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                  <text>8--The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., Tuesday, July 10, 1979 ·

;~:·::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;;;:;:;:;:;:.:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;:;:;:; :;:;:;:;:;:;.;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:; :;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:; :;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::

~\I

.A rea deaths

ANNA K. HARRAH
Mrs. Anna Kathryn Harrah, 62,
former Meigs County resident, died
Monday at her home at 1860 Sara ~
Ave., Cridersville.
Mrs. Ha rrah was born in
Minersville, a daughter of the late
John Henry Aloysious and Wilhemina
Christine Grueser Mescher. She was
also preceded in death by a brother.
Surviving are her husband, Robert
Harley Harrah; a brother, Floyd
Mescher, lebanon ; a sister·in-law,
Ruth Mescher of Gambier.
Funeral services will be held at 4
p.m. Thursday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev. W. H. Perrin
officiating . Burial will be in
Minersville Cemetery.

TRAFFIC PROBLEMS are expected to remain for
a while as bridge renovation continues on the Shadle
Bridge at Point Pleasant. Higgins Erectors and Com-

Weather

pany Haulers, Inc. of Buffalo, N. Y. beg!ln repairing
the floor of the 48 year-()ld structure Monday and is
planning to continue work through September.

County Court

Partly cloudy Wednesday. Highs
Wednesday in the lower 80s . Chance
of rain 20 percent tonight and Wednesday.

Twenty-two defelldants were fined
and 18 others forfeited bonds in Meigs
County Court Monday.
Fined were Herbert A. Lamb,
Vin cent, Franklin Bolenbaugh,
Marysville, Ronald L. Pauley, Mason,
Greg A.Wallace, Stockgort, Robert A.
Paoline,
Groveport,
Ronald
E.Richards, Parkersburg, Raymond!

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Tbunday lhrougb Saturday Cbanee of showers Thursday and
Saturday and partly cloudy Friday.
Hlgha in tbe 80s aod lows in tbe 608.

.

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

EFFECTIVE JULY 1

INCREASED
SAVINGS RATES
SENTENCE YOUR
EARNINGS TO

PLENTY OF HARD
LABOR •••

BURNS TRANSFERRED
Paul Burns Pomeroy, who has been
a Patient ~t Veterans. Memorial
was transferred Monday to
illi. Hospital
Pleasani Valley Hospital in Point
Pleasant, W. Va. Cards may be sent
Randall, Fort Worth, Texas; Russell to room 146.
Lee, Vinton ; Mrs. Bart (Ruby ) Long,
Apple Grove; Mrs. Bonnie Wray,
MEETING CANCEU.ED
Jluntington, and Mrs. Herbert (Opal)· A special meetng of the Ladies
Dunn, Vinton.
Auxiliary of the Chester F1re
Thirty-four grand, 48 great- and Department
scheduled
for
five great1jrellt-grandchildren also Wednesday , July II , has b~en
survive.
cancelled. The next regular meeting ·
Six datJI!hters and two sons of the group will be on Aug. I, CillO
preceded him in death.
Smith, president, announced ..
Mr. Slayton was the last of his
family.
Services will be Thursday at 2 p.m.
from Barton Chapel Church, Apple
Grove, with the Rev. Elmer Geiser of· VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
ficiating and Rev. Tonuny Kinnard
Admitted-John Powell, Portland;
assisting.
Frederick Colburn, Pomeroy; Ruby
Burial will follow in the Barton· Erb, Pomeroy.
Chapel Cemetery.
Discharged-La vinta Simpson, Joan
Friends may call at the McCoy- Fetty, Denise Lambert, Mary
More Funeral Home from 2-4 p.m. Bowman Ira Joiner, Paul Burns,
and 7-9 p.m. Wednesday.
Creston Newland.

MAGGIE RoSENCRANZ
Mrs. Maggie Isadora Rosencranz,
85, Route 3, Pomeroy, died Monday at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
She was a daughter of the late,
Albert and Sarah Kaylar Huffman
and was also preceded in death by her ·
first husband, Ira Wolfe; her second
husband, Herbert Rosencranz , a son
and a daughter.
Surviving are five daughters, Lula
Pearl Preswn, Gallipolis ; Bessie
Ruth Gillespie, Hot Springs, Va .;
Alice Marie Slay, Jacksonville,Ohio ;
Virginia Irene Thomas, Pomeroy , and
Mary Edna Parker, Pomeroy; two
sons, Fred Elmer Wolfe, Gasport,
Kentucky, and Dale Edward Wolle,
Reedsville; 29 grandchildren and 32
great grandchildren. She was a
member of Johovah 's Witnesses.
Funeral services will be held at 2
p.m. Thursday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with Larry Carnahan ·
officiating. Burial will be in Chester
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home anytime.

E. Maxson, Reedsville and Mark
McGuire, Zanesville, $15 and costs
each, speeding; Douglas Burns,
Pomeroy, costs only , five days
confinement, DWI, costs, only, five
days confinement, operating under
suspension; Janice L. Davis,
Reedsville, $10 and costs, left of
center ; Max Hill,Rt. 2,Racine, $10 and
costs, unable to swp within assured
clear distance; Richard Caruthers,
·Jr., Pomeroy, $5 and costs, unsafe
vehicl!; Stanley E. Bennett, Coolville,
$15 and costs, failure to yield; Bruce
McMahon, Adrian, Mich., $150 and
JOHN SI..AYroN
costs, three days confinement, DWI;
John Slayton, 91, Vinton, died at the
Robert M. Johnson, Racine, $15 and Pike County Hospital Monday at 6
costs, failure to display plates; p.m.
Ronnie Eblin, Rutland, $15 and costs,
He was born April26, 1888, at Apple
failure to display registration; Kelly Grove, W. Va., to the late George
C.Winebrenner, Syracuse, $30 and Albert and Sarah Cox Slayton.
costs, reckless operation; Arnold E.
He was a retired farmer.
Riggs, Rutland, $25 and costs, no
He married the late Hannah Owens
cycle endorsement; Earl D.Dille, in Mason County. in 1911 .
Ripley,
costs
only, public
Survivors are three sons and three
intoxication; Paul David Mitchell, daughters : Robert O. i London, Oh.;
Langsville, six months confinement,
costs only, 75 days suspended, DWI ,
costs only, six months confinement, 75
SEEKS DIVORCE
days suspended , driving under
Shirley Herman, Middleport, filed
suspension; Kenneth E. Flower, East suit for divorce against Dale Herman •.
Liverpool, $10 and costs, defective Middleport ands Diana Reynolds,
exhaust, costs only, five days Elyria filed for support under the
confinement, DWI, $10 and costs, Reciprocal Agreement Act against
concealed weapon.
Ray Eblin, Pomeroy.
Forfeiting bonds were Betty P.,
Prater, Rt. 2, Pomeroy, $35.50, failure
Today's birthdays: Noveli•t Saul
-to yield ; Leon C. Pierce, Langsville, Bellow is 64 . Broadway composer
$35.50, unabe ID stop within assured Jerry Herman is 46. Tennis star
clear
distance;
Brent
A. Arthur Ashe is 36. Hai McRaeolthe
Bolin,Rutland, $35.50 no . cycle Kansas City Royals baseball team is
to show
endorseine,nt,
registration; $35.50
Ressiefailure
A. Shaffer,
1
Racine, Altina R.Crisp, Langsville ,
$35.50each, failure to register ; Maria
T. Griffin, Gallipolis, $39.50, failure to
register; Kenneth R. Wilt, Nevada,
$35.50, unsafe vehicle; Bernard L.
Weekley, Jr. Athens, Myrl J. Samons,
Gallipolis, Steven J . Carpenter,
Whipple,
John
E .Simonton,
Twinsburg, Randall Barengo,
Marietta, Jack T. Benthall, Gallipolis,
and Martha J, Nicholson, Middleport,
$35.50 each , speeding; David
L.Baldwin, Parkersburg, $35 ,
speeding; Gary VanMeter, Rutland,
and Bob H. Moore, Cottageville,
$360.50 each, DWI; Larry S. Sayre,
Ravenswood, $35.50, left of center.

Skylab crashdown: the ·final hours
WASHINGTON (AP) - Just hours
before Skylab's expected death-dive,
the space agency today started the
huge station tumbling through space
to try to Increase the likelihood it
would drop its tons of debris in the
Indian . Ocean rather than on North
America.
"We think this is the safest and most
prudent action we can take at this
· time to give us the absolute minimum
probability of casualty of any sort
from Skylab," said the National
Aeronautics
andSpace
Administration's Richard G. Smith.
A radio signal was sent at 3:47a.m.
EDT today to fire nitrogen gas
thrusters which started the 77.!&gt;-ton
craft "wobbling and rolling" as it
passed through an altitude of 92 miles.
Confirmation that the maneuver
worked carne 30 minutes later when
Skylab passed within range of a
tracking station in Madrid, Spain.

NASA spokesman Bob Gordon
reported, "The rate is not as high as
anticipated at this time, but
indications are that Skylab is
beginning its final entry to earth."
The action was intended to delay
Skylab's fiery re:entry about 30
minutes, until about noon EDT. On
that timetable, the 'tons of Skylab
debris that did not burn up would fall
harmlessly into the Indian Ocean.
The decision to start the craft
tumbling was made after the North
American Air Defense Corrimand,
which has been tracking the
spacecraft, issued a revised re~try
prediction at 12 :35 a.m. EDT today. It
forecast Sky lab was likely to re-enter
over the north Pacific, posing a
pOtential threat w North America,
primarily Canada.
The earlier predictions had placed
the most likely r~try area in the
south Atlantic or Indian oceans, far

ELBERFELD$

from land.
The latest NORAD prediction said
Skylab would re-enter between 8:48
a.m. and 1:48 p.m. EDT, with the
midpoint, or most probable re-entry
time, at 11:18 a .m.
At that midpoint, Skylab would start
dumping its debris in the central
Pacific near the Equawr and spread it
over a trail 4,000 miles long and 100
miles wide in a northeasterly
direction. If the re-entry occurred 10
minutes alter that time, the debris
could be dropped on the portions of the
state of Was.hington and Canada.
That orbital track passes across the
northwest tip of the United States
north of Everett, Wash., arcing across
south central Canada, north of
Montreal and Ottawa, and across the
state of Maine, north of Augusta.
"We decided to change our plans
and initiate the twnble early to allow
us an extra 30 minutes to get back

8 TRACK PLAYER

VOL. XXVII,I NO . 61

PASSBOOK

Compounded Daily

5 lj4%

90 DAY CERTIFICATE ......'::i~:~~~~!:~~~~?...... S'h%
1 YEAR CERTIFICATE ...... ~~~;.~~.~.~:·~~~:~~ ...... 5%%
2 YEAR CERTIFICATE ......':~.;~:~~~ !~:~~~·~...... 6%
4 YEAR CERTIFICATE ......¥!~t\'!~\'!t!.~.o.. P9 ..... 7%%

6 YEAR CERTIFICATE ......~.i~!~~~ .'}:~~~-.o~·- · .: 71/2%
,8 YEAR CERTIFICATE .....~:~:':'.~':'.~::o.o.o:~~ ...... 7%%
4 YEAR MONEY CERTIFICATE
Minimum 51,000.00. Interest rate of 11/4% under the average 4 year

yield of Treasury Securities .

MONEY MARKET CERTIFICATE
SlO,OOO minimum. Interest rate equal to the rate pf 182 day treasury
bill rate . As determined at weekly auction .

SUBSTANTIAL PENALTY FOR EARLY WITHDRAWAL
" Tht• frit&gt;fldlr Ru11!.- "
Walk -up teller window
and auto -teller window
Open Friday Evenings S lo 7 p .m.

/JtbeM ,altonal Bank
Miodleport, o.

..

1.
·~

&amp;b
MIODLCIICII't' : . l

·=~-'\ ,

. ..,

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._,,

action filed
CINCINNATI ( AP ) - ASouth Point
woman whose 14-year-old son hanged
himself in the Lawrence County Jail
15 months ago is suing county officials
for their alleged negligence in his
death.
Emma Carrico filed a $3 million suit
in U.S. District Court Monday,
contending that negligence by
Lawrence County Jail officials in
Ironton led to the suicide of her son
Gene.
The boy was found hanging by a
bath towel in his cell March 28, 1978.
He was in custody for carrying a
concealed weapon and delinquency.
Defendants in the suit are Lawrence
County Sheriff James Howell; his
wife, jail matron Eloise Howell; his
son, jail employee James Howell Jr. ;
former jailer Charles Yontco; former
dispatcher Dawn Schroeder, and the
Lawrence County Board of
Commissioners.
Mrs. Carrico, a widow with two
other children, is asking for $2 million
in punitive damages, $1 million in
compensawry damages and $2,475 for
funeral expenses.
She claims in the suit that jail
officials were "guilty of intentional,
wanton, callous acts" that led to her
son'sdeath. Her son, she alleged, had
lhreatened suicide several times, but
was left "unsupervised" by jail
personnel.
The charges were denied by Mrs.
Howell, whose husband was
unavailable· for comment Monday
night.
"We watched him as careful as we
could," said Mrs. Howell. "We made
sure to watch him every half hour."
She said she· was surpcised by the

'39

•VINYL SHOULDER STRAP
•AUTOMATIC AND MANUAL
CHANNEL SELECTOR
•OPERATION 'BATTERY or ELECTRIC

Be sure to se.e all t~e other tape ptavers, recorders, compon.nt stereo
systems, CBs. rad•os, scanners . Now on display all famous r'nf.kes .

ElBERfELDS IN POMEROY

suit.

F. 0.1. C. O.poslts Insurance 111 140.~.
(

·

"I didn't expect it. I didn 't know
anything about it," she said.

