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12 - The Daily Sentinel, Middl•porl-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, July 26, 1978
--

\

•

Somecunion leaders believe second
postal strike will start in New. York
.

UDlted Preos lnleruattooal
Eight ' years ago the
nation's first postal strike
began with a New York City
walkout.' Some union lea.ders
say they believe the natioo 's
second mail strike will start
the same way nod week.
Since the proposed na tiona!
postal con tract was agreed
upon in Washington last
week, there have been

wildcat strikes at bulk mail
centers in California and New
Jersey.
The U.S. Postal Service

Our Interest is
Greater For You

locaUoo or ownership are

5.75%
On 90-Day .

Certificates
5.75 per cent paid on
90 day Certificates of
Deposit.
$500 .00
Minimum .
Interest
Payable
Quartecly.
A substantial penalty Is
invoked on illl certifiute
accounts withdrawn prior
fo th&amp;

~Iff

of maturity.

Meigs Co. Branch

~~~
The A!liens County
s.vina• &amp; L.oon Co.
w. Main St .
Pomeroy , Ohio

fSIJC

--..---

Ohio Departmeot ol
Liquor Control director
Clifford E . Reich ao·
nounced today thai oppllcallons for oew liquor
permits and traoslers of
now being prll(;es•td by lhe
deparlment.
Making appllcallons for
traosfers were Gerald
Grove, dba , Tall Timber
Nile Clul&gt;, Salisbury
Towoshlp , Pomeroy to
Edgar W
: Ellis, dbo, Tall
Timber Nile Club; Mary L.
Crossan, dba Big Maple, 19
W, Main Sl.. Cheshire to
Donald Montgomery, dba,
Big Maple.

SQUAD SUMMONED
. The· Middleport
Emergency Squad was called
to Dr. James Conde's office
at 4:32p.m. Tueday for Alan
Shuler, t3, Route 4, Pomeroy.
He was taken to Holzer
Medical Center with a
possible ruptured appendix.
pAST MATRO~S MEETING
There will be a meeting of
the Past Matrons of
Evangeline Chapter , Mid.dleport , Friday, July 28 at
7:30 p.m. at the Middleport
Masonic Temple. Hostesses
will be Bessie King and
Jennie Cheshire .

.

seems to have weakened
tllose walkouts by firing
a'Imost 100 strikers and
promised more dismissals as
soon as other wildcat strikers
can be identified from
pictures and V·ideotapes. .
In Jersey City, N.J., w~efe
40 workers were fired, a
spokesman for the New York
Bulk and Foreign Mail Center
said about 60 percent of Its
wockers showed up Tuesday
- up 30 per cent from
Mooday .
Attendance at the San
Francisco Bulk l.lall Center
in suburban Richmond ,
where 42 wockers were fired,
was reported at about 60
BATON CLASSES RESUME
Baton classes at Royal Oak
Park will resume . this
evening at 6:30 ·p.. m. according to Judy R1ggs, mstructor.
SQUAD RUN
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad transported Webster
Hodge, Laurel Street , to
Holzer Medical Center at ~ : 45
a.in. Tuesday. AI 5: It this
morning El oise White,
Lincoln Terrace, was taken to
Holzer with a possible
fracture ..
SCOTCH FORESOME
There will be a Scotch
Foresome at the Pomeroy
Golf Course Saturday, July
29, at 6:30 p.m. A wiener
roast and dance Will follow .
Activities are open to the
public.

Stale No. 223X
CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDITION

The Farmers Bank &amp;
Savings Company .
of Pomeroy, Ohio aod Fo•eign and Domestic Subsidiaries, at the close of
business June 30. t978, a stale banking iostltutlon organized and operating

under the banking laws of this State and a member of the Federal Reserve
System. Published lo accordance with a call made by the Slate Banking
Authorities aod by the Federal Reserve Bank of this District.
ASSETS
Cash and due from banks .. .
. '. ' ' ... . .. ' . .. .. ' 1,983,000.00
U.S. Treas ury securities .... .
. . . . . . .. .. . " ·~ " " . .... .... 2,937,000.00
Obligations of U.S. Government
agencies and corporations . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . .
: . . ...... .. ..... 1,594,000.00
Obligations of States and political subdi visions . . .... . ·., .. , ...... . 2,596.000.00
Federal Reserve stuck and corporate st uck .
. ... 24,000.00
Federal funds sold &amp; securities purchased under
agreem ents to resell in domestic uffi ccs.... . . .
. ......... 350,000.00
a. Loans, Total 1excluding unea rned incume J' .......... 11 .238,000.00
b. Less: Reserve for pu.sible loan losses . . . .
. 61,000.00
c. Loans, net. ....... .....
. . ... . 11 ,157,000.00
Bank premiseS. furniture ami fixtures. and
.... 399,000.00
other assets rePresenting bank premises . . . ..... .
Other assets .
. . . . . . . . . . . . ..... . . . .... ' .... ' i61000.00
.. . : ..21.Mii.ooo.oo
·.....
TOT AI. ASSETS ........ .
LIABILITIES
'
Demand deposits uf individuals,
. 4,728,000.00
partnerships cmd &lt;.: orporetlions ...
Time and savi ngs deposits of individua ls,
partnerships. and corporations........
. . .... . . .. ..... 14,137,000.00
Deposits of Uni ted States Government.
................ , . . .. 95,000.00
Deposits of Sta tes and political subdivisions ........ . .. ....... ... .. 340,000.00
Deposits of co mmereial banks .
. .......................... 4,000.00
Certified and officer s' checks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. .... 223,000.00
Total Depos its 1n Domestic Offices . . .
. . ..... .... 19,527.000.00
a . Total demand depos1ts .................... ........ 5 325 000 00
b. Total tim e and savings deposits .
. ............... 14,202,000.00
Total Deposits 10 Domesti c and Foreign Offices ................. 19,527,000.00
Other liabilities . . .
... .. .....
. ......... !14.000.00
TOTA!.I.I ABII.I TIES
... .. .. . . . .. . . ... .. . . . . .
. ... 19,641,000.00
EQUITY CAPITAL

Castro .celebrating
, 25th
anniversary of revolution

'

percent Tuesday.
But the most serious threat
to mail service so far will
come Monday when some
23,000 New York City postal
workers will vole to decide
whether to strike. A union
spokesman said if the vo~ is

Charge
(Cunllnuld frGm ..,, 1)
Developmental Disabilities
Unit of the legal rights service, said Tuesday that the
nursing homes " are not ..
capable of providing for the
residents and there appear to
be ·no plans to do so."
Shesaid none of the nursing
homes are certified by the
state to handle mentally
retarded patients and none of
them have even applied to be
certified.
"They were transferred to
nursing homes without
·consulting county mental
retardation boards or district
offices. and in some cases
withoui contacting the Ohio
Departmeht of
Public
Welfare, " she said.
'"They were dumped. "
The welfare department
gener"ally requires prior
authorization before reimbursing the nursing homes
for the costs of housing former residents of institutions.
Ms. Hailer said she has sent
a letter to the welfare
department asking it to stop
authorizing placement of
Gallipolis residents in nursing homes that are not
certified .
The state plans to release
from 2,000 to 3,000 residents
from mental institutions
within the next year in an
effort to me et national
standards for placing th e
mentally retard ed int o
community settings.

yes, the walkout probably
will start at dawn Tuesday.
Moe Biller, leader of the
New York City local,
pfedicted a New York City .
strike would.mean a national
mail strike.
Leaders of a number of
postal union locals around the
country, who said their members were ,a gainst the
proposed contract, said they
would be watching the New
York strike vote.
In Washington, Emmet Andrews , president of ~he
American Postal Workers
Union , said Tuesday he did
not think a New York City
strike would mean a national
walkout. " I don't think
everybody's going w follow
the situation in New York ,"
he said. "In fact, it is
questionable in some people's
mind whether members in
New York will vote to hold a
strike."

Monitoring
•

station
funds OK'd
WASHINGTON (UPII - A
Senate appropriations subcommitee Tuesday approved
a 1275,000 amendment under
which four .more monitoring
stations would be established
to check Ohio River
water
.
quality .
About $135,000' of the appropriation would operat e
stations at the confluence of
the
Monongahela
and
Allegheny rivers in Pitt sburgh, near Beaver, Pa., at
Parkersburg, W. Va., and at
Evansville, Ind.
,, ... , ...
The remaining $140,000
would be for operation of
se ven current monit or ing
stations and the four new
stations on a daily basis.
The
program
would
provide early warning to 25

.

ENROLL NOW

FALL TERM

GALLIPOLIS
BUSINESS COL~EGE .

j JIL'_r_he_w_o_rl_d_T_o_d_ay_

Choose an exciting Career in one of these
success proven fields:

11111

.

•EXECUtiVE SECRETARY

•SECRETARIAL
•BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
• JR. ACCOUNTING
•GENERAL OFFICE

..

Financial Assistance Available
Approved for Veterans

"'

GAlLIPOLIS
BUSINESS COLLEGE

f

shag - jute back.

OR WRITE:

ro-A'U:i;Eii'siuiiN"iiscoi:L'EG'f1
I P.O . Box 74t
I
I Gallipolis. OH . 45631
I1 ( ) Please provide me

State of Ohio County of Meigs, ss:
Sworn to and subscribed before me thi s lith da y of July, 1978.
J oAnn Crisp, Notary Publi c
My Commission ~:xpires July 17, 1983.

II

~

. I orma t ton
' '·
wt'th more 1n

Age

Name

Address

I Phone

'

brown and biege sculptured

CALL 446 4367

No.

City
·

~-------'

State_ z,~

1

1
II

-II

~ --~---~

I

-aoo test theories that his 1959 suicide attempt in Russia was
a Soviet cover-up for ertocts to brainwash the KeMedy
assassin .
FBI Director J . Edgar Hoover blocked the 1964 CIA
suggestion, and the W!ll'ren Commission decided not "to force
the FBI's band on this point," according to docwnents
oblatned by a private researcher and made available to UPI .

Peasant girl finds diam~nd
HONG KONG (UP!)~ A peasant 'girl unearthed a 158.786
carat diamond while tilling. a commune field in the northern
province of Shantung, the China News Service reported
Wednesday .
The light yeUow-hued gem has been~presented to ChinCooununist Party Chairman Hua Kuo-feng, who named it ''the
Chang Lin diamond," the news service dispatch carried by
Hong Kong's Ta Kung aoo Wen Wei newspapers said . The
finder, Wei Chen.fang,ls a member of the Chang Un commune
and C&lt;mmunisl Youth Brigade. ·

'

Trade deficit called smallest
NEW -YORK (UP!) - Investors, encouraged by the
smallest u. s. trade deficit in more than a year and the
strengthening dollar abroad, sent stocks higher Wednesday in
heavy trading .
The Dow Jones Industrial average, which gained 7.97
· points Tuesday, was ahead 4.51 to 844 .07 shortly before noon
EW. Advances held a better than tw&lt;&gt;-lo-one lead over
declines, 870 to 365, among the 1,659 Issues crossing the New
York Stock Exchange tape.

G~bage crisis comes to end
WJU.JAMSTOWN, W. Vo. (UP!) - Rats and maggots
must (lnd· other sources of meats from now in Wllllamatown.
The great. garbage crisis bas ended.
.
Stacks of refuse bave been hauled away, ending
complaints fed to Mayor Hennan L. Fischer that collections
had not been made f..- many weeks . cans were slUffed to the
limit. With publicity aoo the help of a state Public Service
Commission official, however, collections were Increased late
last week. Garbage cr..,.s Tuesday completed their roundup.

Engineer firm set at Piketon
BOSTON (UP!)- The Energy Department has selected
the Stone &amp; Webster Engineering Corp . to be the construction
management contractor for the department's Centrifuge
Uranium Enrichment plant at Piketon, Ohio.
Continued on page 7

(Oontlmted frlllll .... 1)

FOR INFORMATION

We. the undersigned directors, attest the correctneSS of thi • report of condi·
tion and declare that 1t has been examined by us and tu the hest of our
knowled ge and belief is true &lt;:tnd correct.
Leslie F . Fultz
Fred R. Carsey, Jr. - Directors .
R. C. Follrod

WASIUNGTON (UP!) - CIA officials wanted to dig up

Lee Harvey Oswald'scorpse to examine a scar on his left wrist

'1100 YARD
· SQ.

INSTALLED OVER '12 INCH
FOAM PADDING

ELBERFELDS IN -POMEROY

strike and can't comment oo
what we ·will do if it occurs,"
a spokesman In Washington
said. "We have a contingency
plan that covers any
emergency."
The. proposed contract is
being voted on in mail
balloting expected to be
completed in about two
weeks, but the Postal Service
will have to face the threat of
a strike before then.

In New York, ~.ooo postal cost of living areas wl!ere
workers plan to vote Monday -~· postal workers complain the
on ·a strike proposal. A union proposed average 19.5
S]lOkesrnan said If the vote . percent wage and· cost-&lt;&gt;fwas yes, the . walkout living increase over three
probably would start at dawn years Is not enough.
"There's
always
a
Tuesday.
Moe Biller, leader of the possibility of It passing,
New · York City local , because
opposition
is
predicted any New York City geographical," said Stephen
strike would mean a national Albanese, head of the 4,~
mall strike.
member Boston local of the
Much of the opposition to American Postal Workers
the contract comes frorn high Union.

Fiftee n Ce11ls
Vol. 29. No. 72

Committee
completing
tax cut bill
/

WASHINGTON (UP!) Spurred by Sen . Russell
Long's predictions the Senate
will make similar but even ,
steeper tax cuts, the Hollse
Ways and Means Comlnittee
Is completing a tax bill
containing major tax relief
for investors.
The average taxpayer
would benefit from the bill,
but to a. lesser extent .
Chalnnan AI Ullman, DOre .,
told
reporters
Wednesday he expects to
report
the
legislation
containing capital gains tax
cuts - which President

COLUMBUS (UP!) - A
new effort to help reduce
crime against senior
citizens, through
s\.e~la.llzed training
prOJ!UIIII . for
laW•
e:nforeemeot

personnel

around Ohio, was annouoced Wednesday by
Gov. James A. Rhodes.
The stale Department of
Economic and Community
Developmeal's Dlvlsloli of
Crime Prevention will
lmplemeol a lralalog
program developed by the
pollee tralniog sedloo of
the National Retired
Teachers Association American Association ol
Retired Persoos, said the
governor.

carter has called "windfalls
for millionaires" - to the full
House late today. But some
committee Republicaos said
Friday Is a more likely
target .
Long, chairman of the
Senate Finance Committee,
told a National Press Club
audience Wednesday he
favors limiting the capital
gains tax to 19.5 percent. The
present tax· on profits from
lmg-term inv~trnents ~uch
, as property Of stocks and ·
bonds iS 49 percent, and the
·House committee has voted a
maximwn of 35 percent.
"The facts of life today will
force the House to seoo us a
large tax cut bill, and we will
amend it," Long said.
"The Finance C&lt;lllmittee
will also recommend that we
expand the investment tax
~ credit for employee . stock
ownershil! from 1 to 2 percent
and provide a tax credit
measured by payroll to make
the concept more attractive
to
labor
intensive
companies," Long added.
As Long spoke, the House
committee refused to grant
the same infla lion tax relief
to iooividual taxpayers that it
granted to investors earlier.
By a 23-13 vo.te, the House
committee defeated a motion
by Rep. Willis Gradison, ROhio, that would have
eliminated any increase in
individual income taxes
caused solely by inflation.

DEMONSTRATION - Donald Whitman of Computer
Election Systems, Inc., is shown giving a demonstration
in the latest technique in modern system of voting in
Meigs County :-vednesday. On the left is Leslie Fultz, a

BY KATIE CROW
A demonstration on the
latest technique in modern
system of voting was given by
Donald L. Whitman of
Computer Election Systems,
Inc., at the Meigs Co unty
Board of Elections W e d~
nesday afternoon.
The " Votomatic" is a
punch card method of eiec·
tronic voting.
A person is given a smgle
ballot card which they slide
into the vote recorder. The
person voting, using a stylus
which is attached to the
recorder, pu shes down
through the card for each uf
their choices .

clerk for the commissioner s. The demonstrati on was held
at the office of the Board of Elections .

After voting, they slide the Hocking. Scioto and Monroe
ca rd out of the vote recorder counties·, to na me a frw . Th e
and place it under the flap In vote recorder will fit in any
the write-in envelope. If a voting booth.
Another advan(age IS t hat
person makes a mistake they
may ask for another ballot. ballots t hai are nul used may
The purpose of the modern be used in later elections.
system of voting is for Whit man indicated that if
g reater accuracy by using Meigs County would go to the
computers to count baUots
also reduced election costs by
elimination of paper ballot
counting boards.
Computer elect ion systems
began selling in Ohio 'in 1974.
Fifty co unties in Ohio are now
using this type of voting
system.
Whitman e xplaine d t hat
they are in use in Gallia,

'"votomat ic '' system t hey

would need approximately
100 vote recorders.
When th e ballots are
-coll ected 1 from the precincts,
they a re taken to the Boa rd of
Elect ions and placed in a
ba ll ot count er to obtain
Continued on pa ge 7

Education funds
available for
Rutland youths

The Middleport Fire
Department was called to the
scene of an accident near the
Gavin Power Plant on Route
7 at 4:47 p.m. Wednesday
where the gas tank of a
vehicle driven by Donald
Goeheen, Point Pleasant, has
ruptured: The squad washed
the gasoline off the road.
At 12 :27 a.m. this morning
the emergency squad.went to
the Merry-Go-Round on
Story's Run Road for l!etty
Clark, 42, Millfield, who was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital with a posslble
fractured ankle.

RUTLAND - WiUiam j _
Hobstetter of Rutland has
informed the Daily Sentinel
that as trustee of the will of
Unnie B. Taylor, he has some
funds and the authority to
assist needy children who live
in the village of Rutland , to
help · obtain a college
education .
If any eligible person would
like such assistance the y
should contact Mrs. Hol&gt;sll~tter at S&amp;lem Street,
Rutland .

Recall try
dismissed
DENVEI\ (UP!) - The
Mine
Workers
.united
E&amp;ecutlve
International
Board adjourned Ita meeting
two days early, dilmlulng a
recaU effort against union
President Arnold Miller oo
coolltltutlooll grounds and
giving him a vote of
coofldence.
"We haw completed a very
productive board meeting
and handled 10111e divisive
act! vii)' and put lha t to rest ,"
. Mill• uld after the board
adjourned Weclnesday. He
l8ld the recall effort faUeclto
follow the UMW conlltllutloo.
"¥011 mUll fUe char~U
before you get petitions.
There have been a lot
allegallonl, but no charges.
And there Ia a heU of a lot of
difference
between
~~~tiona and charges," he

member of the Mei gs Board of Elections and on the right
is Richard Jones, commissioner and Mary Hobstetter ,

Electronic voting system
demonstration given here

auto accident

1

week , there have 'been was charged with trying to
wildcat r rikes a t bulk mail run down a seeurity guard
centers iii California and New with his car.
A second man , who
Jersey . Th.e U.S . Postal
Service wea kened those supposedly entered th e ]iostal
walkouts by firing almost 100 facility to pick up his wife,
was arrested for allegedly
strikers.
Two men, including a fired knocking down another guard
postal worker , were arrested with hi• car and then biting
at the New York Bulk and him on the arm , Neither
are .' '
Foreign Mail Center in guard was hurt .
Since the proposed na tiona I Jersey City, N.J..
Both men were ordered
postal contract was agreeed
The fired postal - worke ~ held in lieu of $5 ,000 hail each .
upon in Washingt~n last

"It's hard to. speak nationwide: In this particular area,
chances of it being turned
down are very good. · Other
areas, the South and
Midwest, I would say chances
of it turning down are next to
impossible - the areas that
aren't experiencing the cost
of living problems that we

Squadmen go
to scene of

maintenance of health, much
easier for the diabirtic.
In addition to the film , the
Student Health Team hopes
to be able to make a small
Pfesentation on some of the
different aspects of diabetes.
The team will also be
available to answer any
question s they can concerning health. No reservations are necess ary to
attend the class.

Brown sculptured shag or

The World Today

FBI blocked exhwnation

Oasses set

12 Foot wide - 100% nylon.

St . No . 75 ·02 -04728

j]

Four persons were fined
and two others forfeited bond
in Middleport Mayor Freel
Hofhnan's CO!lrt Tuesday.
Fined were Sammy Uttle,
41, Middleport , disorderly
manner, 125 and costs; Emily
F. Price, 44, Shade, Thomas
L. Cleland, 23, Langsville,
and ' Thomas L. Loucks ,
Texas, all OWl, 1225 and
costs plus three days In jail
each.
Forfeiting bond were
Buddy McKinney, 61, Middleport , disorderly mamer,
$50; and Tony M. Hutton, 19,
Langsville, spinning tires,
$25 .

SALE I
CARPETING·

Accredlttd by the Accrediti"9 Commission of the
Association of Independent Colleges and Schools.

the National , Association of
Letter Carriers. "We are
trying to hold the line. I think
if there Is going to be a strike,
it
should
be
called
IJ&amp;tianally,"
Despite the growing
reports of unhappiness with
the proposed contract, the
U.S. Postal Service says it
11
'11lere is an undercurrent does not expect a national
to go out oo strike," said strike.
Harold Lowe, who represents
"We don't anticipate a
Cleveland's 2.500 members in

Six court
cases heard

WAREHOUSE ON
MECHANIC STREET

.Begin September 18, 1978

Ulitecl PJ'eu llllel'll8tlo~l
Although the U.S, Postal
Service says It does not
anticipate a nationwide mail
strike, there Is increasing
opposition to the proposed
contract
national
especiaUy in big city areas
where malbnen say it just
does not offer enough money,

yield the right of way, $30;
Gaylord Young, Albany,
.loitering in the parking lot,
150 and possession of a
controlled substance, $100;
Richard Stone, Groveport,
speeding, $10 ; Lois Hawley ,
Pomeroy, failure to yield the
right qf way , $30 ; Carl Clay, •
Rutland, speeding, $25; and
Robert Grossnickle , Belpre,
no motorcyCle endorsement,
$30.

ELBERFELDS

DAY M EVENING CLASSES

1. Roger W. Hysell , Cashier. of the above-named hank do hereby declare
that this report of condi tion is true to the best of my kn owledge and belief.
Roger W. Hyse ll

(Cuntlmled frun .... 1)

fashion a new death penalty law in.Qhio to replace one ruled
unconstitutional by the Supreme Court July 3.
Scheduled to .testify were representatives of the Ohio
Prosecuting Attorneys Association and the Ohio Council of
Churches .

enttne

Opposition to mail pact increasing

Pomeroy mayor fines three

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Three persons were fined
Admission s - Norman
and
eight forfeited bond in
Lehew, Portland ; Elsie
Pomeroy
Mayor Klarence
Spence, Pomeroy ; Herman
·Tuesday.
Andrews'
court
Warner, Pomeroy ; U:mnie
Fined
were
Lester ZimCohen , Pomeroy ; William
merman,
Pomeroy,
Kennedy ,
Middleport ;
Brenda LeMaster, Pomeroy ; malicious threatening, $200
and Glennie Milhoan, Long and costs; Roy E. Anns,
Minersville, failure to stop at
Bottom.
a
red light , $30 and costs; and
Di scharge s - Stephen
Snider, Columbus,
Marian
Simpson, Paul Fraley, lola
driving
under
suspension, $50
Damewood, Dana Covert,
and
costs
and
OWl, $350 and
Dillon Taylor, and Enna
costs.
Wilso n.
:"'y•
Forfeiting bond . were Carl
Holzer Medical Ceoter
Hendricks, Jr., Pomeroy ,
POSTAL EXAM
t Discharges, July 25)
squealing tires, $50; John C.
The United States Postal
Brian
Alliz er, ~Haro ld Hite, Middleport , failure to
Service announced that an
Arthur, Cheryl Basil , Mrs.
examination for substitute
James
·Cochran
and
rural carrier at the Reeds- muhicipa1 water systems on
CHICKEN DINNER
Merl
e
Conley,
dau
ghter,
ville, Ohio Po•Hlffice will be toxic materials that may be
The
Constant - B uilders
given at Parker sburg . spilled into the Ohio River.· Oretha Crookham, Dorothy Class of the Racine Wesley an
Griffis,
William
Gru
ese
r.,
Closing date for applications The demonstration was
United Methodist Church will
must be submitted before . begun tn 1977 after a major Randy Hall. Rhonda Hoff- serve a chicken dinner, with
man,
Edna
Holcom
b,
Elias
Aug. 15.
spill of carbon tetrachloride.
Howard, Jr. , Dollie Jividen. all the trimming, on Aug. 26
Matching funds for the· Douglas Johnson, Jr ., Joan from 5 to 7 p.m.
operati on of thi s demonTickets may be purchased
King, Eutha McDaniel, Terry
In 1967, four days of racial stration sys tem will be Neece, Dana Rayburn , Irene from any member of the class
rioting in Detroit ended with provided by the Ohio River Ree d, Halli e Robertson, or reservailons made by
Va lley . Sanitation Com·
39 dead .
Fl orence Scott , Rebecca ca lling 949-2671 or 949-2789.
mission .
Snavely, Steven Siginan,
VISIT HERE
Saman\jla Spears, William
Tommy
Tucker and family ,
Stuver, John Vance, Mrs.
Maryland,
visited recently
John Weethee and daughter,
with
Hilah
Jones
, 109 S. Third
Tracy Whaley, Steven White,
Ave.,
Middleport.
Tucl\er is a
Etta Young , Eleanor Zeiher.
·
former
resident
of MidFOR
Birth
dleport
and
returned
for the
Mr . and Mr s. Paul Musick ,
in
some
30
years.
first
time
a daughter, Jackson.
ADDITIONAL SURVIVOR
REUNION SET
An additional survivor of
Annual Zuspan reunion will
AT
Nora E. Reuter who died be held Saturday, Aug . 5 at
Mon ~ay is a great - great Krodel Park. Basket dinner
granddaughter,
Melissa will he served at 1 p.m .
Wolfe.

Common stock :··
300,00o.OO
b. No. sha res outstanding 12,000 ........ . ....... I par value I
... ...... .. ' ' ........ .. ' ..... 500,000.00
Surplus . . .
. . . .. .. .. .
SIS 000 00
Und1v1ded profits .......... .
TOTAI. EQU lTY CAP)TAI. ..
.... ' ....... . ' . . '' ..... ''' ''' 1,415,000.0
TOTAL I.IABILITl ES AND
.......... ............ ..... . ... ' 21 ,056,000.00
EQUITY CAPITA L .
MEMORANDA
Averag e fror 30 calendar days ending with report date :
. . " . ' ... 1,885,000.00
a. Cash and diw from banks.. . .... . . . . . ..... .
b. F'eder&lt;:d fumh sr' ' ....HI sec.: urilies purchased wtder
agreement to rese11 . . . . . .
. . .. . ......... 892,000.00
c. Total loan s . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . 11,161,000.00
e. Total de[J&lt;lsi!.'l in domestic and foreign offi ees . .
. .. ..... 19,194 ,000.00
SUPPLEMENTAL MEMORANDA
Pledged assets and securities loaned (book value I :
U.S. Gove rnment obligations, di rect and guaranteed,
pledged tu secure deposits and other liabilities ... . .
. .......... 1163,008.94
TOTAL. ..
. . ... , ...... ................ .. ..... .... .. .... 863,008.94

'.

Hospital News

a1 y

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, July 27 1978·

MIAMI (UPI) - At dawn on July 26, exiled io Mexico, where he org.,uzed
1953, Fidel Castro and a band of guerillas another attack in December 1956 which staged an abortive attack on Cuba's after two years of guerrilla fighting in the
Moncada Garrison that made Castro a mountains - toppled the Batista
criminal and sent him into hiding in the . government aoo brought castro to power
on Jan. I, 1959.
nearby mountains.
Participants in this week's celebrations
The bearded Cuban president returns to
"the crad,le of the revolution " in Santiago will include , Palestine Liberation
de .Cuba today to celebrate the 25th. Organization leader Yasser Arafat aoo
anniversary of his revolutionary Mrs. Salvador Allende, widow of the leftist.
movement and praise those who died In the Chilean president, along with Communist
leaders from around the world.
skirmish.
Workers in Santiago de Cuba aoo
The 26th of July celebration comes when
Havana
have spent months sprucing up
once-thawing U.S.Cuba relations appear to
buildings and repairing streets in advance
be near their lowest point since President
of the amiversary aoo the weeklong youth
. carter took office.
Unlike the r,nass rallies of previous festival .
Havana Radio recently reported the
years, Castro will speak today before
17,000carefully chosen delegates at the old .capital city was being turned into a
"beautiful and wann headquarters" for
garrison, now called the 26th of July School
the festival .
City.
The flurry of construction also Is aimed
The garrison audience will include
at luring American tourists and their
" l,oOO outstanding members of the
Committees for the Defense of the dollars to the Caribbean Island . U.S . tour
Revolution " and 1,000 delegates to the lith groups beg!lll visiting the Island last year
annual World Youth Festival, which gets after carter allowed a travel ban to expire.
Lifting the ban was seen ~ the first
under way Friday in Havana .
concrete
step toward renewing relations
Preparations for the youth festival aoo
the
two nations, broken by Presibetween
its 20,000 International delegates have
overshadowed the anniversary of CSBtro's dent Eisenhower in January 1961.
But the thawing relations chilled after
revolution, which in years past has heen
the United States objected publicly to
the island nation's majoc holiday.
After days of hiding in the mountains Cuban military presence in Africa aoo
linked diplomatic relations to Cuban
following the 1953 attack, Castro finally
withdrawal from that continent.
surrendered to Fulgeneio Batista's forces
The prospects of reaching full relations
when he was guaranteed he would not be
reached a low point in May when Carter
executed.
accused Cuba of c&lt;lllpllcily in the
Castro was imprisoned in the Isle of
Katangese invasion of Zaire. castro called
Pines, but was pardoned by Batista and
the accusation a "total lie."

