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                  <text>core to provide heat for the home,
using electricity only to operate the
blower. At 11 p.m. the off-peak directheating and storage cycle begins
satisfies on-peak heating ).
again.
Inside the cabinet of the storage
During the program the customer
furnace Is a central core of special
bricks, capable of storing a targe was required to pay about S600 to $700
quantity of heat and releasing it to a more for the ETS eqUipment than the
controlled rate. Although the bricks cost of a conventional electric furnace
can be heated to a temperature of and water heater. This additional cost
1,200 degrees to 1,400degrees F., their is returned to most customers in three
space-age insulation prevents the to five years, however, because, ac- .
cabinet's exterior from becming too cording to AEP estimates, th&amp;
average .homeowner can save $lli0 to
warm.
During the night, the conventional · $300 a year on his electric bUI.s by
electric furnace heats the home, \ltilizlng the lower off-peak rates.
while the storage furnace is charging · Participants in the AEP System
and storing heat for use the next day. test. program have been paytng a
At 7 a.m. both units cut off. Then, for lower, experimental tariff approved
the next 16 hours a blower moves air by the regulatory conunlssion in each ·
across the. hot bricks in the storage of the states.

.Systems hold potential benefits .
NEW YORK - Prelimmary results "onswner, this means sllaring in
of a three-year, (iveo&amp;tate field test these benefits in the form of lower
program carried out by the American electric biUs," lie said.
Electric Power System indicate that
"The beauty of the ETS system ,"
residential energy-Btorage (RES ) he continued, "is that, unlike other
systems hold great potential for off-peak · on-peak or time-«-day
benefits for both the customer and the ..plans, it causes no disruption in the
utility. Ohio Power Cmpany is an family 's normal lifestyle. The equipAEP operating subsidiary.
ment 'is designed to use electricity to
AEP, in announcing the test results, store thermal energy during off-peak
explained that the customer would hours only, but the space and water
· benefit by being able to meet his elec- heating it provides is available
trlc space-heating and water-heating around the clock.
requirements at lower, off-peak
Tl)e ETS space-heating equipment
rates, and that the utjlity would used in the test program consists of a
benefit by a lessening and a delaytng conventional electric furnace (which
of its need to bulld new power- provides direct night-time heating) ,
generation facilities.
.
coupled to a storage furnace (which
The de111oi1stration program largest of its ktnd in the nation and the
first to utilize central electric - ther·
mal • storage (ETS) furnaces and '
water heaters ' - Involved the
metering and monitoring of such ETS
devices in 70 test homes in five eastcentral states.
In Ohio Power territory, four are
located in Canton, three in Zanesville,
five in Portsmout!l, two in Fostoria
and two in Lima.
The program was carried out by
four AEP System ~rating companies in close cooperation with the
regulatory commissions in those
states. Entire cost of the program
was Jiorne by the System COI)lll8nies
without assistance from the Federal
government.
Dorman M. Miller, AEP vice
president - customer services, said
that the ETS systems used in the test .
proved to have the capacity to meet
the 24-hour space- and wa)er-he8ting
needs of an average home with the
equipment being charged during the
AEP System's traditional off-peak
period of II p.m. to 7 a.m. "About 60
per cent to 70 per cent of annual
killowatthour usage in the typical
electrically heated home could thus
be shifted to a time when demands for
electricity - and upon our power
facilities - are at their lowest," he
said.
As .Miller sees it, the shift in timing
of power needs has beneficial implications in both directions. "Since
electric thermal storage equipment
helps us to operate more efficiently, it
also helps us to control both. our
capital and operating costs. For the ·

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

NEW $HIPMEN1

OPEN STOCK BEDROOM FURNITURE

CHECK RECEIVED - A $5,000 donation has been givell to the TriState Area Council, Boy Scouts of America, by the Allied Chemical Foundation. The funds will be used in completing projects at Camp
Arrowhead, Camp Kiashuta plus others induded in the council's 'Potal
Development Program. According to Council Executive a total of $555,000
has been committed to date towards a total need of $1!61,480. Cree added
that a follow up is now being done with aU prospects and that success
should be achieved within the next month thus making all the planned
projects a reality. The Tri-State Area Councl is a member of the CabeiiWayne United Way , the Boyd County ConunWJity Chest, and the Lawrence County United Way. The council serves youth in the counties of Cabell,
Wayne, Uncoln and Mason (West Virginia), Boyd, Carter and Lawrence
(Kentucky), and Lawrence, Gallla and Meigs (Ohio).

MAPLE OR IVORY FINISHES

HAVE A PROBLEM?
NEED TO 'TALK IT OUT?
GALLIA 446-5554
MEIGS 992-5554
JACKSON 286-5554

r ......... ....
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,1(~i

T~day

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By
Willis T . Leadingham

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Burglaries always increase during vacation periods when the
homeowner Is away. One of the favorite accesses is via the sliding
e glass door. Today's standard hardware tor locking sl iding doors is
pretty flimsy and even an amateur will have no trouble in gaining en ·
• trance. But here's how you can outwit the culprit.
•
Cut a length ol dowel (or broom handle) lhe righl ienglh and lay il in
• the tra~k between the door and opposite jamb. No way that sliding
e door can be slid without removing this wedge.
e. The groove at the top is twice as deep as the one on the bottom for
·e easy removal . Foil this by cutting a piece fo wood slightly less thick
' than the depth of the lower grove . Screw it into the upper
• groove, over the .door whe'n it 's. ln locked position . Now the door Can't
• be lilted out unless it is opened all the way.

e

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.

If there 1s anything we c.an do to help you in the field of rea 1estate
please phone or drop in at LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE. 512 Second
Ave., Gallipolis. Phone 446-7699. We're here to help.
~

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ScD!:NCE AWARD WINNERMlllll Shirley Morris, North Gallla
111gb Sebool, Will recently awarded the Holzer Medical Center
Clinics' Science Award. Tbe award
Is given eacb year to the senior
tbat has complied the ,highest
grade point average In the Sefeoce
curriculum over a period of four
yean. Shirley wiD atteod Rio
Grande College Ibis fall. Tbe
award wu preseoted durtag a
school auembly by James Oller, ···
Science butnlctor.

1978 OLOS CUTlASS
SUPREME
Only 8,400 low miles, AM· FM

stereo, radio. Rallye wheels,
medium blue paint. This one will.
go last. Llkenewcond itiori . . ·

17,175 miles, am ·fm 40 channet
CB . Tilt wheel, cruise, power windows, seats, door locks, 79 price
close to $9,000 . Firethorne, white
landau top. Nice.