Gallia board
files actiQn

FRESH

LB. $149

Crime on rise

$}l9

WIENERS .................... ~.~-?~ .. 89

$}69

=~ .~~i~.~~.......... ...... ~~.~. 89~

POTATO CHIPS ....~~. ~-~---· ·

2% MILK ..............~~.1: .. ..

~~~:~~.................~~·... ~ 169

French City

·

~

99
CUBE STEAK ...................1~:.. ~ }
ROUND STEAK ................1~·...~.1

99

WASHINGTON (AP) -Crime
esperta say Americans should ex·
pect continuing increaaes in
vtolent crime - but the rises
probably won't be as sharp and
startling as the barebones
statlBtlcs indicate.
Government and academic
spectallsta are studying the latest
FBI figures for clues to the cause
of a 17 per cent surge in the
violent crime ·rate, by far the
largest in this decade.
FBI officials say a statistical
quirk distorted the size of the in·
crease. But even after that quirk
Is taken into account, the figures
still show a definite and
somewhat puzzling upward
trend.

Air base use
FINE ASSORTMENT

LUNCH MEATS

north-northeast. The front-running
squall line had already hit the coast.
In New Orleans -where. part of the
ciiy lies saucer·like below sea level the greatest .threat was water.
Massive pwnps at the City's 21
pumping stations were readied for
heavy work.
Flash.flood warnings were posted
for 90Utheastem Louisiana. Possible
high tides were estimated at up to 6
feet. FIOO&lt;kootrol gates oo canals
and bayous were closed. · ·
Most ,public schools in the New
Orleans area cancel!!d todats
swruner classes. Charity Hospital
canceled its 150 outpatient clinics,
which normally handle 1,400 patients.
Bob developed so quickly and so
close to shore, just 400 miles south of
New Orleans, that most big oil
companies went str;Ught into the
evacuation phase of their hurricaneemergency plans .
It caught at least one fishing party
out in the Gulf. The Coast Guard sent
a helicopter to r~ue tile five

fishermen . Another Coast Guard
helicopter crew reported helping a
disabled vessel caught in heavy seas
but gave no details.
There are thousands of oil and
natural gas wells in the Gulf, and
hundreds of production platforms and
drilling rigs standing on steel legs.
Evacuation left them battened down
and empty.
In some instances, oil and gas
production was shut down. Many rigs
are automated, however, and they
kept crude oil and natural gas flowing
througb undersea pipelines.
On shore, residents who pulled back
from low-lying areas faced a shortage
of gasoline for family cars. New
Orleans city officials asked all service

or Diet
7-UP OR

BAIIRELHEAD
ROOT BEER
·

8

·16 OL
bottles

$}09

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -The
office of U.S. Sen. Jolm Glenn, D·
Ohio, says the senator is to
organize a meeting between
congressional and. local leaders
to decide on continuing efforts for
development of ail Industrial
park at Rickenbacker Air Force
Base.
The Defense Department last
week approved and sent to the ar·
med services committees of both
hou.les the Air Force's plan for
•disposing of excess property at
the Colwnbua base.
The plan allows 2,000 acres for
public or private use, sets aside
1,350 acres ·for joint militarycommunity use and relains 630
acres for Air Force Reserve and
Air· National Guard troops
. remaining at the base after active duty personnelleave.

The Gallia County Local School
Board ti Education has filed a
$250,000 suit in Common Pleas Court
against a construction finn, its architect, and their insurance agent.
The suit charges A and S Contracting Co., Piketon,' breached tenns
of agreement for construction done in
1m. The work, the Board claiml!, was
... "shoddy and defective, violating
the company's warranties on
materials and equipment."
Also named in the suit is architect
George L. Walter, Dayton, for failure
to provide "preP!Ired proper studies,
designs, develoPment documents,
drawings and specifications, and
plans as required." The materials
Walter· did t~ in were "defective"
and "incomplete," according to the
action.
Aand S's insurance agent, Buckeye
Union Insurance Co., Colwnbus, was
also charged for aUegedly refusing to
honor the damages caused by the
ineffective work.
The Board is asking (or a $250,000
settlement "jointly and severally"
from the three defendants, as well as
court cells. A jury of eigbt has been
requested.
;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::.

EXTENDED Otm.OOK
Friday through Suoday - Chance
of ahowen Frldlly aDd Saturday aDd
partly eloudy SUDday. Hichi in the
upper 11011 aDd lower 908 Friday aad
the lower 8011 Saturday IOd SllDday.
Lows in tbe mid aDd upper 801.
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.

Guilty plea enter(3d
Bobby E. Milbourne, Middleport,
has entered a guilty plea on a Bill of

Information in Meigs County Common Pleas Court to two charges of
breaking and entering.
Both incidents stemmed from
· separate Band E's 11t the Middleport
Swimming Pool.
Milbourne was released on his own
recogillzance pending a pre«ntenet.
investigation. ·

4

BY KATIE CROW
"Progress against cancer continues
to be an Issue of great concern to us in
Meigs County," says Sharon Michael,
assistant public information chair·
man rJ. the Meigs Cancer Unit.
"We know that progress in treating
leukemia has saved more lives than
the conqutlSI of polio; the Pap test
alone has saved more lives than the
measles vaccine, and the conflrmatioo of the casual link between
cigarette smoking and lung cancer
has a UfHBving potential com·
parable to the discovery of the tuber·
cle bacillus causing TB," says
Mlchae.
"But much more work haS to be
done on other various kinds of cancer.
So when you contribute; you provtde a
way for . the continuation of un·
derstandlng and for the investigation
into the complex diseases called can·
cer," Michael said.
The American Cancer Society concentrates ita efforts in three main
program areas : research, education
and service.
Twenty-eight and nine tenths cents
rJ. each dollar is used for research.
This past year about 80 pe~nt of the

Will buy more
Mexican oil

research budget went toward con·
tinulng investigation in the cause and
prevention of cancer.
"We know now that cancer is best
considered not as one but a 100 or
more different . diseases," stated
Michael. "Researchers are making
dramatic gains against sune cancers
and less against others. But I am
sure, states Michael, that your dollar
has been and wW be used )'risely in the
cancer research."
Twenty..seven cents ,f each dollar
goes towards educlitrng the public
and health profeaaionala in the
various area ·of cancer prevention,
detection and treatment.
It has been found that children in
kindergarten through third grade can
asswne respo1111ibillty for keeping
healthy and devel~ behavior that
will protect themselves against can·
cer.
"Many programs are available for
these youngsters besides a no
smoking program since they are con·
stderlng the pros and cons of smoking
even at this age," states Michael.
Films, free literature and free quit
smoking clinics, information on ways
to quit smoking and self-help
materials are available to adults.
(Continued on page 12)

stations in southeastem Louisiana to
remain open through the emergency,
but most closed at dark.
Officials · advised evacuation
Tuesday for a 250-mile coastal strtp
stretching from New Iberia to the
Mississippi border.
While )he Gulf Coast was bracing,
some residents in central Alabama
mopped up flood water Tuesday night.
Nearly 3 inches of rain fell near the
Birmingham Airport in little more
than one hour.

Area Six
Health meets
July 16
The Review Committee of Area Six
Health Systems Agency, Inc. will bold
a meeting July 16 at the Lafayette
Motor Hotel in Marietta, Ohio. The
business meeting will begin at 7:30
pm. and Is open to the public.
The Review Coounlttee Is a stan-

Cancer progress
•
maJor
concern
IN TilE GOOD OW SUMMERTIME - The old tune with the lyrics,
"your happiness lies, rtght under your eyes, back in your own back yard"
rings true for Cindy Soulaby, Pomeroy Elemenlary School student, who
merely has to go out the back door to her back yard to swim in this attractive pool al the hothe of her parents, Mr. and Mrs . James Soulsby,
Union Ave., Pmneroy.

$}49

OF stORE SLICED

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

MUSIC DEPT. 2ND FLOOR

SAUSAGE

Valley Bell

en tine

WEDNESDAY, JULY 11, 1979

NEW ORLEANS (AP)- Hurricane
Bob, the first Atlantic storm to bear a
man's name, battered abandoned oil
platforms and drilling rigs off the
Louisiana coast early today and .
threatened the land with flooding and
high tides.
The storm, the second of the 1979
season ·in the Atlantic, developed
suddenly Tuesday, forcing 8,000
offshore oil w&lt;rkers w head for land
and sending thousands of coastal
residents is search of higher ground,
officials said. Some public schools
were closed and one hospital shut" its
outpatient clinic.
Though rated a wesk swrm, .with
winds just higher than the 75 mph
needed ·for certification as a
hurricane, Bob moved up through the
Gulf of Mexico pushing torrential rain
ahead of the eye.
The weather bureau said early
today the storm had picked up slight
forward speed to about 17 mph, and
the center was about 140 miles southsouthwest of New Orl~ans. moving

95

BEEF

Reg,

assisllmce requested by any country. .
The Federal Aviation Admlniatration
was warning aircraft from poMible
re~ntry zones, and the ,Justice
Department was set to handle liability
claims anywhere in the world.
The Federal Preparedness Agency
set up an elaborate system for
handling emergency situations in the
United States,
Meanwhile, Canadian civil defenae
officials in Ottawa issued a
statement: "We can'tstop it (Sk~~b)
from falling , but everything is in pw~ce
to minimize the danger should it come
down in our region."
Skylab was launched May 14, 1973,
and was inhabited· by three different
teams of American astronauts for
periods up to 84 days. It has been
floating around as a piece of space
junk since the last crew abandoned it
in Febrt!&amp;ry 1974.

Hurricune threatens·south

GROUND

• Dan Dee 1 lb.

fields over ocean and land areas,
weather and solar activity.
NASA estimates about two-thirds of
the space station will burn up from
atmospheric friction during the
flaming dive back to Earth.
But the agency expected about 500
pieces, weighing a total of more than
20 tons, to survive, including a 5,1~
pound airlock shroud and a 3,900pound lead safe which protected the
film from radiation when astrol)auta
were aboard the spacecraft.
As Sky lab began its final two days in
orbit, NASA established
a
coordination center in Washington to
follow the spacecraft's progress and
be ready to dispatch emergency
teams wany areas of the globe where
debris might cause injury or damage .
Defense Depar1ment medical and
engineering teams were . on alert
·around the world to provide

.

HOMEMADE

LB.

at y

POM EROY-MIODLEPORT, OHIO

1~3~3:.=~:.::~::.:::.:..:::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::~

$3 million

·

•

e

ROBERTS SOLID STATE
PORTABLE
'

over the Indian .Ocean," Smith said.
" H we didn't do it, we-would increase
the likelihood of coming down over
North America and picking up the
possibility of North Africa. "
He added, "We have looked at this,
and in the worst case situation we find
no condition where we fail and create
a hazardous situation that was worse
than what we started with,"
NASA continued to emphasize that
even if parts of the giant station hit
land, the chances of injury or damge
are slim. If . news reports indicate
fragments are headed for particuar
areas, the agency suggests people
take no special precautions except
perhaps to stay indoors.
The sudden shift in the prediction
indicated the difficulty in forecasting
the demise of an orbital vehicle. The
rate at which it falls depends on such
things as variations in gravitation

ding conunlttee of the Area Six

Health Systems Agency Board rJ.
Trustees. Its major purpose Is to par·
ticipate in the Ohio Certificate of
Need Program by reviewing
proposed projects and making recom·
mendations to the Ohio Department
of Health.
The major items to be considered
by the Review Committee are as
follows:
- Good Samaritan Medical CenterConstruction of Medical Arts

Building·

.

- · fie~ Ce111ficate of Need

Manual.
Area Six Health Systems Agency
Inc. is the conditionaUy designated

Williams
Rotary
speaker

Health Systems Agency for 18
Eastern and Southeastern Ohio coun·
ties.
· For further ir)fonnation please con·
tact Thomas A. Lindstrom, Executive
Director at (614) 374-2200.

Mike Williams, Governor of
District 669 of Rotary International,
will address the Rotary Club of Mid·
dleport-Pomeroy on Friday, July 'tl,
at its evening meeting at the Heath
United Methodist Church. A past
president rJ. the Portsmouth Rotary
Club, Wllllams Is devoted to the prin·
ciple of service to his profesaion, his
community and his country. He is
vice president and treasurer of the
(Cor!tinued on page 12) · ·

BOSTON (AP) - Energy officials
say President Carter has "'""anged to
purchase more oil and natural gas
from Mexico and Canada within the
year to ease eJqJeeted shortages of
' home heating oil next winter, The
Boston Globe reported Wd.ay.
The Department of Energy said
more Mexican oll would flow
northward as a result of discussions
between Mexico and the United States
but gave no details on how much more
oil would be available, according to a
report in the Globe. .
""-&lt;.
Canadian natural gas suppliers
have applied for additional export
licenses thllt could result In
significant increases in the volwne of
gas imported by the United States, the
newspaper reported.
U.S. oil companies buy most of
Mexico's exported oil, at a price $4
higher than the OPEC base price,
which ranges from $18 to $23.50.
.•
Five percent of America's natural ·
•• .
gas is imROrted from Canada, which
GROUP ENTERTAINED - The Dark Hollow
could increase to 7 percent with the
Blue Grass Boys, a Meigs County group of young
new export licenses, according to
musicians, entertained at the July 4th celebration of
John Treat, energy department
the
Rutland Fire Depar1ment. The group also
spokesman .

SQUAD RUNS
Three calls were answered Tuesday
and early Wednesday morning by the
Middleport Emergency Squad with
three patients being taken to Holzer
Medical Center.
At 1:59 p.m. Tuesday the unit went
to the Flatwoods Road for John
Anderson and at 8:11p.m. to Route 1,
Middleport for Carl Stewart. At 4:24
·a.m. Wednesday the unit went to
Route I, Middleport, for Mrs. Luctlle
Casto.
·

- -~

~

II;'·.

&lt;ecefY

\

won $200 as first place Winners in the Big Bend Reptta
Talent Show. Making up the group are Brent Patterson, Robert Taylor, Rick Boring and Dennis Wolfe.
\~

�. 3-Tbe Daily Sentinel Middleport-Pomeroy. o., Wednesday, July. II, 1979
2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wedn~sday, July 11, 1979

Governors endorse gas .plan
LOUISVILLE, Ky. 1APJ · - The
nation ' s governors Wednesday
strongly endorsed President Ca rter's
plan to deregulate the price of crud~ ­
oil and we the "windfall" profits to
help solve the co untry's e nergy
problems.
B~ a vote of 19-9 at the closin~

session of its annual convention, the

National Governors Association
adopted a resolution supporting the
president's embattled pohcy m
virtually every detail.
" Deregulation is necessary to
provide industry the incentive to

Editorial opinions.,
comments

IN WASHINGTON
Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

Carroll: not ideal choice

produce more ~nergy and move
toward full replacement cost," the
resolution said. "Pricing all oil and
gas at world prices will encoura ge
conservation and make alternative
energy sources more economically
competitive.
" Furthermore, the infla tionary
effect of deregulation will be
significantly countered by the
strengthening of the dollar and a
corresponding reduction in all import
costs, including those for oil, " · the
governors said.
Deregulation
had
almost
unanimou s support among the
governors. The only fight was over the
tax that Carter proposes on
"windfall" profit~ expected to accrue
to the major oil companies by the time
government ceilings on crude oil
prices are completely lifted on Oct. I,
1981. .
Republican Gov. William Clements
of TeXlls led an effort to have the
governors back 100 percent return of
windfall profits to the energy
companies for new production . He
argued that all-out search and
development of new energy-is the only
answer to the energy .crisis.
"We are in a crisis situation in this
country that exceeds Pearl Harbor,"
Clements said.
But the resolution finally approved
by the governors with only one vote to
spare for the required two-thirds
majority calls for some of the windfall
tax money to be spent on energy
conservation and assistance for the
poor and elderly who will be hardest
hit as fuel prices rise because of
deregulation.
. The governors, however, voted
down an effort to add mass transit to
the program, as Carter had proposed.

•
UMPIRES - Umpiring the little league tour·
narnent games at Syracuse this week and next are 1... ,
TilE DAILY SENTlNEL

!USPS 14HIOI

~'b

......._=·-

rs:m~ ~o..-r •

"""

DEVOTED TO 11IE
•
INTERESTOF

MEIGS-MASON AREA
ROBERT HOEFLICH
•
City Editor
PubUshed daUy e:a:cept S.&amp;urd.ay by T~ OIUO
Valley PubllshiDJ Compuy- Multimedia, bl(.,
l11 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio G719. lkaai.KU
Ofllce Pbone m- USI. Editorial Phooe

Washington
.
By Clarence
R ep0 rt. Miller

By Robert Walters
agents who converged on the state for
LOUISVIllE, Ky . (NEA) • Wben what has been described as the most
confronted with suggestions of un· far-reaching investigation of official
savory activity by a colleague, politi· corruption in Kentucky 's history .
I am afraid that my colleagues in limits and then allows HUD to add 20
m-U57.
cians are fond of reminding the public
Guiding the work of the grand jury
Congress have let nie down. Even perce~t to these limits, residents d
Stco11d elan poAtage paid at Pomeroy, Obio.
Natiooalad ;ertillng represmtadve, Lndoo
that one rotten apple in the barrel is a Washington-based official of the
worse, I am afraid that my colleagues Bllston could receive as much as $854
Aas~la~, 3111 EucUd Ave., Cleveland , ObJo
doesn't justify plowing under the en· Justice Department's public integrity
in Congress let you - the American . a month, in Cincinnati families.could
Wll5.
tire crop.
section, the unit of the criminal divi·
. Subecrlptfoo raks: DeUve~ by canter
receive rent subsidies rL $626 a lll&lt;lrl·
laJ:payers -down.
'Wbue avall•ble !0 eta\1 per week. By Motor
th,
and in New York, taxpayers could
But in the case of the 71st annual sian that specializes in investigations
On
June
'D
the
House
COMidered
Roo~ wbert carrier 11erviee oot aval~ble , Oftt
meeting of the National Governors' of federal, state and local of·
month , p.to. By IDIIIlln OhJQ aOO W. Va. , One
the appropriations bill for the Depart· provide a family a monthly rent
Ye.ur, t27.5G ; SIJ: month•, Slt.50; Tlutt muo.1
Association held here July 8-JO, the Jiceholders.
ment d HOI!sin8 and Urban Develop- allowance d$1,188.
UIB, ...50; Elaewllfre P%.80 year ; Sb month!!
potential spoilsport also happens to he
A:; in the case of aU pending grand
When we add liP these figures to
ment. I offered an amendment to cut
U7.00; Three montbi, P.OO. Sublcrlpdon prtct
Lacludes_§unday TtmH· Sentinel.
'
both the chairman of the organization jury investigatiol18, details of the pro·
the bill by two percent over all with find just how much is being paid, we
and the official host of the conference. be are secret. But at least one inci·
the maximwn cut. allowed on any see that" an appropriation of $5.5
That unfortunate coincidence has dent highly embarrassing to Carroll
single item to be five percent. My blllloo is required to liquidate
produced a dicey situation that can already has surfaced.
amendment would not IIB,ve touched obligations already made. And if we
only cawe uneasiness, if not embar·
In 1975, the wife of a inan serving a
the mandatory items in the $72 billion were to stop the housing program in
rassrnent, on the part of the gover· 21-year Kentucky prison sentence told
bill. This left $51 billloo in non· 11*1, $231 billion. is still conunitted to
nors who have worked assiduously to FBI agenta that she had received a
mandatory funds, and two percent of be paid over the nat to years. Slill,
refurbish their profession's tarnished possibly illegal offer from a lawyer to
this amounts to a saving of ap- the program abuaes continue. And un·
reputation.
secure a pardon or commutation of
der the guidelines of HUD for Section
proximately one billion dollars.
Although the nation 's state ex· sentence for her husband.
This amendment WB.! especially at· 8 housing, almoot 40 pen:ent of the
ecutives had an inulge problem as
After agreeing to cooperate with
tractive in that it did not call for cuts American people could have subrecently as the 1960s, recent years the FBI, the woman was ouUitted
on every item. High priority items sidized housing.
have so"'n the emergence of a new with a hidden microphone to secretly • •
A one billion dollar reduction in the
could be left Wltouched, 8ll(! the cub
breed of governors who are both record her conversations and given ·. :'c ·
would COOle fr001 ~ items lower in program could be · accomplished
j
highly professional managers and $15,000 in government money for at· ;·,,. ·.
priority. Detractors d my amend· without impooing any true hardship
very astute politicians.
tomey's fees.
- - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - ---- - - - ment wrongly argued that fund! for on those reliant on this program. The
veterans' hospitals would be cut. Such truly needy would still be provided
. Their repeatedly heralded arrival
Fearful that the subsequent
+,
on the political scene has obscured negotiations might actually result in
J
argwnenta were ridiculous. Aa I told with reaaonable housing. What would
the ·continued service of less the wrongful release of the prisoner,
my colleagues during debate over the have to be curlailed would be the
By Don Graff
'ready to make huge purchases to amendment, if the · ApPropriations payment of the exorbitant type d
distinguished governors. Now, the FBI decided to take into its con·
however, those gains are endangered fidence the one rn8n believed to be
It sounds ominous.
covertheirshorUaU.
Committee would feel that the housing subsidy I cited above. HUD
by Kentucky Gov . Julian M. Carroll, a both trustworthy and capable of
A hot, dry wind sweeping tlirough
They have nowhere else to buy. Of veterans ' cause is a low priority Item would have to take a more practical
48-year-&lt;&gt;ld Democrat.
halting any illegal action -Gov. Car· the nation's grain belt in tate spring the four major wheat exporting 118· and cut it, I would be ashamed of the and reasonable approach in the ad·
Carroll is highly visible at this mon· roll.
severely damaged the winter wheat lions, three - Canada. Australia and Corrunlttee. Veterans' interests are of ministration of this program.
th's meeting because he is concluding
But Carroll divulged the plan to his crop. A:; a result, the harvest is ex· Argentina - are either having their high prtority and most certainly
I do not believe that the American
his one-year tenn as tiGA chainnan campaign tr~w-er, a Kentucky peeled to fall short of expectations by own production and distribution pro- would be treated as such.
public would allow the federal
and because the organization tradi· lawyer. He, in turn, told his law pari· a billion bushels or more.
blems or have already conunitted this
But there are programs that need - treasury to be used to subsidize such
tionally holds its convention in the ner, whowasinvolvedintheefforls\0 What to do? Buy from the United year's surplus. By late June, the even deserve - to be cut. In par- high-priced housing of Congressional
home state of the outgoing chainnan.
gain prematw-e release for the States.
Sovieta had already bought more than ticular, I speak of the housing subsidy leadership, that same leadership that
One of the firs!_ Democratic gover· prisoner. The negotiations collapsed The nation with the wheat problem 100 million bushels of U.S. wheat, program under Section 8 of the Title pledges budi!etary ~t. let you
nors to endorse Jiminy Carter during · and the FBI was left empty-handed.
_ again -' is the Soviet Union. And plus other grains, and that would ap· U of the Housing and Conununity down by falling to support this amenthe 1976 presidential primaries, Car·
Among the more than 130 NGA what they say about ill winds would pear to he just the beginning.
Development Act of 197t. SeCtion 8 is dment . Aa a result, where there might
roll induced the president to provide "Policy Positions" is a resolution on appear to be true in this case. It has
As a consequence, the price of U.S. atrocious . Its potential for abwe, and have been a well-deserved spending
added luster to the occasion by per· "ethics in goverrunent" that says blown to the ·advantage of U.S. wheat is climbing, fanners have a resulting high costs, is an insult to cut of over a billion dollars, taxpayers
sonaUy attending the meeting.
"the first obligation of every elected fanners who are anticipating a boom to make up for a string of bad every honest, hard working continue to be saddled with yet
But in Lexington, Ky., less than 75 official in this n~tion is to .lead the bwnper crop jus,t as the Soviets are yea!"ll and a lot of the steam- at less! American. Under this housing sub- another unnecessarily high1&gt;riced
miles to the east, a Special federal fight to re5lore c1tizen conf&gt;dence m
for wheat growers - has gone out of sidy program, a San Francisco family program. I believe many of my
grand jury has been empaneled in the goverrunent."
- - - - - - - - - - - - · the protest movement that during the could be provided 8S much as $! ,Jilt a colleagues in Congress owe you an
U.S. district court to consider allega·
But Carroll, the man at the podium ty guard for the Rolling Stones' U.S. past ye.~r or so has propelled mooth in rent payments for 1980!
apology for this one.
caraVBns of tractors along the in·
tions of illegal activities in Ken- representing aU the country's gover· tour last summer.
Because the bill sets monthlv rent
tucky's state government.
nors at the highly publicized NGA
terstates and through the streets of
Much of the evidence being convention, is hardly the ideal choice MOSCOW (AP) - Passport officials the capital to make the nation
presented to the grand jury reported· to personify that noble goal.
have told the wife of dissident forcefully aware of the fanners' com·
ly was collected by a learn of 40 FBI
Alexande~ Ginzburg she must leave plaints with depressed prices.
the country to join him by July 25 or
The sales, which are likely to be
lose her chance to emigrate, her boosted additionally by large Chinese
friends say .
and East European purchases, should
Ginzburg was one of £ive dissidents also provide a welcome assist to the
traded to the United States for two U.S.balanceofpayrnents.
William Steif
convicted Soviet spies April 27, under
RA!porls of a shriveled Soviet
an agreement that included the harvest began · circulating sOine
emigration of close family members. weeks back, reviving memories of
Irina Ginzburg and her two small l!J'Ill. That was the year of their last
sons are the only relatives still here. big wheat crop failure when the
Everyone knows the coot of food is crease in the stamps' value goes into
She has refused to leave without an Sovieta eventually were forced to buy
effect.
ATIICA, N.Y . (AP) - Confessed two watches and a set of cufflinks informally-adopted 19-year-{)!d youth, 1.2 billion busbels abroad. They mov· zooming upward.
A family of four with a net yearly
But what if you -or your friends "Son of Sam " killer David Berkowitz were taken from his residence. He Sergei Shihayev. Soviet authorities ed quickly and quietly. Before '
is in good condition at the Attica state also testified that Harrington had a say Ginzburg has no legal relationship Americans, including those supposed· are living on a very small, fixed in· income of ~.000 will get $100 worth of
to Shibayev, who is now in the army. ty running the show in Washington, come, such as Social Security or a stamps monthly. Afamily of four with
prison infirmary after having his key to the Los Angeles house.
a net yearly income of f6,000 will get
Jagger
's
girlfriend
Jerry
Hall
Friends said Tuesday Mrs. were aware of what was happening, veteran's pe118ion?
throat slashed by a fellow irunate .
That's
where
the
crunch
comes.
$54 worth of stamps monthly. Even
she
saw
Harrington
run
out
of
testified
Ginzburg
was
told
of
the
deadline
about
a
quarter
of
the
U.S.
crop
had
Berkowitz was attacked early
And that's what food stamps are for .
·$54 can buy a lot of groceries.
Tuesday. Officials said about 60 the house the night of the burglary, Mondsy when she went to the Moscow been acquired at cutrate prices.
Since Jan. I, food stamps have been
The stamps are used like cash at
passport office.
The big money that year was reallz·
stitches were needed for the wound . Sept. 14. Harrington was a securi
ed not by fanners but by a handful of free. If you qualify, they won't cost moststores,buttheycanonlybeused
He is expected to stay in the infirmary
big grain dealers handling the Soviet you anything (of course, they're going for food, and seed and plan!a to grow
for one or two days.
·
pw-chases. The U.S. wheat reserve to cost U.S. taxpayers more than $7 food.
Berkowitz walked away from the
Althougb food stamps are federally
was exhausted, domestic prices shot billion in 1979).
attack but refused to identify his
'
.
.
The
Agriculture
Department's
food
funded,
the program is run through
up
and
initialed
a
general
upward
assailant , correctwns servlces
stBmp program began on an ex· state public assistance (welfare)
spokesman Lou Ganim said. State
.
spiraling in .food prices.
Washington now assures this can· perimental basis in 1961, but it dfdn't agencies. Here's what to do to get the
police began an investigation, but the
not happen again. The United States go nationwide unti1197t. The original stamps:
weapon used was not irrunediately
-Go to your local food stamp office,
this time has a much larger reserve idea was for the federal government
found Ganim said.
·
· Berkowitz, 26, confessed to killing
which can be drawn upon to meet both to sell poor people stamps w.orth two get an application fonn, fill it in. If
six New York City residents and
foreign pw-chases and fill domestic or three times their purchase price you qualify, you11 get stamps within
30 days.
attacking seven others with a .44·
needs. With constant satellite . when used to buy groceries.
The trouble with that was that
- After you've applied, you or SO·
monitoring of weather and crop con~
caliber handgun in !976 and J9n.
ditions, the Sovieta can no longer hide several milllon people didn't have meone in your household will be inter·
LOUISVILLE, Ky . (AP ) - Gov.
their needs and buy secretly. Acloser enough money to buy the stamps. At · viewed by a food stamp worker. If
Otis R. Bowen, a Republican serving
check is kept oo the traditionally the other end of the spectrwn, some you're handicapped, or 65 or older,
his second term as chief executive of
secretive U.S. grain dealers, required students, owners of luxury, cars and you can be interviewed at home or by
Indiana, has been elected chairman of
to report regulilrly on the grain flow others who migbt not really need the phone.
~ You have to prove you,re a U.S.
the National Governors' Association.
and call attention to especially large stamps were getting them.
So Congress in late 1977 directed citizen or a legal alien. Most able·
Bowen, 61, succeeded Gov. Julian
sales. And ·under an agreement
Carroll of Kentucky, a Democrat, at
re5ulting from the 1972 fiasco, the that the stamps become free last Jan. bodied persons 18 to 60 must register
the closing session of the group's
Soviets must have authorization frorri 1 and ,'indexed" them so that their to work and accept offers of stable
annual meeting here Tuesday. The
Washington in order to buy more than value rises every six months with the jobs.
increase in the cost of food.
- AU households are pennitted up
chairmanship annually alternates
a set amount each year.
Congress also incorporated new, to $1,750 worth of resources, and
between the two parties .
· And yet. A:; 1972 demonstrated, the
price of wheat has a widesprea~ ef· simpler rules in the law, making it households of two persons or more ill
LOS ANGELES (AP) - A security '
feet on food prices in general. As It easter for older people to gel the which at least oiie member is 60 or
guard has pleaded guilty to stealing
climbs, bread Is perhaps the least stamps and eliminating marginal older are permitted up to $3,000. You
$13,000 in cash and jewelry from the
·
must also show what your income is,
significant food product that becomes people.
Los Angeles mansion of Rolling
Result: By April I there were 19.1 · and you get some deductions to see if
more expensive. With rising demand
Stones lead singer Mick Jagger.
and prices for wheat; less is used as million people lll the U.S. getting food your net monthly income makes you
James Harrington, 27, remained
stamps, more than three million eligible.
livestock feed.
free on $3,000 bail after he entered the
-The fOOl! stamp office notifies you
That translates into greater de· above the 1978 average .
plea Tuesday to one count of fel ony
But that still leaves eight to 10 about your eligibility, tells you haw
mand for corn and other grains for
. grand thelt before Superior Cow-t
feed use. And that translates into milllon Americans who · would be many stamps you get, when you must
Judge Carlos Velarde. Sentencing was
ellgibleiftheyapplied.
re-epply, and sends a food stamp
higher prices for these grains.
scheduled for Aug. 7.
And that translates into higher
A family of four with a $2,()00.a·year Identification card. If you're rejected
Jagger testified at a preliminary
livestock prices.
net income will get $154 worth of food or are given fewer stamps than you
" Little hat. slit sk irt , roller skates, White
hearing in Noveonbet that $3,000 in
And · for the conswner, that stamps monthly, starting July 1. thlnkyoushouldget,youcanappeal,
wine- now fas hionab le can you get? "
cash , a guitar-shaped diamond
translates into ...
That's when the latest, 6.8 percent in·
stickpin, a heart.,.;haped gold locket ,
\. To repeat, it s~unds ominous.
4

COMMENTARY
Donald F. Graff

lll WlR
·• d

Names.·. •
•
ln the news

0r W

h 0 m .???
. ..

THE U.S. AND YOU

Help for food bills

Berry's World

!

f

'

.

'

Jeff Hubbard, Charlie Hamllton ,.Jinuny Joe Hemsley

'

ASSIST IN PRESS BOX - Assisting with the tour·
nament at Syracuse this week and next are Oris Hubbard, Joe Bob Hemsley and Mark Salser, annoWJcers
and Candy Brothers score keeper. Pictured are, front,

and Ray JewelL Absent were Rick Ash, Jim Hubbard
and Garland Cunningham.

1.... Mark Salser, Candy Brothers and Joe Bob Hemsley; back Oris Hubbard. The press box is a new additin to the facilities at Syracuse Park.

Syracuse LL first round action continuing
By area B.ney
First round action continued last
night in the Syracuse Little League
tournament.
Tuppers Plains beat Bidwell ~. the
Galllpo~ Senators downed Reed·
sville 114, and in the third contest, the
Athens Medics bombed the Gallipolis

White Sox I J.J .
Vic Glllllan alammed two singles
and a home run for Tuppers Plains to
help Roger Balser pick up the wtn.
Jay Carpenter added a horne run
while Eddie Collins had two singles.
Paul Collins, Balser, and Steve White

each singled.
Joey Pennington ted the loss. Jim
Denny l.ed Bidwell with two singles
and Gerald had a triple. Smith,
Jackie Glassburn and Pennington
each singled.
In Game two, the Senators plated

eight runs in the fifth inning with J .
Haner getting the win. T. Hagen
slanuned two doubles and a single to
pace the winners.
J. Haner had a double and triple,
and K. Carty had a triple and single.
K. Owens had a single.
D. J . Randolph was tagged with the
10611. Jeff Chevalier, Scott Kessler,
and Steve Rockhold each doubled for

Reds' ace passes Cy Young

come to mean pitching excellence.
" I haven 't been striking mauy
people out lately," Seaver said softly .
" I didn't even know I passed him .
Somebody mentioned it (Young's
mark ) the last time I pitched, but I
forgot about it.;. ·
Seaver, ~. lied Young with his
fourth strikeout of the game, which
carne in the second inning against
l011er John Fulgham, 2-2. !le took over
•ixlh place on the strikeout list when
he halted a Cardinal rally in the fourth
by striking out Garry Templeton.
Seaver finished with eight
TODAY 's
strikeouts - a career total of 2,823 MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
and left the game after six innings to
By The Assocloted Press
Ice down his aching right shoulder.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
BATT ING (200 at baiS I: Broc k, St.
" I've been getting · pain in my
Lou l!, .338; Fost~r . Cinc i nn~tt i, .333 ; shoulder about a month," Seaver
Marzil li, New York , .328: Hendrick, explained . "It just really hurt to the
St. Lou is ..324: Hernandez. St. Louis,
point where I thought I might change
.322.
RUNS : Schmidt, Philadelphia, 6-1;
Lopes, Los Angeles , 63; Matfhe-ws,
Atlanta, 62; Royster , Atlanta , 61 ;

N04'th. San Francisco. 61.
RBI : Kingman. Chicago,

Eastern tops

69 :

Foster, Cincinnat i, 68; Wintltld , Slln

Diego, 66; Schmidt, Philadelphia. 64:
- Clark, San Francisco. 59 .

HITS : Templeton. St . Louis. Hl9 ;

Pomeroy

Ma"t\e'WS, A_tlanta, 109 ; Garvey, Los

Angeles. 10'1; Winfield, San Diego,
106; Row, Philadelph ia , 103; Her-

nandez, St. Louis, 103.
In Pony League action, host
DOUBLES , Griffey, Cincinnati. 25 ;
Rose, Pnlladeipn ia, 24 ; Matthews. Eastern plated two runs in the bottom
Atlanta , 24: Mazzllli. New York , 23: d the seventh inning to take a 16-15
Hernandez. St . Louis, 23 ; Reitz, St . win over the P&lt;111eroy A'a.
Louis. 23.
P&lt;111eroy is now 7-3 while Efstem
TRIPLES : Templeton, Sl . Louis.
.
10; Scott, St. Louis, 9 ; Winf ield, San carne up to 5-4.
Diego, 9; McBride, Ph iladelph ia, 8:
Jerry Larkins got· the win in relief
Bowa, Philadelph ia, 7; Moreno, Pit· d Deroo Jewett.
tsburgh , 7; Hernandel, St. Lou is, 7.
Together they fanned six and
HOME
RUNS : Schm ldt .
Phlladelpl1la, 30 ; Kingman , Cnlcago, walk(!d nine.
29: Matthew&gt;, Atlanta , 19: F"'ter.
Jewett led the hitters with a triple
Cincinnati , 19: Lopes, L "' Angeles. and two singles, including the game
. 19: Winfield, San Diew. 19.
STOLEN BASES : North, San Fran · winning hit. Robbie Smith had three
cisco. 35: M04'eno. Pittsburgh, 33: hits and Roger Gaul had two. John
Scott. St. Louis. 25 ; Cedeno. Houston , Beaver hiI a dou ble and single while
22: Scott. Montreal, 21 ; Taveras, New Brian Well had a single.
York, 21 .
Jerry Fields took the 108!1 in relief d
PITCHING (8 DeciSions) .. Nlekro ,
Roger
Kovalchik. Those two fanned
Houston , 13·3, .813. 2.87: LaCoss. Cln·
clnnatl, 1·3, .727, 2.41 ; Andujar , thirteen but walked sixteen.
Houston. 10·5, .667, 2.73 ; Blyleven,
Fields led the A's at the plate with a
Pittsburgh, 6·3, .667, 3.70; Littel l, St .
homer,
triple, and single while Scott
Louis, 6·3, .667, .83 ; Martinez, St.
Louis, 6·3, .667, 3.25 ; Knepper. San had a double and two singles.
Francisco, 6·3, .667, .29 ; Lee. Moo ·
Kovalchik and Rhett Milhone each
treal, 9·5, .64.3, 3.36.
had two singles, and Nick Rigga,
STRIKEOUTS : Richard, Houston,
1.U ; Carlton, Philadelphia, 108 ; Shawn Gilmore, Mark Friend, and J .
Perry, San Diego, 100; Swan, New R. Wamsley each singled.
York. 98; Niekro, Atlanta, 97 .
Linescore:
p
324 006 0-15 14
AMERICAN LEAGUE
E
600 lllO 2-16 10
BATTING (200 at bats) : Smalley,
Minnesota . .354; Downing, California,
'
.352: Boehle, seattle, .334; Ada ''"·
Minnesota, .333; Molitor, Milwaukee,

California, 111; Rice, Boston , 108;

MOlitor, Milwaukee, 108.
DOUBLES : washington, Chicago,
2.4;

Milwaukee, 23 ; Lemon, Chicago, 23;
Brett, Kansas City, 21 : Jackson. Min·
nesota, 21 .
TRIPLES : Brett, Kansas City, 12; .
Randolph, New York , 8; Wipson, Kan·
, tie, 6; Jones, Seattle, 6.
HOME RUNS : Lynn, Boston, 24;
Rice, Boston , 21 ; Thomas,
Milwaukee, 21; Baylor, California,
21; Slngletoo, Baltimore, 19.
STOLEN BASES : LeFlore, Detrol1,
45; Wilson, Kansas City, 37; Wills,
Texas, 2~; Bonds, Cleveland, 23;
Crul, Seattle, 22.

. PITCHING (8 Declslonsl: Davls, 1
New York, 8-(), 1.000, 2.0; Kern,
Texas, 10·2, .833, 1.64; Clear, Callfor·
nla, 9·2, .a18. 2.52; John, New York ,
13·3, .813, 2.23; Zahn, Minnesota, 7·2.
· .778, 3.24: Barrios, Chicago, 8·3, .727,
Palmer, Baltimore, 7·3, .700

3.61;

3.10: Drago, Boston, 7-J, .700, 3.06. ·
, HRIKEOUTS: Ryan, California,
151; Guidry, New York, '1'1 ; Jenkins,
· t,xas, 97; Koosman, Minnesota, 81;
Flanagan, Baltimore, 80; Kravec,
Chlci!!OO, 90; Kern. Texas, 80 .

I'

dles and fan arms , an oil
filled gearbol( on th e

Whirl -A-Feed!!! table. and

LATONIA RESULTS

FLORENCE, Ky. (AP ) - Miss
Vicandy won the feature pace
Tuesday night at Latonia Race Track
in 2:08. .
The winner paid $5.40, $3.20 and
12.60. Goshawk was second, paying
18.60 and 16.40, and Willie D)m 0 Mite
finished third, paying 12.80.
·
The daUy double com bination of
Chief Omaha and Canadian Frank, 99, paid 1133.20.
A crowd of 1,304 bet $111 ,984.

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and see
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John Rankin got the win while Chris
Leonard slaJwned two triples and a
single to lead the attack. P. J. Lyons
had a triple and two singles, and Scott
LaGraff, Rankin, Jim Stricklin, and

SPECIAl.
10 lb. Bag

City, 66; Rice, Boston. 6-1; Otis, Kan·
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in silo filling.

=:~~~~~te to their win

my motion, so I thought it was best to
gel out of there."
The three-time Cy Young Award
wiMer said he threw the hardest of
any ·outing since his June comeback,
and he was pleased with everytl)ing
about his pitching except the pain .
"It just hurts, that's all," Seaver
said. "II hurts aU the time. It bothered
me the whole game. It's not really a
pain, just an ache from my shoulder
aU through my neck."
Can he continue to pitch despite the
discomfort'
" I have been, and I will again
Sunday,'' Seaver said. " II 's not
scrnething that will keep me out . I 've
been able to make the (crucial) pitch
when I needed to ."
The Reds scored twice in the first
iMing on a double by George Foster
and once in the third on a single by
Johnny Bench. Cesar Geronimo hit a
solo home run, his second, in the
seventh inning.
"You can't spot Seaver too many
runs and expect to beat him," said St.
Louis Manager Ken Boyer. " We had
our shot, but the real turning point
was when (Doug) Bair came in there
and blew us away."
St. Louis got nine hils off Seaver,
but managed just two runs. Bair got
his 13th save by allowing only two
base runners in tbe final three
iMings.
The Cards scored just once in tbe
fourth despite three singles, a double
and a walk, and Bench cut down Lou
Brock trying to steal second base in
the filth to shut off a big iMing.
"Seaver's not hard tD get a good
jump on, and I thought it (Brock's
attempt ) was worth a gamble ," Boyer
said. "You can't sit back all day and
walt for things to happen. "

Flatrock Volunteer Fire Dept.

Boston, 73; Smalley, Minnesota, 67 ;
Rice, Boston, 65; Kemp, Detroit, 63 .
HITS: Brett, Kansas City. 118:
Smalley, Minnesota, 115; Lansford,

i

In the last game, the Medics slam-

.328.
RUNS : Lansford, California, 70:

Baylor, California. 68 ; Brett, Kansas

Legion against Fruth's, and the last
game puts VInton against the
Pomeroy Yarlkees to conclude first
round action. '
Thursday the New Haven Cubs iace
Green one, Point steelworkers tangle
with the Middleport Indians, and in
the last contest, Murray City goes
against the New Haven Reds.