•

!~DAY A-"FAIR" ?- This billboard on the Route 7
bypass has Meigs County motoriSts slightly baffled . ·
"MEIGS COUNTY FAIR AUGUST 5th-19th ," the sign
declares . No, folks, this year 's fair is not scheduled to be
the longest in county history - the sign is a slip up.
Festivities will begin on August 15 and run t hrough the
19th . One week as usual.

Southern teacher, employee
TROPHIES TO BE PRESENTED - Maidie Mora,
president of the Meigs County Fann Bureau Federation Is
shown with trophlell that will be awarded at the Meigs

Weather
Showers ending this
evening and clearing tonight,
with lows between 60 and 65.
Mostly SUMY Friday, with
'high temperatures In the
upper 70s or lower 80s.

EXTENDED FORECAST
Saturday
thr.ou1h
Mnday, fair S.ltlrday aDd
a ~haaee of tbaaderahtwen Saaday aad
MHday, HIJiul wW be Ia
the Ml aid Iowa wW be Ia
lbe lh,'
1

.

i;}}~::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::t::I!:f::{f(f

County Junior Fair. The Meigs CoUnty Farm Bureau
Federation has provided trophies for the junior fair for
many years. The Meigs County Fair will get underway
Aug . 15.

Two-vehicle wreck probed
Meigs County Sheriff
James J . Proffitt reports that
deputies lovestlgated a twocar accident that occurred at :
5:40p.m. Wednesday in Olive
Township on the Hutson
Valley Road.
According to the information, a· ·southbound
vehicle driven by Nanna J .
Wllliama, Rt. 1 Reedsvilte,
was on the inside of the curve
and struck head-on a northbound auto driven by Inez C.
Boring, Rt. 1 Reedsville.
Heavy damage resulted to
both vehicles, but no injuries
were report . Mrs. Williams

was. cited for foiling to keep
her vehicle on the right half of
the roadway .
Sheriff Proffitt alsQ advises
that his office has heen
notified that a 25-inch threespeed Huffy bioycle braWl!
frame and chrome fenders is
missing from a Harrisonville
residence. Cora Lee, Rt. 1,
Harrisonville, reported that
the bicycle was discovered
missing Tuesday · morning .
Anyone seeing a bicycle
answering this description
is asked tu contact the
sheriff's office or call the Lee
residence a.t 742-31~7 .

'

GRIDDERS TO REPORT
All boys, grades 9 through
12 , interested in playing
varsity or reserve .football
should report at Eastern High
School Monday, July 3t at
6:30p.m. to get t!leir helmets
fitted.
MEETING SLATED
The association of the .
Meigs County Trustees and
Clerks will meet Saturday,
July 29, at 7:30p.m. at Rock
Springs Grange Hall. The
budget for the Meigs County
Health Department will be
discussed also other busines.•
mAt t t•rs .

reps meet with. school board
Repres~ntatives from tht
Southern Loc al Tea chers
Association and Southern
Local Public Service Em·
ployes Association met with
the Southern Local Board of
Education this week to
discuss salaries and contracts.
The board agreed that
payment of certain bills will
be held until discussions on
all employes' salaries are
concluded.
In other business, the board
accepted the . resignation of
William Jewell as a teacher
at the junior high school,
accepted the resignation of
Mrs. Patricia Fletcher as a
teacher •at the Racine
Elementary, approved a
maternity leave of absence
f.,r Mrs. Barbara Lawrence
J

for the 1976-79 sc hool year Meadows, Marshall Adams,
and agreed to purchase Don P. Smith, Hilton Wolfe,
student accident ins urance Jr ., an4 Ray Proffitt.
from the Personal Service
The board authorized the
Insurance Company.
clerk to mak e an advance
The board hired the draw on tax co llections and to
following teachers for the make transfers.
1978-79 school year : Miss
The board also approved a
Karen
Rhodes,
Mrs. public service employment
Michaele Hoback, . Mrs. ag reement between the
Patricia Struble, Mrs. Connie So uthern Local School
Sue Giikev, and Miss Reha District and the Ohio Bureau
Miller.
of Employment Service (or
Substitute personnel hired the employment of Joni
for the 1978-19 School year Sellers for a 12-month period.
· were : cooks, June Ashley,
The next regular meeting
Sharlee Evans , Linda Grind- will be Aug. 22 at 7: 30p.m. In
1
ley, Dorothy Johnson, Hazel the high school cafeteria.
Selle.rs, and Lizzie Wood;
Attending were Dallas Hill,
custodians, Ann Cozart. Gene Yost, Shirley Johnson
Robert W. Lewi s, Lizzie and Betty Wagner , board
Wood, and Hazel Sellers : bus m embers , Linda Spencer,
drivers, Willi am Downie, Jr ., clerk and Bobby , Ord,
Wendall Er vin, Martha superintendent.

&lt;'

'

,•

�-.

-2- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, July V, 1978

Minor misdemeanor legislation now law

•

OOLUMBUS (UP! ) - Legislation to require a police officer
to issue a citation to, blit Wider most circwnstances not arrest,
a person for the ccmmission of a minor misdemeanor was
, signed into law Wednesday by Gov. James A. Rhodes.
Minor misdemeantrs include most traffic tickets, reckless
driving, failure to disburse, failure to aid a law officer and the
possession of less than three owtces of marijuana lor a
person 's private use.
Minor misdemeanors are offe_,; punishable by a fine of not
·
more than $100.
Instead of the arrest and jailing of the accused, a police
officer ·would be required under the new law, e ffective Oct . 25,
to issue a citation to the offender .
Jailing, however, would be authorized if the offender
requiTes medical ,care, refuses to ·offer identification to the
police officer or has been previously convicted for the
commission of the same minor misdemeanor.
The legislation, sponsored through the Ohio' General
AssemblY. by Sen. Michael Schwarzwalder, [).{:o]umbus, was
among a group of 11 bills - aU but one effective on Oct. 25 : .~igned by · Rhodes.
. Nine more billS passed by the legislature last month await

-

.

action on Rhodes desk.
A second biU signed into law by .Rhodes will tenninate tbe
revocation of a person's driving license if that revocation was
prompted by the person's refusal to take a blood alcohol test .
The change in state law will aUow a court to grant
"occupational driving privileges" to a person who pleads
guilty to a charge of driving a motor vehicle while under the
~
influence of alcohol.
Under the special driving privileges, a person can drive to
and from w.o rk if he or she can prove that use of an automobile
is essential to their employment.
The lone bill iri the g~:oup effective immediately contained a
$514,493 appropriation to the Bureau of Worker's Compensation. Under the law, the bureau. and the Industrial Commission
of · Ohio are authorized to develop a new record-keeping

system.
The two state agencies wiU no longer be r\!(luired to keep
non~ase reeords. AdditionaUy, the agencies will be aUowed to
keep most of their rectrds on micro-film.
A1oo signed into law by Rhodes and effective Oct. 25 .were
bills to :
- Exempt certain stock investments made by muluallwtds
from the intangible personal property tax.
- Revise the operation of small claims courts, including the
allowance for the courts to hold sessions at night and on
Saturdays.
·
- Increase certain fees charged by clerks -of courts of
common pleas.
.
.
- Authorize boards.of county commissioners to acquire land

for a solid landfill.
- Change "gender-apecific" words in state law Uke
''policeman' ' to ''Police officfr'' and ''husband" to ''~tile_.' '
- Allow a hoard of county COillJilisslpners to hire an allorney
outside the county prosecutor's office.
-Conform state law to federal mandates In the administration of the public school breakfast and lunch program.
- Allow township .board&amp; of trustees to isaue notes to buy
park lands.

N.E.A. 76

)

COMMENTARY

economy .·

'

" Deal you in7 You expect us to change rules in the middle of the game?"

Caution ·a dvised in writing
new Ohio death penalty law

Berry's World

name.

·

Columbus Sept. 12.
Leonard
said
the
committee would meet twice
in August - the lOth a nd the
17th - to hear further
testimony .
Witn esses Wed n es day
included Carl Layman, an
assistant Summit County
prosecutor ; George Smith,
Franklin County Prosecutor,
and Fred J . Cartolano, an
assistant Hamilton County
prosecutor .
Each of the prosecutors
suggested changes to Ohio's
now-W1constitutional death
penalty which, they said,
would bring it into lme with
th e
Suprem e
Court 's
objections in its ruling.
Layman said that the Sopreme Court did not rule the
death penalty unconstitional,
put only objected to the
procedure used in Ohio in
implementing it.
Mo.st of the recom·
mendations to the subco mmitt ee . in its first
hearin g involved a list of
factors wh[ch may allow for a
lesse r sentence
for

tloao of Soviet dlsoideoto by
tbe ·Communist govern·

me•t.
.. The obvious answer is
that eventually I will kill
myself accidentally.''
- Author Truman Capo\e,
replylog - darlag a oomeUmea IDt!oherent tatervlew
(oa ABC-TV) about 1111 problema with dru&amp;• aad alcobol
- to 1 qae1lloa about bta
future.

IHI II ERT IIOEF' I.I U I
t~dil ur

Puloli ~ t" "! ,!. . II~ t 'Xt l'pl S itlu n.J a }
b~

'1'111' tJhw V:&lt;llt·}

l' ublt ~ l t rn ~

l'ull\fXIII\ ·Mu ltum•tha,

lrw ,
Il l
l'uU I'I ti t , ~ l'ullttTH}. Uh tu -t:;ili9
B u :- n w.., .~ Off11't' f' lhuw lf.l:l· 2156

t·:dtturlill f1 ht,rn· 9':12 · .1 1 ~ 7
Sn_ur"l d a!l, pu S l i t~~· pmc!
P tii J\o·ro\ , l ll u u

~alHJI.Iii l

La l t\'t',

fl lh

~l ltS\11~

l ..m tlull

&lt;I I

T'~pl't!Sl!/1 •

t\ l&gt;!.i!t'lll\t S.

:HO I

Eul'lul t\ vc.. Clt'\'d tmtl Olttu ~~ ll fl
Subsenpttun nr h:ll . l)dt\"t•rNJ IJ)
en i'{I L' r ~· lll'l' t' n\•a rliihlo· 75 tt· nts ~~

W&lt;'t'k. Ry Mvlur Houtt• whcn·t·ornl;'r
St'rv1u · nut ~H'&lt;~ rlaUi t• , One month ,

$.'.1 .2!1 By m;ul

111

Pope Poal

Olrru itml W Va .,

Olw Yt'e~r , $2'1.00: Stx rnurnhs,
$11.JO: Thrcc mon t lrl&gt;. 17.00 ·
Elst&gt;whcrc f'l 6.01l }'t:ar·: Srx munt11~
SIJ ,50: Th r c t: rr w nllr ~ . $1 .50 .
SuiJM-rtptlo l\ pr tt"t rrrr lutlo·!'l Srrml&lt;ty'

" Political opinion can not
be persecu\ed and punt..hed
as a crlme."
T ttll t" h~Cillllll'l
- Pope Poal VI, prote•t"---------.......J IDI tbe crlmlaol proaeca·

A model to emulate
CHELSEA, S.C. ! NE;A i'- lt has been a long time, the better
part of 10 years in fact , since the rest of America paid much
beed to communities like this in the · " low country" where.
South Caroli na bwnps up against Georg1a .
For the citizens of Beau fort and Jasper Counties, that is an
eloquent testimonial to progress.
A decade ago. the entire na tion knew about Beaufort am!
Jasper Counties , for it was here thc::lt hunger in America was
" discovered" and held up to public view.
It was here that the doctors trooped to diagnose worms that
infested 80 percent or the children in the two counties. here the
nutntionists came to see the "''urvy anti ricketo and other all·
too-visible signs of malnutrition , here the health statisticians
found an infant mmtality rate of 62 per 1,000 births .
And it was here that Sen. Ernest F . Hollings, D-S.C., came to
see for himse lf th(ll "there is hnn~er in South Car1, li ua " and to
'

What people are sayirlg ...

INTf. KE:.''i'r tW
MElfi S·MAS4)N AHEA
Ci ty

criminal justice system was
" vengeance and retribution 11
in addition to punishment and
rehabilitation.
Each of the witnesses discussed the questions raised,
but left unresolved, by the
Supre;ne Court, inCluding
whether an " aider and
abettor" to a crime can be
sentenced to death, how to
deal with those persons
convicted but not yet
sentenced under the nowun constitutional
death
penalty and the broad -range
of mitigating circumstances
which might preclude the use
•of the death penalty.

QUOTE/UNQUOTE

t)E\·(rn:u r., nn:

Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

" Why co uldn ·r Ca rter nave been stranded in
Eu rope /Ike those tourists in Amsterdam with
the cu t-rate flights? "

exam ple,
whether
the
accused had the intent to
murder someone before the
commission of a crime which
also resulted in the death of a
person.
Opposing the reinstatement
of the death penalty were
Lawrence
Herman ,
a
professor of criminal law at
the Ohio State University,
and
Hiram
Maddux ,
representing the Ohio Council
of Churches.
Hennan argued against"the
death
penalty
· on
phil osophica l grounds a nd
was justified only if you
believe one role of the

TH F: flA I L 'I'SF.~TINt:l .

IN WASHINGTON

1'j78b~ NEA tnc ~ ~
, , -;J-o

J

. •n

"
-~.

,,

homo

A yen for riyals

CiJ

..
..,
.,
"'..

TENANT TROUBi:.ES: Llberace has !ust laid out something in excess of $100,000 for an old suburban mansion In . ~
Milwaukee to convert into a musemn for his collection 111
musical memorabilia, but he -has a problem. The former
owner, who stiU lives in the manse as a rent.paying tenant,
woo'tmove . Abe Austin, who's the same age as the house, says
he's entitled to stay there as long as he can manage his own
affairs. Liberace says no effort will be made to put him out l,hat, in fact, he wants Austin treated as respectfully as
Liberace's own 85-year-dd mother. All of which presumably
means the collection wiD have to wait a while longer for a

losing batt!~ of an American entrepreneur, Steven
Rempel. with Japanese business and Japanese law is deta iled
in a New York Times report- a ppropriately lengthy considerin g that Rempel's trial is now in its fourth year.
. COLUMBUS (UP! ) - A
Briefly. back ir! 1974 Rempel perce1ved a n· excellent op- s p irc ial l egis lat ive·
portunity in the ver y htgh-priced J apanese market fo r im- s ubcommitle met for the
ported luxury goods . He began unporting liquor directly for second time Wednesday and
retailers at reasonable prices, cutting out the t raditional mid- was again told thatits task of
dlemen, the Japanese distr ibuting finns which control home recommending
a
sales at markups many times original prices on the foreign replacement death-penalty .
free market .
statute for on e ruled
A few months of profitable business landed Rempel in deten- unconst itutional by the
tion, a llegedly for defrauding customs of import duties. Hts &amp;tpreme Court is a difficult
defenders contend, however , that the rea l offense was cutting assignment.
in the very good busmess of the Japanese distributors. This
Three county prosecutors
violated the rules of the Japanese game , with businessmen and urged the subcommittee of
government officials as partners. in which a relatively few the Ohio House Judiciary
g1ant f1rms dominate economk activity and detennine price Committee to do its job
levels which are among the world 's highest.
quickly , but tw o other
The market-sharing system restri cts imports as effectively witnesses advised caution in
- possibly even more so - as high tariffs would . Foreign con- drafting a new death penalty .
swner good.&lt;; may reach th~ Japa nese market, but not at prices
On July 3, the Supreme
which represent any threat to local products or to the natton's Court decided that Ohio 's
trade balance. Supply and demand are not significant factors three-year-old death penalty
m Japan's imports policy.
law was unconstitutional in
Steven Rempel is not likely to beat the Japanese version of that it did not give j udges
d ty hall. If he's lucky. the four year 's detention he has a lready enough
discretion · in
served wi ll be cpnsidered sufficient penalty for being out of co ns ideration
of
the
local business bou nds .
accused's involvement with
As for Prime Minister Fuk udH's personal concern w1th the the commission of a capital
troublesome trade surplus, Japan 's own economtc ga me plan offense .
uff•!r&gt; ampl"e opportunity to demonstrate that globa l responThe subcommittee is
sibility begins at home.
chaired by Rep . Paul R.
Leonard, D-Dayton, and IS
charged with recommending
how to fashion a rep lacement
statute to the full committee
Speak ing of moneybags , some Ja pa nese firms a re not fi lling when lawmakers return to
I
all of thei rs with yen.
Constructi on companies doing business in the Mideast are
reported borrowing worktng funds in Saudi Arabian riyals. It 's
i:l hedge against losses on the projects resulting from currency
ANNOUNCE .CHANGE
depreciation Smce the yen persists in risi ng against every
CI NCINN ATI ( UPI I other currency , mcluding the oil· backed riyal , the Japane5e
will ultimately be re paying the loans 1n cheaper r1yals rather Pete Rose has cha nged the
way wine is pron ounced and
them ever more expensive yen.
classified
in a Cincinnati
R1 ch countnes ha ve the darndest prob le ms.
restaurant.
In honor of Rose's new
National League consecutive
game hit streak record, officials of Charley's Crab
restaurant have told their
walters and waitresses to quit
pronouncing rose wine "rozay" and start calli ng it
simply ~~rose , " as in Rose's
Th~

"

By KENNETH R. CLARK

re~edy

The most urgent international task facing J apan is reduction
of its massive trade surplus.
That decla ration comes from no less a n authority than
Prune Mmister Takeo Fukuda, thus aligning his couotry with
1to major trading partners who long since have been of that
opinion.
W1tfl'a favorable trade balance currently running at a n annual rate of $20 billion, the Japanese are nght up there tn the ·
. s uper-surplus class with the 13-nation Organization of
Petroleum Exporting Countries . There are rich and n cher
traders doi ng busmess in today's world markets, but none to
compare with these two moneybags .
Fully cogmzant of the seriousness of the situation. _particularly for those countries running heavy deficits wit~
Japan, Fukuda is taking a personal interest in the effort to corrcct'the imbala nce , primarily through expanded purchases of
Amen can and E uropean products .
""This is a period of global togetherness ,"" he observes in an
exclusive interview in The Chnstian Sc1ence Monitor. "of
global shared responsibility ."
.
Meanwhile, another development reported in another
newspaper illunrinales another aspect of the Japanese

writers.

Uolted PrftJ IDternaUoaal
BuRT BOMBS: Burt Reynolds b11J:1 his new movie, ''The
End;" as a comedy- but the PoJ.!si!.American Guardian So-ciety ill&gt;'t laughing. The Olicagl&gt;-based anti-defamation group
is suing on g~:ound&amp; the film represents "an Irresponsible
violation of the motion picture production code." Group Presl. dent Leonard Jarzab doesn't say eucUy what the suit will ask,
but 1M! does-say &gt;the film defines the Polish people as "being
stupid and vulgar" - · and he adds, "Possibly the most
Irresponsible action in that movie is where they ridicule the,
Polish national anthem ... The movie is deliberately offensive
tn t.ho Polish neoole of this countrv. if not the world."

Donald F. Graff

Home

NEW YORK (UP!) - Pete
Rose of the Cincinnati Reds
won't connpare himself with
Ty Cobb. He says he'll leave
that sort of thing to the sports

peopletalk

tTrA FI&gt;RfV&lt;OIIIl&lt;Sl!IR·w..EG~
HULME

•

" lithe public can vote to
lower taxes, it can vote to
lower profits •• well."
- Acllvtot Tom Haydea,
tellla1 the Natleaal Coafer·
eue •• Alteraallve State
aad Local Pollcleo that CalllonUI baataeueo aboald retnrtl to the public - e of
their uvial• from the property tu euto aader Propoat-.
lloa 13.

confess to the Senate and the world that he and other politi·
clans in the state had for too long covered up the shameful
truth.
The politictans still come to the low country. Jirruny Carter
was here during the 1976 camJl"ign, and Walter F . Mondale.
Hollings was her~ in April, and just this month, JackWatson ,a
key White House staffer, was here as well .
But now they come primarily to visit the five bustling clinics
of the Beaufort-Jasper Comprehensive Health Services, Inc.,
and to talk with Thomas C. Barnwell Jr., the black former
shrimp fisherman who as much as any man is respOnsible for
the crea(!on of those c linics, and for their c~nttnued operation.
BarnweU's comprehensive hea lth program is the story you
never read in .the papers - the success story, the project that
'I(Orked, the " bang" for li)e bucks spent by the federal govern_ment.
. Where a decade ago there wer e 62 infant deaths per 1,000 birti", there are now J6 ; where 80 pert-ent of the children were
wo':'n-infested, few now suffer ; where ind~r plilmbin~ was a
ra r1ty and farmh es earned water two m1les in Clorox jugs
from the nearest uncontaminated sources, there are now pro- .
per· bathrooms, septic tanks. cluster wells and even public

water hne.s.
. In an area where thousands of families ha ve no transportation, a fleet of two dozen mini-buses and vans carries home
hea lth service worke rs to the scattered homes in the marshland "'"I ferries patu•nl' back to the clinics for medical

Cobb. yarns
more frequ·e nt ·
Comparisons are becoming
especially difficult to avoid,
though. With Rose one game
away from tying Cobb's 41J..
game hitting streak , third
longest of the century, he
finds himself spinning Cobb
yarns and quoting Cobb
statistics more often than
ever .
" I'm reading a book about
him now," Rose said.
·The Reds' third baseman
doesn't hesitate to evaluate
the Detroit Tigers' late star,
often propo sed as the
greatest player of all time.
"I have nothing against

Cobb.'' said Rose . ~ ~~He was a
great ballplayer: But I bet if
Ty Cobb . had broken in on
April 6, 1963 and played 16
years, there's no way he
would have hit .367." April 6,
1963 happens to be the date
Rose started his assault on
National Lea gue pitche rs .
Though he may wind up as
the greatest hit-getter in
league history, passing ..Stan
Musial's 3,630, Rose feels he
will never approach Cobb's
record of 4,191 hits .

"I won't get 4,(XM), " said
Rose. "But if I played 24
years, I would."
. Make no mistake, though .
Rose isn't trying to take

OLD HOME WEEK! ·Kay Starr had a reunion with an old
friend after her opening this week at a Loo Angeles nightclub
- sob singer Jobooy Ray. Miss Starr first met Ray in Seattle
in the 1950s "when he was a star-struck kid who wanted to get
into show business." She says he sang for her and, "He was so
intense I thought he'd die if he couldn't beccme a singer." So
she helped talk !Uiy 's parents into aUowing him to try out
singing career for cine year, during which time he recorded his
first hit, "The Lillie White Cloud that Cried. "

NATIONAL ANTHEM: Times have changed in Harlem. The .
whole crowd surged to its feet to sing along Wednesday night at
New York's Colton Club when jau pianist Dorotby Dooepn
started playing "The Negro Nation iii Anthem." Only maitre d'
Jack Weaver was confused, but then he's one of the few whites
on the club staff. The "anthem" was written In the 19~ by
James Weldon Job010n - back when Cotton Club policy was
" Whites Only," with friends of the late Duke Ellington the only
exceptions, Says Weaver,"! hummed along. ! thought it was a
Methodist hymn."
~UUl'E

OF 111E DAY: Muhammad AU, explaining why the
job of his longtime manager Herbert MubaiiUIIIId is secure
despite his hirir)g of Chicago sports agent Marl! MeCoi'IIIIICk to
represent him : " Herbert is still No. I. Herbert and I bave a
perfect arrangement. He got me the best deal any boxer ever
had. He made me some $40 million .
GUMPSES: Tom Joaes is making his acting debut ~ as a
crooked guest at a resort in the NBC-TV movie "Pleasure
Cove" ... The Electrlr Ught Ordleatra is-sulpg United Artists
records In Loo Angeles, saylns the record ccmpany plans to
''dump" hundreds of thousands of albums - illegally withheld
from the trchesjra - on the market at half price ... Grace
Slick - lead singer with the Jefferson Starshlp - 'was al'rested
Wednesday in Corte tl:fadera, Calif., on drunken driving
charges ... Jazz tenor sal1 artist ·.Joibmy GrtlfiD- in Europe for
the past 15 years - opena Sept. 17 at Callftrnla's Mooterrey
Jau Festival to launch an American coast-«KK.st IOU. ...

retlremeat.

"I lind it impoaaible to
understand to what degree
personal ambition can blind

one."

- Cyprao preotdeat Spyroo Kyprtaaoli, wriiiDI
about the dlamlaaal of bla
cblel political DeJollator.

.

PONTIAC, Mich. (UP! ) Fonner UCLA guard Andre
McCarter has signed a multi-·
year contract with the Detroit
Pistons after surviving a
rookie a~ free agent tryout

LATROBE. Pa . (UP! )
Pittsburgh
Steelers '
linebacker Luther Palmer,
signed July 16 after an
inlpressive showing witt\ tliol
semi-pro Pittsburgh Wort
Pak, was plaCed on waiyerls ·
Wednesday.c ,_.; I 1.
Palm er's ·'d-eparture
reduces the squad to 74
play e rs,
I nc luding
46
veterans and 28 rookies .
Defensive lineman Dave
Pureifory
is
sidelined
indefinitely with a sprained
toe and strained knee.

VW -AMC -JEEP
"The riealer that
cares about

•
'

-~
"

•

quality"

1975 OOOGE
DART SWINGER
Slant 6 engin e. power
steering , vinyl top , radials.

1---------"1
1976 PONTIAC
TRANS AM

( NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN. )

"~Most Texas ranchers and ·
farmers can tolerate an aw·

~

camp earlier this month , the
club
announced
NBA
Wednesday.
The Pistons also announced
front
office
a
n ew
realignment to cover work
previously done by Bob
Kauffman, who resigned as
general manager earlier this
month . Brian Hitsky was '
shifted from pubUc relations
and director of marketing to
becom e
d i rector
of
administrative
operations.
Bill Kreifeldt becomes the
Pistons' new public relations
man .

RIVERSIDE

"I can't win. No matter
what I do, I come off as a
big, greedy moneymaker ...
I'm tired and I'm down. 11
- BaoebaU aluuer Rec·
&amp;le Jackaoa, dlacunial lila
auapeaaloa from tile New
York Y aueeo lor baatlac
wbea ordered by maaaJer
Billy Martla lo owlag.

•

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•
•

~

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•

•
•

"There are many things
we want to do for our people.
But financially we are helpleu when we have the aancUona hanging on our necks.''
- Blabop Abel Muorewa,
a black Rbtodeolaa leader,
trylac to peraaade the u.s~

•

19,000 miles. A-C, 400 V-8,
P.S., block on block, rear
defogger. honeycomb
wheefs .

1978 AMC
OONOORDS
" -4 In stock ." A.C., P.S.,

radio,
seBts.

