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                  <text>- .. D-8- The Swu.lav TiJ n~s-S~ntlne l , Swuiay. AI:J~ . 20. 19i8

Uo!lp WanteG

PUBLIC SALE

TELEVISION
VIEWING

SATURDAY, AUGUST 26, 1978

10:30 A.M.
LOCATION: From G.llipalis follow Sf, Rt. 16Q to 11\t_,

SUNDAY , AUGUST20,1 978
6:QO-AG-USA 4 ; For Vou ... Biack Woman 8; This Is
· The life 10.
6:30--Chrlstopher CloseupJ ; Jerry Fa lwell4; Talking
Hand$ 8; Amer ican Problems &amp; Challenges 10;
Agriculture : Food for Thougl:\f 13.
1 : ~ 1his IS 1 h~ Lite J ; Eddie Saunders 6 ; Thinking in
Black 8; Treehouse Cl ub 10; Newsmaker '7813.
7:31r-TV Ch~pel 3; Your t-iealth 4; Show My People 6;
Jerry Falwell 8 ; Urban League 10; Bible Answers
13 ; Jimmy Swaggart .15.
a ~ oo-Mormon Choir 3; Day of Discovery 4; Grace
Cathedra.\ 6; Church SerOJice 10; Chri st for the
World 13; Some of God's Chil dren 15 ~ Sesame St. 20.
8:3G-:-()rai Roberts 3; Jimmy Swaggart 4; CelebratiOn
of Praise 6; Day of Discovery 8; James Roblso~
Presents 10; Willard Wilcox 13; Open Blltle 15 . 1
9:oo-Gospel Singing Jublleel; Roberl Schuller4 ; Rex
Humbard 6; Rev . Leonard Repass 8: Oral Roberts
10; Jim Franklin 13; Ernest Angley 15; Mister
Rogers ~0 . ' ·
9:3!r-What Ooes The Bible Pla inly Say? 8; It I!
Written 10; Church Service 13; Zoom 20.
10 :00-Rex Humbard 3; Yours fo r the As.klng 4; Hot
World ,Tomorrow 6; Christ ian Center 8; Sesame St.
20 : Movie " To Catch A Th ief " 10; Jimmy Swaggart
13; Gospe l Slnglng Jubilee 15.
10:30--- Re x Hum bard 3; Yours for the Asking 4; Hot
Fudge-6; Dr. TheaJones8; WorldTomorrowl3.
1.1 :00---Doctors on Ca ll 4; Blq Blue Marble 6; ERnest
Angley 1t . Rex Humbard 15; Rev . Henry Mah~n 13;
Infinity Factor y 20 .
11 :30---B ig Blue Marble J . Anima f.s';" Animal. Animals
6, 13 ; Focus on Columbus 4 ; Elec. Co. 20.·
12:00---At Issue J ; News Confer.e nce 4; Issues &amp; Answers 6; Face the Nation 8 ; "The Issue 10; Rev . R .
A. West 13; This Is The Li fe 15: Rebop 20.
12 :30--Meet The Press 3.4, t5; Directions 6; FAce the
Nat ion lOb Evangelist Ca lvi n Evans 13; Dick
Cavett 20.
1:oo-Big Valley 3; Trut h or Cons. 4; Co mmunique 6;
Tennis 8; Wash ington Week In Review 33; Gomer
Pyle, USMC 10 ; Issues &amp;.Answers 13; PTL Club 15;
The On ly Thing I Ca n't Do Is Hear 20 .
:3Q-American Li fe Sty le 4; America' s Black Forum
6; Hogan·s Heroes 10: Adlllm -12 13; Hocki ng Valley
Bluegrass 20 : Bl ack PerspectiOJe on the News 33 .
2:00-----Baseball Wa rmup 32,4 ; Aware 6 ; Auto Racing
8. 10; Movie " Petu li a" 13; Bix Belerbecke
Memorial Jazz Fes tival 20; Kanawha County
Board of Educat ion Meeting 33; 2: to-Baseball 3,4.
2:30---Hollywood Teen 6; Echoes 20.
3:()()-- Tennis 6;' Great Performances 33 ; Sportsworid
15; Hired Hand 70.
4:DO--NF L Football 15; Movie " The Little Nuns" 6;
Golf 8,10; Pro Soccer 13
4·30---John Cage 33; 4: 4o-NFL Footbal l 3.
5:oo--Kevin Mabry &amp; the Liberty St reet Show 4;
Turnabout -20 ; Nova 33; 5:3G-E iec. Co. 20.
6 Ot}-News 4 ; Candid Caniera 6; Last of the Wild 8:
Honeymooners' Tri p to Europe 10; Town Topics q ;
Zoom 20 ; Great Performances 33.
6 : JO-- N BC News 4; News 6; Concern 8; Newsmaker '78
. 13; WOrld 20. .
7 00--Wor ld of Disney' 3.4,15 ; Hardy Boys 6,13; 60Minutes 8.10; 7. 30---Crockett' s Victory Garden 20 .
a:DO------Project UFO 3,4,15; How the Wes1 Wa s Won
6,13; Rhoda 8,1D; Even ing AT Pops 20 , 3 3 ~
8:3()--()n Our Own 8, 10: 9:00--Police Story 3,.4,15.
9·QO- Poli ce Story 3,4,15 ; Mov ie " Joe Kidd" 6,13; All
In The F am ii ly 8, 10,· Poldark II 20 ,33 .
9·30---A\ice 8; ,1 0 ; 1 :0:00-Swltch 8.10; Bil l Moyers'
Journal : lrlternational Report 20; Firing Line 33 .
\l :O()-News 3 . ~ .8 , 10 ;13,1 5 ; Wall ~treet Week 33 .
n : U---A8CNews6 ; CS&amp;News8 ,10: PMA Pui~1S .
11 :3()-Mov\e "flowing Gold" 3; Movie " P .J .' ' 4:
MoOJie " Ta ll Gunner Joe" l Si FBI 6 : 700 Clu b 8;
Movie " Honeymoon Hote l"' 10; PTL Clu b 13;
J anak i 33.
"
12 30---Second City TV 6: 1:3o-Marcus Welby, M.D.
a: ABC Newoc. 11 .
MONDAY , AUGUST21 , 1978
Repori 13 : s ~ so- P T L Club 13 : 6:oo-PT L
Club 15; Summer Semester 10.
6:3o-Colum bus Today 4-i News 6; Summer Semester
8, Publ\c Affa irs 10; 6:4.s---.Morning Report 3;
6 51}--Good Morn inq . West Virgi nia 13 ; 6:55--News

5

4 ~ F a rm

78 BUICKS &amp; PONTIACS
IN STOCK
READY TO GO·

outskirts of Vinton , turn right on St. Rt. 325 1nd go -3 ·

miles . Then turn right •nd go 1}J mile. W•tch for signs.
THE FOLLOWING WILL BE OFFERED :
Recliner , antique gas-wood combination range, oak
wash stand witl'l towel rack~ bottle_collection, large lot
of dlsl'les. 3 tables, antique card table, sc;~uare oak
table, mi niature buffet, bowling ball and shoes, ~veral
ca meras. floor lamp, Bell &amp; Howell movie prolector ·
(use d OJery little) , one lot of bowling pins, Copper wasl'1
broiler "(good condition), several coal oil lamps,
ant ique sl'loe seat, good radio, Indian artifacts, couch,
autoharp, antique paper stand, large no. of National
Geographic from 1961. book. case, Iron bed, large
antique chest . some quilts, handmade copper stove
(WOO~) . ad Irons, Iron pot and skillet, large antique
radio, la mps•. knee high desk, antique organ stool , oil
burner·, child 's l4 bed , babybed, afr condition. large lot
ot assorted antique chairs, electric heater, window fan,
se t of 4 cha irs. old wr ltlng desk, old button collectiQfl,
pots &amp; pans, antique trunk, electric boxes, utility
cabinet , 2 coo-coo clocks. antique platters, electric
rotisserie, leather trunk , Putnam dyes case with dyer,
egg grader , ant ique display cc,se, old gun cabinet.
stone jars. old cheese box. antique golf clubs,
automatic sythe, china cabinet, large buffet and other
items. This will be an ideal auction for anyone
interested in Antiques.

REV. JOHN P. LEWIS, OWNER
38U825
AUCTIONEER , LEE JOHNSON
Ci-own City , Ohio

TERMS ' CASH

13.
7:QO-Today 3.4, 15; Good Morning America 6,13; CBS
News 8; Underdog 10: 7: 25-Chuck While Reports
10.
'
7:3!r-Porky Pig 10; B:QO-Capl. Kangaroo 8; 10;
sesame St. 33.
9:oo-Merv Gr iffin 3; Phil Donal'lue .t,15; Emergency
One 6; Brady Bunch 8; Schoolles 10; Studio See 33.
9:3().-Andy Griffith 8; Joker's Wild 10; Zoom 33.
lO :oo-Card Sharks 3,1 5; Morning Fair &lt;; Edge of
Nlghl 6; Tic Toe Dough 8; Variety :78 10; To Tell
The Truth 13; Over Easy 33.
10 :31r-Hollywood Squares JA,15; Hlgh Hopes 6; Price
is Right 8,1 0; $20,000 Pyramid 13: Paint Along with
Nancy Komlnsky 33.
li :QO-High Rollers 3.4.15; Happy Days 6,13 ; Be Glad
Then America 33 .
11: Jlr-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15; Family Feud 6,13;
Partridge Family 4: Loveolllfe8;,10; 11 :55-CBS
New s 8; Today 's Fair 10.
.
.
12 : ~Newscenter 3,' News 4,6, 10;, America Aliye 1.5;
Yo ung &amp; the Restless 8: Midday Magazine 13;
Watch Your Mouth 33.
l 2 : 3~ Ryan ' s Hope 6, 13; Bob Braun 4 : Search for
Tomorrow 8, \0 ; French Chef JJ .
1·oo- For Richer , For Poorer 3; All My Children 6.13;
News 8; Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women
Only 15; Even ing At Pops 33.
l :3Q-Oay!J of Our Lives 3,.&amp;.15; As The World Turns
8.10 : 2:0D-One Life To U~~e 6,13: Vandalia 33 .
2:30-Doctort 3,4,15: Guldlng Light 8,10 ; 3:0DAnolher Wor ld 3,4,15; General Hospital 6,13: Lilias
Yog a &amp; You 20,33.
3 :lir-AII In The Family 8,10; Econemlcally Speaking
20; Book Beat 33.
4:QO---Mlster Cartoon 3 i Gong Show 4; For Richer, For
Poorer 15 ; Merv Grllfln 6; Addams Family 8;
Sesame St . 20,33 ; Match Game 10; Dinah 13 .
4 3!r-My Three Sonsl; Gilligan' s Is. 4; E~pohio ·'7815 ;
Gill igan 's Is . 8; Disco Fever 10.
s:oo-Here Come The Brides 3: My Three Sons 4 ;
Gunsmoke 8; Mister _Roger-s' Neighborhood 20,33;
Voya ge to tl'le Bottom of the Sea 10; Emergency One
13; Petticoat J unction ~ 15.
s .311-AIIernoon Dellglghl &lt;; News 6; E lee. Co. 20,33:
Hogan's Heroes 15.
6·,oo-.News 3, 4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20;
Mak ing Things Grow 33 . ~
.
6: 3!r-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News l 3; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,10; Over Easy 20; Antiques 33.
7 :()().:-( ross -Wits 3; Expohlo ' 78 o4; Newlywed Game
6.13; Last of the Wild 8; Gllllgan·s Is. 15; Daniel
Fosler , M.D. 20 ; Shepherd's Pie 33.
7:3!r-Thot Nashville Music J ; Kevin Mabry &amp; the
Li berty Slreet Show 4; Desegregation Report 6:
Match Game PM 8: Wild Kingdom 10: ,Candid
Camera 13 : Nashville On The Road 15.
8 : QO-~Ittle House On The Pralrle 3,15: Baseball 6,13;
Sa le of Champions .4 ; Elton John 8 ; Jeffer!WlnS 10;
Consumer Survival Kit 20; Per$0n to Person :
Selected Inter vi ews 33.
B.J!r-Good Times 10: Turnabout 20.33.
9·00. Movie " Sergeant Matlovlch vs. the U.S. Air
Force" J,.t,1S; To Be Announced 33; Great Performances 20.
9 : 0~ L i ve from Wolf Tap Farm Park 33; 9:30--0ne
Day AI A Time 8,10.
lO :QO-Lou Grant 8,10; News ~ 20; IO :JO--Over Easy
20.11 :oo- News 3,4,6,8,10, 13,15; Dick Covell 20.
l·l:llr-John ny Carson 3,4. 15: Soap 6,13; Movie " The
swan" 8; MoOJie " Period ot Adjustment" 10.
11 :35-ABC News 33; 12 :05-Soap 6,13; Janak\ 33.
12:4Q-Poll ce Story 6, 13; 1:()()-Tomorrow 3,.4 ; 1:50-News 13.

IN STOCK
READY

TO GO

LPN - AFTERCARE
Major Rural Appalachian. Mental Health
Center has opening for LPN in aftercare
follow up. Work with day care unit and
Psychiatrist to sch~dule and follow·UD
clients on sustaining care medications.
outreach caseload lor follow·up . Mental
Health experience necessary . Prefer
creative. energetic, service-minded person
with solid qualifications to organize and
motiv~t~ clients. Challenging position
and plan for low functioning poorly
motivative clients. Challenging position,
superior workin9 conditions; highiy
competitive salary. Send resume, cover
letter and five letters of reference to DAVID
OeRITA, PHD, Clinical Director, Gallia
Community Mental Health, PO Box 2112,
t;allipolis, Ohio 45631.
( 614-446-5501 )

Ioyer

An E ual

Automatic transmission
Oelux Interior
Power steering
Wheel opening m tdgs.
Window sill mldg s.
12 mo · l2.000 mile warranty

itwtelbsl.
1

IJI·Itiiii·MI·Ibrl
The PrCidential ·insurance
Com pany of America .
Oistrti:t Agl!nl
Gallia-MeigS
Experience Not Nect55ary
AOJerage E•rnings
$20,000
Phone 304.,.15-S436
Pat ~enney,
SAles M•nager
40611, Market St.
Parkersburg, W . Va . 26101

CITY CAB

7DAYSbro12
Caii.C46-0ol51
CALl US for your wedding photos.
Free olb~m wlth every wed·
d ing . Tawney Studios ,
446~ 1615 .

ANTIQUES , bought and sold.
White's A.ntiques, Rt. 35,
Rodney. Coli 2&lt;5·5050

C&amp;R PAINT

DREAMING OF o white Chris tmas TIRED OF WORKING FOR SO~
Professional
Painters
with no bills? Wonderful 10 MEONE ELSE and not earning
Aniloble . Rtsldenllel
think abou t. but it could come what you are worth? Nome
T"'KING orders for 1978
true . Be a Toy Ladies' ho stess!
Commercial.
your own figure and let us WfHvARE
.nmel
bells ond plates.
In your home or by orders from show you how to achieve it
Co 11446·9411
Tawnev Jewelers .
our lriends. Earn toys end gifts demom traling Aloe Vera Skin
ree . Nome brand toys , Care Products , coli 4,.6.4703
•ecson obly priced with between 9 A.M. and 3 p.m.
guarantee. Gilt s for the whole BABYSITTER lor two children . Call
lomily . FOr information ·coli
388-9973 after 5:30.
742
. 2377 or 992-7056.
SOM
EONE to put up eve spou ts ,
I SHOP MAN. I counterman . Con·
li • driveway to garag&amp; and
toe! Motpr Pqrts Co.. 157 other
odd jobs . Call 44b-97.23.
Wolnul Sl., Middleport , Ohio
.
·--o---MATURE
to babys it, 2
WANTED BABV SITTER in Mid - children lADY
in
mv
home. Coli
dleport lor preschool child
while mo ther reache s . &lt;&lt;6~0273 .
9'n-1917 .
NURSE NEEDS BABYSI TTER for 10
Said F•rm, so must sell household Items. Loc•ted west
WORK
OVERSEA'S, Australia . yr . old girl . 5 davs per week .
on Roultt 124 lhroug~ I.Jingsvlllo, Otllo to Route 325,
Every
olhttr
w"kend
oft.
H
ours
Africa, South America . Europe .
first ro•d on loll, first !louse on ltfl.
etc.
Construction, Sa le s. approx . 6:30am to •pm. Call
"HOUSEHOLD"
4-46·0279
after
,.pm
fn gineers . Clerkol. etc $8000
30" Admiral ~ Imperial self-cleaning electric stove,
to $50.000 piu s. E•pemes paid .
Holpolnl refrigerator , dinette set w ~6 chairs. 5 chest of
F01 emplovmen t in forma tion
drawers. 5 beds complete. lamps. stands~ 2 pc. E"arly
A FUTU.RE TO COUNT ON
write O"'erseos Employmenl . for 17 to 31 year olds. Train·
Amerh:an living room suite, black, green &amp; tan leather
80101 1011 . Boston . Mo . 0~102 .
recliners, metal cabinet, blankets, misc. chairs, misc .
ing with lull pay •od
pols, pans &amp; dishes.
GRE AT PART TIME JOB . benefits PLUS travel an(l
• ANTIQUE OR COLLECTOR ITEM5
adventure in the' U.S.
Demonstrate Merri -Moc toys
Ook 5 legged table; stand, wood chair, wood bod. coffee·
Navy . Cali or stop in: 1:21
and gifts .on por.ly plan. Set
table, oblong library table, wood Ice bo•. pie safe,
Columbus Rd . • Athens. Ph.
you r own houre . No invest·
stone jars. copper boiler, cow bolls. washstand, high
rnent defi ver v or collection . 593·3546 (Collect).
chair, Iron bed. wall phone, round table w·• choirs. 4
Hrghesl com mission . Call Ann
pressed back choirs, oval trunk, old lomps, flat Irons.
Bo11ler collect 319- 556-BBBI or
&amp; dishes, Iron &amp; brass kettles, milk cans, oval picture
write Merrr·Moc. Sox 1277 .
frame, and old hand tools.
lJubuque , lo 51001 .
"MISC/'
.
SH l 'f'OUR HU SBAND on the ideo
Wheat cleaner &amp; t'lay rack for wagon .
WANTED:
BUV
OR
TRADE
of your gell ing a pari lime job
OWNER-MYRTLE GARDNER
wrth full time pay Merri-Mac Old Knives . 1 or 100. Carving ·
CASH
LUNCH
POSITIVE ID.
ralors
,
disploy
cases
,
adv.
sets
,
needs demon st rators and
D. Smith
J _Corneban
L. Dono~ue
Anything
c
utlery
.
COli
!&gt;upervisors to sell toys and
949·2033
949·2701
742·3041
()1-4
·367-0590.
g•lts on home party plan. No in
"Not responsible for occldtnts or loss of property"
ves tmen t. deli11ery O f collec - FOR lASTING EXPRESSIONS OF
l•on Co li Ann Bo xler collec t:
DE VE TION see the tasteful
31Q-55b·H8B1 or wr ite Merr i
jewelry at Tawn~y Jewelers.
mac. BOl Jackson. Dubuque .
Beautilul matching bridal sets
lowo 52001.
I rom S89 .50 See at 42• Second
Ave . today ! .
SECRET ARV ·BOOKKEEPER lo•
~~·--local compa ny. Mu ~ t be exp . in
.
Paokk eeping or business col·
lege . Reply to Box No. 105 .. c·o
SEEK BLOCKAGE
Gall ipolis Do ily Tribune. 815
WASJUNGTON (UP!)
!h1rd A_•_e:_:_Gollipolis . - - - Delaware and eight New
ROUTE DRIVERS
(\eon . well groomed, rel iable Castle · County suburbs
wodu~r s
w ith
good math
background 10 ser'olice local Friday asked Justice WUIIam
vending raules . Apply in par- Brennan to block widespread
•on: Mon .. Wed ., and Thun . student busing scheduled for
between 1pm and 3 pm . September until the Supreme
~O_I!9_hl~ ~ng . ·4~ State St .
Court can review a school
TH£ GAlliA -JACK SON-MEIC S desegregation plan.
Community Menta l Heal th
The plan, ordered by U . .S.
Center Is currently accepting
District
Judge Murray Sch·
oppllcotions fo r o clerk posiol Wilmington, 1
tion . Typing obilitv and ew:p . .wartz
Bullng land Involves out 10 11 · De~~elopment •
wi th offi ce machines directed the busing of 23,000 e risks . Conlrary to por.ular cosh varf. but almost e
ne-ceuory. Pre11 ious office eKp.
anywhere hey are rising •
between
the • bellef, land lonot a fal .safe every
ye~r .
desirable , bul not essen tial students
t
I
ld
I
F
I
The
.nves men .
or a
If you are not a land •
Please contort. Nell H. Noble. predominantly black city and e land
of the mld·20s eKperl, the mosl preferred e
Personnel Officer ot ut.-oo-1 predominantly
white 1• , was boom
not the only time
method of buyl"8 a lot ts to 1
.lor additional inlormotion.
suburbs. Schwartz was
people
lost
money
~REALT R d0
your •
upheld in July by the 3rd U. S. • speculaling In land . 11 ·~ve a
ATT E NTION ~
_
e 1h•ppens
ever;r. day . Here negotiating . His l"('tost •
Penon for collec ting ogency. Exp. Circuit Court of Appeals.
,..
valuable asset Is his
preferred , but no! n&amp;eessory.
• are some gul ellnes which
knowledge of property •
Coli Ub-b601 . Mon .. Thurs .,
e may help In reducing the values. You are far better •
_!om_!O 4pm.
. When lhe doc asks for the • risk factor .
off wllh hlm on your side. e
Generolly •peaking, the
1
·•input"
of our symptoms, e lmore
ClEAK -TY'PIST
you pay for a lot, the
25 hr . per week in sale!. accoun· that's the time he 'll have an • surer you are of getting
•
ring and inventory control : ols.o outgo of a patient from his of· I your money's worth. If you
11 !bore ·IS enythlng we I
assisting· area manager . In:• pay •-amount of dollars for un do to help you In tilt • ~
dividual s should be capable of fice .
e a develop lot with utility fj•ld of reel . ealote pleeH e,
working wi lhour supervision .
4
lines already In, you may phone or drop in •t e 1 •
Applications will be taken
Save un water: Let the kids I be
better off lhan buying LEAOINGHAM
REAL e
Tue:&gt; . from I to 3pm at the 7 UP decide whether or not to take
the seme lot for one. half
Pepsi Warehouse at Che!. hire .
• the . amount before Ihe EST ATE, 512 St&lt;ond Ave. , 1
. - ·--- a bath.
• roods and utilities ore built Goll 1polls. Pllont 4~· 76" . e
e
e
·
We're hire to htlo.

VOL XXIX

WALL NEEDED
. LOS ANGELES iUPI )
The city should build a wall to
hold back the dead bodies
that otherwise float into the
backyards in Verdugo
Canyon during rainstorms,
City Councilman Bob Ronks
said Friday ..
"I've been trying to get
other agencies, the county,
the state and the feds to move
for months on this and I'm
getting no response.'" he said,
urging the Council 10 appropriate $200,000 for con·
struction of. wan to shore up
the Verdugo Hills Cemetery.

.
•

•
:
·•

BUYING ALOT

~---

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••

.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

BACK TO
·scHOOL
FASHIONS

NEW FAI.I. FASHIONS
Junior Sportswear by Red·i 1nd Wrangler.
Sweaters by Norton's Paint and Oliver
Pre·teen by Just Bot.toms &amp; Tops
Girls Sportswear by Chatterbox &amp; Glrltown.

l'oHer Mf1 programs dalgned lor
todl!y'sfamilesjhe manltd woman.
homeow~hlgh ln,ome peopl6!,
students. yaunglldul~ . and ' hild1en .

at

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

JERRY E. ROMINE

Cash prizes awarded to
sheep exhibition winners

Citations
are issued

Weather

under two; the ewe, one year
and under two and the ewe
lamb.
. In Suflolks, Eleanor E.
Leonard, Route 3, Pomeroy ,
won first with the ram, two
· years and over; Rodney
Tripp, Pomeroy, was first in
the ram, one year and under
two ; David 'Starlin, Ames·
ville was first In the ewe. two
and overi ewe, one and under
two ; ewe lamb and the flock .
The grand champion ram
was exhibited by Tripp; the
reserve champion ram by
Leonard and the grand
champion and reserve
champion ewe by Starlin.