Limited 2 Dr. hdtp., power win dows, seats, and door locks .
Yellow with black landau top.
Driven only 23.204 mi les . Sharp.

1977 GRAN PRIX

.

Cloth seats, silver, red int ., 18,787
miles. Locally owned, C. B., buill·
in AM·FM stereo radio, air.
Rallye wheels. Expect the best.

'5995
1975 BUICK LESABRE
CUSTOM 4 DR SEDAN
·This Is truly the nicest family siz ed sedan in town . Medium 'blue
finish with matching 6Q·40 cloth
interior and dark blue vinyl top .
Only 37,370 actual miles on this
local one owner .

-'-

~ C?hecJ.clng acco\lnt Is more

, thari a book o.f checks.
'

A ch ecking account at t11e C&amp; S Bank
saves you lime and money. A checki ng
accou nt is also your register o f every
lransaction you m ake.. That is why a
C&amp;S Bank checking account ts more
1h an a book of checks.

1976 LESABRE CUSTOM
4 DR SEDAN
60·40 sea t, cru ise, ti lt, AM a track ,
V·top, 26,961 miles. E xpect top
quali ty .

'4395
1976 CHEVROLET
MONTE CARLO
Another clean local one owner .
Here you'll find cruise control,
till wheel, AM stereo, &amp;·track,
fa ctory air, and power door locks.
Low miles, drives super . White.

'4295

C 8r S ,Bank .Q
The Commercial &amp; Savings Bank
Spn ng Valley

·'

Member FD IC

"

1

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) - A
American
Airlines Boeing 7'll made an ·
emergency stop from full takeoff
speed Sunday when two til'ell under its left wing exploded and
burst into flames, authorities
said.
Six of the 114 persons aboard
Flight 119 were treated for minor
injuries after the incident at Will
Rogers World Airport. The
pasengers were evacuated by
emergency chutes.
Airport firefighters put out
what they called "a small fire"
after the accident.

1976 MONARCH GHIA 4 DR
White exter ior with burgundy
vinyl top and matt hing clqth i n ~
terlor . 11 you 're looking tor a nice
Intermediate this Is it. Air cond .,
P. steer ing, P. brakes, P. win·
dOYfS, P. seat, radio and new
premium tires .

Honoring terms

. '4695
1974 CHEV. NOVA 2 DR
Dark brown . SS Package, V·B,
auto. trans. , P.S.• Rollye wheels
with new raised while letter tires.

Special

'5295

'3895

I J t..· · .

Silver Bri~ge Pl aza

Emergency stop

Real gas saver, small V -6 engine,
factory air, . rear
window
defroster . Dark metallic blue.
·Less than 20,000 miles . Excep·
tionally nice .

'6295

1977 BUICK ELECTRA

25 Court St reet

I

1978 CHEV. MALIBU 4 DR

1978 CUTlASS BROUGHAM

'5995

.. , ._ 'J · -1 ·1

. . . in the world

PUTTING YOU Fl RST
MAKES US FIRST
AT THE SIGN OF QUALITY
NEW AND USED CARS

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Today

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••

BURGLAR-PROOF SLIDING DOORS

By Tbe Associated Press
Hundreds of anti-nuclear demonstrators marched, chll'lted and sang their
way from nuclear power plant sites to jail during worldwide protests against
atomic energy.
The protests were generally peaceful, but a wotnan was killed Sunday in
Spain when a policeman fired his submachine gun into a cro'l\'d of anti-nuclear
demonstrators who started throwing rocks.
One hundred .de~?nstrators - man&gt;: chanting "Two, four, six, eight, we
don't want to radiate -were arrested m Umerlck, Pa., after they scaled a
snow fence around the construction site of a Philadelphia Electric nuclear
power plant.
.. ~d .consumer advocate Ralph Nader told a rally in Boston: "No country or
Civilized $OC1ety can to(erate a form of energy so linked to potential disaster
that an area ~o~~ of square miles could be rendered uninhabitable to
f11ture generations . ..
.More than 800 demonstrators representing loosely allied anti-nudear and
enVIronmental groups were. arrested Sunday, bringing ·the weekend total to
more than 1,100. M?St. were charged with minor offenses ranging from
trespassmg to disturbing the peace.
Two thousand demonstrators hurled ~tones at police in Balboa Spain,
during a protest over the construction of a $1 billion American-Bupplied atomic
power plant. Police responded with rubber bullets and smoke grenades, and the

lAs Angeles-bound

:e

POMEROY·MIODLEPORT, OHIO

MOND~ Y.

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

JUNE 4, 1979

Anti-nuclear demonstrators march Sunday

By Tbe Associated Preu
Traffic accidents across the state
claimed the lives·of at least 21 persons
. over the . weekend, according to the
Ohio Highway Patrol. Two persons
were killed in three of the 18 fatal accidents reported.
The patrol counts traffic deaths
each weekend from 6 p.m. Friday
night until midnight Sunday.
The dead :
SUNDAY
TRENTON -Cheryl L. Pate,_l9, of

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

C£state :

VOL. XXVIII NO. 35

enttne

at

woman was killed when a civil guard opened fire, authorities said.
menace to the functioning ·Of our econoi'Qies, can lead to wars," he said. "This
On Saturdsy, as a prelude to Sunday's Inteniational Anti-Nuclear Day, ap- problem has to be understood as a grave one for the last two decades of this cenproxunately ro.ooo persons participated in protests in 12 states Canada the tury."
·
Netherlands and Japan.
'
'
About 5,000 persons attended a day~ong rally near Plymouth, Mass,
• The demonstrations were held three months after an accident released a listening to speeches and dancing to rock bands in the shadow of the Pilgrim I
radioactive cloud and shut down the Three Mile Island plant hear Harrisburg nuclear plant. There were no incidents or arrests.
Pa. ·
·
. ' · At many demonstrations, protesters carried signs reading "Hell No, We
More than :;oo persons were arrested Sunday at a nuclear plant site near the Won 'I Glow:," and at the Indiana site they released balloons with cards attached
Long Island community of Shoreham, N. Y., where 15,000 demonstrators took that read: If this balloon reached you, so can radiation from the Marble Hill
part in an anti-nuclear rally. Former Chicago Seven defendants Jerry Rubin nuclear plant." .
. .
and David Dellinger and Joyce Berland, a daughter of former u. s. Defense ·
A hearse lead a caravan of about 5Q cars to a protest rally at Shippmgport,
Secretary Clark Clifford, were among those arrested.
Pa., where balloons were also released.
. .•.
.
At least 119 persons were arrested at the North Anna power plant near Other demonstrators were staged Sunday at nudear facilities new: Red Wmg,
Louisa, Va. , 100 at the Marble Hill nudear plant in southern Indiana, and 29 at Minn.! Be;w1ck, Pa.; North Perry, Ohi?; Hartsville, Tenn.; Nashville, Tenn.;
the site of a plant near Moscow, Ohio.
Surgoinsville, Tenn., and Wlllcasset, Marne.
About 8,000 persons turned out for a demonstration in Kalkar , West Gerlh Natchez, Miss., members of the Mississippi Alliance, an anti-nuclear
many , and 3,000 for a rally at a plant site in Brittany, one of several rallies In group listened to lectures against the spread of nudear plants. In Buffalo, N.Y.,
France.
.
speakers told a rally it was time to stop dumping nuclear ·wastes in western
Meanwhile, West German Chancellor Helmut Sclunidt, in an interview in New York. Protesters also marched through downtown Seattle.
this week's Time magazine, warned of the possiblllty of war over oil and .
And at the site of the Seabrook, N.H., plant where more than 1,400 persons
gasoline if nuclear energy is not developed quickly.
were arrested in demonstrations three years ago, ro persons held a candlelight
"I think that the scarcity of oil and .the rising prices for crude, which are a vigil Sunday night.

