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                  <text>14- The Daily Se~tjnel, Mlddlepmi-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday , Aug. 1, 1979

Pomeroy sidewalk sales Friday, Saturday
--

e
VOL XXVIII, NO. 77

'J'H.IS WAS THE fi rst shuttle bus to be used in the first annual Dave
Diles Celebrity Golf Tournament held Monday at Riverside Golf Course
in Mason. Spectators attending the event parked their cars at Wahama
High School and were taken by bus to the golf course. Driver of the bus
was Alice Globokar. Photo by Mrs. Fennan Moore.

Gas dealers go
to White House
IV ASH IN GTON 1AI' 1 -- Angry
service sta tion owners are ca rrying
their d isgruntlemen t over a bevy of
new gasolino: pricing rules to the
White House and the Ca pitol.
Some of the rules also are bound to
rile fin ancially pressed motorists.
Abcut 2.000 independent gasol ine
dealers were expected to

llHIS!'l

first in

front of thc White House tod ay and
th en move to the Cupi tol steps to l'all
attent ion to their comp laints.
'!11e Energy De pw·tmcnt issued new
rulings Tuesda y &lt;timed partly at
appea s in g the dealers. But the
changes appea red only to make the
stalion owners more incellsl'd.
The rul ings give st&gt;rvice stations
penn ission, starting today. to charge
mot orists

for

!-iUch

services

:1 s

clean ing windshields, fillin g tires and
for honorin g credit cards.
"All the depHrirnent is telling us is
that if we need more money, we can
go out and attlnt.(onizc our
customers," said H1~que Harrx.\r,
spokesman for lhe Nationa l Congrt•ss
of Petrol eum Hetc.llh'rs.
'
.tJnder the rulin gs . rnotor i sl.~ may lx.
charged separately for :-;en'H\ .'S oth(•r
than gasohne. but d&lt;·idt·l·s "r·an 't
mi:ikc this a condJti iJil I 11r hu.dng"
fuel , th e department sa id .
1

Station s m us t ghr· moturi sls the

option uf payin g in ea slr

r~ tthu t h~111 !)y

credit cH rd and th e ex ira non-gasoline
charges, such as for cleaning
wmdshields, a re not mandatory .
The l': nergy Depa rtment did
elim inate, aftet strong dealer protest ,
a requirement that sta tions post profit
ma rgins on gasoline pumps.
Sta tion owners ·claimed the
re quirement was a nti -c ompetiti ve
becii LISC it ·gave other dea lers
knowledge of their costs.
Now, dealers must post only their
max imum lawful selling price , or they
may certify they don 't exceed the
legHlmaximum, the department said.
In another action Tuesday , the
En ergy Department ruled that
sta t1ons owned by wh olesalers or
refiners must maintain current profit
margins as long as they don't exceed
15.4 cents per ga llon, the ceiling
allowed independent dea lers.
Who lesa lers ,
refiners
and
mdependents a ll lamb as ted the
rul ing.
"We're absolutely outraged, " said
Alan Darrow, :1 spokesman for the
t-;ational Oil Jobbers Council , which
n'presents wtlDlesalers. ''lt means we
ca n't claim U1e smne profit margins
a;-; inde pendents.''
. lr'&lt;JIIical ly, independents sa id the
rulmg will ma ke prices cheaper at
refi nc r -an d wholesa ler-owned
st:1tions, thus undercutting them. ,

Construction site
scene of four deaths
HOLB!WOK . Ali?. fA!'
FoUl
peop le were ktlled unJ nmv ·t he rs
were mjured in a series of cra:-:.lr"s a1
an Int ersta te 40 construction :-.ile just
west of here. tlw sl&lt;ll.e Dcpwtnrcnl of
Public Safet\' said.
PcJt.mlmarl Bob V:mtc r sa1cJ thrE.'('
people were killed 1'uesday in one
rh~lin .r eaction

a cc ident when a

tra ctor-tr :uler rig dri ven !J~ ;m Ohi o
man tra \'cling eastbound 1 c.ta mto a
line

•

of

car s

s topped

fur

the

con structwn work.

Investigatgurs said .lw truc k
sla!llll C'll mtn ~~ fl: ttbPd tr ul' k, k!l lur~
the driver. .John W1l tiant Myers, 7fi. of
Flagsl&lt;Iff.
Office rs s·!i il ttrP fl allwd fnll'k \'-"il.S
puslwd off t t~ llH.• sHit• (If ~l··· rnw! . md
U1r tr actor-tra der· rt.ll. d1·iwn by
Mi chuel J. l.ipps uf T'&lt;'ll' l';ms , ohio.
1

th en ran OV('r U1e top of

:1 ~ m·

from

P olice shoot
'h·d·
1 mg ' man
l .

TR OY , Mich. 1 M' r · A 24 -yra r-&lt;~l d
Troy nmn. hiding in his van waiting
for a burg lar. was shot to death b) two
policcnwn who UHJ!)glrt ht• wn s D

burglar . J police spokesman saicl.
Troy Police Capt. G;u·y Mollc•m·opf

called th mridcn t "an nnfurlllna te
set of circumst:.mccs.··
Darid Prior's sister said she visited
the Troy poli ce station to tell officers
he r brother would be hiding in U1e van
that night. ·• f asked for extra
surv eillance and they kil led him ,"
ClaudJa Prior sa id.
According to Mollencopf. l'rior had
decided to spend the ni~ht in the varr
after il th ief had made off with stereo
and radio equipmerrt the 11\'o prer ious
nights .
A neighbor ca lled police reporting a
burglar in the ne ighborho od.
Mollen copf said, and one offi cer
approached the van, opened a door
and shone his flashlight into the
vehicle .
Mollencopf said Pnor then pointed
his pellet gun at the officer and said ,
" You 're dead ."
The officer shot once or t wicc, then
fell to lhe pii H'rnent to av md being
shot by Prr or. the captain said. The
second officer, thmking the first had
been shot. then [I red si x shots into the

van.
Officials saJd the officers thought
they had killed a burglar until a
neighbor told them 1t was the owner of
the van.
The police offi cers were not
identified .

Californ ia, kill ing two young children.
The diildren were aged eight and 12
respective ly and were from Temple
City, Calif. , accqrding to police.
Na rnes were withh eld pending
no ti fical ion of next Of kin .
Office rs said the car and truck then
ran into a third automobile, which
slammed into a car driven by George
MI·I '"vs of Holbrook .
EI~ht of the nine persons injured in
the accident were admitted to the
Hoi urook hospital.
The second accident occured when
Mel 'l'errnain, 24. of Holbrook, who
W&lt; tS worki ng as a flagman rJ t the
const ru ct ion site, saw the first
&lt;w&lt;'idcnt. atte mpted lo run across the
westbound lane of the highway and
w ~ t~· run over by a la r ge dump truck .
Otficers sa id Lipps was booked into
tl1e Navajo County Jail on charges of
vehicular manslaughter.
Varner said it took nearly eight
hottrs to clear lhe wreckage and open
the highway.

DID THEMSELVES PROUD - These five men
did an outstanding job in preparing the steaks served
at a dinner held at Royal Oak Park Monday night
following the first annual Dave DUes Celebrity Golf
Tournament held at Riverside
in Mason . The men
.

.

BIG MAN ON HAND - Big Ron
McDole, former defeDBive eod for
the Wasbington Redoklns and a
native of Meigs County !Chester
area) participated In the lint aimual
Dave Diles Celebrity Golf Tournament Monday at Riverside Golf
Course.

Today

&gt;i ...in the world

'"2 ·~

,·~}~{~

from page I)
men! of Trade said 31 survivors
were taken to a Lerwick hospital
and six bodies were recovered. It
was believed the bodies of the 11
missing men were trapped in the
fuselage of the plane, which sank
after crashing into the sea at the
end of the runway of Sumburgh
Airport.
All the victims were reported to
be British.
Swnburgh officials sai d the
craft, a twin-turboprop Hawker
Siddeley 748 owned by Dan-Alr
Services, overshot the nmway
and slashed into the shallow
water in misty weather. It was
leaving for Aberdeen, Scotland.
Shell is exploring for oil in the
Shetland area, off Britain 's northern tip, and has a number of
producing wells in the North Sea.

Bundy condemned

MIAMI ( AP) -- Condemned by a
judge as "a total waste of hwnanity,"
Theodore Bundy ha s been brdered to
pay with his life for the beating and
strangulation murders of two sleepi ng
women . But it may be a long time
before the people of Florida collect.
"In a way, this is my opening
statement
," the articul;lte former law
One defendant forfeited a bond and
student
said
in an emotion-choked
six others were finect in the court of
Middleport Mayor F~ ed Hoffman monologue Tuesday shortly before he
was ordered to die in Florida 's
Tuesday night.
Timothy H. Bickers, Rout e I, electric chair.
Vinton, forfeited a $50 bond posted on
"This is just the first ... early round
an overload charge. Fined were Roy ol a long battle," Bundy vowed
Boggs, George McDaniel , Donald between sniffles. "I haven't given up
Lovett, and Brenda Jeffers, all of by any means." It was the first time in
Middleport, $25 and costs each on his five-week trial he had shown any
disorderly manner charges; Emily G. emotion .
Price; Route 1, Shade, $225 and costs
He refused to plead for mercy.
and three days in jail on a .charge of "Absurd," said Bundy, "to ask for
driving while intoxicated, and Patrick mercy for something I did not do."
Mahaffey, Vinton, $25 and costs,
Judge Edward D. Cowart was
disorderly manner, and ,$100 and costs unimpressed .
on a charge of possessing marijuana.
" It's a tragedy for this court to see
such a total waste of humanit y," sa id
Five defendants forfeited bonds and the judge . "You're a bright young
two others were fined in the court of man . You'd have made a good lawyer.
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews I'd have loved to have you prac tice
Tuesday night.
Forfeiting were Edna Smith ,
Pomeroy, four bonds including $500
posted on a charge of resisting arrest ;
$50, disorderly conduct; $100,
intoxication , and $50, open flask;
Charles Baker, Westerville, $370,
driving while intoxicated ; Jeffrey
Lewis, Pomeroy, $30, speeding; Brian
SCHENECI'ADY, N. Y. (AP l -Boggs, Coolville, $370, driving while
Police
arrived on the quiet city street
intoxica ted, and John Ander son, expecting
only to respond to a ca ll
Rutland, $50, open flask. Fined in the about a barking dog. Instead, they
court were Doug Clelland, Pomeroy , found an ankle-de ep swarm of.
$50 and costs, on a-charge of squealing cockroaches that had spilled from a
tires and Larry McG lothlin , house to the street and trees, covering
Huntington, $50 and costs, disorderly one policema n as he stepped from his
manner, and $200 and costs, petty cruiser.
th eft .
Inside, the officers discovered a 64year-o ld woman with her two dozen
dogs, 15 cats, two mice and a parrot -·
all victimized by cockroach and flea
bites.
" It 's unbelievable, but true," said
BESSIE B. MOORE
Bessie B. Moore; 80, of Lockney, W. police Sgt . Rudy Basha, who said the
Va., mother of Russell Moore, supervisor of secondary education, Meigs
County Schools, died Tuesday morning at the Arlington Health care
Center in Patkersburg, W. Va.
IRONTON, Ohio ( AP ) -- A
Funeral arrangements are being Lawrence County grand jury Tuesday
completed by the Stump Funeral indicted an Ironton osteopath on 62
Home at Gr'!-lltsville, W. Va.
felony drug counts.
. In
three
sepa ra te
fe lony
mdtctments , Dr. Lewis Clark Jones
was charged with five counts of
ORGANIZE MONDAY
The Meigs County Budget Com- corruption of others by drugs, five
mission will organize Monday. On SpeCial counts of conspiracy to traffic
Tuesday, the commission will review U1 drugs, 26 counts of aiding and
school budgets; corporation budgets abetting the trafficking in drugs and
on Wed.nesday, and township budgets 26 counts of conspiracy to traffic in
on Friday. The sessions are scheduled
for!Oa.m. each day.

Mayor's Court

before me. But you went another way,
partner. ''
Twice the judge ordered Bundy put
to death "by a current of electricity ...
passed through your body until you
are dead ," for the deaths of Margaret
Bowman. 21. and Lisa Levy, 20. ·
Cowart said the beating of Miss
Bowman ·•was vicioLLS, vile, wicked
and atrocious ."
Both women were attacked with a
crude oak club as they slept in the Chi
Omega Sorori ty house at Florida
State University in Tallahassee the
morning of Jan. 15, 1978. Bundy also
was convicted of three counts of
attempted murder in the beatings of
three other women who lived in the
sorority house and in a nearby
apartment. Cowart sentenced Bundy
to 198 years in prison for burglary.
Louise Bundy, 52, of Tacoma,
Wash ., looked at the murtroom fl oor
as the sentences were imposed on the
son she has ca lled "my pride and
joy '' Then she left. tight-lipped,
saying nothing.
Death · sentences have taken on
added impact in Florida since the
state sent convicted murderer John

Spenkelink to the electric chair on
May 25.
But Bundy 's determinati!ll to fight
his sentence, combined with other
pending trials and an automatic
Florida review process, seem certain
to 'push any potential execution date
years mto the future.
Bundy is due for trial Sept. 17 in
Lake City, Fla., on a charge of
strang ling 12-year-old Kimberly
Diane Leach on Feb. 9, 1978. The
prosecutor there says he expects
Bundy to be made available.
Bundy also is . charged with
murdering a Michigan nurse near
Aspen, Colo., in January 1976, but
Co lorado authorities say they' re
probably the last in line for Bundy. A
l:i-year Utah prison sentence awaits
him for the !974 kidnapping of Carol
DaRonch near Salt Lake City.
Bundy's attorneys have aifeady
announced they will seek a new trial
in tlje Chi Omega case . And they say
they ha ve found a half-dozen
constitutic.Jal grp unds for appeals.
Meanwhile , Bundy ha s an
automatic right of appeal straight to
th e Florida Supreme Court .

In .sci-fi like incident

·Roaches ravage residence
One of the two wanen who Jived in
cockroaches were "ankle deep " in
)he
house, 6-i-year-old Iva Fletcher,
some spots. "The cockroaches were
was
taken to Ellis Hospital , where she
al l over the street. The walls of tbe
was
in satisfactory cooditioo wltll
house were so full that they had
cockroach and flea bites covering
nowhere else tn go."
•
Sc h e n ectady's
health much o[ her body.
The ambulance that transported the
commissioner, Dr . William Bartlett
ca lled the infestation "inc redible " woman, as well as the Schenectady
and added it was the worst he's ev~r Animal Shelter van and four police
vehicles at Ul e scene of the incident,
seen in 20 years c.1 the job .
had
to be fwnigated.
Although city police had initially
James Provost , manager of the
sa id the re wer e '' hundreds of
thousands" of cockroaches around the animal shelter where the pets were
house, exterminator Harry Linindoll taken, said the cats were so starved in
said later "th e number is definitely in the holl.'!e they had fed oo each other's
·flesh . The cockroaches, in turn, had
the millions.''
apparently feasted oo the flesh of
everything in the house, including
each other.
Provost added that severa l of the
mice and the cats had to be destroyed
drugs.
because they were so badly bitten.
The indictments followed a IJ" It wa s a nightmare," Provost said.
month probe by the state Bureau of " I had to shake my head to find out if
Criminal Investigation. Officials said it really happened." Provost said
the drugs allegedly involved were cockroaches stretched from "wall to
amphetamines and barbiturates.
wall and floor to ceiling."
The grand jury contends Jones
The other resident of the house 6&amp;wrote mo re than 13,000 prescriptions year-old Madeline Cooper, was' not
from February 1978 until March 1979. home at the time of the incident. Both
Earlier this month in Lawrence women fa ce cruelty to animals
County Common Pleas Court, Jones charges filed by the animal shelter.
lost an appeal to overturn a decision to
Tue sday night , city officials
revoke his license. The state medical sprayed insecticides over a threeboard revoked his license to practice block area around the infested house
medicine on July I.
and pledged to have the building tor~
down by the end of this week .
Landlord Peter Ga lvin , who lives in
Rotterdam, N.Y., said the infestation
was not his fault. He said the women
Showers or thunderstorms likely had not a llowed him into the holl.'!e In
tonight and Thursday. Lows tonight the past year.
between 65 and 70. Highs Thursday in
Galvin said . he will fight the
the middle 80s. The chance of rain Is demolition since he still hcl&lt;b a
60 percent tonight and Thursday.
mortgage on the property.

Osteopath facing drug coimts

lrisil Saint Columba landed on
lona in 563 and established the first
reh;.{ious community on th e is land.
CONCERT PLANNED
Columba and his monks settled in
The Eastern Hjgh School Mar ching
lru~s . built a tiny chapel, and later. Band will present a show and CO•Icert
expanded their se ttlement to include a for friends and families of members
mon ;tster~.
at 7 p.m. Friday at the high school. A
cookout and get-acquainted period
will follow the show. All family
' :
members of band students are
mrdially invi ted .
T he

char-broiled more than 300 steaks for thsoe attending.
Front, 1-c, are, Paul Eich, Dan Crow; back, Roger
Morgan, George Harris and Bob Crow. Not pictured
but who assisted was Richard Jones.

OFFICES MOVED
The Meigs County CETA headquarters were moved Monday from the
courthouse to 39350 Union Ave., intersection ofSR 7 and Union Ave .

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
Admitted--J enn y Minear, New
Marshfield ; Thomas Simmons ,
Middleport ; Richard DeMoss ,
Pomeroy; Ida White, Rutland; Donna
Larkins, Portland.
Discharged-Franklin Laudermilt,
Milton Gea ry.
SEEK LICENSES
Marriage licenses were issued to
Wilbur Leo Sims, Jr., 37, Middleport,
and Noami Ruth Donohue, 26, Rt. 4,
Pom eroy ; J effrey Jay Warner, 21,
Pom eroy, and Teresa Lynn Thomas,
22, Middleport.

I Continued

-- -~----------------------------~
High School Seniors

We are now making appointments for senJor por·
traits.
We provide a number of previews from which you
make your selection. our previews give you not onJy
traditional poses before oil backdrops but also poses In
beautful outdoor settings.
You'll like our relaxed atmosphere and reasonable
prices.
Call us today to set up your appointment.

Weather

'

ELBERFELD$
WHITE PAINTERS JEANS

'11

95

Young men's sizes 28 to 36 waist. Lengths 30 to ·
36, 100% cotton preshrunk. Big Ben label by
Blue Bell.

THE PHOTO PLACE
(Charlene and Bob Hoeflich j
109HighSt.
Pomeroy

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
.

at

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

en tine
P~ICE

THURSDAY, AUGUST 2, 1979

FIFTEEN CENTS

July grocery prices
.
show slight decline
COLUMBUS, Ohio lAP) - End of
July grocery prices declined slightly
from a mmth earlier in tile Ohio
Associated Press marketbasket
survey, reflecting the availability of
close.to.home summer produce.
With prices down on potatoes,
tomaiAies, lettuce, chicken and eggs,
the average cost or Ule 17 items oo the
shopping list at the end of July was
121.61 in 18 participating cities. A
month ago the same shopping list had
a price tag of 121.69, and a year ago it
was 121.118.
Cost averages went up on seven
items m the list, down on eight and
two were unchanged in price during
the month . Higher averages were
reported for hamburger, chuck roast,
baron, coffee, orange juice, milk and
peanut butter. Lower prices were
rep&lt;rted on chicken, pork chops,
margar ine , eggs , tomato soup,
potaiAies, tomaiAies and lettuce. Sugar
and cookie prices remained
unchanged.
Cleveland was tile most expensive
city for the shopping Iist this month
witll an average cost of $23.1», up .2
percent from $23.04 a month ago .
Toledo,reported the lowest average at
$19.01 , compared to $18.41 a montll
ago. An 18-ounce jar of peanut butter
increased 20 cents in Toledo and

coffee by the pound was 30 cents
higher .
.
The most significant change was at
Painesville, where the shopping list
averaged $21.71, down from 122.96 a
month ago. This was a drop of 5.2
percent.
The highest increase was reported
at Cincinnati, up 3.8 percent, from
$22.05 a m!llth ago to $22.89 in the
latest check.
Some stores apparently used whole
fryer chickens as loss leaders,
prompting a drop of nearly 13 percent
in the per pound price, from 70 cents a
month ago to an average of 61 cents in
the new check. Center cut pork chops
by the pound sold for $2.10, down a
penny on the average .
A dozen grade A large eggs
averaged 76cents, down from 82 cents
a month ago. Fresh tomatoes by the
pound dropped from 75 cents to 65 ·
cents, and head lettuce declined from
6!1 cents a mooth ago to 60 cents at the
end of July.
A pound of hamburger increased
me cent, to $1.~1 . and bone4n-blade
chuck roast by the pound rose from
$1. 71 a month ago to $1.76. A pound of
name-brand bacoo increased from
$1.84 in June to $1.88 in the latest
check.
Store brand milk by the ~allon

Deputies probing
several reports
The Melc• County Sheriff's
deparunent Investigated a single car
accident Wedne5day. No personal
injuries were reported.
According to tile report Robert L.
Humphreys, 38, Pl. Pleasant, was
traveling wes't on
CR 26
approximately three tenths of a mile
off SR 7 when he failed to nesotiate a
trWl and went off the road on the right
and strucka fence . two posts and 12
fence boards were damaged. There

Today
... in the world

wu slisht damage to the car.
Deputies are investigating damage
to a vehicle owned by Debbie Lemley,
Rt. I, Oleshire. According to the
complaint sometime Tuesday evening
someone kicked in the door on the
driver' s side.
Lee All en, Portland , reported
Wednesday evening that a Blue Tick
hound and a Beagle hound were stolen
from his property on Stiversville Road
at a pproxim ately 10 :20 p.m .
Wednesday. The Blue Tick is a three
year old female and the Beagle is a
two year old male.
Deputies are also investigating the
theft of a four da y old Black Angus
baby ca lf from the property of James
Parsons, Rt. 1, Racine.The calf was
valued at $100.
Sheriff Proffitt requests tllat any of
the area farmers with information on
the calf tn contact his office .

Seeks election ·

Deadline Aug. 10'

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP )
There should be an election to
determine which union will speak
for the state Department of Men·
tal Health and Mental Retar,
dation's workers, departmertt
Diredor Timothy B. Moritz said
Wednesday.
He made the proposal at a
rneetln@ of leaders of the four
unions which now repreaent some
d. the department's employee~~.
The proposal would Improve
and clarify the labor situation in
Ohio's 30 mental health facWties,
Moritz said. He asked the leaders
of the Communlcatl0115 Workera
of America, the Ohio Ovil Service Employees Allloclation, the
American Federation of State,
CoWJty and Municipal Employees and the Ohio Public
Workers Union to respond to the
propa!BI by Aug. IS.

Closing time for all open claaa entries for the Meigs County Fair will be
4 p.m. Friday, Aug. 10, with the exception d. the annual horse show.
The aecretary will be at the fair
lloard office 011 the Rock Springs
Fairgrounds from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m on
Aug. 9 and 10 to accept the entries for
the many classes Included. Only exhibita which are properly registered
by the deadline will be judged and
receive premlwns.

in reased three cents to $1.73 for the
month, and a pound of stick
margarine dropped one cenl to 65
cents. The cost of five pounds of
granulated sugar was unchanged at
$1.15 and a 13-ounce pack of chocolate
chip cookies was unchanged at $1.14.
Coffee prices increased over the
check period, from an average of $2.64
in June to $2.80. A W I• ounce can of
tomato soup increased one cent to 22.5
cents.
A 12-ounce pack of frozen orange
juice rose from 95 cents to $!.Oland a
tO-pound sack of Idaho potaiAies
dropped from a $1.95 average at the
end of June to $1.79.
Average prices declined in nine of
Ule reporting cities and increased in
the other eight. Average prices
reported by other cities, with
percentage of change from the
previous month, include:
Athens, $21.52, down .6 percent;
Canton, $19.63 , down .I percent;
Chillicothe, 121.49, down 1.7 percent;
Colwnbus, 22.33, up 1.8 percent;
Conneaut, $20.90, down 1.4 percent;
Findlay 22.63, up 1.7 percent; Kent·
Ravenna, $21.66, down 1.1 percent;
Marietta, $21.42, up .6 percent ;
Massillon, $20.43, down 2.2 percent;
Portsmouth $22.25, up .4 percent;
Salem, $21.74 , down .8 pe~ ce nt ;
Steubenville, $22.76, down 2.4 per::ent;
Van Wert, $22.84, up .7 percent ; and
Youngstown, $20.78, down 4 percent.

Wrecks leave
two injured
Two penons were tndjured and
their vehicle demollahed In a one-car
accident Wednesday evenlflll.
The Gallia-Melga POllt State
Highway Patrol reported Rounne L.
Hale, 19, Vinton, waa drtvtng eut on
County Road 7, west d. Route 180 at 8
p.m. when she last control ol her car,
which ran off the left side ol the road,
and overturned.
Hale and an OCCllpllllt in her car,
Unda Mcintyre, 17, Akron, were injured In the mlahap and taken to
Holzer Medlcla Center wbere they
were treated and releued. The Hale
car was demolslehd and there were
no cltatiOII!!.
The patrol alao reported two accidents in Meigs County W~y.
At 9:15a.m., Everett D. Parlier, 78,
Reedsville, was drtvtng south on SR 7
near County Road 26 and attempted to
merge lett at the same time a car
driven by Gertrude Moore, 64,
Chester, WB5 a1ao merving into left
lane.
Parker forced Moore's car to the
left, and when Moore spotted another
vehicle approaching in the left lane,
she cut back, striking Parker's vehl·
cle in the left front fender .
There w85 slight damage to both
cars, no injuries, and no citations.
Sllght dama&amp;e was done to a car
operated by Carol F. Pierce, 49,
Langsville, at 3:35 p.m. on County
Road 5 when her car struck a I!Wird
rail. There were no cilati0115.

FAIR SERVICES PLANNED -The annual interfaith religious services will mark the opening of this
year's Meigs County Fair. Services will be held on
Monday, Aug. 13 at the grandatand at 7:30 p.m.
Speaker for the services will be Dr. Lewis Telle who
will share bla faith In God. Special mualc will be provided by "'lbe Voices d. Uberty", ecwnenical group,
made up ol local people. The members ol the Meigs
County Mlnlaterial .Woclation will 8ll8ist with various
portionll ol the service. The publlc Is invited to attend.

Shown, I-I', going over the program are seated, the
Rev. Richard Thomas, vice president ol the Meigs
County Ministerial Allloclation and pastor ol the Northeast Cluster United Methodist Churchell, and the .
Rev. Harvey Koch, Jr., secretary-treasurer ol the
118110ciation and pastor d. the Syracuse Cluster d. the
United Methodist Church; standing, Pastor Albert Dlttes, president of the Meigs County Ministerial Asaocla·
tion and pastor of the Pomeroy Seventh-DRy Adventist
Church.

Board seeking construction
fir'!l for roof r~pair ·i o.b
The Meigs Local School District
Board of Education and admlniltnlto.:a are looking for a construction firm to make Immediate
repairs to the Meigs Hil!h School.
Meeting in apedal session Monday
night, the board of education pa.ssed
an ''urgent necessity" resolution to
set down a psttem to be followed In
getting Immediate attention for the
high school.
' The resolution provides that the
board can obtain Invitational bids on
repair work at the school Instead of
the usual process of publishing adverlisements for bids over a four week
period.
With the invltatiooal process finns
can submit bida at once, after the
building baa been inspected so that
repre8elllatives can see the type d.
repair wort needed.
According to plans, a bid can be aC·
cepted Immediately so that repair
wort can get underway and completed for the opening of the high ·

acbooL
·
'lbe board met in executive session
Monday nf8ht wiih Dr. Carl Shermer,
civil engineering professor at Ohio
Unlveralty, and Ted Beegle, a Colwn·
·bus engineer, both of whom had in·

Petition presented

Braden, Mary Ann Francis, BcJrulle
The board ~ -- J - Tajl« fiii' a.
the ~~~Uestiona d. the two engineers. new acbool year, and Harry Yar·
Administrative Assistant Dwight brough lUI welding instructor pending
Goins reported front walls in some certification by the state.
sections show a bowing action .and
Non-&lt;:ertlfled penionnel employed
cracks have appeared around win- Monday night Include Donna N-.
dowsover thepestseveralooth&amp;.
aide; JoanKaldor,cook, andPauletta
District Superintendent David Harrison, substitute aide.
Gleason reports the bOwing walls and
Pending c:ertificatlon by tfJe State
cracb in the academic section of the Controlling Board, the Meigs Board
nine-year old structure would be the also accepted bida oil six school.
ground level sectiOn.
buses.
Funds for the repair work will cune
The bid d. the Glbllon Motor Co.,
from the pennanent Improvement Athens, at $13,623, was accepted on
funds ol the district, Gleason said.
the chassis, and the bid d. f/ ,890.118 fer .
In another action, the board bodies 811bmltted by the Edwin Davia ·
authorized Goins and Gleason to meet Co., Langsville, was accepted.
Friday with Meigs County ProGleason pointed out that the bus. ·
secuting Attorney Rick Crow to body bid of the Davis firm was IC·
discuss pollaible litigation against all' cepted even though It waa about f/5
finns involved in the design and con- higher than another firm becaWJe d.
structloo of the high school building. ' the additiooal di.ltance which would
The board also granted Goins pennis- be required In driving for repalra at
sion to consult with Horace Karr, headquarters ol the second finn.
owner of the Karr Construction Co.,
Attending the meeting were Supt.
which was the general contracting Gleason, Goins, Dan Morrta, ad·
firm on the CO!I8truction of Meigs mlnlstrative assistant; Jane Waper,
High School, to detennlne If he has .treasurer; board members Carol ·
any suggestiona on what has caused Pierce, Dr. Keith Rlgga and VIrgil·
King and Bob Morris, elementary
damages to the building.
The board employed teachers Beth principal.
spected the building.