••

)

treatment. In the place of hlll\l!er, the'i'e are food stamps and
nutntion teachers.
Beaufort-Jasper Comprehensive Health Services stal1ed
with a $754,000 grant in 1970 from the old Office of Econ&lt;mic
Op~rtunit~, the anti-poverty agency of !be Great Society. Today .11 receives some $3.1 miUion annually from the federal
government, most of It from }he Department of Health Education and Welfare.
'
When the project began, no one - not even OEO - really 01•
peeled It IQ work. How could it, when non-professionals like
Barnwell and other local residenta, mostly black were runnIng It? The " establillllment" resented the publicity about
hunger and depri~atiilrl'ifflllB midst ; the power structure with
the exception of Senatot-Hollings, shwuied the program. '
All that has chang'ed: When Important viJitora come now the
bankers and the civic leadera, the councilmen and the~­
sioners, all turn out to welcome them and to praise Tom Bamwell and his project.
More Importantly, perhaptl, the Beaufort-Juper experiment
is now regarded by the W1Ute HoUle not merely as an llolated
succeu, but as a model lor emulation elsewhere.
Watson, who is coordinating the adminlltration'• evaluation
ol rural development policy, ia focualflll on the linkage ct four.
1118jor problems: . health, housing, water and aewer, an11
transportation . The Bellufort-Jaaper prosram ill a vivid illustration of the progress thai can be achieved when all four
are addressed at once.
.
I

me I had the potential to be a
very good hitter. I feel he's
right. I'd like to play
regularly to show him I ·c an
do it.*'
Despite Youngblood's
heroics, which gave the Mets
their sixth victory in eight
games, Rose's fifth-inning
double off Nino Espinosa, 9-11,
made Rose the focus. He still
is a good distance from J oe
DiMaggio's all-time record of
56 straight games, but he is
closer than anyone has been
in a long time.
" It's too early to think
ahout DiMaggio," he said.
"But it's not too early to think
about Cobb.' '
Rose can pass Cobb's 40
and tie Sisler's U Friday
night if he hits safely in both
games of a double-header
against the Philadelphia
Phillies . Then he could begin
thinking "56." Meanwhile, he
shows no signs of (eeling the
pressure of the increased

scrutiny his performance has Montanez and Youngblood.
But you can't think I'm not
brought.
" I'm having fun, " he said. going to let Rose get a hit.
" I'm, hitting .311 right now, You have to tell yourself
whidr ls my lifetime batting you're going to get him out."
Espinosa did it once , on a
average. I'm consistent. I
know I'm going to go hiU~ss ground ball to third in the
one of these days. But I'm not first . Then he walked him. In
going to choke. They're going the fifth , after throwing a
to have to ·g et me out ."
pair of '2-2 pitches that Rose
Rose suspects the fanfare fouled off, Espinosa threw a
could work in his favor .
high fastball that Rose
" I hope I can get them to bounced to the right center
think abo ut it more than I field wall .
do," he said. " Last week in
By that time , Steve
Montreal I had an ~2 count Henderson's two-run double
and Larry Parrish was ,and Youngblood 's triple had
playing third 10 feet in front victimized Mike LaCoss, 1-1 ,
of tbe base . Now I don't remov ing a U suspense about
understand that. I ' m not the outcome . The only
goi ng to bunt ll-2 leading off question was whether Rose
the game and if I hit it there would hit safely .
it's a double and I may
And if Rose keeps
score ."
answering that question
Espinosa agrees a pitcher affirmatively, thus inching
can be tempted to chang~ his closer to DiMagg io, he 'll be in
game.
a spotlight he won 't have to
"I had a feeling I would share.
stop it," he said . "I told WiUie
With . all the atte nt io n

hitting streaks have been Braves 4, PhUUes 2:
getting it · seems somebody
K.nucklebaUer Phil Niekro,
should be taking a glance at 12-10, continued his mastery
the standings.
of the Phils - W this season
Rose 's Cincinnati Reds - and contributed a single
were plastered , 12-3, by New , during an instrumental twoYork Wednesday, losing two- run fourth inning in hurling
of-three to the fifth-p\ace · Atlanta past the NL East
MetS on this trip. Clark's ~n rleaders.
,
Francisco Giants, 2-1 yictups · , 'Ast'rus s, Expos 0:
of . Silvio Martinez afl\1 the ·
Joe Niekro hurle&lt;\ a lourlast-place
St.
-'Louis hitter 'and ctrov.e in two runs
Cardinals, find their gtip on with a sing le .and·double, and
first place in the Nationa l Bob Watson and Enos Cabell
League West slipping to the each hit home runs to lead
tune of JUSt a ; J 'h-game lead Houston. Niekro , 7-11, went the
over the Los Angeles distance in his first shutout of
Dodgers
the year .
Rose continued his record- Dodgers 8, Cubs 2:
breaking streak with a fifthSteve Garvey slammed a
inning double , blossoming his grand slam in the third inning
cou nt to 39 co nsecutive and Dave Lopes a dded a
inside-the-park
games with at least one hit . three-run
But Clark 's. 26-game effort homer in the fourth to power
came to a n end, tha nks to a Los Angeles .
two-hit masterpiece by Padres 6, Pirates S:
Martinez.
Fernando Gonzalez drove
" I' m
disappointed
I ,m three runs with a pair of
couldn't keep it goi ng," Clark singles and ageless Gaylord
saiQ....;:ln!Lit's not the-end of Pe r ry , 11-4, went seve n
the -:.ioi-ld.! had a 19-garne innings to hand Pittsburgh its
streak earlier, so I'm sure I'll fourth straight loss. He gave
up seven hits before Hollie
get another one going."
Very possible, but the Dod- Fingers eventua lly picked up
gers, without any record- his 21st save.
breaking hitters, are quietly
making a surge in defense of
The original plan of the
their division title .
U.S. Cap1tol was drawn by
In other NL games, it was Dr . Wil liam Thornton of TorAtlanta 4, Philadelphia 2; lola, West Ind1es , a nd acHouston 5, Montreal 0; Los cepted April 5, 1793 :
Angeles B, Chicago 2, a nd San
Diego 6, Pittsburgh 5. •

CUSTOM

V-lop,

reclining

'4995

:~.

195 Upper
H iv 1~ r Rd.

.;:
·.:
•

Gallipolis

446 9800

WILMINGTON,
Ohio
(UP!) - Among hopefuls at
the Cincinnati Bengals'
training camp , trying to
crash into football as a
defensive ~ck , is 25-year-&lt;&gt;ld
, co nstruction worker Gary
We inlein of Albany, N.Y ., a
. free agent who never played
college
ball.
Bengals '
General Manager Paul
Brown calls Weinlein "a
tough nut from the beer
leagues.''
Another non-college f(ee
agent also trying to make the
Beugals js defensive end
James Edwards, 26, oll)er
b.-other of secood-year Cincy
siarter Eddie Edwards, who
has been playing semi-pro
football the past three years.

~EADQUARTERS

W. L. Pet .
Ph i l a

· Chicago

Sam Snead

GB

53 47 .558
49 48 .505

5
6

47 48

Mont rea l

47

55

.495
.461

NeW Yo r k
St . Louis

45 58

437

12

40 61 396
West
W L . Pet .

16

P iUsbr gh

91.

GB

San Fran

60 40 .600

LOS Ang
Ci ncinat i
Sa n D iego
Atlant a

59
58
49
46

42 .584
42 .580
52 .1.85
53 .465

11 -.
2
111 •
13 1 •

~ou ston

44

56

16

.440

Wednesday ' s Results
New York 12. Cincinnati 3

Sam Snead, owner of a
classic go!! s wihg. credits
his staoce, a factor that
often doesn't get the proper
attention .
"A lot of golfers stand too
upright wi th th e ba c k
straight up and down ,"
Snead says. "Their shoulders are forced to turn hori·
zontally on the backswing .
fhis throws the swing out or
th e prope r lane. ,
" More commonly, I see
golfers who bend too lar
forward from the waist . This
gol!er ' reaches' lor the ball
and consequently swings too
nat."
Snead explains that you
ought to stand with !lexed
knees, with your butt sticking out and with your arms
hanging comrortably from
the shoulders.
This enables you to tilt and
turn properly as you take
your backs"'ing . .
And it lets you swing
freely through the ball .

RIVERSIDE AMC-JEEP
••

American league

Major' League Standings

By Un•led Press International
Nationai _League
East

SOME .CARS SOLD AT COST

.'

I :

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD

mNOORDS, ·PACERs,·GREMLINS, MATADORS

4469800

John Aeiker, Rndney Harrison, Donnie Fry, Chris
Kennedy , Sherman Hoschar, Phil King, Bryan Will is.
Back row, Mike Thomas, Scott Harrison, Brill King , Rhett
Milhoan, Jon Perrin , David Roush and Melvin VanMeter .
Larry Thomas is team manager .

• •:I :• :•
···li•••j
••• l •••

Tips from an Old Reliable

ST. CHARLES, Mo. (UP!)
- The St. LAmis Cardinals
Wednesday released quarter·
back Bill Donckers and wide
receiver Moses Foster.
Donckers , 27, was the
team's back-up quarterback !NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN
and played in five games
during the 1977 season .
Foster signed as a free agent . American painter James.
with the Dallas Cowboys in II. McNeill Whistler flunk ed
1977 but was released before out of West Point. He would
the end of training camp and have graduated m the Class
signed with the Cardinals. · of 1855 had he not failed
·
chemistry .

Gallipolis, Ohio

I

- ...

1978 ALL
AMC
Clearance
MODELS
'

CLEANING i

by E. T.

• FOURTH-PLACE YANKEES - The Pomeroy
Yankees won the fourth-place individual trophies in the
Syracuse Tournament for Uttle Uaguers that concluded
Tuesday night. Team members are front row, from left,

J

Sr . Louis•2, San F ra nCISCO 1
At lMt a 4, Ph i ladelph ia 2
Houston 5, Montreal 0

Los Angeles 8, Chi cago 2
San Diego 6, Pitt sbu rgh 5
Today 's Probable Pitchen
CAll Times EDT)
Pinsb urgh ( Bibby 6-4} at San
D iego (Rasmussen 9-7) , 4 p m
N ew York (Hausman 2-0 J at
Hou slon ( Richard 9-9 ) , 8 : 35

p .m .
Friday ' s Games
Montr eat at Atla , 2, twi -nrgh l
Phil a at Cin c r. 2. tw i .n l ght
N ew Yor,k at Houston , nig ht
P ittsburg h at Los Ang , n1gh l
St . Louis at San D iego , n igh t
Ch ic ago at San F ran , nigh t

NEW YORK (UP! l World
Boxing
Coun cil
heavyweight champion Larry
Holmes will "defend his title
for the first time on Sept. 8 at
Giants Stadium in New
Jersey against Italian Alfio
Righetti, it was learned
Wednesday .
Holmes, who wiD receive
about $1.5 million for the lf&gt;rounder, will headline a card
featuring lightweight
champion Roberto D)lran of
Panama against Alfredo
Pitalu a of Colombia and
junior lightweight champion
Alexis Arguello against
Ernesto
Espana
of
Venezuela .

CHESTER, Pa . (UP!) Philadelphia Eagles coach
Dick
Vermeil
said
Wednesday
that
John
Bunting, one of the team's
starting outside · linebackers
since 1974 would likely sit out
the pre-&lt;!eason opener Friday
because of an injury .
The Eagles will meet the
Mlarnl Dolphins ln the annual
Hall of Fame game in
Canton, Ohio, that will be
nationally televised by ABC .
Bunting suffered a pulled
hamstring muscle Tuesday
during practice .

East
W. l. P et .
Boston

Milwauke
New York
Ball •mre
Detroi t
Clevelnd
Toront o

• 63
57
54
55
52
46
36
We st
W.
55
54

~5

.64 3
40 .588
43 .55 7
44 . 556
47 .525
51 . 474
64 . 400

GB

5 l
1

·Bz
1

811z
11' 1
161 2

28

L . Pet . GB
42 567
Cali !
47 535 J
Oak land
51 SO 505 6
Texa s
47 51 480 81 1
Mineso ta
42 54 .438 12 1 1
C: h icago
41 56 . 42 3 1-1
Seattle
36 65 .35il 11
W e dn es day ·~ R esults
New York 3. Cl evel and 1
Detroit 9, Balt imore 6
Cal i for n ia 11 , Mtfwaukee 9
Oak land B. Ch icago 4
Toron to 5, M inneso ta I
Ka ns a s City 12, Sea tt le 3
Texa s 2, Boston 0
Today ' s P robable Pitchers
(A ll T imes EOT)
Cleveland (C lyd e 55 and
Hood
4 41
at
New
Yor k
(F ig uero a 9 7 an d Hunter 3-31,
2, 1 p .m .
Tor on to
( Clancy
7 7)
at
Minneso ta ( Peuaws lt i 0 0), 2 . 15
p.m .
Ball i morc (McGregor 10 9 J at
Detroit (Morr1s 7 4 1. 8 p.m.
Seattle
(M i t chell
5 IO l at
Kansas City (Gur a 7 7 ) , 8 · 30
p.m .
Oak land ( Johnson 7·6 1 at
Ch ic ago (Kravec 7 81. 8. 30 p .m .
Ca lt for n ia
( Ryan '58)
at
M•lwaukee {Ca ldw ell 11·5L 8 : 30
p .m .
Boston ( Tiant 7-2) at Texas
(Ma tla ck 7 BJ, 8 . JS p ,m
Fridav' s Gam es
Kansas Cr ty at Boston , night
Minnesota ill New York . n ight
Calif at Balt imore , n ight
Milwaukee at Toronto . night
Oakland at Cle10 eland , nigh t
Sea tt le at Det r o it. n igh I
Texas at Ch ic ago , n ight
Kan Ct l y

HOUSTON I UP! ) - The
Houston Rockets Wednesday
traded backup forward C.J .
Kupec to the Milwaukee
Bucks for a sixth-round draft
choice in 1979.
Kupec is a three-year NBA
veteran who played with the
Los Angeles Lakers for two
years.

Major L eague Leade r!.
Bv United P ress lnternation i'll
Batting
( Based on 150 at bats )
Nat tona \ Leag ue
G AB · H Pet .
BurroghS Aft
93 303 97 . 320
Clar k SF
98"371 118 .JIB
Ma dlo c k S F
73 775 86 313
Ro seC i n
994181 303 11
Smti h L A
81 293 91 . 311
Bowa Ph tl
93 390 11 1 . 310
Wh rtt i eld SF
96 319 ~ . 3 10
Valnline Mil
98 380 116 .305
R ichards S O
97 368 117 . 304
Maddo x Phil
9 1 340 102 . 300
A m er ican LeagU e
GAB . H Pet .
C;~rew Mtn
91 336 1I~ .342
Lynn Bas
90 325 104 .320
R ice B.o s
98 407 129 3 17
Brett KC
82 332 105 3 16
Le1.c ano M rl
82 269 8~ 3 16
Ja ck scn Cal
79 28 1 87 3 10
Sundberg Tex
92 319 98 .307
Fi sk Bos
91 33 ~ 107 305
l=o rd M in
89 359 109 .304
Oliver Tex
71 289 88 304
Hom e R un s
National League : Fos t er , Cin
and L uzr nsk i. P hil 23 ; Smith,
L A 20 ; Val enl rne , MI L W m f ield,
SO and Clark . SF 17
American L eague : R ice, Bas
24 ; Baylor , Cal and Hisle , Mfl
23·; ThO ma s, M it 22 . Thompso n ,
Del 21.
Runs Batted In
· Nat io nal League : Foste r , Ci n
78 . Clark , SF 76 , Garv ey, LA ,
M ontane z. NY and Winfield , SO
67 .
Am erica n Leagu e : Staub , Del
83 ; Rrc e , Bos 81 ; H iSle, Mil 72 ;
Thompson . Del 7 1; ThOrnton ,
Cle10 63
Stolen Bases
Nati onal League . Mb r eno.
Pill
42 ;
Lope s.
LA
and
Richa r ds , SO 79 . Tav era s, P itt
26 . Smt ih , SO 75.
Am erica n Leagu e : LeFlo r e,
Del 41 ; D ilone , Oak 34 : W il son .
KC 32 , Cruz, Sea 31 : Patek , KC
an d Will s, Tex 29.
Pit ching
Victories
Nilltonal L eag ue : Bl ue . SF 14
4 , Gri m sl ey , Mfl 12 -8 : N iekro ,
At l 17 10 , Per-ry , SO 11 -4 ;
Knep per , SF 116 , Hooton and
John, LA and Rogers , M t l 11 · 7.
American League : . Guidq .
NY 15· 1: Tanana , Cal 14-5 ;
FlanCJQan , Bait 13 -B; Torrez ,
Bos and Caldw el l, Mil 12-5;
Sorensen , M il 12·7 : Pa lm er ,
Ba tt 12-8 ; L"eonard , KC 12 -11.
Ear-ned Ru f'lAverage
(Ba sed on 90 i nnrngs pitched)
National League : Vuckovic h,
St L 2. 19 ; Rogers . Mtt 2.26 ;
s wan , NY 2.44 ; Reus che l. Ch i ·
2.66 , Knepper , SF 2.67 .
American l eagu e : . Gu id r y ,
NY 1.99 : Matla c k , Te:o: 2 25 .
Caldwe ll , M il 2,40 ; Palmer ,
Bait 2.59 : Keough , Oak 2.77
Strikeouts
Nat1 onal League : R ich(lf d,
Hou 185 ; N l ekro , A l l 145 :
Seaver , Cin 130 1 Mon tefusco ,
SF 116 ; Blue , SF 1\ 5.
American Lea~;~Ue : Ryan . Ca l
and Gu idry , N Y 153 ; Flanagan,
Bait Ill ; Leonard . K C 109 ;
Underwood , T or 95.

Get professional
!
results at a
1
fract ion of the cost. '

,~~~~~
·
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•

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I

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- ~~
(

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WHY
PAY
MORE
FOR
CARPET

WHEEl

FULLERTON, Calif. ( UP!)
- The 1-'ls Angeles Rams'
AWOL list was reduced to two
We dnesday when all-pro
cornerback Monte JackSon
and veteran wide receiver
Ron Jessie reported back to
the club's training camp.
The Rams signed free
agent defensive back Robert
James, 31, a tjlree-time aUpro who missed the last three
seasons following surgery in
1975. The team also waived
three rookies - cornerback
Don Bertoni, linebacker Bob
Fields and cornerback Pat
Martin.

'•-

Coo1re•• to repeal Ill eco-aomlc sanetloaa a1alaal bla •.•
Afrlcaa Dalloa.

lui lot of heat."
- Dr. Raymoad Moere,
tbe depaly state bealth com·
mlaaloaer, aayiDI people Ia
rural areaa of ceatral Teua
were lorlag beller thaa city
dwellen Ia a mld-aummer
beat wave wllll daDy tem·
peratarea above 111
de1reea.

•
NEW YORK ( UPI) Spectacular though his
modern · National League
record hitting Streak may be,
anything away from Cobb. In
Pete Rose has become goOdfact, when he tells a Cobb naturedly resigned to sharing
story, his eyes sparkle.
the spotlight.
" Waite Hoyt told me this
''First it was Billy Martin,"
one," .he began. HCobb came the Cincinnati Reds' third
to play the Yankees and there
baseman said Wednesday
was only one entrance to the
after extending the streak oo
fieid , through the Yankee ' 39 games in a 12-3 loss to the
dugout. One of the Yankee
New York Mets. "T~n it was
players caught Cobq in the the 'test tube baby.' Maybe l
dugout and told him to leave,
should come ba c k next
to go into his own dugout.
Monday. "
"Cobb went ahead and did
Joel Youngblood was his
it, but when he IO!Ik batting
latest rival, driving in five
practice, he fouled 16 straight
nms with a two-run homer
balls into the Yankee
and a bases-dearing triple.
dugout."
" He's the first Met to drive
Asked jokingly if he would
in five runs this year," Rose
do such a thing, Rose smile
said, quoting from the
~nQO.Q said, " Of course not , do
baseball statistics library he
you know how hard it is to
carries in his head.
foul a ball into a dugout?"
"Well, it's an "_honor to
RoSe told anothe r story to share headlines with Rose,"
iUustrate the famed pride of
said Youngblood. ·.," When I
Cobb.
was with· Cincinnati he · told
" He was on first base /'
said Rose, "and the outfielder
made a nice play to catch a
fly and double him off first .
Cobb knew if he returned to
the dugout he would catch it,
so instead of leaving , he
backed into the first base
coach, brushed himself off,
and nudged the coach away,
saying, 'I'm coaching first for
the rest of the inning."'
Again ,
R ose 's
eyes
twinkled . He'll leave the
comparisons to the sports
writers, but he must smile
inwardly, knowing that the
comparison is not far off the
mark .

Sports briefs•.•

a

" Like hanging your soul in
solitude."
- Comedian Red Skeltoa,
ladlcallnc bta oppoallloa wbile celebratlag bla 15th
birlbday - to tbe Idea of

Mets win, Reds·drop to third

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'

�-- .. ~The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, July rt, 1978

Yanks .edge Indians

Racing
results
'

RIVER DOWNS
CINCINNATI ( UPI)

Personality Road , running
neck · and . neck
w i th
Pang$han from the eighth

pole, poured on the steam in a
driving f inish to win by a
head the featured $.4,000 ninth
race at River Downs Wed-

nesday .

.,

Delightful Sun showed .
The winner , ridden by
Vernon Sayler , cover ed the
six furlongs in 1: 13 1·5 and
returned $5.60 , $3 .20 and .

S2 .40.
The

.6·3

daily

double

combination of Don M . and

Tom In jun was worth $56 .80.
Attendance was 4, 432 and
the handle S589 ,767 .

COL.UM~CJ~T~ U PI )

Brets Colors outdueled Joy
Boy in the st retch Wednesda y
night to grab a three -quarter .
length victory in the fea tured

eighth race at Scioto Downs .
Dr i ve n by Ji m Pollock, the
winner covered the mile in
2: 01 2·5 and returned $6.40,
$4.40 and $3.40 . Joy Boy paid
S7 .60 and $4 for secor1d . while
Jim Be There came in third
and k icked back $5,20.
A crowd ol 4,1 60 wagered
S299,327 .

NORTHFIELD
NORTHFIELD .
Ohio
IUP II - Mystic Boy led all
the way Wednesda y night to
win t he fea tured $4,000 fifth

race at Northfield Park by a
head over Gay lor Hill .
With Ralph Potts i n the

"\' '.

L~.
RACINE RINKY DINKS T-Ball team finished !he
season with a f&gt;-2 record. Larry Fisher was head coach
and Benny Wilson and Tom Wolfe assisted . Front row i-r
Aimie Wolfe , Chris Mw-phy, ShaMon Williams, joru;

DiMaggio mark
sure to stand
'

sulky, the winner went the
mile in 2:05 2·5 and returned
S6 .80, S3.20 and $2 .20. Gaylord
Hill paid $2.60 and $2 .20 to
place , and J . J . Flor idian
NEW YORK (UP I) _:_ And
showed, paying S2.20.
now
Pete Rose sets sail after
Woe Fonz ea rned hi s fir st
li letime victory in the eighth J oe
DiMaggio's
mo s t
race to f ront a 4· 7 perfecta cherished record and one of
COfiTlbi nation that w"as worth
the greatest in baseball.
$474.80.
,
Having set a National
A crowd of 4,723 wagered
League record by hitting
$404.648 .

safely in his 38th consecutive
game Tuesday night, a nd
extending it w 39 Wednesday.
the Cincinnati Reds' star
moved within sight of the
majoc league mark of 56
straight games established
by DiMagg io in 1941.
·
Rose's challe nge is the
most serious ever· made alrea dy s urpassi ng . the
prev ious Na tional League
mark of 37 games set by
Tommy Holmes of the Boston
Braves in 1945. The only
longer streaks than Rose's 38
were 40 by Ty CQbb in 19111 41
bJ'.G~orge Sisler in 1922, 44 by
Wee Willie Keeler in 1897 (not
counted officially because it
was achieved prior to 1900)
and DiMaggio's majestic 56.
DiMa ggio's streak. consid-

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York Yankee Ha ll of Farner's
career, started on May 5, 1941
and ended on July 17. The
Yankees had a 12-9 record
wben DiMaggio started the
streak. They won 41 games
and lost 15 before the streak
was broken and then went 133 as DiMaggio went on a Illgame hitting streak.
In ali, the Yankees had a 5419 record as DiMaggio hit
safely in 72 of 73 games. The
Yankees tnok command of
the AmericBR League race
during the streak and won the
penna nt · by 17 games.
DiMaggio was voted the Most
Va luable Player Award
despite a season-long .406
perf orm a nce
by
Ted
Williams of the Boston Red
Sox.
DiMa ggio's streak was
ended by Cleveland Indian
·pitchers AI Smith and Jim
Bagby with the help of two
e~telienl defensi ve plays by
third baseman Ken Keltner,
but ihe game DiMagg io
remembers best today is the
45th in whic h he ~ br oke
Keeler's a il-time mark . Joe
thought the streak had come
to an end when his brother ,
Dom, who played center fi eld
for the Red Sox, robbed him
of a double or a triple with a
great catc h in the third inning
of a game played at Yankee
Stadium.
" it was the best catch of his
caree r , " r_!!ca ll s Joe . " I
couldn 't believe he caught it
and I thought the strea k was
ove r. But tlle next tinle up i
hit one into the sta nds where
even he co uldn 't catch it .
" We had dinner together
that night." concl udes Joe .
" He was laughing about the
catch a li th rough dinner and
· fin ally admitted he couldn't
have gone anothe r inch for
the ba ll. I let him pick up the
che&lt;:k ."

99 •

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Tracy Beegle, Danny Gheen, Tommy Stnbart Brad
Maynard .
'

By BilL MADDEN
UPI ·sports Writer
Bob Lemon, who tnok over
the New York Yankee reins in
Kansas City Tuesday, made
it two straight Wednesday
night when Lou Piniella
wiped out a 1-0 deficit with a
ooe"'()ut, three~run homer in
.the ninth inning, for a 3-1
viclory over Cleveland.
Meanwhile, with ·the Bostoo
Red Sox having lost their
seventh game in the last
eight , the Yankees, who have
won seven of eight in the
same span, have crept into
!hird place, 81'.! games behind
Bostnn.
Elsewhere in the AL, Texas
blanked
Bos ton ,
2-0,
Ca lif ornia o utlasted
Milwaukee, 11-9, Kansas City
crushed Seattle, 12-3, Detroit
drubbed Baltimore, 9-1i ,
Oakland downed Olicago, 8-4,
and Toronto put away Minnesota, !&gt;-1.
Rangers %, Red Sox 0:
Bobby ·Bonds hit a two-run
homer in the eighth inning

and Doc Medich pitched a
two-hitter in helping t he
Rangers snap an 'eight-game
losing streak by dealing the
Red Sox their seventh loss In
eight games.
Angela 11, Brewers 9:
Joe Rudi belted his third
grand slam In less than a
month and a lso had a
sacrifice fly as the Angels
prevented the. second-place
Brewers from gaining on the
slumping Red Sox In the AL
Eruit.
.
Royals 12, Martneri ~:
The Royals, behind the
combined two-hit pitching of
Doug Bird and·Steve Mingori,
won their lith game in the
last 12. Pete LaCock hit his
fifth homer for the Royals
and drove in three runs.
Tigers 9, Orioles 6:
Aurelio Rodri g uez
triggered a five-run third
inning with a two-run single
that broke a 3-3 tie as the
Tigers won their seventh in
the last nine games. Jason
Thompson hit his 21st homer

r*;;:;";;=::;:g
)@j)::trft;:;,::mr;;:·:j£;~1
~-

0

0

0

0
CINCINNATI ( UPI) - The
hitting sireak is teliing on
Pete Rose.
At least. that's how 50 or so
well -wis her s at Grea ter
Cincinnati Airport dismissed
!he Cincinnati Reds slugger's
less-than-festive
arrival
home Wednesday night.
Following a 12-3 thrashing
at the hands of the New York
Mets Wednesday afternoon,
the Reds wound up a weeklon g road trip and arrived in
the Queen City at 8 p.m.
Clothes bag slung over one
shoulder and~ package in the
other arm , Rose chatted
about his 39-game hitting
streak with reporters on the
run way.
the n
wa lk e d
straig ht-l aced through a
small crowd of fans at Gate l.
Although many of !hem had
waited nearly two hours for
the third baseman. hands
b;lited with pencil a nd paper,
Rbse declined In stop and sign
autogra phs and fa iled to
crack a
smi le
when
applauded.
Not like
Pete,. the

disappointed fans noted .
on television . It was pretty
" He usually says hi, at amazing."
least," said Kathy Lipovsky,
Crowds in the City of
a Cincinnati native now living . Brotherly Love and the Big
in Columbia , S.C. " But he's Apple uncharacteristically
had quite a time. We don't gave· Rose warm ovations
hold it against him."
night alter night, which did
" It 's been rough on him ," not escape Reds fans.
added another, setting off in
"1 was shocked by the
quest o f Johnny Be nch's (wann reception by ) New
autograph.
York fans . 1 lived in New
Unlike his 3,000th hit, which Jersey during the 1973
came before an affectionate playoffs,"
sa id
Mrs .
hom etown
cr owd
at Lioovskv. relerrin~ tn the
Riverfront Stadium in May, run-in between Rose and Bud
Rose's latest batting feats Harrelson of the Mets which
have come on !he road. That drew a flurr y of bottles and'
left Cinciimalians - and other debris hurled at Rose.
Cincinnatians at heart - to ' 'They were animals."
cheer wildly in front of
Now Rose is back in the city
television sets and radios where cans of chocolate drink
while cr owds in Philadelphia
bearing his name adorn store
and New York enjoyed the
record modern-&lt;lay hitting
streak firsthand.
Ma jor L ea gue Results
By United Press International
" We were dying," said.
l League
Mrs. Lipovsky, her golden- Ci n ci Nationa
000 200 dO l- 3 10 0
haired 2-yea r-&lt;Jld daughter N .Y •
JOJ OJJ oox - 12 11 o
Lacoss, Sarm iento, {6), Bair
Elaine propped shyly on her
(7) and Bench. Corr ell (7 );
lap sporting a ver y small " I Espinosa, Bernard (9) and
Love Pete Rose " t-sh irt. " We St ea rns , Hodges (7 l. W nosa ( 9-Bl. L- La coss (1 - 1) .
watched most of the games Espi
HR s ~Ci n c innat L
Ben ch (lJ);

CQbb's TY CQbb's
ID-g~me hittin g streak and
George Sisler's mark of 41 set
in 1922 could fall Friday, in a
doubleheader against the
Phillies. Rose ' probably will
face nemesis Steve caritoo
during one of. tne games.
" It will be tough to see at
5: 20," Rose said of the
starting time. " And I haven't
gotten a hit off carltnn all
year ."
" I think pitchers are
bearing down and trying to
get me out," said .Rose. " I
hope the pitchers bear down
on me, and forget about
Morgan, Foster and Griffey ."
Both

TY

Lines cores

New York , Youngblood (4J.

Bo says Wolves must
avoid injuries in · '78.
By Bo Schembechler
Michigan Football Coach
Written fur UP I

shelves and " I Love Pete
,Rose " shirls are standard

di'ess .

is a junior with con siderabl e
ta lent.