A vacationing Point
Pleasant man 1was shot to
death early Saturday mor-·
ning in what North Carolina
police olficials are calling an
ambush-robbery involving a
woman who pretended to
have car troubles.
Wake County, N_C. Deputy
Sherilf W.E. McCiair iden·
lified the victim as Jerry
Edward Romine, 33, a
Wahama High School teacher
in world cultures. H~ was
shot once in the head and
lived maybe five minutes
afterwards,. according to a
coroner's report .
Meanwhile. authorities
have arrested and charged
three persons with the crime,
including a 17·year..,ld girl.
At th'e time ol the incident.
Romine and two friends,
Richor&lt;l Pickens and Roger
B1111111ardner, olio ol Point
' Pleasant, were enroute to
Nags Head, N.C. The trio had
left Point Pleasant about8 :30
p.m. Friday .
·
At about 4:30 a .m .•
Saturday, the three stopped
to aid a stranded motorist on
N.C. Route 98 nearthe WakeDurham county line , according to Deputy Ken Dodd.
Pickens stated, shortly
afterwards, having looked in
to the open hood of the
automobile, two masked men
armed with a double-barrel

months; Anthooy Ccaig Ro...tl, son ol Mr. and Mrs. John
· Michael Roush, Jr., Syracuse, 12-18 months ; John Travis
Mugrage, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Mugrage, Letart
Falls,l8months to 2; Adam Richard Salisbury, son o1 Mr.
and Mrs . Steve Salisbury, Long Bot!Dm, 2-.J years;
Oulrl,!'s Tyson Mugrage, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Mugrage·, Letart Falls, 3-4 years.

..

.SHOP WEEKDAYS &amp; SATURDAY TIL 5:00, FRIDAY TIL 8:00

....

&amp;;:'

"""

••••••• u .

Still hrm U1
hlSullntl Comptny
p4orllt O H~e

lloom•fl!lllln

~!oliO&lt;'

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

f' 7821f7

'/

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4

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Raldlff,

Rl. 1, ReadlvUie.

'l1lln -

hllvy damiP to

dll,r - - and cab.

•

enttne

MONDAY, ·AUGUST 21, 1978

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

shotgun and a .Jlkafi""r
pistol, came out of the nearby
woods and ordered the three
to tum over their money and
suitcases.
The bandits then ordered
Bumgardner and Pickens to ·
get into the trunk and forced
Romine, who had tried unsuccessfully to escape when
first approached, to drive
Bumgardner's vehicle, according to Pickens.
• After driving about a half
mile down the. road, the
robbers supposedly pulled
behind a deserted farmhouse
and shot Romine to death.
They pumped two shots into
the trunk, which missed the
two inside , and fled the scene.
After s trugglin g until
sunrise, Bumgardner and
Pickens pried open the trunk
with a tire tool and found
Romine's body on the around.
Missing was their \uggo!e.
jewelry and about $600 in
(Continued on page 8)

UTILE MISS, MISTER - Stephany Gardner,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Michael V. Gardner. Route 3.
Pomeroy , and Kevin Heaton . son of James and Helen
Hea!Dn, Middleport , were selected as Uttle Miss and
little Mister Meigs County Fair Saturday afternoon . As

· ,~a, r..,..ved, • ~ all\ corl.ilicat.e !1'0111 lhe
borfe\d 'DoJ&gt;IIJ\ml!ftt llt"""'ftle \ 4 - . .. ~
baby contest ·each received
Elberlelds.

"-J~l....,.h_e_W_o_rl_d_T_od_a_y_
Nixon to return to public life
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Sources have wid UPI's Helen
Thomas Richard Nixon plans visits to Europe, China and other
nations in a majoc step toward a full&lt;~eale return ro public life .
The sources said the former president's foreign travels
probably wUI begin next month but will not, for the time being,
include the Middle East where sensitive diplomatic moves are
under way tD revive Israeli-Egyptian peace talks.
Nilllln , who resigned in the face of almost certain
impeachment four years ago this month, h8§ received a
numher of invitations from foreign nations and has decided tD
start accepting them as part of his grad4al emergency from
tile in seclusion, the sources said. IUs aides have alerted the
State Department and the White House of the plans.

WASHINGTON ( UPn- Marine Corps recruiting m~ thods
are being questioned once again, and corps officials are
investigating nationwide at the prompting of a Senate
commitllle . The latest charges center around Cleveland,
where recruiters are accused of falsifying high school
documents and criminal records checks, helping enlistees
cheat on tesbl, and employing other dodges tD sign up
physically, mentally or morally Wlacceptable recruits .
It is the third till)e in three years the Marines have come
under fire oo similar abuses. Sen. Sam Nunn, [).Ca., who will
stait hearings on Marine recruiting next month. does not
believe the top Marine leadership condooes recruiting fraud
but says the question is whether the demand for 50,000 recruits
a year creates Intense pressure at lower levels to find any
means of producing warm bodies.

Full representation asked D. C.
WASJUNGTON (UP!) - Senate Democratic Leader
Robert Byrd supports a ~oposed constitutional amendment to
give the District of Colwnbia lull representation in Congress.
The Senate will vote Tuesday on the House-passed
constituational amendment that would - if ratified by the
states - give the nation's capital two senators and two House
members, the same representation tbat any U. S. area of
700,000 population would receive .
"' I'm going to vote for it,'' Byrd told his weekly news
conference Saturday . "I think ibl chances are fairly good,
depending on attendance .'' But, he added, '"absenteeism could
defeat it."

3'

$5 gift certificate from

Raid to be
talk topic
Morgan's Raid into Indiana
and Ohio and the excitement
it caused in Meigs CoW1ty wiU
be the subject of a ta lk at the
Meigs Co unty Mu se um
Tuesday evening at 8 p.m.
Allan Keller , veteran New
York newspaper man and
a uthor , will be the speaker .
Keller is the author of eight
books and many magazine
arlicles and one of his books
is entitled " Morgan' s Raid."
Several others deal with the
Civil War. He will talk about
the raid of the nearly 3,000
Confederate so ldiers north of
the Ohio River which was the
deepest penetration of the
Union area in the entire war
between the states . The Rebel
riders passed just a few miles
behind Pomeroy as they tried
to find a way back across the
Ohio to safer territory. They
fought in the biggest battle of
the raid at Buffington Island
near Portland in Me igs
Cowlty .
A long · time news·
papennan and columnist in
New York, Keller is the
husband of the former Ima
Elberfeld . A Connectic ut
Yankee , he has lived almost
all of his lifei n Connecticut.
The speaker lectured for
more than 20 years at the
graduate school ol Journalism
at
Columbia
University where he h~ld the
rank of professor. and more
recently has been visiting
professor at Manhattanville
College.
.
(Continued on pageS )

Holter, Carnahan exhibit champions

FIRE DAMAGES TRUCK

" Oidt Court"

state points competjtion during the tractor pull at the
Meigs County Fair Saturday afternoon .

Marine corps investigation is on

too.CalllW fOf details.

The Orailae Townlbip Fire
Departmeat waa called
Frldar at t:O'I
1a Rt. ••·
four mllel
Tappen
PlaJnl, wbet'e I lf'/7 balf-ton
pickup truct , .. on lire. The
trUC:k - ollllld IIJ 0tor1•

..•.

3 arrested
•
m slaying

TOKYO · (UPI)
SpliUed by reporla tbat the
American governmeut hu
moved to bolster the dollar,
tbe U. S. c~rreocy gained ·
substantially today agoloal
the Japanese yeo In Ita beat
performance. In more tbaa
two weeks. Banklnc
sources sold the dollar
closed at 190.ZO yen.
Alter opelling at 189.00
yen, compared
wltb
Friday's closing rate ol
186.05 yen, tbe dollar hll a
high of 190.50 yea at one
time, tbe sources said.

POMEROY - Cash prizes
PAULA HYSElL polnbl opt the instruction involved
were awarded to winners of
In maldng her cake during the 4-H demonstratioo show at
sheep exhibitions at the
the 1r78 Meigs Cowity Fair. The Fair ended Saturday
aMual Meiga CoWlty Fair.
In the Corrodale dlvlalon,
nilbt.
firsts were taken by Jeff
Hart, Route 5, Athens, for
exhibiting the hest ram, one
year and under two; for the
one and tinder two ; and
ewe,
Mostly SUMY today and
the
best
ewe lamb.
Tuesday with highs in the low
In
Hanipshires,
Todd Tripp
or mid 80s. Clear tonight with
of
Pomeroy
won
first
places
The Gallla-Melgs Post , a low in the mid or upper 50s.
in
the
ewe.
two
and
over; ·
!Ughway Patrol, Investigated The
probability
of
ewe,
one
and
under
two
and
two weekend accidents.
precipitation Is near zero
ewe
lamb.
the
Officers were called to the percent today throuRh
In tbe Columbia breed, Tim
scene of a three-auto mishap Tuesday . Wind s will be
Bearhs,
Pomeroy. won firsts
Sunday, at 3 p.m ., on CR 34, variable at ~ 10 mph or less
with
the
ram, one year and
nine-tenth! of a mile soulll of today and tonight.
CR 26, In Melp County.
s
:
The patrol reports reporlV
vehicles driven by Shawn
Pelt, 16, Racine, going south
and Edward Chaney, 16
•
Minersville, traveling no~
were stopped on the road,.ay
just past a hillcrest while Pell
and Chaney were talking .
An auto operated by David
Collins, 18, Racine, came
over tbe hillcrest. Collins
observed the two vehldes,
applied his brakes but his
a~to slid broadside Into the
front of the Chaney vehicle."
and the rear of the Pelt auto .
The Collins and Pell
vehicles Incurred moderate
BOY WINNERS - These are the boy winners of the
damage. There was minor
Meigs
County Fair's pretty baby contest staged Saturday
damage to the Chaney auto.
afternoon.
From the left are Alan Dwane Johnson, Jr., son
PeU and Chaney were cited
o1
Mr. and Mrs . Alan Johnson, Pomeroy, o.3 months;
on charges of parking on the
Bruce Hawley, son of Mr . and Mrs. Bruce Hawley.
roadway.
Pomeroy, 3-6 months; Clifford SCott Thomas ID, son of
Saturday, at 9 :45 a.m.,
Mr . and Mrs. Clifford Scott Thom~s II, Middleport, 11-12
officers lnvestif!ated a
backing accident in Rio
Grande on Atwood Dr.
Accordln&amp; to the patrol, an
auto driven b~ Helen Mattis,
38, ThomJVWe, 0 ., backed
Into a vehicle operated by
Roger Minnick, 57, Spring·
field, while revenlng from a
parkfnllspace.
The mattls auto Incurred
moderate damage. The
Minnick vehicle sustalqed
minor dama1e. There was 'nO
report of citation.

y

CAlLED TO JAIL
The
Middleport
Emergency Squad wu called
to the Middleport jaU at 2:30
p. m. SundaY lor a prlloner,
Keith French, Middleport,
who ref.-d t...atmenl. At
t:ll p. m. Sunday the ..uad
_,t to 715 Cbellnut St. for
John Lyons who wu taken to
Pleaunl Valley Hospital.

QIECK OUT OUR

for.r~

NO. 89

.);:./

·lt
DRIVES A WINNER - Tom Theiss, Racine, drove
this trac!Dr to first place .honors In the 7,5011 field stock

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A PLO political spokesman, Mahmoud
Labadi, said, "We had nothing to do with
the londoo attack. Thill (Israeli) strike is
a barbaric act against innocent civilians."
Later the radical Pop.ular Froot lor the
Uberatioo ol Palestiil~al Operations
Brancb guerrUias claill)ed responslbllty
for the attack In Loodoo, that killed a
stewardess and a gurunen kUied and
wowlded nine others.
·
· '"The Zionist cootpany ol El AI - and Its
planes, pilots and all other apparatus and
offices - are used by the (Israeli) enemy
for military and paramilitary purposes,"
the Pop.ular Froot said. The statement
said It was thus '"a legitimate target lor
the Pplestlnian revolution ."
The 001pmunique was issued In Beirut.

-~-

4135econd An.

,.

BEIRUT, Lebanon (UP!) - Israeli
Warplanes •lacked Palestinian guerrilla
tarpta at dawn today In swift retaHaUon
for a tllrrorill altacl\ against an Israeli El
AI Alrlbles bua In London 13 hours earlier.
AI leaa four permns were killed.
A doctor at the Palestlnianrun Gaza
Hoepllal near the raided area said, '"They
lrought 37 woWided In here .and folD' ol
them died." Ambulances 'with sirens
wailing sped other casualties ·to other
hospitals.
Earlier a Palestine Liberation
Organization military spokesman had
lilted three guerrillas ltWed but it was not
immediately clear whether these were
among the Gaza casualties.

SAT.; AUG. 26, 1978

NEW LOCATION

~

Israeli warplanes attack

PUBLIC SALE

C. K. SNOWDEN

..

Retaliation ._

W~r• wore aDDOUIIeed
lollowiJII Satarday allei'IIOOII'otnder pull at the
Mol&amp;• Couly Fair.
They Include: 5,580 llold
olocit, Richard Scott,
Edwin Roasb, Earl Sinclair, Kallly SJallley; 5,5011
stale polata llol!lstock, Ned
Uadorwood, Sr., Bart
Jolwoa, David Hllcaley,
Jackie Broolu; 1,5011 lleld
sleek, BRI Epply, Bart
JoiiDIOD, Erk Broolu, Ned
Uadenrood, Sr.; 7,5011 lleld
.stock alate points, Tom
Tbei11, Larcy Stelcka, Eric
Broolu, Bill Epply; 7,500
powder pull, Jackie
• Steltlla, J&amp;ck.le Brooks ;
8,5011 lleld · stock, Larry ,
Stelcka, Tom Theus, Eric
Brools, Dan Smith; 9,5011
lleld
stock, . Cbarles
Matbews, Curt Battrell,
Tony Cai1UibaD.

1

Ask me about
Ufe I~U~Un~Dee-

Price includes :
Body side mldgs.
White-si de-wall tires
Front and rear floor mats
Rocker panel midg .
Non ·glare mirror
AM- FM radio .

OIL OR gas l•ou . Free. 30 Q(res . SWEEPER and sewing mochin•
repair, ports o~d supplin. Pi,k'
2 miles north of Pomerov .
up and d•H.Jery , Oo ~i1 Vacuum
-~~~?01 evening_::
•·- - Cleaner , 't. mile up Georges
WE ARE ANNOUNCING that
C•Hk Rd . Ph. «1&gt;019&lt;.
Olano (lvnc:h) John.an has
returned to Brenda's Boutique THURMAN HOUSE. ontlqyes, Fur·
nilure stripping, repair and
in Mlddleport. For appointment
refinished. County Rd .8 oft 35.
coll992-36b7.
Cent•rville
Village. Closed
SHOOTING MATCH Sundoy 1 p.m.
Monday &amp; Tuesdor. Evenings
Corn Hollow Gun Club ,
by appoi ntment. 2A5· q479
Rutlond . Ohio ,
FOR DEAD S•OCK REMOVAl.
CALL2•5·5514.

10:30 A.M.

256-6740

PONTIAC'S SPORTY SUNBIRD

- -.-- -··-~---

GIRL WINNERS- '111- are Jilt !llrlwlnnwl fll the
pretty baby contllll llaged al the Melt!• Cclunty Fair
Saturday llfternoon by the Middleport Bulin- and
Prof 1-1
aub. Frllln the left are : Jeuica
Frederic, dauatrter 0 Mr. and Mn. J.,oule Frederic, long
Bottom, 0 to 3 montbl; Amy Young, daqhler of Mr. and

w-·•

'~.

Mn. Edward Young, Pomeroy, 3-6 months; Tabitha
LarKe, daughter ol Mr . and Mrs. James Large, Langsville, 1~11 montlla; Jeuica Leigh Radfocd, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs .. Olarles Radf&lt;rd, Minersville, 18 months to 2
yean; Aimee Mllla, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Rl!ndy
Milia, SyraCUie, 2-3 years; Bobble Jay• White, daughter
ol Mr. and Mrs.
Whlt•, Coolvilie, 3-4years ~

flo!lett

POMEROY - Roy Hoiter,
Route 3, Pomeroy, and Jim
Carnahan, Ractne, displayed
several champion animals in
the dairy cattle judging of the
annual Meigs County Fair.
In the Holstein division,
Holter e1hiblted the -grand
and reserve champion bulls
and the senior and junior
champion females. Holter
won firsts In the bull calf,
under one and over four
months; cow, four and over;
cow, three and under four ;
senior yearling heifer ; get of
sire , produ'\t. of cow and .the

three females bred and
own~ by the exhibitor. Jim
Carnahan, Racine, exhibited
the best cow, two and under
three; Bill Kautz, Route 3,
Pomeroy, the junior yearhng
heifer, and Bob Lee, Racine,
won firsts in the senior heifer
calf and the junior heifer call
judging.
' In the Guernsey division,
Carnahan exhibited the
grand champion bull and the
senior champion and grand
champion lemale. He won
firsts in the bull, one year and
under two ; the co~, four and

over, and the cow, two years
and under three .
Carroll Wingrove of Belpre
took first places in all 13
areas of the Brown Swiss
division and exhibited the
four
grand
champion
animals.
In Jerseys, The Hayes
Family Farm at Guysville
exhibited the four champion
animals and took first place
bonors in 11 of the 13 classes
judged. John Colwell, Route
1, Vinton, exhibited the best
cow, four and over.
!I

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~The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 6., Monday, All!;. 21,1978

r~w,i);;~T;Jk'l

Germany (UPI) -

BY G1U!lG BAILEY
Part m IDa Sorlel• tile Life ola
G.le I'Meelor
.
As many or you know, lhe Ullt " l.&gt;en Talk" covered the
lllll'lling work of a typical day of Meigs CoiD!ty Game
Protector Andy I.yles. Today "Den Talk" will covor the
aftornoon.
Aftor dropping oil 10111e lllocking forms; we lltopped by
Andy'" ho- to cheek bis anawertn&amp; aervlce for IDMUgeS.
~ wu about 1 p.m., and llthoUih there wore sis calli, 110
one bothered to leavea me111111e. Andy called the AtheB~ office
ane legal matters, and oil we went to check out a roadside
dump that 110111e lllupid, uncarlnC cllilena (If they deaerve that
UUe) had been ualng to dl'll"aeofthelrref~~~~e. ,
WilcDlfe ~ ,Jim Spleet wu with us, and although I
stayed In the bacqro111d and just watched, I knew right away
that I wanled no part In their invel&amp;ipUve work. The dump
must have been fifty yards lmg and many feet deep. If you've
· never been knee-deep In fUth such u that and smelled the
stench, then perhaps you can't appreciate the joba that these
men do in serving us and QJK' outdoors. I had never aeen such
an unhealthy, ane1ly eye10re. Yes, efforts to uncovor 10111e
clues to the ones responsible for the mesa wer~ fruitful, and
papers had to be !Wed out, pictures talren, !llld notes made
befll'e Jim and Andy could clean up and go to their nat
assignment. Much paper w;ll'k and many legs! means would
follow befll'e the cuJPrits respOII!ible would be. cornered.
Next it was back to the howM: for a change of clothes and
for an arrest warrant on another case. By this Ume it was f
p.m., and their day tlad just begun. Lunch? Everyone,
including me, had fll'gotten about it. Seems like we w~ ~
busy that our stomachs didn't notice. Besides, after bemg m
that smelly dump, it's a good thing nothing was in our

oo

stolnachs.

Jlffi and Andy could have quit for the day, after 1111,
because they had been on the job at least eight hours. But
would you believe, these 2 conscientl&lt;tlll young men didn'_l
even think about quitting .lime? After a smllll deliberatloo, 1t
was decided that an arrest warrant had been on the books long
enough, and they wore going to Columbus to pick up a ~!
Jim Hves in Gallipolis, Ill it meant a trip there for hun to
change clothes, and then on to Colwnbus. I hed other commit·
menta, Ill no more fll' me. · _.
After another stlip at the radio station to malre
preparations for the program, they m-opPed me off at the car.
Needless to say, I didn't envy them, but in a aense I did. One
could tell that they relllly enjoyed their Jobs.
Ob yes, I'm sure you're curious about the rellll!~ of their
Columbus trip. The suspect wasn't heme, or elae had ned, and
they had received .,me wrong address Information, but they
didarriveat the house, only to find him gone. By the lime they
returned to Meigs CoiD!ty, It was anothor 2 a.m. night, with
another long day ahead. But ah, I wilh I enjoyed my job as
much as they did theirs. Don't we all.
To be concluded.

NORTH RAN{)ALL, Ohio
Cllll' CaniCial&lt;:e
ec1p11 favorite Hy Carol by a
half l..cth Sunct.r to win the
$20,000 Hunting Vlllley Slakes

Sports ·briefs
NUERBURGRING, Wei&amp;

·.·.

Kervty
Roberta, a 23-year old
c.Jifomlan, won the 11178
Wll'ld 500 ccm mot!l'cycle
championship Sunday,
becomingthellrlllAmerican
to do 10 despite finiJIIing the
final race of the seriel in
jhlrd place.
Roberta, who rides a
Yamaha,
copped
the
chamPionmlp easily with no
pointa for the 11..-ace llei'ies.
Barry Sheene of the United
Kln&amp;dom, c:llamplon {(I' the
Jut two years, placed second
with 100 points. Johnny
O&amp;ecotto of Venezuela came
third with 86 points.
NEW YORK (UPI) -Ray
Martin of Fairlawn, N.J.,
sank ~ straight balls
Saturday night and went on to
defeat defending world
champion Allen Hopkins, 200154, winning the $100,000
World Open Poclret Billiard
Championships at the
Billmore Hotel. Trailing 153126, Martin ran his string to
take the lead and win the
$25,000 first prize.
In
the
womens'
championship
match
between two llrooklynltes,
Jean Balukas soundly
defeated Billie BW!ng, 100.28,
to win her second straight
Ulle , Balulw has won the
United St8tes champjenship
the Iaiii siJ: years.

Merrill said alter the game.
"If the catcher had held the
ball Remy would have been
out."
Carlton Fisk hit: a h1111er
with nooe on in the aecond
iDning and Remy•s !!hot gave
lbo ........... looell. Tba
A'o got · solo homers by
Mitchell Page in the eighth
and Wayne Gross tn the ninth.
The victory kept first-place
Boston 8\t games ahead of
Milwaukee In the American
League Ealll.
Dennis Eckersley picked
up his 1001 victory in :Ill
declsi9QS, Matt Keough, 11·7,
took the loss, despite allowing
only Six hits.
Elsewhere, Kansas City
and C.Hfornla remained tied
fer first In the AL Well when
the Royals beat Texas, 2-1,
and the Angels blanked
Baltimore, 1-0, In 14innlngs;
Toronto beat Minnesota, 6-2;

•

IIICI went on to win by about
two aeconds. The victory wu
worth f3,1196.

Barrera, charging that Velasquez had not only drawn

the foul but was working In
collusioo with Shake Shalre
Shake's jockey, Angel
Cordero.
"It was a stupid move and
it could have resulted in the
destruction of a great racehorse," said Veitch. " ...had
the two clipped heels both
could have gone down and
that would have made the
tragedy of Ruffian look Hire
nothing ."
Veitch also was disturbed
over 'two slashes on Alydar's
forelegs that occurred when
the colt !raked, but said they
did not appear to be aertous
enough to prevent the colt
from starting In the Marlboro
Cup at Belmont Sept. 16.
Barrera new Into a rage
aftor the Incident and said he
would nevor race against
A!ydar again. He amended
that Sunday morning, saying
only he di&lt;l not want to run
Affirmed In the Marlbll'o Cup
(a handicap race) because of
the. . weights his colt would
carry.
Allor looking at the pbotos
from the race , Barrera
admitted the stewards bed no
choice but to take Affirmed's
number down in favor of
Alydar.
"In the box (aeat ln the
grandllland), you got people
Jumping up and down and you
can't see very well," said
Barrera. ·"I · think l'lncay
gave him a good ride - I
have no regrellabout naming
him to replace Cauthen and I will have to look at the
fl1ma with the lllewarda m
Mmday before I can say
anything IDII'e.
"We are not cry babies and I terl terrible about

What's happening to all that togetherness?

at Tliltledown.
'1be wtnner, ridden by Gal')'
Columbia, ran the als
furlongs In I: 11 4-6 and paid
$2Ul, fl.fO md P.IO. Jaclde
Pearl waa lhlrd.
· '1be 5-6 daily double of Ack
Dar tn the flrlll race IIICI
Bul1ISt in ihe aecond .....
worth $88.:/ll. The 10-1-1 tenth
race trlfecta of Ohio SIIICUIII,
Judge Mauck and Day Siver
returned $5,tr.!'l.40.

LOS ANGELES (UPI)
The Los Angeles Rams have
hired UCLA assistant football
coach Foster Anderaen to fW
the vacancy created by Iaiii
Sunday's firing of Head
C.O.ch Ge&lt;rge A!Jen.
Anderaen, 38, was hired
Saturday by new Ram's
coach Ray Malavasl to
handle the club's offensive
line.

By MIKE 'nllLY
UPI Sporta Writer
After pitcher Don Sutton
and first baseman Steve
Garvey lrawled befll'e a 5-4
victory over the New York
Mets · Sunday, Manager
Toouny Luorda said he felt
the worst was over.
"It was just one of those
spontaueous things," he said.

