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                  <text>~ 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

�~-'Ole Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, O.,.Thursday, May 31,

1979

Bond's opinions

Editorial opinions,
comments

Baseball poetry

· Carter had better perform

In Washington
J

Gov't botches it again

By Martbll Aagle 111111 Robert Walten secutors now are informally inWASIDNGTON (NEA ) - The dicating that they'd he haPIJY with the
federal government's inherent in· censorship of a mere 10010150 words.
The Progressive's editors still don 't
ability to proceed with either discre·
lion or delicacy when confronted with know which sections of the article are
sensitive civil liberties matters 1$ involved, however, because the
once again on display; in a highly Justice Department bas classified the
publicized legal Case.
censored manuscript, its seeret afThe arrogant, heavy-banded fidavits and legal briefs submitted to
behavior of both the Justice Dertment the court and even major portions of
and the Energy Department could Morland 's own affidavit.
prove to be the Wldoing of federal ef- Government officials have
forts to ban the publication of a con- graciously agreed to grant security
troversial magazine article on the clearances to the Progressive's
hydrogen bomb.
lawyers so they can prepare an apTbere Will SW'pliaing popular sup- peal of the WiscoiiSin judge's deci~~.
port for the government's position in ~ons .
March, when its attorneys went into
Proceeding true to form, the
federal court In Wlaco1181n to win a government 18 well on its way to
pair of judicial orders prohibiting the dissipating the benefit of doubt given
felaty Progressive magazine from to it by those initially bothered by the
.•
..
troublesome aspects of publicity ,., .....
printing the disputed story.
Although freedom of the press was discussing. ·the technical aspects of :::rl:?... .... _
7"'"' .. w~""" M••ooflr&gt;
a cer¢ra! lasue in the court case nuclear weaponry.
many of the nation's leadi11g'
DeW!IpBpei'B were publicly critical of
. the Progressive 's position.
Indeed, the affidavit submitted to
the court by the article's author,
Today In History
Howard Morland, suggests that he ia
By The Associated Press
· lnslon of a conswntng curioalty if not
Today is Thursday, May 31, the
WASHINGTON
.(AP)
during
his Easter holiday,
an WU18tul fiution about p~ly 151st day of 1979. There are 214 days
have
Traditionally,
presidents
in an adjacent field
photographers
bow fuaton ta tricgered in a hydrogen left in the year.
maintained warm relationsbps with filmed him and Wife Rosalynn talking
weapon-aproc:esathathardlycanbe
Today's highlight in history :
clualfted u matter of compelling
On this date in 1910, the Union of news photographers. Not so President to a farmer on a tractor - hardly the
Carte~
publlo.lnter,est.
South Africa was founded.
kind of photo that makes for ,bad
In fact, Carter's rocky dealings with publicity. Yet when Carter's attention
B t the
On tbl8 date:
project. for Open GovernIn 1740, Frederick williani the First lensmen seem to threaten a was directed to the photgraphers, a
u.
ment, a, Wlllbingtoo-based public infew hundred yards a way, another cold
terest organization directed by AI- of Prussia died.and was succeeded by continuing feud.
Photographers, be it noted, are glare was forthcoming.
tomey nieodore J. Jacobe, bas just Frederick II, who became known as
generally agreeable people. So much
learoe;ttbat the JliSitce Department Frederick the Great.
Then. came the president's trouthas swrunoned the Federal ,Bureau of
In 1793, the Reign of Terror began in so that when resigned President
Richard M. Nixon's dealings with fishing expedition along a public road
lnvealigation Into the case.
the French Revolution.
· While departmental attorneys are
In 1889, more than 2,000 lives were White House reporters reached a near Camp David, Md., less than two
pursuing a civll·cue, FBI agents are lost in a flood at . Job.nstown, Watergate ebb,he continued to retain weeks ago . Two photographers
the good will of many photographers. parked their eat's, walked to the
nd cling
riminal
'
PeMsylvania.
co u
a c
lnv~ation,
In 1916, British and German fleets
But Carter is different.
fishing spot, and made a couple of
repeatedly jnterviewing everyone fought in the Battle of ·Jutland off
A few weeks ago, an Associated pictures before leaving the president
suspected of having received a copy Denmark. It was the only major Press photographer being escorted alone. Within five minutes they were
ol Morland's manuscript.
1be FBI's criminal probe un· engagement between the two fleets in through the East Flower Garden at gone - but not before they recorded
the White House encountered the still another glare and a glimpse of the
doubtedly will .have a "chtlling ef- World War I.
.
president
industriously jogging in president's back. The next time
feet" on tboae incUned to aid the ProIn 1962, former Na~1 Adolf
greasive and Morland in their defense Eichmann was executed m Israel running shorts. So he took the picture Carter patronized the spot, a week
yet unwilling to rtak the antangonism, after hla capture in Argentina and - the sort of photo tailor-made to later , the parking places' the
impress Ibis ·country's growing army photographers bad used before
if not harassment, of federal taw en· trial oo charges of war crimes.
walking the rest of the way to Carter's
forcement officers.
In 1970, an earthquake In northern of joggers.
Carter felt differently . He stopped fishing hole were blockaded by
. 'There Ia the high probability that Peruldllednearly67,000people.
material gathered by the FBI in its · Ten y~ars ago: Striking otl workers in his tracks, put bands on hips and federal park rangers.
criminal investigation will wind up in on the Island of Curacao went on a glared . Then he ducked behind a
Maybe Carter is a man who
the hands of the govenunent lawyers rllll!page of burning and looting in the While· House police guard post until
uniformed officers shooed the treasures his·prlvacy. Nothing wrong
conducting the still-pending civil case capital of Willemstag.
But not ell8ctly in
-a clear abuse of FBI resources · Five years ago: It was announced Industrious photographer inside and with that, of
keeping with the jlublictty Interests of
Thete 's also the matte!' or' the tba~ President Richard Nixon and out of sight.
someone who preSumably is a serious
Energy Dertment •s ex post facto SoVIe~ leader Leonid Br~ev would
In his home town of Plains, Ga ., candidate for a second term.
, classification of a report 00 the meet m the Soviet Uruon m late June .
. Lhydrogen bomb triggering
One year ago: U-S Secretary of
·mechanism, publicly available for State Cyrus Vance and Soviet Foreign
abnost folir years m the shelves of Minister Andrei Grom)'ko met five
the library at the Los Alamos Seten- hours in New. York but failed to
tiflc Laboratory in New Me'dco.
resolve r~ffi81D1Dg las~s holding up
The 29-page document was U.S .-Sov1et strategic arms nedecl••tfled in July 1975. But when a gotiatio~s. .
.
. .
reaearcher asal.!ting 1n the preparaToday s ~irthdays : Prmce Rluruer
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
tton of a defense for the Progressive of Monaco IS 56 years old. Pro football
displayed an interest In the report in celebrity. Joe Namath is 36.
May of this year, it was suddenly seiz- Oem~ratlc ~ator Henry Jackson of
n:vurts Of several cases of abdominal
ed and reclassified. The government Washmgton IS 67.
.
Abdominal epilepsy
epilepsy
In the November :U, 1978
dlaplayed its total inseiiSttivity to the . Thou~t for today: A moment's
• issue of The Journal of The American
concept of a free press by proposing msigbt IS sometimes worth a life's
DEAR DR. LAMB -My 62-year.()Jd Medical Association. I'm also sending
that a federal bureaucrat rewrite the experience- Oliver Wendell Holmes,
magazine story to conform to the American scholar and writer, 1110&amp;- sister has told me repeatedly that a you The Health Letter number 1l).jl
doctor diagnosed her as having a)). Epilepsy: YouCanHaveltToo. ~
gove'nunent's vague "national securi- 1894·
dominal epilepsy. Over many yeilrs readers who want this issue can send
ty" criteria.
she
has had a great variety of 50 cents with a long, stamped selfWhen specUtctty was required, the
aliments and bas been to see many addressed envelope for it. Send your
government displayed its passion for
doctors, most of whom she evenWy request to me in care of this
secrecy by te111ng the court on March
SNIFF, SNIFF
distrusts.
newspaper, P.O. Box 1551, Rlidio City
9 that it objected to 2,190 words in the
WASHINGTON (AP) - While
We
are both reg18tered nurses but Station, New York, NY 10019.
proposed article.
humans can distinguish only a few
As the JAMA report points out the
But on March 14 -only five days thousand odors, dogs can i"'rt out as abdominal epilepsy is. something I
have
never
heard
of.
Any tnfonnation causes for abdonilnal epilepsy reany
later '" federal lawyers called for the many as haH a million, a~rdlng to
you can supply about this condition aren't known and they may be
exdal111 ol only 1,322 words. The pro- the National Gr grapbic SOciety.
will be much appreciated. Is it known nwnerous.
by any other name and does it have
I can understand why your sister
any relationship to grand mal or petit may have grown to distrust pbystmal epilepsy and 18 Dllantin used In cians if ahe bas bad recurrent attacks
treating it? As far as I know there's of abdominal pain that weren't
never been any eptleJ18y In our fami- diagnosed. Abdonilnal epUepsy 18 not
NEW YORK ( AP) - Other than for
The rise in the number of women 1y.
something that wallts toto your office
the limited supply and high cost of workers has also enabled some
DEAR READER - Yes, there is every day. The end result is that llocimported oil, is there something about families to assume more debt.
such a thing as abdominal epilepsy. tors may not think of tt as a possible
the 1979 ~and of inflation that makes
Mortgage lenders themselves have Its chief cbaractertatic is attacks of for recurrent attacks of abdtmlnal
control of it unusually difficult?
sometimes encouraged debt by abdominal _pain. They're associated pain that remain unexplained.
The answer 18 yes. Regulatory bending the rules of thumb on the size with abnonnallties in the EEG (brain
DEAR DR. LAMB - I'm a 27-yearrestralnts on borrowing have been of loaM that can be made on homes wave) and the d 0
d
the 0ld femal
•--'-- 1 d0
eased. So has the American attitude sometimes granting mortgages that' same medlcalioiiS
Y
responto totreat · products eand
vege
.... ..,...
dairy
used
some
fish ..Oureat
concern
toward public and private · debt. aniJ&gt;unl to 35 percent of gross income. epilepsy.
18 our 26-rnontbo(l)d sill(1 nursed hUn
Ufestyles are involved, as is lowered
But they aren't the only lenders who
Some of these cases have for one year and aince then we have
confidence in government. And more. have relaxed standards. Bank credit associated disturbances
of been n feeding him as I feecl myself_
In other years, inflation's onset cards have .proliferated, someliines c,octousness or awareness during the the foods I feel most nutritious exwould mean tighter federal budgets. unsolicited; and with them, lines of time the attacks of abdominal pain eluding meat products. He 18 a very
But for fiscal 1978 the deficit was credit have often been extended, occur. Since you're a registered healthy, roery-cbeeked young boy. I
..,.76 billion·. The 197ll deficit is about .again unasked.
nurse, I preswne you have access to also give him a dally vitamin pill. Am
$33 billion ; the 1980 projection is
A particularly important regulatory the medical literature and there were 1 depriving htm of any vitamins or
minus $28.4 bWion.
change has had li big impact on the
mineral8 he might obtain 1n meat?
. While they differ on so many things · housing market. That change permits
My bueband Ia an avid meat eater,
as to .undermine confidence in their savings institutions to offer high-yield 1
• . Neither of us. influence our 8011 either
craft, economists generally agree that savings certificates.
THE~~;;,v,~L
way and he baS eaten meat on occasuch deficits at the peak of a long
Until last year, a savings and loan
sion. Since meat iS very high in proeconomic expansion can only result in association or savings bank could
.O:G ~- .........._
tein, my husband feela our 8011 must
offer long-term savings certificates
~
be ..icktng
••
·inflation.
.
L~ protein. Please ease our
DEVOTED~THE
· ds for our son Ia our main con. ·But private individuals have also that, with compounding, might reach
nun
run budget deficits. Consumer &amp;.plus percent over seven or eight ·
~ESTOF
"
~aliment debt - the kind repai-1 by years. Now they can offer $10,000, 6~~~~
ceg'EAR READER '-"Meat Ia a good
the week or month - has risen to month certificates that pay ciOS&lt;J to 10
cttyF.dllor
DAVID BU!liURK
SOurCe of proteinnd otbl;!; .S!Ibstances
more th an 275 bil1lon, up $45 blllion In percent.
·
AdnrU.fe&amp;Muqer
the bod eeda y
et
a -year.
The net effect has heen to delay ihe
Pui&gt;UsheddaUye.ceptSalunlarbrTheOht•
yn
· ou can g ll)ost of
'
A thr~·yea
1 k t th fl
bo b ·
1
th t
ed Valley Publllhlng Company· Multimedia 1..,
these same substances from an ade~
r oo a
e · gures
me uymg s urnp a accompani
111Coort St., Porneroy, Ohlo 45m. 8 ...; 1 ~
quate amount of flab In the diet as 1
reflects the changed attitude. In inflation in other years, when lenders Office Phone 992· me. Editorial Pho..
note you use for yourse
' If.
. .
January 1977, the ratioL of installment dtdn 't have funds to lend. The 10 992Se«lndclail
·2167·
'pootage paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.
Your son does need a source of comdebt to Income was auuut 13 percent. percent rate helped them retain
NaUonolldvertlalng - t i o live und"' ·
1 1e olein eaning
·
A year later it had
risen
to
14.
This
deposits,
which
could
be lent out.
.._late., !101 Euclld Ave.. Clevela;..r Ohlo
P
e
pr
'
m
one
that
con44115.
·
tains all of the 10 esential amino acids
.
year it's 15. '
No, it isn 't only the cost of oil that
Soblcrlptton ,..., , Delivered by c.orrter
for children. Fish does contain comWhy the willingness to take on so has fueled the current 13.9 percent
where available 90 cent.! II"' week By Motor
1t
te'10
_L
much debt'! Surveys show that people annual rate of inflation. You might ~:\'h~~~;."j'~~ 1' :;"~~ot'dv;,.u.St•. g;:•
P e e pro
and so does milk. If he
have lost faith In the government'S say that Americans, as individuals Year. 127.00: so moottuo, m'~: ,;,.:·mon~
gets an adequate amount Of fish and
ability to restrain inflation, and so buy and through government, also added .. 0 ~· 18·!!!t_ El.i...Joe" .132.110:••r: Six months
milked!
'
In his diet With his daily vitamin
tb ki .
' .. """'nont~,, l9.00. onb.Ktiptlonprl~
m _cation, ~ , shouldn't have any
before priceS rise even more.
grease to e S ds.
. mc~de!!SunclayT'i rnc" - ~nllncl
nutntionaldeflCleilcy.

Jimmy's Whitehouse

course.

HEALTH

•

Business mirror

11 110

I Will driving through Clnclnnati one
bright day.
I saw all the traffic was going one way
!turned on the old CB once more
·
&amp;meone asked What was the seore
the night before?
and the other gliY said REDs 10-4 '1().

4'

There was some other fellows out
there ready to perform
dresed in different colored uniforms .
Now I c~ to this place with
Then out came four men dressed in
Riverfront Stadiwn wrote on the top
black
and allthe ·cars started to stop
three
went to the front and one to the
So I bought a ticket and went inside
back.
.
the place
I thought maybe they wete bavi~~g a The guy in back Shouted PLAYBALL
And a good liine was had by all.
race.

0

0

They played what they called nine innings

I didn't even know who was winning
until I asked the score
and he answer came back REill10-4
.'lo-4'.

1am leamnu this town
·~-..

but not forever
Because .whilelwashere
Icaugbt'BASEBALLFEVER'.
·
·
CATCH IT
.
.
Lowse Gilmor
Pomeroy, OHioMsy1979

SPECIAL NOTE

1978 CHEVETTE 2 DR

ATl'ENTlON, CGIIcbes ol summer ba~eball. III order for tbe Sentinel to accmately report your
team's ball game., tbe bueball
report forma mut be accurate,
'Jbey tiheald at least bave tbe 1e0re
and tbe oame ol tbe teuaa IDvolved, ud III the proper order; .
Already tbe sporll stiff bu bad
g&amp;mel 1Drlled bi without tbe
name. ol tbe teama Involved. With
over 100 different teaau n tbe
COUIIty, It Ia lmpordble to do a loci
job of sports reporting without
your f111le.t coperaUou. We'll be
glad to report wbat you give, but
pleue be sure It's accnnte, eVen
U you oaly give the score rmd the

3495

1

Local car~ 4 speed trans.; radio,
good tires, clean Interior, blue
finish, real good economy.

I

1978 IMPALA COUPE . '6195°
Local I owner a~d only · 12,000
miles. AM-FM radio, power
windows and D. ltoks, cruise
· control, tilt st. wheel, air cond.,
digital clock, 305 V-8, P.S.. P.S ..
and sharp car, sliver with red
vinyl top.

1977 CHEV. IMPALA 4 DR
• 14095
Smatt' V-8, auto.; P.S., P . B.,
locking dlff.. air cond., clean
interior, green finish .

Names. • •
in the news ·

•

They bit the ball and ran the bases
Before I went to my tle&amp;t
Some
had smiles upon their faces
I took a good look aroWid
These
were the guys that touched
lsure didD't see very muCh ground
I saw a lot green stuff that looked like them all
becaiue they bad really hit the ball.
grass
Boy I thought 'This is sure first This is what they call a HOMERUN
Boy this game 181ots of fun!
class!'

11_,

name.

2795 .

1977 PINlO 2 DR

1

Local owner, clean Interior, AM·
FM CB r"!!lo, g'W tlr,es.

1975 FORD PINto WGN 12295

'

-HOLLYWOOD (AP)- Forget the
fame ; glamour and dollars', lor
Shelley Hack, tl\e newest of
television's "Charlie'~ Angels,"
happiness is her own studio parking
space - two of them.
·
The 27-year.()ld Miss Hack, alread)' '
a "Charlie" girl In 'IV spots for
Revlon cosmetics, was In Hollywood
heaven Wednesday as she .discussed
replacing fallen angel Kate Jackson tn
the bit show.
"I can't beUeve it,' ' she.satd. "I get
the series and I get to go to the
C&amp;rrlbbean (to ftlm the opening
episode). And I get two parking
spaces- one by the soWid stage and
one by my dressing room."

WASHINGTON(AP)-AgrtcUlture
Secretary Bob Bergland bas denied
rumors be might resign and run for
public office, aaYinli life oo Capttdf
Hill is "abeolutely uncivilized." •
"fi's terrible," be said. "Early
morning, late at night, aeven days a
week. It's like the dairy business. I put
them in the same;league."
Bergland, a former three-term
congressman and farmer from
Minnesota, was re-elected to a fourth
term in 1976 but resigned when
President Carter nominated him to
the Cabinet post. He said Wednesday
that if carter bad not appointed him to
the cabinet, he would have run for reelection once more and then quit.

NEW YORK (AP) - Shere Hite,
author of '"'lbe Hite Report," a bestselling study of female sexuality, is
suing the Macmillan Publishing
CompaJIY for allegedly withholding
about $790,000 iii royalties.
The suit, filed Tuesday in state
Supreme CQurt, claims that when she
signed her c(Kitract, Miss Rite was
induced to agree to a limitation clause
holding her earnings to $25,000 a year,
presumably for tax heneftts. The book
bas since earned more than $875,000,
she said, while she has received only
three $25,000 payments, plus her
original $20,000 advance.

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) Country music singer Lynn AnderS()n
has" given birth to a 7-pound, 6-ounce
boy at St. Patrick Hospital In Lake
&lt;llarles, La.
"LyM and the baby are both doing
fine," the singer's secretary, Vicky
Claus!, said after the birth Wednesday
night. She sstd the parants have not
decided on a name for the baby.
The singer and her husband,
businessman Harold Stream,
maintain homes in the Nashville
suburb of Brentwood and in Lake
&lt;llarles. Mlas AndersOn has another
child, ~yearo(l)d lisa Lynn, by a
previous marriage.

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Open

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BASEBALL SCOREBOARD
AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST

NATIONAL LEAGfJE
EAST

Pel.
GB
15 .643
27 19 .587 2 .

W . L.

Montrea l '
Philadelphia •
St . Louis

Pittsburgh

Chi cago
Ne w York

Cinc innat i

27

23

l

' ".• 22 21 .512
19 24
~ 16 27

'10

WEST

26

Houston

Atlanta

25 25

~

.442
.372

4

5'1'
8' 2
11' 2

30
f6
26
. 27
21
21

.549
.500 ~~12

25 26 .490
23 29 .442

18 30 .375
Wednesday's Games

GB
18 .625
19 .578 2'1'
22 .542
•
23 .540 4
21 .500 6

L. Pet.

26

.447

8'1'2

' 12 37

.245

18 1J:~

WEST

21 .553

28 23

San Francisco

Los Angeles
San Diego

19 .548

W.

Balt im ore
Boston
New ork
Mil wa.ukee
Detro it
Cleve land
Tor onto
California

30

3

Minne·sota

26 19 .578

5'12
81/2

Chicago

Montreal 2, Philadelphia 0
Pittsburgh 5, Chicago 2
St: Louis 7, New York 3
Houston 6, Cincinriatl 3

San Diego 10. Atlanta 2
Los Angeles 6, San krancisco 5
Thursday's Games

New York !Scott 1-01 at St. Louis
(Sykes 3-21.
·.
Philadelphia !Christenson 0-11 at
Montreal ISanderson 3-31 .
San Francisco (Blue 6-5) at Los
Angeles (Sulton 5·31.
Atlanta (Matula 2-31 ' at San Diego
(Rasmussen 1·51.
.
Chicago I Lamp 3-11 at Pittsburgh
(Biyleven 1-21. (n)
Cincinnati INorman 2-4) at Houston
(Williams 1·11. In )
Friday's Games
San Francisco at Chi cago
San Diego at Pittsburgh , inl
Los Angeles at St. Louis, (n }
New York at Atlanta , (n}
Philadelphia at Cincinnati, (n)
Montreal at Houston, (nl

Te•as

Kansas City

Oakland
Seattle
.

19

.612

28 19 .596

1

28 21 .571

2
2
S'/2

24

24

.500

17 32 .347 13
17 33 .340 13'12

Wednesday's Games

Detro it 8. Toronto 2

Oakland 5, Mlnnes&lt;Jia

4
Cl eve land 6, Chicago 41
•
New Yoi"k 5, Milwaukee 2, 11 Innings

TeKas 3, Boston 2, 10 innings
Kansas City 21 Baltimore I
California 3, Seattle 2

Thursday's GameS

Oakland I Langford 1-61 at Min nesota (Hartzell 1-3).
Detroit . I P. Underwood 0-01 at
Toronto IT. Underwood 0-6) , In)
New York ITiant 1·11 at Milwaukee
(Slaton 4-21. lnl
Boston !Eckersley 4·21 at ' Te •as
(Matlack 3·21. lnl
California !Tanana 5·31 at Seattle
(Abbett -2-4) , In I
Only games stheduled
.

