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                  <text>i).jl- The Sundoy Tunes-Sentinel, SundH y, May t l . 19/H

Gallia sheriff

Inductees listed
GALLIP OILIS ~ Opal
Cremeens. Bill Ste"ens and
Mary Nelson. three veterlln
em ployees of the t~ . C.
Murphy Stores here will be
inducted int o the G. C.
MurphJ· Veteran s Club
Monday ~t the Hilt on Hoteltn
Pittsburgh. They have 15 or
more years uf scn·in .

report is given

GALI.IPOLIS
rour
GA I.l.I POLIS - Ga lll a persons were charged
County Sheriff James Mont· following in ves tigati on of
gornery Saturday released four traffic accidents rriday
his quarterly report regard· by the Gallia-Meigs Post
mg com pia mt s, public State Highway Patrol.
Ja ckie L. Radcliff, 38,
service calls, number of
prisone rs boo ked and meals Tioga, W. Va . was charged
with DWI following an ac·
served .
Here is the gist of the cident at 8 a.m. on US 35 at
report : January
73 the junction to SR 7. The
prisoners, 911 mea ls served, patrol said Radcliff failed to
21 major publi c serv ice stop his car which struck a
complaint s, 2,6 19 public vehicle driven by Ronald L.
service calls. February - 109 Wickline, 33, llenderson. W.
prisoners. 1,006 meals scr· Va. There was moderate
ved, 29 major public service damage.
Elizabeth J . Salyer, 18,
com plaint s, 1,246 public
scrvi&lt;·e calls. March - 133 Gallipolis, was booked for
prisone rs. 1,046 mea ls ser· failure to stop within the
ved, 45 major public service assured clear distance
com pl a int s. 3,264 pu blic following an accident at 7:30
service calls April - 109 a.m. on US 35 al the junction
prisoners, 1,053 meals. to SR \60 . Officers said the
served , 62 major public Salyer vehicle struck the rear
service comp laint s, 2,992 end of a car driven by Robert
public service calls.
C. Blue, 36, Rio Grande.
Money deposited in the There was minor damage.
Joyce L. Robie, 35 , Rt. I.
genera l fund for 1978 (up to
May 1 was $2,725 .1 2.
Bidwell , was cited for im·
proper backing , following a

Gmeway Chwer Highlights
of the evening banquet will be
remarks lo dub members by
Murphy Prcsidenl William T.
Withers (l!ld Chairman S.
Wamc Hubinsu n.

Pool rules
outlined
at meeting

Employees with 15 years or
more servlef' mclude Bill
Mi lls, Boyd Stover. Huy
Chose, .Ja net Scott. Mary
Casto, Dorothy Jefler&gt;, Sarah
Fellure. Mli drcd Sisson and
Vlvia rme Tr,, wbri dge.
GALLI PO !.IS - James T.
The G. C. Murphy Cum·
Boster. Ga llipolts City
pany Veterans' Club, which
Sanitarian, recet ttly attended
was organized tn 1940. now
an in·servt ce trai ning
has
4,886
member~
program pertaining to the
representing 134,000 y·ears'
Swimming Poo l Rules uf the
service. The 224 employees
Ohio Samtan Co de. The
who will join the club this
instru ctor 'wa s
Steve
year represent 3,3li0 years'

.JnHansrm. Ci\'il Enl!inecr. of

service. Ea ch will rct'eive an the Oh1 u Department of
attractive 15 year pin, a
Health .
ce rt ifi cate of membership
The topic~ cuvt~ r ed in the
and will a dve~nce lu tht• fourpro gram were : pion ap·
week vu l'i:ltlon plan.

proval. dcstgn , health and
Murphy veterans atl aming safety , operati on. disi n·
25 years' se rvicf~ rct:l' ive. un
fection illld quality of wat er,
the dat e uf thetr 25th An·
varian ces,
and
un niversary. an engra ved wrist
watch (if ;m l'qurli cl mount of const it utiunality dause .

Murp h)

"' ~ ~~ ·k H..,

•
Review
TV. . .m
By JOAN HANAUER
UPI Television Wrfter
NEW YORK tUPII- "The Bastard" mini-series boasts
historica l adventure, sword-play, the lowest cut gowns this
side of decency - and th€ cleaned up title of "The Kent Family
Ch ronicle" in some areas of the country.
The four-hour drama takes' place at the time of the
American Revolution and stars handsome Andrew Stevens in
the title role with a big-name backup cast that includes Noah
Beery. Tom Bosley, Buddy Ebsen, Lorne Greene, James
Gregory, Olivia lliiSsey, Cameron Mitchell, Harry Morgan ,
Patricia Neal. Eleanor Parker, Donald Pleasance, William
Shatner, Ba rry Sullivan and Keenan Wynn. Among others.
The two-part adaptation of the John Jakes ' novel is being
broadcast in late May or early June on about 100 television
sta tions throug h the country (check local listings). It is a
product of "Operation Prime Time," an attempt to offer
stations - and audiences - an alternative to regular network

r(•cogn iti on

COOPERSTOWN. N.Y.
for C'lllllpC:I!l) scrncr and
t
UP\
1- The Detroit Tigers·
advan cl' to a ft\'t'-Wl'e k
!'\e11·
York
Mets Ball of Fame
vacation pl an Empluy i•t:s
game
scheduled
for Aug . 7 is
comp\cung 3~. 40 and 45
H
lready
so
ld
out
and no
yea rs' ser\'lcr rer tt \'CSpLTI&lt;ll
further
;.~ppli
c:lllons
can be
recogntt wn cl\ the reunion.
arct·p
tt•d
.
1be b USIIlt.'.'iS !llt'd Ill~ wl! i
Dnubleda1· rield , where the
be cnndu ctccl b~· clu b
tr:~dilt nnHI game ts played ,
president J . 0. ('r()uch. aft er
which nrw mcrn bl'r s Will br seat.' less tha n 10,000, and all
received \\ it h luncheon and til'kt't S were sold May H, th€
an aft crnnnn b1"1Clt nde un _Lhe first d.ay they became i:lva ila·
ble

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e
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C£state:'
(.;]~,Q~

:' programming.
In addition to "The Bastard," " Prime Time" will present
11
tcle\~sio n versions or Jrwin Shaw's ~~Evening in 8)'Ulntium
and Boward Fast's "The Immigrants.. "
"The Bastard," with or without its laundered title, tells th€
story of Phillipe Charbonneau, raised by his French mother
Patricia Neal but really the illegitima te son of Britain's Lord
Amber ly , the duke of Kentland.
By
In the opening episode young Charboneau tries to claim his
Willis T. Leadingham : inheritance but winds up being hounded out of England by th€
Realtor
• legitimate Arnberlys and heads for the New World . He arrives
• m Boston in 1771, cha nges his name to Philip Kent and seeks
e his fortune as the American Revolution revs up.
When Philip isn 't putting down Lord North, fi ghting or
engaging in swordplay (he was taught swordsmanship by the
M ost old h ames are 'en • teenage Marquis de Lafayette whose life he save~ ). he is
If you wanl more house
well •
for '(Our doii M you hav€ we ll est abliS hed,
wrestling and engaging in other sports with women whose
good cause to 100k ov€r developed neighborhoods . •
necklines plunge almost to th€ navel.
older houses Sui there are There w1ll be no wa1 hng for •
The whole thing is fast-moving fun , never taking itself too
st
r
eets
!o
be
p
aved,
rt~wers
•
otl"l er good reasom for
1o b@ connec11!d or !.Choals e seriously but stoppin@ lhill o\cle ol satire .
sh opp\n g the ol d on e!i 1oo
For one t h1ng . there are to be buil t All that 1s gotng e
Unfor\unately, in many areas "The Bastard". will conflict
to gra ce the nei9 hborhood 1
simply more old houses
wi
th
CBS' "The Daln Curse." It also will coincide with "Just
IS pr obably al ready there, e
tha n new ones For every
Me and You," a romantic comedy NBC will broadcast May 22.
so
that
worrymg
abou
t
the
1
ne w house that wtll go up
this year there are some &lt;15 fu ture wdl ha ve been done • 9·11 p .rn .. Eastern time.
The comedy was written by Louise Lasser , best known as
tor you al ready
I
ex1s fin q homes &lt;"iready on
"Mary Bartman, Mary Hartman."
the market
Ma ny nldE&gt;r homes
"Just Me and You" stars Miss Lasser as Jane Alofsin, a
!hose built
Espec i al ly
compulsive talker and eater who answers an ad to share
before World War II off er
If there is anyt hing we
driving chores from New York to California .
mor e abudrtn1 space than can do to help you i n the
The car's owner is a computer salesman Charles Grodin
new homes do
a spec1 etl field of real estate plea se •
attract ion If rou ha .. e d phone or drop in at • who is separated fr om his wife. The most exciting thing that
large and grow 1ng tam1ly LEADINGHAM
REAL I happens on the trip is a fl at tire.
but a l1m1ted budget
ESTATE , I l l Second Ave ., t
Miss Lasser 's mannerisms and her charac ter's
Gallipolis . Phone 446 -76,9 . e personality made at least one viewer hope she wouldn't get the
We' re here to helo!
e guy in the end. Actually, they wind up fully clothed, kissing in
the Pacific surf. Why ?

:•
•.'

ee• e • et ee

111ishap at 1:20 p.m. on Cla rk
Dr. off Bulaville Hd. State
troopers report ed the Robie
ca r backed int o a parked autn
uwned by Ga ry E. Wallace,
Rt. 1. Bidwell.
John C. Bostic, 58, Rt. 3,
Gallipolis, was char~ed with
failu re to yield the right r•f
way following an accident at

· GA LLIPOLIS - No drugs
7:20 a.m. Satu r~ay at the were missing in a breaking
junction of US 3li and old SR and entering Thursday nigh(
35 .
or ea rly Friday morning at
According to offi cers, Warehime Clinic, 530 Second
Bostic's vehicle turned into Ave.
the path of an auto driven by
Gallipolis Pulice Chief John
Juhnn y A. Saffles, 31, Taylor said entry was made
r.allipolis. No one was in· by breaking a side window at
jured . There was minor the ground level. A big hold
damage .

was punctured in a door
entering \he clinic owned b,·
Dr . Donald R. Warehime,
D.O.
Va nd alism
was
in· '
vestigated Friday at 1136
Second Ave. where Joh n
Burllle report ed someone put
grass and dirt in the tar]ks of
hi s gasolin e distributing
trucks.

WASHINGTON (UPI ) College tuition tu credits
highlight
a
crowded
congressional calendar this
week in advance of a long
weekend for the Memorial
Day holiday.
A bill to provide the
country's first tuition tax
credits - up to $250 a year
per college student - reaches
the House floor at midweek,
with a fight expected over
attempts to Include credits
for tuition at private elemen·
tary and secondary schools
as well.
In addition, a long-awaited

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
REPEAT SALE
SERT A MATTRESSES

'68 EACH PIECE

ONE LOW PRICE

VOL. XXIX

$68~. pc.

$68.~. pc

$68~.pc

TWIN GENTLE
FIRM

FULL GENTLE
FIRM

QUEEN GENTLE

FlRM
Solqln 2'pc . seh only

Three court
actions filed

'68

$68ea.pc

• .pc

Two actions for money and
a third for divorce have been
filed In the Meigs Co unty
Common Pleas Court
Th e Pomeroy Cement
lllock Co., Pomeroy, has filed
actions against Euge ne
Heeves, Route 4, Pomeroy,
for $666.18, and Richard K.
Jeffers, Route 2. Pomeroy,
for $521.20, both on building
materiel acco unt s.
Mary Catherine Bostic of
Second St.. Midd leport. has
filed for divorce fro m Ronald
E. Bostic, Riverside Apart·
ments, Middleport , charging
gross neglect of dut y and
ex treme cruelty .

'68 . ~
QUEEN FIRM

FULL FIRM

TWIN FIRM

Sold in 2 pc. Set&gt; only

••
••

•

I

....--P-0-M-ER_O_Y-LA-N-DM_A_R_K~, ~;;~~;~;
~

LAWN AND GARDEN

ECONOMY 8 HP LAWN TRACTOR

34 IN. MOWER INCLUDED
Bu rit to ra&lt;c rhc btg mowmg pb&gt; rn

tra: \ Wr! .

~tnde.

:-~ltcr natu r . 3 ·~ rc e d tran~axlc .

l' k&lt;·
di sr

brukcl . dual hcali light &lt; 12X·Mtlll

$6 9gss

POMEROY ·LANDMARK
JACK W. CARSEY, MGR.
Drive A Litfle and Save ALot - Fr.. Delivery within 71 MilesYes! We Serv1ce At Your local Hotpoint Dealer .

Store Hours: B: lO to Ul}-Mitt Closes~~ S:OO P.M.-Serving
Meig s, Gallia &amp; Mason Count ies.

$68 ea.pc.

'68 ~.pc

TWIN EXTRA
FIRM

FULL EXTRA
FIRM

continued its filibuster over
Iabar law revision.
No attempt is scheduled
until . after the recess to
invoke cloture and stop the
Senate debate on the labor
bill, which would ease the
process of labor organizing
and provide penalties for
employers who use antiunion
tactics.
.The mere fact the tuition
tax credit has reached the
House floor is a · victory
eubninating years of work by
its advocates.
President Carter opposes
tuition tax credits in favor of

SS8 ~.pc

QUEEN EXTRA
FIRM
Sold in 2 pc . .... only

expandi ng current dire ct
education grant programs.
Key House
members
including many on the tax:
writing Ways and Mea ns
Committee, also have
opposed tax credits because
of their cost.
Under the bill to be debated
Wednesday, a parent could
subtract, direct from taxes
owed , 25 percent of the cost of
college tuition in a year, up to
a mlllCimum tax saving of
$100 in 1978 (after August),
$150 m 1979 and $250 in 1980.
Advocates say that despite
(Continued on page 10)

•

at y

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

DAVID R. SIMONTON

Simonton
promoted

•

HOTEL PERFECT SLEEPER MATTRESS AND
BOXSPRINGS. CHOOSE FROM TWIN, FUll
OR QUEEN SIZES

ANGEI..S CAMP, Calif. (UP! ) - "Last Chance" is
the king of the croakers.
"Last Chance" leaped 18 feet II inches Sunday to
win the 50th annual Calaveras County Jumping Frog
Jubilee contest and earn $300 for its handler.
Bruce llami\ton, 24, a carpenter from Los Altos,
Calif., brought "Last Chance" to the croakers'
"Kentucky Derby" from a secret location In the
Sacramento Delta where he found the fr og.
La st year Hamilton had two entries, and they
placed third and fifth in the competition immortalized
by Mark Twain.
John llolst of San Jose, Calif. , picked up the
second-and thirdiJlace prizes with his "Sunday Best"
and "Ca nal King." "Sunday Best" recorded an 18-8 ~,
leap, and "Canal King " went 18-8.
Hamilton sa id "Last Chance" would be returned to
its environment in the delta region. He said that he
hunts for his prize croaker in the same area every
yea r, but he would not give the location .
" I'm going to use my prize money for partying,"
he told reporters.
The record in the contest is a little over 20 feet.

David R. Sim onton,
Production Superintendent ·
Maintenance at the Philip
Sporn Plant in New Ha ven,
West Virginia , has been
promoted to Mai nt ena nce
Superint en dent.
Simonton, a native of
Cabell County, West Virginia ,
holds an A.S. M.E.T. Degree
Two accidents and two vehicle . It went off the
from West Virginia Institute
vandalism complaints we're roadway and struck a road
uf Technology, and has just investigated
over the sig n. There was sli ght
returned from the A.E.P.
weekend by the department damage to her vehicle. There
Management School at the of Meigs Coun ty Sheriff
were no injuries and no
University of Michi gan . His
James J. Proffitt .
citation was issued.
employment at Sporn Plant
Friday night, Carl R.
Richard Boring, Pagetown ,
began in 1964 when he was
Thomas, Ro ute I, Long reported that Satu rday as hi s
hired as a Test Engineering Buttom, was southbound on
vehicle was parked along
Aide.
Route 7, near the intersection Route 692 the windshield was
He received a promotion to
Steve Walburn , son of Mr. Performanc e Engi nee r in of Route 7, and the Eagle
and Mrs. Dale E. Walburn , 1967, Maintenance Engi neer Ridge Road when a deer ran
int o the ri gh t si de of his auto.
Middleport, has been elected in
1969,
Performance Th e auto was heavily
president of the Stud ent Engineer, Senior in 1970,
Government Association at Maintenance Supervisor in damaged . Office rs were
Virginia Intermont College, 1970, Performance Super· unable to loca te the deer.
PO INT PLEASANT, W.
The second accident oc·
Bristol, Virginia.
visi ng Engineer in 1973, and curred around 11 p.m. Va . - If you're going to
This organization ex ists to Production Superintendent •
represent th e interests of the Operations In 1976. Last year Saturday on Route 143. Peggy Pleasant Va lley Hospi tal
student s, to secu re the he returned to the Main· Girolami, 17, Pomeroy, was Tuesday you will find things
cooperation of the various tenance Department as a so uthbound on Route 143 temporarily cha nged. The
orga nization s within th e Production Superintendent when she lust control of the regu lar entrance to th e
college, and to promote and served in that capacity ·:···:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:-:-:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:&lt;·:·:·:·:·:·:.:-:-:-:·:·:·:·:· hospita l will be closed fur
resurfacing .
responsibility,
self-control until his recent promotion to
To enter Pleasant Valley,
and loyalty among th e Maintenance Superintendent.
EXTENDED FORECAST
you
will use the new driveway
st udent s. Walburn Is a junior
Wedne sday thr ough on the so uth side below the
The Simontons have three
majoring
in
Business children and reside in New
Friday, ft wf\1 be fair and
PennyFare parking lot
Management at this four· Haven .
warm during the period.
year co-educa tional in ·
Highs wf\1 be near 80 across from F ruth's Phar·
macy . For tomorrow only the
stit utlon In
so uthwest
Wednesday , and the middle
Virginia . ll e is the first male
or upper 80s the next two new driveway will be used as
both an entrance and an exit .
Par1ly
clo
udy
and
not
as
student to hold this office in
days. Lows will be In the
After tomorrow, the new
chill
y
tonight,
with
low
the history of Virginia In·
middl e 50s Wednesday and
driveway
will be closed for
temperatures
ranging
from
tennont's SGA .
In the lower 60s Thursday
completion
and the current
50 to 55. Some sunshine and
and Friday.
reg
ul
a
r
driveway
on the·
warm Tuesday , sca ttered .;.;.;.;.;.:.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:·:·:·:&lt;-:·:·:·:-:-:-:-:·&gt;:·:::-:·: ·:·:·:·~·:
BANQUET SATURDAY
north side will once again be
shower s and high te m·
The 60th annual reunion peratures betwee n 70 and 75.
banquet of the Harrisonville •
Scipio Alumni Assn. will be
MEETING CANCELLED
held at 7 p. m. Saturday.
A meeting of the Mid·
Reservations . may be made dleport Chamber of Com·
by calling Robert Alkire, 742· merce scheduled for Tuesday
2775 or Pauline Atkins, 742· evening will not be held.
2634.

YOUR CHOICE

'99001

PIECE

OPEN WEEKDAYS AND SATURDAY TIL 5100
OPEN FRIO A Y TIL 8;00

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

•

Rebels
hunted
KINSHASA, Zaire ( UPI ) - French and Belgian
paratroopers fanned out fr om Kolwezi today, hunting rebels
who massacred some 150 whites and kidnapped another 60 as
hostages in their retreat from Zaire 's Shaba province.
Aircraft Sunday plucked the last of 2,500 survivors from
the battered town and fl ew them to safety in Kamlna . a giant
army base 125 miles north of Kolwezi where Belgian forces had
set up rescue headquarters.
In
Kinsha sa, where
survivors relayed horr or
stories, thoiiSands of whites
bes iege d eac h aircraft
arriving from Kamina in the
hope of finding rela tives
aboard. \
Six Sa ben~ Belgian Airlines
planes flew close to 1.200
evac uees to Brussels. Two

Two wrecks, two vandalism
complaints probed by law

Walburn
namedSGA
president

smashed out. He reported
that there was also other
damage to the auto. The
incident is st ill under in·
vestigation. Also under in·
vestigatlon is damage to a
name plate on a rnailbo•
owned by Virgi nia Vitatoe,
Route I, Middleport.

Regular PVH entrance
t~ be closed Tuesihly
in use.
When the south side drive is
finished, it will become a
pennanent two· lane entrance
to Pleasant Valley Hospital
and the current driveway will
bec ome a two-la ne ex it.
Howeve r, this is in the future .
For tomorrow, remember to
use the southside drive as
both an entrance and an exit
as the current driveway will
be closed .
SQU AD SUMMONED
The
Mid d l eport
Emergency Squad was called
to Nor1h Second Ave. at 4:13
p.m. Sa turd ay for Mary
Smilh who was taken to
Veterans Memorialllospital.

Middleport pool hours,
charges are announced
The Middleport pool will
open on Monday, May 29,
Mrs. Cherole Burdette, pool
and park manager , an·
nounced today.
Hours of the pool on the
opening day wlll be 1 to 6 p.m.
For the rtrst week of
operation, the hours wUI be
from 3:30 to 6 p.m. weekdays,
and 1 to 6 p.m. Saturdays and
Sundays. If there Is enough
adults and
pre-s chool
children attending, then the
hours of the pool will be
adjusted.
Prices for this year have
been oet at $1 for adults, and

75 cents for students, and 5Q
cents for pre-schoolers for
daily admission . Season
tickets are $25 for families
plus $2 for each school age
ch ild, single adult, 17 and up,
$:1ll ; single student, $15.
Mrs. Burdette reports that
applications for lifeguards
are being taken. Applications
may be picked up at the
mayor's office at village hall
and returned to Mrs. Bur·
dette. Pool rental wlll be 125
an hour by appointment
with Mrs. Burdette. Swim·
ming lessons will be
scheduled in July.

group from the left included Bonnie Morris, Terry
Walker, Nancy Stanley, DaVJd Wilcox, Jill Baity, Kenneth
Young and Cathy Blaettnar and Mark Mitch.

PRICE FIFTEEN CE NTS

MONDAY, MAY 22, 1978

Weather

PERFECT SLEEPER SALE

CANDIDATES for king and queen of the Meigs High
School junior-senior prom Saturday night are pictured as
they waited for the announcement of the winners . The

en tine

'Last Chance' becomes
king of the croakers

·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:-:-:·:·:·:·:::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:

•

tinued and sev.eral others
terminat ed
Frida y in
Gallipolis . Municipal Cour1 .
Because of the failure of the
complaining witness to appear. cha rges of physical
ha nn were dismissed against
Lonnie McCoy of Gallipolis.
J udgc James A. Bennett
continued the cases of James
H. Rece, 44, Vinton, charged
with DWI ; Erne st M.
Wi se man, 51, Ga llipoli s,
cha rged with speeding and
Sheri Q. Wray, 23, Rodney,
arrested for improper
passing. Their hearings were
set for May 22, June 6 and
June 5 respectively.
Fined or forfeiting bonds
were Grego ry F. Cain, 21 ,
Columbus, $16 and costs,
speed; Eddie Lee Casdorph,
45, Charleston, 121 speed ;
Daniel E. Nunley , 32, Rt . 4,
Bluefield, $21 speed; Bruce
Runyon, l9, Rt. I , Bidwell,$20.
and costs, speed ; Hoger
Dickson. Rt. 1, Galltpolis,
$200 and costs, driving under
suspensio n ; Samuel G.
So wards, 20, Garden Grove,
Ca lif. , $27 speed; Brady J.
Angel, 34, Rt. 2, Cro"11 City,
$23 speed; Nancy Y. Smith,
30, Gallipolis, 124 speed ; M.
Kent Besecher, 27, Green·
ville, 122 speed; Kenneth
Dishman, 43. Chesapeake, 128
speed; Daniel L. Boster, 211,
Rt. 2, Proctorville, $22 speed;
Marilyn K. Morga n, 29, Rt. I,
Ga llipolis, $29 speed; Michael
P. Halley , 25 , Gallipolis, $27
speed ; John E. Harrington ,
76, Gallipolis, $27 failure to
use due caution; Jackie L.
Radcliff, 38, Tinga, W. Va .,
and Noble Robert s, 37 ,
Green field, each $300 and
costs, six months In the
county jail and six months
driver's license suspension
for DWI. All but 10 days of the
jail terms were suspended.
Ricky Lee Sibley, 18, Rt. 2,
Crown City , forfeited a $27
bond fnr unsafe vehicle.

NO. 26

Guilla· Meigs Chapter 95,
Fraternal Order of Pollee,
will again be sponsoring tbe
Hoxie Brothers Circus at the
Guilla County Fairgrounds in
Gallipolis on June 21. There
will be two sbows at6 and 8 p.
m. Lodge members will begin
selling tickets to area
businessmen this week.
The lodge also Is making
plans to sponsor big wheel
bike races for youngsters
during Big Bend Regatta
Weekend.

Today •.

SOME BENEFITS OF AGE

compromise on natural gas
pricing legisla tion may
finally win approval from a
House-Senate
conference
committee this week, and
both a $37.9 billion Defense
Department authorization
and a military construction
authorization bill were
sc~eduled for House debate,
as was a bill to grant. trade
concessions to Hungary.
With Congress moving
toward its Memorial Day
weekend holiday, the House
crammed as much legislation
as possible into a four-&lt;lay
workweek while the Senate

e

CHOOSE ANY SIZE - ANY FIRMNESS

•
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••
•

'Tuition tax credits top
congressional calendar

No drugs taken

Four charged in mishaps

planes headed for Paris.
Actual fighting in Zaire 's
main copper and cobalt
mining ce nter was over,
officials said. Saturday night,
the French Foreign Legion
paratroopers stormed the
last pocke t of resistance, a
metal working factory where
200 rebels were holed up.
Groups of sanitary workers
went through Kolwezi ,
burylng bodies of the victlms,
which included both bla cks
and whites. Many of th€
hodies had been lying in the
sun for days, rotting and
being eaten by stray dogs .
In Paris, the Defense
(Continued on page 10)

QUEEN. KiNG - Nancy Stanley , daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Joseph J. Stanley, Route 1, Shade, and Dave
Wilcox, son of Mr. and Mrs . Konneth Wilcox, Middleport,
were named quee n and king of the Meigs High School
junior-oenior prom Saturday night. Miss Stanley was .
crowned by Kevin King, vice president of the junior class.
During the evening Mrs. Alice Nease, retired teacher who
had headed the extensive decoration s for the prom. was
presented with a flower arrangement by the Junior class .
Junior class president Is Shari Mitch.

The World Today
$100,000 reward offered
ATLANTA (UPI) - Mrs. Larry Flynt is offering a $100,000
reward for information leading to the conviction of the person
or persons who gunned down her husband in Lawrenceville,
Ga., March 6.
Thr ee Atlanta-a rea newspaper s carri ed full-pag e
advertisements in th eir weekend editions offering the reward
for information leading to th e arrest and conviction of whoever
was responsible for shooting the sex magazin e owner.

Says corporations sheltered
GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. (UPI I - A bitter federal
prosecutor says court action on PBB criminal charges last
week was an indication of how corporations often are sheltered
from prosecution in the American judicial system.
U. S. Attorney James Brady fought strenuously to bring
Michigan Che mical Co. and Farm Bureau Services to trial for
federal violations stemming from the 1973 PBB agricultural
contamination disaster.

Peruvian unions call strike
LIMA , Peru (UP!) - Peruvian labor unions called a 48hour general strike today in the face of a state of emergency
declared by the military regime to put a stop to a week of price
rioting that left 20 people dead.
The government of President Francisco Moralez
Bermudez tried to break the strike by ordering the arrests of
more than 100 labor leaders and leftist inte llectuals Friday,
but labor sources said the "machinery to carry out the strike
had already been prepared."

Fourth instant lottery starts
CLEVELAND (UP! ) - Ohioans who believe they have
lucky fingers will be buying tickets in the Ohio Lottery
Commission's fourth instant game which starts Tu esday.
Players will invest $1 for a chance to win a prize ranging
from $2 to $10,000 as soon as they rub off the foil covering th€
sb( prize boxes on the tickets, and later might get as much as $1
million should their lu ck improve.

Gusty winds swat Wallendas
LOS ANGELES (UP[) - liusty winds swa tted the Great
Wallendas during their high-wire acts Sunday and knocked one
performer off his perch, but he managed to grab the wire .
Farrell Hettlg , 22, who has performed with the Wallenda
family for seven years, slipped from the wire while jumping
rope 33\1 feet above the ground at th€ Los Angeles Coliseum .

Leon
man
drowns
A Leon man was drowned
Saturday after his tractor
overturned into Poplar Creek
and pinned him under water,
accordin g to Mason County
Sheriff's Deputy Harry N.
Rhodes.
The victim , Vernon Ray
Cossin, 48, Leon Rt. I, was
driving the tractor whi ch had
a disc on the back when it
rolled over a \().foot em·
bankment and landed in the
creek at appro•imately I : 30
p.m. He was found under the
tractor completely submerged
in water.
Surv i vor s i nclude :
daughters, Mrs. Richard
Frabott and Mrs . Sandra
Lamp , both of Columbus ;
sons, Kenneth Ray and Ronnie
Joe, both of Colum bus ;
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Vinton
Cossin of Leon Rt . 1: sisters,
Mrs. Elizabeth Stutler, Red
House , Mrs . Ruth Smi th,
Columbus and Mrs. Ruby
Craig, Buffalo; brothers,
June, Lee and Curtis, all of
Leon , Eugene, Buffalo, Herb,
Red House and Donald, Point
Pleasant : and two grand·
children.
Services for Mr. Cossin will
be held at 2 p.m. Tuesday in
the
Elmwood
United
Methodist Church with the
Rev . Warren Baker of·
flciatin g. Burial will be In
Mount Tabor Cemetery, Leon.
Friends may call at the
Raynes Funeral !lome,
l3uffalo.

Workers put in special day on job
EllS PROM KING AND QUEEN - Crowned queen of the Junior..senior Prom at
Eastern High School Saturday night was Diana Massar and chosen king was Kevin Butilley .
Diana is the daughter of Starling and Sandra Massar , Rt. l, Reedsville, and Kevin Is the son
ol Roger and Darlene Buckley, Rt. 3, Pomeroy.
I,

WILLOW ISLAND, W.Va.
(UPI) - It appeared to be a
routine day of "'ork, except
for two Items.
One was the day , a
Saturday. The other was the
tower.

Unfinished, the tower was
idle , a foreboding reminder of
the April 27 tragedy that
claimed 51 workmen who
plunged 170 feet when a
scaffolding broke loose.
Nearly 73 percent of the
)

workers who gathered
Saturday were putting In a
special day's labor and
donating their wages to a
relief fund set up for the
victims' families.
(Continued on page 10)

•

�3- The Da1Jy Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Monday , May 22, 1978

2- The Oaily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Monday, May 22, 1978

21-foot putt gives
Simons Memorial title

Wayne Hays attempting political comeback
(EDITOR'S NOTE: \IPI
Statehouse Reporters Lee
Leouard ond Dick Kimmins
have prepared a series of
dispatches on the candidate s
and issues in Ohio's June 6
primary elec tion . Today 's
deals with Wa yne Hays ' bid
for the Democratic nommalion to the 99th Ohio House
!District 1

rebound and he's startmg
near the bottom of the ladder
as one of11ve men seeking the
De moc ra t i c
Part y
nommat10n for the 99th Ohio
House district
Hays ruled Congress like a
fiefdom as chairman of the
House Admin! Stratton
Committee
until
the
Washmgton Post satd on May
23, 1976, that for two years
Hays kept a blonde on the
government 's payroll to
serve as hiS m1stress
" I can't type I can't fil e I
can't even answer the
phone," sa1d Eltzabeth Ray,
then 27, who began working

By DICK KIMMINS
Umted Press lnternalional
Th e lawmaker once called
by a colleague the 'meanest
man m Congress" can not be
called a q01tter
Wayne L Havs IS on the

accident m BarnesVIll e, Ohio,
while dr1vmg a pickup tru ck
Then on Feb 23, \97B, Hays
announced hi s candidacy for
the 99-member Oh10 House to
succeed A G l.anc1one, a
bitter Hays detractor who IS
relirmg after nearly three
deca des m the Ohio General
Asse mbly
,
. . "If you're not m off1 ce,

for Hays m April , 1974, as a
clerk for $14,000 a year
Hays, who had served hiS
eastern Ohio district for 28
years, was hounded out of
Wash10gton to hts Flushmg,
Ohio, farm On June 10. 1976,
he took an overd ose of
sleepmg p11ls and nearly died
On Sept. 2, 1976, he reSigned
from Congress and the House
Eth1cs Comm1ttee closed It s
mvest1gat10n 1nto Hays'
alleged
nu suse
of
goverrun ent funds to pay
MISS Ray
Nothmg was heard from
Hays for nearly a ;ear until
he had a min or tr affi c

ther e's not much you ca n

offer, " sa1d the form er congressm an, 11 ho IS still asked
for assistance by c1t1 zens m
his area
Hays IS now 66 a nd
chairman of the board of the

Cttlzen's Na uonal Bank of
Flushing
' r want to get more votes
than all of th em put
together," he S3ld of hiS four
opponents
Hays began political hie 10
the depressiOn as mayor of
Flushmg He soon became a
B e lm o nt
Co unt y
comm1sswner and m 1940 set
his Sights on thP st" te
Ug!Slature
In June, 1940, he defeated
the late Arthur Blake by 2,000
votes lor the Democrattc
nom1nat10n to the Oh10
Senate's 22nd Dtstr!ct He

went on to defeat the late Ray
Palmer by 9,500 votes 111 the
1940 November general
election
In 1948, Hays was sent to
Congress He stayed for 28
years.

He also served h1s distrtct
re spondmg to
every letter wtth a personal
reply and getting more
federal projects 111 eastern
Ohto than any dozen other
congressmen could lure
"Every legislative body
ought to have one like him but only one, " sa1d U.S. Rep .
Abner M1kva, D-Dl , who
Hays' once described as a
a dm~rably,

Atlantic City
is
- -literally shaking
with anticipation
ATLANTI C CITY , N J .
(UPI) - If Mickey Mo use
were a gambling man he
would love AUant1c City
This decrepit resort on the
Jersey shore 1s sha kmg with
anuctpatton, the kmd that
shook Anaheim , Calif , and
Orlando, F1a, 11 hen Walt
DISney sta rted bUil dmg
amusement parks
The 43,000 folks who hve
here are lushng after a pot of
gold, a Jackpot they are likely
to fmd before the week 1s out
The htgh-rollers are
commg
There IS little doubt that by
Fr1day the fi rst legal
gamblmg casmo east of Las
Vegas will ge t down to
sertous busmess
It was a make-believe
game over the weekeoo as
the operators of the $50
million Resorts Internauonal
Hotel--CaSino allowed special

---------I

1
I
I
I
I

Social

I

·Calendar II

MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT PTA, 7 30
p rn at the school, Monday
Safety patrol to be honored
School levy to be di&gt;Cussed by
representatiVes of Board of
Edu ca tiO n and teache rs
association Rev George
Glaze to g1ve devotions
Ref reslunents follo wmg the
meetm ~

BENIJ 0' the R1 ver Garden
Oub members to ~ u r k on the
c!Vlt proJ• ct at the Let&lt;Jrt
Fal l~ Ccmeter; 6 p m Monda y From there they will go
to the home of \'Irs Nora
Cross for the r e'gula r
meet1ng
Mrs
Maxine
Wm ~ett 11 1ll be hostess
RACINE Chapter 134 OES
Monday 7 30 p m There 11111
be mltlatlon of two ca n, didates Officers 10 wear
formals Mem bers are to
brin g CO\C red diSh fur
refreshments
TL t:~ JJA Y

A:VIf"HH •\ \ I f ( ,J ()'\ •lux! l t ar~ Hi:H lnt P11.,t hf)2 i W

pm • t lhl'looll
,\ Mf'HH \'\ I H ,JO\ 1\ ux
On•\\ Wt'b.Stt; r Po:\t 19
JOint JUn!fJf and ~t.' ll\0 1
met.·t 1ng i
p m Tul':-,dil)
!ll;;tr\

')n

at the hall
Ml DDI.E POHT- Pome roy
Area Bra nch, AA UW. 7 30
Tues d.11 at thr Me1gs
Must urn

PA ST
MA"IHO NS.
Pomeroy Lh.o pter OES 7 30
Tue&gt;d•l evelllng at the home
of Mrs I hclma fl1ll
WEIJN ES OA Y
AMt:H JCAN
J. F;(; JON
Feeney-Bennett Post 39 Middleport. 7 30 p m w dnesday
• t the ha ll Plans to he made
fur

U!Ill tdcr)

\1 1!-.o lts

un

Memorml Day
AMF.H J( A:'&lt; I F:f,J 0 \1 Aux!li aly, r eene) 13l'nnett Post
'19 Middleport , 7 30 p m
Wedne&gt;da y at the ha ll
WILDW OO D GAR DEN
CLUB , 8 p m Wednesday at
the home of Mrs Edison
· Hollon with Mrs Mae Holte r,
co-hostess
MIDDLEPORT l iterary
Club, Wedn e~day, 2 p rn at
the home of Mrs Robert
F IS he r
M1ss Susa n
: Fleshman, hbranan , to be
the guest spea ker
. POMEROY - Mi ddleport
L10ns Club. noon Wednesday
at the Me1gs Inn
THURSDAY
MEIGS COUNTY Women 's
r'ellowsh1p, 7 30 p m at the
: Pomeroy Church of Chnst
:Guest speaker will be Cathy
· Brewer, exchange student
from Sweden

•

•

guests lo pretend to be big
spend ers at the gammg
tables w1th phony money
The fun and games end
Fnday After that It wtll take
hard money to gamble
And this week 's h!Stortc
openmg of the first East
Coast casmo IS e~&lt;pected to
enr1 ch Atlantic City like
DISI1ey World saved Orlando
But th ere are some
differences
'In 10 years you're gomg to
have a Disneyland with slots,
a town geared to the
bedomsm that we need," sa1d
Reese ?alley, a million31re
owner of an expenstve gift
shop on the boardwalk
Local leaders f1gure there
could be as many as four
casmos m operation by 1980
Resorts International plans
to open another hotel Within
three years
The ne11 casm o conducted
1ts dry runs to test 1ts 1,200
slot machines and tram tbe
card dealers and croupiers at
the 82 gammg tables
Even the head of the New
J ersey Casmo Co ntrol
Comm1ss1on dropped by m
the 11 ee hours Suooay and hiS
wife got an 1tch to gamble.
"When I told my wile she
can't play the slots she broke
down and Cried," S3ld Joseph
P Lordi
James M Crosby, the top
boss of Resorts International ,
threw a party when It was all
over and predicted his club
will rank with the biggest m
Las Vegas
'We th mk we w1ll compare
With MGM t the MGM Grand
Hotel! 1n Las Vegas that d1d
about SIOO mtlhon,' the buSI nessman said "We think we
can do that and perhaps

peopletalk
By United Press International
MAMA MICHELLE WED: "Mama" Michelle Phllllps, 37,
was marned in Beverly Hills Sunday to Robert Birch, 29, a
programmmg consultant for several rad10 stat10ns M1ss
Plulhps - most recently known for her role as Natascha, the
second wife of screen tdol Rudolf Valentino 1n the movte
named after hun - broke mto show busmess m the 60s m The
Mamas and Papas stngmg group , which mcluded Cass Elllol ,
Denny Doherty and her ftrst husband, John Phllllps.
BABYLON REBORN? : Born-agamChr!Stian Charle&amp; Colson
likens modern Amencan society w1th the decadence of
unpenal Rome, saYing the current worship of comfort Will
brmg our society "toward tts own distrucllon " The a1de to
former President Richard Nixon told graduahng semors at
Gordon College m Wenham, Mass., Sunday : "The idols we
Mater~al!Sm aud personal comfort
worship begm w1th us
are foremost m our da1ly hves "

AWARD Wlli'NERS - Receiving awards at the
annual banquet of Chester Cub Scout Pack 235 were left to
n ght, front , Greg Hibbs, de n chief. Mike Sun . And) Hawk.

Cll)' Edlt4lr

Published dlul) except Saturdly
by ~ Oh1o V11 lley Publishing
9'mp&lt;in) Mldltroedla Inc
Ill

Court St

Pomeroy Oh m

4 ~76i

'BllSlness Off1ce Phone 992- 21 :.6

f'.d1 torw l Phone992·21S7
~

ond da ~ pll'lta ~e pllid at

Pomeroy Oh1 o
NiitiOnal adverhs1ng repre8ell
tali vi' I .undon Asaoclll1e5, 3101
t~ uc h d Avt Ck ve llmd Ohto 44115
Su~ nl'twn r1:1tes Ot&gt;hvered by
lllrtl(&gt;r w .cre awulablc 7~ cents per
wcc: ~ Hy MutC
Jr ltoult whe re n trner
M'r.tu:• nul ;r v ~:~ tlabk! One moo th,
13 ~ By rnatl m Ohio snd W Va
tAle Year S22 00 S•• rnonlhs:
$] I 50 Three mon ths , J7 00,
~::L'I ewhere 126 00 yur S11 mootru
$1:1 SO Three rnunthK 17 50
,SUbscnpuon pm e mcludes Sunday
'runes~nllnel

CHESTEH- Thc am1ual cub Dun M &lt;~ xs on Husscll Kelle1,
~cu ut blue and gold banquet Run Maxsom K; Je DaVIS,
for Chc&gt;ler Pack 235 11 as hehl l err \' ~l' U smnc , mal K1 rk
reeenth at the Chestc1 Seuut 1.-ick Jta1 Maxson received a
hall
den d nef cu1d
Ray Laudernult, new cub
Wolf budges and guld and
nwster pre&gt;entcd b&lt;Jb cat sil ve r (II I U\\ S \\C nl lu SLOUls
!Mdgcs to the &gt;cu uL' 111 Den 2 m J:kn I. M1 ke Sun. ,\nth

Apple Grove News Notes

1978 Lotlte League
Schedule
Frrst Round
Frrst Week
Tuesda~ . May 23
New
Ha ven Cub s at
Powell s G1 ant s x . Pomeroy
T 1ger s at Ma son Ranger s,
Pomeroy Ya nkees a t New
H ave n
R eds
( Po me r o y
P ~rates
at
Pom e r o y

Yankees)
Froday, May 26

Mason Ranger s at Powell s
Gt ants xx , New Ha ven Reds
at Pomer oy Tiger s
x,
Po mer oy P irat es at New
Haven Cub s

Second Week
Tuesday, May JO
Pow ell ' s. G iants at New
Have n Red s , New Haven

'--- ----------l· Cl ubs at Pomerov

•

David Edwards, Junmy W1lson, David McLaughlin, Ryan
Oli ver , Brent Norton, and Matt Hams, and back row, Don
Maxson, Russell Keller, Ron Maxson, Kyle DaVIS, Terry
Neusome, K1rk F1ck

Cub Scouts honored at blue and gold banquet

Mason-New Haven
Pomeroy

RORERT HOEFI.I CH

" I made the clutch putts,"
I! the way Stmons analyzed
h1s second vi ctory smce
)Otnmg the tour m 1912 "I hit
a lot of good shot s and some
on which I sort of crmged
But I thought I played fairly
mtelbgently "
Simons, who had been
havmg problems w1th hiS
game, sa1d the wm "IS really
a boost to my confidence The
way the fellow pros treat you
really affects the way you
feel about yourself There are
a lot of talented people out
here , and I like to think I'm
one of them
"! think I have the ability to

think , to hang m there and
never g.ve up I am a good
short game player and a good
putter "
Fuzzy Zoeller, who fired a
!mal-round two-under-par 70,
snu ck mto third place at 287
and earned $17,75() while Ed
Sileed (711 and Gary Player
(74 ) lied Nicklaus for fourth
at 288 Morris Hatalsky (72)
and Bob Shearer ( 75) lied lor
seventh at 269, and G1l
Morgan was ntnth at 291
Rod Curl, who was just two
shots off the pace when the
!mal round began , skied !D an
81 Sunday and lm!shl'!l well
off the pace at 293

were Mother's Day guests of
Mr and Mrs Ted Wilford and
da ughters of Portland
Mr and Mrp Roge r Roush,
Chu ck MVcha els were
Mother s D ~y dmner guests
of Mr antl Mrs Herbert
Roush
Mr and Mrs Charles Bum
of Boli var Dam we re
Mot her s Da y weekend
guests of Mrs Erma Wilso n
and fam ily
Mr and Mrs Wayne Wilson
and daughters, Cheryl and
Robm, spen t Mother's Da y
With Mrs Matt1e Braden at
R1ple;, W Va

mastCI ; M1 s Donald Maxson
tHHI Mrs Roymund Ma xson
den Jead•Jl s of Den 2, Mrs
Bill Sun and Mrs Rubert K
Wil son uf Den I, Mrs Rube rt
D&lt;~ v l s . committee ehau·man
and mem be1 s MIS R1c haid
cl\\ d I ll IJUt were nut prese nt il l
the b.u1quct 1\ den d uel cord F ~tk , Jr Mr ~ !{;]1 J.auder" ·'" also ple&gt;ented tu buy rmlt mslttuttonal · rept escnlal tvc, RuUert Dav1s. i::lnd
st out c; , eg J-ltbbs
Nc '" uff u.:crs an d den wcoolu &gt;l'OUl lea der, Paul
lt aders " ''' e Introd uced and Hc1 rr 1.s
Include Ha) La udenmlt cub-

H,n1k Da vid Edw,ords. J nn111)
Wil s on .Da vld
Ml l i! Uglu n. H. ya n Oli ver.
ll! CIJI Nm tun a nd Matt Hal·
11 s
Lee Ken n) and Jay
\ 1•utl hng quahflL'l fu1 tilt•

GUMPSES: The name 1nked on the baseball glove was
Reggie Jackson's, and the rec1p1ent of the Yale seruors'
tradihonal Class Day gift Sunday was Yale Presidenl~lecl A.
Bartlett Glametti - a Red Sox fan . Uza Mlnnelll, Robert
MerrUI and Can1l Channing were among the performers at
"Ughts On" at Carnegie Hall , the 30th annual all-!ltar show for
the F1ght for Sight Goldie Hawn ts m Rome to him Marlo
Monleelli's "V1agg10 con Anita" . . Jazzman Dave Brubeck IS
111 London for a concert at the Royal Festival Hall Friday .
Screenwnter-actor Buck Henry will host NBC 's "Saturday
Night Live" June 7 Sally Kellerman w1ll be jo1rung Robert
Conrsd and Richard Chamberlain later this month on location
m the Kentucky grasslands to film NBC 's TV num-senes
"Centenmal" Julie Harris, Edward A110er, &amp;nnle FrankUn,
Unda Lavin, Hal Unden and Dick Vao Patten w1ll be m New
York for the Tony Awards June 4 .. Hugh Dlrwns wtll be 10 New
York next month to sub for vacahonmg David Hartman on
ABC-TV's ''Good Mornmg, Amen ca".