. Ft&gt;XMRO,Mass. (UPI)Wide
receiver Darryl
Stingley of the New England
Patriots, paralyzed from the
neck down in a collision with
Oakland's Jack Tatum, wW
ID!dergo surgery this week to
fuse two injured vertebrae,
Coach Chuck Fairbanks said
&amp;lnday.
Fairbanks said he had
spent two days at Stingley's
bedside In Calllro Valley,
Calif., and said the six-year
veteran was in excellent
spirits. He said the surgery
would not directly affect the
possibility of Stingley
regaining the use of his arms
and legs.

Clippers
seeking·
new
.
major league sponsor
'

SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (UPI)
- Sal Tovella, driving a
Dodge Magmun, · won the
United States Auto Club
sanctioned Allen Crowe
Memorial 100 late-model
COLUMBUS, Ohio (uPI)stock car race. He said It was Officials of the Columbus
his first win In the Illinois Clippers are looking Ill' a
Stale Fair's stockcar race In working agreement with
21 tries.
another Major League team
Tovella, 50, of AddiiOn, next season after two years of
slipped by Don White of Class AAA International
Keokuk, Iowa, the race's pole . League competition in
sitter, coming put of turn alliance with the Pittsburgh
three to take over first place

major league franchise.
Pirates.
( 11
NahOrodny ; Waits and Dill . W
Despite having been the
Columbus was connected
- Wa lls (R.IJl . L- Srone (9·10) ,
Und
t;~ame)
.
most financially successful with the Pirates as early as Hous
001 000 DOO--- 1 9 l
010 030 ooo- • 6 1
minor league franchise in 1957. The affiliation continued Ptsbgh
000 201 OOx- 3 9 1 sos
Oak
000 000 011 - 2 9 o
Niekro. samtiUO (7) and
baseball since being revived until 1970 when the Pirates
Ec:kersley and F isk ; Ktouon
; Reuss and Oyer. WR:oblnson . W- Ecktnl•v
two years ago under the decided to move the Jets Puiols
Reuss (1-2) . L- Niekro (10·10l. and
(14-SJ. L- Keouoh Cl-11 1.. HRs-;
Clippers name, !he team has franchise to Charleston, HRs- Pittsburgh, Ott 2 181 .
Boston , ,Fisk (111), Remy (2).
been in sevenlh place much of W.Va. ,
because
of LA
000 002 003- S 9 1 Oakland, PaQe ~ 13 ), Gross 16l.
time for lack of promising deteriorated Columbus facili- N.Y.
200000 ll Q-4 121
Rau, Rautzhao (6), Hough n• lnf'!ings)
manpower . Team officials ties .
(7), Foster (9) and Ferguson ; Belt Imoo;:, Ooo 000 000 oo- 0 7 0
also were discouraged at the
No minor league baseball . Swan , Lockwood (9), Murray
.
..
Pirates apparent lack of good was based at Columbus until t9l and ·ste&amp;rns. W- Hou'gh (5· California
000 000 000 000 01 - 1 ' 0
. L- Lockwood (7.11) . HRS-'
the 1977 season after the 3)
prospects next season, ·
O.Martlnez, Stanhouse (12)
Los Angeles, Oavallllo (1}
and Dempsey ; Rvan, ~aRoche
The Clippers have . been stadium was refurbished.
(8), Griffin '(13) and Downing .
Cincl
000
000
1()01
31
attached to Pittsburgh The franchise was returned Chi
000
000
0022
9
1 W- Grlffln (3 ... ). L- StanhOUM
pitching
over
the
first
six
Cleveland ripped O&amp;icago, I~
mainly because its owner, to Columbus and the
LaCoss, Balr (9) aod Bench ; CS -61.
I; Milwaukee edged Detroit, innings and four hits apiece John Galbreath, is a . Charleston team became Burris, Moore (91 , Hernandez N.Y.
0102001Q0-4 71
.(91 and Blackwell , Rader (6) . sea
Z.l; and SeatUe nipped New by AI Woods and Alan Ashby Colwnbus area resident.
000 021 20&gt;&lt;- s 9 0
affiHated with Houston.
W- Hernandel (7 -2) . L- LaCoss
Guidry, Gossage (6) , Lyle
Sunday paced Toronto past
Yll'k, 5-4.
Harding Peterson, vice
As for the Pirates, Peterson CJ.31.
(8). Beattie (8) and Munson :
Minnesota.
president of player personnel said ''we have no idea'' where San Ogo
Honeycutt , Romo ( 10-.. ) (7) enCI
200 020 OlD- 5 9 0 Stin!.On
Indialls 10, White Sox 1:
. . w- Romo (10--4). LRoyals !, Haagen 1:
for the Pirates, said "They their next AAA farm team · Mtl
obo 121 ooo-- • 8 0 Gossage
U-10) . HR - New York,
Johnny
Grubb
drove
In
five
Owchinko,
Lee
(7
),
Fingers
John Wathan's second
felt they drew very well last will be, but he did rule out the
Netl\es
(19)
.
··
(9)
.
and
Te11ace
;
FrymM.
'-of the year hllhllllbted runa with l' haoes loaded year even though they didn't west coast.
Twitchell
(5)
,
Dues
(6J
and
a two run filth inning , double and a pair of singles have a good ball club the first _
Carter. W- Lee 1-4-11 . L- Dues ~-"---~--..---.-.
(5-5). HRs- Montreall , OawlOn
I1
enabHng the Royals to talre and Rick Waits won his first half of the . year. Then this
(21) , Perez (10) .
'IHt.uAaLI:SKI'UlllitA.,
two of three against the third- gsme aince July 18 to heip year they had a bad group on
DEVOTEDTO'Mfg
INTEREOTOI'
Cleveland snap a fiv81!ame the field. They felt from the ·
Alia
000 211 1)()0-- 4 5 I
pia"~! Rangers. Jon Mallack
'
MEIGS-MASO!i AREA
St
.L
110
11020x6110
fell to 11·10 despite pitching a losing streak.
fans' interest stand'point,
ROBERT ~EFUCH
•
Nlekro and Nolan ; Lopez.
Brewers 2, Tigers 1:
Cit~'
five-hitter.
Br
uno
(6)
'
and
Simmon!.
W.needed a change. I can
PublillhW dllll)' l"lt."qql S.h&amp;rdl.y
Bruno
(J.O
).
LNlekro
(
1.5-lJ
J.
Ben Oglivie's run-scoring they
Angels 1, Orioles 0:
understand that."
I.Jy Thtl Ohio Y11lley Publiahlnc
Don Baylor's bloop double double in the eighth snapped
Clippers officials indicated
san Fran
200 100 ooo- J 6 I CultlJWmy 'M~Uimedl.li , Inc:., Ill
Sl., POil'teroy, Ohio U7111.
Phil a
012 101 OOx- 5 l-4 -0 court
to center field with two out in a 1-1 tie and MUte Caldwell, they were unlikely to join
Business OWce Phone 992- 21$111.
Barr
,
Curtis
(6)
and
Hi
ll;
the lfth inning seored Rick 16-7, tossed his leagueRuth ven. McGraw (61 , Reed (8) t-:Wt1.lriBl Pht!ne 992.&amp;1~7.
with the Cincinnati
MWer from first base to lreep leading 17th complete game forces
and
Boone. W- Ruth¥en ( 11-9).
S...·uoo '""' ""'"'~• polid ll
Reds or Cleveland Indians
Pom~NY . Ohio.
L~ Barr (6 -10). HR - San Fran·
California tied with Kansas for Milwaukee.
because
of
current
NallunMI udvertisiniL r~
cisco. Dwyer (2) .
t.al.iYI! , 1-Mndon As.!oci..te!l, 3101
City. C.IIfornla starter Nolan Mariners 5, Yankees f:
commitments and prospects.
American
Ltague
Eutlid Ave ., CkVebmd, Ohio 4-U l!t.
Bob Robortson 's seventh- The Reds have another year
Ryan left the game In the
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Tor
000 410 001 - 6 16 2
Sub!lcriptioo -r.Mles: Dtlivcrt:d by
inning
single
lroke
a
4.f
Ue
Mlnn
100
000
1()()-2
6
1
eighth Inning for what is
L'lll~r whert '•vllllable 75 emu J!C'
to go on their cootract wilh Rookie quarterbacks Mark
Kirkwood
,
Will
iS
(7), Murphy
believed to be a rib and capped a Mariner the IL's Indianapolis team, Miller and Johnny Evans will (9J l!nd AshbY ; Perzano,.vskl, weel .ByMotor Ro\ltl wtwre cama~tervk'e ""- IIYailMbW , One mmlh,
separation m his left side.
coneback. Seattle raWed to while Cleveland's Portland get their chance to stick with sunon (61 and Wyn~ar . W13.25. B)l"mallln Ohlu 11nd W. v• ••
Blue Jays a, Twlu 2:
Ue the game twice off losing affiHate, now on a year-to- the Cleveland Browns tonight Kirkwood (l. J ) . L- Perzanow - ~ Vur , S%2.00; Si1 mootbl\
skl (2-S) .
~l UO ;
Three munlhs , $7.00:.
Don Kirkwood's three-hit reHever Rich Gossage .
year contract, ls in the lf they make a good showing
F'..Jsewht!re 126.00 Yl"llfl Sll munthl
001 000 OQO:- l 8 2 IIJ .$0; Three munthl!l, SUO.
against the Detroit Lions in Texas
middle of a pemant race.
K.C.
000 020 OOx - 2 6 0 Su!Jsl-ripliun prke l.ndu&lt;kii Sundl)' 1
the
Browns
third
exhibition
The top affiHate prospects
Matlack and Sundberg : Split· 'J'imes-Stnt lnel.
are the New York .Yankees, game.
~-The Browns, 1-1 in
which is across the country
MOSPORT, Ontario (UPI)
from their Class AAA exhibition play so far this
Yankees at Tacoma, Wash., year, will be piloted by - Australia's Alan Jones
and the Montreal Expos, regular quaterback Br1an continued his domination of
Alydar 's cuts. I love the record crowd of 50,122 who whose top farm club is Sipe In the first hall and the Can·Am series &amp;lnday,
horse, Afydar."
were anticipating another Denver where officials seek a Miller and Evans in the running away In both heats of
Kenny Noe, the chief heart-stopping duel after the
Sam the f/5,000 .auto race to take
second.
Coach
steward for the New York two chestnut colts had turned
Rutigliano's
apparent the overall win in his
Racing AsllociaUon , said the . eight of their nine previous
decision to keep Terry Luck O&amp;aparrll Lola . Each heat
stewards would announce the meetings into match races,
on the bench .could mean the counted as a race In the series
detalla of Plncay's Impending .with Affirmed stlll leading
second year backup quarter- with Jones earning fl. 701j and
suspension Monday and the series, 7-3,
270 series points . for each
back wW be leaving.
added three stewards did not
"The thing that galls me is
Luck got his only starting in chequered flag . The overall·
Immediately see anything in that this w~s the last time we
CINCINNATI (UPIJ _ the final game of last year's win brought him a diamond·
the films of the race that could have beaten Affirmed
studded bell buckle from the
d Cl k dismal 6-8 season.
could impHcate Cordero.
as a ~year-&lt;1ld, at. stralghi Right winger Gor ie ar
The !Jions, always tough for sponsoring lrewery.
signed a one-year
The race was also a bitter weights, " said Veitch. "Now has
Fellow Australian Warwick
coo tract and left winger the Browns, .have former
disappointment for the we'll never know."
Bryon Schutt a two-year Browns' lineman Monte Brown placed second In both
agreement with the World Clark as coach this season. heats and in the overall
Hockey
Association They allll have punter Tom standings, while AI Holbert of
M•jor l .. gue Leaders
32 ; Sm ith , so 31.
Cincinnati
Stingers.
Skladany, who was drafted Warrington, Pa., cm~blned
By United Press International
American League : LeFlore,
BIHing
Clark a veteran from the second by Cleveland In 1977 fourth and third place
Oet 56 ; Oilone, Oak 44 ; Cruz,
( Bned on l2S at bats)
Sea _.2 ; Wills , Tew: 39; Wilson; Rochester Americans of the · but sat o~t the campalgn finishes for third overall.
Na tional League
KC JS.
American Hockey League, demanding more money.
G A&amp;. H. Pet.
Pitching
Burroghs Atl
117 382 121 .317
Victories
The
punting
game
ANAHEIM, Calif. (UP!) Bowa Phil
118 -49-4 152 .JOB
National league : Blue, SF 16· had 37 goals and 51 assists for
88
polnta
last
year
fifth
best
promises
to
he
a
three-way
Cllllfornla
Angels' pitcher
Rose Cin
123 515 158 .307 6; Nlekro , Atl 15-13; Perry , SO
Madlock SF .
92 3d 106 .307 14-5; John , LA and Grimsley, in the league.
'
war . Cleveland's 1977 punter, Nolan Ryan lett - Sunday's
Smith LA.
10.4 373 11.4 .306 Mil 149.
Schutt,a recent graduate of Greg Coleman, must show he game against the Baltimore
Concepcn Co
118 _._.2 135 .305
American League: . Guidry,
Parker Pit
109 &lt;429 131 .lOS NV 17 -2; Tanana, Ca l and Bowling Green Slate Unlver- can top Evans, who allll Orioles before the start of the
Wh itfi eld SF
115 379 11.4 .301 Caldwell, Mil 16·7; Torrez. Bos
Clark SF
120' _.50 135 .300 15-6; Sorensen, Mil 15-8; Split- sity, had 12. goals and 31 punts, to keep his Job. !fe eighlh inning with a rib
Cromart Mtl
121 .467 139 .298 torff,. KC 15-10 ; Flanagan, Ban assists for 43 points, the· would also like to outshme separation In his left side.
Hebner Ph il
103 329 98 .298 15-11 .
The right-bander, who wUI
fourth best on the team . His Skladany • who haunted
American Leltue
E1rn1d Run Avenge
G AB. H. Pet. ( aa~ed on 111 innings pitctledl lrother Steve is a leftwlnger Coleman last season through undergo x..-ays Monday, .
Carew Min
118 44_. 151 .3..0 Natlon•l LeagUe : vuckovich , for the Montreal Cllnadiens. periodic reports th~t he threw several warmup
Rice 8os
123 5U 167 .325 St .L 2.18; Rogers. Mil 2.41
At the same Ume Saturday, might he about to Jom the pitches aftor coming to the
Piniella NY
92 32910.4 .316 SWl!ln , NY 2..&amp;8 ; Blue. SF 2.67 ;
Roberts Se-a
99 338 106 .31 4 Hal icki, SF 2.73.
the Stingers released Butch team ·
mound in the eighth but left
Oliver Tex
9.4 372 115 .309 AmtriCaR League : . Guidry, Deadmarsh
and
Greg
Evans
averaged
f4
yarda
·
with a pain in his back.
Brett KC
90 )63112 .309 NV 1.79; Matlack, Tex 2.l7 ;
North
Carolina
Carroll
per
punt
at
Yount Mil
91 348105 .302 Caldwell, Mil 2.31 ; Gate, KC
·
State and Coleman averaged
Belt Cle
105 412 124 .301 2.61 ; Hartull, Cal 2.66.
BLOOMINGTON, Minn.
Bostoc k Cal
118 _.53 136 .300
StrikeOuts
MILWAUKEE (UP!)
39.2 yards last seaaon.
Hisle Mil
107 397 119 .300 Nation•l League : . Richard , Danny Ongals , who· had Coleman's average mainly (UPI) - Minnesota flrat
Home Runs
Hou 230 ; Niekro, All 195;
National Ltaeue : Foster. Cin Seaver , Cin 161 ; Montefusco, gained the pole position with was lower because he bueman Rod Carew was aelt
home prior to SIIIIUy's game
and Luzlnskl , Ph il 28; Smith. SF 1-41; Blue. SF US.
LA 27 ; Parker , Pitt 23 ; · American League: Ryan , Cat a record-setting run in the speciaHzed in kicking the ball between tha Twlna and the
V..inoman , Ch i and Dawson, Mil 205; Guidr;Y, NY 1U; Leonard, qualifying heat, Sunday out of bounds Inside the 21).
21.
.
KC 1331 F'lanagan, Belt 127; easily won the . Tony yard line, a feat he Tll'onto Blue Jaya with a 1113Amerlc•n Le1gue : Rice, Bos Eckentey, Bos 116.
Bettenhauaen Claulc:
accomplished 23 Urnes for the dogree temperature. .
)0 ,• Hisle , Mil 2t ; Thomas, Mil
The preliminary dlagnolil
27;' Baylor. Cal 25 ; Murrav,
Onglls took the lead for third/highest tcitll tn the NFL.
Batt and Thornton, Ctev U .
by
Twlna'
c1octora 11
good on the 159th lap - when
·
Runs Bl"tCI 1n
that
Carn
baa
alllrep
tlroat.
he took the advantage away
In
Cleveland's first
Sodrll Tronsoctlons
National League : Foster, Cln
91 ; Garvey, LA 85 ; Clark, SF ly Unltof Prell lntornotlonol from Rick Mears and easily exhibition game this year, There wu no Indication u to
84; Smith , LA 83 ; Parker , Pitt
P~:'.\';::~. 11
fought him off the rest of the Coleman averaged 45.9 yards how long he might be
81 .
·
Cleveland - Signed rookie way fll' the checkered nag , In eight kicks . Last week in sidelined.
American LtlttUt : Rice, 8os
103; Staub, O.t 99; Hisle, Mil wide receh.er Rober! Woods of Ongaia averaged 108.3119 mph Buffalo, Evans had four
90 i Thompson, Oet 81 ; Thorn. Grambling and re1eased tree- In the race and -on ...,.... puntsfll'a 33.......
. •daV..age,
ton; Cl rv 19.
aoe-nt Wide reciever Mark
" ~ lNfl
or:tSmoking Ia becoming inStolen 81111
Durdon.
from a record purse of but two of them went over the
Nitional Lfltut : . Moreno,
creasingly
hazardous to the
Lo•
Angeles
Hired
UCL..
'108
560
Finishing
third
was
goal
line
becauae
of
1
Pitt 52 ; Lopes , LA 3•; as.1.•1anl coach Foster Ander
tlo
•
of
your
poc~etbook.
health
Richards. so 3l ; Taveras, Pitt sen •• coecn .
Gordon Johncock.
Cleveland's field poll n.

8 r·owns
Lt·ons·
c'o
' 'llide

I

---

What if

Stingers sign
pair Saturday

)mlneeded
blood•••
and there
wasn't any?

CaD todaY
fora
convenient
donor·
appointment.

i
:

?"

....

.:.::

I

ourselves m offense.''
Chicago, however, was
without its star running back

popping
Cincinnati erupted for four
':':
By MILTON RICHMAN
( touchdowns in the fmll two
}
UPI Sports Editor
:::: quarters against tht&lt; C.icago
/ Bears Saturday night to win
going away, 27-3.
NEW YOIU{ ( UPI) - The L:Js Angeles Dodgers are a house
"It was a long time
divided ..
coming," smlled Bengals
They have been Hving that way for years now, with two boss
Bill
Johnson ,
separate factions.
appreciating thil storm after
On one side olthe house Is their Ali.Starfirst baseman, Steve the calm.
Garvey. On the other side are those on~he
c who can never
"There was some concern,
put a finger on anything really wrong With h but who have from both our players and
never considered him part of them bee
feel, well ... fans, about our lack of
maybe he's a Httle too perfect. ·
scoring," conceded Johnson .
Afew years back, a submarine movie was produced entitled " We'd been categorized as a
"Run Silent, Run Deep," and those four words probably team that couldn't score and I
provide the best key to the long-6llloldering, under-tlle..surface think our players were
resentment that caused Sunday's wild blood-in-tlleir-eyes fist getting a HtUe lintsy out there
fight between Steve Garvey and Don Sutton in the Dodgers' because of lt." ·
dressing room at Shea stadium.
But after staking the Bears
ne seen plenty of baseball fights before, but.I've never seen to a ~ first half lead on Bob
one where the participants show.ed more cold, concentrated Thollllls' 36-yard field goal,
fury amoiD!ting to an almost homicidal desire to take one the Bengals · dominated the
another part than in the struggle between Garvey and Sutton. second half and exploded for
They weren't fooling around. They were playing for lreeps. one touchdown after another.
"I'm only human," Garvey said later. "I've been pushed too '
Len vi! . Elliott started it
far. There are three things that are lmportont to me. First is with an 80-yard m burst,
my family; second is my Integrity and third is the Dodger Ken Anderson followed with a
team as a unit. This unfortunate thing that happened was a 2G-yard scoring pass to John
cubninationofthings. If a man can't stand up for his family, he McDaniel, cornerback Ken
isn't much of a man ."
Riley got the defense into the
Presumably, a newspaper story was at the root of all the act with a 22-yard nm off a
trouble .
fumble recovery for another
Last week, Th«mas Boswell, the Washington Post's gifted six-pointer and rookie David
writer, authore!l a story that was reprinted by the L:Js Angeles "Deacon" 'furner capped it
Times In Its Morning Briefs colwnn last Friday. The Times' with a zig-zag 29-yard TD
writer who picked it up was prophetic w!len he started out by romp . .
saying: "Here's one that should stir some emotions In the
"I'm not. only happy we
Dodger· clubhouse,"
scored 27 points, I'm happy
Sutton was quoted as saying : "This nation gets Infatuated wewon,'' exclaimed Johnson,
with a few names. All you hear about on our team ls Steve whose team got its first
Garvey, the All-American Boy.
preseason victory In three
"Well, the best player on this team lor the last two years starts.
and we all know lt - is Reggie Smith. As Reggie goes, so goes ·
As fll' the Bears, who have
us."
yet to win in three exhibition
Garvey saw the story and burned up.
games, there wasn't much for
Not becauae of any enV1'lor Reggie Smith, whom he gets first-year coach Neill Armalong with well and lllres, but becauae he fell Sutton was prort ol strong to BBY.
~~we
were
verx
that group of Dodger playors who dislike him for his Golden
disappointed
we
didn't
win
Boy Image and has reason to believe have circulated ugly
and
very
disappointed
we
stories aboutlilin.
didn't
score/'
he
said.
"I
Before Sunday's game with the Mets Garvey walked over to .
Sutton in front of the pltcher'slocker. They were standing no
more than two feet away from me and seemed to be talking
about nothing more serious than the weather. Actually ; they
were talking shout that newspaper story.
Garvey told Sutton he thought his ccmments were Inappropriate. "We are a team ," he said. "If there are any
By United Preu International
National League
differences, they should be kept among ourselves and not
East
expresaed in the newspapers. I've been lmoclred before about
w. L- Pet. GB
Ph
ila
65 55 ..542
things I do off the field and I don 'I think those things should be
Chicago
63 59 .516 3
written about In the press. If you have to say something about Plttsbrgh
60 62 .492 6
Montreal
me, say it to my lace."
·
58 66 .468 9
. Lou is
.52 72 .419 15
One word led to another. Garvey listened to what Sutton had St
New York
50 73 .407 \6 1!~
to say, Interpreting one of the pitcher's remarks as slandering
West
W. L. Pet. GB
hoth him and his family.
Los
Ang
73 .51 .589
The color began showing on the back of Garvey's neck. He Sen Fran
71 .53 .573 2
70 54 .565 3
told Suttiln he would take him on rlg)lt then and there. Sutton Cincinati
San Diego
65 59 .52.4 B
didn't back up an inch. ·
Atlanta
56 61 ...55 16112
Instead, he suddenly leaped at Garvey, and in a minute the Houston
54 68 .-452 17
Slturdly's Re5ults
two of them were down on the noor of the clubhouse clawing
Pittsburgh 4, Houston 2, 1st
away at each other with their heads dangerously ~ar the base ' Hous at Ptsbgh, 2nd, ppd.,
rain
of the wooden lockers.
New York 8, Los Angeles _.
The other Dodger players rushed over Immediately . Reggie
Cincl 9, Chicago 7, 10 InnS.
San Die-go 3, Montrea l 2
Smith tried to pry the combatants apart but couldn't. Neither
Ph iladelphia 3, San Fran 0
could BW Russell, Davey L:Jpes, Dusty Baker or coach Preston
Atlanta J , St. Lou is 0
Gomez. Even AI Cllmpanis, the Dodgers' 61-year-&lt;lld general
Sunday's Results.
Pittsburgh 7, HouSton 6, 1st
manager got into lt, attempting to restore peace.
Pittsburgh 3, Houston 1, 2nd
Only after an atraordinary effort were Garvey and Sutton
Los Angele5 5, New York 4
Ch icago 2, Cincinnati 1
finlllly pulled apart.
San Oieoo 5, I\-\Ontreat .4
Both had bruises on their faces, with Garvey suffering a
St . Louis 6, Atlanta 4
Ph il o 5, San Francisco 3
bloodshot left eye- where Sutton had stuck his finger In it.
Today's Probabl• Pitchen
When he's all done pitching, Sutton would like to be a
CAll Times EDTl
baseball telecaster . Garvey 18 leaning In the same direction ,
San Oleoo tPerrv 1_.-Sl at
Seeing the way they tore at each other on the floor, I couldn't Philadelphia (Kaat 6-5l. 7:35
help but wonder what would happen lf they had to work p.m.
Los Angeles (Weich 5-0) at
Montreal (Grimsley 1.4·91. 8
together in th_e same booth.
p.m.
•
Chicago (Reuschel 12·101 at·
Houston (Richard 12-11 ), 8 p.m.
San Frltlncisco (Blue 16.6) at
New York &lt;Koosman 3·131. 8:05
p.m.
St. Louis (Martinez 6-61 at
Cincinnati {Bonham 9-3) , 8:05
p.m.
Tutlday's Gamel
. St . Lou is at Cincinnati, night
Pittsburgh at Atlanta , night
San Diego at Ph lla, nlghf
San Fran at New York, night
Chicaoo at Houston .- night

Walter Payton, who was
rested after suffering a slight
shoulder separation last
weekend.
"There isJl 't any question
what Walter Payton means to
us," said Armstrong ; "and
we missed him out there
tonight ."
Said JohMY Musso, who
subbed for Payton, "We were
getting ready to have a big
night, b_ut we fizzled . We
certainly
didn't
fool

Henderson and bad relief
pitching by Skip l.Dckwood.
· In other games, Pittsburgh
swept a pair from Houston, 7·
6 and 3:-1; San Diego shaded
Montreal, 5-4 ; Chicago
overtook Cincinnati, 2-1; S!.