Curtis Greer r eturns at
defensive tackle and he's a ·
player who can give you the
ANN ARBOR, Mich . (UPI) big play against any tea m.
- The cha llenge of winning Dale Kei tz. our other
th e
Big Te n football returning tackle, may play
c hampi onship be co me s middle guard and tack le this ·
progress1ve ly more difficul t seaso n.
o ur '·
outside
each se ason a nd wha t linebacking will be handled
happened last yea r is just an by Mark DeSanti s, Tom
indic&lt;:Jtion of what we ca n Seabrun, who can r Wl the
hundred in under 10 seconds,
expect in the futur e.
Michigan State made a and Bob Hoilway.
The strength of our team
serious run a t the tiUe, a nd
except for a tie with Indiana, will be the offensive backfield
1t could have shared the where the entire unit from
champio nship . Indiana , of 1977 retw-ns, including Rick
course, is improving each Leach. 1 think Leach is a
season. Minnesota posted a quart erback without ·a
fine 7-4 record and was the weakness. He can beat you
th i r d confer ence team invited rwm ing, passing or with his
tn a bowl game along with head. 1n my opinion , Leach is
Oh!o Swte a nd M1ch1gan. I the premier quarterback in
know Purdue IS unprovmg - the country today .
With him in the backfield
under .lu~ Young and Iowa
wlll have a sohd team .
will be.Russess Davis; Harlan
Th~ s will be the ftr.1 season Huckleby and Ralph Clayton .
that all teams w1ii play under Davis ga ined over 1,000 yards
the .stn cl 95~nan scholarship last season and was named
iun1tation . Previously , a fifth our most valuable player.
year player was not counted Huckleby had a great spring
among the 95. This total limit and a ppears recovered from
further adds to ~e leveling injuries that kept him out of
off pr.~cess I've seen in two of our last three games
college footba ll over the last including !he Rose Bowl:
Claytoo is a fine a ll-around .
couple of seasons.
of . few athlete and we wUI expect
, Beca us.e
scholarships overall , ,mjuncs him to contribute more to our
be~ome ~ vtta i factoc . One ?f off ense this season. Clayton,
our m_a JOr . c?ncerns th1 s along with sophomores Alan
se~son ts avotding the rash of Mitchell and Rodney Feaster
lRJurles we had last season. give us good quickness with
!"l~ te_
a m ca n a ft:ord a ser.les of · our wide receivers £
mJurles and .expect to wm the
Tight end is the most solid
champ1onshtp.
.
position on the team with
Johnson,
Mark
Anoiher concern IS our Gene
peruneter defense where we Schrnerge and Doug Marsh .
lost five starters from ow- Johnson in particular had an
1977 c hampions hip team . outstanding spring practice.
Those l~sses tnciude two
Despi te the loss of Mark
e xc e pll onal
outs 1de Donahue , Walt Downing and
hnebackers, John Anderson Mike Kenn we feel our
and Dom Tedesco, and strong offensive ;'ine ha s some
safety . Dwlght Hicks. Mike talent . Bill Dufek missed the
Joiiy IS \he on ly returning entire 1977 season and had a
reg ular 10 the defenstve difficult spring, but we expect
second~ry.
him to return to his former
The rest of our defense form . Center Stev~ Nauta
should be ~lid espectaiiy at also Is coming back from an
the mstde itn~backmg spot . injury. John Powers, John
Stmpktn s
a~
a Arbeznik' Jon Giesler and
Ron
sophomore broke Michigan's Greg B~rbnick, ali ha ve
record ~or tack les (174). a nd play.ing experience .
rates amo~ g the . fine st
Mic higan ha s woo the Big
l~backo·r s m the. country . Ten championship the last
Also Jerry Meter 1s a two- two yea rs, and that remains
yea r regula r ancJ Mel. Owen ~ \1Ur pruu ~• t y jjoal fPr 19'18. .

St .L
OOOlOOO io-'l .11
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000 001 000- 1 2 1
Martinez and Simmons; Ha licki. lave ll e (9) an d Tamargo .
W- Mar ti nez 15-4 ) . L-'- Hal icki
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At Ia
Phil a

Nlekro and

Sports Tnnsactions

By United Prtn lntern 1tlon11
,
Wednesday
Hockey
New York Islan ders - Signed
center John Tonelli to a multi -.

year contract .

Oak
000 330 10 1- 8 15 o
Chi
002 001 001 - 4 lO 2
J.Johnson, Heaver lo (8) , Sosa
(91 and Essi an J Wood , Hinton
(4), LaGrow (7") and N~h orod ­
ny . W - J Johnson ( 8-6 ) . LWood (10-BJ. HRs- Oatttand ,
Revering ( 13) , Ch icl'lgO , Soder nolm ( 14 L

Named Pat

Qu inn as head coach of their
Maine Mar iners AHL far m

team .

Sl. Lou is - Signed tree -agent
goal tender Ter ry Richarclson.
BIS!blll
Chicago Cubs- Placed third
baseman Steve Ont hteros on the
emergency disabled list for at

least 60 days and rea ct ivated
ou tf ielder Dave Kingman .
Football
New York Jets - Dropped
l)imlers Alan Williams, 12th round draft choice from Flori da , and free aQents Rich
Pennella
of Louisv.ille and
Jerry Andrl'!wlavaQe of Co lgate .
P ittsburgh Wa ived l ine .
ba cker Lu th er Palmer .
St . Lo u is ~ Released quarter back Bill Oonckers ~ nd w ide
r ecei ver Moses Fos ter .
Bufla lo - Released lineback er Phil Heck .
World Team Tennis
Boston
Signed
Ferdi
Taygan to a four -match con ·
tr act .
OaskiHball
Detroit - Signed fr ee -agent
guard And r e McCarter to a
mult i ye.ar contrac f.
Houston - Traded forward
C. J. Kupec to Milwaukee tor a
1979 six fh ,ro und draff ch oice.

c;ollege Basketball
Indiana State - Na med Mel
Daniels assistant coach .

WEST HEMPSTEAD, N.Y.
(UP!) - The New York Jets
reduced their roster tn 74
playe rs Wednesday by
droppin g three punters.
The Jets cut Alan Williams,
their 12th-round draft choice
fr om Florida, and two free
agents - Rich Pennella of
Jerry
Louisville
a nd
Andrewiavage of Colgate.

Ca l it
40 1 300 201 - 11 10 0
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000 400 050-- 9 13 6
Tan ana. Gr iff in (S ), LaRoc he
(9 )
and Downing ; Tr a'w'ers ,
Stein (3) , Cas tro (7J and
Moore . W- Tanana (14 -5) . l Tra vers (7 -5) . HR s- Californ ia,
Ru di ( 7) ; Milwaukee , Yount
(21. T homas '1 t22l. Sando {11 ).

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G r i m s 1 e y, Knowles (]),
Garman t8J and Herrmann ;
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Houston , Watson t 11 J. Cabell
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Rober ts, M c G I o 1 hen (4 ).
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Parr ish . W- B illingham no.sl.
L - Fianagan ( 13-8 ). HRs- Bal timor e, DeC inces 2 (~7). L. May
117) ; Detro it , Thom pson (21) .

isOlate and record oo film a
single gene among the
estimated 3 to 4 l'nlllloo in
each human cell.
The report in ihe New
England Jow-nal of Medicine .
Wednesday is the first
example of using aome of the
tnols of gene-culilng - called
recombinant DNA technology
- In find and understand
hereditary defects while a

b

By Gre1 Bailey
In the semi-finals of the
Eastern
Little
League
Tournament, Tuppers Plains
n scored six times in tbe
sixth lor an 8-3 win over host
Chester . Tuppers Plains
pitching held Chester in
check until the fifth when
they plated one on a double by
Clinton Bailey and a triple by
Jim Newell. Olester' got two
more In the last inning and
left the basea loaded at ·the

final out.
three and walking five.
Mike C&lt;lllins, J . Bauman, . Newell bad his tripie, Bailey
and V. Gillilan shared the his double, and J . Miller, B.
pitching chores for the Call, and Bailey had a single
Winners, Ianning ten and each . R. Muson had two
walking six. T. Guthrie
singlea.
BaU!nan, and J . Carpente;
Tonight, the ~hampionship
socked triples, and T. will be played at 6:30 at
Probert, T. Everett, , R. Eastern High School between
Balser, C&lt;lllins, aod Shields Reedsville I and Tuppers
each had a single.
Plains 11.
Newell and Paul Harris T .
200~81
pitched lor Chester, Ianning c
000 012-3 7 3

·CANCER

Answer line
AmeriQn C~neer Society

A
regular
feature,
prepared by the American
Cancer Society, to help save
your life from cancer.
A man in his 50s writ~~:
" Many years ago, during the
War, I worked in a Navy
shipyard. How do I know if J'
was exposed to asbestos and
what is the danger ?"
ANSWERline : Most people
who have been exposed to
asbestos never develop any of
the diseases that have been
·related to such exposure.
However, there is a risk of
lung cancer, a chronic lung
disease called asbestosis, or
mesothelioma - a rare lonn
of cancer. To learn about
your own possible Naval
shipyard asbestos exposure,
write to " Asbestos " National
Cancer Institute, Bethesda ,
Md. 20014, or call this toll-free
number : (800) 638-6694. Your
loca l American Cancer
Society Unit ca n answer
other questions you may have
al!out the asbestos exposure
situation.
. A high school student asks :

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l-====:::::;::=:J
o.

•

" Why were cigarette commercials taken off tv. and
why are they still being advertised elsewhere? ''
ANSWERline : Alter much
debate and pressure for
reform , both houses of
C&lt;Jngress passed a " Public
Health Cigarette Smoking
Act," one section of which
banned cigarette advertising
on radio and tv as of January
1, 1971. Since that time,
because there are no ·laws to
the contrary, . the cigarette
industry ha s concentrated
millions of dollars in newspaper, magazine and biilboa.rd advertising with a far
smaller portion of the advertising budget devoted to
special promotions such as
sponsorship of sports events.
In 1977 the National Commissio n on Smoking aitd
Public Policy , a group of
distinguished community
leaders and scientific experts,
made
several
recommendations
about
advertising in their report to
the
American
Cancer
Society. The Commission
recommended that the
war.ning
on
cigarette
packages and 'cartons and in
advertising be more explicit
and that the Federal Trade
CQmmission require that tar·
nicot ine
and , carbon
monoxide
content
be
prominently printed on every
pa ckage . In addition , by
voiun~ary agree m ent between the ciga rette companies and the FTC, all
models should be eliminated
in advertising, advertising of
ail brands a hove a certain tar
· nicotine content sh• "ld : '
eliminated, and there should
be no promotion aimed at
people below 19 years of age.
A florist asks: "What is
meant by cance r incidence?"
ANSWERline : The tenn
refers to the number of new
cases of cancer diagnosed in
a population. It is often expressed in terms of cases per
, 100,000. For example , based
on the most recent national
survey, cancer incidence in
the U.S. is approximately 300
out of
every
100,000
Americans each year. The·
actual number of people who
~ill get cancer in this country
is expected to be 700,000 new
· cases in 1978.

I

With further
reductions

Men's

like these.

WALKING, SHORTS

The P resident's recent
action canceling the· sale of
computer equipment to the
Soviet News Agency and
ordering that future oil
technology sales first be
approved by the White House
reveals the intense debate
surrounding our trade policy
with the Soviet Union and
other communist countries.
Now is a good time for the U.
S. to implement a strategy to
completely stop transfer of
strategic technology to the
U.S.S.R.
The original theory behind
detente with the Soviet Union
was to link each other in
trade to reduce tensions and
the threat of war. The hope
was that as Moscow became
more dependent on the West
economically, it would be
inclined to reform its
totalitarian structure. Recent
actions including the trials of
dissidents, clamping down on
human rights, · hara ss ing
American newsmen
in
Russia , and Soviet ventures
in Africa should dispel that
theory. The Communist war
machine keeps growing with
no end in sight.
It appears the Kremlin
does not hold the same view
of detente as we do. Increasing evidence shows the
Soviet Bloc countries tend to
use trade with the West only
to acquire needed strategic
technology. The Russians
have used foreign trade to
build up r~so urces they would
otherwtse l have to produce
domesti cally , This allows
them to pursue more military
objectives.
Part of the problem in
controlling
strategic·
technological transfer to the
U.S.S.R. is separating what
can be converted from
peaceful uses to military
purposes . The knowledge
behind digit~tches can be
applied t ' laser-g uided
wea pons .
achinery that
produces circuits in pocket
calculators can be used to
make guidance components
lor missiles.
For example, in 1972, we
sold the Soviet Union
equipment and accompanying technology to produce
precision miniature ball
bearings. The Soviets used
this technologY, to perfect

be able to travel 6,000 miles
and hit within 600 feet of a
target I Truck ' fa ctories
designed and constr ucted by
American firms were later
converted to produce rocket
launchers and military
vehicles. Thousands of trucks

lungs. A lack of hemoglobin is
called anemia.
They found t.hat in two rare

"Like a needle
group of genetic diseases,
researchers_predicted within
a few years !hey 'II have thoi
genetic code tn more commoo
hereditary diseases, such as
cystic fibrosis .
" The power of the
technique is extraordinary,
but the actual execution of it
ooce mastered is not terribly
difficult," said Dr. Arthur W.
Nienhuis of the National
Heart, Lung and Blood
Institute.
The team of doctors photographed the gene !hat directs
the production of hemoglobin
which carries oxygen. (foU:
the lungs to the blood and
carbon dioxide back 4o the

PRICE
PRICE
PRICE
PRICE

forma of anemia - which
occur in Mediterranean and
Southeast Asian countries the
gene
containing
hemoglobin instructions is
missing all or part of its DNA,
or deoxyribonucleic acid .
DNA is a Illig molecule that
has four main chemicals.
. The only way previously tn
tell if an unborn baby had
anemia was to take a sample
of its blood, a risky procedw-e

ALSO BOYS SUITS, VESTS AND '
SUMMER WEIGHT PANTS ......... 40% OFF
OTHER SPORTSWEAR......... ih to 'h OFF.

KIDDIE SHOPPE

.Carpenter Personals

. Mr: and Mrs. James
Gaston hosfed a family
gat hering recently. Those
present included Mrs. Ellen
Hess and Judy, Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence Hess and Jason,
Mrs . Melody Potts a nd
daughter and Mrs. Joni Hess
and daughter, all of
Springfield, Ohio; Mr. and
Mrs. Tony Zito, Mr. and Mrs.
Fritz Penrod and Mr. and
Mrs. Olarles Penrod, Jr. and
For Frldoy, July_Zl
daughter. Akron ; Mr. and
Mrs. Jay Hess and daughter,
Hamilton; Mrs. Shirley
Gibson and son, GnadenBernice Bede Osol brutten ; Mr . and Mrs.
Howard Crowe, daughter and
son, Dover; Mrs. Frances
Smith, Scio, Ohio and Mr. and
Mrs . Olarles Crowe, son and
daughter, Sterling Heights,
Mich.
Mr . ·and Mrs . Michael
July ZB, 1978
are spending some
Lawson
You shou ld tak e positive steps
th is comin g year to striV e for time here visiting their
several fil ings th at mtg ht nave parents, Mr. and Mrs. Gene
appeared d ifficu ll to obtain Jeffers
and Katherine
Miller
htre totore . Conditions that
awson.
Mrs.
Lawson
could make success possible L_
recently
graduated
from
Ohio
which took military supplies are now developing .
.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Swallow State University Dental
. ~· M' h
do wn the H1 vnl · m trail in your medicine if you 're called
School and expects to have an
the Vietnam War were built to own up lo a past commil·
with Western technology . · men ! You mad e the obliga-t ion . office in Raine later.
Mr . and Mrs . 1',-·-J .
To complicate the problem, You alone are respolrsible lor
the Russians are able to it . Like to find out more about Spurlock, Albany, were
yourself? Send for your co py of Sunday dinner guests of Mr.
obtain sophisticated know- Astro·Graph Letter by mail ing
how from Americ;an alli~s. 50 cents for each and a long. and Mrs. Arthur Crabtree.
The U. s. heat-seeking self·addressed, stam ped e nve- Afternoon callers were Mr.
lope to Astra-Graph , P.O. Box a nd Mrs. Roger McKnight
s h ou id er-I aunched " Red- 489, Radio Cily Station, N.Y. and Darrin, of Williamsport,
eye" anti-aircraft missile 10019. Be sure to specify birth
Ohio who also visited his
was sold to Moscow by one of sign .
our NATO allies. This VIRGO !Aug . Z3-Sept . 22) grandmother, Goldie Gillogly
h
Broodi ng because you th ink in Aihany .
tee . nology enabled. .t he you can 't have someth ing you
The children and grand·
Sovtets to develop a stmtlar really de sire is no way to get it.
children of Mr . and Mrs. Dale
weapon used to destroy · Put your th inking cap o~ . ~o il
numerous aircraft in the up your sleeves and you 11 f1nd Sta~sbury gathered here to
honor their parents on their
V'et
d
. d
lhe way..
I nam an
M1d le East LIBRA (Sepl. 23-0ct . 23) Try to 5~th wedding anniversary
wars.
forc e yourself to come. ou t of
recently. Those who came
The jwnp in Western ex~ . your shell if you lind you 're in a
port s to the communist withdrawn mood today . The were Mr. and Mrs. Ben
.
.
..
an swers you seek are no t Gryctko , Annapo!is, Md .;
countrtes lS staggenng. fo und in retreat.
Mrs. Robert Schmidt and
Governments of the Soviet SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. Z2) It'll daughters, Tina and Robin,
Bloc have set up more than ~-e h~rd to hC?Id back con Iiden ·
800 joint manufacturing t•a l tnf o rma t1on because you Meadow Land, Pa .; Mr. and
.
want to tell another what the
Mrs . Larry Stansbury and
ven_tur~s With the Free World score rea lly is . Betrayal would
sons, Reynoldsburg; Mr . and
staff. In 1977, America sold be worse .
Mrs. Clair Stansbury and
the U.S.S.R. $374 million in SAGIITA.RIUS (Nov . 23-Dec. children and Mr . a nd Mrs.
21) Indec iSIOn comes Irom an·
.
.
..
mac h mery while Sovtet Hcipating the wo rst. ·Don 't let Robert Barton · and son,
exports to the U. S. of negati ve th inking rob you of Groveport; Mr . and Mrs.
equivalent items amounted to exp~ r ienc•ng the wonders of Dale Turner, . Pickeringion;
barely $3 million . These in- today.
Mrs. J erry Stansbury, Reba
dustriai transfers have given CAPRICORN. IDotC· 22-Jon. 19)
.
Fault f1ndmg Will delay any and Aaron and Mr. and Mrs.
t~ U.S.S.R., ~mong other
progress you hope for in yo ur Harold Oxley, loca l. Mr.
things, entire automobile and work today . Don't be a pari to Stansbury was at O'Bleness
truck plants, wide·body jet h ype r~r~t ica l or disapproving
Memorial Hospital at the
·
It h i
f
behaVIor.
am:ra tee no .ogy, turbo an AOUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19) tn time but has since been taken
engtoe ex:pertlse, . and the social situalions today . take
latest U. S. semi-conductor care what you tell another . You
which provide essential m,ay n~ l know II buy yo u could
components

in

to

strat egic

believe these

loans

will not be ·repaid because
.
lhas enormous debt gives . the
KremUn a potential weapon
to use . to shake the West's
financial structure
.

~YliJJ[JJIJ

W

computers and military
elec'tronics.
The extent to which
communist governments
. be
bl t
l
have en a e o secure ow
interest·, long-term loans
from the West for this trade is
alarm· g Th So 'et u ·
10 ·
e VI . mon
owes the West apprmumately
$20 billion, up from $4 billion
in 1973. Total Soviet Bloc
indebtedness amounts to $60
. .
. .
btihon, up from $18 . billion
f1ve years ago. There LS good
reason

ASTRO·GRAPH

·

The U. S. conttnues to bold
a technological lead over the
U.S .S.R. in most critical
areaS vital tO OUf national
security. But that lead has
been diminishing at a r apid
rate. In some areas we may
already trau: In 1973, Soviet
head Leonid Brezhnev made
this startling statement to
members of his Politburo and
communist leaders of the
Warsaw Pact :
"We cominunlsts .have got
to string along with the
capitalists for· a while . We
need their credits, their
technology ,
and
th~ir
agriculture. But we are going
to continue a mas.aive

•

ITJnwlbrDmL!

PISCES (Feb. 21Hilorch 20) Unresolved fa mily to pics that get

everyone uptight might make a
showing a~ain today . Nothing
Will be gaoned except lrust ra-

LADIES SLACKS
'White &amp; P•lels

I

9: 30.1. Fri.

i

SALE-PRICED

II
2ndStreel
Pomeroy, O.

Ncar Stilflers

I

1'~1

SHOES

&amp;

BOOTS

FRIGIDAIRE
Quality comes in many
ways
Ta_kin9 pride in the products they
bu1ld IS a way of life at Frigidaire.
Yo4 have the feeling that they have
always done thei r very best to offer
you, the customer, dependable
appliances that are stylish and
designed with you in mind.

BAKER FURNITURE
Middleport, 0.

eels will be mo re difficult today
If you ' re too negatiye abo ut

something you 're working on
TAUR~S (April ZO-Moy20) II you
haven l the wherewithal and
you fool around with something
speculative today , be prepared
to get your lingers burned . It 's
no day tiJ gam ble .
GEMINI (Mey Z1-June 20) Being

Starts Friday, July 28th Ends Saturday, August 5th

crtltcal o f your loved ones tS
not lhe way to endear you rself

Ieday . All il will gel you is the
title ol nit-picke r.
.
CJ.NCER (June 21-July 2.21 In·

Group of Connie and Miss
Wonderful

correct or mval1d Information ts

lloating around today. Take
anything you hear, with a grain
ol salt - and don 't pass il on .

military buildup, and by the
middle 1980s we will be in a
position to return to a much
more aggressive foreign
policy designed to gain the
·upper hand in our relation·
ship with the West. "
,'
Only if we act now can we
prevent this fateful prediction from coming true. It is
long ove~due to pull the plug
and cancel ail technological
transfers to the Soviet Union.
Why ahouid be feed the bear
!hat wants tn destroy us.' .

Group of

•sao

.

AND WOMEN

Women 's

SANDALS AND
CANVAS

DRESS SANDALS

INEWSP~PER ENTERPRISE ASSN )

ON FINE WEARING
APPAREL FOR MEN

1

. Middleport

ti on.

BAHR CLOTHIERS
Optni'..W.y
Tlll:.. p .nt.

S~or

ARIES IMorch Z1-Aprll191 None
ol you r natulal tale nt will be
able to come through and proj-

20-50%

N. 2ndAve.
Middleport, 0 .

hemoglo~in .

"We Service
What We Sell"

•200

Pair

All

MEN'S &amp; BOYS'
SHOES

•

1

Pair

WOMEN'S
GRASSHOPPERS

30%

20% OFF

Group

OFF

MEN'S

MEN'S SHOES
lnchJdos Entire
Stock ol Somplo
Shoes Sizes
7·1

MESH AND BOAT SHOES

'3"

$501JPair

30%

30%

OFF

•

All

OFF

OFF

All Women's

sAMPLE SHOES

SUMMER
PURSES •
' .

40%

Pair

MEN'S SANDALS

SANDALS AND CANVAS

SHORTS. SUMMER TOPS,
SUN lACK DRESSES
9 : JOiol :OO

with them .
Tina and Robin Schmidt,
Meadow Land, Pa ., spent a
vacation here with t heir
grandmother, Wanda Oxley .
Mr.
and
Mrs . Leo
Daugherty, Pt. Pleasant, W.'
Va ., and Mr . and Mrs. Lewis
Smit h, local, attended a
Cincinnati Reds ball game at
Riverfront Stadium in Cincinnati on Saturday evening
a nd s pent the night i n
Cov ingt o n , Kentucky,
returning home Sunday.
Rex Cheadle was taken to
O ' Bien·ess Memorial
Hospital, Athens, suffering
with a kidney stone on Sunday night, but is now at
home.

Chi ldrer\'s

QtiLDREN'S PLAYWEAR REDUCED

here~

a l wo week vacation

ON OUR
SUMMER

CONTINUES SAVINGS OF

Mon . 111ru S•t.

to Univ ~ rsity Hospital ,
CQi umbus, for observation.
Mr. and Mrs. Reed Jeffers
visited Mr. and Mrs. Lavern
Morris at Stockport ()n
Sunday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Stanley
and Anna , Eddison, spent
Saturday. n ight with his
parents, Mr . and Mrs.
Eugene Stanley , Albany, and
called on her parents, Mr. ,
a nd Mrs . Lewis Smith on
Sunday afte rnoon . Anna
Stanley stayed with her
grandparents and will spend

material was isolated in the
DNA molecule, the scientists
photographed it by attaching
a piece of radipactive DNA tn
it. The atoms in the
radioactive ON A exploded
like tiny flashbulbs and ilioi"
image was captured oo a
piece of X-ray film.
·
The picture that came out :
was a row of . fuzzy-looking
black ball!ls. Babies with the
thalassemia disease were
missing one or more band~.
The doctors said that w'bile
two types of anemia are
detectable by the method alpha-thalassemia and beta' delta thalassemia - the most'
common fonn of the disease
in this country, betathalassemia or €ooley's
anemia, cannot be detected
by looking at the DNA.
Alpha-thalassemia is fatal
at birth. The other two types
are milder but often require
regular blood transfusions tn
make up lor the lack of

FINAL REDUCTIONS

be saymg the wrong things to

the wrong person

Sizes 32 to 42

Hours :

instructions.
"Since DNA is such a
tremendously long molecule,
it's110 big you can't wock with
it," Orkin said. "So you have
tn cut it up first ."
Once the hemoglobin

lor the fetus, and look for the
hemoglobin itaell . The new
technique allows doctors,Jo
take cells from the amnidilc
fluid surroUI)ding the fetus in
the w&lt;mb and look for the
· gene containing hemoglobin

in a haystack •••"

.,..

~

992-358(•

a needle In a haystack."
While the technique so far
has detected ooly a rare

Washington
By Clarence
Report

. .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -. . multiple
guidance sysl:ems
in its
nuclear used
warheads
which are now estimated to

_.;..."'Jjiii==:;;:;i:jpjiii~;;;;~:---1

All SLEEVE All SLEEPWEAR ...................... 'h
All SWIM WEAR &amp;COVERUPS. .................... 1h
All SHORTS &amp; TANK TOPS......................... 1h
SELECTIONS BOYS 'SUMMER SHIRTS ....... .......'h

child is still in the w001b.
The
technique . was
developed by scientists from
Harvard,
Yale
and
Haceteppe l,lniversity in
Turkey.
"A year cr so ago no one
thought we'd be able to take
pictw-eo of the gene this
way," said Dr. Stuart H.
Orkin of . Harvard, who
headed the study . "It's really

T .P. teiun defeats Otester

L-~~--~--·~--~J

Garvey (13 ), Lopes ( 12)

Ptsbgh
000 00 1 202- 5 B 1
San Ogo
002 110 20x - 6 8 1
Kison , Re uss (5 ), Jackson (7)
and Ott ; P e rry , Sh irley IBl ,
D ' Acqvisto
(9 ),
Lolich
(9 ),
Fi ngers (9) and Swe et , Tenace .
W - Perry , 11 ·4. L - K ison , 2 -3.
HR - Pitlsburgh , Garner (4).

' ) - Doctors
BOSTON ( UPI
have developed a new tool for
detecting hereditary dlaease
In Ulllxn babieo by taking a
picture ~ the specific gene
responsible for ·the illness
The picture ahows whether
a portion of a baby 's
hereditary blue.pr i nt
contained In the gene
mia8lng. It is the first time
scientist! have been able tn

352 E. Mt.ln, Pomeroy
\.Your F TO Fl('lrlct

' P';~~~:ibJi ~

Brusstar ( 5 L E

Mt l

New tool is.developed to detect· hereditary diseases

lor Detroit.
A's 8, White So• t:
Glenn Bw-ke singled h&lt;me
a pair of runs and Dave
Revering hit his 13th htmer
tn spark a IS-hit Oakland
attack. John Henry Johnson,
wit~ relief from Dave
Heaverlo and Elias Sosa, wm
his eighth game.
Blue Jays 5, Twilul 1:
Baior Moore, !&gt;-2, hw-led a
seven-hitter and Luis G&lt;mez
capped a live-run fourth
inning with a twO-run triple tn
help the ·Blue Jays snap a
four.-game losing streak.

Philadelph ia -

.

.

heriltage house

$~~air
oF SHOEs

Open FridaytiiBp.m.
N. 2-:J Ave.

Middleport, 0.

�..

..-...

..

.

"'

•

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 . , Thursday, July '11, 1978

:r····.·G
·. .·. .·.·.·.e
·.·......n
. . . .: . e
_. . _.._r....a....