.
-

.

Data entrys · operator
hired
c

Upon the recommendation of Meigs
h
·
County Welfare Directo Mich 1
w1s ~r,
Me1gs ounty
r
ae
Commissioners Tuesday night

Innocent pleas
COVINGTON, Ky . (AP)

Howard T. Kalsbeck and his aon,
Howard D. Kelly, accused of
pirating $374,000 In securities,
food stamps and money from a
WellB Fargo truck June 18 In
Newport, Ky., pleaded innocent
to the charges Wednesday in U.S.
Dlatrlct Court.
Kelly and Kalsbeck had federal
!l'lbllc defenders appointed to
them during the short arraignment before District Court Judge
Eugene Siler.
Siler set a Sept. 24 trial date for
the biaest robbery In Greater
Qnclmatl history.
Both men · are charged with
COflBJIIracy, theft, transportation
d. interstate conunerce of stolen
gooda, and the poaseBBilin of a
flreann In the commission of a
felony. Kelly Is also charged with
poiiBeBIIion of a weapon with a
,previous felony conviction.

'

MORE

THAN

1,000 persns were on . liand for grand opening

ct~remonies of the new Gallipolis K mart store early this morning. Ribbon.

cuttlnl! ·ceremonies

were conducted shortly before 9 a.m. Sharing the
honor above (center, attired in wh!te) were Larry R. WUboum and his
\~

wife, Unda. Wilbourn Is the manager of the 55,552 square fOOt discount
department slore,lQ!!Bted on Upper River Rd. Gallipolis city officlala,lncludlng members of the city commission and chamber of commerce and
other area leaders were on hand for the event.
·.
·

1 ed -Ro wena Young, SR 882,·
emp oy
Pomeroy, 85 da~ntry operator 1.
Swisher
recommended
the
appointment since the welfare
department will be put on a state-wide
computer system effective Sept. 11.
Meeting with the board were
Kenneth Welsh and a delegation ol
Harrisonville realdenta woo presented
a petition with -127 signatures ag~
the issuance of a C-1 and C-Z liquor·
pennit to Larry Allen Vance, elba,
Vance's _carryout on SR 143 In
Harrisonville.
·
The · issuance of the permit wu
protested due to the close prolllmlty of
the proposed carry-out to the
Presbyterian Church and the
Harrisonville Elementary ScbooL
The commissioners .will !Ue
objection and petition with the Ohio
Department of Uquor Control and,
request a hearing.
In other business, the board asreed:
to review the use of the ODES and 1
CETA Building on Union Ave., SR 7,
as a voting place In Salisbury
Township providing there is enough
space.
County engineer Wesley Buehl
reque11ted
that
the
$15,000
unappropriated balance in the A, L a.
G budget be appropriated · to the
bitwninous account. The request was
approved.
Th.e quotation of Guernsey Aaphalt
Co., for purcha.,e_of asphalt materlala
for the month of August, wu IICCepted
for the county higllway department, ,
The board also dlscuued tbe
(Continued on page 10)

"..

.,,

�2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Aug. 2, 1979

_S-The DallySentiilel,Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., 'l'hur8day, Aug. 2,1979

IT'.§

GAaoL!NE!

A WHO~j: OUHCE!

IN WASHINGTON

OH, DAVID,

YOV ~HOU!.PN 'T HAv£~

Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

Editorial' opinions,
comments

Despite absence, George's bat helps Reds
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
George Foster's bat has helped keep
the Cincinnati Reds in the National
League's West Division race. Ray
Knight has _been using the injured
slugger's lumber to drive in H runs in
the last four games.
.The last three RBI came Tuesday
night in the Reds' 10-5 rout of the Los

Collins' report

past year alone, the estimated cost
By Richard E. Cobeo
COLUMBUS - State Senator proposing a constitutional amend·
for
completing the project ros.e from
WASHINGTON (NEAl • Whlle the
Oakley C. Collins (R·Ironton) reports ment to be submitted to Ohio's voters,
trials and tribulations of Jimmy $134 million to $174 million.
that although the General Assembly. each house of the General Assembly
When Sen. J . Bennett Johnston Jr.,
Carter have dominated the news out
has now adjourned until September, must approve the propoeal by a threeof the nation's capital, the Senate has D-La., took over this year as chairthere are still several major issues of fifths vote. The House d. Represenprovided some welcome relief : the man of the commission supervising
interest which have been left pending tatives has aliready provided such a
vote and the resolution remains
latest act of the long-running comedy the l)uilding , he decided that
before the General Assembly.
surrounding its decision to build a economizing was essential. "My judge
One of these issues involves HoUlle before the Ohio Senate, which to this
third office building for its members ment is we should complete the ----~;F""-==-~~
Joint Resolution 39. 1bls joint point has not taken any action m the
building but at the lowest possible
and their staffs.
resolution propoees an amendment to propoaal.
Another
very
contriverslal
Construction of the new building cost," he said.
Ohio's Constitution which would per·
Mter a thorough review of the half·
named for the late Sen. Philip A.
mit the classification of real property measure, which Is presently being
heard by the Senate Judiciary ComHart, 0-Mich., has consistently completed steel hulk that is beginning
In the state.
shown lhllt when it comes to to overshadow the two older office
Currently classification of types of mittee, Is the death penalty proposal.
mismanagement, the Senate can out- buildings, Johnston recommended
real property is not permitted, and House Bill 74 Is designed to revise
the edifice be completed but without
perform even the White House.
the Ohio Constitution requires that all Ohio's current procedllnll used for
Take a couple of starting points. In such questionable features as a third --.....__ _ _ _~,.
types of real property be taxed at the imposing a death penalty. The
1972, when the Senate OK 'd the new physical-fitness plant for senators, a
same rate. If classification of real current procedures have been held
building, the estimated cost and con· rooftop dining room, wood paneling ·
property were permitted, we would unconstitutional by the United States
struction time were $48 million and for senators' offices and a multi·
have different classlflcations with dif. Supreme COurt. It Is now liP to the
four years. Now the ~te will be ·media hearing room. He also
fering taX rates applying to those General Assembly to enact provlalons
lucky if it can keep each figure from eliminated new furniture, arguing
classifications.
·
for iinposlng a death penalty which
that aides could take their old desks
being tripled,
The proposed amendment would comply with the Supreme Court's
~~~~--~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~:·~
True, many of the more than 7,000 withlhem.
permit the Legislature to create the guidelines,
Before he could even get his propersons who work for the Senate have
various classifications of real proper·
Because the U. S. Supreme Court
ty by law. Any law providing for a has struck down Ohio's current death
cramped working quarters. Many of posal to cut $37 million to the Senate
them are housed in facilities that floor, tJ!e Appropriations Committee
property classification would also penalty laws, no convictecl murderer
would not meet Occupational Health demonstrated that there Is at least
have to provide an annual percentage in this state will be subject to a death
and Safety Administration regula· some sense of majesty in the Senate.
reduction in property taxes for penalty unU a new death penalty
· property within that classification.
tions - if Congress had included itself It agreed with Sen. Henry Belimon,
statute is enacted.
R~kla., to restore $5 million for the
' under OSHA's coverage.
It is also important to remember
The primary thrust of this House
joint resolution is to enable the that if a new death penalty statute is
But the main point is that the gymnasium, wood paneling and fancy
Senate has pennitted a willy-nilly ex· hearing room. As Bellmon aptly
Legislature to provide tax relief for enactecl, the actual acts for which
pansion of its staff without consider· pointed out, most of these cuts proresidential property owners and someone is convicted and sentenced
i(lg how well the aides are being used bably would be restored later
agricultural property.
to the death penalty will have to occur
Donald
Gra1f
and has planned a giant new facility anyway.
In order for a joint resolution after the new death penalty statute Is
But the full Senate hardly exhibited ,.:....:,:::__.==-_:: ________
without making an inventory of de·
Jaw.
the same support for the building as
mand for more space.
Any corporate or union chief who did the Appropriations Committee.
made decisions this way would be Sen. John H. Cbafee, R·R.I., led the
fight to kiU any additional funds for
s}Viftly kicked out of office.
the proposed windfall profit tax on the
ByDooGraff
Decision-making hardly improved the building and, in effect, to mothball
What with the politically trawnatic oil companies. The yield from such a
when construction began on the huge it until tbe country could afford to
WASHINGTON (APJ -- President their full-time vacancies as they came
b_uilding. The architect of the Capitol, complete it. Chafee's side won the reshuffling of administration person- recycling of corporate dollars,
bow
ever,
can
be
only
a
guess
at
this
Carter
seems to have promised more open. The order lasted only a few·
who supervises all congressional first vote ori a 47-47 tie but switches on nel and policy priorities of recent
point.
And
skeptical
analysts,
supthan
he
can deliver with his pledge to months and was quietly replaced by
buildings, has taken an average of a subsequent vote resulted in a less weeks, a once-hot issue seems to have
ported by the nation's previous ex- "cut the total size of the federal specific personne l ceilings in
eight montha to review drawings and than ove!'Whelming 49-46 victory for gotten lost in the Washington shuffle.
January.
That Is the states-initisted proposal perience with crash federal problem· workforce."
specifications for each of five phases the building's supporters.
These actions have had their effect.
He said that in an address to the
Now the House must approve the for a constitutional amendment re- solving efforts, foresee cost overruns
instead of two months as envisioned
As
of May, the latest period for which
that
could
raise
the
pricetag
to
f200
nation
Oct.
24
in
which
he
outlined
added funds. If experience is a guide, quiring the federal government to
in the original building plan.
the
federal Office of Personnel
billion
or
more.
several
steps
he
would
take
to
combat
The General Accounting Office, the many House members will be eager balance its budget every fiscal year.
Management
has figures, there were
It
should
suprtse
no
one,
least
of
all
inflation.
congressional watchdog agency, in· to tweak the Senate's nose by vetoing No more debt-increasing, inflation28,212
fewer
full-time
federal workers
the budget planners, if in the end a
But at last count the total federal
vestlgated the Hart building and con- the project and leaving the Senate feeding deficits.
under
Carter's
direct
control than
Remember that one? Around the considerable-t&lt;Hlllljor portion of the workforce has actually grown since there were when he spoke.
cluded that the architect "does not with its steel hulk.
Whatever the result, the congres- turn of the year it loomed as one of the funding of an energy program had to . then . As of May it was up about 27,000
have an adequate system for monitorBut bureaucrats have endured
sional
charade makes most govern- larger features on the political be come directly from the Treasury. people, to 2.9 million civilian workers.
ing the progress of the project."
freezes off and on for decades,
hiring
And
that,
short
of
slashing
such
big
Even
discounting
normal
summer
This falling helps explain the ment bureaucracies look like models horizon, a cloud as big as a budgetand
know
how to get the government's
spenders
as
defense
to
the
bone
or
hirings
and
hiring
in
the
Postal
cutler's fist that had both White
escalating cost of the facility. In the of efficiency.
work
done
in spite of them . This time
to
confiscatory
taxation,
Service,
Congre&lt;;&lt;;
and
other
areas
resorting
House and Congress in a bit of a
they
seem
to have hired more than
could only mean continuing and in· outside direct presidential control,
sweat.
40,000
part-time
and and temporary
,.
federal employment is still creeping
That was, of course, before the creasing budget deficits.
workers
to
take
up the slack. Whlle
And that would be impossibl~ under up ·
realization that there really is an
full-time,
permanent
employment is
the
proposed
amendment.
In
fact,
the
president
may
soon
be
energy crisis (whether of supply or
down
in Carter's segment of the
There
Is
a
strong
case
for
a
tighter
force&lt;1
to
throw
1;000
to
2,000
federal
distribution) got all of us into a much
govenunent, total employment in that
COLUMBUS, Ohio (i,P ) -- The Ohio conservation coordinator for the Ohio heavier sweat. The gasoline line rein on federal spending in general workers off the payroll next Oct. I to segment - including part-time and
Department of Energy is using a agency, said information from the began to look suspiciously like a per· and on deficits in particular. Spen- meet a new legal ceilinr on feder.al temporary workers ..,.. has actually
$154,757 grant to encourage use of car various projects will be considered for manent new feature of the national ding, absorbing an increasing share employment. He had ho!J"d to cut increased by about 14,000 since his
pools and public transportation.
compilation in a statewide energy lifestyle, congressional hoppers of the national product, can retard employment through attrition and , in speech.
The programs are under way in co nservation plan that will be overflowed with proposals for crash economic growth. Deficits too easily the process, come L~ well under the
All this leaves Carter with nearly
Canton, Kettering, Cleveland, submitted to the U.S. Department of development of synthetic fuels and become standard budgeting pro- ceiling·
27,000
more federal workers drawing
But so far Carter hasn't delivered
Springfield and Akron. A department Energy. He said the strength of that Jimmy Carter descended from the cedure, fueling_ an appropriate word
pay
than
will legaUy be allowed on
what he promised, much as he failed
spokesman said those cities were the presentation will affect future federal mount with a sermon and the finan- in the present context_ inflation.
payroll
Oct.
I, under a ceiling imposed
But a constitutionally binding re· to deliver on his campaign pledge to
o'nly respondents to a U.S': gra nts to Ohio for energy cial equivalent of war, a $142 billion
by Congr·ess even before Carter
quirement
to
balance
the
budget
cut
the
number
of
federal
agencies
Department of Energy invitation for conservation programs.
energy plan to deliver us from OPEC
promised his cut.
would raise more problems than it from an alleged 1,900 or so to 200.
projec ts to save transportation
The Canton .Regional Transit bondage by 1990.
depriving the governCarter now has no hope whatsoever
energy.
It Is pure coincidence but curiously would solve,
Authority is using a $54,460 grant to
f
of getting the total number of
The grants may be only the spout of test a subscription bus service for appropriate that tbese should be the ment o the fiscal flexibility governmental units anywhere close to
a funnel of federal and state money major employers. The service picks developments to divert attention from necessary to meet emergency situa200
flowing through the Ohio DOE for use up subscribers at or near their homes the budget balancing campaign.
tions such as we presently face with
What Carter promised oct. 24 was
in the search for ways to save energy . and takes them to work sites !or a
What has the constitutional amend- energy.
this : "We will slash federal hiring and
Bob Russe ll , department fiscal fixed monthly fee . A report on the test ment proposal got to do with the
The framers of the Constitution, not cut the federal workforce .... I'm
officer, estimated that at least 100 is due by the end of the year and Ohio energy crisis? Plenty, if under pre· noted as spendthrifts, chose not to
1hi ·
state or federal grants in Ohio are DOE spokesman Chuck Morris said sent circwnstances only in an limit the federal authority in this ordering tonight a cut in federa rtng
being used for development of energy- the program so far is considered a academic sense, since the latter pro- area . Of course, they could not (that) will cut the total size of the
federal workforce. " ·
saving methods. Some other grants success.
vides a good illustration of the flaws . foresee in detail how the nati911 they
Though he promised to cut "total"
dea l with light, heat, industri al
The Northeast Ohio Areawide of the fonner. A Congress with many founded would develop, what its employment, he ordered only a semi·
processes and agriculture.
Coordinating Agency of Cleveland has minds of its own on the subject has budget practices and energy freeze on hiring , only in the segment
The transportation grants are for been given a $43,500 grant to establish still to act on the Carter plan: But demands would be two cenluries he controls directly, and only of fullprojects testing the feasibility of local and market a car pooling program in even if the administration should get later. What they could not foresee, time, permanent employees. He left a
ideas that might become part of Cuyahoga and four nearby counties. roughly what it wants in the way of they did not provide for .
That the,y did not attempt to do so loophole for part-time and temporary
statewide energy policy. Their goa l is Morris said that test will continue into legislation, that is no guarantee that
help.
to reduce energy used for next year.
the attack on the energy shortage will testifies not to any lack of Imagine·
But it sounded stronger to promise a
transportation by 5 per cent.
The Miami Valley Regional work out as planned.
tion or willingness to address a pro- "total" cut than to promise a cut in
Jerry
McFeeters ,
energy Planning Commission has a $15,000
The cost of achieving energy in· blem, butto their wisdom.
"full-time permanent ·employment in
grant to set up a community transit dependence is supposed to be met by
the executive branch, excluding the
service in areas of Kettering not
Postal Service," which is what he
served by public transportation. One
actually attempted.
part of the survey tests the use of taxis
Carter let agencies fill only half
as feeder transportation to existing
!Xlblic transit stops.
A $23,315 project in Clark County is
being used to promote car pooling
among residents of a common area
who work at or near the same
business site . · The major industry
WASHINGTON (AP) -- House complaints from restaurant owners.
O'Neill said that because of the wide
involved so far is International Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill said
margin
by which the · amendment
Harvester Co.
Wednesday he thinks President
he
doubted the vote could be
passed,
Larry Hines, head of the Clark ·Carter would accept a weakenipg of
WASHJNGTON ( AP) - The Energy
reversed
.
He
said the issue. probably
Transportation his thermostat-setting program if
Department Wednesday proposed a County.Spr ingfield
will
have
to
be
decided by a HouseCoordinating
Committee,
said
part
of
rule requiring refiners to increase
necessary to get standby gasproduction of heating oil, diesel fuel the money is going to implement the rationing authority through Congress. Senate conference committee.
Congressional leaders have hoped
and jet fuel for the next three months. rideo~Jha ring program and the rest for
The Holllle moved toward expected
&lt;
to
get the rationing bill to Carter's
The department invited comment the cost of staffing the coordinating approval of a bill that gives the
desk
by
the
end
of
the
week,
but
oo the proposal until Aug. 16but said it committee.
president the rationing powers he
O'Neill told reporters he "can't tell " if
might be nece&lt;;&lt;;ary to put the rule into
The fifth project is at Akron, where wants.
effect sooner on an emergency basis. the Metropolitan Area Transportation
But, late Tuesday thj! House also this goal can still be met.
Would Carter accept the p~ftial
The aim is to build up adequate Study is using a $20,482 grant for a bus tacked onto the bill an amen(jment
stocks of home heating oil and other ride giveaway to employees of certain rolling back part of the federa'l rule repeal of th~ thermostat law as the
businesses or industries. Morris said requiring themostats in commercial price of getting the rationing bill? "I
fuels before winter .
"Despite our efforts to ensure the passes good for 10 free bus rides are buildings be raised to 78 degrees in the think so," O'Neill said.
House leaders attributed the
adequacy of middle distillate (fuel oil ) being given by employers to their summer and lowered to 65 degrees in
amendment's wide acceptance in part
supplies to prevent the interruption of employees in an effort to encourage the winter.
'important ser vices and activities," the use of public transportation .
The amendment, approved 267-152, In the fact that in many parts of the
the announcement said, "supplies
would exempt bilsine&lt;;&lt;;es from this nation electricity for air conditioning
have continued to be tight in all
requirement if they saved a n is generated from coal or nuclear
region s of the nation."
equivalent amount of energy in other plants -- and many congressmen felt
The department said its officials
ways . It was drafted by Rep. the 78-degree temperature rule was
In
History
Today
have met with refiners and ucged
Chahners P. Wylie, R-Ohio , who said doing little to save imported oil.
By The Associated Press
The rationing bill's floor manager,
them to build up fuel oil stocks, and in
he proposed at a fter hearin g
Today is Thursday , Aug. 2, the 214th
Rep. John D. Dingell, D-Mich., says
recent weeks those stocks have shown
day of 1979. There are 151 days left in of friendship with Ethiopia.
adoption of the thermostat-law
substantial increases.
In 1934 Adolf Hitler became · rollback has added ·new controversy
The proposed rule would require the year.
Today's highlight in history : On this dictator of Germany after the death of to the legislation and has made its
eac h refiner to produce, durin g
date
in 1914 , World War I exploded on !'resident Paul von Hindenburg.
passage by the end of the week
August, Sep.~mbe r a nd October,
In 1939, physicist Albert Einstein questionable.
amounts of fuel oil at least matching several fronts as Germany invaded
The thermostat measure has been
the three highest mo nths of France, Belgium and Luxembourg, wrote to President Franklin Roosevelt
and Russia invaded Germany.
and advised that the United States in force only since July I, but member
production during 1977 and i978.
On th is date : In 1610, the English begin an atomic research program. after member took to the House floor
The department said it would make
navigator,
Henry Hudson, entered the
In 1944, U.S. Navy Lt. Joseph -- itself held at an energyo~Javing 78
exceptions only "in an extreme
This here mixture of gasoline an ' ten percent
body
of
water
now known as Hudson Kennedy Jr. wns killed when his degrees -- to complain about how
situation " and would not Jet refiners
alcohol
will never sell. It tastes awful."
Bay.
warplane
exploded
over
the
coast
of
uncomfortable
Americans
have
been
find loopholes to avoid increasing
In
1928,
Italy
si~-ncd
a
20-year
treaty
Belgium.
under
the
law.
production .
·~
''

KENT, Ohio (AP) - The Cleveland
Browns• brass say . they have
Improved chances of licking the
team's most pressing problem - a
weak pass rush - with the acquisltim
of defensive end Jack Gregory.
The National Football League club
snapped up the 6-foot-6, 255-ilound
veteran of 12 professimal seasons In a
trade Wednesday with the New York
,Giants.
Browns owner Art Modell gave up a
future, undetermined 1980 draft
choice for Gregory, who walked out of
the Giants training csmp last week .
ModeU said the Browns are not
surrendering a first-£ound pick.
"This will be a cost-free propositlm
for the Browns," Modell said. "It will
be based on Jack Gregory passing the
physical, making our team and
producing.
." I'm very sorry he left Cleveland,"
ModeU added, referring to a contract
dispute which led Gregory to sign with
the Giants as a free agent in 1972.
Gregory, who will be 35 in October,
played his first u seasons with the
Browns. He has me year lett m his
COiltract, with no option year.
"He is a very loyal person to have in
the organl.zatlm," Modell said. "To
me, that word is becoming more
important every day."
Modell said Gregory wanted to
return to Cleveland after "a soulsearching sessim with (Giants' owner
) Wellington Mara."
The Browns had a mere 31
qworterback sacks in 16 games last
year.
In contrast, Gregory has 76 sacks in
seven seallOils at New York. In his
first year with the Giants, a year In

F.

Washington tod3:y

production
proposed•••

Speaker O'Neill feels Carter·
might compromise program

Berry's World

which -he won all-NFL honors,
Gregory collected a league-leading 21
sacks.
Browns Coach Sam RutigUano said
Greg..-y fits well into team pia1ts for a
more aggreeslve defensive unit .
"It was an area we were searching
to strengthen from the pass rush and
experience standpoint," Rutigliano
said. "We have two young veterans
(Mack Mitchell and Mike St. Clair)
and now a great pass rusber.
· "If he is healthy, be can give us the
kind of pass I'Uih we need (10 mud!. We
need experience to win In this leigue,
in this divisim. 1bls Is a pass ruah
division," he said, citing the defensive
lines of the Pittsburgh Steelers,
Houston Oilers and Cincinnati
,
Bengals.
Gregory is expected to report to the
Browns' training camp at Kent State

EYE INFLAMED

CINCINNATI (AP) - Cincinnati
Reds seeond baseman Joe Morgan
was scratched from the lineup
Wednesday night ·and sent home
because of an Inflammation in hll
right eye, the team announced .
Morgan apparently suffered the
injury Monday nlgbt when a throw to
second base from catcher Johmy
Bench hit him. He wu given
medication for the eye Wednesday.
The Red.! veteran Is hitting .254 this
season with six heme runs, 22 111118
batted 'in and 17 stolen bases in 21
attempts.

CHARLES H. KNIGHT
BARBARA M. KNIGHT

Ohio Perspective

Additional

0-f'lr-6 with his 32-ounce bat In the first
game of a doubleheader at Atlanta.
He switched to a Black Beauty for the
nightcap, hit a homer and drove in
five runs, then added three RBI in
each of the next three games.
That was ..-oof enough for Knight.
"I ordered a · dozen (of Foster's
bats) today with my name 111 them,"
he said. "I'm not swinging the bat any
different ..• "
The secmd-place Reds have won
three of the four games since to
remain within 31!: games of the
Houston Astros.
In the other NL games Wednesday,
the Houstm Astros edged the San
Francisco Giants 5-4, the Pittsburgh
Pirates ntpped the St. Louis Cardinals
4-3, Atlanta trimmed the San Diego

me mme nm going Into the last
month of the season.
Then he borrowed one of Foster's
pitch-black
35-ounce
clubs,
R!Cknamed "Black Beauty," and hit
rune hcmers in that final month.
That memory may have slipped Into
Knight's mind Sunday, when he·went

Browns re-acquire Gregory

COMMENTARY

A constitutionai ·Iesson

Angeles Dodgers. Knight had a tworun double In Cincinnati's elght-nln
first and added a nJJ«&lt;ring llingle in
the sixth.
But that's nothing new. In 1976,
while Knight waa playing with the
Reds' Indianapolls fann club In the
American Association, he had hit just

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Baseball coach named
OXFORD, Ohio (AP) - Miami
University Wednesday named its
second head basebaU coach In a week.
Don Heckllnsld, '!1, baseball coach
at Indiana Central University for the
past two years, was named to succeed
Bob Morgan,
Mcrgan waa named to the Miami
post lui week but later rejected the
Job to stay at the CW!ece of Wooster
for famlly re&amp;!!OIIS. Tbe vacancy was
created originally when Bud
Middaugh left Miami after 12 years to
tate the baseball coaching job at the
Univenlty of Michigan.
Hecklillskl is a 1973 graduate of
Indiana Central.
In his first year at the Indiana
Central helm he led the to the Indiana
Collegiate Cmference cham(Ionshlp
with a record of 22-12 and waa named
coach of the year for the conference.

The U.S. birth rate dropped from
25.1 per 1,000 population to lU In the
50 years between 11125 and 1975.

LIGAL NOTICE
NOTICI 01' FINDING OF
NO IIG~I'ICANT El'·
I'ICT
H THE EN·
VIRONM NT
·
DA : Au..st L 1t7t

H-allie
clnwt

Cle...a

All-

~~ GO\'erllmet~t

Vlltage Hall

,...,..,.,,OH4576t
TO ALL INTIRISTID
AGINCII!I,
OROupos
AND poiRIONS :
The above -named
IIIII- p r - to request
the D. s. DeDartment or
Housing ani! Urben
Dewi-t to rel"10
Federel fundi under Title I
of file Housing and Com·
munltv Oevelapment Act ot
197A .(PL-93·313) to be liNd
tor file following project:
The 1cllvltv rs a Nnlt1ry
_.,.t,...ran.
II hn been determined
!hot such requKt for
rei .... Of fundi will not
constitute an action
significantly lffectlng 111e
Q!lallty Of the hum1n envlr-mt and, accordlll!lly,
the abOVe·named \/Illhas decided not to prep~re
.., Em~lronmental 1mii!ICI
St1tement under the
Nallon11 Environmental
Polley Act Of 1969 (PL 91 1901.
The rtnan1 lor such
decision not to prep~re
such Statement ere ••
follows :
II) Tht prolect has been
namlned and studied Wlth
rnoect to the physlal,
cultur11
ana
ln rrostructurel components
of the et~vlronment.
(2) ThllexamiMtlon and
study lndlcetK that undertlklntl file Pfl!lect will
not adVWse affect 111e
Q!lallty of the human environment ,
(3) This exemiMtlon end
study lndlcaiK tllot failure
to do the project will
negetlvely effect tile
Q!laflty Of the human environment .
An
Envlronmentel
Revl- Ba.rd re_spectlng
the within project has beet\
m- by lht abOve-named

Bush has different situation
WILMINGTON , Ohio (AP) Cincinnati Bengals center Blair Bush
~ In a different position than he was
last year when he came as a rookie to
team's training camp.
Then, he was the heir apparent to
Bob Johnson, the last of the original
Bengala.
Now, Johnson is gme and Bush has
had a season of National Football
League competition.
"At times as a rookie, I was so tight
I was falling aU over myself," Bush
3ftid. "Now, I've got about .20 games
experience under my belt. I know all
the calls on the line. I know the
asalgnments. I can concentrate m
mechanics and techniques, pn things I
can use down the road."
A first-{"Ound draft pick, Bush said
he had no pressure placed on him
when he went into camp last year.
" The only pressure was the
presaure you put on yourself. As a,
rookie you want to prove on every
play that you belong," Bush said.
Bush, however, had a ..-actical
reaaon for wanting to prove himself as
quickly as possible. He didn't want to
be a long-tenn heir apparent to
Johnson.
·
"If you don't play, say for three

\Ill lege : which documents

file environmental review
Of file project and more
fully setS !Orttlthe reasons

why such Statement Is not
required . Thlt En vironmental
Review
Record Is an file at the
above address end Is
available tor · public
examination end copying,
uPOn re&lt;l!IKI, at file VIllage
Hall, E . 2nd Street,
"-oy, Ohio &lt;15769, bet·
the hours of t A.M.
and A P.M.
No
rurther
en vironmental revl- Of such
project Is pr_.t to be
conducted prior to 111e
r~uest for release Of
Federallundl.
All lnt..-.sloll agencies,
groups and per-1ons
di-.Dreelng wllh this
declllan ere Invited to submit wriNen commentS lor
consideration by the
VIllage to the 1/lllage Hall,
Pomeroy, Ohio &lt;1576!1. Such
written comments should
be received at the VIllage
Hall, E. 2nd Street,
Pomero~. Ohio &lt;1576!1 by
August 20, 1979. All such
commentS so received will
be considered end 111e
1/lllage will not reclueet 111e
rei- Of Federallundl or
take any administrative
action on the within project
prior to file dele II!KI led
In the preceding sentence.
II) 2

years, you buUd a barrier, and it's
really something that's hard to break
down,'' Bush said. "You start thinking
of yourself as second team, thinking
you aren't as good as the players who
are out there."
In the middle of the week before the first game of the season then Bengals
Coach Bill Johnson informed Bush
that he was taking over the starting
job at center.
"I think the reason he did that was
because I had an advantage over Bob
Johnson ," Bush explained . "Bob
hadn't played much against a nose
guard. while I had played against a
nose guard ahnost every week in
college."
·
The 245-pound Bush admits he needs
to ·improve his strength to cope with
guards who line up nose-lor-nose with
the center. But Bush does not wanttO
sacrifice his quickness, which he
considers his greatest asset.
"My quickness got me here and it's
what I have to go with,'' Bush said.
"Strength comes into play only In
certain situations. The perfect
example is golf. With .the golf swing,
technique is the important thing, far
more important than strength."

L.iioi.i NOTICE
NOTICE OF PUBLIC OF
REQUEST
FOR
RI!LI!ASI! 01' FUN OS
HOIIOrelile Clerence An·
drows
Loco I Government
\IIIIo.. Hell
Pomeroy, Ohio 457.~1
TO ALL INTERESTEO
AGI!NCIES,
GROUPS
AND PERSONS,
On or aboUl August 20,
1979 the ebove·named
County will r~uesl IIW U.
s. DtOertment Of Housing
and \frban Development to
release Federal fundi under Title I or 1/W Housing
and Commu_nlty Development Act or 19'1A IPL 9'3313) for the following
protect:
The activity IS a sanitary
-er extension.
An
Environmental
Review Boord respecting
file within project has been
made by the above-n..,}Tied
County which docuffients
the environmental review
Of the prolect. This Environmental
Review
Record Is on file at the
ilbove address, and Is
evalleble for public
examination and copying,
UP!lflrequest.
The \Ill lege or Pomeroy,
Ohio will undertake !he
prolect described above
With Block Grant funds
from the U. S. Department
of Housing and Urban
Development !HUD), under Title I or f!w Housing
and Community Development Act or 1974. Mr.
Clarenct! Andrews Is cerllly/ng to HUO that, In his
OffiCial capacity as Mayor
Of the \//liege or Pomeroy,
Ohio, dOH consent to accept file juriSdiCtion of the
Federal courts If an action
Is brought to enforce
responslblll~ln relation to
envlronmen ol reviews.
decision ma :lng, and ac-

LI!GAL NOTICI!
PUILIC SALI!
The following delcrlbed
collateral will be SOld tor
cash at e pobllc sale al
10:00 A.M. on August 15,
1979 at Smith Nelson
Moton, 500 E. Marn St.,
Pomeroy, 01110. Written
bids may be submllled to
GMAC at 318 Main Street,
8elpre, Ohio. TM Miler
rnerv• the right to bid,
1973 Bulck1 . Century Serial
No. AH57M3H131111.
Account No. 232·192.5·119793.
~~~llr/r!~hath'=r~~,;
GENERAL MOTORS satisfied. The 1.~1 . effect
ACCEPTANCE
CORPORATION
(II 2, lie

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FRESH GREEN BEANS
BUmRED PEAS
HARVARD BEETS
HOT APPLESAUCE WITH
CINNAMON
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...

