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                  <text>10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday , Aug . 6 1979

Demonstration of power by
tractors viewed by fairgoers

WITH A SURGE OF POWER at the starting line
this tractor pulls the 8,000 lb. cement block down th~

Five persons hurt .
in weekend M-eeks
Five persons were injured in three
weekend accidents reported by the
Gallia-Meigs Post State Highway
Patrol.
Clifton Butcher, 54, Charleston W.
Va., was driving east on U.S. at
4:25p.m. Saturday when he stopped
to make a left turn. His car was
struck from behind by an auto
operated by Clarence B. Wilkerson
42, Griffithsville, W.Va.
'
There was moderate damage to the
Butcher car, but Wilkerson's was
•"'demolished.
.Butcher complained &lt;:1. injuries as
did three passengers in his car, Dollie
L. Butcher, 49, Lucille Butcher 22
and Elizabeth Butcher, no age gi~en:
all of Charleston.
They went to Holzer Mecllcal Center, were treated and released.
Wilkerson was cited for failure to
keep assured distance.
At 3:40 p.m. Sunday, Dewey w.
Ferguson, 42, Gallipolis, was driving
on Twp. Road 37 when his car collided
heado()n with a motorcycle operated
by Ronald L. Phillips, 28 also of
Gallipolis. There ·WBS ~oderate
damage to both vehicles and no
citations or injuries we~e reported.
Another accident occurred Sunday
night when a car operated by Timothy
E. Gillespie, 19, Gallipolis, lost control after turning off U.S. 35 onto SR
160 and struck a guard rail.
Phillips complained of injuries and
was taken to Holzer Medical Center
where he is reported in satisfactorY
condition.
·

J5

•tt
d
22 k l e

.
(l!Jnunuea rrom page 1)
Trimble, 32, of Fremont, when his
motorcycle and another vehicle
collided on a Fremont city street.
LANCASTER.- Richard E . Peck,
27, of Pleasantville, in a one&lt;ar
accident on Ohio t811 in Fairfield
County.
FRIDAY NIGHT
HAMILTON - Keith C. &amp;wailes, 50,
of Oxford, when his motorcycle and a
truck collided on a Butler County
road.
·
COLUMBUS - David Parker II, 32,
of Colwnbu.s, when his motorcycle
and a car collided on a Franklin
County road.
MIDDLETOWN - La uri J. Sergent,
6, of Middletown, a pedestrian struck
by a car on a Middletown city street.
WOODSFIELD - Kevin C. Allen,
17, and James lffland, 31, both of
Cuyahoga Falls, in a one-car accident
oo Ohio 26 in Monroe Connty.
WARREN - Beverly S. Rader, 26,
of Niles, in a two-car accident on Ohio
5 in Trumbull County.
STEUBENVILLE Barbara
Skedel, 56, of Dillonvale, a pedestrian
struck by a car on Ohio 152 in
Jefferson County.

Airplane deaths
reach 16 Sunday
By The Associated Press
The toll of victims in five separate
weekend airplane crashes increased
to 16 on Sunday when the pilot of a
single-engine charter flight that
crashed in Idaho died of burns.
Separate crashes in central Indiana
on Sunday left one person dead and
two others injured , authorities said. A
twin-engine aircraft bound for
Indianapolis apparently ran out of
fuel and plunged to a field in Marion
County, killing one of its four
occupants. About the same time,
authorities said a cropduster crashed
in a cornfield near Danville, but the
pilot was not injured.

track cleared in the field behind the 4-H barns in Saturday's tractor pull

Area Deaths
VEVA F. GARDNER
Veva F . Gardner, 44, Route l,
Middleport, died Saturday at Pleasant
Valley Hospital following a lingering
illness.
Mrs. Garpner was born Jan . 6, 1935,
in Huntington, W. Va., a daughter of
the late Thomas H. and Ida Pine
Shoemaker. She was also preceded in
· death by two sisters and two brothers.
Surviving are her husband, Charles
F. Gardner; two daughters, Lisa Ann
and Me lisa Lynn (Missy), all of Route
I, Middleport; a sister, Mrs. Evelyn
Edmonds, Huntington, W. Va.; four
brothers, Harry, Robert and Jerry
Shoemaker, all of Huntington, W.Va.,
and Marion of Proctorville; her
father-in-law, Charles F. Gardner,
Washington, C. H. Several nieces and
nephews also survive.
Mrs. Gardner was a member of the
Rutland Church of Church.
Funeral services will be held at I
p.m . Tuesday at the Rawlings-Coats
Funera l Home with N!r. Sonny
Furrow officiating. Burial will be in
the Gravel Hill Cemetery at Cheshire.
Friends may call at the funeral home
at anytime . Pallbearers will be
Wilson, Timothy, Philip and Steven
Shoemaker and Richard and Michael
Gardner.

Eden United Brethren Church.
She is survived by two sons, Clifford
and Dale B. Adams both of
Reedsville; three .daughters, Mrs.
Richard (Ruth) Hupp, Orville, Ohio;
Mrs . Dan (Violet) . Merritt,
Csteubenville and Mrs. Ardward
(Wilma) McMillion, Reedsville.
Three brothers, Elza Barringer .
Culloden, W.Va.; Bernard Barringer.
Belpre and Floyd Barringer
Reedsville, two sisters, Leora
Coleman, Ravenna and Irene Cottrell,
Newton Falls, Ohio, ll'~randchildren
and 14 great grandchildren. Funeral
services will be held Tuesday at2 p.m.
at the Eden United Brethren Church
with the Rev. Elden Blake officiating.
Burial will be in the church cemetery.
Friends may call at the While .Funeral
Home in Coolville at anytime. The
body will lie in state at the church one
hour prior to serviees.
PEARL R.CASTLE
Pearl R. Castle, 8!i, 812 Leonard
Ave., Belpre, died Sunday evening at
Camden Clark Memorial Hospital.
. Mr. Castle was born in Athens
County the son of the late Charlie and
Mary Rankin Castle. He was preceded
in death by his first wife, Marie
Branch Castle irt 1967. He was also
preceded in ' death by one
granddaughter and one great
grandson.
He was a member of the Orange
Christian Church; he was a veteran of
World War I having served with the
308th engineers; was a dairy farmer
many years and was a retired
electrican for local 972.
He is survived by his wife, Dora
Eaton Castle, one son, Clarence
.Herman Castle, Hampton, Iowa; two
daughters, Mrs. Clara Yoho ,
Hinton ,W. Va., and Mrs. Mary Wise,
Coolville, eight' grandchildren and 10
great grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held
Wednesday at 2 p.m. at the White
Funeral Home ·in Coolville with the
Dr. James Quisenberry officiating.
Burial will be in Coolville Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral home
after 2 p.m. on Tuesday.

FREDERICK c. BEARHS
Frederick Charles Bearhs, 74, 268
Knoles Ave., Chillicothe, died Monday
morning at Medical Center Hospital in
Chillico!he following a month's
illness.
Mr. Bearhs was born Feb. 14, 1905 in
Meigs County, a son of the late
Frederick C. and Chlor McFadden
Bearhs. He was married on Oct. 24,
1936, to the former Ruby White who
survives along with ;r daughter, Rose
Ann Graves, Mansfield; a son,
Charles E ., Waverly ; seven
grandchildren;
two
stepgrandchildren , and two sisters, Mrs.
Jeanette Hysell, Ravenna, and Mrs.
Chlor Compton , Urbana . Besides his
parents, he was preceded in death by
a son and two brothers. Mr. Bearhs
was a 27 year employe of the Mead
Corp.
Funeral services will be held at 2
HOSPITAL NEWS
p.m. Wednesday at the ~'awcett ­
Oliver-Glass Funeral Home, 77 E.
Fifth St., Chillicothe where friends VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
may call after 4 p.m. Tuesday. Burial
Saturday Admissions--Albert
will be in Concord Cemetery, Ross Martin,
Pomeroy ;
Karen
County .
Broadwater, Letart, W. Va.; Floyd

Barnhouse , Pomeroy ; Ross Kent ,

RUBVV.ERB
Mrs. Ruby Vi etta Erb, 8!i, Pomeroy,
died Saturday at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Mrs. Erb was born June 30, 1894, a
daughter of Ule late John and Callie
H}ther Campbell. She was also
preceded in death by her husband,
Grover; a son, Delbert Blake, and a
sister, Mildred Mitch.
Surviving are a daughter and sonin-law, Dorothy and Don Rea; two
granddaughters, Mrs. Larry I Reva)
Bunce, Middleport, and Mrs. Larry
(Donna) Thomas , Pomeroy ; two
sisters, Mrs. Freda Casto, Pomeroy,
and Mrs. Martha Roush, Colwnbus;
five great grandchildren and several
nieces and nephews.
Mrs. Erb was a member of Trinity
Church, Pomeroy, and the Daughters
of America .
Funeral services will be held at II
a.m. Tuesday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev. W. H. Perrin
officiating. Burial will .be in Beech
Grove Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral 'home at anytime.

EVA MAE ADAMS .
Mrs . Eva Mae Adams, 82,
Reeds ville, died early Sunday
morning at Camden Clark Memorial
Hospital following an extended
illness.
Mrs. Adsms was born at Reedsville,
the' daughter of the late Jayhugh and
Anna Amanda Holsinger Barringer.
FlTIINGSET
She was preceded in death by her
Helmet fitting for all prospective husband , Bernard C. Adams in 1974.
Eastern High School football players She was also preceded in death by two
will be held at 6 p.m. Tuesday at the sons, one daughter, one sister and one .
high school.
brother.
Mrs. Adams was a member of the

Addison .
Saturday
Discharges--Martha
Roush, Ida White, Donna Larkins,
Goldie Reitmire, Delores Wickline,
Patsy Laudermilt.
Sunday Admissions--Ralph
Thompson, New Haven ; Linn Darst,
Middleport; Patsy Laudermilt,
Racine; Donna Fortune, Racine;
John Tillis, Reedsville.
Sunday Dis c harges--Ralph
Thompson, Karen Broadwater, Bess
Ellis, Georgia Swauger.
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges, Auguot 3
Paula Back, Michael Barker,
Ronald Betts, John Broyles, Kenneth
Craft, Uoyd Dearing, Susan Halfhlll,
Gladys Hart, Sarah Haynes, Della
Johnson, Dianna Johnson, Angela
Kennedy, John King, Elmore Leach,
Jeanette Lealie, Cheryl Reynolds
Belinda Ross, Joe Schirmer, Jo Elle~
Seymore, Linda Smith, Tim
Snedaker, Robert Steffel, Thomas
Stewart, Sr., Geneva Ervin, Cathy
Ward, Wilma White, Robert Woods.
Births, Aug. 3
Mr. and Mrs. Rick Ash, daughter,
Syracuse.
Mr. and Mrs. James Lawrence,
son, Syracuse.
Mr. and Mrs. David Leach,
dau-ghter, Jackson.
Discharges, Auguot t
Jason Atkins, Trecia Barton,
James Browning, Brooke Dailey,
Goldie Dobbins, Cordie Dodrill,
Melody Eubanks, William Fry, Sr.,
Gary Gill, Mrs. John Jenkins and son,
Everett Keeton, Amy Martin, Ira
Mulford, Gloria Oliver, Angelia
Ramey, Gertrude Shaffer, Greg
Swann, Carl Taylor, Clarence
Walburn, Herman Warner, Viola
Weimann, Mrs. James White and
daughter, Thoii18B White, Ernest
Willi8lllll.
Blrtb, Aaguot t
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Snyd~r,
twins, Jackson.
Discharges, August5.
Chris Adkins, Bridgett Cloak,
Lugus Cooper, Mrs. Loren Cox and
son, Lesh Eichinger, Jo Ann Ervin,
Nornna Johnson, Earl Lego, Jr.;
Bessie McNealey, Frances McCoy,
Chris McKinney, Thomas Neal,
Uswin Nease, Mrs. Walter Stiverson
and son, Brian Swan, James Swann,
Randolph Wagoner.

Following the modified tractor pull
Friday night, the Gallia County
Junior F'air had another first Saturday with its second, but larger, tractor pull.
.
A demonstration of power by trac. tors in the 6,000-12,000 lb. class, Saturday's pull did not draw as large a
crowd as the Friday event, but had a
good share of spectators at the last
day of the fair interested.
"We've still got to iron a few things
out," said fairboard . member Dick
Lakin, who registered all vehicles in
the event.
Lakin added the pull, as a first, was
successful and spectators appeared to
enjoy it. The 'pull was operated the
same as the Friday event, with the
tractors, and in the last segment of
the pull, four-wheel drive trucks,
pulling an 8,000 lb. cement block down
ihe field behind the 4-H barns.
1be event drew many entries, including 16 in the four-wheel drive

class.
Placing first in the 6,000 lb. fourwheel drive class with the m~t
distance was J . W. Storer, Stewart,
who with his Dodge 383 pulled the
weight 289 feet, eight inches. Michael
Pollock, Bidwell, operating. a Ford
F250, made 225 feet, seven inches,
Jack Jordan, Alhany, pulled 189 feet,
four inches, and Bill Rupert, Jackson,
with a GMC, pulled closely behind ·
with 188 feet.
Jim Hughes, Mount Perry. placed
fil"8t in the 6,000 lb. tractor class .by
pulling the weight '1!11 feet, 11 inches.
David Hively, Gallipolis, followed a
close second with '1!11 feet, six inches.
Placing third was John Stevens, Point
Pleasant, W. Va ., at 286 feet, 11 inches, followed by John Baile, AtheiL'l,
at 267 feet and Mark Baile, A~ns, at
224 feet, folir inches. Edwin Roush,
Letart, W. Va., completed his distance at 22;l feet, six inches.
In the 8,000 lb. field stock class,

placing first was Tony Carnahan,
Racine, at 256 feet, four Inches. Cathy
Simpaon, Stewart, followed second
with 252 feet, five Inches, Huck
Wagner, Racine, at 250 feet, Ken Slrn·
pson, Stewart, at 248 feet, three inches, and Jim Carnahan, Racine,
placed fifth at 244 feet, four inches.
Placing first in the 10,000 lb. class
was Curt Battrell, Albany, with 271
feet,. nine inches. Second place Will
taken by Rodney Nelgler, Racine, at
255 feet, six inches, followed by
Grover Salser, Jr., Racine, at 239
feet, .three inches, and Laddie Siders,
Point Pleasant, W. Va., at 'lJfl feet,
two inches.
The final class of the pull, 12,000 lb.,
placed Don Battrell, Albany, at 264
feet,' seven inches. Second place winner was Micbael Salser, Racine, at
'lZI feet, eight inches, followed by
Grover Salser, Jr., Racine, at 225
feet, five inches, BJK\ Laddie Siders,
Point Pleasant, W. Va., at 1911 feet,
five inches.

New shoe store open in New Haven
A third store to serve area residents
has opened in New Haven, Colonial
Shoe Store, owned by Jerry and Gail
Davenport, Middleport, Ohio.
Opening last week was The Watermelon Patch and in early July, Health
Aid Pharmacy.
The shoe store features shoes by
Connie, Rand, Poll Parrot, Converse,
Keds and Nurse Mates, and also of-

will keep growing to accommodate
the area residents.
Store hours wlJl be 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Monday through Saturday and the
store's phone number Is 882-3466.
A drawing wlJl be held Saturday to
give away five gift certificates. The
drawing is featured as a part ol the
grand opening sale now going on.
Mr. and Mrs. Davenport have a
daughter, Heather, five years old.

fers a large selection of genuine
leather purses, socks and slippers.
Located on Fifth Street, next to
Tookie's Fashions, the store wlJl have
four employees to serve customers,
Mrs. Davenport, the former Gail
Miller, Sally Ross, Maxine Miller and
Sharon Wise.
According to Mrs. Davenport, the
store ·will be receiving .more stock
next week, and she stated the store

$432,000 sewer grant approved in Pomeroy
BV KATIE CROW

A $432,000 grant for the extension of
the sewage system In the village of
Pomeroy has been approved. .
Mayor Clarence Mdrews informed
council members Monday night that
he had been notified regarding the
grant approval. The grant is under
Title I from Housing and Urban
Development.
The proposed extension of the
sewage is from the Kroger store on
Pomeroy's East Maiq Street to and
including the Kerrs Run area.
Council will pay for debts on the
project as they are incurred and the
money will be reimbursed to the
village. Depositories for the federal
funds will be the Pomeroy National
Bank and the Farmers Bank and

VOL. XXVIII NO. 80

Jeromee Clifford Calaway, son of
Bobby and Joann Calaway,
celebrated his. first birthday on July
· 31 at the home of his parents.
There for the celebration besides
his parents were his brother, Robbie,
his great-grandmother, Mrs. Ruby
Burke, Coolville; maternal grandparents, Bill and Jane Pullins, Route
2, Coolville; paternal grandparents,
Guy and Annie Calaway, Route 1,
Reedsville. Others attending were
Mick and Sue Burke, Jenni, Matthew,
Ruby Irene of Route 3, Pomeroy; linda Boggs, Mrs. Shirley Hawk, Lisa
and Julie, Brenda Calaway, and
Harry Calaway, all of Route 1,
Reedsville; Buck and Dorothy
Calaway, Tanuny, Missy and Adam,
Leonard Cremeans, Marvin Cremeans, Mrs. Patty Calaway and
Anita Jane, Clarence and Thelma
Henderson, Route 2, Coolville; Aaron
Willi8lllll, Belpre. Sending gifts was
Mrs. Frances Spencer, Route 3,
Pomeroy.
Homemade ice cream, cake, KoolAid, and coffee were served. Gifts
were presented to J eromee.
EXTENDED FORECAST
Wednesday through Friday:
Warm and humid with a cbance of
abowel1! or thunderslol"lllll through
the period. Higlu in the 80s. Lows In
the mid to upper 8011.
EGG REPORT
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Eggs Prices paid to country packing plants
for eggs delivered to major Ohio cities
cases included consumer grades
including U.S. grades, minimum ~0 1
case lot~ .
Carton Large A 59-63 1h , Medium A
50·54'h , Small A 3942.
Sales to retailers in major Ohio
cities cartons delivered: Large A
white' 69-78, mostly 69-71 , mediwn 6069, mostly 60-62.
Poultry prices at Ohio farms , hens
light 8-9. .
Truck lot prices of ready to cook
broilers and fryers: Cincinnati 3638¥.!; Cleveland 37-39 .
Births, AllgUllt 4
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Blackburn,
Sr., daughter, Oak Hill.
Mr. and Mrs. John Hudson,
dau11hter, Gallipolis.

Plane hijacked

TO END MARRIAGE
In Meigs County Common Pleas
Court ~emeth K.Snyder, Pomeroy,
and Sherry R.Snyder, Gallipolis, filed
for dissolution of marriage.

LISBON, Portugal (AP )
Three mercenaries in the Spanish
Foreign Legion held 24 hostages
aboard a hijacked Spanish
airliner at the Lisbon airport
today, demanding asylwn in
France. The French government
said it wouldn 't take them.
"We are not terrorists. We are
deserters from the Spanish
Foreign Legion. We are ready to
hand over our weapons, and we
·want to land in France," one of
the trio said by radio.
ANOP, the Portuguese news
agency, said well placed sources
told it the Portuguese government offered the hijackers refuge
with a Spanish promise not to
seek their extradition. But the
three men reportedly said they
would not give themselves up in
Lisbon and might head for Switzerland if France would not take
them.

Tragic ending
NEW YORK (AP) - A Hudson
River ferry cruise for college
fraternity members ended in
tragedy when one man disappeared into the water and a
woman was accidentally killed
when a broken bottle pierced her
heart, authorities said.
The Harbor Patrol resumed Its.
search Sunday for the body of
Robert l«khart, 19, of West
Hempstead, N.Y., who fell into
the water while trying to jwnp
aboard the ship.
Police said Jessie Jeffers, 27, of
Syracuse, N.Y., died when the
bottle she was holding broke and
punctured her heart after she fell
down some steps on the Dayllne
chartered.

SERVICES SLATED
Dedication services of , the new
Middleport Independent Holiness
Church will be held Aug. 12 at 2 p.m.
The Rev . O'Dell Manley extends an
invitation to the public to attend .

RACINE
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Wayne (Son:
ny) Wolfe of Ashtabula spent a few
days with his sister, Helen Simpson.

.

ELBERFELDS
MEN'S BLUE DENIM
FASHION JEANS
Exce llent selection of
denim fashion jeans In all
sizes 29 to 42 waist, lengths
30 to 36. Most styles in
prewashed . $11.95 to
$17.95. Stock up now for
back-to-school wear.

WESTERII SHIRTS
Men's sizes S, M, L and
XL. Good selectin of
styles, colors ani! patterns. Buy what you need
for back -to-school wear or
for the fair.

