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                  <text>8- The DauY Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 :, Tuesday, Au~. IS, 1978

Switch to low
(Continued from paMe I 1
Rhodes said he · has two principal
.concerns about the hearin~.
"Ole i.s the use of western CQBI and the
other is the installation of scrubbers " he
~d.

I

"With western coal there are a number
of problems. One i.s that it is more
expensive and costs $25 a ton against $S a
ton to get it to the utilities," said Rhodes.
"Secondly they wouJa have too ship a lot
more. It takes three carloads of western
coal to two of Qhio coal to provide the same
amoi.Ull of energy.
·
"Thirdly we would have to worry about
the reliability of delivery," he said. "The
coal comes by rail across the plain states

Parents of Kindergarten
students to meet at Racine

and up the river on barges. We feel Ohio
would run the risk of shortaaes that it ran
"last year be&lt;;ause of the strike if it relies
heavily on western coal."
But the overiding factor, Rhodes said, is
"it would destroy the economy of southeastern Ohio " if utilities switch to low ·
sulfur coal.
Rhodes also said according to the besi
available technology, scrubbers are
unreliable.
·
"They have never been proven with high
sulfur coal," said Rhodes.
Rhodes said the single scrubber in use
by a utility is at the Conesville works of
Qllumbus &amp; Southern Ohio Electric Ql.
''It works only about 30 percent of the
tjme and . causes enormous problems,"
said Rhodes.

There will .be a meeting for
parents of kindergarten
children of Southern Local
District Thursday, Aug. 31 at
7:30 p.m. at the high school
Bobby Ord, superintendent,
announced today.
.
The purpose of the meeting

.~EVAN '(HANKEN, Violet Morarity and Dave Fo&lt;, I tor, were busy preparing an
exhibtl for agenctes ol the. U.S. Department of Agriculture for the annual Meigs County fair.
Repr~nted m th~ exhlbJtwtll be tpe Agriculture Stabilization and Qlnservatlon Service,
the Soli Conservation Serv1ce, Farrners Home Administration and the Edension Service.

!

---------~----------------

1I

Area Deaths
·

Garbage

I

1C:u111 Jl lliL'!I Irom ptJw;e 1J
through town.
They discussed with Don
Ewing ChaJllll. Burial will be ' Lowery damages incurred tO
in Chester Cemetery. Friends lhf basement of his home on
may call at the funeral home LOgan St. recently due to
aft er 7 p.m . this evening.
water. Lowery said in 17 •

·

I

SALLIE S. ALLISON
SallieS. Allison, 90, Racine,
died this morning at Good
Samaritan Medical Center,
zanesville.
She was born Dec. 13, 1887
the daughter of the late
SARAH M. COWDERY
William and Isabelle Wurtz
Sarah M. Qlwdery, 85, Rt.
Savage. She was also . I, Belpre, died early this
. preceded · in death by her morning at Selby General
husband, Harry Allison ; one Hospital, Marietta, followin g
son, Leonard Allison, one an e&lt;tended illness.
daughter, Navada Beaver,
She was born at Reedsville
six brothers and three sisters. the daughter of the late
She is survived by one son, Cinninatus and Ida Bell Mills
Paul Allison, Zanesville ; one Kibble. She ha s been a
daughter, Mrs. Rolland resident of the Reedsville
(Audrey ) Torrance, Tuppers area the greater part of her
Plains; nine grandchildren, life.
21 great-grandchildren and
She was also preceded in
one great· great ·grandchild. death by her husband, Cecil ,
She was a member of the in 1965. Also preceding ner
United Methodist Church.
were two daughters, Olive
Funeral services will be Osborn and Carrie Bell
held Friday at I p.m. at Cowdery, one son, Kibble .
Ewing Chapel with the Rev. Co wdery , and one grandson,
Freeland Norris officiating. Gary Cowdery.
Burial will be in Mt. Herman
She is survived by four
Cemetery at Sharpsburg , sons, Eugene, Reedsville ;
Ohio. Friends may call at the Riley, Marietta ; John,
funeral home after 1 p.m. on Belpre,
and Dale of
Wednesday . .
Columbus; one daughter,
Mrs. Sarah Ann Morrison,
Parkersburg; one brother,
LENORA F. BROWN
Lenora F . B'rown , 87, W. B. Kibble. Akron ; 22
grandchildren and several
Chester, died Monday at the
great-grandchildren
.
.Qlnvalescent Center, Athens.
Funeral services will be
She was born Aug. 26, 1890,
held Thursday at 2 p.m . at the
the daughter of the late J. S.
White Funeral Home in Cool·
and Gertrude Newell Frank.
She was ·also preceded in ville with the Rev. Eldon
Blake officiating. Burial will
death by her husband, Ernest
be in Hetzer Cemetery,
Br'own, one brother, Homer
Reedsville. Friends may call ·
Frank, one sister, Nell White.
at
the funeral home after
She is survived by one
on Wednesday.
noon
daugbter, Jean Ftederlck,
Chester ; one granddaughter,
Shirley Roush, Winter Haven,
MRS. JUNE RICE
Fla .;
one
'greatMrs . June Rice, 61,
granddaughter, Jean Anne Eufaula , Oklahoma. for·
Roush, Winter Haven : one merly of Pomeroy, died
brother, John Frank, St. Monday afternoon . at the
Cloud, Fla.
" Muskogee General Hospital
She was a member of the m Oklahoma foll owing a
Hope Presbyterian Church, lingering illness.
Winter Haven.
Mrs. Rice was born Sept.
Funeral services will be 27, 1916 in Pomeroy, the
held Thursday at I p.m. at daughter of the late Boyd and

Wakeup a
little richer. ..

years at his present residence

water never poured into the
basement as it did a couple of
weeks ago and he asked if the
sewer and catch basin were
stopped up.
Mayor Hoffman said Jhat
two inches of rain fell at that
parti cular lime and he
doubted if th ere was a
problem but he agreed to

Elvis Presley fans plan
•
annzversary gathe~ing

By SUSAN WHt'I'E
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UP!)The sobbing and hyst'eria of ~
year aen are gone , but
thousan •., of Elvis Presley
fans, still clutching flowers
and memories, plan to gather
outside the home of their
have the sewer and catch '
musical king to pay a quieter
basin checked.
kind of homage on the first
anniversary of his death .
Ciara Maag Dilgard. She was
It will be a year Wednesday
also preceded 1 in death by a that the man, adored by
brother, Boyd:
millions, wasfoundaloneon a
Surviving are her husband, bathroom floor of Grace land ,
Gerald R1ce , Oklahoma; his Ill-room mansiOn - the
three sons, Michael J. Rice, ' victim of a heart attack.
Lansing, Mich.; Stephen D.
The death.of the 42-yearoOid
Rice, Oklahoma City, Okla., . MISSISSippi farm boy and Dr . J ohn F. R1ce, ":hose legend made him seem
Traverse City, Mich.; a b1gger than life - stunned a
brother·in·law and sister, Dr. ' world of Presley fans and
M. S. and Yolanda Freeman, touched off a period of
Cleveland : three grand- m?urning almost unrivaled
daughters and two grand· for any entertamer.
sons.
Radio
Luxembourg
Mrs. Rice was a member of cancelled an commercials

i.s for registering otudentl
who did not regitter In the
spring and for !bose who are
plaMing to register.
Parents must bring birth
certificates
and
lmniuniutlon records of their
children.
Questions sucb as busing
and needs of the kindergarten
child will be answered at the
meeting. · The
nell!
registration, for those who do
not register on the 31st, will
be held on Sept. 8.

ReprHenllltlves of the
Meles County Cancer
Society wW be at their .
exblblt at the Metes Fair
everyday through Saturday.
They will be dlatrlbut~g
Hospital News
free literature and a cookbook, Oblo Celebrlly Cook
Vele1'8111 Memorial Hospllal
Book, which features
Admitted - Elva Dalley,
· fa~orlle reclpea from Syracuse; Opal Barr, Mid·
people of Metes County •• dleport; Ida White, Rutland ;
well as lbe other 87 Louis Reibel, Pomeroy;
counties and celebrllleo, Pauline Cunningham,
wDI be oa dlaplay. Donation Minersville; Bernice Molden,
of $S are being asked for Pomeroy; Barbara Hatfield,
the
cook
book. Pomeroy; Wanda Findling,
Represenlatlves wW also Reedsville; Okey Bennett,
have posters aad dllplay Parkersborg; Sadie Bright,
and wm be selling t-sbll1s Gallpolis; Sally Hudson,
Inscribed: "Kiss Me, I Coolville; Debora Zuapan,
don't Smoke".
Mason; Eva Diehl, Racine.
Discharged - None.

the night of his death and shut, ending the public
played nothing but Presley portion of the funeral.
albums. In Tokyo, television
Hundreds of transistor
announcers wept as they read radios blared the songs that
the news of his death . carried Presley 's rise to fame
TWO CALLS
Tributes to the man, who left during the 1950s, such as
In Meigs County Qlmmon
The
Pomeroy
Fire
the United States only when "Hound Dog"- which sold II Pleas Qlurt Carl Lee l:fawk, Depa !1-ment was called to W.
he served in the Army in million copies - "Doo 't Be Sr., Wellsville, and Hazel
Second St., at II :35 a.m.
Gerrnany, were.aired frm Tel Cruel " and " Heartbreak Muine Wiener Hawk, Monday where electrical
Avi" to Uruguay . His Hotel."
Tuppers Plains filed for . wires behind Stiffler's
obituary was run in Moscow.
diSSOlution of marriage.
Department Store had caught
Because of the outpouring
Granted divorce were fire . At6:03 p.m. Monday, the •
of worldwide grief, Vernon
Jettie Stevens from William emergency squad was called
Presley, the 63-year-&lt;lld
G. Stevens; Anne HI!!field 1o the Meigs Museum for
father of Elvis, decided that Gavin Employee
from Robert Hatfield; Mary Lucille Diehl ·wbo ·was tak,en
his son should be shared with
Catherine Bostic from to Veterans
Memorial
his public . .
Ronald Bostic.
idea
gets
award
Hospital.
The musical note gates of
The marriage of Clyde E.
Graceland, that had once
Dennis K. Harris, Mason, Sayre and Cheryl L. Sayre
guarded the Presley privacy , an employee of the General was dissolved .
CLOSED WEDNESDAY
were thrown open, and the James M. Gavin Plant, has
The
Senior Citizens
fans - who had tried every received a cash award for his
Nutritional Program site in
imaginable way to enter the contribution
in
the
Pomeroy and the satellite site
grounds during Elvis ' ''Operations Improvement''
in Racine will be closed
lifetime - were allowed to program of the American
Wedneday. to permit staff
walk up the winding Electric Power System.
members to attend funeral
driveway to the whiteCash awards are given to
services
for Mrs. Alice
"
· employees by American
the Middl~port Church of - - - - - - -··- ·- · columned house.
Parker.
Both
sites will reopen
Meigs County Sheriff
Christ and a member of the
t More than 20,000 were Electric Power for ideas James
on
Thursday.
J. Proffitt reports that
Or.der of Eastern Star at I
j taken, four at a time, into the which improve .sa fety ,
Narsa Moodispaugh, MidNapoleon, Ohw.
'
OCJ
, music room of the mansion, operating conditions, or dleport,
has been cited to
Funeral services will be I
I where the supe.rstar - reduce operating expenses.
Meigs
County
Court on
in
a
white
suit
with
a
dressed
These innovations often
held at 2 p.m. Thursday at the 1
CLOSING FOR FUNERAL
blue shirt and a white cravat result in financial savings charge of illegal dumping
Rawlmgs-Coats
Funeral I
The Meigs Qlunty Senior
- lay in a simple copper being passed on to the con· following her arrest Monday
Home with Mr. George Glaze
afternoon
at
the
dumpster
on
Citizens
Center wUI be closed
coffin.
officiating. Burial will be in
sumer,
and
are
published
in
a
WEDNESDAY
Rt.
7
By-Pass.
~m I tb 3 p.m. Wednesday
60,000
mourners
Another
Gravel Hill Cemetery at
system-wide
magazine
so
ANY STUDENT who
She allegedly dumped a 1!o that staff members can
Cheshire. Friends may call at wishes to play golf for Meigs some of them screaming, other facilities in the system
stuffed
chair on the ground at attend funeral mlces
aobbing
and
lalriting
In
the
9().
the funeral home !rom 5 to 9 High School this year is to
can benefit from them .
degree-plus
heat
never
the
dumpster:
She will al&gt;' Mrs. Allee Parker
p.m. Wednesday.
The cash a.ward was
report to Riverside Golf
it
inside.
A
police
pear
Friday
morning in served. as nutritional
made
presented by J . W. Luzon ,
Qlurse, Mason , Wednesday
helicopter
lwverj!d
over
the
Meigs
Qlunty
Qlurt.
manager for the center.
. Gavin Plant manager.
at 3 p.m. Bring golf clubs as
14-acreestate
as
officers
with
CHARLESHARTENBACH
practice will start Wed·
bullhorns 'begged the crowd
Charles E. Harten bach, 6o ,. nesday.
to
stop shoving as the
of 183 Montana Ave., Chester,
THURSDAY
iron gates swung
wrought
W. Va ., died . Aug. 6 at the
RACINE Grange annual
'Weirton General Hospital inspection Thursday a p.m .
following a lengthly illness.
Potluck refreshments.
Mr. Hartenhach was born
on July 29, 1915 atPomeroy, a
FIFTH INSTALLMENT
son uf Mark Hartenbach and
Gov. James A. Rhodes
Elizabeth Mumaw Harten·
BOWLING LEAGUES
STURDY STEEL BASES WITH WHITE ENAMEL FINISH
announced that the Bureau of
hach .
The Late Monday Night Motor Vehicles is releasing a
He retired in 1965 as a Bowling League will begin fifth .installment of 1978
warehouseman at the Taylor , Aug. 21 at 8 p.m. and the Late lic ense revenues totaling
EASY CARE LAMINATED TOPS FAUCET AND DRAIN SETS 'INCLUDED
Smith and Taylor Co. He was Wednesday League will begin $24,971,814.22 for distribution
a member of the Pleasant Aug. 23 at 8 p.m. at the among county and local
Heights United Brethren in P omeroy Bowling Lanes. governments across th e
Christ Church a·nd the 18- Anyone wishing to bowl on state . Meigs County's portion
PAW.
either night are to report on is $81,167.64.
Besides his widow, Mrs. Monday or Wednesday night.
Grace Frazier liartenbach
. whom he married on Del' . 24,
"
1964 , survivors include a son,
SIGNING CONTRACTS
CLOSING COURTHOUSE
Brett Hartenbach, a
The Meigs County Gam·
Meigs County officials
daughter , Miss Amy Harten·
missioners
will ·meet in
bach, both of East Liverpool , announced today that the
special
session
Wednesday at
two stepdaughters, Mrs. Tom courthouse will be closed all
for
the
purpose of
2
p.m.
(Karen I Johnson, East Liver- day Thursday for the Meigs
signing
contracts
for the
pool , and Mrs. Jim rSherry 1 County Fair.
of
the
multi·
construction
AT ELBERFELDS WAREHOUSE
Wilson, Chester, W. Va .; a
purpose
Health
Care
Center.
sister , Mrs . Mabel Dawson of
The meeting will be at the
Chester : his stepmot her ,
MEET WEDNESDAY
office
of the commissioners.
.ON MECHANIC STREET IN POMEROY
Mrs. Mm·y Hartenbach of
The Past Presidents Parley
East Liverpool, and four of Unit 39, American Legion
stepgrandchildren.
Auxiliary , will meet at
McELROY REUNION
Services were held at thel Elberfeld 's parking lot
McElroy
reunion Sunday, ,
M0::1rlin F'Wlcral Home and Wednesday at 6 p.m. to travel
Aug.
27,
at
Portland Park.
.
burial was in the Spring to Shoney's in Point Pleasant
Basket
dinner
at 12 :30 p.m.
Grove Cemetery .
for a dinner :neetlng.

t

s

Court activity

,
m.egal dumpmg
arrest made

•a]

SALE ·KITCHEN ~siNKS

*

*

..

.REG. '139.95 42 INtfi·SINGL£ BOWL · SALE '119.88 .

SALE '149.88

REG. '219.95 66 INCH-DOUBLE BOWL SALE s199.88

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

........,MIHAL
QUALITY

Now that ' s what we call " gettin·g a
good night' s sleep!" By opening
one o f ou r high interest
savings accounts,
you ' ll wake up to real profits !
We puf your interest to work as
well as your savings . So you can
sit back and watch your money grow!

NEWSPAPER
·cARRIERS
WANTED
FOR
POMEROY AREA

"TilE FRIENDLY BANK"
Walk -Up Teller Window
and Auto-Teller Window
Open Friday Evenings 5 to 7 P. M .

lilitens ~alional Bank

£6

...,. :..

'•

DUPLEX

Stop In At Baker Furniture
For AII Your Home
Fur·nl11hi111A Needs

PHONE
992~2156

THE DAILY'· SENTINEL
IITWIIN

Member Federal
Deposits insured

Deposit

Insurance

to 540,000.00 .

Corporation .

. . - - - - - -__]

A standing room only ·crowd watched Joyce
Frye, Rutland, become the overall winner at the
Demolition Derby staged Tuesday night at the
Meigs County Fair.
Miss Frye was in second place in the
powderpuff division of the derby with Connie
Jones of Langsville taking first. In the finals
however, of the first and second place winners of
each heat, Miss Frye took the top money and
trophy.
Winner of the ', first heat was Lorraine
Aeiker, Pomeroy, with' ·Ralph Withem , Athens,
and Dave Carr, Tupper~ Plains, tying for second.
In the second heat, Robert Van Dyke, Athens was
··first and Miles Small, Dexter , was second. Ed
Edinger of New Matamoras was first in the1 tbird
heat and Duke Howard of Cheshire was second.
Jim Swaney of Macksburg was first place winner
of the fourth heat with Roc.ky Bowman of Logan
taking second. Dennis Hites of Logan was first in
the fifth heat with Bob Hawk, Athens, coming in
second.
Bowman placed second in the feature race for
DEMOLITION DERBY - This was the scene at the Meigs Fair 'fuesday night during winners won by Miss Frye and Hites· was· third
the first heat of the demolition derby. Winning this heat was Lorraine Aeiker of Pomeroy. place winner.
Overall derby winner was Joyce Frye of Rutland .

e

•

at y

,

OILS, ACRYLICS, water colors, pastel, charcoa ls, crayon ami pencils entered in the
amateur pai~ting show at the I 15th annual Meigs County Fair were judged Tuesday murnmg by Mrs . Margaret Ella Lewis, retired Meigs High Se houl art instructor. Here with Mrs.
LeWIS is Hill Mayer.lungtime director uf the fail· ami.tuer painting show. Abuut 50 paintings
were eJ\tc red.

en tine

Reed winner of
painting show

Alva l.ee Reed of Pumeruy
was the top blue ribbon win·
ner in the amatew· painting
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS show
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16, 1978
POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
sta ged yesterday un the
.VOL. XXIX · NO. 86
---------------~-~----------c-:----c------------------,...:...------------- opening day of the Meigs
County Fair.
With about 50 entries, Reed
took eight blue ribbons in the
judging by Margaret Ella
Lewis; retired Meigs High
· School art instructor.
The best uf shuw a wards
went to Melinda l Davis,
Pomeroy for her modern art
exhibit ; tu Helen Newland ,
Route I. Reedsville fur oi ls : to
Kate .Jerrell, Pomeroy , for
acrylics; and tu Juanita l.ud·
Y.'ick, Chesh:r, fur water, ink,

Sunny
skies
-greet •
fair
SUMY skies. ·
At 8 p.m. thia

•.

BJ,.UE RIBBON BASKET - Five year old Gayle Parsons, daughter of Robert and
Diana Parsons, appears pleased with this blue ribbon basket of garden produce at the Meigs
Qlunty Fair. Winner of the ribbon and a cash award for the top basket of produL'O was Pat
Arnold of Albany ,

Top garden produce
displays selected
.

Pat Arnold, Albany ;
Beulah Hill, .Route 3
Pomeroy, and Faye Schultz,
Route 3, Pomeroy, were the
three top winners, respec·
tively, with the best display of
garden produce Tuesday
afternoon when farm crop
and horticulture judging was
held at the Meigs County
Fait.
Numerous ribbons and
cash prizes were awarded in
the judging of the department
which i.s headed by Herrnan
carson and Benny Slawter.
Blue ribbon winners in corn
were \ Bill Kautz, Route , 3
Pomeroy, best six ears of
yellow hybrid; Fred B.
Smith, Route 3, Pomeroy,
best six ears of white sweet
corn; Pat Arnold, best six
years of yellow sweet corn ;
Edison Hollon, Route I,
Minersville, blue for the best
peck of wheat, the best peck
of spring oats and the best
peck of barley .. In POtatoes.
Frank Powers, Middleport
was first with cobblers; Earl
Dean, Route 3, Pomeroy,
triumph; Barbara Fry,
Pomeroy, Kennebec ; Devere
White, Middleport. choice
variety, and Dean, La Sodas.
Beulah Hill won a first in
sweet potatoes.
In the vegetable judging,
first places went to Evelyn
Hollon, Route I, Minersville,
cabbage; Patricia Wolf,
Route
3,
Pomeroy,
cauliflower; Devere White,

.

egg plant; Fred B. Smith, red
tomatoes; Smith, first in
yellow tomatoes ; Mary K.
.Rose, Long Bottom, red pear
tomatoes;
Eleanor E .
Leonard, Route 3, Pomeroy ,
green pod pole beans: Bob
Lee, Racine , green pod bush
beans ; Mrs. Leonard, best
yellow pod bu sh bean s;
Madeline Painter, Route I,
Middleport, best plate lima
beans; Mrs, Painter, yellow
onions; Earl Dean, hot
peppers ; Gerald Douglas,
Route 3, Coolville, sweet
peppers ; Evelyn Hollon,
beets; Sarah Caldwell. Route
3, Pomeroy, pickle plate :
Devere White, okra plate;
Larry Qlwdery, Route I,
Long Botto m, pumpkin :

Sarah ' Caldwell, sumrrier
squash; Bill Kautz, squash,
"
other.
Fred B. Smith won fi"t and
second place awards in three
classes of watennelons and
Beulah Hili won firsts in two
classes of apples. In other
fruits Mrs . Hill won a first for
concord grapes : Roy Holter.
a first lor Niagara grapes and
Evelyn Hollon, a fir st in
peaches.
Winners of fir;t places in
producing the largest fann
crop were : Fred B. Smith,
potato; Beulah Hill, apple ;
Fred B. Smith, tomato and
cabbage; Beulah Hili, beet ;
To'dd Tripp, Route 3,
Pomeroy, cucumber; Lenora
(Continued on,puge 12)

Celeste to be at
Fair on Friday
Ohio's Lt. Gov . Dick
Celeste will visit the 115th
Annual Meigs County Fair
Friday afternoon .
Lt. Gov. Celeste, who is
the Democratic candidate
for governor this fall, will
be on the grounds aad will
visit the Meigs County
Democratic booth In the
Rock Sprtags Grange Hall
from 3 to 4 p.m. •

PAM HOLCOMB , Pomeroy, judged the clothing ex hibits in tht: domcstil' Hrt..s department and ther e were
more than 300 entries . Mt!igs Coun ty Fair Bu~rd mc1nbcr,
Add~ Lou Lewi s, sta nding, is superintenden t of the
dcpartmt!nt with M0::1 rga ret F:lla I ..t:wis as chai l'man .

Fire destroys
"
automobile

elullffeallell.

Pumery .

Flower Study : Jay e n
Hoeflich , Pomery.
Modern Art : Melinda
Davis. Jayne Hoeflich .
WATERCOLOR
Landscapt! from Nature:
Lcmd~ca pt! from Nature:
Helen Newland,. Route I. Juanita Ludwll:k, Barbara
Hac'kett.
Portrait !rom .Uie :_Jayne
C of C to hold
Hoeflich.
Still Life : Barbara Murray.
special meeting
Marine Study : Juanita Lod- .
•
wick , Jayne Hoeflich.
flower Study : Barbara
The Pomeroy Chamber of
Qlm'merce will meet at 12 Murray, Jayne Hoeflich.
Animal Study : J ay ne
noon Friday at the Meigs Inn
HueOich.
for a very important special
M"odern Art : Jayne
session, President Fred Crow
Hoefli
ch.
announced.
OTHER MEDIA
The chamber will be asked
Landscape
from Nature :
to endorse a resolution of the
Alva
IA'e
ReLod.
Patricia McSoutheastern Ohio Regiona l
Carty.
Council in regard to E~A
Portrait from Life : Alva
regulat io ns on usin g low
sulphur coai and possibly I £CReed , Jayne Hoeflich.
Still Life : Barbara Murray .
sending representatives to a
Marine Study : Alva Lee
meeting on the matter at St.
Reed.
Jayne Hoeflich .
Clairsville on Aug. 22 .
Flower Study : Alva l£e
Reed, Patricia Hutter, Route
:J, Pomeroy .
Animal Study: J ay ne
Hot!ll ich.
Modern Al't : Alva Lee
Rc'ed, Jayne Hoeflich.

i~)_r_h_e_W_or_ld_To_d_a_y_

Th e Orange Town ship
Volunteer Fire Department Hare J&gt;redicts weather in R u~sia
was called Monday ·at 8:45
MOSCOW (UPI 1 - The Soviets may not believe in the
p.m. to Calaway Ridge where Easter bunny , but they report they do have a hare that
a ca r, owned by John Rankin. forecasts the weather in grateful appreciation to the peasants
Tuppers Plains, was on fire . who fed him over a hard winter .
The car was a total loss
The official Soviet news agency Tass reported in a
The fire was believed to have dispatch from Minsk Tuesday a friendly hare in the
been caused by a short in the Byelorussian village of Novyazki warns the local peasants of
Wiring. Nine men answered impending rainfall by beating a roadside stump with his paws.
"This living barometer proved to be very dependable, " Tass
the
call.
:;:;:::;:;:::;:;.;:;:;.;:;:;:;:;:;.;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;
said. ''The hare never makes a mistake, and what is most
MARRIAGE LICENSE
valuable, he warns about rain several hours in advance, which
NOT MEETING
A marriage Hcense was is enough for the peasants to prepar e for it."
The Democratic Central issued to Charles Ray
Committeemen will not meet Ferguson, 21, West Columbia,
Thursday evening due to the and Martha Jo Krawsczyn . Cuuldn't remember his name
Meigs County Fair . .
18, Middleport.
CHICAGO (UP! ) - Kandaswamy M. Balasubramaniyam,
a native of India accused of impersonating a doctor and
receiving $51 ,000 in fraudulent Medicaid payments, says he is
suffering from amnesia and cannot remember his name.
But Balasubramaniyam said Tuesday he should be
punished severely if he has mistreated any patient. In a letter
filed before Cook Qlunty Circuit Judge James M. Schreier,
Balasubramaniyam said he should not be tried because of his
complete loss Qf memory .

Community

Hustler uwner lo tell JFK killing
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) - Acknowledging that his life
may be in danger, Hustler magazine owner Larry Flynt says
he nevertheless believes it Is his duly to tell the public who
really killed John F. Kennedy November 22, 1963.
Flynt plans to drop hi.s bomb on the assassination of the
late president in Hustler 's October, November and Decymber
issues.

Devine calls Ray 'cun s_lick '

:;:;.;:;:;:;:::;:::::::::::::::;.::;.::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:

Pomeroy Natloaal Bank
Ia oace aplll lloldiDI a
Watermelaa ~ Spllllal
ealelt Ia oblerva~~ee of
Cnaly
Fair
daya.
Tlleaday'• wiDen were
Job C.nl Ia tile adult
....... ... Nick Rtua Ill
tile
U
aad . uader

Lcmdscetpt! from Nature :

Kate Jerrell, Pomery .
Still Life : Barbara Murray ,

rcspeetivcly , in the
various classes were a.:;
lulluws :
OILS

ev,e~ the

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

l.ee Reed .

" Slilll.lfe . Juanita Lodwic~.
Ches ter ; Patricia Wull
Route 3, Pomeroy.
Marine Study : Helen
Newland , Alva Lee Reed .
Flower st udy: Aiva Lee
Reed .
Anim&lt;:tl Study : Juanita
Lodwick.
Modern Art: Alva Lee
Reed.
ACRYLIC

l'UtH.l.

