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D-10- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, July 22. 1979

Peeps .

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A Gallipolis Diary.
BY J. SAMUEL PEEPS
GALUPOUS - Sending a batch of
"Grandma Peeps Back," A. Don
Pope, the Florida cousin, gives a com·
mentary :
"It becomes apparent that the
population used the boats as we use
buses. Earlier there were few
railroads, and important towns were
on the rivers. Later, when more
railroads had been built, the mode of
travel was mixed. Pa Pope took a
boat to Portsmouth, then by train to
Columbus, and it was in the late 'Bils
before the Hocking Valley R.R. gave
Gallipolis direct access to the major
lines. Now there is no passenger service. Remember the excursions on
the trains ? . Copies from the river

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DID YOU KNOW that an ear-

j thquake once hit Gallia County ?

' Grandma Gwood had this brief
notation in her diary : "Sept. 13, 1886We felt the earthquake today." It
• c~ me only a couple of years alter a
: flood of major proportions. ''Feb. 10,
: 1883- The river is higher, people say,
• than it has been since 1832 ·.. . Two of
; our chickens floated away on a cake
~ ci ice." A year later: "Feb. 11, 1884 : There is two feet of water in our barn
; ... It is simply impossible to believe
• that the river would get way up on the
: hillside where the barn is."

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WE'LL HAVE A FEW paragraphs

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from this diary each Sunday. They're
from 31 pages of handwritten notes
gIeanedfrom 700 pages of Grandma'
Gwood's diary by her grandson, A.
Don Pope, "the cussin' cousin to J .
: Sam Peeps." Egad ! What a job this
~ was!

IT'F FIRST UEUT. Brenda Finnicwn now. It was last Tuesday that
she traded her gold bars for the silver
bars, and the place was Tripier Army
Medical Center near Honolulu.
Daughter of Jack and Margaret Finnicum, she had been in the military a
shorter period than any of the group
promoted along with her. Brenda was
graduated from Gallia Academy High
School in 1974, and got her BSN
degree from Ohio State University in
1978 - BSN is bachelor of science in
nursing.

OUR HOUSE MUSEUM has attracted about 2,200 people this season.
Not likely to equal the record 5,000 of
1976, the bicentennial year. Mary

Allison, the curator, lists the figures
this year as -April 338, (since April
15, the opening date) , May 8321 June .
603, and July 400.
.
There 've been some people from in,
teresting plac-es : S. M. Brading and
Mrs. L. E . Brading, both of Chattanooga ; Mr. and Mrs . Stanley
Brading, Sumter, S. C.; Jean Roherts, Manipowoc, Wales; Tom Mackie,
Dublin, Ireland; Mrs. Barbara J.
Cadot Garrett Keating, N. Hollywood,
a descendant of Gallipolis Cadol:i;
Emmagene Borden, Grand Falls,
Newfoundland, Canada , exGallipolitan; K. 0 . Staecker, Hwttington, formerly of Germany; Maure
Afonso of Belo Horizon te M.G.,
Brazil; Antoinette Perrine, Norfolk,
formerly of France; and K. Shauem,
Huntington, formerly of France .
Ruby Larrigan, Rt. 2, Box 83, South
Shore, Ky . 41175, is a descendant of
Dudit, of the French 500, and she was
here. The other day a letter came
from Ms . Larrigan telling Mary
Allison that she saw her on Channel
13.
Bob Williams of WOWK-TV, Huntington, came to Our House with his
cameraman and ' Channel 13 had a
good segment of the 6 p.m. news,
featuring Mary Allison . Bob had been
with WOWK-TV only seven weeks
when he undertook this assignment.
Mary's good on TV.

ASHEVILLE, N.C. (AP) - Keith
May, the fugitive companion of
former beauty queen Joyce
McKinney, said the two used assumed
names during the past year because
they feared retaliation by members of
the Mormon Church.
·
May , of Los Angeles, and Miss
McKinney, of Minneapolis, N.C., were
arrested Wednesday in Asheville on
charges of submitting false
information to obtain passports in
Seattle.
Miss McKinney checked into a
private psychiatric hospital Friday in
Asheville to undergo psychia tric
testing. She was ordered to submit to
the tests as a condition of her release
from the Blincombe County Jail
Friday on $5,000 bond . .
Miss McKinney, 28, a former Miss
Wyoming-USA, made international
headlines last year in a sex-scandal
case in England. She and May jumped
bail last year while they were

~al

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Today
By

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Willis T. Leadingham

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C£state :

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Rea ltor

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HOME OWNERSHIP-A CASH RESOURCE

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Sometime in everyone's livet ime, for luxury or necessity , there
may be a requirement for a large amount of cash. Today's homeowner
is probabl y t he best prepared int:liv idua l to cope with this "need for
money ' ' problem . His equity in his home Is a r eady sour ce of cash .
Let's assume he boug ht his house about ten yer s ago for S20,000
and has now reduced his mortg age to $10,000. Since home values rise,
his house is now worth $35,000 which gives him an equi ty of about
S25,000. On a conventional mortgage basis, a bank may loan him 80%

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e of value, or $26,000. Thus, after paying ott his existing $10,000 loan , he •
·e . would come out with $16,000 cash, or nearly what he paid tor his home •
.
.
e 10 years ago.
1 'm

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not suggesting that everyon e run out and r eftnance thetr homes . •

1 do point out, however , that another e)( c e lie n t . r~ason . tor owning a

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home·is the increa sing equ i ty produced through nstng pnces .

••ee please phone or drop in at LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE,

If t here is anything we can do to help you in the field of real esta t e

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CENTURY CLUB Membership Recruitment Committee memhers
' Larry Lee, left, and Jeff Smith, review their lists of renewals and
prospective new memhers for the Gallia County Unit of the American
Cancer Society. A gift of $100 to the Gallia County Unit includes memhership 'in the Century Club and the receipt of a heautiful walnut plaque
with engraved brass plates to the donor.

Century Club passes
goal's halfway mark
GALI.JPOLIS -The Century Club
of the Gallia County Unit of the
American Cancer Society for 1979 has
passed the half-way mark in reaching
the goal of 30 members for the year,
according to C. Leon Saunders, who is
chairing the recruitment efforts this
year for Club membership. In the
group to date are a numher of
renewals along with four new participants who have contributed $10
each for a memhership.

Fugitive couple held by police

••••••••••••r•••••••••••••••••••••

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Gallipolis. Phone 446·7699. We're here to help.

Carter resumes work On energy problems

Sadness, rejoicing
·Washington moods

512 Second

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awaiting trial on allegations by Miss
McKinney's boyfriend, a Mormon
missionary, that the two abducted
him. He alleged she forced him to
have sex with her after shackling him
to a bed.
May said in a telephone interview
Friday night that he and Miss
McKinney have received nwnerous
threatening letters in the past from
members of the Mormon Church.

Man confesses
to 8 killings
MARION, N.C. (AP ) - The fully
clothed bodies of two women were
unearthed from makeshift graves
Friday after authorities were led to
the sites by a kidnapping suspect who
cla,ims he killed eight women, the
sheriff said.
McDowell County Sheriff Bobby
Haynes said Danny Parton, 29, of the
North Cove community, pointed out
the graves in mountainous
cowttryside and indicated ,&lt;ix other
bodies were buried in the surrounding
area.
"He took us right to the sites and
pointed them out. They were about a
fourth of a mile apart," Haynes said
.or the two gravesites.
Haynes sa id authorities had
esulblished identities of the two
victims but were withholding names
pending nolification of relatives.
He declined to speculate on the
cause of their deaths except to say
"we feel like he choked one victim to
death. We 're not sure yet about the
others."
Two murder warrants were issued
for Parton, who is unemployed and
apparently lives alone in a clapboard
house about five miles from the two
gravesites, Haynes said.
Parton was first questioned about
the disappearance of Kathy Mosley of
Gaston County on May 30. Parton said
he had known her for several months,
but that she had left his residence on
1\{ay 29 after a quamil, Haynes said .

According to Saunders, "My committee will be working hard, making
contacts these next few weeks to
reach our mark of 30 Century Club
members for 1979. In fact, we'd be
delighted to surpass our goal. Starting with 10 members in 1977 and
growing to 20.inemhers last year un·
der the leadership of Merrill Evans,
we feel confident that we can add
another ten members again this year
as well as renew our 20 continuing
memherships."
From all of the money received by
the Gallia County Unit of the
American Cancer Society, 45 percent
is kept within the county. It is spent
locally for information and counselling, to operate a loan closet of
equipment, to provide dressings,
medications and supplies to cancer
patients in Gallia County. and transport patients when necessary for
them to receive specialized therapy
and treatment at centers in Athens,
Huntington and Coltunbus.
In addition to the service program,
public information and professional
education programs, including
publications, films and training
seminars, are made availaule to
county residents and professionals, as
well as students in the city and county
schools.
Assisting SaUnders as his Century
Club Recruiting Committee members
are four of his associates at the Ohio
Valley Bank. They are Larry Lee,
Jeff Smith, Wendell Thomas and
Johnny Hood. Any one of these five
men may be contacted for further information or to become a member of
the Century Club for 1979.

WASHINGTON (AP) '-- There was highly placed employee admitted
hoth sadness and rejoicing at the hearing a number of comments such
Energy Department when word got as "Tharik God he's leaving."
around that James Schlesinger was
Schlesinger held a 4:30 p.m. news
finally on the way out. But Schlesinger conference in the department
calmly returned to business as usual. auditorium, where he was greeted
He convened his top staff, said he with applause by about 150
was out, praised his successor and employees.
·
went on to a routine agenda of policy
He told Uiem the department had
discussions.
served the nation far better than the
Life was anything but routine nation has realized. And he said of
Friday at the Transportation Duncan: "We can wish him well in
Department, where Secretary Brock this task, bearing in mind that he has
Adams quit after the White House one of the most attractive jobs in
tried to fire two of his top aides. The Washington and is going into one of
aides quit, too.
the le.ast pleasurable."
.
Adams cleaned his desk Friday and
At the Transportatioo Department,
left the department. His interim a sobbing secretary answered the
replacement is a close friend, Navy phone in the public relations office
Secretary W. Graham Claytor.
and a top Adams aide said, "There is
Schlesinger's ·replacement, to take so much we wanted to do. I'm going to
over in October, is Charles Duncan miss this place."
Jr ., now No. 2 man at the Pentagon.
Adams' departure Friday differed
Schlesinger himself didn't ~m from Schlesinger's smooth ouster.
interested in Friday's huUabaloo.
So•ll'ces who asked not to be named
Once he informed his senior staff of· say White House chief of staff
his departure, and told them Duncan Hamilton Jordan told Adams
deserved their help, Uie meeting Thursday that Carter wanted him to
immediately turned to energy policy remain in the Cabinet hot that several
discussions. When it broke up, he of Adams' top aides would have to go.
headed for a Capitol Hill session with
They said Jordan expected Adams
the House Ways and Means to quit on the spot over the ultimatum,
Committee, then returned to his office but Adams said he wanted to mull
to write a letter of reSignation to the things over.
•
He went to Boston on business and
president.
One
high-ranking
Energy · issued a statement saying he had been
Department official described invited to stay in the Cabinet, but he
department executives as suffering was not certain he wanted to. And he
from "a little bit of batUe fatigue" and said he wanted assurances of "direct
added, "People are bemused and wish accessibility of the president to the
to God the senior level of government Cabinet." As Adams expected, Carter
would make up their minds so the · would not grant this request and
Adams quit at an 11:30 a.m. meeting
junior level could get to work."
A Schlesinger aide described Staff Friday. He was the only Cabinet
rea ction to the boss' ouster as member to leave immediatelx.
''sadness" but not surpri'f. Another

Depattment changes...
WASHINGTON ( AP ) - Here is a
look at the various federal
departments after President Carter's
Cabinet shakeup. The president said
Friday there would be no more toplevel departures, but some vacancies
still must be filled.

and Cart~r has nominated Deputy
Defense Secretary Olarles Duncan to
replace him.

TRANSPORTATION :
Brock
Adams was fired as secretary and
Carter has appointed Navy Secretary
W. Graham Claytor to take over for up
TREASURY:
W.
Michael to 30 days . No permanent
Blumenthal was fired as seeretary replacement for Adams bas been
and Carter has nominated chairman named although p~dential aide
G. William Miller of the Federal jack Watson, new Cabinet secretary,
is considered a prospect: After his
Reserve Board to replace him.
stint at Transportation, Claytor Is to
JUSTICE : Griffin Bell's resignation become deputy Defense secretary,
as attorney gener&amp;l was accepted and replacing Charles Duncan who has
Ca r ter. has nominated Deputy been tapped to replace James
Attorney General Benjamin Civiletti Schlesinger as Energy secretarY.
to replace him .
STATE : Secretary CyfU'! R. Vanee
will
remain.
HEALTH, EDUCATION and
WELFARE : Joseph A. Califano Jr.
DEFENSE : Secretary Harold
was fired as secretary and Carter has
Brown
will remain .
·
nominated Patricia Roberts Harris,
currently secretary of Housing and
INTERIOR : Secretary Cecil
Urban Development, to replace him .
Andrus will remain .
HOUSING and URBAN DECOMMERCE: Secretary Juanita
VELOPMENT:
Secretary Patricia
Whole chickens are your best buy.
will remain.
Kreps
· Not only do they cost less per pound, Roberts Harris has been tapped by
but they retain more of their juiciness Carter to head HEW. No replacement
LABOR: Secretary Ray Marshall
and flavor. When you've cut the bird has yet been named for her post.
will remain.
for cooking, unused backs and giblets
ENERGY : James Schlesinger's
can he frozen and reserved lor
AGRICULTURE : Secretary Bob
resignation
as secretary was accepted
making chicken stock.
Bergland will remain.

ELBERFELD$

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SALEI SERTAGUARD
INNERSPRING MATTRESSES

WASHINGTON (AP) - President
Carter, whose reshaping of his White
House staff Is expected to conswne
less of his time than his Cabinet
shakeup, is likely to reb)m to work
this week on energy issues.
"Now that the Cabinet-level
changes have been made, there will
be additional focusing of the
president's attention on the Energy
Mobilization Board and the Energy
Security Corp.," White House press
secretary Jody Powell said Sunday.
Proposals to establish the board,

intend~d to cut through red tape to
"'Speed up development of energy
projects, and to create the energy
corporation, to financ e · energy
development, were sent to Congress
last week . The Senate .Energy
Committee tentatively agreed
Saturday to support the mobilization
hoard.
While he has completed the firings
that shook his.Cabinet last week, the
president is still looking for a new
secretary of housing and urban
development, a new Federal Reserve

NO. 69

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VOL. XXVIII

Board cha irman and a new
transportation secretary.
Some of the changes he is
contemplating in his White House
staff, although unlikely to add any
new faces to the inner circle of
advisers, may be revealed this week,
Powell. said.
Carter, in a meeting with several
reporters Saturday, made clear that
he wants to see some stability
returned to White House operations,
after nearly three weeks of
uncertainty. It was also made clear

at

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Meigs-County has
six minor wrecks
Two persons were injured during
six weekend accidents investigated in
Meigs County by the Gallia-Meigs
Post, Highway Patrol.
A motorcyclist, Earl White , 42,
Athens, was injured Sunday at 5:05
· p.m., when his cycle ran off the right
side of Flatwooda Rd., two and four.
tenths of a mile west of SR 7, and
struck a ditch.
·
White was transported by the
Pomeroy Emergency Squad to
O'Bleness Hospital in Athens lor
treatment.
There was minor damage to the
bike.
The Gallia-Meigs Post investigated
five accidents Saturday.
one driver was injured during a
two-vehicle mishap on SR 143, four·
tenths of a mile north of milepost 11,
at 5:25p.m.

Today
.. . in the world

Wreck frees bees

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FLINTSTONE, Md. (AP ) - A
tnfflc accident freed about 9
million beeo along a highway
near Flintstone, and state police
spent nine hours guldizjg startled
motorists through clouds of the
buzzing bugs.
John Iindner, a retired state
uplary inspector, and volunteers
tried to lure the bees into spare
hlves while police supervised
traffic on Sunday.
Eidra hives were left along the
hlghway and In nearby fields in
hope that more bees would be
recovered over the next few days.
Authorities estimated nine
rniljjon were set free in the accidenT.
SO. persons were injured in the
6:50a.m. accident on U.S. Route
40 near the Allegany-Washington
county line. One was hospitalized.

Battle resumes
CLEVELAND (AP) -

The

court battled over control of the

$180 million Horvil% family real
es1ate, construction and communications empire is scheduled
to reswne July 30.
The Probate Court fight between brothers Wnfiam and Harry
R. Horvitz lor control of the family businesses was interrupted
after William, 53, was hospitalized for chest pains, He has since
been released.

The ·patrol reports a south bound
auto operated by Michael Musser, 17,
Pomeroy, went out of control in a
curve and struck a north hound
vehicle driven by David Hanson , 24,
Middleport.
Musser was transported to Holzer
Medical Center for treatment.
No citation was issued.
An auto incurred heavy damage
during a one-vehicle accident on TR
273, one mile east of Reedsville. at
10 :30 a.m.
Officers report an east hound
vehicle driven by Gary Jackson , 30,
Coolville, failed to negotiate a curve
and overturned.
One driver was cited following a
two-vehicle mishap on SR 143, two.
tenths of a mile northofSR 692, at 5:25
p.m.
Officers report a north hound auto
operated by Homer Welsh , 29,
Pomeroy, had stopped on the roadway
and was backing, when struck in the
rear by a vehicle operated by John
Reider, 18, McArthur.
Welsh was cited on a charge of
improper backing .
The patrol was called to the scene of
an accident on SR 681 , one-tenth of a
mile south of SR 692.
Officers report a north hound auto
operated • by Kathy Lee , 23 ,
Wheelersburg, went left of center to
avoid an oncoming unidentified
vehicle. The Lee auto passed off the
right side of the roadway.
One driver was cited following J
two-vehicle mishap on TR 126, one
mile east of CR 26.
Officers report that a west hound
aulll driven by Sharon Reider, 24,
Racine , sideswiped an east hound
vehicle operated by Ayward Jones, 27,
Racine .
Both vehicles incurred moderate
damage . Reider was cited ·on a charge
of failure tQ yield one-hall the
roadway

Trading session set
The OH KAN Coin Club will conduct
a re gular business meeting on
Monday evening in the Riverboat
social room, Meigs branch, Athens
County Savings and Loan Co . Building
on West Main Street, Pomeroy.
There will be a trading session
beginning at 7 p.m. with out-&lt;&gt;f-towndealers present. A coin auc tion
follows the meeting with prizes and
refreshments. Anyone interested in
coins, paper money, or membership
in the club is welcane to attend.

Weather
Mostly cloudy. Warm and humid
wit h scattered thunderstorms
tonight. Lows tonight mid to upper
60s. Scattered thunderstorms, warm.
and humid Tuesdaywith highs in low
to mid ll&amp;J. The chance of rain 30 percent tonight and 50 percent Tuesday.

that Carter • knows what changes he
thinks should be made to strengthen
the staff and increase the diversity of
his advisers.
Reporter.&lt; also learned that the
overriding theme in the Cabinet
shakeup was loyalty , a point stressed
Sunda y by Hamilton Jordan , the new
White House chief of staff, who said on
NBC 's "Meet the Press" :
"Once the president makes a
decision on policy or a piece of
legislation, it is the responsibility of
people in government to support that

action or leave the government."

Ca rter clearly felt that Joseph A.
Califano Jr ., whom he fired as
secretary of health, education and
welfare, had been working at crosspurposes to presidential goals.
It was understood that the president
expects his Cabinet members to be
team players and that if he had made
an error in the past, he felt it was in
waiting as long as he did to use
dismissals to make this clear.
It was also understood that Carter
was dissatisfied with Califano 's

record ·on Capitol Hill, where the
president feels the HEW secretary
was unable to achieve legislative
success for programs in his area.
But a member of House Speaker
Thomas P . O'Neill 's staff said that
"with (House) members, Joe Califano
got along fine . They all liked him."
The staff member asked not to be
named .
Carter made his views known to
reporters under ground rules that he
not he quoted directly.