21 killed on Ohio highways

DRESSER - "IGHT STANDS CHESTS - BEDS - DESKS BUNK BEDS - VANITIES - CANOPY BEDS

.....;

e

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'1995

1976 DODGE
SPECIAL EDITION
Silver metallic with matching
Landau top. Equipped with AM ·
FM·tape, cruise control. power
Windows. western cast alumln~o~m
road wheels and rear 'del roster .
Priced Right.
I

•3495

'3795

1975 CHEV. C-10 CUSTOM

1915 DODGE B-200 VAN

Long wide bed, std. t•ans. , P.S.,
P . B., topper , one loca l owner.

J;.. ton, auto., P.S., slant si x, 225
engine. ice box. sink, AM· FM 8
track .

was
53295

NOW

13295

'2995

CHEAPIES

1976 CATALINA 4 DR
Dark blue e&gt;Cterior with white
vinyl top. This one owner Is extra
clean Inside and out. equipped
with air conditioning, 'P. steering,
P. brakes, radio, and radial tires.
The Fomlly Sized Sedan
Is Priced to Sell

'2995

70
73
72
68

Buick Sedan .•. , •. $795
Buick century 4 cir • $995
Ford Torino 2 dr .. • $995
Dodge 4 dr ..•• • ••• .$395
71 Buick 4 dr . . .. .. ... $695
72 Ply. 2 dr HT ....... $395

BUICK
PONTIAC

JERUSALEM (AP) - Prime
Minister Menachem Begin said
Sunday terms off the EgyptianIsraeli peace pact will be carried
out even if the Soviet Union
vetoes a proposed United Nations
force to police treaty provisions.
In an address opening a threeday convention of his Herut Party, Begin said an independent international force could ~ used
instead of U.N. units, although he
did not say who might take part
in the force or give other deails.
The idea of creating an international force to man a buffer
zone between Egyptian and
Israeli lines was first raised In a
letter President Carter wrote to
Beglil: and Egyptian President
Anwar Sadat. The letter was attached to the peace treaty as an
official document.

Probe continues
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -An
investigation will continue today
into the bookkeeping practices at
the Ohio Board of Cosmetology,
where thousands of undeposited
checks and money orders have
been discovered in boxes and
files.
The documents fees paid to the
board for tests, licenses or license renewals, date as far back as
three years.
Cheryl Jackson, the office
manager, told examiners last
week that she didn't have time to
deposit ~ money to the state
treasury. The following day, she
resigned.from her job.
The total of the checks and the
money orders could very well exceed $326,000, according to
1
examiners.

Trenton, in a two-car accident on Ohio
73 in Butler County.
FAYETI'E - Gordon Klopeenstein,
68, of Morrenci, Mich., in a two-car
accident on Fulton County 24.
HAMILTON- Norbert P. Moertle,
42, of Hamilton, in a two-car accident
on a local road in Butler County.
LOGAN - Richard E. Elston, 20, of
Chillicothe, in a one-car accident on
Ohio 180 in Hocking County.
WEST UNION - Kenneth D.
Myers, 21, of Peebles, in a one-car accident on Ohio 73 in Adams County.
CLEVELAND - Allen S. Tepley,
44, of Thompson, and Glenn J. Clark,
26, of Rocky River, in an accident on
Interstate 90 in Cuyahoga County.
. SATURDAY
SANDUSKY, - Patricia W. McGrann, 19, of Norwalk, in a three-car
accident oil U.S. 52 in Erie County.
XENIA- Wayne A. Workman, 'r/,
of Xenia, a pedestrian struck by an
auto on Ohio 68 in Greene County. ·
GRANDVIEW HEIGHTS- Robert
J . Hellerman, 18, of Grandview
!.'eights, in a motorcycle-truck accident on a Grandview Heights city
street.
NILF,S - Jolm A. Nickels, 33, of

EXTENDED FORECAST
Wednesday througb Friday :
Mostly dry and warm throughout
the period. 111gb Ia tile low 10 mid
80s. Low In tbe 50s early Wed·
nesday aod rising Into the' low to
mid 808 Thuniday and Friday.

Swimming lessons
will begin June 11
Middleport Park Director Pat Kitchen today announced the following
schedule for swimming lessons at the
Middleport pool:
Session I -June 11-22
Session 2- July 2-13
Session 3 - July 16-'r/
Session 4 ~ August 6-17.
Classes, ages and times are as
follows :
Advanced Beginner, 9years and up,
9to9:30.
Intermediate, 7 to 9 years, 9:30 to
10.
Beginner, 5 to7years,10to IO:ro.
Beginner, 5to7years, 10:30to II.
Babies, 1, 2orolder, II to 11:30.
Cost is $10 with a maximum of 15
pennltted in each class.
Senior lifesaving classes will be
given June 11·22 in the evening. To be
eligible for this class, you must be 15
years of age or older and passed advanced swimming class. Cost is $15.
Junior lifesaving and adult classes
will he announced later.
Anyone wishing to sign up for any of
the above classes, please call Pat Kitchen at 992-6212 or 992-9968 or register
at the pool any day after 3 p.m.

