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                  <text>8 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday , July 2, 1979 •

Operating budget approved
ATHENS - The Governing Board
of the Southeastern Ohio Voluntary
Education Cooperative (SEOVEC)
approved an operating budet for the
agency in excess of a half million
dollars for the 197~ school year at.
its J1111e '!/meeting·.
The board approved a $537,071
budget for SEOVEC, an agency that
pr 0vides selected educational
programs and services assistance to
27 school districts_, four joint
vocational schools and nine county offices it serves in a ten~ounty area.
The budget items for the '79-'80
year include three slate-funded
special education projects, a grant for
the installation and operation of a
computer for instruction al and accounting purposes, payments from
the school districts served by

•

354 E. Main

SEOVEC amounting to $1.07 per pupil
and· state funding for seven regional
supervisory positions : speech hearing - language, early childhood,
school psychologist and low incidence
supervisors, physical and occupational therapist and vocational
coordinator.
In other action, Dr. Robert Weinfurtner , SEOVEC director, described
to Board members the activities of
three summer diagnostic clinics,
sponsored by SEOVEC at Logan, New
Lexington and Newport.
Forty children, aged five through
19, have been referred by seven
districts and will be tested by
qualified school staff to determine
their ability level in several areas.

Clear, cool weather
predicted Tuesday
By The Associated Press
The low pressure center that was
near stationary in southwest Ontario
1/lrough the weekend has finally'
moved to the east, and a large high
pressure system in central Canada
has begun to move south in its wake.
By Tuesday the high pressure zone
will have spread over all of Ohio;
clearing skies and sending humidities
falling, according to the National
Weather Service.
The forecast calls for clear skies
across the state tonight. It wiU be·
mostly sunny Tuesday, with highs in
the mid 70s to low 80s.

Pomeroy,O

S

PECIAL
MON. THRU FRI.

BARBECUE
&amp; FRIES
$}19

Strike••.
(Continued from page 1)
Conneaut, $21.21; Findlay, $22.24;
Fremont, $22.18; Kent-Ravenna,
$21.91; Marietta, $21.29; Massillon,
$20 .91;
Painesville,
$22.96;
Portsmouth, $21.15; Salem, $21.93;
Steubenville, $23.33; Toledo, $18.41;
Van Wert, $22:68; Youngstown, $21.65.

OPEN FOR BREAKFAST
7 TIL 10

4th of July Chicken &amp; Rib Barbecue
Vz CHICKEN OR RIBS

•3oo

(INCLUDES: BAKED BEANS, COLE SLAW, CHIPS AND R~(L)

AT EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL
SERVING AT 1.1:30
LITTLE LEAGUE BALL GAME AND OTHER ACTIVITIES.

SPONSORED BY ATHLETIC BOOSTERS

The purpose of these tests is to determine what type of educational
progrwn is best suited to meet the
needs of the child, Dr. Welnfurtner
said. Children being served by the
clinics include multi-handicapped,
develOpJ11entally disabled, hearing
and perceptually impaired.
The Governing Board also:
- Approved employment of
SEOVEC stafffor 1~.
~- Approved the transfer of the
operation of the Appalachian
Education Satellite Project (AESP) .
from SEOVEC to Ohio University's
Continuing Education Office, AESP
brings in-!!ervice training, seminars
and- WOIIGhops aqd -?~r 1 types of
educational pro~ to the
Southeastern Ohio area vUi satellite..
:;;;. Renewefi the Nelsonville-York .
Ci&lt;y and Washington County School'
Districts as fiscal agents for SEOVEC
for the 1979-al school year.
- Appointed a committed to beglh
searching for a pennanent facility to
house SEOVEC.
-Gave approval for the SEOVEC staff to prepare and submit to the ·
Local Development District a cornmunlty education proposal, which
would stimulate the utilization of
school facilities and services as communlty centers serving child.family
needs.
- Accepted the resignation of
Sherry Allison, SEOVEC low incidence supervisor.

Publisher
grateful

GRAND JUNCTION, Colo. (AI') A grateful publisher is handing out
more than $1 million in bonuses to his
employees for "helping build a solid
newspaper, one that has at least a
decent ceputation."
Although reluctant to discuss the
individual amounts in detail,
publisher Ken Johnson said Saturday
that the bonuses are being paid to
some 200 people, who were employed
by tile Daily Sentinel on AprilJ6,1979.
That was the day Johnson announced
an agreement to sell the newspaper to
Cox tnterprises Inc., owner of the
Atlanta Constitution.
"I'm laying some money on the
troops," he said. "They are· my
friends, and they've been through
good, bad and otherwise. This is a
chance to ·do something for them in, a
meaningful way ."
"All I'm really doing is trying to
share with the staff some of the
proceed:! of the sale," he added. " It's
a very positive way of saying thanks."
Johnson said the bonuses ranged
from "two or three weeks pay" to
several thousand dollars. The Denver
Post reported Saturday that some
were as large as $40,000.Johnson termed reports that one
staffer received $100,000 "on the high
side."
He said he began calling in staffers
individually Friday to thank them for
a job well done and expects to
complete the process early this week.
"They really are very emotional
MEETS TUF.'!DAY
moments,"
he said. "Reactions vary
The Pomeroy Chamber of Comfrom
exclamations
of 'Oh my God,' to
merce will meet at noon Tuesday at
one that said, 'I'm not worth that
the Meigs Inn.
much."'
Johnson, 46, began as a copy carrier
ASK TOWED
with the newspaper in 1949 and
Marriage licenses were issued to worked his way up to become
Dale Edumund Wilfong, 21, Coolville,
and Robin l...e!! Elkins, 19, Tuppers publisher in June 1970. He said he,
plans to stay on with the Daily
Plains; George Gordon Warner, 23, Sentinel,
which has a daily circulation .
Pomeroy, and Cynthia Gay .Conkle, of 30,000 and 40,000 .Sunday, at least
17, Cheshire.
through the 1980 election.
MEETS FRIDAY
Eli Dennison Post 467, American
Legion, Rutland, will meet Friday,
July 6, at 8 p.m. instead of on their
regular meeting night on July 4.

•

BAKE SALE SLATED
A bake sale will be held July 4, from
9 to 12, in front of the Racine Post
Office sponsored by the Racine
Baseball Association which includes
T-Ball, pee wee, little league, pony
and girls' softball.
All parents are urged to donate
items for the sale. Following the
parade T-Ball an~ pee wee uniforms
only are to be turned in at the bake
sale .

EFFECTIVE JULY 1

SAVINGS RATES
ARE GOING UP
.As of Ju~ 1st
the Farmers Bank
Will Be Paying Higher

PASSBOOK
51f4%
90 DAY CERTIFICATE ............ ~~.~~-~~.~-~~. .~~:~~............. 5112%
1 YEAR CERTIFICATE .............~~~~~~~.~~:~?~:~ ............... 6%
4 YEAR CERTIFICATE .............~~-~~~~-~-s-~:~~~:?~............ .71A%
6 YEAR CERTIFICATE .............~~~~~-~~-~~:~?~:?.0
7%%
8 YEAR CERTIFICATE ............. ~!~.i.~~.~-~.~:~.~~:~~............ 7*%
4 YEAR MONEY CERTIFICATE
Computed Daily
Compounded Quarterly

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

Minimum $1,000.00. Interest raie Of 1%% under the average 4 year yield of
Treasury Securities.

SIO,OOO minimum. Interest rate equal to the rate of 182 day treasury bill rate A
determined at weekly auction .
• s

COME IN TODAY AND START THE
SAVINGS PLAN TO FIT YOUR NEEDS

Far:Ittcrs 8ank
t

Q

Q

POMEROY. OHIO

tw

$40,000 MaKimum insurance for each Depositor
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

'

"

r!

.- •.

FLEXSTEEL

The deep-seating, long-lasting
comfort of Flexsteel's line fur ·
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Flexsteel springs, formed from

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Flexsteel craftsmen insist on

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match their skilled workman ·
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Ktln ·Orteca nardwood, double ·

dowe~ed and corner blOCked lor
extra strength and stability. The
beautiful upholstery of Flexsteel
furniture Is the result of expert
attention to 'detail, deft handling
of the line Fl_exsteel fabrics, and
skilful tailoring .

BAKER FURNITURE

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POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

'

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,.
·'

TUESDAY, JULY 3, 1979

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Paving project okayed
..

-·-.
CAN YOU IDENTIFY? - This picture was taken many years ago
from the steps of the sheriff's department. The Melga County Sheriff's
Department would like very much to have those in the picture identified if
possible. If anyone -knows any of the gentlemen shown notify Sheriff
James Proffitt. The jugs and equipment shown indicate a bust was made
on a still. The picture was taken by Felger of Pomeroy.

snendlng
•

evel s Wl"ll

BY KATIE CROW
P,omeroy Council Monday night
approved an emergency measure
calling for the paving of Main Street
from Sycamore to Butternut Ave., at a
cost of $8,230.
The State Highway deparbnent
earlier had agreed to pave fmn Nye
Av., to Sycamore and from Butternut
to the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge,
excluding the business section due to
the revenue derived from the parking
meters.
Council also under emergency
legislation passed a resolution
borro~ing f5,500 to help pay for the

~-

Today

go up ln new budget
-

.. . in the world

I

r

•

4TH OF JUJ.Y SIZZLER

Middleport, o.
\'

VOL. XXVIII NO. 56

BASEMENT SALE
COLUMBUS, Ohio ( AP ) - Ohio's Lawmakers will return on July 9 or 10
The MI. Moriah Church of God, Rt.
2, Racine , Mile Hill, will hold a lawmakers may have been set back to try to iron out lhe considerable
basement sale July 5, 6, and 7. more than some people may realize differences between the two houses
when the Senate refused to pass the over the budget, said leaders who
HOSPITAL NEWS
two-year state budget bill after the gave up their trip to China and other
House had approved it.
Far East nations with Gov. Jwnes A.
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
Language in a 31-day interim Rhodes after the budget collapse
Saturday Admissions-Salem Yates, budget ·which sailed through both Saturday.
Racine; Vera Drehel, Middleport.
houses Saturday out of desperation to
Senate President Oliver Ocasek, DSaturday Discharges--Eleanor meet a midnight fiscal deadline says Akron, House Speaker Vernal G. Riffe
Gordon, Ronald Dailey, Clara Conroy , that state spending in July will be Jr ., D-New Boston, and Senate
Terry Grogan, Darrell McPherson, essentially what it was in June .
Finance Committee Chainnan Harry
Velma Keller, Kevin Anderson .
In almost every area of Meshel , D-Youngstowa, canceled
Sunday Admissions-John Hein , government, the two-year budget plans to accompany 111e governor on
Minersville; Anna Wheeler, Racine ; would have increased spending levels the Far East trade mission, which will ·
Paul Burns, Pomeroy; Margaret as of July I.
return on July 17.
Jones, Middleport ; Patty Hornsby,
This means that if the budget bill
House Minonty Leader Corwin M.
.AJbany ; Minnie Clark, Middleport. isn't passed by Aug . I, the state will Nixon, R-Lebanon , and House Ways
Sunday Discharge-Anna Crislip. have saved millions of dollars .
and Means Committee Chainnan
However, it also means ·that about Williann E. Hinig , D-New Phildelphia ,
80,000 state employees will n'ot have went along with Rhodes as planned .
Holzer Medical Center
received an 8 percent · pay .boost 'l'lley had to fly to Chicago in a state
Discharges, June 29
contained in the budget for them , and plane with Rhodes to catch up with
Mary Freeman, Harold Gibbs, Jef- that Ohio's welfare clients must wait
frey Grow, . Emily Hill, Harry Hill, for increases in aid to dependent olhers in the Jlilrty, who left Columbus
Ireland Hunt, Mary Israel, Carolyn children which amount to more !,han early Saturday while the budget
debate was still in progress .
Lambert, Edith McGuire, Pamela 12 percent .
Mercer, Roy Mullina, Williwn NorWhat will happen to !Qe extra
Ronald Parkinson, Brian money ?
SCsliTett. Larry Slacey, Ray Thomas,
"Frankly, I don 't know, " House
~('IIIPSOn, Helen Thorne; Mrs.
Finance Committee Chairman Myrl
FUNDS DISTRIBUTED
Walker and son, Olive Watson, H. Shoemaker, D-Bourneville, said
State
Auditor Thomas E .
EulaWQ!fe.
Sunday .
Ferguson
's
office reported today the
BIR'niS, June 29
•
But he added that it is possible for
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ross, son, the Legislature to put it into some kind fourth advance distribution of 1979
WiUow Wood, Ohio.
of supplemental appropriations biU state motor vehicle registration fees
Dllcbarges, JUDe 30
and give it to state agencies totaling $69,975,783.20 to Ohio counties, townships and villages.
Thomas Bailey, Gladys Byerly, retroactively.
Meigs County received $65,941.47.
Mrs. Randy Boggs and son, Margaret
Shoemaker also said the funds could
Cantrell, Patricia Coy, Larry Crank, be reappropriated for other purposes.
Jr., Leo Davidson, Elma Dexter, But if this is done, the entire budget
Ulllan Donahue, Mary Erwin, Melvin process could be thrown open again
Halley, Rachel JerJDings, Ayrian and lobbying efforts could be renewed
SQUAD RUNS
Lutz, Carl Lawh9rn, Oeorge Linten, by agencies clamoring for more
Pomeroy Emergency Squad was
Lesley Lyons, Phyllis Mullin, Fran- money .
called to Monkey Run~at 12:35 a .m.
ces Netral, John Royster, James
The chairman said he hopes that Sunday for Paul Burns·who was taken
Saunders, Kark Sprague, Goldie doesn't occur, adding, " I don 't think to Veterans Memorial Hospital. At
Terry, Robert Thorson, Virginia Van you are going to see it happen ."
I :41 p.m. Saturday; the squad went to
Meter, Eugene Wess, Misty White.
The record $3 .5 billion for primary Lasley St. for Harold Triplett who was•
Blrtbs, JUDe 30
and secondary education in the taken to Pleasant VaUey Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Tim Lambert, son, document is safe from infringement
Thurman. Mr. and Mrs. Darmy Shoemaker said language in the main
Farleigh, Jr., daughter, Weliston. Mr. budget, which he sponsored at the
and Mrs. Charles Cox, son, McArthur. request of the Rhodes administration,
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley CoM, son, says the school districts will get their
TO END 111ARli.IAGES
Gallipolis. Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Camp- money retroactively whenever the bill
In Meigs County Common Pleas
bell, son, WUkesville.
Court Woodrow Quee11, Rt. 1, Shade,
is enacted.
Dl.scbarges, July 1
Meanwhile, the schools, like other filed for divorce against Audrey
Tracy Aleshire, Dewey Birchfield, government agencies, will get Kathleen Queen, address unknown .
Jo Lynn Bailey, Tupper Plains and ·
Evan Casey, Mrs. Gary Crosswhite continuation payments.
and daughter, Delford EUyson, Jr.,
Only skeleton sessions will be held Gregory Lee Bailey, Tuppers Plains,
Nora Fannin, Phillip Garlic, Mrs. by the Senate and House this week. filed for dissolution of marriage.
Charles ·Lane and daughter, Mrs.
ADen Lunsford and son, Louise
Morris, Audrey Patterson, Mary •
Rater, Thelma Ramey, Dorothy
Sayre, Janet Smith.
Blrtbs, JulyJ
.
Mr. and Mrs. Gene·· oavis, ~.
Pomeroy. Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Potter,
son, Oak Hill.

Substantial Penalty For Early Withdrawal
•• • ,

at

ELBERFELDS

MONEY MARKET CERTIFICATE

•

•

'·

REG. s4.50
CROSS YOUR
HEART

V-erdict in
HAMILTON, Ohio (AP ) -Gary
Morningstar was · found guilty
Monday in Butler County Common Pleas Court ol aggravated
murder in the deaths of two
Florida.residents.
Mo111ings1ar, 1'1, was sentenced
to two life prison terms for k!Wng
Carmen Buetti and Terri BeMet
of Miami, F1a.
Prosecutor Jolm Holcomb told
the Jury of nine wmoen and three
men that Morningstar and an •ccompllce, Alan Scott, killed the
Florida couple rar two pounds of
cocaine Bod •10,000 cash.
Scott already hu been found
guilty of 'murder and was aentellj:ed to 15 yean-to-life In the
Ohio Penltentlarv.

BRA
$299
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Ptaytex padded stretch bra with stretch strap, lace cups. ·Sizes 3:i.
through 36A, 32 through 38B. .
.
LINGERIE DEPT. 2ND FLOOR

ELBERFELDS IN ,OMEROY

One hurt, cited
in Monday wreck

The (;allla-Meigs P06t State Highway Patrol reported a traffic accident
Monday night in whlch one persoq taken,however. It was pointed out that
was injured. ,
At 4:45 p.m., Orenda F. Allie, 25, the street department fund was $8,000
Vinton, was driving southbound on SR in the red with an additional $4,00() in
7 when It ill reported she fell asleep at unpaid bills:
Chief Webster sumltted his monthly
the wheel. Her car struck a vehicle
report
which showed hiS deparbnent
driven by Jeffery B. RusseU, '¥1, Mid25 aCcidents, made 28
investigated
dleport, in the rear. Russell was also
arrests,
collected
$2,861 from parking
southbound on 7.
3,683 miles.
meters
and
drove
Allie complained of injuries and
The meeting was o~~ ~y prayer
was taken to Holler Mtdieal ()enter
by the Gallia CoUnty Emergency Ser- · by Mayor A'nilrews. 'lttlendmg were
vice where she was treated and Mayor Andrews, Jane Walton , cle•k,
Betty Barohlck, Yo1111g,. Wehrung ,
released .
and
Rod Karr., council members,
1
Alii~ was cited for failure to keep an
Krautter,
Don Wa rd and Chief
· assured clear distance.
Webster.

OFFICERS INSTAllED - New «iflcers were installed at Monday:s meeting of Carpenl\!rs' Local650. ·
The group includes, seated from the left, Donald
Moore, president; William J . Roush, vice president;
Gary Saunders, recording secretary; Raleigh Hemsley, treasurer, and Mason Fisher, warden; back row,

=:~oo:;t~r~~~orc~::a~Governors ·get
N p
Pr .d t
WASHiNGJOth\ fed)
rulesl ~nt
Carter, ace Wl
er~ es ~
contribute to long ga~J.ine hnes m
urban ~eas, ;s
g;vernor~
new au or~tr 0
. up
_percen
of their state s gaso~ supplies from
the country to the City· . .
That w~~dt be ~d ~d~•on ~thed 5
percent se asl e
ey
ea Y
control.
Carter made the new offer Monday
after ..bemg told federal allocation
_rules p~t the gasolme where the cars
are not.

I

::Ungto

To see Shah
MEXICO CITY (AP)- Fonner
Pre8ldent Richard Nixon Ia expected 'lo travel to Mexico
!10111Ctime this week to visit Shah
Mohammad Reza Pahlavi of
Iran, a U. S. Embassy source
reported Monday night.
"It is true that we think he' ill
coming, but we don't know
when " said the source, who
not ·to be identified. "We
are ready to help out in any way
we can with logistics · or
whatever, but so far there have
been no official requesla for any
kind of assistanCe. "
"In all llkellhood, given what
we know, we can expect Nixon to
visit the shah later this week,"
the source said.

..

.
"'

White sentenced
.

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Dan
White, whose manslaughter conviction triggered a riot by
homosexual5, faced sentencing
today for k!Wng Mayor George
Moscone and Supervisor Hal"Vey
Milk.
White could recel ve a
rnaxirnum sentence of seven
years and eight months in prison,
with the possibility of parole in
about five years. Th.e minimum
sentence that could be imposed
by trial Judge Walter Calcagno is
four years.
Since his arrest after the
shooting of Moscone pnd Milk in
City HaU last November '!1, the
fonner firefighter and pollee offleer has been in custody in the
San Franci8CO Jail.

TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) - A
Toledo bus driver was. report~y
sbot and killed Monday night
during a robbery attempt.
Toledo police report that the
unidentified driver was robbed
shortly before 10 p.m. on the
clty'ssouthwestslde.
.
It ill not known whether the
crime -was coMected with the
strike by municipal workers In
. this northwestern Ohio city, but
officials of the Toledo Area Rapid
Tra1111it Authority canceled late
night runs by their bus drivers In
the wake of the incident.

left to right, Sam Boston, new business representative
and financial · secretary; Robert Larkins, Williwn
Harris and Cecil Rice, all truste.es and Henry C. Peery,
installing officer who has served as business agent for
the past 25 years. The new officers will serve three
year terms. Absent was Harold Wells, conductor.

new authority

The common reaction of several he proposed in his last energy speech.
governors queried . was that they
There also could be some replays of
would have to wait until they see earlier proposals such as the ill-fated
specifics of the plan before la• on automobiles that get poor
commenting on how it might work in mileage, which was part of a package
their states.
Carter sent to Congress in 1977,
Carter planned to work today on Referring to ·that package Monday,
details of a "bold and forceful White House press secretary Jody
program" to cut the-nation's thirst for · PoweU said : "If those proposals had
'imported oil.
been accepted, we woold be in much
He will explain the general outline better shape than .we are now."
of the program in a broadcast speech
This time Carter is taking special
to the nation Thursday at 9 p.m. EDT pains to clear his proposals In
- his third energy speech since taking advance with key members of.
office.
Congress and their staffs. Powell said
The program is expected to include two task forces are heing set up to
a revived standby gasoline rationing include administration and White
plan, federal incentives for producing House officials and representatives of
synthetic
fuels,
mandatory Co!lgress. One deals with energy and
thermostat controls for non- the other to the closely related topic of
residential buildings and a fleshe~ut inflation.
version of an "energy security fund"
Carter said Monday he is convinced
Congress, which so far has rejected
an administration proposals aimed
specifically at curbing otl use, is now
ready to act because of current fuel
shortages, the · threat of a home
heating oil "crisis" next winter and
the sbock of this year's 60 percent
Open house for the public will be price increase by oil exporting
held at BelleviUe Locks and Dwn Sun· countries.
day, July 15, from 2 to 6 p.m. This
" I want a bold and forceful program
project is located at ReedsviUe, Ohio that ... will be highly acceptable and
on Route 124.
tliat we can move without delay ,'1'
The locks where the open house will
told a group of energy advisers
be held are on the Ohio side of the Carter
at the start of a White House meeting
Ohio River. Locks are not accessible Monday.
from the West Virginia side.
Just before that meeting began,
Lock personnel of the Army Corps Energy Secretary James Schlesinger
of Engineers will conduct tours of the told Carter, in a murmured exchange
project, which was built under the
picked up by tape rec~rder
direction of the Corps and is main- microphones, that federal gasoline
tained by the Huntington District of aUocation rules are hurting urban
that organization.
_
areas by continuing to ship gasoline to
Litter bags and Information the country despite reductions in long
material will be distributed.
distance driving.
'"'
Refreshments will be sold by the
Reedsville Little League Boosters. ::::::::::'1!!:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::-:::::
Picnic facilities are available.
••'
OFF WEDNESDAY
Children under 12, because of the
The Ohio Valley Publishing Com. ~
proximity to water, must be acpaay will be clooed Wednesday iD or:·:·
companied by adults.
The auxiliary chamber will be der that employees 1118Y obaerve ID· ·..
closed from 1 to 7 p.m. on the day of depeodeace Day. Publlcatloa will ..
the open house. No morning facilities resume as UBual Thunday~
will be available at 'the locks for :::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::;:;::::::::::~::: ::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::recreation craft.

Open house
set July 15

asked

Driver killed

PLAYTEX

STYLE 56 -

•

paving of Main Street. Paving is
e•pected to get underway within three
weeks it was indicated Monday night .
Council expressed its pleasure in
the support· given by residents at a
Jlleeling last week on the city income
tax measure . Council agreed to have
the village solicitor draw up an
ordinance on the city tax that will be
read at the next meeting.
Bill young, councilman, reported he
attended a Consumer Conference
Council in Columbus recently .
Purpose of the meeting was to get all
mayors to participate in a project to
have a standard rate for all Columbus
and Southern Ohio Electric users.
Young said there are 755 different
rates for the electric company. He
also added that the consumer group is
. in favorable of rule 28 under House
Bill 156.
Betty Baronick, council woman,
reported she is still ' receiving
numerous complaints regarding

workers at Beech Grove Cemetery.
She alleged that they are not working
as they should.
Mayor Clarence Andrews stated the
men are working and he makes
numerous trips_to the cemetery and
the men are always tiusy. It was noted
that the cemetery covers 35 acres and
is hard to maintain.
Council, in other business ,
discussed a bill it had received for
repair on the old cruiser. Council felt it
was extremely high . The matter will
be referred to the village solicitor.
Council also discussed tbe purchase
of a gas powered eel, but no action
was taken . Council agreed to accept
bid:! for the removal of three trees at
Beech Grove Cemetery,
Larry Wehrung; councilman,
suggested, since the streets are
cleaner and people are pleased, that
the streets ·be hosed and swept twice a
week to keep them in the best of
condition.
11 wa s reported that the traffic light
at the intersection of Union Ave . and
Mulberry is not working properly.
Chief of Police Jed Webster is to
contact Baldwin and Son,Columbus,
to see if the light can he repaired .
Jack
Krautter ,
street

I

HEALTii CARE CENTER- The new Pomeroy
Health Care Center located on Rock Springs Road (old
Route 1'1) will be opened In August by ~ericare Corporation of Columbus. The one floor structure can ~c-

commodate 100 patients in four private rooms and forty-eight semi-private rooms. The structure will also
house many other fully equipped and staffed offices to
serve the patients.

Truckers going back -to work
Associated Press
Movement of food and goods on the
nation's highways continues to show
"substantial improvement" and the
trend indicates the nationwide
truckers' protest "should be over
shortly," the Interstate Commerce
Commission reported Monday.
"The facts are - whether they
admit it or not - the truckers are
going back to work," ICC spokesman
Doug Baldwin said in Washington.
The agency's nationwide survey
showed a continued trend of more
owner~er~tor trucks hauling food,
household Items and other goods,
Baldwin said. He said regional offices
mentioning violence in their reports
Monday sbowed such incidents were
down substantially .
. Independent truckers associations
in more than a half~ozen states have
voted to endorse a return to work
following the Carter administration's
announcement of a six-point program
for endihg the prQtest, now in its
fourth week.
The government's program
designated .eight interstate highways
as ''safe corridors" for truckers,
established task forces to deal wil~
truckers' problems and 11ddressed key

grievances concerning allocation of
diesel fuel and weight and size
regulations.
A significant number of truckers'
groups, however, appeared to be
going along with their national
leaders in holding out for more
concessions from the government.
And some protest leaders were calling
for an escalation of strike activity.
Michael Parkhurst, president of the
· Independent tr.uckers Association,
conceded that "people have gone back
to work as they are forced into the
position of going complete bankrupt."
He claimed, however, that '-'the
majority are holding out."
''The battle is not over, •' he said in a
telephone interview from Washington.
In Boston, convoy of 43 vehicles
converged on the Massachusetts
Statehouse for the second time in 17
days, and truckers' represe11tatives
met with Gov. Edward J. King.
A convoy also cirded Daley Civic
Center in Chicago's Loop area
Monday. Bill Hayes, president of an
fllinois group known as the Na tiona!
Council of Independent Truckers, said
reports of a weakening of the
truckers' shutdown resulted from "a
ploy
.. -by the ~overnme.nt. "

a

Lea4tfs of the Independent
Truckers Association, believed to be
the largest truckers' group taking
part in the protest, also have refused
to call for an end to the strike.
The association, which says It has
nearly 39,000 dues-paying members
but represents 90 percent of the
country's 110,000 independent longhaul drivers, estimated 50,000
truckers were still off the job over the
weekend . The estimate could not be
confirmed.

?

SWIMATIION JULY 31
The annual swimath&lt;in to raise
funds for the Meigs County Heart
Fund has been set for July 31 at the
Middleport Community Pool. Mrs.
Pat Kitchen is chairman of the
evening. Ther_e wiU be trophies and
awards. for the most laps completed
by boys and girls taking part. Those
wishing entry forms should contact
·
Mrs. Kitchen at the pool. .
SQUAD CALLED
BUILDINGS RESTORED - These two aged brick buildings on Ea!rt ..
The Syracuse ER Squad was called
Second
Street in Pomeroy have been restored to their natural beauty by
this morning at 5 a.rn. for GleMa
.
sandblasting
done by Gheen's Painting Company. The building on the left
Davis, a medical patient, who was
·
houses
the
office
of Douglas Little, attorney and the building on the right
taken "to Holzer Medical .Center.
wlll soon house the offices of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Knight, also attorneys,
~

.

•

II

�2- The Daily Sentinel, Middl~port -Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, July 3, 1979

.

MIDDLEPORT WRANGLERS - JtmiorGirls Sof·
tball team- Front, mascot Jackie Bacon. First row, I·
r , Paula Swisher, Althea Aeiker, Jody Miller, Cindy
Little , Shelia Pullins, Vicki WiS&lt;! . Second row, Scott

McKinney, coach, Margie Miller, Tracy Herman, An·
drea Batey, Anita Aei.ker, Susie Barker, Jack Blicon,
assistant coach. Back, Esther Bacon, coach. Absent
were Shelly Fox, Sherri Fox, Karen Goggins, Lisa Hoffman , Traci McMann , Rhonda Haddox.

T·BALL RAMS -Front, 1-r, Van Klein, Kevin Barton, Mike Fink, Susanne CaSS&lt;!ll , Michael Barton, Mike

Misconception angers Seaver
CINCINNATI (AP ) - Cincinnati
Reds pitcher Tom Seaver has become
convincing a gain , and he 's a ngry
about what he believes is a popula r
misconception !hat he has finall y
become a pitcher out of necessity .
" I pitched for 13 year s, " said
Sea ver . " People who think all I did ·
was throw like Nolan Ryan every da y,
that 's absurd ."
Seaver said that he still has the good
fa s tba ll whi c h earned him the
nickname "Tom Te rrific. "
" People still have to sit on my
fastball. If they don't, they 're dead ,"
said Seaver. " No matter what people
say about my fastball - th ey were

say ing it was gone in 1974 -

I still

have it. "

Seaver notes he now has more of "a
selec tion" whe n he pitches.
" I have more confidence in all my
pitches," he said. " l:m not afraid to
throw any pitch when I'm behind .
Earlier in my career, I hild no
confidence in them and had lD come in
with the fastball ."
Aft.er losing fi ve of his first seven
decisions, Seaver has bounced back
fr om injury problems and won four of
his last five starts. In his last outing,
the three-time Cy Young Award
winner shut out the San Francisco
Giants on three hits Saturday .
Sa n Francisco's Billy Nort h has

noted a change from the Seaver of old . alt.er it's all over and I've done well, I
" He really takes his time now, " said can sit back, evaluate it, and
North . " He l~s like he's thinking appreciate what I have done. "
more. I haven 't faced him that much,
but I think he shook off more signs
today than I' ve ever S&lt;!en him do .
That' s an indication of ' I ' m
thinking."'
After the game, North compared
Seaver lD an artist.
"Seaver looked as if he was pain tin '
today, you know ... a little like Da
By Greg BaHey
Vinci or Michelangelo," North said.
In Pony League action last week ,
"That's exactly the way I feel about host Middleport banged out 12 hits
the pitching business," Seaver enroute to an ~ win over Syracuse.
admitted. " Pitching is an art . I don' t That win raised Middleport's record
appreciate it while I'm doing it, but to $-2 lD tie them with Racine and the
Pomeroy A's for first place.
Wiruting pitcher Jeff Wayland went
the distance ani! contributed a single
and double at the plate.
Wayland fanned 10 and walked just
two. Terry Wayland socked a home
fUll and single while Dave Hoffman
slammed two singles .
Bill Powell and John Wara each
tripled, and Ward and Dave Follrod
r ear-()10 Ausun, a Kolling Hills, Calif ., got a double each. Jinuny Boyer and
Danny Hysell each singled.
schoolgirl, in the other.
Eric Cwmingham took the loss and
" I til ink Chris is the toughest
mentally of thOS&lt;! 'Who have come teamed with Brian Anns to strike out
through ," said Kin g , · a six-time four and walk four . SyncUS&lt;! got only
Wimbledon
c hamp ion .
"The three hits, singles by Brian Riffle, ArS&lt;!mifinalists are of two distinct types . ms, and Cbarles Cbapman.
MEIGS -MASON COUNTY
Chris and Tracy sustain their drive
PONY LEAGUE SCHEDULE
inwardly. · · .
July l
" Martina is physically the strongest
Raci ne at Pomeroy Royals ; M id·
- she is a brute - but emotionally she dleport at Rutland ; Eastern at

'

"The overwhelming majority ofmenthol smokers reported that
low tar MERIT MENTHOL delivered taste equal to--or better than- leading high tar menthols. Cigarettes having up to twice the tai'

WIMBLEDON, England f AP J ,Billie J ea n King shrugged off the
disappointment of losing to Tracy
Austin 00 analyze the chances of the
four . Wimbledon S&lt;! mi.finatists.
Bill ie J ean bel ieves tw o-time

- National Smoker Study

cha mpion Chris Evett Lloyd is the
most psyched-up o.f the four.
Uoyd plays Evonne Goolagong
Ca wley in one of Wednesday 's
semif ina ls . Defend ing c ha mpion
Marlina Navratilova meets the 11).

CONTINUED CLEARANCE SALE

tops Syracq.se

is up and down .
'' EvoMe really cares and her game
suits these courts."

OF NATIONALLY KNOWN &amp;llANOS OF SHOES

Fo7'ihe'w;;;:,----l-

...-...--------F.o r the Men

r~~;dB~~J~~r~~~p:rtfetoi:i~tt!
SANDALS &amp; · . FLORSHEIM I. doubles
, would . not be drawn on
making a forecast, on either the
I singles or her own chances in the
JARMAN
DRESS
I mixedand women's doubles .
I
HOES
~
HUSH PUPPIES beatAusunBillietnokJeanmore&amp;-4,than6-7, two6-2. hours to
S

--.-.------

_ easy Street _
Joyce
Hush Puppies Cover
Girl - And Many Others.
Fo-rT-he-M-en_ _ _ _ _ _

----

-

uThat was one of Ule best wins of

BAGS REDUCED

- my life, " said Trac y, who trailed 1}.2 in
the fina l S&lt;!t " I told myS&lt;!l! ·to fight
harder than ever ."
Austin 's semifinal opponent,

GOOD SELECTION
BUT NOT

j___e_ve_R_Y _slz_e___

.-

HARREY SHOES. INC.

I

9a.m .·S p.m . Mon .
lhru Thurs . 4 Sat. ·
9 a.m.·8 p. m . Fri.

Middle of Upper Block
.
'"Pomeroy, 0.

,~

~

,..

Vr~

L_.;.~=~.:.~----· -------------=---·-

Uoyd, beaten by Navratilova in a
dramatic final last year, feels she is
better prepared mentally this time .
"This year I am tournament tough - I
wasn 't last year. Having played
East bourne (a recent Wimbledon
"warmup" tournament) and won
there, I believe I can do it here."

'

Mason .

July 4
Pomeroy A 's at Syra c use (2)
Julys
Syr ac use at Ra c ine
July 6
Mason at M iddl eport ; Ru tland at
Pomeroy Ro yal s; Pomeroy A 's at
Eastern .

Middleport

Pomeroy A •s
Racine
Eastern
Pomeroy R:oya ts
Rutland
Mason
Syracuse

5-2
4 J
3 3

2 4
2 5
1 6

Natlooalad·Jertialq: rcpresea&amp;atlve, Landco
AN~Latet, 3lt1 Euclid .he., CleveliDd, Ohio
Mll5.

Subllc:rtpUoa 111&amp;e1: DeUvtred by carrier
wbert aval.l.able to cnll per week. By Molar
Roule wlaere carrier ltrvlce oot nalllble, Oat
By mall Ia Ohio aDd w. Va., One
mtoth,
Year, $27.50; 511: motJtJu, $IUO; 1'ltrM mouJ
tbl, a5t; Elaewlltre $1UO year ; Six montlui
tlUI; Tbree montJu, ...... Sublcrtptioa price
1Dtladf!_Su.Dday11met• ~Dtfael.

"·

•

MURINE EAR DROPS
0.5

oz . w/Washer $2 .99 V81Ue

THE WORKS
TOILET BOWL CLEANER
Ots. $1 .19 Value

. OATMEAL COOKIES
CREME FILLED

GARRITY DISPOSABLE
FLASHLIGHT
$2.29 Value

~-79&lt;Value

~jt~~.- . 65¢
DESENEX AEROSOL

J &amp; J BABY OIL

2.7 oz. $2.69 Value

4

oz. $1 .60 Value

99¢
SUMMERS EVE

NESTEA INSTANT TEA

Reg./Herbal Tw in Pk. $1 .37 Value

2 oz. $2.39 Value

i1 69¢
' .

INCREDIBLE SOAP
MACHINE

$265

Yell ow $4.00 Value

DEXATRIM CAPSULES

IH '"$~

ALLEREST 24•

INSULIN SYRINGES

$2.09 Value

BD-8410 U·100 27 G
tOo $19 .99 Value

CAPRICE AM/FM
PORTABLE RADIO

REACH ADULT
TOOTHBRUSH

AC / DC $24.95 Value

Med./Solt $1.35 Voluo

·

TRAVEL KIT
MENS JUMBO

Reg. 2.5 oz. $2.29 Value

AMITY MENS BILLFOLD

PERSONNA DOUBLE II
RAZOR
$3.50 Value

(-."r'
1~-;:i.

NATUREMADE
VITAMIN E
400 I U $ 1 ;Value

' ..
AIR POT
1.9 Lller $12.99 Value

MEIGS TIRE CENTER, INC.
John Fultz, Mgr.'

700 E. Main, Po.meroy, 0 •

,•

"Summer Savings Spree"

$6.98

Kmgs: 8mg .. ·cr ,' j 6 mg nrcoune1DO's: 11 mg ta~:· 0. 7n19 n1cotine av. perc1garene .FTCReport May' 78

,.

radio

p.•.

If you ever need to collect on one of your Insurance
policies, it's good to know you are working through people
. who are ready to go to bet for you. Like our " crew " at
The Insurance Store.

•

The first trans-Atlantic
broadcast was made in 1925.

~-----

5 2

0.

Kings &amp; lOO's

Th e Las t
Co mmonw ealth
P arliament of England was dissolyed
lO 1660.

5 2

TIOO~ ~~lill'\JillGO rill~~® ffil1!Jl2
'' 00)~~®\'!K~Ja'ITrJJGd®CD®DG ~GarnW~ '

Warning: The Surg eon Gen eral Ha s Determ ined
That Ciga rette Sm ok 1n g Is Dange rous to You r Health.

... .

Frash . Back, Eddie Crooks, Heath Richmond, Randy
Carpenter, Tricia Baer , .John Tillis, Jr.

Orange

PONY LEAGUE STANDINGS

llfE DAIL V SENTINEL
Navratilova, took nine successive ·
IUSPS 11.1-!110)
games against Australian Dianne
Fromholtz to win U , 6-3, tH1 after
losing the first set in just 20 minutes .
Uoyd outlasted Australian Wendy
DEV&lt;YI'ED TO 11IE
Turnbull 6-3, 1).4 after a I 1'.!-hour
• lNTERE9'TOF
..EIGS-MASON AREA
baS&lt;!line battle. " I have never lost to
ROBERTHOF.fl.ICII
her and I found she couldn't hurt me,"
City Editor
Pabl.bitcd d.Uy escep' S.mrday by Tbe Olu J
said Chris alterwards. "I think I am
PubU.hiq Compauy-MuJtimtdia, lllc.,
ready to play .Evonne now. I haven't V.Uey
·lll Coart SL, Pomeroy, Oblo 4S7U. Blililleu
played her for 18 months, but I don't
0111« Pboae Ill· !151. Editorial Pbo..
think her game has changed that 11!..115'1.
Secolld dUipot&amp;ale paid aiPomcroy,Ob.lo.

much."

\

t

t

Middleport

16-year-old Tracy Austin ·
knocks off·Billie Jean King

..

. ,.
I

992·?101

�.

,•.

.

,.· ... .. ,
-~

... .
~

.,.

).

J

\

·-

•

'.

.

SOMEONE HAS RIPPED OFF ·
AGOOD SAMARITAN, AGE 7
DEAR HElEN AND SUE:
Last' year we wrote about Douglas
Widner, then 6, who collected for
JeiTY Lewis' Muscular Dystrophy
fund by selling lemonade all swruner.
Well, this year he was getting
things set up again, and his parents
had bought him a special table. Then
someone came up on their porch and
stole.it! After it had been all cut to his
size and painted, etc. Wl!at do you say
·about· a person who , deliberately
steals from a helpful little ldd? DOUGLAS'S FRIENDS AT UNION
SCHOOL, PENNSYLVANIA
DEAR FRIENDS:
This thief is so sinall he could crawl
under a hunkered-down louse! Let's
hope Douglas's many friends have by
now fixed him up with a new table. HElEN
~

'

R. Kitchen, Greg Reager, Coach Ed Kitchen. Absent
were Scott Hanning and assistant coach Ed Baer.

•

Tommy. John stops
Boston nine, ·7-2

•••••
•
••••
•• •• •• ••
••• •••

.