Blue , Rl4" :-~ 1 . , .1_ ~

the featured granas,·ana
entertainment and junior fair
night activities wiil be
featured in the show ring
· near t he midway at 8.
On Thursday junior and
senior lair ca ttle judging will
be held and there will be
twilight harness horse racing
at 4 p.m . Entertaining at 8
p.m. on Thursday as the
grandsta nd feature will be
Margo Smith and band .'
Sheep judging will also be
held on Thursday and the
annual 4·H horse show will
begin at 9 a.m.

TOP WINNERS IN HAY SHOW - Takln&amp; llip honors

In the Hay Show at the Meigs pounJ7 Fair Tuesday were,
1-r, Earl Dean, Rt. .?1 Vom~velyn Hollon, Rt. I,
MinerliVIUe, Roy Hoi•. Rt. 3, Pomeroy, and Alice Cu~tis,

.,,

' Reedsville : Alva Lee Ret
Pomeroy .
Portrait from Life: Ah

or other mediwn.
Winners, listed first and se-

The Meigs County Fair
opened for its second full day
of activity Wednesday under

.:J\ :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;.;::::·:·:·:·:·:

''

'

.

CaJendar 1'

REG. '169.95 54 INCH-SINGL£ BOWL

Everyday!

Woman wins .fair
Demolition Derby

LooK 'Bottom, receivina the award for her son, Tim, and
Boyd Ruth, district conservationist of the · Soil
Conservation Service. The event was sponsored by the
Melas County ~I and Water Conservation "District.

WASHINGTON (UP!)- Rep. Samuel L. Devine of Ohio
said Tu esday that congressmen will be hearing a "con slick"
Witness when confessed assassin Jame Earl Ray tells for the
first lime under oath his version of tbe Rev. Martin Luther
King Jr.'s killing . The Columbus Republican i.s the leading
GOP member of the House Select Conuniltee on
Assassinations, which was to hear testimony from Ray' today .
Devine recently interviewed Ray at length at ·Brushy
Mountain State Prison in Tennessee, along with the committee
chairman, Rep . Louis Stokes, !).()hio, and panel attorneys .
Devine described Ray as a sort of master criminal a man who
might have reached greai heights in professional' or business
life had he not turned to a life of crime and spent most of his
years be~ bars.
~

imput need
is cited
BY FRANK STANLEV
A Rio Grande Coilege
administrator stressed the
need for comm unity input in
the school's continuing
education program at a
Tuesday aftern oon luncheon
in Pomeroy.
Speaking before members
of the Meigs Co unty Human
Resources Council, Bernard
Murphy, Rio Grande College
coordinator lor continuing
education, said it is difficult
to hold various credit and
non-credit classes in the
county without an effective
lin~ of communication with
the people. The continuing
education program. which
operates in four counties, was
formerly organized under
Murphy at the college in 1977,
"We have a problem.'' said
Murphy. " We don 't know the
needs and the talents of the
people in thE\,colinty."
: Be.cause
. of
this
predtcament, m part, Mur·
phy said, he has had to rely op
"gut feeling " in the selection
o! courses taught in tile
program.
" These classes are based
on the fact that I don't know
what people want. I can't
read minds," Murphy said.
Murphy pointed out that
one of every four courses
(Con~uedonpage.t)

�3- The DaUy Sentinel, 'Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, AUI!ust 16. 1978

2-1 stock split is. declared
.22.

Ulllted Preu IDimlaU..I
NEVER ON TV : Fer years, MellDa Me«ourl was an
artivist actress in exile while her native Greece was ruled by a
nillitary dictatorship, but she outlasted the dictators an&lt;l ~t
year woo election to Parliament. 'l'hllt dream fulfilled, she s
!lack in front of the cameras - this time in "Dream of
Passion," which she's promoting ,now with a Q.S. tour. On NBC
-TV's" America Alive," she said it was husband Jalt1 OauiD
who " opened my eyes to human misery and understan~
human rights." When host Jlclt Unkletter asked the
irrepressible star of "Never On Sunday" .. if she's been
"innocent" up to that . point, Misl Mercowi quipped, " I've
never been inoocei'lt."
·
HUSTLER HEADLINES: Hustler magazine owner Larry
Flynt says whoever tried to kill him oo March 6 was working
either for the CIA cr the FBI, and they still want him dead
because be-knoWs who really assassinated Prelldent Jolla F.
Kennedy . Flynt, under treatment in Columbus, Ohio, for the
bullet wound that paralyzed his legs, posted $1 mlillon rewards
for information in the KeMedy slaying -and be says ~ey've
paid off. He'll do his expose In October, November and
December issues of his magazine, whether he Uves or not. Says
he , " I know my life may be in "jeopardy. If they kill me, they
kill me, but I must give the public the facts."

This Week's
Dairy Valley

SPECIALS

.BULL FIGHI'S BACK: S~s .only 5 feet taU, and weighs
ooly 90 pounds, but up until Sunday Maribel Atie'*-r was a
match for any bull. The diminutive torera, who once wanted to
be a nun, is Spain's top female bullfighter- the first woman~
40 years to spin a cape in Madrid's main arena. On Sunday m
Barcelooa she killed her first bull, but the second bull nearly
killed her: During a pass with the cape, she was gored, tossed
and hospitalized with a gashed leg, concussion and multiple
bruises. Another bullfighter finished ber bull but she still was
given an ear as a reward for her cape work.
·
GRANDPA NIXON: Fonner President Richard NIJ:on is a
grandfather for the first time. Daughter, Jalle NIJ:_oo Ellen·
hower, gave birth Tuesday in San Clemente, Calif., to a 9pound-klunce girl - named Je~e . And Jenni~ b~ some
impressive antecedents. She will be able to boast havmg had
hoth a grandfather and a great;trandfather in the White
•. ,ljouse. Her father is David Ellenhower!. grandson of the "!te
Dwight D.
FACE IN THE CROWD: She was just one more frecklefaced kid in the crowd, riding Space Mountain three times and
lining up to get Mickey Mo•e's autograph. Few of the other
tourists recognized her as President carter's daughter . Amy
Caner, vacationing at Disney Wcrld in Lake Buena Vista,
F1a., with family friends from Georgia, made the scene
incognito - a visit not announced to keep her out of the
limelight. So thorough was her cover several boys elbowed
their way ahead of her in the Mickey Mouse line,_unaware of
the bodyguards - Secret Service agents blending mto the
crowd nearby.

FISHTAIL

HRS. : 10:00 A.M. 11111:00 P .M. Sun .. Thurs. 10 :00 A.M. II112 :00 P.M. Friday and
Saturday.
·

YEOMAN•J121 - Sieek. . s p ort y portab le tn th ree decorator
l ca.J ors 100"" soltd-s tate chassts tor o ut s tand tng rehabiltty ,
o perat 1ng economy Out c k-on Sun sht ne · pt cture tube .
1
1 t tuntng system wtth Perma - Se t VHF ftne t~mng All
quallly you d expect fr o IT\ Ze Mh at a pocket -plea smg

$40,000

V

•&lt;•'""''

Joyce
Easy Street
Now

'1000

m.-1 p.m. Fri .
c·lowd Sunday

' 1

,.,.tn~

It you lloslre on cortlllcates

more.
Annual ~~~s '" eltectlve wllen l&gt;'lnclpal
and lntetest a.e ten on deposit tor afull year:
01

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t:la.!&gt;!! \JU!ita ~t'

p&lt;nd

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Puuwruy, Ot nv.
N~o uumd

C~tl vt&gt; rllli lllK

rep rt'~ n ·

l&lt;ltt vt' . LawltJn ASSOJC I&lt;tle .~ . :1101
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Sui.Js&lt;:npt•vn r&lt;~lcs : Oth\'crcd by
cilr'uer wllt' rl:! avatlablt&gt; 75 l 'enl!i ~r

,,

PASSBOOK SAVINGS

5~.. .5;.Jg~o/o
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.set'VIl 't:

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5;.!!ro
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$1Li0: Thrrt· rnonth !&gt; . $i 50

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p!' l t't'

uu.:llldt•s Stmdtt)

TU!ii.'S~Cll l lllt l .

~UMMER

HEAR CERTIFICATE

6!~u 6;,~!%
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·•c,.,.,.,. o...- ....... sl.ooo.oo

•

3· YEAR CERTIFICATE

2·YEAR CERTIFICATE

6~!o 6;!~%
·~-DIIyo-U , DOO .tltl

Joyce Easy Street
Cover Girl
Now

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'"

HARREY'S SHOES,
INC.
,
Oh'

"Middle Upper Block' Pomeroy,

7~~0 7;!~%

IO

7~~0

7;!f!/o

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1~ro a~!J.%
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OhioValley Bank
(!!

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·

Member FDIC

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63
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WASHER-ORYER

$509~AIR

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8-YEAR CERTIFICATE

6·YEAR CERTIFICATE

,-gitator-lor big wu/1
loa4t
: o Knit Iabrie cycle
: o Til'" agltatlon/apln tpaed
•
MIICtlont
: 0 Flve-potlllon water'
with "R..MIICI" Mlllng
·~, CJ Flvt·potitlon water
temperaturw qontrollncludlng 3 P-ermanent
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p,.. Nltlfl9t
: c 81tech dlap8naer
• c Doubi..Action wulllng
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lid
~
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0 Lock 'n Spin~ Safety Lid
, c Fabric aoltener dlapenur
• · (oplloneleccei.Ory)
: 0 Backed by-Nationwide
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Plttsbf"gh
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PnHa

White-Westing ton
Still Bui
Them

'\.

~

.

Pittsburgh, 4.,'!, in 10 innings,
Los
Angeles
nipped
Philadelphia, :&gt;-4, St. Louis
routed Houston, n.,o;, and
New York beat San Diego, ~
I.
Cubs 1%, Braves 8:
Bobby Murcer and Dave
Kingman clubbed back-Illback homers in the sixth
inning to cap an uphill
struggle for the Cubs, who
rallied frpm an · early 7-ll

Morales' shot
defeats Tribe

GB

52 .548
56
62
62
69
70

.521
3
.-479 8
.461 10
.415 15 1h
.41 2 16

L - Pet.

so .sao

GB

san Fran
69
69 SO .580
Los Ang
Cinclnat i
68 51 .571
1
san Olego
60 59 .504 9
Houston
55 62 .-470 13
Atlanta
54 64 .458 14' '7
Tuttday ' 5 Results
Chk ago 12. At.tanta 8 .
Cln c i 4 Pithbgh J. 10 1nn s .
Los An0eles 5, Ph iladelph ia 4
Mon t real 4, San Fr an cisco '3

New York 3. San Orego I

st . Louis11 .' Houston 5

Today's ProHble Pitchers

Templeton tripled horoe the
wirming run to highlight a 17·
hit · attack, lifting the
Cardinals ove~ th• AsfrQs.
Steve Henderson's one-out
double in the eighth hihing
sparked a two.;un rally as the
Mets snapped a three-game
losing streak. Craig Swan, (l..
5, gained his fifth straight
victory, and Skip Lockwood
earned his 14th save.

Women forced to call
off mar11:thon auempts
protected by an elabO!;!IW_,.
$50,000, self-propelIed ;'lage. _
During Misl Taylor"!i swim
an 8-foot white lip slwrk
made an attack pass at one of
the escort divers and he had
to kill it with an explosive
charge contained in a_ "bang
stick."
Miss Nyad , who has not
announced her futur e plans,
said she was disappointed at
not reaching her' goal, "But I
don't think there is another
swimmer alive who could
have done what I did. "
Miss Nyad , 28, ssid sh e did
not make the swim for the
money, but nonetheless she
has accepted the $100,000
coniPact from a toothpaste
manufacturer, which she said
was not ·contingent on her
reaching Key West.
She already has received
$30,000, which she chose to
use for the swim, from the
three-year contract. The rest
of the money will be paid in
yearly installments.

5.75%

Area youth
guests at

fish event

• Fishing Tackle
and Rods
and Reels
• Guns and
Reloading
• Ba II Gloves
Camping
Equipment
• Archery
• Indoor Games
• We
have Gift
Certificates

Irt~:';~o Ga~~ ~~~~ U:

FSI JC

1

L- Pet.

deficit for the win.
Dodgers 5, Philltes 4:
Reggie Smith and Rick
Monday homered and drove
in two runs apiece to cut the
Pbillies' first-place lead in
the NL East to three g&amp;l!les
over Chicago. Los Angeles
snapped a sevepth-inning tie
on Smith's sacrifi!'l! fly .
Cardinals 11, Astros 5:
George' Hendrick hit a
threerun hooter and Garry

CLEVELAND ( UPI) - Indians ' oflensiv~ . show as
By VALERIE STRAUSS
Lauderdale swjm wa s
Cleveland reliever Sid Mon'ge relievers J Ohn Sutton, Mike United Preas International
aborted
at 3:15 p.m. EDT
changed his mind and Min· Marshall and Gary Serum
Diana Nyad and the because the northward
nesota designated hitter Jose_·held the Indians scoreless " swimmin'g nun" Stella
Morales changed the score. over the final seven innings. Taylor failed in their flowing Gulf Stream swept
"I pitched against Morales
Marshall made a big play marathon swim attempts her away from land.
Misl Taylor, a 48-year-old
in winter hall and I threw him in the seventh when be tagged Tuesday, but both seemed to
Fort
Lauderdal e resident
nothing but fast halls," said out Alexander, who was have won the batUe of the
who
quit
an English convent
Monge. "He never saw my trying toiJ,core on Jim Norris' buck .
before
taking
her final vows
slow curve, so I thought I squeeze bunt, but the veteran
The high-powered publicity as a nun, won the time-andwould throw it. He had no reliever who picked up his behind Miss Nyad's swim,
business swinging at that sixth victory against II which cost $130,000 in distance race with 140 miles
pitch but he went out and got losses, had to leave the game expenses and brought the in 31 1'.. hours. Misl Nyad
it."
in the eighth with a rib injury swinuner herself a $100,000 swam nearly 100 miles from
Cuba to off Key West in 41%
Morales deposited the suffered oo the tag play .
personal appearance · hours, but batUed high seas
curve baD over the left field
"After Marshall · makes contract, has not been lost on
fence in the eighth inning to that play, we are supposed to Miss Taylor. She says she 'U and winds, which kept her
give the TwinS a come-from- win ," said
Minnesota never swim for free again. from gaining ground for 22 of
those miles.
behnd 9-8 victor)' over tbe Manager Gene Mauch .
Choppy seas and ~trong
" I'm not disa ppoi nted ,"
" But .this victory ·was a currents blocked Miss Nyad 's
Irtdians.
said
Miss Taylor . " I
"I was looking for a fastball costly one, " added the Key West goal Tuesday and
140 miles in
accomplished
because I didn't want Mooge manager, who also had she pulled herself out of her
salt
water.
I
was
the first
to jam me and then I •got tbe shortstop Ray Smalley shark cage at 7:45a.m. EDT.
to
ever
swim
the
person
breaking ball," said Morales. removed from the game be· Miss Taylor's Bimini-to-Fort
Bennuda
Trian
gle
without
a
"It's very exciting anytime cause of heat fatigue.
shark
cage."
you get a big hit like that. "
"I knew Smalley was down
Misl Taylor was driven out
"These are the most people after Sunday's double-header
Major League Leaden
of
the water three times by
By United Preu 1nternational
I've had around me in two and if I'd had any sense I
marauding
sharks, bringing
Batting
years," added Morales, who would have rested him two
(Based on JOO at bats)
snickers
from
the Nyad crew
was surrounded by sportsw- days instead of one."
National Lettgue
because
Uleir
swimmer
never
GAB. H. Pet .
riters.
Ba~k to back doubles by
Bu ~ rog h s Atl
112 367 117 .319 left the water. Miss Nyad was
"I guess when you do your Dan Ford and Morales gave RoseCin
118492153 .3 11
113 412 129 .306
. jobyougeta lot ofattention," the Twins. a single run in the Cor1 ce pn Cin
Bow a ·~bil
113 .472 144 .305
continued the designated fourth and Willie Norwood's Whitfie
Our Interest is
ld SF
111 371113 .305
99 357 109 .305
hitter, who drove in four rullS · run-scoring single cut the Smi th LA
Greater For You
SF
9 1 3-41 104 .305
including a two.;un single in Indians lead to one run in the Madlock
Parkgi" Pi\
102 403 112 .303
the second inning and a r.un· fifth against reliever Paul Hebni:!r Phi l
99 313 94 .3bo
Cruz Ho u
111 413 123 .298
scoring double in the fourth. Reuschel.
American League ,
The Indians were nursing a
G AB . H. Pet .
· C.:tr ew Min
113 422 140 .332
On 90-Day
slim 8-7 lead in the seventh
Rice Bos
ll B 1!91 158 .322 ·
inning when Rod Carew
90 356 114 .320
Ol i\ler Tex
Certificates
Br e tt KC
84 340 107 .315
sliced a .pinch-hit runPiniella
NY
BB 314 ~ .315
producing single down tbe
5.75 per cent paid on
Rober ts Sea
95 324 100 .309
right field line to tie the score
Munson NY
111 45 1 137 .304
90
day Certificates of
Bostock Cal .
113 433 13 1 .303
and set the stage lor Morales'
Sundberg Tx
110 379 115 .303
Depos
it .
$500 .00
homer.
Stau b Det
116 461141 .JO\
Minimum
.
Interest
Hom• Runs.
"1 made a better. pl\ch to
Nat\onal l.•••u• : . L.uz.lns.k\,
Payable
Quarterly.
Carew tonlght lhan I did
Ph ll 28 ; Foster . C1" and Smith .
LA 26; Parker , Pirt 21; Dawson
when I got him to ground out
A substantial penalty is
and Valentine , Mtl .20.
invoked on •II certlfit:ate
Monday night," said Mooge,
American League : Rice. Bos
accounts withdrawn prior
who lost his second game in
2B : H isl e and Thoma s, Mil '17 :
to the date of maturity.
Baylor
.
Cal
2-4
;
Thornlon
,
Clelf
five decisions.
On Sunday, August 13, the .23.
Runs Bolted In
"He's a tough out and I
area
youth
were
treated
to
8
Nationil
League : Foster , Cin
threw him a super pitch, but
fishing
derby
at
Tycoon
Lake.
87 ' Cla• k. SF BJ o sm;th , LA 78 o
it's tough to get a super pitch
The event was sponsored by ~na~\I~Yn t l~~. 7
tb is~zinski . Phil
past a super hitter."
Zinn 's Landing and man_aged
American Le~gue : Rice , Bos
and Sta ub, Det 96 ; His le, M i l
by \he newly formed clU b• the 86 o Thom pson . Del 81 ; Th o'"
first inning with a two-run Gallia County Bass Busters. ton . Cl"' 16. '
yo ungsters
N~tiona~,o~;.~~!~s . Mor eno ,
homer over the right field Twenty-nine
The Alltens Coun1y
, fence before both teams started fishing at 11 a.m . • P itt 47 ; R icha rd~ . so 33 ;
SavinG$ &amp; Loan Co .
Lopes, LA ~'l ; Smcth , SJ? 31,
w. Main 51.
exploded in the second Wlder cloudy. skies.
DeJesus . Ch c, Maddox . Ph1l and
Pomeroy , Ohio
A light ram started abo ~t Ta ve•as . p;n 26.
inning.
tgnored lt
American League ; Le~ lo re ,
The
Twins,
taking noon, but everyone
-·
f' h Th
De t 55 ; Cr vz , Sea 42 ; D1 lone .
advantage of three bases on and kept catchmg IS ·. e Oak 41. Wills . Tex 18 . Wilson ,
balls, scored four runs in contest ended at 2 p.m. wtth a K c 34
Pirching
chasing Cleveland starter total ol114 Fish being caught.
\lictories
Twelve Fishing outFits we re
Rick Waits . The - Indians
N~tion~l Lugue : Blue, SF 16- ~~-.,:;;-;-;;,;;;;-;;·;-;-;:,._...
to three age groups S : Gr imsley . Mtl 14-8 : Nie k.ro ,
awarded
bounced back to chase MinAll
14 -12 ; P erry , S O 1]-5 ;
nesota rookie starter Darrell as first prizes and everyone Rover s, Mil 13·7: John , LA 13·9.
League : . Gui dry .
Jackson with a six-run else received a tackle box or NYAmerican
17-2;, Tanana, Ca l 16,7;
a
fishin
g
cap.
The
first
place
oulburst highlighted by
Flanagan , Salt 15-10 ; Torr ez .
Andre Thornton's bases - winners were: Billy Mayes, Bos 14.6 : Ca ldwe ll .- Mil 14-7;
ren sen, Mi l 14 ·8 ; P"lm er ,
loaded triple and a two-run Steven Wolfe, Sbelli Bradley, So
Ball 14· 11.
Earned Run A v erage
homer by Gary Alexander. Eric Williams , Stoney
on 1011nnings pitched)
But that was the end of the Johnson , Shannon Mayes, (Based
Ni!t ionll Le~gue : Vucko\l ich .
Mark Hammond , Todd St . L 2. 2'1.; Roge-rs , Mi l 2.35 ;
Aeiker, Mike HaU , Loraine Swan . NY '1 .37 ; Blue, SF '1 . 73 ;
, so 2.85.
Cochran, Tommy Milstead, owchinko
Amer ican League : . Gui dry ,
and Tracee Smith.
NY 1.79 ; Matlack, Tex 2.21 ;
" We're all looking forward CaldwelL Mil ' 2.47 ; Gura , KC
2.5.4 : Pa lmer, Bait 2.61.
.
to next year, because who can
Str ikeouts

Malor League St1ndlng1
By United Pren International
N1tlon11 Le•9ue
Eul

Cromartie was .erased on a
double play, but Gary Carter
belted his 14th homer.
Looer Charlie Williams, 1-3,
retired the first two batters in
ule - ninth before Valentine
slammed hi$. 20th homer far
over th~ left.field wall. Hal
Dues, :&gt;-4, pitched ooe inning
for the victory.
In other NL games,
Chicago outslugged Atlanta, .
12-8, Cincinnati edged

STANDJNGS~~~~~e:.~e fa~0\h~~ h:

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E( ll \,,n,il l P l umc!l9'l·2 1 ~i .
St!l'UIId

Calif., with a 99 and a
old gunner had a 98 and
llhootolf victory over two defeated 17-year-old Storm
others.
Mitchell, Murray, Utah, in a
Irt the women's division the shootoff. However, 'Mitc'lell's
top scor·e was a 93 posted by 98 gave him the Junior
Lou Ann Munson, Howard championship.
Lake, Minn. That gave her
The "'omen's International
the Class A title.
tiUe went to Susan Nattrass,
The winner of the women's Waterloo, Ont., Canads, with
AA crown •was a fellow an 89.
Minnesotan ,- Lora!
I.
Shooting was to continue
Delaney; Anoka, who had a today with the Clay Target
90.
Championship of America,
A Colwnbus, Ohio, concrete the blggt;5! 16-yard event in
' block plant superintendent, trapshooting.
Ray· Mills, ·44, bad his best
The competition took on
' ever score, a perfect 100 from added prestige when officials
2l'r.o yards, to win the of the Amateur Trapahooting
President's Handicap.
Assocalion agreed that the
"I always try to shoot my Champion of Champions for
best, but when I started today stste men, women and junior
1 didn't think I would because liUebolders be included in the
I didn't get a good night's regular majcr competition
rest," Mills said. "I was a llllllead of being a separate
pttle raWed after breaking 40 (race.
straight, but the targets just
kept falling ."
~
The Irtternational tiUe went
to Leo Harrison III,
VERO BEACH, F1a. (UPI)
ronibal, Mo., as the 21-year- Coach Dick Nolan of tbe
•
New Orleans Saints Tuesday
announced the remaining
seven cuts to pare his roster
to the required 60 players.
•
Among them were Don
l
Herrmann, a IG-year veteran
wide receiver who missed
two weeks of practice With
shingles, a painful nerve
•
•' By POHLA SMITH
Colosi ruled pinch-runner ailment. The others cut were
: UPI Sporll Writer
'Rick Auerbach home safe safety Wade Bosarge ;
defensive back Tom Braden,
l PITTSBURGH (UPI )
with the tying run.
i The game in Three Rivers Auerbl!cb, pinch-running offensive tackle Dave
• Stadium Tuesday night was lor
pinch-birter
Ken Hubbard, fullback Dave
~ not the typical Pltlllburgh Henderson , who led off with a Riley and defensive tackle
: Pirates-Cincinnati
Reds walk , scored on a single by Keith Simons. Tackle Mike
Watson was placed oo the
" ba tile - with the exception
. of Pete Rose that just rolled Injured reserve list.
• the way the Reds won tt.
past second baseman Gamer,
:· Dan Driessen's solo horner who caught up with it in short
: off reliever Ed Whitson with right field and then fired it
! two out in the lOth, which home to Sangulllen.
TIIOUSAND OAKS, Calif.
l gave the Reds a 4..1 victory, "Auerbach didn't touch (UP!)
- Tbe Dallas Cowboys
• was the ooly play of the game home plate," SanguilJen· said Tuesday trimmed their squad
; remlnlacent of the two teams' later. ' 'He hit my shin ID the mandatory 60-play
: past slugfests.
guar'd.'' ·
limlt by waiving rookie free·
• The rest of the game
But Colosi sided with Auer- agent Frank Dudley, a light
: literally was a comedy of . bach, who said, "I touched end, and placing thir!H'ound
' errors and arguments.
· home plate With both feet. He draft pick David. Hudgens, a
f
The Pirates scored aU their let me slide between his legs. guard, on the injured reserve
: runs on a first-Ulning , two- If J ohMy Bench bad been list for the season.
• base error by Dave catching, I'd have been in
Hudgens, a defensive tine: Concepcion, then Pirates PhD trouble the way be blocks the man, injured his left knee in
: Garner and Frank Taveras plate."
practice Monday and was
· ~ each made errors that
Driessen was 4-for-23 when flown back to Tel8s to
•'· enabled the Reds to close he went. up against Whitson, undergo surgery . The
; within 3-2.
~.with the score lied at 3 in
Cowboys said be would be out
• Meanwhile, Pirate starter the lOth.
for the season .
: Bert Blyleven was thrown out
"I was geared up because
: for arguing about what be be wail throwing so hard,"
• thought was an errant halk Driessen said. He hit a fast
LAKE FOREST, IU. (UPI)
~ call by, second place umpire ball over the wall in right - Injuries will probably keep
~ Joe West in the seventh
center.
lour Chicago Bears out of
~ inning, and Manager Chuck
Doug Bair, 6-4, scattered Saturday's exhibition game
&lt; Tanner was ejected for
two hits and a walk Qver tbe at Cincinnati, Coach Neill
~ arguing about Blyleven 's final two innings to get the Armstrong said Tuesday.
~ ouster.
win.
The Bears trinuned their
: Then in the ninth , Pirate
The Pirates schedu.led John roster to the 60-player limit
• catcher Manny SanguiUen Candelaria, 8-11, to face the iJY waiving rookie free-agent
: and reliever Kent Tekulve Reds' Bill Bonham, 9·2, center Rick Hansing of
:· staged a minor protest when tonight in the final game of Bemidji State.
~ home 'plate um__pire Nick their three-game series.
;
•
: ~

.

Court St ., Pumeruy, Ohtu 45769.
Off t.._·~·

VANDAUA, Ohio (UP!)In trapshooting on Class
Days, the shooters compete
in classifications determined
, by the average number of
: targets they break from
· either the 16-yardllne or in
doubles.
Tuesday, the Class Day
doubles was held at the 79th
· annual Grand American
·,lournament and in both the
, men's and women's divisions
the top scores were posted by
' Class A shooters, one step
' below top classification of
AA.
Kenneth Anderson, 31,
' Tidiouta , Pa ., a · postal
' employee, had a perfect 100
to win the men's Class A
• doubles. It was his first ever
. 100 in doubles.
" I like to shoot doubles ," he
. said, " but hack home I don't
getto do it that often." His.IOO
: was the best doubies score
, posted Tuesday.
Irt men's AA the winner
W89 Dan Donl\las, Los Baoos,

'

INSURED TO

JJ:,· The Ohw Ve~ ll t}' Pubh.!iiUII)!
Cumparly -M ultunL:.Oitt. Inc .,
Ill
Bustncss

homer in the first inning lor
the Giants, but the Expos
narrowed the deficit to 2-1 on
Andre Dawson's RBI single
In the seventh. Mike !vie's
run-scoring single in the
eighth pui San Francisco
back ahead by two before the
Expos tied the score in the
bottom of the inning. Tony
Pem greeted Moffitt with a
double and scored on Warren
Cromartie's
sin~le.

