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                  <text>Ohio Supreme Court holds up final
legislation on school funding bill

D-12- Tbe Sunday Times-8entinel, Sunday, June 10,1979

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A long.
awaited Ohio Supreme Couri decision
apparently is holding up final
leglsla.tive policy on an important new
school funding bill.
The Senate !&gt;as. passed its version,
but the House Finance Committee
. wants a 'sense of direction from the
couri before acting on the bill.
The court has before it a case
challenging the way Ohio 's schools
currently are funded. The Senate
basically adhered to that same
method in drafting its proposal.
House Finance Chairman Myrl H.
Shoemaker, 0-Bourneville, said last

week of the upcoming decision: "I
would hope we will get it any time
now. We've got to start doing some
things."

He has been meeting regularly on
·school matters with House Speaker
Vernal G. Riffe Jr., D-New Boston ,
and his committee has been hearing
testimony for more .than a month.
Yet, alter , a Rille-Shoemaker
meeting last Thursday, an aide of
Riffe 's said some major decisions
"are still in the formlllative stage."
More committee hearings are on
tap Tuesday as the House rehims
from · weekend recess. The .Senate

Finance Committee, meanwhile,
resumes hearings tonight on the
House-passed state budget bilL It
conU!ins a record $3.5 billion to fund
the schools over the next two years.
The Supreme Court heard oral
arguments more than than two
months ago in the case initiated by the
Cincinnati Board of Education. It
claims generally that the current
state aid formula discriminates by
helping some of Ohio's 2.2 million
public school pupils more than others.
The Senate-passed biU, allocating
$784 million more for schools than the

last fund ing bill, is beset by some
problems not related to the court decision. The biggest of these is a
controversial provision which would
allow money-pinched·schools to levy a
local income tax of up to I percent without a vote of the people - to avoid
closings.
Although backed by COP Gov.
James A. Rhodes, Riffe, and Senate'
President Oliver Ocasek, D-Akron,
there seems to be a growing number
of mavericks in both parties as lawmakers feel the heat from voters ba ck
in their home districts.
Rhodes advocates the tax as an

•

Cornell and Becky Evans. Back tow, 1 to r, Kathy
Shain, Donette Talbott, Kim Wilford, Annette Fitch,
Kevin Teaford, Shane Kincaid, Charlie Boso, Krista
Sellers, Joyce Foreman, Karla Smith.

SCHOLARSHIP WINNERS -Winners ~ schc•jarshlp or citizenship awards at the Portland Elementary
School this year are front row, I to r, Sheri Roush,
Tanya Meadows, Dawn Johnson, Dolly Hlll, Laurie

..
GALUPOLIS - A prellmlnary
hearing date of June 12 was set for
Ricky Saunders, no address listed, on
a cllar!!e ~ theft in Galllpolis
Municipal Couri Friday. Bond was set
at$4,000.
Sbt other cases were tenninated in
Judge James A. Bennett's court
Friday.
A Gallipolis ·woman waa sentenced
to seven days in the Gallia County Jail
after she refused to pay a $50 fine on a
charge~ fleeing a police officer.
Barbara J. Stroud, 39, W8ll found
. guilty to the charge and fined $50 and
COIIta. When she refused to pay, or
make 8JTII118ements to pay, she was
given the seven day sentence.
Steve D. Caudill, 18, Gallpolls,
waived $40 m a charge~ littering.
Charged with petty theft, the case
against Randall Short, Crown City,
was dismissed at the request of the
arresting officer.
Claude Evans, 68, Gallipolis,
waived ~ m a charge of failure to
display a valid registration.

•

WINS CITIZENSHIP AWARD - Shane Kincaid, a student at Portland Elementary School, received the special citizenship award given
every year to a sixth grader. Shane also received a perfect attendailce
award.

N0 communica
• 1IOn
•

GAWPOLIS -One person was in- In
jured .. and three drivers cited
jury and was transported bY CrooksVille, 0., pulled fnm SR 195
following ·a four-vehicle accident in- SEOEMS to Holzer . Medical Center onto 124 into the path of an east bpUnd
da
for treatment.
vehicle driven by Rodney Jones 24
tlg ted
ves a
Fri Y by the GalllaCrowell was cited on a charge of . Rutland.
'· '
Meigs Post, Highway Patrol.
"'"'•lng without an assured clear
F 11 •
Called t 0 th
t 1
..o owmg impact, the Bowen aiito
e scene a
p.m. • of- distance. Holliday and Hartness were slid across the roadway and struck:.
. fleers report that a west bound auto cited on cliarges of fBI' lure to rnam
· tam
·
ehl I dri
•
operated. by Jaru'ce Coff-ey, ""
Ra y, an•••ured clear ~•-tance.
v c e ven by Robert Bumgamn
""•
60 Mlddl
,
.,
0 ·• had slowed on U·s· 35• five-tenths · There
w..
was heavy
damage to the CR• 5. eport, which was stopped•at
· :..
of a mile west of SR 588, for an on"
coming vehicle driven by Caroline Holliday auto, moderate damage to
A J)IIBSenger in the Bowen auto
Crowell, 27, Kannapolis, N. C., which the Coffey vehicle, slight damage to Elizabeth Archer, Pomeroy c1ainli!d
was passing.
the Hartness auto.
· injury and was tr8.115ported by !Ire
A west bound auto oper~ted by
One person was injured during a Middleport Emergency Squad oio
Charles Holliday, 27, Springfield, O., three-vehicle accident investigated in Veterans Memorial Hospital tDr
struck the Coffey vehicle in the rear. Meigs County on CR 5, at SR 124, at treatment.
· ~
4:50pm.
A
t '-• d t
There was m.oderate damage to ii::.
wes uvun au o operated bY Aaron
Officers report that a south bound · Bo
._
Hartness, 47, Winston-saiem, N. c.
w.en and Jones autos, slight
struck the Holliday vehicle in the auto operated by Alva Bowen, 69, damage to the Bumgarner vehicle.

rear.
}Jolliday displayed visi,ble signs of

.

Dep.uties investig'ate

Gawpolls.
Barbara J. Hill, 29, Giilllpolls,
waived PI on a charge~ failure to
By PAUL CARPENTER
the other day, and I thought it would
use cautiOI'I while ba~.,R~.
Assoclaled Press Writer
be just our luck to have that thing fall tWO
~...
Charged with fraud, the CI\Be again-. HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) _ · on Three Mile Island," said Reid,
st Mike Crites, Gallipolis, was con- Middletown Mayor Robert Reid can laughing.
POMEROY- Meigs County Sheriff
tinued Friday.
ll)ix witand seriousness when he talks
"What are you going to do -put up Department deputies investigated
about his town's e...,..riences with the a big net?" the mayor said.
two accidents over the weekend, ac- .. rding
co
to James J. Proffitt, Sheriff.
nuclear accident at Three Mile Island,
just three miles away.
.
BEDFORD'mUSTEESTOMEET
The first accident occurred at 3:46
Testifying Friday before a state POMEROY - The Baord of p.m. Friday on SR 124 4n front of the
legislative committee investigating Trustees~ the Bedford Youth Center ~them High School. Charles Yost,
the incident, Reid started on a sober will meet at 1:30 p.m. Saturday at the 25, Rt. 1, Racine, was struck by an
note when he was asked if there was a center. Up for discussion will be the eastbound auto driven by Larry
lack of communication between plant dissolution of the organization and the Wolfe, Racine.
~erators and local officials.
expenditure of proceeds from the sale
According to statements·, Yost had
"You could say a lack of of the center to the Christian Assem- walked from behind his father's
Veterau Memorial HOII)lttal
communications . I'd say. no bly. The meeting 1.8 open to the public.
parked truck into the path of Wolfe.
Admitted- None.
Yost was struck by the ~eft front fenDischarged- Dorothy Wright, Ran· communications whatsoever . The
LETI'ERBOMBS
der and knocked to the ·ground. The
dy Smith, Otto Lohn, Gordon Johnson, only inftrmation I got was from
Elizabeth McMaster, Helena White, television and radio," he · said, . BIRMINGHAM, England (AP)- windahield ofWolfe'scar was broken.
· Alina Barrett, Lorena Laudermllt, referring to the early days of the Four letter-bomb explosions slightly _ Yost claimed no injuries and no
crisis.
injured six people and destroyed charges were filed.
Helena White.
Reid said he called Met Ed on thousands of letters Friday night in
At about 2 a.m. Saturday Earl L.
Bll'lll.
inaham
Br1'tam'
's
second
larg~t Writesel, 18, Colwnbus, - · drlvm' g
PLEASANT VAU.E.Y HOSPITAL March 28 and was told there-was no city. e
'
. •o eastbound in Syracuse "
in -his 1974
. DISCJJARGES- Phyllia English, radiation being released. Twenty
Postal officials said three in- Plymouth Valtant when a vehicle ap·
Pomeroy; Mrs. Griffin Boggess, seconds after hanging up he heard a cendiary devices exploded within half . parently attempted to pass him and
Point Pleasant; Mrs. Keith Woods, radio news report ahout radiation, an hour at the huge Post Office main sideswiped his car. Writesellost conMiddleport; Garnet Donohue, Point called Met Eld back and the same sorting office in Royal Mail Street, trol of his vehicle; went left of center
Pleasant; Brett Green, Henderson; company official then confirmed the wounding one man slightly. The and off the road and struck a street
Mrs. Michael Shaw, Point Pleasant; report.
fourth Ixmb exploded at a district sign. The car then went back across
Sharleen Dixon, Galllpolls; Matthew
"That led me to believe that they sorting office in Hockley, where five the road and into a yard on the right
Duff, Point Pleasant; Lucille Sch- were hiding something at that time. people were wounded and a fire broke side, and jumped to the left again
makes he
peop,le
before coming to rest on the left side
. P o1nt PI easant; J erry That
wart z,
imaginations,"
said. use their out ·
Meadows, Fraziers Bottom; Wanda
,
All six persons 'were taken to a of the road.
Halley, Point Pleasant; Ralph
.But then Rep. C.L. Schmitt D- hospital and released after treatment
There were no injuries and damage
Young, Addison; Christinia Lee, Westmoreland, drew some chu~kles for cots. and b~s .
.
to Writesel's vehicle was slight.
Clifton; Nellie Hanson, Middleport'; when he asked Reid about the chances · Secor1ty authorities declmed to lay
Elizabeth White, Point Pleasant; of the Skylab spaceship · falling "on blame a~ no group had claimed
VINEYARDREUMON
Roberi Van Meter, West Colwnbia; pe~le, 0010 airliner accidents and respon.sibllity several ho~s after the
POMEROY- The annual Vineyard'
Melissa Wlllliamson, Henderson; other dangers.
explos10ns, but some off1c1al sources family reunion has been set for SunLaura Hartley, Point Pleasant;
"How about a Ja!llinese Kamikaze accused the Irish Republican Army's day, June 17, at Royal 01111 Parkin the
Ronald Buck, Leon; Fred Smjth, diving down Into one of those Provisional wing.
archery building. All relatives and
Point Pleasant; Edna MI!Yes, · towers?" Schmitt asked! apparen~y r--":""--:'~~~:""!~~~fri~ends~~are~ln~vi;,;ted~~·~----.,
l1allijlolis Ferry and James Baird, :~~~~:rs.Three Mile Islands
\
Southside.
"I was' thinking about Skylab just

8CCI'dents

Hospital
Notes

MAKE HAY WHEN THE

! • • • • • • • • • • • re • .• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ••

:

~J

~

Today

:e

SUN DOESN'T SHINE

A

CEstate :

:e
•

:

•

By
•
.
Willis T. LeadinGham
•

~~

:

BUYERS ARE NOT NAIVE

•

•
•

"toAHR

.

...

CHAIR SALE

lift Dad
With a
Cbair
'

HAY TOOLS .

•

SAVE
20% OFF
.REGULAR
PRICES!

•

e

·e
e

•e

e
•

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1 there Is anything we can do to help you In the fleld of real eS!al e
please phone or drop In at LEAOI/IIGHAM IlEAL EStATIJ:,.SU SO&lt;!ond
Ave .. Gallipolis. PhoneL446-7699. We're here to help.
,

•
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e
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NORTH OLMSTED, Ohio (AP)
. - Patient pollee ended a :~»-hour
standoff late Sunday as they
lll'l'eSied a sniper in a high-rise
apartment bulldlng.without firing
a shot.
No one was injured by the
sporadic sniping from the 14thstory balcony where pollee said
ThoiiiiiB G. I.Jewellyn Jr., 31,
fired at least 11 ahots from a .357Cllliber Magnum pistol.
Llewlillyn finally S\UTendered
peacefully to heavily armed
pollee who broke into his
glrUriend 's apartment at about 6
p.m.
Police said he was charged
with attempted aggravated mur- ·
der for ahooting at pollee officers.

CLEVELAND (AP) -Five per-

sona in a bleacher crowd wat·
chlng a softball game were in·
jured when high winda toppled a
tree in Bedford Sunday.
Storms !weeping across the
Cleveland area alao knocked out
power to thousands of persons. A
lightning bolt knocked a
television station Qff the air for .a·
minutes.
Wltnesaes at the softball game
in the Bedford Reservation of the
Cleveland Metroparka said the
50-foot tree came cr8ahing down
is the first strong gust of wind hit
the area. The tree reportedly had
been weakened when hit bY lightning 'two weells ago.
·

Decision .today

:

Your home represents an Important financial asset. When the lime •
comes to sell, PUt yourself ln the buyer's shoes. He's In the same flnan · •
clal boat and will want the most house he can get for the money . e
• Frankly, the stakes are too high to play the do·lt·yourself game In this e
-f m?.netary arena . The best advice Is - let an expert sell it.
f\
But why a. Realt.or, when I can sell it myself and save the commls· •.
.
1e ' Sion?" you may ask. "Right?" ... WRONG I
The average buyer Is far from naive. Before you even start serious •
• negotiations, he'll expect you to deduct the Broker's commission for •
HIS benefit. Then YOU're on your own In the crlllc.al aras of financing, e
•mortgages, contracts and deeds, etc. Your home· will be exposed to e
• any and all unaccompanied strangers who knock.
• · A Realtor will save you these headaches and dangers. He' ll protect •
your Interest and sell your house at the best price. Statistics have pro· .•
• ve~ this time and again .
.

'4

Rio Grande College president Paul
C. Hayes said Monday he welcomed
the decision of the Holzer Hospital
Board of Trustees to transfer the
school of nursing to Rio Grande's
Community College.
Dr. Hayes' remarks came as he
reacted to the decision, made May 24,
when the Holier Board voted to transfer the school to Rio. The first cll!ss
at Rio Grande COllege and Community College is not slated to begin
until fall~ Ullll at the earliest; meanwhile, those who will have starled at
the elllsting School of Nursing iviii
complete that progriun.
Hayes said the decision' was made
following several months of intensive
study by the ad hoc committee, appointed by the Holzer Board, and after several years of in!Qrrnal
discussion between Rio Grande
College. and Community College and
the Holzer Medical Center.
Hayes said the study included a
report from Frank IJ, Sutton, M.D., a
· hospital consultant retained by the
conunlttee, which indicated that
"Holzer Medical Center would be best
served If the Holzer School of Nursing
was transferred to Rio Grande
~ll~e l!'ldCooununity College."

'

HANDSOME RECLINERS,
ROCKERS, WAU-AWAYS,
ROCKER-RECLINERS AND
OCCASIONAL CHAIRS BY
· KROEHLER AND BERKLINE.

D....-rz

•

Western Auto recalls jacks ·
KANSAS CITY M0 (AP)
3
·
'
- About "C" ring, located where the support
'
,000 smgJe..arm auto floor jacks have arm meets the leveling saddle were
been recalled by Western Au~ Supply lost. If the ring is not prope~ly in
Co because of a possible safet h
ard
,
Y az. place, there is a possibility the levelAll. !',&lt;,-ton hydraulic
floor · cks ing saddle could abruptly. shift
.
Ja
position the company said
'
eqwpped with_ a single guiding a~ Anyo~e who wishes · further
for the levelmg saddle are _be1~g information can caU the nearest
recalled •.and the company says 1t w11l Western Auto store the company
replace the single-arm jack with a said
•
· double-arm jack.
·
The recall was ordered this week
but the company said the Jacks wer~
taken off the shelves in mid-May after
a store reported one had failed. No .
TRUCK STOLEN
injuries have been reported from .GAWPOLIS - The theft of a
failure of the jack.
pickup truck from the parking Jot ai
WestemAutosaysithadabout3,000 Skyline Lanes, Upper River Rd., was .
jacks on the market in its 4,000 retail investigated Friday night by the
and dealer stores nationwide in Gallia County Sheriff's Departnlent .
· February 1978. However, not all of
The vehicle, owned by D and F ~­
those jacks had been sold.
tractors, Bidwell, was reportedly
The .single-arm )·ack is said to be removed from the lot late Frida}'
potenllaUy hazardous if a retaining evening.

,....,_._· :. FREE
. DEJ..IVERY

Fulton-Thompson Tractor Sales
SPitiNG ·AVE.

992-5101

' • • • .• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• . .. ........__"""'__'!"'____________.;;.;;.;;. ;,

ELBERFELDS
IN POMEROY
.
.

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

expansions in vocational education,
special education for disadvantaged
pupils, t'ransportation ·and . other
impro vements voted by the Senate
would have to be scrapped.
Riffe sa id he favors Rhodes'
proposal in concept because massive
· inj ections of new state aid ihe last.
several years has been absorbed by
sc hool districts which still pay
teachers as low as $9,000 a year.
The leaders hope to get all this
resolved before June 30 when they are
scheduled to leave with Rhodes on a
17-day trade mission to China.

•

enttne
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS·

MONDAY, JUNE 11, 19791

Rio president 'welcomes decision'

.Gallia-Meigs Highway Patrol..
•
•
mvest~gates four-car accident

te~J15~:W~e~;::ce~: d~g nuclear disaster

~

VOL XXVHI NO. 40

.

One injured, three cited

Court news .

at y

RECEIVE RECOGNITION- Students of the Por- Hill and TornStobart. Back row, I tor, Johnny Cornell,
tland Elementary School who received.either perfect
Ryan Evans, Michael Conley, David Arnburgy, Charlie ·
attendance or field day trophies were, front row, I to r, · Boso, Kim Wilford, Sonya Chaney, Eugene Chaney, •
Michael Holter, Ray Laudermllt, Monica Chaney, Shane Kincaid, Pam Arnburgy and Tbereaa Barber.
Brenda Chaney, Michael Boso, Becky Evans, Dolly

alternative to unpopular school.
property levies. Last week , in votes on
a series of proposed levies around the
state. only 38 percent were approved ,
the govert)or noted .
Mother problem is that Riffe and
Ocasek apparently are at odds over
$80().a.year teacher pay raises each of
the next two years that Rhodes wants
the House to insert in the school bill. If
accepted, the increases, along with
$400 a year for nonteaching school
employees, would take the lion 's
share1 or about $500 million , of the
new money. .
This would mean proposed

OOLUMBIA (AP) :. 'I'hl! state
Supreme Couri WBII to decide
.today whether television
evangelist Leroy Jellkinl would
be freed on bond pending appeal
of his conviction on co118piracy
charges.
Jenkins was sentenced to 12
years in prison last month after a
jury found him guilty of conspirll)g to bum · the homes of a.
state highway ' patrolman and
another man and to assault the
patrobnan and . a newSpaper
reporter.

" We accept the challenge to serve
the community in cooperation with
such a fine institution as the Holzer
Medical Center and we pledge ourselves to continue the qwallty of nursing education offered for so many
years by the Holzer School of .Nursing,:· Hayes said.
,,I '
"Rio Grande College and Com- .
munity COllege will join a fBIIt
growing number r1. Community
Colleges throughout the state to offer
associate degree nursing programs," .
Hayes said. He a1ao indicated that Rio
Grande ill planning to ~fer a fouryear baccalaureate degree program
in addition to the associate degree
curriculwn.
·
Hayes listed several advantllges to
the transfer, including a reduction in

tuition for nursing students from approxip~Btely $5,200 to $1,100 for a full .
program based on current tuition
rates. Hayes said the lower cost for an
associate degree program was made
possible beca,\JH, ~ ~ relationship
with Rio Grande Coilimunity College
which recelvea taxsupport.
"The Community College was formed to offer just such opportunities,"
Hayes noted, "and to give the people
of our four area counties educatiOn&amp;!
opportunities at an affordable cost."
Hayes said the lower cost would
enable recruitment of more students
into nursing education than ill now
possible. He ~timated that when Rio
Grande begins . the first year of
operation of the nursing school, the
freshman class could have as many
as 65-70 students.
"This will mean an increase in
graduate nurses available not only to
Holzer Medical Center but to aU the
hospitals in this area," Hayes said.
''The transfer of the school will also
•
offer students the complete use of Rio
Grande's facilities including a full
library and a full-time counseling
center," Hayes added.
"We want to assure every'one that
this decision was not made,llghUy nor
quickly, and that it Ia our liltehtlbn to
The Meigs County Sheriff's Depart- offer the highest quality nursing
ment investigated two ·accidents over education possible under the direction
the weekend.
of the most competent staff posalble,"
The flnit occident took place at 3 Haye8said.
p.m. Saturday on Scipio Township
Road 177.
Jane ·Opel Johnson,,
Pomeroy, was traveling east on the
road and her vehicle collided head on
with a westbound vehicle driven by
Charles E. WlllllUilSOil, 36, Route 1,
Rolland. The accident occurred on
the crest of a hill . Mrs. Jolmson was
cited to Meigs County Court for
falling to keep on the right haU of the
roadway. No injuries were reported.
Heavy damages were incUITell to the
Johnson car and to Williamson's
truck.
The second accident occurre&lt;J at
5:40 p.m. Saturday on Hollow Rciad
when a westbound vehicle driven by
Gary K. Vance, 38, Parkersburg,
collided with an eastbound vehicle
driven by Maxwell Stevens, 44, Rt. 1,
Reedsville.
•.
According to the report both drivers
were travelling in the nilddle of the
township road and both applied lheir
brakes, cauaing their vehiCles to skid
in gravel.
Maxwell's car dropped over an embankment.
Both drivers were cited for failing
to drive on the right side of the road·
way. Stevens was also cited for
operating a motor vehicle while under
financial respo118ibtllty to suspension.
The Coolville unit of SEOEMS responded to the scel)e but there were no injuries.

