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~-·-

12- The Daily &amp;ntinel, Mlddleport-Pomer·uy, U., Thursday, June 291J!i9!!:78!!...--------------------------------------~.......- - - - - - - - - - - - ,

~-----A~~;-oe;th~----~
I

.

.

I

THOMAS G. REYNOLDS
Rawlings-Co ats Funeral.
Thomas Gardner Reynolds, Home with Mr. George Glaze
77, 618 Grandview Drive, officiating. Burial will be in
Ubanon, formerly of Mid- Riverview Ceme t ery .
dleport , died Tuesday Friends may ca ll at the
evening at the Ohio Valley funeral home any time from
Manor Nursing Horne in 10 a.m. Friday until the time
Ripley, Ohio.
of se:rvices.
Mr. Reynolds was born Oct.
. 6, 1900 at Middleport, a son of
the late Val and Maggie
EDGAR ROUSH
Gardne r Reynolds .
Edgar Ro ush, 72, Rt. I,
Besides hi s parents he was Minersville, died Wednesday
preceded in death by his wife, mornin g in the Holzer
Mildred Grueser Reynolds in Medical Center .
!976 and a brother, Edgar. in
Born September 8, 1906, he
1977.
was the son of the late Homer
Surviving are a son and and Jennie V. Davis Roush.
daughter-in-law, Paul and
In addition to his parents he
·J a ckie
R e y n o I d s , was preceded in death by his
Georgetown. Ohio : tw o wife, Mary Frances Roush ;
grandchildren , Mark and one daughter, Marilyn, and
Cheryl; a sister, Mrs. Gerald · severa l brothers and sisters.
iSara l Rupe, a sister-m-law,
Survivi ng are three
Mrs. Edgar Reynolds, and an da ughters, Carolyn Rummel ,
aunt, Mrs. Will Reynolds, all Omaha, Nebraska ; Janice
of Middleport; three f~rst Thompson , Chesapeake, and
cousins. Mrs. Bessie Bailey, Co n stance Ma tt h-e ws,
Rutland ; Mrs . George Ga llipolis; on·e sister, Hilda
Waters. Zanesville, and Mrs. Yeauger, Minersville ; a
Fauna Cohen, Ramfield. R. brother, Allen , Minersville ;
I.; a niece , Mrs. Ann McKay, four :S tep-da ught ers; four
Warren ; a nephew.. Val E. step-sons ; 13 grandchildren,
Reynolds, Morgantown. W, two great-grandchildren and
Va .. and several grea t· several nieces and nephews.
nieces. great-nephews and
Funeral services will be
cousins.
held Saturday at! p. rn . at the
Mr . Reynolds wa s a Ewing Chapel in Pomeroy.
membe r of the Lebanon The Rev . Jerry S. Lewis and
Masonic Lodge and had been the Rev . Harvey Kock will
employed for 32 years with officiate . Burial will follow in
the Lebanon Co rrectional the Gilmore Cemetery .
Inst itution.
Friends may call at the
Funeral services will be at fu neral home after 7 p. m.
2 p. rn . Friday at the this eveni ng.

HOSPITAL NEWS
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admitted - Mary Bostic,
Middleport ; Garnet Potts,
Syracuse; Harold Bannon.
Reedsville; Velma Newell,
Reedsville ; June Pratt,
Guysville; Mildred Fisher,
Pomeroy; Do nna Siek,
Reedsville;
Ella Siek,
Reedsville; Harold Ci rcle,
Racine; Alma Frazier ,
Middleport ; Gladys .Chaney,
Pomeroy ; Nancy Huffman,
Middleport; Cindy Workman.
·Mas on ; Robert Jeffers,
Syracuse.
Discharged - Mildred
Circle , Harry Thomas .
Tammy J ohnson , Joseph
Hillear y, Gertrude Bass ,
Rhonda Daley , Fran ces
Whrttington.

and daughter, Mrs. Robin
Pha lrn and daughter, Connie
Potter, Roy Proffit, Eva
Queen, Tonda Se idena,bel.
Mrs. James Shafer and son,
Mrs . Tommy Sluss and
da ughter, Shirley Stawser,
Marjorie Trout. Amy White,
William Wint er lll, Opal
Woolum, Kathryn Young.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Max Stump. a
daughter. BidwelL

DRIVER CITED
Two cars received medium
damages and one driver was
cited in an accident on W.
Main St. , Pomeroy, at 9 p. m.
Wednesday.
Pomeroy police said an
eastbound car driven by
Duane Sidders, Midd leport,
.
made a left turn into the path
Holzer Medical Center
of
a westbound car driven by
Discharges June 28
Norman
Comeau, Pomeroy.
Ben Blessing . Earl Borwas
cited for failure
Sidders
ders , Dora Canter, Janel
Cla rk , Belva Farley, Ruth to yield.
Faught, Betty Fouts, Cecelia
Grady, Cora Grindley ,
INSTRUCTION SCHOOL
Patricia Heib , Pauline
Mary Shrine 37, Order of
Hotham. Haley Powell. the White Shri ne of
Everelte Hughes , Mrs. Jerusalem will hold a school
Forrest
Hut chrns and of instruction at 7 p. m.
daughter, Marcus Johnson, Friday at the Pomeroy
Jamie Jones, Walter Lam- Masonic Temple. All offi cers
bert, Wanda Lee , Geraldine and members are urged to
Mayo, Mrs. Norman Persin altend .

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

SPECIAL SALE PRICES AND SPECIAL VALUES FOR.THIS 3 DAY EVENT I
FRIDAY, JUNE 30th-SATURDAY, JULY 1-MONDAY, JULY 3
-~-~~~-~~~~-----~--,r--~--- -~-----------~~---

New Low

P~lce

! .

•

I

MENS WRANGLER
BLUE JEANS
Regular $16.95 - 14 ounce no fault blue
denim - pre-washed . Size 29 to 42 waist leng th 30 to 36 - straig ht leg or boot flare
sty le.

SPECIAL SALEI

l

.. j

Special purchase, Size 8 to 18 in
regulars and slims . Cotton polyester
blend .

l

1

•6.88

JUNIOR SPORTSWEAR SALE

I
I

women 's

'""'

MWIP'I-

SUMMER JEWELRY SALE

I

Save 20% on a large group

!j

necklaces, earrings, bracelets,
''

j

chokers and chains.

20% SAVINGS

-----------------------i------------......_.._.._._.___ ___ _..___________.._.._.._.._.._.._..
Women's regular sizes S-M-L and
extra sizes.

So lids · and print patterns . Plus jogging
shorts .. Regular and e~ tra sizes.

and Tops

by Red-i and Hang Ten

SAVE 20%
As

SUMMER TOPS

SUMMER SHORTS

l
... Sale 4.79
l Reg.Reg. 8.006.00........................
........................... Sale 6.39

Shorts, Tanks, Slacks, Skirts

Choose from tanks, blouson,
sleeveless, short sleeved or terry
~ styles,

Reg. 11.00 ......................... Sale 8.79
I
Reg. 13.00 ........................Sale 10.39 1

Low As 4.49

AS LOW AS

4 79

5

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

I

suMMER
SPORTSWEAR

l

Women 's regula r a nd half size spor tswear
by famous names like Jane Colby , Brad ley,
Devon, Queen Casua I. Lady Jane. lady
Devon and Patrician .

I

umE GIR~'DREssEs,

PLAYSUITS SUNSUITS AND
I
DRESSES

II

REG. 7.00 to 48.00

Monlh s sizes lhru 7-14

~

_·· SALE 5.59 IO 38.39

Sale Prices Start At

ICHILDREN·SSwiMWEAR
~ ~~~~~du~~:~~~imsuitsandtrunksfor

I

l

•2.25

REG . S 3.0o ............. .. ......... sALES2.25
REG .S S.OO ............... .... ..... SALES3.7S
REG .S 6.00 ............. ....... ... SALES4.SO
REG. S 7,00 ................... .... SALE S5.2S ,
REG. S 8.00 ........................ SALE S6.00
REG. S 9.oo ............. . .. .. ...... SALES6 .7S
REG. $10.00 .... .......... . .. , , .. SALE $7 .50

this holiday weekend. The

'7.19

BAN LON
DRESS SOCKS

l!

latest styles and fabrics.
From

Mens 1.25

Popular, Rock-Country, Blue Grass, Instrumentals,
1 Religious
Reg. 2.79 ...... .... ............... Sale 2.25
Reg. 6.79......... ................. Sale 5;45
Reg. 8.79...... ,,, .. ,.,,, ..... Sale 7.05

Save on a new swimsuit for

Bulky knit- one size fits all sizes 10
thru 13. Big selection of colors, This
sale.

1 Reg. 11.79.. ....... .,, .. ., .... ,. Sale 9.45 .

+-· --·

-·

littl e

2-4, 4-6~ . 7-14. Nol all sizes.

--~;,~;i~~~;~~~~~~~;----

99~

_

Rag. 13.79-...... ...... ......... Sala 11.ou_

~--;~;;~~~-;;~iA~~--

MENS HANES s3.75
POCKET T-SHIRT

·
WHITE HANDKERCHIEFS
3 in a package - permanent press
cotton - polyester blend. Generous
size . This sale.

$133 package

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

---;;;,~-;:;:, ~----

Small (3 4-36), medium 138-40), la rge (42 44) , e~ tr a large (46-48) . 100 per cenl cotton ·
crew neck - solid color, go ld, green , light
blue, na vy blue , red .

I

I

•3.44

1

l

-oovs-stioRI-SLETv[
KNIT SHIRTS

1 Sizes 8 to 20- solid colors- stripes .
1 A good selection of styles.
I
I Boys 2.95 Kn~ Shirts....................... 2.36

l

Boys 3.95 Kn~ Shirts ....................... 3.16
Boys 5.95 Kn~ Shirts. ....................... 4.76
Boys 6.95 Kn~ Shirts ........................ 5.56

·------~--------------------+---

INDEPENDENCE DAY
Ju~

4

signals our re-dedication

Work and dress belts in size 30 to 50.
Brown , black, white and novelty
belts.

Mens 2.95 Belts .................... ~ .... 2.44
Mens 3.50 Belts .. ,. ...... ·,."" "" ... 2•94
lts
M 495 Be
414