L:Juis defeated Atlanta , 6-4;
and Philadelphia topped San
Francisco, 5-J.
Pirates 7-3, Astros &amp;-1:
Ed Ott homered twice and
l'llil Garner scored on a
double steal in the second
game, giVing Pittsburgh its
seventh straight victory and
a six.ga'1le sweep of-Houston.
Willie Stargell drove In three
runs and Frank Taveras had
four hits and drove in the
anybody."
who doesn 't get as much deciding run in the opener.
As for Cincy, Johnson playing time as he'd like, Padres 5, Expos f:
Rookie Broderick Perkins
admitted fooling himself by accepted his big-gainer in
drove in three runs and relief
calling the play that Elliott stride.
turned into an 110-yard TD
"I'm good for about one of pitcher Mark Lee picked up
jaunt.
them ilyear,"hegrinned . "It his fourth victory " of .the
"Just after I called the was just a sweep with good season. Hollie Fingers retir~
play , I warned my two blocking."
. --------Turner's dazzling 29-yard
coaches up in the press hox
SAN BERNARDINO, Calif.
over the phone, 'This could be . TD scamper may have been
(UP!)
- DanvWe, Calif., has .
a bad play ,"' recalled just what the rookie from San
captured
the Western
Diego State needed to make
Johnson .
Regional
Little
... League
,
But after Elliott scampered the team.
championship with a 6-0
Asked what lie was thinking
the 80 yards, Johnson
when he popped through the victory over Kailua, Hawaii.
corrected himself.
·Danville now travels to
"No," he - laughed, "that line of scrimmage, Turner •s
Williamsport,
Pa .,
to
eyes lit up and he beamed,
was a helluva good call."
compete
in
the
Little
League
EHiott, a six-year veteran ''Goalline .''
World Series ,

Cubs rally tops Reds
CIDCAGO (UPIJ - It was
an ironic twist of fate for the
Chicago Cubs.
Just 24 hours earlier, on
Saturday, they had led ·the
Cincinnati Reds &amp;-3 with two
out in the ninth inning and
their relief ace Bruce Sutter
on the moiDld. But the Reds
rallied to tie the game and
eventually won it in 10
innings.
&amp;mday, Cincinnati had a I·
0 lead with two out in the
bottom Qf the ninth. Sillgles
by Larry Biittner and Manny
Trillo brought op the Reds'
top relief pitcher, Doug Bair.
Bair walked Ivan DeJesus
to load the bases, and Dave ,
Rader doubled .off the right
field wall to give O&amp;icago a 21 victory.
"I've never done anything
like that, not even in Little
League," said a beaming
Rader. "Just told myself I
was going to hit the ball hard .
AI. first, I thought the wind
(blowing In) WBB going to get
that thing ."
• Willie Hernandez, 7·2, who
went just l-3of an inning, was
the winner but it was Ray

Burris, .in his first start since
July 22, who was the pitching
hero.
Burris allowed just two hits
In eight Innings , One was a
double to Johnny Bench in the·
seventh - which scored
George Foster, who was hit
by a pitch and look second on
an infield out .
"This was like pitchln~ a
no-hitter 11gainst this club,"
said Burris. "I oon't have a
good winning percentage ( ~
5) against them . If I cquldget
six or seven good innings, I
would have been satisfied

with my outing."

Twenty-two-year-&lt;1ld rookie
Mike LaCoss , 3-3, was
working on his first major
league shutout in his seventh
start when he was pulled in
the ninth .
"Bair is my best," said
Reds Manager Sparky
Anderson . "It's never tough
for me (pulling the starting
pitcher ). I never look at it
that way."

...

Prior to Sunday's game,
Cubs ' outfielder Dave
Kingman strained cartilage

CLEVELAND (UPI ) The hardest ball Johnny
Grubb hit Sunday wa s
caught, but the Cleveland
outfielder will stiU take his
other three hits.
Grubb's double and two
singles, which if laid end to
end wouldn't reach

viousl y , though, quite a few

are not.
There's no substitute lor
development competence
and the right aftltudH,
including a positive approach
to
defensive
dr ivi ng .
Our agency provides
financial protection and
service In cases of accidents involv ing young
drivers ... but many of
these accidents can be
pre11ented . That's why we
say - prevention is the

best policy .

DALE C. WARNER
INSURANCE
992 -210

102

w. Mlin

Pomeroy

left- - ~~======;==~~========~

July 18.

Waits, who lost 2-G and 1-G
in his two previous starts
against Chicago this ·season,
feU behind 1-G in the first
inning but blanked the White
Sox the next eight imings in a
neat route-going five-hitter.
Pa .
WILLIAMSPORT,
( UPI J - Eight teams of boys
aged 11-to-12 Bl'e poised for
Tuesday's opening of the 32nd
Little League World Series in
Williamsport, where the
sport for the small fry was
organized in 1939. The teams
are the victors from 6,500
leagues in 32 nations and
have survived playoffs in
ei~ht regions of the world.

PRE-FINISHED
GUnERING
..-ouRSELf!
oe&gt;-11' _,
You ' ll ne&amp;d no professional help or equipmen! 10 pu1 up th is reody -1o- hang guHering;
o il pam slip 1ogether eo•ily and lit snugly. The
boked -on po in1 f ilm ,. •ecurely bonded ta the metal
and won' t flake or peel. See it a1 The Friendly Onet

POMEROY CEMENT
BLOCK CO.

QHW&gt;

The Department Store of
Building Since 1915

Baltimore (Flanagan 15-11) at
Oakland (Langford 6-Bl. 10 :30
p.m.
TUtsCIIV'S Games
Texas at Toronto
Cleve at Mllw, 2, twi -nlght
Kan City at Chicago. night
Detroit &amp;I Minnesota , night
New York at Catlt. night
Baltimore at Oakland, night
Boston at Seattle, nigh t

NEWSPAPER
CARRIERS
WANTED
FOR
POMEROY &amp;
MIDDLEPORT AREA
•

From

PHONE
992-2156

THE DAILY SENTINEL

DtRonaldE

BETWEEN
Tbc lll•lm C.nter

responsible drivers. Ob·

p.m.

denture service,
partials A relines.

NEW HAVEN, W. VA.

soaring hoapltal
and surgical billa.
Call me.

Young men and women
often ask why they have to
pay
more
for
their
automobile insurance.
Drivers in their teens and
earlier twenties cause far.
more than their share of
tra ffic accidents . Reports
the
National
Safety
Council : 21.8 percent of all
motorists&gt; are 2A years of
age or under, yet these
youthful operators are
involved as drivers In 38.6
per cent of all accidents
and 37 .3 per cent of all fatal
mishaps .
A great many you'ng
people
are . ski lled,

first victory
since
the
his. his
bander
whipped
California

rusl&lt;&gt;m den1ures quickl,.-ond

.126 MAIN

II can help pay

FOR YOUNG
DRIVERS

...A.....

economically

882:2~25

Person to person
health insurance

992. 7155
rounded first base," said
149 S. Third St.
Grubb. "I thought It was just Middleport, 0 .
a routine Oy ball."
Grubb then looped a single
,
to right to score Buddy Bell in
sur! ru wwuru~L
.
.IUOIIOtiO&lt;If lol! ~' '"" COI!IDfllt
a t wo-run seven th to g1ve
Htltl , 011.. .
C1eveland starter Rick Waits
... ,u..... ~
Btllll1llflo9'tw~ ,•~a.~

.a,
Our lllaff of denti sts and
technicians will make your

SAYRE HARDWARE

where a rib joined a breast
bone . He was erased from the
lineup and his status for
Monday's night's game at'
Houston has · not yet been
determined.

the final battor to gain his
29th save - tops In the
majors.
Cllrdtnals I, Brav.. t:
Ted Simmons J!oubled
home two runs in the aeventh
to snap a 4.f Ue. 1'110 Nlekro,
15-13, took . the loss while
reliever Tom Bruno, 3-0,
earned the victory.
I'll Diles 5, Giallts 3:
Richie Hebner tripled to
highlight a two-run third
inning and added an RBI
single In the sixth as the llrlll·
place Phillies lllaintalned
their thr""'ilame lead over
the Cubs in the Eastern
Division.

Mike Swisze1

Indians roll over OriSox

hardest hit baU, accounted
for five runs as the Indians
snapped a five-game losing
streak with a 10·1 win over
the Chicago White Sox.
"I broke the bat on my first
single in the first inning, but
they caught the one I really
hit on the nose," smiled
Grubb, who upped his
American Lugue
season 's RBI to 61.
East
"I'll take every on~ of those
W. L . Pet. GB
Boston
78 _.5 .634
hits,
" smiled Grubb, who
Mltwauke
69 53 .566 81!1
New York
69 53 .566 8 1!1 watched his bases-loaded Oy
Detroit
67 54 .554 10
ball drop behind centerfielder
8alfimre
64 58 .525 lJ'h
Clevelnd
54 68 . 4-43 23 112 Tom Spencer after the
Toronto
47 76 .382 31 Chicago centerfield lost the
West
W- L. Pet. GB ball in the sun in a five·run
Kan Citv
67 55 .5 ..9
fourth Inning.
Calif
69 51 .548
"I didn't know Spencer lost
Texas
60 61 .496 61h
the
ball in the sun until I
Oakland
62 6_. .492 7
Mlnesota
56 68 .452 12
Chicago
51 71 ,"418 16
Seattle
47 77 .379 21
Saturday's ReSults
Kansas City 3, Texas o
Oakland 8, Boston 4
Chicago 2, Cleveland 1
Detroit 6, Milwaukee 4
Minnesota 5, Toronto 0
California ,., Baltimore 3
Seattle 4, New York 1
Sunday's Results
Toronto 6, Minnesota 2
Kan5as Citv 2, Texas 1
Milwaukee 2, Detro it 1
Cleveland 10, Ch icago 1
Boston 4, Oakland 2
Calif 1. Bait o, 14 inns .
seattle 5, New York .4
TOdiY'I PrOblble Pitchers
CAll Times EDTl
.
Texas (Ellis 8-5) at Toronto
(Nioor'e 5-4). 1 p.m.
Detroit (B IIrl ngh ~tm 13·5) at
Minnesota cZahn 9-111 . 8:30

STANDINGS

1

I

Other teama, like the 1977 games over San Francisco,
New York Yankees and the can too.
But not every team will be
three
Oakland
A's
champions, have won deapite as generous as New York,
tension In the clubhouse. which Rave awav the lllime in
Maybe the Dodgers, who lead a three-run ninth, with paor
the West Division by two fielding by left fielder Steve

