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                  <text>12-Tbe Dally Sentinel, Middleport-P-omeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, May 29, 1979

·Thousands forced to take different flights

On this date:
IIi I W, !he capital of the 8ylantlile
Empire, C0 nstantlnople, 111'81
captured by the Turks. The date II
listed by aome hlstorlana as the end ot ·
the Middle Ages.
·
In 18t8, Wlacmain jOined the Unklll
as the 30th state.
In · 1917, the ·35th · American
president, John Kennedy, was born in•
. Brookline, Mauach~~~etts.
:
In 1943, the AmeriC8118 defeated the
Japanese In the Padflc war Battle' It
Attu in the Aleutians.
.
•
In 1947, a constituent asaembly 'in
India made It illegal to shun part r4
the population as "untouchablea."

· BY ASSOCUTED PRESS
Thousands of passengers scrambled for new flights or cooled their heels in
altport lounges and hotels as a U.S. govenunent-ordered grounding of all DC-10
jumbo leta dlsrupted wol'ld air travel.
·.
&amp;me DC-108 were called back in mid.flight Tuesday, and on the ground
pasaengers were bused hundreds of miles to catch substitute flights or lodged
overnlgbtunWanavaliableseatturnedup.
.
Str Freddie 1..-ker's Skytrain was deraUed. It uses six DC-108 for ita cheavfare flighta between Englar_KI and the United States.
Many toolt the lnconvelUence phU!JIIOphlcally, mindful the inspections were
prompted by the crash of an American Airlines DC-10 that killed at least 273
j!eOplelnthe nation's worst air disaster. ·
"It's better to be safe oo the ground rather than go 'Oh! Oh!' in lhidalr ,"said
singer Pat Boone, who had a reservation for a DC-10 fllght from New York to
Loe Angeles.
'l1l!l Federal Aviation Adminlstralion's decision to ground the three-&lt;lnglne

e

MEMORI~ SPEAKERS - Mrs. Grace

Pratt, left, president of the
Ladies Auxiliary of Drew Webster Post 39, American Legtrin, and Mrs.
Grace Elch, regent of . RetUrn Jonathan Melga Daughters· of the
American R!lVoution, both spoke on the slgnif~ of Memorial Day at

FLOODED AGAIN - Heavy rains the past few
days have caused flooding problems again on SR 554
between Cheshire and Kyger. This section has been
closed frequenUy because of high water. A hearing on
the proposed widening, improvement and relocation,
in part, of 1.02 miles, will be disciiSSed at a public hear·

log May 31. The ~on will be held at 7:30p.m. at ·
Kyger.Creek High School. Division 10 Deputy Director
Glenn A. Smith will discuss location and design details

relocation, right of way acquisition and constructlor:
schedules.

HOSPITAL NEWS
Holzer Medical Center
DlscbarJiea, May Z5
Sonia Adams, Peggy Besco, VIrgil
Booten, Beulah Bradford, Betty Coner, Ladonna Davis, Minnie Dehart,
Mrs, Darrell Detty and daughter,
Zenia Evans, Barbara Figgins, Con·
~· rad Frazier, Dorothy Hall, Patrick
: Harvour, Frederick Healey, Loren
: King, Patricia Lanham, Donna
- Mather, Charles Petry, Louisse Rad·
· f~. Ethel Rainey, Rebecca Shirley,
.Robert Simpson, Dana Smith, Mrs.
George · Spradling and daughter,
Wilma Herrell; Charles Waugh,
Weldon Woods.
lltrtlul, May Z5
Mr. and Mrs. Joune David Jude,
daughter, Vinton.
Mr. and Mrs. David RatiHf, son,
Gallipolis.

CALLOUT

THE-TROOPS

FOR .

PROPERlY
PROTECTION

Area .deaths
NANCY BUSH
Nancy Sue Bush, 21-month-old
daughter of James E. and Sandra K.
Bryan Bush, Cheshire, died around 5
p.m. Saturday in Vetel"IIPS Memorial
Hospital, Pomeroy, aftef being struck
by an automobile in Middleport
earlier in the day.
She was born Aug. 22, 1977, In
Gallipolis. She is survived by her
parents and one brother, James Bush
ll, and a sister, Angelia K. Bush, both
at home.
One sister, Peggy, preceded her in
death in 1976.
Grandparents surving are Mrs.
Eleta Bush, Gallipolis; Are len Bryan,
South Carotlna; Mr. and Mrs. Clyde
Harrison, t.flddleport;
greatgrandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Aaron
Bryan, Gallipolis.
\
She attended the Church of Christ in
Henderson, W.Va.
Funeral services were held I p.m.
Tuesday at the Waugh-Halley-Wood
Funeral Home with Ron Adams of.flciating. Burial was In Mound Wll
Cemetery.
CLARENCE JONE'&gt;
Clarence (Bill) Jones, jiB, a resident

member of the Disabled American
Veterans, VFW P011t No. 4464,
American Legion .Post No. 'II, and
Fraternal Order of Eagles.
Mr. Jones was a World War D
veteran; having served with the U.S.
Army In the South Pacific. ·
Funeral services will be held I p.m.
Wednesday at Proapect Enterprise
Baptist Church with Rev, Charles T.
Glassburn and Rev. Jack Finnicum
offidating. Burial will be in Mlna
Olapel Cemetery. .
Friends may call at the Waugh·
Halley-Wood Funeral Home from U
and HI p.m. Tuesday. The body will
lie in state one hour prior to services.
Military graveside services will be
conducted by VFW Post No. 4464 and
American Legion Post No. 'II.

·Eastern•••

Bidwell
•••
Continued from page
r

·'

I)

Gallla County's highway death toll for
1979 to six.
Two-year old Nancy S. Bush,
daughter of James and Sandra Bush,
Cheshire, was accldenUy ldlled after
heipg run over by a pickup truck at
5: 10 p.m. Satlll'day evening In the
driveway at the Qyde Harr1aon
residence on Leading Creek Road.
According to the report, the pickup
truck was driven by Ladonna J.
Taylor, ~. Rt. I, Middleport, was
following another vehicle into the
Harrison driveway. The chlld avparenUy ran into the lett side fo the
vehicle and was knocked to the
ground, then run over by the left rear
wheel.
The Middleport Emergency SqQild
was notified at 5:20p.m. MelgJ Coun·
ty Sheriff's Department was notified
by the hospital at 6:12 p.m. that the
chlld was dead on arrivaL at the
hospital.
. No charges were expected to be ru.
ed.

Barri~ger,

Joe

Dinsmore · BoylesJ

Janet Lynn · Brooks. Terry Robert
Randall Glenn Browning,
Brown , _
Barbara Eh!line Buchanan, Sherri
Joan Buchanan , Harold Clark Jr .•
Bruce Eugene Conde, Robert Dale

'

ssgss
Regular .
$189.95
6 pc. Tool Set

19
. 95

5

INSURANCE

at

enttne
I

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

.

.

.

The Meigs County Commissioners
and county engineer Wesley Buell!
Tuesday night were requested to
make a &lt;:hange in the superintendent
anq other personnel at the Meigs
County Highway Department.
• A petition, bearing 100 sigll!ltures,
was' presented to the board by
Kenneth Lawson , Herman Lawson
and Ml1ford Frederick, of Eagle
Ridge Road.
· The petition stated they were fed up
with
excuses . from
the
superintendent's office .and tired of
paying out money for repairs of their
equipment due to the conditions ol the

road.
They also voiced objections to the
type of mix being used for patch work
and stated that they felt the materials
being used was not of ~e qual,ity
needed to do the job.
A large delegation from the western
part of the county again requested
commissioners assume the pperation
of Forest Acres Park.
Since its inception the park has been
operated by the Leading Creek
Watershed Association.
Officials of the Leading Creek
Conservancy District liave stated it
will be ~ble to operate the park this

Governors given
new power

Pitzer, Lawrence L~ PoOler, Karen
Elizabeth Probert , Terri Lynn
Pullins, Connie Lorene Jones Rankin,
Kimberly Kay Reed, Diane Elizabeth
Rice, Lowell Al len Ridenour, Roger ·
Ira Riebel 11. Margaret Evelyn Riffle.
Robin · Jo Ritchie, Jeffrey Delbert
Root. Michael Dwayne Salser. Susan
Kay Shields, Dawn Renee Sor.den.
Terri Mae Stevens Sorgen, Debra '

SAL

EUREKA E.S.P.

Model2097

PRICE

$14ms

• Infinitely variable
;,··
Rugullltor sliding scale FREE
height· adjustment
TOOL
• Powerful 6-amp motor
• Convenient auwil.atlc SET
cord rewind
• All-metal V/bra-Groomer
• Extra-large dust bag
• Headlight and dual Edge
KJeener

IN

POMEROY

1Needed
A

Pick
.

~

And Louisiana Gov. Edwin
By Tbe As8octated Press
President Carter, hoping to ease the Edwards, who already has special
summer gasoline squeeze, is giving power to deal with fuel problems said:
governors new power to allocate the "What'we need is not authority. What
fuel in their states. But many we need ls fuel."
The executive order, which will
governors say they "don't need the
emergency power and don't plan to expire Sept. 30 unless It ls extended,
applies to all states. But the White
.use It anytime soon. . e •
An executiVe 'bl'der announced by Holllll!'·satd"!Jil!St leglalatures already
Carter at a n~s conference Tuesday · have empowered governors to act on
,
gives the · 'governors of 17 states' ga59line problems. .
Carter said the order would allow
. ·powers they now lack to manage gas
sales and relleve long lines caused by governors to regulate service station
hours, impose minimum purchase
shortages or panic buying.
However, one of those ·governors, requirements and asalgn ·motorists
Otis Bowen of lndiana, ·complained: alternate days for gas purchases.
"The president gave us no teeth to . The order will not allow governors
to close stations to discourage driving
enforce Ulis."
or conserve gasoline.

York ·Construction given job
Patching and paving of streets in asphalt at $34.50 a ton.
. S\reets having priority are
Syracuse will get underway soon.
Council Tuesday night accepted the Bridgman from Fourth to the area
bid of York Construction Co., [nc., near the Nazarene Church; a portion
Olauncey. The bid calls for 200 too, of Sixth street ; Ash Street past May
more or leas of asphaltic mix, at $28.50 street and Third Street to Sixth street.
In other business, it was announced
at ton.
The other bid received was from that the restrooms at the PQOI are open
· Shelly Co., Thornville, for 200 tons of in the evening to accomodate those
paying bsll.on t~ two fields.
Council will meet in regulat session
.8250,000 action filed
on Thursday, Jlllle 7, at 7:30 p.m ..
A suit in the amount of $250,000 has
been fUed in Meigs County Conunon
Pleas Court by ·Pamela Price,
-administratrix· of the estate of
WUliam C. Mlddleswart, deceased,
against Freda Middleswart Proffitt.
Tbe action is f()l' the wrongful death
of the plaintiff's fathe~ and a survival
claim.
.
WWlam C. Mlddleswart Clled on
July 4, 1977. Freda Mlddleswart
Proffitt plead guUty to murder of
plaintiff's decendent, William C.
Mlddleswart, 8nd Ia presently serving
time in a penal institution.

.
APPUCANTS SOUGHT

;!;!;!;!;!;!:!;!;!;!;!;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;!;!;!;:;:;:;:;!;!;!;!;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;

The n.llia-MelCJ Commlllllty AcUon Aaency atalf will be 111t1q avpllcatto.. for the Summer Youth
Employment Program (SVEP) on
June 8 at the Pemeroy C.A.A. Offlee
lD the Melp Couty Conrtboale.
Melp eonaty yontb, ages 1f ~~~roach
Z1, wbo uve not applied at lbelr
scbeoll ·or the ODES office, may avply between I a.ID. to ll:SO a.m. and
1 p.m. to I p.m.

;!~;: ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:~;:;:::;:;:;: ;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::;:::::::;:;:::;:

year .Unless park operation is
assumed by the county it will be
closed.
After a lengthy discussion
commissioners agreed to operate ihe
park through Labor Day of 1979. At
that time a r.View of the situation will
be made to determine future county
participation. .
·
It was pointed out that maintenance
work at the park will be done by CETA
employes, which will keep county
expenditures at a minimum. [n
addition, a schedule of rates to be
charged· for use of the park will be
adopted, which will assist in making
the park self-ilupporting. · .
Victor Gaul of the Shade IUver
Jaycees was present to discuss the use
of the "ConunonS" for a tennis cow1,
and to present petitions bearing the
nsmes of those in the area for and
against the project.
Commissioners stated that the
project had created quite a bit of
contr~versy and dlasagreement
within !he conununity.
A conclusion was reached whereby
the prosiopsed location of the project
was moved from.the southwest comer ·
of the lot to the northwest comer.
Thl.!i location will elirnlnt!te the use
of a nsrrow alley surroundlni! the
Cornm9ns placing It farther from the
residential area. And, in addition will
not affect the drainage of surface
water as the northwest comer is a flat
area.

The plan, however, ls subject to a
ruling from the prosecuting attorney
as to the county being the owner of the
property.
.
County engineer, Wesley Buehl,
infonn"'l the board that his labor
force at the highway department had .
chosen to work four to 10 hour days a
week. The mechanics and office
personnel will work five eight hour
days. The new working arrangement
will take e{fect the week of June 4.
In other business, Columbia Gas
Transmissiion Corp., was granted
permission to Install a 10 inch gas pipe
line under and across county road 16
at a point approximately 1,600 feet
northwest of SR 124 In Rutland
Township. Commissioners aplJ'Oved a
one year IV -D contract between the
Meigs County Walfare De!18rtment
and the prosecuting attorney1or Chlld
Support Services; entered into an
agreement through the county
welfare department to provide
transportation services for TIUe XX
participants at a cost ef. $985 w1th
services to be rendered by the
Conununlty Actl9nAgencyl; accepted
the bid of Guernsey Aspat Co., to
supply bituminous materials for the
month of June.
,
A request by the Veterans Service
office for an · additional Jl,OOO for
salaries was tabled untll additional
Information can be obtained.
' Attending were Richard Jones,
president, Henry Wells, and Chester
Wells, commissioners, and Mary
Hobstetter •
clerk.
·

S

COLOR TV's

WASHED &amp; DRYER

'568"

'588

REFRIGERATOR

REFRIGERATOR
.
.

·'549

.•399

Jlbn.,.~, Blnlc

~
.: ·. ' . .·.
~

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

WEDNESDAY, MAY 30, 1979

.

Total Value

ELBERFELDS

Officials

•

' .

(Continued from page! )
Ellen Balderson. Deborah Ann Durst

up for the temporary loss of the wide-body planes.
Long lines were also reported in Miami and Philadelphia.
Across the Atlantic, about .1,1100 people were held up in London's Gatwlck Ali-p&lt;irt after Britain's Civil Aviation Authority grounded all nine American-built
DC-lOII flown by Brttish carriers.
.
Laker Airlines, which offers the lowest-priced regularly scheduled fllghta bet·
weenEnglandandtheUnltedStates calledbacktoLondq~.twoU.S.-boundDC­
JOB in midair + one en route to Los Ai.geles, the other to Detroit.
Along with American, United and Western, the U.S..alrlines that fly DC-108
are : Continental, N~tional, Northwest Orient, World , and Trans (ntemation8,).
M08t substituted other planes where ~ible and urged travelers to check
their flight schedules.
'
.
Other foreign illrlines which reported voluntarily grounding their oc.io Oeeta
for safety inspection were Swlssair, Scandinavian Airlines Systems, The Royal
Dutch Airline KLM, Venezuela's VIASA, Italy's Alitalia Gennany's Lufthansa,
and Japan Air Unes.
'

,: Petitioners seeking changes
; in Meigs highway department

Deeter, Timothy Roger Dillon,
of 52 Uncoln St., Gallipolis, died at 11 Howard
Keith Dorst, Diana Lynn
p.m. Saturday in Holzer Medical Evans, Leslie
Vernon Frank, Brenda
Renee Spencer, Richard Dan Spencer,
Center.
Kay Frecker, Mark Alan Gillilan.
RusseH Eugene Star(!her, She'rrie
Mr. Jones worked for the H. R. Gregory Vance Ginther. Jeffrey Paul Jane
Starcher. Melba Jane Thomas.
Goebel.
Mark
Wayne
Hall
,
Susan
Holdennan Constructioo Co.
Elaine Hannum , Timothy Dwane Sara Darlene Wells Warner, VIda Ann
He was born March 28, 1911, in Hawthorne. Michael
Richard Weber. Bryan Keit~ White. Brian
Gallia County, son of the late Albert Hayman, Malinda Beth Headley, Rusty Wigal, Iva Renee Wilson and
David Alan Heqrick, Paul Wayne Williom Keith Wolfe.
Jones and Es\her Shoemaker Jones.
He ls survived by his wife, Opal M. Holsinger . Judy Sue Holter. Paula
Kay Hysell , Debra Lynn Jewett.
Cremeans Jones, whom he married Peggy
June Johnson. William Dale
HITS - Smalley , Min , 67 ; Remy,
Aug. 5, 1939, In Gallipolis.
Kautz. Randy Keith Keller, Valerie
Bsn, 65 ; G Brett , KC, 63 ; Carew, Cal 1
One son survives, Rev. Donald Mon i ca La Bonte , Kathy Ann 60
; Baylor , CaL 60.
Jones, · Rt. 3, Gallipolis. Four Lawrence. Terry Leon Life, Clirford
DOUBLES Lemon, Chf , 15 ;
We'll protect almost
.
Wayne Longenette, Terry Michael Bonds , Cle , 13 ; C Washington, Chi. 13;
daughters survive: Mrs. Donald Lunsford. Shirley Marie Bennett G Bren , KC, 13 ; McRae , KC , 13 ; Otis,
anything you own o• rent (Delma) Karr, and Mrs. · Charles Lyons. Ronnie Dale McGrath. Ronald KC . 13 : B Bell. Tex . 13.
·home, apartment,
(Betty) Wise, both of Middleport; William Masters. Laurie Gayle
condominium, and
Cheryl Marie Mowery.
Mrs.
Aland . (Barbara) Lopez and Mathews,
possessions.
Jackie Glenn Parker, Cynthia Sue
Mrs. Clyde (Ruth Ann) Dunlap, both
Give us a ull.
of Gallipolla. Sixteen grand and one
great.grandchlld survive.
Two sisters survive: Mrs. Nate
(Geneva) Rapp, Mt. Sterling, Ohio;
Mrs. · Delbert (Alllerta) Tomlinson,
(Continued from page 1 )
Pinellas Park, Fla. One . brother, Chicago )."
Wilber Jones, London, Ohio, survives.
The discovery followed the finding
a·mQuickel or
Fire
guts restaurant
Two brothers and one sister preceded on Sunday of a broken 3.inch bolt that
Junnle St•rcher
her in death.
officials believed to be responsible for .
• 992-:6677 .
He attended Nease Settlement Bav- the separatio~ of the engine from the
WELLSTON, Ohio (AP) - A fire
'Aci'OII from file 'COUrtwhich broke out Sunday night gutted tist Church in Pomeroy. He was a jet's left win!!.
·flouRin Pomeroy.
!he historic four-iltory Wellston Coach
It is not known if the broken bolt
House in Wellston.
·
.
caused the flange to break or if the
Firefighters from Wellston and
~~·
broken flange caused the bolt tO snap,
several area communities fought the
MS. CARNAHAN ,
K£Ht:
FAA officials said.
blaze.
Driver said that in the next phase of
~fuJNCE
(Continued from page 8)
'
Firefighters fought the blaze into
COMPANY
the investigation, all three of 'the
!he early hours on Monday.
Conneaut; Curtis Bradford, plane's engines will be sent to Tulsa,
. Wellston fire officials report no Arlington; C. W. Salier, New York, N.
mjunes despite !he fact that a dance Y.' Mr. and Mrs. John Wingett and Ok~~ ~~Ae~%~ti:~~ inspection or
was being held in the building when daughter, Etta Perry, Columbus; R. replacement of engine mounting bolts
the fire broke out.
A. Elllnger, Staunton, Va.; Mary · on all 134 DC·liJs owned by U.S.
Brummitt, Cleveland; Wlbna Sayre, operators and said all . jets not
· Worthingtoo; Della Cross, Gahanna; inspected by 3 a.m. today must be
Bruce Beegle, Columbus; Mary grounded.
Louise Ours, Huntington, W. Va.
In other developments, Cook County
Pauline Darrah, Parkersburg, W. Medical Examiner Dr. Robert Stein
V'a.; Carolyn Masale,Dublin; Mr. and said there had been positive
Mrs. Donald Shively, Columbus; 1\lr. identification of 12 of the victims. He
and Mrs. Nonnan Roush, Charleston, said their names would be released
W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Ron McDade, after relatives are notified.
Athens; Mr. and Mrs. WUbui- Holter,
iEFRIGERA TORS • RANGES •
Stein said bodies of "one infant and ·
Akron; Mr. and Mrs. Robert Euler, a very young chUd," which he saw in
Elkview; W.Va.; Janet Oyler and her the temporary morgue at the airport,
FREEZERS • WASHERS • DRYERS
husband, Charlotte, N. C.; Mr'. and were not among those ideotified. He
o I picked up an applicaMrs. Charlea Schuler, St. Clairsville; said he didn't kno\V if their deaths
SPEED
QUEEN
. tlon for a low coat loanl
Mr. and Mrs. George Wallace, Colum- . raised the death toll, or if they were
25" CONSOLE
bus; Mr. and Mrs. Clare Carpenter, listed among the 271 pasaengers and ·
On qualifying. I got the
.HEAII' DUTY
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Carpenter, crew who were kW.ed. Two persons
caah I needed on the apoJ
Belpre; Mr. and Mrs. William also died on the ground. ·
. . • and at terms suited to
Stewart, Athens. ·
American Airlines said it knew of no
my
budget!
Mr. and Mrs. Critt Bradford, Wor- infants abQard Flight 191 and didn't
tl)lngton; Mr .. and Mrs. Chris Hill, know if the death loU should be
Shadyside; Mr. and Mrs. Charles revised .
"The Friehdly Bank"
Jewell, New Haven; Mr. and Mrs. Ed·
"We won't know until Dr. Stein
ward Dr011, Freedom, Pa.; Mr. and identifies !hem," airline spokesman
· Walk-~p teller window ·,
Mrs.
Berruird
Gainer,
Barbertoo;
Mr.
Art
Jackson
said.
''We
don't
know
of
17' CU FT FRIGIDAIRE . 15 CU FT ADMIRAL
and al!tn·teller.window
.
and Mrs. Franklln Longsworth, any infant on board. A very Yt&gt;ung
Open
~rlday
Evenings
s
to
7
p,m,
.
Brecksville; Mr. and Mrs. Norm child could have had a ticket. Maybe
FROST PROOF
Styer, Waterford ; Mr.and Mrs. not. We will revise our records death
FROST PROOF
Dwaine Sayre, McCutchenville; Mr. count when we know for sure that
and Mrs. Glen Kimes of P !here are additional deaths."
. ' . . .•l ·
95
arkersburg, w. Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
A
memorial
service
for
all
the
.
Charles Perry, Holland; Mr. and Mrs. victims' was held near the airport
Carroll Cleek, Columbus; Mr. and Monday . About 1,100 persons came to .
I
Mrs. James McClaskey, lndustry, the church, where abOut 40 sat in front •
MANY MORE VALUES· HURRY!
.
$)
,... · ''· :·? ~ . . •
Pa.; Mr. and Mrs. Charlea Cline, pews reserved for friends and famUy
,
.;.:
...........
.
Moundsville, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs. of the dead.
1
11N.
::-"fr
.
.
.
t
· ··
Richard Holter, Reynoldsburg; Mr.
Jackson said the airline flew to
· ~.
/'
and Mrs. Larry Holter, Groveport; Chicago all relatives who wanted to
, 1!- .• •
,.
Mr. and Mrs. Roger WUiford, Tup- attend the memorial service or who
pers Plains, Shirley Preston and her "just wanted to be here for whatever
M.mt..r F .D: t.{
,,.u·N'tl .. lo .,. ~ ·-Ni
reasons."
·
husband of Vinton.

DAVIS. QUICKEL_

.'

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Shaver, son,
Gallipolis.
Mrs. Thomas Grimm, daughter,
Mason.
Dlacbargea, May Zl
Dorothy Adams, Hllda Berringer,
Elmer Belue, Donna Clagg, Thomas
Daniels, . Emma Elckleberg, Artha
Hornsby, Gaye Johnson, Hubert
Johnson, Reva Johnson, Tiffany
Johnson, Mary Kirkman, Shawn
Lambert, Ann .Lemley, Leslie Lyons,
Mrs. Lester Malone and daughter,
Earl MArtin, Vivian McCormick,
John Van McQuire, C4rol Pltchofrd,
Evelyn Runyan, Ronald Saunders,
Wanda Scarbrough, ~rude Sergent,
Mrs. Monte Sheets and daughter,
Merry Simmons, Russell Sprague,
Mrs. Dennis Wright and son.
lllrtbs, May Zl
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Henry,
daughter, Wellston.
Dlscllatgea, May Z7
Crystal Barnett, Sarah Buffington,
John Cwmingham, Terry Davis,
James Graham, Bert Handley, Kelley
Henry, Betty Lane, Ashby Mave,
Dean Mllllken, Louisa Mullins, Sarah
Murphy, Mrs. lUck o\Jsely and son,
Joshua Qulllen, Robert Rice.
Births, May Z7
Mr. and Mrs. James Knapp, son,
Letart.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Sommerville,
daughter, Gallipolis.
. Mr. and Mrs. Tom Skinner,
daughter, Gallipolis.
Dlacbarlea, May Z8
Juel A!J!brole, Hoo.rt Blutoo,
Mabel Bryant, Joha CbmleleWikl,
Leelle Cohoe, Mn. Harold Coot and
son, Mn. Wayne Davia D ud .On,
PeiiiiY Davis, Le1111 Depriest, Jaulta
Ferrell, WliUam Gl'lllwo, Mn.
Thomas Grimm 111111 daacbler, Donna! HaD, Jobn ,Harmon, MRs. Dane
KJug 111111 daughter, Debbl LoDdermllk, Marcella PldJJJpe, Marvin
RadabGqll, Dorollly RGaae, Llllda
Shaver, Llllda Taylor, Charles
Weaver.
Blrtba, May Z8
· Mr. and Mrs. Michael Hamllton,
daughter, Jackson.

VOL XXVIII NO. 32

.the annual Drew Webster Post services in Pomeroy Mmday. Mrs. Pratt
introduced aUXi1iary associates on the speakers' platf~. Elected of.
ficials, Gold Star Mothers, World War r Veterans, Boya and Girls Stall!
candidates were recognized. Opening prayer was by Joe ZwWing post
chaplain, and benediction Was by Gema Cue!, auxiliary chaplain. '
I I

jets pending new checks of their engine assemblies left about to,IXXI DC-10 seats
empty on U.S. carriers alone + about 12 percent of domestic capacity, the industry estimated.
.
.
.
The order followed discovery of "grave and potentially dangerous deficien· ·
cies" in the engine assemblies. An engine fell off the ill-fated Am.,tcan plane on
Friday.
.
·
.
Eight U.S. carriers have 134 DC-!08 in operation. Foreign airlines haye at
least that many, and while they·were not'bound by the FAA order. many grounded their )eta.
· Joseph Scott, an American spokesman In Chicago, estimated about 17,000
persons nationwide were bumped from DC-lOB. About 3,200 persons were bumped in Chicago, he said:
At O'Hare International Airport, the scene of Friday's tragedy, about 300
pe&lt;)ple were bused to Detroit or Indianapolis for other flights, Scott said.
In Los Angeles, frantic passengers dashed from counter to counter .and
argued with ticket clerks ss airlines tried to juggle routes and planes to make

.

