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·-E'PA-; ·;t;;.,·quality hearing slated J'!~r&lt;M~~ ..,
must consider many things that will
have an impact on water quality, such
as adequa te sewage treatment
facilities, storm water controls,
agricultural runoff management and
population projections to meet projec·
ted community development needs
over the nell 20 years .
" The planning process for development of the WQM's has been a major
project of the Ohio EPA," said James
F . McAvoy, Director, Ohio EPA.
"Designated areas, where regional
planning agencies helped developed
plans, received assistance from Ol)io
EPA staff. Non-designated areas plan
coordination became the total respon·
sibility of the agency ."
"The staff of our Office of the Plan·
ning Coordinator established citizen
and elected official committees in the

The Ohio Environmental Protection
Agency (Ohio EPA ) will conduct a
public hearing Monday , July 23, concerning the State Water Quality
management (WQM ) plan for the
Hocking River Basin.
The hearing will be held from 1-4
p .m. and~· p.m . at the Hocking State
· Park Lodge, Rouie 2, Logan.
Counties in these basins include
Athens, Fairfield, Hocking, Perry.
Meigs, Morgan and Washington .
Section 208 of the 1972 Federal
Water Pollution Control Act Amend·
ments (Public Law 92..000 ) as amen·
ded by the Ci'ean Water Act of 1977,
mandiltes that each river basin area
in the State create a plan to achieve
and maintain water quality.
These plans, known as Water
Qualitv Mana~ement IWOM l Plans

Folklore program slated Wednesday
Appalacruan folklore will be the Child . The Gilmores have presen·
brought to life in a program for school ted a variety of programs and
age children ad the Middleport Public work3llops on Appalachian folklore as
Library on July 18 at 2 p.m .
part .of the Artists in the Schools, a
Roger and Mary Gilmore of Athens project sponsored by the Columbus
will present the customs, super- Arts Council. •
stitions and tall tales of the Ap·
Gilmore, a boking agent for First
palachian region through music and Avenue Entertainment Agency, is a
song. Such folk instruments as the self-taught musician. He has com·
dulcimer, fiddle, autoharp and har· posed over 200 songs. Mrs. Gilmore, a
monica will be used by the Gilmores clerical supervisor at Ohio Univer·
to further introduce children to the sity 's College of Osteopathic
lore of this area.
Medicine, also is a self-taught
Folksongs and stories from the musician.
British t.les also will be presented by
According to Ruth Powers, super·
the husband and wife team in ob· visor at the Middleport Public
servance of the International Year of library, the Gilmores' presentation
is just one of the programs scheduled
for children this swnmer. The ac·
tivities are being sponsored in
cooperation vrlth Ohio Valley Area
Libraries, a regional library system
(Continued from page I )
serving
ten counties in southeastern
in this area.
Ohio.
J. M. Koebel, Columbia of Ohio,
For more informatin on the sum·
Inc. manager in the Gallia-Meigs
mer programs contact the Middleport
artlB, said this apparent major
discovery by Columbia Transmission Public Library or Ohio Valley Area
is another example of sizeable Libraries in Wellston.
domestic gas reserves that are now
being developed as a result of price
incentives provided by Congress
through the NGPA to encourage
LICENSE ISSUED
producers to take the huge financial
A marriage ·license was issued to
risks necessary to assure future gas
Richard E. Phillips, 23, Middleport,
supply.
salesman,
and Kimberly Ann Batey,
"Most of · all, " he noted,
iS,
Middleport,
student.
"discoveries of this nature that are
now occurring in many parts of our
nation insure us that our cleanest,
DIVORCE GRANTED
most efficient and lowest priced sour·
In Meigs County Common Pleas
ce of energy will continue to be
available to more and more Court, a divorce was granted Friday
Americans for many years to come ." to Belinda Shuler, Langsville, from
He said that while the cost of David Shuler , Langsville .
Karen Story, M iddleport, was
developing gas from this .a rea will be
appointed
by Common Pleas Court
comparable to the cost of other
domestic sources of supply, its Judge John C. Bacon and Probate
proximity to Columbia 's markets in Court Judge Robert E . Buck, to
the East and Midwest make it succeed. Barbara Knight as Meigs
Librarian. Her
economically attractive since (ran· County Law
compensation
has
been
fixed at $1,000
sportatiori costs ·from more distant
per
annum,
to
be
paid
by
the County
sources of supply will be eliminated.
Treasurer. '

Major•••

--

-

•

•

•

YOU CAN'T GO TOO FAR
ON NOSTALGIA

~

non-designated areas," McAvoy said.
"These committee conununicated to
the staff what the current problems
and concerns were and how they
could be handled presently and in the
future . All information collected in
these committee mee~s was com-

piled for use in the development of the
WQM plans."
" Now, we 're reaching the fi nal
steps," he said. '"!be hearings on aU
basins in the state will soon be held.
'once th~ conunents are received , the
necessary alterations will be made.

Area deaths
THOMAS F .DYE

Memorial Hospital.
Mr. Sayre was bom Sept. 24, 1930
the son of the late Edgar and Minnie
McNickle Sayre. He was also
preceded in death by three brothers,
Everett, Oliver , and Eber, two s is ters,
Mabel Pickens and Wanda Sayre .
He is survived by five sisters, Mrs.
Frank (Cora) Wallace, Racine , Mrs.
Harlow (Gladys ) Swink , Brady Lake,
Mrs . Charles ( Edit h ) Hoppes,
Phoenix, Mrs. Oris (Mae) Hubbard,
Syracuse, and Mrs. John (Della )
Branch, Columbus, and several nieces
and nephews.
Fun eral service s will be he ld
Thursday at 3 p.m . a t Ewing Chapel.
Burial will be in Plants Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral home
after I p.m . Wednesday .

Then the bas.in policy advisory com·
mitlee, composed of loq~l elected of.
ficials and citizen representatives
willvoleonthefinalptan.
Th e State Water Quality
Management Plan for these basins in·
elude :
Par I, which presents an overview
of water quality management plan·

!iOSI'ITAL ~f:WS
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
Adm issions ---Joseph
Stewart ,
Bidwell · Carol Jell, Miners ville ;
Pearl D;rst , Cheshire; Ronald Miller ,
Middleport ;
· Mae
Lightfoot ,
Middleport ; Walter Jewell, Dextewr ;
Gilb er t Coo per , Athens; Samuel
McKinn ey, Pomeroy ; Ka thleen
Shane , Cheshire; Kristine .Shane ,
Cheshire; Callie Metheny, Ewmgton ;
Kathryn Jones, Dexter.
·
Dischar ges---Ruby Erb , Sarah
McCarley, Pauline Taylor .

programs.
Part II which is a description of
existing ~nditions within the basin,
such as physical characteristics, en·
vironmentally sensitive areas, point
source discharges, (industrial •
municipal) and nonpoint water
quality problems (agricultural
runoff, etc. ).
Part II contains water quality
assessment through data from !970 to
1978 as well as reconunended future
monitoring activities; population
projections • existing land . '71";
management agency prereqUISites
for (lesignating responsible agencies
to implement WQM plans; description of public participation efforts ;
policies and procedures used in
developing point source wasteload
allocations ; point source wasteload
allocations or maximum daily load
allwoed at each point source of
discharge which woul(l not violate
water quality standards and iden·
tification of potential beneficial and
adverse impacts to the physical and
soci~nomic enviroliment which
may result irom implementation of
wasteioad allocation limitations.
"After apprQVal of the Basin WQM
plan by the policy advisory com·
miltee, the plan will then be for·
warded to Governor Rhodes for cer·
tification and to the USEPA for approval," McAvoy said.
Copies of the plan are available
from Mrs . Ethel Norman, Hearing
Clerk, Ohio EPA, 361 East Broad St .,
Columbus. Copies may also be found
at the main Public Library in each
county seat.
All interested parties are invited to
testify at the hearing . Written com·
ments must be sent to the Ohio EPA
Hearing Clerk and postmarked no
later than 30 days after the hearing .

Thomas F.Dye, 85, of the Little
Forest Nursing Home,
Akron,
formerly of Reedsville, died Monday
at Akron City Hospital following a
brief illness.
Mr ., Dye was born in Looneyville,
W. Va., the son of the late James
Washington and Melissa Farrell Dye.
Mr. Dye lived all of his life in Meigs
County where he was farmer and
lumberman .
He is survived by two daughters,
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Mrs Lucy Beers, Las Vegas and Amy
DISCHARGES, JULY 11
Moorehouse, Akron , three sons,
John
Anderson , Michael Bias, Em·
Charles, Las Vegas, Thurman and
Ferrell,
Helem Gnunbling,
metl
James of Akron, 10 grandchildren and
Joyce
Harris,
Linda
Harrison, Mrs.
six great grandchildren.
Michael
Hemisey
and
daughter,
Funeral services will be held
Jarvis,
Nicole
Hughes
,
Donald
Thursday at 2 p.m. at the White
Thalma
Kelly
,
Fannie
Kerns,
Larry
Funeral Home in Coolville with the
WOODARD
WILLIAM
H.
Long
II
,
Charles
McClaskey,
Mrs. ·
Rev. George Pickens officiating.
William H. Woodard , 60, Rl. 1, David McPhearson and daughter,
Burial will be in Et:zer Cemetery,
Reedsville . Friends may call at the Rutland, died Monday night at his Blance P eoples , Dora Phelps,
Marcella Phillips , Mrs. Michael Price
funeral home Wednesday from 7 to 9 resid~nce.
Mr
.,
Woodard
was
born
J
uly
14,
1899
da ug hter, Dora Queen, Joe
and
p.m .
the son of the late Harvey and Wilson.
Amanda Bailey Woodard . He was a lso
BffiTHS, JULY 6
DALE L. SAYRE
preceded in death by on e brothe r,
Mr. and Mrs. Victor Young[)), son,
Dale L. -Sayre, 48, Rt. 2, Racine , Albert and one sister, Jennie Betchel. Racine.
died Monday afternoon at Veterans
Mr. Woodard wa s a retired employe
Mr . and Mrs . Carl Hartman,
of the New York Central Railway.
daughter , Northup.
He is survived by his wife, Hattie
Tomer Woodard, one son, William A. ·· - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,
Woodard , Jackson, one daugh ter , '
Mrs. Steven (Edith ) Moyer , Lawton,
(Continued from page I)
eluded would be those receiving pen· Okla ., two sisters, Bertha Russell,
sions, social security, unemployment Harrisonville Road , Pomeroy and
Hawk ,
Pomeroy , five
Lillie
or disabled persons.
grandchildren
and
several
nieces and
The issue proposed will be on the
nephews.
ballot in November and becomes, if
Funera l service s will be held
passed, effective Jan. I, 1980. The tax
at 1 p.m . a t Ewing Chapel
Thursday
will bring a revenue.of approximately
with
the
Rev.
Lloyd Grimm and the
."
$150,000.
Charles
Rus
sell
offi
ci
atin
g.
Rev.
Karr suggested the tax proposal be
brought before all organizations imd Burial ·will be in Beech Grove
el!piained. Karr also asked that Cemetery . Friends may call at the
residents express their opinions to funeral home after I p.m . on
• Automatic humidistat
Wednesday.
members of council.
• Automatic shut-off
Mayor Clarence Andrews set Aug.
• Hose fitting for
12, as "cemetery Sunday." Persons
constant drain
interested in the cemetery are asked
POSSffiLE SHOWERS
on Aug. 12 to donate a day's labor in
By The Associated Press
cleaning the cemetery. The mayor
A weak weather disturbance in the
asked that persons bring lawn
Removes moisture f rom air dur ing t he humid we ather th us protect ing
upper
atmosphere will move across
mowers, rakes, and whatever type of
clothing . carpeti ng · furniture , etc .
Ohio
today
and
tonight,
bringing
a
equipment is needed to clean the
possbility of some widely scattered
cemetery.
Regular $199 .99-17 pint capacity . ..... .. . . Sale 5188.00
showers
. Otherwise it will be pa rtl y
Council approved the bid of Ron
Rl!gular 5219.95-22 pint capacity . .... . .... Sale S198.0P
Holley, Middleport, to remove two cloudy through Wednesday .
Regular 5249 .95- 30 pint capacity . . . .. . . ... . .. . $228.00
The National Weather Service said ·
trees at the cemetery at a cost of $225.
highs
today
and
Wednesday
will
ra
nge
Council also approved for the
firemen to attend the Ohio State from the mid and upper 70s north to
Firemen's Conference in Toledo on the low 60s south while overnight lows
Aug. 4 and 5 at a cost of $250, and will be in the low to mid 50s north an d
discussed controlling the traffic light in the upper 50s to low 60s south.
manually at the Pomeroy-Mason
Bridge from 4 p.m. to 5:30p.m.
The mayor's report in the amount
of $1,842 .35 was approved. The
meeting was opened by prayer hy
Mayor Andrews.
Attending were Mayor Andrews,
Jane Walton, clerk, Larry Wehrung,
Betty Baronick, Karr, Haroli1 Brown
and Bill Young, council members,
Chief of Police Jed Webster, Jack
Krautter and Tom Werry.

a

Pomeroy...

ELBERFELDS

SALE
McGRAW EDISON
DEHUMIDIFIERS

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

County Court

·'

Isyourcartoofargonetogotoofar?
Gl'l a llt'W t•ar loan from u~ a11cl s ee lhf•

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·q ·kd , , 111 r 1·ar fi r" t. t h e n i'illl for a n c ....· 1' a r loa n a nd a
mo nth.h p a~ mt.· nt pl a n tha! ' ll fit th e famil~· hud ~d !

"Tilt' FriNrdf,·
. R11nl,· ··
Walk -up teller window
and auto -teller window
Open Friday Evenings Slo 7 p . m .

lilbeM 14attonal Bank
Mladleport,

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~b ./

~.l4AI 2 :0 .¥ p.ltt
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Mmber F.D.t.C. Deposits lnsur•nc• le MO •.OOII

ts

Twenty cases were terminated in
Meigs County Court Monday night.
Douglas Seyler, Belpre, charged
with DWI, was fined $50 by Judge
Charles Knight and was fined an
additional $50 on a charge of
concealed weapon.The weapon has
been forfeited by the state and Seyler
was sentenced to 30 days in county
jail.
carlos L. Stipp, Ceredo, W.Va.,
charged with DWI, no operator's
license and carrying a concealed
weapon, was fined $150 and given five
days in county jail.
Charged with dr iving under
suspension , Jerry L. Stobart,
Pomeroy , was fined $150.Matthew
Dillard, Pomeroy, charged with no
motorcycle endorsement, was fined
$50 and was placed on suspension.
Steven L. Schneider, Kudsville,
charged with larceny, was fined $50.
Joseph McConary, Gallipolis, charged
with deception, was fined $300. Steve
Grady, Racine, charged with property
destruction, was fined $25.
Charged with improper passing,
Garland K. Naistetler,Portland, fined
$15. Wllllam J . Stowter, Columbus,
charged with failure to obey a stop
sign, was fined $15. Robert L.
Imboden, Minersville, was fined $5 for
failure to keep assured distance. John
D.King, Rutland, charged with DWI
and failure to yield, was fined a total
of $175 and sentenced to three days in
county jail.
Barney Hills, Pomeroy, was fined
$10 for failure to obey a stop sign.
Larry D. Hysell,Rutland, charged
with speeding, was fined $15 . Cheryl
Lahew, Pomeroy,- was fined. $15 on a
sirllilar charge .
Forfeiting bonds were Arley G.
Markin, Albany, littering, $62.55;
Robert K. Lute, Pomeroy, DWI ,
$360.50; Robert E. Waldnig, Racine ,
DWI and failure to stop, $400.10.

•

e
VOL XXVIII NO. 66

entine

at

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

WEDNESDAY, JULY 18, 1979

President ponders staff shake-up
WASli!NGTON (AP) - With all of
his Cabinet and high-leve l. staff
offering to resign, President Carter is
expected to decide by Friday where
the ax will fall as he works on a new
lineup to revive his presidency .
Senior officials were shaken by the
move - the latest surprise in Carter's
self-declared turning point - which
left the government in linnbo.
The 34 top officials affected said
little in public beyond confirming that
they had been asked Tuesday to
tender their resignations.
White House press secretary Jody
Powell said the offers, made orally
and not in writing, would be
considered
"carefully
and
expeditiously'' by the president.
Cabinet secretaries were led to
believe they would hear whether
Carter would l&lt;eep them oo " in two or
three days, " one source said. Another
source said the president's decision
would come sometime " this week."
Both sources asked not to be

identified,
aides as they seek flexibility in embattled Energy Secretary James
One While House official, reflecting restructing the administration to R. Schlesinger, who has said he would
the extremely secretive nature of the bolster Carter-'s re-election odds ?
leave before Carter opens his
day's developments in this city that
Dodging such questions, one official anticipated r~lection campaign .
thrives on rumors, said, " Whatever who asked for anonymity, would say
Treasury Secretary W. Michael
the president's decisions may be, I only that the resignations "were Blumenthal, and Joseph A. Califano
can assure you he is keeping them to • offered ."
Jr ., the secretary of health, education
Asked why dozens of top people in and welfare, both of whom have
himseU ." ·
The number of resignations the government would be moved raised the ire of senior Carter aides ,
president will accept remained simultaneously to offer to quit without were also possible targets .
unclear, but one White House official prodding, the official responded: "We
Reflecting the scope of the
said "the president will accept some ." felt it to be an appropriate step to take resignations,
Warren
Dunn ,
Members of Congress called at this Iinne ."
spokesman for Housing and Urban
Tuesday 's aMouncement "strange"
Besides the 12 Cabinet officers, Development Secretary Patricia
and "curious." Republican reaction resignation offers came from all Roberts Harris, said, "my boss and
was the harshest, but several presidential assistants and special everybody else's boss in Washington
Democrats also questioned the assistants, including Hamilton resigned today ."
!)l'esident 's actions.
~ordan, Carter 's de facto , but
One Cabinet member was described
Powell's brief aMouncement that untitled, chief of staff. When the by an aide, asking not to be identified
several high members of the smoke clears, Jordan is likely to by name or department, as " literally
administration had tendered their emerge wuth that title.
shaken" by the prospect that his
resignations left unanswered several
Powell , a Georgian like Jordan, resignation offer might be accepted.
questions :
could also be given expanded
Among those offering to resign were
What motivated the mass offer ? authority,.
U.N. Ambassador Andrew Young ;
Were the resignations solicited ? And
Speculation on those most likely to Budget Director James Mcintyre;
hy whom, the president or his chief leave the Cabinet focused on Middle East peace negotiator Robert

•

A 16-month old child was vehlcle had to be moved and Brewer's
pronounced dead on arrival at son, Jimmy, was playing behind too
Veterans Memorial Hospital Tuesday vehicle .
When the vehicle was backed out of
night following an accident at his ·
th e' way ,the Brewer child was
.hom..
Meigs County Sheriff 's deputies accidentally run over.
reported William Brewer , Rl.l, Long
Deputies were alerted at 8:06 p.m .
Bottom, was working on a bulldozer Brewer was rushing his son to the
with some other men at his home near hospital but by the time they overtook
Fick &amp; Karr Construction Co. on SR 7. Brewer the child had died.
The accident occured when one man 's

'·

1

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

~·1\ Legislative meetings set

COLUMBUS, Ohio
( AP )
Legislative leaders of both parties
planned meeting! today with Gov .
Ja!IM!S A. Rhodes to discuss Ohio's

;.;

[ .'

interinn budget so I can catch the
plane ' .. . " Ocasek said. " I thought it
was wrong to de !;lin the governor and
keep him from going to China ."
Rhodes said Tuesday he considers
lhe .,......., .. 01"1!....,. 11 ve matter ... and

""t'led-down 11£.5 billlan budget.
Senate !'Nii- Oliver Oe-k, DAlcl'&lt;ll1, sa id he wants to updalj! the
refu s ed to · answer questions
budget situation for Rhodes, who concerning it .
returned Tuesday from a 17-&lt;lay trade
Four legislators - Ocasek, House
rnibsion to Olina .
· Speaker Vema! G. Riffe Jr ., D-New
, Minority Leader Paul E . Gillmor of Boston , Sen . Har_ry Meshel •. D·
Pllrt Clinton said he and other Seriate . Youngstown, an::J Gillmor - decided
GOP leaders pian a similar session . to m•ss the Chlll8 trip because the
Both senators appeared optimistic
budget failed to pass .
that the budget will be enacted by July
31 , when a one-month interim bu(lget
expires .
"This thing could break at any
Iinne ," Gillmor told a Republican
caucus Tuesday. "II could break
tomorrow, or we could be here all nell

week."
Ocasek said the budget likely wiU be
considered again by the same joint
ronference committee.
All 15 Republicans in the Senate
joined with two Democrats June 29 to
block Senate concurrence in the
conference committee 's original
report on the budget. The Legislature
then passed the interim budget the
next day .
Rhodes promised before the
ronlerence report floor vote that five
Republicans would vote favorably
with DemO&lt;.Tats, Ocasek said.
"I'm not going to ask hinn to deliver
anything,'' Ocasek said of his meeting
with the governor. "I' m just going to
repeat to him what he said on Friday
(June 29) that there were five
Republican votes."
When the Republicans voted no,
Ocasek said Rhodes urged the
General Assembly to pass the interinn
budget so he could leave on the China
trade mission, which he organized .
" He called me and said , 'Get me an

But Rep. Morris K. Udall, D-Ariz.,
said the president was "trying to give
the impression that ... policies are ·
going to change, that persoMel are
going to change ."
The announcement came op the
heels of a new Associated Press-NBC
News poD showing that Americana
agree with Carter's assessment of a
nationwide crisis of confidence but
that most of the public is not yet ready
to say Carter is a strong leader in the
face of energy shortages, continued
inflation and national malaise,
The offers to . resign were
engineered in a series of meetings and
telephone calls on the president's first
White House work day after 12 days of
seclusion at Camp David, Md., and
Monday's speaking trip to Kansas
City, Mo., and Detroit.
The shock waves seemed to hit each
department, with not only Cabinet
members but their aides doubting
their futures.

· Hackett firm gets contract

Youngster dies zn
home accident

:·;.

Strauss; and Mary Hoyt, first lady
Rosalynn Carter's press secretary.
Alfred Kahn , chairman of the
Council on Wage and Price Stability,
was not asked for his resignation, a
s pokesman said . Nor were any
changes said to be contemplated that
involve key national security affairs
positions, reportedly including the
jobs of Secretary of State Cyrus R.
Vance, Defense Secretary Harold
Brown, and national security
assistant Zbigniew B.rzezinski.
The · resignation offers pushed the ·
dollar down at the close of Tuesday's
currency trading in New York.
On Capitol Hill, Sen. Lowell Weiker,
R.COnn ., said, "I think the president is
nuts." Referring to Carter's
declaration that the nation is facing a
" crisis of confidence," Weicker said
the resignation offers were "just a
continuation of the scapegoat
operation. It is the president, not his
Cabinet, thaI the American people ·
have lost confidence in ." ,

.... ..................:·:••·:&lt;&lt;·&gt;:·&gt;&gt;&gt;&gt;&gt;'·:&lt;&lt;·:·:: :·:·:·:..:·:·:·:·:·: :&lt;&lt;·:•:
DEADUNEJULY 2Q
.. To avoid 10 pet. penalty wbkb Is
required by law on second half 1978
Real Estate taxes, they must be paid
oo later than 4:30p.m. July !0, 197ll.
.. Books wm be cl"'!ed at that time so
the County Aodttor can add a penalty
to unpaid June lues. Books will be
open any time after Aug. I, for
payment ol deUnquetn t.x, County
Treasurer, George M. Colllos said .
:-:-:·:- . :·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:-:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:':·:·:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:-:·:-:-:-:·:·:·::;:;.:-:·:-:

RECEIVES LOAN - Syn.....,
Mayor Eber Plckeu wu prestDied
a cbed Tllesday Ill tbe amOUDI of
t8,2Se by Tom Metc.Ife, aect1011
dllef, Dlvlalon oiiDtercovermneat.l
aDd llldaatrlal Rei.tlou, who
JejX JeDied c1lredor James McAvoy
of tile Oblo EPA. Tbe leea wlllau!Jt
.,,

nate

..... ! I

waler tnelmeJII

...