Bengaloj]enseerup~

Sp9rt Parade I ~-~
~~~~~ar:t:~~-

team

I

club, to sw-face.
11
1'ffi only . hwnan," said
Garvey. "I've been puahed
tOo far. He isn't the first
person to say something
about me and I'm just getting
tired of l!.' •

don't thil!k we distinguished

Linescores
torff and wathan . W- Spllttorff
Major League Res~lts
1 1~- IOI.
L- Matlack C11 -101.
By Unitltd Press tnternattonal HRsKensas City, Wetl'tan C2L
· National League
"
(l!t game&gt;
Det
000 000 010'- 1 . 6 0
Hous
000 220 02o- 6 11 1 MiiW
000 000 llx- 2 9 1
Ptsbgh
203 101 OOx----;- 1 U l
Young, Hiller (8) and Per .
DiXon, W\11\ems (-4L Andujar r!sh
; CBidwrll and ~rt. W- .
(5), Forsch (7) and Bochy ; Caldwell
Cl6-71 . L- Youno C~- 3) .
Rooker . Ttkulve (6) and Ott,
Sanouilten (61 . W- R:ooker 18· Chi
100 000 00D- 1 S 2
8) . L- Oixon (6.10). HR S210 502 00&gt;&lt;- 10 13 0
Piltsburgh , Stargell (17), Berra Cleve
Stone, Willoughby C1} end

"I haven't talked to the two
gladiators, but I plan to. I'm
sure we can straighten this
thing out."
•
Indications are that a lllory
in the Washington 'Poll, tn
which S~tton praised Reggie
Smith at the expe~~~~e of
Garvey, morely caused a
long-simmering feud,
involving two factions on the

rr:l ::::::::::::::::::::T~d::; :::::: :::;:;:;:;:::::::;:::;:·::::::::::::::::: :::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:; :·: AI~!~ c~.;:.~n~I - ~~l~I) one

RIVER DOWNS
CINCINNATI (UPI) $1oeS First Shoe took the lead ·
in the far turn md made a
driving dash for the finish
&amp;mday to win the $10,001).
added fellture race at RIDowns by two lensth&amp; over
Twist tile pawn.
With Juan Soto up, 9loea
First Shoe ran the six
furlongs In '1: 13 3-a, good for
payoffs of $4, p.fO aild S2.:1ll.
Amber Blo ~e In th!td. ·
Soio Lady and Prompt
Payment won the flnt two
races making a f-7 daUy
doubl~ that returned $112. .
The I0,097fans bet.$117,632.·

Affirmed disqualified
SARATOGA SPRINGS,
N.Y . (UPI) - Earlior this
season, trainer John Veitch
had promised Alydar would
catch Triple O'own winner
Affirmed
sometime,
somewhere.
But he dldn 't want lt to be
this way, and the glorious
rivalry between the two
chestnut colts has become
tainted and sour and
somehow never will be the
same.
Saturday, Affirmed was
disqualified In the I 11•-mile
Travers at Saratoga alter his
susbtitute jockey , Laffit
Plncay Jr ., circled Shalre
9Jalre Shake and headed
toward the rail, as the field of
four neared the half-mile
pole. Then, In an apparenUy
unthinking and unneccessary
action , Plncay cut off Alydar
and
Jorge Velasquez ,
attempting to move up along
the rail at the same tline.
The big colt screeched to a
near halt and fell six lengths
behind, but then came around
the outside to finish only I~­
lengths back, followed by
Nasty and Bold and Shalre
Shake Shake.
It was a matter of seconds
before the stewards polled
the "inquiry" sign and barely
minutes before Affirmed's
flashing No. 3 was taken
down and Alydar was
awarded the victory In the
$104,800 r!'Ce. It marlred the
flrsllosa for Affirmed in nine
starts this year.
After the race, both
trainers accllled each other's
joclreys of bad riding, with a
coldly
furious
Veitch
demanding at leut 30 days
ISllplleiWon ("on bread and
water") for Plncay and
Aijirmed's ~lner, Laz

v

(UPI) _

Remy's reprieve saves BoSox
By STEVE WD.8I'EIN
UPI Sporta Writer
Jerry Remy of the Bolllm
Red Sox got a second chance
Sunday to kayo the Oakland
A's with a foul-tip that never
was.
Rtmy wu p.n a twa:W••
after appal'!lltly str\ldng om
in the fifth inning when plate
umpire Durwood Merrill
ruled he had foul-tipped the
ball on his thlrd-lltrike swing.
The pitch was dropped by
· catcher Bruce Robinaon.
Videotape replays clearly
showed that Remy never
touched the bllll but the slap
hitler didn't waste his opportunity. Two pitches Iator he
polred a tlu'eHwl hwter over
the right field fence, only his
second homer this seaaon, to
lead Boston to a 4-2 victory
over the A's.
''There is no question In my
mind it was a foul Up,"

Sutton-Garvey battle

'lUIII'I'LEOOWN

2- The Dally Sentinel, Wddleport-Pomeroy, 0 :, Monday, Aug: 21, 1978

_

949 E. Llvinp1on Ave. Columbus
---- - --~ . ...

~

...

�•

..

r------..-·,

i-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Aug.

Eichingers.Circles
gather for discuss
reunzon projects

II .

SoCl"al

II
1 Calend~ 1
MONI)AY
MIDDLEPORT . Business
and Professional Women 's
Club, annual family picnic at
Forest Acres Park, Shelter
House 1 nearest the road.
Covered dish, beverage and
table service to be taken. Picnic at 6:30p.m.
' MEIGS COUNTY Church
of Chrial Men's Fellowship
will meet at lhe ,zion Church
of Christ Monday at 7:30p.m.
nJESDAY
American Legion Auxiliary, Drew Webs!er Posl39,
picnic, 6 p.m. Tuesday at the
home of Mrs . Dorothy
Jenkins, 38 Hudson St., Midk
illeport. Members to Ia e a
covered dish. Meat will be
furnished.

•

POMEROY
The
Eichinger family reunion was
MIDDLEPORT - Projects
held Aug. 6 at the Route 33 were discussed at the
Roadside Pari! With nearly a meetings Tuesday of the
hundred attending.
Circles of ihe B. H. Sanborn
Gilts were presented . to Missionary Society of the
Mrs. Nora Houdashelt, the Middleport First Baptist
oldest; Jennifer Hill, the Church.
JOunsest, and Denise Hill,
Meeting at the home of
who traveled the farthest.
Mrs. Elizabeth Slavin, the
Present were Dave Fish, Electa Circle made plans to
Teresa Frye, Vicky Frye, remember Vivian Titus, a
Marietta ; Bill Roach, Boaz. resident of Pinecrest,
.,.. . va., usa Cloneh, Kim GaUipoliJ,
on her birthday in
.,_.
Clonch, Dorothy and Wilbert _,,ember·
Clonch, Westerville: Ruby
Mrs. Mary Bre.wer had the
Hayhurst, W!Uiamstown, W. devotions entitled "Love One
Va.; Mr
. . a nd Mrs. Gary Another, As I Have Loved
·
Mercer, Hopkinsville,
Ky. : You" and "Let Not ·Your
Effie Smith, Amy, susan Heart Be Troubled." A picnic
Waugh,
and
Jason, ' preceded the meeting. At·
"'- are
1 ston, w. va.
.tending besides thoSe l)amed
,.....
'' Mr. and Mrs. Ralph were Mrs. Freda Edwards,
J!;ichinger; · Colwnbus; Mr. Mrs. Lilltan Demoskey, Mrs.
·ed Isabelle Winebrenner, Mrs:
and Mrs. .
J W. Seygn,
Lynchburg, W. Va .; Robert Ethel Hughes, Mrs. Mary
and Jim Seyfried, Colwnbus; Brewer, Mrs. Bernice Baker
Mr. and Mrs. w. G. Seyfried, and guests , Mrs. Louise
Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs. Thompson and Mary Beth
Ernest Leifheit, Akron; Mr. Brewer.
and Mrs. Rodney Leifheit,
Mrs. Leora Sigman was
Kelly and Shelly, Mogadore; hostess lor a meeting of the
Mr. and Mrs . Kenneth · Dorcas Circle held at the
Leifheit, Scott, Mark and Jill, church. As one of the special
Knoxville, Tenn.
projects for the year, the
Mr. and Mrs. William members took on rememDarst, Germantown; Mr. pnd bering residents at the Meigs
Mrs. Jack Gibbs, Doyle and County Infirmary.
Devotions by Mrs. Sigman
Ra ndy, Pa r kers burg , W. Va.;
Allison Traugh, Parkersburg, were on the theme of prayer
W. Va.: John Eichinger, with scripture from Luke 11,5
P arkera burg, W. Va.; Linda through 10. There was a
and Mandy Boyd, Parkers- circle prayer for shut-ins. She
burg, W. Va.; Mrs. Edna also dedicated the love gift
Wayland,
Middleport; offering. Round robin car!ls
Michael Wayland, Rutland; were signed for Mrs. Mary
Marie Legar, Pomeroy; Jeff Lyons, Mrs. Alice Freeland,
Wayland, Rutland.
Mrs. Martha Klein, and
Jennings and Terry . Clifford Hayes.
Wayland, Pomeroy; Mrs.
Mrs. Freda Hood had the
Nora Houdashelt and Julie, program on the Indians. The
Syracuse; Marie Houdashelt, Lord's Prayer in unison
Athens; Elmer and Tracey closed the meeting.
Mrs. Elizabeth Searles was
Houdashelt, Grove City; Mr.
and Mrs . Henry Frank, .a guest and g~ve highlights of
Pomeroy; Leroy Eichinger, the Women's Conference held
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Allen in June. Others attending, the
Eichinger, Pomeroy; Mr. meeting were Mi's. Eloise
and Mrs. Charles Sayre, Wilson, Mrs. Sarah Fowler,
Pomeroy ; Mr. and Mrs. Paul Mrs. Pearl Hoffman, and
Eichinger ·and Paula, Mrs. Katie Anthony.
Pomeroy; Debbie Taylor,
Middleport; Mr. and Mi's.
Don Sayre, Jell and Jesolca, .
Pomeroy; Kim and Marl&lt;
Franz, Pomeroy ; Mr. and
0
Mrs. Charles Sayre, Terry,
CHESIDRE - Mr. and
Tammy and .Traci, Long
Mrs.
Buck Mulford of
Bottom.
•.
Cheshire
are announcing the
Mrs. Grace Stobart,
birth
of
a
son, Eric Richard,
Pomeroy; Greg Smith and
Aug.
9,
at
the Holzer Medical
Vicki Pickens, Pomeroy ; Mr.
Center.
He weighed II
· and Mrs. William Eichinger,
pounda,
five
ounces and was
.Syracuse; Mr . and Mrs.
23
inches
long.
Roger Hubbard, Roger Lee,
Maternal grandparents are
Tracie, Syracuse; Denise Hill
Mr
. and Mrs. Michael
and Jennifer, Florida; Mr.
Whalen
, Point Pleasant, W.
and Mrs. Max Eichmger,
Va.,
and
paternal grandBecky and Max, Jr., and
parents
are
Mr. and Mrs.
Scott Hill, Pomeroy ; and Mr.
John
Mulford,
Cheshire .
and Mrs. Leroy Sauters,
Maternal
great
- grandCharles, Timothy, Joy and
mothers
are
Mrs.
Maxine
Cheri and Patrick Cleland,
Williams,
Point
Pleasant,
W.
Pomeroy.
Va., and Mrs. Ann Whalen,
Sunnyvale, Calif. Paternal
Mrs. Ruby Burke
great · grandfather Is Ben
Davidson, Middleport.
/Jas several guests

'
:

~~.

~ .
• "
t ~ ·
·
- This :five generation family,
all residing· in the Racine area, includes front, Mrs.
Bertha Wolfe with her great ·great • grandson, Jeremy
Guinther, and .his great - grandmother, Mi's. Dorothy
Sayre, right; With his mother, Mrs. Carol Guinther, and
his grandfather, Joe Glenn, standing.

THE TOP OH 570 Club in
Pomeroy will celebrate their
12th anniversary Tuesday.
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·:: Each member is to bring a
:;:;
.
} diet covered dish.

': Helen Help ·:· Le~~~~:ua~~~"~~f;~

)!' uS • • •

·:·:

.,

\

·:-: me 6 p.m. Tuesday, Route 33
southbound roadside park .

By Helen Hottel.:· ~~~:~~~:d dish ·and own

IT 'PAYS' TOBEWELLKNOWN!
DEAR HELEN :
I'm getting weary of books and magazine articles, TV appearances, etc. by · ~ prominent " people who break ihe law, fool
around, get messed up with drugs, whatever, then make a bun·
die on their "confessions."
Watergate was only one example of million-&lt;loliar book contracts going to people who truly "profit" from their mistakes.
But let an unwealthy or unknown person mess up, and he
goes to jail, skid r~w or the dogs. No bail&lt;()Uts from publishers.
Seems like there ought to be a law against people making
money from their transgressions just because they have
famous (or infamous) connections. - UPSET BY "CONFESSION FOR SALE "
DEARUPSET : ·
"Freedom of the press " wouldn't allow such a Ia w.
So long as millions will pay to learn about misadv•ntures of
the famous few, those few will be paid for their confessions.
· Honest now, don't you read them \,00 ? - H.
P.S. Here's another inequlty we may never correct :

PAST
MATRONS ,
Pomeroy Chapter, Order of
the Eastern Star, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesady at the home of Mrs.
Marie Curd.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY
MIDDLEPORT Lions Club ,
Wednesday noon, Meigs Inn.
WOMEN 'S Repu~lican
CJub of Meigs County will
hold a picnic Wednesday at
6:30p.m. at the Pomeroy Gun
Club. Mrs. Lorene Johnston ,
Wellston-, lOth district
committee, will be guest
speaker. Meat will be
provided .
THURSDAY
· TWIN CITY Shrine Club
will meet Thursday at the
home of Mrs. Clara Adams,
Racine.
·

DEAR HELEN :
My brother was killed by a gang because he wouldn't join up
with them and deal in dope. They beat him to death.
The same day a big movie star was beaten up, but he di1ln 't
A orol{ram oa lbe
die. His story was.all over the front page, but my brother, who
Day Scbool lo be ·
Olristiaa
was trvjng to keep l.Utle kids off drugs , they mentioned him in a
held
at
the
West Virginia
one-i~tr:n item 01&gt; liage 21. After aU , he was just another dead
Training
Scbool
Ia lbe
Me•· ·an .
elementary
buildlag
.in
lle was important to his family and friends. He was a good
'I"'"· trying to help others in the barrio. Why should he die un- Polal Pleasant will be
noticed when people who never did anything for anyone but preoeated ··on Tuesday,
Aug. %7 al 7 p.m.
themselves get so much attention ?- CHICANA
WW!am Kille, prnldeal,
DEARCHICANA :
•
will bave cbarce of tbe
I wish I bad an answer to your question . ·
But in defense of the news media , I must add : if reporters ·meeting.
know the story behind the story, they'll often produce a wellresearched human interest feature which may arouse a whole
community to carry on (he good fight. ·
·
·
RELATIVES VISIT
Guests of Mrs. Bernice
Why don 't you send this column to your newspaper editor
and suggest an interview ?- H.
·
Grueser on Friday were her
daughter, Mrs. Howard
DEAR HELEN :
Snyder, Cleveland, and her
Our son and daughter-in-law take their baby with them granddaughter, Mrs. Mitwherever they go, and ha ve since he was less.than a week old. chell McCale and her
They're even planning a camping trip next m.onth, and he'll be children, Mitchell, Patrick
barely two months old then. To my protests they reply, "He's and Maureen of Williams.town, W. Va.
·
well and happy and doesn'I complain."
Isn't this dangerous, upsetting and , well , just not appropriate lor a tiny infant•- WORRIED GRANDMOTHER
DEAR GRANDMOTHER :
OUTDOOR HYMN SING
NO! Your grandson is healthy, contented and I'm sure very
An outdoor hymn sing will
much loved. Suppress your protests - they won't be heeded be held on Saturday about a
anyway. -H.
mile and a hall from Salem
Center. Directions to the
location will be posted and all
singers are invited to par,
tlcipate. The 81"8 will begin
Mrs. Webber Wood has Ear I Th(I!Ja and daughter, at 6:30p.m.
been ill at the home of her Mr . and Mrs. Ernest Wood,
Guests of Mrs. Ruby Burke
Mrs. Virgil King. Mr . and Mrs. Norman Wood,
daughter,
of Allred this past week have
SENT GIFI'S
Recent
visitors
have been Mr. Webber Wood, Mrs .
been Mr. and Mrs. John
Mrs. Margaret Weber and
11
j ' :.J'
Mr. and Mrs. Noel Story, Rosalie Sayre, Jodi Sayre. Donna Jenkins sent gifts to a
Heald, Keene, Texas; Mr.
Webster City , Iowa, Miss
Mrs . Elizabeth Murray recent
and Mrs. James Burke and
bridal
shower
Ernestine
Wood,
Mr.
and
spent
several days In honoring Miss Ann Colwell.
Rodger, Purnis, Miss. ; Mi'.
Mr. · and Mrs. Robert Mrs . Keith Hoffman and
Colwnbus at the home of her Their names were uninand Mrs . Clyde Burke, Calaway, Route 2, Coolville,
Akron ; Mr. and Mrs. Bud announce the birth of a son, children, Naples, Florida , son, Mr. and Mrs. William tentionally omitted lrom a
Coleman, Fostoria; Mr. and July 31 at the Camden Clark Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Hoffman, Murray and son .
IIJting of names. Hostesses
Rev . and Mrs. John Lanier were Mrs. Harvey Erlewine
Mrs. Donald Burke, Debbie Hospital, Parkersburg. The Anderson, Indiana ; Mrs .
and Ronnie, Cambridge ; Mr. baby weighed seven pounds, Gevena McElroy, Zion, were guests Friday o1· Mr . • and Mrs. Fay Sauer.
and Mrs. Robert Burke, one ounce, and was 20 inches Ulinpis; Miss Judy King ~ and Mrs. Ralph Carl.
Mr. and Mrs. VlrgU King camps.
Chester; Mr. and Mrs. Micky long. He has been named Kanakakee, Illinois; Mr. and
Burke, Jeff, Jenni, Matthew Jeromee Clifford. Mr. and Mrs. Steve Brickles and son have returned home from a
Spending the weekend at
and Ruby Irene, Route 3, Mrs. Calaway have a three of Gainburg, Maryland ; Mr. week's stay in Murfreesboro, Great Bend at the campsite of
and Mrs. Kenneth Wood and Tennessee where they
Pomeroy ; Jerry Burke, Lisa year old son, Robbie.
Mr. and Mrs. Dick Harris
children, Colwnbus; Mr. and
and Tricia, Route 1, Reeds·
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Earl Hart, Reynolds- attended Dr. John R. Rice's were Mr. and Mrs. John
Sword of
The Lord Dean, Mi'. and Mrs. Robert
ville; Mr. and Mrs. Bill Mrs. Bill. Puillns, Route 2,
burg;
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Frank
convention.
.
Pullins, Mr. and Mrs. Buck Coolville; and Mr. and Mrs.
Rled, Bruce, Edith and
Deardorff,
Mrs.
Melva
The
Beal
reunion
was
helil
&lt;.:a!away, Tammy, Missy and Guy Calaway, Route 1,
Robert, Jr ., Pataskala; Mr.
Radcliffe,
Albany
;
Mr.
and
Sunday at tbe home of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Markins,
Adam ; Mr. and Mrs. Robert Reedsville. Great - grandMrs.
Melvin
Felts,
Gallipolis;
and Mrs. Roger Young, Mrs. Alma Wood of Racine.
Ca laway,
Robbie
and parents are Mrs . Ruby
Mrs
.
Georgia
Thoma,
Wesley and Yvete.
Jeromee ; Mr . and Mrs . Burke, Route 2, Coolville, and
Mrs. Karen Murray, Tina
Chester
;
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Earle
.
Miss Helen King has and Greg, Sandyville, W. Va.
Ernest Calaway , Anita Jane , Mr. and Mrs. Okey Pullins,
and
daughter , returned home after spending
Wood
all of Route 2, Coolville.
Route 2, Coolville.
Middleport ; Mr. and )\Irs. the swnmer with missionary spent the week here with Mrs.
Elizabeth Murray and
Dale Beery, Otway, Ohio attended revival at Carleton
working in Bibie schools and church.

Eric Mulfiord

born Auuust 9

Kingsbury News Notes

Son '· born lu/r 31

DO-IT-YOURSELF
HARDWARE HEADQUARTERS

~ I

'II I

E

Tuesday, Aug. 22thru
Saturday, Aug . 28th

see Cross Hardware

Coole Ia aad meet .... new
beauticlaa "lmelta llollia1er."
Call Debbie, Dtaaa w Loreu.
lor m appolalm•t.

• Housewa re!
• Wallpaper
• Paints
• Electrical Supplies
• Plumbing Supplies

A
R

Dorothy 's Beauty Salon

CROSS HARDWARE
71 N. 2nd Ave.

Open Mon. thru Sat.
t:OOtoS :OO
Middleport

Neville
•
reunzon
•
tS held
The Neville reunion was
held July 29 at Krodel Park in
Point Pleasant.
There was a basket dinner
at noon with Charles Neville
asking the blessing. Music
and singing was provided by
Wayne· and Nora Neville,
Esther Knott, and · Pam and
Jim Bard.
Attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Warren Wright, Ruth
Marie Wright, Mrs. Mayme
Harmon and Sonny, Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Aei.ker, Mr. and
Mrs. John Ftske, Andy,
Adam, and J~lie, Pearl J .
Wood, . James and Bryan,
Anita Marie Wright and
Kelly, Garnette.Wright, John
and Joyce, Barbara !lnd Tara
Hill, Nancy Chapman and
family and Charles Chapman
of Columbus.
Mrs. Esther Knott, Mr. and
Mrs. Garland Knott and
Annie, Mr. and Mrs. Oliver
Neville, Shelly and Kim,
Virginia Allen , Jean Anderson, Barbara Anderson,
Veronica Northup, Cathy,
Linda, Toby, Ricky and Joey
of Newark: Mrs. Grace
Neville, Carolyn Estep, Bill,
Bonnie and Roberta, John
Neville, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Gladden, Stephanie, Kay and
Joseph, Russell Flinn, John
Flinn, Tracy Scarberry and
Misty, Hl!sher, Brenda Estep
of Parkersburg, W. Va.
Mrs. Joe Kinniard, Miss
Ora Kinniard of Gallipolis
Ferry, W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
Robert NevlUe , Jane, Betty
and Virginia, Keri Adkins,
· Mr. and Mrs. Willard Sisson,
Charles Sisson and Wanda
Hill, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
NeviUe , Mi's. Joan Roberts,
Scottie and Crystal, Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Bradley and
family, · Buster Clonch,
Sandra Dee, Delores Ann
Clonch, Helen Neville, Helen
E. Johnson, Diana and
Randall Clonch, Junior
Preston, Liz, Chris and Linda
of Gallipolis; Mrs. Edith
Redman, Mrs. Addie Sayre,
Mr. and Mrs. Grover Neville,
Patricia, Linda and Mary,
Katherine Terry, Charles and
Donna Roush, Jeff and ·
Junior, Point Pleasant, W.
.Va. ; Mrs. Naomi NeviUe, Mr.
and Mrs. Mark Yoacham and
Mayla, Mrs. Janet Warner
and Usa, Mi'. and Mrs. Wiley
Ours of Racine.
Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Lockhart, Mark, Timothy, Colleen
and David, Anne Marie
stewart, Chriatie and Tim-

my, Forest Park, Ga .: Mrs.
Edith Barnett and Kenny,
Langsville ; Mrs . Nellie
Russell , Mr. and Mrs .
Shirden Russell and Paula,
Beth Smith, Helen E . Roush,
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Roush
and Kim, Mason, W.Va.; Mr.
and Mrs. Francis Poling,
Lucille and Sister, Mr. and
Mrs. James Bard, Sherry
Lynn, Mary Ann and Billy,
Marysville.
Virginia Athey , M_idilleport; Mr. and Mrs. John
Loveday, Dan and Billy,
Bidwell : Harold Harmon,
Bridgewater, Pa. ; Mrs. Ruth
Fowler, Columbus; Mr. and
Mrs. Wayne Neville, Springfield; Jim and Peggy
Ashton., Mr. and Mrs. Roger
A. Neville, Robert and Kelly ,
Sandyville, W. Va .
Pat Wright, Johnst own,
Mr. and Mrs. George Rice,
Lesage, W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Barnett and Matthew
of· Wilinington; Mrs. Nedra
Napier, Stacie and Ann of
South .Point; Mr. and Mrs.
Bill Smith, Catlettsburg, Ky.;
Randall and Nicki, Irene
Rice , Huntington, W. Va.;
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Priddy,
Gary and Doug, Mr. and Mrs.
Keith G. .Aeiker, Sr.,
Pomeroy; Roger Wallis, .
Southside, W. Va. ; Mr. and
Mrs. George Jeffers and
lan;tilY, Winfield , W. Va.;

Keitha Whitlatch, Kathy and
Kelly, Reedsville; Mr. and
Mrs. David Roush, Donna,
Lucinda, and Markeita of
Rockford, m.; Mi'. and Mrs.
Ben F. Roush, Benji and Tlin,
Letart, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
Keith G. Aeiker, Jr., Todd,
Sheillie and Laura, Cheshire;
Mrs. Jan Ashworth, Stacy
and Pam Duncan, New
Haven, W. Va .; Mrs. Joyce
Smith, Hurricane, W. Va.;
Lorie, Lisa, Connie and
Clarence; Keitha Ann
Neville, Mr. and Mrs. Lester
Williams, Odell, Rhonda and
Donita, · Crown City; Mrs.
Bessie Rowe, Trenton, Mich.;
Mrs. Karen Willson, Tony ·
and Danny of Miami, Fla.,
who traveled the farthest.
Next year's reunion will be
held at the same place on the
last Saturday in July.

Add to your collection of
eolleetive nouns : A trend of
poll-takers .

·
Stars banquet at the
Lafa)'J!tte Hotel in Marietta
on Saturday evening .
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Curtis
and Sue Ann of Lorain spent
the weekend wi(h his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Curtis,
also visited Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Riffle . Sue Ann, who has
returned from her tour of
Jordan and Israel going from
Fort ~ayne Bible College,

· By Mrs. Francia Morrla

Mrs. Margaret Houdashelt
accompanied Mr. and Mrs.
Dale Smith to the Wills
reuni111 held at a park in
Lancaster. •
:Mrs. Peggy Nixon of New
~altaville spent a weekend
with Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Webb who celebrated their
47th wedding anniversary:
They atten.ded- the Howard's
.

•

•

992·38 '

992-3982

1
II

1-!~~2~!!~~------~-------j
.

SLICED BACON ......... ~:. 89~
JOWL BACON ............~~·.. 79~
49
CHIPPED HAM .........~~:.. ~l
TURBOT FILLETS .....~~·.. 99~
MAXWELL HOUSE

. COFFE·E

,', ~,

- - - · - ·--

REG,; DRIP.
tLECl. PERK or ADC

;i
z

' $449~

TOP

'

·-

Lb.
Bag

~
~

$1

flololoed
Row
.................

STEAK

Umit one with coupon

99

LB.

••••••••••••••••••

CUBE STEAK ........... ~:!.1

ASSORTED FLAVORS · REG. or DIET

16-oz.
Bottles

FIYBO POP

.

il:ttii)Jt]:l
0

..... "~ ..~.. oo...... , $

........ 1/21/ 71

a

....... -

-:!!=:===~~~u
~
,.. ,,, .........

.

8

GROUND BEEF. ......~~·..99e ~~

0

CARDINA L ~~ ·

Vo STORES

t:

89

SIORES • CAR DI NA l Fo oo ST ORES
GOLDMEDAL

0

.I-!eliJ

ry

l:'l

-~- .:!. 1 .~-

..

"".!~! 5 ~g 39(!
''

~

z

..,....111211171!1

IJoocl n ~jl·j Roy•l ll~&gt;t lilorn.
00 1S ·Ofi

~
~

ft;#

QUANTITY
RIGHTS
RESERVED

1 fARM FREsH PRoDucE

t*POTAT0Es89e PEACHES

·
MAXWELL HOUSE

LB.39$

10 LB.
Bl!!il~~iJ~

'

LIQUID·
DAWN
48

CELERY
49$

MONA ItCH

I

.

PORK &amp; BE~IS ............

40 -01.

BUNCH
c

MUSSELMAN&amp; CHUNCKY

AlltMOU"

oz. BTL $169

8

•

•"It BNtl. As h Sweeps.

As hCieans"
• lnltlnt Rue Adjusb1.,11

.. ..... Con

u,..;, _ . ;.... ~
C:C»Upolt ', . . """"'·

Bailon
. ' Jug

SHORTEI

~~Jf

,

Lb. $~~·

~ Can

STAR KIST

I FISH

PLUS DE POSIT

6%-oz.
Can
cARDiNAl Fooo STORE S
CEREAL

TRIX.,

'
Umh ,ooe iJlolWI c_,..,
C:OU III!!f'l , . , f""'i" ,

215' OFF LABEL

-

DETERGENT

TIDE

The best way to care for carpet Is a
Hoover Converta.ble Cleaner.

VALLEY BELL

ICE CREAM SANDWICHES
OR DRUMSTICKS ..............................

IIILLO SOAP PAIS .............................'~~· Jtc

.
CAROINALAIIORTED FLAVORS

_79

.....,

~

ICE CREAM .............................. . "
iANQUET

A.;.J BLEACH ............... :............

Got

sHour;IE wAsH .·.... :~;o:S •,.

59t

FRIED CHICKEN ................................. 2 ;!; s1"
ROOT IEEI FLOAT BARS ................... ~·~·
~-- Vf:'ri,CHICOK0 N. LIVf.PI or REG .

DOF 0D .........................

79&lt;

l&amp; 'l...:u.

DAOIDOY

CATFOOD .................... 10

c••

~

C

19

S]lt

/BAKERY VALUE!
CARDINAL

BROWII SERVE
ROLLS ..... ...................

Ta·Ct.

,§&gt;0 STORIS • "ROINAL FOOD SlORES

..
...
~

I

'

ot217JOO

"oo STORES

Gal.

Middleport, 0. ·

SJ89~

=

--

84-oz.
Box

-

&lt;
z

1

"""""'Con

7·UP

16-oz.
Bottles

-

..... . ....... ... Pkg .

12 -o•

XI\ •lll 4•1 :I

CIDER VlrfEGAR

FUN SIZE MILKY WAY , SNICKEAS . 3 MUSKETEERS

Umit onl witf'l coupon 1nd $10.00 pu rch•••

• Edge Clell'lin&amp; Suc:tion

HE~:;RBINAL fO OD STORES

KOBEV SHOESTRING

BARRELHEAD ROOT
BEER OR .

•

ARMOUR

~~~~iii~~~

TEA BAGS .......... ·c;:.~c.. *1''

.

65 APPLESAUCE ,............... .'~;~• 65•
POnED MEATS ...... 4 ·z~~o:s 100 POTATOES ..................... ~:~ 891
VIEIIA SAUSAGE
•.•• 79(
CAIDJ BARS
'"·•• $14f
991 NAIISCOAOG. MCINNAMON
ARMOUR TREn
HOlEY GRAHAM$ ....... :~':' 891
C•n

MONARCH

BAKER FURNITURE

1

'

STORES • CAR OINALFOOOSTORE S

~~ll---

AUITINI

DAIRY VAllEY

OPTOMORIST
II1 · OFFICE
I-lOURS : 9: 30 to 12, 2 to s !CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS.) - EAST COURT

CUT UPS. ................... ~~; 59e

FRIENDLIEST SERVICE IN TOWN!

SALE

ADOLPH'S .

.

.i---R:-\'ftoMPlori;o:o~--~.

FAMILY PACK .... ~~;49e

L.v"'UST &amp; PEARL STREETS
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

$
Can
Complete With
Tools

'

MIXED FRYER PARTS

Lb.

$6888

Baltimore, spent Thursday relatives and friends Thursand Friday with Mrs. Helen day and Friday.
Simpson and Mr. and Mrs.
Jamie Wolfe of Jackson Is
Ralph Badgley.
spending
a week with his
Mr and Mrs. Haskell
grand[iarents,
Mr. and Mrs.
Compton of Akron · visited
Dory
Wolfe.
Mi's. Bessie Ervin and other

I

VAUGHAN'S

Limit on. can with coupon

Golden Buckeye Card
When Ordering.

son and son, DArin . of

·J

.COFFEE

25% Off Purchase,
Just Present Yoilr

parents.
Mr. .and Mrs. Clifford Via of
Dayton, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
Woodgerd of Ma rietta and
Mrs. · Frances Barnhart of '
Athens were weekend guests
of their mother, Mrs. Alma
Woods.
Mr. and Mrs, Mike
Hayman and chHdren of
Jonesboro, Tenn . spent
Friday and Saturday with his
parents, Mr. and Mrs.
William Havman.
Mr. and Mrs. Brian Simp-

-,r-,.,.,.~S~ALE DATES AUGUST 21 • 26, 1

REO .. DRIP, ELECT. PEAK

Power

· Guests of Mrs . · Helen spent from Sundav til
Simpson for the Sayre T·uesday at Flemmgsburg,
reunion were Roger Wolfe, Ky. Mr. ·and Mrs. Ralph
son Scott and friend; Judy . Shain went after them and
Shears·of Ashtabula; Mr. and · returned them home.·
Mrs. Max Wolfe of Sandusky;
Mr . and Mrs. Frank
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Brockway Cleland and daughter, Mrs.
and two children of Dayton, Ivan Powell, went to
who came Thursday and Washington, D. C. to visit
returned home Monday, and Senior Master Sgt. Ivan
Mr. and Mrs. Sonny Wolfe of Powell at Andrews AFB
Ashtabula who came Thurs- Hospital.
Mrs . · Powell
day and remaining for a remained with him. They
week's visit.
came from Italy. '!'heir
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Ervine daughters·, Ivaunna and Lori,
are here with their grand-

showed film slides at First
Baptist Church for the
Missionary Society on
Tuesday evening of many
places where the group went
and explained, which was
very interesting.
- ·
Mr. and Mrs . Norman
Styer of Waterford, Mr. and
Mrs. Bryce Sayre and
chlhlren of JacksOn, Mrs.
Doris Rogers of Colwnbus
visited Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
S8yre over the weekend and
attended the Sayre reunion.

SALE

lto!!le Improvement Supplies

"

A JUDGE examines Kiln Cougar's fish during the
Meigs County Fair pet show Friday afternoon .

Mrs. Betty Spencer
presided at a meeting of the
Evangeline Missionary
Society of lhe Pomeroy
Church of Christ held
Tuesday night at the church.
The meeting opened with a
reading, "He Loves You" by
Mrs. Evelyn Smith and
prayer.
Mrs . Thelma
Osborne gave the secretary's
report, Mrs. Rrudy Andrews,
the treasurer's report, and
the flower'fund report in the
absence of LaDonna Clark.
Arrangements were made
to continue the "can of the
month" until the flrst o( the
year. More plans were made
for "Operation Evangelize"
of Chesapeake which will
visit here later. Prayer by
Mrs. Holly McArthur closed
the meeting and Mrs. Smith
served refreshments to Uiose
named and Naomi Ohlinger,
Mrs. Pauline Kennedy~ Mrs.
Gertrude Bass, Mrs. Eileen
Bowers, Mrs. Janet . Venoy,
and guests, Mrs. Kate
Jarrell, Mrs. Helen Miller,
and Mrs. Eva Dessauer. Nut
meeting will be held at the
home of Mrs. Clark.

• So
.R acme
· CiaJ Events

SENIOR CITIZENS

For aU your do-it.,ourself

D

Missionary
society has
meeting

5-Tbe Dallv SenUnel, Middleport-POIJ1eroy:O.. Monday, Aug. 21 , 1978

"'~·

COUPON

COUPON

TALSi

9( I ~ ·
......

0(:1.1 1 -01

w

!!i
:;;
.Q

CARDINAL!~~"'.

Xa(eliJ 41 ]: 1

�--

. -.

~

&amp;--The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 '• Monday; Aug. 21, 1978

Want Ads Turn Unwan·t ed Items Into Cash
WANT AD
CHARGES

DREAMING OF a white Christmas
INith no bill5? W.onderlul to
tMnk about . but it cou ld come

1 ~ WvnburUndcr

true . Be o Toy ladies ' hostess!
In 11 our home or by orders lr~m
your friends . Earn toys and g1fts

fr•e . Nome brand
raosonobly
priced

toy s.
with

guarantee . Gifts for 'the whole

fam il)l . For information col!
742 -1377 or 992 -7050 .

t SHOP MAN . I counterman . Con·
tact Motor Por ts Co ... 157
Walnut St .. Middleport , Ohio.

WANTED BABY SITTER in Mld dlepoi t lo r preschool child
while
mother
tea ches .
~.~2'11 :..;
7 ·_ _ _ _ _

WORK
OVERSEAS.
Aus tral ia,
Af ric a . South Amer ica , Europe .

et c
Constructio n . Soles .
Eng1neers . Clerical. etc. $8000
to SSO,OOO plus . hp_eMes ~id .
For emplovment tnformat1on
write ; Ov~trseos Employmen!,

Box 1011 , Bos ton . Mo . 021~ .