·. BAKER FURNITURE

._o.-,..,,;,,

.a·~.&gt;.:.'il;'.'
.lBJI!~
.•.

•'
'··''""·' ·
candy store. Long abandoned, the 11tructure reportedly
Ia now the property ci the Stale r4 Ohio. Pomeroy
Mayor Clarence AndreWI says hi8 requests to the
dlvilllon office of the Ohio Department of HighwayS
that the structure be town down have gone unan·
swered.
'

REQUESTS UNANSWERED - Scme motorists
are afraid that thla old structure which overloolls Nye
Ave., in Pomeroy, will topple over any minute. Some
older residents reinember when the building was
called "Uncle Hen's" and \Vas a small grocery m.1

...

'

STUDENTS AccEPTED - Two Meigs County
high school juniors have been accepted to attend a
swnmer introductory course in drafting at Cornell
University l.J) New York. The course Ia from June 26 to
August 10 with the students staying on campus. Taking
advantage of the summer program are Rosemary
Hubbard, Southern student, daughter of Larry Hubbard, ltadne, and Helen Holter, Racine, and Brian

Bailey, Eastern student, son of Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Bailey. Both students CllrrenUy attend vocaUonal
claSIIes at Meiga High. Rosemary has received a
scholarship from Cornell to help with the coat r4 the
summer program. Shown ls, i to r, Charles Corder,
Meigs ct;afting instructor, Brian BsUey, Roeemary
Hubbard, and Tim Flesher, guidance councilor.
'

Officials ·testing computer
to determine crash causes
.

CHICAGO ( AP) Federal
inspectors and American Airlines
officials - apparenUy not satisfied
the loss of one engine wss the key
factor in the nation's worst air crash
-plan to pr:ogram 8 computer to see
how the DC-10 jumbo jet would react if
Ita hydraulic system .wss damaged .
The National Transportation Safety
Board and the airline said Tuesday
they are trying to determine whether
the falling engine damaged other
parts of the plane - such as the
hydraulic system that provides power
to critical controls on the plane's
wings and tall .
· American officials said they plan to
program a computerized aircraft
.simulator · at the airline 's training
center in Dallas to learn how the
jumbo jet would have reacted if two ol

s

I

its three hydraulic systems failed
·when the engine fell off. The simulator
is used to train pllots.
"We are looking into the hydraulic
syatem of that aircraft and tracing the
trajectory of that engine when it came
off the top of that wing. We want to
lmow what happened -what kind of
damage might have been done to the
wing," said Bob Buckhorn, a board
spokesmnn.
The hydraulic system provides
power to the aUerons, flaps, elevators,
ri.Kldet and apoUers - devices !hat
help control the plape.
·
Buckhorn added that the safe.ty
board won't know what caused the
crash lor several months.
Investigators say Flight !91's
trouble began Friday when a 3-inch
bolt in the left wing engine assembly

T team fi n ds· pazr
•
d ea d h US ban·d. serzous
•
~:4

.

.

·

'

.

·
HILUARD, Ohio (AP) _ Shots husband Donald, 35. Pollee said Maule
fired by an unidentified gunman who ned the house and went to the store
later took his own life killed 8 Hllliard after throwing a piano bench at the
woinan and seriously injured her gunma.~.
husband, according to authorities in
Maule was listed in guarded.
this Columbus suburb:
condition at a local hospital · with
The couple's daughter was struck wounds in the ann snd chest. His
an~ injured by the man when he daughter Heidi, 14, was treated for
invaded the couple's home Tuesday, head lacerations and released. Pollee
but her injuries did not appear to be said the man apparently let her go
sertous.
after Malile escaped.
The woman was Identified by the
The girl told pollee at the hospital
franklin Coynty coroner's office as !hat she was alone in the home when
Brenda Maule, 35. Hllllard police Lt. !he man forced his way in. She said he
Michael Poole said she was shot in the tied her up and took her to the
bsck of the head and the gunman shot basement, then waited for her
himself in the side of the head. Poole parents. She also said that when he
said a chrome-plated .357-callber freed her, the gWllll8n claimed he had
Magnum· revolver · found near the· killed her mothe rand planned to shoot
man's body apparently was the himself.
weapon used.
·
Hilliard Mayor Roger Reynolds said
Mrs. Maule's body wsa in. the !l1e gunman came to \be hollle with a
kitchen of , her home, while . the suitcase containing a gun, gauze and
gunman was found dead ai the bottom ether.
of the basement stairs. The bodies
The family apparently moved into
. were dlacovered when a Columbus the house last fall. Mrs. Maule was an
police SWAT team, aided by Hilliard agent for Nationwide Insurance, with
pollee aild Franklin County sheriff's her. office located in 'tlie home. Her
deputies, invaded the home about four husband worked for the computer
hours after the first report of tile department
of
Nationwide's
shooting .
Columbus horne office.
. .1
Authorities said .the incident
Douglas Swope, manager of a bank
__ _.pparently was the result of a · branch next to the holise, called tbe
domestic disturbance, but declined family "very friendly , outgoing, the
additonal discussion of. possible kind of people you'd like to have for
motives.
neighbors."
First word of the shooting came
Reyn~lds declared a state of
when police were summoned .Ill a emergency in the area. ordering· two
nearby '·grocery· to attend to bullet neighborhood bars closed for about
wounds suffered by Mrs. Maule's two hours.

y

cracked on takeoff and the engine tore
away .from the •jumbo jet. There Ia
disagreement over whether the
aircraft still could have been
maneuvered to safety. .
·
~ plane nose-&lt;lived toward tbe ·
groundatthe northwest ~nd of O'Hare
lnblmational Airport and exploded on
impact, kWing at leaSt ·273 perll!'na;
The safety board plans to begin
tearing down the three engines of the
wrecked plane nest 'Tuesday a~
America.n's main~enance
headquarters at Tulsa, Okla.
.
Two groups of safety board
engineers also will fiy to CaUlornla tO
begin · working with McDonnell
Douglas engineers to help dele~
the cause of the crash. · '·
The
Federal
Aviation
Administration in Washington
grounded all 134 U.S.-owned DC-Uli
because of "potentially dange1'11114
defidencles" 111 the assembly holding
the engine to the wing.

.•,

Final count 508 .dead
By Tbe Alsoctated Prell
Although there w,u less motoring
than usual because of aasoline
shortages and stricter enforcement of
the 55 mph speed ll.tnjt, 601 pel'IOtll
died in traffic accidents over the
Memorial Day weekend.
The National Safety Council llld
there were reporta of more motorllll
taking shorter trips than ever hilm;
getting to destinations and returning
on one. tank of gasoline.
·
And , the safety cOWlCU said, !bole ·
on the trips probably had more
passengers as !hey bunched up i'ather
than take two cars. Acddenta under
such conditions could attribut~ to a
death roll over 500 despite fewer mllea
driven at relatively lower speeds.
The death count, compiled by the
Associated Press from 6 pm. Friday
to midnight Monday, compared to 1128
last Memorial Day weekend.

TWO SQUAD CALLS
The Middleport Emergency Squad
was caUed at 2':21 p.m. Tueeday for
Amanda Murray, 247 N. Third St. Due
to a manpower shortage, the call was
transferred to the Meigs Emergency .
Service which transported Mrs.
Murray 1o Pleasant Valley Hospital.
At 7:45 pm. Tuesday the squad was
called . to 916 ·Locust st. for Nona
Winebrenner , No treatment ' was
required.
I

\'I

�2-The _Daily Senti11el, Middleport-Pomeror, o., Wednesday, May 30, 19'19

In Washington
Time to.abandon bail
By Marilla ~le 111111 Robert Walters
FRANKFORT, Ky. (NEA ) • The
commercial bail bondsman Ia "a
parasite that preys upon the poor,"
says Kentucky Gov. Julian M. Car·
roll, unwilling to disguise his contempt for "someone who makes a
buck on another's misfortunes."
Tholie harsh words are more than
political rhetoric. For more than half
a decade, Democrat Carroll waged
fien!e perSonal crusade - first as
speaker of the state's General
As!Jembly and later as its governor against the bail bond business.
Refonn of archaic bail practices Ia
hardly a new concept. The Manhattan
Ball Project, undertaken in the mid·
1980s by the Vera Institute In New
York City, demonstrated that defendants identified as "good rists "
could be released between arrest and
~ on their "own recognizance" without posting cash bonds - while
posing litUe thre&amp;t to the pubtic's
safety.
Similar programs subsequently
have been Initiated elsewhere, in·
cludlng the city of Philadelphia and
the states of Iowa, Illinois and
Oregon. But in early 1976, the Kentucky legislature took a dr8$tic step
that never bas been matched by any
ltber state or local government.
When the lawmakers approved a
blJI whole first line said "it shall be
unlawful for any person to engage in
the businells of bail bondsman," they
virtually aboUshed the Industry in the
state. (Commercial bonds may still
be written In Kentucky only for those
charged with federal offenses.)
An evaluation of Kentucky's unprecedented act commiasioned by the
Councll of State Govfrnments, sug.
geats that COI1IIIIei'Cial bondsmen
may have contributed to "corruption ·
in , the state's criminal justice
system."
Police officers In some . communities previously -received
irlckbacb for every arrest that produced bualness for the bondsmen. Jail
offlciala were treated to steak dinners
and free tickets to basketball and
football games. Judges and
legislators received annual
Ou1stmas presents and handsome
campaign contributions from the
bondsmen.

After the statute was passed, Jaw
enforcement officials here reportedly
discovered that there was a "con.tract " oo the gover:nor's life. The
state police resorted to extraordinary
aecwity measures to protect Carroll
until the-threat faded.
To supplant the commercial
system, Kentucky three yearsgosblished Pretrial Services Agency
headad by an ex~ep(lonally capable
director, Wllliaih E. Davis.
With more than 130 employees
spread thro'18hout Kentucky.'s 120
counties and 56 judicial circuits,
Davia' agency last year Interviewed
almost half of t)le 202,i59 people arrested in the state.
A total of 44,685 defendants
qualified for release on their own
recognizance, while another 10,505
people were released under slightly
more stringent conditions, including
posting unsecured bonds or accepting
non.financial bail requirements. In
serious cases where cash bonds were
deemed necessary, they were issued
by the stale.
. Despite considerable initial anxiety
on the part of police officers, judges
and lilw-abiding citizens about the
potential danger posed by ''letting
criminals roam the streets," the 111'07
portion of those released without bali
who either are rearrested while
a=ting trial or fail to . present
ves· for scheduled court apthe
pearan
bas consistently remained
below 5 percent.
In Louisville, the state's largest city, police report a decline in
burglilries and robberies that once
apparently were conunitted by
defendents desperite for money needed to pay the lmdaman.
.Jail c011ts have' been reduced
because there are fewer prisoners.
Public defenders report that their
programs now cost the·taxpayers less
because more defendants are able to
reswne wock, thus earning money to
.pay their own lawyers.
No either nation oo earth _except the
Philippines allows the commercial
bail bondsman to play a majoc role in
the criminal justice system - and
Kentucky has demonstrated that this
country can well afford to abandon
the anachronistic, inequitable
system.

HEALTH lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

Ulcerative colitis
DEAR DR. I..AAIB -I am one of the
thousands of people whQ suffer from
ulcerative colitis. I've bad It fer the
past 10 months. I was in the hoepital
lllld bad aD the tests made and I 'ani
taking Mllpath after meals and
Metamucil at bedtime.
1m on very restrictive diet. I am 55,
am 5 feet 3 Inches tall and weigh 115
PQUJ1dll. I never smoked or drank
-'cobollc beverages. Will you pleaae
11111!1111&amp; IOIDe other treatment oc
medicine I can S1J81esl to my doctor
10 I can get rid of this problem soon?
My doctor said I will probably feel
better within a few months. My diet
which I'm enclosing is 10 bad that can
- that I'm not living, I'm just ex·
IBtlng. 'l'llank you ry much for any advice you can give.
DEAR READER - Ulcerative colItis Is a very complex
dlleue and its exact cause is not
undentood. I must assume that
you're correct in telling me that is
-your dlagnoais. Tbla ts not at all the
same thing as a spastic or irritable
coloo and treatment ts entirelY. dif.
ferfttt.
Patienta witt! ulcerative colitis
U8Ually have·epillodes of severe dlar·
rhea, IICJIDetimes they bave bleeding
and they have abdominal paiJi with
the epilodel of diarrhea. BecaUBe of
the heavy dlarrllea, they frequently
loae weight and htey may develop
nutritional defldenclell becauae of It.
Tbe salt and water metabollmn may
be dlaturbed and, in general, the patients are pretty UllCOOifortable. The
attaclra may IUbslde IIJlOIItaneouaiY
and not oa:ut again foc IIOIIle time.
The . . . treatment Ia to try to stop
the attacks qulcldJ u poalble. There
are lll!veral medicines used for this. A
cmJIDIIII one II Alulfldlne. MOlt antibiotics, however, cbl, help at all.
They're used only If you have a complication such as li perforation cr an
abecess ·wllere t1iere II an actual In·
fectlon. · CortiCOiterone or other
steroid horrnoo are frequently used
and are IAen useful in aborting the attack. The prolonged !lie of ~ld
horlilones, however, may lead to
other problems.
I looked over your diet. Many ~­
tms do not think a spectaJ diet Ia particularly important. In fact, It's '
dangerous sometimes to have a diet
that'• too restricted becallle the patient'• nubitioo Is already lllllJlllnal.
There Ia such a .thing as an elemental diet that provides essentiel amino
acids, vitamins, minerals and gllicoae
and ..mower oil as a miiture. Thia ts
lmcJit entirely absorbed in the small
lnleltlne 110 thet:e 's very little residue
left to enter the inflamed · and
ulcerated coloo.
··
AIDOIII( your lists of foods I would

question· ihe Inclusion of milk and
milk products. Ulcerative colitis patienta usually do not tolerate milk and
milk products well. Applesauee and
apple jUice are not . I)I!Cell8llrily
soothing to the digeltlve system. Tbe
flavor oils in decaffei!Jated coffee are
sometimes very irritating to people
with a sensitive colon.
Patienta have recurrent attacks so
don 1 expect any sudden miracle i:ure
or pennanent relief.
Readers who want lnfonnation
about dtao-bea conditions can send
foc The Health Letter number 1~ .
Send your request with 50 centa and a
long, stamped, self-addressed
envelope to Dr. Lamb, in' care of this
newspaper, P.O. Bm: 1551, Radio City
Station, New Yort, NY 10019.

'

1I

Editorial opinions,
comments

R~port

Berry's World

" Let's get married - after all, you have
'even' and I have 'odd' numbered license
plates!"

- --- - - -- - - - , - -- - - - - _ _ J

Business mirror
NEW YORK (AP) - As the stock
market enters Juhe, scmetimes an
uninspired month, opinions on the
future of prices are split wide as the
Grand Canyon.
Nothing new In this ;Jt's been ·that
way foc 15 years, and the fact that the
Dow Jones industrial average is no
liigher than it was in 1964 lends
docwnentation. It tells of a split in
opinions, a stalemate.
.
What is new is that some of those on
either side of the split feel that we
may not.llave to wait much longer for
the proof of the pudding. That proof,
they agr~, is in the performance, not
the prediction.
On qne side of the great ~vide are
those who say the market will now fall .
into the abYss. Included in tlie group
are 90ine huge iru!titutionai traders
who, over recent years, have been
shUnning stocks:
On the other. side they're ready to
climb the mountain'. By 1983 they
foresee peaks twice as high as the
recent industrial average, which
closed last weekat8:!6.37polnts, about
the same as in June 1964.
On either side they view the same
economic probabilities as providing
credibility. We are at a watershed,
they say. We are headed toward
recession. Our red-ink economy is like
blood flowing.
Even when invested in stocks, the
pension funds have done poorly. A
review by A.G. Becker Inc. of 571
pension funds found that since 1964
only 22 of every 100 matched or
exceeded the Standard and Poor's 500stock index.
Blame is often placed on the
timidity of portfolio managers, wbo
under the relatively new ''pl'lldent
man" law can be held responsible for

invest~ent decisions. ·They feel
caution is more defensible ttlan risk.
How timid have they been? A
Federal Reserve count shows insurers
and pension funds added less to their
stock holdings last year than in any of
the previous 11 years. Private pension
funds used only 9 percent of available
cash for U.S. 'stocks. Recently, some
have invested abroad.
A perusal of investment letters
suggests·that as the econ&lt;my declines
so will the portfolio managers'
already weak. allegiance to stocks. No
matter that prices might recover
later. A manager saves his job now.
The stock market, they say, isn't for
the timid and it isn't for the Shortterm. It's not to be viewed tbrough a
microscope; a telescope's the thing.
A survey by Bache Halsey Stuart of
145 pension fund managers showed
the average fund had 18 percent of
assets in short-term securities. That
alone amounts to nearly $50 billion
that might become available.
·
Many billions more conceivably
could come · from . other insurance
company activities, from foundations,
bank-administered trusts, mutual
funds, school endowments, and
individuals who now invest .in real
estate."

THE DAILY SENTINEL
(USPS I - )

. DEVO'I'EDTOIDIE
INI'ERl'1IT OF
MEIGHWIONAREA

ROBERT IIOEPLICII

DA~=.u.

Adver1lolqlllualft'
.
PubllJhed dolly nceptS.turday by The Obit
Vali&lt;y PubllahlriaCompany. Multimedia, Inc.,
Ill Court st., Pomeroy, Ohio 151Cit. 8uJiJwA
0111&lt;.'1! Plme 2151. - Ed114rtal' Pl1ont

Buckeye briefs. ~ .

9111-21!7.'

Sec:oriJ cluo poetOp paid al Pomeroy, Ohio.

Nollonaladverllolng ...,....ntallve, t.nd•
VETERA.NS MEMORIAL .
COLUMBUS, Ohio ( AP) - Twen\}'AYodllts, 3101 EucUd Ave., Clevtland, 01110
44ne . .
Saturday Admissions-None.
two Ohioans are among 599 per90ns
S.bocr!ption raCes: llellveml by carrier
Saturday Discharges--Callie nationwide who have been selecled to
........ ••alloble.tO cadi per-k. B y Route wtlert carrier aerric.'e notavaillble, One
Metheny, Basil Haynes, James receive some of $6.5 million in
mooth, p .... By11)01llnOidoandW. Va., CN
.
academic
grants
from
the
National
Mill er, Beth The ISS.
End
v.... IZ!.IO; Sll · a1uo: nv.e inanlSunday Admissions--Charles
owment foc the Hwnanities.
ths, 111.10; Ellewbere 132.00 Jea&lt; ; Sill months
117.00; 'I'1ne - · 18.00. S.bocriptionpri~
Lawrepce, Long Bottom; Ina Massar,
The grants range from $2,500 to
in&lt;ludeoSUnday11mH-Selltlnel.
Reedsville; Ava Greenlees, Pomeroy; $20,000 and are awarded for the study
Clement Cooper, Syracuse;. Gladys of literature, phllo90phy, language,
Williams, Lancaster; Ross Kent, history and other social sciences.
selected for the program
·
Addison ; . Ivan Car I, Pomeroy.
. Ohioans
lud
Sul)day Discharges-Mona Neal, me e:
·
'.
John Fleming.
Fellowships - Lawrence I. Buell,
Monday Admissions--Jo~ep)l American literature, Oberlin College; tl'fA Fo~wolml SU\Il-'1):\J;G01""Stewart, Bidwell ; Philip Null, John ""D.Cooney, art, Cleveland 'HUI.ME
.-..e.Fl . "~9
· ·
Tuppers Plains. Marilyn Howery Museum of Art; Lawrence J.
Albany · Willard' Mowery Pomeroy: Freidman, history, Bowling Green
Willi~ Morris, Pomeroy.
' · State. Univer~ity; _Ju~ith_ Fr~er,
·Monday Discharges--Llllian Amer~can studies, Mia~ Uruvers.1ty ;
Stewart Lillie Cummings
Quen'tin C. Craft, English, DeniSOII
'
·
University; James Kittelson, history,
Ohio State University; Daniel
Lesnick, history, Hiram College;
SQUADRUNS
Edward M. Miggins, history,
The Middleport Emergency Squad Cuyahoga Community College; VIrgil
answered a caU to 206 Beech St., at P. . Memolanu,
comparative
8:18 p.m. Sunday for Alberta literature, University of Cincinnati;
Hardaway who was taken to Holzer Edward Olszewski, art, Case Western
Medical Center.
Reserve University; Terry M. Perlin,
At 7: 11 p.m. Mondar, the squad history, Miami University; L. Brian
went to Mill st. for Mary Jones who Price, French, Kent state.University;
·had a foot laceration. She was taken to .'Peter w. Rose, ' classics, Miami
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
University; David L. 'stampe,
tinguistics, Ohio State Universliy;
Jean Tul!Sey, history, Cleveland Plain
Dealer; Peter Williams, religion,
Miami University.
.
SQUADCAU.ED
The Pomeroy Emergency Squad Summer Internships - Katherine
went to Wright St., at 7:30 p.m. R. Goodman, German , Miami
JaFran
Jones,
Monday for Mrs . Tom Bell who was University ;
taken to Holzer Medical Center. At ethnomusicolo@y, Bowling Green
12:05 a.m. Mooday the county ladder State University; Micbae1 T. Joiles,
truck was taken to Wellston to help German, Ohio State University;
Barry J . Leyy, American histor;,
with a fire there.
At I :30 a.rn. Sunday the squad went Case Western Reserve University :
to Minersville for Amy Huston who Carl F: Pinkie, political science, Ohio
was injll!'ed in an auto accident. She Wesleyan University·: Barbara N. ·
was taken to Veterans Memorial Ramusack, south Asian history.
:'Other than him,
Urii~ersity of Clncirmati.
Hospital.
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1-The n..1J Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., WednesdaY , May 30,1979 · · ·

Washington

I

Walling's hit defeats Reds

By Clarence
Miller

Coiltrary to tl'le President's long ment for "aiiditional federal monies;
standing pledge to reduce the size of and that it will work toward .the In- •
government, we again find Mr. car- creasing centralization of educational
ter puahing a propossl here in policy ai the expense of local decision • •
Congress which will only serve to ex- makers.
It ts this last point that Is of main :
pand our already overbloated
concern
to .me. We as a nation have · ·'
bureaucracy.
grown
and
proapered In large part .. ~
During this Congress and the last,
the Administration has pushed for because of our superior educational •
passage of legislation to create a sYstem; a system based on local and '"
cabinet level U.S. Department of state control. (At present 91' percent.
Education. Initial estimates call for of the fimding for our· pubtic SChools • ·
the new department to have a staff of come from local and state revenues.) "'
17,000 people and a budget of- $14 Establishment of a cabinet level •
billion; no modest venture by Department of _Education would do ·
mucb to accelerate the trend away ·-.
anyone's standard.
The arguments in favor of crealing from local and state control of our
a new department are principally two schools ;,. a trend many of us view aa
fold. First, it is maintained by unhealthy.
When Washington takes part In
proponents that it would increase ef·
ficiency liy unifying a great number policy making, very lltUe Is left to
of the educatiOIIBI programs presen- local Initiative. Washington
tly scattered throughout various bureaucrats are quick to asswne that
government agencies into one depart· they have all of the answers. We've
ment. Secondly, by so ~oing, It would ~ it happen time and lime again. "
give education a more significant We've seen It at O.S.H.A. the ()c. . '
· cupational Safety · and Health Ad·
position in the federal hierarchy.
The first is only Il&amp;rtially correct. ministration; we've seen It at E.P.A.,
· The bW being supported by the Ad· the Environmental Protection Agen· ,
ministration l~ves many miljor cy; we'Ve seen it happen at countlesa "
educational components such as man- federal agencies. In their zeal to-.·
power training, Head Start, and protect Americans frCllll countless ex- ·
veterans education under the cesses, both real and imagined,
jurisdictin of the agencies presently federal officials have all too often 1m- .
posed rigid, unrealistic and un- •
adrniniBtering them.
While It can -be assumed that a workable standards oo the general
cabinet level department of education public.
Well intentioned though federal of. '
would give more visibility and stanficials
may be in the promulgation of , •
ding to the field of educatioo, one is
prompted to ask, to what end will thiS such regulations, the result is :
frequently the same. We end up •
new found Influence be used? ·
The fears many harbor are that the sUITellderlng more and more of our ..
Department will become a captive of ~ freedoms and prerogatives ,
special interests; that it will work to to Washl'ngton.
In my judgment, the establishment •
enhance the role of the professional
-of
a U. s. Department of Educatioo
education bureaucrat . here in
Washington rather than the dedicated would be one more such surrender
educator In the field; that it will bring and would do litlle to enhance the .•
increasinll pressures on the govern- quality of education in Ohio oc
elsewhere.
·"

wash-m·gton
·
Today
.

.

.

•

·

WASHINGTON (AP)- Faced with percent increase in consumer prices :
growing evidence that the wage and in April, that the government can't do i
price guidetines aren't working, the much about the worse_current CBIJS!!S '·"
Carter administration has begun to of inflation, rising ·cfll, housing and •
play down their importance. . ·
food prices.
.~
It has little choice, since the only
Both Kahn and Treaaury Secretary •
other option may sboll be to admit w. Michael Blumenthal now say ~
failure, and politic' "ns and consumer prices will increase at least •
bureaucrats are loathe to admit they 8.5 percent this year, up from an •
have failed at anything.
ociginal target of 7.4 percent, and :
Alfred Kahn, tht President's chief could easily be higher. Prices , ~
inflation adv&amp;er, scarcely mentioned mcrea
··
sed g.2 perce nt •-st
.., year.
;.:;
the guidelines during a speech to the
Rather than !leclare the guidelines a ,_
National Association of Homebuilders failure, Kahn told the home builders -~
last week in which he gave a detailed that anyone who thought the ::;
explanation of the administration's guidelines could by themselves .~
efforts to control inflation.
resttain Inflation was afflicted with -.;
He acknowledged that he had given "economic illiteracy."
:
. the guidellnes "shortoflbrift" In his
Kalm ,stressed the importance of •
remarks. But he said he didn't want to other stepa being taken to restrain ·:
exaggerate their importance because inflation, especially fiSCal policies to . ;:
they never were intended to play slow govern~ent spending and
anything but a minor role in the anti- mooetary policies to tigh!er1 the
.inflation effort.
.
money supply and raiselnterest rates. -.
Kahn had said previously ttlat If the Blumenthal has adopted a similar ;
guidelines .didn't show results by·the sta nee.
·
.,•
begin ning of sununer, he would
The administration will be reluctant •
personally consider· them to have to drop the guidelines entirely !
failed.
, anytime soon.
~
The time for such a judgment is
1n fairness, the guidelines never :
· almost at hand. SUmmer is less than a were supposed to be the end-aU :
month away, and Inflation hasn't solution 10 controlling Inflation, but Z
abated significantly yet. ·
the administration had hoped they ~
Indeed, President Carter I!Bid last ·would contain the upward spiral of "'
~eek . he ~xpects "serious, adverse" prices for a time unW 'fiscal 41lld :
inflat1on f~gures -~or the next two to monelary· policies had a chance to :
three months. Prices IIICreaaed at an 1 work.
.
:
ann~! rate of nearly 14 . percent
The guidelines ask business to hold •
durmg the first four montha of the price increases one-half of one ~
year.
.
1 percentage point below the average • ·
Kahn admitled last week, .aftel' the ; increases during the 1971&gt;-77 period. :
,
government reported another 1.1
••

Steve Rogers pitched a six-bitter as
Montreal beat Philadelphia. Rogers
triggered the fifth-inning outburst
with a lead-off single and Warren
Cromartie later detivered a two-run
double before Valentine's flfth homer
of the season.
The ElJIOS had provided Rogers
with a 2~ lead in the second irming
when Chris Speier doubled in tw~J
runs. Perez and Valentine both hit
RBI doubles in the seventh to stretch
the Mon.treallead to 9-ll.
Mets 6, CardiDals 2
John Stearns and steve Henderson
belted 'run-scoring doubles to
highlight a four-run rally In the seventh Inning and lead New York over St.
Louis. Lee MazziUI's dopble, one of 14
New York hits, triggered the New
York uprising off st. Louis righthander Pete Vukovich. An Inning
later, the Mets added an Insurance
run on two singles and Richie Hebner's sacrifice fly in support of Pat
Zachry, W, who yielded nine hits in 7
1-31nnings.
Dodgen &amp;, Giants 5
DuSty Baker's fly ball single to deep
center field drove in the winning run
as Los Angeles raille&lt;l for three runs
in the ninth Inning to defeat San Francisco.