ByALEXSACHARE
AP Sports Writer
Torruny John has been taking his
lumps thes.e days - not from
American League opponents but from
his own teammates on the New York
Yankees.
On Saturday he was shagging flies
in the outfield when one of the balls hit
him on the right forearm. On Monday
night, before he was scheduled to
pitch against the Boston Red Sox, he
was taping a television interview
while the Yankees were taking infield
practice when he was struck under the
right ear by an errant throw.
"I was talking," said John, "and the
next thing I knew I was on the ground.
My head was going around and
around. "
John got up , was given scme
medication and then took the mound
as if nothing had happened. He limited
the rugged Red Sox to five hits and
became the American League's first
12-ilame winner with a 7-2 triumph .
in other AL a.ction the Texas
Rangers blanked the Baltimore
Orioles ~. the California Angels
topped the Oakland A's 8-3, the
Minnesota Twins beat the Seattle
Mariners 7-0 and the Cleve land
Indians defeated the Detroit Tigers IH
in 11 innings. ·
·
Jim Spencer's home run in the fifth
inning snapped a 1-1 tie, Jackscn

SPECIAL
10 lb. Bag

XINGSFORD CHARCOAL
&amp; GULF CHARCOAL
FLUID 32 oz.
'2.50

CITY LIMITS
DRIVE THRU
748 N. Second St.
Middleport, 0.

homered in the sixth and the Yankees
broke the game open with four runs in
the seventh on an RBI triple by Willie
Ra!jilolph, a squeeze bunt by Bobby
Murcer and a two-run single by Lou
Piniella.
Rangers 2, Orioles 0
Baltimore, which had won 22 of its
previous 25 games, began a !:!-game
road trip by being blanked at Texas.
The Hangers' Steve Comer, 11-0,
scattered seven hits, struck out two
and walked three.
Texas got both its runs in the third
inning when Richie Zisk doubled,
Johnny Grubb walked and Jim
Sundberg doubled them both home.
Angels 8, A's 3
Don Baylor hit his fifth home run in
five days, singled twice, scored twice
and drove in three runs as California
topped Oakland . Baylor leads the

BASEBALL -SCOREBOARD

major h;agues with 69 runs batted in .
Baylor singled to drive in one run
and scored another as the. Angels
scored five times against Oakland 's
Mike Morgan , ().2, in the third inning.
He hit his 17th home run of the season
off Mike Norris in the sixth.
Twins 7, Mariners 0
Darrell Jackson and Mike Marshall
combine&lt;!, on a six-hitter and Glenn
Adams had three hits and drove in two
runs as MiMesota won its fourth in· a
row. The Twins broke the game open
with five runs in the third inning
capped by Butch Wynegar's two-run
double .
,
Indians 8, Tigers 4
Jim Norris snapped a 4-4 tie with a
bases-loaded triple in the lith inning
and came home on a sacrifice fly by
Mike·Hargrove as Cleveland defeated
Detroit.

Seaver named
player of week
CINCINNATI (AP) - Mike LaCoss
got off to an 8-0 start, and veteran
pitcher Tom Seaver bas been named
National League player of the week.
However, the Cincinnati Reds haven't
been scoring many runs to support
LaCoss, Seaver ' 1d the rest of the
team's pitching staff.
As a result, the club that led the
league's Western Divisio!l during
most of May continues to slip farther
behind the Houston Astros. But the
second-place Red&gt; will get a chance to
help cut Houston 's eight-game bu lge
beginning tonight as they host the
P -·., "3 in a three-game holiday series.
The series kicks off the Reds'
longest home stand of the season - 14
games in 13 days against the Astros,
the Pittsburgh Pirates, the St. Louis
Cardina ls and the Chicago Cubs.

-NOTICE

WE WILL BE
CLOSED
JULY 4 &amp;5
WEDNESDAY &amp; THURSDAY
'

-RUTLAND
FURNITURE
· Arnold Grate

Rutlar:'d, 0.

742·2211

Baseball At A GlaDce
By Tbe Associated Press
AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST
W. L Pet. GB

Baltimore
Boston
M ilwaukee
New York
Detroit
Cleveland
Toronto

25 .684
(Krukow 5·51
47 29 .618 5 1f2
New York (Kob el 3·3 ) at
45 33 .577 8111 Ph iladelph ia (Chi' istenson 2·6).
46 36 .544 11
Pittsburgh (Candelaria 6·6 or Bi bby
:M 38 .486 15 1h 3 21 at St. Lou is 1B. ForsC'h J·BJ.
35 42 .455 17
San Francisco &lt;Hal icki 5·3) al
24 57 .296 31
Atlanta &lt;Brizzolara 2·3) .
WEST
Houston (W ill iam s 3·3) at Cin

Texas
California
Minnesota
Kansas City

Chicago
sea ttle
Oakland

33

(M oore

21n

.429 11
34 47 .420 12
23 58 .284 23
44

1,0)

at

Detroit

PAN AMERICAN GAMES
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico lAP )
Ken Sutton, a roller . ska1er from
Muskegon, Mi ch. won the first gold
medal presented 1n the Vlll Pan
American Games as the United States
took an earlvJ lead
th em ed as
I ra ce .
(
The Ameri ca n swimm ing and
diving squads captured seven gold
medals and 12 medals overall while
t'
f'
' ·
m
·

set m g

NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST
W. L. Pet.
Montreal
44 27 .620
Pittsburgh
38 34 . 528
Chi cago
37 34 .521
St. Louis
38 55 .521
Philadelphi a
40 38 '.513
New York
30 42 .417
WEST
Houston
50 31 .617
Cinci nnati
41 38 .519
San Francisco
40 39 .506
San Diego
35 48 .411
Los Ange les
34 47 .410
At ladnta
32 46 .410

LB.

79

2801,

$159

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

298 SECOND ST.

POMEROY, 0.
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU

we wrote Douglas asking that he tell
us more about himself. Here is his letter in reply :
"Helen and Sue: One day while I
was sitting watching TV, I saw some
children that needed help, they
couldn't run and play like me. They
· had MD so I thought I would like to do
something about it so I went to James
Way and got me a can that said Help
Jerry's Kids on it. So I had been helping out, I stand outside of stores plus
sell lemonade. This year I made my
.own garden and l am selling fresh
vegetables plus lemonade.
"I enjoy helping someone who
needs my help. I will be eight July .7.
Helen and Sue, I am hoping some day
I will get a letter from Jerry Lewis. I
would like him to know I'm helping ·
his kids again this year. I turned in
around $50 or more last year. I am
happy about that because I love
everyone, and . I am goil)g to work
harder this year. - Dougias Widner ,
149 Wawaset Rd., West Chester, Pa.,
19380."
Douglas, you're a young man we 're
proud to know ! And we're sending
you a cheCk for the Jerry Lewis Fund.
(Should readers want to contribute
through Douglas, mall checks made
out to Jerry Lewis Muscular
Dystrophy Fund, to the abOve ad·
dress. You'll not only help a worthy
cause, but you'll almost insure that
Doug receives a personal thank-you
note from Jerry himself. - HElEN
AND SUE

FRANKIES

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DEAR HElEN AND SUE :
May we use your colwnn to find
. young men whose mothers took DES,
a synthetic fonn of estrogen, during
their pregnancy? They are being
sought by Stanford University
Medical School researcher, Dr.
Robert ~essler. He is attempting to
confinn a suspected link between
DES and reproductive system abnonnalities, including sterility and
genital tUIIIOI'S.
U the link is discovered, Dr. Kessler
and his associates in the division of
urology will study way3 of rever.ling
the damage.
Men who know they were exposed
to DES before birth, and who desire a
free evaluation Should contact the
division of urology, Stanford Univer·
sity Medical Center, Slllnford, Calif.,
94305 (telephone : (4ta) 497.,';746 ).
. Thank you. - A SPOKESMAN FOR
TilE UNIVERSITY
NOTE FROM HANDS : DES was used during the early 1950s to prevent
miscarriages and other problems of
pregnancy. The honnone was later
shown ineffective and was discontinued. In 1971, physicians found a
rare fonn of vaginal cancer in women
whose mothers had taken DES during
their pregnancies. Some studies link
male sexual disorders sexual
disorders to the drug, although so far,
Dr. Kessler has found no such link.

Chicken Breasts .. ~ 99~
Chicken Thighs....l!.89~

THURSDAY- JULY 5TH

. r

FLAVORITE

ALL PLANT PICNIC
.....
OF

OWENS-ILLINOIS GLASS CO._
OPEN TO PUBLIC AFTER 5 PM

CAMDEN PARK

U. S. ROUTE 60 WEST
HUNTINGTON
CLOSED ·
MONDAY EXCEPT LABOR DAY

Rc

MAXWELL HOUSE

INSTANT COFFEE

WHITE

POTATOES
~ LB.

$429

SWEET BRIER

POITED

SUPERIORS

301,
Cans

SWEET HEART

FABRIC SOFTENER

12 oz.

BACON '119
4 $} .MILK
Gal.

BELL
Gal.

.

89~ JEUY

WELCH'S GRAPE
20 oz:

SATURDAY
MT .MORIAH CHURCH ol God
,Racine, Rt. 2, Mile Hill, basement
sale Thursday, Friday and Saturday.
BEDFORD TOWNSHIP TRUSTEES
Saturday 6:30 p.m. at home of c:erk .
The budget for 1980 will be prepared .

$169

79~

A country music festival
by the Wilkesville Legion
Post 476 iit Legion Grove
on St. Rt. 124, 1 mile east of
Wilkesville. Saturday. July
7 2 p.m . to 9 p.m., local
talent show .4 p.m. to 1
p.m. Junior, senior &amp; adult
division. Trophies given.
Everyone . , welcome.
Round &amp; square dancing
at 9 p.m. Sunday July 8, 1
p.m-6 p.m. Refreshment
stand will be held by auxiliaty · ladles. Plenty of
pa~king,
campers
welcome.
,,":11

.

·MARGARINE .......l!.39

· WEDNESDAY
BAKE SAlE WEDNESDAY in
front of Racine Post Office sponsored
by Racine Baseball Association. T•
Ball and pee wee uniforms to he
turned
in
at
bake
sale .

COUNTRY MUSIC
FESTIVAL

$119

LB.

1001.

N INSTANT
8 01 •

LETTUCE

8 Pak
16 oz. btls.

CUT UP 65• LB.
WHOLE 59• LB.

~

sof as . secfionals. suites, chairs .

GB

CHICKEN

POTATOES

an impeccabl e elegance in every
oiece that will be a proud addition
to your hom e. Th is distinctive
F lexs teel sty ling i s availablt' J n

Phi lade lphia 6, New York 2
Pittsburgh 5, St. Louis 4

79~ CHUNK LB.
~

Pan-Amen can

FLEX STEEL
Whatever your ta ste in furn iture,
you van c hoose with confidence
fr om Flexsteel. Whether you
select contemporary, trad itiOnal ,
modern or colonial, vou w i ll f i nd

Monday's Games
Montrea i S, ChicagoO

BRAUN SCHWEIGER
Chef-Boy-Ar-Dee with Meat

new

SCIOTO OOWNS
COLUMBUS, Ohio ( AP) - Maple
Game , driven by C.'harles Wall, scored
his second victory in seven starts
Monday in the featured eighth race at
Scioto Downs . He led during the entire
race and won by I '• lengths in 2:03 3-5 ,
returning $9 .60, S5 and $3.40.
Gareth fini shed second and paid
$11.40 and $5 .60, while third-place
Steady Rich paid $3.20.
The payoff on tlle winning IG4-9
combination in the first race trifecta
was $8,210.10.
Attendance was 4,663. The handie
was $401 ,764 .

nia (Frost 5·4}.

KNOCKWURST
.
SUPERIORS
BIG FRANKS

$}69

i ve

!Billingham 7·4!.
records.
Seattle 1Parrott 6·3 and Decker 0·1J
After the first day of competition
at Minnesota (Goltz 6·6 an~ Serum 0· the U.S. team has a total of 20 medals'
21. 2
10 of them
'
Baltimore (Stone 6·5) at Texas
ld
(JenkinsB·4J.
go .
Oakland (K ingman 0·01 at Califor·

$149

59~

2

New York 7, Boston 2
Cleveland 8, Detioit4, 11 innings
Texas 2, Baltimore 0
Minneso1a 7. seatt/e·O
californ ia 8, Oakland 3
Only games scheduled
Tuesday 's Games
Kansas
Ci ty I Busby
3·51 at Boston .
( Renko 5-3)
•

Toronto

ci nnati (Norman 4· 7 )
Los An ge les (S utcli ffe 7 6 ) aT San
Diego (0wc ninko3 4).

In 1975, Greek shipping magnate
Aristotle Onassis died at age 69.

2 LB. SLICED

lib. quarters

34 .570
35 . .568
34 .547
36 .538

M1lwaukee (Caldwell 8·51 at New
York (Clay 1·31.

The Reds ' Fred Norman faces Ken
Forsch in the opener tonight . Other
probable pitching matchups for the
series include th e Reds' Bill Bonham
aga inst Joaquin Andujar in a
Wednesday afternoon ga me, and
Seaver facing J .R. Richard in the
Thursday night finale.
Seaver pitched two complete games
last week, defeating the Astros 2-! ·and
the San Francisco Giants 2-0. He
retired the la st 21 Giant batters in a
three-hitter .
But LaCoss has lost three straight
decisions since leaving a game on
June 13 with a elbow problem .
"His arm is not 100 percent," said
catcher Johnny Ben ch. " He's a
sinkerball pit&lt;:her, and at times he
ca n't get on top of the ball and force it
down.
"But he 's done a heck of a job,''
Bench said. 1 'll we score some runs,
he looks like Cy Young ."
The Reds' public relation~
department noted that July
traditionally is a good month for the
tea m, particularly in Riverfront
Stadium. Since the structure was built
in 1970, the Reds have had a .610
winning percentage at home during
July .
Ray Knight missed the San
Francisco series with a sore thumb
and George Foster left Sunday's
second ga me with a pulled muscle.
That left the Reds without their two
top hitters. However, both should
return to the lineup d.uring the home
stand.

BOLOGNA

79~ SPAGHffii SAUCE

45
46
41
42

Monday 's Gam~s

.

Los Angel es 6, Sa n Diego 4, 12 in
nings
On ly gamessc tleduled
Tuesday 's Gamfs
Montreal ( lee 7-5) at Chicago

54

Chicago (Barrios 7-3) at Cleve land
I Wise 7·51 .

'

SUPERIORS

Reg . 99c

Smith, Teresa Whittington, Kathy Hood, coach, LiBa
Whittington , Kenda Carsey, assistant coach Mary
Boggs.

MIDGETS- Front, 1-r, Leslie Carr, Polly· Cbad·
well, Wendy Barker, Kim Dent, Mindy Lamp, Kathy
Thomas, Denise Gibeaut. Back, Kim Deem, Anita

.Mon.-Sal 8 am-10 pm

NOTE FROM SUE: We were intrigued by the Union School kids, sc

""
MIDDlEPORT CUBS- Pee Wee team. Front, 1-r,
Todd Hood, Mickey Davis, Luke Burdette, Jason Drenner, David Smith. Back, Eddie Baer, Joey Loving, J.

Store Hours:

4 $} PillA '
BREAD...........IW~.. I

·TON.Y'S PEP PERON I

FLA~ORITE

$ Qg

.

.

18

oz.

••••••••••••••••••••••

WELCH

~ FLAVORITE

.

.

1

.

GRAPE JELLY. ..2!~.59 ICE CREAM .......~.c~.9
l

c o_uP o "'_ ..

.J

1

c o.u P ON

HYLAND CHUNK

COUNTRY TIMES

DOG FOOD

LEMONADE

25 LB.

$299

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at P.owell's
Ofler Expires July 7, 1979

Offer No.

1473-0-50-5
LARGE 49 OZ.

COU PON

¢

l

g~

CO LJ PO ~ .._j

KOOL AID

$199

HB.
CAN

025X5 .

.·

Limit! Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires July 7, 1979

10 QT.
CANNISTER

Limit! Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Ofler
res July 7, 1979

·Limit! Per Customer
Good Only.at Powell's
Offer Expires July 7, 1979

�6- The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, July 3, 1979

.

poem, "A Little Town" ' and Jody
Tolbert playing her own accompani·
men! sang ' 'Whatever It Takes."
. There was a men's trio composed of
Don Erwin, Mike Stewart, and Mack
Stewart, singing "I'd Rather Have
Jesus '. " Rose Reynolds representing
the women . and men 's class used
Helen L. Marshall's poem, "No Farther Away than Today.". She suggested that we begin aJ)ew sowing
seeds of love, kindness and
understanding with cooperation with
the new minister and his plans for
church growth.
The program closed with a.ll joining
In a friendship circle, singing "Bless
Be the Tie that Binds." David Cole
had the closing prayer.

Fire burns as city
workers end walkout
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) - Police and
firemen . began returning to work in
this Lake Erie port city at midmorning today , ending a two-day
strike after city officials announced
tentativ e agreement on a new
contract.
A gro up of about 60 men
overpowered private guards ·at the
Old Plaza Hotel , broke windows and
!JCt fir e to the building, the guards told
police. The fire was burning at
midmorning. The hotel was being
renovated into a residence for the
elderly. It was not occupied.
Another large fire which had burned
out of control in a near downtown
block of buildings in the pre.&lt;Jawn
hour s continued to smolder at
mjdmorning. lt was fought initially by
volunteers
from . suburban
departments and city supervisory
personnel. Three buildin gs were

gutted ·.and lour others damaged.
Lucas County sheriff's deputies led
residents from apartments in the
buildings to sarety.
In another blaze, neighbors roused
sleeping residents whose home was on
fire and got them safely out. It took an
hour for a suburban volunteer
department to reach the location,
neighbors said. By that time the home
was engulfed in flames.
Tentative agreement on a contract
was reached shortly alter dawn and
union members were to vote on it
during the day.
About 50 police officers picketing at
the front of the city Safely Building
dispersed after hearing of the
tentative agreement. One grumbled
as he walked away, "We'll go back to
work but we're not going to do
anything ."

Today in History
By The Associated Press
.Today is Tuesday , July 3, the !84th
day of 1979. There are 181 days left in
the year .
Today's highlight in history :
On this date in 1962, Algeria became .
independent after 132 years of French

Korean War.
In
1976,
Israeli
airborne
commandos rescued lll:j hostages
being held by airliner · hijackers at
Entebbe airport in Uganda , but a
number of people were killed in the
raid .
Ten years ago: The U.N. Security
u1
Council voted unanimously to censure
r 1~ · 1775, George Washington took Israel for actions to alter the status of
command of the Continental Army at Jerusa lem.
cambridge, Mass.
Five years ago: President Richard
In 1863, the Civil War Battle of Nixon ended a summit meeting in
Gettysburg ended after Confederate Moscow that produced a modest
Gen. George Pickett's troops suffered agreement on arms limitations.
One year ago: China· ended aid to
severe losses.
In 1890, Idaho became the 43rd Vietnam as a conflict between the two
Communist countries deepened.
sta~.l945, the United Slates, Britain Today's birthdays : President Jeanand the Soviet Union began the three- Claude Duvalier of Haiti is 28. Former
power occupation of Berlin .
Agriculture Secretary Earl Butz is 70.
In 1950, u .S. and North Korean Broadcaster Geraldo Rivera is 36.
clashed for the first time in the British film director Ken Russell is 52..

~

SPECIAL

CHUCKWAGON~ .... ~ b9e

WITH FRIES ••••••••• 99

4

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VAllEY
992-2556

570 W. Main ·
Pomeroy, 0.

i

- - ---...........

A new class scheduled has been announced by Mrs. Jo.Ann Newsome· of
Slinderella.
Classes will meet on Monday at
Krodel Park, Point Pleasant, 7: 30
p.m.; on Tuesday, 10:30 a.m. at St.
Joseph 's Catholic Church, Mason;
and Tuesdays at 7:30 p.m. at Heath
United Methods Methodist Church;
Middleport.
At the Mason class last week,
Gewanna Johnson lost the most
weight and Janet Simpson and
Yvonne Swartz.tied for runner-up. A
35 pound tibbon was presented to
Mrs. Simpson, and a 00 pound ribbon
to Miss Johnson. In Middieport, Pearl
Phalen received her 00 pound ribbon.
She also lost tbe most weight for the
week with Shirll!y Johnson as runnerup. At the evening class, Sheila Proffitt lost the most weight, and Beverly
Codner was runner-up.
Two new members were taken in at
the Point Pleasant class. Jill Anne
Walburn lost the most weight with
Leona Greene being the runner-up.
The evening class met and Christine
Wilson lost the most weight, with
Claire Plants as tbe runner-up.