Couple surprised on
: ~:
•
45th annzversary

-~ ·o
·· .n
· ~ ·· ·· ···R
··-·.- . . . .·.·a
. . ·.·-·.p·-·-·...·..

t
.
i

ifj]

Alfred UMW ·
has meeting

The Alfred \].M. W. held its
regular meeting on Tuesday
evening, July 18, at the home
of Janice Pullins with an
attendance of 10. Sick calls
Polly Cramer
reparted were six. Special
guests were Martha and WiD
Poole of Texas.
Since some polyesters and
Polyester
Nellie Parker was in
acrylics do not absorb dyes as
charge of the meeting. which no easy dye
well as others, cut a small
open ed with prayer by
swatch of these fabrics from
Thelma Henderson . The
DEAR POLLY- Could you a place where it will not show
hymn sung was "When We or any of the readers tell me and dye it to test color result.
All Get to Heaven ." Greeting how to dye 100 percent When dyeing follow any
cards were sold out. Other polyester? I have tried on special fabric care rules
projects were mentioned and several occasions and failed. covering washing and pressplans made for the group .
ing the article. Read any and
-MRS. K.D.
The nominating committee
all
ins tructions in dye
DEAR MRS. K.D. - It i.s
consisting of Nina Rob in son ~ imperative that one 'follow package before proceeding.
Osie Mae Follrod and Donn a directions exactly when try- -POLLY
Sue Puilins was asked to get ing tu dye anything . Other
DEAR POLLY - I have no
the ir report ready by the next readers have written that method for redoing the worn
meeting.
lhey had · no sUccess dyeing rubber backing on Mrs.
The program subject was polyesters. A booklet from H.K.B.'s rugs but I do get a
" People Who Are In probably the best known dye lot of use out of mine before
Missions" led by Nell ie company says their all· discarding them . I have a dng
Parker . The hostess served purpose concentrated tint and often fold one in half (old
lunch.
and dye is recommended for backing in the middle) for her
· The next meeting will be all washable fa brics except to lie on. With the thinner
held on Aug. 15 at Nellie glass or mineral fibers and ones I have sewn two of them
Parker's horne at 8 p.m. ,
some polyesters and acrylics. back to back to make a reversible rug that lasts until so
much more backing flakes off
after several washings that it
becomes bunchy and lwnpy.
They are very comfortable
when fo!dtd over and used as
KINGSBURY HOME SALES
a pad in front of the kitchen
,.
sink. They are good to put in
ARE NOW OPEN
the trunk of the cat aild to lay
packages on One can even be
10:00 A.M. THRU 8:00 P.M.
Put inside l1.e cu.r in winter
and catch·a lot of the drippy
snow
and ice that are on our
MON. THRU SAT.
shoes. - B R.
DEAR POLLY - Although
1:00 P.M. TO 6:00P.M.
our living room rug was supf&gt;OSed lo be anti-static I was
SUNDAY
getting shocks while wearing
bedroom slippers. My hus... band cut out a piece of lei·
I&lt;Jver rug W fit on the outside
of the sole, glued it on the botlorn of the slippers and ilo
more shocks . -BEVERLY
DEAR POLLY - If the
SEE
reader who is bothered by
ants will try ground or whole
cloves she will not have to
look for anything else w keep
j them a way . This sure cure is
not harmful for children
either.- E. J.C.
DEAR POLLY- Use an ice
cream
scoop when you are
1100 MAIN
POMEROY, 0. filling cup
cake pans and
ha, ve a neater and quicker
PH. 992-7034

By Helen and Sue.Bottel

:~:j

POLLY'S POINTEiS

NEW SUMMER HOURS

FOR MODULAR HOMES
BY AU AMERICAN

a.

KINGSBURY
HOME SALES, INC.

E.

r-:::::::::::::::::::~..:io:b~.·:E~D:N~A~----.,

1\.

Pt acril"• ion~

AJ!~~eJy

RAP :

. Do you think"my mom is too protective? She won't Jet me
ride my bike farther than she can see me. She won't let me go
to the bathroom by myself at high school ball games. She won :t
let me play outside when I go to my friend's house for fea r I
might get kidnapped ! We live in a nice neighborhood where
nothing very scary happens.
I'm 13 and trustable.- OVER-WATCHED
DEAR O-W :
Your mother is protecting you into a nervous breakdown
- for her! Perhaps she might loosen up a bit if she talked with
other parents at PTA meetings or neighborhood get-togethers.
· .. .Or is she afraid to venture out at night? -HELEN
NOTE TO O-WeS MOTHER : Stop reading all those newspaper
c'rime stories and look aroand : You daughter's 13-year-old
friends who rate ordinary freedoms aren't being consistently
l"dped, drugged, mugged, kidnapped or murdered. Why be so
paranoid?
Give her a chance to grow up before you tum her into either
all over-protected scaredy-cat, or a very rebellious girl. ~SUE
RAP :

I'm disappointed in the advice you gave the short guy who
- t-ouldn't get dates . You said (in part) pick a girl who is near his
height. If attitudes were right, no one would care about inches .
People should realize that shyness among short ones is a
result of tbe ridicule and mockery heaped upon us. Your reply
should have been directed at the general public who treat us
shamefully.- DANIEL
DEAR DAN :
Let's don't he so thin-skinned ! As you (and we) pointed out,
it's attitude , not inches, that counts. Your attitude, friend , not
the public's.
·
)
We can name any nwnber of popular shorties, from the two
Pauls I Williams ~nd Anka I down.- HElEN AND SUE

---t
1
So
I
I
t
I

cial It
Calendar II

THURSDAY
TWIN CITY Shrinettes
Thursday at 7 p.m. picnic at
chome of CAlra and Shirley
Beegle, Racine.
TWIN CITY Shrinettes,
Thursday 7 p.m. home of
CAlra and Shirley Beegle.
Picnic will be held.
REVIVAL now in progress
at Hobson Church of Christ in
Christian Union. The Rev .
G
J
k K ·h
eorge ones, spea er. elt
Eblin, pastor. Services
nightly at 7:30 p. m. Special
singing by CAluntry Hymn·
timers. Public invited.
MEIGS COUNTY
Fellowship
Thursday Women
at 7:30
p. m. at the Bradford Church
with Ka ren Mor az as
speaker.
FREE clothin g day at
Salvation Army Thursday
from 10 a.m. until noon. All·

SUNDAY
EBLIN REUNION Sunday
at State Park on U.S. 33,
south side. Dinner at 1 p.m.
TENTH annual reunion of
Taylor-Harper familie s
Sunday at Forest Acres Park,
Rutland . Basket dinner at I
p.m . Bring own table service.

CHESTER high class of
1931

annual

reunion

at

Chester Firehouse Sunday.
Basket dinner at 12 :30. All
teachers, members of the
c lass ,

and

The U.M.W. of the United
We$1eyan MethodiSt Church,
Racine, met Monday even.ing,_July 24 in the church an·
nex.
Mrs. Gene Sayre opened
the program with prayer and
a recording in hannony with
the topic , "Love and the Holy .
Spirit. " The group then sang
"Each Step 1 Take," accom·
pianied by Mrs. Juanita
Sayre at the piano. A reading
on the topic concluded the
program which was followed
by a contest. Prizes were
awarded to Mrs. Frances·
Roberts and Mrs. Alice

;:::
.•.·
;:::

A GIRL CAN CHANGE HER MIND
BYHELENANDSUEBOTTEL
- DE'AR HELEN AND SUE :
'
·•
I'm in a conununity play and have the female lead which requires a prolonged kiss on stage. But the guy I am supf&gt;OSed to
c1&gt;lebration marked their 45th Mark and Jodi ; Mr. and Mrs. kiss kind of turned me off. He wears glasses and is "different "
wedding anniversary.
Donald Smith, Julia, Usa and looking.
.
Aller the dinner they went Margaret of Canton; Mr. and
So I asked the director if he could take the kissing scene oul
lo the horne of Mr. and Mrs. · Mrs. George 0. Smith, and he did.
·
Dale Smith in Reedsville for Kimberly and Steve of ColNow thati know the male lead better, I don't want to hurt his
cake, punch, nuts and mints. umbus ; Mr. and Mrs. JoluiS. feelings. But how do I ask that the kissing scene be replaced?They were presented an oil Bums and Lori of Logan; Mr. UNSURE BUSS
1Jiiinting and other gifts. \
and Mrs. · C.M ~ aning ot' DEARU.B. :
Attending were Mr. and NelsonviUe; and John Smith
At next rehearsal, why not revert to the original script? I'm
Mrs. Dale Smith, Teresa, and Sherrie Starcher, of sure your leading man will pick up the cue. -SUE
Meig~ County,
DEARU.:
.
My I.G .P.A. ("I'm Guessing Again Perception") says
you're becoming quite attracted to the leading man, and you
feel an on-stage k~ may hurry things along. Good luck!
... And let this be a lesson: Never trust first impressions. HELEN

Mr. and Mrs. Melvin R.
Smith of Pomeroy were
"' pleasantly surprised recently
when members of their family took-- them to the Point of
View Restuarant in
Parkersburg for dinner. The

UMW meet at annex

· - ··,_::
,_:_;_
=_··.:,'

schoolmates

welcome. Bring pictures of
fa milies.
ANNUA L
MATLA CK
reunion Sunday at Rising

Park, Lancaster. Basket
dinner at noon . All relatives
and friends are invited.
SINGER reunion Sunday at
Royal Oak picnic grounds.
Potluck at noon . Singing and
entertainment will follow.
TUESDAY
of
all
MEETING
prospectiv e Meigs High
School Girls Volleyball
players . Tuesday, 7 p.m. at
the high school.

AMY -SOUDER
ATTENDS SESSION Amy Souder, a Junior at
Southern Hlgb School,
attended the lint ltSsloo of
the Oblo Y outb . Con·
servatloo Corpo In w-ter
from June 11 through July
It. Tllroujboul tbe session,
sbe
fulfilled
tbe
requirements In tbe EDvlroomental Education
Program and eam~ci one
hlgb school credit. The
YCC begaa lo 197L Oblo
has lhe largest program In
lhe nation, wltb 23 campa
and over I, 780 youths
participating every
summer. These

The Ruth Missionary
Society of.the Racine Baptist ·
Church met recently at the
home of Gamet Ervine.
Roll .caU was answered by
10 members. The minutes of
the previous meeting were
read and the treasurer's
report was given.
A thank you card was read
.by Martha Lou Beegle from
Sam and Mary Curtis on
behalf of their daughter, Sue,
a missionary, who was
presented a gift.
·
Plans were made for a
missionary to speak in
August at the. Bertha M.
Sayre Society meeting. The
session is held at the church
every three months. A
potluck was planned for the
meeting which will be hosted
• by the Ruth Circle.

y.o ung

people accomplished
nearly a ball million
dollars lo work, state-wide,
in the first four weeks.
Among lhe projects un·
dertal&lt;eo are clear cutting,
selective cutting, pruning,
the making of nature trails,
brush piUng for wUdiUe,
and swamp seedlq.

Church picnic
was enjoyed
The Loyal Bereans of the
Church of Christ held a picnic
at the church Tuesday
evening.
•
Blessing was given by Alice
Robson and Ella Mae
Daugherty read the -30th
Psalm and presided during
the business se&amp;Sion.
It was announced that a
bridal shower will be. held al
the church Friday, Aug. 4,
honoring Terry Yancy.
Thank you cards and letters were read by Martha
Childs from Ron Russell,
Texas for the monthly
donations and from Nell
Ohlinger, 805 Somerset
Drive, Charleston.
Birthdays of Cathryn
Ervin, Gertrude Miller and
Alice Robson were observed.
Attending were Mr. and
Mrs. M. L. Kelly, Mr. and
Mrs. Dana Swift, Mr. and
Mrs. Robert McElhinny, Mrs.
Clyda Allensworth, Mrs .
Bessie Ashley , Mrs. Cathryn
Ervin, Mrs. Martha Childs,
Mrs. Cynthia Gehring, Mrs.
Grace Hawley, Mrs. Gertrude Miller, Mrs. Alice
Robson, Mrs. Jessie Saunders, Clarence McNeal, Lena
McK inley and Ella Mae
Daugherty.

Laurel Oiff
News Notes

·~· :.:· babies have

;.,,.l,,,., the phone lmes at

General Hospital,
the two sc ientists
rcspo11sible for the technique
say it will be years before the '
ptc1cedure beComes common.
" We are 110t creaUng life,"
gynecologist Patrick Steptoe
told reporters Wednesday.
"We have merely done
what peo ple do in all
brun&lt;:hcs of medicine, which
is lt1 try to help nature .... We
hn vc not been concerned witil
au yt11i11g else but helping an

stiUbirth, Steptoe said It no
longer posed a danger . " It
· came out crying its head off
and breathing very well. It
was a beautiful, normal
baby," he said.
A spokesman at Oldham
Hospital said telephme lines
were jammed ever since the
announcement of the birth.
Childless couples,
especially from the United
States and Germany, have

been offering
as
guinea
pigs themselves
in test-tube
research, he said.
·
Officials in the United
States estimate there are
inf•~ r tile couple.''
some.l5,000 American women
The center of the worldwide suffering from damaged
ru rur' 5-pou ntl , 12-ounce Fa llopian tubes - possible
IMuise Brown, · lay in the beneficiaries of the Steptoe
premature baby unit of technique .
"One can see a graduaUy
Oldham Genera l Hospital
wh cr·e she waS born by increasing
number
of
C.:1csarea n section Tuesday pregnancies from this start,"
. nigh! - the first known baby_ the ~year-old researcher
bvrn to be conceived in a said. "I would hope that
. within a reasonable number
luboralill'Y gl:lSs tube.
Both Lou ise and her of years there will be more
mothrr , Lesley Brown, 30,. ba hies born in this way, so
w~! re
in
"excellent" that instead of being a sevencmdition, tile hospital .said. day wooder it will be a fairly
The infant. was placed in the commonplace affair."
Even as Steptoe spuke, a
prc rnuture unit routinely
nftl'r she wns born nine days gynecological team at St.
ea rly htx:uuse Mrs. Brown Thomas's hoSpital in Londoo
dl• \·eluped toxemia, a mild announced · removal of ripe
eggs from a 30-year-old
IJ1l1ud poisoning.
Though the condition woman: hoping to fertilize
durm~ prcgrw ncy can cause

All SPRING AND SUMMER

ATHENA IDH

!'OLUMBUS

rU PI ) owner
l.nrry l' lynl under went ·
'!Jrf!cry today at Ohio State
Univ ersity llos pital for
llu !'l t Jer

m a~Jaz i n c

n·mow.t l u f sca r ti ssue from

hi s spinal nerves that were
injured wht&gt;n he was shot
M:m·h 6 iTl Lawrenceville,

The descendants of the late and Matt of Colwnbus; Mr ..
John and Anna Barnhart held and Mrs . Robert Woods,
a reunion at the Helen Bam· Charlie and Amy, Racine ;
hart Bailey residence, Mr . and Mrs . Charles
Racine, on July 23.
Mugrage, Jr., Travis and
Those in attendance were Tyson, Letart Falls, Ohio.
Mr. and Mrs . Charles
Mrs. Jennifer Weaver and
Mugrage, Mickey Ann and Abram, New Matamoras,
Todd, Apple Grove, Ohio; Mr. Ohio; . Leslie Marty, Mrs.
and Mrs. John Hill, Letart Anna Lee Ochletree and Joe,
FaDs, Ohio; Mr.- and Mrs. Parkers~urg, W. Va. ; Debra
Nial Salser, Syracuse, Ohio; Barnhart and Glenna Moore,
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Bam- Houston , Teias; Mrs. Randy
hart , Coolville, Ohio; Mr. and Williams, Kathy and Becky,
Mrs. Russell Utile, Valilrie Rutland; Mr. and Mrs. John
Pape, John , Allen and Usa,
Racine ; Mr. and Mrs. James
· LAFF - A - DAY
Pape, Kristen and Cheryl,
....
Syracuse, Ohio ; Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Turley and Kirk ,
Racine ; Mr. and Mrs. John
Brooks, Debbie and Karl of
Merritt Island, F'lorida;
Dianne Shovel, Columbus,
and Bradley . Barnhart
Keams, Clifton, W. Va.

(; ~i.

Flyn t wn s taken into
~u r gc ry
at
10
a.m.
Ncu ros urg co ns said the
operation is lengthy but not
cu nsii.l cred ·' hazardous."
'll•ey said il co uld be weeks
Uefore Liley ctm determine

Kenneth McC ullough, R. Ph.
·Charles Rlfflt, M. Ph.
· Ronald Hanning , R. Ph

Boys and Girls' Sportswear,

Mon . thru Slit. 8:00a .m . fo9p .m .
Su nday 10 : 30 to 12 :JO •nd S1o 9 p.m.
PRE SC RIPTIONS
. PH.t?l-2955

·Sleepweaf, Swim wear, Dresses.

down.
from
thetransferred
mid-thighsfrom
He was
an
Atlanta hospital to Columbus
Apri114 for further treatment
at Ohio State University
Hospital and has been undergoing therapy· to regain
the use of his legs.

LEXINGTON, Ky. (UP!)
- Buyers paid a record
Sll (.'t't~SM ul.
$42,579,000 for 350 horses at
Flynt wHs sllot twice in the
the two-day Keeneland
Selected Summer Yearling
Sale which ended Tue~y
night.
•
The 350 horses sold for an
j Cu1 1IIII U!· ll f rom pCJ~c l J
average of $12l,M4 per head,
resull s of th ~ elect ion. It was · or 24.5 pere11nt higher than
explained lhat it would cut last ~ea r · when_ 3~4 horses
doW!! Oil the WOrking time or
were
purchased
for
precinct wor kt:!rS and give
$27 ,6ai,OOO. A Northern
results of election at a m~ch
Dancer colt brought this
ea rlier hour.
year 's top price of $1.3
II was indicated that
million, which was second
W&lt;:dnesclay's demonstration
highest price ever paid at the
is one of possibly several summer sale.
si1 11ilar de11 Wnstrations.

Electronic

•.

were

Leslie

F:vclyu Clark, Virginia
ll lazcwkz, and E. A. Wingett ,
members of the Board of
El~-cti o n s, Board of Election
employees, Hichard Jones
ami

.Jim

Housh , -

com~

missioners and Mary Hobc
•tette~· , clerk for the comrnissimlcrs.

air . radio, 4-0.

PUBLIC MEETING
Rutland Township trustees
will hold a public meeting on
the proposed budget for the
fiscal year Jan. I, 19711 on
July 31, at 6:30 p.mc at
Rutland 'fire holllll.

ALL SALES FINAL.!
NO LAY·A·WAYS
•

(

')

.i
'~-,_·. _

1

1973 PINTO •••••• ~ ....... s1495

1Con i i1111cd from

page I)

The "department will negotiate a contract with the
corporation worth more than $1 billion, a spokesman said
Wednesday.

Severe storins kill 4 people
Severe thunderstorms wlih high winds, large hail and
torrential rains have killed at least four people and caused
extensive property damage from the Great Lakes to the Gulf of
Mexico.
A brief but violent squall wil01 winds clocked 'at 80 mph
capsized two sailboats carrying 13 people In the Detroit River
Wednesday night, ~~t"owning at least one person. Three others
were missing.

--·.

Test cheating aided, claim

,

-~

c

3

4

••••

1972 GMC PICKUP. •• ..S1895

LAFUE fRfDADCYATORG$0

TV

&amp;$
_

DRIVE AN S-TRACK CAR STEREO BARG'AIN-!
1976 Chevy

G20~:;versionS7995

..

Beng .. automatic, P.S., P.B., air cond .. AM-FM stereo
radio and tape. w-w tires, red and white. Only 8,800
miles and clean as new. Sleeps four.

~: !a~p~er ~u!:!r~£~-~n

1977 Chev. Caprice ••• ..S5895

Pomeroy,O.

door, sliver with red vi nyl roof. vinyl Interior, full
power equipment, radial tire., 305 V-8, air cond.,
comfort tilt , cruise control , radio &amp; tape._

50% PRICE CUT ON
8·TRACK BLANK TAP.ES

1977 Pinto 2 DR •••••• s2995

by Real istic

.\

tires .

-1973 Monte Carlo ....... sl895

59

landau VB, automatic, ps, pb, air . AM, B track stereo
radio, power door locks and windows. High mileage but
a real bargain.
'

HT Cpe. 1 owner,

good

Oxide coa t ing means extended fre qu e n cy response - less " hiss ," mor e
mu sic . Made in Radio Shack 's o wn
Texas factory .

tires, VB automatic. Do a little

paint work and sove .

CHARGE IT

1976 GMC % Ton •••••• s3595
1 owner,

bed .·

44 -84,

44 -840

(MOST STORES)

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16

ge&gt;o9 tires, V-8, automatic, P.S.c P.B., radio,

.

•

IN STOCK I NEW CHEVY VAN
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AUTO TAPE PLAYER IIIIOUNTS
95

8

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Add to you r li sten.ng
lun! 12-1844

Under.dasb.mouot
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270·016

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449

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Pr.

mechan ically, nice Interior conversion, Ice box ,

t92-2126

-- FLOOR MOUNT FOR
AUTO TAPE PLAYER

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SILVER BRIDGE
PU'ZA
'

Pomeroy

'oeale•s.
Look lor 1h1s

'

1 till: DO .m.

'

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SO-MINUTES
2 FOR

40.MINUTES
2 FOR

local owner, cleen Interior, AM-FM CB radio. good

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5995

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Chevrolet

FABRIC SHOP

gby
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Th e Shac k®. 12 1802

With Topper, V-8, J-speed,

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LocoiHion W.Va. Sl. Pom_,_Ma....,

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nation al

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5ta ll~n Wagon , 4-Sp., rad io, luggage rack.

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•
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Mon ., Tues .• Wed. &amp; Sat . 8 :30til5 : 00
Thursday Till2 Noon
Friday Until 5 P. M.
Herman Grate
773-5591
Ma son , W. Va .

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Conversion 318 V-8, automatic, p.S. &amp; P. B., good tires.

Slalior, Wagon : aut . .a.cy l.. Ford.

......... '!'

TRI-STATE AREA .

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1974 Dodge Van ••••••••s3995

1974 PINTO ••••••••••••• S1795

and the bobbin wlndo llselt, right In ,..---------·~"---­
the machine. The A- 1060
electronic machine. Made In U.S.A.

IN THE

1972 Chevelle .................. s895

~' ultz.

Cu tlass Supreme. 1owner, 12,726 miles, P.S .. P.B .• aut .

You' ve got 1 frH arm for sewing In
herd-to-reech-placn. Push • button

FOR THE BEST DEALS

CAR W'ASH SET ,

Fiberglass raised roof , bunks, screen. l2 V., electric
refrigerator. furnace, Porta Pottl, stove, dinette, 350 v.

1977 OLDS••••••••••••• .'$52.95

Pomeroy, O.

Ot&gt;.., Nights tlitv

less poetic.
·
Asked if years of studying Einstein's brain "has turned
up any differences from the ordinary .run of mankind,
Levy quotes Harvey as saying:
"So far it's fallen within the normal limits for a man his
age."

The Eastern High School 10 a. m.-3 p.m . at the Vista
Cambridge
physiologist
Dr
.
them in the laboratory and
majorettes will sponsor a car Station in Tuppers Plains.
Robert
Edwards,
53,
spent
12
later re-linplant them in a
wash Saturday, July 29 from Exterior wash is $2, interior
wash is $1.50.
years
and
500
attempts
repeat.of Steptoe's technique.
developing
the
teclmlque
that
The woman, who declined .
to he identified, said. as she brought motherhood to Mrs.
was wheeled into the Brown.
Religious, political and
&lt;iperating toom the birth of
some
medical figures have
Mrs . Brown's baby " has
condemned
the achievement.
given me hope . I must keep
my fingers crossed. It \lril1 he on grounds it was opening tbe
several weeks before I know door a little wider to
acceptance of genetic
if it i.s successful."
Steptoe and his associate , manipulationc

sou~

ELECTRONIC MACHINE

MASON FURNITURE

human achievement, .~vy said. But scientist Harvey is

MANSFIELD, Ohio ( UPI) - A former Marine recruiter
living in Mansfield says recruiters in Ohio routinely forged
docwnents helped recruits cheat on tests and overlooked
criminal r~rds of prospective recruits, . in order to meet
enlistment quotas, the Mansfield News-Journal said Thursday
In a copyrighted article.
·
Robert Bietz said that while he was recruiting. in Akron
abdomen on a street In and Columbus until last month he and feUow recruiters felt
Lawrenceville during a constant pressure to meet quotas, causing them to resort to
·
recess in his obscenity trial uiiethlcal practices.
there. One bullet pierced his · ·~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!~~~~~~~~~~
spine and left -his paralyzed

July Used Car Deals

No other company has made even
one machine with electronic stitch
selection . Here's our lourth. Juot
touch • buflon to sew any ol I~
different slltchea. Push our
e)(ctuslve Flip · &amp; Sow penot end

SHOP

MASON FURNITURE

whether tht• ope ration was

1\ttend in ~

·

campgrounds. •All tnembers
and guests are invited. Bring
covered dish, table service
and beverage.

now residing in Florida .

Flynt in surgery

Barnhart reunion held

OUR NEWEST
ELECl'RONIC
MACHINE
THE

~

v~'. ..r

O!:v''" ,a•~~~~'":to (UP!)
have

INTRODUCING

FINAL MARKDOWN

1975 to Wichita where Levy found him working as a
medical supervisor in a bio-testing lab.
Levy described how Harvey reluctanUy decided to let
him take a look at the unsecUoned "gross maleMal'; of
Einstein's brain, kept in a mason jar placed in a carton
with the logo Costa Cider oo the side. ·
"Floating inside the jar, in a clear liquid solution ...
several pieces of matter . A conchshell-fihaped mass of
wrinkly matenal the color ot clay att.er kiln flrmg . A fistsized chunk of grayish, lined substance, the apparent
coosistency of spooge. And in a separate pouch, a mass of
pinkish-white string resembling bl011ted dental Doss. All
the material was recognizably brain matter ."
It was a sight enough to send any person into raptures
about they mysteries of the aniverse and the miracle of

Many women anxious to have 'test-tube' babies

Get well cards were signed
for Jim Spencer, Bill Nease,
Pauline Hill, Fritz Teaford,
Robert Cornwell and Mrs.
Allison .
The program was given by
Marjorie Grimm with
scripture taken from the fifth
chapter •f Ephesians.
Readtngs given were, " An
Indian Prayer" 4ly Doris
Hensler; "The Volley" by
Garnet Ervine; "Nobody" by
Nondus Hendrix ;
"Chastening" by Mary Kay
Yost ; " Never Alone" by
Emma Adamsl "No Time for
God," by Martha Lou Beegle ;
"Victory"· by Phyllis Bailey;
"Where But to Jesus," by
Helen Slack, and "The Soul
Winner, 11 by Marjorie
Grimm. Refreshments were
served by the hostess.

REUNION SET
The descendants of the late
Hiram N. and Sarah RoiUns
will meet for a reunion at the
Racine Locks picnic area
August 6.
A short progra'm will begin
at 11 :4h .m. All relatives and
friends are welcome.

Dr. Hartwig Kuhlenbeck , a co11111ltant from lhe early
ltages of the project, was no more helpful. "It is strictly
science and It has to reiJIIIin in the aclentlflc circle," he
said when l't!llched in Philadelphia.
Harvey said the reaarcb team was "cl011e" to winding
up the study, cmducted intermittenUy over the years, but
he would not specify when or where It would be published .
He told Levy It might be some time next year, the
centennial of Einstein's birth.
Einstelli, known moatly for his theory of relativity, died
in Princeton (N.J.) Hospital of an aneurysm on April17,
1955. He was 78. His brain was removed and study began
under the auspices of Harvey, the hospital's pathologist
, who presided over the autopay.
What happened to the 2.84,pound brain _remained a mys.
tery for 23 years.
.
But Levy said Harvey told him how he packed the brain
in a jar filled with formaldehyde and drove It - "very, .
very carefully" - to Philadelphia where It was sectioned
at the University of Pennsylvania.
It took six mooths and the. specimens were sent to
various researchers across the country, Harvey moved in

•••

.~-

--- ----

MERCHANDISE NOW

E. Main

Wichita by Steven Levy, reporter for' the New Jersey
MonU1ly, who chronicled his hunt in the magazine's
Augu.•t issue.
.)
·
But followup efforts ran into a scientific stonewall.
"The only thing I can -say is that it's a study that the
Ei nstein estate want:&gt; dooe, and that it also wants kept in
scientific literature rather than in the lay pre&amp;S," Harvey
said,

Sliver Bridge Plaza

Make us your family pharmacy
and di scover personal servi ce. We
care about our customers ... anrl
th ey rare about us, too!

Friendly Service

differenc.!es we can find."
The brain - or what's left of It - of the man who
changed our concept of the universe was tracke&lt;! to

The Pomeroy Church of the Whitlatch, Virginia Smith,
Nazarene Sunday School held lona Brlckles, Charles
a picnic July 20 at the Lander, Trina Hudson, Ray
Roadside Park on US Rt. 33 Landers, Annette Hudson,
North of Pomeroy.
Nancy Aeiher and Carla,
Those who attended were: Candy' Smith, Tony Hudson.
Rev . and Mrs. Clyde Hen- Tina Goode, Susan Goode,
derson and grandson, R. E., Jackie Goode, Micky Goode,
Mrs. Nora Nitz, Rusty, Brian, Erick Goode, . Mr. and Mrs.
Donna, Vicki and Ricky , Pam James Farley, Jamie and
Nitz, Shawn Nitz, and Ricky, Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Shannon Nitz, Chuck Me· Whittekind and Shawn,
Cloud, Bruce McCloud and Barbara Colmer, sons
Darrel McCloud, Tammy Tinuny and Billy and grandJohnson, Mr. and Mrs. . daughter Amber, Mr. and
Raymond Walburn and Mrs. William Stephenson,
daughter , Pam, Mr. and Mrs. - Jimmie Snider, Mr. and Mrs.
William Sha,.P. and children, Glen McClung and grandKevin, Brian, Terry and daughter, Missy.
Karen, Ruth Koenig, Patty
· Refreshments of hotdogs,
Woodard , Timmy and various covered'dishes , cakes
Michell, .Macllelle Capehart, and soft drinks were served.
Tammy Capehart, Kelly

Shop

With a Smile

NEW YORK (UP!) - In an office in Wichita, Kan., in a
cardboard box stashed unoblrualvely In a corner, in a
mm;on jar nestled among rumpled newspapers - floats
the brain of Albert Einstein.
Uke a Grade B Hollywood thriller come true, the
bizarre late·of the brain was disci~ Wednesday ; from
lUi remova l after Einstein's death in 1955 to Ita 23 years of
dissection-find scrutiny by scientists seeking lhe biological
basis of genias.
.
" Yes, it's true we're studying It," Dr. 'lbomas Harvey,
who has custody of the precious gray matter, told UPI.
"We're rompar(ng It to normal, looking for ·any

Sunday Sc!Jool picnic enjoyed

ifJJ}\~ls

For Service

Wolfe.
Mrs. Wolfe presided at the
business sessjon where
reports were read and apJ)roved.
'
Betty Wagner and Mrs.
Roberts closed the meeting
with a voc~l duet. They w~re
accompamed by Lavma
Simpson.
Dessert was served by the
hostesses, Mrs. Ruth S~th
and Mrs. Simpson:
.
The .next meetmg w1U be
the August p1cn1c at the summer home of Mrs. Margaret
West. All members a~ to bring a covered dish.

