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                  <text>. 10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Monday, June 5, 1978

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

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

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

Southern

The World Today

Effort

Zaire gets 1,500 troops

SECRETARIAL REFRESHER

HENRY E. CLELAND, JR.

•

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

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

HOSPITAL NEWS

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

Brown

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Election
polls open
until7:30

Students geuing
•

•

experzence zn

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

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

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

VOL. XXIX

NO. 36

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

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

0

'¥

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

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

commissioners

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

•

enttne
PRICE FIFTEEN Wm

TUESDAY, JUNE 6, 1978

p omeroy

Council OK's
$50,000 for paving

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

Child hurt

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

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

at y

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

Discusses police jurisdiction

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

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

•

e

Noted evangelist, singer,

AGE ROOM AIR CONDITIONER

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

Site preparation
discussed again

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

ED IRWIN

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

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

Large window

broken at EHS

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

(J

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

The World Today

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

NnwvouKNO~

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

�3- The Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, June 6, 1978

By LEE LEONARD
COLUMBUS (UP! )- Ohio
voters vtstted thelf polling
places today , wtth a
re latt vely
hght
vote
antl ctpated m pnm ary
ballotmg for state and loca l
off tces and tssues
Secretary uf State Ted W
Brown predtcled a turnout of
1.650,000 - a reducuon of
almost 200,000 from 1974 and
the lowest for a gubernatonal
prunary Since 1966
A low turnout co uld be
mterprete d to fav or the
status quo, meanmg - m
terne&lt; of today 's htghltghts the
renomm at ton
of
Repubhcan Go\ James A
Rhodes and a htgh rate of
re Jel'tJon for schoo l tax

le vt es, man y constdered
cructal to school operungs
next fall

Rhodes, 68, fa ce d a Republicans that Rhodes has development mtsswns
Lt Gov Richard F. Celeste
challenge from veteran state been around long enough .
and
hiS runmng mate,
Rep Charles F Kurfess , R·
For the fir st ttme ,
C ount y
Bowlung Green, m h1s b•d for candidates for governor and Fr a nkltn
renommatton to run for a l ~e ut en ant gove rnor were Co mnu ss ion er Michael J
fourlh term
nommated 10 teams, and Doman, were heavy favorThe re were 138 schoo l there were contests m both Ites to win the Democratic
money 1ssues on the ballot, th e
Democ rati c
and nomination for governor and
mcludm g 26 requests for Republican party pnrnaries ileutenant gov ernor. They
urgently needed new money
Rhodes' runnmg mate was had token oppos1t10n from
tb keep distncts such as Cuya h o g a
Co unt y Dale R Reusch. a Lod•
Cleve la nd and Co lumbus Commt sstoner Geor ge V autoworker and officer m the
operatmg
Vomovtch Kurfess teamed Ku Klux Klan, and Robert
Kurfess, 48, has 22 years m w1th Dr . Luc1lle G Ford , Strittmatter, a Lakemore
the Legislature and has been Ashland College economics prmter
Other statewide contests
Repubhca n leader smce 1967 professor.
He ts the first Repubhcan of
Kurfess and Dr Ford cam· were for the Republican
statewtde stature to put the pa1gned n ght up through . nommat1ons for attorney
governor to the test smce election day , but Rhodes, general, treasurer and one
Rhodes entered the arena of basmg much of h1s campa1gn Oh10 SUpreme Court seat, and
the
Democratic
state poltucs m 1952.
on h1s efforts to attract jobs to for
Any success achieved by Oh to, spe nt Monday m nommabon for a second Suthe GOP leg•slat•ve leader Detroit and planned to be 10 preme Court seat.
Also on th e ballot were
was expected to be Mtlwauk ee and Chi cago
- Cont ests for part y
mterpreted as a fee lung by today
on
mdu stn al

nommations for 22 of the
state 's 23 congressiOnal
seats. - Nominations for all
99 Oh1o House seats and 17 of
the 33 Ohio Senate seats
-Stale Issue 1, a
constituttonal amendment to
make it easier to get public
IOillatlves and referenda on
the ballot and make them
eas1er
to read and
understand.
Rhodes ,
the
oldest
governor in the nation, is
completing his 12th year as
chtef executive
W1nn m g nomtna tlons
Without opposition and
opposing each other in the fall
are state Auditor Thomas E
Ferguson, a Democrat, and
state Sen . Donald E Lukens,
R-M1ddletown ;
and
Secretary of State Brown, a
Repubilcan ,
and
h1s

.
DemocratiC opponent, state
Sen. Anthony J Celebrezze
Jr ., of Cleveland
Also winning the primary
w1thout oppos1hon but
o awaiting the selection of their
fall opponents were state
Attorney General WUllam J
Brown and state Treasurer
Gertrude W. Donahey Both
are two-term Democrats.
Competmg
for
the
Republican nommatton for
attorney general were
Ctnctnnatl Coun cilman
Walter E . Beckjord and
Frankbn County Prosecutor
George C. Smith, the 1974
nomtne e whom William
Brown defeated
Battlmg for the Republican
nommat10n for treasurer
were the 1974 nommee ,
Richard H. Harrts of
Wauseon; George C Ro~ers,

· I don"t thmk people only
about men domg grand
commg

home to the little woman m
bed We are lucky to have
grown-up women . s trong as
ad n•sses and also at the box

olf1ce. wtth a pos1t10n m the
ftlm world so they can contors of "hat they want to
do "

- Actress Liv UUmann,
Corella Scolt King
the only woman on the Dine·
_ _.:..:.:..:..::::..:..:..:..:.:..;.:.:..::::.._ person JUry at the 1978
'' Personal Inn uendos a re Cannes Film Festival, call·
be neath contempt They es- lng for realistic female roles
t• bllsh once a gam the FBI's m movies.
va le ltves and developmg

" Btgotry and rellgtous

tm;1gt na t1 ve scenari OS for mtolerance, though repeat·
edly depnv ed of legal and
thetr own purposes "

- Corella Scott King, normattv e s upport by
widow of Dr Martin Luther church and slate alike. are
Kmg .Jr . acc·using the FBI nevertheless ahve and well
of treating lht• ciVIl n ghts 10 the Umted Sta tes of Amer·
mO\.c mcnt a .s a n 'a lirn e n- tea of 1978 "
emy attack on the Unitt'tl - Professor Gillian Lindt
Slates ...
"Once vou 've walk ed on

the m om~. yo u can never
un wal k

Wh eth er

abroad as

.1

vou ' r e

or Columbia University,

:e¥ -

TV•••in Review

Berry's World

By JOAN HANAUER
UP! Television Writer
NEW YORK (UP! )
Cambodia ts undergomg the
ultimate revolution and while
•t has a few adm1rers, to most
observers tt IS repressive
perhaps to the point of what
one" observer call s auto·
genoctde.
The CBS News Spectal
"What's Happened to Cam·
bodia ?" whtch goes on the air
June 7, 8-9 p m ., Eastern
ttme , hi ghlights both the
maj or aspe cts of the
revoluti on and the mam
dlfft culty w1th accurately
gauging It Anchorman Ed
Bradley ticks off the c1t1es
from Belgrade to Bangkok
that the network news teams
roamed Ill putting together
the documentary.
He ts forced to add the one
place CBS was unable to go
was Cambodta.
Denied
access
to
Ca mbodia, or Democratic
Kampu chea,
as
the
Commumsts who took over
three years ago prefer to caD
tt , the network mterviewed
experts - mcludmg those
ftr sthand observers, the
Ca mbodian s m Thatland
refugee camps
It also shows excerpts from

speakmg at a Rhode Island

bu smessm:m or S)'mpos ium on r e ligion.

on a holiday. people don't
look at ~ou as an ythm K b ut
an Amt_•ltcan as tro n a ut "

-

" I 'm too pr1vate a person ,

and my prt vate hie belongs

Gt•ne Ce rna n, the for-· to me

mer rommander

or Apollo

- Actress Ava Gardner,

17. ~ hl&lt;' h mad t.~ th f la st saytng she will ne\·er write
ma nn t:d night to th•• moon m her memoirs
Oe l'e mb(•r 19i2.

It all goes back to the
· The Sov1et Umon 1s m· tunc we came home and
creas.ng tls null ta ry th reat started the warehouse I
to Western Europe , st n vmg could tell h1m what was
to expand

1 t~

mfluence 1n t he workmg and what

w as n o t

Mt ddle r::ast and c•rrymg because f kept the books."
- Rosalynn Carter. the
out a se n es of nuhta ry ad·
ve ntures tn Af rl ('a It 1s t he U.S t' lr&lt;t Lady, saying her
most dangerous source of a influto ce on Pre sJdept
new world w ar and as sure t o Jimmy Carter's working d,..

be tts ch1 ef msttgator ..
clslons stems lrom the early
- F ore~gn Mini s ter days of the famUy 's peanut
Hua ng Hua of Chtna , speak · business In Plains, Ga.
ing a t lht.' Unitt'd. Nations
Sp4:('Ja l se ~s ion on disarma·
men I

· Eve r&gt;one rloes 1t a nd n&lt;r
OOtl v tares F' a\.e yea r s ago,
p rl!..; cm uff1na ls "' ould have
co ns1&lt;.J rrcd at more se rious

than thry

cl o

(!, lq 'II 0\1\tA IIl ~~

today But 10

vcc.1rs ago, th l'V would have

de met! •t ever happened "
- Phol Lcshin, deputy
ro mm • "slo n t~ r

of th e New
Ynrk ( 'ity Department of
rorn·&lt;'tiUn, di sr ussing the
tolrra ti(HI of honHtst•" ua lity
In Jlrl "iOil S

" H1s name s 1nfla r10n - he sca res EVER Y·
BODYI '
Rosalynn Carter

a film taken by a Yugoslav
televisiOn crew th1s sprmg
and those are among the most
fascinating aspects of the
program
They ·show streel scenes m
Phnom Pehnh - scenes of
empty streets, uninhabited
hou ses , deserted shops .
Where are the people?
They have been sent to
cooperatives , to butldtng
sttes , to wherever the
secrettve rulers ol their
country beh eve they are
needed m a land that has
foresworn mooey , salar1es
and such other luxurtes as
postal service.
The Yugoslav film shows
th e Cambodians as a
stngularly joyless people .
Perhaps they are sullen,
perhaps they reflect a
senousness of purpose. Form
your own judgments.
But it Is difficult to retam
objectivity when you hear a
small Cambodian boy in a
refugee camp talk about the
execution of his family - and
watch him wipe away his
tears as he talks of revenge
An Australian author and
1ournallst based 10 Hong
Kong estlfllates that between
1.8 million and 2.2 million
Cambodians have died smce

Arlington monument goes unnoticed

Screaming Eagles: forgotten heroes
ll} Tom Tiede
lmttall y, the IOist was sent
WASHI;IIGTON ' NEAl- Thts lo Europe to lead the way for
IS r~ ~turv that ha ppened one the Normandy InvasiOn. As
y~ar ngr. 1\ ncl ;t't It IS st11l para troo ps, the dtvl st on
m " "'· 1n a "ienc.;p , beca use 1l members were dropped over
h"' n•&gt;t hcrn wtdely told It's the French beaches 10 the
I ht
Slu r ~ of huw. last dPad uf mght to soften Nazi
M&lt;·monal Da y, the nal ton resistance That done, they
IUin(;d tls b-.ck nn hundrt:.cls rolled overland w1th other
of tllousanth of soldters. ltv- forces as part of what was to
tug ,md dl•CJJ . wh o h e~ve serv- be a fmal uffenso ve agamst
t&lt;l '" tlw JOi st Atrborne DIVI- Germa ny
SIIlll
The offensive bogged down ,
'1ht• d 1\ I "' iOn should need huwcver, when German etr·
"' dill tntrodueuon
It has rntes launched an attack of
l&gt;•&lt;•n ft ~ htm ~ Amenc• 's ba t· thet r o" n tn the Ardenne
ties wtth dtsllnrllon for ncar· Fores t Stri kin g swtf tl y
' II four decades Its an atr agatnst surpnsed Amencans,
outfot. bynamcd ""The the Wehrmacht rushed mto
Sl'ream&gt;ng ~~ a g les · and tt Luxembourg and Belg1wn.
hn~ cctrrwd lhe Arncnca n Thts was the Battle of the
f!;~g from the frw:cn foxholes
Bu lge
The Ge rman s
of World W,or flto the steam· desper• tely w• nted to break
tng chaparra l &lt;•f V&lt;ctnam
U~r uu gh tu reach the v1U.I
The dt vtston was formed Ill seaports of Antwerp.
1942. svmewhut llt lt , a1tualThe Situation has since
ly , "' tlw war agamst littler been recounted many tunes ,
For all ots taruy IJC~tnmng, m books and cmema If D
huwt'vcr , 1t wa s to piHy a m~ ­ Day was the turning pomt of
JVr tf nut cp1 ca l rule 111 the the wa r tn Europe, the Battle
r:urupean !heater ft was ln ol the Bulge rescued the m·
f&lt;ot l tu emerge from that tloatove. Htstonans beheve a
{'UIIlba t ti S the bcHl ft!l OgiJIZ· &lt;.erma n Vlctllry m Belgtwn
o•d and peolt•ps must publluz· would ltkely have prolonged
i-d rn tllta ry un~t m the world
lhe wa ~ and cost the Alhes

""""It

shape. "

Seaver struck out five St.
Louis Cardmals 10 the last
two mrung s as he seemed to
be gett10g stronger
The Cmcinnatt Reds used a
run« ormg smgle by Dan
Drtessen m the etghth to beat
the Cards , 2·1
"f overpowered them at the
end, " Seaver smd "Earlier
10 the game, I felt temble.
My rhythm was all fouled up,
I felt weak, and my legs felt
hollow But I started feeling
better when we got !he second
run ' '

Seaver, pttchmg mhts 4ooth
game m the Natwnal League,
struck out etght and allowed
six h1ts m wmnmg his ftfth
stratght game and raiSing his
record to &amp;4
"People have been asking,
'what's wrong \lolth Seaver, "'
Cincmnall Manager Sparky

dearly in terms of addtUuna l
casualties.
Much of the drama of the
llflle took place tn the Vlctrnty
of a town r;olled Bastogne,
where seven German Panzer
Dtv ls lon s s u rroun ded
members of the IOist Air·
borne D1v1ston The latte•
were und er stege for a month
The weather was btlter, suppiles were gone, and still the
101 refused to step out of the
way.
The diVISIOnal sptnt w•s
unmortallzc&gt;d m a four-letter
wurd When German offi cers
approached the Amencans to
sue for surrender, they
rece1ved an tnsptred reply·
Gen Anthony McAuliffe, ac·
ttng commander of the IOl st,
told the Germans ""nuts." The
divtsion held out, and the ftrsl
major Wehnnacht uffcns1ve
wa s crushed.
The 101 lost 420 men du1111g
tha• histone conf rontattoll
Later on, dunng seve n
frustrating years 10 V1etna m,
It was to lose hundreds more
Ea rly thts decade , then,
members of the dovtswn
decided to butld a Screa1mng
Eagle mooo untl:nt to honor till'

dead , and also the survtvors,
who had gtven so much to the
umt
As tt happened, the monument would not be ra tsed
eas•ly Fur one thmg, there
was the cost of the proJect
$1 10,000 for destgn and cull·
strut ti Oil An H.SSIJCUtt\On

or

wounded m two wars. One
year later, on another
Memortal Day, the monument tu the Battered
Bastards of Bastogne 1s still
wtthout appropriate natiOnal
homa ge.

c&gt;d the proJect, and Congress
relented The monument was
butll tn 1977 near Arltngton's
gate .
And so, la st Memunal Day,
the IO lst Airborne D•v•s•on
uwtted digmtanes from all
over to w1tness the unve11tng
and detllcat1on The p1 es1dent
Before you get your
was asked Members of the
diploma,
yuu don 't have
House and Senate were ask·
enough
trammg;
after you
ed And uf course the med1a
get
tt,
you're
overqualified.
were also urged to come to
record the proud moment lor
the public and, tndeed, for
THE DAILY SENTINt: L
history
OE\'OTEOT0111 E
But few attended Ftfleen·
INTP.REST 01'
MEIGS-MASON AREA
hundred members of the
RURERT HO EFLICH
Diviswn were there, but the
Ctty Editor
PuUllsht'll dal ly e1u.:t pt Saturday
publtc representatives did not
by The OijJu VHIII!)' PtJblishml!!
show The prestdent was Cumprtt n)'·Mull lrlli.'&lt;IW, Inc , IJ1
fiSh ing 111 Georgia . Con- Cuurt St Pumt'roy. Otnu 45769
O H IL~ Phurw w.l 'l i:Mi
gressmen were scattered at UlL'IJUC!f,lj
F.dilurw ii 11Uiit! 9frl-21~7
van ous oth er fun ctions.
St:t ollll d allll pusUII(t! JM~Ill at
, Oh lo
There was virtually no media l ~N~tll llTU)'
t l unal ~ad vt rt lSi n w. rcprckn
cove!'age , hence few people in t&lt;HI VI! IJwtlun ASIOi.'ltHt ~. 3101
the country knew anything of F.oc l1d Ave, Clo:·vdMtKl , Ohio 44115
S u ~ r l pt lun nit~:. l:&gt;tllverOO b)
the occaston
tollrrll' t w ht: t t &lt;tVII LI.IIb\t: 7~ c:tntJi ptt
Toda y lhe Sc rea ming Wl&gt;t k Ky Motor Hu\llt wt ~ri! Clrrlt'r
nut aViiLiabl t: Ont mouth
r::agle statue stands on Arl· !'&gt;IX\'In'
~ 25 Hy mwl\ m n •uu and W Vw
tngton's Memonal Drtve It 's th VtYr S ~\! 00 S11 lnumhs
11 ~0 , • liltCI
IIIUII\h !l, $7 00
made of bronze, rests on a $}o)w,\1
11 n· St,G t-1 )' t &lt;l l Suo: mont h.~
ma 1bl e pedestal, 't IS $\,1 W r hrt!t !IIUI1lhs , $7 $0
dedu alcd lo !he 29,718 umt Su l L~ IIIJlklll Vflt t' 1111lutlu Sumlay

pa st and present 101 troops
sohct ted money by btts and
pi eces Few la rge cuntn bu·
twns were nlllde II took
several years to gather the
cash
Then a problem developed
regardmg the monument 's
stle The DIVIston mststed 1t
toe allowc&gt;d to stand al Arl·
mgtun Nattonal Cemetery.
However, a rule protnbtted
the locatiOn . W1th space at an
mcreasmg premtum m the
cemetery , federal offi ce r~
sa td only Congress could
(jUlhortze construction uf new
memonals.
At first Congress was unen·
thu s1astt c about th•· 101
munwnent. The argument
was that 1f th1s d1 v1stun butll a
statue in Arltngton , then that
div tswn would want the same
prcrogallve In the end 11 was
Hubcrl Huonpho·ey who puslo· men 1'\\ hu

1

w ~re

kllll'tl ur

I l l llt&gt;s~'i~ nln wl

MAIUE'IT A, Ohi o (UP! ) Glassboro State IS the NCAA
III
basebal l
Dtvl ston
chan:pton
The Profs, led by the
masterful p1tchmg of Bob
Pfeffer, took the crown
Monday With a 5-3 win over
host Manetta
Pfeffer, voted the tournament 's Most Va luable
Player, went the distance for
the Profs gtvmg up m ly thr ee
hits after the hfth 10mng .
W1th an assortment of cur ve
balls, sliders and screw balls,
Pfeff er struck out four to post
his lith Win aga mst JUSt two
losses
Pete Kelley , who absorbed
th e loss , also went the full
nine for Manetta, but four
errors did not help the cause
of the Pton eers who lm1shed
second m the playoffs w1th a
38-7 record
Glassboro, 29·11 on the
season, took lead lor good m
ftfth mnlng when Ralph Wen·
dell doubled m Tom Peterson
who had led oil the mrung
with a walk. Then he came
home on Dino Hall's s10gle
The Profs knocked 1n an
msurance run 10 !he etghth .
Glassboro Coac h M1k e
Bnglla credited the wm to the
Profs' defenSi ve play and to
Pfeffer " Wh en Pfeffer
pttches, all of us on the team
think positively ," he sa1d

SCIINOZZ AND CUGIE HOME : Two oldumers of show biz
are out of hospitals In the Los Angeles area Xavier Cugat and
Jimmy Durante both were released Monday - Durante after
17 days of treatment for an upper respiratory infection, and
Cugat after a runMay bout with high blood pressure. The 11$year-{)ld "Schnozzola," who has been living qutetly In
retirement since partial paralysis by a stroke in 1972, Is
reported "in good spirits" and convalescing at home Cugat,
on«lme king of the cha-cha-cha, Ism good shape at 78.

STEIGERS SPLIT: Rod Steiger Is being sued for divorce
in los Angeles by his wife of five years, and 41-year-{)ld Sherry
Steiger seeks a hefty settlement. She wants her piece of the
action in certain movie rights held by her 53-year-{)ld husband,
as weU as her share of his race horses, automobiles, bank
accounts, life insurance and pension funds. The Steigers were
married April 21 , 1973, m Malibu, Calif.
QUOTE OF TilE DAY: Marshall Brickman, co-writer
with Woody Allen of "Anrue Hall," in the July issue of VIva
magaZIIIe on the perUsof success "It's easy to sit at your desk
and wrtte m the script, 'The desert. Dawn.' But five months
later, you're wakmg up at 3 a.m 10 a motel outside Flagstaff,
Ariz. wondering what the hell you 're domg there."

Glassboro

GLIMPSES : Dustin HoHman and Colleen Dewhunt were
presenters Monday m New York's Greenwich Vlllage as Peter
Schumann's Bread and Puppet Theater won an Ohio award for
lifetime achievement and Lee Breuer took the best off.
Broadway play citaUon lor his "Shaggy Dog Animation " ...
Jack Nicholson IS in London costarrmg with Shelley Duvall In
Warner Brothers' "The Shilling," under Stanley Kubrick's
direction ... Larry White has been named president of
Columbia Pictures televiSion ann ..
conventionally educated
class; no longer even the kind
of CIVilization there Is In any
other Communist country no money, no private
dwellings, you can't shop for
food or clothes We know
there has been, and almost
certainly stlll is, great
hardship and many , many
deaths."
The CBS picture of
Cambodia is not pretty and
admittedly may not even be
totally accurate. But tt Is
thoughtprovoking and
frightening

11

,

place in derby

grand slam off reliever Kent
Tekulve sent the Braves past
the Pirates There was a
brawl when the Braves' Pat
Rockett bumped mto Tekulve
while trying to beat out a
swmgmg bunt. Tekulve took a
swmg at Rockett and both
benches cleared before order
was restored
Mets 9, Dodgen 8:
Tim Foil doubled m two
runs to t1e the score then
scored the game-wmner m
the runth to hand the Dodgers
thetr fifth stra1ght loss. Lee
Mazzlih went 4-for-li for the
Mets. Ron Cey hit a three-run
horner for los Angeles .
Phlllles 4, Giants 3:
Jlfll Mornson and pmch
hitter Bob Boone hit consecutive home runs off V1da Blue
m the etghth mnmg to g1ve
the Ph1llies a natwnally
teleVIsed victory over the
G1ants

The
Ohio
Beagle
Federation derby cham·
plonshlps were held Sun·
day at Johnstown, Ohio,
with dogs lrom the area
placing In two classes.
J . R. King, Point
Pleasant, woo In the 13 Inch
class with his female, "Oak
Ridge Little Susie," In a
class of 22 ; Franklin
Wilson, Racine, pla ced
fourth In the 15 Inch class
"lth his dog "Tu·Endle·
Wei Truman," In a class of
16.

NEW YORK (UP! ) - The
Atl an ta Braves, a yo un g
team undergomg a ftve-year
re bulldtng plan , hope to
couple
of
obt am a
" foundation blocks" today
when they get the f~rst chmce
m both phases of baseball 's
annual summer free-agent
dra ft.
The Braves are expected to
ptck ctther pow er-hittmg
second baseman Bob Horner
of Anzona State, pitcher
Expus 4, Padres 3:
Mtke Morgan of Valley H1gh
Dave Cash smgled home Schoolm Las Vegas, Nev , or
the lle-breakmg run in the pttcher Rod Boxberger of the
seventh mnmg and Andre Umverstty of Southern
Dawson htt a two-run homer Callforma when the regular
to lead the Expos over the phase of the draft begins at
Padres Rudy May went e1ght noon EDT.
inmngs for his sixth vtctory.
Horner's double pl ay
Cubs 2, Astros 1:
partner, s hortstop Hubte
Ivan DeJ esus' ba ses~oaded Brooks; Mt ch tga n State
smgle wtth one out m the outfielder KJrk Gtbson and
mnth mmng scored Steve f~rst basema n Don Troyan of
Ontiveros and gave the Cubs Sl John 's (N Y 1 are other
the1r nmth consec uttv e collcgtans expected to be
VICtory at Wngley Fteld
drafted early Gibson's selec-

020 020 Olo-5 10 1
Manetta
100 100 010- 3 7 4
Pfeffer and Holden , Kelley
and Hollin ger . W- Pf eff er
(11 -2) L-Kelley (7·1) HR.sNone

Insured?

53
70
dJ
5d
6B

33 1

326
323

Madd O)( Phil
320
Foster C1n
318
Sm1 th LA
58 31 7
Puhl Hou
62 316
Mazzllll N Y
68 315
Am encan l eagu e

19

G AB H Pel
49 186 69 371
&gt;~6 160 55 3&gt;~&gt;~
54 n 6 76 336
50 171 57 333
39 143 46 J22
dB 184 59 32 1
42136 43 Jl6
51 197 62 215
33 1:?7 40 315
d2 141 d &gt;~ 312

Bayl or , Cal 14 Thom pson

Hobson 8os 11

Run s Batted In
Nat.anal L eague Fos ler C1n
42 , Sm 1t h , L A and Montan ez.
NY l7 , Ce y LA 36. Mc Covey ,
SF 35
Amencan League R 1ce , Bos
52, Z 1S k , Tex 37, May , Balf 36
8o s
Staub ,
Oet.
Hobson
ChambliSS , NY and Ol 1ver , Te x , . . - - - - - - - - - - - . ,
35
THIS WEEK' S SPECIAL
Sto l en Bases
Nat10nal L eague
Moreno,
P1tt 2&lt;~ .
Cede no, Hou 19,
Madd ox PH II 17 Lopes LA
and Ta ver as , Ptt t ld
Am encan League
Wilson ,
K C 20 LeFlo r e Del and Cruz ,
Sea 18 O!l one, Oak l7 Wills,

·~~·

Te x 15

USED CARS

Pclch1ng
Most V1ctone s

front , mascots, Mary M11ler , Rhonda Ztrkle; front row, 1
l!J r, Cmdy Conkle, Jan Betzmg, Jamie S1sson, Kelly
Rought , Sandi M11ler, April W1se , Stephannte Rough t,
Suste Smtth ; ba ck row, from the left, Coach Jerry Rought,
Kim Batey, Lon Wtsecup, Carla Whaley, Tem Tobm,
Andrea Rtggs , Susan Ztrkle, Ann Fitch, Na ncy Sm1th and
Coach Ellen Rought.

GIRLS' SOFTBALL TEAM - Pictured are members
of the Pomeroy Semor Gtrls' slow p1tch softball team ,
coached by Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Rought. Ttoe gtrls are
wearmg umforms that they purchased through their work
on tag day . They have also purchased all of thetr
eqwpment and other tterns needed lor the tag day money
The team IS non-sponsored and members extend thanks to
the public lor generous suwort. The group mcludes

Indians dop 2-0 decision
By MARK FRIEDMAN
for the Wlute Sox.
UPI Spurts Writer
It was the fourth stratght
Btll
Nahorodn y has loss for Rtck Wa1ts. 3-&lt;i, and
somethmg that wtll never be the thtrd lime 10 the last four
dupli cated . He hits what he games, the Indians ha ve
failed to score for hlfll
can 't see
In other AL gam es,
Th e 24-yea r-old catcher
Oakland
downed Boston, 9-7,
npped a two-run double m the
Seattle
tnpped
New York, 7·
fourth mnmg Ill support Steve
3,
and
Baltimore
topped
Stone 's thr ee-hit pttchm g
Califo
rnta,
6-2,
10
10
mntngs
Monday mght when the
Ch1cago Wh•te Sox took a 2.Q A's 9, Red Sux 7:
,Wayne Gross, Mitchell
deciswn from the Cleveland
Page
and Gary Thomasson
lndtans But Nahorodny
eachdrove
mtworuns ma 13never even saw the pttch he
htt
attack
to pace Oakland
hit .
over
Bos
ton
J1m R1ce,
" I lost stght of tt hallway to
Carlton
F1sk
and
Butch
th e plate and I was lucky I
Hobson
homered
for
the
Red
even h1t tt," he satd. "But I'll
Sox,
who
lost
their
second
take tt - l'm not gomg to g1ve
straight game
it back."
Stone, who allowed only one Marillen 7, Yankees 3:
Ruppert J ones homered
runner to reach second base
and
doubled to lead a 17-hit
all mght , struck out SIX and
Seattle
atta ck a s eve ry
walked SIX to run hi s record
Marmer
had
a htt agamst the
Ill. 5-3. It was the eighth
Yankees
New
York , losers in
VIctory m the last moe games

Montrea l
New Yo r k

P• tt s br gh
St L OUIS

American Le-ague
East

San Fr an
Ctn c1na t 1
Los Ang
sa n Diego
HOu! IOn
Afl a nt a

W L Pet
78 70 583
26 21 553

W L Pet

GB
11 7

27 2.4 529 2 1 1
25 29 463 6
1116440 7
20 3&lt;1 37 0 11
West

W L Pet
32 18 640
33 20 613

529

GB
11

S1' 1
91,,

27 24
23 28

45 1

22 28
19 30

-4.40 10
388 12 1'2

Monday's Result!.
Cht cago 2, Hous ton 1
Ph i l a 4, San F ran cisc o l

M ontr eal 4, San 0 1e go 3
Atlant a 8, P l l ts burgh 4
New YOr k. 9, LOS Ang 81
CtnCI 2, 51 LOU IS I

Boston
New Yor k
Detroc t
Ba ll •m r e
MI IW iJUke

Cle,.elnd
Toron to

36
30
18
78
15
13

18
21
12
25

667
588
560
578

25
17

500
460

19 32

GB

41 1
6
, ••

9

ll

313 151.

IAUTimts EDT )

Houston t Andutar 3 2) at
Chtc i!!lgo ( Robe r ts 2 0), 2 30

Oakland
Kan C•IY
Caltf

W L

JO 71
27 21

Pet

San D1ego t Sh trl e'l' J 5l

at

pm
Los Ang el es ( Fhu 5 2l al New
Atlan t a

( Henna

Pittsbu rg h ( Roo ker

4 OJ

at

58S
56l

I'

1
3 11

26 24 570
25 24 5 10 4
Mmesota
21 30 411 2 9
CI'Hcago
20 29 .408 9
Se11 tll e
18 37 327 14
Monday 's ~ ~s ults
( hi CIIQO 2, Cl ev el an d 0
Ba l ti m o r e 6, c a11 t 2, 10 1nns
Oak land 9 Boston 1, n1ghl
Seattle 7, New Yo r k J , night

Tex a s

Ch1cago
Cleve l and
pm

Bos ton ( Rip ley 1 3 or Wr ight
20 1 at Oaio: land ! Ren ko o 11 .

10 30 p m
l&lt; ansas Cit y (Leo nard 4-81 e•
Te xas (J en kins 5·3) , 8 J S p m

Detro it &lt;Si alon 5·21 al Mit

(Sorensen 6 4l, 8 30
pm
pm
C 1C •nnar 1 (Bonha m 6 01 a t
Wednesday 's Gam es
St L O•J IS ( Den n y .4 .4), 8 35 p m
Tor on to at Cle'le , 2 '"'" n1t e
Wednesdav •s Games
Detroit at Mil wa ukee , 1 ght
Clnc mna tl at Ch iCa liJO
Chln go at M l n nest~t a , nigh t
SM Diego at Mont rea l. n•oh t
Kan sas C1ty al Tex a s , night
Los Ange les a l New Yo r k,
C t~llforn l a lit Oak land , night
nighI
New Yor~ at Sea tt le , nt ght

San Fran at

Ph il adel ph i a ,

Hous ton at Pl lfS tlur gn, n1g ht
Allllntl!l at St L OUIS, n1gh t

OBTAIN PLAYER
CLEV E LAND IU Pl )
The Cleveland lndtans have
opttoned mfteldcr · pmch
runner La rry LIUtz to the1r
Portland farm club of the
Pacthc Coast League

J1m Palmer , p1cked up ht s
ftrst wm tn hve dectstons

Vilas gains
quarterfinals
By ROLAND TYRRELL
PARI S t UP]) - " If I were
10 yea rs ) Ounger ," satd
Arthur A&gt;he , "I could handie
hnn wtth ease "
Ashe, 34, wa s La lkmg about
25-year-old Gu tllermo Vtlas
of Argen tma who beat him m
stratght sets Monda y to adva nce to the quarter.fmals of
the $400,000 French Open
tenms champwnsilt ps
After mostly listless play
unt1l
Monda y,
VIla s
responded wtth superb tenms
agat nst Ashe. loo kt ng
suddenly hke the defe nding
French champton
But the favonte to wm this
year's $42,000 lllp pnze IS sttll
BJorn Borg of S" eden, the
tournament's No. 1 seed
Borg, celeb ratmg hiS 22nd
b~rthday today , fa ces blgse rvmg Roscoe Ta nner !
Ktawah Island, S C , Ill the
fourU1 round, secure m the
knowledge he has dropped
on ly e1ght games and no sets
so far
The day 's other matches
include No 4 seed Eddie
Dtbbs, M1am1 Beach, Fla ,
agamst Polish Davis Cup
player WoJtek F1bak and
Mexi co's Paul Ra mtr ez,
seeded No 6, """ clashes
wlth V1 ctor Pec c1 of
Paraguay .
Vtlas , the No 2 seed , ma de
Ashe look like an old-ttmer as
he npped the Amen can's
ga me apart. 6-2, G-2, G-2, 10 a
95•ninute center-court rout.

Special!

Nahonal Leagu e Gr. msley ,
Mfl 9 2, Knep per , SF 7 2 John ,
L A 7 J For sc h St L 7 4 n1 ne
Pi tChers fled W1lh 6 VIC fO r lCS
Amer 1can League
Ta nana ,
Cal 9 2, GU idry , NY 80 ,
Tor r ez , Bos 8 2, Lee Bos 7 2
Fla nagan and Palmer , Ball and

1972 BUICK
SKYLARK CPE.
Au to , P .S , P B , ai r ,

Spl• llo rlf , I(( 7 4

ra d1o

Earned Run Ave rage
I Based on 54 1nnmgs p1tc hed l
Nal •ona l L eague
Kn epper ,
SF l 94 Andu 1ar H ou 2 25,
R Reusch el, Ch1 2 JO, Bonham ,
Cm 2 36. Rog ers Mi l 2 51
Ame nc an League
Gu• dry ,

'1695
1972 CUTLASS CPE.

NY I 80

Pal mer , Ba ll 2 13
John son
Oak 2 22 , Keough,
Oak 2 28 Za hn, M1nn 2 36
Str •keours
Nat•onal Leagu e
R1cha rd
Hou 99 , N•e kro , All 79 , Sea,. er ,
C1 n 77 , Blylev en
P 11! 69
Mont efusco, SF 66
Am en can League Rya n, Ca l
107 F l a n a 9 a n Bal l and
Gurd r v, NY 64 , Tanana , Cal 52
Wdcox De l and Und erwood,

RADIO
Aulo , P S ,
w hee ls

P B , Sport

1972 FORD 1/z TON

Tor 47

WITH TOPPER

River Downs
CINC INN ATI (UP))
Rockm ' Roste carne from last
place and held off Boldanc1a
at the wtre to wun the $5,000
fea ture race at Rtver Downs
by a neck Monday
Robert Wmgo pilote d'
Rockm ' Rosie over the 5\oz
furlongs m 1 06, good for
payoffs of $8 40, $4 40 and
$4.00 Talkmg Dog came m
third
Gold's Bee and Surnsauon
won the hrst two races to
make a 4-2 dally double that
was worth $38.
The 3,277 fans bet

'1295
1971 FORD

liz TON

'995

Karr &amp; VanZandt
You 'll Loke Our Quality
Way of Doong Busoness
GMAC FINANCING

992 Sl42

Pomeroy

Open Evenmgs 'ttl6 : 00
T1ISam Sat

$.108,756

PROFIT
RAISING EARTiiWORMS
C.n You AI'\IIWtr M
YES to Thnf

Q ues t 10ni~

I Do ,-ou ... ~~ w...tock'
2 Oro ,-ou want 1 bu.~MM ol ~~ own7
l Do I!OW ,...cj rf1tlfi1'W nl Of n 111 n::orTWl
4 Do I!OW hew • badt .,ard Ot otlwt ~

PfRHAPS

YOU CAN BECOME A WORM GROWERI

If ACCEPTED f'S A PRODUCER WE OF FER

*

ProfessiOnal Guldance

• Exchange Membershop

• Marketing Serv1ce
• Complete Supphes

ACT TODAY! SEND FOR YOUR FREE BROCHURE!
AND ECOLOGY BUMPER STICKER.

ASSOCIATED

( Barr ios 3 5 ) at
{M onge 2 OJ, 7 30

2 5) , 7 J5 wa uk ee

nl ght

The Cincinnati Reds
Baseball Team 11111 hold a
trial camp
baseball
Saturday at Institute, \1
Va. ,
Jim
Vennarl.
Pomeroy, team scout, sa id
today .
The camp 11111 start
al
9
a.m.
and
go until 2 p m All
boys reporting are to take
their uniforms and glove.
Balls and bats will be
provided. All boys playing
on American Legion teams
just have permission from
tbelr coach or company
commander before they
can participate and boys
still In school this year
must have permlssloo from
tbelr coach or prlnelpal to
attend. Boys are to be bel,.een 16 and 21. The camp
wUI be under the direction
ol Venoarl, Elmer Gra)
and Gene Bennett.

GB

Ba lllmor e ( 0 Ma r t mez 4 3)
pm
' at Ca l dor n 1a I f.~: va n 3 5), 10 30
Sa n F ra nctsco (M on tefu sc o 4 pm
21 at Phll ade iPh•a (L er ch J 5 L
New Yo r k (T 1dr ow 3 4 ) a t
7 35 p m
Seattle tAbboll 1 41, 10 35,
M on trea l ( Twit chell 2 6). 1 35

six of tts last se, en, had solo
homers by Thurman Munson
and Paul Blatr
Orioles 6, Angels Z·
Eddte Murray slammed a
one-out hono er to start a four ·
run , lllth-mmng rally that
gave the On oles thetr stxth
stra1ght wm Rtck Dem psey
added a run-scormg double as
Don Stan house, Ill reilef of

West

Today ' s Probabl e P1tcher5
{All T ime-s EOTJ

Todav •s Probable Pttchers

Yorlt. ( Es pinosa 5 J J. 13 OS p m

IXMNING atiLDS
INSURANCE AGENCY, INC.

Bu rroghs Al l
Gr •ff ey C.n
Buck ner Ch 1

61 333
4d 333

Del 13, May , Ball , Eva ns and

Ch•cago
Ph 1l a

complete protection with one
of our full coverage Homeown·
en' polic1es. Don't hesitate to
P.hy it safe .•. for your· fam·
ily's sake. Gee the facti.

53 183
dl 132
49 160
53 21 5
36 133
d6 169
53 214
&gt;~ 9 183
48 196
54 216

Hom e Run s
Nattonal Le ague Foster Cm
and Monday L A 11 K 1ng man
Cn•
and
Ben ch ,
Cm
10
l UI10S.k 1. P hd 9
Am encan League R 1ce, Bos

East

Avoid a total disastc:r . • . get

G AB H Pet
S1mmons St L
M ond ay LA

Le2can o Mil

National League

It Cov.ld All Go
Up in Smoke!

Mator League Leaders
By Umted Pres s l nternah onal
Batt1ng
I Ba sed on 125 at bats )
Na l 1ona l Le agu e

Coo per Mll

Ma1or League St andmgs
By Untted Press International

"

M1dway H1gh School (Texas) .
More than 800 players will
be seleded by the time both
phases of the draft are
completed Thursday. Players
taken m the regular phase
co nstst of first-time h1gh
school and college draftees.
Those selected in the
se condary phase include
those drafted prev10usly but
not stgned .
In the regular phase the
clubs select m reverse order
of thetr 1977 fimshes, With the
Na tiona I League ptcking
ahead of the American
League under a rotating
system Selec tton m the
secondary phase IS deter·
mmed through a drawmg of
the two league prestdents.
The draft w1ll be conducted
VJa a conference call tymg
the 26 clubs from their home
bases Ill Commissioner Bowie
Kuhn 's off1 ce
For the first llflle the draft
will provtde compensation to
teams who lose veterans m
the re..,ntry draft
The past two June drafts
ha ve shown that a qwck jump
from the amateur level to the
mar or leagues •s a deftmte
posstblhty Among the 19~
June draftees curently m the
maJors are pttchers Floyd
Bamuster of Houston, Bob
Owchinko of San D1ego, Dan
Schatzeder of Montreal ;
shortstop Alan Trammell of
Detrmt, and outftelder Ken
l.andr eaux of Cailforma .
Shortstop Paul Molitor of
Milwaukee and p1tcber Roger
Erickson of Mmnesota are
among the 1977 draftees
already m the maJors.

Leaders

Cubbage M1n
Cham OIIS NY
Brell KC

Northfield
NORTHFIELD,
OhiO
(UP! ) - R1vals Patty Tad
and Camt Almahurst JOined
Bmgo W10ner m the wmner's
circle at Northfield Park
Monday rught as the three
captured div1s10ns of the
$30,000 Ohto Sires Stakes for
three-year-{)ld trottm g fillies.
B10go Winner captured the
ftfth race, wmmng her 1978
debut by two lengths over
Terry , while Parlay Helen
f1mshed third The winner,
dnvcn by Charles Sylvester,
covered the m1le m 2·07 4-li
and returned $4, $3 20 and
$2 40.
Cam1 Almahur st, w1th
Bruce R1egle m the sulky, led
all the way for a" four-length
victory over Flonda Lady 10
th e second diVISIOn . Brass
and Sassy came un thtrd. The
wmner covered the distance
in 2 06 4~ and kicked back
$2 20, $2 20 and $2 20.
In the !mal dl\"ston, Patty
Tad turned a 2 .05 1 ~m•le mto
a head v•clllry over Dash of
Smoke. Gu1d ed by Don
Harmon, the wmner pa1d
$2 40, $2 20 and $2 20 N1p A
Gin was thtrd .
Patty Tad topped favored
Ca m• Almahurst a year ago
m the $56,000 freshman ftlly
trot, but the two have not met
this season.
Lolly Lad won the first race
and ktcked off a 5-2-7 btg
triple combmatton that was
worth $455 40 H1llar10us Song
fi ni shed second and Happy
Holder was th1rd.
A crowd of 2,955 wagered
$405,581.

twn may be delayed because
he •s an outstandmg football
prospect and mtends to play
agam thts fall
Among the leadmg high
school athletes ellg1ble are
fir st baseman Uoyd Moseby
of Oakland Htg h School
( Ca hf ), pttcher Ke tth
Atherton of Mathews High
School (V1rg1ma ), outfielder
T1to Nanm of Chestnut Hill
Academy in Philadelphia and
pttcher M1lton Hawkms of

Ca r ew Mm
Sundber g Tex
RI Ce Bos
Reynol ds Sea
P.n 1el la NY

Division III title

GAY RIGHTS SING-IN: Joan Baez and Harry O.apln
headline a benefit concert Wednesda) mght in Santa Momca ,
Calif , to ra1se funds for the New AUtance for Gay Equality.
The homosexual rights group Is building a treasury Ill
campaign against an trutlattve - on the November baUot m
Califorma - that would ban openly homosexual teachers from
public schools. Also slngmg at the concert w1ll be Peter
Yarrow of the recently reformed Peter, Paul &amp; Mary folk trto.

1975 as a consequence ot
Camb od• a n poli c ieS,
including execution. He calls
it "autogenocide, where one
race kills half or even more
than half of its own race."
Another
Cambodia ·
watcher believes the present
Cambodian
government
wants to kill everyone who
worked for the prevwus
admmistration - all the
soldiers" officials, teachers,
engineers, everybody.
SUmrnmg up, Bradley says,
"There is no longer even a
vestige of urban society in
Cambodia ; no longer a

Anderson S31d. '"He's been when los tn g starter Bob
throwmg like th1s all along Forsch, 7-4, walked Don
He looked awfully good Werner w1th the bases
loaded.
tomght "
Dnessen also conom1tted
" I can 't p1tch any better
an
error to allow the only St
than that," Seaver srud. 1
Louts
run. M1ke Phillips
made good pitches when I
stngled
, advanced on
had to make good pitches ."
Forsch
's
sacrifice and Garry
St L.oms Manager Ken
Templeton's
smgle and
Boyer said, "That's what you
scored
when
Dnessen
missed
call a p1tchmg masterpiece
a
throw
from
Seaver
on
The last three inrungs no one
Templeton's
hit.
was going to beat him "
"I was stretchmg on that
Drtessen satd, "Seaver
pitched a whale of a game. play," Driessen said. "It hit
Thts could be h1s strongest the top of my glove and
performance He 's in great bounced off."
shape "
Elsewhere in the NL,
Dnessen admttted he Atlanta topped Pittsburgh, &amp;needed to contnbute some 4, New York edged Los
heavy htttmg to keep hiS Angeles , 9·8, Ph1ladelph1a
status m the powerful mpped San Francisco, 4-3,
Cinc10nat1 Une-up
Montreal downed San D1ego,
"We have some guys who 4-3, and Chtcago defeated
can mash the ball," he sa1d Houston, 2-1 .
"You really want to do your Braves 8, Pirates 4:
share "
Dale Murphy 's mnth~nmng
Dnessen smgled horne Joe
Morgan 10 the e1ghth. Morgan
had walked, stolen second
and gone to third on a
fi elder's chmce. In the fourth,
Dnessen's ftrst s10gle sent
George Foster , who had
smgled, to third Foster then
scored the Reds' ftrst run

Braves get first pick
•
zn '78 summer draft

Glassboro captures

BALLET ON ICE: ConSidermg the grace mvolved both in
ballet and tee skating, their combination should have been a
foregone concluswn, but tl's taken British-born Olympic
skating champ John Curry finally to get them together
Curry's New York School of Skating previewed works by Curry
himself and by choreographers Peter Martins and Twyla
Tharp Monday mght in New York, prior to a national tour
planned for October. Among 600 attendmg the ballet of the
blades were Lauren Bacall, author George Plimpton, artist
Jamie Wyeth and ballet stars Mikhail Baryshulkov, Patricia
McBride and Jean-Pierre Bonnriouo.

vmce producer s and direc-

obsessiOn for mvad1ng pn ·

hit

United Press International
NO TIME TO DUCK: Leon Spinks dido 't duck That 's the
word from his attorney, and was talkmg about a contract to
f1ght Ken Norton. Since there was no f•ght, the World Boxing
Council recogmzed Norton as champ, while Spmks retained
the World BolWlg Association crown. Spinks seeks a court
order in Las Vegas, Nev., against the billing of the bout this
week between Norton and Larry Holme• as a heavyweight
champwnship fight . Says his attorney, "Leon Splob did not
duck anybody He was only champion 30days - he dtdn't have
time to duck anybody ."

wa nt to st.' e escape fllrns ,
the n

By DONALD BERNS
ST LOUIS (UP! ) - Tom
Seaver knew he was pttching
well when he struck out Ted
Simmons 10 the etghth inning
Monday mght.
"I figure he's the best hitter
in the NatiOnal League "
Seaver sa1d " If he can't
my good stuff, I'm m great

By KENNETH R. CLARK

What people are saying ...

a nd

Brown of Norwalk, Alfred E.
Dahlmg of Willoughby and
Jack G. Day of Shaker
Heights
Only six incumbent
congressmen
were
challenged in the pr1111ary.
Rep . Charles J . Carney ,
Youngstown Democrat, faced
opposition from three
prominent opponents in the
19th Dtstrtct seat he has held
smce 1971 .
In legislative races, former
congressman Wayne L. Hays
attempted
a political
comeback by wmmng the
Democratic nomination In
the 99th Ohio House district,
and several mcumbent
Democrati c committee
chairmen laced oppostllon.
Ohw's 13,220 polling places
opened at 6 30 a.m. and wtll
close at 7·30 p m.

peopletalk

QUOTE/UNQUOn

th1 ngs

Whitehall city attorney; and
State Sen. Sam Speck of New
Concord.
Supreme Court Justices
W11liam B. Brown, a
Democrat , and Paul W.
Brown, a Republiean, were
unopposed for renommation
to run for siXyear terms.
F1ve Republicans battled
for the nght to oppose
Wtlliam Brown. They were
Don P Brown of Shaker
Heights and Judges Ronald
R. Calhoun of Gallia County
Court, Joyce J . George of
Akron Munictpal Court,
Robert E. Holmes of Franklm
County Court of Appeals and
Richard M. Markus of
Cuyah oga County Court
Three Democrats squared
off for the nommatton agamst
Paul
Brown
They
wereJudges Clifford F

Seaver stops Cards
2-l for sixth win

Locally owned

.

