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                  <text>12 _The

Dail~ Sentmel, ~cidleport-P001eroy, 0 ., Wednesday ,Jul~_l2· ~!!-----------------,--,...--- 1

Truck-sale authorized ! ·

Meigs
County
Com· · surplus equipment from the I
missioners Tuesday . night U. S. Government Army
. SUSAN PAYNE
.
aQthorized Wesley Buehl, Depot.
Susan
Martin Payne, 78, Ft.
Also meeting with com··
County Engineer, to sell a
William,
formerly of West
1972 dump truck to Iledlord missioners was Arthur Columbia,0 .,died
Tuesday in
TownShip Trustees at the Sylvester discussing JandfiJJ
Ft.
William.
same price another 1972 truck operations. It was agreed to
She was born June 2, 1900 in
brings at public auction· to be order two new tires for the
Bypro
, Ky ., to the late
landfill truck.
held -'Ug. 5.
,
James
Roush,
com- Isadora and Alice Hall
Buehl also discussed the
Hatfield.
missioner,
reported
storage
summer work program and
Survivors. Include her
insurance on county garage space is nee.ded for husband
, George W. Payne ;
automobile titles issued by
building.
one
daughter
, Mrs. Irene
Richard Jones, com- the Clerk of Courts office. It Slone, Ft . William : four
missioner, urged Buehl to file was decided to use ' space in
a request and application for the back hall of the court- grandchildren and eight
.house to build storage files. great-grandchildren .
Funeral services wi11 be
Attending were Henry
held
Thursday, 1:30 p.m. in
We11s, Jones and Roush ,
Book 29 persons commissioners and Martha the Foglesong Funeral Home
with the Rev. George
•
Chambers, acting clerk.
o((iciating . Burial
Hoschar
Twenty':'nine arrests were
will
be
in
Kirkland
Memorial
made by the Middleport
Gardens:
Police Department during
Friends may call at the
June with eight charges being
funeral
home from 7 to 9 p.m.
· dropped according to the
today
.
report of Police Chief J. J.
Cremeans.
Of the total arrests, six
persons were charged with
CARL E. McDADE
driving while intoxi cated:
Carl Edward McDade, 71,
•
three for speeding: two each
214 Pop lar St., Point
for ' running a stop sign;
Pleasant , .died Tuesday ·
reckless operation of a motor
New
telephone
books
are
morning in Pleasant Valley
vehicle a nd damaging
scheduled
to
arrive
this
week
Hospital.
propert y. There was one
He was a retired employe
arrest each for driving under in the Pomeroy - Middleport
General
Telephone
Co.
area,
'
suspension;- hit-skip ; petty
theft ; menacing threats and of Ohio announced today.
J. L. Parker of Athens,
assault and battery.
custnmer
service manager,
During June, parking
said
new
directories
will go to
meter collections totaled $876
some
5,700
customers
in the
and the police cruiser was
Several new community
exchanges
of
U!tart
Falls,
driven 4,073 miles.
Pomeroy · Mtddleport, Port· . participation 'projects in·
land, Racine and Rutland. eluding a golf tournament
Any customer not receiving a and a " "haunted house" for
directory by July 21 should HaUoween were discussed
notify the comjlBny :s service when the Meigs County
Jaycees met Monday at the
office, Parker said.
In the new books, the Meigs Inn with Dave Jenkins,
numbers for customer ser- president, in charge. .
Bill Hensler was introduced
vice and repair ha ve been
by
John Kauff as a new
combined into a new seven·
digit listing , 592-6626. An member and a discussion was
Athens number, it can be held on the initiation of a
ca lled toiJ-free by dialing "! " "communication dylUlmics"
first. Another change in the program for the mem- .
directories is new number bershl·p. s1·x members in·
service. lt appears as 992-4873 dicated interest in attending
instead of 411.
Parker said the books also Actions filed
Effec tive rate with com ·
include
information on the
pounding 6.66 per cent .
company 's Phone Mart at 16 to end' marriages ,
Ninety day i nterest penaltv
W. Washington St. in Athens.
if
w i thdrawn
before
Phone . Mart is a retail
m•tur hy date.
Two suits for divorce and
operation that enables one dissolution have been
customers to shop for phones, filed in Meigs County Com·
take them hom e and plug mon Pleas Court.
them into pre-installed jacks.
Filing. for divorce were
Adding an instrument this Barbara· A. Grover, Rt. 4,
way costs only haU if the Pomeroy, against Dalton B.
special jacks are already in Grover, same address; Gale
"The A1hens C.ounty
place, Parker said.
·
Roland Relay , Reedovtlle,
5avlnts lo LD•n co .
against Suml Miyazato
w. Ma in St.
Pomerov. Ohio
Heiny, Okinawa, Japan.
MEET FRIDAY
Di vorces . granted . were
Th e Southern
Band
Boosters will meet in special Donna J. Reed from Ralph L.
session Friday at 7:30p.m. m Reed ; Arthur Dillon Roush
..
the high school cafeteria to' frol)l Claudia Lynn Roush:
approve the 1976 fiscal year Walter Voss, Jr., from Una
.
Mae Voss.
budget.
Marriages dissolved were
Thomas Randall Cross and
Phyliss Jean Cross and Terry
SCaggs and Mary Scaggs.

Telephone
books are

•
arnvmg·

!

Area Deaths

of the C&amp;O Railroad · and
attended the Pine Grove ·and
Pleasant Valley Churches.
He was born Feb. 26, 1907 in
Mason , to the late George and
Rose RouSh McDade. He was
preceded in death . liY four
children and two grand·
children.
.
Survivors include his wife,
Mace! Denny McDade; two
sons, Owens Lee McDade,
Pont Pleasant; Wayne McDade, Middleport ; four
daughters, Mrs. Sally Sue
Nibert, Mason ; Mrs. Patricia
Jordan, Mt . ..Uto ; Mrs. Ruth
Jordan, Point Pleasant: Mrs.
Wanda Jordan, Leon; three
sisters, Mrs. Uzzle RoiJins,
Letart ;
Mrs.
Myrtle
Matheny, Leon; Mrs. Nellie
j!elle, Morgantown ; 10
grandchildren and one greatgrandchild.
NEW RACK - A new wash rack, being Installed near
Funeral services will be
the cattle show ring by members of tbe Meigs C9unty Fair
held Friday 2 p.m., , Pine ..
Board, is Showed in part here. Making up the committee.
Grove Cemetery, Leon with
the Rev . Hennan Jordan and
Rev . Ja ck Finnicum of·
ficiating. Burial will be in the
church cemetery.
Friends may call at the
Crow-Husaell Funeral Home
CHARLESTON, W.Va .
EsaeLStyn said the petitions
today after 7 p.m.
(UP!) -A member of a top will be considered by the IEB
Urilted Mine Workers panel at the Denver meeting "for
slated to consider the recall proper conatitutional actlcn
of union President Arnold to make sure that aU legal
Miller later this month says steps have been taken."
the panel shouldn't be
Lamb, a member of the
involved.
executive
board of UMW
the August all-state meeting
An article in today's edition
District 6 which covers
at Maurmee.
of the Charleston Gazette
Ohio and . the
Those attend ing ' the quotes Bill Lamb, Cadiz, Eastern
northern panhandle of West
meeting were Dave Jenkins, Ohio a member of the ,VIrginia said recall "is' a
Dave Fox, John Kauff, B\ll Inie~national
Executive democratic procedure which
Hensler, Bob Schmoll, VIC Board, as saying the board is · I believe is the excllL!Ive
Gaul, Greg Gattril, Char!•• without authority under the · property of the ·entire
Wayland, Mike Mullen, Mtke union's constitltution to memberShip, both working
Kelly and Paul Abels. ·
consider the recall, at this and. retired miners."
The next meeting . is
th
ding
Lamb said that when 5
s. to
Scheduled fo r July 24 , point
The inJEBe procee
is expected
percent
of the union's
Monday, at 7 p.m. with a consider the move to oust
membership
requests the
visitation .to follow . New Miller at a meeting in
secretary
•
treasurer
to
members are invited into the
Col
J 1 25
e
Denver,
o.,
on
u
y
.
·
initiate
recail,
he
is
directed
orgamzation an d anyon
The Miners for Recall,
interested may contact any of
sed in Marm t c1 ·
't to take the next step - which
d bo
ba
e,
aUJIBI
the members name a ve. has
gathered
31,000 is sending out petitions to
each local union.
signatures on petitions
Lamb
said,
"the
calllng for Miller's remoyal . constitution does not saY he
from office, and sent them to Shall place it before the IEB.
Secretary-Treasurer Bill In fact, it does not even imply
Esselstyn.
that he Should." .
The district representative
. said the only constltutuional
duty of the IEB in the recall is
to schedule an election if 30
Vetera1111 Memorial H01pltal
percent of th the union's
ADMISSIONS - Dennis
membership
signs the
Palmer, Racine ; John '
petitions
within~
days of the
Martin, Sr., Pomeroy; Paul
time
they
are
mailed
by the
VanMeter, Middleport;
Lydia Ebersbach, Pomeroy;
..Uien Lewis, Letart, W. Va. ;
..Uvis 1...tlwson, Langsville ;
and Woodrow ZwiiJing ,
Middleport VIllage Council
Syracuse.
DISCHARGES - Mildred expendable funds as of ~une
Barnett, Gra ce Louden, 30, totaled $61 ,868 .13, acEleven persons . forfeited
Loretta Imboden, Debra cording to the monthly report
Spurlock, William Hart, of Clerk-Treasurer Gene bond in Pomeroy Mayor
.
Clarence · Andrews' court
Myrtle Wilson, Dorothy Grate.
However,
the
total
is
Tuesday.
Wright, Ollie Buchanan ,
misleading.
since
$10,294.52.
Forfeiting bonds were Leo
Teresa Collins, and Lura
for
street
light
funds,
Altier,
Corning, speeding,
Swiger.
$8,647.32 for ·street resur- US ; Arthu'r · Davidson,
facing proJects and other Athens, speeding, $31 ;
SQUAD RUN
miscellaneous amounts are Samuel Murphy, Parkers·
The Pomeroy Emergency
Holzer MedlCIII CeDler
included in the total.
burg, W. Va., open fiash, $50;
Squad made one run
(Dlubarcea July 111
Receipts,
disbursements
Burdell
McKinney, Mid·
Tuesda y. At 6:41 p.m. the
Carla Aeiker, R.Jchard and the balance of each&lt;&gt;! the dleport , intoucation, $)00;
sq114d went to the Donahue Baley, Alta Bates, Charles
as of June 30 include: Debra Holsinger, Racine,
residence on State Route 143 BeaVer, Norman Berry, funds
general,
$410,245.53, unassured clear distance,
for Mrs. Donahue, 93, who
Ruby
Carder,
Bonnie
Conley,
$7,386.44:
' $25,777.10; $30; and Thomas Samsel,
was suffering from a possible
Robert
Cornwell,
Brian
Deal,
cemetery,
$1
,006, $876.06 , Mason, speedfng, $30.
hea rt condition . She was Dewey Elliott ; Rodney
$1
,266.85;
fire
· Also, Carl Alley, Letart
taken to Veterans Memorial Ewing, Webster Hodge, Mrs. $450 , $210.95 , equipment,
$1,269
.37
;
Falls, open flask, $50 ; Harvey
Hospital.
Gary Jones and son, Mrs. swimming pool, $3,432.88 , Hoffner, Gallipolis, speeding,
WiJiiam Maynard and $2,582.91, $10,457.59; planning $25; Cheryl !..ish, M880n,
daughter , Sanely McCain, commission , no receipts, running a stop sign, $30;
CEREMONIAL SERVICE
Myers , Donald · $159.77; $209 .16; street Frederick Lee, Athens,
The Mary Shrine No. 37 Hayward
PhiJJips, Beverly Queen, maintenance, $6,002 .93, speeding, $38, and reckless
Order of White Shrine of Stephanie Rees, Mary Shropoperation, $250; and · Carl
Jerusalem wiJJ hold a shire, Gladys Tribble, Dock $3 '355.64, $10,828.18 ; federal
.
revenue
sharing,
no
receipts,
Martin, Jackson, speeding,
ceremonial meeting Friday
Watts,
Mar)'
Weethee,
Donna.
$754.57,
$10,798.90;
anti
$30.
at the Pomeroy Mason ic Wyatt.
recession· asslstance, no
Temple at 8 p.m.
receipts, $78 .13; $1,260 .98.
Two persons were fined and
Receipts for the month five forfeited bond In Mid·
totaled $21,137.34 while dleport Mayor . Fred Hoff·
disburs ements
totaled man's court Tuesday._
$15,404.47.
I'«&gt;LVERINE•
Fined were Ephriam V.
The
board
of
public
affairs
Herdman,
22, Pomeroy ,
8" WATERPROOF
obligated
funds
as
of
June
30,
disorderly
manor,
$25 and
BOOT
totaled $216,173.86. Receipts, costs; and Buddy McKinney,
• Maple, w1terprool cowhide
disbursements and the 61, Middleport, disorderly
• Resists Kids, water.
balance of each fund, conduct, $25 and costs, .
alkalis ond sobs
respectively,
Include :
Forfeiting bood were Barry
• Cushion insole ond steel
sanitary sewer, $4,062 .13, E. Adkins, 25, Charleston, W.
arch suppo~
$4,189.76, $27,133.90; sanitary. Va., D.W.J., $350; Charles D.
•
Leather
lined
lor
comlo~
sewer
escro\" , $1 ,545, no GiUispi, 25, Hurricane, W.
0 3394 (mw lateO)
• Non·sNp, oil P!GOI
disbursements, $169,436.09 ; Va., disorderly manor •. $50;
Durables sole ond heel
water, $7,111.58, $6,340 .73, Robert E. Bresenham,_ 33,
$12,312 .41; water meter Gallipolis, speeding, $27 ;
l'«&gt;l.VERI"E''''
trusts, $219, $188.10, $7,291.26. Charles E. Lee, 43, Gallipolis,
10" WATERPROOF
Receipts totaled $12,V37.71 speeding, t2'7; and Minnie M.
WELLINGTON
and disbursements, $10,718:59 Brown , 81 , Middleport,
• Tan, waterproof cowhide
for the month.
failure to yield, $25.
• Resists acids, woter ,
alkolis ond san ·
• Leather lined lor comlo~
'
'
• Cushicm Insole and steel
shonk arch support
• Non·sli!l, oil proof
Ourabtes sole ond heel
James P. Cq.nde, D.O. announces the

INTEREST

On Certificates
Of Depmit
sl,OOO Minimum
1 Yr. Term .

,.e-SA
~v

FSIIC

_....__

_

ENROLL NOW
roR

FALL TERM
AT

I·

GALLI_POLIS
BUSINESS COLLEGE

· Choose an exc iting Career in one of these
success proven fields :

•EXECUTIVE SECRETARY
•SECRETARIAL
•BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
• JR. ACCOUNTING
•G EN ERAL OFFICE

•

Financial Assistance Available
Approved for Veterans

51. No. 75-02-0472 B

FOR INFORMATION

CALL 446 4367

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OR WRITE :

fo-ALLIP()u5iu~N1sscotr~i1

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Stolt_ Zip--:1

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statement

COURT
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GALLIPOLIS
-BUSINESS COLLEGE

me with more lnformal•oni

Ml.ddle,nort
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Accredited by the Accredit i ng Commission of .the
Association .of lndepehdent Colleges and Schools.

1 ( 1 PIHst prov ide

NEWS

I
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Begin September 18, 1978

I P .O. lox m
1 CO.ttlfl"tls, OH . 4563 t
I .
··

HOSPITAL

IIll••····~

DAY or EVENING CLASSES

II
I

I
I

03396

Complete Selection of All

Shoes

I ~~;;s SHOES, INC;
I
I

"Middle of Upper Block in Pomeroy"
fa .m.-5 p.m.
Mon. thru Thurs. a .s.t.
f a.m... p.m. l'rt .

·

In charge ~ the project are Jolm Rose, Benny Slawter,
and Herman Carson.

Panel shouldn't be ·involved

Projects dis_cussed

6~%

$1.3 billion recreation
on way to U.S. Senate

I

I
I
~

I·····-·-·
CloMIIS.Wy

NOTICE

change of his oHice from Mulberry
Heights, Pomeroy, Ohio to 306 North
,Second Avenue, Middleport, Ohio
effective July 17th, 1978.
Monday; 9:00-12:00 - 1:00-4: 00. 6:30-8: 30
Tuesday: 9:00-12:00-1:00-4:00
Wednesday: Out
Thursday: 9:00-12:00 - 1:00-4:00
Friday: 9: 00-12:00-1:00-4:00
Saturday: 9;00-17:00 ·

I

secretarytreasitrer,
. But Miller baa -.Jd he
wanta the IEB to rule on the
validity of the charges
against him, lnlcudlng
allegations he negotiated a
bad contract and withheld
news of pending Clllbacka In
miners.' medical benefits

r-&amp;;ai-1

'prior to his 197'1 bid for reelection .
Frank Powers, a Miller
aide, said the review by the
IEB is required becauae the

