<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="15514" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/15514?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-22T17:30:37+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="48636">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/982d0c2da6e665160221cd8270bf0a65.pdf</src>
      <authentication>bb7ec0a8386795d5e847a1f66daa1da5</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="49750">
                  <text>,_.

.

/\,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

•

•

,,

�'1

2 _:_ The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, AuR. 1. 1978 ·

•••
•• •• ••• ••••

.•••. •.. ••.

Bro·w ns working hard
KENT, Ohio (UP! ) ~ The
Cleveland Browns are hard at
work preparing1or the year's
first ellhibition game, against·
the New ' York. Giants, with
only one more. week of
practice remaining before
the official .start of the
preseason schedule.
The Browns host the Giants
Monday rught at Municipal
Stadium.
Cleveland is coming off a
generally ragged ~ tie in a
co ntrolled
scrimma ge
against the Buffalo Bills on
Sunday at Kent State
University's Dix Stadium.
Perfonnances of note for
th e Browns included fullback
Mike Pruitt, who ran five
times for 45 yards. The club's
· regular backfield of Greg
Pruitt ·and Cleo Miller didn't

see

action against the Bills.
" I was a little shaky at the
start because I'm not uSed to
moving on the field ," said
Mike Pruitt . "The long
gainers (18 and 19 yards
each ) were straight dive
plays. Our guys blew the
Buffalo defenders off the line
and I blew through . It really
felt good." ' • '
Commenting generally on
the. scrimmage , Coach Sam
Rutigliano said, " II wasn't
. artistic out there, but we got a
lot of things done. It was a
physical scrimma g ~ . We
wanted to throw a lot because
the passing game takes so
much more time to put
together ."
The 25,000 fans present for
th e scrimma g,e saw the
Browns' first use of the 3-4

defense , with three down
linemen
and
four
linebackers. It came in smaU
doses oo a number of series
and ·added up to about 10
plays.
In other developments,
rookie guard Pete Pullara,
underwent knee surgery at
the Cleveland Clinic Monday .
Club physician 'Dr . John
Bergfeld
termed
the
operation successful. Pullara
wUlout 1111til at least October.
The Browm reported two
injuries to players from the
·Bills scrimmage . Veteran
guard Bob Jackson and Larry
Collins· have
shoulder
injuries.

TilE DAIU !SENTINEL
OE\'OTEDTOTHE

INTEREST OF
MEIGS..MASON ARE A
ROB ERT HOEFI .ICH
atr EditOr

An Accident

Publi:;hetl ilaily I'XLt'pl Satul'lli(
lJy Tht&gt; Ohiu Voi! lley Pu llli s lun~

Won't Walt

Cmnp;;m··Mulurnetll&lt;l. Inc .. Ill
CuUI't s't.. Pumc ru~· . Ohio 45769.
Husllll'SS Offlt'l' Phu1w 992· 2156.
Edll unal Pllullt' !m·2157.

Until You Have
The Money

St.'\'otltl

da~~

P(Jincm y-. O h1 11 .
Ne~L/Un &lt;t l

rt•prcsen·

tullli\', [~ n d un Assoo_· ~~tlt'.o,; , :Wil
Euelid 1\ Vt' -· Clcvel.;wd, Dt)lll 4-111 5.

But protection costs little. Remove the financial string
insurance. For all your insurance needs- home,
health, earning capacity, auto - see us!
~ith

Ol:li\'l'n'tl b}'
nH'I(Il'l' where aVailllblc 75 l 'l' lll.'&gt; J)CI'
wt't:k. By Mu1or nuul'-' wlwrc ea r·rtcT'
~· r v r ct' n ut 11\'il llablc, One month.
$!.2::1 . By mail m Oh1 o and W. V;t .,
Orll' Yci:l r. $12.00 : S1x m out h~.
S l\.~0 ;
Th rt• t• munlll.s . $i .Oil :,
SulN:riptL un rt~ tt: s :

Davis Insurance.Agency ·
Across from the Court Hous-e in Pomeroy
Jeannie Starcher
Bill Quickel

Jliti d ·Cit

!Just..a,•w

;nl v ~ rt b m ~

El:w where S2ti 00 p •;tr . Sn'
Sl:l. 50 ; T hn•t• m un th ...,,

r

m un t h.~
S 7 . ~0 .

SuiJ:Krlp llun prll'l' U lt'l U tlc ~ S u ml t~ r

992-6677

T in l CS·Scnllllt'l.

BASEBALL
SCOREBOARD
'
·.

Mtior Ltltut Sflncllngs
8y Unit.ci Presslnterl}ational
N•tlonl! League
East
W. L. Pet. GB
Ph ila a
55 45 .550
Ctl icago
51 51 .500
5
· PiHSbrgh
•a 52 .480 1
Montreal
50 51 .467 8lf2
New York
45 62 .421 13'12
St. Louis
41l- ~4 .385. 17
We'5f
W. L. Pd. GB
San Fran
63 •3 .594
1,
Cincinat i
-~A 6'2 43 .590
· LOS Ang
61 44 .581 ., l'h ·
San Olego
54 52 .509 9 'Aflanta
48 56 .46 2 14 .
Houston
48 56 .462 14
Monda.y's Results
Montreal 3, Pittsburgh 'l
Phil;,delph ia 6, New York 1
Cinci nnl) ti J, Atlanta 2
Houston 4, San Franc isco 1
San Diego 4, LOS Angeles 3
Today'S Probable Pitchers
.,.,_
(All Times EDT)
. ·St. Louis (Martinu S.A) at
Ch icago (Lamp 4. JQ), 2:30 p,m.
Pittsburgh I Bi bby 6·-4·) ;,t
Montreal {Rogers 11 .7), 7:30
p.m.
· New York (Hausman 2· 11 at
Phil adelph ia (Carllon 9· 10 ),
7:30p.m.
Cincinn·a ti (Seaver 10-9) at
Atlanta (Easter-ly 1·6), 7:35
p .m .
Sap Francisco (Knepper 11 ·61
at Houston {Richard 10-9). 8:35
p.m.
Los Angeles (Hooton Jl .n at
San· Diego (Jones 8·9), 10 p.m.
Wednesday's Games
Sl. Louis at Chicago
New York at Phila, night
Pi ttsbgh at Montr-eal , night
Ci ncinnat i at Atlanta, night
San Fran at Houston . nigh t
Los Ang at San Diego. night
Am,er-ican League
East
W. L Pet.

Boston
Milwauke
New York
qa1timre

65 38 .6Jl
59 -4'2 '584
58 46 ) 558
57 .t6 . 553

GB

~ 112
e

.

.

Columbus 9, Syracuse 3
Pawtucket 6, Richmond o
Tod41y'l Gem••
Toledo at Tldewat~
Rochester at Charleston
Columbus at 'Syracuse
Richmond at Pawtucket
Wtdntsday•s Games

Blyleven and Oyer ; Grlrn .
J3; P1Uek an~ Cruz, Sea 32. stey
, Garman (8 ) end Carter.
:,'!~::re~
\ W- Ge~ rman {2·.4). L- Biyleven
N•tion•l L.,gue: Blue, SF J.S . (9-6). HR- Pittlburgh , Slngull.
•: Perry , SO 12-• ; John , LA 12· len ( 3 ) .
7; Grimsley , Mtt 12·8 ; Niekro,
N .Y .
00000001D-1 53
Atl 12-11. •
ila
000 014 Olx- 6 9 0
American Leatue: . Guidry, PhEspinosa,
Murray (6), Bruh .
NY 15·1; Tanana, Cal 1.ol·6:
(8) ttnd Stearns; IJUthven
Caldwell , M il JJ.s; Palmer, ert
Boone. W- Ruthven {8·1) ,
Bait 13-8; Flan•gan, Ball 13·9. and
L- Esplnosa (9-9). HR - Phlla.
Eerned
Run
Averate
(Based on tt innlnll pltcttedJ delph ia, Boone (10).
Natlon•l League: Rogers. Mtl
010·000 002- 3 9 2
2.41 ; swan , NY 2.45; Vuck- Cinci
000 loo 001 - 2 10 o
ow tch , St .l and Blue, SF 2.53 ; Alia
LaCoss, Ba lr (9) and Bench ;
Knepper . SF 2.59.
American Lei'"UI: , Guidry, Niekro and PocOroba. w•
Lacoss (2-1). L- Niekro (12-11) .
NY
2.03;' Mil
Matlack,
"Je• 2.18; HR - Cinclnnatl. ~ench 05) .
Caldwell,
2.38;
Gale,
KC
and Keough , Oak 2.61.
·
Strikeeuts
san Fran
000 000 OlD- 1 2 0
Notional Leo•ue: . Richard . Hous
000 021 Ol&gt;c- .a a 0
Hou 19•; Nlek'ro, At! f159 ; · Halicki , Minton (.8) and Hill ;
Seaver. Cin 140 ; Montefusco , Niekro and Pulols. W- N iekro
(8 ·Bl. L- Halicki (5-5).
SF 122 ; Blue, SF 120.
American Lntue: · Guidry, LA
101 000 OlD- 3 7 J
NY
163 :
Ry&amp;n, Cal 156;
Olio
000 310 00."'7 • 9 0
Leonard , KC 117 ; Flanagan, San
Rhoden, Rautzhan (5 ), Hough
Salt 113; Underwood , Tor 100.
(7) and Ferguson ; Rasmussen,
Fingers (8 ) and· Tenace. wMajor LeltUe Results
IID·1l. L- RhOden
By United Press lnternltion•l Ra!.mussen
&lt;8 ·6) . HR - Los Angeles. Lopes
N•tlon•l Le•gue
·
Ptsbgh
000 200 ooo- 2 5 1 (lJ l.
KC

Toledo at Tidewater .
Rochftter at Charleston
ss ·49 · .52'9 J01'' Columbus at Syracuse
Detroit
Cl eve hid
49 .s• ·•76 16
Rlchmond at Pawtucket
Toronto
39 66 .371 27
Wnt
w. L. Pet. GB
M•ior L••wue Leaders
Ken Ci ty
58 .U .56.9 1
By U,niled Prell lnternttional
Calil
56 so .528 4
aeHing
Oakland
55 51 .519 .S
CB•s. ed on 250 •t bets)
Texas
49 55 ..ol71 \0
National League
Mln, sota
45 56 .4•6 12'1'
GAB.· H. Pet.
Chicago
44 19 .A27 W h Burrogtls A11
98 318 102 .321
Seaft le
36 6! .343 2JV;a_ Rose Cln
J04 437 J38 .316
Mond•y's Results
&amp;wa Phil
98 412 127 .308
Milw at Batt. suspended
Clark SF
103 390 120 306
Boston 9, Chicago 2
Smith.LA .
85 305 9• ~ 308 ·
New York 6, Texas 1
W"ittield SF
101 335 103 .307
Cleveland 4; Kan Clfy 3
Ric"ards so
102 385 118 .306
Tor-onto a, Detroit 7, 14 inns . valntlne -Mtl
103100122 .305
Oakland 2. California 0
Madlock SF
78 29 4 89 .303
Today's Probable Pitc"ers
Concepcn Cn
101 382 115 .301
(All Times EDTl
Amerl,•n L11gue
Chicago &lt;Prolv l ·Ol at Boston
.
GAB. H. Pet.
(T iant ] .J). 7:30p.m.
Carew Min
96 355 118 .332
Detroit (Slaton ,n0-8) at Oliver Tex
78 312 101 .32.ol
000 000 102- 3 9 1
Toronto (Clancy (7 .8). 7:30p.m. Lynn Bos
9• 339 109 .322 · Mtl
Kansas City (Gale JO .J l at Piniella NY
77 274 87 .318
Cleveland (C lyde 5.6), 7:30p.m. Breft KC.
82 332 105 .316
Texas
(Matlack
8-81
at
New
Rice
Bos
103
427 132
.309 ·
Yo.rk (Hunter J .•&amp;) , 8 p.m.
Le1cano Mil
85 278
86 .309
Oakla!ld (Keough 6·7J at Munson NY
97 402 123 .306
Californi a (Ryan 5·9L · 10 :30 Sundberg Tex
98 340 104 .306
p.m.
Thompsn Dt
104 409 12.o1 .303
Minnesota ·(Per-zanowsk i 1-0)
Home Runs
at Seattle (M itchell 5·11) , 10 :30
Nltion•t League : Foster . Cln
p.m.
and Luzinskl. Phil 25; Smith,
Wednesday's G1mes
LA 20 ; Valentine, Mtl 19 ;
Kansas City at Cleve, night
Dawson , Mtt and Winfield, SO
Milw at Baltimore, nignt
18,
BostOn at New York, night
American L .. gue: Rice, ·eos
Minnesota at Seattle, nigtlt
end Thomas, Mil 24 ; Baylor,
IN THE
Oakland at Calif, night
Cal and Hisle. Mil 23;
TMmpso;~n~·~;~ied In
. International League
Natton11 League':-Foster, Cln
United Press International
W. L. Pet. GB 81
Winf
ield, SD
72 ; Clark,
Garwey SF
, LA76;and
Montanez,
Charleston
64 •1 .610
NY 70.
Pawtucket
57 49 .538 7'12
Ameriun League: Staub, Oet
86; Rice, Bos 81 ; Thompson ,
OPEN•
Richmond
54 47 .535 8
•
Toledo
SO 50 .500 I 1'12 Oet 78; Hisle , Mil 7.4 ; Thornton ,
Mon., Tues .. Wed. &amp; Sat. 8:30til5:00
Tidewater
52 54 .491 12117 c1e" 68.
Bases
Th urs d ay T'I112 N000 '·
Columbus
49 54 .476 14 · NationalStolen
League
: . Moreno,
Rochester
50 55 .476 14
Friday Until5 P.M. '
Pill 43 ; Lopes. LA JO ; Richards
Syracuse
40 66 .377 24'12 and Smith, so 29 ; Taveras, Pitt
Herman Grate
Monday'~ Results
26.
•
Amoricon League: LeFlore,
173-5592
·
Mason, W.Va.
Toledo· 5, Tidewater 0
Rochester 4, Charleston 1
Det AB ; OiiOne, Oak l7 ; Wilson , ·• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •. .

l,.l•••••••••••••••••••l
.SHOP

MASON FURNITURE
FOR THE BEST DEALS
TRI•STA TE AREA

MASON ·fURNITURE

.....:
%--------J

S- The Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pcmeroy, 0., Tu-y, Aug, 1, 1978

Pete Rose named player-of-week

Cincinnati half-game frOm first
By DAVID MOFFIT
UPI Sporll Writer
ATLANTA (UPI) ~ Pete
Rose says he's happy his
hitting streak is still going
• strong but he insists it
wouldn't mean near as much
if his team wasn't doing well
at the same Ume.
Rose stretched his consecutivC1lames hitting streak to
44 Monday night, tying Wee
Willie Keeler's 81-year-old
National League record, but
insisted that was not as
important 811 the 3-2 victory
over the Atlanta Braves
which enabled the Cincinnati
Reda to close to just a half
game b'ehind pace-setting
San Francisco in the National
League West.
"Sure, I'm glad I got the
hit, but I'm disappointed I
dido 't score," said Rose .
"Winning baU games has to
come first. The crowd (more
. than 45,000) came to see me
get that hit, but the real
heroes were Cesar Geronimo
and Joe Morgan. They had
the hits that won the game for
~."

Atlanta knuckleballer Phil
Niekro, a 39-year-old veteran,
and Cincinnati's Mike
LaCQlls, a 22-year-old rookie,
were locked in a 1·1 pitching
duel until, with two out in the
top of the ninth, the Reds
erupted for four straight
singles and two runs.
Dave Concepcion , the
victim for two of Niekro ' s
season-high 10 strikeouts,
started it off with a single and
a stolen base. Gernomimo
singled him home and then
scored himself m Morgan 's
pinch~it single after Junior
Kennedy singled.
" How about that Morgan,"

SEMI-BONELESS .

. .LB

$}49

HALF HAMS..............................~....
I

.

·

..

9
\lUARTER HAMS.....................~~.. 5
CENTER CUT .
.
.
$}7 9

!}

HAM SLICES ............................~·....
'

2

WHOLE HAMS SLICED BACON:..............;.......~~.~.1
99
LB. $139
Rl 8 EYE STEAKS ..................~:....
SUPERIORS

PARTRIDGE SEMI-BONELESS

19

$2

USDA CHOICE BEEF .

69¢
EGGS...................~~.. .

DAIRY VALUES
BROUGHTON

1%~~ MILK ........ :~ ..~ }29
VALLEY BELL

'

$}39

CHOC. DRINK............~~~...
VALLEY BELL

·

.

FUDGE BARS ........... ??~ ..
BROUGH!ON

'h GAL

HOMO MILK .......... ~~!~~-·

,

89~

CRACKERS........~.!!!!

Tl DE..................~~:;;. !} 39

ALPO

DOG FOOD..........~.~~.$1

00

69e
4
~:~:1.~. . . . . . . .!~~.4 9
CREME COOKIES .... ..L~~-~~~~
CARRIER MILLS

6
9·
TRASH CAN UNERS •.~;. 99 MOTOR OIL ... ~~~;.~~~~~..
~

GLAD·

BREAD

(FRIDAY ONLY)
'•

VALVOLINE
.

Ol.

