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                  <text>New nursing facility plans August opening
Amerirare Corporation of Columbus, will be opening a new 100 bed, skilled
and mlennediate care nursing home facility during the month of August.
The Pomeroy Health Care Center was originally scheduled to open in July ,
tiut due to construction delays, truc~ing strikes, and other uncontrollable
·
events the facility will not open until Auglll!l.
Interviews for individuals seeking employment at the health care center
• will initially begin during the second week of July.
.
Americare Corp. currently operates nine other health care centers in Ohio
and West Virginia, and is a member of state and national Health Care Associations .
The Pomeroy Health Care Center is located at 36759 Rock Springs Rd. (old
Route 33 ), jllllt three miles north of the Meigs County Fairgrounds. The building
is a one floor design, with four private and forty..,ight semi-private rooms. The
frame is constructed of brick veneer with insulated glass throughout.
·
For the comfort and well-being of the patients, there are well equipped
lounge areas, beauty and barber salons, an examination room for private physi cians, a specially equipped van to transport patients to medical appointments
or other activities away from the facility, individual rooom control,s for

.cmepraturc and hum1dlly, twu large pallent baths. ~n exte nsive physical
therapy deiJ!lrlment, two complete nursing ~ta tions, and a large formal dining
roo!ll . Most Important, the building is completely fire protected utilizing an advanced spri~er system, smoke dete~IO_(S , and an individual call system .
The fac1hty grounds Will e decorated w1th flowering shrubs to show nature
at its best throughout the seasons. There will be a well lighted access road with
large parking areasJor employees and visitors.
Various services that will be offered include medical and nursing care,
phySical therapy , speech therapy, activities therapy, social services, as well as
dietary, pharmaceutical, ~ental and laboratory consultation. There will be a
medical director to serve as a consultant regarding services. A physician will
be available on call at all times.
For a patient to be admitted, an application must be filled out and submitted . The director of nursing and the director of social services will review each
application Wassure that the services offered by the facility are appropriate to
meet the needs of the patient. Each patient's needs in regard to therapy and
rehabilitation will be evaluated upon admission, and routinely thereafer. Patients will be admitted wtihout regard to race, creed, color, religion, national

•

. A .'lilt~~~

MELANIA BARNETI, Jeftrof flag, and her court
were featured on this fioat of the auxiliary of Aerie

2171, Fraternal Order of Eagles. The unit won second
place In the general float division in Saturday's
parade.

BRANDON COOK, In the junior division, was dellghted with his frog, "Cook sPecial," In the Regatta 's Annual Frog Jwnp Contest.

:.;;~~;.~;;~;;~~;;~:;~;;~-l i"''"'"'A;;;,,,d;;th;'''"'''l Miller has busy
and must he signed with the signee's address . Names may 1
SAMUEL HAMILTON
be withheld upon publiclJtion. However, on request, 1 Samuel Milton Hamilton, 81, Point
names will be disclosed . Letters should be in good taste, 1 Pleasant, fonnerly of Middleport and
Marietta, 0., died Tuesday in the
addressing issues, not personalities.
I Pleasant
I Illness. Valley Hospital after a long

I
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I
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I

Cesident speaks out

"

Dear Editor:
I can no longer sit by and watch the
eigs Local Board of Education in
.y opinion blunder again without
1ying what I think, what I know and
hat I hope about the recent actions
ken by this group of citizens.
•
Spending money they do not have
1ough of didn't they l'lllCently ask for
large additional operating levy? On
1 out of the district laWYer to
,gotiate with both teachers and non·
achers on local contracts when
cal, no cost legal representation is
18ilable (out of district legal Beagle
&gt;Sis us (taxpayers) $50 per hour that
! works for us.
I have not asked the past superinndents of Pomeroy (Mr. Gibbs) and
1ddleport (Mr. McCon1as) and
utland (Mr. Smith) all retired, to
orve on a screening committee to
!lp the sch~ board who by hiring a
·oup from Ohio University at a large
1tlay of short bus existent cash, have
bnitted they do not have the ' eX·
ortlae to make such a selection. But
m quite sure these retired superin·
ndents would have served for only
ken compensation and now after
~ same board used this expensive
:reenlng conunittee to screen 42 apications, cannot select an appllcant,
ISk, is this not waste?
So, voters, taxpayers, parents of
!hool age children, grandchildren,
· just interested citizens, call the
·esent board members, Mr. Powell,
r. Riggs, Mr. King, Mrs. Sheets or
uident Mr. Pieree, tell them what
tU think, If you can get them to ever
!Ceive your call. Or even better still,
• at the Meigs Local Board of
ducation meeting at the Middleport
mior High (old Middleport High
•hool) building on Thursday, June
:, at 7 p.m. and let this same group
II you why all this has been
!Ce8ll8J'Y and wl!ere did this nondstent money come from tO finance
tese prior mentioned high ex!ndltures.
You may recall that I asked to be
:turned to this board of education
overal months ago when Mr. Hoover
1d to leave the school district, but
as denied this opportunity by Mr.
~ Dr. Ri!!l!s and Mr. Pierce who

Born Dec. 6, 1897, In Middleport, he
was the son of the late M. J. and Olive
Bowman Hamilton. He worked for
many years a8 a chef at the Lafayette
Motor Hotel, was a member of the
Coal Valley Masonic Lodge No. 74,
were at the meeting when Mr. Powell Montgomery, WV, and a member of
the First Baptist Church, Middleport.
was placed on the Meigs Local Board
of Education.--Mr-rliheets was not
present 11t this meeting. A few years
ago ago when I resigned from this
same board I had a medical problem
(hlgh blood pressure) which-has been
controlled by medication. I made no
mention of this at the time I resigned.
I was too upset and it was too personal
at that time.
I say to all of you, there are four of.
fices on the board of education (Meigs
PITISBURGH ( AP) The
Local) due to be filled this November gasoline shortage and inflation are
(1979). Get together, let three of you, likely to pull the nation's economy
at least, that can work together, seek deeper into a developing recession,
out these offices, get yourselves elec- Mellon Bank's dlief economist said
ted to this thankless office of school Tuesday.
board ($20 a month salary), take con" I see little relief on the horizon in
trol of our schools, hire a good terms of inflation ," Norman
superintendent, and proceed to place Robertson · told reporters in
Meigs Local Schools on top of the forecasting the economic condition for
heap. Let's make it a great place to the rest of 1979 and 1980. "We're
send your chiklren for an education, facing a couple of rather difficult
both scholastic and moral, with a· years."
great athletic program, a great band
Robertson blamed the slump on
and great local bookin_g because it's a double-digit inflation and on the Jack
great school that can one day have of a coherent national energy policy .
great spirit and great backing and
"I think ... a developing recession ...
may have already started, and ·I
great memories for all its graduates.
If I am not at the above mentioned ~lieve it's going to last to 1980. It
meeting it will be because that I am In looks mild and llke it will be quite
California with a group of my famUy shallow, but it could be longer and last
living there, the famUy that made me at least through 1980," he said.
"Aithough it looks like a mild
a home away from home before I
shipped out U.S. Navy during the downturn, I think there is the potential
second World War. I baven't been for something worse."
He said the public's discontent and
back there In 31 years.
If I can be of any help to any one in frustration, fueled by a 12 to 14
this matter, please call on me, for I percent Inflation rate and 811' energy
still have .two children at Meigs high crisis, are fraying tempers, Further
school, Todd and Lorri Snowden, erosion of confidence on the part of
three graduates, Robert Lee, Judith, consumers and businesses could spell
a sharper decline in the economy.
and Rose Mary.
But Robertson ruled out a
Thank you. kindly . Your truly,
depression, saying · "the American
Robert F. Snowden.
economy is soundly based and

"ayor's Court
Fined In the court of Middleport
ayor Fred Hoffman Tuesday night
ere Steven L. Schneider, 18,
eedsville, $10 and costs, failure to
eld the right of way, and Narda J .
~rey, 21, Pomeroy,
reckless
~ration. Forfeiting a $50 bond in the
urt, posted on a disorderly manner
.arge, was Mark A. Tlllls, 29,
Jtland. _
.
.
Fined in the court of Pomeroy
ayor Clarence Andrews Tuesday
ght were Brian Hiles, Pomeroy, $150
1d costs on an assault charge;
1rney Hiles, Pomeroy, $300 and
•sts, assault, and Gary Gibbs,
ason, $30 and costs, on a charge of
1rking on a roadway.
Forfeiting bonds In the court were
orry Phillips, Pomeroy, $370, posted
, a rchatge of driving while
toxicated, and $50 on an assured
ear distance charge, and Harold
cGrath, Long Bottom, $50, posted on
1 open flask charge.

SEEK UCENSES
Marriage licenses were issued to
racy G. Morris, 25, New Haven, and
&gt;etta A. Krider, 19, Long Bottom;
imothy Lee Hill, 21, Racine, and
lf!bbie Jean Imboden, 20, Racine;
ommy Joe Reed, 21, Reedsville .and
.egina Dianne Kimes, 21, Reedsville .

.

'•

..

Surviving are one daughter, Mrs.
R. D. (Ruth) Tygretl, Point Pleasant;
two granddaughters, Frances and
Barbara Sue Tygretl; two- nieces,
)'.Irs. Cll!ra Mae Darst, Middleport,
and Mrs. Betty Holder, Colwnblll!, 0.
He was pr~ed in death by seven
sisters and one brother.
Funeral serv'lces will be conducted
Thursday, I p.m., at the Wilcoxon
Funeral Home with the Rev. Hennan
Hayes officiating. Burial will follow In
the Hill Cemetery, Middleport.
Friends may call at the funeral
home this evening from 7to 9 p.m.

Mellon economist
sees no relief

Th.u rtdly, June 21

ASTRO·GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

~'Your

~CJUrthday
June 28, 1979
Something you have always
hoped for can be gain ed this
comin g year . Th is could involve
ei th er material or pe rsonal
worth . and it might come abou t
through a valuable a! ly.
CANCER (Juno 21·July 22) A
keen se nse of timin g and an
instinct for the riaht answers

makes th is an exc~ ll e nt day to
nail down siW atlon s that have
been · toug h to co nsum rriate .
Find out more of what lies
ahead tor you in the yea r
following your birthday ' by
sending for ~our copy of Astra·
Graph Letter. Mail $1 or eac h to
Astra-Graph , P . 0 . Box 489 ,
Radio City Station , N.Y. 10019.
Be sure to specily bi rth sign .
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) TOday
yo u have the self-co nfidence to
take a bolder course of action
,on a project yo u 're involved In
with another . Thi s person ha s
reasons to go along with yo u.
VIRGO (Aug . 23·SBpt. 22) Fol·
low your in stincts If y~u ifeel
you have sometning to say to
one who IS important in your
life . You'll encounter a frien dl y
ear .
LIBRA (Sepl. 23-0ct. 23) Tackle
the mountain today and Ignore

ExTENDED FORECAST
Friday tbroup Sunday: A chance
of showen and mlld Friday and
early Saturday, Fair and mlld Sun·
day. Highs In the mid to upper 7011
Friday, warming to the low to mld
80s Sunday, Lows In the mid to upper
5011 Friday, rising to the low to mid
80s SWKIIly.
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
Admitted- Darrel McPherson,
William
Johnson,
Pomeroy ;
Pomeroy ; Dwight Oliver, Pomeroy;
Mary Pugh, Minersville ; Darrell
Jenks , Mason; Dottie Deem,
Hartford; Felix Alkire, Pomeroy;
Diana Pope, Middleport.
Discharged-Floyd Cummins, Ethel
Moore, Sarah Bush, Irene Christy.

Martin s aid if Jackson "doesn't
want to come back and help his
teammates, that's his own thing ," and
then adopted a policy of strict sllence
.on the matter.
.

resilient."
Prices this year likely will be up by
10.5 percent, the highest since 1974
when they rose II percent, according
to the Mellon economist. He predicted
they will be up 8 to 8.5 percent next
year.
With inflation eating away at
incomes and purchasing power, real
earnings were down by 5 percent in
the last year, he said.
In making his predictions,
Robertson compared the national
economic picture to that of 1973, with
economic weakness most visible in
personal consumption and residential
building.
.
SQUAD RUNS
The Middleport Emerg~ncy Squad
was called to Zuspan Hollow Road at
2:54p.m. Tuesday for Cheryl Clark, a
medical patient, who was taken to
Holzer Medical Center. At 12:43 p.m.
the fire department went to the
Vernon Little residence on Hobson
Road. A small fire was extinguished
before the department arrived.

schedule planned
A busy district agenda bas been
scheduled for Tenth District
Congreasman Clarence Miller for the
coming July 4th recess. Underseorlng
the growth and developmnent presently going on In Southeastern Ohio, the
Lancaster legislator will make a
number of Inspection visits to new
and eiJ)IIndlng plant facilities and
local municipal and public works
projects throughout the thirteen coun·
ty Tenth District. He is also scheduled
to participate in a series of
tradltionial 4th of July observances
during the week long recess.
His active schedule begins Sunday
morning, July 1, In Fairfield County,
where the Congressman will address
a ''God and Country" program spon·
sored by the Greencastle Community
Bible Church In Carroll.
On Monday morning, July 2,
Representative Miller will travel to
tbe Lawrence County area where be
will tour the U. S. Steel Chemicals
Plant at Haverhill. That afternoon the
Congressman will meet with Ironton
City Manager Larry Wolke, to discuss
current community concerns.
On Tuesday, Congressman Miller
will start his' day in Meigs County
. where he will tour the new County
Health Center which is presently under construction In Pomeroy. Shortly
after noon, the Congressman is
scheduled to meet with Middleport
Mayor Fred Hoffman and Corps of
Engineer officials at the Village Hall.
From the Village Hall the group will
take an inspection tour of the
Village's dredging problems on
Leading Creek. At 2 p.m., Miller
travels to nearby Cheshire where he
is scheduled to take a helicopter inspection tour of the reclaimed mining
properties of the Jaymar Coal Company.
At 4 p.m., the Congressman will
meet at Eureka with Corps of
Engineers representatives to discuss
the replacement work needed at the
Galllpolis Lock and Dam.
Early thaL ... evening the

Congressm..'UI will be In Gallipolla to
attend the 14th Annual Gallipolla
River Recreation Festival at City

Pm.

.

On Wednesday, Independence Day,
Representative Miller will par·
ticipate In the aMual Fourth of July
parade In Sugar Grove which begins
at II a.m. From Fairfield County, the
Congre8sman travels to Hocking
CoWlty to attend the Logan Jaycees'
annual "Holiday at Home" gathering
at · the Fairgrounds. Early that
evening Mr. Miller will be In Jackson
County to participate In Jackson's an·
nual Independence Day parade and
will be the featured speaker at the In·
dependence Day program held at
Manpower Park at 8 p.m.
On Thursday morning, July 5, the
Tenth District lawmaker will be in
Balt.lmore, Ohio, for a tour of the
Crown :lellerbach plant. Early that
afternoon Miller meets with community improvement officials In
Zanesville where he will Inspect the
city's Industrial park and urban
renewal area. At 4 p.m. on Thursday,
the Congreasman continues his busy
week long schedule with a visit to the
new Morgan County Health Clinic under construction In McConnelsvUle,
On Friday, July 6, the Congressman
will conduct scheduled appointments
at his Olstrict Offtce In Lancaster. On
Friday evening, Mr. Miller and his
wife, Helen, will attend Mrs. Miller's
Lancaster High School class reunion.
WILL OK HIKE
.. GENEVA, Switzerland (AP) Qatar's oil minister said today the
Organization of Petroleum Exporting
Countries probably would approve a
crude oil base price of 1- than $20,
but aUow memben to add allowances
for different qualities of oU, up to •
about the $28 level.
.. The price of $20 for a 4Z..galloo
barrel of would add as much as 5 cenU
a gallon to U.S. gal!tlllne and heating
oil prices, analysts said,

Delaware was the first of the
original 13 states to ratify the Con·
stitution.

the fonthllls . Your aspects indi·
whom you' re dealing . No one
ca te you're up to doing big
will Intimidate you today .
thing s in a big way .
PISCES (F•b. 2D-March 20) H's
SCORPIO (Oct. 2•-Nov . ZZ) If
not just " business as u sual"
you keep your mind and energy
for you today. The lime is ri pe
on that hig h mark you' re shootfor you toaccdmplish an impor·
ing lor , you have a darned good
ta n! and major goal.
chanc e of hitting that bulls eye
ARIES (March 21-Aprll19) H you
today .
use a Utile humor in your
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
ma nner. when dealing with oth21) On e would th ink you were a
ers today, you'll l ind them to be
guru th e way words of wisdom
surprisingly supportive and
flow from your mouth today . lo · coopera1ive .
top lt otf , yoU know hOW · tO put
TAURUS {ApriiZD-May 10) You
what you say into ac tion .
have an excellent mind lor
CAPRICORN coec. 22-Jan. 19) . ·commercial matters today, beThere is an abundance of opcause you are both practical
portuni\y that cou ld spell both
and realistic In your approach .
advancement and added revePut this to work.
GEMINI (...y Z1.June %0) You
nue With your work o r career
today . Use your time well.
are normally talkative , but toAQUARIUS {Jan.-Feb . 111) Your
day It won 't be just Idle chatter .
perso nality Is exceptionally
What you say will have purpose
strong and powerful and you
and conviction.
favorably impress those wit h
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE "SSN .)

UPRIGHT

SWEEPER SALE
HOME FURNISHINGS - 1ST FLOOR
COMBINATION UPRIGHT
AND ATTACHMENT OFFER
• Exctuolve &amp;-way Dlai·A·Na,P
rug height ad)uotment

. NOTICE ·

• Top-lllllng dlopollble dust
bog prevents clogo, keepa

EFFECTIVE JULY 1,1979THE INTEREST RATE ON
PASSBOOK SAVINGS WILL BE IN~REASED TO

auction atrong.

5Y4%

'

• Edge Kleener clean• lhal

·laal tough Inch along the

'THE FRIENDLY lWVK"
\.--""""-

lilbeM ,altonal Benk

€b
MODEL
1424

....-.a--.,: ..
.

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-~&gt;

&gt;4tmbtr F. 0.1. C. Deposits lnsurence111 $40,000.

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Reg. Upright $89.95

Welk-Up Titlllir Window Open Fridey Evenings, Slo 7 p.m.

•

~

1111\1~,

~ .

• Brilliant headlight

J~

~~

Tool Reg. $19.95
~
Total Reg. S109. 90 ~

•69

NOW
ny
ON L.

95

.

INCLUDES 6 PC,
ATTACHMENT SET

Elberfelds In ·Pomeroy
.

.

,

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

When the facility opens it will be ·a definite asset to the municipality, and
should be a welcome entrant into the community , There will be an open house
held prior to the opening day, date and time will be announced, and all in·
terested persons are invited to attend.

...

enttne
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

THURSDAY, JUNE 28, 1979

Public .hear:ing held on
lPomeroy village income tax
By Kiltie Crow
Approximately 20 persons attended the public meeting Wednesday night regarding a proposed
on" percent income tax for the village of Pomeroy.
Rodney Winters, tax administrator for the city of Wellston , explained how a one percent tax will
·
effect the working public.
According to Winters, all persons working within the corporation of Pomeroy will pay the one
percent tax. It is a tax on wages and salaries. Those persons who work within the corporation will pay
one percent on the gross amount of their Income which will be deducted from their checks by their
employers.
Self -employed, business, professional people, and rental income tax will be paid on the net
amount and this is estimated and will be paid every three months .
Any resident of Pomeroy, who llves within the corporation, is liable to pay the tax no matter
where he works, Winters explained. Winters also explained that salesmen, pop and beer distributors
are liable for the amount of blll!iness they do within the corporation.
He also noted that persons who receive social security pensions unemployment bemifits and
those disabled will not have to pay the tax.
'
Winters stressed that the city Income tax is deductible from federal income tax .
. Those who have the tax deducted from their wages do not have to file any type of fonn with the
VIllage or govenunent. Persons who live In the corporation and work outside the area still must pay
the tax unless there is a city tax where they work also. If they are paying only one-half percent they
would pay the difference.
Winters said he is the only one who works In the Wellston office, the only one who handles the
money, and all accounts are done in code. He stated his salary is $12,000 a year and the one percent
tax in Wellston brings in a revenue of $300,000 annually.
Those attending felt the one percent tax was the only "fair way" to go since it will be equal.
.When Winters was asked if it would be better to pass an ordinance on the tax or pass it at a
general election Winters answered ''general election".
Winters abo reported that persons under 18 years of age would be exempt as well as banks.
Banlui are exempt due to the Intangible tax.
Pomeroy council proposed that revenue for the tax would be uaed as foUowo: 60 percent lor
streets, 10 percent for the lire department; 10 perceai for the two cemeteries, Sacred Heart and
Beech Grove, and 20 percent for the water departme!Jt,
It was suggesteQ that SOIJie money should be u.~ed for the benefit of the children.
Council explained there were several reasons why it had not matched a $19,000 grant for the minipark. Members felt the $19,000 matching funds were needed more in other directions.
It was also pointed out that at the present time, the street department and cemetery fund is $6,000
in the red and the auditor wiU insist that money be generated to eliminate that deficit.
It was also indicated that the tax would have to be sold to the people and council would have to indicate that they are sincere In their efforts;

"
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-

ROCK-A-THON CONDUCTED - The Meigs County 4-H Junior Leaders Club held a rock-a-thon on the

Meigs

-

Today
... in the world

Session over
TOKYO (AP) - The first ses·
sion o( the seven-nation economic
sununit ended today with President Carter reporting "it's too
early to tell " whether agreement
can be reacht!\1 on fixing countryby-&lt;Oountry targets to limit oil imports.
Carter said he and the others
meeting here hope to come up
with a fonnula. But American officials empbasized that "a great
deal of work remains to be done,
particularly on short-term commitments." .
European Jiarticipants in the
sununit have been pressing for·a
freeze on oil imports through
1985, while Carter favors emphasis on import curbs that
would focus more directly on the
next 18 months.

New restaurant fire
brings allegations
Although nothing has been proven
and no charges bave been filed,
allegations have been made that Wed·
nesday's fire at the construction site
of the new Gallipolis Ponderosa Steak
House may have been deliberately
set.
Phil Spinosi of Trio Construction
Co., Columbus, the firm contracted to
build the new restaurant, said it was
likely members from the Tri.State
Building and Trades Union, which has
been picketing the site on Upper
River Road, set the fire which
damaged 46lumber trusses.
Fire Chief Jim Northup said the investigation into the early morning
fire is still continuing. He cannot
deterrnine.what exactly caused it, but
does agree it could have been set.
"We felt it was an incendiary fire

MANAGUA, Nicaragua (AP )
- President Anastssio Somoza
called a special session of the
Nicaraguan Congres today amid
widespread rumors that it would
seek a fonnula for his departure
from office.
Meanwhile, the national guard
announced it launched a counteroffensive against Saildi(lista·
rebels occupying territory -north
of the Costa Rican border, and
the new U.S. ambassador,
Lawrence Pezzullo, arrived In
Managua.
The goveornment was makinga
major effort to round up
members of Congress from
across the strife-tom countryu. It
chartered private planes and used national guard helicopters to
bring the congressmen and their
alternates to the Intercontinental
Hotel, where the session was to
be held because it could be proc
tected better than the government palace.