! Calendar I
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT Amateur
Gardeners, 6:30 p .m.
Wednesday at the Mason
Community Park. Picnic fur
members and their families
and-&lt;Jr guests. Each me er to
take a covered dish, a place
setting and a drink .
PO M E R 0 y .
MIDDLEPORT
LIONS
CI,.UB, nuun Wednesday at
the Meigs Inn . l\11 Lions urged to ~ttend .
MONTHLY MEETING ,
Southern Ohio Garden
Tractor Pullers Club, 8 p.m.
Wednesday at Kautz home in
Chester. Discussion to be held.
on upcoming fair tractor
pulls.
SOUTHEASTERN OHIO
Garden Tractor Pullers
Wednesday 8.p.m. at home of
Dale Kautz. Plana will be
made for Fair pulls. Anyone
interested invited to attend.

~~~ of petitions, containing
different charges, and the
constitution is amliguoua en
the recall.
He said the UMW president
usually Interprets - the
cOnstitution, subject to veto
by the IEB, but It WOUld be
inappropriate for Miller to
rule oo questions Involving
himself.
H: John Rogers, a New
Martins ville attorney
working with the recall
miners , said Miller has
deriled hll request to appear
before the IEB as the group's
law)rer.
Urilon sources quoted by
the newspaper 11ld it wu
unUkely that the IEB would
plan to proceed wltb the
recall because a rnajcrlty of
the board is ccnsidered proMiller.
But even if the IEB agreed
to proceed, the sources said
getting 30 pereent of the
union 'a membenlhip to sign
the petitions for a special
electlm could be dilllcult
bec.uae of the relative
harmmy In the coalfields. ·

e

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
'fllursday, Julv 13, 1978

amendment wo~Jd name the
Indiana Dunes National
Lakeshore after .the late Sen.
Paul Douglas.
Burton . called the 341-&lt;il
vote on the bill the
"environmmental vote of the
decade /' with the exception

EXTENDED FORECAST
Sat urda y through
Mooday: Fair Saturda y
and a chance of afternoon
-or evening showers and

thundershowers Sunday
and Monday. H.Jghs will be
in the 60s and tows wilt be
In the m'id or upper 60s.

en tine

·of a bill setting aside millions
of acres oJ Alaska as natlonal
parks and for other
conservation purposes.

"We passed the only part of
the · presiden t's
urban
package that may be passed
this year -

urban parks,''

said Burwn.
The largest port ion of the
bill $650 million, would go for
' hin g
' s
matc
fund
for
of
city
rehabilitati on
recreation fa cilities.

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 29, No. 62

~ain si!ed~R!~havew

Union organizing
CHARLESTON,
W.Va. union's top panel meets July want to stop ' 1·
.
Ohi
respond to that..:This has got
(UPI) United Mine 25 in Denver, Colo.
.
B!IJ ~mb, Cadtz,
. 0 ' wstop somewhere."
Workers President Arnold
According to an arttcle Internationa l
Execultve
Miller said the wp panel at
Millet' said Wednesday that published in today's editions Board member from Dtstn~t the Denver meeting won 't be
union ocganizing, not his of the Charleston Gazette, 6 in northern West Vtrgtn ta discussi ng the union 's
ouster will be the main item Miller said, "I want to put and Ohio, satd m a newspaper finances which according to
on th~ agenda when the that controversy to rest . I report Tuesday that thed IEB some r~ports are troubled.
has no busmess const ermg
.
'd
·d the
the recall petitions at the The unton prest en1 sat
Den
ti
balance sheets wtll be
A::~:·~~!i Miners for ·addres sed at a special
Recall , based in Marmet, convenllon, wh1ch ts at least a
1 · to ha e sent 31 000 year away·
caiRI
v
•
Turning to other matters,
stgnatures to Secretary- Miller noted the ca lm in the
Tr easurer BtU Ess~lstyn,
· Jfi Ids d 'd it was the
who announced earller the c_oa te . an 1 sat . . .
NEW YORK ( UPI ) - Six suspects have been arrested for
petitions will be discussed at ftrst mtners vacatton m a
beating former Olympic ice skating champion Dick -Button and
.
long tune when mel)lbers of
th e IEB meet mg.
.
I I
C b'
five others in Central Park last week.
· Miller said he' doesn 't his home ?"a on a '"
·~ Five of tbe suspects were arrested Wednesday and
intend to remove him"!'lf as Creek have n I been aff(lCted
charged With assault and robbery. A sixth was charged early chairman of the IEB when by a wtldcat strtke on etther
today . ."They were just getting high and drinking bee,r .and
the reca11 que stion is end of the tw~w~k penod.
.• wanted to beat some people up," said Detective James D Net II.
dd sed
He satd arbrttatton proceea The
res union
· president said, din gs, in which miners
"Some of those petitions were present work grievances, are
..-~ a\ -.......-keta. "down to almost nothing ."
.
~('UI'I) - Olllo Audllar Tlwa
,._

i'tlfll.)~r_h_e_w_o_r_ld_T_o_d_a_y_.
Six suspects arrested

Ferguson to reject voucher

ayw

a .-...• l'dl''m lllld wtth hll olllce
by state Schoo Super intendent Franklin Walter.

m=e~s
-

••

(of

ire"tiM

Weather

l

'*"

HI."
~·'1young
Of'tt 18 IJ!at .
guy•,

the ones who went into the
mines two or three years ago,
they've learned the hard
way ."

In other areas, Miller said
Showers
and
thun- . he is trying to stir up interest
dershowers tonight. Lows in with federa l officials lor
mid 60s. Showers end ing coalfield housing and is
WASHING'I'ON ( UPI ) - The House Agriculture Friday and becoming panly atlempting . to drum up
Committee narrowly approved a biU esta blishing a . cloudy by afternoon, with membership in the UMW
commission w review preserva tion of agricultural land, but hi ghs near 80.
credit union.
refused to authorize $200 million to fund pilot preservation
projects.
The panel Wednesday passed, 22-19, the stripped-down bill
sponsored by Rep . James Jeffords, R-Vt., after rejecting, 2120, a ~lion authorizing $SO million a year for four years to
fund state and local pilot projects testing methods of
preserving fannland.
·By Judy Owen
record is what J ona than
"Orion " - they 've got the beli eves is the best on the di sc
muslc in them and ilow l wo of - "Just Like Being Born
their
favorite numbers are on Aga in." James likes side two
SM.T LAKE CITY (UPI) - Riders re-enacting the pony
a
recO
rd as well.
express ride from Salt Lake City to Sacramenw, Calif., beat
Brothers
Jonathan and
the U. S. Postal Service in delivering a lirst-dass letter.
. 'l'he pony express run began July I at the Utah State James Scott of Pomeroy,
Fairgrounds with riders from Utah, Nevada and Californta performing under the name
"Orion" - the great warri or
following part of tbe original trail.
.
constellation, cut their first 45
rpm at Lost Nation Sound in
Guysville on April 30. Copies
wASHING'I'ON ( UPI) - More jail terms and less of the recording were
probation are needed to scare off potential white-collar released recently to area
crim.Jn8la, says a top Justice Department official .
radio stations such as WCOL
"We must Increase the cost of such crimes by ensQfing
in Columbus, WXIL in
punlsiunent more severe than only the possible loss of
Pa rkersburg, WOUB in
reputation and community standing," Deputy Attorney
Athens, WJEH in Gallipolis,
General Benjamin Clvlletti said Wednesday .
and Meigs County's own
WMPO, pushing them toward
loca l, if not statewide, fame.
'Tapes have also been sent
UNIVERSITY HEIGHTS, Ohio ( UPI ) - Foul play is to top recording studios feared by Pollee In the disappearance of auxiliary policeman Warner Brothers and Capital
Phillip Jakubowicz, 25, Ul)lversity Heights.
to name a few.
Sgt. CJ\arles F.laher said Jakubowicz was last seen
James, who represents
Salarday sitting alooe on ~ bench at Severance Center "Orion" in busin~ss .transShopping Center In neighboring Cleveland Heights. His car actions and public relations
was found in the shopping center's parking lot Wednesday activities, said the studios
CUTS RECORD - Jim
OIOrning.
listen to the tapes, and, If they Scott, . pictured here,
are sufficiently impressed recenlly cut a record along
with the music , · they with his older brother,
negotiate
a contract.
Jonatbao. RecordJnc under
TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI)- Judson Hildebrant, 23, Defiance,
"The
big
_studios pick up Ihe name "Orton", the
waaln crltieal condition at a Toledo hospital early today after
are ' both
being lhot aboard · a Greyhound bus Wednesday by an about 25 percent of the groups brothers
who
send
tapes
in
this
way,"
of
Meigs High
graduates
unidtintlfled man who fied oo foot, pollee said.
,
he
says.
The
Scotts
are
School.
The
Scotts
classify
Mthorltiea said Hlld,brant and a friend were en.route to
to
record
on
·a
wenhoping
as
easy
their
music
Cleveland where Hildebrant was to enlist in the Air Force. ·
known label someday.
llstenlog-roclr..
On si&lt;le one of their first

Ag bill barely passes_

LEARNING TO IJVE IN NA TIJRE - Meigs Girl
Scouts recently spent the week at Ca mp Kiashuta to Jearn
about the great outdoors. Pictured are Tuesday's Banner
winners for the best all around unit program on "Animal
!.and". They're pictQfed on the swinging bridge which

Local group records

Riders beat postal service

More jail tenns recommended

Foul play feared by police

Model2087

Bus passenger said critical

!UR!KA I.S.P.
Model2087
.
• Six poeltton 0/o/ A-Hop •
. haa preottt 1tHinvo lor
· maximun, power on
l'tery carpel-even
problem ohlgo
• Powerful t-emp motor
• Alt·mlllal Vlb11-6roomor
•I Dual
Wiele brtght hNdltght
Edgo Kluntr
• KlnQ-tlze top-lllltng
duot bag
• 8-!llece tool kit, mO&lt;Iel
2d17, DPIIOJ)&amp;t It
oddlttOIIII coot.
•AwerlOt ,lgu111

HAVING SURGERY
Charles Bmlt~l-- a, WI·
derwent lllflll')' Ulll IDOf-·
nlnl at UDiv.ntl,. Holpllal in
Colwnblll. He II the 11111 of
Mra .
Sherrie
Smith,
Pomeroy.

River System.
The House a&lt;iapled amend·
ments to name a New Or J-eans
park in honor of pirate Jean
Laffite who helPed Andrew
Jackson at the Ba ttle of New
Orleans.
A
se co pd

•

" Walter piaced the funds in a special escrow account after
U.S. . District Court Judge Frank Battisti ordered the
establiShment of a special fund to.be used for the purchase of
450 scbool buses for Cleveland school desegregation .

GET LICENSE
Marriage licenses were
issued to Thomas Edward
Wilson , Sr., 23, RD, Pomeroy
and Cheryl Sue Smith, 11,
Pomeroy; Dennie Wayne
Benedum, 27, Coolville, and
Cindy Sue DIU, 19, Rt. I, Long
Bottom.

HERE FRIDAY
Ken Bower, a prominent
national caller from Hemet,
California, will be at Royal
Oak Park Friday, Julf 14, for
a Western Squa_re o.nce.
· Sponsored by the "Square·
Naden," the event will take
place from 1-11 p.m.
AU Wettem Square Dancera are cordially Invited.

contraCtor for the $17,584jo)l. Completion is expected by
the end of the month, weather permitting , acc\irding to
Bob Wingett, administrator of the grants for the viiJage.
Workers are Shown here laying the first of three courses of
asphaltic concrete.

establishment of the National
Park System."
The largest portion · of the
biJI, $650 million, would go for
matching
funds
for
rehabilitation
of
city
recreation facilities.
"We passed tbe only part of
the
president's urban
package that may be passed
thls year - urban parks,' ..,
said Burton.
The House eliminated
nearly 1 million acres from
parklands proposed for
designa tion as "wilderness"
areas, and sllelved for. a oneyear study a proposal to
designate 300 miles of the
upper Mississippi River m
Minnesota' as part of the
national Wild and Scenic

~rabavesentin ~ver~

TIIURSDAY
.IMPORTANT MEETING,
Eastern Hogh School Future
Homemakers of America,
7:30 p.m. Thursday at home
of Mrs. Kestner . Anyone
having questions or needing
directions, call Cindy Pitzer,
949-2083.
ROCK
SPRINGS
GRANGE, Thursday, 8 p.m.
a( the hail. Inspection wiJI be
held.
SATURDAY
PUBLIC AUCTION
beginning · 10 :30
a.m .
Saturday at Junior Fair
Building, Rock Springs
Fairgrounds, by the over 30
Meigs County 4-H Club to
raise funds for the Canter's
Cave 4-H improvement fund.
Auctioneer, I. 0. McCoy ;
refreshment stand operating
during sale,
SUNDAY
. COUNTY-WIDE PRAYER
meetlr!g, Sunday, 2 p.m. at
Hazel Community Chutch
with Glen Bissell leader.

VBS SLATED
Daily Vacation Bible
School wUI be held at the
Danville Wesleyan Church
'July 17 through July 21 from
6:30 to 8:30p.m. All chlldren
are welcome. There will also
be an adult clau. R. D.
Brown is the pastor.

TENNIS COURTS BEING CONSTRUCTED Construction of two new tennis courts at the Syracuse
Municipal P~rk began this week with HUD and Bureau of
Outdoor Recreation grant funds paying 90 percent of the
cost. York Construction ~pany of Chauncey . Is the'

WASHINGTON (UPI) The n.3 billion parks and
recreation bill, hailed as the
most important parks
legisiation In year~. is on its ·
way to the Senate.
The biiJ, which lnciudes
much of President Carter's
environmental program, was
approved by the House, 341·
61, Wednesday.
Rep. Phil Btirton, D.Calif.,
. the bill's noor manager' described the vote as the
''enVironmme ntal vote of the
decade," with the exception
of a bill setting aside millions
of acres of land in l\laska .
Wilderness Society official
Celia Hunter caiJed the bill
"the most Important p~~rks
legislation
since
the

. Home Furnloltlflll

.f?'..W
.a REifEl M
NPOMERO~
_..ol;,;,-.;,;,:;;;;;;;;;~'1...__
1

Miss Ullian going on tour

WASHINGToN (UP!)- President Carter's mother, Miss
Ulllan, will go on a European and African tour beginning
Mooday as Carter's emluary:
The White HOUle said her journey to West Africa "will
eliJIIWI the prealdimt'l deep Interest In the problem of world
Iunger, the dllparity betwee11 rich.and poor, and the role of
w0111en In the dl!velopment process,"
.
During her stop In Rome, Mlaa Lillian w!U be presented the
Food and Agrlcult~e Organizatloo'a Ceres. medal.
·

Judge refuses custody
CHIC-'00 (UPI) - -'judge has refused to grant Nobel
Prize • winning author Saul Bellow Custody of his 14-year-old
1011 Daniel.
.
Orcult Court Judge James ~lea Wednesday ordered the
to rt1111in with his mother, Susan Glusman Bellow,
the .uthar'l third wife. Daniel baa been living with his mother
11nct her divorce from Bellow 10 yeara ago. The author haa

tee....-

Iince remarried.

'

- "You Arc."
The recording session took
some 10 hours and fiv e
overdubs when they visited
Lost Nation So und last
''Pring.
Jonathan, a 1973 graduate
of Meigs High School and the
elder brother , does the lead,
rhythm and acoustic guitar
parts as weJI as the lead
vocals. while James, a '75
Mei gs graduate, performs
the bass.
Mike McCallist er of
Parkersburg plays the drums
for "Orion." Davie Akien of
Lost Nation Sound w~ s th e
production engineer.
A thousa nd copies were
made from the master tap;(,'
but only, about 15 have been
distributed, se lec tiv ely, to
date. They haven 't been put
in stores for sale yet, because
the Scotts want to see how the
songs fare over the airwaves
first ,
"Ori on'', classifies its
original music as easy
listening • rQck - "sort of a
cross betwee n Fleetwood

department. "This is war,"

said William J . McNea,
president of the Cleveland
Pol.ice Patrolmen 's
Association. "There Is no
way they are going to fire
policemen in th.Js manner."

Karr· low bidder
Karr Construction of Pomeroy was awarded the general
contract Wednesda y afternoon for construction of the MultiPurpose Health Center near Veterans Memorial Hospital. The
contract , awarded by Meigs County ·Commissioners, totaled
$729,000.
Other bids awarded were mechanical, South · East
Mechanical Piping, $203,517; plumbing, A. J .. Stockmeister,
Inc., $76,313 ; and electrical, Pickermg Electric Company,
inc., $121,000. All bids totaled $1,129,930.
.
Attending the session reconvened from Tuesday mght
were Henry Wells, Richard Jones and J.ames Roush,
commissioners, and Martha Chambers, acting clerk.

:=::::::::;::::::;:::;: :::::;:! ::: '?J :: ::: : :: :: ::: ::::;::::::::==?&gt;==

Two hurt, squad has three runs
The Middleport Police
Department investigated a

Evacuate
•
area agazn

Meigs County Sheriff
James J . Proffitt , reports
officials at the site of the train
derailment at U!tart, W. Va.,
have advised that residimts
Mac and America. "
on the Ohio side of the river
Jonathan and James have near' Letart Fans be
written lyrics and composed evacuated again Thursday
music for abo ut 40 songs In (today ) as a precautionary
addition to "Just Uke Being mea s ure while railroad
Born Again" and " You Are ." crews get the tank cars fllJed
Continued on ·Page 7
with vinyl chloride back on
the tra cks.
In other matters deputies
· are investigating the theft of
a battery and gas cans from a
bOat dock at Sugar Camp
The 1978 ' co unty fair north of Reedsville. Deputies
premium Jist has been are alsO Investigating the
published and is being shooting of a dusk-to-dawn 1
di st ributed for the 115tb light at the Bertha Randolph
annual fair.
residence on SR 124 north of
Closing time for all open ReedsvUie.
cia~ entries will be 4 p. m. on
Sheriff Proffitt said today
Friday , Aug. 12, except the the J . C. Penny bicycle has
horse show and the horse and ' not been claimed.
pu11in g contests. The
A RP 1, Racine, resident
secretary wlJJ be at the fair found the bicycle lying in the
on the ditch along SR 124 last week.
board office
fairgrounds from 10 a. m. to 4 If anyone has a misaing JC
p, m. on Aug. II ·and 12 to Penny boys bike, please
accept open class entries.
contact the sheriff's office to
make identification.

Membership tickets at same rate
Innatlon may hit itrmany, tickets can be purchased at
many directions , but the Sp.encer's Market·; Mid·
Meigs County Fair Board Is dleport Department Store,
holding o~t against it as far Middleport ; New York
as memberShip tickets to the Clothing House, .Green
annual fair are concerned. Lantern, Sugar Run Flour
Membership tickets are Mill, Swisher·Lohse Phar-.
being sold again at the same ma cy, Five Points Grill,
price - $4 each - and they Gloeckner's Restuarant, aU
entitle the purchaser to free in Pomeroy; Miller Brothers'
adm.Jsalon and parking Grocery, Rutland ; Waid
during the entire I.Jve day Cross Sons, . Racine ; Baum
fair. P11rchasen abQ can ; Lumber Co., Chester, and
vote or file for election to the Ni!a Jean Ritchie, Tuppers
board.
·
Plains.
·This year, ,l!'embership

CLEVELAND (UP!, Safety [;!rector James W,
Barrell today started firing
t~ e Cleveland police of·
fleers who refused to patrol
the city's 32 public housing
projects alone, prompting
police union officials to
threaten a strike by the.
1,5 00-plus m e mber

crosses the creek leading to their hillside camp. In the
group are Darla Norris, Juli Nea~e. Regina Nance, Jane
Jett , Trina Reeves, Suzan Thoma , Mandy Reeves, Brenila
Largent, Betty Jo Hunt , Melissa Barker, Kim Cogar and
the unit leader, Patty Woodyard . For story and more
photos see page 5.

three car acc ident at 4:H
p.m . Wednesday · on South
Second Avenue.
A vehicle driven by Virgil
Yarbrough, Rt . I, Racine,
was travciinR north on South
Second when a vehicle drivby Monty L. Dadisman,
Charleston, W. Va ., pulled out
in front of the Yarbrough
vehicle. As a result, the
Yarbrough car st ruck a
parked car owned by Brady
Huffman, 466 S. Second.
Yarbrough and his wife:
Gelma, were ta ken to
Vel'erans Memorial Hospital

by
the
Middleport
E m e r g e n c y S q u a•d .
Da disman was c ited for
failure to yield the right of
way .
At 7:53p. m. the Middleport
E·R squad was called to 642
MiJJ Street for a Weaver boy
who had suffered a laceration
of the head. He was treated
on the scene.
At 8:35 a. m. this morning
the squad transported Jesta
Moulden, New Lima Road,
Rutland ,
to
Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

Resignation Loss set
•
announced .at $1,200
Dr. James P . Conde, ·D.O.
has resigned from the staff of
Veterans Memorial Hospital
as of Ju:y 14, a hospital
spokesman said today.
Dr. Conde resigned by
Jetter on July S and the
hospital's board of trustees
was advised of
the
resignation Wednesday.
Effective Mond ay , Dr .
Conde will move his office to
305 North .Second Ave .,
Middleport, in qua rters
formerly occupied by Dr. J .
J. Davis.

Loss was estimated at
$1 ,200 as the result of a hay
wagon lire on county road 25
near Meigs High School
shortly after S p. m. Wednesday. ·
According to Charles
U!gar, Pomeroy fire chief, a
spa rk from a tractor driven
by Frank Broderick of
Pomeroy ignited the hay. The
hay burned and there wa•
beavy damage to the wagon
and the rear tires of the
tractor were ai!;O damaged.

r

�3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Jul; 13. 1978

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .,

July 13, 1978

Sheltered workshops fOr retarded·explored
EDITOR'S NOTE - As reporter. I say I'm the deputy
new b11111a11e •111• laws an commissioner . Retarded
passed and eoforced, more people say, 'I'm a retard."'
aod more ~~teolaUy relarded
"People need jobs," says
pe&lt;Jple formerly teplln glaol Dr . Robert L. Carl Jr. of the
state IDstltuUoos are being state Mental Health and
placed In smaller lacWUes or Mental
Retardation
homes In the community. Tbe Department. "Very few
process Ia nul easy. Nut lor retarded people are going to
the fearful neighbors who Jive be physics professors, but
next w group homes or 'for the that doesn't mean they have
retarded suddenly laced with to be relegated to no jobs or to
an unfamiliar and often meaningless jobs.
hostile new world. In this
"They can be productive.
final story of a three-part They can be taipayers. " ~
series, reporter Roselll&amp;ry
Indeed, a recent study at a
Armau loots at work In a California Bendix ·plant
county sheltered wor:Ubop showed that the error nile of
for the relarded.
severely retarded workers
assembling bicycle brakes
was
lower then that of normaL.
By ROSEMARY ARMAO
·
·
workers.
COLUMBUS (UP!)
In
Columbus,
the
"When people ask what do
Kaufman
•
Latimer
Co
.
you do, you say . you're a

recently named as its
Employee of the Year a
retarded man Who graduated
to warehouse work from a
cou,nty workshop program.
But· mostly in Ohio,
retarded people work in
sheltered workshops like
Franklin Cqunty's ARCraft
North. One of four county
workshops, it employs 180
people, paying them low
wages based on the minimum
wage law and their ability to
produce, to do cootract work
for
area
industries.
Deinstitlitionalization has
created waiting ·lists at many
workshops,
Kathy is bending the wires
of a transformer so it will fit
Western
Eiectric
transformers . Down the table
a man collates piled Picture

cards of herbs lor a local
bank using them as a
promotio~
gimmick. In
another workroom,
employ"'"' mold, fire and
paint hangi!lg pots for a shop
in Pennsylvania.
"Everybody here is
underestimated," declares
acting workshop director,
Richard Brophy. "We should
have an end product,
something that copld be
cornpelitive in the open

marked Franklin County
Program for the Retarded.
Peo.ple used to throw
bananna peels at it. ...
It all leads, Brophy said, to
the
" I'm ..
retarded
syndrome."
· ••My concern is with
dignity," he adds. " II you
have dignity you are a ·
healthy citizen.''
He suspects that 80 percent
of his retarded workers wUI
ne"ver be placed in real jobs.
Most have IQ 's ol 55 or
market .''
. Brophy, a former industrial below. But recently, Brophy
manager and the father of a s~;~ id, he accepted for
retarded son, believes county placement a young woman ·
officials don't have enough with an JQ near-70 because of
"confidence in their people" her features: she sulfered
.. to turn their workshops into from Downs SyndrOme.
industries. He believes he .
"She could apply lor a job
could teach employees to at a downtown department
assemble pumps or safety store and they would be nice.
to her. But never in God's
masks.
.
"The word retarded should world would they give her a
never even be referred to," job."
• he said. "ARCraft comes
Brophy" spoke of another
from Aid to Retarded good worker, "a lady who has •
Children. These people aren't never failed ," who probably
children." A'sign outside tbe would remain in .sheltered
workshop labels it a place lor workshops. She drools
the retarded, he said, and contantly d,espite medication .
they pass that sign every dsy . " The guy working next to her
"N\ll too long along they in a line who would have to
were driven to work in buses pick up her piece and work on
I

Motorcycle license test upgraded
waging to reduce the toll of
cycle deaths and injuries. •
Charamonte said the new
testing regulations, now in
effect, require anyone a!&gt;'
plying for a motorcycle endorsement to pass a vision
test and a special written
test , and obtain a temporary
P&lt;'rmit which allows them to
practice riding on low-traffic
streets until they are ready to
pass the official riding test.
In the past, he noted,
persons who already held a
regular driver 's license could
add a motorcycle endorsement simply by passing a

COLUMBUS - Ohioans
who want to add a motorcycle
endorsement to their regular
driver's license will have to
go through a tougher testing
process from now on, under
new guidelines announced
recently by the Department
of Highway safety.
'
State Highway Safety
Director Robert Chiaramonte
pointed out that 186 mo~or­
cyclists were killed in Ohio
last year, up from !50 in !976,
and said upgrading the
license test is part of a major
campaign the Department is ·

peopletalk
By KENNETH R. CLARK
Uolled Press International
PISCES RISING: JliUus Erving, the razzle-dazzle "Dr. J .''
of the Philadelphia 76ers, is moving to Pittsburgh _ not to
change basketball teams, but to make his movie debut. Erving
will costar with Meadowlark Lemto~ of the Harlem Globetrotters and Jerry Tarkanlan, coach at the University of
· 1
1
Nevada in Las Vegas, will be techruca adviser. The pot goes
like this : Erving and Lemon play for a lousy Pittsburgh team
that couldn 't score standing on ladders. A 14-year-old boy
persuades the owner to build his team around players born
under the same sign of the Zodiac - Pisces - and things
thencef&lt;rth go swimminoly. The film title _ "The Fish that
-..,
saved Pittsburgh."
TRAVELIN' ON ' Soccer superstar Pele says he's too old to
change his ways, so his marriage of 12 years will have to go.
Pete, who last Y..., lad tile Mew Yorl&lt; Collltloo lo 8
championship in the North American Soccer League, says he .
and wife, Rose, are getting a divorce because she doesn't want
to travel with him any more. Pele - now a good-will
ambassador f&lt;r Warner Communications, owner of the
Cosmos - says he's been on the road for 22 years. and can't
stop now . He and Rose have three children.
SAUL DENIED : Saul Bellow has failed in a bid for custody
of his 14-year-old son. A Chicago judge says Daniel Bellow
must remain with his mother, Susan Glassmao lleUow - the
Nobel Prize winning author's third wife. Bellow-l'emarried
since his divorce 10 years ago - says his former wife has