(FRIDAY ONLY}

7-UP
OF

PEPSI
COLA

(THURS. ONLY
'

~~~Jl,ITE

99e

SUPER MARKET - OPEN DAILY 9 10 10 P.M.
SUNDAY' 10 TO 10
Federal .food

'

00

TOMATO SOUP... ~..~~-~.~ 1 CAN POP........... ~..~~.~ .. ~ 1
'

00

FAVORITE

R.C. COLA or

59

~

SCOT LAD

CAMPBELL

BARBARA DEE . Maple Squares
Vanilla, Lemon, Maple, Chocolate

89~

SCOT LAD Sj\LTINES

GRADE B LARGE

"

(

,

··'
.'Y.'

.:.:
';::
...:·.·:,..·

i.os

Mor~

Red Sox
9-2 victory

/

coasting with a five-bitter ,
Into tJ\e ninth when the Expos
6nally got to him.
By BIIJ.. CAHILL
it," Kravec said.
UPI Sports Writer
Padres 4, Dodgers 3
Elsewhere in the American
Eric Rasmussen and Hollie
Just when it ' looked like League, New York trounced
Fingers co!"bined 011 a there was going to be a Texas, 6-2, Cleveland nipped
sevenhitter and Ozzie Smith pennant race in the American Kansas City, 4-3, Toronto
rapped out four hits to stake League East, the Boston Red outlasted Qelroit, &amp;-7, in 14
San Diego to its se.venth Sox started hitting again.
innings, OBkland shut out
straight victory - a dub
The Bosox got their third Cslifornia, 2-0, and Baltimore
record. It was RasmUBSen's win in the last .13 games and Jlfilwaukee played 1&lt;1 a 5-S
eighth straight triumph and Monday night with a .9-2 romp tie in a game suspended after
Fingers' 24th save. Phlllles 6, over the Chicago White Sox nine innings, due .to a curfew.
Mets 1:
'
that fe.itured a 12-hit Boston Yankees 6, Rangers 1: ·
Bob Boone homered for ~ttack . Jerry Remy drove in
Ed Figueroa, ridirig a 15-bit
Philadelphia's first run, then three rUIL' with a single and a Yankee attack, hurled a foursingled in another during a double and Rick Burleson hitter to earn his lith win in
four-run sixth inning . Dick added a basesloaded double. 18 decisions. Mickey Rivers
Ruthven-went all the way to
Dennis Eckersley' 12-4, got the Yanks on track with
even his record. at s-8.
threw a Six-hitter' striking his sixth homer in the first
out seven en route to hts . inning off Ranger starter and
seventh complete game. . loser Doc Medich, 5-6.
But the Sox are pla~mg 11 Indians 4, Royals' 3:
Pinch hitter Jlm Norris'
cool. They know they re not
.
ou;, of the ~oods ye!.
.
bases-loaded single in the
We .cant say were out of ninth inning made a winning
1t. yet, JUst ~a~ we scored pit~her of reliever Sid Monge,
nme runs, sa1d George 3-1. AI Hrabosky, 4-4 , took the
Scott. whose seventh-wrung loss. .
0Se single sn~~ped a, personal ~ Blue Jays 8, Tigers 7
25 slump. There s sttll a long
Otto Velez' fourth homer of
way to. ~o and we aU,have to the season in the 14th inning
By DAVID MOFFIT
be pos1t1ve thinkers.
.
lifted the Jays to their victory
UPI Sports Writer
And as for the ChlSOx , over the Tigers. Velez' gameATLANTA (UP!) - Pete Kravec took the blame winner came off loser Bob
Rose is fearful that not himself.
.
. .
Sykes, 5-5, and staked
having any more milestones . "Into the SlXth mnmg, I reliever Joe Coleman to his
alter tonight in his drive pitched well ... But then I fifth win without a loss. ·
toward Joe DiMaggio 's 5&amp;- started hangm g all my A's 2 Angels o·
game hitting streak may breaking balls, and that 's my
Ma'tt
Keo~gh ,
Dave
make it tougher for him to best pttch . You
get Heaverlo and Elias Sosa
concentrate on the record. hypnotized out there and I combin ed on a seven-hit
"lt's fun when you are wasn't able to break out of shutout to pitch the A's pasi
pursuing a record and there
the Angels. Mike Edwards
are other guys you can pass,"
singled in one run lei the A's
said Rose, who hit safely in
. and the other came on a
his 44th straight game
throwing error by Carney
Monday night to tie Wee
SCIOTO RESULTS
Lansford.
Willie Keeler 's 81-yearold
COLUMBUS ( UP!) ~ Rick Brewers 5, Oripies 5:
National League record, Oldfield guided Brawny Bret
Milwaukee reliever Bill
second longest in major- to a 41&gt; length victory over Castro retired the Oorioies in
league history.
Equuf Bigshot in the featured the ninth inning after a two
"It's a long way from 44 to . eighth race Monday night at hour and 2().minute rain delay
56,"
Scioto .Downs.
b suspend the game, which '
Tonight Rose can move into
The winner covered the · will be completed Wednesday
Rollie
second place aU alone by mile in 2:01 and returned prior to the regularly
Becky Michael, Linda
raising his streak to 45. The
0' Br ien, both of Letarl ; named the National League 's odds are in his favor since the $5.80, $3.40 and $2.60. Equuf scheduled game. A Baltimore
Bigshot paid $4.80 and $3.40 to ctirfew prohibits any inning
37-year-old Cincinnati third place, while Timely Orbit from beginning after 11 :59
Christy
Mason ;, ending
PlayeroftheWeekforgames
Tammy Tucker,
Allensworth
July 30.
baseman will be going came in third and kicked p.m.
1
Rose, who hastbatted safely against Larry McWilliams, a hack $2.60.
Starr all of New Haven Red ; in 44 consecu tve games, 24-yearold rookie wbo has
Super Tweety won the nmth
1
only been in the majors a few race to start off a 3-.%
THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL
Racine; Barbara Grueser, Tuesday night when he hit in weeks. ,
lrifecta combination that was
"He could be a big problem worth $1 ,188. Heraclytis
Jody Harrlsopn, Nt ata 11ef . his' ...... stral·ght game F· 0r
Lambert. Lori icket , al 1 p
""w'
. ·
[or me," said Rose. "Since finished second and Neveie
Sal&lt;sbury ; Diana Nease, the week, the Cincinnati I've never seen him pitch, I'll
Executive showed.
Syracuse, Amber Warner , Reds' third baseman batted
both of Syracuse. Coach, Bill ..48!, and no
. w !ralls AUanta's have to watch him pretty
A crowd of 4,571 wagered
Yoho of New Haven Reds,
close while he's warming up . $352,968.
assistant , Joyce Rilchie, Jeff Burroughs by five points Anyway, when I face a
USED CARS
Racine .
in the race for the NL batting forkball
pitcher
like
crown, .316 to Burroughs'
Special!
McWilliams, I worry . about
3
RIVER
DOwNS
him
putting
me
in
a
· ~ given· consideration
CINCINNATI (UP!)
for the award were ws slwnp."
McWilliams
appears
to
be
Ainber
Bio surged to the front
Angeles outfielder Reggie
doing
some
worrying
of
his
at
the
top
of the stretch and
Smith, wbo batted .412 with
won
by
10
lengths over Big
own.
six RBI, and Montreal
"It's
gomg
to
be
a
thrill
to
Porter
Monday
in River
infielder Larry farrish, who
'pitch
against
hlm,"
said
the
DoWf\S'
featured
eighth
race.
hit .444 and slammed three
6-foot-5
left-bander
who
has
Mr
.
Researching
was
third.
homers in one game on
BONNEVILLE SEDAN
po~ted a U record with a 2.12
Amber Bio completed the
Sunday.
ERA since joining the six furlongs in the $4,500
Braves. "Their whole team is allowance race in 1: 12 1-0,
ATLANTA (UP! I ~ Pete
great, but he 's the one to get and returned ~.20, $3.80,
Rose is baseball's No. 1 box
because of the streak."
$3.20.
office attraction today .
•
While Rose was pleased he
The 1-'1 daily double of I
Attendance figures say so.
Promised
John and Tingle
c~ught Keeler, he said he was
Rose's hitting streak, now
disappo111ted he was held to BeD was worth $526.40.
at f4 after his sixth inning
just one hit and lost ground to
The 4,215 thoroughbred
SP.orts Transactions
single off Phil Niekro Monday
Atlanta
's
Jeff
Burroughs
in
racing
fans ~~ $471,016.
By Un•ted Press International
night, has fans 'streaming to
their battle for the NL batting
Monday
Atlanta's stadium just as
Pro Footbtll
lead. Rose went !-for-I and
Atlanta - Released veteran stayed at .316. Burroughs
You'll LlktOUrQuolity
they did when the Cincinnati runn
ing back Billv Pr itchett ,
Woy of Doing Buslnns
000 110 000- 2 S 0
Reds were in New York last second,year defet~sive tackle advanced from .317 to .321 Oi'lk.
ooooooooo-o 11
GMAC FINANCING
week and attendance for Jim Duggan and r-ook ie line· with two doubles in three at- calit
Keou gh , He a11er1o (8), Sosa "2-5342
backer- David Adkins .
Pl&gt;meroy
Meta' games tripled.
(9J
and
Essian
;
Tanana
,
Knap
p
Ch icago - Wa ived rookie bats Monday night.
Open
Evening•
'till
:00
(8
)
and
Hump
hrey
,
Downing
A paid crowd of 45,007, free agents Ben Peterson , wid e "At least we don't have to (8). W- Keough (7.7) . LTil5p.m. Sat.
receiver
from
Graceland
,
low~ .
largest of the season, and Bruce Carlson , kicker from light Billy Martin tomorrow Tanana (14.6).
watched Monday night 811 Montana .
(for headlines )," quipped
Denver - Released weteran Rose. "There weren't any
Rose tied Wee Willle Keeler's cor'nerback
Bobby Brooks anct
all-time National League offensive tackle Ricn Behrend · test-tube babies today, were
son , lineba cker Me l Cook,
hitting streak set in 1897.
g.uard Steve Edwar-ds , wide there'!''
"The biggest crowd before receiver Donald Cooper and
tonight was the opening night quarterback Ken Sm ith . all
.
of the season, 42,886," said rookie!
Detroit - Signed veteran
NORTIIFIELO
Randy .Donaldson, the quarterb&amp;ck Greg Landry to a
multl·vear
contract.
Cut
deten
,
NORTHFIELD,
Ohio
Braves' !XIbliclst.
sive back Ken McAl ister , guard
Genes Show
And
Donaldson
is Lerron Jackson , lineman Kit (UP! ) predicting an even bigger Lathrop , running back Tim overhauled Nevele Napoleoo
Cunningham, quar-terback Tom
crowd tonight when Rose will Mclaughlin , wider e c e i v e r with a strong stretch drive
attempt to extend his streak Tony Watson , light end Jim Monday night to win the
Stowe and fullback lr-v Steven . featured $2,600 fifth race at
to a recordiletting 45.
son .
"Ted' Turner ·(Atlanta
Green Bay - Signed running Northfield Park.
back Woody Green . Placed
Doug Hamilton guided the
owner) can have the crowd wide
receiver Keith Hartwig on
winner elver the mile in 2:03 lto!florrow night (Tuesday)," tne reserve list .
Kansas City - Released 51or a I~ length victory that
said Rose. "Alii want is a 3kicker Dave Reeve and defen . returned $5.60 , $3.80 and
for-4 night at the plate."
sive back Alan Trotter- .
Pittsburgh - Recalled wa iv· $4.80. Nevele Napoleon
The Braves' switchboard at
on rookie tight end Mark
the stadium was jaouned by ers
Dufresne and traded him to the kicked back $6.20 and $6 and
calls aa 1100n 811 word spread New York . Giants for a future the sh.ow horse, Bart
Sunday that . Rose had draft cnolce.
Brewster, paid $4.80.
Pro Basketball
utended his hitting streak to
Seattle - Center Marvin Leigh Howie, Tabors King
Webster declared a free ·agent and Cape, Suzette finished 1-243 games.
by NBA Commisloner Larry 3ln the lOth race to set up a 7I..Mg lines began forming O'
Brien.
1-5 big triple combinatioo
at the ticket windows of the
Baub1ll
New York (AU - Activated that was worth $1,400.40.
Stadium as early aa 8 a.m. Shortstop
Bucky Dent and sent
MOI)day.
A cro"'d of 4,843 wagered
catcher Mike Heath to Welt
. "At
times,"
setd Haven.
$448,213 ,
Dmaldllon, ''aome of the linea
were more · than 200 ya~da
long. Between a .a.m. and
game-time some 25,000
tickets were sold for the

than 200 girls

play in. M.;G-M area

It's long
way to 56
n
R
-.rete

.

Pete equals
Keeler's

mark

:&gt;: fo~rth :!u~~
~~~.;/',il~i~ii}:::anf,
~~~gi~:r:a~~t~b~~
spo.r t p ara.de H./'· ~~:.~ d~in~::er!~~ g:~~~~ O.:~"kie,:;;,s. rt~;!~

:.i,: : : : : :,: : ::: : T:~d:~:Y:&gt;&lt;

·•..: .,•..

pitching his heart out."
Allros t, Glaull l ;
runs to support Niekro, 9-9.
Elsewhere In the NL Mont- · Joe )'liekro halted the Expos 3, P1111te1 Z:
·
reill shaded P\!IBburSb, 3-2, Giants oo just twq singles and
Pinch hitter Ed Herrmann
Philadelphia downed New rookie Dave Bergman singled · singled in Warren Cromartie
Yark,. 6-1 , Houston put away !Jome a pair of runs to give with one out in the ninth
San Frariclaco 4-1 and San Houston its seventh .straight inning to cap Montreal's two- '
Diego topped
Angeles 4- win. Jose Cruz · and Julio run winning rally oft Bert
stomach."
'
Gonzalez alao singled home Blyleven, 9-6 , who was
Morgan pinch·!lit for 3.
•
LaCoss, now 2-1 since coming •
up two weeks ago, and Doug
Bair got into a peck of trouble
in the bottom of the ninth
before picking up his 20th
save of the~ .
.
'
The first three Braves Bair
faced all singled and the
Reds ' . ace reliever found
himself with the bases loaded
and no one out. He struck out
Gary Matthews who had
Coaches fQr teams :
By Greg Batley
of Mason; Beth Layne ,
gotten three straight bits off
Kimopr Division
Over
200
girls
from
the
Belinda
Lowe,
Bonnie
Marr
.
forced
Jeff
LaCoss;
Letart, Pa11y Michael ; Dee
Meigs-Mason
area
have
all
of
t-lew
Haven
;
Kellle
Burroughs, who had had two
assistant ; ~son,
rticipat. ed In the softball Rough, April Wise, both of Spencer,
doubles, to ground out (a run pa
Pomeroy ; Tonia Ash, Vicki Bob Mossman ; Middleport,
Childs; New Haven
scoring); and then got Bob league this summer, as they Cundiff, both of Syracuse. Mlck
Red , Ann Anderson , Bill
Rita
Slavin,
assistant,
have
the
past
three
summers.
Coach,
Horner to pop up to end the
Yoho, assistant ; New Haven
The girls will end season play Gerry Rought .
threat.
White, Mike Winnings ;
American
Annette Mills, Te'rri Racine, Joyce Ritchie, Vickie
"That win, that's what thisThursday,Aug.3,withan
really counts," said Rose. All-Star tournament · at Wilson , both of Forest Run; Hill ; Salisbury, Wally Haf .
Tom
Grueser,
The ·Junior Angel Blake, Sheri Drehel, field,
"One of the good things about Syracuse.
Syracuse,
Roll.ie
assistant:
·
·
'11
be
·
it
Loretta
Holsinger
,
Laura
.
my streak has been that it Dlvtslon WI
glll s game Smith, Kathy Whitlatch, all of Stewart .
Senior Division
seeDJl to have helped spark at 6 :30 with the Senior Hits · ' N' Misses ; Robin
Forest Run, Susie Grueser ;
Kathy
the team. Since I've been in Division to follow. l'he girls Wilson , Letart;
Hit ' N' Misses , Kenny
my streak, the team has will be divided into National Howard, Meigs ; Jackie Wiggins : Letart, Carroll
and
American
League
teams
.
.
Greene
,
Barbara
Gordon
played good baU."
Tammy Kimes, all of New . White; Mason , Jackie Sisson ;
Junior Division softball is Haven; Kim Baler . . Nancy Neigs Bob Pooler, Pat Souls ·
Niekro, 12-11, gave up just
assistant; New Haven,
three hits the first five · for girls 111-13 and Senior Smith, both of Pomeroy; by,
Bob Ayers; Pomeroy, Gerry
Division
'is
for
girls
14-18
..
Sonia
Ash
,
Dodle
Chapman,
innings, but one of those was
Carla Teaford, all of Rought ; Syracuse, Rita
Johnny Bench's 15th homer of Teams in the Junior Division Syracuse
. Coach. Susie Slavin , assistant , Wanda
the year. He pitched out of a were Letart, Mason, New Grueser, Assistant, Kenny Teaford .
bases loaded jam in the sixth Haven White, New l!aven Wiggins.
·Junior All.Stars
by striking out Bench and Red, Racine, Salisbury,
'ddl
American
M
S
d
1
Concepcion and then struck
yracuse, an
eport.
Roberta Greene , Carol
Senior Division teams were · o· Brien, both of Letart;
out the side in the seventh ~
Forest Run, Hit 'N' Misses, Melanie Mossman, Valerie
five strikeouts in a row.
"I've gone up against some Letart, Mason, Meigs, New 5antanlo, both ot Mason ;
and Cindy Crooks, Paula Horlon,
good pitchers during the Haven, Pomeroy,
Paula Swisher, all of Mid·
streak/' said Rose. '.'Niekro Syracuse. Forest Run dleport ; Lisa Edwards ,
is one of the best. He's been a finished as champs in league Kellle Javins, La Donna
· 20-game winner a couple of play in Senior Division with a Moxley, Lori Weaver. all of
Syracuse New Haven Wh ile ; · Debbie
times. He's another all«ar fine 13-1 record.
.th an ll-3 Michael, Syracuse ; Tonia
Was
Wl
Second
pitcher and he was reaDy
Salser. Nelanie Weese. Laren
record. Hit 'N' MisSes had a Wolfe, all of ·Raclne; Angela
NEW YORK (UP!) _ Pete
9--f&gt; year, and Pomeroy was Hatfield, salisbury. Coach,
Rose asked the huge throng of
newsmen who surrounded
him for a post-game
intervieW to talk about his
hitting str..k. "He got the
game winning hit with a sore

•m

·&lt;

&lt; &gt;· · ·: &gt;:&gt;

elimination

&lt;&gt; &gt;&gt;&gt;

:::: tournam·ent for the Senior
:::: Division was held July 28-29
withForestRunearningthat

;::: third.

U · Forest ~n got to.the finals ¢/~ 1~e;teMi~~Y N~~m~~~~~ ~Z:e~:Z~m;'C' rec~~~~
_::: by downi Hit 'N' Misses 16-

By MILTON RICHMAN
lJPI Sporta Editor

··: 0,1Pomeroy 1().2 and MaS()n
.·..•: 14-1. Syracuse got there by
beating Letart 22·2, New

NEW YORK (UP! ) - Bob Lemon was lying on the couch at
his borne in Long Beach, Calif., taki1!g It easy and enjoying life,
without a worry in the world .
The White Sox had fired hlm as manager two weeks before,
Bill Veeck saying it was like chopping off the head of one of his
kids, and meaning it, too, and now all Lemon was doing was
coli.ecting his money "scouting."
This was a week ago Sunday around 10:30 at night.
The phone rang and when Lemon picked up the receiver it
was AI Rosen, the Yankees ' president and his old teammate
with the Indians on the line from New York.
" I don't know for sure what's going on, but I want you to
sta.nd by," Rosen said. "Billy Martin has been quoted on
something in the newspapers, something not good, and I'm
leaving to join the club in Kansas City and find out what's
what. If we can't get this straightened out, we want YOI! to
manage the Yankees . I'll get back to you. It looks like we got
problems.'\'
The following day, Rosen called again from Kansas City
asking Lemon to get there as soon as he could. Lemon threw
some Clothes into his bag and took off. He had to change planes
in Denver and when he arrived in Kansas City in the early
hours of Tuesday morning nobody was there to meet him.
That didn't bother Bob Lemon, though. He's not .the kind who
ever expects to be greeted by brass bands anywhere he goes.
When he got to the airport In Ka~sas City and saw no one
around, he hailed a cab and headed for the hotel where the
Yankees were staying.
By tbls time, he already was the new manager of the club
and then .13 days later, he was told he would be the general
manager in 1980. Talk about Horatio Alger. He never moved up
as quickly as that.
.
Lemon 's cllmb was so swift, in fact, that when he called his
wife, Jane, to tell her he was going to be the Yankees' general
manager in 18 months, she thought he was putting her on ., He
finally convinced her he wasn 't.
Years back, Casey Stengel, who had trouble with names all
·his life, once called Lemon "that other fella" after a lengthy
discourse on Cleveland's more celebrated pitcher at the time,
Bob Feller.
Now once again, Lemon is cast as " that other lelia." He's the
one practically .everybody is overlooking in all the concentrated attention on Billy Martin and George Steinbrenner. As
someone who has seen Bob Lemon pitch, and hit, more than a
dozen years with. Cleveland, and manage baUplayers after
that, I can give you one piece·of advice : NEVER overlook Bob
Lemon.
He doem't ·clairn to be the best manager who ever lived, or
the smartest, bul then he never claimed to be the best pitcher
or the smartest, either, and aU he ever did was win 20 or more
games seven different times, pitch 31 shutouts and wind up in
the Hall of Fame.
Lemon has a nice, easy style about him, and as someone
once said in talking about him, "He couldn't act like a big shot
if he tried."
.
He has a way with players, with owners, with everyone, 1111d
if you don't think ~e could astonish a whole lot of people who
don't know him by bringing the Yankees horne in front this
season, just ask some of those who do know him, like AI Rosen,
Billy Martin or even Bill Veeck, the man wbo let him go only a
·
month ago .
Lemon is 57 now and knows knows virtually all the Yankee
players, having served as the Yanks' pitching coach two years
ago. '
.
Nothing bothers hlm a whole lot and no matter bow rough the
going gets, he doesn't overreact. Billy Martin had his problems
with Reggie Jackson. For sure, Bob Lemof1 !Won't. He never
has problema with anyme. That's his nature.
Lut Saturday, before the game with the Twins, the
Yankees' new manager put m a Cleveland uniform to bike
pert in the Old Tlmers' Day festivities to which he had been
invited months before. After putting in a.long day, Lemon also
was Invited to a private party along with all the other Old