University on Sunday, a day after
Cleveland plays ·the Giants in an
exhibition game.
"Cleveland - that's my town,"
Gregory said earlier this week, when
nonors were ripe about a trade. "I've
beerr sorry ever since !left. I have a ,
lot of permal frlenda there, and Mr.
Modell has been super to me
whenever we've met over the years."

Padres 5-4, the Montreal Expos
defeated the Chicago Cubs 7-5 in 12
innings and the Philadelphia Phillies
topped the New York Mets 9-6.
Foster doesn't do too badly himself
with the Black Beauty. Entering this
season, he had hit more home runs
( 121) and driven in more (390) than
any other major leaguer, and he. had
20 homers with 72 RBI this year before
being disabled by a lliUSCile pull.
Knight's batting average is now
.312, and his RBI total is liP to 54 with
28 In his last 18 games. His previous
major league best for a season had
been 13 RBI in 80 games with the Reds
in 1977.
Dave Concepcion also drove in three
runs with a pair of singles in
Cincinnati's biggest inning of the

the certification Is !hal
upon Its approval, the
1/lllage may use the Block
Grant funds, and HUD will
have satisfied /Is responsibility under !he National
Environmental Polley Acl
of 1969. HUO will accept an
oblecllon lo lis approval of
the following bases : (e)
That the certification was
not In rae! executed by the
Officer or
chief executive
other
oHI- at _ , . . _ .
approved Dvy HUD : or (b)
that a~p /cant's environmental review record
tor the project Indicates
omission or a required
decision, finding, or step
applicable to the project In
the environmental review
Process. Objections must
be prepared and subm I!ted
In accordance with the
required procedure (24
CFR Part 58) .and may be
addressed to 1MUD at Area
Office, 200 North High
Street, Columbus, Ohio,
43215. Objections lo the
release or funds on bases
other than those slated
above will not be conSidered by HUO. No Ob'ection received after Seplsidered
ember A, 1979 will be conby Hu o.
of

181 2, lie

NOTICE OF
DRAWl NO OF JURORS
Office or Commissioners of
Jurors,

Ohio.

Meigs

County,

July 1979
To All Whom n Mey Concern:
On Friday, the lOth doy of
August , 1979, at 10:00 o'clock

A. M.. at th.

office of the

Commi11ionen of Juran of

Melga County, Ohio. Jurcira
will b. publkly drown lor the
September !979 Term of the .
Common Pleoa C""rt of aald
County.

season. Mike LaCoss, 11-4, gave wp 11
hits in six innings for the Redl, who
have won 17 of the 21 games IAColl
has started this sell80n.
Ast1'1115, GWltl a

Denny Walllng overcame early nervousness to crack a twHIIII
triple off Vida Blue In HOUIIDII'a four·
run third Inning and lead the AltrOI
past the Giants.
"He's me of . tile best taetbeD
pitchers In the major leigues and be'a
got a lot of stats," aald Walling, who
then listed some: '"He's had the 3011
strikoouts, the 24-3 record and the C)'
Young Award. I'll admit It: I nervous the first time (at bat\.'·'
Pirates 4, Cardblall I
"We're a club that more or leu pall
things together from the fifth inllllll
oo,'' said Pittsburgh's Dave Plll'lrer
after the Pirates rallied from a U
deficit to beat St. l.Guis.
Pittsburgh got two ru1111 bact In tbe
sixth on COilsecutive trlp1es by Mamy
Sanguillen and Omar Moreno and 1
sacrifice fly by Parker, and tied It In
the seventh m pinch-hitler Mlka
Easler's RBI triple.
Braves 5, Padres 4
Dale Murphy's three-nlll · hCIIIIel'
highlighted the five-run Atlanta
eighth inning that carried Atlanta
past San Diego.
The game was spiced by a IJencb.
clearing incident, at leaat the fourth In
the major leagues since Friday nlglK.
San Diego's Gene Tenace flnlabed
trotting out a homp run, then cllargad
Braves pitcher Eddie Solomlll after
the Atlanta hurler apparently said·
something.
The players were stopped before 1
!Wlch could be thrown.
Expos 7, CUb! 5
Montreal got heme 111118 from Tilly
Perez, Gary Carter and former CUb
Rodney Scott, the latter a two-run shclt
in the bottom of the 12th, to beat .
Chicago.
Dave Kingman coMected again for
the Cubs, hitting a three-run shot In
the fifth lnnin6 and railing hll
season's total to 38.
Phlllles 9, Meta e
Garry Maddox and Pete Rolle each
had four hits each, carrying the
Phillies to their victory over the Meta.
Maddox and Schmidt each drove .ln
three runs, while Greg Luzlnald hit hll
13th homer of . the year for
Philadelphia.
Doug Flynn drove in two runs for
New York With a single and a double.

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992·2709 Of 992-6611'
Open:,7:.D.O to 5:00 Mon. thru·Frl •
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�. 5:-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, AIll(. 2, 1979
t-'11le Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Thursday , Aug. 2, 1979

Weekend fishing
report given

Wilkesville captures championship

Cincy explodes for 10-5 win
CINCINNATI (AP )-- Ray Knight is
taking over George Foster's power
role, at least tentatively, with the
Cincinnati Reds.
Now Knight is taking Foster's bats.
Foster, on the disabled list with a
badly pulled muscle, is happy to
oblige . He gave the Reds' third
baseman one of his "Black Beauties"
in Atlanta on Saturday. In the five

NORTHEAST OHIO
:
BERLIN RESERVOIR - - Water
temperature 78 degrees and cloudy.
Use crank baits or spinners in 11.-10 feet
of water for bass. Best times are dawn
and dusk. Walleye fishing is reported
good. Drift nightcrawlers from Route
14 to the Railroad bridge. Outlook
good .
CLENDENING LAKE -- Water
temperature 78 degrees and clear.
Good bluegill fishing reported
lakewide. Try&amp;-Sfeetofwater and use
red worms . Channel catfish biting
after dark on minnows and
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
nightcrawlers . Outlook good.
Now that the Baltimore Orioles
LEESVILLE LAKE - Water have proven to the Milwaukee
temperature 78 degrees and clear. Brewers who's boss in the American
Fish 12-14 feet deep for muskies. Try. League East, they'll try to show the
just off the weed beds and use large New York Yankees the same thing .
minnows or troll large minnow type
Baltimore swept three games from
lures. Channel catfish hitting after the previously red-hot Brewers in
dark on cut bait and' nightcrawlers . Milwaukee, climaxing the rout with a
Bass from 11H2 feet deep near weed 5-2 victory Wednesday. The Orioles
beds on dark plastic worms. Outlook
good .
ODNR sets dates for
SOUTHEAST OHIO
BURR OAK LAKE - - Water
temperature 82 degrees and clear. bird hunting season
Excellent reports on bass. Try early
or late and use surface plugs and dark
COLUMBUS - The Ohio Wildlife
plastic worms . Walleyes on Council has approved the 1979 hunting
nightcrawlers from the dam area . season dates for migratory game birllluegiUs 3-6 feet on meal worms. Try ds as recommended by Carl L.
Dock 4 area. Channel catfish after Mosley, Jr., Chief of the Division of
dark on nightcrawlers . Outlook Wildlife of the Ohio Department of
excellent.
N t IR
(ODNR
ROSS LAKE -Water temperature
a ura esources
).
The seasons are:
82 degrees and cloudy. Good reports
GALUNULE _ Sept. 1 through
lakewide on bass. Size limit is 14 Nov. 9. Hunting pen'od is sunrise to
inches minimum . Use shallow
Ia ·
sunset. Daily bag Umit, 15, and
running lures and purp1e P stic possession limit after the first day, 30.
worms. atuegills or wax worms
so AND
lakewide . Try after dark using
RA
VIRGINIA RAIL surface lures ior bass. Outlook good. Sept. 1 through Nov. 9. Hunting period
omo POWER AREA __ water is sunrise to sunset. Daily bag limit,
temperature 82 degrees. The Tilton's 25, possession limit after the first day,
Run area is very good for bass, 2.5, singly or in the aggregate.
f h s rf
TEAL (SPECIAL SEASON) -Sept.
bluegills and channel cat IS • u 11\::e 14 through Sept. 22. Hunting period is
lures to 4 feet for bass. Use red worms
od
sunrise to sunseat. Daily bag Umit,
lor bluegills. Outlook go ·
four, possession limit after the first
SOUTHWEST OHIO
GRAND LAKE ST. MARY'S
da~~~'SSNIPE-Sept1through
Water temperature 70 degrees and Dec 15 H t'
'od ·
· t
. h h'tt'
good Try
. . un mg pen IS sunnse o
mudd Y. Ca tf IS 1 mg very
·
t DaU
ba limit
· ht
the mouth of .Coldwater Creek and use · sunse · . ~t fteg the first ~lg 16•
cutbait or nightcrawlers. Crapp1es ~~~ II_ ~ t 28 thry, h
are coming from shallow water, 2-3 De
Dail
ba p 'limit ~ug
feet Use small minnows and try · c. 1: . . Y
g . • ve,
Windy· Point. Bluegills on red worms possessiOn Umit after the Ill'S! day, 10.
lakewide. Outlook good.
CAESARS CREEK LAKE -- Water
temperature 76 degrees and clear.
Good bass fishing reported . Use crank
baits or 4 inch plastic worms in 3-10
feet of water. Some smallmouth
hitting spinners. Try old road-beds
and rocky shorelines. Bluegills from
coves with standing timber. Crappies
are deep 12-16 feet. Use minnows.
Outlook good.
Harold Orval Johnson, Nedra Sue
Johnson to Lewis E . Pulver, llarbara
A. Pulver, 2.03 A., Chester.
Nara W. Jenks to Jack W. Carsey,
defendant.
Neacil E. Carsey, Lots, Pomeroy.
SPARTACADE
Earl Frecker, Wah Frecker to Ber·
MOSCOW ( AP ) -- The U.S. men's nard Noo, Cynthia Baca Nau,
and women's basketball teams, both
By The Associated Press
Bedford.
already eliminated from medal Parcels,
TENNIS
Ralph Bales, Connie S. Bales to
contention, posted victories at the
NORTH CONWAY, N.H. (AP)
William A. Young, Ida Young, Pt. of
Jinuny Connors informed officials at Spartacade Games.
Andrew Toney of Southwestern Cistern, Rutland.
an international tournament that he
Clyde A. Morlan, Ethel Marie
would not be returning for the Louisiana scored 20 points and Herb Morlan to Wilbur W. Warner, Dorothy
remainder of the tournament, as his Williams of Ohio State added 18 as the M. Warner, Lot, Orange.
wife, Patti, gave birth to a 7-pound, 14- men beat Latvia 97.00 while Denise
Evelyn T. Sullivan, James P .
Curry 's 21 points led the women's 86ounce boy in Los Angeles .
Sullivan to William E. Taggard, Un·
Connors thus defaulted to Franciso 51 rout of France.
da T. Gartner, Parcels, Lebanop.
Gonzalez of Puerto Rico in the second · In boxing , Alberto Mercado, an 18James N. Smith, Constance C.
year-old Puerto Rican, upset
round.
Smith
to Waid C. Smith, Ola L. Smith,
On the court, Raul Ramirez of Bulgarian favorite Georgy Georgiev Life Estate, Bedford.
Mexico ousted Manuel Orantes of in the 112-pound class to win a berth in
Pearl D. Wilson, Carrie D. Wilson to
Spain 6-1, 6-0; Guillermo Vilas of \he group finals.
K. Testerman, Polly A..
Joseph
Mercado meets Cuba's Omar
Argentina defeated Butch Walts 6-3, 3Testerman,1.825
A., Orange.
6, 6-1; Harold Solomon fought off Santesteban in the group finals
W.
Yonker,
Ramona L.
George
Bruce Manson 7~. W, 6-3; and Brian Thursday. The Cuban qualified by Yoker to Robert L. Boggess, Rita J .
Gottfried 'downed Colin Dowdeswell of beating defending Soviet champ Boggess, one-third acre, Letart.
Vyacheslaw Shulepko in the day's
Switzerland 6-2, 6-1.
William Keith Adkins, Diana L.
SOUTH ORANGE, N.J . (AP ) - - other semifinal bout.
Adkins
to Larry Whobrey, Jr., Jean
NATIONAL SPORTS FESTIVAL
Vitas Gerulaitis opened his run for the
Whobrey,
.32 A., Salisbury.
COWRADO SPRINGS, Colo. (AP)
$75,000 Grand Prix Open title with a &amp;Emma
Diana
Stevens to Wilma 0 .
1, 6-4 victory over Robin Drysdale of - In the final day of yachting at the McMillion, .00 A., Olive.
Great Britain at the Orange Lawn National Sports. Festival, Michael
Robert J. Reeve to Gail Reeve,
Waltze of Venice, Calif., won the gold
Tennis Club.
Parcels,
Columbia.
In other matches, John Uoyd of medal in the Windsor Class with
Edward
Dale Anderson, Laura J.
Great Britain won 6-4, &amp;-2 over Andres David Kane of Cohasset, Mass., Anderson to Clinton P. Stover, Betty
Maurer; John McEnroe defeated earning the silver and Matt L. Stover, Lots, Salem.
David Carter 6-3, 6-1; Anand Ainritraj Schweitzer the bronze.
Dana C. Cheadle, June Cheadle to
In the ice hockey finals, two third·
downed Fernando Dalla Fontanna 6-3,
Dana
C. Cheadle, June Cheadle,
6-1; Chris Kachel beat Rick Meyer W, period goals by Ken Morrow and two Parcels, Scipio.
6-1, 6-4; Fred McNair beat Bruce goals by Craig Homola enabled Great
Nichols 6-3, 6-4; and Jay Lapidus Lakes to defeat Midwest 4-2 for the
scored a 7-6, 7-2, 6-1 victory over Gene championship.
In the consolation, Scott Lecy
ORCHESTRA GRANTS
Malin.
WASHINGTON (AP) - A total of
SAN DIEGO (AP) - Unseeded scored two goals and had an assist and,
Anne Smith moved into the Dave Christian recorded one goal and $10.8 milllon in grants to benefit symquarterfinals of' a $75,000 tournament two assists as the Central team phony orchestras throughout the
with a 6-3, W, 6-2 victory over Laura outscored New England 7.4 for the country has been announced by the
National Endowment for the Arts.
bronze medal.
DuPont.
BOWLING
The 121 grants are for the support of
Joining Smith in the quarterfinals
HOUSTON (AP) - - Veteran ·left- orchestras during the 197~ perwas Ann Kiyomura, who won in
straight sets 11.-2, 6-2, over Sharon bander Dave Davis took the lead of a formance season.
PBA tournament for the first time this
Uvlngston L. Biddle Jr., chairman
Walsh.
year
,
averaging
244
in
his
opening
six
of
the endowment, says ''the year's
GOLF
funding is an increase of $1.6 million
PHOENIX (AP ) -- Tom Sieckma'hn games at the Houston Open.
Davis put 25 pins between him and over that awarded last year by the
carded a !our-under-par 68 for a 131
total and the half-way lead in the Paul Moser, scoring 1,469 against Music Program's orchestra
$«,000 National Golfers of America · Moser 's 1,444 . Davis tossed individual category."
scores of 24!i, 258, 257, 238, 247 and 224.
tournament .
SieC.::mann, 13 under par for 36 Cliff McNealy rolled 1,403 to claim
holes, picked up a stroke on John th ird place.
Stark, who shot a 69 after an openinground 64 . Tied at 133 were Scott
COSTUMES AND TEXTILES
Watkins and Larry Collins. Collins
PROVIDENCE,
R. I. (AP) had the best second round -- a 63, and
Costwnes,
textiles
and accessories
Watkins shot 65.
WIDTNEYSHOW
suggested
by
a
selection
of paintings,
BASKETBAlL
NEW YORK (AP) - An exhibition graphics, furniture and decorative arNEW ORLEMS (AP ) -· The state of paintings, sculptures, photographs
court order h&lt;&gt;.:ting the New Orleans and works on paper acquired by the ts in the Musewn of Art, Rhode Island
Jazz move to Salt Lake City was Whitney Musewn of American Art School of Design, are being exhibited
dissolved by a judge wt10 ruled that during the past nine years is on view through Sept. 16.
The musewn says, "Displays
the move could not be prevented.
through Sept. 2.
ranging
from a corset worn in 1762 to
The ~ge ruling by Civil District
"The Decade in Review: Selections a pair rJ. jeans · worn yesterday
Judge Stephen Plotkin sa id the city from the 19715" conalsts of 79 works
and state had no grounds for entering by 70 artists. The musewn says this highlight this multifaceted display
the legal fight and that National represents about 30 percent ·of it.&gt; spanning 200 years of women's and
men's wear and accessories."
Basketball Association shoul~ not be a acqllisitions during the period.
By The Assoda ted Press
Here is the weekly Ohio fishing
repat as issued on Wednesday by the
Department of Natural Resources :
LAKE ERIE
Water temperature 77 degrees and
clear. White bass fishing is very good .
Fish the reefs of the western basin.
Use minnows or spinriers. Try Avon
Point and )lass Isl;md area . Walleye
fishing remains good however the fish
are moving east and north . !JJok for
deeper water at 40 feet or more. Fish
at 20 feet as they remain suspended.
Outlook good.
CENTRAL OHIO
BUCKEYE LAKE - Water
temperature .84 degrees and slightly
high. Some bluegills on red or wax
worms. Try the mouths of the bays
around vegetation. Channel catfish on
hard bottom. Use worms. Try Uebs
Island and where feeder streams
enter the lake. Outlook good .
ALUM CREEK
Water
temperature . 82 degrees and clear.
Some crappies 11.-20 feet on minnows
and jigs. Try around old bridges.
Walleye are 10-20 feet deep in the
lower basin. Try weighted spinners
tipped with nightcrawlers. Use
weighted crank baits. Outlook good.
KNOX LAKE -Water temperature
83 degrees and muddy. Bass on
surface lures around vegetation early
or late. Channel catfish on shrimp ,
chicken liver and nightcrawlers. Try
the edge of any deep water dropoffs
and the .sand or gravel base. Some
crappies on minnows around logs and
trees. Outlook good.
NORTHWEST OHIO
CLEAR FORK LAKE -- Water
temperature 78 degrees and clear.
Fish top.water lures at the edges of
weed beds early or late in the day for
bass. Muskie fishing is reported good.
Troll or cast large lures near any
weed beds. Large jointed plugs are
working best. Outlook good.
PLEASANT HILL Water
temperature 78 degrees and cloudy.
The south end of the lake continues to
produce walleye . Drift nightcrawlers
on weighted spinners at 10 feet. Bass
are coming from the north end around
stumps and fallen timber. Use surface
lures or dark colored plastic worms.
Outlook good.
CHARLES MILL LAKE - - Water
temperature 78 degrees and cloudy. A
good outlook for bass on spinner baits
and plastic worms. Try around any
weed beds near the marina. Crappies
on small minnows from the sand area.
Channel catfish are being caught by
shoreline fishermen after dark on
nightcrawlers and cut bait. Outlook
good.

Sports
briefs.

• •

games since then, the results have
been , well, smashing .
Knight, the man Cincinnati fans
hoped would take Pete Rose 's place,
has hit .524 ( 11-for-2:) in those five
games, with 15 runs batted in and
three home runs .
Three home runs is one more than
his combined total for 1977 and 1978
with the Reds.
·

Knight made in 1976 for the last month
of the minor league season. He
borrowed a 35-&lt;Junce bat from FOBter
and hit nine homers in the last month ·
of the season after hitting only one to
that point.
"The fans know George isn't In
there and they know somebody's got
to drive in the runs," said Knight, who
hit fifth in the order Wednesday. He
· has been hitting seventh most of the
year.
"I like to hit higher in the order
because it gives me a chance to knock
in a lot of guys. Hitting seventh a lot of
times I came up leading off the inning
or with nobody on," he said.
Jerry Narron powered home runs and
Knight, who three weeks ago had 26
the Yankees completed a three-game RBI, moved to third place 01) the team
sweep of Chicago, which has lost Wednesday with his 52nd, 53rd and
seven in a row. Don HOCMI, W, pitched 54th runs produced. He has 28 in his
seven innings of four-hit hall foc New last 18 games.
York after he learned 10 minutes
"I've never had a streak like It
before the game that scheduled before," he admitted .
starter Ed Figueroa had arm trouble.
Cincinnati scored eight times in the
Rangers 4, Tlgel'fl 3
first inning against the Dodgers,
Texas relief ace Jim Kern picked up thanks partly to a two-run double by
his 18th save with 21.:1 innings of Knight. Da 9e Concepcion hit two
hitless ball and struck out five. Steve singles for three. runs batted in, while
Comer, 1U, was the recipient of reserve catcher Vic Correll rapped a
Kern's help.
double to bring home two more.
"I like to pitch every other day,"
Because of injuries and assorted
says Kern, who has appeared in ~7 bruises, Foster, Ken Griffey, Joe
games for Texas this season and has a Morgan and JohMy Bench sat out the
1.:!4 ERA.
rubber game of the series.
MariDers 7, Angels I
Mike LaCoss picked up his lith win
Dan Meyer homered, doubled and in 15 decisions in a game delayed two
singled and drove in three runs for hours and 18 minutes at the start by
Seattle while Randy Stein, 1·1, pitched rain. He lasted six innings before
31.:1 innings of shutout relief. Meyer's giving way to Tom Hume, who pitched
homer was his 15th and Bill Stein also a strong final three.
connected for his fourth .
LaCoss warmed up twice before
finally getting to throw the first pitch
at 10:23 EDT. He said the delay
bothered him.
"I had already practically pitched
By The Associated Press
three innings before the game
FOOfBAU..
started," LaCoss said . "It seemed like
National Football League
I was in the fourth or fifth already
WS ANGELES RAMS-Waived after we had the big rirst inning."
free agents Ken Beckman of
Charlie Hough, making his third
Arizona State, punter, and Dwayne start of the season for the Dodgers,
Taggart of Los Angeles Southwest lasted only two-thirds of an inning. His
College, wide recever and kick earned-run averEge rose from 4.33 to
return
specialist . 5.33 after the eight.run barrage.
NEW
ENGLAND
Steve Garvey hit a solo !lome run
PATRIOTS--Announced that draft and an RBI double roc Los Angeles.
choice John Zamherlin of Pacific
Lutheran, left camp. Signed
veteran Doug Beaudoln, safety.
NEW YORK JETS-Waived free
RIVERDOWNS
agent Jim Boran of Columbia,
linebacker.
.
CINCINNATI (AP ) Uttle
SAN DIEGO CHARGERS--Waived
free agent Terry Magee of Mischief, carrying 114 pounds, has the
Nicholls
State,
punter. post position today in the $5,000
WASHINGTON.
REDSKINS- featured eighth race at River Downs.
The seven other entries are aU
Acquired two-year veteran Gary
Anderson, offensive lineman, on carrying 118 pounds.
Jungle Hemp, orith Homen&gt; Hidalgo
waivers from the New Orleans Saints.
Acquired four.year veteran Bi!l Bain, aboard, romped to a four-length
offensive tackle, on waivers from the victory Wednesday in the $4,800
featured ninth race .
New York Giants .
The winner paid $8.20, $4 and $3.40.
HOCKEY
Anderson's Pass was second, paying
Nailonal Hockey League
NEW YORK ISLANDERS--Named $3.40 and $4.20, and Time To Duel
llert Marshall, head coach, of returned $5 for third.
The 3-2 double of Squaw's Delight
their Indianapolis team of the
Central Hockey League. Named and Irritation returned 1272.80.
The crowd ol 5,045 bet $544,270.
James Devellano general manager of
the Indianapolis team .
TORONTO MAPLE
LEAFSToday's birthdays : Writer James
Named Joe Crozier head coach of
their New Brunswick team in the Baldwin is 55 years old. Actress
American
Hockey
League . Myrna Loy is H. Republican Senator
Central Hockey League
Paul Laxalt of Nevada is 57.
CINCINNATI STINGERS--Named
Ron Ryan executive vice president
Thought for today : I£ a woman likes
and general manager. Named AI
another
woman, she's cordial . I£ she
Karlander
head
coach.
doesn't
like
her , she's very cordial - COU.EGE
S.
Cobb,
American humorlat ,
Irvin
CCNY--Named Gus Naclerio head
1876-1944.
soccer
coach.