RACINE-The convention of the
Ohio Association pf Garden Clubs was
announced for Aug, 7, 8 and 9 when
!be Bend of the River GArdenC:Arden
Club met Monday evening at the
home of Mrs. Gretta Simpson.
Mrs. James Diehl presided at the
meeting noting tbe convention and
also that both regional and state dues
are payable before Oct. 1. A family
picnic wu planned for July 23 at tbe
Roadside Park on Route 33, 6:30 ·p'm.
with each member to take a guest.
Mrs. Eileen Buck read the club
poem, and Mrs. Ruth Bamitz gave
the club prayer, and Mrs. Esther
West the devotions using Psalm 111.
For roll call members answered with
a conunent on what !bey had plantedwhich can be exhibited. II was
reported that Mrs. Andrew Cross is
improving.
The traveling prize was awarded to
Mrs. Simpson. For tbe program, Mrs.
Bert Grimm presented an article on
celeosia. She said it is easy to grow
and
comes in several colors. She !ilsO
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Morss Ill
talked about the plant as being
suitable for drying and for use in
flower arrangements. Mrs. Wilson
Carpenter gave material on how to
prepare plants for exhibit at flower
·shows.
Refreshments were served by tbe
The Forest Run United Methodist
hostess from a table covered with
Church,
will · hold homecoming day
white lace and centered With a bowl of
pink roses and baby's breath, flanked Sunday with regular worship Service
at 9 a.m. followed by Sunday school at
Susan Louise Fleshinan, formerly Robert Dillingham Morss Ill on June by candles.
10. There will be a carry-in dinner at
of Meigs county, was marriep to 10. The wedding took place at 7 p.m.
12:30 and a short program and hymn
in the First Unitarian Church of
sing will be featured at 2 'p.m. The
Columbus. Guests of family and frienpublic is invited.
ds included Pat Holter, EUen Bell,
REVIVAL SLATED
Wanda Eblin, Agnes Dillon and
A
revival
will be held at tbe Orange
Madhu Malhotra, Meigs county.
Christian
Church,
Lottridge Road,
SNYDER REUNION
The bride is the daughter of
The
sixth
annual Snyder reunion
two
and
one-half
miles
northeast
of
Reverend and Mrs. George Flestunan
will
be
held
July
15 at Portland Park .
Alfred,
July
8
through
13
at
7:30
p.m.
of Melmore, Oh. The groom is tbe son
All
relatives
are
asked
Ill attend and
nightly.
Evangelist
will
be
Dr.
James
of Mrs: Marjorie Morss of Columbus,
bring
a
covered
dish .
Quisenberry
.
. and the late Robert D. Morss, Jr.
The bride 's father officiated at tbe
ceremony with Carl' Whittier of the
Unitarian Church. The bride wore a
white linen suit with a rose blouse.
Music during the wedding included a
cantata sung by the c~urch choir, of
which the groom is a member.
After the double-ring ceremony, a
reception was held at the church. The
(INCLUDES: BAKED BEANS, COLE SLAW, CHIPS AND ROLL'
bride and groom enjoyed talking to
family and friends and opening
presents while music was provided by
Mrs. Fleshman and Mrs. Morss on tbe
piano and violin.
The new· couple will reside in
Westerville, where Mrs. Morss workll
limE LEAGUE BALL GAME AND OTHER ACTIVITIES.
at the public library. Robert Morss is
employed as an area manager with
RGIS Inventory Specialists.

Homecoming
set Sunday

Miss Freshman marries
in Columbus nuptials

4th of July Chicken &amp; Rib Barbecue
1h CHICKEN OR ~IBS
•3oo
AT EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL
. SERVING AT 11:30

SPONSORED BY ATHLETIC BOOSTERS

Two celebrate
birthdays
The fowih and first birthdays of
Kenneth and Jamie Rizer, sons of Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth Rizer, Sr. ,
Portland, was observed recently at
tbe home of their grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Willjam E. Rizer,
Minersville.
A dinner was enjoyed and later in
the day cake and ice cream were
served. Attending and presenting
gifts to the children were their
·- - --- parents and grandparents, and Mr.
and Mrs. William P. Rizer , Chris and
Amy, Vicky Rizer, and Mrs. Zelma
Hawley.

SPECIAL GUESTS NAMED
. The Middleport United Pentecostal
Church will have as special guests for
its Wedne sday evening service, the
Rev . and Mrs. Larry Blake and
family, missionaries to Liberia .
Liberia has a population of over
1,750,000 with the official language
being English. Libe ria lies within the
tropical rain forest belt and has
distinct w~t and dry seasons. The
average temperature is about 80
degrees F.
Missionary Blake will be the spec'ial
speaker for the Wednesday servi ce
will starts at 7:30p.m. The public is
invited.
OFF WEDNESDAY
The Applachian Opio Regional
Transit Association will observe the
July 4 holiday . Therefore, the Aorta
bus will not operate July 4 but will
resume norma l oper ation s on
Thursday.
For 203 years today, we've been free. That's lf
tot to be proud ot. We have a · rich heritage to
live up to; our freedoms and financial opportunities are probably the greatest in the
world . Let's make the most of them.

MEET WEDNESDAY
Pomeroy Lodge 164, F&amp;AM, will
hold a regular meeting at 7: 30 p.m.
Wednesday. All Master Masons are
invited.

''Til£ fRIENDLY BANK"

CJlilens ftalional Bal\k

.e t&amp;

to meet

set Saturday at Wahama

Kenneth and Jamie Fizer

THIS WEEK'S

We'll Not Be Open
JULY 4th

Slinderella
i) classes
,\:l
announced

~ Garden
,. Assn.

New pastor welcomed
A wcleoming service for the new
pastor, the Rev . Bob Melton , and his
family was held at the Middhiport
ChUFch of Christ Sunday fol,lowing the
worship services.
Acovered dish dinner was preceded
by the blessing by Lawrence Stewart,
chairman of the church board. Mrs.
D\lrothy Roach , superintendent of the
primary department. had charge of
the program. She began with a
welcome from the Sunday school
superintendent, Mike Gerlach. The
primary children presented a portion
of the regular Sunday morning excr.
cises including two . songs, ':God is
Able" and "Jesus Loves Me." Amy
.Erwin and Paul Melton sang "Day by
Day." Mrs. Mike Gerlach read the

7-TheDaily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, July 3, 1979

;~:;:;:::::::::;:;:; :;: ;:::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:; :;:; :; : ;:::;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;: ;:;: ;:;:::;

-= £6
aut a .

--·-·

MEETS FRIDAY
Ali members of the Meigs HEACT
Team ..are requested to meeting at
7:30p.m . Friday at the Meigs Senior
Utizens Center in Pomeroy. Guy
Hy se ll requests that the entire
membership be on an hand for the
irn~rtant b'usiness session.

'

we reserve the right

PRICES GOOD NOW THRU JUNE 30

to lim it quantities

FRESH

GROUND

GROUND

CHUCK

BEEF

$169 LB.
Superior, French City, Wilson Kom King

Dan Dee 1 lb.
Reg sug ·

$139

POTATO CHIPS ........... :... :...... .

;;;;I CANS ........................~l 49
ooz. ..49c
SMALL EGGS........................

Grade "A"

12 oz. WIENERS ..............~~:.

age

CUBE STEAK ..................~~: ..~ }

99

·

FINE ASSORTMENT.
OF STORE SLICED
LUNCH MEATS

ROUND STEAK ...............~~·---~ 199

PEPSI,
DIET PEPSI,
MT. DEW

16 oz.
bottles

. =\ . "'" . ,
I

•

SPONSORS PAGEANT- The GiCHlltes will spon·
sor tbe Miss Majorette of West Virginia Pageant at
Wahama High School Saturday. The Glo-ettes include
Lisa Starcher, Usa Hayes, Stacey Hall, Melanie Fry,
Lori Redman, Joy Black, Emily Bwngardner, &amp;uzette
Paugh, Valone Hickman, Sherrie Hickman, Leslie
Cole, Valerie Cole, Tina Johnson, Lisa Ferrell, Stacey
Zuspan, Katie Zuspan, Emily Johr)son, Julie Mitchell,
Rebecca Zuspan, Stephanie Sayre, Micbelle Young,

GICH!Ites and their mother!i will
sponsor the official "Miss Majorette
of West Virginia " Pageant to be held
beginning at 10 a.m. Saturday, July 7,
at the Wahama High School near
Mason under tbe directino of Mrs.
Gloria Buck Wallace.
There will ·be a 50-cent admission
charge for students and $1.50 for
adults wishing to see the talent
required to win a stat.! Miss Majorette title. The event is the only one in
West Virginia where tbe winner can

Deanna White, Rebecca Adamf,' Shelly Mayes, West
Virginia and from Ohio, Tammy Johnson, Nancy Johnson, Teresa Board, Cindy Allen, Niki Ihle, Amber C\lmmings, Mindy Harris, Stacey Young, Angelia Hayes,
Jody Hayes, Jennie Lee, Niki Whitlatch, Amy Warth,
Lisa Miller, Paula Gilkey, Tammy Cremeans, Kim
Dean, Joyce Davis, Naljilie Wallace, Kim Ewing, Beth
Ewing and Patty Duffy. Scott Hayes and Buck Wallace
play the roles of Spiderman and Supennan with tbe
group .•

compete for the Miss Majorette of .
America title at Notre Dame University.
This will mark the second time the
Miss Majorette of West Virginia has
been held in this area.
.
,
Last year it was held in Ripley, W.
Va., and the year before in Martins burg'
The National Baton Twirlers
Association holds three state events
each year including Miss Majorette,
America League State Champion and

tbe national League Championship.
The two state championships are held
on o)IP06ite sides of tbe state to cut
traveling time for girls in their
respective areas.
Miss Majorette contestants are
judged on 40 percent twirling, 40 percent strutting anct 20 percent
modeling. The Miss Marjoette new
age divisions are ~. 7.JJ, 1().23, 13-15,
and 16-00, and Miss College Majorette .
To be eligible contestants must be

-

r

•

Majorette contest at Wahama High School beginning at
lOa .m. Saturday.
·

residents of West Virginia and single.
Fe~ modeling the tiny tot and juvenile
contestants are required to wear a
short party dress, pre-teen dress optional on long gown, and junior, teen
and college division must wear long
gowns. No hair pieces are permitted
by NBTA rules.
· Rules and procedures of the contest
have been checked for accuracy and
are in full accordance with N.B.T.A.
standards, Mrs ~ Wallace reports.
The deadline is July 3 for entries in
the Miss Majorette title. Anyone
wishing furth~r infonnation may call
614-992-7326 or 61W93~!3.
There will also be an open contest
held in conjunction with tbe pageant
for twirlers from other states or for
contestants from West Virginia who
wish to compete for trophies but do

Parental-consent law
struck down by court·
BOSTON (Al' ) - The Supreme
Court, in striking down the state's
parental-consent law for abortions on
Monday, showed that teen-agers "are
not owned by their parents," says the
abortion clinic operator who
challenged the law.
But the state attorney general says
the ruling leaves 'room for another try
at a parental eonsent law.
By an Il-l vote, the Supreme Court
str u ~k down the law that required
unmarried females under 18 to obtain
the consent of their parents or a judge
before undergoing an abortion.
The court ruled that if a state wishes
to require a pregnant mirior to obtain
the consent of one or both parents, it
must also provide an alternative
procedure whereby the authorization
can be obtained.
Bill Baird, the birth control
advocate and abortion clinic head who
was among tho_~;e to challenge the law ,
said Monday !be ruling "shows once
· and for ali that teen-agers are not
chattel , they're no.t property, they're
not owned by their parents."
ArchbishOp John R. Quinn of San
Francisco, president of the National
Co nference of (Roman ) Catholic
Bishops and the U.S . Ca tholic
Conference, said "the ruling goes a
long way toward tearing apart the
fabric of the family and does profoWid
damage to 'the strength of the nation ."
The Massachusetts law required
that an unmarried female under 18
tell her parents about her plans to
have an abortion. Under the law, if
one or both of her parents refused
co~senl, permission for the abortion
could be obtained from a state judge .
the court said, "We conclude ...
that under state regulations such as
that undertaken by Massachusett~.
every minor must have the
opportunity - if sbe so desires - to go
directly to a court without first
consulting or notifying her parents,"
the coutt said.
" U she satisfies the court that she is
mature and well-informed enough to
·make intelligently the abortion
decision on her own, the court must
authorize her to act without parental

NOTICE OF
BUDGET HERING
A budget hearin g f or
r e\fen ue sharin g purp oses
will be held on J uly 10, 1979
at Ch ester Town Ha l! from
6 : 30P .M . to 7 : 30P .M . Th e
' r esident s
of
Chester
Township ar e In vi t ed t o
pr ovi d e writt en an d oral
comments
and
ask
questions concerning t h e
en ti re budg et for the
c urren t fiscal y ear .
Seni or c itizens are en ·
couraged to attend th is
meeting .
General
Revenue
! Sharing fund s are int en d ed
• to be used in th e foll owi ng
" mann er :
,. PLANNED
AMOUNT
USE
•. 1. Ou st
$4,000 .00
Control
2. Misceflaneous
E~e;p e ns es
2344 .00
Beldw is a summary of
the en t ire bud ge t , which ,
· alon g wit h t h e in tenti,.M

consultation or consent."
The Supreme Court said that even if
the pregnant girl fails w satisf9&lt;a
court that she is competent to make
the abortion decision alone, "she must
be permitted to show that an abortion
nevertheless would be in her best
interest ."
The court must authorize the
abortion if It is persuaded that it is in
the girl's own best interest, but it may
also decline to authorize one If it is
not.
The Massachusetts law was
challenged in a 1974 suit by two
pregnant teen-agers, their doctor and
Baird.

BASEBAlL
NEW YORK I AP ) - Tom Seaver of
the Cincinna li Reds has bl!en selected
Player of tbe Week in the National
league for the week ending July 1, the
league announced Monday.
Seaver started two games during
the week and won them both,
defeating the West Division-leading
Houston Astros 2-1 and the San
Francisco Giants 2-0, allowing only
three hits ·in each game.
· Minnesota Twins shOrtstop Roy
Smalley, the ' American League's
leading hitter with a .369 average, was
a unanimous choice as the league's
Player of tbe Week for the period June
2fhluly 1.
Smalley had two hits in five of the
Twins' six games, batting .462, with
two doubles and three home runs. Het
also collected 23total bases, drew four
walks, drove in 11 runs and scored
seven times .

HOSTING rifE DISfRICf 6 Holstein-Friesian Dairy Cattle Club Picnic Sunday were, left to right, Roy Holter, Pat Holter, their sons, Ed and
Alan Holter, and David Burt.
·

r ights to Hary Astrom, goalie.

COLLEGE
BENTLEY COLLEGE
nounced the resignation
Rogan, football coach.

uses Or revenu~ ~na rrn y
f u n ds Is avai l able f or
pu b li c inspe c tio n at th e
r esi den ce of Donald c.
MOra , Cler k from Jun e 29
1979 , to Jul y 10, 1979, be ·
tw een th e hours of 5 :30PM
to 6 : lO PM Monday thru
Fr iday , e&gt;&lt;cepting W ed .
nesday , July 4, 1979.
1. GENERAL
FUND
$19,328.71
2. M .V . LI CENSE
TAX FU ND
10,641 .71...
3. GASO L INE TAX
·FUND
14,400. 00
4. ROAD AND BRIDGE
F UND
5. 007. 62
S. CEMETERY
F UND
1,672.S.d
6. F I RE DI STR I CT
F UND
1.672,54

of

An ·
Jack

te of West Virginia have been
received from Chester, W. Va., near
the northern panhandle trip ; Martinsburg in the eastern panhandle;
Bluefield, southernmost part of West
Virginia and Huntington, Whe¢ling
and Weirton.
·
Home cooked food will be served
throughout the day. Spectators will be
adrhilted arty time between 10 a.m.
and3p .m.

Health ·Review
BYLAMARC.MUJ,ER,D.O.
thinking eventually ended up in the
CUn!cal Associate Professor hospital with iln extremely bad case
of Family Medicine
of what we physicians call Rhus derOhlo University College
malilis. A previously "immune" perof Osteopathic Medicine
son can become sensitive any time
SOME COMMON MISCON- there is contact with the. poison ·
CEPTIONS
weeds, and there is no scientific way
ABOUT POISON IVY
that we know of today to predict when
Tale No . 1: "Poison Ivy is con- this might happen. My advice is to
-tagious. You can get it from another avoid contact with poison weeds r\o
person with the rash." This is false. matter what your past experience has
Contaminated towels and clothes will been . The r!)asons for the apparent
not spread \his rash to another per- "inununity" are numerous. Many
son. You can, however, get it by pet- times these individuals are not sen- ·
ting a dog or other furry animal who sitized because the antigenic material
has been in contact with the juice of (an irritant called urushiol) may
the plant. You can also get it from the have been concentrated in the roots or
smoke of burning plants, stems ·or stems and relatively absent in the
roots.
leaves. Also, it is possible the leaves
Tale No. 2: "Repeated exposure to were not bruised and did not releaSe
poison weeds will build up your im- their toxic material onto the skin.
munity so you eventually are prolec·
"Tale No. 4: "Washing with soap
ted .' ' Again this is incorrect. In fact, and water after exposure can prevent
repeated exposure is likely to cause a the rash from poison ivy." This is
more severe reaction in the future neither completely true or false . A
due to heigh tened se nsitivity. recent study found that if the exposed
Similarly, the notion that eating person washes with soap and water
poison ivy leaves will d~velop protec- within 10 minutes, and if he or she is
lion is false . Most likely the only not highly sensitive to the antigen, the
result will be a severe infiariunatory reaction might be prevented or at
reaction in the gastrointestinal tract.
least minimized. Even wasRing
Tale No. 3: "I can pull the weeds within 30 minutes may help, ac. out by the roots with my bare hands. cording to the study, unless the perI'm immune to poison ivy." This is son is extremely sensitive. If more
one of the most erroneous miscon- than a half-hour has elapsed washing
cepllons and can result iii an ex- does not seem to be useful.
tremely severe case of poison ivy. • Tale No. 5: "A person can develop
Many a person who persisted in this poison ivy for a long time if they contact an article contaminated with the
juice of the plant." This is true since
the antigenic material remains active
for a long period of lime in the fur of
animals and on articles of clothing. A
person may have repeated outbreakll
of the rash without even leaving their

Drug smuggling

93 attend picnic
District Six Hulstein-Friesian'Dairy
CatUe Club held its picnic Sunday,
July 1, at tbe Roy Holter Family
Farm, Pomeroy.
Ninety-three dairy people, young
and old, enjoyed a bountiful picnic
dinner at 1 p.m.
Tom Hamm returned thankS and
Leland Parker presided at the
business meeting.
He Introduced David Mills, Crown
City, the new district director and
Janis Carnahan, Meigs County Dairy

Princesa.

HOCKEY
National HO&lt;:koy League
NEW
YORK
RANGERS
Acquired Bill Lochead, left wing ,
from the Colorado Rockies for the

not wish to enter the pageant.
In the open contest trophies will be
awarded for teams, corps, high school
majorette lines, solo twirling, basic
strut, fancy strut, military strut,
parade majorette, two batons,
military costume, modeling and fancy costuming. Entries in the open contests can enter at the door on Saturday.
.
So far, entries for the Miss Majoret-

·

Ted Renner of Hilliard, Ohio was introduced by James Johnson, COBA
Teclmlcian of Oak Hill. Mr. Renner, a
qualified judge at classifying
HoLsteins, placed tbe cattle for the
dairy judging Contests.
Two· grougs of four registered
Holsteins were placed by three different divisions . Winners were:

oF ~oT~~~~~E~AS
1

OF MEIGS COUNTY,
I
OHIO
WOOOROW QUEEN ,
Plaintiff,
-- \'$ -

AUDREY
KATHLEEN .
QUEEN,
· Defendant . ·
No . 17128
NOTICE BY

PUBLICATION
. You are h er eby no t i fied
that you hav e been named
a defendant in a lega l
action enli t1ecl Woodrow
Queen ,
Plaintiff.
vs .
Audrey Kathleen ' Qu een ,
Defendant . Th is action has
bee n assigned Case No .
17218 and is pending j n th e
Court of com mor\ Pl e~s of
J!leigs Coutny , Pomeroy ,
Oh iQ 45769 .
•
Chester Township
The ob[ect of th e com ,
Trustees .
plain t Is th e obtaining of a
Donald C. Mora ,
di\IOrc e and
the
ter .
Cl erk
mination of a marriage
(7) 3, He
contract
bet~een
the·•.
parti es and th e· se tt lement ·

of th e prop &lt;:- rty r' ig htS of til e
part ies an d t he cus tody of
th e m inor. chi ldren .
You are requ i r e d to
answ e r
the
comp l aint"
w ith i n 28 days after th e las t
publica tion of th is notic e,
whi ch will be publi shed
on ce e ach week tor six
su.ccess ive w eeks . Th e la st
publi ca t ion will b e mad e on
A ug ust 7, 1979, and th e 28
days tor answ er
will
co mmence on th at date.
In case of your failur e to
answer
or
otherwis e
respond as requ ir ed by th e
Ohio
Rules
of
Civil
Procedure ,
the
final
hea rin g on this matter will
b~h e ld after the expi ration
of 28 days after the la st da y
of publication of this no t ice
or as soon the reaft er as can
be sche duled by th e Cou r t.
L a r r y

S p e n cer.
Cl erk of Court
o f Meig s County,
OhiO
~ ·

17) 3, 10, 17 , 2&lt; , 31, 18l 7, 6tc

..

Men's division;- Donnie Milburn,
Hillsboro. Women's division, Shirley
Stowers, Rio Grande, and Youth
division was Janis Carnahan, Racine.
Other prize winners were Charles
Yost, Racine; Bob Lee, Racine;
Harry Holter, Minersville; Mary
Holter, Long Bottom; Diana Milburn,
Hillsboro; Dale Kautz, Pomeroy; Bill
Frederick, Long.Bottom; Bobby Lee,
Racine; Virgil King, Pomeroy; Susan
Milburn, HillBboro; Ed Stowers, Bidwell; BUl Kautz, Pomeroy; George
Holter, Minersville; DoMie Milburn,
Hillsboro; Patty .Parker, Pomeroy;
Alfreda McCown, Pomeroy; Alan
Holter, Pomeroy, and Kathy Parker,
Pomeroy.
Monroe McCown, who served for
many yea.rs in tbe diplomatic service
in India and France, told of
agriculture practices in those coWltries.
McCown and his wife, Alfreda
Baum McCown, are Alumni of .Ohio
State University and graduated in
1923. He has two degrees in
agricUlture from Ohio State and one
from Purdue university. They are
now enjoying their retirement home
in Meigs County and wintering in
Florida.
The Dairy Club fonnulated plans
for a bam meeting lei be held in October at the farm of Charles and Jolut
cannlchael, Gallipolis, to observe
cattle classification by State Holstein
Classifiers. . Their· herd has been
classified every year as to type and
production.