· because there was nothing there to
start it accidentally," he said.
The union has set up an informational picket at the site
protesting the su!H!ontractor Schott
and Son, Inc., hiring non-union carpenters on the job.
Jeff Gerard, in charge of con·
structlon at the site, said he thought
all the union would do is picket.
"Aside from the usual bravado at!ached to it, threats and so on, I would
never have suspected something like
this," he said.
Work is continuing, but Gerard said
the burning of trusses will create
problems as new ones have to be ordered . If the union chose to slow up
work, he added, they could not have
chosen a better target.
(Continued on Page 7)

.•.I

Kroger parking lot Wednesday to raise money ' for
various 4-H projects.
I

County

commissioners

Tuesday reviewed thb status of
various county CETA programs with
Larry Hivnor, Ted Katz and Steve
Gulyassy,CE'l'A representatives.
Hivnor stated under the new
guidelines CETA particip3!1ts were
now required to r eceive formal
training and tha t the maximum
dura trion of participation in the CETA
programs is now limited to 18 months .
Hivnor also informed the board of
the passage of Senate Bill number
.three which excludes CETA
participants hired after June 30, 1979,
from membership in any state or
municipal retirement system . .
Hivnor requested the board go into
executive session in order to discuss a
personnel problem in the CETA
administration.
Richards Jones, president of the
board, expressed his dislike of
executive sessions in that he felt the
public should be aware of the
problems involved. The meeting was
left open and Hivnor proceeded.
Hivnor said he had been with CETA
for five years and during the first few
years he had been very pleased with
Meigs County's operations. However,
problems have arisen with the 1978-79
gra nts in that the county
administrator, Naoma Brinker, has
failed to submit a clos«tut of the 1978
programs and to date has not
submitted the 1979 grants to the office
of Manpower Development.
Gulyassy said. that failure to have
the contracts submitted ca n lead to
funding being taken away . Jones
asked why the board had never been
informed that a problem existed until

now . Katz stated that his office
assumed that tne administrator,
Brink er, would keep the board
informed.
The board informed the CETA
representatives that a meeting would •
be arranged in the near future with
the administrator to work out the
problems ca usin g the delay in
submission of contracts.
Also present was Wesley Buehl,
county engineer, who discussed the
application to ARC for an additional
$200 000 for the construction of an
acc~ss raod to the Multi-Purpose
Health center.
Buehl was instructed to contact Kim
Shields of BHHURDD to
the
·

Melton assumes
pastoral duties

\

J~
president; Russel Williams, installing officer and pasi
district governor: back row, I tor, David Jenkins, third
vice president; Norbert Compton, director; Wesley
Buehl, director, and Albert Hill, lion tamer.

•

necessary forms for llle application.
Buehl reported that his department ·
was patching cqunty roads 82; 41 and
36 with a two and one-half Inch patch
and that it appeared to be a much
better patching job. Buehl said his
department would be working on
county road 25 before th e fair. ·
The Ohio Bridge Company is
driving piling on the bridge on county
roa d 20. The commissioners
authorized the engineer to order four
bids for the plat maps.
Richard Frounfelker, of the SYstech ·
Corp., who has been hired as
consultant through Buckeye Hills,
Hocking
Valley
Regional
Development District, discussed the
study he is doing on the Meigs County ,
Sanitary Landfill operations .
Frounfelker said that he would
prepare a solld waste plan and .
present recommendatiodris on the
county 's operation of a sanitary
landfill within the next four weeks.
, The board received quotations from
Guernsey Asphalt, Ashland, and
Asphalt Materials Co., for purchases
of bituminous materials for the county
highway department. The board voted
unanimously to accept the quotations .
of Guernsey Asphalt Co. for pur-chases
during the month of July.
Attending were Richard Jones,
Henry Wells, and Chester Wells,
commissioners, Frederick Crow, DI,
prosecuting attorney , Carson Crow,
assistant prosecuting attorney and
Mary Hobswtter , clerk.

Weather
BOB.MELTON, MINISTER

OFFICERS INSTALLED - The new Pomeroy·
Middleport Lions Club officers "!ere installed Wednesday at the Meigs Inn in Pomeroy. Installed were
front row, left to right, Kdrl Kraut(er, taUtwister;
Clarence Struble, secretary - treasurer: i'avid Fox .

•

eview CETA program status

Special session

INCLUDED:
6 PC.
ATIACHMENT
SET

baseboards

Interest calculated ·daily from date of deposit to date of
withdrawal . Interest will be paid and · compounded
quarterly,
-

VOL. XXVIII NO. 53

1~94.J()I8 .

•

a1 y

e

origin, ur sex. Medicare and Medicaid patients will be accepted. Medicaid pa·
tients should intitially contact their local welfare office if interested in being a
resident of the nursing care center.
.
Daily rates will vary according to the level of nursing services llJC(Ied. The '
daily rate covers room, board, basic nursing care services, and general social
activities.
Additional fees are charged for medication, physidan services, certain
medical supplies, special therapy treatments (physical, speech, occupational )
and beauty or barber services. Patient and employee. applications can be obtained from the Information and · Referral Services at the Pomeroy Senior
Citizens Center. Further information may be obtained by calling the Americare
home off ice at l-&lt;i!H57-73!i3 or by calling or meeting with Gerald Hazelbaker

Bob Melton, a native of Greenwood,
Ind., is the new pastor of the Mid·
dleport Church of Christ.
A graduate of the high school at
Greenwood, Melton worked in research for five years for the Eli lilly Co.
and . was on his way to bllcorning a
bioc~emist when he was called to the
ministry.
He attended Kentucky Christian
College at Grayson, Ky., from 1974 to
June, 1977 -ai\!I'N11ll'e there served as
dean of men in 1977.
He alSo dJre'cted the musical group
of the college, "Destiny", a 21 member instMunental and vocal group
which traveled to many churches to
present programs. He and his wife,
Debby, were also dormitory parents.
At Kentucky Christian, Melton
· received degrees both in Bible and in
education.
.
In June, 1977, Mr. Melton and his
family went to Columbus where he
was minister of Christian Education
at the Linden Church of Christ. He
founded the Christian Day School of
(Continued on Page 7)

Variable cloudines through Friday
with a chance d. showers or
thunderstorms. Low tonight in the low
to mid 60s. High Friday in tbe low to
mid 80s. The chance of rai11 is 30 per·
cent tonight and 50 percent Friday.

232 plants pulled
Meigs County sheriff's deputies
have destroyed 232 marijuana plants
ranging in size from 10 to 121nches in
length from a field on Bigley Ridge
near Long Bottom in Olive Twp.
Earlier, deputies pulled 30
marijuana plants from a field In
Rutland Twp.
Deputies are also investigating the
theft of a drive shaft from a 1967 GMC
truck park at Hawk's Pennzoll Ser·
vice Station at Tuppers Plains.
FUNDS RECEIVED
After deductions for retirement,
Stale School Foundation subsidy
payments for June totaled $264,980.84
for the three school districts of Meigs
County.
Of the total, Eastern Local received
$73,845.10; Meigs Local, $128,197.24,
and Southern Local, $62,938.30. In addition the county board of education
received lin allotment of 116,582.17.

�3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday , June 28, 1979

In Washington

returned, saying, "ConcessioM were

made of a substantial nature to the
Soviets and that is appeasem~nt."
In answer- to a reporter's question,
the senator added, "Appeasement is
not being a traitor, it is being foolish ."
Jackson may try to soften the impact
of his attack but he has raised one of
the most highly charged terms in the
lexicon of international politics, a
condemnation made infamous by
British Prime Minister Neville
Chamberlain's yielding of
Czechoslovakia to Hitler's Germany
in 1938.
Dictionary definitions of appeasel)lent refer to ''political concessions
at the sacrifice of principles" and
"giving in to the demands of a hostile
power in an attempt to keep the
peace."
Jackson's harsh language might be
justified if the strategic arms control
agreement (SALT n) representedn
abdication of U.S. military strength.
While there may be legitimate questione on some terms, the treaty is
hardly U.S. surrender.
For example, Jackson said the
agreement permits the Soviet Union
to haye more strategic weapons than

the UrutedS\Gll's.
I
The treatlo\, iri fact, imposes a ceiling on theihwn ber of lawwhers- 2,250
in two years, fewer than the current
Soviet total and more than the U.S.
arsenal.
And Paul Nitze, a Jackson confidant and treaty opponent, has
calculated that under the agreement
the United States probably will continue to have several thousand more
warheads on those launchers tban the
Soviets. Jackson and Nitze say the
Soviets have more powerful bombs,
but the truth is that each side can
decimate the other with a small ~ hare
of its weapons .
Jackson 's hard line does not extend
only to SALT II. Carter and many
members of Congress want to increase trade with the Soviet Union ,
which would cut the U.S. trade deficit.
But Jackson is insisting that no con•
cessions should be made until · the
Soviets give formal assurances that
they will' allow free emigration from
their nation, as they have done to an
unprecedented extent in the past
!8.months. The senator's hard line
may simply stiffen the back of Soviet
officials.
Another source of Jackson's
reputed strength is his chairmanship
of the Senate Energy and Natural
Resources Committee, where he has
been highly critical of the energy
companies. But Jackson's bluster frequently has exceeded his
achievements. In 1977.
Carter allowed James R. Schlesinger- an intimate Jackson associate
-nearly free rein in preparing the administration's energy policy in a
manner designed to win Jackson's
support. Carter's proposal was annihilated in the Senate.
Ironically, Jackson is now leading
tha fight to reverse Carter's decision
to phase out oil price controls, but he
has practically no chance of winning
in the Senate.
As Jackson increases his strident
rhetoric, he may further undermine
his declining Senate power. But as
sads is his personal loss of stature and
grace, far more damaging could be
the national impact of l.is "appeasement" charge. If we are fortunate ,
the debate will rise above the level he
has set.

Jimmy's Whitehouse
TOKYO (AP ) - Japanese fear of
terrorist incidents is so all-pervading
here , with heads of seven
govern.ments gathering at the
economic summit meeting, that
security is nearly suffocating.
One Secret Service agent who came
here in advance of President Carter's
arrival found the security more than
he could handle.
At the end of a long, oftenfrustrating day , the agent cut loose at
his hotel, grabbing a fire extinguisher
and spraying those within range, The
errant bodyguard was shipped home
almost immediately.

.scores of Japanese plainclothesmeQ
who are omnipresent at the hotel
would not permit reporters to visit the
U.S. spokesman's suite.
· Packing his bags, Powell moved to
the building assigned to the press
•
contingent.

Capital
briefs

_- Today's- commentary
Summing up summits
•.

Business mirror
NEW YORK (AP) - The combined
effect of the dreaded 1-R.S package,
that is, inflation-recession-shortage,
is likely to force Americans to cut
back. But does a cu\back mean a
lowering of living standards?
No question: The 1-R.S combine can
do enormous damage to the economy,
which is built on the asswnption of
plentiful supplies, an inspired
consumer to want them, and a supply
of money with which to buy tliem.
But what happens to the economy,
assuming it occurs on a limited time
scale, is not the very same question as
what happens to the consumer.
.The elderly, the infirm, the poor some living at the lljnitS of their
finances and requiring special
tranSportation , foods and medicines
- could very well suffer if special
measures aren't taken.
So could the unskilled, the poorly
skilled and those whose skills are
temporarily not in demand. So could
the indebted household, and there are
millions of 'them, whose loan
repayments are beyond then\.
But for millions of Americans the
answer is not clearcut; it isn't at all
certain that for them a cutback.means
regressing to an earlier, less
advanced standard. Inconvenience
might be confused with suffering.
So far, however, tlle answer - even
by some government officials - has
been yes , individuals must lower their
standards. But only a little reflection
suggests that for many the demotion
may be in mind only.
The explanation lies in attitudes,
habits, excesses . In rich food ,
needless travel, wasted energy. In
calorie-larded diets, over-powered
cars, overh~ated h~mes . In -short, it
lies in the family garbsge heap.
Wa ste is an almost natural
consequence of the super-eonswner
society, one in which acquisition

doesn't stop when the need is met but
continues in search of needs that
might not have been discovered yet.
· Statistics lly, a preponderance of
evidence indicates that Americans
can indeed cut back without
materially lowering their living
standards. And_that in so doing, they
might improve "the quality of their
lives.
Don't confusetoday's longevity with
soft living , the medical people say.
They maintain it's a consequence of
better medicine. They even insist that
the modern consumer society is
medicine's enemy.
The issue then is whether cutbacks
lower living standards, or raise them
instead. Even before 1-R.S, the debate
was on, with people wondering if
somehow the quality of life was
deteriorating.
Studies now show wealthy societies
are demanding more fish, chicken,
vegetables and grains, including
pasta, foods long associated with less
advanced societies. The trend is
changing; people are reverting.
Musing about life as the industrial
revolution was gathering steam,
William Wordsworth observed: "The
world is too much with us; late and
sOon, getting and spending, we lay

waste our powers."

'

It's conceivable that some
Americans, given time to reflect,
might come to the same verdict a
century-and-a.Jlalf later.

The list e!so includes Kbruschev's
ByDooGraff
Summits to the right of us, sllffiiillts eye-opening and possiWy mindblowing visit to the United States in
to the left of us.
President Carter no sooner returns 1959 and Richard Nixon's historic
from Vienna "and the umpteenth one- journey to Peking and anticlimactic
on-&lt;&gt;ne Soviet-American encounter follow-up to Moscow in 1972.
The high drama of those events is
than he is off to Tokyo for the latest
multi-lateral get-together of the" largely lacking in the swruniteering
leaders of the industrial democracies. of more recent years. History may
Taking considerable liberty with look back on Vierma and the signing of
the comment of the Prince de Ugne SALT II as piwtal. But to today's paron the" Congr~ of Vienna, it ticipants and observers, it has more
sometimes seems that t big t ng in the appearance of a ceremonial occaleadership these days isn't so much sion, prepackaged and uneventful in
itseH.
.
leading; it's traveling.
The passage of time may also lend
And to what effect? The meetings of
the highest and mightiest make front significance to the now frequent conand editorial pages, birt is the public sultations of the leaders of the adreally paying much attention? Sum- vanced democracies. These may promits hay,e become such a familiar ve to be the foundation-laying of a
mechanism
of contemporary more stable world order. But the •
diplomacy that the instinctive reac- businesslike way in which the partion to yet another for many of us may ticipants go about their business and
be a large yawn and a quick turn to the stultifying effect upon the public
of that business, economics, does not
another page.
It wasn't always so. Not so long ago . do much for them as attention grabin even the medium-range view of bers.
.
Actually, the absence of high
history, face-to-face encounters between world leaders were events of drama and the low level of public in- .
high drama, often even· extreme teres! · in recent swrunits says
crisis. One example of the latter, the something about the development of
1938 four-power Munich conference, this now institutionalized procedure
made such a vividly lasting impres-. in the conduct of international relasion on public consciousness that tions. The periodic meetings in which
President Carter chose to stand leaders keep talking ha,ve succeedd in
bareheaded in tbe rain upon his ar- their purpose of preventing nations
rival fu Vienna rather than raise an from resorting to ·fighting.
umbrella, Munich's legacy to tbe
So if summit success induces
world as a symbol of "appeasement". boredom, who's to complain? That's
Munich, however, has always been certainly preferable to the consein a class by itself- fortunately. The quences of the alternative, failure.
swrunits of the last three decades
·essentially continue the tradition of
the conferences of the World War II
allies.
MARKET REPORT
After Potsdam in 1945, these were
Oblo Valley Uvestock Co.
on the Cold War ice untill955 and the
Saturday, June %3, 1979
Geneva suminit that made genuine
Feeder Steers: Good and Choice headlines with the forerunner of 250 to 300 lbs. 85 to 102, 300 to 400 lbs.
SALT; Dwight Eisenhower's "open 82.50 to 101.50, 400 to 500 lbs. 82 to
skies" proposal. The Soviets at that 92.75, 500 to 600 lbs. 68.50 to 9!.50, 600
time weren't ready to buy mutual air to 700 lbs. 67.50 to ~.00, 700 to 800 lbs.
reconnaissance as a check against ag- 65 to 78, 800 and over 64.75 to Tl.'JJJ.
gressive military build-up by either
Feeder Heifers: Good and Choice superpower. And when the United 250 to 300 lbs. 89.75 to 95.50, 300 to 400
States went ahead on its own with the lbs. 84.75 to 92.75, 400 to 500 lbs. 70 to
U-2 overflights of the Soviet Union, 82, 500 to 600 lbs. 68 to 78, 600 to 700 lbs.
Nikita Khruschev's hyper-histrionic 60 to 70, 700 to 800 lbs. 59.75 to 70. 75,
rction put an early end to the Paris 800and over 57.50to 72.50.
·
swrunit of 1960.
Feeder Bulls: Good and Choice As it turned out, 11 Dpen ~lr-;~s" were 250 to 300 111s. 94.75 to 101, 300 to 400
soon to become a calmly accepted lbs. 83.45 to 99, 400 to 500 lbs. 79.95 to
reality thanks to satellite surveillance 92. 75, 500 to 800 lbs. 72.45 to 82.95, 600
rapidly developed by both sides to 700 lbs. 69.95 to 75.95, 700 to 800 lbs.
following the Soviet's technological 65.95 to 72.45, 800 and over 65.45 to
triumph in th'e launching of the first 69.96.
Sputnik. So mucb for Ide dramas and
Bulls (1,000 lbs. and over) 58 to 70,
crises of yesterday.
Slaughter Cows : Utilities 52 to 60,
Another memorable summit, pain- Canner and Cutters42 to 51.50.
fully so for American participants at
Springer Cows (by the head) 375 to
the time, was the 1961 Kennecty- 650, Cows-Calves (by the head)
Khruschev confrontation in Vienna. 375-775, Veal Calves 90-105, Baby
From it flowed the testing of wills in Calves 69-145.
the Cuban missile crisis, possibly the
HOGS - Top Hogs (210-230 lbs.)
closest the world has come to the real 39.50 to 42.50, Boars Tl to 29.80, Pigs
thing since the end of World War II, (by the head)!2.50 to 35, Sows (450
and a Soviet psychological setback lbs. and over) 28to34.
that it has yet to recover from completely.

Sugar's place is in the factory as
Just last week, the 10-year-&lt;&gt;ld
well
as in the kitchen. Industry used
daughter of an American who lives
COLUMBUS, Ohio ( AP) - The
in limning leather, silvering
sugar
here crossed the street from her home Senate passed without dissent a bill
mirrors,
making hair tonics, shoe
to buy bread for her mother .
establishing $5,000 annual salaries for
polishes,
adhesives, photographic
A Japanese policeman intercepted presently unpaid members of the Ohio
materials,
explosives
and detergents.
her and gave polite but firm orders Development Financing Commission.
that she not venture onto the streets
Also approved Tuesday was a
alone again until Carter and company measure allowing local governments
have left town.
to regulate the burning of debris at
Friday, JUne 21
NOTICE ON
highl ight wilt be wh en a big
Parents of American children home and other construction sites
FILING OF
hope you ha'Je nurtured for
AMENDED
attending school here were sent within their jurisdictions.
quite a while fmall y becomes a
INVEt•ITORY AND
realil y.
letters instructing them to never let
APPRAISEMENT
The salary measure was sent to
CANCEFI (June 2~-Juty 2Z)
Bernice Bede Osol
their youngsters out of the house Gov. James A. Rhodes.
Thll! Stat@ Of OhiO, Meigs
Plan s that Invol ve your self.
County , Court of Com'l1on
without an adult escort during the
Inte res ts should work out co mThe bill allowing local governments Pleils ~ Probate Division .
.Carter visit.
fortabl y and eas il y for you
To t he Execu t o r o r
to regulate burning of construction A dm
today, turning thi s into one of
in is tr a tor
of
the
The authorities are worried about debris was returned to the House with es t a l e , t o s u c h of th e
yo ur m_ore pl easant tim es. Dis·
f ol l ow ing as ar e r .es id ent s
cove r with whom you bes t ge t
terrorist kidnappings aimed at amendments.
th e St a te o f Oho , viz : along .r.omanlicatly by. sending
disrupting the summit.
Also returned to the lower chamber of
th e sur v i vi ng spous e, t he
for your new Astra-Graph Letof
k in ,
th e
was a proposal clarifying language in n ex t
ter. Mall $1 fo r each to Astraar ies u n d e r t he
Graph , P.O. Bo x 489, Rad10 City
The American delegation is staying a 1977 law which revised the schedule bwic llp e; faici
nd to t he attorn ey or
June 29, 1979
Station, N.Y. 10019. Be sure to
at the ultra-fashionable Okura Hotel, for certain fees charged by the atto rneys r ep re sent ing an y
Many chan ges are in store l or
speci fy birth si gn .
of
t he a f o r e m enti on e d
across the street from the U.S. secretary of state.
you thi s co m i n ~ vea r.\ bu l th e
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) Slablli zoer so ns :
Embassy compound where the
ing as pec ts are helpin g your
Ray m ond
E.
Boi ce.
financial picture consid erably
COLUMBUS, Ohio (A.Il)
Carters are staying.
f2o5r;3~ r oy . Oh io, .Case No .
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
toda y. let events unfold fo r
The hotel ha s two buildings and Representatives have defeated a
You are h ereb y notifi ed
PURCHASE OF ONE
yo u and proceed undi sturb ed
SCHOOL. BUS FOR
White House planners wanted to lodge Senate-passed bill to require licensing that t he In ve n tory an d
for a bit .
EASTERN LOCAL
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 221 Your
Carter's traveling press corps in the of motor vehicle salvage dealers, but A ppr aisemen t o f t he es t a t e
BOARD OF
o f the af o r e m e nt i on e d .
EDUCATION
later
voted
to
reconsider
their
same building that houses a sprawling
d e c ease d , ta te o f sa id
"'
Co u n t y , were fi led in th is
:,eat ed propo sal s w ill b e
decision.
'
press center.
Co u r t . Said Invento ry an d
r ec eiv ed by th e Bo a rd of
The two actions came Tuesday on A ppr a i se men t will b e for Edu cation of th e East ern
No way, said Japanese security
NOTICE ON
FILING OF
officials. Members of the American th e measure sponsored by Sen. hea r ing befor e th is Court Loc a l Sch ool Dis t rict of
on t he 16th day of Ju l y ,
Reedsv i lle, Oh i o at th e
INVENTORY AND
delegation are in that building and Ronald L. Nabakowski, D-Lorain.
19 79, at 1: 30 o 'c lo c k. P .M .
Trea s urer's Office unt i l
APPRAISEMENT
The bill would require all salvage
An y p er son de siring to
12 : 00no~n July 18 , 1979l\nd
The State of Ohio, Meigs
cannot be exposed to the risks posed
t 1 1e except i ons
the re to
at that t 1m e op~ n e d by t he
County, Court of common
dealers
to
obtain
a
license
from
the
by sharing elevators and hallways
m ust fi le th em at l ea st fiv e
Treasurer of sa1d Board a s
Pleas , Proba1e Division
registrar of motor vehicles regardless days pr ior t o Ht p afe .set&gt; HI"p.rovided by law for one (1 )
with members of the press.
To the E xec utor or
fo
r
h
ea
r
ing
'
65
~a
s~eng
e
r
J
s
c
~o.
o
l
~u
s
,
A
dmini strato r
of
th e
This posed a special problem for of whether they are also required to
G i ven und er my hand
a c co~dmg to spec•f1 c at1,ons
es tat e, to s uch of th e
White House press secretary Jody obtain liceenses as junk yards under a nd sea l ot said Court. th i s ot sa1d - ~~ard of Educatu:m .
follo w ing as a re r esi den ts
Spe c •f• c a 11 o':ls and 1n of the State of Ohio , v iz : 25th day of June 1979 .
Powell, who usually meets privately an existing statute.
Rob er t E . su c k
st ru ct lons to b idders . may
t he surv iving spou se, th e
in his suite with American reporters
Opponents complained that the bill
Jud ge
be obtained at the off1c e Of
n e&gt;'l:t
of
ki n ,
th e
would establish another unneeded
t he Tr e a sur e r . Eastern
b e nef ici ar ies u nd er th e
during international meetings.
wi ll , and to th e atto rn ey or
H ig h Sc hoo l.
B y Ca r o l y n G . l homas
Powell quickly discovered that the licensing board.
A certif ied c hec k payabl e
attorn ey s r epre se ntin g a ny
Deputy Cl erk
The motion to reconsider, made by (61 28 (7l 5, 2tc
to t h e Tr easur er of t he
o f th e af o r eme nt io n ed
above Boar d of Edu c at ion
person s :
Rep. Benny Bonanno, D-Cleveland,
o r a sa t isfactory bid bon d
Ida M . Chri st ie, RD l r
111E DAILY SENTINEL
was left . pending and can be
Po meroy , Oh io .457 69 , Case
ex ecuted by t he bidder an d
NOTICE OF
!USPS 145-911)
th e su r ety c om pany in a h No . 227 0.4 .
considered during an_y ftQ.gr session.
PUBliC HEARING
amount equal to f ive
You ar e h er eby not i f ie d
. OF BUDGET OF
The measure passed the Senate 31).1
t ha t t he In ven tory an d
perc ent of the bid shall b e
MIDDLEPORT,
~, ~~·-su bm i tt ed wi th ea ch b i d .
on May 22.
A pp r a iseme nt o f th e es t a te
OHIO -

ASTRO·GRAPH

1

1

· ·-

D'€VOTED TO 11IE
DooTERESTOF

\!EIGS-MASON AREA
ROBERT HOEn.ICH

•
CityEdJtor
·I
PubUsbed ct.Uy except S.turday by Tbe Ohio
Valley PubUshtq Company- Multimedia, lilt.,
111 Court St., Pomeroy, ObJo f57d. lkulaeas
Olflce Pboae tft. %15&amp;. EdUortal Phone
llft.2157.
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S.bltrtptlon ntea: Delivered by earrter
wiM!re nallable !10 cent. per wuk. By Motor

Roa&amp;e where carrier 1en1ce aot available, One

moalb, P-•· By rMII iD ObJo and W. Va .• One
Year, 127.11; Six monl.b1, $14.50: Tlrrre moo~

tht, ••: Elsl'wlltre S32.to year ; Sb. montb1 '

$17.M; Thrtt

month ~.

ft.M. Suhllcrlpdo• price

lacl•d~Ji•mday T1 me~- SenUnd.