"I ordered me a dozen of those bats
today with my name on them," Knjght
said after three more of his RBI
helped Cincinnati beat Los Angeles 111·
5 Wednesday night.
The difference is three ounces.
Knight was using a 32-0unce black bat
before switching to Foster's 35·
ouncer .
Ironically, it' s the same switch

Orioles want to show Yanks

Meigs
Property
Transfers

lead second-place Boston by 7~
games, are 91': ahead of Milwaukee
and 14 in front of the two-time
defending World Champion Yankees.
The Orioles invade Yankee Stadium
Friday for a four~ame series.
AI Bumbry extended his hitting
streak to 13 games, opening the
contest with a single that spurred a
three-run Baltimore first inning off
Lary Sorensen. 12-11 . Dennis
Martinez, 14-11, coasted home with an
eight-hitter as the Orioles won for the
13th time in 15 games.
"It wasn't do or die, but it certainly
was crucial," said Bwnbry. " We

came here feeling we had to win two
out of three. Winning all three means
now we know we can beat
Milwaukee."
Milaukee beat the Yankees three
times over the weekend for a sweep of
their own but those victories had little
meaning following Baltimore's
devastation of the Brewers.
Rich Dauer added a solo homer for
Baltimore, which has a 72-34 record
and a .679 percentage. At their present
rate, the Orioles would win 110 games
this season.
In other AL games, Cleveland had
its 1(1.game victory string under
unbeaten Manager Dave Garcia
broken by Boston 7-4; Oakland
stopped Minnesota 7-1; Kansas City
nipped Toronto 4-3; New York
defeated Chicago 9-1; Texas edged
Detroit 4-3, and Seattle beat California
7.(,,

Red Sox 7, Indians 4
Jim Rice had a pair of two-run
homers, giving him the AL lead with
27 this season, and Dennis Eckersley,
13&lt;i, beat his former teammates on a
IIJ..hitter. The Red Sox thus salvaged
one game of the four-game series and
moved on to Milwaukee tonight.
The game was delayed 2 hours, 18
minutes by rain.
A's 7, Twins 1
The A's got their fourth consecutive
complete game and won for the fifth
time in the last seven contests. Rick
Langford pitched an eight-hitter for
his fifth route-going effort of the year.
Langford has been the victor in five of
the last 10 Oakland wins, dating back
to June 22.
"I might go into a state of shock
with statistics like that being thrown
at me," said Manager Jim Marshall.
"But we're using kids and some are
getting better. It would be an awfully
long winter ahead if they didn't."
·Royals 4, Blue Jayill
Kansas City got its sweep of a threegame set against Toronto as sorethumbed George Brett, designated
hitting instead of playing third base,
had two doubles and a single and
.
drove in a pair of runs.
Brett single&lt;\ home Willie Wilson in
the first, then snapped a 2-2 tie with an
RBI double in the fifth .
Yankees 9, White Sox I
· Reggie Jackson, Lou Piniella and

··•

,.
':·
•,
~

:..
"
:~

.,,
"
"
''

"

"
'
•

.,

By Greg &amp;iley
Tuesday night the Wilkesville
Twins captured the Middleport Pony
League Tournament with an easy 1~1
win over the Pomeroy Royals.
D. Payton went the ·distance to
. pickup the win, fanning twelve and
walking six. AIOI18 the way, he allowed the Royals no hits in the seven inn·
lnp.
Oney led the hitting with two singles
while Garnes socked a triple. Payton,
B. Norria, and Bill Norris each had
one single.
Chris Allen took thel08S. Allen and
Randy Stewart fanned twelve and
walked thirteen while giving up six
hits.
.
Llnescore :
JW.
30t 001 2-10 4 0
P.
100 000 6- I 0 9
In game No. 1 of the tourney, the
Royals won out over Rutland :t-1 as
Allen tossed a two-hitter while strik·
lng out eleven and walking just two.
M. Edwards took the 10811.
The only Rutland hits were a homer
by M. Wilford and a double by M.
Spangler, Stewart socked a triple for
one of Pomeroy 's two hits .
i.lnescore :
P.
120 010 1~ 2 0
R.
001 000 0- 1 2 4
In game No . 2, Payton t(I(ISed a
three-hit shutout as Wilkfl!!ville got by
Middleport 5-0. Payton fanned a big
rlfteenand.walkedjusttwo.
Oney socked a single and triple for

'

Sports World
By Will Grimsley AP Correspondent

Sam Snead is 67. He still draws a
gallery on the practice tee. Young
golfers still stop and watch him swing
- a study in pure poetry. Crowds
applaud when he rams home a putt
with that c razy~ooking sidesaddle
stance of his. A couple of weeks ago in
the Quad Cities Open , Sam shot a 66
and 67, becoming the first ever to
match his age in a PGA event.
'l'oday he tees it up in his 37th PGA
Championship. He played in his first
in 1937 as a raw rookie. He won three
and came close in many others. Next
year his career will have spannecl six
decades.
·
He is a physical marvel, still able to
kick the casement or a door.
." I'm still too heavy ," the youngish·
looking veteran says, patting an
expanding' wai'&gt;(line. "I'm about 203,
should be around 165. U I'd kept my
weight down, I could ha ve won five
tournaments last year.
"I'm going home and oare off some

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are.

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Sale Price u.u to s10.00

San Francisco at Los Ang eles

Indian marathon set
COLUMBUS - The first annual, ,.first, second and third place men and
Hocking Hnls Indian Marathon will · women in nwnerous age categories.
be held Sept. 14-16 a.t Hocking Hills 1 The runner posting the best overall
State Park in Hocking County.
time for the race will be awarded
The marathon event, which will • "The Buckeye Trophy". Four
begin at 10 a.m. daily at the Hocking runners-up will also receive trophies.
Hills Dining Lodge, is sponsored by All participants finishing the race will
the Ohio Department or Natural receive mementos.
Resources' (ODNR) Division rJ.
Entry fee for the race is $5. ParParks and Recreation in cooperation ticipants should register in advance
with the Logan Kiwania. The race has so that they can be notified or their
been sanctioned by the Ohio Amateur running day prior to the race. Late en·
Athletic Union (AAU).
tries will be accepted before 10 a.m.
Participants will race 211,000 meters the day of the race, but an additional
(12.4 miles) over very hilly terrain, $21ate entry fee will be charged.
Marathon registration fonns may .
creeks and trails used by the Indians
in the Hocking Hills area.
be obtained by contacting the DiviRunners will compete against the sion rJ. Parks and Recreation, Hock·
clock and will run in small groups ing Hills Indian Marathon, P.O. Box
started at various intervals 20020, State Route 664 South, Logan
throughout the day.
43138orphone (614)~~ .
Awards will be presented to the
Hocking Hills State Park is located
12 miles southwest of Logan off State
Routes 664 and 374.
of this lard. I can lose !5 pounds in
three weeks just by skipping stuff
made of white flour and white sugar."
Snead has 84 tour victories. That's
18 more than Jack Nicklaus has won
and 23 more than Arnold Palmu.
" I'm not sure Jack is going to catch
me," the Virginian drawls, "Not if he
culs down on his schedule. When you
get older, you cut corners. I heard
somebody say the other day that Jack
doesn 't concentrate, doesn't grind it

SIDEWALK
SALE

Sam played with stars of ttie Bob
Jones era - - Gene SarazeQ, Tommy
Armour , Henry Picard and Harry·
Cooper - - joined Hogan in dominating
the 1950s, moved easily through the
days of Arnie's Army and continued
as a top gallery attraction with the
emergence of Nicklaus, Tom Watson
and the game's new breed.

ITEMS FROM ALL
DEPARTMENTS
UP TO

Gary Edwards, manager of the Ex·
ecutive Golf Course, Nelsonville, an·
nounces that the first annual Senior
Citizens Golf Tournament will be held
at the course Aug. 11 and 12. There
will be large trophies plus money
awards to the top 6 golfers; for more
infonnation call (614) 753-2756 or
write : Executive Golf Course, Rt. 1,
Nelsonville,Ohio 45764.

\

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Sale Price S4.99 to S7.50

ITEMS TOO

LEG LEVI'S

San Diego at Cincinnati

Atlanta at Houston

CINCINNATI (AP)
Ted
Kluszewskl, special batting instructor
for the Cincinnati Reds, predicts that
Dave Collins can do even bigger
things at the plate than he's shown In
recent games.
Going into Wednesday night's
game, the Cincinnati Reds_outfielder
was hitting .337 and since the AU..Star
break had nine runs batted in and·had
scored 12 runs.
"He has always worked hard,"
Kluszewskl said. "It's not just a
matter of it happening all of a sudden.
He's becoming less anxious at the
plate and he is selecting his pitches to
hit. I think that just c&lt;XI!es from
getting a chance to play every day.
" If he just maintains what he's done
so far, that's about as much as anyone
could ever expect of him . When you're
hitting .330 or .:!40, that's not bad."
Collins, who has been starting in the
ouUield because of injuries to left
fielder G~rge Foster and right
fielder Ken Griffey, says he still has a
way to go to reach his peak.
·
"Now I feel more comfortable,"
Collins said. "I'm 26 and I know that
in about three or four years, I'll be in
my prime .~ '
Collins is not surprised by his recent
accomplishments at the plate.
"Some one asked me earlier in the
year what I thought I could do if I
played regularly and I told him I
would hit over .300," Collins said.
Playing regularly hasn't given
Collins any extra incentive, he said.
"I gave 110 percent when I was
pinch-hitting and I'm giving 110
percent right now ..That's the only way
I know how to play," he said.
Collins last season became the
team 's top pinch-hitter, collecting 14
hits.
"It was a difficult adjustment
period," Collins said. "I was coming
to a new league and it took me a while
to get adjusted to the different
pitchers."
Collins hopes that when Griffey and
Foster return full time, he will find a
place to play.
"I might be able to play the other
outfield position, first base ... there
aren't that many spots open to me
since I'm left.lianded," he said. "I
hope I can play somewhere."

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FridaY.' I Games

St_.Louis at Chicago
Philadelphia at Pittsburgh
New York at Montreal

Odd Lot Men's

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V~lues

Philadelphia (Lerch 6·1) and Sucler
at New York !Falcone 2-7 and
Hassler 3-2) .
St. Louis (Fulgham 3-3) at Pitt·
sburgh (Rooker 2·5).
San Diego (Perry 0·6) at Atlanta
(BriZZolara 5·61 .
&lt;Only games scheduled)
1-0 )

NUMEROUS
TO MENTION

REG. '17 . 50

METAL CAMPFIRE

TOASTERS
SALE

REG. '1.99

PICNIC
BASKET

SALE

REG. '10.99

CHAIR
WEBBING
17 FT. REG. 55'

65"
40"

$100
$899

SALE

35¢

SWIM POOLS
REG. 111.99
REG. '3.39

n Cherokee
Gallipolis,

7

u v:z

EVENT SLATED

MANY OTHER

SALE '8.99

SALE '2.00

STYROFOAM
JUGS
SALE

REG. '2.19

CHAIR
WEBBING
38 FT.

2 GAL

REG. '1.00

$}19

SALE

W. MAIN or W.

o,

•.

D

THERMOS BOmE
REG. 2.59 8 oz. SALE
1

POMEROY

..

•

89~

SWIM FINS
"h PRICE

MOORE'S

JaDwroteJbc..bookon 4-whnl!ldwc!
Manv 6 Cylinder Engines Available in CJ's, Cherokees &amp;-Trucks
RIVERSIDE AM~ 6 JEEP ·
446·9.100

~·h

s7.00

SIDEWALK SALES SPECIAL

We have rec:elved our en11re allocation

195 Upper River Road

Odd Lot Men's

Reg. $55.00 lo S95.00
Sale Price S27.50 to 547.50

Values to 18.50

individual
as you

~

out any •more."

FRI., SAT. &amp; MON., AUG. 3, 4 &amp; 6

s2.00

1

AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST
W. L. Pet. GB
70 34 .679
Baltimore
Boston
63 ~ .612 7lf2
Milwaukee
63 « .589 91f2
New YOrk
58 48 .547 14
Detroit
53 51 .510 18
Cleveland
53 53 .500 19
Toronto
32 75 .299 ol0 112
WEST
Callfornfa
61 47 .565
Texas
S6 49 .533 3lf•
Minnesota
55 49 .529 4
Kansas City
53 52 .505 6lf2
Chicago
.441 60 .434 14
Seattle
46 63 .422 15 1/ 2
Oakiand
31 77 .287 30
Wednesday's Games
Oakland 7, Minnesota 1
Boston 7, Cleveland •
Baltimore 5, Milwaukee 2
New York 9, Chicago 1
Kansas City 4, Toronto 3
Texas A, Detroit J
Seattle 7, California 6
Thursday's Game
Boston (Torrez 11-6) at Milwaukee
(Travers 9 -~) .
(Only game scheduled)
Friday's Games
Kanas City at Detroit
Chicago at Toronto
Texas at Cleveland .
Baltimore at New York
Boston at Milwaukee
Cal i"tornla at Minnesota
Oakland at Seattle

BEN FRANKLIN

SIDEWALK

MEN'S TIES

Three rugged wagons
that areas

Fairway in the Sky.
Only ageless, indestructible Sam
Snead carries on .
"My caddie, Jimmy Steed, got on
me the other day," the sweetswinging hillbilly from Hot Springs,
Va ., said. "He told me, 'Mr. Sam, you
done gone through five bunches. How
many more bunches you airri to go
through ?'
"I didn't have an answer. Fact is , if
I can lose 15 pounds and train myself
into better condition, there 's no
reason I still can't win a tournament
on the tour. I would tike to win one
more before the Man Upstairs calls
me hom e."

ALL

Reg . SIO.SO to $15.00
Sole Price SS.2S to 17 ..50
Sizes w;, to 11•12

GB

(Sanderuon 6·6) .

BIRMINGHAM, Mich. (AP ) -- Ben
Hogan is wet.nursing his golf club
factory in Fort Worth . Byron Nelson is
master of a catOe ranch in Roanoke,
Texas , doing some informal
instruction on the side . Jimmy
Demaret, his hair snow white is
running a golf course in Houston ~ith
old buddy Jack Burke Jr. Uoyd
Mangrum, Vic Ghezzi and other old
golfing buddies have gone to the

REDUCTIONS

Reg. price $100.00 to 12-45.00.
Sal.• Prict 150.00 to 1122.50

NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST
W. L. Pet,
Montral
58 ~3 .574
Pittsburgh
58 -45 .563
Chicago
5~ ~7 .535
Philadelphia
55 ~9 .529
St. Louis
51 50 .505
New York
43 57 ..qo
WEST
Houston
· S6 ~7 .569
Cincinnati
59 ~1 .536
San Francisco
52 S6 .&gt;481
San Diego
~9 60 .-450
LOS Angeles
-45 62 .421
Atlanta
« 63 . ~11
weanesday•s Games
Philadelphia 9, New York 6
Montral 7, Chicago 5, 12 Innings
Pittsburgh~. St. Louis 3
Atlanta s, San Diego 4
Cincinnati 10, Los Angeles 5
Houston 5, San Francisco 4

SUMMER STOCK
,

Robbie Smith and Jewett did the
pitching ,for the lc~~.rs, rannlng nine
and walking eleven. Eastern outhit
the Twins 10-2. Leading the Eastern
attack was Jewett with three singles
and R. Gaul with three hits in five
trips. M. Bissell and J. Beaver each
had two singles, and Smith had a dou·
ble and single.
Payton had the only two TWin hits,
both singles.
Unescore:
E.
311 002 0- 7 10 4
w.
100 010 6--8 2 5

Today's

y

Sports transactions

JEER CHEROKEE

the Twins while Garnes got a triple
1111d double. Coen had a single.
Terry Wayland, Jefr Wayland, and
D. Demosky each had 11 single for the
only Middleport hits. Demosky took_
the 1068 and teamed with J. Wayland
tofannlneandwalkfour.
Unescore :
W.
230 000 0-5
000 000 0--11 .
M.
In the semifinal game, Wilkesville
plated si.I runs in the bottom fo the
last inning to take a·thrilling 8-7 victory over Eastern. Payton got the win
in relief and teamed with J . Lowe to
IN! eleven and walk four.

Collins
: :I• •
~ ,__:_._:_J
improved
BASEBALL SCOREBOARD hitter. ••
-:::-1 ...
;·; I • •

$175

�7-tbeOallySentlnel, Mlddleport·Pomeroy,O., ThW'Iday,Aug. 2,1979

SIDE WALK SALE

S.HIRTS

DOUBLEKNIT FABRIC

vaiues to $9.00 men's short sleeve knit and
cut &amp; sew sport shirts. Famous brands.

$}00

Stock ~P now.

$

By Marte Bobbl
Buckeye l'nmm•nlty Services Ia cl·
• ~ ..wied ln bome joiJI to lib: to
.. ellbt famiiiM or lndlvlduala In Meigs
County to become Heme Services
· Worker~.
.. "What is a Home Services
Wcder?" . A penon employed by
B.C.S., wbo )lrOvidlll 1 8polllorinc
;;Home far one to three developmenta)ly c!JMNed l"'kkente Is entitled I
" Home Services Worker.
~ ·~ Is Buckeye Conlmunity Ser·
·vices?" B.C.S. II a private nan profit
:: qency wlacb wu 1r1co1 JIOiilted 1n
" June lrr7•. The agency provicle811118))
residential alternatlvu to
~ dilabled )lei'IOIIIln

00
EA .

YARD

in-home jobs available

'

STIFFLER SIDE WALK SALE
VALUES TOS7.00AND $8.00 ASST. STYLES
MEN'S SHORT SLEEVE

CUT FROM FULL BOLTS
SOLIDS AND FANCY

Beau tiful sol id or fancy polyester
doubleknn fabrics . Cut from full bolts. Buy
now and dOUble your Slivlngs!

~Salaried
•

.. elcb&amp; !Jou+hea"em Oblo countlea cl
•wblch Mel&amp;ulld Gl1lla are Included.
~Molt rwic!enla receivinl the
rl. ~ Hcmea ate lldult. who

lel'vlees

Home Services Worters receive five

dbllan (•5.00) per day for room and
board. There Is a11o Blue Crou and
Blue Shield health coverage

available.
AD relldellt.t are lnvCilved In day
)ll'OIP'aiJUill oulalde ol the home for
which trlnlportatlon II provided.
"What are the job quallficaUOIII?"
Genuine 1nt.ere1t and abl)lty to In·
elude I meatally reW'ded person In
your home and family life.
AbiUty to teach dally Dvinc aldlll
IUCb as cooklnB, cleanlrw, and money

POINT PLEASANT AND POMEROY STORES

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY AUGUST JRD AN

mwllty Services, 1111 Eut Main St.,
Jackaoll, Oh., 41i640, 614-21J11.6030; or,
call Gallco, Olesblre, Ohio, 367~102
and leave a meuage for Marie B.
Hobbs, Procram Coordinator; or,
A surprise party was held recently
Ttz'RIItl for Mrll. Robbe may be honori!1(1 Mr. and Mrs. Harold E.
received by Chrla t.yh, Superlnten· Smith Clll their 21st wedding anniver.
dent ol Melp County Board rl. Mental sary. 1be )lllrty was held at the Smith
RetardatlCIII, Court HOUle, Pomeroy, home with all rl. their chlldren attenOl!lo.~.

Middleport

manas-t.

Home Services Worten may IJlPIY
for Jd8her ..wied )iolltlOIIIInvolvlnB
t..cblnc aelf help skllllsucb 81 dress-

Personal Notes

ding.
A three tiered cake was decorated
In yellow, blue. and pink and topped
:&gt;: with a miniature bride and groom. It

l §r£~~
Attending were the . couple's sons
and their families, Mr. and MrB.
Charles Smith, Mr. and Mrl. Rick
Smith and sons, Ricky and Randy,
their daughter and 800-ln.Jaw, Mr.
and Mrs: John (Debbie) pavidson
and daughters, Tina, Cindy and Kelly.
Also at the party were Mike &amp;nlth,
MliJsy, Mandy and Jason Hubltafd.

lng, eatlnll, and byglene bablll.
Mr. and Mrs. Ron Evans and
Cap~~biUty to 8lliat relldeQt(a) In chlldren of Collumblls were tecent
IJII1dnl and lteeplns medical or visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Ed Evans
therapy IIIPQintmenta.
and Mr. and Mrs. Richard Pickens.
Will)ngnea to attend prHervlce A1ao visiting here baa been Brenda
• and ln&amp;rvlce 1ra1n1nc aeaslma.
Hauck, daughter ol Mr. and Mrs. Jan
Active Involvement In required Hauck, Colwnbus.
weekly Network Meetlnp with other
Mrs. Edward Smith spent the
HOllie Services Worten In yoilr coun- weekend here willt her parents, Mr.
ty.
and Mrs. Arnold Richards. She came

• .~lived In llrge state lnatlluB.C.S. II IIIIo •• H:C families
for menially reW'ded childnn
· but tbere are iMa cblldren available
for Melp CGunty bome plw-nenU:
''Wbat are the job beneflll!" Heme
Services wqrbra are ll1uted acHonoebokl must )IIIII DCt!llllng
c:ordlns to the llllOUilt ol time deter- criteria ol the State rl. Oblo.
mined lleC ""Y to teach ll1dlls to the ·
For applicatl0111 and further In·
lWident (1). In additlCIII to I aalary, formatlCIII, CCIIItad: Buckeye Qm.

·u-.

OPEN
9 AM

.

Sending gifts and cardl were Mr.
and Mrs. Clair Might, Mrl. Irene Ken·
nedy, and Mrs. Wanda Wllllams.
Mrs. Smith received a telepbone
call from ber mother, Mrs. Ellzabeth
Johnson, Columbus, and her brother,

especially for her daughter, ~en­
da, anc! a friend, Faye Narman, who
have spent the put two weeks here
with Mr. and Mrs. Richards. .

Jack Johnson,n., Columbus.
SALE
SIDE WALl( DAYS
LADIES
SEAMLESS STRETCH

SALE GROUP MISSES

SPRING AND SUMMER

DRESSES

PANTY HOSE

Colossal savings for you! Sale group of
misses spring and summer dresses and
pant suits in the season's best styles,
colors and patterns.

25¢

~2

PR.

OFF

Holler Medleal Ceater
Dlldlutea, Aq.

SPECIAL GROUP
LADIES' FANCY &amp; PLAIN

KNIT FASHION
TOPS

cer, Emma Morris, Pbyllla
Mulholland, Freda Ray, Allee Rolle,
Evelyn Sider, Unda Stewart, Anna

ASTRO·GRAPH

SPECIAL SALE GROUP
CHILDREN'S NAME BRAND
SPRING &amp; SUMMER

VAL. TO $7.99 &amp; $5.99
SPECLI!.L PURCHASE
Ladles• Spring and Summer

SPORTSWEAR

'IUILT IN 1177- Completely restored
brick stately home on Mulberry Ave. In POI.,.,..,·ov.
They lust don't build them like this anymore .
lral lleotand oir conditioning . You've got to'"
home to appreciote . Call for appoitment . - .$48.000.

SPORTSWEAR

Special Sidewalk Sale group of
children's better sportswea r. of all
kinds . Save one-half now at Stif·

Values to S7.99 &amp; S5.99. Spec ial pur ·
chase of ladies ' spring and summer
sportswear. Save over 50 Pet now.

fler•s .

OFF
REGULAR
-PRICE

FOOTWEAR
Select from famous brnds. Sandals, casuals and
dress types. All new spring and summer styles. Stif·
tier's Sidewalk Sale!

STIFFLER'S Sl DE WALK SALE

Graoll . P.O. Boa 4H. Radio City
Station. N.'.' . 10011. Be aura to
apeclfy blnh d1te .
VIAOO (AUIJ. lJ4epl. U) Thlo
111 moat fortun1te.d1y to bring
10 1 conclutlon any m1ttera
you may w i ah to wr~o up and
be done with . Things are now
going your way .

Fl NAL CLEARANCE LOT-' ADI ES'
SPRING AND SUMMER STYLE

FOOTWEAR

LIIAA llopt.

U•Oet. II)
Frlencll you get lnvol .. ed with

today will prove to be extremely lucky for rou . and you
for them . KHp Aegatl,.ltm un·
cler wrept, however.

Odd lots, samples, broken sizes and discontinued
styles make up this special Sidewalk 'Sale group.
Final clearance! Save now!

OFF
REGULAR
PRICE

ICOAI'IO (Oct. 14-No•. Ill
Olmt FOf1unt hU t ingled you
out today to be the recipient of
.ner very epeclal favora . and
they won't be enythlng email.
L.ueky you I

IAOinAAJUI (N... IJ.Doe.
t1) You' re holding all the tight
c.ard1 today. The only problem :

STIFFLER'S SIDEWALK SALE

STIFFLER'S 51 DEWALK SALE

VALUES TO 5.99
SPECIAL GROUP LADIES'

VAWES TO 1.79

You tither don 't lmow it , or
tlte you may not utt them . Be
aggrttaive and optlm lallc In all
your endeavor• .
CAPRICORN (Doe. II.Jan. tt)
lt' a imponant to remain posl·
live In your thinking todly .
Other~ are backing you all the

1

1

ASSORTED LOT

POLYESTER-COTTON

SUMMER WEIGHT SLACKS
Out they go!
sale seleclton

Clearance
of l~dies'
polyester and cotton. sum·
mer weight slacks 1nyour
choice of fashion colors.

HOUSEHOLD PLASTICS,

FIRST QUALITY
LADIES'

25¢

ReKNEE HI HOSE
g , 4Yc Val

summers,

ue, new

~uty. s~g~z· ''rst

WotO: SSIIffler •s s ·Up
"' ale.

10e

STIFFLER'S SIDEWALK SALE

STIFFLER'S SIDEWALK SALE

20x40 SOLID COLORS

MEN'S POPULAR STRIPE TOP

PAIR

A good selection Of gOOd
qual ity shag and
loop
decorator throw rugs in
assorfed colors . Shop early
for besf selection .

Men 's white stripe top tube
socks. CHoice of 18 Inch or
22 inch over the calf sfyle.

Regular $1 .00 to $1.25. First

quality!

STIFFLER'S SIDEWALK SALE

CLEAN UP GROUP

slock. 1~2 ROEGFULAFR

ladles summer handbags.
save SO% now . Yes, you

saveat Stiffler 's

Education,

77,!.

T buill
bedrooms, JY:o beth, hardWood floors, out of
water. Priced to sell $19,500.00.
11.1 ACRiiS $15,750.00.

STIFFLER'S SIDEWALK SALE

PRICE

BIG REDUctiON
25 ACRES . 146,800
Extra nice, 2 bedroom,

country house, 1 floor,

large living room , IOV@ ·

ly built-In kitchen, utili ·
ty room, forced llr heat,
lots of shade trees, 5
acres tillable, beautiful
selling, 1 mile from
Chester off Rl. 7 on Twp.
Rd . 25. 6 miles from
Pomeroy .

c.u

Bill or Rult! st-•rt
374· 7311

Marlen•, Ohio

Large 22'x42" size blended
Slight Irregulars. Stock up
for beach and pool use I

'ACRES ON ST. RT.1U-JUSIS10,000.
IUILOINQ LOTS In new addition on Rt. 7 ot Five
Polnl1 - 1 acre lot - ss.ooo.oo.

$1~

DOWNING • CHILDS
RODNEY, BROKER

BILL, BR. MGR.

Phone 992·2342
Eve. 992-2449
.,

,.

,,

.

.. ·.'

and

Welfare

1nd

AIR
CONDITIONER

Beautiful building

' 114 ACRES - On DeMler Rood In Meigs County.
This farm has II all - hills, flat land, slreoms, all
minerals. 5625.00 per acre.

BATH TOWELS
cotton terry bath towels.
Solid, colors and stripes.

3
gl!

St. Rt. 124 Just 3 miles from town.

11 ACRES IN POMEROY sites. $22,000.00.

REG. 11.59 SOLID AND STRIPE ·

HANDBAGS
Clean up lot from our

COUNTRY LIVING without a lot of ground 10 t•ke
c•re of. ~acre lot -l'h story hQme Just live miles
from town on Hysell Run. 3 bedr.o oms, both, living
room, dining room, family room with large WOOd·
burning flrolace . Peaceful . 525,000. ·

LIMITED QUANTITY TO SELL

LADIES' SUMMER STYLE

STROUT REALTY.

TUBE SOCKS

$100
EACH

AREA RUGS

RfG. 49' VALUE

(N(WSPAPfR ENfEAPRISE ASSN .)

-•ted loc•ily by the Qollla·
Melts Community Action Agen·
cy, •n EqUII Opportunity
Employer.

Walk Lot.

walk Sale. Out they go!

SIDEWALK SALE

offered you today. These pro·
poult stand a chance of fun h·
erlng your ambition a more than
you reaHze.

WHITE REG. 11.25 VALUE

Values to 51.79, assorted

grOup of household plastic.
Save 79a now. Special Side

DECORATIVE LOOP &amp; SHAG

Don' t treat with Indifference or
eomQiac ency any propoaitlona

The O•III•·Melgs Community
Action A. .ncy'l HNd Stort Progrim Is •cceptlng •PPIICitlons
for 11M poslllltlll ot Homo THeiler
In 11M Mtlgs COIInfy Htld Slort
PI'OIIr•m. The position rOQIIIres •
high school diploma or
oqulvalont. ud preferebly ••·
porlonce with pre-school
chilclron. Appllc•tlons will be •c·
cepted through Wedntsdoy,
Aueust 1, 1"'· end ore •volloble
•t the C.A.A. Offices In Cheshire
and 11M Molgs County CourIIIGuso. For more lnformotlon,
&lt;•II m -7000. HHd St•rt II funded
by the Oeportment of HHtth,

Hurry to Stiffler's Side

STifFLER'S

1be open church wedding of VIcki
Grate, daushter ol Mr. and Mrs. Her·
Blrtlll, Aq. l
man Grate, Rutland, and Tom FerMr. and Mrs. Loren Cox, son,
rell, son of Mr. and Mrs. Bob Ferrell,
Crown City.
will be held Saturday at 6:30p.m. at
the
Rutland Nazarene Church.
Flldly , AUIJ . 3
way . You 'll probably know of It
The
double-ring ceremony wiD be
by late this evening .
AQUARIUS (Jan. ZO.Fob. 11) performed by the Rev. Herbert
Better get your party clothes
Grate. Chris Johnson will be the
Bernice ~ede Osol out and be ready for a !un-filled matron cl honor and the other atlen·
evening with the g1ng . Tl"lere·s
dants will be Deanna Denney'
li111e chance you ' ll be sitting
home alone tonight .
Rutland; Sherr! Darst, Pomeroy;
PISCES (Fob. IO.Marcl! ZO) Gloria Grate, New Haven, and Jodi
Ch1nces are that big raisE' or
George, Columbus, who wiD be a
promotion you've been hoping
lor may co me th rough today .
junior attendant.
Someone Is about to reward
Mike LaMaster of Charleston wiD
you lor a job well done.
·
be
the best man. Uahen will be Bill
AUIJ. I, 11!t
ARIES (March 21·Aprtl11) A l un
even ing is in sto re lor you . The
Thia coming year offer a a cycle
Strong, Columbus; Jam Bayea,
only frustrations you may teet
ol much popul.lrltv and aoclal
Charleston; John Grate, New Haven,
acceptance. Look ·tor .other
today will be in trying to get
and B. G. Meadows, Charleston.
Leoa. llbrans . .,quarians and
your re5ponsibilities cut ol th e
S.glltarlana to be especially
way early .
AarCIII Grate wiD be the ring ,bearer
fottunale for ygu .
TAURUS (APflt ZO.May !D) It' &gt;to and Jodi Grate, the flower glrl.
LEO (July fS.AUIJ . lZI Lady your ad,.l ntaQe to spend !his
Organists wiD be Jane Wise and
diY with you r fam il y . or those
Luck Ia hanging her hartnhoe
Beverly Grate. Janice Grimm and
who you feel are closest to
over your doorway toda'y . hal~
your heart. Somethin g good is
lng you to lurther your peraonal
Mrl. Wille wiD be the soloists. Laura
brewing .
llllbltlona. This does not In·
GEMINI (Moy !1.Juno !DI By all Heacht rl. Buffalo, W.Va. will register
elude wlld gambling. Olacover
the guests. •
means make this • day to
with whom yoU beat Qll along
negotiate or to dr1w up l hlt
romanlfcally by aending for
The reception will be held lm·
aoreement so lmportal'll lo you .
you:- new AatrcHlraph letter
mediately
followlns the w~ at ...
Victory
Ia
yours
for
the
uklng
.
wh ich beOina wllh your birth·
the
Rutland
United MethodiSt Church
CANCER
(Juno
li·July
!!)
ctey. Mall 11' for each to Aatro-

aon, Willlam Wells.