Meigs de.p' uti"es
•
mvestJ.gate

two accidents

Weather.
Clear and cool torilght. Lows In the
mid to upper 40s. Sonny Tuesday.
Highs in the mid 70s. The chance of
rain Is near zero tonight and Tuesday.

VANDAIJSM - lkveral picnic ta~es in the
shelter house at the American Legion Park on Mlll
Street in Middleport have been broken and burned.
Virgil Parsons and Fred Hanel are pictured here with

GLASS AND DEBRIS MAR PARK ..:.. Broken bottles and debris of all
kinds are strewn aroW.id the shelter house as Lanny Tyre, one of several
legionnaires donating hours of their time to maintain the park for public
use, points out. Tyree urges children to wear shoes when playing around
the shelter house since piec-es of glass have gotten into the grass.

•

Two crq,zsers damaged
during high .speed chase
.

--

Two cruisers of the Jackson Post, ·tering that lane, the Sark auto struck
Highway Patrol, were damaged Sun· a patrol cruise in pursuit operated by
day during .an accident resulting Charles R. King, 41, Wellston, which
froma high speed chase, in pursuit of had turned onto 35 from 279.
a juvenile traffic offender, in Gallia
The auto struck the right rear ol the
County.
cruiser, which spun around and
Called to the scene at 1:14 p.m., the struck the left side of the Sark
Gallia-Meigs Post, Highway Patrol, vehicle.
reports that a fleeing auto operated
Following impact, both vehicles
by MiChael Lee Sark 17, Pedro, 0., slid toward the medium. While sliding
slid broadside into ·~ . west bound the cruiser operated by King struck a
. lane ~U.S. 35 a~r attempting a turn second cruiser, that had pulled onto
off of SR 279.
. · 35, operated by Michael N. Davis, 23,
The auto traveled into the medium Jackson, which had stopped at the
and struck a road sign before enterir.g scene following the original collision. ,
The yoUth has been cited on
•tbe east bound lane of 35, Upon en-

multiple juvenile traffic charges.
All three vehicles incurred
moderate damage. There were no injuries.
SQUADCAU..ED
The Middleport Emergency Squad
was called to Mq,lberry St, at 3:12
p.m. Sunday for 'Velma Keller who
had fallen. She was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where she wa s ad·
mftted for treatment of injuries. at
6:12 p.m. Sunday, the squad went to
Village Manor Apartments for Wilma
Gum who was Uiken to Holzer
Medical Center.

one table which was parttally torn apart and toued
outside the ahelter house. Van&lt;!als also damaged the
restroom doors and moved the World War I cannon
from its station in the patk.

Vandals ·hit Legion·
Park; Post announces
new hours, rules
The American Legion Park on Mill
Street in Middleport has been heavily
vandalized, resulting in some new
roles and regulati0118 for park use to
be posted this week. The park is
owned and maintained by FeeneyBennett P08t 128.
Beginning Immediately the park
will be closed from 9 p.m. untU 7~ .m.
and anyone caught on the premises
between those hours will be charged
with trespaasing.

The roles further specify that flrl!ll
must be confined. Open fires either on
the grass or in the shelter ho~~~e are
not permitted. No alcoholic
beverages or glass cimtainera ~ any
sort . are permitted in the park.
Motorized vehicles are not to be taken
onto the grass.
General cleanup of the park and
repair of the facilities is underway bY
the legionnaires.

Regatta features two ·parades
POMEROY - There will be two
A form iB being provided for each
parades as a part of the 15th Annual unit to register for the parade. n.e
Big Bend Regatta. Parade Chairman 11re available through the newspaptl'
Jim Frecker reports that the big and at the Chamber ~Commerce ol· ·
Grande Parade will be ·Saturday, . flee. Parade entry fonns should be·
June 23, at II a.m . There will be a returned to the Cbamber of Comsmaller kick.off parade Thursday merce office by Tuesday, June 19, if
night, June 21, at 7 p.m. Both parades possible. This will ~e it poulble for
will begin in Middleport and proceed nwnbers to be assigned to each anit
up through Pomeroy, a.~ has been the and will help make the line-up for
custom in years past. The ldck.off or Saturday's parade run smoother:
Mini-Parade will form on South Front
Frecker explained.that "all parade
Street In Middleport at 6:30 p.m. uniia will go down South Third Street
Thursday, June 21, and move out in Middleport to a position In front ot
promptly at 7 p:m,
Valley Lwnber where they will
The Grande Parade will form on receive directions to their spot in the
South Second in Middleport, begin· line-up."
.
·
ning at 9 a.m. on Saturday, June 23.
There will be both radio and TV .
The parade will begin promptly at 11 coverage of the parade, and Freclulr
a.m. Entries are lilvited for the Siltur- expr~ the.,hope that more Daotl
. day parade. · However, Thursday and dressed units will participate INa
night's parade will be much smaller, year. It is hoped that having the Gran·
with it being made up of units which de Parade on Saturday will make !t
. are asked .to participate by the possible for more groups to take part.
Parade Conunittee.
PARADE ENTRY FORM

NAME __________________________________
DESCRIBE UMT: (Float, Marching Unit, Decorated Car, Bike, Etc.)

Address
Phone __________- rerson to Contact ______ _:Comrilents for announcer or revieWing stand and radio about your group:

�2 __:. The Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, June 11 , 1979

.

Editorial opinions,
comments

In Washington
AAA: committed to what?

3- The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pom eroy. 0 ., Monday, June II , 1979

Washington Today

.

.

: month.

• Who is responsible for those
:increases? Are service station
: operators gouging their customers?
l Did the major oil companies
opurposely create a shortage? Have
; motorists contributed to the p-oblem
• through unnecessary consumption?
; The AAA doesn't even attempt to
: deal with the wide array of
• provocative questions a)lout . root
; causes or potential solutions. Instead,
! it confines itself to reporting the
i detailed results of an elaborate survey
1 of prices at 5,278 service stations
• throughout the country.
; Another example of the AAA 's
, abdication of its responsibility to its
members: Almost two years ago, the
organization proclaimed that "more
than 93 percent of the respondents to a
recent survey" of its members "say
that fuel economy Is important to
them in purchasing a new car."
The most obvious method of
achieving fuel economy is to produce
smaller and lighter autos ~at require

less gasoline for propulsion. But for
too many years, the "specialty of the
house" from the country's auto
manufacturers was an oversized, gasguzzling, chrome-plated vehicle that
evoked no complaints from th e'
AAA.
In the mid-l970s, the federal
government finally forced Detroit's
automakers to begin "downsi~g" its
cars to meef Corporate Average Fuel
Ecooomy (CAFE) standards that
established minimum miles-pergallon requirements .
In recent years, the CAFE
standards have been the subject of
dozens of hearings conducted by
federal regulatory agencies and
coogressional committees.
Yet tile AAA has never testified at
any of those hearings - or even
written a letter for inclusion in the
official record - to defend the
regulations against attacks from
automakers who claim the federal
requirements are unrealistic.
On that issue -and too many others
- the AAA's ·official position is
disturbingly similar . to the policies
espoused by the Motor Vehicle
Manufacturers Association.
In the case of gasoline price and
supply, the AAA echoes the American
Petroleum Institute, the oil
companies' .trade association, in .
calling for "phased decontrol of
domestic crude oil prices to provide
incentives for increased llomestic oil
. e~ploration and production."
·
How many AAA members believe
the industry must retail gasoline at
$1.50 per gallon - or more - to
finance its future exploration and
production?

In 1859, a prospector laid claim to a
silver deposit in Six l&gt;{lle Canyon in
Nevada. The claim turned out to the
Comstock · Lode, which yielded ore
worth hundreds of millions of dollars.
In 1940, Princess Juliana of the
Netherlands IIITived in Canada as an
exile during World War II.

Today's

McGovern confesses urge to
.
run again for White House
ByWALTERR.MEARS

By Martha Angle
and Robert Walters
(First of two
.
related columns)
WASffiNGTON (NEA)- At a time
of soaring gasoline prices and
· dwindling fuel supplies, the
organization that ought ' to be
·· campaigning on behalf of the nation 's
motorists is instead acting as merely
a passive observer of the crisis.
That don't-&lt;'ock-the-boat approach
unfortunately typifies the philosophy
. of the American Automobile
Association, which never h88 fully
exercised the potential influence it
possesses as one of the country's
biggest and best organized consumer
groups .
_
Boasting lllat its "more than 20
, nuwoo members" make it "the
. largest motoring and · travel
· organization in the world,' ' the AAA
: claims it is committed to "working for
, improvement of motoring and
. traveling cooditions."
But those efforts invariably are
confined to promoting noncontroversial palliative measures
that won 'I offend the multinational oil
~ ccmpanies, the ~jor ~uto pro_du~rs
, and other industries whose pnonties
• often don't coincide with the interests
1of the AAA's members.
~ "The AAA is terrified of playing an
0
adversarial role," says attorney Roo
' Landsman, who eight years ago
: investigated the organization on
~ behalf of consumer advocate Ralph
: Nader. "It studiously avoids
• coofrontatloo, even in cases where its
' members might benef1t."
: The current fuel situation provides
~ an illustrative case study. "Gasoline
~ prices cootinued their upward spiral
~ this week, with some grades closing
I rapidly on a dollar-per-galion
; average," the AAA reported early this

AP Speci~l Correspoodent
AP Special Correspoodenl
WASHINGTON (AP) - There are

day s, Sen. George McGovern
confesses, when he gets that fleeting
urge to run again for the White House .
Between the lines of an hour's

cooversation with the senator from
South Dakota, it becomes evident that
the urge is more than fleeting, the
days more than a few.

The' U. S. and you
Got a postal gripe?

McGovern doesn't kid himself that
tllere would be room for him as a
candidate if Sen. Edward M. KeMedy
became available to Democrats disenchanted with President Carter.
Indeed, he gives the impression that
if he did run and KeMedy came to the
race later, next spring perhaps, he'd
get out of tile way, no hard feelings .
But he does say that there has to be
a Democratic alternative to Carter in
1980. And it soon becomes evident he
does not think California Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. is the ideal man
for that role.
Not that McGovern claims to be that
himself. He knows he would have a lot
to prove to establish himself as a
serious con lender for another Democratic presidential ncxnination.
For he carries the image of a loser,
the biggest ever, the man who carried
only Massachusetts and the Distri~t of
Columbia when he ran agamst
Richard M. Nixon In 1972.
To dispel it, McGovern would have
to come on strong, very strong, in the
early going -the Iowa caucuses, the
New Hampshire and Massachusetts
presidential primary elections.
He thinks he could do it if he decided
to try.
At this point, he has made no such
decision . He might, if it became really
clear that KeMedy was not going to
run . In any event, he is tllinking about
it. And among politicians at the
presidential level, that often means
the prospect is halfway to becoming
the candidate. ·
Right now, McGovern's political
mission is back home in South Dakota,
where he will be up for rwlection in
1980. While conservatives have him oo
thelr prime target list for tile next
elections, McGovern thinks he is in
pretty good shape, although he
acknowledges it might be a difficult
race.
RepublicanS say they think they
could beat him with a candidate like
Gov: William Janklow or Rep. James
Abdnor.
But McGovern already is hard at
the campaign, spending at least every
other weekend in South Dakota, and
reporting that he senses a shift in the
mood of voters who not long ago were
turned off to government. He says
they now are looking for leadership
and for solutions to problems like
energy and inflation.
Which leads to his dissatisfaction
with Carter, never any secret.
"There's neither any continuity ilor
any design to the administration," he
said. "I just don't see any clear sense
of direction.
"I don't know that things are any
dif-ferent in terms of national
.priorities than they would have been if
we'd ha&lt;l Jerry Ford for another

By William Stell
Chadwick receives about 40,000 another is to use ZIP codes. And he
So the thank-you letter you wrote direct complaints a. year. Most are • notes that 6 miU1on cop1es of:"' ea~y­
Aunt Minnie never reached her. resolved.
•
lo-&lt;'ead pamphlet, Consumer s Gmde
You're sore at the post office, and you
His office serves as a kind of to Postal Sernces and Products, have
think miUions of other Americans are lightning rod for internal postal been printed and sbould be at every
grumbling about the decline of the problems, too . Last year, for post off1ce.
Postal Service.
.
e~ample, the introduction o( !:kent
Thomas W. Chadwick hears that first-class mail turned up what
grumbling every day. It's his job.
Chadwick calls a severe glue
Today in History
Tom is an amiable, 55-year-&lt;Jld problem" in the 15-cent Oliver
By The Associated Press
South Carolinian whose title at the U. WendeU ~olmes stamp. Letters were
Today is Monday, June 11, the 162nd
S. Postal Service is consumer being returned because the stamps
day
of 1979. There are 203 days left in
advocate. l( you've got a beef, get in feU off.
.
the year.
touch with him.
Chadwick's office got complaints
Today's highlight in history:
The Postal Service is one of the and found the Bureau of Engraving
6&gt;n
'this dale in 1970, the U.S.
nation's biggest businesses. It's been and Printing was putting glue on
presence
in Ubya ·ended as the last
a semi-independent entity smce mid- stamps while they were being printed.
detachment
left Wheelus Air Base,
1971 and last year handled 96.9 billion A change to pre-gummed paper
which
was
the
only major American
pieces of mall, about half of the whole solved the problem.
military
facility
left in North AfriCa.
world's mail. It grossed $14.1 billion
Chadwick says customers can ease
On tllis date:,
and employed 655,000 people, down their ·own problems. One way is to
tenn.''
In 1727, King George I of England
55,000 from five years ago.
wrap packages more securely; died.
Chadwick says, "We have 43,000
retail stores" -that's what he calls
post offices. "We have 155,000
IN THE
delivery routes and 98 million
addresses of customers to serve."
GE.MINI (Miy 21 -June 20~ Yo u 'II
COMMON
PLEAS
COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY
,
CAPAICOAN (Doc. 22-Jon. 11)
accomplish a lot more both lor
His Office of Coosumer Affairs' was
OHIO
Your mood today will be geared
yoursell and for others 1f you
organized when the Postal Service
more toward light and fun acllv·
ge l oil by yourself where you
l:~
J~~
y";_AN?r
.
8~
Bernice
Bede
Osol
ltlea than toward these that are
COLUMBUS - State Senator they are ellglble to get the credit was shaken loose from the clutches of 'CERTIAN REAL ESTATE
won 't have a bunch of people
on the aertous akle. It'll be 1
Oakley C. · Collins (R·Ironton) last themselves," Sen. Collins said.
loo~mg over your shou lder
politicians.lt has :W employees, which OF THE TRUSTEES OF
nice breather.
Find ou t more ot what lies
week 81Ulounced the full Senate
The bill passed recently gives real doesn 'I seem like many when
AOUAAIUS
(Jon. 2D-Fob. 111
ahead lor you In the year
paiJSBge of a resolution allowing the estate tax relief to the elderly and compared with the volume of CORPORATED
You ahoulcl be able to clear up
4
-~
follow1ng your birthday by
a situation that you hive felt
homestead exemption tax credit to disabled and increases.the qualifying complaints.
RELIGIOUS SOCIETY IN
sending for your copy of Astraheld you back when the com·
THE STATE OF OHIO.
'
continue if the surviving spouse Is 60 income from $10,000 to $15,000. Sen.
Graph
Letter.
Mall
$1
for
each
But Chadwick thinks it's adequate.
petition Ia auddenly eliminated
No . 17,2DJ
..... , .._ _
to As1ro-Graph. P 0 Bo)( 489,
years or older.
lodly.
Co11ins indicated he had also sup- He says, "The handling of complaints
- LEGAL,NOT,!C!; ;:·-; &gt; . ,
Aadto C1ty S1at1on. N Y 10019
PISCES (,ob. 21-Moroh 20) E•·
is her~eby ,gi,venl to ~,.~'" ",... Juril ~'2: '1'979'
Juat one day after the Senate gave portedthismeasure, in addition toap-: is a vital aspect of our business. We theNotice
· Be sure to specily b~rth sig n
officers and membe-rs
hllaratlng p811a could turn thla
flnal approval . to a bill upping the proving the surviving spouse use . complaint data as a tool in of the Bethlehem Baptist Unusual opportuntlles tnvo lv- CANCER (June 21·Julv 22) At- Into
a fun day for you. Reapond
Church, and to al l others mg your work or career co uld though you may not have
cellin8 income for those eligible to provision.
management." .
.
to epur-Of·the-moment lnvltllplanned
1
1
.
to
day
cou
ld
turn
whom It may concern, that be offeree you thi s com 1ng
tlona.
receive the property tax credit, this
Chadwick's office is "trying to on
The Ohio Corrunission on Aging was
mto more of a soc18l event than
the 6th day of June, 1979, year Don 1 dlscoun1 th em Just
resolution was passed which would in support of the measure which was make it simple and easy lor people to the Trustees of the because they don' t come fro m a workd~y Look for the unu· AAIES (Morch 21•Aprll 11)
Somolhlng good could pop out
Bethlehem Baptist Church conventional sources. •
sua! to turn things around ,
further benefit older Ohioans.
reported out of the Senate Ways and get to us. We have authority to fllecl
of lefl field today . Don't sit back
in the Common P le a s - - - - - - - - - - - LEO (Julv 23-Aug. 22) The
''Widows and widowers of persons Means Committee May 22. The joint disreRard bureau,..atic lines. We're a Court of Meigs County ,
on yo,_,, duff. Act on it. You can
speed at which you accompUsh
Ohio , Case No . 17.203, their
only come out on top.
who counted on this 81Ulualla.t break resolution now goes to the House for direct link between the mailer certain
LEGAL
NOTICE
thmgs makes lh1s a ver y proPetit1on praying
IN THE COMMON PLEAS ductive day You know what TAURUS (April ID-Moy 20)
the Postal Service."
will be able to keep receiving it until consideration.
the Court fo'r an order
Being around other peopi4f
COURT,
MEIGS
COUNTY.
needs do1~g and you 're Willing
Over all, the Postal Service gets 21 giving them authority to nwen
aUmulatea your creativity today
to apply yourself
sell
and
convey
in
fee
million complaints yea~ly, or a little si mple to the First Baptist HELEN CARP CHAPMAN, VIRGO (Aug. 23-S.pl. 22) That and Ideas could pour from you .
If you think any of them are
le$5 Ulan one for every 4,000 pieces of Church, Racine, Ohio, an - vsPLAINTIFF
mental hft you were looking tor WOr1h trying , put them to work .
und
i
v
i
decl
one
-third
in
mail. Most complaints are resolved terest In and to the MRS. RUSSELL MORFEY is forthcommg today Fun
INIWIItAPEA ENTERPRISE ASIN .)
ET AL , DEFENDANTS. th ings will be happening be·
·
locally.
following described real
cause
you
run
mto
S)(Cit
ing
and
·
No.
16,296
There are 160 different categories of estate :
NOTICE
i11vigoraling lnends
IN -THE
The following descri bed
Pursuant to an Order of LIBRA IS.pl. 23·0ct. 23) Somecomplaints. but the largest are real
· PROBATE !=OURT OF
estate, situate in the
Sate
Issued
by
the
Court
of
MEIGS COUNTY,
delayed mail (20.5 percent of the County of Meigs , in the Common Pleas of Meias thing important to your tlaslc
OHIO
State of Oh 10 and in. the County , Ohio , , will offer needs that mtghl have been
total) and non-&lt;"eceipt ( 18.5 percent). Village
IN THE MATTER OF THE
hanging fire will s\Jddenly be
of Racine, to -wit:
tor
sale
at
puonc
auction
on
CHANGE OF NAME OF
To cope with its complaints, the
Lots Nos . 24 and 25 in
1-4th day of July, 1979 at ready to be closed qu1ckty
WILLIAM MAX SAYRE ,
Postal Service in 1975 began Wolf's Addit ion to the the
10 · oo a .m . at the front door SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nor. 22) Be
JR .
Village of Racine , Meigs
on your toes You may have an
of
the
Covrt
House
of
said
distributing an easy-to-use Consumer County,
NOTICE 1 ·
Oh10 .
/s
county, In the Village of opportunity today to make a
William Max Sayre, Jr .,
Service Card, which is supposed to be
Referen ce Deed : Vol.
Pomeroy , the following fast change In direction regardR . D 1, Middleport, Ohio
108, . Page 481 , Me i gs descr
available at every post office. That's County
1bed rea l estate to · Ing an Interest you 're pursuing
45760, hereby gives notice
Deed Records .
wit
that will be just what you
that he will file his Petition
_where your letter to Aunt Minnie fits
~aid cause and Petit ion
Situated
in
the
Township
needed.
in the •'Probate Court of
.w i ll be heard on the 9th day of Scipio, County of Meigs
in.
SAGITTARIUS (Nor. 23-Doc. Me i gs County, Ohio
July , 1979, or as soon
and State of Oh 1o, to -wit . In t1) It 'll take more than a shrewd
You go to your post office and fiU out of
praying for an or der ot said
thereafter as may be .
the southeht quarter of
court changing his name
the card; a sheet of carbon paper
Section No 2 Town No . 7, head to outdo you today .
from William Max Sayre,
RDbert w. Lewis
Range No . 14 of the Ohio You're sure-footed and can
permits you to make a duplicate. One .
Jr , to · Will i am
Ma"K
Eber w Pi ckens
react to moat situations at a
Company's
Purchase
,
Forrest : that said Petition
copy goes to your local postmaster,
Joseph R. FOreman
momen
t's
notice
bounded antt described as
witt be heard on the '20th
Trustees of . fo l lows , tO -wit :
the other to Chadwick's office in
day of July, 1979, at 10:00
Bethleh em Baptist
Beginning
at
the
Washington.
a .m. or as so~n thereafter
Church
southea st corner of section
as sa ld court may hear It .
"Within the next couple of days," C6l II, 18, 25 0) 2, 4tc
No . 2; thence north along
says Chadwick, "you ought to hear _________.....__ said section line to the
WILLIAM MAX
center of the southeast
SAYRE. JR.
from your postmaster. If you haven't
corner
of
Section
No
.
2;
(6!
11
.
ltc
LEGAL NOTICE
heard by the thlrd day, call the
thence
west
49
rods
,
thence
PUBLIC SALE
postmaster."
.
The following described south 7 rocls thenc e west 17
ro ds; thence north 7 rods;
The card's information Is key- collaterdl w i ll , be sold tor then ce west 16 rods 15
LAFF - A- DAY
cash at a public sale at 9 :30
punched into a computer. When the A .M . on June 2S, 1979 at links ; thence south along
Mary A . Davis ' east line ;
postmaster resolves a complaint, he Sm ith Nelson Motors, In c., thence
along said section
00 E . Ma1n St , Pomeroy ,
wr1tes Chadwick's office and the ~Ohio.
Written bids may be line to th e place of
complaint is deleted from the submitted to GMAC at 318 beg inn ing , contain ing 40
acres, more or less
computer. But if the postmaster E . Main St. , Pom eroy,
TERMS OF SALE : Cosh
.Ohio . Written bids may be
hasn't resolved tile complaint after a submitted to GMAC at 318 i n hand on day of sale, for
less than two .thlrds of
short time, it pops up aulomatically in Main St reet, Belpre, Ohio not
The seller reserves the the appra ised value. to be
the consumer advocate's office and right
to b•d 1977 Pontiac , sold subject to the lien for
Chadwick tells the postmaster to get Sunbird.
Serial
No . real ~state taxes for 1979.
2M07C72322819.
Account The right is reserved to
mo&gt;ing.
reject any or all bids .
No . 232 1925-16215.
'
If you haven't heard promptly, the
Property Is appraised at
··Let's not get into anything too heavy loda) .
"$6,550 .00.
lhmg to do is write Thomas W. ·
GENERAL
I'm suffering from interperson;; l overload!"
MOTORS
Chadwick, The Consumer Advocate,
JAMES J PROFFITT
'
ACCEPTANCE
SHERIFF OF
Postal Service Headquarter s.
CO RPORATION
"This speech is loaded with·
MEIGS COUNTY , OH 101
(6) 11 , ltc
.., Washin~ton. 11: C 20~f&gt;O .
16 1 11 , 18, 25, Jtc
·
obvious half-truths. Rewrite it