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enttne
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

MONDAY, JULY 23, 1979

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Eight
traffic
-- deaths

By The Associated Press
At least eight persons have died in
Ohio weekend traffic accidents,
according to the Highway Patrol. ·
The patrol records traffic deaths
from 6 p.m. Friday until midnight
Sunday.
·
The l)ead :
FRIDAY NIGHT
VAN WERT Charles B.
Maldeney, 63, of P;~yne, in a one.(:ar
accident on a Paulding County road.
LANCASTER
Thomas
· McReynolds, 82, Coltunbus, in a twocar accident at the intersection of
state routes 37 and 204 in Fairfield
County .
SATURDAY
CINCINNAT
I William D.
SUMMER JOB - Dwight Spencer has spent .the cer sold produce door to tood but that became too big of
Shuster,
20,
of
Cincinnati,
in a one-car
last eight years , including this year, selling produce a job and less profitable. Spencer grows most of the
accident
on
a
Clermont
County
road.
from his car on Main St. in Pomeroy. Before that Spen· produce he sells although he does buy some from other
SUNDAY
area fanners and from the south.
MASSILLON- James F ..Miller, 18,
of Alliance, in a one&lt;ar accident ona
Stark County road.
NEW PHILADELPHIA- James A,
Prysi , 16, of Tuscarawas, while
walking along Ohio 416 in Tuscarawas
County.
Two persons drowned early Sunday Rt I, Utile Hocking, and Johnny deputies said.
SIDNEY - James P. Townsend, 17, ·
morning in the Ohio River near the Harold Barnhart, 26, Rt. I, Guysville.
Authorities were notified of the
of
Sidney, passenger on a motorcycle
southern part of Wood County when The two others in the boat ·when it drowning about 3:20 a.m. and at 4
the hoat they were riding in capsized . overturned were Jo Ann Dotson and a.m. the body of Newbanks was that hit a bridge on a Shelby County
Two others in the boat managed to Barry Russell of Coolville.
recovered and at 8:35a.m. Barnhart's road.
ST. CLAIRSVILLE - Sherry
swim to safety it was reported . .
The four were enroute to Mustapha body was pulled from the water.
Dead are Matthew Newbariks, 1 ~ . Island, where a party was underway
Assisting in dragging operations j3urkhart, 18, Barnesville, in a tw~H:B~"
were volunteer firemen from collision on state route 379 in Behnont
Coolville, Little Hocking, Chester, and County.
EAST LAKE - George Langsdale,
Vienna, W. Va., as well as SEOEMS
and Camden-Clark ambulance 32, address unknown, in a one.(:ar
personnel and Athens County Sheriffs accident on state route 283 in Lake
County. ·
By The Associated Press
the flames had removed vegetation, Department. ·
Aided by heavy rains, firefighters leaving bare earth .
Johnny H. Barnhart, 26, Rt.
contained the latest in a series of fires
No serious injuries were reported Guy~ville was born in Austria the son
Sunday that have scorched thousands from either fire , but Hill said fire of Clyde E .and Susie Wiesmair
of acres of tlmher and rangeland on crews on Bryant Mountain had to Barnhart, Rt. I, Guysville.
the California-Oregon state line and in ward off swarms of deer flies . Two
Mr. Barnhart was a 1972 graduate of
Idaho.
men were treated at a hospital in Federal Hocking High School and a
The "Happy Fire," a lightning- Klamath Falls for nwnerous bites graduate of Tri-County Joint
caused blaze near Happy Camp in around the eyes.
Vocational School.
Modoc
National
Forest
in
The Bryant Mountain fire 'Was
Vocational Schoo l where he
northernmost California, was halted believed to have been started from a majored in auto hody repair one and
Meigs Coun\)' Sheriff's Department
Sunday morning after conswning logging operation, Hill said.
two. He W;IS employed at Belpre reported no one was injured in a deer2,950 acres of pine, fir and cedar.
In southeast Idaho, a range fire at Motors, Belpre at the time of his auto accident early Sunday.
And a reduced crew of 450 the Fort Hall indian Reservation was death.
firefighters was mopping up remains contained Sunday within a fire line,
He has been a resident of CoolvilleRandall Warner, Colwnbus, was
of the Bryant Mountain fire, which and officials said mopping-up Guysville area since 1971. He was
burned 7,450acresoftlmber in Oregon operations could begin by Monday. preCeded in death by his maternal driving east on SR 124 in Lellanon
and California about45 miles from the
"We still hav~ rainy weather , and grandfather, Karl Wiesmair. He was Township around 4:35a.m. when his
smaller blaze , south of Klamath Falls, it's predicted to keep up during the also preceded in death by one brother, car struck a deer which had run ont.Q
the road. The deer was not seriously
Ore.
night," said Trudie Olson of the Clyde E. Barnhart, Jr., in 1958.
injured
as it·continued running. There
The Bryant Mountain fire, which Bureau of Land Management. "The
In additon to his parents he is
was
slight
dama~e to Warner's car.
began on Tuesday, was controlled weather has been very helpful .
survived by two sisters, Mrs. James
Saturday evening by a crew of up to
The fire, started by lightning Friday (Darlene) Ashcraft, Guysville, and
800 firefighU!rs.
·investigating a
Depuiies are
alternoon, spread from sagebrush and Mrs . Richard (Debbie }. Dailey,
But the thunderstorms also caused grass to timber and consumed about Athens, two brothers, Roy of vandalism report which occured
mudslides late Saturday on the steep 1,000 acres.
Hockingport and Mike of Guysville, Satur&lt;lliy evening. Sometime between
east slopes of the 6,4()().foot peak.
A second fire in Idaho, near paternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. 8:30 and ll p.m. a bottle was thrown
Dennis Hill, a fire information officer Horseshoe Bend, 25 miles north of Roy Barnhart , Guysville and through the rear window of a pickup
for the Bureau of Land Management Boise, was brought under control maternal grandmother, Mrs. Maria truck registered to Ivan Chevalier,
in Lakeview, Ore., said boulders Saturday night after burning 7,800 Wiesmair of Braunau, Austria.
Reedsville . The truck had been
weighing up to one ton were moved by acres. Officials said the fire was
parked at Chevalier's residence at the
(Continued on page 8)
the oozing runoff down draws where caused by a (!rapped cigarette.
time of the incident. ·

I

Two die in boating accident

Firefighters contain blazes

Columbus man
has weekend
accident

also

'

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Girls · Men's and Boys - Woman's Summar Clothing.

TOURNAMENT CHAMPS - Green I of Gallia
County captured the annual Syracuse Little League
Tournament Saturday night with a 17-4 romp over
Pomeroy's Tigers. Team members are, front row,l-r,
Eddie Birchfield, Greg Tongg, J . D. Colley,.Greg Dun·

can, Keiih Fellure, Kenny Holley. Second row, Bobby
Walker, Scott Chevalier, T. J . Pasquale, Gordon
Splete, Tom Duncan, Keith Bartimus, Coaches Ken .
Hawley, Jim Splete, Tom Dwtcan. See details Page 3.

l•

,.

..

SYRACUSE RUNNERS-UP - Pomeroy's Tigers
were runners-up in the Syracuse Little League Tournament completed Saturday night Team members
are, front row,left to right, Vince Knight, Tim Gilkey,

Terry Smith, Darren Hayes, Otis Norris; back; Jackie.
Welker, Steve Musser, Parker Long, Chris Shank,
Scott Hysell, Jackie Justis, Todd Hysell. Coaches Jack
Welker and Tom Hysell.

�-.

•- •ia: Uiliiy ..emmet, M.arueport-romeroy, u., MOOOliY, JWy za, 1!1'1~
2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday , July 23, 197f,'

Committee seeks signatures
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) - A newly
formed committee hopes to collect
285,000 voter signatures over the next
three weeks in its bid to end
"gerrymandering" of legislative
districts.
Specifically, the Committee for Fair
and Impartial Redistricting is
proposing
a
constitutional
amendment ID preclude the practice
of manipulating districts for political
purposes. ·
Dr. Arthur L. Peterson, political
science professor at Ohio Wesleyan
University at Delaware is the group's
executive director.
He noted that it must move with
speed to meet the Aug . 8 deadline lor
November ballot proposals. But he
said "to me, no question is more
important to responsive and
responsible government than fair and
effective representation ."
Under the present system, in which
a live-member apportionment board
draws new districts every 10 years,

PeterS&lt;)n says state constitutional
requ irements

for

compact

and

contiguous legislative districts have
been blatantly ignored.
The committee's proposal calls for
members of the public to submit plans
within the constitutional guidelines to
a
five -member,
non ~parti sa n
commission.
Then, U:e commission would select
what it felt was the fairest plan, based
not only on compactness and
contiguousness, but also on how it met
with U.S. Constitutional requirement
for districts as nearly equal in
population as possible.
Peterson has had some experience
in statewide issue campaigns.
In 1976, he guided a mostly
Republican effort that led to repeal of
the state's instant voter registration
law. Voters rejected the plan, backed
by Democrats, in the first election at
which they could vote without
havingregistered in advance .
As it now stands, and provided there

Editorial opinions,
comments

is no change in Ohio's legislative
apportionment laws, Democrats will
control the ·apportiorunent boardwhen
it meets in 1981 to draw new Senate
and House district~ in the 1980s.
Gov . James A. Rhodes and one GOP
member of the Legislature are the
_only Republicans on the board. The
Democrats are State Auditor Thomas
E. Ferguson, Secretary of State
Anthony J . Celebrezze Jr ., and one
Democratic legislator.
Democrats had a similar edge in
1971 when they devised districts for
use throughout the 1970s. They
captured the House in 1972 for the first
time in 14 years, and the Senate in 1974
for the first time in 16.
They would have taken the Senate
earlier except that its members serve
four-year terms, with_ half elecled
every .two years. House members all
serve two-year terms.
Republicans have not ·been too
incensed about the Democratic style
of map making. They have done it
themselves many times.
After the 1964 "one man, one -Vote"
decision of the U.S. Supreme Court,
requiring districts virtually equal in
population, the GOP Legislature met
in special session ID draw districts
that enabled the party ID maintain
control for the next seven years.

FOR

SAL.E.

.

~y

OWNt:'R

__,_ ...

.

-.'":.

TmRD PLACE TUPPERS PLAINS -Front L-R
Kevin Barber, Jimmy Caldwell, Royce Bissell Eddi~
Collins, Todd Wilson, Jell Sayre, Brian Fryar: Back,

---- -.-- ~: ~

.

" I'm not go1ng through with it -

NEW YORK (AP) - Not knowing
what next will test their sanity, along
Martha Angle and
with shortages, prices, confidence
crises, administrative chaos, and
Robert Walters
things hurtling out of the sky, perhaps
Americans deserve a break.
One break is to read some of the
more refreshing summer reading to
be offered in awhile, the three-to five year outlook for industrial companies,
and their stocks, issued by Value Line
then 20 percent. Today, surging im- Investment Survey.
By Robert Walters
WASillNGTON (NEA) -There is no ports account for 25 percent of all There will be a recession, says
Value Line, but only a mild one. A
more pitiful example of the inability sales.
of an old dog to learn new tricks than
(Even that number is d~ceptively temporary rise in unemployment,
the domestic auto ' industry's con- low because the more than 130,000 perhaps to more than 7 percent by the
tinued resistance to the production Volkswagen Rabbits produced a\ end of the year, will be corrected well
and sale of compact, economical VW's New Stanton, Pa., plant since it before the 1980 elections.
passenger cars.
opened in April 1978 have been And inflation will persist, maybe
After almost three decades of ~ons­ countect as domestically produced even through the 1980s. "Any social
phenomenon that has taken 30 years
tant incursions into their market by rather than imported cars.)
the producers of smaller and vastly
F.ollowing the introduction of the to weave itself into the very fabric of
more efficient imported cars, Beetle to this country, American the economy is going to be around a
Detroit's automakers remain Motors Corp. in the early 1950s pro- while ."
mindlessly devoted to oversized gas- duced a highly successful domestic But the summary is quite
optimistic: The economy is going ID
guzzlers.
subcompact, the Rambler.
In the midst of the recent increase
But the Big Three of the industry - ge t a few things straightened out, says
in gasoline prices to the dollar-a- GM, Ford and Chrysler - ignored Value Line. There'll be a big
gallon level, for instance, General both the Beetle and the Rambler . In investment in industrial renewal, in
· Motors Corp. mounted a major adver- fact, Ford 's response was the 1956 in- productivity, in brand-new industries.
tising campaign to sell its Oldsmobile troduction of the Edl&gt;el, a behemoth The stock market will provide
oppOrtunities, outstanding ones. The
Delta 88 to those "who don't want to that was a financial disaster.
settle for less than full-size comfort."
By 1960, the Big Three reluctantly survey maintains that returns for the
With motorists increasingly wor- began to market compact (but not 900 stocks in its industrial composite
ried about miles-per-gallon efficien- subcompact) cars. GM introduced might even amount ID 20 percent to 30
cy, GM is touting a new measurement Corvair, Ford produced the Falcon percent a year.
.
So, you say, why should we listen to
called miles-per-tankful. By that and Crysler's entry was the Valiant.
standard, the Oldsmobile is a chamBut those manufacturers reverted Value Line? No denying, anyone
pion because it has a huge 25-gallon to fonn in the suc~eeding years, mak- should retain a healthy level of
gas tank. Ford Motor Co. has launch- ing their "compacts" bigger and mulishnish. Forecasters, we know ,
ed an identical promotional effort on heavier, plating them with chrome never give money-back guarantees,
behalf of its Ford LTD .
trim and tacking on high-priced but and not even apologies in some cases.
Value Line, however, has something
Because the country's largest barely necessary accessories.
automakers remain oblivious to the
With no domestic p.roducts to lose if it's seemingly far-out
concept of fuel economy, the inven- available to meet the growing buyer predictions are too far off base. A
tory of unsold domestic cars now demand for efficient, no-frills reputation, for example, that took
stands at 2 miUion vehicles - the transportation, Volkswagen was join- more than four decades to establish,
higheft level in the industry's history . ed ih the late 1960s and the early 1970s during which it made little money.
It is now, after a long struggle, the
Yet the automakers continue to by Datsun, Toyota, Honda, Subaru
deceive themselves, proclaiming that and Mazda from Japan; Renault largest investment advisory firm. It is
big car sales will pick up as soon as from France; Fiat from Italy, and a profitable. It is the life of Arnold
Bernhard, now in his upper 70s and
the current gasoline crisis is forgot- host of other foreign marketers.
ten'
The American companies now are careful that his monument will not be
Recent history suggests otherwise. belatedly manufacturing smaller marred by graffiti.
Value Line furthermore has an
When Germany 's Volkswagen began · cars -most of which look like copies
expprting the now-famous Beetle to of VW's Rabbit - because they were historical perspective. It studies the
the United States in 19!10, America's forced, over their vigorous opposi- performance of economies not just for
automakers were confident that im- tion, to comply with federal fuel months and years, but sometime~ for
centuries. Recently it displayed world
ports would never account for even 5 economy standards.
percznt of the country's total
But they remain devoted to cars prices since 1300 A.D.
Value Lii:Je believes that after years
passenger-car sales.
like. Oldsmobile's Delta 88. With
of
consuming we are entering
When that unwarranted optimism gasoline prices. soaring andsupplie~ _
"investment~xcited
growth years;"
proved totally unfounded, industry of- dwindling, GM is still promoting the
years
in
which
big
investments
will be
ficials coped with the problem by supposed virtues of a "family-size"
made
in
plant,
equipment,
inventory
merely adjusting their projectio~ - car with "lots of easy-loading trunk
and buildings.
first to 10 percent, then 15 percent. space.''
" Enhanced investment activity
through the year 2000 will all for a
revamping of the industrial and
transportation base - which will beef
up productivity," which will, "in time
help stamp out inflation."
It continues: "So will development
of new industries, including synthetic
energies, a digital communications
network to replace part of the
outmoded AT&amp;T analog system,
computer-controlled home appliance
and power ·systems, innovative
heating and .cooling systems, and
perhaps a space-age auto engine."
Yes, but how will it be financed ?
With a modest improvement in
profitability, from 4.9 percent after
taxes in 1978 to 5.2 percent in the next
three to five years, says Value Line, it
should be possible.

Mindless devotion

Berry's World

TilE DAILY SENTlN~L

!USPS 115-9601
~'b """"'-"'...._...,..,,..._.,.,_
BmfJ
qov
DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF

MEIGS-MASON AREA
ROB~T HOEFLICH

City Editor
PubU8btd dally txcept Saturday by The Ohio
Valley P,ubllshlng Company-MuUimedia, Ine.,
•

Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohln 4576!. H~.t~~lnen

Office Pbooe 192· %151. Edlturial Pbone

m-us7.

Second clus postage paid al Pomeroy;Ohlo.

NaUu011lad Jertl:;lng reprt:Sell\aUve, Umdoo
A11sociates, liOI Euclid Ave ., Cleveland, Ohio
44ll5.

" Now, according to our calculations. yow popularity and the rate of inflation should cross
sometime in December

•

Subscription 111le8: Delivered by carrler,
where avallabh: 90 cents per week. By Motor
Routt&gt; where carrier sl:!rvice not nallable, One
month, SUO. By mall in Ollloand w. Va .. O lot'
Year, $!7.50 : ~b: monlha , $14.50:: Thr« monJ
th.o;, $8.50; Eh('~· bert $32 .00 year; Sh1: months'
$11JJOi Thr..-e mouths, SUCI. Snbscrlpll••n prlre
Includes Sunday Timt"s·Scntind.

•(e)

convinced we should do it."
had, I would say, three or four persons
Carter's reasons dated back to his . who had equal responsibilities for
campaign days and to his experience different aspects .of my own duties.
as governor of Georgia.
And I would probably continue that
Politically, there was an advantage approach as president."
to retiring the title and the role held by
He tried it for 2 1 ~ years, but tbe
H. R. Haldeman as chief of stall ID Carter people now concede that what
President Richard M. Nixon. ·
worked at the statehouse doesn't
Carter's was to be an open suffice at the White House.
presidency, and Haldeman has
Instead, the lack of a top lieutenant
written that he purposely used his with the kind of power now delegated
power as staff chief to build a wall to Jordan seems to have erected
around Nixon.
another kind of wall isolating the
"I did not have a single chief of stall president .
as governor," Carter said when he
Carter ' s time and attention
was campaigning for president. "I apparently were being diverted too
often by internal disputes ~mong
administration aides and Cabinet
members, and by other matters that
really didn't demand his personal
involvement.
The president said in tus July IS
address to the nation' that he had
L_a_m_b_.M_o_.______ found himself speaking too frequ ently
about matters of concern to the
goverrunent and to Washington , and
means to spend more time from now
It's interesting to know that a '·"
on
listening to the people and
years ago it was actually against the
addressing
their concerns.
law to put on the label how much
Now
Jordan
is ID deal with the in·
saturated and how much polyunhouse
differences
that need settling .
saturated fat was in the foods that you
some
decision.1 which
Jordan
said
that
were buying. To this I will add that in
in
the
past
have
gone
to
the president
some states, and it may still be true, it
will,
instead,
be
his
to
make
.
was against the law for restaurants to
is
said
to
have
told
the
test of
Carter
serve anything but butter. Margarine
the
White
House
staff
that
from
now
of any type was strictly Ulegal. I 'U
on,
they
should
act
on
Jordan's
leave it to you to conclu&lt;le why such
laws were in existence. I'm happy to decisions as if they came from the
say, though, that currently the trend president personally.
In addition, Jordan is to become a
is toward providing improved food
gatekeeper,
·deciding when Cabinet
labeling so people ~ll know what
meiJibers
and
other presidential aides
they are buying. Hallelujah!
really do need to see Carter.