to the American concept
of Freedom.

~~~~~fi A Home Bank
Fur

Meigs County

People

RACINE
HOME NATIONAl

BANK
RACINE

SALE! MENS BELTS

OHIO

MENS SPORT SHIRTS
~ Solid co lors and patterns - Sizes s: M, L.

1
1

XL XXL. Tapered and full cut styles. All

!
!

with short sleeves . Th is sale Includes our
en t ire stock .
Men 'sS 8 95 Sport Shi·rt'
Men'sS 9'9s
t Sh. t. ................ 57 · 16
por
1r s ..•..• .. •.••• , •• $7.96
Men's Sll .9S Sport Shirts ............... , $9,56
Men 's$ 12 .95 Sport Shirts ........... ., .. 510 , 36

. s

,. ., ----- __,_________. ____

sarar

BOYS CUT~FF JEANS
Sizes 8 to 18, Blue denims and cotton
and polyester blends.

5' 95 Cut.()ffs .......... ........... 4' 49
a,_
UUJJJ 6•95 Cut.()ffs..................... 5•39

a,_

UV7JJ

-~~:.:s:.feE:..~:.:_~:~:~z;::ilii~ ··-~·,. ~ ].9S ~~Nf~~::::· ~
CUT-OFF JEANS
Wa is t sizes 29to JB . Blue denim and 100 per
cent cotton twil l.
Men 's SS. 95
Men's 56.95
Men 's .57 .95
Men'sS8.95

Cut-Offs ... , ......... , ........ $4,49
Cut-Offs ..... , ................ SS.39
Cut -Offs ...................... s6.27
Cut-Offs .................... . 56 .69

. . .-.. --·--- -· -. . ,. . .,. . _________
-~

I
l

Save on our entire stock of women's regular
and e~tra size dresses and pantsuits.

Our entire stoc k of junior and regular size 34 thru 20 .

REG . S20.oo....................... SALE$15,00
REG . $23.00 ....................... SAlE $17.25
REG . $26.00....................... SALE $19,50
REG . $32.00 ........ ........... , ... SALE $24 ,00
REG, 538 ,00 ., ..................... SALE 528 , 50
REG . $44.00...................... , SALES33,00
REG . sso.oo ....... ....... .. .. ..... SALE $37.50
REG. SS8.00 .. .,,.,.,., ............ SALE S43 .SO

Featuring Wrangler pre-washed No Fault
Denim .
EG
R
· S14.QQ ...................... SALE$11.19
REG, S17 ,oo. ...................... SALE $13.59
REG. $19 .00. ....... """"':"'"SALE S15, 19
REG, $21 ,00 ..................... • SALE S16.79
REG. 523 .00 ...................... SALE S11,39

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--·--~.....;;,;;,;...;.

___..__,. . .,--. . ---. . . -----------·----"t
..
-~

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OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8-SATURDA Y OPEN 9s30 AM TO 5100 PM .

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

culmination of two years of thanks to each and everyone
effort, original' planning, who had any part in the
details, financing · and now realization of the nursing
construction .
home.
"I am looking forward to
"This is a most important
continued cooperation from thing for Meigs County and on
the people in Meigs County ," behalf of the commissioners I
Hazelbaker concluded.
extend thanks to the ComHenry Wells, president of munity Improvement Cor·
the board of Meigs County poration," Wells commented.
Commissioners, extended his
James
Roush ,
vice
president of the board of
commissioners, observe d
that a great dea l of work had
gone into this project. "I
thank you Ameritel for
looking at Meigs County,"
Roush stated.
"Our area has self con·
fidence and very shortl y work

Area districts
get DPPF funds

of summer lewalry lndudlng

I

'14.95

---~----

I

!

BOYS WRANGLER
BLUE JEANS

-..,.,...

__....,._.,. .......................... .

round brokenTuesday
for new nursing home
Groundbreaking ceremon·
les were held Tuesday by
Ameritel Enterprises Inc.,
for its Meigs County Nursing
on a 10 acre site
IOC_!r~ on old U, S. 33.
E. Hazelbaker,
,~~!;~~~of Ameritel, said he
'a
those attending
ceremony . .
·
"On behalf of Ameritel, I
very pleased with the

SPECIALS

_,

COLUMBUS (UPI )- Here
are the 26 school districts
which will divide $8.2 mlllioo
worth of extra stare bonuses
for educa ling large numbers
of disadvantaged pupils
under a $202 million
supplemental appropriations
bill passed by the General
Assembly Tuesday and sent
to Gov . James A. Rhodes:
Lima, $14 2,572 ; Trimble
• Local, Athens Co un ty,
$22,102; Springfield, $232,365;
Cleveland, 11 ,690,894; East
Cleveland , $145 ,364 ;
Columbus, $1,42 2, 181 ;
Cincinnati, $1,008,000 ; Oak
Hill Union Local, Jackson
County, $26 ,740, and Toronto,
Jefferson County, $57,514.
Also, Rock Hill , Lawrence

will begin on a new MultiPurpose building," Roush
stated.
Roush read an article about
a south African farmer en·
tilled " Dig a Little Deeper"
which Meigs County ha s
done," Roush concluded.
The $Lllllillion facility was
financed ' by indu str ia l
revenu e bond s iss uod by
Meigs County.
This tax-fr ee financing
method was enacted by th e
federal and state governments to promote Jobs
through the private sector.
Although the bonds are
issued by the county, all
financial obligations arc the

;::.:-::-:-:-:-:-:::::::::::::::::::·:::-:-:-:-:-:-:-:':-:::::::-:-:-:-:-:- .~~~~~~:i~~~.itfnc~f Am er ileI
County, $42,105 ; Toledo , , EXTENDED FORECAST
Construction of the 100-bed
$818,878 ; Youngstown,
Friday through Sunday: home is scheduled to be
$301429; Dayton, $614,591 ;
Fair and warm through the completed by June , 1979.
No;tliridge
Lo c al ,
period, with highs between
It is expected 60 to 80 peopl e
Montgomery County, $46,646;
85 and 90 and lows between will be employed at !he home.
Western Local, Pike County,
60 and 65.
with an annual payroll ex$16,ffill; Windham Exempted
;.:·:.:-:-:.,.:.:::::-:-:-;::-:-;::-:-;:;.
;
:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:,:,
reeding
$500, 000 .
Village, Portage County,
$28,385; Mansfield, $146,597 ;
Portsmouth , $76,921 ; and
Bloom Local, Scioto County,
$22,137.
Also, New Boston, Scioto
County, $10,570; Northwest
Local, Scioto County , $35,954;
Valley Local, Scioto County,
$26,539; Washington Local,
Scioto County, $40,889 ;
Canton, $266,420 ; Akron, VOL. XXIX
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT.
NO. 52
$729,260 ; and Warren,
$182,779.

i,..J_r_he_w_o_rl_d_To_d_a_y_
Huge barn destroyed by fire

'"

.··~ L

~··'r ·~

l
..
GROUNDBREAKING CEREMONIES -Ground was
broken for the construction of a nursing home in Meigs
County Tuesday afternoon . Front, left to right, Henry
Wells, president of th e board of commissioners, Mary

•

.•

•

•

at y

e

OHIO

· Hobstetter, derk of the board, Ralph E. Hazelbaker,
president of Ameritel ; ba ck, Richard Jones ,
commissioner, Bruce Pinkney, project manager and Jim
Roush, vice president of the boad of commissioners. The
site is on a 10 acre plot located or old U. S. :!J.

enttne

WEDNE SDAY, JUNE 28, 1978

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

•

HINCKLEY, Ohio I UPI)- A huge lwrH&gt;tory barn used by
Cleveland Metropark Mountl!d Policeto house 16 horses has
been destroyed by a fire of possible spontaneous origin .
No horses were injured in the Tuesday afternoon blaze, but
ooefirefighll!r and three park rangers suffered minor injuries.
Firelighters were hindered in their work by high wind gusts in
the afternoon.
Fire officials estimated damage $150,000. Lost in the blaze
were saddles, a tractor, a hay wagon, a spreader and 1,000
bales of hay.

....

Boat driver charged
NEWPORK, _ Ky . (UPil - Raymond Kermedy, of
Melbourne, has been· charged with reckless homicide in
coonectioo with a boating mishap June 18 in which one person
drowned in the Ohio River.
Campbell County auorney Paul Twehues, who filed the
charge Mooday, said a motorboat operated by Kennedy was
overloaded and capsized while ferrying people fr om a rock
coocert.

Train derails in Ohio
HUNTINGTON TOWNSHIP, Ohio (UPI )- Three engines
and nine coal cars of a Norfolk &amp; Western Railway Co. train
were derailed Tuesday in a collision with a tractor-trailer at a
crossing on Ohio 511 in Lorain County .
The Lorain County Sheriff 's Department said the
westbound train and the northbound tractor-trailer collided
during the morning.

ManhWit on for suspect
'ROCKLAND, Maine (UPI ) - Police say a manhunt has
been launched in southern New England for a 23-year-{)ld
Maine man suspected of murdering an Ohio woman whose
nude body was found bound and gagged near a popular lover's
lane.
Maine State Police Tuesday said a murder warrant was
issued for the arrest of Robert W. s. Sa lo, 23, last known to
have reside\~ in Rockland, Maine. They said he allegedly
caused the asphyxiation death of Barbara Malek, 29, of Kent ,
Ohio.

Identification made on body .

BULLDOZERS owned by Pu llins Excava ting Co. were busy excavating Tuesday before the groundbreaking
ceremonies took place .

First in 30 years

Delinquent land sale conducted
Meigs County held its first
tax sale of delinquent lands
since 1948last Sa turday, June
24th .
The fo ll owing land was
sold : Margare t Ru ssell.
Rutland Township, 5 acres ;
Maud Grant,
Rutl and
Village , lot; W. r . Stanley,
Ubanon Township , 2 acres;
W. F. Stanley, Lebanon
Township, 3 acres; Clay
Wilso n, Bedford Townshio ,
Minerals, J!iO Acres; Clay
Wil son, Bedford Township ,

Minerals, 84 .&gt;0 acres ; Clay
Wilson, Bedford Township ,
Minerals, 1.75 Acres , and
The odore Ebersbach,
Pomeroy Village, Lot 259 .
Meigs County Prosecuting
Attorney. Fred W. Cr.(Jw, !Ill.
reported the Mary Castle
property located near ·Tuppers Plains, was redeemed
I that is, taxes paid I by hei rs
of the owner and could not be
sold.
Owners of delinquent tax
property are permitted by

law lo pa y the taxes, court
costs ,
and
other
miscellaneous fees, lu keep
the property from being sold,
The next tax sale will be on
July 15th. beginning at 9 a. m.
at the front door of the Meigs
County Court House .
Each parcel of land to be
so ld has been advertised at
least three tlmes in the Daily
SentineL The property is sold
by verbal public biddin g with
the property being sold to the
hi ghest bidder.

Struble
named
Woman
new postmaster'
fever
• •
VICtim

HUNTINGTON, W.Va .
i UPIJ - Dr . Robert J .
Marshall, Huntington , sa id
Tuesday he was "95 percent
sure" the death of a 21-yearold Chesa peak e, Ohio,
wom an la st month was
caused by Rocky Mountain
Spotted fever which is an
acut e infectious disease
transmitted by certain
ticks.
Th e woman was bitten by a
ti
ck
while horseback riding
that the Senate has handed
ncar
Ironton, Ohio. She died
him another setback in his
May
18 in a Huntington
drive to get a comprehensive
hospitaL
energy program. Th e Senate
Information and samples
voted Tuesday to bl ock
(Continued on page 12)
(Continued on pajle 12)

President taking holiday

By HELEN THOMAS
NEW ARK, Ohio (UP!) - Ucking County sheriff's
UPI White House Reporter
deputies have Identified the body of a man found shot to death
WASHINGTON (UPI) at a privare campground near here as J ohn L Silverwood, 30,
President
Carter will follow
Newark.
Congress' lead and take a full
Sheriff Max Marston said the body was identified by the 10-day holida y, sta rting
victim's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Silverwood of Heath.

Friday at Camp David, the
presidential retreat where he
plans to celebra te the Fourth
fo July.
Aides say Carter is tired.
He's also "pretty disgusted"

Sen. Glenn is designi.ted
WASHINGTON (UP! ) - President Carrer Tuesday
designated Sen. John Glenn, [).()hio, as his personal
representative to the Solomon Islands independence
ceremooles July f&gt;ll in Honiara, the capital.
.
Glenn will be accompanied by his wife. Richard
Holbrooke, Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and
Pacific affairs will be the ranking Stare Department
representative of the president .

nfE HAGUE , Netherlands (UP!) - Health authorities
repcrted six more cases of polio amoog fundamentalist
Protestant families who refuse vaccination for their children
oo religious grounds.
The new cases, reported Tuesday, brought the total In
recent. weeks to 87, most of them young children .

Search on for alligator
DEERFIELD BEACH, Fla . (UPI) - PoUce and a veteran
trapper searched today lor an alligator that attacked an 8year-{)ld boy dipping for minnows, mangling his arm so badly
he may never regain lill use .
·
The alllgator wiU be killed when found, according to state
Game and Freah Water Fish Commission authorities.

Two lawyers beat better-known oppooenta In Democratic
runoffa for governor of South Carolina and senator of
MIMiulppi Tuesday, but they are up agalruit strong
l

Cont in ued on paKe 9

Sectional Center Manager
Ralph R. Peyton. Zanesvill e,
announces lhc appoi ntment
of J osep h I. Struble as
postmaster uf the post offiee
in Rutland .
A resident of Pomeroy,
Struble began his servi ce
with the U. S. Posta I Service
in March, 1962. In 1974, he
was transferred to the Athens
Post Office and on Dec. I.
1977, he was named offic er rrr
charge of the Albany Post
Office wh ere he has work ed
untrl receiving his new appointment.
Struble was chosen through
the process merit promotion
se lection of the U. S. Postal
Service and appeared before
th e regi onal management
selection board in Cleveland
on May 19 wrth four oth er
ca nd idates before bei ng
named to the new position.
A son of Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence J . Struble, W. Main
St.. Pomeroy , Struble resid es
with his Wife, Martha. on

Mulberry
Heights
in
Pomer oy . .\1r . and Mrs.
Struble hti\'l' a su n and
daughter-in-lllw , Michael and
Patty Struble, who reside at
~e wp!lrt News. Va.
Fur years, Struble has
se rv ed as ma ster of
ceremonies fur the musical
productron; nf th e Big Bend
Mmstrel Assn.. and at uther
event s . He rs an actrve
member of the Pomeroy Fire
Department
and
th e
Pvrncruy f: mergency Squad .
He rs a pa st commander of
ihe Drew We bster Post 39,
Amcn can Legion and serves
as an elder at Trinity Church
in Pomeroy.
Struble is a certified trade
and rndustnal vocational,
educati on mstru c.t or in Ohio
and teaches fire service and
eme rgency medical service
trarning . He also completed
tramtng fo r certification as a
paramcdrc at the Hockig
Tec hni cal
College
in
i&gt;lelsonville.

Other sources
must be sought

Six more polio cases foWid

Two lawyers are winners

JOSEPH STRUBLE, Pomeroy, at his duties as new
postmaster of the Rutland Post Office.

RECEIVE SCHOLARSHIPS - Teresa Meadows,
Loog Bottom, was awarded a $500 scholarship to Holzer
School or Nursing and Tammle DeBord a $200 scholarship
to Hoelting Technical School by the Women's Auxiliary at
Velerans Memorial Hospital recently. Pictured above,
from 1-r, are Mrs. Jesse While, president of the auxG~ary:

Mrs , Janice DeBord, mother of Tammie; Miss DeBord,
Miss Meadows, Mrs. Martha Meadows , mother of Teresa ;
and Scott Lucas, administrator of Vererans Memorial
HospitaL Miss Meadows is a gradual~! of Southern High
School and Miss DeBord graduated from Meigs. Both
served the hospital as Ca ndystripers.

By Judy Owen
rank s third only to Texas and
Ohro Wesleyan senior Matt California in industrial
Palmer of the Public Utilities consumption of energy and
Commission of Ohio told sixth in residential use ,
"l know it sounds kind of
members of the Middleport
Chamber of co 111 merce frightening ," Palmer said.
Tuesday night that with " but. if coal were the only
energy problems becoming source of energy used the
increasingly complex Ohio nation would run out in 100'
co nsumers and utili ty years. Likewise, if electricity
c;ompanies must look towards was th e only energy source, it
alternate power supplies such would last just 5 to 10 more
as so lar energy and heat from years.
the earth , wind and tides. • Therefore, he stressed, new
Palm er, currently em - and expensrve alternate
ployed by PUCO in its Public sources must be t,apped.
For now, however, PUCO Is
Inquiries Division , was the
guest speaker at the c~am· ,callrng_ for an all-&lt;Jul con·
her 's reg ular business servauon effort . Watch your
meeting at the Meigs Inn.
lrghts, rnsulate your_ homes
According to ,eim, Ohio
1Continqf11 on page

lal

�2-The Datly Sentmel Mtddleporl Pomeroy 0

Wednesd~y

3-The Dally Sentinel Mtddleport Pomeroy 0 Wednesday June 28 1978

June 28 1978

The Senate: Breeding ground for presidents
By STEVE GERSTEL
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Wtthout gtvmg a thought to
Jtmmy Carter or the
problems of plagtartSm how
many senators look m the
mtrror and dectde Why Not
The Best 7
Probably more than
anyone ever knows
The lure of usmg the Senate
as the sprmgboard for a cun
at a prestdenllal nommatwn
ts hard to rests!
Even the prospect of usmg
the vtce prestdency as an
escala!Dr stop on the wav to
the IDp has very wtllmg

recrutts m the Senate
l'he election m 1976 of
Junnt) Carter a one-term
Georgta governor who beat
Gerald Ford a congressman
who reached the White House
by •cctdenl dtd not ktll the
nouon that the Senate 1s the
b eedmg grounds
for
prestdents
In fact Carters troubles
lillY have remforced the
fee lmg among sena!Drs that
they above all others- are
quahlied to lead the country
The feelm g that the Senate
1s the best JUmpmg.(lff pomt
for a pres1dentl•l race can

eas1ly be JUSttl!ed by four of
the last f1 ve electtons
- In 1960 John F Kemedy
the JUnior sena tor from
Massachusetts defeated
Richard Ntxon who Jell the
Senate to serve two tenns as
vtce preSident
- In 1964 Lyndon Johnson
who gave up the powerful
post of Senate Demorattc
leader to be Kennedy s v1ce
pres1denl beat Sen Barry
Goldwater A R1z
In
1968
N1xon
resurrected by the GOP after
e1ght years out of politiCS
edged Hubert H Humphrey

who left the Senate to serve
as Johnson s veep
- In 1972 Ntxon trounced
Sen George McGovern DSD
And m 1976 Carter had to
fend off a field of senators Jackson Bayh Church and others to wm the
DemocratiC nommauon
A little more than two years
before the 1980 nattonal
conventwns tt seems almost
certam that more than one
senator s gomg to htt the
campa1gn tratl m search of
the nommal10n
Among Republicans much

Talk costs money--lots of it
By RICHARD SISK
UNITED NATIONS (UPI)
- The wages of peace are
runmng close to $3 milhon

thts sprmg w1lh more than
one thtrd of the money
devoted to puttmg all the

peopletalk
By KENNETH R CLARK
Uolted Press International
TYPE 0 DONOR The marquee over Baltunore s Cl\~ c
Center says It all Tomght - Alice Coper Its no m1stake
It s Coper m Baltunore because the famed but bedraggled
Sign high m the hills over Tinseltown on the West Coast now
reads Hollywod So Rock Star Alice Cooper says he s
donating one of his personal Os - along w1th $27 000 to
replace the ITllSSutg letter and make the whole thing proclatm
Hollywood once agam He s hustlmg fans for support says We aU grew up on Hollywood I thmk everyone owes
Hollywood a dollar
VJNT AGE BE'ITE The lightshow ts psychedelic the mustc
ac1d rock and the audience pure flower ch1ld The b1g event Bent Mldler poppmg fake ptlls swtlling ersatz booze
swearing rea l cuss words and belting heaV) numbers m a
llfnes of Los Angeles concerts straight out of the 1960s The
Divine Miss M IS starnng m The Rose - a mov1e about a
bluewock sm~er who JUSt mtght have been the late Jaols
Jvpllll Fans pay $2 each to a children s chanty for the
pr!Yilege of dressmg up m flowers and Jo ve beads to be extras
11 tlle concerts wh1ch are bemg filmed for the mov1e

LOST AND FOUND The Mextcan vacatiOn may have been
l~yllic but Richard Bunon and wife for got one small 1tem
when they packed for home They left thetr rented yacht
behind Kin~ Pomt Corp Nevada based yacht-renting ftrm
ln Los Angeles says the Burtons patd $1 7 1100 of the $18 000
rental cost to use the yacht from Feb 2 through Feb 16 then
abandoned the vessel m Vallarta MeXIco tnstead of re turrung
It toCaliforma The firm ts sumg for $8 SOO - the balance of the
bill plus the $7 SOO 11 took to fetch back 1ts property

FLEETING FAME Frank Sinatra hasn t done a
commerctal engagement m his old home turf m 2S years The
last gtg was 111 1%3 when he filled m over a weekend at the
Coconut Grove for another performer who became 1ll The
fans memories apparenUy are better than Old Blue Eyes
own They ve already bought out the Uru versal Amphitheater
box offtce foc his upcommg July 31 Aug 10 return to New
York - but whose place d1d Stnatra take at the Grave back m
1%3' He says he cant remember

rheton c tnlo prmt for
posterity
Budget people at the Uruted
Natwns say the1r rev1sed cost
est1mate IS $2 839 200 for the
current spectal sesswn of the
General Assembly on d1sar
mament

That mcludes $1 199 000 for
verbatim and summary
records of the meetmgs
$879 1100 for translatton and
mterpretat10n $301 000 for
reproduction and dlstr~but1on
of documents and $253 000 for
travel expenses
It doesn t 1nclude the
$1 122 1100 already spent on
the 42 meelmgs over 18
months of the 54 countrtes
on
the
represented
co nference s preparat ory
comnuttee whi ch pumped
out about 1 SOO pages worth of
agendas rules of procedure
and the hke
The grand total co mes
close to $4 million With the
Umted States p1ck1n g up
about 25 per cent of the tab as
11 does for most U N
#
expenses
•
That ftgure 1s about as
mstgmftcant as S4 milhon
ever can be when compared
wtth total U N expenditures
of more than $2 btlllon
annually and may well be a
bargam 1f the session leads to
curoo on an arms race tn
"hich more than $1 b1Uton IS
spent every day
Apart from U N expenses
for Ute special sessiOn there
are the InCidental costs to the
delegattons the US federal
government and New York
City for pr ov tdmg food
secunty Jodgmg and other

necess 11es tor the more than
500 digmtanes attendmg the
f1ve week sesston
For mstance no figures are
available yet from the ctty
comptroller s offtce on the
current seSSion but the U N
Association of the Umted
States estunates 11 costs the
ctty and the federal
government a total of about
$12 mdhon annually for pollee
protecllQII and diplomatic tax
exemptions
Th1s expenditure 1s a
lavonte target of local
pohll Cians who can be
eounted on penodtcally ID
ca 11 for ful assumption of the
costs bv the federal
gove rnment or even the
tran sfer
of
UN
headquarters out of the ctty
But the U N Assoclallon
pomts out that the benefits of
havmg the Umted Nations m
th e Un ted States far
outweigh the costs
Members of the U N
Secretanat and the U N
corps
are
dtplomattc
estunated to spend between
$150 million and $1110 milhon
m IJ"us country for offtctal and
personal expenses and $2
mtlllon more 1s spent by the
Umted Nat ons to rent extra
office space the assoc1at10n
S8ld m a recent statement
And actor Paul Newman a
U S dasarmamen t delegate
stresses th&lt;il the bottom lme
for the sesst on IS not
fmanctal but moral
What th1s whole thmg ts
about IS gettmg technology
back m the control of human
bemgs Newman sa1d If
not well 1s bon voyage

HEALTH

GUMPSES With the sounds of the b1g band era catchmg a
new generation of fans Helen Forrest - singer m days gone by
Lawrence E lamb M 0
for such maestros as Anle Shaw BellDy Goodman and Harry
James - IS warrrung up for a comeback at New York s Reno
Sweeney Jerry Lewis dropped by the Whtte House for a chat
till~ mfotllloll un "" 1 send :;o
wtth President Carter and Vice President Walter Mondale " " f( I ;;t '""I
l't!llls w h ll lung ~ta n~c..l
Tuesday after bemg handed a speCial pubhc serv1ce award for t 11 I 1 ,lloru "
"'If addressed t! llvelupc fot 11
his role as nat10nal chrurman of the Muscular Dystroph)
I
m~ 1
t.:an uf this
Assoc1at1on
OaVJd Jonas - former manager of the late
J)F Alt DR I AMil - 1 el llcwspopcr P 0 Box 1551
1'reddle Prmze - has won a court battle n Los Angeles giVIng n a d1et end I have !Jeenll) Ha d10 C ty Stat u New
him $205 1100 10 d1sputed fees from the comedian s estate
1 g l ""lk fu !0 lllllutcs a Y '' k NY 10019
Jordan s King Hussem and h1s ne" queen - the former Usa day I I ave !Jeen w~ Jkm g fu1
DF:AH Dll LAMB - I 1eod
Halaby - hale ended a week long hone) moon m Scotland fi\C lie vs end I have~ I I sl 1 ut c lumn abt utlowspc1111
where says the king We went fiShing once and I caught a a ty yet Docs I ta ke Ju 1gc1 l Junt I ha v~ a s u gKc!ttlun fu1
salmon
the c uplc II at mtght WUI k I
than 10 mu utcs e:t dt~ y
DEAR READEH It s pr &gt; kn• W f 1C couple who had "
O.blv g 111g lu t•ke " Jut slllllial pr blem and the ma1
I ngc1 tha1 y u hod a1 had ilee 1 tak1ng exll emdy
Ill poled
Welk mg ~I Cl h I sJ OWCIS App~rc! ti) ~he
By JOAN HANAUER
l~e&lt;ll had sumetlung to do" 1tl
I UU C u I a diet hd~ I Jll c
UPI Television Writer
\ ~111 I ss
f 1 usd~
(jS~ the lllon s mfe t ttllty I dun t
NEW YORK (UP11- Astronauts mthe dawmng days of the "Inch " unpu1 ta 11 WI at y 1 Jm w •iwthet th1s would help
space age may have eaten glop from tubes but that 1sn I K ~e• ll y 1\e I I I 1se wl Cl
1 11 &gt;I bu t s JU.SI" sugges
rat10ns they eat aboard the star sh1p Enterpnse
) U it.: II i1 til t'\ 1 :-~ fat It I IHHI
News of the favonte foods of the Star Trek crew - and musdc !1 add11 1 11 11 doc
OF: IH HF:A DF: R - A11d II s
even some of their Klmgon enem1es - comes from Bantam bu1 1 up ca l '' ell! f 1 u " g Kl sugges ll ut !Jeca usc
Books m a paperback tilled Off icial Star Trek Coo king odd il"m up " a yca t s II s II U I lll ex&lt;.:eS.'i h J1 1 U:tl
Manual
ause ICI hty Tle1 e I""
lilli e ll I ~~ ~ Ill~ s tg lllfl
Oddly enough tts spaced out rec1pes are solidly workable l:ant
t v~ n IJt:u ~ utht:s d 1c llp pl)
and thoughUully com piled so the nov1ce chef ca n make what
Vuu shuuldn t tlunk f the 111 ~ lu~ a 1 th~ testu:i~s as C::l
are sta ndard dishes In the repertotre or good mternational tunc t 1 t."qUircs \4 walk su m e t:tllS r birth Ul llul I
cooks
mud Hs thc dtslr:~ nt:c y u haslel t odd that these
Bantam ts the paperback company that has been making \\elk Walku ~ a mle f 1 stuUJt!!'i art t!X perlm~nWI I
money as 1f It were prmtmg 11 JUSt by tsswng the Star Trek
must people s cqulva leul I d 11 1 wart t• tngger an)
sertes that network televtston refuses to reVIve and fans refuse U.SIIIg •buul 50 I (i() caiut iCS s1 1angc f•ds that rmgll1 esuli
to forget The cooking manual IS comptled by Mary Ann lf I takes V U 10 I IIIUics I ft "' tho 1dea
Piccard from the logbook of Nurse Chrtsttne Chapel
lllc1~ tile man) n mses f r
walk a uule y u I 1ly !Jc u&gt;
It 1s dtvtded mto segments featurmg the favorite foods of the 111 g ali lUI 50 t.:H lullcs 1 her C C:t I w sp~ un ..:uunt 11 s JlllC
Federation 1which mcludes chopped chicken hvers ) of a e 3 ~cal 11es 1 a p&gt;uml ns ta1 tes the t: unt titn ~
Vulcans Romulans and Klmgons as well th ose p1cked by
JJl PI vc Ia d mothers 11 t.:an
f body f~t
mdlvldual officers from Captain Kirk to Enslgh Chekov
aol Re~!! rh1 g temptratUi e
AI that 1•te 11 ~&lt; uu ld take
• Some of the rectpes are qwte se nous - K~rk s steamed y u 70 days lu Jose ne p u 111 I mglt p nl ut tha t a
pumpkin bread Klingon Klros Ka1 Faki (p1gs feet and pea of budy fat 1f wolk ng IS •II 1a 11c cis 'A illeh IS htetall y
soup) Chekov s beef Stroganov and McCoy s plantation rice
va1 1t: sc
\t!IIIS
f the
you re gomg l d Even s
Intertwmed w1th the rec1pes are btts of Star Trek lore With thai httle effort of w~lk lt':SlH.:!t:s ISH fad I U rHUS
such as what was m tbe sandwich that Captaln s Kirk ordered mg 1ne lillie a day) u would u1 ~ stcr ill} 111 s me rntm
but the Trtbbles intercepted And speaking of Trlbbles there s get nd &gt;f ~ hllle 111 re tha1 Wh v' Beca use the 11 &gt;rmal
even a reCipe mvolvmg bread baked w1th thetr favorite gram 8&lt;!1 en p u 1ds f t&gt;&lt;h fat vel en culol l 11 keeps the tesl!des
- quadrotttrtcale - although you can substitute present-day ayCoiS! III C lf) t UI CalJJc s une'Ahat ild w 111 mal bud)
Terran approxunat10ns
lu ~&lt;alk a httle more each day tem pela "'" Will !at ge
In case any Star Trek fans wonder about the source of the &gt;f eout se you II gel more ~ iiflt.:tx..:~ les and lht: til
l ulat 1y stag nallun thctl
Kllngon rectpes - some were exchanged during a brief truce bend It out ,r 11
with Kang (when a strange outerspace beastie tried to take
th e 11 r ma l
Tl e !Jest prug1" n f 1 most ~t•su lt s
them on a trip to nowhere wtth Federation and Klingon ene people 1s a ct mil l~llun f lt!JlpCi:IUI~
t
Jtrd
mles battlmg furiously for eternity while II fed off their .sensible cxcH lsti cmd mtH.Ics me dli:u sn 1s surnct mcs ut
emotions )
Jet.luctlur 11 ~H I 1 cs When f k!liet h these I ISla I C ~S
Another source was Cyrano Jones Ute trader who first bull a e d ll
IISISIC !Jy u rrt!t l l l f h~ v(:lr t.: Kt.ic
brought Trtbbles on the scene and later showed up with a ''' a sulfll e11 Jll' l d f ITIO} II p v~ II t s~ llll
Kllngon cookbook
tun~ this usually I' ltlu..:cs lUUIII il dfe~llill\ f thc lila!
The chopped chtcken liver rectpe referred to earlier IS a ~es ult s But 11 d "' 1coqullt I v h I
favorite or Ambassador Robert Fox who was aboard when the j&gt;ct\ Cl tt: il d t et\ llt!Ci lS tiJct
I ill "' l•nn f I eat a1 d
I
II •tiel
l! ~ h t
Enterprue found ttaelf m the m•ddle of the centurles.(lld war \ UJl he" t ~ell I It lh" I f 1
4/t I \\ it
I Df1\ IIIli l i::!l
between the planets Ernlntar and Vendikar
fl\t.. Ia }~ I !:it.~ !II 1csult ~
If Ute Star Trek Cooking Manual does nothmg else 11 To );(IVt.: \ u sulh H p1 g i &lt;::UH I t l llrt h ft i \:S 14 h II
IHI
lllltt l llptlllll
proml8es the future will not be turTM'd over to the fa st food I 11 selldll g u I he Heolti
i ~d ul II hclf.J"
freaks who wouldn t know Dohlman ch tcken from Ch1cken J.eitCI IU !!Je t l
Weigh I ~ .., II
llllhl y
~ll~ht
•
J.usu g f) ct Otl&lt;t ' • "a111

TV•••in Review

depends on wha! Ronald
Reagan plans to do Should he
g1ve 1t st1ll another wlurl the
number of sena!Drtal entries
would be cut
U Reagan rides mto rettre
ment Sen Robert Dole of
Kansas ts certam to make
h1s btd The GOP S 1976 VIce
pres1denttal candidate ts al
ready the closest thmg to an
acti•e candtdate gomg
Two other posslbtltlles
f10m the party sconservattve
wm g - both with little
nattonal recogmtwn - are
Paul Laxalt of Nevada and
OtTm Hatch of Utah

Laxalt won his spurs and
plaudits from all stdes for hts
leaderslup m the ftght agamst
the Panama Canal treaty
desp1te Its ral1ficat10n Hatch
1s trymg to mtlk every ISSUe
that comes by to establish hts
credentials
The best known of the
Senate Republicans Is thetr
leader Howard Baker of
Tennessee
Baker who came close to
gettmg the vtce presldenttal
nommatton m 1968 and m
1976 has made no secret of
some day gomg alter the top
spot Dependm~ on Carter s

vulnerabtllty he mtght try
1980 or watt for 1984
Among other Republican
poSStbiltttes - aU closer to
the liberal wmg - are
Charles Percy of Illinots who
had an
exploratory
comrmttee gomg before Ford
announced he would run
Charles
Math1as
of
Maryland who In 1976 talked
of jumpmg m to gtve
Republicans
a
non
conservallve chotce and
Lowell
Wetcker
of
Connecttcut
W1th Carter m the Whtte
House
there 1s less

speculatton among
Democrats
Sen Edward Kennedy who
beats Carter and everyone
else m the polls IS always
mentioned but he steadfastly
mststs he IS gomg with Carter
m 1980 and remams content m
the Senate
All that could change
however tf Carter dectdell'
not to seek a second term or
appears doomed to defeat
Then a number of Sell8te
Democrats would wmd up 1n
front of their trurrors won
dermg
Why Not The
Best

Silver makes comeback
on Hong Kong exchange
By NANCV G COLLINS
HONG KONG ( UPI) - The
earth god smtled through a
haze of mcense at s1x roast
p1glets the Chmese Gold and
Stiver Society d~rectors
presented to ensure hts
pleasure at the openmg of the
Hong Kong s1lver market
Geomancers deemed the
day (Thursday June 22)
ausptc10us
for
new
enterprtses and Woo Han fat
chairman of the world s thtrd
largest gold market pulled
out all the stops to mark
resumption of tradmg on the
s1lver market closed smce
World War II
Some traders spent the
prevtous mght studymg gold
and stlver pnces from around
the world others pa1d
homage to the earth god - To
Da1 Gong - and everyone ate
and drank

Harrisonville
~&gt;ciety News
Mr and Mrs Bob Alkire
attended square dance
campout at Cross Lanes W
Va over the weekend
Jtmm y
Cheadle
of
Columbus 1s spendmg a few
weeks w1th h1s grandparents
Mr and Mrs Donald Weaver
Mr and Mrs Theo Hmds
Wtlma 1 of Newark Mr and
Mrs K C 1Dena Welsh Mr
and Mrs Terry ( Purle )
Krall of M1ch1gan Mr and
Mrs H R Jewell Mmers
v11le Mr and Mrs Ronald
Jewell Athens vtslted thetr
mother Mrs Leatha Co wen
and attended a ptcmc at
Sno'Aden Lake It was the
first time smce 1~ that aU
f1v e children have been
together Others who enjoyed
the p1cmc were Mr and Mrs
Leroy Welsh and fam1ly Mr
and Mrs Terry Hmds and
famtly Newark Mr and
Mrs Stevte Jewell ond
famtly Athens and Rtchard
Jewel, Athens
Mr and Mrs Joe Carsey
have moved back home to
thetr tratler from Columbus
Gathermg at the home of K
C Welsh to celebrate hts
birthday and Father s Day
were Mr and Mrs Wallie
Co llin s
and
fam1ly
Rtdgeway Mr and Mrs
Robert Welsh and famtly
Mansfield Mr and Mrs
Denzil Welsh and famtly
Rutland Mr and Mrs Leroy
Welsh and fam1l y Mr and
Mrs Darrell Napper and son
and Mrs Leatha Co"en
Nancy and Jimmy Welsh
of Mansfield are spendmg a
week wtlh thetr grand
parents Mr and Mrs K C
Welsh
Mrs Delpha Katzenback
The Plams ts VISttmg a week
w1th her stster Mrs Waldo
Neal Mr and Mrs Jack
Neal Athens and son and
Mr and Mrs Billie Neal and
fam1ly Nelsonville were
Sunda) VISitors or Mr and
Mrs Waldo Neal
Mrs Stella Atkms spent
Thursday wtth her cousin
Mrs Harold Ptckenng of
ltsbon Oh1o She also •.as
ovemtght guest of Mr and
Mrs Thurman Edwards of
East Rochester Ohto
Mrs Frances Young spent
Tuesday afternoon with Mr
Ruth Stebbms m Galltpolls
Mr und Mrs Dexter
Howard and daughter of
Washmgton D C spent a
few days With thetr parents
Mr and Mrs Elwood
Howard
A tho u ~ ht for lite day
( &lt;r&lt; raJ of tl~e Anny Douglas
Mat \J thur 111 landing 011
I• 11e Oct 20 1944 ""'d f
h•', returned By the grace
f llnught y God our fort"es
st ~nd ·~a'" 011 Ph1llpp1ne
SOIJ J

Promptly at 9 30 am the
openmg bell rang and trading
began A near record 180 of
the soctety s 195 full
members were on hand as the
floor traders led by the
chatrman hunself began the
pushmg
shovmg
and
shouting
that
typ1ftes
prec1ous metals tradmg m
th 1s Brtttsh colony
The exchange wtll trade
5 000-ounce stlver warrants
With New York as the
deliver) pomt and Irvmg
Trust Co as the clearmg
house
Silver trading will follow
the same system as gold
trading As Woo put 1t When
you have a successful
formula why change 11 and
rtsk fatlure 7
Both gold and stlver are
traded as undated futures
contracts w1th no ftxed settle
ment dates allowmg buyers
and sellers to hold postttons
open at thetr discretion
Trading methods - a cross
Chicago
between
the
Mercantile Exchange and
Custer s last stand - bear no
resemblance to
other
precious metals markets
The tradmg language ts
Ca nton ese
shouted
a
distance of mches and

Ed

remforced by body contact
and wdd hand stgnals Deals
are closed With back pats
bear hugs and neck locks
Leather soled shoes
neckties and women are not
allowed on the floor and a
glunpse from the doorway at
the roughhousing wtthm
reveals why
The Chmese Gold and
Silver Exchange IS only a
stone s throw from the
trad1twnal 19th century
street market 1n Hong Kong s
Western Dtstnct
Few tf any of the colony s I
mdllon armual tour!Sis ever
stumble upon the narrow
alley lmed w1th shtp chandler
shops where lhe 16 story
exchange stands
The exchange - trrullng
only London and Zurich m
stze - 1s housed m an
unpretentmus ground floor
room banked by dtrect
telephone lmes to broker and
dealer offwes and mobbed by
more than 100 floor traders
Stiver has moved mto a
small corner of the exchange
where traders must commute
from Ute gold area to close
prec1ous metals deals
In a qwet room two floors
above Lung Shen-!!heung the
exchanges 65-year.(lld tradt

t10nally robed assayer
worked qutetly over a
prec1s1on scale welghtng
f1ve-tael gold bars (ooe taelts
1 19 ounces) and testmg
purtty wtth an oval black
stone
He p1cked up one of 20 gold
bars - worth $22 1100 - and
rubbed tt against the stone
H1s :W years of expenence
told him unmediately the
exact purity of the yellow
metal
For Hong Kong delivery
995 fme mternat10nal
standard gold must be
refmed to 99 by one or 20
loca l licensed refmers Silver
will be easter The nchange
will accept mtemational 99:i
fmeness Stiver from any of
the 41 producers approved by
New Yorks stlver exchange
Com ex
At 4 30 p m the cloSing bell
sounded and m 10 mmutes the
floor was cleared leaving To
Da1 Gong the llngermg smell
of mcense and some red
electrtc ca ndles glowmg 111
the dusk
S1lver closed that hrst
seSSion eas1er on hght trading
of about 90 000 ounces
warranted for delivery All
!Did a qwel but auspicious
begmnlng

Asner'~ success

By VERNON SCOTT
HOLlYWOOD (UPI )
Seven or etght months ago Ed
Asner normally a gruffly
warm and amusmg man was
IUS\ plam gruff and trntable
He had grown accustomed
to Wlruttng as a costar or The
Mary Tyler Moore Show
one of the most popular
sttuatlon comedy senes m the
history of the tube For seven
years Asner had good reason
to be cheerful
Last fall he embarked on a
new ser ies an hour long
drama of a metropolitan
newspoper edttor
Lou
Grant Hts character was
the same as on Mary s show
After etght eptsodes Lou
Grant was m danger of
bemg canceled by CBS Asner
and company tn fact were
gettmg their brams beaten
out by the opposition
MTM headed by Gr$nt
Tinker backed the show With
a top budget and some of the
best brams Ul Hollywood
tncludmg liS trOika of
produt-ers Allan Bums Gene
Reynolds and Jun Brooks all
veterans of The Mary Tyler
Moore Show
The scrtpts were of high
quality production values
unstmtmg and the cast was
both attractive and gifted
But the opposttion aU but
blew the fledgling sertes out
of the pond In 1ts ftrst three
weeks the Lou Grant show
was pitted against a baseball
playoff game and two World
Sertes games
In tts fourth week the ser!es
faced the first televising of
The Godfather
followed
the next week by a
gangbuster two hour Pollee
Story
Asner back at work for the
second season of the series
looked back on those bad old
days and IICowled as only be
can
They really put us Ul tbe
dumper he said heavily It
wasn t wttll our ninth week m
the alr that we came up
agamsl
our
regular
compelltlon Family It was
the week before Otrlstmas I
remember tt well
That was the first time we
won our time slot Then In
January they moved us to
another night and we maln
tamed our htgh ratings But
what the hell wben we go

back on the atr m the fall
we U be opposite Monday
Ntght Foctball
An ex-football player tbe
muscular Asner ratsed an
eyebrow suggestmg he mtght
be turung m the footba U
games himself
But It wasn t solely the
quatity and popularity of
oppoSition shows that had
Lou Grant reelmg m the
rat111gs The show hadn t
really enjoyed a shakedown
nor found tts audtence
Maybe there wasn t a
sufflcent tune lapse between
the end of Mary s show and
the begmnmg of the Grant
show for 11 to be accepted for
whattt was Not enough time
bad passed to distmgutsh
between accepting me In the
vartations nece,ssttaled by
Lou Grant
Our show was blessed
wtth time to overcome
mtstakes Vtewers tuned ln
not expectmg a dehctous
situation comedy any longer
Some senes are canceled
before they get a chance But
we had t1me to blend as a
company of players
CBS could have cut us at
the end of 13 weeks But tbe
network wasn t having one of
tts best seasons Also tbe
compettllon blockbusters m
dicated Utat anyone m hts
rtghl mind wouldn l think
about cancelation
Tinker and the three
producers had sufficient faith
In the quality of their show
not to tamper with Its basic
mgredtents a- cheapen It wltlt
guest stars
The success of
Lou
Grant Is a triumph of
quality over expediency By
season s end It had found a
cotnfortable rating spolln the
top 30
When some of our early
shows were rerun at tile tall
end of the season we dlacov
ered that those first ones
weren t so bad after all
The show was conceived
as belng about 70 percent
drama and 30 percent
comedy give or take a little
As we progreued we realized
lite dramatic story was the
hrst conslderallon The
comedy would be a
windfall
So we found 1l happy
brtlance It s worked out very
wlf[

story

Not the least of the show s
problems and speciftcally
Asner s
was
the
transformauon of Lou Grant
from a lovable teddy bear of a
man
an
overstated
cartcature to a believable
newsman
Asked how be managed the
transition Asner grimaced
the old Lou Grant grunace of
Tile Mary Tyler Moore
Show and then let It lade
away m a grand display of
softenmg his face
I began playtng Lou less
grunacmg and more sophisticated he satd I made
him less the shy boy and not
as chauvm1sttc He has
macho m a cooler sense I had
ID stan I illmg the seven
league boots the job required
I brought him down as the
season progressed It s long
pants time It takes a lot of
maturity and respooslbthty I
found out what Mary dtd for
seven years - provide the
glue for a company of
players
Success of the show IS p
mtxed blessing to Asner He s
a btg wmner agam but he
works a bone-wearymg 12
hours a day bvedaysa week
As IaUter figure of the
newsroom Asner al.to finds
himself paterlamUtas of cast
and crew
There was a strong senae
of family on Marys show
Asner coocluded It gave
everyme a feellng of comfort
and securtty I d very much
like to develop that same
esprtt m our show

Astros clip Reds 7-4
By GARY TAYLOR

pttehes sa1d Astt os thtrd
baseman Enos Cabell H1s
stngle and double drove m
three runs and gave Astros
pitcher JQe N1ekro 54
enougl lead to w1n
N1ekt o has pttched well m
h1s last thr.ee outmgs but he
s typ1cal of the Houston
team whach IS ncons1stent
and wh•ch has fallen fa r off
the d1v1 s on lea d
Rehef pttcher Joe Sambtto
recorded hts s1xth save of the
season by stuppmg the Reds
n the f nal two mn ngs He
has bee the Astt os top
pttcher even though J R
R d a1d leads the maJor
lcab'\Jes " th Ill str keouts
Pu hl has been by fa1 the
Astros most consisten t
pi• yet and h s h It ng mulct
ca rry h1m onto the team for
the July 11 All.Stm Game To
be sele&lt;tr ! Puhl rn ~&lt;1 he

att entton to htm and
makmg hun thmk of bemg
HOUSTON (UPI ) - The selected to Ute All-Star Game
pressure ts begmnm g to next week
mount on Na tiona I League
My parents 1m Melv1lle
battmg leader Terry Puhl Saskatchewan) don t realize
the one brtght hght tn a dun what 11 s all about or even
season for the Houston what the All-Star Game IS
Astros
satd Puhl who collected a
All this publlctty ts no blg trtple and smgle Tuesday
deal says Puhl 21 I come night to help the Astros beat
to Ute ball park JUS! hke any Cmcmnatt 7-t and w111for the
other player and don t do ltrst tune m s1x games
anythtng dtfferentl y
Of the All-Star Game Puhl
Actually
though
my satd It s an honor I d Jove
teammates have been paymg to play 1wtll be disappomted
more attentiOn to me and 1fldont ~o
rtbbmg me more than Utey do
Puhl s tnple was one of
anybody else
seven h1ts the Astros used to
Puhl a native of Canada score stx runs 111 the ltrst four
who stgned wtth the Astros mnmgs Tuesday and se nd
for
$1 000
tn
1973
Reds startmg p1tcher Bill
• acknowledged that h1tttng Bonham to his second loss m
332 near the mtdpomt of the 10 deCISIOnS
season IS brmgmg more
I was ~ uess1ng Bonham s

UPI Sports Writer

chosen by Los Angeles
Manager Tom LaSorda as
one of three or four alternote
outftelders
Desp1te the paltry number
of votes turned m to the
league offt ce by the Astros
the young outfielder satd he
hked the all star voting
system
Veah when we start wm
nmg we 11 start gettmg
votes he satd
Puhl has steadily unproved
his battmg average from 240
early m the season desp1te
the league s thtrd base men
movmg m to take away h1s
dra g bunts
People are playmg me
smarter he sa1d But 1 feel
comfortable at the plate and I
am eas1ly strokmg the ball to
left held If I contmue to do
that 1 11 hit

Fidrych undergoes tests

Today's

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sporla Edllor
NEW YORK ( UPI ) - Ted Wlihams always had th1s one all
consurrung destre th1s near obsessiOn &gt;f h1s wh ch coni nuall)
bugged h1m
He wanted ID be a pttcher
One day Joe Cronm the n playmg n an •ger w th the Red
Sox fmaUy let hun p1tch m a game that was hopelessly lost and
what brmgs that back to mmd s the Monday N ght
Massacre m Toronto m which the Blue Ja ys all but cre mated
the Onoles 24-10 and Earl Weave• 111 tota l unequivocal
surrender brought m centerf~eld er Larry Harlow and catcher
coach Elrod Hendncks to p1lch
Not too many people realize 11 but Ted or gmally broke 1nto
baseball as a pttcher Croom sa1d from h1s swnme r home m
Cape Cod Tuesday
Wtlltams started as a pitcher w1th Sa n D ego but was such
a good.Jookmg httter that Frank Shellenba ck the manage r
there put hun In the ou Uteld After red ca le to the Red Sox
he d frequently pretend he was p1tch tng to an magmarv hitter
when he d wann up before a game on the s delines He was a
great pantomun1st and he d say to whoever ~&gt;as near h1m I
got two balls and one stnke on th1s guy now 'Aalch ne tlu ow
him a curve balllo'A and on the outs1de And 1fter he d tlu ow
that curve of hts he d Jump up and down Just I ke a I ttle kIll
and say D•d you see hun nuss 11
Anyway we had a btg crowd thts day 1n Boston and " e
were playmg Detrott Cron m recalled We w.re wa) be lund
m the seventh or etghth mrung and I sa1d to fed on the bench
You ve been poppmg off so much about )Our p tchmg lm
gonna put you m to pttch
Good good he sa1d He was really exnted He p1tche&lt; l
ooe mrung I beheve and I remem ber hun stnkmg out Rudy
York Pmky Htggm s smgled off htm but to the best of mv
recollectiOn the Tigers dtdn t get an) runs off red rhe f• ns
loved tt When they left the park tile) wete I liking 1bou l l1s
pltchmg rather than the beating we took
In Monday mght s contest Weaver " "' &lt;r t dzed bv Pete
Bavast the Blue Jays president and by Roy Harts! eld tl Clr
manager for turnmg the game mlo a travesty by br ng ng n
Harlow and Hendncks to p1tch but there 1s no ru le mthe book
agaiOSt 11 And Weaver had ample precedent on h1s s de
When Pepper Mart n ordmanll a third baseman wa s ~ til
Ute Cardmals Frankie Fnsch let hun p1tch 1 relief one day
agamst the Cuoo and Martin was so out of h1s element he h ~d to
be shown how to stand on the mound
Rocky Colav11D who had an arm like ocann n ca me m fff m
the outfield to pttch 111 a game for the Indians m 1958 He d1d the
same thmg when he was w1th the Yankees 10 years later
wmdmg up w111rung that contest
Hendricks had never p1tched a ywhere 1n Ius fe l&gt;efo e
gettmg the call agams\ the Blue Jays Monda) n ght
I take that back he told me from Tm onto I p1 tched a
" little softball m the Islands when I was about 14 l ears old
mea rung the Vtrgm Islands whe1 e he s ft om
Hendrtcks 37 d1dn t do that badly n hts professiOnal debut
as a pttcher g1vmg up one hit and wa lkm~ on!) 01e m 2 I 3
1ruttngs He was m the bullpen warmmg up OriOle ' ght hander
Dan Stanhouse when he was not1f1ed of hiS msta nt com erslon
In the fifth mnmg Toronto was m front 24-6 and catcher Dave
Skaggs delivered the message to Hendncks when he came to
the bullpen from the dugout
He satd to me Can you throw stnkes a 1d I told h m 1 II
try satd Hendncks
I didn thave a fmger glove so I used Stanhouse s related
the Orioles veteran recetver Alii did was go n and,throw at
the same speed I use pttchmg batting practice and hope no one
would htt 11 back at me
One of the most popular playe rs n the b1g leagues
Hendricks took a lot of goodnatured n bbmg from the other
Ortoles durmg hts pitching turn
On• of the Baltimore players urged hun to tr) tl1e hes1tat on
pttch Satchel Patge helped make fomous
I told him no I can l do that sa1d always consc~ent ous
Elrod Hendncks 1know I m not a pitcher but I d1dn t rea lly
Utlnk 11 was a joke

Cll VEl \ ND tUP I M Irk I he Bird F'1drych
"ho has been Sidelined w1th a
sot e arm smce Apr 1 17 wa s
adnutted to Lenox Hosp1tal m
New Vork l'uesday for tests
an I possible treatment the
Amer ca n J.eague team sa td
here
Ihe 1 ge ts sa1 d F'1drych
the AI Rookie or the Year 111
197f. ~&lt;as to rctw n to Detrml
I ller tod a) afte t be ng
eleased frt 1 the New York
hosp1tal
F drych was sent to New
York by the team to be
ex un ned by Dr M a ur~ce
Cowe ll the Yankees team
phys clan who successfully
treated Yankee p1tcher Don
Gul lett for a sumlar aliment
F!dt)Ci who spent most of
the rnonU m F lorida soakmg
up sun n effotls to heal h1s
shoulder ongmall) had been
sc hedul ed to fl y to I os
Ange les Jeter thts week to
vtslt Dr Frank Jobe another
orthopedic spec1a list
01 Jobe fe els Gullett s

atlment wa s somewhat
Simi lar m loca tion to
Mark s satd T1ger General
Manage r Jtm Campbell
And smce Dr Cowen had
such good results wtth
Gullett we dec1ded to send
Mark ID see htm
In treatmg Gullett on May
22 Cowen used massage
and ma mpulat10n of the
shoulder
Gullett a lefthander began
throwmg after the treo tment
and wtthm two weeks slatted
h1s first game In hiS last
start Sunday m Detro1l
Gullett held Detrott to two
hits pitched 7 2 3 mmngs and
picked up h1s th1rd wm
w thout a loss
Campbell sa 1d Ftdry ch
who has a 2.j) reeord thiS
season and was 6-4 last year
after postmg a 19 9 mark m
h1s rookie year was giVe n an
orthogram a test m whtch
dye 1s nJect ed mto the
shoulder ar d X ravs taken
Campbell satd the results
were perfect

Sports briefs
ORONO Mame iUPll Douglas K Btggs 33 of cape
Eilwbeth has been named
head so&lt;cer coach and grad u
ate •ss •stant 111 ph ys ca l
ed ICatton at the Um1 ers1ty of
M 11 n!.! 1t Orono It was
11
1 cd 1ucsd y
SAN FH I NCISCO UPI I 1hl S 111 Fra nnsco 49ers
1 uesday Sl ~ n e d guard Walt
0 wn11~ uf Michigan their
second " und draft chm(e
HIS s1gmng brought the
nu t her of dr tftees s1gned to
e1~ht
fr Jill the f1rst s1x
011! ds of thiS year s NF I
dr tft
NEW YORK I UP! - fhe
Nell York Mets SW lpped a
pa1r of r ght-handed pitchers
Witt thell 1tdcwoter f II m
ch b l'uesday se ndmg M1ke
B uhert to the Intern 11onal

League team and recalling
Tom Hausman
Bruhett appeared m 13
games I or the Mets th1s
season postmg a l.,'i record
a nd a 4 97 earned run
a1erage Hausman the ftrst
free agent ever Signed by the
Mets was :&gt;-2 at Tidewater
w th a I 22 ERA m 10 games
A1LANTA (UPI ) - Los
Angeles Manager 1 ornmy
J.asorda ca llin g himself the
second greatest optumst 111
lustory sa1d Tuesda) he 1s
com meed hts Dodgers are
the best m the Natwnal
League and wtll wm the
pen 1ant for the secon d
straight year
The Dodgers curren tly are
n th~rd place 111 the National
League West s1x ganes n
back of diVISion leadmg San
Franc 1sco and three and a
ha lf belund Cmcmna t

NHL considering expansion
By RICHARD L SHOOK
UPI Spuns Writer
DE1ROIT !UPI) - The
Nat10nal Hockey League IS
earnestly co ns 1d e nn g
expansiOn to mclude four
World Hockey AssociatiOn
fra nchises
There are no agreements
yet Prestdent John Z1egler
of the NHL sa1d Tuesday
after emergmg from more
than 16 hours of talks directed
toward what one mar called a
bottom lme marnage of
the established league wtth
four of the more entrenched
members of the younger
league
Z1egler declmed to dtsclose
the tdentllles of the
franchi ses or even the
number mvolved but 11 was
lea rned they are Edmonton
Wtmtpeg Quebec and New
England
Th e tw o parties are up
aga mst a dead! ne of 4 p m

R u d.,1 s sIam
sinks Royals
By MIKE TULJ Y
UPI Spurts Wrtters
If Joe Rud1 keeps starts
h1tl1n g the way he htt
Tuesda)
mght
when
Ca hlorma beat Kansas City
5-t the Angels could begm to
11 ove m the Amertcan
Leag ue West
Rudt m red m a season
long slump belted o IWO.()Ut
pmchh1t grand slam m the
se venth 1nmng to help
C&lt;t hforma break a five game
losmg streak
Rud1 s home run hts ftrst
smce April 13 and thtrd of the
season came on a 3-2 pitch
from Steve Mmgort 1 2 n
rehef of starter Denms Leo
nard who walked the bases
loaded m the seventh
I ve been strikmg out so
much lat~ly I JUSt wanted to
tr) to hit the ball satd Rud1
who never even heard the
O\ at10n of the crowd
After I htt the home run I
JUSt went through the bench
shook everyone s hands and
went strrught to the locker
he satd I was JUSt as happy
bemg on the bench tomght
I ve been a total loss to the
tea m
Tom Gnffm registered hi S
fJrst AL vtctory after tilt ee
losses wtth four tnnm gs of
shutout rehef an d Da ve
LaRoche hurled the fmal two
nnmgs for his e1ghth save
In Ne ~ York the Yankees
solvaged a spht of the1r tw o
game sertes w1th the Red Sox
when Gra1g Nettles h1t a tw o

SC IOTO RESUI TS
CO l UMB US I UP I I
Bruce Rtegle gu1ded rami
Alm a hu rs t to a one ha lf
VIcto r)
ove r
length
Justalease m the featured
etghth race Tuesday mght at
Sc10to Downs
Tam1 Almahurst cove red
the rmle m 2 03 2-,'i and
place wtth the Mtddlepon re turned $3 20 $2 20 and
lndw ns A sho wdown be $2 20 Justalease pa1d $2 80
tween the two teams Thur and $2 whtle Grandma Wall
sday w11l dec1de the second came m th rd and returned
$2 20
pla ce team
North Fork Creed won the
H tung fu r Mtddleport " ere
f~r;t
race ktckmg off a 6-7-,'i
John Bal ke t HR J Chns
tr1fecta
com b nat1on that was
Burdette ltnple)
Bob
wortlt
$3
528 9Q Jeame Dawn
St uthern Shawn Baker John
was
second
and Lang Boy
Blake frey Cassell Ca rl
thtrd
Moodtspaugh John Bacon
A crowd of 4 083 wa gered
a ul Joey Poulms all smgles
$25!485
Dave Hcndr~ cks had both
smgles for the on ly two hit s
lor the Bobcats
Bobcats 024 100- 7 2 4
Braves
244 43x- 17 13 0
In another llttle league
ga me Monday the Pomeroy
Yanket!s defeated the New
Hav en Clubs 6-5
Scott Hamson co llected the
wm and Bradley the loss
Harnson fanned seven and
walked four whtle Bradley
fanned nine and walked I'A O
Hilt ng for the Yankees
1
were Jon Perru two homers
Scott Harrtson one homer
and one t rtpl e Rhett
Mtlhoan.. a trtple John
Effec tive rate w th cam
Ae1ker Davtd Roush Bnan pound
ng 6 66 per cenr
Willis each had singles
Htllers for the Cubs were N netv day nteres t penalty
f
w thelrawn
Detore
Johnso n
Dawson a nd matu..ly date
Rolhns
In Pee Wee actton Todd
Hysell of the Powell s tea m
ptlched a no hitter agamst
the Ptzza Shack club Todd
fanned 14 and walked just one
batter Artte Hurmel ond
Brya 1Tannehill combmed to
The Atnens county
st nke out 13 and 1ssuc 4 ba se
Sa v ngs &amp; Loan Co
W Man Sl
on balls
Pomeroy Oh o
lhtters for Powell s were
Mark Cnrbttt Bryon Ingels
Greg F1elds Todd Hysell and
Terry Newsome all smgles
Powell s
000 50--li 6
Pi zza Sha&lt; •
tlljO ~ 0

Summer league results
Hy Debbie Hoff
In l•ttl e leag ue act 1011
Mond 1y the H •rnso t vtlle
Bt beats wcr&lt; defea ted by the
~h d dl e port !Jraves 17 7
lames ACree was th e
~ nmng p!l(her and Dave
Hen d11cks the lose• Acree
and SJ 1wn Baker cornbu ed
t fa1 I I walk 2U 11 d yte lrled
on l) two h1ts Dove Hen
dt tcks st uck out seven
'Aalkt'li etght a nd penmlled
13 h ts
! he Vlltory for the B1aves
kecp.s them m a t 1c ror second

INTEREST
On Certificates
Of Deposit
1,000 M1mmum

1 Yr. Term

•

THE DAILY SENTINEL

DEVOTED TO THE

~

INTEREST OF

MEIGS-MASON ARF.A
ROBERT HOEFUCH
CUy E4l\ur
W. ly u ep1. S..turdiY
lil r ltl 0 1 u V11lt!y Publ•tun~
( Opli y Mull ~ILII I c
Ill
t.:ouM St I \Ill frvy Oh u 4~7118
Rw; ell.li Ofltl t: PhOIMl Wl- 2156
f Uu rwl Phull~ tt.!-:ll~7
tit u 11 dus pu!ilall(e p;ftd II
l 'oln~ruy 01 o

I ulJ

liliV~rt~Uij(

!.

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revr~!Jtll­

AliJIOO~l~.!l 310
f;ud tl Ave Clcvelilnd ottlo 44 11~: 1
Sultil.: phon rMin Dt vcred Uf
Jll ldi.N

ll rr ~f whtrt MVIIIlllble n L't'r\U per
"t't!k Ry Mutur Roulal whrre ~ IWI'It!f

ut IIVMilibl~ ()nt monlh
£1 1:5 By w 11 Dhlu11nd W VM
Lilt! Y~11r Jt2 00 Sue tnunt.hal
I I ~ Threr mnth1 J1 00
~:L t'Whfrt&gt; tlt 10 y~M r st. nunlh.l
JI J $0 T lrllr 1 u 1th11 11 SCI
Sui !lt ripUun prll" Ulll~ll SundiY
Ta r:.-Stntlrttl
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56020

0 '

ACE

PLASTIC PIPE &amp; FITIING
ACE
COPPER PIPE &amp; FiniNG
GALVANIZED FITIINGS
HARDWARE
Metgs Plaza

ED r wher WHA ·wanled tm
muntly from legal achon
agaiOSt the four applicants
runs out Negotiations were
to begm aga m at 9 a m
It s as clear as a muddy
lake a weary but not
dejected General Manager
Chff Fletcher of the Atlanta
Flames sa 1d as he trudged
from the last meetmg One
wa) or the other we should
know by Wednesday
Ziegler sa•d earl er m the
day wl en he first ~dmttted
the tw o leag ues were
conversmg As all of you
probably rea hze by no" we
are havmg meetmgs w1lh the
WHA face to face
We re work1ng to see
whethe r or not the NHI
should expand he sa d f
say expand because we have
precedent for expansiOn and
we have no precedent for "
merger to "ork w1th

run homer m the 14th for a 6-4
deciSIOn Boston made the
Yankees pay for t though
dram ed
the r
We
Sold Red Sox
bullpen
Manager Don Zm ner
They ha\ C to plav l'A o
tomorrow mght a d we re
go mg to the swunmmg poo
In other g•mes Toronto
swept Balttmore 6 2 and 9-ll
M1lwaukee ro uted Mtrmesot.a
13 6 Ch ca go outla sted
Seattle 1().6 1 exas topped
Oaklan d 3 1 and Detrott
npped Cleveland (l.l
Blue Jays 6-9 Onules 2-8
Sam Ewmg stroked a one
out pmch smgle to score Otto
Velez from second m the
mnth ex tend ng Baltunore s
los1ng streak to seven
roronto won the opener when
Dave McKay smgled
doubled Slnashed a two-run
trtple and SCOI ed tWICe
Brewers 13 T"tns 6
J.arrv Htsle rapped four
h ts nclud10g h1s 13th
homer and scored four runs
to spark a 17-hlt attack that
earned Milwaukee to ts 15th
wm m the last 20 games
Wh1te &amp;,lx 10 Manners 6
Chet Lemon helted two of
Ch tcago s fl\ e home run s
Knuckleballer Wilbur Wood
ran his rec &gt;rd to 6-5 but
needed n nt h 1n nmg rehef
help fr om R ch Hmton when
the Manners ra llied for f1ve
runs
Rru1gers 3 A s I
Run sco nn g s1ngles by
Bump W1ll s a nd J1m
Sund berg a long 11 lth the
combmed ft ve-h1t p tchmg of
Dock Elli s and Regg1e
Cleveland led fexas to ts
seventh str aigh t VIctor)
Oa kland ha s lost 16 of 19
r1gers 6 Indians I
Rusty Stau b s l'A Orun
homer htghl ghted a SIX run
f~r sl
mn ng and Dave
Rozema l-4 sca ttered mne
h1ts Loser Da\e Fretsleben
did not ret re a batter n h s
AL debut

But several formidabl e
1ssues are m the way of a
se tt lemen t wht ch would
stab thze hockey sa lartes
reduce the number of players
and trun the b1dding wars for
free agents and rooktes
Nei ther the NHI nor the
WHA players assoc1ahons
has been heard from - a s1gn
taken by mosl to mean
consent
The NHI has alread) been
reduced by one team w1th the
foldmg of the Cleveland club
nto the Mtnnesot.a franchise
•nd the Colorado Rockies
have no lease and hence no
place to pl•Y next seoson
Each of the ne'A members
would be asked to pay $1 8
m1lhon to JOill the NHL a
welcome f1 gure to some smce
nearlv eve ry club n both
leagu es lost money last

season
fhe NHI also wos believed
to be askmg for several
key pia) ers to be hooded
over to mem ber teams
the)
hold
cla 1m1n g
negottatton nghts suc h as
New England s Mark Howe
bemg sent to the Boston
Brurns
The questwn of what to du
w1th the rema mng players
fr om th e other WHA
fr anchises also was believed

to be a major toptc under
diSCUSSIOn

• Ftshrng Tackle
and Rods
and Ree ls
• Guns and
Relo ad1ng
• Ba II Glov es
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Equipment
e Ar c hery
• Indoor Ga mes
• We
have Gtf1
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�2-The Datly Sentmel Mtddleporl Pomeroy 0

Wednesd~y

3-The Dally Sentinel Mtddleport Pomeroy 0 Wednesday June 28 1978

June 28 1978

The Senate: Breeding ground for presidents
By STEVE GERSTEL
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Wtthout gtvmg a thought to
Jtmmy Carter or the
problems of plagtartSm how
many senators look m the
mtrror and dectde Why Not
The Best 7
Probably more than
anyone ever knows
The lure of usmg the Senate
as the sprmgboard for a cun
at a prestdenllal nommatwn
ts hard to rests!
Even the prospect of usmg
the vtce prestdency as an
escala!Dr stop on the wav to
the IDp has very wtllmg

recrutts m the Senate
l'he election m 1976 of
Junnt) Carter a one-term
Georgta governor who beat
Gerald Ford a congressman
who reached the White House
by •cctdenl dtd not ktll the
nouon that the Senate 1s the
b eedmg grounds
for
prestdents
In fact Carters troubles
lillY have remforced the
fee lmg among sena!Drs that
they above all others- are
quahlied to lead the country
The feelm g that the Senate
1s the best JUmpmg.(lff pomt
for a pres1dentl•l race can

eas1ly be JUSttl!ed by four of
the last f1 ve electtons
- In 1960 John F Kemedy
the JUnior sena tor from
Massachusetts defeated
Richard Ntxon who Jell the
Senate to serve two tenns as
vtce preSident
- In 1964 Lyndon Johnson
who gave up the powerful
post of Senate Demorattc
leader to be Kennedy s v1ce
pres1denl beat Sen Barry
Goldwater A R1z
In
1968
N1xon
resurrected by the GOP after
e1ght years out of politiCS
edged Hubert H Humphrey

who left the Senate to serve
as Johnson s veep
- In 1972 Ntxon trounced
Sen George McGovern DSD
And m 1976 Carter had to
fend off a field of senators Jackson Bayh Church and others to wm the
DemocratiC nommauon
A little more than two years
before the 1980 nattonal
conventwns tt seems almost
certam that more than one
senator s gomg to htt the
campa1gn tratl m search of
the nommal10n
Among Republicans much

Talk costs money--lots of it
By RICHARD SISK
UNITED NATIONS (UPI)
- The wages of peace are
runmng close to $3 milhon

thts sprmg w1lh more than
one thtrd of the money
devoted to puttmg all the

peopletalk
By KENNETH R CLARK
Uolted Press International
TYPE 0 DONOR The marquee over Baltunore s Cl\~ c
Center says It all Tomght - Alice Coper Its no m1stake
It s Coper m Baltunore because the famed but bedraggled
Sign high m the hills over Tinseltown on the West Coast now
reads Hollywod So Rock Star Alice Cooper says he s
donating one of his personal Os - along w1th $27 000 to
replace the ITllSSutg letter and make the whole thing proclatm
Hollywood once agam He s hustlmg fans for support says We aU grew up on Hollywood I thmk everyone owes
Hollywood a dollar
VJNT AGE BE'ITE The lightshow ts psychedelic the mustc
ac1d rock and the audience pure flower ch1ld The b1g event Bent Mldler poppmg fake ptlls swtlling ersatz booze
swearing rea l cuss words and belting heaV) numbers m a
llfnes of Los Angeles concerts straight out of the 1960s The
Divine Miss M IS starnng m The Rose - a mov1e about a
bluewock sm~er who JUSt mtght have been the late Jaols
Jvpllll Fans pay $2 each to a children s chanty for the
pr!Yilege of dressmg up m flowers and Jo ve beads to be extras
11 tlle concerts wh1ch are bemg filmed for the mov1e

LOST AND FOUND The Mextcan vacatiOn may have been
l~yllic but Richard Bunon and wife for got one small 1tem
when they packed for home They left thetr rented yacht
behind Kin~ Pomt Corp Nevada based yacht-renting ftrm
ln Los Angeles says the Burtons patd $1 7 1100 of the $18 000
rental cost to use the yacht from Feb 2 through Feb 16 then
abandoned the vessel m Vallarta MeXIco tnstead of re turrung
It toCaliforma The firm ts sumg for $8 SOO - the balance of the
bill plus the $7 SOO 11 took to fetch back 1ts property

FLEETING FAME Frank Sinatra hasn t done a
commerctal engagement m his old home turf m 2S years The
last gtg was 111 1%3 when he filled m over a weekend at the
Coconut Grove for another performer who became 1ll The
fans memories apparenUy are better than Old Blue Eyes
own They ve already bought out the Uru versal Amphitheater
box offtce foc his upcommg July 31 Aug 10 return to New
York - but whose place d1d Stnatra take at the Grave back m
1%3' He says he cant remember

rheton c tnlo prmt for
posterity
Budget people at the Uruted
Natwns say the1r rev1sed cost
est1mate IS $2 839 200 for the
current spectal sesswn of the
General Assembly on d1sar
mament

That mcludes $1 199 000 for
verbatim and summary
records of the meetmgs
$879 1100 for translatton and
mterpretat10n $301 000 for
reproduction and dlstr~but1on
of documents and $253 000 for
travel expenses
It doesn t 1nclude the
$1 122 1100 already spent on
the 42 meelmgs over 18
months of the 54 countrtes
on
the
represented
co nference s preparat ory
comnuttee whi ch pumped
out about 1 SOO pages worth of
agendas rules of procedure
and the hke
The grand total co mes
close to $4 million With the
Umted States p1ck1n g up
about 25 per cent of the tab as
11 does for most U N
#
expenses
•
That ftgure 1s about as
mstgmftcant as S4 milhon
ever can be when compared
wtth total U N expenditures
of more than $2 btlllon
annually and may well be a
bargam 1f the session leads to
curoo on an arms race tn
"hich more than $1 b1Uton IS
spent every day
Apart from U N expenses
for Ute special sessiOn there
are the InCidental costs to the
delegattons the US federal
government and New York
City for pr ov tdmg food
secunty Jodgmg and other

necess 11es tor the more than
500 digmtanes attendmg the
f1ve week sesston
For mstance no figures are
available yet from the ctty
comptroller s offtce on the
current seSSion but the U N
Association of the Umted
States estunates 11 costs the
ctty and the federal
government a total of about
$12 mdhon annually for pollee
protecllQII and diplomatic tax
exemptions
Th1s expenditure 1s a
lavonte target of local
pohll Cians who can be
eounted on penodtcally ID
ca 11 for ful assumption of the
costs bv the federal
gove rnment or even the