Rece nt VIS it ors of Mr and
Mrs M1k e Epple were Mrs
An1 bcr l.ohn , Pomeroy , and
Mr and Mrs Willard Scott of
loll a
Mr and Mrs M1ke Epple
VISited Sunday w1th Addie
Pu llins and With Clifford
Cuckler who makes hiS home
there and also VISI(I\d Mr
Epple' s siS ter, Florence
Bahr
Mr and Mrs Bob Alk1re
VISited Mr and Mrs Chu ck
Alk1re Sa turday evemng
Mr and Mrs Bruce Hart
Sunday dtnner guests of
spent a weekend With Mr an d
Mr
and Mrs K C Welsh
Mr s Don Bell and also Visited
were
Mr and Mrs Darell
Mr and Mrs Robert Hart at
Na
pper
and son and Mrs
Racme
Letha
Cowen
Other guests
Mr and Mrs Dale Hart of
11
ere
Mr
and
Mrs Denzil
Racme VISited Mrs Mary
Welsh
and
fa
m1h
and Mr
Housh Saturday evemng
and
Mrs
Willie
Collms
of
Mother 's Oay guests of
dgeway
R1
Mrs Eu la Wolfe and Aa ron
Mr and Mr s Clair
were Mr and Mrs Thomas
Waggoner
an d Mr and Mr s
Wulfe, Austm, Amy and Jerry
J
ohn
Willia
ms att end ed
Wolle, of Racme, Mr and
graduatwn
for
Don Kennedy
Mrs John Ord, Letart, W
on
Fnday
at
Graceland,
K;
Va , Mrs Carroll Nom s.
He
IS
the
miniSter
of
Zion
S)racuse . Mr and Mrs Jim
uw1s of P01nt Pleasant , Chur ch On Sunday they
Randy Lyons and lr1 end of att ended h i ~ ordammg at
Ravenswood Other guests of West Libe rt y, W Va
Mrs Honme Wilt an&lt;! son,
Mrs Wolfe were Clan ce
Lan
caster , were weekend
Lyons and Buddie, HenVISitors
of Mr and Mrs Felix
derso n, W Va , Clarence
Alkire
Also VISiting Sunday
Lyons of Gulfport MISs , and
w1
th
them
were Mr and Mrs
B1ll Lyon s of Kanawha
Rog
er
Alkire
and
There \\Ill be no Mem o r~ al
fam1iy
Day dmner al the u tart
Mrs Marga ret Doug
Commumt)' Hall due to Jack
las
and
Mrs
Hazel
of help
Stanley spent three days m
A sl'a utlt.•r s fur gr U\\ S su Ten nessee and attended the
fll ll' ami tlnck that the .rnuna l Grand Old Oo rv and other
r.111 sw1m fur dc~ y s wtt huut l ou r s
Mrs Hoy WISeman and Mr
gettmg rts :,ktn wt:t

Ya nkees

)( , Pomer o y P1ra les at N\ason
Ra nger s , ( Powel ls G1 ants at
Pome r oy T 1ge r s)
Fnday , June 2
Pom er oy T•ger s at New
Haven Cubs . New Ha ve n
Reds a t Pomeroy Plrates x ,
Ma son Ranger s at Pomer oy
Yankees. X)(

Thrrd Week
Tuesday, June6
Po m e r o y
Y a nkee s
at
Powel l s
G 1an t s
X)I. ,
Pomer oy Ti gers a t Pomeroy
Pfr a tes x , New Ha ven Cubs
at New Ha ve n Reds , ( New
Ha ve n Cub s a t M as on

Rangers!
Fr~day ,

June 9

Powe ll's
G1anls
at
Pom eroy P 1rates
X)l.
Pom eroy
Yankees
at
Pom er oy T1gers
x ; Mason
Range r s a t New Haven Reds

•

Maaor League Standmgs
By Un1ted Press International
Nat1ona1 Leagu e
East ·
Phil a
Ch 1cago
Mont rea l
P1IISbrgtl
New Yo r k
St LOU IS
Sa n F r an

W L Pet
19 16 543
191 7 57 8

Ia

,, 15

W
23
23
14
18

1J

19 •a6 1

17 19
18 72

west

GB

4. 17
4 ~0

359

2 1 ']
31 ~

7

L Pet
GB
14 627 11
15 605
1
16 600
1
18 500 4 1 ,

LOS Ang
CtnCmill r
Houslon
Sa n Otego
17 1'1 .447 61 1
Allanta
14 11 389 8 1 1
Saturday's Results
P h tl i'l 9, N ew Yo r k 4 11 •nns
C hteago 10, Sl LOU tS 2

P1llsbu rg h 6. Monlrea l 0
C n cmnah 10 Sa n Drego 6
Houston 13 A tl an t a o
Los Angeles 3 Sa n F r an 1
Sund01y s R esu lts

New Y or k 6 Phil a 5 , tO tnn S

POLLY'S POINTERS

and Mrs Earl Stark ey were
10 Columbus Fnday for the
Polly Cramer
Grand Openmg of the Grange
Mutual Casualt y Bldg and
also viSited Jess1e Je"ell
fam1ly li kes popcorn popped
Mr and Mrs E R Carr Peanul buller
m bacon grease It adds new
viSited Mrs Adr1 ene French favonle
navor
to an old favon te
Sunda) at Russell's Nursmg
If
your
toddler IS havmg
Home, Albany
DEAR POLLY - Once you trouble Jearnmg to dnnk
Lend-A-Hand met at the mentwned that you baked
home of Mrs Frances Young ham slices w1th peanut butte! through a &gt;!raw tell hun or
w1th Norm a Lee co-hostess and must&lt;trd on them I would her to kiss the straw and soon
they w1ll have the knack Tuesday mght
hke tu know how much of U NDA
each you use and how much DEAH POLLY -a nd Donnulk IS put over them - ANN na - I l10d bacon grease 1s
DEAH ANN - I reall y l1av e dog's daily food The amount
no specific measurements I would depend on the SIZe of
coat the ham slices on both the dog
sides w1th prepared mustard
Wh•n se rv10g a pork or
!rum a Jar and prefer the hot- beef roast I like to have
ter brown type Next I spread browned pot&lt;ttoes w1th 1t
peanut butter thickly all over After peehng and sl1 cmg the
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr and Mrs
Hoyt both Sides of the sli ces, put pol&lt;ttoes I coat them w1th
Ferguson of Pomt Pleasant them 10 a bak10g diSh and ba con fat and place them m
and Mr and Mrs Tom cove r w1th milk They arc the pan with the roast for
Warner and I.Jsa of Ra cme b&lt;lked 10 a 3!iO deg ree oven about one and a quarter
VISited Mr and Mrs Homer until ham IS tend er when hours They are turned when
pierced w1th a fork -which IS about half c'Ooked - BAR·
Warn er on Mother's Day
Mother's Day guests of Mr usually about 45 mmutes to BARA
and Mrs Dana Lewis at an hour The peanut butter
DEAR POLL'i - When
Clifton were Mr and Mrs forms a crust on the ham and hangmg curt&lt;un.s to dnp dry I
Russell Roush, Dav1d, Ed and the milk w1ll cook away This usc wooden clothesp10s to
Cmdy , Mr and Mrs Ronald ha s always been a favonte of hold the pleats 10 pla ce They
Russell , Mandy and Mi chael, my ch1ldren and now my lea ve no marks and the curBrenda Lawrence of Port- grandchildren, too, adore 1t t&lt;tms look like new Each
land, Mr and Mrs Isaac - POLLY
pleat 1s perfect - MRS B.S.
DEAR POLLY - I could
J.ew1s Brenda Lawrence and
DEAH POLLY
To
Cmdy Roush were Saturday never remember the 11ashtng remove bl•ck marks on Thermstrucli ons for Items hke mos bottles and lunch pails
mght guests of the Lew!Ses
blank e t s, put some margarme or other
Mr and Mrs. Eddie Hupp dr a pe n es ,
spent Sunday evemng w1th bedspreads and thmgs that otly malertal on a paper towel
Mr and Mrs. Russell Roush are not washed too often and wipe over the dtrty areas
Mrs Joyce Manuel and Usually there are sheets of IO· Wipe clean and then wash dau ghter s, Donn ita and structlons m the package I TRUDY
Robm , VISited Mrs Laura cl ip each of these to a hanger
Polly will send you one of
Byers at Tanners Run that IS hung next to my her s 1gned thank -you
washing ma chme so they are newspaper coupon clipper&gt; 11
Fr1day
at hand when needed - she uses your fav or1te
DOROTHY
'
Pomter, Peeve, Problem m
DEAR POLLY - Donna her column Wnte POLLY'S
wanted to know what to do POfN'IERS 1n care of this
Friday , June 23
Second Round
Wlth leflover bacon and ham- newspaper
Powe ll's
Giant s
at burger grease. We save our
Fourth Week
Pom eroy Yankees
1( ,
Tuesday, June tJ
Powel l's Goants at Mason Pomeroy P~rat es at Pomeroy excess grease m a large
&gt;hortemng can . When my BEST BUS DRIVER
Ra ngers. Pomeroy T1 ger s at Tigers xx , New Haven Reds
Ne w Haven Red s , New a t New Haven Cubs
husband and son get their
&lt;X&gt;LUMBUS (UPI) - J .
Sixth Wee!&lt;
Haven Cubs at Po m eroy
hands dirty while workmg on Burton Haerr l11 of near
Tuesday,
June
27
Pi rates x , ( Pomer oy T 1ger s
New Ha ven Cubs at cars they use a small amount Springfield wtll be c(ITlpeUng
at Pomeroy Y ankees)
Pom eroy
T i gers
•
)( ,
of this grease to pre-wash 111 the national school bus
Fnday, June 16
New Have n Rods at Pomeroy Yankee!! at Mason thw hands before usmg any driver tourmanent for t)lJ!
Rangers , Pom ~roy Pirates at
Powe ll' s Gi ant s x, Pom er oy
New Ha ve n Reds , !Pomeroy soap and water ThiS Sll ves fourth consecutive year.
Yankees a t New Haven Cu bs ,
our wash cloths and towels. I
P1r a tes a l Powe ll 's G fants )
He won the Ohio Grand
Ma son Ranger s at Pom er oy
Frrday, June 30
often use a small amount to Champion School Bus Driver
P1r a tes xx
Powell's Giants at New pre-treat grease spots on ln Columbus Saturday
Follh Week
Ha v en
Clubs ,
Mason
Tueiday, June20
pants and shtrts that have
Haerr took lop honors and a
Ranger
s
at
Pom
eroy
Tigers
Pomeroy
Ti gers
at
grease
from
bicycle
cha1ns,
xx
,
New
Ha11en
Reds
at
trophy
at the Ohio School Bus
Po we ll s G 1a nt s
xx .
etc. I rub 1t m the grease stam Driver Evaluation, aoo will
Pom eroy Yanke~s x .
Po m er oy
Y a nkees
at
Ga mes In parenthes is I I unttl It d!Silppears and then get up to S500 toward hill
Pom ero y Pirates x Mason
woll be schedu led mutually by wash -MARY A.
Ra nger s at New Ha ve n Cubs.
expenses ln competing In the
those tea ms· manage r s
(New Ha ven Red s a t Mason
DEAR
POLLY
I
would
x
Diamond
N
o
1
national contest at NiaJ!Ilra
Ranger s)
xx - Diamon d No 2
lik e to tell Donna that my Falls, N.Y., July 17-18.

Fairview
News Notes

'

TEAM

Leagu e

W L
10 7
6 J

AI hens

Loga n

Well ston

Anderson happy despite
poor play by Cincinnati

7 5
7 6
5 5

CINCINNATI (UPI ) - CmReds mana ge r
Clnnatl
Ga ll opo los
Sparky
Anderson
1s ha ppy
Ir on ton "
5 6
Jac kson
3 8 even 1! Ius defendmg
Me tgs
I 9
champions are only vtrtually
Overall
deadlocked for fir st place m
TEAM
W L T
the Nat1onal League west
Waver ly
15 8 0
Alhens
15 9 I 111th the San Franc isco
Iront on
15 10 0 Giants and th e Los Angeles
Wellston
12 a 0 Dodge rs
·
Loga n
13 10 0
"Cons1denng the way
Ga llopolos
8 B 1
Jack son
3 10 0 we 've been playmg, I've got
fv'\e 1gs
4 ]J 0 to be happy with the 24-16
Remammg Gam es
Monday - Ath ens at record we have," Anderson
Said
We ll ston
Ironton
at
Ja ck son Loga n a t Waverl y
Anderson offered a qUick
Me 1g s at Ga ll 1pO I1 s (a t R1o
rev1e11 of the first 40 games of
Gra nde!
th e season after the Reds
Tuesday Gal l ipoli s at
split
a doubleheader w1th the
Logan Ja ck son at M e1gs
Wednesday - Logan al San D1ego Padres Sunda y,
Ga lll po l1s , Iront on a t fv\e1gs
wmmng the second game I~
Iront on a t
Th (lr sday on
John D'AcqUisto's basesGal l 1poi 1S ,
We ll s ton
at
loaded
fifth mmng w1ld p1tch
Me igs, Logan at Ja ckson
Fnday - Logan at Athens after committing three errors
while losmg the opener 7-2
We've never pla)ed \\ Orst
m th e field smce I took over
this club than we have so far
th is year Fort; games now
and already 36 errors,"
Anderson sa 1d , fmdin g
finding Ius words a little hard
to beheve
ThiS, too, IS virtually the
same Reds' team that tied a
maJor league record la st year
by makmg 95 errors m 162
games
11
I've never seen so many
bad pla ys so often ,"
Anderson sa1d HJ'm not JUSt
t&lt;t lking about the wild throws
and the balls that are booted
Th ere are th e mental
mistakes and the confus1on
on the field I've seen that
doesn 't show up m the box
scores''
And er son proceeded to
touch upon the club 's hittin g
Wav erl y

bases dur~ng Saturday's 1 ~
VI Ctory over the Padres TI1ey '
wound up With four runs
' And ,''

Prevention is
the best policy ...

r e m ind ed

FOR YOUNG

Anderson, " three of th ose
four Saturd ay came on
Foster's trtple "
Young men and wom en
The Reds loaded the bases
en ask why t hey have to
m the second mmn g of oft
pa y more for th e tr
Sunda y's f1rst ga me and automobtl e Insu rance
fa iled to score The run tha t
Dr tvers 1n t h e1r teens and
beat the Padres m the second ear lier twent1 es ca use fa r
game cam e wh en RICk m or e th an lhe1 r shar e of
Auerbach crossed the plate m tr a ff tc ac c tdents Repor ts
Nato onal Safety
the fifth mmng on John the
Councol 11 8 percent of aiJ
D'Acqu1sto's ba ses-loaded motort sts are /4 yea rs of
wild p1tch
age or under yet th ese
" That was the only way ~ e y o uth f ul op erator s a r e
would have scor ed," sa1d I in vol ved as d r 1ve r s 1n J8 6
per cen t of all acc 1dents
Anderson "Because I don't and
37 3 per ce nt of al l fata l
thtnk we were gonna knock m1sha ps

DRIVERS

one m

A great man y young
peo pl e
ar e
sk ill ed ,
re s p o n s 1b l e
d r 1v e r s
Obv 1o usl y though, qu1 t e a
few a re not
Ther e's no su bstitu te for
developm ent com pete nce

" It 's all gmng to changethe heldmg and the hittmg,"
S3ld Anderson, confid ently
'I know 11 IS I can JUSt feel
It "

It could be he was thmking
of what Tom Seaver refe rred
to as "the superb fielding
suppon ' he rece 1ved 10
Sunday's second game that
enabled h1m to pick up his
third v1ctory agamst four
losses
" Pete Rose made two b1g
plays behmd me," Seaver
pomted out

and the nght atto tudes.
1nc l u d 1ng
a
pos1 t 1ve
a p proac h t o defe n s1ve
driV IOg
Ou r ag en c y pr ov i des
f 1nan c1a l p r o t ec t iOn a n d
ser v tce 1n case of acc 1den ts
mvol v1 ng young dr1 ver s
but
man y
of
th ese
a cc 1d ent s
c an
be
prevented That ' s why we
say - pr even tmn IS the
be st pol 1cy

A thought for the day
Amencan poet Ralph Wal do
Emerson smd, "Happy IS the
house that shelters a
frt end "

DALE C. WARNER
992 21&lt;3

102

W. Marn

Pomeroy

"Sure ," he said , ' we' ve got

San O teg o ' C net 2. 1st
C no I, San Ot e go 0 2nd

Harrisonville Society News

SEOAL BASEBALL
I Standongs as of May 211

1978

11

Irishwoman Bridey Murphy, on how the notonety affected her
hie: "I'm an AU-American ~randmother I play bndge, I bowl.
My life IS as complicatro as I want It I guess I was a celebrity
at one t1me, but I don 't thmk I have what 1t takes to be one "

Mason-New Haven-Pomeroy Little League schedule

ME IGs-MASON ARF.A

1

Nicklaus, who designro and
built the 7,101-yard, par-72
Mwrf1eld Village Golf Cub
course on which the
tournament IS played, leU SIX
shots off the pace after taking
the trtplebogey SIX on the
fourth hole , but he fought hiS
way back to trail by only one
stroke gomg to the 17th.
But, agam diSaster struck,
m the form of a la~rway
bunker, and he ended up w1th
a double bogey to take
h1mself
out
of
the
tournament
Meanwhile, Sllllons, who
started the day Wlth a one shot lead over Kratzert , was
nothmg short of amazmg With
his parsavmg putts
Leadmg by one shot,
Sunons ran m an eight-footer
on the 13th, a SIX·footer on the
15~1, a Ill-footer on the 17th
and finally the clmcher on the
tournament 's 72nd hole
Kratzert, who p1ckoo up
$28,500 for f1mshmg second,
had a chanc'e to tie on the
!mal hole, but h1s Ill-foot
birdie putt failed to go m
"I thought I had made the
putt when 1t was three feet
from the hole," sa1d Kratzer!,
who labeled S1mons' wmner
"a heluva putt It was for all
the marbles, and he made It
That' s part of the game "

QUOTE OF THEDA 'i: GlnnJ Morrow, 57. who from a trance

'"a

DEV(JTED TO TilE
INT F.RF..\'1' Ot-'

DUBLIN, Ohio (UPI ) ''Fantastic' '
That pretty well sums up
Jun Simons' 21-foot clutch
putt on the !mal hole Sunday
which gave him the $2[&gt;0,000
Memortal Tournament and
1ts $50,000 ftrst prtze.
It was playmg partner Jack
Ntcklaus, a man who has hit
some fantasttc putts hllllself ,
who so labeled Simons'
performance, whtch saw the
28-yearold Pennsylvaman
scramble his way to vtctory
with one savtng putt after
another down the stretch
And, 1t was Ntcklaus who
kept Sunons looking over h1s
shoulder all day, although tbe
Golden Bear all but played
his way out of the tournament
With a trtple-bogey s1x on the
fourth hole.
" I haven't relaxed all
week," satd Simons, after hiS
fmalround two-&lt;Jver-par 74
gave hun a wmrung 72-llole
total of fourunder-par 284 ,
one shot better than young
Bill Kratzert, who also had a
!mal-round 74
"I know 1t's rather dumb, "
Sunons sa1d, "but I worned
more about Jack than Bill
Kratzer! I really respect the
man I 1dohze hun It's JUSt
hard to 1gnore Jack when
you 're playmg wtth hun,
especially m Columbus "

25 vears ago descnbed m chilling detwl the life of 19th-eentury

By Mrs Herbert Roush
Mr and Mrs Larry Foster
and children of Columbus,
Mrs Ed Mom s of Bowlmg
Green spent Mother's· Day
weekend 11 lth Mrs Anna
Wheeler They also visited
Mrs Bess1e St1tts at Mt
Monah
Mr and Mrs Dorsa Parsons VISited Sunday w1th Mr
and Mrs Lester Little of
Hockmgport
Mrs Gerald Ha;man , Mrs
mor e''
PhylliS
Young, Mrs Lil lie
Resorts will fea ture craps,
Ha
rt
att
end ed a moth er
bla c k jac k , ba cc arat ,
da
ughter
banquet w1th Mrs
roulette, th e B1g 6 Wheel and
Lmda
Jewell
hosted by Mrs
slot rnachmes 111 the old
Jewell
's
miSsionary
soCiety
Challont e-Haddon Hall Hotel,
at
the
Hol
iday
Inn
1n
once one of the prem1er
Saturday
evemng
Gallipolis
conventiOn sttes tn the natton
Mr and Mrs LewiS Ours
Crosby, whose firm also
V
IS!Ied
Mr and Mrs Gerald
operates two casmos 10 the
Hay
man
Thu rsda y aft ernoon
Bahamas, est~mated the slot
Mr
and
Mrs Lo well
ma chmes took 1n so me
on
and
Sher n of
Burt
120,000 on the first day
Columbus
V
ISited
a recent
A former res1dent of Las
weeken
d
W
ith
.Mr
.and
Mrs
Vega s 1\ho didn 't want 1ll be
Vernon
Donohue
Hienlifled, wasn't Impressed
Mrs Mae Durst was taken
He Sa!d he waited 10 mtnutes
by
the Racme emergency
at a disabled slot machme
squad
to Veterans Memonal
and complamed there
Hos
pital
Munday mormn g
weren t enough change girls
and
admitted
as a medical
nnky-&lt;link opera"Th1s
patient
tion " he said
Mr and Mr s Jo hnme
M1ke Sa ntamello, seruor
Dono
hew and daughter, of
counsel for the Casino Control
CloviS,
New Mex1co, spenl a
CommisSion was watching
week
W
ith
their parents , Mr
the opera tion closely
and
Mrs
Roy
Donohew.
" We expec ted some
V1Ck1
Ables
of Ca nal
pro blems w1th the slot
Wmchester
spent
Mother 's
machines." he Said ''But
Da
y
wee
kend
wit
h her
that 's one purpose of the
s,
Mr
and
Mrs
Jack
parent
practice, to get out all of the
Ables
and
Paul
bugs "
Mr and Mrs Harry R1fne
and George Hendershot of
Greenlcmd resembles (:I ll Ravenswoo d Route VISited
ICe-fil led bowl nrnmed by Mr and Mrs Owen Anderson
coa&gt;tal ranges fn the center Monday
th1ck 1ce has depressed the
Mr and Mrs Arnold Anground SUI fat e to 1,200 feet derson, Brenda and Lori Ann,
below sea level
THF. DAILY SENTI NEl.

"Communist tool" for h1s
opposition to the Umted
State's role m Vietnam
Hays' prunary opponents
mclude the Belmont County
treasurer, the son of a former
county comm1ss10ner and
probate judge, a former aide
to Sen John Glenn, D-()hio
and a Monroe County School
Board member
Hays IS expected to win
eas1ly and m November face
George Contos, who was the
GOP nominee agamst
Lancwne two years ago and
who 1s the editor of a coal
mdustry newsletter.

SEO standing.~

Cht cago 3 51 LOut S 2
P llsbu rg h 7 Mon tr ea l 0
Atl anta 6 Houston .4
Los Ang{&gt;les 4 SM Fran 1
Monday ' s Probable Pitchers
I Atl t1m es EOTJ
P1tfsOurgh I Rooker '1 '1 I at
Mon tr eal ! Roger s 4 4), '1 15
pm

Atlanta
(Ma hler
o OJ at
CtnCi nnatr ( Bon ham 4 0 ) 8 05

pm

Los Ange les 1Su tton 3 4) at
San 01("9 0 (Qw ch1nko 3 '1 J 10

pm

Tuesday ' s Game s
Phrlael elph la a t Ch tc ago
New Yor k at P1lt sbgh n1ghl
Montr eal dt St L OU IS n 1ghl
At lanta a t Cmcrnnaf 1, ntgh l
Los Ang at San D1eg o n1gh l
Houston at San Fra n n1ghl

Amencan League
East
W L Pel
GB
Oetrott
73 1'1 657 25 14 64 I
Boston
N ew Yor k
73 14 6'}'/
I
18 19 486
6
Cleve lnd
18 19 486
6
Mtlwauk e
Balt lmor
10 21 432 8
l oron to
" 13 37a 10
We~t

Oakland
Caltl
KM Cdy
T exa s

W L Pel
74 15 615
2 1 16 568

GB

2

11 1

19 17

528

19 17
15 24
11 13
14 27

528
31 J
385
9
3 43 10
34 1 I I

Mmeso ta
Ch1 cago
Sea fi iC
Saturdav' s Results
Bos ton 6, Det ro1 t S
Tor on to 10 , New Yor k 8
Balf1mor e '1 Cleveland 1
Oakland 4 Ch1cago 3
Ka n C1 ly 6 Mmnesota 3
M tlwaulu:•e 6 Coli iQrn 1a 4
Sea lft e 7. T e ~&lt;a s J
Sundav' s Results
New Yor k 2 Toronto 1, 1st
New York 9 Toron to 1, 2nd
Bal ti mor e 3 Cl eve 0 lsi
Cleve 3 Balf 1mor e '1 1nd
Dctr o11 2, Bos ton I l si
Boston 9 Detro1t l 2n d
Ch1 cago 6 , Oaklii nd 1 lSI
Oak land 8 Ch ic ago 0 2nd
M 1nnesot a 3, Kan sas C1 ty 7
MllwC
IUkee '1 Cal dorn ta I
Te•a s S Sea tt le 4
Today ' s Probable P•lch ers
I All hme~ EDT)
Bos ton ( Ripl ey o 3J a t Tor an
to I Cia ncv 2 3), 1 JOp m
Tell as
(Matla ck
4 4)
at
Mmncso ta ( Za hn J 21 8 30 p m
Kan sa5. C1tv (Leona r d 3 7) at
Sean le (House 7 71, 8 35 p m
Tue sda v' s Games
Cleve at New Yo r k, n•ght
Dctro1t at Ball , n1 ght
Bos ton at Toronto n1g ht
Te)l.as at M•nnesota, n1gh l
Ch1cago a t Ca lll orn1a n1gh l
Mtlwaukee at Oakl and ntght
Kan C1 ly at Sea 7, 1w 1n 1gh t

Mator L eague Le aders
By UntTed Preu International
Battmg
• ll •unri n n 11n at h01hl

B ig Ten Standmg s
Nat•onat Leagu e
Un1ted Press International
W l Pet GB
G A 8 H Pet
Br rogh s All
36 1?0 43 J.)tl Mtc h tgan
13 3 8 13
Monday L A
35 171 47 347 M tch Sl
II 5 688 1
Sm 1th LA
37 \ 41 47 333 W tSCOn Sin
10 6 625 3
Grtftev C1n
40 169 56 33 1 Iow a
9 6 600 3 1 7
Billker L A
35 121 40 33 1 Oh to Sla te
9 • 500 5
Foster C .n
40 163 53 J2S M.n nes ot a
7 7 500 5
Buc kner Ch i
'}7 102 33 324
Northw st rn
6 10 , 29 7
Puh l HOU
3 4 140 45 31 1 l nd 1ana
5 8 38 4 617
Ma:lllt N'Y
40 158 SO 316 il l inOIS
6 12 333 a
Park er P1!
37 143 45 315 Purdu e
J 13 18 7 10
Amencan Leaqu e
_G , A.B H Pet
Resul ts o f w eek end ga mes
Carew Mm •
39 150 61 407
F r~d ay
l nd 1an a 6 P u r cue
R1ce Bas
39 164 60 366 4 Ind ia na 12 Purdue 11
Ja cksn Ca l
16 85 31 365
Sat urd ay M 1Ch 1gan Sta te
Sundbrg Tex
35 171 41 339 10 M •ch 1ga n 5. Oh 10 Sta te 7
S•nglln Bal
30 97 31 337 IH11101 S 1 Oh1 0 Stat e I ll l 1no1s
c ooper M1l
36 144 48 333 0
Lezcano M il
79 94 31 330
Su nda v
M 1ch 1ga n
J
P1n 1el a NY
16 94 31 330 M 1C h1g an Sta te 0 , ll l inpiS 6
Cart v Tor
3,. 122 40 328 lnd 1t!lna 3. lnd 1ana 7 lll1no•s
Revntds Sea
36 114 37 325 J un10 ;:, Ja te 11 Pu ro u ~ ..1
HomP. Run !!.
Oh10 Sta te 8 Pu rd ue 1
Nattonal League Mon day ,
LA
11 , Ktngman
Chi 9
Luzmskt and Schm 1dt , Ph I 8,
Bench , Dnessen, Fos ler and
Str fkeouh
Morgan, Cln , Sm 1th , LA and
Natlon11 League R 1char d,
Par ker , P1ft 7
Amer.can League Rice, Bos Hou 74, N1e kro , An 6.4 ~eave r
13, Thompson Ott 11, Baylor , C1n 55 . Blyleven . P11t 54
M ontefu sco SF 48
Cal and l ls k Tu 10. Al e)l. an
Amencan League Rya n , Ca l
der , OaK 9
8 7, Flanagan , Bait .0 Tanana
Run5 Bitted In
Ca l and leonard
KC 40 ,
National LeaQJie M on da y ,
L A 33 Morgan Cm 31, Foster , Matlack Tex 37
C1n and Srn ll h L A 30 Wa ts on .
Hou 28
American League Rice. Bos
41 , Z1Sk, Tex 31 Sfa ub Oet
and Car ew M 1nn 30 , May Ba lf

28

'OtniP.n Jl"&lt;iifU,
National League M or eno
Pill 2 1
Cedeno, Hou IS,
Royster , All Lopes , LA Tave
ra s Pil l 11
Amer.can League · LeFl ore ,
Del 17 Wil SOn . KC 16 Ddon e,
Oak
and
Cr u2,
Se a
14 .
Norwood , Mmn 12
P•tcfl lng
Mosf Ylc1or iel
N1tlon11 Lngue JoM . LA
and Blue, SF 6 I, Gr i msley Mil
and For sch Sl L 6 2 , Norman ,
Cln and Rau, LA S 0 . Khepper .

SF S 2

AmeJIUn LeaQJ.Ie T ano!llna ,,
Cal 7. 1, Lee, 8os 6 I. Guidry ,
NY 5 01 F igueroa , NY s 1;
Tor rez , Bos S 1, Knapp, Cal
end sor enson , Mil 5 3
E•rned Run Average
(llltd on ,, •nnjnQt pitched)
National Ltltue Andujar ,
Mil :l tJ9 . R Reuschel . Ch i 2 1) ,
Perry, so 2 15 Forsch , St L
239 , Swan . NY 2 ,.1
Am or leon

Leo gut Johnson ,

8os 1253,
50 Guidry
Keo ugh,
60, , _ _ _
Oak
, NY 0111k
183. 1Lee.
Ro2em1 , Oet 2 64

EASTERN GIRLS' TRACK TEAM TRIO - The above-p ictured gals, from left. Angel
Blake, Kllll Batey and Lourie Matthews, shown w1th Coach Sue Thompson, were among the
stars on the Eastern H1gh track team this yea r K1m was a discus thrower, Angel, 440 yard
run and Lourie , m1le run Greg Ba1ley photo.

Four Meigs gals earn berths

on All-SEOAL softball squad
The All-Southeastern Oh1o
Athleti c League fas t-pit ch
so ftball team was ann ounced

today wnh four Me1gs H1gh
g ~rl s
earnm g
School
recogni tlon
Tracy Burdette was chosen
for a hr&gt;t team berth, Pat
Vau ghan, second team ,
Kathy Howard , honora ble
mention and G Jenda Brown
spec1al honora ble menllon
Followmg IS the complete
list and current standmgs
Ftrst Team

Sen 1o r an d Pam S1g ler
Logan . Sen1or (hurt ear ly m
the seas on)

1978 SEOAL SOFTBALL
I Standrng s as of May 20 I
TEAM

W L

Jack son
Waver l y
Ir ont on
M etg s

9

I

7 3
9 4
5 5

Logan
Ga llipolos
Wells ion

5 6
4 6
I

11

Ov er-all

W L
10 1

Team

Jackson

Becky Kuhn, Logan

3

Wa ver l y
Me•g s
Iron ton
Wel lston

G1 n ny You ng . Ga lllpol1s

4

Ki m Conley Jackson

3

J od y Rowe I ron ton
Sonya Ha tt en , Well ston

4

Cat hy Nye, Logan
Debbie Foul Jackson
Second Team
Player- School

J

Galli polis
7
Athens
J 16
Rch1a101ng Games
M ond a y - F atr f le ld un1 on
at
A t hen s
Ir ont on a t
Ga l l 1po i1 S .:~n d M et gs at
Ga ll •p ol1 s
J a ck so n
at
Wa ver l y
T u es day A lhens a t
Ga l l i p OliS
Wa ve rl y
at

4

Yr

Pa t Va ughan M etgs
Ja net Groves. Ga l lipol i S

Dus ty Staten , Wellston

Br enda Con kle , Waverl y
K1m Co.: , Ir ont on
Anne Greene Jackson

Paula Hartley , Waverly

Jenn y Ca ssa dy , Logan
Cath y Ma r ek J ackson
Honorable Menf1on

4

J
3
3
1
1
4

3
1

Kathy Howard , Mergs ,

Sen 1or
L• sa Mc Da n 1e ls,
I ronton Fresh m an , /\-\an sa
T ru cco, L ogan , Ju n 1or

Cher yl Faor chold

Wa verly ,

Sen1or
Stephame Mul lm s,
We ll st o n. Se n• or , L y d•a
La vel le, A then s . J un1 or . Lou

Ann Chapman

Ja ckson,

Sop ho m ore , T1na Adkm s,

Ga llopol ls, Sophomore
Spec101 Mention
Gl en da

Br own ,

M e 1gs,

9 3
10 6
11 7
7 9

Logan

9

10

a

·R

D-

W'
A
R

E

111/-Sports
Trophy race

Mike Swiger

POINT TOTALS
As ot May 20
TEAM
TOTAL

992-7155
149 S Third St
Moddleport, 0

4011

Ir on I on

*
~ 111*
* :. (' : : ·1·39 *
* Ruler "unuruN" *
* CJi f . :a,:.. 7fC*
*
*

**

"IIGPUN"

IHCIAL

IIIOIIIIUl·IIIOITUr

Wa v er ly
4017 ' - - - - - At hens
40, 1
Loga n
351 ..
Ga ll ipoli s
JP 1
hhe1g s
24
insuruce~
Jac kson
14
Wel l ston
1012
Remammg spor t s to be
5tllr f11111 lft lUO lfll: f Co 1»~ u
mcluded are boys ba seba ll

"See me for car, boliiC,
life, health and busioess

and gorl s softball

TUIIDAY NIGHT IPICIAU

~o "' ' 01!

ru

l '- • llll i~ ltl110&lt;1

Wednes day -

**

. . _ . Nfii,_IWIITTIUT

HEII'I WHilE YOU'LL FIND THI FUN!

t503 Eastern Ave , Gallipoli s, OhiO
Jackson Ave &amp; 24th St , Rt Pleasant , W Va

NHL cn a mp,onshtp
By Unlled Press I nternatiOnal
f Best of Se\ en)
(Al l T1m es EDT)
M ontre al ~o s Boston
I Scn cs tu~ d , 22 1
May 13 Mon tr eal o1 Boston I
May 16 M on tr ea l 3. Boston 2

(O J)

Ma y 18 Bo ston 4 Montr eal 0
Ma y 21 Boston 4 Mon treal 3
(otl
M a y 23 Bo ston at M ontreal

a 05 p m

Ma y 2S Montr eal at Bos ton
8 OS p m
x Mrt y 77 or 78 Boston at
M ontr eal 8 05 p m
)( tf neceuar v

s N. W.OPTOMETRIST
COMPTON. O.D.

OFFICE HOURS: 9; 30 to 12,2 to s 1CLOSE
AT , NOON ON THURS.) - EAST COURT
ST., POMEROY.

1
1
I

-·--·-------·------------···~'·
DO-IT-YOURSELF
HARDWARE HEADQUARTERS
Home lm provement Supplies

see Cross Hardware
• Housewares
• Wallpaper
• Painls
• Electrtcal Suppltes
• Plumbing Supphes

CROSS HARDWARE
Open Mon. thru Sat.
9 00
: to S: 00

$20 Per Adu It ...

::::::;._7•1~N~·~2~n=d~A~v~e~·...--~Mi=-d=d~te:p:o:r~t---~9~92:·:3:8J~'.J~

'£1Jc11lte ?2 ?2a11c~

$5 Per Child (5 to 12)