The Dodgers had scored twice in
the ninth and had the bases loaded
with one out and Baker hitting against
San Francisco reliever Qave RobertS.
Baker lofted a fly ball over the head of
Giants center fielder BW North for
the game-winning hit.

RMOUS

BELKNAP
BRAND

K~ilSike~J6tleler.s

brief~

Orrvi l le vs . Akron St . Vincent -St.
I p.m.
Championsh i p, 3: 30p.m .

Mary ,

CLASS A
STEUBENVILLE, Ohio (AP) AI Dover
.
Jim Kuzma's appointment to the U.S:
Zanesvi lle Rosecrans vs . Parma
Naval Academy has set a record. It t:-toly Name-Nazare'th , 11 : 30 a.m .
M c Donald vs . Brilliant Bucke ye
marks the first time three brothers
ever have attended the service school. North . 1:30 p.m.
Championship, 4 p.m.
Kuzma, the son of College of
CLASS A
Steubenville basketball Coach Hank
AI Grove City
Lu casv i lle Valley vs . Ch i ll icotne
Kuzma, follows his brothers, Hank
and Chuck, as Naval Academy cadets. Zane Trace, 10:30 a.m.
Cardington vs . Ironton St. Joseph ,
The youngest brother, 6-foot-li JIIII 1:30
p.m.
averaged 14 points and 11 rebounds
Championship, 3:30p.m.
.
Tuesday's Results
for SteUbenville Catholic Central High
CLASS AAA
School last winter.
AI Euclid
Eastlake North .:1 , Parma Nor PORTSMOUTH, Ohio (AP) - Bob mandy 2
Schaffer has been named football
Euclid 6. Elyria 1
coach at Portsmoutjl High ~chool ,
Championship
.
Euclid 4, Easllakd North 0
Succee ding Bill Borhen.
AI North Canton
Schaffer, a Portsmouth High School
Stow 3, .Akron Ellet i
and Ohio State University graduate,
Oregon Clay 4, Youngstown Mooney
served the last four seasons as an 2
Championship
assistant coach with the Trojans. It's
Oregon Clay J, Stow I
his first head coaching assignment .
CLASSAA
Borhen went ~10 in his only season at
AI Westervillo
Columbus DeSales B, Delaware
Portsmouth .
Buckeye Valley 3
.
Cadiz 3, Zanesville Mays\nlle 2
VANDALIA, Ohio (AP) - The late
Championship
Fred Etchen, a former Olympic gold
Columbus DeSales 5, Cadiz 2
CLASS A
medalist, will head a group of four
AI Deshler
1979 enshrinees into the Amateur
Champi11nship
Trapshooting Association Hall of
Edgerlon 8, Miller City 4
At Urbana College
Fame in August.
Championship
The other selections this year are
Pitsburg
Franklin -Monroe 11,
Cliff Doughman of Clearwater, Fla., Fremont St. Joseph
6
Dan Orlich of Reno, Nev ., and Bill

W aiJcs beat Syracuse

Foster's absence
hurts statistics
CINCINNATI ( AP) - George
Foster, out of action with a sprained
ankle , is falling farther and farther off
the psce set by the National League
leaders in home runs, hits and runs
batted in .
But . Foster, tlie Cincirmati Reds'
slugger who has hit more home runs
and driven in more runs than any
other player in the major leagues in
the last three years, says he never
worries too much about that .
" Alliong as I keep a smooth stroke,
the hits and home runs will come,"
Foster has been saying all along , even
during a blazing start that had peo~le
talking about his chance of bec~mmg
the team's first Triple Crown wmner.
Frank Robinson won the award in the
American League with Baltiinore the
year after he left Cincinnati .
"Sure, I'm pleased with the start
I've had . But I'm not pleased to the
point
complacent," Foster said
just days before the InJury.
~~Whateve r comes abm.~t, fine ."
Foster already has missed too many
games to play in the Hi8 he totaled last
year and two years ago.
Champ Summers filled in for a
while before he was dealt to tfie
Detroit Tigers. Dave Collins also
played in Foster's left field spot. Ken
Henderson who recently was
activated after sitting out all spring
with a foot injury , also got a chance.
"There's going to be a different hero

on this team each day ," Foster said
before he knew he would miss a week
of the season . ''Even the pitchers each guy's picking up the other guy."
To Foster, that's the reason the .
Reds rebounded 'from three straight opening losses to take the lead in the
National League West. And in his own •
quiet way , Foster helped keep the
Reds going when things looked .bleak.
"A word here or there helps a guy
stay up," Foster said. "If somebody
makes a mistake, 1might try to talk to ,
them about it to Jet them know they .
shouldn't get down on themselves." ·
Foster signed a multi-year contract
this spring for an estimated $700,000 a .
year, making him the highest paid _.
Cincinnati player ever. He insists the ,
money doesn't make any difference in
his play.
·
"I play with the same intensity. I .
don't have to prove anything," he :
said, typically low key. "If I keep that •
smooth stroke, the hits will come and · ..
the home runs will take care of
ihemselves. 1 just go to bat looking for ..
a pitch I can hit."
But he admits that he concentrates ··.
harder with runners on base.
"I just feel I have more incentive ,.
then," Foster said. "I feel I can do .· .
more damage, hurt the pitcher more ·
if I drive in a couple of runs."
.

"Photos are Forever"
• Portraits
eWeddings
• Special Occasions
• Pass"orts

Trans mission fihn
available to groups

The Photo Place
(Bob Hoeflich)

A new 16mm motion picture on
765,000-vol.t electric power transmission is the liltest addition to Ohio
Power Company's public communications program.
The film, "Assignment: 765," answers such questions as: What are
765,000-volt transmission lines? Why
are they so important to the delivery
of electricity? Are the lines safe? .
What research has been done on
•
them•.
The 21kninute color movie tells in
easy-to-understand language and
quality visuals why these lines are
safe and why they are crucial for
power delivery today and In the
future . It was produced by the
American Electric Power System, of
which Ohlo Power is a part.
Ohio Power believes this flbn will
be of Interest to civic and service
clubs, high school and college classes
and many other types of groups and
organizations. Showings of "Assignment: 765" may be arranged by contacting the Ohio Power office.
Severaj other films and_ talks
dealing with the different aspecls of
the energy situation also are
available through Ohio Power at no
charge.

109 Hl~h St., Pomeroy

• Fishing Tackle and Rods
&amp; Reels
• Guns and Reloading
• Ball Gloves
ecamping Equipment
eArchery
etndoor Games
• We have Gift Certificates

o•"~~..,.,.'I

Next to Muon County Fair
·

Pt. Pleasant, w. va.

PHONE '67l·2ftl

Opefl Sunday 1 p.m.-6 p.m.
Mondoy thru Solurdoy
9 a.m. to lp:m.

MONKEY RUN, POMEROY, 0.

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Grounda, 'G r•ndvlew Hgts.

MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

THRU JUNE 2, 1979

..

Sport Shop

Carrier Needed

'ANTENNAS IN STOCK

.. '
.'

Tri- County

212 E. Mlln, Pomeroy

' .

-'

E l yr ia

Catholic , 11 a .m .

ALL TV AND CB
.

•

The Daily Sentinel

I'm

Pa i n esv il l e Harve y vs.

15% .0FF

j

••

Wednesday
· Class AA
AI Barb,rton

RADIO SHACK SALE

.,

l

Regional Tournament Pairings

sign Poole

~~

there ain't nobody here but us chickens."

•

egwna parnngs
Ohio High School Baseball
By The Associated Press

Bengals

Come choose lrom our complele seleclion of Keepsake
guaranleed perte el diamond engagemen l rings and
malched wedding nngs.
Keepsake. The perfect way to show your love when

·

.R·

Syracuse's Shawn Cunningham and
Barry McCoy'pitched a one-hitter but
14 walks allowed host Racine to take a
thrilling u victory in pee wee action
last night. The only hit off Syracuse's
pitchers was a single by Chris Jewell
in the fourth inning.
Racine's Chris Diddle went the
distance and picked up the win,
CINCINNATI (AP) - Nathan walking 7 and striking out 12. Cun·
Poole, a running back from the ningham and McCoy fanned eight.
University of Louisville, has signed a
Chris Baer Jed the Syracuse attack
contract with the Cincinnati Bengals. with a triple and single. Clyde Sayre,
The i.foo~, 210-pound strongman Barry McCoy and Eber Pickens each
was selecled in the loth round of the had a single for the losers.
Natiollill Football League draft.
"Our scouts liked this young man
all along and feel he would have been
drafted a.lol,!\lll'lier If he was a little
LEGION TEAM PRACTICES
taller," said Paul Brown, Bengals
The Meigs County American Legion
vice president. .
Baseball Team will have its first
Poole closed out his career at practice session of the season at 7 this
Louisville with a three-year total of evening at the Meigs High School
2,958' rushing yards In 536 attempts . facilities at Rock Springs. Players
He averaged 5.5 yards per carry and should take aU completed papers with
.
scored 23 touchdowns.
them to the practice session.
In 1978, Poole ranked among the top
five In National Collegiate Athletic
Association statistics in rushing and
points per game.

Seal Your Promise of Love
With Keepsake

'

Runoflcoring singles by Reggie
Smith and Steve _Yeager gave the
Dodgers their first two runs of the in·
ning.
Padres 11-3, Braves 3-2
Dave Winfield homered and Gene
Tenace cracked a tw~ .(riple to
help Gaylord Perry record his 271st
career victory as San Diego defeated .
Atlanta in the first game of their
double-hitter.
The Padres completed their sweep
as Ozzie Smith's run-scoring single
broke a tie in the eighth inning.

Ohio sports

•

because they're a fast-ball hitting
club," said Niemann. "And the guys
behind · me were playing great
defense . I just tried to get it over and
depend on the rest of tbe team to get
the outs. "
His teammates gave him a calming
advantage in the first inning when
Cedeno slashed a single to left center,
stole second and went to third after
Reds catcher Johnny Bench threw the
ball into centerfield.
Cruz blasted a triple to left-center
off loser Paul Moskau, 4-2, driving
Cedeno home with the go-ahead run.
The Reds came right back,
however, With Bench singling in the
top of the second l!mlng and going to
second base when Niemann balked. A
fielder's choiCll moved him to third,
and Danny Driel!Sen singled him
home.
·
The win moved the Astros to within
one game of the Reds, who lead the
Western Division of the National
League. They have a chance to tie
Cincinnati tonight as the Reds' Tom
Seaver goes against Joe Niekro for
· Houston.

Utzinger of Casper, Wyo.
Etchen, from Miami, Fla .,
captained the 1924 United States
trapshooting team and led the team to
an Olympic gold medal at Paris.

PICKENS HARDWARE

•••

•

"! threw a lot more breaking and
off~peed pitches than I usually do

Parker, Pirates snap slump
By KEN RAPPOPORT
AP Sports Writer
Dave Parker -is starting to shake
out of his "slump." You know it when
be tells you so.
The Pittsburgh Pirate star never
hesitates to 'blow his own horn, as
many know, and that's exactly what
he did Tuesday night after helping his
team blow out the Chicago Cubs S.O.
"It's about time for me to put
something together," said Parker af•
ter hitting two doubles and a home
run and driving in three runs.
In the other AL games Tuesday
night, the Montreal Expos routed the
Phlladephia Phillies ~; th~ Houston
Astros nipped the Cincinnati Reds 2·
1; the New York Mets turned back the
st. Louis Cardinals 6-2; the Los
Angeles Dodgers edged the San Francisco Giants 6-5 and the San Die@o
·Padres swept a double-header from
the Atlanta Braves, 11-3 and 3-2.
Pittsburgh took a 2-0 lead in the first jnning with the aid of a tbrowing
error by pitcher Ken Holtzman and a
run-scoring single by Willie Stargell.
Phil' Garner led off the Pirate second
with his third homer. PBl'ker clouted
his seventh homer with two out in the
seventh, and then doubled in two
.more runs In a four-run Pirate eighth.
Don Robinson and Grant Jackson
combined on a five-bitter for the
. Pirates, who turned in oilly their
second shutout this season.
Exjlos 9, PhiDies 0
Ellis Valentine's three-run homer
capped a five-run, fifth inning and

SPORTS

none.

Reynolds moved to third on the
The hit came in the bottom of the.
By MICHAEL O'CONNOR
play, with Cedeno going to second.
ninth
inning
off
the
bat
of
pinch-llitter
. Alloelaled Press Wrtler
Retiever Doug Bair intentionally
HOUSTON (AP) - Facing the Dennis Walling, who sliced a bases- walked Jose Cruz to load the bases
hard-hitting Cincinnati RedS in his se- loaded single to score shortstop Craig and set the stage for Walling's
cond major league start didn1 par· Reynolds and give !he Astros the vic- heroics.
tlcularly bother Houston pitcher Ran· tory.
Niemann, who was recalled from
The game was tied 1-1 when
dyNiemann.
Olarleston
May 17 when Vern Ruhle
"Last week was my first major · Reynolds singled to open the Astros' was placed on (he 21~y disabled list,
league start, and I was really nervous half of the ninth inning. With first had to pull out of his ftrst start with
then," Niemann said. "Meeling the baseman Cesllr Cedeno at the plate, the Astros when he developed a
Reds didn't make any difference-, Reynolds broke for second tin the blister while pitching against San
because I was as nervous as I could pitch, then stopped in his tracks.
"The break was just enough to Diego in a game Hoil:lton won 11-3.
be, anyway."
He still had the blister. Tuesday
·
move
shortstop Dave Concepcion
Niemann turned in a strong pitnight,
but managed to overcome
ching performance to record his first toward second, and Cedeno hit the some bad moments early in the game.
major league victory 2-1 over the ball right where he had been," said and go the distance, Scattering eight
Reds Tuesday. But it· was a lucky Astros Manager Bill Virdon. "It was hits while striking out six and walking
"break" that set up the game-winning the difference in the game."
hit.

prizes.

.'

�5-~ Daily SentlDel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday , May 30, 1979

Orr, Lane, Stolz latest entrants

4-The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Wednesday, May 30, 1979

Orioles win first game at KC in two years
ByHERSCHELNISSENSON
get to wondermg what the hell you plaining of soreness in his right,arm,
APSportsWriter
have to do. Last year 1t was 100 per- retired 13 Kansas City batters in a
The Baltimore Orioles Slln'ived a cent Kansas City and last night (Mon- row between the first inning and the
llkount and flattened the Kansas day 's S-4 16-inning loss ) we had plenty fifth . He allowed five hits, struck out
City Royals Tuesday night.
of chanees but still couldn't wiri ."
three and walked two before Tippy
One night earlier, the Orioles dropo
In other American League action, Marinez relieved in the eighth when
ped their lOth consecutive game in the Milwaukee Brewers trimmed the · Palmer'sforearmtightenedagain.
Brewers 7, Yallkees 3
Royals Stadium. But Tuesday • New York Yankees 7.J, the Californis
· evening, Ken Singleton, Rich Dauer, Angels downed the .Seattle Mariners
Cecil Cooper slammed a pair of
Gary Roenicke and Lee May 6-4, the Detroit Tigers edged the bases-empty homers and Robin
unloaded haymakers and the Orioles Toronto Blue Jays~ and the Chicago
pounded the Royals 8-1, their first White SoX' shaded the Cleveland Insuccess in Kansas City since June 4, dians 4-2. The Oakland-Minnesota and
1977.
Boston-Texas games wete ra10ed out.
".Hall, does this feel good," ex.Baltimore ace Jim Palme.r , making
·
. claimed Manager Earl Weaver. "You his ftrst start m 10 days smce com-

Yount added a two-run double as
Milwaukee handed winless CaUish
Hunter his fourth setback. Cooper's
lith hornet&lt;&gt; of the year and second of
the game broke a 2-2 tie in the sixth inning and three infield hits and Yount's
double, which right fielder Reggie
Jackson misplayed, helped the
Brewers to . three more runs in the
seventh. Milwa~ee·s. Mose Haas
scattered seven hits, mcluding orne

R ed s ' young pltC
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Manning Roush, Owner
Open 8 a.m.-5:30p.m. Mon. thru

POMEROY,O.
Sal.

•

Ia&amp; Martu
. Ange . '
en 4
.
. Bobby Gnch collected three hits
and drove m ~ runs .while Jlm
Barr. scattered eight hits befo~e
needing help from Dave LaRoche 10
the eighth as the. Angeb posted thell'
fourth consecutive triwnph. Barr '
replaced schedule&lt;! starter Nolan
Ry~, _who . r~m~ behind 10
Califorrua With his 10Jured son and
WlllteSo:r .t ;IJ!dlauz
then was de~yed by the grounding of
Bill Nahorodny doubled home two
a DC-1~- Gnch delive~ed . a tw&lt;f-run runs and Richard Wortham blanked
. double .m .the seventh ~g. In
Cleveland on four hits for eight. infifth,hiss10glesc~redBnanDowrung nings Nahorodny's double ·eame in
aU the wa~ !rom first. Ruppert Jones the fourth i.nnning off loser Eric
and Bob Stirison homered for Seattle. Wiilkins afte Alan Bannlste singled
.
Tigers 9, Blue Jays 8
r .
r
Lance Parrish snapped an 8-3 tie ~ Lamar Jolmson walked_. The
with a run-6coring single in the eighth ~te Sox score&lt;! two more runs in the
inning following a two-out intentional sixth on ~I sing!~ by ~t May,
walk , to Jason Thomp!lOn. Lou making his debut With Chicago, and
Whitaker opened the eighth with a Rusty Torres.

!he

HOUSTON (AP ) - Veterans Tom . "He doesn't dwell on a mistilke you
Seaver and BiU Bonham have had make for 20 minutes," Moskau said.
j)eir problems during the early part "He'll let you know in a few words ...
of thill baseball season , but the Cin- a quick reminder ... and that does the
cinnati Reds have used the younger job. And after you pitch, he won't try
members of their pitching staff to to correct five different things at onvault into first place in the National ce, even if you did five different
League West.
things wrong.
"We expected your young pitchers
"He'll pick one thing and say,
to develop, but honestly, not quite 1111 "Right now, let's work on this one
fast as they have. They 're the reason · .thing and improve on it the next time
we're in first place," said Reds out."
Manager Johil McNamara.
Moskau explained that Fischer
.Mike LaCoss has a lMl record, whlle . takes a simplistic approach to pitPaul Moskau is nolfar behind at 4-1.
chillg.
Both LaCoss, Moskau, Tom Hume
"Hemakesitsoeasytollllderstand.
and Doug Bair contend that they are It hits home right away," Moskau
the beneficiaries Of the positive at- said. "You don't have to aak a whole
tltudes of Reds pitcing coach Bill bunch of questions."
·
F'ischer.
One small tip from Fischer has
"Every lime he sees you after a helped Moskau improve on his suegame, he dwells on something good cess so far over last year when he w1111
you have done," Moskau said. 6-4.
"Everything is super, super, super...
"I used to. he a stalld up pitcher;"
positive, positive, positive. As a Moskau said. "Fish said I'm so big
young pitcher, that helps. Everybody and so strong that if I just bend' my
likes to be complinlented."
.
back a bit and keep a short stride,
That's not to say that Fischer won't things would be better."
criticize, Moskau said.

SNAPPER SALE

LIST '1 008.75

.

~gle and was sacrificed to second.
Afte Rusty Staub filed out Thornr
· purposely ~ but
~:Spoiled the strategy wiih his
game-winning hit. The Tigers a1a11 got
8 tw&lt;H'Wl single from Alan Trmnmell
and a two-run double from Jerry
Morales and Parrish had an RBI
dOuble. Rookie Dave Toblk earned his
first major league victory with one inning of relief.

runs by Jackson and Craig Nettles.

POMEROY - Johru!y Orr University of Michigan basketball ~ch and
. fonner NCAA coach of the year will
, tee it up in the Dave Diles Celebnty
,. Golf Classic on July 30.
•. The coach of the many-times Big
• Ten champion Wolverines is the latest
.. in a long line of celebrities to an' .nounce plans to take part in the
· , charity event at Riverside Golf Club
., in Mason, West Virginia.
· Also recently entered are Cin~
cinnatl Reds' telecaster Ray \ ~e
, and Bowling Green 's football coach
, DeMy Stolz.
.
'
The tournament is part of a day·
' long celebration that will include din:. ner and live entertainment at Royal
., Oak Park. Some to well-known
, celebrities_. including Notre Dame
Football Coach Dan Devine fonner
~·profotball stars Joe Sclunidt'and Ron
, Kramer and ABC Sports com-

NBA Playoffs At A Glance
By The Associated Pr"s
Championship Finals
Best of Seven Series
Gamel
Washington 99, Seallle 97

•

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$}04

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Game2

Seattle 92, Washinoton 83
Gall), 3
, Seallle 105, Washington 95
'

Tuesday's Game

, Seallle 114, Washington 112, OT
,,

Friday's Game

'· Seallle at Washington , (n)
Sunday's Game
Washington at · Seallle (Coliseum),
If necessary..

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VAllEY
992-2556
570 W. Main
Pomeroy,O.

:
Wednesday, June 6
• Seattle at Wa shington , ·(n), if
f.'ecessary.

•~"

Tuesday's Sports Transactions

By The Associated Press
FOOTBALL
National Football League
. CINCINNATI Poole, running back .
. DENVER BRONCOS - Signed Jim
.

Turner, placekicker .

ST. LOUIS CARDINALS - .Signed
Note Henderson , tackle ; Ricky McBride, linebacker ; and Ken Slone,
defensive back.
..
COLLEGE
• EASTERN WASHINGTON
Named Ron Raver athletic director .
MISSOURI
VALLEY
CON FERENCE - Named David Pri ce

THURSDAY
FRIDAY
SATURDAY

commissioners.

' STANFORD - Announced the
r.eslgnalion of Anne Gould, women 's
\ennis coach, at the end of the season.

MAY 31, JUNE 1-2-3
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we've had outstanding response from
the celebrities," said Mills, "and we
may have a couple of outstanding sur·
prise starters to announee in the days
immediately ahead.
·" This is a wonderful opportunity for
us to show what kind of turnout we
can have and at the same time make
substantial contributions q,o various
charities in the two-county area. I'm
urging everyone .who 's interested in
teeing it up to get in touch with us
right away:"
All the proceeds from the event will
be earmarked for charities to be
deslgilated by the conunittee.

Seattle .tops Bullets
ByTOMSEPPY
AP Sporta Writer
SEAITLE (AP)- Dennis Johnson
says the Seattle Super..SOnica only
have to remember IllS! year to keep
frotn squandering their lead in the
National Basket championship
playoffs against the Washington
Bullets.
"Everybody on thill team: is
rememberiag last year,' ' said
Johnson after the Sonics defeated the
Bullets 114-112 in overtime Tuesday
night to go, ahead ~I in the best-of·
seven finals. "We had the lead then
and relaxed. The next thing we knew,
we were being blown out,"
Laat year, the Sonlcs led in the final
series ~2. but got pasted in Game Six
in Washington, 117-ll2, and the Bullets
went on to win the championship,
The next game in this aeries will be
played Friday in Landover, Md., with ·
Game Six, if necessary, here on 'Sun·
day and Game Seven in Landover
next Wednesday.
Dennis Johnailn also said it doesn't
mean a thing that the Bullets were
down ~I against San Antonio in the
Eastern Conferella! finals and came
back to win the serles,oniy the third
time in NBA history such.a ~back
was made in the playoffs. It has never
been done in the chainpionshlp round.
"We're not the Spurs," said
Johnson, who tipped the last Bullets
shot into·the hands of teammate Jack
Sikma with three seconds remaining
in the overtime. "We don't get aU the
publicity that the Spurs do, but they
don't play defense like us. We
your average team. We 're not going
to lose the ~1lead. "
· Dennis Johnson and Gus Williams,
the two Sonics. guards, once again
paced Seattle. They got 32 and 36'
points, respectively. They got lots ri
help inside from Sikma, who had ~
points,!? rebounds, five blocked shots
and aided in getting Wa.shington's
three big men - Elvin Hayes, Bobby
.Dandridge and Wes Unseld - to foul
outoflhe game.
Washington CQl!ch Dick Motta .was

aren'

SPECIAL
10 lb. Bag

I..

mentator Frank Broyles of Arkan!ias
will take pari.
The field of 144 golfers will tee it up
in a shotgun start promptly at 1 p.m.
Don Mills, chairman of the publicity
committee, stressed that even though ·
there are still openings avaUable at
$100 per person , the field is expected
to fill quickly.
He urged all Meigs arid Mason
countillllS to file their entry blanks as
soon as possible before the tournament is opened up to golfers in
surrounding areas.
"This is the first time we 've attempted somet)ling llke this and

Johnson

on top,~l."

Baseball AI A Glance
By The Associated Press
AMERICAN LEAGUE
W. L. Pel.
Baltimore
30 17 .638
Boston
26 18 .591
Milwaukee
27 22 .551
New York
25 22 .532
Detroit
20 21 .488
Cleveland
20 26 .435
Toronto
12 36 o250
WEST
California
29 19 .604
Minnesota
26 18 .591
Texas
27 19 .587
Kansas City
27 21 .563
Chicago
24 23 .511
Seallle
17 32 .347
Oakland
16 J2 .333
Games

just
~1.

kept
We're

Calilo rnia at Seattle, In)
GB
21h
4
5
7
9'12
18'12
1
1
2
4112
121h

13

Chicago 4, Cleveland 2
Milwaukee 7, New York 3
Oakland at Minnesota, .pdd ., rain
Boston at Texas, ppd ., rain
Baltimore 8, Kansas City 1
Ca lifornia 6, Seattle 4

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Tuesday's Games

Mont rea l 9, Philadelphia 0
Pittsburgh 6, Chicago 0
New Yor k 6, Sl. Louis 2

Racine

Hou$fon 2, Cincinnati 1

San Diego 6-3, Atlanta 3-2

Los Angeles 6, San Francisco 5
Wednesday 's Gam es

Philadelph ia ( EspinOSil 5-4) at
Detroit (1'\'ll.cox 3-2) at Toronto Mont real (Lee 4-2l. In)
!Hultman 2-4),), (n)
Chicago (McGlothen 5-5) al Pitt sOak land !Minetto 1-01 at Minnesota burgh (Rooker 1-0, (n)
(Hartzell 1-3), (n)
New York (Swan 4-3), ai 51. Loui s
Cleveland (Waits 6-2) al Chi cago (Marl inez 2-2), (n)
(Baumgarten S-1), (n )
Cincinnati (Seaver 2·3L a t Houston
New York (John 9-1) at Milwaukee (Niekro 6-2), In)
!Caldwell 5-4) , (n)
Atlanta (McLa ughlin 1-2) at San
Boston (Torrez 4-3) at Texas (D . Diego (Loiich 0-2 or Shirl ey 1-4), in)
El lis 1-3), (n )
Son Francisco !Halicki 5-3) al Los
Baltimore !Flanagan 6-3) at Kansas Ange les (Sutcl iffe 5-3) , (n)
City I Leonard 4-4), (n)
Thursday' s Games
Call.fornla (Ryan 5-3) at Seattle
New York al St. Louis
I Honeycutt 2-5), (n)
Philadelphia at Montreal
Thursday's Games
·
San Francisco at Los Angeles
Oak land at Mlnne.Ota
Atlanta at San Di ego
Detroit at Toronto, (n)
Chicago a l Pittsburgh , (n)
New York al Milwaukee, (n)
Cincinnati at Houston, (nl

Leaders
TODAY'S
MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
By The Associated Press
NATIONAL LEAGUE
BA TTl NG (100 al bats) - Rose,
Phi , .365; Brock, Sl L, .. 360 ; Winfield,
SO, .349 ; Murphy, All , .348; Mazzlill,
NY, .339.
RUNS - Lopes, LA. 41; Concepcion, Cln , 35 ; North, SF , 34; Puhl,
Hln, 33; Schmidt, Phi, 32; Parker,
Pgh, 32.
RBI - Mu•phy, All , 36 ;· Kingman,
Chi , 35; Schmid!, Phi, 34; Winfield,
SO, 34 ; Foster, Cln, 33 ; Garvey, LA,

Ruthven, Phi, 6-3, .667, 3.20:
STRIKEOUTS - Richard, Htn , 81;
Carlton, Phi, 55; Perry , SO, 55; P
Nlekro, All. 54; Hooton, LA, 52.