•

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Selling
anything other than official programs
outside the Ohio State Fair gates
would be illegal under legislation
approved by the House.
The bill, passed 94-0 Tuesday, is
sponsored by Rep. James R. Ross, RCoshocton.
·
Ross said current law prohibits the .
sale of any merchandise on a public
road within 1,000 feet of a county
fairground . The bill extends the
prohibition to the sta le· fa ir, but
exempts official program sales.
The measure was sent to the Senate.
·~

Notice is her eb y give n
tha t o n t he 9th da y of J u ly,
1979 , a t 1:30 P .. M . a Publ ic
H ea r ing w l tl be he l d on t he
budge t pre p a r e·d by th e
Vi ll age of Midd l e p or t ,
M ei gs Co un t y , Oh i o t or t he
ne x t su ccee d ing Fisc al
year , endin g D ece mb er 3 1,
1980 .

Su ch he ar jng wi l l bc +,ei d
a r rn e Vi lla ge H a ll at 237
Rac e
St r eet ,
Coun c il
Chambers , Mi d dl ep or t ,
Ohio .

Gene G r il le,
Cterk -l r casurcr

MY~~fcgpco~i
(6 ) 28 , He

Sa id Bo ard of Edu catio n
res erves the right to wai ve
'in f ormali ti es to ac cep t o r
re jec t an y and a_ll or part s
of an y and all b•d s.
' No b i d s may be wi t h .
drawn f~r a t lea st th i r ty
(30 ) . days
aft e_r
t he
sc h e ~ul ed c!osing lime f o r
rece1 pt of b1 ds .
Boa r d of Educ a ti o n
&lt;lf Ea ~ te r n Lo cal
Sc hool D istr ict
Elo i se Bos to n
Treas ure r ot
E ast ern L ocal
Sc hoo l D i str i ct
38900 SR 7
R ee d sv ill e , Oh iO
4.577 '1
(6, ld , 21, 28 (7) 5, .t i c

•

o f th e afor e m en t i on ed .
d ecea se d , tat e · o f sa id
Cou n t y , we r e fil ed in t his
Cou rt . Sa id In ve n to r y and
A ppra isem ent w ill be to r
hea r ing be f or e th i s Cou r t
on th e 16th d a y ot · J ul y ,
1979, a t 1: 00. o'cl o ck P .M .
An y per son d es.1r mg to
fi l e exce pti o n s ' "'e r e t o
m ust f ile tt1 em a t l ea st f i ve
day s pr ior to t h e dat e se t
fo r . hea r ing
, Given uride r t h e han d
and se a 1 of sa i d . Co urt. this
25t h d ay of J u n e 197 9
Ro bert E . Buc k
Ju dg e
By Caro l y n G . T homas
De pu ty Cle rk
(6) 28, (}) 5, 2tc

op tim is tic viewpoin t and sun ny
dispo Si tion place you in the
leader ship role amo ng your
pais to da y. They 'll be lookin g
to you for gu1dance .
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0et. 2311! you
don't thi nk yo u have loyal
fri en d ~ . today ' s eve nts shoul d
prO'Je you wron g . Yo u are held
in high es te em. Others will let
you know ii .
SCORPIO (Oct. lf-Nov. 22) The
stimulu s yo u n eed tod ay
comes from invo lving your sell
with new people with different
ideas. You 'll lind the fres h
appro actl you 're look ing for.
SAGITTARIUS (Nev. 23-0ec.
21) Un sel fi Sh deed s on you r
part w ill rece ive th e fine st kind
of recognition today from perso ns wh o can add a great deal
to yo ur happine ss.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19)
An ex change of id eas with
those well 'qualified in an area
Important to you will give you
the insight into the subject that
yo u need .
·

AQUARIUS (Jon. 211-Fob. 19)
Tasks that you put you r hand to
today will turn out to be quite
prOfitable , even though they
may not appear so to you at th is
time . Do your best.

PISCES (Fob. 211-Morch 20)
Your popuhulty is showing
today . On e of the reasone: You
extend yourself to trul y be a
friend to all those you meet .
ARIES (Marett Z1 ·April ~9) Co n·
cernlng yourself with matter s
Importan t to your famil y will be
a so urce o f great sa ti slacHo n
tor yo u today . You wo n't eve n
mind doing the tough er chores.

TAURUS (Ap•li-20·Moy 101 Your
positi ve , happy outloo k will be
a wel come diversio n from
to day ' s pres su re s . You ' ll
sp read sunshine w11 e rever you
go and with whOmever yo u
mee t.

QEMINI (May 21-Juno 20) Salt-

Ing away the returns of the da y
Is a w ise move on your part .
Your prud ent co ns cientious
effort s will put yo u on firmer
groun d .
i NEWSPA.PER ENTERPRISE A.SSN I

Somehow, every time we
construct' a chain of reasonillg; whatever we hoped to
fasten down has gone
elsewhere.

Legion squad defeated 7 -I

.All star balloting ·tightens

Editorial opinions,
comments

:.Jackson's damaging rhetoric
By Richanl E. l:uheu
WASHINGTOlil (NEA ) - In this
\ political city, reasoned debate and
criticism have a way of degenerating
. 'into posturing and demagoguery.
' Such may be the case with Sen. Henry
M. Jackson 's recent accusation that
President Carter has engaged in a
1policy of appeasement toward the
1Soviet Union.
·
Because Jackson , a Washington
·Democrat, has become a respected
national figure during his 26 years in
the Senate, critics may be inclined to ·
treat him kindly and attribute his
remarks to excessive zeal. They may
be too kind.
In a speech delivered less than two
days before Carter left Washington
for his swrunit meeting with President Leonid Brezhnev, Jackson accused Carter of appeasing the Soviets
on a range of issues, including
emigration rights, trade and
technology exchange in addition to
arms control. Carternd his top aides
were understandably upset.
Jackson kept up his criticism while
Carter was in Vienna and after he

.

'

2- The Daily Sentinel, Miudleport-Pomuoy, 0 ., Thursday, Jw1e 28 , 197°

Today In History
By The Associated Press
Today is Thursday, June 28, the
!79th day of 1979. There are 186 days
left in the year.
Today's highlight in history:
On this date in 1914, the heir to the
throne of Austria-Hungary, Archduke
Francis Ferdinand, was assassinated
at Sarajevo, Bosnia. It was the spark
that set off World War I.
On this date:
In 1838, Britain's Queen Victoria
was crowned.
In 1919, the Versailles Treaty was
signed in France after World War I.
In 1941, guerrilla warfare against
the Nazis began in Yugoslavia during
World War II.
In 1950, in the Korean war, North
Korean soldiers captured the South
Korean capital of Seoul.
In 1974, President Lyndon Johnson
sent to Congress a proposed
constitutional amendment that would
lower the voting age to 18.
In 1977, government control over
Richard Nixon 's presidential papers
and tape recordings was upheld by the
Supreme Court.
Ten years ago : An Eastern Airlines
jetliner carrying 101 persons on a
flight from Baltimore to Tampa was
hijacked to Cuba.
Five years ago: President Richard
Nixon a~d Communist leader Leonid
Brezhnev, meeting in.Moscow, agreed
on joinf"U.S.-Soviet ventures In
housing, energy and medicine.
One year ago : The U.S. Supreme
Court affirmed that college admission
programs which give special
advantage to minorities are
constitutional but also ruled that ~tan
Bakke 111ust be admitted ·to, a
University of California medical
school becau•e the admissions
program was not flexible enough . .:
Today's birthdays : Composer
Richard Rodgers.Js 77. British writer
Eric Ambler is 70.
Thought for today: What's in a
name? That which we call a rose by
any other name would smell as sweet
- William Shakespeare, '!564-1616.

By Greg Bailey
In Legion action l;~st night, host
Meigs couldn 't seem to get the hits at
•
NEW YORK (AP) - Larry Bowaof Winfield (862,91! ). The San Diego star
Chicago 's Dave Kingman, the
Lopes is bidding for his first starting the right time and fell to visiting
Philadelphia moved back in front of IS just 688 votes ahead of Foster major league home run leader, and ro1e. He holds a 333,044-vote lead over Athens, 7-1.
Cincinnati's Dave_Concepcion in their (862,223), the outfield . leader last Philadelphia's Oarry Maddox are Cincinnati's Joe Morgan, who has ' ~!hens pl~tf\1 three .runs in the.fourrac:eto be the National League starter ' week.
' ~
.•
. , been Uie NL second base electee every th. inning oft a double By Scott Burson ·
fifth and• sixth, respectively. .
W. at shortstop in the 50th !}ll..Star Game
With the bases loaded to take a 4-0
year since 1972.
' to be held Jul..y 17 in seattle.
'
lead
t~t they never relmqwshed.
Schmidt is the league's top voteOther close nices· in the fan
Leading
I~ gmng mto the fourth ,
getter with .1,300,971 tallies.
balloting announced today are for
The American league leaders , Fry smgled and John Schanzenbach
catcher, first base and the outfield.
announced earlier this week, are first doubled. Goldberry reached on an
Besides Bowa, other tentative
• baseman Rod Carew and second error to fill the bases for Burson's
st.arten for the NL with the balloting
baseman Bobby Grieb of California, double.
deadline just a week away include
Meigs got its only run in the bottom
third baseman George Brett of
Philadelphia's Pete Rose, first base ;
of
the seventh. With one gone, GAHS 's
Kansa s City, shortstop Roy Smalley of
Dave Lopes of Lo,oi Angeles, second
Minnesota, catcher Carlton Fisk of Art Fogelstrom lashed a double. With
base; the Phillies' Mike Schmidt,
'
Boston and Boston outfielders Fred two out, catcher Terry Wayland then
third base; Ted Simmons of St. Louis ,
Lynn , Jim Rice and Carl singled to score Fbgelstrom.
catcher, and outfielders Dave Parker
Fogelstrom led the Meigs hitting
NATION-L LEAGUE
Yastrzen\ski.
Bosoball At A Glonce
EA.ST
of Pittsburgh, Greg Luzinski of
with
his double and a single. North
· Fans select the starters, except for
By Tht AUOCiatiCI PrtU
W. L." Pet. GB
Philadelphia and Dave Winfield of
's Steve Little added a double,
Gallia
AMERICAN LEAGUE
pitchers,
and
the
remainder
of
the
2842 26 .618
Montreal
San Diego .
EAST
man squads are chosen by the and Tom Owens, Jerry Fields, and T.
Pittsbur gh
36 32 .529 6
W. L • •615 GB Chicago
Winfield is In an extremely tight
Wayland each stroked a single.
35 32 .522 6'h leagues.
50 2J .685
battle with George Foster of Baltimore
6'12
St.
LOUIS
•
35
32
.522
Bell, Schanzenbach, and Burson led
Boston
.OS 26 .653-4 4
37 35 .514 7
Philadelphia
Cincinnati for the third starting Milwaukee
42 32 .Sd8 8'h New
outfield spot while Simmons moved · New York
41) 34 .S.Il IO'h
WEST
33 36 .478 15
ahead of Cincinnati's Johnny Bench Detroll
Houston
46 31 . 597
Cleveland
32 -40 .ol« 17'12 Cincinnati
as catcher.
39
35 .527 5'12
Toronto
24 52 .316 27'12 San Francisco
37 37 .500 7'h
Either Bowa or Concepcion has
WEST
By Greg Bailey
single for the Pizza Shack. Sc:ott
San Diego
34· « . 436 12'/'
started at shortstop for the National Kansas City
41 33 .55A
In Meigs Pony League action, Powell, Kyle Davis, Hunnel, and DanLos Anglees
33 A3 .AlA 12'h
41 33 .55-4
League since 1974. Concepcion, who Texas
A11an1a
29 45 .392 15 1h
visiting Estern socked it to host ny Hall each had a single. Rutland is
California
42 3A .553
was No.2 behind Bowa in the balloting Minnesota
Wedne•day's Games
Rulhlnd Tuesday, 17-9, 'raising its now 6-2 while the Pizza Shack is 4-4.
37 33 .529 2
two weeks ago and was the leader last Chicago ·
32 Al .A38 8'12 Chicago 11. Phi Iadelphia 4
Linescore :
record to 4-3.
New York 12, Pittsburgh 9
week by a slim 2,'119 votes, once again Seattle
33 · 43 .434 9
015 54- 15 9
John
Beaver
and
Mike
Bissell
each
R
St. LOUIS 5, Mon1rea I 0
22 54 .289 20
trails. The latest count shows Bowa Oakland
p
100 2.'!- 6 6
San Diego 2·2, Atlan1a 1-5
for
the
winners,
Bissell's
homered
Wednesday's Game•
with 904,495 votes to 894,261 for Balli more
Cincinnati 9, Los Angeles 1
blow coming with the bases full.
3, Cleveland 1
San Francisco6, Houston3
Concepcion.
·
Boston 3, Detroit 1
In another Pee Wee contest, each
Deroo Jewett had two hits for
Thursday's Games
Bench has·been the National League Milwaukee 9, Minnesota 8
Eastern while Roger Gaul, Kenny pitcher tossed a one-hitter as · the
Atlanta
(Brizzolara
2·2) at San
starter behind the plate each year Kansas City 10, Oakland 3
Diego ( Rassmussen 3·8) .
Newell, and Charlie each had one. Rutland Reds downed the host MidTexas 4, California 2
Houston (Williams 2·3) at san Fran · Robbie Smith and Jewett combined to dleport Mustangs !~. Tile Reds are
since fan balloting was initiated in Seattle
4, Chicago 3
cisco (Curtis 3-3) .
1970. But the latest tally shows
now 7-1 on the season.
(Only games scheduled)
fan seven and walk seven.
New York (Kobel 3·3) at Pittsburgh
Simmons, who is among the )eague
Thursday's Games
Mike Bartnrm got the win, fanning
Michaels was tagged wtib the loss.
(Robinson 5·4), (n).
Milwaukee (Slaton 7-3) at M in·
·leaders in homers, runs batted and
Cincinnati (Hume 5·3) a1 Los
15
and walking two. Jeff Nelson did a
M.
Willford
had
a
triple
and
single
(GoiiZ6'6).
Angeles (Hooton 7-4). (n).
batting average, 'With 989,664 votes to nesota
while Todd Eads had two singles for fine job for the Mustangs, also fann·
Chicago (Baumgarten H ) a1 Seal·
(Only games scheduled )
Bench's 911,728.
tie (Parrott5·2) .
Rutland. M. Spangler also had two lng fifteen and walkilfg just two.
Friday'S Games
Simmons, however, is not expected
New York {John 11·3) at Toronto New York a1 Chicago
Both hits in the game were doubles.
hits while T. Porter and Edwards
to play because of a broken left wrist (Moore 1•0), (n) .
The Reds' Paul Dall~y had one double
Philadelphia at St. Louis, 2, (n )
single.
each
had
a
(Wise 6·5) al Baltimore Montreol at Pittsburgh, (n)
suffered last Sunday. He will be (D.Cleveland
while the Mustangs' Lester Stewart
Unescore :
Martinez 10-3), (n) .
Houston at San Diego, (n)
sidelined at
541 151 0--17 8 had the other. That loss was the seE
Boston (Renke 5·2) at Detroi1 !Bill · Atlanta at Los Angeles, (n)
Ingham 6·A), (n) .
least six weeks.
: · Cincinnati at san Francisco, (n)
025 000 0- 9 8 cond uffie the Mustangs had fallen to
R
California (Barr 3-31 ot Texas
Rose leads Steve Garvey of Los
the Reds by just one run.
7-A ) , (n) .
,
Angeles by 131,010 votes at first base. (Jenkins
.
Unescore :
In
Pee
Wee
action,
the
Rutland
Oakland (Norris 3-42) at Kansas Cl ·
TODAY'S MAJOR
Garvey is attempting to start for the ty(Gura5·6),(n).l
001 00- 1 I I
R
Angels
handed
host
Pizza
Shack
a
11Hi
·
LEAGUE LEADERS
sixth straight time at a position he ljas
Friday's Games
000 00-1l I I
M
setback
Tuesday.
By The Associated Press
dominated since he was a write,in Toronto at Baltimore, 2
Scott
Willlams
and
Joey
Snyder
AMERICAN
LEAGUE
Boston at New York, (n)
2inner in 1974.
BATTING (150 at bats) : Smalley, combined for the winners to strike out
Cleveland at Delorll, (n)
Minnesota', .362 ; Carew, California, nine and walk seven. Artie Hunnel,
In the outfield, Parker, No.3 a week Seattle at Milwaukee, (n)
.355; Bochte, Seattle, .352; Downing,
ago, has jumped into the lead with Chicago at Minnesota, (n)
Brian Tannehill, and Anthony Wilson
California, .351; Kemp, Detroit, 350.
Ca)ifornia
at
Kansas
City,
(n)
1,095,582 votes, trailed by Luzinski
tossed for the hosts, fanning eleven
RUNS : Brett, Kansas City, 61;
(948,878), also No.2 a week ago, and Oakland at Texas, (n)
Lansford, California, 58; Otis, Kansas but walking thirteen.
City, 58; Rice, Boston, 55; LeFlore,
Brian Layh was the big stick for the
Detroit, 54.
Angels as he banged out a home run
RBI: Lynn, Boston, 62 ; Baylor,
California, 59 ; Boehle, Seattle, 5:1 ; and two doubles. Joey Snyder had two
Rice, oBostori, 54;
Thomas, singles, and Danny Welsh and Monty
Milwaukee, 54 ; Horton, sea1tle, 54.
Hart each had a double. Billy Eblin
HITS : Brett, Kansas City, 105;
and
Charlie Barrett eacli singled.
Lansford, California, '11; Smalley,
Don Dorst oocked a double and
Minnesota, 96; Bochte, Seattle, 93;

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD

the Athens attack with two hlt.a each.
Jeff Bush went the distance oo the
mound for Athens to pick up the wtn.
He fanned three but walked only two.
Meigs starter Jeff Wayland was
tagged with' the loss. Wayland,
Fogelstrom, and Fields combined to
fan eight and walk five .
Meigs will play host to Losan
tonight as they tune up for two
doubleheaders this weekend.
uncscore :
A
100 401 11- 7 9 0
M
.
000 000 !0--1 8 3
Bush a nd May, Abdella (6).
J . Wayland (LP), Fogelstrom (8),
Fields (8), and T. Wayland.

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RIce, Bos1on, 92.
DOUBLES : Lynn, Boston, 22 ;
Washington, Chicago, 22; Lemon,
Chicago, 19; Brett, Kansas City., 19;
Cooper, Milwaukee, 18; Downing,
California, 18; BeU, Texas, 18.
TRIPLES : Brett, Kansas City, 12 ;
Wilson, Kansas City, 7; Randolph,
New York, 6; Griffin, Toronto, 5;

Bannister, Chicago, 5;
5.

Jones,

Seattle,

.

HOME RUNS : Lynn, Boston, 19;
Thomas, Mllwoukee, 18; Rice,
Boston, 17; Singleton, Baltimore, 16;
Grich, California, 16.
STOLEN BASES: LeFlore, Detroit,
38; Wilson, Kansas City, 32; Cruz,
Seattle, 22; Bonds, Cleveland, 20;
Oils, Kansas Cl1y, 20 ; Wills, Texas,
20.
PITCHING (7 Decisions) : Kern,

Texas, 9-1, .900, 1.51; Stanhouse,
Baltimore, 6·1, .857, 2.56; Zahn, Min·

·nesota, 6-1, .857, 3.14; John, New
York, 11 -3, .786, :2.45; Clear, Califor·
nla, 7-2, . 778, 2.63; Martinez,

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LAWN MOWERS

Ba lt imore, 10·3, .769, ·3.45; Porroll,
Seattle, 6·2, .750, 3.05; Eckersley,
Boston, 8·3, .727, 3.02.
STRIKEOUTS : Ryan, California,
124; Guidr•y-, New York, 80; Jenkins,
Texas, 77 ; Kravec, Chicago, 75;

Flanagan, Baltimore, 69 .

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Built tough to make your
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STRIKEOUTS : Richard, Houston,
126; Perry, san Diego, 82; Carl1on,
PhUadelphla, 81; Nlekro, Atlanta, 81 ;
Sutton, Los Ange)es, 78 .
Wednesday•• Sports Transactions
By The Associated Press
BASEBALL
American Le•gue
CLEVELAND INDIANS - Recall·
ed Dell Alston, outfielder, from
Tacoma ol the Pociflc Coast League.

Assigned Horace
Tacoma . ..

Spe~d,outfielder,

DETROI.T TIGERS -

to

Assigned

Fernando Arroyo, pitcher, to
Evansville of the American Associa tion. Announced that Lou Whitaker,
second baseman, will rejoin the team
from the disabled list.
TORONTO BLUE JAYS -

Placed

Bob Robertson, first basemandesignated hiHer, on unconditional
waivers. Signed Ron Shepherd, out·
fielder, to a contract with Medicine
Hat of the Pioneer League.
BASKETBALL
National Bosketboll Assoclotlon
BOSTON CEL TICS - Signed Eric

Fernsten, center.

TODAY'S MAJOR
LEAGUE LEADERS
By The Auoclated Press
·
NATIONAL LEAGUE
BATTING (150 at bats) : Brock, St.
LOUIS, 351 1 Hendrick, St. Louis , .342 ;
Foster, Cincinnati, .339; Mazzllli,
New York, .333; Rose, Philadelphia,
.332 .
RUNS: Logan, Los Angeles, 61 ;
Matthews Atlanta, 55; North, San
Francisco', 55; KIngman, Chicago, SA ;
Royster, Atlanta, 52.
RBI · Foster. Cincinnati, 6-4;
Kingm.an, Chicago, 60; Winfield, San
Diego, 55; Simmons, St. Louis, 52;
Clark, San Francisco, 51.
HITS: Garvey, Los Angeles, 97 ;
Russell, Los Angeles, 95; Winfield,
· san Diego, 95 ; Rose, Philadelphia, 94;
Motthews, Atlanto, 93 .
,
DOUBLES: Rose, Philadelphia, 24;
Parish, montreal, 21; Mazzllll, New
York, 21 ; Reitz, St. Louis, 21; Mat·
thews, Atlanta, 21; Griffey, Cincln·
na11, 21 .
TRIPLES : Winfield, San Diego, 9;
McBride,
Philadelphia,
81
8;

ScQt1,

FOOTBALL
Conodian Footboll LHgue
BRITISH COLUMBIA LIONS

Released Thomas Geredine, wide
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Signed Billy Troup, quarterback .

COLLEGE
MIDWESTERN
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CON ·
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RIVERSIDE
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AMC-JEEP

lnternotionol League
By The Associated Press
Wodnesdoy's Rnults
Rochester 8, Charleston o
Syracuse 3, Richmond o
Toledo 6, Pawtucket 5, 15lnnings
(Only games scheduled)
Thursday's Games

'79 AMC
CONCORD DL

,.

Tidewater at Charleston
Rochester at Columbus
Toledo at Syracuse
R lchmond at Powtucket
Friday's Games
Tidewater at Charleston
Roches1er at Columbus
Toledo at Syracuse
R lchmond at Pawtucket

St.

LOUIS, 8; (7 Tied with 5).
.
HOME RUNS : Kingman; Chicago,
26; Schmidt, Phllodelphia, 21 1 Fosler,

Cincinnati , 19; Simmons, St. Lou1s,
18; Lopes, Los Angeles, 18.
STOLEN BASES : Moreno, Pill·
sburgh, JO; North, San francisco, 27 ;

-

'

TIIISTLEDOWN
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio (AP) Scott, St. Louts, :i!~ ; Scott, Montreal, Fire on Three, with H. Rivera Jr.
aboard, won the featured eighth
20; Lopes, Los Angeles, 20.
PITCHING (7 Declsons) : LaCoss, allowance at Thistledown Race Track
Cinclnna11, 8·2, . .BOO, 2.50; Niekro, on Wednesday, covering the mile in
Holis1on, 11 ·3, .786, 3.02; Martinez, St.
Louis, 6·2, .750, 2.62 ; Knepper, San 1:38 ~ and paying $5, $3.60 and $2.60.
Day Saver was second, returning
Francisco, 6-2, .750, -4.21; Blyleven,
Pltl sburgh, 5·2, .714, 3.n ; Grimsley, $9.60 and $3.20, and Sail 'N Royal paid
. Montreal, 8·4, .667, 4.69; Andu[ar, $2.40 for show.
Houslon, 8-4, .667, 2.1101 Lee . Mon·
1\ -crowd .of 4,345 wagered $5'15;598.
1real, 7--4, .636. 3.69.