Columbus, Ohto 43212
1229 W 3rd A1e (614) 294-3739

TraC), Cahf 95376
29129 Kasle1 Rtlld (209) 83H600

YISl,TONE Of OUR MODEL RANCHES IN
GREENWICH OH,
AKRON OH,
PAULDING OH,
TROY OH,
SHILOHOH,
FREDRICKTOWN OH.
FOil FUITHEI
WORTHINGTON OH,
_ COLUMBUS OH,
INFORMAOON
CINCINATTI OH,
VAN WERT OH.
CAUCOWCT
YOUNGSTOWN
OH,
ATHENS OH,
61.. 443-7126
CHARLOTIE NC,
RICHMOND VA,
MERCER PA,

Charlotte, NC 28234
P,O Box 2507 (704) 375-1787

Richmond, Vir11nia 3400

w.ea., st (804) 35!1-2503

�3- The Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, June 6, 1978

By LEE LEONARD
COLUMBUS (UP! )- Ohio
voters vtstted thelf polling
places today , wtth a
re latt vely
hght
vote
antl ctpated m pnm ary
ballotmg for state and loca l
off tces and tssues
Secretary uf State Ted W
Brown predtcled a turnout of
1.650,000 - a reducuon of
almost 200,000 from 1974 and
the lowest for a gubernatonal
prunary Since 1966
A low turnout co uld be
mterprete d to fav or the
status quo, meanmg - m
terne&lt; of today 's htghltghts the
renomm at ton
of
Repubhcan Go\ James A
Rhodes and a htgh rate of
re Jel'tJon for schoo l tax

le vt es, man y constdered
cructal to school operungs
next fall

Rhodes, 68, fa ce d a Republicans that Rhodes has development mtsswns
Lt Gov Richard F. Celeste
challenge from veteran state been around long enough .
and
hiS runmng mate,
Rep Charles F Kurfess , R·
For the fir st ttme ,
C ount y
Bowlung Green, m h1s b•d for candidates for governor and Fr a nkltn
renommatton to run for a l ~e ut en ant gove rnor were Co mnu ss ion er Michael J
fourlh term
nommated 10 teams, and Doman, were heavy favorThe re were 138 schoo l there were contests m both Ites to win the Democratic
money 1ssues on the ballot, th e
Democ rati c
and nomination for governor and
mcludm g 26 requests for Republican party pnrnaries ileutenant gov ernor. They
urgently needed new money
Rhodes' runnmg mate was had token oppos1t10n from
tb keep distncts such as Cuya h o g a
Co unt y Dale R Reusch. a Lod•
Cleve la nd and Co lumbus Commt sstoner Geor ge V autoworker and officer m the
operatmg
Vomovtch Kurfess teamed Ku Klux Klan, and Robert
Kurfess, 48, has 22 years m w1th Dr . Luc1lle G Ford , Strittmatter, a Lakemore
the Legislature and has been Ashland College economics prmter
Other statewide contests
Repubhca n leader smce 1967 professor.
He ts the first Repubhcan of
Kurfess and Dr Ford cam· were for the Republican
statewtde stature to put the pa1gned n ght up through . nommat1ons for attorney
governor to the test smce election day , but Rhodes, general, treasurer and one
Rhodes entered the arena of basmg much of h1s campa1gn Oh10 SUpreme Court seat, and
the
Democratic
state poltucs m 1952.
on h1s efforts to attract jobs to for
Any success achieved by Oh to, spe nt Monday m nommabon for a second Suthe GOP leg•slat•ve leader Detroit and planned to be 10 preme Court seat.
Also on th e ballot were
was expected to be Mtlwauk ee and Chi cago
- Cont ests for part y
mterpreted as a fee lung by today
on
mdu stn al

nommations for 22 of the
state 's 23 congressiOnal
seats. - Nominations for all
99 Oh1o House seats and 17 of
the 33 Ohio Senate seats
-Stale Issue 1, a
constituttonal amendment to
make it easier to get public
IOillatlves and referenda on
the ballot and make them
eas1er
to read and
understand.
Rhodes ,
the
oldest
governor in the nation, is
completing his 12th year as
chtef executive
W1nn m g nomtna tlons
Without opposition and
opposing each other in the fall
are state Auditor Thomas E
Ferguson, a Democrat, and
state Sen . Donald E Lukens,
R-M1ddletown ;
and
Secretary of State Brown, a
Repubilcan ,
and
h1s

.
DemocratiC opponent, state
Sen. Anthony J Celebrezze
Jr ., of Cleveland
Also winning the primary
w1thout oppos1hon but
o awaiting the selection of their
fall opponents were state
Attorney General WUllam J
Brown and state Treasurer
Gertrude W. Donahey Both
are two-term Democrats.
Competmg
for
the
Republican nommatton for
attorney general were
Ctnctnnatl Coun cilman
Walter E . Beckjord and
Frankbn County Prosecutor
George C. Smith, the 1974
nomtne e whom William
Brown defeated
Battlmg for the Republican
nommat10n for treasurer
were the 1974 nommee ,
Richard H. Harrts of
Wauseon; George C Ro~ers,

· I don"t thmk people only
about men domg grand
commg

home to the little woman m
bed We are lucky to have
grown-up women . s trong as
ad n•sses and also at the box

olf1ce. wtth a pos1t10n m the
ftlm world so they can contors of "hat they want to
do "

- Actress Liv UUmann,
Corella Scolt King
the only woman on the Dine·
_ _.:..:.:..:..::::..:..:..:..:.:..;.:.:..::::.._ person JUry at the 1978
'' Personal Inn uendos a re Cannes Film Festival, call·
be neath contempt They es- lng for realistic female roles
t• bllsh once a gam the FBI's m movies.
va le ltves and developmg

" Btgotry and rellgtous

tm;1gt na t1 ve scenari OS for mtolerance, though repeat·
edly depnv ed of legal and
thetr own purposes "

- Corella Scott King, normattv e s upport by
widow of Dr Martin Luther church and slate alike. are
Kmg .Jr . acc·using the FBI nevertheless ahve and well
of treating lht• ciVIl n ghts 10 the Umted Sta tes of Amer·
mO\.c mcnt a .s a n 'a lirn e n- tea of 1978 "
emy attack on the Unitt'tl - Professor Gillian Lindt
Slates ...
"Once vou 've walk ed on

the m om~. yo u can never
un wal k

Wh eth er

abroad as

.1

vou ' r e

or Columbia University,

:e¥ -

TV•••in Review

Berry's World

By JOAN HANAUER
UP! Television Writer
NEW YORK (UP! )
Cambodia ts undergomg the
ultimate revolution and while
•t has a few adm1rers, to most
observers tt IS repressive
perhaps to the point of what
one" observer call s auto·
genoctde.
The CBS News Spectal
"What's Happened to Cam·
bodia ?" whtch goes on the air
June 7, 8-9 p m ., Eastern
ttme , hi ghlights both the
maj or aspe cts of the
revoluti on and the mam
dlfft culty w1th accurately
gauging It Anchorman Ed
Bradley ticks off the c1t1es
from Belgrade to Bangkok
that the network news teams
roamed Ill putting together
the documentary.
He ts forced to add the one
place CBS was unable to go
was Cambodta.
Denied
access
to
Ca mbodia, or Democratic
Kampu chea,
as
the
Commumsts who took over
three years ago prefer to caD
tt , the network mterviewed
experts - mcludmg those
ftr sthand observers, the
Ca mbodian s m Thatland
refugee camps
It also shows excerpts from

speakmg at a Rhode Island

bu smessm:m or S)'mpos ium on r e ligion.

on a holiday. people don't
look at ~ou as an ythm K b ut
an Amt_•ltcan as tro n a ut "

-

" I 'm too pr1vate a person ,

and my prt vate hie belongs

Gt•ne Ce rna n, the for-· to me

mer rommander

or Apollo

- Actress Ava Gardner,

17. ~ hl&lt;' h mad t.~ th f la st saytng she will ne\·er write
ma nn t:d night to th•• moon m her memoirs
Oe l'e mb(•r 19i2.

It all goes back to the
· The Sov1et Umon 1s m· tunc we came home and
creas.ng tls null ta ry th reat started the warehouse I
to Western Europe , st n vmg could tell h1m what was
to expand

1 t~

mfluence 1n t he workmg and what

w as n o t

Mt ddle r::ast and c•rrymg because f kept the books."
- Rosalynn Carter. the
out a se n es of nuhta ry ad·
ve ntures tn Af rl ('a It 1s t he U.S t' lr&lt;t Lady, saying her
most dangerous source of a influto ce on Pre sJdept
new world w ar and as sure t o Jimmy Carter's working d,..

be tts ch1 ef msttgator ..
clslons stems lrom the early
- F ore~gn Mini s ter days of the famUy 's peanut
Hua ng Hua of Chtna , speak · business In Plains, Ga.
ing a t lht.' Unitt'd. Nations
Sp4:('Ja l se ~s ion on disarma·
men I

· Eve r&gt;one rloes 1t a nd n&lt;r
OOtl v tares F' a\.e yea r s ago,
p rl!..; cm uff1na ls "' ould have
co ns1&lt;.J rrcd at more se rious

than thry

cl o

(!, lq 'II 0\1\tA IIl ~~

today But 10

vcc.1rs ago, th l'V would have

de met! •t ever happened "
- Phol Lcshin, deputy
ro mm • "slo n t~ r

of th e New
Ynrk ( 'ity Department of
rorn·&lt;'tiUn, di sr ussing the
tolrra ti(HI of honHtst•" ua lity
In Jlrl "iOil S

" H1s name s 1nfla r10n - he sca res EVER Y·
BODYI '
Rosalynn Carter

a film taken by a Yugoslav
televisiOn crew th1s sprmg
and those are among the most
fascinating aspects of the
program
They ·show streel scenes m
Phnom Pehnh - scenes of
empty streets, uninhabited
hou ses , deserted shops .
Where are the people?
They have been sent to
cooperatives , to butldtng
sttes , to wherever the
secrettve rulers ol their
country beh eve they are
needed m a land that has
foresworn mooey , salar1es
and such other luxurtes as
postal service.
The Yugoslav film shows
th e Cambodians as a
stngularly joyless people .
Perhaps they are sullen,
perhaps they reflect a
senousness of purpose. Form
your own judgments.
But it Is difficult to retam
objectivity when you hear a
small Cambodian boy in a
refugee camp talk about the
execution of his family - and
watch him wipe away his
tears as he talks of revenge
An Australian author and
1ournallst based 10 Hong
Kong estlfllates that between
1.8 million and 2.2 million
Cambodians have died smce

Arlington monument goes unnoticed

Screaming Eagles: forgotten heroes
ll} Tom Tiede
lmttall y, the IOist was sent
WASHI;IIGTON ' NEAl- Thts lo Europe to lead the way for
IS r~ ~turv that ha ppened one the Normandy InvasiOn. As
y~ar ngr. 1\ ncl ;t't It IS st11l para troo ps, the dtvl st on
m " "'· 1n a "ienc.;p , beca use 1l members were dropped over
h"' n•&gt;t hcrn wtdely told It's the French beaches 10 the
I ht
Slu r ~ of huw. last dPad uf mght to soften Nazi
M&lt;·monal Da y, the nal ton resistance That done, they
IUin(;d tls b-.ck nn hundrt:.cls rolled overland w1th other
of tllousanth of soldters. ltv- forces as part of what was to
tug ,md dl•CJJ . wh o h e~ve serv- be a fmal uffenso ve agamst
t&lt;l '" tlw JOi st Atrborne DIVI- Germa ny
SIIlll
The offensive bogged down ,
'1ht• d 1\ I "' iOn should need huwcver, when German etr·
"' dill tntrodueuon
It has rntes launched an attack of
l&gt;•&lt;•n ft ~ htm ~ Amenc• 's ba t· thet r o" n tn the Ardenne
ties wtth dtsllnrllon for ncar· Fores t Stri kin g swtf tl y
' II four decades Its an atr agatnst surpnsed Amencans,
outfot. bynamcd ""The the Wehrmacht rushed mto
Sl'ream&gt;ng ~~ a g les · and tt Luxembourg and Belg1wn.
hn~ cctrrwd lhe Arncnca n Thts was the Battle of the
f!;~g from the frw:cn foxholes
Bu lge
The Ge rman s
of World W,or flto the steam· desper• tely w• nted to break
tng chaparra l &lt;•f V&lt;ctnam
U~r uu gh tu reach the v1U.I
The dt vtston was formed Ill seaports of Antwerp.
1942. svmewhut llt lt , a1tualThe Situation has since
ly , "' tlw war agamst littler been recounted many tunes ,
For all ots taruy IJC~tnmng, m books and cmema If D
huwt'vcr , 1t wa s to piHy a m~ ­ Day was the turning pomt of
JVr tf nut cp1 ca l rule 111 the the wa r tn Europe, the Battle
r:urupean !heater ft was ln ol the Bulge rescued the m·
f&lt;ot l tu emerge from that tloatove. Htstonans beheve a
{'UIIlba t ti S the bcHl ft!l OgiJIZ· &lt;.erma n Vlctllry m Belgtwn
o•d and peolt•ps must publluz· would ltkely have prolonged
i-d rn tllta ry un~t m the world
lhe wa ~ and cost the Alhes

""""It

shape. "

Seaver struck out five St.
Louis Cardmals 10 the last
two mrung s as he seemed to
be gett10g stronger
The Cmcinnatt Reds used a
run« ormg smgle by Dan
Drtessen m the etghth to beat
the Cards , 2·1
"f overpowered them at the
end, " Seaver smd "Earlier
10 the game, I felt temble.
My rhythm was all fouled up,
I felt weak, and my legs felt
hollow But I started feeling
better when we got !he second
run ' '

Seaver, pttchmg mhts 4ooth
game m the Natwnal League,
struck out etght and allowed
six h1ts m wmnmg his ftfth
stratght game and raiSing his
record to &amp;4
"People have been asking,
'what's wrong \lolth Seaver, "'
Cincmnall Manager Sparky

dearly in terms of addtUuna l
casualties.
Much of the drama of the
llflle took place tn the Vlctrnty
of a town r;olled Bastogne,
where seven German Panzer
Dtv ls lon s s u rroun ded
members of the IOist Air·
borne D1v1ston The latte•
were und er stege for a month
The weather was btlter, suppiles were gone, and still the
101 refused to step out of the
way.
The diVISIOnal sptnt w•s
unmortallzc&gt;d m a four-letter
wurd When German offi cers
approached the Amencans to
sue for surrender, they
rece1ved an tnsptred reply·
Gen Anthony McAuliffe, ac·
ttng commander of the IOl st,
told the Germans ""nuts." The
divtsion held out, and the ftrsl
major Wehnnacht uffcns1ve
wa s crushed.
The 101 lost 420 men du1111g
tha• histone conf rontattoll
Later on, dunng seve n
frustrating years 10 V1etna m,
It was to lose hundreds more
Ea rly thts decade , then,
members of the dovtswn
decided to butld a Screa1mng
Eagle mooo untl:nt to honor till'

dead , and also the survtvors,
who had gtven so much to the
umt
As tt happened, the monument would not be ra tsed
eas•ly Fur one thmg, there
was the cost of the proJect
$1 10,000 for destgn and cull·
strut ti Oil An H.SSIJCUtt\On

or

wounded m two wars. One
year later, on another
Memortal Day, the monument tu the Battered
Bastards of Bastogne 1s still
wtthout appropriate natiOnal
homa ge.

c&gt;d the proJect, and Congress
relented The monument was
butll tn 1977 near Arltngton's
gate .
And so, la st Memunal Day,
the IO lst Airborne D•v•s•on
uwtted digmtanes from all
over to w1tness the unve11tng
and detllcat1on The p1 es1dent
Before you get your
was asked Members of the
diploma,
yuu don 't have
House and Senate were ask·
enough
trammg;
after you
ed And uf course the med1a
get
tt,
you're
overqualified.
were also urged to come to
record the proud moment lor
the public and, tndeed, for
THE DAILY SENTINt: L
history
OE\'OTEOT0111 E
But few attended Ftfleen·
INTP.REST 01'
MEIGS-MASON AREA
hundred members of the
RURERT HO EFLICH
Diviswn were there, but the
Ctty Editor
PuUllsht'll dal ly e1u.:t pt Saturday
publtc representatives did not
by The OijJu VHIII!)' PtJblishml!!
show The prestdent was Cumprtt n)'·Mull lrlli.'&lt;IW, Inc , IJ1
fiSh ing 111 Georgia . Con- Cuurt St Pumt'roy. Otnu 45769
O H IL~ Phurw w.l 'l i:Mi
gressmen were scattered at UlL'IJUC!f,lj
F.dilurw ii 11Uiit! 9frl-21~7
van ous oth er fun ctions.
St:t ollll d allll pusUII(t! JM~Ill at
, Oh lo
There was virtually no media l ~N~tll llTU)'
t l unal ~ad vt rt lSi n w. rcprckn
cove!'age , hence few people in t&lt;HI VI! IJwtlun ASIOi.'ltHt ~. 3101
the country knew anything of F.oc l1d Ave, Clo:·vdMtKl , Ohio 44115
S u ~ r l pt lun nit~:. l:&gt;tllverOO b)
the occaston
tollrrll' t w ht: t t &lt;tVII LI.IIb\t: 7~ c:tntJi ptt
Toda y lhe Sc rea ming Wl&gt;t k Ky Motor Hu\llt wt ~ri! Clrrlt'r
nut aViiLiabl t: Ont mouth
r::agle statue stands on Arl· !'&gt;IX\'In'
~ 25 Hy mwl\ m n •uu and W Vw
tngton's Memonal Drtve It 's th VtYr S ~\! 00 S11 lnumhs
11 ~0 , • liltCI
IIIUII\h !l, $7 00
made of bronze, rests on a $}o)w,\1
11 n· St,G t-1 )' t &lt;l l Suo: mont h.~
ma 1bl e pedestal, 't IS $\,1 W r hrt!t !IIUI1lhs , $7 $0
dedu alcd lo !he 29,718 umt Su l L~ IIIJlklll Vflt t' 1111lutlu Sumlay

pa st and present 101 troops
sohct ted money by btts and
pi eces Few la rge cuntn bu·
twns were nlllde II took
several years to gather the
cash
Then a problem developed
regardmg the monument 's
stle The DIVIston mststed 1t
toe allowc&gt;d to stand al Arl·
mgtun Nattonal Cemetery.
However, a rule protnbtted
the locatiOn . W1th space at an
mcreasmg premtum m the
cemetery , federal offi ce r~
sa td only Congress could
(jUlhortze construction uf new
memonals.
At first Congress was unen·
thu s1astt c about th•· 101
munwnent. The argument
was that 1f th1s d1 v1stun butll a
statue in Arltngton , then that
div tswn would want the same
prcrogallve In the end 11 was
Hubcrl Huonpho·ey who puslo· men 1'\\ hu

1

w ~re

kllll'tl ur

I l l llt&gt;s~'i~ nln wl

MAIUE'IT A, Ohi o (UP! ) Glassboro State IS the NCAA
III
basebal l
Dtvl ston
chan:pton
The Profs, led by the
masterful p1tchmg of Bob
Pfeffer, took the crown
Monday With a 5-3 win over
host Manetta
Pfeffer, voted the tournament 's Most Va luable
Player, went the distance for
the Profs gtvmg up m ly thr ee
hits after the hfth 10mng .
W1th an assortment of cur ve
balls, sliders and screw balls,
Pfeff er struck out four to post
his lith Win aga mst JUSt two
losses
Pete Kelley , who absorbed
th e loss , also went the full
nine for Manetta, but four
errors did not help the cause
of the Pton eers who lm1shed
second m the playoffs w1th a
38-7 record
Glassboro, 29·11 on the
season, took lead lor good m
ftfth mnlng when Ralph Wen·
dell doubled m Tom Peterson
who had led oil the mrung
with a walk. Then he came
home on Dino Hall's s10gle
The Profs knocked 1n an
msurance run 10 !he etghth .
Glassboro Coac h M1k e
Bnglla credited the wm to the
Profs' defenSi ve play and to
Pfeffer " Wh en Pfeffer
pttches, all of us on the team
think positively ," he sa1d

SCIINOZZ AND CUGIE HOME : Two oldumers of show biz
are out of hospitals In the Los Angeles area Xavier Cugat and
Jimmy Durante both were released Monday - Durante after
17 days of treatment for an upper respiratory infection, and
Cugat after a runMay bout with high blood pressure. The 11$year-{)ld "Schnozzola," who has been living qutetly In
retirement since partial paralysis by a stroke in 1972, Is
reported "in good spirits" and convalescing at home Cugat,
on«lme king of the cha-cha-cha, Ism good shape at 78.

STEIGERS SPLIT: Rod Steiger Is being sued for divorce
in los Angeles by his wife of five years, and 41-year-{)ld Sherry
Steiger seeks a hefty settlement. She wants her piece of the
action in certain movie rights held by her 53-year-{)ld husband,
as weU as her share of his race horses, automobiles, bank
accounts, life insurance and pension funds. The Steigers were
married April 21 , 1973, m Malibu, Calif.
QUOTE OF TilE DAY: Marshall Brickman, co-writer
with Woody Allen of "Anrue Hall," in the July issue of VIva
magaZIIIe on the perUsof success "It's easy to sit at your desk
and wrtte m the script, 'The desert. Dawn.' But five months
later, you're wakmg up at 3 a.m 10 a motel outside Flagstaff,
Ariz. wondering what the hell you 're domg there."

Glassboro

GLIMPSES : Dustin HoHman and Colleen Dewhunt were
presenters Monday m New York's Greenwich Vlllage as Peter
Schumann's Bread and Puppet Theater won an Ohio award for
lifetime achievement and Lee Breuer took the best off.
Broadway play citaUon lor his "Shaggy Dog Animation " ...
Jack Nicholson IS in London costarrmg with Shelley Duvall In
Warner Brothers' "The Shilling," under Stanley Kubrick's
direction ... Larry White has been named president of
Columbia Pictures televiSion ann ..
conventionally educated
class; no longer even the kind
of CIVilization there Is In any
other Communist country no money, no private
dwellings, you can't shop for
food or clothes We know
there has been, and almost
certainly stlll is, great
hardship and many , many
deaths."
The CBS picture of
Cambodia is not pretty and
admittedly may not even be
totally accurate. But tt Is
thoughtprovoking and
frightening

11

,

place in derby

grand slam off reliever Kent
Tekulve sent the Braves past
the Pirates There was a
brawl when the Braves' Pat
Rockett bumped mto Tekulve
while trying to beat out a
swmgmg bunt. Tekulve took a
swmg at Rockett and both
benches cleared before order
was restored
Mets 9, Dodgen 8:
Tim Foil doubled m two
runs to t1e the score then
scored the game-wmner m
the runth to hand the Dodgers
thetr fifth stra1ght loss. Lee
Mazzlih went 4-for-li for the
Mets. Ron Cey hit a three-run
horner for los Angeles .
Phlllles 4, Giants 3:
Jlfll Mornson and pmch
hitter Bob Boone hit consecutive home runs off V1da Blue
m the etghth mnmg to g1ve
the Ph1llies a natwnally
teleVIsed victory over the
G1ants

The
Ohio
Beagle
Federation derby cham·
plonshlps were held Sun·
day at Johnstown, Ohio,
with dogs lrom the area
placing In two classes.
J . R. King, Point
Pleasant, woo In the 13 Inch
class with his female, "Oak
Ridge Little Susie," In a
class of 22 ; Franklin
Wilson, Racine, pla ced
fourth In the 15 Inch class
"lth his dog "Tu·Endle·
Wei Truman," In a class of
16.

NEW YORK (UP! ) - The
Atl an ta Braves, a yo un g
team undergomg a ftve-year
re bulldtng plan , hope to
couple
of
obt am a
" foundation blocks" today
when they get the f~rst chmce
m both phases of baseball 's
annual summer free-agent
dra ft.
The Braves are expected to
ptck ctther pow er-hittmg
second baseman Bob Horner
of Anzona State, pitcher
Expus 4, Padres 3:
Mtke Morgan of Valley H1gh
Dave Cash smgled home Schoolm Las Vegas, Nev , or
the lle-breakmg run in the pttcher Rod Boxberger of the
seventh mnmg and Andre Umverstty of Southern
Dawson htt a two-run homer Callforma when the regular
to lead the Expos over the phase of the draft begins at
Padres Rudy May went e1ght noon EDT.
inmngs for his sixth vtctory.
Horner's double pl ay
Cubs 2, Astros 1:
partner, s hortstop Hubte
Ivan DeJ esus' ba ses~oaded Brooks; Mt ch tga n State
smgle wtth one out m the outfielder KJrk Gtbson and
mnth mmng scored Steve f~rst basema n Don Troyan of
Ontiveros and gave the Cubs Sl John 's (N Y 1 are other
the1r nmth consec uttv e collcgtans expected to be
VICtory at Wngley Fteld
drafted early Gibson's selec-

020 020 Olo-5 10 1
Manetta
100 100 010- 3 7 4
Pfeffer and Holden , Kelley
and Hollin ger . W- Pf eff er
(11 -2) L-Kelley (7·1) HR.sNone

Insured?

53
70
dJ
5d
6B

33 1

326
323

Madd O)( Phil
320
Foster C1n
318
Sm1 th LA
58 31 7
Puhl Hou
62 316
Mazzllll N Y
68 315
Am encan l eagu e

19

G AB H Pel
49 186 69 371
&gt;~6 160 55 3&gt;~&gt;~
54 n 6 76 336
50 171 57 333
39 143 46 J22
dB 184 59 32 1
42136 43 Jl6
51 197 62 215
33 1:?7 40 315
d2 141 d &gt;~ 312

Bayl or , Cal 14 Thom pson

Hobson 8os 11

Run s Batted In
Nat.anal L eague Fos ler C1n
42 , Sm 1t h , L A and Montan ez.
NY l7 , Ce y LA 36. Mc Covey ,
SF 35
Amencan League R 1ce , Bos
52, Z 1S k , Tex 37, May , Balf 36
8o s
Staub ,
Oet.
Hobson
ChambliSS , NY and Ol 1ver , Te x , . . - - - - - - - - - - - . ,
35
THIS WEEK' S SPECIAL
Sto l en Bases
Nat10nal L eague
Moreno,
P1tt 2&lt;~ .
Cede no, Hou 19,
Madd ox PH II 17 Lopes LA
and Ta ver as , Ptt t ld
Am encan League
Wilson ,
K C 20 LeFlo r e Del and Cruz ,
Sea 18 O!l one, Oak l7 Wills,

·~~·

Te x 15

USED CARS

Pclch1ng
Most V1ctone s

front , mascots, Mary M11ler , Rhonda Ztrkle; front row, 1
l!J r, Cmdy Conkle, Jan Betzmg, Jamie S1sson, Kelly
Rought , Sandi M11ler, April W1se , Stephannte Rough t,
Suste Smtth ; ba ck row, from the left, Coach Jerry Rought,
Kim Batey, Lon Wtsecup, Carla Whaley, Tem Tobm,
Andrea Rtggs , Susan Ztrkle, Ann Fitch, Na ncy Sm1th and
Coach Ellen Rought.

GIRLS' SOFTBALL TEAM - Pictured are members
of the Pomeroy Semor Gtrls' slow p1tch softball team ,
coached by Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Rought. Ttoe gtrls are
wearmg umforms that they purchased through their work
on tag day . They have also purchased all of thetr
eqwpment and other tterns needed lor the tag day money
The team IS non-sponsored and members extend thanks to
the public lor generous suwort. The group mcludes

Indians dop 2-0 decision
By MARK FRIEDMAN
for the Wlute Sox.
UPI Spurts Writer
It was the fourth stratght
Btll
Nahorodn y has loss for Rtck Wa1ts. 3-&lt;i, and
somethmg that wtll never be the thtrd lime 10 the last four
dupli cated . He hits what he games, the Indians ha ve
failed to score for hlfll
can 't see
In other AL gam es,
Th e 24-yea r-old catcher
Oakland
downed Boston, 9-7,
npped a two-run double m the
Seattle
tnpped
New York, 7·
fourth mnmg Ill support Steve
3,
and
Baltimore
topped
Stone 's thr ee-hit pttchm g
Califo
rnta,
6-2,
10
10
mntngs
Monday mght when the
Ch1cago Wh•te Sox took a 2.Q A's 9, Red Sux 7:
,Wayne Gross, Mitchell
deciswn from the Cleveland
Page
and Gary Thomasson
lndtans But Nahorodny
eachdrove
mtworuns ma 13never even saw the pttch he
htt
attack
to pace Oakland
hit .
over
Bos
ton
J1m R1ce,
" I lost stght of tt hallway to
Carlton
F1sk
and
Butch
th e plate and I was lucky I
Hobson
homered
for
the
Red
even h1t tt," he satd. "But I'll
Sox,
who
lost
their
second
take tt - l'm not gomg to g1ve
straight game
it back."
Stone, who allowed only one Marillen 7, Yankees 3:
Ruppert J ones homered
runner to reach second base
and
doubled to lead a 17-hit
all mght , struck out SIX and
Seattle
atta ck a s eve ry
walked SIX to run hi s record
Marmer
had
a htt agamst the
Ill. 5-3. It was the eighth
Yankees
New
York , losers in
VIctory m the last moe games

Montrea l
New Yo r k

P• tt s br gh
St L OUIS

American Le-ague
East

San Fr an
Ctn c1na t 1
Los Ang
sa n Diego
HOu! IOn
Afl a nt a

W L Pet
78 70 583
26 21 553

W L Pet

GB
11 7

27 2.4 529 2 1 1
25 29 463 6
1116440 7
20 3&lt;1 37 0 11
West

W L Pet
32 18 640
33 20 613

529

GB
11

S1' 1
91,,

27 24
23 28

45 1

22 28
19 30

-4.40 10
388 12 1'2

Monday's Result!.
Cht cago 2, Hous ton 1
Ph i l a 4, San F ran cisc o l

M ontr eal 4, San 0 1e go 3
Atlant a 8, P l l ts burgh 4
New YOr k. 9, LOS Ang 81
CtnCI 2, 51 LOU IS I

Boston
New Yor k
Detroc t
Ba ll •m r e
MI IW iJUke

Cle,.elnd
Toron to

36
30
18
78
15
13

18
21
12
25

667
588
560
578

25
17

500
460

19 32

GB

41 1
6
, ••

9

ll

313 151.

IAUTimts EDT )

Houston t Andutar 3 2) at
Chtc i!!lgo ( Robe r ts 2 0), 2 30

Oakland
Kan C•IY
Caltf

W L

JO 71
27 21

Pet

San D1ego t Sh trl e'l' J 5l

at

pm
Los Ang el es ( Fhu 5 2l al New
Atlan t a

( Henna

Pittsbu rg h ( Roo ker

4 OJ

at

58S
56l

I'

1
3 11

26 24 570
25 24 5 10 4
Mmesota
21 30 411 2 9
CI'Hcago
20 29 .408 9
Se11 tll e
18 37 327 14
Monday 's ~ ~s ults
( hi CIIQO 2, Cl ev el an d 0
Ba l ti m o r e 6, c a11 t 2, 10 1nns
Oak land 9 Boston 1, n1ghl
Seattle 7, New Yo r k J , night

Tex a s

Ch1cago
Cleve l and
pm

Bos ton ( Rip ley 1 3 or Wr ight
20 1 at Oaio: land ! Ren ko o 11 .

10 30 p m
l&lt; ansas Cit y (Leo nard 4-81 e•
Te xas (J en kins 5·3) , 8 J S p m

Detro it &lt;Si alon 5·21 al Mit

(Sorensen 6 4l, 8 30
pm
pm
C 1C •nnar 1 (Bonha m 6 01 a t
Wednesday 's Gam es
St L O•J IS ( Den n y .4 .4), 8 35 p m
Tor on to at Cle'le , 2 '"'" n1t e
Wednesdav •s Games
Detroit at Mil wa ukee , 1 ght
Clnc mna tl at Ch iCa liJO
Chln go at M l n nest~t a , nigh t
SM Diego at Mont rea l. n•oh t
Kan sas C1ty al Tex a s , night
Los Ange les a l New Yo r k,
C t~llforn l a lit Oak land , night
nighI
New Yor~ at Sea tt le , nt ght

San Fran at

Ph il adel ph i a ,

Hous ton at Pl lfS tlur gn, n1g ht
Allllntl!l at St L OUIS, n1gh t

OBTAIN PLAYER
CLEV E LAND IU Pl )
The Cleveland lndtans have
opttoned mfteldcr · pmch
runner La rry LIUtz to the1r
Portland farm club of the
Pacthc Coast League

J1m Palmer , p1cked up ht s
ftrst wm tn hve dectstons

Vilas gains
quarterfinals
By ROLAND TYRRELL
PARI S t UP]) - " If I were
10 yea rs ) Ounger ," satd
Arthur A&gt;he , "I could handie
hnn wtth ease "
Ashe, 34, wa s La lkmg about
25-year-old Gu tllermo Vtlas
of Argen tma who beat him m
stratght sets Monda y to adva nce to the quarter.fmals of
the $400,000 French Open
tenms champwnsilt ps
After mostly listless play
unt1l
Monda y,
VIla s
responded wtth superb tenms
agat nst Ashe. loo kt ng
suddenly hke the defe nding
French champton
But the favonte to wm this
year's $42,000 lllp pnze IS sttll
BJorn Borg of S" eden, the
tournament's No. 1 seed
Borg, celeb ratmg hiS 22nd
b~rthday today , fa ces blgse rvmg Roscoe Ta nner !
Ktawah Island, S C , Ill the
fourU1 round, secure m the
knowledge he has dropped
on ly e1ght games and no sets
so far
The day 's other matches
include No 4 seed Eddie
Dtbbs, M1am1 Beach, Fla ,
agamst Polish Davis Cup
player WoJtek F1bak and
Mexi co's Paul Ra mtr ez,
seeded No 6, """ clashes
wlth V1 ctor Pec c1 of
Paraguay .
Vtlas , the No 2 seed , ma de
Ashe look like an old-ttmer as
he npped the Amen can's
ga me apart. 6-2, G-2, G-2, 10 a
95•ninute center-court rout.

Special!

Nahonal Leagu e Gr. msley ,
Mfl 9 2, Knep per , SF 7 2 John ,
L A 7 J For sc h St L 7 4 n1 ne
Pi tChers fled W1lh 6 VIC fO r lCS
Amer 1can League
Ta nana ,
Cal 9 2, GU idry , NY 80 ,
Tor r ez , Bos 8 2, Lee Bos 7 2
Fla nagan and Palmer , Ball and

1972 BUICK
SKYLARK CPE.
Au to , P .S , P B , ai r ,

Spl• llo rlf , I(( 7 4

ra d1o

Earned Run Ave rage
I Based on 54 1nnmgs p1tc hed l
Nal •ona l L eague
Kn epper ,
SF l 94 Andu 1ar H ou 2 25,
R Reusch el, Ch1 2 JO, Bonham ,
Cm 2 36. Rog ers Mi l 2 51
Ame nc an League
Gu• dry ,

'1695
1972 CUTLASS CPE.

NY I 80

Pal mer , Ba ll 2 13
John son
Oak 2 22 , Keough,
Oak 2 28 Za hn, M1nn 2 36
Str •keours
Nat•onal Leagu e
R1cha rd
Hou 99 , N•e kro , All 79 , Sea,. er ,
C1 n 77 , Blylev en
P 11! 69
Mont efusco, SF 66
Am en can League Rya n, Ca l
107 F l a n a 9 a n Bal l and
Gurd r v, NY 64 , Tanana , Cal 52
Wdcox De l and Und erwood,

RADIO
Aulo , P S ,
w hee ls

P B , Sport

1972 FORD 1/z TON

Tor 47

WITH TOPPER

River Downs
CINC INN ATI (UP))
Rockm ' Roste carne from last
place and held off Boldanc1a
at the wtre to wun the $5,000
fea ture race at Rtver Downs
by a neck Monday
Robert Wmgo pilote d'
Rockm ' Rosie over the 5\oz
furlongs m 1 06, good for
payoffs of $8 40, $4 40 and
$4.00 Talkmg Dog came m
third
Gold's Bee and Surnsauon
won the hrst two races to
make a 4-2 dally double that
was worth $38.
The 3,277 fans bet

'1295
1971 FORD

liz TON

'995

Karr &amp; VanZandt
You 'll Loke Our Quality
Way of Doong Busoness
GMAC FINANCING

992 Sl42

Pomeroy

Open Evenmgs 'ttl6 : 00
T1ISam Sat

$.108,756

PROFIT
RAISING EARTiiWORMS
C.n You AI'\IIWtr M
YES to Thnf

Q ues t 10ni~

I Do ,-ou ... ~~ w...tock'
2 Oro ,-ou want 1 bu.~MM ol ~~ own7
l Do I!OW ,...cj rf1tlfi1'W nl Of n 111 n::orTWl
4 Do I!OW hew • badt .,ard Ot otlwt ~

PfRHAPS

YOU CAN BECOME A WORM GROWERI

If ACCEPTED f'S A PRODUCER WE OF FER

*

ProfessiOnal Guldance

• Exchange Membershop

• Marketing Serv1ce
• Complete Supphes

ACT TODAY! SEND FOR YOUR FREE BROCHURE!
AND ECOLOGY BUMPER STICKER.

ASSOCIATED

( Barr ios 3 5 ) at
{M onge 2 OJ, 7 30

2 5) , 7 J5 wa uk ee

nl ght

The Cincinnati Reds
Baseball Team 11111 hold a
trial camp
baseball
Saturday at Institute, \1
Va. ,
Jim
Vennarl.
Pomeroy, team scout, sa id
today .
The camp 11111 start
al
9
a.m.
and
go until 2 p m All
boys reporting are to take
their uniforms and glove.
Balls and bats will be
provided. All boys playing
on American Legion teams
just have permission from
tbelr coach or company
commander before they
can participate and boys
still In school this year
must have permlssloo from
tbelr coach or prlnelpal to
attend. Boys are to be bel,.een 16 and 21. The camp
wUI be under the direction
ol Venoarl, Elmer Gra)
and Gene Bennett.

GB

Ba lllmor e ( 0 Ma r t mez 4 3)
pm
' at Ca l dor n 1a I f.~: va n 3 5), 10 30
Sa n F ra nctsco (M on tefu sc o 4 pm
21 at Phll ade iPh•a (L er ch J 5 L
New Yo r k (T 1dr ow 3 4 ) a t
7 35 p m
Seattle tAbboll 1 41, 10 35,
M on trea l ( Twit chell 2 6). 1 35

six of tts last se, en, had solo
homers by Thurman Munson
and Paul Blatr
Orioles 6, Angels Z·
Eddte Murray slammed a
one-out hono er to start a four ·
run , lllth-mmng rally that
gave the On oles thetr stxth
stra1ght wm Rtck Dem psey
added a run-scormg double as
Don Stan house, Ill reilef of

West

Today ' s Probabl e P1tcher5
{All T ime-s EOTJ

Todav •s Probable Pttchers

Yorlt. ( Es pinosa 5 J J. 13 OS p m

IXMNING atiLDS
INSURANCE AGENCY, INC.

Bu rroghs Al l
Gr •ff ey C.n
Buck ner Ch 1

61 333
4d 333

Del 13, May , Ball , Eva ns and

Ch•cago
Ph 1l a

complete protection with one
of our full coverage Homeown·
en' polic1es. Don't hesitate to
P.hy it safe .•. for your· fam·
ily's sake. Gee the facti.

53 183
dl 132
49 160
53 21 5
36 133
d6 169
53 214
&gt;~ 9 183
48 196
54 216

Hom e Run s
Nattonal Le ague Foster Cm
and Monday L A 11 K 1ng man
Cn•
and
Ben ch ,
Cm
10
l UI10S.k 1. P hd 9
Am encan League R 1ce, Bos

East

Avoid a total disastc:r . • . get

G AB H Pet
S1mmons St L
M ond ay LA

Le2can o Mil

National League

It Cov.ld All Go
Up in Smoke!

Mator League Leaders
By Umted Pres s l nternah onal
Batt1ng
I Ba sed on 125 at bats )
Na l 1ona l Le agu e

Coo per Mll

Ma1or League St andmgs
By Untted Press International

"

M1dway H1gh School (Texas) .
More than 800 players will
be seleded by the time both
phases of the draft are
completed Thursday. Players
taken m the regular phase
co nstst of first-time h1gh
school and college draftees.
Those selected in the
se condary phase include
those drafted prev10usly but
not stgned .
In the regular phase the
clubs select m reverse order
of thetr 1977 fimshes, With the
Na tiona I League ptcking
ahead of the American
League under a rotating
system Selec tton m the
secondary phase IS deter·
mmed through a drawmg of
the two league prestdents.
The draft w1ll be conducted
VJa a conference call tymg
the 26 clubs from their home
bases Ill Commissioner Bowie
Kuhn 's off1 ce
For the first llflle the draft
will provtde compensation to
teams who lose veterans m
the re..,ntry draft
The past two June drafts
ha ve shown that a qwck jump
from the amateur level to the
mar or leagues •s a deftmte
posstblhty Among the 19~
June draftees curently m the
maJors are pttchers Floyd
Bamuster of Houston, Bob
Owchinko of San D1ego, Dan
Schatzeder of Montreal ;
shortstop Alan Trammell of
Detrmt, and outftelder Ken
l.andr eaux of Cailforma .
Shortstop Paul Molitor of
Milwaukee and p1tcber Roger
Erickson of Mmnesota are
among the 1977 draftees
already m the maJors.

Leaders

Cubbage M1n
Cham OIIS NY
Brell KC

Northfield
NORTHFIELD,
OhiO
(UP! ) - R1vals Patty Tad
and Camt Almahurst JOined
Bmgo W10ner m the wmner's
circle at Northfield Park
Monday rught as the three
captured div1s10ns of the
$30,000 Ohto Sires Stakes for
three-year-{)ld trottm g fillies.
B10go Winner captured the
ftfth race, wmmng her 1978
debut by two lengths over
Terry , while Parlay Helen
f1mshed third The winner,
dnvcn by Charles Sylvester,
covered the m1le m 2·07 4-li
and returned $4, $3 20 and
$2 40.
Cam1 Almahur st, w1th
Bruce R1egle m the sulky, led
all the way for a" four-length
victory over Flonda Lady 10
th e second diVISIOn . Brass
and Sassy came un thtrd. The
wmner covered the distance
in 2 06 4~ and kicked back
$2 20, $2 20 and $2 20.
In the !mal dl\"ston, Patty
Tad turned a 2 .05 1 ~m•le mto
a head v•clllry over Dash of
Smoke. Gu1d ed by Don
Harmon, the wmner pa1d
$2 40, $2 20 and $2 20 N1p A
Gin was thtrd .
Patty Tad topped favored
Ca m• Almahurst a year ago
m the $56,000 freshman ftlly
trot, but the two have not met
this season.
Lolly Lad won the first race
and ktcked off a 5-2-7 btg
triple combmatton that was
worth $455 40 H1llar10us Song
fi ni shed second and Happy
Holder was th1rd.
A crowd of 2,955 wagered
$405,581.

twn may be delayed because
he •s an outstandmg football
prospect and mtends to play
agam thts fall
Among the leadmg high
school athletes ellg1ble are
fir st baseman Uoyd Moseby
of Oakland Htg h School
( Ca hf ), pttcher Ke tth
Atherton of Mathews High
School (V1rg1ma ), outfielder
T1to Nanm of Chestnut Hill
Academy in Philadelphia and
pttcher M1lton Hawkms of

Ca r ew Mm
Sundber g Tex
RI Ce Bos
Reynol ds Sea
P.n 1el la NY

Division III title

GAY RIGHTS SING-IN: Joan Baez and Harry O.apln
headline a benefit concert Wednesda) mght in Santa Momca ,
Calif , to ra1se funds for the New AUtance for Gay Equality.
The homosexual rights group Is building a treasury Ill
campaign against an trutlattve - on the November baUot m
Califorma - that would ban openly homosexual teachers from
public schools. Also slngmg at the concert w1ll be Peter
Yarrow of the recently reformed Peter, Paul &amp; Mary folk trto.