Collins says tax credit stays

ASTRO·GRAPH

~~~~~~~E"lN BA~~:~~

&lt;Dm: ~--r

'Birthday

Berry's World

'I

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By::~;~~~t~~~~...
Me. z·g.s Legr·on splz.ts ~;kd~~~:~~~er{ls~ho~~~~~e~n
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·
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Weekend Sports Transactions

so they' re not so obvious. "

BALTIMORE ORIOLES - .Placed

Sports World

.·

Sunday's Games

Boston 5. Minnesota 0
Baltimore 5. Texas 4
Chicago 13, Milwaukee 3
New York 10, Kansas Clly 4
Detroit 10, California 1
Oakland 12, Toronto 1

,,

Seattle 5, Cleveland 2

Monday's Games

Seattle (Abboll 2-7) at Toronto
( Lemanczyk 5-3l. (n)
Californ ia (Barr 3-ll at Cleveland
(Wilkins 2-3), lnl.
Oak land (McCatty 4-0) al Detroit
.
(Morris 3-2), (n)
Baltimore (McGregor )-2) al
Chicago ( Kraved 6-4). (n)
Boston (Stanley 6-4) al Kansas Cily
(Busby 2-2). (n)
Only Qames scheduled

BATTING (125 at bals) :- Rose.
Philadelphia, .361; Brock, St Louis,
.359; Winfield, San D1ego. .354;
Hendr ick , St. Louis, .352 ; Murphy,
Allanla •. 348.
RUNS: Lopes, Los Angeles, 56;
Kingman, Chicago, 43; Royster,
Atlanta, 42; Concepcion, Cincinnati,
41; Hernandez, St. Louis, 40; North,

San Francisco, 40.
RBI : · Winfield, San Diego , 50 ;
Kingman, Chicago, 48; Fosler, Con cinnall, 46; Garvey, Los Angeles, 44 ;
Her:nandez, St . Louts , 40.
.HITS - Winfield, SO, 84; Rose, Phi,
82; Garvey, LA, 76; Russell, LA, 76 ;
Moreno, Plllsburgh, 73; Templelo,,
St. Louis, 73.
·
.
DOUBLES: Rose, PhiladeiP.hoa, 21 ;
Parrish, Montreal, 18; Mawlll, New
York. 18; Buckner, Chicago, 17,
Rella. St. Louis, 17; Baker. Los
Angeles. 17.
TRIPLES: Templeton, St. Louis, 7;
Scott. 51 Louis, 7: Winfield, San
Diego, 7; Moreno. Pittsburgh. 5 ; Cruz,
Houston, 5.

HOME RUNS · Kingman, Chicago,
20; Schmidt. Phlladelphla, 17; Lopes ,
Los Angeles, 16; Robinson .. Pills:
burgh. 14; Simmons, St. Louos. 14 ,
Winfield, San Diego. 14
STOLEN BASES: Moreno, Pills burgh, 23 ; Scott. $t. Louis, 21; Norlh ,
Francisco,

21;

Taveras,

New

York, 18; Lopes. Los Angeles, 18.
PITCHING (6 Decisions ): LaCoss,
Cincinnati, 7-0, 1.000, 2.35; Z~chry,
New York, 5-1, .833; 3.59; N1ekro ,
Houston, 9-2, .818, 2.46; Lamp,
Chicago, 5-2, .714, 4.61; Knepper, San
Francisco, 5·2, .714, 4.05; Lee, IVv:Jn -

treal 6-3, .667 , 3.88 ; Ruthven,
Phll~delphia, 6-3, .667, 3.41;
Vuckov ich , St. Louis, 6-3, .667, 2.97.
STRIKEOUTS: Richard, Hou~ton,
94 Carlton, PHiladelphis, 68; Ntkro,
Atlanta , 65 ; Swan, New York, 63;

Sulton, Los Angeles, 61.

Tuesdav's Games

Seattle at Toronto, (n I
California at Cleveland, In)
Oakland at Detroit, In)
Baltimore al Chicago, (n )
New York at Minnesota , (n)
Milwaukee at Texas, (n )
Boston at Kansas Cily, In )

TODAY'S
MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
By The Associated Press

AMERICAN LEAGUE
BATTING 1125 al bals) : Smalley,
• Mlnnesola , .367; Carew, California,
.355; Kemp. Detroit , .350; Boehle,
Seallle. .345; Wilson , Kansas City.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
340
EAST
·
: Breit, Kansas c·oly , 48~ 01·IS,
W. L. Pet. GB · RUNS
Kansas
City , 45 ; Lynn, Boston, 4.,
31
21
.596
St. Louis
Lansford, California, 44 ;. Jones,
30 22 .577 1
Montreal
_
28 25 .528 3'h Seallle, 43.
Plllsburgh
30 27 .526 3'1' · RBI: Baylor , Californta, 55; Lynn.
Philadelphia
25 28 .472 6'h Boston, 52; Boehle, Seattle, 47 ;
Chicago
21 32 .396 10'/, Porter, Kansas City, 45; Cooper,
New York
Milwaukee, 44; Horton, Seattle, 44:
WEST
HITS: Brett, Kansas City, 82 ,
3&lt;5 25 .590
Houston
33 25 .569 1'12 Smalley Minnesota, 79; Lansford,
Clnclnnall
29 31 .483 61h California, 77 ; Rice, Boston, 72;
San Francisco
Remy, Boston 71; Cooper, Milwaukee,
28 33 .459 8
Los Angeles
27 35 .435 9'h 771
San
Diego
22 36 ·379 12'h
•·
DOUBLES
· Lemon, Ch 'ocago, 17 '·
Atlanta
Washington Ch lcago , 17; Lynn,
saturday's Games
Boston, 16, f~ornton, Cleveland, 16;
New York 4, Houslon 0 ,
McRae, Kansas City, 16 ; Bell, TeKas ,
Ch icago s, Los Angel ~s 3
16
Cincinnati 7, Montreal I
·TRIPLES: Brett, ~ansas C'l1 y, 9 ;
San Francisco 6, Plllsburgh 2
Griffin. Toronto. 5; llson , Kansas
Philadelphia 9, Atlanta 3
City, 5 ; Kuiper , Cleveland. 4; RanSt. Louis 7, San Diego 4
dolph , New York. 4; Bannister ,
Sunday's Games
Chicago, 4; Porter. Kansas City, 4;
San Francisco 7, Pllls~urgh 4
Jones, SeaHie, 4.
Atlanta 10, PHiladelphta 3
HONE RUNS: Lynn, Boston , 16;
Houston 5, New York 3
Slnglelon, Baltimore. 14: Thomas.
Chicago )0, Los Angeles 3
Milwaukee, 13; Grich. California, 13;
St. Louis 3, San Diego 2
jones, Seallle, 13. ·
Cincinnati 3, Montreal 2 • •
STOLEN BASES : LeFlore, Delroll.
Monday 's Games
Wilson, Kan~as Cily, 25; Cr~z .
All anta I Brizzolara 1-2) at Montreal 28;
Seallle.
22; Otis, Kansas City, 20;
(Gr imsley 5-4), (nl
')
at Wills, Texas,
18
Houslon (R ichard 6·•
PITCHING 1_6 Decisions) · John ,
Philadelphia (Lerch 2-4). In)
Cincinnati (Norman 3-5). at New, New York, 10-1, .909. 2.23 ; Kern ,
Texas, 7-1, 875 , 1.63; Clear,
York 1Orosco 1-2l. In J
•
5-- l , .833, 2.72; Marllnez.
St. Louis (Sykes 4-2) at Los Angeles California,
Baltimore. 9-2, .818, 3 0&lt;; Jenkins.
(Reuss 2--4, (n)O 1.
Texas, 7 2, .7 78 , 3.34; Ryan ,
On Iy games sche~uled
Games
Houslon Tuesday's
at Philadelph
ia, 1n l
Cinclnnall al New York, In)
Pitlsburgh al San Diego , _In J
St. Louis at Los Angeles. (n l
Chl~ago at San Francl~co , In)

TODAY'S

r---I
Ne
I

pitcher , from Pawtucket of Nle ~n ­
ter natlonal league.
National league

ATLANTA BRAVES - Recalled
across four runs to wm . Two walks Joe M c laughlin , pitcher, from Rich·
forced in two runs, a nd then Dave mond of the International League .
Butcher raced home on a passed ball. Senl • Rick Mahler. pllcher, to Rich When the Meigs catcher threw to the mond
NEW YORK METS - Signed Gary
pitcher covering home, the ball went Hardie,
shorlslop, and B1ll Hill ,
through and into the infield and the ou tfielder .
last Wellston runner raced home for
PHILADELPH IA PHILLIES ~
Act1vated Larry Bowa, shortstop.
th e winning run.
Sent Rudy Meolt. Infielder , to
Cliff Kennedy, Chuck Kennedy, and CJI&lt;Iahoma
City of lhe American
Fogelstrom eac~ had two singles to Associat ion .
'
lead the Meigs Legion attack. Ken
HOCKEY
.
Nattonal Hockey League
·
Brown had the other Meigs hit.
ST. LOUIS BLUE;S - Acquired
Wellston was held to just tllree hits
Bryan Maxwell , defenseman , from
by four Meigs pitchers. Norman had a the
Minnesota North Slars for future
double and single and Montgomery considerations. Sent Barry Gibbs,
had a double . Ken Brown was tagged defenseman, and Terry Richardson ,
with the loss as starter Tom Owens, goalie, to the New York Islanders fer
Jeff Wayland, Brown, and Wayland fu t ure considerations.
COLLEGE
again fanned six but walked a btg ten
UN IVERS ITY OF TENNESSEE ·
CHATTANOOGA - Named Murray
batters.
.
Dave Campbell got the win in relief Arnold basketball coach.
of starter Rick Maerker. They fanned
seven and walked six.
HORSE RACING
' Linescore :
000 003 0-3 7 NEW YORK (AP) - Coastal,
M
w
000 000 4-4 3 $!0.80, swept into the lead with a little
Owens, J . Wayland (5), Brown (6, more than an eighth of a mile to go
Fourth Grade Girls Jennifer
Field Day was held for the Pomeroy
lp) , J. Wayland (7) and T. Wayland, and won the $269,000 Belmont Stakes
by 'Jo¥1 lenths over Golden Act and
Elementary School at the Meigs Foot· Couch, Cindy Arnold, Darla_ Haw ley . Foster (5).
Fifth Grade Boys - CHns Shank,
upset the Triple Crown attempt of
ball Stadium (the old Pomeroy High Bryan
Maerker,
Campbell
(6,
wp)
and
Korn, Sherman Hoschar .
School football field) recently. The
Spectacular Bid, the eighth horse to
Montgomery , Midkiff (7).
Fifth Grade virls Dre~ma
win the first two legs of the Triple
students walked in a group from the English, Rhonda Neece, C1ndy
+++
· The second contest was also nip- Crown and fail in the Belmont.
elementary school to the field with Soulsby.
Sixth Grade Boys - Mark Ham - and-tuck for five innings before Meigs
Chief of Police Jed J . Webster ·mond,
Dean Doidge, Rodney Rou_sh .
assisting with traffic control.
Sixth Grade Girls - D!anna Whole, plates those five runs in _the sixth.
Brown got the win th1s time m relief of
· Games and relays were planned by Ga_yla Hann ing , Kelly Gtnther .
other
awards
.
presented
at
the
Jeff
Wayland. Campbell was t~gged
John Amott, who, with the assistance
assembly were as follows : with the loss this time as each 1'1tcher
of the Pomeroy P. T.A., planned the Thursday
Mrs . Mary Carolyn Wiley presented is now 1-1 after exchanging wms.
entire activity.
·
.
Kindergarten Diplomas lo the afIn fifth inning with the score knotted
The elementary cooks prepared the ternoon kindergarten class.
at
2-2, Mike Wayland singled and stole
The
School
Safely
Patro
l
was
lunches and came to the field to serve
presented awards by Mr. Arnott who second. Two walks followed to load
them to the- stllden~. Many parents Is the advisor of the group. Nv-. Arnoll
joined their childreif for the day. then · presented field day awards as the bases and Little's ground out to .
second ~red Wayland. Then that big
Several parents wanted to walk to and allached .
.
.
Mr . Morrls (Robert) Pnnclpal, sinh gave Meigs its win.
As an Independent Insurance
from the stadium with the !§rOup and
Terry
Wayland
opened
w1th
_a
presented Hie following awa..-ds : for
agency, our primary function Is
did so.
Perfecl Allendance: Todd Lee, Ricky
10 prov1de policies which afford
but then came two outs, agam
Awards for this event were awar- Molller, ~aura Frye, Chris Alkire. single
financial p~olecllon In case of
provn{g that two-out lightning can be
lOSS.
ded at the elementary school on Thur- Jason Wright and C1ndy L1tl.e
To Margaret Johnson and Darla very effective. Mike Wayland walked
But we also have a vital Insdey, the last ·day of school, with Mr.
and Cliff Kennedy singled to score one
terest' in· loss prevention, as
Hawley
lor
"outslanding
work
In
Amott presenting the ribbons . Rib- organtzing the school library ."
should our clients. we encourage
run . Tom Owens also singled to plate
bons were awarded for first, second
To Brad Rob 1nson for " outstand 1ng another Meigs runner, and a passed
care, caution and safety ...
preventive measures which can
and third place with every participant physical educallon activity ."
keep lhat car acclden1 from hap·
To Tony Hudson for "outstanding ball scored another. A Foglestrom
receiving a participant ribbon. Those
single and an error pushed the fourth
penlng, that building fire from
lunchroom
assistance.'
f
receiving first, second and tird place
slarllng, lhat home b\Jrglary
To
Dewey
Autherson
or run across, and Little singled for the
awards are as follOW!I:
from being committed.
" assistance to others." ,
.
fin~ run.
.
Prevenllon saves life, limb and
To Lee Garnes for keepong the
Mike Wayland doubled and singled
properly .. . and helps control In·
Principal
on
his
toes
."
SACK RACE
surance costs and premiums.
To Joey Rellmlre for "o~lsl?,nd l ng twice to lead the Meigs atlack, and T.
Winners are: (f irst , second, third achievement In self dlsclplone.
When losses do occur, oyr
Wayland had three si~gl~s .
clace) - Kindergarten Boys - Jason
policyholders can count on proApril Smith, School Secretary, Fogelstrom had two singles, and T1m
l' 'rlghl, Br •n Kovalchik and Stacey presented gifts to office assistants and
tecting and serving In time and
Skidmore had a double. Getting
..• ank .
.
need. Bul we still say - preven·
praised
them
for
their
fine
work
Ktndergarlen Girls- Pally Jones, throughoul the year. Office helpers singles were Cliff Kennedy, Owens,
lion Is the best policy.
Sandy landaker, Jenni Werry .
Glenda Gum . Cathy Delong, Little, Roger Carson, and Harvey
Firsl Grade Boys - John Michael were: Averlon.
Robyn Venoy, Debbie Whitlatch.
Logan. Rar.~y Hawley , Mickey Marla
Werry
and
Linda
Noel.
Meigs will host Logan at Syracuse
Seyler _
A special thanks to everyone.
Firsl Grade Girls- Nancy Baker. especially our P.T.:A.. members. for In a single game Wednesday at 6 p.m .
Shelly Arnold , ElizaDelh Graves.
110 015 0-a 14
making this an enjoyable year: for our M
Second Grade Boys - Jell students.
1
w
100 100 0-2 8
·
•
McElroy, Chuckle Smilh, Danny Carl.
J. Wayland, Brown (4, wp) and T.
Second Grade Girls - Beth Pierce,
RIV
= DOWNS
992-l1U
Wayland.
Kim Klein, Nlchole Bunch .
'""'
102 W.Moln
s. Coy, Campbell (5, ip) · and J .
Third Grade Boys - Mike Van . CINCINNATI (AP) - Competiti~
Pomeroy
Meter, Mark lmbod~n, Dennis Harris. was the top-weighted horse m Midkiff, T. Montgomery (2) .
Third Grade Goris - Tammy
d
Wright, stephanie English, Julie Monday 's feature race over one an
Bally.
one-sixteenth miles at River Downs.
BROAD JUMP
In Sunday's feature, the $15 1-000Fourlh Grade Boys - Mark Elliot, added Apollo Stakes, Windy Prospect
Greg
Fields,
Todd Girls
Hysell.- Jennifer pulled away in the stretch to win by
Fourth
Grade
Swarts, Jennifer Couch, Sandy sevenlengths.WitlljockeyR.J.Myers
Bailey.
Jr. aboard , tile winner covered the
Fifth Grade Boys - Parker Long, five furlongs in 59 1-li seconds and
Chris Shank, Chris Kennedy .
ed $2 80 .., 20 and $2 20 Eggs
· • ••·
· ·
Fifth Grade Girls - Tracy Reed. return
Rhonda Neece. Kim Wilson .
Dynamite paid $2.20 and $2.20 to
Sixth Grade Boys - Mall Riffl e. place, and Boone Tucky Buddy
Kelly Wisecup. Sean Doidge.
returned $2.20 to show.
.
Sixth Grade Gir ls - Gayla ' HanIn the daily double, wmners Aiken
ning, Dian~: Y~~D~~ble Werry . Andy and Niwog , the 2-4 combination,
Kindergarlen Boys - Stacy Shank, paid $34.20.
Jason Wright, Charles Klein .
A crowd of 7,285 wagered $848,244 .
Klndergarlen Girls - Lori Hayes,
Kristin Stanley, Pally Jones.
Firsl Grade Girls - Jenny Bock,
Lee'a Johnson. Nancy Baker .
THISTLEOOWNS
First Grade Boys - Jimmy Lee.
NORTH
RANDALL,
Ohio (AP) Hank Cleland, Jr., Randy Hawley .
Second ' Grade B9ys - Jeff In Rem won the $15,915 first division
McE lroy. Ronnie Bachlel. Roy of the Western Resei'Ve Stakes at
When you purchase
Zimmerman.
Thistledown Sunday, running the mile
a PL12 or PL316
Second Grade Girls - Belh Pierce. and one-sixteentll in 1: 43, one second
Klm Klein, Leanna Pinkerman .
Powerlock 8 Aule.
Third Grade Boys - James Nor- off the track record.
man, Lee Garnes, Jonathan Dunn.
Roral Potion won the $16,025 second
Third Grade Girls - Stephanie divi&amp;on.
En9lish , Tammy Wright, Tracy
In Rem earned $9,585 and ~d $4.60,
Sm 1lh .
$3.60
and $2.80. Jolly Mike was second,
60YARD DASH
Fourth Grade Boys- Huey Eason , paying·$8.80 and $4. Bold Sailing paid
Raymond Rider, Todd Hysell.
$2.40 to show.
Fourth Grade Girls - Jennifer
Royal Potion was clocked in I :44 1-5
Swartz, Cindy Arnold . Cindy Little . and picked up $9,615 purse money
Fifth Grade Gi rls - Chris Shank,
while paying $11.20, $3.40 and $3.40.
Paul DulL Bryan Korn .
Fifth Grade G1rls Dreama Southwood Champ, second, paid $2.60
English, Tracey Reed, Rhonda _Neece. and$2.20. Trenthor's'Cometpaid $4.20
SIKih Grade Boys - Kelly W1secup, to show.
Joe Humphrey, ·Bobby Staats.
The dally double of Boston Big Boy
Slalh Grade Girls - Jaye Roberts,
(9) and Sid's Doctor Baker (5) paid
Marla Wilson, Lisa B;!xter.
SOFTBALL THROW
$1,~ .
Kindergarten Boys - Stacey Shank,
The crowd of 6,625 wagered $812,231.
Jason Wright, Randy Corsi
Kindergarten Girls- Pam Whaley.
Kelly Smith, Aimee Milch .
Flrsl Grade Boys - Cary Belling,
In 1942 It was diSclosed that the
Randy Hawley, J1mmy Le•.
First Grade Girls - Deanna Haggy , United States and the Soviet Union
Shelly Arnold. Rainy Duff.
had made a lendlease agreement to
Second Grade Boys .- Danny Carl ,
aid the Soviet war effort.
NEW HAVEN, W. VA.
Keith Mallox, Todd Powell.
.
Second Grade Girls - Belh Ewong.
Greg Bailey
The Meigs American Legiop
baseball team started their 1979
campaign at Wellston Sunday and
camE! home with a split of a
doubleheader. The first game jitte~s
seemed to grip Homer Smitll's crew m
the first contest as they fell to the
hosts 4-3 when two.out lightning
struck in the ·'bottom of the seventh.
But a 14-llit Meigs attack was too
much for the hosts in the second game
as Meigs stored five times in the sixth
inning to roll to an 8-2 v1ctory .
The first game saw the two teams
locked in a scoreless battle for .the
first five inrun~s before the Meigs and

I
:

WW\e
·

PREVENTION
IS lHE

BEST POLICY

DALE C. WARNER

· INS.

FREE
IRON-oM

Sayre Hardware

Missy Woods, Leanna Pinkerman .

Third Grade Boys - Sieve Tracy,

·you CAN'T BEAT OUR PRICE! ! FACTORY DIRECT

James Norman , Eric Spencer .

Th ird Grade Girls - Dreama Benlz,
Stephanie English, Tracy Smith.
Fourth Grade Boys - Huey Eason,
Todd Hysell, Timmy Colmer.

I I

california, 7-3. .7oo; 2.92 ; Wa lls,
Cleveland, 8-4, .667, 3.38; Palmer,
Baltimore, 6-3, .667, 2.95.
STRIKEOUTS: Ryao. California.
94 . Guidry New York. 76 ; Jenkins.
T;xas, 73 ; 'Koosman, Minnesota, 58;
Underwood, Toronto, 56 ; Kravec,

Chicago, 56.

COMPTON f 0 • D
· •

'

I

I
I iit

OPTOMETRIST

1
,

OFFICE HOURS: 9:30 to 12• 2 til 5 CCLOSE AT NOON

M~yoT~~~:.~~;,!#r~~Rs
L_o_N_!~~!~!.::._:~s!~~~_T.!~·~':_o_'1_E!~~-------~NATIONAL LEAGU ~

....

Gallia Countians plated three runs in
the top of the sixth. Ken Brown led off
· with a single and promptly stole
second . Cliff Kennedy did the same,
and Dave Kennedy's squeeze bunt got
one run home. Art Fogelstrom singled
in the second tally, but then Wellston
got two quick outs. M1ke Wayland
walked, Fogelstrom scored on an
error, and then Steve Lillie's ground
out ended the inning.
Jeff Montgomery opened the
Wellston seventh with a walk and
Robbie Norman doubled, followed by
another walk. But then Meigs got two
quick outs and it looked like the game
was in tile bag before Wellston pushed

Pomeroy field day
results released

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .- - - - " " '

~-

of the Int ernational Leag ue .

RED SOX
Placed
J im
WrBOSTON
ighl pllcher,
on - lhe
21 -day
diSabled llsl. Recalled Joel Finch.

Triple Crown. Then came Affirmed,
'with young Steve Cauthen aboard, to
repeat.
_
Then this year - Spectacular Bid,
impressive winner of the Derby and
Preakness and oddson favorite
Saturday in tile gruelling lt,&gt;,.mile
Belmont stakes.
· Just a spectacle, not a horse race,
hard boots said. Y_ou gotta go just to
see a happening. Three Triple Crown
winners in three years - ut~eriy
ridiculous. If that happened - and
few doubted it would - the glory of
the Triple Crown would certainly lose
all ils luster.
Seattle Slew? Who's he ? Affirmed ?
Oh, that's the colt that beat Alydar
every time. As soon as people got
enchanted with ooe Triple Crown
winner, another came along.
The stature of all the past Triple
Crown winners - begin rung with . Sir
Barton in 1919 and moving on through
the roll cail of immortals such as
Omaha; War Admiral, Whirlaway,
Count Fleet and Citation - began to
dwindle.
Triple Crown winner? So what?
Everybody is doing it.
Then came Coastal. This was an
obscure chestnut raced only three
times ail year and not recognized
without a program.
He struck another crushing blpw to
the Bid's 19-year-&lt;&gt;ld jockey, Ron
Franklin, reeling under a torrent. of
adversity - ranging from fights to a
paternity suit.
Secretariat, maybe the greatest of
them ail , merely set off a cha in
reactiOn. Now it may be 25 years
before we have another.

San

Krenchlckl. infielder. from Rochester

..

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD
Baseball AI A Glance
By The Associated Press
AMERICAN LEAGUE
'EAST
·
W. L. Pet. GB
Baltimore
37 21 .638
Boston
35 21 .625 1
32 27 .542 51(,
New York
Milwaukee
32 28 .533 6
Oelroll
26 26 .500 8
27 29 .482 9
Cleveland
Toronto
16 44 .267 22
WEST
Calltorn la
35 24 .593
32 27 .542 3
Kansas City
30 26 .536 3'12
Minnesota
31 27 .534 31(,
Texas
Chlcago
28 29 .491 6
24 36 .400 11 •;,
Seattle
Oakland
19 40 .322 16
Saturday's Games
Boston 12, Mlnnesola 6
Kansas City 9, New York 8, 13 lnnln'gs
Toronto 5, Oakland 0
Balllmbre 4, Texas 3
Chicago 6, Milwaukee 2
California 9, Detroit 1
Cleveland 4, Seattle 3, 10 Innings

.

·

By Will Grimsley AP Correspondent
NEW YORK (AP) - If Coastal
were a guy instead of a horse, he
would wear glasses. If he were a a
prize fighter instead of a
thoroughbred the public would be
demanding an investigation.
But he deserves more than a
garland of carnations draped around
his neck and a second helping of oats
for his stunning feat Saturday of
puncturing the Triple Crown bid of the
supposedly indominatabie Spectacular Bid. He brought a breath of sanity
hack to the industry.
Until the majestic ' Secretariat
surfaced in 1973, ninety-&lt;!ight years
had gone by with a total of only eight
Triple Crown winners - 3-year-&lt;Jlds
able to sweep the Kentucky Derby,
Preakness and Belmont Stakes in the
space of about 35 days. A gap of 25
years had separated Secretariat from
the last Triple Crown winner ,
Citation.
.
The achievement meant something.
The Triple'Crown became the goal of
breeders, producing close to 30,000
new foals yearly. Top jockeys were
judged on their ability to win the big
ones, and thelr lame was measured by
the fleetness of the steeds they rode .
Horses and riders alike .became
legend - Earl Sande, Eddie Arcaro,
Bill Hartack, BiU Shoemaker - and
they were held in awe by followers of
the sport. They generated a magical
aura. People ·flocked to the blue grass
country to see where the horses were
born and bred and later retired to
produce champions of their own.
But four years after Secretariat
swept through all opposition in the
three classic races, a llandy-legged
colt named Seatlle Slew won the

.

1\

.I I

Cabins. Barns- Storage
HICKORY
MODULAR
BLDGS.
SANT AIRPORT

675-4079

~P~i.J~IN:T~P~LE~A:.:::-~~::;~~----•-••••••••-•-

�Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .• Monday, JWle II , 1979

5-

The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, June I I. 1979

Scouipack plans several summer activities
\.
/

'

'

Several suminer activities were
planned during the Chester Cub Scout
Pack 235 conunittee meeting held
Friday at the town hall.
New committee members, Shelia
Curtla and · Joan Scarbrough were
welcomed to the meeting as was Gail
Osborne as the assistant webelo
leader.
The committee voted to accept the
resignation of cub master, Ray
Laudermllt. Kathy Davis, pack chairman, appointed a conunittee to
secure IJ8IIles of qualified adults Interested in becoming cub masters.
In other pack related business, final
plans were made for aU of the C!Jbs to

• ARROW OF l.JGIIT AWARDS were presented to, left to right, Mike
Sim, JimmY Wilson, Donnie Maxson, ~nd Andy Hawk, .front. They are
pictured with, from the left, Don ~n, webelos, leader, Jeff Hawk,
webelos den chief, and Ray Laudennilt, cubmaster.

High rank award given
·CHESTER- Four members of Cub
Seoul Pack 235, Chester, received the
Arrow of Light Award, the highest
rank in the cub scout program, at a
recent pack Jl1eeting.
Receiving the award were Jimmy
Wilson, son of Mr. and Mrs , R. K.
Wilson, MikeSim, son of Mr. and Mrs.
William Sim, Andy Hawk, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Ray Laudennilt, and Donnie Maxson, soli of Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Maxson. Jimmy Wilson, Sim
and Hawk will continue scouting in
Pomeroy BoY. Scout Troop · 249,
Pomeroy, while Maxson will continue
his scouting in Troop 235.

Angela Martin and Edward Sellers

Martin, Sellers to wed in june
The open church wedding of Angela
Guests will be registered by Debbie
Sue Martin and Edward Earl Sellers Coleman. A reception will be held in
will take place at 1 p.m. on Saturday, the church social room immediately
JW!e 16, at the lAurel Cliff Free following the ceremony.
Metodlst Church.
The bridH!ect is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Franklin Martin,
Pomeroy, and the prospective
bridegroom is the S9ll of Mr. and Mrs.
Wayne Rowe, Racine. The Rev. Floyd
MONDAY
Shook will perfonn Ule do11ble ring
TWIN CI1Y Shrine Club Monday at
ceremony.
7:30p.m. at park in Racine. Members
andy Faulk will serve as maid of to bring fez for pictures.
bmor with Yvonne Core, Kathy
LADIES Auxiliary, Bas han
Quivey, and Margo Martin 88 Volunteer
Fire Department, Monday,
.bridesmaids. Frank Martin will be 8 p. m. at the fire house. Kathleen
best man, and the ushers will be Jeff Morris vice president, will have
Sellers, Jolm Sellers, Jolm Smith and charge' of the meeting and invites
Bl'l!ce Hysell. Rochelle Rowe and anyone interested in joining to attend
Sherrie Dawn stover will be Dower the meeting. Money making porjects
girls, and Steven Martin, the will be planned.
. .

r--

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.
,.

Social Calendar

ring bearer.

on this

Brand New

EUREKA·

Gail Osborne, scoutmaster of Troop
235, and Bob Arms, scoutmaster of
Troop 249 were present to welcome ·
their new members.
Ray Laildennilt, cubmaster, extended congratulations to the boys
and commended them for their work
In the pack.
Other awards presented were Dana
Eynon, Matt Harris, Brent Norton,
Mr.·and Mrs. Forest Robenstine of
Andrew Hawk, Donald Maxson, Mike
Sim, and Jimmy Wilson, athlete Kent spent a few days with Mr. and
badge ; and Brian Holly, Mike Young, Mrs. Clair Waggoner.
Mr. and Mrs. Clair Waggoner and
J. C. Ginther, and Billy Scarbrough,
Mr.
and Mrs. Fred Shankle of
silver arrows.
California were recent supper guests
. of Mr. and Mrs. John Williams.
Mr. and Mrs. Asa Jordan of Middleport visited Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Williams Mo~day afternoon.
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Nellie
Borgan over the weekend were Mr.
At the Allg. lOmeeting, Mrll. Diana and Mrs. JamesBorganof Lancaster,
Ebers, Meigs County Extension Mr. and Mrs. Larry Birchfield and
. agent,will~thespeaker. Anauction · children of Albany, Jeff Birchfield,
W88 -held following the meeting using Rosella Birchfield and Anna Dorgan,
"funny money."
Columbus.
'
TOPS mets every Friday.morning
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Eshehnan
with weigh-in time being ftwn 9 a.m. called on Mr. and Mrs. Doug Bishop
!o9:30a.m.
Sunday evening.
Mrs. Nellie Borgan, Mrs. Russell
BIBLE SCHOOL
Eshelman attended a Tupperware
ANNOUNCED
party· at the home of Mrs. James ·
Vacation Bible School at the MI.

Harrisonville
Society News

sp~ak

Dr. Nan Mykel will be guest
speaker at the Friday meeting of the
TOPS (take off pounds senslbly)
Club, OH 1439 to be held at the Mental
· Health Center in Pomeroy.
During last week's meeting plans
were made for several members to
attend the area recognition day
workshop to be held in Logan. Two
new members were enrolled to make
the chapter a toiaJ of 16. Net loss for
the week was 18 pounds with Jo
Slalnaker being the best loser of the
week. Members gave a tribute in song will
UnionBaptistChwrehnearCarpenter
be held ' June 13-23 from 9:30 to
to her.
11:30 a.m. American Missionary intern students from Grand Rapids,
Mich. will be Conducting the Bible ·
school. There -will be classes for
children of aU ages as well as adults.

TUESDAY
FREE BLOOD PRESSURE Clinic
"'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!II. Tuesday from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. at
11
. town hall in Harrisonville. Sponsored
by Harrisonville Senior Citizens. All .
pel'SOII8 of aU ages are welcome.
MEIGS CHAPTER 53 DAV
Tuesday at 7:30 p:m. at home on Butternut Ave., Pomeroy.
·

Hysell honored
Mrs. Charles R. Hysell, Racine,
was honored recently with a layette
shower at the home of Mrs. Charles
M. Hysell, Pomeroy.
Gifts were placed in a white
bassinet trimmed with pink and blue
streamers. Games were played with
prizes going to Mrs. Martha Fry, Mrs.
Katie White, and Mrs. Terry Shain.
Refreshments were served to those

Estep Thursday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Alkire, Helen
Pickens of ' Racine, Mr. and Mrs.
Dutch Hewitt of Colwnbus, Virginia
Burke, Pomeroy, visited Monday with
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Alkire.
Mr. and Mrs. James Cheadle and
family of Columbus visited Mr. and
Mrs. Junior Payne over the weekend.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Alkire were
supper guests of Mr. and Mrs. Kermit
Walton SWlday evening.
Miss Barbara · Sieple of Indiana
spent a weekend with her aunt, Mrs.
Frances Young. They visited Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Hall In Columbus on
Friday.
Mrs. Myrta Wilson of Colwnbus and
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Bailey of Marengo
spent a weekend with Mrs. Stella
Atkins and Ruby Diehl.
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Alkire and
children of Pomeroy were supper
guests SWlday evening of Stella
Atkins and Ruby Diehl.

Ask me about
Ufe Insurance
bToda

s

Famil~

) offer a tota l program to help
protect your family's way of living
and bu ild financial securi ty for your·

retirement vea rs. Call me for details.

MIKE SWIGER
Middleoort, 0 .
992-7155
"•'• ,,.
)ta te Farm ltle and

A

...

I HIIIIANCI

Acc1den t Assuran ce

Cnmoa ny
!trwu.- J!•· , •

" ,,.

..... "

~

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

o/Qmilhil~

"'u c-

Pr.,IP
CoJIJ
011 •••
Gregg Gibbs

I

992-3443

T·BOIIE $

$ 3B

CARDINAL

BACON ................~~~ ..

STEAK~ .Pound

r
~

1
~

For Custom Meat Cutting Call Us

~

VAUGHAN'S.

. ..

•