Tlmers.
Because of the kind of day it had. been he took quite awhile
befQfe he got to the party. He was the last "lle to make It, in
fact ,
·
. Sometimes, though, the last have a way of winding up first.
Bob Lemon ls that type of Individual.
1

11

Haven 7~, and Mason 15-3;
On July 22, New Haven
Reds copped . the Junior
Division tourney crown by
downing runnerup ·Mid•
dleport with MaS()il coming in
third. The Reds also won the
regular se.ason crown with a
13-1 record, Middleport was
12-2, Racine was third with a
!&gt;-5 record, and Syracuse was
fourth at 7-6. Trophies will be awarded at
the All.Star games fot both
league and tourney play.
Individual and team trophies
will be ·awarded to the .first
place league teams, and team
trophies will be given to the
second place team.
Following is an aU-star
roster:
National
Jody
Grueser ,
Kim
Grueser, Tammy Smith, all
of Forest Run ; Darla While
and Oreama White, both of
Lelarl ; Mlcki Hankinson,
Lynn
Oliver,
Melan ie
Mossman , Cindy Stanley, all

GOLF CLASSICS
Tips from an Old Reliable.

Sam Snead
Golfers llke Sam

S~ead

never use IODI irops without

first sizing up the situation.
There's more to it than just
picking the right club.
: Snead says, "If the green
~ hard and I want to hit the
shot hi'h so it won't bounce
over, I U play the bali farther forward in my stance
than normal, about opposite
my left h~el. The shot will fly
higher than normal and stop
quickly ."
It just the opposite a difJerent kind of shot with an

iron.

" If I need a low, boring
shot I address the bali far·
ther back in !flY stance,
about halfway between my
feet, " notes Snead. "The
shot wtll fly lower and run
farther."
He adds, "The key to
swinging on both types of
:.!uil '" i~ to take a long,
smooth swing with a wide

arc.''

!NEWSPAPER

ENT~RPRISE

ASSN .!

Reds ace

1973 FORD

T-BIRQ ·.-

No. 1 at
box 0 ffi ce

'1695
1969 PONTIAC
•895
1973
'DODGE CHARGER
• SE
'1895
Karr &amp; VanZandt

SnortS
r

tra nsaCtlO RS

game."
Even the a forecast for
heavy llhowert which failed
to materialize, didn't deter
the fans.
Another rush on • the
advance ticket · whidows
~gan Monday night after
Role tied Keeler with his
sixth inning single to right.
The Braves went· into
Monday,night's game with a
total attendance of 518,740, an
average of 12,73t for 47 dates.

DOWNING CHILDS
INSURANCE AGENCY, INC.
Middleport, 0.

•

992-2342

-..;."\.

�•
4- The Da~ntlnel,Middleport-Pomeror, 0., Tlleeday,Aug. l , l978

[ il' ' ' '(;;,~;,;;'(i'~~''ii;;;' · · Mrs. Edith Fo"est narned
!j. By llelen and SueBottel !
,!: Bradford mother of the year

Sandra Curtis isher
honored with · sh

'

Two showers. were held ·
recently honoring Sandra
Cl!rtis, recent bride of David
Swisher.
At the Middleport First
Baptist Church, Mrs. Edna
Wilson, Mrs. JWJe Kloes, and
Mrs. Dorothy Anthony were
hostesses for a shower. The
gift table featured bells
suspended from above with
blue · and yellow streamers
extending to t1ie table. Cake,
punch and mints were served. Games were played with
prizes going to Mrs. Sarah
Owen and Miss Rhoda Hall.
Others presenting gifts to
Mrs . Swisher were Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Parker. Mrs.
Nonna Wilcox and Darla,
Mrs. Marjorie Walburn, Mrs.
Julia Boyles, Betty Jo Lieving, Mrs. Louise Thompson,
Mrs. Harold Chase, Mrs.
Frances Smart, Mrs. Nola
. ; Swisher, Mrs. Lillle Hubbard,
I Mrs. Robert Lewis, Sr., Mrs.
Clara Mae Darst, Mrs. Cora
Pullen, Miss Jerry PuUen,
Mrs. Clarabelle Riley, Mrs.
Katie Anthony, Lynn Kloes,
Mrs. Isabelle Winebrenn~r,
Mrs&gt;
. Fredl! Hood, Mrs. Freda
Edwards, Mrs. Nadine Barton, and Miss Judy Owen.
Hostesses for the second .
shower were Judy Owen,

Debbie Kennedy, and Linda
Gerard and it was held at the
Owen residence. The refresh-

BRENDA SAMPSON
ENLISTS. - Breada L.
Sampson; daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Jimmie 118Uey,
East Shade Road, Roule I,
Reedsville, and tbe late
Daris D. Sampson, hat
enlisted ln tbe U. S. Marine
Corps. A 1978 graduate of
Eastern Hlgb School,
Brenda wUI undergo eight
weeks basic trailllng !II
Parris ,Island, s. c.

Auxilit}ry
attends party
Members of the American
Legion Auxiliary of Drew
Webster Post 39 were in
Chillicothe recently for th2
birthday party at the
Veterans Administration
hospital there.
Going from the Pomeroy
unit

wer e Mrs .

Gemma

Casci , Mrs. Catherine Welsh,
Mrs. Grace Pratt, and Mrs.
Veda Davis. They took a hun·
dred loot bags, each containin~ a banana, potato chips,
and peanuts, three cakes, 16
dozen cookles, and several

pounds of candy, from the
senior unit ; and 18 dozen
cook ies, several pounds of
fud ge, 325 Christmas name
ta gs made from old
Christmas cards, and several
door prizes, from the junior
unit.
The door . prizes went to
Davtd Rotzenbu~ , born on July 2, 1888, the oldest veteran
at the hospital; Albert Greenburg, born July 10, 1895:
Domi ni c Fan cell e , th e
youn~est veteran, born July
211, 19!&gt;3 ; and to the two having birthdays on the day of
U1e party, Ronald Laugel and
Henry Landry. Each of the
men also received an extra
cantee n book fr om lhe
district.
Contributing for the party
also was American Legion
Auxiliary 2ti3, Lewis Manley
Post, Middleport .

ment table featured a bride
replica with trailing ribbons
in yellow and green. Cake.
punch and mints were served. The cake was decorated
with yellow roses and edged
in · yellow and green. Miss

trated perfume wafts up from
the bowl on my coffee table
and it is pleasing to look at it
in lhe sparkling clear glass
bowl.-M.H.
DEAR POLLY - Never
throw away baby bumper
pads as they make good
kneeling pads, soap pads,
shoe liners and ca.n even be
shredded to fill throw pillows.
Alwninum soda pop cans
make sale unbreakable
banks for kiddies as they
already have slots for the

DEAR POLLY - I need
help. I attempted to remove a
wax build-up on my beautiful
cherry coffee table by following the directions on the furniture soap I used and only
washed 12 inches at a time
but there were smudge
marks about a foot apart. I
went over it three times and
left off at a different place
each time but always ended coins.
Mesh onion bags make
up with the smudges. Would
you or any of the readers fishing nets if cut off evenly
have any suggestions? - and with a wire coal hanger
run thrOugh the mesh leaving
A.R.M.
DEAR MRS. A.R.M. - some of the hanger for a hanPerhaps you used the same · dle. (Polly's Note: These
cloth t'1!11 long and the ac- wonld be good for children to
cumu.latnin of dirt and wax on use. )
When the knees in my boys'
the cloth re being put back on
the table to cause the pants show wear, I get extra
mileage out of them by
smudges. -POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - When my removing back pockets· and
children were small I put using them as patches that
their puddings and desserts match the pants.- MRS. R.F.
DEAR POLLY - My
in a cup as they could hold on
Pointer
concerns food
to it while eating and there
were fewer spills. Also I storage when one has limiled
always kept cups in a lower storage space. Buy a large
drawer and when they garbage can and put in it
wanted a drink they did not groceries for later use silch
have to climb up to get a cup. as canned foods , cake mixes,
etc. and then cover it with ~
-MRS.G .H. DEAR MRS. G.H. - I do large seventy inch· round
hope you use plastic cups in !able cloth and put in any corner or unused space. It is both
both cases. -POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - Most decorative and useful, and no
everyone loves gardenias and one will dream it is a garbage
we hate it that they never can. -GLADYS.
Polly will send you one of
seem to last iong enough. I
have been enjoying them h'er sign ed thank-yo u
much longer since .I newspaper coupon clippers if
discovered that putting it in a she uses your favorite
deep bowl like a fish bowl Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
with just a little water in the her column. Write POLt:Y'S
bottom made them last POINTERS in care of this
newspaper.
a~nost a week. The concen-

CON :
Your mother is like the woman who shouts at her child, "Get
oot of my sight!" Then- "Don't you dare turn your ba·ck on
me"'
She .needs a crash course in "Letting Go." Do you lulve an
adull relative or friend who could persuade her you're 18 and
responsible before she produces what she wants least- a collegedrop-out?-SUE
,.
RAP:
I've run for class president twice and lost. Several things are
against me.l'm overweight and the kids don't like me because
I'm of the Jewish faith . Everybody calls me hippo-body and
worse. They start fights with me and pu.Sh me around.
I'm into acting and do very well but always get the heavy-set
parts.
I want to run for class president again this year, but with a
girl as my vice1)resident because when I chose boys for running :nates, we lost. Would this give me a better chance' HOPING HAL
DEAR HAL:
A girl running mate won't win the presidency for an unpopnlar candidate. (And somehow we sense.personality-lacks
more than Jewish faith are the roots of your problem. )
Forget office-seeklng and work on friendships. A concerned
and honest teacher or counselor might give you pointers.
-HELEN AND SUE '

,------··-·1

was held during which time .....

the Meigs County Fair nower
shows were discussed. ·
Members were urged to pa·rticipat&lt;:., in the artistic arrangemerlt and horticulture
classes and several indicated
plans for exhibiting.
It was noted that the new
officers, Mrs. James Diehl,
president ; Mrs. Eileen Buck,
vice president ; Mrs. Andrew
Cross, secretary ; and Mrs.
Esther West. treasurer, will
be insl&lt;!lled at the September
meeting to be held at the
home of Mrs. Wesl.
Three workshops on nower
arranging to be ll&lt;!ld in
September were announced
by Mrs. Pat Holter, county
conU.ct chairman. Mrs. Diehl
won the traveling ·prize. Mrs:
Morris received a ribbon for
her arrangement " Heat

VBS SLATED

A odaily vacation Bible
school is being held .at the
Middleport Church of the
Nazarene each evening from
6:30 p.m. to 9 p.m. ·through
Friday . There will be crafts
and nightly visits from a
down . Classes are being held
from . children ages three
Urrough high school.

1
1
I
I,

FRIDAY
WEEKEND REVIVAL,
Hiland Chapel Church of
Christ in Christian Union,
through Sunday evening at
7:30 p.m . Theron Durham,
evangeHst.
HAPPY HARVESTERS
Oass, Trinity Church, 7:30
p.m. Friday at the church.

I

-.. ---~-...­I
SoCia}·.

Calendar .

TUESDAY
MEETING
of
all
prospective M ~ i gs High
School Girls Volleyball
players. Tuesday, August I at
7 p.m. at the high school.
MEETING
of
all
prospective Meigs High
School Gi rl s Volleyball
players. Tuesday, 7 p.m. at
the hi gh school.

linue Friday ' and Saturday.
Among the many items to be
offered for sale will be quanlilies of jelly glasses and a
Leltergraft copying machine
with several cans of ink .·
For the past several years
Ole junior unit has "'adopted"
the diabeti c ward of 32 patients at the Salldusky Sailors
and Soldiers Home. sending

Pickens, Carol Morris,
Catherine Russell, 'llildred
Carson, Elizabeth Ohlinger
Helen Miller, Eileen Bowers'
Diana Bing, and Becky
Painter.

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

ROUND BONE .

GOLDEN ISLE

·

EDITH FORREST

.

GOLDEN ISLE

·

FANCY TOMATOES ••••••••••••••• ~.~~~~ •••••
$

.

1

e;uctly sure what. it means.

00

MUSHROOMS ••••••• :••••••••••• ~.~.~~ ••

1

_ GOLDEN ISE

214 E. Main

.,

GOLDEN ISLE

Store

992-5130

.

49 e

MACARONI &amp;CHEESE••••••••••5.~x·E·~···· .

REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE SERVICE
lnsur~nce

.

GOLDEN ISLE ·

-

The

e

1
e
STUFFED OLIVES................ ~.~!·.!~~ ..8 9
GOLDEN ISLE.

A. The underwriter Is the person in the home office of
an Insurance company, who, after colla ting all facts
about the prospective Insured and the relevant r isk
fa ctprs, decides whett&gt;er the policy should be accepted
and if so, on what basis. A solicit ing Insurance agent Is
also an underwriter In that he" does e)(ercise the in itial
underwriting In making the choice of prospects ... thu s
eliminating the most obvious uninsurable risks or
finding the PQiicy best sui ted to the particular
prospect .

OQ

00

·. CATSUP. •••••••••••••••••• ~~·······3.~~~~ •• ~.1

Pomltl'o~. o .

PRODUCE
LONG SLICING

FRESH

GEORGIA
.
PEACHES
"

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

BIG SALE STARTS-THURSDAY AT 10 A.M.
LASTS THRU . SUNDAY. WEEKDAY HOURS
FOR THIS SALE · WILL BE 10 A.M. TO 9 · P.M.
SUNDAY 1 TO 5 P.M. ·

•1 00

3 LBS.

CUCUMBERS OR
LARGE BELL PEPPERS

·s·.

· Mix or
Match

FOR ·$100 .

~

-

COUPON

~-------

TOILET TISSUE

$}29

GIANT BOX

•

10 oz. Denim
Sanforset
Guaranteed 1 Year ·

W/C

Everyone knows Wra~glers

••

"'(

/.

. I

CouDlltn Expires Aug . 5, 1978
CITY GATEWAY

~iiJiit One P1eue with Thli ~oupon
i~oupon

Expires. Aug . 5,1978
• TWIN CITY GATEWAY

$1

69

W/C

U mit ·one Plea u with Thi s l.ouaon

.....

MAXWELL ' HOUSE'

POUND CTN.

39~

W/C

NO. 655
2 LB. CAN

\

!

W/C

L1m1t Onf' Please with Thi s' Couaon ·

Coupo.n Expt.res Aug . 5, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

KEEBLER C.C. BIGGS

OR

CHOC. CHIP COOKIES
NO •. I05
12
BAG-

oz.

·'ALL
SALES
FINAL

79~

W/C

.

Umlt Ont Plott with litis Coupon

Coupon Expires .A ug. 5,1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

.

'

..
'

NU SOFT

NIAGARA

SPRAY STARCH
NO. 205

22. OZ. CAN

69~

Ltmot One Pita so with 1 nts l.ooopon

Coupon
TWIN

. 5, IY78

NO. 205

W/C

BORDEN PRIZE

LEMONADE MIX

-FABRIC SOFTENER
33 OZ. Bn.
~lmit

79~

One Please with This c;oupon

CotJ!IO·n Expires Aug. 5, 1978
IN Cl
GATEWAY

NO. 205

W/C

33 OZ. CAN

$}39
W/C

Limit Qne Pl'e ase with This Coupon

Coupon EKpires
N CITY

.,
_,

. 5, 1978
WAY

: ..,•••t
•

COUPON

( t)UP.JN

lll JPON

.

.
. ·'..

MARGARINE

Coupon Expires Aug . 5, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

Coupon Expires Aug . 5, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

W/C

COUPON

Limit.,On• Ple,ue wtfn 1his Couaan

Limit One Plene with This Coupon

89

~

Coupon EKpires Aug. 5, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

TEEN QUEEN

PEANUT BUnER
21h LB. JAR

10 CT. BOX

CO UPON

U\JP!JN

GOLDEN ISLE

59~ W/C

TRASH BAGS

(

.~,

Sliver lrlclge Pia.-

(

W/C

Limit One Please with This Coupon

...., ...

·Now everyone
will know the Wearhaus
.
We r•serve the .right to n·m lt pairs to customer.
.. "''" .. WEAR,.. ..

I!,_

PAPER TOWELS

.'I_ .· .: ,;!';i·'
.,•-n

W/C .

limit One Please with This Coupon

COUPON

JUMBO ROLL

79~

4 ROLL PKG.

$}39

GAL

L_COL:PON

GOLDEN ISLE

CIDER VINEGAR

Coupon t xpires Aug . 5, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

VIVA

FLARE LEG
BOOT .-LARE
STRAIGHT LEG

. GOLDEN ISLE

SOFT PRINTS

SOAP POWDER

"'--·

CQlJP()IW

COUPON

'

TIDE

l

Wearhaus,

79

OO

APPLESAUCE •••••••••••••••••••••• ~.~~~~••••

0 . l'yf he•rd the term "underwriter•• but 1m not ·

'J

¢

i~~~~~. . . . . . .~~~.l 09

59

. ,.

GOLDEN ISLE

1

FRESH &amp; LEAN

TOMATO JUICE ••••••••••••••••• ~~.~~.~~..

••• MEN'S WEAR_, ••

ALL SALES ·
CASH.

• '

GATEWAY GROCERY SALE ITEMS

Wranglers

gifts and table favors each
nionth and $100 In cash each
year, and the "Peck-of-Wee
Ones" in Columbua, a home
for terminally ill children.
They also recently purchased
a wheel · chair and an
automatic hoist for lilting patients from their beds and
chairs.
·

FRANK IES......... !~P~

SHOULDER
$ 09 STEW BEEF•••••••••••••• ~·••
ROAST. ..............~~: ....

Coupon Expires Aug. 5, 1978
TWIN CITY GAT

\

SUPERIOR

CUBED

ear· ans
. .

U.S. BEEF

ENGLISH ROAST
CHUCK ROAST

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

•

REVIVAL.PLANNED
A weekend revival will be
held at the Hilla~d Chapel
Church of Christ in Christian
Union Thursday through Sunday, 7:30 each evening. The
church is Iocaled off State
Route 7 by-pass on the new
Vet~rans Memorial Hospital
Road. Theron Durham wiD be
the evangeltst. The public is
invited.

.

Choice

BONELESS

Lj mlt One Ptene with 'fhis Coupon

. . . . ----·

..

Forrest, UJuise HawkinS,
Tressie Hendricks, Karen
Mraz, Frances Hysell, R~by
Mossman and Connie, Nancy
Morris, Bonnie Pickens,
Madeline Painter . Vicki

Mrs. Edith Forr'est was ·
named "Mother of the Year"
at a mother-daughter banque\ held · recehtly at the
~ Bradford Church of Christ.
"Hats Off to M&lt;lll" was the
theme ol the banquet Tables
were decorated with floral
hat centerpieces on wig headforms . Catherine Russell had
charge of the presentatioos to
Diana Bing, the yol!lll!esl
mother; Mrs. Heleu Miller,
the oldest mother; Frances
Hysell, the mother with the
most family present; Edie
Grimm, the youngest Christian present, and Mrs. Forrest, the outstanding mother
of the year.
·
The program opened with
singing of "Faiih of Our
Mothers" and ·a reading
" When God Created
Mothers" by MadelinePainter. There. was a poem,
"What is a Girl?" by Janice
Haggy and prayer by Mrs.
Forrest. The •group singing
was led by Karen Mraz.
A style show was presented
by the grandmothers,, Mrs.
Forrest, the . plunging
neckline; Mrs. Tressie Hendricks, the combed cotton
duster; Mrs. Hysell, the
slipover sweater; Mrs. Nora
Cambron, the tea dress; Mrs.
Hildred Carson, the simple
Httle print dress, and Mrs.
Jackie Reed, the car coat.
There was a song by Linda
stobart and daughter, and
Mrs. Mraz was the speaker.
Scripture was .taken from
Proverbs.
Attending 'were Mrs. Eva
Milliron, Tammy and Diane,
Mrs. Norma Russell, Mrs.
Jackie Reed, Patty Roush,
Mrs. Mildred Riley, Mrs.
Mary Jane Herald, Robin and
Betsy, Clara Mae Jeffers,
Elizabeth Herald, Dreama
Pickens, Cressa Shain, Edie
and Belinda Grimm, Mary
Hawley, Shelly Stobart,
Sharon Russell, ·Lucille Harrison, Linda Stobari, Mildred
Hysell, Linda Blake, Nora
Cambron, Janice Haggy and
Dreama, Margie Wilt, Edith

Better Come Early So You Won't Be Disappointed.

POMEROY CHAPTER 186.
OES, this evening, 7:45 p.m.
at the temple.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY LODGE 164
F&amp;AM Wednesday 7:30 p.m.
All master masons are in·
vi ted .
THURSDAY
VACATION Bible school,
each evenin g this week, 6:30
to 9 p.m ., at Hemlock Grove
Chri st ian Chur ch ; public
invited.
.
THE UNITED Methodist
Women of Chester wJU hold a
polluck dinner at noon at the
church . Regular U.M.W.
meeting following at 1:30
p.m. Members should bring
table service.

.._~--

SATURDAY
ANNUAL Zuspan reunion,
Krodel Park. Basket dinner
served at 1 p.m.
SATURDAY
ICE
CREAM
Social
Saturday sponsored by
Orange Township Volunteer
Fire Department. 5 p.m. at
the Tuppers Plains Grade
School.
Squar~
dance
following at 9 p.m .
SUNDAY
TEAFORD reunion Sunday
at Racine Locks and Dam.
Lunch at noon, bring covered
dish.
MARTIN AND SAYRE
annual reunion at Shriners
Park, Racine. Lunch at noon .
Friends and relatives invited.

Social II
!
1 Calendar 1
I

The annual family picriic of · Wave." Mrs .' Buck, program
the Bend 0' the.River Garden ~ chairman, announced a .
Club was held Monday even- meeting for completing the
ing at the Shriners Park in books.
Racine.
There was .i discussion on
Mrs. Clifford Morris was houseplants and dried
hostess for the meeting with materials by Mrs. Ruth Barthe rnem hers and guests be- nitz, Mrs. Grella Simpson,
ing sealed at a l&lt;!ble covered Mrs. Cross. Mrs. Diehl, Mrs.
with a white cloth and Wing ett , Mrs . Wil s on
centered with an arrange- Carpenter, Mrs. Bert Grimm, ·
ment of red cannas and and Mrs. Morris. Guests were
gladioli. Grace was given by Wilson Carpenter, James
Mrs. Ernest Wingett.
Diehl, Bert Grimm, Clifford
Afler the dinner and sooial Morris, and Ernest Wingett.
hour a short business session

Yard sale announeed for project

. A yard sale to finance prcr
Jecls of the Junwr American
I..egton Auxiliary of FeeneyBe~nelt 128, Mtddleport, wtll
be held this weekend tn the
~~~ k t.n ~. ar~a . of Becky's
( o~sroad Grocery .. IO&lt;:ated
at the )unctton of Batley Hwt
Road and ~ute 124. .
The sale wtU begm at 10
a.m. on Thursday and con-