BASEBALL

.

Americ'an League

BHSTON RED SHX - Placed Jerry
Remy. second baseman, on the 15-day
disabled list. Recalled Ailen Ripley,
pitcher, frdm Pawtucket of the In ·

ternationa l Leaque.

falls drastically

.touse.

TUCSON , Ariz. (AP) - Smuggling
in the one-time "marijuana capital"
of the nation has fallen dramatically,
officials say, partly because ever
•·
more sophisticated American users
have lost their taste for simple
Mexican grades.
·
"Now everything is Colombian, or
from Hawaii," says Mike Cochran,
All residential customers of the
deputy director of the Ariwna Drug West Virginia Telephone Cmpany will
Control D1slnct.
':V be rece•ymg
· ·
d
f bo t 10
"Let'
ll 't a lad or 'social
~ ecrease o a u .
s ca 1
percent m !herr monthly local serv1ce
p~enomenon among peopl~ , whcohra::~ rates beginning with their AUgustl979
disposed to do those things, Co
telephone bill according to Horst L
'd "Wheth er you're
or, a ·Lindner, company
'
S31 ·
,.
. a dealer
.
vice president. ·
~r, after you ve tned It, you re
The decrease is the result of a June
disposed to I"?~ for a bigger and 28, 1979, final decision of the West
better product.
Virginia Public Service Commission
Cochran. compared the pattern to which granted the telephone comp&amp;ny
that expenenced several years ago by a $700 699 annual rate increase which
, lh.e U.S. wine mdustry, wben novice is approximately 50 percentle~ than
wme tasters graduated from sweet
. . .
.
·
dr'
nd more expensive the $1.5 nullion Ill rate relief sought by
1
wmes o 1er a
the company in May 1978.
products of the vme.
978 · th
· ·
Tod
Cochran said Colombia is . Oil Nov· 9, I • e comrruss10n
the N':?'pa Valley of the marijuana . allow~ the telephone company to
· d tr
d th big-time smugglers i pla.ce mto ~!feel under bond, an inIn us y, an
e
.
•tenm rate mcrease of $957,444 penhave f!10ved ~.the shores of Florida, dingthecommission 'sfinaldecision.
Georg1a, Lomstana and Texas.
. In the final order residential
"We l?&lt;Jk at Tucson ~ore as a customers benefited by' lUlving tbeir
codunumty of user~. now instead of a rates fwiher reduced from those
smugg1mg enclave, he sa1d. In years estsblish din the inte · rd
past, legislators and law enforcement
. e .
nm o er.
Resldenllal . customers will
officials alike dubbed the city the U.S.
"marijuana capitaL"
therefore receive "!funds which
Marijuana smuggling bas been . r~present tbe difference between the
" tty slow for a good 18 months " higher local sernce rates charged
ci:;~an said.
' between November !978 and June
In the year from July 1, 1976, wJune 1979. \
.
30, 1977, Ariwna narcotics agents
Rates for busmess cu:'torners will
confiscated 42,000 pounds of rerna•~ at levels established by the
marijuana. But in the following xear, conumss10n order dated No~, 9, 19'1~.
onl 3 200 pounds was rounded' up.
Customers due refunds will receiVe
Arfzon~ 's catch then rose again in the them by check through the ~· Aclast six monthsoflast year, with 3,300 cording to th~ Commissions order,
•pounds being confiscated.
the company IS equired to make the
refunds, with interest at the rate of 10 ,
percent, no la1er than Sept. 6, 1979.

Monthly Irlns

will be less

'

'

�'

•

Mi~~'•nm1-Pomeroy,

8- The Da1ly Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy . 0 ., Tuesday, July 3, 1979

I

0 ., Tue.•rl•v. July 3,1979

'llffllrul ID'Il

Your Be~t Buys Are Found in the Sentinel Cl~ssifieds
IN I

COMMO~

o•

WANT AD
CHARGES

EDNA MAE REEVES
LEO NARD
ROSS

BORING ,

,,

15 Words or Under

rgsh

I 80
3110

6 dii}'S

Plit~nhtts ,

Cha r ~f

100
l:iO

1day
2days
3-days

1 25
190
2 2:5

• FLORA MAY

371

Eal·h word over the nummum

~ l'enls per word per
da~' Ads nmn l n~ other than ron.
~ ut1ve days Will be c har~ed at

t5 words ts

tht&gt; 1day rate

In memory, Ct!rd of Thank:!
and Obitua ry 6 tents per word.
S3 00 mmlmum Cash 111 ud ·

DIXON , ET AL ~

REEVES

Oe lcnda nh .
Case N o 16. 669
- LEGAL NOTICE In pursuance of an Of'" der

o f sa le •n parttl •on fr om
sa•d Court to me dtrec t cd, 1
wd l off er f or sa l e, at publtc
auc tt on , at t he doo r of t he
Cour thouse 1n ltle Vtllage of
Pomeroy , M e tg ~ Coun l y ,
Oh10. on the 14111 day of

In

M t~ bile

Home sales and Ya rd
se~ l es are a ccept~ only Wllh
cash Wlth order zs cen t charge
for.WSII carryln~: Box Nwn~r In
~Of The Sent mel

PORTABLE SEWING moch1ne .
L1ke
new
$65
Phone

992-7331.
IN MEMORY of Don (Sonny)
Fo lmer Btrthdoy July 4th He
would hove been .44 •
OadondMom

July , 19 79 , at 10 00 AM,

The Publisher reserves tht
nght to edit or reject any ads
deemt"d
objrrt1onaL Thr
Pubhsher Wlll oot be responsible
for mor(' than one mcorrect mSf'rtion
'
Phone 992-2156

NOTICE

.

WANT-AD
IA_DVERTISING
DEADLINES
Monday
Noo non Sa turd&lt;1~

Thcsda y
t hru F'mlay
4P M
the day befort&gt; pubhcauon

Sunday
4P M

Fnda} 11''

'

1---- - - - · ---1-1
LEGAL NOT I CC:

NOTICE 01·
PROPOSED MERGER
NOIIC I? IS hereby 91VI?n
that app l •cal1o n has been
made t o t he Compt r olle r of
the r ; " .:'n cy wash.ng ton.
D C .: v2 19 tor h1 S conse n t
. to a merger of Th e C1 f1Z ens
Nat io nal Bank of M1d
, dleport , Middl eport , Oh10
and Th e Cent ral Tru st
Comp any ,
N at1onal
A ss oc,a t •o n . C !nc .nnat. ,
01'1 10
Th e application was
acce pt ed for f1l 1ng June 6,
1979
II 1S con t emp l ated tha t
a ll
o ff•c es
ot
the
abov e 1n amed bank s w111
con f•n ue to be ope rated
T11 1S n ot 1ce IS publiShed
pu r suant t o sec t• on l8 lcl of
lh e Fed er a l Oepos 1t In
sur a n ce Act and Part 5 of
Th e Regu tat1 ons o f the
Comptroller
of
lhe
Curr en c y 112 CF R 5 )
Th e C1t1z ens
N a t 1ona t Bank
of Middleport
Midd l eport , Oh•o
Th e Central Tru st
Comp a n y , N A
C• ncmn at1 , Oh10
( 6) 26 , ( 7) 3, 10. 17, 24 26, 6

lc
COUNTY ME tGS
PUBLIC NOTICE
Th e to ll ow1ng documents
w ere r ece •ved or prepared
by Th e OH10 En\ll r On
menta l Protec t 1o n Agency '
durmg th e orevious wee k
The e tf ecl1ve dale of each
f•nat action •s st ated The
ISSuance d ate o f each
pr oposed aett10n · ~ stat ed
Anyone agg r~evetl or ad
vcrse l y a ff ected by a ! mal
a ct1on t o Iss u e, deny ,
mo dify , r ev oke , or r enew a
pe r m.t ,
liCen se ,
or
varliHlce or to a pp:-ove or
d1 sa pprove
plans
and
speci f 1cat1on s, may f 1tc an
appeal w1 th The env• ro n
mental Boa rd o f Rev1ew .
Su1 te 305. 395 E
Broad
St , Columbus . Oh10 43216,
w 1t hm th~rty { 30 ) days of
the e fl ect•ve date , pursuant
to Oh 10 Revised Code
Se ct ion 374S 07 , unles s such
f ma t act10n was preceded
by tne same o r sub
stan t .ally
the
same
propo se d ac t 1on
In ad
d1l10n , pu rsuant t o Sec t •on
3745 04 of th e Rev1sed Code,
no li ce o f t he f1l10g of t he
appeal sha l l_ be f i l ed w1fh
the D1r ecto r o f th e Oh1o
Env• ronm entat Prot ec t1 on
Agency , 361 E . Broad
Str ee t , Columbus, Oh10
43 216 , wilh 1n three (3) days
after the appeal 1S fi l ed
w1th Th e Env~ronm e n t al
Board ot Rev1e w A l l su ch
final a c t 1ons are so •den
li f •ed Such per so n s may
r e quest an ad i Ud•ca t•on
hearrng be f or e Th e Oh10
EPA on a propo sed a chon
to issue , deny , mod.ty ,
r e ..,oke , or ren ew a p erm 1t ,
l 1cen se or vanance . or to
approv e or d 1 s~ pprove
plan s a nd speCifications ,
w i th •n 11'1 •r l y (30 ) days o f
th e 1ssuance date ORC
3745 07 does not pr ov1 de tor
ad1ud ica l i on
hear1ng
reoue st s or a pp eals fr om
orders .
vcrlf1ed
com
ptamt s , o r e nf orc ement
com pl•anc e
sc h edu l e
le tt ers W111'11n 30 days of
pub1•c at•on 1n a n ewspaper
•n th e a ff ec ted cou nty , any
p e r so n may a l so
(1)
subm 1t wr.tten c omments
rela hn g
to
a c t .o ns ,
proposed ac l.ons , ver 1f 1ed
com pla .nts,
enf or ceme nt
cornpt • an ce
sc h e du l e
le tter s o r pre 11mma r y sta ff
determ •nat.ons or. perm•ts
to •n sta11 . (21 reque5 1 a
pub l1c m eetmg r eg ilrd•ng
pro posed ac!lons or on
pr el •m• nar y staff deter
mmal 1ons on perm 1IS to
1nsta ll . and or (3) r equest
not 1CC of f ur the r ae11ons or
pr oceed ings 0.11 r eques t s
for adtud ,c at •o n hear1n gs
and p u bl 1c mectmgs , and
other
commun•ca t 1ons
concern.n g
publ•c
meet1ng s, ad1Ud ,ca t 10 n
hear1ng s , v er. f 1e d com
pla+nts , an o rPgutalions ,
shoul d be adar essed to The
Legal Re cor e.-. Se c t .o n .
Oh io EPA , P 0 Bo,. 10J9 ,
Columbus . Oh •o 432 16 ,
(6 14 )
466 6037
Unless
otherwis~ state d '" par
ficu lar notiCe S, a 11 other
communicat1o ns 1nc ludmg
c o m ments on propose d
ac t ion s sr~ou ld
b£' ad
dressed elth~r t o The
D ivision of Authon zat1on &amp;
'compliance
f{ Air l
or
P er mit
and
Appr oval
sec t i on
(Wl!lt e r J.
wh ichever I s appropr 1at e.
at The OhiO EPA , P 0 Box
1049. Columbus, Oh io .43216
Approval of plans and
spec If lc ll fion S
Hart, Warren
Salisbury,. Twp
, Oh ,
.

real es 1at e sttua t ed '" the
Cou nty o t Me•g s, St ate ol
Oh10 T ownsh1p ot Sc1 p10,
and m or e parti Cu l arly
d es cr1bed as fo ll ows
PAR VEL NO . 1 Bemg 1n
t he Southea s t quar t er of
Se(IIOn No 73 , Town NO 1 ,
Range No 14 , of the 0 C P ,
and bounded as tol l ows
Begin n1n g 30 rods Sou tl'1 of
th e North east co rn er of
sa •d quarter Sec t •o n and .46
rods a nd 221• nks west of the
easl l1ne of sa 1d Qul!lrter
Sect •o n , then c e {1 ) West 23
rods ahd 3 tm ks , (21 So utli
34 rods and 16 l 1nks (3)
East 23 rod s and J lmk s, (.4 )
Nor t h 34 rods and 16 link s
to the place of beg1 nn1n g,
co ntam.ng F 1ve (5) acres,
w i th r1ght of way fr om lh 1s
lan d through l ands now
ow ned by Wm C Reeves
a nd L ana Reeve s to t he
publ •c highway
PARCEL
NO
2·
Beg1nn•ng ' " the 11ne be
tween Sec l•on No. Twen t y
three (23) and Seventee n
( 17) at the Sou t hwest
co rn er of a l ot of l and
former l y deed ed by Jesse
Pag~ t o John Pag e , th enLe
East T wen ty nne rod s to
t he E a&lt;;t s• de of the Athe n s
LPIC'I Ga lltpot• S r oad to th e
w, .1 I me of a tot of l and
f ormer l y d ee d ed by J esse
P age to Samuel Page ,
t he n ce South on sa 1d l1 ne
and a long the Eas t s•de of
t ~e road to t he Northeast
co rn er of a tot of land
de eded by me to Martm
Rupe , th en ce west a bo u t
t w en t y one r ods to th e l 1ne
between scc t•on 5 tw en ty
thr ee
and
seve nteen ,
-t h" · ce North a long sa •d
l• n P t o the
p l ace
of
b ~~• nn1ng , con la 1n1ng some
two acre s, more or l ess ,
and 1S a pa rt of Sect•ons No ·
Seven teen ( 17). Town ( 7),
Range N umber Fo urt ee n
( 14) m the Oh•o Compa n y's
P u r chase
PARCEL
NO .
l :
B eg1 nn•ng tlllfty rod s So ut h
f ro m the North Eas t corner
o f the South Eas t qu arter of
sec t 1on N o T wenty thr ee,
t ow n
seve n
Range
Fourt e en Of the Oh10
Company 's
Pur c ha se.
t he nce W est seven t y rods ,
t he nce South abou t th1r ty
rod s to L S Tow nse nd'S
l a nd then ce Ea st seve nth
rod s to th e East l1ne of sa1d
Sec t•on tw e nty thr ee,
t hence North alo ng sa •d
E as t l1ne t h 1r tv r ods to the
pla ce o f bcg• nn•ng , co n
tam1ng l h1 r teen and one
e•g hth acre s mor e or l ess
save and exce pt S I X acres
off ttw west S1d e o f sa 1d
tra ct of land , now ow n ed
and by A M ReEves
PARCEL NO . 4: Also .
anothe r lot or par c;e t ot
la nd , beg1nn•ng at th e
So uth east co rn er of th e
above descr 1bed lot , then ce
eas t abou t !'even t ee n r0ds ,
or to the St ate roa d as now
trav e l ed , t hence
Nor
thwa rd t y a long Stat e Road
abou t th1 rt y one rods a nd
f1fl een and one ha lt lm ks or
t o Co lumb• a Down1ng's
Sout11 l•ne . thence West "
a long sa1d Down1ng's South
l me about tw enty r ods, or
to t h e Eas t t •ne of said
Sec t1 0n twe nty . thre e.
th ence Sou t h a long sa1d
Eas 1 l•ne a bou t th1rty rods
t o the pl a ce of bcginnmg
1con t a1 n 1ng th r ee acres and
s1xty four r ods. being so
muc h of Sec t ion seven t een ,
tn
t own seve n , range
f ourte en
1n tne
Oh10
Com p a ny 's Pur chase
The amoun t conveye d by
t h• s deed bcmg ten ac r es
and C1g1'1 ty four r ods mor e
or less

RE FERE NCE

DEED

vo lu me 20 1, Page 67. Me1gs
coun ty Dee ~ R ec ords The
appra1 se d va lu e ot sa1d
prope rty be1ng \4 633 33
Th e above propert y will
be sold at the door ot th e
Cour th ouse by the Sh entf
t or no I tess t han two th 1rd s
the
appra•sed
va l ue
t her eot
Te rm s o f Sa l e
Ten
per cen t payable at the t 1me
o f sa le and the balance
payable to t he Sher•ff
wilhtn th1rly days
(6 1 5, 12. 19, 26 (7) 3, 10, 61 c

LEGAL NOTICE
THE CITIZENS

Help wanted

Memory

IN LOVING Memory of Evelyn
Wholey , who passed away
four years ago today , July 3.
1975. Sadly mtssed by Jo Ann
leonard and Billy Scarbrough

I WISH to express my
gratitude and heartfelt thanks
for the ads of kmdneu shown
to me dunng my recent
hosp•tohtotJon at the Holzer
Med1 col Center I w1sh to
thank Or
Lent.z and Dr
Vallee the nursing staff on
Two East , the Re v. Hervey
Koch , f n ends and neighbors ,
all those wtlo prayed for me o r
who sent cords , flower s, came
to vls1t or called. May God
Bless you all
Eugene R. Buckley

Notices
GUN SHOOT, EVERY FRIDAY
7·30 PM RACINE GUN CLUB
FACTORY CHOKE GUNS ON·
LY
BARBEQUE WED . JULY 4TH
MEMBERS ONLY , RACINE GUN
CLUB.
Lost and Found
LOST IN VIC if1tty ol Pome roy
Elementary School. GrayiSh
black end cream mmioture
poodle weonng wh•te fleo col ·

J , lt c

Labora tory Techmc•on , 3- 11
shift. Experienced MLT (ASCP )
or equiva lent. Excellent salary
and fringe benef i ts . Sh1ft d1t:
feren ta• l Contact Personnel
Ofltce
Pleasant
V ol ley
Hospi tal , Valley Onve, Pomt
Pleasant WV 25550 Phone
304 - 675- A~O An Equal Op
portu n1ty Employer
BARPERSON Rel1able honest
w1t h references . F1ve Po1nfs
Bar ond Grill, Rt 3, Pomeroy

Auto Sales
1974 VEGA HATCHBACK , ce ll

303-675· 1SOl or 305 675· 24BB
or 304-675 -1553
OWNER lEAVING state · must
sell 1976 Detsun 610 A-door
wagon 1978 Toyota Corolla 4
door sedan 992 -361

1973 CHRYSLER New Vorker.
Good
condi tion
$1300
992 2192or614 4076

1970 CHEVELLE SS 4 speed
$250. New t~res . 992-6057

1973 wv 9&lt;9 2490.
1972 AUDI 100 4-speed, 4 cy l
Front whee l dn..,e. S(&lt;X&gt;O

992 5785
A· l CONDITION

1970 Ford

ONE h .p, motor . 11 0 o r 220

992·2841

992· 729 1 after 4pm .

$400 B43·2542 .

For Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Per)\ ,
Rou te 33, nort h of Pomeroy
!Lorge lots Call 992·7A79
3 AND 4 RM fu r n.shed and un·
furn1shed
opts
'Phone

992·5434 .
FURNISHED APT su1toble for 3
or 4 construction workers
After Spm
cell 992· 5434
992-3129 , or992- 5'914
TWO BEDROOM furn1shed opt
992-3 129 ,
992-5.434 ,
or

TRAILER l or 2 adults, no pets

Phone 992·31BI
l:JNFURN 5 room opt 1n M ld-

dleporl. 992·5434 or m -3129
TRAILER , ofler 6 , coll992-5914

M1ddleport. July 5, 6 7 Ttme
9·5 e-ach day . 1 btke plenty o f
what · nots
Clean teen
clothes and some large s1zes,
20 '/, All in glad shape

Western.
Saddles
and
harness Horses ond ponies
Ruth Reeves 614·698·3290
Bordmg &amp; R1dmg lessons and
Horse Cora products.
RISING STAR Kennel

Boa,..

d;ng Coli 367·02'12.
AKC

REG

985 3803.