caused their son "emQtional trauma" by subjecting him to
"oppressive and harsh conduct." He says' be can provide a
more suitable horne for the boy. But Judge James Bales says
he failed to prove that point in court.
JUST BEGINNING: Ex-heavyweight champ Muhammad
Ali visited the Statue of Uberty in New York Wednesday on
behalf of the American Jndi•n Movement and its freedom
march to Washington. Ali used the occasion to announce
·formation of a new.international organization called WORLD
-"World Organization of Right, Light and Dignlty." He licked
frozen custard and autographed· bits of paper - and even $1
and $5 bills - f&lt;r the Indian children. He shrugged off a
question about his upcoming bid to ~egain his heavyweight
crown . Reaching down to hug a tiny Indian girl, he said, ·
" Boxing was just a start - my introduction to the world."

riding test.
The Highway Safety chief
said the new regulations are
designed to help, not hassle,
beginning cyclists.
"No matter how long
you've been driving a car, it
takes different physiciil'skills
and special knowledge to
handle a motorcycle safely in
today's traffic,"
said
Chiaramonte. By requiring
new riders to pass a written
test on traffic laws and cycle
regulations, then practice
under restricted conditions, the new system will give
beginners a better chance to
prepare themselves before
facing the dangers of freeway
speeds and heavy traffic
situations, he said.
He pointed out that, nationwide, 40 percent of all serious
motorcycle accidents involve
riders with less than a year's
experience.
Director Chiaramonte also
warned people who aren't
licensed to ride motorcycles
that riding without a permit
or endorsement can be very
expensive.- as wei! as risky.
CHARLES CALAWAY
"If you are convicted in
court of riding without a
proper license, you can be

Spt.~~.~~.$5599

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AM-F M radlb , step bumper, Scottsdale. sliding R.

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78

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··

1976 GMC % Ton ........ ~369~
1owner, goo~ tires, V-8, auto., P .S.. &amp; P.S., radio.

1974 Dodge

Van.~??;.e_r_s!?~.$3995

318 V-8. automatic, P.S., 8. P . B.. good !Ires 8. sound
mechanica lly , nice Interior , conversion with ice box,

dinette

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1972 GMC ...................... $1999
4 Whee l dr tve, 4 speed trans .• 6 cyl. engine .

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-· Blazers, Suburbans, Vans,
'

Conversions, Mini Homes,
El Camino In Stock

~OMEROY

MOTOR CO.

"Your Chevy Dealer" '
992 -2126

Pomeroy
Open Evenings Until&amp; p.m .

Marriage won't
cause reduction

PATTY DYER

Two attend camp at Utica

fined up to $500 or sent .to jail
lor six months, or both," he
Two 4-Hers from Meigs County, Charles
said." Anyone who knowingly
Calaway
and Patty Dyer, are attending Ohio
lends a motorcycle · to
oom_,e wbo u.q·~ properly

Junior

~adership

Camp this week at Camp Ohio .

licensed is subject to the at Utica, Ohio. Purpose is to dev.elop better
same penalties ...
leadership for our 4-Hers.
·
Chiaramon ~urged all
Calaway is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Guy
cycle owners to tum down
their unlicensed friends who Calaway of Route 1, Reedsville . He has been a
just want·to iake the bike " for member of the Meigs County Better Beef Club for
a little spin.' '
three years and a member of the Fine Swine Club
"Over the past two years,
one third of all the Ohio cycle for one year.
Miss Dyer is the daughter of Mrs. Maxine
riders who died in accidents
were riding without a permit Dyer of Bidwell and has been a member of the
or endorsement at·the time," Hillbillies 4-H Club for 10 years. She has also been
he reported . "Imagine how a member of the Junior Leaders Club for five
you'd feel if you let an
inexperien ced friend or years and is an active member at the Grange.
This year's sponsor for this event is Westfield
relative take off on your
cycle, and they didn 't make it Companies, in cooperation with the Ohio
back."
Extension Service.
For full details on how to
apply lor a motorcycle en·
dorsement , contact the
nearest Hi ghway Patrol
license exam station or
deputy registrar office.

AT &amp;T

Unsuccessful
motions made

CLEVELAND (UPI)- Defense attorneys in the second
Danny Greene murder trial
.
have made angry, but unsucWASHINGTON (UPI) - cesslul motions to strike two
American Telephone and dsys of testimony from a
Telegraph Co., the world''s confessed mob hitman.
largest private corporation,
The defense charged that
recently was warned one of Louis J. Aratari exhibited
its telephones would be "c onstant witness
disconnected if it did not pay misconduct" before the
an overdue S448.08 bill.
CUyahoga County Commoo
"We value you as a cus- Pleas court jury.
tomer ... ," said the computerThe attorneys
cited
written dunning notice from . Aratari's repeated faOure to
the Chesapeake and P.Jtomac · answer their questions, his
Telephone Co., one of 23 unsolicited comments to the
telephone companies in the jury, and his constant insults.
" Ma Bell" chaL~ that AT&amp;T
"This witness, Aratari,
owns.
borders on psychopathic
"However, unless payment paranoia," said· defense
of $448.08 is received by Jun attorney Burt Fulton.
Presiding Judge Norman
(computer spelling) 20, we
will have to interrupt your A. Fuerst overruled the
motions
and, in an
service," the notice said.
Officially, at least, AT&amp;T unpr.ecedented move,
was not at all milled at suggested to the defense
getting dunned by a lawyers that they phrase
-subsidiary .
their future questions to
"It is refreshing to know Aratari so as not to arouse
the C&amp;P treats its owner like him and trigger emotional
all the rest ollts customers," outbursts.
said Pte Wagner , A·T&amp;T
The attorneys responded,
media-relations manager. He somewhat bitterly, that they
said the bill was paid.
had requested the resultS of
A team of AT&amp;T lawyers psychological tests on
had this particular telephone Aratarl, but were told no such
Installed months ago in a results exist.
Justice Department office
On at least three different
they are using to prepare occasions, Aratari has
defenses against a 1974 referred out loud to liegovernment anti.trust suit to detector tests for the jury's
break up the huge telephone benefit. At one point, he
empire.
gestured to ' the three
By mistake the notice fell defendants and said, "Why
into the hands of a Justice don't they take lie-detector
Department official who ' tests?"
..ssed it on to AT&amp;T- alter
Following Aratari to the
stand
making a photocopy that was witness
was
slipped io a reporter .
Middleburg Heights Police

warned

GREAT USED CAR VALUES I

'

it wouldn't stand lor It," gru~ling job interviews.
Brophy said.
Behavior modlllcaUon speEmployees come in to work clalillts work with employees
beginning at 7:30 a.m. when to help fit them lor
city buses arrive. They will competitive jobs.
work a 6'h hour day including
" I'm not t~lking about
Urn~ for
individualized modifying violent. behavior.
In six years I've never seen a
training.
Work adjustment is one seriouilly violent act. But I
program. "These people," mean unacceptable habits,
Brophy said, " have no like a man who makes a
concePt of what is expectecJ in hacking noise all the time or
an industrial center. For someone who jumps and
example, you may get makes wild movements or
someone who can do a cho~e babbles incessanily .''
but doesn't understand a · The employees sigm a
work schedule. He'lll~y down contract with the center
his head to rest in the middle agreeing to change his
of work.''
behavior in return lor tokens.
With stars after their The tokens buy candy, potato
names on a record, chips, transil&lt;!r radios.
Because many employees
employees are .rewarded lor
good work and taught suffer from impaired speech
responsiblity toward a job. or physical handicaps like
An assertiveness group cleft palates that impede
also meets at the center io talking, speech pathologists
teach employees about also work at the workshop.
Simple skills like telling
standing up for their rights,
everything from voting io not time and knowing the
letting · a bully take their difference between a dime
lunch money.
and quarter are taught,
Job readiness training lor
Between classes, two· 13employQes about to get minute breaks and a 3().
outside jobs prepares them minute lunch, employees sit
for eight-hour days and or stand at Ion~ tables doin~
•

OEVOTEOTOTHF..

INTEREST m·

MEIGS.MASON AREA.
ROBERT HOEFIJCH
Clty Edh.ur
· 1
Publbhal ilitily ~x cept S..hlrtliiY,
b~ The Ohio V•lky Publilllhin"'
lll l

P~llllt! fO )I, Ohio.

Nauumtl ac.lvt!rlisin"' reprt:Mt&gt;ll•
J.antlun AssudMtcs, 3101
f~ ul' hd flvtJ., CltwelMmJ, Ohiu 4411:1.'
Su!M:nr,liiNI rwtes; rkllv er~:: tl lly

l&lt;l ll\'t',

ICI"C iiVaih•bit: 7{1 Ct!lll:li per

\U'I·k, Ay M ull..- lloult' WIICrt CMrfll"l'

~ '1"\' lt ' t' nut avMi!Hhle , One lllYfllh.
S:l 2i II&gt; ut1ul 111 Olun iilld W. Va ..
V~·wr ,

f j!:,l ,tiO ;

SIX

lllOI'IIhll,

muntittl, t7 .00; f
)'t'Mr: Six mur1lh."
$1 .. ••11 : Thrl'c J IIUilth li, Si .SO .'
SIIIN 'rtptluJI ~'nn·· md utl•" ~tultbl )'
fi L511 :

Th rl't·

t· : l~· · l¥hl' rt' S:ltl , t~l

'I'II L &gt; ' ' M~ ' IIIIlld

work is

·

• u.

.

(' "'
&gt;N

· ~

•

growmg

"

·~

..

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1978 v.w.

1978 Pontiac

·Bus

Grand Prix
A.C .. V-lop, AM-FM rodlo,

r1di1h, rN4
powor wlndowt.

sunroof, 5.000 mllos.

wheels,

Opel1900
Autom1tic tr1n1., 4 new

Gooclyoor Tlompo tlros.

1977 Ch.ulet
Monte Carlo .

1975 MllaiiJ
Couear XR7

A.C., P.S,, 1111 whHI, cast

Cloth Int., rood wiiHis,
rodlots, V-top, crul ..
Cllnlrol.

$5795

$3995

Aoki surprise 'leader
.
in British Open play
~

Sports
briefs. •

•

,LOWER
:RATES

Major

League

STANDINGS

CaseyKasem

STAR SUPPLY CO.

!~?~P~~~~Ir~~~~AL $1995
1970 VW BUG

NOW IN PROGRESS

1977 DODGE CUSlOMIZED TRADESMAN VAN
Sidewall murals, olrcondllloned. captain chelro, with swivel bolloma AM FM 1
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SPICIAL nATUII

195 Upper River Rd. ·

Sport Parade

Springfield, Rick Jooes ol round.
The field was to be cut to
Youngstown ,
Gary
Trivisonno of Mayfield the low 80 players lor ~y;s
Heights and Bill Williams of third round and then will be
B7 MIL'l'ON IUa.MAN
Lexington, were live shots cut to 40 golfers for Frldsy's
their half of the inning and
By &amp;reg Bailey
• final 18 holes.
UPJ lp!lnl Edit«
back of Muwell at 147.
Plagued by recent injuries never relinguished the lead.
Muwen started poorly
Trivisonno, the· defending
NEW YORK (UPI) - U you asked Pete Rose to cnoose the Meigs American Legion Two walks started the raUy,
champion, shot a 77 Wednesday with bogeys at I, between his kids, like most lathers, he wouldfl't.
team dropped an 8-3 decision and Blake singled o~e run
Wednesday alter trailing 5 and 6, before birdieing 8 and
He'd tell you he's crazy ahout them both, Fawn, his 13-year- to host Belpre last night.
home. After another free
Maxwell by one stroke alter parring 9 lo finish the toush old daughter, arM! Pete, Jr ., his fl..year-old son .
J ohn Sa yr e , recove ring pass, Boyd slashed a two-run
front side two..,ver. But the
Tuesday's round.
But all his hopes, all his dreams, are clearly entwined with fr om some minor injuries, single. Belpre got 'another
Williams' par-72 was the 28.year-old salesman's devilish , captivating young Pete, who wears a replica of his did a sparkling job in relief tally in the fifth on two walks
best score In the second birdies at 10 and 13 lor a one- lather's Cincinnati uniform practically to bed with him and is a and Kell y Winebrenner arid a single by Devore. They
under 01'1 the back side gave maj&lt;rleaguer in the making if ever you saw one.
banged out four hits for two iced the contest with three
him a 73 total.
The two kids could be one of the reasons Pete Rose and his bri~h t spots for Meigs.
runs in the eighth.
Cook iri playing in his first wife, Karolyn, are back together agairi. The~ had broken up
Meigs got its only other two
MeJ1 s took an · early and
Ohio Amateur and in his first briefly, but the Reds third baseman says the problem is all . short·ll ved 1-0 lead in the top tallies in the seventh .
tourney since winning the over.
Mike Wayland ted off with a ·
of the fi rs[. Sayre walked and
Northeast Amateur in' Rhode
"It was my fault," he admits . "She's a good lady. Sometimes went to third on one of single, and Brian Hanulton,
Island.
Winebrenner's singles. After returning to action after a
I think she's too good for me.'' .
Rose's wife was with him l&lt;r the Ali.Star Game in san Diego two were out, the speedy bad muscle pull suffered two
weeks ago, followed with a hit
and so was Pete, Jr., wearing. his unifOI'm that Frank Torre, Sayre stole home.
Belpre took a 3-1 lead in of his own to score Wayland.
vice-president of Rawlings, had specially made fbr him.
At1 Fogelstrom then singled
Young Pete was never n\ore than a few feet away from his
By MORLEY MYERS
nine," said Watson, 28, of the lOth before a record ·lirst-•
the big first sacker home.
lather's side in the clubhouse before Tuesday night's contest in
ST. ANDREWS, Scotland Kansas City. "I only missed day crowd of 22,~.
Besides Winebrenner's four
san Diego and lor that, the man the Reds' switch-hitter had to
Fishing derby.
(UP!) -So St. Andrews isn't three greens, but I did not get
But be then bqgeyed the
hits, the onl y other Meigs
thank wa~ Natiooal League ·manager Tom Lasorda.
such a gentle old lady after the ball close enough to the 15th, had a double bogey 6 at
safeties were those three by
"He let my little boy come into the clubhouse and I'll never
all.
hole to get birdied," he said. · the dreaded 17th and finished
Way land, Hamilton and
forget him for that," said an ,appreciative Rose, shining his slated Saturday
Nicklaus , who won the at 69, along with Compatriot
True, she behaved in
basebaU shoes in front of his locker before the game. "I told
The annual youth fishing P'ogelstrom in the sventh .
matronly fashion early on, Br·itish Open in 1966 and 1970, Ray Floyd, Aust~alian Jack
him (Lasorda ) I didn.'t want Petey to get in the way and he said derby of the Mei gs Co unty · Tim Ebersbach took the
PITTSBURGH (UP!) but then the capricious was also among the afternoon Newton and Spain's Sevvy Therese
Hession
of to me, 'I love the kid.'
Fish and Game Assn. for loss as he .and three other
whims th~t have hampered starters who had the worst of Ballesteros.
"!.said to him, 'Are you sure it's no imposition for him to be youngsters 15 and under has Meigs hu rlers fanned eleven
Indianapolis upset 1974
At the end of the day, only · champion Laney Smith of
golfers on this legendsry the weather.
the clubhouse, because I can understand how it would be if been set fo r Saturday from 9 but walked eigt'it. Horner got
course since the 15th century
!'The
course
was 26 players in the ISS..trong Snyder, N.Y., 2 and I all the ballplayers brought their kids in ,' but he told me it was a.m. to 2 p. m.
the win with relief help from
came to tl)e surface and considerab.ly tougher this field managed to better the Wednesday in the second perfecUy all right:"
The event will be held at the Marks an d Gates. They
1
Hubert Green's chances of afternoon than it had been in par of 72. Amerlcims Ben round of the 78th annual
Until this season, Pete Rose's boy had been a familiar ·figure associa tion's grou nds on fann ed ten and walked seven.
winning the 107th British the morning," said the 33- Cranshaw and Mark Hayes, Women's Western Amateur in the Reds' clubhouse in Cincinnati, but now it's djffereht. Shade River Road .I Food will
Meigs plays their last home
Open Golf Championship had year-old "Golden Bear," who who celebrated his 29th . golf championship at the Sparky Anderson, the Reds' manager, laid down a rule be provided to lhe young ga me of the season at
virtlially gone with the wind . fired four birdies in his birthday Wednesday, were suburban Fox Chapel whereby the players' children are allowed in the. dressing people and there will be a Sryacuse Saturday. Their
Green, the 1977 U.S. Open outward 35 and homeward 36. among seven players at 70. Country Club.
·
rqom only after a game, and then ?niY if the Reds win .
number of prizes awarded. oppon ent will be Ashland, .
champion
and
pre"When we started, the wind Arnold Palmer, winner of the
"I don't blame Spar.ky," Rose said. "I have a lot of respect Participants will provid e Kentu cky, and ga!Ile time is I
Smith was one of the last
to\U'Ilament third favorite , started to get up. There was British Open in 1961 and 1962, surviving Curtis Clip players for him, but I think this riew rule of his all goes back to winning their own fishing tackle and p. m. for the doiibieheader.
.
Meigs 100 000 200-3 7 3
posted a disastrous S.Over- not a breath of air to start, finished at 71.
and losing. One day last season af!er we lost a ballgame, ba II.
in the field.
par 78 on the 6,933-yard Old then a little breeze came up
In another upset, Julie Cole Sparky walked through the clubhouse andjaw 25 people in it he
On Sat urday evening a
Belpre 300 011 03x-8 9 2
Course
seaside
links and made aD the holes on the
of Orland, Fla., scored a 4 didnl even know . He said, 'That's it. From now on, no dinner will be held at the
E.bersbach (LP), Sayre(! ),
Wednesday ahd
found front nine hole!l to the pin
and 3 win over.Kelly Fuchs of unauthorized people in the clubhouse. No e~ceptions.' I told clubhouse be~innin g at 7 p. Forbes (7), Andrews (8) and
Becker, D. Kennedy.
himself 10 strokes adrift of close, and the hack' nine
Phoenix, Ariz., winner of the him I didn't think he could put a member of my family in the m.
Horner (WP I, Marks (3),
the surprise first-round long," he said.
NORTHFIELD
same
class
as
outsiders.
He
said
if
he
made
an
exception
for
last two natiooal Public Links
Ga tes (71 and Dolak.
"This morning, before the
leader, !sao Aoki of Japan.
NORTHFIELD,
Ohio Championships:
one, he's have to do it for all and 'he wasn't going to do that."
WESTBURY, New York
But Green was not the only wind, the fellows who'got.out ( UPI) - Mel Turcotte guided
Beth Daniel dropped only
For the last few years, Rose's son accompanied his fa \her to
( UP!) Rambling Willie
big name to suffer the ill there were pretty fortunate . I Ga~lord Hill to a I 'h length ooe hole in defeating Sally spring training in Tampa, Fla., and served as bat boy for the
needs
a
win
Saturdsy's in the
winds of this course. don't know how Aoki would victory• over Dutch Gardens Austin 7 and 6 while Carol Reds . This spring the boy made every exhibition trip with the
second
leg
or
the $50,000 U.S. WE'VE LOWEREU
Defending champion Tom have played with a lot of in the featured $4,000 fifth Semple beat Del)ble Raso 5 club until the Reds traveled across the state to ~'ort
Pacin
g
Championship
to
Watson , complaining the wind, but I'm sure he's going race at Northfield Park and 4. In other matches, Lauderdale and Anderson said no children would be allowed. '
THE COST OF
become
harness
racing's
allwind did not drop until he to lind out before this Wednesday night .
Noreen Uihlein downed Susan "It broke the kid's heart," Rose said. "I said to Sparky that time leading mon ey winner . CARPET CLEANING
.played the last hole, had to championship is over," said
Gaylord Hill covered the Cary 1-up; Cindy Hill bested one .of the advantages of being a ballplayer is that you can
Th e B-year-old gelding ,
settle lor . a 73, two strokes Nicklaus, who plays out of mile in 2:00 4-6 and returned Terri Moody 1-up; Judy expose your son to baseball. That didn't make him change his
by Vivian Farrington
owned
NOW RENT
behind the man he edged by North Pairn Beach, Fla., and $5.80, $4.40 and $3. Dutch Oliver topped Debbie HIU 2 mind, though.
and
Paul
Seibert,
trails
only
Muirfield,
Ohio.
one shot last year, Jack
Gardens paid $5 and $5 lor and I and Brends Goldsmith
"IAok," Rose added, getting back to the present, " I want my
When early starter Aoki second and J.J. Floridian, the bested Andrea Gaston 4 and boy to be a ballplayer. Why would I want' him to be anythin g Albatross bn the all-time list.
Nickla~s .
RajTlbling Willie, trained and
Watson covered the front shot his 68 - " I had a show horse , kicked back 2.
else• It was good enough for me, wasn't it? It's a great life ." ridden by Bob Farrington ,
nine in regulation 36, but hit headache from wondering $3.20.
At that moment, Pete, Jr., walked over to his father . He had ha s earned $1 ,183,287 to
the ball over the wall and out how to avoid the bunkers," he
Hair Lover finished 01'1 top
just come from Lasorda's private office in the home team Albatro ss' $1 ,201,470. A
of bounds to bogey the 14th. said later - it looked as if the in the first race, kicking off a
SAN DIEGO (UPI) -Two dressing room in San Diego Stadium.
\oictory this Saturday, worth
The c.hampion then birdied championship record of 63, t-9-4 big triple combination Californians, Sharon Barrett
"Mr. Lasorda's gonna m~ke a trade for you," the boy told $25,000 would make him No.
the 16th, but dropped a stroke which American Mark Hayes that was worth $3,370.50. of Spring Valley and Doug his old man.
I.
at the tough 461-yard, par-4 set last ,year, was up for Game Susan was second and Paciotti of Chula VIsta, led in
"You want me to go?" Rose asked, still shining his shoes.
Mountain Meadow showed. the 15-17-year-old divisiqns
17th , which also claimed grabs.
"No," said Pete, Jr.
Big-hitting Tom Weiskopf,
Nicklaus among its many
A crowd of 3,987 wagered Wednesday after two rounds'
When the you,ngster ran off again, Rose put the shoes inside
,I
winner In 1973, birdie-blitzed $440,014 .
ol the Junior World Golf his locker and talked about his boy some more.
victims.
...The wlnd made the
lhe front ninO In 31, lio-underChampionahipa that drew
"Petey oaid he wants me to be a Dodger instead of a Red. I
W•••kopf,
lrom
lnccmlnK nine mucll more p•r .
playen trom 11 -tlono.
never beard b\m . .y a th\ng Wle that bllore. KMiil are I'•Uy
difficult than the outgoing Col.umbus, Ohio, then bLrdled
Barrett scored her ·second something, aren't tll'ey?"
, ·
SCIOTO DOWNS
two-under-par 72 on the
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Cer- Torrey Pines North course to
tainly Right charged out of grab a six-61roke lead over
Do· il· yourse/1
the pack In the stretch the other girls at 144.
and get proless i onal
Wednesday night to grab a
results
·
Paciottl had a ooe.stroke
American League
2o/c length victory over My lead at 145 among the boys.
East
W. L. Pet GB
Weasel Turk in the featured San Diego's Robert. Powell
Major League Standings
57 26 .687
Boston
By Unlteg Press International
eighth race at Scioto Dowris. was in second place followed
48 35 .578 9
Milwauke
National League
46 38 .548 11 1 2'
New York
Bruce Kirk guided. the by three tied at 147 By United Press 1nternational
45 40 .529 13
Balfimre
East
winner ovei'the mile in 2:01 3- Marcello Stallone, Rio· de
42 42 .500 15 1'
w.
L. Pet. GB Detroil
39 46 .459 19
5, which WIIS good lor payoffs Janeiro; Tom Walters, Phi Ia
Clevelnd
47 34 .580
32 53 .376 16
43 39 .524 4 1/ 2 Toron to
of $5.20, $3.20 and $3. My Dayton, Ohio; and Johnny Chicago
West
P i llsbrg~
40 41 .494 7
Weasel Turk kicked back Hammond, Columbus, Ohio. Montreal
W. L - Pr;t. GB
41 45 .477 8 lh
46 40 .535
$4 .80 and $4.40 lor second,
36 50 .419 1311;.&gt; Cal if
Rae Rothlelder, Fort New Yor k
Kan City
44 _40 .524
I
34
53
.391
16
St
.
LoUi
s
while Mighty T S came in Worth, Texas, and Cathy
WMPO
Te)(as
42 41 .506 2 1 -;
West
43 44 . .:l94
3 ' '~
third and paid $4.40.
949-2S2S
W. L . Pet . GB Oakland
Hanlon,
Palos Verdes
SATURDAYS
M inesota
39 42 .481
41 1
52 34 .605
Ted Row Boy won the first Estates, Calif., were second San Fran
Racine,
0.
Chicago
38
46
.452
7
Los Ang
SO 36 .58 1 1
9 til Noon
race to front a 1-3-2 trilecta behind Barrett at 150.
Seattle
30 58 .341 l7
Cinc inati
A9 37 .570
3
Wednesday's Games
San D iego
&lt;12 4S .483 10 1n
combination that was worth
( No games scheduled }
At lanta
37 47 .440 14
$2;533.50. Kaerl Way was
Thursday ' s Probable Pitcher s
Houston
36 46 .439 14
(All T imes E DT l
second and Adios Streaker
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)W~nesday 's Games
Ch ic ago (WOOd 9 -Sl at N ew
(No games scheduled)
came in third .
Billy Sample of Tucson and
York (F igueroa 7·6) , 2 p.m .
TodJy's Prob•ble Pitchers
Texa s CEltis 7·4) at Bo ston
· A crowd of 4,484 wagered Jell Loonard of Albuquerque
(All Times EDT)
San Diego (Owchinko 5·1l at I Ec ker sley 9·2l, 7 :30p .m .
are so close in their battle lor
$310,376.
Minnesota ( Goltz 8·.5)
ar
Chicago ( Roberts .4 . ] ), 2: 30
the Pacific Coast League p.m ,
Baltimore (F lanaga n 12-6 ). 7 : 30
San Francisco (Knepper JQ.S) p.m .
batting .lead that It lakes an
Ka~sas City (Sptittorff 10.7)
at Pittsburgh (Candela r ia B·BL
100 Union Ave.
Pomeroy, 0 .
extra decimal point to 7 :35p.m
at Milwauke e ( Ca ldwell 9.5),
992 -2593
separate them.
Houston
( N lekro
S·id
at 7. JOp.m .
( Waits 6·9 1 at
Cleveland
THISTLEDOWN
Montr eal { Grimsley 12-6), 7: 35
sample Is hitting .3719 to p.m
Oak land (Johnson 5·51 , 10 : 30
.
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio .3716 lor Leooard, according
New York (Swan 1·51 at p .m .
6 cyl., 4 dr.
Full
line
of
guns,
Toronto (Lemanczyk 3· 10 ) at
(UPI)- Toot n Turn ran the tO latest official statistics Cincinnati &lt;Seaver 9· 7L 8: 05
Californ
ia
tAase
6--4l.
10
:
30
p.m.
sill ludongs in I : 10 4-$ covering games through
ammunition, hunting bows,
Los Angeles (R hoden 7 ·4) at p .m .
Wednesday to take the Sunday.
Detroi t
(Rozema
.4.4)
at
St . Loui s (Denny 7·6 ) 8 :35 p.m .
arrows, knives, holsters,
SeatTle (Abbott J -7) , 10 : 35 p.m .
featured eighth race at
Frid•y'~G•mes
Leonard, however,
Frid~y·s
Games
San Diego at h icago
police scanners, antennas, ·
Thistledown.
Ctlicago at New York
dominates other categories.
New York at IY,Jc inn a ti , ni ght
Te)(aS
at
Boston
,
ni
ght
The three-year-old lilly, Hi.s 92hits, 197 total bases and
rifle
slings, binoculars &amp;
Houston at Montrea t, n ight
M inneso ta at Ba ltimor e. night
San Francisco at P ittsburgh ,
ridden by Bennie Feliciano, 12 triples are all tops in the n ight
Kansas Ci ty a~. Mil w auk ee,
other items too numerous to
AM-FM. std.
paid $4.80, ·$3 and $2.80. league.
Los Angeles at St . Louis, night
Detroit at Seattle, night
mention. ·
n ight
Trinidsd Bay was secood and
Cleveland at Oakland , nig ht
Philadelph ia at Atlanta , nlohf