Wednesday's Sports Transactions
By The Associated Press
BASEBALL
American League
DETROIT TIGERS - Sent Dan
Gonza les, outfielder , to Evansvi lle of
the Amer ican Association. Recalled•
Ed Putnam, cather , from Evansville.
KA NSAS CITY ROYALS - Ac ·
ti vated AI Cowens, outfiel der , and
Steve Mingori, pitcher. 5ent Joe Zdeb
and Clin! Hurdle, outfielders. to
Ornaha of the American Association.
SEATT LE MARINERS - Places
'Bill Stein , third baseman, on the 15·
day disabled li st . Recalled Charlie

GUESTDAYPLANNED
The Women's Golf Associ.atioo met
Tuesda tth p
Y a e orneroy Golf Coune.
. Plansforguestday tobeheldlater
m the season, were~. Prlles
were awarded to PeMy CQmpton
Nonna Custer Mildred KaiT anci
E·
'
llzabet.i U!hse.
Anyone lDierested in playing Ia
welcomed to attend the golf seas!- .
whichareheldeveryTuesday Teeoff
time "
.
IS 9a.m.
, - - - ; ; . . - - - - - - -...

!rom Spoka ne of the Pa cifi c coast
League.
·
.
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
COLORADO ROCKIE S - Named
Don Cherry head coach.
.
. BASKETBALL
Nat1onai Basketball Association
NEW JERSEY NETS - Signed

MODULAR
HOMES

Beaman,

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Meets
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two -year contrac:t .

FOOTBALL
National Football League
DETROIT LIONS - Sig ned Keith

eOhio Building COdes
eAFHA&amp;VA
See qur tot model tOday.

Dorney, offensive lineman .

MIAMI DOLPHIN S - Named
Elbert Duben lon on a fu lf.. flme sco ut .
TAMPA BAY BU CCA NEERS -

.
- .

Acqui red Tony Davi s, running bac-k',
from th e Cincinnati Bengals tor an
undisclosed future draft choice.

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COLLEGE
.
MAR SHALL UNIVE RS ITY Named Lynn J. Snyder athletic

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Detroit at Oakland, In$
Cleveland af Cai jforn ia, (n)
Toronto af Seaffl e, 1~1

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Friday's Games

Chicago at New York, In I
Boston at Minnesota, In I
Baltimore at Te•as, In I
Milwaukee at · Kansas City, In I

Astros move back
into first place
HOUSTON (AP) - Neither wind
nor a driving - rain storm nor a
hangnail could keep Houston knuckle
hall pitcher Joe Niekro from his
appointed rQunds in the Astrodome
Wednesday night.
While a tornado warning and gusty
winds created alarm outside the
Astrodome, Niekro delivered the mail
inside, dispatching anclnnati with his
sixth victory of the month in a 6-3
deciSion as the Astros ·moved within
percentage points of the Reds in the
National League West.
nie two teams enl\ the three-game
set tonight with the divisional lead at
'stake. Cincinnati's Fred Norman , 2-4,
faces Rick Williams, 1·1.
· "When you're a knuckle ball pitcher
and you're getting your pitches over,
the hitters can't sit back and wait for
' the lmucklebail,'.' said Niekro, 7-2.
"Everything has been falling right for
me. I'm not so uptight as I was last
year. I can't wait to get the hall."
Cincinnati batters would have
preferred to wait on another pitcher in
the Astros rotation. Niekro allowed
one hit to Dave Concepcion in the third
inning until his hang-nail started
bothering him In the eighth. ,
"I ~nt my fingernail back in the
warmups and it started bothering me
late in the game," Niekro said.
Niekro took a comfortable 6-0 lead
into the eighth inning .when Cesar
Geronimo and pinch hitter Arturo
DeFreites led off with back to back
singles and Ken Griffey walked to
load the bases.
Junior Kennedy then hit inio a

double play that scored Geronimo to
break up Niekro's shutout · and
Concepcion then new out to end the
inning.
Niekro yielded a two-run double to
Geronimo In the ninth ·after Johnny
Bench and Dave Collins had siilgled
and left after 8 2-:1 innings on the '
mound . Joe Sambito got the last· ,
batter out and recorded his fourth
save of the season.
Houston first · baseman Cesar
Cedeno was the Astros' primary
offensive thrust . He got the key hit, a
solo home run in the third, in the
Astros' early 3-0 lead. Houston scored
in the first on Cedeno's single and in
the second on Terry Puhl's sacrifice
ny.
Cedeno's fourth homer of the season
in the third made it 3-0 and the Astros
chased Reds starter Tom Seaver with
three more runs in the sixth.
·~ I wish I bad a pat excuse, but I
don't," said Seaver, who left after
yielding back to back singles in the
sixth. "It's just that none of my
pitches are consistent right now . And
that's what pitching is all about."
Cincinnati
Manager
John
McNamara also sa~~g a few bars
praiSing Niekro.
•·
"This is the first time we saw
Niekro Ibis season and I was
impressed," the Reds manager said.
"He bad very gooo control with all his
pitches. He threw the knuckle ball
enough to let us know he had it, but he
·used his slider and fastball to keep the
hitters off balance."

Meigs summer results

1:30 P.M.

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They had a white Con their red caps
And nwnbers and names written on
their hacks.
They had on white pa11ts and CREDS
on the front of their ljhlrta
I hope they don't get them covered
with dirt.

MY~GAME .

By Julian Bond
their supporters that the president's
ATLANTA (NEA)- A small .group greatest critic on the left.decked Ed
of men sat · in an Atlanta pastor's Brooke..
study last January 13 to walt for a
Repeatedly stoog by polls that shoW
special church program to begin.
Kennedy the overwbelmlng favorite
'Ole minister emeritus, the Rev. of American blaclrs In a contest with
Martin LUther King Sr., in who son's Carter ,_ or any other presidential
name the waiting congregation ·bad candidate - the Carterltes are spangathered, asked the visiting speaker a ding by brancllng Kennedy as a closet
question.
·
racist, a partllan who puta party
"What's this man like who beat Ed politics over racial constderations.
Brooke?"
An Atlanta Joumal.conatltution
He's a good man, the speaker poll makes Kennedy the favorite of tl6
replied. You won't be dlaappointed in percent of Southern blacks, against a
him.
mere 19 percent for Carter and 15 per"But Ed Brooke was the only cent Wldeclded.
·
senator we bad," Daddy King cont.
But the carter campaiSJ' 's biggest
plained. "D!dn'tyouhelpbeathim?". worry Ia not black defectlona toward.
Edward Kennedy, senior senator non-eandidate Kennedy. The real fear
from Massachusetts and pollsters • 18 ·that dlaatlsfied black ete.;torate,:
choice as the most popular political faced with a choice between a non"'
figure amo~~g Americans - white and perfonnlng Carter and a fl8cally
black - could not answer. He bad' frogal Jerry Brown, may choose In
campaigned for Paul TSOfll!as, the 1980 to stay at home.
~
former congressman who bad
'Ole task of enargtzlng and uciling
defeated.Brooke- the only black per- . black AmeriCans in
will not be
son elected to theUniled State Senate easy. That same !leWiplp8r pollin this century.
showed a surprillng 17 percent blacf '
Brooke's divorce and ·his quarrels vote for right-wing Ronald Reagan in
with the Senate Ethics Cormntltee a contest with Carter -a result black
may have contributed more to his Democrate hope stems more mm
defeat than Kennedy's endorsement voting against Carter than for
of bla opponent. But to blacks in Reagan.
Massacbuaet - and to Daddy Ktng - · The newspaper poll showed 31 perthe Kennedy charisma did Brooke in. cent of black voters Wldectded in a .
''He was the only senator we bad," Carter-Howard Baker race; 21 per"·
COli~ Wldectded between Carter and
Daddy King repeated.
KeMedy's speech that day was well Reagan; 2f percent Wlllure between
received. So well that the congrega- · Carter and Teus' Jolm Connally, and
lion stood and cheered for nearly 10 15 percent undecided between Kenminutes when be abouled that "now 18 nedy and Carter.
the time" to C8IT)' out Ktng Jr.'s unThis lar group of ''wldecideda'r
f\JII8bed agenda. So well thatfew gave ·among the populati111 moet fervent
any thought to poor Ed Brooke.
for carter three years ago suggests
But the Carter campaign Intends to that the president's men must do
make sure that every black voter more than paint Kennedy anU-black.
remembers that KeMedy helped - Their biggest tuk Ia to convince their
however rdlgbUy - to remove the boss that his black conati.tuency
highest elected black In America wants pel'forma!lce 111 his p1'111111aes,
from office.
.
or they'll go flabing in another pond in
Carter-Mondale reelection comml~ 1980.
tee operatives are already rerntnclin.ll

I

'

•

3-'Ole Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thurllday, May 31, 1979

By Greg Batley
In Boys League action, the Pizza
Shack downed visiting Rutland'a
Reds ~ as Artie Runnel and Brian
Tannehill teamed up to pitch a onehitter.
They bad 15 strtlteouts and just four
wallts.
Getting singles for the winners
were Tannehill, Steve Tracy, Don
Dorst, Kyle Davis, Runnel, and Scott
Powell. Tracy also had a triple and
Runnel bad a double.
Donald Nickles got the only Red hit,
a single. Steve Quillen and Joshua
Henry did thepttclttng for Rutland.
Unescore:
Rutland
000 OIHl
Pizza
124 1X.....'I
In T-Ball action, Sugar Run
Ashland rolled over Elberfelds 23-10.
Jason WfiAAt bad a home run and
triple for the winners, and Jolm
Brtckles bad a triple. Bracy Kom had ·
a double, and John Elllott had a triple
and double.
·
In other T-Baii actioo, the Daily
Sentinel romped civer the host Mason
Meta 3&amp;-8. Todd Powell was the
leacfutg hitter ·with a home run and tripie while Randy Hawley had two
doubles and a triple.
Scott Barton bad·a triple and double, · and Shawn Ha.wley and Jeff
Smith each had'a double .
Liliescore:
767 118--311
Sentinel
221 30-' 8
Mason
The host Rutland Dodgers Monday
rolled to a 12-1 win .over the Pomeroy
.Tigers behind the two-hit pitc;hlng of
. Jack Person:
·
· Danny Davii ted the Dodgers in hitting with two doubles and a single
while Todd Doczi bad a double and
single. James Acree and David
Hoover each had two hila for the win. ners, and D. Priddy, Peterson, M.
. Norman, B. Spires, and D. Cremeans
ech bad one hit.
Liliescore :
Pomeroy
000 1- I 2 3
Rutialld
723 x - 12 a o

. Vrmning ·pitcher

Loog smashed a

triple and single while Freshett and

Scarberry socked borne runs as the
New Haven Reds beat the boat
Pomeroy Pirates Monday, .13-3. Long
and two other Red pitchers walked
only one batter while three Pirate pit.
chers walked eleven.
Losing pitcher Rod Hanison stroked a double and two singles for the
Pirates. Phil King got a double and
Rex Haggy and Huey Eason each bad
a sirigle. For the winners, Vickers,
Wolfe, Zerkle, and Hendricks each
had a single.
Unescore:
10 10 02- 13 8 3
Reds
Pirlites
00 2~1 - 3 8 3

.,

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For
Meigs County

The host Mason Rangers got two
runs in the atxth inning as they came
from hehlnd to down the Pomeroy
Yankees, H. J. Hyaell,ptcked up the
win in relief and also had the gamewinning hit, a triple to go along with
four wallcs In the sinh. D. Mitchell
bad a double and R. Lavendar a
single for the only other Mason bits.
Charlie Knopp took the loss, fann-·
ing 14 and walking 8. Shennan
Hollchar hit a triple for Pomeroy,
Mike Thomas a double, and Bill
Howell and Cbrta Kennedy a single
each.
Liliescore:
100 :IAlth'l
Pcimeroy

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�5-The DaUy Sentinei, Middlelport-POJ~ertly, 0 ., l'hursday, May 31, 1979

.
L eade.rs

'

4-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, May 31, 1!rl9

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,,

added an RBI double in New York's
three-run lith inning. Play was
interrupted tor 32 minutes when 11loot-4, 217-pound Cliff Johnson
collided with pi ate umpire Lou
DiMuro after .;coring the second run
of the inning. DiMuro, ~ was
·
·
l'Onsc1ous
an d respons1ve,,to
questions,
wastakeilby ambulancW\oahospital
for treatment of possi~eck or back
injuries.
,..

Baylo~ homered for the Angels.

Angels 3, Mariners Z
Brian riowning opened the ninth
with a single, stole second, went to
third on Merv Rettenmund's groundeD
and scored the winning run on Bert
Campaneris' squeeze bunt single:
Meanwhile, Nolan _R yan held the
· - inc1u din g
Mariners to three h1ts
homers by Ruppert Jones and Leon
·Roberts - and struck out 12. don

.
A's5., Twinl I
Mitchell Page singled home the tiebreakingrun ·in the seventh inning and
the eventual winning run came home
on a wild pitch by Minnesota relief ace
Mike Marshall. The A's ·got strong
rel1'ef efforts from John ''
u.enry
JohnsonandBobLacey,whoputdown
a threat in ·the ninth after the Twins
had runners at second and third with
one out. ·
·

Chicago White Sox 6-4.
By HuGH A. MUU.IGAN
Unbeaten Texas reliever Jim Kern · RIDGEFIELD, Conn. (AP) - No
earned his seventh victory by ·need to tattoo the bride and groom
allowi!lg two hits in four innings.
with a health warning from the
Surgeon General.
Royals 2, Orioles 1
Amos Otis hit a tWQ.I'tlJI homer In
A new survey has determined that
the first inning and Rich Gale pitched marriage is not h11zardous to your
out of several jams before giving way health.
to AI Hrabosky in the ninth. George
The old vaudeville comics used to
Brett singled with one out in the say married people didn't necessarily
. Kansas City first and with two out Otis live longer; it just seemed longer.
hammered Mike F1aRII8an pitch for
Well, Smith and Dale, if they were
his third home run of the season and still conducting funny business in the
!44th of ,his career, making him office of Dr. Kronklte, would have toe
Kansas City's all-time leader, bury that gag along with the patient to
surpassing John Mayberry's 143.
keep abreast of the latest research on
The game marked the return to the the marital front.
Kansas City line-up of outfielder AI
A ~esearcher at the Rutgers, N.J.
Cowens, who suffered a broken jaw Medical School has concluded that
May 8 when he·was hit by a pitch from connubial-cohabitation
is
the
Texas' Ed Farmer. Cowens doubled healthiest way to live, regardless of ·
on his first at-bat and later added a the quality of the relationship.
Inherreport,Dr. AnneR.Somers,a
single in four trips.
Vllllkees s, ·B rewers 2
specialist in family and community
. Juan Beniquez and Bucky Dent. hit medicine, · says that statistics from
·sacrifice flies and Mickey Rivers 1940 to 1961 show that married people
residing with a spouse live· longer on
the average than the single, widowed
or divorced.
· Since I was married during that
two-decade time frame, I was abOut to
conclude that tho,e were the vintage
years for the old nuclear family, but
:more recent data indicate that the
marriage bond is even more
conducive to
mental

Carrier Needed

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REG.'
PRICE

WOMEN'S &amp;
QIILDREN'S

MEN'S
.DRESS PANTS

(Tennis)

$500 PR.

EXTRA STRENGTH

VAWES TO 120.00
SALE PRICE

SO's

p,.ices

-SIDEWALK SALEVALUES TO $12.99 AND $15.00
LABELS CUTOUT-FIRST QUALITY

, Famoua Mfg. ·Labels Removed. Values
to $1:2.00 and $15 .00. Good assortment
of stylet and cc.lora. Be sUre to see thete
and tove.

Take your cholctt of assorted colored

A good

doubtekntts In prints and solids. 1 to
S yard lengths. Save now 1

-SIDEWALK SALEReg. 79c Value
15"x26" Size ·

-SIDEWALK SALENew Spring Polyester

la.o•n::~;~K. I'll.

:

U.rln

.
HHnlne,R. Ph
Mon. tllru Sat. l:oo •. m. to-9 p.m.
.
Sunday 10:301o 12:30and5to9p.m. .·
•
SCRIPTION$
. . .. . ·- PH;m.29U
·
OpiR

"l(ERM'S KORNER''

•

. . :_

Nit.h hllll9

large. table of 44 " and 45" asst. aport
fabrics mil/lengths. Good auortment of

...,_ilj
PomefoyA

pattern• and colors.

77!ARD

··

~.

'1

so~ EA.

l

•
I

polyester

00

~'~""';...

V", •• ,.,

~&lt;J• t '

Yard ·-

....

Big 15 Inch by 26" tlzo. Flrll Quality.
Asst. colon kitchen 1owelt. Stock up
now.

-SIDEWALK SALEValues To$1 .99
Famous Fruit of Loom
Ladies Large Size

-SIDEWALK s,;L..EWaffle Weave Cotton
&gt;

DISH CLOTHS
.

PANTY HOSE
so~

25~~CH
' '

PR.

Serviceable dl1h cloths mode of cotton
waH!e weave material. Vwy low price.

Close out group first quality famoua Fruit
of the loom. Elc1ra alret. Good shodes.

39c value.

Savo

-SIDEWALK SALEFancy Cotton Terry
Reg. 39c Value

-SIDEWALK SALEValues To $5.99 ..., ,~.
CLEANUP LOT
LITTLE TOTS
'·

WASH CLOTHS

SPORT JACKETS

'1 00

25~ACH

lng sport jackets 1 to 3. Ll»le tots only.

Goo yourt now. Only St .00.

-SIDEWALK SALEPackage of so
Hot or Cold Foam

-SIDEWALK SALEPackage of 100
PAPER PICNIC

.••

..·,•

PLATES

CUPS ·

'

:J
·'•

Pi cnic time 11 tlere ar:ln 10 buy your

·'•

paper plates now an be ready to go.

Goodsize.

,

'••

84~,"'

•••

-SIDEWALK SALE'14 Inch Width
Reg. 79c Value

-SIDEWALK SALE32 oz. Bottle
Sweetheart Dlshwashlng

MASKING TAPE

LIQUID
54~

... ~

EACH

Cl..,n up lot. (M they go. llttlo toto tpr·

Special purchoae for our sidewalk
sale. 32 oz. size Sweeth.art Pink
Oithwaohlng liquid.

R.,...,

llssortment of

DOUBLEKNiT

KITCHEN TOWEL

48~

VALUES TO $1.29 YARD
MILL LENGTH ASSORTMENT
FAST COLOR FANCY PRINTS

77~Yard

metal zippers. From 7" to U Inches
in sizes.

·Big,pockogo of fifty cup1 . Good quoU·
ty and wolghl.

·SPORT FABRICS
F.. Main

&gt;

MEN'S
DRESS
'h PRICE

Good

""ltndly.s.Mce

POMEROY, O.

1 Group

$179

Thru. SundaY,
· June 3rd

.

DOUBLEKNITS

; Ho1 and Cold Cup• a1 a special price.

6.40Z.

.•7••

YOI,J MONEY I

ONLY

REG.
$2.13

SALEMill Length Polyester
Values To $1.99 Yard

Good size fancy cotton terry 'wash
cloths to match abOve bath towels.
Latest fashion colors ond palferns.

YES STIFFLER'S SAVES

ME'N'S KNIT SHIRTS

Values to

CAPSULES

AIM Q.OSE.lJP
. TOOTHPASTE

NEW YORK CLOTHING· HOUSE
126 E. MAIN

larege

1Yl£NOL

-SIDEW~LK

ZIPP.ERS

-Sidewalk SaleClean-Up Group
LADIES' SPRING

'2.49

Many Items Too Numerous To Mention • Hurry lnl
.

-Sidewalk salleValues to $3.99
Ladles· Misses

KNIT TOPS

~PRICE

Vah.1e• to 79c. Sllgt·uj~ lrr~ulor, ap.clal
sidewalk buy . Aut. shape1. Save now at
thls .~ow, low price.

1

-SIDEWALK SALEBig Assortment Metal

spring coats. Clean up. See
these and save 50 pet. Smart

Reg.

MEN'S
DRESS SHOES

33~AIR

.

•

now. large table only SOc.

OFF

Near Stiffler

PRE-WASHED
JEANS

Famous Maverick Aut9metick .!!!~
denim jeans now at a Oj!W;(ooitollt!ft;.
Your choice of styles.
·

-SIDEWALK SALEMen's Stripe Top

Ye1 , we can save you money.

2nd street
Pomeroy,O.

ONLY

•9••

Sale group ot men 's racer style tank ·
· tops In your chOice of fashion colors.

--Sidewaik SaleValues To $1.29
1!2TO 1 Yard

Clean up rock of ladles' better

$117 .

SOLARCAINE
SPRAY

DENI.M JEANS

•1••

styles. Not all sizes.

REG
$2.60

-SIDEWALK SALEMen's Maverick
Flare and Straight Leg

-SIDEALK SALEMe_n 's Racer Style

.

SHIRTS, SLACKS, SHORTS .

ONLY .

PAIR

.-----

REMNANTS
and patterns:

.

•1••

·

POMEROY STORE ONLY

-Sidewalk Sale-

in your choice of fashion

POMEROY I OHIO .•:

now .

EACH

PIECE GOOD

PWEAR

ALL

Vcilues 1o .s~ .99 in this large group
. of ladies joggert and jamaica
shorts . All irst quality , S1ock up

-

Values to $19.99 pair. Ladies' popular style pre-washed
blue denim fashion leans. From Allee Oopl Slightly tr ·
regular . Stiffler's Sidewalk SAle!

INSIDE BARGAINS

THE DAILY SENTINEL

DENIM SHORTS

SAVE AT
STIFFLER'S

Ladies' Plain &amp; Fancy
Polyester Knit

ALL
lh PRICE

CALL

TANK TOPS

Shop early for best se!ectlon .

~ PRICE

Yoif•.m!!~~-_j

'-

SIDEWALK SALE
VALUES·TO $3, 99
. LADIESASST.

'144 .

SALE TABLE

!

352 E. •Main, Pomeroy

Frtctay•s Game

Seattle at Washington, 9-p.m .
•
Sunday's Game
Washington at Seattle Colisum . 3::ib
p.m ., if necessary :
.. · Wednesday , June6
•
Seatt le at Washington, 9 p.m ., it
necessary
•

POMEROY. STORE ONLY

SPECIAL

I!