~~~-=~~~~~~~~~~~~~-=~~~~
J

FRESH LIKE

COR

FRESH CALIFORNIA

14 Y2· 01. Cream Style or

STRAWBERRIES •• ~~~t ..... 69e

OCUST &amp; PEARL STREETS
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Thoughtfor today: It does not take a
majority to make a rebellion. II takes
only a few determined leaders and a
good cause ~ H.L. Menoken, American writer and editor, 1880-1956.

..

.

12 ·01' . Whole Kernel

FRESHLIKE

VEOETABLE SALE

.

BANANAs.......... 4

3~89

LB.

~

.
ATTENTION BIG OR I.ITTLE

00

FARMERS- WE BUY HOME GROWN

PEPSI · 8 Bns.

jason Shain
WHOLE

Turns six years

• 6-poaltlon Dlei-A·Napl
• Reln!orced vinyl
decorator bag cover

U -1n. Fren t h SIVII Oraen 8eone
Silted Cenon
. ~
1 O·o r Vet All Mlo.d \legtllblfl
14·ot Pe n &amp; C•nol t
12 ..., .o r Cui S pin1ch
14 \'f 01 Swil l Peel

T4.01

PRICES GOOD THRU JUNE 16
PAK 16 OZ.

Mr. and Mrll. Dave Shain, Route 2,
Racine, entertained recently with a
party honoring their son, Jason
David, on his sixth birthday.
ASplderman theme W88 carried out
with .the cake being made by Mrs.
Joann Tuttle, Racine. Ice cream and
cake were aerved to Chad Diddle, Ar·
nie Dugan, Jennifer Damron, Jwlie
Beegle, Tina and Travis SpaWl, Rick
and Tim Gilbride, Kenny Brown,
Keith and Cindy Allen, Mayla
Yoachlm, Jan Glllilan, Trent Lewis,
Robin Manuel, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
R. Hysell, Mr. and Mrs. Barney
Shain, Mr. and Mrll. Charles M.
Hysell, Mrs. Garnet Ervine, Mrs.
Mildred Spencer, Mrs. Nola Spaun,
and Mrll. Charlene Lewis.
· Sending gifts and cards were Jon
Tuttle, Mr. and Mrs. Bru~ Zirkle,
Susan and Brenda, Miss Pat Shain,
. Miss .Vera Beegle, Mrll. Laura Hoff,
man, Mr. and Mrs. Tom Reed, Sherr!
and Theresa.

...

PRODUCE. STOP IN OR CALL

we reserve the right ·
to ·limit quantities

Exclualft Ylbn-Groomer II
beeler .,., bi'VIh ioll

$1~t

.

MONAR CH

40·oJ.

$}89
STEAK •••••••••••••••• ~~;.

I

ale posit

SYRUP..............................................~~..~~..~!~·-· s1 29 .

STEW

·.

LB.

MAXWELL HOUSE . .

$}49
SAUSAGE ......... !-!~; ••
HOMEMADE

.

COFFEE...............~~-.~~...
~r~~AFE . . . . ~. . . . . . . . . . . . . . ~~.~~-~!..~3

$}59

REGULAR, DRIP, ELEC. PERK OR ADC

=.~~~
.
.
.
.
.
!¥••~ }69
BOLOGNA....... ;..
sge
9
BACON.•.........•L~~~
~rts~~. . . . . !!:~~-~ 1°
BEEF ••••••••••••••••••••••

W'LSONS ,KORN KING

LB

$}93

.

$139

PIIIK · 16-oz.$}49
11
Can

,~

69

VALLEY BELL

•
SUMMERTIME TREATS
ARCHWAY COOKIES ......... ~~!:~~-~ ... 20~

SAVORY

FINE ASSORTMENT

DIET RITE OR

OF STORE SLICED

RC

•i2 Gal .

8 bottles

LUNCH MEATS

OFF

'139

']DAIRY -VALUES I
Salis. ·S'taak. Beef .Stew~ Beef S. N.oodles.
Turkey. Chicken&amp;: Ourhpllnga or Ch1cken &amp;
Noodles
REG . or CRINKLE ' CUT

·16oz. $}09

ORE IDA

.

~

FRENCH FRIES ........ ........ ..... .. .... .... .

.

~.
Pko

Burdens

For Complete Information Call

1-800-282-6410

TwiN POPS ..................................... ·;.;~· 79 1 ~~;-..,
Burdens
· 12 ·C•
BORDEN
'E BARS ······································· Pkg .. 89
FUD
Burdens
·

FREE

C

Outside Ohio Call Free 1-800-84~78

Dr. Riviere

ICE CREAM BARS ...............:....:..:.....';.;~· $1"

$}00
SOUR CREAM &amp; Dl PS••••••••••·•• ••••.••· 28oz,
Ctn. ,
VALLEY BELL

Dr. W.P Kimball • [Jr. H .'. Murphy • Dr. w.l . SIUirl,
.. r . W , Adam' • tJ r. G.A. M o01~

:.a...,.. t.:. lMinJ:Mu..