Niles, in a motorcyde accident on a
Niles city street.
ZANESVILLE - Larry L. Conkle,
26, of Dresden, in a motorcyde accident on a Muskingwn County road.
RAVENNA - Jeffery Braham, 'r/,
of Windham, in a one-car accident on
Ohio 303ln Portage County.
CLEVELAND - Paul Smith, 49, of
Parkvlew, in a one-car accident on Interstate 71 in Cleveland.
AKRON- DannyM. Ruddy, 20, of
Cleveland, in a one-car accident on
Ohio91 in Summit County.
CADIZ - Robynne Striker, 22, of
Uhrichsville; and Nila Holcomb, 23, of
Dennison, a passenger in the same
auto, in a two-car accident on U.S. 150
in Harrison County.
' TOLEDO - Larry Feeback Jr., 9, a
pedestrian struck by a car on a Toledo
city street.
FRIDAY NIGIIT
TOLEDO - David A. Hauser, 14, of
Maumee, in a two-vehicle accident on
a Lucas County road.
WILMINGTON- James Burke, 12,
and Kathleen Burke, 15, both of New
Vienna, passengerS in one of the
vehides involved in a two-car accident on Ohio 73ln Clinton County .

Athens police
cite 12 people
ATHENS, Ohio (AP) - Authorities
say 12 persons were arrested early
Sunday as police in riot gear dispers·
ed about 200 Ohio University students
who gathered in the city's downtown
section and wouldn't leave.
·
Police say the arrests were for
misdemeanors ranging from
disorderly conduct to failure to comply with a lawful pollee order.
Four of those charged were from
out of town. The others were university students.
The trouble began when a crowd
nwnbering' at least 500 persons at its
peak gathered In the streets and
refused to disperse. Police blocked off
a major portion of the downtown area
and the size of the crowd dwindled to
about200.
Then city police, university security officers and authorities from surrounding communities gradually
began moving the crowd hack toward
the university campus.
Some bottles and rocks were
thrown at police but there were no
serious injuries.
Police fired wooden pellets called
"knee knockers " and· dispersed the
crowd.

Weather
Clear tonight with the low near 80.
Partly cloudy Tuesday with a chance
of showers late in the day. Highs In
the low to mid 80s. The chance of rain
is near zero tonight and ro percent
Tuesday.
.

PURCHASES FIRST BWCKS - Kyle Allen,
center, is the first person to purchase blocks for the
erection of a permanent stage which will be built on the
upper parking lot in the village of Pomeroy by the
. Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce. The blocks sell for
$1. The stage will be 20x29 feet with a 38 inch pipe railing along the '!Ide next to the levee. It iJ h
that the

stage will be completed before the Big Bend Regatta.
Chuck Mullen will biilld the stage free of charge. Those
wishing to purchase blocks may contact Bill Quickel at
Davis Insurance. Pictured, I to r, Blll Quickel, receiving a check from Kyle Allen for $200 for 200 blocks, and
Chuck MUllen who will do the work free of charge.

Am.e ricans believe gasoline
shortage profit motivated
NEW YORK (AP) - Americans
say they would cut beck on driving
significantly if the gasoline shortage
were real, but they remain overwhelmingly convinced the shortage is
just a profit • making ploy by the oil
companies,. an Associated Press NBC News poll shows.
·
This is not to say people are
treating current energy problems as
minor. In fact, they now say energy
concerns are just about as serious a
national problem as the rising cost of
living.
It 's just that Americans are deeply
suspicious of the major factors in the
energy situation - the oiliJroducing·
countries, the oil companies and the
government.
This sUBpicion and deep concern
about how their lives could be changed by energy problema combine to
give the public a split personality on
energy.
,
On the one hand, three out of four
Americans haven't had any difficulty
getting gasoline in recent weeks. But
that hasn't stopped millions of drivers
from "topping off" their tanks in fear
of possible shortages, the poll found .
Tbe special AP-NBC News poll on
energy matters interviewed 800
adults · across the country by
telephone May 29, after .the Memorial
Day weekend.
Nearly three out of four American
drivers - 7f percent - said they
would cut back their driving

significantly If theY were convinced
the gasoline shortage were real.
Twenty • three percent would not and
3 percent were not sure.
But the public doesn't think the
gasoline shortage Is real .
Sixty .five percent said the shortage
is a hoax to get consumers to pay
higher prices, while only 25 percent
said It is real. Ten percent were not
sure.
Despite this suspicliln about the
sources for the current gasoline situation, Americans say energy is one of
the nation's top problems.
Asked wahl Is the nation's top problem, 32 percent named the cost of
living, leaving it in the top spot it has
held for mariy months. Energy was
picked by 29 percent. That's up from
the 18 percent who chose energy in the
AP-NBC News poll taken at the first
of May.
Because of the margin of error inherent in a sample survey of 800
adults nationwide, there is no significant difference between the 32 percent naming inflation and the 29 percent naming energy as the No. I pro- .
blem.
Crime was named by 10 percent and
morality by 9 percent. The remainder
were scattered among other issues .or
were not sure.
Many Americans report that
gasoline shortages have not touched
them directly - yet.
Seventy.four percent of the nation's

Census takers visiting Meigs

FIRST ENTRY - Remo Nieri, San Carlos , Calif., fonner prominent
Middleport businessman, has entered the first "frog" in the annual frog
jump to be held June 23, at Meigs Football Stadium in Pomeroy. lilieri 's
!Tog, named Reelllo, took part in the California National .Championship
frog jump and placed second .with a jump of 18 feet NI~:ri also brought
with him a second frog named "Kennit ", who will also be entered in the
annual frog jump on June 23. The frogs are presently in Crow's Frog
Stables in Syracuse. The frogs will be jockeyed by Dale Duttoll and Dr.
Clyde Ingels, Middleport. Niert ~shewn holding Reerno and Kermit.
~

In other action, deputies are investigating the theft of a cow from the
Clair Follrod farm in Orange Twp.
Follrod said he saw his four-yearold Hereford cow on Sunday, May 'r/.
Deputies investigated a one car accident on SR 7 at f :05 a. m. Sunday on
SR 7 just south of Five Points.
Brenda S. TAtterson, 28, Columbus,
was traveling south on SR 7 when the
vehicle ran off the road, crossed the
centerline and struck a guardrail on
the left then came back across the
road and struck the rock embankment.
The Pomeroy Emergency SQuad
transported Mrs. Tatterson to
Veterans Memorial Hospital for
treatment.
·
MEETs TQNIGIIT
Ronald Tatterson, her husband, had
The Meigs County Fair Board will minor injuries. 'Mrs. Tattersoil was
meet at 8 this evening at the cited to Meigs County Court on
secretary's office on the Rock Springs charges of reckless operation. The
Fairgrounds.
vehicle was di!molished.