·Dottie T. was third.
·
Toronto at California , nignt
The u dally double of
Missy Omission and Hope To
FULLERTON,Calif. (UPI)
Spare was worth $14b0 and - Tbe Los • Angeles Rams
the 114-2 ninth race trlfecta of Wednesday signed two rookie
Locotodon W. Vo. Sidool Pomeroy-M11on
Miss Abe, NeedatOi and The free agents with Southern
Bridge 1:104) 773-5777
BoW1A!r returned $2,024. 70. California backgrounds running back Mark Davis and
offensive tackle Tony Rice.
Davia,
21,
attended
Westminster High School and
Golden West College in
Orange County where tbe
Rams have theLr training
camp before · going oo to
Colorado state. He weighs 196
and stands r..e.
Rice, 22, went to Compton.
High School and Compton
Community College In lhe
Los Angeles area before
attending San Joae State. He
weighs :1!&gt;5 and i.s 6-2.
said, "The birdies at 10 and 13
helped quite a bit. They were
lourlooters and they really
helped my morale. But, it
was nerve ..wracklng~ "
Ohio State star John Cook
carded a tw&lt;KJver 74 Wednesday to go .with 1lls opening 71
over the Columbus Country
Club course and was three
shots behind Maxwell, who is
playing hjs home course.
Four others, Dan ~huler of

CLIFTON
AUTO SALES

1971 Buick

wlw•ls, crulst control.

•
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Ned
Mli:~well ,
of Columbus,
credited two lour-foot birdie
putts with enabling him to.
lire a on ~·ove r-par 73
Wednesdsy lor a two-round
total of 142 and a three-stroke
lead after two rounds in. the
72nd Ohio Men's Amateur
golf tournament.
Maxwell, who had a onestroke lead going into ·
Wednesday's second _round,

Injuries hit,
legion.loses

Today's

1974 NOVA CHEVY

"The Dealer That Cares About Quality"
~------~
~------~:
7 P•ssenger, 4 speed tr1ns .,

ups lead to three strokes

EDWARDS GUN SHOP

V.W.-AMC JEEP

( UUI't St. , l1utllt'I'U)'. Ohio 4571'11.
lill'lillll'lili OfUcr Piton~ 992- 3156.
EdtiHna l Ph u nc99'H I~i .
1 toit't'utld class 1J4JSLMMC ptrld at'

1 ~ 11'

Christian

• nn
.II W

Christian missions. are,w
growing
in the Muslim nation - ~
'
of Egypt, according to Rita "
White , Sabbath School. ;
the "
superintendent of
Pomeroy Seventh-day Ad- .. :
Benefits to widows and substantial work was ear- ventist
Church.
The ·"
widowers who remarry after nings of $200 a month. Under congregation is studying its":;
age 60 will not be reduced the new law, the monthly denomination's work there at
under new Social Security measure of substantial work Saturday services this ., ;
amendments. The provision will be the same as under the month .
..
bec9mes effective in January retirement test - $334 a
" We operate a large '.2
1979.
·month for 1978, $375 for $179, elementary
school
in .,
Under present law , benefits ·$416 for 1980, $458 for 1981, subuin Cairo and a high ..
to widows and widowers who and $500 lor 1982.
sch outside the elty," Mrs... ,
remarry at 60 or tater may be
Length of marriage before White ys. "More than half ,,
reduced.
·
divorce - The length of of th ,000 elementary school "
Other important benefit marriage required before a students are Musliril - not,;,
changes were made by the divorced woman can be surprising in a land where 92 ,
new law, and they include: eligibie for benefits on the percent of the populatioo are
Publis pension offset -' record of herformer husband followers of Islam." The
Social Security dependent's is reduced from 20 to 10 Egyptian government ' s ;;
.benefits to /the husband or years. The change is effective department of education "'
wife or a retired, disabled, or January 1979.
rates the Zeitoun school in ill! ;
deceased worker will be
Retroact-Ive benefits top category.
,;;
reduced by the amount of any When a person applies for
Adventist chur c hes •.•
pension or annuity he or she teduced benefits, generally worldwide will give an of- :
receives based on his or her no benefits will be paid for . fering at the end of Sep-; , :
work in noncovered public months before the month of' I ember to build several more; .
employment. The cbar~~~e 1o application unleu the ochoola on the banlla of lhe
e!tect•ve tor benellta p11ld for beneflta are for dlaabiUty or Nile. Also alated to rec:el
December 1977, based on unreduced dependent's · funds 'from the offering a---·~···
applications
filed
in benefits are involved. The a high school in Tanzanla an
December 1977 and later. The change is effective for a!&gt;' mission facilities llnn, d~l~:·r~:~.l
offset provision does not' plications filed in January
Seventh-day A
apply to those who would be 1978 and alter. Previously, up number only about 2,000
eligible for pensions by to 12 months benefits could be Egypt, which is Africa's
December 1982, and woo paid for months before the populous nation
could have qualified for month of application in all million persons. Bu!, ·
Social Security dependent's cases.
Mrs. White, Egyptians "'"''
benefits unqer the taw in . A free leaflet entitled "How expressed serious interest lit.
effect on January 1, .1977.
Recent Changes in SSA Affect Adventist health concepts{
Blind people
The You,". gives a more detailed such as abstinence froiD'
measure of substantial work explanation of these as well alcohol, drugs and tobacco:.
was changed for people who as the many other changes in This tenet of the Adventist..
receive Social' Security So&lt;;iaiSecurjty. Copies can be Church is held in high regan\.
disability benefits because-of obtained at the Athens Social by abstemious Muslims. •
blindness. Disability benefits Security Office, located at
The public is invited to thia~
are generally payable ·only if 221 'h Columbus Roa d, and all services of the church;
. a person is unable to perlorm Athens , Ohio, 45701. · The which is located on Mulberry:
substantial work. Before the telephone number is 592-4448. Heights Road. Sabbat'!;:
change, the measure of (Meigs County Residents School begins at 2 p. m.
may dial 992~22).
saturday afternoon.

THF. DAIL\' SF.NTINEL.

t'i:t l'r~ l' W

.

their job.s under the scrutiny
of an Instructor. All work ill .
checked by employees acting
as quality control. It is IIU.
any factory .
But, said Brop'!f, he Is
always slow and careful
about
a
community
placement. · He keeps ,
remembering the employee
he placed once .who was soon .
fired at great coat to'hls self- ·
confidence . The employee
was doing a groat job, oo· ',,
great
fellow _ workers •
complained and agitated lor
his dismissal.
"What pe&lt;Jp!e don't under- ~
stand," Brophy said, "is that •
being retarded has nothing to ~
do with insanity. The
processes are slower but the, :.:
same, the same emotims, the '
same desires. They want a •
stereo just as badly as you do. "''
"They should have the . ·
opportunity to get one."

RIVERSIDE

Officer Robert Parovechek.
He told the jury he was on
patrol last Feb. 28 when he
saw two men in an auto near
a local tavern.
,
Parovechek said the way
the car was being driven
indicated the occupants
might have been Intoxicated.
He checked, found the vehicle
was stolen, and pulled it over.
Aratari was in the back seat
of the car.
Aratari has testified he was
oo a missloo to fulfill •
"contract" to kill Brian
O'Donnell, an asaociate of
racketeer Greene.
-"
On trial in the current case
are John P. Calandra,
Kenneth Ciarcia and Tholnaa
Lanci. -They are accused of
a·ggravated murder,
aggravated arson and
engagihg"in organized crinne,
in connection witli the plot to
kill Greene.

f oiiiJN:Ili )I·Multnncdict. Inc..

~axwell

NEWSPAPER
CARRIERS
WANTED
FOR
MIDDLEPORT
PHONE

SANTA ~A. Calli. &lt;UPIJ
- John McDonO!JIIh, 62, who
aerved aa a Nati01'18l FootbaD
Lea~~~t official from 1980 to
1974 and was commlaslmer of
biilh school officials In
Orinae County, died of
cancer Monday night.
McDooough, a realdehl of
Ranta Ana, refereed 210 NFL
pme~· durlnl his 14-yoar
·career.

,,
•

992-2156

THE DAILY SENTINEL
BETWEEN
8 A.M and 5 PM

�4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Thursday, July 13, 1978

Local Bowlina

Browns complete
negotiation_s

..

Wed. Afternoon Loogue
Pomeroy Lanes
Week of Julys

'

'

I

\

I

·,\

•

,... _( _

..

~

_

· -~

Meigs County Fish and Game Assn. will
hold their annual Fish Derby for children 15 ·
years and under . This event will be held
Saturday. July 15 frorn 9 a.m. - 2 p.m. You
must furnish your own bait. This .will be
held at the club grounds on Shade River
Road.
Take State Rt. 7 to north of Chester and take
County Road 82 and go west and follow the
West Branch Shade River aII the way.

WATCH FOR SIGNS

MEMBERSHIP DINNER
Meigs County Fish &amp; Game Assn . will hold a
dinn.. at the Club House Saturday, July 15
at· 7 p.m. The club house will be open at 4
p.m . for social hour for members only.
Membership t.i ckets will be available.

Pawtucket
Tidewater

W. L
Toledo
39 .00 ·"'' n v,
52 20 Columbus
38 42 .475 13
State Farm Ins .
38 J4
Rochesler
38 44 .463 1&lt;
Team.3
34 34
J1 55 .360 23
TeamS
· 3438 Syracuse
Wodnesday's Results
Team•
32 40 Columbus
J
Team 2
26 46 Tidewater 55, Richmond
Toledo 0
High Ind. Game ·- Mary
Rpches1 0r 16, Charleston 9
Hoover 167, Jenny Whitlatch
162 and Jenny Whitlatch lS6.

High Ind . *r les -

Jenny

Columbus at Richmond

WMPO 538, Team

Columbus al Richmond
Tidewaler at Toledo

Team

H 1gh

507 .
Team· High

Game
5,

SEries

CINCINNATI (UPI) - The
eggs
will . fly ,
the
wheelbarrows will roll and
the cows will be milked
during the Cincinnati ROdsNew York Mets series which
begins tonight at Rivertront
Stadium.
The farmyard feats will be
part of the Reds' annual
Farmers Night altraction
Saturday, with Reds and
Mets players joining fans in
the competition. Prizes
totalling $25,000 will be
awarded fans alter the
Saturday game.
Shenanigans aside, the
third-place Reds are looking
three-game lead over them,
in the four-game .Mets series.
The Reds send Tom Seaver to
the mound in quest of number
· 10, against seven losses,
·
tonight.
Orice again, Pete Rose will
elicit hearty cheers every trip
io the plate as he tries to
extend his consecutive-game
hitting streak beyond 2!'&gt; .
Rose, who thrilled the
hometown crowd with his
3,1J00th hit earlier in the
season, is two fruitful games
away from tying the club
record of 'tJ, shared by Vada
Pinson (1965) and Edd Roush
(1920, 1924) .
· However, the switch-llitting
third baseman still ' is far
from Jhe revered 56-game
hitting streak set by Joe
DiMaggio in 1941.
Rost:'s mounting streak
was unofficially boosted
another run&amp; Tueoday niJibt
in Sail Diego, when he got the
only hit of lour Reds
wrticipating in the All.Star
Game ,
Nagging injuries have cha-

OF

GOODYEAR ATOMIC CORP.
OPEN TO PUBLIC AFTER 5 P.M.

CAMDEN PARK
U.S. 60 WEST- HUNTINGTON
Closed Every Monday Except Labor Day

CLTIZENS NATIONAL
BANK

.7

EARNS
· OUR NEW 8 YEAR CERTIFICATE PAYS A 7.75% INTEREST RATE
WITH A MINIMUM DEPOSIT OF $l,OOO .WITH THE INTEREST
BEING PAID QUARTERLY.
Fede ral RegUlation requires that interest on time deposits redeemed prior to
matur ity will be recomputed at the pf"evaillng regular savings account rate, less 90
days interest.

No penalty for premature withdraw• I in the e'vent of the dhth of the Certific:ate

owner.

. ''THE FRIENDLY BANK"

lilitens /iatiorud Bank
lllltDLEPOttt
01110

I

1, '

\.
~·

Syracuse at PaWtucket
·
FridJiy's Gemts

Charleston at. RocheSter
Syracuse at Pawtucket

for Farmer's Night

"ANNUAL SUMMER OUTING"

'

Charleston at Rochester

2

racterized the Reds' season
thus far. Joe Morgan, with
muscle pulls, is hitting only
.254 while missing a dozen
games. Johnny Bench,
meanwhile, has missed 31
contests and carrie$ a .224
average with 11 homers and
30 runs batted in into the
second half.
· Manager Sparky Ander!OII
maintains the Reds must win
at least 47 more games to
take the division .

•

program card
announced
Adam Krahel, summer
director, today aMounced
summer recreation program
activities in the Kyg~r Creek
attendance area.
Girls basketball Tuesday
and Thursday, !HI p. m. Girls
Volieyblill, Monday and
Wednesday,6to8p. m. These
activities are open to all girls,
7th through 12th grade.
Boys basketball, H)-12
grade, Monday and Thursday, 6-10 p. m.; Boys
basketball, 7-8-9 ~rades,
Wednesday, 8-10 p.m. Friday
4 to 6 p. m:
Individuals interested in
archery will meet Thursday(tonight) at 7 p.m. at the high
school.
Tennis sessions
are
Monday and Wednesday from
3 to 6 p. m. LeSSORS off..-ecl
for students, 7-12 grades.
Thursday, 3 to 6 p. m. adult
lessons.
Adults anct students are
encouraged to sign up and
participate. Call 367-7377 or
367-9381 for more in formation .

.
King~bury

News Notes
The Carleton Sunday
School had an attendance of
66. Following Sunday School
the superintendent, Ralph
Carl, presented Matthew
King with a perfect attendance pin for one year.
Visiting recently with their
grandmother, Mrs. Elizabeth
Murray, were Tina and Greg
Murray and their mother,
Karen, of Sandville, W. Va.
Recent visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. John Walter Dean,
Jeremy and James, were Mr.
and Mrs. Russell Well of
Chester.
Recent visitors of Mrs.
Neva King were Mr. and Mrs.
Courtney Williams and Mrs.
Jessa Carr of Portsmouth.
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Beal,
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Bailey,
Mr. and Mrs. Roger · Yoilng,
Wesley and Yvete, Mr. and
Mrs. Russell Well, Mr. and
Mrs. Kirk Chevalier and
Jessica, all of Chester, and
Mrs. Elizabeth Murray attended a picnic at Forked
Run recently.
Mr . and Mrs. Patrick
Williams · and
family,
McArthur, visited 0ver the
weekend with Mrs. Hazel
Arnold·.
The Carleton Church had
Bible School this past week
with enrollment of 59. The
program was held Sunday
night. Each claas took part.
The Beginners and the
Primary classes
with
teachers and helpers sang
several songs with several of
the class answering questions
and saying their memory
verses. The Junior and
Middlers sang and also went
through their memory ver·
ses. Teachers and helpers for
Bible School were Louise
Harrison, primary teacher,
helpers, Judy . Carl, Sbrley
Kauff and Elizabeth M11rray;
Beginner class teacher,
Debbie Queen and Karen her
helper; Middler Clau,
teacher, Loretta VanCooney
and Virginia Dean; Junior
Class
teachers,
Olen

het at the Loews Theater on
Manhattan's upper East Side.
The'woman told pollee she
went up to Jackson for an
autograph and he re!Ulled.

White, Lopez good. friends ·
By GENE CADDES
UPI S~ .Writer
DUBLIN, Ohio (UPI)
LPGA rookie DOOna Horton
White doesn't mind being
caught up In all the fuss over ·
fellow first-year player
Nancy~.
·
Wht{e, . a . 2•-year-old
University of Florida
graduate, hasn't done too
badly in her first year on the
LPGA tour and, without
Lopez, probably would have
been Rookie of the Year.
She has won more than
going into this week's
tBS,OOO Cllissic, but Lopez,
who has won seven events including five in a row dW'ing
ooe stretch - is the hottest
thing to hit the women's'tour
in the last 20 years.
"Nancy Is a good friend,"
said White, the 1976 women's
U.S. Amateur champion and
former Curtis CUp and World
Amateur teammate of Lopez.

m.ooo

Sports .
~onsactt"ons

1,1 U

.

By United Press International
Wednesaav
Kanses

former

Calleie
State -

treck

Dodds as
director .

it!li

coach
new

Named
De
LOSS .
alhlellc

"I'm glad to &amp;eo It happen to
her . She's good Jor the

game.':

..

An all-around · athlete, it
wasn't .until just before her
junior year in collece that she
decided to devote lull time to
golf. She transferred from the
University of 1\lorth CarolinaGreensboro to Florida 110 she
could play year round and It
proved io be a worthwhile ·
move.
•
While at Florida, she also
met her husband, Michael, a
West Paim Beach coach and
teacher, who now has joined
her on the loW'.
"It is a very lonely and
demanding Ufe," While said
of the LPGA tour. "I'm just
thankful Mlke is able to be
with me."
Her best finishes so far are
a secmd at Houston, a third
in the Peter Jackson Classic
in Canada and a tie for fourth
at Hershey, Pa.
"A win could really help
my confidence," said White,
a native of Kinston, JII.C. "I'd
love to win, but! don't wando
put pressure on myseU. I
want to be patient."
White would like to "setUe
down some day, have a
family and do some teaching

'

•

zn nature

Pl!ins alter the outfielder hit . She claimed he !.ben olepped

NEW YORK (UP() - the Yankee star of striking
Regie Jackaon has !Ued a her in a Manhattan movie
cross-complaint charging theater, police 111ld.
harassment against the
Casandra Small, 23,
woman who earlier accused charged Wednesday she
suffered scratches and ·back

KC.summe~
'

'I

Jackson files cross complaint

Tidewater at Toledo

Queen City all set

FOR

,. ·~:.

-

WMPO 1524, Team 5, 1480 and
Team 4, 1439.

SATURDAY, JULY 15th

..

-

509 and

PARK RESERVED

'~

Syracu5t _., Pawtucket 2
Thurscllly's Gomes

Wh itlatch 438, Mary Hoover
433 and Cledith King and
Clara Mcintyre 399 .

•

YEAR
CERTIFICATE
Of· DEPOSIT

44 39 .SJO 11.1'2
42 43 ,.,4 11'1'2

WMPO

LaCrosse.
CLEVELAND (UPI ) Jolmson was in the Browns'
The Cleveland Browns tiave
camp
last summer, where he
;tnnounced the club has
remained
until the final cut.
completed
contract
Walczak,
impressed the
negotiations with all its
coaching
staff
at the club's
rookies.
camp·
at
Baldwintryout
Four remaining players selected in the National . Wall;lce 'College last mooth.
The Browns open summer
Football League college draft
earlier this year came io training camp at Kent State
terms with the · club University on Saturday.
Wednesday.
Latest tO sign were guard
Pete Pullara, of TennesseeChattanooga, a fourth-round •
UTTLE ROCK, Ark. ( UPI)
pick; wide receiver Keith
The Shreveport Captains
Wright, of Memphis State, a
fifth-round selection ; center may be put up for sale if the
AI Pitts, of Michigan State, a city of Shreveport, La .,
sixth-round choice, and offen- doesn't get busy building a
sive tackle Jon Kramer, of new ballpark, the team
Baylor, a ninth-round pick. director said Wenesday.
Taylor Moore of Shreveport
Offensive tackle Brent
if construction ·contracts
said
Watson , of . Tennessee, the
on
the
ballpark aren't signed
Browns' lOth-round selection,
by
Aug
. I, the team may be
has 9pted to play in the
offered
for sale at a special
Canadian Football League,
of the Texas
called
meeting
the club disclosed.
directors
in
Cleveland also announced League
the signing of two more ·free September.
The
directors
met
agents, defensive end Ed
WedlJ.esday
in
Little
Rock
Southern
Johnson, of
Methodist, and kicker James before the Texas League AllWalczak, of Wisconsin- Star Game.

CHILDREN'S I
I
FISH
DERBY --.- 1 , ...._

lnttrnotlonal LNUnitecl Pross lnternotiOIIOII
W L Pet. GB
Charleston . 54 32 .628
Richmond 45 34 .556 61 '

and collchlng," but right now
it's all golf.
"Mike and I are both
young/ ' she said, uand w·e·re
just going to enjoy it a litUe,"
A field of 91 pros an4 five
amateW'S wUI tee up Friday
morning at Riviera Country
,Club in the Columbus suburb
of Dublin. The field includes
defending champion Jo~ne
Carner and former winners
Judy Rankin , Carol Mann,
Sharon Miller and Kathy
Whitworth .
Also on the scene after a
week off is Lopez, who has
won more than $133,000 in 16
events this year .
Only four of the top 20
money winners are absent
from the cast, including No . 2
Jane Blalock, the winner of
the last lwo LPG A events,
and No. 4 Jan Stephenson.

her. causing her to fall lllld
suffer her alleced inJurl•.
Miss Small wu re...from Metropolitan H01pltal
early today.
Jackson later fUed a crollcomplaint against Mlaa
Small.
A pollee officer aald
Jackson was not arrelled Mel
added that it wu ~ to the
colll'ts now to decide the cue.
Jackson was not available
lor comment. .
Last November, Ja~
was acquitted on a
harassment
char1e
stemming from an Incident
outside Yankee Stadium
following the All-star game in
July 1977.
Chris Howe, 14, had
charged Jackson stepped on
his right wrist, causing a
small cut.
•
Jackson testified Howe had
made vulgar remarks to hlm
alter he had sl1ned
autographs. The ballplayer
said he then chased the youth, ·
'but never touched him.
Judge Harold Enten,
presiding at the ilon·jury
trial, found Jackson Innocent.

Learning to live in nature is
·the JWile ol the game for
·Melal CoWity 1irlacouts who
.thil week broke the countryside allellq! _ of Camp
~ Klashuta.
' -The hilJJ of Kiashuta ~ loCated Just a mile south of
: Chester - are alive with ac: .1,\vlty u the approximately 2o
~ ac!ult leaders and Instructors
• work to teach outdoor skills to
:..the mare · than 50 Brownie,
: junior and cadette scouts at: ti!ndlng day camp.
: . The girls are divided into
• iix units, each with its own
: tent, cooking and sanitary
:· fJcillliea and special pro: f11111118 such aa craft work,
: hjking. and nature studies.
: The fires are built by the
: ICOutll who also have the
: "*ponllibillty ol planning and
: jl(epliring the meals as well
: ~ waahlng the dishes and
• .cleanlilg up the camp site.
: They learn to do the job with
: I! Umited amout of water
• )Yhich is carried from the

,• c:wb'm.
' Units of. the ·yOWlger girls
: lll'e set up near the cabin,
: wj1iJe the cadettes and jWiiors
: are Wider the trees on the
• hillside beyond the swinging
: bridfle. Neither snakes nor
: spiders seem to dampen their
: splrita. And going without the
: usual bath ori their overnights

sports
,

briefs.

seems no problem at all.
The usual number of cuts
and bruises and insect bites
for outd\lOr camping are
handled by Mrs . _ Merle
Johnson, qualified in first aid,
or one of the other leaders all
required to have some first
aid training.
Tllere's one man at camp
all the time, Harold Norris of
Harrisonville, and. for the
ovemighl.!;, he is joined by
two or thr~e lathers, Larry .
Hudson, Thomas Werry and
Tom Mankin, for added protection.
, Each of the camping unil.!;
has a name and most display
some creative decoration
from nature. For one it's a
hanging basket of .field
Dowers, for another their
name made , with twigs and
tied by string between two
trees.
Margaret Ella Lewis,
re(ired Meigs High Sc)lool art .
teacher, is on hand every
afternoon to teach crafts.
Wednesday afternoon the

1',1eigs health team with head- spn, Carolyn King , Patty
quarters at · th~ Senior Parker, Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Citizens Center this summer . Hudson, Thomas Werry and
visited the camp to talk about . Tom Mankins.
the basics of good health.
Girls at the camp are Jodie
Friday is awards day and Schaekt!l, Gina Gibbs, Sarah
it's then that Becky Mankin, ·Philson, Laura HawUlorne,
camp director, will present Trina Barker, Carol King,
badges earned during the Lisa Gaul, Teresa Johnson,
week by the girl scouts. Wendy Fry , Christi Hoffman,
Parents are invited to spend Sue Ellen Fry, Janet Werry,
the afternoon with their Michelle Capehart , Traci
daughters and share their ex- Casto, Jane jett, Susan
periences of the week.
Jones, Dawnette Norris,
Weeks of preparation have Darla Norris,. Laura Farley, .
gone into the camp program: Cheryl Roush, Beth Pierce,
The volunteer leaders and Clarissa Pierce, Kim Cogar,
helpers are required to have Tammy Ca!X'hart, Carolyn
training and it has been going Casto, Shari Cogar.
on for weeks. Judy Werry is
Susan Jell, Penny Kesterthe· finance director, Karim son, Patti Jeffers , Melinda
Werry, the food buyer, and Mankin, Melanie Mankin,
Pat 'Thoma , the camp Daphne Dillard, Debbie
registrar ,
Werry. Susan Thoma, Brenda
Leaders of the units are Mr. Largent, Melissa Barker,
and Mrs. Harold Norris, Terri Starcher, Dawna
Shirley Cogar, Shirley GibbS , Grueser, Betty Jo Hunt, Jill
Pat Phil s on,
Patty Neace , Trina Reeves, Mandy
Woodyard , Merle Johnson , Reeves, Regina Nance ,
and Pat Thoma . Their 1.-.ura McCullough, Chris NAVAHO LOOMS aren't easy to make but it is one of
helpers are Pam Hoffman, Haning, Kathy Parker, and
many skills being taught this week at the Meigs County
Pat Schaekel, Mary Kester- Lori Hudson.
·
Girl Scout day camp taking place at Camp Kiashuta near
Ch~_ster . Here Janet Werry is assisted by Harold.Norris,
the only male unit leader at the camp, in getting her loom
started . It's made from binder twine with dried bark and
weeks woven into the string.
1

BECKY MANKIN, camp director , assists her young
daughter, Melanie, in making a wall plaque. It is one of
several craft projects being taught by Marga ret Ella
Lewis. A paper plate is painted and dried materia ls
gathered from around the camp are attached for decoration .

""PECIALO

~~

L

'
•••

HOLLYWOOD (UPI) Harrison and Yvonne Yoimg.
Mrs . John Dean ac- Julius Erving, the razzlecompanied" by Mrs. Faye dazzle "Dr. J." of the
Stanley of Snowv1lle, Mr. and _Philadelphia 76ers, will make
Mrs. John Walter Dean, · his movie debut in a musical
Jere~y and James were all comedy called "The Fish
al Athens where they at· That Saved Pltlsbilrgh," tt
tended a shower for Tanuny .1\'as · announced Wednesday.
Master
The film is budgeted at f'
Gilkey given by her sister,
million and will feature other
Cindy HaMing.
The missionary, Rev. NBA stars and Meadowlark
Donald Genheimer, from Lemon of the Harlem GlobeAfrica, and his mother. Mrs. trotters. Erving and Lemon
William Genheimer also here will come to Hollywood for
from Africa, are visiting Mrs. rehearsals starting Monday
Nova Kine, Mr . anc1 Mrs. and lh""'lnl wUJ start In
Vrlgll King and lamlly and Pltlaburch J11ly 31.
Jerry Tarkanian, coach of
attended prayer meeting
Wednesday night at Carleton University of Nevada, Las
Vegas, will serve as technical
Church.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert adviser.
.
In the film, Erving and
Hamshire and John Perdas of
while supplies l.ast
Chambersburg, Pa., spent Lemon will be members of a
the weekend with Mr. and professional basketball team
Ignite charcoal· in grills, lay and
Mrs. Wayne Beal, Mrs. John called the Pittsburgh Pisces
remove
asphall tiles. strip old
Pedras and Mary and Usa that has fallen oo hard times,
it in plumbing and .
paini.
Use
who have spent the past week failing to win and doing
gutter
work
- soldering and
here returned home with poorly at the bo•office. A 14hobby
work.
Includes standard
year-old boy coovinces the
them.
pencil
lip
and
instructions. Ul
Mrs. Roger Young, Wesley owner to rebuild his team
T7555
listed.
and Yvete, Mrs. Sandra around Erving with players
QUANTITIES
LIMITED
Perdas, Mary and Lisa, Mrs. horn under the same sign of
Janeth Beal, attended a baby the Zodiac, Pisces.
shower lor Mrs. Russell
(Linda) Well given by the
ST. LOUIS (UPI)- The St.
South Bethel Church.
Louis Cardinals announced ·
Mr. and Mrs. Kirk Wednesday they wUI scrimClievaller and Jessica en· mage with the Kansas City