ELBERFELD$ ·I N POMEROY

at y

WASHINGTON (AP) - A special
congressional task force endorsed the
nation's wage and price guidelines as
the Carter administration prepared to
unveil a potpourri of alternatives for
the anti~nflation program's second
year.
The Council on Wage and Price
Stability was to release today a 5().
page " issue paper " discussing
possibl~ new directions for the
guidelines starting Oct. 1.
Carter administration sources said
the report and statements from

PIKETON, Ohio (AP) - Contract talks blltween striking
members of Oil, Olemical and
Atunlc Workers Local 3689 and
the Goodyear Nuclear Co. wlJl
continlie today in Chillicothe.
Local 3689, which represenl3
about 1,600 workers at the company's Piketon uraniwn enrichment plant, rejected a contract
· proposal Ialit week. The proposal
would have provided wage increases &lt;:1. eight, seven and six
percent, respectively, over the
next three years.
The president of the union
local, Dennis Bloomfield, said
union representatives wlll--..z.
plain worker objections to the
company offer at today 's
meeting. The strike began when
the union's old contract eliJ)ired
on May3.

Teenager killed ·
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)

+

An Ohio teen-«ger was killed

Monday when his motorcycle and

a truck collided In nearby Milton.
Pollee Identified the victim as
Buck R. Smith and said he apparently was racing the motorcycle with relatives.

Fire humin,-'·
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) - The
fire in a giant Gulf 011 Corp.
refinery tank continued to pour
out thick smoke early Tuesday,
and a Gulf sPokesman said it was
impo8Sible to tell when it would
finally bum Itself out.
The fire, which was touched off
by a bolt of lightning Sunday, had
caUiled about $1 million damage
and the loss of about 800,000
gallons of gasoline which went up
in smoke. No major injuries were

reported.
Gulf spokesman Quentin L.
Wallerstedt said that as the blaze
entered 113 third day, flames
were still shooting about 25-30
feet in the air. Thick black smoke
continued to he visible for miles.
(Continued on pageS)

council chairman Allred E. Kahn and program supported."
acting director R. Robert Russell
The task force pointed out that there
would be " honest about the could be dire consequences if the
shortcomings of Ule first year. "
government were not successful at
The announcement was not slowing inflation.
"Unless inflation is brought under
expected to include specific wage and
price targets for 198(). Instead It control to a much greater degree than
should reveal a "wide range of policy is now the case - and soon -our free
options, " according to council system of government will be
drastically altered, almost certainly
spokesman Joe Carter.
The voluntary wage guidelines set a for the worse," the panel concluded.
The wage and price council, which
limit of 7 per~nt on pay increases this
year. Pri~s were to be held hall a monitors ccmpliance with the antipercentage point below 1976-77 inflation guidelines, had llqleci to
increases.
release its final recmunendations for
The Carter administration is giving the second year of the program by
serious consideration to a two-year Aug. 1.
wage timit that wolild "reward "
workers who stayed within this year's :;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:·
limit, Carter administration sources
have told The Associated Press.
KENNEDY CHOICE
The council may ' for example,
allow wages to increase 15.5 percent .. NEW YORK (AP) -SeD. Edward
for the two years ending Sept. 30, 1980. Kennedy is tbe overwbelmlng
This would allow workers who ·prestdeDtial pick of lodepeodeota and
received a 7 percent pay increase this Democ:rats iD a three-way race with
year to get 8 percent next year.
Jimmy Carter aDd Gov. Edmund G.
The first-year program, announced Brown Jr., according to au ABC·
by President Carter last Oct. 24, has Harris poll.
come under increasing attack from .. A Kennedy-Caner race showed botbl
both business and labor as inflation groups favoring the Massachusetts
has raged at an annual rate nearly · senator 63 to 32 per~ot, according to
double the administration 's 7.4 results released Mollday.
percent target.
. . The. survey of 96'7 voters, taken July
However, there were kind words for %7 to 29, said the president edges
Ule progra~ Monday from a House Brown 51 lo 42 perceDI among both
budget panel, which released a 37- groups 1o a two-way race, and 5!i to 36
point proposal for whipping inflation. per~nt among Democrats only.
"The wage and price guidelines ... In a three-way showdown, 52
prog ram developed
by
Ule percent
of
Democrats
and
administrat ion ha s been more independents chos~ Kennedy. Carter
effective than
is
generally garnered 25 percent aud Brown, 18
perceived," the task force report said. per ~ nl.
"ll 's status should be clarified and the
:::::::::;::::::j :;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::;:::::;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::

C&amp;SOE seeking major raise
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) - The
Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio Electric
Co. says it needs to charge its
customers $126 million more than it
does now. But staff analysts for the

Youngster injured
in minor accident
A GaJllpolis youth was injured in
one &lt;:1. two accidents Monday reported
by the Gallia-Meigs Post State Highway Patrol.
Scott Facemire, 8, was a passenger
in a car operated by Mary W.
Facemire; 44, Gallipolis. At 11:25
a.m. their vehicle struck a car
operated by Roberta Gleason, 20,
Henderson, W.Va.
The patrol said Gleason was
making a left turn onto SR 7 from U.S.
35 when it came into the path of the
Facemire car. There was moderate
damage to both cars. Gleason was
cited for failure to yield. The
Facemire youth was taken to Holzer
Medical Center, treated and released.
At 5:10p.m. Mlcbael E. Wolf, 28,
Reedaville, was driving east onSR 248
near Township Road 113 in Meigs
County when his car went left of center on the curve striiWJg a car
operated by Elizabeth Smith, 46,
Reedsville. There was slight damage .
to both cars and Wolf was cited.

Public Utilities Commission of Ohio,
which must approve any rate
increase, say the utility can get by
with 40 percent less than that.
The
commission' s
utilities
department says in a report scheduled
for release this week that better-thanexpected earnings by the company
over the past year have reduced its
need for higher rates. The report
recommends that C&amp;SOE's rate
increase be limited to a total of $72
million~79 million.
The request for the rate boost was
filed by the company in March.
The canmission's final decision on
the case is nO\ expected before Ia te
November or early December. That
decision is expected to be influenced
by lengthy hearings scheduled to
begin in September.
For the year ended June 30, the
company reported net income of ~1.2
millioo , c&lt;mpared with $40.6 million
the previous year. The commission
staff project's the company's net
income fer the test year ending Aug.
31, 1979, as $73 million, compared with
the company's projection of $54
million.
The electric company has about
441 ,000 customers in 25 central and
southern Ohio counties. It has argued
that poor earnings are sapping its
ability to meet debt obligations,
attract investors and continue
required
construction
and
maintenance.

lo~d

only.
Council agreed to let the Pomeroy
Fire Department seek bids for ceiling
heaters to be placed in the truck bay.
Council also agreed to have the
street committee purcluise an electric
au gar.
It was reported that residents on
Pleasant Ridge and 'Beech Street are
wanting cable TV. It was pointed out
that the areas mentioned are in the
city limits and are entitled to cable
TV . Council asked that resdients
within the corporation who are not on
cable and would like to be to contact
city hall .
It was noted that there have been
several favorable comments on the
flow of traffic at the Pomeroy-Mason
Bridge. Council has an officer posted
at the bridge site who manually

con trolls the tr ~ffic lightfrom 4 to -5:30
each evenin g.
Chief of Police Jed Webster issUed
the following report for his
departmentfor the month of July. 1be
department investigated 17 accidents,
made 61 arrests and drove 1,084 miles.
Steve Hartenbach, meterman,
submitted a report for the month of
July which showed that 822 parking
tickets were issued and $1,038.50
collected from the meters.
The mayor opened the meeting with ·
prayer. Attending were May.or
Andrews, Jane Walton, clerk, Chief
Webster, Bill Young, Rod Karr, Larry
Wehrung, Betty Baronick, Hlfrold
Brown and Lou Osborne, coUJI(:il
members, Donnie Ward and Jack
Krautter.

•

enttne
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

TUESDAY, AUGUST 7, 1979

Effects of HB 21
reviewed Monday

New alternat.ives planned
for anti -in~ation fight

Labor talks on

jerom e Calaway

children, si mila r to a carnival.
Council agreed to a cost of $100 a day .
Mayor Andrews reminded council
that next Sunday was "cemetery
Sunday" and asked interested persons
to be at Beech Grove Cemetery at
noon to assist· in a cleanup project.
Two trees have been removed from
the cemetery and two more must
come
out
Mayor
Andrews
commented. The cost to have the
additional two trees removed is $200 to
which council agreed.
The logs at the cemetery will be sold
for $20 a pickup load. Persons
interested are to go to city hall andr1
pay for what amount they wish to
purchase. Those purchasing the logs
must load their qwn trucks,
however. The $20 is for a pickup truck

•

POMEROY-MIDDlEPORT, OHIO

- . .in the world

Middleport, 0. Store boUJ"11 wiD be 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.,
Monday through Saturday. Mrs. Davenport is shown
above outside the store.

regular work day of the employe.
Extra pollee employes with a t least
two years of service, or 1,000 hours
will be paid $3 per hour.
Council, in other business, named
the Pom eroy National Bank -a$
depository for active public funds and
transferred a liquor license from Paul
Simon, dba Pomeroy Wine Store to
James R. Stewart, dba, Pomeroy
Wine Store.
Randall Carpenter has been
employed as a full time police officer
.
it was reported.
Mayor Andrews informed council
that Hetzer Theatrical Productions,
which has a "super show boat" would
like permission to park at the levee
next year for a three day period.
The boat is equipped with rides for

e

Today

NEW SHOE STORE - A new shoe store has
opened in New Haven, Colonial Shoe Store, owned by
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Davenport, the former Gail Miller,

Savings.
Council , l!nder an e!llergency
measure passed an ordinance· for
longevity pay for full time water and
sewer employes and mayor' s
secretary. Those wbo have worked a
minimum of five years will receive 10
cents per hour longevity pay for each
five years of employment.
The maxlmwn accured sick leave
will increase from 90 to 120 days (15
days per year) for all regular
employes. Those employes with more
than eight years of service will be
eligiqle for 120 days upon effective
date of ordinance and have accrued 90
days prior to effective date of
ordiance .
All employes will be given six paid
holidays when holiday falls on a

ATHENS - State Representative
Ron James (0-Proctorville) · and
Claire "Buzz" Ball (R·Athen:i) said
Monday they wlll continue to work
with all concerned parties in dealing
with House Bill 21, the bill to
eliminate the fuel adjustment clause
Ulled by Ohio electric utilities.
The two legislators mel Monday in
Athens with area UMW officials
representing local union numbers
1886, 1890 and 1957. The parties
discussed the effects of House Bill 21
')
which Is now pending in the Ohio
(
, , Senate. .
.
\ ·
"We met With representatives of
the UMW District 6, and we all agree
NEW SUPERINTENDENT
that we want to protect the economy
Gary E. ToolbUer, PhD, Boalder,
of our area, i!L'lure that there wlJl be
Colo., bu been employed oa a
no coal mining jGb losses, and assure
tbfte,.year coulnld u Gallla
COGDty School Saperillteadeat.
Toolbaker, wbo replaces Tom
Halntoa, begiol 1111 duUes Aag. U.
'l'1le 3'1-year,old educator wu
fonaerly a lnperiDteodeut Ia tbe
Hayden Pablk Sebool Syttem in
Colonde.

that the utility customers of Ohio are
paying the lowest possible ratea," the
legislators said.
Don Nunley, UMW ExecuUve
Board Member said that the UMW
.Supports the ellmination ol the fuel
adjustment clause, but that they are
&lt;:Oncerned with certain language in
the bill that might Jeopardize coal
mining jobs in the area.
"I'm glad that we all agree that
there is a way we can work together
to help our area and stlll insure the
lowest electric rates possible," he
said.
James and Ball said they wlJl strive
to work out the specific language to
insure that the goals that were agreed
to at the meeting wlJl be met when
Htluse Bill2lls passed.

Syracuse woman
hurt in accident

Meigs County sheriff's deputies investigated two traffic accidents over
the past 24 hours.
The first occurred at 2 p.m. Monday
on US 33, three tenths of a mile north
of the Pomeroy Corporation limit
where a southbowld auto driven by
Rebecca
A. South, 22, Rt. 3, Pomeroy,
Larry Wolfe, Racine artist, wlll be
ran
off
the
roadway.
judge for the 1979 Meigs County "Fair
Her
vehicle
went left of center, ran
art show, William J. Mayer, show
off the left side of the roadway
superintendent, said today.
Seven classes in four medias wlJl be striking a concrete wall, bounced off
judged during the annual show with it and struck a building owned by
the classes to include: landscape Bruce Teaford.
A passenger, Betty M. Foley, 43,
from nature, portrait from life, still
Syracuse,
complained of back inlife, marine study, flower study,
juries.
She
was transported to
animal study and modern art. The
media to be Ulled includes oil, acrylic, Vetera!L'l Memorial Hosital by the
water colors and other media which Pomeroy Emergency Squad There
include pencil, pen, ink, charcoal, was severe damage to the car and
moderate damage to the Teaford
pastel or crayon.
Building.
Premiwns for first and second
A second mishap occurred at 12:45
place in each &lt;:1. the classes are $1.50
to $2 for first place and 75 cents to $1
for second place.
The best &lt;:1. show will be judged with
SQUAD CALLED
premiums of $3 to be awarded the
The Middleport Emergency Unit
best in modern art, oil painting, answered a call to 102 Union Ave .,
water, ink or other, and acrylic.
Pomeroy, at 8:08 p.m. Monday for
Entries mWit be made by · 4 p.m. Arthur Hoyt who was taken to Holzer
Friday.
Medical Center. At 3:53p.m. Monday,
the fire department was called to
Route 7 to flush gasoline at the scene
of an accident.
Clear tonight. Lows about 70.
SQUAD RUN
M~tly sunny Wednesday with a chanThe
Pomeroy
Emergency Squad
~ of thunderstorms mostly in the afternoon. Highs from the upper Ills to was called to Spring Ave., at 11:52
the low 90s. The chance of rain is 20 a.m. Monday for Audria Arnold who,
percent tonight and 30 percent Wed- was taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital where she was admitted.
nesday.

Wolfe named
fair judge

·.

Weather

a.m. today on SR 143, five tenths ol a
mile south of Harrisonville. · According to deputies, Walter D. Arnold;
29, Langsville, observed names
coming from underneath the hood of
his van. The Rutland Fire Department was called but the vehicle was
destroyed.

SS reductions
jeopardized
WASHINGTON (AP) - Proposed
reductions in Social Security taxes
could be jeopardized by a report that
one portion of the program will be in
financial trouble in a few years.
The Congressional Budget Office
says money in the old-age and ·
survivors' insurance portion of Social
Security is expected to drop in 1984 to
a level that "would be Insufficient to
maintain the cash flow of the

prograr;n."
The bad news came in a letter from
Congressional Budget Office director
Alice Rivlln to Rep. Robert N.
Giaimo, ~onn., chairman of the
House Budget Committee.
The budget office blamed the
problem on inflation and the downturn
in the economy.
It estimated that the balance in the
old-age fund at the end of 1979 will be
34 percent of total benefits. But by
1984, that wUI drop to 5.4 percent, Mrs.
Rivlin said.

..,.,.,,

'"' '
'

' I

First Pomeroy excursion Sept. 18,.
A 400 passenger sternwheeler wlll
be salllng from Pomeroy on Its first
crulses from that Ohio River port on
Tuesday, September 18.
The Gateway River Belle, a packet
vessel from the Port of Pittsburgh,
wlJl be saillng two cruises on that
date. 1be Belle Is the newest addition
to the five boat Gateway Clipper
Fleet, a Pittsburgh ba8ed finn. .
The first excursion is a School
Sightseeing Cruise from 10 a.m. to
noon. Although termed a "School

Cruise," the sightseeing tour is open
to the public, according to fieet of.
f!cials. It costs $2.25 per person. Light
refreslunents and souvenirs are
available.
The other cruise is a Captain's Dinner Dance Cruise saillng from 7 p.m.
to 11 p.m. The $12.95 cruise features a
full course Captain's Buffet Dinner,
mWiic,anddancing.
· Charters are available on the
Gateway River Belle, also. Banquets,
company parties. reunions, wedding

recept!o!L'l, ana social events of aii
kinds can be accommodated aboard
the Belle. Persons Interested should
· contact a fieet cruise director for
details.
Cruises board one half hour before
scheduled sailing times at the old
ferry boat landing In downtown. For
tickets and reservations, phone (412)
39.1-2382. Or write; Pomeroy Ex·
cursloiL'l, Gateway Clipper Fleet, One
Wood st., Pittsburgh, PA 15222.

GATEWAY CUPPER - The company's
n&amp;rnl!l!llke. Purchased in 1962, this 400 passenger sternwheeler serves the same purpose that other vessels in

the fieet do, that is, san on narrated 'lghtaeelnc
cruises, dinner dance cruises, disco and Moonllglt
Dance crulaes, and other specialties offered by the
fieet.

�3 -:TheDaUy Sentinel, Mlddleport-P&lt;meroy, 0 ., Tueaday, Aug. 7,1979

2- The Dail Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Tuesday. Aug. 7, 1979