Ohio University next week to gain a
better idea of what the repair would
entail. ·
Superintendent David Gleason
presented three possible school year
calendars, all lhree containing at
least two days of parent-teacher con·
ferences . Gleason suggested every
eighth Friday of the school year be
reserved for conferences.
"This gives parents a good op·
portunity to find out why their kids
might he doing badly,' ' he said.
The board accepted a second calen·
dar which would begin teachers on
September 4 and students the next
day. Total school days would be liM!,
with two left out for conferences .
The board also approved a
curriculum program recommended
by Dan Morris. The program, entitled
Curriculum Career Awareness, is a
consulting service brought into
schools to show students job skills and
other employment areas following
graduation. Morris said 35 teachers

would be involved wtth the program.
Air application to continue Youth
Employment Training Program also ·
received a nod from the board. The
$17,000 for the YETP would be
processed through CETA.
The board also approved bids from
Downing and Childa insurance agen·
ts, on student accident insurance and
fleet insurance; Meigs Tire Center for
tires and tubes; AM!and Oil Co. for
gasoline, oil, anti.freeze and fuel oil;
Broughton Foods for milk and dairy
products; Betsy JWss for bread and
bai\ery products; Chef's .Pantry for
meats, and Midland Grocery for dry
goods.
Board member Virgil King was
chosen as Meigs' candidate for the All
Ohio School Board AssociaUon. Supt.
Gleason made the recommendation
based on King's 22 years vrlth the
board.
"He has a long line of. things he's
done for the schools that should be
conaldered," he said.

_,

ud coUec·

11011 syatem. RullaDd Mayor Euceae
1'boii1J11011 reeetved $ll,!IZ5 ud
RadDe Mayor Cbarles Pyles .-,Z50.
The m011ey !J llii llltem~t.fee l•n
from tbe EmerceDcy Vlllllge Capital
Improvement Rotary Flmd ( EV.
CIRF), adinlnllte~ by tbe Oblo
EPA, wllb fuadlapprop• Llted by tbe
Ohio General Assembly. Goal of the
EVCIRF prog1 m !J to eDible u
m~ny Oblo villages u po~slble to gel
tbelr needed water service lm·
provemenll uudenray, EVCffiF
!Olllll provide lbe lnllbd money for
tbe plwonlne pbue of ltwl!rage or
pubUc nter 1111J1111y oy1tem Jm.
provemeats. Tbeoe loans to
SyraC~J~e, Racllle ud RutlaDd were
among 13 village loa• present. lions
lbat will be anrded by tbe Oblo
EPA for needed eavlronmenlal plan·
DiDg proJecll during tbe 78-'lt bien·
Ilium tolallDg $750,000.

New Haven council awards sewer pacts
NEW HAVEN - Two contracts for
sewer construction were awarded by
the New Haven Town Council during
a recent meeting.
Low bidders awarded the con·
tracts were the Adrian and Wilson
construction companies.
Construction on the new system is
expected to begin shortly.
In other business, the council
voted to erect a stop sign at the
corner of Danny Sayre' s and
Lowman's house !lnd a decision was
made to purchase other needed

Meigs' Local Board of Education
Tuesday night awarded Hackett
Roofmg, Middleport, a contract to
reP&amp;ir the roof at Meigs High School.
A bid of $138,000 from Hackett
Roofing, Middleport, was approved
after discussion on the merits of
Hackett using Tro-Cal sealer on the
roof.
Administrative assistant Dwight
Goins explained cracks were likely to
form on the high school roof soon.
Goins had consulted vrlth an engineer
who inspected the roof and concluded
it would need repair .
A bid of $137,9113 had been offered by
Tri-State Roof.ing and Sheet Metal, a
West . Virginia-based firm, but the
board was il)lpressed by the sealer
used by Hackett and four additional
panels being added to every fool of
the roof to increase protection .
Goins said be would consult further
with Carl Schirmer, a member of the
Department of Engineering staff at

street signs.
Buildin g permits were issued to
G.0 . Roush , Toby Oldaker and'
Houseco Builders.
Attending the meetin g were
Charles Smith , mayor ; Wendy
Divers , recorder ; Mike Fields, Pat
Fields, David Jones, Jeff Mankin
and James MacKnight, council
members : Orlando Smith, Howard
Smith , Ron Robinson, David
Gillispie, Doc Fields, Bob Roush and
Carl Wiles.

Mason council negotiates
water purchase-agreement
MASON - A poss_ible water buying
contract was negotiated Monday
evening by the Mason County Public
Service District and the Mason Town
Council, during a re&amp;War council
meeting.
Calvin Smith, general manager of
the public service district, talked
with the council concerning the
purchase of water to serve
Foglesong and Hanging Ro ck
Roads, both of which lie near the
town linnits.
The county will lay the water lines
after plans have been made to buy
water to serve the areas. No action
was taken on this at the Monday
The council also asked Smith, who
serves as the town engineer, to
contact Maurice Renneker and the
LeFebre Association of Cincinnati
regarding water level controls on
the storage tank and pumping

system of the new water system.
Complaints were heard by town
residents concerning lots overgrown
with weeds. The council has asked
lot owners to clear the weeds and
underbrush as soon as possible .
A request was made of the council
to put gravel on the road leading to
the ballfield, but no action was taken
on the matter.
The council has issued a reminder
that parents will be held responsible
for any children caught discharging
BB guns or air rifles within city
linnits. They also urge parents to
place lights, reflectors, or reflector
tape on their children's bicycles.
In other action, council agreed to :
- Pay all outstanding bills ; and
- Issue a trailer permit for Glen
Tumbleson to be put in Zuspan 's
Trailer Court .
It weas noted that during the last

regular council meeting, Fred
raylor was appointed to the new
position of council president.
Those attending were Mayor
Charlotte Jenks, Recorder Lois Test
and council members,. Ed Perry,
Fred Taylor, Lawrence Roush and
Catherine Smith.
·

SEEKING APPUCANI'S
Pomeroy Village is accepting applications for patrolman. Ap·
plications may be picked up at the office of the mayor.

EXTENDED FORECAST
Friday tbrougb SIUiday - Fair .
Friday tbrougb· Sllilday wllb blgb
temperalw'ell ID lbe 1101 ud IOWI Ill
the 801.
:;:::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;

If-"
----" When a storm knocks down o line il co n put thousands of fom·
ilies and bu sinesse s 0 ul of co ntocl w ith the resl of the world. We
can't stop the storms , but we lry lo g e t lhe d a mage fixed fast.
"That's where I come in ... lwenly·four ho urs a day. As I tell my
friends , 'When a line cornes .down , they get me up: Bull really
don'l mind il.ll makes me feel I'm an impo rtant part of providing
1he besltelephone servi,ce possible, Thai's why I'm proud to be
one of lhe people Ge.neral Telephone is tal,~!ng (
aboul when they say We ke ep you la lkmg .

ij i ¥1

Brent William'
Lineworlce(
Cambridge, Ollie
One of lh&lt;
100,000 GrE
professionals whc
are working 1c
bring yov beHe1
and more efficient
telephone service

KITCHEN AREA- This Is the ~-completed
kitchen at the new 100:bed nursing home being built by
Amerlcare Corp, of Columbus, three miles north of the ·
Rock Springs Fairgrounds on old St. Rt. 33. The

t'

.opening is now set for mid-8eptember. Residents may

contact the Meigs county Senior Citizens Center in
Pomeroy for applications aor patients and em·
ployment or call Americare's office 1-457·7353.

One

NURSING STATIONof the nurse's stations
at the new 1oo.bed nursing home being built on old St.
Rt. 33 three miles north of Rock Springs Falrgrount',

is shown above. '!'he opening date of the·ntirslng home

is now mid-8epterilber.

�3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, July 18, 19'19

Parker earns MVP in annual all-stilr game

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Wednesday , July 18, 1979

Sohio hails

Carter~s

CLE VELAND (AP I
The questions about c~ rter 's plan s for
St:andQrd ·Oii Co. (Ohio ), which. has domestic oil development.
Sohio owns 53 percent of the oil
large holdings of Alaskan oil , has
hailed President Carter's plans to reserves in Prudhoe Bay on Alaska's
North Slope and ha s ·expressed
limit for eign oil imports.
But Richard M. Donaldson , Sohio's interes t in further exploration fo r oil
vice president for government and m the United States. It ha• also
public affairs, said Monday that the complained about long goverrunent
Cleve land-based com pany ha s review. periods for petroleum project

Editorial opinions,
comments

IN WASHINGTON
Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

Senate's appeal slips
By Richard E. Cohen
WASIDNGTON (NEA) - Rep.
Mickey Edwards recently decided
that the House can be a horne.
The Oklahoma Republican surprised many people both inside and outside his home state when he chose not
to run for the Senate in 1980.
In doing so, he joined a growing
nwnber of congressional devotees
who find the House a more interesting
and combative political arena than
the Senate.
Statewide polls had given Edwards
a good chance to succeed retiring
GOP Sen. Henry Bellmon in nelrt
year's election. But his refusal to run
gives the Democratic Party a good
chance to capture a seat in what is ••peeled to be a bad year nationally for
its senators.
Edwards, who has represented the
Oklahoma City area in the House
since1977, said tlie "ego satisfaction"
of serving in the Senate was not
enough reason to make the race,
which would require ignoring his
family and his House seal and spending three to four days a week for
more than a year getting ·known
across Oklahoma.
He was under considerable
pressure from GOP leaders to run for
the seat to help tbe party win a Senate
majority but, he decided, "ultimately
it'smy career."
One factor that influenced his decision was that "the Senate is filled with
loners and I like work)ng with people." He dism!S.ed the prevailing notion that the Senate is higher ranking
than the House. This view stems partly from the Senate's responsibility for
ratifying treaties and confirming
presidential nominations.
As the Senate regularly gets bogged
down on a few major issues each
year, hmvever, many persons see it as
a quiet debating society where fine
points are thrashed out endlessly and
tittle is ever resolved. By contrast,
the House is like a raucous national
town meeting where tough issues are
raised and the votes counted.
The Senate is filled with big egos
who appear regularly on national
television. Few House members are
recognized outside their districts;
some are not even well-known on
their home turf.
. But the image of Senate majesty is
becoming less appealing, as was
shown by the defeat of more than onethird of all incumbents seeking new
Senate tenns in both 1976 and 1978.
In a body as large as the House,
members have few committee
assignments and can concentrate on
issues importarit to them and their
constituents. Edwards, for example,
is the senior Republican on the subcommittee that deals with the Occupational Safety and Health Ad·

ministration and has regularly lambasted the regulatory agency for undue interference with businesses.
Tbe House often is more feisty than
the Senate and inclined to reflect
public sentiment rather than the
views of a few wise old men.'
Allhoug)l Democrats hold a 276-159
edge over Republicans in the House,
Speaker Tip O'Neill and his
lieutenants have to struggle to get a
majority on tough issues. This results
from the breakdown of the seniority
system and the influ. of new
lawmakers who are better educated
and more concerned than their
predecessors about the national im·
plications of their actions . No longer
do they have to "go along to get
along," as the legendary Speaker
Sam Rayburn advised a generation
ago.
Although some of these trends have
been duplicated in the Senate, the
walls still shake when commi tlee
chainnen are challenged.
For Mickey Edwards, it is enough
reason to stay in the House. He likes
his job and thinks he can get more
done where he is.
For those who think a seat in the
House gallery gives the best and
cheapest entertainment in town, his
decision is gratifying.

Meigs
Property
Transfers

action
permit~ .

Earlier this year . Sohio scrapped
plans fo r an oil pipeline from Long
Beach, Ca lif.. to Midland, Texa s,
beca u•e delays in the permit process
reduced the profitability of the
project. •
',
Donaldson said Carter's proposed
ceiling on foreign oil imports is a step
in the right direction and that Carter's
call to reduce energy waste is
essential. And he said he is heartened
by plan• to cut government red tape
lor compa nies planning energy
deve lopment projects.
But Donaldson said the president's
address left some things to be
considered, especially with regard to
rarter 's proposal to create new
energy-development age ncie s and
programs .
"Collec tively, the president's
proposals will put a lot more
government into everybody's lives as
far as energy development and use
goes ," he sa id.
"The program is virtually silent on
development of new oil and gas
resources that must carry the major
burden of the country's energy needs
in the decade of transition ahead ."
Donaldson added, " How all this
impacts on the fight against inflation
isn't altogether clear yet."

.-

NEW YORK ( AP) - The dollar's
value slid on world markets , while
prices of gold rose . Stock market
averages barely moved. Economists
left sfiort-range forecasts unchanged .
Except for increases in shares of
certain companies that might benefit
immediately, investors weren't
encouraged .by President Carter's
energy proposals. Nothing that wasn't
anticipated, they said in unison.
The most pronounced changes, in
bonds and commodity prices, were
generally negative. Bond prices fell ;
nJE DAILY SENTrNEL

IUSPS l.fS-960 1
~'b

. . . . ...,._d,_

~~ ~._

DEV6TEO TO THE
INTEREST OF

MEIGS-MASON AREA
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CltyF.rlllor
Publlsht.'d daUy e!u:epl Sllturday by The OhiD
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Subscription rates: Dellve reil by carrler
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Ye&amp;r, p7.50i SUr m oal.lwl, fU.$1 ;

~ 1:11&lt;.&gt;!1.,

•

th.s ~

$8.50; Ehewhere 132.00 year ; Sh: month§
$17.09; Three monlhs, P .OO. SubscrlptJon prke
lnch~des_§unday Times- Sentinel.

o'

..'

By Will Grimsley AP Correspondent

traders . teared the program was
inflationary. Commodity traders felt
the same way ; they bid up prices.
In all , initial reactions from
investment markets provided very
little support for the Carter energy
Donald F. Graff
program, a program designed not
only to resolve the energy crisis but to
save his presidency as well.
First reactions, however, might not
be the final judgment, especially since
the program wa s so complex, and
vague in some areas, that
cats, seemed to make no difference in
By Don Graff
assessments might take several days,
Contrary to popular wisdom, them the survival statistics with one inand perhaps weeks or months.
But an analysis of first~ay results, that has don't always git -and when teresting e•ception. Perhaps it
they don't, what happens?
.shouldn't be mentioned to avoid starplus inierviews, shows clearly that:
mini-diplomatic
incident
in
this
ting a run on the limited market, but a
A
- Investors weren't charged with
one-person
category posted a 100 percase.
confidence by the speech, de~pite the
cent
survival
rate .
The
U.S.
gasoline
shortage
is
cramlong buildup and the suggestions
during the week that it would Ill: hard- ping the driving style of delegations to
The pel was a,nlguana .
hilling, the President 's . most the United Nations and one of !bern
A capital developmeol
wants
the
organization
to
pressure
important address, a " turning point. "
the
United
States
into
coming
up
with
If
he
had known he would end up
- Many apparently feel the
special
relief
measures
for
the
providing
evidence for his enemies,
proposals would prevent a balanced
Karl
diplomats
and
their
chauffeurs.
Marx
might have given up
budget, might add to or prolong the
The
demand
comes
from
the
amwriting
early
in his revolutionary
life of existing inflation, and could
career.
ba8.'!8dor
of
Iraq,
third
largest
OPEC
involve the federal government more
· producer and one of the leading price
A first edition of his "Communist
deeply in business decisions.
Manifesto, " the call to anru of the
-Some feeling exists that the boosters.
There has been no word from of. worldwide proletarian uprising,
President's acknowledged problems
ficial
quarters as to how the matter is recently brought $6.1,000 at a Paris
of leadership might make it difficult
going
to · be resolved, but the non· auction . Only a dozen copies are
for him to enact any packsge of longdiplomatic American public could known to exist of the work corange energy proposals.
-Comments were made that the probably come up With a quick authored with Friedrich Engels in
1848.
program doe s little to change enough answer :
Gel
in
line.
Lizard
power•
The record price only goes to prove
immedale conditions. While solutions
The
researchers
aren't
sure
exactly
the
truth of a basic law of economiC!
to short-range problems weren 't
really· expected, their scarcity why, but the preliminary evidence in- that capitalists have known about all
removed a potential jolt to markets. dicates pets may do more than pro- along -supply and demand.
To business people, the Sunday vide company In their owners'lives.
Furred and feathered friends may
Collectors cool oo 1oup
night address and two subsequent
prolong
life.
Demand
can slso drop, with a conspeeches on Monday, contained a
year-long
follow-up
study
of
pe&lt;&gt;sequent
effect
on prices, as is happenA
disturbing contradiction in that
ple
treated
for
l"'rious
beart
problems
ing
with
the
work
of pop artist Andy
Washington was berated for
liinitations and looked to for solutions . at a Philadelphia hospital, as Warhol.
reported by the Health Insurance InThe paintings of soup cans he was
stitute, found tbe survival rate turning out in the early '705 for prtces
significantly higher for those with on the order of $60,000 currently
pets than for those without.
might be e.pected to be had for as UtThe pel-human bond may give in· Ile as $30,000, according to a recent
dividuals something more to live for , Wall Street Journal report quoting
it is theorized, or it may be that the spokesmen of the New York auction
pet-;&gt;wning type is somehow different house, Sotheby Parke Bernet.
Quite a drop in less than a decade
are put into chairs for eight hours and and more resilient.
but
The
type
of
pet,
mostly
dogs
and
thai's still a lot of chicken noodle .'
administered uncomfortable but not
dangerous electrical shocks. The
shocks can be shut off by turning on a
light. One of the monkeys is
restrained so that he is unable to
reach the light. He is, thereby,
prevented from having any control
over his stressful environment. Both
monkeys showed effects of stress.
Even those who could control or shut'
off the shock, evidenced elevated
blood pressure and some
degeneration of the heart muscle.
However, as might be expected, the
MOSCOW (API - Foreign Minister Me.ico's rancher-governor, Bruce
restrained animals failed worse. Andrei Gromyko 's 70th birthday King , says he may start riding his
However, five out of six collapsed present from Soviet leaders came in horse to work as part of his personal
with a type of heart block and four of the fonn of a congratulatory telegram energy conservation program.
these died of cardiac atTest.
The governor said Tuesdsy he has
praising his 40 years of diplomatic
Many other e.periments related to service.
set a goal of cutting his energy
stress have been conducted. Most of
Tass, ·the Soviet news agency, said consumption between 5 percent and 10
these have shoWn fairly conclusively Tuesday the message came from the · percent. "If nece8.'!8ry, I'll bring up
that stress faciors play an important Communist
Party
Central one of my saddle horses and ride to
role in influencing many disease Committee, the presidium of the work."
states. Much of the evidence even Supreme Soviet and the Soviet
He said the thermostat at the
suggests stress as a direct initiating government's Council of Ministers. governor's mansion in Santa Fe has
cause of disease. Much more resear"At all posts of party and state work been turned up Ill 78 degrees, and said
ch needs to be conducted before we you devote your energies and he probably will walk more and use
fully understand this phenomenon. I e•perience to boundless ' devotion to fuel-efficient automobiles for his
hope that throug)l this research we the cause of communist construction travels around the state .
may some day be able to predict and and to the great ideals of MarxismEarlier this summer King directed
prevent many of the medical Leninism," the telegram said .
state agencies to develop programs
problems which result from enfor a minimum 10 percent energy
vironmental factors such as stress.
SANTA FE, N.M. (AP)
New savings.

COMMENTARY

Briefly noted

Health Review

Names. • •
•
zn the news

CAMDEN PARK RESERVED
SATURDAY-JULY 21st
"ANNUAL SUMMER OUTING"
ENGINEERING DEPARTMENT
CONSTRUCTION DEPARTMENT
AND

K.V. COMPUTING DEPT.
OF

UNION CARBIDE TECH. CENTER
OPEN TO PUBLIC AFTER 5 P.M.
U.S. 60 WEST-HUNTINGTON
CLOSED EVERY MONDAY EXCEPT LABOR DAY

Royals edge
Eastern team

goats to go around . But the
outstanding individual undoubtedly winner of the Most Valuable Player
Award - was gargantuan Dave
Parker of the Pittsburgh Pirates, who
played right field the entire game.
You 've got to hand it to Lee Mazzilli
of the Mets, hitting tbat home run in
the eighth to tle the game. You can't
discount gutsy Bruce Sutter of the
Cubs for his " split-finger'' strikeout
mastery in the ninth . But Parker, 6
feet , ~ inches, and 230 pounds , a
Goliath in a solid gold unifonn, was a
spectacle to remember forever.
In the seventh he lost Jim Rice's
towering fly ball in the lights. Big
Dave recovered the ball, wheeled and
cut the dashing ·Red Soxer down at
third - eliminating a threat . In the
eighth with two men on base, the
Pirates. outfielder outdid himself on
Graig Nettles' sharp hit to right. He
charged the ball and shot it on a fly to
catcher Gary Carter of the Expos ,
who snuffed out a charging Brian
Downing at home .
Parker is renwoned for his offensive
skills - league batting champion the
last two years, 1978 MVP, first in total
bases and a bidder for baseball's
triple crown - batting average, home
runs, and rbi titles.
This night he was the complete ball
player - a man to applaud in a nervestabbing if not a perfect game .

By Gres Bailey
Cluis Shank got the only Tiger hit, a
There was good pitching and good single in the second inning . Mike
hittiqg last night in.the Syracuse Lit- Chancey and David Ebersbach each
tie League Tournament.
doubled for the losers, and. Doug
In the first game, good pitching Owens had a single.
allowed the Pomeroy Tigers to take a
The Tigers will battle Fruth 's Thurf&gt;-1 victory over Syracuse's Hubbard's sdsy at8: 45 for the ~t to advance to
Greenhouse.
the semifinals. The other game ThurThen in the second contest, Fruth's · sday at 7:30 has Tuppers Plains
Pharmacy banged out 16 hits to come meeting the Athens Medics. There
from behind for a 2Ch'l win over Vin-' are now eight learns left in the tour· '
ton.
ney.
In that first game, winning pltcber
Fruth'sfoundthemselvestrailing3I..oog tossed a three-hitter but 2 after two innings, but tben exploded
Syracuse 's Mark Salser and 'Darin for 18 runs in the final four innings for
ROWJh teamed up to ta!l8 a one-hitter that IQ!Hided win. Tim Swisher got
to no avail as the Tigers never trailed. the .win with Todd Dee! taking the
All three Syracuse hits came in the loss.
last two innings .
Kelly Riffle and Alex AWitin led the
winners with three singles and a
double eacb. Brian Wedge slammed
RC WINS TOURNAMENT
two singles and a home run, and
The Royal Crown softball team cap- Swisher, Dennis Rodgers, and Dwain
tured two more tournaments during Myers each singled.
the past two weekends.
For Vintoo, John Diddle and Deel
In district play at Pt. Pleasant, RC each doubled, and Brian Hawks had a
defeated Hockenberry's Pllarmacy s- single.
5, Mead 's Auto Repair ~. and
Tonight at 7:30 in the first game,
Hockenberry's again by a score of 31- Green I meets the Middleport In7.
.
dians, and Murray City battles the
Then in Hockenberry's tournament Gallipolis Red Sox in the final game of
at'Apple Grove, W. Va., RC defeated \benight.
Abele 's 1~. I.O.O.F . 21~. Skyline
Lanes 11-6, and Putnam Trust 7-.1.
The "BoWers" have now won 36 of
SCIOTO DOWNS
their last 38 games and will advance
COLUMBUS, Ohio (API
to semi-&lt;!late play this week~ at Popamatic look the lead in the stretch
and went on to win the featured race
Ravenswood .
at Scioto Downs Tuesday night for his
first victory in five starts this year.
The winner , circling the mile in
2:114, returned $8.60, $4.20 and $4.
Steady Rich paid SUO and $3.60 for
second and Don Didit, $5.60 for show.
The 6-4-3 first race trifecta was
routing Har1ion Ismail of Rhodesia 6- worth $1,669.80.
2, 6-3, and Paraguay's Victor Pecci
A crowd of 4,331 wagered $331,092.