HEALTH

~~---L_a_w_r_e_nc_e_E_.
Trend to improvement

DEAR DR. LAMB - I've been
wondering about something and
maybe you can shed some light on it.
Our government is so concerned
about our health, warning us about
cigarettes and artificial sweeteners,
food dyes and so forth. Why isn't
something said about those vegetable
oils, coconut and palm oils that are so
high in saturated fat?
My husband is on a low-cholesterol
diet and.! have been using many of
these products for-many years before
I became aware of the fact that they
are harmful. 111 bet many other people are doing the same thing unknow- ,...,.,
_J ~
'
ingly. It's almost unbelievable how~
many so-called low.fat foods contain
.
some of these harmful ingredients.
DEAR READER - One problem
TY/
has lieen the difference of opinion
a bout how unportant some of these
·0
dietary constituents are. At the present time, there's almost unaninnous
agreement among heart specialists
By Don Graff
and various scientists working on the
Maybe he will be able to pull it off.
problems of fatty-&lt;!holesterol deposits
After all, there were those who
in the arteries that one should limit laughed - and even more who paid no
saturated fat intake. Now that's not attention whatsoever - when he set
the same thing as cholesterol. Actual- out four years ago to become presily, cholesterol only occurs in animal dent.
products, such as meat, milk and
Jimmy Carter has demonstrated
milk products.
that he is capable of accomplishing
It's always been my position that the unlikely. Maybe he will be able to
regardless of any difference in opi- do it again on a much vaster scale,
nion about saturated fat In the diet, rallying Americans to his crusade
the buyer has a right to know what against the energy crisis and in the
he's buying and that includes knowing process leading the nation to a moral
how much saturated fat is in the food and spiritual regeneration .
you purchase.
Maybe. But success in the long haul
You touched on an important point is going to require more than a Sunby referring to these as vegetable day School lesson , an admittance of
oils. For years commercial interests past failings and a vow to do better.
have been permitted to sinnply record
Americans are going to have to do
in the ingredients "vegetable oil" more than join hands and speak well
which often is a synonym for coconut of their country. What is being asked
oil.
of them, and at what cost, is going to
One of the most important parts of a have to be explained clearly, In detail
diet to prevent fatty-cholesterol and very convincingly if their support
deposits is eliminating obesity and for an energy program that may lead
control of calorie intake. For that to independence only after great
reason I am sending you The Health sacrifice is to be won and, more imLetter nwnber 9-12, Kitchen Power portant, sustained.
for Weight Control. It will give you
Maybe Jimmy Carter, who prosome guidelines · in preparing good mises leadership, will be able to do
meals and limiting calories. Others this. But promises are one thing,
who want this issue can send 75 centS deli very something else entirely.
with a long, stamped, sell-addressed
As it is, he is initially raising more
en"elope for it. Send your request to questions than he is answering in the
me, in care of this newspaper, P.O. serial Wlfolding of details of his $142
Box 1551, Radio City Station, New billion master plan.
York, NY 10019.
The expense of the undertaking is of
I'm afraid the real reason that we an order greater than anything the
haven't had more aCCIIJ"ate'food label- nation has hitherto been asked knowing sooner has to do with commercial ingly to commit itself to. He says that
interests. Our government, with all the required billions will be
its diversity, is influenced by all sorts redirected from foreign suppliers Into
of different pressure groups.
American pockets. But they alSo must
first come out of American pockets in
the f9rm of higher fuel prices before
Today In History
being rechanneled Into energy
By The Associated Press
developments via a windiall profits
Today is Monday, July 23, the 204th tax. The oil cartel may be out the in:
day of 1979. There are 161 days left in come, but it is still Americans who·
the year.
will be footing the bill.
Today's highlight in history :
His alternative energy proposals
On this date in 1914, Austria issued are a repackaging of o)d Ideas, not inan ultimatwn to Serbia after the novations to capture the imagination
assassination of Archduke Francis of the public and fire it with a will to
Ferdinand. ·The dispute triggered succeed. The prospects are already
World War I.
the subject of thorough disclission.

By G~g Baney
A 14-hlt attack and a three-hit pitching perfonnance by righ~der
Gordon Splete allowed Centenary
Green I to take home all the marbles
Saturday night In the S)·racuse Little
League Tournament.
Green rolled to a 17-4 victory over
the Pomeroy Tigers as Tommy Duncan and J . D. Colley each collected

''

By the Associated Press

AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST
W L Pet.
Bal timore
63 32 .663
Boston
58 34 .630
Milwaukee
59 38 .608
New York
52 '43 .542
Detroit
48 4.1 .511
Cleveland
33 52 .(53
Toronto
29 69 .296
WEST
Californ ia
56 42 .571
Minnesota
52 42 .553
Texas
5J 43 .552
Kansas C-ity
Chicago

Seattle
Oeklarid

.16 49
.. 51

.

.uu

.458

GB
l

•r,

l
11 ',
14'h
20

35'f1

2
2
8 y,
II

42 56 .429 14
26 72 .265 30

Sund•v •s G1mes

Milwaukee 14 5, Cleveland 53
Detroi t 1, ChlcagoO
Boston 6, Californ ia 5, 10 inn ings
New York 4, Seattle 0
Baltimore .4 , Oal&lt;land 1
l&lt;ansas CiT V7, Texas6
Monday ' sGames

Oak land

&lt;Keou gh

0· 11 1

Balfimore (F iangan 13·5) , N
Cal i fornia ( Frost 7·6) at
(Finch 0·1). N

(Sore nsen

at

Boston

11 ·9)

at

Toronto (Clancy 2·6} at M innesota
&lt;Zahn 8·21. N

Tuesday 's Gimes

Also the drawbacks.
We are reminded that the United
States has "more oil in our shale
alone than several Saudi Arabias."
, True, but it aiso needs to be explained
that recovery of shale oil in sufficient
quantity may be possible only at the
cost of converting much of Colorado
and Wyoming into a slag heap. Are
the Americans prepared to make this
sacrifice for energy independence) ·
Was.te disposal and pollution are
also problems in increased use of
coal, whether burned directly or exploited as a source of synthetic fuel.
And tbere is some question that successful development of a multi-billioo
dollar synthetic industry could really
buy energy independence.
What if tbe oil cartel slashed !be artificially exorbitant prJce of Its prodUct, as it could still profitably do at
any time? Would Americans willingly
continue subsidizing the synthetic
product wben the real thing was plentifully available on the world market
for hall the price?
Solar energy on a large scale requiring the development of virtuaity a
new teclmology to be feasible but '
neverthless possibly the most promising e~ergy investment In the long
haul, IS still decades in the future.
And the plans for nuclear power,
something which to many Americans
is less desirable than dependence on
the-oil cartel, is going to require a
great deal of explaining.
The president may be able to
answer these and many more questions as his road show continues. And ,;.
he did warn that the struggle would ~
not be easy.
.:
To achieve our freedom, he said we ,:
must have faith -miles and mil.; of "'
faith, It would appear, to paraphrase ·:..
the ditty from "Damn Yllnkees."
~
Well, that will certainly help. But a '.:_
great many Americans are going to ::
be looking for something more as the ~
battle for energy independence drags ;
on against an elusive enemy, who Is in ,;;
part ourselves.
••
They are going to want not periodic '"•
rallying . cries but real, continuing ' i~
leadership. Leadership they can · '
recognize as such.

•

Kenny Holley, Keith Fellure, Scott
Chevalier, Bobby Walker and T. J .
Pasquale.
Parker Long was tagged with the
loss, fanning six and walking five.

BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
Two weeks ago today, the
Pittsburgh Pirates were tied for
fourth place in the National League
East , seven games behind the
Montreal Expos.
But they put together a four-game
Tuesday's Games
winning streak, lost one to Atlanta's
Cincinnati at Plttsb\Jrgh , n
Chicago ~t Houston, n
Phil Niekro and then won eight in a
At lanta at St. Louis, n
row.
Montreal still is in first, but with
Mntreal at san Diego, n
a double-header sweep of the Atlanta
Philadelphia at Los Anoeles , n
Braves on Sunday, the Pirates moved
New York at san Franci sco, n
ID within one-half game of the Expos.
The Pirates won the opener 5-4 on
pinch-hitter Mike Easler's twtHlln
single in the sixth inning after nearly
four hours of rain delays.
In the nightcap, right-hander Jim
Bibby
smacked a two-run homer, the
By G~g Bailey
second
of his major league career,
The Syracuse Girls Softball team
and
handcuffed
Atlanta on five hits
played two games last week .
ln the first ganne, the gals fell vic- throul!h eiJZht inninJZS for a 3-2 win .
tims 7-6 to the host Hit 'N Misses. Winning pitcher was Loretta Pettit while
the ·loser was Carla Teaford.
For the Hit 'N Misses, Laura Smith
GIRLS JUNIOR AND SENIOR
. led the hitting attack with three
. SOFTBALL STANDINGS
singles. The winners got seven hits
IA.S of July 191
while Syracuse pounded out 17. The
SENIOR LEAGUE
Hit 'N Misses are now 7-3.
Division A
9_1
For Syracuse, Sonia Ash led the Forest Run
7·3
atack with three ·singles while Beth Hi t N ' Misses
6·4
Syracuse
Bartrum had a double and single. New Haven
5·5
Deana Nease, Teaford, and Beth Pomeroy
4-6
Divislon B
Varian had two singles each.
Two
Rivers
Ford
64
Linescore :.
4·5
F~ney Bennett Am . Leg .
S.
111 200 IH 17 5 Middleport
26
H.
006 000 01-7 7 6 Mason
0·9
Scores of Gilmes Last Week
Syracuse hosted J'Wo Rivers Ford
and came up with a hard-lought-13-10 New Haven 10 Pomeroy 9
Midedlport 7 American L eg . 0
win. Tealord this time got the win 1forfeit)
while A. Ury took the 1055 .
Forest Run 7 Mason 0 ( forfe it )
Sonia Ash led the hitting as she New Haven 8 Syracuse 5
banged out three singles and a double. Pomeroy..9 Hit N' Missess
Forest-Run 5 Svracuse 3
Tonia Ash slanuned two singles and a New Haven 21 American Leg. 18
home run with two on board. Dodie Hit N' Misses 7 Syracuse6 (8 innings)
Chapman, Teaford, and Teresa Fer- Two Rivers 7 Am . Legion 0 (forfeit)
Two Rivers 7 Am . Legion 0 (f.orfelt)
rell each had two singles.
Syracuse 13 Two Rivers 10
For Two Rivers, P. Ewing had a
JUNIOR LEAGUE
H
home run and two singles, S. Durst New Haven Bears
J.O
had three singles, LiFizer had two New Haven Reds
3·1
Letart
singles, and McDennitt got a home
3·1
run and single. Two Rivers is ·also Salisbury
Syrcuse
1·1
now&amp;-4.
Middleport wranglers
1·2
0·3
Pomeroy
Lineseore:
0·3
Racine
TR.
-...
400 030 3- 10 14 4 Mason
0·4
S.
332 500 X-13 16 1
Recent Scores

In all, the double-header took about
10 hours ID play.
"Hey, the day is short when you
win," Bibby said. "It was a short· day
at tbe ballpark today .''
· Sipping on a beer in the ·locker
'room, Bibby then asked: "What are

California at New York
Seattle at Baltimore
Oak lana at Boston

M llaukee at Oelroit
Kansas City at Chicago
Cleveland at M inne$ota

Only Games Scheduled

NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST
W L Pet GB
Montreal
52 38 .578
Pittsburgh
52 39 .57 1 'h
Chicago
50 40 .556 2
Philadelphia
52 4l .S-'7 2v,
St. Louis
4l AS .500 7
New York
38 52 .422 1A
WEST
Houston
55 44 .556
Cincinnati
51 47 .520 3'1'
San Francisco
48 50 .490 6
San Diego
'-1 ll .450 10'1'
Atlanta
40 56 .410 13'h
Los Angeles
39 58 .-402 15

Syracuse girls
split two games

New Haven Reds 5 Salisbury 3

Sunday's Games

Cinclnnat112·A, Chicago I ·8
San Francisco 8·5, Montreal6·15
Houston 7, St. t:ouls 6
Philadelph ia 5, San Diego 2. n
Los Angeles 4, New York l
Pittsburgh 5·3, Atlanta 4-2, n
Monday •s Games
Cincinnati (Norman 6-8 and Hume

6·5) at Chicago (Lamp 7·Sand Caudill
0·2), 2, first game completion ol
suspended game of May 10.
Atlanta (Neikro 13·11 and Brlz ·
zoiara 5·41 at Pittsburgh IBlyleven 7-3
and Rooker NJ. 2.
Houston (J . Nlekro 13-l) at St. Louis
(Fupgham 3·21, n
Philadelphia &lt;Noles 2·21 at san
Diego (Jones 8·61. n
New York !Hassler 3·21 at Los
Angeles (Reuss 2·8), n
Montreal ISchatzeder 0 ) at san
Francisco (CurtiS6·51. n

l,ong and Chris Shank each doubled
for the Tigers, and Jackie Welker got
a single.
Third Place Winner
In the first game of the night, Tup-

Pirates back in race with
doubleheader sweep Sund~y

Softball standings

Cleveland (Wilk ins 2 4) , N
Chtcaoo (Trout 4·31 at Delroit
&lt;Baker 1-61 N
Seattle (Abbott 4·9) at New York
' iFigUIIrOa HI . N
Kansas City &lt;Leonard s.J) at Texa s
(Jenk ins 10·6) . N

.

was sharp on tbe mound as he fanned
three singles in the Green attack.
Tbe champions in the 36-team tour- thirteen Tigers and walked five.
nament collected a single run in tbe
Keith Bartimus got a double and
first inning an.d two in the second single for !be winners, and Splete
before blowing the game open with socked~ double. Getting singles were
nine runs in the third frame for a 1~
lead.
Meanwhile, Splete was working on
a no-hitter until the fifth inning when
he gave up a double and single. Splete

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD

M ilwaukee

s commentary
•h
w e uotta have fialt

OlLi:IY

Saunders, Chris Iriams, Ray Tope, Russ Shaw. Back,
Bruce Orourke, Mike Bostic, Bobby Simons, Dwight
Dailey, Brett Bostic, Teddy Dixon, coaches, Jay
Simms and Kenny Bostic.

Green takes Syracuse tourney championship .

I. just like to hear the offers.' '

man • •
Business Jordan, Carter's right-hand
.
•
IN WASHINGTON mirror
WASHINGTON (AP) - Every
president has his right-hand man, and
Hamilton Jordan was Jimmy Carter's
long before the president named him
White House chief of staff.
Carter ·hadn't planned on having a
stall chief in his White House. Instead,
his top assistants were supposed to
func1tion as spokes of a wheel.. But the
wheel was squeaky, and the president
deci(!ed he had to change his way of
doing business as part' of the effort to
revive his leadership.
.
Jordan said the idea of naming him
chief of staff had come up before, "but
I resisted it. and the president was not

FOURTil PLACE IN SYRACUSE LI'ITLE
lEAGUE TOURNAMENT- Galliplis Red Sox, front
row, L-R, Berke Lyons, Jolm Williams, Rodney

Vic Gillilan, Roger Balser, Jay Carpenter, Paul Collins, Tom Everett, Mark Shrivers, Steve White, Randy
Fryar; George Co~J!ru'. Charles Collins, coaches.

By The Associated Press
Saturday 's Results
Toledo 3, Tidewater 2
Rochester at Richmond , rain
Syracuse S·-4, Charleston 2-1

· Columbus 10, Pawtucket 3

Sundily's Results
Tidewater 2, Toledo 1

Rochester at Richmond. ppd, rain
Charleston 18. Syracuse 1
Columbus 3, Pawtucket~

New Haven Reds 28 Racine 0
Salistury 7 Mason 0 (forfeit)
Lefort 18 Pomeroy 3
Letart 21 Mason 1
New Haven Reds 26 Mason 1
New Haven Bears 12 Middleport 11
Salisbury 7 Letart 4
New Haven Bears 37 Racine 0

New Haven Bears 18 Mason 15
Letart 28 Middleport 14

Sa;;c;bury 21 Pomeroy 0
Syrac~c;e 17 Racine 3

Mlddlepo.-t 28 Pomeroy 5

we in the standings? ''
"Half a game back," replied pitcher

John Candelaria.
''No, we're tied, aren't we ~ " Bibby
asked.
Somebody !ben infonned him that
Montreal had split a double-header
with San Francisco.
Had Montreal lost both games of the
twinbill, the Pirates could have
moved into a tie for first place .for the
first time this season. After losing the
opener 8~ , however, the Expos
collected 18 hits and won the nightcap
1~.

"By the middle of next week, we 'II
be two up and lookin' hack,"
Candelaria said.
"First place. That's what we want ,"
Bibby added. "First place is a good
place to be.
"We're known as a second-half
ballclub. Look what we did last year, "
Bibby said. " But we weren't as far
back at the All-Star break as we were
last year, and I think the big incentive
is ID get ID first place now and not wait
until late in the season."
Pirates right-hander Kent Tekulve
preserved both victories, going three
scoreless innings in the firSt game and
one in the second . He now has 16
saves.
Elsewhere in the NL, Cincinnati and
Chitago split, the Reds winning the
opener 12-1 and the Cubs winning the
second game_5-4; Los Angeles edged
the New York Mets 4-J; Philadelphia
whipped San Diego 5-2, and Houston
got by St. Louis 7~ .
Giants 11-S, Expos f&gt;.IS
San Francisco left-hander Vida
Blue turned in a strong performance
until tiring in the ninth to pick up his
!50th career victory in the opener. Bill
North drove in three runs for the
Giants, one with a home run.
Reds~. Cubs 1-8
Dave Concepcion hit his second
grand slam home run of the se~son,
capping Cincinnati's five-t"un eighth
inning, and drove in five runs to power
the Reds over the Cubs in the opener.
Junior Kennedy also had a two-run
sbot in the opener, his first major
league homer .
Dodgers 4, Mets 3
. Dave Lopes pushed a perfect
squeeze bunt down the first base !me
with one out in the ninth, sroring Steve
Yeager, to give tbe Dodgers their win
over New York.

Phlls 5, Pad res Z
Mike Schmidt, the major league
leader, slammed his 33rd home run of
the season and Greg Gross drove in
two run s with a single to give
Philadelphia right-hander Nino
Espinosa his fourth consecutive
vic!Dry.
Astros 7, Cards 6
Jose Cruz bounced an infield single
!Dward second base with two out in the
ninth inning to drive in the winning
run and snap Houston's five-game
losing streak.
PRO FB NUMBERS
NEW YORK (AP ) - The National
Football League has a numbering
system for players, as fo llows:
Quarterbacks and kickers, 1 to 19;
running backs and defensive backs, 20
to 49, linebackers, 50 to 59.
Centers, offensive linemen ·and
defensive linemen , 60 to 79. Wide
receivers and tight ends, 80 to 89.
Defensive linemen also may wear
numbers from 90 to 99.
A footnote from the league noted
that all players who were in the NFL
in 1972 may use their old numbers,
even if they clash with .the above
guidelines.

pers Plains captured third place
honors with a 11-4 romp over the
Gallipolis Red Sox. Lots of hitting
marked the contest with winning
hurler Vic Gilliam giving up eight hits
to the Red Sox while Brett Bostic and
Ted Dixon allowfl9 Tupper Plains hitters 13 safeties. Bostic was tagged
with the loss.
For Tuppers Plains, Paul Collins
led the attack with two singles and a
double while Roger Balser had a
single and double. Steve White socked
two singles, and Tom Everett had a
double. Getting a single each for the
winners were Jay Carpenter, Gillilan,
Mark Shrivers, Kevin Barber and Eddie Colins.
For the Red Sox, Russ Shaw slammed three singles in a losing cause.
Dwight Dailey added a triple while
Bob Simms and Ted Dixon each
socked a double and single.
Individual trophies went to the first
four teams while trophies were also
presented to an All-Star team composed of players selected from teams
other than the first four . Autographed
baseballs were also presented to
another All-Star team.
Following is a listing of the AllStars:
All Star Tournament Awards
'Alex Austin, Fruth 's; Tod Deel,
Vii1 ton ; Marl&lt;. Salser . Hubbard's;
Greg Nease, Hubbard 's; Chris
Leonard, Athens Medics; Barry
Mathews, Addaviile ; Matt Dawson,
New Haven Cubs; John Ranttln.
Athens Medics; Tim Swisher,
Frufh.'s ; Brian Hawks, Vinton ; Kyle
Dav is, Pomeroy Ya'nkees; Danny

Thomas , Middleport Indians; Scott
Gheen, Middleport Indians ; Jimmy

Reynolds ,

Point

City; Rod Long, New Haven Reds ;
ShaWn Baker, Middl eport Braves;
David Ebersbach , Hubbard's ; and
Char les Knopp , Pomeroy Yankees.

Autographed Baseballs
Andy Grinstead, Murray City; Rod·

LOVES FINESSE

LOS ANGELES (AP') - Donna
Caponi Young, winner of the LPGA
Championship Tournament in June,
says she likes to play on a golf course
which demands pinpoint control.
"Give me a tight course where.there
is a premium on finesse," she sa id,
"and I always feel I have a good
chance. I like to play on a course
where you have to put spin on the ball
to make a decent score.' '

DISLIKES RATINGS
LONOON (AP) - Virgihia Wade a
forme; \':'inlbledon tennis champi~n,
doesn t like the business of rating
individuals or teams.
"I don't mean to sound critical "
she said, "But I think this No.. !
business is an American phenomenon.
There is interest all over the world as
to who is No .I but not to the extent of
the United States. In Amer ica, it
seems to lie the only thing people
interested in sport• ever talk about.' '

ney Plants. New Haven Cubs; Tom

Hagen. Gallpolis Senators; Steve
Teaford. Portland ; Rod Harrison,
Pomeroy Pirates; Mike Chancey.
Hubbard's; Kelly Riffle, Fruth's; •
Brian Freeman, Pomeroy Pirates;
Lane Gandee, New Haven Cubs; Ed-

die Miller, Middleport Indians; Bob·
by Southern, Middleport I ndlans;
Darin Roush , Hubbard 's; Mark Chap-

man, Albany , and D. J. Randolph.
Reedsvi lle .

Ask me about.
Life Insurance
for'IOda

s

FamU~

I o ffer a toto! program to help
protect yo.ur family 's way of living
and bui ld fina ncial security for your·

retirement vears. Call me for details.

MIKE SWIGER
Middlen~O.
U~TI

&amp;

, •• ,.