Meigs County residents were advised today that representatives from
the U. S. Census Bureau are working
in the county,
Meigs County sheriff's deputies
have received numeroua calls regarding U.S. Census takers.
According to I! census representative, the 1980 census will be done by
mail, however, representatives are
now going door to door to ascertain
the name and address of the owner or
renter.
Sheriff James J. Proffitt reports
Census Enumerators wlll have official credentlala.

Exhaust appeals
.COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -The
appeals process open to , the
Revolutlona~y
Communists
Youth Brigade to remain as a
student organization at Ohio
State University has been
exhausted:
The brigade, accused of
throwing red pailit at a CIA
(Continued on page 10)

.•..-··

.

14'

drivers said they have experienced no
difficulties in getting gasoline in the
past month.
Of those who have had trouble, 19
percent reported being unable to find
gasoline or spending time hunting for
a station with a supply. Eleven percent said they have walled in line to
fill up and 6 percent said they have
been restricted In the amounts of gu
they could buy at one station. One percent were not sure. The percentages
add to more than 100 because aome
people mentioned more !han one problem.
The mere fear of shortages has
caused millions of drivers to "top off"
- fill up their gas tanks more frequently than normal. Industry experts have said that such topping off
can make a tight supply situation
worse.
Twenty~ perc~nt of the nation's
drivers said they have been topping
off. Seventy-three percent said they '
are not and one percent were not sure.
One of five of those who have had no
problems getting gas admitted to topping off. But 43 percent of those who
have faced problems getting gasoline
said they have been filling up more
frequently.
As with any sample survey, the
results of the AP-NBC .News p()Jia
could differ from the results of interviews with all Americans with
telephones because of chance variations in the sample.
For poUs with 800 interviews, the ·
results should vary no more than five
percentage points either way simply
because of sample errors. That Is,
there is only one chance out of 20 that
the resulis of interviews with aU
American adults would vary from
these results by more than 5 percentage points.

SQUAD CAU.ED .
The Middleport Emergency SQuad
answered a caU to 795 S. Third Ave.,
at 10:52 a . m. Sunday for Candace
Lambert, a medical patient, who was
taken to Holzer Medical Center. ·

SCHOOLS WINDING DOWN
Meigs County schools are winding
down for the 1978-79 school year.
Eastern Local Sel)ools dismissed for
the year Friday. afternoon. Schools of
the Meigs Local and Southern Local
Districts will close at the end ~
classes Thursday.

•••

�3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, June 4. 1979
,2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, June j , 1979

In Washington
Cops lQJ.d protestors

.

McGee cap~ures Kemper
Open tourney by stroke

'