Baseball bidS farewell to Thurman Munson

Editorial opinions,
comments

COMMENTARY

NEIGHBORHOOD
WALKING TOUR

J

;=~=--:=-------------

TON

IN

. By Julian Bobd
The love affair between black
Americans and Jlmn\y Carter is at its
rockiest now, when both partners
::::..;::_::...::..;~_;_:_;.....:~:..:..:.....:.:..:::.:=o--.lr--------..::::::~--- m081 need a stable relationship.
Carter needs blacks as much in 1979
as he did three years ago when he was
a&gt;££ , :&gt;or&lt;, IF merely "Jimn\y Who." But for dif- .
v
c.~
ferent reasons •
,au CJ ,)\Np (LO~E
step. These bureaucrats and others
.,.ov6H, IT'~
In Florida's crucial 1976 primary,
throughout govenunent are devoted
A1..110&amp;T L'"&lt;
he needed black votes to smash a failto making programs work as well as
B EING T.U:RE.
ing George Wallace and to position
possible. As they see it, their primary
himself as the single Southern candifference from the Carter team is
didate able to lead the region Into
that they work ior the public and not
l»th..:entw-y America.
for Jimmy Carter.
He also needed Florida •s black
Many of these people were envoters to certify him as an Mrothusiastic when Carter took office
American, a status that opened the
because they thought he would take a
hearts - and pocketbooks _ of hesifresh and challenging look at the pro- _ _ .:....;;;;.:_~~.::.;_.:__..,.:__ _ _ _~---.:::
:...;;;:;..;-..;.;._...!!!£;.. tant liberals elsewhere.
blems they knew existed. But they
Black voters didn't' "need" Carter
have written him off and are counting
in 1976-Birch Bayh Morris Udall
down the 18 months unill they expect
Frank Chw'ch, a ..;luctant Hubert
there will be a new president.
Hwnphrey
and.the pre-Proposition 13
As a parting shot, one steps up from
Jerry Brown - stood eager to
the table and says, "The Carter aides
shoulder the black man •s burden and
say they are turning the comer now
"Municipal income taxes in Ohio . pocket his votes.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (1\P) - Ohio
but they have been around the block cities collected income taxes in record produced more revenue in 1976-77.
But Carter had positioned himself
five times and there has been no amounts during 1977 and a taxpayer than state-imposed income taxes in 29 as the only candidate who could send
change."
education group predicts total states," the council said.
Wallace a m~ge, the only one who
Back to work.
The public expenditure group said had the support of the King family
collections last year will also be
each Ohioan paid an average of $89 in and Andrew Young. Only Carter
record-breaking.
Charles A. Calhoun, executive municipal income taxes in 1977.
understood that a minority of
"It would have required an average Democratic
director of the Ohio Public
voters, including properToday In History
Expenditure Council. said the final property tax rate of $16.20per $1,000 of ly motivated blacks, win the party's
By The Associaled Press
figures for 1978 will not be reported to taxable value to produce the revenue primaries. His opponents still thought
Today is Tuesday, Aug . 7, the 219th the state auditor until later this year. generated from municipal income party organizations and yesterday's
day of 1979. There are 146 days left in · But the council estimates municipal taxes i.n Ohio in 1977," the council politics would choose Gerald Ford's
the year.
income tax collections for 1978 will be said.
opponent.
Today's highlight in history:
Municipal property tax collections
$716 million when final figures
But now black voters need Carter
On this date in 1789, the U.S. War become available. That would be in 1977 were about $284 mWion, less almost
as badly as he needs them In
and Navy departments were more than $88 million above the 1977 than half of the total income tax the Democratic Party, the pr~qt
receipts statewide, according to the
established.
record total of $627.8 million.
party holding nine of every 10 black
council.
Oq this date :
"A major portion of the increase
voters
no candidate to Carter's left
Financially troubled school districts hasaniwuncedhimself
In 1941, Soviet planes carried out can be attributed to the current
their first !Jombing raids against inflationary spiral prevailing in the may become the 'first local taxing unit
Many black voters ·frightened· by
Berlin in World War II.
state and nation," the council's latest other than fliU.Jlk;ip~lities to be the overwhelming rej~on of George
In 1942, U.S. Marines landed on newsletter says.
allowed to levy an income tax .
Guadalcanal in the Pacific.
Gov. James A. Rhodes has signed McGovern by the white American
Cities in Ohio have been collecting
In 1957. a federal grand jury in New income taxes for 39 years. beginning into law legislation permitting local electorate in 1972 feat that a future
election may see black concerns comYork indicted Colonel Rudolf Abel as with Toledo and expanding to five school systems meeting certain pletely
isolated again.
a Soviet spy.
municipalities.in .J~ UIJiU.59·. there criteria to impose income taxes up to I
The
recent
Cabinet reslluffling may
In 1960, the Ivory Coast became were 42 Cities ', 26~ bli'!)l!J!l9, llnd 424 percent for their districts.
upset the close-knit Washington
ind ependent of France . In 1963, cities and villages' this yeru'.
Before that can happen , however, lwive
·
political
cooununlty, but the Cabinet
America's first lady , Mrs. John F.
Only 10 cities do not impose a the district's deficit must be certified · reshuffling made little impres3ion
011
Kennedy , gave birth to a son at the municipal income tax , the council by the state auditor and two property
tax levies must have been defeated by black America, where w. Michael
Otis Air Force Base Hospital on cape said.
Blumenthal, Brock Adams and
Cod . The infant ·died two days later.
Income tax rates vary from .5 voters .
James
Schlesinger wlfortunately are
In 1968, former Vice President percent to 2 percent , w_ith voter
In addition, the district must have
not
household
names. Joseph
Richard Nixon was nominated for approval needed for anything more been denied a commercial Joan and
Califano's
Influence
on black
President on the first ballot at a than I percent.
received a state loan to continue
America's
health,
education
and
Republican National Convention in
The state's 10 largest cities operating.
welfare
was
widespread,
but
his
inIf voters do ilot want the school
Miami Beach.
collected $333.3 million in 1977, or 83.1
sistence
"
that
Southern
black
and
Ten years ago: The Justi ce percent of th e statewide total . district income tax, they would have
Department abandoned its case according to coun cil-gathered to seek a referendum after it is white state-&lt;lupported colleges exagainst Dr. Benjamin Spock after an statisti cs .
initiated to vote the tax cut. The ta·x change currlcula didn ~ endear him
appeals court reversed his conviction
Only nine other sta tes allow local can only be lev.ied until the state loan to most Southern coUeg~ucated
blacks.
on a charge of conspiring to perus~de governments to collect incom e taxes. is paid off.
young men to avoid the military draft. the council said .
Five years ago: The Senate Foreign
Relations Committee
cleared
Secretary of State Henry Kissinger of
allegations he had misled the
WASHINGTON (AP)- Washington
committee on his role in the ,
in
August ought tD bear one of those
wiretapping of 17 offi cia ls and
labels
that read : "WARNING : The
newsmen.
Surgeon
General has determined that
One year ago: The House approved
the
heat
and hwnidity in this place
funds for a new nuclear aircraft
_ _ _ _ _ . ' can be hazardous
to .your hea lth and
carrier despite President Carter's
r:omfort.
opposition ID its coru;truction.
So. it is no wonder that Sen. Lowell
Today's birthdays: Outfielder Steve
Weicker,
R.COnn., was practically
Kemp of the Detroit Tigers is 25 years
my mouth gets full of saliva and shouted down when he suggested the
GOUT AND ARTHRlTIS
old . Writer and publisher Maia
becomes very tell!le and itchy. I have Senate forego its August recess.
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
Wojciechowska is 52.
DEAR DR. LAMB- WW you please to stop, but how do I go about it? My
"I have never seen so much power
Thought for today: The man who explain the difference between ar- stomach is bloated and I feel full all
listens to reason is lost. Reason thritis and gout? Is lndocin the best the time, even when I haven't eaten. arrayed on one issue on the Senate
enslaves all whose minds are not thing for either? My doctor gives no It may not he a serious problem but lt floor as long as I have been here,"
said Weicker.
strong enough to master her - - encouragement in either case. My really bothers me.
Weicker was suggesting that the
George Bernard Shaw, English husband has gout and takes lndocin.
DEAR READER - It's uncomfor- 96th Congress forego the opportunity
writer, 1806-19~0 .
DEAR READER - Gout is caused table to be full of gas, regardless of for a first-hand look at solar energy on
by high levels of uric acid production whether it's in swallowing air or some the beaches , tennis courts and golf
by your own body cells. Uric acid other cause. My first suggestion courses of America.
salts can cause acute inflammalioh of would be that you should see a physiInstead, he wanted his colleagues to
The average car in the United the toe. On a long-term basis, it can cian. He might be able to give you suffer the August heat and humidity in
States travels about 10,000 miles each settle in joints and cause gouty ar- some medicine ~t will help keep Washington and work on energy
year and consumes more than 700 thritis. Thus, gout Is the cause of one your mouth dry and stop the excess legislation.
formation of saliva. That way you
type of arthritis.
Senators listened in stunned silence.·
gallons of gasoline.
I'm sending you The Health Letter won 1 have to swallow all the time.
"If need be, fine, go home to your
T1)e fact that you swallow air and constituents on the weekends," he
nwnber 2-3 on gout and uric acid to
give you more information about this produce lots of saliva suggests to me said . "I do not think they have many
problem. Other readers who want this that you mighl be a little on the tense nice things tD say tD many of us and
issue can send 75 cents in check or side. He may be able to help you with they will have fewer nice things to say
coin with a long, stamped, self- your tension problems.
Aside from those measures, my
addressed envelope for it. Send your
request to me, in care of this best suggestion Is to learn to walk
whose 706,000 members depend on newspaper, P.O. Box 1551, Radio City around with an eraser between your
teeth, at least while you're at home
Station, New York, NY 10019.
sales for a living.
Arthritis includes a·long list of con- and out of public view. It's hard to
But Ca rlson isn't alone. Many
lenders also believe that. interest rates ditions. The two main forms of ar- swallow when you're holding an
will fall so slowly, and prices will thritis are osteoarthritis, the eraser between your teeth and that
continue to rise so swiftly, that the degenerative type most often seen in wW alert you to the fact that you are
buyer will come out thousands of people past middle age, and the other swallowing and help train you out of
cormnon type is rheumatoid arthritis the habit.
dollars ahead of the delayer .
Thinking of this sort, you may which is a generalized di.ooase
conclude, is itself ·inflationary. In associated with inflanunation of the
keepin g with generally accepted joints.
11IE DAILY SENTINEL
IUSPSI..-1)
There are a lot of other causes for
,economic principles. sales usually
decline as prices and borrowing costs arthritis, including gonorrhea, and at
one time tuberculosis was a common
rise. But not always.
In housing, for example, many cause. Stated another way, arthritis
buyers have been attracted by those can be a complication of a number of
risin g pri ces. Instead of being . different inflammatory diseases.
lndocin is used to control an acute
frightened off, they are drawn to what
they see as a chance to make money attack of gout. It is one of several
medicines used for this purpose. It is
- or to at least avoid losing it.
Price increases have been also useful in a number of inflamastonishing. The house that sold for matory conditions which includes
$28,800 in 1973 sold for $55,900 in 1979. some cases of rhewnatoid arthritis.
And Realtors expect price increases As in gout, there are many other
to be maintained in the double-digit medicines that are commonly used in
range for at least a year.
different forms of arthritis and the
But some day, warn critics, the choice of the medication to be used
supply-demand balance will be depends upon which type of arthritis
reinstated. Never in history, they it is and the overall condition of the
point out, have prices continued iu a patient.
straight line. They may rise over
DEAR DR: LAMB - What can a
C 197t b~ NEAl , 1nc
time, they say. but not without person do if he swallows air and can 't
help it? I tried everything to stop but
interruption .

18 months and counting

sees

Business mirror
NEW YORK (AP ) - Rules of
thumb have always
guided
homebuyers, and now a new one
seems to have been added : Buy now.
The old rules still offer some
guidance. You shouldn't, one rule
says, spend for a house more than 2\2
times your annual income. Your
monthly charges should consume no
more than a week 's pay, admonishes
another.
The new rule, which probably has
been as responsible as any single
factor in prolonging the home-buying
binge, advises you to bend the old
rules, to buy now even if you stretch.
the budget to breaking.
It maintains that high prices today
will be higher tomorrow. and that if
you don't buy now you'll be in worse
shape next year. It tells you to suffer a
light . budget now for bountiful
rewards in years to come.
"By all means buy now," said Jack
Carlson when presented a typical
situation, that of a young couple
debating whether to com mit
themselves or wait until interest rates
fell from their record-high levels.
Carlson may have special reasons
for silch advocacy; he is executive
vice president and chief economist of
the National Associalion of Realtors.
I

"

..

•
A mutual need
1980 wm:

Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

By Richard E. Cobeo
WASHINGTON (NEA ) - As
workers everywhere do, two highlevel government bureaucrats were
complaining about their boss during
lunch the other day.
"Jimn\y Carter has made it harder
to work in government," said the
man. "Not only is he always attacking Washington but he gives no direction or policy or sense of caring in
government.l don't feel he is trying to
make It work."
The civil servants were defensive
because they believe the public sees
government standing still and
assumes they are to blame. But, said
· the woman, "decisions are not being
made because the White House
doesn't want to; that doesn't fit into
their campaign structure over
there.''
The bureaucrats' greatest frustration is that no one seems to care what
they do. In a position to see what is
taking place throughout government,
they find that many department
heads decide they simply don~ have
to face tough issues because •the
Georgia staff keeps these proble1J15
from Carter anyway."
As a result, the man said,
"employees down the line get sloppy
because there is no demand for good
work; no one wants to make a decision or put himself out.' '
They found it especially amusing
when the president said in his Sundaynight television address following the
Camp David meetings that he bad
spent too much time working on
details and not enough talking about
the bigger issues with the public.
"It's a fraud for Carter to say he's
managing government all the time, "
she said. "He hardly does it at all. "
In watching Carte.r at work, one
lunch partner said be
a constant
battle between ' the Jlmn\y Carter
created by (chief of staff) Hamilton
Jordan, who is the Southern outsider,
and the Jlmn\y Carter created by
(domestic policy adviser) Stu
Eizenstat, who represents all the
Democratic Party interest groups."
The two parts of Carter's Sunday
speech represented those two
characters and the result was a series
of activist policy recommendations
1110-degrees opposed to the conservative, anti-Washington rhetoric of
the rest of the speech.
The bureaucrats have no strong
partisan bias, but they said this is a
worse time to work in government
than was 1973-74, during Watergate.
''With Haldeman and Ehrlichman
gone, no"one told us to be quiet, " he
said. "Today, everyone is told not to
say anything to an outsider or even to
each other; circumspection is the
word of the day."
'
She added that ''there were some
people of integrity those days in the
management posit~ons; now, even the
middle-level people see themselves as
political."
They also draw a contrast to the
years when Gerald Ford was president . "Because he had little
background in national politics and
campaigning, he had people who were
mostly interested in government,"
she said.
President Carter does not have to
worry that he has a branch of
Republican renegades sending him
memoranda and watching his every

'·. Donald F. Graff

.

''Ohio perspective"

HEALTH
~
~~---L_a_w_r_e_nc_e_E_.L_a_m_b_.M_.o_.

Retention d. the "Georgia Mafia" '
and exclusion of any policy-making ·
black from the White House iMer dr.::
cle stW rankle black mayors and·
political operators who feel a real or,
llll8gm~ anti-black l:ias among:
Carter mtimates.
,
blaBukt AmCa~r lshastheandonlylikpresiltodebenr·
enca
IS
e Ydidate
th c nJ 1...,.
'd tiaJ
e o Y ~ ~ en
can
,
black Amenca will want.
,
No Republican candidates made in-.
roads mto the small ranks of G.O.P.,
blacii;S; none attend~ the All;anta
meeting of the .Georgia and National.
Black Republican Councils; only;
John Connally sent a representative.
. carter needs. b~ck voters ~ keep ·
his membe~p m the Washingtoo '
crowd he ran against In 1976. He badly ·
needs the numbers of black·
registrants to increase dramaticaJJy
by November 1980 - !Uid to have them '
act~y vote ..
He IS ~orking to that end. Earlier
this year ma commencement address
Carter chided blacks who don~ vote.
More recentiy Vice President Mon-·
dale reminded the NAACPtovoteand ·
~0681ynn Carter lectUred the Na- .
tiona! Urban League on Carter's appoinbnents of blacks to high federal
positions. .
Carter qwckly denied that U.N.
Am~dor Andrew ~oung received
a tongue lasllin8 during the
Cabinet upheaval and more quickly
registered hlB opposition to the anti- ·
busing amendment defeated in the ·
House in late July.
Carter's campaign conunittee isn~
too worri~ about the defection of ,
some p~nt blacks. It notes that
the leagues Vernon Jordan receives ·
the bulk of his fund!! from the taxpayers' pockets through the administration's largesse, and that Jardan W&amp;J an early - If closet - supporter of Jimmy Who m 197&amp; and
~ust, like other black leadership
figures , support Carter's ~ectlon ·
or admit misleading black voters In
1976.
Jinuny Carter's fortunes and thole ,
of black America are intertwined for
the moment. The man from Plainlll
not likely to succeed himself without ,
black support, and blacks are not llJiely to have a champion, however reluc- ..
tant, like Carter If the president isn, ,
renominated and re-elected.
Tbe president needs to show black .
America he really can help fulfW
their dream ; black Americans need · ·
to show they can be grateful if he
does.

Capitol Ideas
I I

when we appear in our bathing suits ..
in our tennis shorts or whatever, ·
while they are paying more for a
ga llon of gasoline if they can get it. " •
The idea horrified Sen. Bob Dole, R&lt;X".

CANTON, Ohio (AP) - A \&gt;altered
red car with the words "Thank you
'No. 15" scrawled in white paint on Its
doors pulled slowly into the parking
lot of the Cantnn Civic Center.
A young couple got out and walked
toward the police barricades where
sever111 hundred other Thurman
Munson fans watched many 0f
baseball's great and mighty arrive for
the funeral of the New York Yankees'
caldler and capt!iin.
·
Those two, along with many other of
Munson's fellow Canton residents,
quietly mourned f&lt;K" their friend and

farewell to Michael's father, who was
killed last Thursday in the crash of his
private jet.
The flower-draped casket stood,
closed, in the midst of a sea of floral
displays and beneath a gold-franied
color portrait of Munson, 32, who died
when his twtn.!ngine jet crashed and
burned · short of a runway at the
Akron-Canton Airport.
The Yankees and their wives, flown
in by team owner George
SteinbreMer on a charter flight, fWed
more than half the seats as Lo11

hero Mooday ~ the private service
began inside the huge auditorium.
Suddenly, out of the side door of the
Civic Center came t-year-old Michael
Munson, dressed"in a replica of his
father's No . 15 Yankee uniform . Tears
began to flow among both men and
women as the youngster, fiddling with
his baseball cap and looking awed by
all the attention, held the hand of a
family friend and walked toward a
car.
Inside, in a makeshift chapel,
Munson 's family , friends and
teammates were saying a final

12
h
Mike La Coss wms . t
e

CINCINNATI (AP ) - Atlanta
Manager Bobby Cox had just watched
Cincinnati's Mike LaCoss pitch his
second victory over the Braves in nine
days.
"You can't canpare him (LaCoss)
tD a (Tom) Seaver in his prime, but
he's young. He's good. I like him,"
Cox said alter LaCoss defeated
Atlanta 3-1 on a four .!Jitter Monday
Right to handed the Braves their fifth
defeat in a row.
·
However, Cox doesn't think his
team should have lost to LaCoss, 1z.4.
"He had a good sinker. but nothing
else to go with it, I thought," he
observed.
·The sinker has been good enough aU
year. Atlanta mustered a first-inning
run on Bob Horner's runo&amp;COring
single, but LaCoss retired the side in
&lt;K"der in six of the last eight innings to
win his third game in a row. The Reds
are 19-3 in games he has started.
"He's doing a much better job than
we ever expected," Reds Manager
John McNamara said.
LaCoss this year has been a slow
starter who often finds a groove in the
middle innings. He said he rarely
throws strikes in warmups.
"Ninety percent of the time I have
bad stuff in the bullpen before
games," the Moot-S LaCoss said. "I
can't get the ball over the plate. It's ID
minutes I just try to get loose .
"I've seen too many guys who have
great stuff in the bullpen and ctme out
on the mound and don 't have
anything ," he said.
He retired 15 of 16 batters in one
stretch and 10 of 11 to finish the game
for
his
fourth
route -g oing
performance this year.
La Coss earned the respect of
Horner, who hit safely In his 19th
straight game.
"He doesn 't overpower you," said
Horner, who is hitting .321. " But ,YOU
have to respect hJm because he's a
smart pitcher. He knows how 1.0 get
his job done.''
Ray Knight, Hector Cruz and
Johnny Bench provided the Reds
offenae In another patchwork lineup

GAME8111.4TED
The All-etar game for the Junior
and Senior Girll Softbel1 Lagues will
be held at S;yracue on August 13 with
the lint game to begin at 7 p.m.
lndlvidual and team trophies will
also be awarded at this time to the
winners and runners-up in the leagues
and tournament.

frequent visits home, the very reason
he became a pilot several years ago.
"He di~ because he loved his
family ," Coleman said. "He loved his
family so much, he wanted to be With
them as much as possible. Time was
so important to him. That's why he
took up flying , so he could be with his
family as much as possible."
_The ,Yankees also attended the brief
graveside service before flying back
tn New York ·to play the Baltimore
Orioles in a night game.

scoring double of! the left field wall.
After going six-foi'-46 with the Reds
when he arrived in Cincinnati
following a trade with the San
Fran~ Giants for Pedro BoriJ:oo,
Cruz has hit over .300 with 10 RBI and
played good defense substituting for
Griffey in right.
"Now I feel like I'm a player
again," said Cruz, who batted only 25
times in three months with the Giants
·
before the trade. "I feel very good at
the plate now."
Bench scored after singling in the
fifth. Ray Knight singled and an
infield error let the hustling Bench
score from flr!lt.
Atlanta relievers Adrian Devine,
Joe McLaughlin and Larry Bradford
By Grec Bailey
The Hlt 'N Mi8les roared m.n allowed one run over the last 7 1-3
behind to acore three nma in the innings, pleasing Colt.
"The bullpen can't pitch much
seventh inning to take an 8-8 wlil aver
Forest Run and capture the Senior better than they're doing," he said.
Girl.s League Tournament.
Loretta Pettit wu the winning pitcher whlle Tonya Saller took the 10811.
Forest Run took a 1-41ead In the fir.
st, but Hlt 'N Milles came beet with
four in the fourth.
ln tile bottom II. the fourth, Forest
Run plated five blc nma to repln the
lead &amp;-4. The Hlt 'N MiaN than
narrowed the ecore to 8-8 with anmln
the sixth to, set up ~ lf!Y!IIth inning
surge.
ln that seventh, Lori Rupe led olf
with 1 li!Jcle, followed by 1 walk to
Laura Smith. Pettit then reached on a
fielder's Cbolce, and Rope scored on a
single by Shari Drehel to tie tbe !!C~ft.
Pettit then came bome on an error,
and Drehel IICOI"ed on a single by
Laura Elchlnller.
Forest Run started the bottom of
the aeventh with two singles, but left
the runnen ltranded.
The Hit 'N Mlslea reached the
fina1.l with wins over Pometoy, Two
Rive" Motola and New Havea.
Forest Run came tlnuch the loaen
bnlctet after lollng the flnt pme
with Two Rivera. They then best
Pwueroy, F-.y BenneU American

'N Misses

win 8-6 tilt

Others attending the services
included baseball Commissioner
Bowie Kuhn, American League
President Lee Macl'llail, Cleve~
Indians Preside.nt Gabe Paul and
General Manager l'llil Seghi, former .
Yankee Manager Bob Lemon and
players from the Indians, Tesaa
Rangers and Baltimore Orioles,
including former Mu11110n teammalel
Bobby BomE of the Indians and
Sparky Lyle and Mickey Rivers ol the
Rangers.