~~~~~n~~~~::h ..--A new dimension

Seaver wins sixth straight
CINCINNATi (AP )- Tom Seaver,
pitching despite an aching shoulder
and trying to forget a sertous back
injury that threatened to end his
career this spring, has joined five
other major league pitchers ahead of
Cy YoWlg on the all-time slrik"'lut
llilt.
Seaver won his sixth straight game
when the CinciMati RA!ds defeated the
St. Louis Cardinals, t-2, Tuesday night
but said he was mildly surprised to
overtake the man whose name has

Jamie Hoessie each had a single.
For the White Sox, Jay Lambert led
the hitting with a single and double.
Gamble Grant had the other Ill!, a
single. Greg Pickens took the loss.
Tonight's action has the Pomeroy
Tigers facing the Gallipolis Tigers in
Game one at 6:15p.m.
Game two has Glouster American

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~

.....
4- Tbe Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, July II , 1!179

Mauck, Weaver ejected by umpires ·Tuesda
A!l the song says: It's one, two,
three strikes, you're out at the old ball
game. No one knows that better than
Minnesota Manager Gene Mauch,
who was · thrown out of the old ball
game fOI' insisting Detroit's Lou
Whitaker got one swing too many.
There was one out in the ninth
inning of a S-S game at Tiger Stadium
Tuesday night wben Ron LeFlore,
who had walked, broke for second as
Mike Marshall pitched to Whitaker .
The 2-2 pitch to Whitaker, with
LeFlore in full flight : Whitaker
swings through it and catcher Butch
Wynegar pegs to second to try for
LeFlore and an inning-ending double
play. Right?
Wrong. Plate umpire Dallas Parks
calls it a ball. Wynegar's throw goes
into center field and LeFlore goes to
third. Whitaker, given new life,
singles LeFlore home to win it 6-5 for
Detroit.
In the other AL games, the Oakland
A's nipped the Baltimore Orioles 7~.
the SeatUe Mariners bested the New
· York Yankees f&gt;-1, the Cleveland
Indians beat the Kansas City Royals 7. 4, th.e Chicago White Sox downed the
Texas Rangers 5-3 and the California
Angels trimmed the Boston Red Sox 43.
.
Oakland 7, Baltimore 6
Mauch wasn't the only manager to
hear the cheery refrains of baseball 's
anthem. Baltimore's Earl Weaver got
the thumb in Oakland after another
questionable swing.
It's the eighth inning and the Orioles
are ahead 6-4 when reliever Sammy
'Stewart hits Jim Essian with a pitch .
Essian takes second on a groundout,

then Stewart hit.'l Jeft Newman on the Giannoulas 'bobbed onto the field
left hand .
while Ron Guidry was war!bing up in
Right, Earl' Wrong, he replies .
the third, .and put a " hex" on the
" The ball hit his bat, " the manager Yankee pitcher .
cried, unperturbed by Newman's split
Piniella, beading for left field at the
batting glove a nd what is suspected to time, hurled his glove at the comic
be a fr acture of the catcher's little character .
finger.
"U the people want to pay to see a
Wea ver was ej ected by plate chicken ," said Piniella, " dress up the
umpire Rich Garcia and went to his players as chickens. It's a business to
dugout. But while the A's were
deciding whether to pinch-run for
Newman, Stewart started warming
up .
. The umpires slopped him from
doing so, and Weaver - who should
NEW YORK (AP) -Manager Bob
have left by then ·- charged right Lemon of the American League Allback out for another conference with Stars iS planning ahead, for the latter
the crew but was ordered off the field stages of next' Tuesday 's Ali.Star
a second ~e .
Game .
The game finally gets started again
Lemon, the deposed manager of the
and Tony Armas knocks Stewart out world champion New York Yankees,
of the game with an RBI double and included four full-time relief pitchers
it's6-5 _ whereupon A's Manager Jim and one part-time fireman among the
Marshall notices Weaver still hasn't nine pitchers named to the AL squad
left. So he strolls out on the field for that will try to end the seven-year
yet another chat with the umps.
dominance of the NL in this year's
" I knew Weaver was in the 50th annual classic, to be played at the
bathroom, but I told the umpire they'd Seattle Kingdome .
have to carry me off the field if they
Chosen from the AL bullpens were
didn't get him out of there," said fireballing Jim Kern of the· Texas
Marshall .
Rangers, rookie Mark Clear of the
Mariners5, Vankees 1
California Angels, Don Stanhouse of
If that wasn't enough, New York left the ftltimore Orioles and Sid Monge
fielder l.&lt;Ju Piniella threw his glove at of the Cleveland Indians.
the San Diego Chicken while the
The remainder of the staff ,
Yankees were losing to Seattle and · announced Tuesday, consists of
Rick· Honeycutt at the Kingdome.
Boston's Bob Stanley, whom the Red
Ted Gia'nnoulas, who amuses Sox use as both as a starter and
baseball crowds while masquerading reliever, a's well as starters Tommy
as the furry mascot, is making a John and Ron Guidry of the New York
week-long appearartce at the Seattle Yankees, Nolan Ryan of the Angels
ball park prior to the All.Star Game .

'" and not a joke. Tell him to get off
the field ."
·
Giannoulas' hex might have
worked. Guidry gave up homers to
Bill Stein and Leon Roberts, the latter
eoming after a foul pop by Roberts
glanced off one of the speakers
suspended 150 feet above the domed
stadium's playing surface .
Indians 7, Royal!i 4

Andre Thornton's two-run homer
and Ron Hassey's three-rWI double
carried Cleveland to victory and
handed Kansas City Its lOth loss in II
starts .
White Sox 6, Jtangers 3
A throwing error by Texas reliever
Jim Kern led to three seventh-inning
Chicago runs - without a hit - and
carried the White Sox to their seventh

AL staff includes four relievers
and Dave Lemanciyk of the Toronto
Blue Jays .
Kern, traded to the Rangers by ·
Cleveland this season, has a !().!
record with 15 saves and a leagueleading 1.34 earned run average .
Clear, a top candidate for the AL
Rookie of the Year award, has a 9-2
record with seven saves and a 2.56
ERA.
Stanhouse is 6-1 with 12 saves and a
2.64 ERA for Baltimore 's East
Division leaders. Monge is IH&gt; with
nine saves and a 1.95 ERA.
Of the starters, John has the best
record with a league leading 13
victories and just three losses .
Guidry, who was :'.a-3 and won the Cy
Young Award last year ; iS 6-5 with two
saves and has been troubled by
injuries.
.
Ryan is II~ and leads the league
with five shutout.s. His 151 strikeouts
iS tops in the majors. Stanley is lll-5
with one save and Lemanczyk iS 7~
with a 3.09 ERA.
The combined record of the nine-

man AL staff iS 76-35, a .690
P."~centage, with 46 saves. Six of the
pitchers are right-banders with
Guidry, John and Monge the AL
SOijthpaws. Only four- Ryan, John,
, Kern and Guidry - have previous AllStar experience.
Among the pitchers the AL chose to
pass up included Minnesota bullpen
ace Mike Marshall, whose 18 saves
lead the league, teammate Jerry
Koosman, 11-6, and Baltimore
teammates Dennis Martinez, !1).6, and
Mike Flanagan, 11~ .
The National League staff, also
named Tuesday , includes three
Houston hurlers - Joe Niekro ,
Joaquin Andujar and Joe Sambito .
The other pitchers are Steve Carlton
of Philadelphia, Montreal 's Steve
Roge~;s, Gaylord Perry of San Diego,
Mike LaCoss of Cincinnati and Bruce
Sutter. of the Chicago Cubs .
Niekro, Andujar, Carlton, Rogers ,
Perry and LaCoss are all starters
while Sambito and Sutter work o"t of
the bullpen .

Mo.rgan, Concepcion selected
For the Men

SANDALS &amp;
DRESS
SHOES

FLORSHEIM
JARMAN
HUSH PUPPIES

Joyce - Easy Street Hush Puppies Cover
Girl - And Many Others.

GOOD SELECTION
BUT NOT
EVERY SIZE

BAGS REDUCED

HARTLEY SHOES, INC.
9 a.m .-5 p.m . Mon .
thru Thurs . &amp; Sa1.

Middle ol Upper Block
in Pomeroy, 0 .

9 a .m.-a p.m. Fri .
Closed Sunday

VISA

NEW YORK (AP) -Pete Rooe will
have an opportunity to set an All.Star
Game record by playing at his fifth
different position in ·Tuesday night's
game at the Kingdome in Seattle.
The Philadelphia Phillies first
baseman was among !3 reserves
named to tbe National League squad
today by All.Star Manager Tommy
Larorda of the Los Angeles Dodgers.
It will be the seventh straight AllStar Game for Rooe, who will back up
· Steve Garvey of the Dodgers al"first
base.
Rose, who has already appeared at
second base, third base , left field and
right field in his 11 All.Star games,
was joined on the list of reserves by
second baseman Joe Morgan of
Cincinnati, third baseman Ron Cey of
Los Angeles, shortstops Dave
Concepcion of Cincinnati and Garry
Templeton of St.l.&lt;Juis, outfielders Lou
Brock of St. LouiS, Jack Clark of San
Francisco, Gary Matthews of Atlanta,
Dave Kingman of Chicago and Lee
MaZ2illi of New York and catchers
Bol&gt; Boone of Philadelphia; Gary

Carter of Montreal and Johnny Bench
of Cincinnati .
The fans across the country voted
Dave Winfield of the San Diego
Padres , Dave Parker of the
Pittsburgh Pirates and George Foster
of the Reds · to start in the outfield,
while the infield starters are Garvey
and Davey L&lt;lpes of Los Angeles and
Larry Bowa and Mike Schmidt of
Philadelphia .
The top vote-getter among the
catchers was Ted Simmons of the
Cardinals, but he'll miss the game due
to a broken wrist, so either Boone,
Carter or Bench will get the start.
Bench was the runnerup in the fan
voting, the first time he has lost since
the fans were allowed to select the AllStars in 1970.
It will be the first All .Star Game for
Matthews and Mazzilli who, like Clark
and
Parker,
are
the
sole
representatives of their respective
teams.
Kingman, the Cubs' slugger, was
hitting home runs at a near·record

pace during the first half of the season
but is now second to Schmidt for the
NL home run lead . Carter has been
one of the main forces behind the
Expos' drive to the lead in the NL
East , while the switch-h'itting
MaZ2illi, whose Mets are in last place
in the division, ha• been among the
league leaders in hitting all season .
Brock, who already has announced
his intention to retire at the end of the
season, will be making his sixth AllStar appearance .

seven.

GOESSLER JEWELRY STORE
E. Court St .

Pomeroy, 0.

Angels 4, Red Sox 3
Brian Downing singled to score Don
Baylor with the run that liftted
California to a cOmeback triumph
over Boston .

Hehnet Day plans
announced today
CINCINNATI - The Cincinnati
Reds have an added treat for their
young lams- Helmet Day will be held
at Riverfront Stadiwn oo Sunday,
Aug. 5 when the Reds meet the San
Diego Padres in a 2:15p.m . game .
Each girl and boy, Hand under accompanied by a separate paying
adult, will be given a free Cincinnati
Reds helmet, which looks just like
those worn on the field by the Cincinnati players .
The bright red helmet.'l , with a
white wiShbone "C" on the front , have
adjustable headbands so that they
will fit children of all ages .
Tickets for the Helmet Day game of
Aug. 5, as well as tickets for all other
Reds' home games, are available at
Riverfront Stadium, the Reds ' 580
Gift-News Shop and all other Reds'
ticket outlets .

SVHS seeks grid coach

79~

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Thur sday , Ju ly 12 thru Jul y 14

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TOMATOES
CUCUMBERS
CABBAGE
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ORANGES

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PRESERVES

Houston
Cincinnati

S3 36
.46 ~2

san Diego

40 so
37 50

Atlanta

Los Angetes

.596
.524 6
.4u 13112
.425 15
.409 J6'/,

AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST
W. L . Pet.
Baltimore
S6 30 .651
Boston
52 32 .619
M ilwaukee
49 38 .563
New York
4ll 39 .552
Detro it
~2
oiJ .488
Cleveland
41 &gt;15 .477
Tor on to
8 60 .318
WEST
Cal ifornia
52 37 .584

1a uz:

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Mon.-Sal 8 am·10 pm

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

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PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU JULY 14, 1979

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~UPERIORS

71/'l
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M in nesota
Kansas City .
Chi caoo
Seattle
Oak land

:.:J

0
.lOO 7 1/ ,
39 46 .&gt;159 It
38 51 .427 ~
2S 65 .278 27'h
Tuesd•v ';s G11mes
Clelleland 7, Kansas City"'
Detro i t 6 , Minnesota 5
Chicago6, TexasJ
Californ i a .c, Boston J
Oakland 7, Baltimore6
Seattle 5, New York 1
Only .games scHeduled

Wednesday's Games
Baltimore (0 . Mart inez 10 -6) at
Ookland &lt;M cC atty 5-J J
M ilwauk..e (Slaton 8 ·4 ) at Toronto
(Huffman 4· 10 ), (n) ·
Kansa• Ci ty (Spllttorff 9·7) at
Cleveland (Paxton s-• L (n)
Minnesota (Harrtell _..,or Jackson
1· 11 at Detroit (Morri• 7·4), (n )
Texas 1Darwin 2-Q} at ·Chicago
tT rout 2 3), (n)
Boston ( Eckeors lev 8·S) at Califor nia (Frost 7·4J. (n)
New York (Johns 13 ·31 at Seattle

SUPERIORS

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By The Associated Press
BASEBALL
American League
CHICAGO WHITE SOX - AcQuired
The contr act of Jim Morri son, in·
tlelder.lrom the Philadelphi a Phi llies
to co mplete an April trade for Jack
Kucek, pi tcner . Pla ced Ron scnue le r ,
pitcher, on the 21 -day disabled l ist .
TEXAS RANGERS - Placed Jon
Matl ack , pitcher, on the 21 -day
disabled lisf. Recalled Jerry Jon
Cleaton . pitcher, from Tulsa ot the
Texas League.
'BASKETBALL
N1tional
aasketbltt Association
KANSAS CITY KINGS - Signed
Sam Lacey, center , and Bill Robizine,
forward , fo mulf i -year contracts .
Signed Bob Nast'i, forward , to a two·
vear' contract .
NE W JERSEY METS An ·
noun ced tne resignation at Da11e
Wahl , assistant coach.
FOOTBALL
National Footbltt League
BUFFALO BULLS Signed J im
Huslett,l inebacker, and Kevin Baker;
defen!ive end.
DETROIT LIONS - Signed Ken
Fanletti , Eddie Cote ai1d John
Mohring, linebackers : Walt Brown,
center ; Jeff Komto, quarterbaCk i
Bob Forster, offensive lineman ; and
Bryan Sweeney, wide rece iver.
GENERAL
PEACH BOWL - Named Howard
Towns managing director .
COLLEGE
NORTHWEST MISSOURI STATE
- Named Lionel Sinn head basketball
C08Ch .
OCCIDE NTA L
COLLEGE
Named Bruce Allen head IQ91ball
coach .
ST . LOUIS UNIVERSITY Named Dave Axelson assls1ant
athle11c director effective August 1.

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DETERGENT

Sport Shop

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• Fishing Tackle and Rods
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• Guns and Reloading
• Ball Gloves
• Camping Equipment
eArchery
• el ndoor Games
eWe have Gilt Certificates ·
Next to Mason County
Grounds, Grandview Hgts .
Pt. Pleasant, w. va.

39e

$1 29 REGULAR &amp; DIET
8PAK
$169
•
~ 16 OZ. BTL

Store Hours:

6'1&gt;
711,
16'1&gt;

36 52
Tuesday 's Games
Chicago 7, Atlanta 3
. San Francisco 11, Montreal 7, (13
mn lngs)
Philadelphia 6, San DieQo 5
Cincinnati~. st. Louts 2
Los Anvetes 7, New York 4
Pittsburgh~. fiouston J
· Wednesday's Games
Los Angeles !Reuss ·28) at New
York (Falcone HI
Chicago IMcCiothen 8· 7) at Atlanta
IBrtzzolaraOorMuhter2-8), (n)
· San Francisco I Curti• 4·5) at Mon ·
treat (Schatzeder 0· 1). (n)
San Diego ID'Acquisto HI at
Philadelphia !Lerch • ·7) , lnJ
St . Louis (Denny 4·61 at Cincinnati
(LaCoss 8 ·31, In)
Pittsburgh (Kison N) at Houston
!Richard 7·8 ) (n)
ThUrsday' s·Games
San Francisco at Mo,treal, (n)
San Oif'Qoat Philadelphia , (n)
Los Angeles at .N ew York , (n)
Chlcaoo at Cincinnati, (n}
Pittsburgh at 'Houston, (n)
onty games scheduled

E GROWN

113 SIZE

'1 49

1h
51!2

WEST

HUNTINGTON
WE

12 OZ. PKG.

79~ BOLOGNA
Hilton

1/•,;:·

U.S. 60 WEST

'199

We ' .a aly Accept Fed . Food Stamps
Monday thru Friday
, ,oo tit7 ,oo
Saturday 9, 00·9:oo
CLOSED
SUNDAYS

\'
,.

CAMDEN PARK

PfiEBE 'S STORE

GB

Tuesday ' s Spor1s Tr•ns11ctions

OPEN TO PUBLIC AFTER 5 PM

5th &amp;Pearl

Buebatt At A Glance
By The Associated Press
NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST
W.L. Pet.
Montreal
48 3] .608
Chicago
-14 36 .550
Philadelphia
46 40 .535
Pittsburgh
42 38 .525
St. LOUiS
42 •o .512
New York
32 48 , 401)

.

/

M ilwaukee at Toronto , (n )
TeKasat J&lt;.ansasCity , ( n )
New York at Seattle, ( n)
Onlv games scheduled

EMPIRE-DETROIT STEEL
"FAMILY DAY PICNIC"

SLICED LB.