tertained with a cookout in Chiefs July 29 with the
celebration of Mary F'erdas' proceeds going to the
seventh birthday on July 4. A University of Missouri
flag cake was served wilh Athletic FWid.
decorations of red, while and
blue. Attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Wayne Beal, ' Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Young, Wesley
and Yvete, Mr. and Mrs.
923 S. 3rd Ave.
Middleport, 0.
Russell Well, Mr. and Mrs.
992-2709 or 992-6611
John Perdas, Mary and Usa,
Open: 7:00 to S: 00 Mon. thru Fri.
Mrs. Coelle SalseF, Mike
7: oo to 3: oo Saturday
Salaer and Rodney Chevalier.
lthBIRTHDAY PARTY
John • Jeremy
Dean
celebrated his 4th birthday
with a cookout at the home of
his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
John Walter Dean. After the
cookout, birthday cake and
ice cream were served to
those atteding, Yvete Young,
Robert Rted Jr., Jamea
Dean, Charlie King, .ShllUlon
Spaun, Susan King and
Wesley Young, Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Marklns, his great·
grandparents; Mr. and Mra.
John Dean. hia grandparents; Mr.· and Mrs.
HAMPSHIRE FLEXWALL INSTANT \
Charles Klilg, Mr.· and Mrs.
Roger YoWig, Mr~. Ruth Ann
Spaun, Bruce and Edith Rted
' and his parents, John and
Anita. After Jeremy had
opened his many gifts the
evening was spent playing
Features
.
.
. Hard Plastic Walls
games.
Mr. and Mrs. Dick Harrls
OTHER BARGAIN ITEMS
entertained at their camp at
Great Bend over the Fourth
'
of July weekend. Those who
spent the weekend camping
were Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Markins, Racine; Mr. and
~.
Mrs. John Dean, Mr. and 1
Mrs. John Walter Dean,
I
Jeremy
end
James,
.
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs.
STOP IN SOON ATs
Robert Rted, Bruce; Edith,
Robert Jr. aod Rodney, an of
Pataskala; Mr, and Mrs,
Gerold Gilkey, Tammy and
Dean, ol Athens; Mr. and
Mrs . Walter Terrell of
rataskala .

··FABRICS
Special Pufdaaae

of the Month

Mill Ends of
~· Famous Dress
:: Manufacturer

'l'

MECHANIC,.

PROPANE TORCH
now

VALLEY LUMBER &amp;
SUPPLY
CORPORATION

WADING

POOLS ......... ~~..~~~~~.~--~

1999

··TENNIS RACKETS
•BADMINtON SETS
•NYlON TENTS ............... ..... :..... '21.99 • $31.95
•USE•• &amp;SOFTBALL EQUIPMENT

o'

·

I
[

"' W' wide ·
Yd.
Polyeller IDterlock
•
&lt;

.\e,\

Perfect

~~

'

VIIDH

:_- •" wide 11,98 Yd.
P"\'llter llalll__

.

s~El .·
: •" wide

.."

LUMBERJACKS FOUR -Carolyn Casto, Shari Cogar, Susan Jell and Patty Jeffers of
the cadette Will have found working with lumber to their liking. They and other members of
their unit have cut down trees and sawed wood to construct a ta~le for their campsite.

SUMMER

98• yd.

Nottce those toes
Jacket tricks
For
sandals, toes with little
Jacket over jacket - !hat's
.
gold
stars
glued on them look
the rule of thumb for falL The
...
well,
they'll
get noticed
inner one, o!'course, has to be
anyway
.
closer fitting than the outer.

SHOE
SALE

CO'n'ON

DI NNER TIME-These " Lady Birds" fixed chili and
banana boats for dinner and enjoyed every bite. In the
group eating picnic style with situpons between them and
~ the ground to keep the moisture from coming through are
" • fr ont, left to right , Sue Ellen Fry, Gina Mari e Gib bs.
.....,.,._,. Carol Annette King , and back, Pat Philson, leader, Sarah
Philson, Jodie Schaekel, Mrs. Mary Kesterson. leader.
Diana Kcstersol), and Clarissa Pierce. ·

CONTINUES
1 .•

The

THE

Sewing
Cenler

SHOE BOX

MIDDlEPORT DEPt SToRE

¥~~
~u"-"'t~ ~
SWIMWEAR REDUCED

•MEN'S
•BOYS'
•GIRLS'
•WOMEN'S
•All SIZES

MIDDLEPORT OHIO

NOTICE
James P. Conde, D.O. announces the
change of his office from Mulberry
Heights, Pomeroy, Ohio to 306 North
Second Avenue, Middleport, Ohio
effective July 17th, 1978.

Also Reduced
Well Known Brands

•REDEYE •DEVON
•WRANGlER
•QUEEN CASUAl

Miondav: 9:00-12: oo •1:00-4: oo- 6: 30-B: 30
Tuesday: 9:00-12:00-1:00-4:00
Wednesday: Out
Thursday: 9:00-12:00-1 : 00-4:00
Friday: 9:00-12:00-1:00-4:00
Saturday: 9:00-12:00

.

~·

_,..

rc_-..

COOKING is no easy task when the firewood is damp and the fire just won't seem to
burn. Here Angie Grueser, Christi Hoffman, Traci Casto, Trina Barker and Laura
Hawthorne, \ront,left to right, and Beth Pierce, and Lisa Gaul, back, wa it for the weiners to
get warm. ,.

,,

ON RNE WEARING
APPMEL FOR
MEN AND WOMEN

BAHR CLOTHIERS

ADMIRAL
DEHUMIDIFIERS

.

Open Friday
Til 8:00p .m .

CONTINUES - 20% - 50% OFF ON
SELECTED SUMMER MERCHANDISE

Takes the dampness out of
your basement or other high
moisture &amp;rea1 for only

pennies • day In operating
cost. Shuls off automatically.
Humldisteel controls. 15 pint
capacity.

heritage house

$13goo
BAKER FURNITiJRE
MIDDLEP!)RT

',.

~ .'

TIRED? YOU BETMandy Reeves of Harrisonville ol the "Animal Land"
junior unit takes a rest.

ONE CLINIC SLATED
DONATOES BOND
Only one free cervical
Mrs. Marge Crow was
cancer clin ic has been awarded a $50 savings bond
scheduled for July at Heath by the· Southern Local Band
United Methodist Churcfi in Boosters. Mr s. Crow donated
Middleport.
the cost of the bond back to
There are openings for the the booster organization.
women's clinic which will
begin activ)ttes at 1 p. m. on·
Wednesday, July 19, and
Cologne cooler
women wishing an . apTry refrigerating so me
pointment should call 992-7531
.daytime or 992-5832 in. the cologne for use on hot , muggy
evenings or on the weekend. days.

NOW IN PROGRESS'I
SAVINGS OF

20-50%

) \
_ .-__

oF sHoEs .

Open Friday Til8 P.M.
Middleport,

N. 2nd Ave.

..

'

.

�7-The DallySenUnel, Mlddleport-Pcmeroy, 0., Thunday, July 13,1978

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, July 13,1978

Garden Club conducts
special therapy·program
The Monday night meeting
of t he Middleport Garden
Club held a( Forest Acres
Park was planned as a
special therapy program for
participants in the Meigs
County Personal Advocacy
Program. Mrs. Mary Skinrn•r . personal advocacy dirt'Ctor, acted as chairperson of

a rran gement s

for

the

meeting .
Th~ guests mtroduced by
Mrs . Skinner were I.cona
Martin, Maggie Hoy. Betty
Will, Ella Mae Elhs, Linda
Watson, David Diddle, Don
Ruffington . Oscar Price,

MO])ULAJ(
HOMES
11y
A ll A m ericar1

MEETS
•OHIO BUILDING
CODES
'
•FHA &amp;VA
.SEE OUR LOT
MODEL TODAY

KINGSBURY.
HOME SALES
1100 E . Main

992 -7034

By Helen and. Sue Bottel

CLINGERS ARE HARD TO DROP
DEARHELENANDSUE :
Marge is 15 and acts 12, which was OK when we were boih 12
but now I'd like to know how to get rid of her without being

Virgil Saunders, Charles rare blue rose. She compared
Bush, Hugh Roush, Jr. ·Judy roses to people who are difMcHaffie , Maxine Black, ferent , not thinking or acting mean.
Sarah McCarty, Gonley Cole, alike . The story of "The Blue
She acts inunature around teachers, boys and · most of all
Cha rles Grueser, Arthur Rose " is of a child named me, but when her friend Jenny s hows up, she makes me out the
Reeves. Also attending were . Jennie who though retarded
~at'!l'e ?""·I really can't stand it when she asks me a quesBenny Skinner and Maurice is precious, loving and rare. tion I didn the_ar and then says (for Jenny's benefit ), "Never
Smith who attended the The Rev . Mr. Middleswarth 'l'lllnd, ~t's ~ver y&lt;itir'fieaa·." This with a mouthful 'of brac-es. '
Special Olympics in Colum- offered the prayer which was
She InVItes herseU to stay overnight and go on our famjly
bus and wore their gold and followed by another prayer outmgs •.etc. She wants me to have no other friends, but she has
s il ver meda"ls fur par- by Charles Grueser.
A picnic was held with hot ~er fnends. When I do meet someone new, she grosses them
ticipating in the running,
out w1th cross~xammmg and personal questions,. as if she
Jumpmg a nd throwing con- dogs, potato chips, baked ownsme.
·
b eans, soft drinks, cake and .
tests, to the meeting .
How
can
I
make
her
stop
running
my life? -SOFTIE
Advoca'tes attending were coo k ies being se rv e d . DEARSOFTIE:
.
Helen Bailey. Joann Clark, Hostesses for the picnic were
.. .By running your own life , for a change . Even though imDebbie Osborne, Arthur Skin- members of the garden club mature, Marge seeflls to have you buffaloed. She wouldn't say
ner, Richard Grueser Jessie Mrs. Dorothy Morris , Mrs. those mean things, or horn 111 on your arfairs, if you weren't
Grueser, Luta B. H.:mpton, John Davis, Mrs . M. L. such a soft1e.
Larry Clark, Steven Jewell, French, Miss Nellie Zerkle
So get tough. If you really want to lo&amp;e her , say so. Next time
Rca Roush, and the Rev. Mrs . Walter Hayes, Mrs: she hurts your feelings tell her you've outgrown each other so
Malcolm J ohnller, Mrs. M. C.
William Middleswarth .
'
"Goodbye i " :- SUE
The garden club members Wilson, Mrs. Kincaid, Mrs.
were introduced to their Dave Bowen, and Mrs. Skin- DEAR SOFTIE :
guests. On display and for ner who noted that donations
On the other hand (and th~re 's always the other l,;;nd in teensale at the meeting Wi·t e had been received from other age relationships), if you and Marge have only had a temsome of . the 'projects com- organizations but that this
porary falling-Qui ,rou may feel very differently by the time
pleted by members of the pr&lt;&gt;- was the first time members · this letter reaches print.
of
an
orga
nization
and
gram. These included wood
... Which~ why we changed names and circumstances a bit.
picture frames; yard name member· of the Personal AdWe
wouldn t want to cause another rift. - HELEN
vocacy Program had met for
pla tes for homeo wn ers
quilt~. hot dish pads, pi~ a social hour together.
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
cushtons .
Being the mother of a "special" child,! know how deeply our
· For the program, Mrs. ·
daughter suffers from the rejection of other students. Her
Skinner read the story, "The
retardation has brought taunting and practical jokes as well as
Blue Rose" by Gerda Keline.
roore subtle ostracism.
She sa1d tha t there are many
If ki(is only knew how much special children suffer al'their
kinds of roses, pink, red,
hands . I wish there was some way we could reach the hearts of
yellow and while , and the
:· normal" boys and girls to show them our youngsters need
JUSt a httle understanding and kindness. Acceptance by their
peers would encourage them to make the most of what they
. Your " Extra Touch "
'· have . -MOTHER OF AN ANGEL
Flor ist Since 1 9~7
DEAf\ MOTHER :
We hope your letter inspires more young people toward kindness. It takes only a few well-liked students·to turn the tide : If
they show these special children they are accepted, others will
follow the1r lead.
· .When kids aren 't made to feel like misfits, well, that's a
FLORIST
giant
step. It could be the beginning of a much fuller life.
..
-HELEN AND SUE "

r1-------·-

. ?~
PH. 992-2644

Pomeroy , Ohio

r

Generation Rap.

~

352 E Mai n, Pomeroy

!
1

L -----·--Your FTD Flo,;&lt;+

BLUEGRASS &amp;COUNTRY
MUSIC FESTIVAL
July 16 at 1:30 P.M . . Continuous
music till 9 P.M. at the American
Leg\on Grove, l'l2 mUe east ot
Wilkesville on Rt. 124. Refreshments·
&amp; Bingo stands on grounds. $1.00
admission. Children under 12 Free .

SPONSORED BY lEGION POST 476

, _____,-.__

COURTNEE KNAPP
TU,RNS ONE - Courtnee
Rae Knapp celebrated her
first birthday on Juile 13
wlt!t.a party at the home of
her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Knapp, Flatwoods
Road. Ire cream and cake
were served. Attending
were her grandparents,
Mr . and Mrs . Ray
WIUiams, Pomeroy, Route
4, and Mrs . Daisy Knapp,
Weot Co\ambla. OtHn at.-

tendiDg were Roc, Terri
and Roxanne WUIIams,
Darin Roach, Connee
Williams, Buck, Carolyn
and Stephanie Knapp,
Mark and Trudy Williams,
,SkiP Enslen, and Dor,
Judy, Shannon and Brook
Coates. Sending gilts ·were
Keith
and
Kev in
Karschnik.

Report given on
Regatta events ·
A report on Regalia ac. tivities was given and plans
for participation in the Senior
Citizens Center Yesteryear.
were discussed at the Monday meeting of the Young
Wives Club or Chesler held at
the new home of Sara Bailey.
Parade participation at
Regatta was reported a great
success. Jane Coates and
Ly\a VM.n ~eter were •P"

pointed co-&lt;:halrpe1'1100 for
the booth at Yesteryear.
Ester Mayes volunteered to
finish a quilt top donated to
the club with the club to proVI~e the material. Donations
will be taken on the quilt once
it is completed.
The August meeting will be
held Monday, Aug . 14, at
Royal · . Oak Park with a
wiener roast and swiriuning
party. Attending the meeting
were Linda Well, Lyla Van
Meter, Jane Coates, Norma
'Hawthorne, Kathy Stone,.
Karen Young,. Susie Kibble,
Ester Mayes, Avis Spencer,
and Sara Bailey.

,------,
Social ·
1

1

I

Calendar 1

THURSDAY
IMPORTANT MEETING
Eastern High School Futur~
Homemakers of America,
7:30p.m . Thursday at home
of Mrs. Kestner . Anyon e
having questions or needing
directions, call Cindy Pitzer,
949-2083.
SP RI NGS
RO CK
GRANGE , Thursda y, 8 p.m .
at the hall . lnspectwn w11l be
held .

P~RK\MG
AMY

.T\ME
You will be pleased .to know we have installed
drive-in facilities to service our on-the-go customers . We take pride in the fact that we are a
full-service bank and alwaxs serve our customers
courteously and efficiently. Drive m, we ~ould
be happy to' serve you.

DRIVE ·IN WINDOW OPEN
MON.-THURS. 9:00-3:00
FRIDAY 9:()0.6:00
SATURDAY 9:00-3:00
A Home B.ank For Meigs Courity People

RACINE HOME
·--.. ··~. .. NATIONAL BANK
RACINE, OHIO

.'

SATUROAY
PUBLIC
A UCT ION
beginning
10:30
a .m .
Saturday at Junior Fair
Building , Roc k Springs
Fairgrounds, by the over 30
, Meigs County 4-H Club to
raise funds for the Canter's
Cave 4-H improvement fund .
Auctioneer, I. 0 . McCoy;
refr eshment stand operating
during sale.
SUNDAY
COUNTY-WIDE PRAYER
meeting , Sunday, 2 p.m. at
H~zel Community Church
With Glen Bissell leader.
•
ANNUAL PICNIC of the
Middleport MaSQnic Lodge
363, F . and A. M. and
Evangeline Chapter, 2 p.m .
. Sunday at Forest Acres Park
Shelter House 1. Members 1 ~
take their own table service
and a covered dish . The picrue IS for members and their
fanmhes.
MONOAY
MIDDLEPORT BUSINESS
and ProfessiunaJ l Women's
Club, 7 : ~0 p.m. at the Columbia Gas Co. office, Middleport, Monday.

Raspberry pie -baked by wiches. Other hostesses were
HARRISONVILLE--Several invitations were read at Bernice Hoffman was served Avanen · Georgr:, Emma
the Tuesday night meeting of with ice cream and sand- Ledlie and Bernice Ledlie.
the Harrisonville Chapter,
Order of the Eastern Star ·
held at the Masonic Temple. '
Members received an in,
vitation t~ the Athens County
FriendsNighttobeheldSept.
22 at Nelsonville. There was
,I
also·an invitation to a recep- ~ ·
.. ·
Polly Cramer
twn honoring Nancy~ jtiley, ;,
de~uty grand matron, on ', ·"'
"
'
:
::-:-:::":-:'
·
,..,.:
'
=,.--"
·
Sept. 30 at Miirieltii': ..............:: ......... · ....................................... :. .. ....... likii"tu snare the method r ·use
Sunshine fund was taken by Hot pan
fur controlling ants. I make a
Enuna · Ledlie a~d Virginia /eft its mark
mark with chalk atoliild the
Reese. Reported Ill were Lois
place where 1 think they enter
Thompson, confined to the
Riverside
Method is t
DEAR POLLY - I placed a the house or cupboards. They
Hospital, Columbus, Room ~ery hot pan on a wooden will nut go across the chalk
5020, ·Birdie Wyatt, also in counter top and now have a line . Fur large ants such a
Ri
'd w
round black stain about seven line should be dri'wn quite
vers1 e; · ayne Wingett, a · h
t hick and w1'de. Evi'dently
pa Wrlt
"
a t the ve t erans me es in diameter. I have they do not like the feel of the
Hospital l·n Hunt'mgt on, w· tried bleachin"b It with cha lk on their feet and it is
Va . Room """·
o•&lt; R
oun d-ro b'm vinegar but this only lighten- harmless to have around. cards were signed and sent to ed the finish. Scouring does
each one.
no good So any suggestions M.B.
M Slell A
would he most appreciated. _
DEAR POLLY - I know
rs.
a tkins, worthy UN f
there are many gad"ets
matron, welcomed the
rom Washington
b
members. Her pr&lt;&gt;-tem of· DEAR UN _ The black around but I give mysell a
ficers were Bernice Hoffman
spot is probably a burn in the very soothing skin massage
t
A
• wood. Try anununia and if over my entire body with a
secre ary ; vanell George, 1 d ·
common lun"-handled bath or
Adah ; p ear 1e cana d ay , 1
t &gt;a! ues nut work you may . se r v ice • brus,h
with
Esther; Dana Hoffman, wor- &gt;ave
to 1lightly
sand it with reasonably ·stiff bristles. Thi·s
1
.
t
f
thy patron
.
; Cha r1es Ki ng, me hs ee
h woo or sandpaper. relieves any itchinu and
associate patr on ; R Uth
.as
t
uroughly after using great to use each day
b
1
for inErlewine, warder ; and Ruby . e1l1er to be sure all fine parDiehl, sentinel. Mrs. Adkins . tides are removed. Any other vigorating the skin and cirthanked her pro-tem ·officers suggestions, readers? -POv culalion. I suggest yiJU try
LY
une.- MERLE
DEAR POL!.\' _ Fo1· a d1'f·
an d presented each of the
·fI.
DEAR
POLLY -If Hazel's ferent plant stand
• use an ul·'
pa st mat rons WI'th a g1
1
mi dewed book is rare
u
historically important ur of wooden ironing board. Strip it
personal value it really down if necessary and then
. ON OEAN'S LIST .
should go to a professional varnish. Place putted plants
Linda Stewart, daughter of · book conservationist. Such a on lop and hang other plants
Mrs .
Leona
Stewart, person can be loca ted frum the underside with
Pom~roy_, was named to ~he through the ne~rest musewn. hooks.- DIANE
dean s hst for the sprmg Once damage IS dune it is fur
DEAR POLLY - I lint
quart~r at Hocking Valley the rest of the days uf the pussywillows with colored
Techmcal College . for the book and it cannot be undone . chalk and find they look most
sprmg quarter. Miss Stewart Perl&gt;aps the · local musewn attractive \vhen arl'i!nged in a
receiv~d an associate degree can hel p you themselves. vase.- HELEN Y.
m reg istered nursing from -REBE CC A, a muse um
DEAR POLLY - My Pet
the college. She graduated curator
Peeve is with those grocery
with a 3.6 average.
DEAR POLLY _ 1 would checkers who scatter frozen
foods ~hruughout one's bags
uf g roceries instead of putting
them all together ·in one bag.
TI1is would certainly make

w

Col. WiUiarn Cowan, an Air
Force pathologist, told
reporters a spot check of 1,200
of the tests - reported as
" normal" by the laboratory
:_

turned

up

" major

discrepancies'' in 3 percent of
the cases. He said about onethird of those involved
abnormalities that might be
linked to cancer.
The tests were done on Air
Force women and female
service dependents. It Is not
known exactly how many
women are involved, since,
some of them had tests as
often QS every year.
Cowan said the Air Force
has contacted women whose
recheckelf tests indicate
abnormalities, but does not
yet' know the results oi their

reexaminations.
The
company
was
identified as Automated
Medical Services of Ohio Inc.,
whose headquarters are in
Mansfield. Officials said its
contract was not renewed
when it expired last Sept. 30
because of allegatiO!'IS
Improperly
trained
employees were analyzing
the leJ ts and acting in
supervisory roles .
Some 32,000 tests done by
the
contractor , JuneSeptember 19n, when the
contra ct expired, will be
rechecked this sununer . As
the most recent tests, they
mvolv.e women least likely to
have
had
a
repeal

Cowan sa1d the Air Force is
also urging anyOI)e who had a
pap test at the 94 installations
to contact a doctor if she has
not bad a succeeding test at a ·
base not served by the
contractor in question .

requirements
and had
analyzed aboui 20 percent of
all such Air Force tests over
the five years.

"

""

the

unpacking

at

:,·
.,
... ,
,..
..

, ..
,,

, ,
.,

hume

I· •

MASON FURNITURE
FOR THE BEST DEALS

HOSPITAL NEWS

Covert,

Pomeroy;

Mary

Lawhorn, 'Mason, W. Va.;
Daisy Glassburn, Bidwell,
and Debbie lAw Ia, Lotart. W.
Va.
DISCHARGES -

Clara

JULY
CLEARANCE

•
•'

MASON FURNITURE

Veterans Memo~! Hospital
ADMISSIONS . - Arvillia
Donahue, Pomeroy; Everett
Calaway, Coolville; Christina
Grimm, Syracuse ; Ryan Dill,
Pomeroy; Lana Cozart,
T~pper.s Pialns ; Grace
Williams, Syracuse; Dana

SPECIAL MEETING
A special meeting of the
Pooleroy Fire Department
wll bo held at 7 lhia evening
('lblarmayl at !he !Ire . .Uon
.. Buttemut Ave.

,•

TRI-STATE AREA

The Sale

You Have
Been Waiting For
Starts Friday, July 14

•

OPEN:
Mon., Tues .. Wed. &amp; Sat. 8 ; 30til S:OO
Thursday Ti I 12 Noon
Friday Until S P.M.
Herman Grate
773-5592
Mason,

STOREWIDE .

w. Va.

eALL SPORTS WEAR
eALL SWIMWEAR &amp; COVERUPS
eALL SLEEPWEAR

'f!/liJ/][J@(Jf]fiJ!l){g)

PLUS:. Presses - Suits : Dress Shirts and
more ... .

ROOF PAINT

,

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•'
•'

'

'

e Red

Houn :
9:30185:00
. ' Mon. thru Sal.
f:l0-1, Fri.

•
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I

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, Boys 4-1
Schoal Ago
Boys I. Girls 7-14

.

992-3586
KIDDIE SHOPPE

2ndStl'ftt
Pomoroy , O.
Near

-

Extremely dura ble pure atkyCI

tor

mex imum

p~ lnts

g\on

retent ion and weather res istance
Excellent for meta l roo fs , bu ildifl9S ,
wood trim , shutters. lawn furniture ,
and e(l ulpment . Pr ime n ew galv an i ze d
su rfa ces with S P · 136 1 Vi ny l -Zin c
Chromate Metal Condit ioner ; badly
rusted sur fa ces w ith No . 84 -A Red L ead
Pri mer .
·

Spread rate

approx ! m at ~ly

SOO square

(7) 13, ltc

Trustees of
Scipio TWp.
Glenn E . Jewell ,
C le rk

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•

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feet per gallon , d ependi ng on surface
condition .

RETURNS TOHOME
Mrs . 1 Betty Becker is
recuperating at the horne of
her mother Mrs. Elizabeth
Searles in Cheshire, She was
released today from Vetera118
Memoria l H'ospltal.

BAKE SALE SLATED
T he Rutland United
Methodist Church women will
hold. a bake sale Saturday
beginning at 9 a.m. at the
Rutland Department Store .

211%

SHOP OUR COMPLETE PAINT DEPARTMENT

EBERSBACH HARDWARE
PH. H2-2111

110 W. MAIN

POMI-.oY

Young's
latest
controversial remark that the

ON

'
IILKiiD.
MIICHANDIII-ITOP- SHOP &amp; SAVE

.VILLAGE PHARMAC.Y

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MoToR VEHICLfi FEES
State Auditor Thomas E.
Ferguson's office reported
the third advance distribution
of 1978 state motor vehicle
registration fees totaling
$39,790,033.97 to Ohio coun·
ties, cities, townships and
yillages.
The 1320 townships shared
in a total of $1,691 ,13S.tl0
based on the number of road
miles within their borders.
Meigs County received
$37,046.81.

HJ-LO TEMPS
NEW YORK (UPI) - The
highest temperatures
reported Wednesday to the
National Weather Service,
excluding
Alaska ·and
Hawaii, was 112 degrees at
. GUa Bend, Ariz. Today's low
was 40 degrees at Evanston,
Wyo.
NOW YOU KNOW
Emperor Jahangir, 17th·
century ruler of india, was a
fishing buff but he never ..
killed anything he caught he just placed a strin~ of
pearls through the fish's
gills and threw ·It back in the
water.

They said they wanted to administration on foreign
his reaction to the current
take
the move Wednesday but policy come from the
dissident trials in the Soviet
the
House was adjourned president and secretary of
Union.
state," he said.
Young, who is in Geneva to before they eould act.
In Geneva , a Stale .DepartGoldwater told the Senate
attend a meeting of the U.N .
Economic and Social Council, • Young's remarks were ."very ment official said Vance's
appeared undisturbed by the embarrassing" to President immediate reaction to the
Young
intervjew
wa s
Carter.
commotion he qealed.
Mobbed by reporters in the
" I del)la nd Ambassador ''unprintable.''
Young's comment, in an balls of Geneva's Palais des Young provide details on .!fho
Interview published_ Nations this morning , Young he thinks are political
to prisoners in th e U.S,"
Wednesday,
came
in responded . cockily
for
hi s Go ldwater said. " If he
response to a question about demands
( Young ) can't provide the
impeachment.
" Alii can say (to them ) is, details I would exped the
help yourselves. And they can president to 'discharge
Middleport
help themselves, " Young Andrew Young.
.
' said.
9-5
MON .. SAT.
"We can't alford to have
FRI. TILS
A layette shower honoring
In Washington, Sen. Barry this kind iii thing 5aid about
• Work Shoe s
Debbie McLaughlin was held Goldwater, R-Ariz ., said our country- these are lies ."
• Work Boots
White
House
Press
Friday night at the Rutland Young should be fired unless
• Wes tern Boots
Secretary
Jody
Powell
said.
United Methodist Church. he can prove that there ani
Young
"does
not
reflect
t
he
" Buy Them Where
Hostesses were Jane Wise politicaL prisoners in the
of
the
president.
views
They Fix The m"
· Ellen Brooker , Janei United States.
"
Statements
of
thi
s
Williamson, Donna J enkins,
But the Russians said the
'
Margaret Weber, and Donna ambassador's statement to
Williamson.
Pastel colored streamers the French newspaper Le
were featured in the decora- Malin showed U.S. repression
was widespread.
In the interview published
lions, and stork replicas were
used on both the refreshment
and the gift tables. Games Wednesday, Young was
asked about the trials of
were played with prizes going Soviet dissidents Anatoly
to Janet Morris, Debbie
McLaughlin, Donna William- Shcharansky and Alexander
Ginzburg on the eve of the
son, and Carol McLaughlin.
Geneva SALT negotiations
Others attending were Mae between Vance and Soviet
Weber, Marjorie Milhoan , Foreign Minister Andrei
Janet Morris , Marcia Gromyko .
Denison, Ruth Erlewine, Fay
Young, who was in Geneva
Sauer, Edith Williamson, attending a U.N. meeting,
Ali ci a Warner, Carol was quoted as responding ,
Me La ugh lin ,
De bbie "011, that( trial) certainly is a
.McLaughlin, Wanda Vining, gesture of independence .on
Sherry Darst, Hazel Hilt th
Diana and ria Williamson . ,
eir part. But that will not
hinder
the
SALT
Sending gifts were Mrs. C. negotiations
0. Chapman, Ann · Webster,
"And the~ one does not
Margaret Edwards, Marjone know what can happen to
~ice, Rosemary Burson, Joy ' dissidents. After aU, in our
and Mary Ruth Sauer, Jenme prisons also there are
Grate, T~resa Br~wn , Opal hundreds, perhaps even
Dyer, Lisa . Morns, Leafy thousands, of people whom I
Chasteen and V1cky Johnson . would
call
politic at
prisoners. " He did not
elaborate.
In Washington, Reps .
Steven Symrns, R-Idaho, and
Larry .McDonald, !).{;a .. saia
they would ask today for the
impeachment of Young for
special otter saves you money now . . .
" high crimes and misdemeanors."
PLUS 50¢ OFF on your next purchase!
Rockefeller and the driver
(detail• available In tlore)
