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                  <text>D-10-The SWlday Timeo-&amp;ntinel, Sunday, June 4, 1978
Acting on a requesl by City
La w
Director
Ja ck
Schu lman , representing
Kucini ch, the Ohi o 8th
District Court of Appeals
agreed Friday to bar the
co uncil from completing its
certification of petitions to
recall the mayor.

EFFORT THWARTED
CLEVELAND (UPI J Cleveland City Counc il
leaders, who eagerly waited
all week for the chance to set
a recall election date against
embattled Mayor Dennis
Kucinich ,
have
been
thwarted again by a state
appeals court .

t

I

Otarles Covert will .

Human Service Council

receive degree June ·8

to meet Thursday noon

:
eu :.

t t ' ' 't '
' .

I I I I I • •

I~1-

GAI.LlPO LlS - Charles C.
Cuvert , son of Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest H. Covert of 640
Linwood 0 r., R.to Gran de ,
Will graduate on June. 8 from
the Ohio State Umverslty
A~ric ultura l Technical Inslltute at Wooster .
Cha rles will receive the
degree of Associate Ill Ap-

CY."st·~
'*'~•
- Lt
Q {(.it ·

1

•
•

1•
1

1
I
I

T0 day

PRICING YOUR HOUSE RIGHT

You may be pleasantly
surpr ised to find aut tha t

•neighborhood , and the
•
current
mar k e ·tu · An
on
•
h
ed
overpri c
ouse Sli!lng
•

k t

Your

•

Nobody - but nobooy is·mor e acutely aware of
· mar kef
the current housmg
n
It
A

• than your local

r~ ea

house for less than its

fa i r market vai•Je.
If possible, your pr ice
· s,
should inc l ude cu rta1n
drape ries. refr igera t or .
air conditioners.
dishwasher . bu ill i ns It's a
be Her pacKage deal and

f

e

e

•
•

youwe re 1ntendingtoprice •

th s
the ma r e or mon"bl
• becomes
to sell. Soalmost
first , impossl
you muste
get in li ne wit h t he mar ke1
That means a reai1 St 1c
appra isal.