Today's commentary

Editorial opinions,
comments

A Capital issue

Currently, death l'Ows across the
nation hold almost 500 c.ondernned
""The method of operation will be
BY MARTHA ANGLE
early man came out or the caves, or prisoners, with 80 percent in si&gt;;
the same as recently used at a bloody
AND ROBERT WALTERS
descended from the trees, he com- so uthern states and Florida far in the
anti- nu clea r power plant demonWASHINGTON
! NEA l
menced refining his behavior.
. lead with some 130.
The arguments on both sides of the
Throughout the recent spat e of stration in West Germany," the report
He lost his taste for raw meat.
analogies between the current grass- added . No such violence occurred in
Matrimony became a somewhat issue are many and often passionately
roots protests against nuclear power New Hampshire.
. more involved matter than grab- presented, but they all come down to
Two of the 47 people arrested during
and the anti-war demonstrations a
~iqg th~ nearest female topknot. questions of morality and praca
non-violent
demonstration
at
the
decade earlier. one disturbing
Survival might 'still be a challenge for ticality.
Opponents see capital punishment
similarity has received too little at- Diablo Canyon nuclear plant near
the weak and the injured, but th ey
Avila Beach , Ca lif., were later
as
a euphemism for murder by the
tention .
were no longer deliberately exposed
state.
It is inherently discriminatory,
Now being employed against law- rev ea led to be deput y s heriffs
to hasten death .
abiding critics of nuclear generating assigned to in!Utrate the protest
We've come a long way , with they say, because it is applied overstations are many of the once- organization.
frequent detours and backtrackings," wh elmingly to the poor and
True to the tradition of agents
discredited surveillance, disruption
down the road to civilization since uneducated, society's outcast.s. The
th
e
two
undercove
r
provocateur.
and harassment techniques utilized in
those beginnings. But we are still · punishment does not fit the crime, but
a vain effort to stern the tide of citizen officers were the only members of the
experiencing difficulty swearing off the social status of the criminal. It is
protest against the war in Vietnam protest group to suggest the use of
one deeply rooted tribal practice: the less justified retribution for a crime
violence.
during the late 1960s.
claiming of a life as penalty for a than an opportunity for the expression
When opponents of nuclear power
of society's vengeance.
The growing list of potential
transgression.
Supporters ar~:~ue that the nature of
violations of the demonstrators' civil gathered last summer for a meeting
Capital punishment is as old and as
near
Toms
River,
N.
J
.,
two
men
some
crimes is such that death is the
liberties ,
compiled
by
the
universal as human society itself. Its
only
suitable
penalty, that society bas
Washington -based Campaign for photographing the attendees' autos
implementation, however, has unto
protect
itself and that the
a
right
Political Rights •. includes these in- misrepresented themselves as newsdergone considerable refinement
paper photographers.
cidents:
down through the centuries. At one e~istence of the death penalty funcMembers of the public who testified ' They later were disclosed to be freetime and in some places, the theft of a tions as a deterent "to the violent
at a Los Angeles City Council hearing lance photographers who had been
loaf of bread could mean death in any criminal.
That last is a much-debated point.
last year on the controversial (and working for two years under a connumber of barbarically inventive
subsequently abandoned) Sundesert tract with the Jersey Central Power
The
studies are voluminous but totally
way~. The supreme penalty gradually
nuclear power plant near Blythe, and Light Co. , operator of the nearby
inconclusive
as to whether the deatli
came to be reserved for the supreme
penalty has any effect on the number
Calif., were photographed by city Oyster Creek nuclear plant.
crime - murder, a life for a life.
As in the past, ihe overzealous public
police.
Only in fairly recent times, and in of murders committed. What is clear
and
private law officers appear unPolice officials initially deceived
the West, has refinement reached the is that the public doesn't care.
Overwhelmingly, 70 percent ac·
council members by claiming the film willing or unable to distinguish bepoint of questioning the basic prinwas for "training" purposes, but later tween potential terrorists or
ciple of capital punishment, the cording to one recent poll, Americans
admitted they were gathering saboteurs and those engaged in
justification for the state's taking a favor the death penalty, and most say
evidence for an expected disturbance peaceful demonstration or non-violent
life under any circumstances. The they would do so even were its inef•
- an event that never materialized. civil disobedience .
··1 just dreamt we were confronted by an
death penalty is in effect today in only fectlveness in deterriitg violent crime
At the same time, the files of the
In the state of Washington,
a; few Western countries, the United conclusively proved.
autotess vacation ."
Nuclear
Regulatory Commission are
Nevertheless, as recent events in
legislators were asked earlier this
.
-.,,.,states notably included.
year by public utility officials to replete with dozens of cases 0f fines,
-· •And its existence here is determined Florida and the iast previous
approve a bill giving nuclear plant ranging up to $18,000, imposed upon
· by two Supreme Court decisions - a execution, in 1977 in Utah, demonsecurity guards access to law en- utility firms for violations of federal
1972 invalidation of then-existing state strate, the implementation of the
forcement intelligence data and broad security standards as plant gates and
laws as arbitrary and discriminatory penalty is today a very powerful
police powers, including authority to inside nuclear power facilities.
.that did ,not, however, find the death public issue.
Instead of dispatching intelligence
arrest citizens anywhere in the state.
In the heyday of executions in the
penalty tper se "cruel and unusual"
The legislation apparently was agents to scurry about the landscape
and hence unconstitutional, and a United States (199 individuals were
COLUMBUS - According to State Passage of this bill by both houses follow-up decision in 1976 upholding electrocuted, gassed, hanged or shot
drafted specifically for the beneflt of and pry into the lives of critics, the
the Washington Pubiic Power Supply power companies could perfonn a Senator Oakley C. Collins (R-lronton) would put Ohio off limits for federal r.ewritten capital statutes in three . in 1935 I only the most sensational of
legal killings attracted public atSystem, which is building three public service by improving their the Ohio Senate's most controversial consideration of such a site.
states.
commercial nuclear reactors near record of inept security where it's piece of legislation last week conOpponents to the bill argued that the Most other states more or less tention .
Richland, Wash., and two near Sat- most appropriate - at the generating cerned disposal of raaioactive wastes state &lt;joes not have the right to promptly overhauled their laws along
In 1979, the first execution in two
stations.
- a subject that the anti-nuclear challenge the federal court's decision the lines of the approved three - years Is cause for nationwide atsop, Wash·.
~~
forces in this country have recently preventing the state from Setting its Florida , Te&lt;as and Georgia - tention , widespread press conIntelligence files reluctantly
brought to the public's attention. This own standards in this area, and also although mroe than a dozen are still demnation and public protests.
disclosed by the New Hampshire State
In 1936, France's first Socialist
Police showed that they considered government, l)eaded by Premier Leon of course, followed the Three-Mile- that the legislation is premature, holdouts.
Call it refinement.
Island nuclear plant accident earlier since actual damage from storage has
seriously the erroneous information Blum, took office.
this spring, when radioactive not been adequately shown.
provided by "two very well informed
In ·1946, Juan Peron was
gentlemen" from the U. S. Labor inaugurated president of Argentina . material released into the atmosphere
Ohio is the first state to attempt
became a real concern.
Party, an organization that makes no
state.
regulation of disposal other than
In 1961, Preslent John Kennedy and
Lengthy debate on the Senate noor a flat prohibition of contaminated
secret of its unconventional con- Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev
preceded a 24-8 vote banning the waste storage. California and Monspiracy theories.
were conferring in Vienna.
storage
or placement of most wastes tana presently have such regulations.
The Labor Party representatives
Ten years ago : A young Cuban
claimed that a planned demonstration neeing Cuba survived a nine-bour contaminated with high radioactivity ' In other action, the Senate adopted
__b,_M_._o_.____
at the Seabrook, N.H., nuclear station flight to Madrid in the nose-wheel within Ohio. That legislation , Amended Senate Joint Resolution 8
was "nothing but a cover for terrorist compartment of a jetliner, despite however, does not prohibit the calling for a study of outdated county
activity," according to the state police temperatures of 40 degrees below zero federally mandated storage of.spent laws. The bi-partisan Legislative
fuel rods from nuClear reactors, Service Commission will look into
documents.
doctcr just tc be sure that you don't
Deailog Wllb Oily 1Wr
at an altitude of six miles.
Five years ago : The death toll from which are to be stored on-site at the county government PrOVisions which
~Y La'!.rence Lamb, ~.o: ,
. have any underlying cause for most of
reactors for up to ten years.
· your problems.
have become useleSs or unnecessary,
smallpox
was
put
at
more
than
10,000
DEAR
DR.
LAMB
I
•~ve
this
111E DAILY SEN11NEL
The
bill
would
pro
hi
bit
the
Governor
For most people the simple excess
but
have
simply
not"
been
taken
off
the
!USPS I.....)
in India 's state of Bihar in one of the
problem with the hair on my uead. My
from
entering
into
any
agreement
books.
·
wor:t · epidemics of the disease in with the federal government allowing
hair gets so oily I mwtt shampoo formation of skin oils that results in