1975 as a consequence ot
Camb od• a n poli c ieS,
including execution. He calls
it "autogenocide, where one
race kills half or even more
than half of its own race."
Another
Cambodia ·
watcher believes the present
Cambodian
government
wants to kill everyone who
worked for the prevwus
admmistration - all the
soldiers" officials, teachers,
engineers, everybody.
SUmrnmg up, Bradley says,
"There is no longer even a
vestige of urban society in
Cambodia ; no longer a

Anderson S31d. '"He's been when los tn g starter Bob
throwmg like th1s all along Forsch, 7-4, walked Don
He looked awfully good Werner w1th the bases
loaded.
tomght "
Dnessen also conom1tted
" I can 't p1tch any better
an
error to allow the only St
than that," Seaver srud. 1
Louts
run. M1ke Phillips
made good pitches when I
stngled
, advanced on
had to make good pitches ."
Forsch
's
sacrifice and Garry
St L.oms Manager Ken
Templeton's
smgle and
Boyer said, "That's what you
scored
when
Dnessen
missed
call a p1tchmg masterpiece
a
throw
from
Seaver
on
The last three inrungs no one
Templeton's
hit.
was going to beat him "
"I was stretchmg on that
Drtessen satd, "Seaver
pitched a whale of a game. play," Driessen said. "It hit
Thts could be h1s strongest the top of my glove and
performance He 's in great bounced off."
shape "
Elsewhere in the NL,
Dnessen admttted he Atlanta topped Pittsburgh, &amp;needed to contnbute some 4, New York edged Los
heavy htttmg to keep hiS Angeles , 9·8, Ph1ladelph1a
status m the powerful mpped San Francisco, 4-3,
Cinc10nat1 Une-up
Montreal downed San D1ego,
"We have some guys who 4-3, and Chtcago defeated
can mash the ball," he sa1d Houston, 2-1 .
"You really want to do your Braves 8, Pirates 4:
share "
Dale Murphy 's mnth~nmng
Dnessen smgled horne Joe
Morgan 10 the e1ghth. Morgan
had walked, stolen second
and gone to third on a
fi elder's chmce. In the fourth,
Dnessen's ftrst s10gle sent
George Foster , who had
smgled, to third Foster then
scored the Reds' ftrst run

Braves get first pick
•
zn '78 summer draft

Glassboro captures

BALLET ON ICE: ConSidermg the grace mvolved both in
ballet and tee skating, their combination should have been a
foregone concluswn, but tl's taken British-born Olympic
skating champ John Curry finally to get them together
Curry's New York School of Skating previewed works by Curry
himself and by choreographers Peter Martins and Twyla
Tharp Monday mght in New York, prior to a national tour
planned for October. Among 600 attendmg the ballet of the
blades were Lauren Bacall, author George Plimpton, artist
Jamie Wyeth and ballet stars Mikhail Baryshulkov, Patricia
McBride and Jean-Pierre Bonnriouo.

vmce producer s and direc-

obsessiOn for mvad1ng pn ·

hit

United Press International
NO TIME TO DUCK: Leon Spinks dido 't duck That 's the
word from his attorney, and was talkmg about a contract to
f1ght Ken Norton. Since there was no f•ght, the World Boxing
Council recogmzed Norton as champ, while Spmks retained
the World BolWlg Association crown. Spinks seeks a court
order in Las Vegas, Nev., against the billing of the bout this
week between Norton and Larry Holme• as a heavyweight
champwnship fight . Says his attorney, "Leon Splob did not
duck anybody He was only champion 30days - he dtdn't have
time to duck anybody ."

wa nt to st.' e escape fllrns ,
the n

By DONALD BERNS
ST LOUIS (UP! ) - Tom
Seaver knew he was pttching
well when he struck out Ted
Simmons 10 the etghth inning
Monday mght.
"I figure he's the best hitter
in the NatiOnal League "
Seaver sa1d " If he can't
my good stuff, I'm m great

By KENNETH R. CLARK

What people are saying ...

a nd

Brown of Norwalk, Alfred E.
Dahlmg of Willoughby and
Jack G. Day of Shaker
Heights
Only six incumbent
congressmen
were
challenged in the pr1111ary.
Rep . Charles J . Carney ,
Youngstown Democrat, faced
opposition from three
prominent opponents in the
19th Dtstrtct seat he has held
smce 1971 .
In legislative races, former
congressman Wayne L. Hays
attempted
a political
comeback by wmmng the
Democratic nomination In
the 99th Ohio House district,
and several mcumbent
Democrati c committee
chairmen laced oppostllon.
Ohw's 13,220 polling places
opened at 6 30 a.m. and wtll
close at 7·30 p m.

peopletalk

QUOTE/UNQUOn

th1 ngs

Whitehall city attorney; and
State Sen. Sam Speck of New
Concord.
Supreme Court Justices
W11liam B. Brown, a
Democrat , and Paul W.
Brown, a Republiean, were
unopposed for renommation
to run for siXyear terms.
F1ve Republicans battled
for the nght to oppose
Wtlliam Brown. They were
Don P Brown of Shaker
Heights and Judges Ronald
R. Calhoun of Gallia County
Court, Joyce J . George of
Akron Munictpal Court,
Robert E. Holmes of Franklm
County Court of Appeals and
Richard M. Markus of
Cuyah oga County Court
Three Democrats squared
off for the nommatton agamst
Paul
Brown
They
wereJudges Clifford F

Seaver stops Cards
2-l for sixth win

Locally owned

.

Columbus, Ohto 43212
1229 W 3rd A1e (614) 294-3739

TraC), Cahf 95376
29129 Kasle1 Rtlld (209) 83H600

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K~ .

Sport Parade

Costello
new Bulls
coach

Shearer, Sneed
lead qualifiers

By J ERRY MITCHELL
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (UPI )
- Bob Shearer and Ed Sneed
CHICAGO ( UPI ) - Larry led a group of 34 qualifiers
By MILTON RICHMAN
Costello becomes coach of the Monday fol' the U.S. Open
UPI Spol'll Editor
Chicago Bulls today and will golf championship, while a
unfold his plan to turn the couple of PGA tour winners
ST. LOUIS ( UPI) - In his time , Henry Armstrong was that tea m into a win ner.
were among those who failed
rarest of all men, a pure natural.
His appointment was an· to survive the sectional
He was absolutely indefatigable inside the ring , a fellow who nounced Monday at a news
tournament.
always kept coming at you and would never quit .
confe rence· ca ll ed by the
Shearer carded 6~9 while
Mainly because he fought that way, like some kind of hwnan Bulls. The former coach of
Sneed
went 67·71 for 4-under
buzzsaw, they pinned many different names on hin1. Names the Milwaukee Bucks was not
138s
on
the Charlotte Country
like ''Hurricane Henry," "Homicide Hank' ' and "Hammering available for comment.
Club
course
.
Henry."
It app eared the Bull s
Five men tied at 140 : Gary
Of all the labels, though, none ever fit hin1better than the one wanted to keep it that way
Koch (69-71), Bob Gilder (7().
he became known by best - "Perpetual Motion."
until today 's scheduled news 70), Mike Morley (611-72 ),
That was his style then. and now 40 years ·later, Henry conference - Costello's fir st
Armstrong ,.the only fighter in boxing history ever to hold three official meetin g wit h the Danny Edwa rds (70-70) and
world championships simultaneously, hasn't changed his ways media as Chicago's coach . Bobby Wadkins (69-71).
Among those who fail ed to
too much.
Costello's appointment fol- score at, or und'er, the 146
He's busy, busy, busy all the time.
lowed a month-long search by
U he isn't working with kids as assistant director of the new General Manager Rod cutoff were former U.S. Open
Herbert Hoover Boys Club of St. Louis, he 's preaching only Thorn , who had four finalists champion Ken Venturi and
three blocks away as associate pastor of the Mt. Olive Baptist in the race be fore he Memorial Open winner Jim
Church. And if he isn 't doing that he's about to fly off recommended Costello to the Simons. Venturi had a 7&lt;lver
78 in the afternoon to finish at
somewhere as he will in another day or so to Las Vegas.
executive committee of the
He's not goin g there to gamble , but to 1isit ailing Joe Louis team . Approva l by the 150, while Simons skied to an
because Mrs. Louis asked him to come and please see her co mmit tee was gr anted afternoon round 76 for a 148
total.
husband .
Monday.
"A lot of guys say the
Henry Armstrong , a senior citizen at 65, finds little time
Costello was the fir st coach
these days to dwell on old times. He's too occupied with more of the Milwaukee Bucks and USGA should change its ways
important things. But his memory hasn't dimmed so much in his third year the team won {in qua li fy ing)," Si mons
that he can't remember how much of his blood and sweat it the NBA cha mpionship. In his sa id . " I don'l agree.
Qua lifying is not that tough.
took to accwnulate those three titles in 19311.
first eight years, the Bucks
Toug hest of the three, he says, was the lightweight crown he won fi ve divisional titles with U you play respecta bly you
won from Lou Ambers at Madtson Square Garden less than 90 407 victo ries and 249 defeats. qualify.''
days after he beat Barney Ross for the welterweight
Costello, under pressure
championship.
from the curre nt Bucks'
Spo rts Tran uc ti ons
" In that fight, the referee , Billy Cavanaugh, came over after president, James Fitzgerald,
By U n1 t ed j:)ress in ter nat ional
the 12th round and told me he was going to stop it," Armstrong resigned on Nov. 10, 1976, but
Monda y
Basketb all
says.
continued to watch the team
icago Named La rry
"I asked him why. I had knocked Ambers down several from the stands. Last season CosChtello
as coa ch .
Philadelphia ~ Signed gua r d
times and knew I was ahea d on points. Cavanaugh said to me, he worked as a pro scout and
Jerry For t.
'Look at all the blood in the ring !' I said, 'So what•• He
Hockl'y
broadcaster
of
some
said,'lt 's all yours.· I told him I wouldn't bleed anymore. He Marquette basketball games.
Minnesota (NHL) - Signed
detenseman Don Jackson of
said if I did, he was going to stop it.
Notr e Dame and si gned Ted
'I don 't want to lose my job,' he told me. 'You can fight
Hampson as coach of th ei r
Oklahoma City far m in the
anywhere you want but! can only referee in New York."'
CHL
1nternafional League
One of the few men he ever lost to was Sugar Ray Robinson,
F ootball
United Press Inter na ti ona l
New York Giants - Signed
but in Robinson 's opinion , Henry Armstrong was the best
W . l. P et . G B
ei ght h rou nd draft p ick Je ff
Ch arlest on
35 14 .714
fighter who ever lived .
Richmond
26 20 .565 7 1 7 Grady , linebacker from Flori da
Twenty-four years ago. Armstrong was elected to Boxing 's ColumbuS
A&amp;M . 11th ·round p ick Greg
21 70 .524 9 1 :1
Lawson . runn 1ng t:&gt;a ck trom
2 1 73 .•77 1 P ~
Hall of Fame and nobody has any more right to be in there . He Toledo
Ro c hester
21 23 .471 11 1-. Western Illinois , and two tree
had I75 professional fights, winning 144, including 97 by Pawtucket
agen ts, Jim Curry, w id e receiv
2 1 74 . 4~ 7 12
er fr om Harvard . and M i ke
knockout. But that 's all in the past .
Ti de wat er
7J 17 .A60 12 1 •
Hams , guard from Nonheas
14 32 . 30&lt;~ 19 1 ~
Wha t he's far more involved with now is the work he's doing Syracuse
tern ,
M onday ' s R esu l1 s
New York Jets Signed
with the local youngsters .
Ro c hester 5, Tidew a ter 4
r unn ing ba ck N1ck Giaqu in to
"I'm thankful to have this job," he says. "There is no Richmon d 10, Sy ra cuse d
and linebac ker Terry Ra msey ,
ton 4, Pawtu cket 1
greater satisfaction than working with kids . They range in age Cha rlesTod•v
both of the Un 1ver s lty of
' s Ga m es
Conn ect icut . and
li11ebac ker
from 6 to 18. None of them ever saw me fight , but that isn 't Roches ter at T 1dewater
Kev in Benson of Maryland , all
a cuse at R ichmond
important. One of !hem came up to me the other day and said, Syr
as tree agents .
Toledo at Ch arl eston
Buflato Si gned runnmg
'Mistuh Armstrong, you're a famous man. Like George Pawtuc ke t at Co lumbus
ba ck Dennis Johnson of Miss 1s
We dnes d ay 's Games
Washington . You're in the encyclopedias and the history
sipp 1 State , th ei r th ird round
Rochester at T ide water
books. We studied all about you today .' I told him, 'All right , Syracuse
dr af t chOice. lo a series of one
at R ichmond
vear contracts .
Toledo at Charleston
then, you'd better listen to me."'
Base ball
Armstrong earned nearly $4 million before he retired in 1945 Pawtu c ket at Columbus
San Diego - Claimed inf ield
er Fernando Gonza le1 from
and he remembers some of his purses he never even got to see.
Pll tsburgh on wa i vers and sa id
"One of the fellows I fought was Baby Arizmendi, a Mex·
they would cu i a player today
to make roo m lor h im .
ican," he says.
Cleve lan d - Opt ioned infield .
"I was getting only $50 a fight before my first fight with
DAUGHTER BORN
cr
p1nch runner Larry Lintz
Arizmendi al)d my manager at lhe time, Wirt Ross, told me I
Mr. and Mrs. Ern ie Sisson. to Port land of the Pac i f ic co ast
L eague and reac tl vatea inlield
could get $1.500 plus 10 per cent of the gate if I promised not to Syracuse . announce tnc birtn er
Hora ce Speed of!
the
knock out Arizmendi .
or a daughter , Tuesday, May d1sabled l ist
Soccer
"On the night of the figh t, I was hitting Arizmendi real good 30 at the Holzer Medical
- F1red Head
with my right hand. Ross said if I kept it up, I'd knock him out, Center. The infant wcighc'&lt;l CoaLochs Angeles
Te r ry Fisher and re
so I hit him with a left jab and my manager said I shouldn 't do e1ght pounds, six ounces and pla ced h 1m w 1th Tomm ie
that , either.
1\lls been named s~mantha Sm 1t h
'What should I do then?' I asked him. 'Just bob and weave ,' Dyann. Mr. and Mrs. Sisson
have another daughter ,
he said ."
SUNS WIN
After the fight , Armstrong went to a Mexico City dance hall Sherri Dawn, age 10. MaterIn re ce nt T-ba ll action
with a beautiful senorita.
tllll gra ndparents are Mr . and VJSJtmg Syra cuse Suns
"While I there, my Mexican trainer came and told me some Mrs. Edison Braee,Fl.acine, downed t he Midd lepo rt
'bandidos' had robbed my purse from the box office," says and the paterna I grand- Bucks, 31 to 8.
Armstrong. "He said 'All the money, she go boom !' I excused parents arc Mr. and Mrs.
myself and went looking for my manager but didn't find him Ernest Sisson, Sr., Srracuse .
until the next morning. He gave me that same song and dance Mrs . Grace Williiuns of
SEEN AND HEA RD
about the bandidos stealing my money.
Syracuse is a paternal great·
!11r . and Mrs. Harley
" You know something 1 I don 't believe that story yet. "
gra ndmothe r.
St;,lnaker were in Piqua over
the weekend to visit their son,
Bruce, who is app€a ring at
Mo's Lounge. They were join·
ed fur the evening by Mr. and
the way many medJcmes pro- Mrs. Richard Cl~rk . Lima .
duced by drug compantes are Mrs . Cla rk and Mrs.
studied before marketing . Stalnaker g radu~ted in the
Often the scientists and same high school class.
Lawrence E. Lamb,M.D.
labonttories involved Hre not
Bruce will be app€aring tn
toUtlly without bias as often Troy for the next 10 days at
they arc investigators one the Holiday Inn. On May 31 he
I 'I&lt;'P r nwdi (' illt'
since Tagamet has been !.e way or another for the drug was a guest on the Bob Braun
subject of a heavy promo- comp~ ny involved.
Vartety Show whi ch
I am sendin g you The un1:1;111ates in Cincmnat1 .
tional campa ign both in the
DF.A H DR. L~MB - I read Lay and mc'!l tcal press . In fact Health Letter nwnber 1·5,
1n n, ur co lumn about I ha ve seldom see n a Ulcers : Duodenal. Stomach,
Taga'met betng available in medtcine given so much pro- which will give you the basic
the Untted SUites. My son ts motion and publi c ity. informali un abuut ukers.
MINEOLA , N.Y. (UPI) 24 \'ears old and has had ~ Perhaps because of this it Others who arc interested ttt
Attorneys
for both sides in a
duc;,Jenal ulcer fur ~t least recctved unusually rapid ap· lhis tssue can send :;o cenlo,; $10 million dama ge suit
f&lt;•ur l ears. I suppose beca use prova l from the Food and wtth a long, stamped , self·
against sports magnate Roy
111' " a worner tt nherited Drug Administration IFDA I. addressed envelope for it to
Boc said Monday they hoped
from me&lt;. He ts an accoun- Ordi narily the FDA is r~the r me in ca re of thts newspaper ,
to reach an o ut ~f -court
tiln t and JUSl ftm shed gcttmg cauttous about ~ pprov ing P.O. Box 1551, Hadi o City Sta settlement
by June 15.
Ius master; degree. Is his new medicines until they tion , New York, NY 10019.
Thoma
s
Thornton , a
Tagamet or oth er
uln·r the same as a pept1 c have be en comp let ely
limited
partner
in the NHL
uker ''
evaluated by sc ientists in the medici nes Hre not a New York Islanders, has sued
substitute for proper living
I would apprectote tt 1f you United States.
Boe, principal owner of the
would ; end m&lt;· ' mne tnforma·
While it appears that the which ts essential to the hockey team and the NBA
lt&gt;Hl al»ut thtS new treat· drug has a very good place in management of all peptic
New Jersey Nets, for
men!
medicine and probably has ulcer cases. That includes allegedly illegally switching
[) E A K
H F. AD E R .. few side effects, there have removal of stress and the
funds from the Islanders to
ragarnet. als(l known as been a few warnings. One of eliminations uf ulcerogenic the financially ailing Nets,
u metttl lllC , ts betng usl'&lt;l ex - these is a suggestion by ~ t\llbits such as the use of col· who moved from Long Island
. tcnsiVel' tn the treatment of Baltimore physician . that fee, alcohol and smoktng to New Jersey last year.
1&gt;epttc ul&lt;er By the way Tagamet might affect the c t g~rettes .
du&lt;xlen"l ull'e" are one form bone marrow and its ability
of p€pttt· ulcer A pe ptic ulcer . to produce blood cells. This
can occur tn etthe r the was discounted by the phar·
duodenum . which ts the first maceutical fi rm marketing
part of the tntest111e JUSt out· Tagamet.
However, the doc tor's sugstdc the stmnach, or inside
the stomach itself \'lost gestion as pu blished in
ulcers. even tf thcprc calle&lt;l Lancet Medi c~) Jo urnal
stomac·h ulcers, an· really raises some questions about
duodenal ulcers
how thoroughly Ihe adverse
IN THE
Tag amet h•s a dtfferent ac· cffecL&lt; of Tagamet h~vebeen
twn from anUtdds
studied . An earlier question
Basically tt mhthlts the about Tagamet concerned its •
stoma ch 's ability to form ex· role in the cause of tumors in
('ess amounts of actcl rather rats. Howeve r, this data was
than fli' Utrallztng the uver· reviewed by the FDA before
OPEN :
production of acids. It was us· they approved .the drug for
Mon ., Tues., Wed. &amp; Sat . 8: 30til5 :00
ed extenstvely in England public ust . It has also.been
Thursday Till 2 Noon
before it was approved '" tltts reported in Lance t that
Friday Unti18 P. M.
country and received good Tagamet was ineffective in
Herman Gr ate
reviews there.
stopping bleeding, a com·
773-5592
Mason, W. Va .
I'm certain th~t your son 's plication of peptic ulcers.
dod•&gt;r knows all about tt
1 am a bit concerned about

HEALTH

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Two winners of PG A tour
events this year did qualify
for the Open, to be contested
June 1&gt;-18 at Cherry Hill
Country Club in Englewood ,
Colo. New Or leans Open
winner Lon Hinkle had a 7()-71
for a 141, while Tallahassee
champion Barry Jaeckel shot
72-70-142.
Former North Carolina
State golfer Vance Heafner
was the only amateur to
qualify. He had failed in three
previous attempts.
·
Only 61 golfers competed
for the 34 spots.
J .C. Snea d said he did not
mind having to qualify , alth ough he has won six
tournaments and more than
$800 ,000. But he said he
ob jects to the 36-hole
qualifying round because it
makes it difficult for older
players, such as his uncle
Sa,';' Snead, t? qualify ·
Sam didn t even try to
qua lify this year because he.
has problems w•th. h1s f"':t
and h1s hlp and he JUst can I
walk ~ holes," J.C. Snead
srud. U he had to play 18
holes to qualify he probably
would have done it."

Lines cores

NBA title
on line
in Seattle
By MAII.TIN HEERWALD
s~ ATTLE (UP!) - The
Seattle Supersonics and the
wa shin gton ~.Bullets hav e
spe nt all their tomorrows.
TheSonlcs had one to spare
going into the sixth game of
the NBA championship series
at Landover, Md., but the
Bullets took care of that, 117·
82.
In Wednesday night's
seventh and final game for
the NBA crown, the only
advantage left to Seattle is
the home court. And when
there is no tomorrow tllat
edge is questionable.
"Whoever wants it the most
is going to get it," said
washington guard Kevin
Grevey. "The home court
isn 't goin g to mean much."
" It doesn •t matter where
the game is played - their
fans can't put the ball in the
basket for them," the Bullets'
Elvin Hayes said.
Washington Coa ch Dick
Motta hoped Sunda y's
lopsided score would give the
Sanies a lot to think about.
"This will be the first time
there will be true playoff
pressure, 11 he said.
Sonic Coach Lenny Wilkens

Spinks' attomey

-·.---.- -. . .

attacks promoters
l.AS VEGAS, Nev. (UP! ) Leon Spink!' attorney went to
court arguing Spinks "tlldn't
have time to duck," but he
wasn 't talking about an All
jab.
The lawyer was asking a
federal court judge to ~rder
promoters to stop btlllng the
bout Friday between Ken
Norton and Larry Holmes as
a heavyweight championship
fight.
The World Boxing Council
took away Its version of the
heavyweight Utl e from
Spinks, saying he did not
fuflll an obllgation to fight
Norton.
Spinks retains the World
Box i n g a ss o c iation
championship.
"Leon Spinks did not duck
anybody," the attorney sald.
"He was only champion 30
days - he didn 't have time to
duck anybody. "
'Spinks' attorney, Edward
Bell of Detroit, said Spinks
does not object to holding the
Norton bout, but to bllllng it
as for the world heavyweight
championship.
U.S District Judge Roger
Foley took the arguments
under submission.
Spinks, who was not in

court Monday , defuted
Muhammad Allin Las Veau
Feb. U to gain both the World
Boxing Amclatlon and the
WBC titles. He has allo ltled
the WBC for stripping hlm of
Its tlUe.
Bell told the court Mooday
noth ing In the WBC ·
coostltutlon required a newly
crowned champion to defend
the tiOe against the No. 1
contender tlle first time out,
The WBC contended botll
All and Spinks agreed when
the February bout was
sanctlooed that tlle winner
would flght Norton next.
Attorney Bertram Fields,
representing the WBC, told
the court, " In tllls country a
man's agreement means
90111ethlng. All and Spirikl
agreed to fight Norton next."
The WBC attorney sald that
if there Is legal Interference
with the fight Friday "ABC
television will be out mUllQnl
and Norton stands to lose f%.3

PAN READY

~~E~~..........~.s g~

SPECIALCUT FOR THE GRILL

59¢
FRYERS.L~;
SPLIT

WHOLE

million.."

FRYING

Bell disagreed. "ABC, the
WBC and Norton all knew
when they signed conti'acta
for Friday's flght tllat we hid
filed suit. It isn't our fault It ls
now being heard the week of
the fight ."

Major League Baseball Results was confident his players
By United Pren tnterniltional
Nat ional Leauu e
Hous
001 000 000 ~ 1 8 0

would regroup and the roar of
friendly fans would prove the
Chi
ooo oio 001- 2 8 o homecourt advantage is at its
Lemongello, Samblto {9) and
Baldw in. Lamp, Her nan dez and peak in a championship
Rader W- Hernan dez (S . l l. L showdown.
- L emongello (5:6).
Asked about the difference
Sa n Fran
000 110 00 1- 3 8 0 between th e two clubs in the
000 000 13x- 4 5 0
Phil a
Blue, Moff i tt t 8l and H ill ; series, Wilkens said :
"We're going to win that
Carlton , Reed (9) and McCar .
ver , Boone (8 ). W- Carlfon (6. game Wednesday. That's the
5) . L - 81 ue (6 .A) . HRs- SM
Fran cisco , M e Covey t5 J. Evans difference."
t5l ; Philadelphia , Morr ison (2),
"They've still got to win
Boon e (bl. Cardenal (2 },

San C&gt;Qo
010 001 001 - 3 10 0
Mil
020 000 llx - 4 9 1
Rasm ussen , O' AcQu ls to (7)
and Roberts ; May . Gorman (9)
and Carter . W - Ma~ (6.51 . L Rasmussen (2·71. HRs- Mo ntr eal , Dawson (8).
Alia
000 003 014- 8 12 3
000 101 020- 4 7 1
Ptsbgh
Ruthven . Easter ly ( 8) and
Murphy , Can delar ia, Tekulve
(9) and Oft . W- Easter ly (2.4).
(J-4).
HRsL - Candelar ia
AIIMia , Murphy IJ).

030 500 000- 8 9 I
20012 1 003- 917 1
Rhoden , R.!!l uflhM (5) , Forst .
er I BJ and Grot e: Br uhert ,
S1cbe rt (4 ), Murray (7), Lock
wood (9) and Stearns . Hodges
(9). W- Loc kwood 15 A ) . L Forster ( 1 2). H Rs- Los An·
geles , Cey ll) .
LA

N.Y .

(lOC i

SIL

000 100 010- 2 7 1
60

00\0000D0-1

Sea ver and werner ; Forsch ,
L 1llell (8) and Simmons . WSeaver (6--t ) . L - Forsch P A ) .
Am er ican leatue
000 200 ooo- 2 6 0
Cl ~ e
000 000 000- 0 J 1
Ston e and Nahorodny ; Wltits
and Hasse y W- Sion e (53 ). L
Wa i ts D 61.

(hi

( 10 in nin gs }
000 200 000 • - 6 9 7
Bal
Cal
00 1 000 001
2 84
Palmer , Stanhouse (8) and
Dempsev ; Aase, Hartzell (61 ,
LaRoche ( 10 ). Griffin (10) . WSta nhouse 114 ) l - l.,ROche
{J 21. HRs- Bal t imare, Murray

o-

(8 )

one more," said veteran
Sonic forward Paul Silas who
has two championship rings
from his days with the Boston
Celtics, "and ain 't no way in
hell they're going to do tllat."
For the Bullets, a victory
Wednesday would bury the
criticism that Wa shington
chokes on the big games and
erase a mid-aeason slump
that had even optimi sts
writing them out of the
playoff picture .
For Wilkens' Wonders, the
championship would put the
perfect cap on a season in
which Wilkens took over as
head coach last Nov . 30.
Th en, the Sanies had won only
5 of 22 games. Only the New
Jersey Nets had a more
disma l record.
Under Wilkens, Seattle won
41 regular season games and
lost only 19. They're 13-ll in
the playoffs and· shooting for
all the marbles Wednesday in
what will make their 104th
game in a long campaign.

We'd
you to
chicken-out

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000 110 50()- 1 14 0
400 400 lOx- 9 13 1
COLUMBUS (UPI )- Dick
R•ptev , Wr ight (2 ), Drago (1 )
Brandt
guided Bill Coy to a
and Fis k ; Br ober g, Sos a (7)
and Essian W- Broberg ( 6... ). 2~. length victory over Joe
L R 1pley ( 1 4l. HRs- Bosron . Cole In the featured eighth
Hobson (11 ). Rice ( 19 ), Fisk

race at Scioto Downs Monday
night.
NY
000 100 101- 3 9 2
The winner covered the
Sea
131 110 OOx- 7 17 0
Fi9ueroa , Bean ie (51 and mile in 2:05 2-5 and returned
Mu nson . House . Rome (7) and
$6.41l, $3.80 and $2.60. Joe Cole
St 1nson . W- House (• .Ji l . LFiguero a (5 -41 HRs New kicked back $12.41l and $5.60
York , Munson ( 7) , Blair { \ ) j for second, while Matilda
Seattle , Jones {J l. Stanton (J J.
came in third and paid $3.41l.
(Only games scheduled)
Sharloe Byrd captured the
ninth race, kicking off a 7- 1~
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ATT END SERVICE
and
Berea Star showed.
Mr. and Mrs. Roher!
A crowd of 4,880 wagered
Burdetk were in Spri ngfield
recently for the graduation of $364,994.
thei r nephew, Ga ry A.
Haggy, son of Mr. and Mrs.
James Haggy, the former
Rose Hysell of Pomeroy .
Gary graduated from the Honor Society and received a
oiQuth High School in Spr· scholarship to Ohio State
'irilfield and was one of the where he will attend in the
top members academically of
fall. Graduation was held at
his graduating class. He was the Memorial Hall.
a member of the Natfonal

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19 oz. box .. .. ................... ...... 59'
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Sport Parade

Costello
new Bulls
coach

Shearer, Sneed
lead qualifiers

By J ERRY MITCHELL
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (UPI )
- Bob Shearer and Ed Sneed
CHICAGO ( UPI ) - Larry led a group of 34 qualifiers
By MILTON RICHMAN
Costello becomes coach of the Monday fol' the U.S. Open
UPI Spol'll Editor
Chicago Bulls today and will golf championship, while a
unfold his plan to turn the couple of PGA tour winners
ST. LOUIS ( UPI) - In his time , Henry Armstrong was that tea m into a win ner.
were among those who failed
rarest of all men, a pure natural.
His appointment was an· to survive the sectional
He was absolutely indefatigable inside the ring , a fellow who nounced Monday at a news
tournament.
always kept coming at you and would never quit .
confe rence· ca ll ed by the
Shearer carded 6~9 while
Mainly because he fought that way, like some kind of hwnan Bulls. The former coach of
Sneed
went 67·71 for 4-under
buzzsaw, they pinned many different names on hin1. Names the Milwaukee Bucks was not
138s
on
the Charlotte Country
like ''Hurricane Henry," "Homicide Hank' ' and "Hammering available for comment.
Club
course
.
Henry."
It app eared the Bull s
Five men tied at 140 : Gary
Of all the labels, though, none ever fit hin1better than the one wanted to keep it that way
Koch (69-71), Bob Gilder (7().
he became known by best - "Perpetual Motion."
until today 's scheduled news 70), Mike Morley (611-72 ),
That was his style then. and now 40 years ·later, Henry conference - Costello's fir st
Armstrong ,.the only fighter in boxing history ever to hold three official meetin g wit h the Danny Edwa rds (70-70) and
world championships simultaneously, hasn't changed his ways media as Chicago's coach . Bobby Wadkins (69-71).
Among those who fail ed to
too much.
Costello's appointment fol- score at, or und'er, the 146
He's busy, busy, busy all the time.
lowed a month-long search by
U he isn't working with kids as assistant director of the new General Manager Rod cutoff were former U.S. Open
Herbert Hoover Boys Club of St. Louis, he 's preaching only Thorn , who had four finalists champion Ken Venturi and
three blocks away as associate pastor of the Mt. Olive Baptist in the race be fore he Memorial Open winner Jim
Church. And if he isn 't doing that he's about to fly off recommended Costello to the Simons. Venturi had a 7&lt;lver
78 in the afternoon to finish at
somewhere as he will in another day or so to Las Vegas.
executive committee of the
He's not goin g there to gamble , but to 1isit ailing Joe Louis team . Approva l by the 150, while Simons skied to an
because Mrs. Louis asked him to come and please see her co mmit tee was gr anted afternoon round 76 for a 148
total.
husband .
Monday.
"A lot of guys say the
Henry Armstrong , a senior citizen at 65, finds little time
Costello was the fir st coach
these days to dwell on old times. He's too occupied with more of the Milwaukee Bucks and USGA should change its ways
important things. But his memory hasn't dimmed so much in his third year the team won {in qua li fy ing)," Si mons
that he can't remember how much of his blood and sweat it the NBA cha mpionship. In his sa id . " I don'l agree.
Qua lifying is not that tough.
took to accwnulate those three titles in 19311.
first eight years, the Bucks
Toug hest of the three, he says, was the lightweight crown he won fi ve divisional titles with U you play respecta bly you
won from Lou Ambers at Madtson Square Garden less than 90 407 victo ries and 249 defeats. qualify.''
days after he beat Barney Ross for the welterweight
Costello, under pressure
championship.
from the curre nt Bucks'
Spo rts Tran uc ti ons
" In that fight, the referee , Billy Cavanaugh, came over after president, James Fitzgerald,
By U n1 t ed j:)ress in ter nat ional
the 12th round and told me he was going to stop it," Armstrong resigned on Nov. 10, 1976, but
Monda y
Basketb all
says.
continued to watch the team
icago Named La rry
"I asked him why. I had knocked Ambers down several from the stands. Last season CosChtello
as coa ch .
Philadelphia ~ Signed gua r d
times and knew I was ahea d on points. Cavanaugh said to me, he worked as a pro scout and
Jerry For t.
'Look at all the blood in the ring !' I said, 'So what•• He
Hockl'y
broadcaster
of
some
said,'lt 's all yours.· I told him I wouldn't bleed anymore. He Marquette basketball games.
Minnesota (NHL) - Signed
detenseman Don Jackson of
said if I did, he was going to stop it.
Notr e Dame and si gned Ted
'I don 't want to lose my job,' he told me. 'You can fight
Hampson as coach of th ei r
Oklahoma City far m in the
anywhere you want but! can only referee in New York."'
CHL
1nternafional League
One of the few men he ever lost to was Sugar Ray Robinson,
F ootball
United Press Inter na ti ona l
New York Giants - Signed
but in Robinson 's opinion , Henry Armstrong was the best
W . l. P et . G B
ei ght h rou nd draft p ick Je ff
Ch arlest on
35 14 .714
fighter who ever lived .
Richmond
26 20 .565 7 1 7 Grady , linebacker from Flori da
Twenty-four years ago. Armstrong was elected to Boxing 's ColumbuS
A&amp;M . 11th ·round p ick Greg
21 70 .524 9 1 :1
Lawson . runn 1ng t:&gt;a ck trom
2 1 73 .•77 1 P ~
Hall of Fame and nobody has any more right to be in there . He Toledo
Ro c hester
21 23 .471 11 1-. Western Illinois , and two tree
had I75 professional fights, winning 144, including 97 by Pawtucket
agen ts, Jim Curry, w id e receiv
2 1 74 . 4~ 7 12
er fr om Harvard . and M i ke
knockout. But that 's all in the past .
Ti de wat er
7J 17 .A60 12 1 •
Hams , guard from Nonheas
14 32 . 30&lt;~ 19 1 ~
Wha t he's far more involved with now is the work he's doing Syracuse
tern ,
M onday ' s R esu l1 s
New York Jets Signed
with the local youngsters .
Ro c hester 5, Tidew a ter 4
r unn ing ba ck N1ck Giaqu in to
"I'm thankful to have this job," he says. "There is no Richmon d 10, Sy ra cuse d
and linebac ker Terry Ra msey ,
ton 4, Pawtu cket 1
greater satisfaction than working with kids . They range in age Cha rlesTod•v
both of the Un 1ver s lty of
' s Ga m es
Conn ect icut . and
li11ebac ker
from 6 to 18. None of them ever saw me fight , but that isn 't Roches ter at T 1dewater
Kev in Benson of Maryland , all
a cuse at R ichmond
important. One of !hem came up to me the other day and said, Syr
as tree agents .
Toledo at Ch arl eston
Buflato Si gned runnmg
'Mistuh Armstrong, you're a famous man. Like George Pawtuc ke t at Co lumbus
ba ck Dennis Johnson of Miss 1s
We dnes d ay 's Games
Washington . You're in the encyclopedias and the history
sipp 1 State , th ei r th ird round
Rochester at T ide water
books. We studied all about you today .' I told him, 'All right , Syracuse
dr af t chOice. lo a series of one
at R ichmond
vear contracts .
Toledo at Charleston
then, you'd better listen to me."'
Base ball
Armstrong earned nearly $4 million before he retired in 1945 Pawtu c ket at Columbus
San Diego - Claimed inf ield
er Fernando Gonza le1 from
and he remembers some of his purses he never even got to see.
Pll tsburgh on wa i vers and sa id
"One of the fellows I fought was Baby Arizmendi, a Mex·
they would cu i a player today
to make roo m lor h im .
ican," he says.
Cleve lan d - Opt ioned infield .
"I was getting only $50 a fight before my first fight with
DAUGHTER BORN
cr
p1nch runner Larry Lintz
Arizmendi al)d my manager at lhe time, Wirt Ross, told me I
Mr. and Mrs. Ern ie Sisson. to Port land of the Pac i f ic co ast
L eague and reac tl vatea inlield
could get $1.500 plus 10 per cent of the gate if I promised not to Syracuse . announce tnc birtn er
Hora ce Speed of!
the
knock out Arizmendi .
or a daughter , Tuesday, May d1sabled l ist
Soccer
"On the night of the figh t, I was hitting Arizmendi real good 30 at the Holzer Medical
- F1red Head
with my right hand. Ross said if I kept it up, I'd knock him out, Center. The infant wcighc'&lt;l CoaLochs Angeles
Te r ry Fisher and re
so I hit him with a left jab and my manager said I shouldn 't do e1ght pounds, six ounces and pla ced h 1m w 1th Tomm ie
that , either.
1\lls been named s~mantha Sm 1t h
'What should I do then?' I asked him. 'Just bob and weave ,' Dyann. Mr. and Mrs. Sisson
have another daughter ,
he said ."
SUNS WIN
After the fight , Armstrong went to a Mexico City dance hall Sherri Dawn, age 10. MaterIn re ce nt T-ba ll action
with a beautiful senorita.
tllll gra ndparents are Mr . and VJSJtmg Syra cuse Suns
"While I there, my Mexican trainer came and told me some Mrs. Edison Braee,Fl.acine, downed t he Midd lepo rt
'bandidos' had robbed my purse from the box office," says and the paterna I grand- Bucks, 31 to 8.
Armstrong. "He said 'All the money, she go boom !' I excused parents arc Mr. and Mrs.
myself and went looking for my manager but didn't find him Ernest Sisson, Sr., Srracuse .
until the next morning. He gave me that same song and dance Mrs . Grace Williiuns of
SEEN AND HEA RD
about the bandidos stealing my money.
Syracuse is a paternal great·
!11r . and Mrs. Harley
" You know something 1 I don 't believe that story yet. "
gra ndmothe r.
St;,lnaker were in Piqua over
the weekend to visit their son,
Bruce, who is app€a ring at
Mo's Lounge. They were join·
ed fur the evening by Mr. and
the way many medJcmes pro- Mrs. Richard Cl~rk . Lima .
duced by drug compantes are Mrs . Cla rk and Mrs.
studied before marketing . Stalnaker g radu~ted in the
Often the scientists and same high school class.
Lawrence E. Lamb,M.D.
labonttories involved Hre not
Bruce will be app€aring tn
toUtlly without bias as often Troy for the next 10 days at
they arc investigators one the Holiday Inn. On May 31 he
I 'I&lt;'P r nwdi (' illt'
since Tagamet has been !.e way or another for the drug was a guest on the Bob Braun
subject of a heavy promo- comp~ ny involved.
Vartety Show whi ch
I am sendin g you The un1:1;111ates in Cincmnat1 .
tional campa ign both in the
DF.A H DR. L~MB - I read Lay and mc'!l tcal press . In fact Health Letter nwnber 1·5,
1n n, ur co lumn about I ha ve seldom see n a Ulcers : Duodenal. Stomach,
Taga'met betng available in medtcine given so much pro- which will give you the basic
the Untted SUites. My son ts motion and publi c ity. informali un abuut ukers.
MINEOLA , N.Y. (UPI) 24 \'ears old and has had ~ Perhaps because of this it Others who arc interested ttt
Attorneys
for both sides in a
duc;,Jenal ulcer fur ~t least recctved unusually rapid ap· lhis tssue can send :;o cenlo,; $10 million dama ge suit
f&lt;•ur l ears. I suppose beca use prova l from the Food and wtth a long, stamped , self·
against sports magnate Roy
111' " a worner tt nherited Drug Administration IFDA I. addressed envelope for it to
Boc said Monday they hoped
from me&lt;. He ts an accoun- Ordi narily the FDA is r~the r me in ca re of thts newspaper ,
to reach an o ut ~f -court
tiln t and JUSl ftm shed gcttmg cauttous about ~ pprov ing P.O. Box 1551, Hadi o City Sta settlement
by June 15.
Ius master; degree. Is his new medicines until they tion , New York, NY 10019.
Thoma
s
Thornton , a
Tagamet or oth er
uln·r the same as a pept1 c have be en comp let ely
limited
partner
in the NHL
uker ''
evaluated by sc ientists in the medici nes Hre not a New York Islanders, has sued
substitute for proper living
I would apprectote tt 1f you United States.
Boe, principal owner of the
would ; end m&lt;· ' mne tnforma·
While it appears that the which ts essential to the hockey team and the NBA
lt&gt;Hl al»ut thtS new treat· drug has a very good place in management of all peptic
New Jersey Nets, for
men!
medicine and probably has ulcer cases. That includes allegedly illegally switching
[) E A K
H F. AD E R .. few side effects, there have removal of stress and the
funds from the Islanders to
ragarnet. als(l known as been a few warnings. One of eliminations uf ulcerogenic the financially ailing Nets,
u metttl lllC , ts betng usl'&lt;l ex - these is a suggestion by ~ t\llbits such as the use of col· who moved from Long Island
. tcnsiVel' tn the treatment of Baltimore physician . that fee, alcohol and smoktng to New Jersey last year.
1&gt;epttc ul&lt;er By the way Tagamet might affect the c t g~rettes .
du&lt;xlen"l ull'e" are one form bone marrow and its ability
of p€pttt· ulcer A pe ptic ulcer . to produce blood cells. This
can occur tn etthe r the was discounted by the phar·
duodenum . which ts the first maceutical fi rm marketing
part of the tntest111e JUSt out· Tagamet.
However, the doc tor's sugstdc the stmnach, or inside
the stomach itself \'lost gestion as pu blished in
ulcers. even tf thcprc calle&lt;l Lancet Medi c~) Jo urnal
stomac·h ulcers, an· really raises some questions about
duodenal ulcers
how thoroughly Ihe adverse
IN THE
Tag amet h•s a dtfferent ac· cffecL&lt; of Tagamet h~vebeen
twn from anUtdds
studied . An earlier question
Basically tt mhthlts the about Tagamet concerned its •
stoma ch 's ability to form ex· role in the cause of tumors in
('ess amounts of actcl rather rats. Howeve r, this data was
than fli' Utrallztng the uver· reviewed by the FDA before
OPEN :
production of acids. It was us· they approved .the drug for
Mon ., Tues., Wed. &amp; Sat . 8: 30til5 :00
ed extenstvely in England public ust . It has also.been
Thursday Till 2 Noon
before it was approved '" tltts reported in Lance t that
Friday Unti18 P. M.
country and received good Tagamet was ineffective in
Herman Gr ate
reviews there.
stopping bleeding, a com·
773-5592
Mason, W. Va .
I'm certain th~t your son 's plication of peptic ulcers.
dod•&gt;r knows all about tt
1 am a bit concerned about

HEALTH

SHOP

MASON FURNITURE
FOR THE BEST DEALS
TRI-STATE AREA

MASON FURNITURE

Two winners of PG A tour
events this year did qualify
for the Open, to be contested
June 1&gt;-18 at Cherry Hill
Country Club in Englewood ,
Colo. New Or leans Open
winner Lon Hinkle had a 7()-71
for a 141, while Tallahassee
champion Barry Jaeckel shot
72-70-142.
Former North Carolina
State golfer Vance Heafner
was the only amateur to
qualify. He had failed in three
previous attempts.
·
Only 61 golfers competed
for the 34 spots.
J .C. Snea d said he did not
mind having to qualify , alth ough he has won six
tournaments and more than
$800 ,000. But he said he
ob jects to the 36-hole
qualifying round because it
makes it difficult for older
players, such as his uncle
Sa,';' Snead, t? qualify ·
Sam didn t even try to
qua lify this year because he.
has problems w•th. h1s f"':t
and h1s hlp and he JUst can I
walk ~ holes," J.C. Snead
srud. U he had to play 18
holes to qualify he probably
would have done it."

Lines cores

NBA title
on line
in Seattle
By MAII.TIN HEERWALD
s~ ATTLE (UP!) - The
Seattle Supersonics and the
wa shin gton ~.Bullets hav e
spe nt all their tomorrows.
TheSonlcs had one to spare
going into the sixth game of
the NBA championship series
at Landover, Md., but the
Bullets took care of that, 117·
82.
In Wednesday night's
seventh and final game for
the NBA crown, the only
advantage left to Seattle is
the home court. And when
there is no tomorrow tllat
edge is questionable.
"Whoever wants it the most
is going to get it," said
washington guard Kevin
Grevey. "The home court
isn 't goin g to mean much."
" It doesn •t matter where
the game is played - their
fans can't put the ball in the
basket for them," the Bullets'
Elvin Hayes said.
Washington Coa ch Dick
Motta hoped Sunda y's
lopsided score would give the
Sanies a lot to think about.
"This will be the first time
there will be true playoff
pressure, 11 he said.
Sonic Coach Lenny Wilkens

Spinks' attomey

-·.---.- -. . .

attacks promoters
l.AS VEGAS, Nev. (UP! ) Leon Spink!' attorney went to
court arguing Spinks "tlldn't
have time to duck," but he
wasn 't talking about an All
jab.
The lawyer was asking a
federal court judge to ~rder
promoters to stop btlllng the
bout Friday between Ken
Norton and Larry Holmes as
a heavyweight championship
fight.
The World Boxing Council
took away Its version of the
heavyweight Utl e from
Spinks, saying he did not
fuflll an obllgation to fight
Norton.
Spinks retains the World
Box i n g a ss o c iation
championship.
"Leon Spinks did not duck
anybody," the attorney sald.
"He was only champion 30
days - he didn 't have time to
duck anybody. "
'Spinks' attorney, Edward
Bell of Detroit, said Spinks
does not object to holding the
Norton bout, but to bllllng it
as for the world heavyweight
championship.
U.S District Judge Roger
Foley took the arguments
under submission.
Spinks, who was not in

court Monday , defuted
Muhammad Allin Las Veau
Feb. U to gain both the World
Boxing Amclatlon and the
WBC titles. He has allo ltled
the WBC for stripping hlm of
Its tlUe.
Bell told the court Mooday
noth ing In the WBC ·
coostltutlon required a newly
crowned champion to defend
the tiOe against the No. 1
contender tlle first time out,
The WBC contended botll
All and Spinks agreed when
the February bout was
sanctlooed that tlle winner
would flght Norton next.
Attorney Bertram Fields,
representing the WBC, told
the court, " In tllls country a
man's agreement means
90111ethlng. All and Spirikl
agreed to fight Norton next."
The WBC attorney sald that
if there Is legal Interference
with the fight Friday "ABC
television will be out mUllQnl
and Norton stands to lose f%.3

PAN READY

~~E~~..........~.s g~

SPECIALCUT FOR THE GRILL

59¢
FRYERS.L~;
SPLIT

WHOLE

million.."