. FLORIST .
PH•.992-2644

It

SIDEWALK SALE
VALUEST0$3.99
BO,YS

FR,DA Y AND SATURDAY
JUNE 1st and 2nd

Pa1r

Y &amp; SATURDAY

Gamel
Washington 99, Seattle 97
GAmo2
Seattle 92, Washington 82
Qamel
Seattle 105. washington 95
Game4
Seatt le 114, Washington 112. OT

Values to $2 .99 in th is group of
boys' rank 1ops for summer wear.
Stock up now. Save 01 S1ifflar's.

•soo

I

Flor_lst Since 1957

39 ;

FASHION JEANS

rY~~Exfr~T~~~
~

NBA Playoffs At A Glance
By The Associated Press
All Times EDT

-Stiffler's Sidewalk Sale- ·
Special Sale Group Ladies•
PRE -WASHI;:D BLUE DENIM

MONKEY RUN, POMEROY, 0.

992~2156

1Bl :

Khgman . Chicago, 36; Murphy ,
HITS : Smalley, Minnesota. 68 1 G. Atonia. 36 ; Schmidt. Philadelphia.
Brett , KansasCity, 671 Remy , Boston , 34 " Foster , Cincinnati, 33; Garvey,
66 ; Cooper. Milwaukee, 62 : Carew . Lo Angeles, 33.
.
Callfornoa, 62 ; Baylor, California, 62 .
ITS: Winfield , San Diego, 70;
DOUBLES : Lemon . Chicago, lS ; R/ sei.L Lo s Angeles, 67 ; Rose,
Bonds, Cleveland, 14 1 B. Bell, Texas, P !adelphia , 66 ; Garve 'f , Los
14 ; C. Washington, Chicago. 13 , G.
A eles. 63; Moreno, Pittsburgh, 61.
Brett, Kansas City, 13 , Me Rae,
OUBLES : Rose. Philadelphia. 19;
Kansas City, 13; Otis. Kansas City. IJ. Pi rish . Montreal. 15; Mazzilll . New
TRIPLES : G. Brett, Kansas City 6 . . Y k. 14; Parker , Pittsburgh. 14; K.
Gr!ffin, Toronto. S; A. Bannister',
nandez , St. Louis, 14.
Chocago,4 ; Wilson , KansasCity. 4; 10 . ~IPLES : T. Scott, St. Louis , 7;
Tied with 3.
eno, Pittsburgh , 5; Winfield, San
HOME RUNS : Lynn, Boston, 14 1
a, 5 ; 6 Toed woth 4.
_
Singleton, Baltimore, 12 , Cooper ,
' OME RUNS : Kingman, Chicago.
' Schmidt, Philadelphia , 15 ;
Milwaukee , 11 ; Thomas. Milwaukee,
11 L M.a
rphy . Wtlanta . 13 ; Dawson ,
1 ·
Y· Baltimore, 10; Smalley. ' ntreal. 11 ; Matthews. · Atlanta 11 .
Minnesota, 10; Horton, Seattle, 10.
TOLEN BASES : Moreno , Pitt ·
STOLEN BASES: leFlore , Detroit.
23 ; Wilson , Kansas City , 19 , Otis.
urgh, 19 ; T. Scott, St. Louis, 15;
K
c
abell. Houston. 14; lopes, Los
ansas ity, 17 ; J. Cruz, Seattle. 17 ;
ngeles, 14 ; Taveras, New York. 13 .
Wills, Texas, 16.
PITCHING (5 Decisions) : LaCoss.
lncinnati , S-0, 1.000, 2.51; Lamp,
PITCHING IS Decisions) : Kern,
Texas, 7-0. 1.000, 1.09; John , New c
York, 9-1. .900, u 9 ; D. Martinez,
hicago, 4·1, .800 , · 4. 26; Reed.
Ph iladelphia. 4-1. .800. 3.94; Welch,

since April 26. The Tigers scored
twice in the fourth inning to break a 221ie when third baseman Roy Howell
booted Alan Trammell's grounder,
allowing farrish to score from third,
and Lou Whitaker's sacrifice fly
brought home . Aurelio Rodriguez.
Parrish, who had four hits in five atbats, hit his fifth home run of the
season in the eighth inning.
IDdiaDB 8, White Sox I
Ron Pruitt crashed a two-run homer
, to highlight a four~ uprising in the
fifthining RickWaitsyieldedfivehits
and thr~ unearned runs in five
innings and was credited with his fifth
straight victory. He left after the fifth
when he developed a blister on the
middle finger of his pitching hand.
. Pruitt's homer his first of the season
foUowed a wait to Andre Thomto~
and gave the Indians a &gt;J lead.

a free-lancing lifestyle. ·
There's no satisfaction anymore in
going around telling people that your
helpmate in life Is driving you crazy.
Medical science just won't back you
up. The absence of a sparring partner
is more likely to drive you bananas.
In 1975, according to the National
Institute for Mental' l:lealth, only
about'90 out of every 100,000 marriect
Americans were admitted to mental
hospitals, the lowest m any category
studied.
· .
Among th~se divorced or separated,
the admission rate to 8 mental
hospital was nearly 10 times as high,
JUSt over 865 per 100,000.
.
Even th~ who never marrted at aU
wereheadmg off to the psycho ward at
the rate of 685 for. every ~OO.!MJO
~chelors and old m&amp;ds, or swmgmg
smgles as they used to be called
before the fellows in the white coats
begartbagging them in theit butterfly
nets.
Men In all categories (single,
widower.s, divorced-separated,
married) had a higher incidence of
mental health problems requiring
state or community care, which I did
not find surpising.
ClinicaUy speaking, the stressful
life event known as marria~e is
conducive to a longer, saner
existence. ·

Te~as ,

Porter , Kansas City, J9; Nettles, New
York. 36; Horton . Seattle. "36.

~~~~· rv;~u;~~~~:s;::;*"'l ~~~[~~

EAR RING CLUB

BUY 6 PAIRS AT

of 19n.
"I guess-everybody !mows we have
lost nine in a row in Texas," sighed
Boston Manager Don Zimmer.
" That's what happens when you don't
get clutch hits and leave runners on
base. We left six on base in the last
five innings."
In other American League action,
the Kansas City Royals nipped the
Baltimore Orioles 2-1, the New York
Yankees downed the Milwaukee

Los Angeles , 4 \, 800, 2.9'1, J . N 1ekr o ,
Houston • .7 ·2, 778. 2.51 : _B
Lee .
Wiant real , 5-2, .7U , J.92 : Roger s.
N\cntreal , 5-2 . . 714. 2. 56 : Knepper , San

Baltim1re. 6·1. .750. 2.80 : Jenkins .
Championship Finals
6·2, rso. 3.44 ; .Baumgart.en , Franci sco. 5·2• .714, 3. 17 . '
Best of Seven Series
Chicago . 5-2. .714 , 3._06 ; Wail S.
STR IKEOUTS: Richard, Houston .
Clevel~d , 7.3, .700. 3.51.
· .TODAY'SMAJOR
81; Carlton, Philadelphia, 55 : Perry . Seattle
3W. 1L. Pet.
. LEAGUE LEADERS
STR I EOUTS : Ryan , Cal ifornia . San Diego, 55 ;' P. Niekro, Atlanta, 54 ;
750
Washington
t
3
ByThewssociated Press
78 : G · ry . New York , 61 : Jenkins, S~an •. New York, 53.
250
Texas . 61:' Kravec. Chicago. 49 ;
AMERICAN LEAGUE
BATTING (100 at bats) : Snalley , Koosr~n, Minnesota , 49.
~nnesota ... 389; Kemp, Detro ) , 372 :
ATIONALLEAGUE
.
~ew , altlornoa, 350; A. Ba,nister , •
BAT lNG 1100 at ts) : 'Brock, St .
C.3~5'c
rl•icago, . Louis, 71; Rose. Philadelphia, .363 ;
.. . ago, .346; L Johnson, ""'
RUNS : G. Brett, Kansas ~ity . 40 1 Wintied , San Diego . .354; Mazzllll .
Otis, . Kansas City. 37 1 LeFlore . New Y'ork , .349; Murphy •. Atlanta.
Detroot , 36; Lynn, Boston. 3l; Baylor . .348·
•
Callfor~oa , 35 ; c. Washington.
RLNS : Lopes, Los Angeles, 43;
Chicago, 35; Smalley, Minnesota, 35 . Concepcion. Cincinnati, 35; Puhl,
RBI : Baylor, California. 48 , Lynn, Hou.ton. 3~ ; North, San Francisco,
Boston. 42; Cooper, Milwaukee, 39 1 34 · Parker , Pittsburgh. 33.

Rangers nip 'coUsins' 3-2 Wednesday night
The Texas Rangers always get their Arlington Stadium Wednesday night ..
·when Richie Zisk singled AI Ollver
lllall ...and their man always seems· to
home from second base in the lOth
l)e the Boston Red Sox.
'inning
for 3-2 triumph. The Red Sox
• The Rangers made it nine In a row
haven 't won in Texas since Septem(?er
civer the red.faced Red Sox in

Ballimore, I 2• . 778. 2.95 ; Koosman .
MinneSlta . 7.2, 718, 3.52 : Pat mer .

..

Btl.

R;'J . 79c value. Thre•fourth lr.ch
w th1 . Stock
now at thlt low , low
·p rice for our tl ewolk aole.

j!

.

33· ~ Roll
.

.a

r

.•
·1

~

�\
'I

6-TIM&lt; Daily Sentinel, Middl_eport-Pomeroy , 0 ., ThW"Sday, May 31, 1979

POLLY"$ POINTERS
Polly Cramer .

'AAVWJ;e;;rs program on .'POlitics of Food' •

Ms. Gruese'" honored
by recent bridal'fare

."The Politics of Food" was the pro- Savings and Loan Co., Meigs Office.
'8J'IIII theme at the recent meeting of
S!Jeak!!rs were Mrs. Diana Eberts,
:the Middleport-Pomeroy Are.a Meigs County Extension Agent, home
.lll'anch of the American . Association economics, who talked oo the food
•of University W~~nen held at the and nutrition programs offered by
Riverboat Room of the Athens County that agency, and Miss Marty Geyer.

· A bridal shower honoring Melanie • Sylvia Rouah, Mrs... Deima Hawley,

- ·~ Kay Grueser, bride~lect of JacobS. Mrs, Icy Miller, Mrs. Janet Simplm,
Holman, was held recently at the Mrs. Jeanette Duffy, ~. Nettie
Silver
Run Baptlat Church in MO?"e, Mrs. Sheila Cozart, Mrs,
Help for counter tops
automatically deposited into my
Cheshire.
Hoetesses for the shower Gis Hood, Mrs. Nor Baker and
. checking .account. I frequently write
were
Melanie's
Mrs. Jerry
, •.. Amy Hawley, Lori Hudson,
DEAR POlLY- I have tried every . out my checks the week of deposit, Hawley and Mrs. sisters,
Linda
Hudson,
and
ty and Rodney Gruester. .
polish I know of on my laminated put them in !le8ied envel~, and
Games
were
played
with
prizes go,
Rizer, Mrs. Ann
plastic kitchen table and counter top~ mark the MAIUNG TIME m the ing to Denise Holman, Jan McKee Hemsley,Minnie
Mrs.
Doris
Grueser, Mrs.
but nothing will restore the shiny sur- stamp area. I am all set for when I
and
Joyce
Sellers.
A
yellow
an~ green Mlldrelt Ohlinger, Mrs. Judy Werry,
face. Do you or the readers know of knQW the money is in the bank. J~
any way I could polish these sur- add stamps and drop In the mail. color scheme was carried out in the Mr .. BE~ Mrs. Charles Je_well, Mrs.
faces? -G.M.Z.
Maybe nothing ls left in the checking . decorations. The refreahmetlt table Beth Heejl, Mrs. Neva Gnmm, Mrs.
DEAR G.M.Z.- Sounds
If you accountbuttheblllsarepaid.-~. featured a three-tiered cake ·with a Wanda !inboden,. Mrs. Ida Martin,
rectangular base and heart-shaped Mrs. m~r Logan and llarbara,
\Jave been using abrasives foc clean- S.S.
layers
with wedding , ~Us Mrs. Cheryl -Statts; and Mrs. Feme
ing. One of the leading manucturers
DEAR ~ILY - A plastic coffee adornedtopped
wi\11
green
and yellow .rib- Roush. Mrs. Gladys Robson, Mrs.
of such products euggeats a SJlfay can lid, trimmed around the edges,
bons.
Jean Kloes, and Miss Eleanor Robwax that dusts and was in one t)pera- ~ be a great cooking ~I for campThe
cake
was
served
with
mints
son.
lion and leaves a high shine. It may mg or for around the kitchen. It can
take a few treatments. Boiled linseed be Wled as a bowl scraper, a Slll!lll and punch. Attending or sending gifts
oil (bought at the paint or drug store J cutting surface or a scoop. - besides those named were Mrs.
Thelma Grueser, mother of the brideoften recommended for protecting · CHARLENE .
·
URG~YNEEDED
elect,
Mrs. Alice Holman, mother of
counter or bar tops and ltshould leave
DEAR CHA1uENE - I agree with
The
Melgl' Couuty Bumal)e
some luster. - POU.Y
you. I find mine is indispensable but I the prospective bridegroom, ,Mrs. Society II tn' desperate Deed of
I
DEAR POlLY - Are you tired of cut the circle in half and find itsy to
someoue to !iik" a nl« bloode
fighting with bacon? While It is in ita hold the flat side and then the rounded
terrier type dOC aDd her elgbt fiveplastic imlp roll up 011e side, unroll side makes the best bowl c~per ever
day-old puppie11.' You will be uoiJ~
and then roll up the other side. Unroll and gets out that last lltue bit of cake
ID fiDdiDg bome4 for the puppies
and flatten out and this will guarantee batter or whatever. -POLLY
FRIDAY
wben ibey are old ellOIJib to take
. Polly will send you one of her ~igned
the atrtpa qf bacon will not stick and
OLVIE TOWNSIDP Trustees Fri- . from the motber, Tbere are four
will come apart with ease. _ thank-you newspaper co11pon clippers day 7:30p.m. at ReedsvilJe.
male aDd four female~, two bloode
CAROLYN
If she uses your favorite Pointer,
'
SA'ruRDAY '
like the mother aDd tile othen are all
DEA,R POLLY- When I get paid P~ve or l'f?blem In her . ~wnn.
REVIVAL at Church of Jesus black wltb j111t a lltue wblte on
twice a month the money is Wnte POLLY S POINTERS m m care Christ, New Road, Rutland, 7:30p.m.:. them. AD papplei
cute, lbl!lle are
·
ofthlsnewspaper.
each night starting Saturday with Da- · no different. Someolle waited autO
mond Adams, Marietta, speaking. the last moment aud tben cut tblll
Services for one week.
·
' dOC out Into tbe weather at a Ume
.when II Deeded 10111ewbere and
IIOII!eOae the m01L Allyone feellnll
SUNDAY
GALLJA County Salon, Eight and some c""'pa'lloa for lblll YOUD&amp;,
Forty, Sunday, home of Mrs. Gladys Pl)lbably year old, doc and her
Cumings.
. f~y, pleue call tbe Humane
SoCiety Agents atllliZ-'1853.

·

Chaplin flick set
Silent film. great, Charlie Chaplin,
~~~ Greg Bane and artist LuciUe
Mulholland •will join forceB for an
evening of art and film enterll!inment
when the French Art Colony prsents a
classic movie session and 111eet the
artist evening on SaturdHy June 9 at
7:30p.m.
· • Bane will provide live piano accompaniment for one of Chaplin's
best known silent films, the sad-eyed
comedy about the litue tramp who
tries to cope during the Klonlllke gold
rush fo the 1890's.
Mrs. Mulhofland, a noted Huntington artist, will be present for a
. ''meet the artist wtd view her work"
· time preceding the film. 'The Many
: Worlds of Lucille Mulholland" is ·the
• tiUe for the collectioo of watercolors.

Men's
Casuals
.

by

~®m@@)'

oils and pastels on display in the
Galleries at Riverby through011t the
month of June.
The film, scheduled to start at 8
o'clock, contains one of the most
memorable comedy scenes of all
times ... Charlie, in hunger and
desperation, cooks and eats his own
shoe. Other highlights include the
"dance of the rolls" and hte sequence
in which the cabin totters on the edge
of a cliff.
Also to be featured will be a W. C.
Fields short subjhect.
Bane, who graduated from Rio
Grande College last week, is from
Gallipolis and Is known in this area
for his skill as an entertainer and
pianist. ·
A French Art Colony spokesman
said this is the first in what will
become a regular classic film series
next fall, If response is adequate to
justify such aprogram.
· The Chaplin film will be shown at
Riverhy, 530 First Ave. in Gallipolis,
the home of the French Art Colony.
Admission for the film only is 75 cents
for ciudren age 12 and under, and
$1.50 for adults. Hot, fresh popcorn
will be served.

~-

· RUTLAND-A tour of the Adena
State Memorial at Chillicothe was
planned for June when the ·Rutland
Garden Club met recently at the
hmle of Mrs. Ruasell Utue with Mrs.
C. E. Blahop as the co-bcxlteas. .
It was noted that f,loral arrangements for the Rutland Alumni
•banquet held Saturday night were
provided hy Mrs. Robert Csnaday,
Erlewine, Mrs. James Nicholson,
Mrs. Chris Diehl, Mrs. Ralph Turner,
and Mrs. Bishop. Mrs. VIrgil Atkins,
Mrs. stella Atkins, and Miss Ruby
Dlelil will make arrangements for the
Harrisonville banquet.
Mrs. Csnaday reported on her recent tour of the :rim Buck Gardens
near Granville where about a million
. planta and 5,000 hanging baskets are

Herman Warner had as Memorial
Day guests, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Kaul2, Columbus; Mrs. Emma Will,
Flo.n da ; John Lambert, Point Pleasant Dora Heaton . ~d Ruby Baer, ,
Pomeroy, . and William and Jane
Warner, Middleport.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Hammer of Col·
umbus were weekend guests of Mr.
andMrs. BobHoentchandJayne.
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Russ,
Cleveland, spent the holiday weekend
here with Mrs. Philip Meinhart and
Miss Erma Smith.

Navy

HARREY
SHOES, INC.
"Middle of Upper

Block, Pomeroy, 0."
9 a . m .~s p.m. Mon.
thru Thurs. &amp; SaL
9 a.m ... p.m. Fri. ·
Closod Sunday

SALE SET
Eleanor Circle, · Heath United
Methodist Church, will hold a rummage sale Monday and Tuesday
beginning at 9a.m. at the church.

COUPLE SEEK DIVORCE
In Meigs County Conurion Pleas

Court Tammy Kay Gilkey, Pomeroy,
filed suit for divorce against Mark
Gilkey, Middleport.
The marriage of Sandra HiU and
Dennie
Hill
was
dissolved.

~

ES..CIALLY PRICED FOR
-

~

it'

,

~

SPIEC~I:A~':;~S·~!f~.
1 GROUP

MEN'S
SHOES
1 GROUP

LADIES'
SHOES

growing.

.

Mrs. Turner, president, thanked
• those who carried out the therapy program at the Athens Mental Health
"Center providing plants for three
planters, refreshments and games.
Joining the 15 members of the Good

· s~~

SALE
PRICED

L--

Vi.!ues to '36.00
SALE.
PRICED

I

Values to 20.00
1

ALL SALE SHOES DISPLAYED INSIDE
FOR EASY SELECTION
.

HARTLEY'S SHOES, INC.
Middleport Upper Block, Pomeroy, 0 .
.I

~"'~ 91 .m.-5 p.m. Mon . ·
•.. thru Thurs. &amp;'Sat.

,t a.m.-1 p.m. Fri.

Closed Sunday

I

Luck Club were Mrs. Nicholson, Mrs.
Harry Williamson, p.trs. Carl
Denison and Mrs. E. Atkins.
Attending the county meeting of
gardeq clubs at Trinity Church,
Pomeroy this month were Mrs.
Nicholson, Mrs. ErleWine, Mrs. Roy
Snowden, Mrs. Canaday, Mrs.
Charles Lewis, and Mrs. W._P. Jarrell. It was noted that Mrs. Lewis is
the new Chairman of the Christmas
fiowershow .
It was voted during the meeting to
retain the same officers for another
year, Mrs. Turner, president; Mrs.
Virgil Atkins, vice president and program Chalnnan, Mrs. Albert Woodward, secretary; and Mrs. Roy
Snowden, treasurer.
For devotions, Mrs. Bishop used
Romans 8, verse 28, "All Things Work
TogetherFOrGood"andapoem, "We
Give 'l'hanka, Father." A thank you
note was read from Miss Edna Mae
Swick and membe.rs answered roll
call by naming their favorite peony.
Mrs. Erlewine oresented an article

bana, corresponding secretary; and
Dr. Reta Hubler, Portsmouth, first

vice president. The 30th biennial convention of the AAUW will~ held June
24-28 in Albuquer , N.M.
Refreshments were served by Jean
Alkire, Bernice Carpenter, Kitty
Cassell, Jan Hill, and Madhu
Malhotra.