Mother's Day guests of Rev. and
Mrs . Don Wail\er were Mr. and Mrs.
· Don Jr. Walker and children of Dixie,
W. va:; Mr·. and Mrs. Deibert Walker
of Summersville, W. Va.; Rev. and
Mrs . Mark McClung of Middleport, .
Mr . . and Mrs. Jeff Knighting and
Ricky Walker, local. ,
Mrs. Addie Petrel accompanied
Mrs . Pearl Willis of Letart Fails and
visited Mrs . Willis' sisters in
Columbus and Buckeye Lake Sunday.
Mrs. Garnet Ervine, Mr. and Mrs.
Ralp h Shain and Mrs. Mildred
Spencer spent Mother's Day with Mr.
and Mrs . Thomas Reed . at U,gan,
Ohio.
:
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Sayre spent I
Mother 's D,ay with Mr. and Mrs:
Dave Sayre at Antiquity.
.,
· Mr . lfld Mrs. William Stewart of
Athens visited friends in Racine
Sunday.
.
Miss Wilma Rose of Columbus iB
spenging a week with Mr . and Mrs:
Ward Sayre and also Mildred Wolfe at
Pine Crest N~rsing Horne , Gallipoli s.

TODAYS
MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS

FATHER'S
DAY•••
JUNE 17

Bv The Associated Press

AMERICAN LEAGUE
BATTING ( 100 at bats) - Smalley,
Min , .390; Kemp, Det , .365; Carew,
Cal, .356; A Banni st er, Ch i, .348 ;

Remx . Bsn, .3•6.
RUNS - G Brett, KC , 39; LeFlore,
Del, 36; Otis, KC, 36 ; Lynn, Bsri, 35;' _ &lt;;:
Washington , Chi, 35 ; Smalley, Min. 35.
RBI - Baylor, Ca l, 47: Lynn . Bsn,
41; Cooper, Mll , 39 ; Porter, KC, 39 :
Nellles, NY , 36; Horton, Sea, 36. .
HITS - Smalley, Min, 67 ; Remy,
Bsn, 651 G , Br~tt , KC, 64 ; Carew, Ca l.
Buckner, Chi, 4; Dawson, Mtl, 4; J 62;
Cooper , Mil , 61 ; Bay lor, Ca l, 61.
Cruz, Htn, 4; Lopes, LA, .t ; Metzger,
DOUBLES - Lemon , Chi, 15 ;
SF, 4.
Bonds. Cle, 13 ; C Wash inglon , Chi, 1.3;
HOME RUNS - Schmidt, Phi, 15 ; G
Brett, KC , 13; McRae , KC, 13; Ott s,
Kingman, Chi, 14 ; Murphy , All, 13: .KC,
13 ; B Bell , Tex , 13.
Dawson , Mil , 11; Matthews, All, 11.
TRIPLES
- G Brett, KC, 6 : Griifin,
STOLEN AWARDS - Moreno, Pgh , Tor1 5; A Bannister
18; T Scoli, Sl L, 15 : Cabell , Hln , 1• ; KC, 4; 10 Tied With , 3.Chi,· .4; Wil son,
Lopes, LA, 14 ; Taveras, NY, 13.
HOME RUNS - Lynn, Bsn, 14;
PITCHING (5 Decisions) - LaCoos, Singleton,
Bal. 12 ; Cooper, Mil , 11 ;
Cin, S-0, 1.000, 2.51 ; Lamp, Chi, 4-1, Thomas, Mil
, 11 ; L May, Bal , 10 ;
.800, 4.26; Reed , Phi, 4·1, .800, 3.94; Smalley,
Min, 10; Horton , Sea, _10.
Welch , LA, 4·1. .1100, 2.91; J Nlekro,
BASES - LeFlore, Del,
Hln . 6-2, .750, 2.40. Rogers. Mil, S-2, 21;STOLEN
Wilson,
KC. 19 ; Otis, KC, 17; J
.714, 2.56; Kn~pp_er, SF. 5-2, .124, 3.17;

33.
HITS - Winfield, SO, 66; Russell,
LA, 66; Rose, Phi, 65 ; Garvey , LA, 62 ;
. Concepcion, Cin , 59.
DOUBLES - Rose , Phi, 18 ;
Parrish , Mil, IS ; 9 Tied With 13.
TRIPLES - T Scali, Sl L, 1;
Moreno, Pgh, 5; Winfield , SO, 5;

PITCHING (5 Decis ions) - Kern,
Tex, 6cO, 1.000, 1.19 ; John , NY, 9-1,
.900, 1.95 ; Baumgrln, Chi, 5-1, .833,
2.35; D Marl inez, Bal , 7-2, .77B, 2.95;
Koosman, Min , 7.2, .778, 3.52 ; Palmer ,

Today iD lliltory
By Tile Allaoclated Press
Today is Wednesday , May 30, the
!50th day of 1979. '111ere are 215 day~
left in the year .
Today's highitgllt in hiatocy:
On this date in 1431, Joan of Arc was
. burned at the stake in Rouen, France.
On this date :
In 1498, Christopher Columbus
sailed from Spain on his third voyage
to the New WOrld.
In 1539, the Spanish e~plorer,
Hernando de Solo, landed in Florida.
In 1883, reporta that the new
Brooklyn Bridge in New York was
about to collapse created panic: Six
people on the bridge were trampled to
death.
In ·1961, the dictator of the
Dominican Republic, Rafael Trujillo,
was assassinated.
In 1963, an estimated tenthousand
people were killed in a windstorm and
floods that struck East Pakiltan.
In 1973, West Germany and
Czechoslovakia agreed to establish·
normal relations, ending 35 years of
hostility.
Ten years ago ; Argentina was
· crippled by a general strike as .
workers walked off their jobt to
ctlon against students
test poli
Jli'O
ce a
··
Five years ago : Britain followed up ·
oo a general Btrlke in Northern
Ireland by ·announcing it would
..

Bal. 6-2, .750, 2.80; Jenkins, Tex, 6-2,
.750, 3.44; Marshall , Min , 6-4, .667,
2.05.
STRIK EOUTS - Ryan, Cal. 66 ;

Guidry, NY , 61 ; J ~n ki ns, TeJII., il L
Kravec, Chi, 49 ; Koosman , Min , 49 .

Institute a form of direct rule.
Ooe year .ago: Cuba went before tbe
United Nations to deny as absolutely
false the U.S. charge that Cubans had
a role in the recent rebel raid into the
African countrY of Zaire.
Today's birthdays: Band leader
BeMy Goodman is 70 years old. Actor
and voice specialist Mel Blanc is 49.
Thought for today : What we see
depends mainly on what ·we look for John Lubbock, Engish astronomer
and mathematician , 1803-1865.

SALES MERCHANT

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Th1s remarkable b1t pf
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strap ( #.8 2102)

•

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Pomeroy , o.
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Open: Mon . tl'lru Wed. 9· 5,
nur . 9·12, Fri. 9·5, Sat. 9-2
sotlstoctlon Guoranteed
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Wednesday's Games

.

~---~-----------------~------,
Gateway ·~ · ·
.1

II

NATIONAL LEAGUE ·
EAST
W. L. Pel. GB
26 15 .634
Mootreal
Ph iladelph ia
27 18 .600 1
22 19 .537 4
St. Lou is
Pittsburgh
21 21 .500 5' '2
19 23 .452 )1,2
Chicago
16 26 .381 101 .,
New York
WEST
26 20 .565
Cincinnati
27 23 .540 1
Houston

BOSTON' (AP) - Ceitics owner
Harry Mangurian has stepped into
negotiations tor Larry Bird and plans
to sign the Indiana State star to aNational Basketball Association con,
tract on Wc•dnesday , the Boston
Herald American reported . .
"Harry is up here to sign Bird.
We 'II have him under contract tomorrow," a source close to Mangurian
told the newspaper Tuesday night.
Tenns of the contract were not
repoJ'\ed.
Mangurilln, Cellics president Red
Auerbach and Bob Wolf, attorney for
the Celtics' No. dr¢t choice in 1978,
were scheduled to meet at 10:30
Wednesday morning.

Cruz, Sea. 17; Will s, Tex, 16.

Enjoy the G.r•t ·-Outdoo1'8 in colOrful, relaxing
Furniture-featured at savings one week only

1

to sign Bird

Only games schedul ed

ESPECIALLY FOR SUMMER
ENJOYMENT
.
,

•

Boston plans

•••
••• •••
•••

SCOREBOARD

Det roit 9, Toronto 8

fourth one."
repeating: "We're on top,

BASEBAI l

Tue~day's

angered about those foul calls, claiming San Antonio Coach Doug Moe set
the stage for them when he criticized
· the referees after the final game of
the Eastern Conference playoffs.
"In that last game, the referees
were accused of favoring the champion Bullets, " said Motta. "I honestly
feel we are the victims of Doug Moe's
outburst. Seattle played the last 14
minutes and did not have a foul called
against them. I am very upset.
"I don't believe you can play an
NBA game and not have a foul called
on a team in the last 14 minutes," said
Motta.
.
ActU'ally, the Sanies had two fouls
called against them in the last 16:28,
but none in the last 8:47.
Sanies Coach LeMy Wilke~ said
his team knew it had to win. "It was a
must gilme for both teams and we
knew they were going to go aU out.
There was a lot of tension, 80 our
team was tight in the beginning."
The Bulle(.s finally had their guards
break out of heir shooting slump with
Kevin Grevey and Charlie Johnson
hitting for 18 points apiece. Hayes
also scored 18, while Dandridge and
Unseld had 16 each ,
. "We can still win this.thing," contended Grvey. "We have come back
from being down 3-1 before. But 1! will
be tougher this tUne. Seattle was·not
San Antonio; they're a much better
team, especially defensively."
Sonlcs forward John Johnson,
referring to his team 's 261lf-39 foul
shooting, said: "U we had hit our free
throws, wewouldn'tbave had togo into overtime. We maintained five and
six-point leads in the second half, but
then we eaaed up and gave them the
opportunity to come back."
John Johnson also said he did not
think the team would let up in Friday 's game: "We've been there
hefor~ and know what It takes. We're
not going to · relax until we get the
Dennis

•••••
••

I

No. 205

1

:

Tbursd•y,

31 thru JUne 2

4

o oo o 0

00

o o 0 0 o 0 0 I I 0 0 0 0

0 0

..................................~............................................................................................................. ;

~

�..

7-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday , May 30,1979

~- Social Calendar WEDNESDAY
.
POMEROY Chapter 186, Order of
the Eastern Star, annual inspection,
May 30 at the Pomeroy Masonic Temple. All Ea$tem Star members invited.
WilDWOOD Garden Club, Wednesday, 8 p. m. at the home ci Mrs. Mae
Holter with Mrs. Evelyn Holter as cohostess. Membel'!l are to take and
twne an iris for roU call.
OAPSE CHAPTER 17, Meigs Local,
Wednesday at 7:30 p.m.at Meigs
Junior High. Bob LeCialn, field
repreSentative, will be present.
CHURCH SOPI'BALL lEAGUE
meeting Wednesday at f&gt;CIIIleroy
United Methodiat Church at 7:30 p.m.
League being organized through the
efforts of the Meigs County
MiniBterlal Association. All churches
in the COWJty are urged to join, even if
not a part of the Ministerial
Aasoclatian.

Store Hours:
Mon.·Sal 8 ani:lO·pm

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

.
' '

298 SEOOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.

.

'

MAX WAY

'

Max Way, assistant superintendent, Scioto Valley LoCal Schools
has been named Adult Educator of
tile Year by the Ohio Association for
1\dult Educators. Way is director of
the largt!llt ·Adult Basic Education
program in rural Ohio,
At present, over 1,000 persons in
Athens, Gallia, Hocking, Jackson
I.llwrence, MeigS, Pike, and R~
counties are enrolled in classes at 20

PRICES

fFFECTI~E

THRU JUNE 2, 1979

GEORGE LUSTER, Jr., and his wife, Dale Dee of Middleport will
be leaving for the Nazatene Bible College, Colorad~ Springs, Cotoi-ado,
JWie 18, to enter the ministry. Luster is the son of Mr. and Mrs. George
Lultar, Sr.,SIDh st.,Mlddleport, and Mrs. Luster is the daughter of Mrs.
Gladys Dillon lllid the late Pearl Dillon, Reedsville.

slles.

:Way was given an Adult Educator
ot the Year plaque at the MidAme~can Conference on Promising
l'tactices in Adult Education, which
was held in Columbus on May 16-12
• 19'19. Over 200 educators from te~
stjltes, the DiSrict of Columbus and
~da attended. This confe;ence
was cosponsored by the Ohio
AI&amp;Ociation of Adult Educators and
ti1J! National Association for Public
Continuin@,.and Adult Educators. '
U. S. Representative Ronald M
MotU, (D-Ohio ), was awarded ~
plaque of recognition at this same
CO!lference. Representative Motti a
key member of the cmuntttee whlch
l'eYiaed the recently enacted Adult
Education Act, was recognized for
asslst8nce in passage of Public Law
~I and In support of adult
edllCatioo in Ohio.
·
Areas covered during the t!JreMay
cooference were adult basic
v~ational, general, and non:
trliilltional education. Specific topics
mc:tuded competency - based
~culum, alternate high school
diplcma .Programs,. career guidance,
c~ration mth community agencl~, and cost effectiveness research.
~lations were made by particl!Jants from illinois, Indiana,
Mldljgan, Minnesota, Ohict, Pennsylvania, Virginia, West Virginia
and Wlsconsin. ·
· '

CENTER CUT

WIENERS ........ ~!~: .. 89
SUPERIORS

Miss Becky Eichinger will be maid

of honor for ber sister, and the

bridesmaids will be Janet and Judy
Mora, Pomeroy, Route 3, with Debbie
Frost, Long Bottom, as flower girl. ,
Mike Frost, Long Bottom, will be the
ring bearer. Best man will be Dave
McCunn Darwin and the ushel'll will
be Scott'run, Ro~te 3, Pomeroy, and
Tim Rawlings, Mason, W. Va. Max
. Eichinger, Jr., will be acolyte.
An open reception will be held at the
church immediately following the

~ding.

DAR TO MEET
Retum Jonathan Meigs Cllapter,
Daughters of the American
Revolution, will nieet Friday, June 8,
at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Thereon
JolwJon at6 p.m.
A flag day picnic will be held with
Mrs. Robert Ashley, Mrs. Lawrence
Smith and Mrs. Paul Elch as

LB•

BREASTS········~··········-·

"Uti

L~:&amp;
JYear final stages

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Adrnitted-Evilee Kelley, Coolville;
Aaron Hysell, Pomeroy; Howard
Cowdery, Reedsville ; Barbara
Lam!lert, Langsville; John Parsons,
Middleport ;
Ida
Dudding,
Dodson, ·
Middleport ;
Alan
Middleport.
Discharged--William BUckley,
Venedia Knight, Marie Custer,
Martha Roy, Ivan Carl. ·

Chicken

·..............: ... age

.Thi

MEMORIAL SPEAKERS- Mrs. Grace Pratt, right; president of the
Ladies Auxlltary of Drew Webster Post 39, American Legion, and Mrs.
Grace Elch, regent ol Return Jonathan Meigs, Daughlel'!l of the
American Revoution, ~ 1th spoke on the significance of Memorial Day at
tile &amp;Mual Drew Webster Post services in Pomeroy Monday. Mrs. Pratt
. lntroduced auxlltary auociates on the speakers' platform. Elected offlclallJ, Gold Star Mothers, World War I Veterans, Boys and Girls State
candidates were recognl:ed. Opening prayer was by . ..e .illing, post
chaplain, and benediction was by Gema Casci, auxiliary chaplain.

.'

CALIFORNIA

Highlights given

Strawberries ..~ .. ~; •. 79'
VALLEY BELL

CH"OC.

\

GAL

HighilgJa ol the Beta sigma Phi
state convention held recently in
Cleveland were given at the ThursdaY
night meeting of Preceptor Beta Beta
O!apter held in tile Rlverbcet Room
ol the Athena County Savings and
Loan Co .• Meigs Office.
Attending the convention were Mrs.
Norma CUster, Mrs. June Freed, Mrs.
Mildred Karr, Mrs. Roberta O'Brien,
Mrs. Betty Ohlinger, Mrs June Van
Vranken, and Mrs. Velma Rue.
Memben enjoyed a potluck dinner
preceding the business meeting
preelded over by Mrs. Mary Morris,
preeldent.

$·t 59

MILK·········~·

·

Luckeydoo speaks .

MAZOLA

= 4/$1 MARGARINE .•... ;~. '69
BREAD ~u·············· . ,. .
.,_
'TUN A······· ········· .....).65 I'ce. c·ream
.
9
,
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· 9
RAVORITE .

.

FLAVORITE

6.5

COUPON

4

.

CHICKEN O
.F THE SEA
I

OMI8SION NOI'ED
.
Unintentionally omitted Ul the account of the wedding of Pamela J~­
nene · Riffle and Gregory Ed~
B~, were the Dower girl, Julie
Dianne Riffle, Baahan, and Billy
Wells, Loog ~· the l;ingbearer.
The double !1Jig .cet;=ony was performed by the brides uncle, the Rev.
Curtis Randolph at the Chester
Cllurch of the Nazarene at 1:30 p.m.
on March 24.

I\OStesses.

CHICKEN

~

Dear Editor:
We would Uke to take this means to
Inform all the people of Meigs County
~t the Meigs History Book is very
near the final stage for submission of
mjlterial to the publisher.
.We want to make sure that everyone
in:Meigs County who wishes to par·
ti&lt;:IP&amp;te has that opportunity - family tribute, memorial or businesswise.
As you know, we had two exterurions
for the free family stories and
picures. That closed April 5th.
Now we have a final opportunity for
pa!d pages. Anyone who still wishes
material published may pay $45.00 for
OQiHourth page, $80 for a half or $100
fo~ a full page. Time is of t)W) essenc.e.'
.We are not sure how Ioog we can hold
this offer open. We hope no one wiU
say when the book is published, "I
wish I had had the opportunity to be
included. "
Everyone in the county and many
outside the county were offered this
opportunity. We IIUiiled over 11,000
~ettel'!l besides publishing many news
articles and announcements on the
radio.
·
We thought you might be interested
in the time Schedule involved in printing The Meigs History Book. By shipping all material to the printer by the
middle of June (after typing, counting·
words and proof reading) he needs six
to eight weeks to get the "slick proof"
back to us around the middle of
August.
If we can proof read and get it back
to him around the .first of September,
he needs four to eight weeks to get the
final or "brownline" proof back to us
around late October. One week 's proofing time would get the material
back to the printer who needs four
weeks to print the book. Allowing two
weeks for shipment would put the
Meigs History Book in the Museum
for pick up before Christmas. .
This is the first Meigs County book
ever to lie published when everyone
was in vited to be an author. With
nearly 1100 stories and more than 700
pictures this book should be a
treasure for years to come.
Incidentally, tile only book orders
accepted are those with cash or check
. accompanying for $211 . or $28. No
orders are accepted to be paid for
after publication. Book orders will
, close shortly.
We want to express our thanks to
everyone - pro'of readers, typists,
writers, researchers, news media,
business support am) everyone who
encouraged us in this effort.
Yours for Meigs County
Charles E. Blakeslee
Margaret Parker
Co-Chairman

4_

'nlunc!BY - Sallsbury, 2:1:0.%:~
p.m.; Letart, 3:15-3:45; Racine,
Home National Bank, ~ ; Racine,
Wagner's Hardware, ~; Syracuse,
Swimming Pool, 8:15-3:15.

Whole FrY~····~ ..sgc

. . . . . . - ........ lAen ............ '-"'·
~ . . . . . . . -''

The . wedding • ci Denise Hill,
daughter of Mu Eichinger, Route 3,
Pcmeroy •. and Richard Mota. son of
Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow Richard
Mora, also ol Route 3, Pomeroy, will
be an event ci June 2 at 2:30p.m. at
the Olester United Melodist Church.
Final plans for the wedding to be
perfonned by the Rev. Carl Hicks and
the Rev. Richard Thomas have been
completed. Mrs. Dorothy Karr will be
the organist, and Miss Paula
Eichinger, the soloist. ·

.........::~.. 8gc

BACON

GRADE A

llpef'l...._. ~_,

~ ~.... t~Mrnw, -

Hill and Mora plan
to wed on june 2

39

SUPERIORS FRANKIES

.... _ . '-1 4wlllltjm .. l'allldl. II')' lllt-tMWt
11\. .......

.

RIB' CHOPS·······!!··'-!

r~------------------~
: uan. ...... _..._._Dey ........ llelnl

...................

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'

I

r:OLJ PON

,

lh GAL

:•••••

I

\_

COUNTRY TIME
LEMONADE ·

.CHEER DETERGENT
171 oz. '
39

$4

Limit 1 per Customer
Good dll!Y at Powell's
June 1979 .

oz.

31

l~()ffoor

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FLAVORITE

SUGAR

oi $149

LimiT • per customer
, Good Only at Powell's
Expires Ju·ne 2, 1979

~OuPON_

5 LB: BAG
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99~

Limit 1 per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Expires June 2, 1979

'

I

CntJPO~..

SNYDERS

POTATO·CHI

R:G~'..• 2/$1:.
Limit 1 per Custom'llr
Good Only at Powell's
June

I
.;

I

Sandra Luckeydoo, director of the
GIJI&amp;erlned HOUle, a nursery ~ehool

in Middleport, wu apeaker at the recent meetln&amp; of the Ohio Eta Phi
a..pter held at the ·home of ~.

Tonya DavlB.
·Mrs. LuCkeydoo wu introduced by
Mrs. Sheila Reeves, cultural chairman,.and e:.plalned the various programs and activities in which the

three to five year olds ol the ~ehool
participate.
Mrs. DavlB, president, conducted
tile meeilng during which time
aeveral aervlce projects; socials, and
waya and means activities were
di~Cuaed. A mother-daughter banquet, apec1a1 recognlticill ol the Valentllle Queen, and a Halloween party for
the children were among the things ·
dllcuued.
Sherrie Abbott presented perfect
.attendance pins to Cllerl Crow, MrS.
Davis, and Cathy Cumnilngs.
Selected u the best cultural report
and ~ted ·a $5 gift certificate was
Clrol Crow for ber program. on cardia pulmonary resusitl!tion.
New pledgea welcomed. Hostesses
ftr the picnic which preceded the
meeting were memben of the tOling
attendance team. ·

Helen Help

US • • •By Ht•len Bolld
'Mature' H111baDd Loees Head
Ov.er Tbll Truck.Stop F1oozle

husband and I have a wonderful mar- ect, "Make Today Count" Cllll give
riage except for this worry. -.B.G.
him moral support and fellowship.
DEAR~. :
The )ocal American Cancer SOciety
! •.
office will direct him to this organizaYour husband should shuck off guilt tion. Euthanaela is not the only way;
and tell his adolescent :It-year-old son .;.. CANCER RESEARCHER.
to stop blaming others for his own
weaknesses.
Professional therapy q:light show
VOLUNTEERS NEEDED
.
him that the past is only damaging
The Gallla·Meigs Conununity Ac-:
when one uses it as a brooding eJ:cuse
tion Agency's home delivered ,meals ·
for failure. -H.
·
program Ill urgently in need of volun-:
DEAR HELEN:
ieers to deUver hot meals tAi
Reading the troubles one of your homebound senior citizens Monda~
handicapped readers has had with through Friday.
•
govemment agencies, reminds me of
Volunteei'S are reimbursed 17 centS •
a quote: "Elephant: a mouse built to per mile. One need not be a senior :
govemment specifications." -HUGH citizen to volunteer for this service. ·
DEAR HELEN: .
Any church, social group, or perilon
It was so tragic reading the letter willing to volunteer their time may
from the 76-year-old man with .contact Mattie Lawrence or Betty
cancer. ·Please teU him Pain need not Carpenter at the Senior Citizens Cenbe intolerable. Doctors can prescribe ter in PCIIIleroy or Hazel McKelvey at
pain-killing drugs. Also, a group call· tl\e CAA Office at 992-7000.

DEAR HElEN: .
I thought I had a wonderful husband, but I just found out he's been
seeing a truck-61opfloozie for the past
nlnemontha. We're both64.
She lays at a small restaurant day
and night and has a C.B. radio so she
can call all truck drivers, of which
Clarence is one.
·
She fools around with any man who
has the money. I've heard her call
Clarence. Theil he leaves home early
so he can be with her.
Since he 's taken up with this hussy
he ~ver has · a good word for me,
doesn't bring me gifts or a smile. I
keep on doing for him, but he ignores
me - never even touches me in bed.
He was always so passionate before.
Now he just calls me the "old dame."
Don't think I'm imagining things ·~ female hu even COOle up to him
at the grocery store, made suggestive
remarks, and laughed in my face.
I wash, clean, cook and would be
sexy for him if be 'd let me. What
more can I do? -HEARTBROKEN
DAME
DEARH.B.: ..
Tell your husband to truck on down
another road or you will no longer ·
wash, clean, cook and be sexy for a '
man who doean 't appreciate the finer '
"dame" of life • his wife. -H.
DEAR HElEN :
I have a :It-year-old stepson who
tormen'ls his father because the
father ran · arou,nd with an~
woman while he was married to his
first wife.
The truth of the story is the wife
(this young man's mother) did not
love my husband.. They stayed
together only because of the boy, and
that was a mistake. After the divorce
years ago, !he married again
. before he did.
Now the son blamea his despondency on his father; says his unhappiness
is caused by a resenUul childhood.
How can we make him understand
that what happened cannot be cliarJI!ed and he should get on with life? My

BUY ONE CHICKEN DINNER
AND WALK OFF WITH
ANOTHER FOR HALF PRICE.
This week through May 28th with M1J 3 piece chicken

dinner for 12.30, you get a second one lor half price.
And that includs mashed p(ltatoes, .the Colonel's
special gravy, cole slaw and a dinner roll . ,
That means if you bring a family of tour to
Bob Evans now through Memorial Day, one of
you eats tor free. And that's something worth
remembering.

1•

,~

New Af"ritial
PRICE

Mr. and Mrs. Steve Price of
Pomeroy, 0., announce the birth of a
daughter, Stacey Michelle, born on
May 22 at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
The infant weighed eight pounds.
Mr. and Mrs. Price have a daughter,
Stephanie, age three.
__
Grandparents ·are Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Werry, Pomeroy and Mr.
and Mrs. Lowell Price, Middleport.
Great-grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Leslie Price, Pomeroy, Hazel
Mitchell, Bardentown, N.J., and
Ralph Gibbs, Sr.. New Haven .