••••••••••••••••••••••••

OUR HUGE

game~a:~~~J:~~~w~~!:~in~~a::
of a degenerative nerve di.ooase and

necessitated by the absence of injured·
players Dave Concepcion and Ken '
Griffey and disabled George Foster.
Losing pitcher Mickey Mahler, 3-10,
walked the bases loaded in the first
inning. Knight .then hit a sacrifice fiy
tD drive in his 19th run in the last eight
games. Cruz followed with a run-

H.ll•

Piniella - Munson 's teammate atld
close friend - read from Ecclesiastes
and began a short eulogy.
In a halting, tear..:hoked voice , he
said, "We, his teammates, found
Thurman to be a very kind,
affectionate, friendly man. We knew
him to he a good family man. We don't
know why God took Thurman from us,
but we do know as long as all of us
wear the Yankee uniform, he won't he
too far from'liB."
Bobby Murcer, another teammate,
offered a Bible reading and added,
"He lived, he led, and he loved. Most .
of all, he loved his 'family."
'
Murcer reflected on the tragic loss

was the last captain of the Yankees
before Munson.
"Thurman was a great competitor,
a great baseball player. He was rough
and tough, but he was always fair ," he
added. Murcer continued haltingly
and, finally, began to sob, tears
streaming down his face.
Munson's grief-stricken widow,
Diane, sat near the speakers,
alternately weeping and consoling .her
daughters, Tracy Lynn, 9, and Kelly,
8. Michael, too young to understand,
had been sent home.
The Rev. J . Robert Coleman, pastor
of St. Paul's Catholic Church in
Canton and a friend of the Munsons,
said, "Thurnian was a very real
person. He knew what he wanted and
he worked hard to achieve it. He was
hard to get to know, but once you did,
he was a great friend."
Munson was killed during one of his

TIRE SALE
IS STILL IN PROGRESS

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ROAD KING
SPECIAL ON WHEELS

SEE US FOR All YOUR RV NEEDS

MEIGS TIRE CENTER
John Fultz, Mgr.

992-2101
Next to Krogers In Pomeroy

We've been talking to you about added vatU£
to your hialth tare·protectinn dollar, but:

·H
ealth
care
protection
•
IS no:cure
for senseless
habits.
••

•

~on.~.~ddhpri,ud

New Haven.
For the Hit 'N Mlslea, Drehel led
the bitten with 1 borne nan and .qle
wtale Rope 11M two lingles. Terri
Wilson and Kim Seth •cb bad a
double.
Loll Bailey led the Forest Run girls
with her lxmer and slDgle. Jody
Grueeer and Cindy 1bornploo ach
had two slniJee.
000401~ 88
HM
100 500 ~ 12 7
FR

j r-----------------------------~

Kan .

"I think the American people may
have been saved by the recess," said '
Dole. '"We could have passed aU the
legislation that has been proposed and
then think where the American people
would be."
,
Dole had an additional motive he
shares with Sen. Howard H. Baker Jr .
of Tennessee. Both intend using the
August recess to campaign for the
1980 Republican
presidential
nomination.
''Some have plans to visit a number
of states and some may visit only
one," said Dole.
In fact, Dole suggested the only
trouble with the month-long recess
was it will be too short." An extension
might actually help the American
people," he said. "Make it Oct. I, and
maybe extend the recess beyond Oct.

}'RE£00M
OF

cHOICE.

Oh sure, if you
become sick or injured,
modern medicine may
be able to patch you.up
and usually your health
Care coverage will pay for it.
!f there is adequate value in your
benefits to cover the constantly rising
costs of health care. ·
Your Blue Cross and Blue Shield
Plaits have been talking to you and your
ernploy~r at&gt;?ut the flexibility and
alte!-"fleltlves m group plans ....about
adding value to your health care dollar.
But the challenge is in maintaining that
value. Well, healthy •lifestyles •play a very
important part. After all, protection
against. th~ cost of .unexpected '
illness 1s Vital, but It's no
· c=o.=.

1."

"January," suggested .Sen. Jesse
Heims, R-N .C.

CORNERSTONE
OF OUR

.erry's World

INSURANCE STORE
So me insurance agents offer the policies of a single insurance
co mpany. And that's okay. Every good insurance company
offers policies th ai provide excellent benefits to man y people.
Btil here at The Insurance S10re we offer more.
We are independent agents, That means we are free to review
and recommend the policies, coverage and services of
many leading companies ... like The Continental in surance
Companies, for e&lt;ainple. So you have a beller
chance to get the insurance pro1ec1ion thai exactly fits
your special requ irements.
-~nd

substitute for sensible health habits.·
Smoking, overeating, excessive use o1
alcohol and stress are things that take
away from the value of everybo~s
health care dollar. But worst of . , they
rob you of your good health. .
. .
Your Blue Cross and Blue Shield
Plan~ will make a deal with you. We'll
contmue to work on ways to control the
rising costs of health care and add ·value
to your h~alth care protection dollar.
All you have to do is ...
~~ please, take care of youne1L
®"

Blue Cross.
.Blue Shield.,

you can depend on our "Follow-Through Crew" for .
conscientious service when you need it.

REUTER-BROGAN
INSURANCE SERVICE

Value added.

'14 E . MAIN ST.
POMEROY, 0 . .
992-5130or992-5139
"YOU DON'T IUY A POLICY
YOU HIRE AN AGENT" '

___j

''

\.;

··---

.;._

_ ____ ___

_____.

II

_.......

----------.

'

..

�'I

·• - 7be Da:!y Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Au~ . 7, 1979

REPRESENTING 4-H - 4-H members representing Meigs County at .
the Jackson Area Safety Speaking Contest on July 16 were Carrie Karr,
center, and Patty Parker. Carrie is a member of the Busy Beavers 4-H
Club and is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Karr, Middleport. Patty
is a member of the Five Point Star Stitchers 4-H Club and is the daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Leland Parker, Rt. 3, Pomeroy. Pictured with the girls is
Arthur C. Dannecker, Jr., vice president, Public Relations of Westfield
Company who sponsored the contest.

Generation Rap
By Hden anrl Sut• Bnth·l

Woodrow Engle ill

Celebrates birthday
Woodrow Engle III, son of Junior
and Debbie Engle, celebrated his
third birthday at the 11ome of his
grandparents recently.
Gifts were presented to the
youngster and a cake decorated in the
three-UtUeopigs motif was served
with homemade ice cream. Attending
were the grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Woodrow Engle, Sr., Mrs. Marilyn
Cooper, Christy Cooper, JoJoCooper,
Mrs. Peggy Dowell, Henry Dowell,
and Debbie Dowell.

Application presented
One application for membership
was presented when the Rock Springs
Grange met Thursday night at the
hall. Legislative reports were given
by William Radford and Frances
Schaefer, and Barbara Fry, women's
activities chairman, reminded
members of the needlework entries to '
be in by Aug. 31. It was noted that
Mrs. Mary Schaefer, Mrs , Louise
Radford, and Mrs. Ethel Grueser are
ill. The hall was vacated for the Meigs
County fair, and Martha King and
Judy
Humphreys
served
refreshments.

PICNIC POSTPONED
Bernard F. Nlehm, chairman of the

M-G-M District Boy .Scouts announced the cancellation of the
District Scout picnic at Kyger Creek
Park originally scheduled for Aug. II.
It will be rescheduled for some time
in September.

Fair flowers
discussed

Plans for operating
Fair food booth made
by Band Boosters here
Plans for operating the food booth
at the Meigs County Fair were made
during recent meetings of the Meigs
Band Boosters held at the high school.
· The booth will be open fr1m Sunday, Aug. 12 through the closing &lt;illY
of the fair, 6 a.m. to 1 a.m. Mrs. Barbara Riggs is in charge of purchasing
supplies and food for the stand and
will be assisted by Mrs. Ann Radford.
Additions to the menu will be franks
with relish . Bob Richmond
volunteered to handle the· necessary
electrical work. Booth cleanup will be
held Thursday beginning at 6:30p.m.
and volunteers to work are needed.
Atelephone conunittee has been ap-

pointed · to get workers and soliCit
donations. They are Mrs. Florence
Bearhs, senior class; Murvllle
Brown, junior class ; Carolyn
McDaniels, sophomore c1aas; Donna
Spencer, freshman class. Those mt
contacted may call Mrs. Muine
Goeg!ein , president, for work assignment.
.
other ways ,and meana projects
have been dlacusaed at the meetings.
Pennants will be sold and a jB2Z band
competition Is being planned.
The officers are Mrs. Goeglein,
president; Mrs. Pat Kitchen, first
vice president; Mrs. Judy Crookll,
secretary; and Mrs. Marie Birchfield, treasurer.

MEIGS COUNTY REPRESENTATIVES - Representing Meigs·
County at the State 4-H Leade,rship Camp from July 9 through July 14 at
Camp Ohio were Rogle Gaul and Tammie Starcher, right. Gaul Ia a member of the Better Beef 4-H Club and the son ri Mr. and Mrs. Roger Gaul of
Route 3, Pomeroy. Starcher is a member of the Pink Ladies 4-H Club and
the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Roger Starcher, Minersville. 'lbe8e 4-H
members attended camp with 1111 other young people from Ohio. Tbe
camp has five primary purposes: (I) Personal growth, (2) stnngthen
leadership skills and abWtles, (3) gain Ideas and methods that If shared,
will streitgthen local and county 4-H programs, (4) make new friends
from each of Ohio's 88 counties, (5) fun and fellowship. The Westfield '
Companies believe In youth and 1979 will mark the 38th year 11 total spon- .
sorshlp of the camp.

Mary Skinner receives grant
'rom uramley, Center Director of
the Gallla.Jackson-Meigs Community
Mental Health Center announced that
Mary Skinner, Coordinator of t11e Personal Advocacy Programs for the
Gallia.Jackson-Meigs Community
Mental Health Center has received a
grant of $1,150 from the Ohio Developmental Disabilities Council. The
grant· will be used to dev~op informational programs about the
developmentally disabled citizens in
the three county area. Personal Advocacy is a program' that utilizes
citizens volunteers that work with
developmentally disabled people on a
one to one bssis. In this role, the ad·
vocate becomes a friend and a source
. of information. The advocate might
also provide transportation in getting
the handicapped to appointments, to
the store, to social and recreational

SHOULD GffiL TELL PARENTS
ABOUT FREE AND EASY SISTER?
By Helen and Sue B.ottel
DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
My 16-year-old sister tells me all
about her fun dates -things you
wouldn't believe. Her idea of a great
time Is making wild, mad love in a
van or abandoned building or at the
beach, or anywhere. And she isn't
particular who with or how many, or
even if she knows them.
She expects me to keep quiet about
this, though she isn't bashful about
bragging to friends. If I tell our
parents, she'll probably hate me. If I
don't she 'II probably end up with VD
or pregnant or both.
Besides, isn't there something
about getting cervical cancer from . - - - - - - - - - - too much sex?- SISTER TATTLER
other herpesvirus infections; cold
DEAR SISTER:
sores,
shingles, etc. Now we read
Better your sister ljates you tem(New
York
Times News Service) that
porarily than she become an unpaid
Drs.
Herbert
Blough and Robert
hooker, perhaps even dead. (Too
GluntoU
of
~
University of .Pennoften girls who take crazy chances
with strangers find their last beds at sylvania are experimenting with 2deoxy-D-glucose as a cure for the
the morgue.)
herpes famlly·of~,lllbe· drug i8
Tell your parents ! -HELEN
licensed for ~ptrooliiiflil not on
themarket.
·
SISTER
About your last question : True,
virgins hardly ever contract cervical DEAR RAP:
This if ·for the woman who wonders
cancer, but "too much sex" doesn't
necessarily bring on the disease, lf she should stand by her convict husthough some researchers say early band, a three.fune loser. You impUed
she'd better give up on a lost cause
sex may be a contributor.
and so did several of your corHowever:
respondents
who had "been that
A recent study by Doctors Shanna
H. Swan and Willard L. Brown of route'' themselves.
The greatest advice on this i8 In St.
Kaiser Permanente Medical Center,
Walnut Creek, Calif., suggests cer- Luke 6:33: "And if ye do good to them
vical cancer might be caused by a which do good to you, what thanks
Herpesvirus contained in sperm. If have ye, for sinners also do even the
their findings prove out, then certain- same."
Whatever her ,.Julabllnll. bas . done,
ly a promiscuous (or shall we say "indiscriminate" ) woman faces more either she helped him to do it, or did
Big C risk, as Herpesvirus U is·a form not prevent him from doing it. The
least she can do Is try to prove the
of venereal disease.
Another study (at the University of adage, "Behind every successful man
Pennsylvania) reports women with there is a woman.''
In her case, maybe this should
genital herpes are eight times more
read,
" Behind every failure,
likely to get cancer of the cervix than
are women who do not have the infec- likewise."- ANOTHER PRISONER
DEAR PRISONER :Thanks for
tion.- SUE
your letter, but you haven't changed
our
minds. - HELEN AND SUE
NOTE FROM HELEN: We recently mentioned Dr. Harvey Sklar of
(GOT A PROBLEM? Or a problem
Englewood Hospital, Englewood,
for
discussion, two-generation style?
N.J ., wl1ose work with safe injections
of adenosine 5'-monophosphate Direct your questlona to either Sue or
(AMP) indicates there may be a cure Helen Bottel - ·or both, If you want a
for early cases of Herpes U (the sD- combination mother - daughter
called incurable VD), and also for the answer - in care of this newspaper.)

ROUTE
CARRIERS
EARN MONEY!
and in these days you need those
extra dollars for fun and school.
You'll enjoy doing this important job
with girls and boys your age. Have
fun and get paid tool

WIN PRIZES TOO!
CARRIER NEEDED IN SYRACUSE
CALL 992-2156

The Daily Sentmel

activities. The advocate helps the
handicapped friend to help theritselves.
· The Mental Health Center presently
has Personal Advocacy Programs for
the developmentally dlaabled in each
of the three counties. Anyone interested in Personal Advocacy or
what can be done for the developmentally disabl~, may cootact Mary
Skinner, Meigs County, 992-2192; JuU
Ormsby, Gallla County, 446-6500 or
Tom Clay, Jackson County,286-!626.

WEEKEND GUFliTS
Mrs. George Dallas, Missy and
MiChael, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Dallas, St.
Paris, and Giselle Anable of Cincinnati, were weekend visitors of Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Matlack, Chester Road.

JUNE EICHINGER
Mrs. June Eichinger, Mulberry
Heights, was cllschar!led from the
Holzer Medical Center Sunday.

VISITORS
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gibbs and
Mark, Sewell, N. J., and Mrs. Bnche
Gibbs of the Pinecrest Nurislng H(llle
were recent visitors ri Mn. Dorothy
Roller. They also visited In Racine
with the Rev. and Mrs. George Oiler,
and In Rutland with Mr. and Mrs.
Sam Gibbs and ICil. Mrs. Charles
Gibbs i8 the fonner Jean Roller,
daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs.
Mark Roller.

. A disc111111ion on the classes ri the
Meigs County Fair flower shows was
held at a recent meeting ri the Bend
of the River Garden Club. . Tbe
meeting followed the annual family
picnic held at the Roadside Park on
Ronte33.
Mrs. Bert Grimm gave grace.
Guests were Mr. and Mrs. Hayman
Damitz, Robin Manuel, Donita
Manuel, Wilson Carpenter, James
Diehl, Bert Grinun, and Early Roush. '
Mrs. James Diehl presided at .the
meeting with Mrs. Wilson .Carpenter
distributing Meigs County Fair
premlwn books ·to the members.
Several members of the club will ellhibit In the . artistic arrangement
. categories and horticulture

specimens.
Mrs. Eileen Buck announced a program book conunittee meeting with
Mrs. Joyce Manuel, Mrs. Carpenter,
Mrs. Grimm, and Mrs. Diehl to attend. Next meeting will be held at the
home 11 ·Mrs. Glenn West in
September

l
' l

'

OFFICERS INSTALLED-Mrs. Catherine Welsh
presented the gavel to Mrs. Veda DaviB, 19'19-31
chapeau, during installation ceremonies at a meeting
of Meigs County Salon 710, Elgbt and Forty, Monday
night at the Meigs Office of the Athens County Savings'
and Loan Co. Other officers in8tall~ by Mrs. WelBh

Golden Acorn
reunion this year
at Pittsburgh

r-- - - - - - ---.
I ·Social Calendar

VISm&gt;RS FROM GEORGIA
Mrs. Janice Quisenberry .White ri
Atlanta, Ga. visited over the weekend
with her grandfather, Ben
'IUE'IDAY
Quisenberry
of SyraCWie. She also
VOLUNTEERS for annual project
of Drew Webster Post 39, American visited her aunta, Mrs. Allee
Legion, parking cars at the county Freeland, SyracUlle, and Mrs.
flar, are to attend post meeting at a Dorothy Roller, Middleport.
p.m. Tuesday
SUTTON Township Trustees
Tuesday 8 p.m. at SyracUlle
Municipal Building. The summary Of
MARK SWANN
the budget for flacal 1980 and 1111e of
Navy Signalman Seaman Recruit
revenue sharing !Wills will be
Mark A. Swann, ICil of Gwenda R.
available for pubUc inllpectlon. ·
Ferguson
of 201 Butter Ave.,
WEDNESDAY
P~meroy, has been awarded the Navy
REGULAR meeting PomeroyMiddleport Ltona Club 12 noon Wed- Expeditionary Medal
He ia a cmrmember aboud the
nesday at Melga Inn.
/
aircraft carrier USS Midway,
operating fnm YakoN!a, Jljlllll.
FRIDAY
He received the medal for bla parTRUTH IN Action Singen from
ticipation
in ~ to the Indian
Bob Jones University will be at the
Calvary Baptist Cbun:h, 7:30 p.m. Ocean and Arabian Gulf iD resp011111t
to the turmoil in Iran and NOI'th
Friday.
Yemen. The Navy ExpedltiOlllt)'
Medal is awarded to peraonnel ri the
STORY HOUR DI.SCONTINUES
Navy w11o have operated under cirThe Tueaday morning story hour at cwnstances deemed to merit special
the Middleport Library Is being recognition. .The medal wu flrat
discontinued for the remainder of authorized In 11138.
Swann joined the Navy In Auguat,
'August. Tbe program will be resmned
19'18.
in September.

'7HE BOYFRIEND" - The girll! (1-f' Mlcltl Clark, Jane Hannon,
Wendy Lardin, Melanie Petty) meet the boys (1-r Bob Adams, Steve
Apostallna, Rob Garrison, Paul DonalJoe ) and catch them in the Ohio
Valley Swnmer Theater's Production of 'The Boyfriend" by Sandy
Wilson. The show will run Alii!. 2-6 and 8-12 at the Patio Theater on the
Ohio Univenlty campus.

0

WHAT'S UP Wl'l11 .WOMEN?

0

NBC Cbalrmln Jane Cahill Pfeiffer
cifers thla formula for aucceaa : "You
need to be energetic phyalcally and
mentally, to care genuinely about
othor people, to have a aenae·of humor
and be wt1ling to UIW!Ie respooaibW·
ty."
. Mn. Pfeiffer and four similarly
IIUCcelllful wcmeo.were honored with

this year's Top Achievement Awards
from Harper's Bazaar. The winners
and their categories were :
Communicationa: NBC Cbalrman
Pfeiffer.
Public Service: Eleanor Holmes
Norton, head of tile Equal Employment Opportwlity Commission.
lndnstry : Marina von Newnann
Whitman, chief economist and vice
president of General Motors.