I
I

1

All TN II(( DA'I' \ WITH

~~~~"~ Ol 85 A li ttle Hockm g Oh1 o 457 42

I

'

~

I

( !)

I

I

~~

L ____

I

l11 II I rl ' '
~ '~(!_I

r '

t

f

1

,.,, ~ \llf UI

M\:,

t

I' ~"

FOR ADOITIONALIHFORMATION PHONE 16141989-2310

A Lot ol AIYS Mllll

ClAn~

- P'llfiiTY ol GOOD fOOD

IIMi udtr~l ,ull

C.wru Mul'\

DON'T FORGET OUR

7th Annual Bluegrass Show
June 9th, 1Oth, 11th, 1978
llWIS F-Y
SIHI!l
**1f CMJm
FaY - lfnur - Sltwrur)
* lA,_ F. . . . - f!r1101!1)01!11
*
-ISitiiUI

CGIS 110110$ - (All llrt1
(All

OSIORII MOTIIRS *** STOIIMUI
FAI!I.Y - ii!Jurjay - Sujar)
COOI'£R Sudlyl
* COOIITIIY COOlEMEN
Sat1rjl!l
(Sttvrdlr $11111)

WlMA L£E

(StMjar
(fnd11

MAC WISDMII - (fndly Saturdlli

Plus - The Mountaineer Skydivers - Saturday
Admission
Adults $10.00 (all three days) L'hildren under 12 $2.00
-

*

*************

Ja ck son at

,..---------------------------~--.

IPICtAL

IMAUIMT-

Logan

For all your do.it-yourseH
A

runs ' '

And e r so n
wa s
exag gera tmg, but only a
little In three different
Innings the Reds loadM the

League

Player - School
Yr
Tracy Burdett e Me1gs
4
Lt sa Shoemak er , Wa verl y
4
T1lda Fanntn , Ja ck son
2

1

M e •g s
Ga lli pOl iS
at
Wel ls ton , Logan at Wave r l y
Th ursd a y At he ns at
M e1gs and Wa ver l y d t Meigs
Wel ls ton a t Jac kson
To be schedu led Jackson
at Log a n

b'UYS on this club Wlth good
averages - around 300 or
better "
With thi s, Anderson
proceeded to reel off the
names of Ken Griff ey,
Ge or ge Foster, Dann y
Dnessen, Pete Rose, and
Davey Concepcwn
' But," pomted out the Reds
manager, •U,o many of the
hi ts are commg w1th two out
and no one on base or w1th
two out and one runner on
Not man y have been gamebrea kers Take the four
games w1th San Diego Ill bet
11 e ha d the bases loaded SIX
tunes and probably didn 't
wmd up wlth more than s1x

1m eMIPIIC FOI TilE WWIIIII -

�3- The Da1Jy Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Monday , May 22, 1978

2- The Oaily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Monday, May 22, 1978

21-foot putt gives
Simons Memorial title

Wayne Hays attempting political comeback
(EDITOR'S NOTE: \IPI
Statehouse Reporters Lee
Leouard ond Dick Kimmins
have prepared a series of
dispatches on the candidate s
and issues in Ohio's June 6
primary elec tion . Today 's
deals with Wa yne Hays ' bid
for the Democratic nommalion to the 99th Ohio House
!District 1

rebound and he's startmg
near the bottom of the ladder
as one of11ve men seeking the
De moc ra t i c
Part y
nommat10n for the 99th Ohio
House district
Hays ruled Congress like a
fiefdom as chairman of the
House Admin! Stratton
Committee
until
the
Washmgton Post satd on May
23, 1976, that for two years
Hays kept a blonde on the
government 's payroll to
serve as hiS m1stress
" I can't type I can't fil e I
can't even answer the
phone," sa1d Eltzabeth Ray,
then 27, who began working

By DICK KIMMINS
Umted Press lnternalional
Th e lawmaker once called
by a colleague the 'meanest
man m Congress" can not be
called a q01tter
Wayne L Havs IS on the

accident m BarnesVIll e, Ohio,
while dr1vmg a pickup tru ck
Then on Feb 23, \97B, Hays
announced hi s candidacy for
the 99-member Oh10 House to
succeed A G l.anc1one, a
bitter Hays detractor who IS
relirmg after nearly three
deca des m the Ohio General
Asse mbly
,
. . "If you're not m off1 ce,

for Hays m April , 1974, as a
clerk for $14,000 a year
Hays, who had served hiS
eastern Ohio district for 28
years, was hounded out of
Wash10gton to hts Flushmg,
Ohio, farm On June 10. 1976,
he took an overd ose of
sleepmg p11ls and nearly died
On Sept. 2, 1976, he reSigned
from Congress and the House
Eth1cs Comm1ttee closed It s
mvest1gat10n 1nto Hays'
alleged
nu suse
of
goverrun ent funds to pay
MISS Ray
Nothmg was heard from
Hays for nearly a ;ear until
he had a min or tr affi c

ther e's not much you ca n

offer, " sa1d the form er congressm an, 11 ho IS still asked
for assistance by c1t1 zens m
his area
Hays IS now 66 a nd
chairman of the board of the

Cttlzen's Na uonal Bank of
Flushing
' r want to get more votes
than all of th em put
together," he S3ld of hiS four
opponents
Hays began political hie 10
the depressiOn as mayor of
Flushmg He soon became a
B e lm o nt
Co unt y
comm1sswner and m 1940 set
his Sights on thP st" te
Ug!Slature
In June, 1940, he defeated
the late Arthur Blake by 2,000
votes lor the Democrattc
nom1nat10n to the Oh10
Senate's 22nd Dtstr!ct He

went on to defeat the late Ray
Palmer by 9,500 votes 111 the
1940 November general
election
In 1948, Hays was sent to
Congress He stayed for 28
years.

He also served h1s distrtct
re spondmg to
every letter wtth a personal
reply and getting more
federal projects 111 eastern
Ohto than any dozen other
congressmen could lure
"Every legislative body
ought to have one like him but only one, " sa1d U.S. Rep .
Abner M1kva, D-Dl , who
Hays' once described as a
a dm~rably,

Atlantic City
is
- -literally shaking
with anticipation
ATLANTI C CITY , N J .
(UPI) - If Mickey Mo use
were a gambling man he
would love AUant1c City
This decrepit resort on the
Jersey shore 1s sha kmg with
anuctpatton, the kmd that
shook Anaheim , Calif , and
Orlando, F1a, 11 hen Walt
DISney sta rted bUil dmg
amusement parks
The 43,000 folks who hve
here are lushng after a pot of
gold, a Jackpot they are likely
to fmd before the week 1s out
The htgh-rollers are
commg
There IS little doubt that by
Fr1day the fi rst legal
gamblmg casmo east of Las
Vegas will ge t down to
sertous busmess
It was a make-believe
game over the weekeoo as
the operators of the $50
million Resorts Internauonal
Hotel--CaSino allowed special

---------I

1
I
I
I
I

Social

I

·Calendar II

MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT PTA, 7 30
p rn at the school, Monday
Safety patrol to be honored
School levy to be di&gt;Cussed by
representatiVes of Board of
Edu ca tiO n and teache rs
association Rev George
Glaze to g1ve devotions
Ref reslunents follo wmg the
meetm ~

BENIJ 0' the R1 ver Garden
Oub members to ~ u r k on the
c!Vlt proJ• ct at the Let&lt;Jrt
Fal l~ Ccmeter; 6 p m Monda y From there they will go
to the home of \'Irs Nora
Cross for the r e'gula r
meet1ng
Mrs
Maxine
Wm ~ett 11 1ll be hostess
RACINE Chapter 134 OES
Monday 7 30 p m There 11111
be mltlatlon of two ca n, didates Officers 10 wear
formals Mem bers are to
brin g CO\C red diSh fur
refreshments
TL t:~ JJA Y

A:VIf"HH •\ \ I f ( ,J ()'\ •lux! l t ar~ Hi:H lnt P11.,t hf)2 i W

pm • t lhl'looll
,\ Mf'HH \'\ I H ,JO\ 1\ ux
On•\\ Wt'b.Stt; r Po:\t 19
JOint JUn!fJf and ~t.' ll\0 1
met.·t 1ng i
p m Tul':-,dil)
!ll;;tr\

')n

at the hall
Ml DDI.E POHT- Pome roy
Area Bra nch, AA UW. 7 30
Tues d.11 at thr Me1gs
Must urn

PA ST
MA"IHO NS.
Pomeroy Lh.o pter OES 7 30
Tue&gt;d•l evelllng at the home
of Mrs I hclma fl1ll
WEIJN ES OA Y
AMt:H JCAN
J. F;(; JON
Feeney-Bennett Post 39 Middleport. 7 30 p m w dnesday
• t the ha ll Plans to he made
fur

U!Ill tdcr)

\1 1!-.o lts

un

Memorml Day
AMF.H J( A:'&lt; I F:f,J 0 \1 Aux!li aly, r eene) 13l'nnett Post
'19 Middleport , 7 30 p m
Wedne&gt;da y at the ha ll
WILDW OO D GAR DEN
CLUB , 8 p m Wednesday at
the home of Mrs Edison
· Hollon with Mrs Mae Holte r,
co-hostess
MIDDLEPORT l iterary
Club, Wedn e~day, 2 p rn at
the home of Mrs Robert
F IS he r
M1ss Susa n
: Fleshman, hbranan , to be
the guest spea ker
. POMEROY - Mi ddleport
L10ns Club. noon Wednesday
at the Me1gs Inn
THURSDAY
MEIGS COUNTY Women 's
r'ellowsh1p, 7 30 p m at the
: Pomeroy Church of Chnst
:Guest speaker will be Cathy
· Brewer, exchange student
from Sweden

•

•

guests lo pretend to be big
spend ers at the gammg
tables w1th phony money
The fun and games end
Fnday After that It wtll take
hard money to gamble
And this week 's h!Stortc
openmg of the first East
Coast casmo IS e~&lt;pected to
enr1 ch Atlantic City like
DISI1ey World saved Orlando
But th ere are some
differences
'In 10 years you're gomg to
have a Disneyland with slots,
a town geared to the
bedomsm that we need," sa1d
Reese ?alley, a million31re
owner of an expenstve gift
shop on the boardwalk
Local leaders f1gure there
could be as many as four
casmos m operation by 1980
Resorts International plans
to open another hotel Within
three years
The ne11 casm o conducted
1ts dry runs to test 1ts 1,200
slot machines and tram tbe
card dealers and croupiers at
the 82 gammg tables
Even the head of the New
J ersey Casmo Co ntrol
Comm1ss1on dropped by m
the 11 ee hours Suooay and hiS
wife got an 1tch to gamble.
"When I told my wile she
can't play the slots she broke
down and Cried," S3ld Joseph
P Lordi
James M Crosby, the top
boss of Resorts International ,
threw a party when It was all
over and predicted his club
will rank with the biggest m
Las Vegas
'We th mk we w1ll compare
With MGM t the MGM Grand
Hotel! 1n Las Vegas that d1d
about SIOO mtlhon,' the buSI nessman said "We think we
can do that and perhaps

peopletalk
By United Press International
MAMA MICHELLE WED: "Mama" Michelle Phllllps, 37,
was marned in Beverly Hills Sunday to Robert Birch, 29, a
programmmg consultant for several rad10 stat10ns M1ss
Plulhps - most recently known for her role as Natascha, the
second wife of screen tdol Rudolf Valentino 1n the movte
named after hun - broke mto show busmess m the 60s m The
Mamas and Papas stngmg group , which mcluded Cass Elllol ,
Denny Doherty and her ftrst husband, John Phllllps.
BABYLON REBORN? : Born-agamChr!Stian Charle&amp; Colson
likens modern Amencan society w1th the decadence of
unpenal Rome, saYing the current worship of comfort Will
brmg our society "toward tts own distrucllon " The a1de to
former President Richard Nixon told graduahng semors at
Gordon College m Wenham, Mass., Sunday : "The idols we
Mater~al!Sm aud personal comfort
worship begm w1th us
are foremost m our da1ly hves "

AWARD Wlli'NERS - Receiving awards at the
annual banquet of Chester Cub Scout Pack 235 were left to
n ght, front , Greg Hibbs, de n chief. Mike Sun . And) Hawk.

Cll)' Edlt4lr

Published dlul) except Saturdly
by ~ Oh1o V11 lley Publishing
9'mp&lt;in) Mldltroedla Inc
Ill

Court St

Pomeroy Oh m

4 ~76i

'BllSlness Off1ce Phone 992- 21 :.6

f'.d1 torw l Phone992·21S7
~

ond da ~ pll'lta ~e pllid at

Pomeroy Oh1 o
NiitiOnal adverhs1ng repre8ell
tali vi' I .undon Asaoclll1e5, 3101
t~ uc h d Avt Ck ve llmd Ohto 44115
Su~ nl'twn r1:1tes Ot&gt;hvered by
lllrtl(&gt;r w .cre awulablc 7~ cents per
wcc: ~ Hy MutC
Jr ltoult whe re n trner
M'r.tu:• nul ;r v ~:~ tlabk! One moo th,
13 ~ By rnatl m Ohio snd W Va
tAle Year S22 00 S•• rnonlhs:
$] I 50 Three mon ths , J7 00,
~::L'I ewhere 126 00 yur S11 mootru
$1:1 SO Three rnunthK 17 50
,SUbscnpuon pm e mcludes Sunday
'runes~nllnel

CHESTEH- Thc am1ual cub Dun M &lt;~ xs on Husscll Kelle1,
~cu ut blue and gold banquet Run Maxsom K; Je DaVIS,
for Chc&gt;ler Pack 235 11 as hehl l err \' ~l' U smnc , mal K1 rk
reeenth at the Chestc1 Seuut 1.-ick Jta1 Maxson received a
hall
den d nef cu1d
Ray Laudernult, new cub
Wolf budges and guld and
nwster pre&gt;entcd b&lt;Jb cat sil ve r (II I U\\ S \\C nl lu SLOUls
!Mdgcs to the &gt;cu uL' 111 Den 2 m J:kn I. M1 ke Sun. ,\nth

Apple Grove News Notes

1978 Lotlte League
Schedule
Frrst Round
Frrst Week
Tuesda~ . May 23
New
Ha ven Cub s at
Powell s G1 ant s x . Pomeroy
T 1ger s at Ma son Ranger s,
Pomeroy Ya nkees a t New
H ave n
R eds
( Po me r o y
P ~rates
at
Pom e r o y

Yankees)
Froday, May 26

Mason Ranger s at Powell s
Gt ants xx , New Ha ven Reds
at Pomer oy Tiger s
x,
Po mer oy P irat es at New
Haven Cub s

Second Week
Tuesday, May JO
Pow ell ' s. G iants at New
Have n Red s , New Haven

'--- ----------l· Cl ubs at Pomerov

•

David Edwards, Junmy W1lson, David McLaughlin, Ryan
Oli ver , Brent Norton, and Matt Hams, and back row, Don
Maxson, Russell Keller, Ron Maxson, Kyle DaVIS, Terry
Neusome, K1rk F1ck

Cub Scouts honored at blue and gold banquet

Mason-New Haven
Pomeroy

RORERT HOEFI.I CH

" I made the clutch putts,"
I! the way Stmons analyzed
h1s second vi ctory smce
)Otnmg the tour m 1912 "I hit
a lot of good shot s and some
on which I sort of crmged
But I thought I played fairly
mtelbgently "
Simons, who had been
havmg problems w1th hiS
game, sa1d the wm "IS really
a boost to my confidence The
way the fellow pros treat you
really affects the way you
feel about yourself There are
a lot of talented people out
here , and I like to think I'm
one of them
"! think I have the ability to

think , to hang m there and
never g.ve up I am a good
short game player and a good
putter "
Fuzzy Zoeller, who fired a
!mal-round two-under-par 70,
snu ck mto third place at 287
and earned $17,75() while Ed
Sileed (711 and Gary Player
(74 ) lied Nicklaus for fourth
at 288 Morris Hatalsky (72)
and Bob Shearer ( 75) lied lor
seventh at 269, and G1l
Morgan was ntnth at 291
Rod Curl, who was just two
shots off the pace when the
!mal round began , skied !D an
81 Sunday and lm!shl'!l well
off the pace at 293

were Mother's Day guests of
Mr and Mrs Ted Wilford and
da ughters of Portland
Mr and Mrp Roge r Roush,
Chu ck MVcha els were
Mother s D ~y dmner guests
of Mr antl Mrs Herbert
Roush
Mr and Mrs Charles Bum
of Boli var Dam we re
Mot her s Da y weekend
guests of Mrs Erma Wilso n
and fam ily
Mr and Mrs Wayne Wilson
and daughters, Cheryl and
Robm, spen t Mother's Da y
With Mrs Matt1e Braden at
R1ple;, W Va

mastCI ; M1 s Donald Maxson
tHHI Mrs Roymund Ma xson
den Jead•Jl s of Den 2, Mrs
Bill Sun and Mrs Rubert K
Wil son uf Den I, Mrs Rube rt
D&lt;~ v l s . committee ehau·man
and mem be1 s MIS R1c haid
cl\\ d I ll IJUt were nut prese nt il l
the b.u1quct 1\ den d uel cord F ~tk , Jr Mr ~ !{;]1 J.auder" ·'" also ple&gt;ented tu buy rmlt mslttuttonal · rept escnlal tvc, RuUert Dav1s. i::lnd
st out c; , eg J-ltbbs
Nc '" uff u.:crs an d den wcoolu &gt;l'OUl lea der, Paul
lt aders " ''' e Introd uced and Hc1 rr 1.s
Include Ha) La udenmlt cub-

H,n1k Da vid Edw,ords. J nn111)
Wil s on .Da vld
Ml l i! Uglu n. H. ya n Oli ver.
ll! CIJI Nm tun a nd Matt Hal·
11 s
Lee Ken n) and Jay
\ 1•utl hng quahflL'l fu1 tilt•

GUMPSES: The name 1nked on the baseball glove was
Reggie Jackson's, and the rec1p1ent of the Yale seruors'
tradihonal Class Day gift Sunday was Yale Presidenl~lecl A.
Bartlett Glametti - a Red Sox fan . Uza Mlnnelll, Robert
MerrUI and Can1l Channing were among the performers at
"Ughts On" at Carnegie Hall , the 30th annual all-!ltar show for
the F1ght for Sight Goldie Hawn ts m Rome to him Marlo
Monleelli's "V1agg10 con Anita" . . Jazzman Dave Brubeck IS
111 London for a concert at the Royal Festival Hall Friday .
Screenwnter-actor Buck Henry will host NBC 's "Saturday
Night Live" June 7 Sally Kellerman w1ll be jo1rung Robert
Conrsd and Richard Chamberlain later this month on location
m the Kentucky grasslands to film NBC 's TV num-senes
"Centenmal" Julie Harris, Edward A110er, &amp;nnle FrankUn,
Unda Lavin, Hal Unden and Dick Vao Patten w1ll be m New
York for the Tony Awards June 4 .. Hugh Dlrwns wtll be 10 New
York next month to sub for vacahonmg David Hartman on
ABC-TV's ''Good Mornmg, Amen ca".

Rece nt VIS it ors of Mr and
Mrs M1k e Epple were Mrs
An1 bcr l.ohn , Pomeroy , and
Mr and Mrs Willard Scott of
loll a
Mr and Mrs M1ke Epple
VISited Sunday w1th Addie
Pu llins and With Clifford
Cuckler who makes hiS home
there and also VISI(I\d Mr
Epple' s siS ter, Florence
Bahr
Mr and Mrs Bob Alk1re
VISited Mr and Mrs Chu ck
Alk1re Sa turday evemng
Mr and Mrs Bruce Hart
Sunday dtnner guests of
spent a weekend With Mr an d
Mr
and Mrs K C Welsh
Mr s Don Bell and also Visited
were
Mr and Mrs Darell
Mr and Mrs Robert Hart at
Na
pper
and son and Mrs
Racme
Letha
Cowen
Other guests
Mr and Mrs Dale Hart of
11
ere
Mr
and
Mrs Denzil
Racme VISited Mrs Mary
Welsh
and
fa
m1h
and Mr
Housh Saturday evemng
and
Mrs
Willie
Collms
of
Mother 's Oay guests of
dgeway
R1
Mrs Eu la Wolfe and Aa ron
Mr and Mr s Clair
were Mr and Mrs Thomas
Waggoner
an d Mr and Mr s
Wulfe, Austm, Amy and Jerry
J
ohn
Willia
ms att end ed
Wolle, of Racme, Mr and
graduatwn
for
Don Kennedy
Mrs John Ord, Letart, W
on
Fnday
at
Graceland,
K;
Va , Mrs Carroll Nom s.
He
IS
the
miniSter
of
Zion
S)racuse . Mr and Mrs Jim
uw1s of P01nt Pleasant , Chur ch On Sunday they
Randy Lyons and lr1 end of att ended h i ~ ordammg at
Ravenswood Other guests of West Libe rt y, W Va
Mrs Honme Wilt an&lt;! son,
Mrs Wolfe were Clan ce
Lan
caster , were weekend
Lyons and Buddie, HenVISitors
of Mr and Mrs Felix
derso n, W Va , Clarence
Alkire
Also VISiting Sunday
Lyons of Gulfport MISs , and
w1
th
them
were Mr and Mrs
B1ll Lyon s of Kanawha
Rog
er
Alkire
and
There \\Ill be no Mem o r~ al
fam1iy
Day dmner al the u tart
Mrs Marga ret Doug
Commumt)' Hall due to Jack
las
and
Mrs
Hazel
of help
Stanley spent three days m
A sl'a utlt.•r s fur gr U\\ S su Ten nessee and attended the
fll ll' ami tlnck that the .rnuna l Grand Old Oo rv and other
r.111 sw1m fur dc~ y s wtt huut l ou r s
Mrs Hoy WISeman and Mr
gettmg rts :,ktn wt:t

Ya nkees

)( , Pomer o y P1ra les at N\ason
Ra nger s , ( Powel ls G1 ants at
Pome r oy T 1ge r s)
Fnday , June 2
Pom er oy T•ger s at New
Haven Cubs . New Ha ve n
Reds a t Pomeroy Plrates x ,
Ma son Ranger s at Pomer oy
Yankees. X)(

Thrrd Week
Tuesday, June6
Po m e r o y
Y a nkee s
at
Powel l s
G 1an t s
X)I. ,
Pomer oy Ti gers a t Pomeroy
Pfr a tes x , New Ha ven Cubs
at New Ha ve n Reds , ( New
Ha ve n Cub s a t M as on

Rangers!
Fr~day ,

June 9

Powe ll's
G1anls
at
Pom eroy P 1rates
X)l.
Pom eroy
Yankees
at
Pom er oy T1gers
x ; Mason
Range r s a t New Haven Reds

•

Maaor League Standmgs
By Un1ted Press International
Nat1ona1 Leagu e
East ·
Phil a
Ch 1cago
Mont rea l
P1IISbrgtl
New Yo r k
St LOU IS
Sa n F r an

W L Pet
19 16 543
191 7 57 8

Ia

,, 15

W
23
23
14
18

1J

19 •a6 1

17 19
18 72

west

GB

4. 17
4 ~0

359

2 1 ']
31 ~

7

L Pet
GB
14 627 11
15 605
1
16 600
1
18 500 4 1 ,

LOS Ang
CtnCmill r
Houslon
Sa n Otego
17 1'1 .447 61 1
Allanta
14 11 389 8 1 1
Saturday's Results
P h tl i'l 9, N ew Yo r k 4 11 •nns
C hteago 10, Sl LOU tS 2

P1llsbu rg h 6. Monlrea l 0
C n cmnah 10 Sa n Drego 6
Houston 13 A tl an t a o
Los Angeles 3 Sa n F r an 1
Sund01y s R esu lts

New Y or k 6 Phil a 5 , tO tnn S

POLLY'S POINTERS

and Mrs Earl Stark ey were
10 Columbus Fnday for the
Polly Cramer
Grand Openmg of the Grange
Mutual Casualt y Bldg and
also viSited Jess1e Je"ell
fam1ly li kes popcorn popped
Mr and Mrs E R Carr Peanul buller
m bacon grease It adds new
viSited Mrs Adr1 ene French favonle
navor
to an old favon te
Sunda) at Russell's Nursmg
If
your
toddler IS havmg
Home, Albany
DEAR POLLY - Once you trouble Jearnmg to dnnk
Lend-A-Hand met at the mentwned that you baked
home of Mrs Frances Young ham slices w1th peanut butte! through a &gt;!raw tell hun or
w1th Norm a Lee co-hostess and must&lt;trd on them I would her to kiss the straw and soon
they w1ll have the knack Tuesday mght
hke tu know how much of U NDA
each you use and how much DEAH POLLY -a nd Donnulk IS put over them - ANN na - I l10d bacon grease 1s
DEAH ANN - I reall y l1av e dog's daily food The amount
no specific measurements I would depend on the SIZe of
coat the ham slices on both the dog
sides w1th prepared mustard
Wh•n se rv10g a pork or
!rum a Jar and prefer the hot- beef roast I like to have
ter brown type Next I spread browned pot&lt;ttoes w1th 1t
peanut butter thickly all over After peehng and sl1 cmg the
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr and Mrs
Hoyt both Sides of the sli ces, put pol&lt;ttoes I coat them w1th
Ferguson of Pomt Pleasant them 10 a bak10g diSh and ba con fat and place them m
and Mr and Mrs Tom cove r w1th milk They arc the pan with the roast for
Warner and I.Jsa of Ra cme b&lt;lked 10 a 3!iO deg ree oven about one and a quarter
VISited Mr and Mrs Homer until ham IS tend er when hours They are turned when
pierced w1th a fork -which IS about half c'Ooked - BAR·
Warn er on Mother's Day
Mother's Day guests of Mr usually about 45 mmutes to BARA
and Mrs Dana Lewis at an hour The peanut butter
DEAR POLL'i - When
Clifton were Mr and Mrs forms a crust on the ham and hangmg curt&lt;un.s to dnp dry I
Russell Roush, Dav1d, Ed and the milk w1ll cook away This usc wooden clothesp10s to
Cmdy , Mr and Mrs Ronald ha s always been a favonte of hold the pleats 10 pla ce They
Russell , Mandy and Mi chael, my ch1ldren and now my lea ve no marks and the curBrenda Lawrence of Port- grandchildren, too, adore 1t t&lt;tms look like new Each
land, Mr and Mrs Isaac - POLLY
pleat 1s perfect - MRS B.S.
DEAR POLLY - I could
J.ew1s Brenda Lawrence and
DEAH POLLY
To
Cmdy Roush were Saturday never remember the 11ashtng remove bl•ck marks on Thermstrucli ons for Items hke mos bottles and lunch pails
mght guests of the Lew!Ses
blank e t s, put some margarme or other
Mr and Mrs. Eddie Hupp dr a pe n es ,
spent Sunday evemng w1th bedspreads and thmgs that otly malertal on a paper towel
Mr and Mrs. Russell Roush are not washed too often and wipe over the dtrty areas
Mrs Joyce Manuel and Usually there are sheets of IO· Wipe clean and then wash dau ghter s, Donn ita and structlons m the package I TRUDY
Robm , VISited Mrs Laura cl ip each of these to a hanger
Polly will send you one of
Byers at Tanners Run that IS hung next to my her s 1gned thank -you
washing ma chme so they are newspaper coupon clipper&gt; 11
Fr1day
at hand when needed - she uses your fav or1te
DOROTHY
'
Pomter, Peeve, Problem m
DEAR POLLY - Donna her column Wnte POLLY'S
wanted to know what to do POfN'IERS 1n care of this
Friday , June 23
Second Round
Wlth leflover bacon and ham- newspaper
Powe ll's
Giant s
at burger grease. We save our
Fourth Week
Pom eroy Yankees
1( ,
Tuesday, June tJ
Powel l's Goants at Mason Pomeroy P~rat es at Pomeroy excess grease m a large
&gt;hortemng can . When my BEST BUS DRIVER
Ra ngers. Pomeroy T1 ger s at Tigers xx , New Haven Reds
Ne w Haven Red s , New a t New Haven Cubs
husband and son get their
&lt;X&gt;LUMBUS (UPI) - J .
Sixth Wee!&lt;
Haven Cubs at Po m eroy
hands dirty while workmg on Burton Haerr l11 of near
Tuesday,
June
27
Pi rates x , ( Pomer oy T 1ger s
New Ha ven Cubs at cars they use a small amount Springfield wtll be c(ITlpeUng
at Pomeroy Y ankees)
Pom eroy
T i gers
•
)( ,
of this grease to pre-wash 111 the national school bus
Fnday, June 16
New Have n Rods at Pomeroy Yankee!! at Mason thw hands before usmg any driver tourmanent for t)lJ!
Rangers , Pom ~roy Pirates at
Powe ll' s Gi ant s x, Pom er oy
New Ha ve n Reds , !Pomeroy soap and water ThiS Sll ves fourth consecutive year.
Yankees a t New Haven Cu bs ,
our wash cloths and towels. I
P1r a tes a l Powe ll 's G fants )
He won the Ohio Grand
Ma son Ranger s at Pom er oy
Frrday, June 30
often use a small amount to Champion School Bus Driver
P1r a tes xx
Powell's Giants at New pre-treat grease spots on ln Columbus Saturday
Follh Week
Ha v en
Clubs ,
Mason
Tueiday, June20
pants and shtrts that have
Haerr took lop honors and a
Ranger
s
at
Pom
eroy
Tigers
Pomeroy
Ti gers
at
grease
from
bicycle
cha1ns,
xx
,
New
Ha11en
Reds
at
trophy
at the Ohio School Bus
Po we ll s G 1a nt s
xx .
etc. I rub 1t m the grease stam Driver Evaluation, aoo will
Pom eroy Yanke~s x .
Po m er oy
Y a nkees
at
Ga mes In parenthes is I I unttl It d!Silppears and then get up to S500 toward hill
Pom ero y Pirates x Mason
woll be schedu led mutually by wash -MARY A.
Ra nger s at New Ha ve n Cubs.
expenses ln competing In the
those tea ms· manage r s
(New Ha ven Red s a t Mason
DEAR
POLLY
I
would
x
Diamond
N
o
1
national contest at NiaJ!Ilra
Ranger s)
xx - Diamon d No 2
lik e to tell Donna that my Falls, N.Y., July 17-18.

Fairview
News Notes

'

TEAM

Leagu e

W L
10 7
6 J

AI hens

Loga n

Well ston

Anderson happy despite
poor play by Cincinnati

7 5
7 6
5 5

CINCINNATI (UPI ) - CmReds mana ge r
Clnnatl
Ga ll opo los
Sparky
Anderson
1s ha ppy
Ir on ton "
5 6
Jac kson
3 8 even 1! Ius defendmg
Me tgs
I 9
champions are only vtrtually
Overall
deadlocked for fir st place m
TEAM
W L T
the Nat1onal League west
Waver ly
15 8 0
Alhens
15 9 I 111th the San Franc isco
Iront on
15 10 0 Giants and th e Los Angeles
Wellston
12 a 0 Dodge rs
·
Loga n
13 10 0
"Cons1denng the way
Ga llopolos
8 B 1
Jack son
3 10 0 we 've been playmg, I've got
fv'\e 1gs
4 ]J 0 to be happy with the 24-16
Remammg Gam es
Monday - Ath ens at record we have," Anderson
Said
We ll ston
Ironton
at
Ja ck son Loga n a t Waverl y
Anderson offered a qUick
Me 1g s at Ga ll 1pO I1 s (a t R1o
rev1e11 of the first 40 games of
Gra nde!
th e season after the Reds
Tuesday Gal l ipoli s at
split
a doubleheader w1th the
Logan Ja ck son at M e1gs
Wednesday - Logan al San D1ego Padres Sunda y,
Ga lll po l1s , Iront on a t fv\e1gs
wmmng the second game I~
Iront on a t
Th (lr sday on
John D'AcqUisto's basesGal l 1poi 1S ,
We ll s ton
at
loaded
fifth mmng w1ld p1tch
Me igs, Logan at Ja ckson
Fnday - Logan at Athens after committing three errors
while losmg the opener 7-2
We've never pla)ed \\ Orst
m th e field smce I took over
this club than we have so far
th is year Fort; games now
and already 36 errors,"
Anderson sa 1d , fmdin g
finding Ius words a little hard
to beheve
ThiS, too, IS virtually the
same Reds' team that tied a
maJor league record la st year
by makmg 95 errors m 162
games
11
I've never seen so many
bad pla ys so often ,"
Anderson sa1d HJ'm not JUSt
t&lt;t lking about the wild throws
and the balls that are booted
Th ere are th e mental
mistakes and the confus1on
on the field I've seen that
doesn 't show up m the box
scores''
And er son proceeded to
touch upon the club 's hittin g
Wav erl y

bases dur~ng Saturday's 1 ~
VI Ctory over the Padres TI1ey '
wound up With four runs
' And ,''

Prevention is
the best policy ...

r e m ind ed

FOR YOUNG

Anderson, " three of th ose
four Saturd ay came on
Foster's trtple "
Young men and wom en
The Reds loaded the bases
en ask why t hey have to
m the second mmn g of oft
pa y more for th e tr
Sunda y's f1rst ga me and automobtl e Insu rance
fa iled to score The run tha t
Dr tvers 1n t h e1r teens and
beat the Padres m the second ear lier twent1 es ca use fa r
game cam e wh en RICk m or e th an lhe1 r shar e of
Auerbach crossed the plate m tr a ff tc ac c tdents Repor ts
Nato onal Safety
the fifth mmng on John the
Councol 11 8 percent of aiJ
D'Acqu1sto's ba ses-loaded motort sts are /4 yea rs of
wild p1tch
age or under yet th ese
" That was the only way ~ e y o uth f ul op erator s a r e
would have scor ed," sa1d I in vol ved as d r 1ve r s 1n J8 6
per cen t of all acc 1dents
Anderson "Because I don't and
37 3 per ce nt of al l fata l
thtnk we were gonna knock m1sha ps

DRIVERS

one m

A great man y young
peo pl e
ar e
sk ill ed ,
re s p o n s 1b l e
d r 1v e r s
Obv 1o usl y though, qu1 t e a
few a re not
Ther e's no su bstitu te for
developm ent com pete nce

" It 's all gmng to changethe heldmg and the hittmg,"
S3ld Anderson, confid ently
'I know 11 IS I can JUSt feel
It "

It could be he was thmking
of what Tom Seaver refe rred
to as "the superb fielding
suppon ' he rece 1ved 10
Sunday's second game that
enabled h1m to pick up his
third v1ctory agamst four
losses
" Pete Rose made two b1g
plays behmd me," Seaver
pomted out

and the nght atto tudes.
1nc l u d 1ng
a
pos1 t 1ve
a p proac h t o defe n s1ve
driV IOg
Ou r ag en c y pr ov i des
f 1nan c1a l p r o t ec t iOn a n d
ser v tce 1n case of acc 1den ts
mvol v1 ng young dr1 ver s
but
man y
of
th ese
a cc 1d ent s
c an
be
prevented That ' s why we
say - pr even tmn IS the
be st pol 1cy

A thought for the day
Amencan poet Ralph Wal do
Emerson smd, "Happy IS the
house that shelters a
frt end "

DALE C. WARNER
992 21&lt;3

102

W. Marn

Pomeroy

"Sure ," he said , ' we' ve got

San O teg o ' C net 2. 1st
C no I, San Ot e go 0 2nd

Harrisonville Society News

SEOAL BASEBALL
I Standongs as of May 211

1978

11

Irishwoman Bridey Murphy, on how the notonety affected her
hie: "I'm an AU-American ~randmother I play bndge, I bowl.
My life IS as complicatro as I want It I guess I was a celebrity
at one t1me, but I don 't thmk I have what 1t takes to be one "

Mason-New Haven-Pomeroy Little League schedule

ME IGs-MASON ARF.A

1

Nicklaus, who designro and
built the 7,101-yard, par-72
Mwrf1eld Village Golf Cub
course on which the
tournament IS played, leU SIX
shots off the pace after taking
the trtplebogey SIX on the
fourth hole , but he fought hiS
way back to trail by only one
stroke gomg to the 17th.
But, agam diSaster struck,
m the form of a la~rway
bunker, and he ended up w1th
a double bogey to take
h1mself
out
of
the
tournament
Meanwhile, Sllllons, who
started the day Wlth a one shot lead over Kratzert , was
nothmg short of amazmg With
his parsavmg putts
Leadmg by one shot,
Sunons ran m an eight-footer
on the 13th, a SIX·footer on the
15~1, a Ill-footer on the 17th
and finally the clmcher on the
tournament 's 72nd hole
Kratzert, who p1ckoo up
$28,500 for f1mshmg second,
had a chanc'e to tie on the
!mal hole, but h1s Ill-foot
birdie putt failed to go m
"I thought I had made the
putt when 1t was three feet
from the hole," sa1d Kratzer!,
who labeled S1mons' wmner
"a heluva putt It was for all
the marbles, and he made It
That' s part of the game "

QUOTE OF THEDA 'i: GlnnJ Morrow, 57. who from a trance

'"a

DEV(JTED TO TilE
INT F.RF..\'1' Ot-'

DUBLIN, Ohio (UPI ) ''Fantastic' '
That pretty well sums up
Jun Simons' 21-foot clutch
putt on the !mal hole Sunday
which gave him the $2[&gt;0,000
Memortal Tournament and
1ts $50,000 ftrst prtze.
It was playmg partner Jack
Ntcklaus, a man who has hit
some fantasttc putts hllllself ,
who so labeled Simons'
performance, whtch saw the
28-yearold Pennsylvaman
scramble his way to vtctory
with one savtng putt after
another down the stretch
And, 1t was Ntcklaus who
kept Sunons looking over h1s
shoulder all day, although tbe
Golden Bear all but played
his way out of the tournament
With a trtple-bogey s1x on the
fourth hole.
" I haven't relaxed all
week," satd Simons, after hiS
fmalround two-&lt;Jver-par 74
gave hun a wmrung 72-llole
total of fourunder-par 284 ,
one shot better than young
Bill Kratzert, who also had a
!mal-round 74
"I know 1t's rather dumb, "
Sunons sa1d, "but I worned
more about Jack than Bill
Kratzer! I really respect the
man I 1dohze hun It's JUSt
hard to 1gnore Jack when
you 're playmg wtth hun,
especially m Columbus "

25 vears ago descnbed m chilling detwl the life of 19th-eentury

By Mrs Herbert Roush
Mr and Mrs Larry Foster
and children of Columbus,
Mrs Ed Mom s of Bowlmg
Green spent Mother's· Day
weekend 11 lth Mrs Anna
Wheeler They also visited
Mrs Bess1e St1tts at Mt
Monah
Mr and Mrs Dorsa Parsons VISited Sunday w1th Mr
and Mrs Lester Little of
Hockmgport
Mrs Gerald Ha;man , Mrs
mor e''
PhylliS
Young, Mrs Lil lie
Resorts will fea ture craps,
Ha
rt
att
end ed a moth er
bla c k jac k , ba cc arat ,
da
ughter
banquet w1th Mrs
roulette, th e B1g 6 Wheel and
Lmda
Jewell
hosted by Mrs
slot rnachmes 111 the old
Jewell
's
miSsionary
soCiety
Challont e-Haddon Hall Hotel,
at
the
Hol
iday
Inn
1n
once one of the prem1er
Saturday
evemng
Gallipolis
conventiOn sttes tn the natton
Mr and Mrs LewiS Ours
Crosby, whose firm also
V
IS!Ied
Mr and Mrs Gerald
operates two casmos 10 the
Hay
man
Thu rsda y aft ernoon
Bahamas, est~mated the slot
Mr
and
Mrs Lo well
ma chmes took 1n so me
on
and
Sher n of
Burt
120,000 on the first day
Columbus
V
ISited
a recent
A former res1dent of Las
weeken
d
W
ith
.Mr
.and
Mrs
Vega s 1\ho didn 't want 1ll be
Vernon
Donohue
Hienlifled, wasn't Impressed
Mrs Mae Durst was taken
He Sa!d he waited 10 mtnutes
by
the Racme emergency
at a disabled slot machme
squad
to Veterans Memonal
and complamed there
Hos
pital
Munday mormn g
weren t enough change girls
and
admitted
as a medical
nnky-&lt;link opera"Th1s
patient
tion " he said
Mr and Mr s Jo hnme
M1ke Sa ntamello, seruor
Dono
hew and daughter, of
counsel for the Casino Control
CloviS,
New Mex1co, spenl a
CommisSion was watching
week
W
ith
their parents , Mr
the opera tion closely
and
Mrs
Roy
Donohew.
" We expec ted some
V1Ck1
Ables
of Ca nal
pro blems w1th the slot
Wmchester
spent
Mother 's
machines." he Said ''But
Da
y
wee
kend
wit
h her
that 's one purpose of the
s,
Mr
and
Mrs
Jack
parent
practice, to get out all of the
Ables
and
Paul
bugs "
Mr and Mrs Harry R1fne
and George Hendershot of
Greenlcmd resembles (:I ll Ravenswoo d Route VISited
ICe-fil led bowl nrnmed by Mr and Mrs Owen Anderson
coa&gt;tal ranges fn the center Monday
th1ck 1ce has depressed the
Mr and Mrs Arnold Anground SUI fat e to 1,200 feet derson, Brenda and Lori Ann,
below sea level
THF. DAILY SENTI NEl.

"Communist tool" for h1s
opposition to the Umted
State's role m Vietnam
Hays' prunary opponents
mclude the Belmont County
treasurer, the son of a former
county comm1ss10ner and
probate judge, a former aide
to Sen John Glenn, D-()hio
and a Monroe County School
Board member
Hays IS expected to win
eas1ly and m November face
George Contos, who was the
GOP nominee agamst
Lancwne two years ago and
who 1s the editor of a coal
mdustry newsletter.

SEO standing.~

Cht cago 3 51 LOut S 2
P llsbu rg h 7 Mon tr ea l 0
Atl anta 6 Houston .4
Los Ang{&gt;les 4 SM Fran 1
Monday ' s Probable Pitchers
I Atl t1m es EOTJ
P1tfsOurgh I Rooker '1 '1 I at
Mon tr eal ! Roger s 4 4), '1 15
pm

Atlanta
(Ma hler
o OJ at
CtnCi nnatr ( Bon ham 4 0 ) 8 05

pm

Los Ange les 1Su tton 3 4) at
San 01("9 0 (Qw ch1nko 3 '1 J 10

pm

Tuesday ' s Game s
Phrlael elph la a t Ch tc ago
New Yor k at P1lt sbgh n1ghl
Montr eal dt St L OU IS n 1ghl
At lanta a t Cmcrnnaf 1, ntgh l
Los Ang at San D1eg o n1gh l
Houston at San Fra n n1ghl

Amencan League
East
W L Pel
GB
Oetrott
73 1'1 657 25 14 64 I
Boston
N ew Yor k
73 14 6'}'/
I
18 19 486
6
Cleve lnd
18 19 486
6
Mtlwauk e
Balt lmor
10 21 432 8
l oron to
" 13 37a 10
We~t

Oakland
Caltl
KM Cdy
T exa s

W L Pel
74 15 615
2 1 16 568

GB

2

11 1

19 17

528

19 17
15 24
11 13
14 27

528
31 J
385
9
3 43 10
34 1 I I

Mmeso ta
Ch1 cago
Sea fi iC
Saturdav' s Results
Bos ton 6, Det ro1 t S
Tor on to 10 , New Yor k 8
Balf1mor e '1 Cleveland 1
Oakland 4 Ch1cago 3
Ka n C1 ly 6 Mmnesota 3
M tlwaulu:•e 6 Coli iQrn 1a 4
Sea lft e 7. T e ~&lt;a s J
Sundav' s Results
New Yor k 2 Toronto 1, 1st
New York 9 Toron to 1, 2nd
Bal ti mor e 3 Cl eve 0 lsi
Cleve 3 Balf 1mor e '1 1nd
Dctr o11 2, Bos ton I l si
Boston 9 Detro1t l 2n d
Ch1 cago 6 , Oaklii nd 1 lSI
Oak land 8 Ch ic ago 0 2nd
M 1nnesot a 3, Kan sas C1 ty 7
MllwC
IUkee '1 Cal dorn ta I
Te•a s S Sea tt le 4
Today ' s Probable P•lch ers
I All hme~ EDT)
Bos ton ( Ripl ey o 3J a t Tor an
to I Cia ncv 2 3), 1 JOp m
Tell as
(Matla ck
4 4)
at
Mmncso ta ( Za hn J 21 8 30 p m
Kan sa5. C1tv (Leona r d 3 7) at
Sean le (House 7 71, 8 35 p m
Tue sda v' s Games
Cleve at New Yo r k, n•ght
Dctro1t at Ball , n1 ght
Bos ton at Toronto n1g ht
Te)l.as at M•nnesota, n1gh l
Ch1cago a t Ca lll orn1a n1gh l
Mtlwaukee at Oakl and ntght
Kan C1 ly at Sea 7, 1w 1n 1gh t

Mator L eague Le aders
By UntTed Preu International
Battmg
• ll •unri n n 11n at h01hl

B ig Ten Standmg s
Nat•onat Leagu e
Un1ted Press International
W l Pet GB
G A 8 H Pet
Br rogh s All
36 1?0 43 J.)tl Mtc h tgan
13 3 8 13
Monday L A
35 171 47 347 M tch Sl
II 5 688 1
Sm 1th LA
37 \ 41 47 333 W tSCOn Sin
10 6 625 3
Grtftev C1n
40 169 56 33 1 Iow a
9 6 600 3 1 7
Billker L A
35 121 40 33 1 Oh to Sla te
9 • 500 5
Foster C .n
40 163 53 J2S M.n nes ot a
7 7 500 5
Buc kner Ch i
'}7 102 33 324
Northw st rn
6 10 , 29 7
Puh l HOU
3 4 140 45 31 1 l nd 1ana
5 8 38 4 617
Ma:lllt N'Y
40 158 SO 316 il l inOIS
6 12 333 a
Park er P1!
37 143 45 315 Purdu e
J 13 18 7 10
Amencan Leaqu e
_G , A.B H Pet
Resul ts o f w eek end ga mes
Carew Mm •
39 150 61 407
F r~d ay
l nd 1an a 6 P u r cue
R1ce Bas
39 164 60 366 4 Ind ia na 12 Purdue 11
Ja cksn Ca l
16 85 31 365
Sat urd ay M 1Ch 1gan Sta te
Sundbrg Tex
35 171 41 339 10 M •ch 1ga n 5. Oh 10 Sta te 7
S•nglln Bal
30 97 31 337 IH11101 S 1 Oh1 0 Stat e I ll l 1no1s
c ooper M1l
36 144 48 333 0
Lezcano M il
79 94 31 330
Su nda v
M 1ch 1ga n
J
P1n 1el a NY
16 94 31 330 M 1C h1g an Sta te 0 , ll l inpiS 6
Cart v Tor
3,. 122 40 328 lnd 1t!lna 3. lnd 1ana 7 lll1no•s
Revntds Sea
36 114 37 325 J un10 ;:, Ja te 11 Pu ro u ~ ..1
HomP. Run !!.
Oh10 Sta te 8 Pu rd ue 1
Nattonal League Mon day ,
LA
11 , Ktngman
Chi 9
Luzmskt and Schm 1dt , Ph I 8,
Bench , Dnessen, Fos ler and
Str fkeouh
Morgan, Cln , Sm 1th , LA and
Natlon11 League R 1char d,
Par ker , P1ft 7
Amer.can League Rice, Bos Hou 74, N1e kro , An 6.4 ~eave r
13, Thompson Ott 11, Baylor , C1n 55 . Blyleven . P11t 54
M ontefu sco SF 48
Cal and l ls k Tu 10. Al e)l. an
Amencan League Rya n , Ca l
der , OaK 9
8 7, Flanagan , Bait .0 Tanana
Run5 Bitted In
Ca l and leonard
KC 40 ,
National LeaQJie M on da y ,
L A 33 Morgan Cm 31, Foster , Matlack Tex 37
C1n and Srn ll h L A 30 Wa ts on .
Hou 28
American League Rice. Bos
41 , Z1Sk, Tex 31 Sfa ub Oet
and Car ew M 1nn 30 , May Ba lf

28

'OtniP.n Jl"&lt;iifU,
National League M or eno
Pill 2 1
Cedeno, Hou IS,
Royster , All Lopes , LA Tave
ra s Pil l 11
Amer.can League · LeFl ore ,
Del 17 Wil SOn . KC 16 Ddon e,
Oak
and
Cr u2,
Se a
14 .
Norwood , Mmn 12
P•tcfl lng
Mosf Ylc1or iel
N1tlon11 Lngue JoM . LA
and Blue, SF 6 I, Gr i msley Mil
and For sch Sl L 6 2 , Norman ,
Cln and Rau, LA S 0 . Khepper .

SF S 2

AmeJIUn LeaQJ.Ie T ano!llna ,,
Cal 7. 1, Lee, 8os 6 I. Guidry ,
NY 5 01 F igueroa , NY s 1;
Tor rez , Bos S 1, Knapp, Cal
end sor enson , Mil 5 3
E•rned Run Average
(llltd on ,, •nnjnQt pitched)
National Ltltue Andujar ,
Mil :l tJ9 . R Reuschel . Ch i 2 1) ,
Perry, so 2 15 Forsch , St L
239 , Swan . NY 2 ,.1
Am or leon

Leo gut Johnson ,

8os 1253,
50 Guidry
Keo ugh,
60, , _ _ _
Oak
, NY 0111k
183. 1Lee.
Ro2em1 , Oet 2 64

EASTERN GIRLS' TRACK TEAM TRIO - The above-p ictured gals, from left. Angel
Blake, Kllll Batey and Lourie Matthews, shown w1th Coach Sue Thompson, were among the
stars on the Eastern H1gh track team this yea r K1m was a discus thrower, Angel, 440 yard
run and Lourie , m1le run Greg Ba1ley photo.

Four Meigs gals earn berths

on All-SEOAL softball squad
The All-Southeastern Oh1o
Athleti c League fas t-pit ch
so ftball team was ann ounced

today wnh four Me1gs H1gh
g ~rl s
earnm g
School
recogni tlon
Tracy Burdette was chosen
for a hr&gt;t team berth, Pat
Vau ghan, second team ,
Kathy Howard , honora ble
mention and G Jenda Brown
spec1al honora ble menllon
Followmg IS the complete
list and current standmgs
Ftrst Team

Sen 1o r an d Pam S1g ler
Logan . Sen1or (hurt ear ly m
the seas on)

1978 SEOAL SOFTBALL
I Standrng s as of May 20 I
TEAM

W L

Jack son
Waver l y
Ir ont on
M etg s

9

I

7 3
9 4
5 5

Logan
Ga llipolos
Wells ion

5 6
4 6
I

11

Ov er-all

W L
10 1

Team

Jackson

Becky Kuhn, Logan

3

Wa ver l y
Me•g s
Iron ton
Wel lston

G1 n ny You ng . Ga lllpol1s

4

Ki m Conley Jackson

3

J od y Rowe I ron ton
Sonya Ha tt en , Well ston

4

Cat hy Nye, Logan
Debbie Foul Jackson
Second Team
Player- School

J

Galli polis
7
Athens
J 16
Rch1a101ng Games
M ond a y - F atr f le ld un1 on
at
A t hen s
Ir ont on a t
Ga l l 1po i1 S .:~n d M et gs at
Ga ll •p ol1 s
J a ck so n
at
Wa ver l y
T u es day A lhens a t
Ga l l i p OliS
Wa ve rl y
at

4

Yr

Pa t Va ughan M etgs
Ja net Groves. Ga l lipol i S

Dus ty Staten , Wellston

Br enda Con kle , Waverl y
K1m Co.: , Ir ont on
Anne Greene Jackson

Paula Hartley , Waverly

Jenn y Ca ssa dy , Logan
Cath y Ma r ek J ackson
Honorable Menf1on

4

J
3
3
1
1
4

3
1

Kathy Howard , Mergs ,

Sen 1or
L• sa Mc Da n 1e ls,
I ronton Fresh m an , /\-\an sa
T ru cco, L ogan , Ju n 1or

Cher yl Faor chold

Wa verly ,

Sen1or
Stephame Mul lm s,
We ll st o n. Se n• or , L y d•a
La vel le, A then s . J un1 or . Lou

Ann Chapman

Ja ckson,

Sop ho m ore , T1na Adkm s,

Ga llopol ls, Sophomore
Spec101 Mention
Gl en da

Br own ,

M e 1gs,

9 3
10 6
11 7
7 9

Logan

9

10

a

·R

D-

W'
A
R

E

111/-Sports
Trophy race

Mike Swiger

POINT TOTALS
As ot May 20
TEAM
TOTAL

992-7155
149 S Third St
Moddleport, 0

4011

Ir on I on

*
~ 111*
* :. (' : : ·1·39 *
* Ruler "unuruN" *
* CJi f . :a,:.. 7fC*
*
*

**

"IIGPUN"

IHCIAL

IIIOIIIIUl·IIIOITUr

Wa v er ly
4017 ' - - - - - At hens
40, 1
Loga n
351 ..
Ga ll ipoli s
JP 1
hhe1g s
24
insuruce~
Jac kson
14
Wel l ston
1012
Remammg spor t s to be
5tllr f11111 lft lUO lfll: f Co 1»~ u
mcluded are boys ba seba ll

"See me for car, boliiC,
life, health and busioess

and gorl s softball

TUIIDAY NIGHT IPICIAU

~o "' ' 01!

ru

l '- • llll i~ ltl110&lt;1

Wednes day -

**

. . _ . Nfii,_IWIITTIUT

HEII'I WHilE YOU'LL FIND THI FUN!

t503 Eastern Ave , Gallipoli s, OhiO
Jackson Ave &amp; 24th St , Rt Pleasant , W Va

NHL cn a mp,onshtp
By Unlled Press I nternatiOnal
f Best of Se\ en)
(Al l T1m es EDT)
M ontre al ~o s Boston
I Scn cs tu~ d , 22 1
May 13 Mon tr eal o1 Boston I
May 16 M on tr ea l 3. Boston 2

(O J)

Ma y 18 Bo ston 4 Montr eal 0
Ma y 21 Boston 4 Mon treal 3
(otl
M a y 23 Bo ston at M ontreal

a 05 p m

Ma y 2S Montr eal at Bos ton
8 OS p m
x Mrt y 77 or 78 Boston at
M ontr eal 8 05 p m
)( tf neceuar v

s N. W.OPTOMETRIST
COMPTON. O.D.

OFFICE HOURS: 9; 30 to 12,2 to s 1CLOSE
AT , NOON ON THURS.) - EAST COURT
ST., POMEROY.

1
1
I

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DO-IT-YOURSELF
HARDWARE HEADQUARTERS
Home lm provement Supplies

see Cross Hardware
• Housewares
• Wallpaper
• Painls
• Electrtcal Suppltes
• Plumbing Supphes

CROSS HARDWARE
Open Mon. thru Sat.
9 00
: to S: 00

$20 Per Adu It ...

::::::;._7•1~N~·~2~n=d~A~v~e~·...--~Mi=-d=d~te:p:o:r~t---~9~92:·:3:8J~'.J~

'£1Jc11lte ?2 ?2a11c~

$5 Per Child (5 to 12)

I
I

1

All TN II(( DA'I' \ WITH

~~~~"~ Ol 85 A li ttle Hockm g Oh1 o 457 42

I

'

~

I

( !)

I

I

~~

L ____

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l11 II I rl ' '
~ '~(!_I

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1

,.,, ~ \llf UI

M\:,

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FOR ADOITIONALIHFORMATION PHONE 16141989-2310

A Lot ol AIYS Mllll

ClAn~

- P'llfiiTY ol GOOD fOOD

IIMi udtr~l ,ull

C.wru Mul'\

DON'T FORGET OUR

7th Annual Bluegrass Show
June 9th, 1Oth, 11th, 1978
llWIS F-Y
SIHI!l
**1f CMJm
FaY - lfnur - Sltwrur)
* lA,_ F. . . . - f!r1101!1)01!11
*
-ISitiiUI

CGIS 110110$ - (All llrt1
(All

OSIORII MOTIIRS *** STOIIMUI
FAI!I.Y - ii!Jurjay - Sujar)
COOI'£R Sudlyl
* COOIITIIY COOlEMEN
Sat1rjl!l
(Sttvrdlr $11111)

WlMA L£E

(StMjar
(fnd11

MAC WISDMII - (fndly Saturdlli

Plus - The Mountaineer Skydivers - Saturday
Admission
Adults $10.00 (all three days) L'hildren under 12 $2.00
-

*

*************

Ja ck son at

,..---------------------------~--.

IPICtAL

IMAUIMT-

Logan

For all your do.it-yourseH
A

runs ' '

And e r so n
wa s
exag gera tmg, but only a
little In three different
Innings the Reds loadM the

League

Player - School
Yr
Tracy Burdett e Me1gs
4
Lt sa Shoemak er , Wa verl y
4
T1lda Fanntn , Ja ck son
2

1

M e •g s
Ga lli pOl iS
at
Wel ls ton , Logan at Wave r l y
Th ursd a y At he ns at
M e1gs and Wa ver l y d t Meigs
Wel ls ton a t Jac kson
To be schedu led Jackson
at Log a n

b'UYS on this club Wlth good
averages - around 300 or
better "
With thi s, Anderson
proceeded to reel off the
names of Ken Griff ey,
Ge or ge Foster, Dann y
Dnessen, Pete Rose, and
Davey Concepcwn
' But," pomted out the Reds
manager, •U,o many of the
hi ts are commg w1th two out
and no one on base or w1th
two out and one runner on
Not man y have been gamebrea kers Take the four
games w1th San Diego Ill bet
11 e ha d the bases loaded SIX
tunes and probably didn 't
wmd up wlth more than s1x

1m eMIPIIC FOI TilE WWIIIII -

�Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Monday, May 2'l.

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., Monday, May 22, 1978

D~dgers,

Reds close
in on San Francisco
By FRED McMANE
UPI SP&lt;Jr\s Writer
Managers Tom Lasorda of
Los An geles and Sparky
Anderson of Cine inn a ti no
longer have to go to their
medicine cabinet for proper
relief of slipshod bullpens.
Re cen tl y ac quired
relievers Terry r orster of the
Dodgers and Doug Bair of the
Reds
have
been
overpowering in rec ent
outings.
r orster. a lefl-hander , took
over for reliever Lan ce

Rautzhan in the eightll inning
Sunday and pitched hitless
relief over tlle last 1 2-3
innin gs to prese rve th e
Dodgers' 4-1 triumph over the
San rrancisco Giants. He has
not allowed a run in his last
nine appearances, stretching
over 13 1·3 innin gs.
"My arm feels great. I like
to pitch this much. If I get a
little tired I probably
con cent ra te more." sai d
Forster.
Bair has bee n just as
innpressiw The Reds ' right·
hander entered the second
game of a doubleheader in
relief of Da\'e Tcrnlin in the
eighth mning and gave up
just one htt over tlle final 1 1-3
innings to save the Reds' 1~

triumph over the San Diego
Padres.
"Ever)1hing's going right
for me," said Bair, who was
not used in the opener when
tlle Reds bowed to the Padres
and Bob Shirley, 7-2: "The
challenge of relief pitching

Royster contribu!J!d a tworun triple to lead the Braves

victory over the Astros.
Knuckleballtr Phil Niekro
gained his fourth victory in 10
decisions.
Pirates 7, Expos 0:
Rennie Stennett hit his first
career grand slam and Omar
excites me.''
In other National League Moreno added a solo blast to
game s, New York edged power the Pirates over the
Philadelphia , 6-5, in 10 Expos. John Candelaria and
innings, Chi cago nipped St . Kent Tekulve combined on a
Lo uis, 3-2, Atlanta beat six-hitter for the Pirates.
Houston. IH, and Pittsburgh
blanked Mootreal, 7~ .
Mets 6, Phlllies 5:
Steve Henderson's twoout
double in the lOth inning
scored~ Mazzilli and gave
the Mets a victory over the
Philli es. John Stearns
BOSToN (UP! I - The rest
homered for the Mets while
of
the hockey world said
Mike Schmidt had a three-run
Boston
would be lucky to
homer for the Phillies.
"steal
one game" from
Cubts 3, Cardinals 2:
Dave Rader doubled home defending c hampi on
Manny Trillo with the Montreal, the Bruins went out
winning run in the sixth and robbed the Ca nadiens for
inning as the Cubs handed the the second straight time
Cardinals
their
lOth SUnday for a 4-3 victory in
su ccess iv e loss . Rick overtime .
The se ries moves to
Reuschel went 7 1-3 innings to
Montrea
l Tuesday with both
get his fourth triumph.
teams
in
possession of two
Bra,•es 6, Astros 4:
Garv Mattllews drove in victories.
In the fourth game Bobby
tWo runs with a homer and a
Schmautz'
led Boston,
sacrifice fly and Jerry
slipping an unnoticed shot
to'

Carew ups average to .407
phone calls, the interviews. It Mike Marshall pitched the
got annoying at times."
ninth inning to get his third
Carew doubled to lead off save. ·
the fourth and scored the first
In other AL games, Texas
run on a single by Dan rord . nipped Seattle, &gt;4, Detroit
After Bobby Randall singled took Boston, 2-1, in the opener
and Willie Norwood doubled of a double-header before
in the secood, Carew cleared dropping the nightcap, 9-3,
the bases with his second Milwaukee wpped California,
double to drop Kansas City 2-1, New York dumped
starter Paul Spli ttorff's Toronto, 2-1 and 9-1 , in a
record to 4-4 .
twinbill, Baltimore stopped
Carew also singled in the Cleve land, 3-0, before
eighth to lift his average to dropping the nightcap, 3-2,
and Chicago trimmed
.407.
Gary Serum scattered six Oakland, 3-2, before losing , S.
hits in eight innings, while 0.
Rangers ~. Mariners 1:
AI Oliver drove in three
runs witll a solo homer, a
sacrifice fly and a run scoring double in the ninth
inning that snapped a 4-4 lie
and gave Texas a triumph
over Seattle .
game-~'inner with a hesitation move at the Montreal
blueline.
said Dryden, He stopped 20
"Shep sorta bobbled the Boston shots, but the Bruins'
puck coming over the line and Gerry Cheevers deflected 2:1
it seemed they hesitated, " Montreal bullets , despite
said Schmautz. "I just carne suffering a slight reinjury in
over the blueline and when! the first period to his twicegot the pu ck, l started damaged right leg .
moving wmy left. Robinson
Prior to the injury at the
fell just as l shot it and nine minute mark, Cheevers
Dryden never saw it. He yie lded a goal to Doug
could just as easily have Risebrough. He also gave up
blocked iI. " .
a second period sizzler to
" I thought both teams Robinson that put Montreal
played well but I wasn 't ahead and the gametying
happy with my own play," tally to Lafleur.