SCOREBOARD

\ 11\\ \ nr • rtr;t'-.r.n.,rrtt
''
IJttlt ).!lTit .... tldd.ihlt ,~ . .
llltT[,,n!!l \t'\lt \z\ 11'

SUPERIORS

LB.

BAseeA! '

Thursdly' s Games
Detroit at Chicago, 2. ( n )

SATURDAY-JULY 14th
UNTIL 5 PM

BOILED
HAM

·
· -

(Bann ister .4 ·7). {n)

PARK RESERVED

.::::::::::::::::::i~;:::::::::::;;~;:;;::~:::;!!s~dium.

SLAB
BACON

•

WilLOW WOOD, Ohio - Symmes
Valley High School needs a football
coach.
Former head coach Joe Bokovitz '
resignation became effective the final
week of JWJe after being accepted by
the board of education, according to
principal Ted Adams . BOkovitz will
coach at Ironton St. Joseph this
season , he added .
The Symmes Valley job could in·
elude a track coaching position,
Adams said . Bokovl tz also coached
the baseball team and applications
al!io are being accepted for that
position .
To apply, contact Adams or school
superintendent Wayne White by
calling 61H43-237l.

l u·t uLtnr .. prn-. o~nd
hr.u r lr·l" ' ,H h pt t t t ,

Unser said he didn't think the ball
would leave the park.
Phillies Manager Danny Ozark , who
sent Unser up to hit for Larry Bowa ,
who had a triple earlier , was
surprised, too. He said he was hoping
for a double .
In other NL games Tuesday night ,
the Pittsburgh Pirates edged the
Houston A!ltros 4-3, the Cincinnati
Reds scored a 4-2 victory over the St.
l.&lt;JuiS Cardinals, the Chicago Cubs
downed the Atlanta Braves 7-3, the
San Francisco Giants ouUasted the
Montreal Expos 11-7 in 13 innings, and
the Lo.s Angeles Dodgers downed the
New York Mets 7-4.

Unser's made him the first player in
baseball history to pinch-hit three
homers in consecutive at-bat.'l. They
have been well-spaced, the first on
June 30th against the St. LouiS
Cardinals, and the second on July 5
against the New York Mets, but they
go into the record book as if they were
one after the other.
Schmidt, who has hit three in one
night - as he did last Saturday night
in part of his current surge - but it
waq Unser who was fielding the
questions about home runs in the
aftermath of h!s sudden climb into the
spotlight.
"I was just wanted something I
could see and hit ," he said of the first
pitch from Padres' reliever Roltie
Fingers that he sent. over the center
field wall, the deepest part of the

error.

Shes always been
· alittlegem,
nowshe's jewelry.

Del Unser sets mark
Mike Schmidt. The fans in
Philadelphia show up expecting him
to hit a home run, and if any home run
records are to be set, he's the one they
figure can do it.
But Del Unser ?
Both Schmidt and Unser homered
Tuesday night as the Phillies raltied
for a 6-5 victory over the San Diego
Padres . Unser's , tho ugh , outdid
Schmidt's in importance. Not only did
it set a major league record , it scored
three runs and won the game . .
Schmidt's 30th homer of the season
tied a National League record for
homers in five consecutive games -

victory in nine meetings with the
Rangers th iS season.
Kern , 1,().2, suffered his other loss
after makin,g a similar throwing

·~~..............

.. , , _

Fair

PHONE

615.-lf88

Open Sunday ·! p.m.·• ~.m .
· Monday thru Saturday
9 a.m. to 8 ~.:-n .

$}39

3

L_

~CO IJ PDN-

I

l

COUPON

COUPO N

MAXWELL HOUSE

HEINZ

CORONET

COFFEE

VINEGAR

TOILET TISSUE

2LB.

f

VAN DE KAMP

JOY LIQUID.......!2;••99~JISH Fl LETS ..... !;~~ ...
ALL GRINDS ·

VIS4'

·

$41 9

050x5
Limit 1 Per customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires July 14, 1979

!;=~~;;; ~ ;;;; !~!

-$·149

GAL ··

·

Lj,Jnit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Ex

II•

8 ROLL
PAC.K

COUPON

.
I

WILSON

$}29

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Oniy at Powell's
Expires July 14, 1979

o,,,,,.

l(:

.

EVAP. MILK

.THE COUPON MILK

ll.Hlt

:~3!'1

Lim it 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires July 14, 1979

�·1-The Dally Sentlnel,Middlepo.rt-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, July 11, 1979

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday , Jullyll, 1979

NOTICETO
PUBLIC
REQUEST FOR
_RELEASE OF FUNDS
V1t111e of Middleport
237 Ra ce St .
..
M l~ d l eport , Oh10 45760
TO ALL INTERIESTEO
AGENCIES .
GROUPS
AND PERSONS :
On or about Ju ly 26 , 1979
the above .named v illage
will reques t the U . S .
Department of · Housing
and Urban Devl!!lormentto
release
Federa
fund s
under T itle I of the Housing
and
Com .m unity
Development Act 01 1974
( L9J .J8J ) tor t he follow ing
project :
( 1)
ConsJruct ion
ot
sanitary sewer lines and
lift station to · serv ice
BroadWay St. below Park
St ., E tm St ., Page St.,
below
Park
St .
and
Ra ilroad 51
'
(2) Resurfacing portions
of , Broadway , Elm , and
Railroad Sts .
( J)
Construct io n
ot
Sidewa l ks on Broadway
and -E l m Sts
·
Theestlma.ted tota l o f the
above mentioned act ivit i es
will be $330.300 .
An
Environmental
Review Report respecting
the w i thin pro jec t has been
m.ade by ttfe above .named
V Il lag e Wh i ch docu ments
the environmentel r eview
of tn e pro ject . Th is En .

Marko the Magic Clown performs at HM C
Tuesday morning in the Pediatric
Playroom at the Holzer Medical Center was an exciting time, because the
patients who could either be wheeled
en their beds, in wheelchairs, or walk
by themselves to ko ti&gt;'the Playroom,
were able to enjoy a full 30 minute
show of magic and tricks, presented
by "Marko the Clown" from Jackson.
In real"life, Marko ill Mark Wood,
00, who ill recognized for his feats of
magic and professional en·
tertalnment throughout Southeastern
Ohio, West Virginia and Kentucky.
When Mark was ·just nine years old,
the ''magic bug" bit him, and he
. began to do his own magic art. From
1970 until 1978, he worked. with his
younger brother, Bryan, who played
the role of ''Tarbaby the Clown. •' Since January of this year, Marko has
beeil solo as "Marko the Magic
&lt;lown."
·
During his pr!!Sentation for the
children at Holzer on Tuesday morning, Marko Wled the magic wand,
and had the young patients get involved with him in his tricks, holding
that magic wand. He had a magic
comic book, he did exciting things

L.

witl1 silk scarves and flowers .
Probably what dellghted the childr:en
most was the live white dove that appeared from "nowhere," and lit on a
tracUon bar of one of the young
paiients . Marko made balloon
animals for all of the children.
Several parents were on hand to enjoy
the show as much as their children.
Those children who were Wl8ble to
be in the Plilyroom received a personal visit from Marko, as he talked
to them, perfonned a trick or two,
and made a balloon anifnal of their

choiceforeach.
The enUre 30 minute program as
Marko presented it in the Playroom,
wu taped by the hospital's color
television camera so that it can be
replayed on closed circuit television
to the children •s l'OODill. They will not
only see the show again, but aee themselves on the televisloo screen. Also,
this means the children who could not
attend, will also see the program 88
presented by Marko yesterday mornlng.

Nancy Casteel, R.N., Pediatric
Head Nurse, commented, "Havinll
someone like Marko take his time to
come from Jackson to entertain our
ypUDg patients 'meana a great deal to
each of them, to their parents, and to
us en the hospital staff. It proves that
other people reallr care, and that
those with outstanding talent, like
Marko, are willing to share and en·
tertain to make the life of hospitalized
children juat a little more pleasant.
-· We are aU very grateful."
-

CJfiCKEN BARBECUE
NEW HAVEN -The New Haven
Volunteer Fire Department Awdllary
will have a chicken .barbecue and hot
dog trays Saturday starting at 11 a.ll).
at the fire station in New Haven.

v• r o nm ental
Rev i ew
un on e 01 !lit! to ll o winQ
Record is on f il e at the
base s
abo~e address and
is
A l ha l lh(' cerfi i i Cc1tion
ava•l?t:lle
tor
public ..., wa s -not in t acl exec uted b
examm at ion and copy ing ,
the Ch i ef e)l;ecu t ivc o tt ke~
upon r equ_es t .
.
or oth e r off ic e r of com
The VIllage Of · M1d
pla int approved b'f H VO
d te port w ill und ertak e t he or
'
Projec t described above
B
That
app l ic ant ' s
w ith B loc k Grant h..ondS
environmenta l
review
fro m the U . S . Depart men t
rec o rd for fh(&gt;- p r o jec t in
of H ous ing and Urban
di c a t es om i ssion of a
D evelopment
(HUO ), required dec ision . t ind ing ,
u nd er Ti tl e t ot the HoU si ng or ste p ap p !'icab l e 10 th e
and
Com m u n it y
p r o] e &lt;t
In
th e
en
Developm en t Act ot 1974. viron .men t al
review
The Village of M id d l epo rt
Proc ess
is ce r1ifying to HUO th a t
Objections
must
be
th e Village o f Middlep o rt . pr epa red and subm i tled in
i!ln&lt;_t .Fred Hoffman , in his accordance
wi th
the
O lf iC!i!ll ca pa city as Village
r e qu i re d pr oce dur e o 4
Mayor , consent to ac c ep t
CFR Pa rt 58J. and may be
f or juri sdic t ion o f th e addressed t o HUD f'lf the
Federal cou rt s it an action
HUO Ar ea Office , 200 N .
is brought to enfo rce
H i gh St. , Columbus , Ohio .
respon ;i bi tities. in re l a t ion Objec t ions to the release 01
to env~ronmenrat r eviews , fu nds on bases other t han
dec i sion
makin g',
and
those stat ed abOve wi(t not
a != t ~on ~ end that r e~pon
be cons i dered by HUO . No
s' b .I IH, es
have
be e n ob i ectio n r ece i ved alte r
sat !Si red .
Ju l y 26, 1979 wil l be co n
Th e legal effec t o f th e si dered by HUO .
c er t if ica tion is that upon its
FRED H OFFMAN
app r oval , t he Vill age o f
MA Y OR
M i ddlep or t may vse the
V ILL AGE OF
Block G r ant funos , and
MI DDL E PO R T
HUD w il l h ave sa tJS t ied i t s (7) 11, lf c
r e.s~onsibilities _un der th e
Nat.1onal
Env1ronmental
P?l rcy Act of 19.69 H UO
':"''" a cc ept an Obj ectio n to
Lost and Found
ds appro v al of the r e.l ease
of f unds and acceptance o f LOST : 2 fox hounds . female ,
th e cer t i f ic ation only i f i t is block and white, mole, white

ton spots . Nome on co llar,
Emory Gordon. It found ,
phone R'E. Gordon 367· 7112
Cheshire, OH .

ORCHESTRA GRANTS ·.
perfocmance season.
WASHINGTON (AP) A total of $10.8
livingston L. Biddle Jr.,, chatrman
million in granis to benefit symphony of the endowment, says "the year's
orchestras throughout the country has funding is an increase of $1.6 million
been announced by the National over that awarded last year by the
Endowment for the Arts.
Music
Program's
orchestra
By Mn. Herbert RCIUih
The 121 grants are for the support of category."
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Manuel and I!On,
Tim, Mr. and Mrs. Sid Manuel of orchestras during the 1979-80
Long Bottom, Mr. and Mrs. Lewis
Hudson, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Row.h
THIS WffK'S
enjoyed a picnic at the home of Mrs.
Bill Jacobs at Mason, W. Va. a recent
Sunday.
Earl Hart of Hacine visited his
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Don Manuel,
Robin andDorulita recently.
14
Mrs. Pearl Norris spent a weekend
with Mrs. Etha Warner.
_
Michael and Mandy Russell visited
thetr grandparents while Mr. and
Mrs. RusseU moved their mobile
home.
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Lewis of Clifton
spent a few days at the home ol Mr. ·
and Mrs. Russell Roush while the
Roushes visited Mr. and Mrs. Chester
992-2556
Durst at Niles, Ohio.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Lawson and
570 w. Main
son, C. J. of Letart, W. Va. visited Mr.
Pom
0.
· and Mrs. Charles Lawson and Wilda a
recent Sunday.

Fairview
News Notes

lOSTc IRISH. SEITER. In rile
Solem Cent... oreo. 742· 2146. ·

Help Wanted
NEEDEDc CARRIERS FOR THE
POMEROY AND SYRACUSE
AREAS . CAll m ·2156 BET·
WEEN 9 c00 and 5:00.
SUMMER JOBS available.
Above overage earnings for

SPICIAL

summer work . Be neal. Cor

helpful.

30• · 675 · 6066 .

EquoiEmployment Opportuni·
1)'.

11 PC. SHRIMP.••••• !1
WITH FRIES ••••••••• s144

RN OR LPN. Part lime position
offers opportunity to work In
community heolth agency providing fam ily planning ser·
vices, information and educa·
tion . witl"l emphasis on
preventive ·heahh
care
leachi ng, Tra in ing on the job
is provided , continuing educa·
t ion encouraged, Meigs Co.
resident with flexibility of
available hours is needed. For
more Information call Planned
Parenthood office 992·591:2
weekdays S..~ . An equal opport,.mity .mployer.

ADOLPH'S

DAIRY VAllEY

WANTED: SOMEONE to mow
yard. 992-7696.

PRAYER MEETING
A county·wi~ prayer meeting will
beeld at 2 p.m. Sunday at the Hazel
Community Church with Glen Bissell
as class leader.

YOUR FRIENDLY KROGER STORE

OPEN 24
HOURS ADAY•

MARK McGuire, 15, of Langsville, had to miss Marko's show, but
Marko perfonned for Mark in his room while visiting the hospital. Mark
is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Daltas McGuire of Langsville.
,00« POl fHI11t0Jri
fMIOUOMOUT tMII

non •c.
'ANT A Inc iA'ttNCS
ON lltOGII IUoND

OPoLLv·s POINTERS
.~

-.en

.
2ND
WEEK

Polly Cramer

Ink got on recliner
DEAR POLLY - My little boy Wled
a blue ink pen to write on our green
vinyl rectiner. Could you give me a
Pointer on how to remove this ink? MRS.J.B.
DEAR MRS. J.B. - Washing with
warm water and detergent should
remove washable ink. Ballpoint ink
should he treated immediately with a
cloth dampened in alcohol, followed
by one wrung out of clear water and
then dried with a clean cloth. Never
w.e a·brasives. Another suggestion is
the use of a non.flanunable cleaning
fluid foUowed by a washing with cool
water. -POLLY
DEAR POLLY - When you have
trouble threading a needle spray your
index finger and thumb with hair
spray and then go over the end of the
thread . The thread stiffens .and goes
through the needle easily.- RITA
DEAR POLl,Y -Thank you for using my idea for making bOOkends out
of expired license plates covered with
plastic and backs of construcUon
paper. I am sorry my explanation for
•'allowing for seams'' was not clear
as to the stitching on the plastic cover
being BESIDE the metal plate and
not through it. The sewing machine
foot foUows the edge of the metal
plate but the needle does not touch it.
I used a folded piece of plastic so that
only the sides would have to be stitched but aU four sides may be sewn if

USJID II~OW All JUS I
AHWUAWUS

seam allowance is made when cutting
it out I allow about I&gt; inch and then
trim off more when .the sewing is
done.- FLORENCE
DEAR FLORENCE- Thank you so
much for setting WI straight. - POL-

JOIN THE HUNDREDS OF THRIFTY SHOPPERS
WHO MADI LAST WEIK A RECORD SALES WEEK.

-.m. we..., ott•
~~

Vegetable Oil
...J
··-r&gt;·i&gt;1

4;~

.REDUCED!

MENS
TANK

HALTER
TOPS

TUBE
SOCKS

TOPS

Values to S3.49 . Si zes
an d E x tro
large . Prints or
solids .

S·I)I ·L

Regular '5.99

S·ave

S2.00 .

Perfec t

Quality .
White ,
str i pe fop , fully

$200

6
CLEARANCE PRICED!

Pair

LAWN
CHAIR
plasti c

MENS SHIRTS

.. :

moul ded
arms. Save

$4.52 .

AWay! What
ever i s left in our
stock goes at great
savings .

re duced to1 w0 low sale prices.

Bing
Cherries ............

42 ·tl.

c.

Regular
'1.49

10

For

Kroger 0. 5 %
Gal. $
Lowf at MI"lk " " " " "
KIWGI~ Ht NU

2% LOWFAT Mill( GAL. PAPUOIIPLASnCCTN ••. $1 .75-

TANK TOPS
• SHORT SLEEVE 4• SLEEVELESS

Reg.
'1.59

25 %.:;.•.

11.'~ PROFESSIONAL

PARTS

--

RATTAN

WOMENS SHORTS

PAPER PLATE
HOLDERS

Shorts Shorts
Hurry

4 FOR

79"
,.

InTher're

~r

30~
.
~

as~

AVONOALI MACARONI&amp; •

Cheese Dinner

4

7%·01.$1
Ioiii

PANTS

lr;d~

lb .

:~~

I
I
I
I
I

OFF
RtiUIIr

Pomeroy,O.

WOMENS
TUBE
TOPS

12
OF

t

UMITONI COUPON PE. FAMilY

1I

c....•-r.•r••u._,.• , 1'.1ne

1

·

I

.acT rt ...uc..t Sllfl llKil 111(1

I
I
I
I
I
I

Minute Maid
Orange Juice .

Country Club
Canned Ham .. c'!~
STORE PACKAGED

Country Style .
Sliced Bacon ....

lb.

I
I
I

Grade A
Medium Eggs .... Do•·

I
I
I
I
I
I

2
Country Time

•ROGUGRADE A L.UGI EGGS .... DOZ."'

FROZEN

-

Lemonade. _... ,·~~~~·

5.. 7-lll. AVG .

Family
•ried Chicken

Fresca,·Tab or
Coca Cola

!&amp;·~~~COIN

8$ l!

IU. ,OTATO
SALAD

01 Cotl SlAW I
4DfNtifiiiiOLLI

Pak

Frtsh Glazed Donuts ........ ........ ....

Rl. 33

sl

Ctn.

POINT PLEASANT OR MASON

(IUmtPICAN .. . Y, ·GAl. CTN. $1.11)

\
"

..

'(

89

Baby Swiss c•eese .......... ....... .... ... ... . tb.$2&amp;9
29
Sandwich Spread ...... ..................... ... ..

Natural Flavor
Ice Cream .............. '/,·Gar.

•

10,., 99c

Dell Sliced BoRed Ham .... ... ....... ... .... ... 1~. $3

Vaiues To 1241

,.

.I

FROM THE PRODUCE DEI'T.

Boston Butt
Pork Roast

Auto Parts

Mason. w. va.

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON

FRESH BONE-IN

WOMENS AND MENS

G&amp;J

I

LIIIT I JAIIIITI COII'ON &amp;$7.50 AIOITIOUl I'IICIIAS£
(EitlUOINC THIS IT£11

KROGER

G&amp;J AUTO PARTS
114 W. 2nd St.

I

c

18·01.
Jar

PINT RETURNABLE BOTTLES
SPRtTE . MR . PIBB ,

~S-el~li~n•~F~•~----~-=· ~-"··~P~r~ice=•----~~~~

SUN GLASSES

I
I
I

Wisk
Detergent

REDUCED

Jamaicas

: 0~(.:.

I

Kroger
Peanut Butter

KROGER

WOMENS
SUMMER

Preca

-

I

$

ggc

LARGE
STRAW
SHOPPERS

e SHELLS •

I
I
I
I
I

a.s

Plastic
Ctn .

/77~R.
Avondale Rice

SUMMER
TOPS

soe

I
I
I
I
I

I

AU WOMENS

9 Inch Round or
9~ Inch Diwided

I

:t$ 09,

Full Cut
Round Steak
PLATES

$256

,lb.

Mixed
Fryer Parts ........

eAmmunition
e22 Cal. Rifles
• Few Guns Left

$248

Luck's
Beans

Kroger 2()-oz.
White Bread .,....... ..

HOLLY FARMS . U.S.O.A . INSPECTED

SPORT SOCKS

Priced .

Reutllblt PI ..IH~ F01m
"CHill. FOAM"

I
I
I r-'0:._.
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

22·oz .
ttl .

lODUlll$ .

NORTHWEST

weight .
J acquard
designs .
Full size . Regular
$4.&lt;9.

WOMENS ABSORBAN\..

69'

High quality
Vinyl Top
Wax shines. protects black.
white, and colored vinyl tops.

WIIUtiiVt TNIIt(;Mt TO liMIT QUANfiJIIJ . NONI SOl D

I ...,._""-'-./

I

33%oFF

Regular

Foamy Rally®
Vinyl Top Cleaner
removes road
film, grime
and spots

GIU.. Lif'O LIS &amp; I"OMERO'f STORES

'

I
I
.I

HeaVy

HANDBAGS

~ale

It"

(()PJIIOMT
·1HI II:IOGII CO . lfiMi AHO PltCU
GOOOSUfCJAJ . JIJlfiT~ ~ATUIOAT JU L'f 14. 1179lN

Dove
• "d ............ ....
L1qu1

lh P~IC~

Drastically Reduced!

.

;;;,,~
SUMMER

All Knits and Casual sh l&lt;ls

It""'

I

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BEACH TOWELS

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flld, Ill. . . . . •IOIIC:e vou•
""" ltt tr&gt;e IMI"e b&gt;¥&gt;0 0&lt; I
OOI"'C*. . bt~ 01 tfl'l,lf'd ¥0&lt;.1' putCI\IM P"U

Seedless
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OFTHE u~•~liiN
THOMPSON

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c u shioned .

days .

PEOPLE

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Entire Stoc:k
MENS &amp; BOYS

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Regular '9.59

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• Few 1100's, model 916
eFew 1200's
• Also Miscellaneous

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Remingron 870
Few Mossbergs
Remingfon 700
High &lt;Powered Rifles

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WOMENS

Attendance at the Free Methodist
Church Sunday, June 17, was 106.
Choir members present 12.
Mr. and Mrs . Phill Wise, Beverly,
Mr. and Mrs. Jerome Cook, Pomeroy,
attended services Sunday at the local
church. Mrs. Cecil Harrison Piqua
visited relatives here recently.
'
Mr. and Mrs .. Pearl Gilkey visited
Saturday with Mrs. Della Stahl.
One hundred thirty-eight p'ersons
attended· the Bible School program
Sunday evening at the local church.
Mrs. Edna Schaefer, Mrs. Fern
Dora Story visited recently with Mrs.
Della Stahl.

~

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Polly will send you one of her signed
thank -you newspaper coupon clippers
if she w.es yout favorite Pointer,
Peeve or Problem in her colwnn.
Write POLLY 'S POINTERS in care of
this newspaper.

News Notes

I

nl9..,5unday
~ ,,.,.,. • ·~ed to bt
,.;lily
for Nit on MC"' t(• OQtO Stor• h t ~~PI ••
_ . . , ~ ......... If - 00 l\ll out al .., ~toed
'tOI.I rOYf o:taooc• of • t:~toblt otem ,

llr;f'l of

!..Y

Laurel Cliff

I·

'lzcepr Clo11d S.unlay Mldnlghr

II

'I
i.

�8-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday , July II, 1979

. Nf;EDS GOOD HOME BADLY
This female Beagle-shepherd type, who is about two years old must
be found a good home within the next few days or will become a ''national
statistic" aml join the 13 million yearly who must be put to sleep l,'"rmanently. She i.• a very quiet, gentle lady who is starved for affection.
Each time she is approached she cowers for a minute (obviously been
abused by someone ) and then when you speak to her she comes over and
actually hugs your leg anrllays her head on your knee. She wauld be a
great pet for either o;enior citizen or family with children becalllle she
needs someone who will love her and believe me, you will get a lot of love
in return. If interested, call Marton Crawford at 992-7680. This is a
Hwnane Society animal.