....::=:.:========
sey Kasem

1

e
·
a

WMPO

SATURDAYS
'8 til

(:;hildren 's birthdays noted

FRIDAY &amp; ·
SATURDAY
• CONTESTANT - Diana Pullins,

Dl

8200

GRASS.
TRIMMER
SALE

A nnuaI _lrf'anae
r ..
6 '

conference held
CARPENTER - Mr. and Mrs.
Mendal Jordan, Deputy state Master
and state JWlior Peputy from Meigs
County, attended the annual Deputies
Conference of the Ohio state Grange
on May 19-:ID at the Friendly Hills
Grange Camp, near Zanesville.
Deputies from more than Ill counties
were in attendance.
The program of work for various
departments of the Grange were
presented, incluatng themes, · contests, activities, etc. far the coming
year.
In. charge of the training aessiona
were Ohio state Grange Officers;
Master, James Ross; Overseer, Alvin
. Moore; Lecturer, Mrs. Donald
Speaight; Chaplain, Howard Cald·
well; Gatekeeper, Harold Eckert;
Ceres, Mrs. Monroe Detwiler;
Pomooa, Mrs. Richard Eversole;
F1ora, Mrs . . Jack Ingram; and
Executive Committee members,
Jack Isler and William Gustin.
Special conunlttee members present
included Mrs. Viola Wayne, State
.JUnior Director; Mr. and Mrs. Ber. nard Shoemaker, State Youth Dlrec-.
tors, and Mrs. Campbell Lewis, State
Director of Women's Activities.
The judging of the National Grange
Sewing contest was held at this
session. There were 1,440 entries in
the State, with several county winners in each class being judged at the
State level. An entry from Meigs
County, (a suit made by Mrs. Janet
Koblentz, Pomeroy, Ohio, who waa
sponsored by a Rock Springs Grange
member), won second place in Class
D, in the .State competition. She will
receive an electric pizza milker as a
prize.
A talent show on Saturday evening
was enjoyed by the group. It waa
followed by an auction which netted .
~for Friendly Hills Grange Camp. ·
Articles sold were furnished by the
'Deputies. Many Improvements have
been made at the camp during the
past year hy varioua COIBities and in·
dividuala.
Deputy Jordan was presented a
trophy for each member of the Rock
Springs Bowling Team that won first
place in the State Bowling Contest. .
Plans were made to exemplify the
State Degree at special sessions
during the year in anticipation of the
National Grange Session, which will
be held in Pennsylvania this year. ·

Jeffery Allen Brickles, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Steve Brickles of
Gaithersburg, Md. recently
celebrated his first birthday. He i.s the
grandson ol Mr. and Mrs. Norman
Wood and Mrs. lona Srickles of
Pomeroy. Mr. and Mrs. Webber
Wood, Pomeroy-, Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Brickles, Pomeroy, and ·Mrs. Goldie
Lynch, Albany are greatgrandparents.
The Brickles famUy and Ronnie
Wood, also of Gaithersburg, were
guests over the weekend with Mr. and
Mrs. Norman Wood. Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Wood, Carrie and Cathy,
Grand Forks Air Force Base, are also
here spending a 10 day leave at the
Wood home.

PLASTIC

DISH PANS
SALE' rr
Reg·: SU9

SALE •2!10

Reg. SS.9S

MINI
GRILL
99' .

. FOLDING

Je.fft:ey' Brickles

Jennifer Ruth Rowe, daughter of
Jerry a'nd Gall Rowe, recently
celebrated her fourth birthday.
Acircus theme was carried out with
a clown cake and other refreshments
being served to her grandparents,
Mr.nd Mrs. Fred • E. Smith, Jllllll!ll
Smith, Donald Shaffer, Mr. and Mrs.
Jay Rowe and Ryan, Betty and Ron·
nle Wagner
·
•

UED

CAR
MIRRORS

Black &amp; qecker

Reg. $15."

RUMMAGE SAlE
There will be rwnmage sale at the
Trinity Church Monday and Tuesday,
8:30a.m. to3 p.m. in the church basement by the Happy Harvesters Clua.

. Beige/Brown
Bone

C~lendar ·\1

are

jennifer Rowe

Mahogany

Social

students take on projects to learn, income families.
For adults, Mrs. Eberts talked
films on food and nutrition in the
schools, and the EFNEP -4 "H pro· about the work of the nutrition aides
gram where special emphasis is who go to families to teach nutrition.
given on food and nutrition for low- She reported on the role of
homemaker clubs, and of the general
· programs offered by the agency
where such things as learning food
values are taught.
In her talk, Miss Geyer, who came
to
Meigs County with an Ohio Univerfrom Flower ·and Garden on "The rot, and noted that brown edges are a
sity
health team, and remained to
Perennial of Perennials - Peonies", sign of low hwnldity.
work
here, commented on the needs
M~-s . Lewis presented gardening
noting that the plant came to us from
of
elderly
residents. She emphasized
,England, China, Japan and Southern ti~ for June and discussed watering,
the
importance
of establishing good
weedkiUers,
and
stakin·
g
.
She
also
Europe. She said that there are 700
eating
habits
with
children.
'varieties with Japan introducing tile talked about disbudding roses leavMiss
Geyer
said
that research has
tree peony. They can be grown from ing a few which will develop into
proven
that
the
elderly
lack facts
seed but require three years before larger buds, pruning hedges and
about
food
and
nutrition
and
that pro· blooming, and once estalished will · shade trees, dividing iris, and
grams
at
the
center
are
devised
to
last for years even on abandoned vegetable gardening.
help
provide
educatioo
and
enMrs. Chris Diehl copducted the
land~ Peonies, she said, need much
couragement for a proper diet.
moisture but good drainage. They traveling prize drawing for the flower
During the business meeting, David
survive in cold regions and bloom in fund. The prize donated by Mrs. Uttle Bowen
spoke to the group concerning
hot weather. They should be staked went to Mrs. Bishop, and Miss Diehl
COnstitutional
Amendment regarthe
when tall, trimmed and divided in the won the door prize. Mrs. Robert cansding
school
funding
. He presented the
fall season.
day and Mrs . . Lawrence Milhoan
petition
to
the
group
for getting the
Mrs. Virgil Atkins, reviewed, displayed arrangements of peonies.
tax issue on the ballot in November.
Refreshments
were
served.
"Stop: Don't Drown Your Plants with
It was noted that the budget and
Kirldness" from Popular Gardening
· planning will work during the sumIndoors. She said that water is impor- ·
mertoptannextyear'sacuviues.
tant but needs to be controled~ and·
Mrs. Dorothy Woodard, president,
compared water to plants and blood
gave
a report on the Ohio Division
for humans. She said that plants are
convention
held .in Middletown in
00 percent water but lose water by
April. She announced the new state oflight, heat, soil and evaporation and
ficers, Dr. Clara Mae Frederick,
different plants take a different
president; Dr. Rebecca Price, Uramount of water. She spoke of root-

Rutland Garden Club meets, ff!akes tour plans

aa

Artist Lucille M ulho/land

Senior Citi;ens Center prograin, who
talked about the elderly and their
nutritional needs.
Mrs. Eberts outlined services of the
extenaton office noting that .tor young
peoplll\ there are 4-H cltib where

CAMP COT ·
REG. 1~5.99

so~

GI'IS

PORC.,F

BOX BRACKETS
SALE $1111

PAIR

Reg. $2.19 .

concentrate

TWO'S COMPANY DRESS

Reg. $1.93

\

POMEROY,O.

MAIN

SALE $1()59 ·

POUSH
SALE $111

DECORATOR
DECORS

IRONING BOARD
COVERS
'1 00

ToPaint

EA .

ODD LOT

'1'"

-SATURDAY;.\
JUNE 2

CAR FLOOR
MATS

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY -

,••• ,

..

h PRICE
SALE

1

FRI. &amp;SAT.

THE FABRIC
SHOP

ALL PRICEs·

SATURDAY,
JUNE 2

FRIDAY,
JUNE 1

JUNE 1 &amp; 2

•

CRUSHED 'VELVET &amp; FUR LOUNGERS

•.

SINGER
MODEL
724

PAINT

NIW SHIPMENT COMING ANY DAY

.-.
••••
''

SEWING
MAQfiNES

IN
BASEMENT

DISCONTINUED

I

FRIDAY,
JUNE 1

00, daugbter of Mr. and Mrs. Edgar
Pulllns, 39879 Betzing Rd., Reed·
sviUe, wao a contestant ID the recent
Honorary Colonel compeUUon at
this year's annual Ohlo Unlvenlty
Air Force ROTC Military Ball. Miss
PuJUns represented Hoover Bouse.
lbe ball was held May 18 at the
Hocldng Valley Motor Lodge, near
Nelsonville. A. junior, Milo Pullin's
college activities Include: Involvement with the Cbrltlan Student
Fellowship, Friday Nlgbt
FeUoWIIblp and Muolc Ministry. Sbe
II a recipient of a four-year scbolar- ·
shlp from tbe ~odem Woodmen of
America. 1be Bouorary COiollel
compeUUoo wu IJNIIIIored by the
local cbapten of the Arnold Air
Society and Angel Fllgbt, ~tiooal
social booorartes. Both groups are
aosoclated wltb Air Force ROTC.

MEN'S

lADIES' SHOES,
SANDALS &amp;
DRESS SHOES
VAWES TO 123.00

\

'5

SAVE ON

DRESS SHOES
VALUES TO 130.00

$699
PAIR

PAIR

GROUP

*CURT~INS

CHILDREN'S
KID PaNER
... TENNIS SHOES

*TOW~LS
*

*WASHCLOTHS
*SHEETS

KETS ·

$799

*soc~s

STOP BY
AND LOOK IN
OUR WINDOWS

*YAR~

\I

L

Pomeroy Ben

Frankli~

. t

VALUES 10 '20.00

$899PAIR

WHILE lHEY lAST
SEVERAL DIFFERENT COLORS
TO CHOOSE FROM

ELLIOTT AP-PLIANCE II

POMERpY, 0.

202 E. MAIN

•179

PAIR

EACH

LADIES'
SANDALS

220 E. MAIN
•

.
.

992-7113

POMEROY, 0•.
••

�8--The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thlmlday, May 31,1979

Metzenbaum.
to ·to speak

Today's Topic:

H'ealth Review

A fallen tycoon

By Dr. Lamar Miller
OU COllege of Medicine
HYPOTENSION
For the pas~ Couple cl. weeks 1 have
been cliscul8ing hypertension. In
today's column, I will answer some
commm questions dealing with the
opposite problem - low blood
pressure. This process in medical terms is called "ltypotensioo."
QUESTION - Is low blood pressure
dangerous, just like high blood
. pressure?
ANSWER - Low blood pressure is
only as dangerous as its underlying
cause. Perbapa the most dangerous
type is that resulting from shock,
1'hich can in turn be due to a heart attack, an allergic reac:Uoo or a
hemorrhage. These conditins, of course, all have a sudden onset and
require emergency measilres i£life is
to be' saved.
There are also a small number of
cases ca IIBed by some rarer
iQetabolic problems such as chronic
adrenal Insufficiency (Addison 's
DiBease) and hypothyroidism which
require medical supervision and
treatment. Most C8lleS cl. hypote~on,
however, are chronic and are not
serious. These are cases with no
known cause and they require no
specific treatment, eKCept reassurance.
QUESTION -How low a reading a
needed for me to be classified as
having low blood pressure?
ANSWER - We do not know what
actual recording of pressure can be
called hypcUnslon or low blood
pres~~ure. What Is nor!!lal for one per1!011 would be too low for another. All
that can be said Is that.any record~~~@
less than 140 systolic ·and 911 diastolk:
and above ·the level ~ to
.prevent a penon from going into
shock Is within the normal range. For
Instance, my wife's pressure Is 90160,
minr ld 1301*1 but we are both normal.
.
Often a physician or patient wil
blame Uredness on hypotension. This
probably does not have any real
scientific
basis WIIess its cause is ' for
.
Instance,
a disease like
bypothyroidiam. But then, the practice of medicine is often not reaJiy
scientific! Unless many Wlimown
facta are dlacovered and questim.s
stlll unanswered are explained, the
. practice of medicine shall remain
about 110 percent art and :» percent
science.
·
QUESTION -Since people with un·
treated hypertension have decreased
life spans, does that mean people with
low blood pressure haye looger life
!lpiiiiS?

fact. I often jokingly tell patients who
complain of chrooic fatigue with low
blood pressure that they may riot live
longer, but It will probably seem that
way_I suppose life span is nothing tn
joke about, but people with a good
sense of hwnor do seem to live Ienger
and enjoy It more lhan their more
serious counterparts.
l.Dw blood pressure b likewiSe not
hereditary or familial, as hypertensin
tends to be. Thyroid disease does
have some hereditary basis, but under • activity cl. this gland is not a
commOn cause ol hypotension.
In summary, then, we recognize
low blood pressure merely as one
single sign and do not grant it
recognition as a disease of ita own. We
must COIIllider all of the other findings
which are part cl. a patient's problem
and then put them all together. l1len
we can come up with a reasonable
diagnosis.
.

Mason Area
News Notes
Mrs.- Kenneth Ault of Colwnbus
visited over the weekend with her
sister and brolher-in~w, Mr. and
Mrs. Lester Johnson at Clifton, Mrs.
Ault and Mrs. Jolmon attended the
Wahama Alwnni Banquet.
Mrs. Elaine Grogan spent a week's
vacation at Myrtle Beach, N. C.
Major and Mrs. Jack Stewart and
family cl. Palestine, Ind., visited
several days with his mother, Mrs.
EvelY'~ Stewart and with his brother
and family, Mr. and Mrs. George R.
Steart, Mason.
Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Wallace of
'l,'ennesaee viaited with his uncle,
Christy Blaetner and with Mr. and
Mrs. RuaseU Capehart. While here
he attended the Wahama alwnni ban·
quet.
Mr. and Mrs. Russell capehart
spent a week in Kentucky and while
there attended the kindergarten
graduatioo at Lexington of iheir
grandson, Charlie Troy, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Jack Troy.
The Capeharls camped oo Saturday
and Sunday at Hone Park and went
In Earlinger, Ky. where Capehart
bowled with JOAM in the Super Bowl.
The Capeharts also visited with
their daughter and son4n-law, Mr.
and Mrs. Jack Troy and sona, at Lexington,Ky.

Prestonburgabur:

:on executjves, Carter meeting

SAN DIEGO (AP 1 :... Each month by his old friend Prestdent Nixon, to
Senator Howard M
. 'Metzenbauin
for the past four years, the 80-year-old consider his age and health when will be the featured speaker at a funman - once described by Forbes sentencing him. His attorney begged dralslng diMer sponsored l)y the
Magazine as "one of the great the judge to consider "ail the good TEnth Congressional District
swindlers of our time" - has things" sm;th had done, citing his Dem01.-raticActim Club.
diligently repor:_ted to his federal client's liistory of philanthropy in San
Dinner chalnnan Lenore Sickels,
probation officer.
Diego.
Athena, annoWICed ,that the dinner
But there was a time when C.
The sentence was $30,000 in fines will be held on Saturday, JWJe 2. A
Arnholt Smith, once named Mr. San and five years probation.
soclalhourwlllbeginat6,followedby
Diego by his civic-minded collegues,
Five years later, Judge Robert the dinner at 7 p.m. The dinner will be
answered In no one.
Conyers is confronted with lhe held in the Gilman Stwlent Center of
At ~is zenith, in the early 1970s, he dilemma. of whether to sentence Smith Marietta College, located at Fifth and
embodied the all-American success to jail. Even if he does 5o, Smith could Butler in Marietta. flckets for the
story : From high school dropoUt to a remain free on bail for years be.ca'use dinner can be obtained from
self-made millionaire who helped put of a backlog of appellate court cases. Democratic coWJty chalnnen in the
Richard Nixqn in the presidency:
Mter celebrating his 80th birthday dlstrict,clubmembers,oratthedoor;
Today, after· a five-year battle that last March in ourt, he quipped to a. Senator Metzenbaum Is erving his
cost California millions in court costs, reporter : "I expect to be here untll flrst full tenn in the Senate. He
Smith faces sentencing on four counts I'm 85."
previously served four years in teh
of tax violations and a grand theft
A longtime friend and major fund- Ohio House of Repl'e!Jentatives and
charge. It Is the latest in a string of raiser for Nixon, Smith had poured four years in the Ohio Senate. An at.
charges.
huge contributions into the former tnmey, Metzenbawn alao has pracBom in Walla Walla, Wash., on president's campaigns since 1950, tical busineaa experience as a co- Sen. H award M etzenbauin ·
March 13, 1899, Smith moved with his when Nixon first ran for office.
founder of the Airport Parking Comfamily to San Diego when he was 7 and
When the Nixons spent election pany ol America, and as Chairman of
quit school at 16. He was a grocery night of 1968 waitirig out the returns, the Board of Communication Corclerk and bank teller but by 1933, with Smith was among a small group of poration, a chain of suburban
the help of his brother John, bad insiders with theJ!!.
newspiiJM!rs. He currently serves on
PEARL RUSSElL
gained control of the U.S. National
Scandal touched Smith three years foarmajorconunitteesin tehSenate:
Pearl L. Russell, Rcine,ls a patient
Bank, then a single building with $1.8 befote the coillipse of his bank.
Energy, Judiciary, Human at O'Bieneas Memorial Hospital,
1
million in deposits.
A federal organized crime strike · Resources, itnd Budget. He is also Hospital Road, Athens, Ohio 45701.
With the help of influential friends force linked Smith to a laundered chalnnan cl. the Antitrust and Friends may send cards to room 'JJY/.
and deals involving companies due to money scheme in 1970, alleging that Monopoly Subcommittee fo the
benefit from World War II, he was a the operation pumped illegal fWids Judiciary Committee.
•millionaire by 1944.
·
into Nixon's campaign coffers. But a
Senator Metzenbaum has received
In the early 1970s, his diverse U.S. attorney canceled a subpoena many awards for his public sevice
billion-dollar empire included lhe U.S. issued for one of Smith's top aides, from such groups as lhe American
National Bank, with 62 branches and ending a probe of possible violations Cancer society, the AFLCIO, and
assets of $746 million, and Westgate- of the Corrupt Practices Act,
others. Most recently, he Wall awardCalifornia Corp., with $215 million in
In 1971, lhe fnternal Revenue ed the Herbert Lehman Ethics Award
assets, including hotels, real estate, Service began auditing Smith's taxes bytheJewlahTheologicalSeminary.
insurance holdings, a fishing fleet, a but later abandoned the effort.
coirunuter airlines, a supermarket
However, in a separate case in 1975,
LOOKING FOR
chain and a cab company.
Smith was collYicted and fined for
LOW COST
SALI
Hill private holdings included the aiding a. corporation in making an
COmplete Wlftl
San Diego Padres baseball team.
. illegal political contrlwtion. .
HEAllH INSURANCE?
Tools
Then, in 1973, the bottom dropped
In the 1974 bank fraud case, federal
See Me
out
·
prosecutors charged that Smith
U.S. National Bank collapsed, siphoned $70 million from his bank,
Widermined by huge unsecured and including $2.5 million into lhe account
uncollectable loans that Smith made of his San Diego Padres baseball
240 Lincoln St.
to companies he controlled.
team. The case ended without a trial
Middleport,
Oh. 45160
· It was then the largest bank failure in June 1975 when Smith pleaded no .
992·3969
in U.S. histnry.
contest to four cl;targes of felony bank
Once one of the richest and most fraud and was sentenced to probatlm.
powerful forces in California, .Smith
~ months later, Smith was
now reportedly lives on $400 a month indicted by a San Diego County grand
The best way to care for carpet Is •
Hoover Convertable Cleaner.
from Social Security - and borrowed jury and charged with 64 criminal
ACCIDENT AND LIFE
time- with his second wife, Helen. li. counts. After 212 years of legal
daughter, Carol, lives nearby; his maneuvering -Including 250 days of
o.
only son, Conrad Arnholt Jr., died in pretrial procedures - Smith was
1966.
broughttotrlallastAugustonlOofthe :-=::=~;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;•If..-----------.
Convicted on the most recent . 64 counts. The marathon event' I
charges last month in San Diego spanned eight months and included
Superior Court, Smith could serve a 2,'mil documents of evidence and more
maximum Sentence of 20 years . . than 100 days of testimony . 1
Friends of the white-baired financier
Stx months ago, Smith, who has
say he has vowed he will not spend a declined interviews remarked to a
da~ in jail.
reporter outside court: ·"I'm going to ·
Smith's current probation began i,n write a book about a guy who had a lot
1975, when he pleaded no contest In of money, then went broke, and went
four chargesoffelony bank fraud. The back and tried to start all over again.
charges
stemmed
from
"Trouble is, they won't let me out of
misapplication of $27.5 mlilion in here to start." funds from his defunct bank.
Fighting back sobs and saying he D
~A J
did not "loot" his company, Smith ru
asked the judge, who was appointed

• WASHINGTON (AP) - President alleged oil compa'ny conspiracies.
carter Is meeting with oil company AS official Washingtnn issued bad
executives amid new · signs gasoline news on the p~ice tront, four oil
will be even scarcer in June than it companies - Shell, Gulf, Conoco and
was in May.
Texaco - planned to reduce gasoline
' Carter summoned the executives to shipped in June "to below May levels,
today's session at the White House one despite driver demand being
day after his anti-inflation agency .traditionally higher because the
said prices at the pump are "far vacation season begins and weather
larger than can be explained" by warms.
increalleS in crude oil prices alone .
The )Vorst cutbacks will be in .the
The Council on Wage and Price eastern United States, while some
Stabillty Wednesday charged one oil parts of the West may actually get
company, the Amerada Hess Corp., more gasoline than in May .
with violating the administration's Energy . Secretary
James
price guidelines dll!'ing the )ast six Schlesinger ~aid · the red~ce~
months, and a council spokesman said . allocattons are not a favorable stgn
other probable violators . may be and said the gasoline situation is being
announced as early as today ,
reviewed.
.
At the same time, an Energy
That prognosis
apparently
Department lawyer charged that conflicted with a statement by White
unnamed agency · offrcials have House press secretary Jody Powell
covered up lilegal transactions that that May was the worst month for oil
••drive up the price of oil for supplies and the situation should
consumers.
improve "somewhat" in June and
Joseph D. McNeff told two House July ·
subcommitees that most if not all of
Schlesinger probably will join
the nation's major oil ~mpanies ~e Carter at a session Friday with
involved in iUegal practices and said consumer groups concerned about
the government's own files contain scarce gasoline supplies and
massive evidence of wrongdoing.
skyrocketing prices.
His and other officials' testimony
In .other energy-related news :
le~ ;:lep. Albert Gore Jr., IJ..Terin., to
- Agriculture Secretary Bob
a~sert that Congress may have Bergland warned that the farm fuel
stumbled on the "largest criminal c:unch 'II~, not . just a springtime
conspiracy case in our history, d1lemma, say_mg shortages ~til
involving billions of dollars, and it continue ater thlS summer and mto
may be continuing to Ibis day." .
the fall harvest.
He
endorsed
McNeff's
-House Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill
recommendation that a special· Said he sees no way that legislation In
prosecutor be appointed to investigate block President Carter from

Sum~

JOHN KAUFF INS.

\t\OODMEN

•BEACH COVERUPS .

•BEACH TOWELS

•sWIM suns

•SWIM TRUNKS

()pen
- . _~.... 9: 30 til 5:

---

I.................

.

A friend cares

-..Arrow+

BUI.LDING OR REMODELING?
SEE US · FIRST AND COMPARE OUR
MATERIAL AT REASONABLE PRICES.

PRICES.

CASH&amp;CARRY
PRICES

QUALITY

WE

DELIVER

VALLEY· LUMBER &amp;
SUPPLY
CORPO'
R
ATION
0.
s.

CALL DOUG LEASE,
JIM WALKER, TERRY
HAMILTON OR
PETE. sOMERVILLf
Upper River Ro;t~l
Gallipol1s

923

. Middleport,
992·2709 or 992·6611
Open: 7:o0to 5:00 Mon. thru Fri.
7: 00 to 3:00 Saturday

3rd Ave• .