I • • ·

.

·

·..

.

,

$l&amp;g

.2 % MILK ••. ,. •...•.•....•.••.•••••••••••• ~.a.'~ •••

, ,
Dr . Aould F. RMtrt
Or. A.J . Stachli • Dr. G.J. Stomba u1111• Dr . C.W Oul
Colbmb1U, Ohio

\

.I

II

69(

MONARCH

CARDINAL SANDWICH BUNS ...... ~~-~.~.~:49~
.CUBE

MIX or
MAT C H

PORK &amp; BEANS .... .,........... ....... ····· Con

LOG CABIN

. FRYING
,CHICKEN

I Wide hHdllght

i'

C\

BOILED HAM...............................................1~·. '1 98

Pound

Custom full upper &amp; lower

106 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, 0.

CALLMUtuiJI

SLICED THE WAY YOU WANT

••·••····•···•·· ····••·•·· ·····•············•• ···

INGELS
FURNITURE
&amp;JEWELRY

HOW'S YOUR
HOSPITALIZATION?

FRYERS..............................!! 53~
68
FRENCH CJTY WIENERS .........~.~: •1

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

SIRLOIN
STEAK

Today's birthdays: Opera singer
Rise Stevens is Be. Pianist Hazel Scott
is 59. French ocean explorer Jacques
Cousteau is 69.

Walker. He discussed various district
activities. Next regular meeting of
the pack will be held at 7 p.m. on July
13, at the scout hall.

FAMILY PAK

THE BEST USDA CHOICE

arrangement theme.

One year ago : Israel said its
invasion forces which would withdraw
from southern Lebanon would turn
their major strongpoints over to
Lebanese Christian militiamen rather
than to U.N. peacekeeping troops.

.

HWltington, W. Va. where they will
appesr on WSAZ-TV 's Mr. Cartoon.
As a special good will project the
group voted to help the Shade River
Jaycees collect good used toys for
their toy.for-tots project. They will be
giving these to children of needy
families at Christmastime.
Special guest at the meeting was
·distri ct representative, Walter

WHOLE OR

. WINDING TRAIL Garden Club, 8
p.m. Tuesday at the home of Mrll.
Cora Beegle, Racine. Plants auction
to be held. Mrll. Dollie Hayes to have
the program on making corsages.
"Only a Rose '' will be the
WEDNESDAY
FEENEY-BENNETT POST 128,
American Legion, 7:30p.m. Wednesday night at the hall.
JUNIOR . AMERICAN LEGION
AUXIUARY, Feeney-Bennett Post
128, 7:30p.m.at the hall.
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT Lions
Club, Wednesday noon at the Meigs
Inn.

Chester Grade School at 8 a .m. that skating party at the Skate-a-Way
day.
RU.k and all cubs and their families
On July 15, the pack will have a are urged to par;ticipate. Also in July
the pack will visit the country home of
Don and Geneva Maxson. Plans are
named and ·Mrs. Ruth Hysell, Mrs. also being made for a pack jamboree.
Jackie Zirkle, Susan and Rhonda,
On Aug. 3 the
. pack will travel to
Mrs. Charlene Lewis, Mrll. Lucille
Leifheit, Mrs. Maxine Shain, Mrs.
Garnet Ervine, Mrs. Bessie Sax1op,
Others presenting gifts to Mrs.
and Mrs. Ellen Johnson.
Mrll. Thelma Jeffers, Mrs: Maxine Hysell were Mrs. Shirley Gibbs , Mrs.
Lee and Jay, Miss Becky Fry, Mrs. Maxine Jordan, Mrs. Carol Elkins,
Martha Fry, Mrs. June Pullinil, Mrll. Mrs. Anna BeUe Sisson, Mrll. Ruth
Cherry See, Mrs. Mildred Spencer, Lewis, MrS. Debbie Lewis, Mrs. Rita
Mrs. Etta Will, Mr!J. Dottie Saxton, Hayes, Mrs. Ruth Ryan, Miss Connie
Proffitt, and Mrs. Romagay Ward.
and Mrll. Catherine Ervin.
'

TREAT DAD TO ·
THE GOSPEL INSPIRATIONS of Akron will provide special music
at the aU-day Father's Day service at the Mt. Union Bap~ Church near
Carpenter. There will be a basket dinner at noon. The public Is invited to
attend. The Rev. Cecil Cox Is pastor of the church.

Dr. Mykel to

travel to Rio Grande College to participate in the distrid cub oly.mpics
on June 16. The pack will meet at the

•

�6 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Munday, J1u1e 11 , 1979

Your Best Buys Are .Found
Notices

WANT AD
CHARGES
15 Word! or Under
Cuh
t'!Uiqce
I d&lt;JO
l.OO
1.2$
2days
1.50
1.90
ldlys
1.110
2.2$
I days
3.00
3.75

Each word O\ler the- ~nimWll
15 Words Is 4 cents per word per
day, Ads runnin~ other than consecutive days wdl be charged at
the 1day rate. ·
·
In memory, Card of Thank!! .
and ObU~ry : 6 cent!l per word 1
13.00 rrunlmwn. Gash in ad·

vance.

'nle Publi~r reserves the
right to edit or reject any ads.

YARD
SAlE .
Kr owscryn
res idence, 300 Broodwoy,
Furni tur e ,
M idd l epo rt.
clothes . misc. Tues ., Wed.,
Thurs.

949-2.66 .
Help wanted
IMMEDIATE

laboratory Techn ician, 3-11
or equivalent . E
. xcejlent salary
and fringe benefits . Shift dlf.
ferenta ll. Con tact: Personnel
Office ,
P'l eosonl
Valley
Hospital , Volley Drive. Point

Pleasant, WV . 25550. Phone
:104-675-4340. An Equol Opportunity Employ,er .

HELP WANTED

Phooe 992-2156

WANT-AD
IAJ?YERTISING
DEADUNES
Mol)day

Tuesday
thru 1Friday

plaster. Contact Dwight Goins
at Meigs locol School District.

the day before publicatioo

I

Sunday

APPLICATIONS now being occepted for insurance agent at .
Western-Southern life, 218%
E. Main. Contact M.R. Lehew.

Friday afternoon

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
"EPA IR OF ROOF
FO"
MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
IN

Phone992-2480.
BARMAID WANTED. Apply at
Headquarters in Middleport.

MEIGS LOCAL

SCHOOl DISTRICT

CONTRACT

Sealed proposals wi l l oe
rece'i ved at the off ice of the
Dire c tor of the Ohio
Department of Trans portat ion , Columbust Oh·io,
un t il 10 :00 A .M ., Ohio
Standard T ime , Tuesday ,
June 26, 1979, for i m provements in :
Athens ,
Meig s
and
Washington Co.un ti es , Ohio ,
on various sectio"s - ATH Un i ted States Route SO In
the Village of Coolville and
. State Route 7 in Athens

- MEG

State

Route 7 in Meigs County ,
and . WAS . Unlteo States
Route 50 In Washin.gton , by
repair i ng
concrete
pavement .
,.,,..
Pavement
Wi9th ), varies .
Projeat and Work Length
36, 590.4 feet or 6.93
m i les.
The blading for th,is
project shall be restricted
to Contractors with a
Cert i ficate of qualif ication
from the Ohio Department
of Transportation in the
11mount of $150,000.00 or

DAVIOL . WEIR
DIRECTOR

Rev . 8-11 ·73

CHIP WOOD. Poles max.
diameter 10" on largest end.
$12 per ton . Bundled slob. $10
per ton. Delivered to Ohio
Pollet Co., Rt. 2, Pomeroy.

" The date set for com pletion of this work shall be
as . set forth In the bidd ing
proposal ."
Each bidder shall be
requ ired to fi le with his b id
check
or
a certified
cashier's che c k for an
amount equal. to fi\'e per
cent of his bid, but in no
event more t han fifty
thousand dollars, or a band
for ten per cent of his bid ,
payable f o ttie Dire c tor .
Bidders must apply, on
the proper forms , for
qualif ication at l ea st ten
days pr ior to the date set
for opening b ids in ac .
cordance with Chapter 5525
Oh io Revised Code .
.
Plans and specifi cations
are on file In th~ Depart ment of Transportation a!'cr
th
0 15tr 1ct
the office Of
e
Deputy 0 I rector .
The Director · reserv es
the r ight to r~jecf any and ·.
all bids .
DAVID L. WEIR

DIRECTOR

(~) 11. 18, 2tc
I

Camping Equipment

1967 Nationar, 12)(50, 2 bedr.

MOBILE HOME SALES, PT.
PLEASANT, WV . 304 - 67~ - ~24 .

1960 SKYLINE trailer 5Chr:10. N.
Main in Rutlond. 7-i2-2789.
1978 MIDAS mini motor home.
Dodge 360 chassis , power
steering, brakes, auto., many
8)(tras . Self-contained. Actual
miles 5,520. Like neW. 631
Grant St., Middleport, OH.
Phone 997-33131 .

For Sale or Trade

P~OBATE

COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHO
ESTATE OF ROSA M.
SEARLS, DECEASED

Case No . 22102

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUC IARY
On May 29, 1979, in th e
Meigs Cou nty Prob a t e
Co urt , · Case No . 22 ,702 ,
Paul Sea rl es, Rout e 1.
Cheshire l Ohio 45620 wa s
appointed Executor of th e ·
es t ate of Ro sa M . Se art s1
deceased , late of 689 Beech
St. , Midd leport. Oh io 45760.
Robert E . Buck
Probate JUdg e.
Clerk
{6) A, 11. 18, Jtc

NOTICE OF
FILING OF
PETITION FOR
TRANSFER OF FUNDS

For Rent .
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Pork ,

sond,

gravel. colclum chloride, fertilizer , dog food , and all types
of salt. Excelsior Salt Works ,
Inc. , E. .-.,ain St., ~omeroy,

992-3991.
PLANTS, CABBAGE , broccoU,
cauliflower , brUssels $P:routs,
head lettuce , tomatoes , and
large selection of bedding annuals. Pots of flowen and
hanging
boskets.
Cleland
Greenhouse .
Geraldine
Cleland, Racine.

Elementary

from

POSt

both deep and shallow well,
sale priced.

lot. TRY AND TOP
THIS. $24,000.00 .
NEW LISTING - 4
a c res i n town, garden
space, fru i t trees, good 3
bdrm . home, basement
w -garage,
enclosed
porc h, din ing
room .

P92-3l25
216 E. Se&lt;ood Street

w i th a 7 room

frame

SALE PRICES
Ja&lt;k W. Carsey
Phone 992-2181

or .C construction workers.
After Spm . coli 992- ~3.-1 ,

992-3129, or 992-5914 .
TWO BEDROOM furnished opt.
992-312~ .
992 -5434 , or
992•S914 .
TWO BEDROOM tr011er. Adults
only. 992-3324.

992-2179.

Racllat9;, ~
Service~

BLOCK &amp; BRICK
WORK, GENERAL

From tile laroest Truck or ·
Bulldozer Radla1or
,mallest Hea1er Care.

CONTRACTOR

Smith Nelson
Motors, Inc.

Rt.3 ·
Pomeroy, Ohio
992-5547
4·25· 1 mo.- Pd.

Ph. ~92·2174

business of six rooms

down. Good Investment
for you at 544,.500.
NATIVE STONE
Remarkably nice inside
Wf·t h natura l gas fur ·
nace, city water and
sewer. 21J2 acres with

7•2-2877 or 742-2152.
J9n 1000cc burgundy Sporster
Spec . Drag pipes, king ond '
queen seats. 2700. miles. Excellent condition. $2-iOO f irm .
Call anytime 9-i9·2221.

Phone 992·6323

Fre:e Estimates
5·20·1 mo.-pd.

Box 3

w.

Mot~, Evenlnts-Muon,
Va .:
7:JO St. Josepti ,Ca1tlollc Church ;
Tuet.. Morning (10 ::1t) •nd

Evenings •• 7:30-Middle,ort;

Htattl United MetfiOdiU Ctiurctl

lots of .trees and lonely.
$27,500.
LEAVE YOUR SELL·
lNG PROBLEMS WITH
US. TRY DIALING A
DeEeAeL FOR BEST
RESULTS.

Housing
Headquarters
TWO STORY 3 b«troom nouse.
· 3 lots . Now's your chance if
you need o neuse. $12.COO.
Ownitr willing to
talk .

992-2082 or 742-2329.

6· J ·I

lime ond fertilizer hauling and
spreading. Also limestone' and
gro'.'el hauling. 7-i:2-2455,

ANO

SERVICE

on

742-24SS.
ADD ONS ond remodeUng,

ser:vice, all
The Fobrlc
Autl-1orized
Service. We

Rl!al Estate for Sale
3 '12 acres in Pomeroy. Secluded wooded area on top of hill .
Overlooks river , Woter , elec·

n

State, Aikens. 614·S92-305J .
MODERN THREE bedroom
houu ,
full
basement,
fireplace, fully carpeted, cen, trol air, enclosed sun porch,
... located on 611J acres on CR 28,
approlC. 3 miles from Racine. If
interested contact lorry Wolfe
949-2836 weekends and .after
5 evenings.
'

HOBSTETTER REALTY

makes, 992-:2284.
Shop, Pomeroy.
Singer Salet and
sharpen Scissors.

will koul fi ll dirt. top soli,
limestone and grovel . Call Bob
or Roger Jeffers, doy phone

992-70B9,
night
phone
992_- 3525 or 992-S232.
EXCAVATING , dozer ,
. backhoe ond ditcher, Chorltts
R. Hatfield. Black Hoe SeNice,
Rutland, Ohio. Pone 7.C2-2008.

PULLINS EXCAVATING. Complete Service. Phone 992·2-478.

AUTOMOBILE

INSURANCE

be.n cancell~? lost your
operators
licenSe?
Phone

• 73

Ll'ttii:' i»RPHAN
BUT THEN VAN BRII'lGS r
HOlliE THAT JACK SACK.
II/HilT Ai'l APPETITE'" AND
DAN AND .JACK HAVE TWO
CAKES EACH "'

+A KQ 10

AIOfiE-GniuW.U'
50 MRS . DRIFT AND I CLAIM

Wf DOH''T CARE FOR AN'(,.,

OH, WELL ··· THE WORLD'S
FULL 0' GUYS LIKE T!&lt;AT, .
I'NI 'FRAID ...

E·C ELECTRICAL Contractor
serving Onio Volley r_.gion .
Six days a week, 24 hours 1er·
vice. Eme:rgency calls. Call

~OSE

OUT OF
BUSTII&gt;J$ UP '!HE
. RAFT 'THSY BLJIL..T;

down (non-veterans)

&lt;'

IRElAND
' MORTGAGE CO.
77 E. State, Athens
592·3051

Excellent

view

Pass
Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass

SAVE ON

CARPETING

1 Grow,

Destiny"

SAVE ALOT
A GOOD SELECTION
OF END &amp; ROLL
BALANCES.

5 Chess tactic
I Choral work
7 Macaw

1Z Beaming

I French
marshal
10 Galalt:y

HOrchestra

feature
Yd ..

ZZ.Law : Lat.

20 Barraclt.s
Item

23 On

21 Dutcl!

Z5 French king
ZIWilhout
restraint
27 "A Boy Named

- "

31 Smarting
township · 3Z Greek.author

H Dictatorship
Z8 Beloved

24 ·Rolls of CArpet In
Sto&lt;k ~ 100's of Somptes
to Choose From .
BUY NOW &amp; SAVE

clear of

tZ Nonsente!

17 Sub's weapon 11 Jalopy
abbr-.
11 Detective
18 House
1J Put forth

SALE

33 stay

ZZ French city

member

15 Take steps

All CARPET
. ~ NOW ON

$7'!..

.

--

land

·13 "No" vote
It Algerian

MJapaneee
capital
38 Talking
bird

31Sad sound
38Hurry
to Eggs

n-

Lehr

Z8Regret
30 Paton's
~~-the

Phalarope"

· Call 742-2211
TALK TO
Wendell or Herb Grate
or Gene Smith

32 "The Say

•.•••.

RUTlAND
AJRNITURE

- Kid":
Wlllle Mav&lt;l..--t--t-35Just a 38 Stir the
emotions

31 Andress

Rutland

film

GIT IN TH'

39 Jesus of
Nazareth,
e .g.
42 OPEC topic

HOUSE AN'

DO 'iORE
CHbRES !!

43 Balanced
«Turhan 45 In the kno1v I

m+--t--

DOWN
1 Cugat's ex

I

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's bow to work it:
lo

river

PEANUTS

'I•

¥A 4

• AQISU

4 Generation

po~

WE OFFER YOV ...
1. ·Two full floors of all new
furniture.
2. Nice oefectlons of used fur•
nllure.
3. A farge building full of
beautiful &lt;arpet.

beautiful flower ~ardens with some fruit trees. Pri&lt; '
ed to sell at 540.000 .00.
JUST LISTED - We have an extremely nice home
In the $95,000.00 price range. You must see this one
tQ appreciate Its beauty.·
DAN \If LLE - 4 bed•oom home with family room
bath and kitchen. Situated on
of an acre w;th
smoke house, cellar and 2 other gOOd buildings.
Needs some work t&gt;ut.well worth $18,000.00.
FARMS - We have lin the Racine area . Call Hilton

.

S-11-B

device

8 "Who - I
Tum To? "
9 Phil or Julie
11 " You - My

&amp;

742·2211

You hold :

3 Leprechaun's

as a vine

DRIVE &amp; LimE

R:t.

Alk tiM I!QCPII

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
2 Air safety

RUTlAND AJRNilURE

kitchen .

4 NT
5 NT

~Htf·~-

Th' man's nam·e is
Eqqs, an' he's at
Buqsies Bar an'
\---:;;;;:;::;:::::;:::~ Gr.i II !

SHP AT •••

modern

Pass
Pass

An Alabama r eader asks
what we respond to partBy Oswald Jacoby
ner 's one-club opening bid . .
and Alan Sontag
We respond one diamond,
but see nothing wrong with a
Oswald : "Here is an EasM tw1&gt;-diamond jump. The one
ley Blackwood hand that important point is that we
rea lly s hows the importance respond in our six·card suit.
&lt; NEWSPAP~ H ENTERPRISE ASSN. I
of planning your play at
trick one. "
(Do you .have a question fo r
Alan: " It is a grand slam
th e experts ? Write ''Ask the
contrac t so it is really imfxpe rts. '· care of this newspa·
portant for declarer to stop
per. Individual questions w/1(
and think ." ·
,
be .answered if accompanied
Oswald: "Easley points
by stamped, self-ai:Jdressed
out that any unthinking de- envelopes. The most interest·
clarer automatically dis- ing quest ions will be used In
cards 'a diamond on · the a ce
this column and will rece ive
of hearts at tri ck one. After copies of JACOBY MODERN.)

PAW HAS HIS GOOD
POINTS AN' HIS
BAD POINTS

NEW with
L.ISTING
In Po~~~:;~YI:a~~~J;v
home
living- room,
bath,

North East

OhiO

(eligible veterans)
FHA-AS low as 3%

systems,

U3.
Phone 1 (614) 698-7331 or
742·2S93.

Weal

Openiqg lead: • K

Real Estate Loans

882-2952 or 882-3454,
HOWERY AND MARTIN Excavating, septic
dozar, backhoe.

Vulnerable : East-West
Dea"ier: South

• AK876

Purchas!
and
Refinance
30 Year Terms
A-No money down

FROM

•

• ----

··---

&lt;)&lt;o

992-2143 .

candltlon . Phone 992-7605 or

home.. fully carpeted. complete kitchen , central air
g,o r.og&amp;, · carport, work shop :
gorden, fru i t trees. Over on
acre. Neot Rut lond. 7-i2-2562 .-·

• • •~

SUPER
GOOSE
STOCK
TRAILER NOWA\IAILABLE .

Repolrs.

EXCAVATING, dozer , loader
and. backhoe wOrk ; dump
trucks and lo-b6ys for hire,

$7900 .

REAL ESTATE loans, Purchase
and refinance . 30 year terms,
VA. No money down (eligible
veterans) . FHA · As low os 3
per cent down (non·veterons) .
Ireland Mortgage Co.,
E.

MA~HINE

2
¥t0!71543!
QJ a4

.• AKQIII13

'

Sweepers, toasters, irons, oil
small applionc&amp;S. lawn moer, ·
next to State Highway Garage
on Route 7, 985-3825 .

SEWING

clubs, gets to dummy with a
trump, leads a club from
dummy, ruffs it to drop
Wes t's jack , gets back to
dummy with the a ce of diamonds and finally gets to
discard his other diamond
on thai last club."
Oswald: " Maybe . East
should hav e ma.,lle a
Lightner double of seven
spades and hoped that West
could guess to lead ,a club.''

21320 MtNitgome,:., Rd.

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR -

gutter work, down spoub,
some concrete Work, walks
and
drivewoys
(free
estimate). V·.C. Young, Ill,
Racine, OH. 9-i9-27.C8.
.

cashes hi s ace-king-queen of

•

TRAILER SALES

BRADFORD, Auction. .r , Com·
plete Service. Phone 9_.9·2~87
or 9,.9·2000. Racine, OhiQ,
Crltt Bradford.

Howard Rotavators and V
chisel plows. Leo Morris.

lrlc ovolloble .
992-3986.

mo.

EAST

• a

SOUTH

4·23-1 mo.