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�5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, J.;ne 2!!, t!l'/9

4-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday; June 28, 1979

Legion Auxiliary installs new year's officers

Martinez one-hits ·Mo.n treal
liy J OHN NELSON

night's ga me .»"ith a 2.38 ea rned run
average and 0ne complete ga me, a
Rookie catcher Terry KeMedy was · seven-hit, 4-2 victory over the New
getting ready to retire his mitt after York Mets orl J une 22.
.
only .two gam~ with the St. l.ouis : In his first year in the majors, the
23-year-&lt;&gt;ld native of the Domincan
Cardinals.
But then, with two out in the eighth Republic pitched one-hitters against
inning, Montreal's Duffy Oyer lined a the New York Mets, three days alter
1-2 pitch &lt;wet first baseman Keith joining the Cards, and P itts burgh~ But
Hernandez's head. and Cards right- he hasn't thrown a n&lt;&gt;-hitter since May
hander Silvio Martinez had lost his no- 26 of last year wh ile he was with
tutter.
Springfield.
Mart~z wound up with the third
In other National League games,
one-llltter d. his two-year major Chicago whipped Philadelphia 11-t,
league c:. vNr, and Kennedy wiU hold the Me~ rallied to beat Pittsburgh 12onto the ~licr&lt;•e lor a while.
9, Cincinnati clobbered Los Angeles 9''1 was .saying, '(';Oih, I just got 1. San Francisco beat HoUston 6-J, and
caUed up i•ltre. And he 1Martinez) is Atlanta and San Diego split a pair .
goln@ to Uit'OW a no-no to me.'
The Padres won the opener 2-1, and
" I'd hA&gt; never U*!d that glove the Braves took the nightcap &gt;2.
Dane lorg drove in a run in the first,
again If he'd done It," KeMedy said.
" It wa exdt:ln&amp;. I wu fired up. I and Brock drove in two more with a
thWghl ·we ~~~~d It alter the seventh... single In the Cards three-run second
Martllw~. t~2, came Into Wednesda y mntng . Steve Rogers, Hi, who last
AP Sports Writer

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RIVER DOWNS
CINCINNATI (AP) - Monagonero,
ridden by Arturo Herrera, fought off a
late charge by the pack to win the
$5,000 featured ninth race at River
Downs on Wednesday, covering the
mile and 70 yards In 1:44.:.h5.
The winner returned $27.20, ~.60
and $3.2() . Country Bear placed,
paying $3.60 and $2.40, and Jungle
Hemp was third to pay $2.60.
Sir R.L. and Bone Craft, 6-3, paid
$42.oW in the double with a consolation
of $5.60 on the combination 8-7
because of a late scratch.
The crowd of 4,507 bet $475,160.

89~

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LB.

25 LB. AVERAGE

•1·

19

Orioles' Palmer·going well
By BRUCE LOWI'M'
·
AP Sports Writer
.
As if things weren't bad enough for
the rest of the American League East,
Jim Pabner is. alive and well in
Baltimore once again.
"It looks like the master's back.
Jim Pabner is a master and he
pitched a masterpiece," Baltimorl!
Manager Earl Weaver crowed after
his ace right-hander, recently
sidelined for 20 days with tendinitis in
his pitching ann, baffied Cleveland
with a four-hitter to give the Orioles a
3-1 victory.
·
"My arm stiU has a little pain," said
Pabner, "but it felt a lot better than it
did the last time I pitched."
The triumph kept Bos!Qn from
cutting into Baltimore's four..game
division lead. The Red Sox defeated
Detroit :1-1.
In the rest of the AL, Texas and
Kansas City moved into a first-place
tie in the West, one percentage point
ahead of California. The Rangers beat
the Angels 4-2 and Ka~ City
bombed Oakland 10-3. Milwaukee
outlasied Minnesota 9-8 and Seattle
edged Chicago 4-3 in two other games.
"We did everything right," said
Palmer, after his five.atrikeout, twowalk perfcrmanceenabled the Orioles
to chalk up their 18th victory in the
last 2() games. "I even got away with
walking ljlro batters in one inning."
The only thing he didn't get away
with Wll!l feeding a fastball to Toby
. Harrah leading ·off the ninth inning.
Harrah sent it over the fence for his
· ninth home run of the season. Still,
Palmer, 7-3, a 26-gamewinner eight of
the previous nine seasons, wound up
with his frrst victory since May 29 and
first compl~te game since April 19.
Red Sox 3, Tigers 1
Boston outwalted Pat Underwood,
who hurled 71-3 innings of three-bit,
eight.atrikeout ball, and a 43-minute
rain delay in the pivotal ninth i!JI)ing
to beat the Tigers.
Champ Summers' homer for Detroit
in the seventh inning and Rick
Burleson's sacrifice fly in the eighth
sent the teams into the ninth tied 1-1.
Royals!O, A's 3
Pete LaCock and AI Cowens each
drove in three runs apiece as the
Royals battered Oakland for their
fifth straight victory. Fred Patek had

.with a home run, his fourth , off loser
Jerry Reuss, now 2-7.
The Reds chased Reuss an inning
later, scoring three more runs and
adding two more in the eighth against
Dave Patterson.
Auerbaeh and Johnny Bench each
drove in three runs as the Reds
handed Los Angeles its fifth loss in six
outings to drop the Dodgers into fifth
place in the National League West for
the first time this year, two .
percentage points behind the San
Diego Padres.
The Reds' Fteii -Norman held Los
Angeles to six hits, boosting his record
to 4-7. The Dodgers scored an
unearned run in the eigth to block the
shutout.
"Any time you can beat these guys
twotimesinarow,it'safeatherinmy
hat," said Norman, who defeated the
Dodgers on May 26th, 3-1. "My control
was good , I was around the plate all
night, and I Uked my fastball
tonight. "

'.

)

,

Mon.,.Tues., Wed., Friday &amp; Sat.
. 8:30 to 5:00 Thursday tlll12 Noon

.

OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONLY

1

Herman Grate
773-5592

Mason, w. va.

-

a two-run single in a 'four-run fourth
inning and Cowens doubled for two
runs in a four-run seventh.!
.
Most of the Royals shrugged off
Kansas City's charge into a share of
first place. " What's to get excited
about?" said Darrell Porter. "It's
June, not September. We've been
there before and there's a long way to
go." And Manager Whitey Herzog
added: "It's too early to worry about
first piace."
Rangers 4, Aagels 2
Oscar Gamble drove in three
Ranger runs, two of them with a third-

Sports
briefs
Wednesday's Sports In Briel
By The Associated Press
TENNIS

WIMBLEDON, England (AP)
Defending champion Bjorn Borg ·
overcame Vijay Amritraj of India 2-6,
6-4, ~. 7", 6-2; and John McEnroe
beat Englishman Buster Mottram, 67, 6-2, H, 6-2in second-round action at
Wimbledon.
In other matches, John Sadri upset
Jcise Higueras of Spain 6-3, f&gt;-7, 6-4, 7-li.
In women's play,
Martina
Navratilova battered Britain's Jo
Durie 6-4, 6-1; Chris Evert Uoyd
defeated Andrea Whitmore 6-1, 6-2;
Billie Jean King downed Linda Siegel,
6-1, '6-3 ; Evonne Goolagong Cawley
beat Sherry Acker 6-3, 6-1: Virginia
Wade, the 1977 winner, eased past
Barbara Jordan 6-U, 6·1; and
Australia's Amanda Tobin upset
IvaMa Madruga of Argentina ~. 7",
7-5. Pam Shriver pulled out of the
women's singles with a shoulder
injury suffered during a tournament
at Chichester two weeks ago.
KIAMESHA LAKE, N.Y. (AP) Erik van Dillen and his brother-inlaw, Fred McNair, scored Secondround victories oin a $25,000 tennis.
tournament.
Van Dillen defeated Joel Bailey 7",
!Ml- while McNair upended David
Siegler; who was coming off his firstround upset of NCAA champion Kevin
Curren; 6-3, 1", 6-1.
Vince Van Patten, the 21-year-&lt;&gt;ld
son of actor Dick Van Patten,
overcame a 2-4 deficit in the second
Set to defeat India's Sashi Menon 6-3,

7".

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cond row, I tor, Don Dorst, Kyle Davis, Steve Tracy,
Scott Powell, Artie Hwmel, Eric Spencer, Danny Hall,
Brian Tannehill ; back row, coaehes,l to r, Jwlior Mattox, Mark Tannehill and Don Runnel. Absent when the
picture was taken wail Anthony Wilson.

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TRI !lTATE AREA

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PIZZA SHACK TEAM - PizZa Shack Pee Wee .
Baseball team d. Pomeroy. The group Includes: front, I
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McElroy, Brent Zirkle, Joey Hall, Ronnie Bachtel: se-

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tvnd vice ' president ; Mrs. J oan
Vaughan, secretary; Mrs . Catherine
Welsh, treasurer; Mrs. Grace Pratt,
chaplain; and, Miss · Eima Smith,
historian.
Mrs. Richards called · for all
members of the unit to renew their

.....

Auerhack, Bench pace wm

GREAT

SIRLOIN
STEAK

Mrs , · Arnold Richards, Eighth
District president, installed the
197~ d.ficers of .the American.
J.fgion Auxiliary of Drew Webster
Post 39, Pomeroy, in ceremonies
. Tuesday night at the hall.
Installed were Mrs. Marjorie Goett,
president : Mrs. Gemma Casci, first
vice president ; Mrs. Iva Powell , se-

•

LOS ANGELES (AP) - It was a
month ago when Cincinnati!s Rick
Auerbach was a central figure in a
bench-clearing brawl between the
Reds and the Los Angeles Dodgers.
Auerbach Contended it was less than
sporting when the Dodgers' Dave
Lopes hit a J.1l pitch for a home run
when the Reds were already losing 142. At the time, Los Angeles Manager
Tom Lasorda said, "He's mad
because they don't let .150 hitters
swing J.1!."
Wednesday night at Dodger
Stadium, Auerbach, filling in for third
baseman Ray Knight, stroked three
doubles,loJ ew;t a l~it Reds attack as
Cincin~ied e DoMit!ll l!l-1.
"He can say all e wan!lll;!a say,"
Auerbach said of Lasorda. "It 's a !hill
to come back here and play well
against your former teammates, but,
it's not personal."
Auerbach'sbases-loadeddouble, ,his
third two-base hit of the night,
provided the key in the Reds' four-run
·fifth inning. Joe Morgan launched it

GROUND
CHUCK

FRYERS

Saturday came )l'ithin l l.J innings of a
no-hitter against Philadelphia, was
the '1ctim.
l
Cubs 11, Phlls 4
_Dave Kingman, Jerry Martin and
pitcher Mike Krukow each slugged
hom ers for Chicago in • what
deteriorated into a beanball contest
between Krukow and Philadelphia
pitcher Kevin Saucier , both of whom
were ejected. - Saucier started the
exchange by bouncing a pitch off
Steve Ontiveros after relieving in the
fi fth inning. In the top of the seventh,
Krukow hit Ga'fy Maddox with a
pitch.
Krukow then led off the bottom of
the seventh at the plate, and Saucier
hit Krukow in the left shoulder with
his first pitch. Alter reaching first,
Krukow hollered at Saucier, and
Saucier charged toward him. Both
benches 'emptied, and after · things
settled down •then pitchers· were
ejected .
Mel&amp;·.Ia, PirtllH lk:-,, .
Willie Montanez and Steve
Henderson hit consecutive home runs
as New York rallied for live runs in
the ninth inning in a game enlivened
by five lead changes iii the last three
innings.
An unearned run in the seventh
gave the Mets a 4-.3 lead, but Ed Ott
sent the Pirates !;lack ahead with a
tw&lt;&gt;-run homer in the bottom of the
inning.
The Mets came back with three runs
in the top of the eighth as Pittsburgh
committed two more errors, but Tim
Foli's two-run double keyed a four-run
explosion in the bottom of the eighth
for Pittsburgh.
Giants &amp;j Astros 3
Willie McCovey's RBI single broke
a 3-3 tie in the eighth inning, when San
Francisco scored three runs, and the
Giants spoiled the return to aetion of
no-hit pitcher Ken Forsch, on the
disabled list since May 17.
Forsch, who threw the season's only
no-hitter April 7 against Atlanta, took
a three-hitter into the eighth.
Enos Cabell hornerd in the fourth
for the Astros, who lost for only the
second time in 10 games.
·
Padres 2-2, Braves 1-5
San Diego rallied foc two runs in the
ninth inning of the opener, winning the
game when Braves . starter Phil
Niekro walked Kurt Bevacqua with
the bases loaded. Niekro, 9-10, had a
· three-hit shutout going into the ninth,
but three consecutive singles, the
third · by Fernando Gonzalez,
produced the Padres' first run. Hollie
Fingers, 7-!i, was the winner in relief
of Randy Jones.
In the nightcap, Glenn Hubbard
drove in three runs with a pair of
doubles to give the Braves a split.
Hubbard's second double drove in two
rims in the sixth inning.
Joe McLaughlin, 1-1, earned the
victory in relief of Larry McWilliams.
McLaughlin retired 10 straight
baiters at one poin\.

inning homer, while Steve Comer and
Jim Kern teamed for a four-bitter to
saddle California with its fifth.loss in
six games.
Both Comer and the Angels' Nolan
Ryan struck out six l!nd· walked six
hatters, but Ryan gave up seven hits,
including Gamble 's third-Inning
homer and RBI-single in the first and
John Grubb's RBI-double .in the sixth.
Carney Lansford homered for the
Angels.
Brewers 9, Twbls 8
Ben Ogilvie's 13th and 14th homers
of the year, both ·with the bases
empty, and Gorman Thomas' 18th, a
two-run shot, helped Milwaukee beat
the Twins, Charlie Moore added three
runs batted in for the Brewers, who
chalked up their eighth victory in 10
games.
Mike Caldwell was staked to a 9-0
lead but needed relief help. Minnesota
got three runs in ,the sixth inning, two
on Willie Norwood's single, three
more in the seventh, two on Roy Roy
Smalley's double, and two in the ninth
on Glenn Adams' homer.
Mariners 4, White Sox 3
Alter Bill Stein tripled with one out
in the bottom of the ninth, Chicago's
Ken Kravec walked Bobby Valentine
and .Leon Roberts on purpose to load
the bases. But he also walked Ruppert
Jones to force in Seattle's winning
run.

Carla Teaford
given shower
.

Carla Sue Teaford, bride-elect of
Danny Morris, was honored with a
shower recently at the Bradford
Church of Christ. Hostesses were
Mrs. Nancy Morris and Miss Carol
Morris.
Games were conducted by Fern
Morris '!with Tanuny Little and Belinda Grimm winning the pri2es. Mrs.
Fern Morris won the door prize. A
wedding bell motif was carried out in
the decorations.
Refresliments of cake, punch and
nuts were served to the honor guest,
Phyllis Morris, Beuna Grueser,
Virginia Michael, Tammy Little,
Doris Swanson, Madeline Painter,
Becky Painter, Diane and Randy
Bing, Norma Russell, Ruth Underwood, Sharon Hall, Flossie Jude ,
Jana Jude, Mildred Withee, Fern
Morris, Mary Showalter, Bonnie
Pickens, Janice, Alicia and Deanna
Andrea Colmer
Haggy, and Matthew Morris.
Sending gifts were Mrs. Ebner
Wehrung, Mrs. Kate McKinney, Mrs.
Edith Forrest, Edie Grimm, Tressie
· A birthday party was given in honor Hendricks, Mr. and Mrs. Jim Reed,
of Amber Danielle Cobner for her se- Mrs. Mae Cornell, Mrs. Helen
. cond birthday by her parents, Shari Righthouse, Sharon 1\fichaei, Steve
.Colmer and Michael Hindy, at the and Dreama Pickens, Margaret Mar·
.. home of her grandparents, Mr. and tin, Vicki Smith, Pete Hall, Sylvia
,.Mrs. Jetty Cobner, Wright St., Blake, Jackie Michaels, the Bradford
Pomeroy.
Missionary Circle, and the Bradford
A Raggedy Ann cake was served Young . Adult Class, Mrs. Barbara
along with ice cream, potato chips, Fry, Mrs: Frances Hysell, and Mrs.
and koolaid. Others attending the par· Betty Weyersmiller.
-.ty were Billy and Timmy Colmer, Mr.
and Mrs. David Johnson and Jeremy,
-Mr. and Mrs. Steve Blackwell, and J.
.R., Mam.le Stephenson, maternal Entertain recently
great-grandmother, Randy and Jimmie Snider, Pat Hindy, paternal
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Swartz entergrandmother, Mrs. James Farley, tained recenUy with a going-away
.Davy, Jamie, and Hicki. Sending gifts picnic at their home in Coolville In
.were Mr. and Mrs. Cass Hindy, pater- honor of their daughter, Rena .
nal great-grandparents.
She began her studies at the
' Calling later in the day were Mr. Patricia Stevens Career and
and Mrs. Harold Whittekind and Finishing College at Milwaukee,
Shawn Lee.
Wise. on Juile 18, and is majoring in a
public
relations program.
·;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Present for ,the picnic were Ann
Summerfield, Bob, Sina May, Amy
and Tracy Murphy, Mildred, Kenny,
Sue and Kenny, Jr. Caldwell,
Reedsville ; Rex and Sina Batley,
»
.:•:.· . Chester; Herb and Irene Parker,
::::
Syracuse; Edna Summerfield of Long
Jack Smith of Lancaster was the Bottom; Grace Swartz, Pomeroy ;
'I'Ilesday afternoon guest of his aunts, Tim and Jenny McKinley of
Miss Erma Smith and Mrs . Amesville : Chris Stone of
Parkersburg, Gerald, Linda , Amber
Genevieve Meinhart.
and
Michael Summerfield of Torch :
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Pullins, Scott and
Sherman
and Teresa Swrunerfield of
Usa and Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Dixon
Little
Hocking,
Ronnie and Robin
recenUy camped at Old Man's Cave.
Russell
,
Joe
and
Phyllis Owens,
While there, Mr. and Mi-s. Dixon went
Gary,
Pat,
Richard
and Branda
to Lancaster to visit Mr. and Mrs.
Tena,
Rex
and
Roger
Swartz,
Russell,
Earl Kelley. Also camping at Old
Anita,
Mikie
and
Donnie
Russell,
all
Man's Cave that weekend were Mr.
of
CoolviUe.
and Mrs . .Bob Sloan and family,
Pomeroy.

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SALE ss•

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SHORTS &amp; TOPS
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$333
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BLOUSES

Mica Jones, Amber Cwnings, Carrie
Cimnt, Kira !{napp, and Jennifer
Cross, enrolled in the tiny tots 4lf the
junior unit.
•·
The jUI!iors w~re hostess~ for th.e
meeting . The table was centered with
a poppy arrangement flanked with
red tapers . Punch, cookies, nuts and
mints were served. Favors were nut·
cups centered with a miniature flag.
Miss Powers was at the punch· bowl.

MEN'S SUITS

sso

--~~L7A~DI:E~SS~H~O--RT~S~L~EE~V~E----1r----orc~;ri~---\ - '
SUMMER
JR. PANTS
I,Q:'/ . ·!

'

district ; Ruth Powers, first place in
children and youth ; Mrs. Casci, first
place in veterans affairs and
rehabilitation.
The unit acknowledged a donation
from Mrs. Grace Eich. The party for
veterans at Chillicothe was announced for July 14. 1\fiss Smith gave the
Poppy Day sale report and Mrs. Casci
reported on ca'rds and flowers noting
that Mrs. Dorothy Jenkins, Mrs. Jenny Wells, and Mrs . Marie Custer are
ill.
A picnic was planned for July 24 at
Fort Meigs. Members are to take a
covered dish and their own table service. These In need of transportation
are to call Mrs. Pratt, Mrs. Meinhart
or Mrs. Knapp.
Mrs. Davis presented certificates to
Pam Powers who has transferred to
the senior unit, to Robin Campbell,
elevated to first class junior ; and

COMPLETE STOCK

Middleport ··
~
Personal Notes &lt;

DENNIS WOLFE
WRIGHT-PATTERSON - Dennis
Wolfe son 'of Mrs . Dorothy
Greathouse of Front Street, Racine ,
enlisted in ihe U. S. Air Force today ,
according to T.Sgt. Orene Gabbard ,
Air Force Recruiter here.
Upon graduatio~ from the Air ~or­
ce's six weeks basic military tralrung ,
he will receive training in the Electric
Power Line Specialist Career Field.
Dennis is a 1979 graduate of Southern
High School.
Wolfe will be earning credits towards an Associate Degree through the
Community College of the Air For':1'
while attending basic and other Air
Force technical training schools.

WMPO
SATURDAYS

I

to the organization. On behalf Jetters and Charlene liO&lt;!glein,
of the unit, Mrs. Grace Pratt , retiring de l~gates to Buckeye Girls' State.
president, presented· a gilt to Mrs. Boih talked about their expe rience~
Richards who expressell her ap- • at Buckeye Girls ' St!ate held at
preciaton for unit members coopera - Capital' University and extended. aption and extended wishe~ for a sue- preciation to the Ul)it. They \fer~ iocessfulyear.
troduc e d by Mi ss Smi th,
Miss Smith, on behalf of the unit,· Americanil!.lll chairman.
An invitation was read from the
presented a gift to Mrs. Pratt who has
been· a n officer for the past seven· Joseph Freeman Unit· at Wilkesville,
years. She was also presented a cor- inviting members to the 50th anniverS&amp;ge whicb was pinned on her by her sary celebration. Mrs. Pratt thanked
_all the members who served at the
granddaughter, Pam Powers.
Mrs. Pratt also received a plaque Memorial Day dinner and those who
from the junior advisor, Mrs. Veda assisted at "the bloodmobile. Mrs.
Davis, in apprecillton of her work Genevieve Meinhart gave the audit
with the juniors of the unit. During lhe report .
meeting the charter was draped for
A report was given on the summer
Lura Crooks and Gladys Morgan. convention held at Wellston by Mrs.
Mrs. Pratt was assisted by Mrs. Gem- Pearl Knapp, Mrs. Goett, and Mrs.
rna Casci, chaplain, and Mrs. Welsh, Welsh. Mrs. Pratt presented cerpianistforthemeeting.
tificates to Miss Smith, Americanism
Gue•ts at the meeting were Tracey chainnan, second .Place in the

.. Turns two years

CaseyKasem

',

'

~ledge

SPORT SHIRTS

- S}t\63
Reg. S12!Kl.-..~ . .. .. ..--. .... . .....
uReg. s1500 ...... .............. 51275
Reg. 51800 ......................5lS:t~
-~

~

- - -·- - - - - - - - - -

;~
r-.