446-9300

\

.•

MASON FURNITURE

. Designed for the sporting life. Made of absorbent 60%
cotton and 40% polyester fabric to look well and be
comfortable out in the OP!!n or indoors. In a varied
·assortment of colors ... latest collar 'styles.
Short aleevel 116.00

MASON FURNITURE
Mon., Tues .• Wed., Friday &amp; Sat.
8:30 to 5:00 Thursday tlll12 Noon

heritage house

OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONLY ,
Mason, W. Va.

BAHR
CLOTHIERS

OF SHOESAVE.

OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8 PM ·

MIDDLEPORT, 0.
N. 2nd AVE.

•

Eastern

Trade
deficit
clim·b s

tRemermer

FATIIR'S DAY

wil!

•HUSH PUPPIES

mm:e

briefs •••

•ANGEL TREADS
•SANDALS
•JOGGERS
•ROBLEE

Arrow
tOURNAMENT KNIT
.

FOR THE BEST DEALS IN THE
TRISTATE AREA

773·5592

Weather

LOWER
jRATES

'•

.

·Herman Grate

Your Social Security

lliE
SHOE BOX

SHOP

FOR DETAILS

ALTA GRESs
deControlling oil prices can come to controls beginning Frida y. The phase..W.D...LIAM B. COLLINS
Alta
M.
Gress
, 98, New Haven,.died
the floor for a vote soon .
out will continue until October 1961.
Funer{ll services for William Wednesday at the
residence of a son,
Carter plans to begin lifting the
Bry!lllt Collins, 85, Akron, formerly of William (Bill ) Gress.
Middleport, were held Wedflesday at
Born April30, 1881, in lhe Long D!lle
the Bckard-Baldwin Funeral Home in Commwtity,
she was the' daughter of
Akr.on. · ·
the
late
John
and Ella Somerville
Mr. Collins, who ·attended MidSomervlile.
dleport ·High School, died Sunday in
Her husband, William H. Gress,
an
Akton rest home. He was born in died in 1960.
Once it "has been determined what that they are paying for increased inM.edicare dolls not pay for, the next surance - doubling or tripling their Meigs County, a son of the late MarSurviving are the son, Blil Gress,
concern is ho,w to pily for the an- protection. This may not necessarily time~ and Idabelle Russell Collins.
New Haven ; ooe grll!ldson, James W.
He is survived by his wife, Lula; Gress, New Haven; and two greatticipated exeluSlqns. Thill is called the be true since most policies have
''economics of health care" - "coordination of benefit" clauses two daughters, a son and several grandchildren, Todd and Michelle
figuring out what is practical to in- which· prevent payments from ex- nieces and nephews including l.Drena Gress. Also surviving are several
1
sure against and what would be better ceeding the actual cost of the service. Rice of Middleport.
nieces and nephews.
to pay out of pocket..
Thus, a pers~n who buys two
Funeral services will be held SaturMany P!!Ople want · insurance policies to cover the $60.00 medical inday, 1:30 p.m. at the Foglesoog
coverage for extensive hospital stays surance 'deductible will actually
Funeral Home with the Rev. Ralph
beyond the 60 or 90 days that receive just $60.00 not S120.00.
Mostly cloudy with a good chance of Mahoney officiating. Burial will
Some companies Indicate in their showers or a lhunderstnrm tonight. follow in teh Graham Cemetery.
Medicare covers. However, they may
not realize that only about. 5 pet. of advertisements er through their Low in the lower 60s. Variable
Friends may call at the funeral
Medicare patients SJ*nd more than 60 agents that they have some kind of af• cloudiness Friday with a chance of home Friday from 2 to 4 p.m.- and 7 to
days in the hospital during a stay and filiation with Medicare. This is not showers mainly during the morning. 9p.m.
thl\t a new benefit period begins 60 true and whenever Sllfh a question High 75 to 00. The chance of rain is 50
days after discharge from a hospital arises, you should contact lhe Athens percent tonight and 30 percent Fri- ·
or skilled nursing home stay.
Social Secudty Office immediately to day.
Other people are attracted to the find out the real stocy.
COLD FRONT COMING
idea of obtaining insurance coverage
Medicare cannot endorse any
By The Associated Press
(Continued from page I )
for Initial deductible - $60.00 under private company for the purpose of
Acold 'front in the L-entral states was Koenig. Substitute leBChers hired for
medical insurance and $160.00 under providing supplemental health inmoving eastward, pushing another the 1979-M school year are : John Coffhospital insurance. Yougerierailypay surance.
stationary
front out of Ohio.
man, Helen Caldwell, David Jenkins,
more fo this type of coverage than for
The ever - increasing rise in health
AJ;
the
cold
front approaches, it 's Donald S&amp;lmons, Betty Roush,
other types of health insurance. One care costs make finding a good supsource estimates that it costs about plemental policy an iltlportant in- expected to bring occasional showers Kathfyn Baum, Patricia Adlelll and
$30.00 per year for insuance for the vestment. There are good policies and and thunderstorms over the state Madhu Malhotra.
$60.00 aMual medical insurance not so good policies. The best way to through Friday morning. The
·
deductible.
obtain the best possible coverage is to National Weather Service said
Some people seek supplemental in- shop around extensively and ask plen- isolated severe thunderstorms were
B&amp;E INVESTIGATED
possible today in the western portion
surance In pay fo! the higher than ty of questions.
Meigs
County sheriff's deputies are
·
"reasonable charges" for which
Obtaining good hallh insurance for of the state.
investigating
an apparently breaking
High temll!!ratures were expected
Medicare does not pay- However, the later years is a concern that
and
entering
at
the Donald Deskins
most private insurance companies do should be· Widertaken with much In be in the 70s, with lows tonight In residence,Route 4,Pomeroy . ·
lhe mid 50s to mid 60s . Friday's highs
not cover such charges for lhe same caution, care, and consideration.
According to lhe report, Deskins had
are
expected to be in the upper 70s. gone
reason - they are not considered
to the home Wednesday
"reasonable charges" for the treat·
afternoon
and foWid that someone had
::: :::::;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:; :; :;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;~~;:=;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:; : ;:;:;:;:;
ment of that particular condition.
pried
a
window
open. Deskins believes
EXTENDED FORECAST
There is Jl feeling that to cover such
the
intruder
left
when he arrived.
Saturday through Monday:
charges would encourage the
Mostly fair tlirougb tbe period with
charging of inflated fees and thereby
blgbs In the 7yGe and lows In the
provide inflationary pressure on
50s.
health care costs.
_ TRUSTEES TO MEET
·::;;;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::·
Once you know Medicare's
Olive Township Trustees will meet
llrnitatlms and have decided what
Friday, June 1, at 7:30 p.m. at
TOlL REACHES %74
risks you want In insure against, you
Reedsvlile.
CHICAGQ (AP) - The death count
need to review what private inbas risen to 274 In the nation's worst
surance policies can meet your needs.
air disaster, and medical examiners
If you are a member of a group
ASK TOWED
now say they have posltlv~ly
health insurance· plan in connection
A
marriage
license was issued to
Identified ·17 victims.
with your· job, fratemal organization,
Ronnie
Chester
Fox, Jr., 18, Rt. 2,
Authorities
·said
Wednesday
the
or other group, check to see if the plan
Albany,
and
Fhonda
Sue Wood, l7, Rt.
carries some coverage af~er
WASHINGTON (AP) _A surge in discovery of part of a b&amp;by's torso In I,
Rutland
.
retirement. Many. do and can prOVIde .imports of oil and autos pushed the lhe wreckage lead them tq believe
protection for fliling in Medicare ' nation's trade deficit to a three-month there was an infant aboard tbe
gaps.
,
high of $2.15 billion in April, but American Airlines jet thai crashed
.
· If your present plan doesn t carry carter administration officials are Friday.
No babies were listed as passengers
over into retirement or if you don't still predicting a decline in the total
on the flight to Los Angeleil.
have one, be sure that lh ewlicy that deficit for .the year.
· ~Bul all we can do now Is beUeve
yu _are considering ~ what you
"I regard it as an aberration from
that
there was an infant on board,"
have decided you n_eed msurance for. an overall improving trend," said
You ~Y be surpfis:e'! at how many William Cox , a top Commerce said American Airlines spokesman
health IJISurance policies actually ex- Department economist. He said the Joe Scott. "H there was an Infant, be
. elude from coverage the same trucking strike was probably, partly wouldn 'I have had a ticket. That
general areas that M&amp;dicare ex- responsible for a sharp 3.9 percent means we couldn't bave bown he was
eludes. The most impo~t feat~e of decline in exports during the month. on board. It's safe to assume the .
Gift Suggestions
an insurance Plan.
be supWhile exports fell to $13.88 billion, (death 1 count Call be raised by one."
He said, however, there bad been no
plementatlon of Medicare. s coverage imports rose 5 percent to $16.04
Inquiries
abo•Jt a missing baby.
rather than duplication of 1t.
billion, with oil and auto imports
Shoes for Dress
Another common misconception accounting for much of the increase.
casua
1· Golf, ..
held by people ':"'to purchase
Meanwhile,
the
Commerce ~-------,----------~
than one health msurance policy, JS Department was to release later
tnday its .report onJdding economic
indicators for April.
The indicators index declined In
VETERANS MEMORIAL
'four
of the previous five months,
Admitted-Helen Gibbs, Hartford;
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Nonsuggesting
a sharp economic downJohn Bumgardner, Pomeroy; Martha
teaching employees of city school .
Roush, Rutland; Kimberly Mulford, turn in lhe view of some economists.
districts are entitled In civil serIn other economic news, federal
Pomeroy ; Myrtle Warner, Syracuse.
vice protection even theugh lhe
Discharged-Harry Moore, Philip banking regulators took action
school board has not adopted the
Null, Eli2abeth Jenkins, Paul Burton, Wednesday that will permit banks and
appropriate regulatims, Ohio's
William
Morris,
llauline savings and loan associations to pay a
Supreme CoUrt has ruled.
Come IN-Look
Derenberger, Pearl Ash, Alan quarter of a percentage point more on
In a Lake County case, the
Over
our sale table
passbook
savings
accoWJts
and
even
Dodson, Clarence Story.
court said Wednesday that such
higher interest on new, four-year
-Manv
Bargainsworkers are included by law in
Holzer Medical Catter
accounts beginning July 1.
the civil service unless they are
Dlsclw'gea, May 30
'"They also voted to eliminate
specified beforehand by the
Eliza Adams, Lori Booten, William minimum deposit requirements on
school board as non-classified
Bowman, Harry Shesher, Richard certljlcates of deposit, except for the
employees.
Corvin, Helen Dempsey, Richard $10,000 money market certUicates.
The 6-1 decbion, with Justice
Gleffner, Jada Hall, Obra Harold, And they voted to reduce penalties if
Paul -w. Brown dissenting,
Geneva Jones, Richard Jones, Bobbi savings are withdrawn before the
reversed the 11th Ohio District
Middleport, Ohio
King, MrS. James Knapp and son, cerilflcates matUFe.
Court
of
Appeals,
and
the
case
Susan Lusher, Amer Myers, Carrie
The recent increase in the price of
was remanded to it for further
Nease, D. Jean Notter, Melissa world oil was reflected in a $334
proceedings.
Petrie, Thomas Rose, Earl Roberts , million rise in the value of imported
Mrs. Thomas Skinner and daughter, oil in April, the Commerce
Elsa Soles, Betty Stewart, Michael Department's trade report showed.
Thompson, Dalsle Mae Vance, Fetta IVr'hile the volume of oil increased only
Walke, WiJllam Walters, Ira Watson, about 5 percent to 266 million barrels
Tax books open for second half of 1971
Patrick Whitt, Betty Williams, Helen in April, the cost of the oil increased 9
percent to $4.04li billion during the
Williamson, Danny Wilcox.
Real Estate Taxes. Flncil day to pay tax
Blrtha, May 30
month.
Auto imports, primarily from
Mr. and Mrs. Johnnie Wallace, son,
will ~be July 20, 1979. .
Japan,
rose $371 mUlion during the
Galllpolla.
'
Mr. and Mrs. John Murphy, son, month .to a In tal of $1.05 billion. The
New office hours effective May 29, 1979 8:30 to
'nation's bilateral trade deficit with
McArthur.
4:30,
Monday through Friday. Closed on SaturJapan totaled $1.04 bllllon, up from
$286 million in March.
day.
WE'VE LOWERED THE COST
· OF CARPET CLEANING
The total April defcit was nearly
MEIGS COUNTY TREASURER
thr.ee times the March trade deficit of
$821 million and the largest since a
NOW RENT
GEORGE M •.cOLliNS
$3.o9 billion deficit in January.

Under protection

Father's Day
June 17

-

Area dea~hs

.IIETI

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

!...~&amp;

Dinlln Jaly.

oo.p.m. a:,;;;..-'

t

:bbons presenwu

'76 MERCURY COMET
'77 JEEP CJ-5 6-cyl.

For Men
&amp;Boys

For Ladies,

BAKER FURNITURE .

Mrs. Paulette King and children
ANSWER - This has no basis in T.J.
and Alia of
Ky.,
spent
several weeks viaiting her
~ parents, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Randolph
and her sister, Mrs.-Stella Krebs and
Contraceptives -- a con ? Stacie,
at Letart. Mrs. King Is
WASHINGTON (AP)- A group of recuperating fr&lt;m surgery on her
law students, saying one in four hand.
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley HarbolD' have
women who use over-the-counter
returned
home after spending a
cootraceptives will become pregnant
week's
vocatloo
at Myrtle Beach.
Ribbona for weight loss were
asked the govemnlent Wednesday U:
Ir----~-------------------,
.
Mrs.
Leona
Dudding
of
Nitro,
Is
presented
at the week)y classes of
Llllm
..........
.-e
"'*-'.'IllY
.......
....
· halt what they claim is misleading
advertising of birth control ll('Odncts. vlsting her sister, Mrs. Helen ... ........ 4•Mied .. ~IIIJ ........ Slinderella held in Middleport,
..._..~
Masonnd Pobtt Pleasant.
~ ·-~·......_..
The petition asking lhe Federal Williams at Clifton.
. ,. _
. . . . . . . . ~..den . . . . . . . . . ....
At lhe Middleport evening class,
Trade Commission to crack down on
................ F
'It!
Bessie
Flocarri received her 36 pound
"false and deceptive ada" for nonribbm
and was also recognized fer
prescription vaginal Contraceptives
having
lost the most weekly we1gbt
was filed by three Geerge Washington
with Shirley Johnaon 88 her runner· University students who held a news
up. At lhe morning clasa, Darlene
conference to &amp;Mounce their action.
Hawley lost the most weight and
_ "Consumers are placing false
I'UIIMr-up W88 Pearl Pballn.
reliance in products they think are
Presented a 36 pound ribbm at lhe
over 90 percent effective in preventing
Dear People cl. Pomeroy,
Mason
Class W88 Jane Tucker, with
pregnancy, when in fact they may
In all my travels I have never seen
carolyn
Gllllsple, Dorothy R.-11
only be 70 percent effective or less,"
a cemetery . with a more beautiful
and
MOilB
Russell receiving 20 pound
the group said in its petition.
natural. setting ·than you have In
ribbons.
Gewanna
J:ohnsoli .lost the
The Jaw students estimated that
BeechGrove.
most
weekly
weight
and Unda Young
more than I million pregnancies will
The hiiJa winding upward through a
was
her
runner-up.
result each year from ·failure of
cathedral of stately trees Inspire a
At the Point Pleasant class, LeOila
cootraceptlve foams, creams and
feeling of awe, and the view cl. the surGreen
l01t the most weight, and there
jellies.
rounding countryside from the top
was
a
tie
for runner-4111 betWeen Lola
makes Heaven seem vecy close inKirker
and
Geraldine Blessing. Chris
deed.
Wilscn
lost
the
most weight class with
Ian 'tit a tragedy therefore, that this
·
beautiful and historic cemetery Is not I:lat.Jy Ross 88 runner-up.
being properly mainlained? The
roads are washing out, grass is uncut,
and weeds are taking over, My husIIIU II a p-adaate o1 Rl•
band and I were there fer Memorial ·
Collect ud ('4mmpplty College Day and had io spend the little t1ine
wllb aa uiOdate degree c1. Applied
that we had in a l01ing battle to clean
ScleDce .. the mecllq) field. 8be wu
up the family plots.
'78 PINTO PONY
IIIIo . prelellted with 1i eltaUOD c1.
If this neglect Is not changed In
reeo1Dltloo for ooutandiDI care, the Beech Grove Cem~cy
.....,..mlc aehlevement anrded by . · could eventually become an im_.
(2) '78 GREMLINS
the Rio Grande Fanlly AIHelaUOD.
petrable jungle like the Capehart ·
Sbe wu reeogulzed u aa oat- Cemetery of New Haven. Even
'78 PINTO SEDAN
•talldiDI atudent Ia medieal Syracuse Cemetery receives better
laboratery
tee"DOIOIY for lbe lJ'IB-'It
care; when we were there the same
'77 VW RABBIT
aeademleyear.Sbebulleelleleeted day; a whole crew of high school
Ia replar membenldp Ia ad Beat
studenla wllh power mowers came to
'78 MERCURY ZEPHYR F7
Pill Seleutlfle Fratendly by Alplla
clean It up.
PI Chapter. Bobbf 18111e applel- c1.
Only you who live in Pomeroy know
'78 CHEVY NOVA
Mr. aud Mn. Rabert Cllapma• o1
what must be done to tum this
Syracaae. Sbe II a 1m graclaate o1
situated around. Good luck and best
Solilberu
HIP
Sdlool.
Sbe
U.
acWishes.
'76 FORD MAVERICK
AFri.end
eepted employment at Holler
Colwnbus, Ohio
Medical Catter, • GalUpoiU, bella- ·

J

~Tbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Thlmlday, May 31.1979

J

•

MIDDLEPORT 0.

•

stendard K od..:o/or

Do-lt·YOUrlelf
and get pratenionli
re•ulta

m~g•tiv••

-------------$100
RENT
FOR

PER·HOUR

ONLY

( 4 Hour Minimum)

----------~---

STAR SUPPLY! . CO.

949-2525

I? a~ine,

o.

·

o' origin•! •lidel.

(Include• 110 siZe/

PICK UP YOUR COUPONS HlRE

.DUTTON DRUG CO.

�to-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thiii'Sdl!y, May 31 , 1979

1i

....••

Your Best Buys Are Found in t~e Sentinel Classifieds
.

WANT AD
CHARGES
I day
lda)'1
!da)'1
lda)'1

LOST: MALE Irish Setter . AP-prox . 2 yrs . old. A rea of
Boshon on Bo shon Rd .
Children 's pet . Reward.

or equ i wa len t. Excellent salary

and fr inge benefits . Shift ~~~ ­

Cbarge
1.25

uo

. Lost .a nd Found

Laboratory T.c:hn lcian . 3- 11
shift. bp4rienced MLT (ASCP)

I~ Words cr Undtr

Cash
1.00

9&lt;9· 2«&lt;&gt;6.
LOST: PERSONAL B;ble belon·

ferentoi l. Contact: Personnel
Office .
Pleasant
Valley
Hospita l. Volley Drive , Point
Pleasant, WV . 25550. Phone

1.90

1.110
3.00

2.25
3.15

30-4 · 675 · ~0 .

Each word over the minimwn
1$ 'lt'OI'dl il fl ctnlll per word per

ing to Marty Foley. If found.
contoct Betty Foley. Syracuse.
P~one

An Equal Op·

day. Ada runnina: other U.n COO·
lf!CUtjve dlys w!U be cha111ed at

WANTED . SAWYER to work at
Paint' Valley Pollet, Scottown.

256·6363 berween 7 and 5pm.
or 886·8840 after 5.

In memory, Card of Tbanlcs
and Obituary : 6 cents per word,
$.1.00 mlnimwn. Cuh in Md·

m .7:105.

LOST: Men"• glosses . Brown
rims in blOck case. Thurs .,
May 2.C betw. .n Pomeroy
Parking · Lot across from
Swisher and Lohse Drugs or
Powell's parking lot. 992·3672.

portunity Employer .

IIJe I day role.

BABVSITIER NEEDED. FleK;ble . FOUND: LO$T coiHo about I
year oJd. Tan, white and
9'12·6233.
block . Phone 9.C9·2636 after 5
hours. References required .

VliJICO.

Mobile !lame soles and Yard
Illes art at"C'epied ·only W'ith
cash wtth Cll'der. 25 cent chlrg!
lor adl carrying Boz Numbertn
!;Ire rllbe S.ntinel.

p.m.

EXPERIENCED AIR condition·
ing and refrigeration man.
Good pay and hol idays. No
phone calls. Gollio Refrigero·
tion Co., 152 3rd Ave .,

1be Publilher mervea the
rtcht 10 edH or reject any ads
deemed objectional. The
l'lllllhh«..W nal be r&lt;sponsible
for mol'! than one U1correct inoertillll.
PINine 1112-2156

wanted to Buy
CHIP

GalllpoBs.
HA \IE VOU BEEN oul at o&lt;hool
for 90 days or more? Are you
betw. .n the ages of 16 and
19? ARe oli , unemployed? If
you con answer yes to these
questions . you may be eligible
for the Gollia-Meigs C.A .A .
YCCIP forestry techniciqn
training program .
C.A .A. ~as openings for eligi·
ble youth In tf:!is natural
resource management skill
training program . Applicatons
and further information ore
available from the Gallipolis
or Pomeroy OBES offices .
C.A.A. is an Equal Employ·
ment Opportunity employer.

NOTICE
WANT-AD
lA niTERTISING
DEADLINES .
Mood&amp;y
Noon on Saturday

WOOD.

Palos

maK.

diameter 10". an largest end,
p4tr ton . Delivered to Ohio
Pallet Co.,, Rt. 2, Pomeroy .'

9'12-2611'1.

.

OLD FURNITURE, ke baxo$.
brass beda, iron beds, desks ,
etc.. complete households .
Write M.D. Miller, Rt. .c,
Pomeroy or call 992· n61J.

OLD COINS, pocket

wotc~eo ,

class rings. wedding banda,
diamonds. Gold or silver. Call

RaerWamsley.·742·2331 .
WANT TO buy: old 45 and 78
phonograph

records .

Call

992-6370 or Contact Martin
I)UYING JUNK cars and
bodies. Also scrap Iron and
metals. Rider's salvage, SR ·
12~ . Pomeroy. 992·S468.