1

~~~e.. ~~i~a~~~~lo~~ ~~

Wilour Farm for added
pract ical experience in the
field of livestock prodUctiOn ·
•
At present, he has a
e
WEARS RIBBON
be gi nning herd of 23
t
GALLIPOLIS - Staff registered Angus cattle and
1 Sergeant Tommie D. Vaughn, plans to continue his work m
By
Wi llis T. Leadingham ' son of Tommie 1'. Vaughn of li vestock production and
Realtor
e. 120 Flame Dr., Martinez,
management.
e Calif., i' now earing a .
I distinctive service ribbon as
The value of your house a fa ir concensus . Or you • a member of an organization
is not what you think it is - can hire a qua I if ied • which recently received the
or what th e buyer thinks . 1t independenl appra ise r .• U.S. Air Fo rce Outstanding

I
I is determined chiefly by
• the
lo ca t i on ,
the

e
e
'I'

plied Science in the College of
Agriculture, having completed his training at A.T.l. Ill
Wooster, and his internship at
''The Meat Animal Research
Center " at Clay Center ,
Nebraska .
While attendin g A.T.I. ,
C'harles was a member of
"Hoo f and Hide Club" ~nd

may ha sten the sale.

or .

e
I
e

Sergeant Vaughn

is

an

ai r c raft

mai nt enance
spec ialist at Seymour
J&lt;lhnson AFB , N. C., with the

e 4th 'l'act1'cal Ft'ghter "n·mu0
e lila! e.arncd the award for
1

e

1
I

•

If t here is anything we
can do to he·lp you in the
fie ld of real estate please

1

ESTATE , 512 Second Ave.,
Gallipolis. Phone 446 . 7699 _

1

•

e capable Realtor can brong phone or drop in at •
e In hJS own appra isa l expert LEAD INGHAM REAL '
• or e~o~en a team of sa lesmen
• w ho will in d1v1dually price

Unit Award .

meritorious se rv ice fr om
February 2, 1976 to April 18,
197'• .
The se rgeant, a 1970
graduate o( Rowan County
High School, Morehead, Ky.,
attended Wayne Communit y
College, Goldsboro, N. C. His
wife, Na ncy, is the daughter
f

o Mr ~.a n

d

N

I Cl

k

f

Mrs. ea ~r _o
t your home and then rea ch ... _, .. '&gt;ere to he lo!
t 136 F1rst Ave., Galltpolts,
•• ett t et ee 1 e e e 11 ee e 1 e e e • • • • 1 Ohio.
•

I

CHARLES C. COVERT

See Southeastern Ohio's largest selection of clean late model
used cars. Most of these cars carry Smith's special

100%

warranty. See Gene Johnson, Bob Brickles, Harland Wood or
Greg Smith today for that extra special deal!

1977 CHEVROLET
CHEVETTE HATCHBACK

1977 OLDS CUTLASS
. SUPREME 2 DR

f inished in
orange rnetalltc with co~tras~ i ng
c us tom
b uc ksk i n
Interio r .
Equ1 pmen1 1ncludes aut_oma t lc
transm i ss ion . AM radiO and
custom wheel covers . 0"""~1y 9 . S~9
mdes N ~w Bu1ck trade th1s
week
Thi!!

Bucksk in €')1(1er ior w ith mat c ~ ln g
landau top and saddle VI nyl
inter ior . Special accent str1pes
Thi s intermediate is extra shMP
&amp; tully equioped P riced to sell

compact

'3495

'5495

1977CH(V.
MONTE CARLO

1977 BUICK LIMITED
2 DR COUPE

Th1s locally owned Monte is ex tra
cl ean ms ide and out Ar ct ic white

Medium green f inish w dh
match ing padded landau top and
velour 60·40 seats . Loaded w tlh
all the options you expect on
Buick 's top of the line Don ' t m 1ss
th is automobile . Pn ced at

extenor w ith bl ue vi nyl roo t and
matching c loth mter ior .. F~lly
equ i pped wit h a1r con dlttonmg ,
cr u tse con troL tilt steering wheel ,
Ralye wheels an d power locks .
Speciall y Pnced at

match ing 6Q . .ao seating and a
white vinyl r oo f cover ing .
Equipment
includes
air
condi tion ing. cruise control , tilt
wheel. AM radio with 8 track

tape, chrome plated wheels, and
radial t ires. This loca l one owner
trade has only 11,973 mi les.

1976 DODGE
ASPEN
Fores t green me tallic

1976 FORD
MAVERICK 2 DR
Be ige f 1n 1sh w tth a co ntrasl tng
tan vinyl roof and mat chtng sport
interior Eq ui pme nt 1ncl udes an
economi c a l 6 eng ine , power
steer ing . factory air conditioning
and st yled road wheels .

.e~~:le r i~r
wdh match 1ng cloth in tenor . Th~s
1

Pontiacs3295

1973 PONTIAC
GRANDVIllE
2 DR HT
Burgundy f in sh with wh tle

V1 nyl

1

r oof and m at chin g burgundy
cloth tnter ior . Equipped w tl h
power wmdows. power 60 .40 seat ,
am . fm 8 track stereo and _Rallye
II wheels If you are look ing tor
luw:ury and r iding comfort Inspect
th is locally owned. on e owner
40,532 m il es and at Smith Butck
Pont i ac

economy model tram Dodge IS
equ 1ppc-d w tth Chrysler ' s fam ous
slant 'il )( eng me , automa tic tr ans
misston and power steering Th is
local one owner has only 17 ,793
m1ler,

. Compare AI

'349 5

1974 PONTIAC
CATALINA
Th ts

hardtop mod el is a
loc al Ma son County new car
trad e
Be 1ge exterio r wit h
malch 1ng 1ntertor and a tan viny l
root Equtpment Includes factor y
atr con d tho n mg, cruise con tr ol,
power s teer 1n g and power
brakes See tht s family si zed auto
no.w .
4

Dr

EIGHT PERISH
COHOES, N. Y. (UPI ) - A
fire gutt ed a two-~tory
rooming house today, ktlhng
a ma n and his seven children
in an intense "wall or flame ''
lllal prevented any rescue
attempts.
"There were a bunch of
kids .. . all cuddled up .. .
sprea d all over the house. W~
had to dig so me of them out,
a fireman said as the last of
the bodies were removed
from the house in body bags
early today.
He said the blaze apparently began in the back of
the wooden building, which
contained four apartments.
KILLED IN WRECK
ELYRIA Ohi o tUP\1 Ralph Nor~is, 83, of Elyria,
died early today of injuries he
suffered Friday afternoon
when the car he was driving
collided head-on with another
vehicle.
.
Lorain cou nty sheriff 's
deputies sa id lhe accident
was still under investigal!on .
The driver of the second
vehicl e inv olved wa s not
injured.

Inspect th is truly beautiful auto.

1

CHEV. CAPRICE
2 DR

This is tr uly a classic car . Dclrk
green exterior with contrasting

equ 1 pped with AM-F M stereo.
cruise control, flit wheel. power
seat , power door locks and power
windows . E 1q:&gt;ecl the best ·

1975 BUICK SKYLARK
This Hat chback model Is fully
equipped with air conditioning , p.
st eer .. p . b rakes and new
prem ium tires . Only 33,657 mlle_s
00 th is tocalone owner make tf
one at the n icest around .

Com pare at

•3495
1972 UNCOLN
MARK IV
Stunn ing Nautilus blue finish
with blue cloth Inter ior . 6 way
power seat, power wind ows, AM-

FM stereo. radio and liLt steering
wheel. Th is personal sized luxury

cou pe is an

e~tc ept ion ally

clean

'"
~

•

he-she should are urged to
call the co unty hea lth
department who will put the
parent in touch with the
p~ogram team:
The teatn consists of a local
health nurse, an occupational
\.
therapist, physical therapist,
'
speech - language therapist,
Home-Based Specialist,
FRED EGGERS
ROSS .HAMRICK
co WJselor, and an early childhood' specialist. Together a
comprehensive evaluation is
made to determine an appropriate program for the
family and child. Th e'
pediatric physician is kept
•
informed of the case and ts
•
depended on as so urce for
medical examinations and
GALLIPOLIS Ross Chicago where ihey attended ;
care of the child.
Dr. Inglis will be explaining Hamrick, president and Fred lhe International Security ~
referral, sc r ee ni ng, Eggers, installation a~d Conference and Ellhlbltion. ,
Topics discussed Included ,
evaluation, treatment, parent se rvice manager of Securtty
education and grant costs and Safety Services, Inc, the basics of security sur- '
procedures. Any interested recently r et urned from ve ys, security product sales,
the certification of burglar •
persons may atte nd the
and fire alarms, internal ;
Human Se rvice Coun cil
theft and computer security, .:
meetings. For further inschool security systems :•
formation please contact
was
moderate planning and advanced
president Emelyn Sca rberry. There
damage .
alarm troubleshootmg.
,
Mark A. Brown, 16, BidThe International Security ~
well , had minor injuries iit a Conference is sponsored by •
single ca r accident at 8:35 Security World Magazine and ~
p.m. on Georges Creek Rd. is attended by security ·:
east of Johnson 's Ridge in professionals from all parts :
Addison Twp .
of the world. Designed to be '•
Troopers said Brown, going an educational experience in ~
east, lost control of his car the exchange of new ideas ~
which ran off the left side of and methods to prevent ·
the highway strik ing a fence, crime and criminal attack.
telephone equipment then The conference is held an· ·
overturned . There was heavy nually in Chicago, New York :
GA LLIPOLIS
Two damage. Brown was taken to and I..&lt;&gt;s Angeles.
Security and Safety Ser- ,
persons were injured in four the hospi(al by the Galha
traffic accidents inve;t1gatcd Emergency Sq uad. No vices, Inc., a local firm,
engaged in the sale and In- •
Friday by the Gallia-Meigs charges were filed .
A Gallia school bus was stallation of burglar and fire •
Post State Highway Patrol.
involved in an accident at alarm systems ls preparing .
The first injury collision
occurred at 8:20 p.m. on 1:25 p.m. Friday on Fairview to observe its tenth an·•
Georges Creek Rd. two and Rd . one mile south of SR 790. nlvr,.sary in Aug\181,
Officers reported the bus
Since 1968, Security and ~
seven tenths miles west of SR
driven by Phyllis L. Johnson, Safety Services has provided ..
7 in Addison Twp.
The patrol said cars driven 41, Rt. 1, Northup, and a local residents and merby Alice Jarvis, 57, Gallipolis, vehicle operated by Frank B. chants with pro tective
and Larry K. Taylor, 18, Swindler, 56, Cro wn City, devices for the prevention of
Gallipolis, co llided headon in co llided in a curve. There was criminal assault.
moderate damage. No one
In March of 1977, Security
a curve.
and Safety Services acquired
Angela Marttn, 18, Point wa s injured .
A final mishap occurred at the c~stomers of Ranger
Pleasant, a passenge r in the
6:40
p.m. on Mitchell Rd . Secunty Systems 1n the
Taylor car was taken to the
so
uth
of US 35 where Carroll · Portsmouth area and no_w
Holzer Medical Center by the
Ga lli a Co unty Volunteer w. Shoemaki!r, 24, Rl. 2, maintains a branch ~fltce tn
Emergency , Squad f o ~ Gall ipolis, lost control of his Portsmouth. Secunty . and
·treatment of tn)unes. Jarvis car on the wet pavement. The Safety Services main offtce IS
was ciled to Mumctpal Court vehicle ran off the roadway located at 255 Third Ave. In
Gallipolis.
for driving left of center. into a ditch.

Hamrick, Eggers
attend session

1.&amp;.'-'

1.&amp;.'-'

•

.

1976 VW DASHER
Is sil ver

outside
with
contrastin g
leatherette in ter ior
Equipped
with a 4 speed tran smission , AM
radto , mag type wheels , plu s
man y ot her V W op t1ons Th is
car is su r e to plea se you Loca l
owner New Grand Pr ;.c tr ade
this week

'4195
A.&amp;
BA I" K
FINANCING

1975 OPEL 1900

RESERVED

This 2 dr . compact from Bu ick Is

FOR YOUR

equipped with ~utomatlc tran sm ission and mag wheels . Arct ic
wh ite f inish with red vinyl

LATE MODEL

mter tor . The spare has ne ver
been down . Inspect this loca lly
owned used 33,692 mile au to.

TRADE-IN.

•2295
40 MORE
TO CHOOSE
FROM

Sunday Shoppen
Welcome

BUICK ~

PONTIAC

SPEAKERS - David Brown and Dorothy Runyon,
valedictcrian and salutatorian respectively of the Eastern
High School graduating class, were speakers at the
annual c~~nmencement Sunday night. They are pictured
with their trophy awards.

Brown, Runyon
·
~ondition
speak EHS
Meeting plans fall through
'78 graduation

'

· De rt t 2 d FbJr
pa men- n

ngene

in a seamless bra.Playtex guarantees it.

Elberfelds In Pome
.'

Middleport squad
wtit kept busy

Li

•••

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UP! ) - Former first lady -Bess
Truman, hospitalized in satisfactory
at Research
Medical Center for a muscular atlment, Will unde rgo
additional diagnostic testing.
Hospital spokesman Gordon Thompson said the testing
today would include a blood sugar test to determine If Mrs.
Truman , 93, was sufferirtg kidney problems. Additional X-rays
also may be taken, officials said.

at

unconditionally guaranteed.
Your money back If you 're not

Stop ;n today - try new Playtex'

NEW YORK (UPI) - The publishers of the Ladies Home
Journal will offer more than 3,000 consumers in the United
States their moeny back on a subscription offer.
State Attorney General Louis Lefkowitz said Sunday that
Downe Publishing had agreed to make the restitution .
Lefkowitz said the company had sent out a mail solicitation
offering bargain rates that were more than the regular
subscription price for the magazine.

Bess Truman hospitalized

Now even fuller figu res can go seamless
and look smoolh, feel comforJable .
Playtex' is so sure you' lllove your
new 18 Hour Seamless bra Ihat ;t's

446-2282

•

Conswners offered money hack

Your money back if you don't agree

18 Hour Seamless tor support and comfort

community leaders liT a companion study on the implications of the new population growth.
But they speculate they will find good and bad
consequences.
On th e plus side, they said, growth will mean "new
lifeblood and leadership for local institutions" and "an
improved economy as the tax base grows."
As for the minus , Thomas and Bachtel sec "the
potential for conflict between the natives and
newcomers,' '
The migrants, they said, are likely to be accustomed
to and demanding of more governmental services tl1an
the rural folk , and certainly they will -mean booming
school enrollments and more frequent traffic jams in
Ohio's south.

.

•

at y

POM EROY-MIDOLE PORT, OH 10

O£""J;..__,r_h_ew_o_rl_d._ro_d_a_r_

EAST MEIGS - David
Brown, valedictor ian, and
Dorothy
Runyon,
salutato ri an, were featured
speakers Sunday nigh! when
the 21st annual commenctment of Eastern High
School was hel d in the
auditoriwn.
Brown's address dealt with
the nosta lgic memories the
class will have of their years
at Eastern High SchooL "We
each have our own special
memories ahout the good
times as well as those bad
times. These memories, I am
sure, will remain in the
thoughts of aU of us for the
rest of our lives."
Continuing, Brown spoke of
the various paths seniors will
take as they leave high school
and of the accomplishments
of the class.

Smooth Tricot - style 11 722
341408 /C, 361420'100'' - Sugg retail $9 50
Feminine Lace - style # 724
341408 , 34142CIO' - Sugg relatl $9 .50
SIHk Tricot with Fiberfill - slyle # 790
34138A, 341408/C- Sugg te1a11 $9.95
.
Figure Molding Tricot Longllne - style 11' 204
341428/C. 361420' - Sugg . rela1l $13 95
('0 Cup $1 00 mo1e, " 00 Cup $ 1 45 more)

The movers are young, mostly In the 25-to 34-year
brackett, with only 6 percent over 65.
They are mostly skilled blue collar workers,
construction and maintenance workers. But all other
occupations from semi and unskilled workers through
doctors and engineers were well repre!ented in the
survey . Less than 10 percent of the movers farm lull
time.
The OSU researchers asked the new rural residents
why lhey had come and the answers they got most
frequently had to do with getting out of the city and
away from pollution and high crime rates .
On the whole, the researchers found the Appalachian
newcomers better educated and better off than the
natives. Thomas aoo Bachtel are interviewing rural

•

enttne

MONDAY, JUNE 5, 1978

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Effort to break Senate
filibuster in spotlight

Hour SupportHour Comfortaseamless bra.

car . A hard to find model.
Spec ially pr iced at

THIS SPACE

VOL XXIX NO. 35

four wrecks

.
'

turnaround" in southern Ohio.
Their report, recently presented at a meeting of the
Population Association of Ainerica, describes the rural
migrants and their reasons for moving and speculates
ahout their interaction with the rural natives.
Their survey of new residents in Athens, GaUJa,
Meigs, Jackson and Vinton counties, accompliahed
through local post offices, showed that most of the new
wave of migrants are from Ohio, especially citified
Franklin and Cuyahoga counties, or from neighboring
states. Only a third of them are "return migrants,"
people who moved away irom the coWJtry and are now
coming back.
,
The researchers found that the migrants are moving
not so much inkl villages or farms as into open country.

e

injured in

Pri ced At

This compact seda n

COLUMBUS (UP!)- Urban dropouts ruMing from
pollution and looking for wide~pen spaces in which to
raise their kids $re fiocking to Ohio's Appalachian
region .
Fifteen southern and eastern counties that lost
residents kl the big cities during the 60s are attracting
them back again in the 70s.
Bllt besides new lifeblood, these back-to-nature
migrants could mean new taxes, overburdened schools
and hard-pressed water and sewer fa cilities for oncescorned· rural sections.
Two researchers at Ohio State University's
Department of Agricultural Economics and Rural
Sociology, Donald W. Thomas and Douglas C. Bachtel,
have completed a fivecounty study of the "rural

Two persons

completely satisfied .
(See store d;s play for details)
.
Th ese great new bras comb;ne the exclustve
18 Hour all-around stretch fabric
for comfort with famous 18 Hour des1gn
for support and now seamless cups too'
It 's the support bra you 've been
wa;t ing for and they' re available tn
flattering styles .

Urban dropouts from pollution
flocking to Appalachian region

Rural turnaround

•

ELBERFELD$

vinyl roof and mat ch ing 60·40
seattng . This 39,505 mile au to Is a
lo cal one owne r and fu lly

'5595

'6995

S~t1h But ck
Pn ced At

is

CUSTOM 4 DR HT

Beautiful burgundy exte rior with

GALLIPOLIS - The noon
luncheon meeting of the
Human Service Council will
meet at the GJM Menial
·Health Center on Thursday,
June 8.
Lunch will be catered by
FuU Circle and reservations
may be made by calling 24S9S75 by June 5. The cost of the
meal will be $2.
Guest speaker will be Dr.
Uoyd H. Inglis, Ed. D., Early
Childhood Coordinator for the
Center for Human Development in Athens.
Dr. Inglis will cover the
Early Childhood Intervention
Program as it exists in Gallia
County . Children 0-3 years
old with handicaps or
disa bilities and their families
are referred to the program
by local physicians, social
workers, therapists and other
interested parties.
Parents who think their
child may have a handicap or
suspect that he or she is not
crawling, feeding, sitting or
playing or talking as soon as

..

The Middlep o r t
Emergency Squad was kept
busy with eight calls on
Sunday and Monday morning .
At 1:12 a .m . Sunday,
William Dunfee, 979 Hysell
St., was taken to Holzer
Medical Center and at J: 05
a.m., the squad went to
CoWlty Road 3 where Frona
Call, GaUipolls Ferry, W.
Va., was hurt In an. auto
accident. She was taken to
Veteralll Memorial Hospital
where she was admltted.
At 12 :30 p.m., the squad
went to the HollBil of Prayer,
Locullt St. for Eva Neansky,
Otapmansv1Ue1 W, Va., and
she was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
At 3:36 p.m., Clara Peck,
Cook Road, near Cheahlre1
wu taken to Holzer Medical
Center. At 3:311 p.m.. a child
was treated for a laceration
at the residence at 905
Brownell Ave. At 7:30 p.m.
Robert C. Fife, 727 Third
Ave., was taken to Holzer
Medical Center.
At 1:34 a .m. Monday
Donald Armentrout, 186 N.
Second Ave., was taken to
Veter1111 Memorial Hospital
u wu Otltrlea Knapp, Dock
St. f 4::tll a.m.

WASHINGTON ( UPI) - Turkiah Premier Bulent Ecevlt
says he was willing to meet informally with Cyprus President
Sypros Kyprlanou last week, but efforts to arrange such a
meeting - which could have advanced a Cyprus peace
settlement - fell through.
The administration had hoped to work out the diplomatic
niceties so the deadlocked Cyprus talks between the Greek
Cypriot community and the Turkish Cypriot community could
be renewed.

'We have aU reached a
crossroad in our lives. Now,
we must choose in which
di rection we shall go. Any
way whi 9h we choose, we are
aU beginning a new chapter
in life's book of which we are
the author. 1t is only fitting
that th is ceremony is called a
com mencement - a new
CHICAGO (UP!) - Comedian Jackie Gleason 's doctors
beginning," Brown Com·
predict "The Great One" will be back on his feet in two weeks
mented .
Brown stated that class and say he is making a strong recovery at Michael Reese
members are now .. on our Hospital, where he underwent open heart surgery to improve
own." "We Will find that no his circulation.
Gleason 62 Sunday was in stable aoo satisfactory
longer will we have teachers
condition
at ine h'ospital's cardiac-surgical intensive care unit.
and parents watching over us
He
was
expected
to remain there for the next two days
lo get us to do our work or to
following
the
flvHiour
triple coronary bypass surgery he
keep us out of trouble. We are
underwent
Saturday.
now ex pected to make

'The Great One' recovenng'

decisions on our own ," he
said.
"The rest of our lives are in
our hands, to do with what we
choose. We must leave all of
our yesterdays behind us and
plan for a future in a world
where nobody Is going to look
out for us but ourselves," he

Ford Motor Co. denies report
DETROIT (UP!) - Ford Motor Co. officlais have denied a
report they wanted to pay an Indonesian general $2 million to
guarantee a contract for a Ford subsidiary.
,
The No . 2 automaker, which has faced such allegations
several times in recent months, disputed a New York Times
story on the reported Indonesian deal.

Rahman wins re-election

advised .
In closing, Brown urged
parents to support a 10 mill
DACCA, Bangladesh ·(UP!) - President Ziaur Rahman
tax levy which will be voted
has
won re-election In the Impoverished Asian nation of
on in the district Tuesday .
(Continued on page 10)
" We have all had a chance
for a good education, but It
seems that If a levy Is not
passed in this district this
year there may not be a
graduating class of Eastern
High School in 1979," he
''l'rofit by experience of
concluded.
others, remain open to adIn her seriously veined
vice, surround yourself with
talk , MISil Runyon , on behalf ·
successful people, read,
of her classmates said to the
study and learn", Dean
parents:
Brown , director of ad"lt was you who played the
missions and records at Rio
greatest· role In shaping our
Grande told the S8 members
ll ves - . who gave the needed
of the 1978 graduating class at
encouragement;
who
Southern High School Sunday
provided the necessities ; who
taught us the beginning of
life ; who, in later years;
showed us the right and the
wrong and then allowed us
the freedom of choice ; who
t_aught us io appreciate the
ATHJ!;NS, Ohio (UP!) lesser things of Ille, and who
Twenty-one
people were inprompted us to reach for the
jured,
one
seriously,
and 10
higher goals and better
&lt;tilers
were
arrested
dw-lng
ourselves. For this, and much
an
Ohio
University
end~f­
more, we thank yoti."
ROBIN SNOWDEN,
springterm celelratlon that
Continuing Mlsll Runyon . da"pler of Mr. aDd Mn.
turned Into a rock and botUe
listed live tests of the Aroold ·saowdea, Jr.,
throwing
melee early
evidence of education over Pomeroy, Is ululltorlla of
Sunday.
the past century which she lbe
20%-member
One OU student, whose
said apply to today, craduatlllg cla11 of Mel&amp;•
name
was not released by
yesterday and to tomorrow . Hlp School. The cla11 wUI
authorities, was reported In
crathlale Juae I.
(Continued on Pill' IOJ
stable condition at ~meneas

WASHINGTON (UP! )- The first effort to break a Senate
filibuster on a proposed labor law revision shares the spotlight
In Congress at midweek with a marathon House effort to pass
all its appropriations bills in one Hl·day period.
Senate Democratic Leader Robert Byrd announced some
time ago he would try this week to impose debate limitations
on the filibu ster, which has stymied the almost-certain
passage of Wlion-backed changes to federal labor laws.
Among the first to come up
After allowing the issue to
brew for two weeks , Byrd - Thursday and Friday - is
scheduled his first cloture fu ndin g for the Health,
vote for Wednesday.
Ed uca ti on aijd Welfare
He has said he will set a Department and Labor
new such vote every day until Department. The
bill
the opposition , consisting of a reported to the House is
Southern - conserva tive slighUy under $58 billion and
coalition, folds.
ano ther $17.6 billion in
Backers of the bill programs wa s deferred
despite help from organized pendin g au l hori z in g
labor - hitve no assurance of leg islation.
the 60 votes needed kl kill a
The amount is certain to
filibu ster. Most observers provoke a fight and the
feel the goal can be reached , Labor-HEW money bill once
but only after a number of again carries the seeds of a
tries.
SenateHouse showdown on
And opponents may the qu estion of federal funds
propose a series of time- for abortions for poor women.
consuming
amendments
The
Senate
ethics
after that in furth er efforts to committee meets Thursday
delay voting on the bill that on two problems - Sens.
would make it easier for Herman Talmadge, 0-{;a.,
unions to organize and
(Continued on page 10)
provide new penalties for
anti-Wlion actions by employers.
Meanwhile the House at
midweek begins an intense
Naomi Brinker, grants
10-dlly effort to complete the
administrator on Mei gs
appropriations bill.
Co unty CETA Title II and VI
Programs; today aMoWJced
a change in the Affimnative
Act ion Plan.
The Meigs Co unty Commissioners have approved I.
Carson Crow as the new
William L. Sims, 36 1 Nor· E.E.O. Ofricer and Complaint
folk , Va., has been charged Officer. The · revised Afwith leaving the scene of an firmative Action Plan now
accident and driving while reads as foll ows:
under suspension following
" The
Meigs Co unty
an accident in Middleport at Commi ss ioners a re com3:15a .m. Saturday.
mitted to equal employment
Middleport police said a opportunities for all appickup truck driven by Sims plicant s, participan ts and
struck a utility pole on Race employees in all facets of its
St. and Sims was later ap- CETA operations; and wbere
prehended on Route 7 by the deficiencies are noted to take
sheriff's department. In affirmative action to correct
striking the pole, the village such deficiencies. In addition,
siren system was thrown out It Is our policy to recruit, hire,
of commission.
and prom ote in all job
However, a new system classifications withou t
being used for notifying regard to race, co lor,
firemen of calls was used religion, national origin, sex
over the weekend.
(except wh ere sex is a bona-

HONORED QUEEN - Jenn1fer Wise, daughter of
Mr . and Mrs. Roscoe Wise, was installed as honQred

queen of Bethel 62, International Order of Job's
Daughters, Saturday night. See story on Page 6.

Affirmative Action Plan changed

Driver charged
after accident

fid e oc cupati o n a l
qualification), age , political
affiliation, or handi ca p
1provided physical limitation
does not prevent jo b perfo rmance).
"It is our policy to take
affirmative acti on to insure
that all train ing programs
and all personnel actions
such as rate of compensation,
benefits, transf ers , and
promotions, layoff and termina tions be administered
without rega rd to race, color,
religion, national origin, sex.
age, political afliliation.
Henry Wells, chairman ,
will have th e overall
responsibility
of
administering the programs. If
a program parti cipant or
applicant feels he or she ha'
been discriminated against in
empl oyme nt , seeking employment and or !raining with
the Meig s County Commissioners he or she should
immediate ly contact the

Southern graduates 58
night.
"Commencement means
the beginning. This ceremony
ends your life as a child, the
end of regimentation,"
Bro wn commented.
" This commencement
signals the end of school, 12
years of training, hopefully
this will not be true, " Brown

stated .
Brown commented, "The
athletes will never play again
the level of competition they
have played in high school.
This Is the end of their group
of friends, " he also told the
class.
"This Is the first time you
are referred to as being an

adult," Brown noted.
He stressed responsibility
to county,Jamily, and home.
" hon or your beginnin g,
education has just begun.
Life simply isn't long enough
to experience everything ,"
Brown observed.
Brown commented tha t he
(Continued on pige 10)

•
E.E.O. Office r, I. Carson
Crow, to pursue the proper
dtscrimination com plaint
proced ure . Telephone 992 5526, for appointment.
"E.E.O. is a legal, social
and economic necessity fo r
the Meigs County CE TA
Program ,. All employees are
asked to assist in th is effort to
achieve equal employment
opportunity.' Any willful or
deliberate violation by any
em ployee of this Meigs
Co unty CETAProgram of our
equ al empl oy ment opportunity policy will be cause
for appropr iate disciplinary
action ."

Mr. Crow and Mrs. Brinker
will be attending an E. E. 0 .
meeting on June 14.

Weather
Partly cloudy tonight and
Tuesday . l..&lt;&gt;w tonight in mid
50s. Hig h tem peratures
Tuesday in the low 80s.
Probability of precipitation
30 percent today, 20 percent
tonight.
TWO SQUAD RUNS
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad was called to Lasley
St. at 4:01p.m. Saturday for
Leslie Price who had fallen.
He was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where he
was admitted. At I: 48 p. m.
Sunday, the Pomeroy squad
went to the home of Ann
Watson, Forest Run Road, for
Kathleen Scott wh o also was
injured in a !aU. She was
taken lo Ho lzer Medica l
Center.

OU celebration ends in 21 injured

11

Memorial Hoepital Sunday
after two hours of eye
surgery. He was reportedly
hit in the face with a beer
botUe.
Early Sunday , as bars
closed In the . liOuthwestern
Ohio university town, a crowd
ot about 2,000 students,
coUege-aged townspeople and ,
out-of-town students gathered
downtown ,

Some members of the
crowd threw rocks and
botUes at the pollee wbo
confronted them in full riot
gear, armed with wooden
bullets called knee knockers
and riot batons . One
department store window
was smashed and another
store broken Into, pollee 118ld.
Bllt by 4a.m. the crowd had .
mostly broken up and Pollee
Chief Ted 1nes rrdered his

men, and the un iversity past several years.
security and Athens County
" It happens about every
sheriff's deputies assisting . year. I can 't remember any
them , back to downtown year it hasn't happened,"
headquarters.
said Sgt. Ron Mount , a
The 10 arrests were for veteran of the police force for
failure kl disperse.
four years and a resid enl of
OU students finished the area for nine years. ,
regular classes Friday and
"It 's a little more than
head into finals today. Athens letting off steam when they
has seen a disturbance this do several thousaoo dollars
weekend every year for the worth of damage," he added.

.,

�3- Tbe DailrSentinel, Middl~port-Potneroy, 0 ., Monday, JW1e 5, 1978
2- The Daily Sentlnel, Middl~port·Pomeroy, 0., Monday, JWie 5, 1978

jr5 A f/\NTA?liC SC!!:Niif\C
~KTttRPUott Wt:VE

$64million

peopletalk

P~C\'e~D fu\1ElHIN6
lfl.bJ Dot:~T

•

zn grants
for colleges

By KENNETH R. CLARK
UDited PrettlllterlladOIIIIl
-·
. HECKLER 10KES JIACKLES: Kel,lb Camdiu stalked off
· the stage Sunday night In Sydney, Australla, after a hec][ler In
the audience accused him of "eg()-(rlpping." Carradlne - In
Australia fll' a film festival screening of his new movie,
"Welcome to LA" - was discu~ his career with the
audience when he was interrupted with, "Listen, while you're
ego-tripping we want to see a movie." The heckler was booed
bY the rest oi the audience, but Carradlne wouldn't come back.
Says he, "I just got the impression my presence wasn't wanted

CAUX CANCe:R ((

/ '

.

00

WASHINGTON (UPI )- The government said today it Is
giving $&amp;1 million in matching college scholarship fWid.s to the
states to help 255,000studentsattend school next year.
The money will be provided to all SO states and territories on
a matching basis, meaning at leut $128 million In federal and
state money will be available to students under the program in
September.
Actually, the $&amp;1 million is a drop in the bucket of federal
gilts fll' undergraduate college students. During the current
year, the government Is providing some $2.5 billlon in direct
and supplemental student grants.
"But this matching grant program is important," said an
Office of . EducaUon spokeswoman. "It gives the states
incentive to keep their own scholarship programs going."
The funds already have been sent to the SO sUites, Puerto
Rico, Guam and other lrust territories.
California will get the biggest chWik with $10.2 million. New
York will get $6.2million, as the money is divided up according
to current college enrollment.
Other states getting at least $1 milllon each are : Florida,
Georgia, Illinois, Indiana , Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, New Jersey, North Carolina,
Ohio, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, Washington
and Wiscoosin.
"With dollar-for-dollar matchin8 from state student
incentive grant resources, .. the announcement said, "fWids
will provide scholarships averaging ~ to an estimated
255,000 undergraduate students who need financial
assistance."
Under the matching funds program, the maximum that may
be awarded a student for a year of full-time study Is $1,500.
Each state program is managed bY a single agency, which
sets up eligibility requirements for students and schools.
Under the program, each state will decide through the coming
school year which schools may take part In !he program.
But beginning with the 1979-80 school year, the federal rules
have been changed to automatically Include all noo-proflt
higher education institutions.
During the current school year, the government has given
$2.1 billion to students under the Basic Educational Opportunity Grants Program and another 1270 milllon in supplemental educational opportunity grants.
The government also sponsors two major loan programs for
undergraduate coUege students. This year, It ia providing
about $325 milllon in direct student loans and guaranteeing
some $1.3billion in private loans tn college students.

12 lawmakers on
new 'Dirty Dozen' list
WASHINGTON (UPI) Tw o senators and 10
congressmen are on the new
" Dirty Dozen" list
politicians Environmental
Action hopes to defeat in the

Meigs
Property
Transfers
Gregory L. Bailey, Jo L.
Bailey to Col. &amp; So. Ohio Elec.
Co., Easement, Olive. ·
Marshall R.
Roush,
Deborah V. Roush to Col. &amp;
So. Ohio Elec. Co., Easement,
Letart
William Edward Bartels,
Diana Louise Bartels to Col.
&amp; So. Ohio Elec. Co.,
Easement, Chester.
Jack B. Lewis, Mary M.
Lewis to Col. &amp; So. Ohio Elec.
Co., Easement. Chester.
Edna Mae Summerfield,
Earl R. Summerfield, Pearl
Summ erfield, Irene S.
Pa rker, Herbert Parker ,
Buel W. Summerfield, Hilda
Summ erfield, Mildred S.
Caldwell , Cec il Caldwell,
Char les
Summerfield ,
Juanita Summerfield to Rex
. T. Summer fi eld, Annie
Summerfield, 11 ,640 sq . ft .,
Chester.
Jan A. Jancosek, Elizabeth
Gravely Jancosek to Roger
Adams, Ri ght of Way, Meigs.
Pearl Brogdon Nixon to
Roger Adams, Right of Way, .
Rutland.
Paul F. Andrews, Mary
Andrews to Roger Adams,
Right of Way, Olive.
Willi am M. Goodw in,
Ma rgaret E. Goodwin to
Bobby Smallwood, Priscilla
Small woo d , P ar ce ls ,
Columbia.

niE DA II.Y SENTINEL
0 F.VO'fED TO TilE
INTERF.STOf'
MEIGS.MASON AREA
ROBERT HOf: FLICH

(..lty f'..di \.Qr
Pubh!hai da tly 4:!XC~ SMturdMy
by Tht Oh&amp;o V~tllt:y PLiblhlhin~
Comp.~~ny - Multimedi.Jt , Inc.,
111

Cwrt St ..
BlL~ir~

Pum~ roy ,

Ohio 45769.
OffiCI:! Phom&gt; 1192- 21 )6.

Edlturl11l Phmltl992-2J~7 .
Stcond cW$1) J)OII\.al(e P41IU 111
F\lnt!ruy, OhJU.
Nt~tiunitl
l!dvertlsinjl{ re prc~Jt:n·
UIUVc 1 I.Mntlvn Assoclites, 31 01
EudtdAv~ , Clnel&amp;nd , Ohio " liS .

S o t~t~~: rtr,tlon rlt lel! : Dellvcrt'(l ll)'
earner w tt'rt' ~tv &lt;liiii i.Jle 7~ cenlti pt: r
wt!t'k . ll)' Molur Ruult' w~re c11rrtcr
M~rVictt not liVItlllble, One mvnlh;

s:1.25.

ny m.~:~il in Ohio 111nd W. Va ..

()1~ Y!.!ar, S ~ .OO ; Sb:
~ 11 . 50 ; Th r~t! mtmlhs ,

month.!! ,
.7 .00 :
El.'lt&gt;whtttt' $26.00 ytJar ; Six munlhl
Sll SO: Thrt!~ mont h¥, S7 ~o .
Sub.lcnph un prit't lm:ludt:¥ Sundlty
1'1mrs.SI!I1tinel

fall elections.
The group said it will wock
tn beat Sens. Jesae Helms, RN.C., and Strom Tlllnnond,
R.S .C.,
who
hiiVe
environmental voting recocds
"among the w&lt;rst in the
Senate," and House members
William Armstrong, R-Colo.;
Garry Brown, R-Mich .;
Samuel Devine , R-Oh!o ;
Willis Gradison, R-Ohio ;
Ge orge Hansen , R-ldaho ;
Thomas Huckaby D-La .;
John Myers, R-Ind.; Ted
Risenhoover, D-Okla.; IUly
Roberts , D-Tex.; and Jamie
Whitten, D-Mlss.
"If Environments! Action
had its way, the American
people would starve and
freeze to death In the dark,"
said Helms, calllna the group
"an ultra-liberal political
pressure group, which
couldn ' t care less about
ID!employment oc Inflation ."
The group plans to raise
$35,000and contribute most of
it to candidates opposing the
"Dirty Dozen."
Environmental Actioo oftlctals claim their actions have
resulted in defeat of 25 of the
41 congressmen named to
their " Dirty Dozen " llJt since
1970.
But Devine, named to the
list four times, has kept hia
seat.

thP.

~t.Agp HnV mMP

WASHINGTON (UPI) - Fewer Americans made
serious errors on their 1977 lncrme tax returns than in
the past, and were rewarded with a record high
average refund - $176.85.
The Internal Revenue Service said Sunday the error
rate on the short form was 4.9 percent this year
COO!pared with 11.8 percent last year - a 58 percent
reducUon.
For the loog form, the err&lt;r rate was 5.7 percent this

year, one-third below the previous year's 8.5 percent.
Both fll'ms were simplified this year, and an IRS
spokesman called the result a "smashing success." He
said virtually all of the 1977 returns have been
)X'ocessed by government computers.
The government ))as paid out $29.1 million in refu~
so far· compared with $27.4 million at this same time
last year, the IRS said.

CLASS OF '48: Joan Molldale was 'on the stump during tbe
weekend in Rose Valley, Pa ., on behalf of Rep. Robert Edlar'a
re-election campaign, but she foWid Ume to reminisce about
the good old days at nearby Nether-Providence High School.
The vice president's wife ran Into Elllabeth Pqe - an old
friend from 30 years back. And how have the years treated the
former Joan Adams? Says she, "I now visit the hairdresser
once a week and before I used to go just once a month."

REPEAT PERFORMANCE-: U it's worth doing once, It's
worth doing twice - and "The Fonz" figures his New York
wedding reception last month was worth a Callfcrnla encore .
So Henry Winkler and bride Stacy posed for pictures at a
second recepUon at the Bel Air home of the new Mrs. Winkler's
grandparents. Tbe reprise was f&lt;r close friends and relatives
who co\Jldn 't make it east for the first show.

.

School issues may overshadow
normal election 'glamour' contests
OOLUMBUS (UP!) - With
less than hall the party
nominations contested for the
statewide
offices
in
Tuesday's primary, the 138
school mooey Issues, many of
them
crucial,
may
overshadow the normal
''glamour" races.
The outcane of additional
operaUnglevies In at least 26
districts , Including
Cleveland, Columbus, Parma
and Barberton , could
determine whether achools
will be able to reopen In the

Republican Rep. Clarence J .
Brown Jr. of Urbana has no
primary or general election
opposition.
-NWlinatlons for all 99
Ohio House seats and 17 of the
33 Ohio Senate seats.
-State Issue 1, a
constitutional amendment to
make it easier to get public
initiatives and referenda oo
the baUot and make them
easier to read
and
understand.
The Republi c an
gubernatorial primary
!aU.
highlights th.e statewide
Secretary of State Ted W. slate. Gov. James A. Rhodes
Brown has esUmated lhat and his running mate,
1,650,000 Ohioans will vote - Cuyahoga
County
a reductic.~ of almost 700,000 Commissioner George V.
from the last gubernatorial Voinovich are defending
)X'imary.
Ohio
House
against
Jilterest in school issues Republican Leader Charles
may belp make up the lack of F. Kurfeas of Bowling Green
a U.S. Senate coolest in Ohio
this year.
Ohioans will have a chanet
to choose party nc:minees for
governor and other statewide
offices, Congress, alate
Legialature and countless
local offices.
The primary will feature
the first tandem voting for
governor and lieutenant By VERNON SCOT!'
governor in the state's
HOLRE Snodgress had it
history , with candidates all at age 23 - an Oscar
running In teams f&lt;r party nomination, a Universal
norninaUons.
Studios contract, a bright
Other statewide races are future - and it wasn ' t
for
the
Republican enough.
nomination fo r attorney
She wa.ved goodbye to
general, treasurer and one Hollywood and went to live oo
Ohio Supreme Court aeat, and a Northern California ranch
f&lt;r the Democratic nOIIlina· with rock and roU singerUoo f&lt;r a second Supreme composer Neil Young.
Court aeat.
Her declaioo startled HolAlllo on the ballot are :
lywood.
Carrie
was
-Contests for party nominated f&lt;r best actress of
nominations f&lt;r 22 of the 1970 for her performance in
state's 23 congresalonal " Diary of a Mad Housewife,"
seata. The lone e~:cepUon Is only her second motion
the 7th District, where picture. The studio was
)reparing bigger and better
movies for her.
It was supposed Carrie was
demonstrating youthful
Idealism and that sbe would
soon tire of life in the country.
But Carrie hWig in there and
stayed away.
She was not, however ,
altogether alienated from
show business. YoWig had
been a member of the rock
groups "BuUalo Springfield"
and ''Crosby, Stills and
Nash".
He
was
a
multimilllonaire who built a
complete studio on his 1,000acre ranch.
Carrie cooked and kept
house - there are four houses
oo Young's property - for
rock musicians and friends.
She thrived oo her new life for
five yeans.
Now 32, the m~er of a Syear.old son, Zeke, and no
looKer living with Young,
Carrie has returned to Holly·
wood to pick up her life is an
actr•.
Her new 'movie, "The
Fury" with Kirk Douglas, ia
in thealera now.
Carrie took a break the
~er day from her role with
Dick Shawn In " Fast
Friendl," a two-hour TV
movie, to relu and have a
sandwich. It was only natural
to ask her why lhe gave up
her career and why she has

Berry's World

and Dr. Lucille G. Ford,
Ashland College economics
professor.
Lt. Gov. Richard F. Celeste
and his running mate ,
Frankl i n C o unty
Commissioner Michael J .
Dorrian, are virtually
assured of the Democratic
nomination for governor and
lieutenant governor . They
have tn ken opposition from
Dale R. Reusch, · a Lodi
autoworker and officer in the
Ku Klux Klan, and Robert
Strittmatter, a Lakemore
printer.
Rhodes, ,11 t 68 the oldest
governor lri the nation, has
campaigned for a fourth term
em his record of trying to
bring' jobs to Ohio. He is
completing his 12th year as
governor.
Both Kurfess and Ce leste

Scott's World

have suggested It 's time for a
change. Kurfess has said
Rhodes has allowed the state
to "bounce from crisis to
crisis" and Celeste has said
he can "talie charge of the
future" in Ohio.
Winning nominations
without opposition and
opposing each other in the fall
will he state Auditor Thomas
E. Ferguson , a Democrat,
and state Sen. Donald E.
Lukens, R-Middletown; and
Secretary of State Brown, a
Republican ,
and
his
Democratic opponent, state
Sen. Anthony J . Celebrezze
Jr., of Cleveland.
Also winning the primary
without opposition but
awaiting the selection of their
fall opponents are state
Attorney General Willlam J .
Brown and state Treasurer
Gertrude W. Donahey. Both
are two-term De mocrats.
Competing
for
the
Republican nomination for

attorney general
are CoWity Court of Appeals and
Cin cinnati Coun cilman Richard M. Markus of
Walter E. Beckjord and Cuyahoga County Court.
Three Democrats are
Franklin County Prosecutor
George C. Smith, the 1974 squaring off for the
nominee whom William nomination against Paul
Brown . They are Judges
Brown defeated.
Battling for the Republican Clifford F. Brown of
nomination for treasurer are N&lt;rwalk, Allred E. Dahling
the 1974 nominee, Richard H. of WilloughbY and Jack G.
Harris of Wauseon; George Day of Shaker Heights.
Only six incumbent
C. Rogers, Whitehall city
attorney ; and state Sen. Sam congressmen are being
challenged in the primary.
Speck of New Concord.
Supreme Court Justices Rep. Charles J . Carney,
William B. Brown , a Youngstown Democrat, faces
Democrat, and Paul W. opposition from three
Brown, a Republican , are prominent opponenta in the
unopposed for renCIIIinatloo 19th District seat he has held
since 1971.
to rWI for six-year terms.
Former congressman
Five · Republicans are
contesting for the right to Wayne L. Hays Is trying to
oppose William Brown . They make a political cll'Deback by