GREAT

PART
TIME
JOB .
Demons trate Merr 1- Moc toys
and gif!s on party plan . Set
your own houre. No inll~s t ·
ment , de livery or collecl10n
H1ghes t 1=ommission . Coli Ann
Ba xter coll ect 319-556-8881 or
wr ite Mer ri-Mac. Box 1277
Dubuque. lo 52001 ,
___

SELLvoUR

HUSBAND on the ideo
ol your gett ing a P';Jrl tirn_e- job
with full 11me poy . Mern-Moc
n eed~
demonstrators end
supervisors to sell toys o~d
g1l1s on home pa rty pla n . No ln11estmenl , delivery or col lee·
tion . Coli An n Baxter collect .
31 9-556-888 1 or wnte Merri·
moe . 801 Jac kson. Dubuque .
Iowa 5200,~1-~---

Cash
1.00

I Uay
"J. liay:.
:I \!a)'S

17

OW~r~c
1 .~

I"'

1.00
2.25

1.01

JJS

:1.00

6\la~·s

FOOT 1968 Yellowstone
camper u!ttf -c:ontained . good
conditiC:n . Also hih:h , mirror,
e.-err,thing needed to hook
up ,• ectric broke_:_CW.:-7074_:__
197b APACHE Camper . Phone
9'12-7316 .
'
27 FOOT TERRY tr0vel troller .
self-contained . E11cellent condi·
t ion . 992-7656 .

word uvt&gt;r UK" mmUnwn IS

f.udl

wnnl.s LS i l't'lll.l) J)l'r word pt'r de~y .
Ads runmng ut~r 0\::ln l'U~utive
dH y~ will lk· clwr~o:t&gt;U at the I llay
ralt' .

mcu)ltr)' , ~C~trd of Tiumlts 1r11~
Qbituar )': 6 l't!llls P"r wunl, S:t OO

Olo

1!1

IIUIIU!lWil. Cuh in lidVIUWt' .
4 k iTTENS . Cu te . 992-5478 after 5 ,

Mobile Huuw sales lrllltl Y111'tl setlt!s
llrl' ael'ei)H'd only with e¥sh with
urdcr . 25 w rtL t'hal'l,lt! fur ads l'arryUI!\ Rux Numbcl' In (;oj rt or Tht• ~~~ ­

p .m.

flernice Bede Osol

COI NS. pocket watches.
~ lo u rings. wedding bonds ,
diamonds . Gold or sillfer . Coli
Roger Wamsley . 742-233 1.

HOMESITES for sale . 1 acre and
up . Middleport , near Rutlond.
Caii992-7A8l . · -- - - - NEW 3 bed-;;;;- house, 2 bolhl,
oil elec .. 1 acre, Middleporl ,
close to Rutland . Phone 992·
7481 .
VA-FHA, 30 yr . financ ing , also
refinancing . Ireland Mortgage,
77 E. State , Athens . phone (614)
S92·3051.
TH-REE BEDROOM frame home IM
Middleport . Col~!92 - 3457 .

IN SYRACUSE · 2 bedroom

house.
New storm wi ndows . New
aluminum building. :2 porches.
992·3219.

..,...,-----

Lind .

Tht· PuiJii.sht!r ~~rv~ Uw righl
w ~~ or rcl't"CIImy 11ds d~ 11lt'd ~
~t:l!Una l. 1' w PuiJiisht-r will not be

5 days a week for any aged
child . Phone 949 - 2758~ .

NOTICE
WANT·AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES

10 x· 50 TWO bed room mobi le
. _ __
home. $1 800 . 992-565::8;_
1976 NASHUA 14 'I 65 3 bedrOom
1'11 both , underpinning , $ 1500
and assume loon . 949-2683 or
843-331 1.

Mo11day

~qun ui1Satunlll y

Tut!sda y

thru F'riday
iP.M.

the tilt)' bdul't! pub!kalltlfl
Sum!~t)'

4 P.M.
Frid&lt;1y ~.tftcmouu

OIL OR gas

leo~e. Free . 30 a cres.
'J miles nort h of Pomeroy
614 -726-2701 f'lve ni ngs.

~EDUCE

SAFE &amp; los t with GoBese
Tablets &amp; E-Vap "wa ter pill~ "
Nelso!1 Drug .
SHOOTING MATCH Sunday 1 p.m.
Corn Hollow Gun Club .
Rullond , O hio .

·e1os WANTED on o 1974 bO 11 24
Modular kome . _Damaged by
fire . The home is we ll built and
contained 3 bedroom Iorge li ving room . for mal dining room,
kitche n, family room , 1'1,
both! . You are invite d to inspec t this home located •;, mi le
east ol Horrisonlfille St. Rt. 143.
The purchaser must -move the
home not later than Oct , 15 .
1978 . Moil sealed bids to 73
Roosevelt Dr ., R.A.F.B.. O hio ,
43217 to arrilfe not later than
Sept . 20. 1978. Incl ud e re tur n
address and phone number .
Ar'\noun cement of acceptan ce
o f 0 bid w111 be mode not later
tha n Se pt . 23, 1978 . Terms :
Cosh . Cerlified check or bonk
drah . The owner reserves the
right to re ject any or a ll b ids .
For appoint ment to inspec t the
home call 7-42-3122 or Colum·
bus 497 -1317 . Harold D.
G raham. Owner . .
NEW 3 bedroom mobile home
wi th 1' , baths . Size 14 11 70.
Con be seen after 5 p .m .
located directly across from
the Racine Hydro Plonl ot Lefort
Falls . 3 miles obolfe Racine .
Ohio
10 x 40 MOBILE HOME . co'm pletely fu rnished . Quick so le price
$ 1888 .00 .
Call
992 -2138
Fires toMe Store or q49 -2328 .

ConstructiOn

All work
guaranteed. Call Tom
Hoskins , 949-2160. Free
Estimates.
7· 16· 1 mo.

702-23'11
Free Esllmotes
Work G!lllrantoed
7· 10· 1 mo.

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

For The Best
Price In Town
See
Denver Kapple
At
'

Res iden·tial and commer·

cial. Call for estimate. 24
Hour Service . Any day ,
anytime .
Phone 985·3806
Jack Ginter 985-)806

MOORE'S

home , near
992-5858.
NEW LISTING - 70 acre
farm with river frontage,
ca bin , large barn, small
HOOF HOLLOW Horses . Buy, sell
milk house, corn crib. old
trade or train , New on ~ used
chicken house and 3
saddles . Ruth ReeV"es , Albany .
bedroom unfinished ranch
(61&lt;) 698·32'10.
type home w ith
full
ba se men1 , near
Long
RI SI NG ST AR Kennels . Boarding
Bo llom .
Below
Fair
and grooming , all breeds .
Markel Value tor quick
Ches hire , 367-0292 or 367-0106 .
sale. $33,500.
LOVABLE WHITE snow drif t gredl
NEW LISTING - Close In ,
PYRENEES Pupp ies . Phone
2112 ac res and ll bMutiful
l -bl4 -667 ·3838 .
newer 3 bedroom A-Frame,
Deck , Ma·ny Features .
$37 ,500.
NEW LISTING- Tuppers
Plains 3 bedroom home, 2
1974 PONT IAC VENTURA. 6 cyl.
baths. full basement,
$2000. 992-7453.
garage , central a ir , fully
equipped kitchen, large
19b3 Olds 88, new , battery . ex ·
level lot, e xcellent loc ation .
hous t, brokes hoes , outomo tic.
A steal at $21,000.
Phone 949·2426 .
REDUCED TOSU,SOO - A
1972PLYMOUTH DUSTER . P.S.. a i r
2-story home oo good street
cond .. new tires . economical.
In Middleport .
go.od
work
c or . Phone
SUPER INVESTMENT 985-3596 .4 apartments, 2 other
rentals. Shoul.d gross over
197&lt; OlDS CUTlASS CUTlA5
Sup reme P.S.. P.B . . AM-FM _ $6,000 per year . Plus a good
small business. $47,200 .
tope . viny l interior. buckel
HANDY MAN ' S SPECIAL
seats , Sl 'JOO.OO . Ph 992-b35J .
- S$5,900 will buy th is 3
71 CHEV ROLET CHEYE NE '' ton
bedroom home with garage
pick up , 350 outomotic. 53 ,000
and large lof In town.
mi les . New pain! job. $1250.00.
IF BUYING OR SELLING
Phone 992-7841 .
YOUR
BEST
INVESTMENT MAY BE
1974 -12.:1 FIA T Spider Converti ble
AN APPRAISAL!
·(lfery good condition). l ow
HENRY E. CLELAND
mile age . Call 992 -78b6 or
REALTOR
992 · 390
-=-'..:.·~- - - - - HANK, KATHY , LEONA
1972 DATSUN 4 door sta tion ASSOCIATES
wagon , 26,000 miles, 4 c y~ ..
992·2259, 992·6191
good gas mileage , 250 N . 3rd .
992'·2S68
Middleport. Phone 992-7329
after 4 p.m.

Muffler
Brakes
Shocks
Tires
Battery.
lnsl'!llation Service

Ph . 992·2848

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

Pomeroy, O.
3·1S-Ifc

NEW FIBERGlAS TIRES

ROGER HYSELl
GARAGE

Mounted on new wheels,
ready to go.
to
complete. Truck owners,
don' t miss this dee I. We sell
at discount prices everr
day . Stop in at

uo

Chester, Ohio
10-30-c

BoX J

us

ll• mile off Rt. 7 by.pus on

51. Rt. 124 toward Rull•nd,
0.
Autt &amp; Truck
Repaif
'A lso Transmission
Repair
Phone 992 ·5682

FRED'S TIRE CENTER
in Hartford, W. Vo .
7-20-1 mo. pd .

4-30-tfC

MONDAY. AUGUST 21,1971
5 :®--Here Come The Brides 3; My Three Sons 4; ;
Gunsmoke 8; Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20, 33:
Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea 10; Emergency One
13; Petticoat Junction 15.
5 :3()...-Afternoon Dellglghl ~ ~ News 6; Elec. Co. 20,33;
Hogan's Heroes 15.
6 :®--News 3.~.1.10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20;
Making Things Grow 33.
6 :3()...-NBC News 3,4,15: ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8, 10; Qver Easy 20: Antiques 33.
7 :CJO-Cross·Wits 3; Expohlo '78 ~~ Newlywed Game
6,13; Last of the Wild I ; Gilligan's Is . IS ; Daniel
Foster. M .D. 20: Shepherd's Pie 33.
7:3()...-That Nashville Music J; Kevin Mobry &amp; .!he
Liberty Street Show ~~ ; De""'lregatlon Report 6;
Match Game PM 8: Wild Klngclqm 10; Candid
Camera 13: Nashville On The Road ·15.
8:®--Little House On The Prairie 3,15; Baseball 6, 13;
Sale of Champions 4; Elton John 8; Jeffersons 10 ;
Consumer Survival Kit 20; Person to Person :
'Selected Interviews 33.
8:31&gt;--Good Times 10: Turnabout 20,33.

appoin1ments lor sen •o.r
portra its . w e us e fred• ·
lional seni ng s and also
feature
outdoor
po r traiture.
Call Us Today

The Photo Place
(Bob Hoeflic h)
109 H;gh ~1 .

Pomeroy
8·2· 1 mo.

J&amp;L

(1 MIICI!

MORAN SENT VOIJr VOIJ

Mf: WI!LCOMe Helle.

5elilOilES~ ...

I OlD NOT MI!AN TO&amp;!

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE

IMPO~IT&amp;

WICL THIS ROOM
DOl ... 1 CAN AL~O
MAI&lt;E YOU~ M!ALS
AND PACK YOUil.
LUI&gt;JCH&amp;S IF
VOU W15-H ...

Cellulosic I wood ' fiber)
Thermal insulation
Save 30 pc:t. to so pc:t.
on huting co1t
Experience and
fully insur~
Free Est.
call99n772
8-10-lmo. (Pd. )

'fliJ\iNl fii}'il ~ THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
ty ~~ ®
by HeMri Arnold and Bob Lee

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one lener to each 'square, to lorm
lour ordinary words.

SAVE ON

I DUSEEb

r
rx
IAMBALS±
rx J
II

BORN LOSER

,.

1M~

CARPETING
DRIVE A LimE

t,,,.. ......

IS AV~Rlt.a:.O ~ ~ 1\IIS

&amp;
All carpel inst•llod wlll1
padding at no charge.
Expert installation .

t

Radiator~

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

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

New or Repair

-·

4 • 88

sq. yd.
&amp; up

Gutters and

Downspouts

Aoor Covering In Stock

AH0 GUARDED 011LY

fir 0L0 SI&lt;ELETQI;S ...

NOTHIN ' I GUESS ...
M,- 'MAGtNAl iOH

Salurday's

JU$7

·-- 6t4LY ~ELETONS

-

· ~tUM~er
AIJ.EYOOP

-c""'

RUTLAND
FURNinJRE

·'

,_ _

--------

~~;:=:.:~~:J_..lL...J~U!:.;·::...·
!!

------·--------

girl and

'289.95

-

s,

CAl! THE WISEMAN
REAL ESTAtE AGENCY 446-3643

~----

-~,.-

-

Sale Prices

POMEROY LANDMARK

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Champion skills will out
NORTH

WEST
EAST
• Q J 10 9 7 3 • ! 54
• J 10 2
• 7 53
• 97 4
t A 10 6 S
• I
• Q 86
SOUTH

•AK 2

- 1,.,1-t--

FRANK &amp; ERNIE

tO Dined

~&amp;iiD@~&amp;Ib' §&amp;~!%

-~

•

,.lie

• ••• HOIN DO
DO tr' ;II

!l -·

n Knlevel

Vulnerable : North..South
Dealer : South

type

North Eau

Soulb

You
,

•

5•3•

6.

t3 Amaz
2t

~

Pus

.•
~

Ic

•

l

!I

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's
lo

CA N SELL
THI~

IN -

SEE? YOU DON'T NEED

A S PECIAL BUN FOR
IT... A ND IT WON'T
ROLL OFF Tl-IE
BREAD.

to work It:

C&amp;YPTOQUOTES

ro

I(NOWI

how
AXYDLBAAXK
LONGFELLOW

One letle r simply stands Tor another. In lhlo sample A Ia
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, e tc. Sing le letters.
apostrophes, the length and formation or the words are aU
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

y

A R:lX! I

• AK J 2

~

•

CAAZ'Y LIKE

• Q8 2

"=-+---+~1!'.!'

u l~int

.JuS'!"' AOD ,,.
UP SIX "P'tMf:$
AND A\IERAGoE
ANSWt!fl;S

-...

• K 86

alfresco

:

YOU GOT ME UP
AT Tl-IREE IN
THE M ORNI NG-

FOR THIS 1'1/rl

VENTJON !

UJYNDKL

XN

y

GYH

ASJ

Pass

PaM

---

So I 61VE UP! I

WI-IAT 15 IT lfOU
ADMIT THAT THERE'S WANT, CHAALIE 6ROWN?
NO WA'r' I CAN WIN ... t-----,·,----'"1

I-lOW ABOUT TWO
OUT OF THREE ?

Pass
Pass
Pass

Opening lead : •

,.

a.

Q

By o.,.•ald J•coby
aad Alaa Soala1
Oswald : " The world pair
championship recently held

in New Orleans was won by

Marc elo Branco and Gabino
Cihlra of Brazil. "
Alan : " Successful slam
YSKYO
UM
FYDDXHR
SXGNKEQ bidding combined with good
lay was responsib.l e for a
J H
DSK
U Y T C :· E K J H Y L 0 •rge part of their success .
Here we find them in a sixclub
contract that depended
E J Z X N
EKIXHNJH
on avoiding a trump lose r ."
Oswald : " The normal
Val
Cr)1111111'lte: NOWADAYS, TiiOOE WHO LOVE
play with nine cards in a suit
NATURE ARE ACCUSED OF BEING ROMANTIC.Is to try to drop a missing
NICHOLAS CHAMFORT
queen, but Branco had a
Uttle utra going for him BAR:'lEY
DLXKN

, DJ

FZNS

SXGNKEQ

C

THEM TWO
PILLS DONE TH'
TRICK, DOC --WHAT WUZ THEY
ENNVHOW?

LEETLE WHITE

BETTER
KNOWED AS

CRYSTALLINE.

C9 He04

OH ··JEST A

DERIVATIVE OF
SALICYLIC ~
ACID- -~

West had made one of those
weak jump overcalls. "
Alan , "That two-afade
call by West was one o the
weakest ·possible of aU weak
jump overcalls . It did have
one effect on the bidding.
Somehow or other it sort of
pushed Branco and Clnlra
into the club slam ."
Oswald : " Branco won the
spade lead and cashed his
king of clubs . Then he entered dummy with the ace of
hearts, led the len of clubs
and stopped for real study.
Finally, he decided that
West who had shown loll ol
spades would be short In
clubs . He finessed, made hla
slam and scored 72 and onehalf out ol a possible 77
match points as a result." .

M!t · fu~R:JYJ}.]

·

You hold:

e K QI

*1'•

' _.,,..,__

I-21·A

• 6
• A Q 94
t K J 3
.10975 3

b-+-+-

Marie

stroke
37 Mah111tma
31 Joslp Broz

&amp; Hotpoint Appl.

992-2181

BRIDGE

or Husirul

341 TeMis

For All Your GE T.V.'s

--

35 Close
31 " - Worry":
19t0 80Jig
or emu, e.g. 31 Wee1011

Zl ToJHJotch
Bailey's pal Zl Ostrich

others
30 "Tennis,
- ?"
:U !love : Lat.
35 Sault

$~OFF

------·-

zs Blimp's rank

frame

IS Beetle

playwright 19 Graceful
23 l!l:il
..,......;b;:;irds;.;;;;.,.........,._al - drab
Mitchum
movie

2t 11 Diarnond"

$lrs

BRING IN
COUPON ·
AND REC£1VE

Stopped
at - "

Guidry

PRICES.·~-- l1~~~~~~!!~!!!!!!!!!~~~~~!!

Housing
Headquarters

33 " Dirist

offspring

23 White wine
Z4 Give life to

28 Baseball's

HOOse

Landmark .

10 :31&gt;--Like II Is 20; Norlt1 Star : Mark Dl Suvero 33.
11 :®- News 3,&lt;,6,8,10, 13, 15; Di ck Cavell 20.
11 :31&gt;--Johnny Ca rson 3,4,15 ; Soap6,13 ; Movie " Many
Rivers to Cross" B: Movie " The Last Safari" 10:
ABC News 33 .

3! Observes

Z7 Shortly

- ·- -

c

20 Stallion's

zz " Bus Stop"

PTLCiub 15; Summer Semester 10.
6:30-Focus on Columbl,ls 4; News 6; Summer
Semester 8; Concerns &amp; Comments 10.
6:45---Mornlng Report 3: 6 :50--GoOd Morning, West
VIrginia 13; 6 : 55-News 13.
.
7:®--Today 3.~.15 ; Good Mornln~ America 6',1=1,; CBS
News 8; Underdog 10; 7: 25---Chuck White Report1
10.
7 : 3()...-Porky Pig 10; 8 :I)()-( apt. Kangoroo 8, 10;
Sesome St . 33:
9 :00- Merv Griffin 3: Phil Donahue 4,13,1S;
Emergency One 6: Brady Bunc h 8; Schoolleo 10;
Inner Tennis 33.
9 :3()...-Andy Griffith 8; Joker's Wild 10.
,...
IO : CJO-Card Sharks 3.15: Morning Fair~~ · Edge of
Night 6; Tic Tac Dough 8; Variety '78 10; To Tell
The Truth 13; Over Easy 33 .
·
10: 31&gt;--Hollywood Squares 3,4, 15; High Hopes 6: Price
Is R ighi 8,10; $20,000 Pyram id 13 ; Paint Along Wlll1
Nancy Komlnsky 33 .
11 :®--High Rollers34,4. 15; Happy Days 6,13 ; Boating
Safety 33.
11 :31&gt;--Wheel of Fortune 3,15; Family Feud 6,13;
Partridge Family 4; Love ot Life 8,10.
II :55-CBS News 8; Today's Fair 10 . .
12 :DO-Newscenter 3; News 4,6,10; America Alive 15;
Young &amp; the Restless 8; Midday Magozlne 13;
Watch Your Mouth 33 .
12 :31&gt;--Ryan's Hope 6,13: Bob Braun ~ ~ Search for
Tomorrow 8, 10; French Chef 33 .
I :OG-For Richer, For Poorer 3: All My Children 6,13:
News 8; Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women
Only IS; Austin City Limits 33.
1:3()-...Days ol Our Lives 3.4, 15: As The World Tur11$ .
a, 10.
2:00-0ne Life To Live 6,13; In Perf9rmance At Wolf
Trap 33 .
2 :3()-Doctors l.4,15: Gu iding Light 8,10.
3:oo-Anol her World 3.4.15; General Hospltai 6, 13;
Lilias, Yoga &amp; You 20,33.
3 :3()-AII lnThe Fami ly 8.10: Consumer Survival Kit
20; Consumer Survival Kit 33 .
4 :®-Mister Cartoon 3'; Gong Show 4; For Richer , For
Poorer 15; Merv Griffin 6 ; Addams Family 8;
Sesame St . 20.33 : Match Game 10; Dinah 13.
&lt;:31&gt;--My Thr"" Sons 3: Gllllgan',s Is. &lt;: Expohlo '78 IS;
Gilligan's Is. 8.
5 :®--Here Come The Brides 3: My Three Sons 4;
Gunsmoke 8; M ister Rogers' Ne ighborhood 20,33;
Voyage to the Bottom ot lhe Sea 10; Emergency
One 13; Petticoat Junction I S.
5 :31&gt;--Aflernoon Delight 4; News 6; Elec. Co. 20,33;
Hogan 's Heroes 15.
•
6 :®--News 3.&lt;.8, 10.13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20;
' Mak ing Things Grow 33 .
6 :31&gt;--NBC News 3&lt;.15: ABC News 13 ; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8, 10; Over .Easy 20; Antiques 33.
7:CJO-Cross-W IIs 3: Expohlo ' 78 4; Newlywed Gome
6,13 ; Pop Goes The Country 8; News 10; Oral
Roberts IS; rench Chef 20; How To Buy A Home 33.
7:31&gt;--Hollywood s quares 3,~; Let' s Go To The R11ces 8; •
Candid Camera 6; MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20,33;
Pr ice Is Righi 10; That' s Hollywood 13 .
8 :®--TV : The Fabulous '50s 3,4,15; Happy Days 6,13;
CBS News Special 8,10: TV On Trial 20; Movie
" Down lo the Sea In Ships" 33.
·
8 : 31&gt;--Laverne &amp; Shirley 6, l:i ; 9 :®--Three's Company
6, 13 ; Movie " Capone" a, 10.
9 :31&gt;--Sieve Lawrence &amp; Eydie Gorme 3,4,15: Carter
Coun,ry 6; Mary Tyler ~oore l3; ft'te Red
Herr\ngs 33.
10 :®--20·20 6, 13; .News 20.

Yeslerday'a Auwer

1--. .,.,,"~J'' Zl Provoke

15 IN'.STOCK

-----

7 Girl'siJllllle
8 Electiician's

trumpeter

TRA
ILER I

war

a

heroine
11 Zulder 17 Swedish

Z1 Askew

BED f4DR

SPECIAL

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
4 Lawsuit
I Editor's
5Short
mark
prayer
Z Exceeding
Encourage
3 Touring car
llll'LSe(:t
4 French
13 Took a taxi
&amp;ealiOil
U Empower
$Avaricious
15 Wagnerian
Descartes

district
concern
18 Got nervous 9 Widen
20 Noted
1% Stretching

MAKES A

c.
w

II XJ

THEM [
(Answers tomorrow)
Jumbles: THICK SQUAW IMBIBE HARROW
Answer: Could be a question of price- HOW MUCH?

NewapaperbOoks.

IF YOU NEED
. A SOFA THAT

-

r XXI I I )

Tht ltltst JUMBLES are here In JUMBLE BOOt&lt; lt10 tnd JiJMBLE
BOOK lt11 . Allallable tor $1 .35 EACt1J poslp•ld lrom Jumblo. c/o this
newspaper, P.O. Box 34, NOr'Nood , N .. 07648. M•lo.e checks payable 1o

HOU"SE"

--

I

IN HER E ...

RUG REMNANTS

--------

gested by the above cartoon .