Amended Senale Bill 105 is almost every morning just to l:eep the grease oily hair is best treated by just frerecent years.
~, ~~·~"'·­
radioactive waste disposal in Ohio. identical to a House bill that passed
quently washing the hair. Once a day
One year ago: China's Foreign
DEVCYTEDTQ.THE
In essence, then, the legislation that chamber last week. Both away.
is not too much for an individual with
Huang
Hua,
visiting
Zaire,
Minister
I
can
get
I've
tried
every
shampoo
lii'I'EREST OF
MEIGB-MASON AREA
was sharply critical of Soviet and gives Ohio some time - three and a measures allow 19 and 20 year olds to my hands on, especially those for oily such a problem. In many people with
hall years - to consider just what the handle intoxicants while working in hair.
ROBERT HOEFLICH
'·
truly exceslve amounts of oil
. Cuban involvement in Africa.
cttyWIM
DA. V1D BUSKIRX
Today's birthdays: Opera singer nuclear situation in our state will be. places that sell food. The only difCan you recommend smne, type of washing the hair twice a day 1~
Proponents of the measure argued
AdvertbJacMaaalt:r
.
Robert Merrill is 60 years old. Actor that this legislation would enable Ohio ference in the Senate version of the drink which can be taken intemally perfectly all right.
Pubtiahed daUy exceot Saturday by The Ohio
bill is its specification that the
Ordinarily, blow drying of the hair
Dennis Weaver is 54. Democratic
Valley Publishing Company-M~timedia, Inc.,
to evaluate the technology surroun- establishment rnust derive at least that will cut down n this oil in my
Ill C~ St., Pomeroy, Qhlo t5789. BUJinesa
is
hard on it .because it eliminates oils
Senatcr
Howard
Metzenbaum
of
Ohio
hair?
Office Phone 991:- 2156. Editorial · Phont
ding nuclear waste during that three half of its sales !rom food, not liquir.
is
62.
Democratic
Senator
Gaylord
that
are in the hair shaft and are imDEAR
READERThere
are
a
few
992·2157.
and a half year period, and would also
Second cla.ss J)OStaJe paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.
portant to the texture of the hair
Nelson of Wisconsin is 63.
medical
conditions
that
contribute
tc
allow the state to have input regarNaUonal adver1iaing representative, Landon
itself, But in a person who has truly
Associate$, 3101 EucUd Ave., Cleveland, OhiO
ding future disposal sites in the state
In 1831, Prince Leopold of Saxe- excess oiliness of the skin. Most of
excessive
amounts of oil, blow drying
44115.
thse
are
associated
with
other
~p­
while keeping an eye on federal Coburg was chosen as Belgium's first
Subscription rates : Delivered by carrier
the
hair
might
not be a bad idea.
toms
which
you
didn't
mention
so
I
where avallable 90 cents per week. By Motor
monarch, becoming King Leopold the
energy planning.
I'm
sending
you
The Health Lettger
think
it's
unlikely
that
you
hae
Route where carrier service not available, One
The lotus, sacred flower of ancient
The federal government is First.
month, $3.90. By ma~lln Otuo and W. Va ., One
number
12-6,
Hair
Care, to give you
anything
more
than
just
an
excessive
Egypt, is a member of the onion presently considering several areas
In 1878, Turkey turned the
Year, 127.510; Six months, IIUCI: Three mon·
an
overall
appreciation
of the factors
production
of
oil.
, tha, $8.50; Elsewhere $32.00 year; Sbt monthl
family.
around the nation for po ssible Mediterranean island of Cyprus over
117.00; Three monU..,19.00. Sub8crlptlon pric&lt;
that
affect
your
hair
and
how tc take
H
you
have
other
skin
problems,
it
selection as.pennanent disposal sites. to the British.
~!'eludes SUnday Times- ~ntinel .
might be worth checking in with your care of it. Other readers who want
this issue can send 00 cents wiill' a
. .
· ........
.•. •,.., .
long, stamped, self-addressed
envelope for it. Send your request to
ments necessary to se rye oth- AQUARIUS (Jon. 211-Fob. II)
Tue1d1y June 5
macy to keep everyone in your
.p..,. · ·
ers, a s well as yourse lf
Your ll'le·and-let·llve attitude
"' r"' ' '"' ~~ · ~ ~ • ;- _, ' ..J"" '~ Assert
me in c~e of this newspaper, P. 0 .
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) High wins you the friendships you
Yo~;~e ll! Fi-nd- ~ut mar~ of what
Box
1551, Radio City Station, New
•.• ~ .• o
.
!t
standards and a com pa s- seek to cultivate . Ya,u appreci·
lies ahead lor yo.u for !he year
I,.. ,-:tr .,&amp;.JI
._...
York,
NY 10019.
sion
ate
nature
put
you
on
a
ate
everyone's
need
lor
sell·
following yo u r birthday by
......... _ •.y
Bernice Bede Osol
smooth cour se t oday . Ther e e~~:pre s elon .
One of the factcrs that contributes
sending lor your copy of Astrashoul dn ' t be an y stor ms 10 · PISCES (Fob. 21J.Morch 20)
Graph Lett er . Mail S1 lor each
to oily hair is an oily skin, specifically
contend with .
Your rewards come today oy
10 Astro-Graph. P .O . Bo)( 489 ,
the forehead. The oils from the
SCORPIO (Oct . · 24·Nov. 22) helping tho8e who nave previRadio City Statio n. N.Y. 10019.
Persons
who
can
do
you
a
lot
ol
done
things
for
you
.
This
ously
forehead
are quickly picked up by the
B~ sure 10 specify blrlh sign .
good materially ar e working in will bring you much to smite
CANCER (June 21-July 22} Do
hair, especially with certain hair
your behalf today . Aide al ong about.
\t)'Birthday what comes na tu ra lly to you with
PHENIX CITY, Ala. (AP)- Digger record of 2:12.8. Driving a Datsun 28G- styles, and the next thing you know
their methods of doing ARIES (MO&lt;CI1 21·Aprll11) ComtoOay and you 'll na11e no trou things .
~
munication with one who is
O'Dell has come Oijt of retirement to zx, Newman won the event with a you have oily hair again,
ble rolling with th e pun che s. to
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc. Important to your alms Ia now
accomplish all that yo u wish to
protest high gasoline prices ''the only nine..second margin in a 14-lap race.
Another source of oil Is If you use oi21)- Your strength and Ioree possible. Be prepa;ed to make
ge.t done.
June 5. 1979
way I know oow."
·
ly hand lotions. Any of the oil that's
Driving
a
Datstln
200-SX;-he
also
won
come
out
of
the
kind
wayyou
adjuatmenta
In
your
thinking
Look tor some changes to LEO (July 23· Aug . 22} Your
Herbert O'Dell Smith has had him- the B-Sedan race by a flve..second lefl on the hand gets in the hair If you
deal with people today. This and It'll work out for the beat.
occu r m your social li te lhls gra c1 ou s ways will be work ing
will
net
yolJ
the
biggest
gain
of
TAURUS
!Apr!(
ZO.Moy
20)
Be
,
in
full
gear
today
.
You'll
know
buried alive. He says he will stay margin.
have the habit of rubbing your hand
self
comi ng year . Th ings should
au of them .
willing to go alof'lg wtth coall th e righ l lhings to say to win
begi n to happen to bring out
unW
gasoline
prices
fall.
through
your hair at some Point durthere
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jon. 11) worker 'a Ideas or methode,
the IJest in you. drawing man y over persons you deern imporHOU.YWOOD
A(AP)
Johnny
mgtheday.
·
It
is
the
!58th
burl~
in
a
lollf!
career
Set
definite
goals
and
put
forth
even
though
\hey
might
differ
ta nt.
lriends 10 you r S1de .
your best effort today to make from youre. Your productivity
of publicity stunts for O'Dell, who will Weismuller, Hollywood's most . You should also avoid adding any
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopt. 22) Mate·
GEMINI (M•y 21-June 20} You
them a reality . By using this will thus be enhanced.
rial benefits are in store for you
are !he one who po ssesse s the
be 83 next week. Since Friday, he has lamowt Tarzan, had to wait an extra oily or greasy applications tc your
formula , victories can be yours .
INEWSPAPE" ENTERPRISE A.SSN. J
toda y becau se you will be
necessarv charm and diplolain flat on his back, six feet un- day to celebrate his 75th birthday face If you're trying tc keep th!l oil out
will in_! to mak e _th e adjust derground, in the front yard of with his family at the Motion i&gt;lcture of yout hair.
I'm sorry that there isn't a drink or
Mack's Mobile Homes at Phenix City. Country House and Hoepital.
YoU fo~K."&amp; WtU. ~
He calls it his ''next-to-last" burial.
Weissmuller's birthday was Satur- some medicine that you could take
day, but the party was delayed for a that would immediately solve your
6LAPToK~
_ FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (AP) day because his family had tc attend problem. There isn't. Your problem 1s
- Marathon swimmer Stella Taylor, the high school graduation of his 16- ~o~ caused by something you ea~ nor
FoU~D ~lfi\N6
IS 11 caused by lack of something that
who twice has conquered the English year-old granddaughter.
Weissmuller, who played. the ape you need to eat. It's not a vitamin
. . Channel1 says she hopes t/tis week to
make her lhlnl tr.y at beComing the ffillll In half a dozen pictures· for ·deficiency. first person to swim from Bimini to MGM, has been hospitalized for more There are some shampoos that conthan a year and a half, suffering from tsin chemicals that are particularly
Florida.
"I'm getli!lg slight heebie-geebles, ~oronary respiratory problems and effective in cleansing the hair of oil.
'I'hese are mentioned in The Health
but I feel terrific and I think it 'II be memory lapses.
His siXth wife Maria, recently won Letter that I'm' sending you .
better ~time," said the ol8-year-illd
Miss Taylor, who Is waiting for the a court conservatorship battle tc keep
light sea and weatl)er conditions the actcr from beinl! transferred from
the hospital to a mental health
before starting the IOCknlle swim.
In her last effort, in October 1978, facility.
Miss Taylor set a world endurance
mark of 51 hours.
ATHENS, Greece (AP)- The ashes
of opera star Maria Calla8 have been
""
WATKINSGU::N, .N. Y . (AP) -Ac- scattered on the Aegean Sea, fulfilling
tor and sometimes race car driver the singer's request.
Paul Newman is getting ·more and
The ceremony Sunday had been
more comfortable in ihe driver's seat. delayed because of a family dispute
On Sunday he won two races and over custody of the aahes ajnce Miss
broke a record he set here at the Spor- Callas died of a heart attack in Paris
tscar Club af America Trans- in September 1977.
Northeast Division Race.
Culture Mlnlst,!r Dimltrioe Nianiaa,
Newman, 54, broke his own C- aboard a Greek navy ·vessel,
_Production class record Sunday when sprinkled the aahes over the choppy .
"l don't know . It just doesn't
he raced one lap in two minutes, 10:56 blue waters of the Agean &amp;boll! 37
inspire confidenc~ . ··
seconds. That broke his one-year-old miles southe&amp;~~t of Athens.
BY DON GRAFF
At some point back there wh en