4P.M .

the dly before publlcatioo
Sunday

4P.M.
Friday altemaon

NOTICE

In Memory
IN LOViNG memory of Harriet
S. Neigler ~ho pOiaed away S
years ago May 30th.
.
.
Her hondt ore folded now to
rest
Hushed pre thoselipt 10 pure
Her spirit now among the
blast
~
,
No pain Or sorrow to endure . .
Her chair Is vacant now and

lone

·
Her ste~ no longt-r heod
Her voice is stilled forever·
moro

No Ionge~ gesture, look oi
word
She tolled for others day by

.

With soc't-lfice her life was
fraught '·

Bids wi ll be rece ived at
th e off ic e of Bernard V .
Fultz , Pomei' oy National
Ban k Bu ilding , Pomeroy .
Oh io, until June 2, 1979 ~ at
10 :00 o '&lt;;lock A .M ., for the
former residence real
esta t e of Roscoe Cozart.
situated on State Route 338,
East of Racine . Ohio ,
overlook ing the Oh io Riv er ,
co nsist ing of .a one -story
frame dwell ing . five rooms
and · bath ,
on
ap pro)(imatelv on e -acre lot .
For further Information
t elephon e 992 -5896.
The EJCecutor reserves
the ri gh t to accept or reject
any bid .

CARD OF lhanks ;n behalf of
my beloved husband, Paul

McDaniel; Sr., wha paned
away M!Jy,6,,1979, I would like

'.

to try to eJCprell my appreciation to •YAJl'O:Ile who wa1 so
kind to ,e. It would be im Ponibl'e
tO
mention
eoweryone's "Otne. I would like
to soy a sp«lal thanks and ap-

pt"WCiatiO, ·1o· lhw' M;ddlopart
Emeriancy Squad, Veterans
Hospital , nurtet,
and doctors wf)o were on duty . A apeclal thank• fo'r all the
flowers , , f~. pho'1,. calla,
etc . Alto ,~ Would rlke to thank
all my gOOif~'= neighbors,
friends , churcflft. relalves ,
Rawlings and Coati Funeral
Home, Feeney -Bennittt Post
Memoria~

128 ,

M;ddleport ,

Oh;a ,

pallbearers, singers and also
my pastor and his wife, Rev .

ond Mrs. Odell Manley of

t~e

Yard Sale
YARD SALE. Ju11e 1, 10 til 5.
Ne:.:t to State Highway
gc:~rage . Rt . 7 . Trucy Andrews
moving to California, Old
dishes, gloss pictures, etc.

YARD SALE. Langsville. Follow

to Certified. Saturday , June 2.
9 til 5. Lots of iniont and
children's clothes , matern-Ity
clothing, and other. items.
Rain or shine.

GARAGE SALE . June I and 2.
John Keck . Mulberry Hts.,
Pomeroy. Lot s of new and rea l
good dresses , you con try
them on .·Size 16. to~· and ltos
of other itmes.

Items, what-knots, two beds,
toys and mof)y other i tems .
Friday. June I through Monday , June .c. 10-8.

YARD SALE. Marvin McGuire
r•aldence . Rt. 7 By-Pall Satur-

day. 9 tll5.

Sedan · No .' 2L69R3P 254284

YARD SALE. Men's, women's
ren's clothing, fur·
and child_
niture , toya , games, misc.
items. At. 2.ca i,-. Chester star·
ti ng Friday, June 1, 2 , 3,

!51 31, 161 1, J, Jtc

GAR4GE SALE . June 1 and 2.
10 til 5. 3rd house south of
Eastern High SchooL Jim
Loucks.

The Fermers Bank &amp;
SavingS
Compeny
Pomeroy, Oh io, reserve S
tfle r ight to bid at this sate

·

30'' RIDER ELECTRIC START

-,

UST 895:75

Western
parade
Phone 698-3290.

saddle .

REG. cockei spaniel,
mole, $«1. ~ -nJ.5233 alter
.. pm.
AKC

Auto Sales

SALE '888•
SALE '788
m·zns

...

1973 INTERNATIONAL SCOUT
21 .000 miles. tully equipped,

air, wenc~ . etc.. eJCcellent
condition . 992-2121 ,

1974 GMC JIMMY, P.B., P.S.,
A.C., 2·w~eol drlvo. $1725.
Call '1'12·3580.
FORD F·ISO. 4x•. po, pb,
auto .,

topper .

Phone

• 985·-4339.
1974 WI DASHER. 9'12 , ~ .
1973 FORD STATION Wogan,
A.C., 51 ,000 m;les. $1050.
1972 Dodge Dart Swinger, 6
cyl., 2·daor, $1175. Alter 5:30
call'1'12·71n.
1978 PONTIAC GRAND Am II ,
P.B.. P.S. . air, FM-AM radio .

7•2·2777.
1976 CHEVY ,.x,. Custom
Delu)(e
heQ_vy
Va ton .
Gur,rack , FM converter ,
38,000 miles. Take over
payments. Caii304-B82-2886.

1976 CHE\IV SCOTSDALE

I'

lon

RUTLAND

11

M•nning Roush, Owner
Open 1 •. m .-5:30 p.m . Mon. thru Sot.

POMEROY, 0 .

Box3

..

104·106 W. Union, Alhens,
Mon .· Sat.

10·5:30.

· 1973 CHEVELLE 350 au.tomatlc,

Still A

Services Offered
WATER AND m;oc. ~aullng.
Call 9'12·5858.
·
NOW HAULING limestone In
Middleport-Poemroy area .
Call for free estimate,

.

and

SHRUBS ALL
SALE PRICED

I

.

...

Jack W. C.rsey
Mgr.
Phone 992·2181

1977 FORD CHATEAU E150
van , Aula., P.S.. P.B., A.C. , •
captains chairs, dual gas
tanka, cruise control, AM· FM
ttereo. 32,(XX) miiM. bcellent
con'ditlon . $5800 . Phone

1974 HOLLY PARK mobile
home. Ux70. 31-4-675-5475.
1970 TWO 8EDROOM 12•60·
Champion.

Appl i ances,

1967

23

Foot

Alratream

Troller. Phone 1·304·675·3098.
2.C FOOT ALL aluminum pontoon boat, 50 hp motor. 15 ft.
baas boat. Mlnkoia trolling
motOr, $0 h1p ..Mercury mdtor,
1-4 ft. Runabout, 35 hp motor.
All re.ady for 1he river', Try
the~
out.
ftobert Hill.

949·2013 .

5UP.t!R

·.

l!,stol Wilk.S\1'1111
GOOSE

STOCK

TRAIL&amp;R NOWAVAILAILE .

Chester, D.
5-6·1 mo. pd .

Refinance

S&amp;G
DEEP STEAM

A-No money down
(eligible veterans)
FHA-AS low as l%
down &lt;non·veteransl

CARPET
QFANIMG

Purchase

and

30 Year Terms

BULK UME
SPREADING ·
POMEROY ·
~ARK
Phone m·2111
Ask For
CHARLES BU~H
J•ck W. C•rsey ·
Mgr,
, Phone ft2· 2111

WIND POWEA 15 KW PTO electric generator, 675-22.. 5.
13 FOOT AVAlON travel
troller , $550. 19 in. lawn
mower, practically new, $75. 1
aet .of ruck bed ralls, 8 foot,
.$35, 1 set of wide 1preod car
mirrors, $20. Note Vanaman .

3 Yr acru in Pomeroy. SEclud·
ed wooded area on top of ~Ill.
Overlooks rivef. Water , elec·
trlc available. 992·3886.

. BROWN AND tan small male,
medium hair, long ears, I
year old. Brown and block

n-

dleport or &lt;all 9'12·7853.
TWO
FEMALE
puppies .
7•2·3045.
Real Estate for Sale

Rutland, OH . Phone 742·2761 .
1978 SUZUKI RM 250 C. Like
new-condition. Priced to tell.

'1'12·22•9:.:.·- - - ' -- - SWEET POTATO plants. Nancy
Hall . Centenniol. ~uarto
Rican . Also tomato plontt,

peppers, cabhage. .Dwight
Spencer, W. S~ode Rd. Phone
985·3tl38 . No Su~day oaleo .

BUSINESS
·FOR SALE
·Beer, Wine CamOUt fu Pomeroy, 0,

Same locaUoo for
lOyean.

PHONE

614-992-5786

BY OWNER: houoo on 41/1 St.
For information call 992-2766 .
FOR SALE by owner, 2-3
bedroom homes, one with 2
acres . Call992·269.f after 6.

Hot;smg

.~~!.e.
·1'_ ~J3:
front
porch
and
aluminum siding, In·
sulated. $25,000.
NEW· LISTING Large 8
roam frame home with
1'12 baths, furnace heat,
T. P. water, Ohio Power
and five acres of land.
blshwasher, disposal ,
and carpeting all
through . $30,000.
EXCELLI!NT- New 3
bedroom home In the ·
countrv. 2 car garage, ·
fa m lly room with
fireplace, WOOd doors
and windows, on large,

room, ~

bedrooms, modern kit·
2 1h

chen,
baths, garage,
carport, 2 aeres1 many

ot-her
features ..
$60,000.00.
'
HANDYMAN ' S
SPECIAL
3
bedrooms, bath, storage

buildings, lots of space
In town. ONLY $7,500.00.
DON'T MAKE A MOVI!
UNTIL YOU'VE DONE
YOUR MOilLE HOME
WORK - 1972, 12'&gt;&lt;60',
furnished, equipped kit·
central

air,

Water

all

tap,

between

Racine and Nease Set·
tlernent. S7..500. Don't
walt, pick Your home
site now.
WHEN IT COMES TO
REAL ESTATI!, WE
WILL GIVE ' YOURS
OUR BEST.

underpinning . Lot rent$
for $35.00 per ·month .
$8,900.00.
WE ARE LOCALLY
OWNED &amp; OPERATED
AND ARE IN NEED OF
LIST I NO$. CALl. TODAY I
REALTORS
Henry E. Clel•nd Sr.
Henry E. Clel•nd Jr.
9'12·2259
992 ... 91

Hous1i1y "'
HP.ulqu,lftr.rs .

---·----·---'

..•'

It's like
a qiant

spiral!
. ..

s

on ROlli• 7. 9Bs.3825.
·
SEWING MACHINE Repairs,
aervice, all mokn, 992·228.f.
'l'he Fabric Shop, Pameray.
Authorized Singer Sal" and
EXCAVATING, dozer, laoder
and back~oe work: dump

zs

WINNIE

trudts and lo-boya far hire,

will houl fill dirt, top :soil,

OH , STAN~,.I

OON'T 'THINK
SHE'D DO IHAT. YOU' RE:
ONE: OF 'THE:QWEST

limestone and gravel. Coli lob

apela•ro

9'12·21.(), '

EMPLOYEES HERE: !

..,.

;s

Loat your

llcenae?
.

Phone

· E·C ElECTRICAL Cantra&lt;lar
oervlng Ohio Volley region.
Six daya a week, 24 houra aer·
vice. Emergency calla . Call

882·2952 odl82·:US..
·
HOWERY AND MARTIN EK·
cavatlng,

septic

syater:ns,

LOOK AT TH' LINE - UP,
LOWEEZV, AN' POINT OUT
WHO STOLE I./ORE JAR
OF HONEV

dozer, back'-. Rt. 1o().
Phone 1(61ol) 698.7331.
IN STOCK· far Immediate
delivery; various slles of pool
kits. [)o.ft: your•.• lf or let ua
Install for you. 0 . Bumgardn•r

Salu, Inc. 992-5724. . ·
CODNU'S CAMPERS an ~aln·
bow Ridge wit~ ·lap at thw
ll,._larth-Sw111 Colony Jayco ._Motor Homes to Toppen, atce11odn and friendly
service. For directions coli

61Hol3·3011 .
IIERV GENTLE Quarter Horae.
Western

parade

saddle.

Phone 698.3290.

~

...."

..
~

LEo MOitRIS Trucki"'l· Will do

linMI and fortlllzer hauling and
opreadlng, Also 11..-tone and
grovel hoUII"'I. 7•2·:U55.
SALES AND SERVICE

on .

Howard Rotavatora ond V
chiael plow.. Leo Marrla.

742·2ol55.
NEIGLER Construction for
bulldln~ hausea and repair

PEANUTS

I-IERE'S BLACKJACK
SNOOPI{, THe. WORLD
. FAMOUS RIVER SOAT
6AM8LEIL

---

,work. Coli Guy Nelglor.
9oi9·2SOB.
'ADo ONS AND ,.modeling
gutter work , down spouts.
wolkt
and , drl11eW;oy1
(free-

· • Same ' coru:ret• wortc.,

"llmate). V. C. VD&lt;f"'l, Ill,
Racine, Ohla, ,.9·274.
'

•

•I

been cancellitd?

full basement,

"'

&amp;uwVH:I¥

•;o!

furnace,

NEW liSTING GOOd 3
bedroom fraine home In
Pomeroy . Bath, natural
gas furnace, front
porch, near shopping,
1\Sklng only $18,500.
NEW LISTII!G - Nice
building lot In Racl~e
Village. 69x 1110, out of
high wa..- near school.
Only $5,000.
BARGAIN -Four room
house wlfh bath, . city
water and river view.
Lottor S7 ,500.
WOODED TRACTS Four 5 /\ere' tracts wlfh

'

,,

NEW LISTING - Nice
building lot In Syracuse
on Slate Rt. 12•. Out of
1937 flOOd. Only $5,000.
NEW I:ISTING - Good
2 bedroom .home · and
bath near shopping. Gas

E. Second Stroot

lot.

..

~

or Roger Jeffers, clOy Jlhane
992·70B9,
nlghl
phone
9'12·3525 or 992-5232.
EXCAVATING,
dour ,
back'- and dltcher, Chari"
R. Holfleld. Block Hoe Service,
Rutland, Ohio. Pone 742·2008.
PUlliNS' EXCAVATING. Complete Sorvl&lt;e. Pho0e992·:U7a.
AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE

ff2·3225

and

•

Service. We sharpen Sclnors.

HeadqWI( ters

water . Starting at
$3,500.00.
TRY AND TOP THIS Brick, ranch, full basement, wOOd burning
.f ireplace, large roc.

chen,

talk ,

~.~

NEW LISTING
Pomeroy, Wright St.,
Excellent neighbor·
hood, .25 acre. Equlped
kitchen. Full basement,
air conditioning, dining
bar, want 522,500.00.
NEW LISTING - Meigs
School · District.
Homesltes , 1- 1•;,

,,

'

Sweepei-a, toasters, Irons, all
smal l appliances. Lawn moer,
· next to State Highwoy Garage

'1'12·2082 or 742·2328.

60, E.
'A A IN
POMFROY . O :

!"~

or 949-2000. Racine, Ohla, Crltl 8rodlord.
ElWOOJ) BOWERS REPAIA -

you ,..d a hauH. $12,000.
willing . to

.

BRADFORD. Auction-. Com·

TWO STORY 3 bedraam houoe.
Owner

'

plete Service. Phone 949-2..a7

3 lots. Now' s your chance If

~16

room , family

bedroom

hous• , · . full
basement,
fireplace , fully carpeted, c:en·
tral air, enclosed sun porch,
located on 6% acres on CR 28,
approJC. 3 miles from.Raclne. If
interested contact Larry Wolfe
9~9· 2836 weekends and after
5evenings.

Cot, bla~k . female, SH, young.
See at 2.C.C Sycamore St. , Mid·

+

~

Cellulosic lw-lllltrl
Thtrlllaii .. Mfltlotl
Sllve 30 jiCt. to 5I pet • •
on11Nt1ngc01t
l!xperlence and
fully Insured
Fre61!st.
c.nm-2772
5-17·1 mo.

with whita markings . 1 beige per cent down (non-veterans).
pupy, 3 mo. old, both female, . Ireland Mortgage Co . .E.
Humane Society, 992·7853 or State. Athans. 614·592· 3051 .

THREE

AT f'AI'II --·

'f

0

1/A. Na money down (eligible
vet•ront} . FHA · As low 01 3

MODEAN

I POH'T CARE

WHAT MAMA
SAYS ... UNCLE
GEORGE 18 MAD

Blown Insulation ·
.... .
...
JIM KEESEE

REAL ESTAtE Laona. Purchase

9'12·7661!0.
KITTEN, black, 6 weeks ald.

.

J&amp;l.

and reflnonc,. 30 year terms,

striped mixed brood dog,
female, 3 or • ma. old. Beige

I

-. J

.----~~--, .'

fi\IE KlnENS, 6 to 7 weeks
old. 4 calico, 1 tiger. 992-7680.
Human• Society.

'

Coni•C1: G - Smith
· · ar Mike Gr•le
•t Rutland Furniture Co.
. ·742·2211
After 5 P.M., ftl._
oi' 742·2174
I
"
• ·2

4·23-1 mo.

Real Estate for Sale

electric

..

~

Fr~Estlm.te

592-3051

GiveAway

acres,

.·'"'
"•

-

IRElAND
MORtGAGE
CO.
77 E. State, Athens

4231 mo. (Pd. 1

'1'12·2151 , unt11June8, 19~ , at
10 a.m. Appraloed price:
$.5.250. VendOn reserve the
right to reject all bids .

Pomeroy aher 5 p.m.

:!

•·5-lfc
-

Real Estate Loans

'

$950. 992·3453or9'12·2752.
1977 KAWASAKI KZ 1000. Exeel lent cond ition, $1700 firm ,
Inquire at ~02 W. Main ,

AT1\W~.

~

949·2862--949·2160

• ·5·1 mo.

BoJC 723 , Pomeroy, Ohio. Tel.

clo. &lt;m·3980.

197• Mcirkllne, 50x12, 2 br.
B&amp;S MOBILE HOME SALES
PT. PLESANT. WV.
67·5· ..24

2 Mllft

No rust.

367·7101.
PAINTING AND oandblalllng ..
Free ootlmat". Coii949·26B6.
1967 FORD 390 engine. 67.000
TAEE TRIMMING and Removal. actual miles. Trant., bocfv
7•2-3167 or7•2·2573.
jlarto. 1974 &amp;sex 70 matarcy·
Mobile Homes Sale's