Answer:

___

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

ArB

.. Lll014$ '" MOWE'f - ·

Now arrange the · circled loners ro
form the surprise answer, as sug-

UITLE ORPHAN ANNIE

9' and 12' Vinyl

August 22, 1978
~
011er the ne~t 12 months , your
ambitions will be greatly ac celFOUND AT Edson Hart residence,
erated . You co uld be tnvo111ed
Co rwin , a port German
in things requiring greal depth
Shepha
rd dog. Friendly . Phone
of thought to attain . Yo u'll be
Buy where you can come in
992-5019.
up to 11 ·
and SH what yoU're getting
Free Estimates
LEO (July 23·Aug . 22) You have
- Good selections - Fully
the skil l to form ulate good
Phone 949-2862
·.;__
stocked.
ideas Ieday and the abHity to
or 949·2160
translate lhem in to act1on . If
"' ltz.%174
Good Selectloo Of
you say you 'll ~a s o mething,
8·20-1 mo . (Pd . I
you will. F1nd out mo_re about TO LOA N
Venture Capitol
!97&lt; VOl KSWAGE N BEETl E. • &lt;
yourse lf by sending lor yo ur
$50.000 up . Slorl·up . Buy-Out.
spef!'d. radials·. bJ .OOO m ites .
BRADFORD , Aucl ioneer. Com· NEIG LER BUILDING Supply lor
copy ol As tra-Graph lette r .
Any
worthwh1
,ie
h:ponsion .
goo d ~ cor~di t io n . $1900 .00 .
pleie Service. Phone 949-2487
Mail 50 cenls for each and a
bu ilding houses. repair work
Pro je&lt;t . Mr . Ha rt 21 A·Jb8-2b35
Phone 992-6115.
or 949-2000 . Racine , Ohio , Crill
10 x 40 Nousho Mobile home ,
long , self-addressed , stamped
and cobineh . Coli Guy H .
368·2569
From 1 ~&amp;Up
Bradford .
good condition . 2 bvdroom . i975 DATSUN piCkup, 35 ,000
envelope to Astra -Graph . P.O.
Neigler . 949-2508 ol1er 5 pm
b() ACRES. house and furniture
Bo:-: 489 Rad iO C1ty StatiOn ,
s1900.00. 949-2326
miles. Good !ir es , new pain t
$32,000 .00. Immedi ate po sses- ElWOOD BOWERS REPAIR REEVESfi AOIN G Posl , Poge v'ille
N. Y 10019. Be sure to spec ify
C. II 742·2211
ob . Step bumper . $2900.00.
Sweepers, toa sters , irons . all
1
SIOn. Phone 742-2988 afte r 5
Grocer ies , dry goods . · hard bir th s ign .
TALK TO
small appliances . Lawn mower ,
Phoneqa~
5 -~2~
97~·~·--------p .m.
wore , feed , ta ck shop. Special
VIA GO ~Aug . 23- Sep~ . _22) Profi t WATER WEll drilling . William T.
Wendell or Herb Gral•
ne111
to
Sta
te
Highwoy
Garage
t973 DATSUN PICK UP. 4 ~ p eed .
25 lb . of dog food, 53.8=8:::._ _
will be doubly benefi c ial today .
FOR sal e near pool in
or Gene Smith
on Route 7. Phone (6 1") 985You can taste the h' u its of your
Grant . 742-2879.
wilh topper .and mog wheels.
Syracuse. c'oll9fn-57b7.
B &amp; S MO Bil£ HOMES , P1 , PleoAUTOMOB ILE INSURANCE b~n
3825.
l ow mileage. Phone 843-273-4 .
\abor s \mmedlatel~ and you·n HO\J~ PA\Nl\HG . indoor or out 1oant , W . Vo . buid• Heck 's .
can celled? Lost your op,e rolors
also store youf methods in_\he
door . N o iob too big or smal l. 1973 Broadmore 14 11 bA '} FURNISHED
APARTMENT
license? Pho ne 997-7143
memory · bank lo r future gam .
Rea so nable prices . 992-6.'368 .
bedroom
ovoil oble for s leeping quarter's.
LIBRA (Sepl. 23·0cl. 231 The
THE CHIMNEV SwOOp . Redu ced
room fur for four men , 10
time is ripe to embark on jomt WILL DO baby silting in my home 1973 Dorion 14 x 60 2 bedroom
roles til Sept l . bi4·37J -6057
l971 Vic torian 14 x 07 3 bedroom .
minutes ·from Mounl ioneer·
'fenlures . If you ' ve been conages ~ - 4 . ~hone 992-7689 .
weekdays un1d 5.
Plant.
Hertford
2
bol
h
,
W
.
Vo.
Phone
'!hiland
742-221l
le.m plating such a move , work
1971Coven try 12x653bedroom
_c1:.;-30
:,-:&lt;::_·8~8~2:.;
· 3~35~6.:__.- - - - out the details and take con 1969 Stol f1lsmon 12 x 60 2
cre te aclion to day .
70 CHEVEllE 350. 4 speed ex·
bedroom .
SCORPIO lOci . 24- No• . 221 . ,
ce llent condition , new springs ,
a supervisor today. you 'll h~ve J BE DROOM HOUSE in Pomeroy COAL. LIMESTONE . sand. grovel.
VIRGIL&amp;. SR . ..
. ,~!I
shocks . fi res . shifter . carpet.
few peers . You not only ass1gn
o r Middleport
Despeo rately
cal cium chloride , lertilizer, dog
sect covers . exhou sl system .
992·
332S
persons to lh e proper _tasks ,
needed . Phone 992-b3 18.
food . or~d ell types of salt. Ex Phone 992-:l9b7 a tier 5 p.m
yo u work w1t h them. tn an
2u ~ . Seton~ Street
celsior Sa lt Work s, Inc. , E. Main
inspiring and encouragtng way .
St .. Pomeroy . 992-3891 .
LONG BOTTOM -;- Walch
SAGITTARIUS (No• . 23·Dec .
the riverboats from your 3
BURROUGHS SENSI-MATIC oc·
21) Th 1ngs go well for you toda y
count in g ma chine . Phone
bedroom mob ile home . Has
bec ause you kno w how to k~ep COUNfRV MOBILE Home Pork
drilled well , 1'12 baths,
992 -2156 . The Ooily Sentinel. 10 ', ACRES . 8 room house . 4
things in proper perspect•ve .
Route 33 . north of Pomeroy .
111 Cour t Slreet. Pomeroy .
sundeck and over 3 acres.
With excellenl balance , you
bedroom . new bot h , new kit ·
Lorge lois . Call ~'1 - 74.79 .
EAST MAIN Unusual
neither ove rsell nor undersell .
Ohio .
chen , cily water . On Rt. 33 in
newer business build ing
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22·Jan . 191 ONE BEDROOM opt. Con tact
Burlingham
.
992-7751.
Vil lage Manor Apt. , Mid· BEAT THE bctobvr rush. Give u~
Changing your rou11ne th ts evew ith city water, natu ral
you r order now for arrows FIVE ROOM house ond both
ning will have a salutary effect.
dlepo rt. 991. -778::'.:..·---.,---gas and electric . A good
custom
mode
th
e
way
you
wont
Newly poin ted . Portl y furnishHOWERY AND MARTIN
Choose a ne w place for di nne r. 3 AND 4 RM : furn ished and un·
location for your busi ness.
th em ond cut to yoUr indilfiduof
ed. la rge garage . $9500. 964 S.
co\loting . septic systems .
or if you usually stay home on
COUNTRY
HOME
6
fur nished
opts .
Pho ne
lenglh . Pick up ony lime before
3rd . Middleport. 992-5989 .
·doler , backhoe. dump tr uck ,
Tuesday , go out
room
home
with
central
9'12·5&lt;3&lt;
October 1. $5 de posit with
limes tone , grovel , blac kt op
AQUARIUS (Jo n. 20·Feb. 19) AI
healing . Lar~e liv ing with
order . (Eoslon Gomegene r)
po..-ing , Rt . 143 . Phone 1 (b\4 )
I he e nd of th iS busy , p roductive
mole adul t only. Phone
fireplace, d n lled well and
aluminum arrows , $26 .95
·• day you 'd do well to tone do wn
99:2-3181.
698-7331 .
10 acres . Will help finance
doren . F1be rgl oss S24 .95
~ ou r a c t111 lties . Seek the com - 1 - BEDROoM APARTMENT for
or
1rade for mobile homes .
Pillu
NsExCAvATING . Com plete
dozen . We relle1ch ar rows ,
pany of lo w-ke yed pals or c ur l
re nl , Coll9-49-2253 ohe r 5 p.m.
$33,500.
Service
. Phone 992-2478 .
gloss
,
alum
in
um
or
wood
,
inup wi1h a good boo k .
_
REAL BUY - &lt; bedroom
cludes 3 new plo slic vanes nick
PISCES (Feb . 20-M arch 20) Ma- FUR NISt1ED 3 room apar tment.
PUomE
POOLS . All ~ize~ and
frame home on 2 large lots.
and insert , $ 1 per arrow . Also
ter ial prospec ts are super good
Phone 949-2253 oiler 5 p .m.
shapes . Swim pools , 2 yea rs
Natural
gas
F
.A.
furnace,
Largest Selectiea In Tlle Vallet
we stra ighten aluminum ortoday In fac t, you may oe ab le
experience . free es ti ma tes .
bath , 2 car garage. $17,500.
ROOM
AND
BOARD
lor
one
per
William
Ingels.
Brok..rows , $.50 each arr ow. Tri
to tie som~ \htng down lo e nanyt hi ng you
need lor
IMMCU LATE - ooe of the
son in Portland or'eo . Call
Sialewide Office
hance your f1nan c!al sec ur11y
County. Sperl Shop North and
underground
swim
pools . New
finest
3
bedroom
mobile
BAJ-15 14.
ARIES (Morch 21·Apr;l 19 ) You
Tr i County
Sport
Shop
~ hem i c al and supply sto re .
homes.
enclosed
bath
with
~-,---have the mag1 c touch in a ll your 5 ROOM and both house near
Downt own JOA -675-1988 .
Al b any . Ohio .
P h o ne
shower, elec tr ic F .A . heat
731 - 7 room , 2 story frame
endeavors lo da y You c a n
614:698-6555. ( Afl e, b · pm .
Racine . Phonf! 992-5858.
CA
NNING
TOM
ATOES
.
green
and
central
air
.
Over
J;_.
·home . city water, fuel o il
sco re whet her yo u ' re m th e
614 -689-5251 John Je lfers or
peppe rs. Gera ldine Cleland ,
acre ot level lend ,
FOR RENT , 5 rooms and
lield ol fin a nce or 1us1 do1ng
heal, basement, 70&gt;&lt;90 lot
689-52b5 Bill Gillette . ) We are
Rac
ine
.
Ohio
.
FAMILY
HOME
&lt;
bolh lu ll base men!. Call offer 7
so meth ing for lu n .
rented, indeal Invest ment.
bedrooms, 2 baths, natural
TAURUS (April 20·May 20) II
15 CU . FOOT uprighl tr~ze r . 3
513,200 , New Haven .
!'c':' 9'17:!__064.~.'---~NOT all wet on
gas F .A . fu rnace , shop,
m~y be necessar y today to _be
yea rs o ld . Con ta ct Mn . Les lie
family
room,
garage,
and
3
just a shaife more assert1ve
Hoffma n , 742 -2374 .
724 - 2 storY frame, partia l
lots . $27,500 .
ihan usual in s afeguarding. your
base ment,
most
all
CA NNIN G
PEAC HES
and
CONDOR STREET 3
sell-! nle re sts . You can do 1t 1n a
furniture goes with this
1omotoes . Bring cont ainers .
bedroom frame home with
wa y that others will a cce pt
home,
Pt .
Plea sa nt.
•·
GEMINI (lilly 21 -June 20) Sol ~ IF YOU hove o ~ervice to offer ,
Charles R. Ha rris , Portlor~d .
bath , gas furnace and large
wo nt to buy or sell $-Omething ,
$29,475 .
ten you r b usi ness approa ch
lot for garden and park ing .
Oh;o
.
8&lt;3-2693
.
---~oe
look1ng
for
work
...
or
w1t1'1 a li111e te v!!)' toda y. Don ' t
Only $9,500.
wha te ver . . vou'll get res ults H'EALTY PIGS . $25 .00 and up.
go fo r the clinche r qui ckly
533 - Build ing lots at Kera
SAVE
MONEY
BY
Phone 949-24b0.
Iosier with o Sentinel Wont Ad.
k:eep it light u nttl you ' re ready
BUYING THIS YEAR .
Landing , $6,000, water,
Co11992 21 ::
56::.·_ _ __
10 close .
AP PLES . Fi tzpatr iCk Orchards ,
HAVING SOLD A LOT OF
sewer , paved
streets
CANCER (June 21·July 221 II CoMMLJN trY: Yard Sole . Monday ,
Stole Ro ute 689 , Phone
HOMES THIS YEAR WE
Ql
Included .
you bes t so mebo dy m a co mMAY BE ABLE TO SELL
Aug . 21. b p.m. til '? Tuesday
w.lkeh·•lle b6Q:~·3~7~8~5:...- - petitive situat ion toC ay . leave
)(
YOURS. CALL 992.3J2S.
end Wednesday . Aug . 22 . 23 all 2- B by 1b" x 7" wheels , Pr .
we hawe enlarged our Any U.S. mode cor -p..fs
your opponen1 a litt le room to
Representative
FREE
CALENDARS.
day . Davts residence , Rose Hill ,
service department and edra if needed. Excludes
$75 .00 2 · 700 • 16 Winter tires
save fa c e . That
you 'II fe el
George Johnson
Helen L. Tuf~~
Pomeroy .
will serwice Hotpint and tront-whHI drive cars.
pr , $50.00. Call 992-7692 .
good , an d retain a riend .
West Brown St.
Gordon B. Tu.rord
"C other brands .
' '
INf WSP,t, P( R EN TERPRISE ASSN )
YAR-0SALE . AUG. 21 , 22ond 23. '}- NEW' - PAIR drapes , 7 new
Sue P . Murphy
Mascin, W. Vo .
Some furniture , some tools .
(!)
dresses , s ize 16 and 18 , b pa ir
AISOCIIIII
773.9140
~I I '
'
c lothe~ . etc. Virgie Hobstettn1er-na1iona I League
women s shoes, size 5 ' • and 6,
Porn~
.: nUPON
ter
's.
Rose
Hill.
9
a
.m
.
to
5
p.m.
o,ther nice things . $20.00 for all
Uni1ed Press tnternationa I
W. L. Pel. GB
YARD SALE . Saturday and Sun- "' ol it . Phone 949-2679.
l 't• ACRES , drilled we ll , seplk
Charleston
75 49 .6(15
day , 2m iles oul on 143 . Evere tt CAN NIN G TOMATOES . Bring you r
tonk , Located 1 mile from
1
Pa wtucket
70 55 .560 S 11
McDaniel residence.
M eig~
Mine
No , 1 Ca ll
own conlomer . Pick y:our own.
Richmond
64 58 525 10
Mor~ho ll Rous h, EoSI Letart . _20._': 882 · ~233~':..·- - - - - - , - I 1L" I'\ V H -' , l&lt;~, U •u;,. ,, 1\0U:.e , aU
YARD
SALE,
Monday
,
21~1
and
Toledo
62 60 .soa. 12
eleclric . Morning Stor Heights .
247-3752
Tuesday 22nd . Corner _of 5th
6 ROOM HOUSE and both , in
Tidewater
63 62 .504 121J2
Phone 9-49- 242~ .
·
and
Ma
in
.
Middleport
.
81cycles
,
coun try on 11 acres . centra l
12 , 65 1970 ATLANTIC MOBilE
Rochesler
62 62 .500 13
teen girl's clo th ing . fur nitu re.
heal . mineral rights , 15 3 BEDR OOM HOU SE . new
HOME ., 2 bedrooms , comple te Columbus
55 69 .w 20
aluminum roof. reasonable
e tc.
min ules drive Ia town . lmly furnished . wo•he r , dryer and
Syracuse
43 79 .352 31
pr ice . 3 193 1 Welshtown Rd .,
medio
te
possession
,
o1
r
conditioner.
on
1
4
cere
lot.
Saturday
's
Results
vARD SALE Aug ·21 thru the 24th .
.'
Minersvi lle , Oh io . Phone
or
$13 .000 .00 .
742 · 3074
Lorge
ut ility
budd 1ng .
Tidewllter 5. Rich mond 4, 1.4
lO a .m . t,il 5 p.m. 541 Hlgh St. ,
SPECIAL
9'1).57S&lt; .
9'12-5825 .
$9,500.00. Phone 742-2501 ar
inn ings
Middleport . Nice drapes and
Le1 Pomeroy Lllndmark
PRICE
Columbus 4, Char leston 0, 1st,
clo thing and etc. Reuben Col - _ 742 -272b of_r•_• 6-~~- _ __
Expires
soften &amp; condition your
7 innings
August 31, 1971
wa1er with Co·op water
lins c.--------~ CAPEHART CONSOLE ~te reo , 8
Charleston 1, Columbus 0,
EXCELLENT
FARM
BUY
14i
ACRES
The
softener,
Model
UC
-S
VI.
tra
ck
,
AM
·
FM
Mu
ltiplex
.
YARD SALE . 770 Sycamore St. ,
2nd , 7 innings
oWner' s age prevents her from contlnuirtg to operate
NowOnfy
Whirlpool 12 washer and
Middleport , Monday . Tue~doy
Toledo at Rochester , ppd .•
Whirlpool dr~er Coli qq2.tJ062 .
the farm and she dnlfes an Immediate sale. 50 to 60
end
Wednesday
10
til
b.
rain
acres tillable with some vorx good cr"k bottom Paw1 ucket 8, Syracuse J
Si'VE.RAL FA MIL Y garage sol~ . H &amp; N OAV o ld or started leghorn
hilltop land . The balancolslnpasturo &amp; woods. The 6
pull et~ .
both floor or cQge
Sunday's Resuns
Mil fo r d Frede ric k Jr . s
test your w1ter
room home 11 good (does need some modernl zatloo) ,
grown available . Poullr'y Hou'·
Tidewater 6, Richmond 1
res idence , Rt . 124 CR 28 Roc i_n e.
large
all
purpose
barll
&amp;
several
oulb&lt;JIIdll)lls:
The
lng
ond
Automation
,
Modern
Aug . 23 and 24 10 a .m . 111 4
Charleston J/ Colum bus 1
minerl!ls go with It and It's located In an area where
Poultry . 399W . Main . Pome roy .Toledo 6. Rochester o, 1st. 7
p .m ., Antique table , chest .ol
gas, oi l &amp; c oal have been found to be plentif u l. Neor
Phone q9'2 -21b4 ,
drawers , men 's , women s ,
Inni ngs
Rut land . 60's.
Toledo
Roches1er 1, 2nd . 7
childr~n sand infa nt clothing of
APPAlACHIAN STOVE CO. 23 dil·
,all sizes . bcby corseat . jumper .
Innings
ferenl models ot di"ounl
TV Te nnis , blqcle , much, much
Pawt ucket 6, Syracuse 3
pr ite,, Middlepor t !lore behi nd
JACK W . CARSEY 1MGR .
more loa nu merous to mention .
••
Today 's Games
Tony 's Corryout , for merly
E.
MAIN
ST .
POMEROY , 0 .
540
'• Tidewater at Richmond
David C. Miller lu mber Co,
YARD SAL E Tuesday, Wednesday
Columb&lt;Js at Charleston
Elferv
Sunday
12
r~oon
to
3
p.m.
/ 9 a .m. - 4 p.m. Jerry Burke.
•
Toledo at Rochester
to98 -7191.
Sumner Rood .
Syracuse at Pawtucket

1

CLITI[j

As Low As·

'

.. ..__

~,,_..

1

SAVE A LOT

EXPERIENCED

TUESDAY,AUGUST22, 1971
S : ~5-Farm Report 13; 5:50--PTL Club ' 13; 6:-

~

Rubber Back Carpet

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING

9 :®--Movle "Sergeant Matlovlch 'IS. !her U .S. Air '
Force" 3.~.15; . To Be Announced 33: Great Per.
formances 20. •
9 :05---Live from Wolf Tap Farm Park 33; 9 :JG-&lt;lne
Day AI A Time I, 10.
.
IO :ro-...Lou Grant 8,10; News 20; 10 :30-()Ver Ea1y
20. n :®-News 3,4,6,8, 10. 13, 15; Dick Cavett 20.
II :3()...-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Soap 6, 13; ·M ovie "The
.
swan" 8; Movie "Ptrlod of Adlustmenl" 10:
11:35---ABC News 33; 12 :05---Soap 6,13: Janakl 33.
12 :40-Pollce Story 6, 13; 1 :oi&gt;-- Tomorrow 3,4; I :50News 13.

TELEVISION
VIEWING ..

CAPTAIN EASY

Phunl' tKr.!-2156

mv home

AI Tromm

experience .

n:~: t m~rtiun .

Will DO bbobys itting in

Roofing . Siding.
loom ~ditions
&amp; Spray Painting

All type• of rooting , gutters
&amp; downspouts. 20 yurs

respunsiiJit&gt; (ur murt&gt; than utlc Ull'lll'·
'

.

DICK. TRACY

'.

High SchoOl
SENIORS
we are currently maki.ng

OHIO VALLEY ROOFING
AND
HOME MAINTENANCE
SERVICE

sHEPPAR D PUPS to give away . 4 'wE PICK up junk auto bodi'es buy·
ing jur~k cars . scrap iron . bo~­
mole and 4 feme le , I female. 9
teri•n- and meta ls. R1der s
mo. old . Pkone 742-2334 .
Salvage . SR 12_4. Pomeroy .
SMALE ADULT female half Pek ·
9q2.5&lt;68 .
ingese . Very gentle. 992-7843 .

For Tuesday, Aug . 22

ASTRO.•GRAPH

CHIP WOOD . Pole s mo11 .
diameter 10" on Iorge'' end , $8
per ton . Bundled slob, $6 .per
ton . Delivered to Ohio Pollet
Co., Rt. 2, Pomeroy . 99~ · ?.._68~ :.
TIMBER . . POMEROY Forest Products. Top price for standing
sow timber . Call 992-5965 or
Kent Hanby , 1-A46-B570.
OLD FURNIT URE . ice bc.kes , bros5
beds , iron beds, desks. etc .,
complete households . Wr ite
M.O. Miller, Rt . 4 , Pomeroy or
ca11992-7760.

Business Services

7-The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-P&lt;)IIJeroy, 0 ., Monday, Aug . 21, 1978

9 A Ql 7
t K J 3
+A 62
You decide to open a 19point notrump and your
partner raises you to three .
A New York reader wanll to
knoll' if you should go on to
lour .
The answer Is a decided ·
" No." If you do mlsa a alam,
just make a resoluUon to
never open one notrum:p
with 19 points .
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)

(For 1 copy of JACOBY MOD·
ERN, sond ST to: " Win •I
Br;dge, " c1re of this n•••~M·
por, P.O. Box 469. R1dlo City
Sll lion. New York , N. Y. 101)19.)

THAR FER
A SECONT, I
THOUGHT
THEY WUZ
ASPIRIN

THAR1 FER
A SECONT,

'-iOU WUZ.
RIGHT

�r

8-Tiv&gt; nailv Sentinel.

Raid •••

INDIVIDUAL WINNERS - ~own are the individual
winners in the 4-H demonstration show held Friday. From
left to right, first row, ~eila Koenig, Carrie Carr, and,
Second row, Herbie Ervin.
·.

I

.

.

IF Your&lt;E@)@fJ!l[)!Jooo
8£(Alf&gt;£ YOU cAN'T AND
~--

~

--o•--....

~40-

.. !?i'.:2:;.- . -

c:-

~

0b

..

,..--,.-.......
~~ ·=
~- -~6
u r

·.

.-..e, - -

A DEC£/'IT COLOR TV.,
AT A DECENT PRICE
... ... ,.C!&gt;o-

COM£ SEE

us .. - . -

OUR 5ELE.CTroN WILL HELP

RAISE' YouR SPIRIT'S.
·---·
ALL 1978 MODELS AT
CLOSEOUT PRICES
ZENITH

INGEL'S FURNITURE
M. 2MD

MIOOlEI'ORT, 0.

~'4E.

JACKIE BROOKS of Albany was one of the women drivers of tractors in competition ai
the Meigs County Fair Saturday afternoon. Mrs. Brooks placed second in the powder puff
competition and was fourth in the 5,500 state point competition wit~ men tal!:ing the first
three places.
·

Arrests
(Continued from page 1)
cash,
according
to
authorities.
The pair then ran from the
scene and eventually con·
vinced a young ·couple to
drive to a nearby home and
call the authorities. Pickens
pointed out the two were first
reluctant to seek aid from
passersby, fea rful of the
bandits.
Bumgardner was treated at

a local hospital for injuries,
suffered when he was struck
ill the back of the head by a
pistol.
· ·'Jerry would never have
hurt anybody," Pickens said
shortly after the incident.
" He wasn 't a th reat to
anybody ."
Harry Siders, president of
the Mason Co unty Board of
Educa tion and a close friend
of Romine's, agreed, and
added, " It 's beyond belief
that it happened. He was a
fine young rna n and a very
close persona ) fri end."
"He was considered an
ex cell ent tea cher by hi s
colleagues and by the Mason
County Boa rd of Education.
We will all miss him very
much ," Siders added .
The assailants apparently
pulled oil the same stranded
motorlirt ploy

~everal

19, . Raleigh. Ballentine was officer Richard Branch.
robbed of $12 and was locked
Romine, the son of Kenna
in the trunk of his car. He was Edward and Muri Marie
not hurt .
Gandee Romine, was bOrn in
Two men and the girl were Gandeeville, W.Va., on
arrested and charged Sunday · March 12, 1945.
in connection with the two
He is surVived by two
incidents.
brothers, Stephen Romine,
Authorities said Terry Ann Hurricane, and Phillip M.
Hamm, 17, and Mike Reyes, Romine, Culloden.
Lamas, 21, both of Wake
Funeral serv ices are
Forest, and Bland Julius Hill sched uled for Tuesday
Jr ., 19, Youngsville. were morning at the Casdorph and
charged with first degree Curry Funeral Home in St.
murder, four counts each of Albans.
"kidnapping, and with four
Internment will take place
counts each of armed rot&gt;- in the Gandeeville Cemetery
. bery. Bond of $70,000 was set in Roane County .
on the robbery and kid;
Friends may call from 2-4
napping charges, but no bond p.m. and from 7-9 pm. today"
wa s set on the murder
Charges. Th ey rema in in the
Wak e County Ja il and are "
MARRIAGE LICENSE
expected to appear before a
Marriage licenses wer e
judge today in preliminary issued to Thurman Ray
hearing.
Haning , 23, Rt. 4, Pomeroy,
John :r. Hall of the Wake and Leisha Jo Mace, 21, Rt. 4,
Co unty · District Attorney's Pomeroy; Ca rl Andrew
office sa id Sunda y the arrests Eskew, 20, Langsville, and
res ult ed from information Rose Mary Snowden, 19,
obtained by investigating Rutland .