OFFER GOOD THROUGH MEMORIAL DAY.

Rober Medlral Center

Dilcllarlea, May D

Annlnda Andenon, Anita Ball,

Boyd Bobo, Nita Brown, Benllie

Casto, Bertha Egpn, Patricia
Fraley, Tanuni Henry, Heather
Holcamb, Cllarity Howell, John Imes,
Ully Kelvington, Juoo Klein, Connie
Lamliert, Devin Newell, Laaco Niday,
Mrs. David . Ratliff and son,
Jacqueline
Walter, Alva Yost.
Memorial services held
.
Jllrtlw, May •
}?fr.
and
Mrs. David Smith, .
. . :s
oall8hter,
Loog
Botlml. Mr. and Mrs.
I,egionnalres of Drelio-Webater POll
39, held memorial
at the David Kema,11auglmr, Bic!well.
Cherry Ridge Cemetery Monday
aftemoon at the gravesite of deceued
junior American Legion Auxlliary
•
member, Sherrie ManhaiL
COFFEE BilEK "
The lllllllal coffee bri!U of the
The legionnaires were acWestern
Boot C. B. aub·;hU been set
companied to the cemetery by Mrs.
Graee Pratt, Auxiliary president, and for Sunday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. at
Mrs. Genuna Casci, chaplain. and the Hoek Springa Fairgrounds.
A variety of mule will be preMnwere joined there by Pam Powers,
junipr chaplain, Mrs. Charlea Mar- ted, there will, be plenty of food on
shall and son, Charles. Miss Powers hand and a number of door prizes
had prayer and.Mrs. Case! placed the awarded at the annual event. The
American Legion Auxiliary emblem public is invited.
In !ftP8l'lltion for the event, the
on the grave. Joe Zwllllng, post
c."'aplain, had prayer also. Mlas club will hold a spectai meeting at 7
Powers on behalf of the juniors plac- p.m. Saturday at the fairgrounds. All
ed a basket of pink baby rosebuds on members are asked to be present for
the planning seaaion.
Sherrie's grave.

services

2'-';M"xl'

STU':DS
ON·LY

HIGH MILEAGE
RETREADS
1h PRICE OF NEW ·
TIRES WITH ANEW .
TIRE GUARANTEE
Whltewells CNo extre cost)
REG. TREAD

RECAP
TIRE

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•

Phis.OC

Fell. Tall, ..
bcaptJelllt

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FRIEE MOUNTING

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992-2101 .

HOGG &amp; ZU·SPAN

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,,

8- The Oailv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, May 30, 1979

.

Legion Auxiliary honors deceased
members, elects officers recently
.

..' 1-

New officers were elected· and the and field service. The door prize
charter was draped for three deceas-- brought by Martha Hunnell was won
ed members at the Wednesday night by Son Parsons.
Reported ill were M. L. Kelly, C. W.
meeting of the American Legion Aux·
Edwards,
Edith Spencer. Sympathy
iliary, Feene;'·Bennett Post 128, at
cards were sent ·to Kemeth Darst,
the hall.
Elected were Mrs. Irene Christy, Paul Searles, and Erma and Bill Hen· '
president ; Mrs. Erma Hendricks,
first vice president and membershiP
chainnan ; Mrs. · Etta WUJ, second
vice president and Americanism
chairman ; Becky Tyree, secretary;
Gem-Parsons, treasurer; and Velsia
SENI&lt;iRCITIZENSSCENES
Roush,
chaplain.
.
BOAT TRIP
'The charter Wall dnj~ for Phyllis
POMEROY -:- Those individuals
Rowan, a gold star mother, Irene whoaregoingon theboattriponJune
Darst, and Rosie Searles. The sum- · · 23 may pick up their tickets from
·mer convention to be held at Wellston S118811 Oliver in the RSVP office. The
on June 7 was announced and eight tickets are good fOI' the noon ride
members from the unit will attend. It only.
was voted to pay the dues for Ger·
_This boat trip b8ll been made
trude
Kloos,
now
confined
to
the
)l08Sible
for · llellior ciUzens by the
.Pinecrest Nursing Home.
local Ubraries and by the Ohio
A plea was issued for blood for Program in the Hwnanlties, a state
Tammy Clark, left, and Kim Roush; and back, left tO
TOP OOOKIE SALESMEN-These scouts pictured
Will, husband of a member of based . agency of the National EnHarold
right, Sally ~dford, Ruth Fry, and Mrs. Philson.
here with Mrs . Pat Philson, back right, each sold ~or
the
unit,
and anyone willing to give dowment for the Hwnanltles, which
Qualifying
for
a
certlficat'e
but
not
present
fCll'
the
picmOI'e boxes of Girl Scout cookies. They were presented
blood
for
him is asked to report on makes grants to non-profit
ture Wall Pam Reibel.
:; ~icates of appreciation by Mrs. Philson. Front
June
11
to
the Pomeroy Elementary organizations in Ohio for public
• w•""
•
School.
programs in the hwnanlties.
,(
It
Wl\8
noted
that
Lori
Kloes
and
GOVERNOR'S CONFERENCE
•'·
.. t
.
Janet Horky will be attending
The lith GoVernor's Conference on
Buckeye Girls' State at ' Capital Aging will be held. June. ~21. This
University in June. Lori and Janet, year"Action Time iii '79," represents
along
with Janel) 1\:elly, an alternate, the Increasingly active role Ohio's
; The five Meigs County girl scouts eookie Sale were presented cer· cookie chairman, , Jayne Good, Jill and her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Tom senior citizens are taking in the issues
· who sold more than ~ boxes of tif1cates by Mrs. Pat Pbilson, county Nease, Sherr! Sisson, Tanuny Theiss,
which affect their Uves. The Ohio
and Paula Winebrenner; Junior Kelly attended the Girl State tea.
~·cookies in the annual Girl Scout chainnan, Friday.
.
A
field
service
orientation
session
Commission on Aging is again coor·
~
Receiving the certificates were Troop 1276, Crystal · Lane; Junior
to
be
held
at
the
Middleport
hall
on
dinating
the event.
::
Tamara Clark of Middleport Troop Troop 1292, Pat Hysell, cookie chairA highlight of this year's con·
•
1039; Ruth Fry, Sally Radford and man, Regina · .E blin, Jackie June 10 was announced. Registration
~
VISIT OUT.OF·T()WN
Kim R0ush of SaJisb
Troop 1100 Fredericks, Chris Hysell, Gretta Ken- wUJ be at noon with the meeting to ference will be ·an appearance by
• Cheryl Lehew and Mrs. Harry
ury
; nedy, Suaie Lambert, and Sherry begin at I p.m. ·
Baroness · Maria von Trapp, whose
:tlavis visited several days IBBt week and Pam Reibel of Chester 11M.
Memorial
Day
activities
were
story
b8ll inspired people eVerywhere
",with Mrs. Alma Johnson, Spnn
' gfl'eld.
Presented pins for having sold 79 WilBon; Cadette Troop 1116, Rhea discussed and members were remind· throUgh "The Sound of Music."
boxes or more but Jess·than ~ were Norris, cookie chafrman, Christina
~y went especially for the graduaBetty Jo Hunt, Pam Rlnilhart, Jodie Hanning; Cadette Troop 11M, Ger· ed of the schedule. The juniors Baroness von Trapp, -who makes ber
~ of Emma J o Leifheit from Ken- Ha · 8 nd. M "··· Barke J
trnde Casto, cookie. chairman, Pam decorated the tables for dinnef at the home in Stowe, Vennont, will speak
·~O.
Ridge High School. Following
ms,
e......,
r • unior
·
at the afternoon session on June ~....
Troop 1049, Becky Mankin, cookie Reibel, Tammy Capehart, and hall.
Mrs.
Christy
introduaed
Mrs.
Singer
Sylvester Blue of Cleveland
.-duation, Emma Jo's parents, Mr.
chairman; Junior Troop 1039,' Carolyn Casto.
·
District
will
also
offer moni of his in·
Florence
Richards,
Eighth
:l'lll Mrs. Richard Leifheit, entertain- Tamara Clark, Christy Farley, Tina All mthe scouts who sold cookies ·
president,
who
talked
about
juniprs
spirational
music
following Baroness
t'!l·with an open house.
H drl ~- M
·~. ·Miss Lehew and Mrs. Davis returnen c.... , ell.saa Hubbard, T1sha were awarded the 1979 cookie patch.
von Trapp's address.
~ home Saturda
. y and were ac- Jarvis and Chrystal Manley • Joy
Meigs County will be attending the
Clark, cookie . chairman; Junior.
conference on June ~- Departure
~mpanied by Mr. and Mrs. Leifheit
Troop 1100 Barbara Fry, cookie chair·
time from the Cellter will be at 7:30
tltlo came for . the Pomeroy High man, .......
• •-- Chase, Kim Eblin , Ruth
$chool AI umm banquet. It was
a.m.
The cost for the conference wi\1
Fry, Sally Radford and Kim Roush;
be
~
which includes transportation
~&lt;!ifheit's 25th anniversary .
Junior Troop 1~. Carol Jean Adams,
and lunch.
Aget-together was held at the home
Reservations must he made by
of Mr. and Mrs. Larry Circle and sons
June 10.
on Sunday, May ~. honoring Brent .
TRIP POLICY
Patterson, a graduate of Southern
Due , to the rtae In gasoline, ad·
mission prices and food costs, the
; GALLIPOIJS - The five-&lt;lay would be classified as "beginners" In HighSchooL
Center cannot afford to be responsible
Attending were · Mr. and Mrs.
watercolor workshop sponsored by the use of watercolor media, was a
1Jte French Art Colony and held at modified " paint • along" approach. ' Ernest Johnson,. Belpre; Mrs. Murl
This was -a beneficial learning ex· OursandMr.andMra.DickGauland
~erby , conducted by the well·
sons and TammyStarcher, Chester;
perience.
.
.
~W!I and recognized Hun~on,
Every participant in·the workshq~ Mr.nd Mrs. James,Cornell, Pomeroy;
~ Virginia artist, Marian Murphy,
ttlis enthusiastically received and at· left with one or more completed Mrs. Allen Stobart and daughter,
Watercolor palntinga to add to their Middleport; Mike and Steven Norton,
tended.
own personal collection. Some of the Minersville; Cindy Ratterson .
~ Those who registered for and par·
ticipated in this outstanding original works may be entered iii the Syracuse.
Donnie Dudding, Dennia Wolfe, Mr.
:WOrkshop were _involved daily, Mon- July 4th exhibition in the Ciiy Park,
:llay through Friday, from 9:30 a.m. that will be sponsored ·by the Frencll and Mrs: Paltenlon and sons, Mickey
:)llltil 2:30 p.m. Ms. Murphy demon- Art Colony all a part of the River Murgrage, Mrs. Martha Lee and
jltrated aU kinds of techniques used in Recreation Festival pliumed for the daughter, Mra. Harold Hager and
daughter, Kim Follrod, Mrs. Edsm
watercolor painting so that all of ,holiday.
According to .Janet Byers, Roush, Paul Moore, Mr. and Mrs.
Dlose who took advantage of this opHomemade
j)ortunity to be tutored by her felt they Education Chairperson for the Fren· Douglas Circle, Florence Circle, all of
had learned and enjoyed,. both at the chArt Colony, Ms. Murphy may con- Racine; Rocky Pitzer, Bashan, and
' time.
'
duct another watercolor workshop In Mrs. Margaret Tuttle, Eagle Ridge.
same
and punch were
French City
; A BPfCial feature utilized by Ms. the Fall, when an appropriate date . Cake, ice
served.
Murphy for those who attended that can be cleared.

emergency squads.
The pretend patients were tran·
sported to Veterans Memorial
Hospital for care after supposedly
having a bus accident. The volunteers ·
were provided with refreshments by
hospital personnel after the disaster
was over.
The volunteers enjoyed their play·
acting roles and for the third year,
fully cooperated with the ilfe saving
mechanlsmB of Meigs County to test
their efficiency In a real disaster
situation.
Volunteers who participated were:
·Charles and Esta David, Lllllan Napper, Early Roush, Maurice Lott,
Dayton, Gene, Virgil and Kennit
.McElroy, Clarence and Allee Struble,
Reva Beach, Audry Swett, Frances
King, Cecll Bradbury, Hazel 'lbom·
pson, Jerome and Ann Cook, Mary
Frances Bawngardner, Mae Weber,
Dorothy Will, Bill Qulvey, Bill Watson, Uncoln RuaaeU and Dans
Hilwett.
'
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Have a nice week .,.

..

PUBLIC ,AUCTION

.~

~-

(3 DAY SALEJ
.
TUPPERS PLAINS, OHIO (MEIGS COUNTY(
FRIDAY, JUNE 1; SATURDAY, JUNE 2, &amp; SUNDAY, JUNE 3 STARTING
EACH DAY AT 10 O'CLOCK A.M.
Toke St. At. 7 south out of Marietta, Ohio toward Pomeroy to Tuppers Plains,
O!'lo -- tur~ east at Dairy Bar onto St. Rt. 681 towards RHdsvllle for 1 mile.
F1eld Pork1ng.
·
·

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ANTIQUE; FURNITURE. GLASS; CHINA, POTTERY, LG. JEWELRY
COLLECTION !including diamonds &amp; pearls,), GUNS, OLD ITEMS, ETC.:
We will be selling some of every_thln_g each day except the guns &amp; good jewelry .

GUNS WILL BE SOLD AT I O'CLOCK P.M. SATURDAY.
·
GOOD JEWELRY WjLL BE SOLDATl O'CLOCK P.M. SUNDAY.
Sell ing this lalge collection of many , many years of Mr.. Susan Manley, dec.
ANTIQUE FURNITURE : 2 curved gloss china cupboar.ds ; walnut VIctorian
side chair; •ladder back chairs; sq . oak tablej sm. stands ; plano bench; organ
stools ; flat wall cupboards; 2old restaurant booths ; lg. lolly cupboard; Captain
chatrs ; h1gh chairs ; sq. oak stands; child's rockers ; cherry chest-drawers wg_love boxes ; child's slant top desk ; mahogany stand. beaded edge w-brass
t1pped feet ; walnut night stands; VIctorian marble top stand; round pedestal

•

•

.•••

stand; w1ng back chairs; larkin desk ; tea cart; sm . cherry corner clipboard;

dropleat stand: rockers; sm . bench w-needlepolnt; wooden &amp; Iron beds; hobby
horse ; cylinder coffee table ; VIctorian tables; oak platform rocker; marble top

sewmg machme stand ; top for round oak table; Morris chair; walnut dresser

w-marblelnsert : wash slands; Empire chest; Duncan Phyfe table; flat glass
ch1na cupboardS! pressed back chairs ; side tables; Ice cream table w-chalr;
old marble top table; oak sideboards; oak dropleaf loble; dye cabinet; old oak
slant top desk from Post Office; kitchen cabinets; corner cupboards; bookcase
secretary ; oak hall tree w-seat' knee holedesk:.bachelor desk; swivel top table
w.. drawer ; wicker planter: wicker doll buggy: walnut solid door cupboard wcarvlng ; ornate clock shelf; dressers: . lot chairs In singles &amp; sets ; blanket
chest' 2 church pews) victrola. and many other pieces not listed.

•

...
!,

GUNS TO BE SOLD SATURDAY, JUNE 2 at1 O'CLOCK P.M. ,
.
Ithaca Model37 Feafherwelght9shof pump w-chrome; 41 cal. Remington overu~der derringer w-2 boxes rlmflre shells; old 22 cal. Woodsman ; R.G. 22 cal.
p1stol ; 20 ga. single barrel Stevens ; Savage 22 cal . w-10 power scope; 12 ga.
hammerless Savage, Model 220D; 410 single barrel. Elgin pocket watch wHunter case w-dlamonds. 21jewel Illinois R. R. Special w-chaln.
CHINA. GLASS &amp; POTTERY : Covered &amp; open composes; cut glass; figurines
&amp; statues: sets china; sponge ware ; bean pols: English china; souvenir plates ;

.

s~emmed compotes; glass baskets; Ice cream dishes; carnival; tg . old glass
d1shes; wheel cut; cruets ; Par ian ware; Fenton ; opalescent; slag· soap stone·

•

'c plledion tooth pick holders; cobalt hand painted vase; cake stands ;

green ; sa.lt.peppers; custard ;

glas~

ajJpl~

animals; stretch glass ; glass candle

holders; o1lla~p ~olle.ctlon ; plf~hers ; erma , Austrian, English china ; bisque ;
cov:ered butter dishes ; han~ painted vases; depression ; amethyst ; lot ruby

-•

The first birthday of Jennifer Hill
daughter of Denise Hill, was observed
recently with a party at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Max Eichinger, Route 3,
Pomeroy.
,
A Tom and Jerry theme was carried out for the party with cake and
Ice cream being served. Presenting
gifts to Jerinifer were her mother, Mr.
· and Mrs. Max Eichinger, Scott,
Becky and Max, Mr. and Mrs. Allen
, Eichinger, Mr. and Mrs. John Fry,
Mr. and Mrs. James Fry, Ruth and
SUe, Mr.nd Mrs. Paul Eichinger,
Paula and Tammy, Mr, and Mrs.
Woodrow Mora, Judy and Janet, Mr.
and Mrs. Steve Frost, Mike and Debbie, Darla KeUy, Richard Mora, Mr.
· and Mrs. Roy McCaskiU, and Dianne
Hill.
...

Hull pottery, etc .

•

MI SCOLD ITEMS. ETC.: Pl'cture f_ra!T'eS

·

&amp;

1

pictures; shoe lasts; Iron skillets ;

silverware ; glass churns ; wooden bowls ; floor lamps ; stone jars, jugs, crocks,

etc.; urns, Iron bull dog door stop : Seth Thomas clock ; Camel back cloch ;
cuckoo.clock ; ant. toys ; kraut cutter ; finger lamps ; beer stel~s ; doll collection
(modern) ; lard press ; p~ll out candlestick telephone ; trunkS! luggage; quilts.
beddmg ; stereoscope: banks. Iron toys; brass. copper &amp; pewter; books;
marbles ; full set wind-up train ; cast Iron toy stove w-equlp. ; wooden planes:

.,.,_ ..
....

carb1de lamps ; R-.R. lanterns ; scales ; lot primitive Items ; tinware ; spl.ttoon ;
perfume bottles, and many other items .

•

LARGE COLLECTION GOOD JEWELRY !Including diamond rings, pearls;
cui g!ass, jet &amp; carnival beads) TO BE SOLD SUNDAY AT 1:ooO'CLOCK P.M.
Th is IS only a partlalilsflng ot this largeJ day sale, Nothing shown before day of
sale. Lunch on premises. Terms - cash or check w-posltlve IDeach day ofsale.
Not responsible for loss or accidents. MHOiels and motels In towns close by.
Come and plan , to stay all three days. Something for ~veryone . This Is a
collection of many years of Mr , and Mrs. Walton Manley ."Call Marietta, 0 ., or
Parkersburg, W. Va. for motels.
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OWner- Mr. Walton Manley.
. ·
Auctioneers- Bill James &amp; Randy New5om,. Phone 1-614-557-3411 or 557-3133.
'&gt;l'L OJ

Grandchild born
Friends here have received word of
the birth of Ryan Patrick, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Dwight Zavitz, Jr., Chester,
Va. The infant is the first grandson of
the Rev. and Mrs. Dwight Zavitz, for·
11U'Iy of Middleport and now eesiding
at Chester, "'a. He weighed seven
pounds, one ounce, and was born oo .
May26.
FREE CL01liiNG DAY
Free clothing day will be held at the
Sal~ation Army, Pomeroy, Thursday,
May 31, from lOa.m. tintil noon. All
area residents In need of clothing are
welcome.

Council of.Royal and Select MB!Iters ·
. Louise Stewart, member of Racin~
Chapter, OES, and Grand representative to WB!Ihington, and Donna
Johnson,. worthy matron Qf Racine
Chapter, Order &lt;!Eastern Star:
The entertainment consisted of string music by the Dark Hollow Boys
duetS by Charles and Doris Bailey:
and a sing-a-long with Wilma Sayre
Styer at hte piano.
Cleland had table grace before
refreshments ~ ice cream, cake, tea
and coffee were served.

LOOtc FOI THIJ SIGN

THIOUGMOUT TH1
UOtrFOI
PANTASJK SAVINGS
OH ICIOGII . .AND

I"IODUCTS

-

LISTID lllOW All JUST
AFIWIUMPlU

·SAtE·

S(M . I

•••

TOTAL SATISFACTION GUARANTEE
~~ VOU buy .. Kroger ie. 'Qutren\e.d fOI' your tottl
Mtilt8CIIOrl
of rTIII\UfiCturtr . lt vou •rt no! tabS·
Mel, Ktoger wil! r~ your i1em With the ume brlnd Of a
COI'?'IPM'IIlll brand OJ refund vour I)UrCI\IIt price.

GOlD CRfST DRY ROASTED

'tel'.._

Peanuts

16·01~119

Hi Nu 2%

COPYitGHT lt79- rt• tiiOGft CO. ITIMS AND 'ltCU
OOODMAV 17 THIU IATUIDA\' JUNI2 . lf1t1N

Lowfat Milk

GALLI POLl I&amp; POMEROY STORES

WI ftSIIVI THtlttGHT TO liMn QUANTITIU , NOHI SOLD

fODIAliiS .

C.n

Gal.

$

Paper or

NON RETURNABLE

SPECIAL THIS
Will DIILT

Plutic
Ctn. ·

Tab, Sprite
or Coca Cola

41
I
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NA TUIAl FlA YOII

Fountain Square
Ice Cream .... ..........
Spotlight
Bean Coffee ..·. ~~

·-

Macaroni
2-lb.
801

61

POTATOES .. ~/.~:.~~.~ If.

''lb.

l'tlg.

c

..r 1P1181.111111-.AIII

18

LlMR 0111 COUPON Pll '~ y

I

:
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oz.

O~I'J

I ,.:-::;;.&lt;H

35 c

CHERRY PIE ·FILLING .......~:~. $1.39

I-

LlMR ONI COUI'ON rtl fAMILY

. -~ . . . .IIM111WIM_t_ll.ltlt
_ . 11-111·
IIIII

7c

U.S.D.A.INSPECTED GRADE
MARVAL OF VIRGNIA , I·U·LI. AVG.

Fresh
Turkeys ......... ...lb.

3 oz.

12 oz.

.

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kROGU

with
Off
· $1 ·
ARMOUR, TREET.••••••••••••
•••••••
•29

16

lOc

•

OYSTER ST~ •••••••••.••••••••••••• 6!JC
•
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HOLLY FAIIMS, U.S.D.A.INSPECTED,
GIIADE A (3 THIGHS, 3 DRUMSTICKS.
3SPLITIREASTS)

Pick·O·
.,.c_•"-: ~......--1 Chix
.... ........... ........ lb.
SLICED FlESH
Quarter
Pork Loin ............ . lb.
a-oz .

_101/a oz , Hilton

.23 oz. KOOL·AID .••••••••••••••• 6/69~

c

Tomato Sauce

Can Lunch Meat

141/a Ol •

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Chicken Of The
Sea Tuna ...........
.''l•·o•.
Con
ROUND TOP
·Kroger 20-oz.
White Bread .... ...... ..

Any Size Pkg.
Ground B~ef

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HUNfS TOMATOES ••••• ~~.~ ••••.2/97~

$

LIBBY'S PUMPKI" ................. 59~
ROAST BEEF••••••• ~.~ •••••••••••••. $1.29

~----------------~·

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'Heed
· UIIT t lEAN W1111_. All $7.st AMITitllli. . . . . .
(UCL- J.. ITIIl
liMIT ONE COUI'ON ,II FAMILV

Red Ripe Cut

·

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12 oz. Armour

:

'!

Fresh
Cauliflower

4 ~oil White Cloud ·

TOILET TISSUE ••••••••••••":~'~::.~~'••. 99~

:

"

II
I

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPOII

t-,;.;._p;._...._ ...

.., Jar $2 39
INSTANt NESTEA
~
··········~······

a.n-. FIAt

(UCll- Tlllllll)

Mushrooms

~~-4

Uft )

28

lllfl2 411.111111 .... Ill $7.51
Dl'

(

Gunnoe's
41'
Count~ Sausag, .H..
1-N..
ld

!SIEMS I PIECES I

.

H •• lOLL ... SUI

$

12

I

21 Ol. Thank You

um-. • •

(UCII- Till ml)

lf·OI •

165 ct.

REAMES NOODLES ..................~.~?:. 7fl

·

.......su•

Cheer
tO-lb. $
Det ergent ...... lox

CHEESL ... ~~-~:. $1.39 LEMONS .. --· ...... 6/4f

12

$
6·01.

KIOGIIINSTANICO,IE . . . I·Ol. JAISI ."

Spaghetti

New White

Deluxe American

'Kroger
Gelatin

3$

CELERY........~.~~~~. 4f

I
I

I IK

llMR ONI COU,ON Pll fAMilY

KIOGEI

12 Ol. Kraft 16 Sliced

I.

---tiiMillWIU_t . . l ,ltlt
-11-llmiii&gt;:IIIUO

~- 98c

30 ct. Florida

I
I
I

..rTICAIIIITII-.MD$7.5U.TIIIll
(UCliiiK Tlllllll)

bceptlllllteii&amp;WW..S 1;1..-

HONEY ·LOAF..-•••••••••·••••••• ~.~~}1.97
MARGARINE ........ 69'

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16·01.
Cans

Except a...! S.lwAr Mid. TI9AM S..

Pepper Loaf or

1 lb. Kraft Parkay

a..a:

OPEN
24 HOURS
· ADAY

Rice

~

glass; hen on nest : advertising plates; mugs ; shaving mug ; Roseville. McCoy,

'I

•

jennifer Hill

HELP FOR PARENTS
ON 11fE BOOKMOBILE
POMEROY - Have problems. or
concerns about your kids ? Every
parent does . Raising children has to
be one of the world's toughest jobs there's so much to takihg care of
another person .and preparing that
person to take his or her place in the
world.
'
Your bookmobUe now offers help
for many of your child care questions.
On the new "Parents' Shelf" subjects
range . from natural childbirth and
naming the new baby to "How to Survive Your Child's Rebellious Teens."
For the years in between, you can

consult such experts as Drs. Salk ,::::::::::::::::;:::;·:·;·:·:·:·:·:·;·:·:·:·:·:·:·:··-·.·,······································
Spack and Lendon Smith for answ..; ::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;~:;:;:jj;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;';:;:;:;;:;:;:;;:
to questions on vaccinations and han· . ·
Mrs· Paul Haptoiwtall entertained
dicaps and what to do when your chlld
' complains ''there's nothing to do." Monday evening with a bridal shower
You canalsofindhelp to deal with dlf. honoring Mila Donna Saunders.
ficult subjects like death, drinking ' Games were played with prizes goand divorce. For sharing good times Ing to MJ:s. Judy Saunders, Mrs. ·
together, there are songbooks; nur- , PhyUI.s Pope, and Zole Klskla. A
dealraled cake, punch and ice cream
sery rhymes and storybooks.
were served by Mrs. Haptonstall.
This week's bookmobile schedule:
Tuesday, May 29- Keno, church, ~ Other gueslll were Tami Pope, Sandra
3:30p.m .; Reedsville, Reed's Store, ~ Veith and daughter, and Gloria
5; Tuppers Plains, Arbaugh Houaing, Saunders.
5: ~ :30; Chester Methodist Church
·s:~7, 4li: Riggs Addition, 30. • .ii:~:~®Ir:!:!:J~:J~:::t;:=:::t~:~:t~:~::r:::t:@~:Ji''
Thursday, May 31-;Sallsbury, New
houaing, 2:15-2:4li; Letart, Schuler's Machlr at a recent meeting of the
Restaurant, 3:15-J:4li; Racine, Home Shade Valley Council of Floral Arts
Natl. Bank, 4-5; Racine, Wagner's: held at the Chesterflrehouae.
Hardware, 5-3; Syracuse, Swimming
New by-:lan were accepted and
Pool, 6:15-3:15.
.Mrs. Bunny Kuhl reported on the jon·
quil. Gueata were Mazie Hollinger,
Brenda Day and 1100 Chris, and DebPROGRAM HEARD
bie Holsinger. Mrs. Pat Holter served
CHESTER-A program on contriv- refreshmenlll.
ed containers w.as presented by Mrs.
Next meeting will be held on June
Betty Lou Dean and Mrs. Jennie 19at8p.m.