FRYING

Bell disagreed. "ABC, the
WBC and Norton all knew
when they signed conti'acta
for Friday's flght tllat we hid
filed suit. It isn't our fault It ls
now being heard the week of
the fight ."

Major League Baseball Results was confident his players
By United Pren tnterniltional
Nat ional Leauu e
Hous
001 000 000 ~ 1 8 0

would regroup and the roar of
friendly fans would prove the
Chi
ooo oio 001- 2 8 o homecourt advantage is at its
Lemongello, Samblto {9) and
Baldw in. Lamp, Her nan dez and peak in a championship
Rader W- Hernan dez (S . l l. L showdown.
- L emongello (5:6).
Asked about the difference
Sa n Fran
000 110 00 1- 3 8 0 between th e two clubs in the
000 000 13x- 4 5 0
Phil a
Blue, Moff i tt t 8l and H ill ; series, Wilkens said :
"We're going to win that
Carlton , Reed (9) and McCar .
ver , Boone (8 ). W- Carlfon (6. game Wednesday. That's the
5) . L - 81 ue (6 .A) . HRs- SM
Fran cisco , M e Covey t5 J. Evans difference."
t5l ; Philadelphia , Morr ison (2),
"They've still got to win
Boon e (bl. Cardenal (2 },

San C&gt;Qo
010 001 001 - 3 10 0
Mil
020 000 llx - 4 9 1
Rasm ussen , O' AcQu ls to (7)
and Roberts ; May . Gorman (9)
and Carter . W - Ma~ (6.51 . L Rasmussen (2·71. HRs- Mo ntr eal , Dawson (8).
Alia
000 003 014- 8 12 3
000 101 020- 4 7 1
Ptsbgh
Ruthven . Easter ly ( 8) and
Murphy , Can delar ia, Tekulve
(9) and Oft . W- Easter ly (2.4).
(J-4).
HRsL - Candelar ia
AIIMia , Murphy IJ).

030 500 000- 8 9 I
20012 1 003- 917 1
Rhoden , R.!!l uflhM (5) , Forst .
er I BJ and Grot e: Br uhert ,
S1cbe rt (4 ), Murray (7), Lock
wood (9) and Stearns . Hodges
(9). W- Loc kwood 15 A ) . L Forster ( 1 2). H Rs- Los An·
geles , Cey ll) .
LA

N.Y .

(lOC i

SIL

000 100 010- 2 7 1
60

00\0000D0-1

Sea ver and werner ; Forsch ,
L 1llell (8) and Simmons . WSeaver (6--t ) . L - Forsch P A ) .
Am er ican leatue
000 200 ooo- 2 6 0
Cl ~ e
000 000 000- 0 J 1
Ston e and Nahorodny ; Wltits
and Hasse y W- Sion e (53 ). L
Wa i ts D 61.

(hi

( 10 in nin gs }
000 200 000 • - 6 9 7
Bal
Cal
00 1 000 001
2 84
Palmer , Stanhouse (8) and
Dempsev ; Aase, Hartzell (61 ,
LaRoche ( 10 ). Griffin (10) . WSta nhouse 114 ) l - l.,ROche
{J 21. HRs- Bal t imare, Murray

o-

(8 )

one more," said veteran
Sonic forward Paul Silas who
has two championship rings
from his days with the Boston
Celtics, "and ain 't no way in
hell they're going to do tllat."
For the Bullets, a victory
Wednesday would bury the
criticism that Wa shington
chokes on the big games and
erase a mid-aeason slump
that had even optimi sts
writing them out of the
playoff picture .
For Wilkens' Wonders, the
championship would put the
perfect cap on a season in
which Wilkens took over as
head coach last Nov . 30.
Th en, the Sanies had won only
5 of 22 games. Only the New
Jersey Nets had a more
disma l record.
Under Wilkens, Seattle won
41 regular season games and
lost only 19. They're 13-ll in
the playoffs and· shooting for
all the marbles Wednesday in
what will make their 104th
game in a long campaign.

We'd
you to
chicken-out

BUY THE PARTS
YOU LIKE BEST

LEGS
MEATY
&amp; THIGHS .......... ~?:. 89~ BREASTS .. ..... ~~:_gge

tonight

GROCERY FEATURES
EVERYDAY LOW MILK PRICES

All Star 2% Milk .. .... .. .. .............. Gal. '1.65
All Star Homo Milk ................. ... .. 112 gal. 89'
All Star Homo Milk ..................... Gal. 11.69
MOUNTAIN TOP FROZEN APPLE PIE
35 oz. size ............... .. .. .....'1.19
KRAFT VELVEETA CHEESE

2 lb. box .. ....... ............... '1.99
KRAFT AMERICAN CHEESE SINGLES

8 oz. " ...................... pkg. 79'
•

000 110 50()- 1 14 0
400 400 lOx- 9 13 1
COLUMBUS (UPI )- Dick
R•ptev , Wr ight (2 ), Drago (1 )
Brandt
guided Bill Coy to a
and Fis k ; Br ober g, Sos a (7)
and Essian W- Broberg ( 6... ). 2~. length victory over Joe
L R 1pley ( 1 4l. HRs- Bosron . Cole In the featured eighth
Hobson (11 ). Rice ( 19 ), Fisk

race at Scioto Downs Monday
night.
NY
000 100 101- 3 9 2
The winner covered the
Sea
131 110 OOx- 7 17 0
Fi9ueroa , Bean ie (51 and mile in 2:05 2-5 and returned
Mu nson . House . Rome (7) and
$6.41l, $3.80 and $2.60. Joe Cole
St 1nson . W- House (• .Ji l . LFiguero a (5 -41 HRs New kicked back $12.41l and $5.60
York , Munson ( 7) , Blair { \ ) j for second, while Matilda
Seattle , Jones {J l. Stanton (J J.
came in third and paid $3.41l.
(Only games scheduled)
Sharloe Byrd captured the
ninth race, kicking off a 7- 1~
trifecta th at was worth
$1 ,4S7 .41l. Eastern Scot placed
ATT END SERVICE
and
Berea Star showed.
Mr. and Mrs. Roher!
A crowd of 4,880 wagered
Burdetk were in Spri ngfield
recently for the graduation of $364,994.
thei r nephew, Ga ry A.
Haggy, son of Mr. and Mrs.
James Haggy, the former
Rose Hysell of Pomeroy .
Gary graduated from the Honor Society and received a
oiQuth High School in Spr· scholarship to Ohio State
'irilfield and was one of the where he will attend in the
top members academically of
fall. Graduation was held at
his graduating class. He was the Memorial Hall.
a member of the Natfonal

ONLY
.

PIUSBURY
No. 105
ASSORTED RAVORS
16 OZ. CAN

. The ln•uronc;t Stort
Pvmeroy,O.
"l·ltJO
4Dcc=o~~.r~~~JO~~oO~OOOOOOal

2f4 E. Ma in

w!C'

VINE RIPENED

• •••••••

C OU P O N

89~

No. 305
W/C

j
.
ASSORTED FLAVORS
PRE-SWEETENED

W/C

KOOL-AID
2QT. 99~
PKGS.
W/C

3

DETERGENT

12 OZ. CAN

ICE CREAM CUPS
No. 105

12 CT. PKG.

69~

Limit OM Plttsl with Thi• Coupon
Coupon Expires June 10, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

29e

W/C

Lim it One .Please with Th is Coupon
Coupon Expires Jun e 10, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

CO U PON

ORANGE PLUS

W/C

On e Please with Th is Coupo n

Coupon Expires Jun e iO, 1978
IN CITY GATEWAY

,

COOL WHIP

39~

Limit

W/ C

KEEBLER

Limit One Pleue with This Coupon
Coupon Expires June 10, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

Limit one Pleu e with This Coupon
Coupon Expires Jun e 10, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

No. 105

$229

64 OZ. JUG

COUPO N

COLD POWER

Limit Onl PIOAst with This Coupon
Coupon Exptres June 10, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

W/C

84 OZ. BOX ·

$}99

PARKAY

MARGARINE
POUND CTN

W/C

Limit One Please with ThiS Coupon
Coupon Expires June 10, 1978
N CITY GATEWAY

..
'

.

LAUNDRY DETERGENT

BIRDSEYE FROZEN

9 OZ. CTN.

.

WISK LIQUID

COUPO N

No. 155

, ll t Jr'f'N

sug

LB.

BIRDSEYE FROZEN

No. 75

992-6292
L----------------------------------------

6 OZ. BOTTLE

j

No. 75

1

SPARE RIBS

Lim it ThrH Please with This Coupon
Coupon Expires June 10, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

Th is Coupon

28 OZ. BOTTLE

$1.79

EACH
BARBECUED

10
SWEETENER

SNO BOL CLEANER

l . _ r ntJPON

354 E. MAIN ST. -,· '
POMEROY, OHIO

· ·~ . ~ h

COUPON

W/C

~

C O 'J P~

No. 205

W/C

BARBECUED
CHICKEN

SWE~T

-

Limit Ono Please wirn Tfils Coupon
Coupon Expires Jun e 10, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

-,

WHITE
POTATOES

(

~

·• ~...

SUNDAY
ONLY

!·

l859 m29¢
4

Coupon ExpirH June 10, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

COUPO N

No. 205
ECONOMY
32 OZ. BOTTLE

Ch icken-Out is plll't of your loca l 3 IN ONE restaurant ,
alona with a Dairy Isle and a Fros top. Great Dairy
treats and famous Frostop Root Beer.
Brln&amp; In the whole family because 3 IN ONE Is ....

TOMATOES

79

16 OZ. BOX

·~·

' • •.•

' . WHOLE

INSTANT POTATOES
l imit One Please

DISHWASHER DETERGENT

systems to do th is for you. Property Insur ance Is

REUTER-BROOAN INSURANCE SERVICE

89~

f

'I

25~

No. 75

LUX LIQUID

A. No. Most companies have well thought out, proven

·- ·.. ~-~=. . ·. . ··~..----~----"'!-~&gt;4t

.

~- · ,.

COUPON

Limit One Please with 'this Coupon
Coupon Expires June 10, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

I

KRAFT BARBECUE SAUCE
18 oz. bottle ... ... .. .... .,.....•.•.•... 69'
PILLSBURY CAKE MIXES
19 oz. box .. .. ................... ...... 59'
NESTEA INSTANT TEA
Large 3 oz. jar .....................
'1.89
:-""'
&lt;.;:···.,.,•. •.· ·'

~11~~~· ~HUNGRY
· · - JACK

CANNED FROSTING

Or, If you wan t, you can chicken-in , because ChickenOut restaurants prepare their del ici ous, homestyle
chicken to co, al s o. Whether you choose the ir dlnlna·
room or yours , you 're bound to love their chicken-

l. -

COUPON

16 oz. bottle...... ... .... ............... 79'

NEW

FLORIDA

HOTOOG &amp;
CUP OF RC

I 51.

KRAFT ASSORTED VARIETIES CHEESE SPREAD
2- 5 oz. jars ... ........ ............ 2/99'
WISHBONE ITALIAN DRESSING

PRODUCE SPECIALS

WEDNESDAY
THRU
SATURDAY
ONLY

Bos

usuolly renewed, Issued and rnalled to you. allowl"ll
ample li me lor you to review the Insurance and ask
questions or Increase your benefits. Ltfe compan ies
usuolly use bonk draft..- period ic nollces to notify you
of a premium due. ff you don 't gel the noti ce. they
fo llow up with a second notice and usually a personal
call .

49~

HAM SLICES ....•..•.........................•••.....•...~~~.! 17'
FRESH-STORE MADE ·
$ 29 FRENCH CITY
SJSS
HAM SALAD •.••.... ~~; .. }
BREAKFAST LOAF•••••••• ~.B~ •••

Oa~

I• it nocn11ry to kotp up with prom tum datos on
Insurance policies to .kHP them In lorco?

LB .

BONELESS

Scioto results

Q.

WINGS

49~

Limit One Please with This Coupon
Coupon Expires Jun e 10, 1Y78
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

'I

,,'
W/C

�The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, June 6, 1978

Grants visit Bend area
POLLY'S POINTERS'
on genealogical search

Meigs Auxiliary wins awards
Meigs County American won the chtldren and youth lificate for vetera ns affa&amp;rs
Legion Auxiliary units won awards ; and Mrs. Vt'&lt;la and her report will be sent to
sev~ral awards allhr annual
Davis received the best all- National for cumpelilwn.
l11stnct conference held last a•·ound program ilward for Raeine unit also received a
Thursday at Wilkesville.
ju1lior activiti es in the veterans affairs award . Goal
for the best program in the Pomeroy unit's classifica- ribbons for membership went
chstnet the award went to tion . The s.ame award went to to Units 39 and Racine 602.
Middleport's Lew1s Manley the junior unit at R4dne in ils with both receiving birthday
Post 263 Au.,iliary. Mrs. membership classification.
roll dtations, Jan. 31 roll call
Frank Powers of the
Mr s. Paul Casci of the eitations. and citations from
Pomeroy Unit 39 and Umt 263 Pomeroy unit received a cer· both Department w1d National.
A memori&lt;:tl servil'e was
conducted by Mrs . Luci lle
WATCHES AND FINEl
McCumber, chaplain ·of the
JEWELRY FOR
hos t unit. Memonal roses
were presented for Mrs. Carrie NetuzliJ1g, Mrs. Jessie
Hou dashelt ,. Mrs . Nancy
Wa lker, and Sherri Marshall
uf the Pomeroy unit.
Mrs. Alex Blair. Wellston.
presided at the conference attended by 49. Mrs. Lawrence
Hartline, second vice president was guest speaker.

t1TS
~ j ~\ \'
C/f~l)t,~~~ ~, ,
~\

ST. CHRISTOPHER

150.00

1

Sier l1ng Sliver mef1a l w•l h
~ tam le s s steel cha1n

Mr. and Mrs. Mendal
Jordan , State Grange
Deputies in Meigs County,
attended the annual Gra nge
Deputies Conference of the
Ohio Sta te Grange. Th e
meeting was held at the State
Grange Friendly Hills Camp
near Zanesville. Plans were
completed for the State
Grange Session which will be
held at Nei l House in
Columbus in October.
The National Grange
sewing contest was held at
the confere nce. Entries
representing Meigs County
were made by Mrs. Midkiff,
Star Gra n~e . Class A winner

BlUE LINDE STAR
IDENT BRACELETS

Beaut1tu t sra, set 1n lOK

Gold

WANT A REAL
ESTATE LICENSE?
Gallipolis Business ,College

STICK
PINS

is oHering the accredited

From

~~~GOLD

FILLED
BRACELET

program of clan work

4_00 up

1

Soark l1 ng seroe nt1ne stat us
cha 1n brace let

you ' re

to

comp lete
in
onlv
12
weeks . Class beg!ns June
12. For more information
conta ct L.. E. Tyler, 446·
4367 .

GOESSLER'S JEWELRY
Court St.

requ i red

complete for taking the
Oh io State EM.amination

Pomeroy, 0 .

No. 7S-02·1M12B

Three
Day

causing the trouble. I am sure
some uf the readers will have
other su~gestions for you. POLLY
DEAR POLLY - I never
DE:AR POLLY - My pro·
fe
lt
my son's wallet was safe
blem is with my stockings.
when
he was wettring jccms.
They lend to bunch up or
Nuw
I
have sewn Velcro to
crease at the ankles and
the
inside
top of the pocket he
sometimes they bag at the
always
puts
his wallet in.
knees, too. I wear size 9 ~';!
Each
lime
he
gets
a new pair
hose, a size 8 shoe, weigh 125
this
addition
is
made
before
pounds and am 5 feet 5 inches
theY
arc
worn.FRIEDA
tall.- HELEN 0.
DEAR POLLY -- and
DEAR HELEN 0 . -Do you
Simone
who has trouble with
wash your hose after each
mice
W
e had 'the sa me prowearing' I al&lt;o wonder if you
blem
and
were told that the
arc buying the correct size. I
mice
came
up the pipes that
weHr size 91.".! hose but only
enter
our
mobi
le home. I
1
6 2 shoes. Ask at the hosierJ'
think
the
solution
given us
counte r or your favorite store
would
work
as
well
in
a house
because that might well be
as a mobile home. Put steel
wool all around eve ry pipe so
any open ing is filled and in a
short time you should find
vou have no more mice. Steel
;vuol can be bought in bulk at
most, hardware stores.
-PENN IE
DF.AH POI.l.Y - Because
and Martha King, Rock of illness we could nul make
Sp rings Grange, Class C our usual weekend trips to
winner.
our home in the mountains
Meigs county will be a host and the mice rea lly moved in.
county for the State Session We first used a commercial
and each Grange has been poison and the number
asked for a $10 donation for decreased considerably - we
flowers for the State Session. found dead mit'&lt;' in many
Favors will also be furnished Wlexpedcd places. even in
for the youth luncheo n.
my bed. I am one of those
The Meigs co unty deputies people who cannot stand mice
announces that the five· and fe lt we had to eliminate
co unty gathering at Rodney every single one of them w
in Gallia county has been we followt'&lt;l a neighbor's adchanged to Saturday evening, vite and put moth balls every
June 10, beca use of the place we sa w a trace of them.
District Talent Festival They evidently do not like the
which will be held in Albany odor of moth balls as we have
on June 17. Participating nvt s~cn a sign of a mOuse for
counti es are Ja ckson , qu1te a !nne. - RUBY
Lawrence, Vinton, Meigs and
DEAR POLLY .. My
the host county, Ga ll ia
Pomter ts fur those who wear
Members are to take table dentures. When brushing
service and food for a potluck your dentures always have
supper.
~·atcr in the wash basin so if
they should slip out of your
hands fall1ng into the water
HAVE GUESTS
Mr. and Mrs. Ted E. Spires, will help prevent their being
Defiance, and Mr. and Mrs. cra cke&lt;l or chippt'&lt;l . - MRS.
Raymond Zir kl e and A.F.
DEAR POLLY - People
daughter. Beverly , Bryon ,
shoppin
g in department
GtL were recent visitors of
stores
have
a habit of picking
Mr. and Mrs. William Fred
up
too
much
or changing their
Smith, Sr.
minds aml then depositing the
extra things just any place in
the store . Department stores
should have a sign on a cart
u.. t reads " If you have picke&lt;l up lou much or cha nged
your mind please deposit
he re
th ank you."-OOHOTHY
Polly will se nd you one of
hH s1gned t hank-yo u
newspaper coupon dippers if
she uses your favori te
Pmnter. Peeve or Problem in
ll&lt;!r column. Write POLLY 'S
POlNTEHS in care of this
newspaper .

Stockings
up

bunch

TO OUR MEIGS COUNTY CUSTOMERS!

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

BOOTS
$
50

Originally $18.00

$ 50
14

l)OFF

·WRANGLER
JEANS
Straight Leg and Boot Flares

$

l,OOOts
MORE ITEMS

TOO
NUMEROUS
TO MENTION

oz.

00

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

$

00

I

TUESDAY
REVIVAL in progress at
Freedom Gospel Mission at
Bald Knobs through June 8.
Services 7:30p.m. nightly. 0.
G. McKin ney eva ngeli st.
Special singing . Public invited.
RA CINE LEG ION Aux·
iliary . will serve election
day dinner starting at 11 a.m.
at Racine Post Horne.
MIDDLEPORT LODGE F
AND A.M., 7: 30p.m. Tuesday
night at l.he hall
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY Masonic Lodge
164, F'&amp;AM, regular session,
7;30 p.m. Wednesday. All
Master Ma sons invitrd.
BETHEL Ladies Aid 1 p.m.
'with Eu ni ce Davis and
Virginia l'isher .
THURSDAY
HAPPY HARVESTERS
Class at Trinity Church,
Thursday, 7:30p .m.
!.A UHF. I. CLIFF' BETTER
HEAI.Tfl CLUB. 7 p.m.
Thursday at the Houle 33
roadside park for a potluck
piclll l'.

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

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

JAMESBABLE
HONORED - J ames
Christopher Bable, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Larry Laudermilt,
Sr., and the late J ames M.
Bable, was honored Sunday
with a luncheon and a party
followi ng his graduation from
Swthem High School.
Acake decorated for the occasion was served with coffee
and punch. Attending and
presen ting gifts were Mrs.
Carrie Sa ble uf Columbus,
Mrs. Goldie Inge ls of Mason,
W. Va., and Mrs. l'reda
l.audermilt, a ll grandmothers, Mr. and Mrs. Max
Boring, Lori and Va lerie, Mr.
and Mrs. Stanley Higginbolhan , Mrs. Steve Kurl!c,
Cheryl and Dreama, Columbus; Mrs. Vunda Johnson and
Kelly, Mrs. Kathy Fa rr and
David , Mrs. Patti Laudermilt, Nonnan, Lori and Barbie. Mason, W. Va .; Jeff,
Mike, Mitc h, and Rick Bable,
Ray and Herbie, Racine; Mr.
and Mrs . Larry Laudermilt,
who hosted the celebration .
Sending gifts were Mr. and
Mrs. Lemley Russe ll , Mr.
and Mrs. George Ray Van
Matre, Mr. and Mrs. Brian
Kearns, Mrs. Frances
Johnson and family , Mrs.
Villa Lee, James W. Bland,
Miss Kaly Oliver. Mrs. Edna
Fosler. Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Cununins. Mr. and Mrs.
Edgar Davies, Mrs. Viola
Stewart, and Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Chapman.

,--·----··-"1
I

NOW

PAINTER
PANTS

,Recer\t Bend Area visitors
were Mr. and Mrs. William
Downing Grant of Kansas City, Mo. and their pilot, Allen
C. Wooddell .
Mr. Grant, president of
Business Men 's Assurance of
Kansas City, an insurance
firm founded by his late
fath er, William "Tom "

SPORTING I Social 1
GOODS l Calendar I

RANGER- MINER

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
MEic;S COUNTY, OHIO '
IN THE MATTER OF THE
FORECLOSURE OF LIENS
I=OR OELINQUENT LAND
TAKES

Athens, Ohio- Ph. 592-2488

MEIGS
COUNTY
HUMA NF. SOCIF.TY , 7:30
p.m. Thursday rughl at the
l\1 verbuat Room at the
Athens County Savings and
Loan Cu.
· RO CK
SPR INGS
GI\ANGE, at the hall, 6 p.m.
Thursday .
HARRISONVILLE OES 255
inspection Thursday 7:30
p.m. Members to bring
cove red dish for potlu ck
dinner .

Grant, came to Meigs County
to locate material for his
Grant family history.
They were met for lunch at
Crow's by Miss Lucille Smith,
Chester, and Miss Elea nor
Smith, Pomeroy. The Grants
and Miss Lucille Smith have
been exchanging history on
tbe Grant family for some
time.
In Middleport Mr. Grant
visited briefly with Rodney
Downing, a maternal relative
and photographed the
childhood hom e of his
mother , Franl'eS Downing
Grant, 93, now living in Kansas City.
The Dale Duttons, who now
own the home, gave the
Grants a Civil War bayonet
left there by Mr. Grant's
grandmother, the late Mrs.
Lucy Somerville Downing.
The group visiting the
home on Grant Street which
was built by his great grandfa ther, William H. Grant.
Rece ntly pla ced in the
Hegister of Historic Places,
the home is being restored by
the Mike Gerlachs, new

78 -DLT.J
78 -DL T -4
78 -DL T - ~

Twenty -lour hour lime is
widely used in scientific work
throughout the world . In the
United Sli1tcs it is also used in
f'IIIDAY
operations of the Anned
HOCK SPHINGS GH1I NGE J&gt;' orces. In Europe it is used ln
Will VISit Columbia Grange, 8 pre!ere"'"' to the 12 hour a.m.
p.m. Frida y night.
and p.m. system.

78-DL T-6
NOTICE OF SALE UNDER
JUDGMENT
OR
FORECLOSURE OF L IENS

owners, who showed the
group through the home.
· At Miles Cemetery rubbings were made of the
gra vestones of John Grant
and his wife, Sarah. William
D. Grant, Eleanor Smith and
Lucille Smith are lineal
dest"endants of John Grant,
who served as a quarterrnaster in the Revolutionary
War from the sta le of Maine.

FOR

DELINQUENT

TAXES

LA ND

Wher e as judgment has
be.en rendered rtge inst cer
tam parcel!:i at r ea l es t &lt;1t e fo r

ta&gt;: cs, assessn·u:nt s, costs and

Charges as follow s;
CAS E NO . 78 DL T l PAR CE L NO RT 01 T itled in

the

name

Ru ssel l ,

of

Ma r'g arc t

address

Si tuate d

To~n!.hip ,

unknown

in
Rutland
M eigs Cou nty ,

Otuo . Sec t ion 2, Town S,
Rr1ng e l d, Ohio CompiJ ny ·s
Pur e ha se .

S acr es

n ear

m id dl e o t eas t l1 ne E'KCt! pl 15

a cr es N. E .-- Re f eren ce Vo l.
136 py . 591 Meigs County
De ed Records .
JU D GM E N T
S4166 plu s
accrued ta xes. ass essmenl s
ilnd penalti es, and cos t s ot
ac t ion

SON BORN
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Buckley ·are announcing the
birth of a son, Tyson Kenneth ,
May 12 at the Holzer Medical
Center . Mr. and Mrs. Buckley
have a daughter, Tamara
Jean, four .
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Sisson,
Sr., and Mrs . Grace
Williams, Syracuse. Pa ternal
grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Eugene Buckley,
Cheshire, and Jesse Gainer,
Pomeroy, and Mr. and Mrs.
Russell Bu ckley, New
Brighton, Pa.

CASE
NO
;,7 8 DL T 3
P ARCEL N O . RV~1
Till ed
in I h e n.Jm e ot Maud Gr unt,
a ddr ess unk.nown
Si t uated in Ru lland Village,
Sec t io n B, -18 acres (640) in
s w corner of N .E . 1 4 E of
road
JUD GMEN T
S551.56plus
accrued tax es, assessments
and penall ies. ,l nd cost s ol
a c t ion

CA SE

78 OL T 5 PA R

James J . Pro ff itt
Sher iff of
M eigs cou nt y, Oh io

lSI 23, 30 161 6, 31C

ORDINANCE N0 . 1070,78
FiK Rates
a nd Charges for Water
Service In The Village of
Middleport, Ohio
WHEREAS, th e Vi llage of
Middleport owns a water
sys t em serving the r esi dent s
of the Vi ll age of Middleport
and areas ad j aten t !hereto :
Now therefore,
Be it ordained by the
Council of the Village of
Midd leport ,
MeigsCounly ,
Ohio, t hree -fourth s of · the
members e lect ed thereto
concurri ng :
Sec . l . That, beginning July
I , 1978, the f ol lowi ng sha l l be
the r a tes c harged monthl y by
the Village of Middl eport ,
Ohio for water furnish ed by
the Vi llage of Midd lepor t to
its inhabi t a nt s and o t her
user s th ereo f .
METERED SERVICE
For t he f ir st 2,000 ga llon s
per month or less . 3.60 Min .
Charge
For the next 3,000 gallons
per mon t h, . 141 2 per lOOga ls.
For the n ext 10,000 ga llons
per month , . 1'1 p er 100 gals .
For th e ne~el 15,000 gallons
per month , . 11 pe r 100 gals .
All ove r 30,000 ga llons p er
month, .OB per 100 gals.
An Ordinance to

MIN I MUM CHARGE
FOR METERED
SERVICE
T hrough on e .half in c h
meter s, 3. 60 per month
Through fi ve eightM inch
meters , 3.60 per mo nth
Through three -fourths 1n ch
meters, 6. 24 per mon th
Th r ough on e i n ch meters ,
12.48 per mon th
Through one and one -ha l f
in ch me t er s, 20 :88 per month .
T hro ugh two in c h m eters ,
37.44 per month
Through fo ur i nch meters ,
72.80 per month .
Through sill. inch meter s,
135 .20 p er monlh
Sec. 11 : All b i lls lor the
above servi ce shall be ren .
dered monthly on the fi r st
day of each month or as soon
th er eafter as is rea so nably
p oss i ble tor the service
rend ered
dur i ng
th e
pre ce ding mon th . bi ll s thus
re ndered a r e
le on

befor e )he exp1ratioh of ten
t IOJ days fr om the dat e
render ed . Paym ents after the
expiration of ten 110) d ays
are subtect to a penally often
per cen t ( 10 per cent) of th e
amount o l th e bill , but in no
ins tan ce shall sa id penally b e
less than thirty cents (S .JO) .
Sec
I ll . Each user of
village wa ter serv ice wh o
does not own rea l estate shall
make a deposit to secure th e
paym ent l or wat er service of
the sum of S25 .00 , which sum
sha ll be hel~ by the Villa_g e,
wi t hout interest to th e
deposilo r
U po n th e te r
mination o f wat er se rvic e
such am ount of the d eposit ot
S25 .00 as 1S necessary shall b e
ap plied to the water bill and
the ba lance returned ' to th e
user .
Ther e Sha II be c harged tor
the ins tallation ol a new tap ,
the sum of One Hundred
Tw enty Five
Dollar s
($125.00 ). A n ew ta p i s hereby
d efined to be the ins tallttl ion
Of wa l er servi ce on a line
Where non e f or merly exis ted
and which re quires t he in
staltation of n ew lines from
the water main and th e in
staltafion of a new meier .an d
meter boll. in a locat ion not
tormerly served by water
servi ce tram the said w a ter
main . Sectio n
V:
Thi s
Or dinance is dec lared to be
an emergenc y mea sure i n
that the plfl)li c peace, h e al~h ,
sa l ety and w elf are requ1re
the imme diate estab l iSh men t
of rates in t he f inancing o f the
cost of said water sys tem and
t he operation thereof , and,
there f ore , thi s Ordinance
shal l take effec t immediately
upon i ts passag e .
Passed th e 24th day of
May 1978
M . L . Kelly
Pre si dent of Cou nc il
Attes t ·
Gene Grat e
Clerk
(5) 30 (6) 6, 13 , 3t c

clerk to sa id board aT its next
mee t ing
Description of the im
provemen t
loca te d
al
Ches t er , Ohi o, i .e repetir s to
ttJ e Ches ter Elementary
SCh OOl bu ild ing .
Copi es of th e specif ic ations,
i nstruct1ons to bidders,, and
proposal torms may be ob
tai ned dt the olf ice of t he
cle rk o f
th e board o l
educa tion o t Eastern Lo c al
Sc hoo l D is tri c t , Reedsvil le ,
Ohi o
A ce rtified check pay able
to th e clerk treasurer of the
&lt;Jb ove board ol educat ion or a
Sdl l sfa c lory
b id
b ond
exec uted by th e b idder and a
s ur e ty co mpany , i n an
nm ov n t equal to f ive per ce nt
of t he bid shall be s·ubmitl ed
wi1h each bid .
Said boar d o f ed uca tio n
reserv es the rig ht to wa i ve
informalit ies, to ac cept or
r ejec t any and il l I , or part s of
any and a ll b id s.
The success ful bidder will
b e r equ ir ed to turnish a
s ati st ac tory pe rfo r man ce
bond to r one hundred perc ent
o t th e co ntract pr ice
No bi ds may be withdrawn
to r a t leas t th ir t y {30) day s
alter th e sc h ed uled closing
lime for rece1pt ot bid s.
Board of Edu ca tion of
Ea s tern L o cal Schoo l Dis tr ic t
By Doug Bi sse ll
Pre si d ent
E Ioise Bo ston
Cler k
( 5 ) 30 (6) 6 , 13, 20 , 4I C

CHUCK
ROAST...........

99

Mer cury .

The eve ning stars are
Venus, Mars , Jupiter and
Saturn .
Those born on ti1is date are
under the sign of Gemini.
American patriot Nathan
Hale was born June 6, 1755 .
On this day in history :
In 193:!, a motion picture
drive-in theater opened in
Camden, N.J., the fir st of its
kind .
In 1 ~44, hundreds of thou sands of Allied troops started
crossing the English Channel
in the "D-Day" invasion of
Nazioccupied Europe. Tire
greatest invasion in history
was supported by thousands
of planes and ships.
In 1972, a coa l mine
exp losion in Rhodesia
tr apped
464
miners

Shortcake, w~h or without
Whipped Cream.

LEGAL
AD VERTISEMEN T
FOR BIOS
Separate, sea led prop osal '"
tor fhe repairs to the Chest er
Elem entary school bui ld ing
will be received at th e off ice
of the c lerk o f th e board o t
educa tio n of Eastern Local
Sc hool D is tr ict, Re ed svi11t·,
M eigs County ,, Ohio un t •
12:00 o' c l ock noon. E .S T ,
J une 27, 1978 and will be
pub l icly opene d and r ea d by
the cle rk th erea fte r al th e
t said board of
Ia ted and a
lh o

• 100°o FI OS I-Pr ou f &lt;..Om1 e111~nce
me'l':IY

•

t m1e - c o n~urn u u~ t

hme

ei 1111Hittlo- !. t lr••
~J I

rJelto&lt;:.tHl(j

• EleyJnt temper eel y l;-}5~ st1c lvcs d!l~ 8Cl 5)1 10 c. I\, ur
keep sptll s lr om l lt p]) 1r 1g ' hroL,gh unl ::· trJI:cl ;,,,1, _,,.,

ICE 1 So l1tJ Sln.ie l et~ M ,;k~r d1rl r11na t
lC&lt;l lly ffi il kes purt y·SILP 1re cube~ dlld etrmur 11~-&lt;'::i 1t t•
fl UISa nce of f1ll 1ng ;m d spd l1nq 1Ce l • i:IY~ r,,,,nlc~tJit~ r'

• E)( c lus rve

ADOLPH'S

ex tr u cha rg e
• · 17 0 c u lll otal retng erated volur.n e ger.1erou&lt;.. ,1 fl4
cu II free zer co mpartment

DAIRY VAllEY

BAKER FURNITURE
Middleport, Ohio

tO :OO A.M. IIIII :00 P.M. Sun .. Thurs. 10:00 A.M.
til 12 ,00 P.M. Friday and Sa1urdav.
H~ S. :

See Us At The

FrlcJidaire~ Wh., settle for less?

Bend

BROUGHTON or VALLEY BELL

SAUSAGE.~

JcANs$100

"·

49

PIECE ......·•gge
SLICED
gge
••••••••••••••••
LB

39
~:~c~OAST.............~-.~..

1

HOMO

3 oz. CANS

ARMOUR

LB.

I'

bank .

ARMOUR'S CANNED
MEAT SALE

~~~L~~~········ ...............~.~..1
I,

Franci s~o

• A conven1enll( locntt·rl J-posrt 1on EIPct r 1-S~~ ~· "
swrtr h Cd n help you ~a -!e ene1 g y

¢

CEDAR FARMS

for an!led robb€1')' in the
April 15 robbery uf a &amp;111

try Our Delicious Strawbeny

VIENNA

LB.

underground and mo1·e than
425 of them died.
In 1974, newspaper heiress
Patricia Hearst was indicted

The Almanac
United Press lotcrnatlonal
Today is Tuesday , Jtine 6;
the !57th day of 1978 with 208
Ul follow.
Tht! moon ls between ils
new phase and fir;1 quarter .
The morning star is

ARMOUR

government interferent'e. For children. it 's " You are not
mature enough to watch shows as they are ." (Bull! ) For
parents: "You are not capa ble of controlling your children."
(More bull !)
Television should have certain limits, but all these niggling
complaints are ridiculous.
Aren't you glad pressure groups don't take out after advice
colwnnists?- YOUR FAN, NOT THEIRS
DEARY.F'.N.T.:
Who says they don't'!
We've been " pressure-cooked" by experts and so has every
other colwnnist in the business. Afew ultraconservative guardians of the public moral make complaints their life·project.
Letters they write to editors would singe the hair right out of
your ea rs! -SUE

A total of $966.51 was col- members who were on the
lected by the American streets with the poppies.
Legion Auxiliary of Drew
Wehsler Post 39 during PopPY Days in Pomeroy.
The poppies are made by
LOSE WATER BLOAT
hospitalized veterans who are
WITH ODRINIL
paid a wage which is used for
personal items. Auxiliary
-NATURE'S WAY
members ea rmark the
New OONIIl can llelll you lose etr.ess
money coll ected from the
werJhl due to e.:cess water releniH&gt;rl
commemorative poppy for
dunn~ the pre mtnsHual C't'Cie
direct hel p to veterans and
OOfllfl.-a gentle drurette compoundtheir families with distribucontams natu ral herb s m a tablet that rs
elleclrve aflllast acting
tion in the local unit.
OO"INl-tne 'Nat ufilt ' wat er prll-rs
Mrs. Mar jorie Heuter, popguaranteed to help you lose that un·
PY day chairperson, on behalf
comtonablewaTer tl toa t ano temporary
o{ the unit extends thanks to
werg ht garn or your money will bt
Elberfelds for providing a
refunded
display a rea, as well as those
rs so~ wrth ntr s guar ani~ by
who gave their money and
NELSON DRUG STORE
time and to the auxiliary
Pome,.,y, Ohio

NO

at the same p lace on the l SI
day ot Ju l y, 1978, tor an
amount su ffi cient to satisfy
the jud gment again st th e
parc el

MEATS

·'No! "
It is an insult to me the way reformers keep demamling

Tow! announced for poppy drive

CASE NO 78 . DL T ·6 PAR
CEL NO . PV -01 T i lled in
nam e of Theodore Ebersbach
Si tuated
in
Pomeroy
V ill ag e , L ot No . 259, 10.59
a cres , N .E . end .
JUDGMENT S266.28 pl us
acc rued tax es , a ssess ment s
and penalties, and cos t s o f
.1 ct ion .
Whe r eas. such judgments
order su ch real p ro perty to be
so ld by the undersigned to
su t1Siy the tot al amoun t o f
such judgment ;
N ow, the r efore , public
noti ce is hereby given th a t I ,
Jarncs J . Pro ft it t , Sher ilf o f
M ei gs County , Oh io, will sell
such r ea l property at pu bl ic
au c t ion, for cash , to the
highest bidder of an amount
su ff ic ient to sati s fy th e
i ud gmenl .:~g ai nst eac h par cel
begi nn in g at 9:00a .m . at the
Ir on I door ol th e M eigs
Co unty Court Hou se, in
Pome r o y , Ohio, on the 14th
day of June , 1978 , an d con
linuing th ercalle r . from day
to day , until all p a r ce ls are
so ld , H anv par cel does not
re cei ve a su ffi cient bid, it
sh alt be o tter ed tor sa le ,
under the same t erm s and
co nd i tions of the 1i rst sa lc and
at the same ti me of day and

CASE NO 78 DL T .t PA R
CEL NO LBT 01
Tilled in
the n ame o f W F Stanl ey .:Jnd
S.:nah J St an ley, .Jddrcsses
unknown
Sil ua l ed
in
L eb() non
Town s hip , M CI QS Co un ty ,
Oh 10 , Sec t io n 74 , I acres ncar
mi ddle of N E ~ ~ ol N .E IJ .
JUD G MEN T ~ 1519 pl us
accrued taxes, Jsscss mcnts
ami pcn t~t t 1 es , and costs of
action
Situa t ed
1n
Leb a n on
1 ownsh1 p , Sec t io n 14, 3 11cre s
1n N E pa r t
JUDGMENT
\ 5&lt;19) plus
ac c ru ed ta• es . a ssessments
and pen&lt;lll 1es and costs olth ,s
ac t ion
T OTA L J UD G MENT on
two parcels \ 10 14 plus ac
crued ta l(.es , assessments and
pen a1t1 es an d costs o f ac110 n

SHE'S ANTI THE 'ANTI'S'
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
I'm getting sick and tired of all these pressure groups trying
to get the goverrunent to interfere with our television , I've had
it up to here with " ban TV violence, sugar-product and
cigarette commercials, sex- for the chi ldren's sake."
I watched the tube as a very iJnpressionable youngster, and
have no detrimental effects. As a college student, I'm still an
avid TV fan .
·
Hegardless of what the pressure groups claiJn :
I. Television has in no way affected my or my family 's
reading habits. We all enjoy reading.
2. I thought many of the cigarette ads were cleverly done,
but they did not influence me toward smoking. After watching
one, I'd remember to scold my parents for lighting up. I've yet
to find one person who took up cigarettes as a result of a TV ad.
It was usually peer pressure.
3. When I was very young, I liked Saturday morning cartoons, which were much more violent than they are today. I
never once thoug ht of copying them. Today 's violent shows
have not given me a thick skin . ! enjoy them as "fiction ." They
ha ve little to do with real violence.
4. The family viewing hour' Small children seldom unders~
land sexual references. More likely they 'll become bored and
stop watching .
5. Once again people are screaming for the goverrunent to
make ba ns. This tiJne it's on sugar-&lt;."ereal ads. I had a simple
cure for those "sweet" ads : My parents knew how to say

DEARY.:
We've discovered that many of these "Get the rascals out"
people have not watched the TV show or read the colwnn
under fire. They follow blindly, having been told by their
leaders to target in on certain "SUbversive corrupters of
morals." Result' A flood o[ letters. SometiJnes they bring
about cancellations but more often producers and editors discount organized campaigns and rely on their own judgments.
Which is lucky for your fra nk and honest correspondents
-HELEN AND SUE

SA MUEL SHAIN
TURNS ONE- Samuel
Benton Shain celebrated his
second birthday recently with
a party at the horne of his
maternal gra ndparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Dana Winebrenner,
Syracuse.
Homemade icc cream and
a cowboy cake were served to
ltisgrandparentsnd parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Shain and
his sister, Emily, R4cine ;
Mrs. Dodie Winebrenner,
Bobby and Bec ky, Cottageville, W. Va.; Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Farrar and
Dawn, Miss Patty Winebrenner, Columbus ; Mr. and Mrs.
Michae l Winebrenner and
Shelly, Racine; Beulah Ward,
and his great-grandmother,
Oma Winebrenner, Syracuse.
Remembering Sam uel with
cards were his paternal
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Harry L. Shain, Mr. and Mrs.
Harry A. Shain , Letart; Miss
Sandy
Winebrenn e r,
Syracuse, Gary Hysell ,
Hutland, and Mrs. Nonna
Goodwin, Pomeroy.

CEL NO . Bl .Ql - T ill ed in
name Of Clay W ilso n , Rf. I ,
Grantsvi lle , W. Va .
Co al
undertying
!he
f Ollowing
real
estate :
S1 t ua ted in Bed ford Town
Ship , Meigs Cou nt y, Ohio ,
Sec t i_on ot , 190.86 acres, S .W .
par t Oi l , g a s and oth er
mmera ls.
JUDGMENT S5 15.17 plys
acc ru -ed ta~ecs , assess ments
and penalties and cos t s ot
ac tion .
under l ying
the
Coal
fo llow i ng
rea l
es t a t e.
Si luat ed in Bed ford Town .
Shi p, M eigs County , Ohio ,
Sections 9 10. 84 .50 acres,
S. E . corner, oi l , gas and othe r
mi ne rals .
JUDGMENT S222 .94 plu s
acc r ued la~ees , a ssessments
and penal ti es and costs ol
act ion .
Coa l
underlying
th e
fOllo win g described re a l
es t ate : Si tuatrd in Bedford
To wn s t"lip , Meigs Coun t y,
Oh io, in Secti on 10, 1.71.5 acres ,
E end oil. gas and oth er
mine r als .
JUDGME N T $5 . 05 p lu s
acc rued l a•es, assessments
' and penallies ttnd costs of
action .
TOTAL JUDGMENT lor
thr ee pa r cels ·$743 .26 pl us
ac c r ued la )(es, assessments
and penalties and cost S ot
action .

CASES N0 . 78-DLT·2

Polly Cramer

Grange deputies
attend conference

' 10 K. Go ld
2 dia .
Blue Lind e

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, June 6, 1978

POnED
MEAT •••••••••••

5

/

$ 100
12 OZ. CAN

ARMOUR

TREET............ 99~
24 OZ. CAN

ARMOUR

:::~..................99~
ARMOUR

12 OZ. CAN

CORNED

99~

BEEF ••••••••••••••••••

ARMOUR

VALLEY BELL

2% MILK ...................... -.....~~.~·.. sl 49
FESTIVAL

ICE CREAM_......... _.......... ~~.~~~·. 99(

~~BSLARGE •••.••••~.59¢

12 OZ. CAN

ROAST
I BEEF ....... ~ ..........99~

~~~~~........................~..~.,,.

PEPSI
$ 19
t::O~ ..................

8- 16 OZ. BTLS.

CAMPBELL'S

GROUND BEEF
LB.

$}29

FRIDAY ONLY

BREAD 4.,.(,
$}
·

'*•

JOHN A. WADE, M.D.

TOMATO
SOUP

&gt;OAVES

FRIDAY ONLY

Announces the Openina Of His Office AI

Pleasant Valley ~pital
Valley Drive ..

DR•.PEPPER

• . Point PINNnt, West VI I'll In II 25550

Practice Limited To Ear, No.e and
Throat Facial Plaetic Surgery
Bronchoeeophagology
,,

Opening July 1 - AccepHng Appoints, Junt 1
Telephone (104) 171-1244

•

THURSDAY ONLY

•I

DIET or REGULAR)

8 PAK

99~

PLUS DEPOSIT

MARKET - OPEN DAILY 9 10 10 P.M.
SUNDAY 10 TO 10
We.kcept Federal Food Stamps-We Resene The Right To Lmil

RC or DIET RITE
Qua11tilie~,-J

8 PAK

99 ~

PLUS DEPOSIT

�The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, June 6, 1978

Grants visit Bend area
POLLY'S POINTERS'
on genealogical search

Meigs Auxiliary wins awards
Meigs County American won the chtldren and youth lificate for vetera ns affa&amp;rs
Legion Auxiliary units won awards ; and Mrs. Vt'&lt;la and her report will be sent to
sev~ral awards allhr annual
Davis received the best all- National for cumpelilwn.
l11stnct conference held last a•·ound program ilward for Raeine unit also received a
Thursday at Wilkesville.
ju1lior activiti es in the veterans affairs award . Goal
for the best program in the Pomeroy unit's classifica- ribbons for membership went
chstnet the award went to tion . The s.ame award went to to Units 39 and Racine 602.
Middleport's Lew1s Manley the junior unit at R4dne in ils with both receiving birthday
Post 263 Au.,iliary. Mrs. membership classification.
roll dtations, Jan. 31 roll call
Frank Powers of the
Mr s. Paul Casci of the eitations. and citations from
Pomeroy Unit 39 and Umt 263 Pomeroy unit received a cer· both Department w1d National.
A memori&lt;:tl servil'e was
conducted by Mrs . Luci lle
WATCHES AND FINEl
McCumber, chaplain ·of the
JEWELRY FOR
hos t unit. Memonal roses
were presented for Mrs. Carrie NetuzliJ1g, Mrs. Jessie
Hou dashelt ,. Mrs . Nancy
Wa lker, and Sherri Marshall
uf the Pomeroy unit.
Mrs. Alex Blair. Wellston.
presided at the conference attended by 49. Mrs. Lawrence
Hartline, second vice president was guest speaker.

t1TS
~ j ~\ \'
C/f~l)t,~~~ ~, ,
~\

ST. CHRISTOPHER

150.00

1

Sier l1ng Sliver mef1a l w•l h
~ tam le s s steel cha1n

Mr. and Mrs. Mendal
Jordan , State Grange
Deputies in Meigs County,
attended the annual Gra nge
Deputies Conference of the
Ohio Sta te Grange. Th e
meeting was held at the State
Grange Friendly Hills Camp
near Zanesville. Plans were
completed for the State
Grange Session which will be
held at Nei l House in
Columbus in October.
The National Grange
sewing contest was held at
the confere nce. Entries
representing Meigs County
were made by Mrs. Midkiff,
Star Gra n~e . Class A winner

BlUE LINDE STAR
IDENT BRACELETS

Beaut1tu t sra, set 1n lOK

Gold

WANT A REAL
ESTATE LICENSE?
Gallipolis Business ,College

STICK
PINS

is oHering the accredited

From

~~~GOLD

FILLED
BRACELET

program of clan work

4_00 up

1

Soark l1 ng seroe nt1ne stat us
cha 1n brace let

you ' re

to

comp lete
in
onlv
12
weeks . Class beg!ns June
12. For more information
conta ct L.. E. Tyler, 446·
4367 .