of the other car, David Low,
16, of Briarclill Manor, N.Y.,
were killed.
Rockefeller'·s
secretary,
Monica Lesko, 38, of
Wootwood, N.J., and Grace
(C II
~--l)
United
Slates
holds
"hundreds, perhaps thousands of political prisoners,"
drew threats of,impe~clvnent
and what a U.S. official
described
as ·
an
"Wipr~table" reaction from
Secretary of Stale Cyrus
Vance:

f)an '~

'

a3oof 5~op

Shower hosted

'

Final Rockefeller
services are held

said essential to

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formulated

ves."

BUDGET

Notice is hereby given tha t
on t~e 1-4th day of July. 1978 at
7 o clock P .M . a publi c
hearing will be held on the
Bud qe t prepared by t he
Sclp•o Twp , Trustees of
Metg~ County for fhe n~ ~e. t
succeeding f iscal vear ending
O~ c . 31, 1979. Such htarlng
will . be
held
at
the
Oown1ngton
Town
Hali
building ,

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GALVA -GUARO PAINTS

Amba11118dor

Passage of bill

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fl

u.N.

PUBLIC HEARING
0~ THE
SCIPIO 'TOWNSHIP

~-·

-. Aluminum sg,95

(UP!) -

Andrew
Young
today
challenged Congreis to try to
Impeach him for his
11latemenl that the United
States holds "political )riso·
ners," telling those whO want
him ousted to "help yoursel•

Holzer Medical Center
Dlacbargea July IZ
Petro Aldrigl, Ted Collins,
GIQria Danner, Kurt Doss,
NEW YORK (UPI) services
for
Mildred Foreman, Dorothy Funeral
Gillenwater,
Charles millionaire philanthropist
G iII i Ian d, Margaret John D. Rockefeller III were
Greenlee, Luther Holbrook, scheduled at Manhattan's
Joremy Jordan, Mrs. Ed· Riverside Church, which
warcl Keeler and eon, 1\ocketener•a father waa
Frederick Lanier, Anna lnalrumentlll In b\llldlnll.
Latham, Mrs. William Lewis
Rev. William Sloane Coffin,
and .daughter,
Luman pastor of the church, was to
Louden, Mrs. David Mercer preside at the funeral
and son, Lawana Moore, services today .
Mary Scurlock, Stanley
John D. Rockefeller Jr.,
Shaver, Leslie Sheline, Lottie father of the live Rockefeller
Smith, Wilma Smith, Tamara brothers, gave the money to
Thomas, Mrs . Michael found Riverside Chiu'ch.
Thom·pson and daughter, Sue
Following the service,
Trago, Brent Unrue, Leslle Rockefeller was to be buried
Wllliams, Anile Wood , in a prlwte ceremony on the
Martha Wyant.
family estate at Pocanli'co
Blrlha
HUls In Westchester County.
Mr . and Mrs. · Robert
Rockefeller, 72, was
Jindra, a daughter, Oak HOI; driving with his secretary in
Mr. and Mrs. David Rawlins, her converUble when it was
a daughter, Oak Hill; Mr. and sti'uck head-on by another
Mrs . Jessie White Jr., a son, vehicle about 6 p.m. Monday
Gallipolis:
... on .a lw&lt;&gt;-lane road in Mount.
Pleasant, N. Y., near the
family estate.

Stifflers

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gal•

• Green s13.75 gal.

examination.

Infants 3 mo.-24 ma.
Toddler 2T-4T
Girlt64x

Hail, Juanita Chapman,
Orville Gart~ and Eula Si.ek.

. NOTICE OF

Something For Every Size

"SUPER QUAUT}m
58.95-515.95

BY ARLETl'E -BAUDET
GENEVA, Switzerland

.--------------------------,
! Are11 Deaths I

•,

IN T'1 E

For Longer Lasting
Paint Jobs Use Our

Young challenges congress

25 pet. going
•
on retirement

BOARD MEETS FRIDAY
A special meeting of the
Southern Local School
District Board of Education
will be held at 7:30 p.m.
Friday in' the high school
cafeteria for approval of the
197&amp;-79 fiscal year budget.

easier. -ANNE
Polly . will send you one of
he r s ig ned thank-you
ne wspaper coupon clippers if
s he u·ses yuur fa vorit e
Pointer, Peeve or P roblem in
her culumn. Write POLLY 'S
POINTERS in care of this
newspaper .

SHOP

New Insulation IIWidarda L. Hart, Jr:, 41uolved a Department of Agriculture
lor ' bollllng In rul'al ........ prellminaey injunction. While agency, serve all rural areas
financed by the Fanners certain upectl of the laWIIlit including toWIII of up to 10,000
Home Admlnistra.tlon remain to be reaolved, the to 211,000 that are not in
(FmHA) will be put Into IM!.WW.u!alion standards can Standard Metropolitan
lffect, Archie R. Stegall, now 'lie implemented.
Statistical (SMSA) Areas and
. CoWity Supervisor, . an~ new thei'IIUIIIIlandarda have a shortage of mortgage
-.ced today.
· are designed to provide for credit for famWes of low and
.lmplementallon of the heavier lnaulallon and other moderate income. FmHA will
IIWidarda, lint scheduled for measures to make FmHA finance approximately 50
llarcb 15, haa been held up financed bollllng less , colllly homes and 100 apartment
!IEinc federal court con- to heat or cool, and to con- units lor Ohio during fiscal
llcleratlon ·of a suit by the serve energy . They will apply year· t978.
· · Natlonal"-elaUon of Home to newly-buill homes and
Bullden challenging the new apartments financed by
code. After FmHA prepared FmHA, and inao!ar as 1s
SQUAD RUN
additional environmental economically feasible, to
At 8:52 a: m. this morning
material and a further existing hoUsing purcha5ed
hearing on the case was held, or . repaired with FmHA the Pomeroy Emergency
U. S. District Judge George loans. Better weatherizing Squad was called to the
through more effective in· Arthur Slusher residence 159
sulation, storm doors and Kerr St., for Meda Altiu;, 93,
windows
and
other who was taken to Veterans
Memorial HospitaL
techniques
will
help
famllles
·.
to .reduce high fuel energy
expenses that jeopardize .
CORRECfiON
their ability to afford
Samuel
Burwell McKinney
adequate
housing.
WASHINGTON (UP!) Middleport,
forfeited a $100
Details
of
the
standards,
About 25 percent of federal
spending this year will go to which vaey by climatic iones, bond in Pomeroy Mayor
retirement and disability, a are available from FmHA Andrews ' court for intoxication and not Burden
situation that Is going to be state or coUnty offices.
ad- McKinney as reported
Housing · loans
eumlned by a special panel.
· President . Carter ministered by FrnHA, a U. S. ·earlier.
Wednesday ·signed
an
exi!cuUve order creating an
11-member panel to study
pension systems aromd the
country.
.
I
The
Commission
on
Panna;
three
sons,
Hulbert
MRS. GRACE WILLIAMS
Pension Polley will develop
Mrs. Grace WiUiams, 92, Williams, Akron; John P .
on
nallon&amp;l - policies
retirement and disability that Syracuse, died Wednesday (Jack) WUiiams, SyracUse,
at
Veterans . and Thomas H. WUUams,
can be used as guictelines by evening
Columbus; 10' grandchUdren
Memorial
Hospital.
the public and private sector.
Mrs .
Wllliams
was and 16 great-grandchildren .
Funeral services will he
preceded in death · by her
husband, Clifton H. Williams, held at 2 p.m. Saturday at the
END·MARRIAGES
and a daughter, Jean Ewing· Funeral Home with
In Meigs County Common Williams Jones. She was a the Rev . Dwight Zavitz of·
Pleas Court one marriage member of the First United ficiating . . Burial will be in
was dissolved and one Presbyterian Church · in Moun II Hill Cemetery ,
divorce granted.
. Syracuse.
Gallipril1s.
The marriage of Mike
Friends may call at the
Surviving
are
two
Capehart and Linda M.
•
funeral
home from 7 to 9 this
daughters, Mrs. Ernest (AvaCapehart was dissolved and
evening
and from 2 to 4 and 7
zo) Sisson, Syracuse, and
Shirley Vining was granted a Mrs. Vera May Tannehill, to 9 p.m. Friday.
divorce from Roger Vining.
•

••lllil.llll!lllll!lllll!lllll!lllll!lllll!lllll!lllll!lllll!lllll!lllll!lllll!lllll!lllll!lllll!l-

There wu no Immediate
explan..lon of the illno-month
delay in rechecking tests. But.
Air Force officials said it had
been necessary to subpoena
the pap-smear slides from the
laboratory, a step taken last
Monday .
Officials said a federal
grand jury In Cleveland was
hearing testimony in the
case. The U.S. attorney in
Cleveland,
James
R.
. Williams, declined to discuss
the gran! jury's role, but said
the FBI is investigating.
The company was hired to
assist Air Force clinics overburdened with pap test

" "'
" •
' "

I
. S

.

flve years.

-~

,...,..------r---:--- ·•· .·;•••·

on false pap
. smears results I.:

By ROBERT KAYLOR
WASHINGTON (UPIJ
The Air Force is looking for
thousands of women who had
pap smear teSts for vaginal
and cervical cancer at 94 oi
its bases between 1972-77, to
warn them the reault.a may
have have. been \neo&lt;rec:Uy
reported.
A few suspected cancer
caSes have turned up in
' samples rechecked so far. A
federal grand jury and the
FBI are looking into alleged
irregularities involving the
tests, 640,000 of which were
analyzed under contract by a
private laboratory over the

·"

v·s POINTERS.·· -

I Air Forc;:;e-;;dt.;7~;;;;;~l
f

New standards becoming effective

Invitations extended to OES

Local. • •

LaWkln, ,'l,

U... ~ver

of a

.third vehicle that was
sideswiped by Low's car,
were injured.
On Wednesday, a memorial
service was held for Low in
Briarcliff Manor, N.Y.
Police have said that Low,
an A-&amp;ud~nt a I the high
school, apparently caused the
accident by S1"erving over a
double yellow tine on the twolane road.

.'

SWISHER LOHSE
rttur rnu1. y

Will they go on Co record the
others, possibly do an album?
Well, they have anot)Jer
recording date for early fall
and, about the album, James
says, smiling , '' Yeah, · an
album would be nice. But for
the meantime we' re takipg
things one step at a time.
We'llsee how this first record
is accepted and go from
there.''

Kenneth McCullough. R . Ph .
Charles ·RiHi e , R. Ph .
Ronald Hanning, R. Ph
Mon . fhru Sat. 8: 00a .m . to 9 p . m .

Sunday 10 :30 to 12 : 30 and 5to 9 p.m .
.PRESCRIPTIONS
PH . '9-&gt;2-2955
Friendly Service
Pomeroy, 0 ..
E. Main
Open Nights till9.

&lt;SID-

Whirlpool

APPLIANCE

U. S. economy
WASHINGTON (UPll)
Se118. Birch Bayh, O.lnl., and
John
ileinz,
R-Pa.,
introduced legislation today
to prohibit the federal
government from buying or
supporting the purcbase of
foreign steel and otller
~ sold In the United
States at unfair prices.
The bill for the first lime
would establish · in law a
"mlnimwn preference" in
government procurement for
domesllc
go.ods
plus
additional prelerencea for
domestic Items ov..- fcrl!lgn
)X'oducls that are lllll'keted
In the United States at
artlf!cially low prices, Bayh
said.
The definition of a
"domestic article" 1s one
whO.e cost 1s at lealll 75
percent derived from other
domealically produced '
producia .
Bayh said passage ot ·the
bill Is "essential .to the
American economy,
particularly to elforll Wider
way to bolller the troubled
domestic steel lndUIIry ."

.REUNION SLATED
The C. E. Snyclet: reunion
will be held July 18 at Portland Park. A basket lunch
will lllart at noon •

Nu •. Gwen~olyn , lhe Nutt111cker Suite lsn'l a new candy bar .

Model SFC-4500

~

• Squeez'l,s and com pacts
trash to (lpproximately
1/4 its o riginal size into a
t&lt; Jgh, disposable bag
• Built-i n compartment for
solid air freshener
• Convenien t key-knob
operation

Whirlpool
TRASH MASHEir

compactor

o Four-color front panel for

c hoice of harvest gold ,
a lmond , white or avocado
, o HandsomeT extu red
1
Steel top surface
• ··orop-down side panel on
drawe r for each bag
removal

REG.

'267

1ONLY

ELLIOTT APPLIANCE II
I

r'

220 EAST MAl N STREET

POMEROY, OHIQ.

E992-7113

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-··. . . -

- .......

.

---

==~~N:;.h~openin;o, Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

Ca.-;h

l'IICi r"j.!t'

100

1.50
iiiO
:1.00

1. ~;)

Tuesday through Sa turday by

I!Wi

appointment .

Eill'h word V\'t'l' tiJt' nu nunwn 1$
wurcL~ IS .f l't"!lb pt"r wort!, pt•r t.l&lt;t\
Ado, fWIIlU I~ v!Jit'r 111&lt;11 1 {'t/IIM't 'UII\' t·
liM)·~ wlll Ot• eh.arlo(l;'d at till' I da)

n&lt;i•
111 IIWlllUt)', Card of Thetllk!&gt; ami
Obi\U&lt;~t)' . ti t'etti..S pt't' wvr tl, $:1
ITUHU tl!Un Ct:1sl1 m ildl' lilll'( '

flO

'

llud.

r~scrve:;

lhe nl;!lrl
W t'i..lrt ur !'t'Jt'l"lilll}' .ad.s dt'"t'lllt•,l ub}l't'lll.llliil. Tht Pubhs lu:r wrllnul iJt'
rt.'$J)Ut...,;lblt' fur mur.. lht~n um• Ll ll 'UI"•
r&amp;:1 UISI'r"IIOII.
Phullt' 99'2·21 56
Th1• PuiJ ib her

CARRIERS NEeDED for the Oa.rly
Sentinel Pomeroy . Middleport
· and Syracu se area
Please
phone 997 -2156 between B 30
arn ond 5:00pm .

-NOTICEAnnouncing new ownershiP
of Hayman' s SanitAry
Collection
S•rv ic e ,
formerly belonging to

wish
to
extend
Lightning and his family
much success on
his
retirement. We know he
~ill be missed . We hope to
91Ve you th&amp; same prompt
courteous service to a II our
customers.

~--

Robert Hayman

992-6345

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
. DEADLINES

-

WHEEL
ALIGNMENT

MUJiti&lt;l)
Nuun or\ Sal unl.a y

Tut•.,da\
thru Pr rtiiH

~P . M ..
lht• J.ty !Jt.f01 t' pubht'O
HIUil

SPECIAL

IF YOU ho ve a serv1ce Ia otter USED ~TRACTORS .
MF~30 Diesel
wont to buy or sell somethrng. MF135 D1es.el
MF150 Diesel · MF235 Dre se l .
oe look mg l or work
or
MFl65 Diesel . MF785 D1esel whate .. ~r . . you'll get re sul ! s
MF1135 Diesel. Cob. air · &amp;
fos ter wi th o Sen tinel Want Ad.
heater .
Coli 9t;J2.2J56.
NE W &amp; USED IMPLEME NTS
BA CK YARD Sole. 2 family . 9-3. MF9 Bole, . MF 10 Bo ler . MF I20
Frr. til ? Rain ca ncels. 277 Mom
Baler - Matlhews. Rotary Scythe
MF880 Semi -moun t ed t:r bot.
- ~' ·· Mid ~~E rt
1om
Plow
MF520 12" Disc .
CARP ORT SA LE. l sttrme ever . Off
MF200 2 Row Chopper- · MF39 'l
Rt. 7 Bypass . 1 • mile on l eading
Row Planter s . Mechcinicol
Creek Rood . July 13. 14 . 15
T
rans plont er .
Record players , 10-speed bic y.
SHINN"S TRACTOR SALES
cle , upr rght prone . clo thes
Phone4S8- Jb30 .
_ ~ · :h es :...~".~ ·- _
l eon . W . Vo .
SEVERAL FAMILY Yard So le
Wed Thurs . Fri . 212 Rock St.,
Pomeroy . F~urth rrght tu rn oft FOR SAl E Five cemeter y lots.
Ra ci ne
Cemetery .
Ca ll
Spr tng A ... en ue 1 carpel a nd
Gollrpolts, OhJO ~1 4 · 4 4 6 · 2507
mrs c.
-.'
YARD SAlE . Sa turday , July 15 ot 9 NEW POTATOES . cabbage , ond
beons (pick your own ) l or sale
om. Owens . 212 N. 3rd . M1d·
now . Sweet corn available July
dleport
Clo thing . leather .
11th . C. W Proff it t Form .
bogs . shoes , o r&amp;eord player ,
Portl and . Ohio.
books. , appliances , knrck ·
knocks . e tc.

$}295

Any U.S. made car -parts
~xtra if needed. Excludes
front-wheel drive cars.

WANT to tha nk mv neighbors
and fri ends. for the l oad and
kindnes:&gt; and for all they did l or
me at the ~ udd en deo1h of m,.
son. Kenneth Per s.tnger . Al so.
to my niece . Carolyn lrllle
Thank s and God Bless to each
of you .
Mary Roberts. .

BRING IN
COUPON
AND RECEIVE

WE WOULD li k e to than k the
Rac i ne Emergency
Squ ad ,
Delores Wolfe . Ron do!l Roberts.
and Brll Rob er1 s. lor tronspor
l ing our daughter, Robrn, to
Holzer HoSpital. Your'ki ndness
is greatly apprecia ted .
· Joyce &amp; Don Manuel.
::.::_

~lXI

OFF

~ SPECIAL

PRICE

__

Expires
July IS , 1978

LOS T: TOOL BOX
weffn Chester
th ought to be
Com RJ Rood
Brssell , 949·2860

wi th tools be t·
and Bo shan
lost rn Seoul
Call Ch arles

--·-----

Pomeroy Landmark

-

9.J~ck 1'1. Carse~ , Mgr.

-

A;l

.

-.--~--

DIESEl MECHAN IC for €oter piller
ond Tere11 equipment. 742·280b

Pomtroy 992.2181

NeW MAO&lt;. lRU CK FAC ILITY .
Ground lor opportunities . EM ·
perien ce d second
general
mochonics . ¥ech on 1c's helper .
Ports manager . Rar ts co unter
helper. Ports de lr&lt;Jery tr uck
dr r... er s. Secretory . General of.
l rce wor k. Send res ume to:
G ollra Mock , PO Bo io: 49 1.
Gall 1polis 45631

PAUL ORR
Long Bottom
Basham
949 -2193 or
985 -3586

or

A CAREER JOB
IN CONSUMER FINANCE
-,.o il

.....,

..

..
..
'
....-......
....
.. Ill

~

~

tf11 •

v ~· ; '

~

J

-

..•..

ASTRO·GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

.. .

~ · u !JIJJj
~ jjlJJJJrflw'}
July 14, 1978
Cha nce ma y play a more promr·
ne n t ro le m. your arfa.r s tnr s
co m.ng year than tl ha s l or
quite some trme Forlunalely
the break s snoufd c ome ju s!
when yo u need them

CAN CE R (June

.
' '

...' . ., ,.
I

I'

.

.,'fi '• :.O•
I • (

•'

' '

..."'
..'l'-

,.,,""

·--

21-July

221

The r e ' s a. su r prrse rn s tore
today that you should l1nd
pteasmg One o l your SOCi al
mter est Will be mslr umental rn
brrngr n g 1t aD o ut Fmd out more
aboul yourself by se nd1ng tor
your co py a t A stra -Graph Let ter Ma rl 50 cenl s l o r ea c h and a
long , self·add ressed . s tamped
envelope to A stro·Graph , P 0
' Box 489 . Rad1 0 Ct ty Sta11011 .
N Y 10019 Be sure Ia spec tl y
blflh sr g n
LEO lJuly 23-Aug . 22) A vex mg
family malfer c ould finall y begrn t o pr ogress m rt ne w and
p romising drrec tr on today . Be
prepared to fl ow w1th the
€\Ien ts ."

VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sepl . 22) Lei

your hem do wn a li lli e , s peak
up and tell o ther s your
thought s today
You cu e
blesseo wl!h a keen . clever wrl

liBRA (Sepl. 23-0cl . 23) Gaons
co uld come m an unusual man ·
ner tOday EJSpe c t the u ne)( ·
pee led and you won ' t un th rnk·
rn gty r efuse what you sh ould

DOBERMAN PUPS 10 weeks old .
Blo c!.. and !On . '192 -3116 or
99'} 5010

-1971 M~RCURY MARQUIS
celleri1 cond1 t1 on 99'} 552 3
TWO 1907 Chevy It s. . 2·doar
s eda n .
4 · do or
wagon
949·'1301

-

~

21

Poone 992. 2181

FOOT ST AR CRAFl inboard.
outboar d .
Good
cond oiion
$3500 or 110de lor s rnolle~
111boar d ou tb oard 949 -2125 .

1977 YAMAHA .XS 650. One
owner . 4.000 ac:tuo l mile'S .
Superb condil•on Coll992 -50 17
alter 5 piT! .

-

~

RETREAD

CAPRICORN (Dec ~ 22-Jan . t9) i977 fORO PICKUP 302 V ~ 8 Sid
Be c areful today not to label
~h r lt SICXXJ H'l ·29J2 olter 5

pe o ple
toward

a

to a group you don "t approve
ot She m1ght be a gem 1n th e
rough
AQUARIUS (Jan . 10-Feb ~ 19)
Condrh o n s aHec t1ng your sta tus or ca ree r are a trif le trtc ky ,
ye t beneficta l . today ShJi trn g
evenl s ma y unertpec t edty e .- pose an opportunity fo r you

PISCES

---~~-

o r behaYe al ao l ty
pers o n who belongs

!Feb ~

!969 OLDS CUTLASS con11er1obl e
Run s well needs body work .
992 . 7207 ofte:r 5 pm .
1966 BU ICK LESABRE Ph one
992 ~ 5865
1972 CHEVROLET B~IA·i;-s tOOO.
997 ·7308
---~ -~ - 1969 PONTIAC CATALINA . Good
condrtion Good work ~or .
992 ~ 3976 .

10-Mart h 201 An

rdea that rnay be a Or t tar oul
could ltash through you r 1magina t1ve mtnd toda y. :ts brrl lrance
may be more apparent l o others tha n to you .

_

_

\ 957 CHE VY . 1952 Che vy . Both for
5500 Charles Bissell 949·2860
at Basi-ion
-

-

ARIES (March 21 -April 19) In- ~JLJi' l&amp;2£&amp;aii£. ;;:;:

~est1g ate any unusual offe r s
presented 10 you today No
ma11er how bizarre they
appear . a litrle probing m1ghl
re\leal hiddf!n treasu re

1976 ST AR CR AFT TRAILER . Sleeps
s. ilC . Be&amp; n_used twice 992.J36 1
or 992 -3694,

:~~R~a~~~p~~!~~~;~~.~~~ ~i:iL.'i~!",: ~-~S

may loday r e 'w'erse hls behav1or
pat tern wllh an o ffer to be
help ful Tak e him up on 11 - a
new un 1on c ould I P.S u l1
GE MINI (May 21-June 20) Don ' t
tJc ctlra1d to c hang e you r wav o l
You It
do1ng th1ngs today
never know d th e r e ' s ·a hr: tiP.r
me thod un les s you try rl
(NEVIS P.ft.P£H l tll! IH' IH',f l&gt; '.',fl 1

WANH::O TO Rent House or
apartment in Pam~rdy or Mid·
dleport lor Dentis t locating in
th@ oreo 1 593 · 588 ~ . Athens .
WANaO TO r ent re tired couple
de'&gt;"O' furnt'.&gt;hed apartment or
'&gt; rnoll ho11~1 1 o' t. o,l(lr tn
f'r,. ,lf," i Y •J r Mtrldlr•por t Call

SPECIALS
RETREAD
TIRES ARE

NOW AS LOW
AS

$13~

With Retreadable
. Excha'nge

MIDDLE PORT

3 ~ 15

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
· ~ding
-

0.
tfc

Sa
, ...... t...

I

..

Movie Channel 4 5 &amp; 9 P ~ M -Orca ~ The

-~

SM ITH NELSON

Poone 949-2801
or 949-2160
FREE ESTIMATES
No Sunday C. lis Please
7 ~ 9 ~ I mo.

M OTORS, INC.
i

~~

BORN LOSER

ffi·2

Any day, anytimo.
Phone 985-3806
Jack Ginler98S-3806

$23.000 for a quick sale .
LAND - 5 Jo~ 25 acres of

land

in

the

park with .80 of 'an acre of
level land . Has 3 bedroom s
with central air and heat.
Rea l nice built·in k itcMen ,
patio, and metal utility

NEW

USTING

Reno v ated 3 bedroom
frame
ho me .
New
carpeting all through , new
fuma~e and ou t of high
water. Walk to work or

IN TOWN -

3 bedroom s,

bath , family room , electric
baseboard heating, Ohio
Power , city w•ter, and nice.
-view. $17,500.

OUTSKIRTS -

.Box 3Tank~

co untry .

Electric available. Located
on good gra v el road. $750 .
per acre.
,
REAL NICE - 1975 Holly

Nice 2

bedroom home . Ins i de
finish is like new . Clean ,
neat, and handy on State
Route. Bath, natural gas
heat, city water, 2 car
garaeg , and over 9 acres .

;$18,500 .
BEAT INFLATION! BUY
NOW, SELL LATER .
COME IN AND WE WILL
SHOW YOU HOW.
G. Bruce Teaford
Helen L. Teaford
Sue P. Murphy
Associate

L.

present. plus FREE GAS WI LL
SELL
FAST
$24,000.00.
SECLUDED - But close to
Pom eroy, 2 a c res , 2 story
home in good condition ,
several buildings, garden
space. only_ S2S,OOO.oo.

SYRACUSE -

3 acres,

secii,J ded, fencing, garden,
like new 3 Bdrrrt . home,

ranch type wifh 2 baths, 2
yrs. old. ONLY 528,000.00.
$8,500.00 - 2·3 Bdrms., 1'h
bath s. basement, equipped
kitchen .
read y to

7- 10-1 mo .

HOMESITES for sale, 1 ac re and
up. M iddleport near Rutland
Coll992 -7481.
~,---~.

all elec . , 1 acre M 1ddleport ,
dose lo Rutla nd . Phone 992·

lteal
~•tal~
.
- loi Sal~
. ~

1•8 I . · - - -, - - - -

·.

VA· FHA , 30 yr . f i~cin g . also
refinancing . lrelcfnd Mortgage!
77 E. Stat&amp; . Alhens . phone (614
5 9 2 ~ 3051 .

----

-

~

19 ACP:ES LOCATED in Pomer:_oy .
Oh10 with ci ty water and
'ewoge ovoilcible . 992.bJ33 or
7-42·1033.

THREE BEDROOM total elec tric
hou"Se in Rustic Hill!t , Syr acUse
Ohio .
D ou bl e co n cre te
dm•ewoy , polio with brick bar
b·que . stor age butldmg , stove ,
refrigerator . and carpe ti ng.
992.2b5b ~

TWO l OTS near Meigs M ine No. I
wi th r ural water avai lable .
742 -2746

IN RUTLA ND . b roo ms. . parlrol
both , ca r port , utili ty bui ld rng .
On big lo t Ci ty wat er , gos.

2 story

older

-

home,

bedroom s, family room
with firepla ce, liv ing room ,
d i ning room , c arpet ed
throughout ,
kitchen
complete! y
equipped,
laundry room wifh washer
and
dryer ,
2
baths .
o.utbull ding with electric
for stor age, alum . siding,
storm w indows, new roof,
on doub le lot . Ask i ng
$35,000 . ONner will take
mob1le n ome · as down
paym e nt .
Prefer
3
bedroom .

Middleport...:. House,

large

.THREE BEDROOM frame home in
·Middleport . Co ll992·345 7.

804 W. Main
992-2298
Pomeroy

·.--

TWO NICE loh in RacH1e with Hoi·
ly Por k trailer and 19 x 42 ce ·
men! block building , has Iorge
garden space and !everol fruit
trees . Phone 9.tl9 2428.

After Hours

Call 992 -1133
CONTACT :
lois Pauley
Branc.h Manager

THE WISEMAN
REAL ESTATE AGENCY
~

~t A I TQII

GALLIA COUNTY'S LARGEST
REAL ESTATE AGENCY
~ CALL 446 3643

FREE MOUNTING
AND BALANCING

wifh

Don't Wait '
Buy At Savings!

k i t c hen, living , dining ,
large util i ty , enclosed
slUing porch, barn &amp; other

remodeled 1'12 story home

Bdrms .,

both ,

buildings . ONLY 115.000.00.
WE HAVE MANY NICE
PROPERTIES
A'ND
MANY
QU ... LIFIED
BUYERS. FOR BEST
RESULTS CALL TODAY.
HENRY E . CLELAND
REALTOR
HANK, KATHY &amp; LEONA
ASSOC;ATES
992-2259-992-6 lfl

[B
"'"0'

"'GASOLINE ALLEY

______

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

---~-,r::;---;-----., -----~-:---.

I been
up here
b'fore!

Me an' Beckll
knows all th'

-

PUlliN S ~X CAVA TtNC . Complete
Service . Ph one 992·7478 .

-

---

--

PUDDLE POOLS . All srzes and
shapes Swr m pools. 2 yea1s
ex perrence. fr ee estim oles ,
anything
yo u
ne ed
l or
und&amp;rground swim pool s. New
chemical ond supply st ore
Albany ,
Ohro .
Pho ne
6 14 ·698·6555. ( Aft er 'b prn
614 ·689.525 1 John Jeff ers or
689·5'105 Bill Cilletre. ) We ore
NOT all wet on PRICES .

pasture &amp; woodS /On VanZandt Road . The owner is no
longer able to take care of this lovely place so they
must sell now. Attrac ti ve remodeled 10 room farm
home,. with nice si zed rooms, I V:;. baths, 4 bedrooms &amp;
carpet throughout . Rural &amp; well w a ter plu s Several old
outbuildings. Priced to sell at ~ . 900 .

OWNER DESiRES IMMEDIATE SALE - The owner
of this home In Pomeroy Is leaving the area and needs

to sell now. A 11h story home w ith -4 bedroom s including
a spacious master bedroom, lovely kitchen w i th all the
appliances, large living room , washer &amp; dryer plu$
pat io &amp; 6 acres of land and It's onlyh 1 mile from
downtown . $27,500

Chimney Swept by a ;ofession~l
with modern dus tle ss clean i ng
- old tlme workman shrp . Coli
1-J7J.b()57, Ron Zortman .

E. M,_Wiseman, Broker 446-,3 796 Eve.
J1m Cochran, Assoc. 446· 7881
N~ncy Smith, Assoc. 446·4910

zz Invented

30 Gymnast's

had!"
8 Capitulates

business
u Uke

31 Finnish

9~nnoble

O'Nelll's
:U. Came to
"Interlude"
fruition
25 - Negri
~ Top off

17 Holiday
time

10 Certain subscription

-·"·~·-~ --- •

.·..

II

21 Miss

NORTH

Moreno

22 Social

.

• K85
EAST
WEST
- . -.
• QJ 4
• KQI09153 ., 8 6
t K J8754
• Q
• Q 10 6 3 2
• J9
SOUTH

27 Amen-Ra
1W Osiris
%8 Go llllray
!I Salty

• AK8 73
• J2
• 10 3 2

Utterer's

=ce

MAT'flllfSS • • •
F·,.,_
"'L ,.,.~
IT ,~
~

BeER.
C 1I1IIIYIIEA, IIIC., Tlrl

ill'lt

US Pll ()II

I .• . I FIND IT ~A~D 10
13ELIEVE iHAT GIRL IN
'lOUR FilM IS NOT

C'ONNA WELLS!

]·I J

DAILy CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it :
'~

.....

---~-

NOW I THAR 'S A

PomiiOJ Undmarll
9a.J.Kk w. C.ney, 1\o\ir.
-

-

,_992-2111

"CR'f8A61(" 80061E! 11415
IS 60NNA KILl

ME!

L.A Dt: OA OE OA DE

South

Pass

t• '
Pass

3¥
Pass

Opening lead : •K

By Oswald Jacoby
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Is and Alan Sontag
.
used lor the three L's, x for the two O's, etc: Single lenerli
The Professor started h1s
tpostropbes, the len(th and formation of the words are a
play just the way anyone
hl.llts. Eseh day the eode letters are different .
else would . He took
dununy 's ace of hearts, led
CRYPTOQUOTES
the 10 of spades and, paused
T W D L- to think before gomg fur·
XWDTYA
LX
I U L' T W
\her. He had started wtth
four apparent losers and
LZ·
IDWOXW
QOZW;
LZ FLDD
now the ball trump break
had increased the number to
AWOV
0 T • five.
FLZB JWUG
XWOR
•
Then the Professor
JOVZOCWX.- XOAPWD
SYBVXYV remarked, " ~aybe thi~
Yalenlay't eryptoquate: I HAVE COME TO THE CON· cloud has a stlver lining .
eLUSION THAT MANKIND CONSUMES TOO MUCH FOOD- He played his spade ace.
He cashed ~ king of
lYDNEY SMml
trumps
and ace of cluha.
~ 1978 JCinl Feal\lrn Synd lut~. Inc.
Then he led a club to
dummy's king , cashed

•

NICE MATCH ,G'UY5!

•AH
Vulnerable : Both
Dealer : South
weot North Eaot

A X y 0 L B A A X R
II LONGFELLOW

BARNEY

NOW WE HAVE TO GO
AND CONGRATULATE

7- 13-A

• 10 9 6 52
·• A 4
• A 96