are Don P. Brown of Shaker winning the Democratic
Heighi.'J and Judges Ronald nomination in the 99th Ohio
R. Calhoun of Gallls County House district.
A 9.9 mill, five-year levy is
Court, Joyce J. George of
Akron Mun icipal Court , being sought in Cleveland,
Robert E. Holmes of Franklin the state's largest school
district with 110,000 students,
which has been· on the !rink
of financial collapse Ill' a
year and which borrowed Its
enUre state allocation f&lt;r tbe
rest of 1978 to stay open
tn Santa Barbara for seven through June.
The 90,000-student
months bef&lt;re making the
full
commitment
to Columbus school district, like
Cleveland facing court'·
Hollywood.
"The decision to come bact ll'dered desegregation busing
was no more difficult than the this taU, needs an .. 8.8 mill
decision to leave," Carrie three-year levy to keep Its
said. "I took one step at a buildings open.
Ohio's 13,~ polling places
time, intermediate steps .
open
at 6:30 a.m. Tuesday
That's why I went to Santa
and
close
at 7:30p.m.
Barbara. I'm not an
impetuous woman. I think
thin8s out in advance.
TbeAlmauc
"'llle next step was to go
UDIIH Preaalalernalloul
back to work in the theater.
So I appeared in 'Vanities' in
Today Is Mooday, JWie 5,
Detroit for 11 weeks. I wanted the !58th day of 1978 with 209
Ia do a play first because 1· to follow.
needed the confidence and
The moon Is new.
The morning star Is
that did the trick .
"When 'Tbe Fury' came Mercury.
The evening stars are
along I felt at ease and
confident of myself. I Mars, Venus, Jupiter and
conUnue to feel sure of myself Saturn.
working
before
the

Meigs Legion .team splits twin ·~~-{!~··w

BY GREG BAILEY
Good pitching from both
teams highlighted th e
American Legion twin bill
Sunday ·between visiting
Internat ional L ea gu e
Un iteCI Pr ess Interna ti onal
W . l. Pet . GB

Ric hm ond
. Co lumbu s

34 14 .708

25
12
21
21
23

20 .556 711"1
20 .S2.d 9

Pawtuck et
23 .477 11
T oled o ·
23 .477 11
Tid ewa ter
26 .469 11112
Ro ch ester
20 23 . 465 lllh
Sy ra cuse
14 31 .311 181h
Saturday 's Result s
Syr l!lcu se at T idewa ler , p pd .,
·•r ain
Rochesl er 9, Richmond 8
Char les ton 9. Pawtucket 6
Co lumbus 7, T oledo 6
Sunday' s Results
T id ewater 10, Syr acuse 6, l s t,
7 in nings
T idewater ~ . Syr acuse 3. 2nd .
7 In nings
Rich m ond 3, Rochester 2, 10
inn ings
Cha rl eston 8, Pawtucket 7
Toledo 9, Co l umbus 7
Today 's _ Gt~m es
Rochest er at Tidewa ter
, Syra cuse at Ric hmond
Pawt ucket at Ch arl eston
Tuesday' s Game s
Rochester at Tidewater
Syra c use at Ric hmond
Toledo at Ch arleston
Pawt uc k et a t Co lumbus

TERR E HA UTE, Ind.
" (UP! ) - Billy Cassella won
the featured USAC Sprin t Car
event at the Terre Haute
Action Track SUnda y, beating
Gary Bettenhausen by about
10 cars lengths.
USAC defending sprint car
champion Sheldon Kinser
fiip]ll!d during the first heat
and broke a co liar bone. He
was taken to a Terre Haute
hospital in good condition.

"! needed the creative
process of raising my son,
giving him as much of myself
u possible. There was no
way I could come back to
work .
"1didn't miss acting . I fed
all the musicians who came
tn the ranch. The nearest
grocery store was an hour's
drive. Once there were 22
guys preparing for a tour and
they needed three meals a
day.
"Neil and the rest of them
really gave me an education
in music, sound systems,
orchestration and all the rest .
Remember I was born and
raised in Chicago. I'm a real
Midwest girl and have no ego
thing about being a star . I
was born and raised In
Chicago."
Now that Zeke is
dramatically better and
attending a special school,
Carrie feels It is time to
resume her career.
Her re-entry into movies
and TV was gradual. Two
years ago Carrie moved from
the San Francisco area ranch

cameras."
Carrie ia often asked If she
regrets the lost opportWilties
for important parts in big
pictures and about the
mlllloos of dollars she might
have earned had she not
turned her back oo Hollywood

Wellston and the Meigs
Legion team
Rick Maerker tossed a twohitterfor Wellston in the first
contest to hand Meigs a 5-1
· ·
setback m 1ts season opener.
Tbe~, in the second game,
Mei gs_Tim Ebersbach threw
a no-hitter as Meigs selvaged
t
a spht, 4·1.
In the opener, We~l~on f~
all the runs they nee e m e

Major League Stilndings
By United Press International
National League
East
W. L· Pet. GB
27 20 57&lt;
Chicago
25 21 .543 11/:z
Phi l a
26 24 .520 2 1/~
Montrea l
New Yor k
24 29 .453 6
22 27 .449 6
Pi llsbr gh
20 33 .377 10
St . Louis

we st

w. L . Pet . GB
San Fran
32 17 .653
Cincinati
32 20 .615 1'1-.
Los Ang
27 23 .540 51h
San Diego
23 27 .460 91f-.
Houston
22 17 .449 10
Atla nta
16 30 .375 1 3 1 1~
Saturday 's Results
Hous ton 5, St . Louis 2, 1st
St. Louis 2, Ho uston I, 2n d
Ph i ladelphi a 5, Los Ang 1
Chic ago 8, At l an ta 6
Mon treal 5, San Fr an cisc o 3
New York 3, San Diego 2
Cinci nnati 4, Pittsburgh J
Sunday's Results
Philadel ph ia 9, Los Ang 4
San Diego s, New York 2
PittSburgh 4, Ci nci nnati I
Ch icago 6, At l an ta 4
San Fr an 3, M tl 2, 10 inns.
St. Louis A , Houston 7
Toda y's Pr obabl e Pitch er s
(All Times EDT)
Houston (Lemongello 5·5) at
Chicago (Lamp 1 5 ), 2:30p .m .
Sa n Fran ci sco (Bl ue 6-3) at
Phila delphia (Carlton 5-SJ , 7:35

p .m .

Cin ci nnati (Hume 1-S) at St.
Lou is (For sch 7-Jl. 8:35p.m.
Tues.da y' s Games
Houston at Chicago
Cincl at St . Louis, night
Atlanta at Pi ll sbgh , nigh t
San Fran at Ph iladelph ia,
n i gh!

l os Angeles at New Yo r k..
n ight
San Diego at Mon tr eal , nigh I

The Department

Amer i can L eagu e
Ea st
W. L. Pet . GB
36 17 .679
Boston
30 20 .600 4 1 1
New York
28 22 .560 61''
Detroit
27 25 .519 81)
Balt lmre
25 25 .500 9 1 1~
M il wauke
2J 26 ..469 11
Clevelnd
19 J2 .373 16
Toronto
W es t
W. L. Pet . GB
Oaltland
29 21 .580
Ka n City
27 21 .563 1
Cali f
26 23 .531 21 )
TeKaS
2S 2.4 .51Q. 31t 2
M inesota
21 30 .411 8 112
Ch ica go
19 29 .396 9
Seatt le
17 37 .315 14
Saturda y's Res ult s
Minnesota 9, Detroit '1
Cle¥eiand ~ . Milwaukee 4
Oak l and 5. New Yor k 1
Tor onto 4, TeK as 3, nigh t
Chicago 9, Ka nsas Ci t y 5
Bos ton 5, Cl'lli for nia .tl
Baltimore 2, ScatHe I
Sunday 's Results
Milw 12, Cleveland 7, 1st
M1tw 9, Cl eveland 4, 2nd
Detroit 6, Minnesota 4
Texas 9, Toronto 5
Kan City 13, Chicago 2
camorn ia 4, Bos ton 2
Oa ld em d 6, New York 4
Balt imore " · seatt le 1
Today 's Probable Pitcher s
( All Ti m es EDTI
Boston {Lee 7-21 at Oakland
(Wirth J.J), 4:30p.m .
Chicago (Sl one 4 3 ) at Clev e
land (Wa its 3-5 ), 7:30p .m .
Bal timore ( Br iles ) ... ) at
T e ~&lt;as ( Jenkins 53) , 8 : 30p.m .
New York (Tidr ow J .4 ) I'll
Se att le (Abbolf 1·4) , 10 : 35 .

Tu esday 's Games

Chicago Ill Clevelan d. nigh t
Detroi t at M i lwaukee , n ight
Kansas City at Texas , n ight
Baltimore at Calif, n ight
Boston at Oakland, night
New York a t Sea ttl e. night

Since 1915

WANT A REAL
LSTATE LICENSE?

Gallipolis llusoness Collll!ll
Is

oHerlng the acc'redltld

proaram

you ' re

of class

work

required

to

complete for taking the
Ohio State Examlnatlo~
complete in only 12

for seven 'years.
"Not really," she said,
smiling again. "I woo't be
playing
20-year-olds
anymore. I'll be playing
WWlen. And I think aU the
good parts are ahead of me."

w eek s. Cla ss begin s Jun e
12. For more lniormlt1on
contact LH E. Tyler, 444·
4367.

No . IHl-04728

Different breed of runaway
DES MOINES, Iowa (UP! )
- There's a different breed of
runaway em the road today.
''The majority olltlds today
are not fWIDing f&lt;r ltlcks and
they are not running to
travel. The majority are
running to get away from
)X'oblems at home and !rom
things tbey cannot handle,"
according to Art Fine,
director of the Iowa Runaway
Service.
In Polk CoWity, the Des
Moines area, the number of
runaways Ia seven Urnes the
national average. The
average f&lt;r runaways Ia 86
per 100,000 population,
statistics show. This lhould
put Polk County's total near
200, but there were 1,43'1 in

the last reporting period.
And Fine admlta there
could be many m&lt;re because
ooly one in eight actuaUy II
reported. "This figure II just
the Up of the Iceberg," he
lllld.
Fine said farnlly&lt;enlered
problems often keep the
runaway closer to home
nowadays, with many youlha
conflnlns their running to
their neighborhoods.
"They jull need to leave
and sometimes, just a llhort
distance will do it. They don't
need to fWI u far anymore,"
he said.
M~re g~am&lt;roua locatioos
lib Callfcrnla and New Y&lt;rk
are getting fewer nmaway1.
fine 11ld the dlvurce rale

could provide a clue to the
growing number of children
leaving ·home.
Polk County haa an abnormally l!igh divorce rale of
two to three timea the
national average. ''11111 could
give 111 Idea that there are
problema with the famllylhat
tralllfer over to the kids," he
lllld.
"All fll' u we can lell, few
II the runaways we are
worklns wlth turn to
proatltutlon In the bigger
CUIUIIUllltiel," he said. "But,
lhll II a touch queltlon
because t11ere •e ao many
ihat are not repor1ed. They
may be tha'e and they may
be leavlna 0. Moilltl f&lt;r It,
but we elm' know." 1

O ur st11ff of de11tistlii and

technicians will make your
~1om demure:.-; quir kl)' and

economicall y

denture service,
panials &amp; relines.

from

and sco red on ~ double by that Sixth mnmg.
.
Dan Edwards. M1ke Way land
Me1gs got two runs m the
g?t the?nly other Meigs hit', a first. inning of the s:cond
smgle m the s1xth. Maerke.r game t o help Ebersbach get
aUowed only one runner until the wm m h1 s ~o-hitter ..
A walk to Brtan Hamilton
an error and a two-run sing!;
•· .,, --.,-'-···r-- 4 •.,..~-·'·"
by Gallia Academy's Art
·-······
Fogelstrom furnished all the
runs Ebersbach needed for
the 4-1 win.
The hard-throwing right·
band er fanned eight an d
walked four, two of those free
passes coming in the second
frame for Wellston's only

and a throw home went out of the fifth on three walks and a
play to score both runners. A single.
single later scored another
Meigs got its only tally in
run . Wellston padded the!r the last inning when Kenny
lead with two more runs m Young reached on an error

Anywhert In O hio

SOUTIIERN RESERVES - Reserve players on the
1978 edition of the Southern baseball team are, fro111left,

By IRA KAUFMAN
UP! Sports Writer
Jim Kaat , 39, scattered
seven hits SUnday afternoon
to record his 255th career
victory - tops among all
active major league pitchers
- wh en he helped the
Philadelphia Phillies to a 9-4
victory over the Los Angeles
Dodgers.
"I'm a little laster than last
year," Kaat said. "I worked
this winter on weights and
flexibility. I also made some
adjustments in my pitching;
every year is different."
Kaat's victory completed a
three-game swee p over the
Dodgers and left Los Angeles
!i'h ga mes behind San
Francisco in the National
League West.
The Phils used a five-run
second inning to rout the
Dodger s' ace left-bander,
Tomm y
John,
and
Phi ladelphia outfielders

The Jli'Jierc Center
9o49 E. L ivlnast on A ve. Columbus

~

1

...

I.

recorded 14 outfield pu touts
- including 10 by center
fi elder Garry Maddox , just
two short of th.e NL record .
Jose Cardenal started the
second-inning rally with a
double and after a walk to
Richie Hebner, Boone singled
in a . run. Jim Morrison's
single tied the game 2-2 and
after a walk to Jerry Martin,
Maddox stroked an RBI
single. Greg Luzinski 's two·
run single capped the assault.
In other National Leag ue
ga mes, San Diego beat New
York, 5-2, Pittsburgh topped
Cincin nati, 4-1, Chicago
ripped Atlanta, 6-1, Sa n
Francisco edged Montreal, 32, in 10 innings, and St. Louis
defeated Housym, 4-2.
Padres 5, Mets 2:
Derrel Thomas' tw~un
single and Bill Almon's two·
run double were the big blows
in a four-run sixth inning that
carried Gaylord Perry; , 4-2,

and the Padres over the Mets.
Cubs 6, Braves I:
Heity Crll2 , with a .203
aver age, slamm ed two
doubles and a single, batting
in two runs, to spark the Cubs
to th eir eighth straight home
victory. Rick Reuschel won
his sixth game in 10 dec isions.
Giants 3, Espos 2:
Vic Harris opened the top of
th e loth inn ing with his first
homer of the year to in crease
the Giants' lead in the NL
West to I 'h games over
Cincinnati.
Curdloals 4, Astros 2:
Silvio Martinez allowed
seven hi ts in 6 2-3 innings but
picked up his second victory
without a loss when the
Ca rdinals scored three fifthinning runs against the errorplagued Astros.

RIV ER DOWNS
CINC1NN ATI (UP[)
Com]ll!titive beat Bold Sailing
by I'h lengths Sunday to win
the featured $9,000 . Dr .
Hi tesman Me morial
Handicap at River Downs.
Homer Htldalgo guid ed
Com]ll!titive over the 7'''
fur longs on the turf in I :31 25, goo d for payoffs of $19.40,
$4.80 and $3.40. Bold Creme
came in third.
A3-1 daily double combination of Hill Whacker and
Glimpse of Mickey returned
$3Ul.
Worth y Way, Assassinator
and Charlie A. Cee combined
for a 10-1-5 trifecta lh at paid
$576.10 on a winning $3 ticket.
The 7,574 fans bet
$826,043.

On this day in history :
In 1917, more th an 9.5
million Americans between
the ages of 21 and 31
registered for the World War
I draft.

Pioneers battle for
national title today
MARIETTA, Ohio (UPI )Marietta will meet Glassboro
State at I p.m. today to decide
the NCAA Division III
Baseball World Series
championship.
In their first match SUndB y,
Marietta, 3M, nudged the 21111 New Jersey tea m 11·10. In
another SUnday game, the
Pioneers beat Ithaca College
&amp;-1 to eliminate that school
from the double-elimination
lournament.
The Pioneers scored six
runs in the first two inning of
their game against Ithaca,
five of them in the second
frame.
Seni or righthander Ron
Szafraniec, 7-'J on the season,
wen t the dista nce for
Mar ietta , scattering five hits
and striking out four.

Major Le1gut Lead ers
BY united Press Inte rnational
Bat1ing
(Based on 125 at batsJ
Nationa l Leag ue
G. AI· H. Pet .
Sim mons St .L
52 18~ 61 .339
Burrog hs Al l
18 155 51 .329
Monday LA
40 128 42 .328
Maddox Ph il
"S 166 54 .32.5
Gri ff ey Cln
52 210 68 .324
Buc kner Chi
JS 133 43 .323
Foster Cln
52 210 67 .319
Smit h LA
48 182 58 .319
Clark SF
19 189 60 .317
Puhl Hou
~ 7 192 60 .313
Am er lun Lugu e
G. AB· H. Pet .
Carew Mln
49 186 69 .371
Sund berg Tex
46 160 55 .3""
Rey no lds Se5
49 168 56 .333
Rice Bos
53 221 73 .330
Plnlello NY
3S 139 45 .324
Cooper M il
48 18A 59 .321
SinQieton Ba t
43 139 . .. . 317
Chambll$ NY
SO 193 61 .316
Cubb&amp;ge M in
42 136 43 . 316
Brett KC
33 127 40 .J15
Home Runs
Nltlontl League : Foster , Cln
and Monday , L A 11 ; Ki ngm an ,
10 ;
Chi and
Ben c:h, Cln
L uzinsk l, Phil 9 .
Amer ican Lteiue : Rice, BO!.
18 ; Baylor, Ca l 1" ; Tnompson,
Del . 13 ; Ma y , Batt a nd E'J &amp;ns,
Bas 11.
Runs letttd In
Nltlontl LtiiUt l Foster , Cln
.til ; Sm ith, LA 37: M organ , Cin,
M on ta nez, NY and McCO'Je y,
SF 34.
Amer lctn Ltlgut: R:ice, 8os
lO ; Zls k, Tex 371 May Bolt 36;
Star ·,, Oet and Cham llss. NV
35
Stolen IIIII
N•tionll Le agut : . Moreno.
Pitt
Ceden o, Hou 19 ;
M BddO)(, PH il 17; Taver a5, Pitt
U ; Royster , Afl 13,
Ameri cln League : . Wilson,
I&lt;C 20 ; Le Flore, Del IB: Oil onel
Oak · a nd cr u z, Sea 17; Wills,
TeK 15.
'

7"'

•Dr. 1\.J. Sooehli•Dr. C.W. Deal•llr. G.J . Soombaullh
•Dr. W.O. Kimbaii• Dr. J.C. Murphy •Dr. l. Ochman

Chuck Michael, Terry NcNickle, Bryan Wolfe, Dale
Teaford, Paul Cardone and B&lt;b Lee.

Phils. sweep Dodgers

6

Dr. Ronald ERiviere

Fo elstrom reached on an
g
d 1 ded
third
, :~~~~ aan fi:l~er's 0~hoice .
·Youn then squee~ed him
h gf th f' . 1
orne or e ma run.
Jeff Montgomery took the
loss as he hurled a fine twohitter at Meigs. Becker and
Fogelstrom got the only two
hits, both singles, as Mont•
gomery struck out' six and
walked five.
.
Meigs travels to Ashland,
Kentucky next Sunday for a
twinbiil.
First Game
Wellston
030 020 1)....5 7 2
Meigs
000 000 1- 1 2 4
Maerker.and ·settles.
Owens (LP), Triplett (6)
and Hamilton, D. Kennedy

In tha t second inning ,
Norman walked , stole
second, and went to third on a
sacrifice. After another walk ,
a double ste al got the run
(6).
home.
Second Game
In the third inning, Meigs
W
ellston
010 000 0-1 0 4
gave Ebersba ch some
Meigs
202
000 x-4 2 I
breathing room with two
Montgomery
and
Settles.
more run s. Greg Becker
Ebersbach
and
R.
Johnson.
singled, stole second, and

BASEBALL

Mon treal (May S-5l, 7: 35p.m .
Atlanta ( Ruthven 2-Sl at
Pi ttsburgh
(C an~elar i a
5 6),
7 : 35p .m .
Los Angeles (RhOden s Jl at
New York ( Br uhert 1. 4), 8:05

POMEROY
CEMENT
BLOCK CO.

second inning by platmg
three runs on two hits.
Norman singled and
S]ll!araw walked. A ground·
out advanced both runners,

run .

p.m .
San Diego (Rasmussen 2 6) a !

Prodigal Snodgrass returns
returned .
" I never wanted to be a
movie star," she said, from
her forehead . "So the
decision to leave Hollywood
was easy foc me.
"I worked hard to support
myself and put myself
through college. I came to
Hollywood and got my first
'IV show in three months.
Within four months I was
signed at UniversaL I wocked
very hard in TV and in two
movies.
"But I wanted to be free
and to get good roles at other
studios. Not only that, I fell in
love for the first time in my
life. Neil and I needed one
another at that time.
"He wanted me In live with
him on the ranch. That
sounded better to me than
what I was doing. So I left."
In 1973 Warner Bros. gave
Young '500,000 to make
"Journey Through the Past."
Carrie worked in a variety of
jobs, helping where she
could.
She appeared as an actresa
in only one scene. It Involved
pot smoking .
"I asked Universal if they
would give me a release to
appear in the scene," she
recaUed, grinning. ''The Uni·
versa!
Image
wasn 't.
compaUble with pot-snaking.
They not only gave. me the
release, they released me
from my cootract.
" After that I might bave
worked in Hollywood now and
then, but I'd given birth to
Zeke, who has cerebral palsy.
I decided to forget everything
to concentrate on spending
my time and energies with
my son.
"There Is nothing in tbe
world to replace a mother's
love and attentloo for a child
in that condition. And my
dedlcatloo pald off. If he
walked into this dressing
room right now, you'd never
know he had cerebral palsy.
He'sal/ boy.

.:;

'

Ch arlesto n

t1

MISSING MULEPOWER : Fnmkle LalDe, of "Mule Train"
fame, b&amp;sn't been taking hls vitamins- and it caught up with
him last week in Evansville, Ind. Hospitallzed after
complaining of dizziness during a show, he was released in
time to finish his stand Saturday evening, before moving oo to
Denver and Chicago. Doctors say the big belter, who's in his
60s now, is in good enough shape- just short on vitamin B-12,
JI'Ohably as the result of a hard-driving 8-week tour m
England.

Fewer errors made on '77 returns

Ebersbach hurls no-hitter

He was touched in the fifth
inning, though, when Ithaca ,
bowing out of the tournament
with a 21-10 record, erupted
for four runs and four hits.
Marietta was sparked in its
second game by junior
second baseman Jim Burton
whose grand slam started a
seven-run uprising in the
sixth inning.
Burton had previously tr ippied twice and set a ne w
world series game record

with five RBI's.
Glassboro, now 211-11, nar·
rowed Marietta 's 11-J lead
with two runs in the bottom of
the sixth . The l&gt;lew Jersey
team then bunched five runs
with six hits and the aid of
two walks in the eighth.
Marietta pitcher Steve
Kovar got credit fll' th e win
with Dave Barton earning the
save. Kovar is S.lJ on the year.
The championship game
wil l be played at 1 p.m.

Reds, Braves, Cubs
all gain victories
By Greg Bailey
In a rain-shortened game,
the New Haven Reds downed
the host Pomeroy Pirates S.lJ
as K. Barker fanned ten and
walked seven for the win. R.
Plants socked a triple, and R.
Edwards and Barker got a
double and single each.
Nick Riggs took th e loss,
fanning seven and walking
just two. J. Fields and R.
Oliver got th e only two
Pomeroy hits, both singles.
Reds
401 10--6
Pirates
000 ll0-1J
The host New Haven Cubs
trounced the visiting
Pomeroy Tigers ll -0 as
Bradley tossed a two-hitter.
Pethel socked a homer and
double and Dawson got a
homer and single to lead the
win. Bradley strouck out
thirteen and walked four.

Ithaca
000 040 000-4 :; 2
Marietta laO 000 OOx-li 5 o
Russo and Sull ivan ;
Szafraniec and Hollinger . LSzafraniec (7-'J ). L- Russo
13-2). HR's- None.

Coshocton wins
Class AA crown
COLUMBUS IUP! i
Cincinnati Elder , Coshocton
and Hi cksv ille won cl ass
titles this weekend in the
state high school baseball
tournament at Ohio State
University.
F.ldcr captured its ninth
Cla ss AAA cham pio nship
since 1943 with a !i-3 win over
Euclid
Coshoct on look advantage
of six Cleveland Benedictine
errors acco unting for seven
unearned runs to post a 9-li
win in the Class AA finals,
whi le ll;cksville erupted for
nine runs in the top of the
eighth in rushing to an 11·2
win over Middletown Fen·
wick· for the Class A cro wn .
Tiw Coshocton Redskins, in
wtnnin g their fi rst state
baseball title, scored three
times in the first inning and
never trailed, alth ough
Benedictine battled from
behind on two 0 ccasions
during the three-hour 40minute game.
The three-run eighth · in·
ning rally , which broke a 6~
tie. came wi th a minimum of
hitting. A walk, a bunt on
which the third baseman fell
down and a sacrifice put
runn ers on second and third.
Tom Scholl singled in one
run. Mark Schlarb's secrifice
fl y scored another and the
final ta Uy came in when
losin g pitcher Joe Buerger
balked .
Benedictine, which finished
as runnerup in the state

Marietta

003 017 000- 11 17 1
Glassboro
149 S. Third St,
200 012 050--10 12 2 Middleport, 0.
Elston, Kovar (I), Stifner ., __ _ _ _11111
(8),
Barton ( 8) and
·"Ste me for car, holle,
Holl inge r ; Charlesworth ,
Adams (3), Aldino !61, izzi life, health aad bu.~iacss
(6), McArow (9) and llolde n.
i~:
• " 'I " . ..
W- Kova r (6-0 ). L
Charlesworth (3-J ). HR 'ss1, i, f\11•...,... c."""'"
Marietta , Burton (in lh e sixth '"' ~ ' ~ · ·. ltel'!l
DlhC. ~ Ill. . .
with three on.)

"2·71·

.

Tim Gilkey and Jac k
Welker got the two Tiger hits,
both singles. Ron Denny was
the loser, fann ing six and
walking seven.
Pomeroy
000 00- 0 2 I
NewHaven 3.'i0 03-11 8 2

tournament for the thi rd
time , outhit Coshocton 11 to 9.
Coshocton fin ished its
season with a 23-5 record.
Benedictin wound up with a
23-3 mark.
Linescore:
Coshocton
300 020 13-9 9 I
Benedictine
110 021 lH 11 6
Mark Schlarb, Glen Head
(6) and Dean Bratz; Pete
Germano, Joe Buerger (!i)
and John Szuch. WP - Head.
l.P - Buerger.
Prevention is
the best policy .. .

FOR YOUNG
DRIVERS
You ng men and women
ten ask why they have to
more
fOr
the ir
b •lfolmolbiile insuranCe .
I D'rlvers in their teens a nd
twenties cause fa r
than the ir share of
f ie accident s. Repor ts

Na tional Safety
ne il: 2.B percent of all
l nlol&lt;&gt;rists a r e 24 yea r s o1
or under , yet these
opera t ors a r e
i n volved as drivers in 38.6
per cent of a l l accid ents
and 37 .3 per cent of all fa ta l
mishaps .

youthful

A great

many young people

are sk ill ed , responsi b le
drivers . Obviously , though ,
quite a few are not .
There' s no subst itute

development com nPton•:el
and lhe right
including a posi t i~e ap.
p roac h
to
def ens i ve
drivi ng .
Our
agency
provi d es
finan ci al protection a nd
serv i ce in case of ae&lt;:id&lt;mh•l
in ... alving young drivers

bu l many ol these
preveonted.l
Tha i's why we

cidents can be
pre v ent ion

is the

policy.

DALE C. WARNER
992-2143
W . Main

.J

The Middleport Braves fell
from a 7-2 1ead to an 8-7loss to
the host Rutland Dodgers
over the week end . Bll!y
Harmon was the winner and
Shawn Eads led the hitters
with a triple and single.
Harmon had two singles.
David Barr had the big blow
in the bottom of the sixth
when the winners scored four
times.
Chris Burdette took the loss
Bnd was the leading Brave
hitter with two singles.
Middleport
000 !i20 !f--7 7 3
101 104 1-8 8 7
Rutland

bing

Don't st

you can't stop.

11

..........................A.P.uh•li•'•
~•"•lc·•·of•T•h•is·N·•w•••P'•~•t•&amp;·T·~--A.d•v'•"•isi.ni·Co
--u·n·ctl•A

...

.,

�3- Tbe DailrSentinel, Middl~port-Potneroy, 0 ., Monday, JW1e 5, 1978
2- The Daily Sentlnel, Middl~port·Pomeroy, 0., Monday, JWie 5, 1978

jr5 A f/\NTA?liC SC!!:Niif\C
~KTttRPUott Wt:VE

$64million

peopletalk

P~C\'e~D fu\1ElHIN6
lfl.bJ Dot:~T

•

zn grants
for colleges

By KENNETH R. CLARK
UDited PrettlllterlladOIIIIl
-·
. HECKLER 10KES JIACKLES: Kel,lb Camdiu stalked off
· the stage Sunday night In Sydney, Australla, after a hec][ler In
the audience accused him of "eg()-(rlpping." Carradlne - In
Australia fll' a film festival screening of his new movie,
"Welcome to LA" - was discu~ his career with the
audience when he was interrupted with, "Listen, while you're
ego-tripping we want to see a movie." The heckler was booed
bY the rest oi the audience, but Carradlne wouldn't come back.
Says he, "I just got the impression my presence wasn't wanted

CAUX CANCe:R ((

/ '

.

00

WASHINGTON (UPI )- The government said today it Is
giving $&amp;1 million in matching college scholarship fWid.s to the
states to help 255,000studentsattend school next year.
The money will be provided to all SO states and territories on
a matching basis, meaning at leut $128 million In federal and
state money will be available to students under the program in
September.
Actually, the $&amp;1 million is a drop in the bucket of federal
gilts fll' undergraduate college students. During the current
year, the government Is providing some $2.5 billlon in direct
and supplemental student grants.
"But this matching grant program is important," said an
Office of . EducaUon spokeswoman. "It gives the states
incentive to keep their own scholarship programs going."
The funds already have been sent to the SO sUites, Puerto
Rico, Guam and other lrust territories.
California will get the biggest chWik with $10.2 million. New
York will get $6.2million, as the money is divided up according
to current college enrollment.
Other states getting at least $1 milllon each are : Florida,
Georgia, Illinois, Indiana , Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, New Jersey, North Carolina,
Ohio, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, Washington
and Wiscoosin.
"With dollar-for-dollar matchin8 from state student
incentive grant resources, .. the announcement said, "fWids
will provide scholarships averaging ~ to an estimated
255,000 undergraduate students who need financial
assistance."
Under the matching funds program, the maximum that may
be awarded a student for a year of full-time study Is $1,500.
Each state program is managed bY a single agency, which
sets up eligibility requirements for students and schools.
Under the program, each state will decide through the coming
school year which schools may take part In !he program.
But beginning with the 1979-80 school year, the federal rules
have been changed to automatically Include all noo-proflt
higher education institutions.
During the current school year, the government has given
$2.1 billion to students under the Basic Educational Opportunity Grants Program and another 1270 milllon in supplemental educational opportunity grants.
The government also sponsors two major loan programs for
undergraduate coUege students. This year, It ia providing
about $325 milllon in direct student loans and guaranteeing
some $1.3billion in private loans tn college students.

12 lawmakers on
new 'Dirty Dozen' list
WASHINGTON (UPI) Tw o senators and 10
congressmen are on the new
" Dirty Dozen" list
politicians Environmental
Action hopes to defeat in the

Meigs
Property
Transfers
Gregory L. Bailey, Jo L.
Bailey to Col. &amp; So. Ohio Elec.
Co., Easement, Olive. ·
Marshall R.
Roush,
Deborah V. Roush to Col. &amp;
So. Ohio Elec. Co., Easement,
Letart
William Edward Bartels,
Diana Louise Bartels to Col.
&amp; So. Ohio Elec. Co.,
Easement, Chester.
Jack B. Lewis, Mary M.
Lewis to Col. &amp; So. Ohio Elec.
Co., Easement. Chester.
Edna Mae Summerfield,
Earl R. Summerfield, Pearl
Summ erfield, Irene S.
Pa rker, Herbert Parker ,
Buel W. Summerfield, Hilda
Summ erfield, Mildred S.
Caldwell , Cec il Caldwell,
Char les
Summerfield ,
Juanita Summerfield to Rex
. T. Summer fi eld, Annie
Summerfield, 11 ,640 sq . ft .,
Chester.
Jan A. Jancosek, Elizabeth
Gravely Jancosek to Roger
Adams, Ri ght of Way, Meigs.
Pearl Brogdon Nixon to
Roger Adams, Right of Way, .
Rutland.
Paul F. Andrews, Mary
Andrews to Roger Adams,
Right of Way, Olive.
Willi am M. Goodw in,
Ma rgaret E. Goodwin to
Bobby Smallwood, Priscilla
Small woo d , P ar ce ls ,
Columbia.

niE DA II.Y SENTINEL
0 F.VO'fED TO TilE
INTERF.STOf'
MEIGS.MASON AREA
ROBERT HOf: FLICH

(..lty f'..di \.Qr
Pubh!hai da tly 4:!XC~ SMturdMy
by Tht Oh&amp;o V~tllt:y PLiblhlhin~
Comp.~~ny - Multimedi.Jt , Inc.,
111

Cwrt St ..
BlL~ir~

Pum~ roy ,

Ohio 45769.
OffiCI:! Phom&gt; 1192- 21 )6.

Edlturl11l Phmltl992-2J~7 .
Stcond cW$1) J)OII\.al(e P41IU 111
F\lnt!ruy, OhJU.
Nt~tiunitl
l!dvertlsinjl{ re prc~Jt:n·
UIUVc 1 I.Mntlvn Assoclites, 31 01
EudtdAv~ , Clnel&amp;nd , Ohio " liS .

S o t~t~~: rtr,tlon rlt lel! : Dellvcrt'(l ll)'
earner w tt'rt' ~tv &lt;liiii i.Jle 7~ cenlti pt: r
wt!t'k . ll)' Molur Ruult' w~re c11rrtcr
M~rVictt not liVItlllble, One mvnlh;

s:1.25.

ny m.~:~il in Ohio 111nd W. Va ..

()1~ Y!.!ar, S ~ .OO ; Sb:
~ 11 . 50 ; Th r~t! mtmlhs ,

month.!! ,
.7 .00 :
El.'lt&gt;whtttt' $26.00 ytJar ; Six munlhl
Sll SO: Thrt!~ mont h¥, S7 ~o .
Sub.lcnph un prit't lm:ludt:¥ Sundlty
1'1mrs.SI!I1tinel

fall elections.
The group said it will wock
tn beat Sens. Jesae Helms, RN.C., and Strom Tlllnnond,
R.S .C.,
who
hiiVe
environmental voting recocds
"among the w&lt;rst in the
Senate," and House members
William Armstrong, R-Colo.;
Garry Brown, R-Mich .;
Samuel Devine , R-Oh!o ;
Willis Gradison, R-Ohio ;
Ge orge Hansen , R-ldaho ;
Thomas Huckaby D-La .;
John Myers, R-Ind.; Ted
Risenhoover, D-Okla.; IUly
Roberts , D-Tex.; and Jamie
Whitten, D-Mlss.
"If Environments! Action
had its way, the American
people would starve and
freeze to death In the dark,"
said Helms, calllna the group
"an ultra-liberal political
pressure group, which
couldn ' t care less about
ID!employment oc Inflation ."
The group plans to raise
$35,000and contribute most of
it to candidates opposing the
"Dirty Dozen."
Environmental Actioo oftlctals claim their actions have
resulted in defeat of 25 of the
41 congressmen named to
their " Dirty Dozen " llJt since
1970.
But Devine, named to the
list four times, has kept hia
seat.

thP.

~t.Agp HnV mMP

WASHINGTON (UPI) - Fewer Americans made
serious errors on their 1977 lncrme tax returns than in
the past, and were rewarded with a record high
average refund - $176.85.
The Internal Revenue Service said Sunday the error
rate on the short form was 4.9 percent this year
COO!pared with 11.8 percent last year - a 58 percent
reducUon.
For the loog form, the err&lt;r rate was 5.7 percent this

year, one-third below the previous year's 8.5 percent.
Both fll'ms were simplified this year, and an IRS
spokesman called the result a "smashing success." He
said virtually all of the 1977 returns have been
)X'ocessed by government computers.
The government ))as paid out $29.1 million in refu~
so far· compared with $27.4 million at this same time
last year, the IRS said.

CLASS OF '48: Joan Molldale was 'on the stump during tbe
weekend in Rose Valley, Pa ., on behalf of Rep. Robert Edlar'a
re-election campaign, but she foWid Ume to reminisce about
the good old days at nearby Nether-Providence High School.
The vice president's wife ran Into Elllabeth Pqe - an old
friend from 30 years back. And how have the years treated the
former Joan Adams? Says she, "I now visit the hairdresser
once a week and before I used to go just once a month."

REPEAT PERFORMANCE-: U it's worth doing once, It's
worth doing twice - and "The Fonz" figures his New York
wedding reception last month was worth a Callfcrnla encore .
So Henry Winkler and bride Stacy posed for pictures at a
second recepUon at the Bel Air home of the new Mrs. Winkler's
grandparents. Tbe reprise was f&lt;r close friends and relatives
who co\Jldn 't make it east for the first show.

.

School issues may overshadow
normal election 'glamour' contests
OOLUMBUS (UP!) - With
less than hall the party
nominations contested for the
statewide
offices
in
Tuesday's primary, the 138
school mooey Issues, many of
them
crucial,
may
overshadow the normal
''glamour" races.
The outcane of additional
operaUnglevies In at least 26
districts , Including
Cleveland, Columbus, Parma
and Barberton , could
determine whether achools
will be able to reopen In the

Republican Rep. Clarence J .
Brown Jr. of Urbana has no
primary or general election
opposition.
-NWlinatlons for all 99
Ohio House seats and 17 of the
33 Ohio Senate seats.
-State Issue 1, a
constitutional amendment to
make it easier to get public
initiatives and referenda oo
the baUot and make them
easier to read
and
understand.
The Republi c an
gubernatorial primary
!aU.
highlights th.e statewide
Secretary of State Ted W. slate. Gov. James A. Rhodes
Brown has esUmated lhat and his running mate,
1,650,000 Ohioans will vote - Cuyahoga
County
a reductic.~ of almost 700,000 Commissioner George V.
from the last gubernatorial Voinovich are defending
)X'imary.
Ohio
House
against
Jilterest in school issues Republican Leader Charles
may belp make up the lack of F. Kurfeas of Bowling Green
a U.S. Senate coolest in Ohio
this year.
Ohioans will have a chanet
to choose party nc:minees for
governor and other statewide
offices, Congress, alate
Legialature and countless
local offices.
The primary will feature
the first tandem voting for
governor and lieutenant By VERNON SCOT!'
governor in the state's
HOLRE Snodgress had it
history , with candidates all at age 23 - an Oscar
running In teams f&lt;r party nomination, a Universal
norninaUons.
Studios contract, a bright
Other statewide races are future - and it wasn ' t
for
the
Republican enough.
nomination fo r attorney
She wa.ved goodbye to
general, treasurer and one Hollywood and went to live oo
Ohio Supreme Court aeat, and a Northern California ranch
f&lt;r the Democratic nOIIlina· with rock and roU singerUoo f&lt;r a second Supreme composer Neil Young.
Court aeat.
Her declaioo startled HolAlllo on the ballot are :
lywood.
Carrie
was
-Contests for party nominated f&lt;r best actress of
nominations f&lt;r 22 of the 1970 for her performance in
state's 23 congresalonal " Diary of a Mad Housewife,"
seata. The lone e~:cepUon Is only her second motion
the 7th District, where picture. The studio was
)reparing bigger and better
movies for her.
It was supposed Carrie was
demonstrating youthful
Idealism and that sbe would
soon tire of life in the country.
But Carrie hWig in there and
stayed away.
She was not, however ,
altogether alienated from
show business. YoWig had
been a member of the rock
groups "BuUalo Springfield"
and ''Crosby, Stills and
Nash".
He
was
a
multimilllonaire who built a
complete studio on his 1,000acre ranch.
Carrie cooked and kept
house - there are four houses
oo Young's property - for
rock musicians and friends.
She thrived oo her new life for
five yeans.
Now 32, the m~er of a Syear.old son, Zeke, and no
looKer living with Young,
Carrie has returned to Holly·
wood to pick up her life is an
actr•.
Her new 'movie, "The
Fury" with Kirk Douglas, ia
in thealera now.
Carrie took a break the
~er day from her role with
Dick Shawn In " Fast
Friendl," a two-hour TV
movie, to relu and have a
sandwich. It was only natural
to ask her why lhe gave up
her career and why she has

Berry's World

and Dr. Lucille G. Ford,
Ashland College economics
professor.
Lt. Gov. Richard F. Celeste
and his running mate ,
Frankl i n C o unty
Commissioner Michael J .
Dorrian, are virtually
assured of the Democratic
nomination for governor and
lieutenant governor . They
have tn ken opposition from
Dale R. Reusch, · a Lodi
autoworker and officer in the
Ku Klux Klan, and Robert
Strittmatter, a Lakemore
printer.
Rhodes, ,11 t 68 the oldest
governor lri the nation, has
campaigned for a fourth term
em his record of trying to
bring' jobs to Ohio. He is
completing his 12th year as
governor.
Both Kurfess and Ce leste

Scott's World

have suggested It 's time for a
change. Kurfess has said
Rhodes has allowed the state
to "bounce from crisis to
crisis" and Celeste has said
he can "talie charge of the
future" in Ohio.
Winning nominations
without opposition and
opposing each other in the fall
will he state Auditor Thomas
E. Ferguson , a Democrat,
and state Sen. Donald E.
Lukens, R-Middletown; and
Secretary of State Brown, a
Republican ,
and
his
Democratic opponent, state
Sen. Anthony J . Celebrezze
Jr., of Cleveland.
Also winning the primary
without opposition but
awaiting the selection of their
fall opponents are state
Attorney General Willlam J .
Brown and state Treasurer
Gertrude W. Donahey. Both
are two-term De mocrats.
Competing
for
the
Republican nomination for

attorney general
are CoWity Court of Appeals and
Cin cinnati Coun cilman Richard M. Markus of
Walter E. Beckjord and Cuyahoga County Court.
Three Democrats are
Franklin County Prosecutor
George C. Smith, the 1974 squaring off for the
nominee whom William nomination against Paul
Brown . They are Judges
Brown defeated.
Battling for the Republican Clifford F. Brown of
nomination for treasurer are N&lt;rwalk, Allred E. Dahling
the 1974 nominee, Richard H. of WilloughbY and Jack G.
Harris of Wauseon; George Day of Shaker Heights.
Only six incumbent
C. Rogers, Whitehall city
attorney ; and state Sen. Sam congressmen are being
challenged in the primary.
Speck of New Concord.
Supreme Court Justices Rep. Charles J . Carney,
William B. Brown , a Youngstown Democrat, faces
Democrat, and Paul W. opposition from three
Brown, a Republican , are prominent opponenta in the
unopposed for renCIIIinatloo 19th District seat he has held
since 1971.
to rWI for six-year terms.
Former congressman
Five · Republicans are
contesting for the right to Wayne L. Hays Is trying to
oppose William Brown . They make a political cll'Deback by
are Don P. Brown of Shaker winning the Democratic
Heighi.'J and Judges Ronald nomination in the 99th Ohio
R. Calhoun of Gallls County House district.
A 9.9 mill, five-year levy is
Court, Joyce J. George of
Akron Mun icipal Court , being sought in Cleveland,
Robert E. Holmes of Franklin the state's largest school
district with 110,000 students,
which has been· on the !rink
of financial collapse Ill' a
year and which borrowed Its
enUre state allocation f&lt;r tbe
rest of 1978 to stay open
tn Santa Barbara for seven through June.
The 90,000-student
months bef&lt;re making the
full
commitment
to Columbus school district, like
Cleveland facing court'·
Hollywood.
"The decision to come bact ll'dered desegregation busing
was no more difficult than the this taU, needs an .. 8.8 mill
decision to leave," Carrie three-year levy to keep Its
said. "I took one step at a buildings open.
Ohio's 13,~ polling places
time, intermediate steps .
open
at 6:30 a.m. Tuesday
That's why I went to Santa
and
close
at 7:30p.m.
Barbara. I'm not an
impetuous woman. I think
thin8s out in advance.
TbeAlmauc
"'llle next step was to go
UDIIH Preaalalernalloul
back to work in the theater.
So I appeared in 'Vanities' in
Today Is Mooday, JWie 5,
Detroit for 11 weeks. I wanted the !58th day of 1978 with 209
Ia do a play first because 1· to follow.
needed the confidence and
The moon Is new.
The morning star Is
that did the trick .
"When 'Tbe Fury' came Mercury.
The evening stars are
along I felt at ease and
confident of myself. I Mars, Venus, Jupiter and
conUnue to feel sure of myself Saturn.
working
before
the

Meigs Legion .team splits twin ·~~-{!~··w

BY GREG BAILEY
Good pitching from both
teams highlighted th e
American Legion twin bill
Sunday ·between visiting
Internat ional L ea gu e
Un iteCI Pr ess Interna ti onal
W . l. Pet . GB

Ric hm ond
. Co lumbu s

34 14 .708

25
12
21
21
23

20 .556 711"1
20 .S2.d 9

Pawtuck et
23 .477 11
T oled o ·
23 .477 11
Tid ewa ter
26 .469 11112
Ro ch ester
20 23 . 465 lllh
Sy ra cuse
14 31 .311 181h
Saturday 's Result s
Syr l!lcu se at T idewa ler , p pd .,
·•r ain
Rochesl er 9, Richmond 8
Char les ton 9. Pawtucket 6
Co lumbus 7, T oledo 6
Sunday' s Results
T id ewater 10, Syr acuse 6, l s t,
7 in nings
T idewater ~ . Syr acuse 3. 2nd .
7 In nings
Rich m ond 3, Rochester 2, 10
inn ings
Cha rl eston 8, Pawtucket 7
Toledo 9, Co l umbus 7
Today 's _ Gt~m es
Rochest er at Tidewa ter
, Syra cuse at Ric hmond
Pawt ucket at Ch arl eston
Tuesday' s Game s
Rochester at Tidewater
Syra c use at Ric hmond
Toledo at Ch arleston
Pawt uc k et a t Co lumbus

TERR E HA UTE, Ind.
" (UP! ) - Billy Cassella won
the featured USAC Sprin t Car
event at the Terre Haute
Action Track SUnda y, beating
Gary Bettenhausen by about
10 cars lengths.
USAC defending sprint car
champion Sheldon Kinser
fiip]ll!d during the first heat
and broke a co liar bone. He
was taken to a Terre Haute
hospital in good condition.

"! needed the creative
process of raising my son,
giving him as much of myself
u possible. There was no
way I could come back to
work .
"1didn't miss acting . I fed
all the musicians who came
tn the ranch. The nearest
grocery store was an hour's
drive. Once there were 22
guys preparing for a tour and
they needed three meals a
day.
"Neil and the rest of them
really gave me an education
in music, sound systems,
orchestration and all the rest .
Remember I was born and
raised in Chicago. I'm a real
Midwest girl and have no ego
thing about being a star . I
was born and raised In
Chicago."
Now that Zeke is
dramatically better and
attending a special school,
Carrie feels It is time to
resume her career.
Her re-entry into movies
and TV was gradual. Two
years ago Carrie moved from
the San Francisco area ranch

cameras."
Carrie ia often asked If she
regrets the lost opportWilties
for important parts in big
pictures and about the
mlllloos of dollars she might
have earned had she not
turned her back oo Hollywood

Wellston and the Meigs
Legion team
Rick Maerker tossed a twohitterfor Wellston in the first
contest to hand Meigs a 5-1
· ·
setback m 1ts season opener.
Tbe~, in the second game,
Mei gs_Tim Ebersbach threw
a no-hitter as Meigs selvaged
t
a spht, 4·1.
In the opener, We~l~on f~
all the runs they nee e m e

Major League Stilndings
By United Press International
National League
East
W. L· Pet. GB
27 20 57&lt;
Chicago
25 21 .543 11/:z
Phi l a
26 24 .520 2 1/~
Montrea l
New Yor k
24 29 .453 6
22 27 .449 6
Pi llsbr gh
20 33 .377 10
St . Louis

we st

w. L . Pet . GB
San Fran
32 17 .653
Cincinati
32 20 .615 1'1-.
Los Ang
27 23 .540 51h
San Diego
23 27 .460 91f-.
Houston
22 17 .449 10
Atla nta
16 30 .375 1 3 1 1~
Saturday 's Results
Hous ton 5, St . Louis 2, 1st
St. Louis 2, Ho uston I, 2n d
Ph i ladelphi a 5, Los Ang 1
Chic ago 8, At l an ta 6
Mon treal 5, San Fr an cisc o 3
New York 3, San Diego 2
Cinci nnati 4, Pittsburgh J
Sunday's Results
Philadel ph ia 9, Los Ang 4
San Diego s, New York 2
PittSburgh 4, Ci nci nnati I
Ch icago 6, At l an ta 4
San Fr an 3, M tl 2, 10 inns.
St. Louis A , Houston 7
Toda y's Pr obabl e Pitch er s
(All Times EDT)
Houston (Lemongello 5·5) at
Chicago (Lamp 1 5 ), 2:30p .m .
Sa n Fran ci sco (Bl ue 6-3) at
Phila delphia (Carlton 5-SJ , 7:35

p .m .

Cin ci nnati (Hume 1-S) at St.
Lou is (For sch 7-Jl. 8:35p.m.
Tues.da y' s Games
Houston at Chicago
Cincl at St . Louis, night
Atlanta at Pi ll sbgh , nigh t
San Fran at Ph iladelph ia,
n i gh!

l os Angeles at New Yo r k..
n ight
San Diego at Mon tr eal , nigh I

The Department

Amer i can L eagu e
Ea st
W. L. Pet . GB
36 17 .679
Boston
30 20 .600 4 1 1
New York
28 22 .560 61''
Detroit
27 25 .519 81)
Balt lmre
25 25 .500 9 1 1~
M il wauke
2J 26 ..469 11
Clevelnd
19 J2 .373 16
Toronto
W es t
W. L. Pet . GB
Oaltland
29 21 .580
Ka n City
27 21 .563 1
Cali f
26 23 .531 21 )
TeKaS
2S 2.4 .51Q. 31t 2
M inesota
21 30 .411 8 112
Ch ica go
19 29 .396 9
Seatt le
17 37 .315 14
Saturda y's Res ult s
Minnesota 9, Detroit '1
Cle¥eiand ~ . Milwaukee 4
Oak l and 5. New Yor k 1
Tor onto 4, TeK as 3, nigh t
Chicago 9, Ka nsas Ci t y 5
Bos ton 5, Cl'lli for nia .tl
Baltimore 2, ScatHe I
Sunday 's Results
Milw 12, Cleveland 7, 1st
M1tw 9, Cl eveland 4, 2nd
Detroit 6, Minnesota 4
Texas 9, Toronto 5
Kan City 13, Chicago 2
camorn ia 4, Bos ton 2
Oa ld em d 6, New York 4
Balt imore " · seatt le 1
Today 's Probable Pitcher s
( All Ti m es EDTI
Boston {Lee 7-21 at Oakland
(Wirth J.J), 4:30p.m .
Chicago (Sl one 4 3 ) at Clev e
land (Wa its 3-5 ), 7:30p .m .
Bal timore ( Br iles ) ... ) at