GOESSLER'S JEWELRY
Court St.

requ i red

complete for taking the
Oh io State EM.amination

Pomeroy, 0 .

No. 7S-02·1M12B

Three
Day

causing the trouble. I am sure
some uf the readers will have
other su~gestions for you. POLLY
DEAR POLLY - I never
DE:AR POLLY - My pro·
fe
lt
my son's wallet was safe
blem is with my stockings.
when
he was wettring jccms.
They lend to bunch up or
Nuw
I
have sewn Velcro to
crease at the ankles and
the
inside
top of the pocket he
sometimes they bag at the
always
puts
his wallet in.
knees, too. I wear size 9 ~';!
Each
lime
he
gets
a new pair
hose, a size 8 shoe, weigh 125
this
addition
is
made
before
pounds and am 5 feet 5 inches
theY
arc
worn.FRIEDA
tall.- HELEN 0.
DEAR POLLY -- and
DEAR HELEN 0 . -Do you
Simone
who has trouble with
wash your hose after each
mice
W
e had 'the sa me prowearing' I al&lt;o wonder if you
blem
and
were told that the
arc buying the correct size. I
mice
came
up the pipes that
weHr size 91.".! hose but only
enter
our
mobi
le home. I
1
6 2 shoes. Ask at the hosierJ'
think
the
solution
given us
counte r or your favorite store
would
work
as
well
in
a house
because that might well be
as a mobile home. Put steel
wool all around eve ry pipe so
any open ing is filled and in a
short time you should find
vou have no more mice. Steel
;vuol can be bought in bulk at
most, hardware stores.
-PENN IE
DF.AH POI.l.Y - Because
and Martha King, Rock of illness we could nul make
Sp rings Grange, Class C our usual weekend trips to
winner.
our home in the mountains
Meigs county will be a host and the mice rea lly moved in.
county for the State Session We first used a commercial
and each Grange has been poison and the number
asked for a $10 donation for decreased considerably - we
flowers for the State Session. found dead mit'&lt;' in many
Favors will also be furnished Wlexpedcd places. even in
for the youth luncheo n.
my bed. I am one of those
The Meigs co unty deputies people who cannot stand mice
announces that the five· and fe lt we had to eliminate
co unty gathering at Rodney every single one of them w
in Gallia county has been we followt'&lt;l a neighbor's adchanged to Saturday evening, vite and put moth balls every
June 10, beca use of the place we sa w a trace of them.
District Talent Festival They evidently do not like the
which will be held in Albany odor of moth balls as we have
on June 17. Participating nvt s~cn a sign of a mOuse for
counti es are Ja ckson , qu1te a !nne. - RUBY
Lawrence, Vinton, Meigs and
DEAR POLLY .. My
the host county, Ga ll ia
Pomter ts fur those who wear
Members are to take table dentures. When brushing
service and food for a potluck your dentures always have
supper.
~·atcr in the wash basin so if
they should slip out of your
hands fall1ng into the water
HAVE GUESTS
Mr. and Mrs. Ted E. Spires, will help prevent their being
Defiance, and Mr. and Mrs. cra cke&lt;l or chippt'&lt;l . - MRS.
Raymond Zir kl e and A.F.
DEAR POLLY - People
daughter. Beverly , Bryon ,
shoppin
g in department
GtL were recent visitors of
stores
have
a habit of picking
Mr. and Mrs. William Fred
up
too
much
or changing their
Smith, Sr.
minds aml then depositing the
extra things just any place in
the store . Department stores
should have a sign on a cart
u.. t reads " If you have picke&lt;l up lou much or cha nged
your mind please deposit
he re
th ank you."-OOHOTHY
Polly will se nd you one of
hH s1gned t hank-yo u
newspaper coupon dippers if
she uses your favori te
Pmnter. Peeve or Problem in
ll&lt;!r column. Write POLLY 'S
POlNTEHS in care of this
newspaper .

Stockings
up

bunch

TO OUR MEIGS COUNTY CUSTOMERS!

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

BOOTS
$
50

Originally $18.00

$ 50
14

l)OFF

·WRANGLER
JEANS
Straight Leg and Boot Flares

$

l,OOOts
MORE ITEMS

TOO
NUMEROUS
TO MENTION

oz.

00

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

$

00

I

TUESDAY
REVIVAL in progress at
Freedom Gospel Mission at
Bald Knobs through June 8.
Services 7:30p.m. nightly. 0.
G. McKin ney eva ngeli st.
Special singing . Public invited.
RA CINE LEG ION Aux·
iliary . will serve election
day dinner starting at 11 a.m.
at Racine Post Horne.
MIDDLEPORT LODGE F
AND A.M., 7: 30p.m. Tuesday
night at l.he hall
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY Masonic Lodge
164, F'&amp;AM, regular session,
7;30 p.m. Wednesday. All
Master Ma sons invitrd.
BETHEL Ladies Aid 1 p.m.
'with Eu ni ce Davis and
Virginia l'isher .
THURSDAY
HAPPY HARVESTERS
Class at Trinity Church,
Thursday, 7:30p .m.
!.A UHF. I. CLIFF' BETTER
HEAI.Tfl CLUB. 7 p.m.
Thursday at the Houle 33
roadside park for a potluck
piclll l'.

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

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

JAMESBABLE
HONORED - J ames
Christopher Bable, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Larry Laudermilt,
Sr., and the late J ames M.
Bable, was honored Sunday
with a luncheon and a party
followi ng his graduation from
Swthem High School.
Acake decorated for the occasion was served with coffee
and punch. Attending and
presen ting gifts were Mrs.
Carrie Sa ble uf Columbus,
Mrs. Goldie Inge ls of Mason,
W. Va., and Mrs. l'reda
l.audermilt, a ll grandmothers, Mr. and Mrs. Max
Boring, Lori and Va lerie, Mr.
and Mrs. Stanley Higginbolhan , Mrs. Steve Kurl!c,
Cheryl and Dreama, Columbus; Mrs. Vunda Johnson and
Kelly, Mrs. Kathy Fa rr and
David , Mrs. Patti Laudermilt, Nonnan, Lori and Barbie. Mason, W. Va .; Jeff,
Mike, Mitc h, and Rick Bable,
Ray and Herbie, Racine; Mr.
and Mrs . Larry Laudermilt,
who hosted the celebration .
Sending gifts were Mr. and
Mrs. Lemley Russe ll , Mr.
and Mrs. George Ray Van
Matre, Mr. and Mrs. Brian
Kearns, Mrs. Frances
Johnson and family , Mrs.
Villa Lee, James W. Bland,
Miss Kaly Oliver. Mrs. Edna
Fosler. Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Cununins. Mr. and Mrs.
Edgar Davies, Mrs. Viola
Stewart, and Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Chapman.

,--·----··-"1
I

NOW

PAINTER
PANTS

,Recer\t Bend Area visitors
were Mr. and Mrs. William
Downing Grant of Kansas City, Mo. and their pilot, Allen
C. Wooddell .
Mr. Grant, president of
Business Men 's Assurance of
Kansas City, an insurance
firm founded by his late
fath er, William "Tom "

SPORTING I Social 1
GOODS l Calendar I

RANGER- MINER

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
MEic;S COUNTY, OHIO '
IN THE MATTER OF THE
FORECLOSURE OF LIENS
I=OR OELINQUENT LAND
TAKES

Athens, Ohio- Ph. 592-2488

MEIGS
COUNTY
HUMA NF. SOCIF.TY , 7:30
p.m. Thursday rughl at the
l\1 verbuat Room at the
Athens County Savings and
Loan Cu.
· RO CK
SPR INGS
GI\ANGE, at the hall, 6 p.m.
Thursday .
HARRISONVILLE OES 255
inspection Thursday 7:30
p.m. Members to bring
cove red dish for potlu ck
dinner .

Grant, came to Meigs County
to locate material for his
Grant family history.
They were met for lunch at
Crow's by Miss Lucille Smith,
Chester, and Miss Elea nor
Smith, Pomeroy. The Grants
and Miss Lucille Smith have
been exchanging history on
tbe Grant family for some
time.
In Middleport Mr. Grant
visited briefly with Rodney
Downing, a maternal relative
and photographed the
childhood hom e of his
mother , Franl'eS Downing
Grant, 93, now living in Kansas City.
The Dale Duttons, who now
own the home, gave the
Grants a Civil War bayonet
left there by Mr. Grant's
grandmother, the late Mrs.
Lucy Somerville Downing.
The group visiting the
home on Grant Street which
was built by his great grandfa ther, William H. Grant.
Rece ntly pla ced in the
Hegister of Historic Places,
the home is being restored by
the Mike Gerlachs, new

78 -DLT.J
78 -DL T -4
78 -DL T - ~

Twenty -lour hour lime is
widely used in scientific work
throughout the world . In the
United Sli1tcs it is also used in
f'IIIDAY
operations of the Anned
HOCK SPHINGS GH1I NGE J&gt;' orces. In Europe it is used ln
Will VISit Columbia Grange, 8 pre!ere"'"' to the 12 hour a.m.
p.m. Frida y night.
and p.m. system.

78-DL T-6
NOTICE OF SALE UNDER
JUDGMENT
OR
FORECLOSURE OF L IENS

owners, who showed the
group through the home.
· At Miles Cemetery rubbings were made of the
gra vestones of John Grant
and his wife, Sarah. William
D. Grant, Eleanor Smith and
Lucille Smith are lineal
dest"endants of John Grant,
who served as a quarterrnaster in the Revolutionary
War from the sta le of Maine.

FOR

DELINQUENT

TAXES

LA ND

Wher e as judgment has
be.en rendered rtge inst cer
tam parcel!:i at r ea l es t &lt;1t e fo r

ta&gt;: cs, assessn·u:nt s, costs and

Charges as follow s;
CAS E NO . 78 DL T l PAR CE L NO RT 01 T itled in

the

name

Ru ssel l ,

of

Ma r'g arc t

address

Si tuate d

To~n!.hip ,

unknown

in
Rutland
M eigs Cou nty ,

Otuo . Sec t ion 2, Town S,
Rr1ng e l d, Ohio CompiJ ny ·s
Pur e ha se .

S acr es

n ear

m id dl e o t eas t l1 ne E'KCt! pl 15

a cr es N. E .-- Re f eren ce Vo l.
136 py . 591 Meigs County
De ed Records .
JU D GM E N T
S4166 plu s
accrued ta xes. ass essmenl s
ilnd penalti es, and cos t s ot
ac t ion

SON BORN
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Buckley ·are announcing the
birth of a son, Tyson Kenneth ,
May 12 at the Holzer Medical
Center . Mr. and Mrs. Buckley
have a daughter, Tamara
Jean, four .
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Sisson,
Sr., and Mrs . Grace
Williams, Syracuse. Pa ternal
grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Eugene Buckley,
Cheshire, and Jesse Gainer,
Pomeroy, and Mr. and Mrs.
Russell Bu ckley, New
Brighton, Pa.

CASE
NO
;,7 8 DL T 3
P ARCEL N O . RV~1
Till ed
in I h e n.Jm e ot Maud Gr unt,
a ddr ess unk.nown
Si t uated in Ru lland Village,
Sec t io n B, -18 acres (640) in
s w corner of N .E . 1 4 E of
road
JUD GMEN T
S551.56plus
accrued tax es, assessments
and penall ies. ,l nd cost s ol
a c t ion

CA SE

78 OL T 5 PA R

James J . Pro ff itt
Sher iff of
M eigs cou nt y, Oh io

lSI 23, 30 161 6, 31C

ORDINANCE N0 . 1070,78
FiK Rates
a nd Charges for Water
Service In The Village of
Middleport, Ohio
WHEREAS, th e Vi llage of
Middleport owns a water
sys t em serving the r esi dent s
of the Vi ll age of Middleport
and areas ad j aten t !hereto :
Now therefore,
Be it ordained by the
Council of the Village of
Midd leport ,
MeigsCounly ,
Ohio, t hree -fourth s of · the
members e lect ed thereto
concurri ng :
Sec . l . That, beginning July
I , 1978, the f ol lowi ng sha l l be
the r a tes c harged monthl y by
the Village of Middl eport ,
Ohio for water furnish ed by
the Vi llage of Midd lepor t to
its inhabi t a nt s and o t her
user s th ereo f .
METERED SERVICE
For t he f ir st 2,000 ga llon s
per month or less . 3.60 Min .
Charge
For the next 3,000 gallons
per mon t h, . 141 2 per lOOga ls.
For the n ext 10,000 ga llons
per month , . 1'1 p er 100 gals .
For th e ne~el 15,000 gallons
per month , . 11 pe r 100 gals .
All ove r 30,000 ga llons p er
month, .OB per 100 gals.
An Ordinance to

MIN I MUM CHARGE
FOR METERED
SERVICE
T hrough on e .half in c h
meter s, 3. 60 per month
Through fi ve eightM inch
meters , 3.60 per mo nth
Through three -fourths 1n ch
meters, 6. 24 per mon th
Th r ough on e i n ch meters ,
12.48 per mon th
Through one and one -ha l f
in ch me t er s, 20 :88 per month .
T hro ugh two in c h m eters ,
37.44 per month
Through fo ur i nch meters ,
72.80 per month .
Through sill. inch meter s,
135 .20 p er monlh
Sec. 11 : All b i lls lor the
above servi ce shall be ren .
dered monthly on the fi r st
day of each month or as soon
th er eafter as is rea so nably
p oss i ble tor the service
rend ered
dur i ng
th e
pre ce ding mon th . bi ll s thus
re ndered a r e
le on

befor e )he exp1ratioh of ten
t IOJ days fr om the dat e
render ed . Paym ents after the
expiration of ten 110) d ays
are subtect to a penally often
per cen t ( 10 per cent) of th e
amount o l th e bill , but in no
ins tan ce shall sa id penally b e
less than thirty cents (S .JO) .
Sec
I ll . Each user of
village wa ter serv ice wh o
does not own rea l estate shall
make a deposit to secure th e
paym ent l or wat er service of
the sum of S25 .00 , which sum
sha ll be hel~ by the Villa_g e,
wi t hout interest to th e
deposilo r
U po n th e te r
mination o f wat er se rvic e
such am ount of the d eposit ot
S25 .00 as 1S necessary shall b e
ap plied to the water bill and
the ba lance returned ' to th e
user .
Ther e Sha II be c harged tor
the ins tallation ol a new tap ,
the sum of One Hundred
Tw enty Five
Dollar s
($125.00 ). A n ew ta p i s hereby
d efined to be the ins tallttl ion
Of wa l er servi ce on a line
Where non e f or merly exis ted
and which re quires t he in
staltation of n ew lines from
the water main and th e in
staltafion of a new meier .an d
meter boll. in a locat ion not
tormerly served by water
servi ce tram the said w a ter
main . Sectio n
V:
Thi s
Or dinance is dec lared to be
an emergenc y mea sure i n
that the plfl)li c peace, h e al~h ,
sa l ety and w elf are requ1re
the imme diate estab l iSh men t
of rates in t he f inancing o f the
cost of said water sys tem and
t he operation thereof , and,
there f ore , thi s Ordinance
shal l take effec t immediately
upon i ts passag e .
Passed th e 24th day of
May 1978
M . L . Kelly
Pre si dent of Cou nc il
Attes t ·
Gene Grat e
Clerk
(5) 30 (6) 6, 13 , 3t c

clerk to sa id board aT its next
mee t ing
Description of the im
provemen t
loca te d
al
Ches t er , Ohi o, i .e repetir s to
ttJ e Ches ter Elementary
SCh OOl bu ild ing .
Copi es of th e specif ic ations,
i nstruct1ons to bidders,, and
proposal torms may be ob
tai ned dt the olf ice of t he
cle rk o f
th e board o l
educa tion o t Eastern Lo c al
Sc hoo l D is tri c t , Reedsvil le ,
Ohi o
A ce rtified check pay able
to th e clerk treasurer of the
&lt;Jb ove board ol educat ion or a
Sdl l sfa c lory
b id
b ond
exec uted by th e b idder and a
s ur e ty co mpany , i n an
nm ov n t equal to f ive per ce nt
of t he bid shall be s·ubmitl ed
wi1h each bid .
Said boar d o f ed uca tio n
reserv es the rig ht to wa i ve
informalit ies, to ac cept or
r ejec t any and il l I , or part s of
any and a ll b id s.
The success ful bidder will
b e r equ ir ed to turnish a
s ati st ac tory pe rfo r man ce
bond to r one hundred perc ent
o t th e co ntract pr ice
No bi ds may be withdrawn
to r a t leas t th ir t y {30) day s
alter th e sc h ed uled closing
lime for rece1pt ot bid s.
Board of Edu ca tion of
Ea s tern L o cal Schoo l Dis tr ic t
By Doug Bi sse ll
Pre si d ent
E Ioise Bo ston
Cler k
( 5 ) 30 (6) 6 , 13, 20 , 4I C

CHUCK
ROAST...........

99

Mer cury .

The eve ning stars are
Venus, Mars , Jupiter and
Saturn .
Those born on ti1is date are
under the sign of Gemini.
American patriot Nathan
Hale was born June 6, 1755 .
On this day in history :
In 193:!, a motion picture
drive-in theater opened in
Camden, N.J., the fir st of its
kind .
In 1 ~44, hundreds of thou sands of Allied troops started
crossing the English Channel
in the "D-Day" invasion of
Nazioccupied Europe. Tire
greatest invasion in history
was supported by thousands
of planes and ships.
In 1972, a coa l mine
exp losion in Rhodesia
tr apped
464
miners

Shortcake, w~h or without
Whipped Cream.

LEGAL
AD VERTISEMEN T
FOR BIOS
Separate, sea led prop osal '"
tor fhe repairs to the Chest er
Elem entary school bui ld ing
will be received at th e off ice
of the c lerk o f th e board o t
educa tio n of Eastern Local
Sc hool D is tr ict, Re ed svi11t·,
M eigs County ,, Ohio un t •
12:00 o' c l ock noon. E .S T ,
J une 27, 1978 and will be
pub l icly opene d and r ea d by
the cle rk th erea fte r al th e
t said board of
Ia ted and a
lh o

• 100°o FI OS I-Pr ou f &lt;..Om1 e111~nce
me'l':IY

•

t m1e - c o n~urn u u~ t

hme

ei 1111Hittlo- !. t lr••
~J I

rJelto&lt;:.tHl(j

• EleyJnt temper eel y l;-}5~ st1c lvcs d!l~ 8Cl 5)1 10 c. I\, ur
keep sptll s lr om l lt p]) 1r 1g ' hroL,gh unl ::· trJI:cl ;,,,1, _,,.,

ICE 1 So l1tJ Sln.ie l et~ M ,;k~r d1rl r11na t
lC&lt;l lly ffi il kes purt y·SILP 1re cube~ dlld etrmur 11~-&lt;'::i 1t t•
fl UISa nce of f1ll 1ng ;m d spd l1nq 1Ce l • i:IY~ r,,,,nlc~tJit~ r'

• E)( c lus rve

ADOLPH'S

ex tr u cha rg e
• · 17 0 c u lll otal retng erated volur.n e ger.1erou&lt;.. ,1 fl4
cu II free zer co mpartment

DAIRY VAllEY

BAKER FURNITURE
Middleport, Ohio

tO :OO A.M. IIIII :00 P.M. Sun .. Thurs. 10:00 A.M.
til 12 ,00 P.M. Friday and Sa1urdav.
H~ S. :

See Us At The

FrlcJidaire~ Wh., settle for less?

Bend

BROUGHTON or VALLEY BELL

SAUSAGE.~

JcANs$100

"·

49

PIECE ......·•gge
SLICED
gge
••••••••••••••••
LB

39
~:~c~OAST.............~-.~..

1

HOMO

3 oz. CANS

ARMOUR

LB.

I'

bank .

ARMOUR'S CANNED
MEAT SALE

~~~L~~~········ ...............~.~..1
I,

Franci s~o

• A conven1enll( locntt·rl J-posrt 1on EIPct r 1-S~~ ~· "
swrtr h Cd n help you ~a -!e ene1 g y

¢

CEDAR FARMS

for an!led robb€1')' in the
April 15 robbery uf a &amp;111

try Our Delicious Strawbeny

VIENNA

LB.

underground and mo1·e than
425 of them died.
In 1974, newspaper heiress
Patricia Hearst was indicted

The Almanac
United Press lotcrnatlonal
Today is Tuesday , Jtine 6;
the !57th day of 1978 with 208
Ul follow.
Tht! moon ls between ils
new phase and fir;1 quarter .
The morning star is

ARMOUR

government interferent'e. For children. it 's " You are not
mature enough to watch shows as they are ." (Bull! ) For
parents: "You are not capa ble of controlling your children."
(More bull !)
Television should have certain limits, but all these niggling
complaints are ridiculous.
Aren't you glad pressure groups don't take out after advice
colwnnists?- YOUR FAN, NOT THEIRS
DEARY.F'.N.T.:
Who says they don't'!
We've been " pressure-cooked" by experts and so has every
other colwnnist in the business. Afew ultraconservative guardians of the public moral make complaints their life·project.
Letters they write to editors would singe the hair right out of
your ea rs! -SUE

A total of $966.51 was col- members who were on the
lected by the American streets with the poppies.
Legion Auxiliary of Drew
Wehsler Post 39 during PopPY Days in Pomeroy.
The poppies are made by
LOSE WATER BLOAT
hospitalized veterans who are
WITH ODRINIL
paid a wage which is used for
personal items. Auxiliary
-NATURE'S WAY
members ea rmark the
New OONIIl can llelll you lose etr.ess
money coll ected from the
werJhl due to e.:cess water releniH&gt;rl
commemorative poppy for
dunn~ the pre mtnsHual C't'Cie
direct hel p to veterans and
OOfllfl.-a gentle drurette compoundtheir families with distribucontams natu ral herb s m a tablet that rs
elleclrve aflllast acting
tion in the local unit.
OO"INl-tne 'Nat ufilt ' wat er prll-rs
Mrs. Mar jorie Heuter, popguaranteed to help you lose that un·
PY day chairperson, on behalf
comtonablewaTer tl toa t ano temporary
o{ the unit extends thanks to
werg ht garn or your money will bt
Elberfelds for providing a
refunded
display a rea, as well as those
rs so~ wrth ntr s guar ani~ by
who gave their money and
NELSON DRUG STORE
time and to the auxiliary
Pome,.,y, Ohio

NO

at the same p lace on the l SI
day ot Ju l y, 1978, tor an
amount su ffi cient to satisfy
the jud gment again st th e
parc el

MEATS

·'No! "
It is an insult to me the way reformers keep demamling

Tow! announced for poppy drive

CASE NO 78 . DL T ·6 PAR
CEL NO . PV -01 T i lled in
nam e of Theodore Ebersbach
Si tuated
in
Pomeroy
V ill ag e , L ot No . 259, 10.59
a cres , N .E . end .
JUDGMENT S266.28 pl us
acc rued tax es , a ssess ment s
and penalties, and cos t s o f
.1 ct ion .
Whe r eas. such judgments
order su ch real p ro perty to be
so ld by the undersigned to
su t1Siy the tot al amoun t o f
such judgment ;
N ow, the r efore , public
noti ce is hereby given th a t I ,
Jarncs J . Pro ft it t , Sher ilf o f
M ei gs County , Oh io, will sell
such r ea l property at pu bl ic
au c t ion, for cash , to the
highest bidder of an amount
su ff ic ient to sati s fy th e
i ud gmenl .:~g ai nst eac h par cel
begi nn in g at 9:00a .m . at the
Ir on I door ol th e M eigs
Co unty Court Hou se, in
Pome r o y , Ohio, on the 14th
day of June , 1978 , an d con
linuing th ercalle r . from day
to day , until all p a r ce ls are
so ld , H anv par cel does not
re cei ve a su ffi cient bid, it
sh alt be o tter ed tor sa le ,
under the same t erm s and
co nd i tions of the 1i rst sa lc and
at the same ti me of day and

CASE NO 78 DL T .t PA R
CEL NO LBT 01
Tilled in
the n ame o f W F Stanl ey .:Jnd
S.:nah J St an ley, .Jddrcsses
unknown
Sil ua l ed
in
L eb() non
Town s hip , M CI QS Co un ty ,
Oh 10 , Sec t io n 74 , I acres ncar
mi ddle of N E ~ ~ ol N .E IJ .
JUD G MEN T ~ 1519 pl us
accrued taxes, Jsscss mcnts
ami pcn t~t t 1 es , and costs of
action
Situa t ed
1n
Leb a n on
1 ownsh1 p , Sec t io n 14, 3 11cre s
1n N E pa r t
JUDGMENT
\ 5&lt;19) plus
ac c ru ed ta• es . a ssessments
and pen&lt;lll 1es and costs olth ,s
ac t ion
T OTA L J UD G MENT on
two parcels \ 10 14 plus ac
crued ta l(.es , assessments and
pen a1t1 es an d costs o f ac110 n

SHE'S ANTI THE 'ANTI'S'
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
I'm getting sick and tired of all these pressure groups trying
to get the goverrunent to interfere with our television , I've had
it up to here with " ban TV violence, sugar-product and
cigarette commercials, sex- for the chi ldren's sake."
I watched the tube as a very iJnpressionable youngster, and
have no detrimental effects. As a college student, I'm still an
avid TV fan .
·
Hegardless of what the pressure groups claiJn :
I. Television has in no way affected my or my family 's
reading habits. We all enjoy reading.
2. I thought many of the cigarette ads were cleverly done,
but they did not influence me toward smoking. After watching
one, I'd remember to scold my parents for lighting up. I've yet
to find one person who took up cigarettes as a result of a TV ad.
It was usually peer pressure.
3. When I was very young, I liked Saturday morning cartoons, which were much more violent than they are today. I
never once thoug ht of copying them. Today 's violent shows
have not given me a thick skin . ! enjoy them as "fiction ." They
ha ve little to do with real violence.
4. The family viewing hour' Small children seldom unders~
land sexual references. More likely they 'll become bored and
stop watching .
5. Once again people are screaming for the goverrunent to
make ba ns. This tiJne it's on sugar-&lt;."ereal ads. I had a simple
cure for those "sweet" ads : My parents knew how to say

DEARY.:
We've discovered that many of these "Get the rascals out"
people have not watched the TV show or read the colwnn
under fire. They follow blindly, having been told by their
leaders to target in on certain "SUbversive corrupters of
morals." Result' A flood o[ letters. SometiJnes they bring
about cancellations but more often producers and editors discount organized campaigns and rely on their own judgments.
Which is lucky for your fra nk and honest correspondents
-HELEN AND SUE

SA MUEL SHAIN
TURNS ONE- Samuel
Benton Shain celebrated his
second birthday recently with
a party at the horne of his
maternal gra ndparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Dana Winebrenner,
Syracuse.
Homemade icc cream and
a cowboy cake were served to
ltisgrandparentsnd parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Shain and
his sister, Emily, R4cine ;
Mrs. Dodie Winebrenner,
Bobby and Bec ky, Cottageville, W. Va.; Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Farrar and
Dawn, Miss Patty Winebrenner, Columbus ; Mr. and Mrs.
Michae l Winebrenner and
Shelly, Racine; Beulah Ward,
and his great-grandmother,
Oma Winebrenner, Syracuse.
Remembering Sam uel with
cards were his paternal
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Harry L. Shain, Mr. and Mrs.
Harry A. Shain , Letart; Miss
Sandy
Winebrenn e r,
Syracuse, Gary Hysell ,
Hutland, and Mrs. Nonna
Goodwin, Pomeroy.

CEL NO . Bl .Ql - T ill ed in
name Of Clay W ilso n , Rf. I ,
Grantsvi lle , W. Va .
Co al
undertying
!he
f Ollowing
real
estate :
S1 t ua ted in Bed ford Town
Ship , Meigs Cou nt y, Ohio ,
Sec t i_on ot , 190.86 acres, S .W .
par t Oi l , g a s and oth er
mmera ls.
JUDGMENT S5 15.17 plys
acc ru -ed ta~ecs , assess ments
and penalties and cos t s ot
ac tion .
under l ying
the
Coal
fo llow i ng
rea l
es t a t e.
Si luat ed in Bed ford Town .
Shi p, M eigs County , Ohio ,
Sections 9 10. 84 .50 acres,
S. E . corner, oi l , gas and othe r
mi ne rals .
JUDGMENT S222 .94 plu s
acc r ued la~ees , a ssessments
and penal ti es and costs ol
act ion .
Coa l
underlying
th e
fOllo win g described re a l
es t ate : Si tuatrd in Bedford
To wn s t"lip , Meigs Coun t y,
Oh io, in Secti on 10, 1.71.5 acres ,
E end oil. gas and oth er
mine r als .
JUDGME N T $5 . 05 p lu s
acc rued l a•es, assessments
' and penallies ttnd costs of
action .
TOTAL JUDGMENT lor
thr ee pa r cels ·$743 .26 pl us
ac c r ued la )(es, assessments
and penalties and cost S ot
action .

CASES N0 . 78-DLT·2

Polly Cramer

Grange deputies
attend conference

' 10 K. Go ld
2 dia .
Blue Lind e

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, June 6, 1978

POnED
MEAT •••••••••••

5

/

$ 100
12 OZ. CAN

ARMOUR

TREET............ 99~
24 OZ. CAN

ARMOUR

:::~..................99~
ARMOUR

12 OZ. CAN

CORNED

99~

BEEF ••••••••••••••••••

ARMOUR

VALLEY BELL

2% MILK ...................... -.....~~.~·.. sl 49
FESTIVAL

ICE CREAM_......... _.......... ~~.~~~·. 99(

~~BSLARGE •••.••••~.59¢

12 OZ. CAN

ROAST
I BEEF ....... ~ ..........99~

~~~~~........................~..~.,,.

PEPSI
$ 19
t::O~ ..................

8- 16 OZ. BTLS.

CAMPBELL'S

GROUND BEEF
LB.

$}29

FRIDAY ONLY

BREAD 4.,.(,
$}
·

'*•

JOHN A. WADE, M.D.

TOMATO
SOUP

&gt;OAVES

FRIDAY ONLY

Announces the Openina Of His Office AI

Pleasant Valley ~pital
Valley Drive ..

DR•.PEPPER

• . Point PINNnt, West VI I'll In II 25550

Practice Limited To Ear, No.e and
Throat Facial Plaetic Surgery
Bronchoeeophagology
,,

Opening July 1 - AccepHng Appoints, Junt 1
Telephone (104) 171-1244

•

THURSDAY ONLY

•I

DIET or REGULAR)

8 PAK

99~

PLUS DEPOSIT

MARKET - OPEN DAILY 9 10 10 P.M.
SUNDAY 10 TO 10
We.kcept Federal Food Stamps-We Resene The Right To Lmil

RC or DIET RITE
Qua11tilie~,-J

8 PAK

99 ~

PLUS DEPOSIT

�6- The Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Ju ne 6, 1978

1
Sf

di
T

ORDINANCE NO. I0"·11

An

Ord 1n1nce to FIK

COUNT Y,
OHIO ,
INHABITANTS

OTHeR USERS .

ITS
AND

dJ

WHE REAS , the Village of
M iddle port has here tof or e
l'!dOpted certa 1n r~tes and

N

sewerage s-rste'm serv •c e

p

F
F

charges

for

sa n~F ar y

and sa id ra tes an d ch arges
needed to be ad 1usted . and

WHEREAS , 1t •S deemed
ne c essar y ro estaD l• sh ce rto!'l •n
r ales and
c har g e s to r

san 1ta rv

sewera ge system

and sewa ge a •sposa l fa cdif ,es

se r v •ce to be rende r ed to sa •d
Vill a ge a nd to •Is •nh ab ttants
a nd other users , w h •Ch w il l
prod uce suff •c• e nt re ven ue s
to p a y t h ~ Op t" r al 1ng and
m a m te na nce e w:ppn ses of lis
sa n 1tarv seweora9 t" syst em
an d
se .... aged 1s·pos a l
f !I C11i f 1f'S and to prov 1de l or
the pa y m enT of rn e prm c1 pa l
a nd 1n te r es1 ot S 3 o~S , OOO 00 o f
F rr s t Mortg a g e Sewe-rage
Sys t em and Sewag e D 1sp os a t
F a Cili t i eS
I mp r ov eme n t
Re v e nu e Bon d s ot t hf' Vill agt"
rssu ed for lh f' p urpose o f
pa y 1ng pa rT ot m e c ost o t
const r u cti ng· sa 1d ta cllil1 eS
a nd ext end rng sa 1d system
N OW THERE FO RE
BE
IT
O R D A I NED
Ov tne
Counc il of ! he V lil d gto of
M i d d lepor t , M e rgs County .
O h10 . t hr ee f ou r ths ol 111e
m e mber s e te c re d t here t o
con cu r n ng
SE C 1 That 1n co nnec l 10n
w ilh t h e c onst r uc t 10n o t
ex tens 1ons
ano
1rn
p r ov em ent s to t he se w era ge
sys te m . thf' to l lo w 1n Q sha ll be
t he r ate s charged month l y by
rne V i ll age ot M 1da lepo r t ,
O h 10 , lor st' r v 1ces r endf' red
by rts sar11 ta r,. se w er a ge
sys te m to Its 1n hab 11a nts a nd
ot he r user s the reof
com
menc 1ng Jul y I , 1978
M on t hly ra te, ba sed u pon
w a t er met er r ea d 1ngs
0 to 2,000 ga llons per m on t h
53 00
2. 100 to 5 000 ga l lons per
m on th $4 10
5, 100 10 8 000 gal l ons
per
m on th 55 10
8, 100 to 10,000 g a ll on s per
mon tn 56 00
10,1 00 to 15 ,000 ga ll o n ~ pe r
m ont h $9 110
15,1 00 t o 10,000 gal lons per
montn S14 40
10. 100 fo 2S .OOO g a ll ons pe r
m ont h 516 BO
A l l o.... er 2$,000 gallon s pe r
m o n111 Sl 6 BOp lus 12 pe r 1,000
ga li ons
F l a t Rat e . non me t e r e d
o r 1v a te w ellS per montn S4 80
SE C II l n t he E"vent th a t
one wat er m e ter ser v es mor e
th a n o n e domesl!c c om
m er c1 a lor 1nd us tr 1a 1 un1t , tn e
m rn 1mum btl I o t SJ 00 per
month . p er u n •t , o r t he
mete red ser v 1c e r ead 1ng
w h 1cneve r 1S the gr eater st1a ll
app ly
Wh e re n o wa t er
me t er s are 1n 5ta l led on a
or 1vat e w ell a nd ser v 1c e 1S
or ov 1ded to mo re !ha n one
d o me sli c, c om me rc 1a l o r
m d us tr 1a lun 1t , the fl a t ro'l te o t
S4 80 oer mont h p e r un 1t , sha ll
app l v A unrt St1 a ll con s1st ot a
sew er con nect ron as d ete r
m in ed by t he r egul a t 1on s o l
lhe Board ot T rusr ees o t
P Ub liC A ffa 1rS Of Sa !d Vi l l age
SEC
I l l The Vill age o f
M1ddl eport re se r v es t he r i g ht
to requ ,re th e meas ur em ent
of water ael 1v ered to an y
pre mls es 1n su ch a m ann er
that rates for sewerag e
serv 1ce can be dete rm 1ned
f r o m such wa t er m et e r
read.ngs , 1n wh 1c h ev ent lhf'
r ate s l or se w er serv 1c es sna il
be t he r a tes set fort h on a
wa ter m et er r ead ing ba s1s
l1 kew 1se , any f l at rate user
upon not 1f 1c ai 10n to th e Board
of Tr u stee s of P u OI1c Alfa 1r s
of !he Villa ge sh a lf h ave the
r 1g ht to 1nsta ll at h ts e)lpensf'
an appro ved me t er 1n g dev 1c e
tor t he me a su r em en t of a ll
wa ter pump ed fr om we ll s or
o ther sour ces g r a nt rng u n to
th e B oar d ot T rust ees of
P u b liC Ali a 1rs t he r 1gnt to
rea d
t he
m eter
t~ nd
pe r 10d 1ca lfy ch ec k th t a c
c ura cy of suc t1 mete r mg
Tt1e fo reg o 1 r&lt;~ g cn ar ges are
m 1n 1rnum
ch a rg E's
no •
ma x rmum ch a r ge s and Tl"'e
V tlt age r eserv es Tf're· r gr• a na
1S o b hg a tea to ncr ea H! •,.. e
sa m e at a ny t me !lf'IO ut a •re
re .... en ue'S o f tne s a l'l •ar t
se wera ge svs te iT' a no se w aQt
d 1sposa 1 t ac 111 1 e!. or oJe ,..
SUff i(I E'f)l
IQ
Oit f
' l'lf:"
op erat 1ng and r-d r •ena rc.e
ex pe nses ana tne oeo · ~e r. ce
ch a r ge ot tne bO~"'O!I H JII!' ':l ·c.
pa y lhe CO!It ol cor s· , ... c rq
sa 1d la c ol il leS or f t 'en~ oros ·o
sa 10 sv ste m
SE C I V Snou o rre o 1 t or
any ser v 1ce rend e ~"a Of ' n "
sa nrtary ~ew erage ~ ( S ' err
and se w ag e d i 'S POS &lt;l ta c.ll r e&lt;:.
no t be pa 10 w ' ~"~
" f a ays
a p en a ll y of 10 pe r cen t of '&gt;u c r
tld lrng sha lt be c hargea II tne
tltfl tS noT Od 1d lv rlt' ll'l 'i lfT (
da ys , the Vill age r eserves tne
r1 gh l to cu ' off the se w er
serv 1ce to \ad o rem tse s
Whrch SM !l Tnen be r tsume a
on ly upon pa y men t ot a n
ad d 1t 1ona l tee of \ 5 00, a nd
f u r t h er . If sa 1d tlrll JS not pa 1d
W1Hl 1n 90 a a vs , tne Cl erk 1S
h e r e by
a utt'lo r , t ea
an a
d1 r e c te d to
c t&gt;rt ty
th e
de l1 nc uent 1&gt; II
P lu s t he
p en a l t 1es to t P'\e Cou nt y
A u d ilor tor collec t ron as a nd
at t he sd me l 1me th at o tn e r
ta'll. es and as'Jo essme n ts ar e
co llec te d
~ EC
V
T h e owner ot
pr tval e pr ope rt y w t1 1C h 1S
ser vea or m a y be serve d b y
the
sa n11 ar y
sewe r ag e
,svs t em ~t nd se wa ge di spo sa l
ta c ill l res by p 1pe5 conn ec t ed
w llh
sa 10
s ys t e m
a nd
•• • fa cd d 1es to co n yey samtary
sew erag E' th ~ re lro m sh a ll as
w e n as the l esse e of the
prem 1ses. be l1 a ble to t ne
vtl l ag e t o r d ll s an rt ary
sew er ag e to sa rd sys te m an d
fa c ili t i eS f r om sa1 d sv stem
a nd fd Cih l tes
fr om sa 10
p re m 1ses
SE C VI Any ot her m eans
of sewage d 1Sposa 1 tS her eby
d ecl ar ed to be a n u 1sa nc e and
1!. fh~re f ore pr oh 1b1led
,.
SE C V II
That a ll or
dtn a nces or parts t her eo f , 1n
co nf1 1c t here ....n t h , mcl ud 1ng
Ord tnan ce N o 9 10, adopt ed
June 7, 196 7, c e , and th e sa m e
are , he r eb y rep ea ted , ef
l e c11 \le Ju l y 1 19711
Pa ssed th e 8th day of Mev
19711

" ·r-

M l Ke ll y
Pr e$ rden t ot Co u ncil
P.t 1es t
G ene G r a te
E l er k
C.S

10 16 6, 13

)t c

Isn't technology wonder·
fu l' As elec trl t power
. become:. more elf1eient, n s1111( rates are threatening to
bnng bil ci&lt; the candle as a
h ~htsv urce .

Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

WANT AD
CHARGES

AD ·

JUSTEO RATES AND
CHARGES FOR SANITARY
SEWER·AGE SYSTEM AND
SEWAGE D IS POSAL
FACILI TIES SERVICE FOR
THE VILLAGE OF MID ·
DLEPORT ,
MEIGS

DI CK TRACY

15 Worth: 01 Under
Ca:sh
Cl\1111 ~ 1 '
I da;

100

I 2~

2 d41 )~
J d¥ )'~
6 tli6):!i

1511
1!0

! !S

'"'1S

300

3

E:a dl \\'VI iJ lJ \'\!1' llll;' IHIIIU11WI1 1~
~~ ~ ll' l lls !Jt'l ~~o urd pt-r
,J,d:, I U!LI\Ul¥ Ull!el U\l:lt\ lOic&gt;t't'lltl\t'

u.. y

llot.Jnb

tli:t} ~ ~Ill bt&gt; d tarl\t'd

l:ll ti lt&gt; I

u ~;:

.:::.--=:;;.=

. --

STA N S BARGAIN LAN D Moin St ,
Rutlond Ohto We buy , se ll. or
! rode new and used merchan
d1se on11ques , t~res , new and
used Open 7 day s o week 9
am to 5 pm 8uy w1 se buy fro m
Sto n s

lllt'II'Mil\ , C11 nJ ul
OOtlU;tl
6 ('\!IllS pt.&gt;!'

y

mutunwn

WUf

u

SJ 00

MuOtlt• Home sa l~ 1111d Y1:1 nl sa lt'.!i
il('t' l'~ l;'t]

unl.\ Will i l ll .!! h w1t1 1
urtll'r !5 t't'nt d ll!.r ge hw atb cat r~ ·
11 1~ Box Numbtor In Cure uf fht' St•n&lt;l it'

wwl

NO ITEM TOO Lorge or too small
Wdl buy I p1e&lt;e or complete
ho useh old New used o r anh
ques Mart1n s Furnilure 10 N
'2nd St . M1ddlep.or t
Phone

qn

Tbt•

~ ~ I L::.htr re:;..• l\t'~

n~ltt

tlk'

\u l'l!U or n•Jt'l'l lin) 11ili dt'(•tnt'&lt;.! uiJTi ll:' Pullhsht·r t~ llinl lt lJto
rt'.:o4&gt;vlt.5 1bil' fur mort' l harl urJ t' 1m ur

Jt'l li iJI'lil !

rt't.·t m:.t.•rllun

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
rut·~U&lt;~I

lin u Fnd,H
~I

Uw dil1 Lll•furt' pubht &lt;t llu11
S unJ&lt;~&gt;

.fo P \ I
~ rti \&lt;1 \ afh'I11WII

For Wedne sday June 7

ASTRO•GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

If\ \/uJm
W l:J~cnw~w~u
Ju ne 7. 1978
Bre ak s and o ppo rluM tes 10
ad 11ance your f1nancta l po s il1 0 n
could pop o ut o l the bl u e 101
yo u tt11 s co mt ng year H o w ev
er they re 1ntend ed so lely tor
you It you try to br1ng Hl
other s tn ey won 1 wo rk

GE MINI (May 11-June 10) Don I
let a w ell ·me a n•ng l rtend pre ·
'en I yo u !l a m ta k1ng adva ntag e
of an unu sual o p po rtu m ty t hat
may pop up to da y Thts luck y
01eak w on 1 be here to m o rro w
F1nd o ut to w hom you re ro·
mantt call y su1 ted by se nd m g
fo r yo U! copy a t A sl ro-Gra ph
Le tte r Ma1 1 50 c e nts to r ea c h
and a lon g , s ell -addr ess ed
sla mp ed e n vel o p e to As tr a-

Grap h P 0 Bo• 489 Rad 10 C11y
St at 1on N Y 100 19 Be s u 1e to
spe c• fy you r b1r th s rg n

CAN CE R (J une Z1 -July 121
Spu r-o f-the mo ment happe nIng s w ill tur n o ut to be th e m os t
ell: cttl ng and t u n to da y K eep
yo ur sc nedule fl e xtble o r yo u
m1gh t feel ne gl e c te d 1f you 1e
tell beh •nd

LEO (July 13-Aug . 121 You
co uld end up fo und e rtng today
'' yo u l1 s ten to o thers w h1 le
1gnon ng your o wn tnt UIII V€
te e t1ng s reg a rdmg th1ng s a t a
do me strC nature

VIRG O !Aug 13·Sepl 21 ) Take
your mmo o ff yo ur care er 01
other we l()hl ~ ma ile rs to day
Do someth1ng en te rt a1n1n g d il·
te rent and tot a lly unrel at e d to
,.ou r w orld I) conc erns

LI BRA (Sepl 13-0cl 231 Se ll·

1973 ELDORADO CADillAC h
cellenl condllion loaded wllh
e•lros Only $3800. A lso 10 ft
truck comper Good con d rho n
Only $1000 Cal l 997 53 11 or

6370

qq2 .632q

( HIP WOOD
Po l e s mo11 1973 PL YMO UTH FURY I
dtometer 10 on large st en d
1?ng1ne oulo , P S . P 8 , A C
pe r ton Bundled slob S6 per
il ·door !r.edon Excellent cond1 ·
ton De li vered to Ohio Pollet
11on Phone 985·3900
Co Rl '2 Po meroy 992 · 2689
1%6 DODGE
PO LARA , one
CO IN S CURREN CY token s old
o wner 1(' fu'e cond111 o n Phone
po&lt; ket watche s and chom s
9&lt;q 2763
sr lver and gold We need 196-t
an d olde r sdver cotn s Buy sell 1975 GR ANO TORINO Squ1re Ford
o r l10de Co lt Roger Wamsley
Statton wogon w 1th P S , P 8
A C tdt wheel crutse con tr ol
7A11l3 1
all new ltr eS Power wmdows
llMBER POME ROY Forest Pro
S3200
Ca ll olte r b
pm
ducts l op pr 1ce for sta nd1ng
742· 2008
sow t11llber Call 9q'] 5965 or
1973 BU!CK LUX US EHellen t co n
l( e n ~ Ha nby , 1_ 446 8570
d11ton P S P B A C Nt~w
WANT TO buy G ood wheel ch a1 r
tHeS $1 750 Q92 787b
Q49 159 1
197 4 PIN TO Rod10 l ltr e~ new
Ol D FURNilURE •ce bo.ote s bro ss
sh oclo. s 48 000 mdes $1500
bed s 1ron beds etc com plete
Coii9Q'} 7185 ah e1 4
househol ds Wn!e M D M il ler
197 1 CAD ill A C ElDORA DO Full
Rl 4 Pom eroy 01 coli 997 63 70
pow e r 01r e~~: c ellen l co nd1110 n
WANTED 10 buy O lder country
Phon e 99'1 7 467
Some
hou se ond acreage
w oo d ~
No rt h end ol Me1g s
County
Awa y fr om poved
rood Reply to Bo:o: 719 M c o
The Do1ly Sen ttn el Pomer oy
OhiO
8 &amp; S MOBilE HOMES , Pt Plea
WANTED l O buy f1rewood lor
sant , W Vo bes 1de Heel.. s
s1ove I 304 773 5937
1q73 Br oodm ore 14 JC b 4 2
bedroo m
I q73 Dor tOn 14 K 60 ")b edroom
1971 Vtc!OJm n 14 1r b7 3 bed roo m
2 both
If- YO U ho ve o se rv1c e to oll er !972 Cov entry 12 " 65 3 bed r oom
wo n t to buy 01 se ll somethmg 19b9 S1o1esmon 12 /( bO 2
oe look 1ng for wor k
or
bed room
w hateve r
you It get res ulh
foster w 1th o Sentmel Wo n! Ad COAl liMESTONI:: ~ on d groYe l
co lc 1u m chlor1 de l ert il u e r do g
Ca ii9Q'} 71 56
toad end al l types of soh E)l
CARP ORl SALE June 7 &amp; 8 9 30 to
cel s1o r SoH W o rk ~ Inc E Mom
~ Book s A 11 on clot hmg toy..
St Pom ero y 991. 389\
od d~ and ends 918 5 Th1rd
8~
S T SELE CTI O N of the be st wood
M 1ddleport
sto ... e ~ 111 Sou theo st er n Oh 1o
SEW RITE SEWING Clu b w1 ll .,pon
Jotul
Mo r 5o
Efel
Ttr ol 1o
so r o yor d !r.a le Wed June 7th
1eompw oo d and Nofhuo Z1on
o n the empty lo t ocross fr om
Heat Co 8 Putnam Or (o ft Mill
148 Butternut A ve from lOom
~t )
Athe ns 6 14 592 .007 9 01
to? Ro 1n conc el s
b l 4b% 1187
VARO SAl E June 6 &amp; 7 9 A BURR O UG HS SENSI MA. TIC oc·
Weo1he r perm 1tt mg Brodbury
co un t1n g mo chme
Pho ne
Rood Don Ho nmg res1dence
992 2l ~b Th e Oody Se n t1nel
Chdd ren s clo th1 ng
m 1sc
111 Cou rt S1ree1 Pom er oy
1 t em~
O hiO

sa

'T'!'""AS
a-::·~''?