992-2845.

7 and 143. 992-3183.
THREE BEDROOM 6 yeor old

and

For further information call Jo
Ann Newsome, 614-Hl·l312.

Pkone 698-32'10.
LEO "MORRIS Trucking. Will do

SALES

110:30)

Evertints at 1:H -PI. P'tea.unt,

WEST

¥KQJ8
• K 10 s s
• J753

6/~NTS

line-Barth-Swiu Colony Joy co - Motor Homes to Toppers, accessories and friendl y
service. For directions coli

Alan ' "The discard of the i
ten of clubs is a s ure-thing
play. SouLh dra ws trump,

• 9B642

tH -U9... 245 EYen lngl
2 Miles East of.Wilkesville

WANTED
Overweight People
Sfinderella
Diet Classes

trick short. '.'

+A92

CellufOSI&lt; (WOOd fiber)
Thermal Insulation
Savo J&lt;l pet. to so pet.
on heating cast ·
Exl&gt;erlonce and ·
fully Insured
Fret Est.
Call 992-2772
5·11·1 mo.

Lilngsvllle,

that careless s tart , the bad
club break leav es him one

S-li-A

• J975

and com ·
Call
for

Chester, 0 .
5-6-1 mo. pd.

J)roper discard wins slam
¥A

10TALK

COONER'S"CAMPERS on Rolnbow Ridge with lop of tile

I!AL-D,MIDDI.£ -

NORm

IN

STOCK
fer immediate
dellv9fY: various sizes of pool
kits. D~it- yourself or let us
Install for you . 0 . Bumgardner
Sales , Inc. 992-572.t.

FA\,

--...-...;~D MAN.

MONTGOMERY

Jack's ·Septic
Tank Semce

1940 CASE TRACTOR . Good
condlllon. 5600. 992-3183,
1978 HONDA 750-8. Excellent

living room and kitchen ; wallto-wOlf carpeting. I Yr - bcres
immediate possession . Priced
at $32,000. Intersection of Rt .

A~.

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE

estimate. 24 Hour Ser ~
vice. Any day, anytime.
Portable toilet rental.
Phone 985-3806
Ja&lt;k Ginther 985 -3806

eNEWHOMES
e ROOM ADDITIONS
eiiOOFING
eVINYL SIDING
•GUTTER &amp; SOFFIT

985-=l838.

garoge. Call 7•2·2754 .
THREE BEDROOM house, Iorge

Pomeroy

Residential
mercia!.

Hall, White yams , red yams,
Georgia
Red , Centennial,
Bunch Puerto Rican . Tomoto
and cabbage plants. Dwight
Spencer, West Skoda Rd ., Jmi.
N.W. of Chester. Phone

TWO STORY house located on
,/~ ocro in Rutland. Full bose·
ment, lartJe living and dining
room with server, drapes ond
carpeting. Utility building and

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

J&amp;L

SEPTIC TANK
CLEA.NING

BOB'S GENERAL
CONTRACTING

SWEET POTATO plants, Noncy

.Real Estate for Sale

BRIDGE

' ·

4231 mo. (Pd .)

EXPERIENCED

I I I I XJ

(Ans-s tomorrow)
Salurday'sl Jumbles: 1/ISDR ABIDE FASTEN STRONG
Answer: They're supposed lp get people to
work-BOSSES
Monday, June 11

992-60l1

1 - ~· f)d .

N. L Coostrudion

3 AND -i RM furniShed and un furni shed
opts.
Phone

992-5434 .
FURNISHED APT . sultoblo for 3

*New Home
*Add ons.
* Remoldiilgs
*Free estimates

sug ~

gosled by lho above calfoon.

C. R. MASH
VINYL &amp; ALUM.
SIDING

Athens Ar@a

w. va . Krodel Ptrk Club House.

lillie Hxing. Just look at
lhe price of on ly $12,000.
5 RENTALS - Four 2
bedroom apls. up and a

Now arrange llwt circled leflera to
form the surprise answer, as

Print answer here: (

797 -274i or 797·27.!12

6-6-1 mo .

VERY GEN'ft.E Quarter Horse.
Western parade saddle.

older home with. nice
woodwork but needs a

Phone

Ja&lt;k W. Carsey
Mgr. ·
Phone 992 -2181

H~skins U9· 216tl.

and 3 acres. $17.000.
NEW. LISTING- Rt. 33 .
out of town is this 2
bedroom · home, bath,

and be Independent" for
only $23,.500.
RACINE - A 3 bedroom

992-3929.
VERMEER BAL.ER Soles, ports
and service. Balers iri stock for

POMEROY LANDMARK

Tom

Thun. ,MIH'nlnv

go into self employment

1978 STARCRAFT BOAT 18 fl.
trailer Ond access. includes
Mercruise 228 h.p., stoinlen
steel prop, built-i n refresh ~
ment center , podded reor sun
and ski deck wHh full canvas ,
includes life jackets, ski
ropes , fire ew:tinguisher and
more. Blue· metalflake color.

SHRUBS

maintenance, new and ,.e,.ir .
SfOf'l'i'l diNlrs and windows. All
work guaranteed. 20 vears ex perience. Free esti'"atn. C•ll

614-843-31J11.

level lot. $23,000.
BUSINESS - Want to

Mgr.

AND

All types raoflng, tutters l! nd
downspouts. All types hom@

water, 2 car garage,
barn, nice garden spot

large dining ~ furnace,
fl,lll basement, and nice .

C.i~CLE:5.

IWEEYALj

.

Hoine Maintenance

992-2772

bldgs . Near Long Bot'
tom . $33,.500.00.
WE ARE A FULL TIME
REAL
· ESTATE
ORGANIZATION.
"FOR BEST RESULTS
LIST WITH US."

~~!~.~!{8
.·1~-

VERY IMF'O~ANi
IN AU"TOMO&amp;Il.. E

. I I I _

-

and

-CALL

70 acres, farm, ranch
type house, barn &amp; other

noose. Has hot .&amp; cold

Headquarters tor
l-lotpoint and
General Electric
Appliances

ROSE· BUSHES

IDOSPYRb

Auto&amp;Truck
Repair
Also Transmission ·
Repair
Phone 992-5682
4-30-tfc

Ohil Valley Roofing

Free Estimate

HARD
Hi FINO .
$25,000.00 .
NEWER RANCH - 5
Pis. Excellen t condi tion, central air &amp; heat,
large level tot, . fully
equipped
kitchen.
MANY ,
OTHER
FEATURES. $29,100.00.
NEW LISTING MAJOR
INVESTMENT PRO·
PERTY IN MEIGS CO.,
POTENTIAL
FOR
COMMERCIAL
&amp;
R E C R E ,A T I 0 N A L
USES . CAL~- FOR
DETAILS .
SHOULD BE SOLD -

MILLFIELD - B yr . old
2 bedroom home. bath,
central heal, and · full
base ment. Lot 160x160.
$14,000,
COUNTRY - On Si. Rt.

POMEROY
lANDMARK

ON All

(J I

&gt;~, mile off Rt. 7 by-pass
on St. Rt. 124 toward
Rutland .

4·5·tfc

AWMINUM
&amp; VINYL SIDING
BY
J&amp;L INSULATION

ousmg
Headquar tt1rs

priced $13.9S. Gould pumps

DISCOUNT

949-2862--949-2160

IYOHEN

..

Phone 985-3929 ond 985' 4129.

Office .

20%

9

very

gscrest Manor, between. Tuppers Plains and Chester.

742-2255 . PAINT SALE . Morlln

delivery.

.

New, repair,
gutters and
~town spouts.
Window cleaning
Gutter cleaning
Free Estimates

Roger Hysell~
Garage

home,

REAL ESTATE: 1 acre lot in Rig-

· Senour, DivisiOn of Sherman
and Williams . Pro-Line interior
and exterior flot. white , $5 .99 ·
gal. ; 2 gal. can exterior flat
white regular $22.95, sale

immediate

bd~ m .

Henry E. Cleland Sr.
Henry E . Cleland Jr.
992-2259
992-6191

992-6173.
197B '/, SUZUKI DIRT bike 250
RM. Like new. Cecil Brfnager .
949-2397 .
RUTLAND HARDWARE 2 doors
down

district ,

3

187· ASH _ST.
MIDDLEPORT
992-3100 6·6-1 mo .

MONDAY, JUNE 11,1979

Realtors

TRUCKS, 2 ton 1973 ond 1 V1
ton 1970. Both with 12 ft.
boxes . Phone 992·6206 or

Route 33, north of Pomeroy.
Large lots . Call992- 7~79 .

ONE BEDROOM opts. Contoct
Village Manor, 99.2 -7787.
Notice is htreby given
tnaton t he 30th day of May ,
FURNISHED APT. 3 rooms ond
1919, the Unc:t ersigned
both. No child,en and no pets.
petition er, f il ed a petiti on
949-2253.
in th e Court' of Com mon
Pleas o f Ga tlla County ,
SLEEPING ROOM for working
Ohio , being Cause No .
mon only. Reasonable rent .
M isc . 33 on the Docket of
992-6022.
said Court , asking t hat
$2,000 be transferred from
t he Gen eral F und to th e
GiveAway
Gas F un d, Provided by Jaw ,
for the rea sons set forth in
.FIVE KITTENS.• 6 to 7 weeks
sai~ p e t it i?n ; and that said
pef1 t 1on w11 1 be for hearing , old. 41 calico, 1 tiger. 992 ~1680 .
on th ·e 18th da y of Jun e,
Humane Society.
1979 at 9 :00a .m .
70,000 BTU floor gos furnace
to someone to pick It up. It
Lewi s Sh ee t s
Ernest Montgomery .
was in working order when
token out. Coll ,992-7102.
ApprovetJ as to for:m :
Joseph L . Cain ,
5-5 wk . old puppies. Port
Pro scc vllng A ttorn ey ,
AuStrlian
ond
German
Ga ll i~ Cou nt y, Oh io
Sh~pherd .
992 · 3~12
or
June 11

liMESTONE,

19 FOOT FRANKLIN lrovel

Wanted to Rent

Pom eroy

bath, dining room, base ment area, garden,·nice

trailer . 142 - 234~.

WANT to rent : furn ished or
unfurnished house or apt. for
a single female physician.
Pioose con tOct W. S. lucas,
administrator ,
Veterans
Memorial Hospital , 992-210-4 .

room,
yard,
Home

1970 Sylva , 60•12, 2 bedr .
1970Costle, 60x l2, 2 bedr.
197.-4 Markline, SOx 12 , 2 bedr ,

COAL .

Wanted to Buy

sto rag~ .

H. L Writesel
Roofing · .

Civil
Mechanical
Archetectural
Lavouts ·

fully
ca rpeted
s.
remodeled . PRI CE D
FOR QUICK SALE,
$2S.OOO.OO.
NEW LISTING
nice

a·s

grade s(hol Rutland . Tuesday
12, Wednesday 13th. Dresses.
201Jr· 22 1J, Shoes 108 . Avon '
bottles, lots of misc .

lev e l

School

1969 Voliont, 12x60, 2 bedr.

------- -HOWARD PHILLIPS bekind

family.

992-5858 .
1965 GENERAL60xl2. 2 bedr.

June 10. 17

leSs .

Rev . 8-17-73

Mobile Homes Sale's
197-4 14 .: 70 mobile home . ,
Good
cond i tion .
psoo.

-4 FAMILY yard sale, June 13th
only. 9 to -i . One-naif mile N .
of Recine between Racine and
Syracuse. Green and white
trailer . Rain concelled . lots of
different items .

bdrms. .

fenced
garage &amp;

Coli 614-667-3263.

LOTS Of new dothing .
Something for everyone . First
house on left after you cross
rail road track at Cheshire at
the Mary Layne residence,
June 13, 1-4 , lS, 16.

Se at ed proposa l s wi ll be EXPERIENCED CARPET ;n.
992-2689.
stallers t Col17-i2-3117 after 5.
r eceived by the Board of
OLD FURNIJURE , ;(e boxes,
Edu ca t ion of th e Meig s
Lo ca l Schoo l D istr ic t o f IMMEDIATE
bross beds, iron beds., desks,
OPENING
Middle.port , Oh io at the REGISTERED NURSE, with od- .
etc. , complete households.
Tr easu r er 's O ff ice untit ministrative 8)(perience and
Write M .D. Miller, Rt. -i ,
6: 00 P .M . on Ju ne 18 , 1979
Pomeroy or col l 992- n60.
public sp&amp;aking ability. lnand at that t im e opened
and r ea d by t he Treasu r er . valves nealth testing and
OLD COINS. po&lt;ker" wotckes.
immediately
ther ea ft er , presentation of heclth in class rings , wedding bonds,
ta bulated , and a report formation . Car requi r ed .
diamond-. . Gold or silver: Call
thereo f made by
th e Some evening work . Some
Roer Womsley , 742-2331 .
Tr easurer to sai d Board a t volunteer work . Apply by
i t s n ext mee tin g .
WANT TO buy ; old 4S ond 79
Desc r i pti on
of
im - June U, 1979. Tuberculosi S
phonograph
records . Call
Clinic,
Mulberry
Helghts
,
provemen t
locat ed
at
992-6370 or Contact · Martin
Me i g s
H i gh
Schoo l , Pomeroy, M ·"::722.
Furniture.
Pome ro y,
Ohio .
Th e
Roofi ng Con tractor sha l l
NOTICE TO
BUYING JUNK cars ond
bid as a Pr im e Contractor .
CONTRACTORS
bodies. Also scrap iron and
This includes all labor ,
STATE OF OHIO
metals. Rider's salvage, SR
ma ter ia ls, equi pm en t. and
DEPARTMENT OF
se rvice s
r~quired
to
12-i, Pomeroy. 992-S468.
TRANSPORTATION
compl e t e thi s
Sec t io n
Columb~s. Ohio
BUYING: Scrap iron ond ' cleon
w tl iC h
inc l ud es
n ew
June 1. 1979
cost iron . Bot,teries , copper,
r eolac ement of roof on th e
Contract Sa les Legal
Meigs
H i gh
School .
brass, aluminum, rodiators,
Copy No. 79-492
Bidder s wi ll be bidding on
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
lead. i~sulated copper, t:tc.
th e in!i t a llat io n of t he . Seated propouls will be
Meigs Metals . Rt. 7 and 33,
TrOcar or Car l isle R·ooting
rece ived at the office of the . Pomeroy.
sys t ems .
Director
of the Oh i o
sp ecifi cations
Det ail ed
Department of Trans - WANT TO buy: smoll palc8 . in
and in st r uction s to bidder s
por.t ation , Columbus , Ohiol
country or trade nice place in
may · b e obtai ned at t he
until 10 : 00 A .M . , OhiO
Syracuse on a country ptace .
Offi ce o f the Tr eas urer ,
Standard Time, Tuesda y ,
992-n31J.
Middlepor t. Ohio .
· June 26, 1979, for im .
A ce rt i f ied chec k payabl e
provements in : .
to t he Tre asu rer of th e ~ Gallia Coun ty, Ohio, on
above bo ard of educa tion • GAL · 35 - 10 . ~4 1 (4.61)
Pets for Sale
or a satis fa ctory bi d bond
United States -Route 35, by
e?~ecuted by t he bidd er and
· r ep airing
concr e t e
HOOF
HOLLOW, English and
the surety co mpany , in an
pavement .
ern
.
Saddles
and
Wes
t
amount equa l to fiv e
PaOJemen t
Wid t h
harness. Hones and ponies.
per ce nt of the b id sha ll b e
Varies .
Ruth Reeves . 61-i -698-3290.
submi tted with each bi d .
Project and ·work L ength
Said board of educ a tion
Borc~ing &amp; Riding lessons and
24,110.4 feet or 4.68
r eserv es the right to waive
mi les.
Horse Care products.
inform a lifies, to accept or
" The date set for com .
RISING' STAR Kenrlet. Boa~- .
r e ject an y and all, or part s
p l etion of this work sh~ll be
ding. Co /1 367-0292.
of any and a ll bids .
as set forth in the bidding
No bids may be w ith ·
propou l. "
drawn for at least l tlirty
Each bidder shaft be
130 )
d ays
a ft e r
the
requ ired ro file with h i s bid
. Auto Sales
sch eduled clos in g t im e for
a
certif i ed . check
or
r eceipts of bi ds.
1913
CHEVEllE
350 automatic,
cashier's check for an
amount equal , to fi\'e per
P.S.. P. 9., AM-FM 8-track ,
Board of Edu ca t io n
cent of his bid, but in no
$1200 or best offer. 949-235.4 .
of Meigs Lo ca I
e vent m or e t han f i fty
Sctloo t D is t ric t rnousand dollars , or a bond
1974 PONTIAC CATALINA, • ·
Ja ne Wagn er ,
for ten per cent of his bid,
door. A.C .. P.B.. P.S. 55.000
Tr easurer
payabl e to the D irector .
mUes. Coii992-58S9.
So uth Third Aven u e
I Bidders must apply , on
Middl eport , Ohio 45760
1969 MUTANG GRANDE . 302
the proper fo rms, for
qualification at least ten
V-8, auto., 67,000 miles. S.COO.
lS i 29 16 1 4 , ll , 3tc
' days prior to the date ·se t
247-2192.
for opening bid s in ac NOTICE TO
1970 DODGE SLANT si x
co rdan ce w i th Chapter 55 25
CONTRACTORS
Ohio Revi sed 'C ode .
pickup. $650. Sam Arnold ,
STATE OF OHIO
Plans and specifications
Syracuse. Ohio.
DEPARTMENT OF
.are on file in the Oepa,r t TRANSPORTATION
1972 i&gt;L YMOUTH DUSTER .
ment of Transportation and
Columbus, Ohio,
.th e office of the District
Very good condition. Good
June 1, 1979
Deputy Director .
gos mileogo. $1250. 992-2379
Contr-act Sales Legal
The Director res erve s
or 992-3325.
Copy No. 79·471
the right to r e ject any ~nd
UNIT PRICE
all b ids .

County,

HANDYMAN WORK mowing
law ns, pOinting houses, r oof s
and building sidewolks, etc.

LARGE YARD Sole. Monday
and Tuesdoy .June 11 -12. I
fisher St., Pomeroy . Furniture . clothes . different
sizes . Los of odds end _
ends.
Roin cancels .

JUNE 13 and 1,. , 9 to-i , off Rt. 7
behind Skote-A·Way . Anti ·
ques, Avon bottles. trombone,
exercise equipment, books.
nice clothing, misc. Rain or
Shine.

Excellent loca tion in Mid·
dleporl, 1'/2 story, 3

Television
Viewing

Unscramble these four Jumbles.
one lett~r to each square, to form
four ordil"'ary word$ . .

~

QUALITY
DRAFTING
SERVICES

NEW LISTING -

614 -99S-3961 .

992·2153.

lP.M.

I

PAUL ORR
WANTED: SOMEONE to repolr

I P.M.

'

· Couple or lady to
do I ight housekeeping for a retired
man . Live in. Con tact

Cong Bottom or Basham
949·2193 or '15-3586

Noon on Saturday

i

OPENING.

LEARN GOLF c0rr9Ctly this
summer. Beginner' s and adJohn
Teaford .
van ced.

\.!dJ

:!

'

367-7101 .

Old Rt. 33 between County
Roods 18 and 19. 9-5.

~--

Business Services

Coli 992-5858 .

GARAGE SALE. June 11 . 12.

ftfJfl~fi}'il ~ THATSCAAIIBLEDWOADGAIIE
~~ s
byHonriArnoldandBobLoe

~

Real Estate for Sale

NOW HAULING limes tone lo
Middleport-Poemroy area .
c an f or f re e est im ate .

•LOST: MALE Irish Setter. Approw. 2 yrs. old. Area of
Bashon on Boshon Rd .
Children ' s pe t. Reword .

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy . ll .• Monday, June 11 . 1970 .
DICK TRACY

the Sentinel Classifieds

ID

WATER AND m isc . houi!ng.

pm.

Yard Sale

deemed objectio nal. The
Publisher ~ll not be responsible
for l1lOI'e than one incorrect Insertion.

NOTICE

Services Offered

SITTER IN Syracu se areo d.uring sum'fler- months for 8 yeor
old boy. 992 -751-i after ~ : 30

Lost and Found

shift . Experienced MLT (ASCP)

Mobile Home sales and Yard
.sales are accepted only with
cash with order. 25 cent charge
for ads carrying Box Nwnber Jn
Care of The Sentinel.
.

Help wanted

GUN SHOOT . EVERY FRIDAY
7,30 PM RACINE GUN CL UB.
FACTORY C HO~E GUNS QN.
LY .

•

I DON'T 60 INTO THAT
STORE AN~ MORE

See the Grate Fa mil~ at

I USED TO BUY A1.L
MY COMIC 600K5 iHE~e

Wolfe for more info. on these.

We have other llslln_gs to choose from . Give .us 1
&lt;all. We need more listings II 1
Cheryl Lemley, Asso&lt;. Phone 742 -2003
H lfton Wolfe, Asso&lt;. Phone 949-2589
GeorgeS . Hobsletter, Jr. Broker 992·5739

EVER~ TIME I'D SlN A

COMIC BOOK, T~e MAN
WOULD SA~ u 601NG TO
DO SOME 1-lEAW READING
TON161-lT, Eli 7II

I DON'T 60 INTO T~AT

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
used f ~r the three L' s, X for the two O's, etc . Single letters.
apostrophes, the length and- formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are dilferenl.