IOUU • • NC:l

992·71SS

Stelle Fa rm l 1fe and
Acc1dent Ass urance
Co mpanv
lil:lrnt:

Qlh ~

il ·•1•lv1~J'~n lllwr ~

Monday's Games

Toledo at Tidewater
Rochester at Richmond
Syracuse at Charleston
Pawtucket at Columbus

Tuesday's Games

R-ichmond at Columbus
Pawtucket at Toledo
Charleston at Rochester
Tidewater af Syracuse

Dr. Riviere JIIIY• for lhe coil!

Coli todDy for
yo uf'

F'" cOpy

of Dr. Ri11itrr 's
JnfomuJIIvt'

b;ochwrl

,

Riviere Center
Dr. Ro11.W

r. Rldtrr

Or. A.L Stld tli • Dr . G. J. Stoml)au"h • Or . ('. W. Ue1 l
Dr. W.O. I(imhall• Dr . J .C Murph:-- • Dr. \\W.. Stuhz

f)r . o... ••w
:.s....... f . liwln•··•• •r.

.,,

"

~dUll •

'\ t·-:

Or . G .A . Moore

·., lum~us. Ohlo431~

Pleasant

Steelworkers; Eric Robson, Murray

The Department Store
Of Building
Since 1915

�A surprise layette shower was and her son, Russell, Belpre; Forrest
given for Gloria Decker recently at Adams, Reedsville; Garcia Adams
the home of Hope Drake in Long Bot- a~d her children Christi and Willie,
torn.
Long Bottom; Janet Jeffers and her
Hostesses were Sheila Curtis children, Tommy, Dusty and Annie,
Shirley Smith and Sharon Reibe/ Coolville; Vincent and Jessi ca
There was a pink color' scheme car· Reiber, Racine; Erin Smith, Midried out.
clleport; Gary , Donna, and 1\.lban CurGames were played with prizes go· tis, Pomeroy; Tony and Julie Adams,
in!( to Jill Holter, Ileen Swain, Liz Columbus.
Adams and Tammy Jeffers.
Those who sent gifts were Vickie .
Present at the shower were Carol Barber. Reedsville; Joyce Adams,
Scyoc and her children, Cindy, Marie, Columbus ; Florence Deeter, Racine;
and Christi, Reedsville; Mary Swain, Diane Jones, Reedsville; Florence
Reedsville; Ileen Swain, Reedsville; Griggs , Reedsville; Barb Masters,
Sharon Matson, Racine; Helen lllll, Reedsv ille; Nancy · Buckley ,
Racine; Jill Swain, Reedsville; Deb- Reedsville; Debbie Hill, Racine;
bie Durenberger and her son, Kathy McDaniel, Long Bottom; and
Howard, Parkersburg, W. Va.; Fran- White's Chapel Sunday Schoo) Young
cis Adams, Reedsville ; Liz Adams Adult class.
·

recrea-

Polly Cramer

DEAR POLLY - I.work at a small·
restaurant and we disagree over what
foods should be refrigerated. The type
of mayonnaise we use says nothing
about refrigeration and we also
wonder about ketchup and mustard. I
think they should all be refrigerated
after opening. -C.A.W.
DEAR C.A.W. -There is no question about mayonnaise. It is a big
source of food poisoning and should
only be taken from the refrigerator
when being used. This pertains to all
foods ~de with eggs and dairy products. As to the mustard and ketchup,
I discussed this with a home
economist who took it up with a still
higher authority. Their opinion was
that if the mustard and ketchup are
kept out on the tables during the day it
would be best to leave them out at
night rather than run the chance of a
temperature change. They should be
reasonably safe if used up in a short
period of time, such as a week or two.
-POLLY
DEAR POLLY -I want to tell Mrs.
P.R. that those large mesh bags fruit

and onions come in are idea] for moving yard plants. The large clump of
"home" soil around the plant can be
easily moved and relocated by
replanting with the mesh bag intact. NORMA
DEAR POLLY - Have you ever
baked a frozen store-bought pie and
found the crust edges burned before
the center was brown ? I solved that
problem by making a collar out of the
rim of a pie tin. Now when the crust
edges are as brown as I like I lay the
collar over the edges and Jet the
center brown more. I always have a
beautiful pie and save the collar to
use over and over. - H.H.
DEAR POLLY - I have a pair of
light suede shoes that I could not get
clean until my shoemaker told me to
rub them with sandpaper. It worked
just great.- MRS.W.R.
Polly's note - Try a small place
first and be sure the sandpaper is not
too coarse. Polly will send you one of
her signed. thank-you newspaper column clippers if she uses your favorite
pointer, Peeve or Problem in her column. Write POLLY'S POINTERS in
care of this newspaper.

CANCER

Answer line

~
~
/ "? .

/
I

!&gt;

WHEN IT comes to hedonism and pure physical
pleasure, nothing beats the luxury of an outdoor spa or
hot tub. Both body and psyche are soothed by a warm

Social News

Reedsville
News Notes

'I

I
I

I
I

OPTOMETRIST

OFFICE HOURS : 9: 30 to 12, 2 to 5 (C.LOSE AT NOON
ONTHURS. )-EASTCOURTST.,POMEROY.

I
i

L---------------~--------------- ·

HoSPITALIZATIOW

cALL

Mutual C'\

?f()mahi1~
P@op/P vauc~n CIIUIIOft ...

Gregg

Gibbs

I .,..991-3443 .

The first American hot tub was a
discarded wine vat erected about 15
years ago by some imaginative GI 's
in Santa Barbara, Calif., according to
an article in the July issue of House
Beautiful magazine. Soon, repairing
used water tanks and wine vats evolved into a booming business in hot tubs
across the nation.
Today's tubs still look like an oversized barrel, although the tub is usually made of redwood, cedar cypress or
mahogany . Seats ring the interiors,

Harrisonville

A re~ar feature, prepared by the viva! for black women. For patents
Recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
American Cancer Society, to keep you with localized disease the difference
Virgil
were Mr. and Mrs.
informed about cancer.
in survival is 115 percent in white Russell King
Hoffman
from Indiana.
Question: "How is prostate cancer women and 79 percent among black
Guests
of
Mr.
and Mrs. John A.
diagnosed?"
women. Because breast cancer is a
ANSWERiine : The initial disease that can be detected in an Dean were Mr. and Mrs. Hobart
examination for possible prostate early stage and there are effective Smalley of Muskogee, Okla., Mr. and
cancer is a palpation of the gland means of treatment, there is an op- Mrs. Hobart Smalley, Jr., Dale and
through the rectum. By inserting a portunity to save more lives with Hobie, Weirton, W.Va., Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Bruce Ried, Charles and
gloved finger into the rectum, a today 's knowledge.
physician can feel an irregular or
Question: "Is caocer an old per- Robert, Jr., Mr. and Mrs. John
Walter Dean, James and Jeremy, Mr.
unusually firm area that may in- son's dise&amp;e? ' '
and
Mrs. Kenneth Markins, Racine,
dicate a tumor. Most prostate cancer
ANSWERline: Cancer can strike at
begins in the part of the prostate any age from infancy up. However , and Mr. and Mrs. Walter Terrell of
gland that can be easily reached and cancer occurs mainly among the mid- Pataskala, Ohio.
Recent visitors at the home of Mr.
felt mthis manner. If a physician fin- clle-aged and the elderly. For examand
Mrs. Wayne Beal were Mr. and
ds a suspicious area, a battery of ple, people in their 70s consttute a
Mrs.
John Perdas, Mary and Usa of
tests, including X-i"ay, urine tests and higher number of cancer patients
blood analyses will be performed. The than any other age group. In the U.S. Chambersburg, Pa.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Kauff and family
only way to conclusively diagnose more than 60 percent of cancers in
cancer is by biopsy, which is the both men and women occur at age 55 have moved to Harrisonville.
Mr .and Mrs. Charles King visited
surgical removal of a small piece of or over.
·
over
the weekend with her parents,
tissue from the suspected growth for
Mr.
and
Mrs. Raymond Smith , Chanmicroscopic examination. Under the
cey.
microscope, abnormal cells and the
Recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
tissue patterns characteristic of ,canJohn Walter Dean were Mr. and Mrs.
cer can be seen by the trained eye.
Hobart Smalley of Muskogee, Okla.,
Prompt treatment is the next step. It
and
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Terrell of
is important to remember in any
Pataskala.
discussion of prostate cancer ·
Mrs. Elizabeth Murray and Mrn.
diagnosis that there are several other
Mildred King visited one day recently
physical conditions that may produce
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Smith and with Mrs. Myrtle White at Pleasant
the signs flld symptoms of prostate
daughter
of Akron were recent Valley Hospital.
cancer. Most often a Jess serious convisitors
of
Mr.
and Mrs. Ernest Ruth.
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil King spent
dition will be found.
Mrs.
Roy
Reed
and
children
of
Tupseveral
days in Columbus attending
Request: "Is there an inexpensive
pers
Plains
visited
Sunday
with
her
The
Sword
of the Lord's National Conservice to transport cancer patients
parents.Mr.
and
Mrs.
Edward
ference
hosted
by John R. Rice.
to outpatient clinics? My aunt needs
Chevalier.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Robert Bruce Ried,
that kind of practical help? "
Roger· and Nancy Brewer of Orlan- Charles and Robert, Jr., have moved
ANSWERiine: The American Cancer Society Unit in your aunt's home do, Fla. visited with Mrs. Oral Ran- into the trailer home of Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Houdashelt.
community can usually,provide those dolph recently.
Anne
Drake
of
Gahanna
spent
a
few
Jeremy Dean celebrated his fifth
services free of charge or help find
days
with
her
grandparents,
Mr.
and
birthday
July 6 at the home of his
assistance elsewhere. In most parts
•
Mrs.
DavidSmithandDiana.
parents,
Mr.
and Mrs. John Walter
of the U. S., American Cancer Society
Mr. and Mrs. Hugjl Martin and sons Dean. The evening was spent playing
volunteers use their spare time and
cars to help patients receive the treat- have returned home after a visit with games and swirruning after which
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Mar- everyone enjoyed ice cream and
ment that they require.
tin,
Sr. and family of-Manakin Sabot, cake. Presenting gifts and attending
QUESTION: "Is breast cancer
Va.
wer~ Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Markins,
more or less coinmon among black
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Howard
Young
of
Racme,
Mr. and Mrs. John A. Dean,
women ?"
ANSWERiine: Breast cancer in Paden City, W. Va. visited with Mr. Shannon .Spaun, Pomeroy, Mrs.
Yvonne Young, Wesley and Yvette,
b~ck . women is slightly Jess common and Mrs. Garth Smith.
Visiting with Mrs. Helen Archer and J eremy's brother, James.
than Ill white women but 'it has inMrs. Leo Story, who has been ill,
creased by 25 percent among black last week were Don Coleman and
women in the last 24 years. The death daughter, Kim, of Columbus and Mrs. suffered a stroke and was taken to
Holzer Medical Center.
rate for breast cancer in American Milton Tuttle of Texas Rd.
Gene
Cowdery
is
a
patient
at
St.
Mr. and Mrs . Ralph Carl visited
black women is about one and onethird times higher than 40 years ago. Joseph Hospital, Parkersburg, W.Va. with Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Lee at Darnus year more than 3,000 Arilerican Mr. and Mrs. John Chaney of win recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Smith and
black women will die of breast can- Minersville visited Sunday with Mr.
family were recent visitors of Mr. and
cer. Unfortunately there is a dif. and Mrs. Roger Chaney.
Sarah Frydman of Buffalo Grove, Mrs. Ralph Bates and family at
terence in breast cancer survival
Iii.
is visiting with her grandparents, Michigan.
rates between white and black
Mr.
and Mrs. Ernest Whitehead.
American women. Among white
-Mrs. L. Balderson.
women there is a 65 percent five year
survival rate after treatment cornHOW'S YOUR
pared with 50 percent five year sur-

r-------------------------------1
l N. W. COMPTON, O.D. :

water soak and the freedom of bathing outdoors. The
photograph shows a tiny nook sheltering redwood
decks and a hot tub.

Outdoor 'hot tubs--hot items! II
Americans from coast to coast are
di scovering the hot tub . A
phenomenon that began in California,
the hot tub is bigger than a bathtub
yet smaller than a swinuning pool,
and combines some fo the nicest
features of both.
A soak in a hot tub soothes the spirit
and relaxes the nerves, devotees
claim. Part of its present popularity
may stem from GI's who remember
with pleasure thei r Japanese soaking
tub experiences.

1

CORN KING ·

Mr. and Mrs. 'Millard Christian
visited Tuesday and Wednesday with
her brother, Mr. and Mrs. Max Harmbn, Greenville, Oh.
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Chapman
of Maryland are spending a week with
her aunt, Mary Diehl and cousins,
Stella Atkins and Ruby Diehl. ·
Mr. and Mrs. Kermit Walton,
Pomeroy, were Sunday evening
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Bob Alkire.
Mr. and Mrs. Darell Graham of
South Carolina spent a few days with
his mother, Mrs. Bessie Graham.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Graham spent
a week here at his farm before
moving to Utah.
Mrs. Evelyn Hammond, Chicago,
and daughter and Mrs. Lorene
Hargrove and sons, California,
visited Mrs. Duane Stanley and
severa l other friends the past week.
They are the dsughters of the late F.
R. Wilson and former residents from
here.
Mrs. Nellie Brogan is spending a
month with her sister in Virginia.
Mrs. Rosalee Sayre is a patient at
Holzer Medical Center.
ClintonGilkey, Albany, is a heart
patient at Mt. Saint Marys in Nelsonville.
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Payne, Columbus, visited Saturday with Mr. and
Mrs. Junior Payne and family.
Mrs. Catherine )Veaver visited her
son, Mr. and Mrs. Sam Steinmetz of
California the past two weeks.
Mrs. Ruby Halliday has been returned to her home after having eye
surgery at O'Bieness Hospital,
Athens.
Mrs. Evelyn Allen, Mrs. Dena
Raymond, Downington, visited Frances Alkire Thursday evening.

and hydro jet outlets on the walls produce a whirlpool effect for the
massage and aerating bubble ring.
Water temperatures can be regulated
to as high as 110 degrees.
As the hot tub moved east and into
northern climates, some additions to
the support system become
necessary, according to House·
Beautiful. Mocllflcatlons for outdoor
installations in these climes include
special gas or electric ·heaters and
tw&lt;H!peed pumps.
What will all this b!.iSs cost? A small
tub with accessories costs upwards of
$1 ,700 in kit form ; larger tubs can
range up to $6,000. If you're a do-ityourseifer, you can save several hundred dollars by installing the unit
yourself.
Great for aches and pains, some hot
tub installations may even be tax
deductible - if your doctor
prescribes one for health. But warns
"House Beautiful, " beware! The IRS
looks carefully at each~-

Top Round Steak ........ ~~.~l 99
Cardinal Bacon............~;.~1 19

3
CARROTS························

S

THIS WEEK

' ......_ . y'J

Monday thru Friday

BANANA
SPLIT$

ONLY99e
Featuring
.

I

s

Flavors of Ice Cream
July 23·27

1\

!~airy15Je~d
Locust 51 in Middleport
f'; , 7~2 - 524P

®
only

$800per
-day

($12.00 overnight)

DUEST SERVICE IN TOWN!
QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

CUT-WRAPPEDfROZEN

6
21/zCT.LB.PKG.
AVG.

~~

~-_.;;..

.....

sau aans:

JULY 23 • 28, 1979

.

.

jijeiiHift•lU

'*o STORES • CARDINAL FOOD STORES
PILLSBURY PLUS
-- -

:i

i CAKE MIX
~

Aut. Fl.vors

•- ·-·

::

2 s119 ~~
1 a-oz.

Bo11u11

:::

E.PrM J/21171

0

Your choice of white, pink and
11,..., or yellow and blue.

.,
~

. . Roll

.Pkg.
DEL MONTE SALE

IEEILER HOlEY GRAHAMS ................................. .....':O': 89'

CUT .. FRENCH STYLE
DEL MONTE

.IEEILER CIIIIAMOI CRISP ......................................':: 89'

·GREEN BEANS ...............3
or

NAIIICO

-

·

NUnER BUmR COOKIES ··· · ·· ··.. ·· .. ····· ·· ··· · ···.... -·.... ~~~~~·89'
SESAME WHEATS
~~;.· · 79C

WHOLE KERNEL

DEL MONTE

CORN .................'....-.............3

NABISCO

I • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • I • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

CAUIHED. CHUNK ot SLICED
DEL MONTE IN JUICE

PINEAPPLE ......................... .'&amp;cr::·49c

MAXWELL HOUSE

~INE~PPLE · GR~PEFAUIT .

PINEAPPLE ·
ORANGE o• "NlAPPLE -PINK

DEL MONTE JUICES ........ ~~~·

Ethel M. Rife, Affidavit, Colwnbia.
William E. Snouffer, Jane A. Snouffer to Thomas W. Hoschar, Melody R.
Hoschar, 1.3acres, Salisbury.
Laura L. Carpenter to Roger E.
Carpenter, Parcels, Chester.
John Hayes, Elizabeth Hayes to
Roland McDole, Parcels, Chester.

COFFEE

59c

LB.

CAN

Vour choice of regul•r. drip,

-

...........o.c.

'479

~1
11u1,1":::- , 1.,.-

s.O sTORES • CAROINAL FOOD STORES
~
BIRDSEYE
-- -

i AWAKE

12·01.

bpir• 7/ 21171

WHITE VINEGAR
CIDER VINEGAR

TETLEY

100 ct.

TEA BAGS ·

PREVENnON
IS TME

WHOLE or SLICED

GREEN GIANT MUSHROOMS ..................... ~~;~ 554

1-LB.CAN

COFFEE

STAR KIST

., •• TU A
Limit two c•n• chunk 1tyl1 picked
In w111r or on ·

c

6%-oz.
Can

PEPSI

~llO STORES ' CARDINAL FOOD STORES

..---FREEZER

$199
FRIED CHICK EN .............~~~·.. .
BANQUET

•n

"''

.

2 LB.

3
SLICED STRAWBERRIES.•••••••••~~~~.

~

GREEN VALLEY

·

·

10 OZ.

"

VALLEY BELL

':'"

.

SNOCONES •••••••••••••••••••••••• .!~.~.

u•

6

g~

99~

DAIRY SPECIALS

.6"""~\..
{.'\:)'~l
\J_

~·--~--

KRAFT

.

VELVEETA .......~~~~ ....

BORDEN FRESH

COTTAGE

$1 09
CHEESE ...•..•. :!~; .....

VALLEY BELL

..

COOL WHIP...................~~~... ·

'

..

.'

"
'
ll

01211100

&amp;Y!·OZ.
Pkga.

hl'lm 7/21/'ft

c.?

~

:=

U)

24 OZ.

BIRDSEYE

992-2143
102W. Main

:
.
4c
.

~f

· ·&gt;~,:~~ sf·ilif·i:!IIQUii4•J:ic:'1t~rNO:n#

..

DALE C. WARNER
INS.

BETIY CROCKER NOODLES

. . ..

GAL 89~
•••
FRUIT DRINK .•.............. .J.u.~

ro

c

i¥tt11J ifttl:l

i
ROMANOFF
i
. 1 LB $}29 ": ~::.."':.:2 . s119 ~
. .

• ·'
.:

"

0

KRAFT B.B.Q. SAUCE ............................ ):;:; 59'

., ••.

HEINZ

Ernie Stautner, one-time Pittsburgh
Steeler tackle and a member of the
Pro Football Hall of Fame was bora
in Bavaria, Germany.
'
!

•

~

SMOKEY . HOT or PLAIN

GALLON

SAVARIN ADC

"

~
~

iioODLES with CHICKEN ................................... ... ):;. 59'

HEINZ

i

2 89~ ~

!::~~"! .......
,.,lfy '

;?;• •

Cans

brough of Grand Rapids, Ohio, Earl
Harden of Weston, W. Va., Charlet
Cazart of Columbus, 0., Mr. and Mrs.
Hayward Bissell and grandson of
Keno, Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Tuttle of
Eagle Ridge, Mr. and Mrs. Jim Patterson and sons of Racine Rd.

Po.meroy

45

...

~

Transfers

But, we also have a vital In·
terest In loss prevention, as
should our clients. We encourage
care, caution and safetv ...
preventive measures which can
keep that car accident from hap·
penlng, that building fire from
starling , that home burglary
from being committed.
Prevention saves life, limb and
property .. . and helps control In·
sura nee costs ~nd premiums.
When losses do occur, our
policyholders can count on pro·
tectlng and serving In time and
need. But we still say - prevenlion Is the best policy .

•••

• ;:.,~:;...'"'.!' :

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY ·MIDDLEPORT Uons
Club Wednesday a.t noon at Meigs Inn.

loss .