tran sfer
of
UN
headquarters out of the ctty
But the U N Assoclallon
pomts out that the benefits of
havmg the Umted Nations m
th e Un ted States far
outweigh the costs
Members of the U N
Secretanat and the U N
corps
are
dtplomattc
estunated to spend between
$150 million and $1110 milhon
m IJ"us country for offtctal and
personal expenses and $2
mtlllon more 1s spent by the
Umted Nat ons to rent extra
office space the assoc1at10n
S8ld m a recent statement
And actor Paul Newman a
U S dasarmamen t delegate
stresses th&lt;il the bottom lme
for the sesst on IS not
fmanctal but moral
What th1s whole thmg ts
about IS gettmg technology
back m the control of human
bemgs Newman sa1d If
not well 1s bon voyage

HEALTH

GUMPSES With the sounds of the b1g band era catchmg a
new generation of fans Helen Forrest - singer m days gone by
Lawrence E lamb M 0
for such maestros as Anle Shaw BellDy Goodman and Harry
James - IS warrrung up for a comeback at New York s Reno
Sweeney Jerry Lewis dropped by the Whtte House for a chat
till~ mfotllloll un "" 1 send :;o
wtth President Carter and Vice President Walter Mondale " " f( I ;;t '""I
l't!llls w h ll lung ~ta n~c..l
Tuesday after bemg handed a speCial pubhc serv1ce award for t 11 I 1 ,lloru "
"'If addressed t! llvelupc fot 11
his role as nat10nal chrurman of the Muscular Dystroph)
I
m~ 1
t.:an uf this
Assoc1at1on
OaVJd Jonas - former manager of the late
J)F Alt DR I AMil - 1 el llcwspopcr P 0 Box 1551
1'reddle Prmze - has won a court battle n Los Angeles giVIng n a d1et end I have !Jeenll) Ha d10 C ty Stat u New
him $205 1100 10 d1sputed fees from the comedian s estate
1 g l ""lk fu !0 lllllutcs a Y '' k NY 10019
Jordan s King Hussem and h1s ne" queen - the former Usa day I I ave !Jeen w~ Jkm g fu1
DF:AH Dll LAMB - I 1eod
Halaby - hale ended a week long hone) moon m Scotland fi\C lie vs end I have~ I I sl 1 ut c lumn abt utlowspc1111
where says the king We went fiShing once and I caught a a ty yet Docs I ta ke Ju 1gc1 l Junt I ha v~ a s u gKc!ttlun fu1
salmon
the c uplc II at mtght WUI k I
than 10 mu utcs e:t dt~ y
DEAR READEH It s pr &gt; kn• W f 1C couple who had "
O.blv g 111g lu t•ke " Jut slllllial pr blem and the ma1
I ngc1 tha1 y u hod a1 had ilee 1 tak1ng exll emdy
Ill poled
Welk mg ~I Cl h I sJ OWCIS App~rc! ti) ~he
By JOAN HANAUER
l~e&lt;ll had sumetlung to do" 1tl
I UU C u I a diet hd~ I Jll c
UPI Television Writer
\ ~111 I ss
f 1 usd~
(jS~ the lllon s mfe t ttllty I dun t
NEW YORK (UP11- Astronauts mthe dawmng days of the "Inch " unpu1 ta 11 WI at y 1 Jm w •iwthet th1s would help
space age may have eaten glop from tubes but that 1sn I K ~e• ll y 1\e I I I 1se wl Cl
1 11 &gt;I bu t s JU.SI" sugges
rat10ns they eat aboard the star sh1p Enterpnse
) U it.: II i1 til t'\ 1 :-~ fat It I IHHI
News of the favonte foods of the Star Trek crew - and musdc !1 add11 1 11 11 doc
OF: IH HF:A DF: R - A11d II s
even some of their Klmgon enem1es - comes from Bantam bu1 1 up ca l '' ell! f 1 u " g Kl sugges ll ut !Jeca usc
Books m a paperback tilled Off icial Star Trek Coo king odd il"m up " a yca t s II s II U I lll ex&lt;.:eS.'i h J1 1 U:tl
Manual
ause ICI hty Tle1 e I""
lilli e ll I ~~ ~ Ill~ s tg lllfl
Oddly enough tts spaced out rec1pes are solidly workable l:ant
t v~ n IJt:u ~ utht:s d 1c llp pl)
and thoughUully com piled so the nov1ce chef ca n make what
Vuu shuuldn t tlunk f the 111 ~ lu~ a 1 th~ testu:i~s as C::l
are sta ndard dishes In the repertotre or good mternational tunc t 1 t."qUircs \4 walk su m e t:tllS r birth Ul llul I
cooks
mud Hs thc dtslr:~ nt:c y u haslel t odd that these
Bantam ts the paperback company that has been making \\elk Walku ~ a mle f 1 stuUJt!!'i art t!X perlm~nWI I
money as 1f It were prmtmg 11 JUSt by tsswng the Star Trek
must people s cqulva leul I d 11 1 wart t• tngger an)
sertes that network televtston refuses to reVIve and fans refuse U.SIIIg •buul 50 I (i() caiut iCS s1 1angc f•ds that rmgll1 esuli
to forget The cooking manual IS comptled by Mary Ann lf I takes V U 10 I IIIUics I ft "' tho 1dea
Piccard from the logbook of Nurse Chrtsttne Chapel
lllc1~ tile man) n mses f r
walk a uule y u I 1ly !Jc u&gt;
It 1s dtvtded mto segments featurmg the favorite foods of the 111 g ali lUI 50 t.:H lullcs 1 her C C:t I w sp~ un ..:uunt 11 s JlllC
Federation 1which mcludes chopped chicken hvers ) of a e 3 ~cal 11es 1 a p&gt;uml ns ta1 tes the t: unt titn ~
Vulcans Romulans and Klmgons as well th ose p1cked by
JJl PI vc Ia d mothers 11 t.:an
f body f~t
mdlvldual officers from Captain Kirk to Enslgh Chekov
aol Re~!! rh1 g temptratUi e
AI that 1•te 11 ~&lt; uu ld take
• Some of the rectpes are qwte se nous - K~rk s steamed y u 70 days lu Jose ne p u 111 I mglt p nl ut tha t a
pumpkin bread Klingon Klros Ka1 Faki (p1gs feet and pea of budy fat 1f wolk ng IS •II 1a 11c cis 'A illeh IS htetall y
soup) Chekov s beef Stroganov and McCoy s plantation rice
va1 1t: sc
\t!IIIS
f the
you re gomg l d Even s
Intertwmed w1th the rec1pes are btts of Star Trek lore With thai httle effort of w~lk lt':SlH.:!t:s ISH fad I U rHUS
such as what was m tbe sandwich that Captaln s Kirk ordered mg 1ne lillie a day) u would u1 ~ stcr ill} 111 s me rntm
but the Trtbbles intercepted And speaking of Trlbbles there s get nd &gt;f ~ hllle 111 re tha1 Wh v' Beca use the 11 &gt;rmal
even a reCipe mvolvmg bread baked w1th thetr favorite gram 8&lt;!1 en p u 1ds f t&gt;&lt;h fat vel en culol l 11 keeps the tesl!des
- quadrotttrtcale - although you can substitute present-day ayCoiS! III C lf) t UI CalJJc s une'Ahat ild w 111 mal bud)
Terran approxunat10ns
lu ~&lt;alk a httle more each day tem pela "'" Will !at ge
In case any Star Trek fans wonder about the source of the &gt;f eout se you II gel more ~ iiflt.:tx..:~ les and lht: til
l ulat 1y stag nallun thctl
Kllngon rectpes - some were exchanged during a brief truce bend It out ,r 11
with Kang (when a strange outerspace beastie tried to take
th e 11 r ma l
Tl e !Jest prug1" n f 1 most ~t•su lt s
them on a trip to nowhere wtth Federation and Klingon ene people 1s a ct mil l~llun f lt!JlpCi:IUI~
t
Jtrd
mles battlmg furiously for eternity while II fed off their .sensible cxcH lsti cmd mtH.Ics me dli:u sn 1s surnct mcs ut
emotions )
Jet.luctlur 11 ~H I 1 cs When f k!liet h these I ISla I C ~S
Another source was Cyrano Jones Ute trader who first bull a e d ll
IISISIC !Jy u rrt!t l l l f h~ v(:lr t.: Kt.ic
brought Trtbbles on the scene and later showed up with a ''' a sulfll e11 Jll' l d f ITIO} II p v~ II t s~ llll
Kllngon cookbook
tun~ this usually I' ltlu..:cs lUUIII il dfe~llill\ f thc lila!
The chopped chtcken liver rectpe referred to earlier IS a ~es ult s But 11 d "' 1coqullt I v h I
favorite or Ambassador Robert Fox who was aboard when the j&gt;ct\ Cl tt: il d t et\ llt!Ci lS tiJct
I ill "' l•nn f I eat a1 d
I
II •tiel
l! ~ h t
Enterprue found ttaelf m the m•ddle of the centurles.(lld war \ UJl he" t ~ell I It lh" I f 1
4/t I \\ it
I Df1\ IIIli l i::!l
between the planets Ernlntar and Vendikar
fl\t.. Ia }~ I !:it.~ !II 1csult ~
If Ute Star Trek Cooking Manual does nothmg else 11 To );(IVt.: \ u sulh H p1 g i &lt;::UH I t l llrt h ft i \:S 14 h II
IHI
lllltt l llptlllll
proml8es the future will not be turTM'd over to the fa st food I 11 selldll g u I he Heolti
i ~d ul II hclf.J"
freaks who wouldn t know Dohlman ch tcken from Ch1cken J.eitCI IU !!Je t l
Weigh I ~ .., II
llllhl y
~ll~ht
•
J.usu g f) ct Otl&lt;t ' • "a111

TV•••in Review

depends on wha! Ronald
Reagan plans to do Should he
g1ve 1t st1ll another wlurl the
number of sena!Drtal entries
would be cut
U Reagan rides mto rettre
ment Sen Robert Dole of
Kansas ts certam to make
h1s btd The GOP S 1976 VIce
pres1denttal candidate ts al
ready the closest thmg to an
acti•e candtdate gomg
Two other posslbtltlles
f10m the party sconservattve
wm g - both with little
nattonal recogmtwn - are
Paul Laxalt of Nevada and
OtTm Hatch of Utah

Laxalt won his spurs and
plaudits from all stdes for hts
leaderslup m the ftght agamst
the Panama Canal treaty
desp1te Its ral1ficat10n Hatch
1s trymg to mtlk every ISSUe
that comes by to establish hts
credentials
The best known of the
Senate Republicans Is thetr
leader Howard Baker of
Tennessee
Baker who came close to
gettmg the vtce presldenttal
nommatton m 1968 and m
1976 has made no secret of
some day gomg alter the top
spot Dependm~ on Carter s

vulnerabtllty he mtght try
1980 or watt for 1984
Among other Republican
poSStbiltttes - aU closer to
the liberal wmg - are
Charles Percy of Illinots who
had an
exploratory
comrmttee gomg before Ford
announced he would run
Charles
Math1as
of
Maryland who In 1976 talked
of jumpmg m to gtve
Republicans
a
non
conservallve chotce and
Lowell
Wetcker
of
Connecttcut
W1th Carter m the Whtte
House
there 1s less

speculatton among
Democrats
Sen Edward Kennedy who
beats Carter and everyone
else m the polls IS always
mentioned but he steadfastly
mststs he IS gomg with Carter
m 1980 and remams content m
the Senate
All that could change
however tf Carter dectdell'
not to seek a second term or
appears doomed to defeat
Then a number of Sell8te
Democrats would wmd up 1n
front of their trurrors won
dermg
Why Not The
Best

Silver makes comeback
on Hong Kong exchange
By NANCV G COLLINS
HONG KONG ( UPI) - The
earth god smtled through a
haze of mcense at s1x roast
p1glets the Chmese Gold and
Stiver Society d~rectors
presented to ensure hts
pleasure at the openmg of the
Hong Kong s1lver market
Geomancers deemed the
day (Thursday June 22)
ausptc10us
for
new
enterprtses and Woo Han fat
chairman of the world s thtrd
largest gold market pulled
out all the stops to mark
resumption of tradmg on the
s1lver market closed smce
World War II
Some traders spent the
prevtous mght studymg gold
and stlver pnces from around
the world others pa1d
homage to the earth god - To
Da1 Gong - and everyone ate
and drank

Harrisonville
~&gt;ciety News
Mr and Mrs Bob Alkire
attended square dance
campout at Cross Lanes W
Va over the weekend
Jtmm y
Cheadle
of
Columbus 1s spendmg a few
weeks w1th h1s grandparents
Mr and Mrs Donald Weaver
Mr and Mrs Theo Hmds
Wtlma 1 of Newark Mr and
Mrs K C 1Dena Welsh Mr
and Mrs Terry ( Purle )
Krall of M1ch1gan Mr and
Mrs H R Jewell Mmers
v11le Mr and Mrs Ronald
Jewell Athens vtslted thetr
mother Mrs Leatha Co wen
and attended a ptcmc at
Sno'Aden Lake It was the
first time smce 1~ that aU
f1v e children have been
together Others who enjoyed
the p1cmc were Mr and Mrs
Leroy Welsh and fam1ly Mr
and Mrs Terry Hmds and
famtly Newark Mr and
Mrs Stevte Jewell ond
famtly Athens and Rtchard
Jewel, Athens
Mr and Mrs Joe Carsey
have moved back home to
thetr tratler from Columbus
Gathermg at the home of K
C Welsh to celebrate hts
birthday and Father s Day
were Mr and Mrs Wallie
Co llin s
and
fam1ly
Rtdgeway Mr and Mrs
Robert Welsh and famtly
Mansfield Mr and Mrs
Denzil Welsh and famtly
Rutland Mr and Mrs Leroy
Welsh and fam1l y Mr and
Mrs Darrell Napper and son
and Mrs Leatha Co"en
Nancy and Jimmy Welsh
of Mansfield are spendmg a
week wtlh thetr grand
parents Mr and Mrs K C
Welsh
Mrs Delpha Katzenback
The Plams ts VISttmg a week
w1th her stster Mrs Waldo
Neal Mr and Mrs Jack
Neal Athens and son and
Mr and Mrs Billie Neal and
fam1ly Nelsonville were
Sunda) VISitors or Mr and
Mrs Waldo Neal
Mrs Stella Atkms spent
Thursday wtth her cousin
Mrs Harold Ptckenng of
ltsbon Oh1o She also •.as
ovemtght guest of Mr and
Mrs Thurman Edwards of
East Rochester Ohto
Mrs Frances Young spent
Tuesday afternoon with Mr
Ruth Stebbms m Galltpolls
Mr und Mrs Dexter
Howard and daughter of
Washmgton D C spent a
few days With thetr parents
Mr and Mrs Elwood
Howard
A tho u ~ ht for lite day
( &lt;r&lt; raJ of tl~e Anny Douglas
Mat \J thur 111 landing 011
I• 11e Oct 20 1944 ""'d f
h•', returned By the grace
f llnught y God our fort"es
st ~nd ·~a'" 011 Ph1llpp1ne
SOIJ J

Promptly at 9 30 am the
openmg bell rang and trading
began A near record 180 of
the soctety s 195 full
members were on hand as the
floor traders led by the
chatrman hunself began the
pushmg
shovmg
and
shouting
that
typ1ftes
prec1ous metals tradmg m
th 1s Brtttsh colony
The exchange wtll trade
5 000-ounce stlver warrants
With New York as the
deliver) pomt and Irvmg
Trust Co as the clearmg
house
Silver trading will follow
the same system as gold
trading As Woo put 1t When
you have a successful
formula why change 11 and
rtsk fatlure 7
Both gold and stlver are
traded as undated futures
contracts w1th no ftxed settle
ment dates allowmg buyers
and sellers to hold postttons
open at thetr discretion
Trading methods - a cross
Chicago
between
the
Mercantile Exchange and
Custer s last stand - bear no
resemblance to
other
precious metals markets
The tradmg language ts
Ca nton ese
shouted
a
distance of mches and

Ed

remforced by body contact
and wdd hand stgnals Deals
are closed With back pats
bear hugs and neck locks
Leather soled shoes
neckties and women are not
allowed on the floor and a
glunpse from the doorway at
the roughhousing wtthm
reveals why
The Chmese Gold and
Silver Exchange IS only a
stone s throw from the
trad1twnal 19th century
street market 1n Hong Kong s
Western Dtstnct
Few tf any of the colony s I
mdllon armual tour!Sis ever
stumble upon the narrow
alley lmed w1th shtp chandler
shops where lhe 16 story
exchange stands
The exchange - trrullng
only London and Zurich m
stze - 1s housed m an
unpretentmus ground floor
room banked by dtrect
telephone lmes to broker and
dealer offwes and mobbed by
more than 100 floor traders
Stiver has moved mto a
small corner of the exchange
where traders must commute
from Ute gold area to close
prec1ous metals deals
In a qwet room two floors
above Lung Shen-!!heung the
exchanges 65-year.(lld tradt

t10nally robed assayer
worked qutetly over a
prec1s1on scale welghtng
f1ve-tael gold bars (ooe taelts
1 19 ounces) and testmg
purtty wtth an oval black
stone
He p1cked up one of 20 gold
bars - worth $22 1100 - and
rubbed tt against the stone
H1s :W years of expenence
told him unmediately the
exact purity of the yellow
metal
For Hong Kong delivery
995 fme mternat10nal
standard gold must be
refmed to 99 by one or 20
loca l licensed refmers Silver
will be easter The nchange
will accept mtemational 99:i
fmeness Stiver from any of
the 41 producers approved by
New Yorks stlver exchange
Com ex
At 4 30 p m the cloSing bell
sounded and m 10 mmutes the
floor was cleared leaving To
Da1 Gong the llngermg smell
of mcense and some red
electrtc ca ndles glowmg 111
the dusk
S1lver closed that hrst
seSSion eas1er on hght trading
of about 90 000 ounces
warranted for delivery All
!Did a qwel but auspicious
begmnlng

Asner'~ success

By VERNON SCOTT
HOLlYWOOD (UPI )
Seven or etght months ago Ed
Asner normally a gruffly
warm and amusmg man was
IUS\ plam gruff and trntable
He had grown accustomed
to Wlruttng as a costar or The
Mary Tyler Moore Show
one of the most popular
sttuatlon comedy senes m the
history of the tube For seven
years Asner had good reason
to be cheerful
Last fall he embarked on a
new ser ies an hour long
drama of a metropolitan
newspoper edttor
Lou
Grant Hts character was
the same as on Mary s show
After etght eptsodes Lou
Grant was m danger of
bemg canceled by CBS Asner
and company tn fact were
gettmg their brams beaten
out by the opposition
MTM headed by Gr$nt
Tinker backed the show With
a top budget and some of the
best brams Ul Hollywood
tncludmg liS trOika of
produt-ers Allan Bums Gene
Reynolds and Jun Brooks all
veterans of The Mary Tyler
Moore Show
The scrtpts were of high
quality production values
unstmtmg and the cast was
both attractive and gifted
But the opposttion aU but
blew the fledgling sertes out
of the pond In 1ts ftrst three
weeks the Lou Grant show
was pitted against a baseball
playoff game and two World
Sertes games
In tts fourth week the ser!es
faced the first televising of
The Godfather
followed
the next week by a
gangbuster two hour Pollee
Story
Asner back at work for the
second season of the series
looked back on those bad old
days and IICowled as only be
can
They really put us Ul tbe
dumper he said heavily It
wasn t wttll our ninth week m
the alr that we came up
agamsl
our
regular
compelltlon Family It was
the week before Otrlstmas I
remember tt well
That was the first time we
won our time slot Then In
January they moved us to
another night and we maln
tamed our htgh ratings But
what the hell wben we go

back on the atr m the fall
we U be opposite Monday
Ntght Foctball
An ex-football player tbe
muscular Asner ratsed an
eyebrow suggestmg he mtght
be turung m the footba U
games himself
But It wasn t solely the
quatity and popularity of
oppoSition shows that had
Lou Grant reelmg m the
rat111gs The show hadn t
really enjoyed a shakedown
nor found tts audtence
Maybe there wasn t a
sufflcent tune lapse between
the end of Mary s show and
the begmnmg of the Grant
show for 11 to be accepted for
whattt was Not enough time
bad passed to distmgutsh
between accepting me In the
vartations nece,ssttaled by
Lou Grant
Our show was blessed
wtth time to overcome
mtstakes Vtewers tuned ln
not expectmg a dehctous
situation comedy any longer
Some senes are canceled
before they get a chance But
we had t1me to blend as a
company of players
CBS could have cut us at
the end of 13 weeks But tbe
network wasn t having one of
tts best seasons Also tbe
compettllon blockbusters m
dicated Utat anyone m hts
rtghl mind wouldn l think
about cancelation
Tinker and the three
producers had sufficient faith
In the quality of their show
not to tamper with Its basic
mgredtents a- cheapen It wltlt
guest stars
The success of
Lou
Grant Is a triumph of
quality over expediency By
season s end It had found a
cotnfortable rating spolln the
top 30
When some of our early
shows were rerun at tile tall
end of the season we dlacov
ered that those first ones
weren t so bad after all
The show was conceived
as belng about 70 percent
drama and 30 percent
comedy give or take a little
As we progreued we realized
lite dramatic story was the
hrst conslderallon The
comedy would be a
windfall
So we found 1l happy
brtlance It s worked out very
wlf[

story

Not the least of the show s
problems and speciftcally
Asner s
was
the
transformauon of Lou Grant
from a lovable teddy bear of a
man
an
overstated
cartcature to a believable
newsman
Asked how be managed the
transition Asner grimaced
the old Lou Grant grunace of
Tile Mary Tyler Moore
Show and then let It lade
away m a grand display of
softenmg his face
I began playtng Lou less
grunacmg and more sophisticated he satd I made
him less the shy boy and not
as chauvm1sttc He has
macho m a cooler sense I had
ID stan I illmg the seven
league boots the job required
I brought him down as the
season progressed It s long
pants time It takes a lot of
maturity and respooslbthty I
found out what Mary dtd for
seven years - provide the
glue for a company of
players
Success of the show IS p
mtxed blessing to Asner He s
a btg wmner agam but he
works a bone-wearymg 12
hours a day bvedaysa week
As IaUter figure of the
newsroom Asner al.to finds
himself paterlamUtas of cast
and crew
There was a strong senae
of family on Marys show
Asner coocluded It gave
everyme a feellng of comfort
and securtty I d very much
like to develop that same
esprtt m our show

Astros clip Reds 7-4
By GARY TAYLOR

pttehes sa1d Astt os thtrd
baseman Enos Cabell H1s
stngle and double drove m
three runs and gave Astros
pitcher JQe N1ekro 54
enougl lead to w1n
N1ekt o has pttched well m
h1s last thr.ee outmgs but he
s typ1cal of the Houston
team whach IS ncons1stent
and wh•ch has fallen fa r off
the d1v1 s on lea d
Rehef pttcher Joe Sambtto
recorded hts s1xth save of the
season by stuppmg the Reds
n the f nal two mn ngs He
has bee the Astt os top
pttcher even though J R
R d a1d leads the maJor
lcab'\Jes " th Ill str keouts
Pu hl has been by fa1 the
Astros most consisten t
pi• yet and h s h It ng mulct
ca rry h1m onto the team for
the July 11 All.Stm Game To
be sele&lt;tr ! Puhl rn ~&lt;1 he

att entton to htm and
makmg hun thmk of bemg
HOUSTON (UPI ) - The selected to Ute All-Star Game
pressure ts begmnm g to next week
mount on Na tiona I League
My parents 1m Melv1lle
battmg leader Terry Puhl Saskatchewan) don t realize
the one brtght hght tn a dun what 11 s all about or even
season for the Houston what the All-Star Game IS
Astros
satd Puhl who collected a
All this publlctty ts no blg trtple and smgle Tuesday
deal says Puhl 21 I come night to help the Astros beat
to Ute ball park JUS! hke any Cmcmnatt 7-t and w111for the
other player and don t do ltrst tune m s1x games
anythtng dtfferentl y
Of the All-Star Game Puhl
Actually
though
my satd It s an honor I d Jove
teammates have been paymg to play 1wtll be disappomted
more attentiOn to me and 1fldont ~o
rtbbmg me more than Utey do
Puhl s tnple was one of
anybody else
seven h1ts the Astros used to
Puhl a native of Canada score stx runs 111 the ltrst four
who stgned wtth the Astros mnmgs Tuesday and se nd
for
$1 000
tn
1973
Reds startmg p1tcher Bill
• acknowledged that h1tttng Bonham to his second loss m
332 near the mtdpomt of the 10 deCISIOnS
season IS brmgmg more
I was ~ uess1ng Bonham s

UPI Sports Writer

chosen by Los Angeles
Manager Tom LaSorda as
one of three or four alternote
outftelders
Desp1te the paltry number
of votes turned m to the
league offt ce by the Astros
the young outfielder satd he
hked the all star voting
system
Veah when we start wm
nmg we 11 start gettmg
votes he satd
Puhl has steadily unproved
his battmg average from 240
early m the season desp1te
the league s thtrd base men
movmg m to take away h1s
dra g bunts
People are playmg me
smarter he sa1d But 1 feel
comfortable at the plate and I
am eas1ly strokmg the ball to
left held If I contmue to do
that 1 11 hit

Fidrych undergoes tests

Today's

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sporla Edllor
NEW YORK ( UPI ) - Ted Wlihams always had th1s one all
consurrung destre th1s near obsessiOn &gt;f h1s wh ch coni nuall)
bugged h1m
He wanted ID be a pttcher
One day Joe Cronm the n playmg n an •ger w th the Red
Sox fmaUy let hun p1tch m a game that was hopelessly lost and
what brmgs that back to mmd s the Monday N ght
Massacre m Toronto m which the Blue Ja ys all but cre mated
the Onoles 24-10 and Earl Weave• 111 tota l unequivocal
surrender brought m centerf~eld er Larry Harlow and catcher
coach Elrod Hendncks to p1lch
Not too many people realize 11 but Ted or gmally broke 1nto
baseball as a pttcher Croom sa1d from h1s swnme r home m
Cape Cod Tuesday
Wtlltams started as a pitcher w1th Sa n D ego but was such
a good.Jookmg httter that Frank Shellenba ck the manage r
there put hun In the ou Uteld After red ca le to the Red Sox
he d frequently pretend he was p1tch tng to an magmarv hitter
when he d wann up before a game on the s delines He was a
great pantomun1st and he d say to whoever ~&gt;as near h1m I
got two balls and one stnke on th1s guy now 'Aalch ne tlu ow
him a curve balllo'A and on the outs1de And 1fter he d tlu ow
that curve of hts he d Jump up and down Just I ke a I ttle kIll
and say D•d you see hun nuss 11
Anyway we had a btg crowd thts day 1n Boston and " e
were playmg Detrott Cron m recalled We w.re wa) be lund
m the seventh or etghth mrung and I sa1d to fed on the bench
You ve been poppmg off so much about )Our p tchmg lm
gonna put you m to pttch
Good good he sa1d He was really exnted He p1tche&lt; l
ooe mrung I beheve and I remem ber hun stnkmg out Rudy
York Pmky Htggm s smgled off htm but to the best of mv
recollectiOn the Tigers dtdn t get an) runs off red rhe f• ns
loved tt When they left the park tile) wete I liking 1bou l l1s
pltchmg rather than the beating we took
In Monday mght s contest Weaver " "' &lt;r t dzed bv Pete
Bavast the Blue Jays president and by Roy Harts! eld tl Clr
manager for turnmg the game mlo a travesty by br ng ng n
Harlow and Hendncks to p1tch but there 1s no ru le mthe book
agaiOSt 11 And Weaver had ample precedent on h1s s de
When Pepper Mart n ordmanll a third baseman wa s ~ til
Ute Cardmals Frankie Fnsch let hun p1tch 1 relief one day
agamst the Cuoo and Martin was so out of h1s element he h ~d to
be shown how to stand on the mound
Rocky Colav11D who had an arm like ocann n ca me m fff m
the outfield to pttch 111 a game for the Indians m 1958 He d1d the
same thmg when he was w1th the Yankees 10 years later
wmdmg up w111rung that contest
Hendricks had never p1tched a ywhere 1n Ius fe l&gt;efo e
gettmg the call agams\ the Blue Jays Monda) n ght
I take that back he told me from Tm onto I p1 tched a
" little softball m the Islands when I was about 14 l ears old
mea rung the Vtrgm Islands whe1 e he s ft om
Hendrtcks 37 d1dn t do that badly n hts professiOnal debut
as a pttcher g1vmg up one hit and wa lkm~ on!) 01e m 2 I 3
1ruttngs He was m the bullpen warmmg up OriOle ' ght hander
Dan Stanhouse when he was not1f1ed of hiS msta nt com erslon
In the fifth mnmg Toronto was m front 24-6 and catcher Dave
Skaggs delivered the message to Hendncks when he came to
the bullpen from the dugout
He satd to me Can you throw stnkes a 1d I told h m 1 II
try satd Hendncks
I didn thave a fmger glove so I used Stanhouse s related
the Orioles veteran recetver Alii did was go n and,throw at
the same speed I use pttchmg batting practice and hope no one
would htt 11 back at me
One of the most popular playe rs n the b1g leagues
Hendricks took a lot of goodnatured n bbmg from the other
Ortoles durmg hts pitching turn
On• of the Baltimore players urged hun to tr) tl1e hes1tat on
pttch Satchel Patge helped make fomous
I told him no I can l do that sa1d always consc~ent ous
Elrod Hendncks 1know I m not a pitcher but I d1dn t rea lly
Utlnk 11 was a joke

Cll VEl \ ND tUP I M Irk I he Bird F'1drych
"ho has been Sidelined w1th a
sot e arm smce Apr 1 17 wa s
adnutted to Lenox Hosp1tal m
New Vork l'uesday for tests
an I possible treatment the
Amer ca n J.eague team sa td
here
Ihe 1 ge ts sa1 d F'1drych
the AI Rookie or the Year 111
197f. ~&lt;as to rctw n to Detrml
I ller tod a) afte t be ng
eleased frt 1 the New York
hosp1tal
F drych was sent to New
York by the team to be
ex un ned by Dr M a ur~ce
Cowe ll the Yankees team
phys clan who successfully
treated Yankee p1tcher Don
Gul lett for a sumlar aliment
F!dt)Ci who spent most of
the rnonU m F lorida soakmg
up sun n effotls to heal h1s
shoulder ongmall) had been
sc hedul ed to fl y to I os
Ange les Jeter thts week to
vtslt Dr Frank Jobe another
orthopedic spec1a list
01 Jobe fe els Gullett s

atlment wa s somewhat
Simi lar m loca tion to
Mark s satd T1ger General
Manage r Jtm Campbell
And smce Dr Cowen had
such good results wtth
Gullett we dec1ded to send
Mark ID see htm
In treatmg Gullett on May
22 Cowen used massage
and ma mpulat10n of the
shoulder
Gullett a lefthander began
throwmg after the treo tment
and wtthm two weeks slatted
h1s first game In hiS last
start Sunday m Detro1l
Gullett held Detrott to two
hits pitched 7 2 3 mmngs and
picked up h1s th1rd wm
w thout a loss
Campbell sa 1d Ftdry ch
who has a 2.j) reeord thiS
season and was 6-4 last year
after postmg a 19 9 mark m
h1s rookie year was giVe n an
orthogram a test m whtch
dye 1s nJect ed mto the
shoulder ar d X ravs taken
Campbell satd the results
were perfect

Sports briefs
ORONO Mame iUPll Douglas K Btggs 33 of cape
Eilwbeth has been named
head so&lt;cer coach and grad u
ate •ss •stant 111 ph ys ca l
ed ICatton at the Um1 ers1ty of
M 11 n!.! 1t Orono It was
11
1 cd 1ucsd y
SAN FH I NCISCO UPI I 1hl S 111 Fra nnsco 49ers
1 uesday Sl ~ n e d guard Walt
0 wn11~ uf Michigan their
second " und draft chm(e
HIS s1gmng brought the
nu t her of dr tftees s1gned to
e1~ht
fr Jill the f1rst s1x
011! ds of thiS year s NF I
dr tft
NEW YORK I UP! - fhe
Nell York Mets SW lpped a
pa1r of r ght-handed pitchers
Witt thell 1tdcwoter f II m
ch b l'uesday se ndmg M1ke
B uhert to the Intern 11onal

League team and recalling
Tom Hausman
Bruhett appeared m 13
games I or the Mets th1s
season postmg a l.,'i record
a nd a 4 97 earned run
a1erage Hausman the ftrst
free agent ever Signed by the
Mets was :&gt;-2 at Tidewater
w th a I 22 ERA m 10 games
A1LANTA (UPI ) - Los
Angeles Manager 1 ornmy
J.asorda ca llin g himself the
second greatest optumst 111
lustory sa1d Tuesda) he 1s
com meed hts Dodgers are
the best m the Natwnal
League and wtll wm the
pen 1ant for the secon d
straight year
The Dodgers curren tly are
n th~rd place 111 the National
League West s1x ganes n
back of diVISion leadmg San
Franc 1sco and three and a
ha lf belund Cmcmna t

NHL considering expansion
By RICHARD L SHOOK
UPI Spuns Writer
DE1ROIT !UPI) - The
Nat10nal Hockey League IS
earnestly co ns 1d e nn g
expansiOn to mclude four
World Hockey AssociatiOn
fra nchises
There are no agreements
yet Prestdent John Z1egler
of the NHL sa1d Tuesday
after emergmg from more
than 16 hours of talks directed
toward what one mar called a
bottom lme marnage of
the established league wtth
four of the more entrenched
members of the younger
league
Z1egler declmed to dtsclose
the tdentllles of the
franchi ses or even the
number mvolved but 11 was
lea rned they are Edmonton
Wtmtpeg Quebec and New
England
Th e tw o parties are up
aga mst a dead! ne of 4 p m

R u d.,1 s sIam
sinks Royals
By MIKE TULJ Y
UPI Spurts Wrtters
If Joe Rud1 keeps starts
h1tl1n g the way he htt
Tuesda)
mght
when
Ca hlorma beat Kansas City
5-t the Angels could begm to
11 ove m the Amertcan
Leag ue West
Rudt m red m a season
long slump belted o IWO.()Ut
pmchh1t grand slam m the
se venth 1nmng to help
C&lt;t hforma break a five game
losmg streak
Rud1 s home run hts ftrst
smce April 13 and thtrd of the
season came on a 3-2 pitch
from Steve Mmgort 1 2 n
rehef of starter Denms Leo
nard who walked the bases
loaded m the seventh
I ve been strikmg out so
much lat~ly I JUSt wanted to
tr) to hit the ball satd Rud1
who never even heard the
O\ at10n of the crowd
After I htt the home run I
JUSt went through the bench
shook everyone s hands and
went strrught to the locker
he satd I was JUSt as happy
bemg on the bench tomght
I ve been a total loss to the
tea m
Tom Gnffm registered hi S
fJrst AL vtctory after tilt ee
losses wtth four tnnm gs of
shutout rehef an d Da ve
LaRoche hurled the fmal two
nnmgs for his e1ghth save
In Ne ~ York the Yankees
solvaged a spht of the1r tw o
game sertes w1th the Red Sox
when Gra1g Nettles h1t a tw o

SC IOTO RESUI TS
CO l UMB US I UP I I
Bruce Rtegle gu1ded rami
Alm a hu rs t to a one ha lf
VIcto r)
ove r
length
Justalease m the featured
etghth race Tuesday mght at
Sc10to Downs
Tam1 Almahurst cove red
the rmle m 2 03 2-,'i and
place wtth the Mtddlepon re turned $3 20 $2 20 and
lndw ns A sho wdown be $2 20 Justalease pa1d $2 80
tween the two teams Thur and $2 whtle Grandma Wall
sday w11l dec1de the second came m th rd and returned
$2 20
pla ce team
North Fork Creed won the
H tung fu r Mtddleport " ere
f~r;t
race ktckmg off a 6-7-,'i
John Bal ke t HR J Chns
tr1fecta
com b nat1on that was
Burdette ltnple)
Bob
wortlt
$3
528 9Q Jeame Dawn
St uthern Shawn Baker John
was
second
and Lang Boy
Blake frey Cassell Ca rl
thtrd
Moodtspaugh John Bacon
A crowd of 4 083 wa gered
a ul Joey Poulms all smgles
$25!485
Dave Hcndr~ cks had both
smgles for the on ly two hit s
lor the Bobcats
Bobcats 024 100- 7 2 4
Braves
244 43x- 17 13 0
In another llttle league
ga me Monday the Pomeroy
Yanket!s defeated the New
Hav en Clubs 6-5
Scott Hamson co llected the
wm and Bradley the loss
Harnson fanned seven and
walked four whtle Bradley
fanned nine and walked I'A O
Hilt ng for the Yankees
1
were Jon Perru two homers
Scott Harrtson one homer
and one t rtpl e Rhett
Mtlhoan.. a trtple John
Effec tive rate w th cam
Ae1ker Davtd Roush Bnan pound
ng 6 66 per cenr
Willis each had singles
Htllers for the Cubs were N netv day nteres t penalty
f
w thelrawn
Detore
Johnso n
Dawson a nd matu..ly date
Rolhns
In Pee Wee actton Todd
Hysell of the Powell s tea m
ptlched a no hitter agamst
the Ptzza Shack club Todd
fanned 14 and walked just one
batter Artte Hurmel ond
Brya 1Tannehill combmed to
The Atnens county
st nke out 13 and 1ssuc 4 ba se
Sa v ngs &amp; Loan Co
W Man Sl
on balls
Pomeroy Oh o
lhtters for Powell s were
Mark Cnrbttt Bryon Ingels
Greg F1elds Todd Hysell and
Terry Newsome all smgles
Powell s
000 50--li 6
Pi zza Sha&lt; •
tlljO ~ 0

Summer league results
Hy Debbie Hoff
In l•ttl e leag ue act 1011
Mond 1y the H •rnso t vtlle
Bt beats wcr&lt; defea ted by the
~h d dl e port !Jraves 17 7
lames ACree was th e
~ nmng p!l(her and Dave
Hen d11cks the lose• Acree
and SJ 1wn Baker cornbu ed
t fa1 I I walk 2U 11 d yte lrled
on l) two h1ts Dove Hen
dt tcks st uck out seven
'Aalkt'li etght a nd penmlled
13 h ts
! he Vlltory for the B1aves
kecp.s them m a t 1c ror second

INTEREST
On Certificates
Of Deposit
1,000 M1mmum

1 Yr. Term

•

THE DAILY SENTINEL

DEVOTED TO THE

~

INTEREST OF

MEIGS-MASON ARF.A
ROBERT HOEFUCH
CUy E4l\ur
W. ly u ep1. S..turdiY
lil r ltl 0 1 u V11lt!y Publ•tun~
( Opli y Mull ~ILII I c
Ill
t.:ouM St I \Ill frvy Oh u 4~7118
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tit u 11 dus pu!ilall(e p;ftd II
l 'oln~ruy 01 o

I ulJ

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!.

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AliJIOO~l~.!l 310
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ut IIVMilibl~ ()nt monlh
£1 1:5 By w 11 Dhlu11nd W VM
Lilt! Y~11r Jt2 00 Sue tnunt.hal
I I ~ Threr mnth1 J1 00
~:L t'Whfrt&gt; tlt 10 y~M r st. nunlh.l
JI J $0 T lrllr 1 u 1th11 11 SCI
Sui !lt ripUun prll" Ulll~ll SundiY
Ta r:.-Stntlrttl
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56020

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ACE

PLASTIC PIPE &amp; FITIING
ACE
COPPER PIPE &amp; FiniNG
GALVANIZED FITIINGS
HARDWARE
Metgs Plaza

ED r wher WHA ·wanled tm
muntly from legal achon
agaiOSt the four applicants
runs out Negotiations were
to begm aga m at 9 a m
It s as clear as a muddy
lake a weary but not
dejected General Manager
Chff Fletcher of the Atlanta
Flames sa 1d as he trudged
from the last meetmg One
wa) or the other we should
know by Wednesday
Ziegler sa•d earl er m the
day wl en he first ~dmttted
the tw o leag ues were
conversmg As all of you
probably rea hze by no" we
are havmg meetmgs w1lh the
WHA face to face
We re work1ng to see
whethe r or not the NHI
should expand he sa d f
say expand because we have
precedent for expansiOn and
we have no precedent for "
merger to "ork w1th

run homer m the 14th for a 6-4
deciSIOn Boston made the
Yankees pay for t though
dram ed
the r
We
Sold Red Sox
bullpen
Manager Don Zm ner
They ha\ C to plav l'A o
tomorrow mght a d we re
go mg to the swunmmg poo
In other g•mes Toronto
swept Balttmore 6 2 and 9-ll
M1lwaukee ro uted Mtrmesot.a
13 6 Ch ca go outla sted
Seattle 1().6 1 exas topped
Oaklan d 3 1 and Detrott
npped Cleveland (l.l
Blue Jays 6-9 Onules 2-8
Sam Ewmg stroked a one
out pmch smgle to score Otto
Velez from second m the
mnth ex tend ng Baltunore s
los1ng streak to seven
roronto won the opener when
Dave McKay smgled
doubled Slnashed a two-run
trtple and SCOI ed tWICe
Brewers 13 T"tns 6
J.arrv Htsle rapped four
h ts nclud10g h1s 13th
homer and scored four runs
to spark a 17-hlt attack that
earned Milwaukee to ts 15th
wm m the last 20 games
Wh1te &amp;,lx 10 Manners 6
Chet Lemon helted two of
Ch tcago s fl\ e home run s
Knuckleballer Wilbur Wood
ran his rec &gt;rd to 6-5 but
needed n nt h 1n nmg rehef
help fr om R ch Hmton when
the Manners ra llied for f1ve
runs
Rru1gers 3 A s I
Run sco nn g s1ngles by
Bump W1ll s a nd J1m
Sund berg a long 11 lth the
combmed ft ve-h1t p tchmg of
Dock Elli s and Regg1e
Cleveland led fexas to ts
seventh str aigh t VIctor)
Oa kland ha s lost 16 of 19
r1gers 6 Indians I
Rusty Stau b s l'A Orun
homer htghl ghted a SIX run
f~r sl
mn ng and Dave
Rozema l-4 sca ttered mne
h1ts Loser Da\e Fretsleben
did not ret re a batter n h s
AL debut

But several formidabl e
1ssues are m the way of a
se tt lemen t wht ch would
stab thze hockey sa lartes
reduce the number of players
and trun the b1dding wars for
free agents and rooktes
Nei ther the NHI nor the
WHA players assoc1ahons
has been heard from - a s1gn
taken by mosl to mean
consent
The NHI has alread) been
reduced by one team w1th the
foldmg of the Cleveland club
nto the Mtnnesot.a franchise
•nd the Colorado Rockies
have no lease and hence no
place to pl•Y next seoson
Each of the ne'A members
would be asked to pay $1 8
m1lhon to JOill the NHL a
welcome f1 gure to some smce
nearlv eve ry club n both
leagu es lost money last

season
fhe NHI also wos believed
to be askmg for several
key pia) ers to be hooded
over to mem ber teams
the)
hold
cla 1m1n g
negottatton nghts suc h as
New England s Mark Howe
bemg sent to the Boston
Brurns
The questwn of what to du
w1th the rema mng players
fr om th e other WHA
fr anchises also was believed

to be a major toptc under
diSCUSSIOn

• Ftshrng Tackle
and Rods
and Ree ls
• Guns and
Relo ad1ng
• Ba II Glov es
Camptng
Equipment
e Ar c hery
• Indoor Ga mes
• We
have Gtf1
Cer1111cates
601 Matn St

PI Pleasant W Va

Across from Courthouse

PHONE
675 2988
Open Sun day I p m 6 P m

Monday thru Saturday

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�•

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•
ii-The Daily Senti~ei,_Middleport-Pomer y, 0., Wednesday, June 28,1978

4- The Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 .. Wednesday , June 28, 19i8

•

Phils zncrease
lead to 2 ·games
By B! l.J., MADDEN
UPI Spurts Writer

Now that he's back with a
contending team Dick
Ruthven can "t resist a few
parting shots at the guys he
left behind.
Ruthven scattered seven
hits in shuttin g out the
Montreal Expos , 14l, Tuesday
night for his second win in
three starts sinrt' corning
over
the
fi rst-place
Ph •ladelph•a Phillies from
th e last-place Atlanta Braves
on JUI1e 15 Greg Luzinsk1
acrounted for the gan1e"s
ooly rUI1 with h•s 17th homer
in the se1·enth inning.
"I always sa1d I"m a much
better pitcher than my record
shows - especially in the
seasons I spent with the
Braves. " said Ruthven, who
has allowed only three earned
runs in hls three starts for the
Phillies . .. , used to pitch my
best but I never knew when
somrone was going to mess
up behind me ...
Rulhren . ~-7, spent two
depressing seasons with the

lastiJla cc Braves after being
traded away by the Phil lies m
the winler of 1975. As bad as
the Bra\'eS have been.,
ho wever. Ruthven mainl&lt;lins
the\' have one bright spot.
.:, still think Phil Niekro is
ooe of the fi ve best pitchers in
baseball, .. sa id Ruthven .
"Bu t you'd never know it.
looking at his record with the
Bra ves . Here's a gu)' who has
always pi tched his heart out,
but what does he have to show
for it. Yes sir. it sure is great
to
be
back
with
Philadelphia ."
The Phillies" victory increased their lead in the
Nat ional l,eague East to two
games o1·er Chicago and
three over ~l ontreal.
Elsewh ere in the l'ational
League. ;&lt;ew York beat
Chicago. 1-2, Si. Louis swept
Pittsburgh. 241 and 6-1 , Los
Angeles blanked Atlanta , 341.
Houston put away Cincinnati.
i-4 . and San f rancisco routed
San Diego. 9-1
G•an ts 9. Padres I :
\"1da Bl ue pllcht'd a SIX·

Iutter for his· fifth straight
1·1ctoq while th e G1ants
me rea sed their NL \\'est lead
lO 21 -z games over Cincmnati.
Blue, lH. struck out three
and walked four. Gaylord
Pe rrY. 6-3 . took the loss.
Cardinals 1.0, Pirates 0.1 :
George Hendrick drol"e ·in
lwo runs w1 lh a homer and a
single and Jerry Mwnphrey
had a pair of RBI singles in
the nightcap. Tite Cardinals
took the opener behind the
rombint&gt;d shutout pt,tching of
Pete Vuckol" tCh and Buddy
Schultz .
Dodgers 3. Braves 0:
Ron Ce1· blasted a threerUI1 homir m the seventh
mning, his ninth , and Doug
Rau pttch ed a seven-httter.
Ius first shutout and sixth
comp lete ~ame
MNs 1, Cubs 2:
John Stearns hll a threerW1 homer and Pat Zachry. 93, fired a six-hitter to spa rk
the ~l ets . Steve Henderson
drove in two runs for the Mets
w1th a double and a sacrifi rt'
Oy .

••••••• •••••••
••••• ,••_
__
•••

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD
M~1 o r

N e~lt ona l

tenn lS

He !a1er played e1ght years
of sem1 -pro foo tba ll and
seren \·ears of .sem1 -pro
ba ket"" ll for the Da)100

Triangles. He also was a
dentist and a referee for the
National f ootball League.
the B1 g Ten an d Oh1o
Conference.
In 19H. while refereeing an
Armv-:\ otre Dame ga me.
R.,..;, can1e up on the sh ort
end of a collision with the
Arm~ 's j)J werfu l rW1ner , Doc
Blanchard. and suffered a
dislocatt&gt;d arm and torn leg
ligaments .
Whe n Reese began l ea dm~
the MA C m 1!!46. the league
consisted of only five teams
- Butler. Cincirutau. Ohw I.; ..
Wayne Sl&lt;lte and Western
ReServe. From the on gtna I
fi1·e. only Oh1o U. remams as
a member wday .
Dun ng Reese"s re~ gn.
Miami. Western ~l i ch1gan.
Toledo. Kent State and
Bowling Green were added as
members.
Since Reese ·s retirement m
1964. Ball State, Cemra l
Michigan. Easte rn Ml chtga n
and \ orlhern llhn olS ha ve

Sport s

T rans act•on ~

Bv Un 1ted Pr eH lnternaltona l
TuesdiY
sa ~~ bal l ~

Sean e
l oo k. p tt cller R-c lo.
Honeycu'l o ff Tnt:' d tSab lec ~ '

W L

Ph d a
Chtc ago
Mon!real
Pttrstlrgn
St

oas.•:· r ar Jan· es Oa · o
•t t' r ~ " I Jrdl ' ( !"IO •C{~ Onlrf?-a l
S qneo Mana qf:'T
D c lo. ·N ,d ...,.,., ·c ne .... two , t'&lt;H

r-, e .._, Y orO.. v(lr lo. ees
~econo o a,t-rr~n h
'~"&gt;e

: · oa 1 o

tl• e

aceo
Ra n

sao 1ea s:
retro.! C' ... e
JJ neand
call e-d v c ca tere-r M •J.;e Hea tr.
10 1 11., &lt;;'!opt'' on •nt- ro~lf'r
Pro Footba l l
;::ranc•~co
),gned
San

ao l o~

or

P

·o

n

oo ...

, d1

e..Col le ge
S QI"'E'a
as r. e-ac oas k. e• d t

A. uour,...
S~T~•Il'l

Tu-Endu;-We1 Truma n. a
ma le· bea ~ le own ed by
Fra nk!tn Wilson of Rac1ne.
too k f1 rst place at the Salt
Cree k Beagl e Cl ub l..lcensed
Tnal held at Zanesville. Ohw.
last Saturda ,· m the !5" ~! a l e
Cla ss m a field of 23 dogs.
Truman now needs two
more "ms tn ltcensed tnals
and a t"lal of 120 pomts to
became a F teld Champion.

lor

,,...o

.ear ~

1-1ar~ ara

.'.O PO·"'f'd Pe•er

Rafrr ona ... eao ... orr~ s crev.
t1 ' ~~ar ~MO •ttf' 1as1 thret
,ear s •c coac ~ .~, e-r s ..,,1f~ · ,
l1g r1J wP qt-t . re .,.,

co a cr

1

507

]

..186

~·

W L P el .
Ang
San Ote&lt;_:!O
HOU'1i10n
~tlanla

CiB

lO 16

6l~

'](I

603

~ ~.

.tO 3~
35 38
31 38
19 . 1 1

~56

b

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LO~

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J'2 7 9
373 11

18 4}
w est

San F"ra n
Cinc1 Mh

-

J19 11 ' ./

J.t9 13 1

•

Jl J l b
Tu e sda y · ~ Res ults
N ew York 1, C!'l tcago ?
St lOUt S 2. P 1 ll~bg h 0 lSI
St LOUt} 6, P 11!Sbgh 1 1no
P htl adelph .a 1 Montrea t 0
LOS Angel es 3. A! lant(l 0
H ou~t on 7, c ~ nctnnat • -'
Scm Fran ct sco 9t Sa n 0 •(&gt;90 1
Tocsa y' s P ro bab le- P ttchen
! A ll Ttme ~ EDT )
New Yort.:. ( t&lt;oo~ man 1 81 a!
Ch 1CclQ O ( Holtz an 01 1, 1 30
pm
Ph dadelph ,a {Lon borg 6 51 a1
Montr e a t 1Sch at zf'de r 1 OL 7 35

om

St Lou•s I Mart .nez 2 31 a!
P ittSbu rgh {8 1btl V 5 J ). 7 35

pm
LOS Angeles I HOOIOn 6 6 1 &lt;II

Atl a nta ( N ie k.ro 8 81. 7 35 P m

C•nc• nnat t { Nor man B 4) at
Hou~ton ( O p( on J 3 ) 8 JS p m

San F ran C1'1iCO ( Barr 3 J and
Wd l, am s 1 OJ a t San D •ego
1Jone!l. S 6 and Ra'lmussen J 1
1 9pm
T hu r sda y ' s Gam es

AI·
thou!\h the Milwaukee Bucks
feel "cramped by the small
capacll) of the Milwaukee
Arena . the team sars it has
agreed to play in the arena
through the 198UJ season
"The Bu cks were born 1n
\l1lwaukee. they were ra1sed
m ~ll l•·aukee 31\d t ~)" wlll bf
m ~1 1l w aukee as long as the
cit\ want&gt; us and the fans
•·ant us.· Jun Fiugerald.
pres1dent of the Bucks, sa 1d
Tuesda\' The arena seats
only 10.938 and IS one of the
smalle~t '" the lea~ue .

I.OS ANGELES t UP! •
Williams, the Los
Tommy
Soccer
Kings ' scorm g
Co l or aac
QefTloved Dave Angeles
C l e~"'""er' ~ a!! ~eaa coa ch
leader for a lefH•tn ger,
Sa f'l JO~t'
Reteaseo ll• ta
M1' •C d"d 0 01a •necl for'lrarc s1gned a multi-year con tra ct
Do uq 1.,• dr • from Ci) ca go St na Tuesda; w1th the Los Angeles
To ta lo; e n s plan•
Kmgs.
Pr o Buke tba ll
Cn•c ao o
Soqn e--d t ree agen·
Terms of the part •·ere not
c en l ~r L _,p f' '.' o•• n
disclosed .

Str ikeouts

Nat•onal Lea9ue : R i c.ha r rJ ,
Hou Ill: Niek.ro . All
102 ,
N.onle t usco . SF 100 . Seaver ,
Cui ;me Slue, SF 94

Ame n can League : Gu id ry ,
118 .
Ryan , Cal 11"3 ;
Flan agan , Ball 83 , Le-onard . KC
78 Tanana . Cal 69
NY

Ma,or League Resuns
B y Uni ted Press Internationa l
Nari onal Leaguellsl gam el
St L
100 100 OOD-- ] 5 0

P1Sbgo

ooo ooo ooo- o 1o

11nd gam e )

6 10 1

1 90

LOS Ang

Falcone .
Stmmons

Li ttell

E as t

W L Pe l .
51 21 o99
~ ~ JO
583

Bost on
New Yor~
M tl wauk e
Ba l t 1mr e

Detro •'
Clevelnd
Tor on!O

GB
8' .

Jl

3\

so~

10

.tO
35
37
15

JJ

5J8
500
J5 7
J.H

11 1 •
15
18

35
38
J7

76

w e-st

Texas
'( an ( , tv

W L P el.

CB

535

I

Cil lt f

39 32
38 J)
37 36

SJ9

OaKiano

35 38

507
J 79

5

Cn •cag o

33

39

A58

6 .

M •MSOia

30 J l
26 49

J])

3

9
15

3J7

T ues d ay ' s Res ult s
Tor on to b. B&lt;lll more 1 1st
Toron to 9 Ball more 8. 2na
N Y 6 Boston J \J -nn'!.
Oetro •t 6 . Cl eve tano 1
M 1l wa ul&lt;.ee 13 M 1nnesota 6
at. torn i a 5 t&lt;a ns.n C ''Y J
Texas 3. Oa 1\ land 1
Cn1C a9o 10, Seattle 6
Tod ay ' ~ Pro bab le P t1CI'I ers

&lt;

L e ad er~

Bathng
( B a sed on 17S a l ba ts I
N i lt o n~ I L e ag ue

G. A B
Punl Ho v
Burrogr.s 4• 1

61156
65 11S

Md dloc !o. S F

53 lq6

os

Smdr. LA
Pa r ... er P.l
LOP~~ l A

198
68 tiO
OJ 1'19
69 156 79 ) ()q
o9 26.: 81 307
69 131 11 ' 301

Gr !f e-y Ctn

1J

21~

7~ 5

)J

(IIH~ S F
Cncpc ,on C.n
.\' 1"' 11 e-l d SF

Ame nc an L eaque

GABHPc t .
66 7J8
1J 30)
69 ] J6
oto ne

85 ) ,.IJ
98 313
79 321
73 no

J a c k!.O" Ca l

51 t16 56 )18
56 190 b() 31 6

L ynn Bo~

66 i.t \

7b 315

Carew M1n

R•c e SO$
Rt' vno l d~ St' a
)vnooerg Tell:
C!.lbb age Mtn

51 195 ol 313
191 61 l1l
&amp;a / b-1 81 )11
Ho me Runs

Coo per M •t
Le1 cano ,\ ',d
Be ll Cle
N ~t i Of!il

b()

leil g ue •

lU1JnS J.; I

F0'3le r
Ctn
( •f"1Qmdn Cn • 15 foo'\Onoil r

Phd

17

P ar~er

1J

P 11 ana

I

16
LA
n t ,eld S O

Amertcan Lea g ue .Rtce Bo'3

13 Bay lor
Det ana
Murr

a..,

Cal 18
Tnoma ~

Tho m ()\Of"1
Mil 17

Ba it 16
R: uns Bat1e d In

Nattonal Lea qve FOSler C•n
53

,\' n l te ld

SO J8

Monta nez

NY dnd Cl ark . Sf:: ~ 7 Morgan .
Ce-y ana GcHYey L A anc
Lut •nS. t.:. • Prul J.6
Amer. un League . R1ce So s
67 St a vo Det 5 1 Tnomps.on
Dt&gt;l ..19
Mvrra y
Bait and
Hooson Bo !i. .s8
~ t olen

B asu

N al to na I Le- a gue
Moreno
P '' 36
Cedeno
Hov 1J
Taver&lt;!IS P It 11
Lopes L A

ana

Q •cr.aras.

Reu~~ .

Wh 1tson {11,
Ham 111on (.S l. Jac kson (8) and
Over
w- Falcone ( 1 5 ). L Re uss ro 1 J HR - San D•ego .
He-n dr~ t k 16 1

.t0 110000l - 7100
000000101 - 2 60
( 9 31 ana
Srt-arns
La m p , (re,sel 1-0 , M cGlo th en
161, Moor e ( 9 1 ana Raaer L
Larnp ( 2 9 1 HRs New York .

NY
Cli •
Za ch r 'f

SO 10

1
t

2, 0

I

,...

000 000 ooo- 0 7 0
Rurnven ana Boon e , Dues
Garman (8 ) and CarTer W-

~

Mll

Rutnven ( J 1J. L - Oues ( 1 4 )
HR
Ph d adetpt1 i a, LUl lnSio.l

getE&gt;S .

Cey ( 9 )

(,ne t

001 000

Joo-

no 200 Qlx -

HOVS

s0

J

8ont1dm BorbOn ( ) ) To ml in
( 7 1 Sa r m 1ento ( 8 1 and

Werner

Corre ll ! 8 )
N1ekro . Samb lt.o
18 1 dnO F erguson W N •ek.r o
15 J L Bonh am 18 l )

Sa n Fran
San [)go

001100 51(}- 9 16 1
000 010 000- I 6 I

ana

B1ve
K •nne..-

(7 t

Saae-k
Pe-rr y.
Wil ey ( 8) and

Roberts W - Biue ( ll 4 ) L
Perry (8 J l HRs - San Franc •s
co (l ark. ( 9 1 McCovey [ b )

RIO TE AMMATES OF MORE THAN 50 YEARS AGO REUN ITE - Pictured here are
four ex-Rio Grande College athletes who played for the Redmen more than 50 years ago.
Left to right. they are: Clark (Guy 1 Baker. Dana Stor y, Chester Hannahs and Ralph
Doonally .

Am encan L eague
1 1&lt;&gt;1 gamel
Ba ll
Tor

010 001 000- i J 0
010 23000x 611 0
Pa lme r ana De mpsey . Le
m an ct)' k Cr uz (7) and AShby
W
Lemanc ly k ( 2 9 ) L
Pa lmer ( 10 6 1 HRs - Sa ll 1mor e
Mur rav {l b l To ron to . Mavt&gt;er

ry 113 1

( 14

tnR1 ng ~ l

Bo~ton

OIX)

002 100 000 00- J l..t 0

N ew Yorio.
011000010 00002 - 6 l J 0
Wr • ~t~ n l
B v rgm e i er () l
B S1an1ey Il l Campoe ll l &amp;l.
Drag o 10 ) ana F •Sk Gu,ory
C,.o~s age
&lt;7
Ly l e 112 ) ana
M un!tOn
W Ly le (6 11 L
Drago r "] i
HRs - Ne,.. Yor'
Net tle~

t il l

Oet
Cleve
Rozem c\

600 000 000
000 100 000
c\nd Ma y

6 II 0
I 91

Fre •s

1eoen Reu!l c hel Il l. Kern (7
&lt;Y.onge 9 J ana Al ell.lna e-r W
Roz em a t3 J J L - Fre osl eben (0
1 HRS 0t'lrO i1 S.t aub 110

M•nn

10 1 100 11'()-- 6 \3 1
022 011 S1 K 13 17 1

M rl to~·

Go lll Man.na ll (6 ). Harr 1son
(6
ano
N ynegar
Haa s
Rep l og le IJ J and Mar hn e1 WRep )og le \ A 11 L - Volf z ( 55
HR~ M 1l wau k.ee
H•!ol e f lJ .
Oa•ns f 4 1

Four ex-Redmen reunite
after more than 50 years
COLUMBUS - Bonds of
fr~endsh1p that were formed
when thev were teammates
at R10 Grande College in the
early 1920s were rene wed
wtth a breakfast at Bob
E\•ans Restaurant m Worthmgton last week .
Meetmg for the first tune m
more than 50 years were
Clark 1Guy 1 Baker, Dana
Storr . Chester Hannahs and
Ral ph Donna ily.
When thev f1rst came to Rio
Grande , Baker was from
\" mton , Story from Cheshire,
Donnally (rom Bidwell and
Hannahs from Cambridge.
from Cambridge, along
w1th HannahS , came Lou
Boyd, Ius pal. and one of lhe
greatest all-around athletes
1al ong
w1th Raym ond
Alhson , that Rio Grande ha s

K(

013 000 000- 4 q 1
000 100 40-.:. - S 6 0
Leon ar a M •ngor ' ( 7) a nd
Porler
Br ett . C.r ttl .n t J. ,
La Rocne t 8 and 0owfltn9 'II
Gr 1ff •n 1 31 L M •ngor • I I 2
HRs l(ansao; Ct-y , Ot 1s 111 1

Calt t

Mc Rae

9

Ca1ttorn 1a ,

A m er.c an L eil t;~ ue : Wil son
1&lt; C ?8 Otlone Oak ana Cruz
Sea ?5 Le ~ l ore Oet and Will s

l

100 000 000
Clevel and
l9

Thur sday, Ju ne- 29 thru Jul.,. 1
We Gladly Acc •pt Fed . Food S1amps
Monday thru Friday

l :OO t it i :OO
Satur~y

9 :0M :OO
CL OSED
SUNDAYS

PORK AND BEANS ~~~~
PAPER TOWELS SCOTT .
GRAPE JELLy SMUCKERS
POTATO CHIPS DAN DEE
PEANUT BUnER JIFF Cmmv or Chunky
MARGARINE

4 ""'

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Roll

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ana Ess •an w- Ell 1s 0 3

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people in the county learn if
they are eligible for food
stamps.
The group embarked upon
the plan after learnin~ that
only about half of the 14,000
residents eligible for food
stamps were receiving them .
Attorney Peter B. Sessa of
the Southeast Ohio Legal
Service program said the
group is made up of

OOLJ:IIBUS (UPI ) - The
Ohio r.enera! Assembly, still
une&lt; in of its fiscal impact,
has r ..;sed and sent to Gov.
James A. Rhodes a bill
granting a 5 percent state
income tax credit for
homeowners who make more
than
$300
worth
of
improvements on their
property in one year.
The bill, aimed at
encouraging upgrading of
neighborhoods, cleared the
House Tuesday with only
three votes to spare. The
Senate then quickly agreed to
amendments drasti cally
watering down the scope of
the tax relief program.
Passage of the bill helped
pave the way for· an
agreement on a conference
committee report on a
supplemental appropriation
and school financing bill, and
subsequent legislative
adjournment for the summer.
But even with the House
changes . diluting
the
program, state revenue loss
estimates varied from $3
million for the current budget
period to almost $10 million
for a full year.
The House attempted to
limit the credits to persons
who genuinely improve their
properties to increase their
value, not just fix broken
windows or stopped up
IOllets.
Rep. Dennis E. Eckart, [).
Euclid, who ended up voting
against the bill anyway,
offered the amendment
which got it untracked from
heavy opposition.
He got Ute House to go
along with a major
amendment making the bill
more fiscally palatable by :
- Raising from $100 to $300
the minimum cost of
im!X"ovements to qualify for
the credit.
- Prohibit'ng a hcxneowner
from accumulating improvement costs over more than
one year and then taking

credit.
- Umiting the maximum
credit from $85 to $85, and to
once every three years
instead of every other year.
- Eliminating credits for
such projects as removal of
air conditioners and changing
a filter on a furnace from the
definition of a home improvement.
The House also went along
with an amendment by Rep.
George D. Tablack, [).Campbell, providing for a 30-day
jail sentence or maximum
$250 fine for falsifying an
income tax return.
But the chamber tabled an
amendment which would
have extended the credits to
renters
who
make
improvements.
The Legislative Budget
Office estimated _the revenue
loss at $8.1 m1llion to $9.75
million in the first year, but
Tablack said it would be only
$3 million during the current
budget period.
He pointed out the
provisions will not take effect
until September, leaving only
nine months until July, 1979.
Rep. John E. Johnson, [).
Orrville, objected to the bill
on grounds it would provide
no tax relief. He noted the
income tax credits would be
more than offset by
in creasing property taxes

community
leaders
concerned about social
services. The first step was to
find out why people were not
participating
in
the
program.
"First of all we asked
whether we wanted to
increase participation, and
then asked why," he said.
He said they decided to try

f~)
{ A 9J

Ktss 1nger

SIDI GLANCES

because of the improved
property.
"This is like taking a
person with appendicitis and
treating him by slicking a
wad of cot too in his ear," said
Johnsol.
House Democrats had
blocked passage of the bill
last week, and 10 of them still
voted against the measure
Tuesday . However, the
amendments convinced
seven Republicans to join 46
Democrats in supporting the
bill . .
It passed, 53-33, with 50
votes required for approval.

lb .

$1 49

FRENCH CITY

CUBE

SLAB

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BACON

FRANKS
lb.

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"01.

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SLICED
BACON

NEW YORK (UP!) - The
estranged wife of Harlem
Globetrotter Meadowlark
Lemon, was conditionallly
released Tuesday at her sentencing for assaulting him
with a knife during a dispute
last April. She pleaded guilty
to simple assault last month
alter she was accused of
stabbing Lemon in the back
April 25.
Manhattan Criminal Court
Judge Louis Necco ordered
the discharge of Willye
Lemon, 40, on condition that
she seek psychiatric help and
stay out of further trouble .

by GIH Foa

99~

m .OO or Mort Purchase
••

The two-day !rMCreenlng
program, done by trained
volunteers, wiD help answer
questions. If volunteers think
the people may be eligible,
they will send them to the
food stamp division of the
Muskingum County Welfare
Department, which will
determine if they are eligible,
and certify them if they are.
Sessa said many people
have cited transportation
problems, personal pride,
and the cost of purchasing
stamps as reasons for not
participating in the federal
program .
The informational blitz is

regulations are written.
About half of those who
favor the junk food ban say it
should also Include such
items as potato chips,
pastries and uncarbonated
drinks.
"What troubles me most ,"
says a cafeteria worker in
Big Sandy , Texas, " is that we
give the low income children
free and reduced lunches
because they are supposed to
not be able to alford the
lunch , then . they go through
the line and gel their tray and
throw all or most of it awa y
and go to the machines and
buy junk food for their
lunch ."
Many parents hail the
restrictioo as a positive step
in helping their children
develop proper nutrition
habits.
"It is very difficult to teach
healthy eating habits when
the children are exposed to
non-nuirltious and hannful
foods at school and their
peers are consummg these
'foods,"' said a Lawrence,
Kan., mother.
Some of the writers like
junk foods and want them
available in schools, but by
far the biggest reason glven
for opposing the regulations
is that it represents a
government intrusion on
individual rights.
"I am concerned since we
have two school age
children," wrote a Houston,
Texas, parent, "but It is my
respmsibility to see to their
nutrition - not the federal
govenunent's.''
The children's letters offer
the same range of opinions.
" I attend Poteau High
School and even though I'm
not 18 I believe I have as
many '·righiB as any olher
person. It seems to me your
(stet) trying to take that right
away from me,"· wrote Katy
Copeland of Poteau, Okla.",,
U that dumb law is passed, I
and my friends wlll not ever
eat in the cafeteria."
But Tina Sl!na, an 8th grade
student from Memphis,
Tenn., wrote : "We would love
to ha ve ora•· ~· juice and

DOMINO

With

Hamilton County.
·will stay open," responded
the Sen. Ha r ry Meshel , D·
Conferees
on
appropriations bill voted 5-l Youngstown, chairman of the
to le ave out langua ge conference committee.
inserted by the House giving
The conference committee
school districts a cha nce to also voted 4-2, with
borrow from pr ivate banks Republicans opposed , to
and make repa yment by June elimin ate au thority for
1979.
Bowling Green State UniMinorit y H o u s.e versity to spend $3 million in
Republi cans want ed the state capital constru ction
language put in to ensure that funds for a natatorium.
schools would have another
The money instead was
alternative to closing in the diverted in $50,000 chunks to
fall.
the
state 's
two-year
" I can guaran tee that
community colleges and
without this language, the branch campuses for "non·
schools won 't stay open," movable capital equipment"
said Rose. "This simply will purchases. Bowling Green
not do the trick. I'm almost Stale got $500,000 "in place of
certain that some schools will th e money
for
the
close this fall."
natatorium.
"Nothing we can do will
Sen. Paul E. Gillmor, R·
guarantee that the schools Port Clinton, warned that the
amendment would require
student fe e increases of $6 per
quarter at BGSU to pay for
the natatorium , which he said
is
al ready
under
construction .
Rose tried unsucessfuliy to
the commumt)', one job was amend the conference report
by deleting $20 million in
create d.
The committee fi gures that public welfare increases and
if
eve ry body
eli gible pumping more money into
participates,- about 178 new basic education.
Th e Lima lawmak er
jobs could be tTeated in the
proposed that $13 millioH be
county.
Currently eligible residents diverted to th e stale's share
hav e t.o make two trips to of purchasing school buses
Zanesvi ll e to get their for desegregation purposes in
stamps. Afler being certified, Cleveland.
Rose pointed out that U.S.
their Auth ority to Purchase
card, which details how many District Court Judge Fra nk J .
stamps they can purcha se at Battisti ha s ordered tha t the
different limes, is mailed to state pay half the cost of bus
them to verify the address. purchases for Cleveland. H~
Transportation poses a said that w.ith out his amendproblem for some residents, ment, Ba ttisti would insist
but Ernest Parrent of the that. bus money earmarked
food stamp program in the for other school distri~ts go to
Muskingum County Welfare ClevelAnd.
"[ would rather see nonDepartment has devised a
hungry
children than nonprogram to take the stamps
tired
chi
ldren from not
to th e people.
having
to
walk to school,"
He has plans to purchase a
van, staffed with food stamp said Meshel in lead ing the
workers and drive n by a vote against the amendment.
Rose also complained the
shen ff's deputy to make
re gular tr ips to· small state budget is underfundea
commu nit ies within th e in th e areas of school
subsidies and tax credits ,
coun ty.
He says some states have necessitating his proposed
such programs, but if he wins welfare cut.
approval of his plan, it would But Shoemaker predicted
an additi onal windfall in
be the fi rst in Ohio.
revenues by autumn .

the brainchild of Sessa who
said similar, but smaller,
programs were attempted in
Poughkeepsie, N.Y., and
Rhode Island .
The Rev . William Briggs,
director of the Eastside Community Ministry and one of
the committee member s ,
said that during the first
week of Ute campaign , 10
people called for information.
The committee has drawn
up an itinerary, but already
now into the third week, finds
itself running ahead of
schedule.
Workers in the Comprehensive Employment and
Training Act program have
drawn up the leaflet which
will be handed out by Boy
Scouts and Girl Scouts.
A hotline was installed for
daytime hours, but senior
citizens offered their line for
a nighttime and weekend
hotline when they got
involved, saying some people
who may be eligible probably
couldn't call during the day .
To be eligible for the food
stamp program, a family of
four must be making less
than $6 ,804 , and their
rescurrt's must be under

$1,500. Income ugures vary
for the number of people in
Ute household.
Everyone eligible for the
program is entitled to
purchase some stamps and
get some as a bonus.
For example, a family of
two in the program is entitled
to $94 worth of stamps. The
lower the net income, the less
they pay for stamps and more
bonus stamps they get
totaling $94. The higher the
net income, the more they
pay for stamps and the few er
the bonus stamps they get
totaling $94.
The committee figures the
average monthly bonus 1the
amoun t of bonus sta mps
recipients got ) in July of 1977
was $26.73. The committee
figured 7,059 were eligible,
but not participating.
Multiplying those two
figures results in $188,687.07,
the amount of money the
coUI1ty lost per month and
$2.2 million in a twelve-month
period .
The committee also pointed
out that U.S . Department of
Agriculture fi gures show that
for every $12,700 in food
stamp bonuses brought into

support
given for restriction

99~

SUGAR . ...... ... .5 LB.

Money for the schools
breaks down to $53.4 million
in additional aid under the
existing stale subsidy
formula, $13 million to ensure
that each district will receive
at least 10 percent more in
1978-79 than this year , and
$8.2million in special bonuses
to districts with bigh welfare
case loads.
The bill authorizing the
in come tax credits for
property improvements was
passed by the House, 5:1-33.
Th e Senat e concurred in
whole sale amendments
blunting the impact of the tax
credits , 26-1.
Left behind in the rush
toward a summer break were
a pair of bills dealing with
agricultural pollution and appointment of tempo rary
jud!(es , including three in

e

. SPECIAL

oz . •

appropriation .
Adoption of the conference
report followed day long
negotiations, including two
hours of concentrated work
on the report, mainly to
amend the House-approved
bill back to the Senate
version. The ·main change
was elimination of · the
expanded private loans.
The House adopted the
conference committee report
7().14 after the Senate agreed
to it, 27-2.
The appropriation also contains $35 million to fund a
state employees' pay raise,
$20 million in additional
welfare allocations to
increase aid to families with
depend~nt children by 9
percent, and $10 million for
industrial development.

Overw
. h eImmg

HORN

CHEESE

and get more participants
because of concern over
nutrition .
"II is our belief that
everybody in the county has
Ute right to an adequate
nutrutional diet," he said.
" And secondly, a lesser
known fact, Muskingum
County is losing $188,000 by
not having all eligible persons
in the program."
The group wants to make
people aware of the program,

approval~=':.0th': ~~~h:~

t..re- llog

Got.
Plus: T••
' Doposot

TORONTO {UP! ) - The
Toronto Bluejays Tuesday
ac ti vated center-fielder Rick
Bosetti and sent 18-year-old
Char l e5ton a t R1chmond
catcher
Brian Milner to their
Syracuse at Toledo
Colum bus at Rochester
Pioneer League farm club at
Tidewater at Pawtuct.:et
Medicine Hat , Alberta .
Thursd•v 's Games
Bosetti, who was placed on
Char leston a1 Richmond t2·1
the
disabled list June 11, was
Syra cuse at Tol edo
Columbus at Rochester
lea ding Ute club in batting at
Tidewater at Pawtucke l'
the time of his injury.
Rochester 1 Col umbus 4
T idewat er 8 Pa wtucket 3
Wednesda y 's Games

$

Quarters

SWEET ROSE

10 9 0

Sea

1 5 1 go Breazea lf I l l.
and 0 1. Lemon 2 (9}

.

By SANDRA L. LATIMER

Tole-do 4 5yra c.u se 3, 2nd

Sundoerg . Langford . H eaverlo

W - Wood 18 S) L
Pole
HR s - Seanle .
I 1 Moltn aro 13 ), Hale ( 3). Ctl tc a

• .99
00

Willey and other roaches
s u p p leme nt ed
an d
augmented the name of Rio,
but we were the pioneers.
playing footba ll , basketball
and baseball, traveling ex·
tensive ly. Nearl y everywhere
we went we were asked,
·Where is Rio Grande ?'
' 'We were handcuffed by
playing teams with greater
st udent representation. such
as Ohio Unive rsity, Denison
Day t o n
Un iversity ,
Unive rsity, Mu sking um