CR'ItPTOQUOTI!S

STORE. AN~ MORE

HJ

JHK

LX .N K N

NJ

SK

ASJ

CHJAN

HJD

SK

·'

A XV D L B . A A .X R
LONGFELLOW

XN

SXRS

ASXDSKL

RJXHR . - AXEEXYG

'

YN

JNEKL

7: 00- Cross -WIIs 3; Newlywed
Game 6. 13; Pop Goes the
Country 8; News 10; Love
American Style IS ; Get Smart
17; Dick Cavett 20,33.
7 : 30-Th a t Na shv ille Musi c 3;
Muppet Skow 6; Pri ce Is Righi 8;
Wild Kingdom 10; $1.98 Beauty
Skow 13; Nash" lite On Tke Road
IS; My Three Sons 17; MacNeil Lehrer Report 20.33.
9:00--Litlle House on the Prairie
3, 15 ; Baseball 6, 13 ; White
Shadow 8,10; Movie "The Saxon
·
Charm " 17.
~ ' 00--Movle ' A' Fine Pair" 3,1S;
Mash 8, 10; Prime of Miss Jean
. Brodie 20,33 ; 9 :36--WKRP In
Cincinnati 8,10.
10 :00--Lou Grant 8.10; Ascent of
Man 17; News 20; Energy for the
People 33 .
10 :36--Uke It Is 20; 11 :00--News
3,6,8,10,13,15; Dl&lt;k Cavett 20;
New Soupy Sales 17.
II :3D-Johnny Carson 3, 15;, Pollee
Slor)&lt;. 6, 13; Rockford F iles 8;
Movie "The Defeclor" 10; Movie
"Houdini" 17.
12 :46--Movle "Executive Suite" 8;
Ironside 13; 1 '00--Tomorrow 3;
News 15.
•
1 '4lf-News 13; Movie "Miracle of
Morgan 's Creek" 17; 3:4Q-News
17; 4:()()-.()pen Up 17;
TVESDAY, JVN E 12,1979
5 :45-'-Farm Report 13; 5:50--PTL
Club · 13;
5: 55-Summer.
Semester 10.
6 'Q0--700 Club 6,8; PTL. Club IS;
Wor ld at Large 17; 6: ID--News
17; 6: 2s-Concerns &amp; Comments
10.
6: 30-Dragnet 17; "6 :4s-Mornlng
Report 3; 6:56--Good Morning
West VIrginia 13; 6:55--Chuck
While Reports 10; News 13.
7:QO--Today 3,15; Good Morning
America 6. 13: Tuesday Morning
8; Schoolles 10; Three St0051es
17; 7:15,-Weather 33 .
7:30-Famlly Affair 10; Lilias Yoga
s. You 33.
9:00--Capt. Kangaroo 9,10; Leave If
. To Beaver 17; Sesame St. 33.
8 :30-Romper Room 17; 9:00--Bob
Braun 3; Phil Donahue 13,15;
Emergenc',l One 6; Porky Pig &amp;
Friends 8; Love oi Life 10; Lucy
Show 17; Love Tennis 33.
9 :30-Green Acres 17; Weather 33;
Hogan' s Heroes 10.
10:oo-card Sharks 3, 15; Edge of
Night 6; All In The Family 8,10;
Dating Game 13; Movie "Invisible Stripes" 17; Exploring
the Crafts : Silk-screen 33.
10 :30-AII Star Secrets 3,15; $20,000
Pyramid Ja ; Andy Griffith 6;
Wkew 8,10; Daniel Foster M.D.
33; 10:55-CBS News 8; House
Call 10.
II :00--High Rollers 3, 15; Laverne &amp;
Shirley 6,13; Price Is Right 8,10;
Antiques 33.
11 : 30-Wheel of Fortune 3,15:
Family Feud 6,1]; Frying Pans
West 33; 11: 55-News 17.
12 :00--!'lewscenter 3; News 6,iO;
Password 1S; Young &amp; the
Restless a; Midday Magazine 13;
Love American STyle 17.
12 :36--Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Search for
. Tomorrow s, 10; Movie "The
Gunfight at Dodge City" 17; Not
For Women Only IS;· Ma&lt;NeiiLehrer Report 33.
.
1:oo--Days of Our Lives 3,15; All My
Children 6,13; Young &amp; the
Restless 10; How To Buy A
Home 33 .
1:3D-As The World Turns 8,10;
Black Man's Land 33.
2:oo--Doctors 3,1S ; One Life to Live
6,13 ; 2:2&gt;-News 17.
2:30""Another World 3,15; Guiding
Light 8,10; I Love Lucy 17;
Prime of Miss Jean Brodie 33.
3:oo--General Hospital 6,13; Rebop
17; 3:36--Mash 8; Joker's Wild
10; Banana Splits 17; Crocketl's
Victory Garden 20 ; Time for
Music 33 .
4 : 00- Mister Cartoon 3; Merv
Griffin 6; Addams Family 8; Six
Million Dollar Man 10; Sesame
Sf. 20,33 ; Mike Douglas 13;
Fllnfstones 17.
4:30-Lone Ranger 3; Lu&lt;y Show 15;
Partridge Family 17.
s :oo--Bonanza 3; Beverly Hillbillies
8; Mister Rogers Ne ighborhood
20,33; Gomer Pyle 10; Six Million
Dollar Men 13; Brady Bunch 15;
Star Trek 17.
5:30-News 6; Petticoat Junction 8;
Ele&lt; . Co. 20; Mary Tyler Moore
10; Odd Couple 15; Docior Who
33.
6:00--News 3,8, 10,13, 15; ABC News
6; Family Affair 17; Villa Alegre
20; Sludlo See 33.
6:30-NBC News3,.)5; ABC News 13;
Carol Burnett 6; CBS News 8, 10;
Over Easy 20,33; Father Knows
Best 17.
7: 00- Cross-Wits 3; Newlywed
Game 13; Uganda : To Heal a
Nation B; News 10; Love
American Style 15 ; Get Smart
17; Dick Cavett 20,33 .
7:30-Hollywood Squres 3; Candid
Camera 6; Gong Show 8; Price Is
Right 10; Donna Fargo 13.
8:00--Basebell 3i Happy Days 6, 13;
Runaways 15; Pilot "The Dci81ey
Brothers" 8, 10; Movie "CIIy
Beneath the Sea" 17; Austin Clly
Limits 20; City Notebook 33.
8: 30-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6.13; Movie
"The Life &amp; Times at Judge Roy
Bean" B,IO; Two Ronnl~s 33 . ·
9:00--Three's Company 6.13; Movie
"Killer on Board" IS; Other Side
of Vl&lt;fory 33; Cakewalk 20 .
9: 30-Taxi 6,13; Dlplomaflc Style of
Andrew Young 20. ·
·
10 :00--Julle Farr, M.D . 6,13; Inside
San Quentin 33; America 17;
NeWs 20; An Apple, An Orange
20.
11 : 00-News 3,6,8 , 10,13,15 ; . New
Soupy Sa tes 17.
11 : 30-Jo~nny Carson 3,15; Movie
"The Black Windmill" 13; Movie

"rhe Trackers" . 6i

"

Barnaby

Jones 8; Movie "The ·Naked
Runner" 10; Movie "No Mlnc·r

Vices" 17; ABC News 33.
' j,

I

I.
l

,I

\I

,.

,.

.

�Marker not stolen
·• I
I

I.
CLARENCE (KYEI NICHOLS
Clarence (Kye J Nichols, 74, Pearl
St., Middleport, died Sunday morning
at Riverside Hos~ilal in Columbus.
Mr. Nichols was born June 24, 1904
in Middleport, a son of the late
Raleigh and Melissa Van Kirk
Nichols. He was also preceded in
death by a brother, Elden.
Surviving are a brother, Ralph
Nichols, Erwin, Pa.,live nieces, three
nephews.
Fwieral services will be held at 10
a.m. Wednesday at the RawlingsCoats Funeral Home. Burial will be
in Middleport HIU .Cemtery. Friends
may call at the funeral home from 2 to
4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Tuesday.
·
MARGARET GANS
Margaret Gans, 67, Lasley St.,
Pomeroy, died Sunday afternoon at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Miss Gans was born Feb. 7, 1912, a
daughter of the late Fred and Anna
Wetzgel Gans. She was also preceded
in death by a sister, Kathryn.
SurviVing are three brothers, Carl
of Crestline; Alfred of Pomeroy, and
Clarence, also of Pomeroy.
Miss Gans was a member of the
Sacred Heart Church and the Sacred
Heart Guild. She operated the
Mulberry Ave. Restaurant in
Pomeroy for many years.
Funeral services will be held at 10
a.m. Wednesday at the Sacred Heart
Oturch with the Rev. Father Paul
Welton officiating, Burial will be in
Sacred Heart Cemetery. Rosary ser·
vices will be held at 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday at the Ewing Funeral Home
where friends may call anytime after
7 this evening.

BROOK HUNTER
Brook Hunter, 70, a resident of Rl.
1, Cheshlte, died 8 a.m. Saturday at

her home.

She was born Feb. 23, 1909, in Pecks
Mill, W. Va., daughter of the late
George and Susan Woody Martin.
She was preceded in death by her
husband, Montie, in 1971. Nine
children survive : Bernard,
Gallipolis; Roger Rutland; Dallas,
with the U. S. Army in Gennany;
Eugene, at home; Mrs. Pearl Smith,
Mrs. Wayne (Goldie) Morrow, Mrs.
Jerry (Roberts) Temple, all of'
Columbus; Mrs. Ennil (Edna)
Freeman, Chaprilansvilie, W. Va.;
. Mrs. Eugene (June) Stowers, Pecks
Mill, W. Va.; Mrs. Joe (Wilma)
Gilkey, Middleport; twenty-three
grandchildren,
nine greatgrandchildren; two brothers, Boss
Martin, Henlawson, W. Va.; Jack
Martin, Logan, W. Va.; three sisters:
Mrs. Betty Adkins, Henlawson ; Mrs.
Gracie Ellis and Mrs. Maxine Bartrwn, .both of Huntington. One
daughter preceded her in death.
She had been mseveral months.
Funeral services will be held 3 p.m.
WIICinesday at Miller's Home lor
Funerals with Pastor E. F. Anspach
officiating. Burial will follow in Mina
Cemetery.
Casketbearers will be Ted Perry,
Ennil Freeman, Jerry Temple,
Wayne Morrow, Joseph Gilkey and
Eugene Stowers.

wood, Ohio. 'l'he Hoods woul.d have
celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary this December.
Mrs. Hood is survived by her
husband, along with, one son, Roger
Hood, Gallipolis; one brother, Morris
E. Haskins, Gallipolis, and four grandchildren survive.
Mrs. Hood was a ~duate of Alderson-Broaddus at Phillipi, W. Va. She
attended Marietta College and
Denison University and graduated
from Marietta College in 1929.
She WllS a member of Beta Theta
Sorority at Marietta College and a
member of First Baptist Church of
Gallipolis . where she served as
deaconess.'
Funeral services will be held 2:30
p.m. Wednesday at the Willis Funeral
Home with Rev. Joseph Godwin and
Rev. Alvis Pollard officiating. Burial
will follow in Mound Hlll Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 7 until9 p.m. Tuesday.
·
Pallbearers will be Hank Thompson, Carl Waugh, Ted Wiseman,
Thompson Casey, Owen Cantrell, and
Bob Hood.
.Honorary pallbearers will be John
Cornett, Paul McNealey, John O'Dell,
Stanley Saunders, Bob Mackenzie
and Howard Branrton.

If you have become especially
discouraged bec.ause the theft ~f a
tombstone reported by Sheriff James
J, Proffitt Indicates that happenings
are falllng · to a new low, be not
dismayed. It was a mistake.
Sheriff Proffitt said that the tombstone was reported stolen Wednesday evening from the Miles
Cemetery in Rutland.
However, be reports todi!Y that it
was not stolen.
According to the latest infonnatlon,
F. W. Wilcox, fanner trustee of
Rutland ToWilllhip, notified the
sheriff's office 'Friday evening that
his wife remembered seeing a Logan
Monument Co. truck at the cemetery
on Tuesday afternoon.
·
Deputies were WJable to make. contact with the Logan Monument
people until saturday morning and at
that time learned that the company
had picked up the monument to have
names of children relettered.
A
daughter bad made arrangements to
have the work done and apparently
had not notified other members of the
family.
Sheriff Proffitt ehended thailks to
Wilcox and the township trustees,
Harold Dewhurst and Fred George
and Township Clerk Edna Swisk for
their concern and assistance in
·clearing up the matter.

HOSPITAL NEWS

Rio offers
VETERAN MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
Saturday Admissions-·Thomas
Portland; Maggie Gilmore,
programs for Sayre,
Racine; Irene
Middleport;
Susan Sellers, Racine.
Saturday Discharges-Hirman
swnmer youth Pauley,
Cecll
Martin
Christy,

Haning,

Again this summer, Rio Grande
College and Collimunily College will
offer summer enrichment programs
lor area children.
,
.
Two programs, one lor children
ages 3-6 and a second, for children
ages &amp;-12; are offered through the Rio
Grande Department of Education.
The Kindergarten Summer Enrichment Program for u year olds will
begin June 19 and meet each weekday
until July 11. Each day's activities
will begin at 10 a.m. and end at 11:30
a.m. in Yale Hall on the Rio Grande
campus.
The second enrichment program,
which deals with the Natural Sclences, is,_ open to childi-en ages &amp;-12 and
will begin June 19 and meet each
weekday \hfough July 11. Each day's
activities will begin at 12:30 p.m~ and
end at 2 p.m. at the Instructional
Resources Center, !11 the _basement of
Holzer Hall, on the Rio Grande campus.
• Parents wishing to enroll· their
children may do so by calling Elaine
Holter, Professional Education
Department, Rio Grande College and
Community Cqllege, ~.ext. 203.

DIVORCES GRANTED
Deborah L. Hawley has been.granted a divorce from Bruce Hawley in
the Meigs · County Common Pleas
Court and waa awarded custody of
two minor children. Pauline Von
Ebelnsiem was granted a divorce
frcrn Carl Von Ebeinsteln and was
given the use of her former name,
VIRGINIA HOOD
Greathouse. Charles E. Wilson was
VIrginia Kathrine Haskins Hood, granted a divorce from Cathy Wilson
74, a resident of 329 Fourth Ave., with Mrs. Wilson receiving custody of
Gallipolis, died at her home around -10 one minor child and James A. Goody
a.m. Sunday. She had been in failing and Donna S. ·Goody were granted a
health since October.
divorce. Filing for dissolution were
·Mrs. Hood served as secretary and Robert Bollinger and Diana .Lyme
director of the Haskins-Tanner Bollinger, Welchtown.
Clothing Co. for several years.
She was born Dec. I, · 1904, in
REVIVAL TUESDAY
Gallipolis, daughter of the late James
Dan Haynuin and the Country HymL. and Hattie Morrts Haskins. She ntlmers will be singing at a revival at·
married Burhl Dye Hood on Dec. 19, the Fathers House in Hartford, W,
1929, by Robert W. Peirce,
,_ at Rich· Va., starting at 7:30p.m,Tuesday.

TOO GOOD TO BE KEPT ASECRET
..•OUR 6MONTHS CERTIFICATES
We want everybody to know about
our Savings Certificates! A minimum
deposit of $10,000 wi ll yield the
highest rates allowed when held to maturity. It's a great way to save. Get facts!

Farmers Bank
POMEROY, OHIO
$40,000 .Maximum lnsura~ce For Each Deposrtor

Member federal Oeposrt lnsu;ance :CorPOration

Cun-

ningham, Hattie Powell, Paul Taylor,
Frances Gibbs.
Sunday Admlssions-.John Keck,
Pomeroy; Nancy White, Pomeroy;
Velma Keller, Middleport.
Sunday Discharges-None.
HOLZERMEDICALCENTER
Discharges, JUDe 8 '
Eivira Barr, Katherine Bellamy,
Norma Berry, Lorena Bonecutter,
Mrs. Ricky Buck and son, Kristma
Bush, Iva Buxton, Sandra Carr, Jacquellne Cash, Avonelle Cobb, 'Brian
Daniels, Lela Davis, Allee Dill,
Michale Drummond, Ruby Duncan,
PeMy Elliott, Ira Evans, Richard
Hackett, Kevin Heaton, Brad
Jenkins, Margaret JOhnson, Merle
Johnson, Michael Jordan,.Ricky Joy,
Donald 14arcum, Mary Morrbon, Sue
Nutter, Mary Roberts, Helen Salts,
Nevylle Shackelford, Gertrude
Swackhamer, Arcllle Swartz, Ethel
Thompson, Gayle Trueglio, ·dharles
Yerian, Elva Westfall, Doma White,
PhyllisWickline, Clara Yinger. .
lllrtbs,JUDe8 ·
· Mr. and . ~s. David Haley,
daughter, Point Pleasant; Mr. and
Mrs. Michael Claar, IGII, Hamden.

Congress.looks into DC-10
WASHINGTON (AP)- Congress is
beginning to take its own look into
what is wrong with the now-grounded
DC-10, asking the Federal Aviation
Administration to explain its response
wthe ·crash that took 275 lives.
In the hearing today, a House
·subcommittee headed by Rep. John
Burton, l).{;alif ., planned also to look
into the process by which the
government decided eight years ago
that the jet was airworthy·.
" I think Burton will express
people's feelings about the DC-10, now
it's up, now it's down, up-down, updown,'' a member of his staff said in
advance of the hearing.
Scheduled as an opening witness
wss Langhorne McCool Bond, who
last week became the first
government official to ground an
entire fleet of jets. Burton long has
been at odds with ·Bond, who was
appointed by President Carter.
''He's a disaster,'' Burton said of ·
Bond last week. "His con·s tant
changing of mind-about this DC-10, for
instance, h.ad endangered lives. This

Four persons were injured and two tenths of a mile south of milepost 6, in
vehicles demolished during four MeigsCountyat1:25a.m,
Saturday IICCidents investigated by
The patrol reports that a north
the Gallia-Meigs Post, Highway paund pickup truck qlerated by
PatroL
W~ L. Buckley, 28, Pomeroy, turTimothy E. Davidson, 20, Pomeroy, ned into the path of a south bound auto
was cited on a charge of DWI driven by Walter Arnold, 29,
following a one-vehicle, two-i!ljury, Langsville.
accident on SR 124, at CR 28, in Meigs
Buckley claimed injury, but was
County.
not immediately treated. A
Callecfto thefiCelle at 7:20p.m., of- ~er, Twila S. Buckley, 28,
fleers repdri !Jiat lln eOst,bound auto, .Posperoy, was transported by .
operated by'l'lmdthy E.' DaVIdson, '20, SEOEMS ·to Holzer Medical Center.
Pomeroy, failed to negotiate a curve, ·She was treated for a cervical strain
passed Off the left side of the fi!Bdway and released.
snd struck a guardrail.
There were severe damage to the
• Davld!!on and a passenger, Bruce Buckley pickup. Tbe Arnold auto was
Bwman, 20, Racine, displayed visible demolished.
signs of injury and were transported
Buckley was cited oo a charge of
by the Racine Emergency Squad to making an improper left turn.
Veterans Memorial Hospital for
A Gallipolis Jl!Venile, Catherine A.
treatment.
·
. 'l'nlesdale, 17, was cited on a charge
Davld!!on was cited on a charge of of DWI following a one-vehicle
DWI. His vehicle was demolished.
. mishap on SR 160, one and eightTwo persons were injured during a tentha ofamilesouthofU.S. 35.
two-vehicle accident on SR 143, three- ·

Fort Gay .couple
~eld ,. on ch~rge
AFort Gay, West VirginiA man and

of grand theft auto and . felonious
1!!188ult for Athens County authorities
· 'The Gallia department received ~
.bulletin at 10:45 p.m. from the Athens
County Sheriff's Office to be on the
lookout for an auto ~ a couple
wanted in connection with possible
kidnapplngandautotheftcharges.
Deputy Roger Brandeberry stopped
thecarandarrestedthepair Carolyn
Russell 28 snd Earl Hutchinaon 22
on SR 7' j~t inside the Gallipolls 'city
limits, moments later.
•
::::::::::::::::::::::=:=:::=:=:=:=:::::::=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:::=:=:=:=:::;:;:::.::::::::

Birtbs,June9 .
EXTENDED FORECAST
Mr. and Mrs._ KeMeth Criss,
Wednellday through Friday: Fair
daughter, Jackson.
Wedllelday BDd 1bunday. A cballce
Discharges, June 10
of showen Friday. Hlpa froQJ the
Mrs. H. Michael Carlton and son, upper 7011 to lbe lllld !M!a W:ednesday;
John Clunielewski, Usa Green, Mrs. Wlll1lllDg to lbelllfd to
bY. '
David
. Hall and aon, Geneva Howell, Friday. lAWs ill'"-~
""' '5os ·w· '"""' y,' '
Mrs. David Kisor aad son, Mrs. rlalogto 'tbelilll!Y'Frlday,
Harold Manring and daughter, .:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:=:;:::::::::::::;:=:::=:=:::::=:=:=:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Rebekah Mitchell, Joe Muihare,
BOOKMOBn.E TtiEsDAY
Michael Nelson, Delorea .Riffe,
Dorothy Spencer• Teresa Swatzel,
Tue!lday 's schedule lor the Meigs
Amanda Taylor, Walter Tomboin, Boolanoblle includes- Keno, ·3-3:30
JackWbeatley,NancyWilllamson.
p.m.; ReedBvllle, Reed's Store, 4-5;
lllrtbs, JaiJe 10
Tuppers Plains, Arbaugh Addition,
Mr. and Mrs. George Buckley and 5:30-6 :30; Chester, Methodist Church,
son, Wellslon; Mr. and Mrs. Krishna 6:45-7:45; Riggs Addition, ~:30.
Kool, daughter, Bidwell; Mr. and
Mrs. .Timothy Howard, son, New
CHESTER TRUSTEES MEET
Haven; Mr. and Mrs. Carl Shriver,
Chester Township 'trustees wiD ·
daughter• Thurman.
meet at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the town
hall.
.
.
VBS ·nus WEEK
Bible school will be held at the First
Southern Baptist Church, Mulberry
SALEM TRUSTEE'l MEET
Ave., PomerDy, beginning this
A
meeting of Salem Township
evening and running through Friday
Trustees
set lor June 29 bas been
with classes from 8:30 to 8:30 each moved ahead
June 22 at which time
evening. There will be classes for an regular to
business will be Iranpre«hool through teens. All children
sa~.
of the community are invited.