T e ~&lt;as ( Jenkins 53) , 8 : 30p.m .
New York (Tidr ow J .4 ) I'll
Se att le (Abbolf 1·4) , 10 : 35 .

Tu esday 's Games

Chicago Ill Clevelan d. nigh t
Detroi t at M i lwaukee , n ight
Kansas City at Texas , n ight
Baltimore at Calif, n ight
Boston at Oakland, night
New York a t Sea ttl e. night

Since 1915

WANT A REAL
LSTATE LICENSE?

Gallipolis llusoness Collll!ll
Is

oHerlng the acc'redltld

proaram

you ' re

of class

work

required

to

complete for taking the
Ohio State Examlnatlo~
complete in only 12

for seven 'years.
"Not really," she said,
smiling again. "I woo't be
playing
20-year-olds
anymore. I'll be playing
WWlen. And I think aU the
good parts are ahead of me."

w eek s. Cla ss begin s Jun e
12. For more lniormlt1on
contact LH E. Tyler, 444·
4367.

No . IHl-04728

Different breed of runaway
DES MOINES, Iowa (UP! )
- There's a different breed of
runaway em the road today.
''The majority olltlds today
are not fWIDing f&lt;r ltlcks and
they are not running to
travel. The majority are
running to get away from
)X'oblems at home and !rom
things tbey cannot handle,"
according to Art Fine,
director of the Iowa Runaway
Service.
In Polk CoWity, the Des
Moines area, the number of
runaways Ia seven Urnes the
national average. The
average f&lt;r runaways Ia 86
per 100,000 population,
statistics show. This lhould
put Polk County's total near
200, but there were 1,43'1 in

the last reporting period.
And Fine admlta there
could be many m&lt;re because
ooly one in eight actuaUy II
reported. "This figure II just
the Up of the Iceberg," he
lllld.
Fine said farnlly&lt;enlered
problems often keep the
runaway closer to home
nowadays, with many youlha
conflnlns their running to
their neighborhoods.
"They jull need to leave
and sometimes, just a llhort
distance will do it. They don't
need to fWI u far anymore,"
he said.
M~re g~am&lt;roua locatioos
lib Callfcrnla and New Y&lt;rk
are getting fewer nmaway1.
fine 11ld the dlvurce rale

could provide a clue to the
growing number of children
leaving ·home.
Polk County haa an abnormally l!igh divorce rale of
two to three timea the
national average. ''11111 could
give 111 Idea that there are
problema with the famllylhat
tralllfer over to the kids," he
lllld.
"All fll' u we can lell, few
II the runaways we are
worklns wlth turn to
proatltutlon In the bigger
CUIUIIUllltiel," he said. "But,
lhll II a touch queltlon
because t11ere •e ao many
ihat are not repor1ed. They
may be tha'e and they may
be leavlna 0. Moilltl f&lt;r It,
but we elm' know." 1

O ur st11ff of de11tistlii and

technicians will make your
~1om demure:.-; quir kl)' and

economicall y

denture service,
panials &amp; relines.

from

and sco red on ~ double by that Sixth mnmg.
.
Dan Edwards. M1ke Way land
Me1gs got two runs m the
g?t the?nly other Meigs hit', a first. inning of the s:cond
smgle m the s1xth. Maerke.r game t o help Ebersbach get
aUowed only one runner until the wm m h1 s ~o-hitter ..
A walk to Brtan Hamilton
an error and a two-run sing!;
•· .,, --.,-'-···r-- 4 •.,..~-·'·"
by Gallia Academy's Art
·-······
Fogelstrom furnished all the
runs Ebersbach needed for
the 4-1 win.
The hard-throwing right·
band er fanned eight an d
walked four, two of those free
passes coming in the second
frame for Wellston's only

and a throw home went out of the fifth on three walks and a
play to score both runners. A single.
single later scored another
Meigs got its only tally in
run . Wellston padded the!r the last inning when Kenny
lead with two more runs m Young reached on an error

Anywhert In O hio

SOUTIIERN RESERVES - Reserve players on the
1978 edition of the Southern baseball team are, fro111left,

By IRA KAUFMAN
UP! Sports Writer
Jim Kaat , 39, scattered
seven hits SUnday afternoon
to record his 255th career
victory - tops among all
active major league pitchers
- wh en he helped the
Philadelphia Phillies to a 9-4
victory over the Los Angeles
Dodgers.
"I'm a little laster than last
year," Kaat said. "I worked
this winter on weights and
flexibility. I also made some
adjustments in my pitching;
every year is different."
Kaat's victory completed a
three-game swee p over the
Dodgers and left Los Angeles
!i'h ga mes behind San
Francisco in the National
League West.
The Phils used a five-run
second inning to rout the
Dodger s' ace left-bander,
Tomm y
John,
and
Phi ladelphia outfielders

The Jli'Jierc Center
9o49 E. L ivlnast on A ve. Columbus

~

1

...

I.

recorded 14 outfield pu touts
- including 10 by center
fi elder Garry Maddox , just
two short of th.e NL record .
Jose Cardenal started the
second-inning rally with a
double and after a walk to
Richie Hebner, Boone singled
in a . run. Jim Morrison's
single tied the game 2-2 and
after a walk to Jerry Martin,
Maddox stroked an RBI
single. Greg Luzinski 's two·
run single capped the assault.
In other National Leag ue
ga mes, San Diego beat New
York, 5-2, Pittsburgh topped
Cincin nati, 4-1, Chicago
ripped Atlanta, 6-1, Sa n
Francisco edged Montreal, 32, in 10 innings, and St. Louis
defeated Housym, 4-2.
Padres 5, Mets 2:
Derrel Thomas' tw~un
single and Bill Almon's two·
run double were the big blows
in a four-run sixth inning that
carried Gaylord Perry; , 4-2,

and the Padres over the Mets.
Cubs 6, Braves I:
Heity Crll2 , with a .203
aver age, slamm ed two
doubles and a single, batting
in two runs, to spark the Cubs
to th eir eighth straight home
victory. Rick Reuschel won
his sixth game in 10 dec isions.
Giants 3, Espos 2:
Vic Harris opened the top of
th e loth inn ing with his first
homer of the year to in crease
the Giants' lead in the NL
West to I 'h games over
Cincinnati.
Curdloals 4, Astros 2:
Silvio Martinez allowed
seven hi ts in 6 2-3 innings but
picked up his second victory
without a loss when the
Ca rdinals scored three fifthinning runs against the errorplagued Astros.

RIV ER DOWNS
CINC1NN ATI (UP[)
Com]ll!titive beat Bold Sailing
by I'h lengths Sunday to win
the featured $9,000 . Dr .
Hi tesman Me morial
Handicap at River Downs.
Homer Htldalgo guid ed
Com]ll!titive over the 7'''
fur longs on the turf in I :31 25, goo d for payoffs of $19.40,
$4.80 and $3.40. Bold Creme
came in third.
A3-1 daily double combination of Hill Whacker and
Glimpse of Mickey returned
$3Ul.
Worth y Way, Assassinator
and Charlie A. Cee combined
for a 10-1-5 trifecta lh at paid
$576.10 on a winning $3 ticket.
The 7,574 fans bet
$826,043.

On this day in history :
In 1917, more th an 9.5
million Americans between
the ages of 21 and 31
registered for the World War
I draft.

Pioneers battle for
national title today
MARIETTA, Ohio (UPI )Marietta will meet Glassboro
State at I p.m. today to decide
the NCAA Division III
Baseball World Series
championship.
In their first match SUndB y,
Marietta, 3M, nudged the 21111 New Jersey tea m 11·10. In
another SUnday game, the
Pioneers beat Ithaca College
&amp;-1 to eliminate that school
from the double-elimination
lournament.
The Pioneers scored six
runs in the first two inning of
their game against Ithaca,
five of them in the second
frame.
Seni or righthander Ron
Szafraniec, 7-'J on the season,
wen t the dista nce for
Mar ietta , scattering five hits
and striking out four.

Major Le1gut Lead ers
BY united Press Inte rnational
Bat1ing
(Based on 125 at batsJ
Nationa l Leag ue
G. AI· H. Pet .
Sim mons St .L
52 18~ 61 .339
Burrog hs Al l
18 155 51 .329
Monday LA
40 128 42 .328
Maddox Ph il
"S 166 54 .32.5
Gri ff ey Cln
52 210 68 .324
Buc kner Chi
JS 133 43 .323
Foster Cln
52 210 67 .319
Smit h LA
48 182 58 .319
Clark SF
19 189 60 .317
Puhl Hou
~ 7 192 60 .313
Am er lun Lugu e
G. AB· H. Pet .
Carew Mln
49 186 69 .371
Sund berg Tex
46 160 55 .3""
Rey no lds Se5
49 168 56 .333
Rice Bos
53 221 73 .330
Plnlello NY
3S 139 45 .324
Cooper M il
48 18A 59 .321
SinQieton Ba t
43 139 . .. . 317
Chambll$ NY
SO 193 61 .316
Cubb&amp;ge M in
42 136 43 . 316
Brett KC
33 127 40 .J15
Home Runs
Nltlontl League : Foster , Cln
and Monday , L A 11 ; Ki ngm an ,
10 ;
Chi and
Ben c:h, Cln
L uzinsk l, Phil 9 .
Amer ican Lteiue : Rice, BO!.
18 ; Baylor, Ca l 1" ; Tnompson,
Del . 13 ; Ma y , Batt a nd E'J &amp;ns,
Bas 11.
Runs letttd In
Nltlontl LtiiUt l Foster , Cln
.til ; Sm ith, LA 37: M organ , Cin,
M on ta nez, NY and McCO'Je y,
SF 34.
Amer lctn Ltlgut: R:ice, 8os
lO ; Zls k, Tex 371 May Bolt 36;
Star ·,, Oet and Cham llss. NV
35
Stolen IIIII
N•tionll Le agut : . Moreno.
Pitt
Ceden o, Hou 19 ;
M BddO)(, PH il 17; Taver a5, Pitt
U ; Royster , Afl 13,
Ameri cln League : . Wilson,
I&lt;C 20 ; Le Flore, Del IB: Oil onel
Oak · a nd cr u z, Sea 17; Wills,
TeK 15.
'

7"'

•Dr. 1\.J. Sooehli•Dr. C.W. Deal•llr. G.J . Soombaullh
•Dr. W.O. Kimbaii• Dr. J.C. Murphy •Dr. l. Ochman

Chuck Michael, Terry NcNickle, Bryan Wolfe, Dale
Teaford, Paul Cardone and B&lt;b Lee.

Phils. sweep Dodgers

6

Dr. Ronald ERiviere

Fo elstrom reached on an
g
d 1 ded
third
, :~~~~ aan fi:l~er's 0~hoice .
·Youn then squee~ed him
h gf th f' . 1
orne or e ma run.
Jeff Montgomery took the
loss as he hurled a fine twohitter at Meigs. Becker and
Fogelstrom got the only two
hits, both singles, as Mont•
gomery struck out' six and
walked five.
.
Meigs travels to Ashland,
Kentucky next Sunday for a
twinbiil.
First Game
Wellston
030 020 1)....5 7 2
Meigs
000 000 1- 1 2 4
Maerker.and ·settles.
Owens (LP), Triplett (6)
and Hamilton, D. Kennedy

In tha t second inning ,
Norman walked , stole
second, and went to third on a
sacrifice. After another walk ,
a double ste al got the run
(6).
home.
Second Game
In the third inning, Meigs
W
ellston
010 000 0-1 0 4
gave Ebersba ch some
Meigs
202
000 x-4 2 I
breathing room with two
Montgomery
and
Settles.
more run s. Greg Becker
Ebersbach
and
R.
Johnson.
singled, stole second, and

BASEBALL

Mon treal (May S-5l, 7: 35p.m .
Atlanta ( Ruthven 2-Sl at
Pi ttsburgh
(C an~elar i a
5 6),
7 : 35p .m .
Los Angeles (RhOden s Jl at
New York ( Br uhert 1. 4), 8:05

POMEROY
CEMENT
BLOCK CO.

second inning by platmg
three runs on two hits.
Norman singled and
S]ll!araw walked. A ground·
out advanced both runners,

run .

p.m .
San Diego (Rasmussen 2 6) a !

Prodigal Snodgrass returns
returned .
" I never wanted to be a
movie star," she said, from
her forehead . "So the
decision to leave Hollywood
was easy foc me.
"I worked hard to support
myself and put myself
through college. I came to
Hollywood and got my first
'IV show in three months.
Within four months I was
signed at UniversaL I wocked
very hard in TV and in two
movies.
"But I wanted to be free
and to get good roles at other
studios. Not only that, I fell in
love for the first time in my
life. Neil and I needed one
another at that time.
"He wanted me In live with
him on the ranch. That
sounded better to me than
what I was doing. So I left."
In 1973 Warner Bros. gave
Young '500,000 to make
"Journey Through the Past."
Carrie worked in a variety of
jobs, helping where she
could.
She appeared as an actresa
in only one scene. It Involved
pot smoking .
"I asked Universal if they
would give me a release to
appear in the scene," she
recaUed, grinning. ''The Uni·
versa!
Image
wasn 't.
compaUble with pot-snaking.
They not only gave. me the
release, they released me
from my cootract.
" After that I might bave
worked in Hollywood now and
then, but I'd given birth to
Zeke, who has cerebral palsy.
I decided to forget everything
to concentrate on spending
my time and energies with
my son.
"There Is nothing in tbe
world to replace a mother's
love and attentloo for a child
in that condition. And my
dedlcatloo pald off. If he
walked into this dressing
room right now, you'd never
know he had cerebral palsy.
He'sal/ boy.

.:;

'

Ch arlesto n

t1

MISSING MULEPOWER : Fnmkle LalDe, of "Mule Train"
fame, b&amp;sn't been taking hls vitamins- and it caught up with
him last week in Evansville, Ind. Hospitallzed after
complaining of dizziness during a show, he was released in
time to finish his stand Saturday evening, before moving oo to
Denver and Chicago. Doctors say the big belter, who's in his
60s now, is in good enough shape- just short on vitamin B-12,
JI'Ohably as the result of a hard-driving 8-week tour m
England.

Fewer errors made on '77 returns

Ebersbach hurls no-hitter

He was touched in the fifth
inning, though, when Ithaca ,
bowing out of the tournament
with a 21-10 record, erupted
for four runs and four hits.
Marietta was sparked in its
second game by junior
second baseman Jim Burton
whose grand slam started a
seven-run uprising in the
sixth inning.
Burton had previously tr ippied twice and set a ne w
world series game record

with five RBI's.
Glassboro, now 211-11, nar·
rowed Marietta 's 11-J lead
with two runs in the bottom of
the sixth . The l&gt;lew Jersey
team then bunched five runs
with six hits and the aid of
two walks in the eighth.
Marietta pitcher Steve
Kovar got credit fll' th e win
with Dave Barton earning the
save. Kovar is S.lJ on the year.
The championship game
wil l be played at 1 p.m.

Reds, Braves, Cubs
all gain victories
By Greg Bailey
In a rain-shortened game,
the New Haven Reds downed
the host Pomeroy Pirates S.lJ
as K. Barker fanned ten and
walked seven for the win. R.
Plants socked a triple, and R.
Edwards and Barker got a
double and single each.
Nick Riggs took th e loss,
fanning seven and walking
just two. J. Fields and R.
Oliver got th e only two
Pomeroy hits, both singles.
Reds
401 10--6
Pirates
000 ll0-1J
The host New Haven Cubs
trounced the visiting
Pomeroy Tigers ll -0 as
Bradley tossed a two-hitter.
Pethel socked a homer and
double and Dawson got a
homer and single to lead the
win. Bradley strouck out
thirteen and walked four.

Ithaca
000 040 000-4 :; 2
Marietta laO 000 OOx-li 5 o
Russo and Sull ivan ;
Szafraniec and Hollinger . LSzafraniec (7-'J ). L- Russo
13-2). HR's- None.

Coshocton wins
Class AA crown
COLUMBUS IUP! i
Cincinnati Elder , Coshocton
and Hi cksv ille won cl ass
titles this weekend in the
state high school baseball
tournament at Ohio State
University.
F.ldcr captured its ninth
Cla ss AAA cham pio nship
since 1943 with a !i-3 win over
Euclid
Coshoct on look advantage
of six Cleveland Benedictine
errors acco unting for seven
unearned runs to post a 9-li
win in the Class AA finals,
whi le ll;cksville erupted for
nine runs in the top of the
eighth in rushing to an 11·2
win over Middletown Fen·
wick· for the Class A cro wn .
Tiw Coshocton Redskins, in
wtnnin g their fi rst state
baseball title, scored three
times in the first inning and
never trailed, alth ough
Benedictine battled from
behind on two 0 ccasions
during the three-hour 40minute game.
The three-run eighth · in·
ning rally , which broke a 6~
tie. came wi th a minimum of
hitting. A walk, a bunt on
which the third baseman fell
down and a sacrifice put
runn ers on second and third.
Tom Scholl singled in one
run. Mark Schlarb's secrifice
fl y scored another and the
final ta Uy came in when
losin g pitcher Joe Buerger
balked .
Benedictine, which finished
as runnerup in the state

Marietta

003 017 000- 11 17 1
Glassboro
149 S. Third St,
200 012 050--10 12 2 Middleport, 0.
Elston, Kovar (I), Stifner ., __ _ _ _11111
(8),
Barton ( 8) and
·"Ste me for car, holle,
Holl inge r ; Charlesworth ,
Adams (3), Aldino !61, izzi life, health aad bu.~iacss
(6), McArow (9) and llolde n.
i~:
• " 'I " . ..
W- Kova r (6-0 ). L
Charlesworth (3-J ). HR 'ss1, i, f\11•...,... c."""'"
Marietta , Burton (in lh e sixth '"' ~ ' ~ · ·. ltel'!l
DlhC. ~ Ill. . .
with three on.)

"2·71·

.

Tim Gilkey and Jac k
Welker got the two Tiger hits,
both singles. Ron Denny was
the loser, fann ing six and
walking seven.
Pomeroy
000 00- 0 2 I
NewHaven 3.'i0 03-11 8 2

tournament for the thi rd
time , outhit Coshocton 11 to 9.
Coshocton fin ished its
season with a 23-5 record.
Benedictin wound up with a
23-3 mark.
Linescore:
Coshocton
300 020 13-9 9 I
Benedictine
110 021 lH 11 6
Mark Schlarb, Glen Head
(6) and Dean Bratz; Pete
Germano, Joe Buerger (!i)
and John Szuch. WP - Head.
l.P - Buerger.
Prevention is
the best policy .. .

FOR YOUNG
DRIVERS
You ng men and women
ten ask why they have to
more
fOr
the ir
b •lfolmolbiile insuranCe .
I D'rlvers in their teens a nd
twenties cause fa r
than the ir share of
f ie accident s. Repor ts

Na tional Safety
ne il: 2.B percent of all
l nlol&lt;&gt;rists a r e 24 yea r s o1
or under , yet these
opera t ors a r e
i n volved as drivers in 38.6
per cent of a l l accid ents
and 37 .3 per cent of all fa ta l
mishaps .

youthful

A great

many young people

are sk ill ed , responsi b le
drivers . Obviously , though ,
quite a few are not .
There' s no subst itute

development com nPton•:el
and lhe right
including a posi t i~e ap.
p roac h
to
def ens i ve
drivi ng .
Our
agency
provi d es
finan ci al protection a nd
serv i ce in case of ae&lt;:id&lt;mh•l
in ... alving young drivers

bu l many ol these
preveonted.l
Tha i's why we

cidents can be
pre v ent ion

is the

policy.

DALE C. WARNER
992-2143
W . Main

.J

The Middleport Braves fell
from a 7-2 1ead to an 8-7loss to
the host Rutland Dodgers
over the week end . Bll!y
Harmon was the winner and
Shawn Eads led the hitters
with a triple and single.
Harmon had two singles.
David Barr had the big blow
in the bottom of the sixth
when the winners scored four
times.
Chris Burdette took the loss
Bnd was the leading Brave
hitter with two singles.
Middleport
000 !i20 !f--7 7 3
101 104 1-8 8 7
Rutland

bing

Don't st

you can't stop.

11

..........................A.P.uh•li•'•
~•"•lc·•·of•T•h•is·N·•w•••P'•~•t•&amp;·T·~--A.d•v'•"•isi.ni·Co
--u·n·ctl•A

...

.,

�4- The Daily Sentinel, MidcUeport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Jw1e ~ . 1978

Moskau and Hume:

Bullets crush Sonics, 117-82
LANDOVER, Md. (UP! ) What started as a best-ofse ven NRA champ ionship
series is now a best:Of-o ne
series, home-court advantage
I1J the Seattl e /iUper:somcs.
Even a 35-point loss at
Washington Sunday couldn't
snuff out the Sanies'
enthusiasm .
"Every game they play
here, the))iaY it's the biggest
game in~ history of thetr
fr anchise ," sa id Seattle's
John Johnson. "Co me
Wednesday night , it's the
b1ggest ga me in our
franc hise. And we' re gonna

Center Coliseum. The Sanies championsh ip series game. a 129-95 win over St. Louis.
The Bullets got outstAnding
,have won 22 st~ai g ht in that. The previous record, 34, was Wilkens played on that St. games from many players,
building , but Washington's set April 2, 1961 by Boston , in Louis team .
including Hayes (21 points, 15
Elvin Hayes isn't buying any
''home-court" theories.
"Now they have to think
about us . They know we can
put points on the boa rd, and
that has to con tern them,"
sai d Hayes. " It doesn 't
matler where the game is
played . Their fans won 't put
lhe ba ll in the basket for
them .''
CIN CINNATI (UP! ) "Dido 't Torn Seaver have a I· best in baseball.
That was something the Bert Blyleven pitched nine 4 record earlier this season ?
"Real nasty," is the way
Sanies couldn 't do in Game 6. years in the American . Check Blyleven's record at lhe Pirate manager decribes
They shot just 34 pereent League befere being traded the end of the season . He'll be Blyleven 's curve.
from the field , . lheir worst to the Pittsburgh Pirates by up there near the top of tbe
Even though Blyleven
. ." .
"' performance of the series, th e Texas Rangers last list of winners. So will began
wm
Sunday's game by
The Bullets ' 117-82 triumph and were outrebounded, 69- winter.
Seaver.
reeling off live perfect
evened the series at lhree 49.
And during those nine
"And " added Tanner "so innin gs en route to his
Wa shington's margi n of years, he compiled a life-time will John Candelaria." '
ga mes api ece, with the
victnry , Anderson was more
deciding game at the Seattle 'ictory was the largest in a record of 122 victories against
C8ndelaria is the · Pirate impressed by Don Robinson ,
113 losses. It's a record, lefty who compiled a 20-5 the 21-year-old rookie right·
though, that takes on quite of won-and-lost
record, hander Cincy faced in
bit of luster when it's noted accompanied by a 2.34 ERA Saturday night's game.
that the career earned run . for the Pirates last year. He's
"That kid ," exclaimed the
average of Blyleven is a now :Hi with a 3.33 ERA.
Red manager, "has a great
gaudy 2. 79 for 2,143 innings.
Blyleven's start Sunday arm. Helookslikehe'sagood
1 welcomed tile trade / ' was his 12th of the season . competitor, too. I can 't think
said Blyleven, who pitched And while he hasn 't faced all of any pitcher in tbe league
se ven and a half seasons for Ute the clubs yet, he has seen who throws as hard as be
th e Minnesota Twins, enough to be convinced that does.
perennial losers, before being the National League is
" John D' Acquisto (San
swapped to the Rangers, "but stronger than the American . Diego Padres) might," be
I dido 't expect it."
"The hitters are more ag- added .
Doubles by Ken Griffey and
Tha t's because shortly gressive, and lhey're better
before the trade , Blyleven in the National League," said Don Werner and singles by
signed a multimillion-dollar Blyleven Sunday after Joe Morgan and Dave Collins
contract that included combining with relief pitcher were th e only hits by the Reds
deferred payments extending Grant Jackson to beat the . Sunday.
Morgan , bothered by a
some 15 years after he retires Reds 4-1 , dropping them a
game and a half behind the nagging groin injury and in
from lhe game .
So far . the 27-year -o ld San Francisco Giants in the midst of on e of the worst
Blyleven hasn't exactly set NL West. "The lineups you slumps of his career, is
the National League afire. face are tougher, even though · batting only .230. He entered
His
vici1Jry Sunday was his they don't use the designated Sunday's game with only four
VINYL Vfl.VET ... A vtnyl wall CCM."ring wt1h a beautiful 10ft eggs Mil
hitter in this league."
hits in his last 42 official trips
fourth
against five losses.
ftnlsh. Painting is fast otod ea5\' sloce woodworil can be painted right along
,_wnn lh~ walls. S!Wt buying the eKtrft pain! . Wmshable low satln
Blyleven not only has a to the plate.
Is Pirate Manager Chuck
sheen. Applies easily, dries In ont'-half hour. F..qulpment
Tarmer disappointed ?
good fastball, but , said
"Joe' s having the same
cleans up wtth water.
"Not a bit ," he replied. TaMer, his curve is one of the problem I was having until
today," said the Pirates' Bill
Robinson, who slammed a
~------------------------, pair of doubles and a single in
I Sunday's se ries finale .
"Today, I could see he was
I
OPTOMETRIST
trying
I1J hit homers and
OFFICE HOURS: 9:30 to 12, 2 to S (CLOSE 1
882-2525
pulling
his
out , just what
1 AT NOON ON THURS.) - EAST COURl I I was doing.head
I
wasn'
t relaxed
NEW HAVEN, W. VA. I ST., POMEROY.
126 MAIN
I either, and the guys ,
·------------------------~ espec ially (Jim ) Rooker ,
kept telling me to. Now, I
th ink I've go tten their
message.' '
Tom Seaver, bidding for his
fifth straight victory, will
oppose the Cards' Bob Forsch
when the Reels open a two ,
game series tonight in St.
Louis. Before returning home
next Monday , the Reds will
make other stops at Chicago
and Pittsburgh.
Anderson said he still
doesn 't know when Johnny
Bench, who has been
sidelined a week wiih a stiff
back, will return to the
lineup .

Pirates defeat Reds
4-1 behind Blyleven

11

SAYRE HARDWARE

I
I

N.

w. COMPTON, O.D.

I

As our life
changes, so does the way .
we use electrici~

Two wins ·of 15 starts

rebounds ), Bob Dandridge
CINCINNATI (UP!) (19 points), Mitch Kupchak
(19 points ), Charles Johnson Reds Manager Sparky
(17 points), Wes Unseld (14 Andersoo ' s foreheard
rebounds) and Greg BaliaN! wrinkled into a frown as he
seaMed the club's stAtistic
(12 points, 12 rebounds) .
Ballard's contribution was sheet.
an unexpected plus from a
"TWo victories out of 15
rookie who averaged just stArts," he said.
over four minutes of playing
Anderson was referring to
time in each of the first five the records of Paul Moskau
games. "We knew Greg was and Torn Hume, the Reds'
ready and we had to utilize fourth and fifth starting
him," said Coach Dick MottA. pitchers.
"He was a big key in the
Moskau, making his fifth
ballgame."
start since his recall from tbe
In the third period, Indianapolis farm club, failed .
Washington showed a new to survive the third inning.
offensive
wrinkle
Sunday as the Pittsburgh
Dandridge at guard - and Pirates tAgged him with a 4-1
scored 37 points to take an 64- loss in the finale of a three
61 lead. Dandridge had nine game series.
points in the quarter and
Before departing with his
Hayes eight.
second loss against no
Motta said he moved Dan· victories, the Red right·
dridge because of Kevin hander yielded three runs,
Grevey 's wrist injury. five hits, walked three and
Grevey stArted and played struck out four .
six minutes, but couldn't
"I don't know the answer to
return and must be his problem," said Anderson.
considered questionable for "There's nothing wrong with
Wednesday night.
him physically, and he's
Johnson, the Sonics' Ill rowing lhe ball hard."
leading scorer in the series
Hume, who'll go against the
was held to nine points. Cardinals Tuesday night in
Wilkens hinted that things the second of a two-game
woo't be the same in Game 7. series that opens tonight in
"That'sa game adjustment St . Louis' Busch Stadium, has
we can deal with," said a 2-ii record after 10 starts.
Wilkens. "I don 't think they And the second of those two
can play with four forwards victories came back on April
against us. I think we can 14.
make it pay."
"Sure I'm disturbed," said
Fred Brown led Seattle Anderson .
with 17 points, followed by
Changes planned? :
Gus Williams with 16. The
"None
have
been
starting front line of John discussed,'' answered the
Johnson , Jack Sikma and Red manager.
Marvin Webster was held to a
total of 25 points.

"Whether tbere will be is
something, they (Moskau and
Hume) will decide," he
added.
Bert Blyleven and · Grant
Jackson combined for a fourhitter SWlday as the Plra~s
salvaged the series finale.
Blyleven, acquired from
the Texas RaN!ers during the
winter, had a perfect nohitter going after five
inning.,. Then, in U\e sixth,
Mike Lum became the Reds'
first base runner when he
opened the inning by drawing
a walk.
After Don Werner looked at
a third strike, Dave Collins,
pinch hitting fer relief pitcber
Dave Tomlin, singled to
center for the Reds' first hit
of tbe game. But he was
quickly wiped off base when
Blyleven turned Pete Rose's
bouncer into an inning-ending
double play.
While he was mowing down
the flrst 15 batters he faced,
Blyleven admitted he was
entertaining thoughts of
pitching a no-hitter.
"I've had one," he said,
referring to the no-hitter he
pitched against the callfernia
Angels last September.
"And,"
he
added
confidently, "the Ume will
come when I'll pitch an~her

ooe."
Jackso.n, a 35-year-old
lefty, replaced myleven in
the seventh after a double by
Ken Griffey, a single by Joe
Morgan and a walk to George
Foster loaded the bases with
none out.

Tanana becomes first AL
pitcher to win 9 games
By MARK FRIEDMAN
UP! Sports Writer
Frank Tanana became the
American League's first
nine-game winner Sunday
when he led the california
Angels to a 4-2 victory over
the Boston Red Sox with a
four-hitter over 8 2.J innings.
"It's always nice to beat a
team that's considered one of
the best in baseball," said
Tanana. "I've always pitched
well against Boston here,
though ."
Ron Jackso n and Ken
Landreaux powered solo
homers to back Tanana and
give Jim Frl'8osi his first
11ctory as a manager. The

win also snapped a seven·
"That Tanana really knows
game losing streak fer the how to pitch, doesn't ha' "
Angels.
asked Fregosi. "He's a great
Tanana struck out five and competitor and he knows how
walked two to lift his record to keep hitters honest."
to 9-2 and become the second
pitcher in the majers to win
nine games. Ross Grimsley of
In other American Leaglll!
Mootreal was the first .
games, Milwaukee swept
Dave LaRoche nailed down Cleveland, 12-7 and 9-4, Texas
the final out of the ninth downed Toronto, 9-6, Detroit
inning to record his seventh toppled Minnesota , 6-4,
save after Tanana fielded a Kansas City clubbed Chicago,
sacrifice fl y to Carl 13-2, Baltimore stopped
Yastrzemskl and a run- Seattle, 4-1, and Oakland
scoring single to Carlton defeated New Y&lt;X"k, 6-4.
Fisk.

Bean is
Kemper
champ

. A lot of peop le believe that higher electric
bills an· caused by higher elect ric rates.
ln part. that's true.
Hut a big reason many electric bills are up
"i.Jf&lt;'aU '-I' lhe amount of electricity we use is up.
"Fxlay, for instance, an average family
tu"-s aiYJut four times m ore electricity t han in
l':rJJ And for a lot m ore t hings:
In l!-!50, m ost of the electricity used in the
hrJme was for lighting, cooking, refrigeration
and washing clot hes.
'-:nw. los.• than half ~ fafT'n, .·, Plectr;, ;,,, ;,
used fo r that. Instead, more than au'1o IS used
for air condit ioning. color TV, dishwashing,
clothes drying and hundreds of other electrical
conveni ences you wouldn't want to be without .
.
Unfortunately, inflation has drasti...ally
mcreased the cost of RUJ1plying the electric-ity
needed to meet this H1 ' ·1dv g-rowth in dc·ma nd .

And with new families cont inuing to join
the ranks of our customers ever y day, the
demand IS gomg to keep on growing.
So, keep~g the power coming, and fmding
ways to keep Its cm;ts down, is getting tougher
every day.
But, while we cont inue to do everything
we can _to hold down our costs as we keep up
With this growth, there are some things you can
do to help keep your costs in line, too.
.Use the appliances you have more
P4'fiCH'! rttv M~ ~ " &lt;ure V'lU r hom e is properl v
IIlBUJatea. Ana, wnen IL _comes tune w uuy new
appliances and systems, look into energy savers
like the heat pump.
.
If everyone m akes an effort to do just a
few of these t hings, we'll have a brand new
sow-ce of energy to rely on.
Ourselves.

Ohio Power Company
Working together is the only way.
,

CHARLOTIE, N.C. (UP! )
- Andy Bean is known for his
distance off the tees, but now,
the Kemper Open champion
says, he's rigbt up there with
the best of lhe putters on the
tour .
"For a person my sil;e ( 6feet-4 , 210-jlounds ) to develop
a soft touch around the green
takes werk - and I have
worked at it," said Bean, who
finished with a 66 for a 11'&gt;Wideri)ar 273 total.
Bean, winner of last year's
Dora! Open, stArted the day
one stroke behind Alan Pate
but pi cked up three
coosecuti ve birdies and an
eagle on the secood hole to
move to 14-under.
~~ When you get one-, two-,
or three-under after the first
fi ve or six holes you get that
mornentwn," said Bean, who
won $60,000 and moved to
fifth place on the PGA money
list with more than $137,000 in
earnings this year. "Tben I
made the eagle putt ard.l was
off and flying."
His only lapse of the day
came on the 17th hole when he
put his shot in the oonker.
chipped about 15 feet post the
hole and twOi)utted.
Mark Hayes and Andy
North finished at IIM!nder to
tie fiX" second place and
picked up W,750 each from
the 1300,000 purse.
North said Bean, his
playing partner, "played
absolutely perfect for eight
holes. Then he g~ 10 far
ahead be was just trying to
get in and that's what he

play at 8-under-par but
quickly found himself four
shots behind Bean.
·
"I thought 12-under would
do some good," Hayes said.
"Andy plays awful solid. This
course is perfect fer him. He
can get it (drives ) over the
doglegs."
Bean played tbe front side
at &gt;under 31 and added
birdies at the 13th and 14th·
holes and bogeyed the 17th.
Bean, once known for his
fierce temper, said efforts I1J
control himself have helped
his game. He said he feels
he's ready to add some more
victories to his record,
starting with this week '~
Memphis Open.

Gold

Model CE30M2WF
Heres a tull -s&lt;Z e electnc ra ng e bUill by
G1bson Jo last w1Jh a lll l·u p top and sp1ll·
conta 1mng nm 2 b1g 8" surlace e lements
chrome reilector pans and mf 1nile hea t
con lrols

INGELS FURNITURE
106 N. 2nd Ave.

Middleport, 0.

DO-IT·YOURSELF
HARIMARE HEADQUARTERS

. m·

Helen ii~lp.,... . .

I US. • •

y

By Helen Boltel

.,~~

Auxiliary members attend . convention

.

POLLY'S POINTERS

-~

Polly Cramer

·:.:

Wicker needs
a face lift

SHEGOTWRATHYOVER WREA'I'H
OEA!tHELEN :
·
I often go shopping with a friend who lives at our retirement
center. I pay lor the gas, as I don' t drive any more. We're both
over 70 and Widows.
We used the same cart the other day . i bought a lovely spray
of gardemas to put on my husband 's grave. She wanted one
too! but got the last on the display table and it was definitely in:
fen or.
So'!'ewhere along the line she switched sprays and 1 ended
up With the poorer one. !look it over to her after I'd unpacked
my purchases, but she wouldn't exchange, saying we both had
the flowers we'd bought.
.
I say this is dishonest. Should I give up my friendship with
her? -FEEI.JNG CHEATED
.
DEARF.C.:
Which is ~ore important: friendship with a woman who
gJVes you a hft (car- and companion -wise1or a slightly inferior
spray mtended for a man who couldn't know the difference?
Your husband wouldn 't want you feuding over flowers for his
grave; so check the switch down to an honest mistake -even if
it wasn 't. -H.

DEAR POLLY- Would you
please tell me how to give
wicker chairs a fa ce lift? ABBIE
DEAR ABBIE- Afrequent
going over with the brush attachment on your vacuum
will keep the dust out uf those
IT\any crevices. Wash with
warm water w1th about a
tablespoon of ammonia added for each quart of water
and rinse tl1oroughly with
d ear water. I had my wicker
chairs, that had been treated
to counlless coats of while
paint, stripped by a professional furniture · stripper to
eliminate that flaking and
peeling that often occurs.
When repainting use
enamel paint. II can be
sprayed on or applied with a
brush that should always be
full of paint and always stroked in the same direction. My
experience is that a tremen·
dous amount of spray pamt is
required, making the job
quite expensive. Clear varnish could be used on natural
wicker.·· POLLY
DEAR POLLY- For a year
my husband kept promising
to make a sand box for the
children but he never seemed
to get the time. Finally we
came up with a simple, inex·
pensi ve solution that has
worked well. We bought a
four-foot plastic molded play
pool for $5 and filled it with
280 pounds of sand 1which
cost us another $.1) . For a
cover to keep lhe rain out 1
rounded the corners on an old
plastic shower curtain to
make a circle. The edges
were turned under and on the
sewing machine I stitched a

DEAR HELEN:
I could love a homely girl if she were kind and not bitter or
jealous. I could love a handicapped girl if she weren't self·
p1tymg. I c ould love a girl who is poor or uneducated if she did
not hold It against me for bein ~ more fortwmte. But i could
never love a fatty , because she could c han ~e her handicap if
she really tried.
.
Who wants a sell-indulgent wife, lacking in character and
will power? Tllis means she is lazy, and demands that people
accept her as she is, rather than improve.
I am a counselor who has devoted hb life to helping the less
for!Wlate , but I have not one shred of pity for fat women. They,
as deserted wtves, stream through my office daily seeking
welfare money:
Money I t an give them, but what I can't tell them is that if
they weren't slobs, inside as well as out, then they'd still have
their men.
I hope you 'll print this for the sa ke of all families about to
lose their breadwinner to the arms of a slender woman. -J .W.
DEARJ.
Thin women have marriage-fa ilure too. Those deserted
wives . who stream through yo ur office aren't all there
because they 'refoodaholi cs.
Of the fatties, some may be genuine gluttons, but others are
lettmg calories compensate for emotional lacks in their lives.
My I.G.A. P. (' 'I'm Guessi ng Again Perception .. I suspects
you have a weight problem in your own home. If so. knock off
the resentment, prove you still care, and perhaps your wife
will stArt shedding those pounds. - ll

\(}::{{ ~'~i::(f}'):))\))~(}~')())~~)):})~ : ))'' ;:::;::

::•\· Hood reunt·on ::::

casing. Through this wa s run

~r~~;~~~~~~·::~~~t.l~J~~\~~~

i:l/l/1/

Cub Scouts

the way over the sand boll to
keep the rain out and to keep
the sand from blowing away.
- MARGE
, DEAR POLLY- I am an
avid worker of crossword
puzzles and have found that
using a red pencil or pen does
wonders for those who have
less than perfect eyesight. BRADLEY
D8AR POLLY - I use
votive candle holders as containers for miniature flower
arrangements. They are
great when using violets, paJ.l·
sies and fuchias.
Also, narrow men's belts
make great replacements for
worn purse handles.- RUBY
DEAR POLLY •• My
children do not like to finish
the milk left in their cereal
bowls when the cereal is
gone. So I give each of them a
plastic straw to drink it and
they think this is a treat and
drink it all. - BONNIE
Polly will send you one of
he r signed thank -you
newspaper coupon clippers if
she uses your favonte
Pointer , Peeve or Problem in
her column . Write POLLY'S
POINTERS in care of this
newspaper.

One thin dime
is her gripe
DETROIT (UP! ) - To
Jane Hayes, a drive to
abolish pay 11Jilets is no
laughing matter - especially
when you can 't find a dime.
Mrs. Hayes, a member of
an area group called Citizens
Against Pay Toilets, recently
found herself without change
when she needed to use a
restroom at the city's Greyhound Bus terminal.
The incident led her to file a
complaint with the Michigan
Civil Rights Commission last
week, charging that the pay
to ile\s at the bus station
disc riminat e agai n st
wom en .

The William and Nancy
Hood descendants will hold a
reunion on June 11 from II :30
a.m. to 4 p.m. at the
Shadblow Area uf Blendun
Woods in Colwnbus.
Descendants of the children
of William and Nancy HUIXI,
James and Nancy CurtiS

Hood Decker, Willia m J r. and
Atmor e Stewa rt Hood.
Sa muel and Civilla i\llen
Hood. Joseph and Elizabeth
Campbell Hood, Alexw1der
and Nancy A. Davis Hood,
Andrew and Catherine Gale
Hood. Walbtce and Sarah Ann
Williamson, Sheibler Hood .
and Henry and Sarah Anne
r;.
Uf Ul
HUIXI Be ll are invited tu at·
tend.
Those attending are asked
Mrs . Ma daline Housh
to
ta ke pictures, snapshots
rt&gt;ceived her 20 pound pin and
an
d
fa mily da ta . Each family
certificate at the Mason class
b
tv
take a picniclunch .
of Conway Diet held Tuesday
evening at St. J oseph 's
Catholic Church. Fou r new
IN THE IIOSPITAL
members were welcomed tn ·
Earl Thoma. Pumeruy. is a
to the class and Can'' v Van medical pa tien t at Holzer
Meter,Bett y Jam e~ and Medical Center. Hi s room
Eileen Fi elds were the witi- number is 507 A.
ners of the week for weigh t
loss.
At the Athens class, Kathy
Cheadle lost the most weight
Speedy Snails
for the week with Bert War·
Curious biologists have ·
ren as her runner-up . Kathy sought to detennine the speed
C11eadle rcceivl'&lt;i her 20 uf snai ls . Experiments with
pound pin and certificate. At ~a rden snail.s hi:lvc rn cosured
the Pomeroy class, · Sue sluggards crawling along at
Maison was the big looser, .00036 m.p.h. and speedsters
with Barbara King as runner- raci ng at .0313 m.p.h.
up.

D1n awl/1¥,]ed

·
Several awards were
presented al the Thursday
night meeting of Cub Scout
Pack 242 held at the Syracuse
Elementary School.
Chris Deemer and Barry
McCoy led in the pledge to the
nag to open the meetin g.
Athlete and ci tizen badges
were presented to Todd
Adams, En c Thoren, Jeff
F'rank, and David Duffy. The
boys commented un George
Washington and Abraham
Lincoln and explained to the
others attending what they
had todo to e;orn the badges.
There was a skit and other
games with the mee ting closing with the living ci reie. AtLending were Mrs. Robert
Deemer and Chris: Bi ll Baer,
Chris and Andy. Mrs . Koger
Grindley, son. Chris; Mrs.
Jim Adams. Todd and Kim:
Mrs. Clarence Frank and
Jeff ; Mrs. Corbitt Patterson
and Mike; Mrs. Pete Thoren
and Eric ; Mrs. Patty Jeffers
and J. L.. Mrs. Jeanette Duf·
fy and David : Mrs. Barry
McCoy and Barry; Jerry
Alesh ire and Jerry; Mr. and
Mrs. Hugh McPha il, Scott ,
Heather and Corey, and Mrs.
R. 1.. Corson.

SEEN AND HEARD
Mr. and Mrs. Cia renee
Grueser. Nease Settlement,
Mr. and Mrs. Hanun of South
Webster, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Orr, Chester,. Paul Orr.
. &amp; shan, Mrs. Robert Lee and
children, Bob Bill and Becky,
Racine. R. D. visited with Dr.
and Mrs. Robert Grueser and
family , Logan, recently and
attendt-d the graduation services of their daughter, Lisa
Grueser. Other relatives at·
tending were James Hanun
and a fri end of Mt. Blanchard, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Hamm, Lancaster; Mr. and
Mr s. Ed Newma n and
children, David and Jane and
their friend of Galion .

'·I found myself in a
situation where I needed to
use the toilet, all lhe free ones
were taken and I didn 't have
a dime,'' Mrs . Hayes said . uy
had to go through some very
embarassing moments to get
change.
"ll I had been a man , I
wouldn 't have to go through
that ," she said.
Mrs. Hayes said men have
the choice in most cases of
using a urinal in a restroo m
without charge.
The citi zens group seeking
to abolish pay 11J ilets at
airports, shopping centers
and other public places bega n
in a business law class al
Wayne State University.
But Stuart Ca ssell, who is
coordina ling the effort, sa1d
the drive quickly became
much more than just a class
project.
"Once we researched this
and discovered the reasons
for pay toilets, we became
committed to getting them
tak en out of all pu blic
buildings ," Cassell said.
"We feel all establishments
serving the public sh ould
consi der
it
their
responsibi li ty to provide
adequate restroom facilities
without patrons having to
suffer the indignity of having
to pay for vita l bodil y
functions," he said .
The group plans to press its
effort through a letter-writing
campaign aimed at state
lawmakers and the media , as
well as demonstrations
At least three stAtes, New
York, Alaska and Iowa , have
banned pay toilets in recent
years, Cassell said.
Establishments that still
have pay toilets generally
justify them by saying the
revenues are used for
maintenance, cassell said.
But the group Inspected pa y
toilets and found no
difference betwee n their
cleanliness and that of fr ee
restrooms, be said.
cassell also contends that
pay toilets don't provide very
much revenue, so outlawing
them would not be a financial
hardship.

For a1 ,our dcHt.,ourwtf
Home Improvement Supplies

JOHN A. WADE, M.D;

see CraiS Hardware

Announces The Openin&amp; Of His Office At

• Housewares

• Wallpaper
• P•lnts
• Electric• I Suppllt~
• Plumbing Supplies

w
A
R.
E

CROSS HARDWARE
Open Mon.lhru S.t.
9:00to5:00

did ."

Hayes said he also had a
good stArt after beginning

On~

5--:The Dally Sentinel, MidcUeoort-Pomeroy' 0 ., Monday June 5 1!178
r.-:.::::::&gt;-:.::::::::~:::::~;:;:;~:;:;:.:·:·:·:·~:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:··.-.-•..,....·.·····················~ . ~ • .

71 N. 2nd Ave.

Middleport

Pleasant Valley Hospital
Valley Drive
Point Pleount, West Vlrvlnl• lllSO

Practice Limited To Ear, Nose and
Throat Facial Plastic Surgery
Bronchoeeophagology
Opening July 1 - Acctpllng Appoints, June I
Tt\tp!lont 130-ll 675-1244

Members uf Drew Webster nate to the national convenPost 39, American Legion tion. Mrs. Blair by reason of
Auxi liary, were in Wilk esville being Eighth District presi·
Thursday to atten d the swn - dent is the delegate.
A s oci a l huu r a nd
mer convention of District 8
held at the Presbyterian refreshments following the
Church. Wilkesville unit was meeting. Attending from the
Karen Blaker Ph.D.
Pomeroy unit were M1ss Er·
host for the meeting.
Mrs. Hobbie Good, pres i- ma Smith, Mrs. Pratt , Mrs.
t e r s fr om qua li fi ed dent of the host unit, opened Ma rj or ie Goe tt , Mr s.
Mental patients
psychia trists. (To withhold the meeting and introduced Catherine Welsh, delegates;
rights
psychiatr ic info rmation when Mrs. Alex Blai r, Eighth and Mrs. Dorothy Jenkins
specifically asked might be District pres ident , who and Mrs. Veda Dovis. alterassumed cha rge of the nates.
DEAR DR BLAKER - considered perjury.)
The
letters
should
state
meeting.
F'ive years ago, I got very
Uta!
the
psychiatrist
has
Report.&lt;; on the year 's work
depressed over the sudden
·found
afte
r
personal
exwere
given by Mrs. William
death of my sister in an
amination
that
the
appli
cant
Neff
,
district Ameri ca nism
·airplane crash . I was so upset
CLUB TO MEET
is
mentally
healthy,
that