$}19

~0

MEIGS COUNTY United Methodl.sl
Men Monday 7:30 p.m. at Pomeroy
United Methodist Church.
TIIESDAY
PAST MATRONS of Pomeroy
Chapter 186 Tuesday at 7:30p.m. at
home of Mrs. Marge Crow.
DREW WEBSTER POST 39 picnic
Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. at Ft. MeigJ.
Members to bring covered dish.
HARRISONVILLE SENIOR
Otizens wiener roast at regular
meeting Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. at
Forest Acres Park.
HARRISONVILLE Senior Citizens
Tuesday 6:30 p.m. Wiener roast at
Forest Acres Park.
EASTERN School Board Tuesday
7:30p.m. at high school Ubrary.

As an independent Insurance
agency, our primary function Is
to provide policies which afford
finan cial protection In case of

LBS. FOR

.

·CUSTOM MEAT CUTTING

WASHINGTON STATE

~· ' ~'lrof-'Jr'
~-'.
t .' '

' U.S. born l)ers attacked the German-·
occupied city of Athens, Greece, in
1943.

BANANAS 4~~-~-884
PEACHES .........~;. 394
$ 29
APPLES ;
1

19

$100

CRISP

BEST POUCY

PECIAL

$

POTATOES........~-~..~:......1

MONDAY .
REVIVAL Monday through July 29
at Keno Church of Christ 8 p.m.
rughtiy. Willard Love, Athen8 guelt
'
minister. Public invited.
SWIMMING PARTY at Londm
Pool, Syracuse, sponsored by
Pomeroy Youth League Monday at
7:30 p.m. for playel'll, parents,
manager and coach. ·

were Bobby and Joann Calaway, Robbie, Jeromee, Patty Calway. Sunay
guests for dinner were Jane Pulllns,
Rob and VIrginia Burke of Alfred. In
the afternoon Fred .and Aggie
Crawford of Lancaster, Ohio called on
Ruby Burke.

g~

'

PARTS ................ LB.

Carmel News,
Meigs
By the Day
Proper~y
Sheryl LeAnn Johnson visited with
her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Douglas Johnson of Racine a recent
Saturday.
Only thirty-five were present for
Sunday~school July 15.
Rev. Mark Flinn called in the community of Cannel recently .
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Earl Johnson
and daughter Sheryl LeAnn called at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Douglas
Johnson of Racine on Sunday.
Mary Circle was guest of Mr. and
Mrs. Jame8 Circle of New Haven, W.
Va. on Thursday night.
F1orence Circle spent Tuesday
visiting Mrs. Fern Gaul of Colwnbus,
0.
Mrs.- Elsie Circle, Mrs. Jim Patterson ' and Florence Circle visited
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest johJison of
Belpre, 0 . recently.
Visitors at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Douglas Circle the past wei!k
were Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Scar-

7

uo ••••••

u.s. NO. liDAHO

l&amp;t her son, Eric, who has been
hospitalized for some Ume, is not so
well at this Ume.
Thomas Whlte is reported very ill at
this time.
The mother of Uoyd Dil!iriger is
reported doing very well at this time.
The Carr School Reunion will be
held on the second Sunday in August
in the Woode grove here at Alfred.
Saturday guests of Ruby Burke