REGULAR
PRICE

STIFFLER'S SI.DEWALK SALE
SPECIAL ALE SELECTION
LADIES'S SPRING and SUMMER

Mr. and Mrs. Harold Smith

Summer, Pbyllia Triplett, Jane Vln·

Values to $5 .99 . Special group
ladies• summer knit tops. See .
these and stockup now.

-STIFFLER'S SIDEWALK SALE -

Reg, J9c Value 2'5
10091. po1
• • Yds.
and Cl Vester Coats
Stock up ~~s thread.

Wedding
plans told

Barbara Blankenahlp, Anna
Carroll, Earl Davenport, Lawrence
Greer, Greg HaJJ, Lottie mvely, Anna
James, Edith McMillan, Froud Mer-

CLOSEOUT
AS LOW
AS

Elliott Appliance II
220 E. MAIN

POMEROY, 0.

FRI.
&amp;

AUG.
3-4

SAT.
1 GROUP

1 GROUP

LADIES'
SHOES

:::~
:!·

PR.

OR

•2.00

2

FOR

*7.00

1 GROUP

LADIES' SHOES
VALUES TO '20.00

'6.99

aoclal room.

=n,, , ,,, , ,, , , , , P
,. , , ,o,,, ,m
, , , ., e
' ' 'r''o
'"".y, , ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,r:

'4.00

PR.

GROUP MEN'S.SHOES

·.·. i.',

Personal Notes

·\i

Mrs. Peuy Nixon of New
Straitsville was the weekend guest rl.
Mr. and Mrl. Ralph .Webb, Racine.
Patty Foster of Livonia, Mich.
spent the past two week.tJ here with
her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Webb. She accompanled them
to Grove City on Sunday to attend the
1968 Grand Family reunloo.

tiTII ANNIVERSARY
OBSERVED SUNDAY
Mr. and Mrs. GU)' A. Ru&amp;!ell, Rt. 1,
Middleport, wiD obl!erve their 40th
wedding anniversary with an open
houiJe at the Riverboat Room at the
Athena County Savings and Loan, W.
Main St., Pomeroy, from 2 to 5 p.m.
Sunday.

WEYENBURG VALUES TO '30.00

'10.99
BOYS'

. CONVERSE
TENNIS SHOES

PR.

GROUP CHILDREN
TENNIS SHOES

'3.00

'• .
•

'
PR.

MARGUERITE'S SHOES
102 E. MAIN

POMEROY, OHIO

~--------------~~ '~

'

�&amp;-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Aug. 2, 1979
9--Tho fllillvSentlriel,Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thunday, Aug. 2,1979

95 classes o domestic arts at Fair
Everything from needlecraft to
ceramics Is included In the 95 classes
ci. the domestic arts department for
edliblt by Meiss Countians at the
116th annual Meiss County Fair to be
staged on the Rock Springs
Falrgroungs, Aug. 14-18.
Mrs. Addalou Lewis Is superinten·
dent of the department with Mrs.
Margaret Ella Lewis as general
chainnan. As in previous years, any
article which was awarded a
premiwn in the past two years Is not

eligible for entry. Deadline for entries
to be made at the fair board office on
the fairgrounds Is 4 p.m. on Friday,
Aug. 10. Exhibitors are pennltted no
more than one entry in each class.
Ribbons and premiwns will be
awarded in three places with the
premiums ranging from $2.75 to 75
cents.
Mrs. Suzy Carpenter will judge the
clothing entries, while Mrs. Helen
Williams will judge the needlework
and crafts. The Senior Citizens RSVP

members will assist as judge's clerks.
They will include Kate Jarrell, Louise
Hall, Esta David, Grace Turner, and
Clara Thomas.
Pat Wolfe, Marilyn Spencer, Shelia
Taylor, and Janet Koblentz will assist
in displaying the articles once the
judging has been completed. Other
assistance is needed with the work
and volunteers are invited to
telephone either the superintendent

Meigs 4-H Clubs
The Eastern Meiss 4-H Cub met Ju.
ly 12 at the Barton residence with 18
members and I advisor In atten·
dance. The club discussed the project
judglnss and decided not to have a
bake aale. Red Rover was enjoyed by
the club for recreation. Refreshments
were served by Mrs. Barton and
Joyce Ritchie. The next meeting will
be July 19 at the Ritchie residence.S
Usa Collins, reporter
The KallcoKlttens 4-H Club metJu.
ly 12 at the Rock Sprtnss Church 1\'ith
6 members and 2 advisors in atten·
dance. The members discussed the
plans for a float on youth night at the
fair, decorating the fair booth and
clothing judging. Refreslunents were
served by DWe Eblin and Lisa
Frymyer. The next meeting will be
July 17 at the London Pool where the
club will enjoy a swimming party and
party and a picnic.
Tamml Eblin, reporter
The Country Chickli Sr. 4-H Club
met July 12 at the Patty Hoffman
residence with 6 members and 1 ad·
visor In attendance. The members
discussed havmg a bake aale and also
enjoying a field trip to Fort Meigs.
Demonstrations were given by Bren·
da Chappelear and Krls Snowden on
how to use a seine, Barbara Chappelear on how..to use a catching net
and Patty Hoffman on how to use a

Social Calendar
THURSDAY
CWC poUupk dinner Ft. Meigs
Thursday 6 p.m. Those needing tran·
sportation to meet at Sacred Heart
Catholic Church parking lot 5:45p.m.
Bring own table service.

ROCK SPRING Grange will meet
at 8 p.m. Thursday at the ball. The
hall will be vacated that night lor the
Meigs County Fair.
EVANGELINE CHAPTER 172,
Order of the Eastern Star, 7:30p.m.
ThUrsday night at the Middleport
Maoonic Temple.
FRIDAY
EASTERN High School marching
band will present a show and concert
at 7 p.m. Friday at the lligh school for
friends and families of band
members. A cookout and get·
acquainted period will follow the
show.
SATIJRDAY
RUMMAGE AND BAKE SALE in
baaement of Middleport Masonic
Temple. Sponsored by Harrisonville
Eastern Star. Bake aale Friday only
with rwnmage sale Friday and Satur·
day.
WESTERN BOOT CB CLUB Satur·
day 7 p.m. at club house on Oak Grove
Road, Racine. Members urged to at·
tend. New members are welcome.
ICE CREAM social at Basban
Firehouse, Saturday beginninS 6
p.m.; sponsored by auxiliary and fire
department; cake, pie, coffee and soft
drinks also for sale. Stringed music
entertalrunent.
SUNDAY
ANNUAL WEBER Family
Reunion, Sunday,-at Reedsville Lock
and Dam. Basket dinner at noon;
.tholle attending to take bingo prizes. .
All relatives and friends welcome.
TEAFORD FAMILY JU!union Sun·
day at Racine Lock and Dam, West
Virginia side; basket lunch at noon.
ANNUAL REUNION of the descendants of Orlando and Kathryn Davis
will be held Sunday at Forest Acres
Part, New lima Road, RuUand. A
basket dinner will be held at noon. In

plankton net. The next meeting will
be July 19 at Patty Hoffman's where
Barbara Chappelear will disect a fish.
·Rhonda Jeffers, reporter
The Hillblllies 4-H Club met July 16
at the Kevin Napier residence with 12·
members and 2 advisors, with 5
visitors in attendance. The club
discussed the proj~t judgings and
raffle tickets. Demonstrations were
given by Bill Holcolm, Cindy and
Cheryl Riffle, Mary Colwell and Bill
Dyer on Hogs, Aquarium, Foods,
Rabbits, House Plants, Clothing and
Strawberries. For recreation exer·
cises were enjoyed. Refreslunents of
cake, homemade ice cream, and pop
were served by Christine Napier and
Pauline Rife. The next meeting will
beJuly27.
Richard Basham, reporter
The Country Chickli 4-H Club met
July !at the Patty Hoffman residence
Ryan Martin
with four members and one advisor in
attendance. The club members
discussed the bake aale they bad on
July 13 where they made $60, the food
and clothing judgings and the fair
booth. Refreslunents were served by
Jeffery Ryan . Marton, son of Jeff
Krls Snowden. The next meeting will and Luelle Martin, celebrated his
be July 26 at the Patty Hoffman firSt birthday on July 15 at Fort
residence.
Meigs.
Rhonda Jeffers, reporter
Attending the celebration besides
his parents were Eddie and AnaMae
Martin, grandparents, Les, Sheryl,
HOMECO~GSUNDAY
Jimmy Brian and Stacey Gibbs, Rick
The annual Long Bottom Communi·
Gwen Martin and Steve and
ty Homecoming will be held Sunday and
Binky an,d Cammy Morris. .
at the Long Bottom United Methodist
A Big Bird cake was served along
Church. A basket dinner will be held with hamburgers, hotdogs, potato
at noon followed by a program at 1:30 chips, and punch. Sending gifts were
p.m. The public is invited.
Marty 'and Kenneth Riggs, grandparents, Jan Riggs, Zack and Teresa
Clllle of rain the reunion will be held in McKnight, and Betty and Paul
the basement of the Rutiand Church Williams.
of Christ, also on the New Lima Road.
Relatives and friends are invited.
JORDAN AND MICHAEL reunion
Sunday at noon at roadside park on
south side ol U.S. 33 between Darwlil
and Rock Springs Fairground.
Everyone welcome.
REVNAL now in progress at
Carlton Church, Kingsbury Road,
Friday, Saturday, and Sunday 7:30
p.m. niShtly. The Rev. James Lewis
of the Christian Brethren Church,
New Haven, guest speaker.
MONDAY
RACINE CHAi&gt;TER 134, Order of
the Eastern Star, will meet Monday
at 7:30p.m. at the Masonic Temple.
Lillian and Traci Weese will serve
refreslunents.
MIDDLEPORT GARDEN CLUB, 6
p.m. picnic at the home of Mrs. M. J.
Fry' Cheshire. Auction of pots, con·
tainers, arranging materials, and
other plant and gardening parapher·
nalia. Co-hostesses, Mrs. Sibley
WMPO
Slack, Miss Judy Arnold. Arrangement for the picnic table by Mrs. Carl
SATURDAYS
Horky. Members to take covered dish
8 til Noon
and table service.

NEW FALL
SHOES
Hush PUPP.{!§(i'
stand up to rot..~h
and.tumble abuse

Au l lllllllt' !l

RCA &amp; l'il•ul,m•: J~aler
,- '·" J .~l ~ · ~ ~ S erv t(('
PtlO IH' 991 7' I

A?PLIANCF

11

110 E . Maon Sl
Pornt&gt;rov. 0 .

SHOP

MASON FURNITURE
FOR THE BEST DEALS IN THE
TRl STATE AREA

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

POLLY·s POINTERS
"

'JI'ORGOTl'EN GRANDPA' IWl A
VOLUNTEERGRANDDAUGII'I'Eil
By lleleiiUII 811e B.ae1

Polly Cramer
BOT1'LES WERE BURIED
By PaUy CZuner
POU.Y'SPROBLEM

"'

...

DEAR POU.Y- M,y huabud dug
up aiiiiDiber r1. very old bott1s and I

lqle you caiJ ten me how to clean
• them. -bad
been buried·~ v••1
•
·'"" , - .
' and have I brown film on tbe
inaide
: tbatl cailnot wub away._ MRS. E.C.
- ..... ., MRS E
""""'tbat your
• lw.t.nd
.C. - There
Ia a
... cbailce
d!IC.'OVered
·
and
acme rare
very l.nterelting bot~ tiel. I auqest that ;you take them to
u antiq- dealer and eee If you can
' Jell'll
IICIIDetlllfll •bout them before
you do lll)'tlmJg. if IIIICb 1 dealer hu
DO
eet1
-•~'"'
•
IIIII 0111 you ....,.... leiiVe tea
leave~ and vinepr ln the boUlea to
• 10111: the brown film. Then put tiny
, · tM:ta or 1111a11 pebbles inside and
: .lbake to try to 1 - tbe film. Then
• ue a bottle bruall and ICrUb with
~ Wll'lll .-py water and then Wllter to
" wblcb you have lidded boufebold am.• aionla.Goodluck. -POlLY
DEAR POLLY -IIIIteadrl.freaintl
• all my fre1b 1emm juice In cubell : · IIJ'Ite the IIDOIIIIt t1 rind c:alled for in

,:.

.

DEAR HELEN AND SUE: Tbl.s let"'v Iavortte 1emon "'•
Ia ln reference
to )'0111'
fram
.....
,.., .....a• .......,, mix ter
•.,............
_ ....~......._,
......letter
_ _,_
to
thatwithtbeproperunountoflemon
- · - · ... _
'""' , .. _
juice and tr.e ln 1111a11 jan. When I be treated Ub • peraon, but Iince be
Wlllt to mate a pie 1 have both tbe II In a DUI'Iinl bome, hLI dllilbta' .
Julceandrlndallready.-L.J.L.
cannotbeldwed.
DEAR POU.Y -I have a great old ~~~~=-~=ta ~
remedy for getllng rid t1 roacbei.It Ia vlatt with my IIJ'I!!Cfatber wben he
clean, safe and IJIIllle)' uvtns, too.
.
"'-'""'e
boru
__._
-"
---~
,...._
wu
In
a
"home,"
bilt
It
wu
over
.
an
...,..u_
"""""' .,. ., ""'"' u"'
pipe bol~, COI'IIel'l, crevtcea, under bour .away and DO one would tPe me
the llinll, etc. The ,.cbanralk ln this more tbp once or ~ • year.
,..,_ time I ••-' the -·'"ject wu
and carry It bome and 10011 you will ~·-s
find only amall onea and then no cllauled.
,.ches at all. It may !Pe a llUle
1be lack rl. tneoda. family or jlllt
wldle but lt worb and Ia final. -MRS. •••••tte to talk to caa.l bim to go
C.H.
• dotmbW CiVenJIIbl He • bla will to
11
DEAR POlarge onlona on bud cut
ve. NUI'IInl borne people weren't
off tbe piece or two needed and then IIIIICb belp.
peel tbe UIICUt onion, wrap it In
I wlab there - a ft)' for clildren
wrap and then In aluminum foil.---.and rl. forgoUen older follll to awltcb
pia
with their _,_,_ f
...~
put It ln the refrilerator. lt will keep
cee
.--- or 1...,. or
for neb and be frelb and odorlela. _ . two aod- bow they reell1 feel. You
JEANE'I"I'E
doo 'lltop beinl human aod aeollitive
DEAR JEANE'ITE - I have very just becal• tbe yeua "''ltiply.
lood luck keepillg 111Ch a cut onion In
I'll never treat my )Jin!llla this
~c
-~ thathentIa stored
futened with a ~;.,.,have ''F..,..otten'a" addn!u
,,......,e .,,..
in the
, •-.,
•
vegetable bin ln my refrllerator.- I d Ub to be a aubiUtute grandPOlLy
dl=f~~~otben
who would Ub to COil espood with

,.0:

--. """

ft'·"""

''FcqoUenG~"):

OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONL.:
Herman Grate
773·5592

We don't have this elderly man'•
addn!u, but we're uvtDg your 1etten
In caR be readll )'01Irl and eenda It to

Mason, W . Va. ;.

Ill.

Then we'll break a rule and put you
Louely old people need all the
they WI get, even If it'a

ct.rinl

fnm IIIIIT1lpte grandcblldren. -

HELEN AND SUE

STOCK REDUCTION

CREST
TOOTHPASTE
HtQ IJI II or Mrn l
9 Of MIQ li sI S2 .i ~

S1.19

GAVISCON
ANTACID
la~le!~
100 &lt;; ~19

PEPSODENT
TOOTHBRUSHES
Ha10 or Soli

l 1SI 56 11

sa.37

MIO l rs! S 89 Ea

3/tJ.OO

~.
I

B~b~

PRE-INVENTORY SHOE SALE

:l

SALE STARTS FRIDAY, AUGUST 3RD AT 9:30 A.M•

~~

-·v•...
•

Orl l b o1

BdO¥ Po fll'lltr

•..
.,,

14 or

B• O ~ s~. m poo lfHll

s.99

SUMMER
WHITE SHOES
VALUES
$711
TO $26.99

.,...r o.kt

s:' 99'~

.. .

FAIR TIME COMING UP!

SCHICK
DOUBLE
EDGE
Plus
Slides
~

KNEE HI
HOSIERY
Colors
4.~ ~ 1

P~Q
~ ~~~

ENTIRE STO.CK
CASUAL and SPORT

Pl~l •n u JT\

S 1.41Q l 1S\ $1 51

3/$-J.OOL"': : :=: :

DINGO BOOTS

1h

s.99

SECRET
An't·Pcrsorrant
Re9uiM 01 New U 1 s c e u ! ~ rl
2 '• Ol MIQ l• SI $1 li9

.$.89

ol J Pa u
l •SI $1 i9

WOMEN'S
SURBEX-T
Vnam1n B·Comple•
With V1!~m.n C
100 S M!Q l r51 58 9~

$6.19

Select Group Women's

1h

T·- ·

PRICE

(Joggers not included)

r

~~

were byperactm.

Human studlel11181111t regular pot
- micbt llfect the IIU bormonea ill
bCJtb males and ,..,.., fWl'W. in
1.owend aperm . COUDt and altered
1111111trua1 eyc1a ADd tbere'a a
pwibillty It could be 1lnbd with
cancer or lung
When applied to the akin of mice, tar fnm
lllll'ljualla clprettea producee tbe

dl-•·

malicnant bman .. does
'taccotar.
The McCall'a article adda, '1n a
study that apcllled laboratAiry rats to
IIIIOke fram the lunan equivalent rl.

one to m JoiD1a a day ... It wu fOUIId
that !nftemmation t1 111111 tllaue,
ireskdon ci air IICI and Nocbg..
ol cl:olrl"'ll wu lntenee than
that llllffered by • aProl group ·poled ta llmllar dales t1 c:lpMte
IIIIOke. '' -HElEN AND SUE

FEATURING ...

~D~~

(GOT A PROBlEM? Or I lllbJect
for~ two 11 • ;atllooi&amp;Jle!

Direc:t your questiona to eitber Sue or
Helen Botlel - or both, If you Wlllt a
combin.tion motber-dau1bter
IIIIWel' -In i:U'e 01 this DeWiji6per,)

AND SANDALS
VALUES
TO
122.99

$500

'lBOMASQIIR!I

VALUES
TO
$26.99

ENTIRE STOCK
MEN'S

All SUMMER

DRESS BOOTS

SANDALS
women's &amp; Children's

~~LUES
$42.99

$•Jsoo
L

DEN'S

CANVAS

•~ ~~
• =:=·..
••

CLEVELAND (AP) - A radiologist Medicihe, said the space-age procesa scanning to detect breast tumors
at Case Western Reserve University may soon be used to detect tumors In came under fire from medical and
federal authorities, since X·rays
is experimenting with the use of other parts of the body aa well.
microwaves to detect breast tumors "This whole project grew out of the themselves are known to have caused
- a safer method than the current use realization that there is a great cancer.
Gregg said a survey three yeara aso
of X-rays.
· difference between normal and
showed
that manimo1raphlea Dr. Earl Gregg, a professor of abncnnal tissue, especially in the
which
use
X-rays - nm the rilk of
radiology at the university's School of brellllt," Gregg aald Wednesday.
Breasts are made up mostly of fatty inducing30tumors per milllon women·
tissue, Gregg 'said, while tumors tend under 34 years old who under10 the
bea1 n!Bily and trui.y proved that pot to resemble stronger, muscle-like test.
II bid fw you? - REGULAR tissue. The difference beccmes more
Gregg said chances are better for
SMOKER
women
over 35 that an X-ray scan will
recognizable when microwaves are
DEAR.SMOKER:
not
cause
a tumor to form, but added
passed through a wcman's breast.
Yes, you lbould atop smoldng pot Gregg said he hopes to build a that the use of X-ray for routine
(IIIII Wwcro) - Mel Ulinc any other microwave scanner for patient use seaMing Is not reconunended.
IICIJ1IIWCribed drug wblle you are later this year.
He added that women under 34
·
Pftllllllt,
The proposed scanner would years old have one chance in 10,000 of
Ia Dlllrijuana bad for you? incorporate a microwave transmitter developing a breast tumor, but that
We qiiOte Keltb Stroup, former direc- and receiver which would rotate for women over 35, the likelthood of
tor t1 NORML (N•tlooal Organlza- aroamd the breast, scanning it section discovering such a tumor Is 10 Urnes
tlllll for tbe Reform ci MllrijUIIIIa by section. The beam goes through the gre~ter.
Law) who saya, ''There liDO IUch tissue, and a computer collects the
Gregg said mircowave detection
thing u a tGtlllly lllfe drug, and I data, reglsterinS where the beam may also work well·with tumors In the
don 'l think marlj1111118 Is going to be pasaed easily thtough the breast and bi-ain and pancreas.
thefirllt. ••
where It may have been blocked by
An article In the JUDe, 1979, Mc- tougher tissue .
CIIl'a .tatea ln part, "There Is DO
Gregg said a microwave scanner
Your "Extra Touch"
dllput.e tbat marijUIIIIa llfects the can detect tumors as ·small as a half- ~
Florist Since 1957
bnln... It Ia not yet clear wbetber inch in size, and may uncover a tumor
there are IllY 1011(!~ effects, but before a doctor or patient is aware
aevenl ltudi1111 on rbesus monkeys that it exists.
have IOIIeriDg lmpllcaUona." . The
The greatest advantage, be said, is
drug bu been abown to IICCUIDII!ate in the safety of the experimental II
FLORIST
.
the lnln and reproductive organa method.
PH. 992·2644
causing pcJIIible 911Bn1c d&amp;mace. Dr.
Gregg aald he bessn research on the
352 E. Matn, l"omerov
Ethel Sure trath at the University of project three years ago, wben X-ray L
Your FTb Florist
Callfctmill Sdlool t1 Medicine, O.vla,
·= ...... .
fOUIId that " perceat of pregnarX
monkeys who received tbe equivalent
ol one or two jolntl per day experienc·
ed apontueous aborUona, atllliUtba
or death of the oifJprlng .oortly alter r - ' " " " " 1 : : - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - j
birth. Suntvon are ci low tarth
wel&amp;bt. bad bellth prob)ema and

1h

PURSES

1h

PRICE

White • Bone • Canvas Macrame.

U. S. FORCF3, Gtrmany- 'l'bomu .
M. ~ 1011 t1 Mr. llld lin. Keooeth K. Kimel, Hartford, w. va.,
recently wu pi'OIIMIIed to Army lint
seraeut . wlile ~ .. 11nt
seraeaat t1 the l1llt u. s. Army ArUIIery Dftlrdtma¢ in Germau,y.
Klmea entered tbe Army in
February,llli7.
The M'leanl Ia I 11117 graduate rl.
Wabamll Hilb Sdlool in Muon, W.
Va.
Hll wife, Ireva, Is with blm in GerDlllly.

lib. $3. 50

Delicious Russell Stover Candies are famous everywhere
for their superb quality and freshnes~ .

SWISHER LOHSE
Pharmacy

PRICE

SELECT GROUP

SCHOOL SHOES

HOYT.ctJRTJSREUNION
The umual Hoyt and Mary FOII!.er
Curtla reuni111 will be Aul. 18 with a
, piCIIic bullet dlnller at 110011 at Fen· _
ed Run State Park. Host for tbe 72nd
annual reunion will be Cbarlea and
Arta Joinoo and famlly.

KtnMih McCullough , R. Ph .

Chllrlu Riftle, R. Ph . '

Ronald Hannin9 , R. A\
Mon . thru Sit . I :OOa .m . to 9 p.m .
Sunday 10 : 10 to I:I :10 and 5 lo 9 p .m .
PRE SC RIPTIONS

.

• .

PH . "'l· lhS

Friendly Sflrv•ce

Pomerov 0 .1 1-----'

E. Milm

PICNIC SUNDAY
The Hemlodt Grove Chrtatian
&lt;hln:h will bold 1 plalic jSunday,
Alii· 5, at tbe nortbbouDd state part

GIRLS
1112-7
BOYS
1112-7

on U.S. 33.1bepubliclainvlted.

300 s Mtg List S2 16

'1.19

J'Tl1l VESTSIJBTREUNION

NEED BAND SHOES? .

. h.

SKIN CREAM ~ ~ .;
Wnn fl ee (

. Whltelellther·white sole.

•
• THOM MeAN

Women's Slzr 5·10
REG. Sll.99

l ~ 01

Tra ~el luDe

12 0! M!IJ Lrsl $.2 59

\

\

JOHNSON'S
ODOR
EATERS
Rf yul;u r I
Hrn wn
11

~&lt;