27320 MCJnfVDmtr't' Rd.
Lantsvlllt, Ohio
614-Mf-424! t!v.,.lniS

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

FRIDAY, JUNE 1, 1979
,
5 :35 - World at Largo 17; .5:oiS •
Farm Report 13; 5 : ~ PTL :
Club 13 : 5 :-u Summer : ,
"lub,led a heart to dummy s
&gt;31
NORTH
Semester 10.
,
king only to have the student
• Q4 2
6:00-PTL Club 15; 700 Club, 6, B; ''
produce the ace and lead the
• KQ4
6:10 - News 17: 6 :25 - Societies
jack of trumps.
'
t K 72
In Transition 10.
At this point the Professor
• KQ73
6 :30-Dragnet 17: 6 :•5 - Mllrnlng · ·
showed his hand and
WEST
EAST
Report 3: 6: 50- Good Morning,
remarke&lt;j., "I used to prac• ••••
• J 1098
West Virginia; 6:55 - Chuck
tice magical t r icks when I
• 10 8 7 5 2
• AJ 9
While Reports 10; News 13.
was a boy . As you can see I
t9653
tQJIO
7:00 - Today 3,ol,15; Good Morning ,
have lost two tricks and still
•J10g4
.A86
Frldav
Morning
8: •'
6,13;
have a trump loser and a
Schoolles 10: 3 Sloo;tS· Llttle
SOUTH
diamond loser. I am going to.
.AIII$1
Reseals 17.
1 .
make that diamond loser
• 63
. 7: 15-Weather 33; 7:30 - F'!'mlly 1 •
disappear into thin air. "
t A84
Affair 10: Lilias, YOQ• and You •
The Professor carefully
• 52
33.
.
.
won that spade with his ace.
8 : oo-capt. Kangaroo 8, 10; Leave It· .. :
Then he cashed his ace .of
Vulnerable: East-West
to Beaver 17: Sesame St. 33.
•·
diamonds, led a heart to
Dealer: North
8:00-Romper Room 17; 9:00-Bab ·
dununy's queen, ruffed a
Wool
Eaol
Braun 3; Phil Donahuo 13, 15; ','
heart, entered dummy with
Pass
Emergency One I 6: Hogan's .,.;
lhe
queen
of
trumps
and
led
· Pass
Pass
Heroes 8: Love of Life 10; Lucy .~
dummy's last• club .
Pass
· Pass
Show 17; Mr. Rogers 33.
i ·
At this stage of the per·
9 :30- Brady Bunch 8; Hog•n's • •
formance East was left wilh
Horoe• 10: Green Acres 17.
'I
lhe lop lrump and the high
Opening lead: J
10:oo-card Sharks 3,15; Edge ot ""
·diamond, South with a low
Night 6; All In the Family 1,10; '·.
trump and a low diamond.
Doling Game 13; Movie "She's ~ :
Both East's cards were high,
Back on Broadway" . 171 10:30- _;
but he could nol score the
All Star Secrets 3, 15; $20,000 .,,.
diamond trick. If he ruffed
Pyramid 13; Andy Griffith 6; · ;
in, South would chuck his
By Oswald J•coby
Whew1 8,10; Bit with Knit 33.
"
diamond; if he chucked his
•nd Alan Sontag
' 10 :5HBS News 8; H~M Call 10. I
diamond· South would take
11 :00-High Roilers3,15; Laverne &amp; ::
his small trump right then
The student,' sitting East, and there.
Shirley 6, 13; Price is Rlghtl, 10.
was tempted to double four'
11 : 30- Wheel of Fortune 3,15; . •
"Magic it Is," groaned the
spades, but he had learned student.
Family Feud6,13; SooameSt. 33.
that it seldom paid to double tNEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .1
11 :55-News·17; 12:QO- Newlcenler , .,
the professor.
3; News 6, 10; Passwor~ 15;
(Do you have a question fpr
East won the first trick
Young and the Rostlon I;
the e&gt;&lt;perts ? Write " Ask the
wilh the ace of club~ and Experts ," care of this newspaMidday Meglllne 13; Love ,..
shifted to the queen of dia· per. Indi vidual questions will
· Arnerlcan Stvle 17.
·,
monds.' The Professor won be answered If accompanied
12:30-Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Search for
in dummy, led a trump to his by stamped, sell-addressed
Tomorrow 8,10; Electric Co. 33: .,
king and paused for a
Not for Women OtiiV 15; Mavl• ~
envelopes. The most interestmoment's study ' before con~ ing questions will be used in
.
"T~e Great Flamarlon" 17.,
· ;·
tlnulng play. Then he Jed a
tflis column and will 'receive
1 :00-Days of our Lives 3,15; All My " ·
club lo dummy, ruffed a copies of JACOBY MODERN.)
Children 6, 13; News 8; Young
and tho Restless 10.
'
·;"·
1 :30-As the World Turns 8, 10; ·
2:oo- doctors 3, 15: One life lei ··:;
by THOMAS JOSEPH
Live 6, 13; 2:25-News 17 ,
2:30-Another World 3,15: Guiding .,
ACROSS
3t Bechann
LlghtB,10; I Love Lucy 17; Book
1 Italian
40 Gallic
Beat 33 •
· river
father
3:00-Gonorat Hospital 6,13; Lilias,
5 Quaffing
DOWN
Yoga end You 20; Infinity • ··
quotes
1 Modify
Factory 17.
3; 30-MASH 8: Joker's Wild 10;
11 Ring up
z Stalnray
Fllnfslones 17; Over Easy· 20;
1% Indian city
feature
Lowell Thomas Remembers 33.
13 The Charles'
Mllllla
4 :00-Mr. Cartoon 3: Hollvwood
canine
force
Squares 15: M•rv Grllftn 6:
Yesterday'• Alllwer
1\ddams Family I; S.ume St . .• ,
14 Sonptreu
t Palm leaf
2Q.33; Six Million Ooll•r Mlln 10; • •·
11 Alpine
Zl Eye problem
Bette
5 Opportune
Mike Dougln 13; Space Giants ,,
snow
ZIBeer
U ChlJiele.
I Step -!
17.
,t
field
30 Slrut the
American
7 Use a
• : JO-Bowltched 3; Gilligan's lslend ·
U Undulatory
boards
8; Lucy Show 15; Gilligan's ' ' '
architect
calculator
Island 17.
•
· ,~,,
..., ,
zz Voice
sz PaPal
18 A.barrier
8 Kipling
5 :oo-1 Dream of Jeannie 3; Beverly
Diet
tribunal
"with love"
' work
H lllbllllel B; Mr. Roger, 20,33;
gulde!ines
II Zulder 17 Ut!ht ·
t Cloying tone
Gom~~; Pyle 10; Six Million • ,
zt HigiHtrung :sa Electrical
Dollar Man 13: Brody Bunch 15;
stroke
10 Part of
t Dream of Jeannie 17.
. ••
tenn
U MaBon's
Yugoslavia 28 Tell
5:30-Carol Burnelf 3; News 6; , ..
Implement
Sanford and Son 8; Electric. Co. · •••
%0 Here : Fr.
20: Mary Tyler Ml&gt;ort 10; Odd -·
Z1 Crew's hue
Couple 15: Lucy Show 17: Doctor " '
Who 33.
2% Horror ne•meb-..f-~f--+-6 : 00-Nows 3,4,1,10,13,15; ABC "" '
ZS Babble
Nows 6; Studio See 33; Andy - '
zt Biblical
Griffith 17; Villa Alegre 20.
weed
6 :30-NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News
Be depen·
13: Carol Burnett 6; CBS News .... ,.,
8, 10; Over Eeav 20,33; My ThrM ••
dent on
Sons .17.
"':,~
28 Fresh talk
7 :00- Crou .Wits 3;
Newlywed '"
27 Incite
Game' 13, 6; Sha Na No I ; News
28 DiBco dance,
10; Love, American Style 15;
Carol
Burnell 17; Olck CltVett
with "the".\
20:
watch
Your Mouth 33 .
·~·~
31 Campll.l in l:=c+-t..-7:30-Hee Haw Honey• 3; Pop Goel
;
Brootlyn
the Country 15; S1 ." IINuty ·· · '
3% Slower :
Show 6; Family Feud a, 10;
5100,000 Name That Tune •t3;
33 Pork produclib--l--l-Sanford 17 : MacNeii·Lehrer
US .A. river
Report 20,33 .
3&amp; Juon's ship
8 : oo- DIIf'rent, Strokes 3, 15;
37 Cylindrical
Operation Petticoat 6, 13; Incredible Hulk 8, 10; Washington
38 Sit in
Week In Review 20,33; Movie
seBBion
"Destination Inner SPACt" 17.
8
:30-Hetlo,
Larry 3, 15; Welcome
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work it:
Beck, Kolfer 6, 13; Wall Street
AXYDLBAAXR
Week 20,33.
II LONGFELLOW
9 :00-Rockford Flies 3,4, 15; Movie .
" Cruise tnloTerror" 6,13; Dukn .
One Jetter •imply stands for another. In lhia sample A Is
of Henard I, 10: Royal Hll'llege
used for the three L's, X lor the 1wo O's, elc. Sinsle letters.
20; Money, News &amp; Vltwl 33.
apostrophe• the length and form ation of the words are all
9 :30-Bnt of Famlllts 33; 10:011hints. Each day the code lelten are different.
Qulncy 3,15: Dallas 1,10; Ten
CRYPTOQUOTES
Who Dared 17; News 20.
10:30-To Be announced 3.1; Con0 A W H
AV
RBAABH
sYmer Survstvet Kit 20.
WA
1 :00-News 3,6,8,10,13,15; Hogan's
Horots 17; Fawtly Towers. 20;
NW· A· PVDA
FDBOAWVS
M
DJ
L~tl Thomas Remembers 33.
11
:
30-Johnny
Carson 3, 15; SOeP
AV
K B•
APMS
· KBUWKWSL
WA
6, 13; Bonkersl I ; ABC News 33;
Movie "The Astro-Zoinbln" 10;
OAWHHWSL
N W A P.V D A
UWKB
Movie "Love Happy" 17.
12 :00-Juke· Box 8; Monty PythOn's
WA
DJ . - ZVOBJP.
ZVDRBHA
Flying Circus 33 .
Yesteruy's Cryp&amp;oqlaote: WHEN THEY COME FROM TIIEIR
12 :05 ~ Barttta 6,13 ; 12:30-Mo\fle
· "The Hellbenders" 8.
IVORY TOWERS, IDEALISTS ARE API' TO WAll{
1 :00-Midnlghl Special 3, 1$: Movie
STRAIGHT INTO THE GUTl'ER. -,-LOGAN P. SMITH

The vanishing loser case

H. L Writesel ~
'
,'
Roofing
r;.

TRAILER SALES

THE HEIRS of WIIUam Boal at.
ALUMINUM TI!WCK' topper 36" fer tor sole his home and real
~lg~. 8' long, w~lle, illdlng .Property located at 11 Oak St.,
front ~all windows. New Pomeroy, Ohio. Biela will be
$230.
·3S85.
. accepted at lhe office of Bar·
1977 KAL, EXCELLENT cond;. bare Knight, AHorney at Law,
1600 milea.

I m~K w~ ~r.

'

'

8 :30-PIIot "Faculty Lounge" 3;
Angle 6, 13; 9:00-The innocent &amp;
the Damned 3,15; Barney Miller
13; In flail on : 6,8; Lou Rawls on
Ice 10.
9:30-Carter Country 13: 10:00- 20.
20 6,11; ·Barnaby Jones 8,10;
News 20 ; Footsteps 33 .
·10 : 15-Commanders 17; 10 :30Hocklng Vallev Bluegrass 20;
Area Showcase 33 .
11 :00-News 3,8,10,13,15; Best of
Groucho 20; Lowell Thomas
Remembers 33.
11 : 30-Johnnv Carson 3,15: Slersky
&amp; Hutch 13; Movie " Where the
Bullets Fly " 6; Mash 8; ABC
News 33 : Movie " Blac~ Gunn"
10.

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

I

9'12·7291 altor•::IO.

tlon ,

YeSie rday'sl Jumbles: HAREM DOWDY MOSQUE AIRWAY
Answer; You'll be anxious 1o do so-WOAAY
Thursday, May 31

~-Gflmf&gt;,~
Rt. 3
Pomeroy, Ohio
ft2-5Sol7 ·
4-25·1 mo.·Pd.

I I I I ll

BRIDGE

.•

CONTRACTOR

·

(Answers tomorrow)

.

.

ROSE 'BUSHES

'

BLOCK &amp; BRICK , ,
WORK, GENERAL

Call: 949·2818
or 949·2150
• -•·Pd.

992-6011

01

z,.

Racine, 0 .
Wholesale, OlslrlbUtois
for fine · Pennzoll
lubrication ·products,
Motorcr•lt, Fr•m, •IK!
Industrial ChemtUI
Supplies, In oddltlon to
moll m•l•r brands of
motor oil.

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprise answer, as aug·

Prlnlanswerhere: (

.,

N. L Consbudian .

J&amp;R OIL CO. ,..,..,~p.

tLUSSTY 1·

ges1od by rho aoove canoon.

Ph. 992-2174

OPENING SALE

SIDING

Good Selection

'

Athens ArM

MONTGOMERY

•New Home
•Addons
* RemQidings
*Free estimates

~LAZES.~ IT'S eAI&gt;JANNIS'$
PET TIISE~ CU~ .!

Smilh ·N·
Motors, Inc.

Tt7·2745or 797·2752
I ·Jil ·pd .

C. R. MASH
VtNYL &amp; AUJM. ·

WESTERN BOOTS from Acme

OH .

. COMPA~TioleNr ·

Tam H.sklns 949·2160.

Jack's Septic
Tank Senice

speed, FM convertor , twin gao . ~5~92~·~54~7~8~.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
lanks, lilt w~eel. $1000. Call
30.c~·..:BB::2::·.:2BB6:::::_·:-::-:-----

For Sale

.

HARDWARE,

and Tony Lama for work or
drets, We hove a large selection of boott on hand for men
o,nd ladles at Mountain
Leath•r and GEneral Store,

STDRA6E

Resldentlol and com·
merci•L C•ll for
estimate. 24 Hour Str'
vice. Any day, anytime.
Portable toilet rental.
Phont 915·3106
Jack Ginther 915·3106

:
:
·
;
•
,

Nova 20,33; Movie " Rio Grande"
I~
-

new a ltd ,..,.tr,
Storm doors ud wlfldOWs, All
work auarti'IIHCI. :ro Y••n ••·
paritnce. Free tstlrn.tts. C•ll

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

Television
Viewing
THURSDAY, MAY 31, lt79
7: 30-Hollywood Squares 3; Bonkers
6 ; Matc h Game PM 8; $100,000
Name That TYne 10; Nashville
On The Road 13: Dolly 15;
Sanford &amp; Son 17: MacNeil·
Lehl er Report 20.3.1.
a : 00-Hiuonner 3; Mork &amp; Mindy
· 6,13; Inflation : 15; Waltans B. 10;

I I t

~tint..,•nce,

5-20·1 mo.·pd .

Rutland , Ohio. 2 doors down
from Post Office. 7~2-2255.
New .and uaed cosh registen
and colculator,1 . Paper and ·
supplies, Mortln·Senour point
Pro Line $8.10 go,, 1200 col·
ora , 2 gal. can exteriOr flat
latex kouse paint $13 .95,
white only. 40 gal, gas water
fleater, glass lined, 5 yeor
warranty ,
tole
pri_ced,
$119.9~. M.T.O. lawn mower,
3'1' hp 21: cut . sale price,

$125. Also garden ouppllu.
FUJI Hl·speod racing blko.
9'12·5121.

Auto&amp; Truck
R!!pair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992·5682
4·30·Hc

Fre~ . Estlmates

Mgr.
, Phone·9'12·2181

I I I

All typU roofing, tvtttrs tM
CloWnSJC)Utl . All l'f!MI homt

Phone99H323

SALE PRICES
9 ... _ Jack W. Carsey

I EPSIO

'

Home Mailtenanu

eNEWHOMES
eROOM ADDITIONS
eROOFING
eVINYL SIDING
•GUTTER &amp; SOFFIT

Headquarters for
Hotpolnt and
Genera I Electric
Appliances

IIERV GENTLE Q"arter horae .

---,l
.

and

BOB'S GENERAL
CONTRACTING

.POMEROY
LANDMARK

Ruth Reeves. 614·696·3290.

building. Sllualed on nice
rented lof. 9'12· 7235 ofler 5.
"•65 GOLDEN Empreu.
949·240'1.

GRAVaYlliACTOR SALES &amp;SERVICE
,204 CONDOR ST.

Zenith stereo, .C·speed record
player with speakers, S30. All
in good conditlpn . See at 256
So. Fourth, Ave., Middleport.

Barding &amp; Riding lenons and
Horse Care products.

30" RIDER .HAND START
1

9'12·6173.

Western .
·saddles
and
harness. Horses and ponies .

1973Governor, 60K12, 2br.

NEVER AGAIN WILL BE BE ABLE TO OFFER
llfiS FINE M(MER AT THIS LOW -APRICE

Evenings "' ·

HOOF HOLLOW. En gUs~ .Qnd

1965G.neral, 6Chc12, 2bdr.

. ONI WEEK ONI. Y

ISOO lb. bole.

7•2·2877 or 742·2152.

UnS(.:ramble these four Jumblea,
one let1er to each square, to form
lour ordinary words .

Ohio Valley Roofing

"'• mile aft Rt. 1 Dy· pass
on st. Rt. 124 toward
Rutland.

VERMEER BALER Model tio5 C.
P~one

Hysell
Garage

1S FT , LOWE LINE Aluminum
· bass boot, 20 HP , Mere., stick
A!SING STAR Kenn~ls, boar· steering, fully equipp4td with
dtng ond , groomtng, all tro ller. Phone985·.c339.
breeds. Cheshire, 367·.0292.

1970Skyllne, 12x65, 2br.
1970Sylva, 60•12, 2 bdr.
1970Caotle, 60x12, 2 bdr .
1973 Nobility, 12x60, 2 br.
1973 Rid-cod, 70xl4, 3 bdr.
1973 Nashua, 60•12.. 2 bdr .

SNAPPER SALE

•

cauliflower, brussel s sprouts,
head lettuce, tomatoes , and
Iorge select ion of bedd ing on·
nuals . Pots of flowers and
tlanging baskets . Cleland
Grearthouse.
G•ra_ld l ne
Cleland . Racine.

Pets for Sale

dual whH,I~ . .f54 engine, ,c.

Rain cancels .

Noti c e is hereby given
that on Mondav . June 4th .
1979, at 10 : 00 A .M ., a public
Notices
sale wilt be held at the Scott
Shank resldtn ce , 105 Union
GUN SHOOT, EllERY FRIDAY · Avenue , Pomeroy , Ohio . to
7:30 PM RACINE GUN CLUB. sell for cash the fotlow ing
FACTORY CHOKE GUNS QN. collateral , to wit :
1973 Pont lec Cat. 4 Dr .
LV . .

LISt 1008.75

gravel , calci um chloride , fer·
tilizer , dog food, ond aU types
of ~O tt . EKcelsior Salt Worhs,
Inc .. E. Main St ., Pomeroy,

Makes

..

...
••

~ --B-ris_z_
.-·n_e_;_s_S_e---:rv:---ic_e_s_.;..
.·

sand ,

TRUCKS, 2 ton 1973 and 11!,
YARD SLE . Nice clothes, tope ton 1970. Both w ith 1:2 ft .
player, topes, homemade .boJCes . Phone 992-6206 or

FOUR FAMILY Carport Sale.
Sot. 9 to 3. 1668 Lincoln Hta.
PUBLIC NOTICE

LIMESTONE ,

992·3891 .
YARD SALE , 53-4 W. Mai n, neJC t PLANTS , CABBAGE. broccoH.

Tfle State of Oflio, Meigs
county Court of Common
Pleas , Probate Dhrls.o n
GIGANTIC
VARD
Sole
9&lt;/2·5'111.
'
.
To the , Executor or
Naylros
"Run
Rd
..
Po.:neroy:
Adm i n is trator
of
the
Start• T~urs ., May 31 t~ru •, . Camping Equipment
estdte, to such of the
10.•.
follow ing as are residents
of the State of Oh io, viz : 1975 11 FOOT truck camper,
YARD AND Bake Sale. June I '
the surviving spouse. the
self- contained, air condition,
2
al
225
E.
2nd
St
..
Pomeroy
ne x t
of
kin ,
the
e:.:cel,lent condition . 992·2.121 .
behind the Eagle• Club. Given
beneficiaries under the
wil l i and to th e attorney or · by lhe Ladi"AuK.
, STARCAAFT FOLD down
attorneys represen t ing any
camper , . Reasonable. Ex·
THREE FAMILY Garage Sale at
of the aforement io ned
condition . 992-6121 .
cellent
Paige Humprhey' t troller . ~ ,9
per: sons :
miles off Rt. 7 on 143 on the
Rose M . Sea rles {Case
No . 22702 1. 689 Beech St .,
left. Thurs.: Fri. and Sat . .
M iddleport , Oh io .
Something for everyone .
For Rent
You are hereby notif ied · Watch for signs.
that the ln\lentory and
COUNTRY
MOBILE Home Park,
Appraisement of the-. estate
YARD SALE. June 1, 2, at the
Route 33. nqrth of Pomeroy.
of the aforementioned ,
,Betty Young residence on Pine
dece a5ed . tate of said
Grove Rd. In bock of Memory , Large lots. Call992· 7479.
County , were filed in th is
Garden$. Old furniture, what· ,3 AND~ ftM furniahed and un·
court . Said lnventpry and
.nota, nice clothing. 9 till •
furnished
opts .
Phone
Appraiseme!Y wltl be. for
hearing befiP't th is Court
LARGE FOUR family Yard Sale. 9'12·5ol34.
on the 25th day of June,
Starts Thurs. George Skinner't
FURNISHED APT. suitable tor 3
1979 a t 1: 00 o 'ctock P .M .
rnidence. Rt, 3. 992·32.C9.
or • construction workers.
Any person desiring to
.Household orticln and misc.
After 5pm call 992·~ .
f i le exceptions thereto
must file them at least fl\le
9'12·3129, or 9'12·591•.
YARD
SALE,
Monday,
Juno
4,
days prior to th e date set
6:00p.m.. Tu"doy, June 5, 10 TWO BEDROOM lurn;shed apl.
for hearing .
till g • .C Family. Toya._. clothing,
992·3129 , 992·5434 , or
Given under my hand
misc. Davit realdence , Rose
and se al of said Court , th is
9'12·5914.
Hill. all Rl. 33.
29th day of May 1979 .
EIGHT ROOM ~auoe In
Robert E . Bu cl\. Judge
YARD SAL£. Rase Hill, on•
Pomeroy . OH. $125 per m'o nth
By Caro l yn G . Tflomas
half mile from lost light ·In
plua utilities. Call992-5532.
Deputy Clerk
(51 31, (61 7, lie
Pomeroyh on Rt. 33. Girls
TWO BEDROOM trailer , Adult•
clothing ti:ret new-born to 12,
only. 992·332•.
odda andendt . Men and
womens cloth .. Iorge woll picAPT. FOR rent , 3 rooms and
tures . new topes , kitchen
bath In Po~roy . Phone
chairs . baby both tub, cor aeot
9'12· ~21 alter 5 pm.
andtoys.
·

1

COAL ,

wiglet, mini bike, many ot~er ,. , 1971, 1 MON;rE CAJcLO. Runs
items.
• .
~· aood. Pjan~r ste~eo : $650.

family.

OHIO RIIIE.R Auction Tu"&lt;joy
and Friday. 7 PM, 537 North
Hlg~ St., Mlddleporl, Ohla.

YARD SALE. I day only, Mon.
day. June ~ - Starting 10-3. We
ore moving and have o lot ot
misc. •tems. 7 mile• off Rt. 7
on CR 28. Located on Paul Orr
Form.

.

'

For Sale

949·2660. Cla1~;ng , c~iltfs
P.S.. p, B., AM· FM 8·tra&lt;k,
recor d p Ioyer, rec:ord s, Avon
$l200 bet
ff
'
9.C9
~
bottles, box scrap material, , ,
or 1 0 er.
•
·

NOTICE OF FILING
OF INIIENTORV AND
A.PPRAI5EMENT

Middleport
Independent
Halln"' C~urc~ . Pearl St.
Th• Paul (, McDaniel. Sr.

Auctions

247·36«.

opposite Bashon Fir• House.

gain

Card of Tteanks

condition.

'GARAGE SALE. June 1 and 2.
10.5. FrL and Sat. Jean
Trussell. Rocin~Baahan Rd..

way
A massage from her stlare
Live not for self nor selfish

IN MEMORY of our d.ar loving
husband, Rev. Floyd Wiie,
who pa11H a...,.oy 11 years
ago May ~1, 1-\•.fs ~·~but not
forgotten .
•·
Sadly mined by~ Wif8 Garnet ,
children OnCJ 'grandchildren.

3!10 angina.

Good

9-6.

May- wl)q toil ;n ,llfo'o hard

YARD SALE, 5341 W. Moln, next
to Certified. Sat .. June 2. 9 til
5. Lots of Infants and
c:hildren's clothing, maternity
dot~ and other itema.

CHEIIV 327 or
Complete.

VARil SALE. 927 Brownell
Avo., M;ddleporl. Fri. and Sat.

And laf• 'her tired .fingers
wrought.... •
·

Do all for Him and dare,
.
Daughter Mary , Grond childre.n , and
Great grandchildren.

BUYING; Scrap iron and clean
cost iron. 8otterie1, copper,
bran, aluminum, ·r adiators,
lead, insulated copper, etc.
Meigs Metal a, Rt. 7 and 33,
Pomeroy.

si9ns on CR 10. May 31 and
Robert CozarJ ,
June 1, 9 om to 6 pm. Men'a,
E )( ecutor
women's, children'• clothing
Estate of
all si:res. Toya, knick.knocka,
EosCoe Cozart
May 18 , 20 , 22. 24 , 27 , 29,3 1 · misc.

Early beaon h•r day at toll

Yard Sale

512 per ton. Bundled slab. $10

Furni ture.
Tueaday
lhruFriday

day

.

.

Help wanted
IMMEDIATE
OPENING .

f}j}~ fii)~ ~THAT SCAAMILED WOAD GAME
~ ~ ~~b)IHentiAmoldondBobLeo

..

I·..... -·· .

muiS.hii""ll-

b-l---l-+-+-1-

wo

'WA

«) 1m Klftt Fe.tt~Jr• Syndic•'-· Inc .

\

'

''Marta" 10.

�,,. __...

~2-Tbe Daily Sentinel, Middle}l!ll't-Porneroy, 0.,

ThUI'Ilday, May 31,18'111

No bargains available last month

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

Associaled Press
Supermarket
shoppers found that
4
bargains at the meat counter were
few and far between· last month, but
an Associated Press marketbasket
survey .shows that overall grocery
bUlB rose only one-tenth of a percent.
!It• survey indicated that egg
prtces are continuing to decline; the
cost of orange juice has started to
drop ; and there are a few sales on
coffee.
•·
The AP drew up a random list of 15
commonly purchased food and
nonfood items, checked the price at

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8 P.M.
• SPECIAL PRICES, ODDS AND ENDS TO CLEAN UP. ONE.OF-A-KIND. GREAT SAVINGS FOR THIS ANNUAL SALES EVENT.