SHE'SAPRISONERATtB
DC.nn n.,...,;N ANU SUE :
I'm an 1&amp;-yearoOld female ''prisoner," HYing at home and attending L-ollege. Mom pressures me \O study harder and
harder. When friends caD, even for swruner school
assigrunents, she hangs up on them, telling them not to bother
me. She still opens my mail!
My folks want me to finish university and become
"something," and I want that too, but I'm tired of push, push,
JlllSh.
•
I do well in my classes, I'm pretty responsible. Yet when I
ask for a Httle more freedom to make my own decisioos (I
have none!); she say&amp;, "If you don't like it here, why don 't you
move out?" And when I say I will, she shouts, "Over my dead
body! "
Shouldi'-CONFUSED18
P.S. MOst of my girlfriends have their own apartments.
DEAR CONFUSED:
Can you afford a move-out? If it means quitting college for a
job, think twice. Or lind part-time work that will allow you to
finish without parental help ... if you "live cheap," with ·a
girlfriend.
Certainly, you're getting far too much "help" at home! HELEN

Gardeners host picnic

-----------·---·--..-..-.._.._
__
r
1

Gerard, Joyce Hutcllison,
and Carol Durst won the
game prizes. ·Others attending were Sharon Sayre,
Rayanne Cole, with Debbie
Gilmore sending a gift.

'
Polly
Cramer

budge

DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-l~&lt;meroy,,O. , Tuesday, Aug. 1,11171

';

POLLY·s POINTERS
Smudges won't

. 5

••

�.'

•

1-Tbe DIUySentlnel, Middl~Ptwetoy,O., Tueeday,A1Ji. l,1978

7- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-P&lt;meroy, 0., Tuesday, Aug. 1, 1978

Want Ads Turn
Unwanted Items Into Cash
,.
WANT AD

BURROUGHS

CHARGES

A CAREER JOB
IN
CONSUMER FINANCE
CO.In rocognlllan ond presllte lhl"'U9h • urhr In

· 1 ~ WllrdiOrUnder
1Chllrlje.
Cuh
1.00
1.2!1
I do~
1.50
1.90
· zdltys •'
lda)ll
1.80
2.2!1
3.00
3.75
8d.ly!i

EMcb wurd over thr minirn~m 15
worlb: il 4 cenu per word per dly .
Alb numing othi!r lNin L"Uf\14!1..'liU\Ie
dMys will ~ cllilrged Mt the I day

""·
In memory, Card uf Thank! lind
Olituarn 6 eent.s per .,-oni, $3.00
nuni.mwn . Cashi.nadv!ult~ . ..
Mobile Home Nlet~ ,Mnd Y;utl !Alit'!!

ollly· with cash with

B~ IK'C~

tlrder , ~ c..-enl chllr(!:e fur .Hds c.~trry ·
inK Box Number ln Gare of The Sen·
titiet.
'

con sum..- fi.. nct .. Consumtr fi. .nctls on lntegroland
lmportont force In our country's ltCIN1Clmlc •rowth and

progress.

I

·

·

A pilsitlon horo. will give you oconomlc sacurlty.
Tha consumor fl1111nco business Is siHdy - ovon

during recessions. ,
You can win promotion ropldly. You will bo paid 1
good stortlngsalary' ond rocaiw axcopti-lomployoo

bono fils.
Thoro oro Branch Ropr... ntatlve positions open
now for high scl»ol grid ..,.s. You must hlvo on
IUto~obilt .

Phone Mr. Snodgrus tad.ly for a confldontlol,
,ersonal ln,.rvlow. C.ll .!n-2'111.

CAPITAL FINANCIAL SERVICES, INC.

The Publisher re!il!rves the ri!!hl

300 Wost Socond StrMt
Pomeroy, Ohio 457"
An Equol Opportunity Employer

to edit or reject wny tids.deemed IJb.
jet.1iooal. The Publisher will not be
~ble for more than ooe irn:ur·
M:t i n~on .

Phone !r.J'l-2156

NOTICE
· WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

STAN'S BARGAINLAND . A store
for the pe9ple . We bu.y, trnde
ond sell . New -and good used
merchandi se , furn iture and ap·
pliances . ,Antiques . Vou wi ll
a lways get a fair deal with
Stan . Ope n. 7 days a week .
Monday thru Saturday . 9 om to
S pm . Sunday lOam to 6 pm .
1

ACTIVITIES DIRECTOR , previous
exp-erien ce working with
gerioterics , Must be on
organizer with ability to com ·
. municote. lots of public con·
tact . Coll6141 - ~46 · 7112 lor interview. An Equal Opportunity
.Employer .
DAIRY FARM help wonted. House
furn ished .
Racin•
area .
949:2579.

M..nday
NoonOOSHturd.H)'
~sda y

thru F r id ~:~y
4P.M . '
Ute da y before publk o~~.twn·

CLOSE OUT on all 1978 Starcraft
told downs and travel trailers
thru Aug . S only . Before our
vocat ion starts . Make us your
offer . only 5 un its. I used 15ft.
ti--ailer. Open Sunday , Camp
Conley Storcraft Soles, Rt. 62 N.
of Pt . Pleasant . 304-675-5384 .

S und~fy

4 P.M .

Fridily a£lenu.1011

Meigs .
Property
Transfers
Olen D. Boothe, Henrietta
Boothe, Harold D. Brown,
Catherine L. Brown to
Videocom,
Inc.,
Lots,
Pomeroy.
James J . Proffitt, Sheriff,
C. C. Lewis etal to John
Wells, 4.62 acres, Chester.
Keith E . Miller, Pamela
Sue Miller to Isaac D .
Jackson, Doris V . Jackson,
Lot, Martinsville, Orange.
Beatrice E . Smith, William
Fred Smith, · Sr. to William
Fred Smith, Sr. If• acre,
Salisbury . .
Carrol H. McKenzie, Eva
McKenzie, to Robert · E ,
Eblin, Hyllia J . Eblin,
Parcels, Salisbury.
Harold T . Nice, LBura Mae
Nice to Robert E . Jacks,
Donna Y. Jacks, I I&gt; acres,
4.13 acres, Chester. Daniel
E. Thompson, dec. to Louise
Thompson ,
Jonnie
s ·ue
Kinney, Nancy Hill, Cert. of
trans., Olive, Middleport.
George Long to George
Long, Maxine Ohmyer, Lot 2,
Ar baugh ' s Add . , Tuppers
Plains.
~ Bernard Wilson, Myrtle
Wilson to J acalyn L. Bing,
51.19 acres, Salem.
Daniel L. Webb , Judith K .
Webb to Kathryn Denison, 4
acres, Rutland.
Christine Beegle to Olen
Boothe, Hehrietta Boothe,
Harold D. Brown, Catherine
L. Brown, Lots, Pomeroy.

For Wednesday, Aug. 2

ASTRO•GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

Aug . 1, t97B
A secret de s•r e tha t you 've
been hop• ng for , but thoug ht
was out of reach , could becarne a rea lity thi s coming
year. Cha nce and luck wil l be
prom inent .

LEO (July 13-Aug. 21) Someone
wi th your be st •nterest s at
heart will be st•rring up a lot of
dust on your be half behind the
scene s today The res ults wil l
be benefiCiaL Fmd out to wh om
you re romari1ically su•ted by
send1ng tor your c opy of Astra• Grapn Letrer. Ma11 50 cents tor
each and a lo ng . selfaddressed . sta mped enve lope
to Astr a-Graph , P.O. 6 o~~: 489,

Radi o City Station , N. V. 10019 .
Be sure to specify birt h sign .
VIRGO (Aug . 23·Sept . 21) Be a
da ring drea mer to da y. Le t yo ur
1'1opes run ra mpa n t. Even it you
fall s hor t of yo u r tar get, you ' ll
still be a b tg w1 nfier
LIBRA !Sept. 13·0ct. 23) Key
peo ple wit h clout a re the ones
fo r yo u to deal wit h today ,
care erwise . In one fell swoop
they 'll acco mplis h th lnQS und e rl ing s cou ld ne..,er acht e ve .
SCORPIO (Ocl . 1t·N!Jv . 21)
'four grea test benefits will
come today from yo ur invo lvement with or~anizations , clubs
or clique s . Be a milce r, not a
loner .
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec .
2t) Advanlages co me today
from 11'1ing s th a t you manage
fo r oth ers. Keep this in mind If
you 're interested in chalking
up a tidy p ro fit.
C4PRICORN IDee . 22-Jan . t9)
Whe n you weigh· s itu.ation s
loda y, put (he em pha s is o n me
positive s id e. This wi ll put you
on the traok to 8chielle your
desired alms.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. t91
The surprise twist in today 's
,happen_ings will be in matters
where you s ince rely s trive to
be o l service, only to d iscove r
1

couflting
111

Court

Street,

Pomeroy,

Ohio .
USED TRACTORS,
MFI35 Diesel · MF230 Dies~ •
MFI50 Diesel · MF23S Diesel •

MFI65 Diesel · MF285 Diesel MFI13S Diesel. Cob. ai' &amp;
heater.
NEW I USED IMPlEMENTS'
MF9 Baler - MFIO Boler - MF120
Boler . Matthews Rotary Scythe
. MF880 Semi-mounted 6 bot·
tom Plow - MF520 12' Disc MF200 2 Row Chopper · MF39 2
Row Planters - Mechanical
Transplanter.

SHINN 'S TRACTOR SAlES
Phone .459 - 1630

leon , W. Vo .

1975 BLACK El Camino (louie.
350 two barrel, automatic ,
power steering and brdkes .
May . be seen I •; , miles off
Route 7 Bypass on 143 or call
992 -:1750. Good condition .
$2600.
CABBAGE . CORN. potatoes. halfru nner beans , (pick your own) .
$£ bu. C.W. Proffitt 'Form .
Portland, Ohio.
CB BASE stations : Siltronix
1011 -0 . Freq . counter .D10. mic.
Tube type om side bard . .$325.
Radio Shack mOdel TRC -458
new -40 channel om side bond .
Used 2 months. S200. 992-7066.
TRACTOR . FARMALL Super C and
equipment. 2-47-22-42 .

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?
Ltt Pom•oy L•nilmorlc
soften &amp; •condition your

water with Co--op w1ter
Now Only

THREE BEDROOM house in Middleport or Pomeroy. 992-631B.

o&lt;·
Ph one

992-2156 , The Daily Sentinel ..

softener,

Phone m-2111

SENSI ·MATIC
moth ~r\e .

Mo&lt;hl . UC-SVI.

•289.95

Let us test your water: Frie

Pomeroy Landmark
9,.;:!_1ck W. Carsey, Mgr.
.a;l Phon• 992-2111

-·

Business·Services

L----------------------------.....______.

IF YOU hove o service to Otter,
won't to buy or sell something,
ae look lng for work . . . or "r---~==='=:;----,
whatever ... you II get roou lts
~~
foster with o Sentinel Want Ad.
.
Call9'12·2151&gt;.

I

J

GARAGE SALE July 31 · Aug. 4.
9-5. Locot.d off Rt. 7 B~pou on
Old Rt. 143 south of Jock's
Colo . Reasonable ~rices on
new toys , good school clothing
and much more. (Follow the
signs for great ba rgains .}
BIG YARD Sole, Thu rs . and Fri. J
miles north of .the Fairgrounds
on Old Rt . :13 .
LARGE YARD Sale and Rummage
Sale. 1 mHe off 12• on Happy
Hollo w Rd . Nellie Hy~ell
residence . )!JIY 30 to August 5 .
742·299 1.
CARPORT SALE August 2 &amp; 3 .
9 30 to 5,00. 91.8 S. 3rd , M;d.
dleport.

MODERN SlJPDI
'Y
[ ...
Sm•ll engine &amp; 1110wer
Mrvlct, Massey Ferguson
&amp; Gillon Til ten, Llwn loy Mower Sltlll &amp; Service.

OHIO VAU.Ft ROOFING
AND
HOME MAINTENANCE
SERVICE
All ty)lll of roofing, gutfors
downspouts. 20 yon
exptrlonct.
All work
guor1ntud . Call Tom
Hoskins, t41 · 2t60 . Free
Esflmotes.
7·16·1 mo.

· - ~ · lMO.