FREEZER BEEF
PORK STEAK ..
~~~
29
SIDES
............
~~~.$1
PORK
49
.........
~--~
109
HINDS ...........~~·..$1
BUTT ROAST
WHOLE OR MIXED
29
FRONTS
.........
~~~.$1
FRYER
.
•
'

CREAM ITYU

Mrs. Elsie Roush of Pomeroy spent
the weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
Edison Roush.

.

WIENERS ...........

r----------.
I Social Calendar

-~ ·

Kingsbury
News Notes

American Canc.er Society

Alfred
Social Notes

On Sunday, July 15, ' the delcen·
dants of George and Catherine Baer
held their first reunion in the
tion bullding at Royal Oak Park with
60 relatives and two guests attending.
After the group sang the dcmoloey,
a dinner was served and a abort
business session was beld. Officers
for 1979-1980 are: Gecirge Baer, pnsldent ; ·Kathryn Karr Mora, secretary;
Ann Bailey Watson, treasurer.
The group salig, "Happy ~versary" to Betty and Bill Knight.
'
. Those attencllng were Mr. and Mts.
Patrick Morrisey, Tom and Carrie;
Mary Baer, Margaret and Joey Carto, Mr. ·and Mrs. Roger Karr and
Jessica, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Mcira
and Jennifer, Marilyn, Trulla and
Donnie Spencer, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Karr and David, Ann Watson, Mr. and
Mrs. Horace Karr, Kathleen Scott,
Dr. and Mrs. J. B. Marshall, Vlrg!nla
Deevers, Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Knight, Daniel Nease, Mr. and Mrs.
· Uswin Nease, Altona Karr, Jaclde,
Mike and Debbie Frost, Mr. and Mrs.
William Buckley, Jeremy and Ryan,
Mary Kathryn Roush, Mr. and Mrs.
DeiUlis Evans, Becky, Michael and
Jamie, Carolyn Salser, Mr. and Mrs.
Woodrow Mora, Janet and Judy; Mr.
and Mrs. William Knight, Mr. and
Mrs. Bradford Knight, Mr. and Mrs.
George Baer, Bill Baer and 90118,
Chris and Andy.
Guests included Mae Forst and
. Becky Eichinger.

POLLY'S POINTERS

A reception has been planned for
the minister and his wife following the
services this next Sunday, AU are
welcome!
The wedding o,f Richard Yost and·
Sharon Hederson Satwday was well
attel)ded with a reception following.
Stmday evening callers at the
Charles D. Woode IMJme were Mr. and
Mrs. Arthur Atherton.
Nellie Parker has received word

Swartz in Athens a recent Sunday af. evenirig with Charles and Hele1o
t.emoon.
Woode here.
Hobart Swartz is a patient in St.
Richard Swartz of Ravenna, 0 .
recently visited his mother, Grace
Joseph's Hospital.
The Robert Robinson children of Swartz here.
Belpre have been visiting their grand- Sunday School attendance on July
several local people attenoea the· mother,_ Nina Robinson and aunt, 15 was 40, the offering was $26.75.
fwleral of Warren Bamhill at Hughes Clllra Follrod and they attended chur-_ Worship s~ was 11 with Rev.
FWieral Home in Athens recently.
ch here on Sunday.
Thomas spe
on I Jphn chapter 2.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles D. Woode
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Hayes of
Florence Spencer was pianist and
villted at the home of Waid and Katie Long Bottom, 0 . spent Sunday iJoward Flanders song leader.

First reunion
held
here
-

Surprise shower held

Keep that mayo cold

I

5-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, July 23, 1979 ·

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .• Monday, July 23, 1979

.

8 oz.

'69~

\

�'
7-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday , July 23 1979

DICKTRACY

Your .Best Buys Are Found in the Sentinel Classifieds

.
TO SEE 'IOU,

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to form

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY I OH 10

ESTATE OF ETHEL G
BLACKWOOD ,
DGCEASEO
Cue No . 22 , 717

NOTICE OF

HelP Wa11ted

WANT AD
CHARGES

APPOINTMENT

l fi WnrdsorUndPt
Cash
Otltrl(e

OF FIDUCIARY
On Ju l y S, 1979, i n the
Me i gs County Proba te
Cour t , Case No . 22.717 . J .

B

O' Br ien ,

S treet.

100 1 ?

Cour t

Pomeroy ,

Ohio

• 5769
was
appointed
e)C.ecutor of th e estate of
E the I
G.
Bkackwooct ,

de ceased.

lat e of

Rt .

7,

A l bany , Ohio .

Robe rt E . BUck
Probate Judg e-

1 day
2days

1.00
1.5()

l.!l)

ldays
6days

1.110
3.00

2.25

1.25

Each word over the mlnlmum
IS words Is 4 cents per word per
day. Ads nmnln~ other lhan consa·utive days wtll be chargc.'d at
the 1day rate.

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
• ESTATE . OF
ETHEL
DILCHER .
DECEASED

Mobile Horne ~1 eJ a nd Yard
sa les are accepted only with
cash with order. 25 cent charge
fot ads carrytng Box Numbtr In
ea·re of The Sentinel .

Jt c

-

Case No . 12 ,710

NOTICE OF

APPOINT-ME NT

OF FIDICUIARY
On

M eigs

Ju l y

3. 1979 , in th e

Coun t y

Probate

Cour t , Case No . 21.72 0,
Drexel Lamb erl. Rt . 1,
Rutlan d . Ohio was ap
po inted exec utor of the
es tat e ot Eth el " O ilc her ,
dece ased . late o f Rt
1.
Rut l and , Ohio .
R o bert E . Bu c k
Probat e Jud ge · •
Clerk
~ 1l 9 . 16, 23. J t c

Tueadoy, July U

ASTRO·GRAPH
Bernice Bede

NOTICE
WANT-AD
jApVERTISING
DEADLINES
Monday
. Noon on Sa turday
Tuesday
thru Friday

For Rent
3 AND 4 RM furnished and un·
furnished
apts .
Phone

Sunday

'192-543.4 .

I P.M.
Friday afternoon

ONE BEDROOM opts . Contac t
Village Manor, 992-7787

Notices

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) In rptes

where you mu st exercise you r
authority , oth ers Will happil y do

your bidding today because
what you ask o f th em is vo i ced
pleasantly rather 1han as a
command. Find out more o f
what li es ahead for you in the
yea r foUow1ng your bi rthday by
sending lor yo ur co py of AstraGraph Lett er . Mail $1 tor each
10 Astro-Graph , .P.O. Box 489 ,
Radio C1 ty Stati o n, N . Y. 10019.
Be sure to Spec ify birth time .

VIRGO !Aug. 23-Sepl . 221
Should you ge t a wong hunch

OFFICE SPACE
FOR RENT

GUN SHOOT. EVERY FRIDAY
7:30 PM RACINE GUN CLUB .
FACTORY CHOKE GUNS ONLY .

LOST: DARK brown smo ll
loose · leaf notebook with
Westinghouse Depot on front
alphabet poge Iinde r. With
nome inside . Also impor tant
papers .
Reword .
Call

NICE
LARGE
hom e
in
Pomeroy . Write Box 72'9W , c-o
the Doily Sentinel. Pomeroy,

OH 45769.
TWO ROOM apartment .
Private bath . All utilities paid .
First floor private entrance.
Also . sleeping room for rnet.

LIBRA IStpl . 23-0cl . 231 Don't
pas s up any opportunities toda y where you !lave a chance
to mingle with you r lrien.ds .
Something propitious co uld resul t from the encounter .

SCORPIO lOci. 24-Nov. 221 It's

quite probable today that you
cou ld come up with a bright
idea to put yo u a lew paces
ahead of your compe tilion .
Don 't be afraid to tes t il.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec.
Z1) Tleat all your experiences
ph iloso ph ically today . No matter what might pop up , don 't let
it rattle you. Yo ur positive
311ilude assures yo ur success .

CAPRICORN !Dec. 22-Jtn. 191
A small profit is better than
none . You' ll not be disappoin ted today unless you expect more than you are legitimately entitled to.

AQUARIUS iJtn. !11-Fob. 191
Instead of sidestepping diflicult decisions today , meet
them 'tourageou sly. Be1ng in deci5ive or wi shy-wa 5hy is the
only th ing that could defeat
you .

'

Auto Sales
1974 VEGA HATCHBACK , co li
303-675-1501 or 305-675-2488

'192-6022 .

or 304-675· 1553.
1968 CAMERO , V-B . 4-opeed .

'1'12-6377.

'192-261l9 .

1973 TRUCK ,;. ton Int. , 50,000
miles , 6cyl. , heavy duty, fbc:ed
for dual wheels . Trade.
Rutland Hardware.

OLD fURNITURE , ice boKes ,
brass beds , iron beds, desk s,
etc. , complete household s.
Write M.D. Miller, Rt . .. .
Pomeroy or coll992-7760.

FOR SALE : 1970 Dodge pickup.
Phone 992·2360 .

OLD COINS , pocket watches ,
clos~ rings , wedding bands ,
diamonds . Gold cr silver . Coli
J . A. Wamsley , 742·2331 .

1973 OLDS N;nety-E;ght. full
power, low m ileage, gets
good ga!&gt; mileage. hcellent
condi tion . Asking $1995. Ca ll

Yard Sale

1977 CHEVY MONZA 305 V-8,
aut o .. P.S., P.B., A .C. , AM-

VARO SALE at James Swain's
on CR 28 above Eastern High
Schoql. July 13 and lA from 9
to? Everything imaginable .

lope . 992·5691 .
1965 RAMBLER , good work
car. New tires, runs good.

YARD SALE . Clothes , misc.
langsville- Oel&lt;ler Rd. County
Road across from Smo lf s
Grocery . Follow signs. 10om8pm .

PISCES IFtb. 211-Mtrch 201 $250. Call 949 2571 after 5 pm
e,.;pected today , p:oduce a little extra. Your industriousness
witt not go unnoticed or unrewarded.

197.4 GMC Surburbon, 9pass
lruck . 454 C. I. power steering,
brakes . ou"tomotic , radio,
Michelin 8 ply tires . S1300 or
best oHer. 992-3,.62.

ARIES IMtrch 21-Aprll 191
You ' re a fun person to b~
around today becau se you 're
not apt to take yourself or life
too se ri ously. Friends will ' be
encoura~ed to emulate you r

actions.
TAURUS(Aprll 211-Mor 201 Art;s.
ti c, creative , domesti c do-i\you rsell projects will afford you
th e greatest pleasure today . Be
an imaginative putlerer .
·

GEMINI (Moy 21-Juno

201

Should yo u be requ ired to put
yo ur salesmanship skills to the
tes t today . it won 't be hard to
co me away with the order
rega rdless of how tough the
prospect ma y be.
CANCER (June 21·July 22) In

business or financial matters
you have the ability toda y to
size thing s up quickly and
accu ratel y. Small points won't
esc ape your attention.
INEWSPA.PEA E~H FIPR I SE ASSN . I

Love increases with time
among those who avoid tm!
fate of selfishness.

FUNNY BUSINESS

... HERE,

LET

ME

197.4 Ford LTD wagon . All new
tires , new shocks . Good condition . $900. 992-6248.

Jack W. Caney
Mgr.
Phone 992·2181
16 CU . FT . frost free
refrigerator freezer Avocoi:fo
w een. $275. 992-72-JI after 4.
tractor . New
condition .

E~&lt;cellent

742-2228 or742-1832.
ENGINE FOR 1972 Datsun 510.
'192-~082 .

GREEN BEANS. you p;ck . $4.50
bu . Also

small

.949-2862-949-2160

pony .

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE

Sales &amp; Servtce

SALE PRICES
~ Jack W. Carsey
Mgr.
_ . . Phone992-2181

Cellulosic Cwood fiber)
Thermal insulation
Save 30 pet. to 50 pet,
on heatinv cost
Experience and
fully Insured
FrH Est.
Call 992·2772
5·17·1 mo.

ROOM .

BOARD ,

Elderly

only ,

laund,y .

Reasonable.

'192-6022 .
Real Estate for Sale
124

LINCOLN

HHI

Rd ..

Pomeroy .
Upstoirs ,
3
bedroorrts. both ond shower.
Downstairs , dining room , liv·
ing room , l(itchen and holt
both. 4 rooms below street
le ve l .
furna ce
room .
workshop and 2 finished
rooms . PH . 992·5865 .
TWO ACRE lot n&amp;ar Meigs
Mine No. I . Rural water
available .
Bes t
offer .
7A2-2746.
FOUR BEDROOM house. 2
bath. kitchen . dining room.
living room , utility room , portiolly carpeted , 2 screened in
porc hes , on 2 acres level
ground. nice locofion . Priced
reasonab le . 247 -3663 .
·wes t of Rt. 7 on 143. level
acre age .
7.42 - 2656
or

742-2955 .

Vinyl and Aluminum
Siding

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Mobile Homes- Sale

E)!:PERIENCED

Radlat9r·.---...,
Servlc•

Sm~h

Nelson

Moten, Inc.

STROUT REALTY
BIG REDUCTION
148,9()0

Extra nice. 2 bedroom .
country house, 1 f loor,
large ·liv i ng room ,
lovel y bv ilt· in
kitchen, ut ility roo m ,
forced air heat, lots of
shade trees, .5 acres
ti II abe, beautifvl set ting ,
1 mil e from
Ches t er off Rt . 7, 6 miles
from Pomeroy.

Boor-

d;ng. Call 367·0292.
GOING OUT of business. All
poodles ,
pomeronian,
pekinese. black pam puppy
great coot 'line . Phone 696-111
after 5pm .

POODLE GROOMING. Judy
Tay lor. 614-367-7220.

·GOING O UT of business. All
Roger Bollen pood l es :
pomeron i on ,
pekinese, block pam puppy,
great coot line . Phone
696-1111 ofter Spm .
AKC DOBERMAN Pins cher
puppies . litter is reg istered
Cahmpionship bloodline s.
Show quality . Has been worm·
ed .
Temporary
sh o t s .

Gwe: 'YUH ONE O'
M'CARD5 ...

\

614-675-1863.
COLLIE PUPPIES. Full blood. B
week old . adorabl e (joll ie puppies. $25 . 992· 7300 after ~: OO .

Mobile Homes Sale's
1974 1-4 K 70 mobile home.
; Good
condition.
$7800 .
~ 992-5858 .
c

1965GENERAL60&lt;12 , 2bodr .

111

1970 Sylva , 60x12, 2 bedr.
l 1970 Castle, 60x12, 2 bedr .
~ - 197A Morkline, 50~&lt;12 , 2 bedr.
1969 Valiant , 12x60 , 2 bedr.
1967 Notional. 12MSO, 2 bedr.

B'S MOBILE HOME SALES, PT.
PLEASANT , WV . 304-675-4'24 .
12 x 65 THREE BEDROOM.
located in Cheshire. With or
wi thou t furn iture'. ~92- 7094 .
1972 12 x 60 trai ler , 2
bed room ..
stove
and
r ef,igerator , fuel .)il furnace .

$4500. 992-5891 .

SUPER

GOOSE

Pomeroy

Ph. 992-2174

Real Estate for Sale
REAL ESTATE loans. Purchase
and ref inance. JO yeor htrms,
VA. No money down { eligi~e
11eterons) . FHA · As low as 3
per cent down (non-veterans).
Ireland Mortgage Co., 77 E.
Stote. Athens . 61 .. ·592-3051 .

STOCK

Mick's
Barber&amp;
Style Center
Introduces -

MARK MORA
HAIR IDLIST

Fei1turing:
women's

men '1

&amp;
styling,

perms.

' 992.-2367
Pomeray,O.
7-10· 1 mo.

Main St.

ALUMINUM
&amp; VINn SIDING
BY
J&amp;L INSUlATION
Free Estimate

CALL
992-2772

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR -

.,.n.

toasters , irons, all
small appliances. L.;rwn maar ,
next to State Highway Go rage
on Route 7. 985-382S .

RESTAURANT AND bor . D-I

:z '' E. ·s.cond StrHt

ond 0~ 2 li cense i ncluded. 3
acres . and house, Good
business opportunity . · Call
367 -0557

NEW LISTING - Fully
furnished ranch style 3

E)(CAVATING , dater. loader
and backhoe work : dump
trucks and lo-boys' for hire ,
will houl fil! dirt , top soil ,
limestone and gravel. Call Bob
or Roger Jeffers , day phone
992 -7089 ,
night
phone

992-3525 or 992-5232 .

plete Service. Phone 992 -'2A 78.

175M·f tractor 16 in . 3 bottom

maintenance

6 cy l engine , std . Irons., fully
insu lat ed and carpeted .

free
In
A
good
retirement
home w i th large extra
lot. This you must see .

plow . '192-2877 or '192-7663

new. $630. Phone992-7206 .
PIANO. UnivoK Compoc elec·
tric piano . Good condition .

S250 . 6 14-593 -BOlO or
61093·5076 .
HARDWARE
RUrLAND

7•2-2255. One •o gal. Mor-Fio
auto. gas water heater , glas s
lined, fue l saving, $120. Vani ty cabinet with marble top
with fau Cets ond pop-up. drain
end supply lines, $99 .95 . One
double bowl sink with faucets.
$69.96. Speci al Sale • Roof·
ing.90 lb. roll white , green,

block granule. $13 .10. 57 lb.
roll black , $9.55 5 gol. asphalt
roofing

plain

cr

fobroted ,

$B .30
1974 VW VAN . Good condition. 30 mpg. Needs muffler.
$2300 or best offer . 992-3798.

1979 SUZUKI DS·OO. Ex. con&amp;
l ien. Coll992-5391 .

1977 YAMAHA 125 w;lh 1400
miles

w ith

helmet.

$625.

-'192-IIJ72.
ONE WALK beh;nd Grovoly
tractor and mower, electric
start , dual wheels . 12 h.p.
Wheel Horse troctor and
mower. 7 h.p. Perny Craft
mower, electric start. 5 h.p.
Huffy. 5 h.p . -Montgomery
Word mower. 5 h. p. Wheel
Horse. Tillis Tractor .Soles .

96S·4202.
GENERAL .

EL EC.T RIC

refrigerator. Freezer, good
condi tion . Signature Menu
Magic electric range , good
condition. Small table w ith 2
choi rs. Fold up legs. To see

Coll992-3069.
SUPER M forma !I tractor 3 bot·
tom 14" plows , 8 ft . transport
disc, hoy eleavator , 550
Oliver , salt and • mineral
feeder, crib feeder . N ick
l eonard, Rt. 3, Pomeroy .

---;:
For
-=
R ~nt·~-

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Parll ,
Route 33 , north .of Pomeroy:
Lorge lots. Coll 992-7479.

POM!;t:lOY . 0 .
NEW

LISTING -

In

Pomeroy, stately two story remodeled home,
original hand -carved
oak wood
work,
3
bedrooms, formal din·
i ng, n ice kitchen, base ·

ment, in good condition,

large lot . $34,500 .
JUST LISTED - Mid dleport, remodeled 2·
family , live i n

one, rent

the other, 2 baths, many
features, needs some

E-C ELECTRICAL ContrQctor
serving Ohio Valley region.
SiK days a wHk , 2.4 llours ser v i ~ e . Emergency ca lls . Call
882-2952 or 882-3454 .

ing . this

home .

2

4

bedroom

new

$21,000.
LIKE
NEW
3
bedroOms, family room
with

woodburning
fireplace, nearly all
carpeted, 2 car garage,
front porch, and back

si t es.

ly 20 acres, nice fenced
· pasture , barns and
other
buildings ,

remodeled
home.

Free

2-story
gas and

POMEROY central

heating .

Almost

maintenance
tree with aluminum
siding, storm doors and
windows . Partial base -

ment, too. Just $19,000.
LOTS OR ACREAGE -

a c res ,

We have several loca -

'ht

$3,000.00.
5 POINTS AREA abou l 6 yrs . old, 3 BR ,
double closets, fully
equipped kitchen, very
ni ce dining

area, central

hea1 &amp; air, deck, double
lol
100'x200'. New
drapes &amp; rods included .
$29,000.
WE HAVE FINANCING
AND NEED LISTINGS
FOR OUR QUT OF
COUNTY BUYERS .
REALTORS
Henry E . Cleland, Sr.
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
992 ·2259
992 ·61'91
LOT FOR so le, Harrisonvi lle.
Water top on lot . d(ivewov tile
in , App . 145 h . frontoge. On

hard rood .
'192-2020.

0

$1600 .

Call

tions

and

7-23
NORTH
+ A J 10 7
• lO 8 3 2
• s3
+53 2
EAST
WEST
• 9 54 3
+KQ862
• 965
• KQJ74
• 62
• 9
+ Q 10 7 6.
+J 9

LIITLEORPHAN ANNI E

GiveAway
LASSIE TYPE female . 3 mo.

old. 742-2454
SPRINGER SPANIELS. Young
female and mole pup, Black
and white. Humane Society.

992. 768(1 .

.

592-3051
'

OF COJRSE ... lHEY'RE

TH ' SORT WHO' ll Do
AN'ITIIIHIO FOR

ROUSH

A~YBODY · ·· IF

llUl IF lHE Y
KNOW WH O

SOUTH

....
•A

HE IS, WQI&lt; 'T
&lt;HEY TALK&gt;'

+ AKQJIOPI
+A K 8 4

l&gt;iEY CAN ···

CONSTRUCTION

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer : South
West North East

2+
Pass

I SEE NO
"10 "TAKE -n&lt;AT...
"1H«1" 'THING' Wmi
US , 06CAR!

By Oswald Jacoby

Ol'E~A"Tli ~L¥...

Hourst-1 M., W., F .
Ot!Mr limes by appointment.

HOUSE FOR sole near Meigs
M ines . 742·2228 .
TWO STORY 3 bedroom house.
3 lots . Now's your chance it
you need o house. S12 ,00).
Owner wllll'ng to ta lk .

992-20B2 or 742-2328.
REAL ESTATE: 1 occelolln Rig·
gscrest Manor, between Tu~
pers Plains and Chester.

Phone 985-3929 ond 985-4129.

cNE WSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN . )

(Fo' a copy o f J ACOB Y MOOERN, send $1 to: ." Win at
Bridge." cd re o f this newspaper. P.O. Box 489, Radio City
Station. New York , N. Y. 10019)

GASOLINE AU.EY

Slim' We haven't

finished our qame'
Don't uou love me?

co vet ing, septic systems,
dozer. bocl.. ha.. lilt. 1A3.
Phone I (61A) 698-7331 or

love uou,Lola!

I'm

PiaLJ
ljOUr

here 1

queen!

•

~~

..r

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
4Q Type of metal
41 Pianist
Duchin
10 Gioconda 's
DOWN
"Suicidio"
1 Lily
11 Hebrew
2 Window style
writings
3 Dish for
1% Cadence
the elite
13 Affront
4 Work
Yeslenlay•s Alllwer
14 Gold coin
with lace
15 Grizzled
5 Exchange, 11 La Scala site 25 Ill-treat
26 Violin's
18 Asian
as words 15 Algerian
ancestor
holiday
6 Feminine
seaport
17 Pub offering suffix
%1 Acorn progeny 26 ~ Osmond
30 Frosty
18 Bandleader 7 One kind of %2 Toujours 31 Be pertinent
Noble
chicken
Z3 Muffle
36 Motel of yore
19 Bandleader 8 Maid of 24 It rhymes
Kemp
9 Prate
with "moon" 37 Andress film
20 Horse color
T'""'TZ"r11r'Tol
22 Hackman
Z3 Bridge
%4 Discordant
sounds
25 "- of
hwnan
kindness"
%6 Bankrupt
Z7 Palmyra
leaf
26 Crew
! .Price paid

5 Inebriate

IN STOCK for imm.diate
deli very: various 'ize• of pool
kits . Do-it - yourself or let us
install for you . D. Bumgardner
Soles. Inc. 992-572.4 .
ADO ONS and remodel ing,
gutter work , down spouts,
some concre te work . walks
and ' driveways
( free
estimate). V.C. Young Ill ,
Ra cine. OH . 9-4q·2748 and

992-7314 .
WILL HAUL l imes tone ond
gravel. Also, lime hauling and·
spreading. Phone 7-42-2A55.

WlNNI E
~ET'&gt;'OU?

NOW, LET'&amp; GO

HOW COULD I?
YOU'RE LIKE
~'&gt;4/~~fii.Y TO

FIND OUT JUST
WHAT YOUR

S &amp; G CAiiiPET Cleaning . Steam
cleans .
Free
estimate .
Reasonab le rates . Scotchguord .
992 -6309
or

ME:!

INSIDE AND
G"RIEVANCEB

ARE: I

742-234B .

NEICLER Con struct ion . For
building good houtes and doing repa ir work . CaU Guy
Nelgler. 9-49-2508.

BARNEY

SHUX ·· I WUZ GOIN'
TO GIVE SNUFFY AN'
LOWEEIV SOME OF

'499

29" -

BUT

Diavolo"

THEY AIN' T
HOME ··UH ··

3% Go along
with
33 Tad's dad
34 Actor Torn
35 Undivided
37 SiUy one
38 Picturesque
39 Bounder
...,.,_.___._...____

MV ''VOTE FER TAIT"
BUTTONS ·

AND UP
CASH &amp;CARRY

.,.5

SALE ON ALL CARPET IN STOCK

DAILY

CRYPTOQUOTE -

Here's bow to work
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

II

AND UP
Installed and Pad FREE

PEANUTS

YOUR OWNER'S
STILL IN THE
HOSPITAL 50

GOOD SELECTION OF
CUSHION VINYL

I 6VESS I HAVE
TO FEED liOU

.C ALL 742-2211 TALK TO
Wendell or Herb Grate or Gen!! Smith

Rutland,

IF I CUT M~ FIN6ER
ON THE CAN OPENER,
I'M GONNA SUE I(OU!

A CASE

LIKE n.lAT
COULD . DRA6 ON
FOR I(EAR5

It:

One letler simply stands for another. In this sample A ls
used for the three L's, X for the lwa O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formalion of the words are all
hinls. Each day the code lellers are dil!erent.
CRYPTOQUOTES

CY

JRG

QGDL

OEU

JRG

OYEOCZ

NCQQ

RY

PUIUE

voz
WUA

11n

11

TU ESOAY, JULY 24, 1979
5 :45-Farm Rep&lt;irf 13; 5:5o-PTL
Club 13; World at Large 17;
5 :5s-Summer Semester 10.
6 :0Q-700 Club 6,8; PTL Club 15;
6:1o--News 17; 6:25-Concerns &amp;
Comments 10.
'
6: 3o-Dragnet 17 ; 6:45-Mornlng
Reports 10; News 13.
7:0Q-Today 3,15; Good Morning
Amer ica 6,13: Tuesday Morning
8; Schoolles 10; Three StoogesLittle Rascals 17; 7:15-A.M .
Weather 33 .
7 :3o-Famlly Affair 10; Lilias Yoga
&amp; You 33 .
8 :oo--capl . Kangaroo B.10; Lassie
17; Sesame St. 33 .
8 :3Q-Romper Room 171 9:oo--Bob
Braun 3; Phil Donahue 13,15;
Porky PI.Q &amp; Friends 8; Love of
Life · 10 ; Lucy Show 17;
Biography 33 .
9 :30--Simlord &amp; Son 8; Hagan's
Heroes 10; Green Acres 17.
10: oo--card Sharks 3, 15; Edge of
Night 6; All In The Family 8,10;
Movie "Cain &amp; Mabel" 17; Paint
Along with Nancy Komlnsky 33.
10 :3Q--AII Star Secrets 3,15; ,$20,000
Pyram id 13; Andy Griffith 6;
Whew 8. 10; Consumer Survival
K;t 33.
10 : 55-{:BS News 8; House Call 10.
11 :oo--High Rollers 3, 15 ; Laverne &amp;
Shirley 6, 13; Price Is Right 8, 10;
Biography 33.
11 : 30- Wheel of Fortune 3, 15;
Family Feud 6,13; 11 :55-News
17.
12 : oo--Newscenter 3; News 6,10;
Password 15; Young &amp; the
Restless 8 ; Over Easy 33;
Midday Magazine 13 ; Love
AmerlcM Style 17 .
12 :3Q--Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Search for
Tomorrow 8, 10; Movie " 'Ride a
Crooked Trail " 17; MacNeilLehrer Report 33 .
1: oo--Days af Qyr Lives 3, 15; AU My
Children 6, 13; News 8; Young &amp;
the Restless 10; Danclng Disco
33.
1: 31)-As •The World Turns 8, 10;
Poldark 33.
2 :oo--Doclors 3, 15; One Life to Live
6.1'31 2 · ~5-News 17 .
2 : 3Q--Anomer World 3,15 ; Guiding
Light 8, 10; I Love Lucy 17;
Ja mes M ic hener's World 33.
3 :oo--General Hospital 6,13; Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 20; Infinity Factory
17.
3 :3o--Mash 8; Joker's Wild 10;
Banana Splits 17; Crockett's
Victory Garden 20; Time lor
Music 33 .
4 :00-Mister Cartoon 3; Merv
Grlflln 6: Addams Family 8;
Sesame ST . 20,33; Six Million
Dollar Man 10; Mike Douglas 13;
Fllntstones 17.
4 : 30- Lone Ranger 3; Hogan's
Heroes B; Lucy Show 15; Partridge Family 17.
5:oo--Bonanza 3; Beverly Hillbillies
8; Mister Rogers ' Neighborhood
20,33; Gomer Pyle 10; Six Million
Dollar Man 13; Brady Bunch 15;
Star Trek 17 .
5 : 3Q--News 6; Petticoat Junction 8;
Elec. Co. 20; Mary Tyler Moore
10; Odd Couple 15; Doctor Who
33.
6 :oo--News 3,8,10,13 ,15; ABC News
6; Studio See 33; Family Altair
17; VIlla Alegre :10.
6 :3o--NBC News 3,15; ABC News 13;
Carol Burnett 6; CBS News 8, 10;
Father Knows Best 17.
7 : 00-Cross -Wits 3; Newlywed
Game 6,13; Please Stand By 8;
News 10; Love Amerlca.n Style
15; Gel Smart 17: Dick Cavell
20,33.
7:3o--Baseball3; Candid Camera 6;
Gong Show 8; Price Is Right 10;
Abbott &amp; Costello 15; Donna
Fargo 13; My Three Sans 17;
MacNeil -Lehrer Report 20,33 .
8 :oo--Happy Days 6,13; Runaways
15; CBS Reports 8, 10; Dragnet
17; Austin City Limits 20; City
Notebook 33.
8 :3o--PIIot 6,13 ; Baseball 17; Two
Rannles 33.
9 :0Q-Three' s Company 6,13; M avle
" Billy" 15 ; Movie . "The
Hawaiians" 8, 10; Opera Theater
33; Truckers' Delight 20.
9 : 30-Ta~l 6,13; 10:oo--Voyage to
the Bottom of the Sea 3; 13
Queens Blvd. 6, 13; News 20 .
10:3o--Ptlat 6, 13; Lock Stoke &amp;·
Barrel 20 .
11 : oo- News 3,6,8, 10, 13 , 15; Dick
Cavett 20 : New Soupy Sales 17:
Book Beat 33 ,
11 :30-Johnny Carson 3, 15; Pilot'
6,13; Barn"by Jones B; ABC
News 33; Movie "Promise Her
Anylhlng" 10; Movie "FI.ylng
Tigers" 17.
12:4o-Movle "SPYS 6, 13; Movie
" Lone Star" 8.

WRRZ