~~~::~=:----------------------------------------------------------------, ~wn
FRANK tnd ERNIE'S
••. "rHas oNe COMes :::_dlllo
~f[RB£09
W1'rH A Po.AM

r

WILL. 00 babysitting i~ the~~m-;
wHM;doys . 7 to 5, 992.3976 .

Iatlller brandt.

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag
--~~~~~~~~~~~~~:::.::::.!L--

South tames bad trump split

part
S3 Tracklne

•

1S

service dtpertment •nd
II Mrvl~ Hotpolnt and

J

S2 WlnCllke

TILE INSTALUiD. Ce~rni~ii;
slare and quarry . 992·3685 ,
year' experience .

We htvt · tnlttg•d our

lake

venire!J!en
zeeeremony

FRANK &amp; ERNIE

BRIDGE

reat : sl.

rank
25 Group of

141 ACRE FARM ~ UNUSUALLY GOOD BUY - The
owner 's age prevents her from c ontinuing to operate
the farm and she desires an immed iate sate . .SO to 60
acres tillable with some verv gOOd creek bottom and
hill top land . The balance in pasture &amp; wOOds. The slK
room horry e is gOOd (does need some modernization),
large all - Purpose barn and several VOOd outbuildings.
Minerals go with lt and It's located In an area where
gas, oil &amp; coal have been found to be plehtlfut Near
Rutland . $60's . .
. •

Z3 sty-high

abbr .

~~~~~
')

--

WATER WEll drilting .. _Wil l~;-j"·
Grant . 7,.2·2879.

7 " - been

zo Cboice :

Will CARE lor lhe elderly in ovr
home. Ph one 992·73 14 ,

QUICK SALE NEEDED - 68 acres Of good bottom,

"

a valid

---'---~_.-....,...-~ 19 employee
Maxim

W ill do roofing , comtr u ctr on
plumbing and heating. N o tab
too Iorge 0 1 too sm all. Phone
7 42 23.tl8.
HOWER't
AND MART IN
co vet ing . seplt&lt;
s.y~ l(:&gt;~ns ,
dozer, backhoe, dump tr uck.
limestone _ gravel , bla cktop
paving, Rt . 143 Phone 1 (014 )
698-733 t

Yesterday'• Aa8wer
11 Nautical
27 P1anlst
wfectlon
Errol!
21 Edremist.t Z9 Phase

(PG)
Hedda I PG)
Cabbie Channel 5 ,7:00 P .M. - Paul Gaudino Family Fitness Show
10 :00 - 700 Club ._
Thursday, July 13
7 &amp; 11 P.M. -

will

J-__.J L----~~l-~~~~~--~7~-~·3~-JIBLasVeg~

EXCAVATING. dare r. backho e
o nd dr tcher . Chorles R. Ho i
field , 8o ck
Hoe Sor·v•cc
Rutland . Ohio Phone 742· 2000

BDRMS ..

good condlf ion . DNL Y
511 .000.00.
HOME WITH 4 LOTS Has much pofentlal . ONLY
59,000.00.
COUNTRY
Nicely
3

EXCAVATING dozer laoder and
backhoe work dump true~ ~
and lo·boy s f or htre, wrll haul
fill din fO soil. lrmcs tone anrl
grove-l. Call Bob or Roger Jel
lers . day f:!hone 997 -7Q8Q , ntghr
ph~_99~.&lt;J5 25 or 992 5(32.

1=~~----------~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~··JL

MDvte CMnne\ 4 5 &amp; 9 P .M. - Rollercoaster

operatic
heroine
I Lamprey
catcher

nwnber
15 Having len

··~

·-

Basement ,
new
F . A.
furnace ,
lot$
of
r emodeling , on a level lot .

E xcel lent
neighborhood,
cu te little 2 Bdrm . home
needs owner . Ba$ement,

Part of
the eye
14 Soccer

38,5

SEWIN G MAOIINE Reparrs . ser
vice oil make s. 99'1r 2184 rne
Fobr Tc Shop , P'cJ m croy
Aulhor ired Srnger So les and
_ ~ er:_i c e . Wu !&gt;ha~en Scisso1s.

paJ1'011.

3 Rebel
4 Repugnance
5 Young

'

ElWOOD BOWERS REPAIR
Swee-pe rs, too !. ters . rron~ . all
sm all opplion c.es. . lovv11 rn ower
nex t to State Highway Goragf'
on Ro ute 7. Phone (614 } 98 5

2:3D-News 3;· 3:00-Movle "Backtrack" 3; 4:36--Movle " Dead Run" 3.
6:DO-Big \/alley 3; Bewitched 3.

z Pui 011 the

;=~~~~~~~~~~ 12'Belittle
river

Auctla ne&amp;r , ..Com
p lete Serv ice. Pho ne 949 -14!:1 /
or 949·20&lt;X&gt;. Rocrne. Ohro , 'Cr •II
Bradfor d.

NEIGlER BlJJLDIN~G - S~ ppl)l ~~
build1ng houseto , repa ir work
and cobin oto;. Co lt Guy H.
Neigler. 949·2508 olter 5 pm .

good repair
move into. CALL

A STEAL AT $16,500.00.
MIDDLEPORT

counter

BRADFORD ,

1 : 3D-News 13.

DOWN
1 Cut

Italian

3

lot, complete! y remodeled,
garage ,
ce l l ar ,
outbui ldings , grape arbor .
No ~ 2i 6. $27 ,500 .

[H

5 Kind of
•., 81!$101!$, IT

FIVE ACRES ond Schultz m obrle
home, land ho s add itional
trailer hook up . Need l or qui ck
sa le. 614 ·667 -3305

-~·-

&amp;..."•e

CALL
99HJ23 or 99 2 ~ 6011
6 ~ 19~ I mo. pd

__

KXXXI I )"

.I

Soffit, Room Addit ions
&amp; A· Frame Homes .
For Free Es1imates

=-=~-

THREE BEDROOM house . oil elec·
:r ic lots of ground . Reasonobl•
after . Owner . New Hoven , WV ,
304
~3!.'~•:.:..-~
J 7 ACRES IN Rutl~nd Village -4
bedroom house, 2 cor garage ,
other
ou tbuilding s
A sking
$15 .000 . 7.d 2·3 150,

---

A lOOt&lt;···

tJ

"CX: I )

SOMETHII'I' .. , OH ~ Q fl ...
WHAT'S THI S~

. VINYL SIDING

THREE BEDRO OM house in Ra ci ne
oreo. Near "r rver Cornp!ete'ly
re modeled 949 2545.

--

IJll GO liAVE

·TOO COLI? FOR PYrJIOMS ...
BUT HE :;URE SAW

ALUM. &amp;

Nt W 3 bedroom house . 2 bath s,

In

TODAY .
RT .
lJ. 3

MASH BROTHERS

REE VES TRAOI,N G Post , Pagevi ll e.
G roceries., dry goods , hard
wore , f eed ta ck shop, Special
25 lb. o f dog food , $3.88 .

I I r1

SEEING SNAKES
QUifT DOWN· · ·

,

4; News 6; Elec . Co. 20,33; Hogans

tJ

I SLYJUT

7-7- l mo.

Junction 15.
5 : 3~dd Couple

Heroes 15.
6,110-News 3,,,8, 10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20;
.
Making Things Grow 33.
6·3&lt;f-NBCNews3,A,15; ABC News13; Andy Griffith 6,
· CBS News 8,10; Over Easy 20; Antlquoo 33.
7:110-CrO!S-Wit• 3,A; Newlywed Game 6,13; Muppet
Show 8; News 10; Gilligan's Is. 15; Almanot 20;
· Inslghl 33.
7,3()-Porter Wagoner 3; Gong Show 4; $100,000 Name
Now arrange the circl~ letters to
That Tune 6, 13; Price Is Right 8; MacNeil-Lehrer
form the surprise answer. as sug·
Qested by I he above canoon .
Report 20.33 ; Family Feud 10; Pop Gots The
Country 15.
·
8:00-CPOSharkey 3,4,15; Movie " The lasf OlnoMur"
Answer here;·
TO
6,13; Movie "Scalawag" 8,10; Washington Week In
Review 20.33.
'
(Answers tomorrow )
8:3&lt;f-Chico &amp; lhe Man 3.4. o5; Wall Street Week 20.33.
Jumbles COACH ENEMY ALWAYS TREATY
9:110-Rockford Files 3,4,15; Evening Of French
Yesterdays
Answer: What the peech with the beautiful skin also
Television 33; To Be Announced 20.
had-A H~RT OF STONE
""·lO :oo--Qulncy 3,4, 15; ABC News Closeup 6,13;' CBS
News Special 8,10 ; News 20.
10:3()-Monty Python's Flying Circus 20.
11 :110-News 3,4,6,8 ,10, 13,15; Dick Cavett 20 .
11 :36---Johnny Carson 3.4. 15; T.eam Tennis 6,13; Movlt
by l '' OMAS JOSEPH
" Carbine Williams" 8; Movie " The Wor of the
40 More
ACROSS
Worlds" 10.
12 :00-ABC News 33; 12 :36---Janokl 33.
profound
I Food
1·
00-Midnlghl Special 3,4, 15; Movie " Kung Fu" 10;
n
Cast
out
fish

UTILE ORPHA N ANNIE

SHORE , SHORE!

------,--c-

N~W LISTING -1 9 acres,
ranch type home with 3
Bdrm s., bath , carpeting ,
pa neling. Garage, several
b ui ld i ngs · plus 2 o lder
homes that are rented at

[]

·] I I

Free Estimates
Phone 949-2862
or 949-2160

742·2328

_,...,... _

IWOPER

Downspouls

-

Free Estimates
Work GuArAnteed

Chester, Ohio
JQ.JO.c

742 ~ 288 1

MAIN
POMEROY, 0 .

Construction

tj
I . J

~1 1 N., T IIo~T-

New or Repair
Gutters and

AI Tromm

Jack' septic

1n

J08 J.ID I~

ROOFING

Room Additions
&amp; Spray Painting

estimate, 24 hour service.

GILTH

- PI'( tQl'T '(lU ~T

H. L WRITESEL

~~
Roofing, Siding,

by Henrr Arnold and Bob Lee
'

®

Unscramble lhese tour Jumbles,
one letter lo each square, to form
four OJdinary words.

•

'(.U?. AllJI:£'{'1:

~v

R.e s i dent I a I
and
commercial.
Call for

Killer Whale ( PG)
Hollywood Oldie I G)
THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

JJ1JJJ~UJ£

Go~.

General Contractors

SEPTIC TANk
CLEANING

WH'I WOLI~O A .
. IU!ii1N!55 TYCOON
Ll~ VOIJR: UNCLe
tN!Wr TO &amp;LOW
U5 UPf

7 &amp; 11 P.M. -

"

10 ~

7:3()-Schoolles 10; 8:110-Capt . Kangaroo 8,1Q; Stumo
St. 33.
9· 00- Merv Griffin 3; Phil Donohue 4,13,15;
Emergency One 6; Brady Bunch 8; Tic Toe Dough
iO.
9:36---Andy Griffith 8; Family Affair 10.
10,110-Cord Sharks 3,4,15; Edge of Nlghf 6; Tit Tac
Dough a; To Tell Tho Truth 13; Joker's Wild 10;
Over Easy 33.
10 :36---Hollywood Squares 3,4,15; High HQpto 6; Price
"Right 8,10; $20,000 Pyramid 13; Paint Along With
Nancy Komlnsky 33.
11 :00-High Rollers 3,4, 15; Happy Days 6,13 ;.
11 : 3()-Wheel of Fortune 3,15; Family Feud 6,13;
Partridge Fam lly4; Love of llfe8 ;, 10; 11 :5$---(;BS
News 8; Loving Free 10.
12 :00-Newscenter 3; News 4,6,10; Sanford &amp; Son 15;
Young &amp; the Restless 8; Midday Mainl . . 13;.,
Watch Your Mouth 33.
12 :3()-Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Bob Braun~ ; Gong Show 15;
Search for Tomorrow 8,10; Whet's Cooking? 33.
.1:00-For Richer, For l?oorer 3; All My Children 6,13;
. k~;,s 8; Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For·.women
un1y 15; Mokem &amp; Clancy 33.
1:3()-Doys of Our lives 3,4 ,1S; As The World Turno
8, 10; Giselle 33.
2:011-&lt;)ne life To Live 6, 13; 2 :3()-Doctors 3.4. 15;
Guiding light 8, 10.
3:110-Another World 3,4,15; General Hospital 6,13;
Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20,33.
J :Ju:.-AII ' ln- ·the Family 8,10; Crockett's VIctory
Garden 20; Anyone For Tennyson? 33.
•
4:110-Mister Cartoon 3; Superman 4; For Rlcller, For
Poorer 15; Merv Griffin 6; Addams Fomlly 8;
Sesame Si. 20,33; Match Game 10; Dinah 13.
• :36---My Three Sons 3; Gilligan's Is. 4,8; Batman 10;
Lltfle Rascals 15.
5:110-Monroes 3; My Three Sons 4; Gunsmoko I ;
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20.33; Voyage to tile
Bottom oflhe Sea 1O; Emergency Ono13; Petticoat

lO ,oo--Ciass of '65 3,4, 15; Barnaby Jones 8, 10; Pol dark
II 33; News 20.
10 :3()-Lock, Stock &amp; Barrel 20; 11 ,oo-News
3,,,6,8,10,13,15; Lilias 'Yoga &amp; You 33.
11 ·3o-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Starsky &amp; Hutch 13; Cry
· of a Hurting World-l ·m Hungry 6; Mash 8; ABC
News 33; Movie " The Innocents" 10; 12 : oo--J anak l
33.
12 :05--McCioud 8; 12 :3()-Bewltched 6; 12 :, ()-Toma
13; L llO-Tomorrow 3,4; 1:5(f-News 13.

't'OU'VE: GOTTA
!If KIODIN6l "'

a..tlertor

Bissell Siding Co,

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

POII'T 'IOU HI!!'"' UNCLI!!
TV COOKI!D UP THOSE MURCEit
~IMMICK!!I Hlr5!~1'- TO PElt·
5UAPI!! 't'OU WAS TII.VIN~
TO I&lt; ILL HIM I

tA

Storm Windows
Call Professional
Builders

:J/4 mile off Rt. 7 bY·PISS on
St. Rt. 124 toward Rutland,
0.

apartments in the heart of
·town . 2 two bedrQOm ones.
I one bedroom , and a studio
apartment on a large
corner lot
Asking just

L,__ _ __

f'

Pomeroy,

•

ROGER HYSEll
GARAGE

4

ff2-2UII

1' (1 /'VII

1

Ph. 992-2848

Jl .9.tf c

•-4·1 mo.'

2\6 E Second Street

Let us test your water Free

1\Y~ ·:!_ack W. Carsey , Mgr.

SALES AND SERVICE

THURSDAY. JULY 13,1971
.
6:3()-NBC News3,4, 1S; ABC News 13; Andy Grlfflfh 6 ;
CBS News 8, 10; Over Easy 20; Anllq,.s 33. ,
7·110-Cross.Wits 3,4; Cry of • Hurling World-1 m
· Hungry 6 · GOng Show 8; Newlywed Game13; News
10; Gllllg~n's ls: 15; Hocking Volley Bluegrass 20 ;
Consumer Survival K it 33.
·
7 · 3()-Hollywood Squares 3; Minor League Baseball 4;
· Tattletales 8; That's Hollywood 10; Nashvllle.onthe
Road 13· Marty Robbins' SpotiiQhl IS.
H, oo-Lhlps 3, 15; Welcome Back, Kotter 13; Waltons
8, 10; Once Upon A Classic 20,33 .
8:3()-What's Happening 13; In Search of lhe Real
America 20,33 .
9 : DO--James at 15 3,15; Movie " Return to Fantas~
Island" 13; Hawaii Five ~ O 8.10; World 20,33.
·

CAPTAIN EASY

fo.

softener, Model UC-SVI ,
Now Only •289,95

PomeroY Landmark

Pomeroy, Ohio

4-30-tlt

Let Pomeroy Lanamark
soften &amp; condition your
water with Co.op water

FIREWOOD f O R !tole . Green or
acc ep t
~eoso ned . Ph one 9f:15 .J567 or
SCO RPIO (Oc t. 24-Nov. 22) No! 1974 CUlLASS S 2·door . l andau
949·1358
only wrll you s land o ut rn a
root , P.B P S . A .C . 4 new
cro wd tod ay . Out others wrl l
rodral ltrtH
45 000 actual FRANKLIN FIREPLACE wrth screen
emulate y o ur acl\ons as well
m des AM ·FM tope . $2895, or
rn good condi tion . S125,
bes l oiler
6 11. .667 ·6220 0/ 985·4203 .
Tr~ as th ey mav . ho we ve r. they
d 742 ·2201 alt er S.
747 221 1
st1 H lack your dynam 1c toucties _ a'fltme :.. ~ --~
SAGITTARIUS (Nov : 23-0ec
1977 CHE VROLET CAPRICE Clossrt:
21 ) Yo u ' re co mpa ss tonat ety re · ,.&gt;ttD&amp;( . 350 -4 1:.bt Po\· er win ·
spo n stve 10 the needs o l ttie
dow~ . vtn yl top , etu1s. e control ,
les s fo rtunate to day Yo u 11 pe( trlt wheel AM ·FM B·trock tope ,
paweT door locks . SS(X)Q. Aft er
for m you r good deeds w1thout
lanlare
5 call9-49 1754

•
;

~

!973 GRAN TORINO
Wogon $950 ?92 -5786

For Friday , July 14

- ... -·

I

~-

Boarding
Indoor and ou tdoor run ~
Groo onrng oil breeds Clean
sonrtar,. l oc doties. Cheshrre
Phon e (014 ) 367 ·0297

300 West SecOnd Street

.t.:J~- -

~;

_:.·:::..:.==~

Muffler
Brakes
Shocks
Tires·
Battery .
Installation Service

Pomerov 992-6212
or 992-6263
tA:M.Io4:30P.M.

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

FIVE RO OM house, both and lot ,
newly pornled . 964 S. Jrd St ..
'!'~~~lep o!_t:_'!91· 5~9 --~- _

MOORE'S

300 Main St.

Mower Sales &amp; Service.

ONE LO l tn· Middleport equipped
l or 2 mobrl e homes Inquir e at
_224 Wa~nul after S_pm , _ -·----TUP PERS PLAIN S. 3 bedroom, I ~ ~,
both total electr,ic , air condi
lioning , full basement , Iorge
lot 992.3595

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?

RI ~ IN G STAll: Kennel

rt J r

,a,, 1"1

-~

HOOF HOl LOW Hor~es Buy . sell
tradt' or trtu n New and used
saddl e~ Rulh Reeves . Albany
1014 ) b98 3790

..." .

.&gt;Ol I

~

mower

&amp; Glloon Tlll•rs, lawn Boy

CITIZENS: Our new
assis tance . you may be
l ive in our apartment
than $50 o month . For
mar~
information, contac t
Vi llage Manor Apart ments .
991 -7787 .

stores $17,500.

---

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

""'

Phont' 997 7181

'REDucE

An Equal Opportunity Employer

u

YARD SAl E Raci ne 3rd and
Morn. Fn &amp; Sot l ots o f baby
clothes , mrsc

Small engine &amp;

For The Best
Price In Town
See
Denver Kapple
At

PWMBING &amp;
·HEATING INC.

541:rvlce, Mlssty FergusOn

SENIOR
renters
able to
for less

b~.:~siness building that will
house and give a small
family a sta"rt . Waht to try
vour luck . Only $13,000 .

Hotpotrll Appl
Sail' Prtet''&gt;
Jack W Cdr•.cy.
Mqr.

CAPITAL FINANCIAL SERVICES, INC.

,., ..,
111

For All Your
GET V.'&lt;, &amp;

9 FAMtl Y GAR AGE Sole ,.,. H A
Cole re ~1de nce , Tuppers Plorns ,
Ohio 9-9 doily . Junk to anti·
ques

COUNTRY M OBILE Home Pork .
Route 33 , north of Pomero~ .
L arg~ I_? Is. Co~l ~~~7 .tl79 ,

'

I

GARTER

~
MODERN SUPPLY.

742. 2949 .

5i7,500.
. OPPORTUNITY - ' room

Condor St .. Pomeroy . Dishes
-sA F ~ and lost wrth
clothing baby thmg s ond o lrt ·
GoBese Tabl ets &amp; E· Vop · wa ter
tle ot ev erything . Thur sda y thru
,
pill ~ _ N els:'n Drug .
Saturday. From 9 -5.
_, B WEEK OLD pigs for sale
MISC. VARO Sole . July 15. 10·00
985 ·3565
'
om, Brown trailer beh rnd -~
1976
DODGE
VA
N.
New
tires,
ful·
Pomerp y Frerght Stollen , W.
ly cus tomized , AM · FM , 9·tr ock
Morn St Clothing , sm all op
stereo . Good co ndition . $2800.
plton ces. gall d ub! . misc.
742·779 0.
YARD SAlE . 90 \ Sou th 2nd AYe ..
M1ddlepor t. Thursday

Gain recognition and prestige through a career in
consumer finance . Consumer finance is an integral and
important force in our country's economic growth and
progress.
A positioJI here will gtve you economic security .
The consumer finance business is steady even
during recessions .
You can win promotion rapidly . You will be paid a
good starting salary and receive exceptionAl employee
benefits.
.
There are Branco Representative positions open
now for high school graduates . You must have an
automobile.
Phone Mr. Snodgrass today for a confidential,
pe-rsonal interView. Call 992 -2111 .

" ':' :·

-- ----l e tar t, Fri. 10om till

FOUR PUPPIES. moke good pe.ts .

bu l l~ing .

YARD SALE. Fri . only . Baby 1975 HONDA CB 2001 wi th mol·
clothes and o th er
items,
Ching h elmet. 3,IJOCI miles . fx .
_ loco~~~ end~ Wright St.
cell eonl condition . Must see to
'1'ARD SALE . July 13. \4. \S . AI __c:.p_precrole $550. Q8S. 334\ .
Hobson by t~ roilrood tr&lt;Kks 12 FOOT BOAT ond trailer . S2 50.
J._n ~~dl•~ort . &lt;&gt;92·6::3.:._
1966 GMC '1 ton prckup truck
$500. Coli '19'} 5293 alt er 4 prTI
FIV E" FAMILY Yard Sol e ot 2iB ' l

Couple or lady to do
light
housekeeping
for ·a retired man.

Uve in. Con1ac:t:

oher b:30 pm .

---·-

POMEROY
LANDMARK

YARD SAl £
? Ac ross from gas sto l ta.~ . RutH
Circle

HELP WANTED
LIFEGU AR D AT HiCkory l akes
Campgroun d . bl 4·6b7 : 3349 .

- ---------

YARD SAl E 463 lincoln St .. Mrddleport. Thurs and Fri. Bam to5
pm
Wetght bench . guitar.
household goods clothrng . All
rtems (n good condition
no
Junk .

Call 110w for appolnt.;,enl.
LOST: SMAll block mole poodle
rn M iddlepor t area
Call
992 -7159

__

i~" ~'z-;'=S:~~~"k

Swu.la\·

tP.M:
Fndwy .111fkmuorr

~--

~

Bus·i ness Services

-

MAlE KITTEN . two months old .
block o.nd wh i tv . ~ Adorable
mar k ings .
9'2 · 259']
or

CHIP WOOD . Po l es
mo11 . B &amp; S MOBil E HOMES. Pt . Plea·
drome ter 10"" on larges t end . SB
sont . W. Va . be ~i de Heck "s.
per ton Bundled slob, $6 j:)er 1973 Broadmore 1-4 11 b.tl 2
bedroom
ton . De livered to Ohio Pollet
CO., Rt . 2. Pomeroy . 992·2b89.
1q73 Dorron 14 M60 '}bedroom ,
GOOD USED tr actor
w rth 19/2 Victorian 14 K 67 3 bedr oom .
2 both
hyd rou l ic . 1_p~· hitch . 74 2~~07 4
1972Covenhy 12 K 65 3 bedroom
TIM BER POMEROY Forest Pro. 1969 Statesman 12 )( 6() 2
ducts. Top price f or st anding
bedroom .
saw timber . Call 992 -5965 or
COAL
liMESTONE sand. grovel ,
Kent Hanby , 1·4-46·8570. --(
cole tum chl oride, fertilizer . dog ·
.
OlD FURN ITUR E ice balCes . bro s.5
l oad , and all types o f spit . f:. .
beds.. iron beds. desks et c. .
ce lsior Soli Works , Inc .. E. Ma in
complete hou sehold§ Write
St ., ':o~':r.oy . ~'l :JB~1.:.
M D ~ Miller , Rt 4, Pomeroy or
BEST
SHECTIOf~ ol the best wood
call 992 -7760.
stoves in Sou theastern Ohro .
OLD COIN S. pocket watches.
Jotut . Morso , Hel , T1rolio ,
class r ings . wedd1ng bonds .
Tempwood , and Nofhuo Zion
d1amonds Gold or silyer . Call
Heat Co ., 8 Putnam Or. (oH Mill
St . ). Athen s 6l.ti ·S9'].6Q79 or
Roger Wo~~I !:L_7~_2_:_2~ ~
614 -696· 1 187.
WOU LD hke to
ta"' e over
payment s on a mobrle home BURRO UG HS SENSI-MATIC oc ·
304·773 .56 15.
counti ng mac hine . Phone
9q2 '1 156 . The Doily Sentinel ,
11 1 Court S!reet
Pomeroy
Oh io..._.
..

We

NOTICE

TRAC:V SAYS.
lO • 50 TWO bedr oom mobile fOUR KITTENS to give owa,.. John
home $1 BOO. 992-!)858.
Bailey , FlotWOQds Rood , Coil
985-3565 .

992 ~ 21&gt;39 ~

Lightning Boyd.

Mul.n lc Humt: .'Joitlei i!.Ud Ycml s..lt!S
.HI't' iU'l't'I.Jtt'd unly' wlth l'aSJI Wi lli
Ol'!.lt!L 15 ~~Ill dlil.l )!e fur atb t'U IT}'ill~ Bo,~x Nurnlwr In C~rt~ uf Tire St·n-

TELEVISION.
VIEWING

liCK TRACY

~:Wanted

M rs . Kei th Ridenour , owner.

FRIDAY, JULY 14, 1971
5:is--Farm Report 13; 5:5(f-PTL Club 13.
6:110-PTL Club IS; Summer Semester 10.
6:30---Columbus Today 4; News 6; Summer Semnter
8; Soclefles In Transition 10.
6:,5--Mornlng Report 3; 6:5(f-Good Morning. Wftt
Virg inia 13; 6:55--News 13.
7,110-Today 3,4, 15; Good Morning Amerlco 6,13; CBS
News 8; Underdog 10; 7:25-Chuck Wh ile R..,rts

I-'The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. o ., T!rursday, July 13, 1978

' Hair by lifo' Beau ty Solon. 3
mites east of Chesler. Rt. 2~ 8 .

! ~WordsorUmkr

~

•

8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, July 13, 1978

~~~1Ps

..

REAL SI:IORE ENUFF
FAMILV TREE!!

dummy ·s ace of diamonds
and threw West in with the
jack of hearts.
West toqk hi.! high trump
and was left with nothing but
hearts . He had to lead one.
south could get a ruff and a
discard but that was'!'t
enough. Instead South diS·
carded the last club from
dummy and a dlllmond from
his own hand. West had ~o
lead another · heart. This
time the Professor ruffed ~n
dummy while discarding his
last diamond .
He had lost just three
tricks and had no losers left
since he could trump hi.! one
remaining club with
dummy's last trwnp.

~ ru~ ~:.nu),j
You hold:
• Axxxx
• AX
t AKxxx

•x
This is the same hand used
on Tuesday. You open one
spade . Partner Jumps to
three spadet. The same
reader wants to know how
we would proceed.
we plan to . bid alJ: while
Inviting seven. We ataJtt with
8 four-diamond bid.
oNEWSPAPER ENTI:I\PRJIE ASBN . t

(Do you hove 1 question lor
me erpeils-? Write " A!o th•
Erpsrts ," core ollhls .ntwo~
per. lf,ldivic1UII QU8'IIIOnS ~~~~

be answered if ICCOm~mea
by SflfflPIJd, JIJII,.ddro...cl
11nvefope$. The most InterN.~
inQ questions will 0. ul~ rn
this column •nd will recet._.
copies of JACOBY MODERN./

�...
•

·.
SA LEI

IN

ELBERFELD$

Women's
Coordinate
Sportswear

POMEROY

SUMMER
PATIO

sa vi ngs!

CasuaL

folding
Lloyd
chairs,
tables,
swings, grills.

Bradley, Jane Colby .and
others.

SAVE

BEGINS FRIDAy I _J ULy 14th AT 9:30 A.M.

y,

ALL SALES FINAL -NO EXCHANGES- NO REFUNDS

OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8 P.M. AND SATURDAY 9:30 TO 5

SALE

P.M.

Men's S6.50

BOYS'
SUMMER
WEIGHT
JACKETS
SIZES 8 to 18

REGUlARLY
1
7.95 TO 111.95

MEN'S JEANS
Fas hion jeans in denims
and
cotton
polyester
blend s . Broken sizes .
Regular prices $9.95 to
$1 7. 95 .

WEMBLEY
TIES
A big selection of patterns
and solid colors from our
regular stock.

Final
clearance
on
remaining stock. $5.95 to
$7 .95. While they last.

Sizes 8 to 18. Slims &amp;
regulars . Not every size,
but good over a II selection.
Regularly $7 .95 to $10.95.

JR. SPORTSWEAR

SALE $390

TO

MEN'S '13.95 JACKEt .. .....................'5.37
MEN'S 117.95 JACKETS ................. ,•• 110.77
MEN'S 119.95 JACKETS .................... 111.97

REG. s5.00 ....................... SALE s4.00
REG. s1.00 ....... :............... SALE ~5.60
REG. sg,oo ......... ,~ ............ SALP7.20
REG. s12.00 ..................... SAL£

WOMEN'S TOPS

One and two piece suit. Pre-teen, junior,
regular and extra s izes .

Nice group of styles l!lld sizes.

REG. sg.oo ........
SALE 15.85
REG. '12.00 .. ... ....................... SALE 17.80
REG. '15.00 .......
SALE 19.75
00 .

... .... .

......... ..

00 . . . . . . 0 0 0 0 . . . . . . . . .

REG. 123.00 ........................... SALE '14.95 .

SALE

REG. s 6.oo .. . . . ... . .. . ... . ....... SALE S 3.96
REG.$ 8.00· · ········ · ···· · ······ SALES 5.28
REG. Sn.oo .. . . . .. . . ... ... . . . ·•• ••. SALES 7.26
REG. $13.00 . ... . ................. SALE$ 8.58
REG. S16 .00 .. . ... . . ... .. . ... ... .. SALE $10.56
REG. S20 .00 ...................... SALE$13 .20

·MEN'S KNIT SHIRTS

Women's Summer Blouses

Many styles and colors . Regular and e xtra
sizes .
REG. S 7.0o ... . .... .. ...... .. . .. .. SALE S 5.25
REG. $ 9 -0 0· • • .. • • . .. .. · • · •• • .. .. ·SALES 6.75
REG. SlO.OO • . .... • .. • • · • • · ... .. • · SALES 7 .so
REG. Sll.OO ... . . .. ... . ...... .. ... . SALE$ 8.25
REG. Sl2 .00 • • " .. • · .. · .... · • • .. • • SALES 9.00
REG. $14 .00. • • • • • .. · '" .. • • • "· · · · SALE 510.50

REG.$ 6.0o ...... ..... .. . .. .. ..... . SALES3.96
REG. s 8 .00 .... .... .. .. . . . ... ... . .. SALE 55 .28
REG. S 9 .00 ...... . .. .. .. . .. .'.. .. .. . SALE $5.9.4
REG. 51 o.oo . . ... . ... . ...... . ..... .. SALE $6.60
REG . $11 ,00 ......... .. ... .. .. .... . SALE $7.26
REG . 512.00 .. . . .. . ... .... ........ .. SALE $7 .92
REG . $13 .00 .. . ...... ....
SALE $8.58
....