"He didn 't throw anything close to
the plate," Mazzilli commented. "I
really wanted to get a hit and I swung
at one bad ball and missed it.
Truthfully, I liked the home run better
than the walk."
Guidry appeared angry with
Lemon, the man fired earlier this
season as manager of the Yankees .
The Cy Young Award winning pitcher
who helped the Yanks Ill the World
Series title last season said:
" I' m not happy with the
circumstances of going in there. When
you come in with the bases loaded,
you ain't got no room to play with.'.'
Relief ace Bruce Sutter of · the
Chicago Cubs took credit for the
victory, pitching shutout ball the final
two innings. It was the second straight
All.Star win for the right-hander wbo
throws what he calls a split-finger fast
ball, something like a forkball.
Don Drysdale, in 1967 and 1968, was
the last to achieve two consecutive
AII.Star triumph~.
A crowd of 58,905 jarruhed tbe
Kingdome for Seattle's largest
baseball crowd ever and in addition to
the game saw striptease dancer
Morganna make good her boast that
she would run onto the field. She did,
fully clothed and planted a kiss on
George Brett of Kansas City, who was
stepping into the batter's bo•.
· The Angels' Nolan Ryan started for
theAL,struckoutthefirsttwobatters
but lben gave up a walk to the
Dodgers' Steve Garvey, a triple
Philadelphia's Mike Schmidt and a
double to Cincinnati's George Foster.
Ryan gave up another run In the
second that knotted tbe count at' 3-3.
The AL jumped on tw!Hime Cy
Young Award winner Steve Carlton
for three runs in the first, highlighted
by Fred Lynn's two..-un horner in his
only time at bat, He had been
bothered by a groin pull and had run
into the fence trying to get Schmidt's
hit .
The AL added two more off. Joaquin
Andujar of the Houston Astros on
singles by the Angels' Don Baylor and
Boston's Carl Yastrzemski, pill'&lt; a hit
batsman a~d an error.
In a bad night for Cy Young Award

winners, Gaylord Perry of San Diego,
gave up three hits and the final AL run
while facing only three batters in the
sixth.
The Nationals had chipped aw'y in
putting their overall record at 31·18-1.
Singles by the Phlllles' Bob Boone, the
Cards' Lou Brock and the Dodgers'
Davey Lopes brought a run In the
second.
Another scored in the third thanka
to a Sctunidt double and one more was
scored in the sixth when the Padres'
Dave Winfield doubled and Carter
singled him home.
Mazzllli 's homer led off the eighth
but then ~ern put down the side.
With one out in the ninth, he walked
Joe Morsan who reached seclilld on a
balk. Parker was intentionally
passed, thus finishing the evening
with just one infield hit. Craig
ReynoldS of the Astros fouled out and
Larry Parrish drew a walk.
That's when Lemon called on
Guidry, who promptly walked
Mazzilll forcing in the run. He then
retired Winfield but the damage was
irretrievable.
Although each managet played
nearly all of their 2&amp;-!nan squads,
Parker played the whole game and
Lasorda declared, "If the game 'had
gone 20 innings, he would have stayed
in there .n
Lemon, in conclusion and In
probably his last game wearing a
Yankee
pinstripe
uniform,
commented, "We had opportunities,
but we let tbem go by. We didn't get
walks with the bases full."

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Sports briefs
Hy The Associated Press

BASEBALL
SEATI'LE ( AP J -

Lee Maullll ol

the New Yprk Mets slugged a pinchhit home run to tie the game in the
eighth inning, then drew a basesloaded walk to force home the winning
run in th e ninth as the National
Leag ue defeated the American
League 7-9 for its eighth straight AIJ.
Star Game vi ctory.
A capacity crowd of 58,905 jammed
the Kingdome to see the National
League 's 16th victory in the last 17
games, stretching their advantage to
31-111-1 for the 50 All-star Games
played since 1933.
Dave Parker of Pittsburgh, who
drove in a run with a sacrifice fly in
the second inning and cut down
California's Brian Downing with a
magnificienl throw to home plate in
the eighth, was selected tbe game's
Most Valuable Player. Chicago CUbs
relief ace Bruce Sutter was the
winning pitcher for the second year in
a row , while Te•as' Jim Kern
absorbed the defeat.
TRACK AND FIELD
OSLO, Norway (AP) - England's
wonder boy, Sebastian Coe, set a
world record for the mile; winning the
Dubai Golden Mile in 3 minutes, 48.95
seconds.
.
John Walker of New Zealand held
the old record of 3:49.4, established in
Goteborg, Sweden, in 1975.
It was the second world record
established by Coe, 22, in 12 days. On
July 5 he also set a world record of
I :42.33 in the 800 meters .
TENNIS

By Greg Bailey
In Pony League action, host
Eastern and the Pomeroy Royals battled down to the wire as the Royals
came up with a run in the top of the
seventh for a 14-13 victory. The
Royals are now 6-4 overall while
Eastern slipped to~.
With the score lied l:H111 in the bottcJrn d ·. the sixth and three runs
already horne, Eastern hit into a rare
triple play that snuffed out the fire .
The Eastern batter hit a grOWlder to
the pitcher who threw to the catcher
for the first out. The catcher then
threw to first for the second out, and
the first baseman then alertly threw
; back to home in time to get the second
;runner coming in.
.
~ Randy Stewart got the ~ in relief
:while Brian Well took the loss, also in
·relief.
, Joho Smith socked a triple and
single to lead the Royals whlle
Stewart and Brian Whaley each had a
· double and single. Otis Core had a
triple, and Nick Leonard and Chris
Allen each singled.
John Beaver and Mike Bissell each
had two singles for Eastern. Ken
Newell ad a double while Rob Smith,
Leonard Koenig, Well, Troy Guthrie,
and Deron Jewett each singled.
Unescore:
p
021 604 1-14 9 6
103 603 0- 13 10 6
E

and All.Star reserve, evened the count
wi!h his home run in the eighth inning
on a ~2 pitch from Texas ' Jim Kern.
Kern, who had given up only one
home run this year, observed wryly,
"He went with the pitch and hit it 317
feet fair ."
The dimensions of the Kingdome
are 316 feet down the foul lines and
Mazzilli 's shot landed at the top of the
fence.
It W&lt;IS Mazzilli again in the nir]th
only this time he drew a bases loaded
walk from Guidry who was called into
the game by Manager Bob Lemon
after Kerr\ had walked the bases full.

tourney
•
•
action contmues

Sports. World

SEATTLE (AP) - A guy so big that
you'd think he would do better moving
_, pianos makes two defensive plays that
are absolutely mind-boggling. A little ,
:. ' dark-haired guy from New York's
rag-tsg Mets hJts the game-lying
home run in his first time at bat.
The game's best home run hitter,
Mike Schmidt, goes eyeball-t(H!yeball
with the killer speedball pitcher,
Nolan Ryan, in the very first inning
and hits a massive triple. The host
city 's lone representative, Bruce
Boehle, comes to bat in the sinh and
bounces a hit over short. Bedlam in
the Kingdome.
With the bases lull, the 1978 Cy
Young honoree, walks home the
winning run and a bullpen specialist of
the Chicago Cubs blows down Boston's
Jim Rice and Rick Burleson for the
last two outs as the National League
beats the American League for. the
eighth straight time in baseball 's 50th
AII.Star game.
Add to that these ingredients. There
are 58,906 crammed into the tight
Kingdome with gadgets and red,
white and blue streamers hanging
from the rafters. A guy in a chicken's
uniform is doing silly routines on top
of the dugouts.
Morganna , the notorious sports
stripteaser, leaps out of the stands,
runs to home plate and plants a kiss on
George Brett 's startled features. We
didn't think George protested half
enough . And then thL~ lanky guy in
shorts. tee ,})irt and baseball &lt;:liP runs
out on the field and plays tag with the
cops.
That, in a nutshell, is the 1979 All•
Star game. won by the National
Lesguers 7-IJ.
Baseball? Don't be stupid . It 's
theater. Moybe that's loo kind a won! .
It •s vaudeville . But it's fresh . It's fun .
It 's unpredictable. And the fans loved
every minute of it.
So what If the National League has
won the last eight in a row , 16 ·Of the
last 17, 31 to 18 with one iie overall? Do
you think Chub Feeney, the NL prexy ,
can throw out his chest and brag about
superiority ? Of course not. Tbe All·
Star game proves nothing in the way
of comparative league strength . No
more than in the World Series in
»hich the American League has a 45
to 30 edge, 27-19 in the period since the
· All.Star game's inception in 1933.
Let's face it . It's a great show, with
players moved in and out of the
lineups like basketball players, The
All.Star game has none of the
organized rh ythm of regular season
play or World Series, none of those
tense duels in strategy that are more
akin to war and chess battles.
Let's have no more of those
barroom hassles about one league
being better than the other. Let's just
savor II for what it is - a look at our
heroes in a fun-filled setting .
In this one, there were heroes and

the AL leading &amp;-5. ,
Then in the eighth, when tbe Angels'
Brian Downing tried to score from
second on a single by the Yankees'
Graig Nettles, Parker threw him out
at home . Tbe ball reached catcher
Gary Carter of Montreal on the fly and
he blocked the sliding Downing from
the plate .
"That play was perfect all the
way," declared Mana ger Tommy
Lasordli, who has to hope that some of
the AII.Star good fortune will rub off
on his defending champion Dodgers,
who languish in last place.
Mazzilli, a 24-year-;&gt;ld outfielder

~yracuse

Today's

Business mirror

At their groceri es in 1978,
Mildred V. Brooks to William E. Americans bought the equivalent of
Francis, Jo Ann Francis, 1.74 acres, 79,318,000 one-pint jars of pickles,
making them a bigger seller than
Olive.
corn
tomatoes, beans or peas,
1
James 0. Swain, Deen E. Swain to
according
to National Georgraphic.
Lyle J . Swain, Mary R. Swain, Parvets, Olive.
Linda P. Carpenter to James W.
Carpenter, .90 acre, Orange.
James A. Taylor, dec. to Lester
Taylor, Clarence Taylor, Lucille
Rose, Arthur A. Taylor, Aff. for
trans., Salisbury.
Lester Taylor, Marjorie Taylor 1
Clarence E. Taylor, Betty Taylor,
BY LAMAR C. Mll..LER, D.O.
Lucille Rose, Lester Rose, Arthur A.
Clinical Assocla te Professor
Taylor, !rene Taylor to Arthur A.
of Family Medicine
Taylor, Irene Taylor, Corrected,
Oblo University College
Salisbury.
of Osteopalhlc Medicine
STRESS
Many of my colwnns in the past
have discussed and answered
ort the risk factors involved
questions
Stretch meat protein for dishes
in heart disease, especially coronary
such as chop suey, stews and more by
using less meat than usual and adding artery disease . The three most comshelled peanuts. The dish will have a mon factors - smoking, cholesterol,
nice texture and maintain its and hypertension - have all been
discussed before but they account for
nutritional level at the same time.
only 50.00 percent of the cases of
coronary artery disease.
Other risk factors including lack of
exercise, genetics, diabetes and even
a person's sex are also important, but
fail to account for the remaining percentages. However, another important factor -stress -is considered
a contributor to many heart
problems. Much research is being
done with biofeedback as a way to
control stress. It is hoped that by
reducing stress health problems like
hypertension, peptic ulcer and
coronary heart disease can be
brought under control.
, Some rather interesting e•periments have been considered
through the American Heart
Association. In the April, 1979 issue of
"Modern Concepts of Cardiovascular
Disease," Doctors J . C. Bruen and R.
S. Eliot disc~~SSed several of these
research studies.
In one e•periment two adult male
tree shrews - a submissive animal
. and a dominant el.perienced fighter are introduced. The e•pected re.
follows with the dominant animal ~
ting much the best of the submissi
one. They are then separated bef• ·
any lasting physical damage is done.
Ne.t, the animals are placed in cages
ne•t to each other. The submissive
animal spent 90 percent of his·waking
hOUrs keeping an eye on the dominant
one. In every case within two to 16
days, ' even though the subordinate
animal ate ahd drank, he went into a
coma and died of kidney failure.
In a second group of experiments,
" I fell in love wit h someone I mef in a gas
confined pairs of squirrel monkeys
line. rr
,

Berry's World

SEATTLE (AP) - Basebi&gt;ll '.s Ron Guidry of the Yankees -in a
annual All.Star game cim be counted ronfrontation 3,000 miles from New
on for surprises and the 1979 edition York?
. ' came
Or that in the intimate confines of
up to that standard except tbe
•.
National League won again and that's the enclosed Kingdome that four
walks in the ninth inning WOIIld decide
•·... · routine.
:~
· But. who would have thought tbe the 7~ game for the eighth straight
...
throwmg arm
Pittsburgh's Dave NL victory and their 16th of the past
;:
Parker, the muscUlar giant, would 17.
I! win the Most Valuable Player Award "When you're not hitting, you have
~ ·• for him? After all, it was his bat that to do something," said the 6-foot-5
won him MVP honors for the league Parker, who weigba 230 pounds.
What he did was throw out Jim Rice
'
last season.
·
at
third base after the Boston star hit
And who would have through! the
a
sky
high fly that dropped for a
;• Mets' Lee Mazzilli would homer in his
to
open the seventh inning with
double
first All-star at-bat and then outduel

WASHINGTON , (AP ) - Fritz
Buehning, a 19-yearo{)ld amateur from
UCLA, was the lone player to solve tbe
patient games of the clay-court
specialists, beating Spain's Manuel
Orantes ~. 6-3, 6-4, in the first round
of the Washington Star lnternation~l

def-Un8 Erick lsltersl&lt;y W , !H.

In other matches, Raul Ramirez of
Mexico beat Australlan Ross Case 6-3,
6-3. Emilio Montano of Mexico topped
Australian John James 6-3, 6-0,
Argentina 's Jose-Luis Clerc beat
Sherwood Stewart 6-4, 6-1 and Spain's
Jose lligueras defeated John Sadrie 63, 6-4.

Home

SPECIAL NOTE
The Ken Amsbury Chapter, Izaak
Waltoo League of America, will hold
its aMual family picnic this Monday,
July 23, at the clubhouse near Chester
at 7p.m.
The club will furnish the meat and
famllies are aaked to bring a covered
dish and table service.

INDOOR-OUTDOOR CARPETING
• Fishing Tackle.and Rods
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Otherwise,
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straight sets, with top-seeded
Guillenno Vilas of Argentina beating
Jay Lapidus 7-9, 6-1, Harold Solomon

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4 -1bt I:!&amp;ilY Sentinel,'Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday , July 18, 1979

Tom Terrific meets press on own terms
CINCINNATI (AP) - Tom Seaver Cincinnati clubhouse while Seaver
meets the press oo his terms, which is lakes an extra long shower &lt;Jr gets
a prerogative he's earned as a three- something to eat after a game, but the
Reds' ace isn't likely to tell a writer to
time Cy Young Award winner.
There might be a wait in the "take a ... hike" as a lesser-known St.

Indians welcome
three day·break
CLEVELAND (AP ) -A yoWtg man
can make a fine living playing a kid's
game, but even baseball players need
a break.
The three-&lt;lay All-Star hiatus comes
annually within a lew days of the
middle of the 162-game season, a
welcome vacation lor all but th0541.
who are honored with a trip to the
midseason classic.
The only Cleveland Indians player
to make It to this year's All-Star Game
in Seattle Tuesday night was relief
pitcher Sid Monge. The rest of the
team was . spread far and -wide for
some relaxation and family time .
Third baseman Toby Harrah said,
"I'm going to motorcycle down to
_ West Virginia and visit some

relati.ves.tl
Designated hitter Cliff Johnson, a
recent addition to the roster, said,
"The wife and I are going to check out
a few places. I'd like to buy a bouse

here."
Third basema~utfielder Ted Cox
ssld, "I'm going to play some golf,
relax, maybe take in Sea World (in
nearby Aurora). And I'm going to

•

Baseball At A Glance
By The Associated Press
AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST
W. L. Pet.
Baltimore
59 31 .656
Boston
56 32 .636
Milwaukee
54 38 .587
New York
49 43 .533
Detroit
4.1 45 .soo
Cleveland
42 48 .41&gt;7
Toronto
29 47 .312
WEST
California
55 38 .591
TeKas
52 39 .571
Minnesota
48 41 · .539
Kansas City
4-4 47 .484
Chicago
41 50 .451
Seattle
«l 54 .426
Oakland
~ 69 .265

Tuesday's Game

National League AII ·Stars
American League Ali ·Stars 6
Wednesday's Games
No g'mes scheduled •
Thursday's Games
California at Baltimore, 2, (t·nJ
Chicago at Texas. 2 (1-nJ
Seattle at Boston, (n)
Oakland at New York, (nJ
Toronto at Milwaukee, (n )
Detroit at Minnesota, (n)
Clevelond at Kansas City , In)

GB

have my bWtion checked . I'm going to
have it operated on after the season
ends."
Outfielder Bobby Bonds and
Cleveland fireman Don Smith, who
handles the video tape machine lor
the Indians, planned a trip to an
rnmamed "fishing hole" somewhere
in Ohio, while outfielder Jim Norris
and utility player Ron Pruitt went on a
family fishing expedition to Kelley's
Island, in Lake Erie near Sandusky,
Ohio.
Pitcher Rick Wise said, "I've got
absolutely nothing planned. There's
really only two days off with a
workout Wednesday,. then travel to
Kansas City that night."
Catcher Ron Hassey, who spent
most of the first half of the season in
the minor leagues, said, "I haven't
seen much of the city, so I 'II try to get
aroWtd and see some of Cleveland.
And I might take in the Pro Football
Hall of Fame in Canton, too."
Several of the Indians, including
shortstop Tom Veryzer, pitcher David
Clyde, coach Joe Nossek and Manager
Jeff Torborg, were planlling trips to
Geauga Lake, another amusement
park in Aurora.
Everyone will be back tonight for
Ute flight to Kansas City, with the
Indians getting back into action
Thursday night. against the Royals .

Louis pitchet· did Ute last time the
Cardinals were here.
"Baseball is a grind," Seaver told
writers after beating the Chicago
Cubs just prior to the All-Star break .
" You're most successful when you try
to always play in Ute 95 to 98 range of
the percent of your ability."
The No.6 man on the all-time major
league strikeout list elaborated his
philosophy of baseball.
"When you try to do more then you
can do, you end up falling way short,"
he said. "The secret is to stay within
yourself, stay just short of that 100
percent mark.
"That 's the psyche of this game.
Just try to do what you can do ."
Seaver said that's why he didn't
change anything about his delivery or
concentration following a team
meeting Sunday, a meeting designed
to rouse the Reds from the doldrums
that had overtaken them during three
straight losses to the Cubs.
"You take (George ) Foster out of
the lineup and (Ken ) Griffey tries to
be a home run hitter," Seaver said as
an example of a player overextending
himself. "Ken ended up doing less for
the team than he normally can do."
Griffey is back on track now,
raising his average to .301 , and so is
Seaver with seven straight wins since
returning from a back injury.
Seaver coo tends he doesn't worry
about numbers, though - wins,
losses, earned run average or
strikeouts.
"The ,numbers will be there at the
end of the season, within a plus or
minus range, if you're consistent," he
said. "I don 't pay any attention to how
many consecutive games l've won or
how many strikeouts I have.
urve wori nine games, so the most I!
can win now is 10, right? I can't go
from nine to 20, so there's no use in
worrying whether or not I can win 20
games this year ."
Seaver's seven-game string is three

Demolition derby

2
6
t1
14

17
31112

planned at fair

2
5

Cut off and MaD
AU'I'().DEMOLITION-c&lt;&gt;NTEST-DERBY
c/o Fair Secretary's Office or Raee Track Office
Bax Z%1, Pomeroy, Ohio 45'789

10

13
15 112
30 112
7,

Name ...... ... .... . ........ . _. Address ... . .. .......... . ... .... _
Age·

City &amp;State ......... __ ......... __ ...... . Zip- -

! have read the rules and accept the decision of the Judges as final and
elect to use the ground or track in its present condition.
AU'I'O·DEM~ONTEST

(Date .......... . . ...... .. .. .. (Signature) ....... . ............ . . ..

NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST
W.L. Pet. GB
Montreal
50 35 .588
Chicago
47 38 .553 3
Philadelphia
50 41 .549 3
4/J .39 .541 ~
Pittsburgh
St. Louis
4-4 42 .512 6'1&gt;
New York
37 49 .430 13 112
WEST
Houston
Sol «l .574
Cincinnati .
48 45 .516 5112
San Francisco
45 48 .484 81h
San Diego
30 33 .4-48 12
Atlanta
39 52 .429 13 1h
Los Angeles
36 57 .387 171;,
Tuesday's Game
National League Ali ·Stars 7,
American League All -Stars 6
Weclnesday's Games
No games scheduled
Thursday's Games
Atlanta at Chicago
Houston at Pittsburgh, (n)
Cincinnati at st. Louis, I n)
New York at San Diego, (n )
Montreal at Los Angeles, (n)
Philadelphia at San Francisco, (n)

Sponsor's Name ...... , .. . ..... Car number requested .. ..... . ...... .

5- The Dally Sentinel. Middleoort-Pomeroy , 0 ., Wednesday , July 18, 1979
tian .for three years. and have no
more leanings towaru homosexuality.
Generation Rap
I'm now very much attracted to
By Ht·lo·n anti~ .... llutt. •l
girls, though haven't engaged in sex
yet. I don't plan to wait tmtil I 'm mar11DS DROWNED OUT TALKER
ried, however.
·. DEARHEIENANDSUE :
My advice to those who •are pulled
.
When I betlln to speak, or am In the
· · middle cl• sentence, people will butt toward gayness but don't want it for
themselves : try God. He did it for me.
: ! In llllktr talk over me.
. · I !mow I'm not a spell-binding -CHANGED AND HAPPY
: . stGryteUer; that at times I am not
; well-ilifonned m current evenla; and
. I am no good at telling a joke.
: Whatcanidotobeheard?-S.S. .
l11URSDAY
i DEARS. :
MAGNOIJA CLUB annual picnic
, Often it lan't what you say but the
; way that you !IBY it which brings on Thursday at Rllcine Dam on West
· the drown-Is. Perhapo your volee is Virglnis side. Bring covered dlsh,
: 110 10ft people scarcely hear you, or so beverage and table service ..
. monotoned they don't listen. Or you
. FRIDAY
i may be so shy ·you WJConsciously
SQUARE DANCE Friday Meigs
: reflect the idea you aren't worthy of Chapter Senior Citizens Center 8:30 to
i notice.
1:30. Music by Stringdusters. Ad·
: Take deep breaths and speak from mission $1. Children under 12 ad·
1 the bottool o1 your lungs. Wort on In- milled free .
; Oectl0111 - put a sparkle in your
SA11JRDAY
· smile, practice become more
WESLEY AN Holiness Anninlan
: animated too. Try out before the mir- Convention Saturday at Maplewood
: ror and on a lap! ·recorder . Use your lAke 7 p.m. _Speaker will be Clyde
: family u an audience.
Morri!l. Special singing.
' You needn't be a great storyteller:
OW FASHIONED ice cream social
. sincere interest goes further , at Red Crispin's comer, Long Batespedally if It 's combined with tom, between Methodist Church and
; enough self-esteem to lure you away Post Office, Saturday beginning at 5
: from the becllground. - HELEN
p.m. Country music will be provided.
Sponsored by Long Bottom Com• S.S.:
munity Allsociatioo.
Bulc 1illenen hardly ever becmte
HILLBILl-Y JUBILEE at home of ·
: spell-binders (unless theY take Norma and Burl Coleman, Hudson
; t;QIU'Ielln public speaking), but stuc!y Valley near Reedsville Saturday.
• and a little effort can make you so Potluck at 5 p.m. and music by Coun· well-iliformed that you 11 have no try Rebell7:30to II. Wiener roastat8
: trouble keepinc conversations going p.m. Admnlssloo )3 .
with Bood questions and brief comMONDAY
' menta. And you 11 he more apREVIVAL Monday through July 29
preciated than llfe-ol'-the party types at Keno Church of Christ 8 p.m.
wbo haC the whole show.
nightly. Wlllard Love , Athens, guest
. Aof humor helps. People ~r . Public invited.
u.ten even to a quiet volee if you have
SWIMMING PARTY at Londm
a repulatlQJiorqulclthumor. -SUE
Pool, Syracuse , sponsored by
P.S. NOTE: '10 READERS: At least Pomeroy Youth League Monday at
half of 111 feel we're too often drowned 7:30 p.m. for players, psrents,
out by the other, more talkative hall. 111811118er and coach.
Jl you've IOived the problem, pleue
eend polnten to us, care of this
nenpaper. Your comment.~ should
make a helpful colwnn for the quiet
Ollei.-H. andS.

baseball, you've got to stay wlthJJt
strikeouts.
yourself,
just below the peak o1 your
" If you have just one shot at
Olympio gold in the 100 meters, you ability, to be consistent over the long
better go for it," Seaver said. "But in haul."