By MARK FRIEDMAN
UPI SJ)&lt;Jrts Writer

Rod Carew, who hit .400
early last season but dropped
below the elusive mark in
August, may well make it this
year if he gets his telephone
disconnected.
"It bugged me for about
two weeks last August," said
Carew after his three hil'l and
two RBI helped the
Minnesota Twins to a 3-2
vicwry over the Kansas City
Royals Sunday. "It wasn't
rea lly pressure," decided
Carew, ''it was the constant

Bruins shock Canadiens
second time iri row, 4-3
past Montreal's Ken Dryden,
at 6: 22 of overtime after
Montreal had staged a raid 011
the Boston goal to tie the
game with 33 seconds left in
regulation.
The Bruins caught the
Canadiens, who were still
policing the entire ice surface
and outshooting Boston, 6-2,
in the overtime, napping and
too k their second .
Gregg Sheppard , who
scored 25 seconds into the
contest to give Boston the
initial lead for the fourth
straight game, set UP the

BALLOT LANGUAGE, EXPLANATION, ARGUMENTS, AND
RESOLUTION FOR AMENDMENT TO THE OHIO
CONSTITUTION PROPOSED BY THE GENERAL
ASSEMBLY TO BE SUBMIITED TO THE VOTERS AT
THE PRIMARY ELECTION, JUNE 6, 1978

PROPOSED AMENDMENT
JO THE OHIO CONSTITUTION

FULL TEXT OF THE RESOLUTION PROPOSING
THE AMENDMENT
ISSUE I
(Ame nded Substitute H ouse J oint
Resolut ion No. 12)
JOINT RESOLUTION
PropoliDg to am•nd lecUoa lg of
Adlett JI of tht CollallUltlOn of
the SlaJt of Ohio to reduc. lbt
n\Unber of timts lAltlaJin and

nfe..-ncham propo&amp;ab mu.t be
adnrtlMcl. to rtqvlre Jbt Ohlo
BUlol Board to ~ tbe

ballet lanpap lor Ita.. propotalJ, and to ecntorm ,.qulN-

meats tcr el.reulatlng and alplrlg
lAltWt.. &amp;Ad menadu.m petlHctu to tbON pro~!dtd bf tnr

tor other ki.Jida of ~Utlona.
Be it reaolvtd by lh~ Gtone ral

Assem bly

PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT
To amend Section l g of Article II of the Constitution of Ohio
L TO REQUIRE THE OHIO BALLOT BOARD TO WRITE THE
BALLOT LANGUAGE FOR STATE ISSUES PROPOSED BY
INITIATIVE OR REFERENDUM PETITION.
2. TO REDUCE THE NUMBER OF TIMES INITIATIVE AND REFERENDUM PROPOSALS MUST BE ADVERTISED PRECEDING THE
ELECTION.
3. TO MAKE THE REQUIREMENTS FOR CIRCULATING AND
SIGNING INITIATIVE AND REFERENDUM PETITIONS SIMILAR
TO THOSE FOR PETITIONS FOR CANDIDATES.
(Proposed by Resolu tion of the General Assembly of Ohlo)
A major ity affirmative vot e is necessary for passage.

1

YES

SHALL T HE PROPOSED AMENDMENT
BE ADOPTED?
NO
EXPLANATION OF ISSUE No. I
1. Under present la w the Ohio Ballot Board may write simpl ified ballot
language for Constitutional amendments proposed by the General.
Assembly. However, ballot language for state issues proposed by initiative or re ferendum petiti ons must be written by the Se&lt;:retary of State
under h ighly techni cal req ui remen ts. This section of the amendment
allows the Ohio Ballot Board also to prepa re simpli fi ed ballot la ngua ge
for issues proposed by initiative or referendum petition.
2. A state issue proposed by initi ative or referendum petition is now requi red to be pu blished once a week for fi ve conse&lt;:utive weeks prior to
the election. This section of the amendment redu ces this requirement
to once a week for three weeks, as is now required for issues prop osed
by the General Assembly.
3. This section of the ame ndment allows a signer of an initiative or r eferendum petition to use a stand ard postal address to identify the place of
res1dence. It also eliminates th e notarized statement of the ci rculator
and authorizes the General Assembly to provide by law for a statement
that the ci rcula tor wi tnessed the affixing of eve ry signature. · These
changes make the requirements for circ ulating and signing initiati ve
and referendum peti t ions sim il ar to those of petitions for ca ndid ates.
ARGUMENTS FOR TilE PROPOSED AMENDMENT
The people's constitutional right to propose laws and constitutional
amendments by initiative peti tion and to place laws passed by the General
Assemb ly on the ballot by referendu m is sometimes frustrated because
of technical details in the lega l requirements. Issue i will clarify some of
these proced ures, and will enable initiative and referendum measures to
appear on the ballot in language tha t is clear and easy to understand.

.
Issue I will have the following advan tages:
I. People who sign initiative or referendum petitions will be able to
list their addresses in the form most fam iliar to them whether it be a post
office address, a street and num ber in a city or vi ll age, or a rural route
number or township if they live outside a city or vi llage. At the present
ti me. some names of elig ible signers must be stricken because they failed
tc list their address in st ri ct conform ity to the law.
2. Circulators of petitions wi ll no longer ha ve to ha ve each part-petition
notarized. a requirement that is both bu rdensome and expensive. A simple
statement that the ci rcula tor witnessed each signature will be sufficient.
Since all signat ures must be checked before final acceptance of the petitions , this is sufficient to assure, initiall y, that the petitions should be
received for filin g.
3. Reduc ing the numbe r of times newspaper publication is r equired for
each initiated or referred measure from five to three will result in substantial savings for taxpayers. Three instead of five publications of ini tiative proposals in November, 1975, would have saved $120,000.00.
Three co mplete ·publications will give all voters ample opportunity to
read the proposal and the information about it.
4. Voters have already adop,ted a proposal creating a Ballot Board with
au thority to write the ballot language for constitutional amendments
proposed by the General Assembly in language that is clear and easy tc
un dersta.n d. Legal requirements that technical details of a proposal must
appear on the ballot were eliminated . Issue I will apply the same technique for p reparing the ballot language for initiated Qnd referred measures,
and will assist in voter understandin g of these sometimes complicated
measures.
Committee for the Amendm ent; Kenneth R. Cox, Rex F. Klefter,
Harry J . Lehman and
John K. Mahoney

of

!he

State

of

OhJo,

th ree ·fifth s or the members elccted
to eac h ho use concur nn c therein.
th.il t ther e sha ll be Jru bm lt ted t o the
eh'&gt;d on; of t h e state m t h e m an ner

p resc nbed by law at th e special
ele&lt;:tto n to ~ held on the fi n;;t
Tuesday after the tint Monday 111
J une, 19711. a p ro po~a l to amend t he
Coru; titution of the Slate of Ohi o by
ame ndinc ~e lt o n tr o f AMide n
ae foUov.-s :
ARTICLE II
Sec tion 11. Any Ini tiative, 5Up ·
pleme ntary, or referend um peti tion ma.,y be prt:R"nted ln st puate
~N b\lt ea ch
1h1ll contain
a full and corre&lt;: copy o f th~ title.
and text of the law , ~teCtl on or
item thereof aou(ht to be' rdeTT'td .
or the p ro po~ la w or pro poSf' d
am~ndment
to th.e
const itu tion.
Each siJ,n er of a ny ln tuat !\'t , supplement ary , or referend um petition
must be an elector of the • tate
and shall place on such pet ition
after h is name the dale of al('n in J'
a nd hia place o f reJ~ i de n~ . A signer
re!lldint oulslde of a m unicipalit y
sha U state the cou nty a nd the rura l
route number, post office addreu,
or township of hls res.ldence . A
resident of a mun ici pality shall
state the strut and n um be r, if
anY. of hia residence an d t he n ame
of the municipality o r the post
otrlc: e add l"t"!': s.. The names of all
slgners to s uc h peti t ions shall ~
w rtrten In l.nk, each lil(ne r Jor
h imself. To e ach part o f ruch petl.
t aon shall be attached th e state m ent of the circula to r . as may be
requ ired by h 1w. t tla t he witnessed
the affixing a l every signature The
~ t! hon and s l(tUlt ures upon liUCh
pe titions. shall b@ presum e-d to be
tn au ~ fpec tJ ruff\ cien t, unl eu not
la ter than l o rty d ay• Mfore th e
e led.ton, tt 1h.a ll be otherwtse
p ro\.·~ and In :;uch event ~ n add le
tion al d ay~ aha ll be allowed for the
f\linc al ad dltlooal • lrnatu rts to
such ptotltlon . No la w or ame nd ·
me nt to the coratitutlon I!&gt;Ubmltted
to the ei N:tortl b y Lnltlath•e and.
su pple men tary petit ion And recetv rng ~n affinnatl ve maj ortt y of th e
vot es ca st thel't'On , th:~ ll be held
unconstitutiona l o r void on accoun t
of the lnsufficienc:y of the pet ition•
by which such JU bml&amp;ll lon of the
sam e W i!l r rocUrrd : nor ~al l t he
re jiP'Ction o an y law •ubml tted by
~fere-ndum petition be held In·
valid Jor suc h ituu ffielen C'y . Upon
all initiativ e , supplementary, and
refere ndum petltlon8 p rovided for
in anx of the sec tlora o f th!J arti ·
cle. It llhall be ne~ ry to rue
f rom eaeh of one-hall of the
eountle!ll of lhf' rtll te, ~t ltion s
bearing the s:trn atu!"H ~ not leM
Uu n one- h.ai.I of the dellll'l ated
pf'rcenta ge of the electors c f auch
cou n ty. A t ru e t'D PY o f aU 11w11· or
p ro po~ed lawa or proposed amend ·
mt-nts to the conrtltu Uon. togethe r
with an a rrument or explan ation .
or both , for, and Also a n a rrum ent
or ex-planation, or both. acalnlt
t h e cam e . ahall be prepared. The
pe raon o r persons who p~pare the
arlfUmMl or t! XJ)Ian allon, or both,
u alrut ll'l Y law, tectlon, or item ,
sub mi tted to tht- electors by n-fera

r•rt

endum petition . ma y be named in
suc:h petition a.nd the penons who
p repare the argument or explan aa
t ion, or both, t or any p roposed law
or propo sed amendm ent to the con.
stt tutlon may be named in t he
petition proposing the same. The
person or persons who prepare the
a rgum ent or ex Pianatl on or both .
for th e laW, 5C'Ction . o r 1tern . 11ub·
m itted to the electol"!! by rrteren·
du m pt&gt;tltlon . or a gainst any p ro·
posed law submitted by wpple.
m entary petition , s hall be nam ed
b y the fe nera l assem bly, if in ses"r;ion, an d 11 not in session then by
the governor. The la w. o r p roposed
law, or proposed amendment to
the constitutio n, t ogether with the
Brguments and e:xp\a.nations, not
f'Xt'@eding a total of th~ hundred
w ords for each , and alao the arru men.ts and e xpl ana tlona, not ex·
ceedlnr a total of three hundred
wonts against each . .!ihitll be published once a we-ek for three con·
aecutlve wet-k s prtted in g the e \ecUon , in at least o ne n4!"'NS"J)aper of
pneral circu lat ion In e ach count ~·
of the state, where a newsp11per is
pub!Lshf'd. The sec m ary of sta te
shall ca use to be placed u"POn the
bal!ot.s, the ba llot Ta ngua ( e for any
Auch law, or proJX&gt;9C'd law, or pro ·
P'09t!d a mendment to the conrt ltU·
Uon . to be •ubm ltted. The bAllo t
l angu.a~ shall M
precrll&gt;ed by
the Ohio Ballot Board in t he same
manner, an d subje-c t t&lt;:1 1he sru1u~
te rms and condi tions, as apply to
~ su bm itted b y 1he t ene ral
assembly p ursuan t to Secti on I o f
Article XVI of thJs conJf!ltutlo n.
Th e ballot la nguage shaU bt 10
PN'Itrlbf:"d and 1he aeoeretan· of
state shall cause the baUots eo t o
bt• printed as to permi t an affirma t ive o r negative v ote upon each
Jaw, section of law . or Item 1n a
law appropri ating money , or pro·
JJoOi'ed law. or proposed amendment
to t he constitu tion . The atyle of all
lawa wbmltted b y irlltlatlve an d
supp lementary peti tion sh&amp;ll be ·
"Be It En ac t~ by the Peo_l:lle o f
t he State o f Ohio," and of al l con!ltitutton al amendment$ : " Be It Re solved by lhe Peop le o f the Sta te o f
Ohio." Th ~ bui5 upon wh ich the required numlwr of peUUonen in ;my
case shall be dete rmined shall be
the t ot al numbe r of vot es t'Mt fo r
t he o rfi ce of governor at the 11\.!1
preceding eJ eetlon th erefo r . The
fort' g'Oin g provl.! lons of th is se~tlon
shall be sdl · ~X"etutl n fil' , exctpt as:
herein o t huwl,e provided . Laws
may be passed to bcll! tat e t heir
o~ rati o_n . but in no way limiting
o r restnt't lng e ith e r such provb !oT\.1
or the powe rs here in reserved .
EFFECTIVE D ATE AND REPEAL
ll adopted by a m11jorlt y ot t he
e lectors
\IOtin g
thereon ,
t hiS
am endmen t shall ta ke Imm ed iate
etrect and ex1St1ng Section lg uf
Article II shAll be re pealed from
wch effedlve da t.e.
UN IT ED STATES OF' AMERICA

STATE OF OHIO
OFT! CE OF THE SECRETARY
OF STA TE
l. TEO W. BROWN . Sec:rt tan· o f
State . do ht reby ce rttfr that the
forerotng h1 a true eopy of Amf!nd~d
Su tJgtlt ut e House Joln t Rt'Sf)! Utlon
No. 12, fl ied in the office of the Sec reta ry of Sto1te, p roposing to nmend
the Coni1.ltu tlo n ot Ohio , toge:ther
with the ballot langua ge and explana tion certified to mf! by t he
OhJo Ballo t Boa rd and ar i(llmenta
for the amen dm e n t as •ubmltted b)
t he appropria te co mmltt~
IN TESTIMONY WHEREO F. I
have he reun to su bsc ribed my name
and il:tflxed my omctal 1u l at Co·
tumbUI thls l Slh d ay o f A pril, 1V78.
I Sui )

TED W, BRO WN,
Sttrett~ry o f State

Custoot full

hi one "" too dags

Our

~laff

of drn1 1m and

Jcchmc1an\ v.1 ll make \Our
ru'ilom &lt;k-nlure'l qu!Ckl) . and
economtca ll)

Ont or two day full
denture ~t r v1ce ,

DtRonald ERiviere
• 0. A.J . s...hiJ • 0. C.W. Bc:.J • 0. . 0 J. S&lt;ombaugh
• 0. . W D. K•mbaii ·• O.. J.C Murphj •O. J. O&lt;hman

The Riv1ere Cen ter
~9

E. ltvmp!on Ave. t:olumbus

...

.llllliiiil.

w;

Tigers
Red Sox 1,9:
Bob Montgomery drove in
four runs with his first four
hits of the year to lead Boston
over Detroit in the nightcap
after Milt Wilcox fired an II·
strikeout , six-hit
performance to win the
opener.
Brewers 2, Angels I:
Cecil Cooper's fourih hit of
the game, a tw&lt;HJut single in
the bottom of the ninth,
scored Gorma n Thomas from
third base with the winning
run to give Milwaukee a
'ictory over California.
Yankees t-9, Blue Jays 1·1 :
Thurman Munson knocked
in five runs with a single,
double and his first homer of
the season to lead New York
to a rout of the Jays in the
second game. In the opener,
Cliff Johnson came up with a
two-run homer to pace the
Yanks.

Orioles 3-%, 11-3 :·
David Clyde, with relief
help from ,Jinn Kern and
Dennis Kinney, picked up his
second .victory of the season
and John Grubb tripled to
trigger a three1un second
inning that gave Cleveland a
nightcap vic tory. In the
opener, Scott McGregor
tossed a four-hitter in hurling
his first major-league
shutout.
White Sox ~. A's 2-8:
Mitchell Page drove in five
runs with a homer, two
doubles and a single and
rookie John J9hnson pitched
his second shutout, leading
Oakland to a roQt over
Chicago in the second game.
Junior Moore and Eric
Soderholm each drove in a
rur with eigh th~nnin g singles
and the Sox adde&lt;j three runs
in the ninth to win the opener.

MEMORIAL DAY MEAT SPECIALS

GROUND

SUPERIORS

LB.
1:1"'._...._

.....

.. ~

79¢

12 oz.
PKG.

spg

99

RIB or
SIRLOIN

WIENERS

CHUCK

\

CUDAHAY
SLICED NO. 1

MIXED

FRYER PARTS ......~~:;.49~
BREAST.................~~: 99~
DRUMSTICKS ........~~:.99~
THIGHS ................~~:. 79~
PICK OF THE CHICKEN

HAMS

BACON

WHOLE lb. $} 49
HALF lb. $} 59

.

/~
'.·" .
~..JI"'
· &gt;

CORN

·

_. - ·
11
..

IMEMORIAL DAY PRODUCE VALUEs]- .:. .
TENDER FLORIDA ,
6 FOR 99e ';,I .•·

Look for the Country Pride
Calico for the · ·
finest
fresh and frozen poultry.

IDAHO

RED RIPE

POTATOES

TOMATOES

39C

LB.

$1 49

10 LB.

STRAWBERRIES

GREEN PEPPERS

LB. 89~

2

4/$1

99e

PINTS

HEAD LETTUCE

EAT

BEEF PATTIE.$

49e

HEAD

WE MAKE 'EM HERE

qualifying record Saturday
with a best lap of 203.620 and
a four~ap average of 202.156,
eclipsing his 19n marks of
200 .535
and
198.884
respectively. And he felt he
could have done better.
"It wasn 't a smooth run by

T

THE GRILL

2

BIGGEST SAVINGS IN TOWN!
lomol tw ~ '""'~ co.., pon
0"' ( O~POII ~~ lt m!l'f

any means, " he said . "The

chassis wasn't anywhere
close to how I wanted it and l
did an awfu l lot of slipping
and sliding."
Three other drivers also
qualified at better than 200 Danny Ongais, Mears, and
defending champion A.J .
royt - but Foyt lost his
chance for the pole because of
his own error in adjusting the
turbocharger wastegate that
controls. the power delivered
by his eight..:ylinder engine.
"It was my fault. You win
some and you lose some," he
said.
Foyt and Ongais had
identical speeds of 200.122,
but while Ongais will start
second, Foyl will be 20th in
tlle lineup because he was a

Jumbo
Rolls .

n

;;

0

z

VAUGHAN'S
"

•

I

SALE DATES MAY 22-29, 1978
.OPEN MONDAY, MEMORIAL DAY

SUOAR
GREEN GIANT

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sporta Editor

~

II

16-oz.

Cans

KETCHUP

FOLGERS
REG
., DRIP
or ELECT.

~

RK ·.

32 -oz.
16·01.

Can•

8

z

Lb .
Can

"

Vo SIORf S

1

32 -oz.
Bonia

t.,... an,.n•

69~

Good .. C..._.! !ll"ovtl .,..,, SltlrH

O.

COFFEE

HEINZ

$1

CAR:\~:~:\}~

lom11 o n t '""'" CQ!HioOI•
On t 'OIJ POI"I lilt&lt; ftm il y

S1 0.00 purchase

Limit one w i1h

ET PEAS

6/:nn e

tt ¢ft"4;tltl lloytl 81 ~ • SIO/ fl

7 S1IIR1 S

OCUST &amp; PEARL STREETS
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Sport Parade

b pn.

GoiHI

~

5i~•69

NEW YORK (UP! ) - Danny Ozark has been managing the
Phillies six seasons now and practically from the first day he
took over, he has been listening to the sa!T]e old refrain .
As a handler of men , he was much too soft, too permissive,
too easy. He didn 'I use the whip enough, they said of him.
The fact the Phillies set an Eastern Division record by
winning 101 games the past two years hasn't changed the
thinking of most of Ozark's critics, especially since the Phiis
lost both those playoffs.
"I'm probably too easy," he admits. "A Iotta people tell me
this, yet my players don't take advantage of me . At least, l
don 't feel they do.
"Whenever l hear or read that I'm not tough enough , my
reaction is that l get more out of my players by managing my
way . I'm not the kind of person who likes to keep picking all the
time. l don 't like to henpeck others and I don't like being
henpecked myself.
That shouldn 't be construed to mean he lets everyone walk
all over him, Ozark is quick to point out.
" U I ever have any beef with my players, I let them know
about it. I'm not bashful, " he says. "I can remember one time
not too long after l became manager of this club, some players
suddenly had a lotto say for themselves in the newspapers.
"They were second-guessing me, telling me who I shoold be
playing and shouldn't be playing, and I got so fed up with it, so
provoked, that I called a meeting, closed the door and
straightened a few things out. l had my say.
Once again Ozark has the Phillies on top in their division now
and although they aren't exactly running away from the rest of
their competition, no one in any of the other three majorleague divisions is doing appreciably better.
No matter what, Ozark doesn't figure to change. For better
cr worse, this is the way he manages and the record shows he
has been relatively successful doing it his way.
"Every manager has to bandle his players the way he sees
fit," says Ozark . "They tell me that when Bill McKechnie
managed Cincinnati, he'd allow his playel'l! to have beer in the
clubhouse after the game but he wouldn't permit any soft
drinks before the game. I don't know what he reasoning was ,
but that was the way he felt .
"Jake Piller was my first manager In the minors, with Olean
of the Pony League, and he had a rule that you couldn 't even
have a drink of water on the bench. He clainned it made you
logy and sluggish.
"Of course, that was back in 1942 and things have changed a
lot since then ," Ozark goes on. "In those days, players in the
big leagues never had any kind of food in the clubhoose, so
they'd 'brown bag' it every day. Today, they have what
amounts to a catering service in the clubhouse. Fried chicken,
beef stroganoff, lasagna, everything. In San Franclsco and
Montreal, they even have big ribeye steaks and baked potatoes
in the clubhouse ."
Speaking of all the food made available to the players now
made Ozark laugh.
"We lost a ball game in Houston once and I was really teed
off ," he says. "Some of our guys went for the food right after
the game. Terry Harmoo was one ot the nicest guya we ever
had on this club. He isn't with us anymore, but alter thl.s
particular game, I wan!J!d to have a meeting with the players
and the first thing l saw was Terry Harmon picking up a piece
qf chicken. 'Put that chicken down !' I said to him. He dropped
it out of his hand inunediately ."
Major4eague ballplayers are given 121 a day meal money
when they're on the road. Some of them pocket that, then fill up
on what is spread out for them in the clubhouse.
·
"And they beef about that food being lousy , too," Ozark
laughs some more.

SUPERIORS ·TAVERN

STEAK

~

WHOLE FRYERS

Field set fo~
Indy 500 race
INDIANAPOUS (UP[) Roger Penske , the former
sports car ace turned
business tycoon , owns the
hottest three-car team in
Indiana polis 500 history , and
Tom Sneva still is the No. I
chauffeur.
ror the second year in a
row, Sneva , the former
schoolteacher from Spokane,
Wash, pula Penske car on the
pole with a record clip better
than 200 mph .'
Rick Mears, in an identical
machine, became the fastest
rookie in Speedway history at
a speed of 200.078 to clainn the
outside spot in the first row,
while Mike Hiss qualified
eighth fa stest Saturday for
Penske .
However , that car will start
33rd, or last, because it will
be driven in the race by
former winner
Mario
Andretti .
Sneva , the seventh driver
in 500 history to grab the first
starting spot two years in a
row, smashed his own

I~/H

00 10 0!1

H7

'Oo SIO A1 S

$5Z9
00 1!&gt; Oh

Bottle

CARDI NAl

Umlt one with coupon

GAlEN GIAN T

NIBLETS CORN .................. 3 '~;~: 89&lt;
PORK NBEANS .................. 3 '~;~: 79&lt;

INSTANT

CA MPI EllS

MA)IWEll HOU SE INS TANT

REG. or DIET

s399

COFFEE ............. '~~~·

FIYOO POP
I
BUNS
_$189
Z. c•89'

16-oz.

Bottles

ESTEl

$

~

REG . or RIPPLE

PRINGLE$ .,,,,,,, .....................

g . 01,

89(

Cln

69(
MARDI GRAS NAPKINS .................. · '"'
79(
140 Ct

HEAVY OUTV

25-fl

REYNOLDS FOIL .................... · ............. ''"
CAMPFIRE MARSHMALLOWS ... ..... .':;~ 59&lt;

WIENER or HAMBURGER

CARDINAL

VANILLA

ICE CREAM

Pkt...

12-oz.
Bo•
~
p

POTATO
CHIPS

8
16 oz. $119
bottles

11 oz.

79'

I DAIRY VALUES I
EXTRA lARGE EGGS. .................~~. 69'
KRAFT CHEEZ WHIZ ......................... ';:; 79c
KRAFT PIMENTO CHEEZ WHIZ ........ ';:: 79&lt;
KRAFT PARKAV

IE
.

Z

1-Lb .
Cartons

011011 CHIP NDIP ............................... ~:;::,; 59•

11211711

Gmld .. Caninll Ao vel lll"e S10•••
00 10 Ob

&lt;&gt;&lt;?o S10AI S

GOLDEN GRAIN MAC &amp; CHEDDAR 4 '~;,:· s1

l•m •l oo• w olh ~

One couoon p"' faln•l'

•

26·01
Bqx

STARKIST TUNA ................................... ."~.~· 69&lt; ~
"z

VIETTI HOT DOCi SAUCE ................ ) ~.~: 5100

G~

0

£,..,.,.

11271711
ld e.IMMIIIo~e!' ll~• S1or 11
00 20 Ofl

0.

1&gt;0 S1ORJS

CLARK or ZACiNUT CANDY BARS .. ':,~· 99&lt;
BORON CHARCOAL LIGHTER ......... 0c".'," 69&lt;

MR. BEE

7-UP

~1\

3-oz .
Jar

ASSORTEO FLAVORS

I PICNIC NEEDS I

69

lrm rl tiOf Wltn

One co... ~~" "" t.IT)!!r

l!m 11 on t .., ,, h Cflolt"l"

Ont

KINGSFORD

DAWN LIQUID

CHI

DETEROEIT :!~~~~
Limit two with coupon

I FROZEN FOOD VALUES I

Pill' lilmoly

L

20' OFF LABEL

TOiEis.ZJ~~~· 99

t OIIPOO

~0 S10 RfS • C~ R OI N ~1 IOOOS10R£ S ·~~'IT~~"

Lb.

'"'

DISHWASHER

l•m~~.: 5~0:z. $159

Bag

1

0"•

NATURAL SUN.

LEMONADE ........~ ..6~:- $1

co~ pon pt1t

,.,.,.,!,

. -~9'J1 f1 S
Goott " C~ ov tl llut llor"
00 l O Ofi

'%0SIOA£ S

�Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Monday, May 2'l.

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., Monday, May 22, 1978

D~dgers,

Reds close
in on San Francisco
By FRED McMANE
UPI SP&lt;Jr\s Writer
Managers Tom Lasorda of
Los An geles and Sparky
Anderson of Cine inn a ti no
longer have to go to their
medicine cabinet for proper
relief of slipshod bullpens.
Re cen tl y ac quired
relievers Terry r orster of the
Dodgers and Doug Bair of the
Reds
have
been
overpowering in rec ent
outings.
r orster. a lefl-hander , took
over for reliever Lan ce

Rautzhan in the eightll inning
Sunday and pitched hitless
relief over tlle last 1 2-3
innin gs to prese rve th e
Dodgers' 4-1 triumph over the
San rrancisco Giants. He has
not allowed a run in his last
nine appearances, stretching
over 13 1·3 innin gs.
"My arm feels great. I like
to pitch this much. If I get a
little tired I probably
con cent ra te more." sai d
Forster.
Bair has bee n just as
innpressiw The Reds ' right·
hander entered the second
game of a doubleheader in
relief of Da\'e Tcrnlin in the
eighth mning and gave up
just one htt over tlle final 1 1-3
innings to save the Reds' 1~

triumph over the San Diego
Padres.
"Ever)1hing's going right
for me," said Bair, who was
not used in the opener when
tlle Reds bowed to the Padres
and Bob Shirley, 7-2: "The
challenge of relief pitching

Royster contribu!J!d a tworun triple to lead the Braves

victory over the Astros.
Knuckleballtr Phil Niekro
gained his fourth victory in 10
decisions.
Pirates 7, Expos 0:
Rennie Stennett hit his first
career grand slam and Omar
excites me.''
In other National League Moreno added a solo blast to
game s, New York edged power the Pirates over the
Philadelphia , 6-5, in 10 Expos. John Candelaria and
innings, Chi cago nipped St . Kent Tekulve combined on a
Lo uis, 3-2, Atlanta beat six-hitter for the Pirates.
Houston. IH, and Pittsburgh
blanked Mootreal, 7~ .
Mets 6, Phlllies 5:
Steve Henderson's twoout
double in the lOth inning
scored~ Mazzilli and gave
the Mets a victory over the
Philli es. John Stearns
BOSToN (UP! I - The rest
homered for the Mets while
of
the hockey world said
Mike Schmidt had a three-run
Boston
would be lucky to
homer for the Phillies.
"steal
one game" from
Cubts 3, Cardinals 2:
Dave Rader doubled home defending c hampi on
Manny Trillo with the Montreal, the Bruins went out
winning run in the sixth and robbed the Ca nadiens for
inning as the Cubs handed the the second straight time
Cardinals
their
lOth SUnday for a 4-3 victory in
su ccess iv e loss . Rick overtime .
The se ries moves to
Reuschel went 7 1-3 innings to
Montrea
l Tuesday with both
get his fourth triumph.
teams
in
possession of two
Bra,•es 6, Astros 4:
Garv Mattllews drove in victories.
In the fourth game Bobby
tWo runs with a homer and a
Schmautz'
led Boston,
sacrifice fly and Jerry
slipping an unnoticed shot
to'

Carew ups average to .407
phone calls, the interviews. It Mike Marshall pitched the
got annoying at times."
ninth inning to get his third
Carew doubled to lead off save. ·
the fourth and scored the first
In other AL games, Texas
run on a single by Dan rord . nipped Seattle, &gt;4, Detroit
After Bobby Randall singled took Boston, 2-1, in the opener
and Willie Norwood doubled of a double-header before
in the secood, Carew cleared dropping the nightcap, 9-3,
the bases with his second Milwaukee wpped California,
double to drop Kansas City 2-1, New York dumped
starter Paul Spli ttorff's Toronto, 2-1 and 9-1 , in a
record to 4-4 .
twinbill, Baltimore stopped
Carew also singled in the Cleve land, 3-0, before
eighth to lift his average to dropping the nightcap, 3-2,
and Chicago trimmed
.407.
Gary Serum scattered six Oakland, 3-2, before losing , S.
hits in eight innings, while 0.
Rangers ~. Mariners 1:
AI Oliver drove in three
runs witll a solo homer, a
sacrifice fly and a run scoring double in the ninth
inning that snapped a 4-4 lie
and gave Texas a triumph
over Seattle .
game-~'inner with a hesitation move at the Montreal
blueline.
said Dryden, He stopped 20
"Shep sorta bobbled the Boston shots, but the Bruins'
puck coming over the line and Gerry Cheevers deflected 2:1
it seemed they hesitated, " Montreal bullets , despite
said Schmautz. "I just carne suffering a slight reinjury in
over the blueline and when! the first period to his twicegot the pu ck, l started damaged right leg .
moving wmy left. Robinson
Prior to the injury at the
fell just as l shot it and nine minute mark, Cheevers
Dryden never saw it. He yie lded a goal to Doug
could just as easily have Risebrough. He also gave up
blocked iI. " .
a second period sizzler to
" I thought both teams Robinson that put Montreal
played well but I wasn 't ahead and the gametying
happy with my own play," tally to Lafleur.

By MARK FRIEDMAN
UPI SJ)&lt;Jrts Writer

Rod Carew, who hit .400
early last season but dropped
below the elusive mark in
August, may well make it this
year if he gets his telephone
disconnected.
"It bugged me for about
two weeks last August," said
Carew after his three hil'l and
two RBI helped the
Minnesota Twins to a 3-2
vicwry over the Kansas City
Royals Sunday. "It wasn't
rea lly pressure," decided
Carew, ''it was the constant

Bruins shock Canadiens
second time iri row, 4-3
past Montreal's Ken Dryden,
at 6: 22 of overtime after
Montreal had staged a raid 011
the Boston goal to tie the
game with 33 seconds left in
regulation.
The Bruins caught the
Canadiens, who were still
policing the entire ice surface
and outshooting Boston, 6-2,
in the overtime, napping and
too k their second .
Gregg Sheppard , who
scored 25 seconds into the
contest to give Boston the
initial lead for the fourth
straight game, set UP the

BALLOT LANGUAGE, EXPLANATION, ARGUMENTS, AND
RESOLUTION FOR AMENDMENT TO THE OHIO
CONSTITUTION PROPOSED BY THE GENERAL
ASSEMBLY TO BE SUBMIITED TO THE VOTERS AT
THE PRIMARY ELECTION, JUNE 6, 1978

PROPOSED AMENDMENT
JO THE OHIO CONSTITUTION

FULL TEXT OF THE RESOLUTION PROPOSING
THE AMENDMENT
ISSUE I
(Ame nded Substitute H ouse J oint
Resolut ion No. 12)
JOINT RESOLUTION
PropoliDg to am•nd lecUoa lg of
Adlett JI of tht CollallUltlOn of
the SlaJt of Ohio to reduc. lbt
n\Unber of timts lAltlaJin and

nfe..-ncham propo&amp;ab mu.t be
adnrtlMcl. to rtqvlre Jbt Ohlo
BUlol Board to ~ tbe

ballet lanpap lor Ita.. propotalJ, and to ecntorm ,.qulN-

meats tcr el.reulatlng and alplrlg
lAltWt.. &amp;Ad menadu.m petlHctu to tbON pro~!dtd bf tnr

tor other ki.Jida of ~Utlona.
Be it reaolvtd by lh~ Gtone ral

Assem bly

PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT
To amend Section l g of Article II of the Constitution of Ohio
L TO REQUIRE THE OHIO BALLOT BOARD TO WRITE THE
BALLOT LANGUAGE FOR STATE ISSUES PROPOSED BY
INITIATIVE OR REFERENDUM PETITION.
2. TO REDUCE THE NUMBER OF TIMES INITIATIVE AND REFERENDUM PROPOSALS MUST BE ADVERTISED PRECEDING THE
ELECTION.
3. TO MAKE THE REQUIREMENTS FOR CIRCULATING AND
SIGNING INITIATIVE AND REFERENDUM PETITIONS SIMILAR
TO THOSE FOR PETITIONS FOR CANDIDATES.
(Proposed by Resolu tion of the General Assembly of Ohlo)
A major ity affirmative vot e is necessary for passage.

1

YES

SHALL T HE PROPOSED AMENDMENT
BE ADOPTED?
NO
EXPLANATION OF ISSUE No. I
1. Under present la w the Ohio Ballot Board may write simpl ified ballot
language for Constitutional amendments proposed by the General.
Assembly. However, ballot language for state issues proposed by initiative or re ferendum petiti ons must be written by the Se&lt;:retary of State
under h ighly techni cal req ui remen ts. This section of the amendment
allows the Ohio Ballot Board also to prepa re simpli fi ed ballot la ngua ge
for issues proposed by initiative or referendum petition.
2. A state issue proposed by initi ative or referendum petition is now requi red to be pu blished once a week for fi ve conse&lt;:utive weeks prior to
the election. This section of the amendment redu ces this requirement
to once a week for three weeks, as is now required for issues prop osed
by the General Assembly.
3. This section of the ame ndment allows a signer of an initiative or r eferendum petition to use a stand ard postal address to identify the place of
res1dence. It also eliminates th e notarized statement of the ci rculator
and authorizes the General Assembly to provide by law for a statement
that the ci rcula tor wi tnessed the affixing of eve ry signature. · These
changes make the requirements for circ ulating and signing initiati ve
and referendum peti t ions sim il ar to those of petitions for ca ndid ates.
ARGUMENTS FOR TilE PROPOSED AMENDMENT
The people's constitutional right to propose laws and constitutional
amendments by initiative peti tion and to place laws passed by the General
Assemb ly on the ballot by referendu m is sometimes frustrated because
of technical details in the lega l requirements. Issue i will clarify some of
these proced ures, and will enable initiative and referendum measures to
appear on the ballot in language tha t is clear and easy to understand.

.
Issue I will have the following advan tages:
I. People who sign initiative or referendum petitions will be able to
list their addresses in the form most fam iliar to them whether it be a post
office address, a street and num ber in a city or vi ll age, or a rural route
number or township if they live outside a city or vi llage. At the present
ti me. some names of elig ible signers must be stricken because they failed
tc list their address in st ri ct conform ity to the law.
2. Circulators of petitions wi ll no longer ha ve to ha ve each part-petition
notarized. a requirement that is both bu rdensome and expensive. A simple
statement that the ci rcula tor witnessed each signature will be sufficient.
Since all signat ures must be checked before final acceptance of the petitions , this is sufficient to assure, initiall y, that the petitions should be
received for filin g.
3. Reduc ing the numbe r of times newspaper publication is r equired for
each initiated or referred measure from five to three will result in substantial savings for taxpayers. Three instead of five publications of ini tiative proposals in November, 1975, would have saved $120,000.00.
Three co mplete ·publications will give all voters ample opportunity to
read the proposal and the information about it.
4. Voters have already adop,ted a proposal creating a Ballot Board with
au thority to write the ballot language for constitutional amendments
proposed by the General Assembly in language that is clear and easy tc
un dersta.n d. Legal requirements that technical details of a proposal must
appear on the ballot were eliminated . Issue I will apply the same technique for p reparing the ballot language for initiated Qnd referred measures,
and will assist in voter understandin g of these sometimes complicated
measures.
Committee for the Amendm ent; Kenneth R. Cox, Rex F. Klefter,
Harry J . Lehman and
John K. Mahoney

of

!he

State

of

OhJo,

th ree ·fifth s or the members elccted
to eac h ho use concur nn c therein.
th.il t ther e sha ll be Jru bm lt ted t o the
eh'&gt;d on; of t h e state m t h e m an ner

p resc nbed by law at th e special
ele&lt;:tto n to ~ held on the fi n;;t
Tuesday after the tint Monday 111
J une, 19711. a p ro po~a l to amend t he
Coru; titution of the Slate of Ohi o by
ame ndinc ~e lt o n tr o f AMide n
ae foUov.-s :
ARTICLE II
Sec tion 11. Any Ini tiative, 5Up ·
pleme ntary, or referend um peti tion ma.,y be prt:R"nted ln st puate
~N b\lt ea ch
1h1ll contain
a full and corre&lt;: copy o f th~ title.
and text of the law , ~teCtl on or
item thereof aou(ht to be' rdeTT'td .
or the p ro po~ la w or pro poSf' d
am~ndment
to th.e
const itu tion.
Each siJ,n er of a ny ln tuat !\'t , supplement ary , or referend um petition
must be an elector of the • tate
and shall place on such pet ition
after h is name the dale of al('n in J'
a nd hia place o f reJ~ i de n~ . A signer
re!lldint oulslde of a m unicipalit y
sha U state the cou nty a nd the rura l
route number, post office addreu,
or township of hls res.ldence . A
resident of a mun ici pality shall
state the strut and n um be r, if
anY. of hia residence an d t he n ame
of the municipality o r the post
otrlc: e add l"t"!': s.. The names of all
slgners to s uc h peti t ions shall ~
w rtrten In l.nk, each lil(ne r Jor
h imself. To e ach part o f ruch petl.
t aon shall be attached th e state m ent of the circula to r . as may be
requ ired by h 1w. t tla t he witnessed
the affixing a l every signature The
~ t! hon and s l(tUlt ures upon liUCh
pe titions. shall b@ presum e-d to be
tn au ~ fpec tJ ruff\ cien t, unl eu not
la ter than l o rty d ay• Mfore th e
e led.ton, tt 1h.a ll be otherwtse
p ro\.·~ and In :;uch event ~ n add le
tion al d ay~ aha ll be allowed for the
f\linc al ad dltlooal • lrnatu rts to
such ptotltlon . No la w or ame nd ·
me nt to the coratitutlon I!&gt;Ubmltted
to the ei N:tortl b y Lnltlath•e and.
su pple men tary petit ion And recetv rng ~n affinnatl ve maj ortt y of th e
vot es ca st thel't'On , th:~ ll be held
unconstitutiona l o r void on accoun t
of the lnsufficienc:y of the pet ition•
by which such JU bml&amp;ll lon of the
sam e W i!l r rocUrrd : nor ~al l t he
re jiP'Ction o an y law •ubml tted by
~fere-ndum petition be held In·
valid Jor suc h ituu ffielen C'y . Upon
all initiativ e , supplementary, and
refere ndum petltlon8 p rovided for
in anx of the sec tlora o f th!J arti ·
cle. It llhall be ne~ ry to rue
f rom eaeh of one-hall of the
eountle!ll of lhf' rtll te, ~t ltion s
bearing the s:trn atu!"H ~ not leM
Uu n one- h.ai.I of the dellll'l ated
pf'rcenta ge of the electors c f auch
cou n ty. A t ru e t'D PY o f aU 11w11· or
p ro po~ed lawa or proposed amend ·
mt-nts to the conrtltu Uon. togethe r
with an a rrument or explan ation .
or both , for, and Also a n a rrum ent
or ex-planation, or both. acalnlt
t h e cam e . ahall be prepared. The
pe raon o r persons who p~pare the
arlfUmMl or t! XJ)Ian allon, or both,
u alrut ll'l Y law, tectlon, or item ,
sub mi tted to tht- electors by n-fera

r•rt

endum petition . ma y be named in
suc:h petition a.nd the penons who
p repare the argument or explan aa
t ion, or both, t or any p roposed law
or propo sed amendm ent to the con.
stt tutlon may be named in t he
petition proposing the same. The
person or persons who prepare the
a rgum ent or ex Pianatl on or both .
for th e laW, 5C'Ction . o r 1tern . 11ub·
m itted to the electol"!! by rrteren·
du m pt&gt;tltlon . or a gainst any p ro·
posed law submitted by wpple.
m entary petition , s hall be nam ed
b y the fe nera l assem bly, if in ses"r;ion, an d 11 not in session then by
the governor. The la w. o r p roposed
law, or proposed amendment to
the constitutio n, t ogether with the
Brguments and e:xp\a.nations, not
f'Xt'@eding a total of th~ hundred
w ords for each , and alao the arru men.ts and e xpl ana tlona, not ex·
ceedlnr a total of three hundred
wonts against each . .!ihitll be published once a we-ek for three con·
aecutlve wet-k s prtted in g the e \ecUon , in at least o ne n4!"'NS"J)aper of
pneral circu lat ion In e ach count ~·
of the state, where a newsp11per is
pub!Lshf'd. The sec m ary of sta te
shall ca use to be placed u"POn the
bal!ot.s, the ba llot Ta ngua ( e for any
Auch law, or proJX&gt;9C'd law, or pro ·
P'09t!d a mendment to the conrt ltU·
Uon . to be •ubm ltted. The bAllo t
l angu.a~ shall M
precrll&gt;ed by
the Ohio Ballot Board in t he same
manner, an d subje-c t t&lt;:1 1he sru1u~
te rms and condi tions, as apply to
~ su bm itted b y 1he t ene ral
assembly p ursuan t to Secti on I o f
Article XVI of thJs conJf!ltutlo n.
Th e ballot la nguage shaU bt 10
PN'Itrlbf:"d and 1he aeoeretan· of
state shall cause the baUots eo t o
bt• printed as to permi t an affirma t ive o r negative v ote upon each
Jaw, section of law . or Item 1n a
law appropri ating money , or pro·
JJoOi'ed law. or proposed amendment
to t he constitu tion . The atyle of all
lawa wbmltted b y irlltlatlve an d
supp lementary peti tion sh&amp;ll be ·
"Be It En ac t~ by the Peo_l:lle o f
t he State o f Ohio," and of al l con!ltitutton al amendment$ : " Be It Re solved by lhe Peop le o f the Sta te o f
Ohio." Th ~ bui5 upon wh ich the required numlwr of peUUonen in ;my
case shall be dete rmined shall be
the t ot al numbe r of vot es t'Mt fo r
t he o rfi ce of governor at the 11\.!1
preceding eJ eetlon th erefo r . The
fort' g'Oin g provl.! lons of th is se~tlon
shall be sdl · ~X"etutl n fil' , exctpt as:
herein o t huwl,e provided . Laws
may be passed to bcll! tat e t heir
o~ rati o_n . but in no way limiting
o r restnt't lng e ith e r such provb !oT\.1
or the powe rs here in reserved .
EFFECTIVE D ATE AND REPEAL
ll adopted by a m11jorlt y ot t he
e lectors
\IOtin g
thereon ,
t hiS
am endmen t shall ta ke Imm ed iate
etrect and ex1St1ng Section lg uf
Article II shAll be re pealed from
wch effedlve da t.e.
UN IT ED STATES OF' AMERICA

STATE OF OHIO
OFT! CE OF THE SECRETARY
OF STA TE
l. TEO W. BROWN . Sec:rt tan· o f
State . do ht reby ce rttfr that the
forerotng h1 a true eopy of Amf!nd~d
Su tJgtlt ut e House Joln t Rt'Sf)! Utlon
No. 12, fl ied in the office of the Sec reta ry of Sto1te, p roposing to nmend
the Coni1.ltu tlo n ot Ohio , toge:ther
with the ballot langua ge and explana tion certified to mf! by t he
OhJo Ballo t Boa rd and ar i(llmenta
for the amen dm e n t as •ubmltted b)
t he appropria te co mmltt~
IN TESTIMONY WHEREO F. I
have he reun to su bsc ribed my name
and il:tflxed my omctal 1u l at Co·
tumbUI thls l Slh d ay o f A pril, 1V78.
I Sui )

TED W, BRO WN,
Sttrett~ry o f State

Custoot full

hi one "" too dags

Our

~laff

of drn1 1m and

Jcchmc1an\ v.1 ll make \Our
ru'ilom &lt;k-nlure'l qu!Ckl) . and
economtca ll)

Ont or two day full
denture ~t r v1ce ,

DtRonald ERiviere
• 0. A.J . s...hiJ • 0. C.W. Bc:.J • 0. . 0 J. S&lt;ombaugh
• 0. . W D. K•mbaii ·• O.. J.C Murphj •O. J. O&lt;hman

The Riv1ere Cen ter
~9

E. ltvmp!on Ave. t:olumbus

...

.llllliiiil.

w;

Tigers
Red Sox 1,9:
Bob Montgomery drove in
four runs with his first four
hits of the year to lead Boston
over Detroit in the nightcap
after Milt Wilcox fired an II·
strikeout , six-hit
performance to win the
opener.
Brewers 2, Angels I:
Cecil Cooper's fourih hit of
the game, a tw&lt;HJut single in
the bottom of the ninth,
scored Gorma n Thomas from
third base with the winning
run to give Milwaukee a
'ictory over California.
Yankees t-9, Blue Jays 1·1 :
Thurman Munson knocked
in five runs with a single,
double and his first homer of
the season to lead New York
to a rout of the Jays in the
second game. In the opener,
Cliff Johnson came up with a
two-run homer to pace the
Yanks.

Orioles 3-%, 11-3 :·
David Clyde, with relief
help from ,Jinn Kern and
Dennis Kinney, picked up his
second .victory of the season
and John Grubb tripled to
trigger a three1un second
inning that gave Cleveland a
nightcap vic tory. In the
opener, Scott McGregor
tossed a four-hitter in hurling
his first major-league
shutout.
White Sox ~. A's 2-8:
Mitchell Page drove in five
runs with a homer, two
doubles and a single and
rookie John J9hnson pitched
his second shutout, leading
Oakland to a roQt over
Chicago in the second game.
Junior Moore and Eric
Soderholm each drove in a
rur with eigh th~nnin g singles
and the Sox adde&lt;j three runs
in the ninth to win the opener.