YOUR FIIENDLYIIOGU

AVC1'NOAU

HAM SALAD~ ••••••••••••••••••••~b;,$1.19
JUMBO FRANKS ••••••••••••••• .'~}1.59
French City

who had come from Spencer, w. va.
to be present.
Ben Philson was program chairman and introduced the widows
Gamet Gretta Simpson, Gretta Car:
nahan, Aline Weaver, Cora B. Beegle,
Dolly Wolfe, Ann Coe, Mildred
Spencer, Ruth Bamiz, Marie Theiss
and Hattie Paynter. He conunented
on the work of the lodge members in
promoting the principles.
· Introduced were Jesse Brinker
sixth arch Inspector of the Grand

~~~~cyH~andb~=·

Watercolor workshop success

Ryan ·Lee Clonch, son of Ronald and
Debbie Clonch, celebrated his first
birthday recently at his Pomeroy
home.
· .
Gifts were presented to him. A
Mickey Mouse cake and ice cream
were served following a dinner. Attending besides Ryan and his parents
were his grandparents, Mr. and tars.
Delbert Mlillron and l'oJr. and Mrs.
Robert Clonch. Al8o attending were
Eric Milliron and Pam Milliron: Sen- '
ding gifts· were Mr. and Mrs. Dale
C.lon.ch, David, Glni and Amy, Mid·
dleport; Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Barnett
and Jason, Virginia Beach; and Mr.
and Mrs. Sam Larkin, Shae and
Valorie, Germany .

Appromnately 65 persons attended
the recent meeting of Racine Lodge
4111, F. and.A.M. when Masonic wives
and widowa were honored
Ralph Webb, master, ·opened the
IJieeting with Frank Cleland giving
the prayer. Guests were welcomed
and James Clatworthy, district deputy grand maater of the 12th Maaonic
DIBtrtct, was introduced, and . commended the lodge for the meeting of
appreciation. The master then Introduced Solon and Frances Butcher

!iii!Wialed EmerJency

Get-together held

Ry_an Clonch

• •

Thursday, May 10, 25 RSVP volunteers suffered nwnerous Injuries and,
distress! These brave(?) Individuals ·
played a vital role in the recent mock ·

Birthdays

....
••

'

for any !Oils of money on !IllY planned
excursion&amp;. The following pollcy will
apply to all planned excurslona:
1. AU sealll 8re filled on a first paid
basis.
2. Refunds will be made If there Is
someone on slanll-by to take your
place, cance.llatioos 411 hours or Ieiss ,
prior to the scheduled trtp will not be
refunded.
3. AU persons going m trtps must
have their own transportation to the
Center and back home.
4. AU reservationa must be made
with Joyce Bunch In the RSVP office.

local girls sell L01TS of cookies I I I I

•

.

form with Mrs. Qu'istypresldlng. The
Lord'~ Prayer and pledge to the flag
were given. The secretary's report
was read and the treasurer's report
Wall filed for audit

Senior Citizens ' Scenes.

cream

65 attend meeting of
Racine Lodge No. 461

111e meeting · opened In ritualistic

..,....

~ five

I

drlcks .

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t-The DaDySentlliel, Middleport-Pomeroy, O., Wednesday, May 30, 1979

J

C·.

· f11kay
Sliced Bacon

SJ
29
48;:: .

-lUCID

lolletl-......
'

Salad
Tomatoes ..... ... lb.

tA• OI....,AID

PotatoSal1d ....

Ill .

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�1}fi~Nl OO'il ~ ntAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
~ ~ ~~·
byHenriAmoldandBobLott
UniC&lt;Imblo theM lour JumbiH,

l_!}-The Deily Sentinel, Mlddleoort-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, May 30, 1979

Your Best Buys Are Found in the.Sentinel Classifieds
Notices

WANT AD
CHARGES
1$ WOI'ds or Under
Charg!
CUh
!day
1.110
1.2:1
2dlya
1.50
1.90
!dayo
1.80
2.2:1
ldayl
1.110
3.75

Each word over the minimum
1$ word~! is 4 cenls per · ~ per
dly. Ads NMln« other \han COO•
MCUU.ve da)'l wiU be charged at
the 1dly rau.
In memory. Cord o1 Thll'*'
and Obituary : 8 ce~b per word,
$1.110 minbnum. Cool&gt; in ad-

vance.

1be' Publisher rt3erVcl the
right to edJt or reject any ads
deemed

objectional.

The

Publiaher wiU not be ~ible

for more than one inoorrect In·

sertioo.

l'llone 992-!156

·WANT-AD
IAnii'ERTISING
DEADUNES
Monday
Noon on Saturday

I P.M.

4P.M.

Friday afternoon

Card of Thanks
FIVE KITIENS. 6 w"ks old.
843-2774.
THE FAMILY of Gornot l.
Moore with" to thank aU who

flowers

ond

cards.

Thanks to the Ewing Funeral
Home, Rev. Floyd Shook and
oil

992-3129 ,

brass beds, iron beds, detks,
'-tc., complete houMholds.
Write M.D. Miller, IU. 4 ,
Pomeroy or call 992-n60.

wno visited during the time

of my great loss.
Husband Robert E. Moore.

EIGHT

WANT TO buy: old •S and 78

Auctions

phonograph
records . Call
992·6370 or Contact Martin
Furniture.

OHIO RIVER Auction Tuesday
and Friday, 7 PM , 537 North
Higt, St .. Middleport . Ohio.

BUYING JUNK cars end
bodies. Also scrap Iron and
metals. Rider's sol~ . SR

LOST: BLACK and ton female
Germcn Sheperd. Broke colter
from home on Story's Run Rd.

below Middleport. If soon . coli
Gorald Mathows. 367-0395 or
992-5207.
lOST: PERSONAL Biblo belon·
ing to Marty Foley. It found.
contact Betty Foley, Syracuse.
Phone 992· 7305.
LOST: Men's glanes. Brown
rims in block cose. Tnura.,
May 24 between Pomeroy
Park!ng lot acro11 from
Swisher and lo.hse Drugs or
PoWell's parking lot. 992-3672.

' Help Wanted
IMMEDIATE

OPENING.
3·11

shill. Exporloncod ML T (ASCP)
or equivalent. bcellent salary
and fringe benefits. Shift dif·
ferentail . Contact: Personnel
Office,
Pleasant
Valley .
Hospital , Valley Drive, Point
Pleasant , WV. 25550. Pnone

30H75-4340. An Equol Opportunity Employer.

'

WANTED. SAWYER to work at
Point Valley Pallet, Scottown .

:256-6363 betwoon 7 ond 5pm. ·
or 886-88.c0 after 5.

BABYSITIER NEEDED. Flowiblo
hours. References required .

992-6233.
EXPERIENCED AIR condition·
lng and refrigeration man.
Good pay and holidays.' No
phone calls. Gollio Aefrigero·
lion Co., 152 3rd Ave .,

Galllpollo .
HEAD COOK . for girl scout
summer resident camp near
Portt.·mouth. Ex~rience In
quantity cooking. liv•in. Call
Kathy collect , 61•·878-1381 .

PAINTING AND sandblasting.
Free estimates. Coll9•9·2686.
TREE TRIMMING and Rem oval.
U2-3167 or 7A2-2573.

992-6173 :

CHEVY 377 or :ISO engine.

GiveAway
F!VE ~lnENS 1 • 6 to 7 week s
old. 4 calico, 1 tiger. 992-7690.
Humane Society.

15 FT. LOWE LINE Aluminum

condition .

2•7·36-1•.

boss boot, 20 HP, Mer e.. stick
steering, fully equipped with
tr~iler . Phone 985-4339.

THREE KlnENS, one male , two

lomolo. Coll367-ll395.
FREE TO good home. Mole

1967 23 Foot Airstream
Trailer . Phone 1·30ot·675·3098.

border collie. excell,nt watch

St., Syracuse. Salt and pepper
shakerS, cJothin;. mite.

2A FO(&gt;T
alumi num pon toon boot, 50 hp motor. 15 ft .
bc::i11 boot , Mlnkota trolling
motor, 50 h.p. Mercury motor.
14ft. Runabout, 35 hp motor.
All ready for the river. Try
them out . Robert Hill.

YARD SALE. Juno I, 10 Ill 5.

949-2013.

BROWN AND tan small mole.
medium ne~ir , long ears, 1
year old. Brown and black
stripe~ mixed breed dog,
female,· 3 or "' mo. old. Beige
with white markings. 1 beige
pupy, 3 mo. old, both female .
Humane Society , 992·7853 or

"Ll

Next to State .Hithway
garage. Rt. 1. Trucy An4rews
movirig to California . Old
dishes, glasa pictures, etc.

Beer, Wine Carry-

GIGANTIC

1973 Nashua, 60xl:2, 2 bdr.
1973Governor, 60.:12, 2 br.
1974 Markline, 50x12, 2 br.

B&amp;S MOBILE HOME SALES
PT. PLESANT. WV .
675-4424

YARD

RUTLAND

HARDWARE ,
Rutlar')d, Ohio. 2 doors down
from Post Office. 7"'2·2255:
New and used cash registers
and calculaton. Paper and
supplies . Martln·S.nour point
Pro line $8.10 go .. 1200 colon, 2 gol. cun exterior flat
latex house paint $13.95 ,
white only. AO gal. gas water
heater, gklss lined, 's year

Sale,

Naylros Run Rd. , Pomeroy.
Storts Thurs. , May 31 thru 0 ,
10-...
•

Y~A:_R::D,--,-A-:-N=D-:B-:o k-o-:S-1
o :o--.-J,-u-n-e ,-,

2 at 22S E. 2nd St., Pomei-oy

be.hlnd tlto Eoglos Club. Given

worranw .

by t~elodin A~x.

solo

197.. HOLLY PARK mobile
home . l-4»e70. 31"'·675·5-f75.

1970 lWO BEDROOM 12•60
Champion . Appliances ,
building . Situated On nice
rented lot . 992-7235 after 5.

pr iced .

Real Estate for Sale

$119.95. M .T.O. lawn mower,
3 1/ 1 hp :22" cut, tole price,
$125. Also garden supplies.

THREE FAMilY Garage Sale at
Poigeo Humprhey's troller. 1.9
miles off Rt. 7 on U3 on the
left. Thura ., Fri. and Sot.
Something for everyone .
Watch for tigns.

· MODERN THREE bedroom
house ,
full
basement ,
fireplace, fully carpeted , ceotral ·olr, enclosed sun porch,
located on 6 1/i acres on CR 28,
appro]( . 3 miles from Racine. If
interested contact larry Wolfe
949-2836 weekends and after
5 evenings.
TWO STORY 3 bedroom ~ouse .
3 lots. Now's your chance If
you n-d 0 house. S12.000.
Owner willing to te~lk .

FUJI 10-s~ racing bike.
992-5121 .
WESTERN BOOTS from Acme
ond Tony lamo for work or
dre11. We hove a Iorge selec·
tlon of boots on hand for men
and ladies at Mountain
Leather ·and GEneral Store,
ICW-106 W. Union , Athens ,
OH .
Mon .- Sat.
10-5:30 .

Betty Young retldence on Pine
Grove Rd. in back of Memory
Gorden1. Old furniture, what·
noti, nice clothing. 9 till 0

LARGE FOUR lomlly Yord Solo.
Storts Thurs. Georg. Skinner's
residence, Rt. 3. 992·32•9.
Houtehold article• and misc.

592--::·:54:7: 8::·=====:::=-,
t

YARO ·SALE, Monday , June • •
6:00p.m:, Tuescfay, June 5, 10
till 0 • 4 Family. Toys, clothing,
misc. Davis residence, Rote

Hill, oH Rt. 33.
YARD SALE, Rooo Hill, o milo

992-2082 or 7•2-2328 .
' THE HEIRS of William Real of-

BUll LIME
SPREADING
. POMEROY
LArfDMARK

fer for sale his home and real
prop~rty located at 11 Oak St .,
Pomeroy, ,O hio. Bids will be
accepled at ~he offi ~e of Bar·
· bora Knight, Attorney at law,
· Bo.: 723, Pomeroy, Ohio. TeL
992-2151 , until June 8, 1979, ot
10 a.m. Appra ised price;
$5.250. Vendors reserve the
right to reject oil bids.

from lost light in Porneroyh on
Rt. 33. Girls clothing sizes
new·bom to 12. oqds ' ends.
Me" and womens doth .. large
wall picture.•. -'flew tapes. kit·
chen chairs. baby bat~ tub,
cor seat and toys.

9 ... _ J•.ck w. Carsey
IAiill, PhoneMtr
.
992-2181

Pets for Sale

1977 FORD CHATEAU EISO

Phone m-2111
Ask Far
CHARLES BUSH

-=--

van. Auto. , P.S., P.B., A. C., -4
captains chairs , dual gas
tanks, cruise control , AM-FM
stereo. 32 ,&lt;XXI.mll••· Excellent
condition . $5800 . Phone

RISING STAR Kennels, boor·
di ng and groomlnt. all

broods. Choshiro, 367-0292.
HOOF HOLLOW, Englllh and

Housing

-·~~!~.
1'. ~u~
992-ms

!10 E..SoCGOtd StrMI

NEW LISTING - Nice
building lot in Syracuse
on State Rl. 12~ . Out at
1937 Hood. Only $5,000.
NEW LISTING - Good
2 bedroom home and
bath near shopping. Gas

hltf\, 8' long, white, sliding.
front gla11 windows. New

$230. 985-358$.

VERY GI'NTLE Quanor llano.

Thurlday, M1y 3·1

ASTRO·GRAPH
Bernice Bede Oso·

.
'Your
'Birthday
Moy 31, 1979
Une11pected c hanges migh t .at

lirst give you some concern
this coming yea ; . Howeve: .
'time wi ll prove vour fear Gwe1e
~;~ roundtess beca use th mg s wilt
work out better than what yoc
ori ginall y plannec' .

GEMINI (Moy 21-June !OJ Haste
makes waste tod a-, . Organize
your lime and conce ntrate onl y
on th ose th ingS that can be nefit
others as well as you rself Fin d
ou l more of what lies ·ahead for
you in the year followin g you ~
birthoa y bv sending for yo ur
copy ol Astro-Graph Letter.
Malt S1 lor each and· a self·
addressed envel ope to Astro·
Graph, P.O. Boll' 489. RadiO Cit'
Station , N.Y. 10019 . Be sure to
speci f-, birth sigr
CANCER (Junf' 21 ·July 22)
Ta ke ex tra care that what you
buy todav is some thin g vou
not

JUS! a

lancllul no tion . 'r ou have a
tenden cy toward ex trav'ag ance.

LEO (July 23-Aug. !!J Sellgralllication might be your first
lhought today . Lat er . you'h
realize this is selfish and -,o u'll
do the proper th i)'lg for those
you love.
·
· (

VIAQO (Aug. 23-Sel. ,221 II you
don 't take time to th ink th ings
through , yo ur concl usions to·
day wlll be based upon wishful
thinking , rather than on what 's
practica l.

Western parade
Pnone 698·3290.

saddle .

Pm.EROY
Headquarters for
Hotpoint and
Genera I Electric
Appliances

air , wenct., etc., excellent
condition. 99'.2·2121 .

1974 GMC JIMMY. P.B.. P.S..
A.C., 2·whool drivo. 51725.
Coll992·3580.
FORD F-150, 4•4 . pa . . pb.
au'to. ,

topper .

SALE PRICES
Jack w. Carsey
Mgr.
. I'IIOIIe 992-2181

Phone

985·4:m.
197• VW DASHER. 992:SS.C. .
1973 FORD STATION Wagon.
A.C. , 51 ,000 mlloo. 11050.
1972 Dodgo !)art Swir&gt;gor, 6
cyl .. 2-door, $117S. Allor 5:30
call992-7177.
1978 PONTIAC GRAND Am II,

Cabin cruiser , 17 foot , trailer ,
65 hp Mercury Motor .

P.B., P.S., air, FM-AM radio.

9'12-2304 .

742-2777.
1976 CHEVY 4x4 Custom
1
Deluxe
hea'Yy
1t
ton.
Gunrack . FM co'nyerter ,
38 ,000 milet. Take O'Yer
payments. Calll&lt;W-882-2886 .

2-4 PIGS, 7 wHks old . Trn:;mas
Sayre, Great Bend , Ohio.

Phono 843 - 24~1 .
1967 MUSTANG 6 cyL outo ,

.

PONY , ALSO bull coli. 2'1,
months old. 843.2353.
1977 KAL . EXCELLENT condi·
tlon , 1600 miles.

No rust .

$950. 992-3453 or 992-2752

1976 CHEVY SCOTSOALE I ton
dual wh. .ls, •54 .,...,., A·
spMd, FM convertor, twin gas
tanks , tilt wheel. $4000. Call

:104-882-2-.
1973 CHEVELLE 3SO .outomalic,
P.S.. P. 1 .. AM-FM f.IYack .
$1200 or bolt oHor. 949-2354.
1971 MONTE CARLO. Runs
good. Pion. .r stereo. $650.

992- 5~11 .

camping Equipment
1975 I I FOOT truck compor.
telf. contained, alf conlfltlon,
e.:cellent condition. 992·2121 .

furnace. full basement,
front
porch
and
aluminum ,siding. In·

LANDMARK

· Auto Sales
i973 INTERNATIONAL SCOUT
21 .000 mlloo, lull~ oq.iippod,

Still A
Good Sol~tetlon
Of

ROSE BUSHES
and
SHRUBS All
.SALE PRICED

1..

J•ck W. C.rsey
Mgr.
Phone m-2111

-

Headqur~rtt:rs

m-72'11 attor • :30.
AlU~NUM TRUCK topper 36"

Western .
Saddles·
ond
harness. ' Horses and ponies.

REALlY
RUTLAND

3
bedroom
r~nCh
on
Salem Street. Home has
family room; bath and
nice large kitchen . Excellent outbuilding wilh
heat and electric . Ask·
lng $39,000.00.
BUSINESS Owner says

I·

sulated . $25,000.
NEW LISTING Large 8
room frame home with
1'1:3 baths, furnace heat,
T.P . water, Ohio Power
and five acres of land.
Dishwasher, disposal,
and carpeting all
through . $30,000.
EXCELLENT - New 3
bedroom home in the
country. 2 car garage,
family room with
fireplace, wood doors
and windows, on large,

lot.
NEW LISTING Good 3
bedroom frame home In
Pomero~ . Bath, natural
gas furnace, front
porch , near shopping .
Asking only $18,500.
NEW LISTING - Nice
building lot In Racine
VIllage. 69x180, out of
high water near school.
Only $5,000.
BARGAIN -Four room
house wllh bath, city
water ·a nd r!ver view.
Lolfor $7.500.
WOODED TRACTS Four 5 Acre tracts with
wat,r tap, between
Racine and Nease Seltiement , S7,500q Don't
wall, pick your home
sltenow:

·

WHEN IT COMES TO
REAL ESTATE, WE
WILL GIVE YOURS
OUR BEST.

Housing Headquarters

J&amp;L

Blown Insulation
· JIM KEESEE
CtU.UIOSIC (Wood filler)
Thermaltnsul•.tlon
Slve 30 pet. to 50 pet.
on htltlng cost
Expertonco 11111
fully Insured
F .... Est.
Call m-2112
5-17-1 mo.

¥• mile off Rt. 1 by -pass .

n•

on St. Rt.
Rutland.

Service
~rom

toward

and

ISEMQUO!

A!l

tv,..

AU

type~

Ph. 991·2174

new •ltd repair.
Storm doors and wiiHiows. All
work fU.rlft1Md . 20 V"" •I!·
perlenu. Fr.. estimates·. Clll
Tom H•sklns Ht·21.0.

Auto &amp; Truck
' Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682
4·30-tlc

Atltenl ArN
791+2141 Dr' "7·1152

•

BOB'S GENERAL

N. L Construction
BLOCK &amp; BRICK .
WORK, GENERAL

Residentl•1 •nd commercial . Call tor
..esllmate. 24 Hour Ser'
vice. Any d•Y• onytlme.
Portable toilet rental.
Phone 915-:1106
Jack Ginther 915-310.

grovel hauling. 742-2455.
SALES AND SERVICE

carport, 2 acres, many
other
features .

Howard Rotavoton
chisel plows. Leo

lime and fertilizer hauling and
spreading. Alto limestone and

on

and V
Morris.

7·2-2455.
NEIGLER Construction for
building houses and repair
work. Colt Guy Neigler.
~4~·2!5011 .

ADD ONS ANO remodeling
gutter work , down spouts.
Some concrete work , walks
and
driveways
( free
estimate) . V. C. Young , Ill ,
Aocine , Ohio, 9-49· '1748.

Real Estate for Sale
31h acres in Pomeroy. SEclud·
~wooded areo on top of hill.
Overlooks river . Water, elec·
trlc ove~ile~ble . 992·3886.
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., n E.

State, Athens . 614-592-3051.

Lengsvltle, Ohio
'14·"Hl4S Evenlnts

·H -1mo.

5-6·1 rno. pd.

WE HAVE FINANCING FOR
MOST
OF OUR
.
. HOMES FOR
. AS LOW AS 5% DOWN
NEW LISTING - Good 3 bedroom house, mostly
carpeted, large carpar1, outbuildings and garden
sp~ce . 1th acres of land, located close to Pomeroy
Proced at $32.000.
·
COUNTRY HOME- 5 acres and a pond, remOdeled
4 bedroom, fully carpeted home, large living room
has a heat-a-lator fireplace, kitchen· Is equipped
w1th refrtgerator, stove and dishwasher. Priced at
$39.90Q.
.
-.
JUST LISTED - Immediate possession real nice · 3
bedroom home, with large living room' and family
room, all ~icely carpe!ed, large eat-In kitchen
equopped woth dishwasher , disposal and stove 2
full baths, 112 baser:n~nt and garage, nice garden o~ 1
plus acres of land on Rac ine . Priced atS-45,000.
BUILDING LOTS - LIHii! over' 1 acre, already
surveved, water and electnc available. $3,000.
6G ACRES - ol o land for sale, can be divided
·
Lebanon Township .
COUNTRY LIVING IN TOWN - Total privacy Is ,
the key here on 2 plus acres, the living room has
brock fireplace, step·down family room equlpped t
kitchen, full bath. laundry area, and two' bedrooms
complete downstairs. The unfiniShed upstairs
makes expansion pos_
s ible . Prlced.tosell at$25,900. ·
LETART, 0. - 3:BR wilh large closets, lull bath,
beaOtlfully carpeted lhroughoul, large living room
wit~ a formal DR &amp; family room. The large kitchen
ha~ plenty of cabinets and the dishwasher stays.
Prt ced at $35,000.
. JUST LISTED --85 acres, with plenty of g:l'od
1 pasture land and some farming ground. Good barn
, with dr illed well. Garage and other buildings, farm
1 t'.ovse. Needs some repair . Mineral rights too. GOOd
· location about 5 minutes from Pomeroy 011 Rt. 33.
. Priced lor quick sale. $37,000.
75 ACRES with a 3 bedroom trame nouse, oarn ana
other building, mostly fenced. Some timber and eKcellent bottom land .. About 1,000 feet at beautiful ·
Ohio River frontage. Owner will help finance . Ask- ·
in9 S57 ,000. Without limber $55,000.
SAVE ON THIS MIDDLEPORT HOUSE -Good ~
bedroom house at a low price. Plenty of closet space
and kitchen cablnes, low heat bills. Priced tor extra
quick sale. $27,000.
LD1'!i - 1 Acre and up near Pomeroy.

WANTED: WE NEED NEW HOMES &amp; FARMS
CALL JIMM~ DEEM, ASSOCIATE 94'1-2311
OR NANCY JASPERS, ASSOCIATE
'149-2654 or 949-2591
·

·IRElAND
MORTGAGE
CO.
77 E. State, Atltens

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers, toasters, Irons, all
small appliances. Lawn rnoer ,
next to State Highway Garage
on Route 7. 985·3825.

SEVfiNG MACHINE Ropolrs,
service, ell makes, .992-2284 .
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
AuthoriZed Singer Sales and
Service. We sharpen ScissorS.

EXCAVATING, dozer, loader
and backhoe work; dump
trucks and lo-boys for hire,

Fr"'Estlm•te
Contact: Gene Smith
or Mike Gr•te
at Rutland Furniture Co.
742-2211
After 5 P.M., 992-4109
or 742-2174

or 992·S232.

EXCAVATING,
dozer,·
backhoe and dltcher, Charles
R. Hatfield. Black Hoe Service,

AUTOMOBILE

NCMON
SAil

882-2952 or 882-3454.
HOWERY AND MARTIN Ewsystems.
Rt.
1•3.

Phone I (614) 6~8·7331.
IN STOCK for immediate
delivery: various sites of pOol
k its. Do-ll· yourself or let us
install for you. 0 . Bumgardner
Sales, Inc. 992-572-t .

CODNER'S CAMPERS an Rainbow Ridge wit~ top of the
lina-Barth-Swiu Colony Jayco - Motor Homes to Top·
pers, acceuQrles and friendlY.
servjce. For directions call
61~: 843-1011.

FROM

$'ft5

,,

Bridge ,·· care of th'is newspaper. P.0 . Box 489, Radio City
Station, New York, N. Y. 10019.)

11 Piercing .
13 Neither

I French ,
compoeer,

filmed
nor taped
lt Syracuse

t Ogle ·
6 Famed mezzo.

Ynterda:r'• Allnet

18 Fully

It Certain
pole
• Chlcaso

/

revenged
%1 valley
:12 Widen

U Hindu

alr!Jort
S1 Candy
SZ Young

20 "IA deeply
En Rose"
JZ Old Faltb21 "- me your
ful, e.g.

festival ·
ZS FreneUc
state

chicken
M No
longer

tired ... "
II Jail
zz Took the risk keeper : Sp,

Z7 Yes,
Indeed

:n Haul

,.

23 Windflower

feral

(!iuddenly)

,,•

nickname
%8 Bore;

depress: sl.
33 Concerning
Cupid
S5 Heston role
38 As of now
"Tile- Is a
Tramp"

"'

.

'

subltance

6-+-++-+--lf-40 Custer, to
:-+-++-+-lfSittlns Bull r:

It Compulalon

1

Walton

I

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

j

Is LONGFELLOW

WE OFFIER YOU ...
1. Two tun IIOMS of •n new
furniture.
2. Nice ieloctlons ot used furniture:
·
3. A ,.,... bvlkllng ·lull af
btlullful c•raet.

Ot\e letter •imply · •tands for another . .In thlo· sample A Is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the lenglh and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code lrtters are dll!erent .

CRYPTOQUOTES "')
R J 01

PJOM

15 HE FAMOUS 6ECAIJ5E
HE'S 5~01 A 600D

CARD PlAVeR ?

S" the Grate Faml'y at

'

EMRH

XHUO

BVHU

RHPOVY,

· ' E L. H V I

zvo

.
''

·•'

.''
THURSDAY, MAY 31 , 1979
5:45-:--Farm Report ·U; 5:50---PTL
13;
5:55- Summer
. Club
Semester 10.
6:C»-PTL Club 6, 15; 700 Club 8;
6:10-News 17; 6:25-For You.
Black. Woman 10.
6:»-0ragnet 17; 6:45-Mornlng
Report 3; 6: 50-Good Morning
West VIrginia 13; . .0.:55--Chuck
White Reports 10; N_.,s 13.
7:ro-Today 3,15; Good Morning
America ,6, 13; Thursdly Morning 8; Scl1oolles 10; Thr. .
Stooges 17; 7:15-Weatltar 33.
'
7:»-Family Altair 10; Lilias Yoga .. .. .
&amp; You 33; 8:0G--&lt;:apt. K•ng•oo
'• I
8, 10; Leave It To S.aver 17;
Sesame St. 33.
8:»-Romper Room 171 9:C»-Bob
Braun 3; · Phil Donahue 13,151
Emergency One 6; Hogan's
Heroes 81 Lucy ShOw 17; Mister
Rogers 33.
9:30- Brady Bunch B; Hogan's
Heroes 10; Green Acres 17.
lO:oo--&lt;:ard Sharks 3, 15; Edge of
Night 6; All In The Family 8, 10; - '
Dating Game 131 Movie "I Died ·· ·'
a ThOusand Times". 17.
10: 30-AII Star Secrlrls 3, 15; 120.000
Pyramid 13; Whew a, 10;_Bit Wltlt
Knit 33.
10 : 5~BS News I ; HOUM Call 10;
11 :00-High
Rollers 3,15;
Laverne &amp; Shirley 6, 13; Price Is
Righi a. 10. ·
11 :3o-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15;
Ftl'mlly Feud 6, 13; Nova 33.