'Something fo_r everyone ' in upcoming shows
Whether your preference in nower
arrangements is for the traditional or
modem design, there will be
something lor everyone in the two
shows to be staged at the Meigs County Fair, Aug. l4-18.
Mrs. Janet Bolin aild Mrs. Suzy
Carpenter are cf&gt;.Chairman of the
shows w.hich are being held by the
Fair Board ln cooperation with the
Meigs County Garden Club Association.
While the Garden Club Association
is active in the flower shows, au
classes of the show are open to all
realdents of Meigs County and to all
members of Meigs County Garden
Clubs, even those who live in an adjoining county. The entry fee required .
is the purchase of a membership
ticket.
The first show will be staged on
Wednesday, Aug. 15 while the second

show will be held on Aug. 17. Both
shows will include classes for artistic
arrangements, both adult and junipr
entries, horticulture specimens, and
educational exhibits.
In each class blue, red and white
ribbons will be awarded as well as
premiums, $1.25 for blue, $1 for red,
and 75 cents lor red. Also at each
show, a best of show and a reserve
best of show in artistic arrangements
will be selected by the judge, along
with a horticulture sweepstakes
award and a junior gardener award to
be presented on the basis of points for
ribbons .
The theme of the two shows is "Put
a Little Color in Your Life." The emphasis of the first show is "Color in
Literature" and the classes are :

9-The Daily Sentinel, Mi!fdleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, July 11,1979

"Roses are Red and .. .. '\ an ar- theme of the aecond show and the
rangement including roses.
classes are •
.
"Golden Wedding", a mass destgn.
"Black Beauty", suggestive of a
" Orange Blossoms"' in the
horse show.
"Silverbeils and CocklesheD.s", Japanese maMer.
"How Now Brown Cow", including
depleting the sea.
,
.
"The House of Green Gables", a weathered wood.
"Black Tie and·Tails", modem wtth
'construction, painted material perpainted materials pennitted.
.
mitted.
1
" Red as A Beet", includiny
''Snow
White '',
white
predominating.
·
vegetables ando()r fruit. " .
·
'"Uly White", in the verticle man"'Beside Green Pastures", suitable
for church.
ner.
il
'th
"In a Purple Haze", stab e WI
"Baa Baa Black Sheep", modern
painted material pennitted.
stressing texture . .
"Green as Grass " , exhibition table
"LitUe Red Riding Hood ", exhibitpicture.
lion table picture.
"Tickles Pink" (junior class), ar''Somewhere Over the Rainbow ''
rangement including weathered
(junior class), a favorite design.
A "Pot-Pourri of Color" is the wood.