YARD ::,ALE 829 5 3rd
d le por t Wed &amp; lhurs

Mod

FOUR FAMil V Ya rd Sole Wed
l hu rs Car o ly n Ada ms Ro c1ne
pa st legto ~Hol t look l or !Hgns

SAG ITTAR IUS (No•

1l· Dec

ARIES (March 11-Aprll 191 Gel

PUBLIC NOT ICE
Ro na ld E
Bo st rc , who se
l a st k no w n p l a c e of r es1den ce
1!» A pt No 3, R 1ver s1ae A p ts .,
M 1dOtepor t , Oh iO 457 60 , 1S
he r eby no11fr ed thai on the
19th da y ot M a y , 1978. Mar y
Cat he r •n e
B os t tc ,
be ing
pta 1nt 1ff tiled her co mp larn t
aga 1nst h 1m a s d ~ l en dant 1n
the Cour t of Commo n P t et~ s ,
Me 19 S Cou nty , OM IO, C a~ e N o
16,826 , pr a y m g to~o d i v or ce
fr om sa id Ron a ld E Bostic on
the g r oun d s o f gr oss n eg tect
Of au1y t'ln d elO'tre m e cru ell y .
pl a 1n h ff !!ISO pra ys lor o t her
pr o o er r f' h ef ~ a J d cause Will
D~ tor ne ar 1ng on or att er tne
1S tn d a y of iul·f , \978
Mary Catherrn e BOSI IC
P l a lnt tff
O ' Br i en &amp; O ' Srt en
Pa t n ck H O ' Br1 en
.Attor ney !. for P l a 1nl1 ff

ll l lJ . JO (61 6, 13, 10. 11,

61&lt;

LATE lOMATO plonls lo1 sole
Across from the ~w1mmmg
p ool
Th o ma s
,Haymon
Sy rocu~e

19b9 FORD VA N C roft~mon o m
p laner Cor lt smon shoper w1 th
mol or (o ro Hilt on Po r tl and

BA3 no&lt;

1'977 CHEVROLET PICI&lt;.UP ScoH
sdal e A1r
power stee r 1ng
bro~e s
~ teel b el l l1 re!r.
tool
bo.ot SIISOO MoMe off er 370
Mechanic Pome1oy a fh~ 1 5
YARD SAl£ June 7 8 9 hom 9
am lo 4 pm ot b1g wh1te hou :s e on
left ocr os!r. lrom Rou.,h lone o n Rt
7 1n Cheshl rtl O hto at Mar y l ay ne
re!r. 1dence
BO Or s
Ch .tdren s
Wl: STERN
SB 95 to S13 95 Men ~ S79 95 to
$44 95 Bo dey ! B oa t ~ 322 N
7n d Ave Mtd d lcport
197b CHE VROl El 1l ton ptdwp

SHINN S TRACIORSAl ES
Phone 458 1030
l eon W Vo

EED A WATER
SOFTENER?

1n Tomat o
h e lds l op pay Dalle s Cl e land
949 2340

197 6 STAR CRAFl CAMPER
304 77 3 586 7

70 It

9q2 J437

Far Rent
3 AND o1 RM lurn1shed en d un
fu r nished opts . Ph on e 997.
5434
COUNHY MOBIL~ Home Pork
Rout e 33, no rth of Pomeroy
Lorge lois Co lt 9'17·7479
SEN lOR Cfl iZEN S
Our new
ren ten OSS ISionce you may be
obl e to ftve tn ou r oparlment
!or l e ~s tha n SSO o month For
con ta ct
m or e 1n formo ll on
V, lloge Manor Aporlm~~;nh

&amp;

condltton

your

. water with Co-op . water
soHener, Model UC-SVI ,
' Now Only •289.95
Let us test your water Free

Pomeroy Landmark
9e':!_ack W. car.. y, Mgr.

!Iii!!

Phone 9'11·21 81

PA IN T FOR 5al e Afurmnu n1 po 1n t
new bucket s ne'.l er been op en
ed 100 gol ovatl ob le ot $4 50
per goll on Blue late ot pomt ot
SJ 50 per gal lon 992 b1 73 01
99&lt; 6106
1938 HARl E'f' DA VIDSON fu lly
CU!! Iom1t ed wrt h su 1C1d e cl utch
end ~ hd t h celt enl cond11 10n
Ask 1ng 53000
747 .7 790 or
b l 4 6q9.3190
1976 250 l::n duro t--londo he el len t
cond il1on les~ lhon 800 m tl e~
A sk1 ng 5750 I q6b BSA chop
per
lou tond 1I1Qn
Ask 1119

S600 6" 698 3l'l0
Al LADIN lAMPS and pa rt!. tOe
oil Ge t the lamp you 11e bee-n
wantmg 01 f1• up that o ld one
ot a !r.umm er ~ ov mg s ·Now at
Mounto 1n leother an d G en era l
~ t o re
104 106 W Um on St
At hens Sole ends June lOth
7B AI UMINUM PONT OON boot
mo tor
and 1101ler
$ \bOO
991 3073 alter 0
1977 BUICK Cen1 u11on I 976 Hen
do Acco rd 1q71 VW 8199
Browmng sho t gun 949·7432
DUMP TRUCK q pass enger ~t o .
Iron wagon 10 p 1 e c e ~ of f01 m
equ 1pment. All 1n good wor k mg
•
condi tiOn Coli 949 1 I 14

R.e side n f I a I

qcn.77a.,

FERTILIZER. NITROGEN
POTACH, FERT.().f'ELS

FUt(NI SHW G ARAGE opt Sou th
Alh M1dd lr po rt 99? 7 140
MOBILE H O M~ w tlh city woter
or J gas N te e focot ton In
Ho 11 c A lber t I-iiii 949 1261

&amp; BLEND

Pomeroy Landmark
TRAm TW O lo h m Pomeroy Wrll
!rode for bulldo1e r or mo lor
home Co li I 304 b-4 8 5607 Fori
Goy w v

! ~ackW. Cars.y , Mfr .
I

1-

•

·

Phonem-ltll

Alum. &amp; Vin~
Siding

and

commercial. Call for
estimate, 24 hour service .
Anyday, anytime.
Phone 985· 3806

Jack Ginter 985-3806

Jack'S\.":..........
Septic
Tank
"''ii!WIK'

Box J

Free

......, •• the

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
!!1·1l74

Estimates

Let

us

capture

and

preserve those pre(tous
moments forever -

Weddings
Silver and

Golden Anniverutry
Family Reunions

Special O&lt;:casions
Photography
is

our

business, not a side lif'M!

.

The Photo Place
(Bob Hoeflich)
Pomeroy

5.31 .1 mo.

DAVE'S BACKHOE
&amp;
DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Anytime S.furday

992 ·7119 or 992-5041
4 27 tfc

-

-

Coll9n HBI
NEW 3 bedro om house , 1 bo ths,
oil e lec
I acre Mtdd leport
close to Rutland Phone 991
7481
VA FHA 30 yr l 1nancrng. o tso
rcfi i'I OnC1 ng lr e tond Mo r tgage .
77 E Sta te Athens phone (b l A)

592 J051
BY OWNER 5 a cre s wrth 9 roo m
house FRH GA S 2 cor garage
summ er kil chen and bo rde red
by 7 cre eks Call 985 38?7
TWO 5 TORV !rome hou se 6
room!'l and both cellar out ·
b u 1ldmg ~ 4 oCt e'&gt; land ot edge
o f Rutlond CompiBi e tra der
hook up ol ~o '2 bonk s oppro1'
e d pr operfy at 51~ 500 Ph one
q 9') 71Jfj4

l
aC H!!r. lotated 1 mile from
Me1gs Mme N o I Or til ed wel l,
sep11c to nk $6000 742 /565

We h1ve enlarged our

service department and
~nd

~.. JockW . Cilrsey . Mtr
MAIN
POMEROY. 0
JUST LISTED - About 6
ac r es with

WANTED ANY busrn ess
~eo/
htote that n eed~ f1non ctng
M r Ar our k so u 116 871 4 17 5

FOUR VERY tome k1tt en s Phone

qq) 1JIJ

BlACK AND while .neutered
mole 3 ye or 5 old Pl ay fu l of
fucllo note ,
ADULT FEMALE co llie Fu ll blood
ed Sa ble co lor G ood w.th
ch1fdren 985 3365
TO GOOD home 5 all whtte cots
and Mttte n~ !r.ome wtlh blue
eyes 1 all bloclo. torn co t . Adults
co ts g ood
mouser s
Co l i
9973 128 ofte1 4 pm or con be
seen o!lor A o t 289 Mulberr v
A ... enuc Pom eroy
THRH WHilE t..111ens I cot1 co and
I tiger k 1tt en 99') 2570 a h er b

pm

Mobile. lloltlt'f lor
. Sale
por.do , 3 bttdr oom lo ~r cond r·
lion Colt between 7 00 and
8 00
Mon
thru
lhu f s

J 5q82

191J lt(AILER FOR sol!l Do1 ion 17
)I
bO Phone 7A 2-2b89 or
b14 1Jb4.57 A1 On CR 1 So14'! m
Cenl er

11£al E~ tatc for Sale
1.:1 ACR tS of land on the Po meroy
Course

Hrl l

Ro od

9'12 3944
HO U ~~

.AN() s101e bu lld tng '"
Hc mh v r l l e ~ 98 ) ~ !l 19

home.

kllchen &amp; dining, nat gas
F .A

furnace

fireplace ,

m .ooo.oo.

GiveAway

excelllffit

J bedrooms , be1h , large

porche'5 ,

C o lt

BY OW N ER 80 ocres. 2100 feet
fr ontage
Ex &lt;ell e nt
10 0d
de .... efo pmen t
pOss 1b dt li e s
No r I_!! o f Pomeroy 9'97 7010
47 ACRE FARM 5 roo m s end bo th
forc ed 011 furna ce C1 ty water
70 x 74 hie btock gorogeo On Rt
7 985 -4156
IN RUTLAND b room 5 po r 110l
bot h cor por t utdttv budd1 ng
O n bt g lo t C1ty water g&lt;l !io

1A2·288 1

11'Jr\1M m1f W THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

H~Y I HOIJ

00 li1ESI:

gl ~

MAL OOT 8"-D...

TA"7Te to 'IOU'?

I0

WHY'?

heat ,

ba sement.

2

car

garage

300.Moin St.
Pomeroy. Ohio
Pomeroy m -6282
or 992-6263
8 A.M. to4:JO P.M.

BABY FARM - 25 acres
with very nice remodeled
home clo .. ln . 2 bedrooms .
be1h , carpeti ng. panel ing ,
new siding, basement, F.A.
furna ce . $30,851 00.
LOVELY BRICK - Close
to new Hydro Unl1. 3
bedrooms, 1'1' baths. F.A.
turna ce, close 1o school , 6
room s S35,000 00.
LOVELY KITCHEN This you sho uld see, la rge
dining area wllh dining
bar, l bedrooms, ba1h ,

211 E. Second Street
BUSINESS BUILDING Out of all floods Concrele
floor . air cond ition ing .

basement ,

~bout

78

yrs .

old . Sl8,000.00.
LIKE FLOWERS? - Here
Is lust tho business lor you .
Established lor • num ber
of
years .
furn i shed ,

Training
I ntere s t e d

parties call .
BRICK &amp; FRAME - I •ere
ground , 3 bedrooms, 1'12
ba1h , nlct kitchen &amp; din ing ,

•I I electric, patio, porch,
garage and workshop .
531,900.00.
OTHER PROPERTY TO
CHOOSE FROM.
HENRY E. CLEL AND
REALTOR
HANK , KATHY &amp; LEONA
CLELAND
ASSOCIATE
REALTORS
"2·2!lt- m .6191 ~~~~

"'
•

loading dock an d parking .
NEW LISTING - Wayou1l
bedroom frame home with
10 acres Has large living
room w1th woodburn lng
firepla ce Owners wil l fake
fra iler In trade or will help
finan ce S33,500.
POMEROY - Reasonable
2 fam ily home . Live in the
upper and rent out the
lower . A good canner lot
see th is

one tor only $9,600.
IN THE COUNTRY - 8
room older home with 3
bedroom s ,

rural

(X)

QUE'!STION.

PONISH

Just s 16,500.
HANDY
WITH
A
HAMMER - 3D acres of
land , 6 room house In good

location overlook ing Rt. 7,
Two wells, cistern and 2

ou1bulldlngs. Will take a
trade·ln. Only $16,500
EDGE OF TOWN - One
bedroom frame needfng a

AND

S A ~ ··

OAWEAL ·

~\NO

l O~S T

PRE"SERVCS • ·

HOW' S IHA1 SOUI'ID 7

Answer here :

Sweeper s, too~ te r5 rrons oil
~moll oppl1an ces. Lawn mower
nel(t to St ate Htgh woy GorogG
on Rou te 7 Phone (614 ) 985

A

(I XXI ) ( XXXI r 1
(Answers tomorrow)

ElWOOD BOWER S REPAIR
Yest erday s

I

Jumbles LOUSV APRON BANGLE ANKLET
Answer

Wha1 the man who drank too much wine
became -" PORT-lY"

REMODEliNG Pfumbtng, healing
and all 1ypes of general repotr
Wo rM guaranteed 70 yeor'&gt; ex
pe fle nce Phone 992 2_.[)1il
SEWING MACHINE Rep airs , se ~
v1 ce o tl makes , 9922284. lhe
Fobr~ c
Shop
Pome r oy
Authorued S1nger Soles ond
~erYI C Ct We sharpen Sctssors

ALI.EYOOP
~ I'LL ~EED

IN

~E

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
43 Jazz star,
Kld 1 Bounder
DOWN
4 Turkish
1 French
title
painter
9 Eggs
2
Spanish
city
10 Covered
3 Went to
walk
the prom
l2 Slower : mus.
13 Mr. Nunoy
4 Fearful
Yesterday's Allswer
shades
15 Bullfight
19 Male
30 Composer
shout
5 Small
title
Erik
16 Mr. Olaney
reg1on
%2
Bat
31
Prefix for
6
Stone
of
1i Type of
a
country
gnats
leather:
32 Engine23 Embrace
1 Olinese
abbr
room
24 Belittle
dynasty
18 Budding
worker
2S
Unrelenting
8
Human
bemg
frog
33
Indigent
26 Withdraws
20 Altar words 11 Worn away
38 Ending for
Z8 English
21 Sky altar
14 Male
22 British
,..,.....:r,;.iv..:e::.r~..,.,~r.bleacher
gun
23 Vegas
game
26 Stockholm
citizen
27 Mother of

MOO\'IAN

ilME- FRAME [).&lt;IoTA AND "THEN
"THE PReSENT llATC ...

EXCAVATING , do : e r , loader ond
backhoe wo1k dump truct..s
ond lo b~s f o1 hu e, wtll haul
l dl d11t , to sott limestone ond
gr ovel Coli Bob or Roger Jet ·
ftt r"i day phone 997 7089 n 1ght
phon e 997 .3575 or ~7 . 5231
t XCAVA TIN G
dozer
backhoe
and d 1tcher C ho rl e~ R Hot
fm ld
Back Hoe Sttrvlclt ,
Rutlan d . Oh10 PhonB 742 1008.
Will do roolm g . constru&lt;tlon
plumb rng and healing No 1ob
too Iorge or too smotl Phone

u p er~e nc e ,

fr ee es t1mo1es.
ony t h1ng
yo u
need
f or
unde rgro und sw1m poots New
chemk ol and su pp ly store
Al b an y ,
Oh1o .
Phone
b1A ·69B 0555 . ( Al ter 6 pm ,
6\ A.689·S25l John Jolters or
089· 5265 B1ll &lt;ilt lette ) We ore
NOT oi l wet on PRICES
SPEEDY ORILLINC,
d!rll1ng , commerctol
o nd
domes t iC Pump so te s a nd ser
II+Ce . 99'2·6/95 or 304·895·3807
H l Wrt tese l Roofing, new or
r ep o +r
gu tt ers
and
downspo utS Free es ltmotes
Ph o ne
9 4 9 · 7862
or

WI-40EVfR ~AID ~•we
~ PASS THIS WAY i&amp;Jrl
·ONcE,'* NeVER T~IED

J0•·8q5·3802
H l Wrlie se ! Roofmg new or
rep o 1r .
gu tt ars
ond
downspouts Free estimates
Pho ne 949·2862 or 949· 2160 .

TO ORavE

-- --·-

II

on

Rt. 7. Modern Inside with
lull basement and young
fruit trees.
A LOT OF BUYERS ARE
SEEING US NOW. IF YOU
HAVE A NICE CLEAN
PLACE AND WANT TO
MAKE A PROFIT CALL

HELEN L. TEAFORD
GORDON II. TEAFORD
SUE P. MURPHY
L--~Associote Realtors

Z8 Briny deep
%9 Miss
Gardner
30 Part
34 Actor
Alastair
35 Nero's hall
36 Bmd
37 Braided
39 Beverage
IG Complete
41 Directed
4% Adolescent
years

Summer

Semester

HUNTER

Hogan ' s Heroe-5 15

10 3D- Ameri can Enterpr ise 20: 11:0D-News
3,4.6.8,10,13,15: Dick CaveH 20, Li lias Voga &amp; You
33 ·
11 :30-Johnnv
Ca;son 3. ~ . 1 5 ; Pollee Slory 6,13. Haw all
F lve 0 8: ABC News 33, Movie " Papa 's Dellcote
Condition" 10 : 12:00--Janak l 33.
12 4D-Myslery of the Week 6,13. Kojak 8: 1·00-Tomorrow 3,4, 2· 1o-News 13

Movie Channel 4 s &amp; 9 P M - Hollywood Oldie
7 &amp; 11 P.M. - Let's Do It Aga in lPG I
Coble Channel 5 6·30 P.M. - Testimony Time
7:00 - Wa hama Band In Mexico
9·00 - Wahama Band .
Tu rs da y . JUIU: 6

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Six bid asks honors
NORTH
+ AY54J

• KQ
• 93
• A9

WEST
• 10 8
t J875 2

EAST
• QJ 7 6
• 10
• 10 4

• Q 10 8

+ J7654 2

• J 96

5D? WE WER:"
ONLY GONE A
TIME !

THEY'LL
5TOPI1T
IY07HING!
I

111!:Y MUST HAVE FIGURED THAT BY
~URN I N G TH E HOUSE TH SYD DE·
STROY 1115. ''EVID ENCE " ~---­

THEY'THIN!(
YOU HAVE .

Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass
Pass

Pass

old Cu lbertson grand s lam
force
Specifi cally . a ft er you ask
for ace s and follow with a
bid of SIX 1n et new suit , you
"' ant your partn er to bid
sev en 1f he holds lwo of the
three lop trump honors .
Seven hearts makes easi-

ly All South ha s to do 1s to
dra""

t rumps

an) one 1s w1 lhng to take.

2•
4 NT

6•

Pass

A Tennessee

what lead we
from
K72

• B6

• ae n

Call Now For

I. ONGFEJ, J, OW

CRVPTIIQUOTES

BTY

O IYAY ' M
XBV

C BVA - QY OOYA

U B T '0

IEE-HEE-HEE!

Appointment

Pomeroy landmark

9a!..Ck W. tarMr.Mar.

!1!1.

PhoiHl 992-2111

J '.t.. .
\'~ "

••
I

NO, I HATE TO TELL
'i'OU, Bl 1T '1'0U ARE
NOT FASTER THAN
A ?PEEDING BULLET

2

• 9 7:1

IYJA

H V PI

By Oswald Ja coby
and Alan Sontag
How can South bid the
grand slam wilh any confi-

opened one notrwnp

dence ''

of spades. Our partner

He can assume that hls

partner needs bolh kmg and
queen of hea rts for h1s earl y
bids , or he can check for
kings by means of a Bla ckwood five notrump and b1d
seven on the theory that
even if North does nol hold
the trump queen the suit wtll
break
. Far better is hav ing som e
expert method to find out
just how good his partner 's
trumps are.
South's SIX·dub call repre-

The hand to our
partner raised him to

We recommend the·- • -.. -· -

some cards. We can
him in spades a nd lead
sUit rather than our
diamond
tNF.WSPAPFH ENTF:HPJUSE ASSN . I

(Do you have a quesr1on
the experts? Wnte " Ask

Exp erts .. care o' l';:'::h;•s;li~:~:·~
per lndfwdual

I BET 'IE WIN FUST
PRIZE FER ~ORE COSTUME, _..,.I!=;:==';&gt;
ATTHI KIDDVGARDEN PARTV ---

c

1

',i~::,~:~~i~

be
wered.
by ans
stamped
envelopes, Th e mos l
1ng qu estr ons w11f be

tr11s column an d wr/1

coptes of JACOB Y MOOERN !

BARNEY

Any U.S. mede cer--11arts
utra It nHded. Elcludn
fronl-whMI drive cors.

claim

m one hand '1 That chance is
lc&gt;S than 10 P.cr ccnl and one

(f) 1978 K1ns Fulurt• Synd 1nlt In ~ .

S~~

and

Since dummy wlll be able to
ru ff hiS fourth diamond.
llow a bout all fo ur trumps

Openmg lead : • 6

hmt s Enrh day th r code lN te1 s are ditl ercn l

SBAU

Pass

sen t ~ an expert way to hnd
out. It 1s a vanattO n of the

+

stmpl y stan ds for ano\ her. In th is sa mple A 15
thre e I.'s, X f or th e \ WO o·~. NC Sin gle l ette r s,
apostrophes, the length .md f orma tt on nf the words are all

I TOLO YDU TrEY
BUT H0W COULD
WERE
Ot!T TO GET
IT HAVE HAPPEN -

B2

Pass

One l etter
used f o r tht•
WINNIE

G+A

Vulne rable . No rth-So uth
Dea le r North
West
East South

J TX H BAY - PJMI - EBE
DBUUJAU
Yesterday's Cryploquote : NO ONE IS RICH ENOUG H TO DO
WI1110UT A NEIGHBOR.- DANISH PROVERB

SPECIAL

8,

6 OO--News J.4.8.1 0, 13,15. Zoom 20,33 ; ABC News 6.
6 30-N BC News 3,4, 15. ABC News 13 : Andy Griffith 6,
CBS News 8 10 : Over Easv 20.J3.
7:DO-Cross.WIIs 3: Probe 4; Newlywed Game 6.13:
News 10: Gilligan 's Is 15, Dick Cave1120: Peop le &amp;
Places 33
7·JD-AII .Sfar Anv1hlnc Goes 3. Sha Na Na ~. Bel·
ween the War s 6, Family Feud 8; MacNeii.Lehrer
Report 20 ,33 . The Judge 10; In Search of 13, Wild
Ki ngdom 15
8·DD-GrllliY Adams 3,4,15: Eight Is Enoug h 13; Bil ly
Graham Crusade 6.8: Nova 20,33 , CBS News
Special 10.
9 OO--Davld Frost 3,4.15: Char lie's Angels 6.13 , Movie
" He ll Boats" 8,10. Great Performances 33:
Poldark II 20
10:00--Po llce Woman 3,4,15 : Starsky &amp; Hutch 6,13,

• A 7 5 4 .t
t A K Q6
• K :1

Ia

acre of land . 512.500.
CHESHIRE - Big red
brick with 2 apartments . 10
baths , 2 furna ces, and

News 6;

4,

Chris1opher Closeup 10: 6 45-Mornl ng Reporl 3;
6 Sll-Good Morning West VIrgin ia 13; 6· SS.....News
13
7 DO-Tod•y 3.4,15 . Good Mor ni ng Amer ica 6,1 3. CBS
News 8. Porky Pig 10
7 2&gt;--Chuck White Reports 10 : 7:30-Schoo lles 10
8 OO--Cap1 Kangaroo 8,1 0; Sesame Sf 33
9·00- Mer v Griffin l; Phil Donahue 4, 13, 15.
Emergenc y One 6: Brady Bunch 8, Ma tch Ga me
10.
9 3D-Andy Gro ffllh 8. Fam ily Affa ir 10
10 00--Card Sharks 3,4,15. Edge of Night 6: Pass The
Buck 8. Joker's Wild 10. To Tell The Truth 13.
10 .30-Hollywood Squares 3,4,15, High Hopes 6; Pri ce
Is Right 8,10: s2o.ooo Pyramid 13
11 DO-Hi gh Rol lers 3,4,15, Happy Oay s 6,13; 11 ·3DWheel ot For1une 3, 15 . Family Feud 6,13. Par.
1rldge Family 4, Love of Life 8,10; Sesam e St. 33.
11 5S.....CBS News B ;_L~vl ng Free 10
12 ·00--Newscen1er 3, News 4.6.10; Santord &amp; Son 15 ,
Gambl1 8. Midday Magaz ine ll
12 ·30-Ryan 's Hope 6, 13. Bob Braun 4, Gong Show 15:
Search lor Tomorrow 8,10: Elec Co . 33 .
1 oo-For richer For Poorer 3: All My Children 6,1 3:
News 8: Young &amp; the Restless 10: Not For Women
Only 15
30-Davs of Our Lives 3,4,15; As The World Turns
8,10 . 2 O~ne L1fe lo Live 6,13. 2 3D-0oc1ors
3,4,15: Guiding Lighl8,10
3 oo--Another World 3.4,1 5: Daytime Emmy Awards
6.13 , Lil ias Yoga &amp; You 20
3 3D-All In ne Fa mily 8, 10, Ohio Journal 20
4 DO-Mister Cartoon 3. Super man 4: For Richer, For
Poorer 15. Addams Famllv B. Sesa me Sf 20,33.
Gomer Pyl e, USM C 10
4 3D-Lit11e Rascals J,1S; Gilligan 's Is 4, Merv Griffin
6, Gilligan' s Is 8, Brady Bun ch 10; Dinah 13
5 00--Here Com e The Br ides 3, Sta r Trek 4, Gunsmoke
8; Mls1er Rogers' Neighborhood 20.3J . Hogan's
Heroes 10. Emergency One 13. Pe111coa1 Ju nc11on
15
5 3D- News 6: Elec Co 20.33. Mary Tyler Moore 10:

SOUTH
+ K2

DAILY C RYPTOQ UOTE - Uero's how t o work It :
AXVDI. BAAXR

gas fu rnace, city water ,
breezewa y, 2 car garage,
trailer spot and over an

5 bedroo ms , 3

THfC»U~H

1\ GLovERt.e~tf!

Wheel
Alignment

6 30-News

Castor

--Water well

EXPERT

Janakl 33.
t2 :0s-Movle "Conspiracy of Ter,or" 6,13; 1:00-Tomorrow 3,4; 1 1D-Kolak 8; l · ~ s-News 13.
Movie Channel 4 .,..
58. 9 P.M - Poco iGI
7 &amp; 11 P.M. - Hol lywood Oldi e
Coble Chlnnel 5 6:30 P.M. - Tesllmony Time
7·00 - Paul Gaudino
7·JO - Special Edlflon
10"00 - 700 Club
. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 7, 1978
5 4S.....Farm Report 13: S·Sil-PTL Club IJ , 6·00--PTL
Club 15; Summer Semester 10.

• N ews 20

IIHie redecorating , bath ,

"um.

Now arrange the Ctrcled leners to
form the surpnse answer. as sug·
gested by the abOve canaan

COFFH ... EGGS

BRADFORD
A uct1 oneer
Com·
plete Ser11tee Phone 949·7•87
or 949 2CXXJ Rocrn e O h1 o Cril l
Bradford

water ,

acr~

I

W14AT YOU M1~14T
51VE. IN ~ESPON5E
iO A NEEDL.IN6

USPIIO!I

simin!----si\J:,-j~~

fireplace and 3 ca r garage
Has large garden and
ce llar with work shop over

garden oo this llh

KJ

ISAROUEb

SALES AND SERVICE
1H·Ift

natural gas, wood burning

rooms ,

I

I

SR . ~~!!'! PUDDLE POOLS All sizes and
1
0
sha pes Sw1m pools, 2 yeors
"' " "

near stores. Better

KJ

I KEWOA
[1]

PULLINS EX CAVATING Comp lete
Serv 1ce , Pho ne 992 2478

99'2. Jl2S

byHen'nArnoldand Boblee

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

BORN LOSER

6q8 7331

VIRGIL B.

15

~ ~ ~~ ®

SYRACUSE 7. bedroo m ho use
7•2·ll• B
Ne w storm wrn do w s 7 par
che!i
olurnmum bu 1ld 1ng 1n HOWE RY AND MAA: TI N
E• ·
bock Phone 99'2 .3119
5y s tem~ ,
co vot1ng , u~ pllc
dozer , boct..h oe , dump truck ,
l1me stone. grovel , bto&lt;ktop
p0 v1 ng, Rt \AJ. Phone l (614 )

natural gi!ls, city water ,
underground gasol ine tank ,

Pom er&lt;Yf l.andm ark

JO&lt; n

I ' 1 ACRE lo t for sol o close to
longs v il le O h10 742·14CW

fARM O N CR 31 36 oo es Near
Potllond 84 3 2~61
I'

Announced

8 00--Redscene '78 3, Happy Days 6, 13; Life In The
Fas1 Lane 4; Man From Atlantis 15; Movie
" National Vel vel" 8, 10, Ja cques Llpchllz 33, Some
of the Presidents' Men 20.
8 3D-Baseball 3,4, Laverne 1!. Shirley 6,13
9.00--Three's Company 13: Mus ic Clly News
Popularity Awards 6,8,15; Altair In The Air 20,33:
Movie "The Spokes Gang" 10.
9 3D-Mary Tyler Moore IJ : 10:00--20 20 13: George
Crumb Voi ce of the Whale 33, News 20
10 3D-Black Perspective On The News 20; 11.00-News 3,4,6,8,10, 13, 1S. Dick Cavefl20; Over Easy ll
11 3D-Johnny Carson 3,4,15, Soap 6,13: Mov ie " Night

3625

C.IIAfler5 :00or

HOMES! TE S for sale 1 acre and
up M1ddteport neor Rutland

Phone 992-2181

ONE' OF- MY :;LE&amp;Pt'-ie Pll.~!I... TO
H&amp;l.P ME DOZE- OFF!

PWMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.

Portraits
Weddings
Passports
Anniversaries
Special Occasions

~I_Iali!'~Si.le ~ _ =

!lit!

THe CH EMIST'!! RE'PORT !
THAT TODDY VIA:; DOPED !IT~ONil
ENOUGH TO PUT MV ~lt!IHT OUT
FO~ KEEPS!

I.JTI'!.E ORPHAN ANNIE

985-4155
Chester, Ohio 45720

will se r&gt;~ice Hotpoint
other brands

Muffler
Brakes
Shocks
Tires
Battery .
Installation Service
Ph . 992 ·2148 Pomeroy, 0 .
J.1S·IfC

CARTER

at.ar

109 High St.

~EAD

I WAS FEE!.INS Rf;STLE5!! AND
EiDGY.. :;He !!AID !:&gt;HE'D ADDeD

MOORE'S

Coli
992-6323 or 992-6011
5 15 1 mo pd .

.

KEN GROVER
PHOTOGRAPHY

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

CAPTAIN EASY

Price In Town
See
Denver Kappk!

nco~

·c-..

,~

For

Ohio
10 JD·C

Service
"_,
... ..,...,

speed ne w clutch m uffle•
brakes and pom t 25 m p g
S\300 Call'997.7539

VACANCY FOR el derly po1 1e n1 m
prtvote hom e 01 Tupper s Plo1ns
Coli of1er 5 weekday&lt; ~ . or
o n ytr me
on
w ee lo. end ~
014 bb7 3305

Ferguson

Gilson Tillers, uwn Boy
Mower Sates &amp; Service.
399 W. Main SfPomeroy, Ohio
Ph. 992-2164
5-4·1 mo.

&amp;

At

Under hang gutters &amp; room
additions.

c.;nester,

Rad1at11U

15 FOOl WOODEN boa t wt l h
m0 t01 end IIOtler Wtl l sel l
cheap A!s o e lec 11 rc b u d! m
oven 9'/i 3573
1971 DAT SUN 1, ton p1ckup 4

WAltR WEll d n llrng W1l 11o m T
G ronl 741 287Q

service, Missey

MASH BROTHERS

CLEANING

9BS J9 12

.------------~ , MOUlt~ HOME 11 '• 70 w i th ex ·

Check our low. low
prices on

4·JO.Ifc

27,000 mil es h ce!lont co nd1
lion l opper 1ncl udcd 01 S3JSO

WILl CARE for th e elde rl y m our
ho me Pho ne 997731 4

~
MODERN SUPPLY

-r-----------t
r----------.., r-----------.,
SEPTIC TANK
For The Best

Bru sh hog
Grader blad e ond d ll I S&lt;OOp
Smolltroder 84 3 75bl

WU Rll lnH DOUBL~ k e yboard
wlfh bo ss l oot pedol !l Ex t ro
mce Sb95 742 7'111 a1 747 2201
ohe r 5

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

6·6·1mo. I .

8N FO RD trocto r

NfW 8 USED IMPlEMfNl S

soften
lOM~ O NE lO work.

tmg yo ur se ll 1n a h en zy ove r
un e xpec ted d JStu p i!On s to day
Will so lve no thm g Try flo w tng
w 1th e ven ts Yo u II hav e qu1 te a
WANTE D TO r erll
Hou'&gt;e or
happ y ttme
tro
ile1
by
l
1
xed
1
nco
me
cou ple
TAURUS (April 10-Moy 10) To
becom e c ar e l ess w 1t h po ssessto ns o r tnd1 fl eren t w1t h wo rk
beca use so me th 1n g more 1n ler ·
es ttn g come s at o ng wou ld b e a
costly mt s ta ke
NE:WSF'APFH F NTFHPIUSf: ASSN 1

6

TUESDAY, JUNE 6, 1978
5 00--Here Come 1he Brides 3, Star Trek 4; Gun smoke
8; Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33 . Hogan' s
Heroes 10. Emergency One 13; Petticoat Junction
15.
5 3D-News 6; Elec. Co. 20,33, Mary Tyler Moore 10;
Hogan 's Heroes 15.
6 00--News 3,4,8, 10, 13, 15 ; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6 30-NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News IJ; Andy Griffith 6,
CBS News 8.10; Over Easy 20.33
7 O~ross.Wits 3,4; Newlywed Game 6.13; Pop Goes
The Country 8, News 10; Gilligan's Is 15; Fren ch
Chef 20 , O' Happy Day 33
7·3D-Hollywood Squares 3,4 , Let's Go To The Races 8;
Candid Camera 6, MacNeil Lehrer Reporf 20,33,
Pri ce " Right 10; That's Hollywood lJ; To Be

Small engine &amp; mower

0.

PHONE
992-2238

USW TRACTORS

Let Pomeroy Landmark

No
e~~.per t e nce
l t ) I 1 'JL&lt; Sf:"Sf· !&gt;Omeont&gt; 1~ W A il Rf;SS
neceHory Ap pl y 1n ptH\011 al
·r 1 ng trJ (IIJ ' o.,om r-'h mg ru er ~r
Blu e lorton M1d dl eport
fCJU lrJr; d f d 5 P ;JI(Jt)1ng QU (! ')·
liG-,5 Fat.: ! !» Hill e,n l )' [)(;! IC BA BYSI THR
WHKDA VS
7
,.:.aiPO •rrrJugt-1 po1n!Pd nqu1r;
ch ddren age'&gt; J 8 5 Cal l alter
CAPRI CO RN (Dec 21-Jan 19 ) 0 949 1059
" ~?eo t:om olatnr s to yo u r set t
trJaa 1 ( 1U II tJr ama1t1d tww
'Ju1r. K , othr.:rs w1ll -;po t y ou r
ar noy dnt; P a nn ~P e lt Na ys to
HOOF HOL LOW Horses Buy sell
olt~':"'late 11
Hade or tro1n New ond us ed
AQUAR IUS (Jan 10-Feb 19) A saddles
Ru th Reeves A lbon y
bonu~ lor d 10 b W'.:!ll done In C! {
l b i 4J 098 3190
be oe~t rJ Y.. eO u pon you to day
SomPnn~ w h'l ha'\ nevPr b een RISING ~t AR Kenn el Boord mg
runs
Ind oor ond outd oOf
a true dlly ITLIQ h l try to sp o·l 11
Gr oo mtng all breed s Clean
ou 1 o f envy
PISCES (Feb 10-March 10) ~ O n1 1 0 1 y fo cr h lt e ~ Chesht re
Pho ne (6 14) Jb7 0197
Jump at th e c ha nce to do
so rn e thmg d dfe rent tod ay as
Dame Fo rt une w11! have ner
h and 1n 1t There ts no th tn g so
1m po rt an t that 11 can 1 be don e
to mo rr o w

pm

oiler

mile off Rt. 7 by-pall on
Sr . Rt. 124 toward Rutlond.

~.

River Front
For Trailer

l:x
ce llen l
co nddJ on
Fully
cor peled w1th bed end but l l 111
bor 949 2511 5

1&lt;1·1006

ROGER HYSELL
GARAGE

Corner Lot On

I 471 FO RD fCONOLIN E Von

M FI35 D1ese l
MF130 D1 esel
M F150 Dtese l MF135 D1esel .
M Fi bS D 1e ~e l MF785 D1e !r.el ·
MF l \ 35 DuHe l Cob
011 8
heal er

TWO FAMil V Yo rd Sole Thur'&gt; MF9 Bo le r MF IO Bo ler MFI10
e nd f 11 June 8 &amp; q 9 5 1 ~ 3
Sole r Matth e w ~ Rot ary Sc yt he
Lm col n Hts Old too ls ~ c h oo l
MF880 Sern1 ·moun ted b bot·
d e'&gt; ks d oth o w n 1 ng~ m us1co l
to m Plow
Mf570 17 D1 sc
•n!r. l rurnent !r. and rn tH othu1
Mf 200 7 Row Chopper MF39 ')
Row P lan t e r ~
Mech on1col
110n!r.pl anle l

tr; ''Jj' nes tor

\ € " ' ,...,., . ~ 1 r~a sons Otoj oa1 ·
''?' .. s fT' a. J': ra•":: '. t.r~ a ~ r,ut

FOR RENT

1977 CHEVROLET SU BURBAN C 10
tru ck Sdverodo pockoge and
tra der tow111g package 15 (X)()
m1le s 742 3 154

" Holloeld

LIZ%!

'-----------------------------------.-J

INTERNA TIONAl 64 Combin e
Troc to1 mounted sproyer For
mall Model B tra ctor 3 pam!
ht tch cutoU sow Olt lrke new
bush hog All m good candrtron
W1ll toke
Hade\
Phone
Q49 2763

JOHN DEE RE 10 10 dozer com
pletely rebu1 lt $4500 D1e sel
engine Wllh wmc: h Colt Charles

TELEVISION
VIEWING

I HEAR HER,
SAM-

Business Services

go Loo k5 ht..e new Wrll tokelrod es Don I mtss th1s 1f you ,..
need o doler Phone 949.2763

Rummage C ABBAGE
BROCCOLI ,
') o le Jun e t1 9 10th 9 5 Bo ke
coul1 f low c' brusse ll spro uts,
Sole on the lO th a t Po mh
egg plon ts head l ettu ce ~ weel
Ho u!oe
Se cond
Street
peppers h ungor ton woJ&lt;C seet
Po meroy
bana na chtl l peppers Plu s
ma ny d1 fl e&lt; lent vonet ies of
YARD SALE Ina Ellr 5 be lo w Mtd
tom ol o plants , mony k m ds of
dl eporl Tue!!l Wed &amp; Thur ~
hongmg boskets
and po t
9 00 8edd1n g Iorge s1ze coot
flo we r ~ Lorge vortety o l on
al m a~ I new m 1sc 1tems
nva ls 1n flat s Clclond Fo rm s
YARD SAl E o n Rt 7 Tue!r. and
Ro o n e ,
e nd Grcenh ou~e
W ed Rood acro!'l~ from Leod mg
Ger old me Cleland .
Creek Watch l or srg ns

•al"'~'

l'l.ldl

INH J.INAli ON Al
500
ser 1e·
bulld ozer
b way
blad e
R 0 P S cob wrnch ready to

EPISCOPA l CHURCH

dou bt s shouiO oe g119 r1 sec.rJnd
ot ace n r r.~u 1 +1e toaa , Laa;
~UC fr IS Nart mg :o Dull a !.- ;; lOST PAIR OF m e n ~ gold wne
!r o me el'e gl a!r. ses co nto1 ned 111
S f11'1 QS fc,• f0..J 1! 5h P h "lO NS
Dloc l.. cm e be or mg the nome ol
s r-t:: "a '. rrJ.,.' •r ..JS I
Dr
RD
Tho mm
Rew ord
SCO RPIO lOci 1&amp;-Nov 11 1 5€
Phone 9(+7 3728 o r 9q') ~55
· : .. ·. . ::"".! ~"'' ,_,..,.f' St'ogrJ"I)·
s r"
·c.a"

VW BUG S&lt; OO '192 5656
-

-

\l l'Htlil\
~ ~~!11 011 ~t urd .ll

p

-

1977 CHEV Y MONZA 305 cu m
V 8 A C AM tope 992· 7987

.

PIIVI'lt' ~'2·! Jj(j

~

843 2622

I 965 FO RO MUSTANG '28 9 Engm e
recent ly rebu1lt Good shape
$400 74') 254 1

Thanks a1 K.l

C ~t !!h Utl!dvrmu~

1973 MONTI: CARl O londou P S
P 8 A C . AM B track '&gt; l ereo
b ceUen t
cond1tron
$1700

I %8

r aft'

In

Terror" 8; Mov ie " Satan 1 S Harvest" lO; 12:0Q--

9- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday , J une 6, 1978

TRTER

I

TH' LEETLE
TURTLE

�6- The Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Ju ne 6, 1978

1
Sf

di
T

ORDINANCE NO. I0"·11

An

Ord 1n1nce to FIK

COUNT Y,
OHIO ,
INHABITANTS

OTHeR USERS .