Poodl..,

Phone

and

W Va , KroG•I P• ri Club

1\'VO SMAll pu pp •e s, port
husky, brown end b lock

smillll!sl He•terc•r•

Bulldozer

6l· l mo

C:.HIC:.K5N,

~ETRIE'VE til ~

GUr-1- EA!&gt;Y
soar~

992-2772

rr

R•di• tor

~IDe~

I XXXI )"( X l I ]"
(Answerslomorrow)

N. L Construction

H. L Writesel
Roofing

BLOCK &amp; BRICK

SEVEN PUPPIES to good home
M ot her
port coll1e 985·3559

Ph . 9:92 -2174

CONTRACTOR
Rt 3
Pom eroy, Ohto

I Jumbles

_

VAPOR QUEEN

FURN . APT . 3 rooms ond both
No pels
No child r en

949-22S3
For Sale
LIMESTONE,

sand ,

grovel , colc1um chlonde fer ·
tillzer, dog food , and o il types
of salt h ce lsior Salt Wo rk s,
Inc, E. Ma1n St , Pomeroy,

J&amp;L

Blown Insulation
JIM. KEESEE
Cellulosic

(Wood

m ·Je9t
1975 OUACHITA Boss boat

992-529B
TWENTY PIGS, 7 weeks old,
S30 each 400 boles wheot
straw $1 25 aa 985·4104
RUNNING GEARS of iron
wheel wagon , $50 1 pa ir pull·
ing pon1es and harness , $A75
1 Boy mare w1th mare colt ,
rebred, $380 I Sorrell mare
w1th stud colt rebred to reg
quarter hor se . $400 985-3891
HARDWICK GAS range . Good
cond!llon . $20 Coii742· 2A20
80YS' 3-speed AMF btcycle

27" 949·2154
1977 OUACHT,i\ boss boet with
tratler 135 hp Mf!rc motor,
Mere Thru ster motor . $4500,

992·5B75
1960 PONTIAC FOR ports . $50.
New starter and e)(houst
p 1pes Phone 992 5706 afte r

6pm
1974 CHEV . PICKUP camper
spec1ol p s ,' p b o c $2250
1975 Gran Fury Plymouth
Good shape make good of·
(e r. 10 1/ , ft. truck camper
H~n ry Hariman . 985-3839
1975 CR 125 Hondo El s1 nore
d1rt b•lle
Good condition

$300 992·57B5
fORD TRACTOR

Excellent

condtt1on. 742-2228.

197B YAMAHA YZ 125. $600 .
Good cond1t1on 843-2452

REG. POLLED Herelard bull.
Very gentle Carl Nottmghom .

992-5309
VW PARTS . 742·27SS

fiber 1

Thermallnsulltion

Save lO pet. to SO pet.

B' S MOBILE HOME SALES . PT

on heating cost

PLEASANT , WV, 304 - 675- ~424

Olympic star?-"ALL·AOUND"

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alar~_Son!~9

Thoughtless player loses
toward

Call614·667·3263 .
PIANO TUNING lor home a nd
school lane Oon1els Al so
repe1rs, 14 yeor s e)(per1ence

rf!po•r Reasonable roles Free
estimates .
99 2-6309
or

Phone 915-4202
6 24· 1 m o. pd .

Real Estate for Sale

HOUSE FOR sol e. 5 rooms and
both May be seen o f 206 But·
ternut Ave , Pomeroy , OH or
contact Doc Ebhn .
THE HEIRS of Wtl ltam Beol of
f e r for sole h1s home ond real
property located at1 1 Oak St .,
Pom er oy , OH . 81ds w1l l be oc·
cepted of the olf•ce of Barbaro
Kmght, Attorney at low, Box
723 Pomeroy , OH . Telephone
992·2151 , untt) July 13 , 1979,
ot 10:00 om . Vendors reserve
the right to re1ect all b1ds

B ROOM HOUSE and bath . Ap·
pro)(. 2 acres . 1 1/, mile off Rt
7 , wes t on 124 Many extros

992·7255
HOME FOR SALE 124 L1ncoln
Hdl Rd Must see t o op
r,rec1ate A good buy. 3 bedr.,
!J ba th Iorge livmg room, for·
mol d1n1ng room Iorge kit·
chen, wall to wall carpeting
Basement , 2 fimshed rooms ,
furnace and workshop Phone

608 E .
MAIN
PnMI"AOY 0 .
NEW LISTING
SYRACUSE
E x·
cell ent condl1ton, ranch ,
,wood surr·~~ fir ep la ce,
fam11u ,..(\\.~ garagz , J

bedrcx. ~ bath ,
goo d

nice
lo t .

Real Estate for Sale

Bust ness Services

3 111 acrea 1n Pomeroy SEcl ud
ed wooded area on top o f h1 ll
0\lerlooks nver Water, elec·
tric
O\lailoble
$7900 .

SRAOFO I 0 Auch oneer Com
plete 59rv1ce Phone 9A9· 2A87
or 9-49 2000 Racmc Oh10,
Cri ll B1adfo rd
-~~

REAL ESTATE loons Purchase
ond rehnance 30 year t erms,
VA N o money down {el i gibl e
vererons ) FHA · As low as 3
per cent down {non \lelerons )
lrelon d Mor tg age Co , 77 E
State Athens 6U -592 .3Q5 1
THREE BEDROOM house on 1
acre 37295 Rt 12.4 992· 2581
or 992-2082 Bu1l t '1977 many

forced air
ftn a nc Jng

availabl e
$22, 500 00
Make offer .
~IDDLEPORT Ex·
cellent neighborhood Remodeled l'h story
home, 3 bedrooms, llv·
1ng room , family goom,
garage w i th stOrage,
fenced level yard, stained glass front windows.

$25,000.00
HANDY
SPECIAL

MAN'S
$7,500 00

cou l d make n tce home
or rental

Business

Sites - We

have several .
Businesse s- We

ha ve

several.
Business Room have several.

We

WE NEED LISTINGS
BUYERS&amp;
FINANCING READY
CALL TODAY
REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland, Sr.
Henry E . Cleland, Jr.

992-6191

216,E. Second Street

PLAY 'GROUND - Jus t
for th e c h1ldren
ni ce
a nd level. Re novat e d J
b ed r oo m
hom e,
full
basement , 2 ba ths,
garag e
and
boat
storage $48,500

STURDY - N•cely bu111
s tu cc h , 9 rooms for

a

large fam •ly , 2 baths,
furna ce, equipped ki t
c hen, dinmg , f 1r ep la ce
and
full
basem e n t
Large yard &amp; 2 car

garage . Only $35,000.
RT. ll NORTH -

6

room
ranch with
2
b ed room s,
bath ~
ca rpeting all th roug h ,
garage
and
larg e
gard en space $17,500.

2 bed room

home with bath, nat ga s
heat, T . P . water a nd
OHio
Power .
Only

-

2

bllths, nat gay, 2 lots,
one setup for 2 trailers

and large outbuilding on
level corner lot Asking

POMEROY
LANDMARK
Headqua.rters for
tfotpoint and
Genera 1 Electric
Appliances

SALE PRICES
w. Carsey

Mgr .
Phone 992· 211H

MEIGS CO. FARM -

l7 ACRES -

New listing.

Frontage on Rt. 224 wtth approx. 4·5 ac:res bot1om,
20 acres pasture and balance in woodland (some
timber reporte d) . Inc ludes c hicke n house, corn

crib, shed. barn plus other outbuild ings. The
r e modeled home ha s A bedrooms, eat ·i n kitch en,
utility room , cellar house, large porch &amp; vinyl

siding FREE

~ AS

C~LL

FOR HOUSE

THE WISEMAN

REAL ESTATE AGENCY
GALLIPOLIS, 446 ·l64l .

$17,500.
NEW LISTING

-

4

bedroom home, nat. ga s

F .A. furnaces. 2 baths,
equipped kitc hen · and
ni ce yard for $25,000
RUTLAND
bedroom t ile block
building with bath , nat.
gas, c ity water and elec·

tric for only $12,000 .
NOW IS THE TIME TO
BUY AND FIX UP
BEFORE WINTER .

--

WINNIE
5HE 5-AID 11&lt;EY'LL
GET UMO 10 IT.-

""1-&lt;E 31ihS CANSTANO 1-r ANY -

5HeW~7He

\ \CR= T ~EY 'RE
THREATE NI\13lD LEAV£ '"' IT
CONTINU:= S I

-

MUSIC 705TAY/

, WELL, MAYBE I VE
JU&amp;T OUTLIVED

MY USERJ LNESS
HERE. _ _,..,

EXCAVATING ,
dozer ,
backhoe and d1tcher Charles
R Hatf1eld Block H oe Serv1ce .
Rullond O hio Pon e 7&lt;12·2008.

9f2.Jl25

$12,000
4 BEDROOMS

worl&lt;.?

EXCAVATING dozer loader
and bo ck~oo work dump
truck s and lo· boys lor h1re
w1ll haul f ill d.rt , top sod ,
l1m estone and grovel Coil Bob
or Roger Jailers day phone
992 ·7089
n 1ght
ph on e
992· 3515 or 991 .5232

· , Housing ' •
•· Head ilart~rs .

INSURANCE

been can cel led? l ost your
opera tor s
l1conut? Phone

I NEWS PA PE R ENTER PRI SE ASSN I

!Do you hate a quest1on for ttte experts ? Wme " Ask the
Expe r fs ''care of thfs newspaper Individual questions wtll
be answered If accompamed
by stamped self-addressed
envelopes The most mterestmg questions w111 be used m
th1s column and w1/l rece1ve
copieS Ol JACOBY MODERN I

I Spatial

greeting

• Kind of

5 Habitation

contract
I CUstomer
12 American
7 Turf
clergyman
8 Lose pace
13 U.S .
9 Under the
emblem
weather
15 Law~ehed
10 Duffer's item
Y estertlay 's Allswer
11 Feign
14 Comfy
21 Along in
37 Anglo-Saxon
2G Youngling
quarters
years
cash
%3 Cupid's call 16 Factory
22 Passe
38 Tear
Z4 Kansas city 17 Actress,
25 Trag1c king 39 Marsh plant
!~Correct
Ruth 27 Fatal
40 One-third of
Z8 Absolve
18 Happening
30 Lots
a movie dog
Z9 French city 19 B1vouac
34 Decreased
41 Pappy
31 Wing : Fr.
shelter
35 "- lively!" 42 Timber
3% Explosive
zo Demarcate 36 Coxcomb
curve
.,--.,.,--.,.,--.,.,.-~
initials
33 Put on

'192 ·2143

ton's

BARNEY

~~- -

nickname

HOWERY AN D MARTI N Ex·
covotmg , septic systems
dozor, backhoe
Rt
143
Phone 1 (6 14) 698 7331 or
H2-2593
I