his
chairperson;
Mrs. Jea n Ca rr ,
I had trouble eati ng and
The
Middleport Garden
ur
her
chan
ces
of
children
and
yo
uth
chairpersleeping.
Club
will
meet tonight at 7:30
rehospitalization
or
recurson:
Mrs.
Lucille
Neff
,
comWhen I toid my p.&gt;ychiatrbt
p.m.
at
the home of Mrs.
rC
m:t!
uf
mental
illness
are
no
·
mumty
scrvu.
:
e
r.
:
ha1rman
;
about this, he made arJames
Titus,
Rutland, with
grea
ter
than
for
any
other
Mrs
.
Grace
Prall,
junior
acrangement.&lt;; fo r me to be adMrs . John K ill(:aid as the co·
adult
and
that
the
individual
l1v1lles
cha1rperson
;
Mrs.
mitted to a psychiatric
hospital for a few weeks. At is f~ll y capable of perform· Lorraine Snyder, veterans af- hostess. Mrs. Millard Van
fatrs and rehabilitation ; Mrs. Meter will demonstrate makthe time, I went along with ing the job.
If
you
want
to
read
more
Helen B1llmgs, Athens Men- ing cor sct ge~. Members ar c to
the plan because it seemed to
take flowers and corsage
about
this
issue,
my
source
of
tal
Health Center.
.
make sense .
Mrs. Chfford .~ dk ms of IllHterials to me~ kc their m~r· n
Looking back, however, I infonnation is "An American
rea lize I made a big mistake. Civil Liberties Union Hand- Crooksv ille was elected alter- co rsages.
Within the past two months, l book. The Ri ght.&lt;; of Mental
have appli ed fo r three Patient.&lt;;, 1973. "
1f you take this advice and
reg istered nursing positi ons.
The Ohio Supreme Court
are
rejected a fourth time,
Each time, I was rejected
rush
straight
to
a
don't
because I had to prov ide a
hi story of my psychiatri c lawyer. Not yet. Fi rst, con·
hospitalization on the JOb ap- sider other possi ble explanati ons fo r your inability lo land
plication .
'
a
job in an intensive care
I would rather do a difSix
ol
the
seven
presenl;
ustices of the Oh io
fe rent job. Nursing is so hard WI it.
Supreme
Cour1
are
lrom
the
state's three
What rea sons wer e you
on my legs. Bull am trained
larges
t
cities.
This
is
imbalance.
given when you were turned
and need the money .
away'
Did they say there was
There is only one other
a
job
freeze
or that they need·
ho;;pital in our small city with
ed
a
nurse
with
mort! recent
an intensive care unit. I am
going to apply there, but this lechnical expertise ? These
time I am going to avoid the explanations may be valid.
Weigh the evidence. If you
prob lem by leaving the
p.&gt;ychiatric llistory section of discover. for example. that
the application blank . Then you do nut lta ve adequate
I'll have a better chance of techni cal expe rience to be an
intensive ci:lre nurse , obtain
getting a job.
DEAH READE R - Maybe . Ute necessary updated trainBut you will also have a bet- ing or apply for another kind
ter chance of losing it if the of nursing job.
In The Democratic Part y Primary
But If the evidence points to
truth is ever discovered. Do
Nom inate
not despair. There is a way to job discrirni rti:ltion, contact i:l
handle this problem. Yours lawyer and fight for your
is. after all. a concern shan&gt;d ri ~ ht.&lt;; . This discrimination is
A Norwalk Resi dent ,
by many; one out of every illegal and unj ust.
For Oh io Supreme Court Ju s ti ce.
Write to Dr. Blaker 1n care
l ,()(X) Am ericans is or has
of this newspaper, P.O. Box
been a mental pa tient.
• Elected Judge ol the Sixt h Ois tn cl Courl
The American Civil l.l ber- 4119 . Radio City Station , New
of Appea ls Three Times.
ties Union suggests that York . N.Y. 100\9. Volume of
• Endorsed by the Oh io Democ ratiC Pariy .
former menta l patients who mai l prohibits personal
must reveal their psychiatric replies, but questions of
~
Jo!'ln Kell ; . Chairman, 4135 North Ha~cn , Toledo. Oh•O 43612
pasts on applications attach general Interest will be
to each form two or three let- discussed in fu ture columns.

CHOICES

~

!'f

Needs Small Town
Representation

Clifford 1'. Brown.

Three
Day
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Bill's ·Army-Navy Store
65 North Court St.

Athens, Ohio- Ph. 592-2488

�4- The Daily Sentinel, MidcUeport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Jw1e ~ . 1978

Moskau and Hume:

Bullets crush Sonics, 117-82
LANDOVER, Md. (UP! ) What started as a best-ofse ven NRA champ ionship
series is now a best:Of-o ne
series, home-court advantage
I1J the Seattl e /iUper:somcs.
Even a 35-point loss at
Washington Sunday couldn't
snuff out the Sanies'
enthusiasm .
"Every game they play
here, the))iaY it's the biggest
game in~ history of thetr
fr anchise ," sa id Seattle's
John Johnson. "Co me
Wednesday night , it's the
b1ggest ga me in our
franc hise. And we' re gonna

Center Coliseum. The Sanies championsh ip series game. a 129-95 win over St. Louis.
The Bullets got outstAnding
,have won 22 st~ai g ht in that. The previous record, 34, was Wilkens played on that St. games from many players,
building , but Washington's set April 2, 1961 by Boston , in Louis team .
including Hayes (21 points, 15
Elvin Hayes isn't buying any
''home-court" theories.
"Now they have to think
about us . They know we can
put points on the boa rd, and
that has to con tern them,"
sai d Hayes. " It doesn 't
matler where the game is
played . Their fans won 't put
lhe ba ll in the basket for
them .''
CIN CINNATI (UP! ) "Dido 't Torn Seaver have a I· best in baseball.
That was something the Bert Blyleven pitched nine 4 record earlier this season ?
"Real nasty," is the way
Sanies couldn 't do in Game 6. years in the American . Check Blyleven's record at lhe Pirate manager decribes
They shot just 34 pereent League befere being traded the end of the season . He'll be Blyleven 's curve.
from the field , . lheir worst to the Pittsburgh Pirates by up there near the top of tbe
Even though Blyleven
. ." .
"' performance of the series, th e Texas Rangers last list of winners. So will began
wm
Sunday's game by
The Bullets ' 117-82 triumph and were outrebounded, 69- winter.
Seaver.
reeling off live perfect
evened the series at lhree 49.
And during those nine
"And " added Tanner "so innin gs en route to his
Wa shington's margi n of years, he compiled a life-time will John Candelaria." '
ga mes api ece, with the
victnry , Anderson was more
deciding game at the Seattle 'ictory was the largest in a record of 122 victories against
C8ndelaria is the · Pirate impressed by Don Robinson ,
113 losses. It's a record, lefty who compiled a 20-5 the 21-year-old rookie right·
though, that takes on quite of won-and-lost
record, hander Cincy faced in
bit of luster when it's noted accompanied by a 2.34 ERA Saturday night's game.
that the career earned run . for the Pirates last year. He's
"That kid ," exclaimed the
average of Blyleven is a now :Hi with a 3.33 ERA.
Red manager, "has a great
gaudy 2. 79 for 2,143 innings.
Blyleven's start Sunday arm. Helookslikehe'sagood
1 welcomed tile trade / ' was his 12th of the season . competitor, too. I can 't think
said Blyleven, who pitched And while he hasn 't faced all of any pitcher in tbe league
se ven and a half seasons for Ute the clubs yet, he has seen who throws as hard as be
th e Minnesota Twins, enough to be convinced that does.
perennial losers, before being the National League is
" John D' Acquisto (San
swapped to the Rangers, "but stronger than the American . Diego Padres) might," be
I dido 't expect it."
"The hitters are more ag- added .
Doubles by Ken Griffey and
Tha t's because shortly gressive, and lhey're better
before the trade , Blyleven in the National League," said Don Werner and singles by
signed a multimillion-dollar Blyleven Sunday after Joe Morgan and Dave Collins
contract that included combining with relief pitcher were th e only hits by the Reds
deferred payments extending Grant Jackson to beat the . Sunday.
Morgan , bothered by a
some 15 years after he retires Reds 4-1 , dropping them a
game and a half behind the nagging groin injury and in
from lhe game .
So far . the 27-year -o ld San Francisco Giants in the midst of on e of the worst
Blyleven hasn't exactly set NL West. "The lineups you slumps of his career, is
the National League afire. face are tougher, even though · batting only .230. He entered
His
vici1Jry Sunday was his they don't use the designated Sunday's game with only four
VINYL Vfl.VET ... A vtnyl wall CCM."ring wt1h a beautiful 10ft eggs Mil
hitter in this league."
hits in his last 42 official trips
fourth
against five losses.
ftnlsh. Painting is fast otod ea5\' sloce woodworil can be painted right along
,_wnn lh~ walls. S!Wt buying the eKtrft pain! . Wmshable low satln
Blyleven not only has a to the plate.
Is Pirate Manager Chuck
sheen. Applies easily, dries In ont'-half hour. F..qulpment
Tarmer disappointed ?
good fastball, but , said
"Joe' s having the same
cleans up wtth water.
"Not a bit ," he replied. TaMer, his curve is one of the problem I was having until
today," said the Pirates' Bill
Robinson, who slammed a
~------------------------, pair of doubles and a single in
I Sunday's se ries finale .
"Today, I could see he was
I
OPTOMETRIST
trying
I1J hit homers and
OFFICE HOURS: 9:30 to 12, 2 to S (CLOSE 1
882-2525
pulling
his
out , just what
1 AT NOON ON THURS.) - EAST COURl I I was doing.head
I
wasn'
t relaxed
NEW HAVEN, W. VA. I ST., POMEROY.
126 MAIN
I either, and the guys ,
·------------------------~ espec ially (Jim ) Rooker ,
kept telling me to. Now, I
th ink I've go tten their
message.' '
Tom Seaver, bidding for his
fifth straight victory, will
oppose the Cards' Bob Forsch
when the Reels open a two ,
game series tonight in St.
Louis. Before returning home
next Monday , the Reds will
make other stops at Chicago
and Pittsburgh.
Anderson said he still
doesn 't know when Johnny
Bench, who has been
sidelined a week wiih a stiff
back, will return to the
lineup .

Pirates defeat Reds
4-1 behind Blyleven

11

SAYRE HARDWARE

I
I

N.

w. COMPTON, O.D.

I

As our life
changes, so does the way .
we use electrici~

Two wins ·of 15 starts

rebounds ), Bob Dandridge
CINCINNATI (UP!) (19 points), Mitch Kupchak
(19 points ), Charles Johnson Reds Manager Sparky
(17 points), Wes Unseld (14 Andersoo ' s foreheard
rebounds) and Greg BaliaN! wrinkled into a frown as he
seaMed the club's stAtistic
(12 points, 12 rebounds) .
Ballard's contribution was sheet.
an unexpected plus from a
"TWo victories out of 15
rookie who averaged just stArts," he said.
over four minutes of playing
Anderson was referring to
time in each of the first five the records of Paul Moskau
games. "We knew Greg was and Torn Hume, the Reds'
ready and we had to utilize fourth and fifth starting
him," said Coach Dick MottA. pitchers.
"He was a big key in the
Moskau, making his fifth
ballgame."
start since his recall from tbe
In the third period, Indianapolis farm club, failed .
Washington showed a new to survive the third inning.
offensive
wrinkle
Sunday as the Pittsburgh
Dandridge at guard - and Pirates tAgged him with a 4-1
scored 37 points to take an 64- loss in the finale of a three
61 lead. Dandridge had nine game series.
points in the quarter and
Before departing with his
Hayes eight.
second loss against no
Motta said he moved Dan· victories, the Red right·
dridge because of Kevin hander yielded three runs,
Grevey 's wrist injury. five hits, walked three and
Grevey stArted and played struck out four .
six minutes, but couldn't
"I don't know the answer to
return and must be his problem," said Anderson.
considered questionable for "There's nothing wrong with
Wednesday night.
him physically, and he's
Johnson, the Sonics' Ill rowing lhe ball hard."
leading scorer in the series
Hume, who'll go against the
was held to nine points. Cardinals Tuesday night in
Wilkens hinted that things the second of a two-game
woo't be the same in Game 7. series that opens tonight in
"That'sa game adjustment St . Louis' Busch Stadium, has
we can deal with," said a 2-ii record after 10 starts.
Wilkens. "I don 't think they And the second of those two
can play with four forwards victories came back on April
against us. I think we can 14.
make it pay."
"Sure I'm disturbed," said
Fred Brown led Seattle Anderson .
with 17 points, followed by
Changes planned? :
Gus Williams with 16. The
"None
have
been
starting front line of John discussed,'' answered the
Johnson , Jack Sikma and Red manager.
Marvin Webster was held to a
total of 25 points.

"Whether tbere will be is
something, they (Moskau and
Hume) will decide," he
added.
Bert Blyleven and · Grant
Jackson combined for a fourhitter SWlday as the Plra~s
salvaged the series finale.
Blyleven, acquired from
the Texas RaN!ers during the
winter, had a perfect nohitter going after five
inning.,. Then, in U\e sixth,
Mike Lum became the Reds'
first base runner when he
opened the inning by drawing
a walk.
After Don Werner looked at
a third strike, Dave Collins,
pinch hitting fer relief pitcber
Dave Tomlin, singled to
center for the Reds' first hit
of tbe game. But he was
quickly wiped off base when
Blyleven turned Pete Rose's
bouncer into an inning-ending
double play.
While he was mowing down
the flrst 15 batters he faced,
Blyleven admitted he was
entertaining thoughts of
pitching a no-hitter.
"I've had one," he said,
referring to the no-hitter he
pitched against the callfernia
Angels last September.
"And,"
he
added
confidently, "the Ume will
come when I'll pitch an~her

ooe."
Jackso.n, a 35-year-old
lefty, replaced myleven in
the seventh after a double by
Ken Griffey, a single by Joe
Morgan and a walk to George
Foster loaded the bases with
none out.

Tanana becomes first AL
pitcher to win 9 games
By MARK FRIEDMAN
UP! Sports Writer
Frank Tanana became the
American League's first
nine-game winner Sunday
when he led the california
Angels to a 4-2 victory over
the Boston Red Sox with a
four-hitter over 8 2.J innings.
"It's always nice to beat a
team that's considered one of
the best in baseball," said
Tanana. "I've always pitched
well against Boston here,
though ."
Ron Jackso n and Ken
Landreaux powered solo
homers to back Tanana and
give Jim Frl'8osi his first
11ctory as a manager. The

win also snapped a seven·
"That Tanana really knows
game losing streak fer the how to pitch, doesn't ha' "
Angels.
asked Fregosi. "He's a great
Tanana struck out five and competitor and he knows how
walked two to lift his record to keep hitters honest."
to 9-2 and become the second
pitcher in the majers to win
nine games. Ross Grimsley of
In other American Leaglll!
Mootreal was the first .
games, Milwaukee swept
Dave LaRoche nailed down Cleveland, 12-7 and 9-4, Texas
the final out of the ninth downed Toronto, 9-6, Detroit
inning to record his seventh toppled Minnesota , 6-4,
save after Tanana fielded a Kansas City clubbed Chicago,
sacrifice fl y to Carl 13-2, Baltimore stopped
Yastrzemskl and a run- Seattle, 4-1, and Oakland
scoring single to Carlton defeated New Y&lt;X"k, 6-4.
Fisk.

Bean is
Kemper
champ

. A lot of peop le believe that higher electric
bills an· caused by higher elect ric rates.
ln part. that's true.
Hut a big reason many electric bills are up
"i.Jf&lt;'aU '-I' lhe amount of electricity we use is up.
"Fxlay, for instance, an average family
tu"-s aiYJut four times m ore electricity t han in
l':rJJ And for a lot m ore t hings:
In l!-!50, m ost of the electricity used in the
hrJme was for lighting, cooking, refrigeration
and washing clot hes.
'-:nw. los.• than half ~ fafT'n, .·, Plectr;, ;,,, ;,
used fo r that. Instead, more than au'1o IS used
for air condit ioning. color TV, dishwashing,
clothes drying and hundreds of other electrical
conveni ences you wouldn't want to be without .
.
Unfortunately, inflation has drasti...ally
mcreased the cost of RUJ1plying the electric-ity
needed to meet this H1 ' ·1dv g-rowth in dc·ma nd .

And with new families cont inuing to join
the ranks of our customers ever y day, the
demand IS gomg to keep on growing.
So, keep~g the power coming, and fmding
ways to keep Its cm;ts down, is getting tougher
every day.
But, while we cont inue to do everything
we can _to hold down our costs as we keep up
With this growth, there are some things you can
do to help keep your costs in line, too.
.Use the appliances you have more
P4'fiCH'! rttv M~ ~ " &lt;ure V'lU r hom e is properl v
IIlBUJatea. Ana, wnen IL _comes tune w uuy new
appliances and systems, look into energy savers
like the heat pump.
.
If everyone m akes an effort to do just a
few of these t hings, we'll have a brand new
sow-ce of energy to rely on.
Ourselves.

Ohio Power Company
Working together is the only way.
,

CHARLOTIE, N.C. (UP! )
- Andy Bean is known for his
distance off the tees, but now,
the Kemper Open champion
says, he's rigbt up there with
the best of lhe putters on the
tour .
"For a person my sil;e ( 6feet-4 , 210-jlounds ) to develop
a soft touch around the green
takes werk - and I have
worked at it," said Bean, who
finished with a 66 for a 11'&gt;Wideri)ar 273 total.
Bean, winner of last year's
Dora! Open, stArted the day
one stroke behind Alan Pate
but pi cked up three
coosecuti ve birdies and an
eagle on the secood hole to
move to 14-under.
~~ When you get one-, two-,
or three-under after the first
fi ve or six holes you get that
mornentwn," said Bean, who
won $60,000 and moved to
fifth place on the PGA money
list with more than $137,000 in
earnings this year. "Tben I
made the eagle putt ard.l was
off and flying."
His only lapse of the day
came on the 17th hole when he
put his shot in the oonker.
chipped about 15 feet post the
hole and twOi)utted.
Mark Hayes and Andy
North finished at IIM!nder to
tie fiX" second place and
picked up W,750 each from
the 1300,000 purse.
North said Bean, his
playing partner, "played
absolutely perfect for eight
holes. Then he g~ 10 far
ahead be was just trying to
get in and that's what he

play at 8-under-par but
quickly found himself four
shots behind Bean.
·
"I thought 12-under would
do some good," Hayes said.
"Andy plays awful solid. This
course is perfect fer him. He
can get it (drives ) over the
doglegs."
Bean played tbe front side
at &gt;under 31 and added
birdies at the 13th and 14th·
holes and bogeyed the 17th.
Bean, once known for his
fierce temper, said efforts I1J
control himself have helped
his game. He said he feels
he's ready to add some more
victories to his record,
starting with this week '~
Memphis Open.

Gold

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Heres a tull -s&lt;Z e electnc ra ng e bUill by
G1bson Jo last w1Jh a lll l·u p top and sp1ll·
conta 1mng nm 2 b1g 8" surlace e lements
chrome reilector pans and mf 1nile hea t
con lrols

INGELS FURNITURE
106 N. 2nd Ave.

Middleport, 0.

DO-IT·YOURSELF
HARIMARE HEADQUARTERS

. m·

Helen ii~lp.,... . .

I US. • •

y

By Helen Boltel

.,~~

Auxiliary members attend . convention

.

POLLY'S POINTERS

-~

Polly Cramer

·:.:

Wicker needs
a face lift

SHEGOTWRATHYOVER WREA'I'H
OEA!tHELEN :
·
I often go shopping with a friend who lives at our retirement
center. I pay lor the gas, as I don' t drive any more. We're both
over 70 and Widows.
We used the same cart the other day . i bought a lovely spray
of gardemas to put on my husband 's grave. She wanted one
too! but got the last on the display table and it was definitely in:
fen or.
So'!'ewhere along the line she switched sprays and 1 ended
up With the poorer one. !look it over to her after I'd unpacked
my purchases, but she wouldn't exchange, saying we both had
the flowers we'd bought.
.
I say this is dishonest. Should I give up my friendship with
her? -FEEI.JNG CHEATED
.
DEARF.C.:
Which is ~ore important: friendship with a woman who
gJVes you a hft (car- and companion -wise1or a slightly inferior
spray mtended for a man who couldn't know the difference?
Your husband wouldn 't want you feuding over flowers for his
grave; so check the switch down to an honest mistake -even if
it wasn 't. -H.

DEAR POLLY- Would you
please tell me how to give
wicker chairs a fa ce lift? ABBIE
DEAR ABBIE- Afrequent
going over with the brush attachment on your vacuum
will keep the dust out uf those
IT\any crevices. Wash with
warm water w1th about a
tablespoon of ammonia added for each quart of water
and rinse tl1oroughly with
d ear water. I had my wicker
chairs, that had been treated
to counlless coats of while
paint, stripped by a professional furniture · stripper to
eliminate that flaking and
peeling that often occurs.
When repainting use
enamel paint. II can be
sprayed on or applied with a
brush that should always be
full of paint and always stroked in the same direction. My
experience is that a tremen·
dous amount of spray pamt is
required, making the job
quite expensive. Clear varnish could be used on natural
wicker.·· POLLY
DEAR POLLY- For a year
my husband kept promising
to make a sand box for the
children but he never seemed
to get the time. Finally we
came up with a simple, inex·
pensi ve solution that has
worked well. We bought a
four-foot plastic molded play
pool for $5 and filled it with
280 pounds of sand 1which
cost us another $.1) . For a
cover to keep lhe rain out 1
rounded the corners on an old
plastic shower curtain to
make a circle. The edges
were turned under and on the
sewing machine I stitched a

DEAR HELEN:
I could love a homely girl if she were kind and not bitter or
jealous. I could love a handicapped girl if she weren't self·
p1tymg. I c ould love a girl who is poor or uneducated if she did
not hold It against me for bein ~ more fortwmte. But i could
never love a fatty , because she could c han ~e her handicap if
she really tried.
.
Who wants a sell-indulgent wife, lacking in character and
will power? Tllis means she is lazy, and demands that people
accept her as she is, rather than improve.
I am a counselor who has devoted hb life to helping the less
for!Wlate , but I have not one shred of pity for fat women. They,
as deserted wtves, stream through my office daily seeking
welfare money:
Money I t an give them, but what I can't tell them is that if
they weren't slobs, inside as well as out, then they'd still have
their men.
I hope you 'll print this for the sa ke of all families about to
lose their breadwinner to the arms of a slender woman. -J .W.
DEARJ.
Thin women have marriage-fa ilure too. Those deserted
wives . who stream through yo ur office aren't all there
because they 'refoodaholi cs.
Of the fatties, some may be genuine gluttons, but others are
lettmg calories compensate for emotional lacks in their lives.
My I.G.A. P. (' 'I'm Guessi ng Again Perception .. I suspects
you have a weight problem in your own home. If so. knock off
the resentment, prove you still care, and perhaps your wife
will stArt shedding those pounds. - ll

\(}::{{ ~'~i::(f}'):))\))~(}~')())~~)):})~ : ))'' ;:::;::

::•\· Hood reunt·on ::::

casing. Through this wa s run

~r~~;~~~~~~·::~~~t.l~J~~\~~~

i:l/l/1/

Cub Scouts

the way over the sand boll to
keep the rain out and to keep
the sand from blowing away.
- MARGE
, DEAR POLLY- I am an
avid worker of crossword
puzzles and have found that
using a red pencil or pen does
wonders for those who have
less than perfect eyesight. BRADLEY
D8AR POLLY - I use
votive candle holders as containers for miniature flower
arrangements. They are
great when using violets, paJ.l·
sies and fuchias.
Also, narrow men's belts
make great replacements for
worn purse handles.- RUBY
DEAR POLLY •• My
children do not like to finish
the milk left in their cereal
bowls when the cereal is
gone. So I give each of them a
plastic straw to drink it and
they think this is a treat and
drink it all. - BONNIE
Polly will send you one of
he r signed thank -you
newspaper coupon clippers if
she uses your favonte
Pointer , Peeve or Problem in
her column . Write POLLY'S
POINTERS in care of this
newspaper.

One thin dime
is her gripe
DETROIT (UP! ) - To
Jane Hayes, a drive to
abolish pay 11Jilets is no
laughing matter - especially
when you can 't find a dime.
Mrs. Hayes, a member of
an area group called Citizens
Against Pay Toilets, recently
found herself without change
when she needed to use a
restroom at the city's Greyhound Bus terminal.
The incident led her to file a
complaint with the Michigan
Civil Rights Commission last
week, charging that the pay
to ile\s at the bus station
disc riminat e agai n st
wom en .

The William and Nancy
Hood descendants will hold a
reunion on June 11 from II :30
a.m. to 4 p.m. at the
Shadblow Area uf Blendun
Woods in Colwnbus.
Descendants of the children
of William and Nancy HUIXI,
James and Nancy CurtiS

Hood Decker, Willia m J r. and
Atmor e Stewa rt Hood.
Sa muel and Civilla i\llen
Hood. Joseph and Elizabeth
Campbell Hood, Alexw1der
and Nancy A. Davis Hood,
Andrew and Catherine Gale
Hood. Walbtce and Sarah Ann
Williamson, Sheibler Hood .
and Henry and Sarah Anne
r;.
Uf Ul
HUIXI Be ll are invited tu at·
tend.
Those attending are asked
Mrs . Ma daline Housh
to
ta ke pictures, snapshots
rt&gt;ceived her 20 pound pin and
an
d
fa mily da ta . Each family
certificate at the Mason class
b
tv
take a picniclunch .
of Conway Diet held Tuesday
evening at St. J oseph 's
Catholic Church. Fou r new
IN THE IIOSPITAL
members were welcomed tn ·
Earl Thoma. Pumeruy. is a
to the class and Can'' v Van medical pa tien t at Holzer
Meter,Bett y Jam e~ and Medical Center. Hi s room
Eileen Fi elds were the witi- number is 507 A.
ners of the week for weigh t
loss.
At the Athens class, Kathy
Cheadle lost the most weight
Speedy Snails
for the week with Bert War·
Curious biologists have ·
ren as her runner-up . Kathy sought to detennine the speed
C11eadle rcceivl'&lt;i her 20 uf snai ls . Experiments with
pound pin and certificate. At ~a rden snail.s hi:lvc rn cosured
the Pomeroy class, · Sue sluggards crawling along at
Maison was the big looser, .00036 m.p.h. and speedsters
with Barbara King as runner- raci ng at .0313 m.p.h.
up.

D1n awl/1¥,]ed

·
Several awards were
presented al the Thursday
night meeting of Cub Scout
Pack 242 held at the Syracuse
Elementary School.
Chris Deemer and Barry
McCoy led in the pledge to the
nag to open the meetin g.
Athlete and ci tizen badges
were presented to Todd
Adams, En c Thoren, Jeff
F'rank, and David Duffy. The
boys commented un George
Washington and Abraham
Lincoln and explained to the
others attending what they
had todo to e;orn the badges.
There was a skit and other
games with the mee ting closing with the living ci reie. AtLending were Mrs. Robert
Deemer and Chris: Bi ll Baer,
Chris and Andy. Mrs . Koger
Grindley, son. Chris; Mrs.
Jim Adams. Todd and Kim:
Mrs. Clarence Frank and
Jeff ; Mrs. Corbitt Patterson
and Mike; Mrs. Pete Thoren
and Eric ; Mrs. Patty Jeffers
and J. L.. Mrs. Jeanette Duf·
fy and David : Mrs. Barry
McCoy and Barry; Jerry
Alesh ire and Jerry; Mr. and
Mrs. Hugh McPha il, Scott ,
Heather and Corey, and Mrs.
R. 1.. Corson.

SEEN AND HEARD
Mr. and Mrs. Cia renee
Grueser. Nease Settlement,
Mr. and Mrs. Hanun of South
Webster, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Orr, Chester,. Paul Orr.
. &amp; shan, Mrs. Robert Lee and
children, Bob Bill and Becky,
Racine. R. D. visited with Dr.
and Mrs. Robert Grueser and
family , Logan, recently and
attendt-d the graduation services of their daughter, Lisa
Grueser. Other relatives at·
tending were James Hanun
and a fri end of Mt. Blanchard, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Hamm, Lancaster; Mr. and
Mr s. Ed Newma n and
children, David and Jane and
their friend of Galion .

'·I found myself in a
situation where I needed to
use the toilet, all lhe free ones
were taken and I didn 't have
a dime,'' Mrs . Hayes said . uy
had to go through some very
embarassing moments to get
change.
"ll I had been a man , I
wouldn 't have to go through
that ," she said.
Mrs. Hayes said men have
the choice in most cases of
using a urinal in a restroo m
without charge.
The citi zens group seeking
to abolish pay 11J ilets at
airports, shopping centers
and other public places bega n
in a business law class al
Wayne State University.
But Stuart Ca ssell, who is
coordina ling the effort, sa1d
the drive quickly became
much more than just a class
project.
"Once we researched this
and discovered the reasons
for pay toilets, we became
committed to getting them
tak en out of all pu blic
buildings ," Cassell said.
"We feel all establishments
serving the public sh ould
consi der
it
their
responsibi li ty to provide
adequate restroom facilities
without patrons having to
suffer the indignity of having
to pay for vita l bodil y
functions," he said .
The group plans to press its
effort through a letter-writing
campaign aimed at state
lawmakers and the media , as
well as demonstrations
At least three stAtes, New
York, Alaska and Iowa , have
banned pay toilets in recent
years, Cassell said.
Establishments that still
have pay toilets generally
justify them by saying the
revenues are used for
maintenance, cassell said.
But the group Inspected pa y
toilets and found no
difference betwee n their
cleanliness and that of fr ee
restrooms, be said.
cassell also contends that
pay toilets don't provide very
much revenue, so outlawing
them would not be a financial
hardship.

For a1 ,our dcHt.,ourwtf
Home Improvement Supplies

JOHN A. WADE, M.D;

see CraiS Hardware

Announces The Openin&amp; Of His Office At

• Housewares

• Wallpaper
• P•lnts
• Electric• I Suppllt~
• Plumbing Supplies

w
A
R.
E

CROSS HARDWARE
Open Mon.lhru S.t.
9:00to5:00

did ."

Hayes said he also had a
good stArt after beginning

On~

5--:The Dally Sentinel, MidcUeoort-Pomeroy' 0 ., Monday June 5 1!178
r.-:.::::::&gt;-:.::::::::~:::::~;:;:;~:;:;:.:·:·:·:·~:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:··.-.-•..,....·.·····················~ . ~ • .

71 N. 2nd Ave.

Middleport

Pleasant Valley Hospital
Valley Drive
Point Pleount, West Vlrvlnl• lllSO

Practice Limited To Ear, Nose and
Throat Facial Plastic Surgery
Bronchoeeophagology
Opening July 1 - Acctpllng Appoints, June I
Tt\tp!lont 130-ll 675-1244

Members uf Drew Webster nate to the national convenPost 39, American Legion tion. Mrs. Blair by reason of
Auxi liary, were in Wilk esville being Eighth District presi·
Thursday to atten d the swn - dent is the delegate.
A s oci a l huu r a nd
mer convention of District 8
held at the Presbyterian refreshments following the
Church. Wilkesville unit was meeting. Attending from the
Karen Blaker Ph.D.
Pomeroy unit were M1ss Er·
host for the meeting.
Mrs. Hobbie Good, pres i- ma Smith, Mrs. Pratt , Mrs.
t e r s fr om qua li fi ed dent of the host unit, opened Ma rj or ie Goe tt , Mr s.
Mental patients
psychia trists. (To withhold the meeting and introduced Catherine Welsh, delegates;
rights
psychiatr ic info rmation when Mrs. Alex Blai r, Eighth and Mrs. Dorothy Jenkins
specifically asked might be District pres ident , who and Mrs. Veda Dovis. alterassumed cha rge of the nates.
DEAR DR BLAKER - considered perjury.)
The
letters
should
state
meeting.
F'ive years ago, I got very
Uta!
the
psychiatrist
has
Report.&lt;; on the year 's work
depressed over the sudden
·found
afte
r
personal
exwere
given by Mrs. William
death of my sister in an
amination
that
the
appli
cant
Neff
,
district Ameri ca nism
·airplane crash . I was so upset
CLUB TO MEET
is
mentally
healthy,
that
his
chairperson;
Mrs. Jea n Ca rr ,
I had trouble eati ng and
The
Middleport Garden
ur
her
chan
ces
of
children
and
yo
uth
chairpersleeping.
Club
will
meet tonight at 7:30
rehospitalization
or
recurson:
Mrs.
Lucille
Neff
,
comWhen I toid my p.&gt;ychiatrbt
p.m.
at
the home of Mrs.
rC
m:t!
uf
mental
illness
are
no
·
mumty
scrvu.
:
e
r.
:
ha1rman
;
about this, he made arJames
Titus,
Rutland, with
grea
ter
than
for
any
other
Mrs
.
Grace
Prall,
junior
acrangement.&lt;; fo r me to be adMrs . John K ill(:aid as the co·
adult
and
that
the
individual
l1v1lles
cha1rperson
;
Mrs.
mitted to a psychiatric
hospital for a few weeks. At is f~ll y capable of perform· Lorraine Snyder, veterans af- hostess. Mrs. Millard Van
fatrs and rehabilitation ; Mrs. Meter will demonstrate makthe time, I went along with ing the job.
If
you
want
to
read
more
Helen B1llmgs, Athens Men- ing cor sct ge~. Members ar c to
the plan because it seemed to
take flowers and corsage
about
this
issue,
my
source
of
tal
Health Center.
.
make sense .
Mrs. Chfford .~ dk ms of IllHterials to me~ kc their m~r· n
Looking back, however, I infonnation is "An American
rea lize I made a big mistake. Civil Liberties Union Hand- Crooksv ille was elected alter- co rsages.
Within the past two months, l book. The Ri ght.&lt;; of Mental
have appli ed fo r three Patient.&lt;;, 1973. "
1f you take this advice and
reg istered nursing positi ons.
The Ohio Supreme Court
are
rejected a fourth time,
Each time, I was rejected
rush
straight
to
a
don't
because I had to prov ide a
hi story of my psychiatri c lawyer. Not yet. Fi rst, con·
hospitalization on the JOb ap- sider other possi ble explanati ons fo r your inability lo land
plication .
'
a
job in an intensive care
I would rather do a difSix
ol
the
seven
presenl;
ustices of the Oh io
fe rent job. Nursing is so hard WI it.
Supreme
Cour1
are
lrom
the
state's three
What rea sons wer e you
on my legs. Bull am trained
larges
t
cities.
This
is
imbalance.
given when you were turned
and need the money .
away'
Did they say there was
There is only one other
a
job
freeze
or that they need·
ho;;pital in our small city with
ed
a
nurse
with
mort! recent
an intensive care unit. I am
going to apply there, but this lechnical expertise ? These
time I am going to avoid the explanations may be valid.
Weigh the evidence. If you
prob lem by leaving the
p.&gt;ychiatric llistory section of discover. for example. that
the application blank . Then you do nut lta ve adequate
I'll have a better chance of techni cal expe rience to be an
intensive ci:lre nurse , obtain
getting a job.
DEAH READE R - Maybe . Ute necessary updated trainBut you will also have a bet- ing or apply for another kind
ter chance of losing it if the of nursing job.
In The Democratic Part y Primary
But If the evidence points to
truth is ever discovered. Do
Nom inate
not despair. There is a way to job discrirni rti:ltion, contact i:l
handle this problem. Yours lawyer and fight for your
is. after all. a concern shan&gt;d ri ~ ht.&lt;; . This discrimination is
A Norwalk Resi dent ,
by many; one out of every illegal and unj ust.
For Oh io Supreme Court Ju s ti ce.
Write to Dr. Blaker 1n care
l ,()(X) Am ericans is or has
of this newspaper, P.O. Box
been a mental pa tient.
• Elected Judge ol the Sixt h Ois tn cl Courl
The American Civil l.l ber- 4119 . Radio City Station , New
of Appea ls Three Times.
ties Union suggests that York . N.Y. 100\9. Volume of
• Endorsed by the Oh io Democ ratiC Pariy .
former menta l patients who mai l prohibits personal
must reveal their psychiatric replies, but questions of
~
Jo!'ln Kell ; . Chairman, 4135 North Ha~cn , Toledo. Oh•O 43612
pasts on applications attach general Interest will be
to each form two or three let- discussed in fu ture columns.

CHOICES

~

!'f

Needs Small Town
Representation

Clifford 1'. Brown.

Three
Day
TO OUR MEIGS COUNTY CUSTOMERS!

50% OF OUR SALES COMES FROM YOU! BRING
TlUS ADVERTISEMENT FOR ANOTHER 15% SAVINGS.
OPEN 9:00A.M. TO 5:30P.M.

SPORTING
GOODS

RANGER. MINER

or@iQg!§o
$ 50

OOFF

NOW

PAINTER
PANTS

$750
14 oz.

WRANGLER
JEANS

Straight Leg and Boot Flares

$

l,OOO's
MORE ITEMS

TOO
NUMEROUS
TO MENTION

CARPENTER
PANTS
$ 50
LEE RIDER
14 oz. JEANS
Stright Leg and Flares

00

$

00

JUST ARRIVEDI THOUSANDS
of SLEEPING BAGS
Largest Selection In Southeastern Ohio
Every Size and Style Available

Bill's ·Army-Navy Store
65 North Court St.

Athens, Ohio- Ph. 592-2488

�/

7 ~The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy' 0 ., Monday, June 5, 1978

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Monday. JWte 5, 1978

Miss jennifer Wise
installed as Bethel queen
Jennifer Wise, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe Wise ,
was installed as honored
queen of Bethel 62. International Order of Job's ughters.
in the semi-annual installation of officers held Saturday
night at the Pomeroy
Masonic Temple.
Other elected officers installed were Ruth Blake,
senior princess; Dolly
Rousey , junior princess;
Susanna Wise. guide. and
Kathy Blake, marshall.
Appointed officers installed
were Julie Byer. chaplain ;
Step han ie
Houch ins,
recorder ; Teresa Starr ,

treasurer; Toni Pope, musician; Jeanna Pauley, first
messenge r ;
Za ndra
Va u ~han, second messenger;
Angie Houchins, third
messenger ; Jeannie Welsh,
fourth messenger; Brenda
Chappelear. fifth messenger ;
Mandy Sisson, librarian ; Betsy Herald, senior custodian;
Cindy Parker, junior cuslo!lian ; Kim Pauley, inner
guard; and Barba ra Chappelear. The choir members or
Stephanie Radford, Amy
Sisson, Lori Wood, Robin
Herald , and Valerie Jeffers.
The installing officers were
Mandy Sisson, installing of-

f1cer; Merri Ault, guide; Lori
Wood, marshall ; Angie
Sisson, cha plai n; Twila
Childs, senior custodian ; Linda Mayer, junior custodian ;
Sandra Luckeydoo, recorder ;
Kathy Johnson, musician;
Becky Anderson, flag bearer;
Ben Philson, soloist with
Laura Hoover as his accompanist.
The honored queen 's colors
are green and yellow, her
emblem is the dove; her
nower' the daisy; her theme.
peac-e. Her motto is "Blessed
are the peacemakers, for
they shall be ca lied the
children or God.

The guardian council of the
Bethel is Mrs. Mary Wise,
guardian; Bill Quickel ,
associate guardian ; Sue
Starr, guardian secretary;
Audrey Wood, guardian
trt~as urer ;
and Vickie
Houchin s, directress of
'music.
The associate guardian
t'Ouncil is composed or Carol
Sisson, promoter of sociability ; Lois Pauley, custodian of
paraphernalia; Nancy :Pope,
promoter of hospitality; Donna Byer, director of finance;
and Angie Sisson, director of
Epochs.

Energy is sold by the joule,
but in common practice the
billing or electrical energy is
expressed in terms or the
kilowatt-hour, which is 3.6
million joules, or 3.6 mega joules.

DON'T VOTE FOR JUSTICE
OF THE OHIO SUPREME COURT
UNTIL YOU
KNOW ABOUT

u
DG
E
j

RICHARD M. MARKUS
Endorsed over all Opponents by
DAYTON DAILY NEWS, DAYTON JOURNAL HERALD, AKRON BEACON JOURNAL,
YOUNGSTOWN VINDICATOR, CLEVELAND PLAIN DEALER, CLEVELAND PRESS,
AND THE SUN NEWSPAPERS.
ASK YOUR LAWYER ABOUT

JUDGE RICHARD M. MARKUS
Paid lor by Markus Judicial Campaign Committee
Former Senator ROBERT A. TAFT, JR., Chairman , Lawyer Division
Katherine S. Sturgen , Chairman , 11843 Lake Ave., Lakewood, 0. 44107

YOUR CHILD IS PRECIOUS
••• Laughing Eyes

.•• Bandaged Shins
••• Mischievous Smile
••• A Heartful of·Hope
ANSWERS •••

HERE VISITING
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd T.
Chapman and daughters,
Shell~nd Kimberly, of Pitt·
sburgh, Pa. were weekend
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ken·
nelh Russell. Chapman at·
tended the alumni banquet at
· Racine High School where he
graduated with the class of
l961.
That same weekend the
Russells' son, Lt. Karl
Russell , station ed at
Okinawa, visited his wife,
Linda, and children, Melissa
and Kenneth at their home in
Jacksonville, N.C. He returned to Okinawa on May 31 but
telephoned his parents while
on leave.
ATIEND FUNERAL
Mrs. Lelll! Hanun and Mr.
and Mrs. Allen Hamm,
Pomeroy, and Miss Nancy
Harrun and Mrs. Everett
Johnson, Colwnbus, we~e in
Chesapeake Friday night
having been called there by
the death of Mrs. Reuel
Smith. She d1ed at the Cabell
Hunting ton Hospital on
Wednesday.
Mrs. Phillip Meinhart, Miss
Erma Smith, and Mr. and
Mrs. Arthur J. Smith of
Chauncey attended her
fw1eral services on Saturday.
Mrs. Smith was a niece of
Mrs. Hamm, Mrs. Meinhart
and Miss Smith.

Fairview
News Notes
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr. and Mrs. Don Manuel
and ch ildren and Chester Van
Meter of Morning Star visited
Mrs. Laura Byers at Tanners
Run Sunday afternoon. Mr.
Van Meter and Don entertained with music during
the evening .
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Miller
and children of Bellvue, 0.
were Memorial weekend
gues.ts of Mr . and Mrs.
Charles Lawson and family .
Mrs. Ett Warner spent
Tuesday night with Mrs .
Pearl Norris.
Funeral services for Saith
Friend who passed away
at
Mari etta
Nursing
Home were held Saturda y
at
the
Ewing
Funera l Hom e with in-

As you know the Meigs Loca l School District has pla ced a 10 mill 3 year
emergency operating levy on the ballo t for June 6. We feel it is extremely
im portant that th e levy succeed. We have tried to answer all questions and
inform the public about all aspects of this levy .

WHAT'S THIS EMERGENCY ALL ABOUT?
We are anticipating a def ici t of $160,000 to $180,000 at the end of 1978 and a deficit
in e~cess of $630,000 at the end of 1979 . Thi s emergency level will allow us to
borrow money against ta ~es collected in 1979 and not have to pay it back until the
1979 calendar yea r . Three yea r s will give the state and legis latur e tim e to decide
what changes, If any. wil l take place in school funding . In the meantime we can
keep our schools open and operat ing.

WASHINGTON (UP! ) Ttme Is runrung out for some
MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT GARDEN
Club, 7:30 p.m. Monday, at
the home of Mrs. James
Titus, Rutland. Mrs. John
Kincaid, co-hostess. Mrs.
Millard Van Meter to
demonstrate making corsages. Members to take
Rowers and corsage material
to make their own corsages.

By Mn. Neva NlcboiiOD
Rallud Gardea Club
HENS AND CHICKENS

If you want an interesting plant and one that doesn't grow
out of bounds, plant the Sempervlvum. The name means "live
forever" which expresses mw end~ and permanent thi•
plant is and doesn't grow out of bOilllds.
It is better know by its common name, hen and chickens, a
most descriptive name of its manner of growth. When you
"set" the "hen" you will, in due time, have a brood of "baby
chicks". The pointed succulent leaves are arranged In neat
rows like petals of a rose blos,orom, forming a rosette, with stem
hidden Wtderneath. During growing season, more steams are
sent out to edge of main plant. These develop into "chicks"
which seem to he peeping out from Wtder the protective wings
of "mother hen".
They are hardy, easy to grow, and can tolerate quite a bit
of neglect. Use ordinary garden soil (on the alkallne side) .
They can be grown in SWl or shade.
Hen and chlckens are charming In a rock garden,
strawberry jars, dish gardens, as pot plants and make an old
tree stump look great.
Small rosettes may be no more than v. to \l inch in
diameter: larger ones up to six incbes or more. The Interest
and beauty they create c&lt;me from di!lerent patterns and
colorings of rosetts. Some have cobweds of hairs, so dense and
white they partially conceal leaves, as if a busy spider had
been at work. The teJ:ture of some appear velvety. On others,
leaves are shiny and smooth. Leaves of some varieties may be
tipped with brown or otber colors, or the entire rosette may be
reddish or have a purplish tinge.
Rosettes of some varieties may send up a stalk of daisyshaped blossoms. Mler flowering Is over, rosettes die, but
"chicks" will have grown into "heM" with colonies of their
own. They are shallow-rooted and during dry seasons
appreciate extra water although they may survive without it.
Where winter heaving Is bad, a Ught litter as soon as the
grotmd freezes is good.
Sempervivurns can be planted any lime dnring growing
season . Simply remove a rosette and tuck its stem !lnnly Into a
damp spot. They make nice gifts, especially for children's
gardens because they are easy to grow.

terment in Letart Cemetery.
Mr. Friend was a fonner
resident of this community.
Attending services from a
distance were Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Layne of Pittsburgh,
Mrs. Lulu Boggs, Johnnie and
Bud Noble, Arett Boggs,
Vernon Deleuins, Thelma and
Richard Short and Betty
Noble, all of Moundsville , W.
Va.

TUESDAY

REVIVAL In progress at
Freedom Gospel Mission at
Bald Knobs through June B.
Services 7:30p.m. nightly. 0.
G. McKinney evangelist.
Special singing. Public in·
Vited.
RACINE LEGION Aux·
Hiary will serve election
day dinner starting alii a.m.
at Racine Post Home.

of the Vietnam era veterans
to use their Gl Bill education

benefits.
Max Cleland, head of the

Marietta firemen end strike
United Press Internati&lt;&gt;ual
Firemen in Marietta today
ended a strike that started
Friday when \hey returned to
work on the first shift.
Meanwhile, si x Minerva
police offi cers and fiv e
dispatchers decided to accept
a city contract offer and
ended their walk out.
Wa shin gto n Co unt y
Common Pleas Court Judge
Hober t Rawson Saturday
nig ht in Marietta issued a