Short sleeve styles - entire stock inc.luded .
S, M . Land XL sizes . Excellent selection .
MEN'S $ 4.95
MEN'S $ 6.95
MEN'S$ 8.95
MEN'S $10.95
MEN'S $14.95

KNIT
KNIT
KNIT
KNIT
KNIT

SHIRTS ... . ........ $3.46
SHIRTS ......... .. . $4.86
SHIRTS ... . .. .... .. $6 .26
SHIRTS ..... . .... . S 7 .66
SHIRTS ...
$]0.46
00 . . . . . .

r.=~~~~--~~R~E~G~-~$1~5,~00~·~··~··~··~..~..~-·~··~··~··~··~·~~~~~~--------~~

MEN'S DRESS SHIRTS

s

SPECIAL
SALE PRICE

MEN'S
WRANGLER

'•

14 OUNCE
NO FAULT

:

BLUE
DENIM
JEANS

I

Straight or Flare
Leg Style
Size 29 to 42

•• •

"

MEN'SS 6.95
MEN'SS 8.95
MEN ' SS10.00
MEN'S 511.00

DRESS
DRESS
DRESS
DRE.SS

SHIRTS ......... . $4.86
SHIRTS .. .... ... . $6.26
SHIRTS ........ .. $6.96
SHIRTS ....... ~ •• $7 .66

REG. S 8.00 .... .. ... . .............. SALE $5.60

REG. S 9.oo .... . ..... . .... . ...... . . SALE $6.30

LimE GIRLS
SUMMER SLACKS

Children's Summer Pajamas
Mon t hs s izes t h ru 7 t o 14 .
SALES 3.15
SALES 4.20
SALES 5.60
SALES 9,10
SALE$10.50

REG. 52 .99 . . .. ........... . ...... . .. SALE $2 .10
REG. 53.50 ....... . ...... .. ....... .. SALE $2.45

REG. 53.75 ........... ....... ........ SALE $2.65
REG. 54.00 . •• ••••• •. .•••••••••••••• SALE 52.80
REG. $5.00 .... .. ... ............... . SALE 53.50

GIRLS' TOPS
Si z es 2 to 4, 4 t o

Sizes 4 to 6x and 7 to 14
Reg.$6 .00 S..le$4.20
Reg.S10.00S..IeS7.00
Reg.$7 .00 Sale ·S4.90
Reg . S11.00S..IeS7.70
Reg . $8.00 Sale$5.60
Reg . S13.00SaleS9. 10
Reg . $9.00 Sale56.30
·-

MEN'S WALK SHORTS

BOYS' CUTOFF JEANS .

6xa nd 7 to 14.

REG. '2.50...... .................... .. SALE 1.75
REG. 13.50 ....... .. ................... SALE 12.45
REG. 15.00 .......... .. ................. SALE 13.50
REG. 17.00 .......... .. ... ............. . SALE '4.90
.REG. '9.00 .•. ...... .......••........•.• .SALE '6.30
REG. 111.00 ..........-.... ·.-............. SALE '7.70

Sizes 8 to 18 . Blue
polyester blends.

1

denims and cotton

BOYS SS.95 CUT OFFS ..... :...
BOYS '6:95 CUTOFFS
BOYS S7.95 CUT OFFS

3.60
.S4.20
5

00 • • • • • •

00 .

.

. . . . . . . . . . . . 00

0 ... 0 .

..........

. Sizes 32 to 44 - 100 per cent polyester solid
colors and pla iqs.

..S4.80

Men's '8.95 walk Shorts• ............ s5.39
Men's sg,95 Walk Shor1s ........... SS.99

SHORT.
SLEEVE
KNIT
SHIRTS

SALE
PRICES

GIRLS DRESSES
MONTH SIZES
THRU 7 TO 14

SAVE

Y3

RCA
CONSOLES
SAVE 50.00 ON ANY
RCA CONSOLE COLOR
TELEVISION IN STOCK
1

Many Styles and
Wood Finishes

LAWNBOY·
SALE.
Save '25.00
on any

.

Lawn loy Mower

In stock

SAU

SUMMER
JEWELRl
One case of summer
jewelry.
NecklaceJ,
chains. earrings.

· .SAVE

DRESS
SALE
Junior , Missy
&amp; Half Sizes

SAVE 35%

FROM

Y3

'1170
•

payment in regard to the
production of musicals was
tabled and Leda Kraeuter,
Karen Goins, Mildred BaUey,
Everette Holcomb and Ar·
thur Arnold r eceived permissi on to attend sta te
sessions, required in the.ir
vocational fields.
Don Barnett was named to
drive the bus ro ute of Ella
So uthern a nd a budget
showing anticipated income
of $3,745 ,676. 67 a nil a n·
ticipa t ed ex pend it ures of
$3,711,245 was a pproved for
submission to the county
budget commission for the
next fiscal yea r.
(Continued on page 12)

•

~

en tine
(

FRIDAY, JULY 14. 197_8

TO SO'

·lL:

72

PRICE .
SALE
CHILDREN'S

VISITORS ·TO TilE MlddlepQrt Community Park are
doingdoubletalleos theaedays - and Sabblth is the reason .
Sa~tll Ia a pert German Shepherd and part Austrian
Queen Blue Hiller dOfl which climbs the ladder to a sticky
slide at the park and goes sliding down. Sometimes,
Sabbith hu to be encouraged to go sliding but at other
~he jUBtdoea ~on hll own, Eight monlha old, Sabblth
Jil
IIJ~ lio
•• le I
)'z J Ja\ l ilo
Montana. However, Sabblth is taken to the parkily by
Dick's yourwer lrother, Tye Hennan who sees that
Sa~th gets In plenty of time on the slippery slide. Tye
Herman Is shown with Sabblth, the slicky slid~ dog ,

SHORTS
Many styles and
colors for little boys &amp;
girls . Month sizes
lhru 7 to 14.

E

AS LOW

JUNIOR

The World Today

SABBITIJ climbs the ladder to the slide.

By ROBERT SANGEORGE

~--------------Penalizes l:arter's committee

Delegates fail

TANKS · lUBES .
· SHIRTS
SIZES S-M-1.-XL

SAVE
30%

Dream foiled by finances

SALE PRICES
START AT
ONLY

.

RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazll (UPI) - Brazilians are giving

FURN.ITURE
SALE
UVING ROOMS.
. BEDROOMS,.
DINING ROOMS,

MD lAMPS

up thetr beloved "calezlnbos" - UtUe cupe of strong arwlsweet
coffee - because the price of beans Is going up. Coffee sella IIi
Rio supermarkets lor Sl.81 per powld, a price .that seems a
bargain to Americans or Europeans but represents a luxury
lor the Brazlllan who eatn8 the minimum salary of $811.52 per
month .
According to Brazlllan Coffee lnatltute figures, Brazil's
population Increased 13 percent during the last lour years, but
collee conawnptlon leU 7 percent. Brazlllan roaslera sold 7.5
million 13t-pound sadsa In the domestic market in 1974, but
following the July 1m froet that sent prlcee climbing, sales
lk'opped to 1.4 million aacks.
·

Book list coming to parents
'

'

.

WOONSQCKET, R . I. (UPI) - WOOII«&lt;cket Junior and
Senlcr lllllh Schooletudents wUI be brlnclng home reading lists
nut liD to make aure their parents approve ol the ..-!lined
.
· I
material.
••
~ School Ccrnmlltee drafted the plan Wednelday night
in the hope of avoiding another furor like the lllle IIIII IIJI'ing
ovw a book lllinC four-letler worda and 11,ree1 blnguage. The
book, "A Hero Ain't Nothln' But a Sandwich," By AUce
aulcnu, wu ~ In an elghth.gade Epgllah c:lul, Parents
ri one lirl objected to the book because of the llreet Ia~
used. Tbe book Ia about a teenager's clrUtl addiction In a bblck

gfpUD.

C.o u n t y
s h e r if f ' s
department.
But Sheriff Gerald McFaul
said he does not have the
ma npower
to
patrol
Cleveland. "Plus," he added ,
" I'm sympatheti c to the
policemen, but that's not why
I'm te lling you tllat.
" No. 1, I only have about
100 deputies and '47 of them
ha ve an obligation to the
courtrooms," McFaul said .
'Tm the only sheriff in the
State of Ohio thai · doesn 't .
have a road patrol. I have no
vehicles out there on the
stree ts , Unfortu nately , I
couldn't be of any help out
there on the streets."
- The strike was sparked by
the firing Thursday of 13
policemen who refused to
patrol crime-ridden publichousing projects alone , ~s
ordered by the mayor.
"This is war," William J .
McNe a , president of the
C leve l an d
P o li c e
Pa trolmen's Associa tion
responded. "Ther e is no way
they a r e goin g to lire
policemen in this manner."
The CPPA represents
about 1,500 rank and file
officers and the Fraternal

Order of Police represents
about 500 supervisors .
Af ter the firings. the unions
set an 11 p.m. Thursday
s tr ike deadline . Ku cini ch
tried to head it off by saying
he would no longer order
off icers to patrol the housing
projects alone, but he refused
to reinsta te the dismissed
officers .
The unions - rejected the
offer and walked out.
Kucinich expressed disappointment at the strike action
and said : "I must ca ll on the
police to obey the law as they
ask others to obey the la w,
They are now under a penalty
of contempt of court . What we
have is a test of whether the
police depa r tme nt will
respe ct a la wful judi cial

DECISION UPHELD
CINCINNATI (UPI) Tlaf, 1\!lro U.S. Circuli Court
of o\ppealt tOI!ay upheld llle
C olumbu s
s chool
desegregation decision of
Federal Judge Roberl M.
Duncan , meaning tbat
. 37,000 of the city's 86,700
public school students will
be bused this fall.

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

.,

P11ter, 69, and O]iel Sewar,
51, Kanauga, were injured in
a three-auto accident on SR 7.
eight-tenths of a mile south of

u. s. 35.

According to the GaUia ·
Meigs Post, Highway Patrol,
an auto driven by Arthur
Powers, 40, Glenwood, W.
Va., was lltopped at the exit of
the Silver Bridge Pla za ,
preparing to enter Rt. 7, when
a vehicle operated by Sewar,
traveling south. made a left
tum Into the patll of an auto
driven by Kenneth Higley, 38,
GaUipolia, north bound on 7,
1be Higley auto struck the
' Sewar vehicle In the right
side, The force of the impact
sent the Sewar auto sliding
into the front of the Powers
vehicle.
Higley claimed Injury, but
was not Immediately treated.
Peter Sewar, and his wile,
Opel, a pasaenger In the
vehicle, displayed visible

By HELEN THOMAS
UPI Whl!e House Reporter
BONN, West German y
(UP! ) - Presi!lent carter
ana West Gennan Chancellor
Helmut Schmidt joined today
in condemning the trials of
Soviet dlssidents but said this
will not deter their countries
from continued effor ts w
cooperate with Moscow in
disar mame nt and ot her
fi elds.
.
" We deplore this action,"
Ca rter sa id to reporters a fter
a tw o-a nd-a-half hour
meeting with Schmidt. " But
at the same time we want to
c o nt inu,e p e a cef ul
rela tionships . But our voice
will not be stilled as we
co nsi der these and ot her
violations
ar ound
the
world ."
Sctunidt joined in '·: want

injf!,red-

"

word the presideot has said."
The two leaders met t he
press at the Bonn chancellery
after talks ranging over a
wide field from Eas t-West
relations to the state of t he
dollar and the weekend
seve n ~ na tio n
eco nom ic
summit confe rence in which
both will play leading roles.
Ca rter was welcomed here
with full pomp by West
Germany's leaders at the
start of a two-day state visit
to this country as a curtilin
raiser to the swnmit.
Schmidt. a close friend of
the United States, has been
one of the severest critics of
the Carter a dministration's
handlin g
of
economic
matters. Today he smiled
wa rmly as they met ,
apparently determined to
they do not get on well
toge)her .
Carte r conferred with
Sctunidt at the chancellory
after receiving a full-dress
official military welcome and
paying a courtesy call on
Wes t German President
Walter ·Scheel at his Villa
Hammerschmidt residence
overlooking the Rhine.
Ca rter and Sclunidt talked
to
r eporte rs
in
the
chancellery lobby in front of.a
large painting by Ludwig
Kirchner entitled "Suicide
38" - one of the many works
banned by Adolf Hitler 's

woman

A Leta rt woman received
minor injuri es after her small
foreign car was demolished
in a two·vehicle acc ident
Wednesday around 4:30 p.m.
on Sand Hill Road, nea r Point
Pleasant. according to Mason
order."
County She riff's Deputy
The city is without an Harry Rhodes.
appointed police chief. Edwin
Dawna F . Parsons. 20,
Nagorski was named acting Leta-rt , was treated at Holzer
chief after Kucinich fired Medical Center where she
Richard Hog nisto.
was ta ken followin g th e
Hongisto' s firing prompted m1shap in a pickup driven by
other city officials to start her husband, Ra ndy Parsons.
reca ll
e fforts
a ga inst
The Pa rsons woma n ha d
Kucinich and he is now trying been traveling east behind a
w win support in a recall farm tracto r driven by Ed
election to be held next Mallo&lt;, Point Pleasant , when
mon th.
she attempted to pass and
collided headon with a truck
driven by Ala n Berna rrl
Younts, Greensboro, N. C., at ·
the crest of a hill.
Deputy Rhodes said Ma ttox
had given a hand signal in
preparation fo r turning into
hi s hayfield and the sign
a pparentl y was mi sin·
.
signs of injury, and were auto passed off the left side of terprcted by Mrs. Parsons as
taken. t o Hol ze r Medical th e roadwa y, stru ck a n a signal lor her to pass the
Center by SEOE MS ,
emba nkment, and ove r· tractor.
No est imate of damage to
Opel Sewar was admitted turned.
the
Youn ts t ru ck wa s
to the intensive care unit for
Bush displayed v isible
available.
fractures of the ribs, and a signs of injury, and was taken
roncussion. She is listed in to Holzer Medical Center by
satisfactor y rondition.
SEOEMS.
Peter Sewa r was treated
Bush was a dmitted for
and released lor mild con- , treatment of a concusSion,
tusions of the right ribs, and and contusions of the right
lacerations to the right side of face . Aspokesman for Holzer
the lace.
announced that Bush will be
Sewar was cited by the released today.
patrol for failure to yield
Bush was cited by patrol
when. turning left .
for OWl.
The Higley and Sewar
According to the patrol. a
autos
inc ur red severe tru ck driven by E rn est
damage, theve was slight Chalfant, 27, Glouster , was
damage t o the Powers north bound when the vehicle
vehicle .
passed off the left side of th e
This week' s winning Ohio
At3 :15 p.m. Gene Bush, 17, ' roadway Into a ditch aod
Lotter y
numb e r s:
Jackson . wa s injured when overturned.
Gold
numb
e r -% .
the vehicle he was operating
The Chalfant t ruck in ·
oumbe
r- U .
While
went out of control on a curve curTed severe da'mage. No
Blue
oum
ber-el5.
while traveling. east ori SR citat ion was issued.
Extra Cash
588.
At 12:40 p.m., of fi ce r s
8%9989.
( C'.o!ltlnued on pare 12)
t\~ ording to t!J\-patrol, th e

to say 1 agree with every

_Te'o\lt w\deapread r eporta

Letart

Two persons .injured
in three-car mishap

"eat'ezinhos is given up"

$188

AND DOWN the slide comes Sabbith. ·

. ~tate'~ Iru:_£est cit,y?it._
by ·police. strike
·

CLEVELAND (UP! ) Only a handful of hi ghranking police official s
guarded Ohio's largest c ity
today as 2,1100 pollee officers
and supervisors walked off
W.ASHINGTON (UP!) - The Federal Election the Job to protest the firing of
~on has penalized President Carter's 1976 campaign 13 fellow officers.
conuruttee for the second time in a month lor accepting illegal
Mayor Dennis Kucinich obcampaign contributions. Ruling that a 'political lunch at New tained
a
tempor ary
Y&lt;irk's post "21" restaurant was an illegal contribution, the restra ining order from
FEC Thursday ordered Carter's campaign to pay the federal CUyahoga County Common
Treasury $3,285.14 - the full cOli! of the lunch.
. Pleas Court Presiding Judge
At the same time two of the big contributors to.the lunch, Leo Spellacy ordering the
Seagram's liquor heir Edgar Bronfman and the political action officers back to work, but
commi~tee of the Coca.Cola Co., were fined $500 each for union officials said the men
illegsl contributions.
would stay off ihe job,
AnaldetoKucinichsaid the
"again
mayor talked to Ohio Gov.
CHICAGO (UP!) - Delegates to tile Lutheran Church In
James Rhodes and "appriSed
America convention have failed a second time to elect a new
him of the situation," telling
president for the nation's largest and most ecumenical
Rhodes he may ask for
Lutheran body.
National Guard troops to
With 4:;3 votes needed hr election, only two candidates of . protect the city of 800,000,
70 initially nominated received more than 100 votes. Herbert
The Teamsters Union ,
ChiUstrom, Minneapolis, president of the Minneapolis Synod
representing sanitation and
received 136 votes and the Rev. William Lazareth New York'
city streets employees, said
received 107. Third highest vote-getter Thursday ~as the Rev:
its members would stay out
H. George Anderson, Cobunbia, S. C., with 92. Anderson was
today in support of the
officers. But other c ity ·
higl\elt In Wednesday night's balloting wltll 244. He announced
his withdrawal early Thursday but delegates persisted in ~mployee unions did not .
votihR lor him.
·
indil;ate. what Iller would do. ,
Safeguarding the city fell
Into the hands of tile few non·
COLORADO SPRINGS, C&lt;Jio, (UPI) - Fund-raising uniformed officers who were
problems have folded Dewey Reinhard and Steve Stephenson's working and the CUyahoRa
,dream of a hot-air balloon crossing of the Atlantic Ocean for
anotber year.
The two halloonilts attempted the voyage last year, but
were forced down by bad weather within two days of taking off
from Main. Reinhard, 48, said Wednesday he was able to raise
only s:ta,ooo of the SIOO,OOO necessary for the flight.

.

AS

atAIRS, THIES

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

tires and tubes ; Ashland Oil,
'gasoline , motor oil , a nti·
freeze and fuel oil ; Sand Hill
Coal Co., coal ; Betsy Ross,
bread and bakery products ;
Chef's Pantry, meat. Con·
tracts on dry goods and milk
a nd dai ry products were
tabled for further st udy .
It wa s r eport ed . two
teachers had been awarded
grants. They are John Aniott,
$
2,000 lot a career awa reness
programs lo r the fourth, fi lth
and sixth grades, and Mike
Ger. lach, $1.1136 for a History
of Meigs County microfilm
program.
A request from Pa ige Hunt ,
voc al music tea cher, for

Trials are
condemned

TOPS

SALE

at

REGUlARLY 35'

REG. S 5.oo ................ .. ...... SALE $3.50
REG. S 6.00 ....... . . . .............. SALE S4.20

REG. S 7.00 ••••••••••••••• ••••••••• SALE 54.90

•

THREAD

REG. S 3.00 ... . .. . ... ... .... . ... . .. SALE $2 .10

SALE

ReG . 5 4.so ..... . ........ ... . . .. .
REG. S 6 .oo .. ... . ........ .. . ... ..
REG . S 8 ,QQ .. .... . .'. .. .. .. oo., ...
REG . 513 .00 ..... . . ... ... . .. .. ....
REG . S1S .OQ .. . . ..... .. .. ... . .. .. .

VOL. XXIX NO. 63

SWI

Short s lee ve styl es - n e ck si zes 14 112 to 17 112.
Made by Van Heusen and Campus.

have to be provided. Ad- McCoy ; s drama co ach ,
dltional personnel would also Ch 1· 0 · .
h ' bo&lt;~rd expects to set a school
be required probably becalll!e
ares ownle, teac, er ; calendar lor next year; fill
of the additional classics J ea n Shave~, tea cher ; eXIsting teaching vacancies
which would be added to the E velyn , Stanley , subrrli\l!,le . a~d disc~ss freezing of ad·
, curriculum
cook, Lmda Jett and Pa uliiie ' miDJ_st,ratiOn salaries.
', The board did take action Sno~den as bus dnvers.
Assignments for inspection
requiring that effective this
Lms Wyan.t was em ployed of the buildings fo r t he new
Fall, a U high school students as a bus, driver lor Paulme school.year are expected to
_ beginning with the ·Fresh- ~nowden s route and Phyllis be made at this time. While
man class _ must .complete cC::.fn was employed as a no school calendar has yet
two Math courses for
Th.
.
.
been set, I he two dates Which
d ·
p
·
e reslgna~JOn of Mrs. ll'!em to be more acceptable
gra uahon. reviously only Dugan as assistant to the at.Lhis poin.L are Aug. 28 and
one Math course was b
d t
· d
.oar
rea sure r wa s ac· Sept. 5.
require · This action was the cepted as of Aug. 18· Steve
The boa rd awarded con·
result of an earlier tecom· Peckham was employed as a tracts for the upcoming year.
mendation by Flesher.
substitute custodia n effective They went to Downing-Childs
The board a ccepted the at once
1
st d
·d
resignations
by
Ina
A ·.
.
nsurance, u ent acc1 ent
Mea dows, t each.er ; Celia
special meetmg was set insurance and fl eet in·
for Aug. 10 at whcch tune the ' surance ; Mei~s Tire Center.

e

J&amp;P
COATS
.SEWING .

Little girls one &amp; two piece suits. Little boys
trunk s .

BOYS'

Sizes 8 t o 20. Good
se lect ion of si yl es and
color s . Buy now fo r
ba c k to s c hoo l.

..,..,,.

Spec ial Clear a nce
m e n ' s s h o r t s leeved s por t s hirt s. Solid
co lor s . pa tte rn s . T a p ered a nd fu ll c ut
st yl es .
MEN ' SS 7 .95SPORT SHIRTS .. . ..... .. $5,56
MEI'fSS 9 .95SPORTSHIRTS .. .. . . . . .. 56,96
MEN ' S $11 .95 SPORT SHIRTS .. .... . . .. $8.36
MEN ' S$12 .955
IRTS .. . .. . .... $9.06

II the board adopts the
higher requirement (17 ia the
etate minimum) students can
be scheduled into mor e
claaaes and the free time
reduced, Flesher said. He
sa1d the plan should be in·
voked for the Freshman class
entering high school this Fall.
The board t k act!
oo no
on .on
the proposal Thursday night,
but will st d th
tt
u y e rna er .
Concern was exj)ressed for
students who have trouble
pa ss ing the
m inimum
reqdlrements now and ad·
ditional classes which would

COLOR

SALE I

SALE

WOMEN'S SHORTS

00 00 . . ,

SALE

WOMENS SWIMWEAR

FEATURING WRANGLER "NO FAULT" DENIM

· -. Y2 PRICE

REG. sg,oo ..................... ~ SALE '6.75
REG. s12.00..................... SALE sg,oo
REG. s1B.OO.... :................SALE..s13.50.
REG. S20.00 .....................SALE $15.00 .

Sizes S, M, L and XL . Good s election of
styles.
·

JUN lOR SHORTS

Limited quanllty in the t-ome
furnishings departmenl$ - lsi
floor . Regularly $5.99 to $25.95.

JUNIOR SUNDRESSES

SUMMER WEIGHT JACKETS

$J 400

THROWS
&amp; COVERS

lh PRICE

Y2 PRICE

-

Pe rman e nt pres s .
cotto n
pol y ester
bl e nd . S., M. , L. &amp; XL
size . Two pocke t s .
long t ai ls.

BOYS' JEANS

Boys $4. 95 Denim
Sport Shirts $2.99

RfG. '5.59 TO '20.00

MEN'S
SHORT
SLEEVE
BLUE
CHAMBRAY
SHIRTS

SWIM TRUNKS

1f2 PRICE

JOGGING SHORTS, TOPS &amp; SlACKS

.PRICE

houn of etudy to llfaduate Senior yean Flelher A id in
ntller than the minimum 17 making the Prl!ll!lllation. He
now required.
stated students need more
TbiJ 1ftl the request of tile challenge and that diplomas
lacully, guldlslce dep111tment art being liven In a too
and Prtnci.,.l Jama Diehl lenient manner.
·
voiced When ihe Meip Local
However Fltlher did point
ao.nl of Education met In out that ' ~any •tudents
replar -.iion at the Junior graduating this spripg did
eam 20 or more credli hours
IIlah in Middleport Thllrllda
•ht,
y without~t· ,_,~-...,uir·ed. He
nl"''
• ,_.,e .•,
' Preaentln• the ian was said 60 percent of the 200
Tim Fleshe~ of thep !dance members of the clus earned
department who :::d the 20 hours or more; 21 percent
additional tllree cr""''t hours eamed between 19 and 20· 10
...,.
.
,
would
better
prepare percent earned between 18
graduate s lor later Ule and 19'; five percent earned
·
·

LAWN
FURNITURE

OJr entfre stock -of regular

Quee n

In tile qear futlll'e, Meigs Students, In aome inatan«S, between. 17 lllld 18 and lour
Hlp Scbool etudenta may now han loo much free tune percent earned oniy the
hne to c!omplete 211 credit especiaU~ In their Junior and required 17 credit liours.

AND

and e"tra sizes at great
Devon ,

lloard may require 20 ~ours for graduation

CI.IARANCf
SALI

Nazis as "degenerate art. ''
The
tw o
leaders
co nd emned the di ssident
tria ls in answer to a
reporter's question .
carter stressed that tbe
United States has no desire to
interfere in the internal
affa irs of the Soviet Unioo .
"But rising condemnation
around the world is a legiti·
mate role for me and my

MARY KAY GRIMM

Milwaukee
resident
participant
•

0

. country, " he said.
.

Milwaukee born Mary Kay
Grimm is in Meigs County
this sununer working with
the five member student
health team being sponsored
jointly by the Meigs County
Board of Health and the
Consortium for Hea lth
Educa ti on in Appal achia
Ohio.
Having just completed her
third year of nurses training
at t he University of
Wi sconsin in Milw aukee,,

Mary· Kay also works in a
nursing home. She is taking a
leave of absenc'e to assume
her duties with the health
team whi ch inclu de t he
drawing of blood at numerous '
free health clinics being held
throughout the county.
. Mary Kay's fi rst im·
pressions of the Big Bend
a rea t ell her that the
stereotypes she's heard of
sma ll towns are, for the most
pa rt , true.
" Not that Meigs county is
ba ckwoods or -anything," she
says, "but, things definitely
move a t a slo.wer pace around

here."
And , she a dds , whil e
smiling. " The peopie here are
a lot niore friendly and less·
suspicious. than in a la rge
.city...
The youngest of four
children, Mary Kay must
kno w wha t she' s t al kin g
about - she also .grew up in
Milwaukee.

. Sclunidt added that West
Germans are "particularly
distressed" also by an eight·
year sentence passed oo an
Ea st Germ lin diss ident ,
Rudolf Baard.
"I would like to draw the
of
visiting
a tte ntion
Am erican jou rnalists that
there are many in Eastern
Europe
subj ect
to
perseculion beyond those woo
now
in
the
public
consciousness are · playing
such. an .Jmportant role ,''
Sclunidt sa id.

Davis resigns
Rutland pos.ts
RUTLAND - Bruee Davis
Chief of Police and Street and
Water Supervisor for the past
8\'z years, has r esigned his
post.
Co un cil a ccepted his
resignation with regr et
Tuesday night a nd appointed
LaiTy Colema n to fill the
va ca ncy . F or se rv ices
residents of Rutland are to
call Colema n at 742-2939.

.

Weather
Mostly cloudy tonight, with
showers and thundershowers
possible and lows in the low
or mid 60s. Partly cloudy
Saturday, with highs In tile
lo we r 80s , Probability of
precipitation is 70 percent
today, 30 percent tonight and
20 perce~ Saturday. (1

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