50 THAT'S WHAR
MAW HID HER

WHO SAYS

41 Nifty
DOWN

MONEY DON'T

GROW ON

1 Simpleton
2Good
~~~-+-~--

TREES?

IN STOCK lor immed1o1e
dell..,ery vono us size~ of pool
k 1ts Oo· it- yoursel l 01 let us
1nstoll f or you D. Bumgardner
Sol es, Inc. 992·5124 .

name,

DAlbY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work
A X Y D L 8 A A X .R
Is
One letter

it :

LONGFELLOW

simply stands for a nother. In thi s sample A is

992·7314 .
NEIGLER CONSTRUCT ION for

used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc Single lett er s,
apostrophes, the lengLh and form ation of the words ar e all

new houses and repair work
Call Guy Ne•gler 949 2508
Raci ne , O h1o .
'

hmts E ach day the code letters are different

CRYPTOQUOTES

I FEEL KIND OF WOOZ't'...

COMMERCIAL CARPET dean
mg. steam
dea n . Free
estimate, reasonable rat e.
Contact Gen., Sm1 th 992·6309
or Mike G ·•.Jte 742· 23.48

The slang term "limey"
- used Jar Englislunen _
~rlginated with the British
Navy's inclusion of lime
juice, to prevent scurvy in
ships' provisions for l~ng
voyages.

DO~'T

THINK I
CAN PITCH AN~ MO~E ...

I

'f'OU'VE PROBABLI{
fJEEN !-liT ON THE
HEAD WITH TOO
MAN~ Fl.~

BALLS

HE'5 PROBAS~I{

6&amp;SN l-IlT ON THE
~EAD WITH roo
MAN~ Fl~ SAI.L5

OB

,•

F J p

SEROAXI
BY

Y AJ I

OBB
NI

Ronn les 33.

2:oo--Doctors J , 15; One Life to Live
6,13; Evening a t Pops Special JJ;
2:25-News 17
2: 3()-Another World 3,15; Guiding
Light8,1 0; I love lucy 17; J:oo-General Hospital 6,13; Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 20.
3:30- Mash 8; Razzmatazz 10;
Banana Splits 17; Over Easy 20;
Boley, Oklahoma 33
~ : OQ--Mister Cartoon 3; Hollywood
Squares 15; Merv Griffin 6;
Addams Family 8; Six Million
Dollar Man 10; Mike Douglas13;
Fllntstones 17.
4 : 30-lone Ranger 3; Hogan ' s
Heroes 8; lucy Show 15; Partridge Family 17.
5:0Q--Bonanza 3; Beverly Hillbillies
8; Mister Rogers' Neighborhood
20,33; Gomer Pyle USMC 10; Six
Mi llion Dollar Man 13: Brady
Bunch 15; Star Trek 17 .
5· 3()- News 6 ; Petticoat Junction
8: Elec. Co. 2() ; Mary Tyler
Moore 10; Odd Couple 15; Doctor
Who 33.

21),33.

for short
3Gum up

A DD ONS and re modelmg,
gutter work , down spouts,
some concreta work , wa lks
and
drl \l!l"w oy s
( tr ee
estimate ) V C Yo ung, Ill,
Rocm e, O H 949·2H8 and

WEDNESDAY, JULY 4, 1979
at Large 17: 5: 45Farm Report 13; 5:50-PTL Club
l l : 5:55-Summer Semester 10.
6 ·0Q--700 Club 6,8; PTL Club 15;
6:10- News
17 :
6 '25Chr lstopher Closeup 10.
6 .3Q--Dragnet 17; 6:45-Mornlng
Report 3; 6 :50-Good Morning
West Virginia 13; 6:55-Chuck
White Reports 10; News 13. ,
7:oo--Today 3,15, Good Morning
America 6, 13; Wednesday
Morning 8; Schoolles 10; Three
Stooges-Little Rascals 17.
7:15-A .M Weather ll; 7 : 30Famlly Affair 10; Lilias Yoga &amp;
You 33
8:oo--Capt. Kangaroo 8,1 0; Leave It
To Beaver 17: Sesame St . 33.
8·3().-Romper Room 17; 9:oo--Bob
Braun 3; Phil Donahue 13, 15;
Joker's Wild 10; Lucy Show 17;
Biography 33.
9:3()-Sanford &amp; Son 8, Hogan's
Heroes 1O; Green Acres 17.
10 :00--Card Sharks 3,15; Edge of
Night 6 ; All In The Family 8.10;
Dating Game 13; Movie "Halls of
Montezuma" 17; Exploring the
Crafts : Weaving 33.
10 :3Q--AII Star Secrets 3,15; $20,000
Pyramid 13; Andy Griffith 6;
Whew 8,10: Daniel Foster, M. D '
33.
•
10:55--{; BS News 8; House Call 10.
11 :oo--High Rollers 3,15; Laverne &amp;
Shirley 6,13; Price Is Right 8,10;
Biography 33 .
11 ' 30-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15;
Family Feud 6, 13'.
12 .oo--Newscenter 3; News 6, 10;
Password 15; Over Easy 33;
Young &amp; the Restless 8; Midday
Magazine 13
12:31)-Ryan's Hope 6,13; Search for
Tomorrow 8, 10; N_'lt For Women
Only 15; Movie " ~~ars &amp; Stripes
Forever" 17; MacNeil-lehrer
Report 33 .
l :oo--DaysofOur Llves3,15: All My
Children 6, 13; News 8, Young &amp;
the Restless 10; Watch Your
Mouth 33.
1·31)-As The World Turns 8, 10; Two

s 2Q--World

6:00--News 3,8,10,13,15; ABC News
6; Family Affair 17; VIlla Alegre
20; STudio See 33.
6 · 31)-News 3, 15,13.8.10; Carol
Burnett 6; Over Easy 20,33;
Ftaher Knows Best 17.
7 00-Cross . Wits 3; Newlywed
Game 6,13 ; Porter Wagoner 8;
· News 10; love American Style
15, Gel Smart 17. Dick Cavett
20,33.
7: 3()-Dolly 3; Match Game 6;
Muppet Show 8; The Judge 10;
That's Hollywood 13; My Three
Sons 17 ; MacNeii·Lehrer Report

style
44 French
resort
45 Pilot
Boying-

E· C ~~ECTR I C A L COntroclor
serv •flg Oh1o Voll ey region
Sn( day s o week 2A hours ser·
viCe Emergency call s Col i
882 -2952 or 862 345.4

--

we

remnant
31 Not
wanted :
43 Window

PULLINS EXC A VATING Co m~e~~h~_!92- 2478

AUT OMOBILE

asks what call

recommend. We s imply
jump t o four s pades.

infinitive
11 Bear anns

wher·
he

----

Yo u double a one-heart bid
to your r~ g ht Your partner
responds one s pade. An Iowa

4 Neronlan

ACROSS

Never mind!
What about
Mom's finqer?

SEWI NG MACHINE Repo 1rs,
serv lcfl , oi l molc.es ~1 · 218Jt
The Fobn c Shop , Po meroy
Auth omud Singer Soles and
s~ We sharpen SciSSo rs

---

LITTLE -

,

+AKJ 4
• A Q 10 8

THOMAS JOSEPH

Slim brunq this
home from Buqsie's
Bar

ELWOOD BOWER S REPAIR
S weeper~ . toaster' 1rons oil
small opp l1once s Law n moer,
ne)( t to Stole H1ghwoy Garage
on Rou te 7, 985· 3825

7-3-8

~J.,""e
by

GASOLINE: ALL.EY

• 5 I mo

Elementary,

equ1pped kitchen. full

r

STOCK

game.

South did du ck a couple of
clubs but h a d to wm the third
lead. Then he led a s oade

of W olkUw l llt

GOOSE

Alii tiM IXMPtl
• 2

bother to think .
West made the unfrie ndly
opemng lead of the deuce of
clubs. A heart lead would
have g1ve n South n o cha nce

to l ose the

H~A lLE R N OW AVAILABLE

$30,500.00
E X C E L L E N T
NEIGHBORHOOD

992-2259

992·5865. $&lt;5 000.

SU PE~

acres,
t e n c tng , two·
story nome, barn, other
butlding, Chester area,
garden, wood burner.

basement,
furnace,

MT80••.

and lead a

Yo u hold :
+ K Q 10 3

The o nly
e x c u se for
South's failure to make
today 's three-notrump contra ct was laziness . He didn•t

~H5 E\f e n1119~

E 1~1

Pass

diamond

a

low spade We st's ace would
ca pture thaL low s pade, and
South would have three
spade tricks Instead of two .

reader

AROUND H. . .
BtGG•A"N VQU,

l.Olii. \VIIIt , 01\oo
1 Molet

'

South I
2 NT

North East
Db I.
Pass
3 NT
Pass

THeRE'$ NOTHIN'

8 1GGE A: 'N son&lt;
OF u·s !

TRAILER SALES
, .. Ut

$40,000.00
FARM - Free gas, 20

PomeroY

NOw, 00N'1' FIGHT
Lt ' L ==-ELLER , IT 'S

1JU0 Monttom • r• !Old

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
Also TransmiSSIOn
Repair
Phone 992 · 5682
4 lO lf c

with

By Oswald Jaco by
and Alan Sontag

\.\

992·3886

kitchen,

ALL.EY OOP

4 23 1 m o

'

had to do after dummy's
queen held the first spade
was to come bac k to h1s hand

L___~_ __j

592-3051

4231 mo ( Pd l

If South hadn ' t been too
lazy to think he would have
m a d e his contract. All he

Opening lead · • 2

71 E . Sta te , Athe ns

l,. md~ off Rt. 1 by. . pa ss
on St. Rt . 124 toward
Rutland

North of Chester, 0 .

TWO STORY 3 bedroom hous e .
3 lots N ow s your chance It
yo u need o hous.e $12,000 '
Owner wdlmg to
folio.
992-2082 or 7-42·2328 .

West
1•

Pass
Pass

IRELAND
MORTGAGE CO.

•New Home
*Add ons
Remoldings
F~ee estimates
992 · 60 11

come to eight tricks.

+9 73

Vulnerable: Neithe r
Deale r . We st

1

jack and West 's ace . West
cash ed his last club and got
off lead w1th a diam ond
S ince East still h a d a s pa de
stopper South co uld only

+A 9 3

ANNIE· .. W£Ll, MAYBE COFFEE '
... ANO ... ER ... ANY MfAl
Len ? GOT TO KEEP UP
MY STRfNG'IH .'

Garage

St. Rt. 7

742 2910 .

OM ·~ · H~ JUST CAME rROI'I THE
HOSPITAL ··• CAN' l fAT A THING

Roger Hysell

USED GARDEN
TRACTORS
AND
RIDING MOWERS

992·361)
EXTERIOR PAINTING . Gen eral

Chester, 0 .
5-6· 1 mo. pd.

Pur c h ase
and
Relinance
30 Year Term s
A- No
money down
(etlg tbl e veteran s )
FHA - AS l ow as l %
down ( non -veterans)

*

TILLIS

I WILL boby s1t 1n my nome,
doyhme Mondoy •t hrough Fi r·
doy w 1th ch• ldren ages one to
four Phone M rs. Gl enn Sm1 th

NEW THREE bedroom all elec·
trio l'lome . Ohi o Powe r Over
a cre
Ea t- m
k1 tc hen
I
d• s h w a s her ,
gorbog~
disposal coro mic both area
utility oreo , 3 col ors of
carpetmg, rura l w ater Neor
long sv •lle
$.43 000
Call
742-2819 after Spm Raymond
Hatfield.

West

continued wtth a spade to hls

+KJ 52
+QI076
SOUTH
• J 53
• A92
• J 10 42

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

Real Estate Loans

*

992-3100 6 6 1 mo.

RIDENOUR GAS Serv1ce Do )(·
ol l.P. gas Chester 985·3307

Box 3

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

187 ASH ST.
MIDDLEPORT

l'l .,, t&lt; ... I.

Jack's Septic
Tank serviCe

5-20 ·1 mo .· pd .

Civil
Mechanical
Archetectural
Layouts

+B6

Jack G i nther 91S·l806

Free Estimates

mo

QUALITY
DRAFTING
SERVICES

HANDYMAN WORK mow1ng
lawns P';Jinling houses, roofs
and bu1ldmg Sidew alks , etc.

men t 2 bedr on Lincoln Hts.
Seriou s calls only 992 ~7

Phone 98S-l806

Phone 99Hl2l

~ - 17 · 1

PAINTING AND sandblasting
Free est1motes Call q49· 2686

THREE 8BDROOM home 1n

Res iden tia l and com mercial
Call
for
estima te . 2~ H our Ser•
v1ce Any day , anyttme.
Portabte toilet rental

eNEW HOMES
eROOM ADDITIONS
eROOFING
eVINYL SIDING
eGUTTER &amp; SOFFIT

fully insured
Free Est.
Call 992-2772

NOW HAULING limestone 1n
M•ddleport -Poe mr ov
o rea
Call
for free
es l 1mat e
367-7101

Bradbury 1 floor co rner lot
with garage corport a nd reor
opt 992 -6345
11/J story home w1th full bose·

dumm y

won the Lr1ck . No w South

NORTH
7-3-A
+ K Q B6
• Q 10 6
+A K Q5
• 84
WEST
EAST
+A7
+ 10 9 4 2
•KJ8 75
• 43

SEPTIC TANK·
CLEANING

BOB'S GENERAL
CONTRACTING

E,.;perlence and

I 4x70 197A Governor 3
' bedroo m 1117 both , central a1r ,
awntng butldmg and wood
burner .
In
M idd lepo rt

REAL ESTATE I acre lot in R1g·
gscrest Manor , between Tuppers Plotn s o nd Chester
Phone 985·3929 ond 985--41 29

DUPLEX

ducked a nd dummy's queen

992·5851l .
1965 GENERAL 60xl2, 2 bedr

992·ntB .

ACTUAL

~at ktnd of an athlete was t hat rotund

Answer

Tuesday, Jul y 3

949 · 2862 --949 · 2160
.! 5 IIC

992-5547
4-25 ·1 mo ·Pd

Pomeroy

Yesterday's

N e w, repatr,
gutters and
down s pouts.
Window ~leaning
· Gutter cleaning
Free Estimates

WORK, GENERAL

Smith Nelsoo
Motors, Inc.

ly 992·6122

Now arrange the ckcled toners to
form the surprise answer, as suggested by the abOve canoon

) I K J

ovetz THe

6-6· 1 mo

moles . 992·5035
WHITE AND brown huntmg
dog , male. 8 mo ol d Fnend

Adults only 992-259B

Jack

THE;
c APTAlloJ CA N

CALL

H ou 5~~

Fur tur1hl!r lnlor~hon call Jo
Ann Ni!WS(Iml!, llt·991 Jlll

WHAI iHEY &amp;AID
A~L!T 'THE

j;eFO~e

Free Esti(Tiate

6-14·2 mo

From the 111rge5t

ONE BEDROOM mobtl e ho me.

or 992-3129

6.

YARD SALE . 7B5 5. Fronl 51 .

or

Sunday

GiveAway

WOULD like to do bobystthng
m my home and oges o f 4 &amp; 8
Contact
Judy Humphreys

COAL

(IO • JO)

Evenlnts •' 7 . .10 M•ddleport ;
Heeth Un1led M et hoch1t Church
Thu r~
Morn1rHJ 110. 30) and
Evenmgs et 1 30· Pt Plea1an t,

EXPERIENCED
Rdlat9r.,--.,
Service

DOZER, END Loader and dump
truck . W1 ll do basements ,
pond s .
b ru s h
t1mer ,
limestone and gravel Charles
Butc her 742 · ~40 .

.YARD SALE . July 2·6

YARD SALE . lns1de 1069 Vme
St , Middleport July 6th odn
7th . 10 om to 6pm . Sew1ng
moch1ne w•th l1ke naw mapl e
cabinet , lifereo tope deck w1th
AM·FM radio , s.peokers ond
stand. Other m•sc ttems·

No

Morning

IT (

TWO BEDROOM tro 1ler Adu lts
on ly 992·3324 .

YARD SALE. July 5 , 6, 7 across
from Enterpme Church

THREE FAMILY Garage So le
Hunnel's on Rose H1ll . Thurs·
day and Fndoy, July 5 and 6. 9
om to 4 pm
Cameros,
dothmg, many other 1tems
look for signs oft US 33 , north
of Beacon Stat io n

949·2860 .
calls.

V~ ,

(304) 424·641)

992·S914 .

12 x60 2 bed room mob1le homfl
1n Ra cme area . 992·5858

YARD SALE . 32502 Mtnersv tlle
Rd . Many household items.
Stone Jars, 1ugs , churns , m1lk
cens , some onhques. July 5, 6 ,
7 . 11om · 6 pm

Tu•s

949-2101

Estimate,

W

M~ !oo n ,

7•30 St. Josepl'l C•thohc Chur ch ;

7: 00- Cross -W its 3; Newlywed
Game 6, 13; Please Stand By 8;
News 10; Love American Style
15; Get Smart 17; Dick Cavett
20,33.
7:31)-Hollywood Squares 3; Candid
Camera 6. Gong Show 8; Price Is
Right 10; Donna Fargo 13; Burl
Ives' America 15; Baseball 17;
Mac Neil -Lehrer Report 20,33.
8:0Q--Runaways 3; Happy Days
6, 13; Paper Chase 8, 10; You Are
Loved IS ; Austin City Limits 20;
City Notebook 33 .
8: JQ--Laverne &amp; Shirley 6, 13; Two
Ronnles 33.
9· 00-E mergency 3, 15; Three ' s
Company 6, 13; Movie " Thaddeu•
Rose &amp; Eddie" 8, 10; Evening at
Pops 20,33 ; 9:31)-Taxl 6,1).
IO:OQ--13 Queens Blvd. 13 ; You Are
Loved 6; Charlotte Marathon 17.
10:31)-PIIot " My Buddy " 13; Boley,
Oklahoma 33; Rat Patrol 17.
11 :oo-News 3,6,8, 10, 13, l'S ; 11 :JoWimbledon Tennl• 3,15; Movie
" The Rookies" 6; Barnaby Jones
8; ABC News 33; Movie " First
Love" 17.
1U5-Johnny Carson 3,15; 12:41)Movle "The Legend of Valentino" 8; 1:1 5--Tomororow 3.
t · 31)-Baseball 17 ; 1 : 55-News 13;
4 oo--News 17; 4 20--12 O'Cidck
High 17 .

KJ K

PARKERSBURG

992-25111 or 992 ·2082

TWO BEDROOM House, newly
remodeled
lu tc hen
in
Pome roy Coli 992 2288 offe r 6
p.m .

YARD SALE 698 laurel St ,
M1ddleport. Thurs . and Fn . 5 •

MOn EYf_nrngs

can for a Free Siding

Services Offered

Yard Sale

FOUR FAMILY Yard Sale. July
2 thru 7 at Wood row Fortney's
on Bas han -Keno Rd' 949-2827 ,

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

992· 2514 .

BASEMENT RUMMAGE Sol e.
Julr 2. 5. 6. At Arthur's
Mtl er's, Rt. 1, Rutland , OH.
1().4 eo. day

South 2nd St., Mtddleport , OH.
L1nens, bedd•ng , dishes ,
drapes , curtains , clot h1ng,
dolls
s1lverstone
rod1os ,
teWelry , toys . There ts
somethmg for everyone.

Slinderella

Diet Classes

/111

1970 Sy lva , 60x l 2, 2 bedr
1970 Ca st le , 60xl2 , 2 bed r
1974 Morkl1ne, 50x12 , 2 bedr
1969 Valiant , 12K60, 2 bedr
1967 Not1onol 12 x50, 2 bed r

ONE BEDROOM opts Contact
Village Manor . 992 -7787

810

H. t' l ( f)
T rnt wr 1rtn h•r l'r u/1//IIC

WANTED
Overwetght People

Siding

Don' t Ju St b~ sat•sf1ed W1t h a
JOB - Plan NOW tor a Pr o fe s·
s•o nnl career D11vmg a " B•g
A1g " We are a Pnvat e Tnun1ng
School and If y OU' meet o ur
Quald•c&lt;JtiOn s vou w ill be tra •n·
f!d by Profe sSI On al Inst ruc tors
on m ode rn equ 1pment Trcun
on a P;HI T1m e tJilsls (Sat &amp;
Sun ) and Keep y ou r JOb , or
atten d o ur 3 We ek Full T1me
Aes •dent Tra1mng

1976 FORD COURIER piC kup

992·2689

OLD COINS, pocket watche s.
class r,1 ngs wedd1ng bonds ,
d1amonds Gold or s1lver Call
J A Wamsley , 742· 2331

8 t1Tt'at4 tl / !AJhur HultS
IllS hul/t'/111 \u 1875

TUESDAY, JULY l , 1979

" =~=.!..-··-- ·

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

Vinyl and Aluminum

Lahu "

1974 14 • 70 mob1le home
Good
co ndil1 on .
$ 7800

ts 1n good con d1t1on Ne(lds
work on trans . and front end

phonograph
reco rds . Call
992·6370 or Contact Martin
Furmture

"'

M ercury Montego XL V·B. a1r ,
p s. , p b , rod1cl. vmyl top
Also 20 mpg SSOO. 949·2748 or
992.7314

Ccll992·3990
1968 DODGE CORONET Body

WANT TO buy old 45 end 7B

$18,300

I 9 7-&lt; '
al t,IIWttJ In lil t' l, S /Jt' PI uj

I I I :0
..

Mobile Homes Sale's

Excellent cond1110n
$1750
Con be seen at 123 Unton Ave .

OLD FURNITURE , ICe boxes ,
brass beds, iron beds, de sks ,
etc ., complete households
Wnte M D Miller, Rt . 4.
Pomeroy or call992-7760

ll\'!'f{)g e t'Ofi/IIIXJ n j nho tl l

3 fema les , 4 moles

mtss h1m

Wanted to Buy

Business Services

farge
Ina k111~ ffJ111f'!l'IIL'l' lt!lcJ ann11al

1972 OLDS CUTLASS , good
shape. $650 Ccll992·7063 .

1973 CADILLAC ELDORADO

CHIP WOOD
Poles ma x
dtometer I 0" on largest end
S12 per ton Bundled slob $10
per ton Oeli\lered to Ohto
Pollet Co., Rt 2, Poi'Tlaroy

/ VSTRUCIION
'bm •t•n 1'/J!fJ/o\ ul /H

a

lor. If lound ccii992·32SS. We

HOOF HOLLOW, Engl11h end

(71

OPENING

1977 FORD CHATEAU von
P.S., P.B., A C ~l, lot more ex·
tras Coll992-7291 after -4

NATIONAL BANK
OF MIDDLEPORT
YARD SALE , July 6, 7, 8 ~I
Middleport, Ohio
Grant Young res1dence , •;,.
N ot.ce 1S her eb y g1ven
mile west on SR: 12&amp;. Children's
that , p ur suant to ca l l ot 1ts
d •r ec to r s,
a
s p eeta l
clothes . d iShes, and otehr
meet1n~
of
th e
1tems
sharehO l ders
of
Th e
Ci l lzens Nat1on fll Bank of
YARD SALE . BIO E. Mom St ..
Midd l eport w1ll be held at
Pomeroy Ro tn cancels Fr1
1IS bank ing hou se at 97 N
ond Sat. July 6, 7·
Second A\lenue , 1n th e
FOUR FAMILY Garege Sole
V•llaoe of M l dd tecort on
Tu es da y J u ly 2.4 , 19 79 at 3
Ju ly 6 9·3. Riggscrest Manor
P M , for th e purpose of
above Eastern -H1gh School off
&lt;ons•der~ ng
and deter
County
Rd 28 .
m1n1ng by vot-e w h ether an
ag r eeme nt to merge the
YARD SALE July 6 &amp; 7 Fndoy
sa 1d bank and The Centrlll ' and Saturday . Sellars k1tch en
Turst Compa ny , Nationa l cabmet
Walnut pendulum
Asso c• atto n . loca ted tn the
clock Oak chtfhrobe odd
C.ty o f C1nC 1nnilt l St a te Of
Oh Ia , und er t he pr OVISIOns chairs. miu. household items
733 Butternut Ave , Pomero y
of t he laws of the un .ted
St ates . sh all be ratif ied an d 992·3079 .
co n f1 rm ed . sub tec t to t he
YARD 1SALE Fnday, Julr. 6
app r oval o f the Com p
troll er o f th e Cu rr ency. lasts fill everythmg 1s sod at
the Charles Manuel res1dBhce
wa shmg ton , D c , and tor
th e purpose ot vot 1ng upon Manuel Rood above Racme
any other ma tte rs m
c1denta l to t he proposed THREE FAMILY Yard Sale
merger o f th e two banks A Thursday only July 5th 9 til ?
co py of l he aforesaid wood.n exlenor doors kitagreement , ex ec u te d by a chen tabJe and chotrs, dothtng
majo r 1t y of the d irectors of - children' s and oduhs dishes .
each of the tw o banks , baby lo\le seat, baby hamper
pr ov 1d1ng to r 1he me rg er ,
1S on file a t t he tJa nk an d J Wtllloms, Syracuse. OH .
mav be insper t ed dur ing
bus m ess hours .
Harold E Hubbo~~rd
Pets lor Sale
Pres ident
(6 ) 26 ( 7) 3, 10. 17 . 4tc

E fl ecf 1ve ela t e 06 76 79
1 h •s lin a I ac t io n not
p r er.e d ed by propo sed
ach on and 1S appea ll!lb le to
EBR ,
Sep tic
Sys tem ,
Sc pt tc Tan~s &amp; L eac hing
T11e ~ 1eld for Dairy Oetlt!.

IMMED IATE

Card of Thanks

tt1e to tto w,ng descr •bed

vanl'f!

'

Unscram~e these foUf JumtSies.
one letter 10 each square, to form
tour ordinary words.

H~

PLEAS COURT
MEIGS COUNTY ,
OHIO

Television
Viewing

~THAT SCRAMBLED WOAD GAME
by Henri Arnold and Bob Lee

~ ~ ~~ I!&gt;

VIFREKIP

OKEOQ

'F

F K I

TEFZAOM
NM

XZEVRM

AJROKEVIJOR .
WFRXFZ
Yesterday's Cryploquote: COURAGE IS
PRICE THAT
UFE EXACTS FOR GRANllNG PEACE - -AMEI.JA
EARHART
.

THE

rC)

1919 l&lt;ln'it Features Synellc•te, tnc.

•

I

8:00- laugh In 3,15 ; Eight Is
Enough 6, 13; Movie "Hawaii"
8,10; Movie "VIctory at Sea" 17;
Masterpiece Theatre 20; All
Creatures Great &amp; Small 33;
Charlie's Angels 6,13: Upstairs,
Downstairs 20 ; Pollee Story 3, 15.
10 : 00- Vegas
6, 13 ;
A
Good
Dissonance Like A Man 33;
Mardi Gras 17; News 20; 10 :» Best of Groucho 20.
11 :00-News 3,6,8, 10 , 13, 15; Book
Beat 33.
11 :JQ--Wimbledon Tennis 3, 15; Your
Turn 8; Movie "Star Spangled
Girl" 10; Movie "The Black
Rose" 11.
11 :45-Johnny Carson 3, 15; 12 :00-Swltch 8; 12 :41)-Mannlx A,13.
1: 1o-- Ko)ak 8; 1: 15-Tomorrow 3;
News 15; 1: 50-News 13; 2:05News 17.
2: 25- Movle "Charlie Chan In
Egypt" 17; 3:55-12 O'Clock
High 17; 4 :55-Dragnet 17

,.

�10- The Uatly Sentmet, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., TuesQay, July 3, 1979

OPEC releases oil prices
'

TEHHAN. lran (AI' ) - Iran has set
contract prices of $19.10 to $19.90 per
barrel of heavy cru'de oil and $2Jto $22
for light crude following last month 's
meetin g of the
pr ice-fi xing
Organization of Petroleum Exporting
Countries, the Nationa l Iranian Oil
CO. sa id IIJday.
Iran's previous oil prices, including
surcharges, were $18.47 per barrel of
light crude and $1 7.74 per barrel of
heavy crude.
. Officials would not immediately
explain why a range of prices was
used in the latest fixing instead of a
single price.
Meanwhil e, Saudi Arabia and
Kuwait notir ied Japane se oil
companies of an average $3.50-a·
barrel irtcrease in crude oil prices,
government sources in Tokyo said.
The United Arab Emirates was also
reported to have sent similar notices
following the OPEC price increase,
but the sources couldn 't confirm this.
They said Saudi Arabia IIJld the
Jlfpanese clients-the price range on its
oils, which has been from $13.64 a
barrel to $17.87, now would be from
$17.17 to $21.32.
The price increases will be
retroactive to June I, Saudi Arabia
said, although the OPEC meeting
decided they will take effect July 1.
Kuwait also sa.id its prices will. go up

an average $19.49 from $16.40.
The United Arab Emirates was
repor-ted to have notified the Japanese
that the price range of its oil, which
has been from $17.68 to $17.81 , now
would be from $21 .36 to $21.46.

ID

HA.ltl .EY ·~· AUAMS
Harley L. Adams, 59, Route 1,
Reedsvill e, died early Monday
morning at Ca mden.Qark Memorial
Hospital followin g a brief illness.
He was born in Reedsville, a son of
the late Perry and Viola Blake
Adams. He was a former employe of
the Union Carbide Corp., Metals
Division, Marietta, having retired two
years ago because of a physical
disability. He was a veterans of the U.
S. Army having serving overseas
durirtg World War II. He was a
lifelong resident of the Reedsville

;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.

EXTENDED FORECAST
Thursday through Saturday: Fair
Thursday. A · chance of thunderstorms Friday and Saturday.
Highs through the period from the
upper 70s ·to tlie mid 80s. Lows from
the mid 50s to the mid 60s.

\

area.

Weather
Partly cloudy tonight and Wednesday. Lows tonight about 60. Highs
Wednesday between 80 and 85. The
chance of rain is 20 percent tonight
and Wednesday.

SQUAD RUN
The Pomeroy Emergency Squad
was called to Union Ave., at 11 :46 p.m.
Monday for William Stephenson who
was taken to Pleasant · Valley
Hospital.

NEW FINANCIAL REPRESENTATIVE ,- Sam Boston, left
receives congratulations from business agent Henry C. Peery who ha~
served in that position for the past 24 years. Peery, a resident of New