On September 18, 19, 20, 21 and 22,
the 87th (Golden Acorn) Infantry
Division ri World Wars I and U will
hold its 30th Annual Reunion in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, at the
Marri&lt;Kt Inn.
The 87th Infantry Division was activated and· trained u a Combat Infantry Division in both World Wars.
In 1917 the division joined General
Pershing's A.E.F. in France, 'and ult
was being assigned to the Western
Front. the Annlstice was signed. In
World War n the division went into
aCtion at Metz, France. During !54
daya of almost continual combat, the
Golden Acorn foucht In France,
Belgium, lAillembourg, and Germany. It advanced more than 345
mlles In the European(, Theater,
taking 63,338 prisoners and UberatiDR

· were front left, Mrs . .Eunle Brinker, Ia concierge; and
back row, left to right, Mrs. Marjorie Goett, l'archiviate; Mrs. Mary Martin, Ia secretainH:asalere;
Dollie Hayes, l'aumonler, and Mrs. Iva Powel!,
pouvior member. other officers are Mrs. Florence
Richard, second demi chapeau, and Mrs. Pearl Knapp,
first demi chapeau, not present.

hundreds of towns. Veterans of ~
famou.s "Batue of the Bulge,"
crossing of the Naulle and Rhine
rivers, and the ''lightning streak" in
,SH9P
pursuit of the Nazis 8C1'1l811 the heart
J;i Germany, flgltlng many bitter batties from the once Impregnable
Slefried Line to the Czech Border.
FORTH~ b .... ST DEALS IN THE
The combat ability ri the 87th
TRISTATE AREA
Division wu beld In high regard by
General George Patton, CGmmancler
ri the Third Anny' and this unit
received three Bronze Combat BaWe
Mon ., Tues., Wed., Friday &amp; Sat.
Stars for Ita IIIOit vallailt efforts in the
8:30
to 5:00 Thursday till12 Noon
baWe! ri the Ardennes, Rhineland,
and Central Europe.
OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONLY'
For additional information on the
Herman Grate
87th Convention, contact: Gladwin
M~son, W.Va .
Paacuzzo, 2374 N. Dundee Ct.,
773-5592
HIgh Ia nd , MI c big an 48 031. . "';o;;;;;;;;o;;;;;;;;;;;;;...,.-.;;;;;;;o;;;;;;;;;;;;;,.._;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;o;;;;:;;;;;,~
Telephone: 1-313#7.-.x;.
•

MASON FURNITURE

MASON FURNITURE

j

l
BABY BEEF

SAVORY SLICED

Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Cale, Marcia, Missy and Megan, have returned
from a vacation at VIrginia Beach.
They also visited In Waahlngton, D. C.
with her brother and his family, Lt.
Col. (Ret.) and Mrs. James Roller.

BACO N....... ~.hl!·.f.~~=···· 59~

A PERSONAL MESSAGE
TO GENERAL TELEPHONE CUSTOMERS
FROM THE PRESIDENT
OF YOUR PHONE COMPANY
"If you ever have a nagging problem
with your phone or phone bill,
I'm going to help you get action.
Here's how:'

u.s.
GRADE "A" SMALL

'

'

SUPERIOR

.

FRANK I ES ...................................................t!.?!: ••

.

e
99

BOLOGNA ...............................................~~~~~~~;~ 79

'1 00
.
BROUGHTON
ICE· c;REAM .••• ~!.~~~... •129
Jll' LBS.

BROUGHlON'S

2% MILK .••••.••....~:~. '1 69
VAllEY BEll .

-BARRELHEAD ROOT BEER ........~.~~~~ 99~

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

------·
······'

24 oz.
19

COnAGE CHEESE .. '1
16 oz. Throw Away
COCA-COLA ..... ~~.a.k..'1

69

All STAR DAIRY

8 OZ. REG. 89' 69~

DAN DEE

POTATO CHIPS.•••..........•..•.••.•...••..••.
SCOTLAND SALTINE

·

CRACKERS ••••......•.......•...••..••.••:.~~.~~.

49~

.

3/$100
ORANQE DRINK •.•..••••..•..•...........
8RIGHT &amp; EARLY

FRIDAY ONLY

DR. PEPPER
BPAK

99~

&amp; OZ.

.

PAK

FUDGE SOFT

4
BUBBLE GUM .•••••......•..••-..••••••..•••..••.

69~

!lEG.• QUART

CANNING

'iiOmogenlzed

MILK ...........••••••••.~:~·. '1 5•
........~~~!£~t.~ 179

TheACllON LINE number is 800-282-5716 .Write it down now in your directory, in case you '
need it later. It connects you directly, at no charge, to th e ACllON LINE desk at our Executive Offices
in Marion.
The people manning the ACllON LINE desk have the leverage to get action for you - right then and
there. They have my personal, unlimited support to cut through red tape to get satisfaction for you .
If there IS some good reason why your request just can't be fulfilled , they'll explain exactly why.
I have confidence in General Telephone's Quality People, who are dedicated to providing you with the
best 1n ~~~1ce . Accordmgly, l support their efforts fully, and will continue to do so with the manpower
and faCilities to msure that they can provide you with ever better telephone service.

•

R.M. WOPAT
___.-"}

I'~
l/1 /£/~
President

GEOERAL TELEPHOnE comPAnY OF OHIO
•
,

,

0

e

EGGS ..................~~... 39~ GROUND BEEF. ..........................................~·.-'1 29
'BANANAS

But once in awhile a problem just won 't go
away. You want action, but you just can 't
seem to get the satisfaction you need. That's
why we've put in a special new GTE
··
ACllON LINE for you to use when all else
seems to fail and you want direct action, now.

,,

SUPERIOR

DAIRY

Nobody's perfect. If we all were, this would be a
much easier world to live in. Not terribly
interesting, but easier.
We recognize that sometimes problems
arise with your phones or telephone service.
Most often, the solution simply
involves a call to the Repair or
Business Office number listed on the
introductory pages of your phone
book. If that doesn't do i~ your loca l
Customer Service Manager (that's
really his job .. .to serve you) also has
his phone number listed in the introductory pages of your directory.

LIVER .....................,..,...............................................~·. 79e

fHURS. ONL Yr

RC OR
DIET RITE
COLA

ALL WffK

PERSI COIJ
&amp;

MT. DEW

8 PAK i6 OZ. BTLS.

'1"

•

SUPER MARKET - OPEN DAILY 9 10 10 P.M • .
SUNDAY.lO 10 10
we " - lhe

To Umit

8 PAK 1' OZ.
BTLS.

99C,

�6- The De.lly Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Aug. 7,1979

'·hi~lifl'trntinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday,Aug. 7,1979

.•

Your Best Buys Are Found in the Sentinel Classifieds
Ifill THE COURT

OF COMM ON PLEAS
OHIO
WOO DROW QUEEN .
Pl,aintiff ,

·· \' 5 ·

AUDREY

KATHLEEN

QUEEN ,

DefentUnt.

15 Words or Under
Cash
Charge

I day

1.2S

NOTICE BY

2days

1.00

1.50

1.90

3di!)'S

PUBLICATION

6days

l .ftO
3.00

2.:Z::,
3.75

No. 17118

You arc hereby no tif ied
vcu have b e en nam e d
a . de l endant in a l eg al
actio n ef'ltit l ed Woodrow
Queen , · Pla in t i tf ,
vs .
Audr ey Kathleen Qu ee n ,
Detendanf. Th is act ion has
bee n ass igned Case No .
Hl ~l

Eo~~ch word over tht: minimum
15 words is 4 cenl'l per word per
day . Atb nmn in~ other than consecutl\·e days Will be C'hargt'd at

U~Idayra t e.

In memory, Card or Tha nlu
Obitt111ry : 6 cenl!! per word,
$3.00 minimum. cash in advance .

17118 and is. pendin_
g i n t he

Hnd

Court Of Common Pleas of

Me igs

Cou tny ,

Pomeroy ,

Ohio 4576q _
Tt1e object of 'th e c; On" pta int is the obta ining of a
div orce
and
th e
t er .
mlnati on of a marr i ag e
co ntra c t
b e tw ee n
t he
parties and the selll emf!nf

Mobile Home sal es and Yard
sa les are aceepted only with
cash ~ith order. Z5 cent charge
for ads carrying Bolt Number In
Care o~Thf Sentinel,
The Publisher rest"nles the
rlght to edit or reject any ads
dee med objectio nal, The
Ptlblish!!r will not be rel1XJnl&gt;~ible
for more than one incorre&lt;:l In-

of'the property r ights ot the-

parties a n d the custody o f
the minor c h i ldren .
You are r equ ir ed to
answer
th e complai nt
w i th in 28 day s alter th e la st,
pub l ica tion of t his not ice,
which will be pub lished
on ce each w ee k fo r six
su cce ssive weeks . The l ast
publicat ion w i ll be mad e on
Au g us t 7, 1979 , and th e 28
d ay !. for
answer wi ll
commence on that da t e.
In· case of vou r f ai l ure to
an swer
or
otherwise
respo nd as r equi r ed by th e
Ohio
Rules
of
Civi l
Pro ce dure,
the
final
'1 eari ng on t h is matter wi ll
beh .eld after the expiration
of 28 days after t h e last d ay
of publi c ation o f t his notice
or as soon thereaft er as can
be schedu led by the Cour t .

sertion.

Phone992-2156

NOTICE
WANT-AD
!ADVERTISING I ·
DEADLINES .
Monda_y
Noon on Sa turday
Tuesday

thru Friday
4P.M .

Larry

(7)

Spe n cer,
C lerk of Cour t
o f Me ig s Count y,
Oh to

the day berore publi cation
Sunday
4 P.M.
F'riday afternoon

3, 10 , 17 , 24 , 3 1. (B l 7, 6t c

Card of Thanks
WOULD like to thank
everyone lor the cords ,
flowers , vis its and prayers
during my recent stay at
Holler Medical Center.
Eula J. Wolfe .

Wedneldey, Aug. 8

ASTRO·GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

Notices

~'Your

GUN SHOOT . EVERY FRIDAY
7:30 PM RAC INE GUN ClUB.
FACTORY CHOKE GUNS ON·
lY .

'f{[jJ/'Birthday
Augu11 1, 1979
GoOCI things you have done for
othe rs in the past wi ll be
re tu rned to yo u with a bonus
this comi ng year . Aren 't you '
Qlad you 've been such a nice
pe rson?
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You can
learn much today by observ ing
one who d oes tl"1 ings in ways
you admire. His techniques
can be applied In situations
which affect yo u. Ho·w to get
along with other signs is one of
the sections you' ll enjoy In
your new Astro..Q raph Letter
that begins with you r birthday .
Mall $1 to r ea ch to Astra-Graph ,
P.O. BoK 489, Radio City Station , N.Y. 10019. Be su re to
! peci ly blrtl"1 date.
VIRQO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) When
yo u are properly moti'lated to·
day you will find It greatly
enhances your productivity .
Look for the reward s that a job
well done has to offe r.

LIBRA (Sopl.

AL INE'S DRESS ond Beauty
Shop. Specials, Monday , Tues·
day, Wednesday on ly thru
month of August . All summer
mer chandise 1/ 3 price, $25
perms, $20. $20 perms , $17 .
$1 B perms S15. Open evenings ..
by appointment on ly. 2
operators. Aline Weaver ,
Cathy Wood . 5th and Vine ,
Racine. OH . 9"9·2666.

OFFICE SECRETARY nHdod at
once. Must be good typist ,
short hand preferred. Must be
accu rate .
Good
fringe
benefits . Write Box "06.
Pomeroy, OH .45769' and give
complete re~ume. All replies
strictly confidential. Present
employer will not be contacted without your permission. Business college preferred but not required .
COOK AND wolfreas wonted .
Apply in penon. Craw's Forni·
ly Restaurant.
SOMEONE TO do body work or
d ean up ca rs . Apply in person , Harold Hysell , Rutland ,

Thia should be a rewarding day
materially from projects or en terprises where you are using
you r skills or talents on the
behalf of others.
,
.

Oh.

ACUAAIUS (Jon. 211-Fob. 111

Wanted to Buy

Set high standards for yourself
today workwlse . . Not only
should you do a good job , but
even a bit more than 11 e)C pected , The payoff will be wortn 11.

CHIP WOOD. Poles moK.
diameter 10" on largest end.
$12 per ton . Bundled slab. $10
per ton. Delivered to Oh io
Pallet Co., Rt . 2, Pomeroy.

PISCES (Fob. rti-Morc:h 101 Olh·

ers will be willing to do yo ur
bi dding today becauae the y' ll
realize what you want them to
do Is not motlveted by sel fi sh

be ttealtent to trust new meth ods or techniques today . They
are apt to be the ones that will
get ttte job done for you . Th ink

OLD COINS, pocket watches,
clan rings. wedding bands,
diamonds . Gold or silver. Call
J. A . Wom•ley , 7.42-2331 .

pr ogre~alvely .

TAURUS (AprU 211-Moy 20) A

WANTED: SAW logs . Payment
upon deli :v-ery to our yard. 1 :30
to 3:30 weekdays. Blaney
Hardwoods . SR 339, Barlow,

OH . 678-2980 .
Wanted to Relit
TRAILER, HOUSE or apl. 3
be&lt;lr. furn . odn utlllles. Willing to pay up to $250 per
month. 319 A. Mechanic St.,
anytime.

COUNTRY MOBilE Home Pork ,
Route 33, north of Pomeroy.
.Lorge lot•. Call 992-7479.

I'OUIIIIilc continents.

cowoting, septic systems ,
dozer, backhoe. At. 143 .
Phone I (61~ ) 696-7331 or

YARD SAlE . Aug. 8, 9, 10.
Wed ., Thurs . Fri . 10om to 6
pm. Tom Clarks residence .
Crooks and 3rd St., Syracuse.
Furniture, co ii!Ktors items ,
misc. items .
TEN FAMILY Yord Sole.
Minersville Hill. Follow signs.
Everything from baby's to
adult's. Antiques , furniture.
Auguste , 9 , 10.
HU GE YARD Sole. Thurs .,
Aug. 9. 9am to 8 pm. Fur·
nitu re , TV , antiques, depression gloss. n ic• clothes , misc.
In Chester on SR 248 .

985-3505.
THREE FAMilY Yard Sole.
August 7th . 8th, and 9th. 10
om til eve ning. 979 Hysell St. ,
Middleport, OH .

992·3891.
VERMEER BALER Sales, ports
and service. ~o le rs in stock f or
immediate deli very . Ph one
7.42-2877 or 7"2·2152 .
POTATOES AT th e C.W. Protfin Form, Portland OH. Pricei
change day. to day with the"
morket .
CANNING TOMATOES. Harry
Hill Form, LetortFall s,

ALUMINUM MOlDS loo- mak·
ing ornamental cot:~crete
Items. Picnic table , bird both
and planter, etc. 7"2·27"6 .
ONE COUCH and 3 choirs.

992-3850.
TWO . QUARTER HORSES. 2
three year old geldings . " year
Appaloosa mare. Tack. $650·.
33 N . lo Darw in. 681 left to
Snowville. left ot store, 1 mile
to Hebner's .

CANNING TOMATOES, Gary
Roush , Letart Falls. 247-3901 .
1974 TOYOTA TRUCK , sharp.
Hi Lu x long bed , $1700.

985-3310.
TWO SCHAEFER SCD93 6 com·
portment ice cream cabinet,
new, $2068 eo, lik e new with
warranty
only S70Q .
I
Kelvinotor FPD5 frozen display
case, new $2380, like new on·
ly $900. 1 Wyott 3 prong mile
shake mi xe r with S.C. cups ,
new SJ.ol9. used 1 year $125.
Plus other ice cream equipment. All above purchased
separately, $2"25. Buy all
together first $:2150 tokes a ll.
day .
'61"-235 -8510 "during
Evenings 61" ·237·"-4 02.

1972 OlDSMOBilE 350 4-bbl
Pets for Sale
HOOF HOLLOW, English and
Western .
Sadd l es
and
harness. Horses and ponies .
Rutn Reeves . 61.4-698-329'0.
Barding &amp; Riding Lessons and
Hone Care products.
RISING STAR Kennel. Boording. Caii367-0m .
GOING OUT of business . A ll
pood les.
pomeran lon ,
pekinese, block pom puppy
great coot line . Phone 696-111
after 5pm.

POODLE GROOMING. Judy
Tay lor. 61~- 367 -7220 .
GOING OUT of businen. All
poodles ,
pomeran i on .
pekinese, ~lack pom puppy,
great coot line . Phone
696- 1111 after 5pm.

197.4 VEGA HATCHBACK, coli
303-675- 1501 or ·305·675·2"88
Or 304-675-15SJ.

1974 VW VAN, 30 mpg. Gciod
condition .

Needs

muffler.

$2000. 992·3796 .

.

1978 SCOUT " ·wheel drive .
Automat ic, good condition .

engine and transm iss ion. ·
S200. 70,000 actual miles . 4
Olds Sport wheels and tires,
$100. Audiovox AM-FM in
dash stereo with 30 watt amp
and tri-oxlol speakers , S1SO.
125 cc Suzuki motocross,
needs minor work , $250. Call
Steve Bose. 8432~9.4 .

TWO EARLY A mer icon wing
bock chairs, Gold Herculon
covered. 1 Early American 82"
sofa. All in good cond ition.

985-3805.
SWEET CORN for freezQr .
White and yellow . pick your
own. Thomas Sayre. 6.43·2"91 ,
197" GMC JIMMY. 2-wheel
drive, power steering, pow er
brakes. $900. Coll992-358o'

1974 TRIUMPH MOTORCYCLE.
SOOcc. $625 . 742-2047 .
1

BABY 8~0 . chest of drawers.

742-261&gt;7.

1975 FORO VAN . New point,
new tires . W2· 7676 .
SEARS WASHER o.nd dryer .
$150 pr. One 'lolom ski , con.
cave . $30 . 992-7059.

19n STARCRAFT 16 It . open
bow boot, 85 h.p. Mere, convertoble top. S.S. prop11, Sterl·
ing trailer . Plus accessories .
$36(:().90. Phone 992-2791.
TWO
QUARTER
h orse
geldings . S650 eo. Al so tack .
33 N . to Darwin, 681 left to
Snowville, left at store, I mile
to Hebner's . ..

1970 OLDS CUTLASS. Power
steering, power brakes. $650.

CoH992-3580.

3 A.NC 4 RM furnished and un·
furnished
opts .
Phone

992·5-4:3-1.

18 FOOT COVERED wagon
trave l trailer camper. Sleeps
6. A .C., gos-electric-bollery .
Nate Vanaman , Rutland , OH .
1969' FOLD DOWN camper.
Sleeps 8. Stove, lee boK, fur·
noce. $650 . 992-7663.

Mgr .
Phon e 992 · 2181

992-772 1.
TRAILER . ONE

odulr only.

99'2·3181. Janie Armes .
UNFURNISHED APT ,, 5 rooms ,
Newell's Sunoco. Chester.

96S-3350. - I

-

- --

REAL ESTATE: I acre lot in Riggscres t Manor, between Tuppers Plains and Chester.
Phone 985-3929 ond 985-4 129.
RESTAURANT AND bar. D-1
and 0 -2 license included. 3
ceres . and house-, Good
bu11iness opportunity . Call

367-0557.
19 ACRES , 5 room house . CR

28 . 247-31 64 .
FOUR"BEDROOM. bath, livingdining on ¥.acre lot In
Ru t land. Utility building. Call
7.42-2754.
HOUSE FOR sa le in Rutland. 3
bedrooms: both, utility room ,
dining oreo, 21 )( 13 living
room. 12 x 21 fom il)' room .
lo ts of cabine ts in kitchen and
5 x 7 pantry . Metal building
outside' Lot 100 .: 2~0 out of
high water on quiet street .
phone 7"2 · 2~20 .
MUST SELL. Two story , 6 room
house, recently remodeled ,
large lot with plenty of garden
area, natural gos in Pomeroy.
A sk ing $11 ,000. Coli 992-6168
after 6.

yr.

bedrooms, 21;2

.-.

608 E . ..~.~~~A~T.:.Y
MAIN
o&gt;nMO:IIOY . 0 .

...

ff2 -332S

NEW

216 E. Second Street

NEW

GiveAway

LISTING

-

2

bedroom 'frame home,
insulated, bath, elec.
baseboard heat, T. P.
water, new workshop
under construction, on

AKC REGISTERED St. Bernard 4
years old to good home in
country .
Glen
Bissell .

949-2801.

Rt. 7 in T.P.
NEW LISTING -

A -frame

SAVER

3

F .A.

furnace,

city

water , alumlnu ffii siding

and only a few yrs . old .
FAMILY HOME - 4
bedrooms,

1112

baths,

full basement, F .A. fur ·
nace,
T. P.
water ,
several acres w i th cave.

NEW

LISTING

-

3

bedroom brick veneer
ranch home, 1 vrs . old, 2

full baths, fully In·
sulated, large yard of 3
lots plus a river front

lot.
RESTFUL -

Sleep In

this secltJded spot sur rounded by the forest,
nice stone one bedroom

home. Nat. QdS F .A. fur ·

nace ,

city

water,

washer-dryer hookups.
one modern kitchen.

BEAT THE HEAT BILL
BY BUYING ONE OF
THE ABOVE. HAVE
REAL ESTATE PRO·
BLEMS?
CALL
992-3325.

•

lion. Equipped kitchen.

ftJII basement, many
features . U3,900.00.

BEAUTIFUL

RANCH

woodburning fireplace,
large recreation room,

and

basement, nic e nat. gas

1970 Sylva . 60•12, 2 bedr.
1970 Castl e, 60M12, 2 bed r.
1974 Markline, S0K12, 2 bedr.
1969Voliont, l2K60, 2 bedr.
1967 Notional, 12K50, 2 bedr.

in excellent remOdeled
and moderni zed condl ·

R&lt;!&lt;dsvllle, locust post

22

bedroomer In town. Full

985-3373 .