Past matrons, ·patrons honored at
Thursday meeting of Eastern Star

Church
"'
member U'Yrhhe/d
Marth.a Bible Class hears letter ·in labor case

PasC matrons and past patrons matron; Bill King, associate patron ; held on July 15 at 2 p.m. at the Forest
were honored at the Thursday night Marie Hawkins, associate con- Acres Park, Shelter HoWle I.
meeting of Evangeline Chapter 172, ductress ; and Euvetta Bechtle, MarAt another recent meetmg of the
Order of the Eastern Star, held at the tha .
chapter, 60-year members were
Middleport Masonic Temple.
Presented were Pete Quick, past honored. Mrs. Grace French, Mrs.
In the honored group were Mrs. grand patron of Oklahoma, who serv- Evelyn Lewis, and Mrs. Helen
Evelyn Lewis, Mrs. Virginia ed as chairman of the ritual comrrut- Reynolds were each presented a
Buchanan, Mrs. Jenevee Chesher, tee for general grand chapter under yellow rose . Another 60Mrs. Beulsh
A letter from the Mountain Mission typewriter recently purchased.
was
not
School at Grundy, Va. thanking the
The U. S..Supreme Court has upheld Mrs.KathrynKnight,Mrs.Katherine Mrs. MargueMte Kennercale . Also Hayes,
Mrs. Bessie King had the opening
Mitchell,
Mrs.
Grace
Pratt,
Mrs.
presented
was
Arlana
Quick,
past
present
for
the
meeting:
.
.
right
of
a
Seventh-day
Adventist
the
Martha Bible Class for donation was prayer. Members were reminded of a
During the recogrution, special
read at a meeting of the class at the howling and pizza party which the who refused to join or support a union Euvetta Bechtel Mrs. Bessie King, deputy grand matron In Oklahoma,
Mrs. Mary In Wilcox, Mrs. Ann and past grand representative of Ohio honor was given to Mrs. French by
Bradbury Church of Christ recently.
class sponsored for the youth. Mrs. becalllle of his faith, says Albert Dit- Thomas Mrs. Naomi King, Mrs. in Oklahoma.
Mrs. Etta Mae Norton m her presenThe Sunday school picnic was an- Maryln Wilcox had devotions and also tes, pastor of the Pomeroy SeventhMarle
Hawkins,
Paul
DarneD,
Bob
Mrs.
Kathryn
MitcheU
was
suntation
on the chapter history. She
nounced for July 29 at the Ohio Valley served refreshments. The closing day Adventist Church.
King
and
Bill
King.
shine
page
lor
the
evening.
Comnoted
that
Mrs. French was inltiated
The case-involved David Anderson
Christian assembly camp grounds. It prayer was by Bill King. Others attenMrs.
Ann
Thomas,
worthy
matron,
munications
included
a
post
card
on
Oct.
4,
1918,
served m the station of
was noted that a donation was made ding were Mrs. Ruth Barnhart, Mrs. of San Diego, California, an employee
and
Paul
Darnell
worthy
patron,
from
Beatrice
and
Robert
Kuhn,
Ruth,
as
associate
conductress, conto the new mimeograph and Elsie Barnhart, and Mrs. Noami of General Dynamics Corp. there. He
presided
at
the
meeting.
Pro
tern
ofassociate
matron
and
patron,
who
are
ductress,
and
worthy
matron.m 1928,
refused
to
join
the
local
of
the
InKing.
Naomi
King,
associate
vacationing
in
England.
A
thank
you
and
deputy
grand
matron
m 1925.
ficers
were
·;·;&lt;&lt;·"· ·::::.::: :_:: :.:::-:-:::;::: :.:-:-:;:·:::·: :-:;:::&lt;·:-:·:·:·:.:.:.:.;.:-;.;.
ternational Association of Machinists
note
was
read
from
Mrs.
Hawkins
During
the
school
of
UlStnlction
that
and Aerospace Workers, AFIA:IO.
Today in Hi~tory
along
with
an
invitation
to
Roberta
year,
Mrs
.
French
pro-temed
as
'!'orAnderson was offered an alterWEEKEND HERE
By The Associated Press
Circle meeting to be held on Aug. 16 at thy grand matron. Mrs. French spoke
native
by the union • a payroll deducToday is Wednesday, July II, the Amesville.
Mrs. Doris Hotelling and Mrs. Bon·
in appreciation. Paul Darnell , worthy
tion equivalent to dues as either a fee
nie Tyson and children, Matt, Edie for services or a contribution to 192nd day of 1979. There are 173 days
Reporting for the ways and means patron, also gave words_ of conleft in the year.
•••
•;: and Mark, and Misty, David, Tammie
committee, Mrs. Mitchell noted that gratulati ons to the SIXty-year
charity. fie declined this plan, but of.
Today's highlight in history •
John Austin has returned to Rlch- and Jay Hotelling, all of the Findlay fered to contribute the sum at Issue
. Stanley orders to be delivered on July members. ·
.
.
On this date in 1955, the new U.S. Air 12 should be paid to Bessie King. Mrs.
kh
area and Debbie McLaughlin, Rllt·
Sunshine
page
was
VIrginia
mond, Va. after spending a wee ere man: spent the weekend here with directly to a charity.
Force Academy was dedicated at Bechtie noted that Mrs. Hawkins had Buchanan . Mrs. Mitchell reported on
with Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Kelton, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth McLaughlin.
The Adventist was fired by General Lowry Air Base iH Colorado.
assisting them in preparation for
~'"'~ Dynamics in compliance with a
been remembered and that sympathy serving the alumni banquet, bowling
On this date':
their move to Virginia in early
Mr. and Mrs. Duane McLau,..;.;.. uniono!!ecurlty clalllle. He sued in U.
cards had been sent to Mrs. Audrey league and chamber of commerce
In 1767, the sixth American Davenport and Mrs. Mildred Ziegler. di110ers. The fathero!!on banquet far
August. Mary Austin who came with and son, Jason, Idaho Fall.s, Idaho, s. District Court and lost, but in Seppresident,
John Quincy Adams, was Mrs. Chesher noted that he husband, the five Masonic bodies in the county
her father remained here with her have arrived for a month's visit with tember, 1978, the .Ninth U. S. Circuit
horn in Braintree , Mass.
their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Harry, is improving at Pinecrest Nur- on Aug . 17 was annoWiced. A rwngrandparents.
d Mr
d Mrs Fred Court of Appeals reversed the
In 1804, American statesman
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Hanuner, Col- McLaughlin an
. an
.
mage sale was set for Sept. 7and 8.
decision in favor of Anderson, citing a Alexander flamilton was mortally sing Horne.
umbus were weekend visitors of Mr. Williamson. Also here for a visit is provision of the Civil Rights Acts of
A history on the chapter for the
Mrs . Bechtle reported that cards
wounded by Vice President Aaron month of July was given by Mrs. had been sent to Harry Cheshire and
and ~s. Bob Hoeflich and Jayne.
Kevin McLaughlin, stationed with the 1964.
Burr in a pistol duel at Weehawken, Bessie King. The annual Mason· Unda Cramer, get-well, and the Roy
Mrs. Jo Ann Foster of Livonia, U. S. Marines at Camp LeJeune, N.
The June Supreme Court ruling N.J .
Mich. spent last week here with her C.
Eastern Star family picnic will be Kesterson family, sympathy.
upheld Anderson's victory in the ApIn 1814, a British fleet captured the
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Webb,
peals court, Dittes says. "We beUeve town of Eastport, Maine.
and Mrs. Marla Foster.
all Americans deserve the right to
MEETING NOTED
In 1944 , President Franklin
The Athens, Hocking, Vin_
ton Coun- choose whether they will join labor Roosevelt announced that he was
ties Youth Service CoQrdinaUng unions," he states. "The high court ava ilable for an unpecedented fourth
Council will hold its regular monthly has taken the same view."
term.
FHA TO MEET
meeting on Tuesday, July 24, at 7 p.m.
In 1952, the Republican National
Eastern FHA will meet Monday, at the Southeas~m Ohio Regional
Convention in Chicago norr.inated
July 16, at the high school from 7 to 9 Council on AlcohoUsm Office on Dairy
Gen. Dwi ght Eisenhower for
p.m.
Lane, Athens .
president.
In 1960, Premier Moise Tshombe of
.. WEDNESDAY
the Congo's Katanga Province
· SOUTHERN LOCAL School Board declared
the
pro vince's
Wednesday 7•30 p.m.
independence.
Prices Effective Thru Sat., July 14
MIDDLEPORT AMATEUR
Ten years ago • A federal appeals
12 oz. Eckrich
GARDENERS,.6•30 p.m. picnic at the cou rt in Boston reversed the
home of Mrs. Ferman Moore, Lincoln con vic tions of pediatrici an Dr.
Hill, for members and their families . Benjamin Spack and three others
Those attending are to take a covered found guilty in 1968 of conspiring to
BY LAMAR C. MILLER, D. 0.
QUESTION • When l was a kid, my dish.
Homemade
counsel evasion of the military draft .
CHnlcal A88oclate Professor
mother used to get 5 percent sugar of .. THURSDAY
Five yea rs ago • The United States
of Family Medicine
lead from the drug store. It seemed to
MEIGS HUMANE SOCIETY
announced
it was ready to accept a ,Oblo University CoUege
dryuptherash.Caniusethis?
Thursday 7•30 p.m. at Thrift Shop,
200-mile
economic
zone for coastal.
of Osteopathic Medicine
ANSWER • The last tjme I ordered Middleport.
'
Frenlh City
·areas
as
wen
as
a
12-mile
territorial
THE TREATMENT OF
sugar of lead,(lead acetate) it was not
SYRACUSE VILLAGE COUNCIL
limit as part of an international lawPOISON IVY
'available at my local pharmacy. Thursday 7•30 p.m.s
of-the-sea package.
·QUESTION • There really are a lot Other topicals which have a similar
REVIVAL Rutland Freewill Baptist
One year ago • At least 180 people
of preparations available in drug effect such as 10 percent tannic acid Chuch beginning Thursday through
were
killed in Spain when a truck
stores for poison ivy. Which are the have been used. A drying action can 14th. Rev . Paul Taylor speaker.
carrying
industrial gas ~xp loded and
best to use?
be obtained by opening the blisters Special singing. Public invited .
12 oz. Kraft
113 Count
set
a
fire
at a campsite on the
ANSWER : First of aU, there .are no with a sterile needle or kn!fe and ROCK SPRINGS GRANGE, 8 p.m.
Sliced Individuals
Mediteranean
coast.
external (topical) preparations which swabbing the open areas With this Thursday at the hall.
Today's birthdays • Actor Yul
will actually decrease the length of solution. However, one needs to be
FRIDAY
time the rash lasts. All the oinbnents, careful doing this on the face or on MARY SHRINE, White Shrine of Brynner is 59. Opera tenor Nicolai
Pkg .
Gedda is 54.- Sin ger Hermann Prey is
pr.Scription or over the counter, are sensitive skin, for obvious reasol13 .
Jerusalem, 8 p.m. Friday at the so.
1 7/ 8Average
1
lb.
Teen
Queen
lor the purpose of either relieving the
QUESTION: Can a person get shots Pomeroy Masonic T~ple, Members
Thought
for
today
•
Life
is
made
up
Quarters
itching and discomfort, or to control to be desensitized to poison ivy, just totskesandwichesorasalad.
of marble and mud - Nathaniel
any secondary complications. Any as you can to hay fever or other
SUNDAY
Hawthorne, American writer, 1804bland solution which will soothe the it- seasonal allergies?
~~~ ~-~~.
MASONIC-EASTERN STAR pic- 1864
ch is probably suitable. Either, sim- . ANSWER : Unfortunately, desen- nic, Sunday, 2 p.m. at the Forest
ple bicarbonate of soda or epaom salt sitiZ8tlon has never been a very suc· Acres Park, Shelter HoWle 1.
(magnesium sulfate) can be Ulled for cessful way to deal ~th the problem,
MONDAY
Authorized CATALOG
this plll'pOSe. Likewise, com starch or although a product IS~ the market
MEIGS BAND B()OSTERS, 7•30
SALES MERCHANT
oabneal baths are an excellent way to for this Ptuy?Se_. The In)ecti~ns which p.m. Monday at the school in the band
•.
relieve the itchy poison ivy rash. Y?ur P.hysiclan . can administer are room. Plans will be made for the
These common substances are, of gtven m a senes of four shots at booth at the Meigs County Fair.
21 oz. Thank You
course, very safe to use. •
weekly mtervals. The protection of·
Phone ??l ·l178
Preparations available over the lered is oniy short, lasting for one EASTERN FHA Monday at high
234 E. Main St.
counter in pharmacies are also safe if season at most . The degree of ef· . school7to9p.m.
Pomeroy, o.
not abused, but are not 100 percent fectiveness is probably a reasonable
TU~DAY
OWNED
AND
OPERATED BY
10 oz.
without side effects. Topical an- expectation. Tablets, I believe, are AREA Volunteer Fire . and
Jack &amp; Judy Williams
tihistamines as well as topical also available without prescription in Emergency AsSn. will meet at 7•30
Open : Mon. thru Wed. 9-S,
Thur. 9-12. Fri . 9-5, Sat. 9·2
anesthetics such as benzocaine have the phannacies, but I'm not certain p.m. at the Pomeroy fire station.
Satisfaction Guaranteed
the potential of sensitizing, the user how effective they are or even if they·
or Your Money Back
0.23 Regular
and cane·themselves produce skin are widely available.
My suggestion would be for highly
rashes. Even calamine lotion has
created a few problems when it is sensitized individuals to receive the
used too extensively or too often. Zir- shots. For most people, however, this \
conium dioxide, a favorite . topical, is not necessary. Incidentally, only \
can cause small lumps to appear on one company now produces and it is
the skin (granulomas) which can be difficult to find .
disfiguring.
&amp;5 ,,,,, ¥

a

•..•

.Mrs. fames Titus hosts
Rutland Garden Club
Two films, "How to Plant a ·ftGee
Bush" and "Cut Flowers to Last
Longer" were shown by Mrs. Ralph
Turner, pre$dent, at the recent
meeting of the Rutland Garden Club
held at the bomeofMrs. James Titus.
Mrs. Turner acquired the films
through the Ohio Cooperative Ser·
vices from the Pomeroy PubUc
Library. In her commentary .on the
fUm, Mrs. Turner noted that there is
no magic to making an arrangement
fl roses last a week,- carnations two
weeks, and chrysanthemums looger.
It is the knowledge and Ulle ol simple
steps and tools for preparation and
treatment instead of magic.
Miss Ruby Diehl displayed an arrangement of roses fulfilling the
theme, "A Rose-the Miracle of
Perfection."
·
For devotions Mrs. Titus read
Psalm 101 exemplifying David's
godliness and mercifulness. During
the business meeting It was noted that
Mrs. Vemoo Weber, Mrs. James
Nicholson, and Mrs. Russell Little
have been weeding the park planters ·
in Rutland.
Members having made arrangements for various meeting
places were Mrs. Roy Snowden, Mri.
Nicholson, Miss Diehl, Mrs. VIrgil
Atkins, and Mrs. Turner. Taking a
, tour of Adena Memorial on June TT
were Miss Diehl, Mrs. Nicholson, and

.,._
•·. Personal Notes • •

r---

Social Calendar

Phone 742-2100

Health Review

REG. PAK WIENERS. ••••••• ~.k-~. S1J9

HAM SALAD ...................~~~. s1.19

BOILED HAMS •• ., . ..........:~~- s1.19

SWISS CHEESE ... sl.39 CALIFORNIA
ORANGES ....... .' .. 6;7f1
FRESH
MARGARINE....... 2/95' PEACHES .... ...

!Sears I

Sgt

CARIBOU CATFISH .•••••••••• ~.B :s1.79

CHERRY PIE FILLING ........... s1.39
INSTANT NESCAFE COFFEE~~~.s4.39

FASHION
MATE

4" SEWER
DRAIN PIPE
10 FT. SECTIONS
1500 POUND
CRUSH STRENGTH

$365

PICKENS HARDWARE
MASON, W. VA.

..
:t , .·.

~ '"' .

\l.'~.
!

I." "-"

MODEL 247

~ y~ '8995

.."

·- -

.J

t

•.

MORTON TABLE SALT. •••••••••. 2/49e
26 oz. Armour Beef

SLOPPY JOE ••••••••••••••••••••::~ •. 97e
27 oz. Del Monte

SPINACH .•••••••.••••••••••••••••••••. 59

4

A full30 year warranty .

We Service All Machines
Sharpen Scissors

. FABRIC SHOP

Pomeroy, 0.

LOSI' DOG - Aay- bavillc - •
lbla poodle II asked to CODIIIct Sbarl
Colmer at ttW%55. 'l1lo male doc
wu lui -a Ill tile aru ol lbe
Pomeroy Elemeatary Sc:bool. He u"""" !lillie aame of " Pepe" lAd Ia a
loved family pet.

Emma Smith
Circle meets
The Emma Smith Circle of the
Reorganlz.ed Church ri Jesus Christ
of Latter Day Saints met recently at

the Racine-Portland Road church.
Attending the meeting were Pearl
and Eulil Proffitt, Dah and Beulah
Roush, Golda Gillilan, and Goldie
Clendenin. Mis81ng from the class
meeting were several members including Lucy Taylor, teacher. Golda
Gillilan · conducted a dll!CUS!lion
following material from Lucille
OUver 's hook, "Celebrate Your Existence" with a song and prayer. Mrs.
Roush gave the secretary's report.
Hostesses were Mrs. Dah Roush and
Mrs . Clendenin who served
refreshments during a concluding
social hour.
It was noted that Bible school will
begin Monday. Mrs. Phyllis Stobart
and others are preparing for the
school which will meet from 9 to II
a.m.
ATI'ENDANCE NOTED
St. Paul's United Methodist Church

Sunday School had an attendance of
52 with 65 for the worship service last
Sunday. The Rev. Richard Thomas
gave scripture from John 4 and the
morning message topic was "[
BeUeve"using scripture from Peter.
The church softbilll league i.s
holding games on Sunday afternoons
at fields designated by the Meigs
County Ministerial Association.
These are Chester, Minersville,
Racine, and Middleport, 2 p.m.

VBS SCHEDULED
Vacatioo Blblelchool will be held at
the lleorgan1zed Church of Jesus
Ouist oll.atter Day Saints, PortlandRacine Branch, beginning Monday
and continuing through July :.l.
Ctasoes will be held from t to II a.m.
and the special guest each day will be
"Fluffy" the puppet. Theme ot •the
school will be "I'm His, He's Mine"
and children of all denominations are
Rlcome to attend. -

MUSICAL PROGRAM
TO BE PERFORMED
The Duncan Family Singers will
present a program of music at the
Middleport Fl.nlt Baptist Church at 7
p.m. on Sunday, July 22 . The family
comes here from Tampa, Fla.
Refreshments will be served follow·
ing the service.

SACRAMENTO

NESTEA

·COLD POWER

TOMATO
JUICE

ICED
TEA

SOAP
POWDER

46 OZ. CAN

3 OZ. JAR

59~

•1••

Racine

Social Events
Miss Patty Shain of Antiqmty was a
dinner guest Thur&lt;jsay evening of Mr.
and Mrs. Roy Ritne.
Mr. and Mrs. Edison Brace visited
Myron l.eadman at Winfield, W. Va.
Mrs . Albert Hill spent a recent
weekend with Mr. and Mrs. WAid
Foster, Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Billy Hill entertained
at their home Mother's Day. Their
guests were Mr . and Mrs. Albert Hill ,
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Badley, Mr. a~d
Mrs.
Jeff HUI, Mr. and Mrs. Bill H1U,
1
Jr., Tim Hill and Jenny Badgley.

ON DEAN'S LIST
Beverly Wilcox, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Raymond Wilcox, made the
dean's list for the spring semester at
Marshall University. A music major,
she will be a junior ln the fall. Mrs.
WUco• and son, Brian, were in Huntington to visit Beverly over the
weekend.

Tf~~r~~J;l
SEE

1WO'S COMPANY
DRESS SHOP
Pomeroy

Main St.

TENDERLEAF TEA BAGS•••• ~~:. $2.29
MATCHING BAGS

10% Campbell's

TOMATO SOUP•••••••••••••• ~ ••••• 2/49~

MAN'S QUALITY SHOES
),

0.
11

84 OZ. BOX

•219

FROZEN FOOD FEATURES

.
·
2 LB. BAG 2~~~$89~
F
Mister G French r1es •. ~ .........•.......... _
•......•..•
Frostie Acres Orange

69~
JUICe ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •• •
.-

,

J2 OZ. CAN

6FoR$1 00
1-•--·-·····,·-··----------------------------T·----I
.
•
.
d
6 OZ. CANS
Frost1e Acres Lemona e............;. ....................
COUPON

i

RC or DIET RITE
COLA
I

l'c!ros.TL

PAPER
PLATES
100 CT.
PKG.

COUPON

.

CHARMIN
BATHROOM TISSUE

.COUPON

I

I'

1
NU-MAID
I MARGARINE

99~ I ~~ 79~ I ~- 49~

Umit 2 Per Customer "
Expires ·14th
COUPON

Next to Elberfelds In

'

SHOP HERE AND SAVE THE GATEWAY WAY!!

BUCKLEY REUNION
ONJULYZI
Friends and the family fl the late
Charles Wesley Buckley will gather
at the Belleville Loeb and Dam picnic shelter at Reedsville, July 2!1, for
their 43rd annual reunioo. A buket
dinner will be served at 12:30 p.m.
Everyone i.s cordially invited.

100 Count Tender Leaf

I

r

Mr. and Mrs. Michael E. Pooler,
Reedsville, are llllllOWICing the birth
of a son, Michael Edison, Jr., horn on
July 6 at O'Bleness Memorial
H&lt;lllpital, Athens. Mr. and Mrs.
Pooler have two other children, Shel. ly, three,llnd Connie, :.l mootha.
Paternal grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Daniel C. Pooler, Chesterhill; '
and matemal grandparents are Mr.
and_Mrs. Ben Clay , Sr., Amesville.

INSTANT POTATOES •••••••••• 21$1.19

.

12-13-14

SATURDAY

II

16 oz. Idahoan

Features : Zig -Zag stitch, front drop·in bobb in, qui et full rotary
movement, one -way needle Insertion, three need le positions, wide
zig· zap stitch . Zoned press bar control. snap-on pr essure feet arm .

115 W. '"~ .:. ve.

KOOL-AID .••••••••••••••••••••••••• 6/69e

The president announced that the
conventioo of the OAGC will be held
at the the University of Akrtln, Aug.
7-f, She also noted that Mrs. Charles
Lew18, a member of the club, Is chair·
man ol the Christmas flower show to
be held Dec. .I and 2 at the Pomeroy .
Elementary School. Theme will be
"I'm Dreaming of a White
Chri!tJnas.
It was noted that information had
been received by the club advising
that the Regional Executive Board
had voted to haVJ! .counties host the
regional meetlngii in alphabetical
order. The fall 1979 meeting will be
held Oct. Tl in Washington County,
while Meigs County will host the fall,
1981 meeting.
Mrs. Virgil Atkin.s, program chairman, read an article entitled "A Year
Around Garden." Mrs. Albert
Woodard gave notes on an article
fron Flower and Garden on "Lady
Bug Mercenaries." The matertal
presented a glimpse into the private
war~ ladybugs vs. aphids. Ladybugs
are considered the most popular bug '
in the Wlll'ld.
The 13 members present answered ·
roll call by naming a pest that infesla
gardel13. The annual picnic will be
held on July 30 at 6 p.m .. at Forest .
Acres Park. Mrs. Virgil Atkins was
co-OOstesa.

JULY

Announce birth

p0meroy

RUTLAND
DEPARTMENT
STORE

Mrs.Turner.

THURSDAY
FRIDAY

79~
14th

I

1

I
I
I
I
I.

I

2Ex:~pires:~J~~u~~~1~!4t!~h·--·-··-;l~---·--~~~·~~1~4t~h,.
·coUPON

COUPON

NU SOFT

HEINZ

FABRIC
SOFTENER
NO. 205
33

oz. BTL

.

I Expires July 14th

79~

-·--·I

DILL PICKLES
NO.

155

32 OZ. BTL

79~

Expires July 14th

�10..!.11\e Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, July 11, 1979
'ilfl~Nl

Your Best Buys Are Found in the Sentinel Classifieds
WANT AD
CHARGES
15 W ord~ or Und~r
Cash
Ctul.rge
I day
1.00
1.25
2days
1.$0
1.90
3days
UJO
2.25
6days

3.00

3.7$

GU N SHOOT , EVERY FRIDAY
7:3() PM RACINE GUN CLU§.
FACTORY CHOKE GUNS ONLy .
MEIGS CO. fish and Game
club r egular meeting. Shade
Vol ley Club House, Fri. , 13th.

68'

f'..&lt;u:h word over lhe minimum
15 words is ~ rents per word per

dRy . ~ds runnin~ other lhBn conSt'CUllve tiHy.o; WI IIIli' chll~ed at
t he 1 day rate .

. In memor}'. Card o( Tlvl nks
~ nd Ob!tuary : 6 t't!nts per word,
$3.00 mtnimum. Cash in adHlnC't' .

Home sales and Vard
sa les are .accepted only with
M o ~i l e

co11.sh with nrdt'r.

~ ~ nt

•

Notices

charge

for ads ca rrying Box: Number In
Care ol The Sentinel.
The Publisher rese ~es lhe
right to edi t or reject any ads
deemed o bj ec.t iono~~L Thl'
Publisher will not be responsible

for more than otle incorrect insertion.
Phom• !J!n-2156

NOTICE
WANT-AD
IA.DVERTISING
DEADLINES

Yard Sale
VARD SALE ot James Swain' s
on CR 28 above Eastern High
School . July 13 and 14 from 9
to ? E\lerything imaginable.
VAR:D SALE . Thurs. and Fri.
June 12 and 13. lots at nice
clothing, lamps , Fisher Price
toys and other Items. At Don
Hanning' s, Bradbury Rd. Rain
cancels .
YARD SALE . Thurs ., Fri. and
next to church in Bradbury.
Ra in cancels.

Robert Hawks ,
Grove. 8-6.

Hemlock

Pets for Sale

OLD FURNITURE. ice boxes,
bran beds, iron beds, desks,
etc .. complete households .
Write M.D. Miller. Rt. 4.
Pom&amp;roy or c'o ll 992-7760.
WANT TO buy : old •s and 78
phonograph records . Call
992-6370 or Contact Morfin
Furniture .

HOOF HOLLOW, English and
Western . · SaddleS
and
harness. Horses ond ponies .
Ruth Reeves . 6U-698-3290.
Barding &amp; Riding lessons end
Horse Core products.
RISING STAR Kennel. Boarding. Call367-0292 .
AKC REG. Doberman Plnst:her
pups lor sole. Excellent
bloodlines . Hoytt and
Camelot. show quality. Work·
ed, hod shofS . 1-304-675- 1863 .

Wlr&lt;DSHIELD FOR 1967 GMC
p ic kup truck .
61... -667-3742.

Eve i ngs

Thursday, July 12

ASTRO·GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

S5•oo. H2-26'12.
12 x 65 SCHULTZ . 3 bedroom
Jl/1 both, ,.xiO tip-out, cnetroi
o'c.. with washer and dryer.
Wi ll sell with or wi thout lot'
Col 1992-7,.91 after 5:30pm.

Services Offered

HANDYMAN . WORK mowing
lawns, painting houses, roofs
and building sidewalks, etc.
PIANO TUNING for home and
school. lone Daniels. Also
repairs. 14 years experience.
992-2581 or 992-2082 •.

ming now. 614 -367-05.50.

Auto Sales
1974 VEGA HATCHBACK , coil
303-675·1501 or 305-675·2•88
or~- 675-1553 .
·
1978' FORD f -250. 4x4, new
tires, A .C., tool box, cob

Bghts . 245·5017 .
1973 VW BEETLE . 9•9·2490.
1975 CHBV. MONZA, P.B..
P.S., A. C. , low mileage, ex ce llent condit ion. $2250 .
q49-2723 .
lq78 BUICK RIVIERA loaded
with extras. Still under warranty . Call 614 -667-3627 or

992·3886.'
REAL- ESTATE Loons. Purchase
and refinance . ·30 year terms .
VA. No morley down (eligible
veterans) . FHA - As low as 3
per cent down ( non-...eterons).
Ireland Mortgage (o., 77 E.
State, Athens. 614-592-3051 .
TWO STORY 3 bedroom house.
3 lots. Now's your chance if
you need o house. $12,000.
Owner willing to talk .

992-2()62 or "2-2328.
REI'.L. ESTATE ~ 1 acre lot In Riggscrest Monor, between Tuppers Plains and Chester.

Pnono 985·3'129 ond 985-•129 .
· NEW THREE bedroom all elect rio home. Ohio Power, O...er
I
acre . Eat- in kitchen ,
dishwasher .
garbage
disposal. ceramic both or&amp;a .
utility area, 3 colors of
carpetin g, rural water. Near
Langsville . $43 ,000. Coli
74:2-:2819 after 5pm. Raymond
Hatfield.

FOUR BEDROOMS. full bosement on v. acre , utility
bu ilding. Rutland. L.ow thirty's.

FOR

SALE

in

RESTAURANT AND bar. D"l

Good condition . 843 -2542.

Construc:OOn
Extensive Remodeling

27UOMonttomt,:.,.ltd.
Lugs viii•. Olllo

'14· Nf ·4'24S Evei'III'IIJl
2 oWlet E•st ot WltketYIIIe

608 e.
MAIN

$3950. 992·5032 , 992·3373.
1973 BUICK REGAL. 949·223.(

trailer .

pumps

T60x160. Easy terms if

Hotpoint

Air Condnioners
s25 to sso
Discounts
Large Stock
Jack W. Carsey

Mgr .
_ , . Phone99l-2181

Will sell

-

RAYS USED Frunilure. Addison , 367 -0637 . Electr ic
range, $85. Gas range, $65.
Refrigerator. $35 . Chest. $20.
Breakfast set, $35, High choir
$72' Bar stool, $10. Coffe~
tolbe, $10. round dining room
table, $65. Port-o-crib, $25 ,
Bobycorseot, $10 .
1973 CHEVY CAPRI station
wagon . $1000' Also 3 acres of
ground In country'. $5000.

8-43-2061.
1978 19 h . Starcrott 175 h.p.
GiveAway
FOUR PUPPIES. J female , 1
male. Mother is part colli e

985·3559"
TWO MONTHS old loveable
block puppy . Port Labrador,
healthy, has . all shots. Meigs
Humane Soc 1e ry . 992-2639 or

9'12· 25'12·
PUPPY . REAL cute, has all
shots" block cot, female
short -haired . 2 block kittens 1
ye llow. I blue ..1 tig11n and' 1
broad striped t1ger. Con be
seen ot 244 Sy camore St. , Middleport.

Mercury block Max motor.

9'12-5170.
RUTLAND

-POMEROY
lANDMARK

TEN PUPPIES , 4 block, 6 white
with block ma rkings. Will be
Iorge dogs· Ke ith Ridenour.

985·•1 75.
80ROER TERRIER, mole, blond.
Benj i type. Husky, l, 4 mo. old.
Terrier Beagle type , brown
with some blo ck , 4 mo, old.
female . Beagle type, female .
2 o~ J years old. 't' ery gentl e.
Me•gs Co. Humane Society,

992-7680.
TWO BEAGLE puppies, mole. 3
or o4 mo . old. Meigs Humane
Society . 9q2-7680 .'
TH REE PUPS . mother is
chihuahua. father 8enji type.
5 eeks ol d. 985 -388• .

HARDWARE

742-2255 . One 40 gal. M~Fio
auto. gas water heater, glass
lined fuel saving, $120 . Point.
oil bose flat latex 2 gol.
$13.95. Vanity cabinet with
marble top and tou cets w ith
poj&gt;up, $99.95. One double
bowl stainless steel sink with
faucets $69.95. 7 qt. canners
$7 .47 . One 9 qt. conner
$13.73. Jar picker uppers and
fillers .

Headquarters for
Hot point and
.General Electric
Appliances

SALE PRICES

9 .. _ Jack W. Carsey
&amp;I
Mgr.
' - - · Phone 992-2181
HARDWARE

742-2255 . ROofing sale. 90 lb .

roll $1:3 .10. 57 lb. $9.55. 5 gal .
Auctions
BIG AUCTION every Wed .. 7
pm . Hartford Community
Center, Hartford. WV, -i miles
obove
Pomeroy · Ma son
~ridge .

HAR TFORD

COMMUNITY

liberated or plain roofint tor
$8.30. Rooting brushes $1 .25,
250 ft . coil of 4 in. drain tile

$90.

MUST SELL - 197-i Kawasaki
125. Mint conditloo. 2,!XX) mi.

Pnone 992·2722 .

16 Clt. FT . frost free
BUILDING. Truck load of anti·
refrigerator freezer. Avocado
que fu rniture and glassware.
green. $275. 992-7191 after4.
A lso new coffee and end table
sets and lots ol new merchan- LUGGAGE
CARRIER for
di:se . 7:00
. au tomobile, 992-5786.··

lots of
porches,

SE~L ­

ING?- Our listings 1re

depleted

by

demand

4-S· If C

for

CARPET

CLEANING

during

week of July 20th. For Information and to coli for

oppt. , 992-25$3 .

WE HAVE CONV.ENTIONAL FINANC·
lNG FOR MOST OF OUR HOMES FOR
AS LOW AS 5% DOWN.

NEW USTING -

LOTS -

Nice remodeled 2 bedroom home

land . Priced for qu ick sale for $17,500.