Haven, W. Va. retired as of Monday night. Diuing his administration, the
uruon has established large quarters· at Union Hall, 218 East Main St.
Pomeroy, and has improved community relations and fringe benefits .· '

News organizations

3 OUNCES OF
A~CURACY IN ACTION ...

LCD QUARTZ
TRAVEL ALARMS
GOESSLER JEWELRY
Pomeroy, 0.

By The Associated Press
of
news
Representatives
organizations denounced the Supreme
Court's ruling on Monday that said
judges have broad discretion. to
exclude the news media and the public
from pretrial criminal proceedings.
The 54 decision came in a case that
pitted the right of a free press against
that of a fair trial.
The ruling upheld the New York
Court of Appeals and a trial judge who
barred reporters and the public from
a pretrial hearirtg in 1976 on a defense
motion to supress evidence against
two men accused of killing Wayne
Clapp , a former policeman in
Brighton, N. Y., a suburb of
Rochester.
Jerry W. Friedheim, vice president
and general manager of the American
Newspaper Publishers Association,
said in a statement: ·
"ANPA is most disturbed that such
' a divided Supreme Court would by a
tenuous 1-vote marg in issue an

opinion in this case which appears to
substitute censorship for common
sense and which may encourage some
judges to conduct judicial proceedings
in secrecy .
" ~NPA agrees with the dissent of

HOSPITAL 1\EWS·

_..,...

E_ckrich

HAM &amp; CHEESE LOAF. ••••••• ~~}1.98
Eckrich

OLD FASHIONED LOAF. •••••••~~·. $1.89
Homemade

HAM SALAD
12 oz. Kraft
Pimiento Sliced

CHEESE ... Pkg.

LB.

••••••••••••

$1 39

1 lb. Blue Bonnet
Quarters

MARGARINE.. .....69

~ •••••••••• l

6 OZ.

$119

~

HEAD

2

Pkgs.

4

LETTUCE ........... 9~

12 oz. Donald Duck

ORANGE JUICE ••••••••••·•••••••••••• 7.9~
10112 oz. Campbells

VEGETABLE SOUP. ••••••••••••••. 2/59~
20 oz. Del Monte

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
Admitted--Mildred Milburn,
Middleport ; Mary Pierce, Long
Bottom; Joann Fetty, Lansville ;
Rhonda Ha ger, Gallipolis ; Linda
Rhodes, Logan; Mary Bowman,
Tuppers Plains; Denise Lambert ,
Rutland .
"
Discharged-Salem Yates.

•

RADISHES .... ~1.29

•

•

ACTIVITIES N&lt;JfED
.. Activities on the 4th of July in
Racim• will begin with the raising of
the flag at 10 a.m. at the Racine
Junior High .
.. A parade will follow at 10: 15 and a
Mr. Justice Blackmun that the chicken barbecue at 11 at the fire
narrow-majority opinion is a rejection station. At 2-p .J!1 . games will be h~ld
of 'the important interests of the at the junior high ball field and
public and the press." '
fireworks display will be held at 10
John Finnegan, executive editor of p.m.
the St . Paul Pioneer-Press and
Dispatch and chairman of The
AssOciated Press Managirtg Editors
SUIT FILED
Association's Freedom of Information
Chargiflg that injuries sustained
Committee, said:
durirtg a July IS, 1978 accident on SH 7
"I think the Supreme Court decision resulted from the negligent operation
is not in the overall public interest. I of a motor vehicle operated by Grover
foresee that pretrial hearings in many B. Stout , Pomeroy, Sandra J ..
states which heretofore have been Michael T. and William T. Woodall
open will now be closed simply fil ed suit Monda y in Gallia County
because it will be easy for the trial Conunon Pleas Court.
judge to do so. The Supreme Court is
The Wood a ll 's see k judg ment
amountin g to $50 ,000 against
inviting. closure."
defendant Stout.

denounce -decision ·

BULOVA

Court St.

Surviving are his wife, Thelma E.
Adams; a son and daughter-in-law,
David and Jenny Adams Reedsville;a
grandson, James Adams, Reedsville;
a brother, Harry , Belleville, W. Va.,
and several nieces and nephews. He
'was preceded in death by two
daughters, Patsy and Sandra Kay, a
sister and three brothers.
Funeral services will ·be held at I
p.m. Thursday at the Eden United
Brethren C.'hurch with the Rev . Elden
Blake officiating. Burial will be in the
church cemetcry.' Friends may call at
the White Funeral Home in Coolville
after 7 this evening . The body will be
taken to the church to lie in state one
hour precedin g servicei.

Holzer Medical Center
Discharges, July 2
Larry Bailey, Gladys Balsinger,
Samantha Bandy, Waldo Bowman,
Noah Burgess, Roger Byer, David
Dailey, Mitchell Davis, Dorothy
Delawder, Bethanee Elliott, Lee
Ferrell, Bethel Grover, Richard
Lawhorn, Jack Lyons, Jesse McCarty, Kara Morgan, Rida Morrison,
Dorothy Nimrichter, Mrs. Roger
Powell and son, Mrs. Charles Ross,
Jr. .and son, Belva Smith, Owen
Wilber, Mrs. Jerry Wills and
daughter.
Births, July 1
Mr. and Mrs. William Yerian,
daughter, Oak Hill. Mr. and Mrs.
Evan:Davis, daughter, Wellston . Mr.
and Mrs. James Neal, son, Gallipolif;.
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Goble, son,
Browton, W.Va.

'

SLICED PINEAPPLE •••••••••• 2/$1.29

.REAL ESTATE
FOR SALE

14112 oz. Hunts

WHOLE TOMATOES •••••••••••••••••. 49~
9 oz. soct. Solo

Excellent location in Mid ·
dleport. Now rented property. Great value for
home and -or rental.
For info. write Daily Sentinel, Box 729 -D, 111 Court
St., Pomeroy, Ohio.

HOT or COLD CUPS •• ~ •••••••• ::~9:. 59'
Jib. Golden Isle

VEGETABLE SHORTENING •••••• $1.79

Strike may be over
Wa~h ington

1AP)-Movementof food
and goods on the na'tion 's highways
continu es to show " substantial
improvement " and the tre nd
irtdicates the nationwide truckers'
protest "should be over shortly," the
Interstate Commerce Commi ssion
reported Monday.
"The fa cts are - whether they
admit it or not - the tru cker s are
going back to work," ICC spokesman
Doug Baldwirt said in Washington.
The agency's nationwide survey
showed a continued trend of more
owner-&lt;Jperator trucks hauling food ,
household items and other goods,
Baldwin sa id. He said regional offices
mentionirtg violence in their reports
Monday showed such incidents were
down substantially. ~
Independent truckers assoc iations
irt more than a half-&lt;lozen stales have
voted ID endorse a return IIJ work
followirtg the Carter administration's
announcemen t or a six-point program
for ending the protest, now in its
fourth week.
The
government' s progr am
designated eight interstate highways
as ''safe corridors" for truckers,

established task for ces to deal with
truckers' problems and 1ddressed key
grievances concerning allocation of
diesel fu el and weight and size
regulations.
A significant number of truckers'
groups, however , appeared to be
going along with their nationa l
leaders in holding out for more
concessions from the goverrur..·nt .

And some protest leaders were callin g
for an escal ation of strike activity.
Michael Pa rkhurst,.president of the
independent Truckers Assoc iation,
c'Onceded th.,... 'poople have gone back
ID work as they are forced. into the
position of going complete bankrupt. "
He r laimed, however , that "the
majority are holding out.' '
"The battle is not over," he said in a
telephone interview from Washington .
In BosiiJn , a convoy of 43 vehicles
converged on the Ma ss achusetts
Statehouse for the second time in 17
days, and truckers' represent atives
met with Gov . Edward J . King .
A convoy also circled Daley Civic
Ce nt er in Chi cago 's Loop area
Monday . Bill Hayes, president of an
ntinois group known as the National
Coun'Cil of Independent Truckers, sa id
reports of a weakening of the
truckers' shutl:lown resulted from "a
ploy by th e government. "
Leaders . of th e Indepe ndent
Truckers Association, believed \0 be
the largest truckers' group taking
part in the protest, also have refused
IIJ call for an end to the strike.
The association, which says it has
nearly 39,000 dues-payirtg members
but represents 90 percent of • the
country's 110,000 independent longhau l driver s, estimated SO,OOO
truckers were still off the job over the
weekend . The estimate could not be
confirmed.

KATHRYN E.BROWN
Kathryn Ernestine Brown, 65 ,
Minersville, died Monday at her
residence.
Mrs. Brown was preceded in death
by her parents, Theodore and Laura
Funk Maa g, one brother, Brad and
one infant grandson . .,
She was a member of the Racine
Baptist Church and a former member
of the Mirtersville United Methodist
l'hurch .
She iS survived by her husband,
Victor .L. Brown one son, Danny of
Minersville, three daughters, Mrs.
Vickie Cummins , RaCine , Mrs .
Sharon Wolfe, Jackson, and Mrs.
Marilyn Williams, Mirtersville, , II
grandchildren and one great
grandchild, two sisters, Mrs. Betty
Heibel,
Pomeroy and .Mrs .
Margaretha Wolfe, Columbus, and
several nieces and nephews.
Funera l services will be held
Thursday at 2· p.m. at the Racine
Baptist Church with the Rev. Don
Walker officiating. Burial will be in
Letart Falls Cemetery, Friends may
call at Ewirtg Funeral Home after 7
p.m., this evening .

WILLIAM F. WARNER
William F. (Bill ) Warner, 55, well
known Pomeroy busirtessman, died
unexpectedly Monday evenirtg.
Mr. Warner was reportedly at ·his
riverbank camping site with his wife
when he was stricken ill. A rescue
unit was summoned·and he was taken
IIJ Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point
Pleasa nt where he was pronounced
dead.
Mr . Warner was owner and
operator of the Warner Beauty and
Barber Shop. He had been in the
profession for 39. years. He was' a
member of St. Paul Lutheran Church.
He was a son of Herman Warner 'Of
Pomer oy and the late Frances
Warner . &amp;sides his mother he was
preceded in death by a brother. Mr .
Warner resided at 752 South Second
Ave., Middieport.
Sur vivin g besides his father ,
Herma n, are his wife , Jane Ann Fick
Warner ; a son and daughter-in-law ,
J ames W. and Lori Warner ,
Syracuse; a son, Jay P. Warner ,
Day tona
Beach,
Fla .;
two
grandchildren. Nichole and Tara Ann
Warner ; a sister , AMa l.ee Grimm,
Naples, t' la ., and a niece and nephew,
Cl audia Grif11m and Mark Grimm .
r-uneral services will be held at 4
p.m. Thursday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev . William
Middl eswarth officia ting. Burial will
be
in
Riverview Cemeter y,,
Middleport . Friends may call at the
fu neral home an}1ime after 7 this
even ing .

-

IN POMEROY TUESDAY -

Congressman
Clarence Miller was' ill Pomeroy Tuesday to view the
multi-purpose building being erected adjacent to
Veterans Memorial H011pital and the former Children 's .
Home. Due to a multi-craft· strike completion of the
building has been moved forward to 19M. Work is
presenUy two mont!Js behind. Congressman Miller was

also interested in securing an additional grant through

ARC for $200,000 to build an access road to Union Ave.,
from the Multi-Purpose Building: Pictured, left to
right, Henry Wells, commissioner; Congressman
Miller, Mary Hobstetter, clerk for the commissioners,
and Wesley Buehl, county engineer.

••

at y

e,.
. VOL. XXVIII

NO. 57

..

Approve 1980

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

CANTATA SUNDAY
The choir of the Middleport Church ·
of Christ will again present the
centennial cantata , " I Love
America " , at 7:30p.m. SWlday at the
,
church.

Man injured during
river festival drills
A Gallipolis man injured Monday
evening during a water skiing-hand
glider accident at the park front
public use area was listed in fair
condition today at Holzer Medical
Center.
It is unofficially reported that Uoyd
W. Carter, 31, was injured when the
hand glider he was flying plummeted
an estimated 40 to 50 feet irtto the Ohio
Hiver.
Carter was transported by the
county .emer)lency service to Holzer
Medical Center, where he was
admitted for treatment. of a hairline
fracture of the sternum, minor
lacerations, and a back injury. ·

3 oz. Armour

ByKaUeCrow
The Big Bend Regatta was a sue·
cess, but not financially, Paul Simon,
president of the Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce, told members at a noon
!Wtcheon Tuesday at MeigS Inn.
Simon, in his remarks, suggested
the president of the chamber serve as
chairman of the event next year with
othel'll assigned respective duties.
Simon also said this year 's weather
W88 the worst to b8ttle, since m6st 61
the activities were outside.
He abo reported that the conctl!!Slon stands made the chamber a
profit of approx.imately Sl,OOO adding
that Bill Quickie, general chainnan of
the year's Regatta, bad excellent con·
ceuiOIII.
Slmtll UJJialDed tbal tile JeaaDie C.

Riley abow l001t $3,000, due ID part to
c~ of tile loatloD for fear of
rUn. Slm011 added tbal " We do aol

have lo Import taleot u we have local
talent tbal will draw large crowds".
Tllta wu proven, Slm011 DOled, by tile
aUe~ at tile loca!laleat abow on

that the Air Force Band l!l'lt the
chamber money, too ..
The frog Jump made money, but the
proceeds fi'OIIl it went to the Mei~s

'I'hunday Digbl cluriDC Reptta.

It was noted that allhough the
JEannie C. Riley show ltfit money, It
was an excellent perfonnance.
Simon said the band show on the
parking lot also l!l'lt money. He said,
"Surpriaingly enough the carnival
rides made ,t smaU profit," approx.imately Sl,JOII. Normally Uti.!
runs more than S3,000.
Simon abo said too much money
was spent on the queens, nollng that
$200 was Sl)ellt on flowers alone . and

By The Assodated Press
Wed nesday . During a comparable
Traffi c a ccidents across the nation non-holiday period at this time of
too k 125 lives during a f'ourth of July year. 110 traffic death s could be
holiday in which travel was limited by expected.
uncertaln ga&lt;;aline supplies and a oneLas t year during a four-d ay
day celebration that kept many close celebration, there were 706 hi ghway
IIJ home.
deaths . The worst death toll for the
l'he National Safety · Ck&gt;uncil tlad 1 Fourth 111 Jlj)y was 758 during a four- •
estimated that there could be 120 to da y weekend in 1972.
18(] lives lost in highway accident s
The
most
r ece nt one-day
betwceen 6 p.m. Tuesday to m idni ~ ht celebration was in 1973, when 194
persons died in traffic accidents. '

POTTED MEAT••••••••••••••••••••

21 49

MASON FURNITURE

14 oz. Kraft Deluxe

Macaroni &amp; Cheese Dinner••••••• 89
•

200 Ct.

4

I

.

KLEENEX .• TISSUES, ••••••••••••••••. 69~

~

Herman Grate
773-5592

Mason,

w. va.

C~NTS

oext year ID oplte of the fiDanclal
Cowtty Jaycees.
Fred Crown sai\1 too many events
were scheduled for the three days and
Sim011 suggested several cbaoges downfall.
be made for nen year's evenl All
Several matters will be taken up added two parades were two too
memben voted to hold the Regatta with the board of directors .
many. He also suggested some
economy steps be taken to make tbe
event fi)Ore profitable.
Bill Quickel state the Regatta was
an overaU success, but not "financially". He said he was badly mlslnfonned as to the quality of the car'
nival. This will be corrected next
/.
,,, ' !.o, ..,,
(Continued on page 1.1)

.(~ Several

B&amp;E's

said sol.,ed

FIRST PLACE WINNER of the

A number of crimes,' including
everal breaking and entering r:Lfenses, have been solved in Middleport, Police Chief J. J. Cremeans
reports.
The crimes involve primarily
juveniles with offenders being clted,to
courts, Chief Cremeans stated.
The B&amp;E 's _include entry to the .
Holswn Bakery, May 22, through a
back window, calculators taken
recovered; June 5 and June 18, the
Waffle Shop with entrance gained
· · through the back door and through
the front door, adults involved in tbe
theft of some 60 packages ~aret­
theme division in the 4th of July parade held in Racine went to Chester
tes in the June 5 incident, and one
Council323, Daughters of America.
adult and a juvenile involved in. the
;:::;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:::::::::::::;:·
theft of cigaref;tes were ajlprehended.
WINNER' NAMED
On JWte 22, KeUy Manufacturing Co.
.. Kendra (cq) Ward with dulcimers was entered by knocking' out a side
selcetiotis was the first place wluuer panel in the building, stereo equipin the annual Rutland talent show ment and a radio taken recovered
staged
Wednesday night In with an adult and two juveniles Inwith
the
fire volved; June 22, grand larceny, theft
the 18 ye"ar olds will appear in Meigs conjunction
of a motorcycle from the Fife GWI ·
County Court on charges of disorderly department's July 4th celebration.
. . As first place winner Miss Ward Shop, JS. Third Ave., recovered II\
conduct.
received a $25 prize. Second place town, two juveniles involved; June 211,
went to Kim Batey, $15, guitar and ice locker at Gateway broken Into; ·
vocal, and third place, tiO, went to small items taken, two juvenUei;
Orville Hogue, vocal. Jack Walker, June 26, two cars on Walnut St. van.
.
Rutland businessman, was emcee. A dalized, two juveniles cited.
Clear and cool tonight. Low 1',1 the fireworks display closed the Names of the adults were withheld by
Chief Cremeans pending further In.. ·..· ......··... ..· ..·.··..·......... .
.................·.·.·.·.·.·..................·.·.·.· ...·.·.·...·.·.....................·..... vestigation.
rain is near zero tonight and Friday.

The Me igs Count y Sheri ff's
Departm e nt investiga ted · two
accidents on Ju ly 4.
At 4:45 p.m. in the village of
Syracuse on SR 124 Robert E.
Waldni g, 49 ,Rt . I, Rac ine was
traveling east when his car struck the
rea r of car operated by' Blondena
Hudson , Racine, which in turn struck
the rear of a car driven by James
Middleswart, Portland.
Hudson and Middleswart had both
slowed down for a vehicle in front
whlch was making a right turn onto
Apple Street.

Waldnig was cited to court on
charges of driving under the influence
and fa iling to maintam assured clear
distance.
The Hudson car was demolished
and there was slight dan1age to the
Waldnig truck a nd the Middleswart

vehi cl e driven by Marvin D.
Randolph, 17, Ht. 2,Haclne .
La wrence was cited to Mei gs
County 'Juvenile Court on charges of
failing to yield to approaching traffic.
Eight juveniles and three 18-year
old 'youths were taken into custody
car .
Wednesday eveing at Chester
Se veral passengers m the vehicles following complaints of a disturbance
complained of slight injuries but were near the (,'hester Commons.
not immediately treated .
The
subjects were
foun d
At 9: 45 p.m. irt Racine, at the discharging fireworks, yelling and
intersection of Fifth and Main Streets, r\~Jlning in the vicinity .
.
Bryan Lawrence , 16, Portland , turned
The juveniles will appear later in
left into the path of a northbound Meigs Courity Juvenile Court whil e

Weather

~~ ~~ u~;r~~. s;::~~:~ , ~~~.~~~~·t·i~~:.

. ,'

EXTENDED OUTI.OOK
Saturday through Moaday
Fair wlUt a warming tread
through tbe period. HJgb ID tile
uper 7h to low 1188 Saturday. WarmiDg to the mJd 80s by Mooday.
Lows ID tbe mJC, to upper 54111 Satur·
di&gt;y moi'IIIDI aDd ID tile ap. by
Monday morning.
,:::::::::::::;:;:;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.;:::::::::::::::::::;:;:;::::::::::::::::::::::

.

OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENt: ON a, Y

PRICE FIFTEEN

· . ..,;;!'{ ~

-

ROLFS
... it shows you care.
.

Mon. , Tues ., Wed ., Friday &amp; Sat ..
8:30 to 5:00 Thursday till12 Noon

enttne

Deputies check two traffic acci.d ents

Rolfs new French Clutch features easy-access space for credit cards, a
ture window for your drive" liceme, a triple-framed pocket for cur~r.n1ov
and coins, as well as a zip pocket and other compartments. And it's
in soft crafted leather, sewn and tooled to perfection. just further proof
how Rolfs handles a clutch situation . . . beautifully.

FOR THE BEST DEALS IN THE
TRISTATE AREA •

4

·-

1979 Big Bend Regatta no financial success

SHOP

MASON FURNITURE

•

ev~nt

4 Roll Charm in

TOILET TISSUE ................. ~:~;. 994

possibility of repair by the Army Corps of Engineers of
the erosion damage to the levee. Also pictured are Col.
F. W. (Chip) WaMer, Sam French, Bill Sinozich, and
Larry Franks, all with the Army Corps of Engineers.

THURSDAY. JULY 5. 1979

Holiday toll 1.25

GOLF CLUB
PICNIC PLANNED
Pomeroy Golf Club members,
green fee players, and guests are in·
vited t o a buffet picnic and scotch
foursom .e scheduled for 6:30p.m. on
Saturday.
Those a!tending are asked to take a
covered dish . Beverages and table
service will be furnished . There will
be a S3 cart rental per person and
reservations for carts should be made
with John Thomas, manager, immediately. Following the picnic, a
membership meet!r. 2 will be held .
Guests are welcome.

LEVEE, DISCUSSION - Congressman Clarence
Miller visited Mid&lt;l!eport Tuesday afternoon and stopped at the Middleport levee while he was there . Mayor
Fred Hoffman was there to greet hm and discuss the

_

..-.~.

__

PAR 1

\

See all the other styles Rolfs clutches- wallets - ket
rings- cigarette cases-' accessories. 2nd Floor.
Closed Wednesday, Fourth of July
·

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

NON-THEME FIRST PLACE WINNER at the 4th
of July parade held Wednesday in Racine was the float

of the First Beptist Church. Second place winner was
the float of the Racine.Junior Girls' Softball Team. ·

FOUR TRAFFIC DEATHS
By The Associated Press
.. Ohio rccordc'll only four traffic
deaths durin'g the Fourth of July
holiday, and two of th~ victims were
motorcyclists, the Highway Patrol
said.
.. The patrol was coWlted holiday
traflic deaths from 6 p.m. Tuesday
until midnight Wednesday .
.. The de~d :
WEDNESDAY
.. GREENVILLE - Michael A.
Kissinger, 22, of Greenville, when his
motorcycle collided with a car on a
Greenville street.
.. NEW ARK - Robert E. Richmond,
·t8, of Lodl , in a one-ear accident on a
Licking CoWJty road east of U.S. 62.
.. XENIA - Ronald Hughes, 21, of
' Spring Valley, when he lost control of
his motorcycle while riding through a
xenia subdivision in Greene County.
.. ELYRIA - Danny G. Butcher, 31,
nf Elyria, riding a motorcyle which
collided wlih an automobile on an
Elyria street.
:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::

on

DESPITE HEAVY overnight rains and showers Wednaday the
annual July 4th celebration of the Rutland Fire Department held the
community park WBB weU attended. Popular with the younger aet waa tbe
"Toonervllle Trolley."
.
. ·

at

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