Beautiful 2-story home

galore
sites.

GAS

FREE KTITENS: 8 weeks old. 2
block , 2 grer,, 1 block and gray
striped , 1 bock fluffy , 1 block
and silver fluffy . 2 block and I
black end grey striped cat.

LISTING

- Two level acres ~ all
brick,
up
to
four
bedrooms~
ftJII base men1, family room with

acres of h igh land near

TWO PUPS , 3 mo. aid, . 12'
high, short hair. Mother dog,
short. hair , 15'' high. One big
dog, 23" high. Brown curly
hair. House broken, regular
pets . Nels Pickens, 33 1 3rd St. ,
Racine .

le ase .
100 La sley
St.,
PClmeroy , l&gt;elow Sugar Run
Flour Mllli. 0 - ll lcen,e. Call in
person.

~

~TiL

Middleport, Ohio

992·5170 or992-3667 .
MULBERR Y RESTAURAN T lor

baths,

•New Home
•Addons
Remoldings
*Free estim•tes

*

SU PER

GOOSE

"'·5 ·1 mo.

L-OOK •. PLSA!&gt;e:~ oo ou•r 7 r.;,.,r
GO IWSWING OFf' ,
F LO!&gt;SY ~ IF Y'DON'T
&lt;WAt-ITA GO BACK
HOME TO YOUil.-

Phone 9tH32l .

992-6011

7·25·1 mo. Pd .

A&amp;H
UPHOLSTERING

11 Years Experience
Will Make Service Calls

Purchase

and

Refinance

30 Year Terms
A - No money down
(eligible veterans,
FHA - AS

low

as

U 111111' New Monove·
ment (formerly Sylvii'S
Upholstery!, acrou

e

men 's

Fe:-turing :

Housing
"'"-.;.;.
_

Head uarters .

beautiful built -in kif ·
chen, dining room. Your
dream
come
trtJe .

$60,000.00.
LARGE HOME

-

Remodeled and in good
repair, music room, full

basement,
Pat io,
garage, ni ce lot. four

bedrooms, 2 baths.
$28,500.00.
PRICED REDUCEDOWNER SAYS SELL And Is offering this nice
home with full bose·
ment, equipped kitchen,
nlq! lot on a good street
In

Pomeroy

for

only

S19,900.00.
TWO-FAMILY IN MID·
DLE PORT Price
reduced tor needed
qu ic k sale. $10,900.00.
HIGH ON A HILL Baby farm, barn. other

592-3051
031 mo .

mile off Rt. 7 by -pass
on Sf. Rt . 124 toward

BISSEll.
SIDING CO.

J~

Rutland .

Radlat9r · r""""'l~

Servlc4r

ROUSH

CONSTRUCTION

6-14·2

Construdkln
Extensive Remodeling
GREG ROUsH
Phone 992·7583
992-2282
7-5-1 MO.

N. L Construction

CONTRACTOR
Rt. 3
Pomeroy, Ohio
992·5547
1·25·2 mo.

WILl HAUL limestone and
grovel. Alto , lime hauling ond
spreading. leo Morris Trucking , Phone 7~2- 2"55.

.

CALL

ROOFING, ROOF repair and
siding, other maintenance. E&amp;
R Roofing
and Siding .
"bl-4-388-8860 or 61.4-388-87.97.
ANN'S CAKE Decorating Supplie•. 50716 Osborn Rd .,

Reedovlll•. OH 45772. For In·
tormat ion coli , 667-6o485. Will
be open late If you n..d
something.
S &amp; G Carpet Cleaning. Steam
cleaned.
Free estimate .
Reasonable ratn. Scotchguard. 992-6309 or 7-42-2348.

ment.

mo.

service, oil makes, 992·228.4 .
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Soles and
Service. We sharpen Sclttors.
EXCAVATING , dorer, loader
and backhoe work ; dump
trucks and to-boys for hire,
will haul fUI dirt, top soli,
lime•tone and gravel. Call Bob
or Roger Jeffers, day phone
night
phone
992-7089 ,

WE~ WAI5T rN6
TIME , W~ I T!?V !

plan remodel ed home.

AUTOMOBILE

$16.500.00.
ACREAGE

1 -

stea(

240

acres . Buildi hg sites. ·

REAqORS
Henry E . Cleland 1 Sr.

Henry E . Cleland, Jr.
992-2259
992·6191

INSURANCE

been cancelled? lost your
operators
license? Phone

992-2143.
E·C ELECTRICAL Contractor
serving Ohio Volley r.-glon .
Si~ days a week, 24 hours ter·
vice . Emergency coils. Coli
882-2952 a&lt; 882-:3-154.

LIS '50 MUCM

He was lucky to find the
queen of clubs with East, but
the Gods of c hance help .
those who help themselves.

North East

South
Lt

Pass
30

I¥

H

It
6•

1•
Pass

S+

Pass

Pass

Ask liM I!XMPII
You hold :

I-7·B

• Q5
¥A J9 3
• J 10 5
+A 6 42

Opening lead : +6

FOOD···

HS TRIED TGET
MAo-; 6UN AWAY
FROM Mel

W~o~ERE.

H I$ ~~IEI=t ~5 !

know the correct respon,se to

partner's one-spade open·

" Why did I bid so much ?"
thought South. " Not that the
slam is sure to lose. A
successful club finesse and a
3-3 club break is .all I need.
Or . can I add an extra

chance?"
· Then South proceeded to
add that extra chance. He
ruffed the second spade,
, cashed his ace of hearts, led
a trwnp to dummy, ruffed a
heart, led a second trump to
dummy, ruffed another
heart and then proceeded to
run off all his trwnps to
come to a four-card ending.
Ht held his four clubs, North

ing .
Bid two clubs. With 12
high-card points, you are
just too weak for a jump to

two notrump. Respond in

clubs since a two-heart response should s how more •
than four hearts.
{NEWSPAPE R ENTERPRISE ASSN .)

(Do you have a question for
the expe rts ? Wri te " Ask the
Experts , .r care o f this newspaper. Individual questions will
be answered if accompan ied

by stamped, self-addressed
envelopes. The most interestIng ques tions will be used In
this column and will receive
copies of JACOBY MODERN.)

~~·W:d
GASOIJNE ALLEY

"~

The tube is lonq qone
but 1'11 betAverLJ still
has the dol \ar!

7,1919.

f.laiia

~"

You're darn
tootln'l have!

position

"The

%Russian

mountain
range

3 Check
4 Play a part
13 Ai!nee
5 Picture
Semple
6 DesCendant
McPherson of Asher
was one
7 Song
15 Lizzie
refrain
metal
8 For keeps

!FREE ESTIMATE)

V.C. YOUNG Ill
RACINE , G.
f4f -274tor
m -7314

8-6·1 mo ..

WINNTE

1\!'l 1&gt;1&lt;) Jnirll&lt;: Inn~ nri1.

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
45 Home of Sana
I Zhivago 's 45 Imitated
love
DOWN
5 Locale of
1 Political
Crucible"
10 Place
in office
12 Hanker
after

and

• IT ISN'T GOING
TO~EE:ASY

APOLOG IZING TO
EVERYONE
FACE -10-FACE .

I KNOW, I!&gt;UT
I OWE IT
TO THEI\I\ .

I'VE e&gt;EEN
A NERD.'

NOT JUST

COIN6 T~ 15 I!&gt;ECAUSE YOU 'RE
IN A JAMWiiH

SMOOCH,
ARE YOU?

YOU
AP.&gt;OUT
nlO&amp;E PEOPLE:

eEI NG LI KE:
FAMioi.Y,IT
GOT TOME..

WHI:N l WA? A KIC) I USED TO
PLAY Wlnl ?CRAPS OF
MATER IA L , SPOOLS OF

THREAD, AND EVERYONE
OUT THERE CODDLED
ME: 10 DEATH

! _ _..-

Yesterday's ADIIwer

19 DillydaUy
20 Regrettable
21 Greek letter
2! Nonsense!
24 Defective

25 Just get by,
18 Managed
9 Pure
with "out"
11 "Stay As
and simple
28 Thrice,
Sweet
11 Chair of state
to Trajan
As You -" 14 Robust
Z8 Straight
18 Real
18 Doctrine
talk
estate sign
held
30 Show the way
ZO Royal
r:---r:-"'""'1'1~.-tltle word
!3 Back up
27 Expiate
Bird of the
rail family b-+-+29 Statue
inscription
30 Provisions
31 Minute
33 Old
Burma's
capital
Wee lad
Linen
rolle

32 One of the
Aliens

33 Gone
34 Repulsive
35 What a
bomb!
37 On the
peak
38 Klthless
39 Raised
• II Guevera
U Tea

- 30" Cut

...._..~....~...=....,..&amp;J

~!ARNEY

SALE ·•aaa••

E LVINEV, WHAT WOULD 1./E
THINK IF I SAID PAW WUZ.
GOIN' TO
H TH'ROOF?

THAT 'S TH' SAME
THING I THOUGHT

African

1 - 308W • Hand Start ·

V.I.P.
Honolulu
farewell
t4 French
river

8 HP Rider - 30" Cut

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

SALE '78811

List

$895.75

II
PEANUTS

AT GREAT SAVINGSI

THATWA5 A
GOOD PROEiRAM ..
WlolAT'S ON
NEXT?

GRAVELY
TRACTOR SALES

I

~ATE THIS PROGRAM! f I LIKE THIS ONE ... I
SWITCH CHANNEL5!
I HATE THAT ONE... I

HATe THAT ONE, TOO!
THIS 15 A 6000 ONE ...

992-2975
210 Condor St.
'

Pomeroy, Ohio

'.,

•

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Ia
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are ali
hints. Each day the code letterir are dlfterent.
CRYPTOQUOTES

.

KRDKER

MDGURU

" Capone 11 8, 10; Three's

Company 6,13; Shakespeare
Plays 33; James Michener's
World 20; 9 :30-Taxl6,13.
10:DO-Starsky &amp; Hutch 6,13; News
20.
10 :DO-Amerlca 17; Lock Stock &amp;
Barrel 20.
11 : 00- News 3,6,8,1 o. 13,15; D lck
Cavett 20.
11 :30-Johnny ·Carson 3,15; Movie
"'The Lady &amp; the Oultaw"' 6,13;
Barnaby Jones B; Movie "'Stand ,
Up &amp; Be Counted"' 10; Movie
"'Operation Warhead"' 17; ABC
News 33.
12 : ~Movle "'The Mating Game"'
8; I :DO-Tomorrow 3; News 15.
1:30--Baseball 17; 1:4o-News 13;
4:00--News 17; 4:2o-Avengers
17.
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST B. 1979
5:2(}--World at Large 17; 5 : ~
Farm Reporl13; 5:w.-PTL Club
13; 5:55-Summer Semester 10.
6:00--700 Club 6,8; PTL Club 15:
6:10- News
17;
6 : 25Chrlstopher Closeup 10.
6:30-Dragnet 17; 6 : ~nlng
Report 3; 6:50--Good Morning .
West VIrginia 13; 6 :55-Chuck
While Reports 10; News 13.
7:00--Today 3,15; Good Morning
America 6,13;
Wednesday
Morning 8; Schoolles 10; Three
Stooges 17; 7:15-A.M. Weath~r
33.
7:30-Famlly Affair 10; Lilias Yoga
&amp; You 33 ; 8:00--Capl. Kangaroo
8,10; Lassie 17; Sesame St. 33.
6:3(}--Romper Room 17; 9 :DO-Bob
Braun 3; Big Valley 6; Phil
Donahue 15.13; Porky Pig 8;
Razzmatazr 10; Lucy Show 17;
Book Beat 33.
· 9: 30-Sanford &amp; Son 8; . Hogan" s
Heroes 10; Green Acr es 17;
Beginning to Sew 33.
10 :00--Card Sharks 3, 1S; Edge of
Nlghl6; All In The Family 8,10;
Dating Game 13; Movie ·· "'I
Dream of Jeanie" 17; Paint
Along wllh Nancy Komlnsky 33.
10:3(}--AII Star Secrets 3,15; $20,000
Pyramid 13; Bewltched6; Whew
8,10; Consumer Survival Kit 33.
10 :5;.-.cBs News 8; House Call 10;
11 :Oo-High
Rollers
3.15 ;
Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13; Price Is
Righi &amp;;10; Films of Olin Sewall
Peftfnglll 33.
11 : 3(}--Wheel of Fortune 3, 15;
Fam lly Feud 6,13 ; 11 :55-News
17.
12:00--Newscenler 3; News 6, 10;
Password 15; Young. &amp; the
Restless 8; Over Easy 33 ;
Midday ' Magazine 13; Love
American Style 17.
12 :30-Ryan' s Hope 6,13; Search for
Tomorrow 8,10; Nol For Women
Only 15; Movie "'I, Jane Doe" 17;
MacNeil -Lehrer Report 33 .
1 :00--Days of Our Lives 3,15; All My
Children 6, 13; News 8; Young &amp;- .
the Restless 10; Best of Ernie
Kovac\ 33 .
1 :30-As The World Turns 8,10; Two
Ronnles 33.
•
2:00--Doctors 3,15; One Life to Live
6.13; Great Performances 33.
2:25--News 17; 2:30--Anolher World
3,15; Guiding Light 8,10; I Love
Lucy 17 .
3:110--Genera( Hospital 6, 13; Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 20; Rebop 17.
3:30-Mash 8; Joker's Wild 10;
Bonana Spli ts 17; Over Easy 20.
4:00--Mister Cartoon 3; Hollywood
Squares 15; Merv Griffin 6;
Addams Family 8; Sesame 51.
20.33; Six Million Dollar Man 10;
Mike Douglas 13; Fllntstones 17.
4:30-Lone Ranger 3; Hogan's
Heroes 8; Lucy Show 15; Partridge Family 17.
S:OO--Bonanza 3; Beverly Hillbillies
8; Mister Rogers Neighborhood
20,33 ; Gomer Pyle 10; Six Million
Dollar Man 13; Brady Bunch 15;
Star Trek 17.
5:3(}--News 6; Petticoat Junction 8;
E llec. Co. 20; Mary Tyler Moore
10; Odd Couple 15; Doctor Who
33.

za

PULLINS EXCAVATING. Com·
plate Service. Phone 992-2478.

w..t
Pass
Pass

FRIENDS ··· AND
THEY OlD 8Rt~G

CU"TE AN ' "TAKS

Elec. Start ·
8 HP Rider

992·3525 ar 992·5232 :
EXCAVATING ,
do1er
backhoe and dltcher, Cherie~
R. Hatfield. Block Hoe Service,
Rutlond, Ohio. Pone 742-2000.

NOW DAN ...
T HEY''RE ANNIE'S

We were able to get a few more of
these fine Snapper Mowers and
want to offer them to you one last
time at a Great Savings.

$1,008.75

squeeze as an extra c hance.

By Oswald Jacoby

SNAPPER SALE.

List

lead .
South had developed the

and Alan Sontag

~GRAVELY

6.;_ 3081WS

hand when East produced

the queen on the second club

An Illinois reader wants to

Gutter work, dawn
spouts, som• concrete

CALL 992-7544.
7·8·1 mo.

dummy's king and made the

Vulnerable : North-South
Dealer : South

,., AND THA1 lAlL
ONE W\lH THf
EYES OF A
KILLER ··•

REMODELING

Pomeroy,O.

club.
Now South led a club (o

+ AJ6 4

'

work,
Wilks
drlvew1y1.

,

Core was forced to chuck a

¥A
t QJIOUSI

!HOSE STRANGE
MEt-! ··· THAT GIANT

7·5·1 mo.

107 Syc•more CRNrJ

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR -

SEWING MACHINE Ropaln.

6XWJTIV6

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

ADD ONS &amp;

Other times by appolnl·

ltJ ll-16

S -7

949-2000

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING

Stop! It 's on the roa.d."-

his three clubs and the jack
of hearts .
West might just as well
have held his _head on, the
table. He had to hang on to
the king of hearts and there- ,

WEST
0 K 10 6
• A QJ 95
¥ K 10 9 7 4
¥ Q 53
t3
t762
+1097 2
+Q8
SOUTH

Free Estim1tes
3rd St., R1clne

4·5·tfc

Hours9· 1 M,, W., F .

l-f..T6 TO~
UP

CAR SEATS, BOAT
TOPS, FURNITURE

Y4Y-286l-949·2160

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

TO LOG!(
M'i'76L.F

~\

BOB'S
UPHOLSJERY

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

POPLAR STOOGE

"'ASP-HALT"'

•2

6-6·1 mo.

Roofing

BRADFORD, Auctioneer , Complete S•rvlce. Phone 949-2487
or 9"9-2000. Racine, Ohio,
·
Crltt Bradford.
Sweepers, too1ters , irona, all
small appliances. lawn moer,
next to State Highway Garage
., on Route 7, 985-3825.

e:w.L-te~:::

UP.

IJP,
IT Wf&gt;..S TOO
i.\DI(f;

992-2772

H. L Writesel

)iron

~~UP

I

Free Estlm•te

Pomoray

Federal
Housing &amp;
Veterans Admin. Loans.

"A" snake!

Answer:

NORTH
0.7-A
• 8743
• J862
t AK
• K53
EAST

I ll-1if.ll'..
I'M 001~

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

Nelal
M«ors,lnc. ·

New Home

'(()IJ

WA.S LATB
WHW I

B~ ~6 Tllv\E "'1

BAR!.- IE-~ .

Coli for 1 FrH Siding
Eltlmate, 949·2101 or
949·2UO. No Sundoy
Cllll.

Sm~h

Ph . 992-2174

I"WH'I' DIDIJ'T

~.. . IT

Siding

ElJPERIENCED

I

Jumbles: CHAIR LAPEL

BORN LOSER

7-10·1 mo.

Vinyl and Aluminum

I I I t" t 1 1 I 11

BRIDGE.

FtNO OIJT

buildings, nice one floor
New kitchen . A

Yesterday's

Pomeroy,O.

Mlin St.

Roger Hysell
Garage
Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992 -5682 '

Now arrange lhe circled oenera 10
form the surprise answer, as sug·
geSied by the above can0011.

(Answers tomorrow)

992-2367

down Cnon-veterans)

State,

~RANtj
J K

&amp; ·

styling,

Movie

Mswer. "[I] t I

Call for ilppt. or walk ln.

Ph. 9t2-37U or m -3752
8·1·1 mo.

()

MAKP. MORA
U"R STYLIST
perms.

IN SYRACUSE

J I I

v'''"'"'
1.\t.,Ln•=-

Introduces-

women'·s

J%

IRElAND
MORTGAGE
CO.
77 E.
Athens

O"'e; OF THO~E
DUOE5, HUH?!
O.KAY, 6UPDY-

Mick's ·
Barber&amp;
Style.Center

i\.0~

Reynolds'
Electric Motor
Shop

YE:5! t •Vt= NEVER
5EEN HIM ~EFOI':E­
W&amp; JU5T ACC05TED
ME AND TRIED TO
FOilCE ME TO 60
WITH HIM\

7·12

STOCIC

TA'AilER NOW AVAILABLE .

CAPI'AIN EASY

Free Estimates

from Codner'• Tuaco.

''•·u•·•:u J E~t!nings

WORK, GENERAL
3

aNEW HOMES
oROOM.ADOITIONS
a ROOFING
oVINYLSIDING
a GUTTER &amp; SOFFIT

2 Mile·s Eut of W i lketvlll~

BLOCK &amp; BRICK

ranch.

SIDING

For Appointment

DUTTON DRUGS

7:3().-.,.Hollywood Squares 3; Candid
Camera 6; Gong Show 8; Price Is
Right 10; Donna Fargo 13;
Abbolt &amp; Costello 15; My Three
Sons 17: ~acNeii-Lehrer Report
20,33.
&amp;:DO-Runaways 3,15: Happy Days
6, 13; CBS Reports 8,10: Baseball
17; Austin Clly Limits 20.
B: »--Detective School 6, 13; Two
Ronnles 33.
9:DO-Movle "'Monte Walsh"' 3,15;

BOB'S GENERAL
CONTRACTING

Call 992·2628

SERVICE

1977 12 x: 60 Hillcrest mobile
home . Total electric, 2 bedr ..
~ood
condition .
$8500 .

old

L•n!ilnllle. Ohio

Real Estate Loans

75 ACRE FARM with 7 rbom
house and bo th, ti.mber, gas·
and oil. Near mines . 992-3392.

2

21320 Monttom~~, Rd.

C. R. MASH
VINYL &amp; AWM.

...JO -tf c

NEW THREE bedroom oil elec·tr i c
nome .
goroge ,
dishwasher ,
d ts pasa l ,
ca rpeted , Iorge eat-in k i tchen ,
rura l water , Ohio Power, O'i•r
1 acre, In country. Near
Longsville ·and mines. $-43 ,000.
742-2819. Roymond Hatfield .