Doubles event concluded

•
1 defeats

MAXIMUM
INTEREST
SAVINGS?·

I N'fEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
ROBERT HOEFLICH
, City F.Atltur

·

"Sometimes a game just
alipa away from you before
you know it," lainented San
Franclaco Manager Joe
Altobelli after the Glanta
blew a ~I lead In the eighth
and loat a 4..1 decision to the
Expos on Ellis Valentine's
home run with two out.in the
bottom of the ninth .
The bitter loss dropped San

Francisco into a firsti!Uice
lie with Los Angeles in the
National League West.
Randy Moffitt could not
handle the prosperity of a
·two-run lead after be relieved
starter Jim Barr after seven
innings.
Altobelli said, "Our relief
pitching has been sharp_au
year .. . but they just didn't
have it tonight."
Darrell Evans hit a two-run

.jDriessen
's
shot
'

rOute .to

TH E OAILV SENT lNEI .
UEV&lt;rtE.DTOTHE:

PORTABLE

&amp;FRIES .

11011 show-you the

CARUSLE, Pa . (UPI)
Quarterback Billy Kilmer
has signed a reported twoyear, $500,000 contract with
the Washingtoo Redskins, the
team said Tuesday.
The 39-year-old, 16-year
veteran had agreed to tenns
last week with team
President Edward Bennett
Williams but did not sign until
late Monday night.

Ot A GO t~ A l

SANIMiat

By IRA KAUFMAN
UPI Sporll Writer

i

Alfred
·Social Notes

Puhlisht:\.1 llciily

FISHTAIL

ADOLPH'_$ DAIRY VALLEY

"I break out like this every time I think about my
campaign promise for a national health plan."

CLOSEOUT ON

$99

84~

SANIMiat

Sll/lday School attendance
on Aug. 13 was 41, the offering
$24.14. Worship se..Vlces were
held at II a .m. with the Rev.
Richard Thomas speaking on
" Noah ,
Preacher
of
Righteousness." Att.endance
at this service was 22 .
Howard Flanders led .singing.
GLIMPSES : Howard Coaeii was master of . cerem9nies Nina 'Robinson was pianist.
Our church will have its
and DanDy Thomas was "Man of the Year" Tuesday nigh! at
the All-American Collegiate Golf Foundation Awards dinner at annual homecoming on Sept.
New York's Waldorf •Astoria ... Film director Ingmar 17 with "The United Haras · special
Bergman - acquitted of the tax charges that drove him out of monizers"
Sweden- opens his latest play, "Dance of Death," Sept. 29 at singers. All are welcome.
The Swartz family reunion
Stockholm's Royal Dramatic Theater ... Televisioo actress
wiU
be held In the Woode
Kathleen Nolan - president of the ~ Aclll!'a Guild - Ill
Grrive
·here on Sunday, Aua.
one of three nominees l&gt;reslden\ Carter will name lor \be
27
with
a basket dinner at
board of directors of the Corporation for Public Broadcasting
12 :30 p.m. Everyone · is
welcome.
The Carr School Reunion
was held in Woode grove
Sunday, Aug. 13, with an
attendance of 25, in spite of
the rain. A basket dinner was
served at 12 :30 p.m. The
same officers were retained
for another year.
Mr . and Mrs . Murray ·
Hopkin s, who have been
visiting Grace Swanz, attended and enjoyed meeting
old friends .

12° PERSON.AL·SIZE

Race_closer, Giants beaten 4-3 by .Montreal

COLUMBUS - Bob Evans pay~ut . •
__
Net incomL per- lhare II
Farms, I nc. , toaay anEvaJII -fiii'tljer annoiiiiCe(l~bQeciontheaveragenamber
nounced a 2 for 1 stock aplit Bob Evans Fann1, In~. of COIIIIIIon lllld common
on all the company's i.uued consolidated financial In· equiVIlent abarea out·
COIIliiiM stock.
formation (unaudited) for the lltanding ~J•ed fqr ltoek
Olalrman of the Board, first quarter ended July 28, aplltlthrougb the 2ior llltock
Daniel E. Evana, stated 1978, in comparilon with the aplit declared today.
U!e oompany's restaurant
llharebolders of record on correspooding quarter ol1977
Augullt 25, will ~ entitled to (1978 - 1977 respectively).
ol!fratlona for the first ,
receive the addltioo.alllhares
Sales
$23,085;902
quarter, and Included In !,!!! ·
which will be mailed Sep- $17,840,864.
above financial infol'llllltlAii-'tember 29.
Income · before Income were net 1a1e1 S10,313,000
It is the present lntentioo of taxes, $3,107,857 ; $2,378,891. cempared with t&amp;II61-000 a
Federal and state income year ago . Net' ~~~orne
the board to pay $.08 per
·share .quarterly divided or taxes, $1,596,730 • $1,227,230. amounted to M3Q,OOO or $.16
$.38 per share annuaiJy. This
Net mcome, $1 ,~1l.l 27 • per llhare compared with
In effect wlU result in a 20 per $1,151,661.
,
$544,000 or Ul per llhare In
cent increase in dividend
Net mcome )ler share, .29 • 1977.

By KENNETHR. CLARK

•

American League
Els.t
Boston

New York
Detroi t
Milwauke
Balt imr e
Clevelnd
Toront o

W
74
67
64
64
64
53
46
wes t

L"
51
52
52
54
64
11

catches his first fish or
catches the biggest fish he's
GB ever seen " Lewis Smith, a
•
club member stated.

Pet.
.627
.568 1
.552 9
.552 9
.542 10
.453 20 117
.39] 27 117

w. L- Pet. GB
Kan Ci ty
64 52 .552
Calif
66
.545
'· 2
Te»tas
59 · 57 .509 .S
Oakland
61 61 .500 6
Minesota
52 66 .441 13
Chica go
47 70 .402 17112
Sea ttle
4-4 76 .367 22
Tuesd1y 's Resulf1
M ilwauke e 9, Toronto 1, 1~t
Tor at M ll w , 2nd , ppd ., ra•n
M innesotll 9, Cleveland 8
Kansn Cit y 4, Detro it 2...
Tex as I, Ch ic:ago 0
California 5, Boston 1
New York 6, Oaklan d 0
Balti more 7, Seattle 4
Tod1y 's Probable Pitchers
(All Times EDTI
Kanscn City (Splittorff 13-10
and Bird -4 -5) ~t M innesota
tZahn 8·11 and Perzanowski 2·
ll. 2. 6 p .m .
Toronto (Je ffer son 19 and
Garvin l -11) at Milwaukee
(Traver s 1.1 and Rodri guez 35L 2. 6 p .m .
·

ss

(All Times EDTI
Houston (Niekro 9-91 at St .
Louis &lt;Mertlnez 6-SI. 1:30 p .m .
San Ole-go !Qwchinko 8-9 } at
New York (Koosman 1-13 ). 2 :05
p.m ,
Atlanta (N iekro 14-12) at .
Chicago (Kruk.ow 5-0l . 2 : 30
Pf'!"
' c ; ~ cl nnat i (Bonham 9-2) at
PittsburOh t Ca ndelar ta 8-111.
7:35p .m .
W•s.t
Los AnGele s (Welch 4·01 at
Ph lledelph l &amp; (Kaat 6-4), 7: 35
Cle\leland (Clyde 5· 71 at
p.m .
Detroit ( Billing ham 12 S), 8 D.m .
Sen Fran cisco (Blue 16-5) at · Oiic ago ( Wood 10-10) at
Montreat (Fryman 6-7) . 7 : 3S Texas {Maflack 10-9). 8:35p .m .
p.m .
Boston (T iant 8 5) at Cali Thunelly's G1me1
fornia ( R yan 6 10 ), IO :JO p .m .
Cincinnat i at Chicago
N ~w Yo rk (Hunt er 6-4 at
San Fran atlw\oritreal , n ight
Oakland (Br ob~rg 9 10) , 10 : 30
San Diego at New Yor ~. night p .m .
·
Los Angell' at Phlla, night
Bal tim ore (Flanagan 1S-101 ar
Houston at P IU!b9h . 1. rw t "' Sea til e (McLaughlin 0
10 : 35
nltt
p m.
Allanta .-H f;.l lO UIS, n tQhl
Tllundar 's Games
'
1Toror'!tO at Milwauk£"eCievetand at Ottro ll . night
Kan City at M inrt&gt;sota , n ight
Chic~go at Te-..itS , n ight
Bostoh at C~li l ornia , n iqht

.o,

\o

601 Main St .
Pt. Pleasant , W.Va .
'

VIS4 '
Across

from Courthou se

PHONE

. 675 -2988

Open Sundav 1- p.m .-6 p.m .
Monday thru Saturday
9 a .m . ~C 8 p .m .

~----------..ll

Nationil Lugue : . Richard ,
Hou 229 ; Niekro , Afl 182 ;
Se aver , Cin 158 ; Montefusco ,
SF 136 ; Bl yle\len , P itt 129.
American Le•vue : Guidry ,
NY
191 :
Rvan .
Ca l
184 :
Leonard , KC 126 Fl anagan , Balf
125 ; Eckersley , Bos 11 2.

NEWSPAPER
CAR·RIERS
WANTED
FOR
POMEROY·&amp;
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PHON·E

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THE DAILY SENTINEL
BETWEEN
I AM and 5 ' PM

�..

rI M.;;.:~~-1 Longworth reunton held
5- The DaUy Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Aui!. 16, 19'11

Attention still on·Stingley

4 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Aug . 16, 1978

~~~,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,T:t:'; ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, :,, ,.,, , ,,,,,,,,,, ,, , , ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,;:·!

;: sport p arade ;r

is no need for further surgery just a good example of hla the film I'm sure he will see
at
this time. St_ingley has losing his poise. When he sees that it was uncaUed for ."
:~:
some
movement in his right
~; !:
arm
and
sensation in his
:;!:
_
::::
entire
body,
but the paralysis
:;:!
';!;
resulting
from
a spine injury
;:;:
:;::
remains unchanl(ed.
!ii
By MILTON RICHMAN
{
The :!&amp;-year-old receiver
;:;;
lJPI Spoi'll Editor
';':
was hit by safetyznan Jack
····
Tatum of the Oakland
NEW- YORK (UPU - Closest ballplayer to Babe Ruth
Raiders while diving for a
around right now, as far as personality goes, is Pete Rose.
catch at midfield.
Wllatever the Babe felt, he said. He was almost childlike in
Two vertebrae in his neck
his approach, completely natural, the same as Pete Rose.
were
broken. Surgery was
The closest ballplayer to Ruth, as far as ability giles is
and he was put in
P!'rfll'llled
entirely -something else. He was in a class by himself the best
traction.
there was, and I haven't seen anybody like him since 'his time
Now it"s Marv Levy's turn to yank Chiefs out of doldrums
Elsewhere, only two weeks after worst season (2-12) in their history and lo_urth losing
He died 30 years ago today and to me who first had t~
into e~lbition play, the first compalgn in row . They're In pretty sad shape In all
opportUnity to know him when I was just a 'tid hanging around
ery
of "cheap shot" has been departments, but e~peclally porous on defense . Stimulus
Yankee Stadium and later grew to know him better covering
heard.
ol new regime and pretty good draft won't turn II around
him as a wnter, ttseems more like 30minutesago.
Houston quarterback Dan overnig~t.
There are some recollections of him that will stay with me
Pastorini said his leg injury
all the way to tht"f!rave.
in
Monday night's exhibition
I never saw him run flatfooted. He was always up on his toes.
game with Philadelphia was Mike Livingston has been showing his stuff lor a decade
That dog trot Of his circling the bases after a home run was
as a Kansas City quarterback , with some occasionally
not as serious as first good
results . Maybe his supporting cast has dragged him
something you had to see to fully appreciate. It has been
thought. But he said he was down. The Chiefs will be throwing up a lot of passes,
frequenUy imitated but never duplicated.
convinced Bill Bergey's late whether by Livingston or alternate 08 Td(ly Adams.
Don't ever let anyone tell you he couldn't run, throw or field .
hit which knocked him out of because they 've got good receivers In Walter Whlta,
No Yankee pitcher ever had to gel on Ruth for costing him a
the game was avoidable.
Larry Brunson. Henry Marshall, Larry Dorsey. Also
~me in the field.
Bergey, one of the NFL's because their running game is mediocre with a 36-yearThe Babe had a special way with kids and women. They all
premier middle linebackers, · old lullback (MacArthur Lane) and unproven Tony Reed ·.
loved him. Once you heard him speak, you'd never forg•t that
drew a roughing-the-pi!SSer as his mate . The offensive line is fairly good, built around
Jack Rudnay . Jan · Stenerud, once premier ·
votce. It had a sandpaper quality that rumbled·along. His voice
penalty for diving into Paa- center
placement kicker, comes oil b.ad year. Rating- C
sil!rted out as a growl and generally wound up as a purr.
torini's knees after · the
Nobody sweated more than him. Everytime I saw him or
M~ior League Resulls
quarterback had delivered a
spoke with him, it seems, he 'd be drying the perspiration on his
By Un•ted Pren lnternill•onid
• th
cond
f The Chiefs are following trend by switching to 3-4
National League
pass m e se
Q1Jllrter o
face.
Aflo
010 010 ooo- 8 12 3 . the Eagles' 28-10 victory. defense . But that requires tested, mobile set of
" Who helped you most in baseball? " I asked him a couple of
linebackers, and that corps was wiped out by retirement
Ch~cWi l t iam~.s~~~gor;, '~!!t~ Past.orini ha~ to be helped and
years before he died .
trades. Draftee Gary Spanl offers best hope for
erly 15! . Garber 16!. Skok IB J from the field after the
"Ed Barrow/ ' Ruth said, naming the Yankees' long4.ime and Nolan ; Lamp . Moore {2 ), incident
quality . The front wall emphasizes newcomers , too, with
Art Still, Sylvester Hicks. the Chiefs" llrst two picks in the
Sutter (8 ) and Bl ackwell. wgeneral manager.
18-5! . L- Camp 12 -3).
ltfeelsalotbettertoday," draft . For experience, you 've got to look to the
"Which manager did you enjoy playing for most?" was Moore
HRs- Atlanta . Horner
(13); the quarterback Said of his
secondary , where there are four proven players- corner
another question I put to him.
f~f.ago , Murcer 01. Kingman left thigh. "The doctor told
backs Gary Green and aging Emmitt Thomas, safeties Tim
,.. "Bill Carrigan and Miller Huggins," he answered, glQSSing
me it was not a hamstring ... Gray, Gary Barbaro. Latter has been a revelation·. Levy In
over Joe McCarthy, who he felt had stood in his way of ( 10 inning$)
Cinc i
001 ooo 101 1- , 5 1 he sat"d I pulied a ten don that previous NFL stint was special teams e)!:perl and look for
becooung the manager of the Yankees himSelf.
him to jack up that department. Rating - CJOO ooo ooo o-- J o 3 attaches to the upper part of
"How about best hitter around today? " I asked him and Ptsb9
LaCoss . Hume (7), Bair (8) tt)e hamstring.
bear in mii)d this was in 1946.
'
and Correll. Bencn (9); Blyle·
ven . Jackson (ll. Tekutve (9 ),
"I don't know why Bergey
"Ted Williams,
. " Ruth sat"d.
.
·on theory that they can't be any worse than they've been.
Whitson { 10 ) and sanguillen . w "did it," the quarterback said.
and that ousted ·coach Paul Wiggin had already laid a
"Better than Joe DiMaggio ?" I pressed him.
- Ba ir ( 6 -4 ). L - Whi t son (3 -6 ).
H
·
HRs- Cinc innat i. Driessen (15 ). " e'S been known tO be an
foundation lor Improvement, let's move the Chiefs up a
"Yes, better than DiMaggio," he emphasized. ·
emotional player who loses
notch to fourth, AFC West.
Ruth then talked to me about the Yankees and it was LA
021 001 I DO-S 10 2 his poise a little bit. This was
IHI:WSPAPER E.NTERPRISE ASSN .)
OOOO.!IOOQ0-.!1 40
obvious he had not forgiven them over never having given him Phi la
Rau.
Rautzhan
(9)
and
a chance to manage them.
Ferguson ; Ruthven , Brusstar
"The Yankees gave me nothing," be said, using a much
(8 ) and Boone . W- Rau (12 -71 .
L - R:uthven (10 .9 ) . HRS- LOS
harsher word thap ·'nothing." "I know I'm not in good shape Angeles
, Smith (26) , Monday
MANKATO, Minn. (UP!)
now , but I'd be in much worse shape if not for the Ford ( lA ) .
r--------.------~-----~
- Fran Tarkenton will start
Foundation. They at least gave me a job."
San Fran
200 000 Ol o- 3 s 21
at quarterback for the
The job they gave him was with their Junior Legion baseball Mtl
000 000 121 - 4 11 2
Minnesota Vi)&lt;ings Friday
Barr , Moff ill ta l .• Curtis 181.
program and it paid $250 a week. Despite the Babe's claim that
Williams (9) and ·H il l : Schat ·
rught when they play at
he wasn't in very good financial shape, he left an estate of zeder
, Bahnsen (8) , Dues 19 1
Miami, Coach Bud Grant said
somewHat more than $300,000, which would amoun"t to better and Carter . W- Dues (5 .4 ). L Williams (f.J) . HRs- s·an Fran ·
Tuesday night.
than $1 million in today 's inflated economy.
ci sco . Evahs (11) ; t\\Qntreal ,
A TYPICAL DAY AS A GAME PROTECTOR
The Vikings cut three
To the outside world , the Babe seldom showed much Carter fl4), Valent ine 1201 .
(Part Dol a Series)
players Tuesday, reducing
emotion, but in private, he sometimes broke down in tears.
San Dgo
000 001 ooo- 1 5 1
BY GREG BAIL&gt;EY
their roster to 60 as required
Babe Ruth had m&lt;re style and flair than any individual I've
NY .
00001002x- 3 87
Every
game
warden
is an early riser out of neces5ity by National Football League
Jones
and
Sweet ;
Swan .
ever met.
wood (9 1 and Stearns . wAfter trying to follow our Meigs County Game Protector Andy regulations, Cut were
Thlr!y years ago today, he spent his last day on earth on New Lock
swan ( 6 -5 ) . L - Jones (10-11} .
Lyles
around for a day, I appreciate much more the job he is quarterback Dee Jay Donlin
York's Memorial Hospital. He was 53 and sinkiitl! fast.
doing.
Following is an account of some normal activities 1 free-agent linebacker Mik;
Hous
)
000
200
J()()5
9
1
I was on the ground floor in the hospital with other reporters St . L
302 200 40x- ll 17 0 witnessed,
Keating and running back
when the phone m a makeshift press room rang. One of the
Bannister , Andujar
( 3 ),
_ After a late night checking coon hunters and making sure Hughie Shaw. The Vikings
Wllliems (Sl. K . Forsch ( 11
hospital's PR people was on the other end of the line.
l8 l end Bachy ; Lopez.'. thmgs werem order (he got in around two o'clock),l'm sure it also put Jeff Wright, who had
"Babe Ruth died at 8:01pm," he said. "Death was due to · Sembito
l..ittell l8l end Simmon\. w was hard lor hlm to rise as early as he did. But after a cup of knee surgery prior to the
cancer.''
Lopez ( 3-l) . L - Bannlster (3 . 7 ) .
coffee
, it was go, go, go for the rest of the day (and most of the beginning of training camp,
HRs
St
.
Lou
is,
Hendr
ic
k
f\3)
.
That was it, no more.
rught
).
After attending to some of his own domestic chores on the non-football injury list
There were some kids outside the hospital, sitting on the
American League
Andy's
telephone began to ring already.
'
steps and makmg plans to chip in for flowers to give the Babe [lst game)
When
Andy
is
near
the
house
and
not
out
on
a
call
or
some
Tor
000
100
000~
1
5
2
on the day he recovered and would be able to go home. They
M il w
000 600 03x- 9 14 l other official business, he is almost completely tied up on the
didn '! know Ruth had died until the Rev . Thomas H. Kaufman
Lem anc.zyk , Coleman ( 4 ) and
Ce rone ; Augustine and Moore . telephone. Thts call was about one. of the many things that
came down from the Babe's room and talked to the newsmen .
W- August ine (11 -11) . l - Le · people mistakenly call .their game protector about. It was a
The kids pressed around him to listen .
manczyk 14- U l. HRs Mit
stra~ dog ~·~plaint. Folks, sure he wants to know about dogs
"Don't worry about him at all," the priest told the children.
waukee. H isle 1271
chasmg wtldllfe, but stray dogs are not in his jurisdiction By
"He was in fine shape when he went. He received ail the last
the way, his phone number is 98:;-3947. Before Andy got a;.ay
rites and died a good Catholic. He said his prayers until the
llnd
••mel
end."
Tor a t Milw, ppd .• ra in
from hts house by 9 a.m. he had received about ten·calls! In
14 0 110 11 o-- 9 12 o between those, he tried to catch up on some of~·- pape
Minn
. r work
A special police detail, which had been summoned to the
Cleve
2¥l 000 000- 8 15 1
~
J ac kson . Sut1on (2). MarShall which is quite numerous.
hospital only a half hour or so before, also was anxious to hear
(1). Serum { 8 ) and Borgmann ,
Thefirstthing on the age nd aafte r 1eavmgthehousewasto
·
what the cleric had to say ab&lt;lut the Babe. ·
Wvneoar
181. Wa ils. Reuschel
m , Monge 111. Kern 19l and meet a special wildlife agent. Together they checked some
"I remember seeing him hit a home run against Detroit
Oiaz. w- Marshall 1611 l. -L - wood ducks traps in which they hoped to find some birds to be
when I was a kid ," said one of the cops.
Mong e ( 3-2l. HRs- Minnesota . ba ded nd
Morales (2 1: Cle veland . Gr ubb
n
a . sexed. No luck this morning. Game protectors, in
He certainly wasn't alone .
I " l. Alexander 1m
one of thetr many jobs overlooked by the public trap and tag .
ooo 100 201 - • 11 o ducks and other animals 'for the Federal 'Government
K .C.
100 001 000- 1 11 1 Naturally, the birds are released unharmed.
·
Oet
SCIOTO RESULTS
After
leaving
the
pond,
the
next
stop
was
to
go
by
a
metal
Leonard , Hrabosky (7) and
COLUMBUS ( UP! J- A 2-9
P~rte r ;
Young , Sykes
( 8 ). shop to check on a deer carrier being made for the state car. It
perfects combination in the
Hill er
(9 )
and
May . 'Wwas not ready, so the next place was the radio.
Leonard [ 13 14 ). L - Young . ~ -4 sixth race at Scioto Downs
lnternationa I League
Another chore that Andy handles well is the radio program
2) . HRs-- Kansas Cit y . McRae
United Press lnternatiQnal
TUesday night was worth ' a
(12) . Porter I9L
he has on WMPO once a month. By the way, this Friday is his
W.
L.
Pet.
GB
whopping $17,513.10 - the Charleston
71 47 .602
Chi
000 000 000- 0 1 1 next one, at the_usual! p .m.lim~ slot. Another "extra'' job he
largest payoff in Ohio racing Pawtucket
66 SA .550 6
Texas
000 000 10-..: - 1 2 0 must handle thts week IS the Metgs County Fair. Stop by and
history.
Stone and Cot bern ; Matlack
Richmond
62 SS .SJO 8'1&gt;
tell him that you appreciate the job he's doing.
.
and Sundberg . W- Matlack ( 11
60 59 .504 1111:2
Town Holl, a 5().1 iongshot, Rochester
9 ) . L - Stone 199 ) . HRs- Texas .
Next we stopped at a Divil!ion of Wildlife checking station
Tidewater
60
60
.500
12
teamed with McKinleys Filly,
to see about their needs and if they had any news to report.
sa 59 .496 12"' Zisk (14 ) .
a 10-1 choice, to provide the Toledo
Columbus
53 65 .449 18
Bos
000010001 - 2 6 1 While there, Andy called into the Division office at Athens to
winning combination, which Syracuse
43 74 .368 27 1!"2
can t
000 020 30• - 5 5 1 report fishing conditions.
Tuesday's Results .
Ecke rsley and Fisk. ; Tanana
was held by one $3
Now. it was back to his house to pick up some things and to
and Down ing . W- Tanana ( 16
tickethoider who refused to Tidewater 6, Richmond 5
check
h1s answering service. On the way, we stopped by a
Pawtucket 3, Charleston 1, 7). L - E c kerslev ( 13 5) . HR sbe identified.
Ca l itornia , Rud i ( 10 ) .
1st
house
to
respond to a landowner's request for assistance in
In the fea tured eighth race, Char l eston 2, Pawlucket 1.
N
v
oo•
ow
ooo•
10 1 stocking his pond.
Steady Stay Right grabbed 2nd
Oak
000 000 ooo- 0 4 0
Gu1dry and Munson . Heath
. By now it was 1 p.m., and upon returning home he fowtd
UJe lead at the halfway mark Toledo 7. Columbus 6
Syracuse at Rochester , ppd ., l8 J. L ang ford , Hea ver lo 13 1, SIX calls had come in on his answering machine. But most of
and moved out to a three- rain
So sa ( 9) and Esslan w- the callers left
· way, when you call Andy
Gu idry 111 7l . c- Lano loro 16 .
no message. BY the
length victory over My
Today's Games
::
,
HRsN
ew
York.
Jackson
and
get
a
r_
e
cording,
please
be
sure
you wait until the tone
Scotch Witty.
Richmorid- 'a1T";dewater
7
·
before
leavmg
your
message,
and
don't
forget to leave your
Driven by Dick Williams Pawtucket at t.narles lan
Columbus
at
Toledo
Bolt
JOO
020
0111
n
1
phone
number.
So
many
calls
come
in
and
the caller does not
m' the winner covered the Rochester at Syracuse. 2
Se~.
Marfinez
,
0
2~
~
~~~-;/
;
~
leave
hiS
name
or
nwnber,
so
"there
1s
no
way Andy can
mile in 2:02 J-5 and returned
Thursday's Games
1
1
Slanhouse
(91
and
Dempsey
:
respond.
On
calls
like
that,
I'm
sure
there
must be some
S4 , $3.20 and $3.20. Big Don Tidewater at Richmond
773-5554
AObOfl
.
Parro!l
11
'·
Todd
15J.
callers
who
think
they
were
;...,ored.
Believe
me, Andy
Charleston
at
Columbus
· came in third .
Rawley
18
1
and
St
in
son
.
w
r
ds
to
.-e-•
Toledo at Rochester
OMartinez 1910 ! L- AbbOtt esp?"
everyvalidcali. ThlswasAndy'smorning ... tobe
A crowd or 4,875 wagered Syracuse
at Pawtucket
(5 . 101 .
continued.
·
$3I3,27S.
:;:;

·

;:;:

Ulllted Presslntematt-1
Each team in the NFL was
forced to reduce its roster to
60 players Tuesday, but
attention throughout ·the ·
league remained focused on a
California hospital room.
Doctors said Tuesday it will
be about two weeks before
they can predict the recovery
prospects
for
Darryl
Stingley, the New England
Patriots wide receiver, who
was paralyzed in an
exhibition
game
last·
weekend.
A spokesman at Eden
HAspital, where Stingley is in
traction under intensive care,
said new X-rays showed there
:-:-: :-:-:-:-:,:,:,:-:,:-:-:-:::-::::::;.::::;.;:::;.::::;.:::::::::::::::.:
In women's softball
adion Monday night at
Middleport, the Meigs Inn
team defeated Valley
Lumber '13·5.
Hitters lor Valley
Lumber were Diana Karr,
Beth Riebel, Bonnie Llgblfoot, Pat Dent, Kathy
Hood, and Rhonda Riebel,

r-------------------'--,

PROSPECTUS ·

OFFENSE

DEFENSE

II

•

PREDICTION

Rangers playing ·;
like they should
ByMIKEnli+Y
UPI Sporll Writer
The Texas Rangers are
finally playing the way they
feel they could have been
playing all season long.
"For the first lime all year
we believe in ourselves," said
Riehle Zisk, whose home run
was ooe of ·only two Ranger
hits in a 1-Q victory over the
Chicago White Sox. "We're
together as a team now and I '
feel like we are in the driver's
seat."
Five games behind the twolime defending Western Dlvl·
sion champion Kansas City
Royals may not exacUy rate
as the driver's seat, .but the .
Rangers are making · a
move.
Jon MaUack was at his
best, allowing seven hits and
fanning seven in beating
Steve Stone, 9-1!.
Besides getting Zisk's
clutch seventh-inning home
run , his 14th homer of the
sea.On and first in six weeks,
the Rangers played errorless
ball, contlnui-ng a recent
trend toward improvement in
the area of team defeme.
"If we had been· playing
defense like this all year'we'd
be in a lot better shape than
we are now," said Manager
Billy Hunter.
In other games, Milwaukee hammered Toronto, 9-1, in the first game

~-MEIGS

Den Talk

of a double-header, Jn wblcb"
the nighlalp was rained out,
Cleveland edged ~ta;

9-8, Kansas City bopped
Detroit, 4·2, New York'
blanked Oakland, 6-0,
California downed Bolton," 5-"
2, and Jlaltimore took SeaWe,
7-4.