ITS
AND

dJ

WHE REAS , the Village of
M iddle port has here tof or e
l'!dOpted certa 1n r~tes and

N

sewerage s-rste'm serv •c e

p

F
F

charges

for

sa n~F ar y

and sa id ra tes an d ch arges
needed to be ad 1usted . and

WHEREAS , 1t •S deemed
ne c essar y ro estaD l• sh ce rto!'l •n
r ales and
c har g e s to r

san 1ta rv

sewera ge system

and sewa ge a •sposa l fa cdif ,es

se r v •ce to be rende r ed to sa •d
Vill a ge a nd to •Is •nh ab ttants
a nd other users , w h •Ch w il l
prod uce suff •c• e nt re ven ue s
to p a y t h ~ Op t" r al 1ng and
m a m te na nce e w:ppn ses of lis
sa n 1tarv seweora9 t" syst em
an d
se .... aged 1s·pos a l
f !I C11i f 1f'S and to prov 1de l or
the pa y m enT of rn e prm c1 pa l
a nd 1n te r es1 ot S 3 o~S , OOO 00 o f
F rr s t Mortg a g e Sewe-rage
Sys t em and Sewag e D 1sp os a t
F a Cili t i eS
I mp r ov eme n t
Re v e nu e Bon d s ot t hf' Vill agt"
rssu ed for lh f' p urpose o f
pa y 1ng pa rT ot m e c ost o t
const r u cti ng· sa 1d ta cllil1 eS
a nd ext end rng sa 1d system
N OW THERE FO RE
BE
IT
O R D A I NED
Ov tne
Counc il of ! he V lil d gto of
M i d d lepor t , M e rgs County .
O h10 . t hr ee f ou r ths ol 111e
m e mber s e te c re d t here t o
con cu r n ng
SE C 1 That 1n co nnec l 10n
w ilh t h e c onst r uc t 10n o t
ex tens 1ons
ano
1rn
p r ov em ent s to t he se w era ge
sys te m . thf' to l lo w 1n Q sha ll be
t he r ate s charged month l y by
rne V i ll age ot M 1da lepo r t ,
O h 10 , lor st' r v 1ces r endf' red
by rts sar11 ta r,. se w er a ge
sys te m to Its 1n hab 11a nts a nd
ot he r user s the reof
com
menc 1ng Jul y I , 1978
M on t hly ra te, ba sed u pon
w a t er met er r ea d 1ngs
0 to 2,000 ga llons per m on t h
53 00
2. 100 to 5 000 ga l lons per
m on th $4 10
5, 100 10 8 000 gal l ons
per
m on th 55 10
8, 100 to 10,000 g a ll on s per
mon tn 56 00
10,1 00 to 15 ,000 ga ll o n ~ pe r
m ont h $9 110
15,1 00 t o 10,000 gal lons per
montn S14 40
10. 100 fo 2S .OOO g a ll ons pe r
m ont h 516 BO
A l l o.... er 2$,000 gallon s pe r
m o n111 Sl 6 BOp lus 12 pe r 1,000
ga li ons
F l a t Rat e . non me t e r e d
o r 1v a te w ellS per montn S4 80
SE C II l n t he E"vent th a t
one wat er m e ter ser v es mor e
th a n o n e domesl!c c om
m er c1 a lor 1nd us tr 1a 1 un1t , tn e
m rn 1mum btl I o t SJ 00 per
month . p er u n •t , o r t he
mete red ser v 1c e r ead 1ng
w h 1cneve r 1S the gr eater st1a ll
app ly
Wh e re n o wa t er
me t er s are 1n 5ta l led on a
or 1vat e w ell a nd ser v 1c e 1S
or ov 1ded to mo re !ha n one
d o me sli c, c om me rc 1a l o r
m d us tr 1a lun 1t , the fl a t ro'l te o t
S4 80 oer mont h p e r un 1t , sha ll
app l v A unrt St1 a ll con s1st ot a
sew er con nect ron as d ete r
m in ed by t he r egul a t 1on s o l
lhe Board ot T rusr ees o t
P Ub liC A ffa 1rS Of Sa !d Vi l l age
SEC
I l l The Vill age o f
M1ddl eport re se r v es t he r i g ht
to requ ,re th e meas ur em ent
of water ael 1v ered to an y
pre mls es 1n su ch a m ann er
that rates for sewerag e
serv 1ce can be dete rm 1ned
f r o m such wa t er m et e r
read.ngs , 1n wh 1c h ev ent lhf'
r ate s l or se w er serv 1c es sna il
be t he r a tes set fort h on a
wa ter m et er r ead ing ba s1s
l1 kew 1se , any f l at rate user
upon not 1f 1c ai 10n to th e Board
of Tr u stee s of P u OI1c Alfa 1r s
of !he Villa ge sh a lf h ave the
r 1g ht to 1nsta ll at h ts e)lpensf'
an appro ved me t er 1n g dev 1c e
tor t he me a su r em en t of a ll
wa ter pump ed fr om we ll s or
o ther sour ces g r a nt rng u n to
th e B oar d ot T rust ees of
P u b liC Ali a 1rs t he r 1gnt to
rea d
t he
m eter
t~ nd
pe r 10d 1ca lfy ch ec k th t a c
c ura cy of suc t1 mete r mg
Tt1e fo reg o 1 r&lt;~ g cn ar ges are
m 1n 1rnum
ch a rg E's
no •
ma x rmum ch a r ge s and Tl"'e
V tlt age r eserv es Tf're· r gr• a na
1S o b hg a tea to ncr ea H! •,.. e
sa m e at a ny t me !lf'IO ut a •re
re .... en ue'S o f tne s a l'l •ar t
se wera ge svs te iT' a no se w aQt
d 1sposa 1 t ac 111 1 e!. or oJe ,..
SUff i(I E'f)l
IQ
Oit f
' l'lf:"
op erat 1ng and r-d r •ena rc.e
ex pe nses ana tne oeo · ~e r. ce
ch a r ge ot tne bO~"'O!I H JII!' ':l ·c.
pa y lhe CO!It ol cor s· , ... c rq
sa 1d la c ol il leS or f t 'en~ oros ·o
sa 10 sv ste m
SE C I V Snou o rre o 1 t or
any ser v 1ce rend e ~"a Of ' n "
sa nrtary ~ew erage ~ ( S ' err
and se w ag e d i 'S POS &lt;l ta c.ll r e&lt;:.
no t be pa 10 w ' ~"~
" f a ays
a p en a ll y of 10 pe r cen t of '&gt;u c r
tld lrng sha lt be c hargea II tne
tltfl tS noT Od 1d lv rlt' ll'l 'i lfT (
da ys , the Vill age r eserves tne
r1 gh l to cu ' off the se w er
serv 1ce to \ad o rem tse s
Whrch SM !l Tnen be r tsume a
on ly upon pa y men t ot a n
ad d 1t 1ona l tee of \ 5 00, a nd
f u r t h er . If sa 1d tlrll JS not pa 1d
W1Hl 1n 90 a a vs , tne Cl erk 1S
h e r e by
a utt'lo r , t ea
an a
d1 r e c te d to
c t&gt;rt ty
th e
de l1 nc uent 1&gt; II
P lu s t he
p en a l t 1es to t P'\e Cou nt y
A u d ilor tor collec t ron as a nd
at t he sd me l 1me th at o tn e r
ta'll. es and as'Jo essme n ts ar e
co llec te d
~ EC
V
T h e owner ot
pr tval e pr ope rt y w t1 1C h 1S
ser vea or m a y be serve d b y
the
sa n11 ar y
sewe r ag e
,svs t em ~t nd se wa ge di spo sa l
ta c ill l res by p 1pe5 conn ec t ed
w llh
sa 10
s ys t e m
a nd
•• • fa cd d 1es to co n yey samtary
sew erag E' th ~ re lro m sh a ll as
w e n as the l esse e of the
prem 1ses. be l1 a ble to t ne
vtl l ag e t o r d ll s an rt ary
sew er ag e to sa rd sys te m an d
fa c ili t i eS f r om sa1 d sv stem
a nd fd Cih l tes
fr om sa 10
p re m 1ses
SE C VI Any ot her m eans
of sewage d 1Sposa 1 tS her eby
d ecl ar ed to be a n u 1sa nc e and
1!. fh~re f ore pr oh 1b1led
,.
SE C V II
That a ll or
dtn a nces or parts t her eo f , 1n
co nf1 1c t here ....n t h , mcl ud 1ng
Ord tnan ce N o 9 10, adopt ed
June 7, 196 7, c e , and th e sa m e
are , he r eb y rep ea ted , ef
l e c11 \le Ju l y 1 19711
Pa ssed th e 8th day of Mev
19711

" ·r-

M l Ke ll y
Pr e$ rden t ot Co u ncil
P.t 1es t
G ene G r a te
E l er k
C.S

10 16 6, 13

)t c

Isn't technology wonder·
fu l' As elec trl t power
. become:. more elf1eient, n s1111( rates are threatening to
bnng bil ci&lt; the candle as a
h ~htsv urce .

Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

WANT AD
CHARGES

AD ·

JUSTEO RATES AND
CHARGES FOR SANITARY
SEWER·AGE SYSTEM AND
SEWAGE D IS POSAL
FACILI TIES SERVICE FOR
THE VILLAGE OF MID ·
DLEPORT ,
MEIGS

DI CK TRACY

15 Worth: 01 Under
Ca:sh
Cl\1111 ~ 1 '
I da;

100

I 2~

2 d41 )~
J d¥ )'~
6 tli6):!i

1511
1!0

! !S

'"'1S

300

3

E:a dl \\'VI iJ lJ \'\!1' llll;' IHIIIU11WI1 1~
~~ ~ ll' l lls !Jt'l ~~o urd pt-r
,J,d:, I U!LI\Ul¥ Ull!el U\l:lt\ lOic&gt;t't'lltl\t'

u.. y

llot.Jnb

tli:t} ~ ~Ill bt&gt; d tarl\t'd

l:ll ti lt&gt; I

u ~;:

.:::.--=:;;.=

. --

STA N S BARGAIN LAN D Moin St ,
Rutlond Ohto We buy , se ll. or
! rode new and used merchan
d1se on11ques , t~res , new and
used Open 7 day s o week 9
am to 5 pm 8uy w1 se buy fro m
Sto n s

lllt'II'Mil\ , C11 nJ ul
OOtlU;tl
6 ('\!IllS pt.&gt;!'

y

mutunwn

WUf

u

SJ 00

MuOtlt• Home sa l~ 1111d Y1:1 nl sa lt'.!i
il('t' l'~ l;'t]

unl.\ Will i l ll .!! h w1t1 1
urtll'r !5 t't'nt d ll!.r ge hw atb cat r~ ·
11 1~ Box Numbtor In Cure uf fht' St•n&lt;l it'

wwl

NO ITEM TOO Lorge or too small
Wdl buy I p1e&lt;e or complete
ho useh old New used o r anh
ques Mart1n s Furnilure 10 N
'2nd St . M1ddlep.or t
Phone

qn

Tbt•

~ ~ I L::.htr re:;..• l\t'~

n~ltt

tlk'

\u l'l!U or n•Jt'l'l lin) 11ili dt'(•tnt'&lt;.! uiJTi ll:' Pullhsht·r t~ llinl lt lJto
rt'.:o4&gt;vlt.5 1bil' fur mort' l harl urJ t' 1m ur

Jt'l li iJI'lil !

rt't.·t m:.t.•rllun

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
rut·~U&lt;~I

lin u Fnd,H
~I

Uw dil1 Lll•furt' pubht &lt;t llu11
S unJ&lt;~&gt;

.fo P \ I
~ rti \&lt;1 \ afh'I11WII

For Wedne sday June 7

ASTRO•GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

If\ \/uJm
W l:J~cnw~w~u
Ju ne 7. 1978
Bre ak s and o ppo rluM tes 10
ad 11ance your f1nancta l po s il1 0 n
could pop o ut o l the bl u e 101
yo u tt11 s co mt ng year H o w ev
er they re 1ntend ed so lely tor
you It you try to br1ng Hl
other s tn ey won 1 wo rk

GE MINI (May 11-June 10) Don I
let a w ell ·me a n•ng l rtend pre ·
'en I yo u !l a m ta k1ng adva ntag e
of an unu sual o p po rtu m ty t hat
may pop up to da y Thts luck y
01eak w on 1 be here to m o rro w
F1nd o ut to w hom you re ro·
mantt call y su1 ted by se nd m g
fo r yo U! copy a t A sl ro-Gra ph
Le tte r Ma1 1 50 c e nts to r ea c h
and a lon g , s ell -addr ess ed
sla mp ed e n vel o p e to As tr a-

Grap h P 0 Bo• 489 Rad 10 C11y
St at 1on N Y 100 19 Be s u 1e to
spe c• fy you r b1r th s rg n

CAN CE R (J une Z1 -July 121
Spu r-o f-the mo ment happe nIng s w ill tur n o ut to be th e m os t
ell: cttl ng and t u n to da y K eep
yo ur sc nedule fl e xtble o r yo u
m1gh t feel ne gl e c te d 1f you 1e
tell beh •nd

LEO (July 13-Aug . 121 You
co uld end up fo und e rtng today
'' yo u l1 s ten to o thers w h1 le
1gnon ng your o wn tnt UIII V€
te e t1ng s reg a rdmg th1ng s a t a
do me strC nature

VIRG O !Aug 13·Sepl 21 ) Take
your mmo o ff yo ur care er 01
other we l()hl ~ ma ile rs to day
Do someth1ng en te rt a1n1n g d il·
te rent and tot a lly unrel at e d to
,.ou r w orld I) conc erns

LI BRA (Sepl 13-0cl 231 Se ll·

1973 ELDORADO CADillAC h
cellenl condllion loaded wllh
e•lros Only $3800. A lso 10 ft
truck comper Good con d rho n
Only $1000 Cal l 997 53 11 or

6370

qq2 .632q

( HIP WOOD
Po l e s mo11 1973 PL YMO UTH FURY I
dtometer 10 on large st en d
1?ng1ne oulo , P S . P 8 , A C
pe r ton Bundled slob S6 per
il ·door !r.edon Excellent cond1 ·
ton De li vered to Ohio Pollet
11on Phone 985·3900
Co Rl '2 Po meroy 992 · 2689
1%6 DODGE
PO LARA , one
CO IN S CURREN CY token s old
o wner 1(' fu'e cond111 o n Phone
po&lt; ket watche s and chom s
9&lt;q 2763
sr lver and gold We need 196-t
an d olde r sdver cotn s Buy sell 1975 GR ANO TORINO Squ1re Ford
o r l10de Co lt Roger Wamsley
Statton wogon w 1th P S , P 8
A C tdt wheel crutse con tr ol
7A11l3 1
all new ltr eS Power wmdows
llMBER POME ROY Forest Pro
S3200
Ca ll olte r b
pm
ducts l op pr 1ce for sta nd1ng
742· 2008
sow t11llber Call 9q'] 5965 or
1973 BU!CK LUX US EHellen t co n
l( e n ~ Ha nby , 1_ 446 8570
d11ton P S P B A C Nt~w
WANT TO buy G ood wheel ch a1 r
tHeS $1 750 Q92 787b
Q49 159 1
197 4 PIN TO Rod10 l ltr e~ new
Ol D FURNilURE •ce bo.ote s bro ss
sh oclo. s 48 000 mdes $1500
bed s 1ron beds etc com plete
Coii9Q'} 7185 ah e1 4
househol ds Wn!e M D M il ler
197 1 CAD ill A C ElDORA DO Full
Rl 4 Pom eroy 01 coli 997 63 70
pow e r 01r e~~: c ellen l co nd1110 n
WANTED 10 buy O lder country
Phon e 99'1 7 467
Some
hou se ond acreage
w oo d ~
No rt h end ol Me1g s
County
Awa y fr om poved
rood Reply to Bo:o: 719 M c o
The Do1ly Sen ttn el Pomer oy
OhiO
8 &amp; S MOBilE HOMES , Pt Plea
WANTED l O buy f1rewood lor
sant , W Vo bes 1de Heel.. s
s1ove I 304 773 5937
1q73 Br oodm ore 14 JC b 4 2
bedroo m
I q73 Dor tOn 14 K 60 ")b edroom
1971 Vtc!OJm n 14 1r b7 3 bed roo m
2 both
If- YO U ho ve o se rv1c e to oll er !972 Cov entry 12 " 65 3 bed r oom
wo n t to buy 01 se ll somethmg 19b9 S1o1esmon 12 /( bO 2
oe look 1ng for wor k
or
bed room
w hateve r
you It get res ulh
foster w 1th o Sentmel Wo n! Ad COAl liMESTONI:: ~ on d groYe l
co lc 1u m chlor1 de l ert il u e r do g
Ca ii9Q'} 71 56
toad end al l types of soh E)l
CARP ORl SALE June 7 &amp; 8 9 30 to
cel s1o r SoH W o rk ~ Inc E Mom
~ Book s A 11 on clot hmg toy..
St Pom ero y 991. 389\
od d~ and ends 918 5 Th1rd
8~
S T SELE CTI O N of the be st wood
M 1ddleport
sto ... e ~ 111 Sou theo st er n Oh 1o
SEW RITE SEWING Clu b w1 ll .,pon
Jotul
Mo r 5o
Efel
Ttr ol 1o
so r o yor d !r.a le Wed June 7th
1eompw oo d and Nofhuo Z1on
o n the empty lo t ocross fr om
Heat Co 8 Putnam Or (o ft Mill
148 Butternut A ve from lOom
~t )
Athe ns 6 14 592 .007 9 01
to? Ro 1n conc el s
b l 4b% 1187
VARO SAl E June 6 &amp; 7 9 A BURR O UG HS SENSI MA. TIC oc·
Weo1he r perm 1tt mg Brodbury
co un t1n g mo chme
Pho ne
Rood Don Ho nmg res1dence
992 2l ~b Th e Oody Se n t1nel
Chdd ren s clo th1 ng
m 1sc
111 Cou rt S1ree1 Pom er oy
1 t em~
O hiO

sa

'T'!'""AS
a-::·~''?

YARD ::,ALE 829 5 3rd
d le por t Wed &amp; lhurs

Mod

FOUR FAMil V Ya rd Sole Wed
l hu rs Car o ly n Ada ms Ro c1ne
pa st legto ~Hol t look l or !Hgns

SAG ITTAR IUS (No•

1l· Dec

ARIES (March 11-Aprll 191 Gel

PUBLIC NOT ICE
Ro na ld E
Bo st rc , who se
l a st k no w n p l a c e of r es1den ce
1!» A pt No 3, R 1ver s1ae A p ts .,
M 1dOtepor t , Oh iO 457 60 , 1S
he r eby no11fr ed thai on the
19th da y ot M a y , 1978. Mar y
Cat he r •n e
B os t tc ,
be ing
pta 1nt 1ff tiled her co mp larn t
aga 1nst h 1m a s d ~ l en dant 1n
the Cour t of Commo n P t et~ s ,
Me 19 S Cou nty , OM IO, C a~ e N o
16,826 , pr a y m g to~o d i v or ce
fr om sa id Ron a ld E Bostic on
the g r oun d s o f gr oss n eg tect
Of au1y t'ln d elO'tre m e cru ell y .
pl a 1n h ff !!ISO pra ys lor o t her
pr o o er r f' h ef ~ a J d cause Will
D~ tor ne ar 1ng on or att er tne
1S tn d a y of iul·f , \978
Mary Catherrn e BOSI IC
P l a lnt tff
O ' Br i en &amp; O ' Srt en
Pa t n ck H O ' Br1 en
.Attor ney !. for P l a 1nl1 ff

ll l lJ . JO (61 6, 13, 10. 11,

61&lt;

LATE lOMATO plonls lo1 sole
Across from the ~w1mmmg
p ool
Th o ma s
,Haymon
Sy rocu~e

19b9 FORD VA N C roft~mon o m
p laner Cor lt smon shoper w1 th
mol or (o ro Hilt on Po r tl and

BA3 no&lt;

1'977 CHEVROLET PICI&lt;.UP ScoH
sdal e A1r
power stee r 1ng
bro~e s
~ teel b el l l1 re!r.
tool
bo.ot SIISOO MoMe off er 370
Mechanic Pome1oy a fh~ 1 5
YARD SAl£ June 7 8 9 hom 9
am lo 4 pm ot b1g wh1te hou :s e on
left ocr os!r. lrom Rou.,h lone o n Rt
7 1n Cheshl rtl O hto at Mar y l ay ne
re!r. 1dence
BO Or s
Ch .tdren s
Wl: STERN
SB 95 to S13 95 Men ~ S79 95 to
$44 95 Bo dey ! B oa t ~ 322 N
7n d Ave Mtd d lcport
197b CHE VROl El 1l ton ptdwp

SHINN S TRACIORSAl ES
Phone 458 1030
l eon W Vo

EED A WATER
SOFTENER?

1n Tomat o
h e lds l op pay Dalle s Cl e land
949 2340

197 6 STAR CRAFl CAMPER
304 77 3 586 7

70 It

9q2 J437

Far Rent
3 AND o1 RM lurn1shed en d un
fu r nished opts . Ph on e 997.
5434
COUNHY MOBIL~ Home Pork
Rout e 33, no rth of Pomeroy
Lorge lois Co lt 9'17·7479
SEN lOR Cfl iZEN S
Our new
ren ten OSS ISionce you may be
obl e to ftve tn ou r oparlment
!or l e ~s tha n SSO o month For
con ta ct
m or e 1n formo ll on
V, lloge Manor Aporlm~~;nh

&amp;

condltton

your

. water with Co-op . water
soHener, Model UC-SVI ,
' Now Only •289.95
Let us test your water Free

Pomeroy Landmark
9e':!_ack W. car.. y, Mgr.

!Iii!!

Phone 9'11·21 81

PA IN T FOR 5al e Afurmnu n1 po 1n t
new bucket s ne'.l er been op en
ed 100 gol ovatl ob le ot $4 50
per goll on Blue late ot pomt ot
SJ 50 per gal lon 992 b1 73 01
99&lt; 6106
1938 HARl E'f' DA VIDSON fu lly
CU!! Iom1t ed wrt h su 1C1d e cl utch
end ~ hd t h celt enl cond11 10n
Ask 1ng 53000
747 .7 790 or
b l 4 6q9.3190
1976 250 l::n duro t--londo he el len t
cond il1on les~ lhon 800 m tl e~
A sk1 ng 5750 I q6b BSA chop
per
lou tond 1I1Qn
Ask 1119

S600 6" 698 3l'l0
Al LADIN lAMPS and pa rt!. tOe
oil Ge t the lamp you 11e bee-n
wantmg 01 f1• up that o ld one
ot a !r.umm er ~ ov mg s ·Now at
Mounto 1n leother an d G en era l
~ t o re
104 106 W Um on St
At hens Sole ends June lOth
7B AI UMINUM PONT OON boot
mo tor
and 1101ler
$ \bOO
991 3073 alter 0
1977 BUICK Cen1 u11on I 976 Hen
do Acco rd 1q71 VW 8199
Browmng sho t gun 949·7432
DUMP TRUCK q pass enger ~t o .
Iron wagon 10 p 1 e c e ~ of f01 m
equ 1pment. All 1n good wor k mg
•
condi tiOn Coli 949 1 I 14

R.e side n f I a I

qcn.77a.,

FERTILIZER. NITROGEN
POTACH, FERT.().f'ELS

FUt(NI SHW G ARAGE opt Sou th
Alh M1dd lr po rt 99? 7 140
MOBILE H O M~ w tlh city woter
or J gas N te e focot ton In
Ho 11 c A lber t I-iiii 949 1261

&amp; BLEND

Pomeroy Landmark
TRAm TW O lo h m Pomeroy Wrll
!rode for bulldo1e r or mo lor
home Co li I 304 b-4 8 5607 Fori
Goy w v

! ~ackW. Cars.y , Mfr .
I

1-

•

·

Phonem-ltll

Alum. &amp; Vin~
Siding

and

commercial. Call for
estimate, 24 hour service .
Anyday, anytime.
Phone 985· 3806

Jack Ginter 985-3806

Jack'S\.":..........
Septic
Tank
"''ii!WIK'

Box J

Free

......, •• the

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
!!1·1l74

Estimates

Let

us

capture

and

preserve those pre(tous
moments forever -

Weddings
Silver and

Golden Anniverutry
Family Reunions

Special O&lt;:casions
Photography
is

our

business, not a side lif'M!

.

The Photo Place
(Bob Hoeflich)
Pomeroy

5.31 .1 mo.

DAVE'S BACKHOE
&amp;
DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Anytime S.furday

992 ·7119 or 992-5041
4 27 tfc

-

-

Coll9n HBI
NEW 3 bedro om house , 1 bo ths,
oil e lec
I acre Mtdd leport
close to Rutland Phone 991
7481
VA FHA 30 yr l 1nancrng. o tso
rcfi i'I OnC1 ng lr e tond Mo r tgage .
77 E Sta te Athens phone (b l A)

592 J051
BY OWNER 5 a cre s wrth 9 roo m
house FRH GA S 2 cor garage
summ er kil chen and bo rde red
by 7 cre eks Call 985 38?7
TWO 5 TORV !rome hou se 6
room!'l and both cellar out ·
b u 1ldmg ~ 4 oCt e'&gt; land ot edge
o f Rutlond CompiBi e tra der
hook up ol ~o '2 bonk s oppro1'
e d pr operfy at 51~ 500 Ph one
q 9') 71Jfj4

l
aC H!!r. lotated 1 mile from
Me1gs Mme N o I Or til ed wel l,
sep11c to nk $6000 742 /565

We h1ve enlarged our

service department and
~nd

~.. JockW . Cilrsey . Mtr
MAIN
POMEROY. 0
JUST LISTED - About 6
ac r es with

WANTED ANY busrn ess
~eo/
htote that n eed~ f1non ctng
M r Ar our k so u 116 871 4 17 5

FOUR VERY tome k1tt en s Phone

qq) 1JIJ

BlACK AND while .neutered
mole 3 ye or 5 old Pl ay fu l of
fucllo note ,
ADULT FEMALE co llie Fu ll blood
ed Sa ble co lor G ood w.th
ch1fdren 985 3365
TO GOOD home 5 all whtte cots
and Mttte n~ !r.ome wtlh blue
eyes 1 all bloclo. torn co t . Adults
co ts g ood
mouser s
Co l i
9973 128 ofte1 4 pm or con be
seen o!lor A o t 289 Mulberr v
A ... enuc Pom eroy
THRH WHilE t..111ens I cot1 co and
I tiger k 1tt en 99') 2570 a h er b

pm

Mobile. lloltlt'f lor
. Sale
por.do , 3 bttdr oom lo ~r cond r·
lion Colt between 7 00 and
8 00
Mon
thru
lhu f s

J 5q82

191J lt(AILER FOR sol!l Do1 ion 17
)I
bO Phone 7A 2-2b89 or
b14 1Jb4.57 A1 On CR 1 So14'! m
Cenl er

11£al E~ tatc for Sale
1.:1 ACR tS of land on the Po meroy
Course

Hrl l

Ro od

9'12 3944
HO U ~~

.AN() s101e bu lld tng '"
Hc mh v r l l e ~ 98 ) ~ !l 19

home.

kllchen &amp; dining, nat gas
F .A

furnace

fireplace ,

m .ooo.oo.

GiveAway

excelllffit

J bedrooms , be1h , large

porche'5 ,

C o lt

BY OW N ER 80 ocres. 2100 feet
fr ontage
Ex &lt;ell e nt
10 0d
de .... efo pmen t
pOss 1b dt li e s
No r I_!! o f Pomeroy 9'97 7010
47 ACRE FARM 5 roo m s end bo th
forc ed 011 furna ce C1 ty water
70 x 74 hie btock gorogeo On Rt
7 985 -4156
IN RUTLAND b room 5 po r 110l
bot h cor por t utdttv budd1 ng
O n bt g lo t C1ty water g&lt;l !io

1A2·288 1

11'Jr\1M m1f W THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

H~Y I HOIJ

00 li1ESI:

gl ~

MAL OOT 8"-D...

TA"7Te to 'IOU'?

I0

WHY'?

heat ,

ba sement.

2

car

garage

300.Moin St.
Pomeroy. Ohio
Pomeroy m -6282
or 992-6263
8 A.M. to4:JO P.M.

BABY FARM - 25 acres
with very nice remodeled
home clo .. ln . 2 bedrooms .
be1h , carpeti ng. panel ing ,
new siding, basement, F.A.
furna ce . $30,851 00.
LOVELY BRICK - Close
to new Hydro Unl1. 3
bedrooms, 1'1' baths. F.A.
turna ce, close 1o school , 6
room s S35,000 00.
LOVELY KITCHEN This you sho uld see, la rge
dining area wllh dining
bar, l bedrooms, ba1h ,

211 E. Second Street
BUSINESS BUILDING Out of all floods Concrele
floor . air cond ition ing .

basement ,

~bout

78

yrs .

old . Sl8,000.00.
LIKE FLOWERS? - Here
Is lust tho business lor you .
Established lor • num ber
of
years .
furn i shed ,

Training
I ntere s t e d

parties call .
BRICK &amp; FRAME - I •ere
ground , 3 bedrooms, 1'12
ba1h , nlct kitchen &amp; din ing ,

•I I electric, patio, porch,
garage and workshop .
531,900.00.
OTHER PROPERTY TO
CHOOSE FROM.
HENRY E. CLEL AND
REALTOR
HANK , KATHY &amp; LEONA
CLELAND
ASSOCIATE
REALTORS
"2·2!lt- m .6191 ~~~~

"'
•

loading dock an d parking .
NEW LISTING - Wayou1l
bedroom frame home with
10 acres Has large living
room w1th woodburn lng
firepla ce Owners wil l fake
fra iler In trade or will help
finan ce S33,500.
POMEROY - Reasonable
2 fam ily home . Live in the
upper and rent out the
lower . A good canner lot
see th is

one tor only $9,600.
IN THE COUNTRY - 8
room older home with 3
bedroom s ,

rural

(X)

QUE'!STION.

PONISH

Just s 16,500.
HANDY
WITH
A
HAMMER - 3D acres of
land , 6 room house In good

location overlook ing Rt. 7,
Two wells, cistern and 2

ou1bulldlngs. Will take a
trade·ln. Only $16,500
EDGE OF TOWN - One
bedroom frame needfng a

AND

S A ~ ··

OAWEAL ·

~\NO

l O~S T

PRE"SERVCS • ·

HOW' S IHA1 SOUI'ID 7

Answer here :

Sweeper s, too~ te r5 rrons oil
~moll oppl1an ces. Lawn mower
nel(t to St ate Htgh woy GorogG
on Rou te 7 Phone (614 ) 985

A

(I XXI ) ( XXXI r 1
(Answers tomorrow)

ElWOOD BOWER S REPAIR
Yest erday s

I

Jumbles LOUSV APRON BANGLE ANKLET
Answer

Wha1 the man who drank too much wine
became -" PORT-lY"

REMODEliNG Pfumbtng, healing
and all 1ypes of general repotr
Wo rM guaranteed 70 yeor'&gt; ex
pe fle nce Phone 992 2_.[)1il
SEWING MACHINE Rep airs , se ~
v1 ce o tl makes , 9922284. lhe
Fobr~ c
Shop
Pome r oy
Authorued S1nger Soles ond
~erYI C Ct We sharpen Sctssors

ALI.EYOOP
~ I'LL ~EED

IN

~E

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
43 Jazz star,
Kld 1 Bounder
DOWN
4 Turkish
1 French
title
painter
9 Eggs
2
Spanish
city
10 Covered
3 Went to
walk
the prom
l2 Slower : mus.
13 Mr. Nunoy
4 Fearful
Yesterday's Allswer
shades
15 Bullfight
19 Male
30 Composer
shout
5 Small
title
Erik
16 Mr. Olaney
reg1on
%2
Bat
31
Prefix for
6
Stone
of
1i Type of
a
country
gnats
leather:
32 Engine23 Embrace
1 Olinese
abbr
room
24 Belittle
dynasty
18 Budding
worker
2S
Unrelenting
8
Human
bemg
frog
33
Indigent
26 Withdraws
20 Altar words 11 Worn away
38 Ending for
Z8 English
21 Sky altar
14 Male
22 British
,..,.....:r,;.iv..:e::.r~..,.,~r.bleacher
gun
23 Vegas
game
26 Stockholm
citizen
27 Mother of

MOO\'IAN

ilME- FRAME [).&lt;IoTA AND "THEN
"THE PReSENT llATC ...

EXCAVATING , do : e r , loader ond
backhoe wo1k dump truct..s
ond lo b~s f o1 hu e, wtll haul
l dl d11t , to sott limestone ond
gr ovel Coli Bob or Roger Jet ·
ftt r"i day phone 997 7089 n 1ght
phon e 997 .3575 or ~7 . 5231
t XCAVA TIN G
dozer
backhoe
and d 1tcher C ho rl e~ R Hot
fm ld
Back Hoe Sttrvlclt ,
Rutlan d . Oh10 PhonB 742 1008.
Will do roolm g . constru&lt;tlon
plumb rng and healing No 1ob
too Iorge or too smotl Phone

u p er~e nc e ,

fr ee es t1mo1es.
ony t h1ng
yo u
need
f or
unde rgro und sw1m poots New
chemk ol and su pp ly store
Al b an y ,
Oh1o .
Phone
b1A ·69B 0555 . ( Al ter 6 pm ,
6\ A.689·S25l John Jolters or
089· 5265 B1ll &lt;ilt lette ) We ore
NOT oi l wet on PRICES
SPEEDY ORILLINC,
d!rll1ng , commerctol
o nd
domes t iC Pump so te s a nd ser
II+Ce . 99'2·6/95 or 304·895·3807
H l Wrt tese l Roofing, new or
r ep o +r
gu tt ers
and
downspo utS Free es ltmotes
Ph o ne
9 4 9 · 7862
or

WI-40EVfR ~AID ~•we
~ PASS THIS WAY i&amp;Jrl
·ONcE,'* NeVER T~IED

J0•·8q5·3802
H l Wrlie se ! Roofmg new or
rep o 1r .
gu tt ars
ond
downspouts Free estimates
Pho ne 949·2862 or 949· 2160 .

TO ORavE

-- --·-

II

on

Rt. 7. Modern Inside with
lull basement and young
fruit trees.
A LOT OF BUYERS ARE
SEEING US NOW. IF YOU
HAVE A NICE CLEAN
PLACE AND WANT TO
MAKE A PROFIT CALL

HELEN L. TEAFORD
GORDON II. TEAFORD
SUE P. MURPHY
L--~Associote Realtors

Z8 Briny deep
%9 Miss
Gardner
30 Part
34 Actor
Alastair
35 Nero's hall
36 Bmd
37 Braided
39 Beverage
IG Complete
41 Directed
4% Adolescent
years

Summer

Semester

HUNTER

Hogan ' s Heroe-5 15

10 3D- Ameri can Enterpr ise 20: 11:0D-News
3,4.6.8,10,13,15: Dick CaveH 20, Li lias Voga &amp; You
33 ·
11 :30-Johnnv
Ca;son 3. ~ . 1 5 ; Pollee Slory 6,13. Haw all
F lve 0 8: ABC News 33, Movie " Papa 's Dellcote
Condition" 10 : 12:00--Janak l 33.
12 4D-Myslery of the Week 6,13. Kojak 8: 1·00-Tomorrow 3,4, 2· 1o-News 13

Movie Channel 4 s &amp; 9 P M - Hollywood Oldie
7 &amp; 11 P.M. - Let's Do It Aga in lPG I
Coble Channel 5 6·30 P.M. - Testimony Time
7:00 - Wa hama Band In Mexico
9·00 - Wahama Band .
Tu rs da y . JUIU: 6

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Six bid asks honors
NORTH
+ AY54J

• KQ
• 93
• A9

WEST
• 10 8
t J875 2

EAST
• QJ 7 6
• 10
• 10 4

• Q 10 8

+ J7654 2

• J 96

5D? WE WER:"
ONLY GONE A
TIME !

THEY'LL
5TOPI1T
IY07HING!
I

111!:Y MUST HAVE FIGURED THAT BY
~URN I N G TH E HOUSE TH SYD DE·
STROY 1115. ''EVID ENCE " ~---­

THEY'THIN!(
YOU HAVE .

Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass
Pass

Pass

old Cu lbertson grand s lam
force
Specifi cally . a ft er you ask
for ace s and follow with a
bid of SIX 1n et new suit , you
"' ant your partn er to bid
sev en 1f he holds lwo of the
three lop trump honors .
Seven hearts makes easi-

ly All South ha s to do 1s to
dra""

t rumps

an) one 1s w1 lhng to take.

2•
4 NT

6•

Pass

A Tennessee

what lead we
from
K72

• B6

• ae n

Call Now For

I. ONGFEJ, J, OW

CRVPTIIQUOTES

BTY

O IYAY ' M
XBV

C BVA - QY OOYA

U B T '0

IEE-HEE-HEE!

Appointment

Pomeroy landmark

9a!..Ck W. tarMr.Mar.

!1!1.

PhoiHl 992-2111

J '.t.. .
\'~ "

••
I

NO, I HATE TO TELL
'i'OU, Bl 1T '1'0U ARE
NOT FASTER THAN
A ?PEEDING BULLET

2

• 9 7:1

IYJA

H V PI

By Oswald Ja coby
and Alan Sontag
How can South bid the
grand slam wilh any confi-

opened one notrwnp

dence ''

of spades. Our partner

He can assume that hls

partner needs bolh kmg and
queen of hea rts for h1s earl y
bids , or he can check for
kings by means of a Bla ckwood five notrump and b1d
seven on the theory that
even if North does nol hold
the trump queen the suit wtll
break
. Far better is hav ing som e
expert method to find out
just how good his partner 's
trumps are.
South's SIX·dub call repre-

The hand to our
partner raised him to

We recommend the·- • -.. -· -

some cards. We can
him in spades a nd lead
sUit rather than our
diamond
tNF.WSPAPFH ENTF:HPJUSE ASSN . I

(Do you have a quesr1on
the experts? Wnte " Ask

Exp erts .. care o' l';:'::h;•s;li~:~:·~
per lndfwdual

I BET 'IE WIN FUST
PRIZE FER ~ORE COSTUME, _..,.I!=;:==';&gt;
ATTHI KIDDVGARDEN PARTV ---

c

1

',i~::,~:~~i~

be
wered.
by ans
stamped
envelopes, Th e mos l
1ng qu estr ons w11f be

tr11s column an d wr/1

coptes of JACOB Y MOOERN !

BARNEY

Any U.S. mede cer--11arts
utra It nHded. Elcludn
fronl-whMI drive cors.

claim

m one hand '1 That chance is
lc&gt;S than 10 P.cr ccnl and one

(f) 1978 K1ns Fulurt• Synd 1nlt In ~ .

S~~

and

Since dummy wlll be able to
ru ff hiS fourth diamond.
llow a bout all fo ur trumps

Openmg lead : • 6

hmt s Enrh day th r code lN te1 s are ditl ercn l

SBAU

Pass

sen t ~ an expert way to hnd
out. It 1s a vanattO n of the

+

stmpl y stan ds for ano\ her. In th is sa mple A 15
thre e I.'s, X f or th e \ WO o·~. NC Sin gle l ette r s,
apostrophes, the length .md f orma tt on nf the words are all

I TOLO YDU TrEY
BUT H0W COULD
WERE
Ot!T TO GET
IT HAVE HAPPEN -

B2

Pass

One l etter
used f o r tht•
WINNIE

G+A

Vulne rable . No rth-So uth
Dea le r North
West
East South

J TX H BAY - PJMI - EBE
DBUUJAU
Yesterday's Cryploquote : NO ONE IS RICH ENOUG H TO DO
WI1110UT A NEIGHBOR.- DANISH PROVERB

SPECIAL

8,

6 OO--News J.4.8.1 0, 13,15. Zoom 20,33 ; ABC News 6.
6 30-N BC News 3,4, 15. ABC News 13 : Andy Griffith 6,
CBS News 8 10 : Over Easv 20.J3.
7:DO-Cross.WIIs 3: Probe 4; Newlywed Game 6.13:
News 10: Gilligan 's Is 15, Dick Cave1120: Peop le &amp;
Places 33
7·JD-AII .Sfar Anv1hlnc Goes 3. Sha Na Na ~. Bel·
ween the War s 6, Family Feud 8; MacNeii.Lehrer
Report 20 ,33 . The Judge 10; In Search of 13, Wild
Ki ngdom 15
8·DD-GrllliY Adams 3,4,15: Eight Is Enoug h 13; Bil ly
Graham Crusade 6.8: Nova 20,33 , CBS News
Special 10.
9 OO--Davld Frost 3,4.15: Char lie's Angels 6.13 , Movie
" He ll Boats" 8,10. Great Performances 33:
Poldark II 20
10:00--Po llce Woman 3,4,15 : Starsky &amp; Hutch 6,13,

• A 7 5 4 .t
t A K Q6
• K :1

Ia

acre of land . 512.500.
CHESHIRE - Big red
brick with 2 apartments . 10
baths , 2 furna ces, and

News 6;

4,

Chris1opher Closeup 10: 6 45-Mornl ng Reporl 3;
6 Sll-Good Morning West VIrgin ia 13; 6· SS.....News
13
7 DO-Tod•y 3.4,15 . Good Mor ni ng Amer ica 6,1 3. CBS
News 8. Porky Pig 10
7 2&gt;--Chuck White Reports 10 : 7:30-Schoo lles 10
8 OO--Cap1 Kangaroo 8,1 0; Sesame Sf 33
9·00- Mer v Griffin l; Phil Donahue 4, 13, 15.
Emergenc y One 6: Brady Bunch 8, Ma tch Ga me
10.
9 3D-Andy Gro ffllh 8. Fam ily Affa ir 10
10 00--Card Sharks 3,4,15. Edge of Night 6: Pass The
Buck 8. Joker's Wild 10. To Tell The Truth 13.
10 .30-Hollywood Squares 3,4,15, High Hopes 6; Pri ce
Is Right 8,10: s2o.ooo Pyramid 13
11 DO-Hi gh Rol lers 3,4,15, Happy Oay s 6,13; 11 ·3DWheel ot For1une 3, 15 . Family Feud 6,13. Par.
1rldge Family 4, Love of Life 8,10; Sesam e St. 33.
11 5S.....CBS News B ;_L~vl ng Free 10
12 ·00--Newscen1er 3, News 4.6.10; Santord &amp; Son 15 ,
Gambl1 8. Midday Magaz ine ll
12 ·30-Ryan 's Hope 6, 13. Bob Braun 4, Gong Show 15:
Search lor Tomorrow 8,10: Elec Co . 33 .
1 oo-For richer For Poorer 3: All My Children 6,1 3:
News 8: Young &amp; the Restless 10: Not For Women
Only 15
30-Davs of Our Lives 3,4,15; As The World Turns
8,10 . 2 O~ne L1fe lo Live 6,13. 2 3D-0oc1ors
3,4,15: Guiding Lighl8,10
3 oo--Another World 3.4,1 5: Daytime Emmy Awards
6.13 , Lil ias Yoga &amp; You 20
3 3D-All In ne Fa mily 8, 10, Ohio Journal 20
4 DO-Mister Cartoon 3. Super man 4: For Richer, For
Poorer 15. Addams Famllv B. Sesa me Sf 20,33.
Gomer Pyl e, USM C 10
4 3D-Lit11e Rascals J,1S; Gilligan 's Is 4, Merv Griffin
6, Gilligan' s Is 8, Brady Bun ch 10; Dinah 13
5 00--Here Com e The Br ides 3, Sta r Trek 4, Gunsmoke
8; Mls1er Rogers' Neighborhood 20.3J . Hogan's
Heroes 10. Emergency One 13. Pe111coa1 Ju nc11on
15
5 3D- News 6: Elec Co 20.33. Mary Tyler Moore 10:

SOUTH
+ K2

DAILY C RYPTOQ UOTE - Uero's how t o work It :
AXVDI. BAAXR

gas fu rnace, city water ,
breezewa y, 2 car garage,
trailer spot and over an

5 bedroo ms , 3

THfC»U~H

1\ GLovERt.e~tf!

Wheel
Alignment

6 30-News

Castor

--Water well

EXPERT

Janakl 33.
t2 :0s-Movle "Conspiracy of Ter,or" 6,13; 1:00-Tomorrow 3,4; 1 1D-Kolak 8; l · ~ s-News 13.
Movie Channel 4 .,..
58. 9 P.M - Poco iGI
7 &amp; 11 P.M. - Hol lywood Oldi e
Coble Chlnnel 5 6:30 P.M. - Tesllmony Time
7·00 - Paul Gaudino
7·JO - Special Edlflon
10"00 - 700 Club
. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 7, 1978
5 4S.....Farm Report 13: S·Sil-PTL Club IJ , 6·00--PTL
Club 15; Summer Semester 10.

• N ews 20

IIHie redecorating , bath ,

"um.

Now arrange the Ctrcled leners to
form the surpnse answer. as sug·
gested by the abOve canaan

COFFH ... EGGS

BRADFORD
A uct1 oneer
Com·
plete Ser11tee Phone 949·7•87
or 949 2CXXJ Rocrn e O h1 o Cril l
Bradford

water ,

acr~

I

W14AT YOU M1~14T
51VE. IN ~ESPON5E
iO A NEEDL.IN6

USPIIO!I

simin!----si\J:,-j~~

fireplace and 3 ca r garage
Has large garden and
ce llar with work shop over

garden oo this llh

KJ

ISAROUEb

SALES AND SERVICE
1H·Ift

natural gas, wood burning

rooms ,

I

I

SR . ~~!!'! PUDDLE POOLS All sizes and
1
0
sha pes Sw1m pools, 2 yeors
"' " "

near stores. Better

KJ

I KEWOA
[1]

PULLINS EX CAVATING Comp lete
Serv 1ce , Pho ne 992 2478

99'2. Jl2S

byHen'nArnoldand Boblee

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

BORN LOSER

6q8 7331

VIRGIL B.

15

~ ~ ~~ ®

SYRACUSE 7. bedroo m ho use
7•2·ll• B
Ne w storm wrn do w s 7 par
che!i
olurnmum bu 1ld 1ng 1n HOWE RY AND MAA: TI N
E• ·
bock Phone 99'2 .3119
5y s tem~ ,
co vot1ng , u~ pllc
dozer , boct..h oe , dump truck ,
l1me stone. grovel , bto&lt;ktop
p0 v1 ng, Rt \AJ. Phone l (614 )

natural gi!ls, city water ,
underground gasol ine tank ,

Pom er&lt;Yf l.andm ark

JO&lt; n

I ' 1 ACRE lo t for sol o close to
longs v il le O h10 742·14CW

fARM O N CR 31 36 oo es Near
Potllond 84 3 2~61
I'

Announced

8 00--Redscene '78 3, Happy Days 6, 13; Life In The
Fas1 Lane 4; Man From Atlantis 15; Movie
" National Vel vel" 8, 10, Ja cques Llpchllz 33, Some
of the Presidents' Men 20.
8 3D-Baseball 3,4, Laverne 1!. Shirley 6,13
9.00--Three's Company 13: Mus ic Clly News
Popularity Awards 6,8,15; Altair In The Air 20,33:
Movie "The Spokes Gang" 10.
9 3D-Mary Tyler Moore IJ : 10:00--20 20 13: George
Crumb Voi ce of the Whale 33, News 20
10 3D-Black Perspective On The News 20; 11.00-News 3,4,6,8,10, 13, 1S. Dick Cavefl20; Over Easy ll
11 3D-Johnny Carson 3,4,15, Soap 6,13: Mov ie " Night

3625

C.IIAfler5 :00or

HOMES! TE S for sale 1 acre and
up M1ddteport neor Rutland

Phone 992-2181

ONE' OF- MY :;LE&amp;Pt'-ie Pll.~!I... TO
H&amp;l.P ME DOZE- OFF!

PWMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.

Portraits
Weddings
Passports
Anniversaries
Special Occasions

~I_Iali!'~Si.le ~ _ =

!lit!

THe CH EMIST'!! RE'PORT !
THAT TODDY VIA:; DOPED !IT~ONil
ENOUGH TO PUT MV ~lt!IHT OUT
FO~ KEEPS!