FAMILY SIZE &amp; COUNTRY STY~E - Perfect for'
relaxing &amp; enj oy ing quiet country living in this
aluminum sided 4 bedroom, fully carpeted remodel - .
~d hom e. Sto~e heat-a-later firelace In the large liv Ing room . Dishwasher, stove &amp; refrig . stay in the
brick tiled kitchen . Can be purchased w ith trorri 1 to
~ acres . Owner may f inance to qualif ied buyer.
Fl've acres •. house and pond priced S39,000. Im mediate possession.
Rarely find a '
medium priced home in such fine shape. Well done
RARE · MEDIUM - WE~L

DONE! -

insulat ing with gas heating budget of only $27 a mo.
Plenty of wOOd cabinets, carpeted throuhout, 4 BR
. home. Priced to sell at $27,000.

spacious

A SPARKLING GEM -

On a

riiin1 estate,

mE;ttculousfy cared. for - all th e functional reQUJrements for grac ious livi ng , T he 7 room , 2 story
barn red house with white tr i m offers J bedrooms
beautlf~l .living room with real beam eel-ling, with
glass slld10g doors to the back patio overlooking a
panorama of distant hills. The kitch-e n is one of the
most beautiful you will find, inc ludi ng wood
cablne~s, stove, refrig., &amp; dlshw.asher that stay ,
There ts a 2 car attached garage and many more
feat~res . ~riced at $55,000.00 - you must see this
one 1f you l•ke comfortable living .

The oak trim th roughout
the nome Is really
outstanding . Situated on
nice lot on east Main .

Asking only $28,000.00 .
ST. ROUTE 33 - 3
bedroom home with
bath, kitchen, large living room and utility
room , super Investment
for person with Im agination . Call and
make us an offer on this
n ice home . •

. $32,000.00 -

Good 3 bedroom, a ll carpeted home

close to Pom eroy &amp; Middleport . Located on good flf:2
acres Of land .

buill hom e in ·

~ET'S

Tuppers Pial ns. Home
has 3 bedrooms, living
room, dining area,

HAVE AN OFFER - 80 acres of land, lots of

pasture &amp; some farm i ng ground . Lg . barn, house
needs some repair . Mineral rights . 5 min. from
Pomeroy, $36,000.

tJ

ibGPEIHE~.

Now arrange the circled leners to
form the surprise answer. as suggested by the above cartoon .

t]

I

IT'$

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

--Danger of losing control

ASRfi.Hf:Y.A

LI~IJ! WOO
IS

NORTH
7-11
• J
• K 84
• QJ 8 7
+AI0652
EAST
WEST
• 10 9 4 2
•A
.. 6 52
• 10 9 7
t A 95
• 10 6 4 3 2
+ KQJ!I4
• 7
SOUTH
t KQ17153
., AQJ 3

LITTLE ORPH.oUI ANNIE--THE UM·.TOLLY ROGER

tK

Pomeroy

• 3

NO · Ill SAY IT

Vulnerable : North-South
Dealer: East
Wet! North .East South
I+
Dbl.
Pass 2 NT Pass 4•
Pass Pass Pass

Cellulosic

(Wood

MARK MORA
HAIR STYLIST

fiber)

Experience 1ncl ,

Fteturint ;
women ' s

mtn ' s &amp;
styling ,

992-2367

QUALITY
DRAFTING
SERVICES
Civil
Mechanical
Archetectural
Lavouts

SEWING MACHINE Ropolrs ,
tervice, otl maa.es. 9'92· 2284 .

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

The fabrk S~p . Pomeroy ,
Authorized Singer Sol" ortd
Service. We sharpen Sc:i11ors .

pnon•

EXCAVATING ,
doter ,
backhoe ond dltcher. Charles
A. Hatfield. Block Hoe Service,
Autklnd, Ohio. Pone742-2008 .

INSURANCE

n't the4 ever What do
Llll~~aa·nq to talt.e L!OU have

Must have

t.hattape

t.here?

15 IT YOUR.
PARE'IT5? ARE
!HEY OKAY?

YES DEAR """'"',AND
PAW ARE fOINE ~ BUT
BIRDIE f'JAY8 MO&amp;T
OF MY 8TAFF HA8
WALKED OUT ON
WeNDY... REFUSE
TO WORK. FOR
HER I

off?

out of

fallen

case!

BA~ANCE5.

AU. .CARPET

tyst•ms .
Rt . 143.

Pnono 1 (61•) 698·7331 or
' 742-2593.
IN STOCK for immediate
delivery; various sizes of pool
' kits. Do- it· yourself or let us
install for you. 0 . Bumgordrler
Soles, Inc. 992-572• .

WINNIE

NOW ON
SALE

HOWERY AND MARTir&lt; E•·
. cavotlng. septic
dozer, bockhoe.

FROM

WHY IT'S A

CABLEGRAM ... FROM

CBVT'RAL CITY/

S7~. yd .

24 Rolls al Carpet In
Stock &amp; lOO 's at Samples
to Choose From .
BUY NOW &amp; SAVE

NEIGLER CONSTRUCTION far
new houses and repair work .

Call Guy Nolglor, 9•9-25o6 ,
Racine. OH .

Coli 7U-2211
TALK TO
Wendell or HerD Grate
or Gene Smith

ADO ONS ond remodeling,
gutter work , down tpouts ,
some concrete work, walks
and
driveways
(free
estimate). V.C. Young Ill.
Racine, OH . 949-27•8 and

992·7314 .

RUTlAND ·
FURNITURE
7·2·2211

BARNEY

Rutland
THAT SCRAWNY
PLANT AIN'T
GROWIN' WUTH
A HOOT, PAW

SHP AT •••

RUTlAND FURNITURE
WEOFF'E RYOU ...
1, Twa ~vii floors ot all new

fumltur ,

2. Nice elections of usect fur-

niture .
3. A l...ge liUIIdlng full ol
beautiful carpel.

made the spade game .''

by THOMAS JOSEPH

A GOOD SE~ECTION
OF END &amp; RO~~

E-C ElECTRICAl Contractor
serving Ohio Volley region .
Six days o w . .k . 24 hours llr·
vice. Emergency calls. Coli
882-2952 or 882-J.4s.t .

" Too bad you don't play a
little better," replied North ,
"My poodle would have

titUIM~UI

GASOUNEAU.EY

DRIVE &amp; LimE
&amp;
SAVE AlDT

plete Service. Phone 992-2478 .

992-21•3.

Gr.t.e.-L .
7~ "

SAVE ON
· CAIPniNG

PULLINS EXCAVATIN(); . Combeen cancelled? Lost your
operators license? Phone

Pomeray, O.

7·10·1 mo.

'BAAOFOAO. Auction-r, Comphtte Service. Phone 949·2487
or 9•9-2000. lilocine. Ohio.
' Critt Bradford.

profit."

We don't know how well
North's poodle plays bridge,.
but South rea lly should have
made his contract.
He could afford· one over·
ruff. He could not afford two.
By Oswald Jacoby
So at trick three when East
and Alan Sontag
led his queen of clubs, South
should have discarded his
North decided not to con- king of diamonds and the
vert his partner's takeout contract · \!'OUid have been
double into a penalty double unbeatable.
by passing . After all he was I NEWSPAPER E NTERPRISE ASSN . )
vulnerable and East and
(Fora copy ofJACOBY MODWest weren't. Wben play
was over he rather wished ERN, send $1 to : " Win at
he had passed because Sbuth Bridge. " ca re of this newspB·
went down one trick at four per, P.0 . Box 489. Radio City
Station. New York. N. Y. 10019.)
spades.

Call lor appl. or walk ln.
MainS!.

The play "'was short, but
not sweet. Dummy's ace of 1
clubs held the first trick .
East's ace of spades the
second · one . Then East led
his queen of clubs. South
ruffed. West overruffed and
led bac k a diamond . East
had been careful to lead his
queen of clubs (not the king)
and West had properly read
this as a suit-preference signal for the lower suit.
·
Now 'East led another club
and there was no way for
South to keep West from
scoring another trump trick.
" Too bad you didn't pass
one club," ·remarked South.
" We . would have scored a

Opening lead : • 7

perms.

lully lnsurld
F-Est.
Call m -2n2
5-17·1 mo .

AUTOMOBILE

EITHER '"

Introduces-

Therm•llnsulltlon

Save JO (ICt. lo 50 (ICI .
an ltHtlnv cost

OVER 1'3 'ME' RICAN 1

Mlck's
Barber&amp;
Style Center

JIM KEESEE

CLERG Y MALLET

BRIDGE

SmHh Nelson

J&amp;L
Blown Insulation

LIMIT

WedneSday, July 11

1m111tst HNTer C•re .

Ph . n2 ·2174

I XXI I )

hours -"SMALL" TI ME

MOO.S.Inc.

H ·lmo.

I Jumbles: BASIS

HAVE
'IE TRIED

TALKIN'
TO 1T1
MAW?

THAT'S HOGWASH!!
I'LL

JEST RIP

IT

UP

BV TH' ROOTS AN'
FLING IT IN TH'

CAN

THAT1&amp; o./IJST n&lt;E
EXCU8E WE NEED
TO &lt;SETBACK.
HOME ... WH~
Wt/J&amp;toN~l

ACROSS
DOWN
I "GW1W"
I Of NBA
plantation
stature
5 Black
z Yet to be
and blue
3 Pin a medal on
10 Pardon me! t Church
11 Bittersweet
vessel
13 Girl's name
5Fonn
U Proffer
of prayer
15 Man-to-be
Yesterday's Alllwer
6 Papas or
II Sickly
15 Unruly
27 Large wasp
Ryan
looking
19
Chiropodist's
zt
Put away
7Gennan
17 Greek letter
Sijbject
30
Attained
name prefix
18 Characterize 8 With aU
22 Famous
3t Racetrack
ZO Fishy thing
Venetian
character
respect
Zl Trust in
23 Melodious
36 Wire measure
9 Waist22 Robert U Satisfied
37 Giant
watching
Warren
container
1% Cubbyhole %5 Ash-colored
23 Yearned
Z5 Catfish Row
character b-1--l--1Z&amp; Rah-rah it
%7 Healthy
%8 Journey
stop
29 Farewell
words
31 Sioux
32 Exasperate
33 Camper's
item
• 35 Pulpit talk
37 Preslde1ntial
prerogative b~--1-38 With none
missing
39 Aleutian
island
40 Realty sign
41 Binge
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

it:

One letter simply stands for another . In Lhis sample A Is
used for Lhe three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single leLters,
apostrophes, Lhe length and formation of the words are all
hints . Each day the code letters are different
CRYPTOQUOTES

Nice recreation spot, minerals, too. Let's have an

offer. Price'$57,000.

Sells for $95,000.00. Th is

C

rea l

·

WE NEED LIST·INGS.
We have buyers for
large
farms ,
mini
farms, acreathinking of
listing iwth us.
ee when you are Cheryl
Lemlev, Assoc.

~OTS

OF ~OTS - From 1 to 75 acres, bordering
Porreroy.
·
.
JUST LISTED - 14 acres of nice rolling land with a
1'1&gt; story house that sits back off the road surr011nd·
ed with maple trees. ~g . pond stocked with fish.
Nicely Inn,. ted in Morning Star area. Price $33,900.

WANl TO SELL? - GIVE US A CALL

Phone 742-2003

Hilton Wolfe, Assoc.

CAL~

JIMMY OEEM, ASSOCIATE 949-2381
OR NANCY JASPERS, ASSOCIATE
949·2654 or 9•9·2591

Phone 949·2589
GeorgeS . HobSteHer Jr.

Broker- Phone 992-5739

!:'~AWN BY 1HOe.E
WHO WANI iO KS'SP
SODY AND SOUL..

Answer . The kind of croo k who operates in.. the wee

6·U ·2mo.

SHOU~D BE SOLD - 70 acres, house &amp; gOOd barn,
about 1,000 feet of beautiful Ohio Rl~er frontage .

with fire lace, 21J2 baths
and 2 car garage.
Situated on 4 acres.
a

3

1 Acre and up near Pomeroy .

JUST LISTED -

bedrooms, l iving room,
sitting room, dining
room, sun room and full
baement with shower.

home
Is
showplace .

nice,

on blacktop road. Mostly car peted . F .A . nat. gas
furnace . A very attractive small hom e and 1 acre

2 story
home
in
Pomeroy with e)Ccellent
river v lew . This home

OUA~lTY

Real

area, and two bedrooms complete downstairs. the
un1in ished upstairs makes expansion possible.

Priced
at
only
$37,500 .00.
NEW ~I STING - Large

3

-

family room, equipped kitchen, full bath, laundry

Berrington
24 ' )(52 '
mobile home with 10
acres. Home is total
electfic, 3 bedrooms, 2
baths, livi ng room , kit ·
chen and dining srea .
Nice porches and built
on
storage
area .
Located 1112 miles out of
Salem Center . Conve nient location for all the
mines. You must see
this excellent hOme!!

ha s

POSSESSION

$25,900 - Total privacy is t he key here on 2 plus
acres, the living rm . has brick fireplace, step -down

1975

·

992;7089.
nlgkt
'1'12·3525 or 992·5m.

bedroom home, with large living room and family
room , all nicely carpeted, large eat -in kitchen
equipped with dishwasher, disposal. and stove, 2
full baths, 1!2 -basement and garage, nice garden on 1
plus acres of land in Rac ine. Pri ced at $.45,000.

742-2003

Moun 9· 1 M., W., F .
Other limes DY appolnt-

INVESTMENT PROPERTY - 2 unit income plus

IMMEDIATE

PHO~~

PARK FINANCIAL
• SERVICES, INC.

land and lots of. trees, wittl low taxes. not In a
development . We have that house for you, at only
$39,500 on 3, ~ acre with wall t o wall carpe-ting
throughout, l 'h car garage &amp; storage bldg . behind
garage. Close to schools, churches &amp; stores.

space for two more units, each section has own elec .
~et~r ~ hot water, separate entrance and comes
nicely furnished . Let ' s talk about this one.

HOBSTETTER
REALTY

YeSierday·s

Servlc• ~

CAVATING. dozer. leood.r
ond bock hoe : work; dump
trucks and to-boys for hire ,
will haul f ill dirt. top soil.
limestone and grovel. Call lob
or Aov-r Jefter1 , day phone

tS THIS ONE FOR YOU? 3 bedrooms with 50me

Housing
• Head ilart-ars

0

(Answers tomorrow)

From tM }er. .st Trv&lt;ll ...lhttldoler lt•cll•tor

SwHpers, toasters, irons , all
small appliances . lawn moer .
next to State Highway Goroge
on Route 7, 985-3825.

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

want $30,000.
LIST WITH US AND GO
WITH
YOUR
REGULAR ROUTINE
AND ~EAVE THE
SE~~ING TO US. CA~L
992-3325.
.
VlRGI~ &amp;
GORDON,
REA~ TORS,
HE~EN
AND SUE , ASSOCIATE
REA~ TORS .

rJ

Radlat9r·~

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR -

kitchen,

apt. with bath, garage,

... WHAT WASIH

E:¥PERIENCED

FINANCING

6-6·1 mo .

natural gas furnace,
ca rpeting and a 3 room
carport and corner lot
100 'x150' near Rt. 7.

calls .

CALL 992-7544

949-2862-949-2160

houses . ~ET us SE~~
YOURS AT ONCE.
Henry E . Clel1nd Sr.
Henry E . Clel1nd Jr.
99H25999H191 PY2·2561

the bedroom . Asking
$27,500.
NEW USTlNG 3

WHAT D'YA MEAN-WHAT DID r CAL.L.
YA JUST THE N~

KJ

...YA GOT ME.
PAl.!

I'Y SOME . NAt,~~

Call for a FrH Siding
Estimate, 94t-2101 or
949-2160 . Na Sunday

Pomeray, O.

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

storage bldg . Excellent

heavy

«EAL ESTATE

T07 Sycamore cRNrJ

H. L Writesel
Roofing

Older ·home has 3

~lmost

·OlD I CAL L. YM

I SN 'T .. • 1\I'GD

grocery .

$20,000 .00.
THINKING OF

.... _1_

II I

GNATS I WHAT

THAT NAME ...
YA CAI.I.ED ME

N0 11·m-i' 11 FLIES

neighborhood .

beautiful kitchen, den
RUTLAND

and

remod~l1ng ,

In the

I

town .

bedrooms ,

2•7-2063.
9·9·2472.

In

GREG ROUSH
Phone 992-7583
992-2282
7-5-1 MO.

mtll1t.

CALL
992-2772

...

DOUB~E LEVE~ ~OT

FACTORY FORD topper. $400.
Clift ord Hill Produce .

DOG HOUSE , never used. Call

Free Estimate
'

• Alm!&gt;$1 new building
40x60 with lots of fron tage. $55,000.00 (make
offer).

you qualify .

equipped

J&amp;L INSUlATION

$3,000.00.
LOCATED ON STATE
RT . - Now has gas

bedrooms ,
bath
(ceramic tile L modern

Sale

BY

N.G.F .A.

ment. $13,000.00.
ABOUT 'f&gt; ACRE water. power &amp; ga~ .
Ideal for home or

old 2 bedroom home, full
basement, bllth, lot

WOOds. 4 rooms, tub
bath, modern kitchen,
nat. gas furnace, Ohio
Power, cedar lined,
closets, parq')et floor In

S~eclal

AWMINUM
&amp; VINYL SIDING

&amp; bath, porches, base -

3 Yr.

and service. Balers in stock for
Immediate deliverv . Phone

"l•7-2Q63.

4 S lrno.

S2B,500.00.
2 OFAMI~ y UNIT Always rented, 1 has 3
BRs &amp; bath, 1 has 1 BR

$17,000.

2'1, ACRES -

BOAT. 1974 Charger 15 ft .
with 1978 Mercury 80 hp
motor. 1974 Murray tilt trailer.
Cliltord Hill
Pr oduce ,

SUPER
GOOSE
STOCM
TRAILER NOW AVAILABLE .

PnM IO.R OY . 0 .

room ,

fo

IMARDAf
CAPTAIN EASY
OH, OH~ ~OUt.lc;&gt;~ L.lt&lt;E THA1' AM.,E,;.IA
GM I~ .AL.READY TAKI,_,G ~FF~CT ...

Television
Viewing

byHe11ri ArnoldandBobLee

OO-Ifc

New Home

TRAILER SALES
'

Large garden, old 7
room house~ hot &amp; cold
water , drilled well,
barn. 2 car garage on
sma ll stream. Only

VERMEER BALER Sales, parts

Auto &amp; T.ruck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992· 5682

BISSELl
SIDING CO.

TREES · -

EUREKA Upright ' Sweeper,
$20; 4 speed Zenith record
player with speakers , $30;
Harlequin Romance books,
-iOc eo. 256 So. Fourth St .. Mid·
dleport.

Rutland.

CONSTRUCTION

heat . Full basement.
Lots of remodeling .

BARGAIN -

51. Rl. 7
North at Chester, 0 .
Phone 915-4202
6·24·1 mo. pd .

ll• mile off Rt. 1 by-pass
on st . Rt. 124 toward

ocre. 37295 Rt . 124. 992-2581
or 992::2082. Built 1m, many
advantages.

baths. Music room , sew -

-

USED GARDEN
TRACTORS
AND
RIDING MOWERS

~THATSCRAMBLEDWORDGAME

Printanswerhere: (

OH or

stock at cost and all fhc tures reasonable . A
business two can run .
Sll,OOO.OO - 7 rooms,
bath, city water, nat.
gas, front porch, storm
windows at a real buy .

7•2-2877 or 70·2152 .

4-23·1 mo .

TILLIS

Vinyl and Aluminum
Siding

ing

' ~·.~~-~·

Roger Hysell
Garage

ROUSH

Middleport,

MI~~FIELD

I I I

367·0557 ,
THREE BEDROOM houso on 1

116, E. Second Street

OUACHITA BASS BOAT . Coli
992-5298.

592-3051

ond 0-2 license included. 3
acres. and house, Good
business 9pportunit)l. Call

992-3325

992
c:.::..:
·38'1
::..:.:..:
1._ _ _ _ __

IRElAND
MORTGAGE
CO.
11 E . State, Athens

NEW ~ISTlNG - 110
Acres, about 3D tillable,
SO pasture, bal. wooded.
All fenced . Free gas.
Pond . $31,000 .00.
NEW ~I STING- ~Ove ·
ly 4 bedroom home, 2

FRUIT

low as 3%

down (non-veterans)

TWO BEDROOM house, com·
pletely fu rnished, wall to wall
carpet, gas furnace , gOrage,
nicelot.742· 2923.

9'12-S:JOO .

COAL , LIMESTONE, sand,
grovel. calcium ch loride, fer·
tilizer. dog tood, and all types
of salt. Excelsior Soh Works,
Inc., E. Moin St .. Pomeroy.

FHA- AS

·

HOUSE FOR sole neor Meigs
Mines . 742-2228.

tlouae on corner of Fourth and
Hamilton. $7000 . 992-2766.

rL.U&gt;'VF«s

UP TO MOM'S ROOM .

ID,.

~~ ·

Unscramble t!1ese four Jumbtes,
o~e letter to each s.quare, to form
lour ordinary words.
t,j L - - - -

Business Services

Purchase
~·d
Refinance
lO Year Terms
A- No money down
(eligible veterans)

HOUSE FOR sale. 5 rooms and
bath . May be seen at 206 But-

~-:;.~~t~ ~:~~;;•roy,

A NICE IDEA,
~E GIFT ~HOP SEND

"!:!)

DITIO

Real Estate LDans

742.2754 .

992·=

W~AT

J---,----------'---------------------'

LOT FOR sale . Harrisonville.
Water top on lot , driveway tile
in . App. 145ft. frontage . On
hard rood . S1800 . Cofl

MICHAEl SMITH will do mowing or any yord wN"k .

667·3759.

TRANS AM, 1976. 400 engine .

ad wooded area on top of hill .

RIDENOUR GAS Se.-...lce. Dox·
ol L.P. gas. Chester. 985-3307.

For Sale

I

Real Estate for Sale

FOUR BEDROOM house. 2
baths. in letartedfalls. Ohio. .
Partial/~ carpet
on 2 acres
level ground. 247-3663.

DOZER, END Loader and dump
truck. Will do basements~
ponds ,
brush,
timer ,
limestone and gravel. Charles
Butcher . 742-2940.

DOG OBEDIENCE Cla11es for- . C
l90:7cc8::Y.:.AMA
:::.,.:cH
-:-A
-:-cY
::Z:-::
12::5-.-:$600
:-::.

O LD COINS, pocket watches ,.,

cla ss rings , wedd ing bonds .
diamonds . Gold or sliver. Ca ll
J . A . Wamsl ey. 742-2331.

1971 SKYLINE mobile hOme. 12
x 60. Excellent condition. All
appliances . washer, underpinning and deck included.

Call 614·667-3263.

Friday afternoon

9'12·2689.

B'S MOBILE HOME SALES. PT.
PLEASANT, WV. ~ - 675-4•2• .

GARAGE SALE . July 14

VARO SALE. Thurs., Fri ., Sat.,
Julv 12. 13, 14 . 8-4 p.m. 226
Union
Ave .,
Pomeroy .
Lowmower, tools , glauware,
radios , 8-trock . guitar. C.jB. ,
antennas , lots mare.

CHIP WOOO. Poles mo x.
diameter 10" on largest end.
S12 per ton . Bundled slob. $10
per ton. Delivered to Ohio
Pallet Co., R:t . 2, Pomeroy.

Overlooks river . Water, alec·
trlc
available . $7900 .

196.5 GENERAL60Jl12. 2 bedr.
197,0 Sylva, 60x 12, 2 bedr.
1970Costle, 60x12 , 2 bedr.
1974 Madeline. 50x 12, 2 bedr.
1969 Valiant, 12x60, 2 bedr.
1967 Notional, 12x50, 2 bedr.

Free estimates. Call949-2686.

1\lesday

Wanted to Buy

9'12·S858.

YARD SALE. Moln St. , Rutland .
3 family . · Wed. thru Sot.
Clothes, misc. , rugs . 10:00dork .

501 Maple Drive. New Haven
Hts. furniture , clothes , misc .

4P.M .

J V1 acres in Pomeroy . SEclud·

PORCH SALE . 2n Main. Mid- NOW HAULING limestone lri
dleport . Frl till ? 9~;~m •3pm. Middlaport-Poemroy oreo .
· Coli for tree estimate.
Good merchandise.
YARD SALE. Wed., Thurs. , Fri. 361· 7101.
307 Spring Ave. Rain or shine.
PAINTING AND sandblasting.

Mooday
Noon on Saturday

Sunday

Real Estate for Sale

1974 14 x 70 mobile home .
Good cpndit ion . $7800 .

Sof. at lester lothey's !louse

YARD SALE. July 12, 13, 1•.

lhru F'ririBy
4P.M .
the day before publ i~ation

Mobile Homes Sale's

~

.. t

See t~e Grate Family

at

UCTTN

LFHCE

XK

FEG

LUF

UCK
EF
OCYGK
CV
CMM
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OUGGYBPM
LFHCE
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AFLE.
J G -S G Y M N
K X M M K
- Yesterday's Cryptoquote: MOST OF OUI\ REAusTS AND
SOCIOLOGISTSTALKABOUT A POORMAN AS IF HE WERE
AN OCTOPUS OR AN ALLIGATOR. - .GILBERT K .
CHESTERTON
c1 1919 Kino ~ eetures Syndicate, Inc .

WEDNES.D.t,Y, JUl. Y 11,1979
7:30-0olly 3; Malch Game PM 6;
Muppel Show 8; The Judge 10;
That's Hollywood 13 ; Wild
Kingdom 15; Baseball 17)
MacNeii·Lehrer Report 20,33 .
8 : 1»-G~eat American ~augh·Off
3,15; ElghllsEnough6,13i Never
Say Never" 8, 10; Masterpiece
Theatre 20; All Creatures Great
&amp; small 33 .
8:30- Good Times 8,1 0 ; 9 :0oCharlles Angels· 6, 13 ; Movie
" Rendezvous Hotel" 8, 10; Great
Performances 33; Upstairs
· Downstairs 20. ·
9:30-Sword of Justice 3,15; 10:00Vegas 6, 13; Fall of Eagles 17;
News 20.
10:3()-Best ol Groucho 20; T:.Vo
Ronnles 33 .
11 : 0o-News 3,6,8,10,13,15 ; New
Soupy Soles 17; Book Beat 33.
11:3()-Johnny Carson 3, 15; Pollee
Woman 6, 13; ABC News 33;
Movie " A Talent for Loving" 10;
Movie "Tall Man Riding" 17.
11 :45-Swllch 8; 12 : 40-Mannlx
6, 13; 12 :55-Kolak 8.
1:00-TomorrowJ : News15; 1: 2oBoseball 17.
1:50- News 13; 3 :50-News 17;
4:1()-Movle "Blue Steel" 17;
5: 1()-Dragnet 17.
THURSDAY, JU~ Y 17, 1979
5:A()-World at ~arge 17; 5:-15Farm Reporl13; 5:5()-PT~ Club
13: 5:55-Summer Semester 10.
6:00-700 Club 6,8; PTL Club 15;
6: 1()-News 11 : 6: 25-For You .
Black Woman 10.
6:3()-Dragnet 17 ; 6:45-Mornlng
Report 3: 6:5()-GOl)d Morning
West 'VIrginia 13; 6 :55--Chuck
·
While Reports 10; News 13.
7 :00-Today 3,15 : Good Morning
America 6,13: Thursday Morning 8; Schoolles 10: Three
Stooges- ~ IItie R,ascals 17; 7:15A.M. Weather 33.
7: 3()-Famlly Affair 10; Lilies Yoga
&amp; You 33 .
8:00-Capt. Kangaroo 8,10; Lassie
17 : Sesame 51 . 33; 8 :3o-Romper
Room 17.
9:00-Bob Braun 3; Phil Donahue
13,l 5; Big Valley 6; Porky Pig &amp;
Friends 8; Love of Life 10; ~ucy
Show 17 ; Blogrephy 33.
9:3()-Sonford &amp; Son 8; Hogan' s
Heroes 10; Green Acres 17.
10 :00-Card Sharks 3.15: Edge of
. Nlgnt 6; All In The Family 8,10 ;
Doting Game 13: Movie "Co Not
Disturb" 17; Exploring the
Cralfs·: 33.
10:3()-AII Star Secrets 3,15; S20,000
Pyramid 13: Andy Griffith 6 ;
Daniel Foster M.D : 33.
10 :55-CBS News 8: House Call 10;
11 :oo-High
Rollers
3,15 :
Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13 ; Price Is
Right B,lO; Biography 33.
11 : 30-Wheel ol Fortune 3.1S ;
Family Feud 6,13.
12:()()-----NewKenter 3;

News 6, 10;

Password 15; Young &amp; the
Restless 8; Over Easy 33;
Midday Magazine 13.
12:3()-Ryan's Hope 6,13 ; Search lor
Tomorrow 8, 10; Not For Women
Only 15 : Movie "Sergeal)t
Deadhead" 17: M~cNeii - Lehrer
Report 33.
1: 00-DeysofOur ~ l ves3,15; Young
&amp; the Restless 10; News 8; All
My Children 6. 13; Wild Wild
World of Animals 33.
1 :30-As The World Turns 8,10; All
Creatures Great and Small 33.
2:00-Doctors 3, 15; One Life to Live
6, 13; 2: 25-News 17.
2:30-Anolher World 3,T5; Guiding
Llghtl, 10; I Love ~ucy 17; Even
Festival 33.
3:00-General Hospital 6,13; Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 20; Infinity Factory
17.
3: 3o-Mash 8; Joker's Wild 10;
Banana Splits 17; Turnabout 20;
Earlhkeeplng 33 .
4:00-Misler Cartoon 3; Hollywood
Squares 15; Merv Griffin 6
Addams Family 8; SeSIIme St.
20,33 ; Six Million Dollar Man 10;
Mike Douglas 13; Fllntstones 17.
4 : 30-Lone Ranger 3; . Hogan ' s
Heroes 8: Lucy Show 15; Partridge Family 17.
5:00-Bonanza 3: Beverly Hillbillies
B; Mister Rogers' Neighborhood
20,33; Six Million Dollar Man 13;
Brady Bunch 15; Star Trek 17.
5:3()-News 6; Petticoat Junction 8;
Elec. Co . 20: Mary Tyler Moore
10; Odd Couple 15; Doctor Who
33.
6:00-News 3,B,10,13,15; ABC News
6: Family Affair 17: VIlla Alegre
20; Studio See 33.
6:30-NBC News3,15; ABC News 13;
Carol Burnett 6; CBS News B, 10;
Over Easy 20,33; Father Knows
Best 17.
7:00-Cross·Wlls 3; Newlywed
Game 6,13: Merly Robbins
Spolllghl B:
News 10; Love.
American Style 15; Gel Smart
17; Dlck Cavell 20,33.
7:3()-Hollywooci'Squares 3; Bonkers
6; Match Game PM B; $100,000
Name Thai Tune 10; Nashville
On The Road 13; Dolly lS; My
Three Sons 17; MacNeil-Lehrer
Report 20,33 .
8:00-Prolect U.F .O: 3,15; Mork &amp;
Mlndy 6,13: Carnival of the
Animals 8, 10; Nova 20,33; Movie
"Donovan's Reef" 11.
8 :30-Angle 6,13; Dr. Seuss 8,10.
9:1l0-Qulncy 3,15; Barney Miller
6,13; Hawaii Flve-0 8.10; Great·
Performances 33; 5poleto '79 20.
10:00-Davld Cassidy 3, 15; 20-20
6,13; Barnaby Jones 8,10; News
20.
.
10:3()-News 20; 10:30-&lt;lnedln Lint
17; Hocking Valley Bluegrass 20.•
11 :0()-News 3,6,8. 10, 13, 15; Dick
Cavett '20: Book Beat 33 .
11 :30-Johnny Carson 3,15; Starsky
&amp; Hutch 6, 13; Pan American
Games 8; ABC News 33; Movie
"The Vatican Affair" 101 Movie
"Darby's Rangers" 17.
11:4~ash 8: 12:20-McCioud a: ·
12:4()-Mannlx 6,13.
1:00-Tomorrow 3; News 15; 1:._
Movie "The Man Behind the
Gun" 17.
1:5()-News 13; 3:25-News 17:
3:45-Movle "Charlie Chan In
Lon~n" 17; 5:15-br~gnet 17 .

if.
I

�'
12- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, July 11, [!179
;.:-: - :-:-::::::~;:;.;:;.;:;:;::::.: · :·:·&gt;:·:· :·:-:-:-;.:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-: -:- :-:-:-:-: -: -:-: -:;;.;-::;.;-:-: -: ·:·:-:- ;. :-:::-: - :-:-:-:-:-:-:· :·:':·:-:-:-:=:-:-:·:':·:-:-~-:-:-:-:-:-:·:·:·:·:::··

~

::1

1:

·~

Two states to go
on. gas strike

\·
!!!

.

By BOB DVORCHAK
Associated Press Writer
Some independent Pennsylvan ia
and Delaware gasoline dealers say
they ;re shutting down their pumps
Thursday to protest federal fuel
allocation and pricing policies, but
deall}rsin other·states say a shutdown
is premature.
The Pennsylvania -Delaware
Service Station Dealers Association
....Y!l!ell Tuesday to strike indefinitely
and spokesmen predicted 60 to 80
percent of Pennsylvania's 8,100 las
stations would close.
"Our main objective, and I'm going
to be quite blunt about it, is to make
the public angry ," said Tom
Anderson , executive director .
Meanwhile, · major oil company
officials said between one-\hird and
me-half of the stations may close,
said Robert Shinn, executive director
of the Governor's Energy Council.
The dealer's group represents 3,7:&gt;6
sU!tions, or about 30 percent, of the
13,000 gas stations in the two states.
However, members of the Keystone
Service Station Dealers Association in
northeastern portions of the state
voted unanimously Tuesday night not
to join the shutdown.
"Local r~idents have been hurt
enough by the oil companies and their

Dunmore, president of the Keystone
association with 200 member dealers
in 17 counties.
The New Jersey Gasoline Retailers
Association is announcing today
whether it will urge a shutdown.
I-ndependents service station
operators ·claim the present federal
allocation system favors stations
owned by big oil companies and they
want it changed. They are also
pressing for permission to rai~ their
profits to keep up with inflaton.
The Permsylvanian and Delaware
dealers voted to strike despite a plea
by Gene Eidenberg, chief of staff to
White Hou~ special assistant Jack
Watson, that they hold off four or five
days. On June 27, Watson persuaded
independents to stay open while a new
allocation formula was stadied.
"You gave us absolutely nothing.
Our backs are against the wall. The
dealers can'tput up with it anymore,"
association president Rudy Molnar,
oold Eidenberg by phone before the
vote.
Elsewhere, dealers report that no
shutdown was planned, or that they
are wailing to see what happens
Monday , when
the federal
Department of Energy is expected to
announce permissible increases in
dealers' profits.

greedy raises, ' ' said .James Summa of

Budget report
WASHmGTON (AP) - Surging
fuel and food prices are aimost
certain to be reflected in a gloomy
economic forecast expected from the
Congressional Budget Office.
The budget office, which advises
Congress on economic matters, is

unveiling its mid-year review of
economic trends today in testimony
by Ailee Rivlin, direcwr of the office,
before the House Budget Committee.
The report will likely project a deeper
recession later this year than the
office had previously anticipated.
Meanwhile, Treasury Secretary W.
Michael Blumenthal was to testify
before the Joint Economic Committee
about the recent Tokyo economic
summit.
Last January, the congressional
office predicted a downturn in the
second half of the year with a 1979
inflation rate of between 6.5 percent
and 8.5 percent and unemployment
rising to between 6.2 percent to 7.2
percent.
The Carter administration is also
scheduled to update its economic
projections this week in light of sharp
increa~s in prices for crude oil and
food.
The administration had predicted a
relatively modest inflation rate and
continued economic growth this year.
However, its new figW'es are expected
to raise estimates for inflation and
project near-zero growth in 1979.
Administration sources who asked
not to be identified said Tuesday the
administration's official forecast for
unemployment by the end of next year
would be rai~d from 6.2 percent to 6.9
percent - an increase of more than
700,000 people without jobs.
In its April projections, the
administration predicted a 7.4 percent
annual rate of inflation, a 2.2 percent
annual growth rate and a jobless
figure of 6.2 percent.
However , last week, President
Carter said hikes in crude oil prices