Brewen t, Blue Jll)'ll 1:
Larry Hisle belted hla 27th
home run and Robin Youilt
and CecU Cooper cmtrlbuted
three hits apiece to highlight
a !+bit Brewer attack. Jerry
AUgustine, 11-11, threw hill
eighth complete game.
Indlus •• Twbls 8:
Jose Morales drove In four
runs, one on a game-winning
homer In the eighth Inning:
Mike Marshall took over for
reliever John Sutton in the
seventh, to raise his record to
6-11 and Gary Serum
recorded his first aave.
Royals 4, Ttgen Z:
Steve Braun's pinch-hit
single scored AI Code' a- hit
his ninth homer in the ninth to
give . AI Hrabosky an in&lt;
surance run and his 15th save
·in relief of Dennis Lemard, 3-

14.
Angels 5, Red SOl! Z:
Don Baylor hit a two-run
double in the fifth and Joe
Rudi slarmned a three-run
homer in the seventh to back
the six-hit pitching of Frank
Tanana and shave Boston's
East Division lead over New
.Yorkto seven games.

COUN11r--

OJ!?

AUGUST 15th thru 19th
WE WILL CLOSE AT 12:00 NOON
THURSDAY THE 17th
SEE YOU AT THE FAIR

PICKENS HARDWARE

I

HOURS:
Mon., Thurs. &amp; Sat. 8: 00-5:30
Friday8:00-8:00

4" PLASTIC
PIPE
10' LENGTH

,...

$299JOINT

PHEBE'S STORE
Thursdoy, Aug. l7 lllru Aug. 19
We Gladly Accept Fed. Food Stamp.
Monday thru Friday
, ,ootil7 :oo
Sal~rdoy

CARROTS

9:00-9 :00

CLOSED
SUNDAYS

59C:

·

Lb . Bag

25C:

While
Borden's Singles

12

AMERICAN CHEESE.. .............~~-..sl 19
BardMt's

COTTAGE CHEESE ............... ~;-~~-.. 99'
•

SWEO
POTATOES
lb. 35c

INSTANT COFFEE.. ................. ~~:. s419
Northern
4 Roll
TOILET
TISSUE .......................
~~~:.
Kratt
·
BAR-BE-CUE
SAUCE ............... .'~.~~: . 7gc
Big Johri
.
20 or. can 604
BEANS ···········:····························
_,

age

o

Wagon Trail

·

24

4gc
POPCORN ............................~ .'~·...s1•'
OOG FOOD ............................ • .~~: s3••
PANCAKE &amp; WAFFLE SY.RUI! ..............•.•;.
Pops rile

C.sll Saver

25

.,'

••

BONELESS

HAM

OPEN UNTIL 5 P.M. ONLY

EVENING RESERVED
FOR

SECOND NATIONAL BANK ASHLAND

ANNUAL PICNIC
Closed !;very Monday Except Labor Day

Mrs, Albert

--

have moved to their home on

State Route 143 just past tbe
county line in Meigs County.
Cindy Jones, niece of Mrs.
Victor Perry, came here
from Dayton and has secured
e111ployment at O'Bleness
Memorial Hospital and will
live with her uncle and aunt.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe McWhorter and family have
gone to Lockhart, Texas
where they will be livint.' Mr.
and Mrs. Rex Cheadle took
their furniture to Lockhart
this past week.
Guests of Mrs. Florence
Staneart were her grandchildren, Rita, Diana,
Charles and Scott Leeds of
Rockledge, Florida.
Those visiting Murl Galaway were her grandson
and family, Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Woodrum and family,
Bremen; her great-grandson
and family, Mr. and Mrs.
James Petty and Tiffany Sue,
Bellaire, Ohio, and former
residents, who visited
Temple Cemetery and
relatives in the area, Mr. and
Mrs . Austin Weyand of
Bucyrus, called on Mrs.
Gaiaway .
Many friends and relatives
were called here by the death
of Delia Stansbury, lifelong
resident" of this community.

~

~t'

I

Address

Enter the Burger Chef coloring contest.
Simply color the complete coloring sheet including the
animals on the glasses above as neatly, creatively, and
carefully as possible. Then fill out the entry form so we have
your name and address, and bring this ad to Burger Chef.
Nothi,ng to buy.

TIRES

20

· Any Size
Recapped Tire
Regular Tire Only

cr.

CUBE
STEAK

Plus F. E. T. and
Recappable Tire .

Visit Us During This Special
Fair Price

•••
••
••

MEIGS TIRE CENTER
700 E. Main. Pomeroy,
Ph. 992-2101

••
••
:

$}49 LB.

LIVER
PUDDING

o.

••
••
••••

J

--

No.

- - - - - ---=--Zip

-

State

City

Full-color glasses like these at Burger Chef when
you buy a medium-size drink for 69¢.
You c:an save a tiger and win a prize . Because first prize is
a donation in your name to the World Wildlife Fund (to help
protect endangered animals) plus .a free set of glasses and
a free dmner for your family. Heres what you can win: ·~

Prizes
1
1name
first prize: $:10 donation to World Wildlife F und in your
plus a set of four glasses and a dinner at Burger Chef

1. Clip this ad out of the paper and color the pictures above.
Contest limited to persons 12 years of age and younger.
2. Bring the coloring sheet to the nearest participating
Burger Chef, filled out so we have your name , addre~s.
and phone number. No purchase is required.
3. Entries will be judged on accuracy; creativity, and
neatness. Prize winners will be posted in the store on
September 17, 1978.
'
4. Entries must be received at Burger Chef by 10 p.m.
September 10, and names of winners will be posted at
Burger Chef on September 17.
5. Those desiring a complete list of winners should send
a self-addressed. stamped envelope to Burger Chef
(street address, city, state, zip).
6. E.mployees and families of Burger Chef or their
advertising agency are not eligible to enter.
1. Extra coloring sheets can be obtained at part ic ipating
l:lurger Chefs.
·

for your family (up to $10).

8 third prizes: Set of four
glasses and a free Big Shef .

15 fourth prizes: Free glass
and free ch~seburger.

•

'I

.

TU

4 second prizes: Set of four
glasses (shown above) plus a
free Super Shef, large fries,
and large drink. '

Ypu get more tp like at Burger Chef .

•••
••

LB. $149

Phone

Parents' Name

-How to enter

WIENERS

Age

Name

------------------------------------------------------~----------------------------------------------- - -----------------

...;

FRENCH CITY

-

r,. ... .

· Endangered Animals Coloring Contest Entry· Form
Instructions: Please color careful ly, fill in all in formation, and
take to your participating Burger Chef restaurant. All entries
become the property of Burger Chef.

Rules

LB. $}99

SUPERIOR

CAMDEN PARK

•

RECAPPED

HAM

10
••

THURSDAY, AUGUST 11th

Pomeroy. ·
Reed Crary has returned
home after being a patient at
Holzer Medical Center
Gallipolis. .
'
Recent visitors of Mr. arid
Mrs. Ernest Ruth were Mr.
and Mrs. George Ruth and
family ol Hudson, Mass., and
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Smith
and Linda of Akron.
,
Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Martin,
Jr., and sons visited with his
parents, Mr. and Mra. ·Hugh
Martin, Sr., and familv at
Manakin-&amp;bot, Va.
Mr. and Mrs . Ernest
Whitehead and Juli visited
with Mr. and Mrs. Ed Hensch

and Mrs. David Barstow and
their new baby son.
Mr. and Mrs. Conard Ator

MASON, W. VA.

SfiCED
BOILED

3 lb. Bag

Grahams on Aug. 2

visited with Mr. and Mrs. ·
Garth Smith and Mrs. Gladys Mr. and Mrs. Sherman Center. The infant weighed
Williams and family.
Wayne Graham, Point eight pounds, 13~ ounces.
The Grahairul alao have a
Mrs. Helen An:her spent a Pleasant, announce the birth
daughter,
Tonya, age five .
· day with Mr. and Mrs. Milton of a son, Christopher WaYI)e.
Maternal
grandparents
are
Tuttle on Texas Road.
on A~g . 2 at Holzer Medical
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Evans,
Visiting with Mrs. Gladys ·
Pomeroy ; paternal grand· ·
Williams and family were Doris Fick of Columbus, Mrs. parents, Mr . and Mrs.
Bailey of Helen Wolf of Long Bottom · Shennan 0 . Graham, Leon,
Mrs. Osa
Braden_ton, Fla., and Mr. and Rd ., Mrs. Frances Reed, W. Va. and paternal greatMrs. BtU Dietz of Columbus. Mrs. Maxine Whitehead and grandmother is Mrs. Lula
Recent visitors with Mrs. Mrs. Ruth Anne Balde~son. Cochran, Buffalo, W. Va.
Grace Weber were Mrs.
- Mrs. L. Balderson

Reedsville News Notes
Recent visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Garth Smith were Mrs.
Thelma Hea.cock of Florida,
Mrs. Mildred Wilson of
Parkersburg, W. Va., Mr.
and Mrs. Roy Swank of
California; Mrs. Fannie
Durst of Stiversville, Mr. and
Mrs. Stanley Wells of Long
Bottom, Mrs. Ollie Young of
Pomeroy.
.
Visiting recently with Mr.
and Mrs. Dale Smith and
family were . the George
Smith family of Columbus
and the Don Smith f8mily of
CantOn.
·
Gene Wilson is a patient at
Veterans Memorial Hospital,

to

~

:lather, William Quivey.
='omeroy, to attend a family
:;l!athe~ing, called on his
:l"other. Martha Mays on
;;/)aturday.
: Mrs. Mendal Jordan , ac::t:ompanied by Mrs. J. K .
;:palton of Albany , attended a
•&lt;!!5th wedding anniversary
:l:elebration-for Reverend and
:;)Irs. David White, hosted by
:t-heir daughters at the Lon·
0'\!londerry United Methodist
!;b.urch on Friday afternoon .
:Jlev . White was a former
~stor on the AlbBny Charge
:tinduding Temple, Snowville
-..nd Pearl Chapel ).
•• • Mr. an d Mrs. R. A. (chuck )
~hittlngton, Ronda and
='ristin Powell and Mr. and
'!"Mrs. Conard Ator have
:returned from Knoxville,
::Ienn. where they visited Mr.

MATERIALS CO.

Mltxwell

.

Wintersville ; John Longs·
worth, Racine; Col. Thorne
Longsworth, Omaha, Neb.
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon West,
host and hostess, were
assisted by Mr. and Mrs.
William Cornell.

Son born

; Carpenter Personals

~uivey, who were visiting his

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

CRISCO .... ~ ............................. ~~~. SJ79

West, Racine; Mr. and Mrs.
Crilt Bradford, Racine; Mr.
and Mrs: Joseph La Framboise of Detroit .Micl!igan;
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon West
and children Rhonda, John
and Melody of Racine; Mrs.
Francis and son. Gregory.

.

at~~~:~g~~~t~s t:ls :.:'!~

•

-•

~ allipolis .
~ Mr. and

PLUMBING SUPPLIES

PRICED
AT
SAVINGS

... ONIONS

· MASON - The family of Mrs. Ramey Hunter of Mason gathered recenUy at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hunter
and family at Chester, Ohio for a three day reunion. Her sons
and daughters· visiting their mother included Mr. and Mrs.
Hansel Hunter, from Calif~mia; Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hunter
and family, Mr. and Mrs. Btll H_unter, all of Chapmansville, W.
Va.; Mrs. and Mrs. Hershel Hunter and family of Beckley, W.
Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Herman Hunter and family, Mr. and Mrs.
Homer Hunter and family , all of Belle, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
Bob M?son, Tuppers ..Plains, 0. Also attending were Mrs.
Hunters daughter and husband, Master Sgt. and Mrs. H. D.
•Harbison and children visited enroute to Tilfkey, where
Master Sgt. HarbiSOn will be stationed for two years and the
·host and hostess, Mr . and Mrs. Henry Hunter and family .
Mason Personals
" Mr. and Mrs. Gene Hail, Rt . 4 Pomeroy, and her mother,
'Mrs. Dorothy Cartwright, Mason , went to Bloomington, Ind.
~ver the weekend to attend the wedding of Mrs. Cartwright's
"':phew, Brian Ingels and Susan Embry at the Highland
wVtllage Church of Christ. Miss Embry is the daughter of Dr .
~d Mrs. Donald Embry and the groom is the son of Mr. and
'tMs. Charles Ingels, ail of Huntington.
· ... Miss Cindv Williams "!'d her brother, Jeff, oflndian Head,
::Md., and Miss Barbata Martin of Elk Garden Md. spent a
;,oeek with Cindy and Jeff's grandmother, Mrs. clara Williams.
:: Aaron Ward, Pataskaia,-Ohio spent last week visiting his
:yandmother, Mrs. Thebna Henry at Clifton, while his
.parents , Mr._ and Mrs. Jim Coleman were vacationing at
::.lyrtle Beach.
:;, • Alec Fox spent last week visiting his grandmother, Mrs:
:_Mollie Fox .
.. Mr. and Mrs. Alburtice Young, Mr. and Mrs. Russell
:Young visited recenUy with Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Young at
:,t'.anton , 0 .
:
Todd Self of Columbus spent three weeks visiting his
:1JfBndparenl&gt;, Mr. and Mrs. Russell Capehart and his greai. grandfather, Christy Bietner.

: Mr. and Mrs . William
::Miller and daughters w~re in ·
:;raylor, Michigan lor the
:r-'lcNett reunion .
- Mr. and Mrs. Dwaine
::Jordan, Bryan, Keith and
"'Sarah Faye were in Belpre
where Bryan Jordan was
usher at the wedding of Kevin
Cone, son of Mr. and Mrs.
.Donald Cone of near Albany.
: Guests of Mr . and Mrs.
:l)ohn Gillogly and sons were
:t-'rs . Goldie Gillogly, Albany.
,..nd Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
:Frazier
and
Susan,

MASON, W. VA.

Standings

NESTEA ................................3.~~: .. $119

·: M~N - The Mason 'Extension Homemakers held their
~uly meeting at Mason's Hiatoric Home on Brown Street with
Mr•. Alburtlce Young and Mr~. Evelyn stewart Ill! hosteSses.
The group enjoyed homemade·~ cream, ~rownies and punch.
Mrs, Laurene Lewis, prestdent, prestded during a brief
busin"'!" meeting during which the group discussed the
upcommg tours. The four day tour will cost $119.
At the opening of the meeting Mrs. Jlburtlse Young
presented devotionals taken from the Randolph County
Ext~~ Home'?akers Devotional Book, subject, " The Gift
of_Ufe , and scrtpture, Psalms '1:1, 136, 9 and 10, and closed
wtth prayer.
Mrs. , Landon Smith reported on the County Council
q~eeting which she attended. The next meeting will be held on
Sept.l2,andanotherwUlbeheldlnOctober. .
·
Committee reports were given by Mrs. Smith and Mrs.
·
Fred Spencer.
• Attending the_meeting were Mrs. Laurene Lewis, ·Mrs.
Lester Johnson , Mrs. Matilda Noble, Mrs. Cecil Smith, Mrs.
l,andon Smith, Mrs. Evelyn Stewart, Mrs. Alburtice Young,
Mrs: Fred Spencer, Mrs. Elmer VanMeter, Mrs. Clara
W1lhams and Mrs. William Zerkle.
. '

The Longsworth reunion
was held Sunday, Aug. 6 at
the summer home of Mr, and
Mrs. Gordon West.
Attending the celebration
were Mr. and Mrs. W. E.
Longsworth·of Charleston, W.
Va .; Mr. and Mrs, Harold
Longsworth of Winchester.
Va. and daughters Mary and
Elizabeih, Mr . and Mrs.
F r ank
L o n g sw o r t h ,
BrecksvUie, Ohio; Mr. and
Mrs. Bryan Longsworth,
Dayton; Mr. and Mrs.
Charles
Dobbins
of
Pawtpcket, R. J.; Mrs. John
Hagearty ·and sons, John and
Pet.e r ol West Hartford,
Conn .; Charlie Dobbins of
Monr'&amp; e, La.; Mr. and Mrs.
Paul- McSwegin, · New
Cumberland, W. Va.
John McSwegin and sons,
Dtck, Paul, Allen of New
Manchester, W.Va.; Mr. and
Mrs . Roy Posey and
daughters, Lee Ann and
Kathy, Wierton, W.Va.; Mr.
and Mrs. William Cornell of
Ra~ine; Robert Dobbins of
Monroe, La. ; Mrs. Esther

.

M

do-lt-yourself

1

~

By Alma Marshall

•

698 W•.•MAIN STREET

POMEROY, OHIO

�•

6 _ The D~ily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, August 16, 1978
ching. . Before you do anything
else, sit down with your husband and outline possible
solutions for your problem.
One idea is to move the
television ·~~out of the living
room durinlfthe week. That
Karen Blaker Ph.D.
might make it possiblf for
your husband to enjoy hi.s
Getting it together before the rules become an sporting events without inestablished part of your volving the children.
household routine.
If he still feels guilty, reDEAR DR. BLAKER Unexpected problems Ire- mind him :that the family is
When my husband and I quently emerge soon after a not a democracy. Would he
made strict television rules family· establishes strict necessarily switch to sugarfor our children , we both felt television rules. It takes pa- free gum if your dentist
confident of our ability to lienee to work them out. .
reconunended it for the
make them slick.
• Many families do give up. children?
The television was not to be In a recent National Institute
Certainly not! Children do
turned on during the week , of Mental Health study, a not have the same needs as
but could .be · watched on large group of families were adults. The same argument
weekends. Neither of us ex- paid $500 to turn , off their applies to television watpected the problem that $\11'; television sets for· year . . ching.
faced when baseball season More than half decided durAnother solution might be
started.
ing the first few months to for your husband to begin takI came hdme one Tuesday return the money r•ther than ing part more actively in
evening to find my husband try to survive the difficulties sports ins~d of merely watsitting in the living room of adjustment.
ching them on television. He
glued to the set with all three
But television rules ·can be would then be a role model
children gathered around. nuide to stick. To help you en- for your children, who are no
When I asked about our rules, force your plan, I am sending doubt searching for activities
he said he wanted to suspend you my new hotline letter, to fill up tbe time previously
U1em for awhile because he "Controlling the Television O&lt;.'Cupied by television. •
felt gui'lty not letting tbe Beast." Other readers can
Write to Dr. Blaker in care
children join him when he obtain copies of this newslet- of this newspaper, P.O.. Box
watched the game.
ter by sending 50 cents plus a 475, Radio City Station, New
I got mad . It will probal)ly
stamped, self-addressed York, N.Y. 10019. Volume of
be the same stocy during foot- envelope to me in care of this mail prohibits personal
ball season. And to make it newspaper, P.O. Box 475, replies, but questions of
even worse, he is also a golf Radio City Station, New general interest will be
nut.
York, N.Y. 100.19. Be sure to discussedinfuturecolumns.
I. know I won't be able to en- ask for the hotline on televiforce the rules by myself, sion.
and it looks like I am not goThi.s hotline will also be
ing to get any help from him. helpful for parents who are
Should I just give up '
trying to decide whether to
DEAR READER - No. limit or eliminate their .
I
Merely consider this one pro- children·s television wat..
blem that must be worked out

CHOICES

a

Annual Roach reunion held
Descendants ol John and Roberta, Tammy, Jeffrey,
Amanda Aumiller Roach and Bobby Jo and Sheila, Mr. and

and Alice Roush, Mr. and
Mrs. Donald Zerkle, Letart
Route.

Straulher and Nancy Gibbs Mrs. Richard Johnson , Ollie
Edwards held their aMual
reunion at the Hartford
· Community Building on
Saturday, August 5. ·
The foiling persons a(·
tended:
Mr. and Mrs. John Forsee,
John Paul, Timmy, Tanuny
and Jason, CinciMati ; Ada
R. Caufman, Gallipolis; Mr.
and Mrs. Edward Spears,
Cheshire;
Mrs.
Betty
Lavender, Randy, Estel,
Rusty, Angela, Ricky, and
Stacy Grimm, Mr. and Mrs.
George Tripp, Mary AM and
Scottie, Robert and Roger
Roach , Dolly Trumbull ,
Donna Grinstead , Mrs .
Catherine Stew'art, Nancy
and Raymond, Mason.
Mrs. Nellie E. Schools,
Point Pl~asant, W. Va.; Mr.
and Mrs. Strawford Ohlinger;
Wayne, David, Debbie and
Ralph, Jr., Mt. Alto, W. Va~;
Mrs. Joyce Zerkle, Stewart
FALL FABRICS
and James, Mrs. Ame•60" Suraline
lia
Roach ,
Hart·
•54" Woolens
ford, W. Va. ; Janice
•45" Reversible
•45" Corduroy
Stanley, Vo0na Fry, J oaMa,
· Bessie Ohlinger, Man_dy
•60" Velour
QuiHed Fabric
CERAMICS, macrame, handcrafted jewelry ,
Riggs, Amanda, Chris, Steve
I
treasures made from trash and a variety of novelty items
and Joshua Miller, -Dale
and crafts entered in the domestic arts department were
Roach, New Haven, W. Va.;
judged by Mrs. Irene Christy, Here she looks over three of
Edwin
Edwards, Mr. and
the .17 macrame hangers entered in the competition.
Mrs. Harold Johnson, Linda
Pomeroy,
Second St.
lhle,
Donna
and
Debbie,
Mr.
the type of proteins in your
blood system. This is a com- and Mrs. Robert Ohlinger,
mon complication of serious
liver disease.
There are many ways that
the liver can be injured. One
of the most conunon ones is
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
from the excessive use of
!.,__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....... · alcohol. AbOut 60 percent of
DEAR READER - Cir- the people who have cirrhosis
. Scarring of
rhosis of the liver means have abused alcohol. That
'
scarring of the liver and it means that at least 40 percent
-the liver
of
the
people
develop
cirliterally follows injury of the
liver cellS. Remember that rhosis who have no alcohol
DON'T MISS THESE!
DEAR DR. LAMB - I scarring occurs if you injure . problem. These can occur
FINAl REDUCTION!
would like to know more your skin or any other part of from gallstones, infedious ilabout cirrhosis. I have had it the body so don 't be too sur- lnesses that affect the liver
sinc-e January of 1974, I have prised if scarring occurs in and even nutritional probeen in three hospitals and the body's organs if their blems.
each one adds to my diet. I cells are injured.
Once ·you have developed
am on a very low protein, The scar tissue in the Uver cirrhosis of the· liver you
VALUES TO 49' • 3~" To 5" SIZE
ValuestoSl2 .99
sodium and potassiwn diet . lt tends to contract and defonns should certainly avoid
Sleevo
eten
,
5lwlrt
s
luvet
.
must help some as I have not the liver. The important point alcohol , and if the cirrhosi.s of
P!•stic planters •f a low, low
tank fops .
sail! pn(e . M;lny ( olon _ l
blacked out in over a year. iii the presence of cirrhosis of the liver 1s severe you might
511e5 .
Before that I would black out the liver is how much liver need vitamin supplements
about every 10 days, function is still present. A and special' diets as in your
sometimes even in the nuld degree of cirrhosis is case.
hOspital.
To g1ve you more
t'Ompatible with a relatively
I don't have good balance
understanding
of the liver
good state of health. If you've
and I for~et a lot. I go to the had a lot of dama~e to the and how it works I am senMagic ..,utton
hospital for a check-up every liver that is associated with ding you The Health Letter
VALUES TO '5.99
THEY AU GO!
three months. My feet swell the scarring, then abnormal number 7-3, Living Wiltl Your
MASON
up and are discolored and
function may cause the Liver. Other readers who
JAR LIDS
they have been doing this for liver
would like this Issue can send
body to !"U!jp Ollid and
about four years . Any inseriously alfecf digestion, in- 50 cents with along, slamped,
formation you can give me dueling how the body handles self-addressed envel~ for it
Reg
41c . 26~
would be appreciated.
E• .
lo me in care pf this
proteins.
newspaper,
P.O.
BJx
l:i!il,
I'm no\ sure whether you
GIRLS'
were having what we call Radio City· Statior\, New
York,
NY
10019
.
.
hepatic coma (coma from
KNEE-HI
You didn't state your age
liver failure) to cause your
SOCKS
AND
black-{)ul spells or whether it but iour dizziness may be
related
to
other
problems.
If
lrrs . OfSl .OO
was associated with low blood
sugar attacks which can oc- you have poor circulation,
PAIR $100
cur with people with liver that may be a factor , too . Any
Pt . Pleasant Only
Only
tnajor
illness
and
you
do
disease . The swelling of your
feet and ankles may also be have one - can increast! a
associated with the change in person's tendency to faint or
cause a dizzy sensation.

Opening day scenes.: of '78 Meigs Fair

BASE·
MENT

r

I

FABRIC

10e

&amp;oe .

AYARD ~

99~

KNITS .................. Y2 OFF

THE FABRIC SHOP

HEA 'JH

0.

SAVE
UP

TANYA SALSER tends to her rabbits at the start of the Meigs County Fair
morning. Her rabbit is entered in the open class competition .

TO

Hearing Tests Set
for Meigs County, Ohio

80%

ELECTRONIC
HEARING TESTS
.Will Be Given By
H. William Matting~

. '

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Aug. 16, 1978

WOMEN'S
SUMMER
TOPS

BELTONE Consultant
Who Will Be A':
Anyone who has trouble hearing Is welcome to have a
hearing test using the late~t electronic equipment to
deter mine if hi s loss is one which may be helped . Some
of the causes of hearing loss will be e)(plalned and
diagrams of how the ear works will be shown .
We Al50 Service 1nd Repair All Mak11 of Huring Aids.
Batteries And Suppli1s For All Mlkn for S•'-·
" you Canna1 Come in _,

CALL FOR A HOME APPOINTMENT.
Phone 992-3629

·

MEN'S
AND
BOYS
TANK
TOPS

MEN'S
AND
BOYS
..
SWIM
TRUNKS ·

'100

GUYSVILLE'S Brent Hayes washes up hi.s Jersey cowat the start of the Meigs County
Fair.
/
"

'

~~H

$300 $500

J

·,

FLOWER POT
RIOT

$200

Meigs Inn, Pomeroy, Ohio, Thursday, Aug.
17, 9 a.m . to 12 noon.

'

Tu,.~ay

UVE PONY RIDES return to the Meigs County Fair
after an absence of approximately 12 years. The pony
rides are being provided by Kenneth and Mark Risley of
Svr.amore .' Ohio. ·Shown are. 1-r. Mark Risle~ who is
'l!l!IJ§.ti~ with the rides and David McKee , Akron, who
took advantage of the rides. David is here visiting his
uncle, Virgil Walker of Racine .
.'
"

CHECK

us

FIRST
FOR

SCHOOL

00

FALL
NEEDS!

3

ET SALE

French City old

r

chunk

·:-:

d

GUT BOLOGNA ..................... !~:. s1..2~.~.'.~!~.....s1.39
HOM. EMADE HAM SALAD ..................... !~:.. sl.09
1 lb . Golden Isle Vac pak

pkg.
0 0 •

0. 0 0 0 ••• 0 0

CHEESE .. -~~~~~ .. 89'

1 lb. Teen Queen
quarTers

MARGARINE ........

2/99~

• 0 • 0 •• •• 0 0 •

1 lb

0 ••• 0 0 •

0 0 0 0 •

0 •••• 0 •

sl.39
•

11 0 ba

g
bag 69~
YELlOW ONIONS..........
' ce

-

·.·.
:.:·

[.i Us.
....

oz .

49e
COUNTRYTIME LEMON AID .....·..·... .. . .. .. ..can
• .. •••
Gallons Rich N Ready

·

ORANGE DRINK ••••••••••..••••••••• ~ •••••••••• Sr
2 PAK BOUNTY TOWELS ••••••••••••••••••••

sr

tO oz. Maxwell House

INSTANT COFFEE •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••s3.98
20 oz . Del Monte

KETCHUP•••••••••••••• :•••••••••••••••••••• 2/sl.29
19 oz. Duncan Hines

REGULAR CAKE MIXES •••••••••••••••• ~ •••••. 79c
5 lb. ROBIN HOOD FLOUR ••••••••••••••••• 93e

2 '1 00

• •

vide tutoring for adults ; aid for the blind or disabled .
Perhapsyuucouldeachlindpart-timejobsforpay.
Cultivate new friends and make sure the male halves of the
eouples aren 't stay-at-home clingers.
Join •n actiVe club. Tell His Nibs you'll go without./lim if he
won't attend .
Pw;h hobbys that will get your husband occupied .
Most important of all : discuss this overabundant
togetherness. Perhaps he is as bored with it as you are -w hi~h.
of course, m•kes him grouchy and critical.
·
Then remind yourself of how Iundy it would be If be were no
longer Hround. -H.

'i? #

C_)

DEAR HF:I.EN :
' A while bal:k ynu ·asked readers for suggestions on how
retired people could make extra money .
I housc-~it. All .1ununer Inn~ and sometimes during the
w•nter. 1 hve.at othe1· people's houses while they 're on vacaUun , taking care of yards and animals, giving the homes an ·
"occupied" look so they won 't l&gt;e broken into. I also provide
pet ~are on a once-a-day basis, feeding and petting the lefl-at-

JS(g OZ.

BOYS'
POLYESTER

SCOTT "VIVA"

PAPER
NAPKINS

PANTS
Regular 79c

WOMEN'S
SHORTS

Decorole&lt;l--140 cf. pkg .

2

Poinf
Pleasant
Stort
Only

PKGS.

200titles. Flcfion 1nd meny
ollwrs . Gre•l buys!

$200

GREAT BUY$!

VALUES TO '20.00

REAOEilS :

•

FOR

$100

PANTS
1

You IIYe over $11.00 on
some . H11gg11r end other
brands. c~. '"·

.-~TM·E~TH~EM·A~W~AY•!----------~

MEN'S
KNIT SHIRTS
lndudes (OtiOR·pCll'f knits end
Sile' S to

l m~ff•cl Benlo~l .

XL . End ol Summer. Cle•n ·

Up.

VALUES
TO

'8.99

SALE
PRICES
IN
NOW

It 's a guud suppl c111ent tu Sot·•al s.,,·urlt)' and it keeJ)s me"""
tiVt.&gt; . Sometimes J gu to diHt~rent dtics -a nice VMC!alion . d
have • well-proleded apal'tmenl which I can leave without

t\ l' l'lllilldl'l' h L' I" ' " llletkt• ."i UI'' ' \'IIIII' dlt'tlts ' III SUI'itlll"l! ('CIVl'I'S
you 111 t'rt .-.t· ttf H( Titl\•ub "~' 111i1 u _
; .• 11
'

2·

Sma ll LOI

Pur house-silting I eharge $5minimwn per day . Animal care
depends on amount of wu1·k Involved and mileage. Cur1·enlly
I'm riding herd on 25 ehiekens and a tank of goldfish. Nu 1-'Ct-

OEM~

THE SHEEP OOESN'T look too happy being sheared by owner Noah Hysell at the Meigs
" County Fair . (Photo by Stanley ).

PAPER
BACK
BOOKS

IJurne~ .

fear of robht·rr 1
·
I tow du I f1n·;l L:i l\'llts ? Wurd of 11111111 h. J 'n1usuul1y bookt.•d far
i11 t:tdVHIH'l' . An ad t with 1:.1 pu.."it ufficc box addn•ss t wuuhJ get
.';urnculle Sta lted. - KF.F;PF:I&lt; (W TilE 110USI ·~~

·sentinel

O&amp;rk colors lrreguler • of
l2 n valu.,

HALTER
TOPS

ting hen· .

WELCHS GRAPE JAM.·•••••••••••••••••••••••• 794
JELLO
PUDDING
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
2/59e
7+4 oz. Whitner
·
·
PINK SALMON.·•••.•••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 7r

MEN'S

WOMEN'S VALUES TO 13.49

MEN'S POLYESTER

P .S. Suggestions, anyone?

RUTLAND'S BILL DYER washes down hi.s hog at the start of the Meigs County Fair.
(Photo by Stanley).

Carnival worker Greg Elifritz prepares
truck at the fairground.

POCKET
T·SHIRTS

FOR

THAT'S TOO MUCH TOGETHERNESS!
DEAR HEI.EN:
After working 45 years I looked forward to retirement so I
could read occasionally. But not one ~k have I read in four
years. Twenty-four-hour togetherness is for the birds !
'
The petty argwnents. the criticism is bad enough, but Hi.s
Nibs helps me shampoo my hair. shower . cook and clean. He
t-ensors my coming and going and is at my side constantly, so
that even letter-writing is a chore.
How doyoumanagealifeofyourownwhenyourretiredhusband hogs every minute of your lime? - BADGERED
RETIREE
DEAR RETIREPk
You might turnY'ollr ·husband on to som~ kind uf volw1teer

S}49 J lb. New
,._
•
'
bag 2ru
..~·:--~~;J:.~ ' work
(LookSchool
up Volunteers
of Ameri~a
in your phone
sliced lb.
learn . about
Volunteers;
Utera~y Volunteers,.
whobook;
proI~~~~.£!!!~~~~::!,~~~~J.CAR~~RQ~!JS!:~·:--~-~-~--~·:--~-~-~--~--~-~
Ohio Longhorn
lb
· by the piece ·

•- FOR TH.E 'HOME

•SCISSOR TONGS •PIZZA CUTTER
•6" ASHTRAY
•MEMO HOlDERS •MIXING BOWLS •NAPKIN HOLDER
•CHROME TRIVET •PAPER TOWEl HOLDER
•SET OF 3 FUNNELS •BEATER WHIPPER
•VEGETABLE PEELER

·Helen Help

:·:·

-

PLINTY
OP

GEniNG READY- Tony Carnahan, Rt. 3, Raelne, is shown grooming one of his
Guernsey cows f~r the junior fair . Tony was buay Tuesday aettlng ready for the junior fair
dairy showmanship and judgifll! to be held Thursday at 9 a .m. at the county fair .

l"j

Scene from popular Demolition Derby

Point PIIISint or Maon
'

RUTH CARSON MOLNAR, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Herman Carson, Long Bottom, had the chore of selectine
winners in the canning and baking contest at the Meigs
Fair Tuesday afternoon. Here, Mrs. Molnar samples
some of the cookies in the competition, Mrs. Molnar, a
resident of Canal Fulton , is a home economics instructor
at the Perry High School in Massillon.

'

.

..
I'

.,

•l

•I

\.

.,

~

�8- ThP. ll&amp;ilv Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, AtJRUSt 16, 1978
from

Over 400 domestic arts exhibits judged at Fair