I.JTI'!.E ORPHAN ANNIE

985-4155
Chester, Ohio 45720

will se r&gt;~ice Hotpoint
other brands

Muffler
Brakes
Shocks
Tires
Battery .
Installation Service
Ph . 992 ·2148 Pomeroy, 0 .
J.1S·IfC

CARTER

at.ar

109 High St.

~EAD

I WAS FEE!.INS Rf;STLE5!! AND
EiDGY.. :;He !!AID !:&gt;HE'D ADDeD

MOORE'S

Coli
992-6323 or 992-6011
5 15 1 mo pd .

.

KEN GROVER
PHOTOGRAPHY

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

CAPTAIN EASY

Price In Town
See
Denver Kappk!

nco~

·c-..

,~

For

Ohio
10 JD·C

Service
"_,
... ..,...,

speed ne w clutch m uffle•
brakes and pom t 25 m p g
S\300 Call'997.7539

VACANCY FOR el derly po1 1e n1 m
prtvote hom e 01 Tupper s Plo1ns
Coli of1er 5 weekday&lt; ~ . or
o n ytr me
on
w ee lo. end ~
014 bb7 3305

Ferguson

Gilson Tillers, uwn Boy
Mower Sates &amp; Service.
399 W. Main SfPomeroy, Ohio
Ph. 992-2164
5-4·1 mo.

&amp;

At

Under hang gutters &amp; room
additions.

c.;nester,

Rad1at11U

15 FOOl WOODEN boa t wt l h
m0 t01 end IIOtler Wtl l sel l
cheap A!s o e lec 11 rc b u d! m
oven 9'/i 3573
1971 DAT SUN 1, ton p1ckup 4

WAltR WEll d n llrng W1l 11o m T
G ronl 741 287Q

service, Missey

MASH BROTHERS

CLEANING

9BS J9 12

.------------~ , MOUlt~ HOME 11 '• 70 w i th ex ·

Check our low. low
prices on

4·JO.Ifc

27,000 mil es h ce!lont co nd1
lion l opper 1ncl udcd 01 S3JSO

WILl CARE for th e elde rl y m our
ho me Pho ne 997731 4

~
MODERN SUPPLY

-r-----------t
r----------.., r-----------.,
SEPTIC TANK
For The Best

Bru sh hog
Grader blad e ond d ll I S&lt;OOp
Smolltroder 84 3 75bl

WU Rll lnH DOUBL~ k e yboard
wlfh bo ss l oot pedol !l Ex t ro
mce Sb95 742 7'111 a1 747 2201
ohe r 5

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

6·6·1mo. I .

8N FO RD trocto r

NfW 8 USED IMPlEMfNl S

soften
lOM~ O NE lO work.

tmg yo ur se ll 1n a h en zy ove r
un e xpec ted d JStu p i!On s to day
Will so lve no thm g Try flo w tng
w 1th e ven ts Yo u II hav e qu1 te a
WANTE D TO r erll
Hou'&gt;e or
happ y ttme
tro
ile1
by
l
1
xed
1
nco
me
cou ple
TAURUS (April 10-Moy 10) To
becom e c ar e l ess w 1t h po ssessto ns o r tnd1 fl eren t w1t h wo rk
beca use so me th 1n g more 1n ler ·
es ttn g come s at o ng wou ld b e a
costly mt s ta ke
NE:WSF'APFH F NTFHPIUSf: ASSN 1

6

TUESDAY, JUNE 6, 1978
5 00--Here Come 1he Brides 3, Star Trek 4; Gun smoke
8; Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33 . Hogan' s
Heroes 10. Emergency One 13; Petticoat Junction
15.
5 3D-News 6; Elec. Co. 20,33, Mary Tyler Moore 10;
Hogan 's Heroes 15.
6 00--News 3,4,8, 10, 13, 15 ; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6 30-NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News IJ; Andy Griffith 6,
CBS News 8.10; Over Easy 20.33
7 O~ross.Wits 3,4; Newlywed Game 6.13; Pop Goes
The Country 8, News 10; Gilligan's Is 15; Fren ch
Chef 20 , O' Happy Day 33
7·3D-Hollywood Squares 3,4 , Let's Go To The Races 8;
Candid Camera 6, MacNeil Lehrer Reporf 20,33,
Pri ce " Right 10; That's Hollywood lJ; To Be

Small engine &amp; mower

0.

PHONE
992-2238

USW TRACTORS

Let Pomeroy Landmark

No
e~~.per t e nce
l t ) I 1 'JL&lt; Sf:"Sf· !&gt;Omeont&gt; 1~ W A il Rf;SS
neceHory Ap pl y 1n ptH\011 al
·r 1 ng trJ (IIJ ' o.,om r-'h mg ru er ~r
Blu e lorton M1d dl eport
fCJU lrJr; d f d 5 P ;JI(Jt)1ng QU (! ')·
liG-,5 Fat.: ! !» Hill e,n l )' [)(;! IC BA BYSI THR
WHKDA VS
7
,.:.aiPO •rrrJugt-1 po1n!Pd nqu1r;
ch ddren age'&gt; J 8 5 Cal l alter
CAPRI CO RN (Dec 21-Jan 19 ) 0 949 1059
" ~?eo t:om olatnr s to yo u r set t
trJaa 1 ( 1U II tJr ama1t1d tww
'Ju1r. K , othr.:rs w1ll -;po t y ou r
ar noy dnt; P a nn ~P e lt Na ys to
HOOF HOL LOW Horses Buy sell
olt~':"'late 11
Hade or tro1n New ond us ed
AQUAR IUS (Jan 10-Feb 19) A saddles
Ru th Reeves A lbon y
bonu~ lor d 10 b W'.:!ll done In C! {
l b i 4J 098 3190
be oe~t rJ Y.. eO u pon you to day
SomPnn~ w h'l ha'\ nevPr b een RISING ~t AR Kenn el Boord mg
runs
Ind oor ond outd oOf
a true dlly ITLIQ h l try to sp o·l 11
Gr oo mtng all breed s Clean
ou 1 o f envy
PISCES (Feb 10-March 10) ~ O n1 1 0 1 y fo cr h lt e ~ Chesht re
Pho ne (6 14) Jb7 0197
Jump at th e c ha nce to do
so rn e thmg d dfe rent tod ay as
Dame Fo rt une w11! have ner
h and 1n 1t There ts no th tn g so
1m po rt an t that 11 can 1 be don e
to mo rr o w

pm

oiler

mile off Rt. 7 by-pall on
Sr . Rt. 124 toward Rutlond.

~.

River Front
For Trailer

l:x
ce llen l
co nddJ on
Fully
cor peled w1th bed end but l l 111
bor 949 2511 5

1&lt;1·1006

ROGER HYSELL
GARAGE

Corner Lot On

I 471 FO RD fCONOLIN E Von

M FI35 D1ese l
MF130 D1 esel
M F150 Dtese l MF135 D1esel .
M Fi bS D 1e ~e l MF785 D1e !r.el ·
MF l \ 35 DuHe l Cob
011 8
heal er

TWO FAMil V Yo rd Sole Thur'&gt; MF9 Bo le r MF IO Bo ler MFI10
e nd f 11 June 8 &amp; q 9 5 1 ~ 3
Sole r Matth e w ~ Rot ary Sc yt he
Lm col n Hts Old too ls ~ c h oo l
MF880 Sern1 ·moun ted b bot·
d e'&gt; ks d oth o w n 1 ng~ m us1co l
to m Plow
Mf570 17 D1 sc
•n!r. l rurnent !r. and rn tH othu1
Mf 200 7 Row Chopper MF39 ')
Row P lan t e r ~
Mech on1col
110n!r.pl anle l

tr; ''Jj' nes tor

\ € " ' ,...,., . ~ 1 r~a sons Otoj oa1 ·
''?' .. s fT' a. J': ra•":: '. t.r~ a ~ r,ut

FOR RENT

1977 CHEVROLET SU BURBAN C 10
tru ck Sdverodo pockoge and
tra der tow111g package 15 (X)()
m1le s 742 3 154

" Holloeld

LIZ%!

'-----------------------------------.-J

INTERNA TIONAl 64 Combin e
Troc to1 mounted sproyer For
mall Model B tra ctor 3 pam!
ht tch cutoU sow Olt lrke new
bush hog All m good candrtron
W1ll toke
Hade\
Phone
Q49 2763

JOHN DEE RE 10 10 dozer com
pletely rebu1 lt $4500 D1e sel
engine Wllh wmc: h Colt Charles

TELEVISION
VIEWING

I HEAR HER,
SAM-

Business Services

go Loo k5 ht..e new Wrll tokelrod es Don I mtss th1s 1f you ,..
need o doler Phone 949.2763

Rummage C ABBAGE
BROCCOLI ,
') o le Jun e t1 9 10th 9 5 Bo ke
coul1 f low c' brusse ll spro uts,
Sole on the lO th a t Po mh
egg plon ts head l ettu ce ~ weel
Ho u!oe
Se cond
Street
peppers h ungor ton woJ&lt;C seet
Po meroy
bana na chtl l peppers Plu s
ma ny d1 fl e&lt; lent vonet ies of
YARD SALE Ina Ellr 5 be lo w Mtd
tom ol o plants , mony k m ds of
dl eporl Tue!!l Wed &amp; Thur ~
hongmg boskets
and po t
9 00 8edd1n g Iorge s1ze coot
flo we r ~ Lorge vortety o l on
al m a~ I new m 1sc 1tems
nva ls 1n flat s Clclond Fo rm s
YARD SAl E o n Rt 7 Tue!r. and
Ro o n e ,
e nd Grcenh ou~e
W ed Rood acro!'l~ from Leod mg
Ger old me Cleland .
Creek Watch l or srg ns

•al"'~'

l'l.ldl

INH J.INAli ON Al
500
ser 1e·
bulld ozer
b way
blad e
R 0 P S cob wrnch ready to

EPISCOPA l CHURCH

dou bt s shouiO oe g119 r1 sec.rJnd
ot ace n r r.~u 1 +1e toaa , Laa;
~UC fr IS Nart mg :o Dull a !.- ;; lOST PAIR OF m e n ~ gold wne
!r o me el'e gl a!r. ses co nto1 ned 111
S f11'1 QS fc,• f0..J 1! 5h P h "lO NS
Dloc l.. cm e be or mg the nome ol
s r-t:: "a '. rrJ.,.' •r ..JS I
Dr
RD
Tho mm
Rew ord
SCO RPIO lOci 1&amp;-Nov 11 1 5€
Phone 9(+7 3728 o r 9q') ~55
· : .. ·. . ::"".! ~"'' ,_,..,.f' St'ogrJ"I)·
s r"
·c.a"

VW BUG S&lt; OO '192 5656
-

-

\l l'Htlil\
~ ~~!11 011 ~t urd .ll

p

-

1977 CHEV Y MONZA 305 cu m
V 8 A C AM tope 992· 7987

.

PIIVI'lt' ~'2·! Jj(j

~

843 2622

I 965 FO RO MUSTANG '28 9 Engm e
recent ly rebu1lt Good shape
$400 74') 254 1

Thanks a1 K.l

C ~t !!h Utl!dvrmu~

1973 MONTI: CARl O londou P S
P 8 A C . AM B track '&gt; l ereo
b ceUen t
cond1tron
$1700

I %8

r aft'

In

Terror" 8; Mov ie " Satan 1 S Harvest" lO; 12:0Q--

9- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday , J une 6, 1978

TRTER

I

TH' LEETLE
TURTLE

�10-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, June 6, 1978

NEW HAVEN CANDIDATES - Pictured are
candidates vying for municipal offi ces in ille coming June
6election at New Have n. First row , left lo right, Mary J .
"Joy'' Russell , recorder; James MacKnight, council ; and
Wendy Lynn Divers, recorder. Secon d row, Oavict Jones.

...

Pomeroy

council ; Michael E. Fields, council; Charles H. Smiill,
mayor; and Jeffrey A. Mankin, council. Absent when the
photo was taken were ·Charles Ashworth Sr. and Virgil
Weaver, candidates for council.

r------------~-------------~

The World Today
(Continued from page I )
it will not lay out any new policy."

Resolution clears hurd], ·
WASHINGTON 1UPl l - A resolution to allow seven more
years for ratification of the Equal Hights Amendment has
passed its first test in a subcommittee , but its real test lies
ahead in ille full House Judit·iary Committee .
The resolution would provide a 14-year ratification period
for the ERA , setting the fin al deadline for state legislative
consideration in March 1986 instead of the present expiration
date of March 1979.

MRS. EDITH DIXON
Mrs. Edith Millicent Dixon,
formerly of Middleport , died
May 21 in South Char leston,
. W. Va .
Funeral services were held
on May 25 a t the Snodgrass
Funeral Home in South
Charleston with the Rev .
Ross Jam es offi ciatin g.
Burial was in Gravel Hill
Cemet ery at Cheshire.
CONNIEJOLANCASTER
Connie Jo Davis Lancaster,
daughter of Mrs. Hichard
Fick Sr., Chester area, and
the late George Davis, d1ed
May 17 at San Jose, Calif.
Mrs. Lanca ster was a

Inflation is big concern
NEW YOHK 1UPI I - New York Stock Exchange
Chairman William M. Batten Monday disclosed the results of a
nationwide . siu-vey, which showed Americans are too
concerned about inflallon to take a chance on investing in the
stock market.
"We must act decisive ly to assure that misunderstanding,
lack of knowledge and unreali;tic public policies do not tran sform us from a nation of r isk~akers into a nation of
economically timid souls." he sa td , eJqJlaining the defensive
stance of household money managers co uld boomerang by
spurring more inflation and a shortage of investment fund s to
create jobs.

INSURANCE
LIFE, HEALTH, HOME,
AUTO &amp; BUSINESS
Acro ss from th e Court House
l\4 Court St.
Pomeroy , Ohio
Phon e 614-992 -6677

Area Deaths

!

Holzer Medica l Center
Dl.charges June 5
Mrs. David Baker and so n,
Beattie,
John
J ose ph
Boggess. Merle Cole. Ercel
f' ell ure, Daniel Garthce,
Mrs. Delbert Gilbert and son,
Mrs . Roger Hall a nd
daughter, May Haskins, Jack
Hilden brand , Bruce Hi vely,
Jr .. Gregory Ja mes, Gay

.. ·.•·
'•''

I

'j

I

....

.·: ..

.... :
...•.•,

··::.:·

It's Theirs •••
FREE AND CLEAR ...
~0\V!
They did 1\ .. and so ca n you' They planned
ahea d years ago. and now their pl ans have
paid off and lhe1r home is paid up' You can
d o II lool See us a bout ou r mortgage loans
a\ low rqles. Star\ plannlllg now!

·~

·'.·•.'·"r:,,

!

concert pianist and had her
own studio in San Jose, Calif.
She had been an invalid for
the past four and one-half
years. She was born Feb. 14,
1942 in Bcwling Green, Ky.
Sunoiving are her husband,
Ray Lancaster; a daughter,
Renee Lancaster ; her
mother; her maternal
grandfather, George L.
Davis, Clarksburg, W. Va.
Her father was a World War
II casualty .
Services were held on May
2Q at the Chapel of Roses at
San Jose with Dr. Karl E.
Kniseley II officiating. Burial
was in Oak Hill Memorial
Park.

HOSPITAL NEWS
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admitted - Donald Ar·
mentr out , Middleport :
Charles Knapp , Middleport;
Annette Lambert , Pomeroy ;
Sharon Wise, Hutland ;
Minnie Kapteina, Pomeroy;
Fl ora Murphy , Rutland ;
Elbert Robinson, Pomeroy.
Discharged - Tamara
Ma sh, Sh erry Tackett,
. William Morri s, Ric hard
Cummin s, Gladys Hutton,
Hurley Hutto n, Lenora
Brown , Caro l Wines, Bradley
Poo ler.

WALK-UP TELLER WINDOW
AND AUTO TELLER WINDOW
OPEN FRIDAY EVENINGS 5 to 7

·:·e·;·

" ': '

(!1;)'

(Coltllnued from Jllle I)
there.
It was brought out that a
citizen had called the
councilman and reported the
problem .
.
Mayor Andrews pointed out
that he. give officers duties
and when someone calls in
with something else to be
done the officer has difficulty
in completing his assign·
ments.
It was pointed out by Werry
that he had to tell a man to
leave the parking lot , due to
the ordinance allowing no
loitering, that has all his life
gone to the parking lot wall
just to look at the river.
Council members agreed,
however, their objective was
to clean up the parking lot.
The intention of council in
passing the ordinance was to
stop the drinking and
throwing of beer bottles on
the parking lot.
Mayor Andrews pointed out
that council makes the laws
and he enforces them and if a
citizen has a complaint he
should meet with council.
It was also pointed out that
a citizen has the right to
report any infraction that
they witness.
Larry Powell, councilman,
pointed out that it was
necessary to restrict the
pleasure of some of the
citizens who en ioy sitting on
the parking lot in order to
enforce the ordinance.
It was also noted that the
mayor backs up his officers
in the arrests they make.
One suggestion was made
that to take care of the
problems on the parking lot
was to hire additional men .
It was agreed to call a
safety meeting with the
police officers and iron out
the problems.
Powell and Brown went on
record urging
council
members to vote on the 10
mill new tax levy for Meigs
Local School District to be
voted on today .
Also discussed was the
cleaning of lots privately
owned. Wehrung suggested
letters be mailed asking
citizens to clean up their lots.
Brown asked if open burning is allowed and Charles
Legar, fire chief, who was
present, informed council
that burning permits cannot
be issued in the village .
Brown also reported illat
another grant may be
opening up for villages near
waterways. However, he did
not have complete in·
formation on the type of grant
as it Is just in the preliminary
stage.
In regard to the restoration
of the ol d senior high
bcilding, Brown reported that
Ron James has taken the
proposal to Columbus and
will report back to him
probably at the end of the
month.
Council
asked
that
residents obey the 25 mile
speed limit on village streets.
Council also hired Kenneth
Hoffman as new meterman to
replace Don Stivers who
resigned.
Charles Legar gave a
report of the activity of the
fire department for the last
six months .
Activity in town included 11
calls, a payroll of $502.25,
drove each vehicle 21 miles,
had 1491'z man hours, 12 men
per call , rescued one horse,
had five aut&lt;rtruck fires,
three residents, one apart-

Jeffers, Pauline McCoy,
Oneida Mullens, Ray Palmer,
Michael Hacer, Harry Scott,
Kathleen Scott, Mrs. Ralph
Thompson and son, Mamie
Wallar, James Whaley.
Births JuneS
Mr . and Mrs. Bill Austin, a
daughter, Apple Grove.

Meigs
Property
Transfers
Larr y D. Circle, Patricia A.
Circle, G. Douglas Circle.
Elsie Circle to Larry D.
Circle , Patri cia Circ le, 2
acres, Sulton.
Leonard F. Erwin, Georgia
Ruth Erwin to Gordon F.
Rayburn , Cry stal Gay
Rayburn. I acre, Chester.
Kenneth Handall Adkins,
Regina S. Adkins to Jerry 1..
Six, Haze l Six , 20 acres,
Scipio.
Oris L. Frederick, Jean L.
Frederick to Goldie M.
Frederick, Lots, Chester.
Charles J . David, Esta L.
David to Kenneth L. Cozart,
Patricia W. Cozart , 13 acres,
Lebanon.
George Ch arles Foster,
Virg ini a M. Foster to
Kathryn Philson, .762 acre.
100 acre lots 259, 260, Letart.
Robert L. Lewis , Marvel L.
Lewi s to Joseph l..usk,
Mart in a Lu sk, 25 acres,
Leta n .
Roben W. Pullins to Linda
K. Pullins, 4.523 acres , Scipio.
James W. Suttle, Greta
Suttle to Roger Adams, Right
of Way , Lebanon.
Kenn eth
E.
Ha yes,
Darelene Hayes to Roger
Adams , Right of Way ,
Bedford .
Elwood Howard , Clara
Howard to Roger Adams,
Right of Way, Scipio.
William D. Howard , Judi B.
Howard to Hoger Adams,
Right of Way, Scipio.
Clarice M. Erwin to
Buckeye Rural Electric
Corp., Right of Way , Rutland.
Daniel J . Haffner, Cynthia
T. Haffner to Paul F. Haff·
ner , Beverly S. Haffn er ,
Parcels, Salem .
R. E. Quillen, Velma
Quillen to James Arnold
Anderson , Wilma Anderson,
Lot 8, Bums Add., Letart.
Roy E. Miller, Maurita L.
Miller to Jacob M. Gaul,
Mildred L. Gau l, .043 acre,
C1tester.

SQUAD CALLED
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad was called to near the
Royal Oak Park area Monday
morning for Noah Birchfield
who was reported injured
while working on a roof. He
wa s taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. ·
FRIENDSHIP NIGHT
Friendship night will be
observed when Mary Shrine
37, Order of the White Shrine
of Jerusalem, meets at 7:30 p.
m. Friday at the Pomeroy
Masonic Temple . Each
member Is to take two
covered dishes.
BAKE SALE
The freshman class of
Southern High School will
hold a bake sale at the Racine
Home National Bank from
8:30 a. m. to 12:30 p. m.
Saturday.

HONORED - Frankie Mumaw, a faithful and longtime member of the Syracuse First United Presbyterian
Chw-ch, was honored b~ members of the church SWlday
on her 89th birthday. Following services Miss Mumaw
was presented gifts and dinner was served in her hcnor in
the chw-ch annex .

ment house, one false alarm ,
and had $140,62Q in damages.
The department had 31 out
of town calls, damages in the
amount of $1:&gt;4,110, drove
each vehicle 639 miles, had
594 man hours, 10 men to a
call, five auto fires, four
mobile homes, two to Laurel
Cliff Church, eight residents,
one sawmill, two brush, one
business, three dwnpsters
and assisted other. departments five times.
Legar asked if the
department could put the
barbecue pit back on the
parking lot and co uncil
agreed.
Legar also told council they
should begin considering
purchasing a new chassis for
truck number two.
It was agreed to make
Mechanic Street a dead end
street and Bill Young ex·
tended thanks to the Jaycees
for cutting the grass at the
senior high building.
Lou Osborne, councilman,
suggested that the railing on
the upper parking lot be
repaired before Regatta .
Council agreed to have the
necessary repairs made.
Attending were Mayor
Andrews, Jane Walton, clerk,
co uncilmen Osborne, Young,
Jim Neutzling, Powell ,
Wehrung and Brown, Charles
Hudscn, Donnie Ward, Jack
Krautter, Chief Jed Webster,
Henry Werry , Tom Werry,
George Hicks, Larry Hudscn
and Aaron Kelton.

Whitm ore. The impact operated by Edward M.
knocked the car's motor out, Templeton, 57, Rl. 4,
strewing pans all over the Pomeroy.
highway.
A third deer was killed at 9
The accident is still under p.m. Mon~ay on SR 124, one
investigation.
and three tenths miles west of
Both drivers were cited Uncoln Pike. It ran into the
following an accident at 7 paill of a vehicle operated by
a.m. Monday on CR 31, one David G. Bryan, 21, Rl. 2,
and six tenths of a mile east Gallipolis. There was minor
of CH 28 in Meigs County.
damage.
The patrol said a vehicle
Afinal accident occurred at
driven by Ernest M. Fisher, 9:3() p.m. on US 35 where a
61, Rt. 3, Racine , pulled onto . board fell from a truck
the roadwa y striking a striking the front of a car
vehicle driven by Larry H. driven by Lcren F. Miller, 52,
Hoffman , 26, Long Bottom. Gallipolis.
Fisher was charged with
driv ing left of center while
Hoffman was cited for failure
FELLOWSHIP DAY
to yield.
Sunday will be fellowship
A second mishap occ urred
at 7 a.m. on US 35, one and day at the Dexter Church of
five tenths miles east of SR Christ with a dinner to be
160 where Robert E. France, served at noon in the church
5{), Rt. 3, Gallipolis, was basement. Sunday school will
forced to change lanes by an be at 9 a. m. with prea ching
unknown vehicle. The France at 10 a. m. by Charles
vehicle ran off the roadway Russell. Recreation and
games will be held in the
hitting a ditch .
At7 :20 a.m. on Thaxton Rd. afternoon on the church lawn.
one and five tenths miles The public is invited.
south of SR 5:&gt;4, John E.
Russell , 27, HI . 1, Bidwell,
lost control of his truck in
loose gravel. The vehicle ran · OES MEETS TONIGHT
Pomeroy Chapter 186,
off the roadway hitting a
fence owned by Mauri ce Order of Eastern Star, wUI
hold a regular meeting at 7:45
Andrew Toler.
The first of three deer p.m. this evening at the
accidents occ urred at 7:3() Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
a.m. on SR 160 at the Gallia •
Vinton County line.
TWO GET DEGREES
The animal ran into the
Jerald I. Casto of Leon
path of a car driven by
Coletta J . Wells, 22, Wilkes· received his Associate of
vi ll e. There was minor Science degree and Stanton S.
Kayser, Pt.
Pleasant ,
damage.
A deer was killed when received his Associate of
struck at 12 :05 p.m. on SR 7, Applied Science degree in
one and six tenths miles west commencement ceremonies
of SR 243 in Meigs County. It Saturday at Fairmont State
ran into the path of an auto College .

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.

liN ROLL NOW I
For more information contact Lee E. Tyler ,
446-4367.
No. 75-02-04728

ELBERFELD$ WAREHOUSE

LLOYD SPRING BASE CHAIRS
Featuring Fihercraft
Seats and Backs

steel frames.
Colors: Yellow,
Brown, White,
Green,_Bittersweet

LOW BACK

When you were :ro, they
didn 't think you knew what
you were Ul lking about ; aft er
4!1 , you begin to suspect they
were right.

ONLY

HIGH-BACK SPRING BASE CHAIR

ONLY

s4395

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

HENRY WELLS

Hub cr l
N aka mot o ,
valedi ctori an , and l{obin
Snowden. salutatorian , were
the featured speak ers at th e

E lecti•on s at :_ :
a glance

HOWARD FRANK

Important

day for
governor
COLUMBUS 1UPI 1
"There are some great
levelers tn thts llle,' ' said
Gov. James A. Rhodes,
reporting to a news co nference uo his feelings
about winning a fourth
llOminalion to run for
••veraor.
11
1 came do-.-·nstalrs at
six o'clock this morning
and my wife said to me,
'lhls Is the most Important
da y lor you this yrar'," he
said.
Rhodes oaid his thoughl'
Immediately turned to his
2-1 victory In Tuesday's
Republican primary over
challenger Charl es F.
Kurfess.
" It's not congrat ulations ," he quoted Helen
Rhodes as saying, " It's
Missy's birthday." Missy
Is the Rhodes' daugh ter.
daughter.
"Don't spend all day
looking at why you lost five
counties," Rhodes quoted
his wife as saying. "You
ought to be home by 6 p. m.
Be on time ."

lOth annual commencement
of Meigs Htgh Schoo l held
Tuesday evening in the Larry
R. Morri son Gymna sium
with 200 se nio rs receiving
di ploma s.
.. Many
things
have
bothered me in the 18 years I
have been alive . Most of
them 1 have forgotten. Yet
recently I realized something
that truly disturbed me . Our
civilization is los ing its hold
on reality It can no longer
tell the difference between
good and evil and no one
seems to know what is righ t
and what is wrong ,"
Nakamoto comm ented.
.
h
WAITING FOR THE MOMENT - Meigs High School
" 1t ts very true man as
seniors, including Valedictor ian Robert Nakamoto, are
always had his problems and
shown lining up waiting to enter the high school Tuesday
has always been rather
night for commencement exercises.
sin ful. That is not the
Th
bl . h'
problem. epro emtst ts:
tak e the first statement , who
is to say what is right and
h .
g The 1 uble IS governm ent they deser ve . saying they are too high. So
w a1 IS wron .
ro
we hav e lost sight on any . Our government is a the government goes right on
clear code of moral behavior. reflection of the people it stickin g its nose in ~veryone's
Obeucramu's"eals arethneot)' in danagerer serves. Some people in our business and 1ts hand in
governm ent are very goo d. everyone's pocket. We have
de~ene ratin g, rather we Yet some are wasteful. im- no one to blame but ouraren,t rea 11 y sure of what our moral. sh iftless, lazy and selves,"
morals are ," Nakamoto ineff icie nt. Ask yourse lf ,
" Despite our problems
stated .
would you want your child to there is no reason why this
" We no longer believe in grow up to be like the country cannot achiev e the
ha rd work it seems. Mill ions governm ent," Na kam oto impossibl e. We have nothing
are blissfully unemployed. continued .
to hold us ba ck but ourselves.
h
People seem to ave no
"Th is same government The gra duates of today must
loyalty to thei r employers . tries very hard to do what is work hard to achieve their
Those who are emp\oyed1lrt right. bu\ there rare \imi.le t" dream~&gt;. · Tho )o' mu~L be
on the job, steal from their what it can do and yet peopl e prepared
to
sacrifi ce
boss , and strike continuall y are asking the government to evcr)1hing they have to in·
for more and more pay for do more for them, they want surl' the safety of tomorrow's
less and less work . Wh atever the Kuvernment to become a graduate. We graduates of
happened to a da y's pa y for a semle rich grandfather wh o loday must overcome our
day's work. " Nakamoto shells out gift after gilt. problems or they will overb
d
o serv e .
These sa me pe ople also come us. We graduates of
"Peopl e get the kind of refuse to pay their taxes
IContinued on page 2)

}

Man fined on five charges

rJ

Brickles retires after 32
years with Ohio Power
Homer C. Brickles, a 32·
year veteran employee of
Ohio Power Company, has
retired .
Mr. Brickles, a meter
reader at Pomeroy for 29 of
those 32 years, plans to
"relax, fish and do whatever
l want" during retirement.
"I've walked enough,
though," he said .
All of his service with th e
company has bee n at
Pomeroy. Prior to joining
Ohio Power, he had worked
as a faml er , a waiter and a
truck driver.
He and his wife, Helen a,
live at 173 Mulberry St.,

Balance of all funds of
the village of Pomeroy at end
of May totaled $235,291.71 ,
according to a report by
Clerk Jane Walton, submitt ed
to Pomeroy Council Monday
night.
In the active fund , receipts,
expenditures and balances
respectively, were, general,
t6,934, $10,330.21, $11,853.15;
revenue aharing, no receipts,
,no expenditures, $29,228.67;
anti rtcesslon, no receipts,
M51.07, U,000.25; sewer,
$5,408,31, $3,175.67, $39,425.77 ;
fire department, oo receipts,
S61i0.19, $7,114.76; cemetery,
~. $1,881.74, ($1,846.22);
8treet, no receipts, $5,077.40,
($1,750.17) ; state highway, no
recelpta, no expenditures,
$5 ,369 ; guaranty meter
I

•

Meigs High
•
senzors get
diplomas

:::::::::::::::,::::::::::::::::::::-::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: :=' ::: .. .. . . ·.·.· &lt;: ,:::::::::,::::.:::.:: :.: .· . .-,·,·:_:.'.·
....
:;:
} .
;::;
..
In Republican races for two county posts in the June 6 ::::
primaries, the party nominated incumbents to run for their :;::
..
posts in ille fall.
:::
': :
Henry
Wells,
county central committee, woman, :&gt;:
commissi one r,
defeated Lorene G. Johnston, 651 ; )
•
•
•
.:::
Henry E. Cleland, Jr., 1,957 to Nelle M. Schmid, 196 ; Jan ::,:
,}
~· 1:1 and Howard E. Frank Seaman, 570; Kay Seyerle, ::;:
Bv United Press International
·: ::
e cated Roland Eastman 314.
::::
'1\iesday's elections at a glance:
·:·:
2,261 to 658. In the fall , Wells
For state senator : Oakley :-:·
:.· _':.·,._
will
be
opposed
by
::::
Cali fornia - Proposition 13, which wou ld dra stically ::·:
2
269
· 1- ne C. Collins, · ·
\: cut property taxes in the state, wins aproval by a 2-1 .- ·
Dem oCra tl·c commiSs
o r
For state representative :
::::
nominee Giles Smith who Harold Schritter, 1,578.
;:;: ratio; Gov . .Jerrv Brown wins easily; Attorney :}
· d 783 votes Tues day
·four-way GOP ..·.: . :
recetve
For 1·udge of the court of ::::.. General
.
tEvelle J . BYounger
. N wins be
'
L
F
:
_
.
:
_
,
prunary
o
oppose
rown
m
ovem
r.
'll
d
b
W
an Y 1 tam . oster, an
1
b t
-:::
d ·d t
comm on P cas, pr o a e .,.
New Jersey - Four-term Republican Sen. Clifford : ::
· d
d 1
tn epen en can' a e. division : Robert E. Buck . .;:; Caseisupsetby conservativeJeflreyBell; basketba ll \
Frank will be unopposed in 2,384.
;::: star Bill Bradley wins Democratic Senate race.
)
his bid for reelect ion as
The tot al Rep ublican vote .-.·
. . .
Cl'ff
::::
county auditor
::::
Misstsstppt - Gov . · , Finch and lawyer Mauri ce .·
was 3,268 .
D t' .
ff
ts . th D
t'
.
d )
Here's how Republicans
Here's how Democrats cast ::::
an tn wm run o spo m e emocra tc prunary an
:;::
voted for state and district their ballots Tuesday :
} Rep . Thad Cochran wins Republican primary in battle ::_::
d'd
T d
· · to replace retiring Sen. James Eastland ..
ca;o~ atcsgo~~~::.: and For governor and .'/. : Ohio - Republican Gov. James Rhodes and j
lieutenant governor : CelesteDe
· L G
R h d c1
·1
·.lieutenant governor : Kur- Dorrian, 766; Reasch, 166.
:: :
mocraltc t. ov. IC ar
e este eaSI y win \
f ess •For d • 706 ; Rh odes For stale auditor : Thomas ;::: governorship primaries; former Rep . Wayne Hays , :'..:.:.
Voinovi ch, 2, 109.
E F
647
:::: seeking to make a comeback after Uz Ray sex ....
·Forerguson,
·
·.·.
F or a tt orney genera I :
secretary .of state : -:-: scandal. wins Democratic primary for the Ohio ::::
'::.
George C. Smith, 1,411 : Anthony J . Celebrezzc, Jr., ::: Legislature.
Walter E. Beckjord, 438.
791.
::: H Mtf~nltad nan De Rep . Mttax rBat
' ucus ul nseryatsWSet
'lln . Pa ul :-:
For auditor of State :
F
1 :-·
a te 1
mocra c P mary . ~ar
tams, a ··.
or attorney ge nera : ::: political newcomer, wi ns GOP nomination to oppose -:-:
Dona ld E · Luk ens, I•743 ·
William J . Brown, 815 .
:,: Baucus.
::
F
tate treasurer · -:-:
._.
For secretary of state: Ted
w. Brown, 2,063.
Ger~;ud.'Donahey, 852 _ · :;: New Mexico - Republican Sen . Pete Damemci (
For treasurer of state:
F or supreme court : :::: unopposed and so is his fall opponent , Attorney )
::·: General Toney Anaya. For mer Gov . Bruce King wins .--:
Ric hard H. Harris. 773; William B. Brown, 735.
C:eorge C. Rogers, 612 : Sam
For suprem e court, op- ·::: Democratic ·nomination and former state Sen . Joe ::::
Speck, 514 .
posing
Paul '
Brown, -:· Sl&lt;een wins Republican primary for governor.
For Justi ce of the supreme Republican nominee : Clif· ( Dclowa -:- SeRepubhk'caCnl kG ov. Robedrt Ra y ~nd ?
coun, full term, beginning f
6 If dE ::::
mocrall c n. Dtc ar unoppose ; conserva tive
ord F . Brown, 37 ; A re ' · ::: former Lt. Gov . Roger Jepsen wins Republtcan ..
J an . 1· 1979 : Do n P· Brown . Dahlin
g, 194 ; Jack G. Day, ....
:-:·
462 ; Ronald R. Ca lhoun, 54!; 204
:::: nomination to oppose Clark and House Majority ::::
·
·::: Leader Jerome Fitzgerald wins Democratic primary ·&gt;_
Joyce J . George, 252; Robert
representative : ;_:,_: to oppose Hay.
;:::
E . ,r 101es, 448 ; R.IC ha rd M. RoForJ state 886
·:-:
Markus, 214 .
n ames,
·
:.:.
South Dakota - Rep. Larry Pressler wins ··
county commissioner : -:· Rcpubl'tcan Se na te pr lma ry an d wt·u oppose for mer ::··
::::
For justice supreme court G.1For
1 S . h 183
full term beginning Jan. 2,
es mtt '
· ·
:;: Rapid City Mayor Don Barnell , winner of the Dem()For district congressman: :;: cratic primary, to replace retiring Sen. James
979
P
W
776
B
1
I
1 : au
. rown, • · James Plununer, 695.
Timoth y
Davidson , Clarence Andr ews Tue sday
For J'udge of th e court of
::: Abourezk . Atlorny General William Janklow wins ::::
For stat e central com· :;: Rcpu bl tcan
'
·
for governor an d wt'II be opposed ;::: Pomeroy, was fined on fi ve ni ght.
" ppeals·. Homer E. Abel e,
pnmary
"
mit tee, man : William ·.- b De
R
M K Jb'
1
· ·
Da vidson was fined $500
1,986.
Lavelle, 713 _
;::
~no;;;;a~ Koger c e tps to rep ace restgmng ·· · charges when he appeared in
and
costs on a charge of
the court of Pomeroy MH yor
For representative to
For stat e central com- :::
ov. tc r netp .
neeing
a police officer ; $200
Co ngress : Cla rence E. mitte e, woman : Mary
and costs on a petty Uteft
Ga llagher, 369; Mary Hanley ,
Miller, 2,634.
charge : $100 and costs for
For member of stale 156; Elaine Rouse, 316.
lc a vi n ~ the scene of an
central committee, man: Bill
For state senate : Jack
accident
; $50 and cos ts.
Keslar, 557 ; Herbert J . Hillyer, 624.
iss uin g menac ing threats,
There was a vote of 1,273
Walker, 1,244 .
and $50 and costs, disorderly
For member of stat e Democrats, G6 non-partisan
conduct.
votes and 3,268 Republi can
Others fined in Ma yor
votes cast Tuesday for a total
Andrews cou rt Tuesday night
vote of 4,609, about half of the
Mik e
Smith,
were
re~istered voters in Meigs
Middleport. $100 and costs.
County .
Both Democrats and
Republicans elected central
committee members at
Tuesday's election. The
Republicans had no races for
those posts and the
Democrats had only one race
and that was in Pomeroy
REPUBLICAN PR IMAR Y
Third where Vtrginia V.
w.tn 13,211 ol 13,2 11 polling
Blazewlcz defeated her opplac es r e porf•ng , or lllO pe r .
cent
ponent Dwight E. Carl, 27-13
GOVERNOR · LIEUTENANT
for the central committee
GOVERNOR
Kvr tess Ford 187,892 or 32
position.
per cent
Republicans elected to
Rho des voiMvich - 391 ,801
or 68 percent
central committee posts
ATTORNEY GENERAL
include :
Bec kjor d
166,813 or 35
DeMOLAY INSTALLATION - The 18th semi-annua l inspection of the Meigs Chapter .
Eut Bedford, Helen M.
Order of DeMolay , will be held at 7:30p . m. Friday at the Middleport Mason ic Temple. To
pe$~~/h
311 ,370 o r 65
Quivey; West Bedford ,
be insta lled from the left will be Jeff Daniels, son of Mr. and Mrs . Robert Dant els,
perccnl
Brenda S. Roush; North
Middleport, senior t1&gt;uncilor; George Knighting, son of Mr. and Mrs . Charles Knighting,
T~~~r~~ R E R 159, 399 or 35
Chester, Robert Wood; South
Bidwell , master councilor , and Mark Riggs, son of Mr. und Mrs . Dav id Riggs, Pomeroy .
percen t
HOMER C. BRICKLES
Chester, David Koblentz;
Rog er s 164 ,631 o r 36
junior councilor . Knigh ting received the degree of DeMolay in May, 1976, and has held
per cent
West Chester, Francis E.
several offices in the chapter.
spec&lt;
135 938 a ' 19
Shaeffer; Columbia, Granper cent
OHIO SUPREME COURT
ville Lyons ; Lebanon ,
Don p Bro wn
89.432 or 19
$1,500, $175, $5,544.05 ; water Clarence Lawrence; East
ocmnl
o perating , $11 ,433 .60 , Letart, Lester Roush ; Letart,
Catl1oun
&lt;'~ 7 , 118 or 10
per cent
$7.994 .119, $18,02Q.58; parking Harry Hill ; Olive, Paul F.
George
78,139 or
16
meter. $1 ,166, no ex· Andrews : Reedsville, Alvin
pe~~:~es
IJ1 .JOS 0 , 1a
penditures, $14,677.44 ; utility, Reed ; Orange, William H.
percen 1
no receipts, $1 ,513 .29 , Chapman; Rutland Village,
Markus
130,935 or 11
Elizabeth Hobstetter; East
percent
$16,962.85.
OEMOCRATIC PRIMARY
Receipts, expenditures and Rutland, Pearl E. Little;
With 11,11 1 ot tl , lt polling
places reporting , or 100 per balance in all funds West Rutland, James R.
cent :
(Continued on Jllle 2)
respe&lt;iively are, $25 ,777.91 ,
GOVERNOR · LIEUTENANT
By ARNOLD SAWISLAK down by Jeffrey Bell, a 13, an amendment to the GOVERNOR
$31 ,361.66, $235,294.71.
Celeste Dorrian
490, 503 or
United Press lntcrnaliunal
former campaign strategist California Constitution, held 84 percen t
Californians, rebellin g for Honald Reagan, less than a 2-1 majority from the start
Reusc h Str ittmatter - 91 , 146
16 oercent.
EXTENDED FORECAST
of vote counting , in an orOHIO
against the high cost of half his age .
SUPREME COURT
Showers Friday and
Showers
and
thun· government , gav e landslide
Bill Bradley, a former New election that dr ew one of the
Cli uor c Brown ~ 710.645 or
Sunday, with fair weather
der . .omts through Thursday approval Tuesday to tax- York Knicks' basketball star, state's biggest tur nouts.
45 Oahl
pmenl
.
lng
101,757 or 22
Saturday. Highs will be In
with tain possibly heavy at slashing Proposition 13. New won the Democratic primary ,
The measure would restrict per cent .
the low or mid 70s Friday, times this afternoon and Jersey Republicans took a setting up a liberal-amscrva- property taxes to I percent of
Da y - 153 ,827 o r 33 percenl.
warming Into tile low or
tonighl. Highs today will be in sharp turn to the right and ti '"' l'tnfrontallon that wlll be 1975 valuations and freeze
STATE ISSUE 1
mid 80s by Sunday .
the lower 80s, with lows toppled liberal Sen. Clifford one of the big attractions of future increases to 2 percent
( Re11 ises pr ocedures for pta c
Overnight lows will be In
lonightln the mid 60s. Cocler ca~ .
ng init1i'11i11CS ano r eferenda on
th e November genera I a year. It would cut the 1balloll
.
the lower or middle 50s.
Thursday , with highs in the
property tax revenues of
Case, a pillar llf tl1e eastern elections.
Yes - 750.333 or 67 percen t
No
373 ,996 o r 3l pcrcen1 .
low or mid 70s.
(Coltllnued on J)lle 2)
GOP establislu ncn\ was cut
Yes vutcl$ for Proposi lhm
I

Here's
state races

Pomeroy funds total $235,294

MIDDLEPORT, 0.
MEMBER F.D.I.C.

BY BOB HOEFLICH
A 10 mill, one year emergency operating levy in the
Eastern Local School District, was passed by a small margin
whtlea stmtlar levy in the Meigs Local School District, 10 mills
for three yea rs, failed almost tw()-to-one in Meigs County
·
pnmary electiOns Tuesday.
. Voters of the Eastern Local District passed the levy 643-565
while m th e Metgs Local District voters emphatically turned
down the levy 1,655 to 828.
In pre-&lt;!lection material, it had been reported that both
districts would not have enough funds on which to operate for
ille next
Eastern
closed
year
lor year.
financial
reasons
. for approximately one week last

for sitting comfort
and strong spring

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 2!1, No. :1 7

Meigs Local measure
fails by 2-1 margin;
Wells, Frank victorious

Driver escapes death
.in spectacular crash
PhilipS. Unroe, 22, Eureka
Star Rt., Gallipolis, was
taken to the Holzer Medical
Center lor treatment of in·
juries suffered In a spec·
tacular crash at 5:25 p.m.
Monday on SR 7, one and nine
tenths miles nortli of Eureka.
According to the Gallia Meigs Post State Highway
Patrol, Unroc traveling at a
high rate of speed, attempted
to pass another car. He was
for ced to cut back, ca using
him to lose control of his
vehicle.
The Unroe car ran off the
right side of the roadway,
back across the left si de then
turned over several times.
The Unroe car struck a
mailbox owned by Ralph

e

en tine
Eastern voters approve school levy
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, June 7, lfl7M

'

Proposition 13
landslide winner

Weather

~

intoxica tion , and Jack
Stivers, Pomeroy, $350 and
costs and three days in jail,
driving while intoxicated .
Forfeiting bonds were Tony
Manley, Middl eport , $50,
posted on a li ttering cha rge;
Ida Corsi , Pomeroy , $.10,
ass ured clear dista nce;
Dav id Goodwin , Pomeroy,
$28. speeding ; David Hoss,
Middlep ort, $30 , assured
clear dista nce; Heidi Ash ley,
Racine , $30. assured clear
distance; Kevin Yonke rs,
Mason, $350, driving while
intoxicated ; Selim Yates .
Ra cine, $350. driving while
intoxicated.

38 arrested
in Pomeroy
during May
The Pomeroy Poli(•e
Department made 36 arrests
d
, lh
th f Mav
unn g. e mon O
J
a&lt;.'cordmg to a report submitted to Pomeroy CounCil
Munday night by Police Chief
Jed Webster .
The
departm ent
invcsttgatcd 18 ac-c id ent s:
ISsued 1,046 parking tickets:
collected $2,898 from the
parking meters and drov e
4,556 milcR.
Type of arrests made and
J
nu mbe rs of each respective y
were . ill ega l left turn onto
West Ma111 , 1; drstruetion of
pr operl y, 1, ass ault . l:
fa ilure to paytickets, 1; OWl ,
3; disord erly conduct , 1;
passing on double yellow lin e,
hf 8
d
5
1: petty t C t, : SpCe tng, ;
interfer ing with police of·
fleer, 1; cont empt of court , 1;
open fla sk, 2; failure to yield,
2; intoxication ,· 2; left of
center, 1; leaving sr.ene of
accident, 2; assured clear
distance, 2; running slop
sign, 1; menacing threats, 2.
Officers and numbers of
arrest s made, respectively ,
were , George Hicks, 4; Chief
Webster, 4; Harry Lyons, 3;
Don Stivers, 2; Roger Durst ,
l ·, Tom Werry, 5., Henry
Werry, 3; Larry Hudson. 2;
l J. B• Vau ~l'\
l!h
2
an, .
\

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