RUTLAND
DEPARTMENT
STORE

helow his best, when he won 10 in a
row during the New York Mets' 1969
World Series year.
He has ahnost constant pain in· his
shoulder, and knows he doesn't throw
as hard as he used to throw - all the
more ~eason at age 34 to pace himself
if he is to pitch another three or four
years and make a run at Walter
Johnson's record of 3,508 lifetime

'f---Social Calendar

Phone 742-2100
Prices Effective Thru Sat., July 21st

Hunters
presented
reminder·
The Division of Wildlife of the Ohio
Department of Natural Resources
reminds first-time hWJtel'll and trappers to plan ahead for the fall season
by enrolling in a hunter safety or poapper education course.
Under provisions of Amended
Senate Bill 419, recently enacted by
the Ohio. General Assembly, linlttime hunters and trappers must complete an approved course before purchasing a 1979 hunting license or trapping permit which go on sale in midAugust and are required after August
31.
A special toll-free number, 14100282-J557, may be called for in-

formation on when and where courses
are being held in Ohio. Information on
courses being held in your area in
District No. 4 may be obtained fnn
your state ga,me protector or by
calling the Wildlife District No. 4 office at (614) 59~933 or 594-2211.
The Department's Division of
Wildlife, which administers the courses, has been providing hunter safety
courses since 1957. This is the first
year they are mandatory for firstlime hunters and trappers. Nearly
300,000 individuals have completed
the course since the program began.
The courses range from six to 10
hours of instruction and are ll'!ually
·given in two three-hour sessiom a
week, depending on where the course
is heing held.
The hunter safety course includes
i,nstructions on wildlife management,
basic fireann skills, fit'lll aid, hunting
laws and ethics, wildlife identification, and field care of game.
Trapper education. courses comist
of instructions on basic trapping
methods and teclutiques, trapping
laws and ethics, equipment, various
types of traps and baits, and wildlife
identification and their habits. The
· primary purpose of the courses are to
make the outdoorsmen aware of conservation, wildlife management and
wildlife regulatiom pertaining to hWt-

ting and trapping in Ohio. Those
taking one of these courses and
passing the course will receive a certi fic ate . and become · more
knowledgeable and better prepared,
which will lead to successful trips
afield.

French City

BRAUN SCHWEIGER ............~~;. &amp;r
Homemade

HAM SALAD •••••••••••••••••••• !-.~·. $1.19
French City

SLICED BACON.l~~~~~~~ ••••••• :.k.g~$1.39
30 ct . Bunch

12

Pimiento Individual

SLICED CHEESE

$1.39

Krait Parkay
1 lb. Quarters

PASCAL CELERY..... 69'
HEAD LETTUCE-~.~~~49'
90 ct.

MARGARINE .. ~~~-- 69~ CUCUMBERS ....... 2/'J.f
13'h oz. Chef -Boy-Ar-Dee

PEPPERONI or CHEESE PIZZA .......~~:~. '1.09.
11 oz .

GRAHAM COOKIES •••••••••••••••••.5r
10 oz. Maxwell

~ouse

INSTANT COFFEE •••••••••••• /.~r.. $4.49
10'12 oz. ~ilton

OYSTER STEW •••••••••••••••••••••••.6!r

- --

DEAR HElEN AND SUE :

15 oz. Armour

RE'ruRN ROME

It lan't true that llornGiesuall are
forever loclted intQ their way oflile.
Too often thele dlys, ~e get the
Idea that one can never chanle.
,
I 'DI 211, was gay, but now I m
atralgbt. I didn't go to I shrink, but
Bat the power from higher source : I
didn'tneedaheadesamlnatloo buta
, he&amp;rt \rarlsplapl from 8 worldly to a
iplritual way of life. I've been a Chrts-

CORNED BEEF HASH. •••••• !~~!! .. 8!r
29 oz.

O'SAGE PEACHES. •••••••••••. 2f1.79
12 oz.

ARMOUR TREET•••••••••••1•0~.~':..Sl.29

Mr. and Mn. Barrie Phillips and
daughters, Jill, Michelle , and
Heather, have returnell to their h&lt;me
In Endicott, New York, afterspendinl
the past two weeks with their parenta
Mr and Mn Dayton Philllpl'
• ·
·
·
'
Pomeroy, and Mr. and Mrs. Hugh
Bearhs and son, Roo, of J..onBhollow
Rd .

KLEENEX"TISSUES •••••••• ~ •••••••• 69c
ALUMINUM FOIL ••••••••••••••••••• 81

Wilma Mansfield, M.D.
Family Practice Medicine

Rich &amp; Ready

ORANGE DRINK •••••••••••• ::~'!~~~~~ 8!r

~·
ammonia can't.

''

A powerful portlblli thlt .,au

can Nail ,_,,.
1

louvers.

H-.'1 1 gortabfe with a lin .. more POWtt, but
the aanw e1ay.to-inalall tJ:Ptndo mwntlng

kil. Two IPMCIJ, IIIjua..~tvtrtlc.lllouvers .oo

1111 EER ol 7.6 lor htah tftic'-or.v

..
-~

,

''1

.,

CIOHdSunU'

:!

SAVE 2()¢ ~E~N~ou
AN,Y SIZE

.1

TOP JOB.

!g

11 ldtnh lotd ~y tnt rtlt il dlt lr!bulor Ill our ~ tre h.nclrlt ""ho rldtM'1td 1~1"' In ~O~ntellon .. Ito U~l to l hl!l tO,...YII\11 . or tht tuppl le r oltheo ~odullll on .. hit~ 1111
hlft l&gt;ttrl roderm•d who t&gt;u 1rf ,...,ltln egrMrnent wll h Procter • Glmblt IQrttO IO ' ' up! lon1ncot! rupontlbrlity , orlo 1 holder o f our Ctt 11Hct1t ol Awlhdrlly

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

alit, but with big room-coollnt I)O'Wtr. Only

.1

vertk:ll 104JYtfS.

23~ WIOt, i t t\al twO

'l

.'

.'

,,.,
I

..
'•

·• '1

367000 -

I,

·•369..

"-r•·a plenty of power lor

l~rge

or mulllplt

rooma 11 1 price you ean 1'11ndlt . EkCiualve
Air Swee~ c;:lrculalet air from wall to wall with·
out drafts. Two l()ftd control and adjutllble

verticil ro.,vers.

•449..
SAV£'50

INGEL'S
FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY

I

.-

lnd ldiUtllblt

SAvt 30

'

a

IPNdi.

1

,j

...J

t~ llng 101 llltm. COU PONS BHQU lO 9E SHI PPED . AT OUR EXPE NSE. 1 0 l'ti.OCTllil. Q.AIIBLII, l i ~ O S UNNYIIII DOK ORIIIE. C INC INNAT!. (IH IO 4~231.