\emporary restraining order
fur striking firefighters to
return to work at once.
Marietta 's 36 striking firefigh ters have been told by

WEDNESDAY

Mayor Geoffrey Brunton they
are violating state law by
participating in th e walkout.
·Brunton promised to invoke
state law or a city ordinance
to stop the job action.
Mike Chovan, president of
Local 442 of the International
Association of Firefighters in
Marietta, said his men
planned to remain off the job
until they get a pay raise they
reel is adequate. Marietta
City
Council
offered
firefighters raises ranging
between 39 and 46 cents an
hour , but the · public
employees sought a 46 cent an
hour boost .

Two substitute firelighters
and Chief Beamon Biehl were
the only firefighters on duty
over the weekend. No fires
were reported.
However, the firemen returned to work today ,
apparently in fear of losing
their jobs.
Minerva ' s
police
department went on strike
Wednesday after rejecting a
city council wage and fringe
benefit offer. It was the same
offer they accepted Sunday
night.
It stipulates a $50 monthly
wage increase effective next
year and up to $115 a month

E

BETHEL Ladies Aid I p.m.
with Eunice Davis and
VIrginia Fisher.
HAPPY HARVESTERS
Class at Trinity Church,
Thursday, 7:30p.m.
F1RE
WELLINGTON, Ohio
(UP!) - A downtown
business building containing
three stores was heavily
damaged by fire Saturday
morning .
Authorities said the
Welllngtoo Auto Parts store
was destroyed and there was
extensive damage to the
Western Auto store and the
Looks Unlimited beauty shop .
No injuries were reported .
State fire marshals were
called in to investigate cause
of the 4 a.m. blaze.

LARGE SELECTION OF BEDDING
PLANTS 65' per doz. pak s4.75 per flat
Other Items Also Reduced
Open 9 to 8 Daily

HUBBARD' GREENHOUSE

FISH

$}39

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

89'

RUMP ROAST • TIP
ROAST • Tl P STEAK

,, ..

SlmEAN
$}49
BREAKFAST STRIPS.~-~ :..
LB.
- - - - - - FRESH FRUITS &amp; VEGETABLES - - - TENDER FLORIDA

WESTERN

SWEET CORN·.......................... 6 FOR 79(

ALABAMA
POTATOES

FANCY RED

2mR

NEW LARGE SWEET

SLICING ONIONS ........................L~;. 19~

..

Raymond H. Boatright

CANTELOPES

VINE RIPE TOMATOE$ ..................~~~.39(

~$109

CUST &amp; PEARL STREETS
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

NICE FRESH

99~

FLORIDA ORANGES.·-····~·-···, ....... 5-LB. BAG 99c

DEMOCRAT CANDIDATE FOR

SALE DATES JUNE 5 ·1

FRIENDLIEST SERVICE IN TOWN!

QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

•

YOUR VOTE AND INFLUENCE APPRECIATED
PD. POL ADV.

RAGLE

WILLTHE STATE BAIL US OUT I IKETHEY DIP CLEVELANp?
The state did not ball out Cleveland. They advanced them their. foundation
money f?r ne~l year. When this money runs out they will have an even more
seno~s fmanCial problem . We think that the taxpayers of the Meigs Local School
D1stnct want to ma1ntam local control of our schools. We do not know what plan s
the state or the leg lslature has for funding of schools.

$ 5,000
10,000
10,000
20,000

25.000
30,000
40,000

You
Pay On
35 Pet. of
Valuation

VEG ALL MIXED VEGETABLES .....]

c.n.

CVo sroRrs

89c

&lt;:&gt;~0 5 TORlS • CARDINAl fOOD STORES
:::

Aclditiona I
Taxes Paid
After 10 Pet.
Rollback
112 Year

i

AWAKE
eMiliO'\ per taml._,
Um•'""""'"''.._

-

$ 15.75

$ 7.87

3,500
5,2&amp;J

31.50
47 .25
63.00
78.75
94.50
126.00

15.75
23 .62
31.50
39.37
47 .25
63 .00

$ 1.31
2.62
3.93
5.25
6.56
7.87
10 .50

-

DOLE

GROCERY SHELF VALUES

PI ElPPLE 2g~~Z-

VA~LEY BELL

gal. ,

~~

SUOAR ISP

JIFFY

BISCUIT MIX ........................
DINTYMOORE

2

BEEF STEW ......... ~~~·

40·01.

Umlt of\41 wilt. .,...,
tO\!porl I* frMnlly

BUFFET
DINNERS

691

Bo•

. . . ~I

c:f&gt;PSTORES . CAAOINAl TOOOSTOAfS
.:; KEEBLER

c••

American

:l•

Plcg.
All.llfAICAN
1
.-. '

'\lL ;q''1,
It!'/ ll')(

"!::==='=:::11

FARMLAND

llic.d Turby

Spaghetti I MNt lalla

SeTiobu.y Stuk
Mut Loot

Vul Permeelen
StuHild Poppen

SUPPERS·--~~~~~-~~~!.!~!~~-- ---~~~~- -~~~~!~.. ........... ..

2

Lb.

99C

Pkg.

FREICH FRIES .......................5 ~~.

EXTRA

BORDEN

$

Jt

1

ICE CREAM ................................. ~.:~·''1 '
1

FOLOEAI

TANT COFFEE .....~~~~·s3 79

Limit one with coupon
13• 0, LA IlL

UR

CHOOLS

Paid for by the Citizens Committee for passage of the Meigs Local Schools Levy .
Lee McComa$, Treasurer, Middleport. Ohio.

01

AtTIOrted

COIOIET
lATH TISSUE

8 ~. $129

LIQUID DITR'EIT DAWI ................:!;: 7t
- - -BEVERAGE FEATURE- - otnRITEDI

, .,

R.C. COLA................ 8 ~=~~

-----BAKERY BUY
WTINIRorHAMIURGIR

1

Plut Depo.lt
I ·Ct.

CADIIAL lUIS .............2 "''"· 89

C

5
~

.,...,...,,0/11

~

8

OIOOd M. OINiiMI l'lont llva ltOT"

OIU-IDA "10. 01' C"INKI..E CUT

White

sse

UmlooMwhh&lt;...-

OM CIM.Ipclf'l pet tamitr

14·01.

SLICED CHEESE SINGLES_;~;;.'.~ ............... ~:~:~ 99c

PLEASE

Xet·111U:·1:1

i CHOCOLATE DROPS ~

99'

limit one with coupon

CAN YOU CUI COSTS?
We have cut costs where possible. We have patched Instead of repairing roofs.
We have repaired buses instead of buying new ones. We need six (6) buses that
will cost appro~imately $108,000. We have a minimum number of staff members.
Costs for services keep rising and our revenues do not followsuit . 01· separate
fact sheets we have listed specific Instances of Inflation so you can see how we
are caught up in this problem .

C1n1

-

FRtSK!ES

2 Yo MILK........... ........... 1•49
ARMOUR
VIEIINA SAUSAGE ............ ~:~ 39'

Sliced, Cruthed or Chunk

KRAFT

5•

...... &amp;110/11
Good IIIII C . - fl o,tl I I~ SIOitt

POST
People who are 65 years or older or disabled and make less than SIO.OOO a year
may also be el1g ible for a 40 Pet .• 50 Pet., 60 Pet ., or 70 Pet. reduction in taxes
thr?ugh the Homestead Exemption Act. Applications are available through the
Me1g s County Auditor .

2 89(

~

12 ·01.

limit ont with 110.00 purthiP

Additional
Taxes Paid
After 10 Pet.
Rollback
Per Month

Xet·111 it•): I

BIROS EYE

32 -oz. Jar

s 1,750
7.ooo
8,750
10,500
14,000

11·01.

:l•

WHAT WILL 10 ADDISIONAL Ml LLS COST ME?
Additional
Taxes Paid
After 10 Pet.
Rollback
Per Year

~

America's
Favorite

that lose when a levy falls are our children. We're counting on you. Please vote YES on Tuetday, June 6, for the Meigs Local School Levy.

YES, JUNE 6

BATTER DIP

FRANKS........~?: ...

•

THAT,, . In a nutshell ••• Is the situation. We hope you will call a school oHiclallf you have questlona. Please rememben The only one•

[iJ

Syracuse. Q.

992 -3776

TWII POPS ............................... .':0~~ s1Jt

AVE

Jer sey, Ind ia na ,
Pennsylvania, Connecticut,
Massachuset ts. Oh io,
Maryland , New Hampshire,
Iowa, and Illinois, Cleland
said.

WEDNESDAY, MAY 31 TO JUNE 7

BALL PARK

VAUGHAN'S

SOUTH CHESTER
CENTRAL COMMITTEEMAN

remain eligible for pursuing
advanced studies, he said .
The II . states where
veterans have taken little
advantage of Gl education
benefits are Vennont, New

.,_:!K........... ~-~ ~~ }89

STEAK
BIGGEST SAVINGS IN TOWN!

THURSDAY

1---- -- 1DAIRY VALUES I
WHY ARE YOU IN FINANCIAL PlfEICULTY?
Inflation has driven us into financial diffi culty . Our re venues have stabilized.
Federal and state requirements with no money to pay fer them. No new tax
mi llage for si~ (61 yea r s. and a two and one -half mill rollbac k in vo ted ta~es in
1975 are among t he varie ty of r easons caus ing our financial dilemma .

formal education, especia lly $311 to a single veteran going
in II states where fewer than to school full time, Cleland
50 percent of eligible veterans i!Bid, $370 to a veteran with
have taken advantage of it. one dependent, $422 to a
Veterans are eligible for veteran with two dependents,
the
bill's benefits only within and an extra $26 lor each
USW S11l1KE
CEUNA, Ohio (UP!) - 10 years from the daw or their additional dependent.
Veterans also are paid VA
United Steel Workers Union military discharges.
The administration now allowances to complete their
members who manufacture
bicycles at the Huffy pays a monthly allowance of high school educations and
Manufacturing Co . are
walking picket lines today .
They walked off the job
Saturday after rejecting the
Candidate
company 's contract offer
Friday.
lor
The firm employs between
Republican
1,700 and 1,800 workers and is
the largest employer in
Slate Cen tral Committee
Mercer CoWtty.
~
Tenth Congressional District
I'LL LISTEN
extra after three years or
service, plus a boost in the
Herbert Walker
(614)
clothing allowance from $150
653-9753
Pd . Pol. Adv .
to $185,

Veterans Administration,
said " Operation Boost"
encourages eligibles to use
the bill for job training or

KRAFT

Actual
Valuation of
Property

TO YOUR QUESTIONS ABOUT MEIGS LOCAL' S EMERGENCY SCHOOL
LEVY-

Time ·running out for some veterans to use GI benefits

tn

00 111 011

CARDINAli~~
'.:;c:f&gt;P ST OA~~~AAOINAL FOOO STORES

i
5•

-

Xii·11! il•l: I

SANDWICH BAGS ~
5.~.
.:. .-.
-

69(

-,~,...,.lftf!oti
Umh--'M-

150-Ct.

-

•• g.

~

.........1/10171
OM4 l't

~

1'1 0¥111

II~ fiOrH

~

001601~

I All~

�/

7 ~The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy' 0 ., Monday, June 5, 1978

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Monday. JWte 5, 1978

Miss jennifer Wise
installed as Bethel queen
Jennifer Wise, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe Wise ,
was installed as honored
queen of Bethel 62. International Order of Job's ughters.
in the semi-annual installation of officers held Saturday
night at the Pomeroy
Masonic Temple.
Other elected officers installed were Ruth Blake,
senior princess; Dolly
Rousey , junior princess;
Susanna Wise. guide. and
Kathy Blake, marshall.
Appointed officers installed
were Julie Byer. chaplain ;
Step han ie
Houch ins,
recorder ; Teresa Starr ,

treasurer; Toni Pope, musician; Jeanna Pauley, first
messenge r ;
Za ndra
Va u ~han, second messenger;
Angie Houchins, third
messenger ; Jeannie Welsh,
fourth messenger; Brenda
Chappelear. fifth messenger ;
Mandy Sisson, librarian ; Betsy Herald, senior custodian;
Cindy Parker, junior cuslo!lian ; Kim Pauley, inner
guard; and Barba ra Chappelear. The choir members or
Stephanie Radford, Amy
Sisson, Lori Wood, Robin
Herald , and Valerie Jeffers.
The installing officers were
Mandy Sisson, installing of-

f1cer; Merri Ault, guide; Lori
Wood, marshall ; Angie
Sisson, cha plai n; Twila
Childs, senior custodian ; Linda Mayer, junior custodian ;
Sandra Luckeydoo, recorder ;
Kathy Johnson, musician;
Becky Anderson, flag bearer;
Ben Philson, soloist with
Laura Hoover as his accompanist.
The honored queen 's colors
are green and yellow, her
emblem is the dove; her
nower' the daisy; her theme.
peac-e. Her motto is "Blessed
are the peacemakers, for
they shall be ca lied the
children or God.

The guardian council of the
Bethel is Mrs. Mary Wise,
guardian; Bill Quickel ,
associate guardian ; Sue
Starr, guardian secretary;
Audrey Wood, guardian
trt~as urer ;
and Vickie
Houchin s, directress of
'music.
The associate guardian
t'Ouncil is composed or Carol
Sisson, promoter of sociability ; Lois Pauley, custodian of
paraphernalia; Nancy :Pope,
promoter of hospitality; Donna Byer, director of finance;
and Angie Sisson, director of
Epochs.

Energy is sold by the joule,
but in common practice the
billing or electrical energy is
expressed in terms or the
kilowatt-hour, which is 3.6
million joules, or 3.6 mega joules.

DON'T VOTE FOR JUSTICE
OF THE OHIO SUPREME COURT
UNTIL YOU
KNOW ABOUT

u
DG
E
j

RICHARD M. MARKUS
Endorsed over all Opponents by
DAYTON DAILY NEWS, DAYTON JOURNAL HERALD, AKRON BEACON JOURNAL,
YOUNGSTOWN VINDICATOR, CLEVELAND PLAIN DEALER, CLEVELAND PRESS,
AND THE SUN NEWSPAPERS.
ASK YOUR LAWYER ABOUT

JUDGE RICHARD M. MARKUS
Paid lor by Markus Judicial Campaign Committee
Former Senator ROBERT A. TAFT, JR., Chairman , Lawyer Division
Katherine S. Sturgen , Chairman , 11843 Lake Ave., Lakewood, 0. 44107

YOUR CHILD IS PRECIOUS
••• Laughing Eyes

.•• Bandaged Shins
••• Mischievous Smile
••• A Heartful of·Hope
ANSWERS •••

HERE VISITING
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd T.
Chapman and daughters,
Shell~nd Kimberly, of Pitt·
sburgh, Pa. were weekend
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ken·
nelh Russell. Chapman at·
tended the alumni banquet at
· Racine High School where he
graduated with the class of
l961.
That same weekend the
Russells' son, Lt. Karl
Russell , station ed at
Okinawa, visited his wife,
Linda, and children, Melissa
and Kenneth at their home in
Jacksonville, N.C. He returned to Okinawa on May 31 but
telephoned his parents while
on leave.
ATIEND FUNERAL
Mrs. Lelll! Hanun and Mr.
and Mrs. Allen Hamm,
Pomeroy, and Miss Nancy
Harrun and Mrs. Everett
Johnson, Colwnbus, we~e in
Chesapeake Friday night
having been called there by
the death of Mrs. Reuel
Smith. She d1ed at the Cabell
Hunting ton Hospital on
Wednesday.
Mrs. Phillip Meinhart, Miss
Erma Smith, and Mr. and
Mrs. Arthur J. Smith of
Chauncey attended her
fw1eral services on Saturday.
Mrs. Smith was a niece of
Mrs. Hamm, Mrs. Meinhart
and Miss Smith.

Fairview
News Notes
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr. and Mrs. Don Manuel
and ch ildren and Chester Van
Meter of Morning Star visited
Mrs. Laura Byers at Tanners
Run Sunday afternoon. Mr.
Van Meter and Don entertained with music during
the evening .
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Miller
and children of Bellvue, 0.
were Memorial weekend
gues.ts of Mr . and Mrs.
Charles Lawson and family .
Mrs. Ett Warner spent
Tuesday night with Mrs .
Pearl Norris.
Funeral services for Saith
Friend who passed away
at
Mari etta
Nursing
Home were held Saturda y
at
the
Ewing
Funera l Hom e with in-

As you know the Meigs Loca l School District has pla ced a 10 mill 3 year
emergency operating levy on the ballo t for June 6. We feel it is extremely
im portant that th e levy succeed. We have tried to answer all questions and
inform the public about all aspects of this levy .

WHAT'S THIS EMERGENCY ALL ABOUT?
We are anticipating a def ici t of $160,000 to $180,000 at the end of 1978 and a deficit
in e~cess of $630,000 at the end of 1979 . Thi s emergency level will allow us to
borrow money against ta ~es collected in 1979 and not have to pay it back until the
1979 calendar yea r . Three yea r s will give the state and legis latur e tim e to decide
what changes, If any. wil l take place in school funding . In the meantime we can
keep our schools open and operat ing.

WASHINGTON (UP! ) Ttme Is runrung out for some
MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT GARDEN
Club, 7:30 p.m. Monday, at
the home of Mrs. James
Titus, Rutland. Mrs. John
Kincaid, co-hostess. Mrs.
Millard Van Meter to
demonstrate making corsages. Members to take
Rowers and corsage material
to make their own corsages.

By Mn. Neva NlcboiiOD
Rallud Gardea Club
HENS AND CHICKENS

If you want an interesting plant and one that doesn't grow
out of bounds, plant the Sempervlvum. The name means "live
forever" which expresses mw end~ and permanent thi•
plant is and doesn't grow out of bOilllds.
It is better know by its common name, hen and chickens, a
most descriptive name of its manner of growth. When you
"set" the "hen" you will, in due time, have a brood of "baby
chicks". The pointed succulent leaves are arranged In neat
rows like petals of a rose blos,orom, forming a rosette, with stem
hidden Wtderneath. During growing season, more steams are
sent out to edge of main plant. These develop into "chicks"
which seem to he peeping out from Wtder the protective wings
of "mother hen".
They are hardy, easy to grow, and can tolerate quite a bit
of neglect. Use ordinary garden soil (on the alkallne side) .
They can be grown in SWl or shade.
Hen and chlckens are charming In a rock garden,
strawberry jars, dish gardens, as pot plants and make an old
tree stump look great.
Small rosettes may be no more than v. to \l inch in
diameter: larger ones up to six incbes or more. The Interest
and beauty they create c&lt;me from di!lerent patterns and
colorings of rosetts. Some have cobweds of hairs, so dense and
white they partially conceal leaves, as if a busy spider had
been at work. The teJ:ture of some appear velvety. On others,
leaves are shiny and smooth. Leaves of some varieties may be
tipped with brown or otber colors, or the entire rosette may be
reddish or have a purplish tinge.
Rosettes of some varieties may send up a stalk of daisyshaped blossoms. Mler flowering Is over, rosettes die, but
"chicks" will have grown into "heM" with colonies of their
own. They are shallow-rooted and during dry seasons
appreciate extra water although they may survive without it.
Where winter heaving Is bad, a Ught litter as soon as the
grotmd freezes is good.
Sempervivurns can be planted any lime dnring growing
season . Simply remove a rosette and tuck its stem !lnnly Into a
damp spot. They make nice gifts, especially for children's
gardens because they are easy to grow.

terment in Letart Cemetery.
Mr. Friend was a fonner
resident of this community.
Attending services from a
distance were Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Layne of Pittsburgh,
Mrs. Lulu Boggs, Johnnie and
Bud Noble, Arett Boggs,
Vernon Deleuins, Thelma and
Richard Short and Betty
Noble, all of Moundsville , W.
Va.

TUESDAY

REVIVAL In progress at
Freedom Gospel Mission at
Bald Knobs through June B.
Services 7:30p.m. nightly. 0.
G. McKinney evangelist.
Special singing. Public in·
Vited.
RACINE LEGION Aux·
Hiary will serve election
day dinner starting alii a.m.
at Racine Post Home.

of the Vietnam era veterans
to use their Gl Bill education

benefits.
Max Cleland, head of the

Marietta firemen end strike
United Press Internati&lt;&gt;ual
Firemen in Marietta today
ended a strike that started
Friday when \hey returned to
work on the first shift.
Meanwhile, si x Minerva
police offi cers and fiv e
dispatchers decided to accept
a city contract offer and
ended their walk out.
Wa shin gto n Co unt y
Common Pleas Court Judge
Hober t Rawson Saturday
nig ht in Marietta issued a
\emporary restraining order
fur striking firefighters to
return to work at once.
Marietta 's 36 striking firefigh ters have been told by

WEDNESDAY

Mayor Geoffrey Brunton they
are violating state law by
participating in th e walkout.
·Brunton promised to invoke
state law or a city ordinance
to stop the job action.
Mike Chovan, president of
Local 442 of the International
Association of Firefighters in
Marietta, said his men
planned to remain off the job
until they get a pay raise they
reel is adequate. Marietta
City
Council
offered
firefighters raises ranging
between 39 and 46 cents an
hour , but the · public
employees sought a 46 cent an
hour boost .

Two substitute firelighters
and Chief Beamon Biehl were
the only firefighters on duty
over the weekend. No fires
were reported.
However, the firemen returned to work today ,
apparently in fear of losing
their jobs.
Minerva ' s
police
department went on strike
Wednesday after rejecting a
city council wage and fringe
benefit offer. It was the same
offer they accepted Sunday
night.
It stipulates a $50 monthly
wage increase effective next
year and up to $115 a month

E

BETHEL Ladies Aid I p.m.
with Eunice Davis and
VIrginia Fisher.
HAPPY HARVESTERS
Class at Trinity Church,
Thursday, 7:30p.m.
F1RE
WELLINGTON, Ohio
(UP!) - A downtown
business building containing
three stores was heavily
damaged by fire Saturday
morning .
Authorities said the
Welllngtoo Auto Parts store
was destroyed and there was
extensive damage to the
Western Auto store and the
Looks Unlimited beauty shop .
No injuries were reported .
State fire marshals were
called in to investigate cause
of the 4 a.m. blaze.

LARGE SELECTION OF BEDDING
PLANTS 65' per doz. pak s4.75 per flat
Other Items Also Reduced
Open 9 to 8 Daily

HUBBARD' GREENHOUSE

FISH

$}39

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

89'

RUMP ROAST • TIP
ROAST • Tl P STEAK

,, ..

SlmEAN
$}49
BREAKFAST STRIPS.~-~ :..
LB.
- - - - - - FRESH FRUITS &amp; VEGETABLES - - - TENDER FLORIDA

WESTERN

SWEET CORN·.......................... 6 FOR 79(

ALABAMA
POTATOES

FANCY RED

2mR

NEW LARGE SWEET

SLICING ONIONS ........................L~;. 19~

..

Raymond H. Boatright

CANTELOPES

VINE RIPE TOMATOE$ ..................~~~.39(

~$109

CUST &amp; PEARL STREETS
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

NICE FRESH

99~

FLORIDA ORANGES.·-····~·-···, ....... 5-LB. BAG 99c

DEMOCRAT CANDIDATE FOR

SALE DATES JUNE 5 ·1

FRIENDLIEST SERVICE IN TOWN!

QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

•

YOUR VOTE AND INFLUENCE APPRECIATED
PD. POL ADV.

RAGLE

WILLTHE STATE BAIL US OUT I IKETHEY DIP CLEVELANp?
The state did not ball out Cleveland. They advanced them their. foundation
money f?r ne~l year. When this money runs out they will have an even more
seno~s fmanCial problem . We think that the taxpayers of the Meigs Local School
D1stnct want to ma1ntam local control of our schools. We do not know what plan s
the state or the leg lslature has for funding of schools.

$ 5,000
10,000
10,000
20,000

25.000
30,000
40,000

You
Pay On
35 Pet. of
Valuation

VEG ALL MIXED VEGETABLES .....]

c.n.

CVo sroRrs

89c

&lt;:&gt;~0 5 TORlS • CARDINAl fOOD STORES
:::

Aclditiona I
Taxes Paid
After 10 Pet.
Rollback
112 Year

i

AWAKE
eMiliO'\ per taml._,
Um•'""""'"''.._

-

$ 15.75

$ 7.87

3,500
5,2&amp;J

31.50
47 .25
63.00
78.75
94.50
126.00

15.75
23 .62
31.50
39.37
47 .25
63 .00

$ 1.31
2.62
3.93
5.25
6.56
7.87
10 .50

-

DOLE

GROCERY SHELF VALUES

PI ElPPLE 2g~~Z-

VA~LEY BELL

gal. ,

~~

SUOAR ISP

JIFFY

BISCUIT MIX ........................
DINTYMOORE

2

BEEF STEW ......... ~~~·

40·01.

Umlt of\41 wilt. .,...,
tO\!porl I* frMnlly

BUFFET
DINNERS

691

Bo•

. . . ~I

c:f&gt;PSTORES . CAAOINAl TOOOSTOAfS
.:; KEEBLER

c••

American

:l•

Plcg.
All.llfAICAN
1
.-. '

'\lL ;q''1,
It!'/ ll')(

"!::==='=:::11

FARMLAND

llic.d Turby

Spaghetti I MNt lalla

SeTiobu.y Stuk
Mut Loot

Vul Permeelen
StuHild Poppen

SUPPERS·--~~~~~-~~~!.!~!~~-- ---~~~~- -~~~~!~.. ........... ..

2

Lb.

99C

Pkg.

FREICH FRIES .......................5 ~~.

EXTRA

BORDEN

$

Jt

1

ICE CREAM ................................. ~.:~·''1 '
1

FOLOEAI

TANT COFFEE .....~~~~·s3 79

Limit one with coupon
13• 0, LA IlL

UR

CHOOLS

Paid for by the Citizens Committee for passage of the Meigs Local Schools Levy .
Lee McComa$, Treasurer, Middleport. Ohio.

01

AtTIOrted

COIOIET
lATH TISSUE

8 ~. $129

LIQUID DITR'EIT DAWI ................:!;: 7t
- - -BEVERAGE FEATURE- - otnRITEDI

, .,

R.C. COLA................ 8 ~=~~

-----BAKERY BUY
WTINIRorHAMIURGIR

1

Plut Depo.lt
I ·Ct.

CADIIAL lUIS .............2 "''"· 89

C

5
~

.,...,...,,0/11

~

8

OIOOd M. OINiiMI l'lont llva ltOT"

OIU-IDA "10. 01' C"INKI..E CUT

White

sse

UmlooMwhh&lt;...-

OM CIM.Ipclf'l pet tamitr

14·01.

SLICED CHEESE SINGLES_;~;;.'.~ ............... ~:~:~ 99c

PLEASE

Xet·111U:·1:1

i CHOCOLATE DROPS ~

99'

limit one with coupon

CAN YOU CUI COSTS?
We have cut costs where possible. We have patched Instead of repairing roofs.
We have repaired buses instead of buying new ones. We need six (6) buses that
will cost appro~imately $108,000. We have a minimum number of staff members.
Costs for services keep rising and our revenues do not followsuit . 01· separate
fact sheets we have listed specific Instances of Inflation so you can see how we
are caught up in this problem .

C1n1

-

FRtSK!ES

2 Yo MILK........... ........... 1•49
ARMOUR
VIEIINA SAUSAGE ............ ~:~ 39'

Sliced, Cruthed or Chunk

KRAFT

5•

...... &amp;110/11
Good IIIII C . - fl o,tl I I~ SIOitt

POST
People who are 65 years or older or disabled and make less than SIO.OOO a year
may also be el1g ible for a 40 Pet .• 50 Pet., 60 Pet ., or 70 Pet. reduction in taxes
thr?ugh the Homestead Exemption Act. Applications are available through the
Me1g s County Auditor .

2 89(

~

12 ·01.

limit ont with 110.00 purthiP

Additional
Taxes Paid
After 10 Pet.
Rollback
Per Month

Xet·111 it•): I

BIROS EYE

32 -oz. Jar

s 1,750
7.ooo
8,750
10,500
14,000

11·01.

:l•

WHAT WILL 10 ADDISIONAL Ml LLS COST ME?
Additional
Taxes Paid
After 10 Pet.
Rollback
Per Year

~

America's
Favorite

that lose when a levy falls are our children. We're counting on you. Please vote YES on Tuetday, June 6, for the Meigs Local School Levy.

YES, JUNE 6

BATTER DIP

FRANKS........~?: ...

•

THAT,, . In a nutshell ••• Is the situation. We hope you will call a school oHiclallf you have questlona. Please rememben The only one•

[iJ

Syracuse. Q.

992 -3776

TWII POPS ............................... .':0~~ s1Jt

AVE

Jer sey, Ind ia na ,
Pennsylvania, Connecticut,
Massachuset ts. Oh io,
Maryland , New Hampshire,
Iowa, and Illinois, Cleland
said.

WEDNESDAY, MAY 31 TO JUNE 7

BALL PARK

VAUGHAN'S

SOUTH CHESTER
CENTRAL COMMITTEEMAN

remain eligible for pursuing
advanced studies, he said .
The II . states where
veterans have taken little
advantage of Gl education
benefits are Vennont, New

.,_:!K........... ~-~ ~~ }89

STEAK
BIGGEST SAVINGS IN TOWN!

THURSDAY

1---- -- 1DAIRY VALUES I
WHY ARE YOU IN FINANCIAL PlfEICULTY?
Inflation has driven us into financial diffi culty . Our re venues have stabilized.
Federal and state requirements with no money to pay fer them. No new tax
mi llage for si~ (61 yea r s. and a two and one -half mill rollbac k in vo ted ta~es in
1975 are among t he varie ty of r easons caus ing our financial dilemma .

formal education, especia lly $311 to a single veteran going
in II states where fewer than to school full time, Cleland
50 percent of eligible veterans i!Bid, $370 to a veteran with
have taken advantage of it. one dependent, $422 to a
Veterans are eligible for veteran with two dependents,
the
bill's benefits only within and an extra $26 lor each
USW S11l1KE
CEUNA, Ohio (UP!) - 10 years from the daw or their additional dependent.
Veterans also are paid VA
United Steel Workers Union military discharges.
The administration now allowances to complete their
members who manufacture
bicycles at the Huffy pays a monthly allowance of high school educations and
Manufacturing Co . are
walking picket lines today .
They walked off the job
Saturday after rejecting the
Candidate
company 's contract offer
Friday.
lor
The firm employs between
Republican
1,700 and 1,800 workers and is
the largest employer in
Slate Cen tral Committee
Mercer CoWtty.
~
Tenth Congressional District
I'LL LISTEN
extra after three years or
service, plus a boost in the
Herbert Walker
(614)
clothing allowance from $150
653-9753
Pd . Pol. Adv .
to $185,

Veterans Administration,
said " Operation Boost"
encourages eligibles to use
the bill for job training or

KRAFT

Actual
Valuation of
Property

TO YOUR QUESTIONS ABOUT MEIGS LOCAL' S EMERGENCY SCHOOL
LEVY-

Time ·running out for some veterans to use GI benefits

tn

00 111 011

CARDINAli~~
'.:;c:f&gt;P ST OA~~~AAOINAL FOOO STORES

i
5•

-

Xii·11! il•l: I

SANDWICH BAGS ~
5.~.
.:. .-.
-

69(

-,~,...,.lftf!oti
Umh--'M-

150-Ct.

-

•• g.

~

.........1/10171
OM4 l't

~

1'1 0¥111

II~ fiOrH

~

001601~

I All~

�8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday , June 5, 1978

Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

PR OBATE COURT OF

MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
ESTATE OF FLOYD E .
HENDRICKS .

WANT AD
CHARGES

DECEASED

C1ue No . 22369

9-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, June 5, 1978
11 : 50-Janakl 33; 11:0$-Pollce Story 6,13! I :DO-

AF'POINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

1&amp; Words ur· Under

On May 31st , 1978 , in the
Me i~s

Co un tY P robate court ,

case No. 22369, Den ise Wolfe.

Box 40 2. Rac ine , Oh io 45771
was

appo i nted
Ad
mi n i slratr i ~t of the E st ~tte of
Floyd
E
H endriCkS ,
deceased , lale of M ine rsv i lle ,
Ohio

Mann 1nQ D . Webste r
Pl"obdle Jud ge

( 5l

s.

Clerk
12 •. 19, Jtc

C&lt;~sh

Ida)

1.00
1.50

1.:!5
1.00

1.111

2l5

J.U/1

:ut:~

2d a) ~

3tlay.'l
6 i.la} l!

O!CII '~l'

Each wur·tl o\'l.'r lltt: rnrutrnwn 1.)
wunl&lt;, Ill ~ t'crl lS pt.&gt;r wor'd per dl:l.)'·
Alb I'IIIU\IIIg ulht'l' than l'UIISCt' U( I\'t'
duy.s 14'111 lM;o t'ha r~t&gt;d at l ht• 1 lluy

r'alc

In memory, Ci~rll of TI1&lt;1 rrks a11d
Oblluary : 6 n~ul~ per ~· urd . S:l.OO
rrununwn, C011.h Ul adva111:c

For Tuesday 1 June 6

iSTRO•GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

m
t/iJJQJ~
t_t ) .JtlttJw~WL/
June ti , 1976

Some verv wonnwhtle changes
that

wt ll

con trtbute

to

of lo.no w! e dge wt ll occur ttliS
comtng yea1 Your ettorl wtll

prove to have long-laslmg and
c( tr emely oer1ei1Cral rewards

21-July 22)

Somethrng o t lld lue you ve
ea rn e d a·1d are e ntrtled to Ou t
na&lt;; bPE&gt;n lru &lt;; tratrngly delayed
should bern y6 ur ha nds today

LEO (July 13- Aug 12) A good
trme to appr ;:use
protect yo u ve been
underta~o ng Today
flect upon 11 rn a
pra c llc al manner

HUNTER

Wheel
Alignment

r' t'i'lUI~ r·u un

that new
th1n krng o f
yo u II resaner and

VIRGO (Aug 13-Sepl.

12) In a
competrlrve srtuatton where
you re seek.rng an advantage
play your ace •rn -the -hole Tod3)' no one can tru mp 11

LIBRA (Sepl. 23-0c/ . 23) You re
eastly ·able to sotvc problems
tod ay that oth ers frnd rnsur
moun ta bl e Speak. u p rt you hnd
J'O ursell con tr on te d by a
conf used rndrv1dui! r

SCORPIO !Oct . .4-No, . 11)

IN GOOD CONDITION.
CALL 992-2692 DURING DAY;

Fred W. Crow
SPECIAL
Any U.S. made car- parts

NOTICE

extra if needed . E•cludes
front -wheel drive cars.

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

Call Now For
Appointment

,\ \ l)llll&lt;tl
" liOJII 1111 S&lt;llunla~
Tut•!!d~&gt;

thru Frlllil)
-tPM
tlw tia) U..•fttl'l' putJiiratwn
Sum.la~

-1"1' , ,

F r1d10~ &lt;l f: t·ruliOfl

Pomeroy landmark
9 ... J~ck W. Carsey. MQr.
JAiitl Phone 992-2181

--

In Ml'ltm&lt;Mfi'·Vf
IN LOVING memory of our dear
mo ther Cl a ro A Collin~ wh o
po~sed away June 4 I 970
lhousond thought:. of one so dear
Often brmg o trny tea r
lhough ts go bock
to ~c ene s lon g poHed
lrme rolls on
Bul rnemor1e~ Ia)!
)odlv mrssed b.,. Daughte1 s
l ore ne M ~~ ce
~Iorence l MeDon re i
Bern1 ce V R o~e

197J MON T~ CARl O landau . P S ..
P B A C AM 8 tr act.. stereo .
t:J~cetlent
con d1l ron
S1 700

SOM!::O N~

TO work m lome ta
Irelds 1op pay Dalla~ Cleland
94q 23AQ

No e.&gt;.perren ce
App l.,. m pe rson ol
Blu e !arran M 1ddleport

WAITR!::SS

nece~sory

2bl2

1973 MONTI;: CARL O landau P S
1-' B A C AM 8 troc lo. ~tmeo
b:(ellenl
con dil10rl
Sl 700
ijd)

BURR OUGHS SENSI MAl l(
oc·
coun ting
mo(h1ne
Phone
Cf92 .215e. The Doily Senlrnel,
111 Court Slreel
Pomeroy.
Qh ,o

BROCCOLI ,

(A~ ~A Gl

Auto Sall!o

ijJ J

COAl. LIMES TON I: , sand . grovel , H &amp; ~ MOBIL E HOMES . Pt. Plea
sen t . W . Vo . be~• de Hec k s .
calc rum chl orrde tertil i1er . dog
1973 Broodm o r e 1&lt;I l&lt; M
7
food , and all rypes o f sol 1 !:10:
bedroom
cel sror Sal t Work s Inc ~ Morn
l q73 Do1 ron 14 ll: 00 7 bedr oom
St . Pomero y qq2 .38Q t .
1Q7') Vu; tor rort 14 l&lt; b7 3 bedroo m.
B~ S I ) HI:C TION of the be st wood
2 both
~ l oves rn Southeo sl em Ohr o .
1q77 (o ... e nt•y 17 r OS 3 bedroom
Jotul
M arso. U el
lrrol10
IQtJq Sto l esmon 12 ,. bO 1
lempwood . and Nofhu o. Zro n
bedroom
Heal Co . 8 Put norn Or . (off Mrll
~ 1. ). Athe n~ . b l 4·592 .bQ79 or
bl 4·bqb . l 187 .

11:/11

co vl 1fl ower brussell spro ut s,
egg plants head lettuce -. weet
pep pers hungonan w o ~e , seet
banan a
chrl1 peppers . Plu s
rnony drff erent vo rr ct•e'&gt; of
tornot o plants rnony krnd s of
hongrng
bo slo. e ts and
po t
!lowers large v011e ty of on
nu ol s rn flol5 . Cle la nd Farrn ~
and
Greenhov ~e
Ro crne
Geroldrne Cleland

1965 f-ORD MU)I ANG I.BQ ~ ngme
rec entt.,. rebud r Good sha pe
$.400 747 75 4 1

water

&amp; condition your
with Co-op . water

1Cf7J HOO RA OO CA DillAC h
cellenr condt1ro11 loaded wilh
e • Ha~ Only S3800 Also 10 11
1ruc l.. ca mper Good cond11iOn
Only S2000 Coli 9Q/ 5311 or
qQ') o371:1

softener , Model UC -SVI.
Now Only '289.95

1974 4 ~ peed ~ t re k sh1lt Ve ga
good cond1 I10n e ~t ra cle a n
Con be ~een or 077 Olr ver S,1
M1ddleport or call 997 5118 bet
ween 5 and 9 pm

·Jack W. Carsey. MQr.

1913 Pl YM OU IH f-URY I 3b0
engtne OUI O P S P B A C
4 door o;.edan b celtent co ndr
non Phone qas 3Q(X)

.ank ~ce

Chester. Uhio
10-30-c

0

Phone lt2-1181

USfO lRACIORI

~ack W. Carsey . Mgr .

Buy

t;;'ft J~ck W. Carsey, MQr .

--

sn

·c-r•.

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
,~

acres, Sutton .
Lou ise Thompson. Affida vit, Middleport .
Violet Millhone for Mella
Benedum, Affidavit , Olive.
James E . Keesee, Unda
Keesee to Norman R. Hen-

drix , Nellie B Hendm, 2
acres, Ora nge.

William E . Bartels. Diana
L. Ban els to Thomas E . Ball,
Anita L. Ball, Parcels, Sutton.

Lost and

Found

LO~f

CIT IZlNS

Our

MW

rente •s ass•s tonce 'fOV may be
able to lt'le rn our apa rtment
for lf'lts than S50 o rnonth f or
rnO tt.
lt!io t rnut ron
lOn lo t t
Vdloge Manor Apo rtmenh

PAIR OF mens gold wi re
~92 77~7 .
.
I rome eye glos!tes , cantotned m
block. Case bear ing the nome of TkAIU H SPACE l , rode fr om
Me1gs H igh !:lchool on ol d Rt 33
Or
R0
Thomes
Re word
qcn 2'lA1 or 4&lt;12.7689
. Phone q91 3718 or 992 bb55

acres loca ted 1 mrle fr orn H l WI rl e\e l Roo lrng. 1,ew or
Me1gs Mme N o I . Drrtled well
rep01 r
gutters
and
~ ep t 1c tank SBOOO. 741 1~b~
down!tpou ts Free esllll'10ie!.
Ph one
949 76~7
or
THR!::E BI:DR OOM home near
304
895
3802
Che&lt;,ter
Com plere
trailer
hook up o "d small or chard . H t. Wrtre\e l. Roof ing, new ar
485 4 17~
repo1 r ,
gutta•~
and
down ~pou l '&gt;
Free e~t1rno l e~
73 ACRE ~ of lor1d on the Pome 1oy
Phone 94Q 786') or q4q 71 ()()
Galt
Cour~e
Hrl l
Roo d
1'

Pomeroy,O.

I K]

11 !JOT 00...y I.OOICS

•1

1

300M&lt;!in St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Pom erov 992-6282
or99H26J
8 A.M. to 4,]0 P.M.

IKENALT I

loading dock and parking .
NEW LISTING - Wayout 3
bedroom lrame home w i th

10 acres. Has l"ge liv ing
r oo m

with woodburnlng

fire pla ce. Owners will take
tra iler In 1rade or- wi ll help

upper and r ent out the
tower . A good cann er lot
near stores. Bet1er see this

one lor- only $9 ,600.
IN THE COUNTRY -

HWOO D BOWERS REP AIR

~TPK!fD

room ol der home wi1 h J
bedroom s , rura l wa1er ,

naturl!ll ga!., wood burning
firepla ce and 3 ca r g~rl!lge .

Has lar ge garden

TILL I ~OUM.J 'rtXJ'D

Swee pe r ~

1H' FIRE ...

ORPHAN ANNIE-LITTLE HELPERS

I THOUGHT YO\J
WERE CI1Y GIRlS ···
YET YOU KNOW HOW
10 00 TH r CHOR£5
JUST PERrl7 Cf ...

llU1 UNClE J£6

WEll , I' Vf BEE N
AAOUND "'
AND r LIKE
FARM IN' !

Two wells , cister n and 2

outbuildings. Will take •
trade -ln. Only $16,500 .
EOGE OF TOWN - One
bedroom frame need ing •
little redecorating ,

bath,
gas furna ce , city water,
breezeway . 1 car garage,
trailer 5pol and over an

acre of land . $12.500.
CHESHIRE - Big red
brick with 2 apartment• . 10
rooms . 5 bedrooms, 3
bath s, 2 furnaces. and
ga r den on th i s

frui1 trees .

A LOT OF BUYERS ARE
SEEING US NOW. IF YOU
HAVE A NICE · CLEAN
PLACE AND WANT TO
MAKE A PROFIT CALL
992-3325
HELEN L. TEAFORD
GORDON B. TEAFORD
SUE P. MURPHY
Assotlott Reoltors

rot

a ll

mok.l] ~

~2 · 7'184

lhr
1- obr I(
Shop ,
Pom eroy
Auth OIILOd S1nge r Solos 0 11(1
~ervrce We \ho1p~r1 S&lt;tSSO t '&gt; .
v 1Cl1

~X(AVA TIN G ,

do1e1 , loa der and
ba ckhoe work. dump tr uclo! •.
and lo.boys f or h~t &amp; . will haul
!ttl d111 . to soil , lime sto ne and
gro11el Co li Bob or Roger Jel
l ers day phone 9GI7 708Q. ntg hl
phonu qq7 3575 o r 992 5137. .

by THOMAS JOSEPH

ALLEYOOP

'IOU MEAN YOU CAN
LOCATE ALLEY

AN~

OOOLA WI'TH 'Tl-115 .

I:X(AVA rJN C
d o 1er
bock.ho&lt;'
and dtt&lt;het ( had e) I( Hot
f reld
Bo ck.
Hoc
Serv tce
Ru1land Ohto Pho ne H2 7ootl .

DRIVE ALimE

40U.stranqer.

&amp;

She was t 'irst4

SAVE ALOT

as a

All carpet instolled wilh1

dud&gt;'

fo r the use of
. 4our water~

dead

&amp; up

9' and 12' Vinyl

1

Floor Covering In Stock

ADUll FEMAl E co tlre Fu l l blood·
ed. Soble co lor . Good wtlh
chi ldren qas .J365

FRANK &amp; ERNIE
Buy where you ctn come in

And see what you're gttlinO
- Good selections - Fully
stockett.

r'et&amp; tor Sale
HOO F HOllOW Horses . Buy , sell

Call 742-2211
TALK TO
Wendt II or Horb Grote
or Gene Smith

trode 01 tr o rr~. New and used
sa ddl es . Ruth Ree ve'&gt; , A lbany .
1

742 -2211

R'

PS1CHIATRIST

ovE~QUAL.IFIED.

;
C,- 5'

T"'&gt;o~E\

Ib BE: WILLING
~Rl WIIO LOG&lt;S L/Ki: MOYle S77'1R
~ WI:LL.S A6REES lDIWIKt: l'f •

o

A SOFA THAT

'ScUEN TFST' fVR Rl/SS£1 L A!YO 13/t.LY.

MAKES A

DO YOU 11-IINK
&amp;HE'LL 5HOW UP

BED FOR

TOMORROW?

YOU
REDIBED!

•

PA-r'IE'NT
Hf
'SAl D :r: MIS.S

Rutland

IF YOU NEED

~meb~h

BRIDGE

HE wouLDN',.
- - - - AeC:.EPT ME
Jll

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

Phone (b14 ) 3b7-01n.

1'0 BET ON IT r

ESPECIALLY
WHEN I TOLD
HER IT IVOU LD

eE .S.EE:N 13)'A. X

WE HOPE H::'LL
5EE IT...AND Elf
CONVI NCED THAT
rrs HIS PRECIOUS
DONNA W:=:LL3 '

#OLY

MACI(ER£LI
\¥HAT!&gt; SOIN G

ON HEIZ:?

AXYDL BAAXR
I•

I.ONGFELLOW

One l etlcr simply stands fo r ano ther, In thi s samp le A is
used for th e thr ee L' s, X for th e tw o O's, etc. Sin gle letters,

Pass

s•

Pass

.

Pass

Opening lead :

+6

A Maine reader asks what
we respond after our partner
opens a forcin g l wo spades.
Vfe hold :

apostrophes, Ihe length and formation of the words are all
&amp;-5-8
By Oswald Jacoby
hints. Each day the code l etters are dtfTcren t.
+
K
J
X
and Alan Sontag
CRYPTOQUOTES
Alan : " North wants to be
+AKxxx
in a grand slam if South has
• X X X
VM
BEMDPX
IN
W
X
two
aces
and
the
king
of
M E B NA
EM
We raise to three spades in
trumps. He can't lind this
order to establish spades as
.out
by
nonnal
bidding
methEBNPXFMI
UNVX
MDV
c
HM
ods but modern experts have the trump suit. We plan to
at least two ways to get to take further strong action .
- H Ct::N AX
LIMTBIF
t NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN . !
the grand slam safely."
., aturday's Cryptoquote: ONE OF THE SURPRISING THINGS
Oswald : " Which way do
!For a.copy of JACOBY MODIN THIS WORLD IS THE RESPECT A WORTHLESS MAN HAS you favor ?"
ERN. send Sf ro: "Win a1
r'OR HIMSELF.-ED HOWE
Alan : "I fav or a modifica- Bridge." care of th is newspation of the grand slam fore~. per. P.0 . Box 41!9. Radio Cily
@ IW78 King fealure• Syndi ~ ate, Inc.
The bidding In the box shows Slarion . New York . N. Y. 10019.)
BARNEY

•••

SAKES ALIVE!!
1 GOT MY ;;;IL\.'L.VC:.

15 IN STOCK
L.aroest Selection In The Valle'!

Summer Semester 10.

6,31)-Focus On Columbus 4; News 6: Summer
Semester 8: Concerns &amp; Comments 10; 6:4$Mornlng Report 3; 6:50-Good Morning , West
VIrginia 13; 6'5$-News 13.
7 : ~Today 3,4,15; Good Morning America 6,t3 ; CBS
News 8: Porky Pig to.
7:25-Chuck White Reports 10; 7:31)-Schoolles 10.
8:00-Capl. Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame 51. 33.
9: 00- Merv Griffin 3{ Ph il Donahue 4,13,t5 ;
Emergency One 6; Brady Bunch 8: Match Game
10.
9:3G-Andy Griffith 8; Family Affa ir tO .
10 :DO-Card Sharks 3,4,15; Edge of Night 6; Pass The
Buck 8; Joker's Wild 10; To Tell The Truth 13.
10: 31)-Hollywood Squares 3,4,15; High Hopes 6; Pri ce
Is Right 8,t0; 520,000 Pyramid 13.
11:DO-High Rollers 3,4,15; Happy Days 6,13, .
11 :31)-Wheel ot Fortune 3,15; Family Fued 6,13;
Par1rldge Family 4; Love of l-Ife 8,10; To Be
Announced 33 ; 11 :5$-CBS News~ Loving Free 10.
12 :DO-Newscenter 3: News 4,6,10; Sanford &amp; Son 15;
Gambit 8; Midday Magazine 13 .
12:31)-Ryan ' s Hope 6,13; Bob Braun 4; Gong Show 15;
Search for Tomorrow 8,10; E lee . Co. 33.
1:oo-For Richer. For Poorer 3; All My Children 6,1 3:
News 8; Young &amp; the Restiess 10; Not For Women
Only 15.
1:31)-0ays of Our Lives ~.t5 : As The World Tur ns
8,10, 2:00--Qne Life to Live 6,1 3; 2: 31)-Doctors
3,4,15; Gu iding Light 8,10.
3:oo-Another Wor ld 3,4,1 S; General Hospital 6,1 3;
Li lias Yoga e. You 20 .
3:3o-AI I In The Family 8,10; Consumer Survival Kit
20.
4:DO-M ister Cartoon 3; Superman 4; For Rich~' For
Poorer 15; Merv Griffin 6; Addams Family 8;
Sesame St. 20,33; Gomer Pyle, USMC 10; Dinah 13.
4:3o-Little Rascals 3,15; Gilligan's Is . 4,8; Brady
Bunch 10.
5:DO-Here Come The Brides 3; Star Trek 4; Gun smoke
B; Mister Rogers' Ne ighborhood 20,33; Hogan's
Heroes 10; Emergency One 13; Petti coat Junction
15.
5:3o-News 6; Elec. Co . 20,33; Mary Tyler Moore 10;
Hogan's Heroes 15.
6:DO-News 3,4.8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6:3o-NBC News 3,4,1 5; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,1 0; Over Easy 20,33.
7:DO-Cross-Wits 3,4; Newlywed Game 6,13: Pop Goes
The Country 8; News 10; Gilligan' s Is . 1S; French
Chef 20 ; O'Happy Day 33.
7:31)-Hollywood Squares 3,4; Let 's Go To The Races 8;
Candid Camera 6; MacNe il-Lehrer Report 20,33;
Price is Right 10; That's Hollywood 13; To Be
Announced 15.
8:DO-Redscene '78 3; Happy Days 6,1 3; Life In The
Fasl Lane 4; Man From Atlant is 15; Movie
" Nat ional Velvet" 8,10; Jacques Lipchltz 33; Some
of the Pres idents' Men 20 .
8:31)-Baseball 3,4; Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13.
9:DO-Three's Company 13; Music City News
Popularity Awards 6,8, 1S; Affa ir In The Air 20.33;
Movie " The Spokes Gang " tO .
9::ID-Mary Tyler Moore 13; tO :D0-20-20 13 : George
Cr umb : Voice of the Whale 33 ; News 20 .
10:31)-Biack Perspect ive On The News 20 ; 11 :DONews 3.4.6.8.10.13.15; Dick Cavetl20; Over Easy 33.
ll :Jo-Johnny Carson 3,4,15 ; Soap 6,13; Movie " Night
Terror " 8; Movie " Satan's Harvest " 10; 12 'DOJanakt 33.
12 ,05-Mov le " Conspiracy of Te rror" 6,1 3; !: DOTomorrow 3.4; I' 11)-Kojak 8; 1:4$-News ll.

Safe way to sIam

As Low As
sq. ya .

Phone

TUESDAY, JUNE 6, t978
5:4$-Farm Report t3&gt; 5:50-PTL Club 13 ; 6 DO-

fender.'

Rubber Back Carpet
'4 •88

Tomorrow 3,4; 1: 1$-News t3 .
Movie Chonn.l 4 5 &amp; 7 P.M.- Another Man. Another Chance I PG I
9 e. 11 P.M. - Carnal Knowledge IRI
CAble Channel 5 6' 30 P.M. - Testimony Time
7 e. 9 P.M.- Wahoma Band In Mexico

ACROSS
38 Resident
I Pack too lull :i9 Girl's name
... HEI2!i:! LET Me.
5 Baseball
tO Dinner
SI-40W ...OU!
Al--t- pitch
course
II Wile of Zeus 41 Knicks'
12 Hwnbert
coach
Hwnbert's
DOWN
Movie Channel 4 5 e. 9 P.M. - Poco (G)
passion
I Noted enter·
7 !. II P.M. - Hollywood Oldie
tainer
13 Newt
Yesterday's Alzlwer
Cable Channel l 2 Face, as an
14 Hwnbltd
6:30P.M. - Testimony Time
embankment 16 Exasperated 27 Japanese
15 Get
7:00 ~ Paul Gaudino
21 Put under
wild dog
7:30 - Special Edition
3 Betel palm
17 Prefix with
10 :00 - 700 Club.
legal
bond
29
"Alfie
"
4 Motherly
angle
star
22 Ape-man,
5 Drool
18 - with the
30 Egge.g.
6Lobate
shaped
23
Football
7 Pier uni on:
19 "High 31
French
stalwarts
abbr.
Windy Hill"
aMuily
24 Fire or
8 Misrep20 Ending lor
First carl ever saw
Monda y, June 5
water,
34
Interpret
din
or
gun
resent
with the radiator in
36 Malay
9 Everlasting
e.g.
21 He 's
t he rear
gibbon
Z5 Care for
usually
10 Shine
spoiled
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag
22 Appeal
Z5 Kind of
,.--+--+--ii--+--+--i
role
·26 Uttle
North as king for aces by
means of Blackwood and
brook
NORTH
6-5-A
1hen bidd ing s ix clubs . fi ve
What
• A
notrump in that spot would
1
• Q 6 ,,
1
' deca'
ask for kings . This bid of a
t AKQ7&gt;4 2
new suit asks partner to bid
• 8
seven if he holds two of the
WEST
EAST
lop three trump honors ."
+ Q 10 8 6 2 + K .J 7 3
Oswald : " It ce rtainly
29 Frankness
• J 73
• 10
works
her e and is simple
• 9
• J 10 6 3
32 Note from
enough
so that any estab• 1\ 10 • 4
• Q9 32
lished partnership can use
the boss:
SOUTH
it. Let 's formalize it. "
abbr .
• g. 4
Alan : " OK . A partnership
City in
•AK 982
using this convention agrees
• 8
Mass .
that if a pla yer who uses a
+A.J
76
Blackwood four notrump fol§ 35 ~~- Goes
lows
up with a bid of six in an
Vulnerabl e : Both
to
unbid
suit, he guarantees all
1
Dealer : South
~
the Ball'
the aces a nd asks his part·
~ 37 Windmill
Wesl North Easl
ner to bid seven with two of
"
part
the three top trump honors ."
•
Pass 4 NT Pass
I
Pass
•• DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Hert's how to work it : Pass

J~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

SAVE ON
CARPETING

SOPPIN' WET!!

.

"

Answer: What you usually can 't understand when
someone uses double-talk - A SINGLE WO~O

~

S ~WING MACHINE Re porr s, ser

'

I

BUT Hf 'll BE UP
FOR BRfAKFAST ...

m

~----==·

..

(Answers tomorrow )

Pl vrnb,ng heo tm q
ond oil types o f general repor r