For Tftur..oy, Aug . IJ

ASIIO•GIIPH

Pomery.
Route 3, Pomery. and M. Lieving, Minersville,
and RuU11'ranc1S, l'umei'OY .
Moore.
Wilson Carpenter, and Mrs.
Paint by nwnber:. Renee · Patricia Mt-Garty.
Embroidered: Jean Moore
Needlepoint cushion : J c1111
.J,.,
Moore, Patricia McCarty.
Ann Marie Crycza, Pumeruy, Slone, Jean Moore , Faye
Other hobby item: r;e'DIIte Jean Moore.
Schu Schultz.
Ruth Wewin, Pomeroy .
Patchwork cushion : Cunni
Liquid embroidery picture:
Swisher, Middleport, Marilyn
Oaby quilt: Esther Mays ,
Sheila
Taylor, Patricia
Spent-er, no third awarded.
Martha Douglas, Ruth ErWolfe,
Dorothy
Calaway.
Cushion (miscell aneous : Yin .
Other picture: Mrs. Bert
Dorothy Downie, Martha
RUGS
Hooked: Eleanor Bohram, Gr imm, Connie Swisher,
Douglas, Sharon Wilson. Mid·
Syr•cuse, Patriciu McCarty , Celeste Bush.
dleport .
Handmade purse: Alva Lee
Painted tablecloth : and Patricia Wolf .
Miscellaneous: Ce leste Reed, Pomery, Melinda
Dorothy Calaway, Martha
D'•vis.
Bush.
Douglas.
HOBBY CORNER
Candle : Patricia McCar(y ,
Embroidered tablecloth ;
Mocte!'Car: Jay Carpenter , Joni Murray .
l"dlricia McCarty .
AT
Ceramics: (age !o 15)
Crocheted \llblecloth : Jean Coolville.
Model uther than car or Marilyn Spencer, Lana Kay
Moore, Unda Carpenter,
Route
I,
truck
: Gary Wolfe, Route 3, Sampson,
Route.I Middleport. 1
Pomery,
Terry
Newsome
,
Reedsville,
and
Jayne
Potholders: Barbara MurDownie , Mrs. , Wil"son
ray, Pomeroy.
ray,
Mary K. Rose, Jean Route 3, Pomeroy , and Ja y Hoeflich, Pomery.
Carpenter,
and
Martha
Lady's blouse : Patricia
Carpenter.
'·
Ceramics, over 16 : Patricia
Moure
.
Wolf, Janet Koblentz, and Douglas, Route 2, CoolviUe.
Embroidered
picture
:
Suzy
McCarty,
Jean Moore, and
Mist-ellaneous
needlecraft:
Choose an exciting Career in one of these
. Fancy apron : · Dorothy
Marilyn Spencer.
Car
p
ent
e
r
,
Route
l,
RcneeStone.
Patricia
McCarty,
Dorothy
success proven fields:
T-shirts : Janet Koblentz, Downie, Mary K. Rose, Long
Macrame hanger : John L.
Downie, and Celeste Bush, Reedsville ; Celeste Bush ,
P'dlricia Wolf, and Marilyn Bottom.
and Patty Edwards.
Davis, Pomery , Connie
Embroidered apron : No Middleport.
•EXECUTIVE SECRETARY
Spence•.
Net'&lt;llepoinl
picture:
Jean
Swisher,
and
Barbara
KNriTING
Cape or coal: Patricia Me· first, J ean L. Moore, MidAfghan : Penny Mullen, Moore, Melinda Davis, Hackett.
•SECRETARIAL
Carty, Patricia Wolf,· a nd dleport , second..
Pomeroy, Patricia McCarty.
Mat;ame: John L. Davis,
Patricia
Wolf.
NEEDLECRAFT
Altona Karr, Route I, Long
Decoupage picutr e : Denise Lambert, Rutland,
Sweater, slipover: Marilyn
Painted pillowcases: Mar•BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
Bottom.
Marilyn
Spencer, Celeste and P"dtricia McCarty .
Spent-er,
Patricia
McCarty,
tha
Douglas,
Addalou
Lewis,
Lady 's Shorts : Barbara
Bush .
Plaster of Paris mold:
Dorothy Downie.
• JR. ACCOUNTING
Murray , Janel Koblentz, and Pomery.
Celeste
Bush,
(third
onlr) Helen Wolfe,
3d
picture
:
Button
front
sweater
:
Embroidered
piUow
cases
'
Kathryn Mora, Pomeroy.
•GENERAL OFFICE
Lady's slacks : Janel Jean Moore, Patricia Wolf, Dorothy Downie, Marilyn Ma rilyn Spencer, Suzy Long Bottom.
Jewelry
:
Martha
Douglas,
Carpenter
.
Patricia
McCarty
.
Spencer,
Koblenlz, EsJher May s, Penny Mullen, Middleport . .
Cr ewel pidure : Mr s. · Addalou Lewis. ·
Crocheted cushion : Martha Cardigan sweater ~· Marilyn
Chester, and Kathryn Mora .
Wil
son Carpenter, Esther
Treasurers from Trash:
Spencer.
•
Lady's Suit : Marilyn Dougla s, Jean Moore ,
Hackett
,
SUzy
Carpenter, Maida Long,
Mays
,
and
Barbara
Miscellaneous:
Dorothy
Spencer, Kathryn Mora, and Patricia McCarty.
Downie
and
Martha
Douglas.
E roidered cushion : MarDorothy Calaway, Coolville.
CROCHET
Begin September 18, 1978
Lady 's jacket : Kathryn tha Douglas, Patty Edwards,
MEIGS COUNTY
Afghan: Wanda M. Rizer,
Jean Moore , Ma rgaret
Doublas.
Financial Assistanc ;'"Availab~
B!'&lt;fspread: Jean
Approved for Veterans
Vest : M~rtha Douglas.
Sweater: Unda Carpenter.
Accredited by the Accre.d iting Commission of the
Cape or Poncho : Dorothy
Association of Independent Colleges and Schools .
Calaway, Wanda Rizer, Martha Douglas.
AUGUST 15-16-17-18-19
• Handkerchief , crochet
trim : Helen Wolfe' Route I,
l•mg Bottom, Jean Moore ,
Addalou Lewis.
Doiley: Patricia McCarty,
SENIOR CITIZENS DAY
Dorothy Ca laway, Jean
9: 00 A.M . - 4· H Hor-se Show
51. No . 75· 02 ·04728
Moore..
9:00 A.M.
Junior Fair Dairy
Baby afghan : Frances lm·
Showmanship and Judging
·•·
boden. Route I, Rutland ;
FOR INFORMATION
'
1:00
P .M . - Dairy Cattle Judging:·
Crystal Rayburn . Martha
, Open Class
Douglas.
CALL 446' 4367
&gt;f-4:
00 P .M. ~ Twilight Horse Harness
Baby sweater set: Dorothy
·•
' · Racine
•. :•..
·
Downie, Crystal Rayburn ,
OR WRITE:
"
r
7:30
P
.
M.
Garden
Tractor
Pull
Wanda
Rizer.
,.. ;\ /
Miscellaneous : Marilyn
7:30 P . M. ,
Junior Fair Sheep
-" ~ , {
Spencer, Renee Stone, andEs
Showman.ship &amp; Judging followed by
I P.O. Box 749
1
er Mays.
Open Class
'
·
I
Gotlipolls,
OH.
45631
1
QUILTS
,..a :bO P .M. Margo Smith And Band
Applique: Penny Mullen.
Pluse provide me with more information!
Cotton patchwork : Martha
'*'Grandstand Attractions
Douglas, Barbara Murray,
Homo
Age
I
Beulah Hill, Route 3,
Address
City
Slate_
liP-~
BLUE RIBBON WINNERS-Esther Mays displaying a baby quill, Marilyn.Spencer, a
Pomeroy .
dress w1th a crocheted yoke , and Sheila Taylor, a shirt and pants which she mau:le for her
Pllono No.
i
!'ainled: Patricia Wolf.
husband , we~e among tht: blue ribbon winners in the domestic arts department. ln domestic
Antique :, Addai!W Lewis,
arts and bakmg and canmng, these three Chester area women had a total of 112 entries.
Ruth Francis. alld Jean

The more than 400 entries
in the domestic arts department of the 115th Annual
Meigs County Fair were judged Tuesday.
To expedite the judging,
Marga•et Ella Lewis, chairman, this year used two
judges, Pam Holcolm for the
clothing items, and Irene
Christy for the crafts and
novelty entries.
Winning ribbons and
premiums in the 92 classes of
the department, listed first
second a nd third respectively , were :
Girl 's dresses: Pat Arnold,
Albany; Patricia Wolf. Route
3, Pom~roy ; Marilyn
Spencer. Long Bottom.
Girl's' Belter Dresses:
Janet Koblentz, Pomeroy,
Marilyn Spencer, andPatricia Wolf.
Boy's Trousers : Marilyn
Spencer, Janet Koblentz, and
Pa tri cia McCarty, Mid·
dleport .
Child's blouse or shirt :
Marilyn Spencer, Patricia
Wolf, and Anita Neutzling ,
Pomeroy ..
T-shirt : Marilyn Spencer,
Janel Koblenlz, and Patricia
Wolf.
Coat or J acket : Marilyn
Spencer, Janel Koblentz, and
Patricia Wolf. · ·

Nitewear :
Dorothy
Downie, Pom~roy ; Patricia
Wolf, and Marilyn Spencer.
Robe : Pal Wolfe.
ADULTCLOTIUNG
One-piece dress : Patricia
Wolf, Patricia McCarty, and
Marilyn Spencer.
Tw&lt;&gt;-piet-e dress : Marilyn
Spencer, Patricia McCarty ,
Mrs. Wilson Carpenter,
Pomeroy.
Beller dress : Marilyn
Spencer. Janet Koblentz, and
Patricia Wolf.
Long Dress : Joni Murray,
Pomeroy: Jennifer Machir ,
Pomeroy. and Barbara Mur-

Mora, Patricia M&lt;-Garly, and
Joni Murray.
Lady 's jumpsuit : Crystal
Rayburn , Route 3, Pomeroy,
Esther Mays, Kathryn Mora.
Men's shirt : Sheila Taylor,
Pomeroy, Crystal Rayburn ,
and Faye Schultz, Route 3,
Pomeroy.
Men's suit : Patril'ia Wolf.
Men's trousers : Sheila
Taylor, Faye Schultz.
Women's miscellaneous :
Janet Koblentz, Marilyn
Spencer, and Mrs. Wilson
Carpenter.
APRONS
Kitchen .... apron : Dorothy

.

FALL TERM

GALLIPOLIS
BUSINESS COLLEGE

..----..

DAY or EVENING CLASSES

GALLIPOLIS
BUSINESS COLLEGE

'

...

•

'

fG-AuiPCiusius~EsscoiL~!1

I()
I
1

-------,
·- ·-I·
t
t

i

I
i

Social 1
Calendar 1 ~

I

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

Aug. 17, 1971

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jon . Ill
Devote your efforts today to

This com ing year you are like ly

th ings that can eith'el enhance

to have more time and fw nds

your career or expand your

available than

financial base. These are you r

before to· do

things you enjoy, such as trav-

luckiest areas.

more glamorous lfle .

Your Intuition -and judgment

ellng, soc ializing and leading a
final
was
by
tu sa me or
substantial y the same
proposed action , all such final
action~ are so Identified . such
persons may request an
adludlcatlon hear ing before
The Ohio EPA on a proposed
action to lssu~. deny , modify,
revoke, or renew a permit,
license, or variance ; or to
approve or disapprove plans
and specl-lcatlons , within
thirty (301 days of th~
Issuance date. ORC 37~5 . 07
does not prov.lde for ad ·
judlcetlon hea ~lng requests
or eppeala on orders, verified
complaints , or enforcement
CO!TIPIIance schedule letters .
Within 30 Clays of puDII'c ation

LEO (July 23-Aug . 221 You 're ' regarding the

unle11 such
preceded

ol

could be taken from you . Relax PISCES (Fob . 2Q.Morch ZDI. The
and you'll enjoy the change . only thing that blocks suc((ess
' H~ving trouble selecting a today is ~our own self-doubts .
career? Send for your cop~ of tgnore them . Their message Is
Astro-Graph Letter bY mailing inaccurate .
SO cents lor each and a long. ARlES (Morch 21-Aprll 191
self-addressed, stamped envelope to Astro-G raph , P.O. Bo x
489 , Radio City Station , N.Y.
10019. Be sure to specify birth

submit wr itten comments
to actions , proposed
actions. verI fled com pia lnts ,
or enforcement compliance
schedule letters ; (2) request
a pub!!c meeting regarding
' propos~ ·actions ; end .or ( 3 )
request notice ot further
actions or prOce~dings . All
requests for adjudication
hearings
arid
public
meetings , and other com ·
munlcat lons
concerning
(1)

relating

sign .

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopl . 22) Lei
your achievements speak for
themselves today rather than
talking of them in advance . Ju st
do a good job and all ~ lse will
take care of Itself.
LIBRA (Sopt . ZWCi':"nl A littiO'
more thoughl may be required
for a project you're involved in
before you make any cash

public meetings, adjud ic ation
hearings , v~rlfied
com .
plaints, and reoulations ,
should be address~d to Th e
Legal Records Section, Ohio
EPA, P. 0 . Bo x
1049 ,
Columbus, Ohio 43216 , (6Ul
.t66 -6037 . Un) ess otherw is e
stattd In patt lcular notices ,
all other communications
Including
c ommenu
on
proposed acti ons , should be
addressed either · to The Air
Permits and Compliance
Monitoring Division or
Perm if and Approval Section,
wh ic hever Is apprqprlate. at
The OhiO EPA, P. 0 . Box
10-49 , Columbus, Oh io ~3216 .
Proposed
Issuance
of
perm It to Install
Coalco Mining CorPoration
Scip io Twp .. Ohio, Issue
date 011 ·01 -78
Facility· descr iption : strip
mine
Ap"l ic a tlon No. 06 -001134 ·
SM
.
2l.6 acres .
of

Outco me

the type who likes to have a &amp;\Ients is quite astute today;
hand In the manage me nt of · Heed your small inner voi:e In
,events , but today this role all activities .

In a newspaper In the affected
county, any person may also :

Issuance

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Feb. 11)

certlt lc at!on

Belleville Locks &amp; Oam
Reedsville , Ohio, effective

date ot ·OI ·78.

Recel~ l ng waters : Ohio
R i ver
•
Perta ins to AOI
cer llflutlon .
Bellev ille Lock s &amp; Dam . ·
Reeds~ l lle , oh io, ~ fe ctlw e
date OB ·OB-18
'tl'.
Receiv i n g waters : Oh i o
River
Perta ins to 401 ce r ·
tltl ca tl on .

!NEWSPAP.ER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)

Laurel Cliff
News Notes
Attendance at the morning
services Aug. 13 at the Free
Methodist Church was 86.
Sunday evening, Aug . 20,
Rev. Jon C. Vogt and
evangelist
Philip
C.
Dinkelocker wiD 'be at the
local church. Both men are
recording artists. Rev. Vogt
served three years as _pianist
for Oral Roberts. The public

Friends will be supP.ortive ol
your ideas and Will try tb
cooperate in all ways as long as
~ou don't try to spring any
surprises . Resist impulsive

behavior.
TAURUS (April 20.Miy 20) Be
lmagiliative toda~ with out getling too outlandish . Rube Goldberg

methods

and devices
you more wor~

could cause
than l~ey ' ll save you .
GEMINI (Moy Zt-Juno

ZU)

Those In your charge will rf\' ~
quire a few oats nn the back

is welcome.
Mr. and Mrs. Dick Karr
spent a week recently with
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Bauer and
their great • granddaughter,
Kelly Su.e Deconnick, 'New
Philadelphia.
Rev. and Mrs. Floyd Shook
visited
recently
with
relatives in Pennsylvania.
Ms. Bertha P~rker spent a
week with relatives in
Columbus.

GUST

POLLY·s .POINTERS
Polly Cramer

Specials
ON

HUSQVARNA CHAIN SAWS
AND

BOUNS MOWERS
Be sure to see our display beside
The Grange Hall at the
Meigs County Fair.

DEAR POLLY.- I have
made nice carry-all bags for
the bea~h and salvaged my
husband 's old T-shil1s at the
s&lt;~ine time. I cut U1ern all the
way arouud under the etnns,
leaving the sides intact, and
together. The buit om
hem has " drawstring rw1
through. The kids color lhest•
as they like with markinK
pens and they say lill'y have
real eunversalwn p ll'4't'S. JEA N C.

..,w

Wilkinson Small Engine Sales &amp; Service

o.

·1 DAY ONLY
AUGUST 26TH
'

'

WE WILL BE OPEN
'

9:00 A.M. TO 9:00 P.M.
FO~

THIS BIG EVENT

,.,, 1: .·

t·· ,;·"

.

FOR THIS BIG STORE-WIDE SALE

WATCH FOR OUR BIG SALE ADS AUGUST 20th &amp; 23rd

Weekend visitors of Mr.
and Mrs . Doug BishOp were
Mr. and Mrs. William Cyrus
and family of Catlettsburg,
Ky.
have enlarged our
Mr . and Mrs. Bob Alkire ll:lk e1rvice department and
service Hotpoint and
and Ray spent the wee~end
with Mr. and Mrs. Don Up- ..-.••.. _ brands.
degraff of Birmingham, Ala .
A bridal shower for Brenda
Pomeroy 'Landmark
Bishop is being held Monday
~ack W. Carsey,
night, August 21, at the
church at 7:39. Everyone is
· Phone 992-2111
welcome .
Mrs. Norma Lee is visiting
a week with Mr . ·and Mrs .
Dick McKnight of Johnstown.
Mr . and Mrs. Lawrence
Douglas spent Tuesday
· evening with Mr. and Mrs.
Bud Douglas.
Miss . Robin
Gib so n,
Columbus, is spending a week
with her grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Bob Alkire.
Craig Howard is in Indiana
for two weeks taking a
welding course.
Mr. and Mrs. Buddy Ward
of Kentucky and family were
weekend guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Jesse Carroll.

For All Your
GE T.V.'s &amp;
Hotpoint Appl.
Sale Prices
Jack W. CaJSey, Mgr..

An~ U .S. made car - parfs
edra if needed. Exdudes
front-wheel drive cars.

BRING IN
COUPON
AND RECEIVE

Phone 992-2181
WHITE
CO-OP
CUSTOM POLY

s2D" Offt

A78xl3

SPECIA).
PRICE

4 NEW TIRES

$9230

E•pires
Augu st IS, 1978

Call

Plus

now for appointment.

Fed. Tax

Included
(Excise · ta• &amp;

balancing )

Pomeroy Landmark

Pomerov landmark
k W. Carsey , Mg r.

OPEN
24RRS.

1HIOUDIIOUl fHI
tfOit•OI

PANU.UIC IAVINOI
ON IIIOGIIIU.ND

~fl
l.liOH'OW AIIIUI1

"nw lai.Mf'Ut

Except Clesed Sablrday li~1iglrt TII9 AI Iiiia,
bce,tliiiH l Wllitt Sttlphttr SpriiiCJ

Grien B'ana

7c

COfi...,. tm-IMI 110011 CO. 1T1M1 iU1D l'fiCII
0000 ......, AUOUif

~~

ntiUIAn.AY AUOUIT It,
lm IN eAlWOUII NIIIIO't. WI ..uvt nt1 .oHT
YO LIMn.,....._, NOIIIIOI.D ro DIALMI,

oco

GOOD

7FULL
DAYS

3

~UBLIC NO.TICE

Country Club.
Canned
·lb.
Ham
................... can
U.S. GOV'T . GRII&lt;DEO CHOICE

Middleport. Oh io until .a : OO
P .M . August 23. 1971 for the
following equipment :
one Tractor . loader ·
biickhoe ,
ot
single
manufacturer or igin . based
on
the
follow ing
!.pee lflcatlons :
EnQine : D iesel, SO to 60 net
horsepower
Electr l( al systtm : 12 volt,
heavy duty . alternator and
heavv dUty battery .
Cool i ng System : heavy

WITH COUPON AND
THE PUICHASE OF ANY

•

Free1er Pleezer

\

fro'len Mo•ehies

1
·:

let CI'NIII S.ndwldle1, Fuill• len,
Twl1 CreMI Ancl M•y Othen

INCLUDES:

Charm in
· Bathroom Tissue

lONE IN

Loin
Strip
Steak .. ........... .. ..

fAMOU$ WUTSIDE

duty .~

TransmiS~Ion :

LANDMARK

$1295

SPECIAL

1

•

California
Cantaloupes ......

t or que

converter type.
Differentia l : locking type.
Tires : (front) at least tO
pt'y , 11.00· 16 or equ i"Walent;
(rear) .1t le11t 8 ply , 16.9 -24 or

equivalent .

Loader : ,.,400 to 5, 000 lb. IIH
capacity ; .75 to 1.00 , c~:~blc
yard Sae neaped ) cal;)ac 1ty;
self leveling bucket with
return to dlg depab l lit~ .
Backhoe ' 11 least 1A tt.; 2•
Inch heavy duty trenchlnt
bucket ; one set ea ch o1
standard, cemetery end
street pads ; adjustable,

sign.

An authorized Hoover Rep. will be
in the store the day of this sale

POMEROY

Cll 16. 1t c

padded seat .
Safety accusor les : power
steering ; emergen c y hand or
foot brake ; seat
belt ;
I lluminated · gauges ;
hydraulic warning light or
gauge ; modular safety cat~
with wlfers , heater , with en~
wlthou
air conditioning;
horn , fror\t and rear turn
signals. hndl~ghts, brake
light or lights , two .way
flashers , front and rear
working lights,
reverse
warning system, slow vehicle

CONCEPT ONE IS COMING.
BE SURE NOT f' ••·~~ tr

Hanisonville
Society News

ALL KROGER STORES

Sealed bids will be rece ived
bY the Village -Of Middleport ,
Ohio, Meigs E:ounty, at the
,-,llltgt HaN . 237 Race Street ,

WEDNESDAY
--· =-------------~------------------ANY STUDENT who Stubborn
chen .
wishes to play golf fo r Meigs
Wax removers can be
High School this year is to we X woes
bought at most markets but
re port to Riverside Golf
you can make your own with
Course , Mason, Wednesday
DEAR POLLY - My k.it- one cup of ammonia , one cup
at J p.m. Bring golf clubs as chell floor IS full of wax . I • of delerg enl and one gallon of
pract ice will sta rt Wed- would like to know how tu wann water. Test in a small
nesday.
remuve tht! wetx sin ce I ean- . area to see if this does the job
THURSDAY
not get a new fluor. -MARY - if wax turns cloudy or
RACINE Grange annual T.
softens in a few minutes then
inspen11·-: Thursday 8 p.m.
DEAR MARY - It IS dlf- the solution is of the proper
Poilu• I&lt; refreshments.
fic tilt to try to give a definite strength . If not use more am~ 1TURDAY
answer when informC:tlion is monia . But do nut use more
MEIGS COUNTY Retired not definite But I will than necessary . When it is too
Teachers Associali rm Satur- presume that you have a strong it can hann some
day at 12 noon at the Meigs resilient flooring in your kit- rt!sHient floors.
Inn . Fibn , " Portmits of Our
One manufacturer of such
President", to be shown .
nooring, who reeurrunends
Reservations lo be me~de bv
the above fonnula, says that
We d n es d ay , 992-3744·. Joyce Swisher at 614-367-7467 after sweeping the floor, ap992-5345.992-5123 or 985-3821.
or Bill Quickel at 992-0077.
ply the solution liberally with
ANNUAL Homecoming of a sponge mop and leave for
MEIGS COUNTY Retired
T eac hers noo n luncheon Zion Church of Christ Sunday from three to five minutes.
Sat urday at Me igs Inn . at the church. Basket dinner Scrub with a stiff brush or
Reservations may be made at noon with program at 2 line stee l woo! I but do not use
steel wool pads on a high
by calling 992-3744, 992-5345, p.m.
gloss vmyl). Remove !he
992-5123 or 985-3821.
MONDAY
with a mop or doth
solution
SUNDAY
MIDDLEPORT Business
CLASS REUNION of 1971 and Professional Women 's and then proceed area by
graduating class of Kyg er . Cl ub, ann ual family picnic at arel::l until the entire noor is '
Creek High School Sunda y 2 Forest Acres Park , Shelter stripped of wax. Rinse with
p.m. at Ga llipolis Park Front. House 1 nearest the road . dear, cool water. If any wax
Brin g cove red dis h and Covered dish, beverage and film remains repeat the stripswimming trunks. For ad- table service to be taken. Pie- ping on spots where needed
and rinse. DrY. lhotoughly
d ilion a! informat ion call nic•t6:30p.m.
bel ore applying new wax .
Older floors may require two '
coals of wax after stripping
so as to attain the desired
gloss . - POl.LY
DEAR POLLY - I suggest
that Denise put her husband 's
unifonn' lhat has hairs on it in
u.. dryer before laundering . r
did this with a coat of mine
and
it. worked .
El.IZABETH

498

vided you· don't tactlessly blu rt

out some lhing that's bette r left
unsaid .
'

FOR

you today or they're not
to gQ along with your

SCORPIO (Oct. 2•-Now. 22) In kteaa .
spite of vourself todav , your CANCER (Juno Zt.July 22)
chances 1or accumulation look Changes can be brought about
good . People steering things today It allaapects are l o gical!~
lhrou gh on your behalf ac- analyzed previously .
Unplanned, Impulsive a!teracounts for this .
SAGlTTARIUS (Nov . 23-Dac. Uons could fail. • ,
21) Frle.nds will find you a very
pleasant companion today pro -

ENROLL NOW

Thursday, August 17th

~

Bernice Bede Osol

liket~

outlays. 'Plan now. pay later.

All Dlds should inclu.de •
cash price and a price tor
cash wltn allowance for the
purchase DV the successful
bidder of a 1967 International
Tractor .Loldtr. ~lth backhOI
No. 5199-3121 as provided b~
Section 721 ·15 of the QhiO
Revised Code.
The VII lave ret a ins the
right to reject any and all
bidS .
vIllage of
Middleport
Gene Grate,
~
Clerk . Treasurer
U.t 9, 16, 23 , 3tc

Any Size Pkg.
Ground Beef

Polar Pak
Ice Milk

gc

Kroger
Grade A
large

Pears

KIOGU

Hi Nu 2% Gal.
Lowfat
~a per
Milk
.. ............ . Ctn . .. ..
1.5% lOWIAf

$
THIN SliCED

AtiWit hly II Sllns

... ,..........

Virginia
Baked Ham

lltUIIi-.,.'s

MILI .. o.t . "-tk&lt;oo. $\.It

II AI·! I'll

99

$
••

I'UILIC NOTICI
Notlct II hereby g lven thlt
tht Ohio Anoclatlon of
Rtalton hll flltd 1 com PIIInt With tht PubliC
\Jtllltlts Commiss ion of Ohfe
under docket number 71-151·
TP·CRC lllltllng tho! lhl

muaured or m11aaot nte
torllf of tho Ohio Bot)
telephone Company 11
unltwful. A publiC htarlnt
Will bt l'leld It the OffiCII of
the Commllslon , 110 East
Broad StrHtoColumbul , OhiO

•321Salf :30A .M., Soptombor
11, ltll. All lntoreotod In·
dlvlduilll will be given an
opportunity to ac:tdnll tl\t
lnue prtunttd . Furtt'ltr

lntormanon regardlflg thll
p.rocttd lnt can bt obtained
by contecttng the Com -

minion .
THI! I'I,IBLIC UTILITIEI
COMMIUION OF OHIO
ly : IIIC~Ird L. Smith,
Secretary
II) 16. 1tc

Miracle
Whip .
.tt.
Dressing .. ......... J•

PIOIIN HIAf 'N' SIRVE MAIN OISH
(I~CII'T PIIID CHICKIN)

$ 19
2

Kroger Easy
·lb. ·
Dinners .......... ,.......Pkg.
••

TIIIN SUCED LUNCHEON MEATS
1.-t hlf .. •·

-

·

'fllby.... •.

•

S3H..._

ltiiiRI .....

s3zt-.
H. ........ ..

�''

•

10-Tbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, August!6,1971

.

.

Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash
In
Lou Stewart
Pas'ed
Away 5 Years Ago Today
August 16, 1973
1ne-eded the qu let so He Drew me aside.
Into the shadows where we could confide.

Away from the bustle where all day long
I hurrJed and worried when active and strong .
e

I needed the quiet tho ot first I rebelled
But gertl y, so gently. my cross He upheld
And whispered so sweetly of spiritua l things

Tho weakened ln body, my spirit took wings
To heights never dreamed of when active and

gay .
He loved meso greatly He drew me away .

I needed the quiet . No prl~ my bed,
But a beautiful valley of blessings Instead
A ptace to grow richer in Jesus to hlde.
I needed the quiet so He drew me aside.

Forever Loved and Missed
By Family and Friends

WANT AD

CHARGES

Business Services

1976 NASHUA 1.. x 05 3 bedroom
I 1 1 bath. underpinning, $1500
and assu me loon. 949 -2683 or

10 x SO TWO bedroom mobile
home. $1800. 992-SSSS .

810 S WANTED on a 197• 60 x U
Modular home . Damaged by
fir e . The home is well built and
conta ined 3 bedroom loi-ge living room . formal dining room .
kitchen , fam ily room , I ' t
baths . You ere invi ted. to in·
spect this home located ''t mile
·east of Harrisonvil le St . Rt. 143.
The purcha ser m ust move the
horrre no t later than Ckt . . IS,
1~78 . Ma il sealed bids to 73
Roo s~velt Or ., R.A.f .B., Ohio,
43217 to arrive not later than
Sept . 20. 1978. Include retu rn
oddreS5 .and phone nurrob"r.
Announr::ement of acce pta nce
of a bid w ill be made no t later
than Sept . 23 , 1978. Terms ·
Cosh. Cer tif ied check or bonk
droll. The owner reserves the
r ight to re ject ony or olt bids.
·for appointment to in$pect the
home coli 742-3122 or Co lum·
bus
-497 - 1317 . Harald
0.
Graham , Owner.

-~

__

NOTICE

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

HOMESITES_for sale , I acre and
up. Middleport , near .Rutland .
( allqq2 -7A81 .

-·

.

--~---

NEW 3 bedroom house , 2 ba ths,
all elec .. 1 acre. Middleport .
close to Rutland . Phone C/'92 ·
7481.
VA -FHA, 30 yr . financin g, also
ref inancing . Ireland Mortgage.
77 E. Sta te , A_th,ens , phone (01 Ill )
592-3051
....

-------

HOBSTETTER REALTV

SPECIAl AUCTION Tuesday night
7 p.m . u~ed lur nrture . El~· s
Presley bus t d1shwore. ant•
que j; , pos ter bed baby bed and
mrsc. at Oh1o Rover A ucl •on
537 High St Mrddleport . Ohro
DEAlERS AUCTION . Pub l• c on
11 1tod f rrdoy August 1~ I p.m
til ? New merchond •se sold on
quant rty Ideal for stores, ga s
staTi on yord ~ o l e ~ . et r::. at Oh1o
Rr ver A uctron now located 537
H1gh St M•ddleport . Regular
sole Frr doy at oppr oxr motely 7
pm
WE ARE ANNOU NCI NG that
Orono (lynch ) JOhrn dn has
r eturned to Brenda s Boutrque
1n Middleport For opporntment
co1199'2 -3b67
PUBLIC AUCTI ON Sole . Sa turday ,
Aug . 19 th 1 p m turn east ol
Bopl•sl Chu rch
1
mile on
Foglesong Road Oak chest
spool bed a nd dr esser. T.V..
wr1nger washer and lots o f
m1sc Howard Beoselev Ave
ltoneer .

[b [jHJ~-=-~ -':'""_~
LOST SPRINGER Spaniel . block
and wh1le . Tail cl 1pped 8 mo
old . Female l imp!. . Tvpper $
Plo,n\ ore . '1 weeks . Child 's
pet . Rewor d614 -667 -6124.

Office Hrs. 9 a.m .-5 p.m.
Closed Thursdays &amp; Saturday at noon
Your Full Time Real Estate Broker

(61&lt;1698·3290
-

-'·-- - .... ---

- - ---

IN SVRACI,JSE: 2 bedr '?om house .
New storm windows·. N'w
aluminum building. 7 porches .
992-321 9 . .
105 A CRE est at e. lovely Iorge
modern home wi th porc hes,
Iorge deck . pool and lond ~o p ·
ing. Bor n, ponds. we ll fenced .
Nearly all land in U$9, meadow
and po stur e. $225 .000 f irm .

01&lt;-667 -3398 .
ACRES . 8 room house . 4
bedroom , new b9th. new kit chen . city water On Rt . 33 in
Burlingham 992 · 775 I.
.
' - -- -~---.
FIVE ROOM house and both.
Newly painted . Portly furn ish·
ed. Lorge garage . $9500 . 9b-4 S.
3rd , Middleport .-CI'92 -5989.
10

11

- ·--- ---'

1' • ACRE S drilled well . se pt ic
tonk . l ~oted 1 mile fro ~
M eig s
Mine
No .I
Coli

30H82 -2334 .
BIDS WILL be accept ed th ro ugh
Sept. 1 on the Harr isonv ille
Pr es b yterian Chur ch Par so ncige . An 8 room house
located beside the church in
Harrisonvil le . lot end garden.
Send bids to Rev . Dwight
Zovi tz . Bo• 208 . Middleport ,
Ohio . For further information,
coli 992 -3376 . Right to rejec t oil
bi ds reserved .

----~

25

~ -~ ·:.. ~ ll_b':: k ~o~~W~.:_5 456 .
1972 MER CURY MARQUI S. New
exh aust system . 992-5623 .
1972 PLYM OUTH OU STER . air con d•troning
ec. On omico lly
od
wor k car Phone 985 -359i!! .

fast at $30 .000.00.

10b3 Old s 88 , new botlt.!:.v. 8)1 ·
hausl brokeshoes. aut om atic
Phone 949 -2426 .

work coul d make this a rea ll y nice pla ce . Se lls for

Rutland - 3 bedroom home on Main Street. A little
$14,000.00 .
Middleport - nice big older hom e with 3 bedrooms,
new gas furnace and new roo f. Loc ated on South 3rd

&amp;s¥

Avenu e. Askin g $15,01)0 .00.

FIFTH WHEEl trorler , Low boy L8
ft . long o""eralt 2 a" le $900 .
W•lh hook up S1 150 . Good con ·
d rfrOn . U sed very litt le . Coif
61~667 - 3251 lorry~ B~k~r :__ _ ~
HEAlT V PIGS. $25 .00 and up.
Phone 949 -2400.
CANNING TOMATOES . Bri ng you r
ow n con totner Pick your owrr .
Marshall Roush' East le tart
247 -3752 .

-

ClE AN WHEAT STRAW , 1.25 0
bole . Phone 667 -J32b.

- --

--.-

-- ---

~

-

BEDROOM SUIT !: with morbi@ top
li ving room suile, cedar war drobe , table . 2 wooden c ho 1 r ~ .

e

Mrrteso to
tr e ad I
sewing
machine . Coli qq2 . 711 4.
-

15 CU FT Sears Coldspot chest
type freezer Ver). Q()Od condiltOn S160 Coli !&gt;undoy or after
5 30pm td A·b07 -30.4l .

fence.

lWO ROllS o f 54" wrre
10
lt . bo r 30 ' comple t.e soda faun torn u~ed lovo taries , sinks . 10"
cl oy trle 3 I I long , -p•uo oven,
cann1ng tOt s, ole rnr lk bellies.
ole Koehler wood pop ca se,.,
13'1
6utl ernul
A \le .,
Pomer o y Ohto .
AI-'Pti:S
f itzpa tr ic k Orch ards .
Store
Hau te t,sq
Ph one
Wilke s\l dle b64 37 8~

Rutland - 3 bedroom , total electr ic home situated on
nice size lot in Hutchison Sub-di vision . Home has own

wel l. Sells lor S32.000.00.

·

New Listing - 31J'2 acres located in choice are1 . Land Is
si tuated on south si de of state route 7 b!tween
ceme tery and state highway garage. Sell ing price

512 ,000 .00.
WE NEED ALL TYPES OF LISTINGS. WE ARE
SELLING FAST!!
·· Cheryl Lemley , Assoc ., Home Phone702·2001
Hilton Wolfe, Assoc., Home Phone 949~2519
GeorgeS. Hobstelter, Jr., Broker