,·- -------"GiR"Ls.---------,--:-----------------.-.----1--:------.------------0
SUMMER TOPS SALE
!o!?!~!~~sr~DS · 1,;,.,,~~~~~~~~~~~~~,~~m·~''

REG . $2.50 .... . ..... .. ....... , .. ,, .• , ..... SALE $1.99
REG. $3.00 ... ....... .. ........ ... ' ... ... '. SALE $2.39
REG . S4.50 · .. .. . .. ... ...• . . - . ... .•.. .• . • .• SALE $3.59
REG . SUO • .... •... . ..... _(_. .. .. .. . . .•.•.• SALE $4.79
REG . $7.75 .......................... . ... .. SALE $6.19
REG. $10.00 ..................... .. .... ... , SALE $7.99

•

.• -·----·_

_._

•

•

__

_.._._

___
SALE

..._.._

_____...,....___

..

Regular sizes $8.95 Trousers •••••••••• , ••• , ••••• $7.99
Extra sizes $9.95 Trousers .... .... .. , .... . ... . . . $8,99
Regular sizes $7.95 Shirts (Long Sleeved&gt; • • •.•••• • $6.99
Extra sizes SS.95 Shirts !Lonq Sleeved) ••••• • •••• • $7.99
Regular sizes $6.95 Shirts (Short Sleeved) •••.•••• $6.39

PRICE

29• AND 35• YARb

CHILDREN'S TOPS
2 PRICE

LONG DRESSES

LACES AND TRIMS

BY BUSTER BROWN
SIZES 6/9 MONTHS TO GX/7

JUNIOR, MISSY AND HALF SIZES
REG. $20.00 .... .. .. ..... .. . .. .. ' .. .... ... SALE $13.88
REG.S26.00 .. . ........... . .......... . . ... SALES17.88
REG . $36.00 ...... ... .. .. .. . ... ........... SALE $24.88
REG . $42.00 .. ....... ..... .• .•...••...•••• SALE $29.88
REG. $48.00 .............. .. .•. ...• . .... • • SALE $33.88

Various widths and colors,
limited quantity.

I
I

1~

10 · .
l.-----......,:_-----------------'1
..
I
WOMEN'S
I
YARD
:·---_S_U_M--M.-E-RwoTMOENP~sS--S-A-LE_____i! DRESSES AND PANTSUITS ~~--cANN0N$it·--·EE--T--S--I

r

~

sPECIAL SALE PR;cEs oN JUNIOR, MISSY AND HALF SIZES

I

Regular and extra sizes.

REG. '7.00 ......... _............. ,......... __ ,....... SALE SS.59

j

FROM

1
I
1

'1119

King, queen, twin and full bed sizes. Some pillow cases
to match, discontinued from our regular stock. Regular
pricesss.99toS12.99.

i

:~~: ~~oo-.-_·_·.-.-.-.-.- .-_·: :.-::::::.-.-.-.-.·.-.-.-.-.-.-.- .-::::.-:::. :~, ~:~: t~-~-·w()'~fEN- 'S·-·-C-O_A_T_ S-A:_L_E____
1f2 PRICE
REG.-16.00 .................
-.......................
SALE 12.79
l-------- ·-- ·--------·~'-·----~----...
___________
....... ____
_.._
GIRLS'
Spring weight styles for rain or shine. Junior,
I
WARI#fOUSI
RUSS GIRL SPORTSWEAR
missy,andhalfsizes.Reg.S38.00to$98.00.
!
METAl. CABINETS '

I

_.._....,...

.

I

Slacks, skirts, vests and tops. Sizes 7-14:
REG . s •. 00 .. _... . _ . .. __ . __ ............ _ . _SALE $4.79
REG. Slo.oo · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · -· · · · · · · · · · ·····SALE S5-99

SALE

rl

$2600
·

-------w·-OME·--N--'s______ 1
20 .,. OFF
=~~::::::: ::: : :: :::::: ::: ::: :::: :::::::: ::~~=:E j s·HOR
. ·yS SA.LE
!
· 'c ·
. ~--· M·E-;s-;;;:99-C'AIHA"Rn___
·
r-------sAurH'iS-·;,--..,-,-;-;iv-;;· :~::::~:::: :~ ::::: :: :: ::::::: ::: : :: : : : : : ~:~~:~:~:

BROWN .DUCK
CARPENTERS OVERALLS . .

I

Nice selection of quality shorts in assorted colors. Regular
and extra sizes.

l.

FROM ONLY

'13••

·s4 79

I

WRANGLER COORDINATES SALE

1

2 racks of wrap around skirts, blazers, slacks,
and blouses.

:1-------------- --------~ .
MEN'S CARHARn '18.99

·

·-

WINTUK $1.49 KNITTING YARN

II

Big selection of colors, 3'12 oz. skein, stock up
now. Made by Coats and Clar k.
·

~~--------JU;.o;S--------l

Broken sizes, 32 to 48 waist, double knees, swing nail
apron, limited quantity .

....

I

•

j -~"

SKEIN

~----------..;...----·-~··--·---·--~---------1
I 1 ONLY, KODAK $114.95

'7 19

SALE$s~

I

I .~=~~An:_s~~~E_!~~~--~--------~~0
~::;yw~~:r ~~':".~1~~~'~ ~:~~~~~~·;:~·~:: lumEBOYsstiiiiTSALE___ l_~;:_~;;~;;_
~-~~~
S899
I
!
1 ONLY KODAK '99.50 CAROU~EL 100
$4000
I
I POCKET SLIDE PROJECTOR ZOOM LENS
SALE
0- -

BROWN DUCK DUNGAREES !
----~---------------1

MEN'S LIGHlWEIGHT JACKETS

~~~es s, M, L and XL Good sel~ction of styles. and col·

FROM

Knit and sport shirts in summer colors and
prints.

'2 39

FROM

I

MEN'S

1

~EA N5-

MEN'S 118.95 JACKETS.'.................................. '14.26
0 .1scont·mue d styles to clean up. Stretch
, 1
,
_MENS 22.95 JACKETS ....... -........ _.,_ ., __ ___ , ..... . '17.26 1 denims fashion twill jeans some corduroys
MEN'S 134.95 JACKETS ........ -- ........... -.... ...... -.. '26.26 I regula( prices $9.95 to $17.95:
'

BOYS' '12.95 JACKETS ............................. '9.76
• BOYS' ~17.95 JACKETS __ ,........... .'......... .,_ '13.46

·
.•

l J:

PRIC

1
1

'9.95. BOOK BY WOODY HAYES

I

f

SALE

HOiisiwijilsoiPARri.1iNr~·,-s, FLooR

$~5.95

I

$9.99 West Bend Generation Pattern- 7 118 inch
Open Skillet Stainless Steel with wrap around
0

I

I
I

I

.

....,...,._.._..,...

~-------

7

5

MEN'S $7. •9PSECISAPLOSRATLESHIRTS
·
·
·

.

Short sleeve styles ins , M, L.and XL sizes, good select'
tt
d 1
ton,pa ernsan coors. .

• ·h ••,

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

1. 1979

Gets

s~pension

wAsfil'NitJt&gt;N &lt;AP&gt; -:~~
government released on Thursday the following Ust of Ohio
physicians, dentists and others
which the Department of Health,
Education and Welfare said have
been suspended fnm Medicare
or Medicaid because of criminal
convictiOns fill' fraud.
The Ust includes the date and
lengtb of suspertBiQn:

Gordon K. Amllbary, D.D.S., of
GalllpoUs, 1 year fnm June 22,
1978; Charles Talbott, D.D.S., of
Columbus, 2 years from Aug. 16,
1978; Claborn C. Taylor, D.D.S.,
of Columbus, 2 years from Aug.
16,1978.

Wanted clearance

as a result of the trucking strike and Carter administration efforts to May , compared with April : .
lockout.
·
The 5.8 percent unemployment rate
In May, unchanged from April ,
remained close to the five-year .low of
5.7 percent set in March.
The unemployment rate seems to be
defying other economic indicators
showing that economic growth is
slowing slgnilicantly as a result of

contain runaway inflation .
- Adult men : 3.9 percent lll May,
Administration officials say down from 4 percent in April.
unemployment will.increase sooner or · - Adult women : 5.8 percent, up
later this year as a result of the from 5.7 percent.
winding down of the economy, but the
- Teen-agers: 16.8 percent, up from
Labor Department figures showed 16.5 percent.
this has not happened yet.
-Whites: 5 percent, up from 4.9
The department's report gave this percent.
breakdown by population category in
- Blacks and other minorities: 11 .6
percent, down from 11.8 percent.
- Minority teen-agers: 36.9 percent,
up from 34.5 percent.
- Full-time workers : 5.2 percent,
down from 5.3 percent.
- WhittH:ollar workers: 3.2 percent,
down from 3.3 percent.
,
- BlutH:ollar workers: 6.7 percent,
down from 6.9 percent.
gasolin e in May, but 23,000 gallons of
The nation's unemployment rate
that was borrowed from what he will has been in the 5.7 percent to 5.9
be allowed in June. While not wanting percent range for the past 10 months.
to be identified, the operator figures It was 6.1 percent in May 1978.
he has already sold half the gasoline
The Labor Department said total
he will be allowed this month.
employment In the economy
A busy Akron station owner limits increased by 140,000 in May following
sales to 3,600 gallons a day and closes a sharp decline in Ap-il. Last month 's
at that point daUy.
iricrease raiSed the number of persons
Creseitte said Texaco, which cloSed with jobs 96.3 million, up 2.4 million
many of its Ohio stations earlier this from a year earlier. Some 5.9 million
year, set June allotments at 70 persons were jobless.
percent of the gasoline that stations
The department said its separate
sold in June, 1978. That compares w survey of industrial payrolls showed
an 80 percent allotment in May.
that employment in manufacturing
He said Shell and Sunoco have fixed feU by 31,000, the second consecutive
allocations at 75 percent Qf the year- decline in that sector. But those losses
ago sales voluine. SheU'had its dealers were offset by gains hi collJ(ruction,
of
highways;
on an 80 percent allotment in May and prima rily
Sunoco had an 85 percent allotment. transportation and public utilities and
Gulf and Union 76, Cresente said, are wholesale and retail trade.
alloting 80 percent of year-ago sales.
Treasury Secretary W. Michael
Gulf had a 90 percent allotment in Blumenthal said Thursday that
May and Union 76 an 85 percent unemployment undoubtedly will
increase in future months as a result
volume ceiling.
Some ExxOn dealers say they don't of the apparent slowdown in economic
1Continued on page 10 1
!lfOwth.

Some allotments cut
below May gas levels
Some gasOline allotments to service
stations today are being cut below
May levels, and a weekly price check
indicates fuel costs going up about 3
·percent per month.
James ·cresente, head of the
Northern Ohio Petroleum Retailers
Association at Cleveland, said the five
name brand suppliers armounced
June allocations that are 5 percent to
10 percent below May levels.
Meanwhile, Gov. James A. Rhodes
scheduled another meeting Friday
. with leaders of the petroleum industry
to work on details of a contingency
plan for gasoline rationing if it
becomes necessary.
~ · Aallciclllfect---Prea survey o,f
service stations in 18 Ohio cities sltows
the average cost of regular grade
gasoline at self--service pumps was
77.5 cents per gallon ilt mid·week.
That is up only 1-lOth cent over the
previous week, but compares with 73.8
cents averaged April 26.
At the !Qp of the scale, thete were
reports of premium grades of gasoline
selling for 90.9 cents per , gallon at
Xenia and Mansfield.
The average for high test among IS
reporting cities was 86.7 cents per
gallon, compared to 85.9 cents a week
earlier. The average was 84 .7 cents
the first week of May.
One station operator in Xenia was in
the hole on June allOtments before the
month started.
He said he sold 76,000 gallons of

WASIDNGTON (AP) - A member
of the government agency that
investigates. plane crashes llllys he
would not fly on a DC-ID until experts
get answers to some questions about
its safety.
Philip A. Hogue, one or the five ·
members
of
the
National
Transportation Safety Board, made
the statement Thursday after tbe
board was briefed by an elpfrl who
knocked down the idea \bat a broken
bolt cauSed the fatal crash of a DC-10
a week ago.
The bolt, an early suspect in the
accident, turns out to have been a
Victim.
"As far as can be ascertained so far,
the bolt broke as a result of the
accident," chief staff metallurgist
Michael Marks told the board. The
bolt, recovered from the runway of
OliC11go's O'Hare airport after the
crash there, "had broken in an
overstress condition, rather than a

OWlS HEAD, Maine (AP) -

James Merryman,

the

most ex-

perienced pilot flying with
Dow!Jeast Airlines, was about to
change hla ll)lnd about landing at
Owla Head shortly before his
DeHav!Uand Otter crashed in a
heavy fog on the COB8I of Maine,
k!lllng 17 people, authorities said.
· "I dOO't think WI! will make It ...
Get me a clea1'811Ce to Augusta,"
· he radioed al 8:55 p.m. to the
Bnmswick Naval Air Station,
which controls air traffic in the

area.

Those were tbe last words
beard from Merryman, 35, before

(Continued on page 10 )

OPEN NEW OFFICE- Drs. Mateo and 1Jnnla Dayo, New Haven, W.
Va., will open offices at the former location Of Dr. J . J . Dllvill, N. Secood
{lve., Middleport, effective Monday. Tbe offices will be open frml5:30 to
8:30 p.m. each evening, Mcnclay through Friday, and frml 9 a .m. to 5
p.m. each Saturday. The !1fO doctors wbo also serve on the staff of
Veterans Memorial Hospi(ai received !heir doctor of rnedldne degr.a in
Manila, Phlllpplnes, and both have had additional trainlllg And experience In the United suites.

Safety expert .won't
fly on I)C-10 planes

CLEVELAND (AP) - Numben
draWD 11wnday In the Oblo lottery:
481; "'bile 34; gold t;
willalbaon 81144.

mae

fatigue condi~lon, " Marks said.
After the briefing, Hogue was uked
if he would be a passenger on a DC·10.
"No. No.I would not,'' be said, adding
that If It were up to him, he would be
strongly templed to ground the big
jets.
The NTSB's powers are limited to
investigating accidents and making
recommendations.
It
was on
the
board's
recommendation that the Federal
Aviation Administrstlon on Tuesday
ordered the grounding of all 138 nellis in the domestic fleet to check the
assemblies that hold the planes'
engines to their wings.
At least 25 of the planes remained
grounded Thursday after defects were
discovered in their engine mount
assemblies. On at least one DC-10,
mechanics found a crack that one
expert said could have cauSed an
engine to ·eventually drop off the
aircraft.

..
$500

Pizza ria Electric Pizza

OPEN SATURDAY • .30 A.M. TO 5 P.M.

Bake~,

-

4

'2.19 ·

Only, SS. 49. Plastic. Mattress Protector Pad, Twin

;:;.;:;;;;:.-::;
1:.;;:..-~~;:v::r~;;::-~il--P-RlCEss." .

!-----------------------------Sl,49 YARD
I

' 5 • 49 ~nd

7Z

53.99 yard 60

inch width Polyester yard goods.
------------------------------

-

·-

wl:

-~ ~RICE

----- ~------

'

Elberfelds In .Pomeroy
l

WASHINGTON
(AP)
Unemployment remained unchanged
in May at 5.8 percent of the labor
force, Showing that the slowdown in
economic growth in recent months
has not yet forced people out of work
in lllfge numbers.
' But Labor Department figures
today· showed that . employment in
manufacturing industries did decline
slighUy for the second consecutive
month. These job losses were offset,
however, by gains in other areas.
The department said an additional
65,000 workers were employed in
·highway and street construction,
"p-obably due to heightened road
repair activity resulting from severe
winter stortnS."
• It said employment rolls also were
. bolstered by the return of 50,000
workers who had been.jobless in April

$}388 .
HOME ·;uRNiSHiNoSiiiP'A·R-.,-M-E-N-,-,-s-,-,-Lo-o-tR
:J~·:,~.Watta

.

Y2. --PRICE
.
__
..,.....

FRIDAY, JUNE

~~_!!1!!'~'!~ !!~--------------------

Ready ties and four -in -hand, good selection patterns and
colors from our regular stock. .

Quart Size Club Aluminum Pan with

•

enttne

at y

$799

:~:. _________________ ,.. ________ _

I

' ~· ,-~-!~----· '--~----..-l-~--~----~~-~~-~---.-.-..~~~!:·~~=~~·per:•:4sheers, ~urtalns,

•.

$450

.
I "YOU WIN WITH PEOPLE"

•5.50 TO •7.50

).-.~--........._.- ·,

Denims and polyester cotton blends, not every size in
every style . Regular price $6.95 to $13.95. Limited quan ·
tity. Sizes 8 to 18.

(3) AMERICAN HERITAGE BOOK OF
$}l9
~ PRESIDENTS AND FAMOUS AMERICANS
SET
I ·-------------""----------------

'------------------------'

--c'LOsi'O'U'i"sA-L·;; --------t

BOYS JEANs
. .

.- jI

Y2 PRICE

JOYs-;-SUMMERWEIGHTJAcKf.TS-1
SIZES 8 TO 20 LIMITED QUANTITY. BIG SAVINGS NOW I
BOYS '9•95 JACKETS ...........................··:; " S7•46

r---":"'------1'-·-·----- . . . . . .
I '4.00 SET OF BOOKS

j ----.--· -- ----· -· _--.- --

r
MEN'S '13.95 JACKETS ...... ____ __ ........... ___ ,,,..... 10.46 I
.

________

Apr. May
Up
22.0 24.7
Down
22.0 2U ·
Unchanged
SU 47.3
Unavailable
4.9 . 2.2 ·
No attempt was made w weight~
AP s urvey results accordi ng to
population density or in terms of what
percent of a family 's actual grocery
outlay each item represents.
.
The day of the week on which the
check was made varied depending on
the month .

Unemployment stable in May

CHINA CABINETS, UTIUTY CABINETS,
WARDROBES AND BASE CABINETS.

-i1

weath er and the success of the
administration 's overall anti-inflation
drive could upset their forecasts.
Increased supplies of pork are
expected to take ~me of the pressure
off beef. Pork pnces themsel&gt;-es are
expected to mcrease. only I percent
this year and per captta consumption
is expected to rise about four pounds.
. A look at the. overall number of
Items m the AP survey showed both
more increall'!s and d~ases during
May than durmg April. Here are the
perce ntages of increases and
decreases :

'

.

$6800

TO

•

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

VOL XXVIII NO. 34

_..-----·-------·----·...-·-------

CLfARANCE

Durin g May , lhe AP survey showed May 1978 mcrease of half a percent
the marketbasket ·bill at the checklist and with an April1979 rise of just over
store increased in five cities, rising an half a percent .
Meat
accounted
for
a
average of 4.5 percent. There were
disproportionately
large
share
of
the
several substantia l boosts, mainly
becall$e of sharp jumps in the price of increase . Meats represent 21 percent
of the items checked by the AP, but ·
one or more meat items.
·
The mark!!tbasket bill decreaSed at they accounted for 33 percent of the
the checklist store in eight cities fast price boosts last month. Frankfurters
month, down an average of 2.6 were the hardest hit, going up in seven
cities.
percent.
The government has predicted that
On an overall basis, the
food
prices will rise 8\0 percent w 10
marketbasket bill at the checklist
percent
this year , but the economists
store increased by a tenth of a percent
concede
that uncertain factors like ·
last month. That compared with a

e

press, solid colors, very well made.

Key rings, candle rings, cookie cutters, stationery, electric shavers and many other items,
arranged for your easy selection.
·

T·a nks, blouses, halters, many more . Sizes 2·4, 4·6x, 7-14.

one supermarket in each of 13'i:itles on
March 1. 1973, and has rechecked on
or about the start of each succeeding
month . One item, chocolate chip
cookies, was dropped from the list at
the end of November 1977.because the
manufacturer dis contin11ed the
package size used in the survey.
The survey showed that prices this
ye!ll' are rising at a slower rate lhan
last year. The marketbasket bill at the
checkliSt store rose an average of 4.3
percent in the first five months of 1979,
compared to an average of 5.3 percent
in the first five months of 1978. ·

POOL MANAGER - Hennan London l.s the manager of Syracuse's
London Pool. It was named for blm. ~ '*e apent many hours in
preparation of its opening. Seuon paaes are ~. individual; family of
two, $30; family of three,..,:! ; family of four, Pll; family of five, f39;
family of six, $42 and family of seven, $45. The lllllimum charge IS $45.
Dally rates are 75 cents for studeniB, $1.25 for aduliB, 11 or older, and under school age 50 cents. Swimming lessons, 10 lessons, $10. Passes may be
obtained by stopping at the pool or calling London at 1192-5201. .

...

~

---·--. -··- ... -"-""'······-········"··

NEW LOOK - Thanks to the generosity and efforts of residents of the
Chester area, and former residents, the Chester Elementary School
auditorium has taken on a new look. Tbe floor of the school deteriorated
badly and the room was in a rundown condition. A coordinated effort by
the Q!ester Alumni Alsn., the Chester PTO, tho8e who had attended the ,
Chester School whell, It was a high school, and the school fund, Itself
raised through projects, provided the financial belp needed. Tbe old floor
was removed in June,1978. A concrete floor was poured in July, 1978; new
curtains purchased for the stage by the PTO in December, 1978, and wall.s
were painted and tile laid on the floor in April, 1979. Eastern Board Of
Education thl.s week commended all those who helped in any way with the
extensive improvement project. Total =I even with volunteer labor ran
$5,500.

NEW ATTORNEY- Douglas W. Little, etiorney-et-la"', hu opened
a law office at 213 E. Second Sl., Pomeroy, ~Y aCI'Illl from the J1011
office. A native of Meigs County, Little, ~~ from Meigs High
School in 1972, received hla bachelor of ~: ~ in ~
mlnl.stration at Ohio State University in 191J aril:f ticenUy graduated
the Ohio State University College of La&amp;'H)ffice hOurs will be from 8:30
a.m. to 4:30p.m., Monday through Friday: 8 to 8 p.m., ~~If: 8:30
a.m. to 12 noon Saturday. Little Is the son It 1\Jr, and Mrs. Bill
MidcDeport, and l.s the husband of the fonner Connie Radford. Little 1i'llc•
tured in front of his office.
,
·

.smm

-

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