.:.I

OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8 PM

. s1~

r------

-·

BOYS'' WEAR I MEN'S STRAW
SWile~~~. . ... .s4
HATS
70

KNRIT SHilTS
1 Reg. sgoo ..... .-........... s7&amp;s
e_£_ SJ~ ............s5so Reg slooo
sgso

SPORT SHIRTS

I. ·

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

56~......,...5520 1 Reg. 51300 ..... ........ ...511°5
Reg.___
____ _L __________ _

--~-

All
SALES
FINAL

�r

7- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport.Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday , June 28, 1979

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, JWJe 28, 1979

Bible school
concludes

Library

Miss Smith honored
REEDSVI~-Miss Teresa Lynn
Smith, Reedsville, bride-elect of John
Smith, also of Reedsville, was recently honorell with a bridal shower
hoeted by Mrs. Maxine Whitehead
and daughter, Juli, and Mrs. Grace
Weber at the Whitehead home.
The home was extensively
decorated for the shower with blue
and green streamers fastened to the
refreshment and gift table by daisy
nosegays. The. streamers extended
from wedding bells which were attached to the ceiling.
Games were played with prizes going to the winners. The door priZe was
won by Lisa Hoffman. Refreshments
of cake, punch, mints, and nuts were
served to the guests, Sandy Cowdery,
Rosemary Young, Marlene Putman,
· Hallie Rockhold, Verna Rose, Phyllis
Hetzer, Janet Hoffman and Usa, Linnie Crary, Kim Reed, Gladys
. Williams, Ruth Anne 'Balderson,
Ullian Pickens, Kay Balderson,

Second child born
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Brockert (Deb!
Schaefer) of Sidney are announcing
the birth of their second child, a son,
· on June 25 at the Wilson Memorial
Hopsltal. The baby weighed eight
pounds and was 19inches long. He has
been named Jason Anthony.
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
·Paul Brockert of Piqua and Mr. and
Mrs. Coy Nilz, Middleport. Greatgrandmothers are Mrs. Isabel
• Brockert, Piqua, and Mrs. Myrta
Schaefer, Middleport. Mr. and Mrs.
Russell Nitz, Pomeroy are step greatgrandparents I Mr. and Mrs. Brockert
. have another son, Jonathan 'Andre,
·age two.
·

Mace! Barton, Karen Walker, Vivlna
Humphrey, Regina Kimes, Ludlle
Smith, Jodi Smith, Debbie Graham
Mary Blse, Margaret Caulhron, Mrs:
Medl~y, Frances Reed, Dolly Reed,
Mamie Buckley, Wanda Kimes, Sherr!~ · Starcher, Thelma Smith .
Elizabeth Smith and Sybil Faater. '
Sending gifts Wl!l'e Nancy Buckley,
Nell Wilson, Rose Thomas, Alberta
Edwards, Da Osborn, Erika Boring
Pat .Martin, Marilyn Coulson, Violet
Smith, Orva Jean Holter, Opal Randolph, Inez Doming, Jackie Bigley
Delores Foster, Vlrgiilia Waltoo'
Dorothy Cashdollar Jean Watson ~
Phyllis Reed, Sue' Reed, Mallei
Hetzer, ~bin Hwnphrey, May Hwnphrey, Norma Rockhold and
Margaret Nesselroad.

\

13

The families of Douglas and Edison
Johnson held a family picnic and
RECEIVES DEGREE - Cberyl
cookout recently at Lake Elma near
LYJIII Hudson, daughter of Mr. and
Wellston.
Volleyball, swimming, horsehoe Mrs. George B. Hudlon, 37818 SR
were enjoyed by the group and pic- · lU, Pomeroy, was amoog tbe
Hocldag Tecbalcal College
lures were taken during the day.
Donations were taken for next year's graduates lo rec!elve her degree as a
reunion to be held at the Racine Locks registered lllll'Se. A buffet supper
wu beld for relallves and friends
and Dam picnic grounds.
Those attending from Racine were follo1ilag tbe p-adualloo at tbe bome
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Johnson, Mr. of ber parents. Atteadlng were Mr.
and Mrs. Arthur Johnson and Sheryl, and Mrs. WDllam Aabec!t, Jr. and
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Johnson and Roy, Emlly, Mr. and Mrs. C. o. Rogen,
Jr., Mrs. Glorta Jean Manuel, Mr. Mrs. Ralph McDaalel, Rhonda, Jimand Mrs. Roger Manuel, Angle and my and Juoa, Pomeroy; Mrs.
Arnie, Mr. and 'Mrs. Gary Wilford, Leoaard McDaalel, Hartford, W.
Alisa and Tabetha, Mi. and Mrs. John Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Stewart Lawbora
and Uaa, Mr. and Mrs. George McManuel and Jonna.
Farland, Mrs. Vaagba Miller,
Waid Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd
Johnson and Sandra, Middleport; Mr. Maso., w. Va.; Mrs. Douald Klag,
Letarl, W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Bryant
and Mrs. D. Hubbard and Beverly,
Hudson, AprU, Heatb, aad Heatber
Mr. and Mrs. Buster · Wllldnaon,
of Albany; Mr. and Mrs. Steven
Ricky, Mike, Billy, Kristl, Mr. and
Baldwin of SyraCUJe. Mrs. Baldwin
wu alao a member of tbe
graduating clasa. Otben attendlag
graduatloa were Mr. aad Mrs. Jack
Kaaff and Amy, Mlddleporl, and
Mrs. BI'OOU Edwards, Mason, W.
Va. MI. lllldlon bas beea employed
by tbe Holzer Medical Center.

THE ULTIMATE

Mrs. David Jeffers, Mike and Steve,
Mason, W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Prater, Jason and Connie, Hamden.
Guests at the reunion were Scott
Frederick, Pearl Adams, Racine;
R,obert Brown, Minersville; and Lenny Miller, Mason, W. Va.

BAHR
CLOTHIERS
N. 2ND AVE. ·
MIDDLEPORT 0.

ROUSH REUNION
The annual reunioo of the famlly of
the late Leonard 811d Susan Roush
will be held Sunday, July 1, at the
New Haven Campgrounds beginning
at 12:30 p.m. Those attending are to
take a covered dish, beverage and
their own table service.

.' .
i

'J.
1 Group Women's

SANDALS

'10.00

FASHIONS FOR YOUR LITTLEST
MARATHON RUNNERS!
THEY'LL JOG THRU SUMMER
AND ALL THEIR ACTIVE TIMES
IN COOL, COLORFUL STYLES•..
JUS.T LIKE THE PROS!

Values to $22.99

'5.00
1
'

TENNIS SHOE$

DRESS SHOES

'5.00

'10.00

SUMMER

HANDBAGS
% P"ICE

SIZES 3 Months
to Size 14

Values 'to $28.99

ny
Women's Dress !Casual

SANDALS
40% OFF

CHAPMAN SHOES

NEXT TO ELBERFtL~

POMEROY, 0.

'illl~ ..~ '~

'f\1('1\t

I-TRACK TAPES
MANY OF YOUR FAVORITE SONGS

Featuring:

r NOW, WE'VE UP-TO-THE-MINUTE

DRESS SHOES

1 Group Children's

R

e ~··

KINGSBURY
.HOME SALES

m

IT

1 Group Connie

o\.1-'

MODULAR
HOMES

Tht Joglng Stt

DON'T
MISS

Footnotes &amp;Footworks

L
I

School ends last week

johnson reunion held

IN
SUMMER
SPORTSWEAR

oO'

I.C:TAH'J', w. Va . - ·Vacation Bible
A
School closed on Friday evening at
R
Oak Grove United -Methodist Church
with a program and wiener roast.
Martha Friend, director of the
school, welcomed everyone and
thanked those who helPed ln any way.
June27, 1979 owuld he so many "no shows", we
Special thanks were extended to the Barbara Karr
would ~ve told people without tickets
children who attended.
·
249 Union Ave.
to come down to the levee in case we
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769
The program opened with "Aunt
had room for them at the last minute.
Sadie" (a doll ) sitting on the lawn
But we had such a positive response
rocking and talking to Sue Icenhower. Dear Barb;
from the people aboard that we're
.
I hope you're feeling better. I know thinking about trying to get a grant
Gloria Roush served as the ventriloquist and got the attention of Regatta Weekend put a big strain on next year for a calliope ride! And
everyone on the lesson, "Jesus Is you be\:ause you took care of all the Susan Oliver of the Senior Citizens
Mine -I'm His. "
Friendl of the Ubraries aCtivities RSVP program has promised to make
Mrs. Stella Krebs and Mrs. Lucy with very little help.
. copies of the talk available just as
Cullen led the children in singing
Mrs. Oliver 9pe11t many hours soon as Barbara Spencer gets her
several songs they had learned. making those macrame plant notes in shape.
Beverly Jordan accompanied the hangers for the Friends of the
So the end of may first year in
children at the piano.
Ubraries bomemade items bazaar Meigs County is in sight and I'm getThere were 3S in attendance at the and staffed the booth for 5% hours.
ling ready for company, My sister
school and a special guest each
Wasn't it nice of Kennit to allow us ·and her family plan to visit for the firevening.
to put up a table in front of .the New st halfd of July and my motber and
The total collection of $35 was con- York Clothing House? It was cer- stepfa~er are coming for the second
tributed to the Jaws of Ufe by the tainly a good location: the Friendl half. And I hope all the Friends of the
children, and the Sunday School made $42.93 from the Items you and Ubraries and their friends and
collection of $65 was also given . Dorothy Oliver sold there.
relations will come to our potluck on
making a total of $100 contributed
And the word baa spread that a few July 8th.
towards Pt. Pleasant Emergency choice items were left; So we have
I'm very grateful to yu and Ruth
Squad's life saving equipment, Jaws sold another $10 worth of plant Powers for your willingness to carry
ofUfe . .
hangers, including the beautiful blue on the Ubrary Letters colwnn while
Supt. Gleon Icenhower read ~ poem one.
I'm on vacation. I'm looking forward
to the ladies of the church who helPed
The funny and poignant bookmarks to receiving letters from the two of
with Bible School. Hazel Friend and are on the counter at Pomeroy you keeping me up to date on Friends
Florence Cullen was on the refresh- Ubrary and sales are progressing and library affairs.
ment conunittee for the week of Bible slowly but steadily. At 49c each, I
Thank you for all of your hard work
· School.
lhnk they area good buy.
during Regatta Weekend; I really apFor my own part, I'm both ple&amp;lled peciate it.
Reverend Robert Fulton offered the
closing prayer.
and dlaappointed with the library
Sincerely,
Teachers for the Beginner Class boat rides. 112 people were aboard for
Elleb Bell, Ubrarian
were Clara Neal, Stella Krebs, Mary the 9 o'clock trip; only 163 made the . Serving all of Meigs County
Grimm and Mary Mallette. This class noon trip. U only we had know there
had perfect attendance for five days.
Primary Class teachers were Mar. tha Friend and Lucy Cullen.
Middler Class teachers were Debbie Roush, Nellie Adkins and Floren"Jesus, I'm His, He's Mine" was Guthrie, Lisa Henderson, Bonnie
ce Love.
·
the theme of the daily vacatln vaca- . Koenig, James Meyers, Amy Ritchie,
Junior Class teachers were Glorta lion Bible school held thiS past week Lee Ann Robinson.
Roush and Sue Icenhower.
at the Alfred United Methodist
Teen, Thelma Henderson and MyrYouth Class teachers were Pat Church.
tie Flanders, teachers, with Bob
Friend and Louise Adkins.
Average attendance each day was Brooks, Jim Brooks, Kevin Brooks,
Mason and Area Penouals
52 with a total of 80 persons attending Tanuny Calaway, Doug Jackson,
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Harbour and the closing program held Friday Shelia Koenig, Sherry Myers, Alice
her mother, Mrs. Matilda Noble evening. Pianists for the week were Ritchie, Lori Robinson, Lisa
visited on Thursday witb the latter's the Rev. Richard Thomas and Windland.
son, Steve Noble, a patient at St. Florence Ann Spencer. Nina RobinAnn ~s Hospital in Colwnbus. Mr. son and Eloise Archer served on the
Noble had been in traction following refreshment COlluniltee.
·
E$KEYIULL
an operation. .
Ditector for the school of Mrs.
Eskey J. Hlll, Flatwoods Road,
Mr. and Mrs. Denver Blake and Janice Pullins. On Friday following Pomeroy, is a patient at the Holzer
family spent a weekend on vacation the classes, a picnic was held for the Medical Center in Room 235. He
children. Participating were:
at Holly River.
underwent surgery Tuesday.
Mrs. Sarah WilliS of Pomeroy spent
Beginners, C!Jarlotte Van Meter,
•
the weekend with her friend, Mrs. Doris Dillinger, and Dottie witb
Clara Williams. Mrs. Mary, Pickens students, Scott Burke, Anita ·
visited with Mrs. Williamson Sunday. Calaway, Marta · Dillinger, Robbi
Mrs.Helen Williams has returned Calaway, Michelle Donovan, Hayley
home after visiting her sister, Mrs. Howard, Heather Justis, David KenLeona Dudding of Nitro.
ing, Stephanie Marcinko, Steve
Reverend Chester Styer, pastor of MidkiBs' Wayne Montie, Michael
Clifton, West Colombia and Spilman . Pullins, Wendy Montie, Rachael
By
Charge delivered his first sermon at Welch, and Bobbi White.
ALL AMERICAN
Clifton United Methodist Church on
Primary, June Avis and Dorothy
Meets
Sunday. He succeeds the Rev. 0 . B. Calaway, teachers, with students,
(Joe) Hatcher, who was sent to a Buf· Nick Avis, Debbie Brooks, Tricia
•Ohio Building Codes
falo, W.Va. United Methodist Church. Burke~ Adam Calaway, Todd Dill•AFHA&amp;VA
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Belcher Inger; Lowell Guthrie, Roger
See our lot model today .
visited recently with their daughters, Howard, Scott Justlc, Christy Koenig
Mrs. Ann Sensabatigl), and another Wade Midkiff, and Robin White.
daughter and family, Mr. and Mrs.
Junior, Nellie Parker, Vickie
JohnNeelyandsonaiRoanoke, Va.
Howard, Ruth Brooks, teachers, with
Mrs. Gladys Riley returned home .Michelle Avis, Lisa Burke, Lori
from Ho~er Medical Center on Satur- Burke, Missy Calaway, Theresa
day evening and is recuperating
following surgery. Mrs. Riley was
happy to receive a telephone call Wood's sister, MiiB Patricia Keefer to
from her brother, Dempsey Riffle of Edgar Lanham in Pt. Pleasant. They
Sunnyside, Utah.
·
also visited their parents, Mr. aad
Mrs. Jeanette Cunningham and Mrs. Earl Keefer and Valerta Blake
noo E. Main
daughter, Heather, of Huntington and their gran~, Mr. apd.Mrs.
Pomeroy,
Ohio
visited recently with Mrs. Laurene Albert Boston and brother, Charles
992-7034
Lewis at Clifton.
Keefer and famlly.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Smith and
family have moved to their new home
back of West Columbia. They resided
with her mother, Mrs. Laurene
Lewis, while repairs were being made·
on their home.
Mrs. and Mrs. Reginald Hart
visited over the weekend with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Zerkle
and other relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Wilson (Carolyn)
Wood of Springfield, Mo., Mr. and
Mrs. Ohin (Geraldine) Cross of
· Florence, S. C. were here to attend
the wedding of Mrs. Cross ~-Mrs-'

Letters·

" THE.COBRAS" of Beverly, O.,will preant 111111ic at the Annual Firecracker Ball, sponsored by the Mason
Volunteer Fire Department. The dance wlU be held Tuesday, July 3, 9 p.m. to-2 a.m. at the Fire Station. Admission
will be $10 for couple or 16. single. Tickets may be obtained from any !Ire department member.

Hours :
9:30 to 5:00
Mon. thru Sat.
· 9:30 to 8:00
Friday

Top Ten _Rock
Top Ten Country
Top Ten Disco

ONLY $299 EACH

SWISHER

LOHSE

Pharmacy

KIDDIE SHOPPE
Near Stiffle'r's in Pomeroy
· 2nd Street
· · ·~•86
· Pomeroy, o.

-------------------

I

I.

Kenn(!ttl McCullough , R. Ptt.
Charles Rittle . R. Ph .
Ronal~ Hanning , R. Ph
Mon . ttlru Sat, 8:00a .m . to 9 p.m .
Sunday 10 : 30 to 12 : 30and ~ to 9 p.m .
PRES CR tPTIONS
.
PH. 9''2-l'IU
· F r i4mdly Servl(e
' E. M :un
·

QgenNigt1tst11 .19

------~-

-·--'

County Court ·Melton assumes

One person

hurt

'(Continuedfrompagel)
,
·
Fifteen dcf en dints were fined and the church and served as president of
three others forfeited bonds in Meigs
'
the schools board of education.
I
County Court this week.
The school is fontudent.S from pre·
The Gallia • Meigs Post State High.
Fined by Judge Charles Knight school through the sixth grade. He way Pa.trol ~ported a motorcycl~ acwc.e James W. Warner, Syracuse,~ was in charge of youth work and cldent m B1dw~U Wednesday mght.
II
and · cllllts, unsafe vehicle i Alan T. education ajso.
.
' · One )lerson was mjured.
.
Lowery, Po{IIeroy, $50 · imd costs,
I
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Melton
have
two
sons,
.
Th
Patrol
~ldat
.
9
:
21
p.m.
Melvm
I
speed ; Darrell W. Young, Shade; $15 Paul 9 and Scott 7 'lnd the family is E. Cordell, 22, Bidwell, was ap.,.
and costs, speed:
Charles 'M. residlng at the ciu~h parsonage at preached by the patrol and fled. He
McLain, Gallipolis. $10 and costs, 674HighSt., Middleport.
went down Railroad Avenue on _his
failure to $tOp ,j!t stop sign; Arthur H.
Mr. Melton is the &lt;laughter of Mr. motorcycle and turned left onto Frrst
Beegle, Racine, $10 and costs, failure and Mrs. Ed Lindsey of Smithport, Street before crashing through a fen·.
to stop within assured clear distance; lnd and Melton is the son of Mr and ce into private propef\y and over·
.,..
·
tumid
Steve Boso, Rt. I, Portland, and
Mrs. Ralph Melton . of Greenwood,
Cord. ll
. ed of . . .
d
William T. Knittel , Middleport, $10 Ind.
e cornp1am
mJunes an .
and . costs each, failure to register
"We 're looking forward to working WB;S taken to Holzer Medical Centet,
vehicle; Frederick W. Bruce, here. We 've found the people friendly w~ere he was treated and released.
'·
Gallipolis, Robert C. Edwards, and warm " Mr. Melton commented. He has been cited by the patrol for
"
tJ ,:., ·.;
Beverly, and Hobart F. Riggs,
'
fleemg an officer, havmg no motor·
Rutland,, $150 and costs each, three
WINNER NAMED
cycle endorsement, and for riding and
days coofinement, license suspended
First place winner in the senior unsafe vehicle.
30 days, driving while intoxicated; division of the Regatta Weekend frog
Maxwell Stevens, $150 and costs, 10 jumps was Bob Painter, Pomeroy,
days confinement, driving while in- .with a jump of 13 feet, nine and three Fiji, a British colony since 1874,
toxicated, costs only, no operators quarters inches. First place prize was became an independent parliamen•J
tary democracy on Oct. 10,1970 .
license; Joyce Grady, Racine, $10 and . $150.
costs, public intoxication; Mark
.'
Laud~rrnilt, Rt. I, Rutland, $S and
'"
costs, improper speed; Russ E. Bar,..
TlllRD PLACE FLOAT - Chester Council 323, Saturday's Regatta Parade and won third place in the
tlett, Albany, $100 and costs, illegal
,, Daughters of Amenca, added a patriotic touch to generalfloatCtivunon.
firearms; Gregory L. Reed, Grove
City, $25 and costs, destruction of
'I•
state property.
Forfeiting bonds were Harvey A.
,! --------------------------~~~------------------- Fisher,
Carroll, and John Trout, Hun.
tington, $35.50 each, speeding; June
Opal Johnson, Pomeroy, $27.5S, left of
center.

in cycle wreck

I

..

.

..

, Fuel hill passes Ohio House
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) ~ A bill
eliminating automatic pass throughs
of fuel costs to utility customers has
cleared the Ohio House 82-10
Wednesday.
Sponsors said it would not
necessarily mean lower utility bills,
but would help keep the utilities
honest and mean that future bills
would be more predictable.
Rep . Ronald H. James, DProctorVille,- the chief sponsor, also
· said he believes the proposal would
help restore consumer confidence in
the utility regulatory process.

Under th e existing "fuel adjustment things as rail lines and oil storage.
clause," a utility can pass through to
This would not happen under his
itS customers the costs of coal or other bill, because the utilities could assess
fu els used to produce electricity, customers only for those costs
without prior approval of the Public approved by the PUCO "before the
Utilities Commission of Ohio (PUCO). fact."
Under James' bill, the PUCO would
Another feature of the bill that
review every six months the fuel costs stirred considerable debate in the
of each electrical utility during the House says that a utility buying coal
preceding six months.
from so-called "captive mines," or
Then , it would penn it the actual and those owned by the utility, may pay no
legitimate costs to he added to the ·· more than 10 percent abOve the
utility's rate base : In the past, James average market price of coal. ·
said, some utilities have illegally
James and other supporters said the
charged their customers for such language is intended to see !hat the
utilities can recover · for the
increasingly high cost of producing
coal, and at the same put a ceiling on
what can be paid for captive mine
coal.
Rep. Dennis E. Eckart, IJ..Euclid,
objected to the langua~e. asserting it
guarantees that the utilities will
a family unit. TJus was me1r environ- " Make a profit off their coal while
ment until they learned the skiliB also making a profit from you and
me."
necessary to become independent.
His amendment lost 00-32.
The security of a family unit has not
Rep. Wayne · L. Hays, D-Belmont,
always been possible for a major
number of developmentally disabled said that while he was "ambivalent"
and retarded persons. It had not been toward the Eckart amendment, he
possible for many of them to remain believed the House sbould go along
with their families for various with the 10 percent markup for now,
as "hall a loaf."
reasons.
The former congressman claimed
For this group of persons, The
Gallipolis State Institute and other in· Ohio Power Co. was charging
stltutions are carrying out intensive cuswmers more than $60 a ton for coal
services to prepare residents to live from its captive mines at a time when
more independently ..it is now time for it was selling for an average of $21 on
a ·number of residents in the institu- the open market.
"That was a 300 percent markup,"
tions to be placed oui in foster homes
as the next step .to further prepare he said.
James' bill went to the Senate
them for independent living.
where
a similar proposal already has
The most normal environment for
had
extensive
hearings in the energy
the residents hwo are ready to leave
and
public
utilities
committee.
the state institutions is back into the
The
House,
in
other action,
community where they came from .
The residents are in need of en- approved and sent the Senate a bill
couragement, support, and training allowing retired teacflers to work as
which can best be provided in the substitutes 85 days a year. Rep. Ike
home of someone who cares. These Thompson, !).Cleveland, won 61-27
are needs which most of us have for approval of a measure banning
giveaways of sample cigarettes on
the hetier part of our lifetime.
street
comers and other publicly
The environment best suited to
meet these basic needl is the family owned property. His bill, which went
unit. This is why the Residential or to the Senate, also prohibits sale or
foster care program of Buckeye Com- distribution of cigarettes to persons
munity Services ill recruiting foster Wlder 18 years of age .
homes for the Develomentally Disabled in Meigs and Gallia Counties.
If you are interested in an in-home
job which will enhance the life
OWl CHARGES Fll.ED .
chances of a mentally retarded or
Medium damages were incurred to
developmentally disabled person, two cars and a driver was cited to
please get in touch with Buckeye mayor's court as the result of an
Community Services by contacting accident on West Main, Pomeroy, at
Marie B. Hobbs, Program Coor- 10:09 p.m. Wednesday.
dinator, at Gallco, aox260, Cheshire,
Pomeroy Police said a car driven by
or write to Foster care, 680 East Main Howard Norris, Racine, had stopPed
Street, Jackson 45640. Or you may in the lane of traffic to make a left
leave a message for Mrs. Hobbs by tum when it was struck in the rear by
calling 367·0102 or leave a message a car driven by James Mitchell, West
with Chirs Layh, Superintendent, Columbia. Mitchell was charged with
Meigs Conly Board of Mental Retar- assured clear distance and driving
dation, Courthouse, Pomeroy, Ohio, while intoxicated.
telephone 992-M25. .

'. Foster care workers'
positions available ·
Positions as foster care worker are
available with Buckeye Community
. Services in Meigs County and in a
more limited number in. Gallia County.
.
In return for giving training and
Social services to one or two
: developmentally disabled persons in
:· your home, Buckeye Community Ser; vices offersd a salary plus Blue Cross
: and Blue SHield coverage.
l In addition to the salary, $5 per day
• is paid for each resident's room and
: board. Also each resident receives $35
1each month as a personal allowance.
· Another feature of the program is
that during the day, each adult resident attendl a day program such as
the Gallco Workshop, senior citizen
ceQters, or other community program. THe children attend the
Guiding Hand School during the
school year and a few are in a summer program there. Many of the
children are 4-H club members.
Buckeye Community Services
specializes in the creation of an environment and means to offer the opportunity to grow, develop, and learn
in the ways that are typcial for the
majority of persons living in our com·
munities. This means that as much as
possible DevelopJpentally Disabled
persons should experience and learn
many of the same things which are
common for everyone in general.
For most pe~le their ~ves began in

AFSCME offers
$1,000 reward
COLUMBUS, Ohio ( AP) - A $1 ,000
reward has been offered by the
American Federation of State, County
and Municipal Emplo ye es fo r
information leading to the arrest and
c;onviction of persons responsible for
shots fired into the home of a mental
health administrator last Friday.
The home of Rudy Magnone, Ohio
Department of Mental Health and
Mental
Retardation
deputy
commissioner, was the target of
shotgWJ fire . Only the family dog was
injured.
A link between the incident and a
strike last week by AFSCME has been
drawn by some persons, including
administrators of the department,
said Robert Brindza, exe cutive
director of the WJion.
The union's one-day strike called
June 20 to protest the department's
failur e to enter into co ntracl
negotiations immediately was halted
by a back-to-work order from a
Franklin County Common Pleas
judge, who also . .mandated that
contract talks begin.
Those ~ talksContinued Wednesday .