PROCTER &amp; GAMBLE

.,•

:1

~~~~~~~1d c~Z~~';:•,:b:;,(~d ~~;crh~~~b~:.:~~~:·~r '!~~~ ho~~~.:~~~·~~~=~~~ P~~~f!~!/::•:,~~!!, m,.u,~~~~:;:::.,:odn =~:~~.~~~~~~·~~·;c;':.:~.~o ~:~-~~:;~:i ~
cow~o nl

Thfl Qlblotl ltlll comtl In an HIV to 1\anCI,.

1

&lt;

!!!

AII201!411FM 20,1100/11,700 ITU

U117E""I'I 11,100/II.OOOITU

.:j

:J

LIMIT ONE COUPON PER PURCHASE

TO 1HE CO ~ S IJVEP · CAUTION &gt; Oon 'l 1mb1"111 your dull! by •• ~in g /I om 10 fiCIMrrt COUDOnl ""11110u1 m1•1~0 tile fiCIUitiCI OUft~llt. tie mull !eOMm COUPQIIII PfOIJefiW to gel ~II mG!"IfY
buh AEr.!Eiwi6EA . co wpanllr\.IJCIOO ~;~nly on ~~• b t•n&lt;h Clll•d lor Any otll" IIH &lt;:OI'II h1utu It lUll
TO lHE DEAlER Vo~ 1 ,. aur~oo l•ed ro t e l 11 our ·
&gt;I lor I !\&lt;I rtdtmpJron ot 1~ 1 1 eoupon Wt will "lnlllurM vou lor tt•t !tee ~tlul ollh&gt;l ( OUI)On. or. ll (OIJIIOft c.tlll IOtlrH ,.,e~tndi M.
we wrll reomDuru you !Of IUCI
,ood•. plut ~· lor htn!llong , !i•Ovlded 11111 pou lnd 1~ c;~~turmrr he'&lt;t ~omplitd wrlh 1'- IIM11 ol our =ou po~&gt;cl'- • · 8 y t ubmllllng
th ro eo~ pcn tor •t •m!Jutttmtnr you re oreun l t~ot ~ rtdll mt d rl pu rau ut 10 !PIIIt 11rm1 . lin~ ll!llilt Ill entorel !hilt 1111111 11\tll 1\01 C. CINmtd e Wi twer Il l .Jn~ or
11\t c o~ di iiOnt TERMS OF t:OUF'ON O FF ER Thil ~OUPOI\ mull 01 Oldlllllld by I ConiUIIIII 11 1ht lime ot pu re ~UI ol lht b"nd tlu lndleiltd wl1h 1ht '-tt vtlltl
ot til t coope&gt;n IHi rnQ dtduclt d !rom the dtllt,.l l t\111 l ttllng I)IIU . ll\11 CDUDOh II 1\01\ •U IIQI\Iblll . IM mt~ not bl llbHXIUCICI , T~t COI\IUfll" 111 1111 PlY tny 11111 1U

.

..;

~

59,.

$319
.

ALL STAR 2%

NESTE A
ICED TEA

FORTIFIED

MILK

I

Gallon Plastic Jug

•1.59
'1.89
t-------- ----- FROSTIE ACRES
MISTER G
FROZEN

'1

140 ct. Pkg.

J2 OZ. CAN

AMIOC4EFB 10,1100 ~TU

I AI.CN4C411'1 ..... IT\1

I.

VIVA
NAPKINS

LUNCHEON
MEAT

3 oz. Jar

.

TAKE THIS COUPON TO YOUR STORE

89

DOG ·
FOOD

AIR CONDITIONERS

Top Job

9667TJ

12 oz.
Package

---------------------------------TREET
CHAMP

..

u .. -ap.m. Fri.

FRA.NKIES

BONELESS BEEF STEW.................~~:.~..] ·

ol

Middle of Upp,er Block
in Pomeroy, 0 .

CHUCK
STEAK

BAG

..

t • . m.-5 p.m. Mon.
"'"'Thurs. &amp; S•t.

SUPERIOR

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

Is Open tnt Her Office at :
Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio

lett. With 2 t0eM 1M leltultlbff Yti'IIC.II

HARTLEY SHOES

U.S.D.A.
CHOICE

25 LB.

Sweethearts are loyal but light·
weight. They support you gently
but firmly. And thanks to their
soft, bouncy urethane sole.
Sweethearts feel as light on
your feet at lhe end of your day
as they do at the start. Now
that's a real Sweetheart.

All sizes available.

SHOP HERE AND SAVE THE GATEWAY WAY!!

WISHES TO ANNOUNCE THAT

Extra \aloe

PRICED FROM 124.00 to '29.00

SATURDAY

Athens , Ohio

37'12 sq. fl . Diamond

For An Appointment Please Phone 992 -6601

a SweeOteart!

19-20-21

79,.

NOW TAKING APPOINTMENTS

Every nurse deserves

JULY

FOUNDATION, INC.

An auto -demolition -contest - derby will be held at the Meigs County
Fair Tuesday, Aug.l4 at 7p.m.
Entry blanks may be picked up at
Sugar Run Mill, Pomeroy; Ellis
Sohio, Middleport; Middleport Motor
Parts; Lou's Ashland, Pomeroy; G
and J Auto, Pomeroy; Swatzel Motor
Co., Pomeroy and the office of the
·Daily Sentinel.
The entry blank below may be clipped out and mailed to AutoDemolition Contest-Derby, in care of
Fair Secretary's Office, Box 'l:J:I,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Entry fees will be collected at the
race track. Do not mail entry lee with
entry blank.

~atq;

THURSDAY
FRIDAY

THE OHIO VALLEY HEALlH SERVICES

200 ct.

Beginning July 18, 1979

~UiJe.

~·----------------------------------------------~

FRENCH
FRIES
2 lb. Bags

2/89¢

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

COUPON -

I

~

R.C •.

OR 'DIET RITE COLA
8 PAK

16 OZ. BTI.S.

99~

LIMIT 2 PER CUSTOMER
TWIN CITY GATEWAY
EXPIRES JULY 21

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

FROZEN

LEMONADE

I

6 oz. Cans

·I

6/$}00

I
I

I
I

�6- The Daily Senhnel, Mlddl~port-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, July 18, 1979

Nielsons nod to CBS

B -&amp; PW meets here Awarded
The Middleport Business and the Route 33 By-Pass Roadside Park.
ProfesSional Women ·s Club met Mon- A covered dish meal was enj oyed by
day evening for its annual picnic at all.
There was a brief business meeting
held Wlth Prestdent Francis Louise
Davis presiding. Minutes were read,
the financial report given . A report
that Mrs. Lucy Earwood, of the
Gallipolis Business Club, new District
17 Director will visit the club at the
November meeting, which will also
be the Young Careerist evening, was
read. Janet Korn , chairman of the
" Pretty Baby, Utile Mr. and Miss "
contests for the Meigs County Fair
Bookmobile schedule for Monday, reports everything is ready for the apJuly 23: Laura's Store (near Car- plications to com~ in. Among those
penter ), 2:30.J :15; Dexte(, Church, who will work on the project will be
3: 45-4 : 15 ; Lan gsville, Small's Mrs. Wanda Eblin , Mrs. Alwilda Wer·
• Grocery, 4:3().,1 ; Rutland, Pomeroy ner, Kate Welsh, Eva Robson, Terri
Natwnal Bank, 5:15-6; Middleport, Walker and Erna Jesse.
The August meeting on the 20th will
Ash St. Freewill Baptist Church 7:308:15.
.
.
be a family picnic held at the grounds
Tuesday, July 24 - Success Road of the Racine Locks and Dam above
near 39060, 3:3&lt;H:15 ; Reedsville' New Haven, W. Va . Meeting was ad·
Reed 's Store, 4:3().5:30; Tuppe~ journed. Others attending include
PlalllS, Arbaugh Housing, 6~ : 45 ; Donna Davidson , Mary Kunzelman
Freddie Houdashelt and Ros~
Salisbury, Housing, 7:15-7: 45.
Wednesday , July 25 -Torch , Post Reynolds .
Office, 3:45-4 :30; Hockingport, Community Building, 5-5:45; Coolville,
School Lot, 6:15-7: 15; Riggs Addition,
7:45-&lt;! :15.
Thursday, July 26 -Senior Citizens
Center, 12 :45-1:15; Mulberry Heights
SCARECROW SOUGHT
Infirmary, 1:30-2; Racine, 6th Street,
TRUMPINGTON, England (AP ) 2:30-3; Letart Fa ll s, Shu ler 's
The· Plant Breeding Institute in this
Restaurant, 3: 15-4; Racine Home
town near Cambridge advertised for a
National Bank, 4:15.,1 ; Wagn~r 's Harhuman scarecrow to guard a 10-acre
dware,5-5 :45; Syracuse, Pool,S-7 :30. crop of experimental corn.

\\\e. tOt\U&amp;rt\\)\&amp;
gt6i~

•BIRTHDAYS
•ANNIVERSARIES

You thou~h l the Conve rt ibl e was go ne. but
it's back in a unique ly styled rin g. o ne
side high fashio n, o ne side casual

from

Wea r it .ts an op.1 l fo r casual wea r

•

•

Fl ip it rlv cr to Diam o nds &amp; Rubies fo r evening

e

Or ctwosc yo ur ow n favo rit e stones

qjou mugt come gee
thtg ul'ltque !ling! ~~~::;~~·"'

GOESSLERS JEWELRY STORE
Court St .

STYLIST
SINGER
MACHINE
MODEL 533

scholarship
.

A
.
.
.
THENS - Ohio Uruverstty freshman Jana Burson of Shade has been
a~arded a. Man.asseh Cutler Scholarship by f?hio Uruverstty for the 1979-00
acaderrucyear.
J She 15 the daughter of Fred and
ane Burson, Route 1, Shade ..
The $500 s~holarships, which are
based on me:tt, a~e ~med in honor of
one of the uruverstty s founders. They
are awarded on the reco~endation .
of_ OU faculty members to mco1111Ilg
freslune.n who have demonstrated
acaderruc e:"ceUence in high school
and poten!tal for achievement in
coUege .

Kingsbury
News Notes
The Carleton Church had its Bible
school program following Bible
School Friday evening with all the
children taking part.
Trevor Harrison, son of Mr. and
Mrs. . Phil Hllrrison, has returned
home after being a patient at Holzer
Medical Center.
Recent weekend guests of Mrs.
Elizabeth Murray were Mrs. Karen
Murray, Greg and Tina of Sandyville,
W. Va.
Recent guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Rowland Dais were Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Paulsen, Gail and Tracy from
Texas.
Visiting Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
Wayne Beat were Mr. and Mrs. Kirk
Chevalier and Jessica of Chester, Mr.
and Mrs. Roger Young, Wesley and
Yvette.
Mrs. Neva King has returned home
after visiting several days with her
sister, Mrs. Nora Currunins of
Reynoldsburg.
Recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
John Dean were Mr. and Mrs . Garold
Gilkey , Tammy and Amber and Scott
Wolfe of Athens, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Markins of Racine, Miss Juanita
Terrell of Pataskala.
Visiting recently with Mrs. Neva
King were Mr. and Mrs. Nordling and
daughters, also Mrs. Myrtle Ca!1lliln
and Ruth Cannan of Huntington , W.
Va.
Brill King, who was a patient at
Veterans Memorial Hospital, has
returned home. Also returning home
from Veterans Memorial Hospital
where he was a patient is Eugene
Smith.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Wood have
received word that their daughter,
Ernestine, is a hospital patient at a
hospital in Florida.
Brett Carl and Randall Carl are
spending the week with their grand parents, Mr. and Mts. Charles Bar: ·
nett at Grove City.
Sunday guests of Mrs. Neva King
were Mr. and Mrs. Junior Rucker and
Clyde Carman of Grove City, Mr . and
Mrs. Clifford Carman, Mrs. Kenny
Hughes and daughter of Columbus,
Mr. and Mrs. Grant Johnson and
children of North Lewisburg, Mrs .
Myrtle Carman and daughter, Ruth
Huntington, W. Va. , Mrs . Mildred
Thle, Mrs. Nancy Felts of Michigan
Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Felts, Galtipolis:
Mr. a nd Mrs. Virgil King and David,
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Smith.

LOS ANGELES (AP ) - CBS
captured the national Nielsen ratings
released Tuesday, with seven shows
1·ated in lhe top 10.
CBS has finished first, or tied for
first , in three of the last four weeks,
beating ABC in a contest. of
swnmertime rerurt5. CBS' average
rating for the week that ended Sunday
was 15.1, compared to ABC's 14.2 and
NBC's 11.0.
But th ere was good news for NBC.
The network finished behind CBS and
ABC for the week but its new " Prime
Time Sunda y" newsmagazine show
fin ished No. 19, its highest~ ver
rating . " Prime Time Sunday" and
ABC's newsmagazine "20-20 " were
· the only top 20 show; that .,;ere not
repeats.
It was the second time in three
editions of the show that " Prime
Time " was NBC's highest-rated
program. It finished tied with ABC's
. "Mork and Mindy ," lhe most popular

new show of last season.
The Nielsen top 10, and their
ratings :
1, " M-A-S-H," 24 .9 (CBS ); 2,:
" WKRP in Cincinnati," 24. I (CSS); 3,
"Three's Company," 24.0 (ABC) ; 4,
"Taxi," 22.7( ABC)·' 5t " Lou Grant
"
•
'
22.6 (CBS) ; 6, "The Jeffersons," 20.9
(CBS) 7, "laverne &amp; Shirley," 20.1
(ABC); 8, "60 Minutes," 20.0 (CBS);
9, "Alice," 19.2 (CBS); 10, "The
Dukes of Hazzard," 19.1 (CBS) .
The A.C. Nielsen Co. rates primetime programs based on a survey, and
the three major networks use the
ratings to determine advertising
rates. Each . ratings point, the
company says, represents about
750,000 homes tuned in to a particular
show.
While No. 19 isn't as good as No. 8
for CBS' " 60 Minutes " · the
ne~sma~azine that broke g;ound in
prune time, the rating for " Prime
Time Sunday" represents major

strides for NBC. The network 's
former newsmagazine, "Weekend,"
finished very near the bottom almost
every week.
In fact, tltese are good times all
around for Ute newsmagazine fonnat.
ABC's recently revitalized "~20"
finished 16tlt for Ute week. "20-20" was
No. 3 last week.
last week's "SALT U" debate on
NBC received the worst · rating of
Nielsen's 64 shows, 5.9, and drew only
11 percent of the television audience.
The rest of the bottom 10:
55, "Sword of Justice," 8.6 (NBC );
56, " Stockard Channing in Just
Friends, " 8.3 (CBS); 57, "Project
UFO," 8.1 (Nil9) ; 58, " Carnival of the
Animals, " (a special) 7.9 (CBS ); 59,
"Supertrain," 7.4 (NBC); 60, "The
Paper Chase," 7.4 (CBS); 61 ,
"Gossip," (pilot ) 7.1 (NBC); 62,
"Battlestar Galactic a, " 6.9 (ABC);
63, "Hardy Boys," 6.2 (ABC ).

Beaver reunion held at Royal Park
The Beaver reunion was held July 4
at Royal Oak Park. Prayer was given
by the Rev. Russell Cline. A potluck
dinner was served.
A gift was presented to Mr. and
Mrs. Leroy Forester, Ft. Eustis, Va.,
for traveling the greatest diStance ;
Mattie Beaver Hill, Columbus, the
oldest present and Donald Hayhurst
II, from Camden-on-Gauley, W. Va.,
for being the youngest pr~ent.
The 72th birthday of Russell Cline
was observed. Country and western
music was provided by several members of the family .
Attending were : Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Hill, laura Ann and Eddie, Medina ;
Mrs. Charles Cline, Charlie and
Steve, Mounds...rille, W. Va.; Mr. and
Mrs. Clark Hill, Fannie Cain and
Shawna, Mr. and Mrs. Carol Cline,

and Paul, Mr. and Mrs. Don Hill and
Denise, and Agnes Bentz, all of
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Wolfe, Mr. and Mrs. Larry Black
Jerri, Jinuny and J811011 of Carroll:
Mrs. Patricia Forester and Tina
deville ; Mr. and Mrs. Ruasell
Racine; Harry Hill, West Salem.
'
Mr. and Mrs. David Cline, Donna
and Kathy, Waterford; Mr. and Mrs.
Ryan Martin, Mt. Vernon; Mr. and
Mrs. James Cline · and Darla
Beverly; Mr. and Mrs. John Cline'
Pam Parsons and Karen Wiland'
Akron; Mr. and Mrs. Junia;
Holsinger, Paul, Brad, John and Jay
Brenda Sampson, Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Gillilan, Mark and Vick, Mr. and Mrs.
Bill Glllilan, Tony and Carrie Ann
'

Cir:

Cune

an

}.::::.~~.l)~ily ~ntinel, Middleport-Pome~oy, 0 ., Wednesday. July 18, 1979

r r· p~·;;;·~:~:~ ·:·.· .·:c.;~~g;·· :· ;;·;i~·· · l l
F~:s ~~hl~YJ~;"~naarr:~geRme~

JAMES F. BARNES
WRIGHT-PATTERSON - James
F . Ba".'es, son.of Mrs ..Anna Leonard
of Racme, enlisted in the u. s. Atr
Force recently, according to T.Sgt
Orene Gabbard, Air Force Recruite~
here.
~pon graduation from the Air Force s SIX weeks basic mililary trianing,
James will recetve training in the Inventory. Management Career Field.
James IS a 1979 graduate of Southern
High School.
James will be earning credits
' towards an Associate Degree through
the Community College of the Atr
F?rce while attending basic and other
Air Force technical training schools.

of Reedsville; Mr. and Mrs. George
Gillilan, Lee and Tom Tob, Tom
Gillilan, Mr. and Mrs . . RuaaeU
Holsinger, Philip and Randy, Janice
Herdnwt and Wlllie T., Mr. and Mrs.
Roy Gillilan, Mrs. Marjorie Reeves,
Brandl Nicole, Robbie, Jr., and
Bryan,
of Chester; Mr. and Mrs.
Leroy Forester, Ft, Eums, Va.; John
Baumgardner, and Mr. and Mrs.
John Beaver, Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs.
Keith Curtis, Middleport; Mr. and
Mrs. Francis Gillilan, Jim Glllilan
and sons, Jim and Todd, C&amp;lton; Mr.
and Mrs. Donald Hayhurst and Donny, Camden-on-Gauley, W. Va .
The reunion next year will again be
held at Royal Oak, archery building,
on July4.

nou

MODELS TO

ON IIOGU llANO
I"IOOUCI'
UUI D lll O'I'II All JUU
A fl'h UAMI"tli

MASON, W. VA.

evemng.

Miss Arlene Spurlock, missionary
tu the Republic of Niger, West Africa,
spoke
the Carpenter
Baptistpotluck
Church andatenjoyed
a fellowship
supper with members and guests. She
was a n overnight guest of Mrs. Lewis
Smith a nd Mrs. Smith took her to Rio
Grande the nel&lt;t day . She will be
returning to Nig~r soon.

69c

PLEASANT working

16 ·01 .

Can

cond~ions

30c

2 lb. $149

PLEASANT atmosphere

Catsup

PLEASANT VAU.EY HOSPITAL • .

5th &amp; Pea ~: ._..._.
. ·. '~acme,
!

Qt .

Btl .

Salaries are comparable to other hospitals in the area
Excellent benefit programs.
·
Check us out ... you'll 'be PLEASANTLy surprised
IMMEDIATE OPENINGS
.

77

k•OGU 't\IHOlE

Fould's

Can

CAKE MIXES

Several
Var ieli ·s

Round White
Potatoes .. .

SWEET
PEPPERS
~

SUPERIORS

LONGHORN

FRANKIES

CHEESE
Parkay 1 lb. Quarters

·lb.

.. ... Bag

tiM IT 6WITH COUPON &amp;S75Q ADDITIQNU PURCHASE
(UC!UDI!C THIS ITIM)
l.IMIT ONE COUP'ON PER FAMil y

12

COIP'O• ,000 U•Dil lUI TI~ !UaSI !UIOII tUl l 11 19 1 ~
tnJitTTOmt ltUll mn • tow um

Of

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPOII
I

I
I
I
I
I
I

~~1

'I
I

I
I
I
I

Multi-Grain
Bread
ATTHIIECULAI PltCE
GET ONE
Multi-Grain Bread

I
I

16·02 . lOAF KROGE•

o:
I

•

$ 99

·=~~·

16 -0l.IOAf KROGU

I
I

Whole
Watermelons

I

Each
LIMIT 3 WITH COUPON &amp;!7.50 AODITIOHAt PURCHASE
(E!tUDINC THIS IHM)
12
Of

liMIT ONE COUPON PER FAM ILy
C®~GIIGDSmll/~fi§IIIIHITUJDI! JUllil Jm
SUJICI IGl''liCIItl STJU &amp;tOC:U r•IE~

F.R EE
Spotlight
Bean Coffee .... .-~~!~
KROGER FlESH PAK

KROGER

6C ~~::~gs

H

,,,

Strawberry
Preserves ..........

.---~~~------tROUNDTOP

Kroger 20-oz.
White Bread ...... .

PLUMS
49~

2$ 99
·lb ..

Box

~

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

50c0FF
Freezer Pleezer Frozen Treats
/ l(l CtUM SANDWICHIS TWIN "Of"~ NU Tc AP CO NI S
ANOMANV 01HIIt V A.tiHIH )

12
KV"

liMIT ONE PER COUPON
I
I

PINT RITURNAI!U IOTTLU
SPitiTE, Mil. Pill ,

Fresca, Tab or
Coca Cola

Sho.rtening

. Kroger
Fried Chicken

La.

....

I

1-lb.

COII'O.CODISUIOaY JUlYISIUUSI TUIOII Jf \111 1919
SIII(CT TOHIUUI\1 m11 l lmt I U! ~

I

Clorox
Bleach

I

$ 19

LIMIT ONE COUPON PE" FA Mi lY

12

I

29c

49

I
I

89

J4 .. J7-LB. AVG.

oa SLICIO

AVONDALE

Cans

tiM IT 3WITH COUPON &amp;S7.50 ADDITIONAL PURCHASE
(EXClUDING THIS ITEM I

c

59~

16-oi.

~Can

KROGER

CELERY

29

MARGARINE

'1 o&amp;

~

Semi-Boneless
smo ked Hams .. .... lb .

U.S . NO . I

'85.

An equa I opportunity employer

CUTS

KIELBASSI
'149LB .
Betty Crocker

$1

ON&amp;Cm

Of .

Potatoes

16 ·01 .

Contact:
Director of Personnel
PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
Valley Drive, Point Pleasdant, wv 2ssso
Telephone (304) 675·4340

CENTER

PHEBE ' S STORF
Thursday·, July \9 thru July 21
We' 1BOIY Accept Fed . Food Stamps

MondCiy thru Friday
9 :00til7 : 00
Salurday 9: 00-9:00
CLOSED
SUNDAYS

LB .

I
I

$

savE

Country Club
Ham Patties

.
.
A pleasant place to work,
needs. sktlled, dedtcated registered nurses and licensed
practtcal nurses .

PORK
CHOPS
CUTS

- -.....

I

Kroger
Meat Bologna ...... lb .

· PLEASANT benefits to employes

END

I

I
I
I

IN THE PIECE

Tomato Sauce

BACON

I
I " -__.,"'.

California .
Cantaloupes

Grape Jelly

Green Beans

~-----------------------..

MEIGS INN · POMEROY , OHIOTHURSDAY, JULY 19
9 A.M. to 12 NOON
?-nvone who has tro~bl e h ~ari ng is we lcome to have a hearing test us·
.ng modern e lec tron1 c equ 1pment to determine if his loSs is one which
may ~c hel ped. Som e of the ca uses of hearing loss will be expl ained
and d1agramsof how the ea r works wi ll be shown
'
We Also S~rvice .and Repair All Makes of Hearing Aids.
BaUenes And Supplies For All Makes For Sale
IF YOU CA NN OT COME ; N .
CALL T HE HOTEL FOR A HOME APPOINTMENT .
PHONE 992 ·3629

·JOWL

~--··'

PICKENS HARDWARE

Will Be Given By
Mr. H . W. Mattingly

Pomeroy, 0.

I·~of--t&gt;~

..,.. ' IPK• yOo,,' ,, .,.. -11"1 I ~- OI VOCI Of
Of I t'll,;...., tOvf pUI ( ,.W! IJo'oC.

ClOVU VML EV

roger
Pork &amp;Beans

I

f....-w'l n.nQ t0u Ou' • • 11.1. . "9"•"nl ~ IQI VOU&lt; IO~
. .1..1tc100t&gt; •.-dlt!N of ~Oul41(1u r .. II , Q.i oil '!' flO! W I!'

1

Qt .
Jar

CHOOSE FROM

Pomer.oy, o.

OWNED AND OPERATED BY
Jack &amp; Judy Williams
Open : Mon . thru Wed. 9·5,
Thur. 9·12, Fri. 9-S, Sat. 9·2
Satisfaction Guaranteed
or Your Money Back

'Ot

Wl lUll\' I THl flQH1 TO l iM!f OVANlltiU ,.Oflllt \010
tO OU LU\

VARim OF

Phone 992-2178
234 E.· Main Sf.

UliiiUU I( U.\l llloiCS

CA LLI POll\ .. I"OMEIItOY 'ITQIIIE S

Tara Bolen , da ughter of Ronnie and
Barbara Bolen, is again confined to
Children's Hospital, Columbus, where
she 1s scheduled for treatment.
Mrs. larry Stansbury and sons,
Reynoldsburg, spent the past week
with Mrs. Dale Stansbury, and larry
came for them on the weekend .
Mr. and Mrs . Earl Starkey were in
Somerset for the .funeral of laurence
Wilson, son-in-law of Elma Caster
Vernon, of New Lexington. Mrs. Vernon and Mrs . Starkey are sisters .
Se venth-five alunmi and guests
were present for the Columbia High
School alumnt banquet on Saturday

ISears]

teacher at Melga, saxophone section;
AIRLINE TRAFFIC
Teresa Buckley, Eastern High School
WASHINGTON
(AP) - Airline
stud~nt, band librarian, baritone sec·
lion; Tom Gumpf, principal at Tup- traffic - domestic and Internationally
pers Plains Elementary, trumpet sec· scheduled - increa sed 16.2 percent
lion; Susie Carpenter, trumpet and during the first five, months of 1979
Jim Wilhelm, band director at over the same 1978 periOd , the Air
Transport Assoc iation says.
Eastern HighSchool, tuba.

(Of'UtGHf 1nt . Uti «t~ll CO t l\M~ A,.O •tl(.ll
C.OOO~UtrtOA ¥ JUL¥ IITW.U\ATUIOAf JUlfll ' ' ' ''"

WINDOW
-FANS

Authorized CATALOG
SALES MERCHA~· ·.-

1.0011 ' 0 1 fi·IIS \ IGN
fHIOUGI10UT tHI

....,

HEARING TESTS

l1SW . 2nd Ave .

Prim:

an

Mr. and Mrs. Mike Wolfe, Mike, Jr.,

Carpenter
Personals

and Mrs. Deruris Frederick, .Justin
and Monie, Columbus; Mr. and Mrs.
Tommy Swain, Sonja and Tlffiny,
Marietta ; Ina Massar, Reedsville;
Mr.· a nd Mrs. Don Eynon, Chester ;
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Holter, Wesley
and Martha, Reedsville ; Paul Curtis,
Gary and Alban, Pomeroy ; Mr. and
Mrs. Terry Swain, Michael and Tina,
Marietta.

Swain, Marietta ; Durward Swain
Louisville, Ky.; Mr. and Mrs. Olife;
Swain and Lee, Reedsville ; Mr. and
Mrs. Pat Autherson and Renee
Newark; Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Adams, Christi and Wlllie, Long Bottom; Mr. and Mrs. John Adams Tony
and Julie, Columbus; Mr. and Mrs.
Mike . Swain, Nickie and Scott
Chicago; Mr. and Mrs. David
mer, Jamie and Joey, Logan ;. Mr. and
Mrs. Jim Prinuner and Valerie,
Logan; Mr. and)'&gt;frs. Terry Reiber,
VmcentandJesstca,Racine ; Mr . and
Mrs. David Decker, Reedsville; Mr.

Tide
Detergent

ELECTRONIC

FABRIC SHOP

PUBS WANTED
LINCOLNSHIRE, England (AP) Local authorities planned to install
licensed bars in senior citizen homes
here after residents complained of
missing their local pub atmospheres.

Several local residents are taking
part in the Ohio University Com·
munity concert band.
The last concert Is this evening at 7
p.m. on the green next to Memorial
auditoriwn. Persons who plan to at·
tend are to bring lawn chairs and
hUunkets .
.
Following the band concert there
will be a vocal · concert by Ohio
Singers that will be held at Recital
Hall at 8:15. A variety of milsic will be
presented.
·
Local persons taking· part in the
band are Charles Yeago, band direc·
tor at Wahama who is in the per·
cusslon section, his daughter, Lisa, in
the French hom section; David
Bowen, Meigs Instrwnental Director,
trwnoet section ; Jean Bowen,

~

'

The family of Will and Teresa
Swain held their loth annual reunion
at Forked Run State Park on July 8.. .
There were 64 in attendance which
included six children, 15 grandchildren and 24 great-grandchildren.
The oldest present was Durward
Swain and the youngest was Martha
Holter. Traveling the greatest disl.ance were Mike Swain and family of
Chicago.
Following a picnic, games and
swimmingwereenjoyed.
Attending were : Mr. and Mrs.
Melvin Drake and Eddie Adams
Long Bottom; Mr. and Mrs. Bill

I

For Pomeroy, Ohio

We Service All Machines
Sharpen Scissors

will

·.·

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPOII

AVONOAU

HEARING TESTS SET

Features 6 "bull-in" Fashion and Flexi-Stitch Disc Pat·
terns , free arm , front drop -in bobbin , straight stretch
stitch, self -threading take-up lever, twin needle stit ching, wide zig -zag stitch and a full30 year warranty .

coun~

at the meeting. Vinton
Pomona Grange · was guests and
presented a program. The lecturer,
Mrs. Ruby Hllrden, presented the
program . Her theme w~ " A Salute to
Independence." Jushce Harden
Deputy Master of Vinton and R~
Counties gave a brief talk.
Meigs County will hold contests inspections, and the fifth degree
be
given at the September meeting.
Practice for the fifth degree will be
Monday night; Sept. 31 at the Rock
Springs grange hall. All members of
the degree team are urged to attend.
Meigs County Pomona Grange will
visit Vinton County in October.

Springs grange hall. '
oc
A potluck dinner was · h ld
e
preceding the meeting P
0
master, Stanford Stockt~
~donaed
.
• prest

Residents ~ ""1Oth"''!};;;;"";;;;;;; 'h;TJJ;t;"TB' ''t
•
tn .concert
band at OU

a$ I!

I

Fresh
Glazed Donuts
Available Only
In Stores With
DeiiDepts
Holfoods
Available
1\AMTII7PM

,!99

Dell Sliced Boil~d Ham

.
Fountain Square
Ice Cream .............:~·c~~~,,

.~

tb.$2 99
tb. $2 69

.....

EckrlchKiebassa or Smoked Sausage
INCLUDU ; 'PIICUO' CHICKEN I H . POT,.TO ~A l AO OtC OlE SlAW 1

''"NNIIIOUI
$599
Family Pllk Fried Chicken .. ...... , .........tb .

0RIOR
' D'lp .. .

.. .. .. . .

............. tb.69c

�8- The Daily Sentinel. Middleport·Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, July 18, 1979

9- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday , July 18, 1979

•

Your Best Buys Are Found
•Notices
GUN SHOOT. EVERY FRI DAY
7,30 PM RA CI NE GUN ClUB.
FACTORY CHOKE GUNS ON·

1S Words or UndPr

Jdays
6days

Cash
1.00
1.50
1.80

C"h1frge

3.00

3.71

_(~ ,

B
:-A
:-:K
:-:E::R:S-:B=u=s=Y-:B
::e-. -, -=c=-o-ro_m
_;:":

l.!!i

uo

wi ll be closed July 2B thru July

2.2::i

Paulin e Boker .
AMERI CAN LEGION Post 140.
New Hoven w ill hbld its an·
nuol
Dann y
Workman
Memori al Picnic on Sa turday,
July 21 , 1 pm . The event w ill
toke place on American
legion ground s. All post
members and thttir famil ies
and gues ts are invited to Qt·
tend . Activ rl ies will include on
0)( roost , donee. lree swimming at the New Hoven pool,
hayride' sack
1aces and
games . Prizes will be awarded
so bring your children . The
donee begins at 9pm and ends

day. Ads ruM in ~ other thlln &lt;.'o n~ utivl' days will be c har!;l ed at
the 1 day rate
In memory , Ca rd of Thanks
and Obi t Wiry : 6 cents per word .
13.00 minimwn. Cash in ad vanl't' .

Mob!le Hrnne s.ales and Ya rd

sa lt's 11n~ BCrf'pted only with
c ha r ~ l'

forMs carryi ng Box Numbl&gt;r h1
Cll re of. The Sentinel.

The Publisher reserves the _
riKhl to edi l or reject any m!S

deemed

objt&gt;t·tinnRI.

?

The

Publisher will not !)p regponsible
for more than one incorre&lt;"t inse rtion .
Phooe 992-2156

Pets for sale

For Sale

HOOF HOllOW, English ,and
Western .
Sadd les
and
harness. Horses and ponies.
Ruth Reeves . 614 -698-:1290.
Bardin g &amp; Riding lessons end
Hon1e Core produ cts.
RISI NG STAR Kennel. Boarding . Col l 367 -0292.

2S

E~ c h word Qver the minimum
I~ WDrd.!l: is 4 cent:; per word per

cash " 1th orde r. 25 cent

POMEROY UNI TED Methodist
Churc h Homecoming . July 22 .
Worship 9:30 om . Dinner 12:30
pm . Program 2 pm .

AKC DOBERMAN pinscher
pups. hcellen t blood lines .
Haytt and Camelot. Show
quality , wormed. hod shots .
i -304 -675-1863.
GOING OUT of business . All
p_oodl~u .
pomeronion ,
pekinese, block pom puppy
great coo t l ine. Phone 696-111
after Spm .
DOG OBEDIENCE Classes
forming now . 367 -0550.

POODLE GROOM!NG. Judy

NOTICE

OPEN
JULY 17th

WANT-AD
IA_DVERTISING
DEADLINES

HEADQUARTERS
BEAUTY SALON

M o nda~·

located on
Forest Run Rd.
Connie AldridgeOwner

Noon on Saturday
Tu esd&lt;~ y

lhru Friday
4P.M.

lht&gt; dav pefore publication
Sl.lflday
!P.M.

PH. 992-6311

F rida}' afternoon

Notices

Lost and Found

MEIGS CO. Fish and GAme is
sponsoring iU annual f ishing
derby . Saturday , July 21st at
its Shade Ri ver Club House:
Children 15 and under
·welcome. Watch for signs .
Prizes and refreshments . Bam
ti l 2pm . Members hip d inn&amp;r of
6pm.

LOST: FEMALE IRISH Setter .
Chester-248 -Bo shan a rea.
985-3925 or 992-6048, Reward.

FOUND '
992-7620.

BANKBOOK .

LOST: MALE, beiga co lor
Husky-German Shepard mi x,
wh lte flea color. East ShadeOwl Holl ow Rd . area .

614-667 -6223 0' 667 -6200.

LAFF- A- DAY

Help Wanted

[[L':

COUNSELOR: FOR support ive
counseling-comm, education .
Bachelors in related field
preferred. Car requ ired. Send
resume to: EASO . PO Bf.'x 458,
Athen s, OH 45701 by August

6.
FUtl AND port fime bartend&amp;r
Apply in person. See Ralph
1
~ ...... · -- ~ ----•!1
Werry of the Meigs Inn,
" No 1 don ' t know w hen to Pa~eroy. A lso, part time
1
•
wa1tren .
l' xpre 1 hr r
she was rec a II ed ;:;:::-;~;-:-;::-::=:-;:--;::;-::::­