Home Phone 992 · 5~9 ·,

r----::-=-:--:-::-:-:---------------...,.-,
EXCELLENT FARM BUY -

141 ACRES -

The

owner' s age prevents her from cont inuing to operate
the farm and !he desires an Immed iate Sale . 50 to 60
acres tillable wlfh some very good creek bottom hilltop land . The boloncel• In pa•ture &amp; woods. The 6
room home Is .good (does need some modernization).
large all purpose barn &amp; ~vera! outbuildings . The
minerals go with It and It's located In an area where
ga s, oil &amp; coal have been .found to be plentiful , Near
Rutland . 60' s.

CAll THE WISEMAN
REAL ESTATE AGENCY 446-3643

Fr•e EstfmatH

109 High St .

10:00-Pollce Woman 3,4, 15; Siarsky &amp; Hutch 6.13;

Work Gu.ranttod

Pomeroy
8·2· 1 mo . .

7·1 0· 1 mo.

NEW FIBERGLAS TIRES

ROGER HYSELL

News 20.

10:30-John Cage 33; To Be ' Annciunced 20.
11 :00-News 3,4,6,8,10,13, 15: Dltk Cavett 20; Lilias
Yogo &amp; You 33.
.
\
11 : 3()-Johnny Garson 34,15; Pollee Story 6. 13; Hawaii
Five.o 8; ABC News 33; Movie " Rhapsody" 10;
12:00-Jonokl 33.
) 2:4()-Mystery of the Week 6,13; Movie " VIllain" 8;
1:00-Tomorrow 3,4; 2: 1()-News 13.
Movie Chonnel 4 5&amp; 7 P .M. - You Light Up My Life (PG )
9 &amp; 11 P .M. - Bobble Jo &amp; the Outlaw (R)

7-20· 1 mo. pd.

J&amp;L

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE
Cellulosic (wood· liberl
Thermal insulation
S.ve30 pet. to 50 pel.
an hNtlng cost
E•perlonte and
fully Insured
FrH Est.
Call992-2772
8~ 10-_
l mo. (Pd.)

equipped

For the

1kids and nice modern 3
!bedroom home for mom
,and dad . Has full basement
'with fireplace . Over 4 acres
with fish pond and 2 car
garage . Central heat and

air conditioning . S35.000.
COUNTRY HOME - New

spacious 3 bedroom brick
veneer hQ"Tle . Has large
sundeck , front porch and
over 1 level acre .

CONDOR STREET - 3
bedroom frame nome with
bath , gas furnace and large
terraced lot with room for

park ing . $9.500.
NEAR CHESHIRE -

air

Fair
Market
Value
$28.500 .00.
.
NEW LISTING ~ Country

city water, natural gas
fireplace, 2 car garage, and
garden space. Only $14,000.

TREEHOUSE -

kitchen,

condition, center lot.
carport and storage shed .

SIZE
4
B~DROOMER Bath ,

near Pagevlile, one you
ca n' t resist. Super nice 2
bedroom home. all storms
and insulation. aluminum
siding , carpeting all In very
good condition. $6,000.00
BUT, the home must be
moved t o your lot .

NEW LISTING - . Country
near

Pagevll te.

15

nice

laying acres. $10,000 .00 BUT, the above house must

go here .,.- total of sr6,000.00
for the best
living .

in country

NEW
LISTING
EXCELLENT LOC.r.TIDN ,
3 bedroom , large .utility,
full basement, 1 floor plan

on 2 level lots. all for only
$27.300 .00 .
BRICK RANCH
3
bedrooms, 1'12 bahts, wood
burn ing fireplace. central
air, nice modern kitchen .
front and rear porches ,
peting in excellent

condit ion . ONLY $31,600.00 .
NEWER RANCH 3.

On

bedroom s, equipped
kitchen, small level lot. full
st.orms,
good

Rt. 7. Large fam ily brick
with 2 apartments. Real
nice and mOdern Inside.
F urnace heat i ng , full
basement and a trailer
ren tal . Garden on 114
acres. Ideal for a large
fa mily who wants Income .

ne1ghborhood, ·a great
starter hDI;Tle of $27.700.00 .
.59.500.00 - Needs some
repair ,
large
yard ,
Immediate possession in
Pomeroy . Below Fa ir

Market Value .
CALL CLELANDS, YOUR
LOCALLY OWNED FULL
TIME REALTORIII!
HENRY E. CLELAND
I!,EALTOR
HANK, KATHY, LEONA
ASSOCIATES
992 ~ 2259 , 992-2568

if"W

Housing
Headquarters

.

Rutland,

Phone 915-3106

"

Ph , 992 ·2148

'

Chester, Ohio
10·30-c

CEN'rRAL REALTY CO.

guor,onleed.

'

Cell

years

rJ

work
Tom

Hoskins , 949-2 160. Free
Estimates.
7 · 16~ 1

38 25.
SEWING MACHIN E Repo ir s. \er""ice , oi l makes. 992-7284 . Th e
Fab ric
Shop ,
Pomeroy .
A uth ori zed Singer Scles and
__2!rvi~~ horpen_5 dss ors .

mo .

REEVES TRADING Post . Pogevi lle.
Groceries , d1y goods. hardware . leed , tack shop . Sper::iol
~. 25 lb . ol do~ food , S3.8B.
.
AUTOMOBILE IN SURANCE been
cancelled? l ost your operat ors
license? Phone 992-7 11113.

--

------

THE CHI MNEY Sweep . Reduced
rate s t il Sep t. I . bl 4-373·6057
weekday s unt il S.
----~--

POODLE TO o n1ce
preferably · on older
Phone 992 -2186 .

home ,
couple

insulated, natural gas heat, outside cellar. Nice Ohio .
River view. Loca ted near Racine . Priced for quick

•ale . S9 .500,
TWO ACRES - A beautifu l 4 year old, 3 bedroom home

Will 00 bboby sill ing in my hame
5 ·days a week lor any aged
child. Phone q:lll9 -2758.

-0
H
-U-SE-PAI'NTIN'~G
;:. C:
in-;
dco
:-:-:r- c-,-o-u-:-1.

57 ACRES - With a nic e 1 story house with 3 bedrms .
and 1•17 baths . Mostly carpe ted. Big central fireplace
With heatolater. Small barn and outbuildings, 29 acres
tented . Nice country setting off bla't kfop road lust 6
minutes north of Racine. Asking S42;0Q0 .
·
1/:l

6 ACRES - Nice 1'h story home mo•tly carpeted with 3
or 4 bedrms .. ljylng rm .• famlly rm ., with fireplac~,
basement, fuel' oil furnace, garage and outbuildings.

Some fencing, plenty of road frontage a·nd garden
5pace . City water and drilled well . Loc. close to

TOO .. . ON E. YOU
MU5T NEVER

TElL ANYIIODT!

WHY DO WE.
NEEO A RAS H ~
UG•tT? 11'5

Bf?OAO OAYU G~T .'

WHERE

F{E!5Ul:T OF A
TO!&gt;!l&gt;·UP- WI-lAI

TH ERE'S
BEEt-! NO LIGHT
f'OR YEARS ...

GOIN'

Hocking Valley Bluegrass 20; Consumer Survi va l

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprise answer. as sug geste~ by the above canaan .

Kit 33 .
7:3()-Hollywood Squares 3; Gong Show 4 ; Match
Game PM 6; Tattletoles 8; Mac Nei l-Lehrer Report
10,33; That's Hollywood 10; Noshvllle On The Road
13; Marty Robbins' Spotlight 15.

"[I I I Xt
{Answers lomorrow~

WE'RE
Yesterday' s

I J umbles· WHILE

VILLA . CURFEW FRIGID

9 :QO--Richle Brockelman, Pr ivate Eye 3,.4, 15; Bar-ney
Miller 13; Evening In Bytanthi um 6; Hawaii F lve-0

8,10; Archltecturai .Odyssey 20,33.
:·, .,
9:30-PIIot 13: 10 :00-Qperatlon : Runaway 3,4,15;
ABC News Closeup 13: Barnaby .Jones 8,1 0;
Poldark II 33; News 20.
10 :30-Lock Stock &amp; Barrel 20.
11 :00-News 3.• •6.8 .10, 13, 15; Dick Cavett 10; Li lias
Yoga &amp; You 33.
11 :31&gt;-Johnny Carson 3, 4,1 5: Starsky &amp; Hutch 6, 13:
Mash 8; ABC News 33; Movie " Is Paris Burhing? ..
10.
12 :1l0--;Janakl 33 : 12 :05-Movle .. Something of Value"
8; 12 :4()-Legend of the Black Hand 6,13.
1:00-Torilorrow 3.•; 1: 50-News 13.
Mo•lo Channel 4 5 a. 7 P .M. - Bobby O-t1e1cl lPGI

~~H¥~td'
by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS

GASOLINE ALLEY

~

~

Rubber Back Carpet
As !..ow As

Won't

take a m1nute t' fil'.

t.he'r leakl.l faucets like
we promise'

sq. yd .
&amp; up

9' and 12' Vinyl

Roor Covering In Stock

9 style
of cake

21 Nevada city
Z4 French

FRANKJ&lt;ERNlE

favorite

of gift bearers
3131Greenland8eware
Work crew
41 Concealed.------------. d ummy, Declarer led a low
NORTH
+KQ62
.. 10 9 3

Z3 Wild West
show

ZSCiocklng
device
Z8 Little drink
31 RU9Sian
river
32 Remove
from office
35 Swedish
COW1ty

• A J 10 9 8
• KJ 5

• 43

• K63
+A K Q 8

West

45 Peruse
48 Bankroller

Pass

2+

Pass
Pass

3 NT

AXYDLBAAXR
L 0 N G FE L L 0 W

CltYPTOQUOTES

YPDFWU

YOU

CAN

HMMM ... MAYr:£
I WA5 ALL
WRONO AE\OUT
HilA !

NXZUOF

'

SXW

HPIDUF

Pass

South ' s two heart bid
showed four hearts and im plied less than four spades,
DPIHHK whereupon North jumped to

three notrump. •

JQZNP

This was a slight overbid

l F and the contract most opti-

mistic.
North.South have only
seven top tricks . The total is
FQRRPFFPF . brought to eight by the lucky
IF
CDWB
XZF
location of the ace of spades
In the West Mnd, whlcl\
TWXU " VPSPK
assures
tl!at both the king
Ytllerday't Cl)llll llfllte: TIIERE ARE SOME EN- and queen
of spades · will
TERPRISES IN WHICH A CAREFUL DISORDERLINESS IS score. But from
where will
THE TRUE METHOD.-HERMAN MELVILLE
the ninth trick come?
11nm 1!Jor ,..._, S,odleato. t"":
The opening spade lead
was won by the queen In
BQRX

CDWB

XZF

MY · DADBURN NOSE IS
ITCHIN'- -- THAT'S A SHORE
SIGN I'M FIXIN' TO GIT- -·

1

2•

By Oswald Jacoby
aad Alan Sontag

CIZHQDPF

BARNEY

mobile home with nat ural gas hea1 , city water &amp; septic.

Pass

Pass

' simply stands for another. ln lhia aample A ia
One letter
North's two-club bid was
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, Stayman to ask If South held
apoatrophes, the length and formation of the word• are all
a four-card major s1:1it.
hints . Each day the code letters are ditrerent.

COME UP Wln1 A,
FEW 5KETC~ES..C:

515,000 - Will buy a good 5 bedrm . house with largo
living room and kl~hen, 2 bath•. bo•ement, F.A. nat.
gas heat in Cheslt!r.
We NH,d .Listings (Middleport! .
We hove buyers tor many types of promy
CALL JIMMY DEEM , Assotlate,149·1311

South
1 NT

Open ing lead : • J

. Ia

NOW IF

VAC:ANT LAND - 10 acres ot land on Rt . 33·• lane
about one mile north of 7-33 bypass. Asking 511 ,800 .
510,90. - 1 acre level land with a 64•11. 3 bedroom

Nortb Eatt

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It :

NXP

1S IN STOCK

the king in dummy . Both
East and South discarded

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer : South

WINNIE

8ED.f.G)R
YOU

EAST

.. Q 8 7
• J 942
• Q 10
• J 10 7 5
• 963
SOUTH
• 75
" A 642

•Rutland

MAKES A

WEST

-,_-·COMPANY!!

diamond, which he ducked,

ailowing West's · 10 to ta ke
the trick. West calhed the
ace of spades and continued
with the 10. It was won by

• A 87 5

44lmbued

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

IF YOU NEE()
A SOFA THAT

8--16-A

• 42

wine center

C.ll742-2211
TALK TO
Wendell or Herb Grate
or Geno Smith

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

34 Trattoria

431talian

RUG 'REMNANTS

Alvin Purple \'R )

BRIDGE

S3Eipunge

4% Bright
color

•

stocked .

P .M . -

32 Shut
out

37 Swnptuous
40WUd party

Buy where yau- can come in

n

Wednesda)·, Aug . li

31Epoch

and- what you're gentng
- Good •elections -t Fully

702-221 ...

8 Filch

ze

padding .at no charge .
Expert installation ,

Good Selection Of

Yaterday'1 Alllwer

7 On guard

ri_ver
· land : abbr. 10 Critical
za Potpourri
18 Slisurrate
ooe
2'1 Good
Eternal
15 Musical two
tidings
!2 Famed
19 Washer
28 Declaimed
.,30 Jai alai
magazine's
cycle
_monogram

All corpet installed wllfl

'4• 88

9 &amp;

BecorMo
a member
I Fairy queen

.. i

14 Stupefied
II Stoolie
17 Medii. ill·

SAVE ON
CARPETING

DRIVE A LimE
&amp;
SAVE A LOT

DOWN

I Clan; group 1 Hundredth
8 Ship's rigof a peso
ging support zPoised
10 Moses
3 Brittah gun'
portrayer
4 U.ceraled
11 Glee club
~ber
1% set in
13 Beverage

8;,1 0; Once Upon A Clos•lc 20,33; Jack Van lmpe
Crusade 15.

JUST OFF PRESS! JUMBLE B00Kt11 wllh 110puu:l.. lt .-valltblt tor S1 . ~ postpaid from Jumble, elo INa newapap«, P.O. Box 34,
Norwood, N.J. 078-48. IncluDe ytX~r name, a(klreta, zip codl and ~~
cntcka payable to Newapaperbookl.

6IH&lt;3-2o11 ..

B:OG-Chips 3,.4; Welcome Back , Kotter 6,13; Waltans

8:30-What's Happening 6,13.

An swer· Not many are to be seen in the Citrfe

wlndow- .. A FEW..

DON 'T Mt!)S_ Bes t buy on f old
down
tra i lers
and tru ck
campers by Joyce. COONER 'S
CAMPERS : rake CR 28 to
Boshon , fol low sign,. Contact

1ppllances. family rm. with fireplace, ail nicely
carpeted . Full basement with wood -burning stove.
approx. one acre land. Have a look . Only ~7 ,900 .

Hogan's Heroes 15 .

6:00-News 3,4,8,10,13,1 5; AB C News b; Zoom 20.
Making Things Grow 33.
6:30-NBC News 3,A,15; ABC News 13: Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8, 10; Over Easy 20; Ant iques 33.
7:00--Cross.Wits 3; Expohlo '78 4: Newlywed Game
6,13; Gong Show 8; News 10: Gilligan 's Is. 15 ;

C:O\J L.O l!loE: "TI-lE

NEW

hospital and school at Laurel Cliff. Asking ~2.500.
A BEAUTY AT FIVE POINTS - Herelsan e.cellent J
bedrm. house with l 'h baths, kitchen and bullt.ln
Attached 12 car l garoge. Chry•ler Air-Temp . centro I
hooting and cool ing . Very low elet. bills. Al l th is and

lltAlli A SECRET,

door. No job too big or small.
_ Re~~bl e_ pr i ces . 997 -6368.

with large eat-in ki tchen, 3 bedrooms , all nicely
carpeted, 2 baths, full basement with TV room . Many
more extras , low heat bill with nat. gas forced air
furnace . All this and two nice acre5 of land In a good

location . Will go quick for SJ5 ,000.

Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea 10; Emergency One

13: Petticoat Junction 15.
5:30-Afternoon Oellght 4; News 6 : Elec. Co. 20,33;

Print answer here:

From S2g95aup
YOUNG MAL E mi xed Co ll ie . Very
. plo yl ul. Phone 997-3478 .

Gunsmoke 8; Mister , Rogers' Neighborhood 10,33;

'IOU 51-!0UL.D VVCAt&lt; . .J

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

WI LL do roofi ng , cons tr uc t ion, - - - - - - - - - - - - ,
plumbing and heating. No 1ob •
lao Iorge or 100 small . Phone
742 -2348

NEIG_(E_·R B-UilDING SuPP~~~;
buifCiinfl houses , repair work
and cabi ne ts . Call Gull' H.
~~i g~0 49 - 2508 ohe r 5 pm. ..

5:QO--Here Come The Brides 3; My Three SQns 4;_

I

WATE R WEll dri lli ng . William T.
Gran t. 742-28Jq,

--------

PUDDLE POOLS. Ail si ze$ and
shapes. Swim pools , 7 y ears
experience . free estrmo tes .
onylhing
y ou
need
fo r
undergr ound swim pools. N ew
r::hemicol and su pply store,
Albany ,
O hi o .
Ph o ne
0 l4 -6q8 -6SS5. ~ Alt e:r 0 pm.
Ol 4·b09 -525 1 John Jell ers or
089 -5265 Bill Gille tte . ) Wt/ ore
NO T all wet on PRICE S.

10; Dlnoh 13.
4· 30-Expohlo '78 15; Gilligan' s Is . 8; Disco Fever 10.

I I I J

~....,.,-~-----

PULliNS EXCAVA TIN G . ~omplete
Ser .. ice . Phone W 2-2478

Montage 33. .
1
4;oo-Far Richer , For Poorer 15; Merv Griffin 6;
Addams Fam ily 8; Sesame St . 20,33; Match Game

IEPSOOPt

EXC AVATING. doz er, l o a~ e r and 17 FOOT
1908 Yell ows tone
back hoe wor k ; dump truck s
camper. se lf-con ta ined . good
and lo -boys l or hrre: will haul
tond il ion , Also hitc h, mirror.
f ill d irt , to so il , limestone an d
everr,th ing needed to hook
gravel. Coli Bob or Roger Jef·
up,e ectr ic broke . 992 -707111 .
----~
f er s. day phon e 992 -708 9. n ight
SElF -CON TAIN ED campe r , ideal
phone 9'n -35 25 01 ~7 - 5732 .
l or 't, !on p ickup.• $300 .00.
EXCAVATING, dorer, backhoe
949 -731-4 .
and dll cher . Char les R. Half ield , Bor:: k Hoe
Ser ... ice , 1976 APA CHE Camper. Phone
q92 -7310.
Rutland . Oh io . Phone 742·2008.

HOWERV
AND
MARTIN
Ex·
c_a voting . sep t ic
sys te ms .
doun, back hoe , dump t ruck .
lime1 tone . grovel, bladd op
pav ing , R:. 143. Phone I (614 )
698-733 1.

8,10: 1:00-&lt;Jne Life to Live 6,13: Bil l Movers'
2:30-Boseball 3,4; Doctors 15:. Guiding Light 8,10.
3: 00-General Hospltal6.13; Another World 15; Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 20,33
3:3()-AIIIn The Family 8,10 ; You Bet Your Li fe 20'

GLIJEN

All ~pes of roofing , guners

31

Journal : International Report 33 .

b

II I

5

SERVICE

Pomeroy, 0 .
3-15-tft

lUST LISTED : 3 bedroom. living room. kitchen &amp;
bath. lots ol paneling, mostly all torpeted. All

f

I PYTEM

HOME MAINTENANCE

&amp;
ownspouts. 20
upe~ience .
All

byHenriArnoldandBoblee

r n

I ·1

T~ble

Only 15; In Performance At Wolf Trap 33 .
1:30-Days ot Our Lives 3,4,15; As The World Turns

Unscramble these lour Jumbles,
one letter to each square , to form
fo ur ord inary words.

'

-

Tomorrow 8,10; Romagno l is '

1:00-For Richer, For Poorer 3; All My Children 6, 13;
News 8; Young &amp; the Restless JO; Not For Women

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~ ®

OHIO VALLEY ROOFING
AND

For The Best
Price Jn Town
See
Denver Kapple
At

MOORE'S

'ftltllrut Jel'il

Jack's Septic
Tank Service
BoX 3

4·30-tfc

Muffler . Brakes
Shocks - Tires
Battery .
Installation Service

- --

Jack Ginter 91S·ll06

Aut• &amp; Truck
Repaif ~
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 9~- .5682

ELWOO D -~
B=
O W::-E.,R S:-R::-::EPAIR Sweepers, toas ters ." irons , all
small appliance s. lawn mower .
next to "State Highway Garage
on Route 7. Phone (61.4 ) 985 -

-- 3 bedrooms ranch In
excellent condltl.on.

' FAMILY

o.

n• tpword

BRAOFORO . Auction eer , Com·
plet·e 1Serv ice . Phone 949 -2487
or 949·20CXl Racine. Ohio , Critl
Bradfor d .

LISTING
NEW
SYRACUSE , Rustl e Hill:

country in this 1974
Richard!On mobile home
!With 2 bedrooms .. H!l5 all
uilllt&amp;es and over an acre ot
level lend . Just S11 ,900.

St. Rt.

'

$38,500.00. 742-2267 .

VIRGILB . SR .,_~ ~~
9,92-3325
·2l6 E. Second Street
NEW LISTING - In the

Residential and commercial. call for estimate. 24
Hour Service . Any day.
anytime .

'10 mile oH Rt. 7 by.pess an

FRED'S TIRE CENTER
in Hortford, W. Yo .

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

GARAGE

Mount.cl on new wMel11
rNdy to go. $30 fa S35
complete . Truck owners,
don' t mlsslhis deal. We Hll
at discount prices every
doy. Stop In at

ACRES NEAR
bedroom house
A luminuni
~idi ng . ins ulated . barn s. pond .

C. Bruce Teaford
Helen L. TNford
Sue P. Murphy
Associates
This beautiful home is ready for your family to move
into. 3 bedroom , dining room , plenty of ·storage space
and it has gas steam heat. fireplace and wood and coal
burner, also . Garage and patio with canopy . Situated
on almost an acre on state route 338 in Racine. Will tell

( Bob Hoefl ic h)

----La ngs ... iHe. 3

sizes and prices .

1977 PINTO 3-door runabout A
cyl. . aut omat ic transm rssion .

SMITH NELSON·
MOTORS, INC.

7•M311

FOUR BEDROOM hou se-. Bvtternut
A venue . Pomeroy . A djacent to
firehouse . $12.000 . 3 bedroom
house, S. f ilth A venue. Middle port . $13'500 Co li 992-2720
or ~2 - 3589 .

bui ld on any of these. All

1q74 PONT IAC VE NTURA . b c)tl .
S200J. qQ2 -7453

The Photo Place

--- --

-

Pts .,
Pomeroy , Ra ck
Springs and Rt . 33. You can

-----

AI Tromm
Construction

CAll US Todoy

.

Service
,..
..... .......

Roofing , Siding,
Room Additions
&amp; Spray Painting

tion•t settings and atso
feature
outdoor
por ·
traiture_

- -----

Only S45,000 .
BUILDING SITES - Rt.
143, 681, business loop 7, 5

~

RISING STAR Ken nels . Boarding
and gr oo ming, al l breed s.
C he~h rre . 3h7 -0292 or 367 -0106.

We are currenttv miking
appointments for senior
portraits. We use trid i-

News 13.

7:00-Today 3,4,15; Good Morning America 6,13; CBS
News 8; Underdog 10,
7:2.5---Chuck White Reports 10; 7 :3()-Porky Pig 10.
8:00-Capt . Ka!'Qaroo 8,10; Sesame St. 33.
9 : 00- Merv Griffin 3; Phil Donahue 4, J3 , 15;
Emergency One 6; Brody Bunch 8; Zoom 33.
9:»-Andy Griffith 8; Joker' s Wild 10: Mulligan St~w
33.
10 :00--Card Sharks 3, 15 ; Morning Fair A; Edge of
J:jlght 6; Tit Tat Dough 8; Var iety '78 10; To Tell
The Truth 13; Over. Easy 33.
10:3()-H.lllvwood Sauares 3.4, 15; Hlah Hopes 6; Price
Is Right 8, 10; Paint Along With Nancy Kaminsky 33.
11 :00-High Rollers 3.4. 15: Happy Days 6,13:
American Odyssey 33.
11 :3()-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15; Family Feud 6,13:
Partridge Family 4; Love of Life 8,10: 11 :55-CBS
News 8; Todav,' s Folr 10.
12 :00-Newscenter 3; News 4,6,10 ; Amer ica Ali ve 15;
Young &amp; the Restless 8: M idda y Mag azine 13:
Watch Your Mouth 33 . .
12 :3()-Ryan' s Hope 6,13; Bob Braun 4; Search lor

WEDNESDAY, 1\UGUST 16.1971
7:1)(}-Cross.Wits ~ ; t:•pohlo '78 4; Newlywed Game
6,13; Last Of The Wild 8; News 10; Gilligan 's Is . 15;
Dick Cavett 20; People &amp; Places 33.
7:30-AII·Siar Anything Goes 3; Sha Na Na 4; Wolfman
Jack 6; Fmlly Fud I ; MacNe il- Lehrer Report 20.33;
The Judoe 10; In Search Of 13; Wild Klnodom 15.
1:()(1,-Movle " The Boost. Are In the Streets" 3.•. 15;
E lght Is Enough 6,13 ; Pilot 8.10: World 20; Nova 33.
9:1)(}-Charlle'sAnqels 6,13; Movie " The Deadly Trap"
8, 10; Great Performances 33: Poldark II 20.

THREE BEDROOM I rome home. in
M id dleport. Coll992 -3457 .

--------

SUMMER CLEARANCE So le 0 &amp; J s
u ~ e of Fobt~n . SR7 . I mde
south o f Middleport . T-shrrt
regular
knots S 81;1 a yard
S I 98 . Pot1 err1\ S 10 All fob ncs
greoHy redu ced

TELEVISION
VIEWING

CAN'i DENY THAT,
SON. WHAT DO YOU

_
.. ...
-·

SENIORS

8•3-3311.

MALE Doberman Pincher 8 '8· S -MOBILE HOMES, Pt . Plea- 12. x- b5 1970 ATLANTIC .MOBI[E 1
ft . Meigs -Rutland orec. I tlas .... sant . w . Vo . beside Heck 's.
HOME. 2 be-1rooms, r::ompletely
clipped ear $ and choke color . 1973 Bro o.dmore 14 K b-4 2
C l1a r~t·
furn ished. w a sher. dryer and
I d&lt;iy
o
lh
~r
has
bod
leg
.
REWARD
bedroom
1.25
air conditioner . On '• acre lot ,
~ OO.y ~
1.00
PhoMe 7.1112-231 b
1973 Dorion 14 x bO 2 bedroom
Lorg e
utility
bui l di n g .
3 days
2.25
FoUNDCooN Hound in l etart I 972 Victorian 14 ._ 67 3 bedroom
$9 ,500.00. Phone 742-::n2b or
!i tiH )'~
3. 7~
.Fal ls area . Brown ond wh ile .
2 both
_ ! 42 ·25q_l aft er o_~-c~.:.-- ~~-·
. Contact Paul Hill . 247 .20 12.
1q72 Co .. entry 12 • 65 3bedroom
E&lt;~dl wuni uv n u~ · nunimwn lfl
NEW
3 bedroom mobile home
----------~-19bq
Statesman
12
.60
7
W).Jnh LS ~ ~,:cnb 11'!1 wv rd pt!r tla;·.
LOS T IN or eo of Fiv e Points on
w i th 1 1, baths . Size 14 x 70.
be droom .
AW. rum tutg ulher U~&lt;~.n &lt;..' O) IJ;I!\"UI I\'t'
- :.__._:___
Con be seen after 5 p .m .
Fla twoods Rood on e block ond
lia)'S will ~ dl&lt;! r~l!t! &lt;l\ lht&gt; l d:ly
r'dtt• .
whil e mole sheep dog and one COAL . LIMES TONE . sand . grovel .
l ocated directly across f rom
calc •um chloride , lerli lizer . dog
blockw ith br own feet fem a le
the Raci ne Hydro Plant at l et art
load. and all types of salt h In lllt! mu r~·. Card uf Than~ and
Cock"erspaniel.
Rew ord .'
Foils. 3 miles abo ve Ra cine,
OIJII U&lt;tf)' : fi l't' llls pt'l' Wtlrd , $.1.1)(1
ce l ~ i or Salt Works , Inc., E. Main
Ohio .
Anyone having informatiar&lt;trc ol l
tn.ill unwn . C11sh ut adv&lt;tttc~ ....__
- -·-----_ ~.'.:.: Pom_eroy . 992 -_38..:_
9:_:
'-.....,.-992 -7574 .
74 SHULTZ CLASSIC mob ile home.
Mubilt&gt; Huml' s.ales and Y&lt;tnl Siiles
BURROUGHS SE NSI ·MA TIC ac 14 • 70 ~ gas , 8 ft . ex pondo in
arl' a~.·cept~td only With cash wilh
coun ting machine . Phone
liv in g room . rock ·o·boy winurdcr . 2:i t-ent char~c fur ads t.'arr}'·
9q2 -2 150, The Doily Sentinel.
dow
in ma ster bedroom.
111 ~ Bo.'t Numi.Jt'r· Jn Cart' uf T hr ~~~­
111 Cou rt Stree t. Pomeroy
wooden beams in cei lings . 3
tmt'l .
CLEANING WOMAN for night
Ohio .
bedrooms. G .E. refr igerator
shih . Also , doytiml!!l gri ll cook ."
Tht' Pu blist~r rest-r-..:b · tht' n~ht
and Ma gic Chef stove, rest un·
Apply in person , ( row 's fam ily BEA T THE Oc tober ru sh. Give us
to t.•t!J\ vr re/'t&gt;c:t am ad.s dct:lllet.l uUfurnishe d, s lid ing gl ass doors.
your order now for arrows
Re sta urant . Pomeroy .
~t' \tullel l. T w PuUli:&gt;ht.'r "'·ill nut lotA sh l~ y woo9bur ner , underpin custom
mo
de
the
way
you
wont
::7:co--c::-::n.~p u ms ib lt&gt; fur mure lh&lt;111 Ulll' uwur·
G REA T
PART
TIM E
JO B.
n ing . anchoring . por ches and
them
and
cut
to
your
indiv
idual
l"l't.'\ 11\SI.'flJOII .
Demon strate MERRI-MAC toys
blocks . A ll inc luded. Priced at
lenglh . Pick up anytime before
Phunr 99".!-~ l:iti
and gills on party plan . Set
10 .500 .00 .
Cal l
Charles
October I . $5 deposi t with
you r ow n hours . No inve-sl ·
_Mu ~roge '}_4}__~~~1 .
order . ~ ( Ea s t o n GomegeHer)
ment, deliver y on or co llec tio n.
a luminum arr ows , S2b .q5
Highest commission Coli A nn
dozen .
Fiber gla ss S24 .9S
Baxter collec t 319 -556 -8B81 or
do ze n. We r elle tch ar rows ,
write M ERRI -MAC. Box 1277.
gloss , aluminum or wood , in Dubuq ve . lA S2001 .
dude! 3 new plastic vanes nick 3 BEDROOM HOUSE in Pomeroy
or M id dleport
Despeorat e ly
and insert , $1 per arrow . Al so
SHl YOUR HUSBANO on t he ideo
needed . Phone 992 -0318
we
straighten
aluminum
or
of your gelling aport time job
rows. $ . ~ each arrOw . Tri
wi th full tim e pay . MERRI-MAC
Co unty Sport Shop Norlh and
needs
demons t r at ors and
Tr i
County
Spon
Shop
super\lisors to se ll l oy5 and
Oownl o wn . 30.t ·b75 -2QB8 .
gil ts on home part y plan . No in·
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Pork .
vestment , deliver y or r::oller:: · CANNING TOMATOE S. greerr
Route .33;-o north of Pomeroy .
tion. Call Ann Ba xter collect·
Tucstl::iv
peppers . Geroldirle Cleland . __l!Jrg e lots. Coli ~Q'l}.£J ·_ ~
thru F'nt.lav
319 ·556 -8881 or wr ite MERRI ·
Raci ne . O hio.
ONE BEDROOM opt Contoct
~ P.M .
MAC. 80 1 Jackson . Dubuque.
!Itt• day bdvn· ~u blt c ulto n
Village MoM or Apt .
Mid·
JU
ST RECEIVEp o shipment c f
Iowa 5200 1,
dlepor t. ~2 - 7787 .
Wh itmer Block Diamond l ini ·
Surui&lt;l1
menl. A lso, Row lei gh Products . 3 A ND 4 RM . furnished and~~ p M.
un 1924 Easter n Ave . . Ga lli polis"
furni shed
o pts .
Ph one
Fndc.~ c.f\~·n l ol•TI
O h io
-45631 .
Ph o n e
(lq2 -5-434 .
CHIP
WOOD . Po les
ma x .
b 14·446·9.5:::1c_::
O:...,.,.,.,----:c;-::
MOBIL
E HOM E space. I ocre.
diameter 10" on largest end .. $8
NIN G TOMATOES . $3 a bu., __
coun try . bl-4 -985 -437_9._ _ _
pe r ton . Bundled slab. $6 per CAN
picked .
Raymond
Rowe .
ton. Del ivered to Ohio Pollet
147-2192 ,
Co .. Rt . 2. Pomeroy . 992-2689.
Ronn1e end Susie Casto would
15 CU . FOOT upright freezer . 3
l •ke to express their thank s to
TIMBER POMEROY Forest Pro·
yeors o ld . Conlor::l Mn . Leslie If YOU have o service to oHei".
a ll their good fr iends and
duels . Top pric.e lor ~ tanding
HoHman . H2 -237.C .
neighbors from Naylors. Ru n lor
wont to buy or ~·II to mething ,
saw timber . Call qq1.5qb5 or
on th EJ cord!- , Bower!- , f ood and
Jq7b FORO 150 Ranger pickup .
oe looking tor work . . . or
0 -,~Kent Honb,- . 1 - 44 b · B 57 _
help dur ing the unex pected
4b() V-8. power steer ing . power
w hatever .. you II gel res u lts
0
l
D
FURNITURE
.
ru1
boxes
.
bras
s
death of therr lolo'ed one.
brakes . radio . posi - tra ction , hi·
fos ter w rth a Se ntinel Won t Ad .
beds . iron beds. desks . e tc ..
Specia l rhanks to Mr . and Mn
outpu t healer , trai ler spec ial ,
Call 991-7156.
·
co rhplete househol d s. Write
~---~~--~
Kenneth Rom one . Mr . and Mn .
rus t , pr oofed . 30.000 miles
3
fAMI
~Y
YARD
SALE.
We
dnes-d ay
M
.D.
M
lller
.
Rt
.
4.
Pom
erOy
or
James Weyersm iller , Mr . and
Ne w !r uck otdered . $4000.
and Thursday . 9 to 4. Double
call 992 - 7760.
M rs . James Bearhs ond Mary
7&lt;2-27 :5:3.·_ _ __
bo .. springs , twin bed spr in gs .
O 'Brien . Your kindness will
O l D COIN S. pocke t wat ches . STORM
DAMAGED aluminum
frame and head board s. Coin
always be remembered in our
class ri ngs, wedd ing bonds .
bu ilding . 6000 unit cage la,-er
giO\$ ceram ic s, boy s biCy cle .
hear h .
diamond s. Gold or silver . Co li
house. 140•40 , Make offer lor
.~ hard arg on , bov s and girl s
Roger Womslev~3_:3_ 33 1_.__
1mmediale remova l. Ce ll Ralph
clot he s. sizes tram children s to
We lker . 992-304 4.
9 yr . b ten ths miles pa ssed
WE Pt( K. up junk au to bodies buy·
------Bradbury School on -Neer::e Rd .
ing iu nk car s. scrap Ir on . bot· lWO O UTBO ARD motor s.
ter ies and me tals . Ride r's
ST AN 'S BARGAINl AN D . A store
!o_.:~':_w_si~~ -~a in _:a~ _
aluminum john boat . 247 -394 1.
Sa lvage
SR 124. Pomeroy .
lor the people . We buy . trade
SA LE , Sa turday , Au gu~ f
CAN NING . PEACHE S
end YARD
992·5468.
and se lL New and good used
19th only 10:00 to S P.M . Cortomatoes
Br
ing
conto
ine1
s.
merchond i\e . furmture and ap - THREE BEDROOM house or 3
rolf Teo lord's residerrce . 60b
Charles R Harris. Portland .
plron ces . Antrques. You will
M ain St . Roc me
bedroom. mobi le home with at
Ohio . B43 -2093 .
always gel o la1r dea l wrth
least I a cre of ground in coun Stan . Open 7 days a week .
try on land con tror::t or pr iced
Monda&gt;; thru Saturday Q om to
reasonable 247-2lb4.
: pm Sundoy~~~-6pm ___ _
O NE USED. Iorge me coa l heater
OIL OR gas lease. Free . 30 acres .
rn good condi tr on . Call 74L -2840
2 mrle s north of Pomeroy
George 5. Hobstetter Jr., Broker
o r 992 -2329.
_b l -4 -72b -2701 _!V~nr n [S __ ~Pomeroy, Ohio , Phone 992-6333

HOOF HOL LOW Horses . Buy . se ll
trade o r tra in . Nt~ w and used
saddles . Roth Ree ves . A lbcny .

Hi&amp;h School .

THURSDAY. AUGUST 17. 1971
5:45-'-Farm Report 13; 5:5o-PTL Club 13: 6' 00-PTL
Club 15; Summer Semester 10.
6 ; ~0octors on Call~; News 6; Summer Semester 8;
For You ... Biack Woman 10; 6 :45-Mornlng Report
3; 6:50-Good Morning, West VIrginia 13; 6 :55--·

•

HAVE IN MIND?

15 WonlsurUndt&gt;r
Cash
1.00
1.50
1.&amp;1
:J.IXI

BAKER 'S BUSY Bee Cer om1cs on ·
r)ounr::es Fall Classes beginnrng
August 28 Classes o .. odoble
Monday 7 t o 10pm. Tue sday 9
to 12 . I to 4: 7 to 10 Wed 7 to
10. Thutsdoy 1 to 4.· 7 to 10
Ther wi ll be a limit o f 20 people
r cla ss so please reg rster as
soon os pou ible for cl osse~ ore
l rllrng up Call bl 4-b67-3252
Pauline Boker. Get s- tarted ear
~on you r C hr~lma s grit:_ .

- Tbe DIIUy Sentinel, Mlddlepor,t-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, A_yg ust 16, 1978

hea rts .
South decided lQ a llow
West to take his top s pade