FOR SALE or lease. Jones'
Club. l ocated ot West Columbia . ~t. 33 above lokln , Con·
tact
Frances
Jones .

TRAILER SALES

nso mo.

20 ACRES NEAR Langsville. 3
bedroom remodeled house.
· Aluminum siding. Insulated
dorm windows , large barn,
outbu ildings. ste&lt;ked pond.
$36,500. Owner may help
finance . 992-7733 .

central air conditioning1 gas heat, · big
lot in Syracuse, close to
school.

REPAI~

8"S MOBILE HOME SAlES, PT.
PLEASANT. WV . 304-67S·4424 .

MONTGOMERY

651 Beech Street
Middleport, 0.
992-2356

MODERN THREE bedroom total
electric home in Hutchison
sub-di.,.ision . On Iorge lot.
7.42-2047.

PAINTING AND sandblasting.
Free estimate~ . Ca ll 949-2686 .

1965 GENERAL60xl2 , 2 bedr.

opts . lor
rnet . Rental
assistance
Olia ll o.ble .

REAL ESTATE loons. Purchase
and refinance . 30 year terms ,
VA . No money down (eligible
veterans). FHA - As· low as 3
per cent down (non-veterans} .
Ireland Mortgage Co., 77 E.
Stole, Athens . 6U -592-3051 .

367-7101.

HOUSE FOR ren t. 3 bedroom .
$100 per month, $1 00 deposit.
Showing Sunday from 2-" ·

St. Rt. 7
North of Che•ter, 0,
Phone 91H202
6-24·1 mo. Pd .

Real Estate for Sale

garage,

NOW HAULING limestone in
Middleport-Poemroy area .
Call for . free estimate.

1974 1~ x 70 mobile hom'e .
Good condition . 992-5858,

SENIOR CITIZENS . I bedroom

BIG AUCTION every Wed., 7
pm . Ha rtford Communit)l
Center, Hartford , WV , 4 miles
above
Po meroy - Meson
Bridge.

family room with wood
burning fireplace, 2 car

Services Offered

ONE BEDROOM opts. Contact
Village Manor, 992-7787 .

FURNISHED APT. 3 rooms and
bath. No pets, no children .
Deposit required . 9"9-2253.

Auctions

BY OWNER

Jack W . Carse y

USED GARDEN
TRACTORS
AND
RIDING MOWERS

992-7314.

FOR SALE

SALE PRICES

742-2761 ..

TILLIS

ADD ONS and remqdeli ng ,
gutter work , down spouts ,
some concrete work , walks
and
dr i veways
( fr ee
eslimdte).. V.C. Young Ill ,
Racine, OH . 9"9·27"8 and

Appliance~
sates &amp; SerVICe

Mobile Homes Sale's

614-423·6302.

IN STOCK fo r imm.diote
delivery; various sizes of pool
kits . Do-lt· your,elf or Jet us
install f or you . D. Bumgardner
Soles, Inc. 992-5724 .

Headquarter.s tor
Hat point and
General Electric

Camping Equipment

TUESDAY,AUGU$T7, lt79

742-2593 .

140 acre form lour miles from
Rulland , Small house and
born, woods , d8ep cool, oil
and gas lease . Gerold
ShUster 992-5284

POMEROY
LANDMARK

Business Services

HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex·

1-304-773 -9590 .

1976 DODGE . ASPEN stotion
wagon . Good condition . Ask ·
ing $2"00. 992-6168 after 6.

992-7680 .

For Rent

sur-

COAL, liMESTONE , sand ,
groyel, calcium chloride. fertilizer , dog food. and all I";' pes
of salt. Excels,or Salt Works
Inc .. E. Main St".. Pom•roy:

KITTENS , All colors , aU oges,
all beautiful. Humane Society.

('*W'SPAPf.R ENTERPRISE AS SN ~

tboee underlying the

Business Svrvil;es

TIMEX

OLD FURNITURE , Ice boxes,
brass beds, iron beds, desks,
etc.. complete households.
Write M .D. Miller, Rt . .4 ,
Pomeroy or coli ~2 - 7760.

(Morch f1-Aprll111 Don'l

Aluta and down the east
cout ol Asia frun Siberia
to New Zealand. Almoet all
active volcanic regi01111 are
found at the boundaries of
the large moving plates
which compriae the earth 's
IUI'face. The "Ring of
Fire" marb the bOundary
between the plates underlyIng the Paclflc Ocean and

YARD SALE . Thu rsday August
9·" · Nancy Radford
residence. Old 33.

9.

992·268'1.

re11ona .

urung rA. Fire," a zone running along the west coast of
the Americu frun Chile to

YA.RO SALE. Seth residen ce on
Lincoln Hill in PomerOy. Thurs·
day only. 9-6.

Auto Sales

Help wanted

CAPRICORN (Doc. 22·Jon . 1il

VOLCANOES
75 percent of
the world's active
volcanoes Ue within the

GARAGE SALE. -412 Spring
Ave., Pomero~ . OH . Aug. 9,
10, II fr om 10 until6. Bedspr·
ings, davenports, oval table,
dresser, wood trunk , coffee
tables . end tables, books.
metal desk , odd chairs , misc.
di shes, metal beds, lamps,
breakfast set , paneling trim .
and lots of other misc.

$5700. 992-3796 .

%1 ) You have the gift today to
use the Ideas or suggestions of
others In ways that co uld pe rso nall y profit you . Perk up your
ears.

More than

BACK TO schoo l yard sole.
104'/t S. 2nd , Middleport.
August , 1. 2, 3.

FOUND: UTILE yellow kitten
on Condor St . qq2-3760 .

23·0&lt;1 . 231

rnat1er thet could mean something to you financially sho uld
not be lett dangling today .
Celeylng thtn·gs may also hold
up or eraae your profit.
GEMINI (lhy !1-June 20) Everything shou ld go quite sa tisfactorily today If you use yo ur
inltletlve , Instead of walling on
othera. Get yourselt into high
gear eerty .
CANCER (June 21-July ~!) Yo.u
have the ability tOday to unravel
slt Lilltlona o thers have le ft tangled . Use your tal ents for their
good, aa well as your own .

WE'RE HAVING a yard sole on·
July 27 and 28 from 8 till 6 ol
~88 South ~th Ave . in M iddleport ,

Lost and Found

992-6358 or JOA-882-2269.

SAOIITAAIUS (Nov. 23-Doc .

~AlES

VARO SALE at James Swain 's
on CM 29 above Ea•tern High
SchooL July 13 and 14 from 9
to 1 Everything imaginable.

I NEED to find homes for
several adult cots and " kit·
tens . Freddie Houdashelt. 398
Grant St., M iddleport . Phone
!l:92-2520 after 6pm .

lOST OR stolen : dog on
Horner Hill , SR 143 in
Pomeroy. Approx . l 1/ 1 year ,
very thin . female , blond German Shepard. Answers to
Gretchen Ann . Togged in
Mason, WV . Reword . Contact

Should one yo u know on a
pure ly social basis offer to do
you a favor today , take him up
on it immediately . He ma y balk
tf you vac illate.
SCORPIO (Oct. 2(.Nov. 2Z)
Something you ' 'le wanted
chang ed to you r benefit but
t)ave been unable to acco mpli! h co uld sudden ly be
brought about th rough another's efforts today .

For Sale

Yatd Sale

WANT AD
CHARGES

OF MEIGS COUNTY ,

Television
Viewing

THE INVESTIGATION
PROCEEDS-

ENBR

QXPR

NS

TEXUU

NSARJRUANST

'"
n

6:00--News 3,8,10,13,15; ABC News
6; Family Affair 17; VIlla Alegre
20.
'· 6 :30-;-NBC News3,15; ABC News 13;
Andy Griffith 6; CBS News 8,10;
Over Easy 20,33; Father Knows
Best 17.
7 :00- Cross -WIIs 3; Newlywed
Game 6,13; Porter Wagoner 8;
News 10; Love American Style
15; Get Smart 17; Dick Cavett
20,33.
7:30-Dolly 3; Match Game PM 6;
Muppet Show 8; The Judge 10;
That's Ho ll ywood 13 ; Wild
Kingdom 15; My Three Sons 17;
MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20,33.
8:00--Real People 3,15; Eight Is
Enough 6, 13; Dorothy 8, 10;
Baseball 17;
Masterpiece
Theatre 20; All Creatures Great
&amp;. Small 33. .
·
8:30--Hanglng In 8,10; 9:DO-Movle
" Someone Is Watching Me" 3,15;
Charlie's Angels 6,13; Movie
"The KIUer
Ellie" 8,10;
Shakespeare Plays 33; Upstairs
Downstairs 20.
IO :DO-Vegas 6,13; News 10; 10:30Fall of Eagles 17.
11 :Oo-lljews 3,6,8,10,13;15; Dick
Cavett 20.
11 :30--Johnny Carson 3,15; Pollee
' Woman 6,13;

CMD

,,

Your

Turn:

8;

Movie "Hello Goodbye" 10;
Movie " Pony Express" 17; ABC
News 33.
i2:00-Swllch 8; 12 : 40-Baretta
6,13; 1 :00--Tomorrow 3; News
IS.
' :1(}--Kolak 8; 1:35-Bueball 17;
1 : ~News 13; 4:11S-News 17;
4 : ~Avengers 17.

'•

.,

'.

·,

...•

.-.

...
~

. -: ~

.

..
-'

-'·
·'',,

�Wild animals sensed
California quake coming
.---.---

SWEEPSTAKES - This 1963 Corvair conertible is
the grand prize in Dairy Isle's 30th anniversary old car
sweepstakes contest. McClure's Dairy Isle in Mid·
dleport and McClure's 3-in·l store in Pomeroy invite all
area residents to enter the annual contest. There is no
purchase required and residents can register at either
of the stores. The contest closes on Sept. 15. The convertible is chocolate brown with white top and saddle
colored trim. Ahead of its time, this rear engine, minisize car has a reputation for economy, smooth ride and

handling ease. Thill is the fourth annual old car sweepstakes to be conducted by Dairy Isle. In 1976, a 1948
Packard was won by a Lorain man; a resident of China
Township, Michigan won the 1977 event, a 1951 Kl!iser
and in 1978, the grand prize, a 1955 Hudson
Metropolitan, was awarded to a Newark, Ohio woman.
Dairy Isle is a national franchise organization of Dairy
Isle soft-serve ice creaq~ outlets. The company is based
in Utica, Mich.

Area Deaths
Spill settles
PORT ISABEL, Texas (AP) The world's largest . oil spill
touc!led the United States early
today, as crude oil from . a
runaway Mexican well washed
ashore along a sparsely
populated section of Texas'
southern coast, the U.S. Coast
Guard said.
ACoast Guard spokesman, who
asked not to be identified, said
the oil was observed on a 40-mile
stretch of South Padre Island
beach.
The area is north of the heavily
populated area of the resort isla
nd and south of Corpus Christi.
Another major concentration of
oil from the runaway well in the
Gull of Mexico was sighted early
today 50 miles due south of Aran·
sas Pass, near Corpus Christi,
Texas. The Coast Guard said this
slick was 10 miles long and two
miles wide.

Beef price down
WASHINGTON (AP) - Meat
prices for the remainder of this
year should fall below this
spring's averages because of
near-record. levels of pork
production and lagging conswner
incomes, the Agriculture Depart·
ment said Monday.
The department 's outlook
board said the difference now
between what farmers get for
catUe and what consumers pay
for beef is greater than it has
ever been. But, it added, "retail
beef prices-have begun to ease off
and are expected to continue to
do so through the fall. ''
It gave no specific predictions
on retail prices. It did forecast a
drop in prices for fattened cattle
from the average $72.51 per 100
pounds during the April.June
quarter to a range of $65 to $68
during this three-month period
and $64 to $67 during .the last
quarter of 1979.

Estrada hurt
LOS ANGELES (AP)
Television star Erik Estrada was
injured Monday in a motorcycle
accident while filming his
"CHiPs" television series, a
hOspital official confirmed.
He was taken to UCLA Medical
Center. The extent of his injuries
was not immediately known.
:
Estrada plays the Frank "Panch" ·Poncherello of the California
Highway Patrol in the NBC
series.
Pat Pullum, a resident of the
suburban Pacoima area where
the accident occurred, said about
75 onlookers screamed as
Estrada's motorcycle slid out
from under him .

' Milk price up
SI'RONGSVILLE, Oh io (AP)- The
wholesale price of milk will rise about
one cent a quart for milk produced by
dairy farmers who are members of
Milk Marketing Inc. , a dairy farmer
cooperative based in Strongsville.
The increase, effective Aug . 13, will
have the greatest impact in Ohio,
where about 5,500 dairy farmers
belong to the cooperative. The states
bordering Ohio have about 4,000
members, said Gordon Riehl, general
manager of Milk Marketing.
" [ can 't tell how much the new
wholesale price will affec t the retail
price of milk. That depends. on how
much the dairy processing plants and
supermarkets decide to tack on
because qf inflation ," Riehl said.

Institute of Technology.
Two aftershocks, registering 3.0 and
4.0 on the Richter scale; came shorUy
before and shortly after 3:30 p.m.
PDT.
.
Towns near the epicenter, like
Hollister 100 miles siluth of here,
reported damage to buildings, glass
Ulil1g ."
The reactions of the animals at the and store merchandise. One Santa
65-acre Marine World Africa U.S.A. in Cruz County woman fell and broke her
Redwood City south of here will be leg, and three people in Hollister were
added to a daily record of their hospitalized for sympt&lt;ms of heart
behavior being kept to determine, attacks.
In addition Pacific Gas &amp; Electric
after the fact, whether animals do
reported a fe~· minor power outages,
sense quakes.
The quake began in late morning . and Pacific Telephone said service
Two waves lasting more than 15 was delayed for a time, mostly due to
seconds each jolted the state over a overloaded circuits.
At Marine World, spokeswoman
351).mile wedge from a point north of
here to Encino just north of Los Mary Jo O'Harran said there were
An geles, according to the California reports Sunday night of unusual
behavior by llamas, a baby cougar
"It 's ve ry interestin g. very
and a 5-week-old tiger.
Evemden said there has been a lot
of skepticism about a link between
quakes and animal behavior,
especially because there has been
little documentation of animal
behavior before an earthquake.
"There's been a lot of anecdotal
things, people saying what their
animals did after an earthquake but
nothing has been recorded on a daily
basis," said Evemden. "This is
'
The Gallia-Meigs Conununity Ac· severe winter of 1978.
essentially
the beginning of this kind
tion Agency's annual report and th~
Another important component of
of
research.
It's nice to get some good
statistical and financial data indicate the CAA is "Outreach." Outreach
a milestone year, a spokesman said identifies those in the cmmunity who examples.' '
He said similar research is now
toctay.
need help or who may be eligible for
under
way at UCLA and Stanford,
Grants and expenditures exceeded - any ol the programs mentioned
to
validate claims advanced by
trying
·for the fir.;t time, one million dollars above. During 1978, the Outreach
Chinese
scientists,
who use ani,ml!ls in
for calendar year 1978. Federal and staff traveled 53,920 miles trantheir
often-successful
quake
local "in-kind" expenditures totaled sporting or assisting 3,941
prediction
program.
$1,195,878.
economically disadvantaged persons
Total payroll was nearly $700,000 in Gallis and Meigs Counties.
for staff and CETA participants, with Outreach staff also issued free
551 W·2 fonns being used. According clothing to 2,582 pef!!Ons through the
to financial analysis, money spe!lt in agency's clothing bank; made ~
our economy has a multiplying ef· home visits for health-related pur·
feet; this "multiplier" is between poses, and established 611 new conthree and seven. By using the con- tacts. Through coordinated efforts
servative multiplier nwnber of three, with other organizations, the stalf
the Gallia-Meigs CAA contributed ap- made 403 interagency referrals, and
proximately $3.6 million to the area received 256 referrals.
economy.
In conjunction with Outreach, the
Services to low-income residents Food Stamp Outreach Program atand the elderly on fixed incomes also tempts to reach those families who
A unique opportunity will be
increased. The senior nutrition are eligible for this benefit, but who available to tbo9e attending the Meigs
program served a total of J:l,lll are uncertain about how to obtain Cow!ty Fair this year, according to
meals, with 713 residents par- food stamps. This component con· • Secretary of State Anthony J .
ticipating . In addition, the Title XX tacted 2,554 households and processed Celebrezze, Jr.
home delivered meals component ser- 1215 eligibles for food stamp cer"Working together with the Meigs
ved 9,865 meals with seventy{our tification. The staff also held 102 County Board of Elections, we are
participating.
workshops, with 2,496 persons at- able to offer fairgoers a chance to ell·
The Head Start Child Development tending. Community Action Outreach press their views about some of the
Program provided . education, offices are located in the Pomeroy issues that are of Interest to them,"
nutrition, health, and social services and Gallipolis courthouses.
said Secretary Celebrezze. "Voting
to 159 children; 6,289 lunches were
To accommodate the need for ad- equipment will be located at the
served, and 12,322 snacks. The Head ditional services. the Gallia Head Board of Elections booth on the
Start Program has a "center-based" Start Center is being renovated so , fairgrounds, and tbo9e aUendlng can
program In Gallia County, and a that enrollment can eKpand. The use that equipment to register their
"home-based" program in Meigs Manpower Program's Youth Con- opinions.''
County.
servation and Community Im·
In addition to reconllng public
The CETA programs served a total provement Program is providing con- opinion on the8e issues, the election
of 425 participants. These programs servation and community betterment poll gives citizens additional eJ:·
include the Swnmer Youth Em- services to both counties, together perience with the type of voting equipployment Program, Youth Em- with career development and haalc ment used In the county.
ployment Training Program, and the education for program participants.
"Our study oflut November's elecComprehensive Title I Program The most recent activity for the agen- tion results demoostrated that many
(Adult Work Experience, Young cy is the development of the tran· Ohioans were not completely familiar
Adult Work Experience, and In- sportation program - to be operated with the correct procedures for
by Outreach - that will enable Title voting," explained Celebrezze. · ~
SchoolStudentWorkExperience ).
Under 'the auspi,ces of the cor- XX eligible residents in Meigs County program will help eliminate that dif.
poration for Ohio Appalachian to obtain transportation to any health· ficulty."
Development, the weatherization related facility.
The cooperation of the Meigs Coun·
program provided "weatherization"
If any organization or individual is ty Board of Elections makes this
services (attic and side wall in· interested in obtaining a complete project possible. Board personnel
sulation, weather stripping, storm copy of the 1978 annual report, they working at the booth will be available
window and doors, etc.) to 49 eligible should contact the agency by calling to register citizens to vote.
homes. A similar program, Rural 367-7341 or 992-7000, or write to Gallia·
Secretary Celebrme said, "I am
Home Repair funded by the Ap- Meigs CAA, P. 0 . Box m, Cheshire, gratefal the Board is taking this enra
palachian Regional'Commission, the Ohio45620.
step to make voter registration
Community Services Administration,
widely avaUable to the public. Many
, and the Administration on Aging,
Boards have performed this service
provided minor home repair ac·
for a nwnber of years, and I want to
INSTALLATION PARTY
tivities to 13 households. In addition,
The Meigs County Jaycee-ettes will help expand those Initiatives."
seven clients received either a loan or
The Meigs County Fair opens on
grant from the Fanners Home Ad· ho ld and installation party August 14, 1979 and l'Wll through
Wednesday, Aug. 8, at 6:30p.m. at
ministration for major renovation.
August 18, 1979. Informational
Conununity Action 's Emergency Yvonne Scally's on the river. All material a bout registration and
Energy Assistance Program paid out interested women between the ages of voting, and about the Secretary of
$51,000 to_ assist 339 households who 18 and 35 are invited. For additonal State's office, will alao be available at
faced wtical fuel problems due to the inf orma lion ca II 99~ or 992-2752. the booth.

SAN FRAN CISCO ~ AI' ) - Five
minutes before one of the strongest
earthquakes to hit Northern
California this century began jostling
the region, an elephant at a wild
animal park in Redwood City almost
tore her barn door from its hinges.
Scientists studying Monday 's
outburst by the normally docile beast
- and similar behavior among other
animals - say it could provide more
evidence for a growing belief among
Western seismologists that animals
may some day he~p humans predict
the fearsom e quakes.
The earthquake, which registered
5.9 on the Richter scale as it raced
along the Calav eras Fault, did
relatively little damage and injured
only a handful of people. But it set off
strange reactions in many animals.