12:C»-Newscenter 3: Newa 6, 10; ',.1
Paaaword 15; Young &amp; the
Restless B; Midday Magazine 13.
12: 15-Mo\rle "Operation Secret''
17; 12:»-Ryan's Hope6,13; Not
tor Women Only 15; Search IDr
Tombrrow 8,10; Elec. Co. 33.
1:C»-'OaysofOur Llves3, 15; All My
Children 6,13; f'ltws II Young &amp;
the Restless 10.
1: »-As The World Turns I, 10; ' ,
2 : ~Doctors 3,15; One Life to
Live 6, 13; ·2:»-Anolhar World
3, 15; Guiding Light 8, 10; I Love
Lucy 17.
3:C»-Generlil H~~~pltal 6,13; Llllu
Yoga &amp; You 20; Robop 17.
3:.»-Mash 8; Joker' s Wild 10;
Fllntstones 17; Dick Cavett 20;
Lowell Tharnal Remambtrs 33.
4 :e»-Hollywood Squarta 15( Merv
Griffin 6; Addams Feml(y I;
Sesame St. 20,33; Six Million
Doll•r Man 10; Mike Douglaa 13;
,, .,
Baseball 17.
4:»-Bewllched 3; Gilligan's Is. I;
' 'I
Lucy Show 15.
5:C»-I Dream of Jeannie 31 ·S.varly
Hillbillies 8; Mlslar Rogers'
NeighborhoOd 20,331 Gomer Pyle
10; Bionic Woman 13; Brady
Bunch 15.
.'
5:30-Carol Burnett 31 NIWI 6;
Sanford &amp; Son 8; Elec. Co. 20;
Mary Tyler Moore 10; Odd
Couple 15; Ooctor Who 33.
6:C»-Newa 3,8,10,13,15; Studio See
33; VIlla Alegre 20.
...,,
6:30-NBC News 3, 15; Carol Burnett
6; CBS News 8, 10; My Thr. .·
Sons 17.
·
7:00- Cross ·Wits 31 Newlywed ·-i
Game 6,131
Marty Roliblns
Spotlight 8; Newa 10;' Love
__,
A.m erlcan Style 15; Carol Bur,
nett 17; Dick Caven 20; WUd
Wild World of Animals 33.
. •'
7:30-Hallywood Squaros 3; Bonkars
•/
61 Match Game PM a; 11DO,DGe
Name That Tune 10; Naihvlllt
On The Road 131 Dolly 15;
Sanford &amp;·' Son 111 MecNtiiLehrer Report 20,33.
8:C»-Hinonnor 3; Mark &amp; Mindy
6, 13; Inflation: 15; Waltonl 1, 10;
Nova 20,33; Movie "Rio Grandt"
17.
8:30-PIIot "Faculty Lounge" 3;
.'
Angle 6, 13; :9:C»-The 1,._1 &amp;
tho Damned 3, 15; B.,ney Miller
131 Inflation : 6,1; Lou RPII on
Ice 10.
.
.
9:»-carter Country 13; 10:08- 2020 6, 13; Barnaby Jonn I, 101 '
•J •
Newa 201 Footsteps 33. ,
10:15-Commanders 17; 10:3o-. ... i '
Hocking Valley Bluegrass . 20;
Aroe ShOwcase 33.
n :ro-Newa 3,8,10,13,15: attt of
Grouclto 20; . Lowell Thomas
''"
Remembers 33.
11 :30-Jollnny Caraon 3, 15; Staraky
&amp; Hutch 13; Movie "Where the
Bullett Fly" 6; Math II ABC
News 33; Movie "Bleck Gunn"
"'
10.
11 :45-Movlt "Target Zero" 17;
"
12 :05-McCioud t;
12:~
Mannix 13.
·
1:C»-Tomorrow 31 Ntwl 151 1:45~··
Newa 171 1:!0-:-NIWI 13; 2:05Batleball 17i ~ : 35-12 O'Clock ·
High 17.
.

...

.

···.

·-·

.

38Toolh

Grandpa

RUllAND FURNilURE

· '
'

..·' '

f1 TV's

SHPAT ...

..

.

:n

Rutt•nd

·· •

.•,,.

5 Cull

phrase
t lmpreu

7: 00-Cross-WIIs 3; Newlywed
Game 6, 13; Porter Wagonar 8;
News 10; Love American Style
15; Carol Burnett 17; Dick Cavett
20: Watch Your Mouih 33 .
7: 31)-Dolly 3; Match Game PM 6;
Muppet Show 8; The Judge 10;
That' s Hollywood 13; Wlici
Kingdom 15; Sanford &amp; Son 17.
8; 00- Bob Hope 3,) 5; E lght Is
Enough 6,13; Jeflenons 8,10;
Movie
'' Scalawag"
17;
Masterpiece Thea!re' 20; Scarlet
Letter 33.
8 :30- Gaod Times 8,10; ~ : oo,Charlie's Angels 6, 13; Movie
"Stunt Seven" 8,10; Great
Performances 33; Meeting of
Minds 20.
9 :30-Movle " This Man Stands
Alone" 3, 15; IO :e»-Baeebllll 17;
News 20 .
11 :00- News 3,6,8, 10, 13 , 15 ; Turn~bout 20; Lowell Thomas
Remembers 33.
11 :»-Johnny Carson 3, 15; Pollee
Woman 6,13; ABC Newt :13;
Swllch 8; Movie "King- Rat" 10.
12 :30-Movle "Slave Queen of
Babylon" 17; 12 :•o-Mannlx
6, 13; Hawaii Flve-0 8.
l :C»-Tomorrow 3; 11ojews 15; 1:~
News 13; 2:»-News 111 2:sc.12 O'Clock High 17; 3:50-0pen
Up 17.

..
..-

%7 Utlgate
%8 Man's

FURNilURE
742·2211

(Fo r a copy of JACOBY MOD-

ERN, send $1 to : ·'Win at

Z5 Mock

RUllMD

Phone 6~8 ·3m .

tNEWSPA PE R ENTERPRISE ASSN . /

--Instant

24 Rolls af C1rpet In
Stock &amp; 1DG's af S1mpln
to Choose From.
BUYNOW&amp;SAVE

VERY GENTLE Quarter Horse .
Western parade sadd le .

+2

ACROSS .
DOWN
1 Trim off
1 Antithetic
5 TV funnyman ZName In an
10 Palm leaf
Albee title

19 Gennan
article

/'iq. yd.

Call 742-2211
TALK TO
Wondellar Herb Grato
arGeneSmlth

Pass

soprano
15 Expert
7 Actor
.11 "A Fine Mad- Mowbray
neBB" star
8 Sesslon17 Let go
ending

•'

Ali CARPET

••

color

A GOOD SELECTION
OF END &amp; ROLL
BALANCES.

E-C ElECTRICAl Contractor
serving Ohio Volley region.
Sbt days a we8k , 24 hours ser·
vice. Emergency coils. Call

cavating, septic
dozer, backhoe.

l onllj mind that we
can't afford this dar!~.
dinq4 5qualorf ·

1don't mind
it's old and

SAVE ALOT

INSURANCE

been cancelled? Los t' your
operators
license? Phone

2NT

3•

by THOMAS JOSEPH

.'

DRIVE &amp; Ll11lf
&amp;

2+

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

buL one which is going to fail
unless South gives the hand
ve ry special play .
The simple play is to draw
lrumps and try Lo seL up
hearls with one ruff. This
play will fail if hearls are 41. How about trying Lo ruff
two diamonds in dummy.
This play looks awkward
and will probably fail if
hearts are 4-1.
Can anything be done
about a 4-1 heart break ?
South takes his king of
hearts at trick two . Then he
plays all the spades to disca rd his four of hearts . Now
he ruffs a heart, enters
dummy with a high Lrump,
ruffs another heart, draws
Lrumps, stopping in dummy
and eventually loses one diamond.
This play works and is
certainly ingenious, but it
has one slight flaw.
With hearts 3-2 and
Lrumps 4-1 , this line would
fail because the defender
with four trumps would wind
up wlth the last trump.

~...,,~

SAVE ON
CAIPOING

plete Service . Phone 992· 2•78.

South

The bidding is the sort that
experts call scientific. If you
have another name for It we
aren't going to argue with
you about it. In any event,
_s::.:l::.:x.,c;;:l;;u-=b::.
s is ~ fine contract~

dilapidated!

Rutland. Ohio. Pone 742-20011.
PULLINS EXCAVATING. Com-

J 963
o';J852

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

will haul fill dirt, top soil.
limestone and grovel. Call Bob
or Roger Jeffers, day phone
992 -7089,
night
phone

Q7
K,4

Opening lead:

592-3051
--· 4-23-l mo.

S&amp;G
DEEP STEAM
. CARPET
a.EANING

• 10 7 3

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

FHA-AS low . as l%
down (nnn·veterans)

BRADFORD , Aucnoneer, Com~
plete Service. Phone 9.C9-2-487
or 949·2000. Racine, Ohio,
Critt Bradford.
·

• 64

• i 54 3

•·9
•Kto7o4

Pass

(eligible v&amp;terans)

4231 mo. (Pd. I

EAST

Vulnerable : Both
Dealer : North
Weol
East

Real Estate Loans

'

WEST
• 10 86 2
• Q.J 5 2
0 A Q8

•
•
•
•

Purchase
and
Refinance
30 Year Terms
A-No money dawn

992-6011 -

992-352~

f&gt;-30

SOUTH

BUT WASN'T
PAPA's HAD VERY
f'I'IPA GOIN' TO
BAD lUCI&lt;"·
HAVE A JOB LAST BUT HE'S NEVER
MOIHH,AN' TH'
DISCOURAGED ...
MONTH BEFORE , .. HE KEI'PS TRYING
AN' BEFORE THATP " · POOR t:I&lt;\N •.,

SUPER
GOOSE
STOCK
TRAILER NOWAVAtLAILE.

992-2143.

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

Ll'ft1,E ORPIIAJf AIOUE-CBILDRBN'I HOUR

2MlfH E.. t of Wllkesvllte

•New Home
•Add ons
•Remoldings
•Free estimates

LEO MORRIS T.ucking. Will do

NORTH
+A K J

27J20MGnttemery Rd.

Chester, 0.

4-5-lfc

Avoiding the obvious play

TRAILER SALES

Tank'Senice

949-2862--949-2160

BRIDGE
-___·-_-···Oswald
----·
Jacoby and Alan Sontag
• 2

SIDING

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

PIUADlU..'( Cl~ '?

'

+ K.Q9

C. R. MASH
VINYL &amp; ALUM.

Roofing

NEW LISTING
Pomeroy, Wright St.,
Excellent
neighbor hood, .25 acre. Equiped
kitchen. Full bosement,
air conditioning, dining
bar, want S22.500.00. _
NEW LISTING - Meigs
School
Oislrict ,
Homesltes , .. 1- l 'h
acres, electric and
water . Starling at
$3,500.00.
TRY AND TOP THIS Brick, ranch, full basement, wood bvrning
fireplace,
large rec.
room, family room, 4
bedrooms, modern kit·
chen, 2'12 baths, garage,

WOULD 'bJ ~~~S~

,.,

• A 10811!

Jack's Septic

H. L Writesel

. "'-·

Wednesday, May 30

MONTGOMERY

SEPTIC TANK
. CLEANING

Box 3

Jumble loOk No. 12, conttlnlng 110puulet, lt1Ytiltbtelorl1.71poetpeld
from Jumble, cia lhls ntWtpaiNr, lad4, Norwood, N.J. 07641:-lndudeyour
n1ma, 1ddrla.. lip eodt and tn.lkl check• PIYiblt to NewiPiptr&amp;ook•·

Call: 949-2818
or 949-2150
4-4-Pd.

Free Estimates
5·20-1 mo.-pd.

I I I J

Vesteoday'sl Jumbles: PUDGY ROBIN PLAGUE ALPACA
•
Answer: What some so-called "package" tours cost
. -lhese days-A "BUNDLE"

Racine;o. -

Wttoloslle, Distributors
tor line
Pennzoll
lubrlutlon products,
MOtorcraft, Fram, •nd
tndustrlll Chemlcll
Supplies, In •ddlllan to
most m•jor brands of
motor oil.

rI

(AniWira tomorrow)

J&amp;R OIL CO.~

CONTRACTING

~ow arrange lhl!l circled letters 10
form the surprise aniiWer. as sug·
gesled b~ lho above cartoon.

Print answer here:

t·• ·pd.

PhOne 99H323

CONTRACTOR

I KJ

SLJ&amp;!

.

'YOU'LL. &amp;E. ANXIOU-5
iO D060.

I

IYAIWAR

PREPICTAB!.E-ESPECIAU.Y 1.'-1
SUCH COt.IFI'-IEP
QUARTER9 AS
THE Mlt-11-

OPENING SALI!

.

Pomeroy

hOme

malnten~~nc:e ,

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

SmHh Nelson
. Motors,. Inc.

llA6CA~ '!&gt; A.
TRIF~E UN -

rGOiing, tuttirs •nd

I

r) I

RIEiHH 15UT

THE 1..-ITTLt;;

ctownspovfl.

the

lulldoter

Rt. 3
Pomeroy, Ohio
992-5547
4-25·1 mo.- Pd .

$60,000.00.
.
HANDYMAN'S
SPECIAL
3
beclrooms, bath, storage
buildings, lots of space
in town. ONLY S7,500.00.
DON'T MAKE A MOVE
UNTIL YOU'VE DONE
YOUR MOBILE HOME
WORK - 1972. 12'x6Q',
furnished, equipped kitchen, central air, all
underpinning . Lot rents
· for $35.00 per t:nonth.
$8,900.00.
WE ARE LOCALLY
OWNED &amp; OPERATED
AND ARE IN NEED OF
LISTINGS. CALL TODAY!
REALTORS
Henry E . Cleland Sr.
Henry E . Cleland Jr.
992-2259
992-6191

I I· r

Home Mlintenillce

•

WEiiNESOAY, MAY 30,1t7t

Ohio Valley Roofins

-. -

EXPERIENCED
Radlat9r'-,...--.,

1

.

Roger Hysell
Garage

reduced.

You can own your own
bUsinesS and have a nice
apartment,
too.
Business does very well
and is on St. Route 12~ in
Rutland . Would consider lease. Call tOday
for all info .
ST. ROUTE 33 - Large
3 bedroom home with
nice kitchen, laundry
room and bath. Situated
on 1 acre. Sells tor oniy
$32,000.00. Call today!!
COUNTRY HOME - 3
bedrooms, family room,
living room, (with
fireplace!,
kitchen,
ullllty and 112 basement.
Large 2 car detached
garage. Situated on
almos) 2 acres. Call for
an appoll'!tment.
WE NEED LISTINGS!
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
PhOne 742-2003
Hilton Wolfe, Assoc.
PhOne 949-2519
GeorgeS. HabsteHer,
Jr.
Braker 992-5739

608 E .
MAIN
PnMF ROY. 0. · ·

1973 Nobility. 12•60. 2 b• . •
1973 Ridgewood, 70•" · 3 bdr.

child's

record player. records . Avon
bottles, box scrap .material ,
wiglet. mini bike, mony other
items .

.HOBSJE1TER

Mobile Homes Sale's
1965 General , 6()1(12. 2 bdr.
1970Skyline, 12x6S, 2 br.
1970 Sylva, .60x 12, 2 bdr,
1~70 Castle~60x12, 2 bdr .

. PHONE
614-992·5786

10.5. Fri: and Sat. Jean
Trussell, Rocin .. Boshon Rd.,
opposite Bashon Fire House.

FOR SALE by owner, 2- 3
bedroom homes . one with 2
ocres . Caii992·'269A dfter 6 .

Cot. black . female . SH , young.
See at 2.C"' Sycamore St. , M id·
dleport or CCIII 992· 7B53.

Out lia Pomeroy, 0.
Same location for
18years.

GARAGE SALE . Juno 1 ond 2.

Clothing.

992-76680.
KITTEN, block, 6 weeks old.

FOR SALE

YARD SALE. Longovillo. Follow
-signs on CR 10. May 31 and
June 1. 9. om to 6 pm. Men's,
women's, children's clothing
all sizes. Toys, knick-knacks ,
misc.

94~ · 2660 .

d"'l. Minds good. 985·35S7.

BUSINESS

I I

Business Services

BY OWNER: house on •th St .
For information call9'_12·2166 .

sell!! · Price

NOW HAULING . limestone in
Middleport - Po~mroy
area .
Call for free estimate .

lertith stereo, _. .speed record
player with speakers, $30. All
in good condition . See at 256
Sa. Fourth, Ave .•.Middleport.

Hone Care productl.

.... ant and

Co11992-5858 .

TRUCKS, 2 ton 1973 e~nd 1'It
ton 1970. Both with 12 ft .
bol(es. Phone 992-6206 or

Ruth Roo-. 61•.e9f.:n.~J .
Barding I Rldi"IJLOII- and

really

WATER ANO misc. haul ing.

For Sale

YARD SALE. Juno!, 2. ot tho

laboratory Technician.

Services Offered

367-7101.

BUYING : Scrap Iron and clean
cast iron. Sotteries. copper.
brass, aluminum. radiators,
l.ad, insulated cop~r. etc.
Meigs Metals, Rt . 7 and 33 ,
Pomeroy.
Good

VERMEER BALER Model 60S C.
Makes 1500 lb. bole . Evenings
Phone U2-2877 or 742-21'52.

in

Clifton . w. Vo. Coii992-S782.

~- 6 .

949- 2~ .

house

CAMPSITES on Ohio River near

Ave ., Middleport. Fri. and Sat .
LOST: MALE Irish Setter . At&gt;
pro•. 2 yrs . old .. Area of
Bashon on Bosnan Rd .
Children' s pet. Rewcrd .

ROOM

0'

doss rings . wltddlng bands.
diamonds. Gold or silver. Call
RoerWomsley. 7•2-2331 .

Complete.

PLANTS, CABBAGE . broccoli ,
cauliflower, bru ssels sprouts.
t'!eod lettuce , tomatoes, and
large selectiOf"' ol bedding annuals. Pots of tlowen and
hanging
baskets . Cleland
Greenhouse .
Geraldine
Cleland, Racine .
·

Pomeroy , OH. s·125 per mont~
plus utilities. Caii992· SS32.

YARD SAlE . 971 B•ownoll

Lost and Found

992-543• .

992- 5~ 14 :

985-•253.
YARD SALE . Thurs ., HubbO•d

Sunday

992 - 38~ 1 .

Pho ne

TWO BEDROOM furnished apt.

miles east of Darwin or 7
miles west of Tuppers Plains.
Watch for signs . Phone

the day berore publiCation

f urn is hed

aph .

IEMAH~

Real Estate for Sale
sond,

3 AND 4 RM furn ished and un·

FURNISHED APT. suitable for 3
or 4 consfruction workers .
After 5pm coli 992-5434 .
992·3129, or992-S91A .

992-268'1.
OlD FURNITURE . leo bowos,

LIMESTONE ,

gravel. calcium chloride , fer·
til i1er. pog food , ond all types
of tolt . Excelsior Salt Workt.
Inc.. E. Main S~ .. Pomeroy .

992-5434 .

CHIP WOOD . Polet mo.: .
diameter 10" on largest end.
$12 per ton . Bundled tlab. S I0
per ton. l;)elivered to O~io
Pallet Co .. Rt. :2, Pomeroy.

Yard Sale
YARD SALE. Hi~hwoy 681 , live

TUesday
1hru Friday

tent

wanted to Buy

12•. Pomoroy. 992·5461.

NOTICE

COAL .

Route 33, north of Pomeroy.
l arge lots. Coll992· 7"'79.

OLD COINS, pockot wotcltos.

Motaie Home sales and Yard
alea ... occepCed only with
euh with order. 25 etnt chlrge
for Ids carrying 8oJ: Numbtr In
C.rt of The Sentinel.

For Safe

For Rent
COUNTRYMOBILE Home Pork ,

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

one tenor to eliCit _ .. 1o form ·
. lour Ordinary words.

Television
Viewing

RH

ZFR

RJO

RJOEV

ESOZQEYRY

PZQA

YRVZEDJR

DN ' RROV

QHDZM

F.
YUERJ
,
Yeaterdl!y'1 Ca'Jp~: Nm~ADAYS, . SOME PEOPLE
EXPECT mE DOOR OF OPPORTUNITY TO BE OPE:NED
BY AN ELEcrRIC EYE.-&amp;OURCE UNKNOWN
Cl lt7f Klnt Feetur• Syndl~t.. Inc,

.

.

.

. .....
~.

...
.. '

�~ 12-'lbe Dally Selitinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, May 30,1979

r

I

Area deaths
.

'

•
;
E'l11EL EVELYN DILCHER
• Miss Ethel Evelyn Dilcher, 63, died
• early Monday morning at the hol)le·of,
:- a sister,.Mrs. Drexal LB~nbert, Route
: 1, Rutland, ·rollowlng a n.ine month

:: Wness.

::

Miss Oilcher was born March 17,
1916 In Downington, a daughter of the
, : late Fred and Clara Romine Dilcher.
; ~ Dlness had forced her retirement
: from food servi&lt;:e at Ohio university
• where sh~ had worked for the past 12
: · years.
·
. Surviving are a half.brothel' ,
: Charles Dilcher, Columbus; two
.; sisters, Mrs. Drexal (Edith) Ll!mbert ,
·. Route 1, Rutland, and Mrs, Loyd
(Elsie) Priddy, Route 1, Middleport,
. ; and several nieces, nephews !llld

M~yor'~

am

p.m. Thursday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev . Ll!wrence ·
Gluesencamp officiating. Burial w11l
be In the Bald Knob Cemetecy,.
Friends may call at the funeral
home any time . .
DENNIS E. OURS
Dennis E. OW'S, 71, Winter Park,

,· Norman ..

Fla., died Tuesday at Wmter Park
Hospital.
·
·
.
Mr. Ours was born In Portlsnd son
of the late Marion and Ll!ura Douglas
Ours. He was also preceded in death
by an Infant sun.
'
Mr. Ours operated a Maytag store
in Athens for 25 years prior to moving
tD Florida in 1954.
He was a member of tbe United
Methodist Church and Pararamuthia
Lodge 25, F&amp;AM, Athens.
He is survived by his wife, Eloise
Rapp Ours, one daughter, Joan
Leake, Taylor, Mich., one sister,
VIEW PROPOSED REPLACEMENT LOCK SITE .
Mildred Donohew, Letart Falls, four
DRAWING - . Don Herndon, left, Chief of ~
brothers, Lewis, Letart Falls ;
Dlvillon, Huntington District Corps of Engineers, and
Kenneth, We11sville; Wiley, Racine,
AI Elberfeld, (fonnerly of Melg4 County) the corps'
and Ralph of New Brighton, Pa.
· study manager, scan drawing of propoeed 1,200 feet .
Graveside services will be held
long replacement locks at the Gallipolis Dam In
Frtday at 11 a.m. at - Woodland , Eureka. Looking on Is Harry Amsbary, GallipoliS
Cemetery, Ironton. Friends may: can
Lions Clilb member. Herndon was guest speaker
at the Hughes Funeral Hollie, Athens,
during Tuesday evening's 18th annUal U.Ro-KI
Thursday from 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.
meeting 'at Grace United Methodist Church. The HtmPararamuthia Lodge will hold
tlngton District Corps ol Engineers Ia working hard to
memorial services Thursday at 7 p.m.
complete a rather ccmplex study, which will be subat
the
funeral
home.
mitted with the final recommendations to the division
engineer In October, 1980. Exist!ng locks today form a
----------navigation bottleneck In the oliio River and In some

• Surviving are three brothers,
· Howard, Loog Bottom; Clarenee,
; Portland, and Joe of Cheshire;
t several nieces and nephews and an
• uncle, Dayton Hayman.

The Pomeroy Emergency Squad
. ASKTOWED
answered a call to 121 Union Ave., at
A marriage license was issued to
10:~ p.m. Tuesday for Mrs. Allen
Hartley who was taken to Holzer Barry Jay Stewart, 21, Middleport
and J~th Lynn Hail,. 18, Middleport.
Medical Center.

.. cousins.

: Funeral services will be held at 2
·: p.m. today at the Walker
:; Funeral Home with Mr. Eugene
•· Underwood officiating. Burial will be
•' In Miles Cemetery. Friends may call
: at the funeral home In Rutland
: anytillle after 2 p.m. today until time
'l of lel'vices. The famlly will receive
•· friends at the funeral home from 2 to 4
•:and from 7 to 9 p.m. thiS evenirig.
~~

;•

CHARLESB.LAWRENCE

:" Cllarles ~yron Ll!wrence, 58, L9ng
• Bottom, died Tuesday at Veterans
; MI!IJ!Ol'lal Hospital.·
.
He was a 110n of the late James and
Hattie . Haymali Lawrence: He was
: a1ao preceded In death by a brother,

SQUAD RUN

THURSDAY, MAY 31
9 A.M. TO 5 P~M.

FRIDAY, JUNE 1

SATURDAY, JUNE 2
9 A.M. TO 9 P.M.

9 A.M. TO 9 P.ret.

PRO MAC 610 -16 INCH

~__,McCULLOCH
CHAIN SAWS ·

~R

$4000 OFF
PRO MAC 610 ~ 20 INCH BAR
REG.
$4()00 OFF .
REG. $239.95

$24U5

PRO MAC 650 - 16 INCH BAG

OFF
PRO MAC 850 - . 20 INCH BAR
REG.
$4()00 OFF .
$4()00

REG. $299.95

$437.67

degree, the Kanawha River. The situation will soon be
sharply aggravated since commercial and cargo tonnage ill projected to lnCtease aharply (almll\fi double)
by 1990. Two main probJems of the existing project are
Its loc8tion,ln a riV8!' bend, and relatively small size of
the lock chambers; w)Jich are only half the length of .
new locks on the Ohio River. Average transit line at the
Gallipolis locks exctieda six hours, ccmpared to less
than one hour at the other Ohio River locks in the Hun·
tlpgton district Half of the navigation accidents In the
~~ dlltrlct ~e place at the 42-year.;:,Jd
- ~ slral;lure. 4'onically, according to Herndoil,
the·old Galllpolil Locka handle more tritfflc than any of
~ other 13 locks between Louisville, Ky. and Pittsburgh, Pa.

Saturday, May ?AI, 1979
;rota! Head: 170
Feeder Steers: (good and choice)
250 to 300 IIIII, 90 to ill, :tlO to too IIIII.

tr/.50 to 110, 400 to 500 IIIII. 85 to 101, 500
to 1100 lbs. 88.50 to 93.50, 1100 to 7110 IIIII.
tr/.50 to 80, 7110 to 1100 IIIII. 85 to 78, 1100
and over64.75 to 77.25.
Feeder Heifers: (good and choice)
250 to 000 lbll. 90 to 102, :tlO to too IIIII.
85to91.50, 400to 5001bl. 80to 90, 500to
1100 lbs. 75.75 to trl, 1100 to 7110 lbs. 70 to
11'1.50, 700 to 1100 lbs. 80 to 71, 1100 and
over~.50to67.

Feeder Bulls (good and choice) 250
to 000 lbs. to 1011, 000 ID 400 lbs. to 104,
too to 500 IIIII. to 98.50, 500 to 800 Ills. to
98, 800 to 700 lbs. to 78, 7110 to BOO Ills. to ,
72.50, 800 and over to 70. .
Bulls (1,000 lbs. and over) 58 to
tr/.50, Slaughter Cows: Utilities 53.50
to 58.80, Canner and Cutters 42 to 50.
Springer Cows (by the head)
375-«ii, Cow'8-Calves (by the bed)
411).840, Veal Calves 9(1:115, Baby
Calvesllll-130.
·
HOGS- Top Hogs {21().230) pounds
42.50 to 44.30, Boars 30 to 32.$0, Pigs
(by the head) 12.50to 37.50, Cows (450
lbs. and over) 38 to 41.
Lambs (91}-100 lbs. i 71.$0 to 72.$0.

..

4 HP MULCHER
#8644-221NCH

SELF-PROPELLED
REG. 1323.5.0

4 HP MULCHER
No. 8661 21 INCH
SELF · PROPELLED
REG. 1318.00

'

$4QOO OFF

$40

00 OFF

. BUY AG·ll HORSE POWER OR UP BOLENS RIDER
AND RECEIVE AR~150 GENERATOR (1500 WATIS)
389.95 VALUE

1

Feeder Steers (too-8011 lbs.) choice
00.541-102.25, good 82.5CH8.50.
Feeder Heifers (too-700 lbs.) cholce7N0.50, good MJiO*.
Feeder Bulls (too-800 lbs.) chol~
78-100, good 58.25-77.50.
.
Slaughter Bulls (over 1,001 lbs.)
80.»G, Cow and Calf Pairs, by head,
CJ00.747.50.
Slaughter Cows, . Utilities'
53.51J.67.10, Canners and Cutters
47.25-53.10.
Veal (choice and prime) 84-107.50,
Baby Calves (bythehead)'80-127.
Hogs (No. 1, Barrows and GUts;
310-230 lbs. ) 43.50-43.75, Sows 32-37.40,
~ 30-32, Pigs (by tlie head)
14.M.50,
Feeder Lambs 70.25.

EXTENDEDOUTLOOit
Friday &amp;bnJugh 8auday: Cbauce ol
llhowers or tlnmden~ Friday,
Salllnlay IUid Smlday. Wum with
blgha In the mid IIIII to low 111. Lon
In &amp;be mid

10%

Modei8600·Reg. $229.95

TO END MARRIAGES ·

Filing for dissolution of marriage
were Leslie L. Whittington,
Middleport, and Frances J .
Whittington, Middleport; Linda
Parker carpenter; Rt. I, Reedsville,
and James Carpenter, same address.

REFRIGERATORS - RANGIS - .
FREEZERS- WASHERS ·- DRYERS

17' CU

I

n FRIGIDAiRE

· FROST PROOF .

REFRI~ERAlOR

'549

'588
n ADMIRAL
REFRIGERAlOR

15 CU

..FROST PROOF
1

•399'

MANY MORE VALUEs· HURiiY! .

BAKER FURNITURE .
ELBERFELD$

We will have a McCulloch Representative Friday&amp;· !!iaturday
doing carvings and demonstrating McCulloch Cahin Saws.

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

student body. The Daiiforth award goes to one outstanding junior boy,