(Continued from page I)
"My concern is this," said Spinosi.
"We build union and non-union. Both
people have to eat. People shooting at
truckers and torching buildings, it's
just a load of crap."
Union spokesmen in Ashland could
not be reached for comment.

EXTENDED FORECAST
Saturday _tbrougb Monday: A
cbance of sboen or tbuadenlorms
Saturday. Fair Sunday and Mon·
day. Highs Ia the low to mid IIIIo
and loWI from the upper 5GB lo bte
mid lOs.

RODS
REELS
TACKLE BOXES
BOAT SEATS
. LIFE JACKETS

RECREATION:
CROQUET SETS
CAMPING COTS
BADMiffiN SETS
WATER COOLERS
THERMOS JUGS

HIT BY CAR
Howard Ferguson, Hysell Run, was
taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital
by the Pomeroy Emergency Squad at
6:03 p.m. Wednesday when he was
struck by a car Qn West Main St., in
Pomeroy. Areport on the mishap was
not completed this morning at village
hall.

LLOYD FIBERCRAFT
OUTDOOR FURNITURE

HIGH BACK
SPRING BASE
ARM CHAIR

LOW BACK
SPRING BASE
CHAIR

..ARM CHAIR

CANOPY
SWINGS

TWO PLACE
GLIDER

ROCKER BASE

$4995

PECIALI

1977 CHEVROLET MALIBU 4 DOOR
30.5 v ~· a engine, automa_tic .tra!1S .1 P . ~ .. P . B:, a ir l, ~dlo_! vinyL interior ,
radial tires, color red . Custom ext . trim .
NADA Book Value S337S.OO

·Odd-even sales
Od&lt;M!ven gasoline selling plans
were announced Wednesday by
officials in Pennsylvania and
Delaware, bringing to 11 the
number of . states that have
adopted gasoline rationing to
reduce panic buying and stretch
sho~ supplies.
·
A threatened statewide service
. station strike in Pennsylvania
was averted Wednesday after the
president's special assistant ori
.energy promised to look into pro,
of gasoline allocations to
ldea:Jers.

New restaurant

·

Spe~ial Priced

$297500

STACKING
CHAIRS

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

$34

'
992 ·2126

95 .

$135 $105

Pom·eroy
Opeil Eveniri:Js B P .'M.

"We Sell To Sell Again"

�•

-

9- ')'he Daily Sentinel, Middlepmt -Pomeroy. 0 .. Thursday, June 28, ) 979
DICKTRACY

8-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, J'!'le 28, 1979

·

'ilfllf~ fij)'il ~ ·THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~

·Your Best Buys Are .Found in the Sentinel Classifieds
'

Notices

WANT AD
15 Words or Und~r

Cash
LOO

!day
Zdays
lday!l

Charxe
.- 1.25

uo.

1.50

&amp;days

1.110

2.?!i

3.00

3.7i

Each word over the minimum
15 worrls is 4 cenl!J per word per .
day. Ads rwmlnl$.otherthan consec uti ve days wtll be charged at
the 1day rat.e .
In memory. Card of Thank:i
. and Obituary : e cent, per word,
$:!.00 minimum. Cash in advance.

PARASOL BOUTIQUE BEAUTY
SHOP, next to Skot•A-Wqr
Roller Rink. Will be dosing as·
Of July 8. We thOnk all our
many patron s for their past
y&amp;ars support. Phone 985-41-41
fQr final appointments . Sondra
Kerns.

LADY NEEDS ride to Gallipolis
5 days o week . Needs to be
there by 9 and 1eo.:ea around
5. After 6, 9'12·2576 .

'-

MARK MORA
. HAIR STYLIST

The

Publisher will not be responsible
for more than one incorrect in-

M:rtlon.

Featuring :

Phone 992·21s,ti .

women's

Main St.

TlilANSMISSION

Monday
Noon on Saturday

COPRORATION,
PLAINTIFF

Tue&gt;day
thruFriday
4P.M.
the day before publicatior

R1 . J, Box liSA, Albany,

IN MEMORY of Chorlos W.

so~e

With whi ch we will nava r port
Tt-lough God has you in His

keeping
We stilt hove you In our
hecrts .
Sodly miss ed by the Family.

COMPANY , 305 Cleveland,
Ohio sw . can1on, OHio
44701; NANCY CLARK, 40
S.
Chestnut
Street,
Jackson,
Ohio
44640;

RALPH C: HALBERT, 23

Main Street, Evansville,
Indiana 47708 ; EAST OHIO
GAS COMPANY, 1717 East
Ninth Street, Cleveland,
Ohio 44114 ;
GEORGE
COLLINS , Treasurer of
Meigs Countv, Ohio, Meigs
County
Cour,thouse,
Pomeroy , Ohio 45759;
DEFENDANTS

NO . 17211
LEGAL NOTICE

TWO WHITE kittens. mole and
female. 5 turtoisa shall
ccllcos. Lt. calico . 2 block kittens . Tiger striped kitten .
Large yellow cat . 992-7680 or
go to . 2~ Sycamore , Middleport.
.

13 KITIENS. All kinds and col·
o,rs .

Humane

Society .

9'12-7680.
TWO MONTHS old male ki1·
tens , block . grey, yellow.
Humane Society , 992-2592.

SKETIE SMALL female.

or 5

4

months old, looks llkeyoung

louie. Booglo 1ypo puppy,

brown with whit~. female.
German Shepherd type ,
female, 6 months old, not
larg4t. Beagle type , 2 or 3 yrs .
old, female , quiet dog.
Humane Society, 992-5427
after6, 992·7853 cr992-768l.

FREE KITIENS. 1 whlto and 1
block

and

white .

Call

9'12·3690.
Wanted to Buy
CHIP WOOD . Poles max .
diameter 10" on largest arid.

$12 por ton; Bundled slob. $10
per ton . Delivered to Ohio
Pallet Co., Rt. 2, Pomeroy.

9'12-2689.
OLD FURNITURE , ice bo•os,
brass beds, iron beds , desks,
etc., complete households.
Write M .D. Mlll.r, Rt. ~ .
Pomeroy or call 992-n60.

OLD COINS, pocko1 watches,
d oss rings , wedding bands,
diamonds . Gold or silver. Call
Roar Wamsley, 7-42-2331 .

WANT TO buy: old 45 and 78.
phonograph
records . Call
992-6370 pr Contoct Martin
Furniture.

GR ILL lor 1973 Chrysler New
Yorker . 7~2· 2~ .

DOG HOUSE, good condition.
Call 9'12-3132 or 9'12-3119 aher
~p . m .

Lost and Found
LOST: WHITE faced young cow
w ith long horns, white faced

bull. 350 or 400 lb. Hemlock
Grove

area .

992-76n

or

9'12-5872.
LOST: FEMALE 12 week old
Schnauzer , block and white,
ARound Darwin. Answera to

Angie . 9'12-3890.

.. Forge t the anesthetic ... just

an d

haul

brush .

with referenc.. . Five Points
, Bar and Grill , Rt . 3 , Pomeroy.

Yard Sale

Tt1e
above
named
defendants ,
Wi l liam
Powell. address unknown ,
Antt1ony Aridrul i te s, ad ·
d r ess unknown , Cass i e
Andrulites .
address
un"nown . wil l take not ice
that the pla i ntiff hilis
brought this a ction naming'
you as defendants in the
above entitled action by
fil ing its compla ints on
June 18, 1979 .
The obJect of the co m pla int is to appropriate
easements and rights of 1
ways ,
permanent
In
nature, on , ove-r and undf&gt;r
the following desc ribed
real estate and for such
other and further r elief as
t he nature of the case may
r equire .
Sa i d real estate
Is
Situated in the Township of
Salem , county of Meros
and State ot OH io , anti
described as fo llows :
Being si tuated in Sect ion .
JS , Township 8, Range 15,
Qhio Company's Purchase ;
commencing at a point In
the north l ine of sa i d
sect ian , 200 rods west of t he
northeast corner of sa id
sect ion ; then ce west to a
point halfway between said
beginning point and the
northwest corner ot said
sect ion ; thence south to
south line of said section ;
thence east to a point in the •
south line of said section;
thence east to a point In the
sou th l ine of sai d sect ion
200 rods west from the
southeast corner of said
s.ectlon ; thence north to the·
pl ace ot beginning, con tain ing 130 117 acres, more
or l ess .
E xc epting and reserv ing
28 acres off the sou th end of
th e above described rea l
estate . It is the Intent of
said deed re corded In
Volume 219 pag e 17 of the
Meigs
county
Deed
Recor ds to convey 102'12
a c res of rea l estate ..
Except ing th ere from 6.0
acres tr an sf err ed to John
Elmer Ord by deed dated
August 27 , 1975 recorded In
Volume 261 page 385 Meigs ·
Co.un ty Deed Records and
2.16 acres trantterred to
Paul Saunders, Jr . and
Sandra Saunders by deed
di!lted
May
2•,
1976
recorded in Volume 264
page 313 Meigs Cou nty
D eed Record s .
You are req u ir ed to
answer t he c omplaint
within tw enty -eigh t
(28)
days
after
t he
last
p ub li cat ion at this notice .
which will be published
once each week for six
consecutive weeks and the
'last puotica11on wlll be
m .ade on J uly 26, 1979
•n case ot your ta l lUre to
answer
or
otherwise
respond to the complaint as
p ermitted ·by the OHio
Rules of Civil Procedure
w i thin the t ime stated,
judg.ment by default will be
rendered against you for
t he relief d emanded in the
complain t .
Larry E . Sptmcer
Cl erk of Courts ,
Common Pl eas
Court,
Meigs County ,
O' Br ien and O'Brien
Attor ney s for Plaintiff
100'12 Court Str l!et
Pomeroy . Oh io 457 69

day .
Milo
Hutchison
residence. New Limo Rd.,
Rutland. Jeans, porch fur·
nltur•. odds and •nds.

YARD SALE . Fri. Sol. 10 111 5.
North of CR 18 on Old 33 .
Phone 9'12-3111.
YA~D SALE. Friday , June29 . 9·
til? 366 Sixth 51. , Middleport.

Ohio

"res .

glassware,

FRI. EVE., JUNE 29, 7:00 PM

MAIN ST., RUllAND, OHIO

FINAL
. CLEARANCE

1 , 2 miles aut on Leoding
Creek Rd . June 28, 29, 30 and

July 1st.
FOUR FAMILY Garogo Solo.
Mon and Tues.., July2 &amp; 3. 9-4.
John Musser residence ,
Mulberry Hfl., Pomeroy, OH.
Follow signs. All sizM men's,
ladies and children 's clothing,
toys, shoes, drapes, curtains,
bedspread• .
jewelry .
glat~ware, electric broom, or·
tiflciol Christmas tree. record
ployer:, chi ldren's rockers , k itchen Items and misc.

RACINE EMERGENCY Squad.
Vord Sale. July 2. 9 til ? at car
wash, Rt. 12-4 . Racine. (In case
of rain, at Fire Station). New
and
used
merchandise .
Security llghtl. Proceeds go t.o

building'fund.
GARAGE SALE. 3 foml1., y,
mile on leading CrHk R ., air
conditioner, tires, bicydet,
qnd clothing . Thurt . and Fri.
10.4.

9'12·1054 .
CARPORT SALE. July 2 &amp; 3 .•
10.5. 911 S. 3rd Avo., Mid·
dleport, OH . A Iorge variety of
Items I

PORCH SALE Friday and Sotur·
dey, 9o.m. to4 p.m. 256 South
Fourth Ave ., Middleport.
. Clothing
and
pther
miscellaneous: Items .

furnished

opts .

Phone

9'12·5434.
FURNISHED APT. sul1oble for 3

Y2 PRICE
~OMEROYlANDMARK
Jack W. Carsey
Mgr.
" ' Phone992·21B1

, •

TWO AIM conditioners .

condition . One

sax&gt;

after 5 p.m .

boat, 90 hp Mere with power
trlm. Extra equipment. $AS()()
or best offer. 992·6330 after 5

opt.

oized

Call 9'12-2910.

Auto Sales
1914 VEGA HATCHBACK, coli
:J03.675-1501 or 305-675-2488
or 304·675-1553.
1912 GMC' ~ ton pickup. p.s.,
auto., v.e. $450. 94'1-2801.
1913 VW BEETLE. 949·2490.
1915 FORO Supor cob. $2500.
304-882·2982.
1913 OLDS 98 lu•ury sedan.
Full power. Vory good condi·
tlon, 2 owner car. Actual miiM
46,500. Prlco $2500. If in·
call 9'12-2531 .
1915 CHEVY MONZA. P.S..
P.B., A.C., low mlloogo.
'149·2723.
i915 DODGE CORONEl. gold,
whlto vinyl 1op. Very good
condition. $1IIGO. 742-3147 0&lt;
9'12·5006.
.

•-led

OWNER LEAVING state. mutt
sell. lf76 OotJun 610 .tf·door
wagon. 1978 Toyota Corolla A·
doors«iarl. 992-3618.

19n STARCRAFT Starmoster 6
fold down cmoper. Sleep• '6 ,
ha s furnace and canopy .
.Roger ·Black residence, Main
St ., Rutland, OH or call

742-2891.

REAL ESTATE: 1 aero lot In Rlggscrest Manor, between Tupper~ Plains and Chester.

Bro~bury. 1 floor, corner lot
with goroge , carport and rear

FOR SALE or Lease: Lindo's

Lady

Fair

Racine ,

Beou1y
OH.

Solon . .

ostobllahed. 247·3042.
1111 story nome w ith full bas•

742&lt;2819 after Spm . Raymond
Hatfield.
. -)

ment. 2 beck on Linco ln Hts .
Serious ca lls on ly. m -63--47.

langsville.

$43,000 .

Call

ocres . 992-7513.

40 PIGS. 6 to 10 wooks, $30

HOUSE FOR oolo. 5 ·rooms end

SEVEN ROOMS and bolh. 2

bath. Moy be seen at 206 But·
each. 9.. 9·2129 or see David
· ternut Ave., Pomeroy, OH or
Graham, Rt. 2, Racine.
contact Doc Eblin.
·
MOVING, for sale, grHn gas
stol(e, $75. Green refrigerator
$75. Kitchen sink $75 . 20 gel.
water heater $45. Wash basin

on ly .

Reasonable

POMEROY
LANDMARK
Headquarters for
·~otpoint .and
General Electric
ADoliances

SALE PRICES
.

Jack w. Corsey
Mgr.
• Phonot92· 2111

Rl. 3
Pomeroy, Ohio
992-SS47
4·25·1 mo.· Pd.

.Roofing .
New, repair,
guHers and
down spouts.
Window cleaning
GuHer cleaning
Free Estimates

BOB'S GENERAL
CONTRACTING
eNEWHOMES
e ROOM ADDITIONS
eROOFING '
e VINYL SIDING
eGUTTER &amp; SOFFIT
Phone 992-6313
Free Estimates
5·2()·1 mo. ·pd.

RIDENOUR GAS Sorvlco. Do•·
oiL.P. goa . Chester. 985-3307.
Wlll DO office cloonlng, light
housework or Interior pain·
tlng. Have references. Phone

9'12-7033.