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

COUNTRY MOB ILE Home Pork .
Route 33 . north of Pomeroy.
Lorge lots . Coll9~2 - 7479 .

CAPTAIN EASY

DAN" IT, WASH·· MI!KPOR.T'5

150T IVIRYTI41N6! GOOD PORT
AAIO RAIL FACILITI!!S·- AIIJ
l!lA81R WORK FORCe• ·

·cARTER

,_
Service
c...

._

p_,.,

PIL HZ-ZJ74

l----------...J
SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

ROGER HYSElL

GARAGE

R4!Sidential •nd cornmerclat: Call for estimate . 24
Hour Service. Any day,

•nvtime.
Phone 985-3806
Jack Ginter 985·3806

Jack's Septic
Tank Service
Bo• 3

MAIN SOUTHERN
BR'At..ICH~

At.JD IN&amp;rEAO,
EVERYT~llo.l(!;

1

·

POSS.IIIL.I!'Bo
"ON.E WROl\113!
.STRIKI!S .. IoJUI!oANCE

LAWSUI.T5 -· PLANT
l!oR'EAKPOWNS!

MOORE'S

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, 'INC.

m.

I Fl(;UREP we

COULD I!UI~D Mei&lt;EE·
MEKPOitT INTO OUI'!:

For The Best
Price In Town
See
Denver Kapple
At

__
.... ......

PWMBING &amp;
HEAnNG INC.

Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; V~age to the
• Bolfom of the Sea 10; Emergency One ! 13: Pet.
llcciat Junction 15.
5 ,»--dd Couple • : New• 6 ; Elec . Co. 20,33; Hogan' s
Heroe• 15.
6:00--News 3,,.,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6 ; Zoom 20 ;
Makin Things Grow 33 .
·
6 :30--NBC News3.~.15 ; ABC News 13; Andy Griff ith 6;
CBS News 6,10 : Over Easy 20: Antiques 33.
7:0D-Cross-WIIs 3,4; Newlywed Game 6,13 : Pop Goes
The Country 6: News 10; Glll [gan' s Is. 15: French
Chef 20; How To Buy A Home 33 .7: 3D--Hollywood
Squares 3,t; Let' s Go To The Races 8; Candid
Camera 6; MacNeil· Lehrer Report 20,33 : Pr1ce Is
Right 10; Jhaf's Hollywood 13 : To Be Announced
15.
.
.
a ,OO-Movle; Happy Days6, tJ; Pilot B,10: Evening at
Pops 20 : . Movie " College" 33 .
.
8:3()-Loverne &amp; S)llrley 6, 13 ; Movie " The Russians
Are Coming, the Russians Are Coming" 8, t0.9 :0DThree's Company 6, 13; Great Performances 20.
9:30--Carter Country 6; Mary Tyler Moore 13; Five
Red Herrings 33 .
10,00-20·20 6, tJ; News 20 .
10:3()-Like It Is 20; Williamson Disaster 33.
11 ,DO-News 3,4,6,6, 10, 13.15: Dick Cavell 20; Over
Easy 33 .

New or Repair
Gutters and

&amp;

Pomeroy • Ohio
Ph. 992-21154

5·, ~Monroes 3; My Three Sons 4; Guns(lloke 8;

H. L WRilESEL
ROOFING

Chesler, Ohio
10-30·c

.·Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

Muffler
Brakes
Shocks
Tires
Battery.
Installation Service

1tfl~~~)} ~THATSCRAMBLEDWOROGAME

C:!J ~ ~~ ®
one letter to each square, to form
four ordinary words.

~ I»..Jbbl~
~

HAD 10 MAm

v~
~oofing,
Siding,
Room Additions
&amp; Spray Painting

liT

.,

IGLERCYb
. I l l_

742-!321
Froe EsllmatH
Work Guorontotd
7· 10·1 mo.

NEW FIBERGLAS TIRES

rJ

TAKE IT EASY, BOTH 0'

YUH t WE'R E BIG - 1 1M E ·-·
JU S T DO AS YER TO LD A~D
YOU WO ~ ' T GIT HUR T .. .
1'-::-Dc-A-.1' 'S PROMISE ...

1

I

~·r

I I I I

r

(Answers tomorrow)
J umbles: FLOOD HAVOC OUTCRY BYGONE
Answer: It me)' be g01 in a bar by small children CHOCOlATE

61eur•w4
by THOMAS JOSEPH
GOOD HCAVE:NSl 'THE:
c~~J..TED,

AL.LEV.

ACROSS
38 N.Y. island
1 Fish
39 Unwanted
5 Stationed
plant
(at)
40 Golden Horde
By oneseH
member
Cardsharp's 41 Raison d' conceabnent
DOWN
12 Prolific au1 City·maps
thor: abbr.
2 Old Greek
13 Luther or
colony

HANG 0,.,.
TASS.

Landau
14 Gennanic
deity
15 Spoil

:::::l!!IJb.ie.!!W!!:is!C!..!~

we qoin' t ' fish
th' Wallets· .
cabin off
th bottom
o th'fool
la~&lt;.e!

3 Be up on
4 Poet's
nightfall
5 Trumpet

18 French king
(8118-98)
17 Maxim
18 Before

Heaven he'p

~~::3 .:~

11 Hurt
somewhat
.
15 Bare
Z1 Verb form

5 &amp; 1 P .M. - Ghosts On The Loose (G)
9 &amp; 11 P .M. - Valentino (R)

28 UMW
member
"Shoot
Tuesday, Aug. l
30
'em up" - - - - - - - - - - - , , _ _ - - - - - - - - -

soond
22 Exclude .
Of aircraft,
23 Egyptia n .
in compounds' city
7 Help
24 Flick an eye

establish
8 Obvious
t Signify

Movie Channel 4 -

Yestenloy's ADswer

31 Business
deal
36 Greek
iett.er
37 Be on
the
cuff .

I

_: -~---:-~ 19 Gain above
expenses
us! ZO Stag
-""tilliil"-Z% Marrow
source
%3 Unconunon
ULack
Z5 Memory
work
Zf Muddy

25 Fare
zt Italian
city

BRIDGE

. Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag
I

Losers defeat themselves

..
-

• Q
• AK 2
WEST
EAST
• 42
• AJ 65
• 10 4
• KQ65 3
•J75 32
• JO 6 6 4
• 976 5
- ~-

mess

... --

letter

Z8 Andy

SOUTH
• 73

Gump's

FRANK AND ERNIE'S
KWIKI ·FIX!!::,._GARAGE -~

fi7= ' ~. ~

----------Tir------ zt
PIRSONIIJ-&amp;.V, :r.
THIN~ '!'"HE PJQOi&amp;..!M
IS
&amp;)flaP IN

W A6

• AK 9
• Q J 10 6 4 3

=+....,1-+-fl

~Greek

goddess
3'7 Greek

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-

I

Is

Here's how to worl! It:

1\XYDLBAAXK
LONGFELLOW

hints. Each day the rode letters · are different.
CKYPI'OQUOTilS

•

THI~ MEETING

WINN IE, ARE YOU
TRYING TO CON·
VINCE W':: THAT
WHAT YOU 1RE:

WITH WINNIE

WINI&lt;LE OE:TTER PRODUCE
.!lOME RE5ULTS. I'M
IXM'III 10 MY LAST

.

DOING

RUB

ou

IB OKAY ..

OR YOVR.sELI' ?'

CLEAN 5UIT AND

LID C
VTL '

NUSOLSO

TO

ZTNR,

ou

TO
TK

I

KUZ
RL

BTFF

AIS

YL

ATDLZ

FTML

~HIRT.

IYFC.

-

Yslerday'•
OURE t11E

BRING IN

A. GUEST

RLSZC
KTLFVTSE
Crypleqaate: WVE HAS PATIENCE TO EN·
FAULT IT SEES BUT CANNOT CURE. -EDGAR
© 1V78 Kinf FMtW"'fs Syndiute, IM:.

COUPON

BARNEY

AND RECEIVE

3•

Pass

Pass

a•

Pass

Pass

Pass

Sou Ill

a

4 NT

6+

against it, but one South
player made it and picked
up around 150 IMPs on the
field . It , wasn't really
deserved, but the East-West
pair I'ichly deserved the 150
IMPs they lost.
East took his ace of spades
at trick one and led back the
king of hearts to South's ace. :
West was one of those play·
ers who always gave count•.
H e dropped his 10 of hearts.
Now South cashed all the.

minor suit cards and came
down to the queen-10 of
spades in dummy and the
seven of spades and six of
hearts in hts own hand while
poor East came down wiUt a
real hea dache . He has to
hang on to the jack-small of
s pades. South, who watched
spo~, scored the slam trick
with the six of hearts.

Opening lead : • 4
You hold :

One letter simply st ands for another: In this sample A is
used for the three L's. X for the two o :s. e tc . .tiingle lette rs.
ap ostrophes, the length and formatio n of the words are all

WINNIE

Pass
Pass

L....L.-1-~...L..-

mountains

S~A'fl.

Vulnerable: Both
North
West North East
I+
Pass

-+-+--11li&gt;ealer :

34 Remote

,....&amp;

,....e aua&lt;e-r

wife

Drwlkard
3Z Church
seat
33liort

l!'r

'

NORTH
S.l· A
• KQJ0 9 6
• J 972

%'7 Written

WHEEL
ALIGNMENT I

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag
The Cavendish invitational was a pair event with
IMP scoring. As such, while
it paid to make overtricks, it
didn 't pay muc h . Big plus
scores went to pairs that bid
and made tough games or
slams . Their opponents
received equally bad scores.
Sometimes the losers were
responsible for their bad
scores. Take this hand as an
example. 'About half the
South players reached sixclub contracts. The other
ha lf played three notrwnp
and made from nine to 11
tricks.
There is no play for six
clubs even if a ·heart isn't led

1-l -B
• A J 54
•AKJ
• AQ 6

+ K 10 3

A Ca nada reader wants to
know if we consider this
hand worth a two ne&gt;-trwnp
opening.
We sure do and we make
that bid .
( NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE MSN. t ·
(Do you have a question for
the e~perts ? WrUe ''Ask the

Experts 1 · ' care of m;s new~,.. :
per. Jndiridua/ questions wilt .
be answered if accomp•nied

by

stamped.

se/1-llddreued

envelopes. The most interest·
ing questions wiJJ be used in
th is column and will rece/WJ
copies of JACOBY MODERN.)

THIS LOOKS LIKE A
FAIR-TO-MIDDLIN'

$21' OFF

[B

IN THE

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon .

Print answer here:
Yes Ierd ay .s

ganle

w.

~EEN

COPILE

UITLE ORPHAN ANNIE

r

Pomeroy L.andmalt

HU:~~·~- LA~i

J..iYINcS R:OOM.

FRED'S TIRE CENTER

$lrs

I

.~

Bissell Siding Co.

SPECIAL

I

(J
I....-1
I
.,. .... o.u,o,_ ......... -

Siding

--------~

Where

KROJE

10 F\I.ID our ~ STUPID YOU m;!

......