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qualifying record Saturday
with a best lap of 203.620 and
a four~ap average of 202.156,
eclipsing his 19n marks of
200 .535
and
198.884
respectively. And he felt he
could have done better.
"It wasn 't a smooth run by

T

THE GRILL

2

BIGGEST SAVINGS IN TOWN!
lomol tw ~ '""'~ co.., pon
0"' ( O~POII ~~ lt m!l'f

any means, " he said . "The

chassis wasn't anywhere
close to how I wanted it and l
did an awfu l lot of slipping
and sliding."
Three other drivers also
qualified at better than 200 Danny Ongais, Mears, and
defending champion A.J .
royt - but Foyt lost his
chance for the pole because of
his own error in adjusting the
turbocharger wastegate that
controls. the power delivered
by his eight..:ylinder engine.
"It was my fault. You win
some and you lose some," he
said.
Foyt and Ongais had
identical speeds of 200.122,
but while Ongais will start
second, Foyl will be 20th in
tlle lineup because he was a

Jumbo
Rolls .

n

;;

0

z

VAUGHAN'S
"

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I

SALE DATES MAY 22-29, 1978
.OPEN MONDAY, MEMORIAL DAY

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GREEN GIANT

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sporta Editor

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5i~•69

NEW YORK (UP! ) - Danny Ozark has been managing the
Phillies six seasons now and practically from the first day he
took over, he has been listening to the sa!T]e old refrain .
As a handler of men , he was much too soft, too permissive,
too easy. He didn 'I use the whip enough, they said of him.
The fact the Phillies set an Eastern Division record by
winning 101 games the past two years hasn't changed the
thinking of most of Ozark's critics, especially since the Phiis
lost both those playoffs.
"I'm probably too easy," he admits. "A Iotta people tell me
this, yet my players don't take advantage of me . At least, l
don 't feel they do.
"Whenever l hear or read that I'm not tough enough , my
reaction is that l get more out of my players by managing my
way . I'm not the kind of person who likes to keep picking all the
time. l don 't like to henpeck others and I don't like being
henpecked myself.
That shouldn 't be construed to mean he lets everyone walk
all over him, Ozark is quick to point out.
" U I ever have any beef with my players, I let them know
about it. I'm not bashful, " he says. "I can remember one time
not too long after l became manager of this club, some players
suddenly had a lotto say for themselves in the newspapers.
"They were second-guessing me, telling me who I shoold be
playing and shouldn't be playing, and I got so fed up with it, so
provoked, that I called a meeting, closed the door and
straightened a few things out. l had my say.
Once again Ozark has the Phillies on top in their division now
and although they aren't exactly running away from the rest of
their competition, no one in any of the other three majorleague divisions is doing appreciably better.
No matter what, Ozark doesn't figure to change. For better
cr worse, this is the way he manages and the record shows he
has been relatively successful doing it his way.
"Every manager has to bandle his players the way he sees
fit," says Ozark . "They tell me that when Bill McKechnie
managed Cincinnati, he'd allow his playel'l! to have beer in the
clubhouse after the game but he wouldn't permit any soft
drinks before the game. I don't know what he reasoning was ,
but that was the way he felt .
"Jake Piller was my first manager In the minors, with Olean
of the Pony League, and he had a rule that you couldn 't even
have a drink of water on the bench. He clainned it made you
logy and sluggish.
"Of course, that was back in 1942 and things have changed a
lot since then ," Ozark goes on. "In those days, players in the
big leagues never had any kind of food in the clubhoose, so
they'd 'brown bag' it every day. Today, they have what
amounts to a catering service in the clubhouse. Fried chicken,
beef stroganoff, lasagna, everything. In San Franclsco and
Montreal, they even have big ribeye steaks and baked potatoes
in the clubhouse ."
Speaking of all the food made available to the players now
made Ozark laugh.
"We lost a ball game in Houston once and I was really teed
off ," he says. "Some of our guys went for the food right after
the game. Terry Harmoo was one ot the nicest guya we ever
had on this club. He isn't with us anymore, but alter thl.s
particular game, I wan!J!d to have a meeting with the players
and the first thing l saw was Terry Harmon picking up a piece
qf chicken. 'Put that chicken down !' I said to him. He dropped
it out of his hand inunediately ."
Major4eague ballplayers are given 121 a day meal money
when they're on the road. Some of them pocket that, then fill up
on what is spread out for them in the clubhouse.
·
"And they beef about that food being lousy , too," Ozark
laughs some more.

SUPERIORS ·TAVERN

STEAK

~

WHOLE FRYERS

Field set fo~
Indy 500 race
INDIANAPOUS (UP[) Roger Penske , the former
sports car ace turned
business tycoon , owns the
hottest three-car team in
Indiana polis 500 history , and
Tom Sneva still is the No. I
chauffeur.
ror the second year in a
row, Sneva , the former
schoolteacher from Spokane,
Wash, pula Penske car on the
pole with a record clip better
than 200 mph .'
Rick Mears, in an identical
machine, became the fastest
rookie in Speedway history at
a speed of 200.078 to clainn the
outside spot in the first row,
while Mike Hiss qualified
eighth fa stest Saturday for
Penske .
However , that car will start
33rd, or last, because it will
be driven in the race by
former winner
Mario
Andretti .
Sneva , the seventh driver
in 500 history to grab the first
starting spot two years in a
row, smashed his own

I~/H

00 10 0!1

H7

'Oo SIO A1 S

$5Z9
00 1!&gt; Oh

Bottle

CARDI NAl

Umlt one with coupon

GAlEN GIAN T

NIBLETS CORN .................. 3 '~;~: 89&lt;
PORK NBEANS .................. 3 '~;~: 79&lt;

INSTANT

CA MPI EllS

MA)IWEll HOU SE INS TANT

REG. or DIET

s399

COFFEE ............. '~~~·

FIYOO POP
I
BUNS
_$189
Z. c•89'

16-oz.

Bottles

ESTEl

$

~

REG . or RIPPLE

PRINGLE$ .,,,,,,, .....................

g . 01,

89(

Cln

69(
MARDI GRAS NAPKINS .................. · '"'
79(
140 Ct

HEAVY OUTV

25-fl

REYNOLDS FOIL .................... · ............. ''"
CAMPFIRE MARSHMALLOWS ... ..... .':;~ 59&lt;

WIENER or HAMBURGER

CARDINAL

VANILLA

ICE CREAM

Pkt...

12-oz.
Bo•
~
p

POTATO
CHIPS

8
16 oz. $119
bottles

11 oz.

79'

I DAIRY VALUES I
EXTRA lARGE EGGS. .................~~. 69'
KRAFT CHEEZ WHIZ ......................... ';:; 79c
KRAFT PIMENTO CHEEZ WHIZ ........ ';:: 79&lt;
KRAFT PARKAV

IE
.

Z

1-Lb .
Cartons

011011 CHIP NDIP ............................... ~:;::,; 59•

11211711

Gmld .. Caninll Ao vel lll"e S10•••
00 10 Ob

&lt;&gt;&lt;?o S10AI S

GOLDEN GRAIN MAC &amp; CHEDDAR 4 '~;,:· s1

l•m •l oo• w olh ~

One couoon p"' faln•l'

•

26·01
Bqx

STARKIST TUNA ................................... ."~.~· 69&lt; ~
"z

VIETTI HOT DOCi SAUCE ................ ) ~.~: 5100

G~

0

£,..,.,.

11271711
ld e.IMMIIIo~e!' ll~• S1or 11
00 20 Ofl

0.

1&gt;0 S1ORJS

CLARK or ZACiNUT CANDY BARS .. ':,~· 99&lt;
BORON CHARCOAL LIGHTER ......... 0c".'," 69&lt;

MR. BEE

7-UP

~1\

3-oz .
Jar

ASSORTEO FLAVORS

I PICNIC NEEDS I

69

lrm rl tiOf Wltn

One co... ~~" "" t.IT)!!r

l!m 11 on t .., ,, h Cflolt"l"

Ont

KINGSFORD

DAWN LIQUID

CHI

DETEROEIT :!~~~~
Limit two with coupon

I FROZEN FOOD VALUES I

Pill' lilmoly

L

20' OFF LABEL

TOiEis.ZJ~~~· 99

t OIIPOO

~0 S10 RfS • C~ R OI N ~1 IOOOS10R£ S ·~~'IT~~"

Lb.

'"'

DISHWASHER

l•m~~.: 5~0:z. $159

Bag

1

0"•

NATURAL SUN.

LEMONADE ........~ ..6~:- $1

co~ pon pt1t

,.,.,.,!,

. -~9'J1 f1 S
Goott " C~ ov tl llut llor"
00 l O Ofi

'%0SIOA£ S

�c'

6-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0., Monday. May 22. 1978
PI SCES (Feb. 10-March 101
NOTICE TO

ASTRO•GIAPH

CONTRACTORS
STATEOFO.HIO

DEPARTMENT OF

TRAN S PORTA TIO N
Co lumbu $, Oh io
Ma~ ~ . 197 8

VJ~UJ~
l:JjlfiJ'~~l!Jij

Contrac t $ales Legal
Copy No . 78 -404

UNIT PRICE CONTRACT

1
SeaiE"d p r oposals w ill be
receivea ar me off ice of the
ol
the
Ohio
D i rector
De partment
of
Trans
portahon . Columbus . Oh io .
unt i l
10 : 00
A, .M .
Ohio
Standard T ime. Thursday ,
Ju ne
1,
1918 , for
im
provem en ts in :
Athens , Hock ing , Meigs ,
Morgan . Nobl e. Vinton .;~nd
Washington Co unt ies. Oh io,
on var ious routes and sec
! Ion s and the v iltage ol M e
Connelsv i lle , bv pa i nt ing
extsling guardra tl.
'' The date set tor com
· ptel )on of this work shall be
as set forth in th e b idd 1ng

proposal. "
Each bidder shall be
required to t ile with his bid a
cer t i f ied c h ec k or cashier's
che c il for an amount equal , to
fi'Je per cent of his bid , -but tn
no event mo re than l ifty
thousancl dol l ars, or a bond
for te n per cen t of h is bid ,
payab le to the D i rector .
Bidders must apply , on the
proper
term s,
tor
quali f ic ation at lea s t ten days
pr io r to the · date set t or
op en ing b i ds in a c cordr~n ce
wilh Chapter 5525 Ohio
Rev ised Code
Plans and spe c it ica r1ons
are on t ile in the Departm ent
ot Transportat ion and the
olllce ot t he Di str ic t Deputy
D trc ctor .
T11e 0 1r ec tor rl"serves the
riqht to reject any and all
b ids
DAV I D L WEIR
D I RECT OR
Rev 8 17 73

\Sl 15 ,

n , ?tc

May 23. 1918
Many 'sh o rt t r1 p 'IOU ve l)een
wanttng to make wtll become
realdy tht S co tnmg year Fun
and co mpat1bl e co mpan rons
wt: t en lt ven ,·our C)(Cu rstons

GEMINI (May 21 -June 10)

A
solu l 10n to an old pro blem can
tle found today lJ ~· d1SCu ss1ng 11
!ranKly w rth the o tt"ler party
Don t hOld bac~ on any thtrlQ
tt1a t s bo th emlCJ YOU Frncl ou t
more abou t yatt •sc lt DY seM tng to r yow copy a t As tr oGraprt Le tter Ma ll 50 cen ts tor
each anc! a long
set l adclres si?d s tamped envelope
to A str o-G raptl P 0 B o ~ 489
AadtO C1 ty Sta tt On N Y 100 t 9
Be sure .to spcct l y brrttl s tqn

CAN CER (June 21-July 22) Slep
uo and lake charge of a dlffrcult

J ea nn ie 1.. Tay lor tu
Thr ou gt1 Hlf''kmdnC sb ol i.l i10ih Columbus and Southern Ohio
er . helP wrll be gr\len to you lhat
~~lecl ric Cu., Easemenl,
turn s a labonous tas k 11110 one
Rutland .
thai' s rcta ll vcty srmp tr to com
Cha rles A. Musser, Judy
plet e
ARI ES .(March 11-April 19) YD UI
Musser In Co lumbu s and
rmagr na tron ca n bf' put 10 wor k
Southern Ohio Electric Co ,
to day II you su ~r ound yourse lf
F:asemenl, Rulland .
wllh trtlf&gt;nted rnnOYa !l vc peoDorot hy Reeves, James C.
ple Th&lt;l! whr ch ~·o u f&gt;m•rsro n
Heeves
to Li nda D. Darnell,
can be accornpfrs tl cd
Ohio Power Co. to Southern
TAuRU S !April 10-May 20) Ohio Ohio Coa t C11., 7,475.5 11 Pa ul M. Darnell, Jr., Parcel,
Sornctr11ng y0u Ye wanted for a acres ex. coal, Rutland - Salisbury.
lor'!g tmw rnrght be grvcn to you
Edwa rd !.. Baer, Ruby
Cl!lumbia -Sa lem .
today by one you vc helped rn
Bacr
lo Don K. Grueser,
Fra nklin Rea l Esta te Co. to
the past It wrtl be hrs p~ca s ure
Janel
S.
Grucser. 1.276 acres,
Sout hern Ohio Cua l Co., oil
rN(I'¥ $PAPf H f NTfiWfii S [ A. SSt,J
Sutton.
and gas, under 7,475 .511
acres, Colum bia - Rutland - Amos Tillis, Rulh Tillis to
H. b.Seyler, Ncilia E. Sey ler,
Sa lem.
.22 Here . Pomeroy .
~~ 1971, at least HOO persons
~e lli e R. Va le, dec. lu John
lola A. Damewoud, furdied in an earthq uake in F. V11 le, Cert. of Trans..
merly lola A. Barlrum ,
eastern Turkey,
Rut la nd .
P enton Tay lor. Ernest L. Damewood to

Meigs

Property

Transfers

ln Memory
IN LOVING memory or
Charles W . Eblin , Jr .. who
passed away B years a q o.
May 22 . Even tho ' we mrss
you . we know that you went
home . We nave your happy
memo r y Ia k eep you in our
glow .
We all lov e you , and
m iss ed by fam ily .
5 7'1 H e

Lost and FQund
LO~

I I;S~OWN brll lold. i-=1ve dollar
rPward Between ~ut lond and
M1ddl c port. 992 · 7 ~ IJ

LO~ l ~~ MAl~ co t . Mos tly grey.
wl10r1119 rvd co lim and Ilea (:O I·
lo r . An :. wc r · ~ to th e nome of li1

1y 01 lr1be t Vt\ mtly of Hy:.e ll
Hun fir I 'J4 a nd l:io1le y Run

9 9'1 7680

~lohile Homes for· sale
1912 FUR NISHW mobil~ hqme
w1th or without 1' r oues .
l oaded w rlh eK fras. SeiJ rng
c h~op .

E STA TE

OF

J

FLOY D

RUPE DECEASED
cas e No 21383
NOT IC E OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FID UC IARY
On May J, 1978 , rn the Me ig s
Cou nty Pr o bat e CoUr t. Case
No 22383 , J ane Altce Rup e,
Rt 1. Dexter . Ohio was ap .
po rn ted Administratrix o t fn e
esta te of
Floy d J
R upe ,
ct ece a se d , l at e ot Rt . 1 ,
De Kter , Ohro .

Mann ing D . Webst er
Proba le Jvage
Clerk.
\5) 8, 15 ,

n , 3tc

H t ll c re~r 1:?11"56 . CUS tOt1'1 b~.tilt .

cPm-

PPI• for Sale
Charles W. Aldridge, Maxine
Aldridge, 3.8 acres, Rutland .
Virgil 0 . Day, Mary 3.
Day, Ferrel W. Day, Patricia
K. D&lt;ty to Larry W. Ru pe,
Beverly S. 11upe, 2 acres ,
Rutland .

f.II~IN G

~ 1Af.l

KPt111el , Boo1ding
l 11door oncl ou tdoor
tlH l&lt;o
C.!Oomrrrg all breod5 Clean
'&gt; Oilltory lo ct h t ic~
Chc shrre
Phone (61.:1 ) 'J67 0291.

MA L ~

ANU
l e mol e
AK C
t e&gt;g r ~ tcr e d Old ~ngl1!o h !:rhccp
dog~ 98) J 11 1 or 992 -220!&gt; .

l'els (or Sale
HOO~ ·HO LL OW H01se~ Buy , sell
trade o r train New ond u5ed
~ addle s

f.luth Reeves . Albany .

(b l4 ) b9B ·3290 .

Warning, The Surgeon General Has Determined
That C1garette SmokingIs Dangerous toYour Health.

task confron trng you and your
co work ers
You II manage
lht ngs easi!v . becau se 11 s a
la bo r ot love tor you

LEO (J ul y 23-Aug . 121 Your brg·
hearted gesture tod ay wtll be
mor e help ful to th e o ther party
than vou can 1magrne Be ore
pared to r an o v er wll e lnl!n ~J
thankfulnes s
VIRGO (Aug . 13-Sept . 221 A
tremendous amount w ill be
ac compltShed al horne today
because o f th e q utf't condrtrons
prevatltng Yo u II hP ablf' to rl o
tlltngs tn your own wa y at yOu !
own spee-d
analvttCal powers today ca•1
so l11e the most werghty of pr o b·
tems Be sure to let o th ers
~now yo ur br rght 1deas

SCO RPIO (Oct 24- Nov . 21)
Re cognt1ton wrl l be' yours
today 11 co uld carne rn the l o rrn
o f a promo t ton ra tse 01 even by
ta~rng lhe top Oflle 111 a con·
If'S!
21 ) Concenua te lod ay on way s

to develop personal goals Se·
naus deltberauon wrll result rn
!tndr''hg th e key to g arn s
CAPRICORN (D ec . 12-Jan . 19)
enhances y o ur
tor success wtttl
somethrng that you c an env tsron c learly
Sha re you r
tt1 0uQhts only wr th th ose wh o
are eQu ally vr s rona ry

NO TICE OF SA LE

~pt "f'th (&gt;~ 1 '11 v. htl ~·

( O)(o ~ lfll';

lr·,t ! Uit''i fu ~ v.,rth

IHJ!Iltn.d 1Oil ~ In~
poy.,.r•r • "'t,trnlt..,~ "'t r·r·llntf'l tlll
• l&lt;:f'tnU\,dJit• (,l,r" '\ptllllotl
• Pu ll- down Olr1r'l\,ulor · • tllu n1H1.Jtf'd dt~rr,r lrl(l( lo. .md tnm·r
• "'upt·r \\ ,,rr,lllh ~ ~ · ~· lf!W do·,rlt•r
lot Ur·t,ilh

Pomeroy Nationa l Ban lo.
w ill ott er for sate. at publrc
sate , on Wednesday , M ay 7&lt;~ .
t'n·B. at 10 00 O'C io c ~ AM , ~~
tne Futfon Thom pson Tr ac tor
Sates , In c , Sp r ing Avenue .
P om eroy .
Ohio,
th e
tottowrng
One
Allis
Chalme r s Co rn P ic ker or
Gra1n Combine, Model A .
Sa1 d sale tS be ing ma.d e
pursuant to the auth or ity
c ontatn ed
rn a St-cu r i t y
Ag r eemen t
P omeroy
National Ban k reserves th e
rtqh t to brd on th e property

n.n

(!rl 19 , , , ,

PUBLIC NOTICE

Boara ol Townshr p
Trustees
Jt c

NOTICE

UL TRAM ATIC®
MICROWAVE
OVEN

,,/-'~' $549

BAKER
FURNITURE
Middleport

CALDRI~

SPa led brds wrl! be rece t ved
by the Oh ro Dep.Hfment of
N atu rcl l Resou r ces . D IVISIOn
ot
Forestry
Founta1n
Sq u ar e . Columbus , Ohro ,
J3 27 4, up to it nd rncludlng
Monday , June It 1978, at J DO
PM for an ESTIMI1TED
07 , 6 85
board
f eet
In
terna t 1o n a1 14" Rule o f
!i aw t1 mber on )1 c1 cres rn
Compa rfm enl ] 1 Shad e R1vcr
Slate t o rt~s l , Me rgs Cou nt y ,
Oh!O
For brd f orm!. and f ur ther
tn tormat 10n contact Mr
Do nclfd Baun . S75J7 Joppa
Road ,
Reedsville . Ohro ,
r!JS777 . te le ph one 1614 ) 378
6116 ,

{51

n , 23,

24 , Jt c

I

BY LILLY KENNEDY
Rullaud Friendly Gardeners
DO n' YOURSELF HERBS
If you have u lively interest in good food or just saving a
lillie in the food budgel - growing culinacY herbs are a musl.
The myslerious, enhancing flavor appearing in a familiar
dish as a result of fresh heroo will rate you a IIUle higher in the
ranks of good cooks plus the fragrances that permeate Ute air
will make you feel thal you have lruly gone back lo nature.
Ont-e you have tasted homegrown herbs, you will not want to
be wilhout Utem. Herb plants may be obtained at your local
farmers' markets or nurseries. If plants are unavailable, the
heroo may be started from seed.
Limited space does nol have to pose a problem because
they do Mt have to be confined lo a cerlain area . Most herbs
can be starled indoors in pots, hanging baskels or on your
windowsill. Aller the danger of frost has past they can be
lransplanled ouWoors and broughl back in again before cold
weaU!er hits. In order to grow, herbs musl have a rich soil,
waler and a swmy spot to flourish . Soil composilion may be
unproved by adding compo,st, sand and lime. Herbs can also be
b1tenningled in Ute borders with olher shrubbery or flowers.
When planting your herbs, put Utem out in Ute evening
when il is not so hol or on a day when the sun is hiding behind
the clouds. Waler lhoroughly every evening u·ntil well
established- then letlhe rain take over lheir watering care.
Phmls that you may wish to include in your garden are:
chives, minis, thyme, parsley and oregano . These will make
even a beginner look like an old "pro."
To harvest herbs , pick when the plants begin tn flower . The
yoliDg tender green leaves at Ute tip of the plant are mosl
fluvorful. Cui each •'Jlrig 4-5 inches from the lip of the plant.
!Iinse well - now they are ready for use fresh or lo be
preserved for later.
:~~~::.-:.-:::::--:::~~:=:::::::;:.':'"~:·:·!:!:!!~::!;:::::~::::::~~:::::~:~~t':~IS$!~·~=AQ:~)~fll·~~~~

Helen Help
By Helen Hottel

I
~

Banquet held

~~~
~ ~

I Let THE FRIENDLy ONE

~c::o~

I help you with your
1

REMODELING PROJEa51

~
Vov con odd cabinets, o room divider 0&lt;
!vena room I To ge1 ii'OOI resul1s oil you
need ore the prCJfler 1ools, buildino mo1eriols ond o few tips.
No matter how Iorge 1he project, see vs ... we con help
119'&gt;1"" 1he load ot 1he friendl y One!

Karen Blaker Ph.D.

the sehoul cHfeh~ ri::t .

Guests redincd on three

Clean up for

si!lcs of a table in ltumrm

I the maid
I

I

The 11th a n nu~ l Human
bauquet of the SPQH l« tin
Clu b of the Kyger Cree k High
Se houl was hel d recently in

DEAR DR. BLAKER - I
only wm·k part time, but I
need the help of a
housekecpe1· once a week .
ll bothers me tha l I'm not
organized enough to get
everythin g done by myself,
but I have two. active
tceuage1·s. They keep me
busy driving lhem to all their
aclivilies.
I have enough trouble accepli ng an outsider's help
with lhe house. Bul my kids
make it even harder.
They know I don't like
anyone to see the house when

it's messy. When I start
organizing things li&gt;r lhe
housekeeper's day, they accuse me of clea ning up fur the
maid.
That makes me mad
because it just isn't true. How
can! get them off my back?
DEAR READER - You
sound like a person who
would like to have the house
dean for Ute hou sekeeper.
That in itself makes you
vu lnerable lo your children's
ar.:cusations.
Stop equatin g you1· need for
household help with a personal feeling of failw·e . Accept lhe limilations. thal
resu lt from being only
human.
Your teen-agers have
me1·ely picked up effcclively
on yo ur psyc ho logical
Ach illes heel.
Is there a specific reason
for this teasing beyond the
normal leen-ager's urge to
crilicize his or her parents ?

Arc they angry with you
about some issue lhat has not
been aired and " adequate ly
discussed?
Pass the following message
along to you(children.
DEAH TEENAGEilS Most teen-agers are thrilled
when their pare nts hire a
huus t~keeper ; it means less
work for them.
But if you are not ust'!l to
having a stranger in the
house, 1t might be an unsettl-

·ing experience.

fas hi on ami were served by

Docs it bother you that she
can go thi"Uugh your things
while you are at school' If so,
you may be try ing to make
your mother feel guilty so she
will resume all Ute cleaning
responsibilities.
The1·e must be a better wa y
to solve lhe problem. Teasing
your mother only upsets he1·.
In the lung run, it probabl y :
makes life more difficult for
you.
A family meeting mighl be
Ute best place lo talk about
your feelings. If you really
dislike having a housekeeper
around, offer lu help your
mother clean. Then she might
be able to lellhe housekeeper
· go. You could use the meeting
lo divide up Ute chores.
If you are sincerely
bolhered because you lhink
your mother cleans up for lhe
lllllid. why nut ask what she
needs to do to prepare for I he
housekeepe r' You may be
surprised lo learn how much
time and energy it tokes to
organize work fur others lo
do . Businessmen often spend
several hours a day just
deciding how tu keep their
sccre laries busy .
There il; one sure way lu
stop your mother's annoying ·
behav ior: Offer to toke over
prepa ra tion s fu r th e
housekeep&lt;" you rse lves. But
remember lo check lhe cleaning supplies, leave food for
lhe maid's lunch, pul her
cash in an envelope and write
a note with a list of the jobs
fur the day plus last week's
problems.
I'm certain your motl\er
will gladly help you lea rn lhc
ropes. She probably needs a
vacation from the job - and
fro m your teasing.
Write to Dr. Blaker in care
uf this newspaper, P.O. Box
489 , Radi o City Stoliun, New
York. N. Y. 10019. Volwnc of
ma il pr ohi bi ts personal
replies, but questions of
~en e ral interest will be
discussed in future colunms.

siCives . the f1rst year

togas, the girls, stulas, tulll
tht! .si&lt;Jves WC1 'l' in tunics with

JASON SHAIN
TURNS FlV F:- Mr. and
Mrs. David Shain , Houle 2,
~cine ,

entcrl&lt;.li ned with a

party honoring their son ,
Jason David , on his fifth birthday.
A Superman U1crn e was

carried out for lhe party.
Ca ke and ice crccun were
served to Mrs. Charlene
Le wi~ and Trent, Mr. and
Mrs. Cfutrles M. Hysell , Mr.
and Mrs. Barney Shain. Mr.
and Mrs . Charle s R. Hysell,
Mr. amt Mrs. Dick Wamsley
and H1eh ic, Mr. and Mrs.
Henry El"\•ine, M1·. and Mrs.
Bruce Zirkle, Rhonda and
Susan, Van Wil ford, Mi ss
Patty Shain and Mrs. Mildred
Spencer.
Se nding gifts and cards
were Mrs. !.(lure~ Huffman,

Gmncs

sli:lve coleu s.
The menu consisted of
eggs , s&lt;J iods, re lislws, fr ied
chicken, Italia n bread mid
melted butter, angel food
cakt~ w1th strawberry topping
ami hugh 11latcs of fruit. A
grape drink Wl.I S ust•cl 1o

Loss noted

't'r

Housh , Susan Roush, Margie
uf Bmmmlxmquct.s.
Henry, Terri Corbin, Diane
Bel ween courses the slave Dailey, Marie .Janko, Lori
girls danced fur the guests Prestou, and Linda Wheeler.
and after the banquet games
The decc!rati ons featured
ami d(lncmg wt're enjoyed by wbles covered with lavender
tlw gro up .
And decorated with gold
Seated at the tabl e were l:andles and lavender candle
M1k e Hendrickson and Kim rings. The progra ms were
Hcynulds, consuls, Sarah written in Latin in scroll
Drummond, Paul Lassitor, fashion and lied with gold ribLarry Harr isun1 Sherry Har· buns.
ri ~on.
Tcrcsv Hummong ,
Committees were Jea n
Dcuu ic Stover, Mi ke Ke lley, Elkins, Sherry Ha~Tisun, Lori
T!Jdd Thoma s and .Je"n Preston , Mike Shoemaker,
Elkm.';i. Mike ShucmCtkcr WCt~ and Larry Harrison , food ;
he;-uJ slaver cmd the olht·i· Todd
Thomas , Shawn
slaves were Shawn Thom as, ThomCJS, TeresCJ H~rrunund ,
P::1m Hctnf! gi:l r , f)l~ bbn~ Linda Wheeler, and Mike
1
Ke lley, decorations; and Ki m
Reynolds , Mike Hendrickson,
Susan Roush, Sarah Drummond, Terri Corbin, and Debbie Slover, entertainment.
attend. The Lord's Pr"yer in
Mrs. Fay Sauer is advisor
of the dub and reclined at the
Wtison cl osed the meehn g.
table with lhe guesls.
Mothers preparing the meal
SEEN AND HEARD
were Mrs. Robert Elkins,
Mother's Day visitors at Mrs. James Preston, Mrs.
the home of Mrs. Allen Kale Shoemaker, and Mrs.
Br t!we r
onJ
David , Mary Lou Harrison.
Stiversvillc, were Mr. and
Mrs. Clyde Close. and Hoy,
Waterfo n l: Mrs. Loui se Grand Ope~ing
Brewer, Mrs. Juan n Dobbins,
Culwnbus: Mr. and Mrs.
Hm·uld Brewer ami daughter,
.l&lt;lllc Fitch. Long Bottom. A
large decorated birthda y tO I W. 2nd St. Pomeroy, 0 .

UMW pkzn garage sale
Plrm.., for o-1 garCtge s&lt;Jlc to
IJe held at the home of Mrs.
Ma ry Hussell on J une 5 and 6
were made durin ~ the
Wednesday meeting of the
Min ersvi lle U111teu Methodi st
Wo1nen at tir e church.
The meeting f ollowt~d a
morning of 4U Jlting wH.l n.tg
rug sewing wit h r1 sack lunrh

at noun. Mrs. Husscll was the
progr&lt;J m leadl•r, wtth Mrs.
Betty Koch giving the open,·ng pray er . He ~di ngs un
Mother's Day were given by
Mrs. Koch, Mrs. Stella
Grucser. Mrs. Helen Maag.
Mrs. .J une Sayre, Mrs .
Mildred Phillips. a111l Mrs.
l{u uy Grueser, who presided
&lt;Jl the business meeting.
C:ct-well cttrds weJ'c sent tu

Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Tom
Heed, Sherri and Thersa, Mr.
and Mrs. Spike Plictia, Miss
Vera
Beeg le,
Mr s.
JoyceManuel, Hobi n and those ill members una bll• tu
Don ita .

LAMAR
BEAUTY SALON

rake

Wil S

prestnted to Mrs.

Brewer bv Mr. and Mrs .
Ha rold llr·ewcr. She also
rece ived g1fts. cards. flowers
m 1d

severed

l'U II ~r a tulatory

telephone ca lls. Her birthday
was May 9. The cake was
st·rved with ice eream.

Under New Management
Terri MillerWatker

Opening
Tuesday, May 23
Home Phone742-2377 or
Evenings 992-7056
'-----------'

FASHION MATE.

IN TH F: HOSPlT AL
Mrs. Helen Williams of Colwnbus. for merly of Dexter.

ZIG·ZAG MACHINE MODEL 360

was runfi ncd to Univend ty
Mrs.

Vir gmict

Johnson

received her &gt;O pou nd pin and
t:erli£il:ate antl we~s enroll ed
in the Foreve r Slim program
uf the Co nway Diet Club du ring

one ·or

b st

week 's

meeting.
AI th e Munday n i ~ h t
meet ing of the Pomeroy
class, Mrs. Thelma Miller
was the member los ing Ute
must weight during the week
with Mrs . Pat Schaekelbcing
her runnerup. Mrs.Freda
Van lnwa gen ret:eived her 20
pound pin and ce rtificate.
:::::::,:::::::::::::::::::::::::::;,:;:::::::::::::::::·:·:·:·:·:·:.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:.:·:.:·:·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.:.:·:·:·:·".'.
Mrs. Susi e Gibbs was the
weekly
wei ght loss winner at
''
.,.,
.;:: the Mason class with Mrs.
A shower hunurinH Ri ta Cinda Ha rris. Penny Smith, Patty Weaver be ing her
Casc1 , bride-ded of Terry Juanita Bac ht e l, Pat runner-up, and 20 pound pins
Whitlatcll. was held Tuesday McDo ug al , Ca lh e rine and cerlifi calcs were awardnight al the Bradbury Ch urch Werner, J oyce Dav is, Amy L'li to Betty Ja:nes, C..ndy
of.Christ. Hosting the shower Lega r, Tma Nieri, Elsie ~nd Van Meter , and Johnelta
were Tere.sa Ce~sd, Barbara Dale Barnhart, .Bessie King, Ch.!ndcncn .
Su.'X! n I.A.!ar and Linda
Ar c he r . •nd Debbie Gui !ana Girolam i, Peg and
Wl1 itlatc h.
June Hut ton. Bel"l1ice Jeffers, Crawl were the big weighl
The weddi ng colors of blue, Marie Snowden. and Kate losers iJl at the Athen~ det.ss
scS!-i ittn.
yc lluw and green were tar· Wilson.
rit'&lt;l ou t in the decorations .
Cake, punch. min~~ and nuts were served lo the guests .

Rita Casci honored at shower &lt;

L~tltn

students. The boys wore

siu1ul"te lite traditi onal win e

Hosp it al t.\1 ea ns Hall1
days ICtst week fur
some tests.
Joining Mrs. Williams for a
SL'ver al

Mother 's Duy dum er at her

Columbus home were Mr.
and Mrs. Hubert Li vinl{slon ,
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Barnha rt and three

children of !lieapolis: Oh1o:
Ronal d Willi"III S &lt;rnd
daughter, of Bryan, Miss Cindy W"ite of Bryan. Mr. mill
Mrs. Dana Hysell of Grove
City called in the aft ernoon.

HUBBARDS
GREENHOUSE
992-5776

The 360 features front drop. fn bobb in, 4 step built-In

?uttoh hole , adj ustabl e elastic st retch sti1ch, and
rnler changable fashion a nd utility st itch patterns. With
a 30 year warranty

Syracuse, 0 .

Bedding
Plants ,
Potted Plants, Dish
Gardens , Hanging
Baskets , Vegetable
Plants.

FABRIC
SHOP

Open Mon. thru Sat. 9tiiS
Sunday t til s

Pomeroy, Ohio

were plet ycd with

pnzes bei ng awarded to the
wi nners.
POLICE WATCH DEAm
Atlending were Virgi_nia
TOLEDO , Ohio (UP! ) Wliitlatch, Gemma Casci. City police who tried to pull
Sharon and Tammy Wright. Melvin Stantchion over to tell
Drcama Hovatter , Sharon him about the fli ckering
and Ruth Barn hart, Ida taillighls on his car wound up
CounL' and Ca rrie, Teresa watching him die .
Cremeans, Joyce Blake, DonStantchion sped away when
na Glaze , Sharon Wilson, the police signalled tn him
Durothy Jenkins, Patsy and Saturday night and eluded
Usa Oiler, Ann and Rose Col- them in a long rlU1 from the
uurn, Mary Kun zelman, city's north side down
Ka ti e
Bir on,
E ls ie In terstate 7&gt;. Police said just
Sutherland , Vidia and Peggy off
th e
expressway ,
Girulam i, Pam Moyer, Con- Stant chion and a passenger
nie Dodson , Agnes Dodson, jumped out of the car.
Dorothy Wrighl, Remalee
The passenger ran toward
Fra nckow iak and Heather. the expressway, they said ,
Delores and Rito Ba iley, but Stantchion jumped intn
Hose Sisson, Noa mi King, the ottawa River .
Pf~ l iSONAL to "Wife of a Miser Who Thinks He's a Philan- and Mrs. Wilbur Hanning.
About 2ll feet out in Ute dark
thropist" : Like lhe man says, "The trouble wilh some people
Others presenling gifts water he called for help, but
who give till it hurts is, tli€y'r&lt;• terribly se nsitive to pain ."
were Arline Davis, Barbara before police on the shore
By all means, gel your old job back - und start a sepa rate Mullen, Janie F' rymyer, Joan
could respond, he went under .
savinJ~S account. -· II.
Tewksba!1.,_Carol Tannehill,

GuyA Ru!.sell,
Pres td ent

n,

Notes

IJEAH IIEI.F:N :
" IJran~r.&lt;l " lhinks she hus it IJ&gt;Jd. Let me lell you what drug
pushers tlid to me, u God-fearing, Bi ble-loving woman.
My son wen t nearly crazy with d1·ugs . I found LSD in his
tntiler and reporled il to IIJC stale police. They destroyed it and
said I stole it , instead of Ulking hun in. Then he conunitted
unn cd robbery and is in prison now . I wouldn't give money for
u law yer or bond. I jusl thanked God they look him off the
s tree L~ and put him where he won 't get d1·ugs anymore.
My d11 ughtc r won' t ta lk to 1111! on accounl of drugs. She
pushes.
When llrit·d to gt:l help from my mother and my brulher,
U1"y IJcut me up anrl l got a brain concussion. My brolhers are
all pushers ami users. I 1CilUrled my own mother for laking
spc!'l lo my IJI·uther while he was in the hospital aft er a molorcyde accident. Nobody prosecute•!. Now he 's also in jail for
umtL'&lt;l robbery. I testified against him and found olhcr
witnesses who hclpt'!l pul him ;nvay.
I um a pilKI'UII who is llcl tJing r;oci fight aga insllhe forces of
evil. My fan1ily's sins have found them out. I have Jesus to susloin me, llumk &lt;:od '- WHITE SHEEP AMONG BLACK
DE1\ R W.S.A.B. :
Your "help" is straight f1·ont the "Vengeance is mine"
sdHXII. lla~ you employ~d more love ;md less Bible-thumping
U1rough the years, perhaps your family might ha ve turned out
differently. - fl .

Sa l1s bury
Townsh 1P
T rustees will offer for sale ov
P ublrc Auct ion on the nth
ctay of May 1978 at 10 00 a m
a h9 A llen Stt' el Du m p body
and
ho i st
locat ron
at
Townshrp Halt. Rock Spr 1ngs.
Oh 10 T er ms , Casn oa y ot
sal e

f5 ) fl . lB .

I
I

m;AnTwosE :
(A more appropriate signature would be "Gotcha 1" But
U1cn, most of my views have altered since lhe early '60s. l
B"ck 16 years ago , big famili es were in , "only children"
pltit-d. I went with the times- and times have changed radically since theu. If you compared early colwnns to those I do now ,
you 'd find me a v11stly different person - lor which I'm glad.II.
l'.S. Did you have that second d1ild ' Sigu me - CURIOUS

Jt c

CHOICES

I

'GUTCIIA, II ELEN!' SIIRSAYS
I )I.:AH IIELEN :
Sume 16·ycars ago I wrule you aboul my husband wanting
unuther child right aw11y, but I preferred to wait until! was
n1orc aiJle lo t"Ope, or poss ibly ":\lie fur just one.
I enclose the clippinp, I've savL't. You replied, " Have your
doctor 1•xpi:Jin l11e sit1mliun to your husband ," bul then you added "An only •·hild is a Jont'ly ch ild and often spoiled to buol,"
Implying thul somclimc WI' should consi der increasing our
fumily.
Pi&lt;•&lt;rse conlpal·e the abuve with it recent reply in which you
suid, "One rhild is plenty - if one is all you and your husband
wont. He won 't be spoiled or lonely if you raise him right. " flOW COM F.'! 1Or should I sign liti s, "TWO BE OR NOT TWO
BE''' I

Ne g o ttat e today lor that tong ·
desrred pact or deal Re so lu tr on rs poss tble through th e
Stn c erc . tru s tworthy m anner rn
wh tc h you ' ll co nduct yoursetl

·Latin Club enjoys banquet

l
I

~ USe • •

Se c re c v

AQUARIU S (J an . 20-Feb. 19)

.t l,rluw l ltrarn.ltl r hv
111ur I Hnl.; r turn br ·~~ ,md wo rd' h
h.t , lnt.tl rt•t .rll, ll'lllt't l1 1l4•rrr1K lUI!
1\h.tt r(1 rln I ll "f\ lt1od rlt•nH.Ul
rnolP\I JU\1 n~hl v. rrh !ht• r I
Pmvf'r ~·l(•dol ( h.ur~·· r rru

I

l

SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 13-Dec.

)

Thumb

1975 MEMORY Mob rl e Hofl'le .
14K5b to ta l electrrc , 3 bdr . i9b5
boril e gas hea t 2 b(h ..
l€!'tely fu rn. ne w fu rnace. Must
se ll due to ill hea lth . II rnte re sled . coll 949 1348.

fJ,-4

Green

12 '( bO 1973 Dorian troil.e t; lor
.:;ole _ '}_ bedroom located pe t·
ween Mine I &amp; 2 Ph.on e
1·609 57 42.

chances

'" Prrl!o\f,t lll .,

·r·-··-·· -- · -·- -- -----~---------i

742·2565 .

LIB RA (Se pt. 23-0ct. 13) Your
PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY . OH 10

7-The Daily Sentinel , Middleporl-Pomeroy , 0., Monday , May 22, 1978

Now, a richer, smoother,
more satisfying Salem!
As the leader In tobacco technology we have
discovered a way to improve that great Salem flavor. At the
same time we have actually lowered the tar!
You get all that famous menthol freshness, plus a richet;
smoother, more satisfying smoke.
•

POMEROY CEMENT
BLOCK CO.

Lower in tar, too.

Th e annual molher - Mrs. Edison Hollon. Mrs.
daughler bauquel of the Edith Sisson gave readings
Uuilt'&lt;l Melh&lt;Kiisl . Women of on " Mothers-in-Law." There
Ute ~· uresl Hun Chureh wns was a song, "One Day al a
Time" by Mrs . Vernal
held ren ·ntly al the chon-ch. .
The polluck dinner was Blackwood, and a poem,
!lerved from tables decumtc'&lt;l "Mother's Biscuits" by Mrs.
with lmrricu ne lumps and Alfred Yeauger.
An Enna Bombeck reading
flower rings. The program
was
given by Mrs. Ann Watopent'&lt;l with a song, " ~';lilh of
Our Molhers" with Mrs. so n, and lhe toast to
Har vey Koch giving a daughlers was by Mrs. Verreading on "Mother's Day." non Nease with the choir
Poclry n•u(( Included "My singing se veral songs.
Swc'Cl Mom" by Mrs. Ja ck Flowers were presenled lo
Smith; '' ATribute" by Cindy several mothers and grand'l1101nus; and " IIunds" ily mothers, anu Mrs. Uswin
Nease futd the closing prayer.
There were 45 persons in attendanc-e including guests
from New Martinsville, W.
Va., Athens , Middleport,
Pomeroy,
Racine, Syracuse,
G1lllpolls BuslntSS Colltge
Chester,
and
Minersville.
·
Is oHerl119 1111 •ccredlted
program of ct.Jss work

WANT A REAL
ESTATE LICENSE?

you're
required
to
complete lor teklng lilt
Ohio Stele ExlmlniiiOil
complole In 011ly
12
weeks. Cia .. begins June

Tht O.,.rlmtnt 5toro of Building

12. For mor·e inlorm•lion
contact LM E. Tyler, ~ -

Since tf1!

Report AUG.'77.

4367.

'

No.7S-12 -04728

In 1924, discovery of the
body of IS-year-old Bobby
Franks of Oll~go led to lhe
arrest of Nathan Leopold and
Richard Loeb. They were
eentenced lo 99 years In
prison for the grisly ,so-(:alled
"thrUI kUling ."

REVIVAL
Christian
Baptist Church
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT BYPASS
&lt;Route 7 &amp; 1241

We have 'a full line
of equipment for whatever
· line you're in.

Pastor, JAMES E. KEESEE

MAY 22-28, 1978
With REV. LARRY EMERY
Dean of Massillon Baptist College
AND THE SINGING EMMANUI:LS
On May 28- Morning Service
Special Singing Nightly
Nursery Available

FUNDAMENTAL

INDEPENDENT

What's your line?
Real estat e? Ladies' wear? Building supplies?
Whatever it is. General Telephone has the equipmcnt you need.
Our pushbutton phone systems can g1vc you up
to 20 lines and 36 stations.
. Our sol id-slate switchboards can handl e as many
li nes and stat ions as you need. While our high speed
data term inals process your written informati on as

fast as i600 words a nunute.
And our automatic dialers, pagin g systems and intercoms can help you el iminate the last vestiges uf
incff1ci cncy.
Cn/1 our business office and ask for a Com municati ans Consultant. He'll not only tell you a J.,t more
about our equipme nt, but show you how it can make
your business a bet ter bu sin ess.
T hat 's hi s line .
If

ffiD
GEOERALTElEPHOOE
The (()mplete conmmnicatiuns (()mpany

�c'

6-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0., Monday. May 22. 1978
PI SCES (Feb. 10-March 101
NOTICE TO

ASTRO•GIAPH

CONTRACTORS
STATEOFO.HIO

DEPARTMENT OF

TRAN S PORTA TIO N
Co lumbu $, Oh io
Ma~ ~ . 197 8

VJ~UJ~
l:JjlfiJ'~~l!Jij

Contrac t $ales Legal
Copy No . 78 -404

UNIT PRICE CONTRACT

1
SeaiE"d p r oposals w ill be
receivea ar me off ice of the
ol
the
Ohio
D i rector
De partment
of
Trans
portahon . Columbus . Oh io .
unt i l
10 : 00
A, .M .
Ohio
Standard T ime. Thursday ,
Ju ne
1,
1918 , for
im
provem en ts in :
Athens , Hock ing , Meigs ,
Morgan . Nobl e. Vinton .;~nd
Washington Co unt ies. Oh io,
on var ious routes and sec
! Ion s and the v iltage ol M e
Connelsv i lle , bv pa i nt ing
extsling guardra tl.
'' The date set tor com
· ptel )on of this work shall be
as set forth in th e b idd 1ng

proposal. "
Each bidder shall be
required to t ile with his bid a
cer t i f ied c h ec k or cashier's
che c il for an amount equal , to
fi'Je per cent of his bid , -but tn
no event mo re than l ifty
thousancl dol l ars, or a bond
for te n per cen t of h is bid ,
payab le to the D i rector .
Bidders must apply , on the
proper
term s,
tor
quali f ic ation at lea s t ten days
pr io r to the · date set t or
op en ing b i ds in a c cordr~n ce
wilh Chapter 5525 Ohio
Rev ised Code
Plans and spe c it ica r1ons
are on t ile in the Departm ent
ot Transportat ion and the
olllce ot t he Di str ic t Deputy
D trc ctor .
T11e 0 1r ec tor rl"serves the
riqht to reject any and all
b ids
DAV I D L WEIR
D I RECT OR
Rev 8 17 73

\Sl 15 ,

n , ?tc

May 23. 1918
Many 'sh o rt t r1 p 'IOU ve l)een
wanttng to make wtll become
realdy tht S co tnmg year Fun
and co mpat1bl e co mpan rons
wt: t en lt ven ,·our C)(Cu rstons

GEMINI (May 21 -June 10)

A
solu l 10n to an old pro blem can
tle found today lJ ~· d1SCu ss1ng 11
!ranKly w rth the o tt"ler party
Don t hOld bac~ on any thtrlQ
tt1a t s bo th emlCJ YOU Frncl ou t
more abou t yatt •sc lt DY seM tng to r yow copy a t As tr oGraprt Le tter Ma ll 50 cen ts tor
each anc! a long
set l adclres si?d s tamped envelope
to A str o-G raptl P 0 B o ~ 489
AadtO C1 ty Sta tt On N Y 100 t 9
Be sure .to spcct l y brrttl s tqn

CAN CER (June 21-July 22) Slep
uo and lake charge of a dlffrcult

J ea nn ie 1.. Tay lor tu
Thr ou gt1 Hlf''kmdnC sb ol i.l i10ih Columbus and Southern Ohio
er . helP wrll be gr\len to you lhat
~~lecl ric Cu., Easemenl,
turn s a labonous tas k 11110 one
Rutland .
thai' s rcta ll vcty srmp tr to com
Cha rles A. Musser, Judy
plet e
ARI ES .(March 11-April 19) YD UI
Musser In Co lumbu s and
rmagr na tron ca n bf' put 10 wor k
Southern Ohio Electric Co ,
to day II you su ~r ound yourse lf
F:asemenl, Rulland .
wllh trtlf&gt;nted rnnOYa !l vc peoDorot hy Reeves, James C.
ple Th&lt;l! whr ch ~·o u f&gt;m•rsro n
Heeves
to Li nda D. Darnell,
can be accornpfrs tl cd
Ohio Power Co. to Southern
TAuRU S !April 10-May 20) Ohio Ohio Coa t C11., 7,475.5 11 Pa ul M. Darnell, Jr., Parcel,
Sornctr11ng y0u Ye wanted for a acres ex. coal, Rutland - Salisbury.
lor'!g tmw rnrght be grvcn to you
Edwa rd !.. Baer, Ruby
Cl!lumbia -Sa lem .
today by one you vc helped rn
Bacr
lo Don K. Grueser,
Fra nklin Rea l Esta te Co. to
the past It wrtl be hrs p~ca s ure
Janel
S.
Grucser. 1.276 acres,
Sout hern Ohio Cua l Co., oil
rN(I'¥ $PAPf H f NTfiWfii S [ A. SSt,J
Sutton.
and gas, under 7,475 .511
acres, Colum bia - Rutland - Amos Tillis, Rulh Tillis to
H. b.Seyler, Ncilia E. Sey ler,
Sa lem.
.22 Here . Pomeroy .
~~ 1971, at least HOO persons
~e lli e R. Va le, dec. lu John
lola A. Damewoud, furdied in an earthq uake in F. V11 le, Cert. of Trans..
merly lola A. Barlrum ,
eastern Turkey,
Rut la nd .
P enton Tay lor. Ernest L. Damewood to

Meigs

Property

Transfers

ln Memory
IN LOVING memory or
Charles W . Eblin , Jr .. who
passed away B years a q o.
May 22 . Even tho ' we mrss
you . we know that you went
home . We nave your happy
memo r y Ia k eep you in our
glow .
We all lov e you , and
m iss ed by fam ily .
5 7'1 H e

Lost and FQund
LO~

I I;S~OWN brll lold. i-=1ve dollar
rPward Between ~ut lond and
M1ddl c port. 992 · 7 ~ IJ

LO~ l ~~ MAl~ co t . Mos tly grey.
wl10r1119 rvd co lim and Ilea (:O I·
lo r . An :. wc r · ~ to th e nome of li1

1y 01 lr1be t Vt\ mtly of Hy:.e ll
Hun fir I 'J4 a nd l:io1le y Run

9 9'1 7680

~lohile Homes for· sale
1912 FUR NISHW mobil~ hqme
w1th or without 1' r oues .
l oaded w rlh eK fras. SeiJ rng
c h~op .

E STA TE

OF

J

FLOY D

RUPE DECEASED
cas e No 21383
NOT IC E OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FID UC IARY
On May J, 1978 , rn the Me ig s
Cou nty Pr o bat e CoUr t. Case
No 22383 , J ane Altce Rup e,
Rt 1. Dexter . Ohio was ap .
po rn ted Administratrix o t fn e
esta te of
Floy d J
R upe ,
ct ece a se d , l at e ot Rt . 1 ,
De Kter , Ohro .

Mann ing D . Webst er
Proba le Jvage
Clerk.
\5) 8, 15 ,

n , 3tc

H t ll c re~r 1:?11"56 . CUS tOt1'1 b~.tilt .

cPm-

PPI• for Sale
Charles W. Aldridge, Maxine
Aldridge, 3.8 acres, Rutland .
Virgil 0 . Day, Mary 3.
Day, Ferrel W. Day, Patricia
K. D&lt;ty to Larry W. Ru pe,
Beverly S. 11upe, 2 acres ,
Rutland .

f.II~IN G

~ 1Af.l

KPt111el , Boo1ding
l 11door oncl ou tdoor
tlH l&lt;o
C.!Oomrrrg all breod5 Clean
'&gt; Oilltory lo ct h t ic~
Chc shrre
Phone (61.:1 ) 'J67 0291.

MA L ~

ANU
l e mol e
AK C
t e&gt;g r ~ tcr e d Old ~ngl1!o h !:rhccp
dog~ 98) J 11 1 or 992 -220!&gt; .

l'els (or Sale
HOO~ ·HO LL OW H01se~ Buy , sell
trade o r train New ond u5ed
~ addle s

f.luth Reeves . Albany .

(b l4 ) b9B ·3290 .

Warning, The Surgeon General Has Determined
That C1garette SmokingIs Dangerous toYour Health.

task confron trng you and your
co work ers
You II manage
lht ngs easi!v . becau se 11 s a
la bo r ot love tor you

LEO (J ul y 23-Aug . 121 Your brg·
hearted gesture tod ay wtll be
mor e help ful to th e o ther party
than vou can 1magrne Be ore
pared to r an o v er wll e lnl!n ~J
thankfulnes s
VIRGO (Aug . 13-Sept . 221 A
tremendous amount w ill be
ac compltShed al horne today
because o f th e q utf't condrtrons
prevatltng Yo u II hP ablf' to rl o
tlltngs tn your own wa y at yOu !
own spee-d
analvttCal powers today ca•1
so l11e the most werghty of pr o b·
tems Be sure to let o th ers
~now yo ur br rght 1deas

SCO RPIO (Oct 24- Nov . 21)
Re cognt1ton wrl l be' yours
today 11 co uld carne rn the l o rrn
o f a promo t ton ra tse 01 even by
ta~rng lhe top Oflle 111 a con·
If'S!
21 ) Concenua te lod ay on way s

to develop personal goals Se·
naus deltberauon wrll result rn
!tndr''hg th e key to g arn s
CAPRICORN (D ec . 12-Jan . 19)
enhances y o ur
tor success wtttl
somethrng that you c an env tsron c learly
Sha re you r
tt1 0uQhts only wr th th ose wh o
are eQu ally vr s rona ry

NO TICE OF SA LE

~pt "f'th (&gt;~ 1 '11 v. htl ~·

( O)(o ~ lfll';

lr·,t ! Uit''i fu ~ v.,rth

IHJ!Iltn.d 1Oil ~ In~
poy.,.r•r • "'t,trnlt..,~ "'t r·r·llntf'l tlll
• l&lt;:f'tnU\,dJit• (,l,r" '\ptllllotl
• Pu ll- down Olr1r'l\,ulor · • tllu n1H1.Jtf'd dt~rr,r lrl(l( lo. .md tnm·r
• "'upt·r \\ ,,rr,lllh ~ ~ · ~· lf!W do·,rlt•r
lot Ur·t,ilh

Pomeroy Nationa l Ban lo.
w ill ott er for sate. at publrc
sate , on Wednesday , M ay 7&lt;~ .
t'n·B. at 10 00 O'C io c ~ AM , ~~
tne Futfon Thom pson Tr ac tor
Sates , In c , Sp r ing Avenue .
P om eroy .
Ohio,
th e
tottowrng
One
Allis
Chalme r s Co rn P ic ker or
Gra1n Combine, Model A .
Sa1 d sale tS be ing ma.d e
pursuant to the auth or ity
c ontatn ed
rn a St-cu r i t y
Ag r eemen t
P omeroy
National Ban k reserves th e
rtqh t to brd on th e property

n.n

(!rl 19 , , , ,

PUBLIC NOTICE

Boara ol Townshr p
Trustees
Jt c

NOTICE

UL TRAM ATIC®
MICROWAVE
OVEN

,,/-'~' $549

BAKER
FURNITURE
Middleport

CALDRI~

SPa led brds wrl! be rece t ved
by the Oh ro Dep.Hfment of
N atu rcl l Resou r ces . D IVISIOn
ot
Forestry
Founta1n
Sq u ar e . Columbus , Ohro ,
J3 27 4, up to it nd rncludlng
Monday , June It 1978, at J DO
PM for an ESTIMI1TED
07 , 6 85
board
f eet
In
terna t 1o n a1 14" Rule o f
!i aw t1 mber on )1 c1 cres rn
Compa rfm enl ] 1 Shad e R1vcr
Slate t o rt~s l , Me rgs Cou nt y ,
Oh!O
For brd f orm!. and f ur ther
tn tormat 10n contact Mr
Do nclfd Baun . S75J7 Joppa
Road ,
Reedsville . Ohro ,
r!JS777 . te le ph one 1614 ) 378
6116 ,

{51

n , 23,

24 , Jt c

I

BY LILLY KENNEDY
Rullaud Friendly Gardeners
DO n' YOURSELF HERBS
If you have u lively interest in good food or just saving a
lillie in the food budgel - growing culinacY herbs are a musl.
The myslerious, enhancing flavor appearing in a familiar
dish as a result of fresh heroo will rate you a IIUle higher in the
ranks of good cooks plus the fragrances that permeate Ute air
will make you feel thal you have lruly gone back lo nature.
Ont-e you have tasted homegrown herbs, you will not want to
be wilhout Utem. Herb plants may be obtained at your local
farmers' markets or nurseries. If plants are unavailable, the
heroo may be started from seed.
Limited space does nol have to pose a problem because
they do Mt have to be confined lo a cerlain area . Most herbs
can be starled indoors in pots, hanging baskels or on your
windowsill. Aller the danger of frost has past they can be
lransplanled ouWoors and broughl back in again before cold
weaU!er hits. In order to grow, herbs musl have a rich soil,
waler and a swmy spot to flourish . Soil composilion may be
unproved by adding compo,st, sand and lime. Herbs can also be
b1tenningled in Ute borders with olher shrubbery or flowers.
When planting your herbs, put Utem out in Ute evening
when il is not so hol or on a day when the sun is hiding behind
the clouds. Waler lhoroughly every evening u·ntil well
established- then letlhe rain take over lheir watering care.
Phmls that you may wish to include in your garden are:
chives, minis, thyme, parsley and oregano . These will make
even a beginner look like an old "pro."
To harvest herbs , pick when the plants begin tn flower . The
yoliDg tender green leaves at Ute tip of the plant are mosl
fluvorful. Cui each •'Jlrig 4-5 inches from the lip of the plant.
!Iinse well - now they are ready for use fresh or lo be
preserved for later.
:~~~::.-:.-:::::--:::~~:=:::::::;:.':'"~:·:·!:!:!!~::!;:::::~::::::~~:::::~:~~t':~IS$!~·~=AQ:~)~fll·~~~~

Helen Help
By Helen Hottel

I
~

Banquet held