and one outstandln,g junior girl. Receiving the awards were Charlene
Goegleln,left, Claughter of Mr, and Mrs. CHarles Goegleln, and Cliff Ken·
nedy, son of.Mr. and Mrs. Clifford S. Kennedy, both of Pomeroy.

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

THURSDAY, MAY 31, 1979

With Rolfs Tri-Fold; you don't hsive tO fiaht 'the battle·of the ~lie; Its ''
unique •lidinc ·~ conatruction Ollahlt.' it til lie flat when folded. Put in &amp;I ·
many credit earda, billa, and photot u you like. Rolh alidinauya 'lrillab· ·
ma~ally adiJJat to the. thiclm011 ol the contents. So if you're wutiftc time
tl')'IDI to doae bulky btllfoldt, l"t the One that folds in no. time flat.

· · ROlfS .. . •it ehowa yo'~ c~re.'
EXCELLENT FATHER'S JJAY GIFT F01l
YOUR DAD SUNDAY, JUNE 17TH

ELBERFELD$. IN POMEROY

JOHN STOUT • Outstanding Meigs
High Senior Boy of 1'119.

AEe ~ sian s
~......

No explanation
W.ASHINGTON (AP) - The
Carter . admlniatration's antiInflation agency said Wednesday
the explllllibn In gasoline prices
llince January Is ''far lai'ger than
can be explained" by increases In
oil prtces alone.
The CoWICil on Wage and Price
stability also ruled that Amerada
Hess Co~tion ol New York, a
major petroleum producer and
reflner.-violated the administration's voluntary price guidelines
during the past six months.
Several other oil companies are
probable violators, · it said,
·without naming them.
Amerada Hess ill the first
petrolewn producer to be found
:In violation of the price
,guidelines. The council said the
company admitted It was not In

.]rulge assigned

ll..,_s tor IUO.OO (Value S~_lf.tSJ.

RICIIj\RD LEE ROBERTS

entine

John stout and Carin Bailey were

cootpllance.

Wlttl !MiriMit tf rtlcMr you cootour-'
cfltM 1 ·1 h1vUne WHI •attr lor
lllt.H (YtlvM at IIIUJ) w 1·1
Ottollne WHCII later witt. 2 ~""'"'•

:~

and Mrs. Clifford• Kennedy, River-

nained faculty award wlliners as out- view Drive, and she ill the daughter ol

COLOR TV's . WASHED &amp; DRYER

'56B

: ~~-

Stout, Bailey
•
top senlors

SPEED QUEEN
. HEAV' DUTY

25" CONSOLE

RIDER-36Jnch Cut·Eiectrlc
Start-11 hsp.~oclel13885-7
Reg. $1389.95

We will have a drawing for l·LB.-30E Lawn Boy Electric Trhnmer 113
hsp. Lawn Boy· Trimmer, 1·LZB-60E S/8 hsp. Lawn Boy Electric Trlm·
mer&lt;l·LB-40C 1~ Volt Lawn Boy Electric Trimmer.

VOL. XXVIII NO. 33

to.pay $150.00 to Riverview School as
Personnel items took up a majority
part ·of a matching fund.for the pur- of the board's time.
chase of new folding chairs. The
Resignations accepted , included
school PTO provided the other half.
Jim Watson, custodian, and Ina
BUS BIDS
Massar as head cook, who will be
Bid specifications for a new school retiring at the end of the school year
bils were discussed with Arch Rose, at Eastern High School.
traiiSportaticin coordinator. He was
Mike Will, had teacher and Urlrd
authorized to advertise for bid son grade teacher ~;~t Chester Elementary
June 25. All parties interested In School, submitted his resignation ef.
placing a bid on the new school bUS fective at the close of the school tenn.
are to contact Rose at the superinDennis Eichinger was employed to
tendent's office.
conduct the · sutnmer driver 's
Under new business the board voted education program at a rate of $5.00
to establish the following policy. All per hour.
outstanding checks will be declared
James Huff was re-appointed coorvoid after one year and the treasurer dinator for library services, state and
was authorized to· stop payment on federal programs for the next school
such checks.
..
year. ..
Contracts were awarded to Paul
The Board hired Frank Upton as
Baer and Alfred Wolfe for the tran- half-time mechanic and half.tlme
sportation of vocational students to maintenance man, and Francis
Meigs High School. Salary will be at Benedum as full time mechanic.
the rate of $5 per trip not to eKceed
Granted iwo-year contracts were:
$900 plus six holidays per year.
Mary Bowers, Judy Elkins, Sally Mit·
James Huff, coordinator of federal chem, Debra Rolle and Cindy Scyoc.
programs, reorted that the "Media Granted continuing contracts were:
Now" program grant had been ap- Jereldlne Hawk, Bruce Myers,
proved by the state department. Final Dorothy Myers, Ruth Ann Scarnotification of program and budget brough, Tim Spencer and Doris
Will be forthcoming In several days.
(Continued on Page9)

at

e

DANFORTH WINNERS- The Danforth award winners from Meigs
Hlgb School were named Wednesday morning In an assembly before the

OFF LIST
PRICE ·

Give Aways - Come In, Sign Up .... No Purchase Necessary

•

.MEJ!:TING SET
1111!e111J1 Ia being called
for 1:30 p.m. Thlll'lday 1!1 the River·
boat Room ol the Melcl BraDch,
Athena COunty Savillga and LoaD Co..
to dllculll better acce-!NIIty for aD
.residents to all lllnrlell of the~·
. Handicapped penCJIII .... fliii"C'eiiJ
urged ID attend ID contribute their Input to the lllllelq.

Sale 1 199.99
FREE-6 Pk.
Lawn Boy Oil
With Purchase. ·

Bob Tripp discWISed a need for new
wiring In the Tuppers Plains kitchen.
It was noted that Rufus Cline had of·
fered his services free of charge to
check the Installation of the wiring.
Board employees along with Cline
will correct the problem.
The board expressed · its appreciation to Mike Will, the Chester
PTO, the Chester Alumni Association
and ail the Individuals th!&lt;t either
gave of their tim,e or money to help
improve the Chester school.
The board voted to accept monies
available frolll the state in the
amount of 80 pet. to help .purchase
new equipment for the business office
education classes.
·
Jim Page, high ~~Chool principal, ex,plalned the state will allow up to
$1,280.00 to be spend for additional
equipment. He Hoped to buy three
electric and three manual
typewriters.
At the request of Mrs. Boston, the
board voted to IJUike a temporary
transfer of $6re. 70 from the general
fund to the Title 4-B aC&lt;!ount . until
reimbursement ill received from the
state.
In other business, the hoard agree

A cllizenll

MOdei4500-Reg, $169.95

. Sale 1 149.95

Richard Lee Roberts, principal of
He holds Ohio certification as city
Buckeye Central High School, New · superintendent and high school prlnWaahlngton, Ohio, has been employed clpal, and is a member of the Ohio
u superintendent of Eastern Local Association of School Admnistrators
School.s
.
and the American Association of
Roberta, who succeeds Clark Lees, School Admlnlstt'ators.
was granted a 25-month contract and . His educational experience In·
wW officially begin his duties, July 1. eludes seven rears as teacher at
Eastern's Local Board of Education Parkersburg High School, four years
acted upon the reconunendation of at V(arren High School, Vincent, Ohio,
County Superintendent Robert Bowen and seven years as Principal of
In granting Roberts a contract at the Buckeye Central High Schooh
annual salary of $22,72L116. That Is the
He and his wife, Sandy, have !\TO
same salary paid tq Lees and former . c~en, Tim, 13, and Tammy, 10.
superintendent John Riebel.
Tiley have been very active In the
According to Mn!. Eloise Boston, Ne" Washington United Church !lfld
board clerk, Roberts mill work as an hi8 hobbies Include ceramics, palnCOillultant during June while he is ling and camping.
Jllllldn8 the transttim from New
PUBIJCPARTICJPATION
Washington to Meigs County
In matters relating to public parRoberts was born at Mannington, llcipa~on, the board heard a report
W. Va., and graduated from Parker- and saw a'slide~pe presentation on
Iburg Hlgb School in 1957.
the , Southeastern Ohio Regional
He received a Bachelor of Arts In Education Service Agency by Dr.
Education In 11161 frcm Salem Colleg, Robet:l Wlnefurtner, the executive
Sslem, W. Va., and his Master's director.
Degree In education administration In
After some discussion, the board
19116 frcm West Virginia University. agreed to participate In all services of
He has taken additional a4- SERRC if money becomes available.
mlnlstrative · work at Kent and Cost of this agreement will run
Bowling Green State Universities.
·around $1.07 per student. '

!Dapper... .

FREEl
CHAIN SAWS

Eastem board employs new superintendent

STATE II'UNll81U!lCDVED .

. Mejp Coanb''• b
leal aCbool
distriCts recelted ~13Ui u tllelr
share ol the May State School I'Oilft.
dation Subllcly pa7JD81lla,
Of the total fallowing dedlictiOill
for ~of fepch!• and nonteaching staff members, Melp ~
received f]!l2,320.1111; Eutern Local,
$'75,4S6.58, and Southern LQcal,
'",381.73.

omo vAhLEY UVESTOCK co.

A111ENSI.JVE8TOCI{ SALF.'I
. Salurday,Mayll,tm

.

One defendant was fined
flw
others forfeited banda In tlui court ~
Pomeroy Mayor Cllr~nce AndrewS
Tuesday night.
Fined f200 and collll was Bruce ·
Bowman, no address recorded, on a
destruction ~ property cbarge.
For'feltlng bonds were Daniel
Taylor, Pomeroy, $30, 'polted on a
charge of rilmlng a red light; I.Mry
Wright, Langliville, tz, IIPMdinl;
Gary Jones, GaWpolil, $30, wrong
way on a one way street; Helen
Jeffers, Syracuse, Pl. failure to yield
the right of way; Gregory Sheets, no
·address recorded, f2QO, contributing
to the delinquency of a minor.
Two defendants were fined and five
others forfeited bo~ In the !)Our! of
Middleport Mayor Fred Ho{fman
Tuesday night.
. . .
Fined were Harold S. Utt~. 42,
Chillicothe, f25 and costs, diaorderly
manner, and wntord c. Hill;·80, Loog ,
Beach, Calif., ~and costs, passing 01\
a double yellow line.
Forfeiting bonds were Dewey L.
Culver, 36, New Haven, speedil!g 42 In
a 25 mlle :woe, $29; Norman M,
Presley, 80, Pcmeroy, $:15, Improper
backing; Carleton Dunn, 48, ·
Lynchburg, Va., ,PiG, driving while .
intoxicated; Jimmy Drlsliell, 53,
LaMartjue, Tex., $150, !allure to stop
after an accident, and Gerald
D.Wilklnson, 41, Pomeroy, $50,
di.sorderly manner . .

Funera~ services will be .held at I

~

Cow.;t

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- The
murder trial of Dr. David Ucker
Franklin County Common
Pleas Court will be beard by a
visiting judge.
· Franklin County Common .
Pleas ·Judge George Tyaclt was
drawn to hear the cue but decld: ed to dlsqua)lfy hlmae1f and request that It be assigned to a
judge from outside the county.
Tyaclt explained that besides ·
,being a physician, Ucker Is a
practicing attorney and has
arped cues In the Conunon
Pleaa Court. Since judges In the
coUrt have had profesalonal conlact with Ueker, It would be im· ,
proper for them to hear the case,
Tyacksald.
· Ucker Is charged In the murder
cf Or. Walter T. Bond on Oct. 31,
1m.
(Continued on Page 9)

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Officials
of the New York-based American
Electric Power Co. signed an
agreement today opening the way for
establishing a statewide authority to
acquire and operate 83 municipal
electric systems In OhiQ. '
The agreement is one of two criteria
the Securities and Exchange
Commission said ~EP must meet·
before the large electric utilities
conglomerate .can acquire the
Columbus and Southern Ohio Electric
Co.
·
Before the merger can occur,
however, Ohio voters must approve a
constitutional amendment and the
GeneraiAssemblymustpassenabllng
legislation.
The agreement was signed In Gov.
James A. Rhodes' Statehouse office.
"The step being taken today is one
of the final steps in the long and
complicated AEP-Columbus and

m e r g.e r

·

,·

standing seniors and Clifford Kennedy and Charlene Goeglein were ,
named outstanding junlon at Meigs
High School Wedcnesday when the
annual awards a8sembly was b!lld.
stout is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Billie stout, Ro11te 2, Albany, and
Mlsa Bailey Ia the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Richard Bailey, Hooker St., MidMCIARIHINgh. SenlBAILEGY' I of.Ou1~9ding dleport.
.
. e gs
or II'
•• ·
Kennedy and Mlas ·Goegleln were
the Danforth Foundation Award wln-

a g r e e m e n t c n e r s as junlhors.

Southern merger which we have been
working on since 1968," Rhodes said.
· Rhodes said the agreement
provides protection for Oh1o's
municipal electric power systems,
assuring their customers of adequate
eneregy In the years .ahead.
Signing the agreement ' was W.S.
White Jr., AEP's chairman and chief
executive officer, William Lyren,
president of American Municipal
Power.Qhio, a statewide organization
of Ohio's municipal electric systems;
B.T. Ray, president of C&amp;SOE, and
Charles A. Heller Jr., executive vice
president of Ohio Power Co. of
Canton, an AEP subsidiary.
The Democratic and Republican
leadership of the Ohio General
Assembly was also on hand for the
ceremony.
Specifically, the agreement
requires all parties Involved to
support the necessary legislation and
amendment procedures, White said.

· ·

. ras c r.ms ·
The SEC also told AEP to submit
up-to-date data to'support the fairness
to shareowners of both C&amp;SOE and 17 passenuers
the utility group.
e~·

"The agreement, which · is
contingent upon AEP's acquisition of
C&amp;SOE, is the result of · Intensive
negotiations carried on by AMP.Qhio,
AEPandC&amp;SOEsincelastJuly, when
the SEC indicated that it would
approve such acquisition if the two
conditions were satisfied," White
said.
The merger must be approved by
the holders of at least 80 percent of
c&amp;soE common stock.
The enabling legislation and a
constltitutional amendment
resolution will be Introduced in the
Legislature
with
bipartisian
sponsorship, Lyren said.
The amendment is required so the
authority can realize its full pot~ntial
for the construction and acqu1~1\lon of
facilities , Lyren said.

One person hurt ·in 4 accidents
Four ae&lt;!idents were Investigated
Wednesday by the Gallia-Meigs Post,
Highway Patrol.
One person claimed injury following
a two-vehicle collision on SR 141, at
the junction of Neighborhood Rd., at
4:15p.m.
Offieers report that an east bound
auto operated by William McCreedy, .
3:i, Gallipolis, and a . west bound
vehicle driven by Sylvia Golden, 36,
PatrlqtStar Route, collided head-on In
a cui'Ve.
Golden claimed injury, but was not
immediately treated.
Golden was cited on a charge of left
of center.
One driver was cited following a

two-vehicle accident In Meigs County
on SR 124, at ~epost 39, at 11: 15 a .m.
The patrol reports that an east
bound auto operated by Donny Evans,
20, Portland, hed slowed at a rough
section of the roadway.
An east bound vehicle driven by
Garlan Balles, 38, Poca, struck the
Evans auto In the rear.
There was severe damage to the
Evans auto, moderate damage to the
Bailes vehicle.
Bailes was cited on a charge of
excessive speed for conditions.
Officers Investigated a two-vehicle
mishap In Meigs County on CR 46, at
the junction of SR 7, at 7:45 p.m.
The patrol reports that an auto

operated by Steven Schneider, 18,
Reedsville, turned off of 7 onto CR 46,
slid left and struck a west bound
vehicle driven by George Collins, 36,
Reedsville.
,
There was moderate ·damage to
both vehicles. Schneider was cited on
a charge of left of center. ·
The patrol inyestigated a. two-truck
collision on TR 3, one and e1ght:lenths
of a mile west of SR 218, at 3:15p.m.
Officers report that an e~ bound
truck driven by Teddy R. Dillon, 50,
· Crown City , and a west bound truck
operated by David Kingery, 40;
Gallipolis, collided in a curve.
There was moderate damage to
both vehicles. No citation was issued.

·, ·

~::~=~~~~~~~~~~~~~iiii~~~~~~~ ~:;.;;~~~i:
..: --'"

l•

···-

. ,;._ · ·

·TICKET SALES UNDERWAY
Free tickets for two excursions by
v ·the p . A. Denny on Regatta Weekend
_
·-·
_
)
wW be available at both the Pomeroy
,- ·-·J·_·..,.___ _,_.._
~
and Middleport libraries tomorrow,
· t #!."''
Mrs. Ellen Bell, librarian, said today .
·· ~/",...,·
Friends . of the Libraries, senior
citizenS, clients of ccmmunlty mental ·
SPARSE CROWD - AlthoUgh London Pool In
bealth and historical society members
Syracuse
has been open since Memorial Day, the coru well as · library staff· members
·wd
has
nqt
been the greatest. THe weather hasn't
lllready have tickets. The balance will
cooperated
In
the least with the pool opening. A few
be distributed on a first come, first
bathers
took
adv•tage
of the day Wedneday and_enserved baslll.

~-~·-·--=·~~-=:.:·
,. :-~.::::::~;;::::i:::--· ·=

·~

*

Helala~son. of Mt.

joyed a short swbn but m011Uy took advantage of the
sun and soaked up a few rays. The pool is open from 1
p.m. to 1 p.m. dally. THe pool can be rented for paties
any evening from 78:30 to 9:30 for $25 an hour with a
minimum of two hours.

OWLS HEAD, Maine (AP) - A
Downeast Airlines commuter plane
from Boston crashed near the Maine
coast, killing 17 of the 18 persons
aboard, authorities said.
Seven bodies were found late
Wednesday and the rest were
discovered early today In or near the
wreckage, said William Reinhardt, a
Knox County deputy sheriff.
One passenger,
John M.
McCafferty, 16, of Searsmont, was In
"serious but stable condition" at a
Rockport hospital. The youth, who
suffered a broken leg and head
injuries, was shouting for help as
rescuers arrived.
Polillo and sheriff's deputies had
searched until early today, hoping to
find survivors In the muddy, heavily
wooded area where the turboprop
DeHavilland Twin Otter went down
Wednesday night en route from
Boston to Owls Head.
The airline was withholding the
names of the passengers and crew
members until the bodies could be
identified and relatives notified.
Flight 46 carried 16 passengers, a
pilot and a co-pilot on the 45-minute
trip from Boston's Logan Airport.
The Canadian-built aircraft crashed
shortly before 9 p.m. after the pilot
made a routine request for permission
to diveri the flight to Augusta because
of poor weather conditions at Kno;J
County Airport in Owls Head, said the'
Federal Aviation Administration.
But the air traffic controller at
Brunswick Naval Air Station lost
radio contact with the pilot at 8:43
p.m., said FAA spokesman Mike
Clccarelll, and "the next thing we
knew .we got word of a crash."
Sheriff Carlton Thurston said the
plane lost Its Wing when It hit a tree on
Otter Point and crashed about 400
yards from the beach. Witnesses said
the plane crashed Into a large rock
and flipped over onto Its back.
Broken ~es protruded from the
wreckage as ·medical examiners tried
' to assess the carnage. Officials at the
scene radioed for """-• bags, saying
"we need plenty:::"'A temporary
the Rockport hospital.
morgue
set up
on the grounds
of
The was
Knox
County
Sheriff's
Department said It received the first
report
of the
crash at
13 p.m.later.
and
found the
wreckage
25 9:
minutes
An inve:rtlgator from the Ndational
Transportation Safety Boar was
scheduled to arrive at the scene today
.with FAA representatives.
Downeast Is a small air taxi .service
headquartered In Owls Head, a.village
just outside Roc,kland, a fishing port
·and tourist center 90 miles northeast
of Portland.
·

Mr. and Mrs. Charles Goegleln, Route
3, Pmneroy. Principal James Diehl
announced the four winners.
Mrs. Kay Flck presented the
geometry award winners who are
Ja)'ne Hoeflich, hlgheBiaverage, and
Jerry Fields, Camille Swindell, .David
Wilkes and Darla Wilcox, lltralglt
A's.
Earl Young named the outstanding
senior mathematics student who was
Jana Burson, senior aalutatorian this
spring.

, l'erfect attendance awarda !liVen .
by Young went to Yvonne Core, Diana
Davidson, PhylliB Davis, Unreclla
Johnson, Kathy Parker, Dorset
Thomas, Kimberly Roulh, Carol
Wilkes, Rick Wllltarnson, Angela
Triplett, Carla Rife and Patty Dyer..
Drama awarda presented by ~lla
McCoy went to Chrl.s.Woods, TraCey
Jeffers, outstanding juni!r per· .
fonnance; Clllf Kennedy and Margo ·
Martlri, best junior perfonnances; :
Kevin King and Slwi Mitch, out· •
standing senior perf01'111811CS11; Rick
Havatter and Vicki Blankenship, best
senior performances and Carin
Bailey, special assistance.
French achievement awards
presented by Mrs. Vlrglnla POitci.
went to Susan Damler, Unrecka Jhnson, Kathy Parker and Denise Tur·
ner, French I, and to Tim Gore, Jayne
, Hoeflich, Shella Horky and Beth
Perrin, French II. Charlea Frecker
pl'esented Industrial arts awards to
David Hoffman, Jim Boyer and Den·
n1s Thornton, Industrial Arts I;. Brian
King, Tim Salllers, Robert Duckworth,lndustrlal Arts II; Tim Wyant,
Industrial Arts m, and Steven
l'ulllnll,lnduatrlal Arts IV.
The outstanding art student named
by Jack Slavin was Kevin King and
Everett Holccmb presented the
De!Wb agricultural awan! and the
vocational achievement award to
Patty Dyer. Robert Oliver pre.nted
. the algebra awards to Tonia A.sh,
Algebra I, and David Hoffman,
Algebra II.
M!J. ,ruta Slavin presented the
biology I achievement a~ to
C8mll1e Swindfill, David Wllbl,
Darla Wilcox,\ Shella Horky and
Jayne Hoeflich, and named Jana BID'aon as the outstanding senior aclence
student.
Electronic awards given by .Dale
Harrison went to David Horton and
Randy Tackett and Rosemary Hubbard and Tod Morrow won the
vocational dralting ·awards given by
Charles Corder. Jane Burson wu
named the D.A.R. Good Otizen.
Scholarship winners announced Include Lori Wood, PTA scholarship,
BMOUDced by Ms; Martha Vennarl;
Deborah Danner, Ohio Academic
Scholarship, announced by 'llm
Flesher; Shart Mitch, Rio Grande
College aci}Oiarshlp, announced · by
JOhn Redovtan. Redovtan allo announced that Joel Kevin Kitchen won
the Hocking Tech ~pal's Award.
Senior class honorsrlans were Jobn
Stout, Vlclde Plckelll Smith, Valerie
Matson, Patty Dyer, Rita Jane
Rousey and Carol Wilkes. Jana Bur·
son was tiW ·cla&amp;s salutatorian and
Deborah Danner the cla&amp;s valedictorian.
Wort study program certlflcalell
aw~ by Ma!')' Bacon went to Joe
McCI!llld, Jo,oo Ruuell, Robert
· Pickett,
Devidoen Herdman,
Robert Klein and Jeb Prater.

ou..a

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    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="50703">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="50702">
              <text>May 30, 1979</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="5386">
      <name>dilcher</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1928">
      <name>lawrence</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1369">
      <name>ours</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