Missionary society meets
with Garnet Ervine

Attendance at the Free
Methodist Churcl) Sunday
morning, July 23, was 78.
a rea residents in need of
Mrs. Patricia Hysell has
clothing are welcome.
been
returned home from
CONFERENCE SLATED
Holzer
Hospital.
• The first district annual
SATURDAY
Mr.
Harry
Stahl is a patient
con
ference
will
meet
with
the
MEIGS CAl unty Trustees
in
Pleasant
Valley Hospital.
Guid
ing
Star
Advent
and Clerks Association
Mrs.
Cecil
Harrison, who
Christian
Church
of
Letart,
Saturday 7:30 p.m. at Rock
has
been
visiting
relatives,
W.
Va.
July
29
beginning
at
10
Springs Grange Hall. The
returned
to
her
home
in Pique
a.m
.
Everyone
is
welcome.
,
.
budget for Meigs CAlunty
Sunday.
Rev
.
Wilbur
S.
Baxter
is
Health Department wlU be
Mrs. Edna Howell and Mrs.
pastor.
discussed .
James WiD called on Bertha
1 l1 /
.Parker Sunday evening.
Bev Shook served as "A Girl Seoul wanted ~~-~It
to help
chaplain at the Veterans him across the street today."
Memoria I Hospital for a
week.
The Dancey tangerine is
·Dr. and Mrs. Velenovia and
children, PomerOy, caUed on called the " kid glove"
Mr. and Mrs. Vern story and orange because of its easy·
Mr. and Mrs. N. E. Schaefer peeling quality.
Sunday .

•

Bizarre fate of EHistein's ,brain disclosed

CLOSING PROGRAM
RETURN HOME
Bible School at the BradMrs. Wilbur Young and
Mrs . Larry Cle land and biJI!' Church of Chri&gt;t wiII
children, Greg and Mary hold its clos ing program .
Hibbs, have returned home Sunday during Sunday School
after vacationing in Tampa, at 9:3ll a. m. Craft s will be on
Fla . G: ·-:' •.nd Mary wer e display. The ann ual church
visiting their grandparents, picnic will be held following
Mr. a nd Mrs. Fred Hibbs, church se rvices at Oh io
·former Middleport residents Valley Christian Se rvi ce

'

•

•

�'

li-The Daily Sentinel, Maddlepoa1-Pumcruy,

0 .• Thursd") . •July 27. W78

1s WurtlsOr Ullt.lt'r

Cuh

IW.y
1:daya

( 1l&lt;11 )!('

100
ISCl

:Jtbiyl&gt;
6Uays

I 25
l !II)

2 2~

1.80
J.OO

~ j~

F.ctdl word uvt'r lht• mmunwn I~
words LS 4 et&gt;nlli pt:r \Hwtl ()l'f Ua~
Ads 1'\J IIIUJlfo: ull)t'l lhetll uiiiSl't ull \'1:
dap Will bt- duu ~toJ al tlk' I don
fl:l lt'

In nw mury Catd vf ThanKs 11 ni..l
Obatuwr ~

6

!IUfi UIIWll

\Oish Ill a d\'Wil.:l'

l'CilLs !)t'l

word . $:1 (Jil

Mubllt' Uunw sa lt'S and Yat'll

:.ak~

an· &lt;H'l t'plt&gt;d un \1 wtlh r · ii~h IUt h

unk•r· 25 t,..nl dral !\t' fur

ad~

u u r1;

ST AN S 8ARGAI NLAND A store
lor the peop le . We Cu y, trade
and !&gt;el l New and good used
merchand ise , lurn1ture and op·
pl1onces Antrque s You Wi ll
a lways get o fotr deal w1th
Stan Open 7 days o week
Monday thru Satu rday . 9 om to
5 pm Sunday lOom to 6 pm
ACCO SEED Dea lers available m
th rs orea Wrrte Sta n Coakley ,
Route I , Killbuck 44637 or coli
co ll ec t e~enrngs 21 b · 27b 4584
' HOLV LAND Tour Wa lk wher e
\ Jesus wa lked 25 reser~;otron s
\\ opened Hosted by Ire orrd
,1 Irene Weltrno n Wrt teo -413 4th
A'llit., Kanouga , Ohio I I days ,
depart u r e
Oct
23
~?"' 4-40 43 13

lint'L

Tht' Publ rs llt'l" rt!~t'l"\'t.'!l tlw rr~ l •t
Ltl t'tlll ut rt'Jl't'l an~ a ds tll:'tllllt'l..l
ft:t·t•tJJI.I:II l'ht· Publrsht'l' " 'Ill nul lk·
tl'spu!Lsrblt' fur mort' lhan Ul l l' Llll'Uf'-

••lr-

rt:t.Lm~·rtHm

P hullt:' 99'l- ll5ti

..

f@ i!m:F.ii
- It
-

8 &amp; S MO BIU: HOME S Pt Plea
sont, W Vo be!i,de H!Kk s
1973 Hroodm ore l -4 1 ~ b4 '1
bed room
1973 Dorto n 14 x bO 2 bed room
197'1 V1c to r ion U • 6 7 3 bedroom
2 both
1972 Co.,.t ntry t2 x bS 3 bedroom
1909 Statesman 12 • bO 2
bed room
CO Al LIMESTONE , sand gro~el ,
cakrum chlor1de , ler til1 ze r dog
food a nd all ty pe~ of sa lt b
ce l!.ror Sa lt Wor ks Inc . E Mo1 n
St Pomeroy 99'1 ·389 1

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES
M untla)

z..luun ur1 Siltur t.lu ~
Tu t· ~di:l\

tlu u F'1 11.i&lt;~1
~ p M llwda~

l.JtlfUit' pu iJh(·&lt;ltlull
SUIId U\

4P M
Fr11l&lt;1 ~

ilfl(• n mun

IN THE COURT OF

NI::t:,D SO MEO NE to bru s h hog hd·
ly paslure Reasonable rote
985 4244 m_ornrng~ or eve nl~ g2 or 3 CHRI STIAN srnger
mus1C tOn s mle res ted tn lorm 1ng
a gospel group on ly , ca ll
985 417 4oflerbpm

COMMON PLEAS ,

MEIGS COUNTY ,
OHIO CARLE . MOORE .
Etal ,
&gt;1
Plamtiffs ,
vs .
THOMAS H HEADLEY ,
..,.....-' .. Et al ,
Defendants .
No 16 ,897
-

NOTICE BY

PUBLICATION To Thomas H Headley .
reS iden ce un known . wnose
last known address was 5876
B1d dle Avenue , N ewark: .
Ca tlfo rn1a , 9456 0 , and d
deceased the u n kn own herrs
de'o' isees.
legate es
dr s trrbu tees , e)(ecuto rs end
admm1strators , 1f a n y. of
H ··' H ea dley ,
Th omas
Dece'o!!Sed , John ComstocK ,
whose last known place o f
res rdence and address wl!ls
Buckeye
Lake .
Ohr o ,
otherwrse unk no wn , Rober t
Beeson ,
res rde nce
B
unknown , whose last know n
addr ess was M idd l epor t,
Ot1ro , and rf deceased tne
unknown hei r s , dev rsees .
leg a tees ,
d rs tr r butee s.
e)(.ecutors
an d
ad
m rn rsl rat or s , rf an y
ot
Robert B Bees on . Deceased .
Jenn ie Beas le y, re sid ence
un known , whose last known
address was Atnens , Oh io.
and d deceased the unk nown
herrs . dev 1sees. te&lt;;late es,
drstnbutees , e•ecuto r s a nd
admrn rs trators , 1f any , Of
Jen n 1e Beasley , Deceased ,
the unknown he rr s , d e\lrSees
legatees .
d rstr1but ee s ,
e,;ec ut ors a nd adm rnrstra tors
ot each ot the tol lowrng 'a ll of
whose pla ces o f resid en ce
and last known addresses ar e
un Known . MyrTle ComstocK ,
Deceased , Ma ry R Beeso n.
Deceased , Add te Headley .
Dec eased , Magg 1e Headley ,
Dece a s ed . Horner Hear:lley ,
Dece a sea , Joh n w Headley ,
De c ease d , Margaret
A
Hea d ley , De c eased
and
Thomas Headle y , Decea sed
Sa rd De fend a n ts or any of
th£ m m ay have som e c ta 1ms
on Satd r eal es ta te by v irtue
of de ed r eco rd ed rn Vol \68.
Pa ge 35 at t he d ee d r eco rds of
Me rgs County , Oh io , and
other
recor d eel
and
unre co rded , ms tr umen ls • of
r ecord
Yo u are he r eby notr f red
that a Compl a .nt hi!IS been
t iled rn the Common Pl eas
Court o t Meigs County , Oh10
' Cest, No 16 .897 dem and rng
thai P 1ainl rfts be hel d to hav e
good l rt le to the fo llo w rng
des c r1bed real estat e , tree of
any r1gh l , trtle c tar m or
rnterest ot th e de fen dant s or
any of tt1em , and that the1r
I rile be qureted a o; aga rnst a ny
adverse est at e or 1nterest of
the defendants or an y of
th em
a nd tor their cos ts
he re1n , wh 1ch real estate is
. descr rbed as follows ,
The tollow 1ng r eal estate
be•ng rn the Vill age of M rd
d leporL Sal!sou r y Townsh ip,
Me rgs County , Ohio , a n d
desc r rbed
as _ f OllOWS
B~g i nn r ng at the Southwest
cor ne r of Lot No
'}') 1n
He adley an d Russe i i"'A dd rtlon
to M1ddlepo r t at a n rro n p rn
thence North so t eet to the
North west corner o f Lot 22 at
an rron p rn ; thence West 81
te et to the East lme .o! the
StanCiard Oil Company Lo l,Jt-~
an 1r o n p rn , then c e So uth 55
Deg . 10' West 87 feet a long the
Standard Oil Compan y Lot to
1r on p rn , then ce East 150 feet
to t he place o f begr nn rng ,
cont a l n 1ng
t hr r t een
hu nd red ths acre , more or
less
Reference Deed s Vo l 237
Page 105 , Vol 16 3, Pa g e 713
Deed Reco rds , Me 1gs County ,
Oh10
You a r e ent1t1ed that you
are requ ired to enswer the
Cp mpta 1n 1 W1lh 1n tw e nty
e igh t davs after the last
pubt rc a t ion
The
last
pub l1c af 1on w ill be m ade on
the 7th day of Se ptembt"r
1978
LARRY E . SPENCER
Cle r k o f Courts ,
Mer gs Cou nty , Ohio
(11 17 . (8 ) J. 10 , 17 , 24 , 31 (9 ) 7,
11

Mark Twain is bu md 111
Woodlawn
Ce m e t ery .
Elmira , NY

CHIP WOOD
Pol es mo •
d1ome ter 10 on largest e nd , S8
pe r ton Bundled slob S6 per
ton Oelr ve red to Ohto Pollet
Co Rt '1 Pomeroy 9&lt;1'1 '1689

Forest
-

~-

TIMBER POMEROY
Pro
duch Top pnce for s to ndmg
sow timber Co li W2 5905 or
Kent Honb)l . 1-&lt;&amp;.I0-8570.

-

-- --

OLD FURNITURE , rce boxes . bross
beds rron bed s, d esks . e tc ,
Write
comple te households
M D M1ller Rt 4 Po mer oy 01
co11992 7700
OLD CO IN S poc ket wotche$
cl a ss rings weddrng b ond~
d•omonds Gold o r !&gt;d'ler Call
Roger Wam s ley 742 2331
HOUSE IN po mer oy o f M1ddlepor t
or wtth a creage In thrs oreo
Land con ll oct o r owner lmo nce
posstble 991 50 14
FOOT CO NTROLLED electnc troll
rng mo tor 9'92 3717

Any U . S. made car - parts
eJCtra 1t needed . Excludes
front -wheel dnve cars.

SPECIAL
PRICE
Expires
August 10, 1978

•289.95

Let us test your water Free
Call now for appointment .

ll(il ·:!_ack W. Carsey, Mgr.
0

Pomeroy Landmark

Phone 992 -2181

USED I RAS:l DRS
M~l35 Diesel
MF230 Diesel
MF150 Otesel MF:23S D1esel
MFIOS Dtesel MF'185 Oresel
MF1 135 Dtesel , Cob . orr 8.
heate r
NEW 8 USED IM PlEMENTS.
MF9 Boler · MFIO Boler · MFl 20
Baler - Moll hews Rotary S&lt;y th e
MFB80 Semi·mo unted 6 bo t.
MF520 12 Dr sc
tom Pl ow
MF200 'l R'ow Chopp e r · MF39 2
Row Plante rs
Mecho ntco l
Transplanter
SHINN S TRA C10 H S A~ ~S
Phone 458 lb30
l eon W Vo

W. Carsey , M~r

POMEROY
LAN DMARK

FRI GIDAIRE ELE CTRI C rang e $25
Moytog porlable dryer , Har ve:.t
Gold e~cellent conrlrtron S100
Kodak comero The Hand le
new $20 992.79!:16
BA SS I:IO Al IS olurnmum lowe
lrn~ 70 h p Mere Sirek ~ l eer
rng El ectm sta rt l:ogl e troll1ng
moto1 Coli 91:15 4339

Holpoan I Appl.
Sale Pnccs
J.1ck W (,ll ;ey,

WAHR WELL dr 1llmg Wrlltom T
G&lt;ont 742·1879
WE WIL L haul your tro o:..h odd s and

Ph o ne

Ho)'"'otr

~&gt; ,

997 t'l 345

SERVICE

99110~6

ave enlarged our
lservi1ce
department and
~O AN O KE HAY bale r New Ideo
service Hotpoint and
hay ra ke
Needs rep ot r
. brands .
949 2273

YARD SALE July 2b 27 28 3
lo mrly lOom IO Spm Nelson
F( oad Rutland . Ohr o Look lor
stgn s Clot he!io cu rtorn s e lc
liA CK YA RD Sole Thu rs fn and
Sot 417 Ltncoln St M1ddleport
THREE FA MIL Y Yar d ~ole I rtule
N of I uppers Pl orn'&gt; ~ rr and
Sot Bo m til dark 1 fomr l,. '&gt;rle
tent werg hl l•lt rng !.et rnony
good rtem s . Wat ch lo1 sr g n!.
YARD SAlE Corner o f CR32 ond
CR28 rn Boshon- Firdo y ond
Sot ur dov 9om to 4prn Gas
ra nge , box '&gt;p rrng "i and mo t
tress des k pl u~ o ther m1sc
1tems
YARD SAL E Friday ot Old Leton
Ferr y La nd mg . 10om 2 lornrly
FOUM FAMil '!' Yard So le M o~ e.s
Norman re~ 1 de nce lhur ~ ~ ''
and Sot
Hv!&gt;ell Run Hd
QQ2 251 8
' •
1
TWO FAMILY Yord So le 3rd St
Rocr ne nes t to lounrlromot
New and u5ed rtems Wed
Thur~ and Fr 1
FLEA MARK£1 Sol
July 29
SRI24 near ' So lem Ce nt~1
where Jarrell Grocery used to
be Sror t!&gt;Qom
YARD S AL ~ fr1 and Sot July 28th
and 29th for m 9to dark 3 mrlf?s
south o f Mrd dleport nex t to Be t
tv s Corryou t 99:? .2909
BA SE MEN T RUMMAGE So le at Ar
th ur Mdle1 ~ . Rt 1 Rutlan d
10 4 Sa t ur do~ J u l ~ ?9th

FO UR NEW l 5 rnc h whr te spoke
wheels lo r Dodge o r Plymou th
$100 Phone992 6288
1970 CHE VROLI::I NOVA with 350
hrgh performan ce 1974 Har le ~
Oov1d so n
350
$700
014 007 ·0489orb14 6¢7 3305
C

ANNING
TOAMTOES P1c k yo ur ow n Br
mg o wn con lorner Mor !.holl
R ou~h Eas t t e ton 247 375'1

TWO 75 ..volt Reol 1s tr c No"o 8
speak er s
$160
~5
wolf
Reolrslr c Novo 7·8 spe aker ~&gt;
$130 Le-.s than a year old Col i
014 ·378 6'11:13 of~e r 5
1975 SU PI:R SPORr 550 Hond a f
model 4 &lt; 'flmch:!1 ~ bogs onri
ferrrngs
2 new trre s and
t uneup
new
batte r y
J04 713 5957
l: SK A 7 hp outboar d mola r 5eo
Kmg 7 , hp ou tboar d motor
l e~s mo n 1 ~eo1 old 5oe K1 ng
olu rn"wrn llot bo ll otn boot
747 /411
~IIHWOOO

CII HN 01
91:1S 350/ or 949 7J~ij

~e Q .. oned

B' ' ~001 11ud, ( O m pet sel f con
to 111ed 992 5983

CH BA~l: !&gt; lot•on-.
~Hit1 o n r ,..
1011 L) 1-req r.ounter 01 04 rnr c
l ube type orn ~·de bond $375
Rad 1o Shoclo, rnorle l IN C 458
new 40 chormcl om &lt;:.r d e band
U~ed 2 rnon th' SLOO 9Q7 7066
HAND CO NlR Ol 20 ~pe ed
Pflueger hol l,ng mo la r S55
QQ2 3717
lRACTOR FAI&lt;'MA LL ) upe• C orrd
.-..qu1pment '14 7 '}14')
HII ( H AND SWO'f bar lor rr ove l
t1orler Paul l: Va ll Worche ster
) ! )yro c u~e Ohm be low Hub
bards Greenhov&lt;.. e
CHtlN Bl AN ~ loll 94C/ 7472

1974 PONTIAC VENTURA 0 cyl
$2000 99'} 7453

CANNIN G 10M A 10~) Hon ,. Hr ll
tann Le toi l FOib Oh•o

1975 BlACK ~L (orn.no (lossrt
350 tw o barrel
out omo t1 c
powe1 s h:H:111119 and brolo;e.,
May be seen l ' . mdes ol Houle
7 Bypass on 143 or call
QQ2 .J750
Good conrlrtron

YOUNG NANN¥ onrl b1 ll y go o t
992 b().4 7

$1b00

1975

•. •

CHEVROlET

CA MAH O

98) ~564

197o4
~3

DODC.~

CL UB cab p!C~k up
500 r(l de, S1o50 742 2460

.
Pl ¥MOUTH
,

197]
DU ST!:: R P S
A C new lrr e ~ etonomr co l
S 1OCI5 9BS 3590

KING ~ Ill: bftd roo m !&gt;vile
h 1gidou e go ~ rtryer I rrgrrlorre
re lr,rgerot o r f. t rgrdoue lr o s h
compoct01 ¥/') /994
BAI(GAIN5 1 LAH C.~ gold tweed
carpe t1 ng l1ke new $60 Lo rge
green tweerJ prec e $35 . Hr
~ ha\r $B Or~ S'&gt; rr\g toble $1 0
Cw ~&gt; eot $EI 2·va cs $5 each Ftl
1ng cob•ne t $1 5 J.l o totrl!e r fo,
porl!o S25 H43 nJ&lt;~

19'11 DODGE CHARGI:R 500 383
4 ~ peed ~·t r o s G ood condr
Ira n 949 2338
1474 PIN10 RUNABOU T A C.
auto vrn yl to p $1200 197b
'chevy l u" Frberg1oss toppe r
S/ 700
New
Ho v en
]04 882 3120
197:1 GR AN TORIN O
wagon A .C ~ P 8
mrl es 991 5786

000

Auction
AUCTIO N FRIDA¥ 7pm N ~w
rner chondrse onrJ lots of use d
fu rn• ture
loble!&gt;
c horr~&gt;
wooden b erl ~ chest ~ ches t
ty pe treetl'r , col o r lV go!&gt;
range onrl 1n uch more at Oh1 o
Jf r"er A u~ l• on now located at
!lJ/ H1gh Str ee t Mrdrlle1por t
AUCliO N SAt URDAY os well O l&gt;
h tday ot 7pm New! on d used
me rchonrf1 se at Ohr o Rr ~ er Auc
110n

10

~OOT

F! Bli(GI AS':i boot 75h .p
~ v mrude motor
Wr th trodet
51000 74'} 74/b

~.

Phone 992 -2181

HOU S ~

PAINTIN G rnrl oor or ou1
J.ioo1 No JO b too br g 01 !&gt;mn ll ·
Reasonable pnces 992 bJ~B

Giw Away
TWO PUPP II::S and mo ther
mo th e1 rs a srno ll gen tle dog
and
h o u~sb1oken
Ph one
949 2b7 ~ or 949 2852
TWO MONIH old SrhrrauH?1 type
l ~mol e
pup g1 oy heal thy
lo vab le
Coli 99') 70311 o r
491-1541
PU PPI~ ~

Mo the r
Brrttony
Spon •el f.other ~ ng fr ~ h Se tt er
992 70-l 4

B I C V CL ~

PAM1 5 9112

b?O~

coo n dog ogo 2 yCOIS ,
I fem ale pup py :J n1on th !&gt; o ld
~!l3
)o f. out th A"c
Mrd
dl epo r 1 Ph one Qq') 7023

f.~MAU

PUPPI~ S

PAJ./1 U~h o unrl onrl por i
coHre 991 J9 / IJ

F"vr Rent
COU N l RY MO B I L ~ Ho111e Po1 k
Rou te 33 north o l Pomero y.
lo1 ge lo t!&gt; Cull 992 7479
ON ~

li~OR OO M

opt Con ta ct
V dlag~
Man or Apt
M1d
dl epor t 992 !787

J AND 4 RM
l u r n rs h ed
992 5434

lu1 rrr~&gt; twrl

op t !&gt;

a nd un·
Ph o n e

SPAn FOR wm prng tro1ler rd e o l
lo1 LO &lt;h tructr on wor lo.t! rl&gt; do1.e
to po wet plan t wote1 e leclrrc
and water opid
Pr I'I Ot e
'}9'; 2J.t 3

f Ut.!NISHED APT for rent Adult s ,
no pet~ rl ownt oWn P. orneroy
Co n"&gt; truct1 o n
worke r s
we lc ome Colt 992 7347 or
99'} 3201 .
1HR H BlDROOM modul ar home ,
Po itlond or c-o Secu rity depoSi t .
~ e l e r en ce
requ •red , $200
mon th Coli 304 '}73 5771 af ter
Op&lt;r r

10 • ~0 TWO bed room mobt!e
home S 1BOO 997 .5858
I~

x 70 COMP LE H lur nr shed
Fleetwood trailer wrth 24 II . e ..
pondo l rvmg room Coli 12
Opm 304 173 SQ~J .

MOli llE H OM~ Mo11e 11e 1957 , 1
bed• oom good coqrlrhon 1900
(h('S IIlUI ~ ~ Gollrp o lr ~ Oh10

~ tot ron

b4

Pomeroy Landmark

~... Jack W. Carsey . Mgr .

G I LB~Rl

UONH ele c. t••c trorn oc
cesso rre !&gt; ~t ot ron hou5e log
e tc
loader
wote &lt; tow e1
Phone of te1 ~ '1911Qb I

HOO F HO LLOW H o r ~es Buy sel l
!rode o r lro• n New an d us erl
sortdle s Ruth Ree vo--. All·'&gt;ony
(bl.l ) b91J 3790
HISIN C. ' S I AR Kenne l BOo rdrng
In door onrl outd oo1 run ~&gt;
Groorn rng oil breNls Clean
~o n• l o •y
focdrtrt&gt;!&gt; ( he sh •1£&gt;
f'h one ~ b)4 ) J6 7

O'IYJ

AlftWAU: , HMA ll: 1 yeo r o lrl .
!&gt;poyerl Heg1s ter e d goorJ wtth
fh rlrl ren 110inurl 4050 lirm ,
4b54t ;!4orbl 4 0b 7 JH/M
AKt~

RI: GilH-111:0 Oobt;1rrnan
mo le 1 • yP ur :. olrl Block on.f
ton 1..;1 ~0 304 /?'J ~d ? :t

f

THfUE BEDROOM !rome home in
M1ddl epor l Call q92 34S7
1UPPE RS PLAIN S 3 bedroom . 11,
both lo tol e lecinc. orr condr
tioning , full basemen t Iorg e
lo t qQ'} 3585
IN SYRACUSE 2 bedroom house
New s tor m" wm dow$
New
olum1 num budd ing 2 p o r c h e~
992·32 19

APPLIANCE

CA BBAGE CO ~N . po tat oes holt
run ner b e an ~ ~ p r e !. yO\.H own )
$4 bu C W Proff rtt Fa1 m.
Port land . Ohio,
1977 CHE VY VAN A C.

1HRI: E Bt:DHOOM house rn RaCine
or eo . Neor n ve r Completely
remodeled q49&lt;J 545.

Mqr
PIHlfH' ~97 2181

en d~.

Mtddleport
Large
lof. com~lelely remodeled,
garage,
cellar,
outbuildings, grape arbor.
No. 216 s2uoo
804 W. Main
l'omeroy
992-2298
After Hours
C~ll 992-7133
CONTACT:
Lois

For All Ynur
GE T.V.'s &amp;

$1b00

sotfit. Room Ad~itions
&amp; A ~ Frame Homes
For Free Estimates
· C~ll
992-6323 or 992· 6011
6 19-1 mo. pd.

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING
New or Repair
Gutters and
Downspouts
Free Estimates
Phone 949-21k12
or 949-2160

Heal !::•talc lvr Sale
HO USl AI_,D l01 111 t&gt;o nv1lle Pnc
t•d lo r qu 1£lo. !r.ole 14'1 706tl

U 1 l lU
11• £ 5l't Dnd

•

\trNt

1tl ACRE S on Lrnco ln H1ll w it h
water and sewage. Mak e o n o f
lt:!r ' ~hone 992 63 33 or
Cf9J·5739

)A V ~
BY Owner , Small for m ,
wo._en
...,£omp lete ly , fenc ed
w11e , 2 bo1ns !i lorage budd ing,
I~
A C H~ S
Col! Plulrp Wetry
tr ty wo te r drrl led welL Iorge
485 41 ~~ Lo co t ~rf on ~onrt
14 x bO mob ile ho m• . 2
Rrdge Roorlm Ches te • 1wp
berfro6m . ll vu1g room , kit chen
IHR H
IHDR OO M house
both l11 eploce , cen tral an .
playroom u tihty room , lo ver ,
to tnl e lectric l porches . w1n
Ior ge kd chr n onrl h ~ mg roo rn
rlo w ownin g ~ cedo1 fe n£e in
mu-. riy rtr •t•r t•·rl w rth l li Uplnr ()
l1nn t !ioout1fu l !&gt;et hnq sornw
r•11
mrt' ol lt111rl11L'nt h ' wll
po ~ rure
\OIT1C
woOd !&gt; onrl
I r&gt;i rnorf' rn fb t" , 11011 r.all
tlh&gt;f l'
A 1 conrlr i •Orl
Coli
(j'-4'/ 1' 1 '13
f ;' ' '
, , ·'' '

TI~E

CENTE.R

in Hartlord, W. Vo .
7-20-1 mo. pd

Radiator~

ServicehN.t-'
~ ............ ftvdl 01'

.........r

c-.

. . ....

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE been
wn ce lle d? lost your operat o rs
lrcense? Pho ne 992 2143

VA·FHA 30 yr ftnoncrng , a lso
relmon c1n g Ireland Mor tgage ,
U E. State . Athen!o phone (014 )
592-305 1

0.

Aut• &amp; Truck
Repait
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682

TWO Ni: W ., hc.·droom hous••
unde1 co ns h ucllon ot Morni ng
Star Hs1ghts. Rec room .
fireplace garage and baiemt!nl Nel'lrfy lor occ upancy In
ncar fu tur e . loe Constr uction .
ll'n&lt;J454 or b14 ·4&lt;&amp; b 9568
FIVE ROOM house o n,J lot . 1.. 2.
Mldrl fe p o rt
See fle tcher
Welch

'

CAPTAIN EASY
RIGHT! AND

Siding

Gener:al Contractors
Phone 949-2801
or 949-2860
PREE ESTIMATES
No Sunday (ails Please
7· 9· 1 mo.

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING
Residential and commer·
cial. Call for estimate. 24
Hour Servtce . Any day ,
anytime.
Phone 985-J806
Jack Ginter 98S ~ l806

Jack's Septic
Tank Service
BoX 3

Chester, Ohio
10·30 c

'IOU PUT 0~ THAT
$PEfD eoVERNOR.!
IT PROI!AI!LV l&lt;t:PT

US

FRO~ GO INIS IN·

TO THE Pl'tiNI&lt;!