~~~
~ ~

I Let THE FRIENDLy ONE

~c::o~

I help you with your
1

REMODELING PROJEa51

~
Vov con odd cabinets, o room divider 0&lt;
!vena room I To ge1 ii'OOI resul1s oil you
need ore the prCJfler 1ools, buildino mo1eriols ond o few tips.
No matter how Iorge 1he project, see vs ... we con help
119'&gt;1"" 1he load ot 1he friendl y One!

Karen Blaker Ph.D.

the sehoul cHfeh~ ri::t .

Guests redincd on three

Clean up for

si!lcs of a table in ltumrm

I the maid
I

I

The 11th a n nu~ l Human
bauquet of the SPQH l« tin
Clu b of the Kyger Cree k High
Se houl was hel d recently in

DEAR DR. BLAKER - I
only wm·k part time, but I
need the help of a
housekecpe1· once a week .
ll bothers me tha l I'm not
organized enough to get
everythin g done by myself,
but I have two. active
tceuage1·s. They keep me
busy driving lhem to all their
aclivilies.
I have enough trouble accepli ng an outsider's help
with lhe house. Bul my kids
make it even harder.
They know I don't like
anyone to see the house when

it's messy. When I start
organizing things li&gt;r lhe
housekeeper's day, they accuse me of clea ning up fur the
maid.
That makes me mad
because it just isn't true. How
can! get them off my back?
DEAR READER - You
sound like a person who
would like to have the house
dean for Ute hou sekeeper.
That in itself makes you
vu lnerable lo your children's
ar.:cusations.
Stop equatin g you1· need for
household help with a personal feeling of failw·e . Accept lhe limilations. thal
resu lt from being only
human.
Your teen-agers have
me1·ely picked up effcclively
on yo ur psyc ho logical
Ach illes heel.
Is there a specific reason
for this teasing beyond the
normal leen-ager's urge to
crilicize his or her parents ?

Arc they angry with you
about some issue lhat has not
been aired and " adequate ly
discussed?
Pass the following message
along to you(children.
DEAH TEENAGEilS Most teen-agers are thrilled
when their pare nts hire a
huus t~keeper ; it means less
work for them.
But if you are not ust'!l to
having a stranger in the
house, 1t might be an unsettl-

·ing experience.

fas hi on ami were served by

Docs it bother you that she
can go thi"Uugh your things
while you are at school' If so,
you may be try ing to make
your mother feel guilty so she
will resume all Ute cleaning
responsibilities.
The1·e must be a better wa y
to solve lhe problem. Teasing
your mother only upsets he1·.
In the lung run, it probabl y :
makes life more difficult for
you.
A family meeting mighl be
Ute best place lo talk about
your feelings. If you really
dislike having a housekeeper
around, offer lu help your
mother clean. Then she might
be able to lellhe housekeeper
· go. You could use the meeting
lo divide up Ute chores.
If you are sincerely
bolhered because you lhink
your mother cleans up for lhe
lllllid. why nut ask what she
needs to do to prepare for I he
housekeepe r' You may be
surprised lo learn how much
time and energy it tokes to
organize work fur others lo
do . Businessmen often spend
several hours a day just
deciding how tu keep their
sccre laries busy .
There il; one sure way lu
stop your mother's annoying ·
behav ior: Offer to toke over
prepa ra tion s fu r th e
housekeep&lt;" you rse lves. But
remember lo check lhe cleaning supplies, leave food for
lhe maid's lunch, pul her
cash in an envelope and write
a note with a list of the jobs
fur the day plus last week's
problems.
I'm certain your motl\er
will gladly help you lea rn lhc
ropes. She probably needs a
vacation from the job - and
fro m your teasing.
Write to Dr. Blaker in care
uf this newspaper, P.O. Box
489 , Radi o City Stoliun, New
York. N. Y. 10019. Volwnc of
ma il pr ohi bi ts personal
replies, but questions of
~en e ral interest will be
discussed in future colunms.

siCives . the f1rst year

togas, the girls, stulas, tulll
tht! .si&lt;Jves WC1 'l' in tunics with

JASON SHAIN
TURNS FlV F:- Mr. and
Mrs. David Shain , Houle 2,
~cine ,

entcrl&lt;.li ned with a

party honoring their son ,
Jason David , on his fifth birthday.
A Superman U1crn e was

carried out for lhe party.
Ca ke and ice crccun were
served to Mrs. Charlene
Le wi~ and Trent, Mr. and
Mrs. Cfutrles M. Hysell , Mr.
and Mrs. Barney Shain. Mr.
and Mrs . Charle s R. Hysell,
Mr. amt Mrs. Dick Wamsley
and H1eh ic, Mr. and Mrs.
Henry El"\•ine, M1·. and Mrs.
Bruce Zirkle, Rhonda and
Susan, Van Wil ford, Mi ss
Patty Shain and Mrs. Mildred
Spencer.
Se nding gifts and cards
were Mrs. !.(lure~ Huffman,

Gmncs

sli:lve coleu s.
The menu consisted of
eggs , s&lt;J iods, re lislws, fr ied
chicken, Italia n bread mid
melted butter, angel food
cakt~ w1th strawberry topping
ami hugh 11latcs of fruit. A
grape drink Wl.I S ust•cl 1o

Loss noted

't'r

Housh , Susan Roush, Margie
uf Bmmmlxmquct.s.
Henry, Terri Corbin, Diane
Bel ween courses the slave Dailey, Marie .Janko, Lori
girls danced fur the guests Prestou, and Linda Wheeler.
and after the banquet games
The decc!rati ons featured
ami d(lncmg wt're enjoyed by wbles covered with lavender
tlw gro up .
And decorated with gold
Seated at the tabl e were l:andles and lavender candle
M1k e Hendrickson and Kim rings. The progra ms were
Hcynulds, consuls, Sarah written in Latin in scroll
Drummond, Paul Lassitor, fashion and lied with gold ribLarry Harr isun1 Sherry Har· buns.
ri ~on.
Tcrcsv Hummong ,
Committees were Jea n
Dcuu ic Stover, Mi ke Ke lley, Elkins, Sherry Ha~Tisun, Lori
T!Jdd Thoma s and .Je"n Preston , Mike Shoemaker,
Elkm.';i. Mike ShucmCtkcr WCt~ and Larry Harrison , food ;
he;-uJ slaver cmd the olht·i· Todd
Thomas , Shawn
slaves were Shawn Thom as, ThomCJS, TeresCJ H~rrunund ,
P::1m Hctnf! gi:l r , f)l~ bbn~ Linda Wheeler, and Mike
1
Ke lley, decorations; and Ki m
Reynolds , Mike Hendrickson,
Susan Roush, Sarah Drummond, Terri Corbin, and Debbie Slover, entertainment.
attend. The Lord's Pr"yer in
Mrs. Fay Sauer is advisor
of the dub and reclined at the
Wtison cl osed the meehn g.
table with lhe guesls.
Mothers preparing the meal
SEEN AND HEARD
were Mrs. Robert Elkins,
Mother's Day visitors at Mrs. James Preston, Mrs.
the home of Mrs. Allen Kale Shoemaker, and Mrs.
Br t!we r
onJ
David , Mary Lou Harrison.
Stiversvillc, were Mr. and
Mrs. Clyde Close. and Hoy,
Waterfo n l: Mrs. Loui se Grand Ope~ing
Brewer, Mrs. Juan n Dobbins,
Culwnbus: Mr. and Mrs.
Hm·uld Brewer ami daughter,
.l&lt;lllc Fitch. Long Bottom. A
large decorated birthda y tO I W. 2nd St. Pomeroy, 0 .

UMW pkzn garage sale
Plrm.., for o-1 garCtge s&lt;Jlc to
IJe held at the home of Mrs.
Ma ry Hussell on J une 5 and 6
were made durin ~ the
Wednesday meeting of the
Min ersvi lle U111teu Methodi st
Wo1nen at tir e church.
The meeting f ollowt~d a
morning of 4U Jlting wH.l n.tg
rug sewing wit h r1 sack lunrh

at noun. Mrs. Husscll was the
progr&lt;J m leadl•r, wtth Mrs.
Betty Koch giving the open,·ng pray er . He ~di ngs un
Mother's Day were given by
Mrs. Koch, Mrs. Stella
Grucser. Mrs. Helen Maag.
Mrs. .J une Sayre, Mrs .
Mildred Phillips. a111l Mrs.
l{u uy Grueser, who presided
&lt;Jl the business meeting.
C:ct-well cttrds weJ'c sent tu

Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Tom
Heed, Sherri and Thersa, Mr.
and Mrs. Spike Plictia, Miss
Vera
Beeg le,
Mr s.
JoyceManuel, Hobi n and those ill members una bll• tu
Don ita .

LAMAR
BEAUTY SALON

rake

Wil S

prestnted to Mrs.

Brewer bv Mr. and Mrs .
Ha rold llr·ewcr. She also
rece ived g1fts. cards. flowers
m 1d

severed

l'U II ~r a tulatory

telephone ca lls. Her birthday
was May 9. The cake was
st·rved with ice eream.

Under New Management
Terri MillerWatker

Opening
Tuesday, May 23
Home Phone742-2377 or
Evenings 992-7056
'-----------'

FASHION MATE.

IN TH F: HOSPlT AL
Mrs. Helen Williams of Colwnbus. for merly of Dexter.

ZIG·ZAG MACHINE MODEL 360

was runfi ncd to Univend ty
Mrs.

Vir gmict

Johnson

received her &gt;O pou nd pin and
t:erli£il:ate antl we~s enroll ed
in the Foreve r Slim program
uf the Co nway Diet Club du ring

one ·or

b st

week 's

meeting.
AI th e Munday n i ~ h t
meet ing of the Pomeroy
class, Mrs. Thelma Miller
was the member los ing Ute
must weight during the week
with Mrs . Pat Schaekelbcing
her runnerup. Mrs.Freda
Van lnwa gen ret:eived her 20
pound pin and ce rtificate.
:::::::,:::::::::::::::::::::::::::;,:;:::::::::::::::::·:·:·:·:·:·:.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:.:·:.:·:·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.:.:·:·:·:·".'.
Mrs. Susi e Gibbs was the
weekly
wei ght loss winner at
''
.,.,
.;:: the Mason class with Mrs.
A shower hunurinH Ri ta Cinda Ha rris. Penny Smith, Patty Weaver be ing her
Casc1 , bride-ded of Terry Juanita Bac ht e l, Pat runner-up, and 20 pound pins
Whitlatcll. was held Tuesday McDo ug al , Ca lh e rine and cerlifi calcs were awardnight al the Bradbury Ch urch Werner, J oyce Dav is, Amy L'li to Betty Ja:nes, C..ndy
of.Christ. Hosting the shower Lega r, Tma Nieri, Elsie ~nd Van Meter , and Johnelta
were Tere.sa Ce~sd, Barbara Dale Barnhart, .Bessie King, Ch.!ndcncn .
Su.'X! n I.A.!ar and Linda
Ar c he r . •nd Debbie Gui !ana Girolam i, Peg and
Wl1 itlatc h.
June Hut ton. Bel"l1ice Jeffers, Crawl were the big weighl
The weddi ng colors of blue, Marie Snowden. and Kate losers iJl at the Athen~ det.ss
scS!-i ittn.
yc lluw and green were tar· Wilson.
rit'&lt;l ou t in the decorations .
Cake, punch. min~~ and nuts were served lo the guests .

Rita Casci honored at shower &lt;

L~tltn

students. The boys wore

siu1ul"te lite traditi onal win e

Hosp it al t.\1 ea ns Hall1
days ICtst week fur
some tests.
Joining Mrs. Williams for a
SL'ver al

Mother 's Duy dum er at her

Columbus home were Mr.
and Mrs. Hubert Li vinl{slon ,
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Barnha rt and three

children of !lieapolis: Oh1o:
Ronal d Willi"III S &lt;rnd
daughter, of Bryan, Miss Cindy W"ite of Bryan. Mr. mill
Mrs. Dana Hysell of Grove
City called in the aft ernoon.

HUBBARDS
GREENHOUSE
992-5776

The 360 features front drop. fn bobb in, 4 step built-In

?uttoh hole , adj ustabl e elastic st retch sti1ch, and
rnler changable fashion a nd utility st itch patterns. With
a 30 year warranty

Syracuse, 0 .

Bedding
Plants ,
Potted Plants, Dish
Gardens , Hanging
Baskets , Vegetable
Plants.

FABRIC
SHOP

Open Mon. thru Sat. 9tiiS
Sunday t til s

Pomeroy, Ohio

were plet ycd with

pnzes bei ng awarded to the
wi nners.
POLICE WATCH DEAm
Atlending were Virgi_nia
TOLEDO , Ohio (UP! ) Wliitlatch, Gemma Casci. City police who tried to pull
Sharon and Tammy Wright. Melvin Stantchion over to tell
Drcama Hovatter , Sharon him about the fli ckering
and Ruth Barn hart, Ida taillighls on his car wound up
CounL' and Ca rrie, Teresa watching him die .
Cremeans, Joyce Blake, DonStantchion sped away when
na Glaze , Sharon Wilson, the police signalled tn him
Durothy Jenkins, Patsy and Saturday night and eluded
Usa Oiler, Ann and Rose Col- them in a long rlU1 from the
uurn, Mary Kun zelman, city's north side down
Ka ti e
Bir on,
E ls ie In terstate 7&gt;. Police said just
Sutherland , Vidia and Peggy off
th e
expressway ,
Girulam i, Pam Moyer, Con- Stant chion and a passenger
nie Dodson , Agnes Dodson, jumped out of the car.
Dorothy Wrighl, Remalee
The passenger ran toward
Fra nckow iak and Heather. the expressway, they said ,
Delores and Rito Ba iley, but Stantchion jumped intn
Hose Sisson, Noa mi King, the ottawa River .
Pf~ l iSONAL to "Wife of a Miser Who Thinks He's a Philan- and Mrs. Wilbur Hanning.
About 2ll feet out in Ute dark
thropist" : Like lhe man says, "The trouble wilh some people
Others presenling gifts water he called for help, but
who give till it hurts is, tli€y'r&lt;• terribly se nsitive to pain ."
were Arline Davis, Barbara before police on the shore
By all means, gel your old job back - und start a sepa rate Mullen, Janie F' rymyer, Joan
could respond, he went under .
savinJ~S account. -· II.
Tewksba!1.,_Carol Tannehill,

GuyA Ru!.sell,
Pres td ent

n,

Notes

IJEAH IIEI.F:N :
" IJran~r.&lt;l " lhinks she hus it IJ&gt;Jd. Let me lell you what drug
pushers tlid to me, u God-fearing, Bi ble-loving woman.
My son wen t nearly crazy with d1·ugs . I found LSD in his
tntiler and reporled il to IIJC stale police. They destroyed it and
said I stole it , instead of Ulking hun in. Then he conunitted
unn cd robbery and is in prison now . I wouldn't give money for
u law yer or bond. I jusl thanked God they look him off the
s tree L~ and put him where he won 't get d1·ugs anymore.
My d11 ughtc r won' t ta lk to 1111! on accounl of drugs. She
pushes.
When llrit·d to gt:l help from my mother and my brulher,
U1"y IJcut me up anrl l got a brain concussion. My brolhers are
all pushers ami users. I 1CilUrled my own mother for laking
spc!'l lo my IJI·uther while he was in the hospital aft er a molorcyde accident. Nobody prosecute•!. Now he 's also in jail for
umtL'&lt;l robbery. I testified against him and found olhcr
witnesses who hclpt'!l pul him ;nvay.
I um a pilKI'UII who is llcl tJing r;oci fight aga insllhe forces of
evil. My fan1ily's sins have found them out. I have Jesus to susloin me, llumk &lt;:od '- WHITE SHEEP AMONG BLACK
DE1\ R W.S.A.B. :
Your "help" is straight f1·ont the "Vengeance is mine"
sdHXII. lla~ you employ~d more love ;md less Bible-thumping
U1rough the years, perhaps your family might ha ve turned out
differently. - fl .

Sa l1s bury
Townsh 1P
T rustees will offer for sale ov
P ublrc Auct ion on the nth
ctay of May 1978 at 10 00 a m
a h9 A llen Stt' el Du m p body
and
ho i st
locat ron
at
Townshrp Halt. Rock Spr 1ngs.
Oh 10 T er ms , Casn oa y ot
sal e

f5 ) fl . lB .

I
I

m;AnTwosE :
(A more appropriate signature would be "Gotcha 1" But
U1cn, most of my views have altered since lhe early '60s. l
B"ck 16 years ago , big famili es were in , "only children"
pltit-d. I went with the times- and times have changed radically since theu. If you compared early colwnns to those I do now ,
you 'd find me a v11stly different person - lor which I'm glad.II.
l'.S. Did you have that second d1ild ' Sigu me - CURIOUS

Jt c

CHOICES

I

'GUTCIIA, II ELEN!' SIIRSAYS
I )I.:AH IIELEN :
Sume 16·ycars ago I wrule you aboul my husband wanting
unuther child right aw11y, but I preferred to wait until! was
n1orc aiJle lo t"Ope, or poss ibly ":\lie fur just one.
I enclose the clippinp, I've savL't. You replied, " Have your
doctor 1•xpi:Jin l11e sit1mliun to your husband ," bul then you added "An only •·hild is a Jont'ly ch ild and often spoiled to buol,"
Implying thul somclimc WI' should consi der increasing our
fumily.
Pi&lt;•&lt;rse conlpal·e the abuve with it recent reply in which you
suid, "One rhild is plenty - if one is all you and your husband
wont. He won 't be spoiled or lonely if you raise him right. " flOW COM F.'! 1Or should I sign liti s, "TWO BE OR NOT TWO
BE''' I

Ne g o ttat e today lor that tong ·
desrred pact or deal Re so lu tr on rs poss tble through th e
Stn c erc . tru s tworthy m anner rn
wh tc h you ' ll co nduct yoursetl

·Latin Club enjoys banquet

l
I

~ USe • •

Se c re c v

AQUARIU S (J an . 20-Feb. 19)

.t l,rluw l ltrarn.ltl r hv
111ur I Hnl.; r turn br ·~~ ,md wo rd' h
h.t , lnt.tl rt•t .rll, ll'lllt't l1 1l4•rrr1K lUI!
1\h.tt r(1 rln I ll "f\ lt1od rlt•nH.Ul
rnolP\I JU\1 n~hl v. rrh !ht• r I
Pmvf'r ~·l(•dol ( h.ur~·· r rru

I

l

SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 13-Dec.

)

Thumb

1975 MEMORY Mob rl e Hofl'le .
14K5b to ta l electrrc , 3 bdr . i9b5
boril e gas hea t 2 b(h ..
l€!'tely fu rn. ne w fu rnace. Must
se ll due to ill hea lth . II rnte re sled . coll 949 1348.

fJ,-4

Green

12 '( bO 1973 Dorian troil.e t; lor
.:;ole _ '}_ bedroom located pe t·
ween Mine I &amp; 2 Ph.on e
1·609 57 42.

chances

'" Prrl!o\f,t lll .,

·r·-··-·· -- · -·- -- -----~---------i

742·2565 .

LIB RA (Se pt. 23-0ct. 13) Your
PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY . OH 10

7-The Daily Sentinel , Middleporl-Pomeroy , 0., Monday , May 22, 1978

Now, a richer, smoother,
more satisfying Salem!
As the leader In tobacco technology we have
discovered a way to improve that great Salem flavor. At the
same time we have actually lowered the tar!
You get all that famous menthol freshness, plus a richet;
smoother, more satisfying smoke.
•

POMEROY CEMENT
BLOCK CO.

Lower in tar, too.

Th e annual molher - Mrs. Edison Hollon. Mrs.
daughler bauquel of the Edith Sisson gave readings
Uuilt'&lt;l Melh&lt;Kiisl . Women of on " Mothers-in-Law." There
Ute ~· uresl Hun Chureh wns was a song, "One Day al a
Time" by Mrs . Vernal
held ren ·ntly al the chon-ch. .
The polluck dinner was Blackwood, and a poem,
!lerved from tables decumtc'&lt;l "Mother's Biscuits" by Mrs.
with lmrricu ne lumps and Alfred Yeauger.
An Enna Bombeck reading
flower rings. The program
was
given by Mrs. Ann Watopent'&lt;l with a song, " ~';lilh of
Our Molhers" with Mrs. so n, and lhe toast to
Har vey Koch giving a daughlers was by Mrs. Verreading on "Mother's Day." non Nease with the choir
Poclry n•u(( Included "My singing se veral songs.
Swc'Cl Mom" by Mrs. Ja ck Flowers were presenled lo
Smith; '' ATribute" by Cindy several mothers and grand'l1101nus; and " IIunds" ily mothers, anu Mrs. Uswin
Nease futd the closing prayer.
There were 45 persons in attendanc-e including guests
from New Martinsville, W.
Va., Athens , Middleport,
Pomeroy,
Racine, Syracuse,
G1lllpolls BuslntSS Colltge
Chester,
and
Minersville.
·
Is oHerl119 1111 •ccredlted
program of ct.Jss work

WANT A REAL
ESTATE LICENSE?

you're
required
to
complete lor teklng lilt
Ohio Stele ExlmlniiiOil
complole In 011ly
12
weeks. Cia .. begins June

Tht O.,.rlmtnt 5toro of Building

12. For mor·e inlorm•lion
contact LM E. Tyler, ~ -

Since tf1!

Report AUG.'77.

4367.

'

No.7S-12 -04728

In 1924, discovery of the
body of IS-year-old Bobby
Franks of Oll~go led to lhe
arrest of Nathan Leopold and
Richard Loeb. They were
eentenced lo 99 years In
prison for the grisly ,so-(:alled
"thrUI kUling ."

REVIVAL
Christian
Baptist Church
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT BYPASS
&lt;Route 7 &amp; 1241

We have 'a full line
of equipment for whatever
· line you're in.

Pastor, JAMES E. KEESEE

MAY 22-28, 1978
With REV. LARRY EMERY
Dean of Massillon Baptist College
AND THE SINGING EMMANUI:LS
On May 28- Morning Service
Special Singing Nightly
Nursery Available

FUNDAMENTAL

INDEPENDENT

What's your line?
Real estat e? Ladies' wear? Building supplies?
Whatever it is. General Telephone has the equipmcnt you need.
Our pushbutton phone systems can g1vc you up
to 20 lines and 36 stations.
. Our sol id-slate switchboards can handl e as many
li nes and stat ions as you need. While our high speed
data term inals process your written informati on as

fast as i600 words a nunute.
And our automatic dialers, pagin g systems and intercoms can help you el iminate the last vestiges uf
incff1ci cncy.
Cn/1 our business office and ask for a Com municati ans Consultant. He'll not only tell you a J.,t more
about our equipme nt, but show you how it can make
your business a bet ter bu sin ess.
T hat 's hi s line .
If

ffiD
GEOERALTElEPHOOE
The (()mplete conmmnicatiuns (()mpany

�\

8-TheDailySentinei. Middleport-Pomeroy , o .,MoodHy, M.y22. f p a n t

Ad$ Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

9- The Daily Sentinel, Middlepurt-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Ma y 22, 1978
DICK TRACY

JARRELL ADKINS FORD

FURTHER

596-5283

EXPERT
HUNTER

WiST OF McARTHUR

RT. 50

Wheel
Alignment

• Expert Body and Fender
Repair
•Quality Work and
Refinishing.
• Experts on Collision

Any U. S. made car-parts

SERVICE
MANAGER
f!l~ -~~.

100

Id a~

J;o
I"

:! d&lt;H~

:hill~ ~
ti till~~

JOO
h

f:do

wrJnl.-

I Z5
\90
l.!!i

3 75

~ u r J UHI" tJ~ IILIIILII\Wn !5
n•uu. fWr wnrd ]IN tla)

r•llrt·r

Li~&lt;~rr wn~~' l.l\1\e

tl&lt;r ~ ~ '4"111 IJt• dr;;n(L•U at tilt• 1 d&lt;~~
r.rlt•

Ill rrwmvn Card nf Thnn k!! &lt;1ml
Ubrtui!l' ~ 6· t cnl.:i ~r ~ unl. SJ 00

rrrurrmuin Casl r urad vdlll't
~l r1Lltlt'

llumc set It·~ anJ i'artl sale~
Hrl' cwr·cvtctl r,ml~ wrt h l'il:.li wrtlr
unit·!' ~ L'CI It !'l~.antl' fur &lt;~11!. ~·a rry·
ur~ Bu:~: "umikr lrr C:t n: uf Tilt&gt; Sen·
unt•l
Tilt· flu!JIL\III.'r rc~nc!!l the nght

tu t•r.lit vr rc}l'{i &lt;JII~ a~ d~m~ vb~~ trrm&lt;~l Tilt: PubiL.&gt;htr wr lln\Jl lit'
n.:!\JIOII.!l!blt• fur mor~ lh&lt;~n one meur·
ll'tt

Pomeroy Landmark
Jack W. Carsey , Mgr .

ln:::.crtHJII
PhiJI!t' 99'2·2l!i6

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
M undt~)

\"wn lilt S&lt;lturd~)

Tut&gt;Mt.}
thru Fnda)

Nehon U1ug

Check our low, low
prices on

'J 7

FERTILIZER, NITROGEN,

OAK 10M A 10 ~ta l-. e!&gt; lor ~ a le
Coll/;1 43 17q5
tro~c,

York H omp

Ph o11 e

&amp; BLEND.

!:1 4) / 49 1
MAf' L~

BUN K tll:O} l or

q~q 7~4

sole

$)0

Pomeroy Landmark

5

1977 OU A CHll A It&gt; ft f,berglm~
bo!&gt;~ boot
80 h p Mer cur y
motor Thru ~ler IIOilH1Q rnotor
I lw e wc lh I(C ~ he~r double~
o~ ~k.1 boot
Compi Pie wrlh
11ader Contor t ~ ddtc 'i oung
991 7630

AVACAD O

I JOl

by

ref11ge,o Tor
~' c ellent
t1on ~1 519o

Sw!dlt)
i pM

r nU.)

ilfkn~ .lll

Wanted to IJuy
OLD ruPt-J!TU R~ ICe bo · e~ blm~
ht?d~ !!On b~~ e!&lt; comple Te
hou'&gt;ehold~ W r1 Te M D M dl e1
IJ1 .4 Porr&gt;e1 oy Oh•o or coli
(IQ2 7760
IJQ IT EM f00 Lo1ge or too \moll

w'l 1il buy 1 p•ece or com pleTe
hou'&gt; ehok. N e v. u'&gt;ed or anll
QUi'S M ort1n ~ ~vrn i i UIE!' 10 N
7nd ~~
M •ddl epor 1
Phone
991 b37 0
( H lP WOQD
P ole~
mo .&lt;
d 1ometer 10 on l arge~! e{ld S8
per ton Bu ndled sl ob Stl per
ton Oe ltv ered 10 Ohto PolleT
Co Rt 2 Pomeroy 992 7689
CO INS CU RRENCY tokens old
pod..c t wo !the.&lt;&gt; o"d t ho1n~
~~lv er and gold We need I Qe,A
and ol der !&gt;d11e1 co m~ Bu'f .. ell
or trade Ca ll Roge1 Wam sle y

741 1331
PO MlROV F ore~ ! P1o
Top pme for !&gt; lond"'9
~o w r,mbPr
Call lfQ? 5%S or
Kent HCJnby 1 4A b 8570

TI MBER

Yard Sale
II YOU hove o $e t Ylte to all e1
wont to buy 01 ~ell some th rng
oe loolo.rng lor work
or
who le\ler
you II get le'iul ts
foster w1Th a Sent1nel Won! Ad
Call 991/156

CO Al LIMl:~TON~ ~and gra~t£!1
i: olr,um rhlorrde l £&gt;r !d tler dog
load and oil t ype'l o l ~ol t l ~
cel~tO I ~oil W ork~ IIH
l M0111
)I 1-'omer o.,. 99? )!!91

tOJi )Alt IQ77 Hondo XLIOO On
l1ke new
ly 100 mrle~
742133tl

Help Wanted
1H!:: G Al l/ A - MUG ~ Co mmumty
ACT1on A genty ~~ ~ee ~ mg op
plrconl\ lor 1he l ollo w,ng po!&gt;•
r.on
Coun\elo1 The (ounlielor w1ll be
re\pons1ble tor the day to do,wun\ ehng at Cl: 1A T1tle Il l
)PW V) program pOrtl (i p On t ~
The toun~elo 1~ dutte\ wou ld m
d ude but nol l1m 1Ted to porhc 1
pont canfott\ du11ng opp l1t0
to on
tn lokc or 1en tohon and
lerrn,no!lon Ap pl1con1~ ~hould
po~\e\'1 o de~p ee Ill Coun~el
1ng P!&gt;y cholo gv Soc,ol Work
01 othe r related l ,c ld P1eler
comb,no 110n of degree and
1eloted worK e ~pe r1ence Ap
p ltt ollon ~ and or fv•tl-ler tn
formoi 10" ~~ ovarl oble !rom the
Oh10 Jobs Scrvru~o, O l!. c e~ or
the Commun,ty A tl1on A gen cy
Centr a l OI!1CC at 9'1'1 7CIXJ or
014 3b7 73 41 R e!&gt;ume~ may be
moded 1o Oo~t1d Gloec K~tr-1
Manpower 011 toe l or PO Bo..
772 Chesh1ro O ht o 45020
Deodlrne l or oppi•C0110n~ w1!1
bl! Ma y 16th 1978 !he Gallic
Me•g!i. C A A ~~ on ~qu al Op
por tuntty bnployer M f.

EXPLORE THE
GREAT

Bf:.~l

SHK TION of the be~ I wood
1n ~ou rhea~tpr n Oh1 o
Jo tul
Mor!&gt;O
tiel
I uol.a
Tempwood a nd N o lhuo l ron
Heat Co ~ Pu tnorn D1 (oft M tll
) I J A. then~ b 14 597 t:JJ71f or
b i A·69b 1187
~ l ov e~

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

'289,95

Now Only

tamping Equiplllf!ot
SlAHCRAFI CAMfJf:.R 10 It Used
one seo~on $4000 hrm W1th
lull Reese h1tt'h and bra Me- con

l&lt;ol I 304 773 56M
r977 PALOMINO 14 f1 told down
carnper Used once George
Donovan $2100 985 350..t

Army Opportunities

St:N SI MA II( at
toun h ng mo{ht ne
Phone
fjq2 21Sb I he Oo dy ~entr nel
111 Court ~ t rect Pomer oy
Ohro

C ABbAGl
B ~ OCCOLI
coul tf lower
bru,~el l 'l pr ouh
egg plants head letlu ce ~~ee l
pepper~ hungo11on wo~ ~ee l
banana chd1 peppe1~ Plu'l
many dr ll!~ren! Ya11e f 1e~ ol
tom ato plo11ts many ~un d ~ of
and
pot
hongmg bo~ke t !&gt;
flowers lar ge \la11e ry ol on
nuo l ~ m ll a t~ Clel and ~arms
and Gre nhou ~e
Rotm c
Gcr old•ne Cleland

TRA C \0~ 1

1972 r A C. A LONG I~ It se lf con
Tam ed tra vel
rrorler
A 1
991 319 4 or 'n2 3A)9

9H5 3917

-

good

1971 CADILL A C HOORAO O . Fu ll
powe1 or r clean Body good
~ hope
Dr 1ve d and you wr l l
hove to own Phone 992 74b2 ,
J&lt;n Q Z 18 ( AMARO 4 ~ peed
1-') P B. AlterS , co11 992 38q7

(iive Away

l Hit~i:

f' hone
Geor ge

MONrH o ld puppy
colhe 985 3596.

f!ort

NPor
011 \o!1

bo1h and loun

d1y ro(lm modem ~1tchc n ~ :
acre!&gt;
BOH1 and pl r n ry of
po ~ t u r e
oil l e&gt;•,cerl
A ..,l. rng
Sl) 000 f!hOI' e4&lt;1] O'Jl&lt;i
)po &lt;,ou..,
PwTro nl£1' ~ lwdroorn hom e 4
year~ ol d
I , bo1h :. fully
l"qu,pped lo. 1trhen Cen t1ol ou
\ I Of\ (&gt; l•1 eplocr double gorogP
)piPet IOlnliorl on l 4 O(r{."~

NO ~ T H

•• ,

l)f 111£&gt; P o• nt~

799~

VAIHJ ~ A l t lue ~ and Wed An 11
que 11unk Oe p r£&gt; ~'&gt;tOn drape ~
er e l eodrng (lr&gt;P ~ h'd
o il
~1gn.,

LARGt BH ICK homr&gt; tull y .-qu1p
ped k •tc hen hoi wote! qood
locot•on
Will
tok o ~m oll
ocreogu a~ do ~n poyrnen•
~14 ~00 rwJ "JJ4b
hou\e J hP&lt;il oo rn J
OC!e~ of grounrl l ot Otf&gt;d 0 11 Rt
7 99/ j9J4

~ IX ~ QQ M

HUJ&lt;R O UC.H ~

ol 4·376 o311

1Qo7 v w 99/ 313b or qrn 39:il

b WHK old collie pups
Hdl 2A7 19bl

oCie~

~~

ca ll

Phone992 ·2111

Collect,
593-3022

M1thes

.. ARM ON CR 31 3o
Par tland fl4:l 7~fl I

o·

J1ck W. Carsey , Mgr.

0

Call SFC Lowery

u ITL l:
9Q71817

31~0

11f A C Rl ~ ) lOOn'! hou~('
.- or rnor o mlor tnoll on
'1 47 )10 4

Pomeroy Landmark

UIW

rwo

&lt;.,rncll

o r rno k \' oil er

Le1 us test your water Free

sa

TRAi lER SPACl 1 , rmle "om
Mergs Htgh School on old Rt 33
992 2Q4 I or Qq'} 2689

7.4 1

outbuddn1g ~

S l~ (X)()

By pm~

1970 C HtVR O l~ I CUSTOM De lu xe
' , ton ptckup $3400 low
mtle oge
Reed!&gt;YIIIe

OUTDOORS

)qJO HORNEl b cyl \ld
work cor $4 50 747 3002

~everol

born

HV~ ROOM hou" ''

Mf 135 01e sel
Mf-'130 Dtosel
MF ISO D•e s.e l . Mf-'13 5 01e sel
MF I bS D•es.e l MF78 5 01e~ e l
Mr l135 Dre~el
Co b or r 8
heater
N!;W &amp; USW IMI-'l~M~NTS
VAHD S Al~ May 73 24 lues and
Mf-9 Boler
MI- l 0 Boler
Mf- 110
Wed
Weolher
pe1mi111ng
Ba le1 Mon hews Rot or r ) cythe
Bradbury Rrl
Don Honrng
Mf-880 )em• mounted b bo t
re\tden{e (h, ldren !» tlo thtng
tom Plow
MF 510 12 0 1H
m•sc I T('Il 1~
AutoSale5
M~:xxJ 2 How (hopper
M~39 'l
1974 PIN lO New rod1ol 11re~
Row PlorHer ~
· M echontcol
t 'or Hen!
I ronsplonter
new shod.. ~
aura
Iron ~
46 000 mtles 9Cf7 7185 oher 4
SHINN ) I RAClOR S Al~ ~
J AND 4 RM furn 1shed and un
pm
Phone ..
lb30
fufnl'ihed opt\
Phone- qq7
leon W Vo
1q76
MU
ST
AN
G
AU
TOMATIC
~ 434
Good
con dll •on
Pho ne
COUNIRY MOBil~ Home f&gt;ork
991 3240
1&lt;17 4 !,U ZUK I IM100 ~a ce d one
Rou te 33 nonh ol f! o rne1oy
se o!.on
f:.x:ce llent cond• t ,on
197J MO N ilCA RLOlondou P S
Lorge lot s Col1997 747Q
1300
843
1b21
P8 , A (
AM a track stereo .
~f:.NIO R
(IHZf:. NS
Our
new
co ndilron
$1700
b re ll en t
19/) Harl ey Spo l tsl er like new
ren ter 'I o'&gt;~I~Ton[e \' O U may be
643 2621
rum good k• ng queen ~eat b
able to l t-.e m our aportmP.n t
e .d on Ir on \ e»dro bon ery
1973
5UPER
6llltl
11
1\JO
lo r les~ than S)O a mon th For
vo ltage ""9 and 'J helrne1s .
R eed~vttle Oh1o 61 4 378 b331
more 1nl orrno tr on
con ta c t
Mu~T ho" e $1300 9tl2 Sl4b or
o!1er
6
pm
Vrlla ge Manor A ponment~
con be seen 01 100 A B r~( k St ,
991 7767
1970 HO RNl I !A lO Good !&gt;hope
Pomeroy Oh to .
.J4'J 306'1
10 or: SO 'l bed room mobde home 1n
1'17b HARLlY ·Electro C.lrde 3000
Ro on e or eo Qq') 5858
)CIJ 4 BUICK REGAL All power
m1les I1Me ne w cond•t• on wt th
S/500 Ooyt1me only QqJ ~~ 4 5
Touro po&lt;k and helm et $3100
M I DD l ~PORT
Oll •c space 1000
sq
IT
a11
co"d' lloned
tarpeted Ground floor Corner
loc al ton Call qcn 3b3 I

IN Jo! utl a11d Vd log&lt;&gt; 4
bedroom h ou~e 7 cor gorngl'

ANl) lo t m Dor1111lle
3?) Phone 74/ 706EI

du ( t~

NH DED ~ d., Pr (Oifl~ h1ghe'&gt;1
p11Ce\ pard Call 74113lb a fTer
7pm

AC H~ ~

HOU~t

4 PM

t.Ju:dlt) IJdtrrepublu iilJUII

FERT~PELS

POTACH,

lb~

40 50

Heal J.:stale for Sale

MAIN
POMER()Y, 0.
JUST LISTED - Very nice
2 bedroom home , nicely
re modeled, new carpel and
vinyL u ti l i ty room , bath ,
pari
basemen!.
JUS T
S\1 ,000 .00.
JUST LISTED - 2 yr . old ,
loc.ated on 1 acre , 3 lovel y
bedrooms , bath , ut i l ily ,
ve r y
n ice
kitchen ,
car peted . electr ic he.a t.
garage . $26.000 ,00.
JUST LISTED - Close to
Meigs Hi. 1 yrs . old . 3
Bdrms ., 2 baths, basement,
electric heat. approx . T' ''
acre, small storage bldg .
$32,500.00.
ABOVE THE AVERAGE
- 1117 story frame , lots of
remodeling , 3 BR , bath ,
n ic e kitchen , carpe ting ,
some insulation, storms,
porches , see th is now .
Asking S\7,700.00 .
HARD TO BELIEVE - '
lots, f irst floor . ki tchen ,
li"ing R , bath , bedroom .
2nd floor · 3 BR , carpeting,
N.G. heal , porches, small
basement . Sl7,000 .00,
BUILDING - 1 business
rooms
(re nted) ,
2
aprlments (each have 1
BR , bath , li ving R ..
kitchen ) . Lot size 50x60.
Al ley In th e rear. $36,668,00.
OTHER PROPERTY
TO CHOOSE FROM
TIME TO SELL YOUR
HOUSE AND LOT? TRY
OUR SERVICE , WE'RE
REAL HOT.
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
HANK , KATHY &amp; LEONA

3SOCC Holley Oavrdson
motor cycle . 1300 rndes Good
condr tion 5 5~~ Cal l oflcr 5 pm .
b i 4-31El -6116

Mit K GOA rs IU ~I fres hened SbO
o•ld up Ktd\ weaned Hill.,. ~
S'lO
nonn 1e5
~:J O
~ hade
6 14·b% 1134
I 976 CHt VV 1 1
to n p1ckup
$26 000 m1 fes b &lt;yl 3 speed
wrth
nrce roppfn
SJ:J"'~

9HI

3~17

fo r

lots

Pomeroy, 0 .
3-15-tfc

ACRE)·, 8 room remodeled
h orne . all m1nerol light s fuel
o•l
furnace . ~v1 l o nd Oleo
SJ6 OOJ New 3 bedroom l olot
elech 1C home
I I1J o ne~ .
ncar rn1ne s STf 000 . Bu tld rng
lol \ 11 otres 1urol wa1ct on
lo t , S:i 800 Colt 7 4'1 'JB 19 offer~
pm 01 onylune ~at 8 ~un ·

3 l:J to !I one~ 1 rnt les be low
M.ddleport
r!ve1 f ron 1ogc
flhonc .&lt;III'J. 256 1 for more m•

l oul"'otion

~ ~ ~U;l~ ®

I BOANT I
DELTA

in
vard
grading,
driveways ,
land&gt;&lt;aping , etc.

0

"THE MILEAGE MAKER"

. Call
JERRY MURPHY
(614) 667-6177

P~992-2174

0

SALE
$44 .88
SS\.97
SSS . \7

0

AI Tromm Const.

HEAnNG INC.