Work guaran teed 10 y e ar ~ e•
perrcnce Phone
:/ o4(}q

Ph acres on

Rt. 7. Modern Inside with
lull basement ond young

XI X)-ITJ"

NEW - JUST OFF PRESS! JUMBLE BOOK 111 wltt1110 puzzles ls•vall ·
able lor $1.35 post paid !rom Jumble , c/o ft11s newspaper, P.O. BoK34,
Norwood, N.J. 07648, Include you r name, address, zip codeafld make
checks pa~abl e to Newspaperbooks.

cel lar with workshop over,

Jusl $1 6.500 .
HANDY
WITH
A
HAMMER - 30 acres ol
land, 6 room house In good
location overlooking Rt . 7.

Now arrange the circled te[ters to
form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.

3815

•n7313.

and

(J

Jumbles: IGLOO WHINE GRIMLY STOLID

R~MOOHING

too good
6 week)

RI SING STAR Kennel , Boordrng .
Indoor and ou td oor
ru n~ .
G roo ming oil br eeds Cle an
sanrto ry focili t res . Chesh ire.

·-- IS N1 T HE
FE£L IN ' GOOD
ll1t S MORNING?

HIS 1\Wl'TIIf 'S J='INE

Exptrt installation.

BLACK ANO whrle neu leted
mole 3 y e ar ~ ol d . Pta,.fu l ol·
f ectronote

WI-IAT THE
WHO DRAI&gt;JI&lt; TOO
MUCH WINE
&amp;ECAME.

Prlntanswerhere: "(
011 , JfB! HS KNEE
15 90THERt!'l' t11M ., ,

toos lttr!l , 11ons , all
-.molt oppltonces lawn m owm
ne:J~ t to Stolo Ht ghway Go10g ~'
on Rou te 7 Ph on e {OlA I 985

(bl4 ) 698-3290

8

~ITTLE

~'!, CII4Nif .. , I DIDN'T
I(J«)W VOU WERE UP

f inance . S33,SOO.

POMEROY - Reasonable
2 family home . Live In the

II I

UTTL.E ORPHAN ANNIE

padding •f no ch.arge .

FOUR VE RY lome ~•lien s

·-·

II I

BRADFORD, Auc troncer
Com
p le l e Sc rvrca . Phone Qo49-1487
or Q4q 70CX) Ro cme . O ht O. C1111
Br ad ford .

WAN TtO ANY bvsme !.s
Real
E:sto l e thor need~ f rnonc rng
Mr A rou ck~ou 716 87 1 &lt;I 17!1

floor , i'l i r condi t ion i ng ,
natural ga ~. c ity water ,
underg r o und ga so line t : .. k ,

I (X I I
IBELNAGb

8u~incoo Opportunitieo

VIRGILB. SR .'~~
; I 1&gt;110
991-3325
Gin1 Away
116 E. Second Street
KllTI:N 10 gtve away
BUSINESS BUILDING home Ve ty Plo.,.ful
old 992 7033
Out ol al l lloods. Con crete

lo

PWMBING &amp;
HEATING INC. ·

997 3944

rn
~~

SYLOU

BORN LOSER

SALES AND SERVICE
11 -9-tlc

Pomeroy

109 High St.

698-7331

OTHER PROPERTY TO
CHOOSE FROM.
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
HANK . KATHY I&gt; LEONA
CLELAND
ASSOCIATE
REALTORS
992-2259- 992 -6191

l!l-2114

VA FHA 30 yr l moncrng ol~o
PUll iNS I: XCAVA TIN G Co mple te
rel lllonr1ng Ir el and Mo1 tgoge
S.erviCe Phone 997 1478
77 E Stol e Athens phone {~14 )
;q7 30;1
PUDDU: POOl S. Al l S11e s and
shape!&gt; Swtm p oo l~ 7 yE'Or~
t!Y OWN!::R 5 acre~ wrth 9 room
e•par ren ce . free e-.hrnates
hou se , F~H G A S, 2 (Or gorogo,
anything
yo u
need
lor
surnme• kitc hen ond bo rdered
underg ro und swun pool :. N ew
by 7 creeks , Colt qa5.3577 .
cherr11col and su pply s tore
TWO Sl ORY frame house b
Alba ny ,
Ohio
Phone
rooms a nd bolh . ce llar . ou t·
bl4 ·698 6555 . ( A ft er b pm
b urldr ng~ 4 ones land ot edge
bl 4·689 5'15 1 John JeHer' or
of Ru tland . Com plele fro rl er
689 57.65 Bill G ill e tt e ) W e ore
hook ·up a lso '}bonks oppro •S·
N O T oi l we t on PRICI:S
ed proper ty o t SIS 500 . Phono
SPEEDY DRI LLING . Water well
~n 70'1&lt;
drr/1 11\g , commerc:rol
an d
FARM O N CR 31 3e acre~ Neor
doll'1e ~ h c Pump ~ole\ and se r
Por tland 843 7501
vrce Cl97 -b1q5 or 3Q,d 1:195 3807

Trade

SlNIOR

( Bob Hoeflich)

Will d o I Oo l rng con\ truc li on ,
plurnbrng and heo!mg No tab
too l ot ge or too ~m all Ph one
HOMl SITES l or so le . 1 acre and
74:?. 2348 .
up . M rd dle po rl . neor Ru tland .
HOW I: RY
AND
MAR TI N
i:JI .
Ca ll 99'1 748 1.
COIIOii ng . -.e pl1 c systems .
NEW 3 bedroom hou'&gt; e 2 bolhs.
do rer backhoe dump tru ck
all elec . 1 OCIC M•ddleport
lrmes tone
gra ... el
blacktop
close to Rurlo nd . Phone Cfq'}
po ... rng . Fi t 143 Phone I (614 )
7481 .

Mobile

troller by , I led rncorne cou ple
9Q2 J 437

The Photo Place
5-31-1 mo.

MAIN
POMEROY. 0 :

Nobel Rompel to Roger
T. Holter, Helen M. Holter, 10

four ordinary words .

..If

3-15-tlc

Portra irs
Weddings
Passports
Anniversaries
Specia I Occasions

......,,. ro , ....

Meigs
Property
Transfers

'

Unscramble these four Jumbles ,

lr{.;f;:E~~~ one tet1er Ia each square. to form

CARTER·

Radiator..---.
Service
.............
,...t

Phone99~ - 2161

m

l'IJI' Sal£,

Ph. 991-2848

EXPERIENC:ED

MH J5 Dre~c l
M~ 230 01e ~el
Wrth the ftSSI Stance o f an o tner
Mf-1 ~ D 1e~el
Mf1J5 D1e sel
~, Phone 991 -2181
you c an achteve an amortrous
MF ib5 Dtescl Mr785 01esct
lo
ObJeC tiv e toda y He o r sre w1 11
M f 11 3~ Ore~el
Cob 011 &amp;
IC!b6
DODG~
POLAJ.IA
one
pos se ss tt1at necessary 1-.no w hoo
ter
NO II !:: M 100 large or 100 sm all
owner rl"' f rne condrhon Ph ('l ne Nt:W &amp; USI:O t MPl~MI:N '1S
WAaR WHI drdl1ng W1llrorn 1
how you ve long sought
W rll bu.,. 1 p1ece or comple te
Gr a n t 7-4 / 2tP9
949 '1763
SAGITTARIUS (No, . 13- Dec.
Mf9 t!o lcr
Mf iO Bo ler MJ- 170
household New u~ed or ont r
21f Yo u 11 do well today rf ~ou
Mollhew~ Ro ta ry S&lt;y the
tiole
r
lq64
RAMBLUl
S700
997
SBb4
Ques Mo rtrn s Fur n1 ture 70 N
MF880 Serru moun ted 6 bot ·
base decrsto ns on tWe mos t
{nd St
Mrddleport
Phone 1'17~ GH AN D lORlNO ')qu r1e Ford
rom
Plow
MF 520 l I. Orsc
pract1cat aspe c ts ot tne rssue
997 b370
~tat ron wagon wr!h P S P B
Ml-100 '} Row (hopper MF 39 2
and not those wht Ct'l are onl y
A C rd t whee l c rvr~e con trol
CHIP
WOOD
Po l e~
mol'
~ ow
Planter-.
M echonrc o l
hooe s o r de srres
a ll new t 11e!i Power w 1ndo w ~
doometer 10 on largest end sa
Tron!ioplon t er
CAPRI CORN (Dec. 12-Jon. t! l
S3200 Coil afte1 tl pm
per ton Bundled -.lab Se pe r
)HIN N S tRA CTOR SAltS
'rou re up to meetrng and over·
l A'] 100!:1
ron Delt.,.ered 1o Oh1o Pa ller
Phone 4)8 I 030
co mmg ddfr cu lt c hallenges e s·
Co Rt 7 Pomeroy
71)8q
leof'l W Va
1q73 BUW:K lUXUS l:r cell enl lon
pectatty wh ere y o ur -Na rk or
d1
rtan
P
S
P
B
A.
C
New
COI
N
~
CU
RR~N
(Y
tolo.en'&gt;
old
career IS conce rneo Pers isIll E."S S 17~ qn 7870
poclo.e r wo t che~ and cho rns
tence s yo ur wat c hword
PAIN T J- O R .. o le A lum1num porn !
~~tver a nd gold We need I 9t&gt;4 1974 PINT O f.lodtal lo re~ new
AQUARIU S {Jan . 10-Feb . 1!)
new bucke 1 ~ never been open
end o lder '&gt;ri..J er corn\ Buy ~ e !l
ed tOO gal avorloble ol S4
Somethmg 01 con sequence
~hoc k ~
A8 (XX) m1le~ S I )(X)
per gall on 81ve lote :o" porn! at
can co me from d soc1 a l en · or lrode Coli Pager Warn '&gt;ley
Col l 9tr'l 7785 alter J
747. 1.331
S3 )() per ga llon 9&lt;17 b 173 o•
co unter you tt f: J perrence
1971 CADill A C UOOR AOO f ul l
qq) o106
tod ay Be e~ua - anen!lve rf one TIMBER POM~ R O Y J- or e~t 1-'10
power 01r e •ce le nt co rtd11ro n
NhO 1S o toer 1&lt;; rn vot ved
duel .. lop pr 1U" l or \ lo nd1ng
1938 HARll¥ DAVIDSON fully
Ph on e qq') 7 467
PIS CES !Feb. 10- Ma rch 10! 1he
'&gt;OW 1unber Call ~7 5905 or
cu\ to mr l Cd wrlh 5U1 Crde clu l &lt;.h
mostrm po rtd nt rna tters on your
~en I Hanby 1 44 b 8570
ond sh rlt ~~ cellen t cond•llon
age nrl a IOCid '!' clff&gt; domeStiC
A -. ~ 1ng
!.3000 747 7790 or VACAN CY FOR Plderly' pot1en1 1n
1anl Sale
WANT TO buy Good whee l cho 1r
one!&gt; A n~ l"'iuf'S tha t aHPc tthe
tl l 4 tlq8 3290
p! t\lo te horne ot 1vppe• ~ Plo tn ~
qA9 25Q 1
lamrl, shOuld be g1ven top
tr YOU ho ... e a ~ervrce ro o l!er
Coli alter 5 wi'ekd oy ~
or
1Cf7b
750
~ nduro Hondo EJicelle nl
OLD FUR N ITUIH 1ce bon"'&gt; bra .. .,
won t to buy o r sell '&gt;Omt&gt; l h•ng
OIIOf lty
onyl
1mt!
o
n
wce
~
end~
'condil10n t e~" than BOO mde~
oe lqo ~ rnq lor work
or
AR IES (March 21 -April 19) A bed'&gt; 110n bPd~ e:tc complete
(llll.bb7J30~
A ~ k 1ng $750 19bb B~A chop
h o u~eh ol d \ Wn te M 0 M 1Her
whole ... er
t OU 11 gel re-.ul to;.
tr1end -, au h De a ssocr atrng
per
forr
cond1
11Dil
A
~
k
1ng
Rr 4 Pomer oy or col199') b370
lo ~ ter w 1th a )ent onel w'la nr A d
wrth needs some srnce re sotu
SoOO o" o•a 3790
Co11
Q9/ 71~
trans to her ores en t d tlemma
WANHD TO buy Older country
AllAOt
N tA MP) and part~ IOc Ileal t~stale fur SaJc
You ca n he s1 help by levPirng
hov'&gt;e and o&lt;reoge
~ome
f- OU P fAMilY Garage S.ole M an
of! Get the lamp y ou "'e bee n
wrth her
woods Nonh end of Me1gs
&amp; lue~ June ~th and bth tO to
w ontr n g or frl' up t hat old one
TAURUS {Aprii10-May 20) Prol,l Coun ly Away fr om po ... ed
b
Slo.mner ~ lone Pomero;
at o ~urnrner ~Ovrng\ N ow o t HOUS l AND ~ I O IC burldtng tn
100d Reply IO B o ~ 714 M c o
from you r pa st e:-:perrences d
1\t-ar M 1ner-.v dle Por l oble \ew
h' ccd~ ... dle 1:18~ 357C?
Moun to tn leather and Ger1erol
lhe Do1 ly }ent rnel 1-' o mer o ~
you fmd yo urself m a fam rtr ar
1ng rnoch111 e end &lt; O ~ e .,e ..... mg
)l
ore
l
OA
IDe
W
Un1on
~t
I 1 A C R~ lot l or 'ole &lt;iOHl to
OhiO
Sltuauon to oav What wor lied
tab le re&lt;O rd player ~ land h1e
A them Sole f!nd\ Jut~e lOth
long, ... rllf' Oh•o 741 7409
prevr o us ly Nrl l oo tus t as well WANHD TO buy l rr ew ood l or
plou? ~c ffH'! n Olld ondHOI"''l
rno ~ er boo~~ clo 1h1119 rnt~C
now
18
AlUMINUM
PONT
OON
boot
NINl
RO OM }
a nd
both
A
~to ... e I 304 773 543 7
rtlQ To r o r1d 11oder
$ 1uJO
h 1cpoke~ borr' on Iorge lor
1H RH f AMIL '( 'ford )ale June
1N7 3023 after b
Mo1n StrN! t 111 Ru tla nd Call
NOT ICE TO
5th and r;,th !r am 9 t o ~ }e cond
/ 4'/7418 o r 74/ '}970
CONTR ACT ORS
h o u~e on le fl or1 ( k J tead 1nq 1977 BUICK Cen tu rron 1976 Hen
STATE OF OH IO
Cr eek Hd Rom cancel~
do A ccord
I CJ71 VW BT99
DEPARTMENT O F
Hrow nrng ~hoi gun 94Q 7431
TRANSPORTATION
YAR D SAll M ondo.,. ond lueo,doy
Cotu mbu ~ . Oh ro
S 8. 6 at Don Wa lk fH 're~1 de nce DUMP lRU(K Q p o ~-.en gcr -.to
May 16 , 19 11
1n f.loc1ne Oh1 o On 5th Streer A
llon wag on 10 p1ece s of lorrn
Co ntra ct Sates Ge g al
lo t of nrc e clo the\ med•c1ne
equrpment A ll1n good w o rlo. rng
Copy N o 71 -5"3
cobrnel curiam!!
&lt;ond1t1 on Coli q•q 'Jl') A
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
sea1eo pr opo sals w rl! be
CARPORT SALl june 'f &amp; !; ~ 30 to INl ~RNAlt O NAl
~00
~er1c1
rece 1\led ar the off rc e o t !he
608 E .
5
Book\ Av on clo thrng t o y~
bu
ll
d
oler
b
way
blade
reele r
oi.
the
Oh•O
Ge rald E. Hendri c ks, D
odd
~
and
ends
91
8
S
I
htrd
R
0
P)
cab
wrn
ch
ready
to
Deparlmenl
ol
T ra n~
M1ddlepor 1
go loo lo. ~ lrke new Wdl toke
Gwendolyn R. Hendri cks to po r tat ron Columbo!. , Ohro .
untd
10
00
AM,
Ohro
trade~ Don I mr s~ th r!&gt; d you
Edward Voss. Ma y Lue Voss. St andara l rme lue!.day . )1:-W Rill SEWI NG Club wdl ' pan
need o dot er Ptlone 949 '1703
\or
o
yard
\ole
Wed
Ju
ne
7th
JU ST LISTED - About 6
I acre, Sulton.
MiJy
?.
197B , for· om
on the empty l ot ocr O'&gt;\ lr orn tNI UlNAliONAL
acres
with exce llent ho me .
provements
1
n
Ralph Swan Jr . to freda
14fl Bu lhHnul Ave fr om 10 Qrn
Athens rlnd Mt' 1gs Coun t i e&lt;,.
lra(lpr moun ted ~ proyer ~(H
J
bedrooms,
bath . large
Swan , 1.4 acre. Salisbury.
Oh ro. on va r ro us sec1 1ons
TO? Ro rn &lt;arHels
molt M odal H tra ct or :J poml
Kitchen &amp; d in in g . naf. gas
ATH
U
S
Route
33
rn
tnc
Rona ld G. Jaeobs . Alice L.
hr tch &lt;u toft !.O W 0 11 lrk.c new
CARAG I- ) All at rhe B1!1 ~u '&gt;!.ell
F .A.
furnace
heat.
o f At hens 1n Atnens
bu~h ho g All1n good condrh or1
Jacobs to Freda M. Swan, lot, C1ty
res1den ce J 111e P o 111t~ June ::.th
County , and ~ tate Route 6BI
f i repla ce.
basement ,
toke
! ro de~
Phonf!
W rit
Rutland
rn Me rg s Cou nly by rt;&gt;!. ur
and bth 'Jpon\Ot ed by 1he
por ches, 1 car gl!lrage.
G49 77t&gt;3
fa
c1ng
w
rth
lt!r.ph.JII
co
ncrel
e
M
1ner~
...
t1le
Un1
red
Method•st
Gary Gnf fith , Juanita
$32,000.00.
Pa11ement W 1Cih
var ous
Worn en
IY71 ( H !::VROl~ l ~U 8 Uit 6AN ( 10
Griffith to David Alan teet
BABY FARM - 25 acres
rru clo. }tlve rodo poclo.age and
Pr ot ec i and Work Leng t h
YAR D ~ AU June ~ 8 l q A
wi th very nice r emodeled
Griffith. .355 acre, Chester.
rrode t towmg poc:lo.og o 15 000
feet or 5 50 mrt es
Weather per mrlltng 6 ro dbur~
home close in . 2 bedrooms,
Roy E. Miller, Maurita 29,040
rnrles 7.A'l3 1S"
" Theo date sel tor com
Rood Don Honmg r e:. •dence
balh, corpe llng, paneli ng.
Miller to Leona rd f' . Erwin . ole t ron o f 1t11 S work shalt be
rnr~c
Ch,ldr en ~ rloth1ng
~WHl 1-'QI AI O plan T!!
leodrng
a!! !.el f orth 1n the btddrng
new
si ding , basemen t, F.A.
Georgia Ruth Erwin, I acre, oropo:s.at "
!I em~
...or tttTie'&gt; W e~l Shade Rood
furna
ce . 530.85 1.00.
Chester.
Each brOde r
~!'\all
oe ~PI ~(OP Al CHU RCH Nummoge r1f10' Che\ ler Dw1 ght Spencer
LOVELY BRICK - Close
requ1red
to
l
rle
w
tlh
htS
b1d
a
No
~undoy
~
ol
o!.
Opal Jean Tyree to Robert
~ole June fl q IOih li ~ Boke
to new Hydro Unit . 3
cer t 1f re d chec k or cash1er's
So le 011 1he l01h or f'o11 '&gt;h 1911 f-O IW ~CONOliN~ Von bt
Tyree . I acre. Rutland .
ct1ec tc. tor an amount equal to
bedrooms,
l 1 1 bat hs, F.A.
) I r eP I
H ou~ e
}eco •ui
eel l en t
&lt;.ondii10n
f ul l y
ft \le pe r cent o f hr s btd , but 1n
furna
ce,
close
to school. 6
Opal Jean Tyree . Affidavit , no event more than l r!ly
f' ome roy
ca rpet ed wrth bed and burl! 1n
rooms
535,000.00.
thou~dnd doll ar!! , or a bond
Rutland.
bor YAQ 7~&lt;4)
t or t en per ce nt of hts btd .
LOVELY KITCHEN William T. Hart, eta I, Ethel payaote
JOHN
DH R~ 1010 dOHH (Oill
to the D i re c tor
This you sho u l d see, IMge
floiDI!~
for
Sale
Zeigler Hart to State of Ohio.
B id ders must apply on the
pl.,.toly ruburh SASOO Dna,el
dini ng area with dining
t erms ,
tor
engure w1th wtnch Co li Cho1 lu\
Judgment Entry on Verdict. proper
MOBil!: HOME 12 r 70 w11h e•
ba r. 3 bedrooms. bath .
QUal rf rc at ton al te ast ten days
H Ho tfte ld 742 7000 of1e1 b
pond o 3 bedroom lo11 cond1
Bedford.
error to the d~tf' set l or
basement. about 26 yrs.
pm
l 1on Co lt be lw ~en 7 00 ond
Jay F. Stiles. Affidavit , op en rng Ord S rn accorcan c e
old
. 518.000.00 .
w 1th
Chapter 5SH Ot1ro
8 00
M an
th1 u
fhurs
l(lOUCf. SAH ond fast wrth
Rutland.
LIKE
FLOWERS? - Here
Rev 1sed Code
30 4 773 sqa?
CoBe~e table t s ~ I: Vo p wotor
Pt.Jns an d spec1 f tc at lons
ts j ust 1he busine ss for you .
Albert Hill, Jr. , Ora E . Hill
p1il\ Nel ~on Dtug
Me on fil e rn the Department
E•tab! ished lor a number
to Billy Hill, Jr ., Vicki L. Hill , ot
Transoortar ro n and the
of
years .
Training
Rent
11r
Correct1ve Deed. Racine.
off tce of the D ist r ict Oeputy
tu
rn
ls
hed
,
lntere5ted
D
rrector
William A. Clonch, Martha
Tne D rre ctor resenes t~e fRADE lWO lo ts;n Pomeroy W dl f'or Rmt
parties call.
E. Clonch to Cl1fford Manley, rtgt1t to reject any and all
!rode for bulldoler or motor
BRICK &amp; FRAME - I acre
home Col i 1 30A-648 5602 f or t J AND .A RM furnished and un
Faye Manley, Lots 191 and OtdS
ground,
J bedrooms, 1112
lurn1shed opl !.
Goy WV
Phone 'lfl/
192. Bosworth 's Add ., Mid·
bath , nice kitchen &amp; din ing ,
DAVID l WEIR
!lo4 34
DIRECTOR
dleoolt.
all electric , pat io. porch,
COU NfRY' M08tlt Ho me Pork
Carol W Cline to Melvin L.
Wanted to Rent
ga rage and
worksho p .
lo! ou te JJ . nor th o l Pomeroy
$31.900.00.
Forester, .87 a cre , Letart .
(61 5, 1:/ , 1tc
lo1ge lot~ Cot1497 7,. 7q
WAN HD TO · ofll
Hou~e or

Wanted

MOORE'S '

UK~~riTIS~I

FERTILIZER, NITROGEN,,
POTACH, FERT-0-PELS.
&amp; BLEND
Pomeroy landmark

Pomeroy landmark

lt lfij\'Mt ID'il ~ THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
\:!J \!:::1 ~~ ~~ by Henri ArnoldandBoblee

Muffler
Brakes
Shocks ,. Tires
Battery.
Installation Service

Pomeroy landmark

Cneck our low, low
prices on

Let us test your water Fret:

WHOELSH...~
THE: CANE 'S
~EVE:R OUTA
MY SIGHT AT
THE PLANT!

For The Best
Price In Town
See
Denver Kapple
At

additions .

For Free Estimates
Call
992-6323 or 992-6011
5-15·1 mo. pd .

CAPTAIN EASY
IT WA5 STUFfE:D WITH ~~!!!!!!'=
PL~TI C El(PL0!71VE ...
AND A BLASTING CAP!

-4-1 mo.

Under hang gutters &amp; room

~Jack's SeptiC

Let Pomeroy Landmark
sof1en

ano

Anyday, anytime.
Phone 985-3806
Jack Ginter 985-3806

WILl CAR !: for t he elderly m ou r
home Phone 997 . 731 4

tCfb8 VW BUG S4 00 997 5858

399 W. Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Ph. 992-2164

MASH BROTHERS
Alum. &amp; Vin~
Siding

commerciaL
Call
far
estimate, 24 hour service.

We hFe en Ia rged our
rvice department and
service Hotpoint and
brands .

Gilson Tillers, LAwn Boy
Mower Sales &amp; Service.

&amp;

4-lO-ttc

CLEANING

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Small entlne &amp; mower
ser'llite~ Mlney Ferguson

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682

SEPTIC TANK
R.esidential

~·

11.177 CH!:VY ~ O N ZA 305 cu Ill
V !:1 A ( AM tope 9Q'] 29!:17

GARAGE
¥• mile off AI. 7 by-pon on
St . Rt. 1'24 toward Ruttoncl,
0.

Call After 5, oo or
Anytime Saturdor
992-7119 or 992-5041
4-77-tfc

5:31)-News 6; E lee : Co. 20,33; Mary Tyler Moore tO ;
Hogan 's Heroes 15.
6:DO-News 3.4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6:30--N BC News 3,4,1S; ABC New s 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8, 10; Over Easy 20.33.
7:DO-Cross-Wits 3,4; Newlywed Game 6, 13; News 10;
Gilligan 's Is. 15; Daniel Foster. M.D. 20 ; Know
Your Schools 33.
-- 7:31)-That Nashvltle Music 3; In Search of 4; Muppel
Show 6; Match Game PM 8; MacNeil -Lehrer
Report 20,33; Wild Kingdom 10; Candid Camera13;
Nasvhllle on The Road 15.
8'DO-Uttle House On The Prairie 3,4,15; Baseball
6,13; Jelfersons 8,t0; Consumer Survival 20,33 .
8:31)-Good Times 8.10; Turnabout 20.33.
9:00-{)ur Town 3,4,15; Mash 8,10; Welfare 33; Art
Amer ica 20.
9:3()-{)ne Day At A Time 8.10; Art America 20.
10:01)-Lou Grant 8; Wayne Newton At Sea World 10;
N~ws 20.
10 :3()-{)ver Easy 20 ; 11:DO-News 3.4.6.8, 10,13.15;
Dick Cavett 29.
11 :31)-Johnny Carson 3,4,t5 ; Soap 6,13; Movie " The
Girl Who Came Gift-Wrapped" 8; Movie "My Blood
Runs Cold" 10.

~
MODERN SUPPLY

ROGER HYSEll

DAVE'S BACKHOE
&amp;
DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

992-2562 DURING EVENING.

Phuuc 992-:!156

MONDAY, JUNES, 1978

USED FORD TRACTOR, 800 SERIES.

Mubllc Hurnc su l l~ and \':~n.l s..II.'S
urri)' with {'t~sh wrt l r
tJrdt•r. 25 ecul rh HI' I:~ fur all:. CH IT) ·
Ulg Boll NUIIlUet· Ill Cart' of Ti lt' St&gt;rr·
trm·l

Tlrt' PutJ!LShl•r re~n·c s tht• n~h1
to t•drt ur l't)t't'l irll)' ~Us dt~nwd ulr
Jt't'!IU!Ial. Tht• PuOi ibh('r will nut bt.·
n·.~J.MIIIllllllt• fur· murc tl rau tllll' Ull'lll··

Business Services

FOR SALE

ilrt.' atT~ plt•d

GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) No/
ani..,. rs thrs one o f you r Detter
problem -solvrng days but yOLI It
al so be abl e tp fol low thr oug n
on rerJ:ledres tflal occur to you
at thi S 11me Fr nd out rnore
aDou t vourself by sendrr rg tor
your co oy ol As tr a- Graph Let ter Ma rl 50 cents l or each and a
tong self- addr essed st amo ed
e11velope to A ~trn-Gr aph P 0
Bo~ !189 Rad 1o C rty Statron
N ¥ t00t9 9.., s1ne to speedy
brllh Sig n

t'orSafc

EXPERT

your

seel..mg a sturd1er foundati on

CAN CER 1June

TELEVISION
VIEWING

DICK TRACY

NOTICE OF

�8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday , June 5, 1978

Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

PR OBATE COURT OF

MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
ESTATE OF FLOYD E .
HENDRICKS .

WANT AD
CHARGES

DECEASED

C1ue No . 22369

9-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, June 5, 1978
11 : 50-Janakl 33; 11:0$-Pollce Story 6,13! I :DO-

AF'POINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

1&amp; Words ur· Under

On May 31st , 1978 , in the
Me i~s

Co un tY P robate court ,

case No. 22369, Den ise Wolfe.

Box 40 2. Rac ine , Oh io 45771
was

appo i nted
Ad
mi n i slratr i ~t of the E st ~tte of
Floyd
E
H endriCkS ,
deceased , lale of M ine rsv i lle ,
Ohio

Mann 1nQ D . Webste r
Pl"obdle Jud ge

( 5l

s.

Clerk
12 •. 19, Jtc

C&lt;~sh

Ida)

1.00
1.50

1.:!5
1.00

1.111

2l5

J.U/1

:ut:~

2d a) ~

3tlay.'l
6 i.la} l!

O!CII '~l'

Each wur·tl o\'l.'r lltt: rnrutrnwn 1.)
wunl&lt;, Ill ~ t'crl lS pt.&gt;r wor'd per dl:l.)'·
Alb I'IIIU\IIIg ulht'l' than l'UIISCt' U( I\'t'
duy.s 14'111 lM;o t'ha r~t&gt;d at l ht• 1 lluy

r'alc

In memory, Ci~rll of TI1&lt;1 rrks a11d
Oblluary : 6 n~ul~ per ~· urd . S:l.OO
rrununwn, C011.h Ul adva111:c

For Tuesday 1 June 6

iSTRO•GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

m
t/iJJQJ~
t_t ) .JtlttJw~WL/
June ti , 1976

Some verv wonnwhtle changes
that

wt ll

con trtbute

to

of lo.no w! e dge wt ll occur ttliS
comtng yea1 Your ettorl wtll

prove to have long-laslmg and
c( tr emely oer1ei1Cral rewards

21-July 22)

Somethrng o t lld lue you ve
ea rn e d a·1d are e ntrtled to Ou t
na&lt;; bPE&gt;n lru &lt;; tratrngly delayed
should bern y6 ur ha nds today

LEO (July 13- Aug 12) A good
trme to appr ;:use
protect yo u ve been
underta~o ng Today
flect upon 11 rn a
pra c llc al manner

HUNTER

Wheel
Alignment

r' t'i'lUI~ r·u un

that new
th1n krng o f
yo u II resaner and

VIRGO (Aug 13-Sepl.

12) In a
competrlrve srtuatton where
you re seek.rng an advantage
play your ace •rn -the -hole Tod3)' no one can tru mp 11

LIBRA (Sepl. 23-0c/ . 23) You re
eastly ·able to sotvc problems
tod ay that oth ers frnd rnsur
moun ta bl e Speak. u p rt you hnd
J'O ursell con tr on te d by a
conf used rndrv1dui! r

SCORPIO !Oct . .4-No, . 11)

IN GOOD CONDITION.
CALL 992-2692 DURING DAY;

Fred W. Crow
SPECIAL
Any U.S. made car- parts

NOTICE

extra if needed . E•cludes
front -wheel drive cars.

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

Call Now For
Appointment

,\ \ l)llll&lt;tl
" liOJII 1111 S&lt;llunla~
Tut•!!d~&gt;

thru Frlllil)
-tPM
tlw tia) U..•fttl'l' putJiiratwn
Sum.la~

-1"1' , ,

F r1d10~ &lt;l f: t·ruliOfl

Pomeroy landmark
9 ... J~ck W. Carsey. MQr.
JAiitl Phone 992-2181

--

In Ml'ltm&lt;Mfi'·Vf
IN LOVING memory of our dear
mo ther Cl a ro A Collin~ wh o
po~sed away June 4 I 970
lhousond thought:. of one so dear
Often brmg o trny tea r
lhough ts go bock
to ~c ene s lon g poHed
lrme rolls on
Bul rnemor1e~ Ia)!
)odlv mrssed b.,. Daughte1 s
l ore ne M ~~ ce
~Iorence l MeDon re i
Bern1 ce V R o~e

197J MON T~ CARl O landau . P S ..
P B A C AM 8 tr act.. stereo .
t:J~cetlent
con d1l ron
S1 700

SOM!::O N~

TO work m lome ta
Irelds 1op pay Dalla~ Cleland
94q 23AQ

No e.&gt;.perren ce
App l.,. m pe rson ol
Blu e !arran M 1ddleport

WAITR!::SS

nece~sory

2bl2

1973 MONTI;: CARL O landau P S
1-' B A C AM 8 troc lo. ~tmeo
b:(ellenl
con dil10rl
Sl 700
ijd)

BURR OUGHS SENSI MAl l(
oc·
coun ting
mo(h1ne
Phone
Cf92 .215e. The Doily Senlrnel,
111 Court Slreel
Pomeroy.
Qh ,o

BROCCOLI ,

(A~ ~A Gl

Auto Sall!o

ijJ J

COAl. LIMES TON I: , sand . grovel , H &amp; ~ MOBIL E HOMES . Pt. Plea
sen t . W . Vo . be~• de Hec k s .
calc rum chl orrde tertil i1er . dog
1973 Broodm o r e 1&lt;I l&lt; M
7
food , and all rypes o f sol 1 !:10:
bedroom
cel sror Sal t Work s Inc ~ Morn
l q73 Do1 ron 14 ll: 00 7 bedr oom
St . Pomero y qq2 .38Q t .
1Q7') Vu; tor rort 14 l&lt; b7 3 bedroo m.
B~ S I ) HI:C TION of the be st wood
2 both
~ l oves rn Southeo sl em Ohr o .
1q77 (o ... e nt•y 17 r OS 3 bedroom
Jotul
M arso. U el
lrrol10
IQtJq Sto l esmon 12 ,. bO 1
lempwood . and Nofhu o. Zro n
bedroom
Heal Co . 8 Put norn Or . (off Mrll
~ 1. ). Athe n~ . b l 4·592 .bQ79 or
bl 4·bqb . l 187 .

11:/11

co vl 1fl ower brussell spro ut s,
egg plants head lettuce -. weet
pep pers hungonan w o ~e , seet
banan a
chrl1 peppers . Plu s
rnony drff erent vo rr ct•e'&gt; of
tornot o plants rnony krnd s of
hongrng
bo slo. e ts and
po t
!lowers large v011e ty of on
nu ol s rn flol5 . Cle la nd Farrn ~
and
Greenhov ~e
Ro crne
Geroldrne Cleland

1965 f-ORD MU)I ANG I.BQ ~ ngme
rec entt.,. rebud r Good sha pe
$.400 747 75 4 1

water

&amp; condition your
with Co-op . water

1Cf7J HOO RA OO CA DillAC h
cellenr condt1ro11 loaded wilh
e • Ha~ Only S3800 Also 10 11
1ruc l.. ca mper Good cond11iOn
Only S2000 Coli 9Q/ 5311 or
qQ') o371:1

softener , Model UC -SVI.
Now Only '289.95

1974 4 ~ peed ~ t re k sh1lt Ve ga
good cond1 I10n e ~t ra cle a n
Con be ~een or 077 Olr ver S,1
M1ddleport or call 997 5118 bet
ween 5 and 9 pm

·Jack W. Carsey. MQr.

1913 Pl YM OU IH f-URY I 3b0
engtne OUI O P S P B A C
4 door o;.edan b celtent co ndr
non Phone qas 3Q(X)

.ank ~ce

Chester. Uhio
10-30-c

0

Phone lt2-1181

USfO lRACIORI

~ack W. Carsey . Mgr .

Buy

t;;'ft J~ck W. Carsey, MQr .

--

sn

·c-r•.

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
,~

acres, Sutton .
Lou ise Thompson. Affida vit, Middleport .
Violet Millhone for Mella
Benedum, Affidavit , Olive.
James E . Keesee, Unda
Keesee to Norman R. Hen-

drix , Nellie B Hendm, 2
acres, Ora nge.

William E . Bartels. Diana
L. Ban els to Thomas E . Ball,
Anita L. Ball, Parcels, Sutton.

Lost and

Found

LO~f

CIT IZlNS

Our

MW

rente •s ass•s tonce 'fOV may be
able to lt'le rn our apa rtment
for lf'lts than S50 o rnonth f or
rnO tt.
lt!io t rnut ron
lOn lo t t
Vdloge Manor Apo rtmenh

PAIR OF mens gold wi re
~92 77~7 .
.
I rome eye glos!tes , cantotned m
block. Case bear ing the nome of TkAIU H SPACE l , rode fr om
Me1gs H igh !:lchool on ol d Rt 33
Or
R0
Thomes
Re word
qcn 2'lA1 or 4&lt;12.7689
. Phone q91 3718 or 992 bb55

acres loca ted 1 mrle fr orn H l WI rl e\e l Roo lrng. 1,ew or
Me1gs Mme N o I . Drrtled well
rep01 r
gutters
and
~ ep t 1c tank SBOOO. 741 1~b~
down!tpou ts Free esllll'10ie!.
Ph one
949 76~7
or
THR!::E BI:DR OOM home near
304
895
3802
Che&lt;,ter
Com plere
trailer
hook up o "d small or chard . H t. Wrtre\e l. Roof ing, new ar
485 4 17~
repo1 r ,
gutta•~
and
down ~pou l '&gt;
Free e~t1rno l e~
73 ACRE ~ of lor1d on the Pome 1oy
Phone 94Q 786') or q4q 71 ()()
Galt
Cour~e
Hrl l
Roo d
1'

Pomeroy,O.

I K]

11 !JOT 00...y I.OOICS

•1

1

300M&lt;!in St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Pom erov 992-6282
or99H26J
8 A.M. to 4,]0 P.M.

IKENALT I

loading dock and parking .
NEW LISTING - Wayout 3
bedroom lrame home w i th

10 acres. Has l"ge liv ing
r oo m

with woodburnlng

fire pla ce. Owners will take
tra iler In 1rade or- wi ll help

upper and r ent out the
tower . A good cann er lot
near stores. Bet1er see this

one lor- only $9 ,600.
IN THE COUNTRY -

HWOO D BOWERS REP AIR

~TPK!fD

room ol der home wi1 h J
bedroom s , rura l wa1er ,

naturl!ll ga!., wood burning
firepla ce and 3 ca r g~rl!lge .

Has lar ge garden

TILL I ~OUM.J 'rtXJ'D

Swee pe r ~

1H' FIRE ...

ORPHAN ANNIE-LITTLE HELPERS

I THOUGHT YO\J
WERE CI1Y GIRlS ···
YET YOU KNOW HOW
10 00 TH r CHOR£5
JUST PERrl7 Cf ...

llU1 UNClE J£6

WEll , I' Vf BEE N
AAOUND "'
AND r LIKE
FARM IN' !

Two wells , cister n and 2

outbuildings. Will take •
trade -ln. Only $16,500 .
EOGE OF TOWN - One
bedroom frame need ing •
little redecorating ,

bath,
gas furna ce , city water,
breezeway . 1 car garage,
trailer 5pol and over an

acre of land . $12.500.
CHESHIRE - Big red
brick with 2 apartment• . 10
rooms . 5 bedrooms, 3
bath s, 2 furnaces. and
ga r den on th i s

frui1 trees .

A LOT OF BUYERS ARE
SEEING US NOW. IF YOU
HAVE A NICE · CLEAN
PLACE AND WANT TO
MAKE A PROFIT CALL
992-3325
HELEN L. TEAFORD
GORDON B. TEAFORD
SUE P. MURPHY
Assotlott Reoltors

rot

a ll

mok.l] ~

~2 · 7'184

lhr
1- obr I(
Shop ,
Pom eroy
Auth OIILOd S1nge r Solos 0 11(1
~ervrce We \ho1p~r1 S&lt;tSSO t '&gt; .
v 1Cl1

~X(AVA TIN G ,

do1e1 , loa der and
ba ckhoe work. dump tr uclo! •.
and lo.boys f or h~t &amp; . will haul
!ttl d111 . to soil , lime sto ne and
gro11el Co li Bob or Roger Jel
l ers day phone 9GI7 708Q. ntg hl
phonu qq7 3575 o r 992 5137. .

by THOMAS JOSEPH

ALLEYOOP

'IOU MEAN YOU CAN
LOCATE ALLEY

AN~

OOOLA WI'TH 'Tl-115 .

I:X(AVA rJN C
d o 1er
bock.ho&lt;'
and dtt&lt;het ( had e) I( Hot
f reld
Bo ck.
Hoc
Serv tce
Ru1land Ohto Pho ne H2 7ootl .

DRIVE ALimE

40U.stranqer.

&amp;

She was t 'irst4

SAVE ALOT

as a

All carpet instolled wilh1

dud&gt;'

fo r the use of
. 4our water~

dead

&amp; up

9' and 12' Vinyl

1

Floor Covering In Stock

ADUll FEMAl E co tlre Fu l l blood·
ed. Soble co lor . Good wtlh
chi ldren qas .J365

FRANK &amp; ERNIE
Buy where you ctn come in

And see what you're gttlinO
- Good selections - Fully
stockett.

r'et&amp; tor Sale
HOO F HOllOW Horses . Buy , sell

Call 742-2211
TALK TO
Wendt II or Horb Grote
or Gene Smith

trode 01 tr o rr~. New and used
sa ddl es . Ruth Ree ve'&gt; , A lbany .
1

742 -2211

R'

PS1CHIATRIST

ovE~QUAL.IFIED.

;
C,- 5'

T"'&gt;o~E\

Ib BE: WILLING
~Rl WIIO LOG&lt;S L/Ki: MOYle S77'1R
~ WI:LL.S A6REES lDIWIKt: l'f •

o

A SOFA THAT

'ScUEN TFST' fVR Rl/SS£1 L A!YO 13/t.LY.

MAKES A

DO YOU 11-IINK
&amp;HE'LL 5HOW UP

BED FOR

TOMORROW?

YOU
REDIBED!

•

PA-r'IE'NT
Hf
'SAl D :r: MIS.S

Rutland

IF YOU NEED

~meb~h

BRIDGE

HE wouLDN',.
- - - - AeC:.EPT ME
Jll

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

Phone (b14 ) 3b7-01n.

1'0 BET ON IT r

ESPECIALLY
WHEN I TOLD
HER IT IVOU LD

eE .S.EE:N 13)'A. X

WE HOPE H::'LL
5EE IT...AND Elf
CONVI NCED THAT
rrs HIS PRECIOUS
DONNA W:=:LL3 '

#OLY

MACI(ER£LI
\¥HAT!&gt; SOIN G

ON HEIZ:?

AXYDL BAAXR
I•

I.ONGFELLOW

One l etlcr simply stands fo r ano ther, In thi s samp le A is
used for th e thr ee L' s, X for th e tw o O's, etc. Sin gle letters,

Pass

s•

Pass

.

Pass

Opening lead :

+6

A Maine reader asks what
we respond after our partner
opens a forcin g l wo spades.
Vfe hold :

apostrophes, Ihe length and formation of the words are all
&amp;-5-8
By Oswald Jacoby
hints. Each day the code l etters are dtfTcren t.
+
K
J
X
and Alan Sontag
CRYPTOQUOTES
Alan : " North wants to be
+AKxxx
in a grand slam if South has
• X X X
VM
BEMDPX
IN
W
X
two
aces
and
the
king
of
M E B NA
EM
We raise to three spades in
trumps. He can't lind this
order to establish spades as
.out
by
nonnal
bidding
methEBNPXFMI
UNVX
MDV
c
HM
ods but modern experts have the trump suit. We plan to
at least two ways to get to take further strong action .
- H Ct::N AX
LIMTBIF
t NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN . !
the grand slam safely."
., aturday's Cryptoquote: ONE OF THE SURPRISING THINGS
Oswald : " Which way do
!For a.copy of JACOBY MODIN THIS WORLD IS THE RESPECT A WORTHLESS MAN HAS you favor ?"
ERN. send Sf ro: "Win a1
r'OR HIMSELF.-ED HOWE
Alan : "I fav or a modifica- Bridge." care of th is newspation of the grand slam fore~. per. P.0 . Box 41!9. Radio Cily
@ IW78 King fealure• Syndi ~ ate, Inc.
The bidding In the box shows Slarion . New York . N. Y. 10019.)
BARNEY

•••

SAKES ALIVE!!
1 GOT MY ;;;IL\.'L.VC:.

15 IN STOCK
L.aroest Selection In The Valle'!

Summer Semester 10.

6,31)-Focus On Columbus 4; News 6: Summer
Semester 8: Concerns &amp; Comments 10; 6:4$Mornlng Report 3; 6:50-Good Morning , West
VIrginia 13; 6'5$-News 13.
7 : ~Today 3,4,15; Good Morning America 6,t3 ; CBS
News 8: Porky Pig to.
7:25-Chuck White Reports 10; 7:31)-Schoolles 10.
8:00-Capl. Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame 51. 33.
9: 00- Merv Griffin 3{ Ph il Donahue 4,13,t5 ;
Emergency One 6; Brady Bunch 8: Match Game
10.
9:3G-Andy Griffith 8; Family Affa ir tO .
10 :DO-Card Sharks 3,4,15; Edge of Night 6; Pass The
Buck 8; Joker's Wild 10; To Tell The Truth 13.
10: 31)-Hollywood Squares 3,4,15; High Hopes 6; Pri ce
Is Right 8,t0; 520,000 Pyramid 13.
11:DO-High Rollers 3,4,15; Happy Days 6,13, .
11 :31)-Wheel ot Fortune 3,15; Family Fued 6,13;
Par1rldge Family 4; Love of l-Ife 8,10; To Be
Announced 33 ; 11 :5$-CBS News~ Loving Free 10.
12 :DO-Newscenter 3: News 4,6,10; Sanford &amp; Son 15;
Gambit 8; Midday Magazine 13 .
12:31)-Ryan ' s Hope 6,13; Bob Braun 4; Gong Show 15;
Search for Tomorrow 8,10; E lee . Co. 33.
1:oo-For Richer. For Poorer 3; All My Children 6,1 3:
News 8; Young &amp; the Restiess 10; Not For Women
Only 15.
1:31)-0ays of Our Lives ~.t5 : As The World Tur ns
8,10, 2:00--Qne Life to Live 6,1 3; 2: 31)-Doctors
3,4,15; Gu iding Light 8,10.
3:oo-Another Wor ld 3,4,1 S; General Hospital 6,1 3;
Li lias Yoga e. You 20 .
3:3o-AI I In The Family 8,10; Consumer Survival Kit
20.
4:DO-M ister Cartoon 3; Superman 4; For Rich~' For
Poorer 15; Merv Griffin 6; Addams Family 8;
Sesame St. 20,33; Gomer Pyle, USMC 10; Dinah 13.
4:3o-Little Rascals 3,15; Gilligan's Is . 4,8; Brady
Bunch 10.
5:DO-Here Come The Brides 3; Star Trek 4; Gun smoke
B; Mister Rogers' Ne ighborhood 20,33; Hogan's
Heroes 10; Emergency One 13; Petti coat Junction
15.
5:3o-News 6; Elec. Co . 20,33; Mary Tyler Moore 10;
Hogan's Heroes 15.
6:DO-News 3,4.8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6:3o-NBC News 3,4,1 5; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,1 0; Over Easy 20,33.
7:DO-Cross-Wits 3,4; Newlywed Game 6,13: Pop Goes
The Country 8; News 10; Gilligan' s Is . 1S; French
Chef 20 ; O'Happy Day 33.
7:31)-Hollywood Squares 3,4; Let 's Go To The Races 8;
Candid Camera 6; MacNe il-Lehrer Report 20,33;
Price is Right 10; That's Hollywood 13; To Be
Announced 15.
8:DO-Redscene '78 3; Happy Days 6,1 3; Life In The
Fasl Lane 4; Man From Atlant is 15; Movie
" Nat ional Velvet" 8,10; Jacques Lipchltz 33; Some
of the Pres idents' Men 20 .
8:31)-Baseball 3,4; Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13.
9:DO-Three's Company 13; Music City News
Popularity Awards 6,8, 1S; Affa ir In The Air 20.33;
Movie " The Spokes Gang " tO .
9::ID-Mary Tyler Moore 13; tO :D0-20-20 13 : George
Cr umb : Voice of the Whale 33 ; News 20 .
10:31)-Biack Perspect ive On The News 20 ; 11 :DONews 3.4.6.8.10.13.15; Dick Cavetl20; Over Easy 33.
ll :Jo-Johnny Carson 3,4,15 ; Soap 6,13; Movie " Night
Terror " 8; Movie " Satan's Harvest " 10; 12 'DOJanakt 33.
12 ,05-Mov le " Conspiracy of Te rror" 6,1 3; !: DOTomorrow 3.4; I' 11)-Kojak 8; 1:4$-News ll.

Safe way to sIam

As Low As
sq. ya .

Phone

TUESDAY, JUNE 6, t978
5:4$-Farm Report t3&gt; 5:50-PTL Club 13 ; 6 DO-

fender.'

Rubber Back Carpet
'4 •88

Tomorrow 3,4; 1: 1$-News t3 .
Movie Chonn.l 4 5 &amp; 7 P.M.- Another Man. Another Chance I PG I
9 e. 11 P.M. - Carnal Knowledge IRI
CAble Channel 5 6' 30 P.M. - Testimony Time
7 e. 9 P.M.- Wahoma Band In Mexico

ACROSS
38 Resident
I Pack too lull :i9 Girl's name
... HEI2!i:! LET Me.
5 Baseball
tO Dinner
SI-40W ...OU!
Al--t- pitch
course
II Wile of Zeus 41 Knicks'
12 Hwnbert
coach
Hwnbert's
DOWN
Movie Channel 4 5 e. 9 P.M. - Poco (G)
passion
I Noted enter·
7 !. II P.M. - Hollywood Oldie
tainer
13 Newt
Yesterday's Alzlwer
Cable Channel l 2 Face, as an
14 Hwnbltd
6:30P.M. - Testimony Time
embankment 16 Exasperated 27 Japanese
15 Get
7:00 ~ Paul Gaudino
21 Put under
wild dog
7:30 - Special Edition
3 Betel palm
17 Prefix with
10 :00 - 700 Club.
legal
bond
29
"Alfie
"
4 Motherly
angle
star
22 Ape-man,
5 Drool
18 - with the
30 Egge.g.
6Lobate
shaped
23
Football
7 Pier uni on:
19 "High 31
French
stalwarts
abbr.
Windy Hill"
aMuily
24 Fire or
8 Misrep20 Ending lor
First carl ever saw
Monda y, June 5
water,
34
Interpret
din
or
gun
resent
with the radiator in
36 Malay
9 Everlasting
e.g.
21 He 's
t he rear
gibbon
Z5 Care for
usually
10 Shine
spoiled
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag
22 Appeal
Z5 Kind of
,.--+--+--ii--+--+--i
role
·26 Uttle
North as king for aces by
means of Blackwood and
brook
NORTH
6-5-A
1hen bidd ing s ix clubs . fi ve
What
• A
notrump in that spot would
1
• Q 6 ,,
1
' deca'
ask for kings . This bid of a
t AKQ7&gt;4 2
new suit asks partner to bid
• 8
seven if he holds two of the
WEST
EAST
lop three trump honors ."
+ Q 10 8 6 2 + K .J 7 3
Oswald : " It ce rtainly
29 Frankness
• J 73
• 10
works
her e and is simple
• 9
• J 10 6 3
32 Note from
enough
so that any estab• 1\ 10 • 4
• Q9 32
lished partnership can use
the boss:
SOUTH
it. Let 's formalize it. "
abbr .
• g. 4
Alan : " OK . A partnership
City in
•AK 982
using this convention agrees
• 8
Mass .
that if a pla yer who uses a
+A.J
76
Blackwood four notrump fol§ 35 ~~- Goes
lows
up with a bid of six in an
Vulnerabl e : Both
to
unbid
suit, he guarantees all
1
Dealer : South
~
the Ball'
the aces a nd asks his part·
~ 37 Windmill
Wesl North Easl
ner to bid seven with two of
"
part
the three top trump honors ."
•
Pass 4 NT Pass
I
Pass
•• DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Hert's how to work it : Pass

J~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

SAVE ON
CARPETING

SOPPIN' WET!!

.

"

Answer: What you usually can 't understand when
someone uses double-talk - A SINGLE WO~O

~

S ~WING MACHINE Re porr s, ser

'

I

BUT Hf 'll BE UP
FOR BRfAKFAST ...

m

~----==·

..

(Answers tomorrow )

Pl vrnb,ng heo tm q
ond oil types o f general repor r
Work guaran teed 10 y e ar ~ e•
perrcnce Phone
:/ o4(}q

Ph acres on

Rt. 7. Modern Inside with
lull basement ond young

XI X)-ITJ"

NEW - JUST OFF PRESS! JUMBLE BOOK 111 wltt1110 puzzles ls•vall ·
able lor $1.35 post paid !rom Jumble , c/o ft11s newspaper, P.O. BoK34,
Norwood, N.J. 07648, Include you r name, address, zip codeafld make
checks pa~abl e to Newspaperbooks.

cel lar with workshop over,

Jusl $1 6.500 .
HANDY
WITH
A
HAMMER - 30 acres ol
land, 6 room house In good
location overlooking Rt . 7.

Now arrange the circled te[ters to
form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.

3815

•n7313.

and

(J

Jumbles: IGLOO WHINE GRIMLY STOLID

R~MOOHING

too good
6 week)

RI SING STAR Kennel , Boordrng .
Indoor and ou td oor
ru n~ .
G roo ming oil br eeds Cle an
sanrto ry focili t res . Chesh ire.

·-- IS N1 T HE
FE£L IN ' GOOD
ll1t S MORNING?

HIS 1\Wl'TIIf 'S J='INE

Exptrt installation.

BLACK ANO whrle neu leted
mole 3 y e ar ~ ol d . Pta,.fu l ol·
f ectronote

WI-IAT THE
WHO DRAI&gt;JI&lt; TOO
MUCH WINE
&amp;ECAME.

Prlntanswerhere: "(
011 , JfB! HS KNEE
15 90THERt!'l' t11M ., ,

toos lttr!l , 11ons , all
-.molt oppltonces lawn m owm
ne:J~ t to Stolo Ht ghway Go10g ~'
on Rou te 7 Ph on e {OlA I 985

(bl4 ) 698-3290

8

~ITTLE

~'!, CII4Nif .. , I DIDN'T
I(J«)W VOU WERE UP

f inance . S33,SOO.

POMEROY - Reasonable
2 family home . Live In the

II I

UTTL.E ORPHAN ANNIE

padding •f no ch.arge .

FOUR VE RY lome ~•lien s

·-·

II I

BRADFORD, Auc troncer
Com
p le l e Sc rvrca . Phone Qo49-1487
or Q4q 70CX) Ro cme . O ht O. C1111
Br ad ford .

WAN TtO ANY bvsme !.s
Real
E:sto l e thor need~ f rnonc rng
Mr A rou ck~ou 716 87 1 &lt;I 17!1

floor , i'l i r condi t ion i ng ,
natural ga ~. c ity water ,
underg r o und ga so line t : .. k ,

I (X I I
IBELNAGb

8u~incoo Opportunitieo

VIRGILB. SR .'~~
; I 1&gt;110
991-3325
Gin1 Away
116 E. Second Street
KllTI:N 10 gtve away
BUSINESS BUILDING home Ve ty Plo.,.ful
old 992 7033
Out ol al l lloods. Con crete

lo

PWMBING &amp;
HEATING INC. ·

997 3944

rn
~~

SYLOU

BORN LOSER

SALES AND SERVICE
11 -9-tlc

Pomeroy

109 High St.

698-7331

OTHER PROPERTY TO
CHOOSE FROM.
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
HANK . KATHY I&gt; LEONA
CLELAND
ASSOCIATE
REALTORS
992-2259- 992 -6191

l!l-2114

VA FHA 30 yr l moncrng ol~o
PUll iNS I: XCAVA TIN G Co mple te
rel lllonr1ng Ir el and Mo1 tgoge
S.erviCe Phone 997 1478
77 E Stol e Athens phone {~14 )
;q7 30;1
PUDDU: POOl S. Al l S11e s and
shape!&gt; Swtm p oo l~ 7 yE'Or~
t!Y OWN!::R 5 acre~ wrth 9 room
e•par ren ce . free e-.hrnates
hou se , F~H G A S, 2 (Or gorogo,
anything
yo u
need
lor
surnme• kitc hen ond bo rdered
underg ro und swun pool :. N ew
by 7 creeks , Colt qa5.3577 .
cherr11col and su pply s tore
TWO Sl ORY frame house b
Alba ny ,
Ohio
Phone
rooms a nd bolh . ce llar . ou t·
bl4 ·698 6555 . ( A ft er b pm
b urldr ng~ 4 ones land ot edge
bl 4·689 5'15 1 John JeHer' or
of Ru tland . Com plele fro rl er
689 57.65 Bill G ill e tt e ) W e ore
hook ·up a lso '}bonks oppro •S·
N O T oi l we t on PRICI:S
ed proper ty o t SIS 500 . Phono
SPEEDY DRI LLING . Water well
~n 70'1&lt;
drr/1 11\g , commerc:rol
an d
FARM O N CR 31 3e acre~ Neor
doll'1e ~ h c Pump ~ole\ and se r
Por tland 843 7501
vrce Cl97 -b1q5 or 3Q,d 1:195 3807

Trade

SlNIOR

( Bob Hoeflich)

Will d o I Oo l rng con\ truc li on ,
plurnbrng and heo!mg No tab
too l ot ge or too ~m all Ph one
HOMl SITES l or so le . 1 acre and
74:?. 2348 .
up . M rd dle po rl . neor Ru tland .
HOW I: RY
AND
MAR TI N
i:JI .
Ca ll 99'1 748 1.
COIIOii ng . -.e pl1 c systems .
NEW 3 bedroom hou'&gt; e 2 bolhs.
do rer backhoe dump tru ck
all elec . 1 OCIC M•ddleport
lrmes tone
gra ... el
blacktop
close to Rurlo nd . Phone Cfq'}
po ... rng . Fi t 143 Phone I (614 )
7481 .

Mobile

troller by , I led rncorne cou ple
9Q2 J 437

The Photo Place
5-31-1 mo.

MAIN
POMEROY. 0 :

Nobel Rompel to Roger
T. Holter, Helen M. Holter, 10

four ordinary words .

..If

3-15-tlc

Portra irs
Weddings
Passports
Anniversaries
Specia I Occasions

......,,. ro , ....

Meigs
Property
Transfers

'

Unscramble these four Jumbles ,

lr{.;f;:E~~~ one tet1er Ia each square. to form

CARTER·

Radiator..---.
Service
.............
,...t

Phone99~ - 2161

m

l'IJI' Sal£,

Ph. 991-2848

EXPERIENC:ED

MH J5 Dre~c l
M~ 230 01e ~el
Wrth the ftSSI Stance o f an o tner
Mf-1 ~ D 1e~el
Mf1J5 D1e sel
~, Phone 991 -2181
you c an achteve an amortrous
MF ib5 Dtescl Mr785 01esct
lo
ObJeC tiv e toda y He o r sre w1 11
M f 11 3~ Ore~el
Cob 011 &amp;
IC!b6
DODG~
POLAJ.IA
one
pos se ss tt1at necessary 1-.no w hoo
ter
NO II !:: M 100 large or 100 sm all
owner rl"' f rne condrhon Ph ('l ne Nt:W &amp; USI:O t MPl~MI:N '1S
WAaR WHI drdl1ng W1llrorn 1
how you ve long sought
W rll bu.,. 1 p1ece or comple te
Gr a n t 7-4 / 2tP9
949 '1763
SAGITTARIUS (No, . 13- Dec.
Mf9 t!o lcr
Mf iO Bo ler MJ- 170
household New u~ed or ont r
21f Yo u 11 do well today rf ~ou
Mollhew~ Ro ta ry S&lt;y the
tiole
r
lq64
RAMBLUl
S700
997
SBb4
Ques Mo rtrn s Fur n1 ture 70 N
MF880 Serru moun ted 6 bot ·
base decrsto ns on tWe mos t
{nd St
Mrddleport
Phone 1'17~ GH AN D lORlNO ')qu r1e Ford
rom
Plow
MF 520 l I. Orsc
pract1cat aspe c ts ot tne rssue
997 b370
~tat ron wagon wr!h P S P B
Ml-100 '} Row (hopper MF 39 2
and not those wht Ct'l are onl y
A C rd t whee l c rvr~e con trol
CHIP
WOOD
Po l e~
mol'
~ ow
Planter-.
M echonrc o l
hooe s o r de srres
a ll new t 11e!i Power w 1ndo w ~
doometer 10 on largest end sa
Tron!ioplon t er
CAPRI CORN (Dec. 12-Jon. t! l
S3200 Coil afte1 tl pm
per ton Bundled -.lab Se pe r
)HIN N S tRA CTOR SAltS
'rou re up to meetrng and over·
l A'] 100!:1
ron Delt.,.ered 1o Oh1o Pa ller
Phone 4)8 I 030
co mmg ddfr cu lt c hallenges e s·
Co Rt 7 Pomeroy
71)8q
leof'l W Va
1q73 BUW:K lUXUS l:r cell enl lon
pectatty wh ere y o ur -Na rk or
d1
rtan
P
S
P
B
A.
C
New
COI
N
~
CU
RR~N
(Y
tolo.en'&gt;
old
career IS conce rneo Pers isIll E."S S 17~ qn 7870
poclo.e r wo t che~ and cho rns
tence s yo ur wat c hword
PAIN T J- O R .. o le A lum1num porn !
~~tver a nd gold We need I 9t&gt;4 1974 PINT O f.lodtal lo re~ new
AQUARIU S {Jan . 10-Feb . 1!)
new bucke 1 ~ never been open
end o lder '&gt;ri..J er corn\ Buy ~ e !l
ed tOO gal avorloble ol S4
Somethmg 01 con sequence
~hoc k ~
A8 (XX) m1le~ S I )(X)
per gall on 81ve lote :o" porn! at
can co me from d soc1 a l en · or lrode Coli Pager Warn '&gt;ley
Col l 9tr'l 7785 alter J
747. 1.331
S3 )() per ga llon 9&lt;17 b 173 o•
co unter you tt f: J perrence
1971 CADill A C UOOR AOO f ul l
qq) o106
tod ay Be e~ua - anen!lve rf one TIMBER POM~ R O Y J- or e~t 1-'10
power 01r e •ce le nt co rtd11ro n
NhO 1S o toer 1&lt;; rn vot ved
duel .. lop pr 1U" l or \ lo nd1ng
1938 HARll¥ DAVIDSON fully
Ph on e qq') 7 467
PIS CES !Feb. 10- Ma rch 10! 1he
'&gt;OW 1unber Call ~7 5905 or
cu\ to mr l Cd wrlh 5U1 Crde clu l &lt;.h
mostrm po rtd nt rna tters on your
~en I Hanby 1 44 b 8570
ond sh rlt ~~ cellen t cond•llon
age nrl a IOCid '!' clff&gt; domeStiC
A -. ~ 1ng
!.3000 747 7790 or VACAN CY FOR Plderly' pot1en1 1n
1anl Sale
WANT TO buy Good whee l cho 1r
one!&gt; A n~ l"'iuf'S tha t aHPc tthe
tl l 4 tlq8 3290
p! t\lo te horne ot 1vppe• ~ Plo tn ~
qA9 25Q 1
lamrl, shOuld be g1ven top
tr YOU ho ... e a ~ervrce ro o l!er
Coli alter 5 wi'ekd oy ~
or
1Cf7b
750
~ nduro Hondo EJicelle nl
OLD FUR N ITUIH 1ce bon"'&gt; bra .. .,
won t to buy o r sell '&gt;Omt&gt; l h•ng
OIIOf lty
onyl
1mt!
o
n
wce
~
end~
'condil10n t e~" than BOO mde~
oe lqo ~ rnq lor work
or
AR IES (March 21 -April 19) A bed'&gt; 110n bPd~ e:tc complete
(llll.bb7J30~
A ~ k 1ng $750 19bb B~A chop
h o u~eh ol d \ Wn te M 0 M 1Her
whole ... er
t OU 11 gel re-.ul to;.
tr1end -, au h De a ssocr atrng
per
forr
cond1
11Dil
A
~
k
1ng
Rr 4 Pomer oy or col199') b370
lo ~ ter w 1th a )ent onel w'la nr A d
wrth needs some srnce re sotu
SoOO o" o•a 3790
Co11
Q9/ 71~
trans to her ores en t d tlemma
WANHD TO buy Older country
AllAOt
N tA MP) and part~ IOc Ileal t~stale fur SaJc
You ca n he s1 help by levPirng
hov'&gt;e and o&lt;reoge
~ome
f- OU P fAMilY Garage S.ole M an
of! Get the lamp y ou "'e bee n
wrth her
woods Nonh end of Me1gs
&amp; lue~ June ~th and bth tO to
w ontr n g or frl' up t hat old one
TAURUS {Aprii10-May 20) Prol,l Coun ly Away fr om po ... ed