MOORE'S
Brakes
Tires

Muffler

Shocks

'fl'II~Nl

Batte~y.

Ph . 992 -2841

80&lt;, I H"'V!:IJ'T ~IJ
'
"' H~ ~~~ m"'T ~

TIVER

1\ 61:1:~ IIJ '(f#.f!.&lt;; 1

All tYpes of rooting , gutters
&amp; downspouts . 20 ~ears
expenence
All work
guaranteed . Call Tom
Hoskins, 949 . 2160. Free
Esttmates
7 16 1 mo.

LAISEY
SUFULE

co

UITI..E ORPHAN ANNIE

MODERN SUPPLY

Mswer.

'(fP ... All THE
CLA SSICS WITH

Small tft9lne &amp; mower
service, Musey Ferguson
&amp; Gilson Til'-rs, t.own Boy
Mower Sales &amp; Service.

lALE'S OF

VIOLENCE IN
'fM ..

A(

Now arrange the ct rcled letters to
form lhe surprise answer. as sug
gesled by the abo11e cartoon

I XI ) ON THE [ XX1 )
{Ans wers tomorrow)

Ht510RY BOOKs,
TElliH' OF
SIN~U L WARS·"
"DAVID AND
GoliATH"···

I Jumbles

Yesterd ay .s

Answer

ENJOY LAUG&gt;i SADIST OBLONG
This ~n could be " English " - " SHINGLE"

The latta! JUMBLES are here In JUMBLE BOOK 110 and JUMBLE
BOOK 111 Available tor 11 35 EACH , postpaid tram Jumble , c/o thll
newspaper, p o . BaM 3-4. Norwood. N J 07648 Make checks payllble to

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

NewtpaperbOOka.

-4-1 mo.

and lo -bovs lor hue wrll houl
ldl drrt , to ~o tl , luneuone o nd
gr o ... el Call Bob or Roge r Jef ·
fe rs day phone 99:?-7089 ntgh t
phone q97 3S25 or 992 523'1 .
EXCAVATING dozer
backh oe
and d• tchet Chorltt'&gt; R Hat ·
f1eld . Bock Hoe Servtc_e
Rut land , Oh io Phone 741-'1008

~-~
THOMAS JOSEPH
by

AI..LEYOOP

"(), IT'S 'T1-iE
eAMa WINI&lt;LE,

GALI.IA OOUNTY'S LARGEST
REAL ESTATE AGENCY

1 Worked

Broncos'

name

title

8 Principles
t Hire
12 Mortise

%0 Family
fun room
Z1 Wonder
Z3 D.C. legis.

'-

GASOlJNE ALLEY

this h ~ re 5upport!
seem a tad sha~l.!!

fitter
11 Laundry

item

%4 Spoil

25 Asian

31 Drove,
as cattle
33 - Clive
35 Lake Geneva 's

decree
26 Jeremiad
27 Convict
2lJ Gorge

other name
37 Forest
giant
39 Not 'is

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Silly slam beats odds

river ~-r.-.,:-T.""­
~ORTH

• gear
2t Cheer
3% Cowpoke's
home
34 Cheer
:MPowder
and shot
37 " Key

• •• AND PuT'

ewe

He~e

...

DAILY

COME:

D" A PROFIT ?

eUT I WENT INID OE8r

10 OUY 'TH I~ ~USINE5S
FROM l'IUNT' eE7SIE!
IYE OOT 1\) PAY o&gt;=~

MY CR!::DITOR&amp;l

TH ~' N

WHY

DON'T

YOC

CAL L THAT GUY,WHO
SAID ~= CCUU/!v'AKE
MILL IONS BY ALt.:lWl ~IG

::m-t5'R5 T:J U:5E YCU~
NAM:;?

Pass

C RYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work
AXYDLBAAXR

S()Uth

Pass

LONGFELLOW

X 0 TB

X0 N I A

EMV
OA
ME

FB

HBWBNTBH

YOEZ
XNA

Bl;BA

XBOH.

-

HE CAN BE IF HE
GETS AI-1EAD IN.
THE THIRD SET!

TONIGHT.

POT

WHAT'S
THAT.
MAW?

of dtamonds, took a success-

ful s pade finesse, went back
to dwnmy with the king of
clubs, t ook another spade

Q

By Oswald Ja co b y
aod Alao Soolag
Some 45 year s ago the la te
Norman Bonney of Bosten
reached three notrwnp on
the sunple biddang shown an
the box .
In other word s, he bid at.
West was allowed to hold the
lirst trick with has queen of
hearts, but Nonnan had to
put his ace on East's ktng

A · Missourl read er wanLs
to know af any hand with as
many as 25 high-ca rd points
s ho uld be opened with a
forcang b1d .
Even though game as not
guaranteed yo u want to be
there . But, wath a balanced
25 or 26 h1gh-c'll"Jl points, you
s ho uld o p e n three notrwnp
rather than 1wath a forcang
btd.
i NE:WSPAPI': H t: NTF.R PRI SE ASSN 1

(Do you have a question for

when the su1t was continued.

the eJCperts ? Wnte

He cashed h1s ace of diamonds, entered dl'ffilTIY wath
the king of clubs and lost the
diamond finesse to West's
doubleton queen . Three
more hearts left hun one
Irick short.
The hand was dealt ln' the

Expe r rs , care of thiS ne wspa ·
per lnd1vtdu al questtons w1 11
be answered If accompanied

BARNEY .

I FIXED OL' BULLET
A GOURMET SUPPER

We s t hand . Now South e n te r e d dwruny with the nine

finesse and had his slam.

it:

PBIYOE
LlMTBIF
Yesterday '! Cryptoquole:TO FEAR LOVE IS TO FEAR LIFE ,
AND THOSE WHO FEAR UFE ARE ALREADY THREE
PARTS DEAD. - BERTRAND RUSSELL

OWNER DESIRES IMMEDIATE SALE - The owner
of this home In Pomeroy is leaving the area and needs
to sell now. A I If~ story home with 4 bedrooms inc luding
a spacious m aster bedroom , love ly 'kit chen wl1h all the
appliances. large liv ing room , washe r &amp; drver plus
patio &amp; 6 a c res of land and it's onlyh 1 m11e fr om
downtown . S27 ,500
·

Pass

Opening lead : •

YDAV
OA

the queen droppmg from the

:1 NT

•Q N R R

QXM

hea rt and won the s econd .

Vulnerable : North-South
Dealer : South

Nortb East

So uth look e d over the
dummy unhappi ly, but fi nally saw that there wa s a
c ha nce t o mak e his s illy
s lam H e ducked the fir s t
Th e n he cash e d the a ce and
k1n g of dl3m o nd s and sa w

+AQ 2

CRYPTOQUOTES
~CMI

K 10 6
• K 95
• 7 53
• 10 8 7 4

+

• A 2
• A K J 10 4

One lette r simply sta nds for another In this sample A i1
used f or th e three L's, X fo r the two O's, rtr S1ngle lette r s,
3p0strophes, the ( ~ngth arid fo r ma ti o n o r t he \\urds are all
hin ts Ea r h day th e rode lette rs are d1fferent.

WE'RE NOT
MAKI'JG MORE

EAST

•AQJ

Is

SO
. • WE'RE ltt'mNG ~ARDER
THAN WE EVER DID. WE' RE
SELLING MORE THAN WE
EVER DID. .

six notrump against that
same hea rt lead

SOUTH

appear
43 Rigid
44 Require

'-....

timls tic- and unsound with

• 832
• Q J 10 7 4
• Q 2

W~st

final s o f th e Ressmger team
of four
The hidding at the other
table wa s lon g, arduous, (&gt;pSout h even tually landin g at

WEST

• J 96

Largo"
Oscar
winner
38 Casino
employee
40 Intellect
411ntact
42 Suffix
with

FRANK &amp; ERNIE

7·27- A

• 975 4
• 86 3
• 9 B6
+ K a3

WINNIE

E . M. Wiseman, B_roker 446-3796 Eve .
Jim Cochran, Assoc. 446-7881
Nancy Smith, Assoc. 446-4910

athletic
success
Z2 Court
Z5 Sultan's

F.RI DAY , JULY 28, 1971
5 ·45-Farm Report 13 : 5 : 5D-PTL C lub 13 .
6 OQ- PTL Club 15: S'f.'mer Semester 10.
6 · 3G--Columbus Today 4; News 6 , Summer Semester
8: Societies In Tra ns it ion 10
6 45-Mornlng Report 3: 6 : 50-Good Morn ing , Wesf
VIrginia 13: 6 :55-News 13 .
.
7 oo- Today 3.4,1 5: Good Morning Amer ica 6, 13. CBS
New s 8: Underdog 10 .
7 25-Chuck While REport s 10, 7:3()--Schoolles 10
B:OQ-Capt Kangaroo 8, 10 , Sesame Sf . 33 .
9 · 00- Merv Griffin 3; Phi l Donahue 4 , 13 , 15 ;
Emergenc y One'6 , Brady Bunc h 8, Tic lac Dough
10.
9 · 3D-Andy Griff ilh 8. Family Altair 10.
10 OD-Card Sharks 3,4,15 : Edge ol Nlghf 6 ; Tic Tac
Dough 8 , Joker's Wild 10, To Tell The Truth 13 ,
Over Easy 33
10 . 3D-Hollywood Sq uares 3,4,15, H1gh Hopes6, P rice
is Righ l8, 10 , $20,000 Pyram 1d 13 , Pa 1n1 A long Wit h
Nancy Kaminsky 33 .
11.0Q-High Rollers 3,4,15 ; Happy Days 6, 13 , 11 · 3~
Wheel of For1une 3, 15, Famtly Feud 6,1 3; Par .
lrldge Fam ily 4: Love ol Li te 8, 10; 11 55-CBS
News 8, Loving Free 10.
12 .QO-Newscenter 3, News 4,6, 10 , America Altve' 15;
Young &amp; the Restless 8, Midday Magazine 13.
Watch Your Mouth 33
12 .30-Ryan's Hope 6,13 ; Bob Braun 4; Search fo r
Tomorrow B., 10 ; What ' s Cooking' 33
I. DO-For R1cher , For Poorer 3; All My C hildren 6,13;
News 8. Young &amp; the Restles s 10 ; No t For Women
Only 15, Makem !1. Clancy 33
1 30-Days of Our Lilves 3,4,15, As The World Turns
8,10 . To Be Announced 33
2:QO--One L1 fe to Live 6, 13 ; Nationa l Geographic 33
2 3Q-Doctors 3,4, 15; Guiding Light 8, 10: 3 ·0DAnother World 3,4, 15; General Hosp ita l 6, 13, Lil1as
Yoga &amp; You 20 .
3 .31&gt;--AII in T he Family 8,10; Crockett' s V icto ry
Garden 20, Anyone For Tennyson' 33
4 oo-M 1ster Cartoon 3; Superman 4 , For R ic her' , For
Poorer 15 . Merv Griffin 6. Addams Famtly 8;
Sesame St 20,33. Match Game 10 ; Otnah 13 4· 30My Three So ns 3, Gilligan's Is 4,8; Batman 10 ;
L1ttle Rascals 15
5 00-Monroes 3 , My three So ns 4 , G unsmo ke 8,
M tster Rogers ' NetghborhoOd 20,33 . Voyage to the
Bottom of the Sea 10 ; Emergency One 13 ; Petticoat
Junct 1on 15
5 31}-{)dd Couple 4. News 6; Elec . Co . 20 ,33, Hogan ' s
Heroes 15 .
6 .0Q-News 3.4,8,10,13,15 , :Zoom 10 , ABC News 6,
Making Things Grow 33
6 3D-NBC News 3,4, 15 , ABC News 13 . Andy Gnff tlh 6:
CBS News 8, 10 ; Over Eas)l 20. Antiques 33 .
7 QO-Cross Wits 3,4; ewtywed Ga m e 6,1 3 , Hooper
The Gr eates t Suntman Alive 8, News 10 , Gilligan' s
Is. 15 ; Almana c 20 : Insight 33 .
7 3D-Porter Wagoner 3, Goni'J Show 4, S~OO.OOO Name
That Tune 6 ,13 , Pri ce Is Right 8 ; MacNe ii· Lehrer
Report 20, 33 , Fam 1ly Feud 10 , Pop Goes The
Country 15
8 :0Q-CPO Sharkey 3,4,15 : Tabitha 6 ,13 ; Wonder
Woman 8.1 0 , Washington Week 1n Review 20,33
8 :3D-CPO Sharkey 3,4, 15 , Operation Petti co at 6 ,13,
Wall Street Week 20,33
9 ·0Q-Rocklord Flies 3,4,15 : Movie " Beaut if ul but
Deadly" 6. 13 ; Movie " The Pri va t e L 1fe of Sherlock
Holmes" B. 10 ; Soundstage 20. Sh epherd ' s Pie 33 .
9 3D-Makem &amp; C lancy 33 , 10 .0Q-News 20 : Auslin
Cify Limits 33
10 · 3D-Monty Python ' s Flying C ircus 20 .
11 OD----- News 3.4,6,8. 10 .13 .1 5 ; Dick Cavett 20 ; Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 33
11 · 3()----Johnny Ca rson 3,4.1 5, Bar etta 13 , Movie
" Sands of th e Kalahari " 6, Movie " The Thousand
Plane Raid " 8, ABC News 33; Movie " lady In a
Cage"' 10 .
·
12 OD-Ja naki 33 : 12 4D-Irons lde 13.
1· QO-----M idnq;:Jht Specia l 3,4,15 , Mo v1e " The Two Fa c es
o l Dr Je ky ll " 10

%1 Camper's

..

148 ACRE FARM - UNUSUALLY GOOD BUY - The
owner's age prevents her from continuing to operate
the farm and she desires an Immediate sale . 50 to 60
acres tillable with some verv gOOd creek bottom and
hill top land . The balance In pasture &amp; woods. The six
room home Is gOOd (does need some modernization )
large all · purpOse barn and several good outbuildings'
Miner~ls go with It and it's located in an a rea wher~
oas. Otl &amp; coal hav-r been found to be plentiful. Near
Rutland. S60's .

19 Symbol of 30 Pront.o

7 Part of a
Dickens'

18 Temis ace
19 Dasmiss
7 - 27

Yes'terday's Answer

&amp; Sailor

color
15 Unclothe
17 Not plwnp

CALL 446 3643

QUICK SALE NEEDED - 68 acres ol good bollom
pasture &amp; woods on VanZandt Road . The owner Is n~
longer abje to take care of this lovely place s o they
must sell now. Attractive remodeled 10 room farm
home with nice sized rooms , l lf2 baths, 4 be drooms &amp;
carpet throughout. Rural &amp; w e ll water plus seve ral old
outbuildings . Priced to sell at S46.900 .

on

5 Assert
term papers
10 Nevada city
%Bring to
11 Obvious
3 Irregular
13 Ancaent
4 Gaffe
Egyptian city. 5 Dalrna- "
14 Denver
tian's

wr.A!

WIL L do roofrng . com truclt on ,
plum b rng and hoohng No to b
too Iorg e or too ~ mo l l Phone
7-42 1348 , ~

THE WISEMAN
REAL ESTATE AGENCY

DOWN

ACROSS
I Victuals

,aU:5tat"

t A LIOII

WI-IAI IHE iHEAiERL.OVIN&lt;&amp; CA'!&gt;iAWAY
WA'E&gt; AS!.UP:ED OF,
AI L.A'E&gt;"T.

I KJ

HOWERY AN D MA RliN
h ·
ca votrn g
se ptr c sys te m s ,
do.!'e r, ba ckh oe dump tru ck .
HOMESITES for sole I a cre and
l1mes to no. gro~;el
blackt o p
up . Middl epor t , near Rul lond
povmg , Rl 143 Ph one 1 /61 4 )
Coll992 748l
698 7331 .
NEW 3 bedroom hous e 2 baths
a ll e lec ., 1 a cre Middleport
dostJ to Rutland . Phone Q9') .
7481
tr..
fur Sal,'.

II

[]

I KJ

SERVICE

c

lB

byHenriArnoldandBoblee

..

BORN LOSER

HOME MAINTENANCE

~}

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

Unscramble these four Jumbles.
one letter to each square, to form
four ordtnary words.

Pomeroy, 0.
3· 15-tfc

OHIO VALLEY ROOFING :
AND

ID'il

~ ~ ~~ ®

Installation Service

PUlliN S EXCAVATI NG . Com plete BRA DF-O RD Auc t1oneer Com·
Ser vrc e Phon e 992·2478
plele Se r'lrce Phone 949-2487
or 949·20fX) Ro crne Oh• o , (n ft
PUDDLE POOLS All sr zes ond
l:lr odf o r d
shapes Sw rm poo ls 2 ye ar s
e•penencc
free es tim a tes ELWOOD BOW ER S REPAIR
Sweepers toas te rs , rr ons otl
onylh rng
you
nee d
lot
s moll appl rontus , Lown mower ,
undergro und swim pools . New
nex t to Stole H1ghwoy Garage
chemica l ond s up pl y store
on Rou te '1 Phone (614 1 qBS·
Alban y
O h 1o
Pho ne
3825 .
014 b9B 6555 ( Aft er 6 pm ,
0140895251 Joh n Je ff er s or SEWIN G MA CHINE Repai r ~ . .. er·
b89·51b5 Bill G illette ) We ore
-v1ce . all mak es . 992· n8111 The
NOT all we t on PRICES .
Fa b ri c Sho p
Po m eroy .
Auth o r 1zed Srnger Sole!. and
NEIGLER BUILDING Supply lor
Se r" rce Wu sharpen Scissors
bujldrng houses reporr work
and cabinets Ca ll Guy H l XCAVA TING doter loader a nd
Neig ler 9.. 9 2508 aft er 5 pm
bodo,hoe work dump tru cks

TRAD ING Pos t New sh rp
me n I of Wes te rn s how saddles
silve r tnmmed , $200 up Al so
pony so dd les SSO up All hor~.e
su p pl1e\
Open
M ondo ~
th ro u g h
Sa tu rday
s .a
0 14 ~98 · 5 4 36 .

GOOD THIN&amp;

I·

1 T&gt;i-THINK I

Denver Kapple
At

4-30-ttt

REEV~ S

BEFORE ~~U BUY OR
SELL
YOUR
BEST
INVESTMENT MAY BE
AN APPRAISAL BY A
QUALIFIED
APPRAISER. IF WE CAN
BE
OF
ANY
HELP,
PLEASE CALL.
HENRY E . CLELAND
REAL TO~
HENRYT CLELAND,
JR .
SR . CERTIFIED
APPRAISER
99~ · 2259, 992·2568
.
.,.2.6191

742-2321
Free Estimates
Work GUIIronteed
7· 10· 1 mo.

8RAKE; PE'DAL.!

St. Rl. n4 toward Rulloncl,

Making Things Grow 33 .6 :30--NBC News 3,4,1 5:
ABC New s 13: Andy Gr ifl lth 6: CBS News 8, 10:
Over Easy 20 ; Antiques 33
7 ·oo-CrossWits 3; The Sellin' 4, Newlywed Game 6,13:
Gong ~how 8T Gill igan's Is. 15; Hock ing V lle y
Bluegrass 20; Consumer Survival Kit 33.
7:3D-Hollywood Squares 3.4. Match Game PM 6,
Tattletales 8, ·MacNeil-Lehrer Reporl20 ,33. Thai's
Hollywood 10 ; Nashville On The Road 13 ., Marly
Robbins' Spotlight 15 .
8 :0Q-Chlps 3.4,15 : Welcome Back, Kolter 6.13 :
Wallons 8, 10, Once Upon A Classic 20,33
8 :3D-What's Happening! 6,13: In Search of the Real
America 20.33 .
9 ()()-James at 15 3,4, 15. Barney M iller 6 ,13. Celebrll)
Concerts 8: World 20,33: Hawaii F 1ve-O 10.
9 :3D-Movle "Claudine" 6,13 . IO :OD-C iass of '65
3.4.15 , Barnaby Jones 8, 10, Pol ark II 33 , Ne ws 20.
10 :3D-Lock. Slock &amp; Barrel 20 , 11 :OD-News
3.4.6\ 8.10, 13,15 : Dick Cavell 20, Lilias Yoga &amp; YDu
33

AI Tromm
Construction '

GARAGE

REEVES TRA DIN G Post , Pogevilltt
Groc er1 es . dry good s. hard
wor e teed , lock shop Spe&lt;to l
_2S ib of dog food $3 88
NEW LISTING Newer
ran ch type , 5 bdrms , c lose
in Appx . 1 10 acres, 'l
storage b ldgs , in good
co nditton , large llv1ng
room . e qu ipped bui l t 1n
kit c hen and the kids go to
Po meroy elem , Looks good
lor S3LOOO.OO .
NEW LISTING Super
ni ce 1974 mobtle home in
excellent co ndit ion oo a
beautiful 1 acre fen c ed tot
St orag e bid~ .. carport.
fully
furntshed
and
equipped . Close to m ines.
All for $16 ,500.001•
6 ACRES - In Syracuse.
really c lean . 3 bdrm. one
f loor plan home , large
k itchen . base ment, 2 car
garage ,
f ront
porch
oyerlooks the beautiful
Ollio. Value IS $32 ,000.00.
EASTERN SCHOOL !JIST.
- N ice new 3 bdrm. ranch,
I acre . garage , many
feature s
Priced right.
$26,000.00 .
BEAT THI5- 3 bdrms .•
large bath . 2 stories. new
{carpeting ,
siding .
gut1er'ss. down spouJing,
paneling, ce ilings} , on Ohio
Pwer, close to Pomeroy
Only $16 .500.00
EXCELLENT
NEIGHBORHOOD 6
rooms , 3 bdrms. , 1'/ l baths,
separate util ity, storms,
kids walk to school.
$20,000.00
FAIR MARKET VALUEIs reflected with this 2
brdm . home in good nei~h ·
borhood and ..good con
dition . New carpeting, et c
Only $11 ,000 00
LOW DOWI\l PAY - Full
basement , ' .t bdrms.. in
town . Cheip at S6J50 00.

Roofing. Siding,
Room Additions
&amp; Spray Painting

. CAN REACH THe

Bissell Siding Co.

EXPERIENCED

6 OQ- News 3,4,8.10.13.15; ABC News 6: Zoom 20 :

See

Storm Windows
Ca II Profession a I
Builders

SALES AND ~ERVICE
11:9 -lfc

THURSDAY,JULY27,1971

ROGER HYSEli
¥.. mile oH Rt. 7 br·INSS on

11· 3D--Johnny Ca r son 3,4, 15 ; Starsky &amp; Hutc h 6,13 ,
Mash 8; ABC News 33; Mov ie "Green Dolphin
S treet" 10: 12 :0Q-Janakl,o)3 .
12· 05-Mo vle " Black board Jungle" 8 : 12 : 4D-Toma
6, 13; 1:00-Tomorrow 3,4: 1· 51}- New s 13.
Movif Channel 4 5 11. 7 PM - Pipe Dream s I PGl
9 &amp; 11 PM - Cross of Iron CRJ

TELEVISION
VIEWING

For The Best
Price In Town

PWMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.

Pomtra , Ohro

LONG BOTTOM
Rt 124 V1ew o f th e
Oht o R1ver Over 3' ~
a c res o f land , drtlled
we ll . 3 bedroom
Fl eel wood
mobile
ho m e w 1fh central
hea l and air , J1 ~
b~lhs , sun deck and '
lois of sh r ubbery .
RUTLAND - Lar ge
4 bedr oom fr a m e
home Ha s bath , ci t y
wa te r , natura l gas.
f1rep l ace
1n
l he
l1v rng, 2 c ar garage
and ext ra ~ level lot.
Onl y $14,000 .
NEW LISTING Ches l e r
a r ea .
3
bedroom home w rlh
cen tral hea t and a tr .
fu ll base men !, and
r ural wate r 2 c ar
ga ra g e and ot her
out bu 1ld 1n g s
4 14
a c r es ·wit h pond Has
d lra rler hook up a nd
tr ee h ouse
J us t
$35. 000
NEW LISTING La r ge 3 bed roo m
h ome w 1th ba th ,
nat ural gas fu rnace ,
oak fl oors down and
full baseme nt , nice
s had )l
spo t
ove r loo ki ng lhe Ohio
Rt ver . Th1s •s a good
bu y a t S l9,500
UNION AVE . 3
shady lots Large 10
room house with 4
bedrooms , 2 baths
natural gas . fa
furna ce Hobby s hop ,
garage ,
cove red
picni c patio , all th is
IS VA . approved . •
LINCOLN HTS
Bu1ld 1ng lo i s w ith
sewer , water , and
e lec t ric
available
56 ,000 .
NEW
COUNTRY
HOME 3 ni c e
bedrooms , s te p saver
k it c hen . di n ing room,
family room with
wood
burning'
frr e place , large su n
deck . fron t por c h and
larg e w o oded lot
60's .
114 CONDOR ST: - 3
bed r ooms.
ba t h,
na tural ga s furna ce.
gii rd e n
s pace .
2
o u1bu1ld1ngs
and
room fo r ofl street
parking . Want $9 ,500.
we
have
over
11,000,000 .00 WORTH
OF
PROPERTY
FOR SALE .
G . Bruce Teaford
Helen t. Teaford
Sue P . Murphy
Associates

FRED'S

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

l'OIIIIrOJ

E.!~L~~

Mounted on new wheels,
rudy to go. $38 to S35
complett. Truck owners,
don't misslhls deal. Wt otll
ot diS&lt;ovnt prices every
dey. Slop in ot

CARTER
300 Main St.
Pomeroy,Ohio
Pomeroy 992-6282
or 992-6263
IA.M.Io4:30P. M .

DICK TRACY

NEW FIBERGLAS TIRES

7-7· 1 mo.

2
Bedroom
c arpeted ,
modern
kitchen
with
dishwasher

WILL CAR E for the elde rly in o u r
ho me Ph one 99'1-731 4

l'n 5 BLACK ~l Com•no Cl o!o src
3SO two bar rel
a utomat ic
powe r s leermg ond brakes .
Mo.,. be seen 1 1 • rmles o ff
R out~ 7 8yp055 on 143 or call
Q92·3750. Goo d con dtt 1o n

2 story older home, 3
bedrooms , family room
with fireplace. living room ,
dining room r carpeted
throughout.
k1tchen
co mplefely equ i pped .
laundry room with washer
and
dryer ! 2 baths ,
outbuittling with electric
for' storage, ~arum . siding,
storm windows, new roof.
on double lot . Asking
$35,000 . Owner will take
mobile home as down
paymel"lt
Prefer
3

MASH
BROTHERS
ALUM. &amp;
VINYL
SIDING

~droom .

Pomeroy 992 ·2181

.

IF YOU ho ve o sen11ce to olle r
wont to buy or sell some th tn g
oe look1ng lor work
or
who t e~;er
you II get resul l!io
foster With a Sent1nel Wont Ad
Co 11 992 2156

MINI FARM l 1 1 we ll fe nced acres
close !9 t ow1~ ond "&gt;choo l.,
Lorge 2 !&gt;Tor y hous e hCJ :. room
lor Iorge lo111 tly w•th 5 or b
bedrooms rec 1oom dinmg
1001l1 lrvrng room ond £ounlry
ktl chen . B1g botn and othe r out
bu1 lrlmgs hu tl trees , berne:.
01.d 2 gardens Prt~;ot e pa~e d
rood to pro per ty 01'd ci ty
wa ter
Fr ve minu te from
Mo ~on
WV . Shown by appt
o r, ly 30 4 · 773 . ~5JS

-

$~OFF

let Pomeroy Landmark
soften &amp; condition your
: water with Co-op water
softener, Model UC-SVI,

Pomeroy Landmark

(or Sale

BRING IN
COUPON
AND RECEIVE

SOFTENER?

~

'

9-l-The Daily Sentinel , Midilleport-Pomeruy. o.. Thursd•y. July ti, l!l78

Business Senfices

tltaoor·

EED A WATER

Now Only

--~---

$1295

SPECIAL

SENSI MA T!( oc
coun t~ng
rnoch11,e
Ph o ne
9rn 2156 , The Dod.,. Sen tin e l
111 Court S~reet Pomeroy ,
Oh iO

NOTICE
MN
PAR T TIM E Co mm un1 ty
heal th nurstng ex per1e nce
pre le rred Mus t be res1den t ol
Me rg s County ond be a ble to
'l or y workrng doy ~ Re ferences
requrred Prck up opp lr coh on
form and furt her mformot1on a t
Meigs County otl rce o f Plann ed
Parent hood ol Sou thea stern
Ohro, Co unty Co urthou se
weekdays e)(cept Thursday
Equal Opportumty Employer

ALIGNMENT

HUHHOUGH S

-

LOS T ·- F~"M AU: s h ortha 1r ed
beogla Weorrng o b rown col
lor . An swers to luq Los t rn the
Ru tland , leadi ng Creek area
Phone 7-42·2249

Heal t::~tat e

WHEEL

LllM EWx Num~·r h r Car t• vr 1'\w ~'II!

'

•

Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash
WANT AD
CHARGES·

~

HAM BONES AN'
SPAGHETTI

by

stamped.

Ask the

self-addre ssed

envelopes. The most m te restmg questtons wt /1 be us ed m
th1S column

~n d

Will recetve

copies of JACOBY MODERN

I

�~.·

. ,-..

...