Aski ng on ly S\ 7,000 .
CO UNTRY LIVING Here is what you have been
want ing . Home with 35
acres. It ha s 3 bedrooms,
nice k i tchen, large modern
fa m ily roo m with wood
burn in g fireplace . 3 ca r
garage , large old barn .
Seve ral acres of farm land ,
pasture and good spring
water Woul d like 138,000 .
MIDDLEPORT
2
bedroom , 2 car qarage
aparlmenl. N' · ~~f.:&gt; .., , like
new naf&gt; ··o'i.~'iJ Jrced air
lur;t.l t ' .. ce nalu&lt;al
v ~~· t!d
rloor s and
wwdwork on Gravel Hill.
All in good shape . Wanl
only Sl6,500 .
SELLING
IS .
A
PROFESSIONAL' S JOB .
HE KNOWS WHAT TO
SAY . WHEN , AND WHAT
TO DO WITH A SELLING
PROBLEM . WE NEED
GOOD
CLEAN
PROPERTIES NOW .
CALL992-3325
G. Bruce Teaford
Helen L. Teaford
Sue P. Murphy
Associates

SEPTIC TANK
Re si dential
and
commercial . Call
for
es1imate , 24 hour service
Anvday , anytime.
Phone 985-3806
Jack Ginter 98$ -3806

"• mile oft Rt. 7 by-pass on
St . Rl. 1'14 toward Rutland,
0.

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

Jack's SeptiC
Tank :semce
Box 3

HOWI;RY
AN U MART IN
c avor ,n g
&lt;oepr,c
sys tem s
do1e1 · ba c ~h oe d ump t1u ck
luTU~!&gt; t one
gra ... cl
blacktop
povmg R! 14 3 Phone I [b14)
6Q8 7331
BATHR OOMS AND
rernodol ed ( I! IOIHI C l 1le plurn ·
b1ng corpentrr and general
mom tanonc c
13 year s ex:
per mnce 99'1 368)
fJULLIN S t:XC A VA ll NC. . Co mplet e
~(H\1 1((' l-'h ouu9'i7 2A78.
WIN 1i:R G !; 1 to you1 ho u se? l eTu!.
I romm

MIOOL .. f!ORI J bPrl1001n ho rne '}
full
bo th ~
tully CO !pe te d
equ1p pcd lo.1t( hen wtl h 1n11~ r
com noTu 1ol goo, furnace cen
Tral o•r (Ondlflon.ng on a 100 x
100 lot
I emed 111 yard
$35 ~00 Phone 9(n 5550

neces~ o r y

repou~

Con~ lr uc ll o n

AI

by THOMAS JOSEPH
I 'TELL yOU , LOOMBAH ,
OOP A.N ' "Tl&lt;AT BIG DI"'O
OF HIS SCA'n'EI&lt;ED 'TH '
&amp;)'5 ti&gt;.E LEAVE.S IN

Heal Estate for Sale

CAll

THE WISEMAN REAL ESTATE AGENCY
AT 446-3643

Evenings Call 446-3796 or 446-7881

A HIGH WIND.'

too:&gt;te1~

ulltype\ of genf&gt;rollt&gt;po u
Wor k guo•o nl ce d ~0 year s c~~:
1wr mflce Phone 997. 'J 40Q
CH)d

Gc.~.

o' ' ' ; '' ~ ~A

Where is
t.JOurcar.
Mr Blink?

M4 truck won't
start
and

DRIVE A LimE
&amp;
SAVE A LOT

s . Ll.

What
kind

late
for
work!

4 88

9' and 12' Vinyl
Floor Coverinl! In Stock

!:~~ WING

MACHINE Repo11 s !ocr
viCe , oil rnoke~ lf97 'J2tl -4 The
1-obr ''
Shop
Pome r o y
Auth omed S1nge1 Sole~ o"d
~erv • cc . We ~ho rpe n Sc r sso 1 ~
do1cr lood01 and
backh oe work du111p T rurk~
and lo·boy!&gt; to1 hue w•ll haul
ldl d111 to so d, hmc~tor1e and
grovel. Call Bob or Rogor Jef
lers day phone ~2 - 708 q n1ghl
ph one 991 -3S25 or 997· 5232
doJ l!r

r

PERSONNEl

..

M[GADYNAMIC
COMPUT[R CO·___-

HIRING

or Gene Smith

_

__..---

74 2-22 11

1\c.TuALLY. you
HAvf:

ON~£.

"-

L•D.r

~,..I

I'E:

AGAIN~ You - ",n
IOU ...

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

I

WILL do fOOf rng co nstruchon
plumbmg and heo!tng No JOb
l oo Iorge 01 too ~ma ll Phone J

HUMAN

e

A

8f1NG. •

44

45 Squealed

~:'

46

CAREER .

A SOFA THAT
'

f*.::;::::;;:

to

AXVIli.B!\AXR
I. 0 N G F E I , I. 0 W

BILLY.

J N P

Y N J 0 D P,

J y X
GSX

15 IN STOCK ,

Y'-

)

i

J
J

THE NAME OF
THE 6AR WHERE
AUTOMOBILE
MECAANIC5 60 1

! GIVE UP... WHAT IS

NAME OF THE BAR
WI-JERE AVTOMOBILE
MECHANICS 60 ?

7+

xw

THAT .LAST BOLT OF
LIGHTNIN ' DING
NIGH SCA IRT TH' .
PANTS OFF ME

H
Pas."i

PHSS

~·

! NT

Pass

H p-

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag
Ala n : "Some bands can
only be m ade by creating an
illusion for the defenders. It
is improper to c reate this

illu sio n by

mean s of

remarks , gestures , slow
play when lhere is no problem or anything except the
actua l cards you play ."
Oswald : " When South
looked over dummy he rea l·
ized !hal his seven bid was
silly indeed . There we re
twelve easy tricks staring

BARNF.Y

8ALLt; O'FIRE!!

68 ACRE FARM - Prtce r educed In '"6,900. Attractl'e
remodeled 2 story farm home """,(). ce home fealur es
a large livi ng room . d l nle - r.~~\'t' ... chen, 5 ~drooms,
&amp; Pi, balhs, ll ar;a,\t
· "'e land with balance In
pasture and wood, "'::f"' ... ,e~er barn &amp; garage. You must
see this one , If 's we&gt; I worth the price . Loca ted oil Rl.
325 In Meigs County.

CWX

F W K P

1978 Km.: f'tl l\lrtl Sy ndiute . Int.

REDI BEDS

Lara est Selection In The Valley

XW

DPNKP OX .- VOFFOJZ YPCC
~alurday 's C.ryptoquote : BEWARE OF UTILE EXPENSES;
A SMALL LEAK WJU. SINK A GREAT SlflP. - BEN
FRANKLIN

'

Pass

2+

Opening lead : + t

fRVPTOQUOTES

vp

South

Pass

DAILY CRYPTO&lt;l UOTE - Here's how to work it :

hints. Each day th e rode lcll crs are di fferen t.

I'M AFRAID ITS '":JT
AS SIMPLE AB "\-&lt; &lt;\T

Vulnerable : Bot h
Dealer : North
West North East
I+
Pass
Pass
Pass 3+
Pass
Pass

,.

apos trophes. the l ength and formation of the words are al1

A PIECE OF
FILM !HAT Tl&lt; 15 ACTT&lt;E 5f1
NOW ~INKS CAN ~E
DAtv\A61NG TO HER

MAKES A

"t A
A 7 5Ll

+ . . -.

One teller !limply ~ttand!l for another. In this !ample A it
used for the three I.'s. X for the two O's , &lt;'tr. Si nglc le tters ,

';OU HAVE

BED FOR
YOU

:~~~;r:~:.e
~:~nt

C[l r9 11! Dy NU.W I ,. JWjU Sf'JI(III

Rutland

+ J 9i :l

SOUTH
+ AK Q 10 97 5

I Coarse
hominy

WINNIE

REOUCED TO 115,900 - A very ni ce 1'1' slory 4
bedroom home In good cond ition. Features a basement
with f inished tamll y room and laundry room , eat-In
kilchen , li,i ng room &amp; bath . Lorge lot w llh lenced
yard . Call now, priced t~ sell.

+ 108 75

officer

Call 742-2211
TALK TO
Wendell or Herb Grafe

boc ~hoe :

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

F,~R:A~N:K~&amp;~E:"R:N:l~E~----------------------~------~-----------------------------~O ~urch

1

and dd cher Ch orle!&gt; I( Ho t
held
Bo ck
HOe
Serv1ce
Ru tla nd Oh10 Phone 742 2008

) 41 134B .

~

Buy where you can came in
and see what you're o"ttlng
- Good selections - Fully
stocked .

I::XCAVAliNC~

~~cktimher --=----:-:-=B~R=I=D-:=:G:=E-=--:---

611'

As Low As
sq. yd.
t
•
&amp; up

Middleport, 0 .
5·11 ·2Wk.

3 Do a
floor job
M inority 70 .
TO : QO-Oscar' s Best Actors 6, 13 ; News 20 .
t Spicy spiceJO : JD-Biack Perspective on the news 20.
rack item
11 :GO-News 3.4,6,8, lO . IJ, 15. Dick Cavet1 20 : Over
S Exempted
Easy 33 .
6 Refuge
11 30--Johnny Carson 3,4,1 5; Academy ol Country
state
7 - pro nobis
Music Awards 6,13 : Co lumba ~ : ABC New s 33 ;
M ovie " Come Blow Your Horn" 10.
8 "Columbo"
Uquefy
Yesterday 's Answer
12 :00-Janakl 33 .
9 Celebes ox
Singer
1:oo-- Tomorrow 3,4,4; News 13.
Frankie
10 Bombast
%4 DeLuise
34 "Victory"
1: l ~Ko iak e.
~~~~~Ready
16 Iowa city
2S Irish rebel
heroine
Movie Channel - 4.
5 and 9 p.m . - Late Show I PG I
Krazy 19 Moral
group
35 Lynne's
7 and 11 p.m . - Hollywood Oldies IG I
Correct
decline
26 Hamilton
di rection
20 Shinto
a led
bill
37 Hoodwink
Monday . l\1a~· 22
· -: ;· ..:;::::20 Molded
temple
28 Espied
38 Race
;.;;
ZJ Do a news· Zl Holbrook
30 Drunk : sl.
room job
Z2 " All the
32 Venerate
39
1tz7 Stringed
lhi.ngs
33 European
,ree
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag
instruments
you - "
river
41 Percentage
Zll Tally
r.-.:,;..-r.~:-~ ~ -l 29 Toward
~~sheller
him in the fa ce. Then' was
30 Mariner
NO K T H
1-2'-A
no leg iti mate way lo gel a
• J2
~
31 Set a
lhirlecnth ...
• Q97J
Alu n: " This dicln 'l keep
value on
• 10 2
South from working out a
~:..29~~~.1!:1 33 Grand + AKQ6 2
nkc s\o,.·indlc . He simply ra n
Opry
WF.ST
EAST
off his whole trump s uit.
36 "What have lft'4'-4-Ji:'--+-+--l• an
+ 6
F.as l hc lcl fou r clubs. So did
.,. ., . .
Y l085
• K J642
you Wes t. Rccau.sc ea ch one felt
t
KJ
9
t
Q86
that his partner would hold
me lately ?"

n

Rubber Back Carpet

Fay's Gift

Z Czech river

&amp;

I'm

All carpet installed with
padding at no charge .
Expert i nstallation .

Flowers,
WreattJ s

...... ~

t;ASOUNE ALLEY

SAVE ON
CARPETING

Bibl.., Bunch

~X(A V AIIN G

ACROSS
1 Clockmaker
Thomas
S Ram 's-horn
Exchange
premium
Brazilian

IUM OOlllN G fllurnbr11g hcotu' g

Crosses, Pots,

7 41 'J37fl

GOLF Cl UijS !&gt;hoes bog~ "'
~fr u c lt on lhr ough John leol o1d
Ches ler . Ohro

IN GAlliPOLIS

~.CfH.d'

ALLEY WP

JH11

Baskets, Sprays

(Answers tomorrow)
Jumbles KNELL GUESS KITTEN CANOPY
Answer· What the mountain climber enj oyedTAKING " PEEKS"

checks payable 10 N&amp;w9paperb0oks .

REPAIR
11011!&gt; oil
~ moll opphonce~ l awn mower
ne~ 1 ro Sla te ~~ ~ ghwo y Gara ge
on R olJ h ~ 'J Phone 1614 ) Q85

Beaut iful
Selection Flowers

I

NEW - JUST OFF PRESSI JUM BLE BOOK 1111 with 110 puules Is avail·

BOWtR )

~wc:cper~

For

N. 2nd

YOU'D THI\'lK " -

XI J I)"[ XI I )

able l or $1 35 pos1pald hom Jumble, c/o t1'11!t newspaper, P.O. Bo)( 3&lt;1.
NorwoOd , N.J 07648. Include your name, add re ss, zip code and make

Aut 11oneer Corn
plc l c Sf'IVtCe Phone Q49 '1 487
or 94Q :}()OQ Ra t me Oh!O Crr rr
Brod tor d

H WOOD

A "[

Answerhere
Salu,day's

B~A O f ORO

Chester, Ohio
10-30 -c

4-30-ltc

GIRL? 5URE ...
BUT I' VE BEEN
AROU HIJ "'ORE 'N

our ...

Save 30 pel. to SO pel.
on heating cost
Experi•nce and
fully i nsured
Free Est.
Call : 992 -3815

CLEANING

GARAGE

Yfp ... \T'll BE
A CHANGE FOR
YOU C\TY GIRlS
I RECKON ... '

THI~uS

4-9-1 mo . pd .

ROGER HYSEU.

mo ~u:-

fluGfR

CITY

I GUESS

JFRRV TOLD YOU
HOW IT IS
WITH US, EH7

Cellulosic (wood fiber)
Thermal Insulation

Call After 5:00 or
Anytime Saturday
992-1119 or 992 -5041
• -27 -tl c

SALES AND SERVICE
11-9 -tlc

near stores .

Wf'll RUN O VER
TO M'l PlACE
WHfRE WE CAN

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE

SERVICE

300 Main St.
Pomeroy , Ohio
Pomaroy 992-4282
or 9'12-6263
8 A.M . to4 :30 P.M.

Now arrange the circled letters to
torm !he surprise answer. as suggested by the above cartoon.

ORPHAN ANNIE-THE LAW TAKES OVER

J&amp;L

&amp;
DUMP TRUCK

PWMBING &amp;

KI) 0

KURBEE
HOI' IN, GIRLS ...

CARTER

I

IJTTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

742 -2328, S P.M . to 9 P.M .
·Order Now-Mount by Appt.
4-30-1 mo.

DAVE'S BACKHOE

3: 30--A II in \he Fam ily 8, 10; Consumer Survival Kll20.
4:QO-M ister Cartoon J ; Superman 4,· For Richer,
For Poorer 15 : M erv Grillin6; Addam s Family 8;
Sesame Street 20, 33: Gomer Pyl e, USMC 10;
Dinah! 13.
. 4 : 3~Litt l e
Rascals 3,15 : Gilligan ' s Island 4:
Gi lligan's Is land 8; Brady Bunch 10.
5:0o-Here Comes the Brldes 3, Star Trek 4; Gun smoke 8; M ister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33 :
Hoga n's Heroes 10;
Emergen cy One! 13; Pet.
ticoat Junction 15 ;
5 3Cl-News 6: Electr ic Company 20.33 : Mary Ty ler
Moore 10; Hogan' s Heroes 15 .
6 00-News 3, 4,8, 10,13,15: ABC News 6; Zoom 33;
Feeling Free 20.
6: 30--NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13: Carol Burnett
6: CBS News 8, 10; Over Easy 70,33 .
7 00-Cross-W its 3. 4: Newlywed Game 6, 13: Pop Goes
The Country 8: News 10 : Gi lligan' s Island 15:
French Chel 20 ; Boating Safety 33 .
7: 30--Hallywood Squares 3: Lel' s Go To The Races 8:
Assassinatiol"' of President Kennedy 4; Candid
Camera 6; MacNeil -Lehrer Report 20,33; Pr ice Is
Right 10 ; That 's Hollywood T3; Television Honor
Socie ty 15.
8:00-Pilal " The Man y Laves al Arlhur " 3, 15: Happy
Days6,13 : Movle"The Yearling " 10, 8: Once Upon
A Classi c 70,33 .
8 : 3~Laverne &amp; Shir ley 6, 13.
9:00-Th e Bastard-Ken! Fam il y Chronicles 3; Thre~ · s
Company 6, 13:: Counlry Night of Sl ars 4, 15: Daln
Curse 8, 10; TV on Trial33 : Sing A Si Qn 70 .
9: 30-Carter ·country 6; Mary Tyler Moore 13; Silent

0

S·l2

'""'101

4-12-1 mo. P.

LIST
$78.31
S8S.01
S89. t9

BR7h13
GR78x14
HR78x 15

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Between 7:30 &amp; 9:00
p.m.

byHenriArnolda ndBobLee

Unscramble these tour Jumbles,
one letter to each square. 10 form
tour ordinary words .

BORN I.OSP.R

Specialited

shade ,

UP~

ltj'jjlf.\,0 fii)jt ~ THATSCt&lt;AMBLEDWORDGAME

DURA-STEEL RADIAL

CLELAND
ASSOCIATE
REALTORS
992-2219- 992-6191 '' !•JJ0'
"12

r:;;;;~

9 :JG-Art America 20.
10 :00--News 20; Origina ls 33 .
10 30-Cver Easy 20: Anyone lor Tennyson? 33 .
11 :OCl- News 3,4,6,6, 10, 13, 15: Dick Cavell 70 : Over
Easy 33.

DOZER FOR HIRE

electric and abut the
highway . Askin g 110,000 .
FAMILY HOME - Good 4
bedroom home . 'l fam i l y
rooms . 'l baths . natural ga s
ce ntral heating , shop.
cove red picnic
pat io.
garage and 3 lots . Only
S1 7,500.
MIDDLEPORT - 7 room
o lder hom e that need s
some repair . With a will ing
buyer we wi lt redu ce the

pr1ce, 71 1

TILL HE. WAKES

eASY!

Middleport, Ohio

Middleport, Ohio
24 Years Service
SPRING SPECIAL
Complete Paint Jobs
Small Cars
S\00.00
Large Cars
S\25.00
Trucks
S\75.00
Body work &amp; repair St .oo
per inch using only the best
Dupont materials.
742 -J0\0
4-9·1 mo .

rn

J9b9 C.MC !RUCK b cyl au to
motor 'ecenlly overhauled
good !11es. no ru!&gt; l m good con
dtllon. 614 44b 7Qfl0 osM lo 1
Paul

ICJ73

tree s

TUESDAY, MAY 23, 1978
5:45-Fa rm' Reparl 13.
5: 50--PTL Club 13.
6:00-Summer Semester 10; PTL Club 15.
6:.30-F.ocus on Colu mbus 4; News 6; Summer
Semester 8; Concerns and Comments 10,
6: 45-Mornlng Report 3.
6:50--Goad Morning, Wesl VIrginia 13.
6: 55-News 13.
7:00-Today 3,4,15 : Good Morn ing America 6, 13: CBS
News 8; Chuck White Reports 10.
7:05-Bu llwi nk le 10.
7:30--Schoolies 10.
8 : 0~Capta i n Kangaroo 8,10: Sesame Slreel 33 .
9 : 00- Merv Griffin 3; Phil Donahue 4,13,15:
Emergency One! 6: Brady Bunch 8: Match Game
10.
9 : 3~Andy Griffith 8: Family Affair 10.
10 :00--Card Sharks 3,4,15: Edge of Nighl 6: Pass the
Buck 8; Joker 's Wi ld 10: To Te ll The Truth 13.
10:30--Hollywaad Squa r es 3,4,15: High Hopes 6: Price
Is Right 8, 10; $20.000 Pyramid 13.
1\:0~High Rollers 3,A, 15; Happy Days 6,13.
II : 30--Wheel of Forl une 3,15: Fam i ly Feud 6, 13;
Par tride Family 4; Love of Life 8, 10; Sesame Street
20; Cousteau Odyssey 33.
11 :55-CBS News 8: Loving Free 10.
11:00--Newscent er 3; News 4,6, 10; San lard and San 15;
Gambl l 8: M idday Magaz ine 13.
1 2 : 3~Ryan 's Hope 6, 13: Bob Braun 4, Gong Show 15 :
Search for Tomorrow 8,10: Electric Company 33 .
1:00-For Richer, For Poorer 3: All My Childr en 6,1 3:
News8 : Young and l he Restle ss 10: Nat l or Women
Only 15.
3o-Days of Our L ives 3,4, 15 ; As the Wor ld Turns
8, 10.
2: \J(}-()ne Life I a Live 6, 13.
2: 3Cl-Doclars 3,4,15: Guiding Lighl e,10
3:00-Anolher World 3,4, 15; General Hospilal 6, 13:
Lil ias , Yoga and You 20.

8:30--Basebal l 6, 13; M -A-S-H 8,1 0: T urnabout 70,33.
9:0o-The Bastard.Kent F amily Chronicles 3; M ovie
"J usl _Me and You " 4,1 5; Dain Curse 8,10: Art
Amerrca 20 ; Me eting of Minds 8; .

r1

Brakes
Muffler
Tires
•Shocks
Battery.
Installation Service

VIRGIL B. SR . . . .~
• 1 rot 1(1
992-3325
2l6 E. Second Street
4
MIDDLEPORT
bedroom brick home, 11 '7
baths . natural ga s heat.
washer . dryer hookups ,
basement. and 1 car
garage w ith large shop
over . Level lot. $30,000 .
RUTLAND - Nice old 3 or
4 bedroom stucco hom e
with 1 bal hs . Natural gas,
coal
furnace ,
full
basement. business room , 2
car garage on large corner
lat. W ill take S35,000
9 ACRES - On Slate Reule
143 wi th L.C. water tine .

Ha s

.

rM MR. TITU5'5 IIJI ECE
UNCLE TITUS&lt;
JU5T DOZED OFF ... COULD
YOU STAND IJIY COMPAi'lY

TR.I LYA~ ...

~AUTO P!!.~TING

MOORE'S

Ph . 992-2848

lo!~DUO )M~ 8 l o~ r w1th Go l::l e~c
lobi+&gt; ! ~ 8 ~ Vop v..o1e1 p1ll s

:taoo

old

lWO ' ~ I O H V frame houo;.t&gt; fl
r oom:; and both (e llo1 ou T·
buildtngs 4 ac re ~ land or edge
o f Rutta ml Com pl ete lroriPr
h oo~ up ol~o ') bonk s opprors ·
e d proper ty at $1~ , 500 . 1-'honc

For Salt.

Jq7b HOND A Jb(l Rood Bdo,e honT
d1~c b1a l..e \
1T11Ie~ b
cellen1 &lt;.ond,llon 99'; 6307

week~

ijY OW N t:H ) a cre~ wr th 9 room
hous&lt;' H~H GA!, '}cor goro ge
surnrn e r k!t &lt;hen and bordered
br 1 c1cc k ~ Col l9BS 3fl17

H 11. ~ MOHIL 1: HOMf:.) PI Plea ·
&lt;.Qn t W Vo be'lrde Hed, ~
lii?J !i1oqdmo•e 14 • 04 'I
bedroom
1Q7J Oorron \ .:1 • bO 1 bedroom
IQ7'} V!CIOII OII 14 • 67 J bed1 00tn
'J both
\ 41'} Coven try 12 • b~ 3 bedroom
IIIO!.i ) to te~mon 17 ,
bU 1

MR.. TITUS,,

THAT WILL DO,
SL0550P! n.~
ATTEND TQ
CAPTAIN

BOB'S

The Best
Price In Town
See
Denver Kapple
At
For

.

Will l)Q small houlmg l U 1 bru sh
(lear11ng of basement s oti1CS
gmage etc. Phone 992 77 M .

CAPTAIN E;A&amp;Y~... AH.VES ~

VOLI'RE THE GE?NTLEMAN Y'JHO
WA'j F~VI'i Ei HERE TO SeE

4· 1J· r mo.

99'1· l()l1 4

50U[l WALN UT gote leg ar1d drop
leo! 1. ,1chen table About IOU
year!&gt; old S250 99) 721:!9 to ~ee
11 or ~QI 7 066 blt e1 )

~

OA-Imo.

':JY'l JO~ I

Phone992-2181

:oo:-

6 :00-News 3,4,8, 10, 13,15: ABC News 6: Zoom 20,33 .
6:30--NBCNews 3,4.15: ABC News 13; Carol Burnett
and Fnends 6; CBS News 6.10 : Over Easy 1iJ,33.
7: 00-Cross;Wils 3, 4; Newlywed Game 6, 13; Marty
Robbms Spai1Jght8: News 10: Gil l igan ' s Island 15 ·
Daniel Fosler , M .D . 70 : Know Your Schools 33. '
7: 30--T hai Nashville Musi c 3; In Search of 4: Muppet
Shaw 6; Malch Game PM 8: MacNeil -Lehrer
Report 70,33: Wild Kingdom 10; Candid Camera 13 ·
Nashville on lhe Road 15.
'
6 00-Li ltle House on the Prairie 3,4; 15; Sugar Time!
6, 13; Baby, I'm Back 8, 10; Consumer Sur,lval Kit
20,33.

CAPTAIN EASY

Under han 9 gutters &amp; room
additions.
For Free Estimates
Call
992-6323 or 992-6011
5-15-1mo. pd .

399 W. Main St.
Pomeroy , Ohio
Ph. 992 -2 164

VA HiA 30 y1 I1110f\CIIlg al s.o
r el11•on&lt; rng II eland Mortgage
1'l t ~ to te At ht:&gt;m phone (b14 )

----

cob 1n£&gt;l unll whtle
I 1fy1ng
roorn ~u,leS ltoc t..e' 1ect.ner
cho u lol o!l o way bed
1tuee
qual rp1 '&gt;liE&gt; Von1l y 70 new
7 go ~ ~~o~e~ 1 50000
1
!:1 ~ 000 1 go~ dryer 1 i&gt;lecH• C
dryer A s~or t~d doth1fl9 and
mt'&gt;( 1rF'm~ Phone 747 /btKI

f!IG~

·

MODERN
SUPPLY
Small engine &amp; mower

74til

~ack W. Carsey , Mgr .

-

! ~!:\

lo r ~ ole 1 onr and
serv i cP. . Musev Ferguson
up M rddlc pa11 fiCO! J.lutlor1d 1 &amp; Gilson Tillers, Lawn Boy
Coli ~9/ 74tl l .
Mower Sales &amp; Serwice.
N ~W J hcd1oo m h ou~u i bo rh !&gt;
oil e le(
I 01 re Mrddlvl.lo ' l
(iO'&gt;f.' 10 l&lt; utlond Phone 'J9'}

Phone 992-2111

~tWING MA( HINl ~ 1d1ng mowet
Wa1d~ ~ h p
J Po11oble 1Vs
b!od .. and ,...hde I color con
~ol e
/)
K1tchen sml.. and

L~ ~

1~ 1b rurlllllll:

__ ·---:

Call Now For
Appointment

TODAY. STAY
TUNED...

MASH BROTHERS
Alum. &amp; Vin~
Siding

H O MI: ~ IH )

· Pomeroy Landmark

L.ATER

MONDAY , MAY 22 , 197R

Heal Estate for Sale

We have enlarged ou r
service department and
will service Hotpoint and
other brands .

e:dra if needed . Excludes
front-whul drive cars.

BODY SHOP
MANAGER

l110.il'l.!t'

WA HR WI::LL d1rllrng W1lltom I.
Gr ant 7A1 · 2~79 .

•

DONALD CAll

(4'-'&gt;1 1

Offered

Will CARl l or the elderly m our
homo Ph one r,q2 nu .

SPECIAL

JIM STANLEY

15 WIJrd.... ur l!mlt•r

A l l ~ woo~ ond
pools 1 year ~
ClO pCIICI1(Q
lrcc e~ t1m01 m,
ar~y l htng
you
nef&gt;&lt;;l
for
und!:! rQ round ~w 1rn poo l~ New
r hem1( o1 ond ~ u pply sto1e
O h• o
Pho11e
A l ban y
o 14 6Cifl b~)~ { Alt e1 b pm
61 4 bH!J ~';.1)1 Joh n J ofi Pr ~ nr
tli:N ~~0~ ij dl G•llcnc ) We orf'
NOI oil ~P I on PRill:)

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

•Free Estimates

WANT AD
CHARGES

~nirc5

Business Services

fJ OOL ~
~hope~ ~w1111

PUOUL t:

NO l onger wor k lor ~o t m e
fJ lumb1119 oprl Heal1ng
Bdl
w,ghth ouse .

•1

TELEVISION
VIEWING

DETAILS WILL
FOLLOW,

Notk"•

11 :30--Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Police Story 6,13: Movie
" A Touch of Glass" 8: ABC News 33 ; Movie "The
Joker Is Wild " 10:
12:00--Janaki 33 .
12 :40--News 13.
Tomorrow 3,4 .
""
1

IT DING
NIGH
SCAIRT 'EM

OFF TH'
LINE,TOO,
PAW

just th ree , eac h threw everything e lse away to keep
clubs and even tually South
cashed all hi s dinmonds. ''
Oswa ld : " 'l'h1s shouldn't
have workNL Ea ~ t sho uld
have jettisoned his dia-

mond s in th e ord e r 6..&amp;-Q.
Thi!"\ would givl' West a count
on the diamond suit. He

would know lhc1t South held
seven spades and fi ve dia -

monds. The bidding showed
that his other ca rd was the
ace of hearts and West
would chu ck a ll his clubs ."
Alan : " He s hould have,
bul he didn 't. "

A self-s tyled beginner
asks what is meant by Lhe
express ion, " Double dummy
play ." This refers to play
based on St.•eing all 52 cards .
Obviou sly. il is easier to
make the best play under
Lhosc cond itions .
r ~~: W SI'A I't-:1&lt;

J.:Nn:H I'H ISt:AS.!iN I

(FOJ a co~y of J ACOBY MOOERN. send St

to

· w ,n at

Bndge. · · ca1e of th1s newspa per, P 0 Box 489. Radio City
Stat•on . New York . N Y 100t9.)

r

�\

8-TheDailySentinei. Middleport-Pomeroy , o .,MoodHy, M.y22. f p a n t

Ad$ Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

9- The Daily Sentinel, Middlepurt-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Ma y 22, 1978
DICK TRACY

JARRELL ADKINS FORD

FURTHER

596-5283

EXPERT
HUNTER

WiST OF McARTHUR

RT. 50

Wheel
Alignment

• Expert Body and Fender
Repair
•Quality Work and
Refinishing.
• Experts on Collision

Any U. S. made car-parts

SERVICE
MANAGER
f!l~ -~~.

100

Id a~

J;o
I"

:! d&lt;H~

:hill~ ~
ti till~~

JOO
h

f:do

wrJnl.-

I Z5
\90
l.!!i

3 75

~ u r J UHI" tJ~ IILIIILII\Wn !5
n•uu. fWr wnrd ]IN tla)

r•llrt·r

Li~&lt;~rr wn~~' l.l\1\e

tl&lt;r ~ ~ '4"111 IJt• dr;;n(L•U at tilt• 1 d&lt;~~
r.rlt•

Ill rrwmvn Card nf Thnn k!! &lt;1ml
Ubrtui!l' ~ 6· t cnl.:i ~r ~ unl. SJ 00

rrrurrmuin Casl r urad vdlll't
~l r1Lltlt'

llumc set It·~ anJ i'artl sale~
Hrl' cwr·cvtctl r,ml~ wrt h l'il:.li wrtlr
unit·!' ~ L'CI It !'l~.antl' fur &lt;~11!. ~·a rry·
ur~ Bu:~: "umikr lrr C:t n: uf Tilt&gt; Sen·
unt•l
Tilt· flu!JIL\III.'r rc~nc!!l the nght

tu t•r.lit vr rc}l'{i &lt;JII~ a~ d~m~ vb~~ trrm&lt;~l Tilt: PubiL.&gt;htr wr lln\Jl lit'
n.:!\JIOII.!l!blt• fur mor~ lh&lt;~n one meur·
ll'tt

Pomeroy Landmark
Jack W. Carsey , Mgr .

ln:::.crtHJII
PhiJI!t' 99'2·2l!i6

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
M undt~)

\"wn lilt S&lt;lturd~)

Tut&gt;Mt.}
thru Fnda)

Nehon U1ug

Check our low, low
prices on

'J 7

FERTILIZER, NITROGEN,

OAK 10M A 10 ~ta l-. e!&gt; lor ~ a le
Coll/;1 43 17q5
tro~c,

York H omp

Ph o11 e

&amp; BLEND.

!:1 4) / 49 1
MAf' L~

BUN K tll:O} l or

q~q 7~4

sole

$)0

Pomeroy Landmark

5

1977 OU A CHll A It&gt; ft f,berglm~
bo!&gt;~ boot
80 h p Mer cur y
motor Thru ~ler IIOilH1Q rnotor
I lw e wc lh I(C ~ he~r double~
o~ ~k.1 boot
Compi Pie wrlh
11ader Contor t ~ ddtc 'i oung
991 7630

AVACAD O

I JOl

by

ref11ge,o Tor
~' c ellent
t1on ~1 519o

Sw!dlt)
i pM

r nU.)

ilfkn~ .lll

Wanted to IJuy
OLD ruPt-J!TU R~ ICe bo · e~ blm~
ht?d~ !!On b~~ e!&lt; comple Te
hou'&gt;ehold~ W r1 Te M D M dl e1
IJ1 .4 Porr&gt;e1 oy Oh•o or coli
(IQ2 7760
IJQ IT EM f00 Lo1ge or too \moll

w'l 1il buy 1 p•ece or com pleTe
hou'&gt; ehok. N e v. u'&gt;ed or anll
QUi'S M ort1n ~ ~vrn i i UIE!' 10 N
7nd ~~
M •ddl epor 1
Phone
991 b37 0
( H lP WOQD
P ole~
mo .&lt;
d 1ometer 10 on l arge~! e{ld S8
per ton Bu ndled sl ob Stl per
ton Oe ltv ered 10 Ohto PolleT
Co Rt 2 Pomeroy 992 7689
CO INS CU RRENCY tokens old
pod..c t wo !the.&lt;&gt; o"d t ho1n~
~~lv er and gold We need I Qe,A
and ol der !&gt;d11e1 co m~ Bu'f .. ell
or trade Ca ll Roge1 Wam sle y

741 1331
PO MlROV F ore~ ! P1o
Top pme for !&gt; lond"'9
~o w r,mbPr
Call lfQ? 5%S or
Kent HCJnby 1 4A b 8570

TI MBER

Yard Sale
II YOU hove o $e t Ylte to all e1
wont to buy 01 ~ell some th rng
oe loolo.rng lor work
or
who le\ler
you II get le'iul ts
foster w1Th a Sent1nel Won! Ad
Call 991/156

CO Al LIMl:~TON~ ~and gra~t£!1
i: olr,um rhlorrde l £&gt;r !d tler dog
load and oil t ype'l o l ~ol t l ~
cel~tO I ~oil W ork~ IIH
l M0111
)I 1-'omer o.,. 99? )!!91

tOJi )Alt IQ77 Hondo XLIOO On
l1ke new
ly 100 mrle~
742133tl

Help Wanted
1H!:: G Al l/ A - MUG ~ Co mmumty
ACT1on A genty ~~ ~ee ~ mg op
plrconl\ lor 1he l ollo w,ng po!&gt;•
r.on
Coun\elo1 The (ounlielor w1ll be
re\pons1ble tor the day to do,wun\ ehng at Cl: 1A T1tle Il l
)PW V) program pOrtl (i p On t ~
The toun~elo 1~ dutte\ wou ld m
d ude but nol l1m 1Ted to porhc 1
pont canfott\ du11ng opp l1t0
to on
tn lokc or 1en tohon and
lerrn,no!lon Ap pl1con1~ ~hould
po~\e\'1 o de~p ee Ill Coun~el
1ng P!&gt;y cholo gv Soc,ol Work
01 othe r related l ,c ld P1eler
comb,no 110n of degree and
1eloted worK e ~pe r1ence Ap
p ltt ollon ~ and or fv•tl-ler tn
formoi 10" ~~ ovarl oble !rom the
Oh10 Jobs Scrvru~o, O l!. c e~ or
the Commun,ty A tl1on A gen cy
Centr a l OI!1CC at 9'1'1 7CIXJ or
014 3b7 73 41 R e!&gt;ume~ may be
moded 1o Oo~t1d Gloec K~tr-1
Manpower 011 toe l or PO Bo..
772 Chesh1ro O ht o 45020
Deodlrne l or oppi•C0110n~ w1!1
bl! Ma y 16th 1978 !he Gallic
Me•g!i. C A A ~~ on ~qu al Op
por tuntty bnployer M f.

EXPLORE THE
GREAT

Bf:.~l

SHK TION of the be~ I wood
1n ~ou rhea~tpr n Oh1 o
Jo tul
Mor!&gt;O
tiel
I uol.a
Tempwood a nd N o lhuo l ron
Heat Co ~ Pu tnorn D1 (oft M tll
) I J A. then~ b 14 597 t:JJ71f or
b i A·69b 1187
~ l ov e~

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

'289,95

Now Only

tamping Equiplllf!ot
SlAHCRAFI CAMfJf:.R 10 It Used
one seo~on $4000 hrm W1th
lull Reese h1tt'h and bra Me- con

l&lt;ol I 304 773 56M
r977 PALOMINO 14 f1 told down
carnper Used once George
Donovan $2100 985 350..t

Army Opportunities

St:N SI MA II( at
toun h ng mo{ht ne
Phone
fjq2 21Sb I he Oo dy ~entr nel
111 Court ~ t rect Pomer oy
Ohro

C ABbAGl
B ~ OCCOLI
coul tf lower
bru,~el l 'l pr ouh
egg plants head letlu ce ~~ee l
pepper~ hungo11on wo~ ~ee l
banana chd1 peppe1~ Plu'l
many dr ll!~ren! Ya11e f 1e~ ol
tom ato plo11ts many ~un d ~ of
and
pot
hongmg bo~ke t !&gt;
flowers lar ge \la11e ry ol on
nuo l ~ m ll a t~ Clel and ~arms
and Gre nhou ~e
Rotm c
Gcr old•ne Cleland

TRA C \0~ 1

1972 r A C. A LONG I~ It se lf con
Tam ed tra vel
rrorler
A 1
991 319 4 or 'n2 3A)9

9H5 3917

-

good

1971 CADILL A C HOORAO O . Fu ll
powe1 or r clean Body good
~ hope
Dr 1ve d and you wr l l
hove to own Phone 992 74b2 ,
J&lt;n Q Z 18 ( AMARO 4 ~ peed
1-') P B. AlterS , co11 992 38q7

(iive Away

l Hit~i:

f' hone
Geor ge

MONrH o ld puppy
colhe 985 3596.

f!ort

NPor
011 \o!1

bo1h and loun

d1y ro(lm modem ~1tchc n ~ :
acre!&gt;
BOH1 and pl r n ry of
po ~ t u r e
oil l e&gt;•,cerl
A ..,l. rng
Sl) 000 f!hOI' e4&lt;1] O'Jl&lt;i
)po &lt;,ou..,
PwTro nl£1' ~ lwdroorn hom e 4
year~ ol d
I , bo1h :. fully
l"qu,pped lo. 1trhen Cen t1ol ou
\ I Of\ (&gt; l•1 eplocr double gorogP
)piPet IOlnliorl on l 4 O(r{."~

NO ~ T H

•• ,

l)f 111£&gt; P o• nt~

799~

VAIHJ ~ A l t lue ~ and Wed An 11
que 11unk Oe p r£&gt; ~'&gt;tOn drape ~
er e l eodrng (lr&gt;P ~ h'd
o il
~1gn.,

LARGt BH ICK homr&gt; tull y .-qu1p
ped k •tc hen hoi wote! qood
locot•on
Will
tok o ~m oll
ocreogu a~ do ~n poyrnen•
~14 ~00 rwJ "JJ4b
hou\e J hP&lt;il oo rn J
OC!e~ of grounrl l ot Otf&gt;d 0 11 Rt
7 99/ j9J4

~ IX ~ QQ M

HUJ&lt;R O UC.H ~

ol 4·376 o311

1Qo7 v w 99/ 313b or qrn 39:il

b WHK old collie pups
Hdl 2A7 19bl

oCie~

~~

ca ll

Phone992 ·2111

Collect,
593-3022

M1thes

.. ARM ON CR 31 3o
Par tland fl4:l 7~fl I

o·

J1ck W. Carsey , Mgr.

0

Call SFC Lowery

u ITL l:
9Q71817

31~0

11f A C Rl ~ ) lOOn'! hou~('
.- or rnor o mlor tnoll on
'1 47 )10 4

Pomeroy Landmark

UIW

rwo

&lt;.,rncll

o r rno k \' oil er

Le1 us test your water Free

sa

TRAi lER SPACl 1 , rmle "om
Mergs Htgh School on old Rt 33
992 2Q4 I or Qq'} 2689

7.4 1

outbuddn1g ~

S l~ (X)()

By pm~

1970 C HtVR O l~ I CUSTOM De lu xe
' , ton ptckup $3400 low
mtle oge
Reed!&gt;YIIIe

OUTDOORS

)qJO HORNEl b cyl \ld
work cor $4 50 747 3002

~everol

born

HV~ ROOM hou" ''

Mf 135 01e sel
Mf-'130 Dtosel
MF ISO D•e s.e l . Mf-'13 5 01e sel
MF I bS D•es.e l MF78 5 01e~ e l
Mr l135 Dre~el
Co b or r 8
heater
N!;W &amp; USW IMI-'l~M~NTS
VAHD S Al~ May 73 24 lues and
Mf-9 Boler
MI- l 0 Boler
Mf- 110
Wed
Weolher
pe1mi111ng
Ba le1 Mon hews Rot or r ) cythe
Bradbury Rrl
Don Honrng
Mf-880 )em• mounted b bo t
re\tden{e (h, ldren !» tlo thtng
tom Plow
MF 510 12 0 1H
m•sc I T('Il 1~
AutoSale5
M~:xxJ 2 How (hopper
M~39 'l
1974 PIN lO New rod1ol 11re~
Row PlorHer ~
· M echontcol
t 'or Hen!
I ronsplonter
new shod.. ~
aura
Iron ~
46 000 mtles 9Cf7 7185 oher 4
SHINN ) I RAClOR S Al~ ~
J AND 4 RM furn 1shed and un
pm
Phone ..
lb30
fufnl'ihed opt\
Phone- qq7
leon W Vo
1q76
MU
ST
AN
G
AU
TOMATIC
~ 434
Good
con dll •on
Pho ne
COUNIRY MOBil~ Home f&gt;ork
991 3240
1&lt;17 4 !,U ZUK I IM100 ~a ce d one
Rou te 33 nonh ol f! o rne1oy
se o!.on
f:.x:ce llent cond• t ,on
197J MO N ilCA RLOlondou P S
Lorge lot s Col1997 747Q
1300
843
1b21
P8 , A (
AM a track stereo .
~f:.NIO R
(IHZf:. NS
Our
new
co ndilron
$1700
b re ll en t
19/) Harl ey Spo l tsl er like new
ren ter 'I o'&gt;~I~Ton[e \' O U may be
643 2621
rum good k• ng queen ~eat b
able to l t-.e m our aportmP.n t
e .d on Ir on \ e»dro bon ery
1973
5UPER
6llltl
11
1\JO
lo r les~ than S)O a mon th For
vo ltage ""9 and 'J helrne1s .
R eed~vttle Oh1o 61 4 378 b331
more 1nl orrno tr on
con ta c t
Mu~T ho" e $1300 9tl2 Sl4b or
o!1er
6
pm
Vrlla ge Manor A ponment~
con be seen 01 100 A B r~( k St ,
991 7767
1970 HO RNl I !A lO Good !&gt;hope
Pomeroy Oh to .
.J4'J 306'1
10 or: SO 'l bed room mobde home 1n
1'17b HARLlY ·Electro C.lrde 3000
Ro on e or eo Qq') 5858
)CIJ 4 BUICK REGAL All power
m1les I1Me ne w cond•t• on wt th
S/500 Ooyt1me only QqJ ~~ 4 5
Touro po&lt;k and helm et $3100
M I DD l ~PORT
Oll •c space 1000
sq
IT
a11
co"d' lloned
tarpeted Ground floor Corner
loc al ton Call qcn 3b3 I

IN Jo! utl a11d Vd log&lt;&gt; 4
bedroom h ou~e 7 cor gorngl'

ANl) lo t m Dor1111lle
3?) Phone 74/ 706EI

du ( t~

NH DED ~ d., Pr (Oifl~ h1ghe'&gt;1
p11Ce\ pard Call 74113lb a fTer
7pm

AC H~ ~

HOU~t

4 PM

t.Ju:dlt) IJdtrrepublu iilJUII

FERT~PELS

POTACH,

lb~

40 50

Heal J.:stale for Sale

MAIN
POMER()Y, 0.
JUST LISTED - Very nice
2 bedroom home , nicely
re modeled, new carpel and
vinyL u ti l i ty room , bath ,
pari
basemen!.
JUS T
S\1 ,000 .00.
JUST LISTED - 2 yr . old ,
loc.ated on 1 acre , 3 lovel y
bedrooms , bath , ut i l ily ,
ve r y
n ice
kitchen ,
car peted . electr ic he.a t.
garage . $26.000 ,00.
JUST LISTED - Close to
Meigs Hi. 1 yrs . old . 3
Bdrms ., 2 baths, basement,
electric heat. approx . T' ''
acre, small storage bldg .
$32,500.00.
ABOVE THE AVERAGE
- 1117 story frame , lots of
remodeling , 3 BR , bath ,
n ic e kitchen , carpe ting ,
some insulation, storms,
porches , see th is now .
Asking S\7,700.00 .
HARD TO BELIEVE - '
lots, f irst floor . ki tchen ,
li"ing R , bath , bedroom .
2nd floor · 3 BR , carpeting,
N.G. heal , porches, small
basement . Sl7,000 .00,
BUILDING - 1 business
rooms
(re nted) ,
2
aprlments (each have 1
BR , bath , li ving R ..
kitchen ) . Lot size 50x60.
Al ley In th e rear. $36,668,00.
OTHER PROPERTY
TO CHOOSE FROM
TIME TO SELL YOUR
HOUSE AND LOT? TRY
OUR SERVICE , WE'RE
REAL HOT.
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
HANK , KATHY &amp; LEONA

3SOCC Holley Oavrdson
motor cycle . 1300 rndes Good
condr tion 5 5~~ Cal l oflcr 5 pm .
b i 4-31El -6116

Mit K GOA rs IU ~I fres hened SbO
o•ld up Ktd\ weaned Hill.,. ~
S'lO
nonn 1e5
~:J O
~ hade
6 14·b% 1134
I 976 CHt VV 1 1
to n p1ckup
$26 000 m1 fes b &lt;yl 3 speed
wrth
nrce roppfn
SJ:J"'~

9HI

3~17

fo r

lots

Pomeroy, 0 .
3-15-tfc

ACRE)·, 8 room remodeled
h orne . all m1nerol light s fuel
o•l
furnace . ~v1 l o nd Oleo
SJ6 OOJ New 3 bedroom l olot
elech 1C home
I I1J o ne~ .
ncar rn1ne s STf 000 . Bu tld rng
lol \ 11 otres 1urol wa1ct on
lo t , S:i 800 Colt 7 4'1 'JB 19 offer~
pm 01 onylune ~at 8 ~un ·

3 l:J to !I one~ 1 rnt les be low
M.ddleport
r!ve1 f ron 1ogc
flhonc .&lt;III'J. 256 1 for more m•

l oul"'otion

~ ~ ~U;l~ ®

I BOANT I
DELTA

in
vard
grading,
driveways ,
land&gt;&lt;aping , etc.

0

"THE MILEAGE MAKER"

. Call
JERRY MURPHY
(614) 667-6177

P~992-2174

0

SALE
$44 .88
SS\.97
SSS . \7

0

AI Tromm Const.

HEAnNG INC.

Aski ng on ly S\ 7,000 .
CO UNTRY LIVING Here is what you have been
want ing . Home with 35
acres. It ha s 3 bedrooms,
nice k i tchen, large modern
fa m ily roo m with wood
burn in g fireplace . 3 ca r
garage , large old barn .
Seve ral acres of farm land ,
pasture and good spring
water Woul d like 138,000 .
MIDDLEPORT
2
bedroom , 2 car qarage
aparlmenl. N' · ~~f.:&gt; .., , like
new naf&gt; ··o'i.~'iJ Jrced air
lur;t.l t ' .. ce nalu&lt;al
v ~~· t!d
rloor s and
wwdwork on Gravel Hill.
All in good shape . Wanl
only Sl6,500 .
SELLING
IS .
A
PROFESSIONAL' S JOB .
HE KNOWS WHAT TO
SAY . WHEN , AND WHAT
TO DO WITH A SELLING
PROBLEM . WE NEED
GOOD
CLEAN
PROPERTIES NOW .
CALL992-3325
G. Bruce Teaford
Helen L. Teaford
Sue P. Murphy
Associates

SEPTIC TANK
Re si dential
and
commercial . Call
for
es1imate , 24 hour service
Anvday , anytime.
Phone 985-3806
Jack Ginter 98$ -3806

"• mile oft Rt. 7 by-pass on
St . Rl. 1'14 toward Rutland,
0.

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

Jack's SeptiC
Tank :semce
Box 3

HOWI;RY
AN U MART IN
c avor ,n g
&lt;oepr,c
sys tem s
do1e1 · ba c ~h oe d ump t1u ck
luTU~!&gt; t one
gra ... cl
blacktop
povmg R! 14 3 Phone I [b14)
6Q8 7331
BATHR OOMS AND
rernodol ed ( I! IOIHI C l 1le plurn ·
b1ng corpentrr and general
mom tanonc c
13 year s ex:
per mnce 99'1 368)
fJULLIN S t:XC A VA ll NC. . Co mplet e
~(H\1 1((' l-'h ouu9'i7 2A78.
WIN 1i:R G !; 1 to you1 ho u se? l eTu!.
I romm

MIOOL .. f!ORI J bPrl1001n ho rne '}
full
bo th ~
tully CO !pe te d
equ1p pcd lo.1t( hen wtl h 1n11~ r
com noTu 1ol goo, furnace cen
Tral o•r (Ondlflon.ng on a 100 x
100 lot
I emed 111 yard
$35 ~00 Phone 9(n 5550

neces~ o r y

repou~

Con~ lr uc ll o n

AI

by THOMAS JOSEPH
I 'TELL yOU , LOOMBAH ,
OOP A.N ' "Tl&lt;AT BIG DI"'O
OF HIS SCA'n'EI&lt;ED 'TH '
&amp;)'5 ti&gt;.E LEAVE.S IN

Heal Estate for Sale

CAll

THE WISEMAN REAL ESTATE AGENCY
AT 446-3643

Evenings Call 446-3796 or 446-7881

A HIGH WIND.'

too:&gt;te1~

ulltype\ of genf&gt;rollt&gt;po u
Wor k guo•o nl ce d ~0 year s c~~:
1wr mflce Phone 997. 'J 40Q
CH)d

Gc.~.

o' ' ' ; '' ~ ~A

Where is
t.JOurcar.
Mr Blink?

M4 truck won't
start
and

DRIVE A LimE
&amp;
SAVE A LOT

s . Ll.

What
kind

late
for
work!

4 88

9' and 12' Vinyl
Floor Coverinl! In Stock

!:~~ WING

MACHINE Repo11 s !ocr
viCe , oil rnoke~ lf97 'J2tl -4 The
1-obr ''
Shop
Pome r o y
Auth omed S1nge1 Sole~ o"d
~erv • cc . We ~ho rpe n Sc r sso 1 ~
do1cr lood01 and
backh oe work du111p T rurk~
and lo·boy!&gt; to1 hue w•ll haul
ldl d111 to so d, hmc~tor1e and
grovel. Call Bob or Rogor Jef
lers day phone ~2 - 708 q n1ghl
ph one 991 -3S25 or 997· 5232
doJ l!r

r

PERSONNEl

..

M[GADYNAMIC
COMPUT[R CO·___-

HIRING

or Gene Smith

_

__..---

74 2-22 11

1\c.TuALLY. you
HAvf:

ON~£.

"-

L•D.r

~,..I

I'E:

AGAIN~ You - ",n
IOU ...

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

I

WILL do fOOf rng co nstruchon
plumbmg and heo!tng No JOb
l oo Iorge 01 too ~ma ll Phone J

HUMAN

e

A

8f1NG. •

44

45 Squealed

~:'

46

CAREER .

A SOFA THAT
'

f*.::;::::;;:

to

AXVIli.B!\AXR
I. 0 N G F E I , I. 0 W

BILLY.

J N P

Y N J 0 D P,

J y X
GSX

15 IN STOCK ,

Y'-

)

i

J
J

THE NAME OF
THE 6AR WHERE
AUTOMOBILE
MECAANIC5 60 1

! GIVE UP... WHAT IS

NAME OF THE BAR
WI-JERE AVTOMOBILE
MECHANICS 60 ?

7+

xw

THAT .LAST BOLT OF
LIGHTNIN ' DING
NIGH SCA IRT TH' .
PANTS OFF ME

H
Pas."i

PHSS

~·

! NT

Pass

H p-

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag
Ala n : "Some bands can
only be m ade by creating an
illusion for the defenders. It
is improper to c reate this

illu sio n by

mean s of

remarks , gestures , slow
play when lhere is no problem or anything except the
actua l cards you play ."
Oswald : " When South
looked over dummy he rea l·
ized !hal his seven bid was
silly indeed . There we re
twelve easy tricks staring

BARNF.Y

8ALLt; O'FIRE!!

68 ACRE FARM - Prtce r educed In '"6,900. Attractl'e
remodeled 2 story farm home """,(). ce home fealur es
a large livi ng room . d l nle - r.~~\'t' ... chen, 5 ~drooms,
&amp; Pi, balhs, ll ar;a,\t
· "'e land with balance In
pasture and wood, "'::f"' ... ,e~er barn &amp; garage. You must
see this one , If 's we&gt; I worth the price . Loca ted oil Rl.
325 In Meigs County.

CWX

F W K P

1978 Km.: f'tl l\lrtl Sy ndiute . Int.

REDI BEDS

Lara est Selection In The Valley

XW

DPNKP OX .- VOFFOJZ YPCC
~alurday 's C.ryptoquote : BEWARE OF UTILE EXPENSES;
A SMALL LEAK WJU. SINK A GREAT SlflP. - BEN
FRANKLIN

'

Pass

2+

Opening lead : + t

fRVPTOQUOTES

vp

South

Pass

DAILY CRYPTO&lt;l UOTE - Here's how to work it :

hints. Each day th e rode lcll crs are di fferen t.

I'M AFRAID ITS '":JT
AS SIMPLE AB "\-&lt; &lt;\T

Vulnerable : Bot h
Dealer : North
West North East
I+
Pass
Pass
Pass 3+
Pass
Pass

,.

apos trophes. the l ength and formation of the words are al1

A PIECE OF
FILM !HAT Tl&lt; 15 ACTT&lt;E 5f1
NOW ~INKS CAN ~E
DAtv\A61NG TO HER

MAKES A

"t A
A 7 5Ll

+ . . -.

One teller !limply ~ttand!l for another. In this !ample A it
used for the three I.'s. X for the two O's , &lt;'tr. Si nglc le tters ,

';OU HAVE

BED FOR
YOU

:~~~;r:~:.e
~:~nt

C[l r9 11! Dy NU.W I ,. JWjU Sf'JI(III

Rutland

+ J 9i :l

SOUTH
+ AK Q 10 97 5

I Coarse
hominy

WINNIE

REOUCED TO 115,900 - A very ni ce 1'1' slory 4
bedroom home In good cond ition. Features a basement
with f inished tamll y room and laundry room , eat-In
kilchen , li,i ng room &amp; bath . Lorge lot w llh lenced
yard . Call now, priced t~ sell.

+ 108 75

officer

Call 742-2211
TALK TO
Wendell or Herb Grafe

boc ~hoe :

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

F,~R:A~N:K~&amp;~E:"R:N:l~E~----------------------~------~-----------------------------~O ~urch

1

and dd cher Ch orle!&gt; I( Ho t
held
Bo ck
HOe
Serv1ce
Ru tla nd Oh10 Phone 742 2008

) 41 134B .

~

Buy where you can came in
and see what you're o"ttlng
- Good selections - Fully
stocked .

I::XCAVAliNC~

~~cktimher --=----:-:-=B~R=I=D-:=:G:=E-=--:---

611'

As Low As
sq. yd.
t
•
&amp; up

Middleport, 0 .
5·11 ·2Wk.

3 Do a
floor job
M inority 70 .
TO : QO-Oscar' s Best Actors 6, 13 ; News 20 .
t Spicy spiceJO : JD-Biack Perspective on the news 20.
rack item
11 :GO-News 3.4,6,8, lO . IJ, 15. Dick Cavet1 20 : Over
S Exempted
Easy 33 .
6 Refuge
11 30--Johnny Carson 3,4,1 5; Academy ol Country
state
7 - pro nobis
Music Awards 6,13 : Co lumba ~ : ABC New s 33 ;
M ovie " Come Blow Your Horn" 10.
8 "Columbo"
Uquefy
Yesterday 's Answer
12 :00-Janakl 33 .
9 Celebes ox
Singer
1:oo-- Tomorrow 3,4,4; News 13.
Frankie
10 Bombast
%4 DeLuise
34 "Victory"
1: l ~Ko iak e.
~~~~~Ready
16 Iowa city
2S Irish rebel
heroine
Movie Channel - 4.
5 and 9 p.m . - Late Show I PG I
Krazy 19 Moral
group
35 Lynne's
7 and 11 p.m . - Hollywood Oldies IG I
Correct
decline
26 Hamilton
di rection
20 Shinto
a led
bill
37 Hoodwink
Monday . l\1a~· 22
· -: ;· ..:;::::20 Molded
temple
28 Espied
38 Race
;.;;
ZJ Do a news· Zl Holbrook
30 Drunk : sl.
room job
Z2 " All the
32 Venerate
39
1tz7 Stringed
lhi.ngs
33 European
,ree
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag
instruments
you - "
river
41 Percentage
Zll Tally
r.-.:,;..-r.~:-~ ~ -l 29 Toward
~~sheller
him in the fa ce. Then' was
30 Mariner
NO K T H
1-2'-A
no leg iti mate way lo gel a
• J2
~
31 Set a
lhirlecnth ...
• Q97J
Alu n: " This dicln 'l keep
value on
• 10 2
South from working out a
~:..29~~~.1!:1 33 Grand + AKQ6 2
nkc s\o,.·indlc . He simply ra n
Opry
WF.ST
EAST
off his whole trump s uit.
36 "What have lft'4'-4-Ji:'--+-+--l• an
+ 6
F.as l hc lcl fou r clubs. So did
.,. ., . .
Y l085
• K J642
you Wes t. Rccau.sc ea ch one felt
t
KJ
9
t
Q86
that his partner would hold
me lately ?"