AITJOmm
Construction

byHenriArnoldandBobLee

. four Jumt;Jies,
'"
Unscramble these

Ph . Y?2 -ZI48
Po:meroy, 0 .
·
-1-5--t-fc-1
• _,-------3-

YARD SALE . Fri . and Sot . 10·8.
Ant iques . furnit ure . gloss , HOMESITES for sale. I acre and
up. Middleport , near Rut land.
toys . little girls' clothes , books .
Mounted on new wheols,
16' .SKEETER boot . 7 '1, h.p. Mer Call 992-7-481.
Lorry l . Wiley , 216 Oak St. ,
rudy . to go. $30 1&lt;1 U5
Storm
Windows
cury moto_r., trolling motor and
New Hoven , WV.
complete.
Trutk o-trs,
NEW
3
bedroom
house
,
:2
baths,
accessor ies . 9'92-3-483. Tom
ONE BEDROOM apt. Contact
Call Professional
all e lec., I acre , ~idd l eport .
don't miss this deal. Wt sell
FOUR FAMILY Yard Sole. Thu rs .
Smith .
Village Manor Apt ., Mid ·
Buil.ders
close to Rutland . Phone 992·
Fri. and Sat . 9.:00. 11q Butternut
•t discount pried every
dleport . 9'92-7787 .
A·M MUlTil iTH OFFSET 85
7-481.
Ave , Pomeroy, Ohio . Furniture ,
Clay. Stop In •t
duplicoling machine , including
J AND 4 RM . furn ished and un rugs ,
curtains .
d ishes . VA -FHA. 30 yr. fi noncir_!g . also ·
stand
,
light
,
supply
trays
.
lurni , hed
oph . Phone
de-corative items , baby clothes .
refinancing. Irel and Mor1goge,
Generol Contractors
master . master tHe cabinet .
992 · ~3 • .
· bock to school clothes . a nti77 E. Stale, Athens , phone (61-4)
Phone ttf-2101
many supplies . Bid o pening· on
ques, misc.
THREE BEDROOM modular home ,
592·3051.
or9t9-2NO
August 7, 1978. Location · Philip
Portland area . Security deposit .
Sporn Plant , Rt . 33, New YARD SALE . Bedroom sUite . THREE BEDROOM frame home in
FREE
ESTIMATES
In Hortlord, W. Va .
Referen ce requi red . $::200
maple wood stereo , TV ,
Hoven ,
WV
25265 .
Middleport . Coll992 -3457 .
No
SuJidoy
C. lis Please
month. Coli 304· 273-5272 after
cloth•s , other misc. 277 Lincoln
304 ·882-3213.
7·20· 1 mo. pd .
7-9· 1 mo .
6pm .
·
St., Middleport . Thurs . and Fri. IN SYRACUSE : 2 be~room house.
VERY -REASONABLE : Hospital
·
..
New
storm
windows
.
New
992-562• .
'
MOBILE HOME space , I acre, · beds complete With side roils .
olumlr)um building. 2 porches .
b14 · 985· 432~_9:_,
· ,--countrv
.
BACKYARD
SALE
.
175
N.
3rd
bed screens . pediatric chain .
HboF HOLLOW Horses. Buy , sell
992·3219.
Ave., Middleport. Children's
regular chairs, 1 port-o- lift ,
trade or train . N'w and used RIVER FRONT trailer lot lor rent .
clothing and other items . HOUSE AND LOT in Oa·nville. Prictable with 2·choirs. 9fi2·S511 for
593 N. ht St .. Middleport .
saddles . Ruth Reeve!. , Albany
Thurs., Fri. and Sot .
e~ 1orquick sole . 742-2068.
TWO NEW 3 bedroom houses BRADFORD , .Auctio neer. Commore information.
'192·2238.
(614 )698·3290 .
plete Service . Phone 949-24B7
THREE
BEDROOM
house
.
under construction at Morning
o'
r 9-49-2CXX). Rac-ine , Ohio . Crill
RISING STAR Kennel. Boarding. AVAILABLE AT Riverside Apts .: 1 1970 HONDA CB-350 , good ·condi - GARAGE SALE . Ron G rote
playrOom, · utility room , foyer ,
Star Heights . Re c room .
res idence . Main St .. Rut land .
tio"n, re cent ly overhauled , new
bedroom . $113 per month . S15o
Indoor and outdoor runs .
Bradford.
Io
rge
kitchen
and
living
room.
fireplace
.
'"goroge
and
bose
Wed
..
thru
Fri
.
9-5.
battery . One new Bell helmet ,
securily deposit . Equal Hou!oing
Grooming oil breeds . (leOn
ment · Reocfy for occupanc y in ElWOOD SOWERS REPAIR mostly carpeted with fireplace
medium , $25. Coli 985-43-44 YARD SALE. Aug .. 3. 4, S. 10 to 3
Opportunity . 992 ·6098.
sanitary facilities . Cheshire.
on '/1 a cre of land near tQwn.
near futu re . lee Construction,
Sweepers . toasters . irons. oil
after
5:30
weekdovs
.
anytime
Phone (614) 367 -0292 .
at Rac ine Fire house . Racine .
small appliances. lawn mower .
For more intormolion. coli ::-c99
:,:=2..:·3:..:•~
5&lt;:.,o::r,:6::-I=:
•·..:
•=
•6:_·9=568
=·:,-_
Sot. or Sun.
Ohio . Sponsored by Racine
- ned to State Highway Goroge
992·3923
BUILDING
SITES
lor
safe.
l
·
ocre
Firemen·!. Au• .
MIXED c'ONDITIONEQ hay .
o n Route 7. Phone (614) 985·
18 ACRES on lincoln Hill with
lots . C.ity water. 992-5869 Of
Shade, Ohio . 61-4-1!&gt;96-123-4 .
3825 .
YARD SALE ." 810 ·s9u th Lnd St ..
water and !oewoge. Make on of985-3595 .
Middleport . Ohio. Augus t 2 . 3.
197~ PONTIAC VENTURA . 6 cyl. CH IP
WOOD . Po les max . SILVER QUEEN conn ing . corn ond
fe r. Phone 992 -6333 or THREE BEDROOM house for sole SEWING ¥ACHINE Repa irs , ser·
4. 5, Solid oak d rop leaf table, 4
tomatoes . Delbert Patterson.
$2000. 992·7.53 .
diameter 10 ". on lo;gest end , S8
11ice, oil moke5, 992-2284. The
992 · 57:1~ .
by ow~er , reasonab le pr ice .
cohi
rs
,
silver,tone
,
dishes,
Great Send . Call 643 -2242 .
per ton , Bundled slob, $6 per
Fabr ic Shop , Pomeroy .
1972 PlYMOUTH DUSTER . P.S..
SAVE;
BV
Owner
,
Small
form
,
Welshtown
Rd.,
Miners
vill
e
.
linens , silverware . Avon ,
ton. Delivered to Ohio Poll•t 20 FOOT CHEST type Coldspot
Author
i'zed Si nger Soles and
A. .C. new tires. economical .
complete!-., fenced , woven
992-5754 .
drape s, curtains , lots of
Service, We sharpen Scissors
Co .. Rt. 2. Pomeroy . 992-2089 .
deep freeze. 985:3862. Charles
$10'15 . 985·3596.
clothing . furniture . Somethi,ng
wire, 2 barns . storage building, THREE BEDROOM home on 3
Chaffee. Silver Ridg~ Rd ,
for everyone .
city water. dr illed well , Iorge
acres . Close to school. Pr iced E.XCAVATING . doler. loader and
1973 GRAN TORINO station TIMBER. POMEROY Forest Products . Top price for 5tonding CANNING TOMATOES . Bring your
backhoe wor k: dump tru cks ' ·
I -4 ,.; ~ '!lobile home. 2
reasonably . For more informo wagon . A.C. , P.S.. P.B. M ,OOCI
YARD
SALE
.
Cl~ro
Phillips
.
behind
sow limber . Coli 992-596S or
cind lo-boys. for' hi re; w ill haul
bedroom,
living
room.
l.:itchen
,
lion
,
call6l-4
·992-5126.
own contioner. Pick )'Our own .
miles . 9&lt;n-57B6.
grdde school in Rutland. Avon
Kent Hanby , 1-446--8570.
fill dirt , to soi l, limesto ne and
both, firep la ce , central air ,
Marshall Roush . East l8tort .
bottles , d resses , 22 '1, Ol"\d,20'1r .
1972 IN TE RNATIONAL Scout •h:-4 .
total electric , 2 porches , win - HOUSE FOR sole , Rust ic Hills .
grollel.
Call Bob or Roger Jef2•7
·3752.
OlD FURNITURE . ice bo-es , brass
MiK Thurs . Jrd on ly. Call
992-5397 .
fers , day phone 992-7089 , nigh t
dow o.wnings . cedar fence in
Syracuse .
J
be droo m s .
beds , iron bed!. . desks . etc .,
H2·2823.
fro nt. Beautiful setting . somw
carpeted , A.C. , storage _ _ehone q92- ~5 25 or 992 - 5232.
,..:..:~::::..,__~~- - - - 1969 FORD FAIRLANE 500 . Std .. . complete households. Write
pa!.lure , sQme woods and
building , some appliances. h TWO
FAMil V Yard "Sole . Aug . 3,
low mileoge . Fi rm. S-400.
M.D. Miller, Rt . 4, Pomero~ or
EXCAVATING , darer , backhoe
more. A· l canrl:tion. (oil
cellent condillion . 992-5348 .
4. 5. ·Botto m of Massar Hill,
992-7363
call m -7760.
and ditcher . Charles R. Hat -·
614-098· 2(!65.
ant ique s .
White
SOme
field . Bock Hoe Ser\lice ,
1972 FORD PINTO Runabout . 2· Ot:D COINS , pocket watche5 ,
uni forms . si1e lb 'lr .
door. In good co nd ition. Coli
d on ring, , wedd ing bond1,
-~:;;iiiiiiii~~~a~ Rutland . oh io . Phone 742-2008.
YARD SALE , 3 family . Wed ,, Aug.
992-31&gt;18 .
diamonds . Gold or sil ver. Coli
Will do roofin g . constru,clion .
8
om
til
l
dark
.
Roger
Beegle
2.
RogerWomsle'l . 7-42·2331 .
Plumbing and hAOting . No job
1969 CHEVROlET NOVA . V·8.
Form . 12-4 out of Rac ine, post
too Io rge or too small . Phone
s tandard . Phone 9B5·-4271 .
WANT TO buy . Util ity trailer.
high school about 3 miles. turn
7&lt;2 - 2~8 .
left on County Rd . 35 , about 3
61•·985 ·•32_9c_·- - -- - HOWERY
AND MARTIN h ·
miles out . Watch for signs .
WE PICK up junk auto bodies buy'CO\Ioting , septic systems ,
~===~======
ing junk cars, scrap iron. batYARD SALE . 591 Broadway St.,
dozer , backhoe, dump truck ,
teries and metals . Rider's
Middleport . Wed . and Thurs .
1 MALE puppy . 3 months old , 55:3
lime stone, grovel , blacktop
VI'"'ILB.
SR
.
~~~
Salvage.
SR
·124,
Pomeroy
.
Nice children 's clothing. odds
So Fou rt h Ave .. Middleport .
paving
. RL 143. Phone I (614)
q92.5468.
992.3325
ond ends .
Phone q92-7b23 .
b98·733t.·
--=c--,.---,--,---,:2\6 ,E . Second StrM!._
SELLER NEEDS A
RUMMAGE SALE . Wed . thru Sat .
LUMBER FOR firew90d . 991 -6208. ROOMING HOUSE or Iorge hou'e
PULLINS EXCAVATING . Complete
on land contra ct. $1000 down,
quick sale on this good
Post fire house in Syracuse on
Service , Pho ne 992-2&lt;478 .
BRICK
HoME
12
rooms
S200 a month . Write or call colhome.
2
acres,
storage
$econd st. , blue house . Record
at a really good buy . Ha• 4
lect
:
Anno
Ha
ines
,
95
7
PUDDLE POOLS. All sizes a0d
buildings, work shop . 4-5
player, TV. lots of clothing. oil
ANAHEIM , Calif. (UPI)PEACHES ,. MASON peach or·
baths and Is on a corner lot
l ock bourne Rd .. Columbus . OH
bedrooms,
trl -chlmney
shapes. Swim pools . 2 years
sites . Rain or shine ,
chord . 10om to6pm
Chris Knapp , who walked out
near
!he
hearf
of
!own.
43200. 014 - 2S3 · S~81.
experience . free est imates ,
FIREPLACES.
Original
Wanf
jusf
$23,000.
in a · salary dispull! after the
1973 CHEVROLET IMPALA . P.S.. YARD SALE . 257 Main Street , Mid·
anything yo u ne ed lor
woodwork
,
In
good
NEW LISTING Nice
dleport . Thurs. a nd Fr i, August
P.B., auto. A.C. . 4-door ha rd AI!Star break, was reunited
underground swim pool1 . New
condition .
Close
to
modern home In new
3
&amp;111
.
"
1
0om
to
-4
pm
.
Women''
top
,
$~50 .
Reg
is
tered
Ap·
chem ical and supply store .
Pomeroy . $25 ,000.00.
with the California Angels
subdivision
.
Has
·
3
clothes sizes 12, 1~ . 16.
polooso yearling filly. Boy with
Albony , Ohio . Phone
FARM - 25 acres, lenclng,
Monday night and ~pologized B &amp; S MOBILE HOMES . Pt . Plea·
bedroom•, belh , garage,
Children's clothing . infant and
w~ite
blanket . 992 -7644 ,
614-698-6555 . ( After 6 pm ,
barn , nicely remodeled
and
largelof
.
Total
elecfrlc
to his teanunates in a preup.
Baby
items
.
Double
rin!ie
a nytime .
sant, W. Vo . bas idv He&lt;:k 's .
b 1•·b89·52S 1 John Jelter!o or
home
In
excellent
home on Ohio Power .
tubs , utility cart, etc
meeting before a g~~D~e 1973 Broodmo re 1~ ~~: 64 2 1972 FORD CUSTOMIZED "'on . h ·
689-521!15
B.ill Gillette . ) We are
condlfloo
.
Basemen!
and
$27,500 .
bedroom
NO T oil wet on PRICES.
many other features . This
against the Oakland A's.
celfenf condition . 54 ,000 miles .
NEAR
DEXTER
1973 Dor ion 14 x 60 2 bedroom
should have been sold for
~3600 q49-2bll'l.
Angels' Manager Jim 1972 Vic torian 14 x b7 3 bedroom .
Country home wlfh 6
NE IGLER BUILDING s~,~ppl 'l for
SJO.B51.00
rooms, central heating,
building ho use!. , repair work
Fregosi announced Knapp
2 both
MEN 'S USED worl! pants and
NEWER
RANCH
In
--- - ..
large
living
with
and cabin.ts , Call Guy H.
shirts, used co\lerolls . Walker
was being sent to the bullpen 1972 Coven try 12 • 65 3 bedroom
good neighborhood,
3
Nelgler .. 9-49-2508 after 5 pm .
woodburnlng fireplace,
ond Georgie insulated work
to get into condition. But, 1969 Statesman 12 x 60 2
bedroom. Beaufllul nearbf.
basement, and around 10
bedroom .
boo ts . D·E· EEE widths . $26 .95 ·
REEVES TRADING Po1t , Pagevllle .
level lof: Parf basemen .
while Fregosi said he wanted
acres. Want only 533,500.
S39.95. First quality . Bailey 's
Groceries , dry goods, · hardMany
nice
features.
Fair
COAL'
.
LIMESTONE
.
sond,
grovel,
NEW LISTING - 2 large
Knapp to pitch himaelf back
Boots , Middleport .
wore, feed . tack shop. Special
Markel
Value
al
$25,500.00.
calcium chloride , fertilizer , dog
tots
In
restricted
into shape, he didn 't prornlle
251b. ol dog food . SJ.ea.
MOBILE HOME -In good
food . and oil types of salt . Ex · liKE NEW fri nged 9~e 1:2 100' nylon
subdivision. Has T. P .
him a spot in the starting
condition t2 x 60 . Nice level
rug , color ruuet. green . beige .
ce lsia r Soft Work s. Inc.. E. Main
water
and
electric
AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE been
lol. Equipped klfchen In
St .. Pomeroy . 992-3891 .
Sears patte rn , Ameri can
rotation.
available .
Build your
cancelled? lo1t your operators
good
location
.
Only
Rena issance . US mode. Two·
license ? Phone 992·21•3.
dream home here. S6•.soo .
CANNING TOMATOES . Harry Hill
18.500.00.
si1e -40 le;!sure §Uils in good
t MILE OUT NO. lt3 PLAY NINE holes w!ththe course
Form. l etart Falls . Ohio.
A STEAL - Nice home,
conditio n. 7-42-2301.
1975 1&lt;' x 70' Holly Park ,
112 baths.
profeuionol. He'll onaly1e your
full
basement.
1
mobile home and .80 of on
game and try for inprovement.
•ma
ll
yord
.
Equipped
Any
u
.s
.
mado
cor
-ports
acre. Cenfral heaf and air
the one you he lped the most
Coll985 ·3961 .
klfchen . Onl~ $8,500.00.
extr• If needed. Excluclos
condlllonlng. Rural water ,
_wa s you .
MIDDLEPORT- 2 sfory,
po11t1o,
and
nice
outbuilding
.
front-wheel drive c•rs.
PISCES (Feb . . ZO·March 20)
remode led
downstairs.
$17,500 .
Th ings appear about to take a
carpeting, efc . Jlsklng
BRICK STREET - Wa llt
turn lor the be tt e r romance$t5,000 .00 .
to the stores from vour
wise, Look your spil1iest t_oday .
RANCH
TYPE
home. w.llh Income. City
Cupid may arrang e a renpez WEll dr illing. Willia m T.
EKcellent condlilon, 3
water, natural gas. and on
vous .
Grant . ?&lt;42· 2879.
bedroom,
2
baths.
Covered
Ohio
Power
.
Good.
locallon
ARIES (March 2t·Aprll t9)
po~~llo. ce~tral air, music
HOUSE PAINTING , indoor or outfor only 19,600 .
large project requiring a creand Intercom system.
door . No lob too big or small.
BASHAN 3 bedroom
at ive touch are your c up of tea
Level
fenced
yard,
Reasonable prices . 992-b368.
frame home with rural
todijiy . Vo u also have the ability
Middleport
Elementary .
to ins pire coworkers to use
waler, nafural ga•, and 3
Will
DO boby sitting In m)' home
Many othor foafures :
the ir imag ina1ion. too .
car garage . Lots of
in
Middleport
. Mrs . John l';'on1.
$32,500 .
TAURUS (April 10-May 20)
outbuildings and over an
992 ·25" .
LARGE
STATELY
HOME
acre of land . Woodburnlng
Through use of Jour good
Beautiful/ equipped
Will I&lt;EEP children in my home.
humor you shout
have no
fireplace too. All this for
kltche&lt;~ - Could be a show
Monday thru Friday . 7 om til
difficulty getting others to do
$16,000.
place . 115,000.00
00 pm . 9'12-70.0.
you r bidd ing today . You make
SPECIAL
BEFORE YOU IUY OR
e"'en the mundane seem li ke a
WE . NEED 1,500 ACRES
PRICE
SELL
YOUR
lEST WILL BABYSIT in mv home.
fun game .
OF FARMS ALL IN ONE
Explros
992-6309.
INVESTMENT
MAY
IE
GEMINI (May Zt-June 20) II
PIECE. DO YOU AND
August 10, IJ71
AN
APPRAISAL
IY
A
something big Is on Ihe lire thai
YOUR
NEIGHBORS
QUALIFIED
represe nts substanJial gains,
WANT TO SELL.
APPRAISER. IF WE CAN '
don 't put it off tomorrow ._
IE OF ANY HELP,
You're a dynamite clos·e r
G. Bruco Tulord
Coli now for oppolntment.
PLEASE CALL.
Ioday .
Holen L. Tulord
' 10 x 50 TWO bedroom mo611e
HE.NRY E. CLELAND
CANCER (June 2t ·July ZZ) The
_
home, SHIOQ. 992-5858.
Sua P. Murplly
1
secret lor success today : Be
As-latoa
lWb
NASHUA l-4 "M 3 bedroom
JR.
positive and see yourself as
SR. CERTIFIED
C.rsey, Mlr.
1
V
r
bath. undeor-plftnlne. $1500
Hou•.inq
APPRAISER
lucky . What you envision will
Phone 992·2111
and auume loan . 949-2683 or
manliest Itse lf in rea lity .
ln·225t, "3·25..
Pomoroy ln-2111
IU3·3311 .
H !!dl lquartl~r c..
/NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN )
'
"2·61f1
II:( AltO
FOUND ' BLACK female poodle
puppy . 949-2065 . Mc,KenJie
Ridge area'.
FOUND ON Mulberry Hgh . 2
weeks ago: young male
medium si1ed dog . mixed
breed . White long haired with
block &amp; brown markings . White
flea collar . Phone 992-347B.
FOUND: LARGE German sHepard .
Irish Setter . Bolek , Red collar .
Between
12-4
and
Rutland ,99:2-7-481 .

I

TUESDAY, AUGUST t , 1970

399 W. Ma 't n St.

GARAGE SALE continued . New
items everv day . H.A. Cole
residence . Tuppers Plains
Ohio .
TWO FAMIL '( Vord Sale . Thurs ..
and Fri. Aug . 3rd and 4th from 9
:100 Main St.
f __
till 4. Fir-st road to the left off
Pameroy, Ohio
new Rt , 3J north (long Hollow
Pomeroy t92-6212
Rd .). follow signs . 30" drop-in
or
6 ·i 6 3
electr ic range; women's and
children's clothing , lots of Avon
8 A.M. to4:30 P:M.
bottles. and many mise items .
ES AND SERVICE
Ever11thing
in good condition.
SAL
·' 11 ·9·1fC
'
.
fOUR FAMIL V Yard Sale. Kenneth \,.L------...:.;;,:.::.:.;-.:.J
Davis residence , 2 miles east of r - . - - - - - - - - 1
Chester on SR 2-48. 9 .am to 4
pm, Thurs . and Fri. , Aug . 3 &amp; 4.
Clothes . children's cloth ing and
table lamps .
YARD SALE . Baby bed, pony sod ·
die, clothes, toy!., Hondo 50 '~'• mile oH Ri. 1 by-pus an
mini bi'-:e, 75 Suzuki molorcy·
St . Rt. 12t toward Rutland,
cle, ro llar skates and ny "pther
0.
items . Thurs and Fri. Aug . J &amp; 4 .
9 to 5. On Route 7 Bypass · tu r"n
Aufe &amp; Truck
right a quarter of o mile post
R•
·~
1-43 junction .
•'
epa I
JWO FAMIL v Yord sale . o.s .
Also Transmission
Thurs. and Fri . 3rd and 4th . 2
Repair
bikes , teen boys' and girl s' and
Phone 992-5682
ladies clolhing, drapes , shower
rod , gomes , boqk_s , air com - L - - - - - - __.4.;..·;:.30-;_t;_tc.;..,J
pressor. Block below 4-way
stop at 7th and Main in Mid ·
dlepor t.

r

TELEVISION
VIEWING

L.OWER ·
ECHELON
·APPARATUS

1 U~Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Soap 6, 13: ABC News 33;
Movie " The Brotherhood" 10; 12 : 00-Jan~kl ·
33.12 :05-Movle " Return to Earth" 6,13; 1 ' DOTomorrow 3,4 ; 1: 15-Kojak 8; 1:45-News 13.
Movie Channel 4 ~
5 &amp; 9 P .M . - The Deep (PG )
7 &amp; 11 P .M . - Outlaw Blues ( PGI
WEDNESDAY,AUGUST2 , 1911
S"l5-farm Repor113 ; 5:50-PTL Club 13; 6 :00-PTL
Club t5 ; Sum1per Seme!ler 10.
6:30-News Conference • : News 6; Summer Semester
8; Christopher Closeup 10; 6 :4$--Mornlng Report];
6 :5G-Good Morning, West VIrginia 13: 6 :55-News
13.
1 :00- Today 3 ,~. 15; Good Morning America 6, 13; CBS
News 8: Underdog 10: 7 : 2~huck While Reports
tO.
1: 30--Schoolles 10: 8 :OD-Capt . Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame
51 . 33.
9 :00- Merv Griffin 3 ; Phil Donahue 4 , 13, 15;
Emergency One 6 ; Brady Bunch 8; Tic Tac Dough
io.
.
9:30--Andy Griffith 8; Family Affair 10.
1o:oo-card Sharks 3,t,15: Edge of Night 6; Tic Tac
Dough 8; Joker's Wild 10 : To Tell The Trulh 13:
Over Easy 33.
10:3()-Hollywood Squares 3,4,15 ; High Hopes 6; Pr'lcl