h.v Bel i na 's Bcuu t y Boutiqu(' ... DEMON STRA TOR S- MERRI MAC enables you Ia eorn cosh
on your own hours . Our
Thursday . July 19
guorenleed line of toys and
gifts plu s super hostess incenti'lles make th is porfy plan program unbeotoble . No inVestBernice Bede Osol
men t, delivery or ca llecfion .
Call co llec f to Ann Ba xter.
319-556-888 1 or w rite MERRIMAC, 801 Jackson , Dubuque .
Iowa 52001 .

ASTRO·GRAPH

ALUMINUM AND vinyl siding
'mechanic wanted . Must be experienced and ha ve own
fools. Call9'92-2772.
·

July 19, 1979
Be prepared thr s co mrng year
to let go of srtualions that have
proven to be unprofrtable a nd
unpr oductrve Tt'1 ere rs gre at
hope tor you once you are
willrng to tr y th e ne w
CAN CE R (June 21-July 22 )
Wh en deali ng wrth oth ers
tod ay, be sure to la y all you r
car ds on Hu~ tabl e Do nothrng
1t'1 at co uld lead the m to suspec t
you ke pt an ace up yo ur sleev e.
Frmt o ut rno re of what ties
ah ead tor you rn the yea r
to!l owrng your brr thday by
send rn g for you r co py ol AsItoGraph Lett er Marl $1 for P.ach
to Astra -Gr aph P 0 B o ~ 489,
Aadrr. Cr ty Statron . NY 1001 9.
~ e sure to specr ty bi nh trm e
LEO (July 23-Aug .22) In you r
efl ort s lo try to be al l th rn gs to
all people toda y yo u ma y cau se
you r sell unnecess ar y co mplrc:a tro ns Unfortu nat ely, yo u
can't pl eas e ev er yone
VIRG O (Aug.23-Sepl .22) 11' s e)(tremely rmporta nt today to
clearly delme your goal s and
objec tr11e s II yo u arm for too
many tar ge ts. you ma y miss
them al l
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl.23) Someone wh o 1espec ts yo ur oprnr on
may co me lo you lor advrce
toda y Tell lhrs person the
truth , and not whal yo u 1hrnk
t1 e'd like to hear
SC ORPI O 10 ct.2 4-Nov . 22)
Make no rmportanl changE::s
Impuls ivel y today You ma y
lmd that you Jum ped fr om ttle
fr ying pan rn to th e !He . Srt on
things lor a bit
SAGITTARIU S (Nov .23-Dec.Z1)
It ma y be a shade dilflcu\1 to
make decrsJo ns today , ow1ng 10
the tact that yo u are too ea sily
rnllu enced oy others . It's best
to use you r own Judgment.

1974 VEGA HATCHBACK . cal l
303 -675-1SOl or 3()5-675-2488
Of 3().4 -675-1553.
1978 FORO F-250. 4)(4 , new
ti res . A .C.. tool bo)( , co b
lights . 245-5017 .
1976 OLDS CUTLASS Supr~me
P.S., P.B., A .C. , has extro1 .

CHIP WOOD. Poles ma x.
diameter 10" on largest end.
$12 per ton . Bundled slab. S10
per ton. Deli'llered to Ohio
Pal let Ca., R:t . 2, Pomeroy.

?92·2bll9.
OLD FURNITURE, ice boxes,
brass beds, iron beds , Cask s,
etc.. comp lete households .
Write M.D. Miller, Rt . 4,
Pomeroy or col1992 -7760.
OLD COINS, pocket watches ,
doss ri ngs. wedding bonds,
diomond3 . Gold or si lve r. Coli
J. A . Wams ley, 7.42-2331 ,
WANTED TO buy: luggage carri er for automobile. 992-5786.

Yard Sale
YAR D SALE at Ja mes Swain's
on CR 28 above Eastern High
School. July 13 and 14 lrom 9
to? Everything imaginable .
FIVE FAMILY Ya rd Sate. Mon.
thru Fri., I bth thru 20th . Olf
Spring Ave. on Fisher St.,
Pomeroy. OH. Follow signs.
Cancelled on ra iny days .;
YARD SALE for Wed . 18th ,
9om -l pm at my home In Burlingham . Dono Howel l.

AQUARIUS 1Jo n.211-Fe b.191 In

TAURUS (April 211-May 10) Fo-

\NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE A SSN I

FIVE FAMILY Garage Sa le. Li ving room cha ir, klfC hen chairs,
stereo and speake rs , compound bow ond occenori es,
and misc . items , all sizes
clothing. books . Mulberry
Hts ., 6th house on the right,
Wed . and Thurs. 9am to 5pm .

YARD SALE . Ju ly 17 , 18, 19.
Pearl St ., Middleport between
Vaughan's Grocery and Chris tian Union Church. Some new
cloth ing. reel good used
clothing, child ren 's, adul t's '
baby's. Real cheap. Lots ol
what -nots . Mrs . Wesley
Young.
YARD SALE At Eastern High
School by cheerleaders . July
16. 19. 9:30 lo 4·00 . •
YARD SALE . Danv ille Rt. 325 .

HOUSE FOR rent . 4 rooms ond

OH45769 .

•

Headquarters for
Hotpoint and
General Electric
Appliances

SALE PRICES
Jack W. Carsey

Mgr.
.__..... . Phone 992 -2181

Real Estate for Sale

ADORABLE PUPPIES . 742·2692.

99J -JJ2S

11
rooms ,
nic e
plush
ca rpeting , l lf2 bath s,
large basem ent, 2 car

garage &amp; level 101. Only
$17,500 .
FINANCING . Will
V.A. or F .H.A. 3
bedrooms, new bath,
la rge modern k itc hen
for t he family , full base ·

men t and large hall
acre lot. Just S23,5oo.

OFFICES -

10 rooms,

restroom, all utili t ies.
One floor approx. 7 yrs.

old. Will lake good offer .
WANT LAND - Here's
70 acres w ith
timber .

All

avai !able.

virgin
utilltfes

$25,000,

or

spet you can enjo y..
Restful 3 bedrooms,
bath , natural gas, fur -

992-7bll0.

na ce.
For Sale

COAl.

liMESTONE.

sand.

grovel , calcium chloride , fertil izer, dog food , and all types
of soh. Excelsior Solt Work s,
· Inc., E. Main St .. Pomeroy,

?92·3!191.

H2-2877 o' 7•2-2152.
16 CU . FT . frost free
refr igerator freezer. Avocado
gre&amp;n. $275 . 992-7291 after 4.

5.

HAY FOR sale . After
992 -5413 or 992-6118.

TWO HEREFORD caws with 2
cal .... es for sole. After 5,
992-5.13 or ~n · 611 B.

BUILDINGS-FARM-All STEEL .
For machinery and groin
storage. 40 h . x -48 h . x U ft.,
one 20H . x 13ft., OS door.

$3?95. 40fl.
$5220 .

7211.

X

Ca tl

X

l4fl.

c olle ct

614-237·2740.
APPLES . EXCELLENT for cooking. Fitzpatrick Orchards. SR
689 .
Pho ne
Wilke3v i lle

669-37B5.
CLEAN 1970 .350 CB Hondo
motorcycle. Excellent condi tion. Aftar5pm . 992-5144 .
FORD DIESEL tracto r. New
itres . El(cellent condition.
7.. 2-2228 or 742-2832 .
ENGINE FOR 1972 Datsun 510.

?92-2082.
GREEN BEANS, you pick. $4 .50
bu . Al so small pony . Ph.

843·2353.

.

ton window air conditioning . $200. Coli after 9pm.

247-3251.
1978 HONDA HAWK 400. 1979
Honda Twin-.Stor 185. 99~-3535
or 992 -7685 ,
TWO COMPARTMENT double
droin board cobinaf sink .
Gc;»od cond ition. 9-49-2004 .
GRAVElY

AND

equipment.

$550. ?92-5055.
KAWASAKI KD 175. 1975. For
sa le . Call742-2806.
TWO AIR co nditioners. One

5000 BTU and one 13,500 BTU .
Coli '/&lt;12-2451 after Spm.
WHEELCHAIR FOR 3ale . Practically new . $75. Coll 992-5441.
FRIG!OAIRE 30 in. electric
range. Lik e new . If Interes ted.
992-76.42 or992-5980.

Special Sale

Hotpoint
Air

Cond~ioners

s25 to sso
·Discounts
Large Stock

Jack W. Car-sey
I.API'M' . . .

Mgr.
Phone 992·2181

good offer .

RETIREMENT

Only

-

A

S17 ,500 .

Small down payment .

Aflo' 6, ?92·2520.

60B E .
MAIN
PnMFROY . O.

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
New Home
Construction
Extensive Remodeling
GREG ROUSH
Phone 992·7583
992-2282
7-5-1 MO,

Realtor

NEW

TRAILER SALES
L•n9uJIIt, Ohio
6li ·Ut·42il5 EvMlnp!
1Mtres E.nr o! W ~ l llt,vill•

Realtor

992·22$9

SUPER

992-6191

GOOSE

ST OCK
• Sl

mo

Real Estate for Sale
REAL ESTATE LoonS. Purchase
and r•finonc•. 30 ~ear terma,
VA . ~o money down (eligible
veterans). FHA - As low as 3
per cent down (non-veterans).
Ireland Mortgage Co., n E.
State. A thens . 61-t-591-3051 .
TWO STORY 3 bedroom house .
3 lois . Now' s your chance if
you n•ed o house . $12,(XX) .
Owner w illi ng to talk .
992-2082 or 742-2328

LISTING

Trailer lot on Rt . 7 w ith
city water, and other
serv ies for only $2900.

WE CAN OFFER YOU
PROPERTY THAT NO
ONE ELSE HAS . CALL
992 ·332$.

Housing
r Head ilart-ars .

HOBSTETTER
REALTY
PHOI\IS: 742-2003
NEW LISTING -

1975

B er r ing ton
24 'x52 '
mobile home with 10
acres . Home is total
electric, 3 bedroom s,· 2
baths, li Ving room , ki t chen and d ini ng a rea .
Ni ce porches and bu i lt
on
s torage
area .
L oca ted 1lf2 miles out of
Salem Center . Conve nient loca tion for all the
mines . You mu st see
th is excellent home !!
Pric ed
at
o nly

$37,500.00.
NEW LISTING - L;arge
2 s tory
home
in
Pomeroy with e~ecellent
river view. This home
ha s
3
spac iou s
bedroom s, living room ,
si tting roo m , dining
room , su n room and full
ba ement with shower .
The oak t r i m throughout
the home is really
ou t stand ing . Situated on
nice lot on East M ai n .

Asking only $28,000.00.
ST . ROUTE JJ - 3
bedroom home with
bath, kitchen, large liv ing room and utility
room . Su per investment
for person with im ·
ag ination . Ca ll and
make us an offe r on th is
nice home .

QUALITY built home in
Tuppers Plains. Ho m e
has 3 bedrooms , l iving
room , dining area,
beautiful k itchen, den
with fi re lace, 2'h baths
and 2 car garage ,
Sit uated on 4 ac r es.

Sel ls for $95,000.00 . Thi s
home
is
showp lace.

a

rea I

WE NEED LISTINGS.
We have buyers for
large
farms ,
m i ni
farms, acreathinking of
listing lwth us .
ee· when you are Cheryl
Lemley, Assoc.

CENTRAL REALTY CO.
WE HAVE CONV_ENTlONAL FINANCING FOR MOST OF OUR HOMES FOR
AS LOW AS 5% DOWN.
IS THIS ONE FOR YOU? 3 bedrooms wit h some
land and lots of trees, with low taxes , not in a
development . We have that house for you, at only
$39,500 on J,~ acre w ith wall to wall carpeting
th ro ughout, 1'/, car garage 8. storage bldg , behind
garag e. Close to schools, c hurches &amp; stores .

INVESTMENT PROPERTY - 2 unit income plus
space for two more uni ts, ea ch section has own elec .
m ete r &amp; hot water, separate en t ran ce a nd comes
niceiy furnished . Let ' s talk about thi s one .

IMMEDIATE

Real

n;ce, 3

1 Acre and up near Pomeroy .

JUST LISTED - Nice remodel ed 2 bedroom home
on b lack top road. Mostly carpeted . F .A . na t . gas
f urnace . A very attractive small home a nd 1 acre
la nd . Priced for qui ck sale for $17,500 .

RARE -MEDIUM -WELL DONE! -

Rarely lind a

m ed ium pri ced home in such fine shape . Well done
Insulating with gas heating budget of only 527 a mo.
Plent y of wood ca b inets , carpeted throuh out, 4 B R
home . Priced to sell at $27,000.

A SPARKLING GEM -

On a mini esla 1e,

meticu lousl y ca red for all th e func tional re quirements for gracious living . The J room , 2 story
barn red house with white trim otters 3 bedrooms,
bea utiful livi ng room with real beam cei ling, with
glass sliding doors to the back patio overlooking a
panorama of dis ta nt hills. The kitchen is one of the
most beautifu l you w i ll find , includ ing wOOd

cabinets, s1ove, refrlg,, 8. dishwasher that stay .
There is a 2 ca r attac hed garage and many more
tea tur~s . Priced at S55,ooo .oo - you mu s1 see this
· one if yoU like com forta b le l iv ing .
$32,000.00 -

Good 3 bedroom , all carpeted home

close to Pom eroy &amp; Mi dd leport. Located on good l lf2
acres of land .

LET'S HAVE AN OFFER - BO acres of la nd , lois of
pa sture &amp; som e farm ing ground . Lg , barn, house
needs som e repair . Minera l righ ts. 5 min. from

Pomeroy , $36,000.
·
SHOULD BE SOLO -70 acres, house &amp; good barn,
about 1,000 feet Of beautiful Ohio River frontage .
Nice recr ea ti on spot, minera ls, t oo. Let 's hiive an

offer. Price $57 ,000.

N•t"•n li991
; I

Smith Nelsm

Motors, Inc.
Vinyl and Aluminum
Siding

BISSELl
SIDING CO.
Coli lor a Free Siding
estimlte, ••t-2101 or
949-2 160. No sundoy
c~lls .

Mick's
Barber &amp;
Style Center

MARK MORA
HAIR STYLIST

FerJturing : mtn 1 1 &amp;
women ' s
styling,
perms.
C~lt lor •pp1 . or w•lk in .

992-2367
Main St.

Pomeroy, 0 .

Business Service$
AUTOMOifU INSURANCE
been cancelled? lost you r
ope ra tors
licenN? Phone

9922143 .
E-C EL·ECTRICAL Controc: tor
servi ng Ohlo Valley region .
Six days o wH~ , 24 hours ser vice. Emergency calls . Coli
882-2952 or 882 -3454

HOWERY AND MARTIN E&gt; ·
cavating. septic syltems ,
darer , bock hoe. Rt. 143 .
Phone 1 {614) 6q8-7331 or

7•2·2593 .

IN STOCK for immediate
del ivery: vari ou s sites of pool
k 1ts . Do- it· yourself or ler us
in stoll for you. D. Burtrgordner
Sales , Inc . 992 -5724 .

r

1

0

Now arrange the circted leners to
form the surprise answer, as sug·
geslad by the abo~e canoon.

I XI I I I 1 XI I ) THEM All
tomorrow)
I Jumbles: PARCH CI\MEO SHAKEN MAGNET
Answer: In the long run we might remember a famous

.

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

battle- MARATHON

Jumble 10M No. 13, cont1lnlnt 110 ~·· 11 IYIHible forS1 .75po•tp•kl
fromJumble,clotNs newsp•per,lox 3.4, NorWood, N.J. 07MI. Includeyour
name, lddreu, ztp code 1nd m1k1 c:hec:ke PIYible to New•p•~rbookt .

·
RORN LOSER

BRIDGE

AWMINUM
&amp; VINYL SIDING

BY

J&amp;L INSULATION

~

-. -- -

•

UITT.E ORPHAN ANNI E

6-6 ·1 m o.

Services Offered
NOW HAULING limestone ln
Middleport -Poemroy area.
Call for f r ee est imate.

367-7101.
PAINTING A:NO sandbl0atlng.
Free estimates. Call949-2686 .
HANDYMAN WORK mowing
lawns. pointing houses, roof s
and building sidewalks, etc.

HOUSE

PAINTING .

992·207B .
ROOM.
· Elderly

BOARD. launPry
only . Reosono'bla:

992-602'1 .

Mobile Kom.e s Sale's
1974 U x 70 mobile home.
Good · condition. $7800.

992·5858 .
1965 GENERAL6&lt;1xl2, 2 bed,.
1970 Sylva, 60x 12, 2 bedr .
1970 Castle, 60x12, 2 bedr .
1974 Morkline. 50)(12 , 2 bedr.
1969Voliant , 12x60, 2bedr .
1967 Notional, 121C50, 2 bedr .

B'S MOBILE HOME SALES . PT .
PlEASANT, WV. 304-675-4424.
1975 ·KIRKWOOD 14 X 70. 3

"

bedroom, total electric, ex·
cellent cond i tion . Phone

llh story house that si ts back off the road surround -

ed with maple trees. Lg . pond stocked with fi sh.
N ice ly l oca ted in Morning Star area . Price $33,900.

WANT TO SELL? - GIVE US A CALL

Auctions
BIG AUCTION every Wed., 7

CALL JIMMY DEEM, ASSOCIATE 949·2388
OR NANCY JASPERS, ASSOCIATE!
949-2654 or 949·2591

pm. Hartford Community
Canter, Hartford, WV, 4 mil"
above
Pomeroy - Mason

Bddge.

10 9 4

5
• A J 94

West

North East

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

3•
4t

Pass
Pass

5.,

Pass

Pass

Pa.s s

Opening lead : • Q

S·tf c

By Oswald .Jacoby
aod Alao Sontag
In Frank Stockton's story
" The Lady or the Tiger" , he
presented a very . difficult
problem and then left his
readers in limbo. He did not
give the solution .
South studied the hand for
a moment ·and proceeded to
play the firs t six tricks in

JIM KEESEE
Cellulosic twood libel' I
Thermallnsulollon
Save JO pet 1o 50 pel.
on 11U11nt cost
Experience and

luii.YInsured
FrH Es1 .
Call ,.l-2772

GASOLINE ALLEY

S·ln mo.

EXCAVATING . dozer , loader
and bockhoe work ; dump
trucks and lo-boys for hire ,
wlll haul fill dirt , top soil ,
limes tone and grovel Coll8ob
or liloger Jeffers. doy phone
992·708q ,
night
phona

WINNIE '
I ALMO:OT HATE TO
ADMIT IT, BUT 5HE'$
INHERITED A GOOD
DEAL OF HER
MOTl-IER'&amp;
TALENT.

, 51RDIE, WE&amp;E C06TUME5
'mAT WENDY DESIGNED
FOR $MCJ&lt;X:H AND Hl5
GROUP ARE: (i()()P/

PUlliNS EXCAVI\TING. Com·
plate Service . Phone 992-2478.

SAVE ON
CAIPniNG
BARNEY

DRIVE &amp;LimE
&amp;
SAVE A LOT

·.

TATER!!

DON' T JEST SET THAR
STARIN' AT 'lORE MUSH -- -

MAKE IT ALL GONE!!

A GOOD SELECTION
OF END &amp; ROLL
BALANCES.

All CARPET
NaN ON
SALE
$795

.

sq . yd.
24 Rolls ol carpet In
Stock &amp; 100's of Simples
to Choose From.

BUYNOW&amp;SAVE
Call742-2211
TALK TO
Wendell or Herb &lt;Orate ·
or a,ne Smith

RUl\AND
FURNITURE
Rutland

trumps.

It looked at first glance to
be a cla ssi c elimi'nation
play . West knew he had to
eithe r lead a club or give
South a ruff and discard .
Unfortunately for South,
West had lea rned how to
count to 13. He knew that
South held four clubs - the

sa me number as dumm y.
With only three clubs, South
would have had another
spade or diamond and would
have ruffed it to complete
the elimination play . So
West led a spade.
South ruffed in dummy
and discarded a club from
his hand but was still lert
with · a t;.o-way finesse for
the queen of clubs.
Which way should h e go?
Wa s West's failur e to lead a
club due to his holding the
queen or not holding the
queen ?

South, nonnally a slow
player, is still sitting there
lhinking.
.: !NEWSPAP ER ENTERPRISE ASSN. )

(For a copy of JACOBY MODERN. send S! to: " Win at
Bridge, .. care of this newspaper, P. 0 . BoK 4119, Radio City
Station , New York , N. Y. 70019.)

PEANUTS

'

I WISH &amp;HE INHERITED
HER MOTriER'&amp;
ABIL ITY lD GET
ALONG W ITri
PEOPLE, lDO,I

" A Question of

Guilt"

a,10;

Res11ess Earth 33; Upstairs
Downstairs 20.
lO :OD--Vegas 6, 13; News 20; 10:31).Best of Groucho 20.
11 :00- News 3,6,8, 10, 13, 15 ; New
Soupy Sales 17; Bundy Murder
Trial Highlights 33.
II :3Q--Johnny Carson 3, 15; Pollee
Woman 6, 13; Switch B; ABC
News 33 ; .Movie "Plaza Suite"
10; Movie " Let's Dance" 17.

·

THURSDAY, JULY 19,1979
5:40--World at Large 17; 5 , ~S­
Farm Report 13; 5 : ~PTL Club
13.
5'55--Summer Semester 10; 6:00700 Club 6,8; PTL Club 15; 6:1~
News 17; 6 :25--For You Black
Woman 10.
6,3o--Dragnet 17; 6 :4S-Mornlng
Report 3; 6 : ~Good Morning
West Vlr~lnla 13; 6:S~huck
White Reports 10; New~ 13.
7:0D--Today 3,15; Good Morning
America 6,13; Thursday Nt4rnlng 8; Schooll~s 10; Three
Stooges. r . lttle Rascals 17; 7: ISA.M. Weather 33.
7:30--Famlly Affair 10; Lilias Yoga
&amp; You 33.
8 :00-Capt . Kangaroo 8,10; Lassie
17; Sesame St. 33.
8:3Q--Romper Room 17; 9:0G-.l!ob
Braun 3; Phil Donahue 13, 15; Big
Valley 6; Porky Pig &amp; Friends 8;
Love of Life 10; Lucy Show 17;
Biography 33.
9 '30--Sanlord 8. Son 8; Hogan's
Heroes 10; Green Acres 17; .
10:00-Card Sharks J, 15; Edge of
Night 6; .AII In The Family 8,10;
Dating Game 13; Movie "The
Big Gamble" 17; Lowell Thomas
Remembers 33 .
10 ,3Q--AII Star Secrets 3,15; $:lo,ooo
Pyramid 13; Andy Griffith 6;
Whew! 8, 10; Consumer Survival

Kit 33.
10: S~BS News B; House Call 10.
11 :OD--High Rollers 3, 15; Laverne &amp;
Shirley 6, 13; Price )s Right 8, 10;
Biography 33.
11 :3Q--Wheel of Fortune 3, 15;
Family Feud 6, 13.
12 : OD--Newscenler 3; ' News 6, 10;
Password 15; Over Easy 33;
Young &amp;t he Restless 8: Midday
Magazine 13.'
12 : 15--Movle "Sands of lwo Jlma"
17.
12 :30--Ryan' s Hope 6;13; Search for
Tomorrow B,lO; Not For Women
Only 15; MacNeil-Lehrer Report
JJ.

by THOMAS JOSEPH

BRADFORD, Auctioneer . Corn·
plete Service . Phone q-49-2-487
or 949 -2000. Rac ine , Ohio.
Crltt Bradford.

SEWING M:I\CHINE Aepolfl,
aervlce, oil mo~as , 992 -m-4 .
The Fabri c Shop. Pomeroy .
Aull oorlzed Singer So l" and
Service . We shar~n Sci ssors .

rapid lire order. At trick two
he cashed the ace of trumps.
Then he took the second high
spade and the ace and king
of diamonds. Then he threw
West in with the· queen of

~d·~-

Out! All l
want is out 1

Business Services

742-2211

A J

+K

J&amp;L
Blown Insulation

FROM

• Q 10 8 6 2

+K6

949· 2862 --949 -2160

EXCAV AT I NG ,
da1er .
bockha. and dltcher , Ch arles
R. Hatfield. Block Hoe Service,
Rutland , Ohio. Pone 7-42-2008.

Reasonable rates , references .

• Q 82

SOUTH

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

.PIANO TL.iNING for home and
school. Lane Daniels . A lso
repa i rs . 1-4 years experi1nce.

RIDENOUR GAS Service. Oox·
ol L.P. gas . Chaster. 985-3307.

• 73

+ 9 B 52
•K

Vulnerable : Both
Dealer : South

992·3525 or 992·5232.

DOZER. END ~ooder and dump
truck . Will do basemenh,
pond s,
brush ,
timer ,
limestone and gravel. Ch arles
Butcher. 7.t2-2940 .

EAST

DOWN!

Coll614-667·3263.

992-2581 or ?92·2082 .

A 3
.K 10 6 5

WEST
• Q J 10 7 3
• Q3
• J 9 74
THEY WOK' T STOP
10 FIGGER THI\T
"· HEliE THEY
COME NQH ...

H. L Writesel
Rooftng

4

+

7-Hi

Free Estimate

CALL
992-2772

+A 4

• 8 76 5 2

7:00-C ro ss- Wits 3 ; Newlywed
Game 6, 13; News 10; Porter
Wagoner B; Love American
3tyle 15; Get Smart 17; Dick
Cavett 20,33.
7:30--Dolly 3; Match Game 6 ;
Muppet Show 8; The Judge 10;
That's Hollywood 13; Wild
Kingdom 15; My Three Sons 17;
MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20,33.
8 :0D--Movle "Little Big Man" 3,15;
Eight Is Enough 6, 13; Pilot " The
Lovebirds" 8,10; Movie " On the
Beach" 17; Masterpiece Theatre
20: All Creotures Great &amp; Small
33.
8 :30--Good Times B, 10.
9:0D--Charlle's Angels 6, 13; Movie

" Rebus " 17

A guessing game quandry
NORTH

Television
Viewing

12 :40--Baretta .6,13; Kolek 8; 1:00Tomorrow 3; News 15.
1:50-News 13; 1' 55-News 17;
2: 15--Movle "Charlie Chan In
Shanghai" 17; 3:~5-Movle

Wedn esday, July 18

ADO ONS and remodeli ng ,
gutter work , down spouts ,
some concrete work , wolkt
and
driveways
{ free ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR estimate) . Y.C. Young 111 . sw ..~rs . toasters, irons , oil
Raci ne , O H. 949 -27 .48 and .small appl iances . lawn moer ,
next to Slate Highway Garage
992·73 14 .
on Rou te 7, 985-3825.

located in Cheshire. With or
without furn iture. 992-7094 .

,

Rutland.

.

JUST LISTED - 14 acres of nice ro lling land with a

Pomero v .

.

J

Yeslo'd~y·s
·

mile off Rt . 7 by -pass
on St . Rf . 124 toward

7-10-1 mo.

From 1 1o 75 acres, bordering

LOTS OF LOTS -

Mee'T DID,

(Answers

3"

6-14-2 mo.

843-4974 or 985·3554.
12 x 65 THREE BEDROOM.

Phone 742 ·2003

Broker- Phone 992 -S739

-

S25,900 - Total priva cy is the key here on 2 plus
acres, th e l iving rm . has brick firepla ce. step -down
famil y room, equ ipped k itchen , f ull bath , la undr'Y
area , a nd two bedrooms complete downstairs . t he
unfinished upstairs makes expansion possibl e .

Hilton Wolfe, Assoc.

Phone 949·2589
GeorgeS. Hobs11!tter Jr.

POSSESSION

bedroom home, with large living room and fam ilv
room , all nice ly carpeted, large eat -i n ki tchen
equiJ,iped w ith di shwasher , d isposal. and stove, 2
full baths, 'h basement an d garage, nice garden on 1
plu s acres Of land in Racine . Pric ed at $45,000.

LOTS -

From the J•rgtsl -Tr~c ll or
BulldOitr R•CU•Ior
sm•llest He•Ter C•rt

TJ.'AI LE rl N OW A VA ILAB L E

-

Henry E. Cleland, Jr.

•d.

11310 Monttomrry

acres of n ice lay ing land
in a great location for
subdividing .
Me i gs
School Dist ., wat er &amp;
elec .
availab le .

Henry E. Cleland

Roger Hysell
Garage ·

·

1ntroduces -

equipped k it. OWNER
WILL DEAL , $22,500 .00.
A FO,RTUNE WILL BE
MADE - on lhis 240

NEEDS WORK - Good

Radiat9r·~
Servlcs ~

MONTGOMERY
.

F"om eroy Elem ., · full
basement,
large lot,

9 rm . home with 1.17
acres. Large garden
all
utilities .
spot,
Rebuild l ike you want.
Asking , but make us an
offer .

G!UEeNS' "TRAC.K

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

ava ilable . $27,900.00.
START A FUTURE
NOW - with 1his cozy 2
bdrm . 1 floor plan home.

Meigs Sc hool D ist .,
water &amp; elec . ava il able,
over l acre, great
secl Uded location for
con temporary home .
Want SJ,SOO.OO.

7·12

7-8·1 mo .

for qu ick sale, owner
will sacrifice, all brick
ranch
ty pe
home ,
w .b .f .p .• central air &amp;
heat, J bdrms., 11f2
baths ,
financing

SITE

51. R1. 1

E~PERIENCED

CALL 992-7544

LISTING

BeaUtiful home in Mid ·
dleport, excellent loca
tion, app)( . 2,600 sq . ft . of
l iv i ng space, 2 story ,
br i ck
&amp;
frame , 4
bdrms ., l f/4 baths, fami ·
ly room , rec. r ·oom . den,
large liv ing room , d in i ng,
break. ' nook ,
modern built-in kit..
ce ntral air &amp; hea t, tree
house ,
storage,

$178,000.00 .
BUILDING

YOU'D fii!!TTER. ""i
ee ON TH!;. LI'Vf;L,
OTHERWI510 YOU'Re
GO NNA l'f PEJ:;~ING
.MUD!!- AND 51TTIIJG
AROUt.JD IIJ IROIJ5
FROM HERE TO
P":&gt;:.-.. IUiW YORK!

WHIIT DO VOU MI!!AN
VOU DOoJ'T KIVOW ~
ARE YOU TRYING TO
!IE FUIJNV, MI~TER .• !

Nor1h of Chesler, 0 .
Phone 985-1202 · '
6·20 mo. pd .

992·61)11

Hours 9-t M .1 w., f.
Other times by appointment.
107 Sycamore (Rear)
Pomeroy, 0.

PRICE REDUCED -

NEW LISTING -

WHAi "TH5 WINNEF(
A'T. THE 5UR'L.S~U.E

CAPTAIN EASY

Mswel:(

own swimming pool and
a nice J bdrm . home w·
large built -in kit., din ·
lng , family, rec . room ,
basement, many other
features . SJ9,SOO.OO.

216 E. Second Street

•New Home
•Addons
* Remoldings
*Free estimates
1

I_

USED GARDEN
TRACTORS
AND
RIDING MOWERS

•

WEDNESDAY, JULY 11,1979

TILLIS

SIDING

4-23 ·1 m o.

FOUR BEDROOM house , full
basement on 3/, acre lor, utility building. Low th irties.
eutlond , 742-275-t .

NEW

C. R. MASH
VINYL &amp; AWM.

592-3051

36?.0557 .

$59,500.00.
NEW LISTING - Your

PUPPY BLACK lab ., 8 weeks
old . Co t. black , female .
Female, sOme long hair, ·4
block. 1 tiger, I grey ond
w hite, 1 brood stripe tiger, I
cal ico. Huma ne Socie ty .
KITT~N S.

IRELAND
MORTGAGE
CO.
7i E. State, A1hens

RESTAURANT AND bar. D•l
and D-2 license incl uded . 3
acres. and house, Good
busine55 opportunity . Call

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC,

GiveAway
THREE BEAGLE pups . ?92-7573
after 5.

FREE TO good home. 10 mo.
old whiht husky and co llie.
Female. Very good with kids.
Prefer in the country or on a
form . 992-3382 .

TWO BEDROOM house, completely furn ished , wall to woll
carpet, gas furnace . gorage,
ni'ce lot. 742-2923 .

EIG HT ROOM house and both.
Approx . 2 acres . 1 1/J miles oft
R:f. 7, wesf on 12.4 . Many extras. ~2 - 7255 .

?92-6()22 .

TWO MONTH old labrador
blocll. lemole puppy . housetrained . One lang-haired
caltco cot. block kittens , wh ite
ond tabby mole kirten . Meigs
Humane Society at 244
Sycamore, Middleport.

HOUSE FOR sole near Meigs
Mines . 742-1228.

Real Estate loans

Purchase
and
Refinance
lO Year Terms
A - No money down
(eligible veterans)
FHA- AS low as 3%
down (non-veterilns)

HOUSE FOR sale. 130 Butternut' Pomeroy , OH. 992-24 10.

TWO ROOM apartment .
Private both. All utilities paid.
First floor private entrance.
~ Also. sleeping room for rnet.

FREE ADORABLE kittens .
Three block . one block and
wl'lite. One oroMge. Co li

1ST~

Business Services

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING

742-2746.

ELEVEN MONTH old half Newfoundland and Shepard.
Block , long-haired female.
Mu st go to good home in coun·
try. 992-3705.

II

?92·2020 ..

TWO ACRE lot neor Meigs
Mine No . I . Rural woter
avoilobJe . Be st
offer .

ONE BEDROOM opts . Con ta ct
Village Manor, 992-7787.

19th. 20oh.
YARD SALE at Harold Hoger ,
East Main St., Ra cine . July 19.
From '1- ~ . Clothing and m.!.!.::_

POMEROY
LANDMARK

NICE
LARG E home
in
Pomeroy. Write Bo)( 729, c-o
the Daily Sentinel. Pomeroy ,

?92-5434

REAL ESTATE: I cere lot in Riggscrest Manor, between Tuppers Plains and Chester.
Phone985-3929 ond985-4129.

LOT FOR: so!e, Harrisonvi lle:
Water top on lot, driveway tile
in. App. 145 ft. fro ntage. On
hard rood . $1BOO . Ca ll r

both . 992-3090.

3 AND 4 AM furnished and un·
furnish ed
apt 3.
Ph o ne

2 1/~

Tasks for wh rc h you ha\le smal l
fo ndness are li kely to t&gt;e made
even more ditl icult today because of your attitude Avo•d
negat r'lle assu mptions .

nanclal conditio ns are a m1xed
bag for you todav. Unless
you 're very prude nt , you co uld
wind up In the red rns !ead ot
the black. Soend sen s1bly
GEMINI ~May :n .. June 20)
You 're usually very capable at
taking on two projects simultaneously and doing a goo.d job.
Today , howe~er , you 're better
oft slicking 'to just one .

$125.

wanted to Buy

CAPRI CO RN 1Dec.22-Jon .19)

r ou r sacr al in volvements today
mak e r1 a poi nt to treat e'ler yone eq ua lly Sh owing fav oritISm wrll cause hu rl feeli ngs.
PISCES (Feb .20-March"' 20)
Oon ' t look upon domest ic disagreemen ts tod ay as rnc apable
of being rmmedla tely res olved .
Clear tfl e air QUI Ckly. e\len rf a
one-sided compromr se is necessary.
ARIES {Mireh 21- Aprll 19) Be
very care fu l today how you
phrase what you say There 's a
cna nce you could unrntent ronllly offend one -,. au care tor.

T-Bird.

power scope. $325 . Phone

?92-2849.

124 LINCOLN Hill Rd .,
Pomeroy .
U pstairs ,
3
bedrooms, bath and showar.
Downstairs. dining roo m, l i\1 ing room, kitchen and hall
both. 4 rooms below street
l evel.
furnace
room,
workshop and 2 fin ished
rooms . PH. 992-5865 .

VERMEER BALER Soles, ports
and service. Balers in stoc.k for
immediate deli very. Phone

Auto Sales

?92-b:JO'I .
1967 FORD
843-2273.

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park ,
Route 33 , north of Pomeroy .
Lorge lots . Call992- 7479 .

742-2692.

WANTED: MAN or boy a\ler 16
to cu t weeds. 992-2646 .

REMING TON 22 250 BDL . 10

byH11r1riArnoldandBoblee

Unscramtle these tour Jumbles ,
one letter to each square, to form
four ordinary words.

Real Estate for Sale

Toy lor. 614-367-7220.
GOING O UT ot busine ss . All
poodles .
po meronio n ,
pekine!le, block po'm puppy.
great coot line . Phone
696-111 1 of fer Spm .

For Rent

•

the ~entinel Classifieds

~ ~ ~~ 41

GHOTE SAYS HE
STOP MUMBLES
WASN'T INVOLVED

VIOLENCE.

WANT AD
CHARGES
I day
2days

Ill