INTERNATIONAl lEAGUE
Un ited Press International
College, Marshall Universit y,
W l Pet. GB Kent State , Broaddus and
Charleston
41 25 .65 3
R 1chmond
J8 19 .567 6' 1 Dav is Elkin s in West
Pawtuc ket
3&lt;1 l l 522 9' 1 Vi rgini a, Capitol University
T 1dewater
36 33 .507 10' J and ot hers," he added,
Toledo
32 33 .492 11 ' 1
" Now," continued Baker,
Rochester
31 J.S .470 12
"
We
are the forgott en
Col u mbus
19 36 .446 14 ' 2
leg ions, just reli cs of years
Syracu\e
14 47 lla 22 1 2
TuesCI• v ·s Rtsulh
gone by !"
Richmon d 2 CMrleston 1

P! vmm f'f

00 1 tOO OtO

ever known. Lou now lives in
Flonda .
"1\o team or teams ln Rto
Grande history advertised or
publicized the college as the
teams in the early twenties
under Coach Pa ul Lyne,"
satd Baker. " The basketba ll
teams of co aches New t
Oli 1·er . Art Lanham , the
cross country teams of Bob

represents the Democrats'
Spokesmen for the state
stopgap solution to Ute school Department of Education
funding problem.
agreed that with the state
Aides to the governor loan program, the new ·
indicated he will sign both subsidies and bonuses poured
bills in the package. Rhodes into school districts would
had proposed using the allow most of them to remain
surplus for similar grants open through next December.
and loans to ensure schools
)Jut Rep. W. Bennett Rose,
will be open in the fall.
R-Lima, ranking Republican
There was disagreement on the House Finance ·
over whether the loans and Coounittee, said elimination
grants will have their desired of a proposal to expand longeffect.
term borrowing for schools
Rep. t&lt;fyrl H. Shoemaker, from banks meant some will
D·Bou·rneville, House - not have enough money .
"I can guarantee to you
Finance Committee . chairman, said the legislation will that some schools won't stay
prop up schools for the rest of open," said Rose.
the year.
Aides to the governor said
· But he warned that "next Rhodes would have preferred
year we've got to start from the extension of borrowing
zero and develop an entirely powers, but added 1ts
new school funding method e~inatioo will. not prevent
for this state."
h1m from Slgnmg th e

Community bands together to make residents aware

Sy ra cu se 4 Tol ed o 3. 1st

010 000 OOS - o 7 1
WOOd , H •nfon 191 and Na no
rodny Po l e Toda ( .t l, House
Rue • t 5
Romo (9 1 and St tnson ,

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A.lla
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Rau a nd Veager , Ca m p.
campb ell tn, Solomon ( 9J ano
Pocoroba W - Ra u {8 J l L Campoe- 11 12 2J HR - LOS An

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Racine, 0.

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HEfAUinGIARE YOUR!

5th &amp; Pearl

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000 000 100-

until Sept. 12, unless a special
seSsion is called.
Breaking a stalemate left
over from last week, the
Legislatur~ also approved
and sent to the governor a bill
providing income tax credits
of up to ~ or 5 percent of the
cost of major home im(l"ove·
ments made by hoou:owners.
Senate Democrats had
insisted on the passage of that
bill before a sununer break.
The
supplemental
appropriation includes $75
million in extra grants and
bonuses to l!Chool districts,
and a $40 mlllion loan
program for districts whicli
will be hardpressed to stay
open next fall . ·
Coupled with a school accountability and
management bill sent to the
governor last week, it

Tax credit is given

Stearns (61 Cn1c ago . K mgman

Ph d el

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - The
Ohio General Assembly, sidestepping warnings it will not
do the job, has passed and
sent to Gov. James A. Rhodes
a $1»2 million supplemental
appropriations bill including
$115 million to help keep
public schools open next fall .
Tuesday ' s topheavy
passage of the appropriation,
using actual and projected
surplus state funds through
June of 1979, signaled the end
of a sixmonth effort by
maj(l'ity Democrats to baii
out financially-troubled
school districts.
It also climaxed a two-week
post-primary session and
sent lawmakers home for a
summer vacation. They are
not scheduled to reconvene

ZANESVILLE, Ohio ( UPI)
- Community groups in
Muskingum County have
banded together to make
residents in the state's fifthlargest county more aware of
the food stamp program.
This ambitious project
started June 5 and winds up
July II and 12 with a prescreening program to help

and

{81

( 2nd qam e J
Ba t
1CllClX&gt;040 613 1
H Pc, t. To r
151 100 001 - 9 11 1
85 331
Br tl es . T Ma r l •nez ( ~ I. ~ !a n
09 )]1 hOu!.e
(7
ana
rlendr tc k.s
63 311 Oe m ps~y (9
J~ tt er!!Q n , Col e
88 no m an {8 1 Cruz {I I and Cerone
93 J\5 "N Cruz I I 0 L StanhOvse ( I
61 ]\3 ~ HR ~ Ba lt •more Oa u ~r I J J
84 Jll Sm .tr. IS Toronto Cart y ( lO t
7l 310

Bo v. a Pt1 d

the All England Club,
bringing the two-day total to
63,538.
The departure of McEnroe
and Ashe meant three American seeds have fallen in the
first two days . Dick Stockton,
the lOth seed, was an
openin gpround . casualty
ooonaay.
Van Dillen, 27, known
mainly as a doubles player,
eliminated McEnroe by
playin g aggressively . "I
wasn 't going to lay back and
wait for him to make
mistakes.''
In Tuesday 's first-round
play in women's singles,
defending champion Virginia
Wade , seeded
fourth ,
whipped Sweden's Elisabeth
Ekblom, 6-1, 6-2, and No. 2
seed Martina Navratilova
dumped Julie Anthony, 6-1 , 63.
Sixth-seeded Billie Jean
King, winner of the
Wimbledon singles crown six
times, needed just 43 minutes
to oust Belgium's No . I entry,
Michele Gurdal , !HI, 6-2.

51 LOU IS, Temple ton I l l

ooo-

Amertc a n Le ag ue

in a five-hour ma tch, 8-9, ~.
li-3 , 5-7, 7~ , by breaking
Ashe's serve in the lllh game
of the final set.
. "I did everything I could to
win and .it didn 't work ," Ashe
said of the crucial game. "I
got three first services in and
he hit three good returns."
Chris Ev ert , th e top
women's seed and a two-time
Wimbledon champion , had a
first-round bye and was to
meet Sweden 's Helena Anliot
in a second-round match
Wednesda y.
In other second -round
action on center co urt,
s eco nd -see ded Jimmy
Con nors took on Australia 's
Kim Warwick and Tracy
Austin, seeded ninth , played
Betsy Nagelson .
Tw o- tim e defending
cham pion and top -se ed ed
Bjorn Borg met Australia 's
Peter McNa mara on an
outside court and No. 4 seed
Guillermo Vilas took on Bri·
tain's John Feaver .
Despite overcast skies, a
record crowd of 33,552
attended Tuesday's artion at

and On W- Vuc.k.ov i&lt;h ( 5
L Canae lana 17 1J HR -

(9 )

Sl

.100 110

at Atl a nt a ntght
C•nc .nna!t al Ho uston . n•gnt

· BY PETER J. SHAW
WIMBLEOON, England
(UP[) - Veteran Arthur
Ashe, who had never lost
before the third round in 10
previous Wimbledons, and
John McEnroe, the teen-ager,
who as an amateur qualifier
last yea r reached the
semifinals, were ousted
Tuesda y in th eir first
matches.
" It's a pretty big blow,"
said Ashe, an ex-Wimbledon
champion who was seeded
15th. " You key your whole
year around this tournament .
Th ere's nothing· I can do
about it now but come ba ck
and play next year."
McEnroe, seeded l ith,
said, " You try to expect more
fr om yourself and it's hard
sometimes. It's hard playing
a first-ro und match and then
the guy pla ys good out of
nowhere."
McEnroe had too much
trouble with Eric van Dillen,
who ironically had to qualify
this yea r. Van Dillen woo , 7-11 ,
H , S-9. 6-4 , 6-3.
Steve Docherty edl&lt;ed Ashe

vuc k. o1nch . Sch u ll l (9) and
Sw1snc r Can de lar i a , Jackson

000 100 000-

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ICa i'IO
t.MOur'Ctld r eo; g~a
!!On of arr·et c a r-ec •or B ·
Be t.., nao

Vuc kov ich . Sl L 2 37
Amenc•n Leagu e : Gu icry ,
NY 1 71 . Keough , Oak 1 28 .
Pa lm e-r , Ball 2.JJ ; Wa i ts , Ctev
2 53 . Matt., ck . Te~t 2.51

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B y Un t1t d P ress lnt e rnat"to na l

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Ball 11 S. Sorenson , M il 10 4.
Palme-r . Ball 10 6.
Ea r ned Run A ver•ge
( s a sec! on 11 1nning~ pitched &gt;
Nat 1ona l Lugue : Blue, SF
2 1"5 Rogers , Mtl 2. 17. Hat ic\o.. i.
SF 2 n , R Reuschel , Ch 1 2. '!7 ,

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Mator Leagu e

back now."

Mil and Btue-, SF 11 A Za chrv
NY 9 3.
Se aver , C1n 9 S.
Rogers , Mt l 9 7.
Amencan L.ugue : Gu •dr y .
NY 11 0
Torrel , Bos. 11 J .
Tana na , Ca l 11 "' · F l anagan ,

PtHi aCelpn •a a t Chtcago
N e..,.., Yo rio. at P tiiSbgh n •ghf

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c:on trac

511

l" nited Press Inte rnational
{ All T tm e!lo EOT l
SEA TILE 1UP! I - Tra ck
Det ro •! I Wilc OM.! 6 a ile Sl aton
tmmortal Jesse Owens b -1 at Clevel dnd ~ W&lt;"l !IS S ] and
lon .1 J. ) 2 S 30 p m
dele&lt;'ts a growin g interest tn Pi!x
New Yorl&lt;. i F .g ueroo 7 5 anc
rUI1nUlg among young people McCa ll 0 0 CIT M tl wa uk.ee
7 5 ano t. v gusT ,ne 8
aroun d the co unt ry and 8Ca 1l dwell
1p m
thmks "" kids are a lot more
Ba lf1m0 re ! M cGrego r 8 51 a1
to I Clancy J 11 1 30 c m
dedi ca ted and diScip lined Toron
1 exas 1Jenk n~ B 3 at O a~o..
than tht') "' ere a few years l and 1Conroy 0 0 10 30 p m
Kansa~ C1ty i Sp lt nor tt 9 6 a t
ago
Ca lt tor n. a Knaoo 1 61 10 30
Owens, •·ho won four gold om
(1"\ lcaqo ~ tone 6 5 at Se-atne
medals m the 1936 Ol)·mpics
J J 10 35 p m
an d becam e lhe most !AbbottTnu
rs day 's Gam E's
endurmg fi gure m the hlst ory
T t J.cl !. at O ak l ana
Boston at Ba lr,mor e " '9n1
,f track and field , satd.
Ch •c ago a! SeatTle n tg ht
"Young people seemed w
Kansas Ct!y at Ca lt l n tgnt
IJaH los: :hose qualities lor a
ume. but the) ·re coming

CHI C' AGO 1 UP I t - The
Chtcagn Bulls Tuesday anJo ~e .
noUI1rt'd the s1gmng of freeNew ¥or -. -..~ e · s
Op• oneo
r u~nl •·lln0£"0
o •cne r \' k.e agent LaRue Martin. a
Bruner• 'C T oe-wa•er an a f o rm e~ 'l.o' ola Um l"erSlty
re-ca ll eo
r cl"' · r.ancer - o,....
and Portland Trailblazers
Ha utll'ilfl
Toror ' J
:.c . a tec CP.I" ' er p!a1 er
t ,eJo er c; : • Boo; en a na ~en'
~art m . 28. pla)ed four
ca tcner Br ar ~/ -Tr er ' 0 V t&gt;O
c•ne t-&lt;GP
:.. oe~ ·a
...
·~~
~e ar s •·11h Portland He d•d
P·Of"lEer ._, aq ~uci&gt; •I pia y last season .
Cn •c. aq o ,\ n ' t · SQ ,
~·QI'It'O
&lt;/,,.. It'

36
l1 JJ
]4

lOU IS

G8

m

] 6 33
31 36

Seatt le

Sports
briefs

Na t tonil l League : Gr im!tlty ,

Pe t .

11 JO

New York

ana ~en• Byr on \' tloit ugn l n •c
the •r T r ole A tar"' ctu o at SiH'

gv ara ..... a l•
n-r.g "l en gclro
second ~ounc oral ' ~ c ~t ano
ovr1'er .,.., o- e L, O(!s ~.h 1 D ao 1o

T.\1\ES FlRST PLACE

been added to tum the lea gue
uno a cu rrent 10--u~am cu nfe rence .
F ol lo win g Reese ' s
retirement . Hobert James.
currently commissioner of
the
Atlan ti c
Coast
Conferenrt'. headt'd the MAC.
James late r was repla ced by
Jacob) .

P 1tch ing

Victor ies

L ea gu e

East

First MAC commissioner is praised
DA YTO!'. Ohio t UP! \ Mid-American Omference
Commissioner Fred Jacoby
has · praised Dr . David E.
Reese , 86, the first MAC
co mn11Ss10ne r who die d
Monday night. for sett ing the
foundation for the reputation
the league has today .
·· Dr . Reese provided a very
solid foundation. whi ch was
the base for the outstanding
conference we enjoy today .··
Jacoby sa1d Tuesday after
leanung of Reese"s death
Monday
.. Desptte an aimost lata!
change u1 membership m
those formulati,,e years, he
pro11dt'd th e leadership that
Ulcreasing l~·
strengthened
the league to the point where
11 · ·as arcepted as an NCAA
Dli1Sion I conference with
automati c qu alificati on in
both the \ CAA basketba ll
and baseball t.ournameniS
" U the ~l AC has respect,
Ultegnty and prestige today .
and I th ll1K 11 does, 1t is oni y a
conunuat•on of those same
qualmes first gained through
Dr Reese, · added Jaroby .
" He was well respected and
liked b) all who came in
contacl with him ."
Reese. whose death at the
Ket terin g Con1·ales cent
Center followed a long IllneSS ,
bera me the MAC' s fi rst
commtssiOner m l!Wi and
remamed m that pos1tioo
unul he ret~red 111 1964.
The leagues annua l allsports tro ph~. 1s named the
·Reese Cup .. in h.ts honor .
Born 1n ~! ass1llon. Oh10, m
1892. Reese v;a s a 12·
l.:otterma n at
Dem~ o n
Un11·e r s1 t~
1n football.
basketba ll. baseball and

l ex 24

L. ea9ue St and1ngs

e y Un1ted Press. tnte rna honil l

$202 million school bill sent to Govemor

Arthur Ashe eliminated

----___.._..,

•

•.

many other kinds of juice to
drink instead of soft drinks . II
tastes better and fills you up
more, but everytime we go to
buy some, it's always empty .
"The school lunch is overpriced and raunchy tasting.
So we buy j)Jtato chips and
nutty bars, but it's not by
choice . If the Memphis board
would get some cooks that
could cook, we would eat the
fo od. Because of the
malnutrition and no food we
DETROIT (UPI J - The
Detroit Tigers said today
pitcher Mark Fidrych went to
New York for treatment of
his sore right shoulder, which
has kept him oo the disabled
list since May 1.
The team said the popular
righthander would see Dr .
Maurice
Cowen,
an
orthopedic surgeon for the
New York Yankees, at Lenox
Hill Hospital.

all have colds or sore throats.
I just wanted you to know this
.. . Hang in there and help us,
please."

PARK RESERVED
SATURDAY, JULY 1ST

FAMILY OUTING
OF

LODGE No. 344
BROntERHOOD OF RAILWAY CARMEN
OPEN TO PUBLIC AFTER 5 PM

CAMDEN PARK
U.S. ROUTE 60 WEST- HUNTINGTON
Closed Every Monday Except Holidays

NEWSPAPER
CARRIERS
WANTED
MIDDLEPORT, POMEROY,
SYRACUSE

PHONE

992-2156

THE DAILY SENTINEL
BETWEEN
8 AM and 5 PM

�•

~

..

t •

~

.

•
ii-The Daily Senti~ei,_Middleport-Pomer y, 0., Wednesday, June 28,1978

4- The Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 .. Wednesday , June 28, 19i8

•

Phils zncrease
lead to 2 ·games
By B! l.J., MADDEN
UPI Spurts Writer

Now that he's back with a
contending team Dick
Ruthven can "t resist a few
parting shots at the guys he
left behind.
Ruthven scattered seven
hits in shuttin g out the
Montreal Expos , 14l, Tuesday
night for his second win in
three starts sinrt' corning
over
the
fi rst-place
Ph •ladelph•a Phillies from
th e last-place Atlanta Braves
on JUI1e 15 Greg Luzinsk1
acrounted for the gan1e"s
ooly rUI1 with h•s 17th homer
in the se1·enth inning.
"I always sa1d I"m a much
better pitcher than my record
shows - especially in the
seasons I spent with the
Braves. " said Ruthven, who
has allowed only three earned
runs in hls three starts for the
Phillies . .. , used to pitch my
best but I never knew when
somrone was going to mess
up behind me ...
Rulhren . ~-7, spent two
depressing seasons with the

lastiJla cc Braves after being
traded away by the Phil lies m
the winler of 1975. As bad as
the Bra\'eS have been.,
ho wever. Ruthven mainl&lt;lins
the\' have one bright spot.
.:, still think Phil Niekro is
ooe of the fi ve best pitchers in
baseball, .. sa id Ruthven .
"Bu t you'd never know it.
looking at his record with the
Bra ves . Here's a gu)' who has
always pi tched his heart out,
but what does he have to show
for it. Yes sir. it sure is great
to
be
back
with
Philadelphia ."
The Phillies" victory increased their lead in the
Nat ional l,eague East to two
games o1·er Chicago and
three over ~l ontreal.
Elsewh ere in the l'ational
League. ;&lt;ew York beat
Chicago. 1-2, Si. Louis swept
Pittsburgh. 241 and 6-1 , Los
Angeles blanked Atlanta , 341.
Houston put away Cincinnati.
i-4 . and San f rancisco routed
San Diego. 9-1
G•an ts 9. Padres I :
\"1da Bl ue pllcht'd a SIX·

Iutter for his· fifth straight
1·1ctoq while th e G1ants
me rea sed their NL \\'est lead
lO 21 -z games over Cincmnati.
Blue, lH. struck out three
and walked four. Gaylord
Pe rrY. 6-3 . took the loss.
Cardinals 1.0, Pirates 0.1 :
George Hendrick drol"e ·in
lwo runs w1 lh a homer and a
single and Jerry Mwnphrey
had a pair of RBI singles in
the nightcap. Tite Cardinals
took the opener behind the
rombint&gt;d shutout pt,tching of
Pete Vuckol" tCh and Buddy
Schultz .
Dodgers 3. Braves 0:
Ron Ce1· blasted a threerUI1 homir m the seventh
mning, his ninth , and Doug
Rau pttch ed a seven-httter.
Ius first shutout and sixth
comp lete ~ame
MNs 1, Cubs 2:
John Stearns hll a threerW1 homer and Pat Zachry. 93, fired a six-hitter to spa rk
the ~l ets . Steve Henderson
drove in two runs for the Mets
w1th a double and a sacrifi rt'
Oy .

••••••• •••••••
••••• ,••_
__
•••

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD
M~1 o r

N e~lt ona l

tenn lS

He !a1er played e1ght years
of sem1 -pro foo tba ll and
seren \·ears of .sem1 -pro
ba ket"" ll for the Da)100

Triangles. He also was a
dentist and a referee for the
National f ootball League.
the B1 g Ten an d Oh1o
Conference.
In 19H. while refereeing an
Armv-:\ otre Dame ga me.
R.,..;, can1e up on the sh ort
end of a collision with the
Arm~ 's j)J werfu l rW1ner , Doc
Blanchard. and suffered a
dislocatt&gt;d arm and torn leg
ligaments .
Whe n Reese began l ea dm~
the MA C m 1!!46. the league
consisted of only five teams
- Butler. Cincirutau. Ohw I.; ..
Wayne Sl&lt;lte and Western
ReServe. From the on gtna I
fi1·e. only Oh1o U. remams as
a member wday .
Dun ng Reese"s re~ gn.
Miami. Western ~l i ch1gan.
Toledo. Kent State and
Bowling Green were added as
members.
Since Reese ·s retirement m
1964. Ball State, Cemra l
Michigan. Easte rn Ml chtga n
and \ orlhern llhn olS ha ve

Sport s

T rans act•on ~

Bv Un 1ted Pr eH lnternaltona l
TuesdiY
sa ~~ bal l ~

Sean e
l oo k. p tt cller R-c lo.
Honeycu'l o ff Tnt:' d tSab lec ~ '

W L

Ph d a
Chtc ago
Mon!real
Pttrstlrgn
St

oas.•:· r ar Jan· es Oa · o
•t t' r ~ " I Jrdl ' ( !"IO •C{~ Onlrf?-a l
S qneo Mana qf:'T
D c lo. ·N ,d ...,.,., ·c ne .... two , t'&lt;H

r-, e .._, Y orO.. v(lr lo. ees
~econo o a,t-rr~n h
'~"&gt;e

: · oa 1 o

tl• e

aceo
Ra n

sao 1ea s:
retro.! C' ... e
JJ neand
call e-d v c ca tere-r M •J.;e Hea tr.
10 1 11., &lt;;'!opt'' on •nt- ro~lf'r
Pro Footba l l
;::ranc•~co
),gned
San

ao l o~

or

P

·o

n

oo ...

, d1

e..Col le ge
S QI"'E'a
as r. e-ac oas k. e• d t

A. uour,...
S~T~•Il'l

Tu-Endu;-We1 Truma n. a
ma le· bea ~ le own ed by
Fra nk!tn Wilson of Rac1ne.
too k f1 rst place at the Salt
Cree k Beagl e Cl ub l..lcensed
Tnal held at Zanesville. Ohw.
last Saturda ,· m the !5" ~! a l e
Cla ss m a field of 23 dogs.
Truman now needs two
more "ms tn ltcensed tnals
and a t"lal of 120 pomts to
became a F teld Champion.

lor

,,...o

.ear ~

1-1ar~ ara

.'.O PO·"'f'd Pe•er

Rafrr ona ... eao ... orr~ s crev.
t1 ' ~~ar ~MO •ttf' 1as1 thret
,ear s •c coac ~ .~, e-r s ..,,1f~ · ,
l1g r1J wP qt-t . re .,.,

co a cr

1

507

]

..186

~·

W L P el .
Ang
San Ote&lt;_:!O
HOU'1i10n
~tlanla

CiB

lO 16

6l~

'](I

603

~ ~.

.tO 3~
35 38
31 38
19 . 1 1

~56

b

.u

LO~

l

J'2 7 9
373 11

18 4}
w est

San F"ra n
Cinc1 Mh

-

J19 11 ' ./

J.t9 13 1

•

Jl J l b
Tu e sda y · ~ Res ults
N ew York 1, C!'l tcago ?
St lOUt S 2. P 1 ll~bg h 0 lSI
St LOUt} 6, P 11!Sbgh 1 1no
P htl adelph .a 1 Montrea t 0
LOS Angel es 3. A! lant(l 0
H ou~t on 7, c ~ nctnnat • -'
Scm Fran ct sco 9t Sa n 0 •(&gt;90 1
Tocsa y' s P ro bab le- P ttchen
! A ll Ttme ~ EDT )
New Yort.:. ( t&lt;oo~ man 1 81 a!
Ch 1CclQ O ( Holtz an 01 1, 1 30
pm
Ph dadelph ,a {Lon borg 6 51 a1
Montr e a t 1Sch at zf'de r 1 OL 7 35

om

St Lou•s I Mart .nez 2 31 a!
P ittSbu rgh {8 1btl V 5 J ). 7 35

pm
LOS Angeles I HOOIOn 6 6 1 &lt;II

Atl a nta ( N ie k.ro 8 81. 7 35 P m

C•nc• nnat t { Nor man B 4) at
Hou~ton ( O p( on J 3 ) 8 JS p m

San F ran C1'1iCO ( Barr 3 J and
Wd l, am s 1 OJ a t San D •ego
1Jone!l. S 6 and Ra'lmussen J 1
1 9pm
T hu r sda y ' s Gam es

AI·
thou!\h the Milwaukee Bucks
feel "cramped by the small
capacll) of the Milwaukee
Arena . the team sars it has
agreed to play in the arena
through the 198UJ season
"The Bu cks were born 1n
\l1lwaukee. they were ra1sed
m ~ll l•·aukee 31\d t ~)" wlll bf
m ~1 1l w aukee as long as the
cit\ want&gt; us and the fans
•·ant us.· Jun Fiugerald.
pres1dent of the Bucks, sa 1d
Tuesda\' The arena seats
only 10.938 and IS one of the
smalle~t '" the lea~ue .

I.OS ANGELES t UP! •
Williams, the Los
Tommy
Soccer
Kings ' scorm g
Co l or aac
QefTloved Dave Angeles
C l e~"'""er' ~ a!! ~eaa coa ch
leader for a lefH•tn ger,
Sa f'l JO~t'
Reteaseo ll• ta
M1' •C d"d 0 01a •necl for'lrarc s1gned a multi-year con tra ct
Do uq 1.,• dr • from Ci) ca go St na Tuesda; w1th the Los Angeles
To ta lo; e n s plan•
Kmgs.
Pr o Buke tba ll
Cn•c ao o
Soqn e--d t ree agen·
Terms of the part •·ere not
c en l ~r L _,p f' '.' o•• n
disclosed .

Str ikeouts

Nat•onal Lea9ue : R i c.ha r rJ ,
Hou Ill: Niek.ro . All
102 ,
N.onle t usco . SF 100 . Seaver ,
Cui ;me Slue, SF 94

Ame n can League : Gu id ry ,
118 .
Ryan , Cal 11"3 ;
Flan agan , Ball 83 , Le-onard . KC
78 Tanana . Cal 69
NY

Ma,or League Resuns
B y Uni ted Press Internationa l
Nari onal Leaguellsl gam el
St L
100 100 OOD-- ] 5 0

P1Sbgo

ooo ooo ooo- o 1o

11nd gam e )

6 10 1

1 90

LOS Ang

Falcone .
Stmmons

Li ttell

E as t

W L Pe l .
51 21 o99
~ ~ JO
583

Bost on
New Yor~
M tl wauk e
Ba l t 1mr e

Detro •'
Clevelnd
Tor on!O

GB
8' .

Jl

3\

so~

10

.tO
35
37
15

JJ

5J8
500
J5 7
J.H

11 1 •
15
18

35
38
J7

76

w e-st

Texas
'( an ( , tv

W L P el.

CB

535

I

Cil lt f

39 32
38 J)
37 36

SJ9

OaKiano

35 38

507
J 79

5

Cn •cag o

33

39

A58

6 .

M •MSOia

30 J l
26 49

J])

3

9
15

3J7

T ues d ay ' s Res ult s
Tor on to b. B&lt;lll more 1 1st
Toron to 9 Ball more 8. 2na
N Y 6 Boston J \J -nn'!.
Oetro •t 6 . Cl eve tano 1
M 1l wa ul&lt;.ee 13 M 1nnesota 6
at. torn i a 5 t&lt;a ns.n C ''Y J
Texas 3. Oa 1\ land 1
Cn1C a9o 10, Seattle 6
Tod ay ' ~ Pro bab le P t1CI'I ers

&lt;

L e ad er~

Bathng
( B a sed on 17S a l ba ts I
N i lt o n~ I L e ag ue

G. A B
Punl Ho v
Burrogr.s 4• 1

61156
65 11S

Md dloc !o. S F

53 lq6

os

Smdr. LA
Pa r ... er P.l
LOP~~ l A

198
68 tiO
OJ 1'19
69 156 79 ) ()q
o9 26.: 81 307
69 131 11 ' 301

Gr !f e-y Ctn

1J

21~

7~ 5

)J

(IIH~ S F
Cncpc ,on C.n
.\' 1"' 11 e-l d SF

Ame nc an L eaque

GABHPc t .
66 7J8
1J 30)
69 ] J6
oto ne

85 ) ,.IJ
98 313
79 321
73 no

J a c k!.O" Ca l

51 t16 56 )18
56 190 b() 31 6

L ynn Bo~

66 i.t \

7b 315

Carew M1n

R•c e SO$
Rt' vno l d~ St' a
)vnooerg Tell:
C!.lbb age Mtn

51 195 ol 313
191 61 l1l
&amp;a / b-1 81 )11
Ho me Runs

Coo per M •t
Le1 cano ,\ ',d
Be ll Cle
N ~t i Of!il

b()

leil g ue •

lU1JnS J.; I

F0'3le r
Ctn
( •f"1Qmdn Cn • 15 foo'\Onoil r

Phd

17

P ar~er

1J

P 11 ana

I

16
LA
n t ,eld S O

Amertcan Lea g ue .Rtce Bo'3

13 Bay lor
Det ana
Murr

a..,

Cal 18
Tnoma ~

Tho m ()\Of"1
Mil 17

Ba it 16
R: uns Bat1e d In

Nattonal Lea qve FOSler C•n
53

,\' n l te ld

SO J8

Monta nez

NY dnd Cl ark . Sf:: ~ 7 Morgan .
Ce-y ana GcHYey L A anc
Lut •nS. t.:. • Prul J.6
Amer. un League . R1ce So s
67 St a vo Det 5 1 Tnomps.on
Dt&gt;l ..19
Mvrra y
Bait and
Hooson Bo !i. .s8
~ t olen

B asu

N al to na I Le- a gue
Moreno
P '' 36
Cedeno
Hov 1J
Taver&lt;!IS P It 11
Lopes L A

ana

Q •cr.aras.

Reu~~ .

Wh 1tson {11,
Ham 111on (.S l. Jac kson (8) and
Over
w- Falcone ( 1 5 ). L Re uss ro 1 J HR - San D•ego .
He-n dr~ t k 16 1

.t0 110000l - 7100
000000101 - 2 60
( 9 31 ana
Srt-arns
La m p , (re,sel 1-0 , M cGlo th en
161, Moor e ( 9 1 ana Raaer L
Larnp ( 2 9 1 HRs New York .

NY
Cli •
Za ch r 'f

SO 10

1
t

2, 0

I

,...

000 000 ooo- 0 7 0
Rurnven ana Boon e , Dues
Garman (8 ) and CarTer W-

~

Mll

Rutnven ( J 1J. L - Oues ( 1 4 )
HR
Ph d adetpt1 i a, LUl lnSio.l

getE&gt;S .

Cey ( 9 )

(,ne t

001 000

Joo-

no 200 Qlx -

HOVS

s0

J

8ont1dm BorbOn ( ) ) To ml in
( 7 1 Sa r m 1ento ( 8 1 and

Werner

Corre ll ! 8 )
N1ekro . Samb lt.o
18 1 dnO F erguson W N •ek.r o
15 J L Bonh am 18 l )

Sa n Fran
San [)go

001100 51(}- 9 16 1
000 010 000- I 6 I

ana

B1ve
K •nne..-

(7 t

Saae-k
Pe-rr y.
Wil ey ( 8) and

Roberts W - Biue ( ll 4 ) L
Perry (8 J l HRs - San Franc •s
co (l ark. ( 9 1 McCovey [ b )

RIO TE AMMATES OF MORE THAN 50 YEARS AGO REUN ITE - Pictured here are
four ex-Rio Grande College athletes who played for the Redmen more than 50 years ago.
Left to right. they are: Clark (Guy 1 Baker. Dana Stor y, Chester Hannahs and Ralph
Doonally .

Am encan L eague
1 1&lt;&gt;1 gamel
Ba ll
Tor

010 001 000- i J 0
010 23000x 611 0
Pa lme r ana De mpsey . Le
m an ct)' k Cr uz (7) and AShby
W
Lemanc ly k ( 2 9 ) L
Pa lmer ( 10 6 1 HRs - Sa ll 1mor e
Mur rav {l b l To ron to . Mavt&gt;er

ry 113 1

( 14

tnR1 ng ~ l

Bo~ton

OIX)

002 100 000 00- J l..t 0

N ew Yorio.
011000010 00002 - 6 l J 0
Wr • ~t~ n l
B v rgm e i er () l
B S1an1ey Il l Campoe ll l &amp;l.
Drag o 10 ) ana F •Sk Gu,ory
C,.o~s age
&lt;7
Ly l e 112 ) ana
M un!tOn
W Ly le (6 11 L
Drago r "] i
HRs - Ne,.. Yor'
Net tle~

t il l

Oet
Cleve
Rozem c\

600 000 000
000 100 000
c\nd Ma y

6 II 0
I 91

Fre •s

1eoen Reu!l c hel Il l. Kern (7
&lt;Y.onge 9 J ana Al ell.lna e-r W
Roz em a t3 J J L - Fre osl eben (0
1 HRS 0t'lrO i1 S.t aub 110

M•nn

10 1 100 11'()-- 6 \3 1
022 011 S1 K 13 17 1

M rl to~·

Go lll Man.na ll (6 ). Harr 1son
(6
ano
N ynegar
Haa s
Rep l og le IJ J and Mar hn e1 WRep )og le \ A 11 L - Volf z ( 55
HR~ M 1l wau k.ee
H•!ol e f lJ .
Oa•ns f 4 1

Four ex-Redmen reunite
after more than 50 years
COLUMBUS - Bonds of
fr~endsh1p that were formed
when thev were teammates
at R10 Grande College in the
early 1920s were rene wed
wtth a breakfast at Bob
E\•ans Restaurant m Worthmgton last week .
Meetmg for the first tune m
more than 50 years were
Clark 1Guy 1 Baker, Dana
Storr . Chester Hannahs and
Ral ph Donna ily.
When thev f1rst came to Rio
Grande , Baker was from
\" mton , Story from Cheshire,
Donnally (rom Bidwell and
Hannahs from Cambridge.
from Cambridge, along
w1th HannahS , came Lou
Boyd, Ius pal. and one of lhe
greatest all-around athletes
1al ong
w1th Raym ond
Alhson , that Rio Grande ha s

K(

013 000 000- 4 q 1
000 100 40-.:. - S 6 0
Leon ar a M •ngor ' ( 7) a nd
Porler
Br ett . C.r ttl .n t J. ,
La Rocne t 8 and 0owfltn9 'II
Gr 1ff •n 1 31 L M •ngor • I I 2
HRs l(ansao; Ct-y , Ot 1s 111 1

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A m er.c an L eil t;~ ue : Wil son
1&lt; C ?8 Otlone Oak ana Cruz
Sea ?5 Le ~ l ore Oet and Will s

l

100 000 000
Clevel and
l9

Thur sday, Ju ne- 29 thru Jul.,. 1
We Gladly Acc •pt Fed . Food S1amps
Monday thru Friday

l :OO t it i :OO
Satur~y

9 :0M :OO
CL OSED
SUNDAYS

PORK AND BEANS ~~~~
PAPER TOWELS SCOTT .
GRAPE JELLy SMUCKERS
POTATO CHIPS DAN DEE
PEANUT BUnER JIFF Cmmv or Chunky
MARGARINE

4 ""'

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Roll

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ana Ess •an w- Ell 1s 0 3

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people in the county learn if
they are eligible for food
stamps.
The group embarked upon
the plan after learnin~ that
only about half of the 14,000
residents eligible for food
stamps were receiving them .
Attorney Peter B. Sessa of
the Southeast Ohio Legal
Service program said the
group is made up of

OOLJ:IIBUS (UPI ) - The
Ohio r.enera! Assembly, still
une&lt; in of its fiscal impact,
has r ..;sed and sent to Gov.
James A. Rhodes a bill
granting a 5 percent state
income tax credit for
homeowners who make more
than
$300
worth
of
improvements on their
property in one year.
The bill, aimed at
encouraging upgrading of
neighborhoods, cleared the
House Tuesday with only
three votes to spare. The
Senate then quickly agreed to
amendments drasti cally
watering down the scope of
the tax relief program.
Passage of the bill helped
pave the way for· an
agreement on a conference
committee report on a
supplemental appropriation
and school financing bill, and
subsequent legislative
adjournment for the summer.
But even with the House
changes . diluting
the
program, state revenue loss
estimates varied from $3
million for the current budget
period to almost $10 million
for a full year.
The House attempted to
limit the credits to persons
who genuinely improve their
properties to increase their
value, not just fix broken
windows or stopped up
IOllets.
Rep. Dennis E. Eckart, [).
Euclid, who ended up voting
against the bill anyway,
offered the amendment
which got it untracked from
heavy opposition.
He got Ute House to go
along with a major
amendment making the bill
more fiscally palatable by :
- Raising from $100 to $300
the minimum cost of
im!X"ovements to qualify for
the credit.
- Prohibit'ng a hcxneowner
from accumulating improvement costs over more than
one year and then taking

credit.
- Umiting the maximum
credit from $85 to $85, and to
once every three years
instead of every other year.
- Eliminating credits for
such projects as removal of
air conditioners and changing
a filter on a furnace from the
definition of a home improvement.
The House also went along
with an amendment by Rep.
George D. Tablack, [).Campbell, providing for a 30-day
jail sentence or maximum
$250 fine for falsifying an
income tax return.
But the chamber tabled an
amendment which would
have extended the credits to
renters
who
make
improvements.
The Legislative Budget
Office estimated _the revenue
loss at $8.1 m1llion to $9.75
million in the first year, but
Tablack said it would be only
$3 million during the current
budget period.
He pointed out the
provisions will not take effect
until September, leaving only
nine months until July, 1979.
Rep. John E. Johnson, [).
Orrville, objected to the bill
on grounds it would provide
no tax relief. He noted the
income tax credits would be
more than offset by
in creasing property taxes

community
leaders
concerned about social
services. The first step was to
find out why people were not
participating
in
the
program.
"First of all we asked
whether we wanted to
increase participation, and
then asked why," he said.
He said they decided to try

f~)
{ A 9J

Ktss 1nger

SIDI GLANCES

because of the improved
property.
"This is like taking a
person with appendicitis and
treating him by slicking a
wad of cot too in his ear," said
Johnsol.
House Democrats had
blocked passage of the bill
last week, and 10 of them still
voted against the measure
Tuesday . However, the
amendments convinced
seven Republicans to join 46
Democrats in supporting the
bill . .
It passed, 53-33, with 50
votes required for approval.

lb .

$1 49

FRENCH CITY

CUBE

SLAB

STEAK

BACON

FRANKS
lb.

lt

I Pok
"01.

•

SLICED
BACON

NEW YORK (UP!) - The
estranged wife of Harlem
Globetrotter Meadowlark
Lemon, was conditionallly
released Tuesday at her sentencing for assaulting him
with a knife during a dispute
last April. She pleaded guilty
to simple assault last month
alter she was accused of
stabbing Lemon in the back
April 25.
Manhattan Criminal Court
Judge Louis Necco ordered
the discharge of Willye
Lemon, 40, on condition that
she seek psychiatric help and
stay out of further trouble .

by GIH Foa

99~

m .OO or Mort Purchase
••

The two-day !rMCreenlng
program, done by trained
volunteers, wiD help answer
questions. If volunteers think
the people may be eligible,
they will send them to the
food stamp division of the
Muskingum County Welfare
Department, which will
determine if they are eligible,
and certify them if they are.
Sessa said many people
have cited transportation
problems, personal pride,
and the cost of purchasing
stamps as reasons for not
participating in the federal
program .
The informational blitz is

regulations are written.
About half of those who
favor the junk food ban say it
should also Include such
items as potato chips,
pastries and uncarbonated
drinks.
"What troubles me most ,"
says a cafeteria worker in
Big Sandy , Texas, " is that we
give the low income children
free and reduced lunches
because they are supposed to
not be able to alford the
lunch , then . they go through
the line and gel their tray and
throw all or most of it awa y
and go to the machines and
buy junk food for their
lunch ."
Many parents hail the
restrictioo as a positive step
in helping their children
develop proper nutrition
habits.
"It is very difficult to teach
healthy eating habits when
the children are exposed to
non-nuirltious and hannful
foods at school and their
peers are consummg these
'foods,"' said a Lawrence,
Kan., mother.
Some of the writers like
junk foods and want them
available in schools, but by
far the biggest reason glven
for opposing the regulations
is that it represents a
government intrusion on
individual rights.
"I am concerned since we
have two school age
children," wrote a Houston,
Texas, parent, "but It is my
respmsibility to see to their
nutrition - not the federal
govenunent's.''
The children's letters offer
the same range of opinions.
" I attend Poteau High
School and even though I'm
not 18 I believe I have as
many '·righiB as any olher
person. It seems to me your
(stet) trying to take that right
away from me,"· wrote Katy
Copeland of Poteau, Okla.",,
U that dumb law is passed, I
and my friends wlll not ever
eat in the cafeteria."
But Tina Sl!na, an 8th grade
student from Memphis,
Tenn., wrote : "We would love
to ha ve ora•· ~· juice and

DOMINO

With

Hamilton County.
·will stay open," responded
the Sen. Ha r ry Meshel , D·
Conferees
on
appropriations bill voted 5-l Youngstown, chairman of the
to le ave out langua ge conference committee.
inserted by the House giving
The conference committee
school districts a cha nce to also voted 4-2, with
borrow from pr ivate banks Republicans opposed , to
and make repa yment by June elimin ate au thority for
1979.
Bowling Green State UniMinorit y H o u s.e versity to spend $3 million in
Republi cans want ed the state capital constru ction
language put in to ensure that funds for a natatorium.
schools would have another
The money instead was
alternative to closing in the diverted in $50,000 chunks to
fall.
the
state 's
two-year
" I can guaran tee that
community colleges and
without this language, the branch campuses for "non·
schools won 't stay open," movable capital equipment"
said Rose. "This simply will purchases. Bowling Green
not do the trick. I'm almost Stale got $500,000 "in place of
certain that some schools will th e money
for
the
close this fall."
natatorium.
"Nothing we can do will
Sen. Paul E. Gillmor, R·
guarantee that the schools Port Clinton, warned that the
amendment would require
student fe e increases of $6 per
quarter at BGSU to pay for
the natatorium , which he said
is
al ready
under
construction .
Rose tried unsucessfuliy to
the commumt)', one job was amend the conference report
by deleting $20 million in
create d.
The committee fi gures that public welfare increases and
if
eve ry body
eli gible pumping more money into
participates,- about 178 new basic education.
Th e Lima lawmak er
jobs could be tTeated in the
proposed that $13 millioH be
county.
Currently eligible residents diverted to th e stale's share
hav e t.o make two trips to of purchasing school buses
Zanesvi ll e to get their for desegregation purposes in
stamps. Afler being certified, Cleveland.
Rose pointed out that U.S.
their Auth ority to Purchase
card, which details how many District Court Judge Fra nk J .
stamps they can purcha se at Battisti ha s ordered tha t the
different limes, is mailed to state pay half the cost of bus
them to verify the address. purchases for Cleveland. H~
Transportation poses a said that w.ith out his amendproblem for some residents, ment, Ba ttisti would insist
but Ernest Parrent of the that. bus money earmarked
food stamp program in the for other school distri~ts go to
Muskingum County Welfare ClevelAnd.
"[ would rather see nonDepartment has devised a
hungry
children than nonprogram to take the stamps
tired
chi
ldren from not
to th e people.
having
to
walk to school,"
He has plans to purchase a
van, staffed with food stamp said Meshel in lead ing the
workers and drive n by a vote against the amendment.
Rose also complained the
shen ff's deputy to make
re gular tr ips to· small state budget is underfundea
commu nit ies within th e in th e areas of school
subsidies and tax credits ,
coun ty.
He says some states have necessitating his proposed
such programs, but if he wins welfare cut.
approval of his plan, it would But Shoemaker predicted
an additi onal windfall in
be the fi rst in Ohio.
revenues by autumn .

the brainchild of Sessa who
said similar, but smaller,
programs were attempted in
Poughkeepsie, N.Y., and
Rhode Island .
The Rev . William Briggs,
director of the Eastside Community Ministry and one of
the committee member s ,
said that during the first
week of Ute campaign , 10
people called for information.
The committee has drawn
up an itinerary, but already
now into the third week, finds
itself running ahead of
schedule.
Workers in the Comprehensive Employment and
Training Act program have
drawn up the leaflet which
will be handed out by Boy
Scouts and Girl Scouts.
A hotline was installed for
daytime hours, but senior
citizens offered their line for
a nighttime and weekend
hotline when they got
involved, saying some people
who may be eligible probably
couldn't call during the day .
To be eligible for the food
stamp program, a family of
four must be making less
than $6 ,804 , and their
rescurrt's must be under

$1,500. Income ugures vary
for the number of people in
Ute household.
Everyone eligible for the
program is entitled to
purchase some stamps and
get some as a bonus.
For example, a family of
two in the program is entitled
to $94 worth of stamps. The
lower the net income, the less
they pay for stamps and more
bonus stamps they get
totaling $94. The higher the
net income, the more they
pay for stamps and the few er
the bonus stamps they get
totaling $94.
The committee figures the
average monthly bonus 1the
amoun t of bonus sta mps
recipients got ) in July of 1977
was $26.73. The committee
figured 7,059 were eligible,
but not participating.
Multiplying those two
figures results in $188,687.07,
the amount of money the
coUI1ty lost per month and
$2.2 million in a twelve-month
period .
The committee also pointed
out that U.S . Department of
Agriculture fi gures show that
for every $12,700 in food
stamp bonuses brought into

support
given for restriction

99~

SUGAR . ...... ... .5 LB.

Money for the schools
breaks down to $53.4 million
in additional aid under the
existing stale subsidy
formula, $13 million to ensure
that each district will receive
at least 10 percent more in
1978-79 than this year , and
$8.2million in special bonuses
to districts with bigh welfare
case loads.
The bill authorizing the
in come tax credits for
property improvements was
passed by the House, 5:1-33.
Th e Senat e concurred in
whole sale amendments
blunting the impact of the tax
credits , 26-1.
Left behind in the rush
toward a summer break were
a pair of bills dealing with
agricultural pollution and appointment of tempo rary
jud!(es , including three in

e

. SPECIAL

oz . •

appropriation .
Adoption of the conference
report followed day long
negotiations, including two
hours of concentrated work
on the report, mainly to
amend the House-approved
bill back to the Senate
version. The ·main change
was elimination of · the
expanded private loans.
The House adopted the
conference committee report
7().14 after the Senate agreed
to it, 27-2.
The appropriation also contains $35 million to fund a
state employees' pay raise,
$20 million in additional
welfare allocations to
increase aid to families with
depend~nt children by 9
percent, and $10 million for
industrial development.

Overw
. h eImmg

HORN

CHEESE

and get more participants
because of concern over
nutrition .
"II is our belief that
everybody in the county has
Ute right to an adequate
nutrutional diet," he said.
" And secondly, a lesser
known fact, Muskingum
County is losing $188,000 by
not having all eligible persons
in the program."
The group wants to make
people aware of the program,

approval~=':.0th': ~~~h:~

t..re- llog

Got.
Plus: T••
' Doposot

TORONTO {UP! ) - The
Toronto Bluejays Tuesday
ac ti vated center-fielder Rick
Bosetti and sent 18-year-old
Char l e5ton a t R1chmond
catcher
Brian Milner to their
Syracuse at Toledo
Colum bus at Rochester
Pioneer League farm club at
Tidewater at Pawtuct.:et
Medicine Hat , Alberta .
Thursd•v 's Games
Bosetti, who was placed on
Char leston a1 Richmond t2·1
the
disabled list June 11, was
Syra cuse at Tol edo
Columbus at Rochester
lea ding Ute club in batting at
Tidewater at Pawtucke l'
the time of his injury.
Rochester 1 Col umbus 4
T idewat er 8 Pa wtucket 3
Wednesda y 's Games

$

Quarters

SWEET ROSE

10 9 0

Sea

1 5 1 go Breazea lf I l l.
and 0 1. Lemon 2 (9}

.

By SANDRA L. LATIMER

Tole-do 4 5yra c.u se 3, 2nd

Sundoerg . Langford . H eaverlo

W - Wood 18 S) L
Pole
HR s - Seanle .
I 1 Moltn aro 13 ), Hale ( 3). Ctl tc a

• .99
00

Willey and other roaches
s u p p leme nt ed
an d
augmented the name of Rio,
but we were the pioneers.
playing footba ll , basketball
and baseball, traveling ex·
tensive ly. Nearl y everywhere
we went we were asked,
·Where is Rio Grande ?'
' 'We were handcuffed by
playing teams with greater
st udent representation. such
as Ohio Unive rsity, Denison
Day t o n
Un iversity ,
Unive rsity, Mu sking um
INTERNATIONAl lEAGUE
Un ited Press International
College, Marshall Universit y,
W l Pet. GB Kent State , Broaddus and
Charleston
41 25 .65 3
R 1chmond
J8 19 .567 6' 1 Dav is Elkin s in West
Pawtuc ket
3&lt;1 l l 522 9' 1 Vi rgini a, Capitol University
T 1dewater
36 33 .507 10' J and ot hers," he added,
Toledo
32 33 .492 11 ' 1
" Now," continued Baker,
Rochester
31 J.S .470 12
"
We
are the forgott en
Col u mbus
19 36 .446 14 ' 2
leg ions, just reli cs of years
Syracu\e
14 47 lla 22 1 2
TuesCI• v ·s Rtsulh
gone by !"
Richmon d 2 CMrleston 1

P! vmm f'f

00 1 tOO OtO

ever known. Lou now lives in
Flonda .
"1\o team or teams ln Rto
Grande history advertised or
publicized the college as the
teams in the early twenties
under Coach Pa ul Lyne,"
satd Baker. " The basketba ll
teams of co aches New t
Oli 1·er . Art Lanham , the
cross country teams of Bob

represents the Democrats'
Spokesmen for the state
stopgap solution to Ute school Department of Education
funding problem.
agreed that with the state
Aides to the governor loan program, the new ·
indicated he will sign both subsidies and bonuses poured
bills in the package. Rhodes into school districts would
had proposed using the allow most of them to remain
surplus for similar grants open through next December.
and loans to ensure schools
)Jut Rep. W. Bennett Rose,
will be open in the fall.
R-Lima, ranking Republican
There was disagreement on the House Finance ·
over whether the loans and Coounittee, said elimination
grants will have their desired of a proposal to expand longeffect.
term borrowing for schools
Rep. t&lt;fyrl H. Shoemaker, from banks meant some will
D·Bou·rneville, House - not have enough money .
"I can guarantee to you
Finance Committee . chairman, said the legislation will that some schools won't stay
prop up schools for the rest of open," said Rose.
the year.
Aides to the governor said
· But he warned that "next Rhodes would have preferred
year we've got to start from the extension of borrowing
zero and develop an entirely powers, but added 1ts
new school funding method e~inatioo will. not prevent
for this state."
h1m from Slgnmg th e

Community bands together to make residents aware

Sy ra cu se 4 Tol ed o 3. 1st

010 000 OOS - o 7 1
WOOd , H •nfon 191 and Na no
rodny Po l e Toda ( .t l, House
Rue • t 5
Romo (9 1 and St tnson ,

I J\

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PHEBE ' S STORE

'"

I

7 10 0

Chunk

.

.....

1

LA
000 000 300~ 3 ~ 0
A.lla
000 000 000- o 1 1
Rau a nd Veager , Ca m p.
campb ell tn, Solomon ( 9J ano
Pocoroba W - Ra u {8 J l L Campoe- 11 12 2J HR - LOS An

AT PHEBE'S

Racine, 0.

.,

{ 11 1

HEfAUinGIARE YOUR!

5th &amp; Pearl

.

--..... ~

( I SJ
000 000 100-

until Sept. 12, unless a special
seSsion is called.
Breaking a stalemate left
over from last week, the
Legislatur~ also approved
and sent to the governor a bill
providing income tax credits
of up to ~ or 5 percent of the
cost of major home im(l"ove·
ments made by hoou:owners.
Senate Democrats had
insisted on the passage of that
bill before a sununer break.
The
supplemental
appropriation includes $75
million in extra grants and
bonuses to l!Chool districts,
and a $40 mlllion loan
program for districts whicli
will be hardpressed to stay
open next fall . ·
Coupled with a school accountability and
management bill sent to the
governor last week, it

Tax credit is given

Stearns (61 Cn1c ago . K mgman

Ph d el

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - The
Ohio General Assembly, sidestepping warnings it will not
do the job, has passed and
sent to Gov. James A. Rhodes
a $1»2 million supplemental
appropriations bill including
$115 million to help keep
public schools open next fall .
Tuesday ' s topheavy
passage of the appropriation,
using actual and projected
surplus state funds through
June of 1979, signaled the end
of a sixmonth effort by
maj(l'ity Democrats to baii
out financially-troubled
school districts.
It also climaxed a two-week
post-primary session and
sent lawmakers home for a
summer vacation. They are
not scheduled to reconvene

ZANESVILLE, Ohio ( UPI)
- Community groups in
Muskingum County have
banded together to make
residents in the state's fifthlargest county more aware of
the food stamp program.
This ambitious project
started June 5 and winds up
July II and 12 with a prescreening program to help

and

{81

( 2nd qam e J
Ba t
1CllClX&gt;040 613 1
H Pc, t. To r
151 100 001 - 9 11 1
85 331
Br tl es . T Ma r l •nez ( ~ I. ~ !a n
09 )]1 hOu!.e
(7
ana
rlendr tc k.s
63 311 Oe m ps~y (9
J~ tt er!!Q n , Col e
88 no m an {8 1 Cruz {I I and Cerone
93 J\5 "N Cruz I I 0 L StanhOvse ( I
61 ]\3 ~ HR ~ Ba lt •more Oa u ~r I J J
84 Jll Sm .tr. IS Toronto Cart y ( lO t
7l 310

Bo v. a Pt1 d

the All England Club,
bringing the two-day total to
63,538.
The departure of McEnroe
and Ashe meant three American seeds have fallen in the
first two days . Dick Stockton,
the lOth seed, was an
openin gpround . casualty
ooonaay.
Van Dillen, 27, known
mainly as a doubles player,
eliminated McEnroe by
playin g aggressively . "I
wasn 't going to lay back and
wait for him to make
mistakes.''
In Tuesday 's first-round
play in women's singles,
defending champion Virginia
Wade , seeded
fourth ,
whipped Sweden's Elisabeth
Ekblom, 6-1, 6-2, and No. 2
seed Martina Navratilova
dumped Julie Anthony, 6-1 , 63.
Sixth-seeded Billie Jean
King, winner of the
Wimbledon singles crown six
times, needed just 43 minutes
to oust Belgium's No . I entry,
Michele Gurdal , !HI, 6-2.

51 LOU IS, Temple ton I l l

ooo-

Amertc a n Le ag ue

in a five-hour ma tch, 8-9, ~.
li-3 , 5-7, 7~ , by breaking
Ashe's serve in the lllh game
of the final set.
. "I did everything I could to
win and .it didn 't work ," Ashe
said of the crucial game. "I
got three first services in and
he hit three good returns."
Chris Ev ert , th e top
women's seed and a two-time
Wimbledon champion , had a
first-round bye and was to
meet Sweden 's Helena Anliot
in a second-round match
Wednesda y.
In other second -round
action on center co urt,
s eco nd -see ded Jimmy
Con nors took on Australia 's
Kim Warwick and Tracy
Austin, seeded ninth , played
Betsy Nagelson .
Tw o- tim e defending
cham pion and top -se ed ed
Bjorn Borg met Australia 's
Peter McNa mara on an
outside court and No. 4 seed
Guillermo Vilas took on Bri·
tain's John Feaver .
Despite overcast skies, a
record crowd of 33,552
attended Tuesday's artion at

and On W- Vuc.k.ov i&lt;h ( 5
L Canae lana 17 1J HR -

(9 )

Sl

.100 110

at Atl a nt a ntght
C•nc .nna!t al Ho uston . n•gnt

· BY PETER J. SHAW
WIMBLEOON, England
(UP[) - Veteran Arthur
Ashe, who had never lost
before the third round in 10
previous Wimbledons, and
John McEnroe, the teen-ager,
who as an amateur qualifier
last yea r reached the
semifinals, were ousted
Tuesda y in th eir first
matches.
" It's a pretty big blow,"
said Ashe, an ex-Wimbledon
champion who was seeded
15th. " You key your whole
year around this tournament .
Th ere's nothing· I can do
about it now but come ba ck
and play next year."
McEnroe, seeded l ith,
said, " You try to expect more
fr om yourself and it's hard
sometimes. It's hard playing
a first-ro und match and then
the guy pla ys good out of
nowhere."
McEnroe had too much
trouble with Eric van Dillen,
who ironically had to qualify
this yea r. Van Dillen woo , 7-11 ,
H , S-9. 6-4 , 6-3.
Steve Docherty edl&lt;ed Ashe

vuc k. o1nch . Sch u ll l (9) and
Sw1snc r Can de lar i a , Jackson

000 100 000-

(on

ICa i'IO
t.MOur'Ctld r eo; g~a
!!On of arr·et c a r-ec •or B ·
Be t.., nao

Vuc kov ich . Sl L 2 37
Amenc•n Leagu e : Gu icry ,
NY 1 71 . Keough , Oak 1 28 .
Pa lm e-r , Ball 2.JJ ; Wa i ts , Ctev
2 53 . Matt., ck . Te~t 2.51

Prsbg h

B y Un t1t d P ress lnt e rnat"to na l

~m .W ,\UKEE , VP I1-

Ball 11 S. Sorenson , M il 10 4.
Palme-r . Ball 10 6.
Ea r ned Run A ver•ge
( s a sec! on 11 1nning~ pitched &gt;
Nat 1ona l Lugue : Blue, SF
2 1"5 Rogers , Mtl 2. 17. Hat ic\o.. i.
SF 2 n , R Reuschel , Ch 1 2. '!7 ,

sr L

Mator Leagu e

back now."

Mil and Btue-, SF 11 A Za chrv
NY 9 3.
Se aver , C1n 9 S.
Rogers , Mt l 9 7.
Amencan L.ugue : Gu •dr y .
NY 11 0
Torrel , Bos. 11 J .
Tana na , Ca l 11 "' · F l anagan ,

PtHi aCelpn •a a t Chtcago
N e..,.., Yo rio. at P tiiSbgh n •ghf

' h1r 0

c:on trac

511

l" nited Press Inte rnational
{ All T tm e!lo EOT l
SEA TILE 1UP! I - Tra ck
Det ro •! I Wilc OM.! 6 a ile Sl aton
tmmortal Jesse Owens b -1 at Clevel dnd ~ W&lt;"l !IS S ] and
lon .1 J. ) 2 S 30 p m
dele&lt;'ts a growin g interest tn Pi!x
New Yorl&lt;. i F .g ueroo 7 5 anc
rUI1nUlg among young people McCa ll 0 0 CIT M tl wa uk.ee
7 5 ano t. v gusT ,ne 8
aroun d the co unt ry and 8Ca 1l dwell
1p m
thmks "" kids are a lot more
Ba lf1m0 re ! M cGrego r 8 51 a1
to I Clancy J 11 1 30 c m
dedi ca ted and diScip lined Toron
1 exas 1Jenk n~ B 3 at O a~o..
than tht') "' ere a few years l and 1Conroy 0 0 10 30 p m
Kansa~ C1ty i Sp lt nor tt 9 6 a t
ago
Ca lt tor n. a Knaoo 1 61 10 30
Owens, •·ho won four gold om
(1"\ lcaqo ~ tone 6 5 at Se-atne
medals m the 1936 Ol)·mpics
J J 10 35 p m
an d becam e lhe most !AbbottTnu
rs day 's Gam E's
endurmg fi gure m the hlst ory
T t J.cl !. at O ak l ana
Boston at Ba lr,mor e " '9n1
,f track and field , satd.
Ch •c ago a! SeatTle n tg ht
"Young people seemed w
Kansas Ct!y at Ca lt l n tgnt
IJaH los: :hose qualities lor a
ume. but the) ·re coming

CHI C' AGO 1 UP I t - The
Chtcagn Bulls Tuesday anJo ~e .
noUI1rt'd the s1gmng of freeNew ¥or -. -..~ e · s
Op• oneo
r u~nl •·lln0£"0
o •cne r \' k.e agent LaRue Martin. a
Bruner• 'C T oe-wa•er an a f o rm e~ 'l.o' ola Um l"erSlty
re-ca ll eo
r cl"' · r.ancer - o,....
and Portland Trailblazers
Ha utll'ilfl
Toror ' J
:.c . a tec CP.I" ' er p!a1 er
t ,eJo er c; : • Boo; en a na ~en'
~art m . 28. pla)ed four
ca tcner Br ar ~/ -Tr er ' 0 V t&gt;O
c•ne t-&lt;GP
:.. oe~ ·a
...
·~~
~e ar s •·11h Portland He d•d
P·Of"lEer ._, aq ~uci&gt; •I pia y last season .
Cn •c. aq o ,\ n ' t · SQ ,
~·QI'It'O
&lt;/,,.. It'

36
l1 JJ
]4

lOU IS

G8

m

] 6 33
31 36

Seatt le

Sports
briefs

Na t tonil l League : Gr im!tlty ,

Pe t .

11 JO

New York

ana ~en• Byr on \' tloit ugn l n •c
the •r T r ole A tar"' ctu o at SiH'

gv ara ..... a l•
n-r.g "l en gclro
second ~ounc oral ' ~ c ~t ano
ovr1'er .,.., o- e L, O(!s ~.h 1 D ao 1o

T.\1\ES FlRST PLACE

been added to tum the lea gue
uno a cu rrent 10--u~am cu nfe rence .
F ol lo win g Reese ' s
retirement . Hobert James.
currently commissioner of
the
Atlan ti c
Coast
Conferenrt'. headt'd the MAC.
James late r was repla ced by
Jacob) .

P 1tch ing

Victor ies

L ea gu e

East

First MAC commissioner is praised
DA YTO!'. Ohio t UP! \ Mid-American Omference
Commissioner Fred Jacoby
has · praised Dr . David E.
Reese , 86, the first MAC
co mn11Ss10ne r who die d
Monday night. for sett ing the
foundation for the reputation
the league has today .
·· Dr . Reese provided a very
solid foundation. whi ch was
the base for the outstanding
conference we enjoy today .··
Jacoby sa1d Tuesday after
leanung of Reese"s death
Monday
.. Desptte an aimost lata!
change u1 membership m
those formulati,,e years, he
pro11dt'd th e leadership that
Ulcreasing l~·
strengthened
the league to the point where
11 · ·as arcepted as an NCAA
Dli1Sion I conference with
automati c qu alificati on in
both the \ CAA basketba ll
and baseball t.ournameniS
" U the ~l AC has respect,
Ultegnty and prestige today .
and I th ll1K 11 does, 1t is oni y a
conunuat•on of those same
qualmes first gained through
Dr Reese, · added Jaroby .
" He was well respected and
liked b) all who came in
contacl with him ."
Reese. whose death at the
Ket terin g Con1·ales cent
Center followed a long IllneSS ,
bera me the MAC' s fi rst
commtssiOner m l!Wi and
remamed m that pos1tioo
unul he ret~red 111 1964.
The leagues annua l allsports tro ph~. 1s named the
·Reese Cup .. in h.ts honor .
Born 1n ~! ass1llon. Oh10, m
1892. Reese v;a s a 12·
l.:otterma n at
Dem~ o n
Un11·e r s1 t~
1n football.
basketba ll. baseball and

l ex 24

L. ea9ue St and1ngs

e y Un1ted Press. tnte rna honil l

$202 million school bill sent to Govemor

Arthur Ashe eliminated

----___.._..,

•

•.

many other kinds of juice to
drink instead of soft drinks . II
tastes better and fills you up
more, but everytime we go to
buy some, it's always empty .
"The school lunch is overpriced and raunchy tasting.
So we buy j)Jtato chips and
nutty bars, but it's not by
choice . If the Memphis board
would get some cooks that
could cook, we would eat the
fo od. Because of the
malnutrition and no food we
DETROIT (UPI J - The
Detroit Tigers said today
pitcher Mark Fidrych went to
New York for treatment of
his sore right shoulder, which
has kept him oo the disabled
list since May 1.
The team said the popular
righthander would see Dr .
Maurice
Cowen,
an
orthopedic surgeon for the
New York Yankees, at Lenox
Hill Hospital.

all have colds or sore throats.
I just wanted you to know this
.. . Hang in there and help us,
please."

PARK RESERVED
SATURDAY, JULY 1ST

FAMILY OUTING
OF

LODGE No. 344
BROntERHOOD OF RAILWAY CARMEN
OPEN TO PUBLIC AFTER 5 PM

CAMDEN PARK
U.S. ROUTE 60 WEST- HUNTINGTON
Closed Every Monday Except Holidays

NEWSPAPER
CARRIERS
WANTED
MIDDLEPORT, POMEROY,
SYRACUSE

PHONE

992-2156

THE DAILY SENTINEL
BETWEEN
8 AM and 5 PM

�,,
•
6- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday. June 28, 1978

riMe:''Hei~

I Us
,!::..

• •

. . . -1

Layette
l!!
shower
held recently
~=

I
•

-

By Helen Bottel 1·

•

i\ I._)CIIl' ~1111\\'CI' was hehl
l'l't'l'lllly honortllg Mrs . {;]t•.nn

Mr. and Mrs. I lla_yne Ritc!Jie
TO CE I.EBHATE - Mr . and Mrs . Wa vne Ritchte
of 755 Stelzer Road, Columbus. former restdents uf the
Keno area in Metgs County , wtlt celebra te thetr 50th
wedding anniversary Swtday . An open house honoring
the couple will be held held atlhe home of then· sun and
daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Elton Ritdue . Tuppers
Pia Ills, from 2 to &gt;p.m. fneiuls oml relali\•es uf the
t'Ou ple are cordtally I!!Vtled tu colt during the open
house hours. Mr. and Mrs. Rildue were married on July l. 192B at lilt' hume uf Mrs. 1\itdue 's parents, Etta
and Joe Swindler. rhey are the parents of seven
chtldren. Eileen Kuhn , Canton: Emma Lou Rhodes .
Massillon : Eugene, Pataskla ; Joe. Culwnbus:
William, Coolville: Elton. Tuppers Plains. and Earl .
Lung Bottom. They have 20 gra ndchildren and f1ve
great-grandchildren . The celcbratwn is being hus tt'd
by their children.

DEA R HE LEI\
My stepdad ts 75. my mother 67 . and my brother ll. She"s OK
tu Dad until brother shows up . Then she's mean to all of us .
especially Dad.
If we say anything to my brother, she packs up and takes uff
with him . We worry about something happenmg tu her one of
these run-aways . -HELP
DEAR HELP :
Maybe your mother needs a resptle more than you knw·.
Let.per husband handle this. It's nut vour affair.- H.

Polly Cramer
A jo b for

old blinds
DEAR POLLY- I have so
man~ old Venetian blinds.
some for btg · ba~· wtnduws
and others for smaller wmdows. and am wondering
what I could du •·11 h them . J
hare been s:mng these bhnds
fur Years etnd al wd~ ~though t
" ~wd use fu r them would
present tlself. So far nuthmg

has turned up. - MRS . C. H.
DEAR MHS . C.H. - 1 am
sure we wi ll soon be hearmg
wh•t other readers have done
with such blinds. or course '
you could give them to a local
lhrtfl shop, where they cuuld
be u&gt;ed by surneone else. ur tu
a church rwrunage sale
Some sud1 u rge:~mU:ttiuns gJ vt::

tax slips for usable •rllcles
lhat ~rc gJYen tu them . POLLY
DEAR POLLY - I am
answenng Mr . H.K.B. who
wanted to knuw what euuld be
dune wtth bathroom and k1t·
chen rugs when the rubber
ba c klit~ start s to l"Utne uff .
Havmg been a nurst&gt; for
years I try lu ~•cti t'l'siifety
ftrst 111 rega rd to throw rugs
and ha II runners - I have had
palients who fell and frat··
tured a lup ur leg un newly
wax~d fluur:o. ur lhruw rugs
thai shd. When the backing
sta rts tu gu I buy rug grtp tn
24 ur 2i -tnl'l1 widths Thts ts
sold by the runmng foul 1n
small mall order t·atalogs
and ts pl:. ccd under such
washable rug~. The rug gnp
can be cut to any shape or
length and mtne has lasted
years and years .
fRA:'ICES
DEAR POLLY - My Pet
Pct·L·e ts wtth the boxes our
breakfast cer~als come m.
Wuh the tnner wax~d bag 11
cu:,ts us a needless Cimuunt uf
munt.&gt;) - I am sure sut:h
' boxes are far from dteup. We
gi l't' her a go to a store that has puffed
rt C&lt;' and wheat tn plasttl"
bags The cunlenls keep fn·sh
and li •·,JSts a lutless than the
fatH") pac·kagc-d ktnd I do
lwpt• ~ tl U wlll prun.wle lh1s
bi! GE.!HHT among llie proper people. HOG F:H
·
'
~
DEA H PO LLY - I hated tu

Thinking seriously
of getting
serious?

Diamond
Promise.Ring
~

r-;, . . c.art l'lt1h a Gem-Art

~~ r

0 a~oM P · ~m , ~e rmg
lht
,J g ro ,.. m~ love In 14
1..tra1 ~~o h 1 te c; r . P ile ;~; gold
set
, ;~ a '· ert d amend When ~ou
~lfC'!l 1 \f

SNr

"'tt

•ea t"'l gagement nng,

se r.ng ;s ,.·orth full
pvct dse or1c.e n uad""
~t · D ' ~ "'

'
I

{

! 'V "i~

PII OII •H II INC

'27

00

CANDY'S
CLASSIC
COLLECTIBLES

~ ht•

INGLES
FURNITURE
106 N. 2nd Avo . Middleport . 0 .

et \lo a~

U!') l',:,

CHOICES

r\llc!ldlllg

\h (ISt'

aud sun. Plitlhp . Tommy
Tackett. Marilyn Saale, !l'a
and C• rrie Mills. Phyllis Har·
ns, Sl1ar4n Helber. Wilmo
H~1ber, (;re~rc J one!'l. (;uldte

Dtll.llctty Lou .lullllson. llon·
na fltlt• . LoiS, Melissa, Katltv
and David. IJnda H1Jll et:.
Debb ie and Tanu11y. Hu!Jyn
Hetiler . Rachel and Rubt:rt.

uf the erowd trust
thei r neaghbur:s . As hi s fuutl
we~ :, passed amun ~
t·veryun ~ began to l'i:tl

t11crn.

Iu s or

DEAR DR . lli.AKEK - IJcl' owr1 pruvisiur1s .
One word uf t•autlun : If yuu
Although I want to bt• "
psychulugt&gt;l. I wtll never be cht ws~ the mmistry tu satisfy
able to hw wttll myself your pH rents. yuu wlll run th~
Wlless I becume d Protestant n sk of lalt&gt;r resenl!ng thelll
IIUfli Slt:!f
fur llleJr power un.•r you .
Tho! 1s m~· pc:~n.• nt.s' "'tstl Tltc.t 's " blg cha nt.'e to lrikc
They ore nvw over 70 and with unpurt.c:trillllt!lllltries .
quite til. All they want tn tht&gt;
Thtnk tl over can·full~
wurld ~ tu see therr ~on Ut.'fon· makmg yuur dhll l'e
become a "" IIUIII uf the d oth ... 1\'nte tu Dr . Blaker 111 care of
I am \·cry rehgtuus but i:t tlus nt·wspapN. P.O. Hox -\89 .
rrumster 's ltfe Uuesn't re:-JII\' Httl.llll Cnv Sti::itwn . . Ne\\'
appea llu me
· York . N. \' . 10019. Volume uf
At 22. I ha ve jusl fllushc'tl ma ll pr1Jhtbtts persona l
college and would be r·ead\" tu replH!:,. but questions uf
get on w!lh my life tf 11 w•~n' l g l' IICI'Cil 1!1\t:l't'Sl.WIJI bt•
fur tlus problem
dJ ;,l' Us:l l'd 111 futun.• rulum ns.
chutces : I could wall unul my
SEEN AND HEARD
parenl"' dre ltJ pur~me rny
Fijthcr 's Day guests uf Mr
~real po&gt;stun fur psychology .
Or I could change my career and Mrs. Stanle)' Trus;,ell
goals and begin training fur \\l' re Mr. &lt;1nd Mrs . Ha rold
the mtntstr)' . Neither Trussell uf Newport News.
puss rbillty seems Yt'r~· i:tltrac· Va .. Hubert Trussell om! IH;
~tJi l-111-li:lw and detughter. Mr.
ll\' l' .
I don't WCillt to live mr ltfc and Mrs. Rt dlard Kerns ami
fur my petrt•nts. But bc~·au.sc grandstm, Chad , Belpre : Mr .
they hCJ\'t.' given me and Mrs·. i)unald Tru&gt;sell and
Dun . MI. Vernon ; Mr . and
t:verythm~ a sun could want,
I someti me$ thtnk I c·uultl be Mr&gt;. Halplt Trussell . Peggy.
ll&lt;lppy merely fulftllmg lht•&gt;r Hence. Sc:uuy ond :vlt ss~
"·1shes dunng thetr losl years Tru~~cll. The faml l) t'IIJojcU
on t.'Urth .
" J••tluck &lt;l111ner.
If I &gt;uund cunfu&gt;e-d , ll 's
because I •m.
HERE \'!SITI NG
DEAR READER - If vuur
Mr . and Mrs. Mark Cur·
parent» have really gtL'eti ruu den , Mike and Bmuks. 'cui·
everyUunK ~ ~un l'uuld w&lt;:~nl. wnbus. and Bubby Stdtr&gt;
the) must ilav e been .,f Key nuldsburg were Mongerwruus &lt;.hsJ)t:!nscr~ of sup- Ll..a~ VISllor.s uf thelr grecttpurl and freedom lu pur!-iuc
grandmutlwr . Mrs. Huxt&lt;'
your untque cumbtnallun uf Oiler.
mtert'Sls and talenL'i.

They m•y want you to be a
lflllll&gt;ler. But would lilt\"
really nul understand tf ruu
marehed to the ileal uf o dtf·
ft&gt;rent drwruner?
Your upllons are not as
lumted a!) they 1mght

~t·em .

_

Whal about a career that
cumbtnes psydwlugy and the
uumstry ? Fur ~ xamplt:&gt; , sumc
lllllli S l ~rs beeumc pi:tsturctl
cvunstlurs . They take "
stnmuuus srnes uf t:uurscs lit
an •&lt;Tredtled psychuther•py
tntlmng center wh1ch Ill·
dudes supef\"l sed work wllh
dJcnl.!l .

Shtft the emphasts and you
cuuld be buth p.sychulugl.!tl
and al'tn·c partll'l pi:lllt Hl the
l'hurdl as a dearun ur let)
IILJIH.:,(t•f'.

fn"

&gt; ltghtl~

&lt;hffercnl velll.

~ 11U

tuuld tr~ lu metkc yuur
eart&gt;er rhuiL'l! lll urc etl'l't'll-'
!lil)it' lu ~ u ur p&lt;.trt:nt:, Arc

the) full) •wart· uf Jcsu., ·
ps) ch olu~ tl'alt•l e n ts "'
When l wt~ ~ J:l , 11Ur t'w1·

,k!l'e~Ctli una ! IIHIIISlt:l' u.wd lhl'
nurade uf lilt• l u.i:l \'t'~ ami

ft; he&gt;111 tllustr•tc Je&gt;U&gt;' ; ktll
et:~ it

!TiiWd p~) r huJtJ,K I.'\1

i:lffdld

lu

It!

It

f:t ~ ht

uwm~er s

Career
compromise

The utht'r

fC:IVuritc

t~sHJt•S

,,._.

'l:t!'ll

Pulll!l'l' , Pt't-\ l' oJ Prublcm 111 because n ung111 bt• grabbed
IK·r l'olu nll &gt; Wme POI.I.Y·s ii"''H\
POI..,TEIL'i 111 tare uf lhi&gt;
11~ kllt'W I )l(t I Jm, gCJit'P I!'Ill \
tlt'I&lt;&gt;J!Oper
wnll ln.-, 11 \\ ll t ~tnd \\ •·uld l i\'I IJ

('Iundt. Mrs. Willie Cullins.
Debby Wolfe. t'lins and MarshoJI. Kri stine~ and Alethea
(',,JJtns. Ja cquel in e and
Franklin H•ys, and Kris llna
Eynon .
Sendin g g1fL.., Wl~tc Mrs.
Vlrg ll Hamm. Mrs. Tltumc.s
Homn&gt; . Suzan ne Teaford,
~ml Mrs. P•t Brown .

..

I

CHAPMAN SHOES

Mctgs Htgli Sdiu(•i

Fort Modtsun. luwo. Aug. 10
at Des !V1u1nes. Juwtt. Aug. 11

!-llrlt'l'

lf2

ha,.t: ~'t'fl 1ht· Penns\'h'etnH:I
M&lt;J!t• dwlllplufl~ for till' p(JS\

lht' ) tri::I\'Ci to Mtl'llt ,k!an Cuy .

~ IX ycors

Mtch. On July 2 tliey wtlt be at
Hockfunl. Ill. . on July 3 at
Mant tuwue. Wtsc. and 1111 Jul)
I at the Upper Arlinglun Ht gh
Sdt"'" 111 C'lllumiJu&gt;.

Mr. and Mrs. OrL"al Wtles
wtll trord wtltt the Hura l
Crusade rs fro m Juh· l tu ihc
151h.
'

l h!.!
l llll'fllLI \IUil i.li
l'I IIHJ)cl i\Joll .

Tht• Curp!&gt; w!!lthcn havt.~ a
l.H't·a~ 111 theu· sdlt'dule until
Jul1 15 when the; wtll enter
lhl' MtdWe&gt;l i&gt;la; 11fb 111
Wtutt•\.ntlt'r, WJSl', ful],, wt-'&lt;.1
b) a perfurtmlnc:c 111 Ha"ctlll'.
Wl !o.C on July 16. Cllld then 1''
llust11 11. Mass . for the W•Jrld
Open un July 29 . Thetr next
i.'1Jil1pt'tllwu w1ll bt: un Aug. 2
•t the: AlllCrtciln lnlt'l"llaHAVE GUESTS
ttuna! CmnpetJtiun at Bu tll·r.
Mrs . Patty H~·,cU and
Pa Other perfonna nces wtll
:-.;tJ I'IIlO .Jean uf Polllt'l'u)
IJt: 11n Aug . 3 al Y&gt;psalonlt,
werl' ~Jmdet) afte r nuun .\lt l'it. Aug . 5 ~~Manon fur I he
VtS lllu rs ·~ uf Mrs. Phyl lts
U. S. Open, Aug
at
Haley, Happy Hollow.
Ind .·

PRICE

1 Group
Men &amp; Children's

TENNIS &amp; WOMEN'S
GRASSHOPPERS

1fz PRICE

I

bch

Early Shoppers
SPECIAL
1 Select Group
Men's, Women's
Children's

Model LA49
Jig 18-lb. capacity
0 Heavy Dul• Spiral Ramp
Ag itator-lo r big wash
loads
0 Knillabric cycle
0 Three agitation/s pin speed
selections
0 Five-position water saver
with "Re-sel ect" setting
Five-pos ition water
!em perature controlInclud ing 3 Pennanent
Press settings
0 Bleach dispenser
Double-Action washing
Porcelain enamel top and

NEXT TO ELBERFELOS
IN POMEROY

~RC?~~~~DE HAM SALAD ................... ~.~: ..'1.G9
2 LB• .ROLL HAMBURGER ........... .-....... ~?~~- - •2.89
12 oz . FRENCH CITY

PACKAGED WEINER$ .............................. :.~.~: 89c
lb . TEEN QUEEN

MARGARINE QUARTERS ......................... 2/89c
2 lb . VELVEETA

CHEESE SPREAD ......................................~~.. '2..39

lid
~in ! Iiller