JANET KORN is piCiiiii'Eifiiite"rVi~;Wti!i-Steii)iiiiiiY
Gardnefo, daughter of . and Mrs. Michael · . Gardner,
Route 3, Pomeroy, in the Little Miss Meigs County Fair
contest Saturday afternoon. Mrs. K6rn intervlewe4 all of
the girl and boy contestants in th~ little 'Mias and Mister
Meigs County Fair Contests for the out of town judges.
The contests in addition to the pretty baby contest were
sponsored by Elberfeld's Department Store.
Coincidentally Stephany caught by the Sentinel camera
during her interview with Mrs. Korn turned out to be the
Uttie Miss winner.

(Continued from page I J
Appointed. by lbell Gov. A.
A. Rlblcoff to the Connecticut
Civil War Centennial CommPsion, Keller wrote many
articles on the W1ll' u well u
aeveral bookl. He IIU long
been an amateur mllltary
wrlier and hllltorlan.
During World War II be
aerved u public lnfonnatlon
officer of the Eutem Sea
Frontier, saw service •In ·
Europe and North Aft'!ca, and
served on a baby flattop In
the anti-submarine campaign
In the North Atlantic. He
retired with the rank of
oomrnander,
· He decided to write about
Morgan's Raid when he
heard stories of tbe excitement and terror caused
by the raiders and the ·efforts
of the residents to hide their
horses and valuables In old
coal mines alid other secret
places. His research for the
book was done In the offices
of many local Ohio newspapers and Included Interviews with many Meigs ·
County residents.
The public is invited to hear
Keller Tuesday night at the
museum.

Pomeroy-MiddleJMirt; Ohio

Tuesday, August 22, 1978

i ..

FILE FOR DIVORCE
held Saturday, Aug. 26
Filing for divorce in Meigs beginning at 6:30 p. m• at the
County Common Pleas Court Bashan Fire House on county
were Grace Hysell, Pomeroy, ro•d 28 sponsored by the
against Aaron Hysell, Basban Fire Department and
Pomeroy; Grace L. White, aUJ:illary. For carryout orRt. 2, Pomeroy, against ders bring own containers.
Harold (}. White, DeJ:ter.

earlier on George Ballentine.

COLUMBUS - Private graveside services were held
today at Marietta's Oak Groce Cemetery for C. Wllllam
O'Neill. Amemorial service will be held at 7 p.in. Wednesday
in First Community Church at 1320 cambridge Blvd.,
Colwnbus.
·
There will be no calling hours. Schoedinger northwest
chapel funeral home will handle arrangements. Contributions
may be made in the chief justice's name to the Ohio State
University College of Law.

(

NEW YORK (UPI) -Four young men have been indicted

by a "Manhattan grand jury for the ~ bat attack in
Central Park last month of six men, including former Olympic

Is Th.ls You Heading for School This
Fall?
If It Is ·then

Far~ers

Bank has good

news for you.
The Farmers Bank has Free Checking

Accounts for students.
".'s simple . If you are a full time colle9e or vocational student we ' ll
g•ve.vou a free checking account, with no service charge. We' ll even
g1ve you yo ur first SO Personalized Checks Free .

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

F8

Far01ers Bank
POMEROY , OHIO
40,000 Max1mum Insurance for Each Depositor
Member Federal Deposit Insurance .Corporation

THREE SQUAD RUNS .
Three calls were answered
Saturday and Sunday by the
Pomeroy Emergency Squad,
At 3:58 p. m. Saturday to
squad went to M~lberry Ave.
,for John Goett, who wa s
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital, and at 9:20 p. m.
Norma Chapman, Condor St.,
was taken to the sa me
hospital. At· 7:30 p. m. Sun·
day. the squad was called to
Union Av e. for William
Stephenson who was olso
taken 1o Veterans Memorial.

Council met in- regular session Monday

Reds. warn seals nearly extinct
MOSCOW (UPI) - lmtet sclent!Jts warn that ringed and
Baltic seals are almost eJ:tinct, the Tass news agency reported
Monday.
The oclentista said inventories on the Gulf of Riga, Gulf of
Finland, and Lake Ladota showed there are fewer than 200
seals per breeding spot in contrast to 1,000 seals 15 years ago.
Tass said the 11Cienttsta called for restrictions on the ki.lllng of
seals throughout the Baltic and for the establishment of seal
sanctuaries.

200 East Main

POmeroy, 0.

ice skating champion Dick Button.
Mathattan District Attorney Robert Morgenthau said the
four suspects - three of them teenagers - were charged with
conspiracy, robbery, assault and attempted assault in
connection with the July 5 attack in a section of the park known
as the Rambles. Two other juvenile suspects face charges in
connectloo with the attack in Family Court. The sill Qre
accuaed of beating their victims on the evening of July S.
Pollee previously said the suepects had been drinking and
assauled the six men believing tbey were ·homosexuals.

'No nudes is good nudes'

ELBERFELD$

MUNICH, West Germsny ( UPI ) - Rlvermen ca rrying
passengers on popular raft rides down the Isar and Loisach
(Continued ,on page 10)

WOOD BURNING HEATERS

Desi~ned for style, engineered for comfort, King Automatic Wood Circulators
provtde the luxury of automatically controlled temperatures with economy of
operahon .
.
·

FEATURES:
*Automatic Thermostat
* Refractory Brick Lining
* Cast iron grates, ash and
feed doors and frames

* LOUVERED TOP LIFTS OFF
FOR EMERGENCY COOKING
ON FIRE BOX .

Visit Our WarehoUse on
Mechanic Street in PomiiOJ

Elberfelds In Pomero

HUGE SUNF!.DWER - Mr. and Mrs. Henry Frank of near Pomeroy were copletely
surprised this summer when a sunflower to end all sunflowers burst forth in their pea patch.
Apparently, the sunflower seed was mixed in the pea seeds. The result was this sunflower
plant which has an 18 inch diameter bloom. It's an Ul wind, however, because the Franks
will use the seeds from the bloom for chicken feed . Mrs. Frank is pictured with the large
"surprise" plant.

In a recent golf tournament spOnsored by the
Pomeroy ·Chamber of
Commerce, Pat O'Brien
was low medalist with a 71.
Other winners were Dale
Dutton, first flight, with an
89; Bob Miller, second
flight with an 811 ; Jack
Kerr, third flight, with a 97
and high scorer was Dale
Warner with 119. The,eveot
wa• held at the Pomeroy
Golf Course.

Sunday

~t

fairgrounds
&lt;

Boy Power, In c., will
sponsor a bike rodeo for
young people · between the
ages of five and 18 Sunday at
the
Rock
Springs
Fairgrounds beginning at I
p.m.
Events will include a
sollum race; 3-5·10 speed
race ; big wheel race; 20"
:::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:·

Gov. Rhodes wants
event to
EPA
.
.
be Saturday .
t~ compromiSe
testimony.!
"We are here today to save
Ohio miners, their wives and
their · children from th~
rnlaery of unemployment,''
said Rhodes. "And we are
here to save Ohio electric
consumers, incuding senior
cltlzenss on fixed incomes.
from 30 percent increases in

night.
A motion was made lo accept the bid for
2,500 tons of asphaltic hot·mix at $23.30 a
ton not to exceed $50,000. Council, in other
action, accepted the bid of the Farmers
Bank and Savings Co., to purchase $30,000
in notes at an interest rate of H11 percent
witH a paym~nt of $6,000 to be made a year
plus interest.
It was also agreed to purchase 50 ton of
salt at $25.40 a ton from the Morton Sa lt Co.
It was discussed that possibly more salt
would be used this winter than cinders.
However, Ma yor Clarence Andrews
pointed out that sale loses its effectiveness
when the temi&gt;erature drops below 20
degrees.
In other business, it wa s potnted out that
an ordinance has to be passed before
so dium vapor lights can be placed in park
areas.
Co uncil asked Co uncilman Btll Young to
check on the cost of two hand mowers fo r
the cemetery and report back at the next
meeting.
· Larry Wehrung, councilma n. suggested
that when holes instreets are patched that
concrete be used rather than hot mix.
The traffic problem at the bridge was
again aired and it was decided that the

Bike rodeo scheduled

~onhound

ST. CLAIRSVILLE, Ohio
A 1fi8 U.K.C. coonhound (UPI) -, Gov. James A.
champlooshlp wiU be held Rhodes said today he would
Saturday at tbe Rock Springs use 11 every power" he has as
Fairgrounds with tbe Shade governor
to
prevent
River Coonhunters Club as installation of eJ:penslve anti·
the host group.
pollution equipment at Ohio
Only non-hunting judges ·utilities and vowed "we will
. will be used and entries will burn Ohio coal in Ohio."
be accepted only as long as
Rhodes
made
the
qualified non-houslnll judges statement in remarks
are available. Entries will prepared for delivery at a
cloee at 9 p.m. Saturday and U.S . Environmental
the entry fee is $15.
Protection Agency heartng In
In conjWictloo with the St. Clairsville.
. -regional 42 event, the host
The hearing Is the second
club will also be holding a called by the EPA to study
U.D.C. licensed bench show the Impact on the economy of
with entries c!OIIng at 4 p.m. Eutern Ohio If Ohio's coal
and this will bt followed by a burning utilities are forced to
non-licensed treeln8 contest. lhlfl to low..wtur, western
Entry fee for the bench show coal becauee of EPA pollution
Ia f4 and '1 for the treeing llandarda.
contest. Food will be
The EPA standarda would
available on the IIJ'Oundl.
prohibit utilities from
Anyone needinll more in· burning hlgh-culfur Ohio coal
formation may contact unleaa
they
Installed
WWJam Smith, 992-6208 or apenllve acrubbars.
carl )iaU. ~7222 .
The flnJ hearing wu held
In Ceveland Jut """ and
the me bere wu expected to
atlnd u , many u 110,000
CORRECTION
pet'IIXII. 'nle IMrincll being
RlclinC &amp; lead-In pony It the held In a Holiday Inn· with
Meigs County Foir was Aaron oul.llde speakers lnataUed 80
Card rather than Aaron Curd. the crowd can hear the

Approval was given on. the free and reduced lunch,
breakfast and free milk programs for the district and tbe meat
bid, only orre being submitted, was rej~cted and it was agreed
to purchase meat needed on a monthly basis.
Dwight Goins outlined the steps through which a grievance
until Title IX dealing with equal rights has gone to the present
time. Tbe grievance involves the payment of women coaches
at a lower rate than male coaches. Supt. DOwler commented
that these problems should have been negotiated when a new
contract was signed last year.
However , he said that negotiations will hegin again in
February and perhaps, the problems will be resolved at that
time.
A schedule was worked out for board members to visit
each of the schools of the district next week before schools
open. Board members were asked to rnake suggestions for any
correction to Goins.
At the request of Dan Morris, the board approved
contracts at $5 an hour for 60 hours for Betsy Horky, Teresa
Casci, Becky Triplett,lda Diehl, Mary Hysell, Jo AM Barlley
Hays, Carol Evans, Helen Dais, Roger Birch and Carla
Saelens to work in the Exemplary Central Reading Instruction
program for which Morris has received a federal grant.
Patricia J. McCarty of Middleport was named to serve as
assistant to Treasurer Jane Wa~ner . She replaces Phyllis
.
I Cont~nued on page 10)

BY KATIE CROW
The paving bid submitted by the Shelly
Company was accepted · when Pomeroy

WASHINGTON ( UPI} - The Pentagon wants to make
bounty-bunting more profitable. Because the FBI will stop its
traditional searching for mllltary deserters Oct. I, the Defense
Department will ask Congress for authority to increase by up
to triple the bounties paid local sherifts and police
departments for such arrests, it aMounced Mooday.
The Pentagon proposes to pay up to $75 for each deserter
retW11ed to military custody and up to $60 for each deserter
held in jail to be picked up by milltary police. "We're doing this
to maintain the discipline of the mllltary services,'' a spokesman said. A total of 44,117 deserton cases were listed last year
among the approlimately 2 mllllon members of the armed
forces.

Baseball bat used in assault

POMEROY BEN FRANKUN

Firteen Cents
Vol. 29, No. 90

PQmeroy Council
OK's paving bid

Memorial rites to be Wednesday

,,

hours

WI!.BUR E. BAKER
REEDSVILLE - Wilbur
E. Baker, 58, Reedsville, died
Sunday evening at his home.
Mr. Baker was born at
Baltimore, Ohio, a son of
Raymond R. Baker, Reeds·
vi lle, and the late Rosalee
Baker. He was a member of
the Eden United Brethren
Church and was an electrician. He served in the U. S.
Navy during World War II .
Also surviving are his wife,
Pearl Kibble Baker; a stepda ughter, Mrs. Donna J ean
Best, Fairfax, Va .; an uncle,
Michael B. Baker, Coolville.
Preceding him ln death
besides his mother were a
brother and two sisters.
• Funera l services will be
held at 2 p.m. Wednesday at
the White Funeral home in
Coolville with the Rev . Eldon
Blake officiating·. Burial will
be in the Reedsville
Cemetery. Friends may call
at the funeral home any time
after noon on Tuesday.

•

Bounty profits may go up Oct. I

5-function
wetchiiS
with back light. Wide
choice of men' a and
ladies' styles.

NeW Shipment

prices and brochures from two tlrms wanting to do school
pictures foc the next school year. Supt. Dowler informed board
members that the firms return a part of the price paid by the
student for the picture packages to the schools.
Principal Bob Morris of the Pomeroy and Middleport
Elementary Schools said that such returns are used to
purchase items used in' classrooms and Principal James Diehl
of the high school said that proceeds there go into the yearbook
fund . The board agreed to leave the mstter, of which of the two
firms to be used, up to the respective principal of each building
as far as kindergarten through the junior year of high school
are concerned.
High school seniors who have portrait work done may go to
any studio of their choice, according to the board's decision
last night. Principal Diehl said in view of the prices paid fof
senior portraits that "there is no way you can tell parents of
seniors where to spend their money for pictures."
The board employed Joyce Rouse of Vienna, W.Va ., as a
vocal music teacher replacing Glenna Sprague who resigned
recently. Mrs. Rouse last taught at New Matamoras.
The board also named Dale Harrjson, baseball coach, as
eighth grade boys' basketball coach and Robert Downie and
Delmar Haynes were named "to share the coaching duties of
the seventh grade basketball program. Michael Fergus, who
will be a new teacher at the high school this fall, was named to
the position of freshman boys' basketball coach.

)_r_h_e_w_or_ld_To_d_a_y_

LC.D.hiW•
-CIIES

Area
Death

enttne

emergency squad of Rutland for a new headquarters structure
BY BOB HOEFUCH
'l'be Rutland gymnasium, owned by .the Meigs Local will be returned to the board if plans proceed for the village
School District and constructed a number of years ago as a taking over the gymnaslwn.
It was also agreed that the village must take over· the
facilitY for the former Rutland High Sc!KJol, may become the
gymnasium within a designated period - to be worked out new Rutland Village Hall and community center. .
On behalf of the vtllage of Rutland, John Jacoba and Joan or the building will revert to the board of education.
The board of education also voted last night to discontinue
Stewart, fomerly a member of CQuncll, appeared before the
Meigs Local School District Board of Education Monday night kindergarten classes at the Harrisonville Elementary School ..
and requested that the building be given to the village under a Supt. Dowler reported that only 12 pupils have been enrolled at
the Harrisonville School for the 19711-79 year and only some 35
long term lease.
The two representatives stated that ills not being properly at the Rutland Elementary School for kindergarten. It was
maintained at the present time and ts only used occasionally agreed to bus the HarrisonVille area chUdren to the Rutland
buUding for classes. Last year kindergarten classes were held
except for some storage by the school district.
for
one-half day at the Harrisonville School. J;l.utland has ' a
They said if the board agrees to a long-time lease, at a
morning
and an ·afternoon session.
token payment of $1, the l&gt;uilding would serve as a village hall,
The
board
Monday night set tuition rates in the district a center for senior citizens, a facility for the emergency squad
of the town and for otber cocnmunity purposes. They stated the highest since the district began- at $77.04 a month. Last
that the structure would have better protection and the village year's tuition had previously been the highest and was $55.29 a
month.
·
would maintain it properly.
,
It was agreed that Treasurer Jane Wagner will request an
There was no objection voiced by board members and
board member, carroll Pierce, was named to serve with Supt. advance draw of $200,000 from the Meigs County Auditor to
of School Charles Dowler and Dwight Goins, administrative meet the last payroll of the month and Dan Morris, director of
assistant, to look Into the legal aspects of such a transaction. curriculum, was authorized to make applications for grants
In Pomeroy, such an arrangement was . made with under the Youth Employment Training Program, the Talented
and Gifts Program and for the handicapped :
·
Pomeroy VUiage for the former . Pomeroy High School.
Supt.
Charles
Dowler
presented
Information
includin~
It was agreed that a piece of land which was given to the

ICE CREAM SOCIAL

WALKING FOR CHRIST - This group of boys and girls was one of several "walking
for Christ" Saturday in the Middleport United Pentecostal Church walk-a-thon .
Approximately 30 participated in the walk which started in Middleport, traveled out Route
143 toward Harrisonville, and then through Pomeroy and back to Middleport. Each of the
participants had sponsors and the proceeds from the walk will be used for mission projects.

e

Rutland gymnasium may become town facility

An tee cream aoclal will be

Veteraos Memorial Hospital
Saturday Admission s Mary Clarke, Middleport;
Karen Layne, Racine ;
Maywood Johnston, Port·
land ; John G0ett, Pomeroy;
Charles Chalson, Athens ;
Norma Chapman, Pomeroy .
Saturday Discharges Sadie Bright, Robert Roush,
Wilma Riggs, Cleatus Arnett,
Gecrge Robson.
Sunday Admissions Joseph Stanley, Pomeroy;
Robin Savage, Racine;
Sherry Sa yre, Rutland;
Minnie Johnson, Athens;
William
Stephenson,
Pomeroy.
Sunday Discharge
Eugene Wilson .

•

I'

their utility bills.
"Unless the federal EPA is
willing to reach a reasonable
compromise on sulfur
dioxlfmulations in Ohio, we
will have thousands of
unemployed coal miners, or
skyrockeling utility bills, or
!Continued on page 10)

bike motorcross ; wh ee li e
distance, 2&lt;4' balance and
others. Some of the races will
hav e jumps and hairp in
turns.
Races will be held ln age
groups . Prizes will be
a warded winners and a
.

trophy will be awarded the
individual accu mulation the
most points during the day' s
events.
Gate fee will be $1 and the
first event is free. All others
will have a $1 entry fee.
Participants can enter as
many events as they wish .
All release forms and entry
forms must be signed by .the
1
legal parent or guardtan .
These forms will be available
at the gate. Contestants are
"Watch where you're going required to wea r a helmet,
- you may step on a what- long sleeve shirts, long
cha-ma-cail·it," says Mary trousers and leather shoes
Kramer, the special guest of . are preferred . Proceeds w1il
the Middleport Library on go to Boy Scout Troop 249,
Thursday , Aug. 24 at 3 p.m . Pomeroy. For more In·
Ms. Kramer invites all formation call992·5487 afte r 5
school age children to come p.m.
and learn about the
fascina ting creatures and
objects that fill the world
around us. 'She will bring
"live" samples as well as
slides and pictures.

Nature progr8lll
this Thursday

light uo the West Virginia side was causing
the problem. The West Virginia traffic
lighting system is to be changed but oo
definite date was reported.
The mayor 's report, in the amount of
$3,582.20 for the month of July was read
and accepted.
Jane Walton, clerk, commented that the
operating levy to be placed on the ballot
for the fire department was "9 of a mill
renewal and .1 of a millts an additional tax
ma king a total of one mill. The .1 of a mill
will cost the taxpayers an additional one
cent' per $100 of lax valuation.
Council approved the transfer of a liquor
license from Shirley E. and Ruby Guinther
dba, Pomeroy Wine Store to Paul Simon,
dba , Pomeroy Wine Store.
Simon is requesting permission from
m uncil to place a fence at the front and

back of an alley next to the wine store.
Council had no objection to the fence but
suggested that Simon declare who owns
the property and submit the information to
eo unci I.
Council will meet aga in on Tuesday,
Sept. 5, at 7:30 p.m. The meeting was
opened by prayer by Mayor Andrews.
Attending were Mayor Andrews, Jane
Walton, clerk, Bill Young, Larry Wehrung,
Larry Powell and Harold Brown, councilmen, Jed Web•1er, . chief, and Jack
Krautter .

Miners walk off job
POMEROY . Ohio &lt;U P!) -Workers at
th e Meigs No. I mine of the Southern Ohio Coal
Co. walked off the job Monday and remained
off today in " safety dispute.
Ron Adams. r ecording secretary for Local
I K90 of the United Mine Workers Union , said
the m en struck beca use th ey were forced to
walk a lon g distance into the mine.
The mine employs about 400 pers ons.

Weather

Sunny today with highs in
the low 80s. Clear tonight with
a low near 60. Sunny again
Wednesday with hi ghs in the
middle 80s. The probability of
precipitation is near zer o
through Wednesday . Winds
will be variable, but mostly
from the southeast at less
than 10 mph through tonight

Ms. Kramer lives on a (a nn

in Athens County. She raises
!Continued on page 10)

. New history publication planned
Are you familiar with the 1884 historical
and biographica l history known as
" Hardestys"?

,

If you had ancestors in Meigs County
and have done much research on your
family, you probably have seen the history
or have had it recommend as a
genealogical research source.
If you were lucky, you~ ancestor was
listed, but often they are not. When this
history was publlshtd, it is believed, that
spaces for family histories were sold, and
lf you had the money you co~ld be in·
eluded.
How much better It would have been if
everyone living ln the county could bave
had a Short history Included. " Root"
hunters would have a much better chance
in tracing their families If this were lhe

case.

. The Meigs County Pioneer and
Historical Society is making plans for a
new history publication which will give
you tbe chance to make It easier for your
descendants to trace their lineage back.
The publication, ln the near future, of an
up to date topographical and biographical
history of Meigs County will be a reality
with. the help and cooperation of•ali Meigs
Countians. You will be given an opportunity to write your family history and
have it included. ~100 years from now.
your great-grandchidlren will thank you
for taking time t.o write It down . The best
part of this project is that it won't cost you
to be included.
The ·Dally Sentinel will keep its sutr
scribers up to date as the Historical
Society completes plans f11r this important
and excltinJt endeavor .

GETS TROPHY - Rick umg, Pomeroy, receives a
trophy from Bob Evans at the Ohio State Fair. Rick
captured top honor in the Fishing class at the 4-H Natural
Resources Day last week ,

Two killers
escape, one
is captured
LUCASVILLE, Ohio (UPI)
- Two convicted killers
broke out of their cells at the
Southern Ohio Correctional
Instituti on shortly before
dawn in a heavy fog today but
one was captured before he
C9Uld get off the grounds.
S.M. Patterson , assistant
chief of the Division of
Institutions in Columbus,
identified the escapees as
Cleo Vernon Keaton , 41 ,
sentenced from Pickaway
COunty , and Richard Tingler,
40, sentenced from Franklin
County .
Keaton was captured
hiding behind a building near
the administrative offices,
said Patterson.
Tingler is believed to be
still on 'the grounds,
Patterson said.
Patterson said Tingler and
Keaton shared the same cell
and apparently got out by
sawing through the bars.
Patterson said the facility
has been surrounded by
guarda and tjle Ohio Highway
Patrol.
"It is difficult to search
because of a heavy fog down
there," said Patteraon.

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