RUTLAND FURNITURE
742·2211

so farfetched that they
aren't· worth thinking about.

game South would go down

HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex·

RUBBERBACK CARPO

Housing
·Head uarters

any systemic

meanings for opening bids of
five and six notrump.
. There are some which are

Alan : " In an ordinary

107 Sycamore CRtor)
Pomeroy, 0 .

prices.

LIST YOUR PROPER ·
TY WITH US THEN GO
ON WIT!t A REGULAR
ROUTI~E .
CALL
992-3325.

there are

Oswald : "South knew that
North wasn't going to have
any help for him. But acting
on the old theory tljat when
you start with eleve n tricks
lhe gods of chance will find a
lwelfth for you, South
jumped right to six
diamonds."

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

SAVE ON CARPET
DRIVE A LITTLE
SAVE A LOT

different

A Vermont reader asks if

and Alan Sontag

FINANCING

7-8·1 mo.

6+

huddle."
Alan : " Expert West fi.
naUy outthought himself. He
should have realized that
South 's failure to bid four
notrump indicated a spade
void. In order to prevent a
possible heart-spade
squeeze , he led his king of
spades and the impossible
slam came home ."

AlkftMI!UCPtl

IF l COULD MOD I~
"ll&lt;15 ~·5 POWER
UN IT 50 IT COIJLD

REAL ESTATE

CAU 992-7544

South
2+

Pass
Pass

Db!.
Pass

to defeat bec ause East
would have nothing to hold
onto except c lubs and he
would get his two club
tricks. In an expert game,
South might ·work out a
swindle . Of course, a spade
lead would have given him
that twelfth trick, but West
had opened a heart."
Oswald: "It was an expert
game and South worked the
swindle. He took his ace of
hearts, played two rounds of
trump and led a low club.
Wes t held the trick with hls

nine and went into a long

Opening lead : •K

ALLEY OOP

614-388-8860 or 61 4-JBS-6797 .

Nice 2 .

water . $30,500.00.
BUILDING SITES - 1-2
starting

IRELAND
MORTGAGE
CO.
77 E. Slate, A1hens

story, 3 bedroom home

with

Wily swindle scores slam

ROOFING , ROOF repa ir and
si ding. othe r maintenance, E &amp;
R Ro ofin g and Siding .

baths,

carpeting, oil furnace,
basement , 2 trailer
spaces, and almost 2
acres of land. Asking

woven w i re . $235,000.00.

home

$23,900,00.
!&lt;ARM - Approximate ·

been caocelled? lost your
operators
license?
Phone

$25,000.
RENOVATING
Owner is now remodel -

several

m ent, 2 bedrooms , ex ce ll ent
location .

IN~URANCE

992-2143 .

REDUCED
TO
$2 1,500 .00 .
VACANT LAND - 56
acres, 15 pasture, S
lillable, balance ti mber ,

home in town , full base -

AUTOMOBILE

Pomeroy .
starter or

sundeck . AskinQ S69,000.
375 ACRE FARM - 9
rm . renovated home; · 4
bedrooms, 2 baths, free
natural gas fYrQace, lg.
fam ily rm., modern kll·
chen, basement, and 2
porches . Cattle barn,
36x120, 2 silos, and
many other buildings.
New fences.
some

finish work. $26,800.00.
A BARGAIN - NICE

PULLINS EXCAVAriNG . Com·

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

HORR~~

742 - 25~ .

'192·639B.

CHEVY CARRYALL C-20. Good

HOUSE FOR sale. 130 Butter·
nut' Pomeroy , OH . 992-2-410.

·BRIDGE

I

low as 3%

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

sw..

TO 11tAIJK. Mf

down (non -veterans)

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

X I ] (I I XXJ"

7 : 30- Thai Nash vi lie Music 3:
Muppel Show 6 ; Price Is Righi 8;
W ild Kingdom 10; $1.98 B_,uty
Show 13; Nashville On The Road
15; My Three Sons 17.
B:OQ-Lfttle House On The Pralrled3;
Baseball 6, 13;
The Bo y
Human B. 10; Bill Moyers Journal
20,33 : Ultimate
Weapon 15;
Movie " Hurry Sundown" 17.
8: 30--Diplomallc Slyle of Andrew
Yaung 20,33.
'
9: oo-Movle "Annie of the Thousand
Days" 3, 15; Mash 8, 10; Spol!!lo
20: Murder Mast English 33 .
9:Jo-WKRP In Cincinnati 8,10:
Spoleto 20 .
lO :OQ-Lou Grant 8, 10; Poldark 33;
News 20.
11 :00- News 3,6,B, 10, 13 , 15; Dick
Cavett 20; New Soupy Sales 17;
Book Beat 33 .
11 : 3Q-Jahnny Carson 3, 15; Pollee
Story 6, 13; Rockford Flies B;
ABC News 33; Movie · "The
Barkleys of Broadway" 10;
Movie "The Cavern" 17 .
12:4Q-Mavle "Battle ClrcYs" 8;
1 :oo--Tomorrow 3; News 15.
1: 30- Movle "Crosswinds" 17;
1 :4o--lronslde 13.
2: 40- News 13 ; 3:30-News 17;
3 : 50--Q~n

v

Purchase
and
Refin.ance
10 Year Terms
A - No money down
(eligible vetenns J

Construcmn

Now arrange the circled loners lo
lonT1 lhe surprise ana-. as suggested by !he abOve canoon .

Monday, July 23

RORNLOSER

AFHJ'T ~aJ W~

4-23 ·1 m o.

J

.

Jumbltlooll No. 12, con1alnlntiJ110puz.z:lea, 11 tultablelor .1 .75 postpaid
hom Jumble, clothla newaptper, Box34, Norwood, N.J. 07848. Include row
ntme, addrest, zip code tnd make cheek a parable to Newapaperbookt.

Real Estate Loans

FHA - AS

.

(Answe11 tomorrow)
Solurday·sl Jumbles: TOOTH MAJOR 'AMPERE SOOTHE
Answer: This man's no Ianger fresh-A SOPHOMORE

IIJDU5T~IE5~

Phone 915-4:102
6·24·1 mo. pd .

C.EI'{j'AIN
MOUNTAIN C.LIM5EIZ.

An~werllere: "mE

--A I-lD M&lt;l&lt;&amp;&amp;

0.

New Home

SEWING MACHINE Repairs ,
Service, oil maket, 991-2284 .
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service. We sharpen Scissors .

Call
Bill or Ruth Stewart
374-7311
Marietta, Ohio

Che~ter,

I

PROPER AUTHORITIES

St. Rl. 7

. WHAi A

M16Hi t-101 BE.

ASTOUND IIJ6
5TOR'I: .. . 1'VE AL·
READV NOT IFIED THJ:'

USED GARDEN
TRACTORS
AND
RIDING MOWERS

l '4 mile oft Rt. 7 by -pass

BRADFORD . Auctioneer. Complete Service. Phone 949-2487
or 949-2000. Racine. 9hio,
Critt Bradford .

BANANN IS
THE 5EI\ Alii.
HAD ~OME KIND
PROB' I-'1 SLEW
OF ANIN5$1A GAS- MOST OF If AWAY
RECKON \\IE MUHA --THAT'$ \\IHV If~
GOT DOUSED WITH
EFFECTS DIDN'T
IT 11/HE'IJ WE" !:"7 LAST!
CI\PED FROM
HIS YACHT !

HMM ... AN

on Sl. Rt. 124 1oward
Rutland.

4·JO·tfc

WA~H HAV&amp;
&lt;&gt;RAD~. AI-1-Y .
IU1COV~~ED
THE I~
MEMO~Y...

TILLIS

6·6·1 mo .

Roger Hysell
Gqe

EA7Y 1\IJD

t

ILOORIE

CAPTAIN EASY

7·12

North of

.

I I .r XJ

992-6011

clu for appt. or wolk ln.

_ _ ,. .

I POVER±

•New Home
*Addons
•Remoldlngs
*Free estl mates

4 S I mo

HEIR SAYS SELL IT Compac1 2 bedroom
home
nearly

TWO AIR conditioners . One
5000 BTU and one 13.500 BTU .
Coll992-2,.51 ofterSpm .

KJ

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

TAAtLEA NOW AVAILABLE .

EXCAVATING ,
dozer ,
backhoe and ditcher , Chr rl es
R. Hatfield . Block HOE" S P 1 "1c e.
Rutland. Ohio. Pone 74 ' '2008.

pedols, rhythm beals . like

RISING STAR Kennel.

Lantsvl lte, Ohio
6t•H69·4U5 Evenings
2 Miles Eils fol WUkesvilll!!

bedroom home with
large yard. Has centra l
heating and rura : water .
Peaceful location out of
town. Only $28,000.

WURLITZER ORGAN wHh fool

Western .
Saddles
and
harness . Horses and ponies.
Ruth Reeves. 614-698-3290.
Barding &amp; Riding lessons and
Horse Core products.

BWLE TRANSLATIONS
NEW YORK (AP) - At
least one book of the Bible
had been published by the
end of 1978 in 1,660 'of the
world's lafl8u&amp;ges and
distinct dialects, according
to the American Bible
Society.

247-3251 .

~d .

HOOF f!OLLOW , EngHoh ond

home, $3500. 985·3504 .

21!, ton window air conditioning. $200. Coli after 9pm.

YARD SALE . Houoehold goodo ,

Pets for Sale

1969 12 x 52 2 bedroom mobile

27J20 MDntgomery Rd .

Call for a Free Siding
Es1imote, 949·2101 or
949·2UO. No Sunday
calls.
6·14·2 mo.

Ph .

after 5pm .

742-2668.

TRAII1R SALES

J&amp;L

Hsadquarters for
1-iotpoint and
Genera 1Electric
ApplianCe$

25 ACRES

VARO SALE . July 23 , 2A , 25 , 26
at l owe ll Bing's, 3 miles from
Chester on Boy Scout Camp

women ' s ,
men ' s ,
and
chi ldren' s clothes , mi sc .
items . 1 mile from langsvi le,
CR 10. q til dork . Phone

1978 JEEP J-10 truck . 6 cyl. .
std. shift. 20 mpg. $5100.
Before 3pm , 985-3597 ,

·by

Air Cond~ioners ·
5
25 to~
Discounts

DIESEL

POMEROY
LANDMARK

j _65 acres appro~&lt; . 2 miles

.Hotpoint

FORD
ifres.

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

843-2353 .

'192-253 1.

Rather tt1an doing on ly what' s

oond ,

Large Stock

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

1976 CHEVROLET MONZA hatchback . auto. tron!&gt;. Call

LIMESTONE ,

Special Sale

Wanted to Buy

Cregar mags , othwe· other
el&lt;fros . Excellent condi tion .
Col\992-7196 after Spm .

weekdays .

For Sale

742-2877 or 742·2152 .

CALL 992-6009

LOST: BLUE Point mole
Siamese. Naylor's Run or
Breezy Hts ._992 -3216.

loolo. Call '192-2772.

and service . Balers in stock for
immedia te delivery . Phone

992-JO!B.
FOUND: WHITE female k itten ,
angora with wh ite flea collar.
13 weeks old . Powell's Parking lot , Pomeroy . 992 -3760.

ALUMINUM AND vinyl siding
mechanic wonted. Must be eKperienced and hove own

'192-3891.
VERMEER BALER Sales . parls

S100.00/mon1h
All utilities paid .

Rooting

RIDENOUR GAS Service. Oox oll.P . gas . Chester. 985-3307 .

gravel, calcium chloride , ferti lir:er, dog food , and all types
of so lt . Excelsior Salt Works ,
Inc., E. Main St., Pomeroy,

Pomeroy

"MONTGOMERY

MONDAY,JULY23, 1t79

ETHIL

c. ~..:s..~.:.--·

4 5 ti c

COUNSELOR FOR support1ve
counseling-comm. education.
Bachelor s in reloted field
preferred. Cor required . Send
resume to: EASO, PO Box 4S8 ,
Athens , OH 45701 by August
6.

COAL .-

Sycamore St.

Lost and Found

to day , it may prove wise to

heed that Inner voi ce. Your
intuition is more acc urate than
usuaL

DOZER . END ~ coder end dump
tru ck . Will do basements,
ponds , • bruSh ,
timer ,
lim e~ tone and gravel. Charles
Butcher. 7"'2-:2940.

An equal opportunity employer

4P.M .

accumulate.

• •

Salaries are
comparable
to other .
hospitals in the area .
Excellent benefit programs.
Check us out.. . you'll be PLEASANTly
surprisect.'
IMMEDIATE OPENINGS
Contact:
Director of Personnel
PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
Valley Drive, Point Pleasant, WV 25550
Telephone (304) 675-4340·

the day bdore publication

July -24, 1979
Small th ings w itt ha ve a way of
adding up very benefic ially for
you thi s coming yea r . Step by
step and line by line . you may
even su rpr ise yoU! sell at what
you will be able to achie¥e and

367-7101.

A
pleasan't
· place
to
work, needs skilled, dedicated registered
nurses and licensed practical nurses.

The Publisher rese rvts the
ril!ltlt to edit or ~ject any ads
dee med objectional. The
Publi:Jher will nol be responsible
for more than one incorrect in.sertion.
Phone 992-21!16

Osol

NOW HAULING limes tone in
Middlepor t· Poemroy area .
Call for free esti mate .
PAINTING AND sandblasting.
Free estimates. Coii9A9-2686.

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

anrt Obituary : fi cent.'l per word,

I

Business Services·
H~ LWritesel

Services Offered

PLEASANT benefits to employes

In memury, Card of Thanks
$3.00 minimum. Qt:;l1 in ltdvance.

(7 ) 9 , 16, 23.

PLEASANT atm~here

3.7S

C lerk

BIG AUCTION every Wed., 7
pn• . HQrtford Community
Center , Hartford, WV , A mil es
abo ve
Pomeroy -Mason
Bridge.

PLEASANT working conditions

b.
I :

four ordinary words.

Auctions

Help Wanted

Television
Viewing

l}~I)N}fij}'\t ~ THATSCAAMBLEDWORDGAME
byHonriArnoldandBobLoo

~ ~ ~~ e

FRIEND OF YOURS

QGDL . - TUAUE

AKU

WEUOA

Yette.-.y·• ~te: l,lUUTATION IS THE WGHEST
COMPIJMENT YOU CAN PAY TO AN AUTHOR. - DR.

0.

SAMUEL JOHNSON

l :oo--Tomorrow 3; News15; 1:35. Baseball 17.
2: 25-News 13; 4 : 05-News 17;
4:25-Movle "The Star Packer"
17.

•
:
•
•

J

- t.

~~

·•
,.
••
: ~,

.;,
·
'•

t

.

, ''

,,

�,.

8- The Daily Sentinel. MiddleiJ(lrt·Pomeroy , 0 ., Monday, July 23 1979
EXTENDED OIJTLOOK
Wedneaday through Friday,
warm and bumld with a chance of
showers eacb day. Hlgbs In the 80s
to around 90 and lows from the mid
00 to the low 7011.

ATHENS LIVESTOCK SALES

Saturday, July 21, 1979
Feeder Steers (400·800 lbs.J choice
82·89, good 63. 75·81 ; Feeder Heifers
(400·700 lbs.1 choice 69·82, goad 39·68;
Feeder Bulls (&gt;400·800 lbs. I choice
81.50·93.50, good 48.50·82.
,
Slaughter Bulls (over 1,000 lbs.J
50·58, cow and ca lf pairs 460·,750 ;
Slaughter cows, utiliti es 38 ·46.75.
Slaugher cows, utilities 38 ·46.75,

canners and cutters 35·41. :JO, stock

cows 42·48.50.

Veals (choice and prime&gt; 76·96,

baby ca lves (by the head) 39·47.
Hogs (No. 1, barows and gilts,
200 ·230 lbS ,) 39.90·40 .10, SOWS
23.25·24.75, pigs (by the head ) 8·39.
Slaughter Lambs 50·54, feeder
lambs 50·55.50.
OHIO VALLEY LIVESTOCK CO.
Saturday, July 21, 1979

Trends : Feeder cattle 1.00 to 4.00
lower. Cows 3.00 to 6.00 lower. Veal
calves ready . Total head : 570.

Feeder Steers : Good and Choice,

250 to 300 lbs. 82 ·91.75, 300 to 400 lbs.
79.50·91, 400 to 500 lbs. 79·91, 500 to 600
lbs. 68.5089,600 to 700 lbs. 64.50·77 , 100
to 800 lbs. 62·75, 800 and over
61.75-74.25.
Feeder Heifers : Good and Choice,

250 to 300 lbs. 86.75·92.50, 300 to 400 lbs.
81.75-89.75, 400 to 500 lbs. 67·79, 500 to
ENJOY CLEANING CAR - Crenson Pratt, Middleport, spends most
600 lbs. 59-75, 600 to 700 lbs . 5H7. 100
to 800 lbs. S3·64, 800 and over
of his summer time washing and wru&lt;ing his car. The car is over a year
52.50·65.50.
old but Crenson likes to keep it looking as new as IJ(lSSible.
Feeder Bulls: GoQd and Choice. 250
to 300 lbs. 82-92, 300 to •oo lbs. 72-86,
400 to 500 lbs. 68·75.75, 500 to 600 lbs.
. 64-67.76, 600 to 700 lbs. 61.75-6•.50. 700
to 800 lbs. 57.75·61.75, 8oo and over
57.25-60.75.
Holstein Steers and Bulls (300 to BOO
EVERGREEN, Va. (AP) - Three
.The injured man was taken to lbs. I 57·68 .
Bull s (1,000 lb s. and over )
people were murdered and a fourth Lynchburg General HospitaL His
51.50·56.50.
was wounded this morning at a house condition was not available
Slaughter
Cows
(utilities )
near this Appomattox County immediately.
41.50·47.80, (canners and cutters)
community, state IJ(llice said.
A state police spokesman at 35·42.50.
Springer Cows (by the head 1
Appomattox said someone reported 300·5101
Cows·Calves) (by the head )
hearing shots and screams at the 375·775; Veal Calves 90·110, Baby
house about 8 a.m.
Calves60·145.
HOGS - Top Hogs (210·2301 37.50 to
When IJ(llice went to the house, they
Boars 25 to 26.25, Pigs (by the
found lhree men dead and a fourlh 39.75,
ERIE, Pa. (AP) - A 30-inch
head) 10 to 25, Sows (450 lbs. and
wounded . Their identities were not over123 to 29.50.
shark was discovered washed up
released immediately.
on the shores of Presqua Isle
Police said lhe four were surveyors
State Park Sunday morning , park
who were staying at the house while
police said.
FOOTBALL MEETING
working on a job for an Appomattox
The shark, found by a life
All
boys interested in playing
County firm.
guard at Beach No. I on the Lake
football
at Soulhern High School this
Police said they had no suspects and
Erie Peninsula, apparently had
fall
are
toreiJ(lrt
this evening at 7 p.m.
that no motive for the shootings had
not been dead long, police chief
the
high
schooL
at
been determined.
Dan Pascanio said.
It apparently had been placed
PAINS OF OLD AGE
in the water by someone and
EVENT JULY 31
AUGUSTA'
Ga. (AP)- Golfer Rod
there is no cause for alarm, said
The Heart AsSociation "swim-aFunseth was 'talking about his injured
Pu.scanio, adding that aU 12
right hand and came to a painful than" will be held Tuesday, July 31 at
beaches at the park wo..ld re.
Middleport Pool from 6 to 8 p.m.
conclusion.
main open.
Applications for those who wish ·to
"I
lhink
I
have
arlhritis
8n
my
The shark was sent to the Penn·
participate
may be picked up at the
middle
two
fingers,"
he
said.
"My
sylvania Fish Commission for
Meigs
Inn
or at the pool, Roberta
index
finger
hurts
and
sometimes
my
study to detennine its species, he
today .
O'Brien
announced
thwnb
begins
to
ache.
Oh,
it's
just
old
said.

Police seek murder clues

Shark discovered

age.."

.

EFFECTIVE JULY 1

SA-V INGS RATES
ARE GOI.N G UP
As of July 1st
the Farmers Bank
Will Be Paying Higher

PASSBOOK

computed Daily
Compounded Quarterly

90 DAY CERTIFICATE ............ ~.i~~-~~.~~-1-'-~~~:~?............. 5%%
1 YEAR CERTIFICATE .............~~~~~-~~-~~:~~~. ~-~ ............... 6%
4 YEAR CERTIFICATE ............ ~i.~~~~-~-5-1-'-~~?:??............. 7114%
6 YEAR CERTIFICATE .............~~~~~~~.~~:~??:?. ............. 7lh%
8 YEAR CERTIFICATE
.............
~:~.i-~~~.~.1 :~.~~-.~~
7~% .
.
4Minimum
YEAR MONEYInterest
CERTIFICATE
rate of 111•% under the average 4 year yield of
0

...........

..

JESSIE M. ORR
Jessie M. Orr, 77,. 1621 E. Hudson
St., Colwnbus, died Sunday at Doctors
North Hospital.
~Irs . Or-r was a former resident of
Meigs County. She was the daughter
of the late David Spencer and Mary
Fell .
She was a former employe of
Practical Burial Company.
She is survived by five sons,
Marion, Allen, Starling, Marcus and
Alba Orr, eight grandchildren, , and
seven great grandchildren, and four
sisters, Hattie Frederick , Verba
McDole, Marguerite Rasp and Elsie
StahL
Funeral services will be held
Wednesday at 10:30 a.m. at lhe Long
Funeral Home Northeast Chapel, 5528
Cleveland Ave. Friends may call at
the funeral home today from 7 to 9 and
Tuesday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9. Burial
will he in F.orest Lawn Cemetery.

HOSPITAL 1'EWS
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
Saturday Admissions---George
Deem, Racine.
Saturday Discharges-Raymond
Ridgway, Emrna Johnson, John
Powell,. Norman Matson, Samuel
McKinney, Jr., Mark Michael, Clara
Shuster , Mae Lightfoot, Mary
Stanley, Walter Jewell, Mary Smilh.
Sunday Admissions-Dale Howell,
Syracuse; Judith Smith·, Racine,
Emma Wayland, Middleport; Ronnie
Powell, Pomeroy:
Sunday Discharges-Ronald Miller,
Mary Morarity.

HOlZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGESJULY20
Coreen
Andersen,
Nora
Arthur ,Wilma Bahr, Orpha Booth,
Margare! Coder, Evelyn Daft,
Gertrude Davis, Ella Eabs, Michael
Emerson, Gregory Gooderham,
Matthew Griffin,. Art Hartley, Jr.,
Anna Kessler, Mrs. Gary King and
son, Margaret Kowalski, Ruth
Larkins, Sherry Mayes, Lila Merola,
Richard Miller, Dwight Rees, Mrs.
Harold Rippeth and daughter,
Cynthia Sanders; Mrs. James Shaw
and son, Edward Shemelia, James
Steinbeck, Bobbi Strugill, Mrs. Jack
Thacker and son, Olive · watson ,
Robert Waugh.
BIRTHS,JULY20
Mr, and Mrs Larry Hill and son,
Gallipolis Ferry.
DISCAHRGES,
(Continued from page 1)
JULY21
Funeral services will be held
Kathy
Belcher,
Bmma
Blanksenship, Farrah Brumfield, Tuesday at 2 p.m. at the White
Margaret Camp, belva Campbell, Funeral Home in Coolville with the
Ruth Casto, Jason Conn ley, Dustin Rev. Guy White officiating. Burial
Cottrill, Mrs, Chester Dawson and will be in Carthage Cemetery. Friends
daughter, Mabel Day, Stella Saught, may call at the funeral home at
.
'
Francis Helton, Benjamin Hill, Mrs . anytime.
Dennis Hurt and daughter , Diann
SQUAD CALLED
Jewell, Ruth Johnson, ·.Mrs. Arne
. J?nes and daughter, Patrrcra Jordan,
The Syracuse ER Squad was called
Vrvran McCormrck, Tina Molden, Sunday at 1. 30 am for Johnny
W'll
'
Racer • Carolyn
Roth ' · Grueser who was
· taken
· · to University
' tam
.
Barbara Russell, Phyllrs Russell, Hospital, Colwnbus. At 9:50a.m. they
Amy Searll, Verna Shafer • Mary transiJ(lrted Dale Howell to Veterans
Shupe, Robert Stmmons, Marte Memorial Hospital .
Smith, Opal Stover, Clarre Turner,
Marienna Baughn Irma Waldron ,
BUFFINGTON SPEAKER
ROsalynn Whobrey, Gladys Wills.
Rev.
Eddie Buffington wiu be
BIRTHS, JULY 21
speaker
at Mount Moriah Baptist
Mr and Mrs. Chuck Wolle, son,
Wednesday
evening .
daughter, Jackson; Mr. and Mrs Church
Buffington had been incorrectly
Robert O'Dell and son, Gallipolis.
identified in lhe Sunday TimesDISCHARGES, JULY 22
Dian Canter, Mrs . Clarence Sentinel.
Chapman and daughter, Verna
Gibbs, James Harmon , CArl
THREE SQUAD RUNS
Madden, Melinda· Moore, Brenda
The Middleport ER Squad was
Myers, Robert Polcyn, Billy Singer, summoned three times Saturday.
Recta Smith, Lafe St. Calir, Mrs.
The first call was at 4:08p.m. to the
DAvid Wilkins and son.
Middleport Pool for Roger Carson, 17,
BIRTHS, JULY 22
who was taken to Holzer Medical
Mr. and Mrs. Hobart Mantini, Center. ,
daughter, Addison; Mr . and Mrs
At 5: ;37 p.m. to were called to
Kenneth Nolan, daughter, Bldell; Mr. Sycamore Street for Clara Hall who
and Mrs . Eugene Canaday, son, was dead on arrivaL At 6:07 to Fishe6
Gallipolis.
Street for Don Stivers who was taken
to Holzer Medical Center.

Two die

VOL XXVIII

By XevlJI KeUy
Although they were not in complete
agreement, MiddleiJ(lrt Vlllage Councillhembers accepted figures for the
village's 1980 budget as presented by
clerk-trealturer Gene Grate.
The budget totals $674,269 which according to Grate will represent deficit
spending.

DR.BERCTAP
Dr. Tap became a citizen of the
United States in 1966. He was licensed
by the Ohio State Medical Board in
1967.
He was a member of the American
Academy ol Medicine, Hamlltoo
County; A,Jrierican Medical Associa·
lion, Ohio State Medical Aasociation
and the Gallia County Medical Society.
0
He was also a member of the
American Urology Association, and
the Central Ohio Urology Aasociation,
Gallipolis Elks Lodge, Gallla County
Historical Society, National Rifle
Association, Knights ol Colwnbus in
Cleveland and Annenisn Benevolent
Union. He was ·a member of St. Louis
Catholic Church.
Funeral services will be held 10
a.m. Tuesday at St. I..ouiB Cathallc
Church with Rev. A. J . Golublewski
officiating. Burial will 'be in MoUnd
Hill Cemetery.
Friends may call at the WaughHalley-Wood Funeral Home today
·
from5untll9p .m. ·
If friends so desire, in lieu of
flowers, contributions may be made
to the American Heart Association .or
Gallia Cowlty Historical Society
Water Tower Preservation Fund.
Both may be directed to Mrs. Lola
Mae Suiter, in care of Cmunercial
and Savings Bank, Gallipolis.
Pallbearers will be Dr. Charles
Holzer, Dr. Neal Prendergast, Dr.
Sigismund Harder, Dr. R. H. Alonzo,
Leo Calandros and Dr. A. J.
ooLamerens.

35-4 E. Main

Pomeroy, 0

S

PECIAL
MON. THRU FRI.

FOOllONG
&amp; FRIES
Check this Healthy

SALAD BAR
• 5 different dressing•

•• noturol v-tobleo
• Homemade cole ulad
• Homem1de potato ulad
• 4 extra items

ELBERFELD$ JULY CLEARANCE
MEN'S
SUMMER

SHI

$1,000.00.

MONEY MARKET CERTIFICATE
INDIVIDUAL RETIREMENT ACCOUNT
Substantial Penalty For Early Withdrawal

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

Far111ers
POMEROY, OHIO
b. 0 ....w

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

7%%

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

fDESDAY, JULY 24, 1979

Council approves budget

Treasury Securities.
$10,000 minimum . Interest rate equal to the rate of 182 day treasury bill rate, As
determined at weekly auction.

NO. 70

en tine

at

e

Dr. Berc Tap,
56, succu~bs
Dr. Here Zenop 'J'ap, 56, a resident
of 52! First Ave., Gallipolis, died at
9:30p.m. Saturday in Holzer Medical
Center following an apparent heart .
attack.
Dr. Tap had been in failing health
the past three years. He was a
specialist in urology at Holzer Clinic,
Ltd.
He was born Feb. 1, 1923, at lsl.an·
bul, Turkey, son of the late Nlshan
Zenop and Annenuhi Tap.
He is survived by his wife, Ruth
Distler Tap, whom he married on Jan
28, 1961, at Hamilton, Ohio.
· Two sons survive : Jim and Greg
Tap, both at home. One brother,
Nurhan Tap, Montreal, Canada, survives .
Dr. Tap had resided in Gallipolis
the past 11 years, moving to the Old
French City from the greater
Cleveland area.
Dr. Tap graduated from the Univer·
sity -of Istanbul Medical Facility in
1947. He served at Haydar Pasa
Model Hospital and was a first lieutenant in the Turkish navy .
He was in general practice
medicine in Istanbul from 1948
through 1953, He served his residency
in urology at Haydar Pasa Model
Hospital in Istanbul from 1953
through 1956.
He was certified by the Turkish
Board of Urology in 1963. Then he ·
served as assistant chief of urology at ·
Haydar Pasa Model Hospital from
1956 through 1958.
He came to tne uruted .States on JU·
ly 1, 1008, and served his internship in
the United States at Mercy Hospital,
Hamilton, Ohio, in 1958 and 1959.
He also served his residency in
pathology in 1959 and 1960, and
generirl surgery at Mercy Hospital in
1960 and 1961.
Dr. Tap served his urology residency at Cincirulati Good Samaritan
Hospital in 1965 and 1966. He served
his second and third year residency in
urology at Huron, Ohio Hospital 1966
through 1008.
He came to Holzer in 1968.

•

YOUR
CHOICE

lf2

PRICE
'
Good selection
- men's s'hort sleeve shirts, dress shirts, sport shirts, western
shirts, knit shirts. All sizes.
Regular Prices $5.95 To $5.98
7~

llL

2

PRICE