~~~!}. N}iji)ft

'
~THATSCRAMBLEDWOADOAME

I :OD--Days of Our Lives 3, 15; All My
Children 6.13: New• 8; Young &amp;..
ACROSS
4 Pulpit talk :
the Kesness 10; Wild Wild World
I Criticize
abbr.
of Animals 33.
6 Like some
5 Rome's
1: 30--As The World Turns 8, 10; All
fountain
beer
Creatures Great &amp; Small 33.
2:0D--Doctors 3,15; One Life to Live
ll Spiritual
&amp; Sentiment
6,13; 2:25--News 17.
12 Italian city
7 Worthless
2:30--Another World 3, 15; Guiding
13 Be converted
horse
Light 8,10; Baseball 17; Een
15 Late shipping 8 Musical
Festival 33 ; 3: OQ--General
tycoon
number
Hospltal6,13; Lilias Yoga &amp; You ·
Yesterday'• Alllwer
20.
II Large truck
t Egyptian
3:JO.· Mash 8: Joker'.s Wild 10;
17 "-Touch
deity
Z! Kind of
31 Spin
Turnabout 20; Earthkeeplng 33.
of Venus"
10 Glazier's
dog or ~w
37 Mllintalned 4:0D--Mister Cartoon 3; Hollywood
18 Restrict
item
Z4 - stanwn.Ui 3t Opj,osed to,
Squares 15; Merv Griffin 6;
Addams Family 8; Sesame St.
!II Instance
14 Symbol
Z5 Sal, in a song
cowboy style
20,33; Mike Douglas 13.
Z3 Salad herb
of innocence ~ Building
40 Missile
4: 30-Lone Ranger 3; Hogan's
Z7 Exemplar
18 Tether
wing
firing
Heroes 8; Lucy Show 15.
%9 Brazilian
i9 r :nic page Z8 Mocha, e.g. 41ltalian
5 :0D--Bonanza 3; Beverly Hillbillies
city
sleuth
31 Arboretum
volcano
8; Mister Rogers' Neighborhood
20,33; Gomer PylelO; Six Million
30 Silverware
211 Townsman
sight
43 Beverage
Dollar ~n 13; Brady Bunch 15;
3% Beckon
21 American
34 Greek island
" Once Star Trek 17.
33 Boys' book
humorist
35 Movie dog
While"
5 :30--News 6; E lee. Co. 20; Mary
boys
Tyler Moore 10; Odd Couple 15;
Doctor Who 33.
35Famous
6:0D--News
3,8,10,13,15; ABC News
craft
6; Family Affair 17; VIlla Alegre ·
38 On the links lii""-t--t--+""""120; Studio See 33 .
item
6:30--NBC News3,15; ABC News 13;
Carol Burnett 6; CBS News 8, 10;
3t Enzyme:
Over
Easy 20,33; Father Knows
suffix
Best 17.
·
U Understand
7: 00- Cross-Wits 3; Newlywed
t5Type
Game 6, 13; News 10; Love
American Style 15; Get Smart
of shelter
17; Dick Cavett 20,33.
UHamburger
7: JQ--Hollywood squares 3; Pulse 6;
garnish
Match Game PM 8; $100,000
47 Ritual
Name That Tune 10; Nashllllle
On The Road 13; Dolly 15; My
setting
Three Sons 17; MacNeil-Lehrer
48December
Report 20,33.
VIP
8 :0D--Prolecl U.F.O. 3,15; Mork .&amp;
Mindy 6, 13; Wellons 8, 10; Nova
DOWN
33; Movie "Riot" 17; Restless
1 Latvian city lrr-+-11--t--t· Earth 20.
ZGood
8 :30- ABC News Closeup 6,13;
9:00--Qulncy
3, lS;
Mlss
whack : sl.
Universe Pageant B, 10; VIolent
3 No\ for
Universe 33.
9:30--Barney Miller 6,13; 10:0D-DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here'a how to work It:
Davld Cassidy 3, 15; Onedln Line
AXYDLBAAXR
' 17; News 20.
10 :3o--Daath Isn ' t Enough 6;
II LONGFELLOW
Hocking Valley Bluegrass 20.
One lett er simply stands for another. In thi1 sample A is
11 :Oo--News 3,6,8, 10, 13,15 ; New
used for th ~ three L's, X for the 1wo O's, etc. Single letters,
Soupy Sales 17; Bundy Murder
apostrophes, the length and form ation of the words are all
Trial HlghiiRhls 33.
hints. Each da y the code letters are dllferent.
11 :~~ohn~v.. Car~n. .hl~csillt .• :
&amp; Hutch 6, 13; Mash 8; A!iC' ,!fews •
CRYPTOQUOTES
33; Movie "C"a1rcel My ·Reiet'·
vatlon" 10; Movie "The Pieasu~t'
E V W' B
EB
HTEZKBRWEWZ
KLJ
Seekers" 17.
12 :05--Movle "Rebecca" 8; 12 : ~
VLLW
XYBRT
N L DR V,
YHBRT
Borella 6, 13; 1:00-Tomorfow 3;
·
News 15.
SLO
lOS
WLJ? - RYTX
JEXVLW .l :~Baseball 17; 1 : ~News 13;
Vesterday's Cryptoquote: A CLASS REUNION IS TilE SAME
4: 1S- News 17; 4 :3S-Movle
" Lawl ~ss Range" 17.
OLD FACES WITH MO~ NEW TEETH. - ANON

«

© 1t7f King Feeturn SYndlcat., Inc .

�10 - The Dail y Se ntmel . Middlt•JX•rt·Pomero)'. 0 ., Wednesday , July 18, !:179

Were JFK, King conspiracy victims???

Area deaths
JAMES A.liREWER

WASHINGTON tAP ) - Was the
35th president of the United States
murdered by a conspiracy involving
gangsters ? Did ot.her conspirators
plot the killing of a ma jor American
civil ri&amp;)lts leader?
The assassiruitions committee of the
U.S. House of Representatives, in a
divided decision, says tha t may have
been the case when :
-{)n Nov . 22, 1963, President John
Fitzgerald Kennedy was shot to death
in Dallas .
-On April 4, 1968, Dr. Martin
Luther King Jr . was gunned down in
Memphis, Tenn .
The committee's final report, the
product of a two-year , $6 million
ilWestigation , sa id Tuesday th a t

James Eari Ray assassinated Kin g. Sa ntos Trafficante as "the most likely
It sa id it found "substa ntial family bosses of organized crime to
evidence" that a St. Louis group have participated in such a unilateral
offered S50,000 for tlle murder of King assas.~ination plan.11
- but no proof linking the offer to hi s
But it said it found no direct
murder .
evidence Marcello or Trafficante
Of Kennedy, the final report said : were in fact involved.
"The committee found that it was
Marcello, operating out · of New
possible ... that an individual Orleans, and Trafficante, out of
organized crime leader or a small Miami, deny they had any connection
combination of leaders might have with Kennedy's murder .
partici pated in a conspira cy to
The report said "one critical
a11sassinate President Kennedy ."
evidentiary element" distinguishing
It named Carlos Marcello and Marcello from other mobsters is

CONWAY, S. C. - Wanda Swruners
may have been .
sobbed as she recounted for a Horry
But three of the committee's 12 County jury yesterday how two Hunmembers fil ed disse nts to th e tington men abducted her and Louise
that
Ken nedy's . Sellers, then sexually assaulted and
conclusion
assassination was a conspiracy , much shot them Feb. 22.
less a conspiracy by mobsters.
"It was the most degrading exOne of the thr ee dissenters, Rep. perience I've ever suffered in my
Harold Sawyer, R-Mich .. said the whole life," she said. Mrs. Swruners
conspiracy finding s in the Kennedy was the last wiiness to testify in the
and King assassinations are based on murder trial of Ronald "Rusty"
"supposition upon supposition upon ., Woomer, 24, of Huntington.
supposition."
Woomer is accused of murdering
Committee members scheduled a Mrs. Sellers, 35. He also is charged
news confe rence today to formally with two counts of kidnapping, sexual
release the · report and answer assault and assault with intent to kill.
questions about it.
Three other murder charges are also
Conspiracies or not, however, the pending against him in two other
committee agreed with conclusions of counties.
earlier investigations that Lee Harvey
Tbe defense and prosecution rested
Oswald assassinated Kennedy and their cases yesterday after the jury

heard a tap_ed statement from . the
defendant in which he discussed the
murder spree that spread across
several counties in South Carolina.
Attorneys will present their closing
arguments to the seven-woman, fiveman jury this morning before Circuit
Judge David .Harwell explains the
charges against Woomer. The state is
seeking the death penalty in the case.
Woomer took the stand briefly
yesterday to discuss his constitutional
rights to a fair trial. He testified that
he understood them and had voluntarily given pollee a statement, but he
contended that oificials ignored his

MEETS ntURSDA Y
The Democrat Central Committee
' will meet at the Carpenters Hall in
. .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , Pomeroy Thursday, July 19, at 7:30
EFFECTIVE JULY 1
p.m.

-INCREASED
SAVINGS RATES
SENTENCE YOUR
EARNINGS TO

PLENTY OF HARD
LABOR •••

CAR WASH SET
A car wash will be held Saturday,
July 21, at Ebers Gulf in Racine;from
9a.m. until noon sponsored by Carmel
Sutton Youth Class.·
Outside only is $2 and $3 for cleaning
inside and out.
THURSDAY SESSION
The Rock Springs Better Health
Club will meet Thursday , July 19, at
noon at the home of Frances Goeglein
for its annual picnic.
· SQUADCALLED
The Syracuse ER Squad was called
Sun&lt;~a¥ at 10:57 p.m. for Vicki
Cundiff. She was first taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital then to
St. Joseph Hospital in Parkersburg.
SPECIAL SINGING
The Duncan family of Tampa, Fla.,
will be at the First Baptist Church,
Middleport, Sunday, July 22. Services
will he at 7 p.m. Refreshments Will be
served following the services.
SWIMMING PARTY
The Pomeroy Youth League wiil
sponsor a swinuning party at London
Pool in Syracuse Monday, July 23 at
7:30 p.m. for players, parents,
manager and coach.

Death warrant

PASSBOOK

"credibl e associations ... albeit
tenuous" linking - Oswald and Jack
Ruby , who killed Oswald, to Marcello
ao;sociates.
The report said Ruby was a
personal acquaintance of Jose ph
Civello, "the Marcello associate wbo
allegedly headed organized crime
activities in Dallas."

James A. Brewer, Rt. 1, Lung
Bottom died Tuesday at Veterans
Memor'ial Hos pital following an
accident at home.
He was born March 23, 1978, to
William and Diana Young Brewer. He
is survived by his parents, one
brother William; grandparents, Mr.
M~s. James Goodrich , Long
and
11
Based on a review of Ule evidence, Bottom, Mr. John D. Brewer , Oak
albeit circumstantial, the committee Hill , W.Va., and Mr. and Mrs. VIctor
believed that Ruby's shooting of Young, Jr., Pomeroy ; great
Oswald was not a spontaneous act, 11 grandparents , Mrs. Olhe Henry ,
tlle report said.
Huntington, W,V a. , Mr .John D.
Brewer, Point.Pieasant, W.Va .; and
Mrs. Audrey Young, Pomeroy ; four
uncles two aunts ,and several cousins.
Fun~ral will · be held at the Ewing
Chapel, Friday, at 3 p.m ., minister _ID
be announced. Burial at Beech Grove
request that an attorney be present.
Cemetary. Friends may call at the
Woomer kept his eyes closed as funeral home alter I p.m. Thursday .
Mr.s. Summers, 25, testified that he
and an alleged accomplice, Eugene
Skaar, also of Huntington, abducted
Holzer Medieal Cea!er
her and Mrs. Sellers from the
Discharges, July 17
Pawley's Island convenience store
Robert Allard, Maggie Arnold,
where they worked . .
Carol Blaine, Joe Bond, Barbara
Tbey were driven to a dirt road off Brown, Bertha Brown, Ruth Cook,
South Carolina 544 and forced at gun· Jason Dailey, Angela Damewood,
point to engage in oral, anal and Beatrice Davis, Virginia Day, Della
vaginal intercourse, Mr.s. Swnmers Dyke, Keith Halley, Elsie Heading,
said.
Luther Hines, Doris Jenkins, Bren&lt;la
She told a rapt courtroom that she Johnson, Helen Johnson, Allie Aileen
and Mrs. Sellers were told to walk Long, Rose Patrick, Joshua Proffitt,
together in front of Woomer aiKI Mrs. George Watson and daughter,
Skaar, and, as she turned around, she Harry Shugrue, Bessie Siders, Brenheard the blast of a shotgun and fain- da Smith, Tressie Stevens. Mark
ted.
Toles, George Waldron, William
When she came to, she said, she Ward, Ray Wears, Mrs. Victory
saw Mrs. Sellers on the ground and Young III and son.
said, "Louise, get up; we've got to get
Blrtbs, July 17
help, but Louise didn't move. "
Mr. and Mr.s . Jack Thacker, son,
Mrs. Sellers was dead and the lower Wellston; Mr. and Mrs. Harold Riphaif of Mrs. Surruners' jaw had been peth, daughter, Coalton; Mr. and
blown away.
Mrs. Gary King, son, Pomeroy ; Mr.
Mrs. Swnmers testified that, and Mrs. Dennis Hurt, daughter, Rodrealizing that she had been shot, she ney ; Mr. and Mrs. James Pullins, Jr.,
ran to the hig_hway where two passing son , Point Pleasant.
cars ignored her pleas to stop. She
eventually found a house where the
residents notified police, she said.
The jury heard a tape recording of
Woomer 's statement to pollee after
his capture in a Myrtle Beach motel.

Survivor offers testimony

Kennedy ' s
a ss ass in ation
was
probably a conspiracy a nd King's

Compounded Daily

5 Y4%

90 DAY CERTIFICATE ......~;~~:':~~~!:~~~~~...... 5%%
Minimum $1,000.00
5344~o
1 YEAR CERTIFI'CATE..............................

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) -Gov.
Bob Graham signed the fifth death
warrant of his administratlon
Tuesday, ordering convicted murder
Howard Virgil Lee Douglas to die in
Florida's electric chair next week .
Executlon was set.for7 a.m. July~.
Douglas' 1974 trial Jury had recommended leniency and a life sentence,
but Circuit Judge William K. Love,
who sentenced him, said Douglas
asked to be sent to the electric chair.
After Graham signed the warrant,
Florida State Prison Superintendent
David H. Brierton set the execution
for a week from Thursday.

2 YEAR CERTIFICATE ......~.i~~~~~-5!:~~·."?... :.. 6%

4 YEAR CERTIFICATE ..... t:~!~!'Jl.~~ ~J.I!I!O.. ll'! .. ... 7'A%
6 YEAR CERTIFICATE ......~i?!~~~.s.l:~~~-.o~.... .' 71/z%
8 YEAR CERTIFICATE .....~:~:':'.~':'.~~·-~0•0:~~ ...... 7314%

Weather
Clear tonight. Low around 60.
Mostly sunny Thursday .High in the
low to mid 80s. The chance o£ rain is
10 percent tonight and Thursday.

1 114%

GOOD WEATHER CONTINUES
.. High pressure centered over
Missouri Is giv!Dg Ohio au extended
period of good weather. The high will
move into Indiana tonight and
Thursday.
. . The high is providing the state with
sunny wealller through Thursday, and
the National Weather Service says
good weather could continue through
Sunday.
.. UDder clear sides tooight, low• wiD
be In the 50s. High temperatures will
be in the low to mid II&amp; Thursday.