16-The Daily Sentinel, M.,iddleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, July 'El, 1978

Columbia Gas offers
budget plan for '79 ·

Hospital Nt-ws

Holler Medleal Center
(Diaebarg.,., July !I)
Glenda Brumfield, J anoit
Bryant, Sharon Anne Bums,
Donald Colley, Leslie Coon,
Columbia Gas customers residenual or commercial Jr., Ella Elkins, June Fox,
seeking an easier way to pay customer who wishes to take Larry Garrison, Larry
winter heating bills have a advantage of it . C~omers Holley , Goldye Johnson, Paul
practical answer in th e pay only for the gas they use.
Lewis, Margaret Martin,
company's Budget Payment Monthly bills show both Sharon McGee, Jamie Lee
Plan that lets them know In actual usages and charges, so McPeek, Louise Myers,
August what their January customers always Jlre aware Sarah .· Nichols, Mrs. Verne
gas bills will be.
of the status of their ac- Ord and son, Mrs. Michael
" Managing winter heating co unts.
Pratt ·a nd son, Dorothy
bills ha s become an inMary
Alice
II a customer decides to Roush,
creasingly difficult problem join, he.does so by paying the Spaulding, Judy Stobart,
for many customers, and the . budget amount shown on the Winnie Stout,
Andrew
-·· severity of the past two August gas bill and con- Thorne , Wilford Tipple,
winters hasn 't helped, " J . M. tinuing to pay that amount Deborah Wolfe, Patricia
Koebel, manager for the gas each month thereafter, the- Woolum.
company in the Gallia-Meigs manager said.
Births
area, said.
Budget amounts are based
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Stewart,
''Ce rtainl y any way in on each customer 's history of a son, Patriot . Mr. and Mrs.
which the company can help gas usage, normal weather William Partin, a daughter,
to ease the impact of winter conditions and the cost of ~as. Jackson . Mr. and Mrs.
heating costs will be welcome Major changes in any of these R&lt;&gt;nald Huffman, a daughter,
indeed for our customers. We factors can result in budget Gallipolis. Mr. and Mrs.
believe our Budget Plan is the amount . adjustments when Mark Beegle, a son, Racine.
best solution possible, and accounts are reviewed prior Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Lewis,
some 640,000 Col umbia to the end of the heating a daughter, Proctorville. Mr.
customers c urrently par ~ · season .
.
and Mrs. Leonard Hurlow, a
ticipating in thf program
Cust omers wishing ad- daughter, Henderson, W. Va.
apparently · shar e
our · ditional information on the Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Creech,
opinion."
Budget Payment Plan can a daughter, Jackson .
Koebel pointed out that call or stop by their local ~as
starting in August , th e company office Koebel said. Veterans Memorial Hoopltal
Admissions
Bertie
customer pays a monthly "We will be happy to answer
Wratt,
Pomeroy;
Emma
amount equal to one-twelfth any questions or provide any
Hayman, Syracuse; Carrie
the estimated aMual cosi of further information on this
Osborne, Reedsville; and
his annual gas service. This practical way to spread the
res ult s automatically in impact of winter heating bills Sharon Wise, Middleport.
Discharges - Eleanor
smaller gas bills during evenly over the year."
Werry,
Bertha !son, Ethel
months of greatest gas usage.
Sarson,
Allen
Lewis, James
The decision to join is up to
Parker,
Daisy
Glassburn,
each individual customer, the
Pearl
Reedes,
and Dian
manager emphasized. The
Hysell.
company simply offers the
plan as a free service for any

!

lHE PUFFED

Pedwin.

THE
SHOE BOX
Middleport . Ohio

1-------------------~-----·
·
I

f Area Deaths

!

Virginia Hess Hartenbach
IiERMAN CHEATHAM
and
two sons : Kip HarHennan
Franklin
tenbach,
Pt . Pleasant, and
Cheatham, 59, Col umbus,
.
Jeff
Harten
bach, Gallipolis.
died Monday evening at his
One
granddaughter
survives.
borne following a six-month
One
brother
and
one
sister
. lon g illne ss. A former
in
death
.
preceded
him
, residentofthePomeroy area,
Funeral services will be
Mr. Cheatham was the son of
held
2 p.m. Friday at the
the late Herman and Bessie,
Crow-Hussell.
Funeral HOme
Moore Ch eatham.
with Rev. John Bradley ofSurvivin g are two sons,
Terry and Frankie, both of ficiating .
Burial will be'in Kirkland
Columbus; two aunts, Carrie
Memorial
Garden. Friends
Moore and Neva Moore, both
may
call
at
the funeral home
of Pomeroy, ~nd several
from
6
until
9 p.m. on Thurs- .
cousins.
day
.
Funeral services will be
held Thursdayat 2 p.m. atthe MRS. ARVILLA DONAHUE
Woodyard Funeral Home ,
Mrs.· Arvilla Donahue, 91,
East State Street, Columbus. Route4, Pomeroy, died early
A.E . HARTENBACH
this morning at Veterans
A. E . Hartenbach, 72, a Memorial Hospital. Born
resident of2900 Jackson Ave., June 9, Ul871n Rowan County,
Pt. Pleasant, died at 5:09 Ky., Mrs. Donahue. was the
p.m. Wednesda y in Pleasant daughter of the late James
Valley
Hospital
after and Lizzie Hardin Pettit. She
becoming ill at work .
was also preceded in death by
He was an 'electrician with her husband, William A.
the 1301 Mountaineer Project DonahUe, ln 1966; a son,
at New Haven, a member of Carmel; and five sisters.
th e Main Street Baptist
Su rviving are
three
Church and a member of the daughters , Mrs . William
IBEW Union 317 , Huntington , (Eula ) Elan ,' Pomeroy ; Mrs.
W. Va . He was also a ret ired Wavne 1Marie ) Tillman,
member of the IBEW Club Ponce, Puerto Rico, and Mrs.
317.
Wayne (Florence ) Johnson ,
He was born July 30, 1905, Le~ington , Ky .; a son, Arlie
in Pomeroy, son of the late B. Donahue, Bradenton, Fla.;
Albert Earl and Rosa three sisters, Mrs. Mannie
Gloeck ner Hartenbach .
Swimm. Mansfield; Mrs. Ada
He os survived by his wife , Bates , Fleming sburg, Ky .,
and Mrs. Maudi e Daugherty,
Qearwater, Fla.; a brother,
Arnold Pettit, Clearwater,
Fla .; Twelve grandchildren,
11 great-greal children , and
two great - great - grandchildren .
'
Mrs. Donahu e was amember of the Apostolic
Church of Rutland . Calling
hour&amp;will be from 2-4 p.m.
and 7-9 p.m. Friday at the
Rawling s-Coats Funeral
Home in Middleport . Funeral
services will be held Sunday
at 2 p.m. at the DennyNorthcut and Son Funeral
Home in Morehead, Ky ., with
the Rev . Damond Adams and
the Rev. Ray Rouse officiating·. Burial will follow in
the Pokesville Cemetery , Salt
Lake, Ky.

Come As You Are.
W~ tl' nO! fu~~y We t('ttliH · th&lt;~! yOu don I h ;w ~ .\II dt~. y tO ~pt&gt;nd
on [&gt;,H1k1n g ll, n(l m,\r,) umc~ you ncn t hrt11e the lime 10 h 1 u~ o~
\lil t' I &lt;•I f"llll on yout be ~t &lt;l n.' ~~ So lot your con \l t! nl ~ nce . we o ffe r

(1rlvt: rn L&gt;~nh1ng lu'&gt;t clrr.. t' ur
o· w.\ 11&lt; up
10 our wrndow.
.. nd ...,. ~ II pr'J(l'~' vour d t·r&gt;O~II or w r !hdr~w.\ 1 o\5 (]uk Ko\S 11 wr n ~ 1
\j n rnore ~1.1n&lt;1rng on lmt·' wht" n you rt&gt; pre ~ ~e1t for lime You
&lt;11!" r t:v.. n h,we 10 sren on e loorrns rde the lxl nk ' So ne.o:r Timf'
you ""'"nr ro ~ " "t: rrm e com e ,, ~ yo u ~ 1e . ro o ur &lt;1 ril.'e rn wtnc1 ow !

A Home Bank
Fur

Surviving

Meigs County
People

RACINE
HOME NATIONAl

BANK
RACINE

MRS. JENNIE HANSHER
Mrs. Jennie U. Hansher,
Sycamore Street, Middleport,
died early this morning at
Veterans Memor ial Hospital
at the age of 93. Born Oct . 22,
18114 in Ohio, she was the
daughter of the late Joseph
and Phoebe Ralph Fife. In
addition to her parents, Mrs.
Hansher was preceded in
deat h· by her husband ,
James, three siSters, three
brothers : and two halfbrothers.

OHIO

are

I

.

'

Begins Friday, July 28th at ,..30 a.;m.
Sale Prices Limited To Stock On . Hand
.

.

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8
SALE

MEN'S

SALE

Women's
Tops· and Shorts

SPORT COATS
Sizes 36 to 46, good
selection of · colors
and paHerns .

.. Regular and
Extra Sizes.

1h

- ~OFF

PRICE

sun dresses. Months
sizes thru 7 to 14.

20% Savings On Our Remaining Stock
of Summer furniture.

Short Sleeve Knit Shirts · ·
Size sma ll through extra large, crew neck, collared styles.
a good selection.

SAVE 30%
WEMBLEY TIES

HANES

POCKET T SHIRT

Solid colors , sizes S, M land XL. Buy for work or sports
wear.

Selected from regular stock, solids and fancies. Values to
$6.50.

. ,. .

LlffiE BOYS ·
JEANS
AND
KNIT
SHIRTS

FINAL CLEARANCE

MEN'S
SHORT

MEN'S DRESS
SLACKS .

M.EN'S
SUMMER WEIGHT
JACKETS
Final clearance sale, just 50
jackets in the group. Sizes S, M,
L, and XL. While they last. ~

lh PRICE

NO. 73

.

The World Today
. WAsHIN~TON (UP])- U. S. District Judge John Slrica's
mhng there 1s no constitutional bar to women serving on
war~lpa Is .being hailed by women's rights advocates as
operung doors that have been closed since the republic was

born.
, A_ woman lawyer Involved in the c~ called it a
significant door-opener '' because, ''The military tends to be a
sacred cow, a traditional male preserve. But with this decision
the judge was able .to see beyond those hoary traditions to the
real consUt~tlonal principle Involved."

BLEGRADE; Yugoslavia (UPI) - In a move seen 'a s
presaure on Cuba to end its military Involvement in Africa,
Egypt wants the non--aligned conference to refuse Havana the
honor of hosting next year's summit, at least lor the time
being.
Egypt 'sstate minister for foreign affairs, Butros Gall, iate
Thw-sday night denounced Soviet Interference and Cuba's
mllltary Intervention with liOIDe tG,tllliLtroopo In Africa.

SPORT SHIRTS
M. L. XL sizes , cotton arid

'Double knit polyester ,
solid color and pattern.s .
Size JO to 46 waist,
Hlected from regular
stock
for
quick

S,
polyester blends, permanent
pr.ess. solid colors and patterns.

clearance.
Regularly
St 1.95 to St9 .95 .

lh PRICE

WAREHOUSE CLEARANCE

LAWN BOY
MOWER SALE

h. PRIC

1

CLEARANCE PRICES

-Summer Handbags -Junior Sportswear
-Buster Brown -Summer Jewelry
'25.00 On Any l.awnboy In Stock. -Women's and Girls' Swimwear
-Junior Denim Shorts
-Junior Jogging Outfits
-Children's Sum mer Clothing
-Boys 8 to 20 Short SleM Knit Shirts
-Men's Wrangler 14 OL Denim Jeans
-Men's &amp; Boys' Cut Off Shorts

WOMEN'S
DRESS SALE

SALE

SALE
WOMEN'S

SUNDRESSES

COORDINATE

Junior Sizes

SPORTSWEAR
Special savings

Seven-point plan proposed
SPRINGFIELD, Ohio (UPI) - ·A se.ven-j)Oint program to
Increase overseas markets lor America's _agricultural
products has been proposed by Rep. Clarence J. Brown RDhio.
·
·
'
. "The issue of agricultural policy is one which will affect
our economic future and well-being," Brown told a meeting
Thursday of the Ohio Chapter of the American Society of Farm
Managers and Rural Appraisers.

WASHINGTON (UP!) Inflation roared ahead in
June as the cost of food ,
housing and cars pUShed up
all consumer prices by 0.9
percent for the •third straight
month, the government
reported today.
Duriilg the first half of 1978,
the prices Americans paid ln
supermarkets , department
stores and other retail !llltiets
climbed at a compounded
annual rate of 10.4 percent.
That was the steepest gain
over a prolonged period since
the 11 .7 percent increase in
the six-month period ending
in January 1975, the Labor
Department said.
The departmertt said prices
increased 11.4 percent during
the last three mooths alone .
To make matters worse,
the

average

American 's

Former student arraigned

spokesman told the News that
the Federal Highways Admin istration has a large

backlog of pla ns that have
been submitted by the State.
He addf d,that just as suon
as the Sla te receives the
bridge plaqs back, they will
advertise for bid:! on the
remain ing contracts . . Until
then, he said, there is nothing
that can be done .
The Ravenswood News
story also said an effort was
made on March 9 to ascertain
when the remaining contracts for the bridge would be
awarded. At that time, according to the article, the
stale said "all remaining
contracts would be advertised fo' bid,s in April,
May and June,"
On May :n, the State said,
"t he cont racts for the West

. FRIDAY,
JULY 28 ' 1978
.

Virginia and Ohio approaches
would be let for bid on June 6.
The date set for the steel
st ruct ure was June 27."
Another call was pla&lt;-ed on
June 6 and at that time, the
state said "all remaining
co.ntracts have been sent to
the Federal Highways Administration for review.
It is now almost Au~ust and
th e State still · has not
received approval fi"om the
Federa l • Highways Ad· ·
ministration . Despite this,
the State is now projecting an
August bid advertisement.
When asked directly by the
News if there has been any
change in plans. Gallagher
said, "!'lo, absolutely none.
The delay is directly attributable by the delay of the
plans from the Federa l Highways Administration .
.

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Inflation
•
Increases

buying power fell 0.4 percent
in June and was down 2.3
percent over the past year.
KENT, Ohio (UP!) - Newly elected Cuyahoga County
The administration has
Democratic party Chainnan Tim Hagen, whose political projected that inflation would
organization is backing the recall of Cleveland Mayor·Dennis rise 7.2 percent during all of
Kuclnich, says the chief executive of Ohio's"!argest city "taps 1978.
'"
the real frustrations ofthe people" who elected him.
However , the d!lllble-digit
Speaking Thursday at the Robert A. Taft Institute Govern- inflation pace of the first half
ment Seminar for higb school social science teachers, Hagen · makes that prediction
said the party has a "responsibility to rid the system of people extremely doubtful ,
who don't ul)derstand politics·. "
according to While House
inflation counselor Robert
StraUss.
The consumer price index
TAlLAHASSEE, Fla . (UP!) - A former Utah law student .
will be arraigned today, charged with the Jan. 15 slayings of
two Florida State University coeds and the savage beatings of
three .other women,
·,
The charges were returned in an Indictment against
Theodore Bundy, 31, late Thursday night at the Leon Couhty
Jail. The indictment says Bundy strangled and beat to death
Chi Omega sorority sisters Lisa Levy, 20, and Margaret
Bowman, 21, both of St. Petersburg, as they slept.
'
0 I

Chairman denounces Kucinich

Work on .the bridge t9 span
the Ohio · River bet ween
Ravenswood and the Great
Bend area of Meigs County,
has been delayed due to a
backlog of plans in th e
Federal HighWafS Ad·
ministration, it was re.vealed
this week. •
The Ravenswood News, in
a story this Wednesday , said
efforts made to find out when
the remaining co ntract s
would be let for bids "have·
proved to be as unsatisfactory as in Ure ~st. "
According to Pat Gallagher
of the West Virginia
Department of Highways ,
officials in West Virginia say
they ·hope to advertise for
blds on some contracts by
August 29 and hopefully on
others by September 19.
The highways department

en tine

. POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Pressure put on Cuba

ON
KNIT SHIRTS

ON JEANS

VOL. XXIX

at

'Door-opener' for women

SAVE 30%

SAVE 50%

•

e

MEN'S

Lawn and Patio Furniture Sale

FOR

AROUND-There will be a 'sllgbt change at the Mason County ' f'a~ this
year. Instead of the MoWJtalneer Regional Fiddlers' Contest, a two-hour Fiddlers and
Pickers Concert ~tll_be held Samr~y, Aug. 12, beginning at 6 p.m. Te.n area musicians
from both Weat VU:IZIIIIB af!d Ohto _will, sta~e the """""~'~· Shown m'acticinR their act are
-ll_lree of those mU81c1ans, left to right,_:Jim Gordon, Gallipolis, on the five ... tring banjo;
liary Boles, Leon, on the rhythm guitar; and Bernard Connolly, Mason, on the fiddle.

Save one-third on
dresSy dresses · •nd

WAREHOUSE CLEARANCE

2

LITTLE.
GIRLS
DRESSES

for June stood at 195.3 ,
meaning that goods and
services that cost $100 in 1967
were priced at $195.30 last
month.
Food costs climbed 1.3
percent last month, the sixth
straight month of steep increases, the department said.
·~The
June
increase
stemmed from sharply
higher prices for beef and a
continued rapid rise in prices
of other foods such as poultry,
dairy products, cereal and
bakery products, fats and oil
and sugar and sweets, " the
department said.
Beef prices gained 5.6
percent last month, more
than double the May increase
and almost as much as the
record 6.6 percent inLTease
recorded in April.
The cost of beef was nearly
3! percent above the October
1977 level when the current
upward trend began .
Overall, food costs were up
at an annual rate of nea rly' 20
percent during the past three
months .
• The prices of food
purchased in grocery stores
rose 1.4 percent last month,
which was less than the 1.8
percent rise in May and the
2. 4 percent advance'·m·-A'J!til.
"'he department 's index for
(Contmued on page 101

extra sizes.

Tax cut starts its . way

through Congress
WASHINGTON (UP! ) - Americans who sell their
homes would be entitled to a tax-free profit of up to
$100,000 - but only once in a lifetime - under a tax-eut
measure that has started its way through Congress
The bill, approved 25-12 by the House Ways and M~ans
Committee Thursday night after a week of wrangling,
also provides smallrncome-tax cuts for individuals and a
capitalgains tax reduction - f•om 49 percent to 35 percent
- that President Carter called a "windfall for
millionaires. ••
The measure would raise the personal exemption from
the current $750 to $1 ,000.
The bill, which has a long way to go before it becomes
law, would not take effect until 1979.
_The bill would provide tax cuts totaling $16.2 billion,
With more·than $10 billion earmarked for individuals. The
ca pital-ga ins taxes would be reduced on profits from longterm mvestments such as property or stocks and bonds.
So.me of the lost tax revenues would be offset by $120
, mllhon expected wbe collected from a new minimum tax
aimed at millionaires who now pay no tax ,
. The committee. has not provided exact ligures yet for
IndiVIduals. One committee source said individual tax
cuts likely. would be no more than 10 percent in any
bracket. However, most would be considerably less with
th~ average from 5 percent w 7 percent.
'
!Cunt1nued on page 101

Five from

PET£ R 0 S E
9·GAME·H ITTING·STREA

Meigs on
Rio panel

HDN.· EST TD PETE

,\ v ,.._..A
.
'

. IT 'S A HIT - While Pe.te Rose is ma king a I:it with the ba seball'fans of the world Louise
G1lmore, Pomeroy, zs makmg a hit local.Jy. Every day in front of her home on.Union Ave ., a
new Sign IS put up, made by Louise honoring the Big Red Machine' The latest ·
made after Rose hit for the 39th consec uti ~e game. The uniformed player was also;;,~~;"~~
Lou1se. She composed the followmg poem m honor of Rose·
·
Sweet Swinging Pete , He 's hard to beat
.
He'd rather hit than ea t, Sweet swingng Pete.
Hard hitUng Rose , Always on his toes,
Everybody knows, Hard hitting Rose.

Probe of UMWgoverning
board has been demanded

Workers get 4-day reprieve

SUSAN E. Hannum,
Eastern high scbool
student, has been selected
to perform with the 1978
. All-Ohio State Fair Youth
Choir. She will sing
soprano.

The !25th celebration of
the Ohio State Fair Is
honored to host such ilo
outstanding group of young
vocalists. The choir will
make a total of 64 a(&gt;'
pearances at the Fair,
slated lor August 15
through the 27.

CHARLESTON, W.Va .
"On behalf of the UMWA
(UP!) - An attorney for a fi zzled, but presumably
" We are contemplating at
planned
to
say
more
on
the
Miners
lor Recall , I would this point other actions to
Striking Tuscaloosa, Ala., city workers have a four-day dis~ iaent group bent on
reprieve oo an order to wcrk or be fired, while in San Antonio removing United Mine matter today at a noon news request that an inunedia te redress this usurpation of the
investigation be conducted constituti onal rights of the
Texas, pollee are riding shotgun for garbage trucks in t...; Workers President Arnold conference In Charleston.
But
H.
John
Rogers,
a
i(lto
the flagrant violation" of ra nk and file by the
bitter walkout by trash collectors.
·
Miller from office ha s
In Memphis, Tenn., police Thursday marched on City Hall demanded a government lawyer retained by "Miners the union co nstitut io n; In te rnati onal
Executive
to press wage demands and their fire department colleagues, Investigation of the union's for Recall," wired Labor Roger s' two - se nt ence Board." Rogers.said, without
elaborating.
who staged a walkout earlier this month , were reported:at governing board after it Secretary Ray Marshall to message sa1d '
"You may consider this as
another impasse In contract talks.
,
failed to consider recall ask for an investigation Into
By a 14-S vote, the 24-man
rejection of the recall a formal com plaint filed on . IEB sma shed the recall petipetitions.
Miller, In a buoyant mood, peti\ions by the UMW's behalf of the above group ." tions on grounds that Miller's
Executive
A news conference was set foes failed to follow proper
expressed satisifaction International
at
its
for
noon Aug. 2 in Cha rleston uni o n co n s t itutiona l
Board
this
week
Thursday the movement had
Denver,
Colo.,
meeting.
·
by
the
Marmet-based group . pro cedur es. Four board
Foote Mineral dompilny's average rate for aU comIn Meigs County Common
Graham Plant bas been peting units in this industry
membe~s
ab~tained,
Court,
three
including Miller, secretary- Pleas
recognized by the National category ts 2.98.
dissol
uti
ons
of
marriages,
treasurer Bill Esselstyn and
Safety Council for Its
The award was accepted on
vice president sam Church. five suits for divorce and one
exemplary on-the-job safety the behalf of Graham Plant
One was absent.
· ~ suit to quiet title . have been
performance for 1977.
employees by WilHam Beard,
Miller interpreted the vote filed .
The
National Safety Plant Manager.
as a sign that hts troubles Filin g . for dissolution
Council selected Foote
were
J31nes E . Mil'!'ere fading.
Mineral Conipany for an
Portland,
and
ler,
award In II! Metals Section
COLUMBUS (UP!) earller this month.
Cleveland
prior
to
the
vote.
Pamela
K.
MiUer
,
sa
me
Safety Contest, Steel Plant
Democratic
gubernatorial · The lieutenant governor
I
Celeste
's
remarks
were
address;
Benwood
D.
Division, aMual on-the-job
candidate U . Gov . Richard also said he will remain
made
during
a
news
Bickers,
Norfolk,
Va
.,
and
safety contest based on the
F. Celeste said Thursday he neutral in Cleveland's
Edith A. Bickers, Rt. J,
lowest . occupational injury
remains
opposed
to mayoral recall election, conference, called to urge his
Republican
opponent
Gov
.
The
Meigs
County
Health
Racine ; Margaret Barrett,'
and lllne.. incidence rates
reinstating the death penalty scheduled lor AUg. 13.
James
A.
Rhodes
to
aceept
Department
is
conducting
Rutland,
a"d James Barrett,
achieved by Natlooal Safety
in Ohio.
He added that he advised
debate invitations.
Langsville.
Immunization
Clinics
every
Council member
AI; a member of the Ohio the . Cuyahoga
County
Rhodes says he will decline Tuesday . (except holidays )
Filing for divorce were
orpnlzations duriniJ 1977.
House, Celeste said he voted Democratic 'party to stay
he
doesn't
debates,
because
Iron\
9-11
·a
~
m
.
and
1-3
p.m.
Penny
Jean Williams, Rt. l,
The
Graham . Plant
. to abolioh the death penalty In neutral on the recall of Mayor
believe
they
significantly.
add
Rutland,
Parents
are
reminded
to
ag' inst Dana Ray
quaUIIed for its safety award
favor of a "meaningful" llfe Dennis Kuclnlch, but the
1bls week'• wlulng Ohio
to
a
candidate's
abl~ty
to
bring
·
immunization
recordl
Williams,
Rt, 4, Pomeroy ;
baaed on Ill Incidence rate of Leltery nambera:
senlA!nce with no posaibility of party voted last week , by a 3
communicate
his
positions
to
With
them.
· Rt . 4,
Harold
Hudnell,
.30 occupational Injuries and
to I margin, to support the
parole.
.
Gold aamber - 7,
the public.
·
As a specia I service to the Pomeroy , against Judy Ann
m-.tnvolving days away
Celeste
said
his
position
on
recall
&lt;!rive.
'
Wbite lltlmber - lt.
Celeste said he believed pt.'Ople of the Salem Center Jfudnell, Marietta; Doris A.
from work per two hundred
the sub~ct hasn't changed. · However, he said his
Blue number - 438.
Rhodes
would change his area, Immunizations will be Starcher, Middleport, against
thouund employee-hours
Dhio'a death penalty law position waBII't made known
Extra Caob
mind,
if
the
contest a)lpears available at the Salem Center Stanley E. Starcher, Orrville,
wortlld. For comparilon, the
was ruled unconstitutional by to
elected
precinct . close.
7etU7.
F(lemcntary School from 9:30 Ohio; Jeanette L. Davis,
the U.S. Supreme Court C001 mltteemen and WOOlen in
a.m,
to 1 p.m. on August 4. Syracuse, a~ainst Robert
' \

Eugene Davis, Syracuse;
Nioka V. Zimmerman ,
Pomeroy, against Lester E.
Zimmerman, Pomeroy.
Carl E. Moore and 'Mabel
Moore, Rt. 3, Pomeroy,' filed
suit to quiet title against
Thomas H. Headley , address
unknown, et al.

Celeste remains opposed
to reinstating death-penalty

SAVE

Immunization
Clinics set

Junior, Missy, Half Sizes

SAVE 35%

Elberfl!lds Will
Be Closed All
O.y Monday,
July 31 For
Inventory

Rio Grande College and
Community College today
announced the formation of a
blue ribbon panel . composed
of residents of Gallia, Meigs,
Jack&amp;m, and Vinton counties,
to promote community in·
vollw'ement in cultural events
sponsored by the college. The
paqel will be chaired by Ms.
Ky.le Mari e St iffl er, an
e&lt;eculive of Stiffler Stores,
Inc., a 15-unit department
store chain . Ms. Stiffler will
act as community liaison for
the college's artist and lecture series.
Ms. Diana Ca rsey, Mr. Bill
Qui ckie,
Mrs .
Clara
Thoma s, Mrs . Ja ck Carsey and Mr s . Maida
Moo re wil l serve as
Mei gs county's r~presen·
tatives on the panel,' and will
promote the college's artist
and lecture series .
To enco urage community
participation, RGC-CC is for
the first time time offering
area residents an opport unity
to purchase season tickets to
its artist and lecture series.
The series for 1978-1979 includes appearances by Jeane
Dixon, Robert Vaughn, David
Toma , the National Theatre
Company, and the new Vinton
County Frog Whompers.
The season tickets, which
will ent itle patrons to admission to all fi ve first rate
perfor man ces, may be
purchased from Ms. Carsey,
Mrs. Fultz, Mrs. Thomas,
Mrs. Moo re, Mrs. Carsey, or
Mr . Qui cki e, during th e
months of July and August .
Family season tickets cost
$25. Tickets for a couple are
$20, and an individual season
ticket is $15.
For more informa ti on
concerning the RGC-CC a rtist
and lect ure series, call Ms.
Carsey !Jll2-2780 or write :
Office of Student Development , c-o Mr. Steve Markwood, Rio Grande College,
Rio Grande, Ohio 45674.

9 actions filed in
common pleas court

PLmt receives award

on regular and

two

daughters, Mrs. Gert rude
Dittmar, Zanesville, and
Mrs. Burdell (Katheryn )
McKinney, Middleport ; four
grand children , and four
great-grandchildren . She was
a member of the First Baptist
Church in Gallipolis.
Serv ices will be held
Sunday at 2 p.m. at the
Funeral
Rawlings -Co ats
Home in Middleport with the
Rev . Clllford B. Coleman.
Burial Will follow In the
Che shire -Gravel Hill
Cemetery. Friends may call·
at the funeral home from 2-4
p.m. and 7-9 p.nt. , Saturday.

Federal backlog delaying
bridge construction work

ELB.ERFELDS '1ft .POM E Y
Fl NAL-CLEARANCE SAL .
SUMMER CLOTHING

Weather
Mo· '.ly SUMy and a little
Saturday, with
lhuo,der!mowers possible by
evening, and highs in the :nid
Bus.
Probability
of
precipitation 20 " .rcent
today, 10 percent tonight , 30
percent Saturday.
Wl , mer

GRIDDERS TQ MEET
All boys interested in
playing football at Southern
High School are to meet
Monday at the !;chool at 7
p.m. '

'
'

\

,

.

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