tricks early , He led the last
spade from dummy - East
and South again "discard in g

hea rts -

and West won .

With out th inki ng, Wes t
c ashed his last spade a nd
hearts were pitched from
the other three hands .
West led ·the dia m ond
queen which South won with

the king. Th e hand wa s
over ! South had made th e
contract . It was just a mal·
ter of playing out"the s tring .
If South led the ace of
hea rts, East was dead . He
had been killed by hi s own
partner . The a ce of hearts
for ced East to pitch either a
d"l amond or a club anti eith er
discard set up the ninth trick
for declarer .
II West had not cashed his
last spade, East would h ave
had one m or e card in hls
hand - a heart - and could
not have

been

squeezed .

West would never ha ve
cas hed that la st spade, but
E ast would have taken two
t ricks - one each in cJ,ubs
and diamonds .
West should have been on
his gll'ard when dec larer so
readily allowed him to cash
the top spade tricks. The
lesson is an ancient one:
Beware of · certa in people

who bear gifts.
f NE WSPA PER ENTERP HISE ASSN . I

(For a cop y of J ACO EI Y MOD~

ERN. send Sf ·ro: '' Win ar
BridQe ," care of this newspaper. P.O. Bo x 489, Radio City
Station , New York , N. Y. 10019.)

�..
.

i2 - The DaUy Sentinel, Mldill!!JlOrt-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Aug.

35 anests
during July

Two fined, 15 forfeit
bonds in Pomeroy coUrt
Two defend8nts were fined
and 15 others forfeited bonds
in Pomeroy Mayor Clarence
Andrews ' Court Tuesday
night.
Flned were · E~die Burns,
Phoenix, Ariz ., SZ50 and

Top garden
iContlnuL'll from page 1J
Leifheit , Pomeroy , onion ;
Herman Carson , sweet
potato ; Leona · Leiving,
Minersville, t umip; Edison
Hollon, corn ; Herman
Carson, squash.
,
In the hay show, Edison
Hollon was first in the 75
percent or more alfalfa class
·with Roy Holter taking
second. Timothy Curtis, Long
Bottom , was first ; Earl
Dean, second and Holter,
third, in the· 75 percent or
more clover class; Dean was
first and second and Hollon
was third in the 49 percent or
less legumes class and Holter
was first in the fescue class.

costs, reckless operat ion ;
Raymond
Mii:'baels,
Pomeroy, $100 a nd costs,
intoxication.
Forfeiting bonds were
Joseph Edlich. Cleveland, $50
bond, pa ssing on double
yellow line; Reva Vaughan,
Pomeroy, Janet Hill, Minersville, William Wickline ,
Racine and Dorothy Seth,
Pomeroy1 $30 bond each,
trespassmg on Powell 's
Parking Lot ; Beri Bryant,
$100,
inMiddleport ,
toxication ; David Hurdman,
Pomeroy, $30, assured clear
distance ; William Strauss,
Pomeroy , Larry Hubbard,
Racine, Lynn Witt, Walton.
W. Va., Nancy Varuneter,
Pomero'y
and
Thomas
Gillilan, Chester, $30 bond
each , going wrong way under
,bridge which is one way
street ; Jay Warner, Middleport , $50, squealing tires ;
Kenneth Massie, Gallipolis,
$30, speed; Donald Smith,
Pomeroy, $50 , squealin g
tires .

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AVELL

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satin dill .

Thirty·flve Jrrests were
made by the Middleport
Police Department during
July according to the monthly
report of Pollee Chief J. J .
Cremeans submitted to
council Monday night.

Ground broken for new Health Care Center

A suit for ·money, In the
amount of PIJI.211, hu been
filed in Melp County Common Pleu Court by D&amp;My J .
Lantz. Southgate Mobile
Home Park, Belpre and The
Buckeye Union ln1urance
Co., ColumbuJ agalnlt Kerey
L. Hetzer, Rt. I, ReedlvWe.
. The suit l.s lor alleged
damages to Lantz's pickup
. truck that backed Into the
Hetzer vehicle on Aug. 29,
19'16.
Ffllng ~r . divorce were
Yvonne vance, Middleport,
against
Bobby Vance,
Pomeroy; Harold E ,. Darnell,
Pomeroy, against Mary R.
Darnell, Pomeroy.

Of the total arrests nine
were on dl8orderly llllllUl•r
charges and nine were on
charges of driving while
Intoxicated.' There were four
charged with speeding and
three for falling to yield the
right of way. There wu one
arrest each for falling to
display license; no operatOr's
license; left of center; wrong
way on a one way street;
tires;
Illegal
spinning
!Continued
JMIItl)
passing ; Illegal e!thaust
pipes. Two cases were . offered In the program,
ranging from basket weaving
dismissed.
to teiml.!l, hu had to be .
GRETI'A SUT'J:tE and Russell Moore, Meigs County
cancelled becauoe of low
SHARON JEWELL and Letha Cotterill put some of
During the month, the enrolhnent.
school supervisors, had just about wrapped up several
the finishing touches on the display of Harrisonville
department -investigated 13
display areas of school exhibits for the 1978 county fair
Murphy appealed to the
Grange 1734 Tuesday afternoon at the Meigs Fair. Four
accidents
and the police county civic leaders to
Tuesday afternoon. Students have some 500 Items on
granges are el&lt;hibiting.
cruiser were driven 4,1!04 provide sugge·~tlollll io
display in noral ha~.for the fair . Mrs. Suttle and Moore
miles.
began setting up the numerous e~thiblts last Friday.
correct the situation.
"I appeal to dvlc leader~ io
give me any and all ' Information and Ideas to help
me, n he said.
WASHINGTON (UP!) Ohio, had a substitute that doors to the public this
Murphy and the group went
With the galleries crowded would give both the states morning, large groups of
on to diiCUSil the various
with backers and opponents, and Congress enforcement women supporting . and
· underlying reasons for
the House started this powers over the amendment , opposing the
deadline
disinterest In the program,
morning what was expected rather than just Congress.
extension had already
Including general public
11&gt; be an allday debate on a
The ERA debate had been appeared and lined up at
apathy and feel of the
pro posal to extend the set for Monday, but the House entrances to the House's
unknown.
deadline for states to ratify spent the day working on a public galleries.
Murphy closed the meeting
the
Equal
Rights foreign aid money bill, and
by pledging that he will
Amendment .
put off the amendment
continue to work to make
The House had before It extension until today .
inroads In the field of conLOSE
YOUR
KEYS?
·when it convened at 10 a.m .
The matter has given Con tihuing
education
and
A
key
ring,
featuring
a
EDT an administration- gress one of its most
"overcome the general 'I
wooden
disk
trimmed
with
barked proposal to extend the emotional debates of this
don't care' attitude."
deadline for states to ratify intense session, and all over pictures of strawberries and
Several courses plaMed for
inscribed
"
Memphis,
Tenn."
the amendment from next one sentence . The proposed
fall
in the county wW deal
amendment has been found in the Daily
March 22 until June 1982: constitutional
a look at the major
with
three years and three says, "Equality of rights Sentinel office. The owner
battles
of history; e1totlc
months.
under law shaD oot be denied may daim the keys at the
dancing;
conversational
Cong ressional ' forces or abridged by the United Sentinel office on Court St.,
Spanish;
color
pbotography.
readied for a fight at the start states or by any state on Pomeroy.
Attending were Dr. N'an
over whether the extension, account of sex ."
Mykel, John Brammer,
in the form of a joint
Thirty,five states have
Cheryl
Smith, Elizabeth
resolution of Congress , ratified that proposal since
BOARD MEETING
Moil,
mental,
health center
The Board of Trustees of
requires a simple majority of. its 1972 passage in Congress.
representatives;
Barbara
the House or the two-thirds But the original deadline of Area ·Six Health Systems
Knight,
attorney;
Leafy
RIO
GRANDE
COLLEGE
Continuing
Education
vote required for approval of l\1arch 22, 1979, left little hope Agency, Inc. will hold its
Cha•teen
and
Eleanor
Coordinator
Bernard
Murphy
addresses
members
of
the
the amendment itself.
for backers to get the quarterly meeting August 23
Knight, senior · citizens
Meigs County Human Resources Council Tuesday at the
The extension debate required three additio~al at the Ramada Inn in
center, and Hank Cleland,
Meigs
Inn.
ehcompassed other issues as states without some mote Marietta. The business
real estate buslneu.
well : Rep. Torn Railsbac~. R-"• time.
meeting will begin at 7:30
lli.,
wanted
House so
to ______
When the Capitol
opened its p.m. and is open
to the public.
change
the the
resolution
._ ____________
_. _____
_

Community

•
~

·•

~ ~•;:...
.

¥

.,.

~~

_,

4

·:".;.,'!f,.·~'i'f' d•.t
. · -~
·

I
1

i

'

'

from

Deadline extension debated

sta~thatbaveratifiedcould
change their minds in the

•1

1
eltlensiori period .
Rep . Thomas Kindness, R- I

Area Deaths. l [·-:.:::::;.:::c:;,:y::::~:-~I
'

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Fall?
If It Is then Farmers Bank has good
for you.

The Farmers Bank has Free Checking
Accounts for students.
It's simple . If you are a full time college or vocational student we'll
g1ve you a free checkmg account. with no service charge. We'll even
g•ve you your first SO Personalized Checks Free.

Be sure to come In to the Farmers Bank today
and open your student checking account.

Fo Farnters .Bank
POMEROY, OHIO

'40,000 Maxim um Insurance for Each Depositor
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

I

I ... ~.

:

Vetera• Memorial Hotpltal
ADMITTED Rachel
Thordsen, Portola Valley,
calif.; Robert Rolllh, Letart,
W. Va.; Dana Haning,
Pomeroy; Wilma Rlus,
Racine; Jo•lah Davidson,
Rutland; Debora Garrison,
Pomeroy; Gwendolyn
Williamson, Bucyrus.
DISCHARGED Ida
Smedley, Goldie Roberts,
Virgil
Walker,
Rachel
Thordsen, Everett Roush,
Okey Bennett.

I
1

I

..

SQUAD CALLED
The
Middleport
Emergency Squad wu called
to the office of Dr. James
Conde at 4:Z7 p.m. Tuesday
for Emma Wayland, a
medical patient, who was
taken to Holzer Medical
Center.
TWOFINED '
Two defendants were fined
in the court of Middleport
Fred
Hoffman
Mayor
Tuesday night. They are Roy
F. Boggs, ff, Middleport, Pill
and costs and three days In
jaU on a charge of driving
while lnto!tlcated, and
George A. McDaniel, &amp;1,
Middleport, $50 and costs,
dl8orderly manner.
.

NAMES OMITfED
Two names were unintentionally omitted as
assisting with clerical duties
at the recent BloodmobUe.
They were Nita Rusche! and
Reda Simms.
OFFICE CLOSED
From AugUJt 17 and 28 the ·
PlaMed Parenthood office in
the courthouoe wW not be
open due to ataff vacations.
Hours are po!!led on the office
door with a phone number for
emergency calla.

ELBERFELD$

WILL BE CLOSED ALL DAy

THURSDAY AUGUST 17th

l!nt r o~

.o uranq

I I

diu MO wordl loq 1or aubJoetlo radllctiGIIily lllelllllor I
alld a11111 be 1tpecl wllb the alp"'• !llldnu. Nam" 11113'
be wtthlleld upon publleaUon. However, aa req-t,
DIDIH wW be dlacloaed. Letters should be In 1ooc1 Iaale,

Charles and Minnie Springer
C&amp;laway. He was an equip- , .....,..., _ .. ,.....uu...
ment operator for Carthage
Township and had been a
resident of the Tuppers
Plains and Coolville areas all
of his life. He attended the
Centerpoint and Asbury
Sheriff responds to article
Churches.
This statement is in response to the article in Bob
Surviving are his wife,
Evelyn Clegg Calaway; a Hoeflich's coliunn on Sunday, August 13, 1978, regarding the
daughter ;
.Nina
Jeaw silent majority not ootifying authorities of vandall.sm Incidents
Calaway. Parkersburg; a son because their names would go out over the "squawk boz.''
and daughter-in-law, Ranson
It is true that some times the names of individuals l.s given
Lee and Bernice Calaway,
Coo lville ; three brothers , out over the air regarding cOmplaints. Sometimes the name 1.s
Everett, Coolville, and Guy the ooly way that the field deputy that is on patrol would koow
and Harry, both of Reeds- who to contact, in responding to a complaint.
ville; a sister, Dora Mae
It is oot common practice to give out the names over the
Calaway, Coolville. He was air, but we would like til know the name for future reference oo
preceded in death by his first the case.
If an individual reques\ll that his name not be given over
wife; Mildred, in 1943, and a
the air, the dispatcher will honor the request In moat of the
sister. Hazel Wooten .
Funeral services will be cases. We will avoid using the names on the air If it, can be
held at I p.m. Friday at the avoided .
Vanderhoof Baptist Church
BUT it is very important to this office and every other law
with the Rev. Guy White enforcement agency that the citizens stand up for the law and
officiating. Burial will be in give the information that will help bring the criminals to
the Rockland Cemetery at justice. After all, you may be the next victim.
Belpre: Friends may call at
What if our forefathers felt lhisway? Well, we would oot be
the White Funeral Home enjoying this beautiful land and freedom that we have today,
after 3 p.m . Thursday and at
So, I ask you again, please help the law enforcement
VERE RANSON CALAWAY
the
church
one
hour
prior
to
by calling or stopping in at the office and giving the
agencies
COOLVILLE
Vere
services.
helpful
information
needed to curb the thefts and vandaJI.sm
Ranson Cala way, 68, Route 2,
that
is
occurring
in
our area.
Coolville, died Tuesday at
You
will
feel
better
deep down inside if you do. - Signed,
· University
Hospital
in
James
·J.
Proffitt,
Sheriff,
Meigs Collftty,
·
Columbus.
Mary EUzabeth Cooke
He was born in Meigs
Mary Elizabeth (Tib )
County , a son of the late Dickens Cooke, 52, Letart,
HART REUNION
. HI-LOW
died this morning in Holzer
The
Hart reunion wUI be
NEW
YORK
(UPII
The
Medical Center.
held
Sunday,
Aug . 211, at
highest
temperature
reported
Arrangements will be
Foote
Mineral
Company
Tuesday
to
the
National
announced by the Foglesong
Park.
Potluck
dinner
at I
Weather
Service,
excluding
Funeral Home.
Alaska and Hawail, was 110 p.m.
degrees at Palm Springs,
Call!. Today's low was 36
NOW YOU KNOW
WEBSTER B. HODGE
degrees
at
Alamosa,
Colo.
Egypt
's Great Pyramid,
Webster B. Hodge, 69, 114
as the burial
constructed
Laurel Street, Pomeroy, died
Laurel Cliff
Klng
Cheopa around
tomb
of
Tuesday afternoon at his
Mrs. Johnny Douglas, 2600 B.C. ,.contalns 2.3 million
residence.
He was born June 5, 1909. Guysville, spent an evening blocks of !!lone, some of
He was preceded In death by recently with her mother, Ms . which weigh ao much as 211J
tons.
his father, Harry Hodge and Emma Fox.
his wile, Naomi Sue Hodge .
He is survived by his
mother, Josephine Crow,
Pomeroy, one daughter, Jo
Caruzzi of ColumUus, ·two
brothers, Robert Crow,
Syracuse and Thomas Crow,
Frigidaire's Exclusive
Pomeroy,
one
grandRefreshment Center.
daughter, Johanna Teschner,
• lht only rehooerator t~oll d•SQtn5es ...:e
C.1eveland and Sf'Veral nieces
cMitHI d iet an~ hm tu•tn cw olllel
oev~ r ao es nont Wou Q~ tilt door
and nephews.
• Aconvemenlly tocatea J.~il l ton
He was a member of the
fte~: t r •· S•nr s-.rtch u ~ llelp you Ullt
Int ernational Brotherhood of
• 100', Frost -Pront rtmvtnotnt;e lets ~ou
Electrical Workers.
toroet men~ t +m~ · eonsomln g chore 01
dtiiOSIHllj
Funeral services will be
• 19 9 (u n t~ at retrl aer at~d volUme
held Thursday at 10 a .m. at
'
Ewing Chapel with the Rev .
Robert McGee officlatln11.
Burial will be in Beech Grove
Cemetery. Friends may call
at 1he funeral horne after 7
MidCIIP.port. 0.
lUll 1hi-., evenin~t .
CHARLES E . ALEXANDER
Charles E. Alexander, of
828 Locust Drive, Tallmadge ,
Ohio died on July Z9, at Akron
City 'Hospital , after a short
illness.
Mr. Alexander was born on
May 4, 1908, son of the late
Charles P . !formerly of
Letart Falls 1 and JeaMette
Poffenbarg er (of P oint
Pleasantl Alexander.
Two s isters , Virgiriia
Alexander and Harriet
Alexander preceded him in
death .
He is survi\•ed by his wife,
Marian B., a son , C. Robert,
of Tallmadge ; two·daughters ,
Mrs . Robert (Lee ) Jones of
New Mexico . and Mrs. Jerry
(Kay) Robeson, of Ten nessee, and six grandchildren.
Funeral services were held
on Tuesday, August I, at
First Congregational Church,
in Tallmadge . Cremation
followed .

new~

Suit is filed

FOR THE MEIGS CO. FAIR

BAKER

FURNITURE

·lberfel

I"

'

GROUND BREAKING ceremonies were held
Wedne!!day mcrning oo the grounds adjacent to the
former ChUdren 's Home and Veterans Memorial Hospita I
l\)1' the construction of a Multi-Purpose Health Care
Center !bat will house the Health Department, TB,

Community Mental Health and Senior Citizens. Pictured
are, front, 1-r, Jim Roush , Eynon Plummer, Eleanor
Thomas, Maxine Plummer, and Mary Hobstetter; bark,
Richard Jones, Horace Karr, Ron Keske, Henry Wells and
Wesley Buel\l, .

e

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thlirsdily. August 17, 1978

•

By KATIE CROW
tiround.!Jreaking ·ceremonies for a new Multi-Purpose
Health Care Center , adjace nt to the former Children's Home
lilld Veterans Memoria l Hospital, were held Wednesday .at
11 :30 a .m . with a large crowd in a ttendance.
~
The project ls estimated to run ln excess of $1.1 million .
.• The county's share will be $112,000, all in kind, with no capital
outlay .
As a result of the ground-breaking, new facilities will soon
be available for the provision of services for the Meigs County
• He~lth Department, the County Tuberculosis offices , the
Me1gs County Council ,on Aging and Senior Citizens program
along with the Gallia-Jackson-Meigs Community Mental
Health Center , Inc., Board, the Meigs outpatient services as
well as facilities for the Gallia-Jackson-Meigs 648 Board .
other services that the mental health center offers are in
the area of ~pee ch and hearing.
, In 1976, with the passage of the continuation of the mental
health levy in Meigs County, the Gallia-Jackson-Meigs Mental
Health ~d .Mental Retardation Board began to work in
conJunctiOn w1th the Meigs County Council on Aging , Senior
Citizens, Health Department, County Commissioners and the
Gallia-Jackson-Meigs Community Mental Health Center staff
to develop a multi-purpose community center.
The declsion to develop such a center was arrived at after
years of study. discussion and planning which was fostered
and initially promoted by the Gallia-Jaekson-flleigs Mental
Health lind Mental Retardation Board, the mental health
planning agency for the area .
With the passage of the mental health and mental
re~rdation levy in June of 1976, the advance planning and
necils assessment for this project became a reality and the
groups involved began to seek funds from various agencies .
As a result of this search for funding by the 648 Board, the
Meigs County Council on Aging and the county commissioners,
funding sources were identified and a constructioo application
was applied for .
Participants in the funding of the project as it presently
(Continued on page 7)

at y

,.

/

•

RICHARD JONES , Meigs County Commissioner,
holds an architect 's conception of the new Multi-Purpose
Health Care Center that will be erected on the property
adjacent II&gt; the former children' s home and Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

en tine

Fifteen Cents
VoL 29, No . S7

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

Third
day of
fair
.opens

Hemlock Gruc• was lbe
lint place wluor ID lbe
grange e!dllblta at lbe 1978
Mella Couty Fair.
Taklal second place was
Harrta.vWe Grange and
Star Graoge placed third.
· Tile Meigs County Junlpr
Pomoaa Grange received a
lint place ratlog for Ito
display.

Open class
beef cattle
is judged
Open class beef cattle
judging was held at the Meigs
County Fair Thunday.
In the Hereford division,
Earl Cox, Route 2, Coolville,
firsts
In
the
won
classifications of bull, two
years and over; junior bull
calf; pair of bulls, any a~e .
bred
and
owned
by
exhibitor; cow, two years and

over.
Rogle Gaul, Route 2,
Pomeroy, exhibited the best
junior yearling heif~r . Cox
exhibited the grand and
reserve champion bulls and
the grand champion female
and Gaul exhibited the
reserve champion female.
In the Semltole division,
Brent Hayes, Guysville,
ezhlblted the blue ribbon
junior yearling heifer; the
best senior heifer calf and the
grand and reserve champion
·
females .

Damage heavy
in two car mishap
Ohio State Patrol officers
were called to the scene of a
one-auto accident at 5:40p.m.
Wednesday on SR 143, fivetentha of a mile north of SR 7.
According to the patrol, a
vehicle operated by Michael
Triplett, 17, Pomeroy, went
out of control In a curve,
crossed the roadway, passed
off the left side of the road,
and struck a creek.
There was moderate
damage to the auto.
CONSERVE WATER ,
Racine
RACINE
realdentl are asked to be
elt\rernely conservative of
water on Monday when the
water tank will be emptied
and cleaned. "We're asking
people to uoe aollttle water as
possible on Monday", a
village official said.
GASTOBEOFF
RtlTl.AND - Gas service
In Rutland wUI be turned off
from 8 a .m . to I p.m.
Saturday while work Ia done
to the main line, offlclall said

today.
Ncn' GIVING SHOTS
P.nonnel of the · Meigs
Cuunty Dlpartment of Health
wtll not be glvlnl Immunization lhola on Aug. 22
••Ill p.m.

The Meigs County Fair
opened for the third consecutive day Thursday under
SELECTED as outstanding representatives of· the various county youth groups at the
~ suMy skies.
Meigs County Fair Youth Night observance WedneSdijy evening were , I tor, first row, Opal
Wednesday , many parts of
Dyer , 4-H Girls ; Cindy Pitzer, F11A; Margaret ~arker , representing the outstanding girl ,
the county were hit by heavy
scout troop, Salisbury ; second row, Gary Holliday, FFA: Ed Holter, 4-H Boys.
rains, but only a rew
sprinkles fell at the Rock
Springs Fairgrounds where
the !15th fair is being held .
JOYCE MANUEl~ of Racine was presented a rosette by Suzy Carpenter, co-&lt;:hairman of
On Friday, the annual pet
the nower show after she was named the horticulture sweepstakes winner. Mrs . Manuel ,
show will he held at I p. m.
who docs not belong to a garden dub, won 16 ribbons on her 22 exhibits in specimens and potand the second of two flower
ted plants.
shows will he judged at 2 p.
m. Twilight horse harness
racing will be held at 4 p. m.,
Bill Miller's animal was pair division.
Friday. the final evening of
selected
the grand champion
In th e sho wm a nship
raring . ' Friday
ni ght
hog
at
the
Meigs
market
competition.
David Thornhighlights will include the
County
Fair
Wednesday
.
ton's
swine
was
selected as
Junior Fair Market of steers.
Mill
er.
a
res
ident'
of
grand
champion.
lambs a nd pigs at 7 p. m. and
David is the son of Mr. a nd
the horse pulling contest as Pomeroy , is the son of Mr.
Mrs.
William T. Thornton.
and
Mrs.
Willard
Miller
.
the grandstand attraction at B
Se
le
cte
d
a
s
reser
Ve
The
reserve champion ln
Pat Huller of Pomeroy. blacklight: Mrs. Betty Dean, llubm Manuel.
p. m.
champion
wa
s
a
pork
er
the
class
was owned by
This evening 's grandstand
Route 3, with a modern Mrs. Wi !son Carpenter , and
Putted
plant : Jay
Pomeroy'
s
Becky Windon .
owned
by
Billy
Dyer
.
desi~n won the. " best of
Mrs. Pat Holter .
Carpenter', Donita Manuel. attraction will be Margo
Dyer
.
son
of
Mrs:
Maxine
Becky
is
the
daughter of Mr .
show" award in the Meigs
Smith and Band with the
" A Flower Garde n" , mass a nd Jay Carpenter .
Dy
er
,
a
lso
had
g
ra
nd
and
Mrs.
Virgil
Windon.
Couniy Fair flower s how held design : Mrs . Altona Karr.
Seed Picture : Ja y show to begin at 8.
in
the
market
pig
champions
Wednesday .
L1lester Garden Club ; Mrs. Carpenter and Roland Will,
ReseljVe " best of show" Juanita Lambert, Rutland
went to Jennifer Machir, Friendly Gardeners; a nd Po'"WoRTicuLruRE
1
Pomeroy , while Joy ce Mrs. Margaret Parker, WinSPECIMENS
}
Manuel, Racine took the hnr- ding Trail Garden Club.
Hybrid tea roses : Pat
ticullure sweepstakes award, . "Choir Practice". tradi Altona Karr, Pat
and ·Jay
Carpenter , tional fcHturing rus l!s : Mr:s .
Reedsville, was named junior
Ruth Erwin. Mrs . Pat Holler,
Roses, floribunda : Ada
gardener.
Two of the three trophy Wedn es d ay e venin g ' s
Vincent. is a son of the late
Huller , Jand Bulin , Rutland ,
Mrs. Juanita Lambert.
twilight
harness
horse
racing
Mrs. Aida Cullen of MarietSidne
y Spen ce r , who for
;the
horses
blanket
s
awarded
"Country Kitchen", a n ex- and Pat Holter .
BILL
MILLER
of
prog
ra1n
at
the
115th
annual
ta, an accredited judge of the hibition table : Mrs . W!lson
many
years was a harness
with
the
fastest
time
for
the
Roses, Grandiflura : Pal
Pomeroy
poses
with
the
Meigs
County
Fair.
Ohio Association of Garden
to
Don
Spencer,
horse
trainer
and
driver
in
day
'went
Carpenter, Mrs. Jaunita I loiter, Jwwt Bulin .
trophy for having the top
Spencer , a resident of Meigs County . He is marri ed
Clubs, judged the show orally
formerly of Pomeroy, durin~
Lambert, . and Mrs . Leota
1Continued on page 7 I
market hog at the Meigs
before a large crowd. Entries
the
.fprmer
Sandy
Wells
,
to
Young.
County Fair.
were nearly doubled this yea r
daughter of Meigs County
JUNIOR DJVJSON
and the judging continued fur
Commission er a nd Mr s .
"Sandlot Football", featurseveral hours .
Henry Wells.
ing roaside materials: Jay
Ribbons and premiwns
Spencer , in the first of 10
Carpenter, Reedsville ; Mike
w~ather
were awarded in three places
races yesterday, drove Julia
Parker, Route 3, Pomeroy ,
Sunny
and warm today,
in each of the classes. The and C her y l Fulmer ,
Cour, .which he o\ms, to first
.. ........ 1,
hi
ghs
in the upper 80s.
with
winners, listed first , second
place , and in the second race
Pomeroy.
Fa
ir
toni
ght.
with lows beand third, were as follows :
came in second to win the
Zinnia specimen. dahlia
tween
65
and
70. Variable
ARTISTIC
trophy blanket which was
flowered : Robin Manuel,
cloudiness,
hot
and humid
ARRANGEMENTS
donated by Swisher and
Route 2 Racin e ; Mike
h
hi
ghs
in the low
Friday
,
wit
" Sled Riding", white
Parker , Dunita Man uel,
(Continued on page 7)
OOs.
predominatin&gt;g : Jennifer
Racine , Route 2.
Machir, Chester Garden
Zinnla sped men , t:adus ·
Club; Mrs . Wilson Carpenter,
Oowered ; Robin Manuel .
the River Garden
Bend
Donita Manuel, and Mike
Club ; Mrs . Pat Holter ,
Parker.
Chester Garden Club.
Mal'i~uld : Ounitet M ~mut•l ,
A Walk in the Woods: Mrs .
Meigs County Sheriff across the road, struck an
Ruth Erwin. Chester Garden
James J . Proffitt reports that embankm ent, and turned
:·:.:·:·:·:.:·:·:·:·:·:·:;:-:::::::::·:::::::::·:::;:-:·:·:.:-:·:·:·:·:-:-:-:
•
L1ub, Mrs. Machir, Mrs .
deputies investigated a one- over on its top . The driver
A pre-school tuberculiD
Charles Kuhl, Chester
-,r'
........
car accident on SR 681 told the officer that the ball'
c skin teotlog clinic for all
Garden Club.
Wednesday evening in which joints on his vehicle had been
school personnel of the
"An Outing to the Lake ",
lour persons were i~jured. bad for some time.
Meigs Locak, Southern and
Japanese design : Belly
Injured in the accident and
According to the report , the
Eastern Dlatricls will be
Dean, Chester Garden Club ;
a cc ident occurred around transported by Coolville
held at the TB clinic on
Mrs. Ada Holter, l1!ester and
to
Veterans
7: 50 p.m. on SR 681, eight SOEMS
Mulberry Height• oo
Wildwood Garden Clubs ; and
tenths of a mile east of mile Memorial Hospital were :
Mooday, Aug. 21 from 8:30
Leota Young , Chester Garden
marker 24 in Olive Township. James M. Dillon, Rt. Z,
a.m. to 1% noon and lrnm I
Club.
A 1972 Ford Mustang Coolville, the driver, and
" Cud Up with a G••xl 1 to t
driven by James W. Dillon, passengers, Ronnie Barber,
Cbeclltn1 of the teat&amp; will
Book" , ' modt:rn fre~style :
MRS. DON SPENCER and son , Scott, of Vincent, are pictured with Indian Run Hank
21 , Rt . 2, Coplville, was 17, Diana Barber, 17, and
be done during the same
Mrs . Pat Holte •·; M1·s .
which was the fastest horse in the two divisions for two year old parers At the Meigs Counly
traveling west on SR 661 Gary Durst, 31, all of Rt. I,
Pauli'"' Atkins llulland • hours on Wednesday, Aug.
Fair Wednesday . Indian Run Hank , owned by Mrs . Sidney Spencer, formerly of Pomeroy,
when the front end of his auto Reedsville .
:
%3, Mro. Jane Brown.
Garden Club ; and Mrs .
Dillon was cited to Meigs
widow of ,a long-time local driver and trainer of harness horses, received the trophy blanket
started shimmying, causing
county buerculoola ouno
Wlloon Carpenter.
proVIded!!&gt;' the Dale C. Warner Insurance Agency . Mrs . Don Spencer is the former Sandy
him to lose control of hi s Co unty Court for unsafe
reports.
· " Saturday J)a!u · ~ " .
Wells nf r&lt;meroy.
.
·
·
vehiele . The vehiele skidded vehicle.
rnudern dcs1~11 di s i)I&lt;~ ~;J! 111 :::::.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.:.;.;.:.:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:·:.:.;·:·:·
&gt;J '
~

J

I

Top Market Hog
shown by Miller

Pat Holter's entry tops
in Meigs Fair flower show·

0

~~:~~~:

Horses driven by +ormer Pomeroy
resident win tWO trophy blankets

L.

o:

4 hurt in Wreck

p.m.

.

•

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