Is Right 8, 10; S20,000 Pyramid 13; Paint Along Wltll
Naf1CY Komlnsky 33.
11 '00-High Rollers 3,4, 1S; Happy Oay• 6, t3: 11:30-Wheel of Fortune 3, t5; Family Feud 6,13; Parlrldge Family 4; Love of Life 8,10: 11 , 5s-&lt;:BS
News 6: Loving Free 10.
12 :(»---Newscenter J ; New.s A,6, 10; Amer ica Alive 15;
Young &amp; the Restless 8; Midday Magazine 13;
Walch Your Mouth 33.
11:3()-Ryan' • Hope 6,13; Bob Braun 4; Search for
Tomorrow 8,10; French Chef 33 .
1 ,DO-For Richer, For Poorer 3; All My Children 6, 13:
News 8; Young &amp; The Reslless 10: Not for Women
Only 15; Way II Was 33 .
.
1 :30--0ays of Ou~ Lives 34, 15; As The World Turn•
8;10; Lowell Thomas Remembers 33 .
1 :t»--ne. Life to Live 6, 13; Five Red Herrings 33.
2:30-Doclors 3,4, 15; Guiding Light 8,10; 3:ooAnother World 3,4, 15; General Hospital 6, 13; L.lllas
Yoga &amp; You 20,33.
·3:30--AII In The Family 8,10: Almanac 20:
Economically Speaking 33 .
4:QO-Mister Cartoon 3; Superman~ ; For Richer, For
Poorer 15; Addams Family B; Sesame 51 . 20,33;
Match Game 10; Olnoh 13.
4:30-My Three Sons 3: Gilligan ' s Is. 4,8; Bafman 10.
.5,00-Monroes 3; My Thre&lt;! Son• 4; Gunsmoke 8;
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20 .33: Voyage to the
Bottom of the Sea 10; Emergency One! 13; Petticoat Jun ction 15.
5:30--Cdd Couple 4; News 6 ; Elec . Co. 20,33; Hogan's
Heroes 15.
6:00-News 3,4,8, 10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20;
Making Things Grow 33 .
6 :30--NBC News3,4.15 : ABC News 13: Andy Grlffllh6;
CBS News 8,10; ' Over Easy 20; Antiques 33.
7:00-Cross.Wits 3,4: Newlywed Game 6. 13; Last of the
Wild 8; News 10; Gilligan ' s Is. 15: Dick Cavell 20;
People and Places 33.
·
7:30--AII -Star Anything Goes 3; Sha Na Na 4; Wolfman
Jack 6 ; Fam ily Feud 8; MacNeii.Lehrer Report
20.33; TheJudgeiO; In Se•rchOf 13; Wi ld Kingdom
15;.
8 : DO-Movie " The Adventures of Frontier Fremont"
3,4,15 ; Eighf is Enough 6,13; Carol Burnell 8,10;
World 20: Nova 33.
9 ' 0D-Charlie'S Angels 6,13; Movie "The Con.
versatioi1" 8, 10;. Greo!lt Performances 33; Poldark
II 20
10 ,00--Poli&lt;e Woman 3,4 ,15; Starsky 8. Hulch 6,13;
Arch itectural Ody•sey 33 ; News 20 .
10 ,3()-How To 20; 11 ' 00-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; Dick
Cavell 20: Lilias . Yoga &amp; You 33 .
11 :30--Johnnv Carson 3,4, 15; Pollee Storv 6, 13; Hawaii
•F ive·06; ABC News 33: Movie " The Slrange Love
of Marlha .I vers" 10.
12 :00-Janak l 33 ; 12 :40--Mystery of the Week 6,\3:
Kolak 8.
1:QO-Tomorrow 3,4; 2: 1()-News 13.

KIDS AND PARENTS
ARE ALWA1'5 ARGUIN6
~OUT SOMETHING

BUT KIDS 1-lAVE
Ti-lE AI/VANTAGE

1&lt;105 !-lAVE BETTER
BENCH STRENGTH ~

SPOT

J

.~

..

,_,
'•

••

'

�8- 'nle Dally Se~l , Middleport-Pcmeroy, 0.1 TUesday, A\111. 1, 19'18

J)AUGHTER BORN
Mr. and Mrs. David Scragg
of Belpre are amoul)!'ing the
birth of their lint child, ·a
daughter, born July 7, at St.
Joseph's
Ho s pital ,
ParkersbUlll, W, Va. She
weigl\ed seven jlounds and six
oun~-es and has been named
Sar11h Elizlobeth. Mrs. Scragg
is uie fonner Carrie Roe of
Point Pleasant. Maternal
grandparents are Mrs. Glenna Roe and tbe late Dallas
.Roe of Point Pleasant, and
the paternal grandparents
are Mr. aild Mrs. Clyde
Scragg of Rutland.

•

5 charged

EXTENDED FORECAST
. Thnday
Salafda.:y, a e•aace of
IConi iiiii&lt;'U from paKe I)
ohow~ nandar ud lair
the road Into a ditch:
Frtuy
aad Salarday.
. NEWARK, N.J. (UPI )- A government for inciting wage hike over a Une-year
Moderate damage was .
Htc
..
will
raqe from llle
U.S. District Court judge has w&lt;rkers by firing doZens who period ending in lMl._ With
incurred to his auto .. There
upper
'Its
to
lilt mid lh
lnuecl
a · pr eliminary picketed and called a wildcat previouady won cost of living ·
were no injuries and no
hikes,
their
wqe
wiU
cUmb
walkout
at
the
New
York
injunction barring the New
Th1ll'lllay aDd Fi'lclay aDd .
citations.
llle mid Ml to lilt low Ill
Yol'k Metro local of the Foreign and Bulk .Mail Center (9.5 percent during ·the
second
accident
occurred
A
period. •
.
.
Salarday
' Lowt will .....
American Postal W.orkers in Jersey City. .
atl2 noon on private property
Klein said tbe union was
"We believe that to restrain
from
doe
apper Ill lo lilt
Union from cmductlng a
in · Lebanon Township.'
upper•.
·
strike vote.
. the conduct of the strike vote · cmeerned about tbe firing or
William M. flader, 32, Weld,
Judge violates the Constitution of workers including some who
U.S. District
Maine was operating a 1971
Frederick B. P.acey said the United Staletl," Klein· honored what they believed
· International tractor and
Mmday the union could not said. "We contend this (vote) was a unlon -!Ninctloned
trailer at the Charles Harris
encourage, participate in or is free speech protected by walkout at .lhe Jeraey City
Produce
at
Portland.
facility.
!lplllllllr a strike vote foc its the First Amendment."
Deputies said as Hader was
Klein. said tl)e federal
"The union is and will
23,000 workers because a
driving his rig around the
cmtlnue
to do everything In
government
and
the
postal
walkout would be illegal.
liuUdlng
(packing house) it
" A strike is against the law service had placed the its power to get thoee people
GATHERING HELD
!!truck a telephone line before ·
of the United States. Thus I workers in a dilficult position back to work as 10011 as
The annual gathering of the
· .Nora B. Tripp family was he could stop, and the pole
can· perceive oo basis in by putting on the bargaining poSllible," Klein said.
snapped off at the ground,
Lacey instructed the union beld SWlday at the home of then
which the union or its table a "take-it-&lt;Jrleave-it"
·t he
to obtain affidavits from fired Olarles and Martha Hoff- hood offell an across
leadenhip could encourage contract .
auto
own·
The national contract, . workers in an effort to get man, Pomeroy. Attending
or set ilp such a strike."
.COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
ed by Mayford A. Harris,
which
has not been approved, them reinstated.
MARVIN ANDKATIIRYN Glasgoo(Modern Poultry,
Lacey said.
were Oris and Nellie Rt. 1, Long Bottom . . T!lei'e Ohio Supreme Court was
gives
workers
a
10
percent
Athens,
were recently . hooored at the Ralston Purina
At tbe same time, Lacey
Bumgarn e r ,
Conni e was slight damage to the asked Monday by the state
'Coo •
.
Chow
Hm&lt;r
Council held at Hueston Wooda State Park
said he would not issue an
Bumgarner, Roger, Ryan Harris vehicle. No injuries Consumers' COWIBel to cancel
Lodge,
College
Corner. To be eligible for the weekend trip,
order barring workers from
and Rodney, Letart, W. Va.; were incurred.
the · Public
Utilities
the
dealership
aold a mlnlmwn of 100 tons of Purina
talking about a strike or even
Harold and Ina Teaford. and
A third accident occurred Commission of Ohio's opinion
Chows.
Also
in
the picture are Tom Siewert, Diviaioo
taking an informal strike poll
Carrie Swisher, Middleport ; at 10:05 p.m. on the Meigs IIJld order approving a $28
Sales
Manager,
and NUe Ramsbottom, Director of
as long as it was not
Kenny and Lois Wyant and
million midMay rate increase
I
I Tim of Harrisonville; Alvin High SChool Parklng Lot by the Columbus &amp; Southern
Operations of the Area Ralston Purina ·office at
sanctioned by the union .
where a parked auto I owned
Circleville; Ohio. Glasgo owns and operates Modem
The judge said it would
MRS. MARION PONN
at the Henderson-· Van Alta- and Barb Tripp, Rodney and by Eric Diddle, Middleport, Ohio Electric Co. on grOunds
Suppiy, Pomeroy.
the
utlllty
failed
to
justify
its
Todd,
Chester;
George
lind
violate an individual's right
Mrs . Marion Robinson Johnston Funeral Home at
was struck by a vehicle being
Joan
Hoffman,
Lisa,
Tami,
request.
to free speech if be issued Ponn, . Hebron , former ·Newark from 2 to I and 7 to 9
backed by Patricia Dyer, Rt.
The .state consumer'
such an order. But he noted resident of l.odi ToWJUihip, p.m. Wednesday. Burial will and Bryan, Middleport ; I, Bidwell.
counsel
notice of appeal said
Vickie
Hoffman,
Pomeroy,
he
in
the
Ale:tander
Cemetery
· an order barring wildcat Athens Co unty, died Monday
According to the report,
·
and
Jerry
Goodin
of
Crown
the
PUCO
opinion and order
strikes, distributing leaflets at Licking Memorial Hospital in Athens County.
Ma. Dyer was backing from
to encourage strikes or in Newark.
City. Unable to attend )\'ere the parking place, the lights was ''unreasonable, tmlawful
Nedra Shinn, Columbus, from a nearby truck blinded and against the manifest
pickeling the postal center
A graduate of Shad.e.''igh
ELSIE R. SPENCE
remains in effect.
- ••
whose daughter, -Katrina , her and She did not see the weight of the evidence," and
Michael Klein , the union 's School, Mrs. Ponn is survived
Mrs. Elsie Roush Spence,
the bride of Larry parked auto behind her.
cited instances were the
by her husband, Fred H. · 71 , 25 7 Wes.t Main St ., became
Nakaniski on Saturday.
attorney, said be was oot sure Ponn ; a dau ghter ; three
Slight damage was in; PUCO erred.
Pomeroy, died Monday afwhether the union is planning
Major Issues in the case are
curred to both veh(clet
an appeal of Lacey's ruling or sons ; four grandchildren ; her ternoon
at
Veterans
construction
work
in
There were no injuries or
what alternate action it might father a nd step-mother, Cecil Memorial Hospital. Mrs.
progress,
treatment
of
citations.
and Ethel Robinson, Athens; Spence was born Nov. 9, 1906,
DINNER PLANNED
Monday deputies in· c ustomer deposits,
~~vernment law ye rs a brother, John Robinson, a daughter of the late Curtis RACINE - The Constant vestigated
WASHINGTON (UPI)
'Dayan and gypt Foreign
a n incident that is amortization of cmsultants' The United States will have to Minister Muhammed Kamel
sought the injunction against Shade, and a sister, Mrs. and Jennie Heaton Roush. BuUders Class of the Racine .
expenses
,
scrubber
cost
a strike vote, arguing that Marga ret Tu cker , Bea ver She -was also preceded In w..;eyan United Methodist believed to have been caused adjustments and labor costs decide before the end of the at the cmclusion q! the Leeds
death by her husband, Floyd Church is making plans to by a bolt of lightning.
" what is before the court ... is Cree k.
week whether to put forward Castle talks on July 19, said
Sheriff's Investigator GarY during the .test period. The its&gt;own plan in prder ,to break he anticipated such a meeting
an
inducement ,
an
Preceding her in dellth Spence; two sisters, Gladys serve a public chick.en dinner
consumers'
·
counsel
had
1n c i t e m e n t ,
a n were her mother, Cora Violet and Bernice Mc- from 5 to 7 p.m. on Aug. 26. Wolfe reports the ,house, argued in the rate case that the deadlock in tbe Middle would take place within two
encouragement to strike... Rogers Robinson, a brother Cullough , and an infant Tickets may be purchased owned by Hal B. Hannon, Rt. the utility failed to justify any East negotiations.
weeks.
1, De1ter, appeared to have
~~'Ibis is not democracy," and a sister,
On Monday , Vance's
brother, Raymond Roush.
President Sadat ,
in
from any member of the class been damaged by some type of the ~ - million it sought.
U.S. Attorney Robert Del •· Funeral services will be · Surviving are a daughter, or reservations made by
spokesman
said, "We are
Egypt
will
announcing
that
said
The
appeal
Tll.fosaid. "This is incitement held at 10:30 a.m. Thursday Mrs. Carol Sisson and three calling 949-2671 or 949-2789. of e1plosion . The electrical const.ru ction
·
VefY
disappointed
President
not
engage
in
further
direct
work
in
receptacles and fuse box
to do an illegal act. What 's at the H~ghes Funeral Home granddaughters, Angela ,
Anwar
Sadat
has
announced
negotations
with
Israel
progress, the largest dollar
indicat~ that a high voltage
democratic is to Jet the in Athens where friends may Amanda and Amy Sisson, aU
present that Egypt wUI not
amount
in dispute at " under
had gone through the system
workers vote on the ca ll a ny time Thursday of Pomeroy; a sister, Mrs. H.
circumstances.''
wants the participate in another round
burning and blowing the approximately $100 million , United States to reveal its of negotiations."
em tract."
morning until time of ser- D. Goeglein, Pomeroy; a
was
improperly
included
in
plates from the W$ll. The
Hospital Nt&gt;w!i
Kiein
blamed
the vices. Friends may also call brother, Virgil Roush ,
The spokesman cmtinued,
proposals, particularly
the rate base.
notwithstanding,
Pomeroy,. and several nieces Veteraas Memorial H.,.pital window glass was blown out
guidellne.J for
Israeli "This,
The
appeal
also
noted
the
of the house and some of the
Secretary
and nephews.
withdrawal
from
occupied
rl State Cyrus
PUCO
failed
to
deduct
from
Admitted
Samuel
Funeral services will be Williams , Shade; Milton glass from the front windows the r a t e base approximately territories.
Vance will be going to the
held at 10 a.m. Thursday at Geary, Racine ; Larry was blown into a roadway $930,000 in customer deposits,
Israeli officials believe this Middle East· as scheduled, to
the Ewing Funeral Home Whaley , Shade ; Gregory some 15 feet away. An and erred · in allowing a is the wrong time for tbe meet with Prime Minister
with the Rev. Robert McGee Roush, Hartford; Ri chard electric clock had stopped at $690,000 amortization United States to ·present its Menachem Begin and
proposals, although · the President Anwar Sadat."
officiating. Burial will be in Werry, Racine; Alice Mit· I ::zli.
expense for consultants.
The area had been hit by a
The decision that Vance
Chester Cemetery. Friends chell, Pomeroy.
On March · 30, the PUOO Israelis would not object to
heaV¥
electrical
stonn
about
the
United
States
suggesting
may call at the funeral home
should fly to the Middle East
Discharged - Glennie that time. The incident is still granted C&amp;SOE a $28 million
to·
break
specific
ideas
any time.
was made at. a Camp David
rate
increase.
The
Milhoan.
under investigation. There consurners' counselaskedfor negotiating deadlocks.
meeting with President
were no injuries.
The
iosue
carne
to
a
head,
Carter
Monday morning ,
a rehearing on May I, but the
in
what
Sa!lat
describes
as
"a
PUCO denied it May 30.
Post, the Elks Lodge in
very decisive turning point,"
WAYNE WINGETI
IN THE SERVICE
Wayne Wing~t,81, Route! , Athens and was a member
when Egypt pulled back from
ELECTION HELD
Now serving at Iraklion Air
Shade, died . Monday at the and past master of Lodi
its ~greement to attend a
The annual election of the
Station, Crete, Greece, with a
Veterans 'Administration Grange.
REUNION SLATED
forelgll ~sters conference ' Hemlock Grove Christian
Surviving are two sons, u. s. Air Force Security
Hospital in Huntington, W.
The annual Miller family m the Maddie East.
Church has been held. Terry
David
of · Jackson and Service unit is Staff Sergeant reunion will be held Saturday
Va.
Vance, .after checking · ~ CuD urns was named as a
Mr. Wiligett was born in Thomas of Delaware ; a James 0 . Hoffman, son of at Forest Acres Park begiM· statement with both Israeli trustee for three years and
Bedford Township, Meigs daughter, Mrs. Tony (Jean) Mrs. Lyta M. RouSh of Rt. I, ing at II a.m. and continuing Forei~n Mm ister Moshe Helen Quivey as a deaconess
County , a son of the late El!- Lauro of Franklin Furnace ; Letart , w. Va. Sergeant throughout the day , Botll dinfor three years. Named to
a
precision ner and supper will be enworth and Minnie Whetstone six grandchildren ; four Hoffman,
serve one year were Mildred
Wingett. He was a graduate brothers, Ernest, Racine: measurement equipment joyed by the the reiatives and Actions filed
Ziegler, superintendent;
of Athens High School , class Lowell, Chiefland , Fla .: technician, was previously friends of the Miller family ·
Muriel Bradford, assistant
. of 1916, and auended Ohio Franklin, Eclectic, Alabama, assigned at Karamursel Those attending are to take ~
superintendent
; Sara
Defense
In- basket dinner and their own in Meigs Court
University. He taught school and Paul of Palatine Bridge, Common
Cullurns,
treasurer
; Denise
for a number of years in Lodi N. Y.; two sisters, Mrs. Finis stallation, Turkey . The table service.
Marshall,
assistant
Two suits for money and
· Township , Athens County, Outterson, Columbus, and S.rgeartt is a 1968 graduate of
three actions for d~lution treasurer; "Gayla Roush ,
and operated a general store Mrs. George.(Jarie ) Yozie of Wahama High School in
of marriage were filed In secretary ; Jane Hatelton ,
Mason, W, Va.
at Pratts Fork for several Bridgeport, Conn.
Preceding him in death
Meigs County Common Pleas assistant ' secretarY : WaUace
years. He was an active
Bradford, aongleader , and
Court Monday.
SET DATES
member of the Democrat were his parents, his wife,
Jane
Hazelton, assistant.
Schneider Transport, Inc.,
The Athens Birth Center
Party and a former sherilf of Faye Darst Winget! whu died
will meet on the fir!!! and C:reen Bay , Wis ., filed
REVIVAL SLATED
Athens County. Mr. Wingett, in 1968; a brother, Ray, and a
sister,
Ruth
Boyer.
third
Mondays of each month judgment in· the amount of
There will be a revival
prior to nis retirement,
DANCE TO BE HELD
services
will
he
Funeral
against
Bruce
at
Four
and one-half State St., $759.79
Augo!!! 6-13 at the Mount
owned and operated a dairy
A
teen dance wUI be held
farm in Lodi Township. He held at I p.m. Thursday at the Olive Church , Long Bottom. Athens, above the Cas8 Que Hawley, Pomeroy. Also Gary from 8 p.m. until midr)jght
was a mern ber of the Shade Hughes Funeral Home in Services begin at 7:30 Pasa Restaurant. For more Aspin, Dexter, and Gene Friday at the Forest Acres
Lyons, Racine, flied a suit for
United Methodist Church; a Athens with the Rev. Father Qightly. Daymond Adams information call ~2-3886 Frank
Patala
and
the
Rev.
judgment plus costs against Park on the New Uma Road
will be the guest speaker.
member and past master of
the Meigs County Board of near Rutland. The dance is
Harrisonville Lodge 411, Free •Charles McVey officiating. Lawr ence Buck, pastor,
Health , Me chanic St., being sponsored by the
and Accepted Masons, and a Burial will be in Pratts Fork extends a welcome invitation
Rutland Roadrunners 4-H
REUNION ANNOUNCED
Pomeroy.
past patron of Harrisonville Cem etery with military to the public.
Club.
Admission will be $1 a
Descendants of the . late