Mayor's Court
In the court of . Syra cuse Mayor
Eber Pickens Wayne T. Cleland , 23,
Racine, was fined $140 and costs on
charges of allowing an unlicensed
driver operate a motor vehicle .
In Pomeroy Mayor Clarence
Andrews Court two deiendants were
fined .and two others forfeited bonds.
Fined were Steven Foulkrod ,
Pomeroy, $100 and costs, six months
probation, assault ; Marion Watson ,
Pomeroy, $300 and costs, a•sault.
Forfeiting bonds were William I.
Eakins, Racine, $100, intoxication ;
Jeffrey English , Pomeroy, $40 ,
speeding.
Six defendants were fined and two
others forfeited bonds in tlle court of
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman.
Fined were David L. Hendricks,
Middleport, $10 and costs, .running
stop sign ; Hartford Earl Nobles,
Wilmington, N. C. , $15 and costs,
Randy
Carpenter,
speeding;
Middleport, $50 and costs, assault;
Bernard Keith Cook, Middleport, $50
and costs, disorderly manner ; Alfred
Evans, Middleport, $5() and costs,
disorderly manner; Jimmy W.
Hinton, Rutland, $10 and costs,
spinning tires .
Forfeiting bonds were Sheri Clark,
Pomeroy, $29, speeding; and Randall
F. McMillian, no address,$39 speed.

MONEY MARKET CERTIFICATE
SJO,OOO minimum . Interest rate equal to the rate of 1ai day treasury

bill rate . As d e ter~ined at weekly auction .

SUBSTANTIAL PENALTY FOR EARLY WITHDRAWAL
" Tirl' Frif•ntll)· Rm1l.·"
Walk -up teller window
and auto -teller window
Open Friday Ev e nings 5 to 7 p.m .

Mlaelleport, o.

€b

MA GNET

Kee psake g u a rant c~o:d pe rfect d i a.mo n~· cng&lt;tgcment ri ngs a nd 14 Kara t gold wc.dd mg n ngs co me
in a large ran ge

l lf

st~· lcs

VIRGINIA IIATFIELD
Mr.s . Virginia Hatfield, 54, a
resident of Rt. 2, Coolville, died
Tuesday at St. Joseph's Hospital in
Parkersburg following an extended

illness.
.
.
She was born in Williamston, Ky.,
to Josephine Hatfield McKee of
Detroit, Mich. and the late Abraham
McKee. She \VIIS a member of the
Troy-Bethany Methodist Church.
Survivors include her husband,
Albin, two daughters, Judith Carol
Billinoff, Glendale, Ariz., and Ar·
noletta Jean Gass of Parkersburg, W.
Va.; five soilS, Sammy of Stockpark; •
Albin, Jr., Glendale, Ariz.; David and
Jerry, both of Chicago; and GleM of
Coolville; two sisters, Betty Jo
Lukoski, Detroit, and Magel Lea
Dunn, Cameron, W. Va. She was
preceded by a sister, Juanita McKee.
Funeral servicell will be held at I
p.m. Friday from the White Funersl
Home In Coolville with Brother Steve
Botha officiating. Burial will be in
Coolville Cemetery. Friends may call
at the funeral home after 5 p.m. Tbur·
sday.

VOL XXVIII

and p n ccs .

Choose Kcc psith rings. the pcrfct.:t way to show
yo ur love. wht.: f1 it's for kee ps.

Keepsake·

'

WASHINGTON (AP ) - Hamilton
Jordan, takipg over as White House
chief of staff, ordered an evaluation of
top officials throughout the
govemment while President Carter's
Cabinet members waited today to
learn whether their resignations

Today
. .. in the world

SUMMER . fURNITURE

Plans underway

SALE

wake ol a weekend rock concert

base chairs.
Hurry While Supplies Lastl

NEWARK, Ohio (AP ) -In

--

~

at legend Valley Park, several
retldenbl ol Ucklng Township
are rnaldng planl to block any
more such roenll from the area .
1111 cotJCert and another one
held this IUIQIDer each bl-ouaht
-J:.!(~~pqle to u.-.
county Common Pleas
Judie . Neil M. Laughllo bas
lcheduled a hearlJll for next
Monday on a requeot lor 1 per·
manent Injunction prohibiting
future concerti at the park. The
reaidehta point to incidents of
vulgarity and Indecency at the
. COIICWI II, along with disruption ol
u-.Hic in the area and zoning
violatl- because of lack of per·
manenl parking spaces at the
park .

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

.

A~cusation given ·
WASHINGTON

(AP )

Strlldng atomic workers aCCU!ed

3 DAYS ONLYI
THURSDAY,
FRIDAY
AND
SATURDAY

the Energy Department Wed·
!llllday ol inviling another major
nuclear accident by letting untrained personnel operate slnlck
nuclear facilities In Ohio and Ten·

neuee.

More than 100 striking members of the Oil, Chemical and
Atmllc Workers union OCAW picketed outside department
tadquarters to protest alleged
hazardous condlUona at the plan·
ts. The lltrlkers al8o ·charged the
government haa falled ID protect
the health and safety ol nucleiir
workers.

'Miracle baby''

BUY ONE ITEM AT REGULAR
PRICE, GET SECOND ITEM
FOR r!
INCLUDES:
Girls Underwear Sets
Sizes 2-14
Boys and Girls Shirts &amp; Tops
Sizes 2-14
Summer Infant Wear 3 mo.·24 mo.
Sundresses 2-14
All Swimwear
Hours:
9:30 to 5:00
Mon. thru Sat.
9:30 to 8:00

Friday

1.
Near Stiffler's in Pomeroy
2nd Street
992·3586
Pomeroy, 0.

process."
The youthful McCormack has bolted
party ranks in the past on other
matters. Th is time he complained the
bill and its roany changes in
permanent law, not necessarily

involving state finances, had been put
together only by the Senate's top

•

al y
'

'

.

the bench.
leader s, to the exclusion of others.
Sen . Stanley J. Aronoff, R·
The other Democratic defector,
Sen . Michael Schwarzwalder, D- ·Cincinnati, and Sen. Thomas A. Van
Colwnbus, voted against the bill a Meter , R-Ashland , along with
second time. He did so to stress his Gillmor, also objected becauae
opposition to budget language which hearings were not held on some ite11111
more severely restricL~ use of public put into the measure by the
conference committee.
funds for welfare client abortions.
The abortion language was one of · Democrats denied GOP charges
many " permanent law changes" down the line . Most of them also sal4
Senate Democrats had put into the they were satisfied the abortlcin and
bill..,
desegregation items are political
While Republicans did hot object to assets f9r them.. poi!Sible vetoes
that item , they ?bJected strenuously notwithstanding.
They said the desegregation
to others, includmg one the:; ms1sted
will result in forced busing of school language won't mean forced busing.
pupils. Many politicians see this as a They. noted it prohibits use of state
desegregation
funds
for
hot campaign issue for 19110.
Others, they said, would unduly transportation ana makes it optional
strengthen the powers of the state for school districts to accept the $400
Controlling Board- dominated 4-3 by grants the bill provides for each
. Democrats - and create a municipal student transfered to acbleve
court district in Cincinnati to increase desegregation .
the chances of blacks being elected to
t:ontinued on page 7

.,

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'

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

NO . 67·

ASK TOWED
Johnny R. Davidson, 19, Middleport,
D.C. aS.sembler, to Debra A. Smith, 17,
Middleport, student.

folding furniture and Lloyd spring

the bill .
Voting with majority Democrats for
the mea~ure Wednesday were Sens.
Oakley C. Collins, R-Ironton, M. Ben
Gaeth, R-Defiance, Theodore M.
Gray, R-Columbus , and Donald E.
" Buz" Lukens, R-Middletown .
Democrats also regained the
support of one of two defectors from
their ranks on the earlier roll call .
Sen. J . Timothy McCormack, DEuclid, voted for the bill, saying he
felt his orginal vote had accomplished
its purpose. He defined that purpose
as "a fight to restore subl!tantially
mor e life to Ohio 's democratic

administrative assistant, 113id Rhodes
wouid act promptly on the $16.a billion
spending document .
He said there are technical
problems in running the state under
the interim budget the Legislature
enacted June 30 for the month of July,
allowing Rhodes and other officials to
depart for China on schedule.
There was aimost no debate in
either chamber as the record budget,
up from about $15 billion in 1971-1979,
finally went to the governor . Both
sides said their argwnents already
had been sufficiently put forward.
Rhodes, it was leaerned, helped
persuade the Republicans to depart
from what some had called a "unit
rule" under which all cau cus
members abide by the will of the
majority .
At the time of the first vote, at least
four and possibly five Republican
senators had been ready to support

en tine
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

THURSDAY, JULY 19, 1979

Jordan wants top officials evaluated

SQUADRUN
.
The Middleport ER Squad
Wednesday at .4:34 p. m . transported
10 montll old Brandon Floyd, Rt . 3,
Pomeroy , to Holzer Medical Center.

SAVE 20% ON OUR
ENTIRE STOCK OF
SUMMER PATIO
.. FURNITURE

The . House approved it 56-36
Wednesday to meet parliamentary
requirements, although it had gone
along .61-26 on Its June roll call.
The Senate's 15 Republicans, who
voted no as a bloc the first time
around yielded four votes for the
budget: and said they were satisfied
!he governor will veto parts of it tJ:Iey
don 't like. They received no
assurances of specific vetoes,
bowever, said Senate Minority Leader
Paul E. Gillmor, R-Port Clinton.
Rhodes kept behind the scenes as he
met with the GOP senators two times
and with Senate President Oliver
Ocasek, D-Akron , in between those
meetings.
Ocasek said he reminded the
governor that ~ · had not kept a
promise to provide five GOP votes the
first time, and that Rhodes replied "I
will see what I can do."
· Chan Cochran, the governor 's

e

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
Admissions- Raymond Ridgway ,
Cambridge; Ithmer Neal, Middleport .
Discharges-Robert Vance, Brian
Allen, Wanda Swartz, Sharon Bailey ,
Paul Laudermilt, Wendall Barrett,
Glen Rizer, Wilbur Hood , Rolland
Glenn .

Choose from redwood, aluminum

under the awoerage 4 year

tJlbens /4alional Bank

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Gov.
Jam~ A. Rhodes ·.Is expected to act
promptly on the big state budget bill
. he helped pry loose from .a deadlocked
Ohio General Assembly .
The needed coalition·came together
in the Senate on Wednesday after 18 ·
days of political inflghUng, an&lt;l a few
hours after a series of meeUngs . the
~ovemor had with leaders of both
parties,
Some lawmakers had speculated
that the stalemate, which Involved
constderable posturing for the 1980
elections, would not be broken until
Rhodes returned from 'a 17-day trade
mission to China. He had been back a
day when It broke.
The Senate approved 22-11 the same
conference· committee verslop of the
bill it had previously rejected 16-17.
Democ:rats had provided all the
afflrmative votes the first time, on
June 29.

ELBERFELDS
WAREHOUSE

4 YEAR MONEY CERTIFICATE
Minimum SI ,OOO .OO . lnteres1 rate of
yield of Treasury Securities .

Prompt action expected on big ·budget bill

.

•

CHAPEL IDLL, N. C. (AP) Doctors are calling David Lee
Patterson a ''Miracle baby."
David, who weighed six poun·
da, four Ollllce3, was developed
outalde his mother's womb. Doctors at North Carolina Memorial
Hospital say the live birth of such
a baby Ia "too rare to estimate
scientifically."
The baby was born Wednesday '
to Charles and Shirley Patterson
of Burlington. The mother and
child were reported doing well.
II was the second such birth In
the United States In less than ..
three months. Doctors attending
the first mother said only about
50 births outside the wWlb bave
been recorded In medical
literature.

Will resign too
MANAGUA, Nlcarsgua (AP) Interim President Francisco Ur-

cuyo

resigned Wednesday
36 bours after he
replliced the exiled Ansstaslo
Somoza, and was taken to Las
Mercedes international airport to
be flown ·out of the country, a
presidential adviser said.
evening,

would be accepted .
The only fermat announcement
Wednesday from the .White House
revealed Jordan's promotion .
It was unclear whether Carter
would announce today or Friday
which resignations he would accept
among the 30 out standing ones
submitted earller by his Cabinet and
top White House staff.
White House press secretar)' Jody
Powell said today the president "is

FAIR WEAntER
A slow moving blgb pressure
system centered over llldlalUI II
mPvlllg eastward, alld will bring
ooallaued lllir wealber to lhe llale
lllroucJI lbe weetead.
Warm air from llle .west II claablug
wflll a cold 11'0111 moving soulll from
Cllaada, but wealhermea beUeve the
warm air . wlll win out: High
lemperatureo lllrough llle weekend
art expecled to reach the mid 80s,
willl lows a\ Dighl In tbe lOs.
· :·:·:·:·:·:·:·: ·:·:·~=·:· :·:·:·:·:·:• : · : · :·:·:·:·:· :·:·:· :· :·: ·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·: ·:·:·:·:·:·:·:=:

well on the track of concluding those
decisions, certainly within the neJ&lt;t
few days ."
A~ked on the CBS-TV "Morning
News'; how widespread the shakeup
would be, Powell replied : "There is no
goal or target for shiiUng people
around ." He added that officials in top
policy-making posts "ought ID go
through a process ol eva !nation .
Certainly that's something that
happens in any successful institution
in the private sector.' '
ConUnuing uncertainty about the
shakeup has helped depress the dollar
on international money markets . But
Powell said this should not " bar a
president from taking action that he
needs to take in order to set hts
administration in the proper shape·to
deal with the priorities that he feels
are important to the . country."
Hoosing and Urban Development
· Secretary Patricia Roberts Harris
was the center ol speculation
Wednesday. Soorces who declined to
be named said she met with Carter
and Jordan ·at the White House , first
at 10 a.m . and again at 4 p.m.

Mora, Hill hired
•
•
by commzsszoners

She refused to discuss the substance
of the talks with even her closest
asso ciates. Nevertheless, they were
convinced that she would not be fired
and indeed· had been offered another·
'
post, probably a more desirable one.
Speculation also focused on the
futures of Joseph A. Califano Jr ., the
secretary of health, education and
welfare; Treasury Secretary W.
Mi chael Blumenthal;
Energy
Secretary James R. Schlesinger; and
Transportation Secretary Brock
Adams.
Califano was believed to be high on
Carte r' s hit list, according to
knowledgeable HEW sources. The
HEW secretary, who has close ties to
traditional liberal Democrats, has
feuded with Jordan from the
administration's start.
At HEW, sourre; who declined to be
identified said Califano did not know
whether he would be fired, but he
expected the worst. Aides to Adams
and Blumenthal als9 expr~ fear
their bosses' resignations would be
accep,ted.
From the White House to Cabinet
departments to public interest groups,
a ruiOOf made the rOunds that Mrs:
Harris was offered Califano's job, but
it was reliably learned there was no
factual basis for the gossip.
And a top Schlesinger aide, who
asked not to be identified, told
Associated Press Radio " it Is
inevitable that President Carter is
going
to
accept
Secretary

.

Schlesinger's

resignation ."

Schlesinger told reporters he had no
Meigs County Commis sioners the park, said the county could idea about his fate .
Tuesday night following a lengthy operate the park through Labor Day,
It was learned that when the smoke
discussion with Michael Swisher, but an agreement must be reached clears from the White House staff and
county welfare director, employed between the county and the watershed Cabinet shake-up, Cal'ter hopes to
Donald Mora as income maintenance for the 1980 season . ·
become a "teaching president," freed
supervisOr and 'Siisie Hill as an
settling
administration
Commissioners agreed to meet at a from
income maintenance worker .•
later date with Crisp to determine bickering to concentrate on . longCommissioners also discussed with future operation of the park.
range national problems.
Swisher the need for a general
It was announced Ulat a public
That goal was reflected in Jordan 's
. cleanup of !he welfare building.
meeting would be held at the Tuppers promotion to chief of staff, which for
Discussion also centered around the Plains Grange Hall July 23 at 7:30 the first time in Carter's 30 months in
operation of Forest Acres Park. Jack p.m. to discuss the EPA ban on office elevated one staff member
Crisp, president of the Leading Cree~ construction in that area.
above others at the top. Carter 's
Water Association, present owners of
Commissioner Chester Wells resistance to such a move reflected
reported all workmen were back on concern over a buses of power laid to
the job at the multipurpose building former President Richard M. Nixon 's
and the job was progressing along chief of staff, H.R. Haldeman.
well.
County Engineer Wesley Buehl
reported construction of the new
bridge on County Road 20 has been
completed and reopened for traffic.
•
County Mental
Retardation miDOr COmp
Administrator Christopher Ley
discussed the mental retardation
An abandoned vehicle incident is
program with the commissioners and being investigated by Meigs County
the need for a new bus. No action was Sheriff's deputies and park rangers at
taken.
Forked Run State Park.
Ahearing will be held July 26 o~ the
Tbe rangers reported the vehicle, a
proposed 'annexation of the village of 1969 Dodge, had been si(Ung in the
Racine .
parking lot since early Monday
morning. The vehicle's identificatiOn
number, license plates and inspection
sticker were missing.
After impounding the vehicle,
~eriff James J ' rroffitt s:'i.d he is
investigating the possibility the
vehicle may be one reported stolen m
Parkersburg, W.Va .
Roger Black, Rutland, reported to
deputies his camper had been entered
ROCKY FORK, Ohio ( AP) - sometime within the last month and a
RACHEL BEARD
Several
state officials and tourism Coleman lantern and sleeping bag
·RECEIVES SCHOLARSHIP leaders today planned to conclude il were m1ssmg. Deputies are
Rachel Beard bas been umed
two-day tour of seven southern Ohio investigating.
recipient of the Newmoot Mbalng
Sheriff Proffitt issued a warning to
counties aimed at pUshing tourism in
, Education Scholarship. Rachel Is
Meigs
residents that fraud is on the
that portion of the state.
llle dllagbter of William alld
upswing
in summer. Residents are
Promoted by state Sen. H. Cooper
Montez Beard, Pomeroy. Sbe Is a
advised to check home repair jobs and
Snyder,
the
tour
covered
sites
of
1m IJ'IIdllale of Wabama Hlgb
interest in Highland, Adams, Seioto, other rna tters done by outside firms
School wbere sbe was In band,
before
committing
Lawrence, Gallia, Jackson and Ross carefully
debate, volleyball, alld bukelball.
themselves
.
counties.
'
DllriDg ber high scbool, abe served
On
the
tour
were
representatives of
u bud officer and wu a member
the
Ohio
Department
of Natural
ollbe Naii.W H1111or Society. Her
Resources, the Ohio Department of
seDior year sbe rtcelvecl awardll In
Economic
and
Community
$12,500 RECEIVED
draftlag, debate and Wlls cbosea as
Development,
the
Auto
Club of
State Auditor Thdomas E. Ferguson
promqueea.
Southern Ohio, the South Central Ohio reported today the July distribution of
Racbel baa beea acceped to atPreservation Society and several $10,503,493.39 in local governmant
lead Ohio Ualverslty In Athellll,
private owners of recreation fund money to Ohio's 88 counties and
where ahe wUl major In Chemical
facilities.
408 cities and villages levying local
Engineering. Her father, William
The trip was to include stops at · income taxes.
Beard, II plaot manager for Foote
Rocky Fork Lake, Serpent Mound, the
Of the total amount Meigs County
Mineral, Grabam Plaut In New
Bob EvaliS Farm and Chillicothe's Treasurer, George Collins, received
Haven. Tbe family resldea In the
outdoor drama, "Tecwnseh."
$12,500.
Baum Addllloo, Pomeroy.

Deputies probing
taints

• event .
T ounsm
ending today

.
'

STARTS FAMILY PRACTICE IN POMEROY - Wilma A.
Mansfield, M.D. begJII her family practice Wednesday in the Melga Medical BuildiDg adjacent to the Veterans Memorial Hospital on
Mulberry His. Dr. Mansfield is originally from Athens, having olltalned
t.r uncler!!NIIuate degree from Ohio Unmnaty, and her medical degree
from Ohio Stale University. Office hours are from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday and from noont o·u p.m. Tuesday.
Dr. Mansfield formerly worked at GrantHospitalm Columbus.

Three persons hurt
in four auto wrecks
Three persons were injured during W.Va·.. attempted to siDp to avoid an
four
accidents
investigated unidentified auto stopped on the
Wednesday by the Galla-Meigs Post, roadway ,
Highway Patrol.
·
Tbe tractor-trailer passed off the
One person was injured and three · left side of the roadway, struck a ditch
drivers cited following a mishap in and overturned.
.
Meigs County on SR 684, one and twoMarrinaro displayed visible signs of
tenths of a roile north of SR 143, at injury, but was not immediately
10 :15 a.m.
treated . Tbere was slight damage to.
Officers report that autos operated the vehicle.
'
by Carson Deskins, 77, Rutland, and
Officers investigated a one-vehicle
Katherine Deskins, 32, Pomeroy, accident in Meigs County on CR 36,
were stopped along side each other on three and three-tenths of a mile north
SR 684.
of SR 7, at 6:10p.m.
An auto operated by Melvin Duff,
The patrol reports a north bound
31, Dexter, rounded a curve on 684 and auto driven by Russell Burns, 21,
swerved to avoid the Deskins Longbottom, passed off the right side
vehicles.
of the roadway and struck a ditch.
The Duff auto passed off the right
Bums displayed visible signs of
side of the roadway, went over an injury, but was not immediately
embankment, and overturned.
treated . There was slight ilamage to
Duff displayed visible signs of the vehicle.
injury , but was not immediately
Officers investigated a tw&lt;&gt;-vehicle
ireated. His auto was demolished.
accident in Meigs County on CR 28,
Carson and Catherine Deskins were five-tenths of a mile south of SR 124 at
cited on charges of parking on the 10 a.m.
roadway .
The. patrol reports an auto operated
Duff was cited on a charge of . by Charles Hoback, 63, Syracuse,
operaUng a vehicle without valid swerved left of center to strike a
license plates.
snake on the roadway.
Officers were called to the scene of
Observil.g the Hoback auto, a
a semi tractor-trailer accident on U.S. vehicle driven by Angela Bowman, 23,
35, one-tenth of a mile east of TR 37, at Racine, swerved left to avoid collision
6:11p .m .
just as the Hoback auto cut back to the
The patrol reports a semi operated right. Tbe vehicles struck head-oo.
by Francis A. Marrinaro, 35, Adrian,
There was moderate damage to
'
both vehicles. No citation was Issued.

New Haven native appointed
CINCINNATI - Tbe appointment Luckeydoo 1s also serving as an 1n:
of Roger L. Luckeydoo, a fonner New ter.nal Revenue Agent In .the
Haven, W. Va. resident, to district Examination Division.
director's representative of the
Luckeydoo Ia an aiWIIIIBe of MarMarietta Office, was announced shall University, and is married to the
todBy by the Internal Revenue Ser- former Sandra Brewington of Midvice.
dleport and Is the · father ol two
The district director's represen- children, Amy and Lee.
tative is the persons! representative
of the District Directoo of the Internal
Revenue Service. The director 's
representative acts in that capacity in Sunny ~h Friday. High Frid'l)'
all official contacts with other govern· in the rrud MIB. ~ tonight. Low In
ment agencies, civic and professional the low 6011: The -hance ol rain Ia 10
groups, news personnel and in- · P.':~.C:~! .~~-t-~!~.~-~· . ....
.
dividual taxpayers.
.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.......,.......,.,.,,,.,.,.,.,....,..........·.·:·:·:·:·:::·::::::::··......,.
In the Marietta Office It Is the
EXTENDED FORECAST
responsibility of the director's
Saturday lbroagh Moada:y, flllr
representative to see that all ad· Saturday and Saada:y. A cliiDee o1
mlnistrative functions that are 1bnen or tbtmdentonna MOD•
necessary In any nonnal office day. Hlch 11D the lla. Low 1ba tile
routine are 'pertonned.
Ill.
•
In addition to his new apoointment, :·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:::::::::::::::::::::::::::,:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::,:;:,:::::;:;:,: . '

Weather

-

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i

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