\llle
..

FL.E XS·TE E L

1•'1.'\IE l ' I'IIOLH'l'I~ HE!l Fl ' Rf'.:ITl ' HE

Stylish Beauty

. l'; ·

tt

\~r:e.), ~ Luxur~ous Comfort .

: FS-~ ~
-q ~

Russell, who had sustained a
hand . during the
disturbance leading to the charges,
was transported to Holzer Medical
Center for treatment. She was treated
for a stab wound to her left ann and
tendon lacerations and admitted.
~)he is being held on charges of
felonious assault and grand theft
auto.
HutcllJnson Is being held chargea
of complicity to grand theft auto and
felonious assault
Two female juveniles, children of
Russell, taken into custody at the
time of the arrest, were later released
to their father, Ruaaell's estranged
husband.
·

woman were 8ITE!8ted late Saturday serious cut to the

L~stmg Durability

SOFAS • CHAIRS • SECTIONALS
SOFA-SlEEPERS
RECUNERS ·. ROCKING RECliNERS

BAKER FURNITURE

DRIVER'SEDREGISTRATION·

Called to the scene at 10:40 p.m., offleers report that Truesdale's north
bound auto went out of control in .!1
curve, paase4 off the right side of the
roadway, traveled through the lawn
of a home own(!ll by Mildred Houck,
and struck a tree.
·
There was moderate damage to the
vehicle.
An auto operated by Richard A.
Johnson, 29, Pomeroy, Incurred
severe damage during a one-vehicle
accident on Bulaville-Addlson Rd.,at
!2:30p.m.
The patrol reports that Johnson's
south bound auto pa8lll!d off the right
' side of the roadway and overturned.
Johnson was cited on a charge of
exceasive speed for conditions. There
were no injuries.
·

driver cited
. Two cars were damaged aild the
driver of a third vehicle involved was
cited to mayor's Court as the result of
an accident on East Main St. at 2:20
p.m. Sunday. .
Pomeroy Police said a bicycle fell ·
from a truck driven by Sally Pierce,
Pomeroy. A car driven by Martin
MeAngus, 18, Pomeroy, following the
truck came to a quick stop and a car
following the McAngus vehicle and·
driven by Gary Wolfe, 32, Racine, was
unable to stop 8lld struck the rear at·
the McAngus car: There were
medium damages and Pierce was
cited to court on an insecure load
,charge.
·

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NO. 41

en tine
/

POMEROY ·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

TUESDAY, JUNE 12, 1979.

John Wayne, 72,
movie hero, dies

Forty eight persons attended the
Bloodmobile Monday with 44 pints of
blood received, 32 of which . were
replacements.
Six gallon donor was Mace! Barton;
foW' gallon, Ellis E. Myers; three
gallon, Jeanette Lawrence; one
gallon, Debra J. Carder; first time,
Marjorie Canton and James Will.
Assisting were Ferndora Story, R;
N., and Doctors L.D. Telle and E. S.
Villanueva, Clerical workers were,
Mary Nease, Jean Nease, Jean Sayre,
Martha Lou Beegle, Helen Pickens.

Bike falls;

M

CAUTIOUS MOTORI8I'S
Meigs County Sheriff. James J.
Proffitt urges area motortsts to use
caution now that all of the schools in
the county have dJsmlssed for summer vacation.
The children will have their minds
00 other things and may not use
caution when near the streets and
ds
roa ·

VOL XXVIII

at y

By ROBERT LOCKE
He wanted, a hospital offiCial said,
Allsoclated Press Writer
"to be with his children , his grandLOS ANGELES (AP ) - John children ... He would tolerate discomWayne a Hollywood hero lor nearly fort just to be near his family."
50 yeai-s and 200 movies, built his
His seven children were at his side
image as a learle51j, determined when Wayne, known to friends and
fighter . That was the way "The fans as "The Duke," died at 5:30p.m.
Duke" died - in a courageous light Monday at the UCLA Medical Center.
His 72nd birthday was celebrated
with cancer.
All the disease began its final May26.
assault and as the pain became more
"He was -and is- an American insevere, Wayne sometimes refused the stitution," said actor Chariton
drugs that could have eased the way , Heston. "It's not surprising that, to
the end, Duke gave an example of
courage that made him more than an
actor and friend,"
•
Hospital administrator Bernard
Joyce Hoback, Erma Roush, Macei Strohm, amouncing the death at a
Barton, Emma K. Clatworthy, Grace news conference three hoW's later,
Drake, Jeanette Lawrence, and Ver- said Wayne's family plamed a
private funeral.
non Weber.
Countless fans had been following ·
Retired volunteer senior citizens
assisting were, Pat Ingels, Cecil Wayne's final battle since Jan . 12,
Bradbury, Hazel Thomson, Charles when a routine gallbladder operation
David, Bernadine Meier, Alice turned into a nine and one-half hour
ordeal as surgeonS found cancer in his
Struble, and Clarence Struble.
Donors by communities: Pomeroy- stomach and removed it.
The next live months brought small
Jeffrey J. Hilleary, Marjorie Caton,
Mary L. Starcher, Lura R. Swiger, successes -release from the hospital,
Homer Baxter, James A. WW, Lois J. an ovation at the Academy Awards..,
gradual,
inexorable
·Yant, Patty J. Barton, Edna Triplett, and
Howard P. Logan, William W, Rad- deterioration . He was back in surgery
ford, Patricia A. Imboden, Dennis J. May 2. This time the cancer wsa in his
Gilmore, Patricia Vaughan, Virgil K. intestines.
Wayne - who played the cowboy,
Windon, David M. King, L!lrry G.,
Fisher, Ralph T. Spangler, Ola L. the marine, the admiral, the football' ·
St.Clair, Joseph C. Hall, Jacqueline player - was granted scant ex·
D.Brickles; Syracuse - Millon E. pectation of progress, though he was
(Continued on page 8)
Roush; Middleport - Joyce V.Bartrum, Jeff Daniels, Linda L. Haley,
Mary E. Bacon, Peggy Lewis, Kenneth E. Imboden, Sarah J . Fowler,
Debra J .Carder, James R. Dailey,
Larry Milch, Charles W. Searles;
Racine - Joyce Ritchie, Martha Lou
Beegle, Jeanette Lawrence, Charlotte
L. Wamsley, Loretta K. Hill; Long
'
Botton - Kathy D. Stone, Tbomas 0.
Pomeroy Puhlic Library will host
Stone, Harlan A. Ballard, Henry
Bahr; Reedsvllie - Mace! Barton, the amual Meigs County Art Show In
Richard Barton; Rutland - Mary E. conjunction with th.e Big Bend RegatDavidson, Donna M. Davidson; Bid- ta June 21-24. Entries must be
well . Mary Searls; Limgsville - Ellis brought to the library by Friday, June
22 at 5 p.m. Judging will be completed
E. Myers.
by !0:30a.m. Saturday, June23.
Entries will be divided into two
categories: FROG ART and NONFROG ART. They will be subdivided
by age : small children through kin·
dergarten,
grades 1throngh 4, grades
Clear tonight. Lows. around 50.
5
through
12,
and adults.
Becoming partly cloudy and breezy
WiMers
will
receive a ribbon plus
Wednesday. Highs around 80. The
five
silver
dollars
for first place,
chance of rain is 10 percent tonight
three
silver
dollars
for
second place,
and Wednesday.
and one silver dollar for third place.
Artists may use any medium (such
:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::
as
macrame, soap sculpture, oil
EXTENDED FORECAST
paint,
etc.) and. need not be Meigs
Thursday through Saturday:
County
residents.
Possible showen or thundenloflllB
Entries
will be on display until MonThursday, Partly cloudy Friday. A
day,
June
25 at 8 p.m. They may be
chance of show en Saturday. Highs
reelaimed
beginning Tuesday, June '
In the 80s Thursday and Friday aDd
26
at
10:30
a.m. Any entries not
. the 70s Saturday. Lows In the low 80s
claimed
by
Tuesday, July 3 will
Thunday and in the 50s Friday and
become the property of the llbrary,to
Saturday.
:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:,:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:; be kept or not as they see lit.

48 donate 44 pints of blood

on

Meigs High Scl\ool students interested in driver's education lor the
summer months should 1'\lgister at
the principal's office by Friday of this
· ·~ ,.. "Those .....
rt in the
"'~"''' must be~..,
paof age and
program
16 years
mustbeMeigsHlghSehoolstudeilts.

e

JOHN WAYNE

Four injured, two cars·
demolished in 4 wrecks

Dilclulrlea, JuDe 9
by the Gallia CoUnty Sheriff's DepartMrs. Anthllly M1Dns and son, Carol ment, and are being held on charges
Ann Barnett, Mildred Battrell,
Michell Breeyear. Freda Burnette
.
,
Karen BW1111, Charles Burt, Jerimlah
Carpenter, Minne Collins, John Cook, ·
Jr., Lucinda Cook, Melinda Counts,
Melissa DeiJisanti, &amp;bert Ellison, .
KeMeth Emmerson, David Evans, ·
Mrs. Charles Frecker and daughter,
Andrea Gilllland, jl!rs. Roger Hall
and son, Evelyn Hartley, Tabnon
Upscomb, Richard Malone, David
Meller, Jr., Marie Morlardy, Mrs.
Lewis Pack and daughter, Raymond,
Potter, Linda Roach, Betsy Stapleton,
Carl Thomas, DeMis ViarS.

and other evidence .shows that he just without all the facts to conclude that .
doesn't know what he is doing."
defects in the certlficaliOil proeti&amp;s
Another witness expected , to be were, in fact, the direct cause of (tne)
called• was Philip A. Hogue, who until , accident, it is entirely appropriate
Thursday was a member of the and necessary for the subcommit~
National Transportation Safety to explore the possibility," Button
Board, the agency that investigates said in amouncing the he8ring. ~
airplane accidents.
He made the statement a few days
On Friday, the day after Hogue's after American Flight 191 crashed '611
three-year term ended, the Airline takeoff May 2ii, kUling 275 persons:;
Passengers Association - an
Since then the FAA issued ~
organization of air travelers whlch "airworlhineb directives," Whieh
sued to ground the DC-10 - had the effect of grounding the planes
announced he was taking over as until certsin parts were inspected
director of APA's newly created ,.;,d, if necessary, reliaired. Wedno:!IWashiitgton office.
. day the plane's certificate to fly was
At an NTSB briefing after last suspended.
· ·;
month'S crash of an American . On Sunday, the FAAorderedengille
Airlines DC-10 in Chicago, Hogue said mount inspections on all L-lOlls and
he would ground the DC-lOs if the two other models of Wide-bodied je,\s
choice were his and that he wouldn't opera ling In • the United States,
fly on the plane until some questions although a spokesman said "we have
were answered. ·
· no indication, no information there·Js
Burton, chairman of the gov- anything wrong with an)' of th~
ernment acli vilies .and transport aircraft." The spokesman, Fred
subc.ommittee, decided to reopen Farrar, said the FAA directive ,
hearings last held in September.
enforcing a manufacturers' advisory,
"While. it· would be premature was "pW'eiy precautionary."

•

In ~ Pomeroy

Staff Sgt. alive
SAN ANTONIO, Texas (APJ :_
Staff Sgt. Wibner W. Higgs Jr.,
J:nissing and declared dead for 18
months, has been brought back to
llfe - at least as far as the Air
Force is concerned. He is,
however, still missing, officials
said Monday,
Higgs, 33, was reclassified,
from dead to absent without
leave, on the basis of an FBI investigation that detennined
Higgs is alive and had been
working in southeastern Texas
since his disappearance Dec. 31,
1977.

Suit dismissed
MARION, Ohio '(AP) - A
lawsuit charging the Marion
County Board of Elections with
unlawful acts in last Tuesday's
Democratic prinuiry in Marion
was dismissed Monday.
The apparent loser in the
mayoral primary, Ayers Ratliff,
had charged that Board of Elections officials Wegally allowed
Republicans to vote in the
Democratic primary without
challenging their party affiliation .
or having them sign aflidavjts.
Ratliff claimed that a high
switchover vote by Republicans
for 1ilii opponent, Ron Malone, led
to Malone's victory.

Pomeroy Library
will host annual
art show

Weather

Forest plane
crashes
GRANGEVILLE, Idaho (AP)A U, S. Forest Service plane
caught fire and slammed into a
river in the rugged north&lt;entral
Idaho mountains Monday .
Authorities said one person was
killed and nine others were
missing.
Two of the passengers aboard
the twin-engine DC-3 survived the
crash in the Selway-Bitterroot
Wilderness area . Rangers
refused to give up on the missing
and ordered an air, water and
land search on the tree-covered
slopes along the Selway River,
strewn with crash debris.
"We're still holding out hope,"
said Nez Perce National Forest
spokesman Steve Ylaterman. ·
A dozen paramedic smoke jum·
pers parachueted to the crash
site and' lilalntained an overnight
vigil on both sides of the river in ·
case any of the missing eight men
·and one woman should turn up. ·A
spot was cieared lor hellcipters to
land.
MARION, Ohio (AP) - The
haliot-by-hallot recount of voles
cast in last week's primary election in Marion has been completed, according to the deputy
director of the Marion County
Board of Education.
But the results of the recount
will not be certified ·as official until the office confers with the
secretary of state, Jack Boyd
said Morufliy .- The (ina! ligures
were mailed to the secretary of
state's office late Monday afternoon, he said.

•

BRAVE THE COOLER TEMPS - A hot weather
standing room only crowd should have existed at the
Middleport Swinunin,~ Pool Monday. Only a lew

residents, however, braved the coole; temperatUres,
accented by chilly winds, and most of those basked in
what little sunshine there was at poolside.

E~-Cuban

pilot first to
hijack U.S. plane in 4 years

MIAMI (AP) - The first man to
hijack a U.S. plane to Cuba in 4'h
years was tentatively identified today
as Eduardo Guerra Jiminez, according to a State Department
spokesman.
That was the name of the Cuban air
force pilot who flew a MiG jet fighter
under U.S. air defenses when he
defected to Florida in 1969.
State Department spokeswoman
Sue Pittman said today the hijacker
was thought to be Guerra.
The hijacker told the crew of Delta
Airlines Flight 1061 he was carrying
an explosive in a bag, and fOl'ced them
to fly him and 194 passengers to
Havana Monday night, FBI special
agent William Nettles said.
"He said, 'I 'm sorry. I have to get to

th is," said Sam Kass of Boca Raton , 1 laughed.
Fla.
But lor some, the air piracy was
The captain and crew who dealt fearful. Fay Rudomen, 79, visibly
with the hijacker were hustled away shook as she said, "I feel miserable."
by the FBI soon alter the plane landed It was the first \ime she had flown
here, a Delta spokesman said. The alone. ·
.
captain later refused comment.
Della Flight IO(il had been comOne passenger was arreste~ on mandeered when It passed near
charges of inter! erring with a Wilmington, N.C., abOut 7 p.m. EDT
member of the flight crew · and Monday. The plane had taken off
assaulting an FBI agent dW'ing from New York's Kemedy Airport
questioning in Miami, Nettles said. He less than an hour earlier.
was identified as Lawrence Winters,
It landed in Havana at 8:30 p.m. af42. addfess unknown.
ter two Cuban Air Force jet fl8bten
Patrice Robbins, 19, came off \he re110rteony \ed It to the mt\eld.
plane sporting a T-f!hlrt with "-Cuba" Passengers said they were taken to
emblazoned on the front. She bought the tennlnal and allowed to browse in
it at a souvenir shop at the Havana the shops.
airport while the L-1011 was being . The plane was piloted by Capt. Yinrefueled .
ce Doda of Miami, said Delta
Havana,"' Don Donner of Fort
"An adventure- it SW'e was," she . sookesman WaltJureski.
Lauderdale recalled.
.
Cuban authorities were waiting lor
the plane. They led the hijacker ,
described by passengers as bearded,
stocky and wearing a green army
shirt, away in handcuffs. The New
York-to-Fort Lauderdale flight then
returned to the U.S. , landing at Miami
International Airport al2: IOa.m. with
all passengers and 12 crew members
unharmed:
·
Guerra, 37, shocked officials on Oct.
5, 1969, when he landed a MiG·I7 at
CHARLESTON , W.Va. (API - Stu about 8: 20 p.m.
Homestead Air Force Base in a plane
The coach, who had just completed
Aberdeen,
the fiery , energetic
that carried 40 rounds of anununilion
what
he called "one of the best
basketball
coach
who
VQwed
two
and two cannons armed with 160
recruiti.n
g seasons in Marshall's
years
ago
to
restore
l'tlarshail
rounds. He was not picked up on U.S.
history,"
was on the second day of a
University
to
basketball
prominence
,
radar until just before his landing.
two-week vacation .
died
Monday
night
of
an
apparent
Guerra was then a lieutenant in the
· The 5·fool-5 Aberdeen came to
Cullan air Ioree. He said he left his heart attack while vacationing in Marshall
in 1977 after serving as the
Florida.
family and homeland because he
associate
head coach at the
Aberdeen,
43,
was
stricken
at
6:50
wanted to he away from the Castro
University of Tennessee for 11 years
p.m.
in
New
Smyrna
Beach,
Fla
.
He
regime . Two years later he was
coach Ray Mears.
arrested in New York on drug died a I Fish Memorial Hospital at under
Aberd een was credi ted with
charges.
recruiting two of the top players in
He told police then' that he had been
Ten nessee's history, Ernie Grunfeld
unable to lind a job in the United
and Bernard King. &amp;fore coaching at
States. "Flying is my business, and I
Tennessee, Aberdeen coached lor
can't find work anywhere."
seven years at Acadia University in
It was not known today whether
Ontario, Canada,' where he produced
Guerra's family h{ld ever joined him
se vera l
Canadia n
national
in the United States.
championship teams.
Passengers said the hijacker had
Although Marshall suffered hack-toseemed nervous during the flight , and
back losing seasons in his first two
was seen carrying a duffle bag into
years as head coach, ending with a 14the front cabin. They didn't see him
15 record in 1977·78 and a 12-16 record
again until the plane landed in
this past season, Aberdeen recently
Havana. There, they said, the man
said he felt the Thundering Herd's
yelled his apologies.
current recruiting season had made
"When we were in the terminal in
U.e team into a viable contender for a
Havana, a Cuban - he looked like an
Southern Conference championship.
official - told me the hijacker was a
Aberdeen, who is SW'vived by his ·
defector from the Cuban air Ioree who
wife and three children, graduated
decided he wanted to return to his
from Tusculum College in 1957 and
homeland. I don't know why I was told
ea rned a master's degree' two years
later from Springfield (Mass.) College.
·
Acco rdin g to Evenson, funeral
arran gements are to be announced
later today,
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
was advised recently the village 's application for funds under the Com- ·
munity Bl!ICk Grant Small Cities
0 • 0
Program has been screened by the
Department of Housing and Urban
Development (HUDI for com·
pleteness and was accepted for
U
review May 11,1979.
A copy of the application is
This morning in Meigs County Com- Rt. I, Dexter, who was found guilty on
avallable at the mayor's office Mon·
mon
Pleas Court Robert Radebaugh, May 6, of trafficking In marijuana afday·Friday from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.
ter a three day jury trial in Meigs
Anyone interested may review the ap·
County
Common Pleas Court, was
plication at those hours.
sentenced
to one to 10 years by Judge
COUNCIL RESCHEDULED
The application is for $330,000 to be
John
C.
Bacon
but was relea'sed under
Due
to
the
lack
of
a
quorum,
a
used to. extend the sanitary sewer
·
system to Broadway Street below regular meeting of Middleport $5,000 bond awaiting appeal.
.
Prosecuting
Attornery
Frederick
. Park, Elm, Page, and Railroad Village Council scheduled lor Monday
Streets. Included in the project are night was no\ held. The meeting has W. Crow represented the Stale of Ohio
some sidewalk construction and been rescheduled for Thursday at ahd Radebaugh was repreSented by
Attorney Charles Knight.
·
7:30p.m .
street resurfacing in the same area .

MU' s Aberdeen
dies in Florida

HUDaccepts
fund application

Radebau.uh aet 1-10
fior tr.•offi C k zng
• pot

TALK . WITII "MIZ ULLIAN" - Five:year-old Leslie Lyons of
Pomeroy was presented an au~ographed picture by Lillian Carter,
mother of President Carter, followirig Ohio University's eomlilencement
program Saturday. Mrs. carter was flown to Athens from Georgia by
·Leslie's lather, Leonard Lyons, who received a bachelor's degree in ac·
c:ounting .and an associate degree in aviation from Ohio. He is a tran·
sportation pilot for the university. Following graduation he flew JWs.
Carter and her bodyguard back to Georgia.

•

,

.,

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