~~~~~~~w._~.~.........~···~... ~~-~~~2~5~'
.

HOLSUM 8 PKG. BUNS ..... ,...........,.. ,. ...... 2/79c ,

$489~~1R

and recirculation

•Y•Iem
t ack 'n Spln1" Safety Lid
Fabric aoNener dispenser
(optional accessory)
Backed oy Nationwide
Su re Service

,
YEU.OW ONIONS ...~~~..69
,.

1 2

NASHER-ORYER

5
lb. GRANULATED SUGAR...............~ .'-~:.~P. .9f
7 oz.
CARNATION
SPREADABLES ..........................89c
9oz . ARMOUR
VIENNI SAUSAGE ......................................... ,.. 79c
21 oz . VAN CAMP
PORK &amp; BEANS .......................................... 2/8f
oz . STOKEL YS
FRUIT COCKTAIL .......................................... 2/9f
oz .
COOL-AIDS
.....................................................
6/5f
200 ct.
.
WHITE
PUFF TISSUE ............ ~i.'~.~~-~! .... 2/$1.25
ct.
·
NORTHERN
NAPKINS.......... ................... 2/5f
J oz.
INSTANT NESTEA .................................. !.~~... $1~99
oz . KEEBLER
VANILLA WAFERS .................................... ~~...·5'

•

•

sure
serv1ce

•

17

of quality
recapped
tires at
a reaso nable
price when
you shop

MEIGS TIRE CENTER
John F. Fultz. Mgr .

"992-2109

700 E. Main

Pomeroy. 0 .

'&amp;.,ICIMiatlrMr ~Mi~MT~ I bJ IIIUy

..,.,._.,y .. ,_

Diet Rite or
R.C. Cola

c

Bag

UIIT !laG liTH totPGR UD S7.StlDDinOIAt "ICIJW
(IICLUDIIIC TMIS ITU)

liMIT ONI COUI'ON I'Ea F~Mll Y

WI"&gt;ULIII 01 CHUI

Any Size Pkg.
Ground
ieef .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ..
Mixed

HOllY fAIMS , U.S.D.A. INSPICTEO

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Pcirts .................. lb.

...

Kroger
Pork 'N'
Beans ...........
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Kroger
Cheese 12••••
~~'""'\ Food .......... "'•·
Spotlight
INOlVIOUAll VWIAI'PED

$

'
I

~

I
I
I
I

Meat or Beef
Kroger Wieners

I
I

I

I
I
I
I

c

I

c!

Ill

l·lb.
Pkg.

. r 2Pill IITI CIIPH Ut $7.51 AtlfT1GUl "IICUI(
{UCUIIIIC Till ml)

~Bean

'

The Poet's t
Corner t

Coffee ...
r~ · .

I'

To Sliter
Lucy Mabel Smith Gaul
Satlafled with our dear Lord,
I!Uiured by His holy word,
Seeing blessings every day,
Telling others of the Way.
Ever giving God the praise ;
Really love Him all your
days.

(;~;;;, Club 5$
Canned
-lb.
.

Uving da Uy for our Lord,
Using blessihgs from His

Word,

Ham ..............

......

Caring for your friends and
kin,
Yearning for the ones in sin.

Northwestern
Bing
Cherries ............ lb.
Fresh
Western
Cantaloupes ......... .

May God bless in a.ll you do,
And give comfort unto you ;
Bear your burdens with a
smile,
Ever trusting all the while,
Look ahead on every mile.

24

60

Give your talents to the Lord,
Always read His precious
Word,
Unlhid with those who
humbly pray.
Letting Jesua lead the way .

KIOG~

6,

Grade A
Large
Eggs............. Doz.

lniiiWt Otly lo Storti IIi" Deli 's
Itt f...,lniloDitlllM·7 PM

Live •Maine Lo
·~lace Vour Order Thlt
WH!c for ~kk Up At Your
11....., Store Ned Thu. . .y
Thru Saturcley July 6·Jvly I

•••

-Compoaed March 29, 1978
by Mrs. Riley Pigott, the
flrlt letter In each line of
the above verees spells
1·uur name, Siller Lucy
iltabel Smith Gaul.

Can

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KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON

19

lb.

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_,. . . . . .,,_U111tSIIIIM1 ..11. U11

lallC1 Tt Y'NCIII.l ITl11&amp;liC.M TllU

ELECTION of officers
when Ohio Valley Com·
mandery 24, Knights Tern·
plar, meets at 7:30 Wednesday at the temple.
~--

•.P

a* oe

)M.

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

Charcoal

I'INT IETUINAII.I

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - MID ·
DLEPORT Lions Clu b,
We&lt;lnesday noon allhe Meigs

.._.

It

Embers

..,_..._

Sing a glad and happy song:
Mating mualc for the throng
In your heart keep love and
joy,
Take away things that aMoy,
Hold to faith without alloy.

12

I

OOOD IUIIIDA' . . . • ,_,
MY t, ...
• •V I I _ . 00011 ,.,~--­
_ . , . 1MIItOMI YO tJMf1' Qt" iii&amp; -

,----,
,
l Social

Prices Effective Thru Sat., Julv 1st

l

selection

twtWGhT 1tn-n11 ~ca . ,...

BEVERLY BISHOP
AWARDED - Beverly
Bl1hop, 18, Pomeroy, hu
ben awarded a $200
1cholarsblp
In
co1metology. A June
&amp;raduale of Meigs High
School, Miss Bishop will
alltnd tbe Nallonwlde
Beauty Academy Ia
Columbus where abe will
lake management training
counes and work towards
her maoager's license. Sbe
II the daughter of AIlea and
Betty Bllbop, Route I,
Pomeroy.

1 Calendar

12

excellent

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON

1

SS.OO Purchase or More

!llml !I I ~Ut! IICI 10 bot otld,lv

tt.ICI\IIniiMI DIICI W!I~Wl :1)

SPORT &amp; HOUSE
SLIPPERS
$~ a Pair

1 lb . eeua

of ,._ adv8rt!Md

chetll olllflK:h wtll.,m ~ yoo tCJ JJ~"r c hue Jht fd•tr11Hd '"'"'

CHAPMAN SHOES

3 lb . New

find an

OPEN MONDAY .IULY 3RD.
TIL MIDNIGHT
OPEN Tuesday .luly 4th At
8:00AM And Remain
Open 24 Hours A Dey •

1.0 n.-n. - WIN a'* y~ YOIIr cll(JI(:e ol • com..-r•ble
111m. wtt.li11YIUD61 . !lfi«:ttng the wme W• or&gt;!jjl 0! f , . ,

Ladies Purses Sale Priced

CHEESE OR PEPPERONI
PIZZA l' oz .
$}19

SPECIAL

..,

I'Wiilei:IM 1Df ...,. If! NCh J(rOtjJI• SlOtt. e• ~ ep l l i
~ no1.a m 1M .t If - ao ryn oul or c.n ~~"

'

Chef Fay Ar Dee

Aghatm
whh
Knit F*lrlc Cycle

__

4Q%0FF

PRODUCE

18lb. Clp!M:Ity

FREE CLOTHING DAY
CHESHIRE - The GalliaMeigs Commu nit y Action
Program will hold its free
clothing day for low income
persons from 9 a. m. to 12
nuon frtday. The agency's
clothing bank is located in the
old hi gh school building at
Cheshire.

You will '

JULY 4TH

Phone 742-2100

1

Middleput"l ; Mr. a11d Mrs.
ltandu lph Moure and
t.la ughlcrs. Hillards, and Mr.
and Mrs. Ira Ebli n ond sun,
Sywcuse.

GREAT SELECTION
GREAT Tl'"' ....,

OPEN

RUTLAND
.
DEPARTMENT STORE

di\'I SIUll

The fi fth annual St las Hen·
nett reunion was held recent·
ly at Vienna , W. Va . at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Haven
Johnson and daughter.
Attending were Mr. and
Mrs . Albert Kunze of Keyser,
W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs. John
Motley and suns, Mr . and
Mrs. George Moure, Mr. and
Mi·s. Gregurr Muorc of Cui·
wnbus: Mrs. Robert Brush
and family uf Centerburg,
Charles Johnson and suns,
Heynuldsburg; Mr. anti Mrs,
Rolph
Johnson
uf
Parkcrs!Jurg, W. .VA .: Mr .
e:~nd Mrs . Terry Juhnsun cmd
son. Mrs . Eileen Snyder of

Salvation Army, Butternut
Ave., Pomeroy, from 10 a. m.
until noon Thursday.

CLOTHING AVAILABLE
All area residents in need of
clothing are invited to the
free clothing day of the

ALL KROGER STORES

...