Housmg
Headquar tt:rs

~~~~Jj
'I
I

lt2·l325

'

m ,E. SoCGIId'Streol.

5 ROOM HOME nice

Has ~

bedrooms, modern

bath, full basement, nat.
.gas furnace · and
aluminum siding .
LARGE
FAMILY
HOME - 3 rooms, 4
bedrooms, 1112 baths,
full
basement,

WANTEO
OverwelghLPeople
Sllnderena
Ole! Classes
MOn. Evtnings·M•son, W. Va,,
7: JO St. Joseph Catholic C:lilurcll;
Tues. Mor1Una IIO :JOJ and
Evenlnn 11 7:Jo-Mklclt.,.rt;
H.. ttl Unltt4 MethOdltt Church
Thurs . MHnlng {10: 10) and
Ev.n lnts at 7:JII·Pt. Pltl$.1ft1,

W.Va . Krodtl Park Chill House.
For further lnformltiDn call Jo
Ann NtWIOmt, 614·"2·lll2.
6·~ · 1

mo.

SEPTIC TANK
Cl£ANittG

BloWn Insulation·

1

'
Cellulosic
(wooel filler I
. Thermal Insulation
Savt30 pct.to so pet,
on helltlng cost
· Experltfice 1ncl
· fully Insured ·
Est.
Call992-2772
5-17·1 mo.

NEW

HOME
3
bedrooms, 2 baths,
modern kit., carpeting,
In all except baths, sun

deck, Iaroe 2 car garage
and utility . Level lot
with lots of trees.
IN TOWN . - 6 room
home with aluminum
sidlng . Has ·bath, nat.
gas forc ed air furnace,

city water and Ohi o
Power .
RUTLAND
4
bedroom frame home
with bath, nat. gas heat,

city wafer, 2 car garage
and extra lot. $14,000.
LOTS, LOTS, LOTS WOODED,
SOME
LEVEL, SOME READY
TO BUILD DN. WILL
SELL ONE ACRE.
CALL 992·332S FOR
MORE
INFORMA ·
TION.

Headguart~rs
THE HEIRS of William Bool of.
fer.for sole hit home and real

properly located olll Oak 51 ..
Pomorll'(, OH. Bids will bo oc·
cepted at th. office of Borboro

Knight, ANornwy ol low. Box
723, Pomerov. OH . Telephone

9'12·2151. un1il July 13 . 1979,
at 10:00 om. Vendors reserve
1ho right to rojocl all blda.

191B BUICK RIVIERA. Loaded ,
tlill under wa .

for Sale

20 ·ACRE I' ARM, LANGSVILLE - Beautiful little
farm that has two nice pastures for cattle . A rich
bOttom land for gardening, a well stock pond for
fishing . 6 room and ~alh home that has energy sav·
lng Insulated aluminum siding , REDUCED FOR
SALE S37,500.
-

DOWNING-CHILDS .
BILL, BR. MGR.

PHONE 992-2342
EVE. 992-2449
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

IJ.II'TU

Purc:hase

and
Refinance
3(1 v,ar Terms
A-No money down
!eligible veteranS)
FHA- AS low as 3%

down

cnon-v~teranl)

IRELMO
MORTGAGE
CO.
11 E. State, Athens
592-3051
• ·23lmo.

A PLATE •
Now arrange the circled let1ers to

torm the surprise answer , as sug gested by the abOve cartoon .

QUALITY
DRAfTING
SERVICES

C. R. MASH .. '.,
VINYL &amp; ALUM.·
SIDING

'

Civil
Mechanic'! I
Archetectural
Lavouts

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

•New Home
*Add ons
* Remoldirigs
*Free estimates

.
'

"

From the
llulldour

Smith Nelson.
Mcms, Inc.
Ph. 9t2·2174

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

NORTH

+J

~-.~&lt;::

6-28

J&amp;L INSULATION

FOOR. 001\R, CCBS

durruny's trumps while dis-

EAST
• 62

• Q2
+Kt09 754

• KJ 86

• 7 53
SOUTH

+

KQ984

• A Q 10

Vulnerable : Neither -North-South 60 on scor e
Dealer: South
Wes t . North East South

I:J'ITLE ORPHAN ANNIE .

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-WHILE THERE'S LIFE
W!' ... WE LOST
EVER'ITHIHG , ANNIE
" ' NO INSURANCE ,..
WOULD \~SURE SUCH .

Dbl.

a

3+

4•
Pass

Pass
Pass

Pass
Pass

1+
3+

4+

Opening lead : • A

South really expected that

TRAILER SALEs

four spades would be a cin ch
contract. Of course, he ex-

j

2n20 Mont1omerr Ad.
Lantsville, Ohio

pected a better dummy. The
GO-point part score explains
why he failed to jump right
to the four level.
West opened the ace of
diamonds and con tinue d
with the jack after East's
sig nal with the 10. A far
better pl~y would have been
to play out his ace of trumps
first.

614-tlt-41245 EVtfllftll

2 Miles East of Wilkesville
SUPER

GOOSE

SHUCkS.
WE'LL GET
YOU SOME'

sTOCK

TRAILER NOW AVAILABLE .

MEAT, AUNT

4·.f-1 mo.

EM! C'MON,

Vinyl and Aluminum
Siding

USED GARDEN
TRACTORS
AND
RIDING MOWERS

3 111 acres In Pomeroy . SEcluded wooded area on top of hill.
Overlooks river. Water, electric
avaiiGble .
S7900.

9'12·3886.
REAl ESTATE Loons. Purchase
and refinance. 30 vear terms,
VA . No money down (eligible
veteront). FHA · As low as 3
per cant down (non ~veterans).
Ireland Mortgage Co.,
E.
State, Athens . 6U-592-30S1 .

n

TWO STORY 3 bedroom houso.
3 lots. Now's your chance If
you need a house. $12,000.
Owner will i ng to · ta lk.

9'12·2082 or 742·2328.

systems,
Rt. U3.

Phone 1 {614) 698·7331 or
742· 2593.
IN STOCK tor lm•nediate
delivery: various slz.. of pool
kits . Do-lt- yourself or let us
inJtall for you. 0 . Bumgardner
Soles, Inc . 992-572-4'.
ADO ONS ond remode li l'!~ ,
gutter work, down spouts,
some concrete work , walks
and
driveways
(free
ettlmate) . V.C. Young , 111.
Racine, OH . 9-49·27o4S and

9'12· 7314.
NEIGLER CONSTRUCTION for
new hous" and repair work .

Call Guy Neiglor 949· 2508,
Racine. Ohio .

BRADFORD, Auctioneer , Com·
plete Service. Phone 9-49·2-487
or 9-49-2000. Racine , Ohio,
Crltt Bradford.

Ru1h RHves. 61 .. ·698-3290.
lording &amp; Riding_lessons and
Horte Care products .
RISING STAR Kennel . Boar·

Matjbe if we dropped Won't worr.!
it ..: it miqht open I tried it.'
· accidentalli,J!

Maube if

it isn't
locked ..?

Th8

Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sol" and
Service . .we sharpen Scl11ors ..

WINNIE
HE: WANT8 WENDY

will haul fill dlrl , top soil,

10 DESIGN A LINE

limestone and gravel. Call Bob
or Roger Jeffers, day phone

Rutland, Ohio. Pone 742-2008.

and

GASoLINE ALLEY

SEWING MACHINE Repairs,
tervlce, all makes, 992-228-4 .

Wettern.

Saddlei

squeezed in
clubs si nce
dummy's l ast two cards
were a sma 11 h eart and the
club nine while South h eld
ace·sma ll of hearts .
The sq ueeze could ·n ot
have developed if West had
returned a club when he le d
the second h eart, but West ·
could not have been sure of

However, West did

OF COSTuN\ES

FOR HIS WORLD
TOUR.
THAT'S

SMOOCH , A
N'eN ROCK GROUP.
THE LEADeR 15

A FRIEND OF
WENDY1S ... AND
GET -nf/S ...

PULLINS EXCAVATING. Com·

plete Service. Phone 992- 2~78 .

AUTOMOBILE

INSURANCE

PUBLIC SALE

SHE: CAN DO WHATEVER SHE WANTS 10.
IF SHE: ~OESN'T 1l.JRN
THAT MU&amp;IC OFF I'M

WAJ.K/Ne OUT OF
HERE.' /=OR

been cancelled? Lost your
Operator•
license? Phone

NEW LISTING
ding. Call 367-0292.
PORTLAND - Approx·
9'12·2143.
lmately 56 acres, lots of
AKC REG. mole cocker spaniel
!Imber, some building _ puppy. B weeks old. Biondo, E·C ELECTRICAL Contractor
ser..olng Ohio Volley r-slon.
sites, l!lpproxlmately 5 · $75. Phono742-3176.
Six days a wMk, 2• hours seracres tillable , 15 acres
vice . Emergency calls. Call
AKC Miniature Dachshund
pasture. $23,900.00.
882·2'152 or 882· 3454 .
puppies, 304-882-2982.
LETART F4LLS, OHIO
- Lovely one floor pion
brick home, hardwood
floors, 3 bedrooms, cen·
. lral heat and air condl·
llonlng, wood burning
fireplace, 1 1/:r bath .
$30,600.00.
HYSELL RUN - 1972
mobile home, furnished,
fireplace. central air,
freezer Included, all
LOCATION: Ferrell's Farm , Clarks
underpinn i ng
and
Chapel
Rd., near Porter.
bl~ks . $8,900.
MIDDL,EORT Two
business rooms, two
Old fashion kitchen cabinet, apt. size
apartments over, been
Sunray gas stove, metal kitchen cabinet, ·
rented many years, ex·
cellent
Investment.
2 old fashion kitchen cook stoves, 2 pot
JUST $33,500.00.
•'
bellied soves, stereo, sectional living
,•
NEW LISTING
room suite, coffee and end tables, old
Located on Old Rt. 33 Approximately 2~0
fashioned mantel clock, old fashi,oned
acres, building sites,
crank victrola, dressers, chests, small
tillable ground, pasture,
writing desk, living room chairs, one oak
WOOdS. Home, barn, and
other buildings also,
round drop· leaf table, one oak roped legg ·
JUST $178,000.00.
ed cia~ feet st.a nd table, rocklrlg chl!lf',
SUMMERTIME: lncl
the MOVING I. EASY ...
parlor chair, walnut with caned back. one
II you've betn lhlnldng
oak pie . cupboard, child's rocker, ·o ld. ·
of soiling your property,
Misc. items too numerous to mention .
this Is tile lime to do 11.
Why Will for SNOW Dinner served.
C:ALL U$ TODAY AND
Not responsible for accidents.
LIST1tl
C:lyde Farrall, Ownr
REALTORS
Honry I. Cleland, Sr.
WNIIMr permiHiq, If rain - ule Satur· Henry 1 . Clellnd, Jr• .
day, July 7•
"H1f1
tn-2~59

a nother

diamond .

This

would give South a ·ruff and
discard, but tha t ruff and
discard would s till h ave left
him one trick short of his

contract.
INEWSPAPE:H ENTERPRISE ASSN. t

(Do you have a que s tion for
the experts? Writ e " Ask the
Experts ," care of this newspa·
per. Individual questions will
be answered if accompanied
by stamped. sell-addressed
envelopes . Th e mos r interesting qu es tions will be used in
this column and wiif recei ve
copies of JACOBY MODERN.)

4 Pronoun
5 In olfice

6 Distribute

6 Pallid

II Profit

small appliances . lawn moer,
next to State Highway Garage
an Route 7, 985-3825 .

EXCAVATING, dozer, loader
and backhoe work; dump
trucks and lo-boy1 for hire ,

1 Lave

ACROSS

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers, toasters, irons, all

HOOF HOLLOW, English and

hornet•. Horses and ponies.

608 E .
MAIN
POMF'ROY.O .

Call for a FrH Skiing
Estimate, 949·2101 or
949-2160. No sundey
calla.
6·14·2 mo.

992· 7089,
night
phone
9'12·3525 or9'12·5232 .
EXCAVATING,
dozer ,
bockhoo and dllchor, Charles
R. Ho1fiold. Block Hoe Sorvlco,

Pets for Sale

West was
hearts and

~~--~
by THOMAS JOSEPH

BISSEU
SIDING CO.

51. Rt. 1
North of Chesler, 0.
Phone 915-4202
6 ·2~· 1 mo. pd.

ca rdin g his queen of c lubs on
the las t one.

that.
By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

CALL

TILLIS

M utn ruffed the second
diamond a nd led a trump .

• 6

WEST
OA
• J 96 4
+A J 82

..

Transition 10.

¥ A K 10 3

+

60017/
BARNEY

P9W, DID 'IE HEAR
ElVINEY GOT HER
R: PARAKEET?

HESH, MAW!! '/E'LL
SCARE OFF TH' FISH!!

I&lt;NOWED FISH
OF PARAKEETS

sATuRDAY, JUNE 30 - 10 A.M.

PEANUTS

HeRE'5 THE WOIM WAR I
FLYI NG ACE IN PARIS...

HE 15 SITTING IN A
SMALL SIDEWALK CAFE
WITH A BEAUTIFUL.
~OUNG FRENCH LA55 ...

..

7 One born
!Mltween
July 23 and
specters
Aug . 22 .
IS Noted TV
8 Enumerate
producer
9 Wise about
Fred 10 Trial run
16 Wee one
14 Capricorn's
17 Incessant
symbol
22 Fluffy entree 17 Egyptian
23 Film
Christian
tough guy
18 Gen.
27 Fitted with
Bradley
glass
19 English
28 Fragrant
river
wood
20 Driving
29 - of Life
haza r d
21 Canadian
30 Treat
river
tenderly
31 Fisher-

12 French river
13 Conjure up

Yesterday's Allswer

24 Italian
·

r iver

25 Genesis

26
28
30

32

topic
Hazard oh
the links
Historian's
subj ect
Off·key
Light on
one's feet
Under sail

' . JUNE 29,1979
FRIDAY
5 : 4~World at Large 11; 5 : 4 ~
Farm Report 13; 5 : S~F'TL Club
13 ; 5 : 5~S ummer Semeste r 10 .
6 :ro-700 Club 6,8; 'PTL Club 15;
6 : 3~ D rag ne t

in his firs t e nd play.
He g uessed right and led
the lour of h earts to East's
queen and South's a ce. South
led a trump to dummy a n d a
club to his 10 a nd West 's jack
l or the second e nd play.
~
Now West made the fatal
lead of another heart. South
won with the 10, cas hed his
ace of clubs a nd r a n off a ll

• Q 3
94 2

.'buR HBADAC..HE:'
HURT BAD '?

THURSDAY , JUNE 2B, 1979
Country 6,13; lO :roThe Innocent &amp; the Damned 3, 15;
20·20 6, 13 ; Barnaby Jo~es 8, 10; .
News 20 ; Findhorn 33.
1 0 : 3~Ho c klng Valley Bluegrass :ro.
, 11 :00 - News 3,6,8, 10, 13, 15 ; Dick
Cavet·l 20 ; Lowell Thomas
Remember s 33 .
11 : 3~ Johnny Carson 3, 15; Starsky
&amp; Hutch 6, 13; Mash 8; Movie
" The Hucksters" 10 ; Movie
" Retur n trom1he Past" 11; ABC
News 33 . ·
12 :05- McC ioud 8; 12 : 4~Mann1K
6.13 : 1 :ro-TorJlorrow 3; News
15
I :2~Base ball 17; I :5~ News 13;
3 : 5~News 17 ; 4 : 1~12 O'Clock
High 17; 5 : 1 ~ Dragnet17 .
9 : 3~Carter

6 : 10-News 17; 6: 25-Socletles In

have a s ure thing play at his
dis posaL He co uld have le d

Free Estimate

992-2772

EXO DUS

West was in with the ace a nd

10 7 53

• 8 75

ALUMINUM
·&amp; VINYL SIDING

BY

TRUDGE

End plays thwart defense

Roger Hysell
Garage

"'mile off Rt, 7 by-pass ,
on St. Rt. 124 toward '
Rutland.

LIN ER

G!"T "ORI!" NT!"D"

4231 mo. (Pd .)

S.rvl~fr

Jumbles: OZONE

Answer : H ow t o find yo ur way around in Ch ina -

992-6011

Ra'tliat9rl-,--..,

I

YeSl~rday·s

r - - - ------,··

"I!XPERIENCED

cavollng,
septic
dozer, backhoe.

I XI I I)"
(Answers tomorrow)

HOWERY AND MARTIN E•·
Real Estate for Sale

10

OF FOOD-I"RQo\11

Printanswerhere: " [

DRUTHER:

Real Estate LOans

W~~ll':~

De'TECT THE FI...AVOR

t
I I I j

Chester, 1&gt;.
.H ·l m.o.~ .

Box 3

n

rJ

ICEETIX

Jai:k's Septic
Tank Service

Free

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

IRAAPPE I

Residential and commercial. Call
for
tslln'llte. 24 Hour · Ser•
vlce. Any doy; anytime.
Por11111e tollet rental .
Phone HS·:IIO'
Jack Ginther H5:3106

JIM KEESEE

6·6·1 mo .

dishwasher
and
disposal. Furnace heat.

DOWNING-CHILDS AGENCY

RODNEY, BROKER

-' •

.

.

·

OLD FIRETRAP ·"

HotJsing
DOZER, END loader and dump
truck. Will do basements,
pond s,
bru1h,
timer ,
llme1tone and grovel , Charles
lutcher. 742- 29~0 .

J&amp;L

•

_

........ . .

. .... ~a. ... ~•·- ·

NEW THR.EE bedroom all oloc·

up. Color $130 up . Ridenour
TV and Appliances . ~3307 ,
Chester , OH .

Elderly

CONTRACTOR

Busineu

985-3307.
USED TV. Block and while $75

367-7101.
PAINTING AND aondblostlng.
Froo os11motos. Coll949·2686.
ROOM , BOARD, LAUNDRY,

WORK, GENERAL

'

Real Estate for Sale

trio home . Ohio Power. Over
1 acre. Eot~ in kitchen ,
dishwasher ,
garbao•
dispotol, ceramic bath area,
uti lity area, 3 colors of
carpeting, rural water . Near

Middleport-Poemroy area .
Call for free estimate.

BLOCK &amp; BRICK ,

949·2e62-949·216U
··
H ·tfc

GOT AN eye for o buY? Floor
sample sole. Regrigerator,
rong.s, brand , new Gibson
refrigerator freeZer and
ranges, Oil are feature pocked
to save you work and time.
Some unit• are slightly scratched. All ore priced to sell.
See them today. Ridenour TV
and Appliance , Chester . .

$45. Molal wardrobe $20.
99:1·7645,
.

N. L Construction

H. L Writesel

apt. 9'12·6345.

stove, breakfast set, -4 choirs,
gas heating t 1ova, carpeting.

'.

Sears
self-defrolfing
refrigerator. Good furni~re.
Und...-plnnlng. $6SOO. 992-T.ca.t

POWELL PlANT setter. $200.

Phone 992-7692.
REFRIGERATOR,

.)lusiness Services
~'-----,...--.....,.----------,----;_-----,:!
· :;~,

9'12·2514.
1974 GOVENOR 12 x 52.
23,000 BTU. A.C. . 16 cu. h .

Phone 985·3929 and 985-4129.
THREE BBOROOM hom• in

man only, Reasonable rent.

Phone 9'12-3181.

1-4x70 197-4 .G overnor 3
bedroom ·11h beth. central. air.
awn ing, building and wood
burner.
In
Middlepor t .

pm.
1977 480 C Cooe bockhoo.
Gallipolis, 614·446-4782 ..

.

TRAILER 1 or 2 adults, no pets.

home .

BTU and

ono 13 BTU. Call 9'12·2451

12K60 2 bedroom mobile homo
In RCICine area. 992-5858.
SLEEPING ROOM for working
9'12·6022.

mobile

uuod

rotos. 9'12·6022.
or ~ construction workers .
Allor 5pm coli 992·5-434 . 'WANTED TO DO, H001ses, Per·
992-3129, or 9'12·5914.
ches , Roofing, Carpentry or
contracting,
Free
TWO BEDROOM furnished opl . general
992-3129,
992·5434, · or estlmote7~2- 2068.
9'12-5914 .
HANDYMAN WOIIK mowing
lowna, painting houses, rooh
rwo IEDIIOOM trailer. Adul!&gt; and
building sidowalka, etc.
only. 992·332.4.
Coll614·667-3263.
ONE IEOIIOOM opl&gt;. Conloc1 PIANO TUNING for homo and
\lillogo-.or, 9'12·11111.
school. lane Doniels. Also
TWO BEO!IOOM House, newly repairs, 1-4 years experience.
remodeled
kitchen ,
In
9'12·2581 or 9'12·2082.
Pomeroy. Coli 9'12· 2288 after 6
p.m.

remodeled

. 742·2898.

Camping Equipment

NOW HAULING limoatono In

COUNTRy MOillE Homo Pork.
R001to 33, norlh of Pomet'oy .
Largo ion. Coli 992·7o17'1.
3 AND 4 RM furnished and un·

1970 Sylvo , 60•12 , 2 bedr.
1970..Cosllo . 60•12 . 2 bedr.
197-4Morkllne. SOx 12, 2 bedr.
1969 Val iant, 12•60. 2 bodr.
1967 Notional. 12xS0; 2 bedr.
B'S MOBILE HOME SALES. PT.
PLEASANT, WV. 304-675· 4424.
1971 12x60 2 bedroom. newly

ROSE BUSHES
&amp; SHRUGS

Services Offered
For Rent

~;~.c·o:~i~~~bil• s~~~:

or 9'12-7076.

On All

197'1 STARCRIIFT 15ft. Trl· houl

tell me how m uch this is goi ng ( 6) 21 ,2 8 171 s . 1]. 19;26,fu - ELECTRIC CLOTHES dryor, $25.
to cost and I'll pass out."
9'12·6069.
LADIES CLOTHES. 9'12· J394 .
1915 OUACHITA lou boot.
9'12·5298.
PIONE£1111 SX ~ receiver . Pl
120 tum1oblo. S:ioo. 742-2375.
TWENTY VOLUME sot of World
llook Encylopodla . 15 vol.
Child Craft. Will ooll Mpilrot•
Extra large sale, merchandise of all kind,
ly. Also, Soclrs ap,n -rth
dealers welcome. Come see come save.
quolliy 9 • 12 rug. Groanrusset , used 1 mo. Foy Sauer.
Bring a chair. Don't forget our regular
742-2301 .
Sat. Eve. sale, Chauncey, Ohio.
·
FOUR PIECE Sponish s1ylo
Not responsible for accidents.
bedroom
suite.
$300 .
9'12·6130.
Terms of sale: Cash or Check with
19'' UNITH COLOit TV with
positive I D.
s1&lt;md. Vory good condition. ,
. Auctioneer, Bill Brown
,9'12·52'13 after 6pm.

AUCTION

aide boord, Ford tractor modal
in good shape, plate
gloss. alae FOR RENT 2
bedroOm apt . furni she d
Utiliti•t paid adults, No peta,
no drun~ s . lh Mason. John
Sheets, thrH and half miles.
sooth, Middleport, Ohio.

2000

YARD SALE. 10 om Friday. 577
N. 2nd Ave . loti of clothing

FIVE FAMILY Yard Solo. Off Rt.

Ohio 45710; OHIO POWER

Fridley, who passed away
June 28, 1966.
Your memory to us Is a kHp-

work

9'12-3796.
BARPERSON. Rolloblo, honost

ANTHONY
AN ·
ORULITES ,
CASSIE

SIDNEY M . BOWLES,
CATHERINE F . BOWLES,

In Memory

legged bo1h tub, 1 morblo top

Clothing,
bike, etc.

ANDRULITIES , (address
unknown)
.

Friday llftemnon

NEED SOMEONE l.o do yard

304-675-4340. An Equal Op·

vs

WILLIAM
POWELL,
(address unknown

Sunday
4P.M.

portu~lty Employer .

choirs, lecJther look, one
blond bedroom 4 Pc., one
walnut b.droom 4 Pc .. I old
walnut ~ . Pc. bedroom. 1 long

YARD SALE. Friday and Sotur·

IN THE COMMON
PLEAS-COURT ,
MEIGS COUNTY,
OtiiO
TEKAS
EASTERN

sand .

9'12-3891.
FOR SALE one round 'tabla ·•

and a wide variety of Item• .

Pomeroy, O,

LIMESTONE.

Television
•
Viewing

by Henri Arnold ancJ Bob Lee

Unscramble these lour JumtJjes,
one 'letter 10 each square, to form
four or~inary words.

w.

grovel. calcium chloride , f8rMobile Homes Sale's
tilizer. dog foQd , and all types
of soh. Ex~el sior Salt Works, · 1965GENERAL60•12. 2bedr.
Inc .. E. Main St. : Pomeroy,

Ave. June 28 , and 29.

men 's &amp;
stYling,

. 992-2367

WANT-AD
AO\TERTISING
DEADLINES

laboratory Technician, 3· 11
shift. Experienced MLT (ASCP)
or equivalent. bce,l lent ap l·a ry
and fringe benefits. ~hlft l;fifferentail. Contoct: Personn el
Office , Plibaont ·Valley
.Hospital , Valley Drive , Point
Pl.asant , W\1. 255.50. Phone

COAL,

YARD SALE. 10.1 \ol S. 2nd

perms.
can for Appt.

NOTICE

· OPENING .

YARD SAL ~ . 927 Brownell Ave .
End of str•et. Thurs. and Fri .
9·5, 28, 29. Varied items.

Introduces-

right ta edit or r!ject any Bib
objectional:

IMMEDIATE

Mick'S
Barber &amp;
Style Center

The Publisher reserve!! the.

dee med

For Sale

.

Mobile Home sale3 and Yard
Sllles a re accepted only with
ra.!lh with order. 25 cent charge
(oc- ads carryins Box Nwnber In
Care ol The Sentinel.

'

Help Wanted

GUN SHOOT, EVERY FRIDAY
7:30 PM RACINE GUN CLUB.
FACTORY CHOKE GUNS ON·
l Y.
.~

CHARGES

'

\9 ~~ ~~

34 Nine inches
:15 Conspirator
against Nero

:18 Lipstick
shade
39 Cry ol
surprise
10 Man's
nickname
II New G uinea
town
12 Insecticide

11; 6 :45--;Mo rnlng
Repo rt 3; 6 : 5~Good Morning
Wesl Virginia 13; 6 :55-Chuck
White Reports 10; News 13.
7:GO-Today 3,1 5; Good Morning
America 6, 13; Fri day Morning 8;
Schoolies 10: Three Stooges·
Littl e Rasca ls 17J 7: ! ~Weather
. 33 .
1 : 3~ Fam i l y Affair 10; Lilias Yoga
&amp; You 33 .
8 :ro-Capl. Kangaroo 8,10; Leave II
To Beaver 11 ; Sesa me Sl . 33.
8 : 3~ R omper Room 17; 9 :QO-Bob
Braun 3; " At Home with Family
Circle" 6; - Por ky Pig &amp; Friends
8; Phil Donahue 13 , 15; Love of
Life 10 ; Lu cy Show 17 ;
Biography 33 .
9 : 3~Sa nford &amp; S.o n B; Hogan's .

Heroes 10; Green Acres 17 .
lO :ro-Card Sharks 3, ]5; Edge of
Nlgh16; All In The Family 8, 10;
Dating Game 13; Movie "Subterfuge " 11 ; Exploring t he
Craft s: Weaving 33 .
10 : 3~A II Star Secrets 3, 15; $20,000
Pyramid 13: Whew 8,10: Andy
Griffith 6; Daniel Foster, M. D.
33 .
1 0 : 5~CB S News 8; House Call 10.
11 :ro-High Rolle rs 3, 15; Laverne &amp;
Shirley 6,13 ; ·P rft:els Rlghl8,10;
Biography 33 .
11 : 30- Whee l of Fortune 3, 15;
Family Feud M3; 11 : 5~News
17 .
12 :ro-Newscenter 3; News 6, 10;
Password 15; Young &amp; the
Reslless 8; Over Easy 33;
Midday Magazine 13; Love
American Style 11 .
12 : 3~Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Search for
Tomorrow 8. 10; Not For Women
Only 15; Movie " Texas Lady "
11 ; MacNeil-Lehrer Report 33.
:ro-Days of Our Lives 3,15: All My
Children 6, 13 ; News B; Young &amp;

the Restless 10; Watc h Your
Mou1h 33 .
I : 3~As The World Turns 8, 10;
Movie " On The Town" 33; 2:0()....
Doctors 3, 15: One Life to Live
6, 13; 2 : 2~News 17.
2 : 3~Anolher World 3, 15; Guiding
Light 8, 10; I Love Lucy 17.
3 :ro-General Hospital 6, 13 ; Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 20 ; Infinity FActory
17 .
3 : 3~Mash 8; Joker's Wild 10;
Banana Splits 11 ; Over Easy 20;
Once Upon A Classic 33 .
4 :ro-Mister Cartoon 3; Hollywood
Squares 15; Merv Griff in 6;
Addams Family B; Sesame St.
20,33 ; Six Million Dollar Man 10;
Mike Douglas 13 ; Fllnlstones 11 .
4 : 30- Lone Ranger 3; Hogan's
Heroes 8 ; Lucy Show 15; Pa r ·
trldge Family 11.
5 :ro-Bonanza 3; Beverly Hil lbillies
B; Mister Rogers' Neighbo rhood
20,33; Gomer Pyle USMC 10; Six
Million Dollar Man 13: Brady
Bunch 15 ; Star Trek 11.
5 : 3~ News 6; Petticoat Junction 8;
Elec . Co. 20; Mary Tyler Moore
10: Odd Couple IS ; Doctor Who
33.

6 :ro-News 3,8,10,13,15 : ABC News
6; Family Affair 17; Villa Alegre
33
20; Sludlo See 33 .
6 : 3~ NBC News 3, 15; ABC News 13;
man's
Carol Burnett 6; CBS News 8, 10;
specialty
Over Easy 20,33 ; Father Knows
Best 17 .
·
33 Snake
7 :00- Cross .Wits 3; Newl y'wed
36 Mild oath
Game 6, 13; Sha Na Na 8; News
37 Gh ostly
10; Love American Style 15; Gel
milieu
Smart II ; Dick Cavett 20,33.
1 : 3~ H ee Haw Hone ys 3: $1.98
43 Modlgtiani
Beauty Show 6; Family Feud
s upport
8, 10; $100,000 Name That Tune
44 Onward
13 ; PopGoesTheCountry lS; My
45 Electrode
Three Sons 17: Ma c Ne il-Lehrer
Report 20,33 .
46 Man of
8
:
00D iff ' rent
Strokes
3, 15;
many
Operation Peltlcoat 6, 13; Inwords
credible Hulk 8,10 ; Washington
DOWN
Week In Review 20,33: Movi e
" Mi ssi le Monsters" 17 .
1 ObsU.cle
8 : 3~Hello, .Larry 3,15; We lcome
2 Former
Back . Kotler 6, 13; Wall Street
Mrs.
Week 20,33 .
Sinatra
9: ro-RockfOrd Flies 3,15; Movie
" Love :Trap" 6, 13; Dukes of
3cPu·~l~tu~r~elricE! k,-4-+--4-f--­
Hazzard
B, 10 :
Milwaukee
Symphony Orchestra In Concert
people ·
20: Money; News and VIews 33.
9 : 3~ Ten Who Da red 17; Boys'
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's h ow t o work it :
Basketball 33 .
AXYDLBAAXR
10 : 00- News 3,10 ; Edd ie Capra
Is LONGFELLOW
Mysteries 15; Dallas 8, 10.
10 : 30- Baseba 11 3, 17; Consumer
One letter s impl y stands lor ano ther . In this sa!11p le A is
- S urvival K II 20.
used lor the three I. 's. X l or th e two O's. erc. Single letters~ 11 : 00- News 3,6,8 , 10 , 13, 15; Two
apostrophes , the lcng lh and formation of the words arc all
Ronnles 20; Lowell Thomas
hints. Each day the code lrt ters are di ff ere nt.
Remembers 33.
11 : 3~Soap 6, 13; Johnny Carson 15:
CRYPTOQ UOTES
Bonkers 8; ABC News 33 ; Movie
"
Blood &amp; Black Lace" 10.
JZLOWZVGTXXN
E YLKRY
XL 0 W,
ol :ro-J uke.Bo• 8; Monty Pylhon' s
Flying Circus 33 ; 1 2 : 0~Baretta
J ZLIW
OWZN
LHEWI
VXGIU ,
GQ
6, 13.
12 : 3~Movle · "l"hey Came from
Beyond Space" 8; 1':00DYGSY
QLCWEYGlR
QWW
EL
Midnlght Spec ial 3, 15; Movi e
''Attack of the Tarantula" 17 .
WFGQEWlSW
y T Q
L
1: l~ New s 13; 2 : 3~News 3; 2:50News 17.
DYTEWOWZ .
W.
H .
VWIQLI · 3 : oo- Movle "Two Guys from
Yesterday's CryploquoLe : HE WHO KNOWS NOTHING IS
Texas" 3; 3: l~Mov le "Avenger
NEAHER THF. TRUTH THAN HE WHOSE MIND IS F ILLED .
of the SEven Seas" 17.
5 :ro-Movle " My Wild · ir ish Rose"
WITH FALSEHOODS AND ERRORS. - THOMAS JEF·
3; 5: 1~12 O'C lock High 17.
FERSON

b-+-+--+-+--+-

,•.

�•

•

'

•
I

: -~

10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., Thursday. Jw1e 28, 1979

Board
has
3-2 split
--

ELBERFELDS IN POMER.O Y

Gleason named Meigs school superintendent
BY Bob Hoeflich

.

Dealte strong public support for

'

~

.

~

OPEN. FRIDAY . NIGHT TIL 8
BOYS'
"

GIRLS TOPS
Our entire stock sale priced .
Sizes 2T to 4T and 4 to 14. Knits,

THE PENNZOIL Service Station on West Main St. in Pomeroy has
been reopened by David Grindstaff who also operates a Pennzoil Station
on East Main. Pictured is Keith Klein, the assistant manager rl the
reopened W, Main station.

vive. ~ .
Hazel Irene Lear, 72, a resident of
Two brothers and two sisters sur24 Neil Ave., died at 8 a.m. Tuesday in vive : Russell Wells, Crown City ; Mrs.
Holzer Medical Center. She had been Pearl Lear, Mercerville; Mrs. Herb
in failing health the past three years. (Maxine) C&amp;llicoat, • Northup and
She was oorn ~eo. 1~. 1~. in Harley Wells, Crown City.
Guyan Twp. in Gallia County,
One brother and one sister
daughter of the late Alvin and Addie preceded her in death.
Belville Wells.
_
She was a member of the Gallipolis
She married Ogal Wilson Lear on Church of the Nazarene.
Sept. 29, 1929, in GaUia County. He
Flineral services will be held 2:30
preceded her in death on Oct.1, 1969. ~ p.m. Friday at the church with Rev.
Three daughters and one son sur- Bob Madison officiating. Burial will
vive: Mrs. Fred (Beatrice) Stover, beinOhioValleyMemoryGarden.
Gallipolis; Mrs. Rose Lee Holley,
Friends may call at the WaughGallipolis; Mrs. Sanford (Virginia) Halley-Wood Funeral Home from 2-4
Stroop, Gallipolis; Thomas Lear, and 7-9p._m. Thursday.
Gallipolis. Five grandchildren sur-

HOSPITAL NEWS
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Admitted--Mark
Michael,
Discharged, June 27 .
Dorothy Adams, Stephen Adams, Pomeroy; Ernest Powell, Pomeroy;
Au .·ey Altizer, Wayne Amsbury, Alice Brauer, Racine; Leland Saxton,
Robert Andrews, Jerry Bradley, Pomeroy; Terry Grogan, Middlepor\.
Discharged-Carolyn Walker, Philip
Hollis Clark, Kay Clonch, .Frank Cox,
Null,
Dorothy Wright, Diana Pope,
Gusta Culligan, Ronald Davis, Mrs.
Russ Elliott and soil, Jewell Evans, Preston Parsons.
Mary Fallon, Martin Hall, Avonelle .
Hammond, Reginald Harris, Trevor
Harrison, Milton Houdashelt, Minnie
TO END MARRIAGES
Jackson, Sharon Kearns, Anna
Two suits for divorces were filed in
Lausch, Betty Lemley, Elizabeth Mc- Meigs Courtly Common Pleas Court.
Claskey, Michael McGuire, Marie
Filing for divorce were Naree Hale,
McKnight, Samuei Morrill, Mildred Rt.l,Dexter, against William A. Hale,
Nay, Richard Richmond, Betty Stout, same address; Diana Bartoe, Rt. I,
Eunice Taylor, Mrs. Robert Long Bottom, against · Joseph
Winebrenner and son, ffilarlene A.Bartoe, same address.
Withee, Betty Woodall.
The marriage of Deborah L. Smith
Births JWII! 27
and Roy R. Smith was dissolved.
Mr. and Mrs. Randy Boggs, son,
Oak Hill; ·Mr. and Mrs, Steve Sam·
min, son, Jackson; Mr. and Mrs.
Allen Lunsford, son, Waterloo; Mr.
Oklahoma became a state in 1906
and Mrs. Glen Hapney, son, Bidwell. . wi\h the merging of ths former Indiatt
Territory and the Oklahoma Territory.

Girls 52.99 Tops ... ..... . $2.25
Girls 54.00 Tops ... , ... . . $2.95
Girts 55.00 Tops ...... . .. $3 .75
Girts u ·.oo Tops , .. , ..... $4.55
Girts $8.00 Tops .. . , . .... $5.95

BOYS' 117.95 JACKETS ....... ,...110.70

LimE BOYS ·
SHORT SLEEVE SHI
Sizes 2 to 7 in knits cut and sewn
sport shirts, tank tops, good
selection .

Boys $2.99 Shirts •••••• $2.25
Boys S3.99 Shirts ...... $2.95
Boys $4.99 Shirt~ ...... $3.15
Boys S6.00 Shirts ..... . $4.55
Boys $7.00 Shirts ...... S5.25

SWIMWEAR
Antron and lycra spanoex.

Our most popular styles reduced
for
this
sale .
Features
upholstered top in a variety of
fabrics. Choose oak, maple, honey '
pine, cherry, dark pine.

For
Meigs County ~--f--1---

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

SJ59

others injured during a boating ac-

CHILDREN'S
SW.IMWEAR
SALE

cident Thursday night on
Chickamauga Creek, just inside the
channelleading1o the Ohio River.
KIUed were Eddie Repass, 35, Rod·
ney, and Eleanor Gilliam, 43,
Gallipolis.
Gallia County Coroner Donald
Warehime, who pronounced the
couple dead at the scene, said this
morning each died of head and chest
injuries.

fVERY SWIMSUIT IN

Just right for cool summer evenings. Sizes 2 through 14.

20%

SAVE

MEN'S -

"SUPER NAIL" AND NAIL ENAMEL
DOZENS OF SHADES.
$1.85 AND $1.45 REGULAR.

WEMBLEY '6.50 and s7.50
•

MEN'S TIES
SELECTED FROM REGULAR STOCK,
LIMITED QUANTITY.
YOUR CHOICE

~200

BOYS' &amp; GIRLS'

Our entire stock of terry bath
towels, ~and towels, wash cloths,
kic~ dn towel~, pot holders includ·
ec .• 1 this sale.

SAVE 20%

OFF

REV LON

20%

.KITCHEN AND
BATH TOWELS

SWIM TRUNKS
Sizes S, M,L and XL. Entire stock
on sale.

MEN'S 15.95
SWIM TRUNKS ............ 14.15
MEN~ '6.95
SWIM TRUNKS .... ;....... '4.85
MEN~S 17.95
SWIM TRUNKS ............15.55

HANES
•1.00
REFUND
By mail when you buy any 3
men's and boys all cotton Tshirts or briefs or men's
boxers. Friday and Saturday last 2 days. Special offer.

MEN'S

SUMMER SLEEPWEAR

SPORT SHIRTS

From 6 months to 18 months, 2 to 4, 4to 6x and 7 to 14. ,

Short sleeve styles, polyesters, cotton·
. polyester blent;ls, solid colors and pat·
terns . Good -selection of styles. S, M, 1:;
XL and XXL sizes.
Short sleeve western shirts included.

Pajamas, gowns, robes, shorties and long pants·. cotton polyester, knits and nylons. Solids and panerns.

CHILD~EN'S 14.00 SLEEPWEAR ....................... 12.80
CHILDREN'S 4.75 SLEEPWEAR ........................ 3.30
CHILDREN'S 16.00 SLEEPWEAR .. ...................... 14.20
CHILDREN'S 18.00 SLEEPWEAR ........................ 15.60
CHILDREN'S 110.00 SLEEPWEAR ....................... 17
1

Men's s 8.95 Shirts .••••••.•••.• ,. s 6.76
Men's $1Ci.95 Shirts ..• ..• .• .•• • •• , S 8.26
Men's $12.95 Shirts ... ~ ........... s 9.76 Men's $14.95 Shirts ..•••••..• , , •• , $11.26
Men'S$15.95 Shirts............... $11.96
Men's $16.95 Shirts .•••.•••••••••• Sl2.

--~-·--·--·-·--~~·~·----~·----·----·-·----.--~-~
OPEN
SATURDAY 9:30AM TO 5 PM
SAVE' MONDAY AND TUESDAY 9:30 AM TO 5 PM

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY'

.

'

Two killed, three injured
in Gallipolis -boat accident

40% OFF

LIGHTWEIGHT
CHILDREN'S
JACKETS

.

enttne

Two persons were killed and three

PAIR!

,.,..

'

FRIDAY, JUNE 29, 1979

ONLY

Choose white or yellow gold
from over 500 styles.

'

and reputation of MorriS and urged
theboardtohlreMorrill.
Ellen Bell, Pomeroy-Middleport
librarian, said she ·has been" "much
impressed" with Morrill in hill relationship with teachers and hill im·
agination, a quallty,.she said, which ill
hard to place a value on.
carol Pierce, board president,
responded saying that the board of
education has spent many hours in
seekihg a new superintendent and has
been "concerned about the district."
Mrs. Jennifer Sheets, board
member, spoke 111 '.the procedures
.which had been followed by the board
which received 45 applications for the
superintendent's post.
Dr. Max Evans, .Athens, she
reported, was employed by the board
to help narrow down the applications
because of hill wide experience in
(Continued on page 10)

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SAVE 20%

ONLY

BEDSPREADS

1

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employment of a local perlion for the
superintendent's job.
Morris has been employed with the
district since 1875. It as during
O'Brien's presentation that Warren
Perine turned over to the board peti·
lions reported to be signed by about
419 resdlents of the district recommending that a local person be
employed for ·the superintendent's
position over a person f~om out of the
county.
.
Perine followed O'Brien in urging
the board to employ Morrill because
of hill qualifications and of hill
knowledge of the Meigs Local sltualion.
Perine pointed out that people attending the meeting vote on levies.
"U the board can't go with the peopie,' the people can't go with the
board", Perine warned.
Allen Lee King spoke on the ability

•

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. VOL XXVIII NO. 54

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YOUR CHOICE

till September 1

-Free Tuning
-Fre!l Delivery
--Bench Included

WE WILL NOT BE OPEN JULY 4TH

Racine,- Ohio

LAYAWAY NOW

All piano's marked
down $300.00 for real·
1
Iy big savings.

. ,. .

attempted

BY LANE

Beautiful new styles. Outerbanks by
Jerold and other famous bral!ds.

KIMBALL
PIANO SALE

remember

beswayedandthevoteended3-2with
Mrs. Jemlfer Sheets, Carol Pierce
and Instruction, the Meigs School and Virgil King voting in favor of
DlatrictBoardOfEducationThursday~ Gleason's employment and Dr. Keith
nlght at 3-2 vote named David L. Riggs and LalT)' Powell voting
Gleason, Circleville, as new against naming Gle1190n to the
auperintendent of the district.
district's top position.
More than 100 Morrill supporters 1Adding to the unique situation was
were m hand at the meeting which, at the appearance of Gleason, who was
times, became slightly unruly as called upon to field questions from the
speakers
to sway the board crowd of ,Morrill supporters during
, of education into nalning Morrill to the recessed session which had been
the superintendent's post.
continued from June 18.
At one point, supporters gave MorAt that time, the split vote among
ria a standing ovation and at another' board members was noted in matters
point, petitions reported to contain relating to the hiring of a new
some 1,310 signatures of Meigs Local superintendent;
residents, were presented to the
Attorney Pat O'Brien addressed the
board.
board at last night's meeting .on
Speakers m behalf of Morrill-drew behalf of Morrill. He said he
enthusiastic applause. However, represented interested .parents and
board members who felt that Gleason was himself an interested parent. He

.

commented that if the..flnal two can·
didatea for the superintendent's post
were equally qualified (Morris and
Gleason), the local resdient, Morrill,
should be employed because "he
knows' the problems and shortcomings of the district".
O'Brien stated that Gleason would
have to spend time learning about
these problems and itcould take him
months to get famlllar with them. He
pointe_d out that an out-«-county
elf!Ploye would "have little or no ties"
and could "leaye easily" if he decided
to call it quits.
In contrast, O'l3rien stated, Morrill
has established roots.and would hold
a high level of pride in improving the
Meigs Local District.
O'Brien presented letters from
Mayor Fred Hoffman, Middleport,
and Carl Hysell, Meigs Juvenile- Offleer.• both of which recommended the

STOCK REDUCED

40% OFF

to

ill the man for the position, would not

CEDAR CHESTS

FALL PREVIEW
COAT SALE

HYPO-ALLERGENIC
PIERCED EARRINGS

• MISSY
1 or 2 PIECE

styles and colors. Cannon
and other famous makes .
Many have drapes and
pillow s~ams to match.

BANK

MEN'S 117.95 JACKETS ......... 110.77
MEN'S 118.95 JACKETS ......... 111.37
MEN'S 122.95 JACKETS ••.•••.•• 113)7
MEN'S 127.95 JACKETS ..........116.77

t-·-~----·-·--·--~-·~·-~1-·-~·-~-JULY 4TH SPECIAL
PRE-TEEN · JUNIOR

Full , king , queen and single
bed sizes. Good selection of

HOME NATIONAL

Sizes 36 to 46. Good selection of
styles and colors. Entire stock included.

BOYS' 112.95 JACKETS ••••• , ...... 17.70

SALE I

Aday

RACINE

Sizes 8 through 20. Limited quantity
for quick clearance.

BOYS' 19.95 JACKETS .............. 15.90

Sizes 8 to 18. Good
style- selection,
clearance sale
priced .

/!eo pie

SUMMER JACKETS

tank tops, long and short sleeve

BOYS' $4.95
SWIM TRUNKS