~~~-:-~~~
ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

Grate said the village's income
would be $256,145 opposed to total ex·
pendltures of $374,764, leaving ' a
deficit of $118,619.
Grate went on record as opposed to
the budget as it stands, while Mayor
Fred Hoffman stated he found the
budget acceptable.
"By actual receipts and expen·
ditures, you're going into overspending," Grate said.
Grate said the budget listed aU in·
come the vilh!ge receives from its
general fund, federal revenue sharing
and other sources. Wllh the figures at
hand, it would not be enough to meet
vlllage services in the upcoming year.
'"The money stays the same," he
sta!ed, "and with devaluation you get
"
I ess. "
There remained the possibility the
budget could be funded from otl)er
departmenl'l, but it posed the problem of overdrafting, he continued.
Hoffman disagreed with Grate's
findings, stalinB he saw it differently,
allowinj! the village to operate under
the budget, since there are adequate
year-end t.lances in each fund ,

Hoffman said the village budget.
would be $854,048 which includes income plus existing balances.
"I don't think that would make any
difference, " said Councilman Marvin
Kelly. " If yoo don't have the money, .
you can't spend it."
.
Disagreement then centered
around whether· or not estimates for
the fire truck could "stand on its own
bottom, ... as Councilman Dew~y Horton put it.
Horton requested the fire iruck
estimate be lelt out of the budget, narrowing the IJ(lSSible deficit from
$118,619 to $11 ,046. Additionally, if
four percent was cut from other

estimates, the budget would balance.
Discussion stalemated, and Hoff.
man requested suggestions after
council decided against a Special
budget meeting Tuesday night.
Grate suggested the budget be filed
with the state, as the village was late
in doing so, and the fine pints be
discussed later. Council then approved to file the budget as it stood.
In other action, council tabled further discussion on the exterior work
done on the city biulding by K and S
Construction, Minersville.
Council also approved figures for
an estimated 360 tons of asphalt and
175 gallon of tack to be used to repair

Hudson, Riverview , and Park Streets
and several alleys in the village.
Clerk-tresurer Grate was instructed
to seek bids.
Council also received an expression
of thanks from Lee Wood, financial ·
secretary · of United Mine Workers
(UMW) District 6, for efforts to in·
form the public on H.B. 21 and the
amendment supiJ(lrted by Rep. Ron
James (D·Proctorville ) making coal
companies responsible for the cost of
excavating its own fueL
The battle'.s not over," Wood said.
"We want to keep the ball rolling , and
we believe, in aU truth, that we're
right."
'

1

Top-priority search ·h ,eg~s
for new reserve board chief

began inviting all sub-Cabinet level
INTERESTING POINT - Shown with lOth District Congressman
presidential apiJ(lintees to a Tuesday
Clarence E . Miller (left) during his recent visit to the area are (left to .
afternoon meeting at lhe White House
right), Congressman Miller, Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman, Jon Buck,
wilh President Carter.
training coordinator for the Gallia-Meigs, CAAYouth Conservation and
Mea nwhile , Ca rter summoned
Community Improvement Project Program (YCCIP), and Colonel
members of the White House staff to a
"Chip" Wanner, Army Corps of Engineers representative. Congressman
meeting late Monday.
Miller expressed his supiJ(lrt for the YCCIP program which is concerned
Uncertainty about the significance
with the preservation and improvement of Gallia-Meigs area resources.
of Carter's dramatic moves to revive
YCCIP provides training, wages, and supiJ(lrtive services for 16-19 year
his presidency put new pressure on
old school dropouts. During his visit, Carla Kauff and Steve Secoy, YCthe dollar in world money markets
CIP participanl'l, were able to meet the congressman.
Monday as lhe price of gold bounced
back over $300 an ounce.
Powell acknow !edged that the
changes ordained by Carter were
bound to spark "some degree of
disturbance" and said that is why the
president acted swiftly to, accept five
. .. in the world
Cabinet resignations, including that of
Treasury Secretary W. Micha el
Blumenthal.
Asked why Carter was holding a
rare
evening news conference , Powell
A Jackson County Common Pleas elected a new one.
The
allegedly
ousted
board
filed
suit
said the president wanted to "provide
By The Associated Press .
stalled early today.
Judge has ruled that an April 21
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Waves 4 to 7 feet high crashed
F oreca sters at the National
meeting at Rio Grande College called charging that the petitions circulated an opportunity for people who do not
·United Stata is throwing the 7th
by \lissident members of lhe Buckeye to call lhe meeting were improperly live on the Eastern Seaboard to watch ashore and water from the Gulf of Hurricane Center said Claudette was
Fleet Into an International effort
Rural Electric Cooperative for the distributed and the meeting iself was it."
Mexico surged into lhe sand dunes located about 165 miles east of Corpus
to save thousands ol Vietnamese
The White House spokesman near Corpus Christi as Claudette, Christi and remained stationary for
puriJ(lse of ousting the Board of in violation of the Cooperative's Code
boat people adrift · off the
Trustees was invalid and . that the of Regulations, and further claimed reiJ(lrted he and hrs assocrates were . downgraded from a tropical storm to several hours. But they said the
coutlinell of SOutheast Asia.
puriJ(lrted removal of the trustees was that the members of the c~p did not encouraged by results of a new Gallup a tropica l depressi on remained depression was expected to begin
The ezpanded air and sea
'
moving slowly westward today .
follow the code in removing lhe board poll that indicated 36 percent of 539
lherel ore null and void.
search by the U. S, Navy comes
Americans who were questioned
Around dawn, C.laudette's center
During the fall and winter ot J978, and in electing a new one.
as other nations bolster the atlOTI was located near latitude 27.2 north
On July 5, both sides of the believe Carter's Cabinet and staff
several members of the cooperati\'e
temPt to save the refugees, Jam·
and longitude 94.7 west.
.
beca me disenchanted with the controversy were heard by Judge changes will help the country.
med ,in boats tossing in the Sooth
on
Of
those
surveyed
,
12
percent
Forecasters
said
the
highest
Thomas
Mitchell,
sitting
operational policies. of the company,
China Sea.
0
sustained 'winds were about 35 mph,
' thought lhe shakeup would mak.e
assignment in GaUia County.
manager and Board of Trustees.
Long-Bnge patrol planes "are
but a few squaUs up to gale force were
In a decision filed Monday, Judge matters worse, 42 percent thought rt
Fueling the dissatisfaction was a
flying daily ml&amp;sions In the Sooth
likely and could move onshore along
long strike against the cooperative by Mitchell upheld the board's charges would make no difference and 10
China Sea to locate and seek help
.
the Louisiana apd upper Texas coast
members of the International and enjoined those elected in April percent were not sure.
Citing
the
figures,
Powell
sard:
.
later
today.
.
.
for refugees in distress," U .
from
taking
any
further
action
as
a
Brotherhood of Electrical Workers,
"There
has
been
a
great
deal
of
semt·
COLUMBUS,
Ohro
.
(AP
)
Small
craft
from
Port
O'Connor
to
Commander Gordon Peterson
result
ollhat
meeting.
and a period of bad weather when
hysteria
here
in
Washington,
which
I
Complete
desegregation
of
C?,lumbus
Biloxi,
!11iss.,
were
being
urged
to
said Monday nigllt .some members were without
lhink, based on this most recent schools thrs fall could lead to specral remain in port and persons were
electricity for several da)'s.
Gallup poll, has been confined to this problep1s" at the secondary level, urged to stay ~ff the Gulf beaches
These adversities were followed by
side of lhe Potomac.:· .
according to a reiJ(lrt th~t " .expected today. Swimming and surfing would
a considerable increase in lhe rate
WASHINGTON (AP ) - Users
Powell,
holding
hrs
hrst
regular
to be handed to U.S. Drstrrct Judge be unsafe today along lheTexas coast,
charged by the coo perative to
of diet sodas and other foods con·
in
about
a
month
,
Robert M. Duncan Wednesday.
forecasters warned.
press
briefing
members for service .
taining saccharin are a step
to
lhe
Gallup
figures
as
"a
The
preliminary
draft
of
the
report
Elsewhere showers accompanied
referred
A series of meeting s were held by "'
closer to being assured the proIJ(lsitive
reaction.
"
cites
problems
in
scheduling,
student
in
spots by thunde;storms, were
rather
surprising
mem~rs during the fall and winter of
ducts will remain on store
Asked about mail reaction receiv~ partic ipation in ~xtracurrrcular widely scattered over states east ?f
197&amp;-'lll
to
require
company
officials
to
shelves at least two more years.
by lhe Whrte House, he s~rd: I actrv1tres and rn plannrng for startrng lhe Mississippi River early thrs
answer questions about company
The House on Monday tenhaven
't checked rL I assume rt would lhe middle schools.
.
morning.
policy .
tatively approved extending until
be
negative,
however."
The
action
will
have
a
"negatrve
Rain and lhunder were reported
Some attempt was rpade to answer
June 30, 1981, a moratotiawn that
la
st
week
impact"
on
court-ordered
busing,
the
from
Florida into southern New
The
White
House
lhe ,questions, but the answers were
has blocked a planned saccharin
NEW YORK ( AP ) -- Exxon Corp. volunteered figures on a fa vorable reiJ(lrt said.
Engla.nd
and from the Gulf Coast
apparently not satisfactory to the and Standard Oil Co. of Indiana
ban since mid-1977. Monday's
to
Carter's
July
15
energy
The
report
asks
pefl1lission
to
wait
a
through
the
Ohio Valley into the
response
dissident members.
reported big second-quarter profits address .
voice vote was expected to
year
before
transferrrng
JUntor
and
eastern
portion
of the mid·Mississippi
An estimated 135 members of the . Monday, even lhough -· lhe firms
become formal with an on-the·
senior
high
school
students.
It
Valley
.
cooperative met on April 21 and, by a noted -· they had not raised gasoline
record tally today .
There also were showers and
unanimous show-of-hands vote, and oil prices in lhe United States fast .:.:.:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: proposes combining desegregatron at
the
higher
levels
wilh
a
planned
thunderstorms
from the upper
removed the existing board and enough to ccver rising costs.
NUMEROUS COMPLAINTS
conve~sio~ to middle schools but Mississippi Valley across much of the
The companies attributed the profit
Numerous
complaints
were reassrgnmg eleme ntary school northern Plains, extending into the
NEWPORT, Ky. (AP) :... The
GARBAGE WARNING
increases -· 20 percent for Exxon, the rece ived by the Meig s County
this September.
central Rockies and from western
Reynolds Metal Co. has lost its
Rutland Mayor Gene Thompson nation's largest oil ~ompany, and 36 Sherlfl's Department Monday when It students
Duncan has indicated lhat he want a Oklahoma through the Texas
bid to be dismissed as a defenreports his office has been receiving percent for Amoco -· to substantial was reported members of the systemwide plan operattng thrs Panhandle.
·
dant in litigation in connection
complaints about garbage pileups increases in earnings from overseas Unification Church were In the area.
.
. Thundershowers were expected to
with the BeverlY' Hills Supper
Church members were reported to September.
outside local residences.
operations.
In
a
section
on
finance~ , the report
reach
from lhe Mississippi Valley to
Club fire May 28, 1977 in which
Foreign
operations
return
more
Thompson said there is an
be soliciting funds in Rutland, projects total desegregatron costs. of lhe Atlantic Coast during the day,
165 dlild.
.
ordinance ruling residents must because they do not carry the price Syracuse, and Racine. Sheriff James
Judge John Diskin; Campbell
arrange to have their garbage hauled controls oil companies must deal with J. Proffitt has advised residents to $8.9 million next year and $11.1 mrlhon with showers also scattered across
the following year. School offrcrals Montana and Wyoming into
Circuit Court, refused Monday to
away, and he warns anyone not on the domestic market
exercise their own judgment about have repeatedly urged that the state Nebraska.
dismiss Reynolds of Rlclunond,
complying with the ordinance will
Exxon's profil'l, hfter the write-off, donations to the church.
be ordered to pay all desegregation
Skies were expected to be sunny
(Continued on page 10 )
prosecuted, as lhe pileups present a were $830 million for the second
Deputies are also Investigating the
.
over lhe Southwest and the Pacific
health hazard.
quarter or $1.88 a share, up from $690 theft of a bicycle owned by Chuck costs.
Superintendent Joseph L. Davrs has Coast, with readings expected to be
million or $1.55 a share a year ago. Hensley, Tupper Plains. The bicycle
Revenues for the quarter rose to $19.6 was belleved taken around noon relused to comment on the report mild to warm in most of the nation ..
containing the request for a two-phase
The worst of the sununer heat -- 100
billion from $15.5 billion. in lhe 1978 Sunday.
approach
to
busing.
.
degrees
and higher -- was moving
quarter .
·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::":::::::::::::::::::::::::::
The
school
board
on
July
2
lost
rts
into
western
Texas and New Mexico
AmO&lt;Jo said its profits in the second
appea
I
to
the
U.S.
Supreme
Court
of
through
the
Southwest
and into the
quarter were $401.2 million, or $2.74 a
Dwtcan's
order
to
desegre~ate.
valleys
of
California.
Landfill evaluation
share, compared to $294.2 million, or
The.system was ready to unplement
Temperatures around the . nation
$2.01 a share, a year ago. Revenues in
a
b~srng
plan
last
fall
when
Justrce
early
today ranged from 48 in Arcata,
lhe quarter rose from $4.1 billion to up fur consideration
Wrllram
Rehnqmst
granted
a
stay
~f
Calif.,
to 97 in Needles, Calif.
$4.6 billion .
lhe order pendrng the high court s
Oil companies have come under
Evaluation of the existing Meigs
.
Middleport squad busy
heavy fire for reaping huge profits County Landfill site and IJ(lSSible site review
After lhe Supreme Court ruling was
during times when energy supplies expansion is one of the three major announced, Duncan asked school
are short, and there were indications items up for consideration at the July officials to update the 1977 plan.
The MiddleiJ(lrt ER Squad was
that Exxon may have tried to 31 meeting of · the Buckeye Hills·
The middle school concept divides called out four times Monday and
minimize its reported profits.
Hocking Valley Regional Develop- the system into an elementary level of twice this morning.
"These companies are attempting , ment District executive committee.
At U:30 a.m. on Monday they were
grades kindergarten through five ;
within the rules of the game, not to err
The session is set for 7 p.m. at the middle schools, grades six through summoned to Railroad Street for five
on the side of overstating ·their profits Clair Building in Marietta. Other tops
month old Joanna Clark. She was
at a time when a lot of political include loan planning for an elderly eight; and senior high, grades nine taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
decisions have to be made about housing project at B~verly and an up- through 12. Presently , Co lumbus at 1:45 p.m. they were called to Lasley
them," said Sanford Margoshes, who date on aging programs and relations junior highs house grades seven St., Pomeroy, for Marie 'Custer who ·
follows Exxon for the Wall Street firm and relatiO!lll with the Ohio Corrunis- through nine.
The 83,400-pupil school system is 36 was also taken to Veterans Memorial
of Shearson Hayden Stone.
sion on Aging and an increase in percent nonwhite. Duncan wants all Hospital; at 2:05 p.m. Frank
mileage reimbursement rat.e .
TEACHER HONORED - Everette Holcomb, local vocational
schools .in the system to be between Laudermilt, Pari· Street was taken to
20.9 percent and 50.9 percent Veterans Memorial Hospital; at 2:46
teacher of agriculture at Meigs High School was honored by the OVATA
p.m. to South Second Street for ·
(Ohio Vocatlorial Agricultural Teachers Association) in Toledo July &amp;nonwhite .
William
l.Alwis who was treated at the
11th for 15 years of service to vocational oganiations. The local leather
scene.
MEETS
THURSDAY
Showers and thunderstonns likely
waa one of the nearly 100 leaders honored In Toledo during the 30th annual
FREE CL01111NG DAY
The Gallia-Meigs Community
tonight and Wednesday. Continued
conference. Special higllllghts of the lcoelleaders program include this
Free
clothing day will he held at the . This morning at 1:12 a .m. Henry
warm and muggy with lows upper 60s Mtion Agency, board of trustees, wilt Salva lion Army, Pomeroy on Eblin, Sr., RD., Pomeroy, was taken
year's two state winners, three st~~te farmers and an outstanding proto low 70s and highs again in the mid meet Thursday, July 26, at 7:30 p.m. '111ursday, July 26, from 10 a.m. until to Holzer Medical Center and at 5:55
gram in farm business management. Holcomb was sele.cted as outstan80s.
Chance of rain is 70 percent in village council ch~mbers at noon. AU area residents in need of a.m. Jack Neff , Brownell Ave., was
ding teacher In Districtl7 this year. Holcomb is pictured In second row,
Cheshire .
taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
tonight
and Wednesday.
clothing are welcome.
second from right.
WASHINGTON (APl - · President chairman G. William Miller to be
Carter and his staff pressed a top· treasury secretary. Whrte House
priority search Monday for a new press secretary Jody Powell told
Federal Reserve Board chief as the · broadcast reporters Monday:
Whit e House summoned top "-- "That (Miller 's replacement ) ,will
appointees and presidential aides ,to hav.e our top prrorrty and will he the
meetings with the president.
·
dectston, lhe re~lace,r,nent , that rs
Carter· also scheduled his first probably named frrst.
nationally televised news conference ·
Powell reiJ(lrted that White House
since May 29. It will be held meetings on finding a new chief
Wednesday at 9 p.m. EDT. in the White central banker were held Sunday-@d
House East Room . .
Monday .
.
In last week's Cabinet upheaval
Late Monday afternoon, according
Carter tag gged F ederal Rese rv~ to sources, White House officials

Today Cooperative election

ruled invalid Monday

Expand search

Tropical storm
hits Texas area

Desegregal •
co uJd }ead {
maJ"or problem

Time extended

Exxon, Sohio
profits up
20 percent

Loses big

Weather

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