l~tl ...,r

llHI

R11ne1 Men's Slzes7·13

~~~

Sale •19.99

ONE TABLE
MISCWANEOUS

SHOES

SELECT GROUP

MEN'S CANVAS
Jox
ProKeds

sg99

ALL CHILDREN'S
CANVAS
Sizes 4-1
Size 1112·3
•

$200

30% OFF

All veterana wbo aerved on the S7th
Infantry Dlvlllon (Bucte,e) of WW I,

WW D and Korean Conflict, wiD
ptber for their flit yeiMIIIIIion at
the Marriott Inn Airport Motel, rm
Wilt

~

,For more Information contact thE
Heaclquartera Office Of the S7th Divl
Ilion Veteran~ ~IIOCiaUon, 86 S. Fron
St., Roam 7117, Columbua, OH. 43210.

28 ~ Mt11 liS! S2 99

S1.77

h

'iU(,( , t :J I ~ '-' " 1 '

" " •LI O.,

n /, rr•.r; ' ·I 1 11 P,

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO
LIMIT QUANTITIES AT SAlE PRICES

:• MEN'S BROWN MESH
I"'
AND WHITE
·~

~ DECK
~

••
....

..

VILLAGE PHARMACY
271 N. 2ND AVE.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

SHOES

$600

PR

ENTIRE STOCK

SLIPPERS

1;2 PRICE .

. Men's-women's·
Children's

.I!IST ARRIVED! WOMEN'SALi.. WftiTE

...

WORK .
SHOES

Plain &amp; Steel Toe
&amp; Insulated

lf.1 OFF REGUlAR PRICE
Not 111 sizes in •1 styles.
Thom MeAn brand not in·
clue!

CHEERLEADERS~SH~O~E~S~---.1

heritage house of shoes

CORRBCTION

A Meigs County land tranlfer
publlabed arlla- thla week lbould
blve read Leonard Van Meter, Sr.,
Mllry K. Van Meter to Olarlea V.
Stra\8, Evelyn B. Stra11111, lot,
Puneroy.

ELODAWEBB '
Mrs. Elodil Webb, SCM Sycamore
· St., Middleport, will oblerve ~ 90th
lirtbda)' on Frtcky •

In 111111, the city and IIUburba of
Saigon were declared bubonlci)llpe
·
·
M
areu by Pllbllc-bellth lautbor!Ues and
..;SiiEitiCiiOiiiNiiDiiiliSiiiTRiiiEiiEiiT_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ID•D•L•E•PO•RTIIIIil,lllliO•HiilllliltO , the population 11 two mllUon was or·
..
dered lnnoculated.
~

SPECIALS

Street, Cleveland, OH.
sept. I, 2 (Labor

W36, on AIJC. Sl,
Day Weekend).

Heq u l~ r

~~9

' W 1 IO ' •A L 1'1&lt; I'' I AI'l l •·

•

PLAYTEX DEODORANT
TAMPONS
or Super

r ~!t wr

s.aa

Sale '14.99

'1.49.-=': . ....-

\

M'q 1.1&gt;t Sl

COLOR:
NUTMEG

PRICE

WHITE
SHOES

GREAT BACK TO
TO SCHOOL BARGAINS t

h

COTTON
SWABS
By Johnson l nd Johuso••

\

MEN'S

ENTIRE STOCK
WOMEN'S

M!q lrSI Sl 91 h

Su p~•

tf:~, \

,..

VASELINE
INTENSIVE
CARE

owns._l

STAY FREE
MAXI-PADS
Reqular or

The rough and tumb le world of .
young b oys is toug h o n shoes .
That's why Hush Pupp ie s • shoes
are ma de of extra strong ~~
't,~'~
leat hers and long lasting . II '"'
.' '
..11
d urable soles. And they 're r . · ~ ,,-A;
p riced with your clothing ·. ~~ h .V ,'\ '
b udget 1n m 1nd.
L- .
•. ,

eOhio Building Codes
eAFHA&amp;VA
See our lot model today .

Pomeroy, Ohio
992;7034

jewelry, treasures made frml trash,
and an open class for anything made
for which there is no specific class. ,
In addition to the clasaes listed
above there are eli visions for
children's clothing, adult clothing,
aprons, needlecraft, knitting,
crocheting, quilts and rugs. Clas8es in
these divisiOns will be ·listed totnor·
row.

ELuon

Microwaves may detect cancer

. Bt Hell'n ond Su.. Bttlll'l

In touch.

Casey Kasem

By
A.LLAMERICAN
Meats

1100 E . Main

On gla~ed ceramics, again detail
work will take preference as well as
special techniques such as ability to
butt different colored glazes tosether
without bleeding. In the free band
work (milde without decal or pattern)
shadings, slip painting, clay lifting
will receive the preference. ·
The hobby type clasaes for the
domestic arts exhibit include model
car or truck, other types of models,
embroidered pictures, needlepoint
pictures, decoupage pictures, three. dimensional pictures crewel pictures,
paint-by-nwnber pictures, and there
Is a class for any other type of pictures.
There is a class for ho!Jiemade
purses, candles, macrame hangers,
other macrame pieces, wood carv·
ings, molded plaster of paris objects,

Generation Rap

Turns one year

MODULAR
HOMES

KINGSBURY
HOME SALES

or the chainnan.
Mrs. Lewis has announced that the
class for men '&amp; suits has been
eliminated this year but residentswho
have made a suit may enter the
jacket and trousers In the two
separate classes included in the
schedule. All pictures entered must
be ready to hang and In the class for
homemade purses, those. made en·
tirely by the exhibitor will be given
preference over those constructed
frotn a kit. With the exception of the
class for comfor!B, quilts must be
quilted.
While the schedule this year provides only three classes for ceramics
(one for exhibitors 16 and under, one
for free band designs, and the other
open for exhibit by anyone ) Mrs.
Lewis advises that the 191Ml schedule
will increase the division to include
stain, glaze and free hand designs for
juniors, 10 to 17 years, and adults, 17
and up.
Judging on ceramics this year will
be based not exclusively on beauty of
the object, but quality of the work and
the amount of work going into the
ceramic piece. Proper cleaning
technique before firing will be con·
side red on all pieces' u well as the
bottom finishing. On stained
ceramics, a one-color, antiqued piece,
will be judged second to detailed
work. Good color combinstions, and
techniques such as wood graining,
shading, and Humtnellins, will be
given preference over straight painting.

,

~

WOMEN'S WHITE

1 GROUP WOMEN'S

SANDALS &amp;
DRESS SHOES

DRESS &amp;
CASUAL
~ PRIC ~

'500
Values to '11.99

ValueS to 130.99

SUMMER

CHILDREN

SANDALS
$700

'TENNIS

Values to 21.99
1

SHOES

•s•

Values to '9.99

CHAPMAN SHOES
. NEXT TO ELBERFELDS IN POMERC)Y

�11-TheDailYSent'llle1• Middleport-Pomeroy,
·
0., Thursday, Aug. 2, 1979
10-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0, Thursday, Aug. 2, 1979

,Rhodes signs
utility laws
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Gov.
James A. Rhodes has signed into law
legislation direc ting the Public
Utilities Commission to formulate
rules governing when gas and electric
utilities can cut off service to nonpaying customers.
The measure was one of eight
signed by Rhodes Wednesday. He
allow~ another bill to become law
without his signature.
Sponsored by Rep. Thomas C.
Sawyer, D-Akron, the law says ·the
PUCO must conduct hearings before
writing rules concerning utility
cut.pffs to customers who fail to pay
their bills.
·
After the law's effective date of Oct.
31, the PUCO must follow legislative
guidelines which say the service
ca nnot be terminated without
"reasonable prior notice" and unless
the customer has a reasonable
opportunity to dispute the reasons.
The bill Rhodes allowed to become
law without his endorsement exempts
the sale of liquor at publicly owned
airports from the effect of local option
liquor elections .
Rep . Arlh'ur Wilkowski, D-Toledo,
sponsored the legislation, which will
become effective Oct. 31. It also
allows Sunday sales of liquor at the
airports without local approval at the

Data •••
I
~

(Continued from,page I) ~
proposed annexation in Racine at
great length, but tabled the matter for
additional study. The board also
discussed the progress of the Housing
Rehabilitation program.
Attending were Richard Jones,
preSident, Henry Weila, and Chester
Wells , commtss10ners and Mary
Hobstetter, clerk.

,

RIVERFRONT "'
DINER
•HOMECOOKED MEALS
6til10 P.M.

r------------,
I

NOW HAVING

I

l PIZZA &amp; HOT SUBS l
I
I
I

5 til 10 pm
.

I
I
I

I Will deliver up to smiles. I

~-------~-----'
PH. 992-9963
Pomeroy, 0 .

collapsed.
In Fairfleld, just north of
Cincinnati, water was waist-deep in a
number of htXnes after Pleasant Run
Creek overflowed its banks.
Two golfers were released from a
hospltBI after treatment for shock in
Cincinnati after lightning struck the
Summit Hills Country Club golf
course.
Thundershowers were forecast for
today from New England into
Delaware and from !he the lower
Great Lakes and the upper Ohio
VaUey across the Appalachians.
Scattered thundershowers also
were expected from the Carolinas
through central Florida, across the
eastern Gulf states and TeJ\IIessee
Valley into central Texas.
Temperatures around the nation at
3 a.m. (EDT) ranged from 48 in
Arcata, Calif., to 97 in Blythe, Calif .

By Tbe ASBGCiated Prell

ballot boxes and exemptS municipally
owned airports from . quota
restrictions on 'the issuance of liquor
permits.
Rhodes signed a measure sponsored
by Sen. Marcus A. Roberto, DRavenna, that will permit school
boards to establish self-insurance
plans to protect student athletes. lt
was effective irrunediately.
Other new laws, all effective Oct. 31,
will :
--Raise the gro'!S annual sales
volume threshold that makes an
employer subject to Ohio's minimum
wage law from $95,000 to $150,000.
--Allow
corporations
more
flexibility in the selection of boards of
directors.
-Jlemove the $600 limit on
traveling expenses that county boards
' . FIRST TO RECEIVE KIT - The Rio Grande Pollee Department
of education may allow school
Wednesday becam_e the first department in the stale of Ohio to receive a
' superintendents and assistant
· F~ Respo"'!er Kit from the Ohio Department of Health and Emergency
superlntell!lents.
:Medical Services. Left to right are Marlin Wedemeyer village mayor·
--Permit township trustees to
Larry Coleman, village l1181'!lhill and Scott swearen@in of the Obi~
provide reasonable charges for the
Department of Health.
'
use of ambulance or emergency
medical services.
- Increase from $roo to $300 the

-..m.O,.dM-'1
motor vehicle which may be taken
over by a garage or storage facility
owner.
- -Olange notice-filing procedures
for persons who lease oil and gas
lands and increase the flllng fee.

Area Deaths

BESSIE B. MOORE
Funeral services for Bessie B.
Moore of Lockney, W.Va., who died
Tuesday, wlll be held at 10:30 a.m.
Friday at the Mt. Pisgah Baptist
Church 111!1!1' stumptown, W. Va,
Friends are being received at the
Stump Puneral Home at Grantsville,
W. Va. today. Mrs. Moore lB the
mother of RuaseU Moore, supervisor
of secondary education, Meigs County
COLUMBUS, · Ohio (AP) - A Schools.
special audit of the Belpre ffigh
School yearbook fund has resulted in a
. finding for recovery of $10,050 against
E'I1IEL H. RALPH
. two school employees, according to
Mrs.
Ethel
Hysell Ralph, 88,
state Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson.
formerly of Meigs County, of 2845 ColThe finding was against Gail
umbua Ave., Springfield, died Friday,
Lydick, who served as clerk-custodian July 'll, at her residence following
of the high school activity funds several months of Illness.
during the audit period from Sept. 1,
Mrs. Ralph was born in Meigs
1970 to March 31, 1979, and lllla Kittle,
County
on Nov. 21, 1890, 8 daughter c1.
the yearbook advisor, the auditor's
the late ElllB and Mary Vining' Hysell.
office said Wednesday.
Potential income from the sale of Sbe had been a resident of Springfield
yearbooks and yearbook ads was since 1943. She as 8 member of the
compared with actual deposits to First Christian Church at Springfield.
Survivors inclade siJ: daughters,
determine the amount owed the high
Mrs.
Elmer (Louise) Sclunenk,
school's yearbook fund, the auditor
PboenlJ:,
Ariz.; Mrs. ·Hank (Althea)
said.
The state examiner cited problems Hansen, Tampa, Fla.; Mrs. Harry
in the · existing accounting that (Mary) Osborne, Pomeroy; Mrs.
included overlapping of transactions WIUlam (Jean) Sullivan, Brandon,
from one year to the next; deposits Fla.; Mrs. Victor (Esther) Gcl.f, Sprwhich did not have enough identifying Ingfield, and Mis Irene Ralph with
information; failure to show the whom she made her home; 14 grandsource of certain revenue, and, lack of chlldren; 16 great-grandchlldren; one
differentiation between yearbook and great-f!reat-grandson; a. brother,
Homer HyseU, Pomeroy; two sisters,
advertisement sales information.
Mrs. Tacy Wilson, Zanesville, and
Mrs. Althea Bryan, Cincinnati.
Mrs. Ralph'• husband, Pearley
Ralph, died July 17, 1979. The couple
had been married for 66 years. She as
also p-eceded in death by a daughter
and a BOll.
FWJeral services were held July 30
at the Richard's Memorial Home with
the Rev. John Wilaon officiating.
Burial wu in Glen Haven Memorial
Gardens in Clark County.

Audit results
in findings

MARY LOU WOLFE
Mary Lou Wolfe, 31, New Lima
Road, Rutland, died Wednesday at
Holzer Medical Center.
Mrs. Wolfe was born July Z3, 1948
the daughter of Harold and Ina Tripp
Teaford, Middleport.
.
In addition to her parents she is
survived by her husband, Fred Wolfe,
one daughter, Darcie Melinda
Wolfe ,and one son., Tyler Jason Wolfe,
both at home, one sister, Connie Ann
Swisher,
Middleport,
and
grandmother, Edith Teaford,
Minersville.
She was ·a member of the Heath
United Methodist Church.
Funeral services will be held
Saturday at 1 p.m. at Ewing Chapel.
Burial will be in Beech Grove
Cemetery. Friends. may call at the
funeral home after 7 p.m. thla
evening.

Indiana bore the brunt of a band of
foul weather stret£blng east from the
Rockies, with a tornado and floods
that took four lives and threatened
more property damage in the
drenched Midwest state.
By thla morriing, the rain had
stopped, except In extreme northern
Indiana. And officials at the National
Weather Service in Indianapolis said
little more was expected today .
A flash flood warning remained in
effect until Friday, however, for the
central part of the state, the result of a
fierce storm system that dumped rain
on already saturated lands
Wednesday.
Tornado warnings have been posted
in seven counties, and flash flood
warnings were oui in part or all of 15
counties.
ln Indianapolis, 2.21 inches of
rainfall was recorded Wednesday compared to a nocmal rainfall of 2.08
for the entire month. And in Mit£hell,
officials said, 4¥.. inches fell in 45
minutes.
Last week, heavy rains produced
record flooding Blong Ohio River
tributaries jn southern Indiana.
The bodies of Leanne Raines, 11,
and Angela Martini, 13, both of
Indianapolis, were recovered from a
drainage ditch in more than 4 feet of
water, police said Wedne&amp;lay. The
girls reportedly were trying to rescue
a smaU dog. And in MitcheU, two
people who were swept into a storm
sewer whlle playing oo a rubber raft
were killed, police said .
Police ailoo reported that a tomdao
struck a trailer park about :111 miles
south of lndlanapollB, slightly injuring
two people.
~her tornado was rep&lt;rted in the
area of Middleto.wn, Ohlo, and the the
NationBI Weather Service said it
would send inspectocs to the town to
try to confinn the report.
Madison Township firefighters said
mechanic James Cornett, 22, of
Middletown was Injured when a roof

CHECKS RECEIVED
July gasoline excise tu checks
totaling $11,354,067 were dl!trlbuted

by State Auditor Thomas E .
FergWKlll's office to Ohio counties,
townahipl, cities and villages.
Each county received ~.ooo and
each of the stale's townahlps received
$1200.
Amounts received by Meigs County
villages Include Middleport, $2,413;
Pomeroy, $2,304; Racine, $764 ;
Rutland, t840, and Syracuse S3M.

GRAND OPENING
AUGUST 7

EXTENDED FORECAST
Salllrdar ~~nq~~ M.-.r: fair
Saturday wttll • dluee crt allowen

20% DISCOUNT
ON All PERMS

« llw' "entlnll Sudar ..s
Muaday. HlP Ia tile . .. lAw Ia
tile apper . . to low 'Ill.

:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:

2 operators for your corwenience.

Weather

Opet'! Tuts .. Sal., WOCI . &amp; Frlchly

CORVEnE Z28
-

THINK OF THE MONEY

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
Chevrolet
"Your Chevy Dealer"
Po.merov

992·2126

Open Evenings Til8:00 p.m.

Ia

...-E
-.c..
fD

..••

connie Aldridge
Owner-operator
Crystal Ayburn, Operator
Phone 992-i\311

Partly cloudy tolllght and Friday.
Low tooight in the mid 8011. Hl8h
Frldayln the mid 1101. The chance of
ral is 20 percent tolllght and Friday.

Stereo
Albums

lynn Anderson Labelle
Emotions
George Jones
Dr. Hook
Ray Price
Billy Craddock
Connie Smith

---+

t_ ;C
~

:::::»

0

Ill

A:

CU

~

•

••• 0 ••• 0 •• •

•

•••

•

LADIES' SWIMWEAR,
DRESSES, BLOUSES, SLACKS,
SHORTS, KNIT TOPS

SAVE 55

•

•

0. 0

0

•

•

0 ••• 0

0 •

•

KING-SIZE BEANBAG CHAIR

SHELLS
Y2 PRICE

•• ••••••

0

Beautiful
Hanging Baskets
Special
Priced

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Large assortment of beaituful foliage
• in 4 112 " to 5" hanging baskets, to hang
inside or outside in warm weather. Buy
several at this low price and save.

••

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY

One Group of Asst. Shorts
'3 A PAIR OR 2 FOR '500

n.m~--

ONE GROUP
OF JEANS

ONE GROUP
OF JEANS

SIZES 32-38

SIZES 5-20

'700 PR.
'1 0 00 PR.
SUMMER TflPS, SLACKS..--,
SLEEPWEAR, SKIRTS, MIX
AND MATCH COORDINATES

0 •

•

•

0 •••

Boxed Doughnuts

RED

EARLY SHOPPERS SPECIALS

soc to '5

. . .- - - 1 . .

Freeland S. Norris

'
~

MAN

00

INCLUDES SELECT GROUP OF:
BOLO SCARVES, DEVON SKIRTS,

We, the undersigned directors attest the correctnesa of this llatement of resources and
liabilities. We declare that it baa been eumlned by ua, and to the best of our lmowledlle and
belief Is true and correct.

blouses, hats, tops and pulSeS.

69~

Sale
·
.
Priced
J usfaelivered to our store fresh each~
~~~~~~D;e~ll~ci~o~u~s-~O~ne.dozen to a box.

ALL 30% OFF

I, John T. Wolfe, President, of the above-ft11111eci bank do
hereby declare that this Report of Condltloo Is true and correct to the best of my knowlqe and beUef.
JolmT. Wolfe

Charles H. Yost

18

96

Our Reg . 1.14
Inter ior or exterior
spray_paint,
asst. colors. 8-oz.

• • • • • • • • • • 0. 0

0 •• 0 ••••••••• 0 •••

Albert Hill, Jr.- Directors

Our Reg . 23.96
Wet-look vi nyl, tri·
pie stitched, fille d
with plastic beads.

1---------·'
J/
...
N. 2ND AVE.

0 •• ••••••••

•

Charlie Rich
The O'Jays
Johnny Cash
Manhattans
Tammy Wynette B. l Express
Donna. Fargo
Th~ Stylistics
Marty Robbins
Lou Rawls

....................................~3

BAHR CLOTHIERS

b. No. shares outstanding 5,000 (par value) .......... .. . .. .................. 125,000.00
Surplus ... o • • • • o • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• •• • • • • • • • •• o
125 ()(X) oo
Undi;~ profi~d reserve for contingencies
' ·
tW~E r~ reserves ........................ ........... ............ 736,000.00
roTALt!s~AI., ,
9116,000.00
AND EQUITY CAPITAL .. ................... ....... 11737000.00
Amountsoutstandinguofreportdate:
' '
--Time certificates of deposit in denomlnatl0111
of $100,000 or more .. ..... . ............ ............................. .. , ... 440,000.00
Average for 30calendar day&amp; (or calendar month) ending with report date:
Total deposita ...... ........................ ....... ..... .... . . ...... . . 10,283,000.00
0 ••• I

cQ
z
cIll:

0 •• 0 •

MFSB
Johnnie Taylor

97

MENSWEAR DEPARTMENT
REDUCTIONS FROM
20,-. TO 60% Off

DRESSES, .SLACKS AND PANT SUITS ·fi
'...
•
V, PRICE

0 •••••

0 ••••••

Tapes
Cassettes

97

1 RACK OF

Demand deposits d. individuals, .
prtnBhps., and corps....... . .. ........·. .............. . ................. 2 224 000.00
nme and savlnp deposita of individuals,
' '
Jl"tnsllps., and corps . •.. ... ... o • • • • • • • • • • • • • • o •• o o • o o • • • • o • • • • • • •
7 311 000 oo
DepositaofUnitedStatesGovernment ..... .......... ............ , .. ....... .'591'ooo'oo
Deposita of States and political
·
' ·
aubdlviaiOIII! in the United States ... ....... , ..................... . ; .. , ..... 574,000.00
=led an~ officers' checks ......... : .......... ..... . ...................... 51,000.00
TotalTts . ·~ ....
.10,751,000.00
emand posits ....... .. .... ...... .. ........ ......... 3 211.!10Q.OO
Total time and aavlnp depoelta ........... .......... .... . .. .. 7,4!!5,000.00
~~~~excl:,~;!~tednotes and debentures) ........ 10,7&amp;11000.00 _ _
•• ••

ORIGINALSTARS

APPROXIMATELY 60 MINUTES OF LISTENING TIME!

REDUCED 30 ~.

National Bank Region Nwnber 4

0 •

Ill

MEET AUG. &amp;
Friends of the Meigs County
Libraries will meet Aug. 6, at 7:30
p.m. at the Middleport Library. All
Friends and interested persons are
urged to attend. ·

~

Evenings.

TOTAL ASSETS . ... ... . . \' .................................... . ......

~

REMINDER GIVEN
A reminder was issued today that
the no till forage field day will be held
at 7 p.m. this evening at the Joe Bailey
farm one mile west of Rutland on SR
124.

~
"
~

Statement of Resources and Uablllties
Cash and due from depository instltutiOil.'l ............ . ...................... &amp;37 000 00
u.s. Treasury securities ... . . ..... . . .. .. ................................. 1,096:ooo:oo
Obllgati0118 of States and political
subdlviaiOilll in the United States ........................ . .... ...... . ... ... 338,000.00
All otller securities o o •• o o •• o • o •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ••
1,000.00
FederBI funds sold and securities purchased
=~~toresell ............................................. 1)AIO,OOO.OO
,
(exc udlnguneamedincome ) ...... .. ............ 8,219,000.00
Les.s: Allowance for posalble loanl0111es. . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . .. . . 91,000.00
Loans, Net .. .. . ....... .. ... ...... . ......... .. ................ .. ... ... 8,128,000.00
Bank preml.ses, furniture and fbtures, and
other assets representing bank premises......... ....... .. ......... .... .... ,.,. Mn M
All other assets .. .. .. .. .. .. . .. .. .. .. . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . . .. . .. .. . . . .. .
. 5~

0

YOU'LL SAVE A f . TODA Y'S PRICES

'

in the state d. Ohio, at the cloee of buaineea on June 30, lrTt published in responae to call
made by Comptroller ol the Currency, under tiUe 12, United States Code, Section 161.

House-to-house
•
canvassmg
set

JUST RECIEVED &amp; IMMEDIATE DELIVERY

:.

THE RACINE HOME NATIONAL BANK

:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::;:;:::::::::::::;:;:;:::::;:;:;

*

Announces Its

0 ••••

A housNo-llouse drive in Middleport ,Is scheduled Friday through
Sunday to collect funds for the Mid·
dleport Fire Department's new heavy
re8Cile vehicle.
Mrs. Grace Pratt wW head a
citizens committee which will con·
duct the canvas and firemen, John
Metzger and Kenneth Imboden are in
tharge ol the fund drive.
The new van replaces a 1957 model
which WBB converted from a bread
truck. The new vehicle costs approx·
imalely $13,000 and will be outfitted
with bevy re8Cile gear and an air
cucade system presently carried on ·
the older vehicle.
· The fire department lB asking for
public support of the project so that it
may provide the best possible service
to re!lidents.

18T0200RIGINALHITS

c

Consolidating domertlc mbsldlarles of the

· SIDEWALKSALE
Pomeroy men:bula wW stage
another of their aacceasful
lldewalt aalee Friday ud Satlir·
day. AclvertlaiDg wW reflect be
1peel81 bu'piDI belac offered tlnr·
IDfl tbe two day promoUoa.

CAPRICE, IMPALA, MONTE CARLO,
COVERNSION VANS, SPORT VANS,
PICKUPS, 4 WHEEL DRIVE PICKU,-5,
STAR TRUCKS &amp; BLAZERS

Each Album , Tape or Cassette Features

Located on Forest Run
Road .

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;

Charter number 9815

PLEASURE .

EYOUR 11

The Middleport Emergency Unit
was called to Fair lane Drive at 12 :13
OPEN DOOR SESSION
' p.m. Wednesday for Marv Lou Wolf
On
August
8, a representative from
. · who was taken to the Holier Medical
Congressman
Clarence E. Miiler's of.
Center.
lice will conduct an Open Door session from 10-12 noon in the Court
House in Pomeroy.
:;
SPONSORS PLAQUE
~
Mt. Moriah Church of God is
If anyone has any questions concer•' sposoring a family picture plaque ning the Federal Government , please
\' Aug. 11. Pictures may be contracted stop by. to discuss them wlth the
I• now by calling 992-6095, 949-2218 or representative .
949-2772.

HEAD QUARTERS
BEAUTY SAWN

1-6

during the collapse of the Victor
Transit Corp. truck garage.
Assistant Madison Township Fire
Chief James Cottonjim said damage .
was confined mainly to the garage
and the Volkswagen of Middletown
showroom.
In Fairfield, just north of
Cincinnati, water was waist-deep in· a
number of homes 'after Pleasant Run
Creek gushed out of its banks.
Richard Johnson, executive
director of the Hamilton Red Cross,
said at least 20 families took refuge in
a shelter at Sacred Heart Church.
Police reported Ohio 4 was shut
down between Hamilton and Fairfield
when an underpass flooded.
Johnson said 100 cleanup kits had
been dispatched from Cincinnati to
assist home owners once the water
goes down.
The Cincinnati suburbs of Colerain
Township and Green Townsh ip
reported floodi ng a nd debris across
roads when between 4 and 5 inches of
rain fell.

SQUAD CALLE D

u

J

:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;::

GET THE LOWEST PRICES
OF THE YEAR

HAMILTON, Ohio (AP) -- A
" •• thunderstorm and high winds hit
"' ' Wednesday north of Middletown in the
•... suburb of Poasttown,.injuring a man.
!!.
Rams flooded out 20 families in
nearby Fairfield, also in Butler
,,..P County.
,,J,
."It started raining real hard, the
·• · wmd was blowing al]d all of a sudden
or' it ot·real dark, " said mechanic James
Cornett, 22, of Middletown.
w
."The roof started coming off and I
• , .. trted to get down the steps into the
~- grease pit," he said.
Cornett was released from
Middletown Hospital after being
" • treated for cuts caused by debris
..,
.l
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
Admitted--Walter Robi nson
Rutland; Goldie Reitmire, Pomeroy;
Chester Carson, Tuwers Plains; Jose
~· Delgado, Middleport; David Ward,
''- Vinton; Clarence Norris, Racine.
·
DISCharged-Frances Whittington ,
... Amy Eynon.

REPORT OF CONDITION

A NEW CHEVY CAR OR TRUCK

Caprice Classic 4-Door Sedan

II
il ...

ILY
9:30-9:30
SUNDAY

THURSDAY
FRIDAY
SATURDAY

RACK SWITCHMATES

WE WANT TO SELL YOU

THESE CARS ARE MADE FOR YOU

Thunderstorm forces
20 families to move

Indiana ·hit by foul weather

1-Gal Clorox
Sale
Priced

77e

1-gallon plastic conl ainer,
helps keep clothes white.

Chewing
Sale
Priced
Your choice of Red Hors.e&lt;~&gt; , Red Man"'
Mail Pouch&lt;~&gt; and more, 12 pkgs. to box. '

20-lnch Fan
Our Reg. 19.97

20"

$1- ~~e7
'/.

fan, 5 .. · d plast.
blades, 3- ~ree-., carrying
handle.

�13

U-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Aug. 2,1979

•

Your Best Buys Are Found in the Sentinel Classifieds
Yard Sale

WANT AD
CHARGES
15

YARD SALE at James Swain's
on CR 28 above Eastern High
School. July .13 and 1.- from 9
to 1 Everything imaginable.
WE'RE ~_.,VING a yard' sale onJu ly 27 and 28 from 8 till 6 at
•88 South 4th Ave. In Mid"dleporr.

worm or U nder

~days

Caah
1.00
1.50
1.110

Charge

I day
ZdiYI
6day1

3.00

3.75

1.25
l .UO
2.25

YARD SALE' Aug. 1, 2. 3 . Dolly
8-8. Rain or shine. One mile
north of Chester on State
Route 7. Turn left onto CR 82.
One mile. Watch for signs.
Lots of furr11ture. baby Items,
clothing', (mens , womens arid
boys to 2 toddler) and much
more. Phone985-35 19.

Each •ord over the minimwn
IS word! is 4 cent5 per word per
day . Ads runnin¥ other lhlln con·
MCUlive days W111 be charged at
LIM" 1 day rate.

In mem ory, Ctlrd of Thank!
snd Obituary : 6 cents per word,
f:,tOO mlnlmum. Cilsh in ad-

vance.

GARAGE SALE : July 30 · Aug.
4. 9-5, Located off Rt. 7 Bypa11
on Old Rt. 143, ,outh of Ja(k's
Cafe. Recsonoble /rices on
new toys , goo
school
clothing ond much more.
Follow th signs to great
bargains.
YARD SALE. Wed., Aug. 1 thru
Sat .. Aug. ~ 10 til B. 742 E.
Main St., Pomeroy, OH .
992-7314. Low prices on
everything .

Mobile Homt sties and Yard
sales are a~pted only with
cash with order. 25 cent charge
for ads c.rrying Bolt Number In
care of The Sentinel .

1be Publisher reserves Ule
right to edit · or reject any ads
deemed objecll cmal 1 The
Publlftr will not be responsible
for more than Oot incotrect inxrtion.
Phone 9!n-2156

FIVE FAMILY Yard Sale. Fri ..
Aug. 3rcl only . 9-4 at the corner of Park and Page Sts. in
Middleport. Clothes to fit Infants to adult, :a;,. bed frame,
20" girls' bike, black and
wtltie TV , lots of misc. Rain
cancels until Aug. 1Oth . Ptlone
949-2178 .

NOTICE
. WANT~AD
!ADVERTISING
DEADUNES .

YARD SALE . Starting Wed ..
Aug. 1, 2, 3. Men's, women's,
boys and girls' clothes , od.dsends , junk . 500 lincoln Hill ,
Dremo Smittl.
TWO FAMILY Yard Sale. First
house beyond Tall Timbers
Thursday and Friday. Aug . 2 &amp;
3. Rain cancels . Clothing for
adu lts, teenage girl and infant , patterns, air conditioner,
wooden trunk , depress ion
glass, jeWelry , many ottler
items. 992-7184 or 992- ~.

Mooday

Noon on Saturday
Tueoday
thruFrlday
4P.M.
the day before publication

SundBy

4P.M.
Friday aftem1)nr•

Notices
GUN SHOOT, EVERY FRIDAY
7,30 PM RACINE GUN CLUB.
FACTORY CHOKE GUNS ON·
LY .

YARD SALE. Aug. 2 and 3 from
hill6 at 1~~ N. 4th St. in Mid·
dleport , behind Middleport
Fire House.

CAR WASH ot Pomeroy Fire

YARD SALE . August 3, &lt;. Oil
lamps, furniture , dishes and
lots of other items. On CR 32,
turn from Rt. 7 by Meigs
Memory Gardens . Go 6 miles
on Eagle Ridge Rd. Phone
949-2566.

House. Aug . 4. IQ--t . Proceeds
to go to Boy Scout Troop 2-49,
Pomeroy.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY, Mom . Wo
love you .
linda, John and Steven .

BRENDA'S BOUTIQUE in Mid·
BACK TO school yard sale.
dleport is plecsed to an104 VtS . 2nd , Middleport.
nounce the employment of
August, 1, 2, 3.
Judy Coates . Judy was
FIRST YARD Sole. this year.
formerly employed at BeverAug. 2 and 3. 10-3. School
ly's Home of Beauty and she
clothes. men's clotl1es. white
invltes all of her former
customers and friends to give . uniforms and mucl1 more' 293
Ra c e St.,
Middleport.
her a call at 992-3667 for on
Reasonable prices.
appointment.
GARAGE· SALE ot 2&lt; Rollrood
St., Middleport, OH . August 1
Help Wanted
thru _.th. Lots of nice items.
Cheap.
PERMENANT ful l time baby sit·
ter needed S days a week for 3
TWO FAMILY Yard Sale.
young children . Written
Thun.·Fri. 9-.- . 1639 Lincoln
references required. 992-6233
Hts . Rain cancefs .
after 5:30pm .
YARD SAlE . Aug . 2nd and 3rd.
OFFICE SECRETARY needed at
2 miles on Flatwoods Rood.
Baby ilems and boys' clothes,
once. Must be good typist.
short hand preferred. Must be
new bosslnett. wood stove,
old jewelry, cupboards , gun
accurate .
Good
fringe
benefits. Write Bo)( .-86,
cabinet, shampoo bowl .
Pomeroy. OH .-5769 and give
GARAGE SALE . Exercise bike,
complete resume. All replies
higtl choir, clothes, misc. Rain
strictly confidential . Present
or
shine. 9-5 . Fri and Sat. at
employer will nat be conBill Pullins excavating, seventacted without your permistenths mila north on 33. Past
sion. Business college prefer·
Beacon
Service Station. Watch
red but not required .
for signs .
COOt&lt; AND waitress wonted.
Apply In penon. Craw's Fami- BARGAINS GALORE. Thrift
Shop. 305 N. 2nd Ave .. Mid·
ly Restaurant.
dleport. Open Thurs ., Fri and
Sot.
Wanted to Buy
YARD SALE . Friday. August 3.
CHIP WOOD . Poles max . 10.4. 527 N. 2nd Ave .. Mid·
diameter 10" on largest end. dlePQrt.
$12 per ton . Bundled slob. $10 LARGE GARAGE Sole. Friday.
per ton. Delivered to Ohio August 3 hom 9 till 3 at 127
Pollet Co., Rt. 2, Pomeroy.
Lincoln Hill Rd .
9'12· 268'1.
YARD SALE . Friday and SaturOLD FURNITURE, Ice boxes , day. 10 green house on left up
brats beds, Iron beds, desks , from the pool .
etc ., complete households.
Write M.D. Miller. Rt. 4 , YARD AND Porch Sale. Aug. 3,
4 . Back to school pants and
Pomeroy or cat1992· n60.
tops. Twenty-two pairs of
OLD COINS, pocket watches.
jeons. 213 Union Ave. 8-8.
class rings , wedding bonds,
diamonds. Gold or sliver. Call GARAGE SALE . Rain or shine,
Tuesday, August 3 , Saturday,
J. A. Wamsley. 742-2331 .
August -4tl1 at the home of
WANTED: SAW logs . Payment Mrs .
Allen
Brewer .
upon delivery to our yard. 7:30 Stivenville, Portland, Bald
to 3:30 weekdays. Blaney Knobs Rd. Turn ot foot of
Hardwoods, SR 339, Barlow, Stivenville Hill, first house on
OH . 6711-2'180.
the left. Watch far signs.
4-H YARD SALE. Saturday,
Aug. _. , 1979. 1-6 pm at Twin
City Machine Shop.

For Renf
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park ,
Route 33, north of Pomeroy.
Large lots. Coll992·7•79.

BIG INSIDE Sole on Rt. 1~3 . &lt;
mllesoffRt. 7. Thurs., Fri. Sat.

3 AND"' RM furnished and unfurnished
opts.
Phone
9'12-5434 .
ONE BEDROOM opts . Contact
Village Manor, 992-n&amp;?.

Lost and Found
LOST: BALCK and whtie poodle and wire terrle"r lost in
Monkey Run oreo. Ar1swars to
the name of Bandit. Phone
992-n06.

LARGE HOUSE in Pomeroy.
After In Pomeroy. After 5:30,
9'12-5621.
NOTICE ON FILING
OF tNVENTORY
ANO
APPIIAISEMENT
The State of Ohio , Me igs
Cou nt y Court of Common
Pleas . Probate Oivi,ion .
To the E xecuto r . or
Ad minist rator
of
t he
e~tate ,
to such o t the
fo llowi ng a s are r esi dents
of the State of Ohio , vi)( : the surv ivi ng spouse, the
next
of
k in ,
the
bene f ic iaries untl e r the
w ilt : and fo I he attorney or
an orneys rep resenting any
of t he aforemen ti one d
persons :
·
Verl ie B Midk iff , Rt . J,
Pome r oy . Ohi o .otS769 .
"f'ou are her eby notif ied
th a t the Inventory and
Ap pra isemen t of the esta te
o t the aforementio ned ,
dec eased , late o f said
county . were t ited in th is
Cou rt . Said Inventory and
Appra isement w ill be for
he ar ing before l h is co urt
on the 13th day o t Augus t,
1919 , at 1:00 o 'clock. P .M.
Any person des ir ing to
f ile e~~:ceptio. t5 t he reto
mus t file them at lea s t five
cUI! ys pr ior to the dat e set
tor hearing .
Given unde r my han d
and seal of this courl. th is
2.rn day of July , 197 9.
Robert E ·Je~~~
By Cerolyn G . Thomas
Deputy Clerk
&lt;11 26. «8 J 2. 2 tc

LOST, IIASHAN area . Small
white pony with halter.
949·2694 .
tOST: MALE trHing walker,
brown patch aver one eye.
Lost between Rocksprlnga and
Five PoiMs . Call 992-5556 or
:J0.0-5139.

Camping Equipment

lrilCking m mpallits hafi iJnntuJI · 1916 STARCRAFT FOLD down
t'ilmhrgs o f t~bour
camper. Sleeps six. SUOO.

$18·, 300

IY 1J'!.

Rt'rl'U

Tractur Tra ill'r

.
Trai11i11X . /Ill',

PARKERSBURG
(3041 4244413
Pets for Sale
HOOF HOLLOW. English and
Western .
Saddles
and
karness . Horses and ponies.
Ruth Reeves. 61-4-698-3290.
Bording &amp; Riding Lessons and
Hone Core products.
RISING STAR Kennel. Boor·
ding. Call367-0292.
GOING OUT of businesS. All
poodles ,
pomeronlon ,
pekinese. black pom puppy
great coot line. Phone 696-111
after 5pm.
POODLE GROOMING . Judy
Taylor. 614-367-7220.
GOING OUT of busineu. All
poodles ,
pomeron io n ,
pakinese. block pam puppy,
greot coot line . Phone
696-1111 after 5pm.
MUST S~LL . Two3 year quarter
horse geldings, 1 Appaloosa
more 4 and pony. AU are gentle and well broken. Excellent
horses. Call 991.-6162 .
Auto Sales
1974 VEGA HATCHBACK . coil
303·67$-1501 or 305-675-2488
or :J0.0-675-1553.
1969 MACH I. 96.000 Miles.
Good to ex:cellent condition.
$3000 firm . 9'12- 55-4~ .
1975 NOVA 350 4-door. 30,000
miles . E)l(callent shape .
614-667-3305.
1979 CHEVROLET WINDOW
von 8-poss .. P.S., P.B.. A.C'
E)(cellant condition. 992-3051 .
1973 OLDS 98. lull power, low
mileage , good gas mileoga.
EJCcellent cond ition . Ask ing
$1995. 992-2S31 .
1968 CAMERO 3'16-350 h.p., &lt;
speed. Headers, Cregar mags,
new point job. other extras.
Call992·7196 after 5pm.

For

Sale

COAL, LIMESTONE. sand,
gravel , calcium chloride, fertilizer, dog food , and all types
of salt. Excelsior Salt Works,
Inc .. E. Main St., Pomeroy,
992-3891 .
VERMEER BALER Sales . parts
and $ervice. Balers in stoclool for
immediate delivery. Phone
742-2877 or 742-2152 .
FORD DIESEl tractor. New
itres. Excellent condition.
742-2228 or 7_.2-2832 .
POTATOES AT the C.W. Pral·
fitl Form , Portland OH. Prices
change day to day with the
market.
40" G'E. e lectric rnage , white,

_. burner with deep well
cooker: clock and timer. COli
'1'12·7067 .
CANNING tomatoes for sale.
Bri ng containers. You pick or
we pick. 247-3644 .
SIMCO WESTERN brown horse
saddle. Used only few times,
li ke new. with blanket, bridle,
lead. access. equ ipment ,
$175.
Also
Leltergraph
mimeograph machine with 5
cons duplicot in9 ink , $30.
Charlene Hoeflich, 992-sm.
ONE

FIVE

foot .

rotavator.

742 - 2~55 .

ONE 3 year old Jersey cow.
vary gentle. S550. One U mo.
old y, Jersey and % Guernsey
Heifer, $275. 1 set of 3 pt.
hitch cultivators, $175. Ona air
conditioner, 10,000 B. T.U., us·
ed very little, $125. 9~9- 2179 .
KENMORE GAS dryer , $30.

m-n33.

1973 NEW MOON 2 bedroom
with PQrth and underpinn ing
In good condition . Call
9'12·3'191.
14 ,000 BTU air conditioning.
Used very little. 992-7252.
CANNING TOMATOES. Harry
Hill Farm, Letart Fa lls.
STRAW. $1 .25 per bolo. 1969
Dodge Dart, 6 cyl., "'·door,
$600. Phone985 - ~104 .

Auctions

SMALL DINETTE set. $15. Ca ll
992-5919.

Servl·ces Offered
NOW HAULING limestone In
Middleport-Poemroy area .
Call for free estimate.
36-.:,7_:·7.:,1:,01:.:·_ _ _ _ __ __
~

PAINTING AND sandblasting.
free estimates . Call9,.9·2686.
WILL DO HOUSE cleani ng ond
baby se tt ing. Experienced,
hove reference. 992-73U .
WILL CARE for the elderlr in
our home. Also available,
room and board care.
.:..:.·.:.7:.
31c.:•.:.·_ _ _ _ __

m
.

GiveAway
TWO KITTENS , 6weeks old.
gray. 742-3019 .

SEWING MACHINE Repairs.
RED PLUMS to give away.
service, all makes, 992-228-4 .
992-2021.
The ·Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
AKC" REGISTERED St. Bernard . . Authorized Singer Sales ond
Service. We sharpen Scissors.
o4 years old to good home in
country .
Glen
Bissell .
EXCAVATING, dozer. loader
9~9- 2901 .
and backhoe work; dump
trucks and lo-boys for hire.
BEAUTIFUL KITTENS , both long
will haul fill dirt, top soil.
and short hair. All colors .
limestone and grovel. Call Bob
Humane Society. 992-7680.
or Roger Jeffers, day phone
FREE KITTEN. Naads kind
992-7089 .
night
phone
home. Likes dog. 985-4244 .
992-3525 or 992-5232.
Mobile Homes Sale'.s

Real Estate tor Sale

197.- lA " 70 mobile home.
Good condition. 992-5858.

COMMERCIAL BUILDING for
sale. 59 N. 2nd Ave .. Middleport, OH. Formerly occupied by Dudley's Florist. Approx. 5000 sq. ft. on 2 floors .
$16,00Q. Owner may 11elp
finance . Call 304-.. 85-1631 or
304-485-215-4 , ask for Peyton .

1905 GENERAL60xl2, 2 bedr.
1970 Sylva, 60xl2, 2 bedr. .
1970Castle, 60x12, 2 bedr."
197.- Markline, ·50~e12 , 2 bedr.
1969 Valiant, 12x60, 2 bedr.
1967Natlonal , 12x50,2 bedr .
B'S MOBILE HOME SALES. PT.
PLEASANT, WV. 304 - 675-4~24.

ONE COUCH ond 3 choirs.
992-3850.
MATCHING EARLY American
couch and rocker, $I 00 buys
both. Sears 25" solid state TV.
new picture tube and curcuitry. hcellent condition,
$300. Groggel, 1143·2234 .

POMEROY
LANDMARK
He~dquarter.s for

Hotpoint and
General Electric
Appliance~
Sales &amp; Serv1ce

sALE PRICES
w. Carsev
Mgr.
Phone 992·2181

Jack

MESELF.

Roger Hysell
Garage
J /4 mile off Rt. 7 by·pass
on St. Rt . 124 toward
Rutland .

&amp;

Auto
Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992 -5682
4-JO·Ifc

H. L Writesel
Roofing
New, repair,
gutters and
down spouts.
Window cleaning
Gutter cleaning
Free Estimates

28. 247·316-4.
FOUR BEDROOM. both. livingdining on · ~1. acre lot in
Rutland. Ut ility building. Call
742-2754.

1974 GOVENOR MOBILE
HOME 12 x 52. 23,000 BTU air
conditioning, 16 cu ft Sears
slef-defrosting. Good furniture, underpinning included.

HOUSE FOR sale in Rutland. 3
bedroom~. both, uti lity room,
din ing area, 21 x 11 liv ing
room , 12 )( 21 family room.
lots of cabinets in kitchen ond
5 x 7 pantry. Metal building
outside' Lot 100 x 2-40 out of
high water on quiet street.
phone 742-2-420.
1 •; , ACRE WITH 1975 12 "65 3
bedroom ~railer . Tuppers
Plains oreo . 61 .. ·667-3305 .

~ . 992-2483 .

1977 12 x 60 Hillcrest mobile
nome. Total electric. 2 bedr..
good co ndition . $8500 .
992·5170 or 9'12-3667 .
Real Estate for Sale
REAL ESTATE Loons. Purchase
ond ref inance. 30 year term s,
VA. No money down (eligible
veterans). FHA · As low as 3
per cent down (non-veterans) .
Ireland Mortgage Co., 77 E.
State, Athens. 61•-592-3051 .

FOR SALE by owner: 20 acre
farm near Langsville . 3
bedroom, living room , dining
room , kitchen and baht. Am·
pie storage, util ity room in
bosement. Alum inum siding
and fully Insulated. large barn
and small outbuildings. Well
stocked pond. $36,500. owner
will accept second mortgage .
as
downpoyment
from
qualified purchaser. Coli
992-n33 for appointment.

TWO STORY 3 bedroom house.
3 lots. Now's you r chance if
you need a house. $12 ,&lt;XX&gt;.
Owner , wilfing to talk .
992-2082 or7~2 - 2328.
REAL ESTATE: 1 Ocre lot in Riggscrest Manor, between Tuppers Plains and Chester.
Phone 98S·3'129 ond 985-&lt;129.

NICE COMFORATBLE 8 room
home on apprax . 2 acres of
levelland with plenty of shade
trees . On Rutland Rd .
992-7255 .

HOUSE FOR sole near Meigs
Mines. 742-2228.
RESTAURANT AND ba r. D· 1
and D-2 license included . 3
acres. and house, Good
busl11ess opportunity . Call
367-0557.

I I ....--...0
' :':.:~..~-

19 ACRES, 5 room house. CR

eNEWHOMES
•ROOM ADDITIONS
eROOFING
eVINYL SIDING
eGUTTER &amp; SOFFIT

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING
Federal Hous(pg &amp;
Veterans Admin . L.,.ns.

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.
Hours 9· 1 M., W., F.
Other times by appoint·
m'mt . .
107 Sycamore (Rear)

Pomeroy, 0 .

992 -7544
7·8· 1 mo.

or

Moten, Inc..
Ph. 992·2174

Pomeroy

BLOCK &amp; BRICK
WORK, GENERAL

• TELL ME:• REVEI'lEND
' GOO.C~-- DOES "FLOWEII:"
EVER COME BACK
TO 'r'OUit 'lOUTH

Pomeroy, Ohio

TRUST Me IF 1 AC.TED
A SPY!

A~

OKAY, I SAVVY!
THE THII-/G T'DO
15 I&lt;EfP COMSII&lt;J6
THE STREET!7 FO~
A Giii:L SELLING
&amp;UTTONI10LE
FLOWERS!

~

THE RECORD
· -lilY THE WALL.
STREET AAE-A
1\ND CENTRALPARK 5QUTH

Siding

Fe;tturing:

men 's

women's

styling,

&amp;

perms.
Call for appt. or walk ln .
992 -2367

Pomeroy, 0 .
7·10·1 mo.

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

TH~

PIZ:ZA Q&lt;L&gt;ST
iS AS 10tX:&gt;H /&gt;S

Thoughtless double costs

LAR~RD.

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

116 E .

NEW LISTING - TRU ·
LY A CLASS HOME In Pomeroy, th is la r ge
brick is priced far be low
fa ir market value . 10
rooms ; S bedrooms, 2
baths, forma l dining
room , la rge living room ,
library, large rec . room
In attick, many, many
features. WOULD YOU
BE LIE VE - $58,900.00.
NEW LISTING 2
family in Syracuse, live
in one, rent the othe.r, 2
stor y brick; 2 kitchens,
2 baths, gOOd invest- ·
ment for the future .
$28,000 .00 .
EXCELLENT
NEIGHBORHOOD
Middleport, 1,h story
remodeled home ; 3
bedrooms, garage, fenc ed yard, gOOd condi tion .
$25,000.00.
START A FUTURE
Now , Wi t h th is nice
hom e in Syracuse. 3
bed room s, basement,
double lot. Should VA or
FHA. Excellent condi ·
lion . $26,800.00.
ACREAGE IN TOWN
-Good 1 floor plan
home , 3 bedrooms,
basement, fruit trees,
garden.
A STEAL.
$25,000.00.
MOBILE
HOME
- Fully equ ipped kit·
c hen, centra l air, wood
burning
fireplace,
12x60·1972 Indy . Reduc·
ed $7,900.00.
WE NEED HOMES $40,000 PRICE RANGE
FOR 3 QUALIFIED
BUYERS.
REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland, Sr.
Honry E. Cleland, Jr.
992·2259
992-6191

Second Street

LITTLE FARM - Th is
is for the gardener.
Young fruit , small
stream, barn and 2 car
garage, 7 room home,
dr illed well, cel lar and
on State Rt.
REAL BUY - A large
family home in good
condition .
3 or -4
bedrooms, 2 baths, full
basement, and 2 car
garage on large lot.
NEAR TOWN -Corner
lot with nice 3 bedroo m
frame home, bath , nat.
gas furnace, glassed
front porch, eat-in kit ·
c hen, a 3 room apt _,
garage and carport.
OUT ATHENS WAY - 2
bedroom ca rpeted one
floor plan home . ·sath,
util ity , porches, garage
and large garden .
OPPORTUNITY
Rent the 2 tra iler spaces
and live in the 4
bedroom home . 1 v,
baths, garage and river
view.
INVEST 3 room
business bldg . very
c heap for a small
bus iness.
OFFICES - One fl. of 7
rms., insulated, ther mopane windows, tile fl.
Ohio Power, city water,
and airconditionod.
BUY NOW, FIX UP
AND MOVE BEFORE
WINTER .
CALL
992-3325.

MORTGAGE CO.

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

77 E . Stile, Athens ·

592-3051

4-23-1 mo.

LITI'LE ORPHAN AIOOE-TIIE OLD POSSUM
EH? THER'E HE IS ...
SOUND ASLEEP"• GUESS I
M\J~T 'A' 6EEN DREAMIN'...
BIH IT DID SEEM REAL .. ·

LEAPIH' LIZAR05! IT •·· IT
LOOI&lt;S LIKE "1:¥\0QY" COMIN'
BACK TO TH' HOUSE .. .

TILLIS

st. Rt. 1
North of Chester. 0 .
Phone 915-4202
6·24-1 mo. pd .

Au.EYOOP

I'T'S PROSAS!.Y OSCAJC ...
I'LL I!IIOCT o-&lt;E'S 001' HIS

Housing

·, Head uarters

•New Home
•Addons
* Remoldings
*Free estimates

992-6011

PULLINS EXCAVATING. Complete Service. Phone 992-2•78.
AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE
been cancelled? Lott your
opttroton license? Phon•
992- 21~3 .

E·C ELECTRICAL Contractor
serving Ohio Valley region.
Six days a w..k , 2• hours service. Emergency calls. Call
882-2952 or 882·3454 .
HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex·
coveting, septic systems,
dozer , backtloe . Rt. 1o43
Phone I (6U) 69B-7331 o~
742-2593.
IN "STOCK for immediate
delivery: various sizes of pool
kits. Do-it· yourself or let us
install for you . D. Bumgardner
Soles, Inc. 992·5724.
ADO ONS and remodeling,
gutter work , down spouts,
soma concrete work, walks
ond
dr ive way s
(free
estimate) . V.C. Young 111
Racine , OH. ~.-9- 2748 and
9'12·7314 .

OPEN HOUSE
1:00 To 6:00

August 4th

Directions - Turn towards the hill on Brown Street in Mason
and follow the signs leading to the property.
'

.

12 Room House
3 Story Barn
8% Acres Completely Fenced

• 5 I mo

WILl HAUL limestone and
gravel. Also, lime houllnv and
spreoding. Leo Morris Truck1"11, Phone 742-2455.
ROOfiNG. ROOf r - ir and
siding. ather maintenance. EI
R ftoofing ond Sidin g .
614·388·8860 or 614· 388-8797 .
NEIGLER Construction. For
bu ilding good hou ses and doing repair work . Coli Guy
Nelgier. 949-2508.
ANN'S CAt&lt;E Decorating Supplies . 50716 Osborn Rd. ,
Reedsville, OH -45772. For In·
formation call , 667-6485. Will
be apt'n late if you n..d
something.

WEDGE REALTY
Broker • 675-2722
WILL CONSIDER A TRADE

ACROSS

Under New M•n•ve·
mont (formerly 5ytvt•'s
Upholslery t,
•cross
from Codner's T•••ca.

mg questions will be used in
this colum n and will receive
copies of JACOBY MODERN .}

4 Taste

7 "- du
Iieber"
8 Ex talk-show

host
9 Ultimatum

20 Coat slit
22 Dennis

IN SYRACUSE
Ph. m -3743 or m ·J75Z
8·1·1ma.

• I 'LL CLEAR OUT. MY
S TUFF AI&lt;J D YOU CAN
~Ve YOUR. OFFICE
i?&gt;Ac;'K , MOM .

L .. I. DON'T
UNDER5TAND.
AREN 'T 'IOU
MCK HERE
TO STAY?

~AT

DEPENDS ...

ON WHETHER YOU LIKE
IT HERE ENOUBH TO
5WALLOIN YOUR PRIDE

AND MAKE A PUBUC
APOLOGY!

word

Yesterday's Allflwer

It Velocity

%5 Color
38 Secondhand
26 Likewise
40 Colleen's
27 Type of look
name
31 Terpsi- ·
IZ Biblical

14 Neronian
lhe Menace's
greeting
mother
17 Festive
U Kind
18 Aclor,
chorean
matriarch
of eclipse
Jack 32 Make naked 43 Polynesian
28 Dress fabric 19 Marcel
34 Byre sound
drink
28 Floor covering Marceau, e .g . 36 "Lohengrin" 44 Understood
30 Set right
n Lady's bag
role
15 Bikini time

32 Dull-witted -Z3~H~un-di;red,;,:-:-F-r.-,i-37;_Work hard

33 Meek

in Nice

r;

35 Jutting
36 FlighUess

·We were able to get. a few more of
these fine Snapper Mowers and
~ant to offer them to you one last
t•me at a Great Savings. ·

bird

39 "Wilh
malice

toward -"

•
.J!ARNEV

SHeRIFF

SALE

care of fhl:s new:spa·
per. Individual questions will
be answered if accompanied
by stamped. self-addressed
envelopes. The most in terest·

EKperts ...

1 Lessen
sensation
i Escapade
5 Salad green
11 Kind of chair 6 Convincing

1% Florida city
13 Take fright
1S Let have
16 Caddoan
Indian
17 Jewel

SNAPPER SALE

TAIT !!

1-308W- Hand Start

1"1ME's
IJ·WIISTIN'

NOW,WHAR DID
THAT SLIPPERV

VARMINT RUN
OFF TO?

41 Be daunted
16 Sifting
device
47 Duffer's
digging
t8 Tree
49Growing
outward

DOWN
1 Pack
animal
2 Put money

h--+-+-+-+-

down
3 Actress
Rehan

8 HP Rider - 30" Cut

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR

Is- LONGFELLOW
List
$895. 75

This Is one of the neatest and best malntalnod properties on the market
today - the view of the Ohio River Val loy Is broath.taklng and the peace and
quiet will tranquilize you - all ·bf this plus fhe conveniences of city life come take a look Saturdav as one of our sales force glves•vou a lour you will
not be disappointed .

She .. .and
her mother'

WINNIE

List
$1,008.75

(Do you have a question for
the expert~ ? Write ··Ask the

by THOMAS JOSEPH

.
•

A&amp;H
UPHOLSTERING

6- 3081WS - Elec. Start
8 HP Rider - 30" Cut

!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .,

~~.,•~tr

SUPER
GOOSE
STOCK
TRAILER NOWAVAILAILI .