Frum Cul w nbu~ lht:) Will
gu t11 Evans\'tlh•. Ind . whcrt•
they Will corn t)Ctc . then 1111 to
Altoua, Pa .. Jul y 6. tu
Pt&lt;'kS\'tllc . PH . on Jul; i . and
:\Jien\11 \\ll , P1.1 un .lui~ 8 fur

Bennett reunion held

The Riverview Community
Vacation Bible School opened
June 26 with an enrollment of
83. The last day will be June
30 followed by a closing
program on July I at 8 p, m.
at the school.
Delores Frank is director ;
Marlene P utman, craft
director, and Nancy Buckley,
music director.
Teachers and helpers are
nursery, Patty Martin, Mary
Maxey, Mary Wells, Jerry
Holsinger, Roberta Larkins,
Barba ra Ba rr inge r , Patty
and
Shirley
Powell,
Sa lisbury : beg inner, Sue
Suttle, Connie Connolly, Jo
Ann Lawrence and Teresa
Hannum ; primary, Cathy
Spencer, Sandra Cowdery,
Sherry Starcher and Lorraine
Wigal ; middle r, Mary
Co wdery and Janet Connolly.
Junior, Debbie Dawson and
youth, George Pickens.
Crafl helpers are Mary
Alice Bise, Patty Lawrence.
Lucille Kimes and Glenda
Hunt. Pianist is Maralene
Kimes.

DRESS SHOES

Values To $21.00

1973 and

Till' 18 lxtnd lllt! lfl l&gt;t·rs Will
bt.og1n tuunng un Jul~ I w h~.::n

sun and Stcvt; Mcmlcy . There
was a love qffering presented
In the couplt• from lhcu·
d mrL'h l:ungregallllll . Th~
Hcv . Mr. Manley ts a holiness
mimstcr ami b tht pc.stor 11f
the new lndcpendelll Huliness
Church u11 Pearl Sl. Ill Mtd·
dl epurl.

1 Group
Women's
White &amp; Bone

WOMENS
SANDALS

al l.tii&lt;"llln. 1\eb .. Aug . 13 at
S&lt;.·onsbluff. Ncb .. ;\ug. H at
&lt; ;reelc~ . r;.,Ju. and Aug . 15
thru ugh 19 a t l:.&gt;t:nvcr. Culo.
for Nallunal Meet .
The Huyal CruS&lt;Jders &lt;ravel
by bus. stay parllnne m
11111td.s and partune 111 pnvalt'
hutn es . Partl l.'lpcmt s wen~
sele&lt;"led through tryouts and
the studellls began rehea r·
sals thret' wet•ks bt!furt:
.~l..' huul wa:, t JUt travclm~ tu
daughtt'r of Mr. and Mr~ . • Penn.svlvml!i::i un weekends
l'htlltp H~dfurd : Man d)
For Lite past ftve years, the
Stss'"'· su11 uf Mr . ami Mrs . Huy•l Crusaders liavc fllli slt·
Frank Stssun: Tnna (;t bbs. ,,J 111 the tup 20 uf drwn and
fict ughtt'r of Mr i.irtd Mrs. Uugl t&gt; eorps, ncl:lrh· l,OI.Xl, m
Fred (;ibbs: and En c St·t les. tile U11 Hed States. 'rhev have
~ull uf ,\1r . ;.:nu.J Mr~ . Julm
lx.'t'/1111 ttw Opt• n U. S.-FIIlCIIS
l'\'L' n ' \ear

Rev. and M ts. Odell Man ley

Eugene Housl1, tlw hns ls C:l lli.l
their children, Crystal and
Trc.tt:y, grandtildn~n of tht·
h1murcd guests .
Olltet·s remembering the
cuuplc were Mrs. Milrga rcl
Bennett, Mr. and Mrs . Paul
McDaniel. Mr . and Mt·s. Kenny Smith and Kimberly, and
Mr. and Mrs. Chorl..v flH vid -

Starts 9:30 AM Thurs., June 29

the !loyal Cr usade rs Dt'Wil
ofl&lt;l B~glc Corps wht ch t» bas·
c'&lt;i Ill F tnlcyvtlte. Pa .
In th~ gnmp frurn here arc
Anna II' ties. daughter uf Mr .
Hnd \Irs. Orval Wtles. l.. n
Ann Wu11d . daughter uf Mt·.
ami Mrs Pal Wuud: Lurrct
WJ~·l· up. daughter uf Mr . etnd
Mr s . Ja111 es Wt sec up :
Stc plianme Huught . doughier
uf Mr. and Mrs. Ct•rald
Huughl : Stephetllll' Kadft~ rd .

SL· Jtl'~ .

A 30th anniversary c-elebration honoring the Rev . and
Mrs. Odell Manley was held
recently at the home of their
sun and daughter-in-law , Mr.
and Mrs. Hubert 0 . Manley,
50 Riverview, Middlepurl.
A cake presented to the
t'Ouple was in the shape of
wedding be lls and was in·
scribed , "Happy AnniverS&lt;Jry, Odell and Belly ."
Cupcakes, icc cream, Kool·
Aid and cuffe~ were .setved.
Attending were Mr . and
Mrs . D~no King, Titruny and
Jody , Mrs. Barbara Stahl and
Tami, Mr . and Mrs. Lewis
Smith and Brenda, Mrs.
Mary McCa rty and Keith,
Mrs. James Sears , Mrs.
Sarah McCa rty , Mr . and Mrs.
Donald Jeffers and Ricky.
Mrs . Viola Moun, Mr. and
Mrs. Bernard Hudson, Mary
and Kim , Mr. and Mrs. Rick
Jones, Mr . and Mrs. Charles
Junes, Mary and Ttmmy, Mr.
and Mrs. Ruger Manley,
Ruger. Jr . Wid Donna, Mr.
and Mrs Gary Acree and Jeff .
Mr . and Mrs. SonnyHudsun
• nd Steve, Mrs. Juan Wise
and Be&lt;:kv t h+! R~v . and Mrs.

SEMI-ANNUAL SALE
1 Group

students ctrc tnn'ehng With

Mr. and Mrs. Manley honore Workers
on 30th wedding anniversary named

:Iii

used &lt;Jnllw regtstr•r's table .
Dianne Davidson and LQis
Games were played with Gail.
pmes going tu .Mrs, Pearl
Mrs. Florence Smith, Mrs.
Knapp. Mrs . Dianne David- Dolly Wolfe, Mrs. Alice B
sun. and Mrs . Edith Manuel. Balser , Mrs. Shirley Ables,
· Tile dour prize was wun by Mrs . Eileen Buck, and Mrs.
Mrs. Dunn• Htll.
Lucille Rhodes.
'
Mrs . Nancy Russell, Mrs.
Sending g(fts were Mrs.
.ian Norris. Miss Cindy Dorothy McCloud, Mrs . Stella
Huush, and Mi&gt;s Tracy Nor- Jarrell, Mr . and Mrs . Bub
ris presided at the gift table. Murris, Mr. and Mrs. Ch&lt;!rles
Ci ndy Roush t•egislered the f.awsun, Wilda Lawson, Mrs.
guest&gt;. Punch, ca ke, mints Cindy Morris, Mrs . Debbie
and coffee were served.
Roush, Mrs. Dee Spencer,
Attend ing we re Mrs. Ber- Mr. and Mrs. John Hill , Mrs.
nice Roush, Ci ndy Housh, Linda1'furley, Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Bess Parsons , Mrs. Don· Bren · Manley, Mrs. Julia
na Hill. Mrs. J an Norris, Norris, Mrs. Sally Owens,
, Tracy Nor ris. Mrs . Edith Mrs . Lois Wolfe, Mr. and
Man uel, Mrs. luna Hupp, Ter· Mrs . Carl Davidson, _Poft ·'
rie Man uel, Mrs . Flussie David$un,""Qiltrflii);ifke, Ben
Bush. Debbte Baird . . Mrs. and ..fuim Davidson, Mrs. UnRuberta Lewis, Mrs. Nelfcy · · da Boy les, Mrs. Jeannette
Ftussel l, Mandy Michael, Duffy , and Mrs. Sharon
Mrs. Pearl Knapp. Mrs. Hupp.

Eight Meigs students
travel with musical corps

Karen Blaker Ph.D.

Ill) half shps that

) i1 UI

by tile 1\ppl&lt;· Grove United
Metliudt&gt;t ('hurd&gt; .. n June 16.
fur Mi" Karcrt Hltudes,
bnde·det·t .,£ Btll 1Jav&gt;ds11 n.
Tilt' shuwer wa&gt; held ol the
1,t'tart r'alb ( ·ummunity
IJall.
Hluc, yellow attd wlule
streamers •nd wlutc wcddtng
iJdl s were usc'l I ll uec"rate
the halt . The gtft ta ble was
det11rated with a bnda l doll
cclll er)&gt;tece and blut• and
wlute streamers and bt:ll s.
Till' rdrcslimenl tab le
featured yellow su·e"'ners
and vases uf wllow and blue
nll wers orra"nged by Mrs.
Bmuce Ht~usll. Rlue and
'''IJJ tc streamer~ and a va.sc of
blue 'and wllllc dat sics were

Snuth and sun. Jcrt.&gt;lll\..
Mtdtelle Br own , Maril;&lt;t

A.., th~;~ ~ t or~ got~s. J~~us
lk•&lt;l been pre• dung all day tu
tkt) I l• .~t.Jk dll old pi:ur uf Ct LT P Wd tJf 5,00) Jt :iiJU/1
IJracf~ . ~cd them a!!t et pallt!rn i.ll'L'i..lllll' til'(;! I' t)l(;l\ fl u !IIIC hC:itl
and mod e tn)self bnds from I t ~t ill fur an C\'l'lllll g llleetl He
alllhuse&gt;hurl &gt;lips - J .I..
lltett dcl'l(led to , hare In;
DEAH POLLY - Tu keep iJf't't~d Hntl fish With lht'
bru ~n sugar .w ft and mu1st I mul til utlt'
l)I IJ!'C It Ill dll ernpty thret:·
F. v~;~ryune wa ~ cunazt·d to
pound l'liff et · r 11n ruHI tetpe a f111d !hat f1 w luetV~ !) and 114 11
hunk nf ! ol \1 11!1 tu !he bultu/11 ft;,IJ Wt:! ft' 111\]f'C thl.tll CllOU~h
of till' ltd It d•IC» nut lw rdt·tt fuud ! tl &amp;ill~fy tile nuwc.J
fol' lllilllll L~ - FW
The tntmsler expla111ed the
Poll} "111 ~end yuu urH· •I I "nunH.' It: ' cts ful luws: Jesw;
h~r
~ ~~rltd
l hct ll k •)u U k.Jtc~ the people •II had thetr
flt'\\ .'! prlJJt'f' t'UU(&gt;oll t Jl p~ rs If 11Wil fw d. But tltt:) Wl'rt:
thn1"

Cl!'l' 1\tJ \\ l ot i ~hiJ I't .

ll llli lll'r·tn·law , Mrs. Emil
E) nun. Hustes."ics were Mr~ .
Mildred !hie, Mrs . J , ;\ .
Snulh. aud Mrs. Davul Ba1·, .
Mary Hay s had c harg~· ~A
tilt· get n1es wnh Sharon
Hetbt:r. Donno !lilt•. and
Pauhnl' Ey111111 W}lllllflg the
Jll'llt'S. The ~oor prize was
Wtlll Uy ~argc.ret · EyN1111 . A
stork replied l't'llh:!l'l'&lt;.l thl' g1ft
loiJ!t- Blue. pink ollll whtlc:
st realllt'I'S, white buolit•s.
&lt;tiaper ptns. tutd pae tfiers
were used 111 tht• dt.•C tJ I'et li iiiiS.
Ct~ kt•, dccurated with a sh,rk,
ydluw IJuulles and t'l tsl'lmd.s
was scnil·d with punl'h and

Mary Ann Fnwler . Bt•ckv

As I see II , I ha\'L' t wu

POLLY"$ POINTERS

A bndal shuwer w;ts g1vcn

nmncU wen:! Bt&gt;ll y Dt't.'l'lng

-H .

DEAR HELEN.
I'm pregnant by a married man who has seven k1d.s and h.cts
been separated fr om hts wife a year. He's been wilh me for six
months, says he loves me and wilt get a dtvurce
He wJII pay the huspttal bill and take eare of the baby. he
says. Also marry me. He 's always talkmg about uur new baby .
But I'm afraid he'll change . Should I call&gt;l qutts ?
I do love him. and I wasn't responsible fur the break-up. MARILYN
DE All MARILYN :
Why quit nuw when thmgs seemlu be gomg yuur way '.' Your
baby has a fat her. and you might soon have a husband tlhuugh
wtth seven other children to support he may nut be a very sol·
vent one 1.
Wait until your chtld ts burn and then make a dectston . -H.

SI'IJ"

Miss Rhodes honored
! with bridal shower

C'tlllllls , Jr. C:ll the llmnt• of her

llllllt S.

7-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, June 28, 1978

~

~

EVERYI'HING'S RELATIVE TO HER!
DEAR HELEN
My husband is the oldest in a family of I wu brothers and four
.
sisters. I have four brothers .
We 've been ruHrned 21 years and have al~·ays entertained
the relatives on both sides . As we Jived at a beach, they came
often, stayed weekends and longer. brought friends , later
wives, husbands and children. Seemed lu enjo)' themselves immensely .
But they seldom ask us to visit them . One brother named us
godparents to their baby but added, "" Don't come to the
christening ."
One of the sisters and her husband hved with us while their
home was being built. She drops tn.unannounced and they stay :
twith their three clu ldrenl fur dinner often. Yet we're never
asked there .
She has spe('ifically told us not lu come to their house 1it's
"" too small"" i after we have all the family . tnd ud ing them. here
for Christmas dtnner and drinks . The rest go to her place to
finish off the dav while we stav home and du muunlatns of
dlshes. This has b.&gt;en going on fur six years .
Why do they du this to us? - M.H.
IJEAR M:
.. . Possibly. because yuu expeet 11. Have you sumelww
created the in1llge of perennial husls. tu be taken fur granted
beta use you don't complain- you'll always .. understand "":
Since your husband is oldest uf the brU&lt;KI . he 's perhaps seen
more as father ll1lln brother. You. being the only sister 10 four
males. eould easily create the "" mother" image.
So they may louk un yuu lwu as the bountiful parents. nut
realizm~ how inconsiderate they are. lAnd you don't help by
playing qutet martyr 1
Tell them ! And if they rematn the same. dose down un in\&lt;1tatt ons ~

·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:· :· :::·:::::;::::::::::::·::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:::·:·:::::;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:::;:::::::::;:;:::: :;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: :: :::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:::::::::;:;:;:::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~

Frtsll
t•lnch
Str1wbtrry Pie ..... 'I•
lUClO
Ylrlllla
llkttiHam ............

$299

1~. $299

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6- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday. June 28, 1978

riMe:''Hei~

I Us
,!::..

• •

. . . -1

Layette
l!!
shower
held recently
~=

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By Helen Bottel 1·

•

i\ I._)CIIl' ~1111\\'CI' was hehl
l'l't'l'lllly honortllg Mrs . {;]t•.nn

Mr. and Mrs. I lla_yne Ritc!Jie
TO CE I.EBHATE - Mr . and Mrs . Wa vne Ritchte
of 755 Stelzer Road, Columbus. former restdents uf the
Keno area in Metgs County , wtlt celebra te thetr 50th
wedding anniversary Swtday . An open house honoring
the couple will be held held atlhe home of then· sun and
daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Elton Ritdue . Tuppers
Pia Ills, from 2 to &gt;p.m. fneiuls oml relali\•es uf the
t'Ou ple are cordtally I!!Vtled tu colt during the open
house hours. Mr. and Mrs. Rildue were married on July l. 192B at lilt' hume uf Mrs. 1\itdue 's parents, Etta
and Joe Swindler. rhey are the parents of seven
chtldren. Eileen Kuhn , Canton: Emma Lou Rhodes .
Massillon : Eugene, Pataskla ; Joe. Culwnbus:
William, Coolville: Elton. Tuppers Plains. and Earl .
Lung Bottom. They have 20 gra ndchildren and f1ve
great-grandchildren . The celcbratwn is being hus tt'd
by their children.

DEA R HE LEI\
My stepdad ts 75. my mother 67 . and my brother ll. She"s OK
tu Dad until brother shows up . Then she's mean to all of us .
especially Dad.
If we say anything to my brother, she packs up and takes uff
with him . We worry about something happenmg tu her one of
these run-aways . -HELP
DEAR HELP :
Maybe your mother needs a resptle more than you knw·.
Let.per husband handle this. It's nut vour affair.- H.

Polly Cramer
A jo b for

old blinds
DEAR POLLY- I have so
man~ old Venetian blinds.
some for btg · ba~· wtnduws
and others for smaller wmdows. and am wondering
what I could du •·11 h them . J
hare been s:mng these bhnds
fur Years etnd al wd~ ~though t
" ~wd use fu r them would
present tlself. So far nuthmg

has turned up. - MRS . C. H.
DEAR MHS . C.H. - 1 am
sure we wi ll soon be hearmg
wh•t other readers have done
with such blinds. or course '
you could give them to a local
lhrtfl shop, where they cuuld
be u&gt;ed by surneone else. ur tu
a church rwrunage sale
Some sud1 u rge:~mU:ttiuns gJ vt::

tax slips for usable •rllcles
lhat ~rc gJYen tu them . POLLY
DEAR POLLY - I am
answenng Mr . H.K.B. who
wanted to knuw what euuld be
dune wtth bathroom and k1t·
chen rugs when the rubber
ba c klit~ start s to l"Utne uff .
Havmg been a nurst&gt; for
years I try lu ~•cti t'l'siifety
ftrst 111 rega rd to throw rugs
and ha II runners - I have had
palients who fell and frat··
tured a lup ur leg un newly
wax~d fluur:o. ur lhruw rugs
thai shd. When the backing
sta rts tu gu I buy rug grtp tn
24 ur 2i -tnl'l1 widths Thts ts
sold by the runmng foul 1n
small mall order t·atalogs
and ts pl:. ccd under such
washable rug~. The rug gnp
can be cut to any shape or
length and mtne has lasted
years and years .
fRA:'ICES
DEAR POLLY - My Pet
Pct·L·e ts wtth the boxes our
breakfast cer~als come m.
Wuh the tnner wax~d bag 11
cu:,ts us a needless Cimuunt uf
munt.&gt;) - I am sure sut:h
' boxes are far from dteup. We
gi l't' her a go to a store that has puffed
rt C&lt;' and wheat tn plasttl"
bags The cunlenls keep fn·sh
and li •·,JSts a lutless than the
fatH") pac·kagc-d ktnd I do
lwpt• ~ tl U wlll prun.wle lh1s
bi! GE.!HHT among llie proper people. HOG F:H
·
'
~
DEA H PO LLY - I hated tu

Thinking seriously
of getting
serious?

Diamond
Promise.Ring
~

r-;, . . c.art l'lt1h a Gem-Art

~~ r

0 a~oM P · ~m , ~e rmg
lht
,J g ro ,.. m~ love In 14
1..tra1 ~~o h 1 te c; r . P ile ;~; gold
set
, ;~ a '· ert d amend When ~ou
~lfC'!l 1 \f

SNr

"'tt

•ea t"'l gagement nng,

se r.ng ;s ,.·orth full
pvct dse or1c.e n uad""
~t · D ' ~ "'

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{

! 'V "i~

PII OII •H II INC

'27

00

CANDY'S
CLASSIC
COLLECTIBLES

~ ht•

INGLES
FURNITURE
106 N. 2nd Avo . Middleport . 0 .

et \lo a~

U!') l',:,

CHOICES

r\llc!ldlllg

\h (ISt'

aud sun. Plitlhp . Tommy
Tackett. Marilyn Saale, !l'a
and C• rrie Mills. Phyllis Har·
ns, Sl1ar4n Helber. Wilmo
H~1ber, (;re~rc J one!'l. (;uldte

Dtll.llctty Lou .lullllson. llon·
na fltlt• . LoiS, Melissa, Katltv
and David. IJnda H1Jll et:.
Debb ie and Tanu11y. Hu!Jyn
Hetiler . Rachel and Rubt:rt.

uf the erowd trust
thei r neaghbur:s . As hi s fuutl
we~ :, passed amun ~
t·veryun ~ began to l'i:tl

t11crn.

Iu s or

DEAR DR . lli.AKEK - IJcl' owr1 pruvisiur1s .
One word uf t•autlun : If yuu
Although I want to bt• "
psychulugt&gt;l. I wtll never be cht ws~ the mmistry tu satisfy
able to hw wttll myself your pH rents. yuu wlll run th~
Wlless I becume d Protestant n sk of lalt&gt;r resenl!ng thelll
IIUfli Slt:!f
fur llleJr power un.•r you .
Tho! 1s m~· pc:~n.• nt.s' "'tstl Tltc.t 's " blg cha nt.'e to lrikc
They ore nvw over 70 and with unpurt.c:trillllt!lllltries .
quite til. All they want tn tht&gt;
Thtnk tl over can·full~
wurld ~ tu see therr ~on Ut.'fon· makmg yuur dhll l'e
become a "" IIUIII uf the d oth ... 1\'nte tu Dr . Blaker 111 care of
I am \·cry rehgtuus but i:t tlus nt·wspapN. P.O. Hox -\89 .
rrumster 's ltfe Uuesn't re:-JII\' Httl.llll Cnv Sti::itwn . . Ne\\'
appea llu me
· York . N. \' . 10019. Volume uf
At 22. I ha ve jusl fllushc'tl ma ll pr1Jhtbtts persona l
college and would be r·ead\" tu replH!:,. but questions uf
get on w!lh my life tf 11 w•~n' l g l' IICI'Cil 1!1\t:l't'Sl.WIJI bt•
fur tlus problem
dJ ;,l' Us:l l'd 111 futun.• rulum ns.
chutces : I could wall unul my
SEEN AND HEARD
parenl"' dre ltJ pur~me rny
Fijthcr 's Day guests uf Mr
~real po&gt;stun fur psychology .
Or I could change my career and Mrs. Stanle)' Trus;,ell
goals and begin training fur \\l' re Mr. &lt;1nd Mrs . Ha rold
the mtntstr)' . Neither Trussell uf Newport News.
puss rbillty seems Yt'r~· i:tltrac· Va .. Hubert Trussell om! IH;
~tJi l-111-li:lw and detughter. Mr.
ll\' l' .
I don't WCillt to live mr ltfc and Mrs. Rt dlard Kerns ami
fur my petrt•nts. But bc~·au.sc grandstm, Chad , Belpre : Mr .
they hCJ\'t.' given me and Mrs·. i)unald Tru&gt;sell and
Dun . MI. Vernon ; Mr . and
t:verythm~ a sun could want,
I someti me$ thtnk I c·uultl be Mr&gt;. Halplt Trussell . Peggy.
ll&lt;lppy merely fulftllmg lht•&gt;r Hence. Sc:uuy ond :vlt ss~
"·1shes dunng thetr losl years Tru~~cll. The faml l) t'IIJojcU
on t.'Urth .
" J••tluck &lt;l111ner.
If I &gt;uund cunfu&gt;e-d , ll 's
because I •m.
HERE \'!SITI NG
DEAR READER - If vuur
Mr . and Mrs. Mark Cur·
parent» have really gtL'eti ruu den , Mike and Bmuks. 'cui·
everyUunK ~ ~un l'uuld w&lt;:~nl. wnbus. and Bubby Stdtr&gt;
the) must ilav e been .,f Key nuldsburg were Mongerwruus &lt;.hsJ)t:!nscr~ of sup- Ll..a~ VISllor.s uf thelr grecttpurl and freedom lu pur!-iuc
grandmutlwr . Mrs. Huxt&lt;'
your untque cumbtnallun uf Oiler.
mtert'Sls and talenL'i.

They m•y want you to be a
lflllll&gt;ler. But would lilt\"
really nul understand tf ruu
marehed to the ileal uf o dtf·
ft&gt;rent drwruner?
Your upllons are not as
lumted a!) they 1mght

~t·em .

_

Whal about a career that
cumbtnes psydwlugy and the
uumstry ? Fur ~ xamplt:&gt; , sumc
lllllli S l ~rs beeumc pi:tsturctl
cvunstlurs . They take "
stnmuuus srnes uf t:uurscs lit
an •&lt;Tredtled psychuther•py
tntlmng center wh1ch Ill·
dudes supef\"l sed work wllh
dJcnl.!l .

Shtft the emphasts and you
cuuld be buth p.sychulugl.!tl
and al'tn·c partll'l pi:lllt Hl the
l'hurdl as a dearun ur let)
IILJIH.:,(t•f'.

fn"

&gt; ltghtl~

&lt;hffercnl velll.

~ 11U

tuuld tr~ lu metkc yuur
eart&gt;er rhuiL'l! lll urc etl'l't'll-'
!lil)it' lu ~ u ur p&lt;.trt:nt:, Arc

the) full) •wart· uf Jcsu., ·
ps) ch olu~ tl'alt•l e n ts "'
When l wt~ ~ J:l , 11Ur t'w1·

,k!l'e~Ctli una ! IIHIIISlt:l' u.wd lhl'
nurade uf lilt• l u.i:l \'t'~ ami

ft; he&gt;111 tllustr•tc Je&gt;U&gt;' ; ktll
et:~ it

!TiiWd p~) r huJtJ,K I.'\1

i:lffdld

lu

It!

It

f:t ~ ht

uwm~er s

Career
compromise

The utht'r

fC:IVuritc

t~sHJt•S

,,._.

'l:t!'ll

Pulll!l'l' , Pt't-\ l' oJ Prublcm 111 because n ung111 bt• grabbed
IK·r l'olu nll &gt; Wme POI.I.Y·s ii"''H\
POI..,TEIL'i 111 tare uf lhi&gt;
11~ kllt'W I )l(t I Jm, gCJit'P I!'Ill \
tlt'I&lt;&gt;J!Oper
wnll ln.-, 11 \\ ll t ~tnd \\ •·uld l i\'I IJ

('Iundt. Mrs. Willie Cullins.
Debby Wolfe. t'lins and MarshoJI. Kri stine~ and Alethea
(',,JJtns. Ja cquel in e and
Franklin H•ys, and Kris llna
Eynon .
Sendin g g1fL.., Wl~tc Mrs.
Vlrg ll Hamm. Mrs. Tltumc.s
Homn&gt; . Suzan ne Teaford,
~ml Mrs. P•t Brown .

..

I

CHAPMAN SHOES

Mctgs Htgli Sdiu(•i

Fort Modtsun. luwo. Aug. 10
at Des !V1u1nes. Juwtt. Aug. 11

!-llrlt'l'

lf2

ha,.t: ~'t'fl 1ht· Penns\'h'etnH:I
M&lt;J!t• dwlllplufl~ for till' p(JS\

lht' ) tri::I\'Ci to Mtl'llt ,k!an Cuy .

~ IX ycors

Mtch. On July 2 tliey wtlt be at
Hockfunl. Ill. . on July 3 at
Mant tuwue. Wtsc. and 1111 Jul)
I at the Upper Arlinglun Ht gh
Sdt"'" 111 C'lllumiJu&gt;.

Mr. and Mrs. OrL"al Wtles
wtll trord wtltt the Hura l
Crusade rs fro m Juh· l tu ihc
151h.
'

l h!.!
l llll'fllLI \IUil i.li
l'I IIHJ)cl i\Joll .

Tht• Curp!&gt; w!!lthcn havt.~ a
l.H't·a~ 111 theu· sdlt'dule until
Jul1 15 when the; wtll enter
lhl' MtdWe&gt;l i&gt;la; 11fb 111
Wtutt•\.ntlt'r, WJSl', ful],, wt-'&lt;.1
b) a perfurtmlnc:c 111 Ha"ctlll'.
Wl !o.C on July 16. Cllld then 1''
llust11 11. Mass . for the W•Jrld
Open un July 29 . Thetr next
i.'1Jil1pt'tllwu w1ll bt: un Aug. 2
•t the: AlllCrtciln lnlt'l"llaHAVE GUESTS
ttuna! CmnpetJtiun at Bu tll·r.
Mrs . Patty H~·,cU and
Pa Other perfonna nces wtll
:-.;tJ I'IIlO .Jean uf Polllt'l'u)
IJt: 11n Aug . 3 al Y&gt;psalonlt,
werl' ~Jmdet) afte r nuun .\lt l'it. Aug . 5 ~~Manon fur I he
VtS lllu rs ·~ uf Mrs. Phyl lts
U. S. Open, Aug
at
Haley, Happy Hollow.
Ind .·

PRICE

1 Group
Men &amp; Children's

TENNIS &amp; WOMEN'S
GRASSHOPPERS

1fz PRICE

I

bch

Early Shoppers
SPECIAL
1 Select Group
Men's, Women's
Children's

Model LA49
Jig 18-lb. capacity
0 Heavy Dul• Spiral Ramp
Ag itator-lo r big wash
loads
0 Knillabric cycle
0 Three agitation/s pin speed
selections
0 Five-position water saver
with "Re-sel ect" setting
Five-pos ition water
!em perature controlInclud ing 3 Pennanent
Press settings
0 Bleach dispenser
Double-Action washing
Porcelain enamel top and

NEXT TO ELBERFELOS
IN POMEROY

~RC?~~~~DE HAM SALAD ................... ~.~: ..'1.G9
2 LB• .ROLL HAMBURGER ........... .-....... ~?~~- - •2.89
12 oz . FRENCH CITY

PACKAGED WEINER$ .............................. :.~.~: 89c
lb . TEEN QUEEN

MARGARINE QUARTERS ......................... 2/89c
2 lb . VELVEETA

CHEESE SPREAD ......................................~~.. '2..39

lid
~in ! Iiller

~~~~~~~w._~.~.........~···~... ~~-~~~2~5~'
.

HOLSUM 8 PKG. BUNS ..... ,...........,.. ,. ...... 2/79c ,

$489~~1R

and recirculation

•Y•Iem
t ack 'n Spln1" Safety Lid
Fabric aoNener dispenser
(optional accessory)
Backed oy Nationwide
Su re Service

,
YEU.OW ONIONS ...~~~..69
,.

1 2

NASHER-ORYER

5
lb. GRANULATED SUGAR...............~ .'-~:.~P. .9f
7 oz.
CARNATION
SPREADABLES ..........................89c
9oz . ARMOUR
VIENNI SAUSAGE ......................................... ,.. 79c
21 oz . VAN CAMP
PORK &amp; BEANS .......................................... 2/8f
oz . STOKEL YS
FRUIT COCKTAIL .......................................... 2/9f
oz .
COOL-AIDS
.....................................................
6/5f
200 ct.
.
WHITE
PUFF TISSUE ............ ~i.'~.~~-~! .... 2/$1.25
ct.
·
NORTHERN
NAPKINS.......... ................... 2/5f
J oz.
INSTANT NESTEA .................................. !.~~... $1~99
oz . KEEBLER
VANILLA WAFERS .................................... ~~...·5'

•

•

sure
serv1ce

•

17

of quality
recapped
tires at
a reaso nable
price when
you shop

MEIGS TIRE CENTER
John F. Fultz. Mgr .

"992-2109

700 E. Main

Pomeroy. 0 .

'&amp;.,ICIMiatlrMr ~Mi~MT~ I bJ IIIUy

..,.,._.,y .. ,_

Diet Rite or
R.C. Cola

c

Bag

UIIT !laG liTH totPGR UD S7.StlDDinOIAt "ICIJW
(IICLUDIIIC TMIS ITU)

liMIT ONI COUI'ON I'Ea F~Mll Y

WI"&gt;ULIII 01 CHUI

Any Size Pkg.
Ground
ieef .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ..
Mixed

HOllY fAIMS , U.S.D.A. INSPICTEO

Frve~

Pcirts .................. lb.

...

Kroger
Pork 'N'
Beans ...........
. .,
Kroger
Cheese 12••••
~~'""'\ Food .......... "'•·
Spotlight
INOlVIOUAll VWIAI'PED

$

'
I

~

I
I
I
I

Meat or Beef
Kroger Wieners

I
I

I

I
I
I
I

c

I

c!

Ill

l·lb.
Pkg.

. r 2Pill IITI CIIPH Ut $7.51 AtlfT1GUl "IICUI(
{UCUIIIIC Till ml)

~Bean

'

The Poet's t
Corner t

Coffee ...
r~ · .

I'

To Sliter
Lucy Mabel Smith Gaul
Satlafled with our dear Lord,
I!Uiured by His holy word,
Seeing blessings every day,
Telling others of the Way.
Ever giving God the praise ;
Really love Him all your
days.

(;~;;;, Club 5$
Canned
-lb.
.

Uving da Uy for our Lord,
Using blessihgs from His

Word,

Ham ..............

......

Caring for your friends and
kin,
Yearning for the ones in sin.

Northwestern
Bing
Cherries ............ lb.
Fresh
Western
Cantaloupes ......... .

May God bless in a.ll you do,
And give comfort unto you ;
Bear your burdens with a
smile,
Ever trusting all the while,
Look ahead on every mile.

24

60

Give your talents to the Lord,
Always read His precious
Word,
Unlhid with those who
humbly pray.
Letting Jesua lead the way .

KIOG~

6,

Grade A
Large
Eggs............. Doz.

lniiiWt Otly lo Storti IIi" Deli 's
Itt f...,lniloDitlllM·7 PM

Live •Maine Lo
·~lace Vour Order Thlt
WH!c for ~kk Up At Your
11....., Store Ned Thu. . .y
Thru Saturcley July 6·Jvly I

•••

-Compoaed March 29, 1978
by Mrs. Riley Pigott, the
flrlt letter In each line of
the above verees spells
1·uur name, Siller Lucy
iltabel Smith Gaul.

Can

•

I
I
I
I

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON

19

lb.

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

I
I

_,. . . . . .,,_U111tSIIIIM1 ..11. U11

lallC1 Tt Y'NCIII.l ITl11&amp;liC.M TllU

ELECTION of officers
when Ohio Valley Com·
mandery 24, Knights Tern·
plar, meets at 7:30 Wednesday at the temple.
~--

•.P

a* oe

)M.

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

Charcoal

I'INT IETUINAII.I

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - MID ·
DLEPORT Lions Clu b,
We&lt;lnesday noon allhe Meigs

.._.

It

Embers

..,_..._

Sing a glad and happy song:
Mating mualc for the throng
In your heart keep love and
joy,
Take away things that aMoy,
Hold to faith without alloy.

12

I

OOOD IUIIIDA' . . . • ,_,
MY t, ...
• •V I I _ . 00011 ,.,~--­
_ . , . 1MIItOMI YO tJMf1' Qt" iii&amp; -

,----,
,
l Social

Prices Effective Thru Sat., Julv 1st

l

selection

twtWGhT 1tn-n11 ~ca . ,...

BEVERLY BISHOP
AWARDED - Beverly
Bl1hop, 18, Pomeroy, hu
ben awarded a $200
1cholarsblp
In
co1metology. A June
&amp;raduale of Meigs High
School, Miss Bishop will
alltnd tbe Nallonwlde
Beauty Academy Ia
Columbus where abe will
lake management training
counes and work towards
her maoager's license. Sbe
II the daughter of AIlea and
Betty Bllbop, Route I,
Pomeroy.

1 Calendar

12

excellent

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON

1

SS.OO Purchase or More

!llml !I I ~Ut! IICI 10 bot otld,lv

tt.ICI\IIniiMI DIICI W!I~Wl :1)

SPORT &amp; HOUSE
SLIPPERS
$~ a Pair

1 lb . eeua

of ,._ adv8rt!Md

chetll olllflK:h wtll.,m ~ yoo tCJ JJ~"r c hue Jht fd•tr11Hd '"'"'

CHAPMAN SHOES

3 lb . New

find an

OPEN MONDAY .IULY 3RD.
TIL MIDNIGHT
OPEN Tuesday .luly 4th At
8:00AM And Remain
Open 24 Hours A Dey •

1.0 n.-n. - WIN a'* y~ YOIIr cll(JI(:e ol • com..-r•ble
111m. wtt.li11YIUD61 . !lfi«:ttng the wme W• or&gt;!jjl 0! f , . ,

Ladies Purses Sale Priced

CHEESE OR PEPPERONI
PIZZA l' oz .
$}19

SPECIAL

..,

I'Wiilei:IM 1Df ...,. If! NCh J(rOtjJI• SlOtt. e• ~ ep l l i
~ no1.a m 1M .t If - ao ryn oul or c.n ~~"

'

Chef Fay Ar Dee

Aghatm
whh
Knit F*lrlc Cycle

__

4Q%0FF

PRODUCE

18lb. Clp!M:Ity

FREE CLOTHING DAY
CHESHIRE - The GalliaMeigs Commu nit y Action
Program will hold its free
clothing day for low income
persons from 9 a. m. to 12
nuon frtday. The agency's
clothing bank is located in the
old hi gh school building at
Cheshire.

You will '

JULY 4TH

Phone 742-2100

1

Middleput"l ; Mr. a11d Mrs.
ltandu lph Moure and
t.la ughlcrs. Hillards, and Mr.
and Mrs. Ira Ebli n ond sun,
Sywcuse.

GREAT SELECTION
GREAT Tl'"' ....,

OPEN

RUTLAND
.
DEPARTMENT STORE

di\'I SIUll

The fi fth annual St las Hen·
nett reunion was held recent·
ly at Vienna , W. Va . at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Haven
Johnson and daughter.
Attending were Mr. and
Mrs . Albert Kunze of Keyser,
W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs. John
Motley and suns, Mr . and
Mrs. George Moure, Mr. and
Mi·s. Gregurr Muorc of Cui·
wnbus: Mrs. Robert Brush
and family uf Centerburg,
Charles Johnson and suns,
Heynuldsburg; Mr. anti Mrs,
Rolph
Johnson
uf
Parkcrs!Jurg, W. .VA .: Mr .
e:~nd Mrs . Terry Juhnsun cmd
son. Mrs . Eileen Snyder of

Salvation Army, Butternut
Ave., Pomeroy, from 10 a. m.
until noon Thursday.

CLOTHING AVAILABLE
All area residents in need of
clothing are invited to the
free clothing day of the

ALL KROGER STORES

...

Frum Cul w nbu~ lht:) Will
gu t11 Evans\'tlh•. Ind . whcrt•
they Will corn t)Ctc . then 1111 to
Altoua, Pa .. Jul y 6. tu
Pt&lt;'kS\'tllc . PH . on Jul; i . and
:\Jien\11 \\ll , P1.1 un .lui~ 8 fur

Bennett reunion held

The Riverview Community
Vacation Bible School opened
June 26 with an enrollment of
83. The last day will be June
30 followed by a closing
program on July I at 8 p, m.
at the school.
Delores Frank is director ;
Marlene P utman, craft
director, and Nancy Buckley,
music director.
Teachers and helpers are
nursery, Patty Martin, Mary
Maxey, Mary Wells, Jerry
Holsinger, Roberta Larkins,
Barba ra Ba rr inge r , Patty
and
Shirley
Powell,
Sa lisbury : beg inner, Sue
Suttle, Connie Connolly, Jo
Ann Lawrence and Teresa
Hannum ; primary, Cathy
Spencer, Sandra Cowdery,
Sherry Starcher and Lorraine
Wigal ; middle r, Mary
Co wdery and Janet Connolly.
Junior, Debbie Dawson and
youth, George Pickens.
Crafl helpers are Mary
Alice Bise, Patty Lawrence.
Lucille Kimes and Glenda
Hunt. Pianist is Maralene
Kimes.

DRESS SHOES

Values To $21.00

1973 and

Till' 18 lxtnd lllt! lfl l&gt;t·rs Will
bt.og1n tuunng un Jul~ I w h~.::n

sun and Stcvt; Mcmlcy . There
was a love qffering presented
In the couplt• from lhcu·
d mrL'h l:ungregallllll . Th~
Hcv . Mr. Manley ts a holiness
mimstcr ami b tht pc.stor 11f
the new lndcpendelll Huliness
Church u11 Pearl Sl. Ill Mtd·
dl epurl.

1 Group
Women's
White &amp; Bone

WOMENS
SANDALS

al l.tii&lt;"llln. 1\eb .. Aug . 13 at
S&lt;.·onsbluff. Ncb .. ;\ug. H at
&lt; ;reelc~ . r;.,Ju. and Aug . 15
thru ugh 19 a t l:.&gt;t:nvcr. Culo.
for Nallunal Meet .
The Huyal CruS&lt;Jders &lt;ravel
by bus. stay parllnne m
11111td.s and partune 111 pnvalt'
hutn es . Partl l.'lpcmt s wen~
sele&lt;"led through tryouts and
the studellls began rehea r·
sals thret' wet•ks bt!furt:
.~l..' huul wa:, t JUt travclm~ tu
daughtt'r of Mr. and Mr~ . • Penn.svlvml!i::i un weekends
l'htlltp H~dfurd : Man d)
For Lite past ftve years, the
Stss'"'· su11 uf Mr . ami Mrs . Huy•l Crusaders liavc fllli slt·
Frank Stssun: Tnna (;t bbs. ,,J 111 the tup 20 uf drwn and
fict ughtt'r of Mr i.irtd Mrs. Uugl t&gt; eorps, ncl:lrh· l,OI.Xl, m
Fred (;ibbs: and En c St·t les. tile U11 Hed States. 'rhev have
~ull uf ,\1r . ;.:nu.J Mr~ . Julm
lx.'t'/1111 ttw Opt• n U. S.-FIIlCIIS
l'\'L' n ' \ear

Rev. and M ts. Odell Man ley

Eugene Housl1, tlw hns ls C:l lli.l
their children, Crystal and
Trc.tt:y, grandtildn~n of tht·
h1murcd guests .
Olltet·s remembering the
cuuplc were Mrs. Milrga rcl
Bennett, Mr. and Mrs . Paul
McDaniel. Mr . and Mt·s. Kenny Smith and Kimberly, and
Mr. and Mrs. Chorl..v flH vid -

Starts 9:30 AM Thurs., June 29

the !loyal Cr usade rs Dt'Wil
ofl&lt;l B~glc Corps wht ch t» bas·
c'&lt;i Ill F tnlcyvtlte. Pa .
In th~ gnmp frurn here arc
Anna II' ties. daughter uf Mr .
Hnd \Irs. Orval Wtles. l.. n
Ann Wu11d . daughter uf Mt·.
ami Mrs Pal Wuud: Lurrct
WJ~·l· up. daughter uf Mr . etnd
Mr s . Ja111 es Wt sec up :
Stc plianme Huught . doughier
uf Mr. and Mrs. Ct•rald
Huughl : Stephetllll' Kadft~ rd .

SL· Jtl'~ .

A 30th anniversary c-elebration honoring the Rev . and
Mrs. Odell Manley was held
recently at the home of their
sun and daughter-in-law , Mr.
and Mrs. Hubert 0 . Manley,
50 Riverview, Middlepurl.
A cake presented to the
t'Ouple was in the shape of
wedding be lls and was in·
scribed , "Happy AnniverS&lt;Jry, Odell and Belly ."
Cupcakes, icc cream, Kool·
Aid and cuffe~ were .setved.
Attending were Mr . and
Mrs . D~no King, Titruny and
Jody , Mrs. Barbara Stahl and
Tami, Mr . and Mrs. Lewis
Smith and Brenda, Mrs.
Mary McCa rty and Keith,
Mrs. James Sears , Mrs.
Sarah McCa rty , Mr . and Mrs.
Donald Jeffers and Ricky.
Mrs . Viola Moun, Mr. and
Mrs. Bernard Hudson, Mary
and Kim , Mr. and Mrs. Rick
Jones, Mr . and Mrs. Charles
Junes, Mary and Ttmmy, Mr.
and Mrs. Ruger Manley,
Ruger. Jr . Wid Donna, Mr.
and Mrs Gary Acree and Jeff .
Mr . and Mrs. SonnyHudsun
• nd Steve, Mrs. Juan Wise
and Be&lt;:kv t h+! R~v . and Mrs.

SEMI-ANNUAL SALE
1 Group

students ctrc tnn'ehng With

Mr. and Mrs. Manley honore Workers
on 30th wedding anniversary named

:Iii

used &lt;Jnllw regtstr•r's table .
Dianne Davidson and LQis
Games were played with Gail.
pmes going tu .Mrs, Pearl
Mrs. Florence Smith, Mrs.
Knapp. Mrs . Dianne David- Dolly Wolfe, Mrs. Alice B
sun. and Mrs . Edith Manuel. Balser , Mrs. Shirley Ables,
· Tile dour prize was wun by Mrs . Eileen Buck, and Mrs.
Mrs. Dunn• Htll.
Lucille Rhodes.
'
Mrs . Nancy Russell, Mrs.
Sending g(fts were Mrs.
.ian Norris. Miss Cindy Dorothy McCloud, Mrs . Stella
Huush, and Mi&gt;s Tracy Nor- Jarrell, Mr . and Mrs . Bub
ris presided at the gift table. Murris, Mr. and Mrs. Ch&lt;!rles
Ci ndy Roush t•egislered the f.awsun, Wilda Lawson, Mrs.
guest&gt;. Punch, ca ke, mints Cindy Morris, Mrs . Debbie
and coffee were served.
Roush, Mrs. Dee Spencer,
Attend ing we re Mrs. Ber- Mr. and Mrs. John Hill , Mrs.
nice Roush, Ci ndy Housh, Linda1'furley, Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Bess Parsons , Mrs. Don· Bren · Manley, Mrs. Julia
na Hill. Mrs. J an Norris, Norris, Mrs. Sally Owens,
, Tracy Nor ris. Mrs . Edith Mrs . Lois Wolfe, Mr. and
Man uel, Mrs. luna Hupp, Ter· Mrs . Carl Davidson, _Poft ·'
rie Man uel, Mrs . Flussie David$un,""Qiltrflii);ifke, Ben
Bush. Debbte Baird . . Mrs. and ..fuim Davidson, Mrs. UnRuberta Lewis, Mrs. Nelfcy · · da Boy les, Mrs. Jeannette
Ftussel l, Mandy Michael, Duffy , and Mrs. Sharon
Mrs. Pearl Knapp. Mrs. Hupp.

Eight Meigs students
travel with musical corps

Karen Blaker Ph.D.

Ill) half shps that

) i1 UI

by tile 1\ppl&lt;· Grove United
Metliudt&gt;t ('hurd&gt; .. n June 16.
fur Mi" Karcrt Hltudes,
bnde·det·t .,£ Btll 1Jav&gt;ds11 n.
Tilt' shuwer wa&gt; held ol the
1,t'tart r'alb ( ·ummunity
IJall.
Hluc, yellow attd wlule
streamers •nd wlutc wcddtng
iJdl s were usc'l I ll uec"rate
the halt . The gtft ta ble was
det11rated with a bnda l doll
cclll er)&gt;tece and blut• and
wlute streamers and bt:ll s.
Till' rdrcslimenl tab le
featured yellow su·e"'ners
and vases uf wllow and blue
nll wers orra"nged by Mrs.
Bmuce Ht~usll. Rlue and
'''IJJ tc streamer~ and a va.sc of
blue 'and wllllc dat sics were

Snuth and sun. Jcrt.&gt;lll\..
Mtdtelle Br own , Maril;&lt;t

A.., th~;~ ~ t or~ got~s. J~~us
lk•&lt;l been pre• dung all day tu
tkt) I l• .~t.Jk dll old pi:ur uf Ct LT P Wd tJf 5,00) Jt :iiJU/1
IJracf~ . ~cd them a!!t et pallt!rn i.ll'L'i..lllll' til'(;! I' t)l(;l\ fl u !IIIC hC:itl
and mod e tn)self bnds from I t ~t ill fur an C\'l'lllll g llleetl He
alllhuse&gt;hurl &gt;lips - J .I..
lltett dcl'l(led to , hare In;
DEAH POLLY - Tu keep iJf't't~d Hntl fish With lht'
bru ~n sugar .w ft and mu1st I mul til utlt'
l)I IJ!'C It Ill dll ernpty thret:·
F. v~;~ryune wa ~ cunazt·d to
pound l'liff et · r 11n ruHI tetpe a f111d !hat f1 w luetV~ !) and 114 11
hunk nf ! ol \1 11!1 tu !he bultu/11 ft;,IJ Wt:! ft' 111\]f'C thl.tll CllOU~h
of till' ltd It d•IC» nut lw rdt·tt fuud ! tl &amp;ill~fy tile nuwc.J
fol' lllilllll L~ - FW
The tntmsler expla111ed the
Poll} "111 ~end yuu urH· •I I "nunH.' It: ' cts ful luws: Jesw;
h~r
~ ~~rltd
l hct ll k •)u U k.Jtc~ the people •II had thetr
flt'\\ .'! prlJJt'f' t'UU(&gt;oll t Jl p~ rs If 11Wil fw d. But tltt:) Wl'rt:
thn1"

Cl!'l' 1\tJ \\ l ot i ~hiJ I't .

ll llli lll'r·tn·law , Mrs. Emil
E) nun. Hustes."ics were Mr~ .
Mildred !hie, Mrs . J , ;\ .
Snulh. aud Mrs. Davul Ba1·, .
Mary Hay s had c harg~· ~A
tilt· get n1es wnh Sharon
Hetbt:r. Donno !lilt•. and
Pauhnl' Ey111111 W}lllllflg the
Jll'llt'S. The ~oor prize was
Wtlll Uy ~argc.ret · EyN1111 . A
stork replied l't'llh:!l'l'&lt;.l thl' g1ft
loiJ!t- Blue. pink ollll whtlc:
st realllt'I'S, white buolit•s.
&lt;tiaper ptns. tutd pae tfiers
were used 111 tht• dt.•C tJ I'et li iiiiS.
Ct~ kt•, dccurated with a sh,rk,
ydluw IJuulles and t'l tsl'lmd.s
was scnil·d with punl'h and

Mary Ann Fnwler . Bt•ckv

As I see II , I ha\'L' t wu

POLLY"$ POINTERS

A bndal shuwer w;ts g1vcn

nmncU wen:! Bt&gt;ll y Dt't.'l'lng

-H .

DEAR HELEN.
I'm pregnant by a married man who has seven k1d.s and h.cts
been separated fr om hts wife a year. He's been wilh me for six
months, says he loves me and wilt get a dtvurce
He wJII pay the huspttal bill and take eare of the baby. he
says. Also marry me. He 's always talkmg about uur new baby .
But I'm afraid he'll change . Should I call&gt;l qutts ?
I do love him. and I wasn't responsible fur the break-up. MARILYN
DE All MARILYN :
Why quit nuw when thmgs seemlu be gomg yuur way '.' Your
baby has a fat her. and you might soon have a husband tlhuugh
wtth seven other children to support he may nut be a very sol·
vent one 1.
Wait until your chtld ts burn and then make a dectston . -H.

SI'IJ"

Miss Rhodes honored
! with bridal shower

C'tlllllls , Jr. C:ll the llmnt• of her

llllllt S.

7-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, June 28, 1978

~

~

EVERYI'HING'S RELATIVE TO HER!
DEAR HELEN
My husband is the oldest in a family of I wu brothers and four
.
sisters. I have four brothers .
We 've been ruHrned 21 years and have al~·ays entertained
the relatives on both sides . As we Jived at a beach, they came
often, stayed weekends and longer. brought friends , later
wives, husbands and children. Seemed lu enjo)' themselves immensely .
But they seldom ask us to visit them . One brother named us
godparents to their baby but added, "" Don't come to the
christening ."
One of the sisters and her husband hved with us while their
home was being built. She drops tn.unannounced and they stay :
twith their three clu ldrenl fur dinner often. Yet we're never
asked there .
She has spe('ifically told us not lu come to their house 1it's
"" too small"" i after we have all the family . tnd ud ing them. here
for Christmas dtnner and drinks . The rest go to her place to
finish off the dav while we stav home and du muunlatns of
dlshes. This has b.&gt;en going on fur six years .
Why do they du this to us? - M.H.
IJEAR M:
.. . Possibly. because yuu expeet 11. Have you sumelww
created the in1llge of perennial husls. tu be taken fur granted
beta use you don't complain- you'll always .. understand "":
Since your husband is oldest uf the brU&lt;KI . he 's perhaps seen
more as father ll1lln brother. You. being the only sister 10 four
males. eould easily create the "" mother" image.
So they may louk un yuu lwu as the bountiful parents. nut
realizm~ how inconsiderate they are. lAnd you don't help by
playing qutet martyr 1
Tell them ! And if they rematn the same. dose down un in\&lt;1tatt ons ~

·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:· :· :::·:::::;::::::::::::·::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:::·:·:::::;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:::;:::::::::;:;:::: :;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: :: :::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:::::::::;:;:;:::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~

Frtsll
t•lnch
Str1wbtrry Pie ..... 'I•
lUClO
Ylrlllla
llkttiHam ............

$299

1~. $299

I
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�8-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, June 28 , 1978

Labor market infor1nation

Stomping feet will be used
By SANDRA LATIMER
CIRCLEVILLE , Ohio
(UP! )- St&lt;;mping grapes ·in
your bare feet to produce
wine isn't really the way wine
is produced.
But it's produced that way
one weekend each year at
Shawnee Vineyards near this
southcent r a l
Ohio
community. The rest of the
year Jack Good and his
workers at the vineyards east
of Circleville make wine in
big vats in the basement of
their winery and let it
ferment and age.
The third week of
September after the grapes
are harvested, Good stages a
Grape Stomp. the event
draws a big crowd for fun and
food - and, of course, wine.
The fun comes when people
in the crowd take off their
shoes and step into a barrel of
grapes to produce a cup of
wine .

Participants in U1 e contest
have a given amount of time
to stomp the grapes to fill a
glass. The juice runs through

a little straw from the bottom
of the barrel to tlle glass.
Besides stomping grapes,
tllere 's a barbecue and fish
fry.
Good opened his winery in
1973 on a 3()..acre plot zoned
agriculturally in Pickaway
County .
'
He had a nursery and
landscapin g business, and
was looking for a winter job.
This now takes up all tllis
time.
Today he grows 12 varieties
of grapes, both French and
native types, and produced
eight·types of wine - ranging
from dry white and red
through medium sweet reds
and white. He makes the wine
with the grapes he grows, but
when the season is bad, he
has to import grapes to
produce the wine.
His winoery houses the
facil ities for crushing,
pressing, fermenting , aging
and processing the wine.
There is also a wine tasting
room with restaurant

..

I

facilities.
While trying to make a
success of his business, he
ran into a few problems. The
maj&lt;r stumbling block carne
two years ago when a church
on the other side of the
township wanted to oust a
neighboring beer drive-thru
and sought a local option
election to have the township
declared dry .
The church and the winery
are in two different
precincnts in the same
township. Although Good 's
precinct fought to defeat the
local option question, their
efforts failed as the other side
produced enough votes to
cancel out tlle others.
Good
then
sought
interpretations of zoning and
liquor laws which have
helped him remain in
business.
He has turned the winery
into a private club. He sells
memberships for $6 annually
and members slip their
plastic card into a slot at the

l

door to gain admittance .
stamless steel co ntarn ers
Good will allow non- while red wine is put in oak
members to enter, but his barrels to age.
staff strongly suggests they
"White wine goes in
purchase memberships , stainless steel because 1t wtll
which are. . renewabler~ pi ck up an undesireable taste
annually for $6':• ·
of the wood," he said. "and
His winery is open now also if it is put in barrels
seven days a week and he where red wine has been, it
s tr ongly recommend s picks up a discoloration .".
reservations, especially on
Barrels are cleaned w1th
weekends when there is live soda ash and a sulfur candle
entertainment. The seating burned inside them. Stainless
capacity in the restaurant is steel cleaned then they are
90.
ready to be used again .
Good pt·oduces tlle wine he
As for winetasting, Go.od
sells both over the counter advises to "hold the . glass
and with the meal.
three to four inches from the
To get white wine, Good nose and take a good smell ..
says the grapes are pressed Then put your nose in the
immediately to get the juice glass and take a good whiff.
out.
You'll get different smells.
"The longer the juice is in Take a sip, like sucking on a
contact with tlle skin, the straw, and roll the wine over
redder the wine," he said.
on your tongue."
To obtain red wine, the
Shawnee Vineyards is
grapes are allowed to located on Ohio 56, five miles
ferrnent on the skin for three east of Circleville, within an
to five days, depending on the hour's drive of Columbus. It
color desired.
opens at 11 a.m.
White wine is put in
The restaurant can be used
for wine tasting parties for
groups and Good is also
prepared .to take a winetasting party to the groups on
special occasions. Banquets,
"--~7
dinners , luncheons and
cocktail parties can also he
arranged.

,,..

In April 1978, the Meigs
Co unt y civilian labor force
was estimated at 11,300
persons,- based on place of
residence. Of thi• total, approximat ely 10 ,875 were
· employed and 625 were
jobless. The unemployment
rate stood at 5.3 percent of the
labor force.
According to 1970. U.S.
Census information, close to
two-fifths of the county's
resident jobholders commuted to work in neigh·
borhing counties. In April
1976, about one-third of all
workers living in the county
held mining jobs and around
one-eighth worked for
~arious government agen·
cies.
·
According to annual
average employment data for
1976 , the leading factory
industries in the county were
food , lumber and wood
products, fabricated metals,
electric and transportation
equipment, and chemicals.
Items turned out locally
included bakery products,
nonalcoholic beverages,
processed salt, wooden
pallets, electric motors and
relays, and concrete blocks.
Around two-thirds of those
persons who · were actively
seeking work 'through the
Pomeroy office of the Ohio
Bureau of Employment

Services were men and the
remaining one-third were
women; mor,e than five·
sixths· of all applicants were
not yet 45 years of age.
Among the male applicants
during the reference month,
approximately one-fourth
had backgrounds In structural work, almost one·
seventh were in the machine
trades classification , and
one-twelfth had service experience. Of the women who
were registered for em·
ployment, nearly one-half
were in the service category
and one-third were in the
clerical-sales group. A
number of these jobseekers
had previous employment
experience as administrative
clerks,
waiters
and
waitresses, and carpentry
laborers.
During tJ&gt;e month of April,
there was a need for
television repairers in Meigs
County.
Manufacturing employers
in the County generally offer
beginning workers hourly
wage rates which vary as
follows: unskilled, $2.80 to
$4.35; semiskilled, $3.00 to
$4.75; skilled, $3.50 to $6.110.
For the past several years,
average weekly earnings of
county factory employees
covered by the Ohio
Unemployment Com-

pensation Law have been
approximately two-fifths
below the average for the
state.

Seven cases
end in court
Five defendants forfeited
bonds in the court of Pomeroy
Mayor Clarence Andrews
Tuesday night. They were
John Warsa, Barberton, $50
posted on an open flask
charge; William Edwards,
Racine, $300, assault; Harry
Miller, Pomeroy, '100, in·
toxicatlon; Jackie Hellmers,
Akron, $50, open flask, and
Danny Robson, Pomeroy,
$30, speeding.
Fined in the court were
John Ray IJI, ColumbiS, and
Paul Reeves, Albany, '100
and costs each on intoxication
charges.

MAN FINED
Emmett W. Bostic, 25,
Gallipohs, was fined $50 and
costs on reckless operation
charges when he appeared in
the courts of Middleport
Mayor Fred Hoffman
Tuesday night.

dllpay you the
no matter what you're lookjp.g
for in savings or investment
certificates...
·

•

BOATING'S ms BUSINESS - John Douglas, owner
and operator of Doug's Marina, shows off one of his many

new Starcraft boats now on sale. Located on Pomeroy's
W. Main Street, the marina is Meigs County's newest
business.

New boat business in Pomero)'
For boat ing_ fun for
everyone, a vlstt to Me1gs

Co unt y's newest business is
Doug 's
Marina
on
in order.
Pomeroy's W. Main Street, is
owned and. operated by John
Douglas and offers a wide
lAMES A. RHODES
variety of water ski and
Govunor
sports equipment in addition
to the sale and service of
boats and motors.
LocatM just above the
MiddleP&lt;irt corporation line
where Shuler's Market stood
for
many years, the boating
I . GORDON PELTIER
business
features such
Diroctor of Commerce
fam ous name brands as
Starcraft boats, Mercury
NOTICE OF NAMES OF PERSONS
motors, and Ouchita and
APPEARJNG TO BE OWNERS
Cyprus Gardens equipment.
OF UNCLAIMED FUNDS
Shop hours are 9 a.m. to 9
p.m. Monday through
_..,:ME
.:::.:;,
I:;;;
GS: :__ COUNTY , OHIO
Saturday and 1-7 p.m. on
Sundays.
lnforma u~n ·concermng the am ount of the fund and any
Douglas also says his staff
ne cess.uy mformauon con ce rning the presentment of a Claim will service boats other than
therefor may be obtained by any person possessing a property those purchased at his place.
(propnetary) lJ1 terest in the Unclaimed Funds by addressing a
wntten mqu1ry tu the Director of Commerce, as follows:
Director of Commerce
Unclaimed Funds Section
180 Eaot Broad Slleet
Columbus, Ohio 4321 S

Honor roll

Forty-four seventh graders
and 38 eighth graders have
been named to the honor roll
for the final six week grading
Prescribe d forms will be furnished upon a request or inquir period at Meigs Junior High
School according to John
in wri tmg.
Mura , principal.
Student s honored for
Name and add ress must be g1ven exactly as listed .
receiving grades of B or
above were:
NOTICE · Names and addresses of unclaimed accounts adver7th Grad e - Rowena
tised in pnor years are on file w1th your County Treasurer u Averion, Jeff Baughma n,
weU IS unad vertised ••coun ts of less than S10.00.
Karla Brown , Robin Buf·
fington.
Jeff Carson. Cind y
CITY OF CHESTER
Crooks,
Karla
DeMoss, Faith
Bolrn. Cheryl 5 .. Bolin , John R
Dickens, Ric k Edwards.
CITY OF HARRISONVILLE
Angela Farley, Brent Flnlaw,
Moore , Russell L., Riggs, Gl or ia.
CITY OF LANGSVILLE
Kim Fraley, Beth Gloeckner,
Crisp, James Sr , Rt 1, Ja rr ell. Nelli e, Rt . 1;
Bec ky Hand ley, Te resa
5harp . Doral . Bo• 173 .
Harden,
Anita Harmon, Scott
CITY OF MIDDLEPORT
Harrison,
Angela Hatfield ,
Collin~ Columbus , John~n . Paul E .. RFD I ;
Bill Holcomb, Pau la Horton,
Johnson . PHu l E .. RF D 1; Johnson , Paula M .. RFD 1 •
Johnson . Paula M . RF D 1; Roush . J. Y &amp; H. E.. d• .
Stephanie Houchin s, Ji m
68
.
Hoyt. Usa Jarvis, Brill King.
CITY OF POMEROY
Natalie Lambert , Mary Lee,
Ben Tom Corp .. Box 6?7 . Ebersbach, E or S.• 202
Suzan
Li ghtfoot , Roxann e
La$ley St , Grogan. Larry . 1676 Lmcoln Hl • Heilma n.
· McDaniel , Adam Ma rtin ,
Alber I or E .• Rl 4 ; Leifheil. Lucille, R.R 2. Lochar y .
W P &amp; Clara , I 14 High 51.: Warner . C and N.. 117
Doug Mitchell. Darl ene
Ebenezer 5t , White, Carrol! ! RFD 3; Whi te. Eli D ..
Nelson, Jeanna Pauley, Scott
RFD 3, Woo d. Nebler , Rt . 4.
Pickens, John Smith, Linda
CITY OF PORTLAND
Smith, Kris Snowden, Tanya
Murphey , Marlene, 2436 N. View Dr
Stobart, Paula Swisher, Joan
CITY OF RACINE
Tanner, Greg Taylor, Mik e
Oyler . Janel Man uel. RD No. 2. 5n anes Anna .
' •tlqul!y
'
Tromm, DeAnna VanMeter,
CITY OF REEDSVILLE
Renee Willis, Susanna Wise.
•ng . Rober t. Box 86 , Slot er. Edwar d. Box 124
8th Grade - Kristin An·
CITY OF RUTLAND
derson
, Jimmy Boyer, Jack
rmstrong. OpaL Bx. 474 , ,Crouser , Roy E., Roufe
Braley, Dale Brickles, Lee
Burn em, Greg Bush, Mark '
CITY OF SYRA CUSE
Lena r l , John E . 615 W Onondaga
Cline, Pam Crooks , Susa~
CITY UNKNOWN
Danner, Phyllis Davis, Vicky '
Johnson .. Maude P.; lihPtol'i Ma ude
DeBord, Melani e Dillard,
Mike Edwards, Tammy

Creature
is sought
CHARLESTON, W.Va .
iUPI) - A mysterious doglike creature is stalking the
hills of Grant County , killing
sheep and goats in a fashion
that revived memories of the
1970 coyote in West Virginia .
James M. Ruckel , wildlife
resources assistant chief for
the Department of Naturol
Resour ces , es timated
Tuesday that farmers have
lost more than $2,000 in
livestock to the latest
marauder.
Ruckel said the maj&lt;l'ity of
animal kills occurred on the
farms of Justin Turner and
Jim Evans.
Trappers from the DNR
are attempting to catch the
animal. One of them , Jake
Hilleary , has spent two
moo ths in pursuit of tbe
marauder.
A coyote roamed through
Lewis and Upshur counties
eight years ago, killing sheep
until he was trapped by a
fanner .

MOTHERS BE PRESENT
The swimming instructor
at London Pool in Syracuse
asks that all mothers uf
children who will be takin g
swimming lessons be at the
pool Friday, June 30 at 8 a. m.
Herman l.und on, pool
manager, announced toda y.

NOWI

8-YEAR CERTIFICATE

%
ANNUAL

•

COMPOUNDED

•

·Eichinger , Jeff Elliott, David
Hoffman , Brent Houdashelt ,
,Tim Jarrell , Unrecka
Johnson , Duane Junes, Robin
Kitchen, Rochelle McDaniel,
Mark McGuire, Frank
Martin, Randy Murray ,
Lynne Oliver, Kathy Parker,
Kim Patterson , Helen Slack,
Curtiss Smith, Laura Smith.
Greg Thoma s, · Melinda
Thomas, Dennis Thorntun
Denise Turner, Jeff Whit·
tington , Trov Willis. Fred
Young.

.

:

By Ualled Press IntemaUonal
Thundersto~ accompanied by lightning, high winds, hail
and heavy rallll1 moved through parts of Ohio Tuesday. Two
Jefferson County boys were killed when lightning struck their
tree house and about60,000 persons in Central Ohio !oat power
Killed when lightning struck a backyard treehouse nea;
thetr suburban SteubenvUle homes were Deoman While 7 and
Christopher Baker, 8.
'
Christopher's broiher, Keith, 13, also was in the treehouse
when ~mg .accompanying a storm hit the structure. He wa!
not senously mjured.
. Hours ?f sweltering tempera lures Tuesday gave way to a
rught of violent thunderstorms in several areas of Ohio.
·
Ro~rt Jones~ a spokesman for Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio
Electrrc Co . S81d the disruption caused by tbe storm "was
about the worst I've seen."
He said high winds, heavy rain and hail tbat swept through
tlle central Oluo area caused problems second in severity only
to the Jan. 26 blizzard,
Jone~ said some customers were not eXPected to be restored
to servtce until noon Wednesday.
\
Jones said about 20 of the 200 electric circuits in Franklin
County were !"J' Put of commission.
The Nat!:x.al Weather Service at Port Columbus said winds
from the storrn weremeasured at a high of 48 miles per· hour.
However, the service sa~d w1nds gusted to higher speeds in
many areas, particularly m Prckaway, Madison and Fayette
Counties.

1

MINIMUM 1000.

By Cbarles M. Madlgao
MOSCOW (UPI) - Two
American reporters today
were ordered to stand trial on
July S on civil charges of
slander brought against them
by the Soviet state committee
for radio and television ..
Craig Whitney, 34 , of the
New York Times, and Hal
Piper, 39, of the Baltimore

Available at existing six-month

u.S. Treasury 1111 rates at time

of purchase. Minimum $10,000.00

Federal Regulations require a substantial
penalty for premature

certificate funds.

...

w~hdrawal

of

There is no penalty for p!'linlture
withdrawal in the Milt of the dellh of
the ~ow~r.

·OhioValley Bank·
Galhpohs. Ohio

Four Locations To Better Serve You

!Qmbor FDIC

There were numerous reports of fallen trees and power
outages following the afternoon and evening storms that swept
across tlle Buclteye State.
. -Putnam CoWlty authorities said a tor"nado touched down
between Kalida and Ottoville, destroying a barn and damaging
a house and several other buildings.
·
Golf baU Biae bail wail reported in Wayne and Hoimes
counties as stortll8 moved through that area.
A cool front moved into northern Ohio late Tuesday
afternoon, settin&amp; off the thunderstorms inland from Lake
Erie.
As the front moved southward Tuesday evening, weather
officials isiued a severe thunderstorm warning for the central
and soutllem sections of the state. II expired at 1a.m. today as
the storms moved into Kentucky and West Virginia .
The hot, humid weather with temperatures reaching 95 degrees sent the use of air conditioners in central Ohio soaring .
A Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio Electric Co. spokesman said
usage Tuesday approached 1,900 megawatts. He said the
firm's record generatloo was 1,932 megawatts recorded on
July 20, 1977.
He said, however, that high demand for electricity this year
is not as critical as last year because another generator has
been placed on line at the Conesville generating station.
The Ohio extended forecast for Friday through Sunday calls
for fair and warm through the period, with higbs between 85
and 90 and lows between 60 and 65.

Sun, spent 10 minutes before Piper pointed out that July 4
a Soviet judge this morning was a national holiday for
and were told to return to Americans.
court Friday to file written
The televisioll' authorities
responses to the civil slander brought the case' against
suit and to be prepared to go Whitney and Piper in
to trial July &gt;.
response to articles they
Soviet authorities wrote, quoting Soviet
originally ordered the trial dissidents as saying that they
for July 4, but postponed it fabricated a filmed con·
one day when Whitney and fession by Georgian dissident

Zviad Gamsakhourdias.
Whitney told the Moscow
tourt judge that he had
planned to be away on
vacation at the time set for
trial.
The judge told him the
authorities could not order
him to remain in the Soviet
Union in a civil case but they
hoped he would appear for
the tripl July 5. They pointed
out that under Soviet law a
trial can proceed even if the
defendant is not physically
present.
The summonses raised
concern among reporters in
Mosc ow because it was
feared the Soviet Union may
be •1arting to use such cases
to respond to any "unfavorable
reporting. Such tactics could
keep reporters endlessly tied
up in legal actions, stiOing
their ability to cover new&lt;

Increased demand not
as great as growth
By JIM AMBROSIO
COLUMBUS ( UPI) - The
demand for electricity in
most of southern and central
Ohio will increase during the
next IS years , but the
increased demand will not be
as great as past growth, a
study released Tuesday by
the Ohio Power Siting
Commission shows.
The
$40,000
report,
Jrepared by a Columbus
based firm, Rothey, Bell and
Taub, Inc ., attempts to
forecast the potential power
demands on the Dayton
Power and Light Company,
tlle Columbus and Southern
Ohio Electric Company, and
the Cincinnati Ga s and
Electric Company.
Those
three
power
companies
serve
the
maj&lt;l'lty ol custcmers in
Dayton, Cincinnati, Colum·
bus and parts of south central
and southeastern Ohio.
While the year4ong study
found, among other things ,
that potential growth should
be "substantially below
hist&lt;rical growth," James L.
Kennedy, chief f&lt;l'ecaster for
the Ohio Department of
Energy told the commission

tllat.the primary value of the
report is the method
employed by the firm.
"Our interest is in the
methodology , not the final
results," Kennedy said.
Two different methods
were employed by Rothey ,
Bell and Taub which Kennedy
said would he valuable to the
state when it begins its own
foreca s ting . Kennedy
formerlv worked with the
commission before taking
the job as adrriinistrat&lt;l' of
the energy department's
division of forecasting.
RobertS. Ryan, head ol the
energy department and also a
power siting commissioner ,
said it was "great to apply
so me
so phisticated
techniques" to forecasting ,
but warned that "forecasting
is not that precise.''
According to a Power
Sitin g Commission
sp okesman ,
Barbara
Kaufman, the studies
represent a way for the state
to become more adept in
forecasting since it is an area
in which the state has little
past experience .
The Rothey , Bell and Taub
study could also be used as an

independent check on the
~overnrnent's staff and the
utilities, she said, adding that
while Kennedy may not view
tlle results as important, the
commission may make use of
the figures until Ule state 's
own studies are completed.
This study is the secood of
three independent efforts
planned by 'the Power Siting
Commission. When the final
study is completed, the future
energy demand for all Ohio
utilities will have been
forecasted .
The
Power
Siting
Commission originally asked
for tlle independent study as
part of its efforts to develop
its own forecasts of
electricity demand . The
authority to develop tbose 10
year I&lt;recasts, however, was
transfered to the Department
of Energy whlll in was established by the Legislature last
winter.

Jl'#&amp;)_r_h_e_w_o_rl_d_T_od_a_y_
(Continued !ram (lilt 1)

BOSTON (UP!) - Five people were found shot to death in
a downtown bar today, pollee said. Police said the bodies were
found in tlle basement of the Black Fgiar pub.
"We got the call at about8:20 this morning. All of them are
dead," the police spoke!IITI8II said. A medical examiner was
caUed ot the scene. No further details were immediately
avallable.

Here's propOSed breakdown
of proposed voc-ed funds
COLUMBUS !UPI) - Here
Is a breakdown on the
proposed distribution of
$8,t64,206 in vocational
education construction Cunds
available
under
a
~~~.Wlemental appropriations
bill adopted by the General
Aaaembly Tuesday and sent
to Gov. James A. Rhodes:
Dayton, $1,023, 114;
Cleveland John Marshall
Higll' School, .-e,a: Wayne
County Joint Vocational
School, U50,000; Medina
County Joint Vocational
School, $425,000; Plb County
Area Joint Vocational School,
$~, 750,000; Oregon, Lucas