charged by the Organization of
Petroleum Exporting Countries could
drive the inflation rate up an
additional 2 to 2.5 percent, push the
jobless rate over 6 percent and cut
economic growth by 2.5 percent.
He declared the price hikes made a
recession " much more likely ."

The latest government estimates
put unemployment at :&gt;.6 percent in
June, the lowest point in five years,
and inflation at 13.4 percent on an
annual basis. Economic growth last
year was 4.4 . percent after bein~

adjusted for inflation.
.
Most private economists are
predicting a. moderate 1979 recession
comparable in severity to the 1969-70
downtW'n.
A recession is normally defined as
two consecutive quarters of negative
growth in the gross national product,
adjusted for inflation.
In other economic news Tuesday: The Commerce Department reported
that retail sales fell for the third
con~cutive month in June, giving
further evidence that the nation's
economy may be moving into a
recession.
Retail sales of $70.6 billion in June
were U percent below May's total
and followed declines of 0.1 percent
from April w May and 0.9 percent
from March w April , the report
indicated.
- The Council on Wage and Price
Stability notified two more companies
they have violated the president's
voluntary anti-inflation price
standard.
T)ley are Charter Co., a petroleum
refiner in Jacksonville, Fla., and
Northwestern Steel and Wire Co. of
Sterling, Ill.
The non-compliance listing means
that the companies could be barred
from receiving government contracts
of $5 million or more. It was not
immediately known If the companies
currently have government contracts.
. - The General Accounting Office,
the congressional auditing agency,
said that between :&gt; million and 6
million Americans fail to file income
tax returns each year, even though
their income levels indicate they
should.
The report said the "non-filers" fail
to pay at least $2 biilion a year in
ta•e~ . And some do not get refunds to
which they would have been entitled
had they filed returns.
EGG REPORT
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Eggs Prices paid wcountry packing plants
for eggs delivered to major Ohio cities
cases included consumer grades
including U.S. grades, minimum 50
case lots.
Carton Large A 62-&amp;l'h , Medium A
53'h-55, Small A 43-45.
Sales to retailers in major Ohio
cities, cartons delivered: Large A
white 71-80, mostiy 71-73, medium 6170, mostly 61.a3.
Poultry prices at Ohio farms, hens
. light 6.

ONLY -YOU CAN
SAVE THIS CAR

Op~ning

date
moved .again

Carter considers jobs as summit continues
WASHINGTON (AP) - President evening. The Washington Post today and must act to deal with pressing
Carter is calling employment experts quoted unidentified officials as domestic woes.
to his domestic summit amid reports suggesting Sunday night IS a likely
In related developments:
the administration is predicting the time for Carter to report on the results
- The Congressional Budget Office
jobless rate will climb to nearly 7 of his talks with a diverse group of today predicted the impending
government officials and pri vate recession would be deeper than
percent by the end of 1980.
At a morning meeting today, the citizens.
earlier ferecasts because of climbing
Summoned to the Maryland retreat food and fuel prices.
president was to discuss the jobs
outlook with
experts
from Tuesday night were 10 clergymen,
In its mid-year business outlook, the
goverrunent and the private sector. theologians and sociologists.
budget oHice predicted inflation likely
Powell said Carter wanted to would top 10 percent this year and the
A half dozen governors and a
delegation of mayors were invited to discuss with them the broad currents jobless rate would rise tO between 8.4
spend· this evening at Camp David, of public attitudes toward government percent and 7.4 percent by the end of
Md., the presidential retreat where and the solving of national problems 1979.
- A congressional study has cast
Carter has been cloistered for more in complex and trying times.
than a week.
The president discussed inflation doubt on the ability of synthetic fuels
The administration, acknowledging and the economy, as well as energy, to make a substantial dent in the
a worsening economy, is revising its for three ho!Jrs Tuesd11y with amount of oU the United States
official jobless forecast from 6.2 Treasury Secretary W. Michael · imports until the next century.
The study by the Congressional
percent to 6.9 percent for the end of Blumenthal, Commerce Secret11ry
1980, said administration sources who Juanita Kreps and Labor Secreblry Research Service, said even with big
asked not to be identified. If that Ray Marshall. He also met with federal subsidies, synthetic liquid
prediction holds, 1.3 million more Republican Gov. Richard Snelling of fuels won 't be of much help soon.
Americans could be out of work by the Vermont and a group of economists,
- Energy Department officials said
end of next year than now are.
investment bankers, businessmen and Carter signed an prder requiring air
The new unemployment estimate is union leaders.
conditioners in non-residential
to be released publicly later this week. Afterwards , Douglas Fraser, buildings to be set no lower than 78
Neither the White House nor the president of the United Auto Workers, degrees Fahrenheit this swruner.
Office of Management and Budget said the administration is "probably
the regulation goes into effect
would confirm or deny the report
at the point of no return" politically Monday. The order also prohibits nonDuring the week-long retreat ,
·
·
·
. · , ·.
presidential press secretary Jody :·:·:·:-:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:·.·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:':·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:·:·:·:-:·:::::::::::,::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·:::::::::::::::
Powell said Tuesday, Carter has :(" ··· ·· ···
....... . ··· ······· ......... .. ... .... ··
::::!
decided against removing federal
price controls on gasoline, a proposal
that White House staff members hlld
been considering submitting to their
boss.
"The president has no intention to
deregulate gasoline at. this time,"
Powell sald. He estimated such action
would boost retail gasoline prices to
between $1.10 and $1.50 a gallon,
draining "several tens of billions of
dollars from the economy."
Complex federal rules limit the
amount of increases in gasoline costs
that can be passed on to consumers.
The L~sue of deregulating gas prices is
separate froin the gradual lifting of
prices on domestic crude oil,
currenUy underway .
Powell also reported general
agreement among those 11ttending the
summit that it is too soon to consider
federal actions to counter the
exPected economic slump.
He sald the administration would
"need a better idea of the nature of the
slowdown" before considering action
to counter recession by such means as
blx cuts.
.
In a conference call to reporters,
Powell said the president is finding "a
surprising degree of consensus"
among summit ·participants.
He said Carter !eels such recent
events as the long gas lines at service
stations around the country and
higher oil prices have had a "sobering
effect" that has spurred demands for
action .
The president is expected to remain
at Camp David at least through this

::::

I\

Area deaths

·:,::
·:-:·
RICHARD R. NYE
Richard R. Nye, former Pomeroy
resident, died Monday at a Cleveland,
Ohio hospital.
He was preceded in death by his
parents, George B. and Gertrude
Nye.
He is survived by two daughters,
Mrs. James (Diane) Strawser and
Rachel Nye,..two sons., Robin H. Nye
and Jules S. Nye, one sister, Mrs. R. .
E. (Charlotte Nye) McCullough.
Graveside services will be held at
Beech Grove Cemetery Saturday,
July 14, at 4 p.m.

FREE CLOTHmG DAY
• The Gallia-Meigs Community
Action Agency will hold its free
clothing day for low income persons
on ThW'sday from 9 a.m. to 12 noon.
The 11gency's clothing bank is located
in the old high school building at
Cheshire.
SEEK LICENSES
Marriage licenses were issued to
Tommy Joe Ferrell, 29, Wilkesville,
and Victoria Lynn Grate, 24, Rutland ;
Richards Thomas Yost, 25, Rt. 2,
Coolville, and Sharon Lee Henderson ,
19, Rt. 1, Guysville.

::

::::
{

MAGGIE I.ROSENPANZ
Fulleral services for Mrs. Maggie
Isadora Rosenkranz, 85, Route 3,
Pomeroy, who died Mond11y at
Veterans Memorial Hospital, will be
held at 2 p.m. Thursday at the Ewing
Funeral Home.
A member of Jehovah's Witnesses,
Mrs. R~nkranz was a daughter of
the late Albert and · Sar11h Kaylar
Hoffman and was preceded in 'death
by her first husband, Ira Wolfe, and
her second husband, Herbert
R~nkrJIIlz . A son and a daughter
also preceded her in death.
Surviving are five daughters, Lu1a
Pearl Preston, GallipoUs; Bessie
Ruth Gillespie, Hot Springs, Va.;
Alice Marie Slay, Jacksonville, Ohio;
Virginia Irene Thomas and Mary
Edna Parker, both of Pomeroy; two
sons, Fred Elmer Wolfe, Gasport,
N.Y., and Dale Edward Wolfe,
Reedsville ; 29 grand and 34 great
grandchildren .

Willi"am 8

Partly cloud)', humid and hazy
through Thursday Thursday. Hl&amp;hs
today and Thursday in the low and
mid b . Lows tmlght in the mid and
upper 80s. Chance of rain 00 percert
today and 30 percent tonight and
Thursday.

'

Mayor's Court
Five defendants were fined and two
others forfeited banda in the court of
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
Tuesday night.
Fined were Tony W. Manley,
Middleport, 150 and costs, squealing
tires; Roy Boggs, 45, Middleport, 150
and costs, disorderly manner, and $7S
and costs, issuing menacing threats ;
Randy . L. Phillips, 19, Pomeroy,
speeding 46 In a 25 mile zone, $21 and
costs; Sally Lambert, Middl~.
assault, ~ and coslll, and DaMY
Barrett, no age or ad4ress recorded,
assault, ~ and costs.
Forfeiting bonds in the court were
Dennis M. Smith, 22, Middleport, $100
posted on a charge of Uttering a park,
and ~ fer failure to appear in court,
and Robert F. Seelig, 18, Pomeroy,
$150,leaving the scene of an accident.
oth~

I "

43 arrests recorded

.-Forty-tllree arreata were made by
the Middleport Police Department
during JWJe according to the report of
Chief ol Pollee J . J. Cremear11.
Of the total liJ'I'et!ta, eight were for
disorderly conduct, and aeven on
speeding charges. Five peraons were
charged with littering, four with
allowing a dog to run looae, two each
on criminal trespaasing, .parking
ticketa, improper backing and
reckleaa operation and there wu one
arrest each for p888ing In a no
Jlll88inll zone and failure to stop after
an accident.
Eight cases were dlsmiued by
Mayor Fred Hollman and charges
were dropped In two other Clllllll.
Parking meter collecti0111 for the
mooth totaled $798.50 and the pollee
crul.ser was driven 3,387 miles during
themooth.

NO. 62

A fire d. Wldetermtned origin at the
Old Sayre Station adjacent to Star
Supply in Racine was Wider inveatigatioo today by Meigs County
Sberlff's deputies.
According to information received ,
a couple of juveniles were seen play11111 II'GIInd the building and an old

Today
. . .in the world

Plane crashes
MEDAN , Indonesia (AP ) - An
Indonesian airliner crashed on a
mountain peak in north Swna Ira
Wednesday night, killing all 61
periOIIII aboard, a spokesman for
Garuda Indonesian Airways announced Thurday .
The spokesman said- the
Foldter-ZII crashed oo Mount
Sibray811 near Berastagi, a sum·
mer resort about 5 miles west of
Medan, the capibll of north
Swnutra.

Crash kills 7
WALTERS, Okla . (AP ) - A
tractor-trailer truck slammed into a parked car Wednesday alternoon just north of the Texas
border, killing seven persons,
pollee said.
All seven victims were in the
parked car, poUce sald, and its
two other occupants were injured.
A woman was taken to a
Wichita FaUs, Texas, hospital,
Continued on Page 7

THIS OFFER VOID IF DESTROYED

Q% To 50%

BY SKYLAB ON WEDNESDAY

SALE PRICES NOW IN EFFECT

RIVERSIDE VW-AMC-JEEP

6..... TOOKIE'S FASHIONS
lr 5th Street
New Haven

'. I

Gallipolis, OH.

446-9800 .

Additional bonds
need~d for project

The Racine Fire Department
responded and quickly estlilguisbed
the flames before any majOI' damage
was done.
George WUliam Brown, 3l, Rt. I,
U!tart, W. Va., arrested June 23 driv11111 a 1!177 Vega reported stolen three
minutes earlier. has appeared before
Meigs County Common Pleas Court
Judge John C. Bacon oo a BW of Information charging him with
WJauthorized use of a motor vehicle.
He waived his rights and entered a
gully plea to the charge. Brown was
sentenced to a term of 6 months to S
years in an appropriate state penal institution.
Deputies transported Brown to the
Ohio Penal Medical and Reception
Center at ColwnbWJ today, to begin
serving his sentence.
Walter Arnold, 29, Gen. Del.,
Langsville, hils been ~ntenced to 3G
days in the Meigs CoWtty Jail on
charge of contributing to the
WJruliness of a minor . Tile charge
resulted from . the apprehension of a
runaway girl i!ISI Saturday morning
at his residence . The juvenile had
been absent from her home for a couple of weeks.
Wednesday evening , deputies arrested Mary Garnes, W, Athens , on a
w11rrant fran the Juvenile Court
charging her with child abandonment.
The chllrge had been filed by her
husband, Jimmy Games, Pomeroy.
Mrs . Garnes was lodged in the Meigs
CoWJty Jail pending hearing in the
Meigs County Juvenile Court
sometime today .

'

Bruce Pinkney and Sam Calabretta,
Americare Corp., and Bob Young and
Peter Wright, bond counsel, met with
the Meigs County Commissioners
Tuesday _night to discuss issuance of
additional revenue bonds for the
Pomeroy Health Care Nursing Home.
Pinkney said there is a nl!ed for an
additional $3:&gt;0,000 in industrial
development revenue bonds oo fund
the balance of the original contract
amount.
When the original bonds were
okayed, approval was granted for
fl,OOO,OOO, however , only $1,650,000

TWO SPORTS SCRIBES JOIN to j,rornote a golf tournament Jul~ 30
at Mason. Dave Diles enlists the help of Jaspey (right) for the Dave Diles
Celebrity Golf Tournament. Jaspey is James Sherman Porter, form~r
sports editor of the Gallipolis Daily Tribune. DUes, who got his start m
journalism on the Tribune 30 years ago, is ABC's television football com·
.
mentator and author of biographical books on sports figur1!s.

Southern board
approves budget
Southern's Local Board of
Education meeting in specia l session
Wednesday ni ght , adopted a 1980
budget wtalin g $1,491,552.459.

was issued at the time .
Commissioners will meet in joint
session with the Community
Improvement Corporation (ClC) on
July 24 , to discuss the new proposal.
A news release will be issued in the
near future outlining tlw schedule for
the grand opening and also the
pro cedures for employing personnel
and admitting patients.
'
Mrs. Edna Russell ,R.N ., met with
the board requesting it provide a W
percent match on a 70 - W percent
grant through Title XX for Home
Health Aid Services for a period from
July 1 through J.une W , 1980. The
board approved the W percent match
to be appropriated from revenue
sharing funds.
The board received two notices
from the Ohio Department of Liquor
Control concerning applications for
permits to se ll intoxicating
beverages.
One application is a new class C-2
permit to Larry Allen Vance,
DBA ,Vance's Carry-Out, SR 143,
Scipio Township .· The other
application is for a transfer of class D1 permit from Hugh P. Custer, DBA
Pomeroy Golf Club, Salisbury
Township, to Jay HaU. Jr., DBA

Pomeroy Golf Club.
Commissioners will receive any
public objectio!L' concerning these
permits until Aug . 5, 1979.
It was decided to sell a 1976 Ford car
qwned by the commissioners to
Racine Villa ge for use as a police
crusier .

Wes l ey Buehl ,c ounty
engineer ,disc4ssed various road
projects and his 1979 budget .
At,tending were Richard Jones,
president, Henry Wella and Chester
Wells, comm\ssi.oners.. and Mary

Hobstetter, clerlt.
::::;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::

CHURCH BLAZE KILLS 3
.. NEW BLOOMINGTON, Obio (AP)
- Three members of a Marlon County
famUy died eary Ibis morning in a fire
at the parsonage of the New
Bloomington United Methodist
ChW'Cb.
. .Killed were Shirly Rampal 11nd her
two c hildren,

Joanna,

20 and

Jonathan, 15.
.. The Rev. Vidya Rampal was taken
to Marion General Hospital for
treatment of facial bums.
.. Fire officials said they had not
determined the cause of the blaze,
which broke out 5 a.m.
:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::

MOBO..E HOME DESTROYED
The trailer home of Mr. and Mrs.
William Clonch, 913 Broadway St.,
Middleport, was destroyed by fire at
2:25p.m. Wednesday.
Firemen said the fire which· gutted
the trailer was apparenUy caused by
an electrical problem. Moneblry
losses had not been set this morning .

According to the figures, general
fund receipts for the year will be

$1,491,:&gt;52.49
and
anticipated
expenditures will be $1 ,479,711.44,
leaving a balance of $11,641.05 ; bond
·:::;.;.;:::::::::::::;.;.::::::::::;:;:::;:;::::::::::::.;:;:;.;.:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·
retirement fund anticipated receipts
stand
at $111,26l.li and anticipated
EXTENDED FORECAST
expenditures
at $84,084.64 leaving a
Silturday lllrougb Mooday of
$27,176.47;
lunchroom fund
balance
arm tbrougb the period. A chanc
anticipated
receipts
will
be $132,146.65
e o1 sbowen Silturday aad Monwith
anticipated
expenditures
totaling
day. Partiy cloudy Sunday. Hlgbs
$127,835.80
leaving
a
balance
of
Ill the low to mid 801. Low at nlgbt
$4 ,310.85 and receipts for all other
mooUy !lithe mid 801.
funds are anticipated at $1n,535.68
:;:::::::::::;::::::::::::::::.:·:=:=:=:= :·::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::.
while anticipated expenditW'es from
these hinds amount to $139,340.30
leaving a balance of $38,19:&gt;.26.
The meeting was recessed to 10 a.m.
Showers and thunder5tonns likely July 16 .
and continued warm and hwnld
tonight. The low tonight 85 to 70. MostSQUAPCALLED
'!'lie Pomeroy Emergency Squad
ly cloudy, warm and humid with
achance ri Showers or thunderstonns was called to 307 Spring Ave ., at 2:55
Friday. The high in the mid Ills. The p.m. Wednesday for John Davis who
chance of rain is 60 percent tonight had fallen. He w.as taken to Veterans
Memorial
and to percent Friday.
" _.Hospital.

Weather

•

OSP charges man with DWI

Mid-July Summer Sale
}

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

THURSDAY, JULY 12, 1979

Sllid .

,,

other activities 11way from the
facility, IndividUal room controls
for temperature and hwnidity,
two large patient baths, an extensive physical therapy department, two complete nursing
stations and a large formal
dining room .
The building is fire protected
utilizing an advanced sprini&lt;!er
system, smoke detectors, and an
individual e~~ll system.
Outside of the facility, the •
grounda will be decorated with
flowering shrubs and there will
be a well lighted access road with
a large parking area for employes and visitors.
-.
Anyone wishing information
may call the Americare home of.
fice at 1-457-7353 or Gerald
Hazelbaker, 1-594-3018.
Applications for patients and
employes are available at the
Meigs County Senior Citizens
Center in Pomeroy.

enttne

race car owned by Hilton Wolfe, Jr .•
s hortly before the !Ire was
discovered.
A side window oo the former service station, remodeled several years
ago ; was broken out. Curtains and
pa'pers inside were ignited deputies

Is Having A

Save From

at

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

equipped v11n to transport patien-

ts to medical appoinbnents and

••

·Deputies probing
suspicious fire

Completes course .

MARION- James D. Qullll oll7fl
Chester Road, pomeroy. a General
Telephone eomp.ny of Ohio employe,
baa completed a COtll'l!e offered at the
compiiiY 'a Employe Development ·
Center here.
Trainees at the IChool were taught
the correct methods for climblne
utility poles.
Qua1la Ia an lnltaller-repairer In the
company's Circleville m.trict. .
The school's curriculum includes
more than 90 COUI'IIes and lM!IIllnanl .
Claaaroom training helpl employee~
to develop job skllla and to keep pace
with technological advancement.

•

e
VOL. XXVIII

.

tnlffic is being re-routed away from this section of track, but soon will
return to normal as the bridge is almost complete.

NEW BRIDGE GOES UP - Conrail Railroad is constructing a new
railroad bridge over Leading Creek south of Middleport. Presently raU

Tookie's Fashions
Big Pric~ Reduction
Thursday 7/12/79

Construction delays, trucking
strikes and other WlcontrQJiable
events have caused another delay
in the. opening of a new 100-bed
nursing home in Meigs County.
The IQO.bed. nursing home
facility scheduled to be opened in
August will now open in midSeptember according to a
spokesman for the builder,
Americare Corp. of Colwnbus.
It was originally stated that the
facility, located on former Route
33, three miles north of the Rock
Springs Fairgrounds, w.ould open
in July.
Later, the opening was revised
to August and now tile opening
will not he lield until September.
The finn hopes to stage a
public open house prior to the
opening of the facility , he only
one in Meigs County.
In 11ddition to the 100 beds, the
facility includes well equipped
lounge areas, beauty and barber
salons, an examination room for
private physicians, a specially

Weather

One defendant was fined and fl.;
forfeited bonds in the court al
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews
Tuesdlly night.
.
Forfeiting bonds were Paul Card,
Racine, $370, posted on a charge of
driving while intoJicated; Jolll Ray
HunnelJ, Anitquily, $$0, driving
without an operator 's license, and $2S,
contempt of court; Edna Smith,
Pomeroy, $370, driving while ·
. Intoxicated; Paul Richard Qua Us,
Pomeroy, · $28, parking ticket
violations; Danny D. Brown,
MinersvUle, $250, reckless operation.
Fined S200 and costs in the court on
IN HOSPITAL
a
petty lar&lt;:eny charge was Stew
Jeanne (Clark) Null, former Meigs
McGrath,
RuUand.
resident, Is a patient at the Bethesda
Hospital in Zanes•'ille. Cards may be
sent to Room 438.

SURGICAL PATIENT
MARRIAGE DISSOLVED
Mrs. ·William .Strauss, Route 1,
In Meigs County Common Pleas
Court the marriage of Leslie J . Fl~ming, formerly Sandra Kay
Whittington and Frances J . lngrsham, Pomeroy, Is a surgical
patient at St. Joseph Hospital in
(Continued from page I)
Whittington was dissolved.
ParkersbW'g, W. Va . Cards may be
If anyone is interested in any item
sent to Room 412.
mentioned they may call the Meigs
County Cancer Society at 992:7s:~1 oc
stop in at the cancer office located on
the second floor of the senior citizens
(Continued from page 1)
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
building.
Tom ·and Mike Williams Insurance
Admitted-Larry Dillon, Reedsville;
"We want to help you protect your- Agency, Inc., of Portsmouth. He is 11 Lela Easterday, Racine; Sandra
self against cancer," says Michael. member of the National Association Sweeney, Pomeroy; Mark Michael,
The ACS recommends three active of Ufe Underwriters, the local, state Pomeroy;
Patricia
Cleland,
health steps: (I) adopt preventive and National Independent Insurance LangsvU!e; John Rein, Minersville.
habits, avoid cigarette smoking, Agents • Association, and the
Discharged--Virgil Day, Vera
overexposure to sunlight, and other American College of Olartered Ufe Drehei, Elmer Young, Jr., Patty
known causes of cancer ; (2) have
medical checkup regularly; (3) learn Underwriters, attaining his CLU Hornsby , Anna Wheeler.
degree in 1!174.
cancer's seven warning signals and
Williams has fostered growth and
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
go to a doctor or clinic if one should be development of his community
noticed.
through leadership of various civic DISHARGES, JULY 10
Thomas Angel, Charles Beach,
Twenty·~me and five tenths cents is functions. He is a member of the ParNancy
Bradley, Burl Burke,
used for service · which is direct tsmouth Junior Chamber of comassistance to cancer patients and merce, president of the Portsmouth, Elizabeth Campbell, John Casto,
their families. The Meigs Unit has YMCA, president of the Scioto County Bernice Durst, ~Ma Johnson, Irene
equipment on loan for cancer patients TB and Respiratory Health McGraff, Mrs. John Null and son,
to belp make their stay at home more Association, vice president of the Boy Robin Randolph, Marilyn Riffie, Jay
comfortable.
Scout -Council, and president of the Simms, Michelle Smith, Madge
Information and guidance services 'Portsmouth Association of In- Tredway, John Tyler, Merle
Underwood, Avonelle Wells, Mary
concerning the Meigs cancer patient dependent Insurance Agents.
and his family are provided. In adWilliams has also served his coun- Whiting , James Wilson.
dition, there are volunteers who try as a sergeant in the United States BIRTHS, JULY 10
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Brown,
provide transportation for patients to Anny, during a three-year .tour of
their ,physician's office or clinic for duty inGennany.
daughter,
Jackson
check-ups and treatments. There are
Prior to his election as District 1 Mr., and Mrs. Akers, son, Frazier's
W.
Va.
also trained recovered cancer patien- Governor, Williams . had served Bottom,
Is who might help new cancer patien- Rotary as a district representative, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest HID, son,
Is in relieving some of their fears, as chairman' of the District Mem· McArthW'
anxieties and difficulties.
bership Development Conunittee, MR. and Mrs.Oaniel Williams,
Thirteen cents IS used in fWld and as team leader for the District 689 daughter, Gallipolis
raising and 9.6 cents IS used in and District 975 Group Study Exmanagement. So 77.5 cents is used for change. In this capacity, Williams led
reaearch, education and service.
five young business men from Central
"We wish to thank all of you who and Southern Ohio on a six-week tour
contributed or helped in any way. U of Australia.
you were missed during the crusade
The subject of Mr. Williams • adand still want~ help in the preven~on dress will be "Let Service Ugh! the
of cancer maU a check to the Meigs , Way," the theme adopted for this
County Chapter, P. 0 .,. Box. 692, year by Rotary International
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769,
Michael President James L Bomar Jr
stated.
·
' ·

Cancer. •.

residential buildin&amp;s from btltnl
heated dur ing the wintll' ta
tempera lures bigber tllan • 4ocJ lia.
Mayor Richard Cllner o( Pttlrll,
ru., chairman of the u.s. coat.of Mayocs, said he wu amt1111 . _
invited to !Qday's ~. AIID
invited were Mayers Henry Maltr llf
Milwaukee and Coleman YOIIIII· 4lf
Detroit, said Carver.
Another source, who asked not 10 be
named, said Mayors Maynard
Jacksori of Atlanta, Richard Hatcher
of Gary, Ind., Tom Bradley of Los
Angeles and Edward Koch of New
Yerk Cit:t.Jrtece invited. ,

Body Shaper
Offer good on styles 62726,
N2728 and N2712 only. Offer
ends October 31 , 1979.
Get instructions In Lingerie Department on the 2nd floor.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

I

FISHING RELAXATION - Ed Miller is still fishing for his first big
catch this swruner. After that, he'll try for his second big one. This is one
of many ways to relax during the hot sununer days.

The GalJia-Meigs Post State
Highway Patrol reported tour traffic
accidents Wednesday in which one
·person was injured.
At 9:50 p.m., Oddie Bush, 66,
Gallipolis, was driving north on SR 7
when he lost control of his car, went
off the road, came hack onto the road
and struck the guard rail.
Bush complained of injuries, but
was not immediately treated. Hi, car
was demolished. Bush was cited for

OWl ..
. At 9:85p.m., Beverly J. Dowell, 29,
Racine, was driving east on SR 124
when she struck and kllled a deer.
There was no damage, no injuries,
and no citations.
Earlier Ill the day, Melvin R. Orwnmond, :12, GallipoUs, was driving
south on County ROad 1 at 6:W p.m.
when another car sid~wiped him.
The incident is still under Investigation.

TAKING NO CHANcEs -George Hobatetter, Pomeroy realtor and
former vice president of the Pomeroy National Bank, waa taking no chan- .
ces Wednesday of Skylab falling oo him. He secured himself in the vault
at the Pomeroy National Bank waiting word that Skylab waa down and all
waaclear.

•

.; .

•

r

"I

I

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