· LIDDlE M.BOOTH
Liddie M. Booth, 65, Colwnbus,
formerly of Middleport, died Monday.
Mrs. Booth was born at West
Columbia, July 29, 1914 the daughter
of the late Frank Varian and Gertrude
Varian. She was also preceded in
death by her husband, Pete Booth, one
daughter, and two sisters.
Mrs. Booth was a seamstress . of
Columbus . .
She is survived by four sons Frank
Booth, Pete ·s. Booth, and Ralph E.
Booth all of Columbus and Clarence
A.Booth Lambert cq of Rutland, two
brothers Clarence Varian and Frank
Varian both of Columbus, one sister,
Luci)le Cameron, Columbus. and

several grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held
Thursday at 10 a.m. at the RawlingsCoats Funeral Home with Ed Fryman
officiating. Burial will be in
Riverview Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral home WedQesday 2
to 4 and 7 to 9.
LUCRETIA GENHEIMER
Miss Lucretia Genheimer, 98, for
many years a resident of Pomeroy,
died Monday night in Clearwater,
Fla., where she was making her home
with a niece, Pauline Carter. Local
arrangements will be made through
the Ewing Funeral Home.

econd annual antiques
fair set Aug. 18-19,
at Bob Evans Farms
Antiques and collectibles, treasures
today but commonly used for two centuries of American life, will be offered
for sale by exhibitors from Ohio,
Maryland, Virginia, and West
Virginia on Aug. 18 and 19 at the
Second Annual Antiques Fair at the
Bob Evans Farm near Rio Grande.
From 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily, visitors
will be admitted free of charge to the
Antiques Fair where they are invited
to shop for a quaint collector's item or
a unique. antique. All displays and
exhibits will be for sale.
Glass, one of the Buckeye State's
most popular collectibles, will be well
represented at the Bob Evans An·
tiques Fair. Among those presented
will be Heisey, Cambridge, Duncan,
cut, carnival, depression, and art
glass.
Glass collectors are invited to attend the Fair and meet special guest
Leonard Padgett of Clinton,
Maryland, author of the new book
"Pairpolnt Glass." This informational book details the history
of the Mount Washington Glass Company from its founding in 1837 to the
present day Pairpoint Glass Company in Sagamore, Maryland,
makers of some ofthe finest glass and

HOSPITAL NEWS .
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
Admitted--James Meadows,
Portland; Velma Parsons, Racine;
Louise Eshelman, Pomeroy; Mary
Hussell, Mt. Alto, W. Va.; Ernest
Taylor , Guysville; Dana Covert,
Pomeroy;
Bertha
Canaday,
Pomeroy; Audria Arnold, Pomeroy ;
Frashier Birchfield, Albany; Willard
Lowman, New Haven; George
Folmer, Pomeroy; Albert Cerveny,
Pomeroy; Harold Jeffers, Pomeroy.
Discharged-Jenny Minear , Salem
Yates, Linn Darst, David Ward, Asa
Hoskins, Walter , Robinson, Floyd
Barnhouse.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES, AUG. 6
Ortha Booth, Robert Brickles,
Brenda Cole, Gloria Daives, Ladonna
Davis, Stephen Fannin, Elizabeth
Flower, Georgia Green, Pearlie Hale,
Gladys Hochberg, Homer Johnson
J ames 'Jones, Jenny Juefcuk, Dorsal
Larkins, Randy Lee, Tom Morris,
Kevm Nott, Dora Phelps, Nancy
Propp, Mrs. Harry Shane and son,
Henry Varga s, Edna Wagner, Mrs.
Charles wolfe and daug~ter.
BffiTHS, AUGUST 6
Mr. and Mrs. Sheets, son, Wellston;
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Pearson, son,
Henderson, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
William Carlton , daughter, Racine'.

silver-plated wares ever made.
Padgett will be autographing his book
and assisting visitors in identifying
Pairpoint glass colors, decorations,
andpattems.
In addition to glass, a variety of
other items will be offered, including
china, dolls, furniture, hand tools,
quilts, art pottery, silver, clocks,
Wallace Nutting and Currier and Ives
prints, as well as books.
Hostess for the event will be
nationally recognized antiques
authority, Orva Heissenbuttel,
Washingion,D.C.ARioGrande, Ohio
native, Mrs. Heissenbuttel has leetured on glass from Boston to Los
Angeles and conducted classes at the
Smithsonian Institute. She will be
. available at the Fair for consultation
on authenticating antiques and glass
Some 5,000 browsers and buye~s
were drawn to the .Bob Evans Farm
for last year's first Antiques Fair.
"We feel that the Fair offers
something for everyone " said
George Wolfe, a Bob Ev~ Farm
spokesman. "Antiques, such as the

quilts
arefurniture,
in a familiar
setting
hereand
on ,
country
hand
tools,
the Farm, yet many of the items
reflect a more gracious way of tife
back in the 19th century. The fair is
planned for everyone who has an in·
teres! in America's past."

encouraging news," said Dr. Jack
Evemden , a U.S. Geological SUrvey
research geophy sicist studying the
impact of earthquakes on animals.
"With documentation like that, it
makes it so much easier to believe. It
gives more credibility to the whole

attending
Meigs fair

r------------.. . . . ---------------------...

VOL XXVIII NO. 81

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

..

MEJ!tis.., COUNTY JUNIOR FAIR ROYALTYOiarles Calaway and Mary Mora, left, the 1978 Meigs
County Junior Fair king and queen, relinquished their
titles Tuesday night to Cindy Pitzer, dai!AAter of Mr.

·'

and Mrs. Clinton Pltur, and Ralph Jordon, son
.
and Mrs. Jersey Jordan, who will reign at the 116th An·
nual Fair which begins Tuellday.

In the queen contest the first
ByO.rte. HoefUcb
runner-up
was Terri Pullins, and seThe 19'19 Meip County Junior Fair
cond
runner-up
was Mary Colwell.
king and queen ate Ralph Jordan, !100
of Mr. and Mrs. Dorsey Jordan, and The other candidates were Tammy
Cindy Pitzer, daughter of Mr. and Miller, Patty Parker, and Perry
Smith.
Mrs. Clinton Pitzer.
Introduced and assisting with the
Announcement of the winners in the
presentations
to the new king and
royalty contest waa made Tuesday
queen
were
the
1978 royalty, Mary
night following the Meigs County 4-H
Style Revue staged at Eastern High Mora and Charles Calaway. Also preSchool.
First runner-up in the king contest
wu Ed Holter and second nmner-up
was Bl&amp;ir Windon.

Holter, on the left, and second nmners-up, Blair Windon and Mary Colwell, on the right.
.

CINDY PITZER AND Ralph J~rdan. center, the
queen and king of the 1979 Meigs County Junior Fair,
are pictured with the rurme~. Terri Pullins and Ed

sent and Introduced was Janis Car·
nahan, the 1979 Meigs County Dairy
Princess.
"Making It" waa the theme of the
1979 rewe which featured garments
in several categories modeled by
nearly 150 Meigs County 4-Hers.
Pansy Jordan and Jean Spencer,
4-H AMistants in the Meigs County
Extension Office, narrated the style

rewe following a welcome by Mrs.
Diana Eberts, Elllenslon Agent.
Participants in the style revue
listed with the grand champion,
reserve champion and those receiving honorable mention, were as
follows:
Total Look Series: Tammi Eblin,
grand champion; Janet Werry,
reserve chamnion. Jodie Schaeker,

honorable mention, Lee Ann Robin:

son, Missy Calaway, Bonnie Koenig,
Jody Will, Melanie Mankin, Susan
Bawn, Lisa Frymyer, Alison L.
Jones, and Dorma Curtis.
Clothing from Top to Toe: Amy
Connolly, grand champion; Lisa
Gaul, reserve champion; Krista
Hawk, Jo Ellen Crane, Melanie Ar·
nold, Kristi Haynes, Tina Riffle, and

.....

~

\

Search fruitless

Today
. . .in the world

Five fatalities
LUMBERT ON, N. C. "(AP) A car racing to a hospital with a
wm1111 in labor ran out of control
ancl cruhed Into 8 parked truck,
killing the woman and four other
persona and Injuring three, pollee
said today.
Officer Randy Canady of the
Lumberton Pollee Department
said efforts to save the unborn
child failed.
Canady, who Investigated the
accident just before midnight
Tuesday, said the car carried
four adults and four children and
was bound for Lwnberton 's
Southeastern General Hospital.

More FAA rules
ROSEMONT,' Ill. (AP) - Ad·
dltional equipment to warn pilots
of stalls, which the Federal
Aviation Administration has
recommended for the DC·lO,
would not have prevented a craah
that killed 273 persons, a federal
official says.
.
However, Hugh Waterman,
chief of systems and equipment
for the Federal Aviation Ad·
ministration's Western Region,
testified Tuellday that the FAA
proposals should be put Into ef •
feet to Increase public safety.

CIRCLEVII.l..E, Ohio (AP) - An
intensive search by law enforcement
officers using airplanes and attack
dogs Tuesday failed to tum up two
men believed involved in the
wounding of a Highway Patrol
trooper .
The patrol called off the search
Tuesday night. The search had
centered mainly on the Logan Elm
!'ark area south of Circleville.
One man found along U.S. 2J near
Circleville was taken into custody and
questioned , but later was released .
"We are still looking for two
people," patrol Sgt. John Francies
sald. "We have no real suspects at this
time." ,
The wounded trooper, Thomas J .
Scott, 31, of Chillicothe, was listed in
satisfactory condition at Ross Medical
Center in Chillicothe following
removal of a bullet from his hip .
The patrol said Scott was shot
Tuesday morning as he approached a
car he had stopped for speeding on
U.S. 23 at the Pickaway-Ross county
line .
"It was a routine traffic stop," Maj .
Richard Grurnney , assistant patrol
superintendent, said. " You take that
chance very time you make a stop. He
COPIES AVAILABLE
COLUMBUS - Copies of the Daily
Schedule for the 1979 Ohio State Fair
are now available in Kroger Stores all
across Ohio. The schedule contains all
the many varied events at the Fair,
plus a map of the Fairgrounds.
Postcards which include the Gran·
dstand Entertainment schedule and
ticket information are available at all
OhioAAA's.
The 19'19 Ohio State Fair starts
August 14 and runs through August~ .

I

called for help."
The car was found abandoned
alongside a cornfield on Ohio 361, east
of U.S. 2J in Pickaway County .
A check of the car's license plate
revealed It had been stolen July 12 in
Eau Claire, Wis., the patrol said.
Sc&lt;itt is a native of Jackson, Ohio,
and was graduated from Jackson.
High School in IM6. He joined the
patrol in 1970 and was assigned to the
Delaware patrol post before being
tranSferred t.o Chillicothe.
He is married and has o{le child.
Scott is the third Highway Patrol
officer shot this summer. Two
troopers were wounded last month at
a rest area near Piqua.

Postmaster Soulsby
$5,000 lottery winner
With temperatures ih the 90's
Tuesday , you may have thought the
day was "the pits". However, for Mr.
and Mrs. James Souisby, Union Ave.,
Pomeroy, it was really a "cool" day .
Souls by, who is
Pomeroy
Postmaster , purchased a lottery
ticket at Gateway at noon time and
took it to the SOuisby home without
bothering to perfll'm the rub off
action on the ticket. At home his wife,
Susie, rubbed off the covering a found
three aces, which means a prize of
$5,000.
Without too much waste of time,
Soulsby took the ticket to Gateway so
that it can be processed through the
Ohio Lottery Commission for
collection of the prize.

LONG AWAJTED-PROJECT- After three years of working to have
SR 7 and U.S. 33 paved from Nye Ave. to the Pomeroy-MasOn Bridge
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence AndreWll, left, and Bernard Gilkey, superin· .
tendent otthe Meip County State Highway Department, saw their efforts
come true Tuesday morning as paving got underway. The paving will be
completed this week, weather permitting. .

Weather

MOIJtly clear tonight. Lows in the
EXTENDED FORECAST
low 70s. Partly cloudy with a clplnce
Friday lhrGqb Sunday: Warm
of showers and thunderstonns Thur- Friday and cooler Saturday, with a
sday. Hlgha from tbe upper 80s to tbe cbance of sbowen 8lld lblmlow 00.. The chance of rain Is 20 per- denlorml Friday and Salunbly.
FREE CLO'I1UNG DAY
The Gallla-Melgs Community Ac- cent tonight and 30 percent Thursday. Hipllrom tbe mid IIIII to tbe low •
Friday and from tbe upper '7011 to tbe
tion Agency will hold its free clothing
mid IIIII Saturday and Sunday. Lows
PRACTICE PLANNED
day for low income persons from 9
Meigs Junior High football practice moetly Ia tbe 101.
a.m. to 12 noon Friday. The agency's
clothing bank is located in the old high will be held Aug. 20, at 6:30 p.m. at
Meigs Junior High in Middleport.
school building in Cheshire.
:!i!ii~~;i);~~j~j:j:j:j:j:j:j:j:i:;:;:;:;:;:;~~:~:~~;~~~~:~~~:~~;~~~~:~~~~~:~:~:~~~~~ ~~~~~~;~·

.

Maralyn Barton.
Topping your Outfit: Tammy
Miller, grand champain; Tet:rie Star·
cher, reserve champion, Angie Col·
llns, Amy . Louka, Donia Crane,
Darlene Bawn, Kim Eblin, and Apl11
Brickles.
Joyful Jwnper: Terri Stout, grand
champion; Carrie Kerr, reserve
champion, and Lisa Henderson.
Clothes for School: Carla ~e,
grand champion; Lea Ann Gaul,
reserve champion; Melinda Mankin,
honorable mention, Tammy Calaway,
Lori Robinson, Lori Hudson, Rhonda
Jeffers, Rhonda Rlebel, Denise
Turner, and Missy Primmer.
·
Lounging Clothes: Lisa Collins,
grand champion; Paula Life, reserve
champion, Robyn Pitzer, honorable
mention, Brenda Calaway, Mary Colwell; Kelly Whitlatch, Lisa Hender- ·
son, Allee Ritchie and Beth Riebel.
Sports Clothes Active: Pam Murphy, grand champion, Becky
Eichinger, reserve champion; Lori
Louka, Pam Riebel, and Sherr!
Myers.
Sports Clothes, Spectator: Susan
Danner, grand champion; Renee
Trussell, reserve; Sheila Koenig, and ·
Tammy Black.
Dress-up Outfit for Daywear:
Susan Danner, grand champion,
SOnya Wise, reserve champion; Patty
Dyer, Roberta Myers, Velvet Elkins,
DWe Eblin, and Patty Parker.
J:lre!ls-up Outfit, fonnal wear: Beth
Ritchie, grand champioo; Deborah
Woodyard, reserve champion; Connie
Stout, honorable mention, Paula Ufe,
Tanunle Starcher, Tanuny Johnson,
Renee Trussell, Ka~hy Parker,
Johnson, and April Parker.
Coats and Jackets: Cindy Pitzer,
grand champion; Rhonda Haning,
reserve champion.
Clothing Complements: Denise
Stegall, grand champion; and Angela
Damewood.
·
Mrs. Bberts announced the eight
grand champion winners which were
selected by the judges to participate
in the Ohio State Fair style revue.
They were Susan Danner, two
garments; Pam Murphy, Beth Ritchie, also selected to represent Meigs
on the Ohio State 4-H Fashioo &amp;ani,
Lisa Collins, Cindy Pitzer, Terri
Stout, and Paula Ufe,
Escorts for the style rewe were
Charles Calaway, Dean Col'lfell, Blll
Dyer, Ed Holter, Ralph Jordan,
Rocky Pitzer, Perry Smith, David
Thornton, Dennis Thornton, and Blair
Windon. Flower arrangements on te
stage were provided by Francis
Florists of Pomeroy.

Rutland graduate now teaching in Italy

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

HYMN SING SET
There will be hymn sing at the
Salvation Army, 115 Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy, Sunday, Aug. 12, at 2 p.m.
All singers are invited as well as the
public.

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 8, 1979

Fair royalty chosen, winners named

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Eggs Prices paid to country packing plants
for eggs delivered to major Ohio cities
cases included consumer grades
including U.S. grades, minimum 50
case lots.
Carton Large A 59-63, Mediwn A 51).
54, Small A 33-42.
Sales to retailers in major Ohio
cities, cartons delivered: Large A
white 69·78, mostly 69-71, medium 61).
69, mostly 61).62.
Poultry prices at Ohio farms, hens
light too few to report.

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

en tine

• •

"\ ;A

EGG REPORT

EXTENDED FORECAST
Thursday through Saturday: Fair
Thursday. A chance of showers and
thunderstorms Friday and Saturday. Highs through the period from
tbe low to mid !10s in the north to the
mid to upper 80s in tbe south, Lows
In the 1108.

at y

e

CAA 's annual
report released

Celebrezze

•

And as they get it , they need a complete credit card carrier
like Rolfs Double Attach e. The Double Attache protects
your cards with Rolls exclusive Credit Guard, and gives
you plenty of room lor photos, currency and coins. All
wrapped in th e warm look and feel of fine leather. So when
you get the credit you deserve , get the credit card carrier
you deserve too.

·

Women's Accessories - 2nd Floor

ROlfS ... it shows you care.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

,,

Miss Marilyn Tomer

BY BOB HOEFLICH
Personable, outgoing, refreshlns,
entertaining, a keen sense of hwnor,
talented.
These superlatives and many more
are synonymous with Marilyn Turner, a 1955 Rutland High School
graduate who moved from the Ught
entertainment of high school
musicals into the world of opera.
Miss Turner, · who is visiting her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Turner,'
In Rutland for the month of August,
has made her home in Milan, italy for
the past 15 years.
With the enCOW'Bgement of Mrs. C.
0. Chapman, her former vocal mualc •
teacher at the Rutland High School,
Marilyn many years ago dedicated
herself to the study of classical millie.
She studied at the Cincinnati Conservatory of Music and the ManhattanScbool of Mualc In New York.
To further her studies and enhance
her background, Marilyn went to
Italy 15 years ago and arrived there
with '12 and a pocket dictionary of the
Italian language. Today, she speaks
Italian fl\lently and In fact, teaches a

nwnber Of students English in Milan.
She alao is a technical translator for a
recording company. ~ Turner ·
points out tht English is the important
languqe In ''United Europe" and
Italians are 8111lioua to learn.
BilBy, busy, busy, Marilyn, of course, does not neglect her mUBical
career. She no longer Studies music
hilt ~ moved Into vocal teaching to
pass along the teachlns techniques of
her teacher who died several years
ago.
Her 12 students from all over the
wocld report to Marilyn every day for
studies she tenns a voice building
process.
Incidentally, she has been .appreached to write a book on the voice
building technique which she employs.
When Marilyn returns to Italy, she
will begin her si:tth season with Swiss·
Italian Radio at Lugano. She records
regularly for radio and is paid well for
her presentatl0118. Her vocal work is
no doubt heard around the world since
programs recorded are sold to
8tatiOIUiln_~Y: co~trles. She is also

facing a difficUlt phOnograph recor· "Without a Song," "The Last Rose of
ding session when she returns to Swnmer" and "SWIUllertime." A.
Milan.
contralto, Miss Turner will be acWriting has served as an eJ:Cellent companied by Jane Wise of Rutland.
sideline for MiBs Turner through the Details of the concert will be anyears and currently she Is under con· nollilced later.
tract to compile a cookbook. It seems
Another highlight of ber visit here
that corn Is · just ccmiJlg Into will be arrival of two of her English
popularity In Italy but residents don't students fr~m Italy. The two were
know how to prepare it. Marilyn •s married recently and honeymooned
cookbook will deal with recipes which In Alberta, Canada, and will travel toO
contain com in any fonn, including Rutland about the middle of the mon· !
Com Flakes. Very aware Meigs Coun- th to v181tMartlyn and her parents, .
Aa for the future, Marilyn anty w&lt;men are e:tcellent cooks and
have many Wlusual recipes at their ticipates she will spend apfingertips, MiBs Turner ia hoping prolllmately two more years In Italy,
local women will phone her their which she loves dearly, before returfavorite corn recipes so that she can ning to the United States. She now exincorporate them into her book. She pects to reside In New York City when ·
can be. reached at the home of her she returns to the states.
Everyone will agree that it's a l q
parel)ta, 742-2303.
While here for a visit - this is the way from the pleasant little IIIUilcall
first time she has ever returned home d. the Rudand High School atace to
opera and everyone will alllo qree
during the summer - Miss
will probably present a concert and tbat no one could have worked harder
although she can sing the heavier or more conscientioualy towiJ'da ber
&amp;.,era tic mualc In a number of career fulfillment than Marilyn Tur· ·
languages, her program will be very ner.
light Including such ,.. songs as

Turner

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