County ; $9I,SOO; Cleveland
Vocational Health Center,
~.ooo; and Greet oaks
Joint Vocational School ,
$1,408,SOO.
Also, Plckaway-Ross
County Joint Vocational
School, $'12,0110; Montgomery
County Joint Vocational
School, '341,000 ; CopleyFalrla wn, Suntmit County,
$656,2811; CUyahoga Valley
Joint Vocational School ,
$719,500; Buckeye Hills
tGallia • Jacilaon · Vinton
counties), P5Q,OOO ; Vantage
Joint Vocational School,
$55,0110; and Akron Kenmore
Hl(!h School. $1,322,485.

snoul(l be addressee to Jhe
o ff ices of the Comm iSSion .
Legal Re c ords Sect1on , Oh10
E PA . P
0
Box
1049,
THE PUBLIC UTILI TI E S '
COMMISSION OF OH 10
wer e r ~cetve d or pr epared by Coturncus, Oh10 43216 , (61 4 )
466
6037,
unless
otherwise
By · R ic hard
L
Smit h ,
Th e Oh10 E n vi r onmen tal
Secreta·r y
Pr otec t ion Agt:n.cy du rtng th e st ated In pa rt 1cu tar nolices ,
prev tou s week . Th.e efl ec t ive a! l othe r co mmun1 c a'I10n s
commen t s on
I 28, 11 c
date of each f in al ac tion is 1nc lud in g
stat ed t he tSSUa nce dat e of p·r opose d act1ons. should be
ea c h p roposed ac t io n is add r essed ei ther to The . Ail'
stat ed . A n·y o ne dggr i eve d or P er mits and Complian ce
D ivisi on
or
aa ve r se t y a ff ected by a f in a l M onttor~ng
a ct ion to issu e, deny , mod ify , Perm it and Approval Section.
r.e voke . or r ene w a pe r mit , WhiChever 1S appropr 1ale , a t
li ce n se , or 'f dr i cl nce ; or to The Ohio E PA , P 0 Bo;(
a pprove or dis appr ove p la ns 1049, Co tvrribus , Oh10 43216.
A pprova l o f pla ns and
and spect l icattons , may t ile
sp ec 1f lcaf10ns
an app eal wt th The Envi r on
Chester
Tuppe r s P la 1ns
m en t al Boa r d at Review
Suit e 305 . 39S E ·Broad Sf : Water D1st r ic t
Ches t er, Oh10, eff ect i ve
Colu m bus . OhtO 432 16 , wi th tn
dale 06 n 78
lh 1rtv (JQ) days of !he ef
Th1S f 1na1 act1on not
tec fiVe date, pur suant to Oh io
Rev iSed Co d e Sec t ion 37 45.07, pr ece ded by proposed ac tion
unless such ! mal acllon wa s an d is appealable to EBR ,
pre ce d ed by the same or Rural W a t er D istribu t io n
sub s tanh ally
th e
sa me Syste m ex p an sion and 1m
pro posea ac tion . All such pr ovemen t s, Phase Two ,
final act •on!» ar e so identi f ie d .' M etgs Athens Counties
Such per son s may r equest an
adjud ic ation hea r in g be f or e (61 28. li e
Th e Ohio E PA on a pr opo se d
LEGAL NOTICE
act ion t o iss u e, de ny, mod i f y,
r.evoke , or r en ew a per mi t ,
78 -888 TO CRC
l1 ce nse , or v ar iance; or lo
Notice 1S he r ecy g 1ven that
appro ve or d isapprovE'd plan S comolainls ha"e been liled
and sp eci f ica t ions, W1 lt"1 1n
w i tll tt"le Pu b l ic Utilities
With or
th i rt y (JOJ days of tne
Commiss1on o f Ohio under
is!&gt;u an ce da te OR C 3745 .07
docket numbe r 78 858 TP
Without Fiber
does not pr ov 1de for ad
CRC b y the Oh10 Associaljon
judic at ion hea r ing requests
of Realtors and the Ohio
or appe als on ord er s, ve r il ied
Pr1"ate Employment Serv ice
co mpla in t s, or en forcemen t
Assoc 1at ion , Inc
Snelling
comp li ance sche dule teners
and Sne11 1ng of Columbus.
Wi thin 30 days of publ 1c afion
Oh 10 , Shilowe Personnel
Available at :
in a n ewspap er •n the afl ectea
System , Inc . The Caree r
cou nt y, any pe r son may also :
Pr of ess ional s, Inc , Renh 1ll
( I ) subm it written comme nt s
Em pl oymen t Agen cy . In c ,
r elat ing to actions, propo sed
alleg ing that the measur ed or
ac tion s. "er ifted comp la in ts. · me!&gt;sage r ate tari ff of the
or enfor cemen t com pliance On io Bell Telephone Com
schedule le tt er s. 121 re qu es t
pany 1S unlaw ful The porlies
a publ ic mee t ing rega r ding
of th 15 pr oceeding have been
propo se d ac tions ; and or ()J
dt r ec ted to tile w 1th the
reque s t no t 1ce of turrner
CommiSSIOn at its o fl ic es , 180
act ion s or pr oc.eed1ngs A ll
Ea!i.t Broad Str eet, Colum
r eque s t s t or adjud ic atton
bus. Oh 10 , on or befor e July
hear in g s
and
pubt tc
Ma son ,
15 , 1978 tega t memo randa
meet ing s, and other com
ad d re ss 1ng the a ueslions
W. Va .
m vn ic a tio n s
co n c ern1ng
ra 1Sed by the complamt
publ ic mee t ings , ildtud ic alto n
Further
1nformat 1on
he ar in g s . ve r 11 1ed com
reyardmg lh1S ca!&gt;e (.an be
plaint s , and reg ul at ion s , obta1ned ti v con ta cling th e

END MARRIAGES
l_n Mei~s County Common
Pleas Court . one marria~e
wa s dissolved llld one
divorce was granted
The marriage of .Ronnie
l.ee Anderson and llftty Loll '
Anderson was dissoi,Ved and
Donald Gerald Guthrie was
granted a divorce from Joyce
Ann Guthrie.
·
Charles B. Mullen was
appointed special deputy
sheriff.

COUNTY : MEIGS
PUBLIC NOTICE
Th e fo llowing docu m en ts

BELKNAP
BLACK
ROOF PAINT

For Thursday , June 2.1

ASTRO·GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

AI)Jijl)J~
~ ~crlMbillwLf

BELKNAP

June 29, 1171

You are r:101 ap t to take a back
seat th is coming year and a-llow

t~ e lh 1ngs you want to slip
throu gh your lingers . In st ead ,
your assert iveness ·.. will win
new laurels fo r you.
CANCER (June 21-July 221
You ' re the catalyst to brrng
peopl e tog ether today . in wo rk
or 1n pla y You won 't mind a Oit ,
becau se 11'11 be tun . Having
troubl e sele ctinQ a career?
Send tor your copy of A s tr o·
Graph l etter by maili ng 50
cen ts fo r each an d a long . sell ·
addressed , stamped en ve lo pe
lo As lr o-Graph. P 0 Bo• 489.
Aad ro C• l y Stalron . NY 10019
Be sure to spec 1fy b1rth stg n
LEO (July 23-Aug. 221 Yo u
1mpress others far more ta .,.orabty tha n yo u may re a 11ze
today
This becor'*! s e ven
more ev1d enl 1! a competit ive
S1 luat10n anses
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 221 No '
one ca n do more w1th you r
•deas at thi s 11m e than yo u can
yourse lf Ass ume a leadership
role . Put th em 1nto ! C: tion
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) A pat
on the back wh 1c h you sec retly
need ed wilt be co m1 ng from
several tnend s toda y It w1l l
he lp you get up a lull head o f
steam.
SCORPIO (Ocl. 21-Nov . 22) Be
sure to assoc •ate with act• ve
people today You ·retn o t 1n the
mood to be tied do wn by those
who ten d 10 dra g th ei r fee t
SAGITIARIUS !Nov. 23-Dee .
Z1) Now ts th e 11me to cal l
all en l 10n to yo urself for somethmg you\1e ha ndled etfic ten tly You r tal en ts will no t go
unapprec1ated tf the ri ght party
kno w s ot 1t.
CAPRICORN (Dec. Z2-Jan . 19)
Thi ng s you ·ve learned lrom
eKpenence c an n ow be e fle ctlvely used in a soci al s ituation
Be bold. Try it.
AQUARIUS (Jon . 20.Feb . 1!)
tn lorm ati on co uld surf ace today that' ll bri ng abo ut some
., ac ti"''IIY on what was-4 co nfiden11a l matter. You ' ll tom e ou t
smell .ng a ros e
PISCES (Feb . 20-Morth 20)
Tal king to One wh o is ac t1"1'e
and share s in te res ts w1th you
w111 1nsp1r e you to spnng mto
acllon on yo ur I dea~ _today
ARIES (March 21-AIIfll 1tl EXI ra
eff ort pa ys extra · di vid ends
toda y esp eci ally when yo u go
out ot yo ur Way to be o f
assistance to someon.e e lse .
TAURUS (April 20.May 201
You II do wel l today 1n any
S1t ual10n that perm 1ts yo u to
€Kerc1se you r •mt1a tive Be a
se ll-starter Don ' t wat t on ot h·

ers

5 Gal. Buckel

PICKENS
HARDWARE

TILE
BOARD
FOR BATHS
OR KITCHENS

ONLY

•7!~
Variety of Colors To Choa FRllll

.t«lGG &amp;ZUSPM MATERIAlS CO.
Mason, W. Va.

773-5554

GEMINI(May 21-June 20) More
thmgs wtll get don ~ around
your house tod ay tf\a n you
counted on Another ene rge tic.
nelpl ul person wtll jump 1n and
Share yo ur bu rdens.
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRIS£ ASSN !

JAMES M. CALDWELL

Board has Caldwell
business
named to
•

Five persons shot to death
ALSO NEWI

.

Reporters must stand trial

Republican opposition in the November general election.
Dick Riley, who vowed to end "good ole boy " politics in
South Carolina, capitalized on a former opponent's
endorsement to ovenake Lt. Gov . Brantley Harvey and win
tlle dlance to regain the governor's office for the Democrats .

&amp;-MONTH MONEY MARKET CERTIFICATE
OBTAIN LICENSE
A marriage license wa s
issued to Ricky Lee Yo,1, 18,
Rt. I, Rutland , and Debra
Lynn Bryan , 19, Rt. 1, Mid·
dleport .

Ohioans ·baking under
humid sweltering heat

RATE

an annual yield of
%

DAILY I

9-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Wednesday, Juen 28, 1978

session

membership

The Advisory Board for th&lt;
allematives program of the
Gallia · JacUon • Vinton
Community Mental Health
Center held Its regular
monthly meeting June 21 .
Pat Arnold of Pomeroy,
chairperson, presided at the
business meeting . Linda
Alternative ~
Krasner,
Recreation Specialist, was
Introduced to the Board
members . She discussed
plans for thiJ year's summer
youth camp wlllch is being
held in August.
Kramer is responsible for
organizing and coordinating
the camp. Guest speakers
were John BraiTUller and Bill
Breckenridge, both clinicians
with the Children's Services
Program of the Mental
Health Center.
Their presentation was
entitled "Effective Paren·
ting ... The First Step in
Substance Abuse Prevenlion", and was well received
by those in attendance.
The
nut
regularly
scheduled meeting is set for
July 19th at 7:30 p. m., in the
Gallia Community Mental
Health Center.
Area reaidenll interested in
becoming members of the
Advisory BOard are invited
to attend any regular
bus!r.eu meeting or contact
your local community mental
health center lor infonnation.

proudly presents

·

James M. Caldwell, 39year-old Ross County
Commissioner and owner ·
operator of a 10-member
Chillicothe based public
accounting firm , announced
his acceptan ce to mem·
bership on the Board of
Trustees of the Ohio Valley
Health Services Foundation,
according to Dr. William H.
Allen , Jr., president of the
Foundation.
Caldwell was the second
· Ross County resident to
announce representation of
his county on the eight-county
regional primary health care
devel opment agency. ·
Previously , Wayne B. Foster,
president and administrator
of the Medical Center
Hospital, Chillicothe, joined
the Foundation's board.
Caldwell 's lo cal gov ern·
ment experience includes
eight years service as a
Chillicothe councilman and
chairman of council's finance
committee. He is president of
the southeast chapter of the
Public Accountants Society of
Ohio and a member or lhe
national society . He is
enrolled in practice before
the Internal Revenue Ser·
vice.
He received a bachelors
degree in business ad·
ministration from Ohio
University in t963. Com·
missioner Cadlw•ll and his
wife , the fllnner Pamala
NOW YOlJ KNOW
Marsh,
have two children and
The avtrllt humminiJbird
reside
in
Chil l,c••the.
weighs leu thin a penny.

'

?2-cund'Up o/ StazJ
A COUNTRY MUSIC SPECTACULAR
j11111t 30, Y,~ttv1 and 2,

•

1978

THE BIGGEST SHOW EVER TO HIT THE EAST
* JEANNE C. RILEY
* ERNPT TUBB
Direct from
* FREDDY HART
* CHARLIE LOUVIN

** MELiA
RAY PILLOW
MONTGOMERY
* BARIARA MANDRELL
* MICKEY GILLE,Y
JIM ~D BROWN
HELD CORNELIUS
TO'- T. HALL
MEL' ITREf'f

*
*
**

Door Prilt

the Grand Ole Opry
GRANT TURNER
MC.

also
CARL LIPPS
M.C.

* ROY DRUSKY
* TOMMY OVERSTREET
* ARCHIE CAMPBELL

* MEL TILLIS
* MARTY ROBBINS
*Kim WELLS
TAMMY WYNETTE
* RAY PRICE

*

nCKETS AVAILABLE AT TliE GATE
$20 Per Adult ..• $5 Per Child (5 to 12)

* ALL THREE DAYS WITH FREE CAMPING *

FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION PHONE (614) 989-2310
1971

MOM£ CARLO

..

"

r

A Lot of ARTS and CRAFTs-Plenty of Good Food
(Including Full Course Meals)

�8-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, June 28 , 1978

Labor market infor1nation

Stomping feet will be used
By SANDRA LATIMER
CIRCLEVILLE , Ohio
(UP! )- St&lt;;mping grapes ·in
your bare feet to produce
wine isn't really the way wine
is produced.
But it's produced that way
one weekend each year at
Shawnee Vineyards near this
southcent r a l
Ohio
community. The rest of the
year Jack Good and his
workers at the vineyards east
of Circleville make wine in
big vats in the basement of
their winery and let it
ferment and age.
The third week of
September after the grapes
are harvested, Good stages a
Grape Stomp. the event
draws a big crowd for fun and
food - and, of course, wine.
The fun comes when people
in the crowd take off their
shoes and step into a barrel of
grapes to produce a cup of
wine .

Participants in U1 e contest
have a given amount of time
to stomp the grapes to fill a
glass. The juice runs through

a little straw from the bottom
of the barrel to tlle glass.
Besides stomping grapes,
tllere 's a barbecue and fish
fry.
Good opened his winery in
1973 on a 3()..acre plot zoned
agriculturally in Pickaway
County .
'
He had a nursery and
landscapin g business, and
was looking for a winter job.
This now takes up all tllis
time.
Today he grows 12 varieties
of grapes, both French and
native types, and produced
eight·types of wine - ranging
from dry white and red
through medium sweet reds
and white. He makes the wine
with the grapes he grows, but
when the season is bad, he
has to import grapes to
produce the wine.
His winoery houses the
facil ities for crushing,
pressing, fermenting , aging
and processing the wine.
There is also a wine tasting
room with restaurant

..

I

facilities.
While trying to make a
success of his business, he
ran into a few problems. The
maj&lt;r stumbling block carne
two years ago when a church
on the other side of the
township wanted to oust a
neighboring beer drive-thru
and sought a local option
election to have the township
declared dry .
The church and the winery
are in two different
precincnts in the same
township. Although Good 's
precinct fought to defeat the
local option question, their
efforts failed as the other side
produced enough votes to
cancel out tlle others.
Good
then
sought
interpretations of zoning and
liquor laws which have
helped him remain in
business.
He has turned the winery
into a private club. He sells
memberships for $6 annually
and members slip their
plastic card into a slot at the

l

door to gain admittance .
stamless steel co ntarn ers
Good will allow non- while red wine is put in oak
members to enter, but his barrels to age.
staff strongly suggests they
"White wine goes in
purchase memberships , stainless steel because 1t wtll
which are. . renewabler~ pi ck up an undesireable taste
annually for $6':• ·
of the wood," he said. "and
His winery is open now also if it is put in barrels
seven days a week and he where red wine has been, it
s tr ongly recommend s picks up a discoloration .".
reservations, especially on
Barrels are cleaned w1th
weekends when there is live soda ash and a sulfur candle
entertainment. The seating burned inside them. Stainless
capacity in the restaurant is steel cleaned then they are
90.
ready to be used again .
Good pt·oduces tlle wine he
As for winetasting, Go.od
sells both over the counter advises to "hold the . glass
and with the meal.
three to four inches from the
To get white wine, Good nose and take a good smell ..
says the grapes are pressed Then put your nose in the
immediately to get the juice glass and take a good whiff.
out.
You'll get different smells.
"The longer the juice is in Take a sip, like sucking on a
contact with tlle skin, the straw, and roll the wine over
redder the wine," he said.
on your tongue."
To obtain red wine, the
Shawnee Vineyards is
grapes are allowed to located on Ohio 56, five miles
ferrnent on the skin for three east of Circleville, within an
to five days, depending on the hour's drive of Columbus. It
color desired.
opens at 11 a.m.
White wine is put in
The restaurant can be used
for wine tasting parties for
groups and Good is also
prepared .to take a winetasting party to the groups on
special occasions. Banquets,
"--~7
dinners , luncheons and
cocktail parties can also he
arranged.

,,..

In April 1978, the Meigs
Co unt y civilian labor force
was estimated at 11,300
persons,- based on place of
residence. Of thi• total, approximat ely 10 ,875 were
· employed and 625 were
jobless. The unemployment
rate stood at 5.3 percent of the
labor force.
According to 1970. U.S.
Census information, close to
two-fifths of the county's
resident jobholders commuted to work in neigh·
borhing counties. In April
1976, about one-third of all
workers living in the county
held mining jobs and around
one-eighth worked for
~arious government agen·
cies.
·
According to annual
average employment data for
1976 , the leading factory
industries in the county were
food , lumber and wood
products, fabricated metals,
electric and transportation
equipment, and chemicals.
Items turned out locally
included bakery products,
nonalcoholic beverages,
processed salt, wooden
pallets, electric motors and
relays, and concrete blocks.
Around two-thirds of those
persons who · were actively
seeking work 'through the
Pomeroy office of the Ohio
Bureau of Employment

Services were men and the
remaining one-third were
women; mor,e than five·
sixths· of all applicants were
not yet 45 years of age.
Among the male applicants
during the reference month,
approximately one-fourth
had backgrounds In structural work, almost one·
seventh were in the machine
trades classification , and
one-twelfth had service experience. Of the women who
were registered for em·
ployment, nearly one-half
were in the service category
and one-third were in the
clerical-sales group. A
number of these jobseekers
had previous employment
experience as administrative
clerks,
waiters
and
waitresses, and carpentry
laborers.
During tJ&gt;e month of April,
there was a need for
television repairers in Meigs
County.
Manufacturing employers
in the County generally offer
beginning workers hourly
wage rates which vary as
follows: unskilled, $2.80 to
$4.35; semiskilled, $3.00 to
$4.75; skilled, $3.50 to $6.110.
For the past several years,
average weekly earnings of
county factory employees
covered by the Ohio
Unemployment Com-

pensation Law have been
approximately two-fifths
below the average for the
state.

Seven cases
end in court
Five defendants forfeited
bonds in the court of Pomeroy
Mayor Clarence Andrews
Tuesday night. They were
John Warsa, Barberton, $50
posted on an open flask
charge; William Edwards,
Racine, $300, assault; Harry
Miller, Pomeroy, '100, in·
toxicatlon; Jackie Hellmers,
Akron, $50, open flask, and
Danny Robson, Pomeroy,
$30, speeding.
Fined in the court were
John Ray IJI, ColumbiS, and
Paul Reeves, Albany, '100
and costs each on intoxication
charges.

MAN FINED
Emmett W. Bostic, 25,
Gallipohs, was fined $50 and
costs on reckless operation
charges when he appeared in
the courts of Middleport
Mayor Fred Hoffman
Tuesday night.

dllpay you the
no matter what you're lookjp.g
for in savings or investment
certificates...
·

•

BOATING'S ms BUSINESS - John Douglas, owner
and operator of Doug's Marina, shows off one of his many

new Starcraft boats now on sale. Located on Pomeroy's
W. Main Street, the marina is Meigs County's newest
business.

New boat business in Pomero)'
For boat ing_ fun for
everyone, a vlstt to Me1gs

Co unt y's newest business is
Doug 's
Marina
on
in order.
Pomeroy's W. Main Street, is
owned and. operated by John
Douglas and offers a wide
lAMES A. RHODES
variety of water ski and
Govunor
sports equipment in addition
to the sale and service of
boats and motors.
LocatM just above the
MiddleP&lt;irt corporation line
where Shuler's Market stood
for
many years, the boating
I . GORDON PELTIER
business
features such
Diroctor of Commerce
fam ous name brands as
Starcraft boats, Mercury
NOTICE OF NAMES OF PERSONS
motors, and Ouchita and
APPEARJNG TO BE OWNERS
Cyprus Gardens equipment.
OF UNCLAIMED FUNDS
Shop hours are 9 a.m. to 9
p.m. Monday through
_..,:ME
.:::.:;,
I:;;;
GS: :__ COUNTY , OHIO
Saturday and 1-7 p.m. on
Sundays.
lnforma u~n ·concermng the am ount of the fund and any
Douglas also says his staff
ne cess.uy mformauon con ce rning the presentment of a Claim will service boats other than
therefor may be obtained by any person possessing a property those purchased at his place.
(propnetary) lJ1 terest in the Unclaimed Funds by addressing a
wntten mqu1ry tu the Director of Commerce, as follows:
Director of Commerce
Unclaimed Funds Section
180 Eaot Broad Slleet
Columbus, Ohio 4321 S

Honor roll

Forty-four seventh graders
and 38 eighth graders have
been named to the honor roll
for the final six week grading
Prescribe d forms will be furnished upon a request or inquir period at Meigs Junior High
School according to John
in wri tmg.
Mura , principal.
Student s honored for
Name and add ress must be g1ven exactly as listed .
receiving grades of B or
above were:
NOTICE · Names and addresses of unclaimed accounts adver7th Grad e - Rowena
tised in pnor years are on file w1th your County Treasurer u Averion, Jeff Baughma n,
weU IS unad vertised ••coun ts of less than S10.00.
Karla Brown , Robin Buf·
fington.
Jeff Carson. Cind y
CITY OF CHESTER
Crooks,
Karla
DeMoss, Faith
Bolrn. Cheryl 5 .. Bolin , John R
Dickens, Ric k Edwards.
CITY OF HARRISONVILLE
Angela Farley, Brent Flnlaw,
Moore , Russell L., Riggs, Gl or ia.
CITY OF LANGSVILLE
Kim Fraley, Beth Gloeckner,
Crisp, James Sr , Rt 1, Ja rr ell. Nelli e, Rt . 1;
Bec ky Hand ley, Te resa
5harp . Doral . Bo• 173 .
Harden,
Anita Harmon, Scott
CITY OF MIDDLEPORT
Harrison,
Angela Hatfield ,
Collin~ Columbus , John~n . Paul E .. RFD I ;
Bill Holcomb, Pau la Horton,
Johnson . PHu l E .. RF D 1; Johnson , Paula M .. RFD 1 •
Johnson . Paula M . RF D 1; Roush . J. Y &amp; H. E.. d• .
Stephanie Houchin s, Ji m
68
.
Hoyt. Usa Jarvis, Brill King.
CITY OF POMEROY
Natalie Lambert , Mary Lee,
Ben Tom Corp .. Box 6?7 . Ebersbach, E or S.• 202
Suzan
Li ghtfoot , Roxann e
La$ley St , Grogan. Larry . 1676 Lmcoln Hl • Heilma n.
· McDaniel , Adam Ma rtin ,
Alber I or E .• Rl 4 ; Leifheil. Lucille, R.R 2. Lochar y .
W P &amp; Clara , I 14 High 51.: Warner . C and N.. 117
Doug Mitchell. Darl ene
Ebenezer 5t , White, Carrol! ! RFD 3; Whi te. Eli D ..
Nelson, Jeanna Pauley, Scott
RFD 3, Woo d. Nebler , Rt . 4.
Pickens, John Smith, Linda
CITY OF PORTLAND
Smith, Kris Snowden, Tanya
Murphey , Marlene, 2436 N. View Dr
Stobart, Paula Swisher, Joan
CITY OF RACINE
Tanner, Greg Taylor, Mik e
Oyler . Janel Man uel. RD No. 2. 5n anes Anna .
' •tlqul!y
'
Tromm, DeAnna VanMeter,
CITY OF REEDSVILLE
Renee Willis, Susanna Wise.
•ng . Rober t. Box 86 , Slot er. Edwar d. Box 124
8th Grade - Kristin An·
CITY OF RUTLAND
derson
, Jimmy Boyer, Jack
rmstrong. OpaL Bx. 474 , ,Crouser , Roy E., Roufe
Braley, Dale Brickles, Lee
Burn em, Greg Bush, Mark '
CITY OF SYRA CUSE
Lena r l , John E . 615 W Onondaga
Cline, Pam Crooks , Susa~
CITY UNKNOWN
Danner, Phyllis Davis, Vicky '
Johnson .. Maude P.; lihPtol'i Ma ude
DeBord, Melani e Dillard,
Mike Edwards, Tammy

Creature
is sought
CHARLESTON, W.Va .
iUPI) - A mysterious doglike creature is stalking the
hills of Grant County , killing
sheep and goats in a fashion
that revived memories of the
1970 coyote in West Virginia .
James M. Ruckel , wildlife
resources assistant chief for
the Department of Naturol
Resour ces , es timated
Tuesday that farmers have
lost more than $2,000 in
livestock to the latest
marauder.
Ruckel said the maj&lt;l'ity of
animal kills occurred on the
farms of Justin Turner and
Jim Evans.
Trappers from the DNR
are attempting to catch the
animal. One of them , Jake
Hilleary , has spent two
moo ths in pursuit of tbe
marauder.
A coyote roamed through
Lewis and Upshur counties
eight years ago, killing sheep
until he was trapped by a
fanner .

MOTHERS BE PRESENT
The swimming instructor
at London Pool in Syracuse
asks that all mothers uf
children who will be takin g
swimming lessons be at the
pool Friday, June 30 at 8 a. m.
Herman l.und on, pool
manager, announced toda y.

NOWI

8-YEAR CERTIFICATE

%
ANNUAL

•

COMPOUNDED

•

·Eichinger , Jeff Elliott, David
Hoffman , Brent Houdashelt ,
,Tim Jarrell , Unrecka
Johnson , Duane Junes, Robin
Kitchen, Rochelle McDaniel,
Mark McGuire, Frank
Martin, Randy Murray ,
Lynne Oliver, Kathy Parker,
Kim Patterson , Helen Slack,
Curtiss Smith, Laura Smith.
Greg Thoma s, · Melinda
Thomas, Dennis Thorntun
Denise Turner, Jeff Whit·
tington , Trov Willis. Fred
Young.

.

:

By Ualled Press IntemaUonal
Thundersto~ accompanied by lightning, high winds, hail
and heavy rallll1 moved through parts of Ohio Tuesday. Two
Jefferson County boys were killed when lightning struck their
tree house and about60,000 persons in Central Ohio !oat power
Killed when lightning struck a backyard treehouse nea;
thetr suburban SteubenvUle homes were Deoman While 7 and
Christopher Baker, 8.
'
Christopher's broiher, Keith, 13, also was in the treehouse
when ~mg .accompanying a storm hit the structure. He wa!
not senously mjured.
. Hours ?f sweltering tempera lures Tuesday gave way to a
rught of violent thunderstorms in several areas of Ohio.
·
Ro~rt Jones~ a spokesman for Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio
Electrrc Co . S81d the disruption caused by tbe storm "was
about the worst I've seen."
He said high winds, heavy rain and hail tbat swept through
tlle central Oluo area caused problems second in severity only
to the Jan. 26 blizzard,
Jone~ said some customers were not eXPected to be restored
to servtce until noon Wednesday.
\
Jones said about 20 of the 200 electric circuits in Franklin
County were !"J' Put of commission.
The Nat!:x.al Weather Service at Port Columbus said winds
from the storrn weremeasured at a high of 48 miles per· hour.
However, the service sa~d w1nds gusted to higher speeds in
many areas, particularly m Prckaway, Madison and Fayette
Counties.

1

MINIMUM 1000.

By Cbarles M. Madlgao
MOSCOW (UPI) - Two
American reporters today
were ordered to stand trial on
July S on civil charges of
slander brought against them
by the Soviet state committee
for radio and television ..
Craig Whitney, 34 , of the
New York Times, and Hal
Piper, 39, of the Baltimore

Available at existing six-month

u.S. Treasury 1111 rates at time

of purchase. Minimum $10,000.00

Federal Regulations require a substantial
penalty for premature

certificate funds.

...

w~hdrawal

of

There is no penalty for p!'linlture
withdrawal in the Milt of the dellh of
the ~ow~r.

·OhioValley Bank·
Galhpohs. Ohio

Four Locations To Better Serve You

!Qmbor FDIC

There were numerous reports of fallen trees and power
outages following the afternoon and evening storms that swept
across tlle Buclteye State.
. -Putnam CoWlty authorities said a tor"nado touched down
between Kalida and Ottoville, destroying a barn and damaging
a house and several other buildings.
·
Golf baU Biae bail wail reported in Wayne and Hoimes
counties as stortll8 moved through that area.
A cool front moved into northern Ohio late Tuesday
afternoon, settin&amp; off the thunderstorms inland from Lake
Erie.
As the front moved southward Tuesday evening, weather
officials isiued a severe thunderstorm warning for the central
and soutllem sections of the state. II expired at 1a.m. today as
the storms moved into Kentucky and West Virginia .
The hot, humid weather with temperatures reaching 95 degrees sent the use of air conditioners in central Ohio soaring .
A Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio Electric Co. spokesman said
usage Tuesday approached 1,900 megawatts. He said the
firm's record generatloo was 1,932 megawatts recorded on
July 20, 1977.
He said, however, that high demand for electricity this year
is not as critical as last year because another generator has
been placed on line at the Conesville generating station.
The Ohio extended forecast for Friday through Sunday calls
for fair and warm through the period, with higbs between 85
and 90 and lows between 60 and 65.

Sun, spent 10 minutes before Piper pointed out that July 4
a Soviet judge this morning was a national holiday for
and were told to return to Americans.
court Friday to file written
The televisioll' authorities
responses to the civil slander brought the case' against
suit and to be prepared to go Whitney and Piper in
to trial July &gt;.
response to articles they
Soviet authorities wrote, quoting Soviet
originally ordered the trial dissidents as saying that they
for July 4, but postponed it fabricated a filmed con·
one day when Whitney and fession by Georgian dissident

Zviad Gamsakhourdias.
Whitney told the Moscow
tourt judge that he had
planned to be away on
vacation at the time set for
trial.
The judge told him the
authorities could not order
him to remain in the Soviet
Union in a civil case but they
hoped he would appear for
the tripl July 5. They pointed
out that under Soviet law a
trial can proceed even if the
defendant is not physically
present.
The summonses raised
concern among reporters in
Mosc ow because it was
feared the Soviet Union may
be •1arting to use such cases
to respond to any "unfavorable
reporting. Such tactics could
keep reporters endlessly tied
up in legal actions, stiOing
their ability to cover new&lt;

Increased demand not
as great as growth
By JIM AMBROSIO
COLUMBUS ( UPI) - The
demand for electricity in
most of southern and central
Ohio will increase during the
next IS years , but the
increased demand will not be
as great as past growth, a
study released Tuesday by
the Ohio Power Siting
Commission shows.
The
$40,000
report,
Jrepared by a Columbus
based firm, Rothey, Bell and
Taub, Inc ., attempts to
forecast the potential power
demands on the Dayton
Power and Light Company,
tlle Columbus and Southern
Ohio Electric Company, and
the Cincinnati Ga s and
Electric Company.
Those
three
power
companies
serve
the
maj&lt;l'lty ol custcmers in
Dayton, Cincinnati, Colum·
bus and parts of south central
and southeastern Ohio.
While the year4ong study
found, among other things ,
that potential growth should
be "substantially below
hist&lt;rical growth," James L.
Kennedy, chief f&lt;l'ecaster for
the Ohio Department of
Energy told the commission

tllat.the primary value of the
report is the method
employed by the firm.
"Our interest is in the
methodology , not the final
results," Kennedy said.
Two different methods
were employed by Rothey ,
Bell and Taub which Kennedy
said would he valuable to the
state when it begins its own
foreca s ting . Kennedy
formerlv worked with the
commission before taking
the job as adrriinistrat&lt;l' of
the energy department's
division of forecasting.
RobertS. Ryan, head ol the
energy department and also a
power siting commissioner ,
said it was "great to apply
so me
so phisticated
techniques" to forecasting ,
but warned that "forecasting
is not that precise.''
According to a Power
Sitin g Commission
sp okesman ,
Barbara
Kaufman, the studies
represent a way for the state
to become more adept in
forecasting since it is an area
in which the state has little
past experience .
The Rothey , Bell and Taub
study could also be used as an

independent check on the
~overnrnent's staff and the
utilities, she said, adding that
while Kennedy may not view
tlle results as important, the
commission may make use of
the figures until Ule state 's
own studies are completed.
This study is the secood of
three independent efforts
planned by 'the Power Siting
Commission. When the final
study is completed, the future
energy demand for all Ohio
utilities will have been
forecasted .
The
Power
Siting
Commission originally asked
for tlle independent study as
part of its efforts to develop
its own forecasts of
electricity demand . The
authority to develop tbose 10
year I&lt;recasts, however, was
transfered to the Department
of Energy whlll in was established by the Legislature last
winter.

Jl'#&amp;)_r_h_e_w_o_rl_d_T_od_a_y_
(Continued !ram (lilt 1)

BOSTON (UP!) - Five people were found shot to death in
a downtown bar today, pollee said. Police said the bodies were
found in tlle basement of the Black Fgiar pub.
"We got the call at about8:20 this morning. All of them are
dead," the police spoke!IITI8II said. A medical examiner was
caUed ot the scene. No further details were immediately
avallable.