n

Rubber Back Carpet

Fay's Gift

Z Czech river

&amp;

I'm

All carpet installed with
padding at no charge .
Expert i nstallation .

Flowers,
WreattJ s

...... ~

t;ASOUNE ALLEY

SAVE ON
CARPETING

Bibl.., Bunch

~X(A V AIIN G

ACROSS
1 Clockmaker
Thomas
S Ram 's-horn
Exchange
premium
Brazilian

IUM OOlllN G fllurnbr11g hcotu' g

Crosses, Pots,

7 41 'J37fl

GOLF Cl UijS !&gt;hoes bog~ "'
~fr u c lt on lhr ough John leol o1d
Ches ler . Ohro

IN GAlliPOLIS

~.CfH.d'

ALLEY WP

JH11

Baskets, Sprays

(Answers tomorrow)
Jumbles KNELL GUESS KITTEN CANOPY
Answer· What the mountain climber enj oyedTAKING " PEEKS"

checks payable 10 N&amp;w9paperb0oks .

REPAIR
11011!&gt; oil
~ moll opphonce~ l awn mower
ne~ 1 ro Sla te ~~ ~ ghwo y Gara ge
on R olJ h ~ 'J Phone 1614 ) Q85

Beaut iful
Selection Flowers

I

NEW - JUST OFF PRESSI JUM BLE BOOK 1111 with 110 puules Is avail·

BOWtR )

~wc:cper~

For

N. 2nd

YOU'D THI\'lK " -

XI J I)"[ XI I )

able l or $1 35 pos1pald hom Jumble, c/o t1'11!t newspaper, P.O. Bo)( 3&lt;1.
NorwoOd , N.J 07648. Include your name, add re ss, zip code and make

Aut 11oneer Corn
plc l c Sf'IVtCe Phone Q49 '1 487
or 94Q :}()OQ Ra t me Oh!O Crr rr
Brod tor d

H WOOD

A "[

Answerhere
Salu,day's

B~A O f ORO

Chester, Ohio
10-30 -c

4-30-ltc

GIRL? 5URE ...
BUT I' VE BEEN
AROU HIJ "'ORE 'N

our ...

Save 30 pel. to SO pel.
on heating cost
Experi•nce and
fully i nsured
Free Est.
Call : 992 -3815

CLEANING

GARAGE

Yfp ... \T'll BE
A CHANGE FOR
YOU C\TY GIRlS
I RECKON ... '

THI~uS

4-9-1 mo . pd .

ROGER HYSEU.

mo ~u:-

fluGfR

CITY

I GUESS

JFRRV TOLD YOU
HOW IT IS
WITH US, EH7

Cellulosic (wood fiber)
Thermal Insulation

Call After 5:00 or
Anytime Saturday
992-1119 or 992 -5041
• -27 -tl c

SALES AND SERVICE
11-9 -tlc

near stores .

Wf'll RUN O VER
TO M'l PlACE
WHfRE WE CAN

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE

SERVICE

300 Main St.
Pomeroy , Ohio
Pomaroy 992-4282
or 9'12-6263
8 A.M . to4 :30 P.M.

Now arrange the circled letters to
torm !he surprise answer. as suggested by the above cartoon.

ORPHAN ANNIE-THE LAW TAKES OVER

J&amp;L

&amp;
DUMP TRUCK

PWMBING &amp;

KI) 0

KURBEE
HOI' IN, GIRLS ...

CARTER

I

IJTTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

742 -2328, S P.M . to 9 P.M .
·Order Now-Mount by Appt.
4-30-1 mo.

DAVE'S BACKHOE

3: 30--A II in \he Fam ily 8, 10; Consumer Survival Kll20.
4:QO-M ister Cartoon J ; Superman 4,· For Richer,
For Poorer 15 : M erv Grillin6; Addam s Family 8;
Sesame Street 20, 33: Gomer Pyl e, USMC 10;
Dinah! 13.
. 4 : 3~Litt l e
Rascals 3,15 : Gilligan ' s Island 4:
Gi lligan's Is land 8; Brady Bunch 10.
5:0o-Here Comes the Brldes 3, Star Trek 4; Gun smoke 8; M ister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33 :
Hoga n's Heroes 10;
Emergen cy One! 13; Pet.
ticoat Junction 15 ;
5 3Cl-News 6: Electr ic Company 20.33 : Mary Ty ler
Moore 10; Hogan' s Heroes 15 .
6 00-News 3, 4,8, 10,13,15: ABC News 6; Zoom 33;
Feeling Free 20.
6: 30--NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13: Carol Burnett
6: CBS News 8, 10; Over Easy 70,33 .
7 00-Cross-W its 3. 4: Newlywed Game 6, 13: Pop Goes
The Country 8: News 10 : Gi lligan' s Island 15:
French Chel 20 ; Boating Safety 33 .
7: 30--Hallywood Squares 3: Lel' s Go To The Races 8:
Assassinatiol"' of President Kennedy 4; Candid
Camera 6; MacNeil -Lehrer Report 20,33; Pr ice Is
Right 10 ; That 's Hollywood T3; Television Honor
Socie ty 15.
8:00-Pilal " The Man y Laves al Arlhur " 3, 15: Happy
Days6,13 : Movle"The Yearling " 10, 8: Once Upon
A Classi c 70,33 .
8 : 3~Laverne &amp; Shir ley 6, 13.
9:00-Th e Bastard-Ken! Fam il y Chronicles 3; Thre~ · s
Company 6, 13:: Counlry Night of Sl ars 4, 15: Daln
Curse 8, 10; TV on Trial33 : Sing A Si Qn 70 .
9: 30-Carter ·country 6; Mary Tyler Moore 13; Silent

0

S·l2

'""'101

4-12-1 mo. P.

LIST
$78.31
S8S.01
S89. t9

BR7h13
GR78x14
HR78x 15

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Between 7:30 &amp; 9:00
p.m.

byHenriArnolda ndBobLee

Unscramble these tour Jumbles,
one letter to each square. 10 form
tour ordinary words .

BORN I.OSP.R

Specialited

shade ,

UP~

ltj'jjlf.\,0 fii)jt ~ THATSCt&lt;AMBLEDWORDGAME

DURA-STEEL RADIAL

CLELAND
ASSOCIATE
REALTORS
992-2219- 992-6191 '' !•JJ0'
"12

r:;;;;~

9 :JG-Art America 20.
10 :00--News 20; Origina ls 33 .
10 30-Cver Easy 20: Anyone lor Tennyson? 33 .
11 :OCl- News 3,4,6,6, 10, 13, 15: Dick Cavell 70 : Over
Easy 33.

DOZER FOR HIRE

electric and abut the
highway . Askin g 110,000 .
FAMILY HOME - Good 4
bedroom home . 'l fam i l y
rooms . 'l baths . natural ga s
ce ntral heating , shop.
cove red picnic
pat io.
garage and 3 lots . Only
S1 7,500.
MIDDLEPORT - 7 room
o lder hom e that need s
some repair . With a will ing
buyer we wi lt redu ce the

pr1ce, 71 1

TILL HE. WAKES

eASY!

Middleport, Ohio

Middleport, Ohio
24 Years Service
SPRING SPECIAL
Complete Paint Jobs
Small Cars
S\00.00
Large Cars
S\25.00
Trucks
S\75.00
Body work &amp; repair St .oo
per inch using only the best
Dupont materials.
742 -J0\0
4-9·1 mo .

rn

J9b9 C.MC !RUCK b cyl au to
motor 'ecenlly overhauled
good !11es. no ru!&gt; l m good con
dtllon. 614 44b 7Qfl0 osM lo 1
Paul

ICJ73

tree s

TUESDAY, MAY 23, 1978
5:45-Fa rm' Reparl 13.
5: 50--PTL Club 13.
6:00-Summer Semester 10; PTL Club 15.
6:.30-F.ocus on Colu mbus 4; News 6; Summer
Semester 8; Concerns and Comments 10,
6: 45-Mornlng Report 3.
6:50--Goad Morning, Wesl VIrginia 13.
6: 55-News 13.
7:00-Today 3,4,15 : Good Morn ing America 6, 13: CBS
News 8; Chuck White Reports 10.
7:05-Bu llwi nk le 10.
7:30--Schoolies 10.
8 : 0~Capta i n Kangaroo 8,10: Sesame Slreel 33 .
9 : 00- Merv Griffin 3; Phil Donahue 4,13,15:
Emergency One! 6: Brady Bunch 8: Match Game
10.
9 : 3~Andy Griffith 8: Family Affair 10.
10 :00--Card Sharks 3,4,15: Edge of Nighl 6: Pass the
Buck 8; Joker 's Wi ld 10: To Te ll The Truth 13.
10:30--Hollywaad Squa r es 3,4,15: High Hopes 6: Price
Is Right 8, 10; $20.000 Pyramid 13.
1\:0~High Rollers 3,A, 15; Happy Days 6,13.
II : 30--Wheel of Forl une 3,15: Fam i ly Feud 6, 13;
Par tride Family 4; Love of Life 8, 10; Sesame Street
20; Cousteau Odyssey 33.
11 :55-CBS News 8: Loving Free 10.
11:00--Newscent er 3; News 4,6, 10; San lard and San 15;
Gambl l 8: M idday Magaz ine 13.
1 2 : 3~Ryan 's Hope 6, 13: Bob Braun 4, Gong Show 15 :
Search for Tomorrow 8,10: Electric Company 33 .
1:00-For Richer, For Poorer 3: All My Childr en 6,1 3:
News8 : Young and l he Restle ss 10: Nat l or Women
Only 15.
3o-Days of Our L ives 3,4, 15 ; As the Wor ld Turns
8, 10.
2: \J(}-()ne Life I a Live 6, 13.
2: 3Cl-Doclars 3,4,15: Guiding Lighl e,10
3:00-Anolher World 3,4, 15; General Hospilal 6, 13:
Lil ias , Yoga and You 20.

8:30--Basebal l 6, 13; M -A-S-H 8,1 0: T urnabout 70,33.
9:0o-The Bastard.Kent F amily Chronicles 3; M ovie
"J usl _Me and You " 4,1 5; Dain Curse 8,10: Art
Amerrca 20 ; Me eting of Minds 8; .

r1

Brakes
Muffler
Tires
•Shocks
Battery.
Installation Service

VIRGIL B. SR . . . .~
• 1 rot 1(1
992-3325
2l6 E. Second Street
4
MIDDLEPORT
bedroom brick home, 11 '7
baths . natural ga s heat.
washer . dryer hookups ,
basement. and 1 car
garage w ith large shop
over . Level lot. $30,000 .
RUTLAND - Nice old 3 or
4 bedroom stucco hom e
with 1 bal hs . Natural gas,
coal
furnace ,
full
basement. business room , 2
car garage on large corner
lat. W ill take S35,000
9 ACRES - On Slate Reule
143 wi th L.C. water tine .

Ha s

.

rM MR. TITU5'5 IIJI ECE
UNCLE TITUS&lt;
JU5T DOZED OFF ... COULD
YOU STAND IJIY COMPAi'lY

TR.I LYA~ ...

~AUTO P!!.~TING

MOORE'S

Ph . 992-2848

lo!~DUO )M~ 8 l o~ r w1th Go l::l e~c
lobi+&gt; ! ~ 8 ~ Vop v..o1e1 p1ll s

:taoo

old

lWO ' ~ I O H V frame houo;.t&gt; fl
r oom:; and both (e llo1 ou T·
buildtngs 4 ac re ~ land or edge
o f Rutta ml Com pl ete lroriPr
h oo~ up ol~o ') bonk s opprors ·
e d proper ty at $1~ , 500 . 1-'honc

For Salt.

Jq7b HOND A Jb(l Rood Bdo,e honT
d1~c b1a l..e \
1T11Ie~ b
cellen1 &lt;.ond,llon 99'; 6307

week~

ijY OW N t:H ) a cre~ wr th 9 room
hous&lt;' H~H GA!, '}cor goro ge
surnrn e r k!t &lt;hen and bordered
br 1 c1cc k ~ Col l9BS 3fl17

H 11. ~ MOHIL 1: HOMf:.) PI Plea ·
&lt;.Qn t W Vo be'lrde Hed, ~
lii?J !i1oqdmo•e 14 • 04 'I
bedroom
1Q7J Oorron \ .:1 • bO 1 bedroom
IQ7'} V!CIOII OII 14 • 67 J bed1 00tn
'J both
\ 41'} Coven try 12 • b~ 3 bedroom
IIIO!.i ) to te~mon 17 ,
bU 1

MR.. TITUS,,

THAT WILL DO,
SL0550P! n.~
ATTEND TQ
CAPTAIN

BOB'S

The Best
Price In Town
See
Denver Kapple
At
For

.

Will l)Q small houlmg l U 1 bru sh
(lear11ng of basement s oti1CS
gmage etc. Phone 992 77 M .

CAPTAIN E;A&amp;Y~... AH.VES ~

VOLI'RE THE GE?NTLEMAN Y'JHO
WA'j F~VI'i Ei HERE TO SeE

4· 1J· r mo.

99'1· l()l1 4

50U[l WALN UT gote leg ar1d drop
leo! 1. ,1chen table About IOU
year!&gt; old S250 99) 721:!9 to ~ee
11 or ~QI 7 066 blt e1 )

~

OA-Imo.

':JY'l JO~ I

Phone992-2181

:oo:-

6 :00-News 3,4,8, 10, 13,15: ABC News 6: Zoom 20,33 .
6:30--NBCNews 3,4.15: ABC News 13; Carol Burnett
and Fnends 6; CBS News 6.10 : Over Easy 1iJ,33.
7: 00-Cross;Wils 3, 4; Newlywed Game 6, 13; Marty
Robbms Spai1Jght8: News 10: Gil l igan ' s Island 15 ·
Daniel Fosler , M .D . 70 : Know Your Schools 33. '
7: 30--T hai Nashville Musi c 3; In Search of 4: Muppet
Shaw 6; Malch Game PM 8: MacNeil -Lehrer
Report 70,33: Wild Kingdom 10; Candid Camera 13 ·
Nashville on lhe Road 15.
'
6 00-Li ltle House on the Prairie 3,4; 15; Sugar Time!
6, 13; Baby, I'm Back 8, 10; Consumer Sur,lval Kit
20,33.

CAPTAIN EASY

Under han 9 gutters &amp; room
additions.
For Free Estimates
Call
992-6323 or 992-6011
5-15-1mo. pd .

399 W. Main St.
Pomeroy , Ohio
Ph. 992 -2 164

VA HiA 30 y1 I1110f\CIIlg al s.o
r el11•on&lt; rng II eland Mortgage
1'l t ~ to te At ht:&gt;m phone (b14 )

----

cob 1n£&gt;l unll whtle
I 1fy1ng
roorn ~u,leS ltoc t..e' 1ect.ner
cho u lol o!l o way bed
1tuee
qual rp1 '&gt;liE&gt; Von1l y 70 new
7 go ~ ~~o~e~ 1 50000
1
!:1 ~ 000 1 go~ dryer 1 i&gt;lecH• C
dryer A s~or t~d doth1fl9 and
mt'&gt;( 1rF'm~ Phone 747 /btKI

f!IG~

·

MODERN
SUPPLY
Small engine &amp; mower

74til

~ack W. Carsey , Mgr .

-

! ~!:\

lo r ~ ole 1 onr and
serv i cP. . Musev Ferguson
up M rddlc pa11 fiCO! J.lutlor1d 1 &amp; Gilson Tillers, Lawn Boy
Coli ~9/ 74tl l .
Mower Sales &amp; Serwice.
N ~W J hcd1oo m h ou~u i bo rh !&gt;
oil e le(
I 01 re Mrddlvl.lo ' l
(iO'&gt;f.' 10 l&lt; utlond Phone 'J9'}

Phone 992-2111

~tWING MA( HINl ~ 1d1ng mowet
Wa1d~ ~ h p
J Po11oble 1Vs
b!od .. and ,...hde I color con
~ol e
/)
K1tchen sml.. and

L~ ~

1~ 1b rurlllllll:

__ ·---:

Call Now For
Appointment

TODAY. STAY
TUNED...

MASH BROTHERS
Alum. &amp; Vin~
Siding

H O MI: ~ IH )

· Pomeroy Landmark

L.ATER

MONDAY , MAY 22 , 197R

Heal Estate for Sale

We have enlarged ou r
service department and
will service Hotpoint and
other brands .

e:dra if needed . Excludes
front-whul drive cars.

BODY SHOP
MANAGER

l110.il'l.!t'

WA HR WI::LL d1rllrng W1lltom I.
Gr ant 7A1 · 2~79 .

•

DONALD CAll

(4'-'&gt;1 1

Offered

Will CARl l or the elderly m our
homo Ph one r,q2 nu .

SPECIAL

JIM STANLEY

15 WIJrd.... ur l!mlt•r

A l l ~ woo~ ond
pools 1 year ~
ClO pCIICI1(Q
lrcc e~ t1m01 m,
ar~y l htng
you
nef&gt;&lt;;l
for
und!:! rQ round ~w 1rn poo l~ New
r hem1( o1 ond ~ u pply sto1e
O h• o
Pho11e
A l ban y
o 14 6Cifl b~)~ { Alt e1 b pm
61 4 bH!J ~';.1)1 Joh n J ofi Pr ~ nr
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11 :30--Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Police Story 6,13: Movie
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12 :40--News 13.
Tomorrow 3,4 .
""
1

IT DING
NIGH
SCAIRT 'EM

OFF TH'
LINE,TOO,
PAW

just th ree , eac h threw everything e lse away to keep
clubs and even tually South
cashed all hi s dinmonds. ''
Oswa ld : " 'l'h1s shouldn't
have workNL Ea ~ t sho uld
have jettisoned his dia-

mond s in th e ord e r 6..&amp;-Q.
Thi!"\ would givl' West a count
on the diamond suit. He

would know lhc1t South held
seven spades and fi ve dia -

monds. The bidding showed
that his other ca rd was the
ace of hearts and West
would chu ck a ll his clubs ."
Alan : " He s hould have,
bul he didn 't. "

A self-s tyled beginner
asks what is meant by Lhe
express ion, " Double dummy
play ." This refers to play
based on St.•eing all 52 cards .
Obviou sly. il is easier to
make the best play under
Lhosc cond itions .
r ~~: W SI'A I't-:1&lt;

J.:Nn:H I'H ISt:AS.!iN I

(FOJ a co~y of J ACOBY MOOERN. send St

to

· w ,n at

Bndge. · · ca1e of th1s newspa per, P 0 Box 489. Radio City
Stat•on . New York . N Y 100t9.)

r

�IG-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, May 22, 1978

,--------------------------1

:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;;;:::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.,

WHS in state
tournament
BY GARY CLARK
For only the second time in the history of the school, the
Wahama White Falcon baseball team will make an appearance in the West Virginia State High School tournament
as a result of a surprisingly easy 16-4 triumph over Gary in
the finals of the Region Four tourney at Wahama Saturday
afternoon.
Coach Gordon Spencer's White Falcons battled their way
into the State tournament with sectional victories over
Hannan and Winfield before downing Huntington Vinson and
· Gary in the regionals. The bend area team is now one of four
Class AA teams remaining out of the more than 75 schools
which began tournament play some two weeks ago.
Wahama's opening game in their drive for a state
championship will be Thursday evening at City Park in
Parkersburg beginning at 6:30p.m. Its opponent will be the
winner of Region One and is reported to be Paden City,
however this is unofficial.
In Saturdays' Regional finals the White Falcons exploded
for six runs in the top half of the second inning and added six
more in the seventh to take a relatively easy 16-4 triumph over
the visiting Gary nine.
Jeff Collier, Wahama's unbeaten righthander, started on
the mound and picked up his eighth consecutive victory
without a loss. Collier worked four innings before giving way
to teammate Mark Smith who pitched one hit ball for the
remainder of the contest.
After a scoreless first frame, Wahama too advantage of a
'
hit batsmen and three successive
bases on balls enroute to a
six-run inning.
Vince Waver was struck by a pitch to lead things off
followed by walks to BuddyRose, Jay Hessonand Tom
Thompson to force in the ~arne's first tally.
Jeff Collier then aided his own cause by stroking a double
to left center to score two more and make it 3~ .
Rick Buzzard's single scored Thompson and Collier and
later scored himself on an error by John Spencer to make it 60.

Gary came back with one run in its half ofthe winning on
a long home run by Maril Wooldridge to make it 6-1.
The visitors pulled to within two with a three-run third
frame with all three runs coming after two were out. Chris
Kroll got a walk to start the rally followed by a single off the
bat of. John Spencer before Wooldridge socked his second
homer of the day to make it 6-4.
From that point on it was all Wahama as they went on to
score twice in the fourth twice in the sixth and six more times
in the seventh to put the game on ice.
Three Falcon starters lashed out two hits apiece in Vince
Weaver, Jay Hesson and Jeff Collier with Collier and Hesson
having the only extra base knocks for the winners with both
getting credit for a double.
Other Wahama hitters were Rick Buzzard,Tim Litchfield,
Mark Smith, Jack Smith and Phil Hobbs.
Gary had five hits in the game with Wooldridge's two
homers the big blows. John Spencer, Mark Mathis and Rick
Lopez had the remaining three safeties for the losers.
The Falcons are now down to the final four in the ao or Ole
tourney and only time will tell iflhey can bring home a state
championship.
ab r h rbi
WAHAMA(l6 )
4 2 I 2
Rick Buzzard,ss
I 0 0 0
Donald Russell, ph
3 I I 0
Tim Litchfield,cf
3 2 I I
Mark Smith,3b
·Jack Smlth,c
5 I I 0
Vince Weaver ,ss
4 2 2 3
Buddy Rose,lf
3 2 0 0
Jay Hesson,dh
4 2 2 3
Tom Thompson,lb
3 I 0 I
Krei~ Sayre,ph
1 09 0 1
Jeff Collier, p
4 3 2 2
Phil Hobbs,ph
I 0 1 1
TOTAL.S
36 16 II 14
GAIH' (4)
Jeff Joyce,cf
George Pinter ,dh
Lovis Bacho,rf
Chris Kroll,ss
John Spencer ,3b
Mark Wooldridge,c
Mark Mathis,p
John Gouge ,2b
Roger Swartz,lf
Rick Lopez, 1b
TOTAL.S

ab r h rbi
3 0 0 0
4 0 0 0
0 0 0 0
3 I 0 0
4 I I 0
2 2 2 4
3 0 I 0
3 0 0 0
2 0 0 0
2 0 I 0
26 4 5 4

1234567 r he
Wahama
0 6 0 2 0 2 6 - 16 11 1
Gary
0 I 3 0000 - 4 57
Errors-Weaver, Spencer 3 Gouge, Joyce Kroll, Pinter
DP · Wahama I SB-Joyce, Buzzard, Litchfield, Weaver,
Collier, 2BH-Collier, Hesson HR.-Wooldridge 2
PITCHING
IP R H SO BB
Collier~
4 4 4 3 4
3 0 I 3 I
M.Smith
Mathis(lp )
11-3 4 0 1 5
Pinnter
5 9 09 6 3
Boyer
2-3 3 2 2 1
Balk-Mathis 2 HPB-Litchfield 2 (by Pinter) Vince Weaver (by
Mathis ).

FREE CLOTHING DAY
The Gallia - Meigs Com·
munity Action Agency will
hold its Free Clothing Day for
low income persons ·on Thursday , May 25, from 9 a.m. until
12 noon . The agency's
clothing bank is located in the
old hi gh school building in
Cheshire.
ASSOCIATION MEETING
The Meigs Area Holiness
Association will meet at 7:30
p.m. Tuesday at the Middleport Church of the
Nazarene. The Rev . R. D.
Brown, pastor of the Danville
Wesleyan Church, will be
speaker. The public is invited.

Hl·WW TEMPS
NEW YORK !UP! )- The
highest temperature reported
Sunday to the National
Weather Service, excluding
Alaska and Hawaii, was 104
degrees at Gila Bend , Ariz.
Today 's low was 29 degrees at
Redmond, Ore.
MARRIAGE LICENSES
Kimmy Lane Pierce, 23 ,
Langsville, and Barbara
Jean Jacks, 17, Langsville.
Stephen Earl Jenkins, 22,
Rutland, and Donna Rae
Weber, 25, Route I, Middleport .
Larry Joe Pettit, 30,
Middleport, and Diana Pearl
Pettit, &amp;Jute 1, Long Bottom.

SECRETARIAL REFRESHER

On June 12 there will be an opening for
beginning and advanced Typing and
Shorthand Classes at Gallipolis Business
College. Weekdays or night classes . Both
are being offered.

ENROLL NOWI
For more information contact lee E. Tyler,
446-4367 .
No. 75-02-0472 B

:

Tomato, mango
plants found

I

Area Deaths

MRS. MARlE LARlMORE
Mrs. Marie Larimore,
former resident of Meigs
County, died Thursday at her
home in Newark following a
lingering illness.
She was the wife of the Rev.
M. C. Larimore who was
pastor of the Syracuse
Church of the Nazarene for
nine years. Besides her
husband, Mrs. Larimore is
survived by a brother,
Russell Scott, of Newark.
Funeral services were held
on Saturday in Ne·wark.

Dally Sentinel Publisher
Richard S. Owen was
surprised, to say the least,
when he went to his station
wagon In Pomeroy late
Monday morning and found
tomato and mango plants
on the front noor of his car.
II Is believed that the
purchaser of the plants
placed them In the wrong
vehicle. The owner - and
he had better hurry - can
claim his plants at the
Dally Sentinel offl~e.
:-:·:::::::::::;:::::: :::::::.:-:·:·:·:-:·:·:·:·:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:&lt;·:·:·::

Hospital News
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Saturday Admissions Helen Leifheit, Pomeroy;
Herbert Roush , Racin e;
Mary Bostic, Middleport.
Saturday Discharges Gloria Frederick , Mary
Layne, Pauline Jeffers,
Mildred Gaul, Rhoda Simpson, Errol Follrod.
Sunday Admissions - Lena
Adkins, Accoville, W. Va .;
Russell Cline, Long Bottom;
Flossie Prunty, Bidwell ;
Kathryn Jones, Pomeroy;
Walter Harris, Syracuse;
Bobby Porter , Rutland ;
Bernice Clark, Coolville;
Stephany Gardner, Pomeroy.
Sunday Discharges
Stella Durst .

BILL KESLAR

Keslar candidate
for GOP position

Bill Keslar, chairn1an of
the Muskingum County
Republican
Executive
Committee, announced today
he is a candidate for lOth
Distr ict State Ce ntral
Committeeman in th e
primary election June 6.
Kesler is a Zanesville
businessman who has been
Holzer Medical Center
active in Republican politics
(Discharges, May 19)
for many years. He is
Gerald Bachtel, Brenda president of Keslar Supply
Beatty, Penny Beaver, Mary Company and is owner or
Betz, Mary Bolin, Sarah Baker 's Restaurant. He
Bolin , Virginia Carroll, resides at 1220 Newark Hoad
Deborah Davis, Rhonda with his wife Ellen . They
Debord, Karen Ellyson, Betty have two married children.
Gay, Richard Gee, George He
attended
Miami
Greene, Clara Harmon , University and the University
&amp;Jsetta Hollingshead, Mrs. ur Alabama . He was a
William Howe ll and son, member of Delta Tau Delta
Myra Hysell , Edward fraternity .
Jackson, Goldye Johnson ,
Keslar has - been Falls
Marjann Keat on. Janet Township Republi ca n
Matthews, Gregory Neer, Commi tteeman for many
Hobart Niday, Sr., Ramona years. He ha s been chainnan
Poetker, Mary Potts, Bonnie
Simpkins, Everet Sims,
Sherry Sites, !rna Swingle,
Audrey Theobald, Gladys
Wallace, Ruth Wright.
(Discharges, May 20)
Stanley Benson, Jud y
Canter , Samuel Carpenter,
COLUMBUS - The Ohio
Ca rolyn Fisher, Caro l
Gilmore, Ralph Hall, Norah Department of Natural
Herrell, Okey John so n, Resources IODNR l to da y
Charlotte Little, Garnett announced publication of a
Moore , Dorothy Oldaker, comprehensive water plan
Aaron Queen , Mrs. Jerry for Central Ohio. The report
Roberts and son, Karen is the fourth or five regional
plans being done as part or
Spencer.
the Ohio Water Development
(Births, May20)
Mr . and Mrs. Rod ney Plan.
The 400-pa ge plan contains
Bowen, a sOn, Albany .
detailed recommendations
(Discharges, May 21)
Gino Barsotti, Ca rroll for water supply sources,
Deer, Delia Fultz, April water treatment fa cilities,
Herdman , Glenna Hort on, fl ood plain management ,
Ethel
Jordan ,
Betty water conservation and use or
resources
for
Robinson , Ben Russell , water
Lorraine Sayre, Jan e recreational purposes in a 27Skelton, Ronni e Williams, county area.
Co unti es in the region
Richard Wiseman, Jr .

uf the Muskingum . County
Executive Committee for 10
years. He is past president of
Zanesville City Council, and a
member and past chainnan
of the Muskingum Health
Boa rd . He serves on the
Muskingum County Board of
F.lcctions.
His civic activities include
membership in the Zanesville
Rotary Club, Ameri ca n
Leg ion 40 &amp; 8 1he is a veteran
of World War 11 ), Fraternal
Order of Eagles, F.lks Club,
Aladdin Shrine and Aladdin
Shrine Brutal Brothers, and
Huya l Order of Jesters. He is
a past national officer of the
Jaycees, a past president or
the Ohio Jaycees, and a JCI
Senator. He is also past
president of the Zavi Shrine
Club, and is presently a
member of the Forest Avenue
Pre s byterian Chur c h.

Comprehensive water
plan is published

Rebels
(Continued from Pile 1)
Ministry announced two
Legionnaires had died and 12
were wounded in the rour~y
operation .
It said 250 rebels had been
killed. French and Belgian
army officers estimated 150
whites were slain by the
rebels in cold blood.
But there was no word of
another 60 whites forced to
leave the town as hostages
with the rebels, who
retreated mostly in stolen
trucks or on foot to safety
beyond the Angola and
Zambia borders.
The Legionnaires fanned
out of the town, finding some
rebels north and west of the
city and in the nearby town of
Malinka, the ministry said.
Fren ch paratr oo pers
tracked rebels who were
reported to have donned
civilian clothes and hidden in
the town when news of the
impending Legionnaires
attack spread to Kolweo.i.
The nine days of terrorist
rule could be seen by the
bodies sprawled in the
streets, clinging to fences, or
piled up in some houses.
In one small, white house,
the rescue forces found 34
bodies and a woman , hit by
five bullets, but still alive,
buried under the corpses of
her friends .
President Mobutu Sese
Seko blasted the Soviet
Union , Angola, Cuba, Algeria
and Libya, saying their
" pompous denials " about
their countries' involvement
in the rebel invasion would
not fool anybody .

Workers
(Continued from Pile 1)
''They were all well pleased
to work for the famili es,
because they felt they would
need a little bit of help right
now." explained Don Smith,
business manager of Local
1085 of the Laborers Union.
At the cooling tower, there
was a noticeable lack of
activity.
"They don 't know when
the job will start back up the one that collapsed ,"
Smith said.
"Everything else around
the plant is going. But I don 't
look for anything to go for
quite some time of the cooling
tower, where the scaffolding
collapsed."
Employees, themselves,
struck up the notion of
working a day and giving
their earnings to the families
of the victims, six of whom
wpro from Ohio.
Contracton took them up
on a challenge to match their
wages, assuring the families
of a double portion. Smith
was unable to estimate how
much the fund collected from
the one day of work .
" It was worker s that
wanted to do it themselves,"
Smith said. "We just more or
l~s went along and backed
them on it."
Workers at the Pleasants
power
station
of
Monongahela Power Co.
included men from all crafts.
The scaffolding accident
remains under investigation
by safety experts from the
Occupational Safety and
Health Administration in
Washington .

CONCLAVE SLATED
HEAD INJURY
A
~tated conclave of Ohio
The Pomeroy Emergency
Valley
Commandery 24 and
Squad was called to village
Order
of
the Temple will be
hall at 5:27 p.m. Sunday for
held
at
7:30p.
m. Wednesday
Mildred Johnson who had a
at
the
temple.
All
Sir Knights
head injury. She was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital. are invited.

covered by the plan include :
Adams, Athens, Champaign,
Clinton, Delaware, Fairfield,
Fayette, F'ranklin, Gallia,
Highland , Hocking, Hardin,
Jackson, Lawrence, Logan,
Madi son, Ma ri on, Meig s,
Morrow, Morgan , Perry,
Pickaway, Pike, Ross, Scioto,
Union and Vinton .
Major recommendations in
the report call for :
-Con~t ructi o n or nine new
water supply reservoirs and
48 add iti onal water well
fi elds. The new reservoirs arc
proposed
at
Galion,
Ca ledonia , Marion. Sunbury,
Sabina,
Hill sboro,
Wa shin gton Co urt House,
Somerset and Columbus.
- Immediat e expansion of
17 of the 136 public water
systems in the region to meet
current water supply standards . Estimated cost of
expansion nee ded im mediately is $8.6 million.
-- 17 loca l watershed
const ructi on proj ects for
fl ood control. Most are minor
projects
which
would
alleviate local flooding .
The proposed Darby Creek
Reservoir, subject of much
controversy, was found to be
a much more expensive
so urce of wat er for the
Columbus area than several
alternatives recommended in
the plan.
Copies of the Central Ohio
Water Plan will
be
distributed to public agencies
in the planning region and to
libraries throughout the
state.
The report is available to
the public for $25 a copy. The
price includes sales taxes and
mailing charges. It can be
obtained
fr om
the
Publications Center , Ohio
Department of Natural
Resources, Fountain Square,
Columbus 43224. Checks of
money orders should be made
payable to: Division of
Geological Survey.

Call for Appointment
Meigs area women wishing
an appointment for the free
cervical cancer clinic to be
1 held Wednesday at Heath
United Methodist Church in
BERTHA ROUSH
Middleport are to call 992·
Services for Bertha Jean 7531 in the daytime or 992-5832
&amp;ush, 19, New Haven, who in the evenings. There are
was killed Friday night by a still several appointments
gunshot wound, will be open for Wednesday's clinic.
conducted Tuesday at 1:30
p.m. at Foglesong Funeral
Home, Point Pleasant, by the
Rev . Jimmy Lewis. Burial
will follow at Gravel Hill
Cemetery, Cheshire.
95
Mrs. Roush was shot at
approximately 11 p. m .in a
rural area near West
Columbia .
A Ewington, 0. man,
&amp;ckie Lynn Hall, 26, was
charged with voluntary
manslaughter following the
shooting and is currently
confined in the Mason County
jail in lieu of posting $10,000
bond set by Magistrate Miles
Epling.
Mrs. Roush was born April
9, !959 in Gallia County, a
daughter of Hobert (Happy)
and Elnora Sparks Ingels,
who survives.
Other survivors include her
husband, Greg Roush, New
Haven; a son, Gregory
Shawn, at home; four sisters,
Carolyn Sue, Obriea, Fla.,
Linda, Middleport, 0.,
Sharon, Chester, 0. and
Roberta, Coolville, 0.; and a
brother, James, Jr., Henderson, Ky.
Friends are being received
at the Foglesong Funeral
Home today from 2 to 4 p.m.
and 7 to 9 p.m.

MARY CAIN
Mary Edith Cain, 71, a
resident of the Patriot
Community, died Sunday
evening in the Holzer Medical
Center.
She was born Feb. 26, 1907.
in Kanawha County, W. Va. ,
daughter of the late Francis
Scherer and Mrs. Ida Scherer
of Point Pleasant.
She married Oscar L. Cain,
Dec. 28, 1929 in Charleston,
W. Va. and he survives along
with the following children:
&amp;bert Cain, Goldsboro, N.
C.; Kenneth Cain of Lake
Park, Fla., and Atty. Joseph
L. Cain of Gallipolis; three
daughters, Ida Miller of
Orient, 0 .; Patricia Saunders
or Scottown and Mary Evelyn
Cain, Patriot.
Other survivors include
four brothers, Norman
Scherer, Cleveland; Alfred
Scherer of Escanaba, Mich.;
Charles Scherer of St.
Albans, W. Va. and Thomas
Scherer of Point Pleasant, a
sister, Evelyn Cantrell of
Point Pleasant. There are
also 10 grandchildren.
She wsa a member of St.
Louis Catholic Church,
Church Women United,
Catholic's Women's Club and
Cat holic Daughters of
America.
Requiem mass will be held
at 10 :30 a.m. Wednesday at
St. Louis Catholic Church.
Father A. J. Golubiewski will
officiate. Rosary will be
given at 8 p.m. Tuesday at the
Warehime Funeral Home,
Upper River Rd. Calling
hours will be held at the
funeral home from 2-4 and 7-9
p.m. Tuesday.
Burial will be in Haven of
Rest Memorial Gardens at
Redhouse, W. Va.
·:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:

COLUMBUS (UPI) State Treasurer Gertrude
W. Donahey reported today
that tax collections for
April total $345 million,
bringing revenues tor the
first!O months of th fiscal
year to $3.3 billion.
Mrs. Donahey said the
total is $441 million, or 15.1
percent ahead of the same
period for fiscal 197&amp;-77.
Last month, the yearly
total was running 18.3
percent ahead.

!

ELBERFELDS

SAVE

'29

Tuition
(ConUnued from Pille I)
its cost - $780 million by
fiscal 1980 - hard-pressed
middle class parents badly
need the tax relief.
Outside the House and
Senate chambers,
compromise appeared to be
finally in sight on the key
roadblock
to
energy
legislation .
Three congressmen
disclosed Friday they had
cleared up their differences
on a side issue of gas pricing.
That seemed to cement a 1312 majority among House
conferees for a natural gas
plan phasing out federal price
controls by 1985.
The leadership of a HouseSenate energy conference
committee called a Tuesday
session for a formal, public
vote on the proposal. If the
full conference adopts the
plan , it could l!e a big step
toward completing action on
Carter's energy poli cy
proposals.

The"bright idea "
Exclusrve 6·way Drai·ANap grves precrse se ttrngs - lowest nap to
deepest shag
1 op·Frllrng drsposable
ust bag avord s clog·
rng .
neeas
lewer

Gold is so ductile th~t one
ounce of it ca n be drawn out
into a wire :l5 miles Ion~ .

Headll gh l lrnd s
rn darkest co rner s

Home Furnishing
1st Floor

ELBERFELDS
IN
POMEROY

.·.·.·.·.· ... :;:;::&gt;::&gt;:::·:-:-:-:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:·:::::;:;:;:;:;:

· Entry Permit
A visa is an endorsement or
a notation, usually rubber
stamped in a passport by a
representative or the country
to b\! visited. It certifies that
the lx!arer or the passport is
to be permitted to enter that
country for a certain purpose
and lcnl(th or time.
SUIT BY BELL
CINCINNATI (UP! ) .,.- An
alleged gasoline leak has
prompted a $54,438lawsuit by
Cincinnati Bell against the
Standard Oil Co. and a
former service station
operator.
The lawsuit, filed Friday in
Hamilton County Common
Pleas Court, charges the
phone company suffered
service cable damage and
outages last year around a
Standard Oil station in the
suburb of Cheviot. Workers
discovered gasoline at a
nearby manhole, and a
gasoline leak at the statioq
later was confirmed by
Standard Oil,. the suit says.

STANLEY

Stanley H1297 Aluminum levels feature
three 360 vials, two plumb,
one level: each protected with
dust-proot vial covers. 18".
24" and 26" models available.

SAYRE HARIMARE

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