7251 mo .

7·12

EXCAVATING ,
dour
back hoe and dilcher , Chorle~
R. Hatfield. Black Hoe Service
Rutland, Ohio . Pane U2-2008.'

'

Hlll Monltomtrl •• L•n,nll l«, Oftio
61A-Mf·4,4J E"~ l "ll
1 MIIP1 IEIU ol WllllttVillt

651 'Beech Street
Middleport, 0 .
992 -2356

~·

when t o ke ep quiet. West
passed So uth 's opening bid
with a hand m os t players
would double with . After
West's initia l pass tlie bidding, in hls opinion , got out
of hand.
·
He wondered how th e o pponents could bid to five
clubs when he had such

TRAILER SALES

Will Mike Servi&lt;e CillO

2.

Some people never know

Bectric Motor
Shop

S-2

4•

USED GARDEN
lRACTORS
AND
RIDING MOWERS

Reynolds'

11 Yflllrl Experience

strengths. West decided to
teach his opponel)ts a lesson.
But it was West who would
learn the lesson . If West had
analyzed the bidding, it
would have been clear to
WEST
EAST
him that North and South
• Q J 10
• 975 42
were c ue bidding hoping for
• 876 43
• Q J 10 9
a s lam in clubs. What other
. 96
.43 2
tricks did he have besides
.AK 95
. ....
the ace-king of clubs?
Doubling for a one-trick
SOUTH
set is not good bridge. It can
• 6
help the opponents make the
•AK
hand and it risks what hap• K Q J'7 5
pened here, a redouble. If
• Q 10 6 3 2
West had defeated the conVulnerable : North-South
tract, which he couldn't, he
Dealer: South
would have gained 100
points. His double and the
Wes t
North East South
redouble cost him 350 points.
a
South's play of the dununy
Pass 1•
Pass
was automatic expert techPass
Pass 4•
nique and not based on the
Pass 4+
Pass
Dbl .
Pass Pass Redbi. . information conveyed by the
double. At trick two he led
Pass Pass Pass
hls 10 of clubs. This play
guarde d a ga inst finding all
four clubs in either defendOpeni n g lead : •Q
er's hand. Later on he would
be able to pic k up the nine of
clubs irrespective of where
By Oswald Jacoby
it was loca led .
aod Alan Sontag
NORTH
+A K 8 3
• ~2
• A 10 8
• J 874

&gt;lANDS FULL AND...
DnM I= R'OY . 0 .

QUASH APATHY THRUSH
Answer: Little enough compe nsation for getting one
all wet - A "SOP"

:~ORNLOSER

IRElAND

MARK MORA
~AIR STYLIST

I II I I X]

THURSDAY, AUGUST 2, 1f7t
11:00-Proiect UFO 3,15; Mcirk &amp;
Mindy 6, 13; Walt(tns 8, 10 ;
National Geographic 20,33;
Movie "Dark Commaritl" 17.
B:»--Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13; 9:00Quincv 3, 15; Barney Miller 6, 13;
Hawaii Flve.Q 8, 10; Art of Being
Fully Human 20; Bad Boys 33.
9 :30--Carter Country 6,13.
10:00-Davld Cassidy 3, 15; 20-20 .
6, 13; Barnaby Jones 8, 10; Onedln
Line 17; News 20 .
10:3G-Hock.l ng Valley Bluegrass 20.
11 :00- News 3,6,8, 10, 13,15; New
Soupy Sales 17; Book Beaf 33.
· 11 : »-Johnny Carson 3,151 Starsky
3. Hutch 6, 13; Mash 8; ABC News
33; Movie "One Eyed Jacks" 10;
Karate 17.
12 : 0~Movle "Wild Rovers" 8;
12:3G-Movle "La Dolce VIta"
17; 12 :40--Baretta 6,13 .
1:00-Tomorrow J; News 15; 1:50News 13; 4: !~News p; 4 , 3~
Avengers 17.

Thursday, Aug. 2

992-2282
7-5-1 MO.

Real Estate Loans

1ntroduces --

Now arrange the circled letters to
lonn the·surprise answer , as sug·
gesled bv the above cartoon .

I Jumbles: PIOUS

Yesterday's

Extensiw Remodeling
GREG ROUSH
Phone 992·7583

Purchase
and
Refinance
30 Year Terms
A-No money down
(eligible veter1nU
FHA-AS low as 3%
down (non·veterlns,

Mick ' s
Barber&amp;
Style Center

I NIXFUL
I
(J I

(Answers tomorrow)

Vinyl and Aluminum

Call for ·a Free Siding
E-stimate, 949-2101 or
949· 2160. No sunday
calls.
6·14·2 m o.

I

I KJ

New Home

6·6·1 mo.

OI=IEN "THe !!EST
'TH lNG! 'TO I!!UY
WHEN ONE WAN"Te.
"TO ~AVE MONEY.

Prlntanswerhere: (

Construction

Main St.

&amp;UT I'M ~URE YOU II:EA\.IZE'
THE YOUN6STfRS WOULDN'T

ROOSH

BY

BISSEll
SIDING CO.

S~ELTER ~

992·5547
1-25·2 mo.

CONSTRutnON

CA'LL
992-2772

ITRYSOFb

;CAPTAIN EASY

CONTRACTOR

ALUMINUM
&amp; VINYL SIDING

Radiator·~
Service~
the ,IU9tll Truck
Bulldo ur lhd l• tor

I. MENGO f

Rt. 3

E-'PERIENCED
From

N. L Consttructil

Phone 992·6323
Free Es1imate5
7·25·1 mo. pd.

Free Estimate

949-2862--949-2160
4·5·1fc

CALL

BOB'S GENERAL
CONTRACTING

J&amp;LINSULAnON

Smith Nelson

1972 LTD. P.B.. P.S. , A.C.
Needs body work . Uses
regular gas. Coll992-5919.

FOUND' LITTLE yellow klflen
on Condor St. 992·3760.

wv.

_

os quutrJ hr tilt' U.S: Vtpr u{
l.abur. Bureau uf LDbur statis·
tics, b11llttin No. /8 7S.
Don 't JUst be satisfied with a
JOB ~ Plan NOW lor a Professional career Dnving a " Big
R.g ." We are a Private Train1ng
Sc hool and d you rnee1 our
qua lificaTions you will be trained by Prohus1onat Instructors
on modern equipment . Train
on a Part Time bam !Set. &amp;
Sun .) snd Keep your job, or
attend our 3 Week Full Time
Resident Tra1ning.

RESPITE FROM rHIS

Business Services

BRADFORD. Auct ioneer, Complet3 Service. Phone 9_.9-2487
or 949-2000. Racine , Ohio,
Critt Brodfo~d .
ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers, toosten, ircns, all
sma ll appliances. Lawn moer,
next to State Highway Garage
on Route 7, 985-3825.

al"&lt;'fllgc

7.=
~2· 29
=7
8. _

Television
Viewing

A BRIEF

...I WILL TAKE

Business Services .

'Dri•·t•rs rmP/cJyecl hy l,prgt

ALUMINUM MOLDS for mak·
ing ornamental concrete
Items. Picnic table. bird bath
ond planter, etc. 742-2746.

BIG AUCTION every Wed . . 7
pm. Hartford Community
Center , He~rtford , WV , o4 miles
above
Pomeroy -Mason
Bridge.
AUCTION FRIDAY 7 pm . New
and used mercahndlse at Pt.
Pleasant Livestock Market,
1510 Ohio St .. Pt. Pleosant'

-f

!NSTI(!JCTION

-~~ Sentinel., ~ddleport-Poinerov. 0 .. Thursdav. Allj!. 2.1!n9

SALE

'78888

I

PEANUTS .

CRYPTOQUOTES

AT GREAT SAVINGSI

992-2975
Pomeroy, Ohio

,.

·•
'•

,.

· "Sirocco" 17.
MOO

GRAVELY
TRACTOR SALES
210 Condor St.

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, e tc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are dlfl'erent.

FRIDAY, AUGUST!, 1f79
at Large 17 ; 5:4~
Farm Report13; 5: 50-PTL Club
13; 5:5~Summer Semester 10.
6:00-700 Club 6,8; PTL 'Club 15;
6 : 1G-News 17;6:2~Socletles In
Transition 10.
6 :»--Dragnet 17 ; 6 : 4~Mornlng
Report J; 6:50-Good Morning
West VIrginia 13; 6:5s--chuck
White Reports 10; News 13.
7:00-Today 3,15; Good Morning
America 6, 13; Friday Morning 8;
Schoolles 10; Three Stooges 17;
7 : 1~A.M . Weather 33.
7:3G-Famlly Affair 10; Lilias Yoga
&amp; You 33 .
8 :oo-capt. Kangaroo 8, 10; Lassie
17 ; Sesame St . 33 . ; 8 : 3oRomper Room 17.
9 :00-Bob Braun 3; Phil Donahue
13, 15; Big Valley 6; Porky Pig &amp;
Friends 8; Love of Life 10; Lucy
Show 17; Biography 33.
9 :»--Sanford &amp; Son 8; Green Acres
17.
10:oo-card Sharks 3,15; All In The
Famllv 8, 10; Dating Game 13;
Mov ie "Copacabana" 17; Paint
Along with Nancy Komlnsky 33.
10 : 30-AII Star Secrets 3, 15;
Bewitched 6 ; Whew! B, 10;
Consumer Survival Kit 33.
10:5s--cBS News 8; House Call 10.
11 :00-High Rollers 3, 15; Laverne &amp;
. Shirley 6, 13; Price Is Right 8,10;
Blographv 33.
11 :3G-Wheel of Fortune 3,15;
F amlly ,Feud 6, 13; 11 : 5~News
17 .
12 :00-Newscenter 3; News 6, 10;
Password 15; Young &amp; the
Restless B; Over Easy 33;
Mltldav Magazine 13; Love
American Style 17 .
'
12 :3G-Ryan's Hope' 6, 13; Search for
Tomorrow 8, 10; Not For Women
Only· 15; Movie "The Human
Jungle" 17 ; MacNeil -Lehrer
Report 33 .
1:00-DaysafOur Uvesl,\5; All My
Children 6,13; New• B; Young &amp;
the Restless 10; Sen . Robert C .
Bvrd In Concert 33.
1:»-As The World Turns 8, tO;
2 :00-Doctors 3,15; One life to
Live 6,1.3; 2 :2~News 17.
2:»--Anofher World 3,15; Guiding
Light B, 10; I Love Lucy 17;
Bluegrass Ramble Picnic 33.
3:00-General Hospital 6, 13; Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 20; Rebop 17. ·
3:3o-Mash 8; Jokor's Wild 10;
Banana Splits 17; Over Easy 20;
Birth 3. Death of a Star 33.
4:00-Mister Cartoon 3; Hollywood
Squares 15; Merv Griffin 6;
Addams Family 8; Sesame St.
20.33; 51• Million Dollar Man 10; .
Mike Douglas 13; Fllntslones 17.
4': 30-Lone Ranger 3; Hogan's
Heroes 8; Lucy Show 15; Par.
fridge Family 17 .
5:00-Bonanza 3; Beverly Hillbillies
8; Mister Rogers 20,33; Gomer
Pyle 10; Six Million Dollar Man
13; Brady Bunch 15; Star Trek
17.
5:»--News 6; Petticoat Junction 8;
Elec . Co. 20: Mary Tyler Moore
10; Odd Couple 15; Doctor Who
33.
6:00-News 3,8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News
6; Family Affair 17; Villa Alegre
20: Studio See 33.
6:3G-NBC News3,15; ABC News 13;
Andy Griffith 6; CBS News 8,10;
Over Easy 20,33; Father ~nows
Best 17.
-7: 00- Cross -Wits 3; Newlywed
Game 6, 13 ; Sha Na Na 8; News
10; Love American Style 1S; Get
Smart 17: Dick Cavett 20,33.
·
7:3o--Hee Haw Honeys 3; $1.98
Beauty Show 6; Family Feud B;
Price Is Right 10; On The
Starting Line 13; Pop Goes The
Country 15; . Mv Three Sons 1i;
MacNeil-Lehrer: __Report 20,33.
l :00- Diff'rent
Strokes
3, 15;
Operation Petticoat 6, 13; Movie
"Challonge to be Free" 8,10;
Washington Week In Review
20,33: Up Close with Ronald
Reagan 17.
&amp;:»-Hello, Larry 3,1S; Welcome
Back Kotter 6, 13; Wall Slreet
Week 20,33: Baseball . 11.
9:00-Rockford Flies 3, 15; Movie
" Night Cries" 6,13; Buckeye
Holiday 20 : Mo!1ey, News and
VIews 33 .
9:»--Movle "Ebony, Ivory &amp; Jade"
B, 10; Mr. Mills Reports on
Jupiter Flyby 20; One &amp; Only
Phyllis Dl xey 33.
10:oo-Eddle Capra Mysteries 3, 15;
News 20; 10 :3D--Consumer
Survival Kit 20 .
11 : 00- News 3,6,8, 10, 13, 15; New
Soupy Sales 17; Two Ronnles 20;
11 : 0~To Know The Sound of the
World 33 .
11 : »--Johnny Carson 3,15; PGA
Championship 6, 13; . Bonkers 8;
ABC News 33; Movie "Night ol
the Blood Monsler" 10; Movie
5 : J~World

ZOG

YUSMXGV

VJMGV:

Y /,

CYUSJ;

YA

'I

~·

M

IMM

BYNG

VX Z B B ,
BZOQG

MOO

IJ GH
EG

VIDXWBG . - S .
S .
SMBIMU
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: EVERYBODY · WANTS TO BE
SOMEBODY; NOBODY WANTS TO GROW. - GOETIIE

...

~

(C)

.I

19111 King Fu!urH

$yndlc~te,

Inc .

12:oo-callfornla Jam-2 6,13; Juke·
Bo• 8; Monty Pylhon's Flying
·•
Circus 33.
. ~~
12 :30- Movle "Woman Times
Seven"
B;
1 : OD-Midnight
Special 3, 15 ; Movie "The Brain
''
from Planet Arous" 10.
1:»--Basebail 17; 2:00-lronslcle ·
13; 2 :3G-News 3.
3 : 00- News 13; 4:00--News 17;
4 : 20-Av~m~ers 17.

�14- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. Thursday, Aug . 2, 1979

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
SIDEWALK

FOR THIS SALE

WINTUK $1 49
KNITTING
YARN

MEN'S
ST. THOMAS
BILLFOLDS

Red He art, 4 ply, han ·
dknitti ng yarn. Excellent
color se lection .

held on

SKEIN
OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL B. P.M.
1-·--·--~--·~------~~-·-~·~~----~-----~--·--·-~--.-- -~--·-

.

WOMEN'S

Sll PS AND HALF .Sll PS

SUMMER DRESSES

SPECIAL GROUP, BROKEN SIZES

s3~••••••• SALE

s1.00
REGULAR ·s449 to s600••••••• SALE $2.00
REGULAR sgoo••••••••.•••••.• SALE s3.00

WOMEN'S

JUNIOR, MI SSY AND HALF SIZES

REGULAR '19.00 to '23.00 •••••••••••• SALE 19.00
REGULAR 129.00 to s36.00···~······· SALE s12.00
REGULAR '37.00 to 139.00 ••••••••••• SALE 115.00
REGULAR '42.00 to 148.00 ........... SALE 118.00
REGULAR 154.00 to S68.00 ........ ."•• SALE '25.00

JUNIOR TOPS
REGULAR 12.50 to·1 3.50.~·······SALE

·REGULAR 11.00 to
1

su.oo ...•. SALE $5

00

SUMMER SPORTSWEAR
REGULAR 19.00 to 112.00 •••••••••••• SALE '2.50
REGULAR 114.00 to '17.00 •••••••••••• SALE 14.00
REGULAR 119.00 to 122.00.•••••••••••.SALE 16.00
REGULAR 123.00 to 125.00 •••••••••••• SALE 18.00
REGULAR 132.00 ••••••••••••••••••••• SALE 110.00

MEN'S SU

MER WEIGHT

ZIPPER JACKETS
Final clearance sale. Sizes 36 to 46.

GIRLS' DRESSES
Summer Styles and Colors in Broken Sizes

lj2 PRICE
REGULAR '4.50 to S6.00 .••••••••••••• SALE 12.00
~·----·---·--M-EN-,· -..,..
5 sH·-0---R--T-~S-LE~-E·-v·-E·----·--·--.1
1
1
REGULAR
9.00
TO
13.00 •••••••••••• SALE 13.00
KNit' SHIRTS
Clearance sale of entire stock in sizes

s, M , Land XL .

·1f2 PRICE

REGULAR '15.00 to 117.00 ••••••••••• SALE 14.00
REGULAR 120.00 to 123.00 ••••••••••.SALE s5.00
CARHARTI BROWN DUCK

WOMEN'S

CHILDREN'S SUMMER TOPS

s25 WORK DUNGAREES
SUMMER- SPORTSWEAR
Broken sizes, 34 to 48 waist, limited quantity.
1
1
1
REGULAR 9.00 to 12.00•• , •••••••••••• SALE 3.00
REGULAR S6.00 to 19.00 •••••••••••••• SALE. 12.00 REGULAR 113.00 to 118.00••••••••••••• SALE 14.00.
REGULAR 119.00 to 123.00 ••••••••••••• SALE S6.00 !-s·EL':':'"':'::Ec:n_.-::::o-:F-:::R-:.O-::M-:-s~Toc=-~K::--~--·--·----------·.:.11
CARHARTI 125.99
REGULAR 124.00 to 128.()(). ............ SALE s8.00
MEN'S DRESS SLACKS
CARPENTER'S
BIB
OVERALLS
1
1
Broken sizes, 34 to 41i waist, discontinued styles. While
REGULAR 32.00 to 34.00............ SALE 111.00 Mostly polyester double knits. Sizes 30 to 42 . Regularly
they last .
$11.95 to $19 .95.
1
1
1
00
REGULAR 37.00 to 48.00 •••••••••••• SALE 15.00
V2 PRICE
'10
99

REGULAR 13.50 to 13.75 •••••••••••••• SALE 11.00

CHILDREN'S
SLEEPWEAR
Summer Styles for little boys and girls

REGULAR '4.50 to 14.75 ••••••••••••• SALE 11.00
REGULAR S6.00 to 18.00•••••••••••••• SALE 12.00

WOMEN'S BLOUSES
REGULAR 18.00 to 111.00 ..... ~ •••••••• SALE 13.50
REGULAR 114.00 to 118.00 ••••••••••••• SALE 14.50
SELECT GROUP

MEN'S WEMBLEY TIES
Regular pri ce $6 .50 . Limited quality .

REGULAR '9.00 to 5 1~.00 •••••••••••• SALE 13.00

$100

PRETEEN
SPORTSWEAR
REGULAR 14.50 ••••••••••••••••••••• SALE s1.00
REGULAR 110.00 to '12.00. ••••••••••. SALE 13.00
REGULAR 113.00 to 116.00 •••••••••••• SALE '4.00
REGULAR 117.00 to 124.00 ••••••••••• ~ S6.00

·--·---·--·-~------·--·----·--·-~-·------1--·----·------·--·-:~---------·-·---·---·+---------·--··-·----~-·--·-~--·--·----·--·...l

MEN'S SPORT COATS

Not all sizes. Solid colors and pla id patterns. Regular
prices $49.95 to$59.95 . Your choice .

WOMEN'S TOPS
REGULAR 18.00 to 110.00••••••••. SALE $JSO

SMALL GROUP

THROW RUGS

Regular price $6.99 to $15 .49. Discontinued style . Solid
colors, 100 per cent DuPont nylon. While !hey last.

1f2 PRICE
MEN'S GYM SHORTS
HANES UNDERWEAR SHORTS
Regular prices $2.95 on gym shorts, Hanes
underwear, odds and ends, boxers and knits.
Slightly soiled, broken packages.

1

h PRICE

$400
00
19.00 •••••••.SALE $5

REGULAR 111.00 to 112.00 .••••••• SALE
REGULAR 114.00 to

MEN'S SUITS

Solids and patterns selected from regular stock . Pants,
coat and vest to match. Regularly $89.95 and $99.95. Not
all SIZeS.

'37 99
~---·-·---------~-MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS

Short sleeve styles ins, M, Land XL sizes. Good selection . Entire stock included . Regularly $7.95 to$17 .00.

1

1h

Spring Base Chairs. Chaise lounges, Rockers,
Chairs, Tables

FINAL CLEARANCE SALE PRICES
·ELBERFELD$ WAREHOUSE

WOMEN'S SHORTS
REGULAR S6.00 to 18.00 ••••••••••••• SALE 12.50
REGULAR '10.00·to 513.00 ••••••••••• SALE 14.00
REGULAR 124.00 •••••••••••••••••••• SALE 110.00

OPEN SATURDAY 9:30 TO 5 P.M.

,.

PRICE

FINAL CLEARANCE

SUMMER FURNITURE

THE UNI-DRIU. was demonstrated Thursday at the · n~ge
forage day held at the Joe Bailey Fann just west of Rutland. The first
demonstration was given at 2 p.m. and the second at 7 p.m. The Uni~
operates without disturbing the ground and causing extens1ve erooon.
This is the fJrat demonstration of this type to be given in Meigs'County-

•

at

NO. 78

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

•

enttne
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

FRIDAY, AUGUST 3, 1979

Controversial issue

REGULAR '13.00 to 115.00••••••••••• SALE '4.00

1f2 PRICE
JUNIOR

VOL. XXVIII

REGULAR 18.00 to 512.00 •••••••••••• SALE 53.00

Not every size in every co lor. Regular prices $5.00 to
$9.0Q. While they last.

JOHN RICE, left, Meigs County Agricultural Agent, explained the
steps necessary to successful no-tillage pasture renovation. With Rice is

e

REGULAR 17.00 to 110.00••••••• SALE $JOO

RUSS GIRL SPORTSWEAR

SELECT GROUP MEN'S BELTS

1b1s is the first time the Uni-Drill has been demonatrated in Meigs
County.
The NOotlll has a place on many farms in Meip County it was explained, e8JII!clal!Y in introducing new species of forages without disturbing the ground and caUBing extensive erosion.
Johri Rice, Meigs County Agricultural Agent, gave the necessary
steps to follow in Ulling the no-Ull such as field selection, soil testing iutd
application of llme and fertilizer to name a few.
·
Olhenl speaking to those attending about the process were Boyd Ruth,
district conservationist for Soil Comervatlon Service Roy Miller, and
Eugene Buckley of Landmark.

$} 00

CHILDREN'S SHORTS

FOR THIS SALE

tension Service at the Joe Bailey Farm !coated west of Rutland on SR 124.
The first demonstration was given at 2 p.m. and the second at 7 p.m.
The Moore Uni-Drlll, that the SoU Conservation Service purchased,
was demonstrated along with the spraying of cheniicals by Landmark.

Boyd Ruth, district conservationist for the Soil Conservation Service.

·-----·-·-~·-·----·-·-------~~·-~-~·-

WOMEN'S SWIMWEAR
REGULAR 118.00 to 123.00 •••••••••••• SALE 18.00
REGULAR 127.00 to 130.00 ••••••••••• SALE 112.00

farm

A forqe No-till demonstration was conducted Thursday afternoon by

Y2 PRICE

FRIDAY, AUGUST 3RD AND SAtURDAY, AUGUST 4TH

Bail~y

the Melp County Soli CcNervatlon Service and the Cooperative Ex-

Discontinued styles and
colors. Limited quantity to
sell.

$}19

REGULAR s249 to

Forage demonstration

CLOSE OUT SALE

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

Rio board to cOnsider transfer Saturday
.

and Rio Grande Community
College ... "
1be Rio Grande (private board)
trustees voted to accept the school of
nur sin g at its regular monthly
meetin g last week . Communily
College (pubtic board ) trustees will
meet Saturday, at 2:IS p.m., at the
Vinton County Court Hou se in
McArthur to consider a resolution of
acceptance .
Dr. Charles E. Hol zer Jr ., who has
spearheaded a drive in opposition w
the transfer since the hospital
foundation vote, has sent a letter to
the publi c board requesting
permission to speak at its Saturday
meeting.
Hol zer cites the following in his
opposition to the propolled transfer :
-"The hard-eamed National League
of Nursing accredil&lt;ltion cannot be
tr a nsfer red. The pr oposed new
program l . • ust start from scratch."
-"Cost to students (those from the
Twenty-two Middleport firemen four -county area) would be less. but
have earned certificates for so would the quality and length of the
completlng 36 hours of instruction in program ."
fiJ:t fighting skills and techniques at
-"There would be no significant
the close of the last class period reduction of hospi tal
costs
recently.
(acknowledged both by the outside
Individual cards were presented 00 co nsultant and the hospital
each man completing the training . A administration )."
department certificate was presen~ed
-''The Holzer School of Nursing,
Fire
Chief
Wayne
Davis
Thursday
being
unique in the area, has no
00
night by Pomeroy Fire Clllef Charles competition with a simUar school ; Rio
Legar, the instructor .
Grande would be competing for
1be certificate and cards, as well as students with four other two-year
the instruction, were authorized and nursi ng programs within a 56-mile
made available by the Trade and
Industrial Vocational Education
Service of the State Department of
Education in cooperation with the TriCounty Vocational School In
Nelsonville.
lnstruct1r Legar pral.!ed member
of the class for their interest In their
department and for their community
spirit in improving their efficiency in
fighting fires. Legar commended the
men for their interest in the training
and the cooperation he received.
.- Completing the course were Everett
Bachner, L!lrry Baker, Bob Byer,
Kenny Dyer, Paul Chadwell, Kevin
Dailey James Daniels, Jeff Darst,
Thorn~s Darst, Wayne Davis, Frank
Epple, Darmy Fink, C. Robert Fisher,
Bill Harris, Kenneth Imboden, Joe
McCarty; John Metzger, Russell
Mills, Carl Platter, Donald Stlvers.Cllarles Wayland and David Wilcox.

BY LARRY EWING
The conti'Qversial transfer of the
Holzer School of Nursing to Rio
Grande College and Communily
College will , ~pparently , be
completed this weekend when the
cooununity college board of trustees
meet Saturday to coruider a
resolution a~pting that transfer.
Action taken w implement that
transfer has spurred debate in Galtia
- County since the passage (by a 12 to 8
vote) of a formal resolution on May 24
by the Holzer Hospital Foundation.
The found;ition resolved , " ... that
the Holzer School of Nw-sing, subj ect
.to necessary approva ls, be
transferred to the Rio Grande College

Certificates

• fi remen
gtven

radius." ·
Dr. Holzer has been joined in his
campaign against the proposed
change-from a three-year diploma
school to an initial two-year associate
de gre.e program-by the Regional
Nurses Association , the Gallipolis
City Health Department, the Gallia
County Medical Society, the Athens
County Medical Society, and other
medical and nursing organizations.
On June 19, the Gallia County
Medica l Soci ety passed, by a
unanimous vote of those present, the
following resolution :
"'The members of tile Gallia County
Medlc~l
Society deplore the
at templed cloolng of the Holzer School
of Nunlng as a result of recent action
by the Board of Trustees of the Holzer
Medical Center. The memben of the
Gallla County Medical Society
reeognllt the quality of nlll'!ling
servlcewhlcbhasbeenmadepossible
through manf yean by the existence
of the School of Nursing and oubmlt
that Its cootlnuatlon In its present
form Is essential for the welfare of our
patients and for the adequate staffing
·of the hospltat"
On June 13, the Athens County
Medical Society unanimously passed
a similar resolution, stating, " It is the
feeling ofthe Society that a three year
course is superior to the two year
course for nurses."
Reacting to the Holzer Board's May
24 resolution , Rio Grande College
president Paul C. Hayes welcomed

the transfer and s;tid , in a prepared
statement, the decision was made
following several months of intensive
study by an ad hoc committee,
appointed by the hospital board, and
after several years of informal
discussion between Rio Grande and
the Holzer Medical Center.
Hayes said the. study included a
report from Frank B. Sutton, M.D., a
hospital consultant retained by the
committee, whiCh indicated that,
"Holzer Medical Center would be best
served if the Holzer School of Nw-sing
was transferred to Rio Grande
College and Community College."
A later press release issued by the
college stated that, according w
information received from the Holzer
Hospital Foundation , the present
school of nursing will continue to
operate for the next three consecutive
years lin til those students who enroll
in September 1979, graduate in June
1982. Rio Grande would begin its first
nursing class in the fail of 1980.
According to that release, a letter
from the hospital foundation which
tra nsmitted the formal resolutioo to
the college noted a nwnber of factors
leading to the May 24 decision .
The following were quoted as
reasons for the Holzer board ' s
decision :
-"To provide an associate 1degree
nursing program that will be
accredited at a lower, ,tax-j!UJlllOrled,
cost to the studeots which will, In tum,
effect a reduction In operating costs to

the Holzer Medical Center."
-"To strengthen and broaden the
recruiting of student nurses In an era
of intense recruiting competition
through a signUfcant reduction In
tuition costs."
-"To make It possible to nearly
double the present number of
avaUable regiStered nurses eacb year
In the area which will result In
broadening and strengthening patient
services at Holzer Medical Center as
weU as those of other area providers
of health services.
-" To provide accessibility for
potential student nurses In the four
county Rio Grande Community

.

College dlstric! as well as In other
surrounding Obio counties."
.
Referring to the proposed transfer
as an "incestuous cooception" and
urging the Holzer Board to reverse its
decision, Dr. Holzer reacted to the
reasons quoted above by writing:
"Precious little expert advice was
sought in the decision-making
process, and was aimost entirely in
opposition wthe proposed action_ The
consultant's report and the proposals
from the college contairi'ed little solid ·
evidence that a nursing program at
Rio Grande was needed, desirable, or
even possible. Cer.!"inly many
(Continued on page 10)

Andrews seeks write-in votes
Clarence

Andrews,

Pomeroy elections.

.

nllll fall, voters of the MelliJ Local'
candidacy to nm for reelection to his School District will elect four mempost earlier this year, has filed a bers - three for full terms to the
petition 118 a wri~ candidate for the board of education and one to fill an

m.yw 'Who did ncK tile' • peU.tloo ol

top Pomeroy village post.

The Meip County Board of ElectiOOII reports Andrews filed the writein petition of candidacy and paid the
filing fee.
As a write-in candidate Andrews
wW be opposed by Hollie Green,
Republican, and Roger Davidson, independent, both of whom filed to nm
for mayor earlier.
,
The board reporla that since voters
of Pomeroy Village are now using the
"votomatlc _machines" for casting
ballots, they are to proceed to vote 118
they normally would in November
and then are to write in the name of
Andrews If they wish to vote for him.
To be successful in his write-In
campaign, Andrews must rally more
votes than either of his two opponents,
considered a diHicult feat in some
political circles since the voter must
take the time and effort to write a
name on the ballot.
Write-in candidates for the November election msut Indicate their in·
tention of being this type candidate by
Sept. 27.
-Candidates for Posts in the amall
villages of the county - Racine,
Syracuse and' Rutland - have until 4
p.m. Aug. 8 to file petltiona and the
same deadline exists in toWII8hips
where a trustee and a clerk wW he
named by voters in the fall election.
Candidates for boards of education
l)ave until4 p.m. on Aug. 23, however,
to file their petitions with the board of

unexpired tenn.
In the Eastern Local District,
voters will elect three board of
education members; two in the
Southern Local District and two for
the Meigs County Board of Education.
It was noted Thursday that two candidates bave filed for the post of
mayor ~ non-partisan - in the village
of Racine. They are incumbent
Charles F. Pyles and Louie Dale Lee.
Others who have flied petitions for
posts this week include James SW'cher, trustee of Olive Township; Oria
Hubbard, tru9tee of Sutton Towtllblp;
Vernon L. Weber for clerk-treuurer
of Rutland Village; Janice LaWlOR,
clerk of Syracuse Village; Harry Hill,
trustee of Letart Township.

CLEVELAND (AP) - Here are
the wiDDing numben drawn 'l'barBclay In the Oblo Lottery:
Blne 304; White 11; Gold 7; Wm..-

tboa 83307.

School exhibit
deadline Aug. 10
Several hundred exhibits showing
work of Meigs ~ty echool studenta
will be featured at the 118th aMual
Meigs County Fair.
Deadline for entries in school
Judging will he 4 p.m. Aug. 10. Entry
formt1 may be completed by the
deadline at the office of Meip County
Superintendent Robert Bowen,
MulberryHelghts,Pomeroy.

tryEa.:=:.~~:f~~~;~~:

st place blue ribbona;

'1

for red; 50
cents for white and all entries are
given a partidpation ribbOn. Exhibits
must be in place by 4 p.m. on
Tuelday, Aug. 14, and must remain in
place for the entire fair untl14 p.m. on
Aug. l8.
Judging II on the basis of appearanCe, 50 percent; originality, 25
percent and educational value, 25 per-

cent.

.

Educational exhibits will be
clalsified as science exhibits or arts
and crafts exhibits. Science exhibits
will he directly related to topics in
health, conservation, earth science,
biology, botany, physics or
chemistry.

EARN CERTIFICATES- Some of the Middleport
Fire Department members who recently completed a
fire fighting course were presented cards certifying
completion of the course Thursday night. The group ineluded, left to right, Kenny Byer, Russell Mills, James

Daniels, David Wilcox, Joe McCarty, Wayne Davis,
chief, who is receivinl! a department certificate from
Pomeroy Fire Chief Charles Legar, the instructor;
)lack row, left to right, Jeff Darst, Kevin Dailey and
F ank Epple
·
.
r

Gurn
• ther new syracuse councibnan
Willie Guinther was sworn in as a
member of Syracuse Village Council .
by Mayor Eber Pickens Thursday
evening.
Guinther fills the vacancy created
by the resignation of John Arnott.
Council discussed complaints
lodged regarding loiterjng and
destruction of property at the former
state park, loitering at the park near
the Municipal Building and dogs
running loose.
Council agreed the ordinance on ,
dogs running loose would be strick1y ·
enfocced. Residents are advised to
keep dogs tied or they wlll be picked
up_.

,

Council also discussed ditching
needed in the village especially along
SR 124.
Council agreed that larger signs be
placed at the park sites advising that
the parks close at 9:30 p.m. The
proper signs will have to be ordered,
however .
.
Council, in other business, voted to
incre_ase the salary of the ~lerk $25 on
the month and the salary of the mayor
$100 on the year.
Attending were Mayor Pickens,
Janice L!lwson, clerk, Guinther, Mick
Ash, Jack William, and Junmy Joe
Hemsley, council members, Chief of
Police Milton ·Varian, Herman

lAndon , manager of London Pool and
Doug Hemsley.

Bean dinner Saturday
VINTON, Ohlo (AP ) -- For the lllth
year , the residents of Vinton will host ·
a bean dinner.
Started in 1868 by veterans of the
Union Army along the banks of
Raccoon Creek, who dined on beans,
hardtack . and coffee, this year's
dinner, scheduled for Aug. 4 at the
Legion Grove south of Vinton, will
feature beans cooked in iron kettles
hung over open fires.
The hardtack, however, will be
absent.

SIDEw,ux SALES- Residents of Meigs County todt advantage of
the sidewalk sales that we"! being held this morning in downtown
Pomeroy. There were bargains galore at the many standa located on tbe
village's main street. Sales continue Saturday.
I

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