Asking for dissolution of
Chapter 255, Order of Es!!!em services to be conducted by
person
and refreshments will
Hiram N. and Sarah Rollins marriage were Debbie
VBS SCHEDULED
Star. He served on the board the New MarShfield Veterans
be
sold.
The Pomeroy Church of will meet at the Racine Locks Triplett, Syracuse, and Clyd~
of directors of O'Bleness of Foreign Wars.'
Friends
may
call
at.
the
Christ,
212 W, Main Street, picnic area Sunday. A Short Triplett, Syracuse; Fossie
Memorial Hospital in Athens ,
REUNION SET
the board of the Athens fWJeral home from 2 to 4 and 7 will hold Vacation Bible program will begin _at 11 :45 Ma1son, Syracuse, and
The
annual
Hayes · Young·
to
9
p.m.
Wednesday.
School August 7-11 from 6:3(). a.m. All relatives and friends Raymond MaliSOn, Syracuse ;
County Fann · Bureau and
Holiday
School
Reunlond will
Masonic
services
will
be
and Patricia A. Woodyard,
8:30 nightly. Classes will be are welcome.
was a pa!!! president ol the
be
held
Sunday
at the school
conducted
at
7:30
p.m.
Long Bottom. ,and James H.
conducted fo r children from
Athens County Fair Board.
grounds.
The
pubUc
is inWednesday
by
the
HarrisonWoodyard,
Pomeroy.
.
age 1 through teens. For
He was a member of the
vited.
ville
Lodge.
One 's JUSt right for you ' Come, let us
more information call 992Athens American Leg ion
MEET TONIGHT·
s how you how to e arn the abso lute
2926 .
The
Drew Webster Post of
hig hest interesl as you save ' See us'
the
American
Legion will
CAMP
MEETING
'
" THE
There will be a two-week meet this evening at 8 p.ni.'at
camp ..meeting at Maplewood the post home. RepresenFRIENDL Y
Lake in Syracuse beginning tatives to Buckeye Boys State
Monday , July 31 at 7:30p.m. will be special guests.
nightly. 0 . G.,McK:iruiey will
BANK "
be the guest eyangelist.
There will be special singing
NOW YOU KNOW
and the public is invited.
King Mongut of Slam
Walk-Up Teller Window and
depicted In the Broadway
musical "Anna and the King
MEETING SLATED
Auto Teller Window
of
Siam" ~ may have been
There will be a meeting of
the
most married monarch Iii
~ Sutton TownShip Trustees
Open Friday Evenings 5 to 7 P.M.
hillloty,
with 9,000 wives and
this evening at 8 p.m. at the
concubines.
Syracuse Municipal Building.

Injunction is issued ·

t••n••

$892,440 funding
okayed for Meigs
'.

Wants

• •
opm1on

cancelled

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

! Area Deaths !

ROYALTY of the Meigs County JWlior Fair was named Tuesday night at the Meigs High .School. The group
from the left includes, Noah Hysell, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Olan Hysell, Minersville, and Cindy Pitzer, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Piizer, Long Bottom, , second

Decision
expected

~Ll

(() 8

LUT.
••
witt.
mm ul

9'lY
Ol!P
S9Yhl€S ~Pll€P9ffiS

ELBERFELD$

TlJBE

SOCI\S

' . VO[. XXIX

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

-.

Meinber Federal Deposn Insurance Corporation
DEPOSITS INSURED TO '40,000

rb.f;{1~~-:\
sz;;i;~}\,
•''IIJ

~':. •1.

:\.,..~

~ .... ~

C..,.~·=;·
~

GOESSLERS
JEWELRY STORE
Court St., Pomeroy, O.

your beMmenl • ott.r hlall
moisture arHt for .. only
p.ml• a day In -r111na
c:aot . Shut a off aulomatteatty.
Humldla!Ht CCIItrota, 15 pint

capoctty .

$13911
BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLIPORT

NO. 76

•

at

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Big new selection - while with colored toDa . Mach ina
washabte, tumble dry, new lmJ"'ovld quaHty. Two alza
renges 7to.11 and f to 15. Men und boy a' &lt;~eparlmant
on the lSI floor .

'125PAIR

••

•

Announcement was made
at Tuesday's regular meeting
of the Meigs County Commission that the board's
$75,000 grant requ est for the
multi-purpose building had
been approved by the Ohio
Department of Mental
Health.
.
Contracts for _the buildirlg•"
were awarded to Karr
Constr ucti on,
Pomeroy ,
general, $729,000; Southeast
M~c~olcal ,
Cl)llllcotbe;
mechanical, 1!03,517; A. :f.
Stockmeister, Ja ck s on,
plumbing , $76,313; an d
Pickering Electric, Mari etta ,
ele~tric,
$121,000 . Co~!!!ruction of the complex IS
scheduled to begin within the
next two weeks. Ground
breaking ceremonies will be
held August 16.
Nora Harris, Bill Carr ,
Mrs. Howard Parker, Grace
Weber, and MaMlng Webster
of the 169 Mental Retardation
Board met with the com·
missioners to discuss the
mental retardation program
for Meigs County.
Commissioners pointed
out, thB:t in order to continue

and renovation of a
residential halfway house in
Cincin nati, $15,882 for
equipping a residential home
in Elida, $620,093 for con-

in Dayton, $87,000 · for in·
stalling air conditioning at
Northview school in Dayton,
and $68,250 for repairs on a
training center at Lis.,bon.

struction of a wurkshop in
Ma~etta, $102,500 for purchase and renovation of a
home
in
res identia l
Washington County, $162,000
for purchase and renovation
of a fac ility for use as a halfway house a nd day treatment
program at Cincinnati.
Also, $748,520 for erecting a
workshop in Xenia, $35 ,000
for a healing system at a

HERE AUG. 9
On August 9, a representative from Congressma n
Clarence E. Miller's office
will conduct an open door
session fr om 10 a.m.-12 noon
in the co urthouse in
Pomeroy.
If anyorle has any question~

tra ining center in Napoleon ,

conce rn ing ·t he

$15,000 for construction of
storage buildings at Northview and Southview schools

Government, please stop b'
to discuss them with th·

Feder a '

representative.

en tine
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST ~ 1978

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

....,.

the program, It would be
necessary to place an
operat ing levy on th e
Nov ember ballot. The
program has been supported
since December of 1977 with
county General Fund monies
after the expiration of the ·.20
mill levy.
It was decided to place a
1.25 mill levy on th e
November ballot lor the
purpose of maintaining the
atate m••datod IUD&amp;.Bi
refl!rdatlon program. ·
In other business, a letter
was received from Dorothy
Johnston, 'clerk. of the Meigs
County Board of Elections,
statirg the Elections Board
had .unanimously endorsed a
reso lution requesting the
board of """mmissioners to
advertise for bids for a single
punch card voting and
tabulating system.
Finally,
a
lengthy
discussion ·was held con cerning the operations of the
COWlty hi ghway department
and the road conditions. All
members of the board .were
present.

wo_rl_d_To_d_a_y_
1j.,~)L-_rh_·e__

MARY MORA, daughter uf Mr. and Mrs. Don Mora of
Pomeroy, and Charles Calaway, son of Mr . and
Mrs. Guy Cal way, Tuppers Pla ins, were named Meigs
County Junior Fai r Queen and King at the Meigs High
School Tu esday night. They wi ll reign over the junior fa ir
which will be staged in conj unction wit h the 1151h annual
Meigs County Fai r, Aug. Jo-19.
Route 3,

THESE ARE som e of the grand champions named ai
the annual Meigs Coirnty J unior Fai r style revue held at
Meigs High School Tuesday night. From the left are Kim
·Sch ul, topping outfit category; Terrie Starcher, total look

category; Lori Welch, clothing speaks category; Paula
Swindell . clothes for schoo l: Tammy Calaway, joy ful
jump e r , a nd An ge la Co llin s , top to t oe .

Five accidents investigated
Th e Gallia -Meigs Post, the Sanitary Landfill, offi cers vehicles operated by John W.
Highway Patrol, investiga ted investigated a three-vehicle Cox, 34, Thurman, Jinuny
five acci dents Tuesday , two crash in volv ing a dump Fortune, 34, Racine, ~.nd
of which were three-vehicle truck, a pickup truck, and an Elaine P feifer, 20., Rio
misha ps .
Grande, were east bound on
auto.
At 4:10p.m., on U.S. 35, at
The patrol reports i~at 35.

CLEVELAND - A BOMB EXPLODED late Tuesday
night at the Fairmount Elementary School in suburban
Beachwood , doing damage to the front of the building, police
said today.
.
No ooe was injured in the blast, which occurred about
10:30 p.m.

ueariDg progress slowed

I UP!) -

sents aU construction union ,

according to Philip Cocco,

FORT JACKSON , S. C. - Progress in a closed-door
military hearing into the beat stroke deaths of two 18-year-old
recruits after their first day of basic training has been slow, an
Army spokesman says.
·
About a dozen witnesses have te!!!ified before Capt.
Edward Anderson, tbe hearing officer, but as many of 40 to 50
could be called, spokesman Bruce Andrae said Tuesday.

Fire findings forthcoming
NEWPORT, KY . - AFTER HEARING evidence in
private for five mmths, a seven-man, five-woman ' special ·
gancl jury today was aet to present its findings on the Beverly
Hills Supper Club fire rl May 28, 1977. .
·
The CampbeU County grand jury was to present its
conclusions to Circuit Court Judge John Diskin at noon, when
any criminal tndlctmeQts would be made.
The report will afford the first public gUmpee of secretive
testimony and investigation that began Feb. '23 and was
ll:llended beyond the specified 9tJ.day session when
Ccmmonwealth Attorney Louis Ball asked Diskin ·for more
Ume in May.
M(l'ICOW - THE SOVIET UNION, capping a series of
l!peCtacular space firllta in. the past 10 months, today
approadled a cheriahed Unite,d States record as the most
experienced nation In space.
.
As So)'IIJ 21 .-nonauts Vladimir Kovalenok and
Aleunder IviiiCbenluw circle Earth in the Salyut 8 space lab,
the 9oYlels ware to brellk tbe Anlerlcan record of a totll of 937

~· lpelltin

ii!)IICe .

Coal firm offering reward

BENTON, n.L. - THE OLD BEN Coal Co. is offering a
reward for iniCII'IIIItlon leaclinll to the arrest and
Ill the people rt!lpollllible fCJI' a aeries of coal-mine
bomb 111rtat1 dlwlnc tbe pall three months.
. '"111t ._,b hou caDa are not only 1 haraanent to tbe
CGIIIJIIIIJ bul ~ Ill 1,600 employ-." a spoke1111an said
~v

mn''rlcllon

.Cool~ng tower
talks resume

BOUND BROOK, N.J .
Talks begin this '
week with union officials and
The Pfeife r auto stopped the Resear ch-Cottrell in
fo r tr aff ic, the Fortun e forming a plan to fin iSh a
pickup slowed, t he Cox cooling tower at a West
vehicle failed to stop, and Virginia power plant where
st ruck the Fortune truck in 51 men plunged to their
ICont&lt;nued on page lO l
death s la st sprin g in a
scaffolding accident .
Construction of the huge
tower at Willow Isla nd ,
W.Va..
was
stopped
immediately afte r the April
'll disaster .
Technical experts are to
meet
Th ursda y
in
Washington with a safety
committee of the Building
Trades Council that repre-

Oeveland school bombed

tz1 •

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

amount wer e a nursing home

at Warren, $1,113,800, and
construction of a workshop in
Akron, $849,739. The nursing
horrie was given an · extra
$423,800 and the workshop an
extra $309,039.
other projects approved
we re $1 ,200, 000 for construction of a training center
in Marietta , $429,480 for a
workshop in Waverly,
$114,52li for the purchase and
re novat ion of residential
facility in New Lexington,
$147,325 for expansion and
renovation of an adult center
in Ma rysville and $354,750
addition to a workshop in
Bucy rus.
Also, $286,000 for purchase

Commissi
gets grant

Soviets set another record

ADMIRAL
DIHUMIDIPIIRS
Takas the dam,.u out of

•

e

littl~

a..,~s

runners-up ; Mary Mora, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Don
Mora , Pomeroy, and Charles Calaway, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Guy Calaway, Tuppers Plains, 1978 Junior Fair King
and Queen; Ta nuny Pitzer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Clinton Pitzer, and Terri Pullins, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Theodore Pullins, East Meigs, first runners-up .

··Two projects tot aling
$892,44ll for construction of a
training center and a workShop for Meigs Co unty have
been approved by the Ohio
Department of Mental Health
and Menta( Retardation.
Final a pproval is co ntingent upon acceptable plans
and state controlling board
approval.
Meigs County' s projec ts
in cluded $585,000 for a
training center and $3Q'I ,440
for a sheltered workshop.
The larges t grant of
$1,495,000 went to Aircraft
South Workshop in Columbus,
whi ch re ceived an extra
$375,000. Also getting higher
allocations than the_orig inal

lieaching
l

' .

••

NO ONE WAS injured in this three-vehicle craSh,
which occurred on U.S. 35, at 4: 10 p.m., Tuesday. The
; :;: ;:;:;:;:;:; :;:;: ;:;:~;: ; :; :;: ;:;:;: ;:;:;:; :;:;:;:;:;:;:;: : :; :;:;:;:;:;::

EXTENDED FORECAST
Friday throulb Sunday,
fair Friday and Saturday,
with showers Suaday.
Higba wUI be iii the u~r
7h or lower 80s and lows
wUI 1be In tbe upper 5h or
1ower lh.

:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;.,.;:;:;:;.;.;.;::

'

'

~
'

'

.., &lt;t,.
~'

applicants
.~ .

~·

patrol reports moderate damage to the vehicles operated
by (left to right), John Cox, Racine; Jinuny Fortune,
Racine ; and Elaine Pfeifer, Rio Grande.

Pomeroy's Cha mb er of old Pomer~y High School
Co mmer ce , meeting in building. Current plans call
regular session for a noon for the structure to he used as
luncheon at the Meigs 1M a municipal facility housing
Tuesday,' discussed the offices for the Jaycees, Scout
proposed renovation of the Clubs and variou s other
community
organizations.
There would also be a
general auditorium.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
President Fred Crow
by tbe Pomeroy Emergency reported four pledges at
Squad. They were Shukla A. $1,500 each had bene made
Sabilendra, 28, and Prern fortherenovationofroomsin
Kumar Gupta, 13, both of memory of individual perAthens . There we re no sons. Several other monetary
citations and the vehicle was donations have also been
demolished.
received.
Wednesday mornin g, .a
Complete ren.ovation of the
batterY was stolen from an old school would require
auto owned by Tom Gillilan, approximately 1100,000. Fund
Chester, CR 36. The vehicle ra ising plans, including a
was parked about 50 feel Poineroy High School alumni
from the residence. Deputies dri•·e, were discusaed. e row
are investigating the' in· sa id,
" th e
primary
cident.
beneficiary
is
the
village
of
v'

are sought

Ga.llia Co unt y's Local
Board of Education Tuesday
in special session moved to
redu~ its teaching vacancy
Pomeroy, and It would be list with the employment of
· nice to get the entire com- three mstructors.
·muruty involved." .
' Htred on one-year conAlso discussed were plans tra_cts were Verna Lee Page,
for removing the concrete Pomt Pleasant, a~ hbran an
pillars at the old coa l tipple at Kyger &lt;;reek Hagh School;
and turning the site into an Debbie L. Baird, Rt . I '
observation deck. Crow sa id Cheshire, as an elementary
Roy Shepherd, fo rmerly of teacher and T i~a Henck
Davis Insurance an d a Creekmore, Huntmgton, as
member of the National an EMR teacher.
Guard, is seeking help from
According to County
the guard engineers to knock S up e nnt e nden~ ~ ho m~s
down the heavy pilla rs.
Haarston, the dtstrtct ~ttll
In oth er business , ~ he needs . a gar Is phy s a ~ al
chamber called for donations edu ca tiO n all,d health toto the ciea n·ilp committee structor ,
a· ·business
and henrd comments on 1978 · education teacher , and an
Regatta activities.
EMR teacher at the seconPa t O'Brien ann ounced dary level ; two remedial
. $,195 was brought in on· the reading teachers, and a third
Tennis Tournam ent but grade teacher.
trophies for the winners had
Applicants may apply . at
not yet been purchased. Hairston's office at 220
rcorumued on page 10 I
Jackson Pike., ~allipolis.

Renovatl· on chamber

Two injured in accident
Meigs County Sheriff
James J. Proffitt reports
deputies investigated a onecar accident at 3:30 p.m.
Tuesday afternoon.
According to the report ,
Sudhir Kalcker, 29, Athens,
wa s traveling wes t on
Flatwoods Road at the intersection to Old US Rt. 33
wben his· vehicle skidded on
the loose gravel, slid across
old Rt. 33, then traveled over
an embankment. Injured
were passenger• in the auto
who were tran sport ed to

'

•

t~p··

c

director

of

corpora te

commu n ications ' f o r
Research-Cottrell of Bound
Brook, N.J.
,
"The meeting is to discuss
what possible modifications
Iof the tower ) coUld be made
to get the co uncil 's
appro val," to fin ish the
tower , Cocco explain ed
Tuesday.
Work ers were 168 feet
above ground, po uring the
29th concrete layer of the
power plant tower , when the
scaffolding tore loose. The
to wer was designed to reach
a height of 428 feet and was
being built for the American
Electri c Power System 's
Pleasants Power Station.
Rese arc h-Co ttr e ll
is
considering th e removal of "a
couple of layers (of the
concrete 1 to get a clean
start," Cocco Said. The firm
doesn 't plan to demolish the
partly-eompleted tower and
rebuild it from 'the ground up .
"There is absolutely no
plan to destroy th e tower,"
Cocco emphasized.
GRANT APPROVED
Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman was notified loda y by Congressman
Miller's office that a grant
of $128,000 has been approved by HUO for&lt;.~ewer
line extension on~ Powell
Street to service the proposed nursing home in that
area. This was•one of only
lour cities in Ohio approved
under the Urban Development Action Grant Program.
SQUAD CALLED
The
Middlep or t
Emergency Squad was called
to the office 1of Dr. James
Conde, N. Second Ave., at
2: 09 p.m. Tuesday for Oris
Hoffman , Letart, W. Va.
Hoffman had fallen outside
of the office land received a
possible fraCtured leg and
other injuries. He ·was taken
to Pleasant Valley Hospital
by the squad.

'

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="806">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11449">
                <text>08. August</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="49752">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="49751">
              <text>August 1, 1978</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="5444">
      <name>ponn</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="415">
      <name>robinson</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="100">
      <name>roush</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2350">
      <name>spence</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2544">
      <name>wingett</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