~~~~~ffi~fA Home Bank

SUMMER JACKETS

patterned shirts,

_.,__
HAZELLEAR ·

MEN'S

.

r

Dan Morris, director of cuniculum

BEGINS FRIDAY, JUNE 29 AT 9:30 f.M .-No CONTINUES
THROUGH TUESDAY. JULY 3RD

SALE!

..

FATAL BOAT ACCIDENT UNDER IN·
VESTIGA'l10N - Thursday night's double fatality
boat acdderit just Inside the Channel of Chicka:nauga
Creek remains undeiljpyestigation by Gallipolis City •
Pollee. It had not been aeteJ;rii.aed, a8 of this morning,
which of the five occupants 111 board was operating the
-

Gallia man dies
in farm. accident

cr8ft at the time of the accident. A apokeaman for the
Coast Guard sald this morning that the dtatls of the
, mlahap are "fairly llketchy." City Pollee report that
apparently the boat went out of control, at a high rate
rl speed, while attempting to turn from the Ohio River
into the channel. The craft traveled onto the shore line
and struck a tree.

Weekend motorists to ·face
toughest gasoline problems
western states began talking of a
dealer strike in May; saying their
profits have been frozen by federal
edict since March 1974.
Meanwhile, most brand managers
recommendations on dealer strikes announced higher fuel allotments to
until mid.July.
Ohio dealers for July than they had in
An Allsociated Press sampling · of -':;June, but that did nothing to improve
stations in 18 O,hio cities shows prospects for the last weekend nf this
gasoline prices went up me to two month.
cents a gallon over the past week, and
dealer spokesmen say more stations
may be clOsed this weekend than at .
any time this sununer.
The Ohio Automobile Club says
SUpplies wW be tight in this and
surrounding states for the weekend
and the first days of July. It expects
July dellveries of gasoline to dealers
to be fully under Waf after July 4.
Eastern's Local Board of Education
Executives of all Ohio gasoline at its recent meeting accepted the
dealer groups met in Cleveland resignations of two instructors.
Wednesday tlight. They deeided to
Resigning were R. Alan Holter,
delay recommendations on a strike by vocational agriculture instructor, and
station owners until federal officials Mrs. KelT)' O'Connell, high school
can reply to a request for higher E.M.R. , Instructor. Letters· of com·
profits.
mendation will be sent to them by the
James V. Cresente, executive board.
director of the Northern Ohio
The board hired Mrs. Margaret
Petrolewn Retailers Association in Ella Lewis as learning disabilities
Cleveland, said the ~ector of the tutor for the new school year and Mrs.
national gasoline dealers, Risque Betty Osborn as high school
Harper, will meet with White House
and U.S. Department of Energy custodian.
The new superintendent, Richard
officials in Washington July 12 to Roberta, was given authority to
discuss profits.
regulate all employe vacation time as
Some station owners in eastern and determined
by the Ohio Code.
OOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio

motorists this weekend face the
toughest problems of the summer
finding gasoline, but some IJ!IlY find
solace in a deci.!im to delay

The Standard Oil Co. (Ohio) plaiis to
Suow dealers 113 percent of their
year..ago sales for July. Cresente said
he hopes this will spur other brand
managers to further increase July
allotments.
He said up to 90 percent of his
member stations may close Sunday
while others forecast 65 percent
closinR in central Ohio.

Two instructors
•
• •
reszgn poszttons

It was ~ to advertise for bids
on bus tires, bread, milk, bus in·
silrance, gasoline, fuel oil, grease, an·
annual ox roast event t1 freeze and .all equlprn~t and supplies required for designated
Rtn'LAND - The Rutland Fire · programs. .
.
James -autt· reviewed federal
Department 1s ma1dng plans for
Z7th annual July 4th celebration.
. programs with the · ~rd which apA talent show will be held as an proved participation m both the Title
evening highlight for the observance I and the D.P.P.F. programs for the
Wlth prizes of p:;, $15 and $10 to be of. next school year.
.
fend the top three winners:
The board passed a resolbtlon
Residents wishing to take part are · against sponsoring any more board
liked to call 742-2107, 742-2333 or 742- paid trips. All ~leld trips or othet:
2W at their earliest convenience.
stud~t bus trips m the future must go
Tbere will be an ox roast with Mrs. through the activities account.
.
· 1
h
The board also adopted a policy
Pearl IJttle oversee ng t e. requiring all workbooks, teacher
preparations and there will be games, gra'de books and teacher planning
a kiddie ride and food booths on the books be kept on hand by the schools

.Fire department plans

·u-.s

parkgrounds

From 1 to 5p.m. the Dark Hollow

Blue Grass Boys will be oo hand to en·

tertain and in the evening a group
known as Sky Rock will present music
for llatenlng and dancing.

~'

'

.

Injured were Ruth . Casto, . 28;
Phi!Up Garlic, 33, and, ICaren Kent,
22, all of Gallipolis.
caned to the scene at 9:25 p.m.,
Gallipolis City Pollee report that the
111-feet _Stareraft C8m·An apparently
attempted to turn from the Ohio River
into the channel of Chickamauga
Creek, at an excessive rate of speed,
went out of control, traveled up the
shore line and struck a tree.
It has not been detennlned which of
the five occupants was ~rating the
craft.
,

Galila Oeunty Coroner Dr. Donald
R. Warehime has ruled Glenn M.
Smith, Jr., 57, Rt. 4, Kerr, died Thur·
sday evening of head and chest in·
juries tlllffered in ·a I~ accident.
According to sheriff's investigator,
carl Langford, the fatality apparently occurred when a stick
became lodged in hill hay baler. After
he attempted to pull it out, Smith
became entangled in the baler's
rollers.
HlB body was found by a neighbor,
WWlam Kemper, lying partially under the machine.
Smith was dead on arrival at the
HolZer Medical Center. The Gallia
CounW Emergency Medical Service
was at the scene.
Glenn M. Smith, Jr., was a fanner,
a Kyger Creek plant employee and a
veteran of World War D.
Mr. Smith was born July 7, 1922, in
Gallipolis to Glenn Smith, Sr. and the
late Elaine (Harrill) Smith.
Surviving him are hill step.mother,
Minnie L. Smith; a daughter, Frances
Ann Varney, · Columbus; four
brothers, Claude, Spokane, Wash.;
Francis, Columbus; Darrell,

•

Weather

Cleveland; Charles, Columbus; and · sketchy.''
three grandchildren.
The incident ~ under in·
Arrangements will be announced vestigation by Gallipolis City Police
by McCoy-Wetherholt-Moore Funeral and the U. S. Coast Guard.

home.

Thirty-eight of 42 strikers
offered jobs·back at GSI
BY KEVJN KEILY
Gallipolis State Institute will be of.
fering jobs hack to 38 of the 42 employees dlsmlased for their participation in last week's one-day
strike.
Superintendent John Beattie said
the 38 will be getting their jobs under
the provisions of the state's Ferguson
Act. The provlalons state an individual may be rehired with the un·
derstanding he or she will lose
seniority rights, will serve a two-year
probationary period, will not receive
a pay ral.se for a year, and under no
circwD&amp;tances be rehired at a pay
l'ate higher than the one before
dlsnolasal.
The ~ four emplayees will
not be offered back their jobs until
legal consideration of their lndlvldual
cases has been taken.
"What we want to communicate,"
Beattie said, "ia that there were 1,000
good, loyal employees who came to
work and cared for thelt obligation to
the state of Ohio and to the people up
here. ••

Occasional showers or thun·
dersowers
fllnlght with locally heavy
year was adopted with 'classes to stari
thunderstolms possible. Low tonight
on Aug. 28. The year enda May 28.
It Willi agreed to release a newslet- in the low to mid 60s. Mostly cloudy
ter once a montli uuilng the school with a good chance rl showers SaturHigh In the upp.:r 70s. The chan·
year and once during the swruner. A day.
ce
rl
rain ia 80 percent tonight, and 50
repOrt on the atud~t activities accounts was suliiiillted fof .review by pe~ntSa~turda~~Y~·======3C~~~T~o~~~~~
Mrs. Debra Rose, clerk of activities
accounts.
-~
Mrs. Eloise Boeton,ll'gaurer of the
district, reviewed ezpe1 ses for the
district. Pemilaslon was given for an
advance draw to meet payroll during
the beginning of July, this year.
Several cheerleaders were on hand
to discuss an advisor for their group.
The district bus mechanic and a bus
driver were present and eEpressed
concern over the condition of buses.
Roberts, the new superintendent,
was present for the session along with
board members Dorsel Larkins,
Deryl Well, Mrs. Dorothy, Caladay,
Doug Bissell and James Coldwell,

CLEVELAND (AP) -Here are
for a period of two years after use for the wlllnlng uamben drawu 'I'Inlr·
parent viewing and the checking of sday ID lbe Obi. Lottery:
grades. A special meeting was setfor Blue OM; white 11; goltU; WIIHl·
budget review at8p.m, on July 12.
diGa U11'7.
The school calendar for the next

,

liALs'rEAD, outgomg

The three penona IIIJured "'"'
transported by the Gallla CoulltJ
Emergency Medical Service to
Holzer Medical Center.
Casto was admitted to the intelllive
care unit for treatment of a cerebral
concussion and multiple contusiona.
Casto is listed in guarded oondltlm.
Garllc was admitted for treatment
of multiple contusions and a severe
laceration of the left arm. He ia listed
in fair condition.
Kent was admitted and ia listed in
stable condition with a fracture rl the
leftl~ and the light hip.
.
City Police called in the U. S. Coast
Guard to aid in the lnvestlgatioo. U.
Minott, of the Huntington Station
remained at the scene throughout the
night.
I
A spokesman for the Coast Guard
sald this morning that the details of
the fatal accident remain ''fairly

pretldl~t ot the ,

declalon and sincerely hope thole who
accept the offer to return after the
provisions rl the Fetguson Act will
return with a poeltive attitude toward
their duties." .
Beattie's action is in line with the
declaim of the State Department of
Mental Health and Mental Retar·
dation to hire hack all but !:til of the
1,476 mental Institution employees
dlsmlased for being in the one-day
strike.
The diBml&amp;lais were ordered under
the provisions of the Ferguson Act,
which states any public emplayee
who strikes "&amp;hall thereby be considered to have abandoned and ter·
mlnated hill appointment or em·
ployment.''
~~t~ectorDr.nm~

B. Moritz sald earlier this week 138
employees will not be offered back
their jobs because of violent actions
on their part during the strike. The
four at GSl are not being considered
now for the same reason, although
Beattie declined to
what actlma
the four were

meeung, at the Meigs Iiln in Pomeroy. snown left tO '

New Haven Rotary Club, congratulates Dr. Jim light are Rev. John C8mpbell, Incoming secretary.
Lockhart, n~ly Installed president at Thursday's · lreasurer, Halstead, Dr. Lockhart and HalT)' Mllier,
incoming vice-presdlent.
·

\

(\

•\

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        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="50780">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="50779">
              <text>June 28, 1979</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1172">
      <name>lear</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="89">
      <name>wells</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