Here's propOSed breakdown
of proposed voc-ed funds
COLUMBUS !UPI) - Here
Is a breakdown on the
proposed distribution of
$8,t64,206 in vocational
education construction Cunds
available
under
a
~~~.Wlemental appropriations
bill adopted by the General
Aaaembly Tuesday and sent
to Gov. James A. Rhodes:
Dayton, $1,023, 114;
Cleveland John Marshall
Higll' School, .-e,a: Wayne
County Joint Vocational
School, U50,000; Medina
County Joint Vocational
School, $425,000; Plb County
Area Joint Vocational School,
$~, 750,000; Oregon, Lucas

County ; $9I,SOO; Cleveland
Vocational Health Center,
~.ooo; and Greet oaks
Joint Vocational School ,
$1,408,SOO.
Also, Plckaway-Ross
County Joint Vocational
School, $'12,0110; Montgomery
County Joint Vocational
School, '341,000 ; CopleyFalrla wn, Suntmit County,
$656,2811; CUyahoga Valley
Joint Vocational School ,
$719,500; Buckeye Hills
tGallia • Jacilaon · Vinton
counties), P5Q,OOO ; Vantage
Joint Vocational School,
$55,0110; and Akron Kenmore
Hl(!h School. $1,322,485.

snoul(l be addressee to Jhe
o ff ices of the Comm iSSion .
Legal Re c ords Sect1on , Oh10
E PA . P
0
Box
1049,
THE PUBLIC UTILI TI E S '
COMMISSION OF OH 10
wer e r ~cetve d or pr epared by Coturncus, Oh10 43216 , (61 4 )
466
6037,
unless
otherwise
By · R ic hard
L
Smit h ,
Th e Oh10 E n vi r onmen tal
Secreta·r y
Pr otec t ion Agt:n.cy du rtng th e st ated In pa rt 1cu tar nolices ,
prev tou s week . Th.e efl ec t ive a! l othe r co mmun1 c a'I10n s
commen t s on
I 28, 11 c
date of each f in al ac tion is 1nc lud in g
stat ed t he tSSUa nce dat e of p·r opose d act1ons. should be
ea c h p roposed ac t io n is add r essed ei ther to The . Ail'
stat ed . A n·y o ne dggr i eve d or P er mits and Complian ce
D ivisi on
or
aa ve r se t y a ff ected by a f in a l M onttor~ng
a ct ion to issu e, deny , mod ify , Perm it and Approval Section.
r.e voke . or r ene w a pe r mit , WhiChever 1S appropr 1ale , a t
li ce n se , or 'f dr i cl nce ; or to The Ohio E PA , P 0 Bo;(
a pprove or dis appr ove p la ns 1049, Co tvrribus , Oh10 43216.
A pprova l o f pla ns and
and spect l icattons , may t ile
sp ec 1f lcaf10ns
an app eal wt th The Envi r on
Chester
Tuppe r s P la 1ns
m en t al Boa r d at Review
Suit e 305 . 39S E ·Broad Sf : Water D1st r ic t
Ches t er, Oh10, eff ect i ve
Colu m bus . OhtO 432 16 , wi th tn
dale 06 n 78
lh 1rtv (JQ) days of !he ef
Th1S f 1na1 act1on not
tec fiVe date, pur suant to Oh io
Rev iSed Co d e Sec t ion 37 45.07, pr ece ded by proposed ac tion
unless such ! mal acllon wa s an d is appealable to EBR ,
pre ce d ed by the same or Rural W a t er D istribu t io n
sub s tanh ally
th e
sa me Syste m ex p an sion and 1m
pro posea ac tion . All such pr ovemen t s, Phase Two ,
final act •on!» ar e so identi f ie d .' M etgs Athens Counties
Such per son s may r equest an
adjud ic ation hea r in g be f or e (61 28. li e
Th e Ohio E PA on a pr opo se d
LEGAL NOTICE
act ion t o iss u e, de ny, mod i f y,
r.evoke , or r en ew a per mi t ,
78 -888 TO CRC
l1 ce nse , or v ar iance; or lo
Notice 1S he r ecy g 1ven that
appro ve or d isapprovE'd plan S comolainls ha"e been liled
and sp eci f ica t ions, W1 lt"1 1n
w i tll tt"le Pu b l ic Utilities
With or
th i rt y (JOJ days of tne
Commiss1on o f Ohio under
is!&gt;u an ce da te OR C 3745 .07
docket numbe r 78 858 TP
Without Fiber
does not pr ov 1de for ad
CRC b y the Oh10 Associaljon
judic at ion hea r ing requests
of Realtors and the Ohio
or appe als on ord er s, ve r il ied
Pr1"ate Employment Serv ice
co mpla in t s, or en forcemen t
Assoc 1at ion , Inc
Snelling
comp li ance sche dule teners
and Sne11 1ng of Columbus.
Wi thin 30 days of publ 1c afion
Oh 10 , Shilowe Personnel
Available at :
in a n ewspap er •n the afl ectea
System , Inc . The Caree r
cou nt y, any pe r son may also :
Pr of ess ional s, Inc , Renh 1ll
( I ) subm it written comme nt s
Em pl oymen t Agen cy . In c ,
r elat ing to actions, propo sed
alleg ing that the measur ed or
ac tion s. "er ifted comp la in ts. · me!&gt;sage r ate tari ff of the
or enfor cemen t com pliance On io Bell Telephone Com
schedule le tt er s. 121 re qu es t
pany 1S unlaw ful The porlies
a publ ic mee t ing rega r ding
of th 15 pr oceeding have been
propo se d ac tions ; and or ()J
dt r ec ted to tile w 1th the
reque s t no t 1ce of turrner
CommiSSIOn at its o fl ic es , 180
act ion s or pr oc.eed1ngs A ll
Ea!i.t Broad Str eet, Colum
r eque s t s t or adjud ic atton
bus. Oh 10 , on or befor e July
hear in g s
and
pubt tc
Ma son ,
15 , 1978 tega t memo randa
meet ing s, and other com
ad d re ss 1ng the a ueslions
W. Va .
m vn ic a tio n s
co n c ern1ng
ra 1Sed by the complamt
publ ic mee t ings , ildtud ic alto n
Further
1nformat 1on
he ar in g s . ve r 11 1ed com
reyardmg lh1S ca!&gt;e (.an be
plaint s , and reg ul at ion s , obta1ned ti v con ta cling th e

END MARRIAGES
l_n Mei~s County Common
Pleas Court . one marria~e
wa s dissolved llld one
divorce was granted
The marriage of .Ronnie
l.ee Anderson and llftty Loll '
Anderson was dissoi,Ved and
Donald Gerald Guthrie was
granted a divorce from Joyce
Ann Guthrie.
·
Charles B. Mullen was
appointed special deputy
sheriff.

COUNTY : MEIGS
PUBLIC NOTICE
Th e fo llowing docu m en ts

BELKNAP
BLACK
ROOF PAINT

For Thursday , June 2.1

ASTRO·GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

AI)Jijl)J~
~ ~crlMbillwLf

BELKNAP

June 29, 1171

You are r:101 ap t to take a back
seat th is coming year and a-llow

t~ e lh 1ngs you want to slip
throu gh your lingers . In st ead ,
your assert iveness ·.. will win
new laurels fo r you.
CANCER (June 21-July 221
You ' re the catalyst to brrng
peopl e tog ether today . in wo rk
or 1n pla y You won 't mind a Oit ,
becau se 11'11 be tun . Having
troubl e sele ctinQ a career?
Send tor your copy of A s tr o·
Graph l etter by maili ng 50
cen ts fo r each an d a long . sell ·
addressed , stamped en ve lo pe
lo As lr o-Graph. P 0 Bo• 489.
Aad ro C• l y Stalron . NY 10019
Be sure to spec 1fy b1rth stg n
LEO (July 23-Aug. 221 Yo u
1mpress others far more ta .,.orabty tha n yo u may re a 11ze
today
This becor'*! s e ven
more ev1d enl 1! a competit ive
S1 luat10n anses
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 221 No '
one ca n do more w1th you r
•deas at thi s 11m e than yo u can
yourse lf Ass ume a leadership
role . Put th em 1nto ! C: tion
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) A pat
on the back wh 1c h you sec retly
need ed wilt be co m1 ng from
several tnend s toda y It w1l l
he lp you get up a lull head o f
steam.
SCORPIO (Ocl. 21-Nov . 22) Be
sure to assoc •ate with act• ve
people today You ·retn o t 1n the
mood to be tied do wn by those
who ten d 10 dra g th ei r fee t
SAGITIARIUS !Nov. 23-Dee .
Z1) Now ts th e 11me to cal l
all en l 10n to yo urself for somethmg you\1e ha ndled etfic ten tly You r tal en ts will no t go
unapprec1ated tf the ri ght party
kno w s ot 1t.
CAPRICORN (Dec. Z2-Jan . 19)
Thi ng s you ·ve learned lrom
eKpenence c an n ow be e fle ctlvely used in a soci al s ituation
Be bold. Try it.
AQUARIUS (Jon . 20.Feb . 1!)
tn lorm ati on co uld surf ace today that' ll bri ng abo ut some
., ac ti"''IIY on what was-4 co nfiden11a l matter. You ' ll tom e ou t
smell .ng a ros e
PISCES (Feb . 20-Morth 20)
Tal king to One wh o is ac t1"1'e
and share s in te res ts w1th you
w111 1nsp1r e you to spnng mto
acllon on yo ur I dea~ _today
ARIES (March 21-AIIfll 1tl EXI ra
eff ort pa ys extra · di vid ends
toda y esp eci ally when yo u go
out ot yo ur Way to be o f
assistance to someon.e e lse .
TAURUS (April 20.May 201
You II do wel l today 1n any
S1t ual10n that perm 1ts yo u to
€Kerc1se you r •mt1a tive Be a
se ll-starter Don ' t wat t on ot h·

ers

5 Gal. Buckel

PICKENS
HARDWARE

TILE
BOARD
FOR BATHS
OR KITCHENS

ONLY

•7!~
Variety of Colors To Choa FRllll

.t«lGG &amp;ZUSPM MATERIAlS CO.
Mason, W. Va.

773-5554

GEMINI(May 21-June 20) More
thmgs wtll get don ~ around
your house tod ay tf\a n you
counted on Another ene rge tic.
nelpl ul person wtll jump 1n and
Share yo ur bu rdens.
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRIS£ ASSN !

JAMES M. CALDWELL

Board has Caldwell
business
named to
•

Five persons shot to death
ALSO NEWI

.

Reporters must stand trial

Republican opposition in the November general election.
Dick Riley, who vowed to end "good ole boy " politics in
South Carolina, capitalized on a former opponent's
endorsement to ovenake Lt. Gov . Brantley Harvey and win
tlle dlance to regain the governor's office for the Democrats .

&amp;-MONTH MONEY MARKET CERTIFICATE
OBTAIN LICENSE
A marriage license wa s
issued to Ricky Lee Yo,1, 18,
Rt. I, Rutland , and Debra
Lynn Bryan , 19, Rt. 1, Mid·
dleport .

Ohioans ·baking under
humid sweltering heat

RATE

an annual yield of
%

DAILY I

9-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Wednesday, Juen 28, 1978

session

membership

The Advisory Board for th&lt;
allematives program of the
Gallia · JacUon • Vinton
Community Mental Health
Center held Its regular
monthly meeting June 21 .
Pat Arnold of Pomeroy,
chairperson, presided at the
business meeting . Linda
Alternative ~
Krasner,
Recreation Specialist, was
Introduced to the Board
members . She discussed
plans for thiJ year's summer
youth camp wlllch is being
held in August.
Kramer is responsible for
organizing and coordinating
the camp. Guest speakers
were John BraiTUller and Bill
Breckenridge, both clinicians
with the Children's Services
Program of the Mental
Health Center.
Their presentation was
entitled "Effective Paren·
ting ... The First Step in
Substance Abuse Prevenlion", and was well received
by those in attendance.
The
nut
regularly
scheduled meeting is set for
July 19th at 7:30 p. m., in the
Gallia Community Mental
Health Center.
Area reaidenll interested in
becoming members of the
Advisory BOard are invited
to attend any regular
bus!r.eu meeting or contact
your local community mental
health center lor infonnation.

proudly presents

·

James M. Caldwell, 39year-old Ross County
Commissioner and owner ·
operator of a 10-member
Chillicothe based public
accounting firm , announced
his acceptan ce to mem·
bership on the Board of
Trustees of the Ohio Valley
Health Services Foundation,
according to Dr. William H.
Allen , Jr., president of the
Foundation.
Caldwell was the second
· Ross County resident to
announce representation of
his county on the eight-county
regional primary health care
devel opment agency. ·
Previously , Wayne B. Foster,
president and administrator
of the Medical Center
Hospital, Chillicothe, joined
the Foundation's board.
Caldwell 's lo cal gov ern·
ment experience includes
eight years service as a
Chillicothe councilman and
chairman of council's finance
committee. He is president of
the southeast chapter of the
Public Accountants Society of
Ohio and a member or lhe
national society . He is
enrolled in practice before
the Internal Revenue Ser·
vice.
He received a bachelors
degree in business ad·
ministration from Ohio
University in t963. Com·
missioner Cadlw•ll and his
wife , the fllnner Pamala
NOW YOlJ KNOW
Marsh,
have two children and
The avtrllt humminiJbird
reside
in
Chil l,c••the.
weighs leu thin a penny.

'

?2-cund'Up o/ StazJ
A COUNTRY MUSIC SPECTACULAR
j11111t 30, Y,~ttv1 and 2,

•

1978

THE BIGGEST SHOW EVER TO HIT THE EAST
* JEANNE C. RILEY
* ERNPT TUBB
Direct from
* FREDDY HART
* CHARLIE LOUVIN

** MELiA
RAY PILLOW
MONTGOMERY
* BARIARA MANDRELL
* MICKEY GILLE,Y
JIM ~D BROWN
HELD CORNELIUS
TO'- T. HALL
MEL' ITREf'f

*
*
**

Door Prilt

the Grand Ole Opry
GRANT TURNER
MC.

also
CARL LIPPS
M.C.

* ROY DRUSKY
* TOMMY OVERSTREET
* ARCHIE CAMPBELL

* MEL TILLIS
* MARTY ROBBINS
*Kim WELLS
TAMMY WYNETTE
* RAY PRICE

*

nCKETS AVAILABLE AT TliE GATE
$20 Per Adult ..• $5 Per Child (5 to 12)

* ALL THREE DAYS WITH FREE CAMPING *

FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION PHONE (614) 989-2310
1971

MOM£ CARLO

..

"

r

A Lot of ARTS and CRAFTs-Plenty of Good Food
(Including Full Course Meals)

�.·

·.
_!()-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 :, Wednesday , June 28, 1978

· wANTAD
CHARGES

· Noti.!!l!e

Words or Untler
Cash
1.00

Ulwrwe

3dM.ys

1110

6day.s

2:1-1

:J.OO

IW.y

Lll

uo

2Wiys

l OO

~

The sole w 11l be on the bonll. pa rk

PB A C
b cell e n1

Hl9 lot at 3 00 pm 1e rms c o ~t'
on hand day o f sol e . Ra cme
Home Not•onol Bo nk re!oe r\leS

Eclch Wl.lfll tlver tl tt· nununwn I~
wunb. is 4 eent.o.: ~ r wurd !)t'l Ui!~

the n gh l to b 1d o r th 1s sole o • to
r en)Ove ony ol the above

Ad:.: rut\11U1t( Other UWIII' t'UI\M'('Ut l\'t'

tl!&amp;ys will bl:!

t 'h.11r g~ l 111

r•"'

Ll1t' I da)

a u to m o bil e~

fr om th e ·so le a t

an ytcm e

111 menwry. Card or 'ftl ~ nk!. a11d
ObJlllltr)'. 6 c~nld ~ r wurd. SJ .OO
m.i111m um. Cash 111 adv&lt;llll'\'
M o bil~ Hom~

s.at k!s 1uK.l Yard lWll\'s
aro: .!l(..'t't'pled unfr · willi rash wtlli
ordi!r . 25 t~ llt l'IIHI'!J~ (or 11ili; l'C:Irry.
ing Box Numbt'r In Con\' of The· Sen·
lineI.
The Pu!Jhsher r~St"n't- S till' nlo(IH
W t:dilor rdcl·t &lt;Ill)' cub t.lt"t'lllt'J ulr
}h'IIOital . T)k' PubllSlll'r "''lil IIUI lit'
rt spvll.!i lb l~ fvr mort' tllilll unt• Ull'ur·
r~1

lllstr\.I Uil .

Q

Ph on ~:

!192·2 1fl6

WAl l ~ ~~)

No
ex p enence
neceHOry Ap pl y m per son at
!Hu e f arlan M cddle pon

LPN NH:DI::D Ca ll A rcodto Nur ":.
~r'g Horne ~ 14 otJ7 3l qb
CARR IERS NH DED tor The Ood y
)en l1ne l Pomeroy Mcddl·e port
and Syracuse area
Plecl&gt;e
phon e 992 2!50 be rween 8 30
arn and 5 00 pm
NHD S O M ~ON!:: ro s11 w 11h 7
children ages 8 and 2 Mondoy
rhr augh Fr 1doy fro m 7 om IO
5 30 pm Colt 992 2931 on y111ne
alt e r 5 JO

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
' DEADLINES

NO IT EM TOO l a rge or too sma ll
W11l bu y I p1ece or com p le Te

hou&lt;s et'lo ld New used or or 111
q u e ~ Morr m s Furn11ure '10 N
2nd St
Mrddle-p011 flh o n e
992 6370

M t.~ IKl&lt;l l

Nuun u11S&lt;tl ilrd&lt;1.1
Tut.'sU a ~

t!wu ~~nd&lt;1 \
&lt;PM .
Uw ttl ~ lie( on: pulllll'al tvn

CHIP
WOOD
Poles
m ax
drame ler 10 on I or g e ~ ! e nd SB
pee Ton Bu ndled ~ lob So per
ton Delivered 10 Ohro Pallet
Co Ht 2 Pomero y Q9{ 1b!N

Sunda ~

• PM
i' I' ~ Y llfiAlmw n

GOO D U S ~D Tr actor
wdh
hydr ou l1c J pt h11ch 74'1 J07 4

li MtU.R f-'OMf: ROY ~ 0 1e 't fl ro
FO R GARY Wolfe who po !&gt;~ed
owo y June 27 Jq6J.
LO'II ing ond k 1nd rn o il of hcs way s
Upr1 ghr ondju1. 1 Ia th e end at hrs
d o y!io
S1ncere a nd True 111 hear ! an d
4

m tnd ,

•

f oll o wmg ] Q7-4 Dodg e Charger
1q7J Vega stot •on wagon
1971 Fo rd llD

31~

duch l op prtce l or :. londc ng
sow limb er Call QQ'} ~ 9~5 01
Ken t Hanby I 44b !:1 570

OLU f- URN il UIH rce bo x e~ brass
bed s uon beds d e-, lo. ~ e tc
corn pler e h ou":.c h o l d~
W n te
M D Me ller Ht 4 Po meroy or
co1 19q2 n w

Beo ut1lul
mem o r1 e~
he
left
OW COI NS poc lo. e1 wa tches
behi nd
class r~r'lg~ weddmg bonds
Sad ly mr ssed by Pa ulme Ch m
d1o mon d s Gold or ~1 l v e r Co lt
G ory Pf!g a nd Jam1e Dorrell
Hog er Wam5ley 747 7331
Carm en . Jenn1fer and l au ra .
MEMORY of Chorte !o W
Fr1dley who passed away 1'2
years ago June 18
Giv..Away
A scien t thou g ht . o secre ! rear
Keeps h 1s me mory ever dear
f- OUR Kll H.: N ~
Sadl y m•ssed by !he Family
qij~ 3871

AM S-trock stere o
co nd tl •o n
5 1700 .

2622.

PIN TO
SQU IRI::
Stotr on
V&gt;'ogan w 1lh o 1r new !Ires mag
w heel s. b cce ll ent (ond diOfl .
Phone 9Q2· 2058

IQ7 3

IN THE COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS ,
PROBATE DIVISION ,
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
EDISON
HOBSTETTER .
Adminis tra1or of th e Estate
of Merle E . Rice . decea sed ,
Plaint tft ,
- \' S·

RHODELL STEFFY , et at. ,
Oefendanh .
No . 10 , 909

KITli:N ) 10 week s old 1
bl ock
I whr te w dh br ow n
spo Ts 1 l rger co l Al l fang ho~r
f! hone qq'} 7905

NANCV ~~ MAl ~ puppy b w ee ~ ~
ol d Sl onle y ma le puppy ~
week ~ o ld
M 1~ ed breed bu1
ver y l ov able '¥1'1'1.11 28
HIH TO good horne 3 male
tlo s5e ll puppceo, Gtl5 4:271 alter
Opm

NOTICE FOR SERVICE
BY PUBLICATION
To ;· Nor a K indte. wh ose

1973

FORD

s 1200

srATIO N

197 4 MUSI'ANG II. Hardto p. b
cyl au to Phone 949 2042
197 1 FORD G AlA XI~ Run!&gt; good .

CO UNlR Y M OBILE Ho me Po rk .
~ o u t e 33 nort h of Pon,e roy .
large lo ts. Ca ll 991 747G
Si:NIO R CITI ZEN S
Ou r ne w
ren te rs oss 1stonce you rnoy be
able To lcve rn our apo• tm enl
l or less tha n SSO o m onth Fo r
mo re cnl or mo!r on
co nta ct
Vrlloge Manor Apar Tment s. .
99')_ 7787
CO RNER LOT l or Tro ll er ~ p a c e on
•1 ve d r o n 1
99 2 2238
or
991 .530 4

rwo

Bi:DROOM un fur nr 1&gt;hed op t
Cal l qrn.nel:l
A d ulT ~

Trad e r

on ly qQ J.J324 .
I H ~!::l: ROOM S and ba Th 111
Pomero y. Cal l q92 5021 o r

d e c e a~e d ,

To Glenn Kn ow l es . whOse
add r ess cs un k no wn and
can n o t
w llh
r e a sona l:ll e
Orlrg enc e be asc er1a1ned .
To l he unknown ne 1r s an a
de~o~ 1 sees ot Glen K no w les. , 11
de ce ased ,
To The un k no w n her r s and
dev 1sees o f Leo r a Zw t1t 1ng ,
deceas ed
To Th e unkno w n he 1r s a no
o e~o~ i see !l
o f Frances. V
Br y an , decease d ,
To T he un kno wn he1rs a nd
dev is e es o t E d 1l h Rrce ,
de c eas ed .
'
To The u nkn own he 1rs a no
de vis ee s. o t Mae P rice ,
decea sed .
To : The u n k now n he~rs a nd
deVisees of M er le E R 1c e ,
d ec ea sed , a no
To The un k no w n he 1r s a nd
d ev ts ee s ot J
0
R1(e ,
de c ea sed .
Yo u ar e ne r eoy no llf ted
t hat you ha~o~e been named
d ef end a nts 1n a 1eg a t a c t ion
ent i tled Ed i son H obste tt er ,
Ad m in iS t r ator a t t he E sta te
of M er le E R •ce. P la1 nl d f ,
vs . Rno oett Ste ll y , et a t .
De f enda nts Th 1s. ac t ton ha s
been asstgneo Case N o 20,909
in the Courl ot Comm on
P l eas , Pronat e Or\I ISI On ,
Me 1QS Counfy OhiO , .457 09
The obJec t a t The Com p 1a 1n 1
I s. t ha t fne real es tat e
her'ei na lter aescr 1bet:l oe sold
In Hs. ent 1rety . and to p ay t he
deb t s o t the aeceae n t . tha t
', f he r 1gh lS . •nlerests. . and li ens
of all part 1es. rT~av be t ul l y
d et er m rned th a i the P la1 nl iff
be au t h or~2e0 ana or aer eo to
sell sa id real estate, a n d f or
,. su c h f u r the r rel cet as he m a y
be en t 1tted
lhe s.s1 d re a l
es ta te ts siluateo at 191 Nan n
Fou rt h Avenue , M rd dlep or t.
Oh i o , and oescr1tle d a s
fOllO WS

The I OIIO WtnQ des.crt tl f! d
r eal .e sta te srtu a ted in thf'
Vr l!age of M 1dd l eport , Co un t y
of Ml! i g s, St ale ot Oh ro
Being 125 t eet o tt f he ea st
end of Lo t N o 88
Deed Re f er ence
Vo lu me
\418 , Pa ge 436. and Vo lu me
'255 , P age 399 , M c 1g s c oun t y
Deed R ec ord s
'You are r eQui r ed to an swer
th e Com pl a int w tth in 28 day s.
alt er th e l a st p ubl• c at ton Of
fh i s not 1c; e , w h1ch w i ll be
publ ished on ce each w eek for
stx conse cu t 1ve week s The
last oubf cc at ron w ill be m ad e
on Ju l y 12, 1978, ana th e 28
days f or an swer w i l l com
m en c; e on t h at date
In case ot y ou r t a rlu r e to
answe r or othe r w ise r es pon d
as r eQut r ed bY lh e Oh tO R u le s
ot Civ i l Pr oc;e d u r e , JU d g ment
by defau lt w ill be r en dered
a g a tn sl
you
fo r
r e li e f
dem anded 1n the com pla tnt
Jane t M or ris ,
C Jer k of the Co ur t
o f Common P le as ,
P r oba te D i v i si on ,
Me l os Co unty , Oh to
D at ed : Ju n e s, 1978

161 7. u , 21, 28 17.J.

~.

12, • •c

WA ltH WH I drtllmg W1l l tom
Gr ant 741 'Jl:l79
(hcmney ~wep T by o prol e!o sconol
... tlh modern du~ l le'lo!&gt; ~l eonmg
old h me wQf-k mallSh cp Coli
1 JJ:J bO!l7 Han Zort man

HOUSl: FO R ) AH 2 ~ l o ry v1ny i
srd1 ng 3 bed room down stoc rs
{ up sto 1n IPI In Q roo m d 1111119
room bo lh k 11chen wd houl oc
wdh opp l 1on c e ~
complet ely
ca rpe ted downsta ir S. hot wo 1cr
heo1 au co ndc tc o ned . wat er
~o ll e n e •
ca rpo rt ond bock
pot1 0 I l o t ~ ol (OilCiel e ) 2 out
budd cngs 11 'l tnyl stdmg )
l ocaTed on !&gt; 1de !&gt;!ree l 111
~u tl on d
Oh 1o . Co il dov
741 '}'} It or ev enmg 74'1 795 4
A ~ k lo1 Herb,
~I V t ROOM hou se
a c r e~ of ground

w 11 h boT h 19
o n 01 28 be l ·
w een iol ocme and Ap ple G rov e
l ac more cn l orrna hon co li
247 3\6 4

'997 2105

BU 51Nl: 5S FOH !&gt; ole Bee• Wme
( or~ y O ul q97 57 f:IO bl!lw een
10 &amp; 5 Dor ly
COAL liMl:SI ONt ~and grovel
r ol c1um chJo• •de l c• t •t•ro• dog
l ood and al l types ol o,o h b •
c el ~1or Soli Wo tlor. \ Inc
~ Moon
5t Pomer oy
3aq 1
5Hi: C110 N o lt h(' be\ I....,
stoves 1n ~u t h(tO\t• cr· Ohoo
Jo tul
Mot w
II I
l orcho
1empw ood and Nof r.vo / q
Hea t Co ~ Pu lnon' 0 • c•H ¥
) I ) A th en~ Ol &lt;t ~""J
'. ,•
OI 4 0QO J1EP

B ~ ST

IJ U H fi O U G H ~

SlN!JI MA II(. o•
to untrn g mo t h tn
1-'ho.., ..
991 21~0 l ~e Uorl y ~er l hf&gt;f' l
Ill Court !)t•eer
ti o "'t&gt;' O ~
O hco

Mf.- 135 D ce1.el
M ~ 150 01 e~e l
M ~ l OS D•e ~ el
M F 1 1 3~

M~

730

Will MAIN 1AIN ( ollfOrrliO Hed
wo od lo/ond•
I~ ~
fl oor
3
bedr oom bot h l1vrng 100m
lo1 ge k t t ~ hen d 1n111Q roorn
d£'11 I vii ~·te ba semen T w1 l h
tqr •c o rpe1~dreueo !i on • oorn
or both IO&lt;o ted near H hool !&gt;
hu•d '9~ \ hopp1ng and recreo
r,,," Go,. h••OI nl!w re r•l •o l o• •
·•ltio hOnrPg large loT Pr 1v0 1e
l'(lhll l o t ~ ot r.ee":. Ov EH~1 r e d
h•trhle qoro q ~ '/ 4 • J() Cu":. lom
iltJP''\ and other ex t1 0~
\) ... n~r be1ng trOn!. lerr ed )e ll
for nud ()(h JO.a TI'J 7~ 1 7

IWTIOINV lO I on hdl behmd 134
Mu lbeny Ave Phoneqcn 7123

SPECIAL
Any U. S. made ear- parts
extr1 if needed . Excludes
tronf . wheel clriwe ears.

s;ns

1971 DA rS UN 1 ton p1c k. vp 4
":. peed ne w cl~tch mu ff ler
b, ok. e:. and po m! 15 m p g

11 300 Coii9917539
1478 RM 250 Suruk 1 Wdl trade l o r
cor or ~ el l $1?00 94q 7387

1HIUi: B ~D R O OM h ou~e 1n ~o crr1 e
area N ear r1vec Comple te ly
ren1ode led 94G 2 ~ 4S
)

Call Now For
Appointment

992 3b4 0

Pomeroy Landmark
9eJ!ck W. Corsey , M9r.

!I!!

Phone 991-2181

IF YOU hove o ~ erv1ce to off er
want to buy or sel l ~om et h1ng
oe loo lo. 1ng l or wor k
or
w ha tev er
~ou H gpt re ~u h !o
l oste1 Wt l h o !:,en Mel Wo nt Ad
Co l1992 7 1 ~ 0
fR ID A Y JUNl J(Hh q 7 Ya rd !to le
1635 l cncolr, Herghl\ 4 fomd y
Cob1ne1s rnople c o p t o1n~ cho11
clol hmg Tab le household and
boby c l em~ pion • ~ ,
I

I H~ C RA C IUH

YAR D )o l e
Where ~ o c cne o! The cor ner at
~ ro a dw a y and Morn Stree ts
Whe n ) ot ucdoy July I Wh o1
Ho t bot gou) riPms 1ouch a s. I V
aquo r1 um golf clubs ro d 1os
old ba il ie ~ clothes a nd mc!io c
llems l- or lurlher 1nformo lion
coil &lt;149 109EI alte r 5 pm

I WO f AM II Y Yurd )ol e Wed
1hvrs h1 C.ron l fes cd ence
!:ogl e R1dge Cancell ed d rat n
1119

Tf( U(K CAMPE N lOp 747

1 4 ~4

3 1~4

MO I OR ~ O R 1973 Prn to 1()(X)cc
and 4 speed Ir On !&gt; w1 th )1 000
tn •les S1 50 for bo th oc wrll se ll
separate ly Moy ro g ponoble
drye-r A 1 tond1Tron W1t a rd
w~ed
Kdlm el e{ It I( ltm( e
&lt;ho•ge• Re . •o bb 1h i 3 eo ch
Ht 33 Hurlu1ghorTI ocroH fr om
~ u c &lt;,on '»Grocer y
PIC.!:.
8 week s .old
f-'hon ""
84J '} 4c,ll l orn Say re Por Tla nd
Ohro

Kll VI NA lO R

U I A~ l l

re tr .gero tor SJO
K.ny !:,u e
Nell ie Creek bed!&gt;p•C"od S20
Coli oh er 5 992 1fib 1
HA 'I'
74')

BI G
1~ 50

roun d bol es
ol !cr b prTr

Coli

197 4 I ~IUMPH 500 cc S700 10
ITIOtHh ol d wo ~her and dr yer
SJOO 14'1 2047

Let

Pomeroy Landmork
&amp; · condition your
1water with Co-op . woter
son•n•r. Model UC-SVI,
sof1en

Pet&amp; lor :&gt;ial"
H 00 ~

HOLLOW Ho rse!&gt; Buy !)ell
If ode 01 lro1n Now and used
~add l f'~ Ru th ~eev e ~ A l b an ~

614i b9H3190

.

Ht!:l tN G ') IAH l'iennel . Boor d•ng
Indoor onri "u tdo01 runs
Groorn111q o11 h1e ed ~ (leon
' 0r11 t01y !oc,lclles
Che~h.rf•
PI10rlf' 01 4 Jb l O'l'I'J

Now Only

'219.95

Let us test your w1fer Free

Pomeroy Landmark ·
9~ ·Jack

!Iii!.

w. Carsey. M9r.
Phone 9922111

the

12

Room ,

Muffler
Shocks
Battery .

Broker

Let

:ell en! cond ll •on Level lo l
n Rutl a nd, eq u tp ped k tf
:hen a nd many t ea tur e~ .

$27.700 .00.
~EW LISTING

Pomeroy, 0 .
3-15-lfc

EAFOR
VIRGIL B., SR . r.~'!'i111
?92·3325
~ t• l l O i&gt;'
216 E. Second Sfreet
Pomeroy, Ohio

New 3

bedroom brick home , N i ce
step - sav er k i t c hen wi t h
larg e dining area. Large
fam i l y
ro o m
w it h
he at o later f ireplace and
nic e view of the wood l and

and l a rge fron t por ch . If
you like th e county th i s w i ll
please you .

OLD BUT NICE -

capture

and

preserve those prec i ous
moments forever -

II it 's

room y ou want this has i t
with all citv con11eniences .
Th i s has 3 or .4 bedrooms,
d i n i ng roo m , equ i pped
kitchen , furna ce , l arge
yard . 2 car garage with 2
rooms for st orage an d 2

Weddings
Silver and
Golden Anniversar~
Family Reunions

Special Occasions
Photography
is
bu si ness,

our

not a side line

KEN GROVER
PHOTOGRAPHY
985-4115
Chesler, Ohio 4S720

HOM !::SITI: S for sole l acre and
up M1ddlepo1 I near Ru Tl and
Co llq9'J 748 1

washer · dry er

and

n ic e

518,000 .
HOW LONG HAVE YOU
BEEN TRYING TO SELL.
CALL US TO GET THE
SELLING JOB DONE. WE
ARE
THE
HOUSE
SELLING CENTER .
HELEN L. TEAFORD
GORDON B. TEAFORD
SUE P. MURPHY
Associate Realtors

2 story

older

home, 3

bedroo ms , famil y room
wi th fir epla ce . l i v ing room ,
d in i ng ro o m , c arpeted

t hr oughout , k itc hen
co mpl e t e l y equ i pped ,
laundry room w ith wa sher

and

dr ye r .

2

baths ,

ou tb uild i ng w ith electri c
tor sto rag e, a lum . siding ,
sto'rm w indows. new roof.

on doubl e
535.000 .

lot.

A ski ng

M idd l eport- Hou se . la r g e
lot, com p l et e l y re modeled .
g a rag e ,
c e l l ar .
outbui ld ing s. gra pe a r bor .

~ 15.000

00

NEW
LlSTlNG
In
Pomeroy.
r emode l e d
'lome , p art
b aseme n t.
·an qc &amp; r ef
2 or
3
:&gt;cd room s, 11 '1 ba ths . O N

No 216. S77 ,500 .
804 W. Main
Pom eroy
992 -2298
After Hours

Call992-7l33
CONTACT :
lois Pauley
Branch M.n•ger

L Y $6,100 .00 .
About 25

ac r es In Ch ester t ownsh ip ,
fen ci ng , g ard e n sp a ce ,
b ar n . n ice l y remode l e d
home
w i th
ba se m e nt ,

por ches. carpe t ing. TH IS
VOU
M US T
SEE
$30,851.00.
OLDER HOME
In M •d
dlep ort ,
117 ba ths. 3 4
od r ms , ') sto r teS AS KIN G

120.000 00
REDUCED TO 15,900, •n
Pomeroy , 3 od r ms , ba t n ,
ga r age . ce ll a r

SAY IT WITH FLOWERS
CO u l d be y our moiiO
You r ow n b u~1ness Tra tn
ing pr o ~o~ i d ed , movt&gt; 1n and

CENTRAL REALTY CO.
TWO ACRES A beaut iful 4 year old, 3 bedroom home
w i t h larg e eal· in k itc hen,

3 bedr oom s, all n ice l y

carpeted, 2 baths, ful l basemen! with TV room . Many
more ex tra s. lo w heat b i ll w i th na t . ga s forced air
furna ce . All th is and two n ice acres o t land in a good

location. Will go qu ick foe S35,000.
S7 ACRES - W ith a n ice I' 2 stor y hou se with 3 bedrms .

and 1'' bath s. Mostly carpeted . Big centra l f ireplace
with heatol ater. Srnaii ·barn and outbu ildings, 20 acres

or 4 bedrm s .. li v ing r m ., fam ily rm .. w ith flreplaee ,
bas em ent , fue l oil furna ce , garag e and outbu il dings .

Som e fencing , plenty of road frontag e and gorden
spa ce . Ci t y water and dr illed well . Loc. close t.o
hospital and school at Laur el Cl ift . Asking 542,500.
40 ACRES - In Southern Local with a small barn and
dug well. About 12 acres t illable. Some woo ds and
mineral s. Asking S21.500.
A BEAUTY AT FIVE POINTS - Here .Is an excellent3
bedrm . house with 111, ba t hs, ki tc hen and buflt .ln

3 BORM .
R an c n
1n
Pome r oy , n• ce k tfchen ,
part b asemen t
Ol H E R

Atta ched 12 car l garage . Chrysler A ir -Temp. central
heat ing and cool ing . Very low elec. bills. All this and
approx . one acre land. Have a look . On l y S47 ,900.
S11.700 wil l buy a good 2 bedrm. house and garage.
storage building and garden space on St . Rt . 124 In

[B
IH

A. l 1 Q W

and

commercial.
Call for
estimate, 24 hour service.
Anyday l anytime.

1--· 1 JUST

I'M ( OloiFOflTABLE
HERE, ANNIE .. AND
JUS'l DON' T EVE R
TRY TO KID ME .. .

Jack' septic

rank~

Chester, Ohio

WAN1 YOU 10

BE COM FORTABLE
AN' HAPPY ,.

8RADFOIW
A uC11oneer
Com .
p fe1e S: er v rce fl hona 94 9 · 1 ~ 87
01 949· 2000 Rocme O h1o Crill
!hodfor d

Si:W ING NACHINl J.! epo11 s s.e r ·
v 1ce al l ma kes W 2·1184 l he
f.-o br1 c Sh o p
Po rn ero y
A u1homed S•n ger Sole!) ond
Ser·v1 ce . We sho t pen S c r s~o r s .
~ XC A VA fi N G

dOl or loa der and
backhoe wo rk durnp Truck '
and lo · b o y ~ l of lure will ha ul
l rll d1 rf Ia ~o d l c me~ t o ne and
g•ovel Ca ll Bob or Rog er Jef ·
let s day phone 992 7089 nig ht
phone 992 3575 or '191 · 5131.

VACANT LAN'O - 10 acres of lond on Rt. 33-4 lane,
about one mile north ot 7-33 bypass. Asking 512,800.
S10,900 - 1 acre level land with a 64x12, 3 bedroom
mobile home with natural gas heat, city water &amp; sept ic.
S15,000 - Will buy a good 5 bedrm . house with large
liv ing room and kllchen. 2 baths, basement. F.A. nat .
vas heat jn Chester .
We NHd Llstin_gs (Middleport)
Wo hove buy on tor mony IYPtS of property
CALL JIMMY DEEM, Assocloto, 94t·2lll

r

0

.I

Ye sterdays

darer . backhoe
and dtt che t Charl es R. Hoi ·
Bo ck
Hoe
Se r ,. ic e .
ft e ld
Hutlond O h1o Ph on e 742 200(:1.

WI Ll do 10of mg co nsl ruc han.
p lumbt ng and heo tr ng No 10b
too Iorge or too srn oll Phone

.
Ex

covo t 1ng
sep tic
sy s!em s ,
dolt' ' backho e , dump truck ,
lime!:&gt; to nc
gra ..,el . blackT op
povm g , Rt 143 Pho ne I ( b l~ )

6• 8-733 1

PUDDLE POOLS Al l ~ ~zes and
shopes ~w1m poo l'i. 1 year s
e11 per 1ence
tr ee es timates .
o nyl h rf\ g
'( OU
ne ed
fo r
underg round sw1m pools. New
chem tcol and su pply store .
Al b any
O h 10
Ph o ne
6 1 4 · bG8 · b 5 ~ 5
! Aft er 6 pm .
61• b89 5:l5! John Jeff ers or
bl:l9 5165 8 rll Gi llefle . ) We ore
NOT all we t on PRI CES

NliGllR BUilDING Supplv lor
budd1ng houses, repa ir wo rk
a nd cob1net !io , Col i Guy H.
N etgler , q,cQ .250S ohe r 5 pm .

by

THOMAS JOSEPH

DOWN

ACROSS

1 Tooth woe
I Soprano,
5 SunnoWJted Lucine u Berth
2 Heavenly
12 Tooth
sight
3 Mom's chore

4 "Human" to do
5 lntimi-

14 Zoroastrian bible

dated

15 In medias

GASO~JNE

I Grotto
7 One : Scot.
8 Forward

16 "You -

observer's
station

So Fair"

AI.LI·: Y

17 - Aviv
18 Reining

9 Compact
10 Sold

You t' inl4
Pure ILl
t.hic; one precautionar4. zo Classy guy
don't,? ,...__ Mr. Blink! ZJ Garbed

Who will inspect
rm-1 car?

IIFit Iiddle

~--:;..- 22 Opposed to

31 EJ;punge

city
%4 Jnf~
21 Anger

tree
:It Recent

zs' Bear's

mine
38 Siamese

3Z Bibllcal
juniper

Wednesday • .June 2~

37 Cornwall

grip

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

,....-+--+--+-+-+-

Winner on .loser wins

fat

NORTH
+A lO 2

!:9 RuslHlour
prize

A• Low As

• J 10 6 3

+ K 54

strike

.... . '"• """""" ........

9' and 12' Vinyl

•

WEST

33 Marine

"'"" " . . . .... j

+ ... .

bird
3f Ship's diaryi:;,-+-+-i-

I

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I ,,
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~~

Co11742-22J1
TALk TO
Wendell or HerD Grote
or CO.ne Smlltl
'

prefix

ouFZ le$,.

~ DEfENse 1$ ,....liT
PRISONS

nte.

,n .. ~l\tl'l' Mf:

0\IERcflOWDi:D.

·RUTLAND
FURNITURE

:~=y
39 Japanese
10

Wl~-ld~~db:eog 81e~'IHII

u Nimrod
42 Detail

DAILY CRYI'TOQliOTE -

Here's h ow to work it:

AXYDLBAAXR
Is L 0 N G t' E L L 0 W
One letter

RutlAnd,

simply

sta nd s f or an o ther . In this

.sample

A is

used f or th e three L's, X l or the 1wo O's, etc. Smgl e lelters.
apos trophes, the l ength and forrnat~on of th e word! are all

hints. Each day

WINNIE

• YOU CAN UNDER -

STAND WHY I
TO IIO THIS
MY8ELF?

YES, SIR. TH E
LESS PEOPLE
THAT K NOIV
AOOUT TH IS
FlU/I, THEBETTER .

SHES
BEAUTIFU L"
IBN'T SHE?

th e code

lt&gt;ttcrs arc

d1ffer .;on t :

CRYPTOQUOTES

SO FAR, SO
GOOD. HE

CJ ZF

DOESN'T

DSPQJQBQ

J p

OOSPECT

A THI N6 1

WLP

JQ

BVJPEJP U

IV L

sz

y

8
L C

L

C

L R .
K •
I L C Y S
F W F K Q S P
Yesterday' I crypeoquott:A MAN MAY WRITE HIMSELF OUT
OF REPUTATION WHEN NOBODY El-SE CAN DO IT.THOMAS PAINE

YOU .

if-J I!J78 Km1 Futures Syndicatt, In(' .

BAR :&gt;lEY

FETCH TH' STICK,
ot:
HOW NICE.. AN
AUTHENTIC IMITATION
SENTI MEN T ~

E AST

+

K Q7 3
" 94
• A 8 54
• J 87

"Q8 7 65
• Q9 7 2
+ A Q 10 2
SOUTH
• J986 l4
• J 10 2

;.F~RA:,::N.::,K:,:&amp;:,:E:,R::;N;IE:.,.. -::::::::::::::--:===::-""";:===::::-~;=::::::::--------~ 35 Prior :

Bay wMre you con come In
ond see whot you're vlttttno
- Good selections - Fully'
stocked.

S-211-A

" AK 3

31 Kind of

'4.11 ~~;d

Largest Selection In The Valin .

JJ Vigilant
%0 Urchin
%3 Egyptian

5: 4s-Farm Reporl13 : 5:51)-PTL Club 13; 6:01)-PTL
Club 15; Summer Semester 10.
6: 31)-Doctors on Call4; News 6; Summer Semester 8;
For You .. . Biack Woman 10.
6 : 4s-Mornlng Report 3; 6 :51)-Good Morning , West
Virginia 13; 6:5s-News 13.
7:01)-Today 3,4,15; Good Morning America 6,13 ; CBS
News 8; Porky Pig 10.
7: 25-Chuck White Reports 10; 7:31)-Schoolles 10.
8:()()-.{:apl . Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame St . 33 .
9:01)-Merv Griffin 3; Phi l Donohue 4,13,15;
Emergency One 6; Pass The Buck 10; Brady Bunch
8.
..
9:31)-Andy Griffith 8; Fam ily Affair 10.
IO :oo-Card Sharks 3,4,15; Edge ol Nlghl6; Pass The
Buck 8; Joker's Wild 10; To Tell The Truth 13; Over
Easy 33 .
10 :31)-Hollywood Squares 3,4,15 : High Hopes 6; Price
is Right 8.10; 520.000 Pyramid 13; Paint Along With
Nancy Kaminsky 33 .
11 :01)-High Rol lers 34,15; Happy Days 6,13.
11 :31)-Wheel of Fortune 3,15; Partridge Family A;
Family Feud 6,13; Love of Li te 8,10; 11 :55-CBS
News 8; Loving Free 10.
12 :01)-Newscenter 3; News 4,6 ,10; Sanford &amp; Son 15;
Gambit 8; M idday Magazine 13; Walch Your Mouth
33.
12 :31)-Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Bob Braun 4; Gong Show 15;
Search for Tomorrow 8,10; Romagnolls' Table 33.
1:llO-For Richer, For Poorer 3; All My Ch ildren 6,13 ;
News 8; Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women
Only 15; Soundstage 33 .
:31)-Days of Our Lives 3,4,15; As The Wor ld Turns
8,10; 2:01)-Cne Life to Live 6,13 ; Spo leto, USA 33 .
2: 31)-Docfors 3,4,15; Guiding Light 8, 10; 3:01)Anolher World 3,4, 15; General Hospital 6, 13; L ilias
Yoga &amp; You 20,33 .
3:31)-Ail In The Family 8,10; You Bel Your Life 20;
Old Frlends ... New Friends 33.
4:01)-Mister Cartoon 3; Superman 4; For Richer, For
Poorer l S; Merv Griffin 6; Addams Fam ily 8;
Sesame St . 20,33; Match Game 10; Dinah 13.
4:31)-My Three Sons 3; Gil ligan 's is. &lt;; ,8; Batman 10;
Lillie Rascal s 1S.
5 oo-Here Come The Br ides 3; My Three Sons A;;
Gunsmoke 8; Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33 ;
Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea 10; ·Emergency
One 13; Pett icoat Juncti on 1S.
S:31)-0dd Couple 4; News 6; Elec. Co. 20,33; Hogan ' s
Heroes 15; 5:5s- .
6:01)- -News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20;
Making Things Grow 33.
6 : 31)-NBC News 3,4,lS ; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8, 10; Over Easy 20; Antiques 33 .
7 oo-Cross.Wits 3.4; Newlywed Gam e 6. 1.3; Gong
Show 8; News 10; Gilligan 's Is. 1S; Hocking Valley
Bluegrass 20 ; Consumer Survivai'Kil 33.
7:31)-Hollywood Squares 3,4; Match Game PM 6;
Tattletales 8; MacNe i l-Lehrer Repot 20,33 ; That' s
Hollywood 10; Nashv ille On The Road 13; Marty
Robbins Spotlig ht 15.
8:01)-Redscene '78 3; Welcome Back Kotler 6,13;
American Life Style A; Chips 15; Waltons 8; Once
Upon A liassic 20,33 ; Oral Roberts 10.
8:31)- Baseball ( Reds vs . Astros) 3,4; What' s Happening! 6, 13 ; In Search of the Real America 20,33 .
9:01)-Barney M ill er 6,13 ; Oral Robert s 15; Hawaii
Five-0 8.10; World 20,33.
9:31)-Movle " S.P .Y.S" 6.13 .
10 :31)-Ciass of '6S 15 ; Barnaby Jones 8.10 .
10 :31)-News 20; Poldark I I 33 .
11 :oo-News 3,4,6,8, 10,13, 15; Dick Cavell 20.
11:31)-Johnny Carson 3,4,1S; Starsky &amp; Hutch 6. 13;
Mash 8; Mov ie " Ten Thousand Redrooms " 10;
Lilias Yoga &amp; You 33.
12:01)-ABC News 33; 12:0s-Movle " Joy In the Mor ning" 8; 12 :31)-Janakl 33 .
12: 41)-Toma 6, 13; 1:01)-Tomorrow 3,4; 1:50-News 13.

Z3 FWJction

Rubber Batll Carpet

15 IN.. STOCK

Yesterday's Answer

25 Bearing
Z8 Above
2'7 Chew the

AJI carpet instollod wlltl
padding ot no charge.
Expert instollolion.

IF YOU NEED .
A. SOFA THAT .
MAKES A
BED F0R

I I X)

Jumbles SOUSE FUZZV AFFRAY ESTATE
Answer What the taxidermists' annual shindig
was - RATHER STUFFY

river

SAVE ALOT

742-2211

]YOUR(

(Answers tomorrow )

l3 Asian

'"-:&amp;.•

Floor Covering· In Stock·

'

KXI I I

~.wd'

WeLL, "rnEi&lt;E'5
ONLY ONS

PAR TY PLAN Supet vuo rs, M e rri ·
Mac l oy por l•es ho !i ope nmg s
)v p erv c ~ o n
and
lor
demons lrof ors en your o reo.
Ouoh ry mcr chondi!ie highe st
cornm •ss ron No 11111 eslment ,
deli ver in g or col te c110n , Coli
A nn 8o ..l ei- co llec T3 19·556·888 1
oc wnl e MERRf .MAC 8011 1271 ,
Dubuq ue Iowa 5700 I

PULLI NS EXC A VATING . Complete
Ser v1ce . Ph o r~ e 99') 2478

Now arrange the circl.ed letters to

form the surprcse answer. as sug ·
gested by the above canoon

NNapa~erbooks .

~II AfforS :OO..Anytimo S.turdoy
992 -7119 or 992'5041
4·27-tfc

SAVE ON
c•tl RING
DRIVE ALimE
&amp;

'TIP A 6ER'MAN
WAIT!:!&lt;: AND
YOU' L.L. N E:VER' E!!E
FOR'60TTEN.

The latest JUMBLES are here io JUMBLE BOOK •10 lfld JUMBLE
BOOK,,, Available tor $1 .35 EAC H, postpaid from Jumble , cJo 1hla
new spaper, P.O. BOK3•. Norwood, N.J. 07~ . Make checks payablt1o

carpet ed . F ull basement with wood -burning sto~o~e .

Syracuse.

I I

REAL FOLKS .. .

~ )(( A V A TI N G

MARTIN

n

Answer here ·

ANO SE E ME ... YOU' RE

~IlliG I CAlli
'TI-ll IIi I&lt; .0"' !

AND

r

I I I

RIGHT- --THAT 'S WH Y YOU'RE
TME FIRST AND ONLY ONES
I'Ve EVER INVITED TO COME

SERVICE

Phone 98l-3801&gt;
Jack Ginter 98l-3804

HOWERY

11

KIPECT

UTTLEORPHA

DAVE'S BACKHOE
&amp;
DUMP TRUCK

10 ACRES - Va cant land on blacktop road . Beautiful
hom esi te. Aboul5 m inutes from 5 Poi nt. Pr lce513 ,800.
6 ACRES - Nice 1''' stor y home mosll y carpeted with 3

appliances. fam ily rm . with f ireplace. all nicely

ASSOCIATES
991·12l9- 9,HIYI
992-2lb8

SEPTIC TA_NK,
CLEANING

byHenriArnotdandBobLee

I

Estimates

CALL
991-6323 or992-6011
6-19-1 mo. pd .

fen ced . N ic e- c o untry sett i ng off bla cktop road just 6
mi n u te s north of Ra ci ne . A sk ing S42,000 .

lake over CALL FOR I N
FO

F EA TURE S 118,000 00
MANY OTHER PROPER ·
TIES TO CHOOSE FROM .
WE HAVE QUALIFIED
BUYERS FOR MEIGS
COUNTY PROPERTIES .
LIST WITH US .
HENRY E . CLELAND
REALTOR
HANK , KATHV &amp; LEONA

For Free

4-JO-ttc

741 2348

j'jl THATSCAAIIBLED WOAD GAllE

tNALDAVb
IJ

Soffit, Room Additions
&amp; A-Frame Homes .

3875 .

Wood

OLDER HOME - 7 room s,
bath , ga s floor lurnace,

ALUM. &amp;

VINYL SIDING

Sw eepers_ loo ~ t e r~ 1ron5 al l
sm all appli ances . l a w n rn owe r ,
ne)l l to ) to te Hig hw ay Garage
o n lo! oul e 7 Ph one (61 4 ) 985

4

frame house wi th large eat.
in kit c hen, den or stud y ,
baseme nt ,
3
por c h es .
garage a nd two. third s of an
ac re .

MASH BROTHERS

HWOOD BOWER S REPAIR

apartmen t s, a ll r ented. In
fown where yo u can w alk to
wor k or shop. Nice size lot
In exc el l ent location.

4 BEDROOMS -

5-31 ·1 mo.

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

THURSDAY , JUNE 29,1978

Unsc ramble these lour Jumbles.
one letter to each square, to form
tour ordinary words.

R:.,ai tstate for Sail!

bus iness .

APTS .

IF IJQT,

I'LL SEE

"'m-1174

Pomeroy

10·30-c

allached room s for sma ll
BRICK

.

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Hoeflich)

R.esidenlial

1 stor y

ram e nom e, appr ox
2
1cres of g r oun d , g ard en
.pace . s t orag e Ou1 td mg Up
10 l ou r bedr ms CLOSE T O

MIN I FA RM -

Tires

us

BUT DON' T L6T ME STOP ¥0U .. ~
LOOK TO YOUR HE:A~T'S CONTENT
.. . JU5T THOIJ6HT I ' D ASK IF
YOU IIE'E'DE'D AIJY HE'LP...

St . Rl. 124 toword Rullond,

Brakes

Ph . 992-2848

r

1i''irll'l.\kt ID'\1

0.

Installation Service

Home Phone 992-5739

Mli9HT'VE' ROLLED
Ulo/DER HERE'!

RE-ALLY~ ... I
DIDN'T Kt.IOW
PIPES ROLLo!&gt;

YOU TOP·
SIDE

'lo milt off Rl. 7 by.pou on

MOORE'S

see us for fast service.

OH • eR· HE'H, HEH!

1 THOLI19HT MY PIPE

~ ~ ~~ ®

ROGER HYSEll
GARAGE

See
Denver Kapple
At

is because we are selling
our lis1ings fast . For a
quick sale of your propertv ,
Cheryl Lemley , Assoc .
Home Phone 742-2003
Hilton Wolfe, Assoc.
Home 909-2589
GeorgeS. Hobstener Jr.

(Bob
109 High St.

CAPTAIN EASY

'

The Photo Place

For The Best
Price In Town

S65,000 but well worth it.
The reason this ad is small

NEW LISTING -

Free Estimates
Phone 949-2862
or 949-2160

Portraits
Weddings
Passports
Anniversaries
Special Occasions

-4-1 mo.

l ev e l
Co lon i a l
that
ha s
everyt h ing , lo cate d in
R iggscres t
Manor , on
corner lot . Se ll i ng fo r

a

POMEROY, 0 .
NEW LISTINy
3 vears
')Jd , J bd r m r a nc n 1n ex

St .
Pomeroy, Ohio
Ph . 992-2164

s plit

a 4 room apa r tment over
3 car ga r ag e. A ll t his for

MAIN

399 W. Main

Addition ,
Tuppers Plains, Ohio, on
large l ot. Sell i ng tor
$42 ,000 .00.

bui ld ing with 2 baths. Also

608 E.

engine &amp; mower
service, Massey Ferguson
&amp; Gilson Tillers, Lawn Boy
Mower ·Sales &amp; Service.

Arbaugh

Large q room o lder home
wi th
centr a I heat.
5
bedroom s, 2 bath s. cit y
water . Plus small bu si ness

~7f:le

POMEROY

1967 BSA t!SO Marh 4 (u'&gt;lom
po1n ! e • ce llenl !;hope onl y
1!;00 oc l v ol mde~
SbOO
74-.;1 7753

total

qcn

HO NlJ A Z SO mrn • bcke
Good co nd•hon recen ! tun e
up Also helrne t!i lO q49 2034

1Ci77 1o! O ! Ol lltt:R b1 4 147

shower,

terra ced lot 10' • 100'.
3 PROPERTIES IN I -

19 7 ~

1Q75 ) UZUKI ')50 d 1r! b1 lo. e Phon e

with

electri c, low taxes , low
heating bi ll s, si1uated in

, AO il ) ON Peacoc k A ... enue
Pome r o y
Wdl
!. non ce

~AM 011 cornp r es~o r
lo r ':&gt;Ole Co il 99') 3b4U

S AN D chrld1en ~ shoo
sole 20 ~ o otl Jul y 3 Jul y 1 ~
Ba 1ley ~ M 1dd leport

ki tchen, rec . room , full

Has long sun deck In back

heaf er
N~ W &amp; USED IMP t!:: M~ N I ~
MF 9 Sol er M FlO So ler M F120
~o l er
Mo ll h ew ~ Ro tary ~ c y 1 he
MF880 Sem 1 moun ted b bot
rom Pl o w
MFS')O I 'J D1H
MF200 7 Row Chopper Ml'39 7
~ ow
Plant er:;
M echo r11COI
I r'o llS pl ont er
SHINN S f RA(l OH !:.Ali: )
Phone 45tl l tr 30
leon W Va

WO M~N

Sma II

through •large glass door s.

Mobrle Home f-'or k
'll more rayed out a nd
op pt ov ed tncludm g 18 mobile
homes and two o p o r lr n en l ~ al l
fu1 n an d ren Ted Oo u b l~ we de
14 x ~b three bedr 2 both ce n
!101 011 (owneri re~1 d e11C.: a nd
off ,cc ~u p pl y Trade r 1 co r
garage !&gt;hop ld ry room On
op pto ..: 13 ooes lo crng on Carr
51 and ~ Mo•n St 5 ~ q3
J o c k ~or, OH 1 b loc k ~ fr mn A p
pol och 1on l 1ec woy 5 bl oc !-. ~
f rom down tow n :J bl oc k ~ lr orn
~ h o p pu1 g center 20 m 1l e~ t ra m
4 1 bdl con dolla r cons lf vCt1 0n
10b 01 P1lo. e Co At omcc Plan t
Crty wa Ter ~ew er na tu ral gas
Due to poor heal th owne 1 rnu1. 1
move !o dry drmo te
000
l um O w ner would co rr y 70"~
up To 10 yea r') ot 8" . l or
quol d ced bu yer
Gr o ~~ ~ ng
SOO ()()() Con toc r L ou 1 ~ Hun t
bl 4 286 :1EI311or o ppornnnen 1

MF235 0 1&amp;!oel
M ~ 78S l&gt; 1esel
0 1 e~e l
Co b or~ 8.

II FOO l truc k cornpec Sle eps
l our Ho s showe t $rnk and
co mrnode Hel ng er ot or ga s o r
e leclrcc Gas ~ l ove wll h oven
t: 11celien1 cond1tr on
S1100
Con tac t Jor;nes Roy P o r~on!io
475Q8 Ca rmel Rood Ra cr ne OH
4577 1

bedr oom hom e . modern

~) 10 1 ~

I N G ~R SO L

WHEEL
ALIGNMENT

~
MODERN SUPPLY

~Y O WN~ff
Oc e~ el

HA Y TI M O THY 8. or ch ard gro s!o
H e g ulor
sq ua re
bo les
A \la llob lii! no w on 'Wagons Any
am ounT
Gel h oy be for e
!&gt;tor age or ~ O et1hce f-' oul ) oy re
G1eo t Bend Rood R! 338
Por !lond 84J 4591

Situated on lot 9S ' xl1 5' .
Selling price, $32,000.00 .
NEW
LISTING
4

Rutland , Ohio. Home has

bath

300 Molin St.
Pomeroy, Ohio·
Pomeroy Pt2-6iU
orf92 •• 26J
.8 A.M . to 4;30 P.M .

3

full basement and garage.

TWO B~DH OO M ho use en Hor
II SOil VIII e w rlh
p011e l 1ng
corpe tmg and c1 1y wa le• Call
aft er 5 prn 74'] 225b

HEAnNG INC.

New or Repair
GutteiS and
Downspouts

SALES AND SERVICE
11 -9-lfc

be droom fota l e lect rlc
home,
l ocated
in
Hutchinson Sub- Di vis i on ,

fodtem

B~ O ROO M

r-

Your Full Time

WA NT!::D TO ren t couple w 1th no
r hddren wonts mode rn 2
bedr oom home Wr1 te 8o lC 19b
Bt&gt;lle Volley O H &lt;l371 7

H. L WHITESEL
ROOFING

PWMBING &amp;

Real Estate Broker
NEW
LISTING

TW O

CARTER

Closed ThUrsdays &amp;
Saturday at noon

Sk ylor1!,.,

3:31)-A ii In The Family 8.10; Ohio Journal 20; Tur nabout 33 .
4:01)-Mister Cartoon 3; Superman 4; For Richer. For
Poorer 15; Merv Griffin 6; Addams Family 8;
Sesame St. 20,33; Match Game 10; Dinah 13.
4:31)-My Three Sons 3; Gilligan's Is . 4; ,8; Batman 10;
Little Rascals 15.
5:oo-Here Come The Br ides 3; My Three Sons 4;
Gunsmoke 8; Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33 ;_
Voyage to the Bottom olfhe Sea 10; Emergency One
13; ·Petticoat Junction 15.
5:JI)-Odd Couple 4; News 6; Elec . Co. 20,33; Hogan's
Heroes 15 .
6 :01)-News 3,4,6,8, 10,13.15; Zoom 20; Mak ing Things
Grow 33.
6:31)-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,10; Over Easy 20; Ant iques 33 .
7:oo-Cross-WIIs3,4 ; Newlywed Game6.1 3; Sha Na Na
8; News 10 ; Gillglgan's Is . 15; Dick Cavell 20;
People &amp; PI aces 33.
7: 31)-Aii -Star Anything Goes 3; Sha Na Na 4; Bet ween
The Wars 6; Family Feud 8; MacNeil -Lehrer

-.

Offiee Hrs.: ·
9 a . m .- ~ p.m .

5300 Coli 747-2137

WEDNESDAY , JUNE28, 1978

l-----------------------------------""'

George 5. Hobstener Jr.
Broker
107''' Sycamore St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone 992.6333

992 57~6 .

19b9 4·000R BUI CK
Phone 991·3670

Business Services

HOBSIEIIER
REALTY

Wagon ,

UIW TRACTORS

a ddress i s u n knpwn a nct
c a n no f
w it h
rea sondb l e
Will CAio! E: to,. the elderl y tr\ our
d i ligence be as ce r ta 1ne d ,
home Ph one 9&lt;17 7314
T o : The unknown he ir s a nd
dev i sees of No r a K in d le, i f
de c ea seo ;
To : Glenn K 1nd le wh ose
a d d r ess i s unk no wn an d
c annot
w 1f h
r eason ab l e
d il i gen ce b e a sce r ta i ne d .
T o · T he .u n k.n o wn h e1 r s and
aevisees· ot Gl en n K ind l e , i f
dece ased ;
have enlarged our
To : Epgar K tn d l e , whose
addrf'ss is un kn o w n and
r11iee d epar1ment and
cannot
w ith
re a sonabl e
II ser'llice Ho1point and
dili gence be a sce r ta 1ned ,
b rand s.
To The u nk no wn ne lr s a nd
de v 1se es of E dgar K in d le , if
d ec eased .
To
Ret ha Ru pe . who se
addre ss 15 un kn o w n and
can no t
w dh
r t&gt; a sona bl e
d ili gen c e be asc erta 1ned .
T o · T he unknown ht&gt;1 r s a nd
Phone992-2181
dev 1s.ees ot R et ha Rup e , 11

bed•c o m '

19b9 l TO f O RD or1d 1970 f- ord
l TO A l soiRJ r ts and body ports.
Phone 991 -3040

9'n

~OU ~

Nl W 3 bP d• oo ''' hnuse 1 bu 1 1 1~
~ &amp; ~ MOBIU HOM !:!! Pt Plea
o tl elec , I a cr e . M.ddlepo rt
~ a n t W . Vo bes•de H ec k ~
clo~ e to Hutlond . Phone 992
197J Sroodmore HI ~ b4 ')
741H .
bedr oo m
197 J Dor• o n 14 x bO '1 bad roo •n
VA -f- HA 30 yr . fl no nc ,ng . al so
refmo nc 1ng . Ireland Mor tgage ·
197'1 v. cto rt on 14 11 "tJ7 3 bedt oo m
T1 t: . Sta te , Athens , phone (b l 4)
1 both
192-3051.
1Q72 Co11Qnl ry 12 )( 65 3 bedroo m
l'~b9
Stot e!.man 12 ~ --o 'l

197.3 MONTE CARl O l a ndau P !:.
~4 3

HE' LL COME AROUND,
SPARKLE ... YQU'LL. SEE,

Hl!ai rutalr tor Sale

t 'orSah&gt;

IN

to good horne

TELEVISION
VIEWING

TRACY

.

Home Nof•onol Banli will ofl e•

fo• sole ot pu bhc avction th e
I~

Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items ·Into Cash

·

f RI DAY JUNE JO. 19761he Ro''""

Report 20,33; The Judge 10; In Search 01 13; Wild
Kingdom 15.
·
.
8:oo-Grlzzly dams 3,4, 15; Eight Is Enough 6,13; Carol
Burnett 8, 10; Nova 20,33.
9:oo-Da.v ld Frost 3,4,15 ; Charlie's Angels 6, 13; Movie
" Rancho Deluxe" 8, 10; Great Performances 33;
Poldark II 20.
.
10 :oo-NBC Reports 3,4, 15; ABC News Closeup 6,13;
News 20.
10:31)-Amerlcan Enterprise 20.
11 :OQ-News 3,4,6,8,10.13,15; Dick Cavett 20 ; Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 33 .
11 :31)-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; ABC News Special 6,13;
Hawai i Flve-08; ABC News 33 ; Movie "Car rie" 10.
12 :01)-Janakl 33·; 12 :41)-Kojak 8.
'
1:oo- Tomorrow J,A; News 13 .

11-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, June 28,1978

abo ut th e tnunp sui t when
he l ed dummy 's ace . He
continu ed wit h the three of
diamonds . East won ' with his
ace and led a heart which
drew the j ack , queen and

ace .
Next came the key play :

throwing a winner on a

loser . Decl arer led dummy's
jack of diamonds and dis·
carded his 10 of hearts. lt
wa s a brilliant stroke .
East cou ld not get a heart
ruff. He could get three club
tricks if he held the ace of
• K
• 96 3
that suit , but South knew
where that ace was . East
Vu lnerable : Both
had passed originally and
Dealer : East
had shown up with the kingqueen of spades and ace of
West North East Soulh
diamonds.
Pass Pass
Eventually , South got to
Pass 2+
l
NT
Pass
discard o ne club p n
Pass Pass Pass
dummy 's 10 of diamonds
and wound up losing two
Opening lead : • 6
spades, two diamonds and
one club .
Had he not thrown that
wiimer
on a loser he . would
By Oswald Jacoby
have lost two spades , two
and Alan Sontag
All bridge players know . clu bs, one diamond , one
about playing a loser on a heart ruff and his partner's
loser . If the opponents are confidence.
Hands such as this are one
certain to win a trick , diswhy 35 million people
reason
card a loser on it. The loser·
on-loser rule Is as old as play bridge in this country .
bridge itself . But, as with 1NEWSPA PEH ~~ N TERPRISE ASSN. I
most rules , there are excep·
(For a copy ol JACOBY MOD·
ERN, send St to: " Win at
lions.
.
Bridge." care ol mls newspll·
South won the ~pentng
heart lead with the kmg and per. P.0 . Box 489, Radio City
found out the wretched news Station , New York , N. Y 1001' '

L-----------•

�.·

·.
_!()-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 :, Wednesday , June 28, 1978

· wANTAD
CHARGES

· Noti.!!l!e

Words or Untler
Cash
1.00

Ulwrwe

3dM.ys

1110

6day.s

2:1-1

:J.OO

IW.y

Lll

uo

2Wiys

l OO

~

The sole w 11l be on the bonll. pa rk

PB A C
b cell e n1

Hl9 lot at 3 00 pm 1e rms c o ~t'
on hand day o f sol e . Ra cme
Home Not•onol Bo nk re!oe r\leS

Eclch Wl.lfll tlver tl tt· nununwn I~
wunb. is 4 eent.o.: ~ r wurd !)t'l Ui!~

the n gh l to b 1d o r th 1s sole o • to
r en)Ove ony ol the above

Ad:.: rut\11U1t( Other UWIII' t'UI\M'('Ut l\'t'

tl!&amp;ys will bl:!

t 'h.11r g~ l 111

r•"'

Ll1t' I da)

a u to m o bil e~

fr om th e ·so le a t

an ytcm e

111 menwry. Card or 'ftl ~ nk!. a11d
ObJlllltr)'. 6 c~nld ~ r wurd. SJ .OO
m.i111m um. Cash 111 adv&lt;llll'\'
M o bil~ Hom~

s.at k!s 1uK.l Yard lWll\'s
aro: .!l(..'t't'pled unfr · willi rash wtlli
ordi!r . 25 t~ llt l'IIHI'!J~ (or 11ili; l'C:Irry.
ing Box Numbt'r In Con\' of The· Sen·
lineI.
The Pu!Jhsher r~St"n't- S till' nlo(IH
W t:dilor rdcl·t &lt;Ill)' cub t.lt"t'lllt'J ulr
}h'IIOital . T)k' PubllSlll'r "''lil IIUI lit'
rt spvll.!i lb l~ fvr mort' tllilll unt• Ull'ur·
r~1

lllstr\.I Uil .

Q

Ph on ~:

!192·2 1fl6

WAl l ~ ~~)

No
ex p enence
neceHOry Ap pl y m per son at
!Hu e f arlan M cddle pon

LPN NH:DI::D Ca ll A rcodto Nur ":.
~r'g Horne ~ 14 otJ7 3l qb
CARR IERS NH DED tor The Ood y
)en l1ne l Pomeroy Mcddl·e port
and Syracuse area
Plecl&gt;e
phon e 992 2!50 be rween 8 30
arn and 5 00 pm
NHD S O M ~ON!:: ro s11 w 11h 7
children ages 8 and 2 Mondoy
rhr augh Fr 1doy fro m 7 om IO
5 30 pm Colt 992 2931 on y111ne
alt e r 5 JO

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
' DEADLINES

NO IT EM TOO l a rge or too sma ll
W11l bu y I p1ece or com p le Te

hou&lt;s et'lo ld New used or or 111
q u e ~ Morr m s Furn11ure '10 N
2nd St
Mrddle-p011 flh o n e
992 6370

M t.~ IKl&lt;l l

Nuun u11S&lt;tl ilrd&lt;1.1
Tut.'sU a ~

t!wu ~~nd&lt;1 \
&lt;PM .
Uw ttl ~ lie( on: pulllll'al tvn

CHIP
WOOD
Poles
m ax
drame ler 10 on I or g e ~ ! e nd SB
pee Ton Bu ndled ~ lob So per
ton Delivered 10 Ohro Pallet
Co Ht 2 Pomero y Q9{ 1b!N

Sunda ~

• PM
i' I' ~ Y llfiAlmw n

GOO D U S ~D Tr actor
wdh
hydr ou l1c J pt h11ch 74'1 J07 4

li MtU.R f-'OMf: ROY ~ 0 1e 't fl ro
FO R GARY Wolfe who po !&gt;~ed
owo y June 27 Jq6J.
LO'II ing ond k 1nd rn o il of hcs way s
Upr1 ghr ondju1. 1 Ia th e end at hrs
d o y!io
S1ncere a nd True 111 hear ! an d
4

m tnd ,

•

f oll o wmg ] Q7-4 Dodg e Charger
1q7J Vega stot •on wagon
1971 Fo rd llD

31~

duch l op prtce l or :. londc ng
sow limb er Call QQ'} ~ 9~5 01
Ken t Hanby I 44b !:1 570

OLU f- URN il UIH rce bo x e~ brass
bed s uon beds d e-, lo. ~ e tc
corn pler e h ou":.c h o l d~
W n te
M D Me ller Ht 4 Po meroy or
co1 19q2 n w

Beo ut1lul
mem o r1 e~
he
left
OW COI NS poc lo. e1 wa tches
behi nd
class r~r'lg~ weddmg bonds
Sad ly mr ssed by Pa ulme Ch m
d1o mon d s Gold or ~1 l v e r Co lt
G ory Pf!g a nd Jam1e Dorrell
Hog er Wam5ley 747 7331
Carm en . Jenn1fer and l au ra .
MEMORY of Chorte !o W
Fr1dley who passed away 1'2
years ago June 18
Giv..Away
A scien t thou g ht . o secre ! rear
Keeps h 1s me mory ever dear
f- OUR Kll H.: N ~
Sadl y m•ssed by !he Family
qij~ 3871

AM S-trock stere o
co nd tl •o n
5 1700 .

2622.

PIN TO
SQU IRI::
Stotr on
V&gt;'ogan w 1lh o 1r new !Ires mag
w heel s. b cce ll ent (ond diOfl .
Phone 9Q2· 2058

IQ7 3

IN THE COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS ,
PROBATE DIVISION ,
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
EDISON
HOBSTETTER .
Adminis tra1or of th e Estate
of Merle E . Rice . decea sed ,
Plaint tft ,
- \' S·

RHODELL STEFFY , et at. ,
Oefendanh .
No . 10 , 909

KITli:N ) 10 week s old 1
bl ock
I whr te w dh br ow n
spo Ts 1 l rger co l Al l fang ho~r
f! hone qq'} 7905

NANCV ~~ MAl ~ puppy b w ee ~ ~
ol d Sl onle y ma le puppy ~
week ~ o ld
M 1~ ed breed bu1
ver y l ov able '¥1'1'1.11 28
HIH TO good horne 3 male
tlo s5e ll puppceo, Gtl5 4:271 alter
Opm

NOTICE FOR SERVICE
BY PUBLICATION
To ;· Nor a K indte. wh ose

1973

FORD

s 1200

srATIO N

197 4 MUSI'ANG II. Hardto p. b
cyl au to Phone 949 2042
197 1 FORD G AlA XI~ Run!&gt; good .

CO UNlR Y M OBILE Ho me Po rk .
~ o u t e 33 nort h of Pon,e roy .
large lo ts. Ca ll 991 747G
Si:NIO R CITI ZEN S
Ou r ne w
ren te rs oss 1stonce you rnoy be
able To lcve rn our apo• tm enl
l or less tha n SSO o m onth Fo r
mo re cnl or mo!r on
co nta ct
Vrlloge Manor Apar Tment s. .
99')_ 7787
CO RNER LOT l or Tro ll er ~ p a c e on
•1 ve d r o n 1
99 2 2238
or
991 .530 4

rwo

Bi:DROOM un fur nr 1&gt;hed op t
Cal l qrn.nel:l
A d ulT ~

Trad e r

on ly qQ J.J324 .
I H ~!::l: ROOM S and ba Th 111
Pomero y. Cal l q92 5021 o r

d e c e a~e d ,

To Glenn Kn ow l es . whOse
add r ess cs un k no wn and
can n o t
w llh
r e a sona l:ll e
Orlrg enc e be asc er1a1ned .
To l he unknown ne 1r s an a
de~o~ 1 sees ot Glen K no w les. , 11
de ce ased ,
To The un k no w n her r s and
dev 1sees o f Leo r a Zw t1t 1ng ,
deceas ed
To Th e unkno w n he 1r s a no
o e~o~ i see !l
o f Frances. V
Br y an , decease d ,
To T he un kno wn he1rs a nd
dev is e es o t E d 1l h Rrce ,
de c eas ed .
'
To The u nkn own he 1rs a no
de vis ee s. o t Mae P rice ,
decea sed .
To : The u n k now n he~rs a nd
deVisees of M er le E R 1c e ,
d ec ea sed , a no
To The un k no w n he 1r s a nd
d ev ts ee s ot J
0
R1(e ,
de c ea sed .
Yo u ar e ne r eoy no llf ted
t hat you ha~o~e been named
d ef end a nts 1n a 1eg a t a c t ion
ent i tled Ed i son H obste tt er ,
Ad m in iS t r ator a t t he E sta te
of M er le E R •ce. P la1 nl d f ,
vs . Rno oett Ste ll y , et a t .
De f enda nts Th 1s. ac t ton ha s
been asstgneo Case N o 20,909
in the Courl ot Comm on
P l eas , Pronat e Or\I ISI On ,
Me 1QS Counfy OhiO , .457 09
The obJec t a t The Com p 1a 1n 1
I s. t ha t fne real es tat e
her'ei na lter aescr 1bet:l oe sold
In Hs. ent 1rety . and to p ay t he
deb t s o t the aeceae n t . tha t
', f he r 1gh lS . •nlerests. . and li ens
of all part 1es. rT~av be t ul l y
d et er m rned th a i the P la1 nl iff
be au t h or~2e0 ana or aer eo to
sell sa id real estate, a n d f or
,. su c h f u r the r rel cet as he m a y
be en t 1tted
lhe s.s1 d re a l
es ta te ts siluateo at 191 Nan n
Fou rt h Avenue , M rd dlep or t.
Oh i o , and oescr1tle d a s
fOllO WS

The I OIIO WtnQ des.crt tl f! d
r eal .e sta te srtu a ted in thf'
Vr l!age of M 1dd l eport , Co un t y
of Ml! i g s, St ale ot Oh ro
Being 125 t eet o tt f he ea st
end of Lo t N o 88
Deed Re f er ence
Vo lu me
\418 , Pa ge 436. and Vo lu me
'255 , P age 399 , M c 1g s c oun t y
Deed R ec ord s
'You are r eQui r ed to an swer
th e Com pl a int w tth in 28 day s.
alt er th e l a st p ubl• c at ton Of
fh i s not 1c; e , w h1ch w i ll be
publ ished on ce each w eek for
stx conse cu t 1ve week s The
last oubf cc at ron w ill be m ad e
on Ju l y 12, 1978, ana th e 28
days f or an swer w i l l com
m en c; e on t h at date
In case ot y ou r t a rlu r e to
answe r or othe r w ise r es pon d
as r eQut r ed bY lh e Oh tO R u le s
ot Civ i l Pr oc;e d u r e , JU d g ment
by defau lt w ill be r en dered
a g a tn sl
you
fo r
r e li e f
dem anded 1n the com pla tnt
Jane t M or ris ,
C Jer k of the Co ur t
o f Common P le as ,
P r oba te D i v i si on ,
Me l os Co unty , Oh to
D at ed : Ju n e s, 1978

161 7. u , 21, 28 17.J.

~.

12, • •c

WA ltH WH I drtllmg W1l l tom
Gr ant 741 'Jl:l79
(hcmney ~wep T by o prol e!o sconol
... tlh modern du~ l le'lo!&gt; ~l eonmg
old h me wQf-k mallSh cp Coli
1 JJ:J bO!l7 Han Zort man

HOUSl: FO R ) AH 2 ~ l o ry v1ny i
srd1 ng 3 bed room down stoc rs
{ up sto 1n IPI In Q roo m d 1111119
room bo lh k 11chen wd houl oc
wdh opp l 1on c e ~
complet ely
ca rpe ted downsta ir S. hot wo 1cr
heo1 au co ndc tc o ned . wat er
~o ll e n e •
ca rpo rt ond bock
pot1 0 I l o t ~ ol (OilCiel e ) 2 out
budd cngs 11 'l tnyl stdmg )
l ocaTed on !&gt; 1de !&gt;!ree l 111
~u tl on d
Oh 1o . Co il dov
741 '}'} It or ev enmg 74'1 795 4
A ~ k lo1 Herb,
~I V t ROOM hou se
a c r e~ of ground

w 11 h boT h 19
o n 01 28 be l ·
w een iol ocme and Ap ple G rov e
l ac more cn l orrna hon co li
247 3\6 4

'997 2105

BU 51Nl: 5S FOH !&gt; ole Bee• Wme
( or~ y O ul q97 57 f:IO bl!lw een
10 &amp; 5 Dor ly
COAL liMl:SI ONt ~and grovel
r ol c1um chJo• •de l c• t •t•ro• dog
l ood and al l types ol o,o h b •
c el ~1or Soli Wo tlor. \ Inc
~ Moon
5t Pomer oy
3aq 1
5Hi: C110 N o lt h(' be\ I....,
stoves 1n ~u t h(tO\t• cr· Ohoo
Jo tul
Mot w
II I
l orcho
1empw ood and Nof r.vo / q
Hea t Co ~ Pu lnon' 0 • c•H ¥
) I ) A th en~ Ol &lt;t ~""J
'. ,•
OI 4 0QO J1EP

B ~ ST

IJ U H fi O U G H ~

SlN!JI MA II(. o•
to untrn g mo t h tn
1-'ho.., ..
991 21~0 l ~e Uorl y ~er l hf&gt;f' l
Ill Court !)t•eer
ti o "'t&gt;' O ~
O hco

Mf.- 135 D ce1.el
M ~ 150 01 e~e l
M ~ l OS D•e ~ el
M F 1 1 3~

M~

730

Will MAIN 1AIN ( ollfOrrliO Hed
wo od lo/ond•
I~ ~
fl oor
3
bedr oom bot h l1vrng 100m
lo1 ge k t t ~ hen d 1n111Q roorn
d£'11 I vii ~·te ba semen T w1 l h
tqr •c o rpe1~dreueo !i on • oorn
or both IO&lt;o ted near H hool !&gt;
hu•d '9~ \ hopp1ng and recreo
r,,," Go,. h••OI nl!w re r•l •o l o• •
·•ltio hOnrPg large loT Pr 1v0 1e
l'(lhll l o t ~ ot r.ee":. Ov EH~1 r e d
h•trhle qoro q ~ '/ 4 • J() Cu":. lom
iltJP''\ and other ex t1 0~
\) ... n~r be1ng trOn!. lerr ed )e ll
for nud ()(h JO.a TI'J 7~ 1 7

IWTIOINV lO I on hdl behmd 134
Mu lbeny Ave Phoneqcn 7123

SPECIAL
Any U. S. made ear- parts
extr1 if needed . Excludes
tronf . wheel clriwe ears.

s;ns

1971 DA rS UN 1 ton p1c k. vp 4
":. peed ne w cl~tch mu ff ler
b, ok. e:. and po m! 15 m p g

11 300 Coii9917539
1478 RM 250 Suruk 1 Wdl trade l o r
cor or ~ el l $1?00 94q 7387

1HIUi: B ~D R O OM h ou~e 1n ~o crr1 e
area N ear r1vec Comple te ly
ren1ode led 94G 2 ~ 4S
)

Call Now For
Appointment

992 3b4 0

Pomeroy Landmark
9eJ!ck W. Corsey , M9r.

!I!!

Phone 991-2181

IF YOU hove o ~ erv1ce to off er
want to buy or sel l ~om et h1ng
oe loo lo. 1ng l or wor k
or
w ha tev er
~ou H gpt re ~u h !o
l oste1 Wt l h o !:,en Mel Wo nt Ad
Co l1992 7 1 ~ 0
fR ID A Y JUNl J(Hh q 7 Ya rd !to le
1635 l cncolr, Herghl\ 4 fomd y
Cob1ne1s rnople c o p t o1n~ cho11
clol hmg Tab le household and
boby c l em~ pion • ~ ,
I

I H~ C RA C IUH

YAR D )o l e
Where ~ o c cne o! The cor ner at
~ ro a dw a y and Morn Stree ts
Whe n ) ot ucdoy July I Wh o1
Ho t bot gou) riPms 1ouch a s. I V
aquo r1 um golf clubs ro d 1os
old ba il ie ~ clothes a nd mc!io c
llems l- or lurlher 1nformo lion
coil &lt;149 109EI alte r 5 pm

I WO f AM II Y Yurd )ol e Wed
1hvrs h1 C.ron l fes cd ence
!:ogl e R1dge Cancell ed d rat n
1119

Tf( U(K CAMPE N lOp 747

1 4 ~4

3 1~4

MO I OR ~ O R 1973 Prn to 1()(X)cc
and 4 speed Ir On !&gt; w1 th )1 000
tn •les S1 50 for bo th oc wrll se ll
separate ly Moy ro g ponoble
drye-r A 1 tond1Tron W1t a rd
w~ed
Kdlm el e{ It I( ltm( e
&lt;ho•ge• Re . •o bb 1h i 3 eo ch
Ht 33 Hurlu1ghorTI ocroH fr om
~ u c &lt;,on '»Grocer y
PIC.!:.
8 week s .old
f-'hon ""
84J '} 4c,ll l orn Say re Por Tla nd
Ohro

Kll VI NA lO R

U I A~ l l

re tr .gero tor SJO
K.ny !:,u e
Nell ie Creek bed!&gt;p•C"od S20
Coli oh er 5 992 1fib 1
HA 'I'
74')

BI G
1~ 50

roun d bol es
ol !cr b prTr

Coli

197 4 I ~IUMPH 500 cc S700 10
ITIOtHh ol d wo ~her and dr yer
SJOO 14'1 2047

Let

Pomeroy Landmork
&amp; · condition your
1water with Co-op . woter
son•n•r. Model UC-SVI,
sof1en

Pet&amp; lor :&gt;ial"
H 00 ~

HOLLOW Ho rse!&gt; Buy !)ell
If ode 01 lro1n Now and used
~add l f'~ Ru th ~eev e ~ A l b an ~

614i b9H3190

.

Ht!:l tN G ') IAH l'iennel . Boor d•ng
Indoor onri "u tdo01 runs
Groorn111q o11 h1e ed ~ (leon
' 0r11 t01y !oc,lclles
Che~h.rf•
PI10rlf' 01 4 Jb l O'l'I'J

Now Only

'219.95

Let us test your w1fer Free

Pomeroy Landmark ·
9~ ·Jack

!Iii!.

w. Carsey. M9r.
Phone 9922111

the

12

Room ,

Muffler
Shocks
Battery .

Broker

Let

:ell en! cond ll •on Level lo l
n Rutl a nd, eq u tp ped k tf
:hen a nd many t ea tur e~ .

$27.700 .00.
~EW LISTING

Pomeroy, 0 .
3-15-lfc

EAFOR
VIRGIL B., SR . r.~'!'i111
?92·3325
~ t• l l O i&gt;'
216 E. Second Sfreet
Pomeroy, Ohio

New 3

bedroom brick home , N i ce
step - sav er k i t c hen wi t h
larg e dining area. Large
fam i l y
ro o m
w it h
he at o later f ireplace and
nic e view of the wood l and

and l a rge fron t por ch . If
you like th e county th i s w i ll
please you .

OLD BUT NICE -

capture

and

preserve those prec i ous
moments forever -

II it 's

room y ou want this has i t
with all citv con11eniences .
Th i s has 3 or .4 bedrooms,
d i n i ng roo m , equ i pped
kitchen , furna ce , l arge
yard . 2 car garage with 2
rooms for st orage an d 2

Weddings
Silver and
Golden Anniversar~
Family Reunions

Special Occasions
Photography
is
bu si ness,

our

not a side line

KEN GROVER
PHOTOGRAPHY
985-4115
Chesler, Ohio 4S720

HOM !::SITI: S for sole l acre and
up M1ddlepo1 I near Ru Tl and
Co llq9'J 748 1

washer · dry er

and

n ic e

518,000 .
HOW LONG HAVE YOU
BEEN TRYING TO SELL.
CALL US TO GET THE
SELLING JOB DONE. WE
ARE
THE
HOUSE
SELLING CENTER .
HELEN L. TEAFORD
GORDON B. TEAFORD
SUE P. MURPHY
Associate Realtors

2 story

older

home, 3

bedroo ms , famil y room
wi th fir epla ce . l i v ing room ,
d in i ng ro o m , c arpeted

t hr oughout , k itc hen
co mpl e t e l y equ i pped ,
laundry room w ith wa sher

and

dr ye r .

2

baths ,

ou tb uild i ng w ith electri c
tor sto rag e, a lum . siding ,
sto'rm w indows. new roof.

on doubl e
535.000 .

lot.

A ski ng

M idd l eport- Hou se . la r g e
lot, com p l et e l y re modeled .
g a rag e ,
c e l l ar .
outbui ld ing s. gra pe a r bor .

~ 15.000

00

NEW
LlSTlNG
In
Pomeroy.
r emode l e d
'lome , p art
b aseme n t.
·an qc &amp; r ef
2 or
3
:&gt;cd room s, 11 '1 ba ths . O N

No 216. S77 ,500 .
804 W. Main
Pom eroy
992 -2298
After Hours

Call992-7l33
CONTACT :
lois Pauley
Branch M.n•ger

L Y $6,100 .00 .
About 25

ac r es In Ch ester t ownsh ip ,
fen ci ng , g ard e n sp a ce ,
b ar n . n ice l y remode l e d
home
w i th
ba se m e nt ,

por ches. carpe t ing. TH IS
VOU
M US T
SEE
$30,851.00.
OLDER HOME
In M •d
dlep ort ,
117 ba ths. 3 4
od r ms , ') sto r teS AS KIN G

120.000 00
REDUCED TO 15,900, •n
Pomeroy , 3 od r ms , ba t n ,
ga r age . ce ll a r

SAY IT WITH FLOWERS
CO u l d be y our moiiO
You r ow n b u~1ness Tra tn
ing pr o ~o~ i d ed , movt&gt; 1n and

CENTRAL REALTY CO.
TWO ACRES A beaut iful 4 year old, 3 bedroom home
w i t h larg e eal· in k itc hen,

3 bedr oom s, all n ice l y

carpeted, 2 baths, ful l basemen! with TV room . Many
more ex tra s. lo w heat b i ll w i th na t . ga s forced air
furna ce . All th is and two n ice acres o t land in a good

location. Will go qu ick foe S35,000.
S7 ACRES - W ith a n ice I' 2 stor y hou se with 3 bedrms .

and 1'' bath s. Mostly carpeted . Big centra l f ireplace
with heatol ater. Srnaii ·barn and outbu ildings, 20 acres

or 4 bedrm s .. li v ing r m ., fam ily rm .. w ith flreplaee ,
bas em ent , fue l oil furna ce , garag e and outbu il dings .

Som e fencing , plenty of road frontag e and gorden
spa ce . Ci t y water and dr illed well . Loc. close t.o
hospital and school at Laur el Cl ift . Asking 542,500.
40 ACRES - In Southern Local with a small barn and
dug well. About 12 acres t illable. Some woo ds and
mineral s. Asking S21.500.
A BEAUTY AT FIVE POINTS - Here .Is an excellent3
bedrm . house with 111, ba t hs, ki tc hen and buflt .ln

3 BORM .
R an c n
1n
Pome r oy , n• ce k tfchen ,
part b asemen t
Ol H E R

Atta ched 12 car l garage . Chrysler A ir -Temp. central
heat ing and cool ing . Very low elec. bills. All this and
approx . one acre land. Have a look . On l y S47 ,900.
S11.700 wil l buy a good 2 bedrm. house and garage.
storage building and garden space on St . Rt . 124 In

[B
IH

A. l 1 Q W

and

commercial.
Call for
estimate, 24 hour service.
Anyday l anytime.

1--· 1 JUST

I'M ( OloiFOflTABLE
HERE, ANNIE .. AND
JUS'l DON' T EVE R
TRY TO KID ME .. .

Jack' septic

rank~

Chester, Ohio

WAN1 YOU 10

BE COM FORTABLE
AN' HAPPY ,.

8RADFOIW
A uC11oneer
Com .
p fe1e S: er v rce fl hona 94 9 · 1 ~ 87
01 949· 2000 Rocme O h1o Crill
!hodfor d

Si:W ING NACHINl J.! epo11 s s.e r ·
v 1ce al l ma kes W 2·1184 l he
f.-o br1 c Sh o p
Po rn ero y
A u1homed S•n ger Sole!) ond
Ser·v1 ce . We sho t pen S c r s~o r s .
~ XC A VA fi N G

dOl or loa der and
backhoe wo rk durnp Truck '
and lo · b o y ~ l of lure will ha ul
l rll d1 rf Ia ~o d l c me~ t o ne and
g•ovel Ca ll Bob or Rog er Jef ·
let s day phone 992 7089 nig ht
phone 992 3575 or '191 · 5131.

VACANT LAN'O - 10 acres of lond on Rt. 33-4 lane,
about one mile north ot 7-33 bypass. Asking 512,800.
S10,900 - 1 acre level land with a 64x12, 3 bedroom
mobile home with natural gas heat, city water &amp; sept ic.
S15,000 - Will buy a good 5 bedrm . house with large
liv ing room and kllchen. 2 baths, basement. F.A. nat .
vas heat jn Chester .
We NHd Llstin_gs (Middleport)
Wo hove buy on tor mony IYPtS of property
CALL JIMMY DEEM, Assocloto, 94t·2lll

r

0

.I

Ye sterdays

darer . backhoe
and dtt che t Charl es R. Hoi ·
Bo ck
Hoe
Se r ,. ic e .
ft e ld
Hutlond O h1o Ph on e 742 200(:1.

WI Ll do 10of mg co nsl ruc han.
p lumbt ng and heo tr ng No 10b
too Iorge or too srn oll Phone

.
Ex

covo t 1ng
sep tic
sy s!em s ,
dolt' ' backho e , dump truck ,
lime!:&gt; to nc
gra ..,el . blackT op
povm g , Rt 143 Pho ne I ( b l~ )

6• 8-733 1

PUDDLE POOLS Al l ~ ~zes and
shopes ~w1m poo l'i. 1 year s
e11 per 1ence
tr ee es timates .
o nyl h rf\ g
'( OU
ne ed
fo r
underg round sw1m pools. New
chem tcol and su pply store .
Al b any
O h 10
Ph o ne
6 1 4 · bG8 · b 5 ~ 5
! Aft er 6 pm .
61• b89 5:l5! John Jeff ers or
bl:l9 5165 8 rll Gi llefle . ) We ore
NOT all we t on PRI CES

NliGllR BUilDING Supplv lor
budd1ng houses, repa ir wo rk
a nd cob1net !io , Col i Guy H.
N etgler , q,cQ .250S ohe r 5 pm .

by

THOMAS JOSEPH

DOWN

ACROSS

1 Tooth woe
I Soprano,
5 SunnoWJted Lucine u Berth
2 Heavenly
12 Tooth
sight
3 Mom's chore

4 "Human" to do
5 lntimi-

14 Zoroastrian bible

dated

15 In medias

GASO~JNE

I Grotto
7 One : Scot.
8 Forward

16 "You -

observer's
station

So Fair"

AI.LI·: Y

17 - Aviv
18 Reining

9 Compact
10 Sold

You t' inl4
Pure ILl
t.hic; one precautionar4. zo Classy guy
don't,? ,...__ Mr. Blink! ZJ Garbed

Who will inspect
rm-1 car?

IIFit Iiddle

~--:;..- 22 Opposed to

31 EJ;punge

city
%4 Jnf~
21 Anger

tree
:It Recent

zs' Bear's

mine
38 Siamese

3Z Bibllcal
juniper

Wednesday • .June 2~

37 Cornwall

grip

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

,....-+--+--+-+-+-

Winner on .loser wins

fat

NORTH
+A lO 2

!:9 RuslHlour
prize

A• Low As

• J 10 6 3

+ K 54

strike

.... . '"• """""" ........

9' and 12' Vinyl

•

WEST

33 Marine

"'"" " . . . .... j

+ ... .

bird
3f Ship's diaryi:;,-+-+-i-

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Co11742-22J1
TALk TO
Wendell or HerD Grote
or CO.ne Smlltl
'

prefix

ouFZ le$,.

~ DEfENse 1$ ,....liT
PRISONS

nte.

,n .. ~l\tl'l' Mf:

0\IERcflOWDi:D.

·RUTLAND
FURNITURE

:~=y
39 Japanese
10

Wl~-ld~~db:eog 81e~'IHII

u Nimrod
42 Detail

DAILY CRYI'TOQliOTE -

Here's h ow to work it:

AXYDLBAAXR
Is L 0 N G t' E L L 0 W
One letter

RutlAnd,

simply

sta nd s f or an o ther . In this

.sample

A is

used f or th e three L's, X l or the 1wo O's, etc. Smgl e lelters.
apos trophes, the l ength and forrnat~on of th e word! are all

hints. Each day

WINNIE

• YOU CAN UNDER -

STAND WHY I
TO IIO THIS
MY8ELF?

YES, SIR. TH E
LESS PEOPLE
THAT K NOIV
AOOUT TH IS
FlU/I, THEBETTER .

SHES
BEAUTIFU L"
IBN'T SHE?

th e code

lt&gt;ttcrs arc

d1ffer .;on t :

CRYPTOQUOTES

SO FAR, SO
GOOD. HE

CJ ZF

DOESN'T

DSPQJQBQ

J p

OOSPECT

A THI N6 1

WLP

JQ

BVJPEJP U

IV L

sz

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8
L C

L

C

L R .
K •
I L C Y S
F W F K Q S P
Yesterday' I crypeoquott:A MAN MAY WRITE HIMSELF OUT
OF REPUTATION WHEN NOBODY El-SE CAN DO IT.THOMAS PAINE

YOU .

if-J I!J78 Km1 Futures Syndicatt, In(' .

BAR :&gt;lEY

FETCH TH' STICK,
ot:
HOW NICE.. AN
AUTHENTIC IMITATION
SENTI MEN T ~

E AST

+

K Q7 3
" 94
• A 8 54
• J 87

"Q8 7 65
• Q9 7 2
+ A Q 10 2
SOUTH
• J986 l4
• J 10 2

;.F~RA:,::N.::,K:,:&amp;:,:E:,R::;N;IE:.,.. -::::::::::::::--:===::-""";:===::::-~;=::::::::--------~ 35 Prior :

Bay wMre you con come In
ond see whot you're vlttttno
- Good selections - Fully'
stocked.

S-211-A

" AK 3

31 Kind of

'4.11 ~~;d

Largest Selection In The Valin .

JJ Vigilant
%0 Urchin
%3 Egyptian

5: 4s-Farm Reporl13 : 5:51)-PTL Club 13; 6:01)-PTL
Club 15; Summer Semester 10.
6: 31)-Doctors on Call4; News 6; Summer Semester 8;
For You .. . Biack Woman 10.
6 : 4s-Mornlng Report 3; 6 :51)-Good Morning , West
Virginia 13; 6:5s-News 13.
7:01)-Today 3,4,15; Good Morning America 6,13 ; CBS
News 8; Porky Pig 10.
7: 25-Chuck White Reports 10; 7:31)-Schoolles 10.
8:()()-.{:apl . Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame St . 33 .
9:01)-Merv Griffin 3; Phi l Donohue 4,13,15;
Emergency One 6; Pass The Buck 10; Brady Bunch
8.
..
9:31)-Andy Griffith 8; Fam ily Affair 10.
IO :oo-Card Sharks 3,4,15; Edge ol Nlghl6; Pass The
Buck 8; Joker's Wild 10; To Tell The Truth 13; Over
Easy 33 .
10 :31)-Hollywood Squares 3,4,15 : High Hopes 6; Price
is Right 8.10; 520.000 Pyramid 13; Paint Along With
Nancy Kaminsky 33 .
11 :01)-High Rol lers 34,15; Happy Days 6,13.
11 :31)-Wheel of Fortune 3,15; Partridge Family A;
Family Feud 6,13; Love of Li te 8,10; 11 :55-CBS
News 8; Loving Free 10.
12 :01)-Newscenter 3; News 4,6 ,10; Sanford &amp; Son 15;
Gambit 8; M idday Magazine 13; Walch Your Mouth
33.
12 :31)-Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Bob Braun 4; Gong Show 15;
Search for Tomorrow 8,10; Romagnolls' Table 33.
1:llO-For Richer, For Poorer 3; All My Ch ildren 6,13 ;
News 8; Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women
Only 15; Soundstage 33 .
:31)-Days of Our Lives 3,4,15; As The Wor ld Turns
8,10; 2:01)-Cne Life to Live 6,13 ; Spo leto, USA 33 .
2: 31)-Docfors 3,4,15; Guiding Light 8, 10; 3:01)Anolher World 3,4, 15; General Hospital 6, 13; L ilias
Yoga &amp; You 20,33 .
3:31)-Ail In The Family 8,10; You Bel Your Life 20;
Old Frlends ... New Friends 33.
4:01)-Mister Cartoon 3; Superman 4; For Richer, For
Poorer l S; Merv Griffin 6; Addams Fam ily 8;
Sesame St . 20,33; Match Game 10; Dinah 13.
4:31)-My Three Sons 3; Gil ligan 's is. &lt;; ,8; Batman 10;
Lillie Rascal s 1S.
5 oo-Here Come The Br ides 3; My Three Sons A;;
Gunsmoke 8; Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33 ;
Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea 10; ·Emergency
One 13; Pett icoat Juncti on 1S.
S:31)-0dd Couple 4; News 6; Elec. Co. 20,33; Hogan ' s
Heroes 15; 5:5s- .
6:01)- -News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20;
Making Things Grow 33.
6 : 31)-NBC News 3,4,lS ; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8, 10; Over Easy 20; Antiques 33 .
7 oo-Cross.Wits 3.4; Newlywed Gam e 6. 1.3; Gong
Show 8; News 10; Gilligan 's Is. 1S; Hocking Valley
Bluegrass 20 ; Consumer Survivai'Kil 33.
7:31)-Hollywood Squares 3,4; Match Game PM 6;
Tattletales 8; MacNe i l-Lehrer Repot 20,33 ; That' s
Hollywood 10; Nashv ille On The Road 13; Marty
Robbins Spotlig ht 15.
8:01)-Redscene '78 3; Welcome Back Kotler 6,13;
American Life Style A; Chips 15; Waltons 8; Once
Upon A liassic 20,33 ; Oral Roberts 10.
8:31)- Baseball ( Reds vs . Astros) 3,4; What' s Happening! 6, 13 ; In Search of the Real America 20,33 .
9:01)-Barney M ill er 6,13 ; Oral Robert s 15; Hawaii
Five-0 8.10; World 20,33.
9:31)-Movle " S.P .Y.S" 6.13 .
10 :31)-Ciass of '6S 15 ; Barnaby Jones 8.10 .
10 :31)-News 20; Poldark I I 33 .
11 :oo-News 3,4,6,8, 10,13, 15; Dick Cavell 20.
11:31)-Johnny Carson 3,4,1S; Starsky &amp; Hutch 6. 13;
Mash 8; Mov ie " Ten Thousand Redrooms " 10;
Lilias Yoga &amp; You 33.
12:01)-ABC News 33; 12:0s-Movle " Joy In the Mor ning" 8; 12 :31)-Janakl 33 .
12: 41)-Toma 6, 13; 1:01)-Tomorrow 3,4; 1:50-News 13.

Z3 FWJction

Rubber Batll Carpet

15 IN.. STOCK

Yesterday's Answer

25 Bearing
Z8 Above
2'7 Chew the

AJI carpet instollod wlltl
padding ot no charge.
Expert instollolion.

IF YOU NEED .
A. SOFA THAT .
MAKES A
BED F0R

I I X)

Jumbles SOUSE FUZZV AFFRAY ESTATE
Answer What the taxidermists' annual shindig
was - RATHER STUFFY

river

SAVE ALOT

742-2211

]YOUR(

(Answers tomorrow )

l3 Asian

'"-:&amp;.•

Floor Covering· In Stock·

'

KXI I I

~.wd'

WeLL, "rnEi&lt;E'5
ONLY ONS

PAR TY PLAN Supet vuo rs, M e rri ·
Mac l oy por l•es ho !i ope nmg s
)v p erv c ~ o n
and
lor
demons lrof ors en your o reo.
Ouoh ry mcr chondi!ie highe st
cornm •ss ron No 11111 eslment ,
deli ver in g or col te c110n , Coli
A nn 8o ..l ei- co llec T3 19·556·888 1
oc wnl e MERRf .MAC 8011 1271 ,
Dubuq ue Iowa 5700 I

PULLI NS EXC A VATING . Complete
Ser v1ce . Ph o r~ e 99') 2478

Now arrange the circl.ed letters to

form the surprcse answer. as sug ·
gested by the above canoon

NNapa~erbooks .

~II AfforS :OO..Anytimo S.turdoy
992 -7119 or 992'5041
4·27-tfc

SAVE ON
c•tl RING
DRIVE ALimE
&amp;

'TIP A 6ER'MAN
WAIT!:!&lt;: AND
YOU' L.L. N E:VER' E!!E
FOR'60TTEN.

The latest JUMBLES are here io JUMBLE BOOK •10 lfld JUMBLE
BOOK,,, Available tor $1 .35 EAC H, postpaid from Jumble , cJo 1hla
new spaper, P.O. BOK3•. Norwood, N.J. 07~ . Make checks payablt1o

carpet ed . F ull basement with wood -burning sto~o~e .

Syracuse.

I I

REAL FOLKS .. .

~ )(( A V A TI N G

MARTIN

n

Answer here ·

ANO SE E ME ... YOU' RE

~IlliG I CAlli
'TI-ll IIi I&lt; .0"' !

AND

r

I I I

RIGHT- --THAT 'S WH Y YOU'RE
TME FIRST AND ONLY ONES
I'Ve EVER INVITED TO COME

SERVICE

Phone 98l-3801&gt;
Jack Ginter 98l-3804

HOWERY

11

KIPECT

UTTLEORPHA

DAVE'S BACKHOE
&amp;
DUMP TRUCK

10 ACRES - Va cant land on blacktop road . Beautiful
hom esi te. Aboul5 m inutes from 5 Poi nt. Pr lce513 ,800.
6 ACRES - Nice 1''' stor y home mosll y carpeted with 3

appliances. fam ily rm . with f ireplace. all nicely

ASSOCIATES
991·12l9- 9,HIYI
992-2lb8

SEPTIC TA_NK,
CLEANING

byHenriArnotdandBobLee

I

Estimates

CALL
991-6323 or992-6011
6-19-1 mo. pd .

fen ced . N ic e- c o untry sett i ng off bla cktop road just 6
mi n u te s north of Ra ci ne . A sk ing S42,000 .

lake over CALL FOR I N
FO

F EA TURE S 118,000 00
MANY OTHER PROPER ·
TIES TO CHOOSE FROM .
WE HAVE QUALIFIED
BUYERS FOR MEIGS
COUNTY PROPERTIES .
LIST WITH US .
HENRY E . CLELAND
REALTOR
HANK , KATHV &amp; LEONA

For Free

4-JO-ttc

741 2348

j'jl THATSCAAIIBLED WOAD GAllE

tNALDAVb
IJ

Soffit, Room Additions
&amp; A-Frame Homes .

3875 .

Wood

OLDER HOME - 7 room s,
bath , ga s floor lurnace,

ALUM. &amp;

VINYL SIDING

Sw eepers_ loo ~ t e r~ 1ron5 al l
sm all appli ances . l a w n rn owe r ,
ne)l l to ) to te Hig hw ay Garage
o n lo! oul e 7 Ph one (61 4 ) 985

4

frame house wi th large eat.
in kit c hen, den or stud y ,
baseme nt ,
3
por c h es .
garage a nd two. third s of an
ac re .

MASH BROTHERS

HWOOD BOWER S REPAIR

apartmen t s, a ll r ented. In
fown where yo u can w alk to
wor k or shop. Nice size lot
In exc el l ent location.

4 BEDROOMS -

5-31 ·1 mo.

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

THURSDAY , JUNE 29,1978

Unsc ramble these lour Jumbles.
one letter to each square, to form
tour ordinary words.

R:.,ai tstate for Sail!

bus iness .

APTS .

IF IJQT,

I'LL SEE

"'m-1174

Pomeroy

10·30-c

allached room s for sma ll
BRICK

.

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Hoeflich)

R.esidenlial

1 stor y

ram e nom e, appr ox
2
1cres of g r oun d , g ard en
.pace . s t orag e Ou1 td mg Up
10 l ou r bedr ms CLOSE T O

MIN I FA RM -

Tires

us

BUT DON' T L6T ME STOP ¥0U .. ~
LOOK TO YOUR HE:A~T'S CONTENT
.. . JU5T THOIJ6HT I ' D ASK IF
YOU IIE'E'DE'D AIJY HE'LP...

St . Rl. 124 toword Rullond,

Brakes

Ph . 992-2848

r

1i''irll'l.\kt ID'\1

0.

Installation Service

Home Phone 992-5739

Mli9HT'VE' ROLLED
Ulo/DER HERE'!

RE-ALLY~ ... I
DIDN'T Kt.IOW
PIPES ROLLo!&gt;

YOU TOP·
SIDE

'lo milt off Rl. 7 by.pou on

MOORE'S

see us for fast service.

OH • eR· HE'H, HEH!

1 THOLI19HT MY PIPE

~ ~ ~~ ®

ROGER HYSEll
GARAGE

See
Denver Kapple
At

is because we are selling
our lis1ings fast . For a
quick sale of your propertv ,
Cheryl Lemley , Assoc .
Home Phone 742-2003
Hilton Wolfe, Assoc.
Home 909-2589
GeorgeS. Hobstener Jr.

(Bob
109 High St.

CAPTAIN EASY

'

The Photo Place

For The Best
Price In Town

S65,000 but well worth it.
The reason this ad is small

NEW LISTING -

Free Estimates
Phone 949-2862
or 949-2160

Portraits
Weddings
Passports
Anniversaries
Special Occasions

-4-1 mo.

l ev e l
Co lon i a l
that
ha s
everyt h ing , lo cate d in
R iggscres t
Manor , on
corner lot . Se ll i ng fo r

a

POMEROY, 0 .
NEW LISTINy
3 vears
')Jd , J bd r m r a nc n 1n ex

St .
Pomeroy, Ohio
Ph . 992-2164

s plit

a 4 room apa r tment over
3 car ga r ag e. A ll t his for

MAIN

399 W. Main

Addition ,
Tuppers Plains, Ohio, on
large l ot. Sell i ng tor
$42 ,000 .00.

bui ld ing with 2 baths. Also

608 E.

engine &amp; mower
service, Massey Ferguson
&amp; Gilson Tillers, Lawn Boy
Mower ·Sales &amp; Service.

Arbaugh

Large q room o lder home
wi th
centr a I heat.
5
bedroom s, 2 bath s. cit y
water . Plus small bu si ness

~7f:le

POMEROY

1967 BSA t!SO Marh 4 (u'&gt;lom
po1n ! e • ce llenl !;hope onl y
1!;00 oc l v ol mde~
SbOO
74-.;1 7753

total

qcn

HO NlJ A Z SO mrn • bcke
Good co nd•hon recen ! tun e
up Also helrne t!i lO q49 2034

1Ci77 1o! O ! Ol lltt:R b1 4 147

shower,

terra ced lot 10' • 100'.
3 PROPERTIES IN I -

19 7 ~

1Q75 ) UZUKI ')50 d 1r! b1 lo. e Phon e

with

electri c, low taxes , low
heating bi ll s, si1uated in

, AO il ) ON Peacoc k A ... enue
Pome r o y
Wdl
!. non ce

~AM 011 cornp r es~o r
lo r ':&gt;Ole Co il 99') 3b4U

S AN D chrld1en ~ shoo
sole 20 ~ o otl Jul y 3 Jul y 1 ~
Ba 1ley ~ M 1dd leport

ki tchen, rec . room , full

Has long sun deck In back

heaf er
N~ W &amp; USED IMP t!:: M~ N I ~
MF 9 Sol er M FlO So ler M F120
~o l er
Mo ll h ew ~ Ro tary ~ c y 1 he
MF880 Sem 1 moun ted b bot
rom Pl o w
MFS')O I 'J D1H
MF200 7 Row Chopper Ml'39 7
~ ow
Plant er:;
M echo r11COI
I r'o llS pl ont er
SHINN S f RA(l OH !:.Ali: )
Phone 45tl l tr 30
leon W Va

WO M~N

Sma II

through •large glass door s.

Mobrle Home f-'or k
'll more rayed out a nd
op pt ov ed tncludm g 18 mobile
homes and two o p o r lr n en l ~ al l
fu1 n an d ren Ted Oo u b l~ we de
14 x ~b three bedr 2 both ce n
!101 011 (owneri re~1 d e11C.: a nd
off ,cc ~u p pl y Trade r 1 co r
garage !&gt;hop ld ry room On
op pto ..: 13 ooes lo crng on Carr
51 and ~ Mo•n St 5 ~ q3
J o c k ~or, OH 1 b loc k ~ fr mn A p
pol och 1on l 1ec woy 5 bl oc !-. ~
f rom down tow n :J bl oc k ~ lr orn
~ h o p pu1 g center 20 m 1l e~ t ra m
4 1 bdl con dolla r cons lf vCt1 0n
10b 01 P1lo. e Co At omcc Plan t
Crty wa Ter ~ew er na tu ral gas
Due to poor heal th owne 1 rnu1. 1
move !o dry drmo te
000
l um O w ner would co rr y 70"~
up To 10 yea r') ot 8" . l or
quol d ced bu yer
Gr o ~~ ~ ng
SOO ()()() Con toc r L ou 1 ~ Hun t
bl 4 286 :1EI311or o ppornnnen 1

MF235 0 1&amp;!oel
M ~ 78S l&gt; 1esel
0 1 e~e l
Co b or~ 8.

II FOO l truc k cornpec Sle eps
l our Ho s showe t $rnk and
co mrnode Hel ng er ot or ga s o r
e leclrcc Gas ~ l ove wll h oven
t: 11celien1 cond1tr on
S1100
Con tac t Jor;nes Roy P o r~on!io
475Q8 Ca rmel Rood Ra cr ne OH
4577 1

bedr oom hom e . modern

~) 10 1 ~

I N G ~R SO L

WHEEL
ALIGNMENT

~
MODERN SUPPLY

~Y O WN~ff
Oc e~ el

HA Y TI M O THY 8. or ch ard gro s!o
H e g ulor
sq ua re
bo les
A \la llob lii! no w on 'Wagons Any
am ounT
Gel h oy be for e
!&gt;tor age or ~ O et1hce f-' oul ) oy re
G1eo t Bend Rood R! 338
Por !lond 84J 4591

Situated on lot 9S ' xl1 5' .
Selling price, $32,000.00 .
NEW
LISTING
4

Rutland , Ohio. Home has

bath

300 Molin St.
Pomeroy, Ohio·
Pomeroy Pt2-6iU
orf92 •• 26J
.8 A.M . to 4;30 P.M .

3

full basement and garage.

TWO B~DH OO M ho use en Hor
II SOil VIII e w rlh
p011e l 1ng
corpe tmg and c1 1y wa le• Call
aft er 5 prn 74'] 225b

HEAnNG INC.

New or Repair
GutteiS and
Downspouts

SALES AND SERVICE
11 -9-lfc

be droom fota l e lect rlc
home,
l ocated
in
Hutchinson Sub- Di vis i on ,

fodtem

B~ O ROO M

r-

Your Full Time

WA NT!::D TO ren t couple w 1th no
r hddren wonts mode rn 2
bedr oom home Wr1 te 8o lC 19b
Bt&gt;lle Volley O H &lt;l371 7

H. L WHITESEL
ROOFING

PWMBING &amp;

Real Estate Broker
NEW
LISTING

TW O

CARTER

Closed ThUrsdays &amp;
Saturday at noon

Sk ylor1!,.,

3:31)-A ii In The Family 8.10; Ohio Journal 20; Tur nabout 33 .
4:01)-Mister Cartoon 3; Superman 4; For Richer. For
Poorer 15; Merv Griffin 6; Addams Family 8;
Sesame St. 20,33; Match Game 10; Dinah 13.
4:31)-My Three Sons 3; Gilligan's Is . 4; ,8; Batman 10;
Little Rascals 15.
5:oo-Here Come The Br ides 3; My Three Sons 4;
Gunsmoke 8; Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33 ;_
Voyage to the Bottom olfhe Sea 10; Emergency One
13; ·Petticoat Junction 15.
5:JI)-Odd Couple 4; News 6; Elec . Co. 20,33; Hogan's
Heroes 15 .
6 :01)-News 3,4,6,8, 10,13.15; Zoom 20; Mak ing Things
Grow 33.
6:31)-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,10; Over Easy 20; Ant iques 33 .
7:oo-Cross-WIIs3,4 ; Newlywed Game6.1 3; Sha Na Na
8; News 10 ; Gillglgan's Is . 15; Dick Cavell 20;
People &amp; PI aces 33.
7: 31)-Aii -Star Anything Goes 3; Sha Na Na 4; Bet ween
The Wars 6; Family Feud 8; MacNeil -Lehrer

-.

Offiee Hrs.: ·
9 a . m .- ~ p.m .

5300 Coli 747-2137

WEDNESDAY , JUNE28, 1978

l-----------------------------------""'

George 5. Hobstener Jr.
Broker
107''' Sycamore St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone 992.6333

992 57~6 .

19b9 4·000R BUI CK
Phone 991·3670

Business Services

HOBSIEIIER
REALTY

Wagon ,

UIW TRACTORS

a ddress i s u n knpwn a nct
c a n no f
w it h
rea sondb l e
Will CAio! E: to,. the elderl y tr\ our
d i ligence be as ce r ta 1ne d ,
home Ph one 9&lt;17 7314
T o : The unknown he ir s a nd
dev i sees of No r a K in d le, i f
de c ea seo ;
To : Glenn K 1nd le wh ose
a d d r ess i s unk no wn an d
c annot
w 1f h
r eason ab l e
d il i gen ce b e a sce r ta i ne d .
T o · T he .u n k.n o wn h e1 r s and
aevisees· ot Gl en n K ind l e , i f
dece ased ;
have enlarged our
To : Epgar K tn d l e , whose
addrf'ss is un kn o w n and
r11iee d epar1ment and
cannot
w ith
re a sonabl e
II ser'llice Ho1point and
dili gence be a sce r ta 1ned ,
b rand s.
To The u nk no wn ne lr s a nd
de v 1se es of E dgar K in d le , if
d ec eased .
To
Ret ha Ru pe . who se
addre ss 15 un kn o w n and
can no t
w dh
r t&gt; a sona bl e
d ili gen c e be asc erta 1ned .
T o · T he unknown ht&gt;1 r s a nd
Phone992-2181
dev 1s.ees ot R et ha Rup e , 11

bed•c o m '

19b9 l TO f O RD or1d 1970 f- ord
l TO A l soiRJ r ts and body ports.
Phone 991 -3040

9'n

~OU ~

Nl W 3 bP d• oo ''' hnuse 1 bu 1 1 1~
~ &amp; ~ MOBIU HOM !:!! Pt Plea
o tl elec , I a cr e . M.ddlepo rt
~ a n t W . Vo bes•de H ec k ~
clo~ e to Hutlond . Phone 992
197J Sroodmore HI ~ b4 ')
741H .
bedr oo m
197 J Dor• o n 14 x bO '1 bad roo •n
VA -f- HA 30 yr . fl no nc ,ng . al so
refmo nc 1ng . Ireland Mor tgage ·
197'1 v. cto rt on 14 11 "tJ7 3 bedt oo m
T1 t: . Sta te , Athens , phone (b l 4)
1 both
192-3051.
1Q72 Co11Qnl ry 12 )( 65 3 bedroo m
l'~b9
Stot e!.man 12 ~ --o 'l

197.3 MONTE CARl O l a ndau P !:.
~4 3

HE' LL COME AROUND,
SPARKLE ... YQU'LL. SEE,

Hl!ai rutalr tor Sale

t 'orSah&gt;

IN

to good horne

TELEVISION
VIEWING

TRACY

.

Home Nof•onol Banli will ofl e•

fo• sole ot pu bhc avction th e
I~

Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items ·Into Cash

·

f RI DAY JUNE JO. 19761he Ro''""

Report 20,33; The Judge 10; In Search 01 13; Wild
Kingdom 15.
·
.
8:oo-Grlzzly dams 3,4, 15; Eight Is Enough 6,13; Carol
Burnett 8, 10; Nova 20,33.
9:oo-Da.v ld Frost 3,4,15 ; Charlie's Angels 6, 13; Movie
" Rancho Deluxe" 8, 10; Great Performances 33;
Poldark II 20.
.
10 :oo-NBC Reports 3,4, 15; ABC News Closeup 6,13;
News 20.
10:31)-Amerlcan Enterprise 20.
11 :OQ-News 3,4,6,8,10.13,15; Dick Cavett 20 ; Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 33 .
11 :31)-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; ABC News Special 6,13;
Hawai i Flve-08; ABC News 33 ; Movie "Car rie" 10.
12 :01)-Janakl 33·; 12 :41)-Kojak 8.
'
1:oo- Tomorrow J,A; News 13 .

11-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, June 28,1978

abo ut th e tnunp sui t when
he l ed dummy 's ace . He
continu ed wit h the three of
diamonds . East won ' with his
ace and led a heart which
drew the j ack , queen and

ace .
Next came the key play :

throwing a winner on a

loser . Decl arer led dummy's
jack of diamonds and dis·
carded his 10 of hearts. lt
wa s a brilliant stroke .
East cou ld not get a heart
ruff. He could get three club
tricks if he held the ace of
• K
• 96 3
that suit , but South knew
where that ace was . East
Vu lnerable : Both
had passed originally and
Dealer : East
had shown up with the kingqueen of spades and ace of
West North East Soulh
diamonds.
Pass Pass
Eventually , South got to
Pass 2+
l
NT
Pass
discard o ne club p n
Pass Pass Pass
dummy 's 10 of diamonds
and wound up losing two
Opening lead : • 6
spades, two diamonds and
one club .
Had he not thrown that
wiimer
on a loser he . would
By Oswald Jacoby
have lost two spades , two
and Alan Sontag
All bridge players know . clu bs, one diamond , one
about playing a loser on a heart ruff and his partner's
loser . If the opponents are confidence.
Hands such as this are one
certain to win a trick , diswhy 35 million people
reason
card a loser on it. The loser·
on-loser rule Is as old as play bridge in this country .
bridge itself . But, as with 1NEWSPA PEH ~~ N TERPRISE ASSN. I
most rules , there are excep·
(For a copy ol JACOBY MOD·
ERN, send St to: " Win at
lions.
.
Bridge." care ol mls newspll·
South won the ~pentng
heart lead with the kmg and per. P.0 . Box 489, Radio City
found out the wretched news Station , New York , N. Y 1001' '

L-----------•

�12,...-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. Wednesday, June 28,1978

WELCOMES SPEAKER - George lngals, left,
president of the Middleport Chamber of Commerce,
welcomes Matt Palmer of the Public Utilities Commission
of Ohio to Tuesday night's chamber meeting. Palmer was
the guest speaker.

Other
(Continued from pqe

Screening ·
1)

arid cut back on the use of
heat and air conditioning,
Palmer said. "We may be a
little warmer in the summer
and a little colder in the
winter,' ' he added, " but
conserving like that gives us
extra years to search for
alternate fuel methods."
Palmer also outlined the
history of PUCO, describing
its fantastic growth since its
formation in 1867 . and
discussed the consumer
comp la int department
created •in 1972 to act as
liaison between the consumer and utility companies.
The commission. which is a
joint effort at the state and
federal levels, is comprised
of four main departments :
transportation, utility. legal,
and the public interest
center. The public interest
center grew out of the
complaint department in
1975. It handles over 18,000
complaints each year. In
addition to hearing consumer
complaints the center
receives direct input from the
utilities as well.
" We want to st rike a
balance bet ween the growing
demand for power and increasing costs," Palmer said.
Palmer then explained
utilit y rate change and
suggested money saving
techniques through consumer
awareness.
Companies make and file
applications with the legal
department for a rate change
and are required to issue a
public noti ce in local
newspapers informing the
consumer of a rate hike
hearing and asking for
co nsumer testimony and
opinion.
After a report is published
by the utility outlining the
reasons for a rate hike.
llearing is held with
testimony heard from the
company and th~ public. The
commissioners vote and issue
their decision in a public
)pinion and order . Palmer
stressed the importance of
public opinion in the commissioners final decision .
After all, he said, "All of us
have a Jight to be concerned
about rate hikes."
Finally. Palmer gave tips
on saving money by 111
Checking
your
bills
thoroughly.
12 l
Understanding how your bills
are calculated , and 13)
Knowing how to read your
own meters.
Also keep in mind your
right to file an informal or
·formal comp laint with
PUCO. "We're on your side,"
Palmer co ncluded . ··our
attorneys are your attorneys
and your problems are our
problems."
In other business the
Chamber discusse d the
proposed nursing home for
Middleport. Edison Baker
noted that while plans are
"still on the books" the
outlook is good and . should
things go as expected the

a

program
announced
The Meigs Co unty student
health team, in conjunction
with the Meigs County Health
Department, is offering a
free
health sc reening
program for all people in
Meigs County .
Services will include
childhood imm uni zations.
diabetic testing , blood
pressure testing , hearing
exams and health eduction ..
The first of a series of nine
screenings will be held at the
Pomeroy Senior Citizens
Center , East Main Street
from 9:30 a. m. to 3 p. m.
Appointments are being
taken alghough they are not
necessary . If you want to
make an appointment ca ll the
Senior Citizens Center at 9927311.
The other screening sites
are : Monda y, July 10,
Harrisonville Grade School.
9:30 a. m. to 11 :30 p.m.;
Monday, July 10, Rutland
Grade School. I p. m. to 3 p.
m.; Friday, July 14, Salem
Center Grade School, 9:30
a.m. to 3 p. m.: Monday , July
17 ,
Tuppers
Plain s
Elementary School, 9:30 a.
m. to 11 :30 a. m.: Monday ,
July 17, Chester Elementary,
I p. m. to 3 p. m.; Fr'iday,
July
21 ,
ReedsvilleRiv erview Elementary.
School. 9:30a . m. to 3 p. m.:
Monday, July 24, Racine Fire
Department, 9:30a . m. to 3 p.
m.: and Friday, July 28,
Portland Grade School, 9:30
a. m. to 3 p. m.
All persons planning to
come in for diabetic testing
s hould bring along a urine
sample collected the morning
of the screening. There is also
a simple blood test involved
in screening for diabetes.
Since the test measures
fasting blood sugar level, it is
necessary not to eat or drink
anything exce pt water 4
hours prior to having the
blood test.
This screening program is
the joint effort of the Meigs
County Hea lth Department,
the Meigs Co unty Student
Health Tea m. the Meigs
Co unty Senio r Citize ns
Center. the Meigs County
Mental Hea lth Center, and
the Ohi o Department of
Hea lth.

SALE AUTHORIZED
The Meigs County Commissioners Tuesday night
authorized county engineer
Wesley Buehl to advertise for
sale equipment that can no
longer be utilitzed by the
co unty.
Commissioners will meet
next Wednesday at 2 p. m.
due to the 4th of July holiday.
Attending were Henr y
Wells, Richard Jones, and
Mary Hobstetter , clerk .

President

ASSIST IN GROUNDBREAKING- Also taking part
in the ground breaking were front, left to right, Henry
Wells, Jim Roush, Pat O'Brien, Ralph Hazelbaker,
'

By CHARUYITE MOULTON
WASHINGTON (UP!) The Supreme Court today
ruled Allan Bakke must be
admitted to the University of
California medical school in
the "reverse discrimination"
case, but upheld the right of
governments to "take race
into account .. . to remedy
disadvantages."
Bakke, 38, who is white,
had sued when the medical
school had turned him down
for entrance and admitted a
black student with lower
entrance scores under its
program of setting aside 16
percent of openings for
minorities.
But in ruling Bakke must
be admitted, the court
st rongly
upheld
the
university's right - and that
of other governmental bodies
- to set racial quotas .
Justice Lewis Powell,
writing the leading opinion.
said California courts "failed
to recognize that the state has

Hospital News
Veterans Memorial Hosptial
Admitted - Ava Greenlee,
Pomeroy : Lora Cleland,
Rutland ; Mary Derenberger,
Pomeroy: Sharon Bailey .
Middleport : Rhonda Daley.
Cheshire: Larry Spencer,
Racine ; Vivian Wilson , The
Plains ; Loretta Imboden ,
Middleport.
Discharged - Gilbert
Mees, Mary Roush, Charlene
Barton, Anna Howard, Helen
Melton , Charles Klein ,
Charles Neimeyer. Maurice
Wright.
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges, June 27
Mrs. Vencll AaKms ana
son , Kathy Adkins , Mrs.
Larry Barcus and daughter,
Cecil Burnette, Gemma
Casci, Susan Cochran. Ronda
Conwell, Marc Eblin, John
Fulkerson, Jr., Belle Hall,
Audry Hatten, Burton Hickman , Mrs. Roger Hughes and
daughter , Arius Hurt,
Pamela Johnson, Edward
Kiser, Donna Kisor, Teresa
.Kreps , Ruth Linthicum ,
Brenda Litchfield, Charles
Manuel, Pamela Meek, Edith
Mos hier, Esther Nibert,
Dennis Parson , Laura Riddle, Mary Russell , Adda
Salmans, Mary Shupe, Boyd
Sloane. Dorothy Thompson.
John Thompson, Sr .. Seth
Thompson , Mrs. Gary Tilley
and daughter. Charles
Truglio, Ricky Yost.
Births - Mr. and Mrs.
William Christina, a son,
Jackson ; Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Lanier, a daughter,
Pt. Pleasant ; Mr. and Mrs.
Dwight Lloyd, a son, Oak
Hill.

FRIGIDAIRE
Quality comes in many
ways

59 Court Street
Gallipolis, 0.
Will Be Closed
Week of July 2
thru July 9
Open Mon., July 10
Employees Vacation

$129

Court rules Bakke
must be admitted

home
wouldandincrease
ployment
boost emthe ". , . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -. .
economy in the village.
Attendin g the dinner
meeting were George Ingels,
president ; Edna Wilson ,
secretary ; Alwilda Werner ,
treasurer ; John Werner, Mr.
and Mrs. Edison Baker, Mr.
and Mrs. Richard Owen , and
Judy Owen .

OSCARS
RESTAURANT

(Continued from 1111• 1)
Carter's power to Increase
import fees on oil.
The president bad hoped to
use the import fees as a
weapon to force action on his
14-month-old energy
package. He particularly had
hoped to have some indication from the lawmakers
before he flies to BoM for a
state visit and economic
swnmit, July 13-17.
.
Carter has stressed that the
United States is the only
industrialized nation in the
world that does not have an
• energy policy. He blames
some of the nation's ills,
including inflation and the
decreasing value of the
dollar.. on the failure of
Congress to come to grips
with an energy program.
Domestic inflation and ·
plans for the Bonn meeting
were certain to be at the top
of
the agenda of a meeting
Bernard Bultz, president of the CIC, and Mary
today with Vice Presdient
Hobstetter; back, Bruce Pinkney and Hank Cleland.
Walter Mondale; Treasury
Secretary Michael
95
:;.;.;.;.;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: Blumenthal; William Miller,
chairman of the Federal
Reserve Board; budget
ADDITIONAL FUNDS
Model2087
director
James Mcintyre,
As a · result of action
taken by the Ohio and chief economic adviser
Legislature Meigs County Charles Schultze.
On his journey to Germany,
Schools wlll be receiving
additional money over and Carter also will visit the
above what has been Berlin Wall and greet
I
allocated according to a American troops stationed in
admitted, the university
report received from the Frankfurt.
Before closing shop at the
conceded it could not prove
office of Senator Oakley
White House this week, the
he still would have been
Colllns:
barred had there .been no
Eastern wlll receive president may &amp;Mounce a
minority admission program.
$88,353.30, Meigs new system of classifying
Because of this, Powell
$104,794.60 and Southern top-secret government
documents. Akey point in the
said, Bakke's admission must
$98,706.65.
announcement will be the
be upheld.
;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;.;.;.;::
designation of those who will
But despite the technicality
EUREKA E.S.P.
be allowed to label a
on this particular case, the
Model2087
document as classified.
court said overwhelmingly
• Six position Dial A-Nap 0
Carter also is sending
that the university had every
has precise seltlngs for
Senate Democrat Leader
maximum power on
right to take ethnic (Continued from paae 1)
every carpet-even
background
into have been sent to the Robert Byrd to Europe
problem
shags
consideration in future National Center for Disease during the holiday recess on a
• Powerful 6·amp motor
mission
to
look
presidential
admissions.
• All-metal Vlbra-Groomer
Control in Atlanta. Marshall
• Wide bright headlight
said it would be six weeks into NATO policies and
confer
with
foreil(n
leaders.
•
Dual Edge Kleener
before resul~s are known.
• King-size top-filling
The physician and the
dust bag
victim's husband asked that
•
8-piece
tool 'kit, model
BAND WILL PRACTICE
her
name
be
withheld
from
2677,
optional
at
I
RACINE
Southern
additional cost.
publication.
'Avefage Ftg ure
daughters, Mrs. Burl (Edna )
Characterized by fever, IAJcal band practice will be
held
Monday
from
9
a.
m.
to
Davis, Damascus, Ohio; Mrs. muscular pains and skin
Home Furnishings
Dept.
Doris Amick, Kent, Ohio; eruptions, Rocky Mountain 10 :30 a. m. at the high school
in
Racine.
Junior
and
senior
tsl
Floor
Mrs. Joe tRuth) Kim, Lan- spotted fever is caused by a
caster , and Mrs. Lucille Carr, rick ettsia , transmitted to band members are also to
report at 9 a. m. on Tuesday
Alfred, 14 grandchildren and man by some ticks.
at the high school.
18 great-grandchildren .
Funeral &lt;liervices will be
held Friday at I p. m. at the
Hughes Funeral Home with
MARGUERITE'S SHOES
the Rev . Richard Thomas
officiating. Burial will be in
Athens Co unt y Memory
The Meigs County Unit of
Gardens. Friends may call at the American Cancer Society
the funeral home on Thur- will hold a board meeting
sday from 2to 4 and 7 to 9.
June 29 at 8 p. m. at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. Frances Helmick,
vestigating officer, an auto R.N., Cleveland, will be the
driven by Albert D. Hill, 71, guest speaker. Mrs. Helmick
Racine , was foll owing a is Director of Professional
vehicle operated by Cecil W. Education of ACS of the Ohio
Roseberry, 23, Racine, on 124. Division .
The report states that
Any one interested in
Roseberry suddenly applied helpin g with the ca ncer.
his brakes, and stopped on society or just wanting to find
the roadway. The Hill auto out more about what the
struck the RoSI!berry vehicle Meigs County Unit is doing is
causing moderate damage to wel come to attend .
both autos.
There were no injuries.
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
STARTS THURSDAY, JUNE 29 9 AM
Roseberry was cited for
Two
patients
were
taken
to
improper stopping.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
by
the
Middleport
Emergency Squad Tuesday
evening. They were Rhonda
SQUAD CALLED
The Pomeroy Emergency Daley , Route I, Cheshire, and
Squad ws ca lled to High St. , Mary Bostic, North Second
Middleport, at I :57 p. m. Ave., Middleport.
Values To 523.00
Tuesday for Mrs. Albert
Ebersbach who was taken to
To
PR.
Holzer Medical Center.

Taking pride in the products they
build is a way of life at Frigidaire.
You have the feeling that they have
always done their very best to offer
you, the customer, dependable
· appliances that are stylish and
designed with you in mind.

Middleport, 0 .

BAKER
FURNITURE
- __..,_...,_

a substantial interest that
legitimately may be served
by a properly devised
admissio ns program
involving the competitive
consideration of race and
ethnic origin. "
And four justices joined to
say
that
in
their
interpretation the decision
"affirms the constitutional
power of federal and state
to
act
government
affirmatively to achieve
equal opportunity for all."
After the California courts
had ruled Rakke must be

Woman

,--------------------------1

:
1

Area Deaths

ELLEN NEWLAND
Ellen Newland, 78, 24
Hickory Street, Athens, died
this morning at University
Hospital, Columbus.
Mrs. f\lewland was born at
Coolville, the daughter of the
late Oliver and Mary Carsons
Lemasters. She was also
preceded in death by three
sisters and two brothers.
She was a retired cook
formerly employed at
Buckeye Cafeteria and Berry
Hotel in Athens.
She is survived by four

Two wrecks
investigated
by Ohio Patrol
The Gallia -Meigs Post,
Highway Patrol, investigated
two accidents Tuesday.
Officers were called to the
scene of a one-car mishap at
6:40 p. m. on SR 588, fivetenths of a mile west of Bob
McCormick Rd .
According to the patrol,
Mary A. Martin, 58,
Pomeroy, was eastbound on
588 when she reached for an
object on the seat of the car.
Martin lost control of the
vehicle, passed off the right
side of the roadway , and ran
into a ditch .
Martin was uninjured. The
auto incurred minor damage.
No citation was issued.
At 10:15 p. m., officers
investigated an accident on
SR 124 , one and three-tenths
of a mile west of Racine.
According to the in-

!

ELBERFELDS
IN POMEROY

Meigs cancer
unit to meet

SPRING AND SUMMER
CLEARANCE

at

AUDITIONS-NATURALIZERS
-JOLENE-VOGUE
DRESS CASUAL &amp;SANDALS

'7" •12"

MEETS FRIDAY
Ohio Valley Grange 261'2
Letart Falls, will meet at the
hall Friday at 8 p. m.
Members . of Co lumbia
Grange will attend.

ONE GROUP

LADIES SHOES

•soo

PR.

ONE GROUP

FASHION YARDAGE

LADIES &amp; CHILDRENS
$300
SHOES

OR

PR.

Fall Fabric.'i

2 ssoo
PR.

•PLAIN, PLAID
HEATHER
WOOL BLEND
•60" PLAIN OR
PRINTED CHALLIS
•60" TERRY

GROUP

MENS WEYENBERG
DRESS SHOES

'15"

PR.

ONE GROUP

•60" SURALINE

Shop our Summer Sale Fabrics. A good
selection of 45" cotton and polyester blend.

lfl OFF.

FABRIC SHOP
Pomeroy , 0 .

CHILDREN'S
KEDS-TENNIS SHOES
Starllre diamonds br ing ·
you guaranteed line quality ,
beautifully mounted on · t 4K
yellow or white gold .. with
permanen· registration

GJ!.C!'
m 1. Mlln, Pomeroy

'400
ONE TABLE

MISCELLANEOUS
ITEMS ............. 96'

MARGUERITE'S SHOES
Betty Ohlinger
102 E. Main St.

Pomeroy, o.

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