b
Slo.mner ~ lone Pomero;
at o ~urnrner ~Ovrng\ N ow o t HOUS l AND ~ I O IC burldtng tn
100d Reply IO B o ~ 714 M c o
from you r pa st e:-:perrences d
1\t-ar M 1ner-.v dle Por l oble \ew
h' ccd~ ... dle 1:18~ 357C?
Moun to tn leather and Ger1erol
lhe Do1 ly }ent rnel 1-' o mer o ~
you fmd yo urself m a fam rtr ar
1ng rnoch111 e end &lt; O ~ e .,e ..... mg
)l
ore
l
OA
IDe
W
Un1on
~t
I 1 A C R~ lot l or 'ole &lt;iOHl to
OhiO
Sltuauon to oav What wor lied
tab le re&lt;O rd player ~ land h1e
A them Sole f!nd\ Jut~e lOth
long, ... rllf' Oh•o 741 7409
prevr o us ly Nrl l oo tus t as well WANHD TO buy l rr ew ood l or
plou? ~c ffH'! n Olld ondHOI"''l
rno ~ er boo~~ clo 1h1119 rnt~C
now
18
AlUMINUM
PONT
OON
boot
NINl
RO OM }
a nd
both
A
~to ... e I 304 773 543 7
rtlQ To r o r1d 11oder
$ 1uJO
h 1cpoke~ borr' on Iorge lor
1H RH f AMIL '( 'ford )ale June
1N7 3023 after b
Mo1n StrN! t 111 Ru tla nd Call
NOT ICE TO
5th and r;,th !r am 9 t o ~ }e cond
/ 4'/7418 o r 74/ '}970
CONTR ACT ORS
h o u~e on le fl or1 ( k J tead 1nq 1977 BUICK Cen tu rron 1976 Hen
STATE OF OH IO
Cr eek Hd Rom cancel~
do A ccord
I CJ71 VW BT99
DEPARTMENT O F
Hrow nrng ~hoi gun 94Q 7431
TRANSPORTATION
YAR D SAll M ondo.,. ond lueo,doy
Cotu mbu ~ . Oh ro
S 8. 6 at Don Wa lk fH 're~1 de nce DUMP lRU(K Q p o ~-.en gcr -.to
May 16 , 19 11
1n f.loc1ne Oh1 o On 5th Streer A
llon wag on 10 p1ece s of lorrn
Co ntra ct Sates Ge g al
lo t of nrc e clo the\ med•c1ne
equrpment A ll1n good w o rlo. rng
Copy N o 71 -5"3
cobrnel curiam!!
&lt;ond1t1 on Coli q•q 'Jl') A
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
sea1eo pr opo sals w rl! be
CARPORT SALl june 'f &amp; !; ~ 30 to INl ~RNAlt O NAl
~00
~er1c1
rece 1\led ar the off rc e o t !he
608 E .
5
Book\ Av on clo thrng t o y~
bu
ll
d
oler
b
way
blade
reele r
oi.
the
Oh•O
Ge rald E. Hendri c ks, D
odd
~
and
ends
91
8
S
I
htrd
R
0
P)
cab
wrn
ch
ready
to
Deparlmenl
ol
T ra n~
M1ddlepor 1
go loo lo. ~ lrke new Wdl toke
Gwendolyn R. Hendri cks to po r tat ron Columbo!. , Ohro .
untd
10
00
AM,
Ohro
trade~ Don I mr s~ th r!&gt; d you
Edward Voss. Ma y Lue Voss. St andara l rme lue!.day . )1:-W Rill SEWI NG Club wdl ' pan
need o dot er Ptlone 949 '1703
\or
o
yard
\ole
Wed
Ju
ne
7th
JU ST LISTED - About 6
I acre, Sulton.
MiJy
?.
197B , for· om
on the empty l ot ocr O'&gt;\ lr orn tNI UlNAliONAL
acres
with exce llent ho me .
provements
1
n
Ralph Swan Jr . to freda
14fl Bu lhHnul Ave fr om 10 Qrn
Athens rlnd Mt' 1gs Coun t i e&lt;,.
lra(lpr moun ted ~ proyer ~(H
J
bedrooms,
bath . large
Swan , 1.4 acre. Salisbury.
Oh ro. on va r ro us sec1 1ons
TO? Ro rn &lt;arHels
molt M odal H tra ct or :J poml
Kitchen &amp; d in in g . naf. gas
ATH
U
S
Route
33
rn
tnc
Rona ld G. Jaeobs . Alice L.
hr tch &lt;u toft !.O W 0 11 lrk.c new
CARAG I- ) All at rhe B1!1 ~u '&gt;!.ell
F .A.
furnace
heat.
o f At hens 1n Atnens
bu~h ho g All1n good condrh or1
Jacobs to Freda M. Swan, lot, C1ty
res1den ce J 111e P o 111t~ June ::.th
County , and ~ tate Route 6BI
f i repla ce.
basement ,
toke
! ro de~
Phonf!
W rit
Rutland
rn Me rg s Cou nly by rt;&gt;!. ur
and bth 'Jpon\Ot ed by 1he
por ches, 1 car gl!lrage.
G49 77t&gt;3
fa
c1ng
w
rth
lt!r.ph.JII
co
ncrel
e
M
1ner~
...
t1le
Un1
red
Method•st
Gary Gnf fith , Juanita
$32,000.00.
Pa11ement W 1Cih
var ous
Worn en
IY71 ( H !::VROl~ l ~U 8 Uit 6AN ( 10
Griffith to David Alan teet
BABY FARM - 25 acres
rru clo. }tlve rodo poclo.age and
Pr ot ec i and Work Leng t h
YAR D ~ AU June ~ 8 l q A
wi th very nice r emodeled
Griffith. .355 acre, Chester.
rrode t towmg poc:lo.og o 15 000
feet or 5 50 mrt es
Weather per mrlltng 6 ro dbur~
home close in . 2 bedrooms,
Roy E. Miller, Maurita 29,040
rnrles 7.A'l3 1S"
" Theo date sel tor com
Rood Don Honmg r e:. •dence
balh, corpe llng, paneli ng.
Miller to Leona rd f' . Erwin . ole t ron o f 1t11 S work shalt be
rnr~c
Ch,ldr en ~ rloth1ng
~WHl 1-'QI AI O plan T!!
leodrng
a!! !.el f orth 1n the btddrng
new
si ding , basemen t, F.A.
Georgia Ruth Erwin, I acre, oropo:s.at "
!I em~
...or tttTie'&gt; W e~l Shade Rood
furna
ce . 530.85 1.00.
Chester.
Each brOde r
~!'\all
oe ~PI ~(OP Al CHU RCH Nummoge r1f10' Che\ ler Dw1 ght Spencer
LOVELY BRICK - Close
requ1red
to
l
rle
w
tlh
htS
b1d
a
No
~undoy
~
ol
o!.
Opal Jean Tyree to Robert
~ole June fl q IOih li ~ Boke
to new Hydro Unit . 3
cer t 1f re d chec k or cash1er's
So le 011 1he l01h or f'o11 '&gt;h 1911 f-O IW ~CONOliN~ Von bt
Tyree . I acre. Rutland .
ct1ec tc. tor an amount equal to
bedrooms,
l 1 1 bat hs, F.A.
) I r eP I
H ou~ e
}eco •ui
eel l en t
&lt;.ondii10n
f ul l y
ft \le pe r cent o f hr s btd , but 1n
furna
ce,
close
to school. 6
Opal Jean Tyree . Affidavit , no event more than l r!ly
f' ome roy
ca rpet ed wrth bed and burl! 1n
rooms
535,000.00.
thou~dnd doll ar!! , or a bond
Rutland.
bor YAQ 7~&lt;4)
t or t en per ce nt of hts btd .
LOVELY KITCHEN William T. Hart, eta I, Ethel payaote
JOHN
DH R~ 1010 dOHH (Oill
to the D i re c tor
This you sho u l d see, IMge
floiDI!~
for
Sale
Zeigler Hart to State of Ohio.
B id ders must apply on the
pl.,.toly ruburh SASOO Dna,el
dini ng area with dining
t erms ,
tor
engure w1th wtnch Co li Cho1 lu\
Judgment Entry on Verdict. proper
MOBil!: HOME 12 r 70 w11h e•
ba r. 3 bedrooms. bath .
QUal rf rc at ton al te ast ten days
H Ho tfte ld 742 7000 of1e1 b
pond o 3 bedroom lo11 cond1
Bedford.
error to the d~tf' set l or
basement. about 26 yrs.
pm
l 1on Co lt be lw ~en 7 00 ond
Jay F. Stiles. Affidavit , op en rng Ord S rn accorcan c e
old
. 518.000.00 .
w 1th
Chapter 5SH Ot1ro
8 00
M an
th1 u
fhurs
l(lOUCf. SAH ond fast wrth
Rutland.
LIKE
FLOWERS? - Here
Rev 1sed Code
30 4 773 sqa?
CoBe~e table t s ~ I: Vo p wotor
Pt.Jns an d spec1 f tc at lons
ts j ust 1he busine ss for you .
Albert Hill, Jr. , Ora E . Hill
p1il\ Nel ~on Dtug
Me on fil e rn the Department
E•tab! ished lor a number
to Billy Hill, Jr ., Vicki L. Hill , ot
Transoortar ro n and the
of
years .
Training
Rent
11r
Correct1ve Deed. Racine.
off tce of the D ist r ict Oeputy
tu
rn
ls
hed
,
lntere5ted
D
rrector
William A. Clonch, Martha
Tne D rre ctor resenes t~e fRADE lWO lo ts;n Pomeroy W dl f'or Rmt
parties call.
E. Clonch to Cl1fford Manley, rtgt1t to reject any and all
!rode for bulldoler or motor
BRICK &amp; FRAME - I acre
home Col i 1 30A-648 5602 f or t J AND .A RM furnished and un
Faye Manley, Lots 191 and OtdS
ground,
J bedrooms, 1112
lurn1shed opl !.
Goy WV
Phone 'lfl/
192. Bosworth 's Add ., Mid·
bath , nice kitchen &amp; din ing ,
DAVID l WEIR
!lo4 34
DIRECTOR
dleoolt.
all electric , pat io. porch,
COU NfRY' M08tlt Ho me Pork
Carol W Cline to Melvin L.
Wanted to Rent
ga rage and
worksho p .
lo! ou te JJ . nor th o l Pomeroy
$31.900.00.
Forester, .87 a cre , Letart .
(61 5, 1:/ , 1tc
lo1ge lot~ Cot1497 7,. 7q
WAN HD TO · ofll
Hou~e or

Wanted

MOORE'S '

UK~~riTIS~I

FERTILIZER, NITROGEN,,
POTACH, FERT-0-PELS.
&amp; BLEND
Pomeroy landmark

Pomeroy landmark

lt lfij\'Mt ID'il ~ THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
\:!J \!:::1 ~~ ~~ by Henri ArnoldandBoblee

Muffler
Brakes
Shocks ,. Tires
Battery.
Installation Service

Pomeroy landmark

Cneck our low, low
prices on

Let us test your water Fret:

WHOELSH...~
THE: CANE 'S
~EVE:R OUTA
MY SIGHT AT
THE PLANT!

For The Best
Price In Town
See
Denver Kapple
At

additions .

For Free Estimates
Call
992-6323 or 992-6011
5-15·1 mo. pd .

CAPTAIN EASY
IT WA5 STUFfE:D WITH ~~!!!!!!'=
PL~TI C El(PL0!71VE ...
AND A BLASTING CAP!

-4-1 mo.

Under hang gutters &amp; room

~Jack's SeptiC

Let Pomeroy Landmark
sof1en

ano

Anyday, anytime.
Phone 985-3806
Jack Ginter 985-3806

WILl CAR !: for t he elderly m ou r
home Phone 997 . 731 4

tCfb8 VW BUG S4 00 997 5858

399 W. Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Ph. 992-2164

MASH BROTHERS
Alum. &amp; Vin~
Siding

commerciaL
Call
far
estimate, 24 hour service.

We hFe en Ia rged our
rvice department and
service Hotpoint and
brands .

Gilson Tillers, LAwn Boy
Mower Sales &amp; Service.

&amp;

4-lO-ttc

CLEANING

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Small entlne &amp; mower
ser'llite~ Mlney Ferguson

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682

SEPTIC TANK
R.esidential

~·

11.177 CH!:VY ~ O N ZA 305 cu Ill
V !:1 A ( AM tope 9Q'] 29!:17

GARAGE
¥• mile off AI. 7 by-pon on
St . Rt. 1'24 toward Ruttoncl,
0.

Call After 5, oo or
Anytime Saturdor
992-7119 or 992-5041
4-77-tfc

5:31)-News 6; E lee : Co. 20,33; Mary Tyler Moore tO ;
Hogan 's Heroes 15.
6:DO-News 3.4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6:30--N BC News 3,4,1S; ABC New s 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8, 10; Over Easy 20.33.
7:DO-Cross-Wits 3,4; Newlywed Game 6, 13; News 10;
Gilligan 's Is. 15; Daniel Foster. M.D. 20 ; Know
Your Schools 33.
-- 7:31)-That Nashvltle Music 3; In Search of 4; Muppel
Show 6; Match Game PM 8; MacNeil -Lehrer
Report 20,33; Wild Kingdom 10; Candid Camera13;
Nasvhllle on The Road 15.
8'DO-Uttle House On The Prairie 3,4,15; Baseball
6,13; Jelfersons 8,t0; Consumer Survival 20,33 .
8:31)-Good Times 8.10; Turnabout 20.33.
9:00-{)ur Town 3,4,15; Mash 8,10; Welfare 33; Art
Amer ica 20.
9:3()-{)ne Day At A Time 8.10; Art America 20.
10:01)-Lou Grant 8; Wayne Newton At Sea World 10;
N~ws 20.
10 :3()-{)ver Easy 20 ; 11:DO-News 3.4.6.8, 10,13.15;
Dick Cavett 29.
11 :31)-Johnny Carson 3,4,t5 ; Soap 6,13; Movie " The
Girl Who Came Gift-Wrapped" 8; Movie "My Blood
Runs Cold" 10.

~
MODERN SUPPLY

ROGER HYSEll

DAVE'S BACKHOE
&amp;
DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

992-2562 DURING EVENING.

Phuuc 992-:!156

MONDAY, JUNES, 1978

USED FORD TRACTOR, 800 SERIES.

Mubllc Hurnc su l l~ and \':~n.l s..II.'S
urri)' with {'t~sh wrt l r
tJrdt•r. 25 ecul rh HI' I:~ fur all:. CH IT) ·
Ulg Boll NUIIlUet· Ill Cart' of Ti lt' St&gt;rr·
trm·l

Tlrt' PutJ!LShl•r re~n·c s tht• n~h1
to t•drt ur l't)t't'l irll)' ~Us dt~nwd ulr
Jt't'!IU!Ial. Tht• PuOi ibh('r will nut bt.·
n·.~J.MIIIllllllt• fur· murc tl rau tllll' Ull'lll··

Business Services

FOR SALE

ilrt.' atT~ plt•d

GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) No/
ani..,. rs thrs one o f you r Detter
problem -solvrng days but yOLI It
al so be abl e tp fol low thr oug n
on rerJ:ledres tflal occur to you
at thi S 11me Fr nd out rnore
aDou t vourself by sendrr rg tor
your co oy ol As tr a- Graph Let ter Ma rl 50 cents l or each and a
tong self- addr essed st amo ed
e11velope to A ~trn-Gr aph P 0
Bo~ !189 Rad 1o C rty Statron
N ¥ t00t9 9.., s1ne to speedy
brllh Sig n

t'orSafc

EXPERT

your

seel..mg a sturd1er foundati on

CAN CER 1June

TELEVISION
VIEWING

DICK TRACY

NOTICE OF

�. 10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Monday, June 5, 1978

GOP task force says advantage shifts to
Soviet Union in some strategic weapons
the disparity between U.S. West's ability to resist during
and Soviet weapilns systems. a future crisis," the report
The rep9rt said the Soviet concluded.
The GOP report said the
Union is leading the United
strategic
arms
States "by a huge margin " in first
the production of tanks,
personnel carriers, ccrnbat
aircraft, submarines and
COLUMBUS {UP!) - An
surface ships.
Soviet tanks number 45,000 official ol the Solar Energy
compared to the U.S. tank Research Institute In
arsenal of 8,500, and Soviet Golden, Colo., predicts
general-purpose submarines space stationa will beam
number 259 compared to 74 power back to the earth In
the near lulllre.
for the United States.
H. Dana Moran, deputy
"Such striking disparities
lor
comtranslate into a burgeoning director
enhanceme nt of Soviet mercialization at the Inpolitical-mi litary power stitute, told a solar energy
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
OES INSPECTION SET
conference here Saturday
which co uld overwhelm the
Wednesda y thru Friday
Harrisonville OES 255 Will
that solar energy Is not
have inspection Thursda) , Unit&lt;•d Press International
science
fiction, but a
Chanre of showers dally
June 8 at 7:30 p. m. :\~ embers
reality
and
Is growing
with a slig ht warming
are to bring cuverrd chsh for
more
Important
as the ·
tr&lt;•nd. Highs will b&lt;• In the
potluck dinner.
world
's
supply
of
fossil
WASHINGTON
(
UPI
)
upper 70s or lo w 80s
fuels
diminishes.
President
Ca
rter
today
Wednesday and Thursday
rea ffirm ed
his
adand mid or upper 80s
MARRIAGE LICF.NSE.~
mini
stration
'
s
com·
Marriage li censes were Friday. The low will range
mltment to legislation to
from the mid 50s to low 60s.
Jssued to the foll owing:
make It easier for labor
Douglas Alan Adams. 20. Rt.
unions
to
organize
1, Reedsville, and Carolyn
workrrs
.
(Continued from page I)
Sue J ohnson. 36. Rt. \..
Cart~r
spoke
at
a
White
Reedsvill e; Jeffre)' Lynn
FILES FOR DIVOR CE
ha s had a pleasant
House meeting just two
Kni ghting, 21 , Hanne. and
Peggy J . Phillips. Rt 2.
association with the sta ff and
days before Senate leaders
Rexanna Mari e Walker. li. Hacmc, fil ed suit for divorce
studen ts al Southern High
will try to break a filibuster
Racine ; Geral d Sellers, 43 . tn Meigs County Common
School. "The graduates are a
against the measure to
Portland, and Hattie Powell , Pleas Court against Matthew
compliment to the school,"
revamp federal labor taw.
45 , Portland .
J . Phillips. Ft. Carson. Colo.
Bro wn noted.
"So uthern Loca l School
District is responding well to
its community ," Brown said.
"Support your schools with
time, labor and dollar - big
is not always better."
Jaye Ord, valedldorian,
(Continued from page I )
(Continued from page 1)
In her address, comparing
and Edward Brooke, R-Mass. It to a track race, stated
Bangladesh but an opposition leader charged fraud and said he
The com mi.tlee has begun "Our goal was to graduate.
would not accept the announced vote .
an inquiry into Talmadge 's We have finished our race.
Election commission sources Sunday said Rahman, 42, longsta nd ing practice of
martial law ruler for 2'"' years, won 77 percent of the 17.1 accepting small cash gifts for This was our preliminary
race."
million ballots cast Saturday in the Michigan-sized stale - one day-to-day expenses, free
She explained that Archie
of the world's poorest. .
clothing
and
hotel Griffin uses three words:
accommodations.
desire, determina tio n and
It also has been disclosed dedication. "I hope my class
that
Talmadge
was
KINSHASA, Za1re t UPII - U. S. Air Force transports reimbursed nearly $27,000 for uses these three words," Miss
!Dday ferri ed in what Western co untries hope is the vanguard ca mpaign expenses in 1973 Ord commented. In closin g
of an all-African peace-keeping for ce in Zaire - 1.500 and 1974, although his report she sai d. " If it is to be, it is up
Moroccan troops to replace departing French Foreign Legion- wthe Senate said there were to me."
Larry Fisher, salutatorian,
naires .
no expenses, and he had not
gave
a brief history of the
President Mobutu Sese Seko's regime also wa s bolstered reported receiving cash gifts
graduating
class that was
by political support fr om a different direction-C hinese at his annual birthday
laced
with
humor.
"The class
Foreign Minister Huang Hua .
parties.
of
1978
had
the
highest
grade
An .nvestigation by the
point average in history,"
Boswn Globe disclosed last
week that Brooke, in a Fisher commented.
The professiona l and
deposition related to his
recessio
nal , "Pomp and
On June 12 ther e will be an opening for
divorce proceedings, had said Circumstance"
was played
beginning and advanced Typing and
he had a 10-year, $49,000 loan
by
the
high
school
band.
provided by an old friend, but
Shorthand Classes at Gallipolis Bu si ness
The
invocation
was
given
he did not list it as a liability
College . Weekdays or night classes . Both
in hi s Senate disclosure by Lo ri Guinther and the
are bei ng offered .
benediction by Don Dudding.
statement as required .
Sheila Crouch · introduced
ENROLL NOWI
Broo ke said he made a
"miss tatement " in th e the speaker.
For more information contact Lee E. Tyler .
Presentation of the class
deposition and the loan was
was
made by Bobby Ord,
446-4367 .
only $2,000, which he would
superintendent
, and Dallas
No . 75-02-0472 B
not have w disclose .
Hill, president of the board of
educati on, presented the
VOTE FOR
diplomas.
Seniors graduating were :
Paul Duuglas Ables, James
Christopher Bable, Lois
REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE
Marie Bailey, St ephen
Charles Baker, David EdFOR
ward Ball. Larry J oseph Ball,
Vicki Jean Boso, Martin
MEIGS COUNTY COMMISSIONER
William Bush, Ra ymond
ED UCATION Grad . Pomeroy High School.
Lowell Canter, Shelley Sue
Grad . Oh 10 Un ivers it y , completed work on
Chevalier,
Hobart Ross
masters level. Sr
Ce r t ified Real Estate
Child ress , Sheila Gay
Appra iser
EXPERIE NCE 1st Lt . U.S. Armv J yrs ., State
Crouch, Daniel Alan Dud·
Bureau of Voc Rehab. 4 yrs., presently
ding .
aff iliated w ith Cl eland Realty . Instr uctor tor Rio
x-Donald Alan Dudding,
Grande Col lege.
Larry
Franklin Eakins,
GOALS To prov1de Coordinat ion &amp; Leadership
Herbert
Craig
Ervin, Teresa
to Meig!l Co : To be a con tr ibu t ing member of the
Comm iss ion . To work ha rd for the County ; To
Ann Ferrell, x-Larry Grover
use e.~~;per 1 enc e &amp; knowledge to br lng needed
Fisher., Linda Carol Fisher,
assets mto Meigs County .
Marty Robert Foley, Mark
My only request , that every Voter carefully
Alan Forbes, James Richard
consider whom can do the best job for al l of
Foreman,
X·Lori
Lee
Meig s County . .,.
Guinther,
Keith
Alan
Pd . Pol. Ad v. by Candidate
Hayman, Dean Vance Hill,
Perry Keith Hill.
Steven Craig Hill, Loretta
Francine Holsinger, Michael
Carrol Huddleston, Gregory
Alan Hulfrnan, David Wayne
Coppick , Ti mothy David
Kern , Connie Kay Kiser,
Okey Edward Kiser, Jr ..
Debora Lynn Lawson, Teresa
Dawn Meadows, Timothy
Now IS the ti me to get big
Mark Nease, J oy Beth
savmgs on Frig1 da&gt;re retr igeralors. A111977
Neigler.
100", Frost-Proot models must go so that we can
Michael Ala n Norton, I·
ma ke roomfor all the brand new models.
Leslie Jaye Ord, Conn ie Ann
Patterson, Daniel Herbert
RifOe, 1.Jean Ann Rlchhart,
1-Cheryl Renee Roseberry, I·
John Mark Sayre, Stephen
Wayne Sellers, James Scott
Souder, Kimberly Jane
Taylor.
x-Richard Lee Teaford,
Barbara Anise Theiss. I·
Tlmothy Walter Thoren ,
Rexanna Marie Walk er ,
Mi chael Clinton Warner ,
Barbara Kay White, Cheryl
Denice Wilson , James Nile
Wilson,
Kelly
Cla r~
Win eb renner, Myra Jean
Woods.
x-Denotes National Honor
'Society.
Class flower, Yellow Rose, ;
Class colors, purple and gold,
and class motto, "Life is what
you make lt."

WASHINGTON (U P!) The United States' emphasis
on seabased nuclear missiles
and its reliance on weapons
systems des ig ned in the
Kennedy-Johnson years has
shifted the advantage to the
Sovi(!:t Union In some
strategic weapons, a House
Republican task force says.
· "Shortsightedly, the U.S.
has pla ced most of its
strategic eggs in one basket
by its overreliance on seabased missiles," said the first

of a series of "wor king
papers'' on defense issues
re lease d by the House
Rep ubli ca n Research
Committee.
"Regrettably, the bulk of
America's
det errent
capability rests on weapons
designed in the early 1960's."
The paper, representing
th e findings of a 15-rnember
task force on defense, said
President Carter's decision to
halt production of the B-1
bomber also has incre.ased

Southern

The World Today

Effort

Zaire gets 1,500 troops

SECRETARIAL REFRESHER

HENRY E. CLELAND, JR.

•

limitation agreement gave
the Soviets a numerical
advantage In offensive
weapons, an advantage offset
by superior U.S. technology
and miSsile accuracy.
"Sill years later, as the
SALT II
negotiations
proceed, the military picture
has markedly changed," the
report said.

The American str ategic
capability
was
" downgraded "
by
cancellation of the B-1and by
the delays in the MX
strategic missile program,

HOSPITAL NEWS

Veterans Memorial Hospllat
Saturday Admissi ons Jennifer Barrett, Rutland;
Lenora Brown, Chester;
Leslie Price, Pomeroy;
Bobbie Roy, Racine.
Saturday Discharges (Continued !run page I)
Lillian Werry , Anita Molden,
She named them as :
Clarence Murray, Roberta
I.
Correctness
and Pauley, Stephen Fink, Hazel
precision of the English Curtis, Cynthia Smith, Lena
language. 2. Refined and
Adkins.
gentle maMers. 3. Sound
Sunday Admissions standards of the appreciation Frona Call, Gallipolis Ferry,
of beauty and worth and a W. Va., Marri e Gilmore,·
character based on these Ra cin e; Geo rge Robson.
standards. 4. Power and habit Pomeroy; Richard Cumof reflection allowing the best mins, Raci ne; Kenneth
of thinRS to come back lo the McElhinn y, Middleport .
individual. 5. Efficiency or
Sunday Discharge
the power to do - . a willingJames
Spa un .
ness and determination to
take on responsibility.
Holzer Medical Center
The class salutatorian
(Discharges, June 2)
stated that the business of life
Nathan
Arnold , Robert
is not to get ahead of other
Boggess,
Thorie
Bowyer,
people, but "to get ahead of
Brenda
Burchett
,
Becky
ourselves - to break our own
Burnheinner,
Hom ~r Circle,
record, to outste p our
yesterdays by todays, to bear Kimberly Dameron, Robert
our trials more beautifully Ervin, Bessie Fell, Elzanna
than we ever dreamed we Fields, Luke Fields, Hester
could, to give as we have Grant , Me lissa Handcoc k,
never given, to do our work Joann Holbrook, Phil ip
with more force and a finer Houdashelt. Naomi Howell,
fini sh than ever." She urged George Keener, Sr., Erwin
her classmates to adhere to Kin c a~e. William King ,
Mar y
Larnm,
sound beliefs and convictions Ferrill
Morarity,
Melissa
Mullins.
and to be individuals. "We
ca n be someone and not just Phyllis Pope, Regi na Reed,
another somebody ,'' she Lillian Ro ttenberg , Andy
comment ed . She urged Sayre, Alma Sickels, Mrs.
classmates to be a voice and Ernest Sisson and daughter,
not an echo. She commented Michael Snowden, Mrs. Ted
that they start at the bottom Speakman and daughter,
rung of life's ladder slowly Cla ra Swindell , Charlene
Zavora.
working their way upward. Wood. Marv
Births June 2
Miss R .. nyon ur ged
Mr. and Mrs. Larry- Adkins,
classmates to direct their
a
son, Proctorville; Mr. and
lives with a steady course and
Mrs.
Delbert Gilbert , a so n,
a positive altitude. "Far
Gallipolis. Mr . and Mr s.
away, there in the sunshine, Roger Hall , a daughter ,
are our highest aspirations.
We may not reach them but
we can look up and see their
beau ty, believe in them, and
thry to follow wh ~re they lead
- a positive direction," Miss
Runyon concluded.
Clark Lees, principal of the
hi gh school , presented the lop
10 students of the graduation
WASHINGTON, D. C. class who include Brown,
Gun
registration rules
Mi ss Run yon, Dianna
proposed
by the Bureau of
Massar; Becky Windon, Mary
Alcohol,
Tobacco and
Mora, Rock Van Meter,
Fireanns
may
not now be
Tammy Pitzer, Keith Brooks,
issued
or
carried
out as a
Cindy Scyoc and Joe Kuhn .
result
of
restrictive
language
Diplomas were presented
jilllt
approved
by
the
U. S.
by Douglas Bissell , president
of the Eastern Local Board of House of Represent atives
Education and Supt. John Comm ittee
on
ApproRiebel. The band presented priations.
The limiting pr ovis ion ,
the
processional
and
recessional and prayer was placed in the funding bill by
Rep. Clarence E. Miller,
by the Rev . Steve Wilson.
Sunday afternoon bac- prevents BA TF from using
ca laureate was held with the funds for "consolidating or
Rev. Richard Thomas centralizing ... the records of
delivering the sermon, " How receipt and disposition of
to Get the Most Out of Life." firea rms maintained by
Music was by the senior girls
chorus and the girls glee club.
Suana HaMurn presented the
process ional
and
the
recessional.
Receiving their diplomas
Sunday evening were : Terri
Bahr, Diana Barber, Gary
Allen Barr, Kimberlv Ann
Batey, Betty Jean Baum,
Sonia Lee Beaver Blake,
Janet Eileen Benedum ,
R.andy Mark Boston, Brenda
Annette Bo yles, Keith
Brooks, David B. Brown,
Douglas E. Browning,
Theresa Mar ie Brow ning,
Sheila Marlene Buchanan,
Kevin Neal Buckley, Charles
Clint on Calawa y, David
Lowell Carpe nter , Nancy
Chaft ee, William Edward
Chevalier, Marga ret Fay
Cla rk , Catherine Jean
Collins, Leonard E. Dailey,
Jr ., Debbie Lynn Davis,
James Leonard Davis, Karen
Rebecca Fick Smith, Tanuny
Lynn Fortney., Bryan Ashley
Gibbs, Deborah Kay . Heln
Osborne, Sharon Lee Henderson , Sandy Kay Hensley,
Joetta Ann Krider, Joseph
Edward Kuhnn , Roger Kevin
Marainko , Diana Lynn
Massar, Brian Ralph Matthews, Robert Keith Mays,
Mark Shannon Moore, Mary
Eileen Mora, Bruce Allen
Myers, Gary Lynn Nelson,
Judi Kathleen Perry, Janet
Lucille Persons, Tammy Lou
Pitzer, Kathy Jean Pullins,
Perry Allen Reed, Pamela
J eanene Riffle, Dennis
Rucker, Dorothy Elizabeth
Runyon, Brenda Lou Sampson, Cynthia Scyoc, Debra
Lynn Shields, Eroc Jerome
VanMeter, Sonia Ruth White,
Rebecca Kay Windon , Lori
Lee YnunR·

Brown

while the Soviet Union has
developed intercontinental
ballistic missiles "several
times more powerful than
their U. S. counterpa rts."

Maoon . Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
Rowley , a son, Crown City.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Thompson, Ill , a son, Gallipolis. Mr.
and Mrs. Herschel Wills, a
daughter, Ray.
(Discharges, June31
Glen Aroowwood II, Doris
Bailey, Judith Ball, Brade
Border, Mrs. Robert Broyles
and. son, Anita Campbell,
Dorothy Chaendler, Joy ce
Delaney, Edna Ellis, Richard
Groves, Veda Harmon, Alice
Hoschar, Ethel Jones, Harry
Kinna ird, Jessie Landrum.
Andrea Lewis, Charles
Mcinturff, Desta Polsley,
Eloise Railey , Elsa Roach,
William Sexton. Judith
Sickles, Marjorie Spriegel,
John Tabor, Lester Thompson, Horner Warner, Sidney
White.
Births, June 4
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Hill, a
daughter, Pa triot.
!Discharges, June 4)
John Davis, Charl~s Dugl,
J oh n
Earles,
Lowell
Harrison , Ada Herold ,
Melinda Howell , Todd
Juni per, Diana Pope, Eris
Price, Lance Reese, Maxwell
Runyon, Mrs. Paul Snyder
and daughter, Charles
Stephens, Mrs. Michael
Swisher and daughter.
Blrtbs June 4
Mr. and Mrs. John Denney,
a daughter , Gallipolis. Mr.
and Mrs. William Metzler, a
daughter, So uth Webster. Mr.
and Mrs. Anthony Williamson, a son , Gallipolis.
POSTPONED
A Golf Cl inic scheduled to
be held this evening at the
Pomeroy Golf Club by John
Teaford, professional golfer,
has been postponed temporarily.

Area
Death -·
AGNES MAE HOWARD
Agnes - Mae Howard, 74,
New Haven, died Sunday In
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
She was born on May It, ·
1904 in New Haven to the late
Thomas and Ella M. Ord
Capehart.
She was preceded in death
by her husband, Okey J.
Howard Jr. in 1974; a
daughter, Mrs. Joan Howard
Smith, and a g.randson ,.
James Thomas Howard, Jr.
She was a member of the
New Haven United Methodist
Church.
Survivors include three
sons, Okey Howard Jr ., New
Haven; Bill J . Roward, New
Haven , and James T.
Howard, Point Pleasant; four
brothers,
Joseph
A.
Capehart, Louisville, Ky .;
Jack G. Capehart, Kenova ;
Roy M. Capehart, Brooknel,
Va .; Dan B. Capehart ,
Gainesville, Fla .; three
sisters, Mrs. Edna F. Elias,
So uth Point, Ohio; Mrs. Veva
L. Hussell, Morehaveri, Fla.,
Mrs. Elizabeth Cottle,
Newport News, Va .; 13
grandchildren and 16 greatgrandchildren .
Funeral services will be
held Wednesday I :30 p. m. in
the New Haven United
Methodist Church with the
Rev. John Campbell offi cia ting. Burial will follow in
· Graham Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
Foglesong Funeral Horne on
Tuesday from 2 to 4 p. m. and
from 7 to 9 p. rn.
HI-LOW TEMPS
NEW YORK (UPI ) - The
highest temperature reported
Monday to the Natio nal
Wea ther Service, excluding
Alaska and Hawaii, was 106
degrees at Presidio, Texas.
Today's low was 33 degrees at
Houlton, Maine.

In 1968, Sen . Robert
Kennedy was fatally shot in
Los Angeles by a 24-year-&lt;&gt;ld
Arab national later identified
as Sirhan Sirhan. The
assassin was senteneed wlife
imprisonment .

Miller moves to stop
BATF gun registration
federal iice nsees or for
issuing or ca rrying out any
provision" of the proposed
rules .
Miller, who is the ranking
Republican on the subco mmittee which hears
ATF" s budget req uests, said
that "the rules written and
proposed by bureau crats
would have the force of law
and extend beyond the will
and intent of Congress. We
have voted against such
registration seven times."
In addition io eliminating
funds for the registration
plan through the Appropriations Com mitt ee ,

Miller has joined many other
Co ngressmen
in
co·
sponso ring reso lutions to
disarrrovr the Run rules.
" I am against such
registration, and I am particular ly trou bled by th e
means in which BA TF wants
to achieve it. Members of the
Congress are rightfully
concerned bv this alternot to
circumvent the legislative
process," Miller said.
Miller's language, II approved by the House and
Senate, will have the effect of
forbidding BATF fr om
placing such a registration
program into ~' feet .

.....-=....Eiberfelds In Pomeroy

Election
polls open
until7:30

Students geuing
•

•

experzence zn

INSTRUCTING STUDENTS - Mrs. Carla Saelens,
Meigs Junior High School teacher, instructs a group of her
students in the proper completion of forms encountered in
every day living. The students from the left are Jeff
Carson, Stephanie Houchins, Becky Handley and Brent
Finley.

completing forms
Research indicates that 23 million American s, 16 and
older, are functionally illiterate when it comes to coping with
the problems of completing forms necessary in every day
living and Meigs Junior High teacher, Mrs . Carta Saelens, ts
doing something a bout it.
Her seventh grade reading-spelling classes are currently
involved in a work unit to give them experience in completing
forms, reading labels, writing personal checks, completing
mail order forms, making out job application forms , writing
rosiness and friendly letters, credit applications, money
orders, social security applications and learning how to fill out
withholding statements and income taK forms .
Mrs. Saelens has selected forms which are encountered
rnOllllreqnently by citizens in their every day lives. Neatness
and accuracy are stressed in the work unit as well as readlng
and following directions carefu lly. ·

Smith hired as
auditor for OVPC
First in-house audit or in the
history of the Ohio Valley
Publishin g Co. is Glenn
Smith, Addioon, a graduate of
Ohio University with highest
academic honors and former
athlete at Kyger Creek High
School, Richard S. Owen,
president, anno unced today .
Smith, the son of Mr . and
Mrs. Glenn Smith, Rt. I,
Gallipolis, started his duties
Monday. His father, retired,
operated the Honda shop
above Kanauga.
Smith was graduated
summa cum laude in March ,
1976, from Ohio Un iversity,
with a business administrati on
degree,
majoring in economics. He
was a member of his college
National Honor Society.
The new auditor was Kyger
Creek Bobcat quarterback in
the 1971 season, and also
played basketbo ll and
baseball dur ing his high
sc hool career. He was
graduated in 1972.
He carne to his new job
from Appala chian Po wer
where he was accountant for
two yea rs.
The Ohio Valley Publishing
Compan y publishes the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune, the
Pomeroy Sentinel, the
Sunday Times-sentinel, plus
the Mason County News and
the Belpre Observer.
Smith and his wife, the
former Rosalie Reese, reside
in the Tara Apartments.

VOL. XXIX

NO. 36

4,000 BTU

GE CARRY-COOL®

5.1 EER

• 115 Volts, 7.5 Amps
• Easy Installation
• 1D-Posltlon Thennostat
• 2 Fan/2 Cooling
Speeds

AT604F

~0Nt,189°
MODELS IN STOCK

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

0

'¥

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Heights, be placed on the
SEOEMS towe r. Simpson
was inst ru cted to get a
written agree ment with
SEOEMS.
The

commissioners

authorized Manning Webster
to proceed with the necessary
steps to hire an administrator
for the mental retardation
program.
The 169 board was also
authorized to contact the
l&gt;1ate tu get specifications for
the purcha se of a new 16
passenger school bus for the
mentally retarded school.
Att endin g were Henry
Wells, Ri,·ha rd Jone s and Jim
Roush , commissi oners and
Mary Hr, bstetter , clerk.

•

enttne
PRICE FIFTEEN Wm

TUESDAY, JUNE 6, 1978

p omeroy

Council OK's
$50,000 for paving

BY KATI E CROW
Pomeroy Council Monday
night voted to spend $50,000
on street paving and the
prob lem of who has
jurisdiction over the police
department wa s discussed .
Council will use $20,000
from revenue sharing and

Child hurt

in fall
Shelly Metzger , 3, Middl eport , was injured Monday
evening when she fell from
the top of a sli de at the
playground of the Middleport
Elementary School.
Shelly wa s ta ken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
by the Middleport Emergency
Squad and was
GLENN SMITH
later transferred to a hospital
in Parkersburg, W. Va .
EXTEN DED OUTLOOK
A wa ve of activity for the
Thur s day through Middleport Emergency Unit
Saturday, a chance of continu ed Monday and
showers Thursday mor· Tuesday morn ing . At 1:31 a.
nlog, but fair during the m. Tuesday, the squad went
afternoon and on Friday, to 175 \'z N. Second Ave .. for
with showers developing Paul Miller, a medical
again Saturday. Highs will patient, who was taken to
be In the mid 70s or near 80 Veterans Memorial Hospital.
while lows will be In th e At 11 :42 a. m. Monday the
upper 50s or lower 60s.
unit went to Moson for
Frances Reynolds who was
ta ken to Holzer Medi ca l
MARRIAGE LICENSE
Center and at I: 45 p. m. the
A marriage license was unit members were called to
iss ued to J ames Howard Jack's Restaurant for a
Staebler, 28, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, maternity patient who was
and Pamela Mac McCoy, Rt. also taken to Holzer Medical
4, Pomeroy .
Center .

ly 150 religious songs performed by leading artists
throughout the U. S. and
Canada and has produced or
recorded 30 albums. He has
also conducted several radio
· and television series during
his career. He has a radio
ministry to Haiti, West indies
where approximately a
million people hear " In the
Garden". There is also a
radio ministry on WKOC
Radio in Kankekee, Ill. and a
video tape appearance on
Cha nnel 40 in Indianapolis, on
CI1111Utel 45 In South Bend,
Ind .; and on Channel 13 in
Miami, Fla. These programs
are syndicated to over 200
cable TV stations throughout
the United States and
Canada .
Mr. Irwin received his early religious training in a
Christian home and the First
Church of the Nazarene in
Chattanooga, Tenn. ·He
received his formal training
at Trevecca Nazarene ColleKeofNashvillc. ,
At the ~'riday nl~ht Sij'Vice,

at y

submit quota s on 'the cost of
bulldozing the site.
Mr . and Mrs . Will ia m
Lawson, Columbia Township,
met with the commissioners
to try to ga in information ori
how to obtain a right of way to
a piece of property they own
located on SR 143.
Th e comm iss io ner s
suggested that they conta ct
the township trustees and
also the prosecutor.
Pete Simpson, offi ce clerk
at the coun ty highway
department, met with the
board to di sc uss the communi cation tower for th e
sheriff and fir e department.
It was suggested that the
ant enna and transmi tter ,
presentlv located nn Breczv

Discusses police jurisdiction

musician to he in Meigs
Ed Irwin, an evangelist,
singer and musician, will present Christ in song and sermon at the Meigs Junior High
School auditorium at 7 p.m.
Friday evening.
· Doors to the auditoriwn
will open at 6:30p.m. and the
public is invited to attend.
A native of Tennessee, the
minister for the past 20 years
has traveled from Michigan
and Delaware to the Northeast out to Oklahoma and
Arizona in the Southwest and
aU In between. He has
preached from the pulpits
and platforms of hundreds of
churche s, public school
assemblies ,
prisons ,
hospitallt , private homes and
nursing homes.
The many musical talents
&lt;X Mr. Irwin have become a
valuable part of his ministry .
In addition to singing, playing
piano, organ, and eight other
instruments, he has composed, arranged · and dlrected
sacred music for choirs, or·
chestras, and special groups.
has written approximate-

Site preparation for the
multi-purpose building was
again discussed when the
Meigs County Commissioners
met Monday night.
Wesley Bu ehl, co unty
engineer, was advised that if
his department wanted the
foundation stones from the
old buil ding at the site
location then he would ha ve
to get them out right away.
Buehl infonncd the boa rd
that he would remove the
st.ones as soon as possible.
Buehl infonned the board
that the laying out of the
building site and settin g
grade stak es was not his
responsibility.
The board decided to
contact private contnwt nrs t 11

•

e

Noted evangelist, singer,

AGE ROOM AIR CONDITIONER

Meigs County voting
locations will be open until
7:30 this evening for the
convenience of late voters.
Only resi dents who
registered during an Inten sive registration
campaign by the Meigs
County Board of Elections
may cast ballots.
There are two tax levies
facing voters In the county.
A 10 milt , three year
emergency operating levy
wUI be decided upon In the
Meigs Loca l District and In
the Eastern Local District
voters wIll decide upon a 10
mill , one year emergency
operating levy.

Site preparation
discussed again

an offering will be taken . The
money will be used for recording and broadcast equipment, air time on additional
radio and television stations,
and for the purchase of 1,000
cassette players to place In
the homes of the bli nd, shutin
and handicapped.

ED IRWIN

borrow an additional $30,000
for the &gt;treet paving.
Council had Shelly and
Sands and Myers and Sons
give them estimated costs on
what paving would cost.
Council will have to advertise
for bids and it will be
sometime in August before
paving gets underway.
Co uncil also approved the
purchase of 50 tons of hot rr.IT
to patch holes in streets at
Mayor Clarence Andrews'
discretion.
The purp ose of the
estimat es from the two
pavin~ companies was to
give coun cil an idea what
streets will be paved and how
many.

Larry Wehrung, co uncilman, suggested that a
program be a rran ged
whereby pavi ng is done each
year.
Council did not decide
Monday night what streets
would be paved.
It was brought up again the
possibility of putting the $5
permissive tax before the
voters again, proceeds of

Large window

broken at EHS

which would be used on
otreets.
It was suggested by
co uncilman Harold Brown to
write the Ohio Department of
Transportation, Division 10,
to have Pomeroy placed on
its paving schedule.
Severo! members of the
Pomeroy Police Department
met with council with Henry
Werry, captain, act ing as
spokesman .
Werry asked who is the
bo~ of the police department
and who do we tak e orders

(J

from. council members or the
mayor.
It was pointed out that the
ordinance reads that the
mayor is over the po lice
department and also the
street department.
The discussion , which
became heated at times.
derived from the fact that one
of the council member s hact
ca lled city hall and order•d
the officer on duty to get to
the lower parking lot to
remov e pers ons loiterin,g
(Continued on page 10)

The World Today

Califano presents plan
WASHINGTON (UP! ) - With HEW Secretary Joseph
Califano cautiously predicting vicU&gt;ry, President Carter's plan
wlimit the increase in hospital biils to 9 percent a year went
before the House Commerce Committee today .
Califano said recently that hospital costs rose an average
of 17 percent between 1975 and 1977 and warned the
inflationary trend must be stopped.

No new policy expected
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Against a backdrop of rising
international tensions, President Carter is expected to
enunciate U. S. policy of cooperation and competition with the
Soviet Union in a commencement address Wednesday at the U.
S. Naval Academy.
"It 's a good speech," said a top aide who has seen it, "but
(Continued on pace 10)

Mei gs Co unty Sheriff
James J. Pro ffitt reports that
his deputies are investigatin g
the breaking out of a large
front plate glass window at
Eastern High School. According to the report, the 312'
x 4\2 ' pane of glass was
broken out by a large rock
sometime Saturday evening
or early Sunday morning.
School officials estimate
the damage at $150 to $200.
Mei gs County Sheriff's
Deputies also Investigation
two accidents Sunday
morning. The first accident
occurred at2 :58 a.m. on CR 3
approximately one-half mile
west of SR 7.
Frona W. Call. 35, Rt. I,
Gallipolis Ferry , was
traveling east on the county
road and came Into a curve in
heavy fog and went off the
right side of the roadway and
struck a telephone company
pole.
The
Middlep o rt
Emergency Squad was called
to the scene and transported ·
the driver to Veterans
Memorial Hospit al lor
treatment . There were no
~ltations, but heavy damage
res ulted.
The second accident occurred at 9 p.m. on CR 10 in
Columbia Township. Donald
M. Martin, 28, Rt. I, Athens,
told deputies he was traveling
west on CR 10 near the old
State Experiment Fann near
Carpcntel' In his 1969 VW van
when he heard a popping
noise at the back of the v1n.
m~ ABOVE phcteo was taken from inside of a room
He stopped th• vehicle and
at the &amp;1ulmtock Motel, Pomeroy, where a huge boulder
got out to look and discovered
came rt1lllng dOwn the hill and into the establishment
flames coming out arouud lhe
early Sullda)• rnomlnR. A couple enroull' from Tennessee
motor. The van then burst
to Canadat was lleeplng In the room when the boulder fell
Into flam es and was
about 4 a.m. They narrowly e~eaped InJury. A firewall
destroyed. The Pomeroy t'ire
at&gt;pped title huce boold~ In the aree of the bathroom at
Department rei!P&lt;Jnded to the
the back of the building.
scene.

COMMUNITY SERVICE AWARD - Robert Wingett,
native Meigs Countian now serving as editor-manager of
the Point Pleasant Register and vice president of the Ohio
Valley Publis hing Company. · wa s presented the
"Community Service Award" for 1978 by UJe Point
Pleasant - Maoon County Chamber o~ Commerce Monday
night at its annual banquet. Wingett was presented the
award, which is given annually, fo r his work toward
establishing the Mason County Industrial Park and
expandin g water service in Mason County.

Supporters of 4-H Camp fWid
raising campaign set meeting
Supporters of the Canter's
Cave 4-H Camp fu nd-raising
campaign wi ll meet on
Wednesda y, June 7, at 8 p. m.
at the Meigs County Extension Office.
Purpose of this meeting is
to organize the volunteers
who will be helping to rai se
Mei gs County 's shar e of
money needed for major
facility improvements at
Canter's Cave 4-H Ca mp.
Committees will be set uo

to help develop fund-raising
ideas , publicize the campa ign, solicit support from
community
organizations,
and contact individuals and
businesses for donations .
The meetin g is open to
anyone who is interested in
assisting with the fund raisi ng campaign. For more
information , conta ct the
Meigs Co unty Exten sio n
Office at 992-3895 .

THIS IS a view of the rear of the Shamrock Motel on
West Main St. , Pomeroy, where a huge boulder is pictured
embedded into the rear of the structure . The boulder fell
abour 4 a.m. Sunday. A firewall stopped the boulder and
kept it from injuring a couple in a room . Mildred Johnson
commented that it is unknown as to what action will be
taken for removal of the boulder which weighs an
estimated 10 w14 tons.
::::::·:·:::::::::::::·:::::::·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

A special mretlng of
Meigs Chapter 17 of the
Ohio AssoclaUon of School
Employees will be held at
7: 30 p. m. Thursday in the
junior
high
sc hoo l
cafeteria.
Lou Kitchen, director of
governmenlal services will
be present to review new
leglslallon , pending and
passed, and .Bob LeClatn, ·
field represenlalfve, wUl be
on hand to disc uss OAPSE
benefit s. All classifi ed
employes of the Meigs
Local School Dfstrfcl are
Invited.
:;::: ;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::: ::::;:;~::;:;:~;::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::!: ::

Weather
Showers or thundershowers
and humid tonight and
Wednesday. Lows tonight
bet ween 60 and 65 . Highs
Wednesday in upper 70s.
Probability of precipitation
30 percent today , 60 percent
tonight , 80 percent Wednesday.

NnwvouKNO~

Duriog the months of
December and January,
Bar bad os has the lowest
death rate of any place in the
world.
\

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