·~

.Berry's Worid

By B011 uREEN
AP Golf Writer
CHARLOTTE, N. C. (AP) - Jerry
McGee's !-stroke triumph in the
Kemper Open golf tournament was,
he said, "the best I've ever handled
adversity.
·
"I am more elated than I've ever
been before in my life. This is the high
point of my career."
The victory, secured with a 2-stroke
swing against Jerry Pate on the 17th
hole, gave him a new lease on his
golfing life. The negative thoughts are
gone, said the man who, early last
week, told a friend he was looking lor
a job and was considering leaving the
PGA tour.
His season had been marked by
nothing but trouble.
He played well early in the year,
then suffered rib injuries that
sidelined him for nine weeks. When he
returned, his game was suffering. "I
wondered if I'd ever come back, ever
be able to play again, ever be able to
make the top 60 money winners
again."
On topoitbat, be's being sued by his.
fonner sponsors.
"I bad a lot of things on my mind,"
McGee said after turning baCk .Pate
by a single shot with a closing round of
68 and a 272 total, 16 shots under par
on the Quail Hollow GoU ourse.
The touring pros were playing the
course for the final time. The tournament moves to the Washington, D.
C. area next year.
"Now all the negative thoughts are
gone. I can relax and play the rest of
the season and have fun. And,"
grinned McGee, who won this one on

Collins' report

HEALTH
~
~~~-----La_w_r_e_n_c_e_E_.L_a_m

~

~

,,...,~~~...;;r:umew..,...·· ··

NaMes~~.~~~:

ASTROoGRAPH

'lt~

~----

·

ij.~.

YoU CNJ AffoRD...

~

•

in one of the preliminary races.

They have been feuding aU season,
these two. In Florida, the kid ·was so
embarrassed by the job the two older
jockeys did on him that he used a
racial slur in referring to them in the
jockey room. Cordero was livid when
he was told that Franklin had gone on
TV and accused him of unfair tactics.
Jockey feuds are as old as thoroughbred racing itself but they can be as
ri~ky as playing Russian roulette with
cannon balls. At best, it's a dangerous
sport with a pack of half-ton thoroughbreds thundering around tlie track at
45 MPH.
·
Old timers still talk about the time
Sonny Workman, a fonner nro boxer
who rode for C. V. Whitney, decked
the legendary Earl Sande back in·the
1930s; the bitter rivalry between Bill
HartackandManuel Ycaza; the whiplashing stretch duel between Herb
Fisher and Don Meade in the 1933
Kentucky Derby and the fierce rivalry
between Lafitt Pincay aboard Affirmed and Jorge Velasquez on
Alydar in their faceoff in the Travers
at Saratoga last year.
But no free-for-all compared with
the 1933 Derby finish.
Fisher had Head Play in the lead
turning into the stretch when Brols.er's
Tip shot through on the inside.
Fisher tried to force Broker's Tip,
with Meade aboard, in tight . At the
eighth pole, Meade grabbed Fisher's
saddle cloth. Fisher slashed Meade
acro&amp;S the head with his whip. The two
"tugged at each other all the way down
the stretch. Broker's Tip won by a
nose. The brawl continued in the
jockey room . Onlookers called it a
draw.

Sports briefs

I

~

said. "I knew if I was patient, if I kept
on stroking it good, most of them
· .,
would go tt .
One went in on the 16th, a 12-footer,
and he was tied with Pate.
On the 17th, Pate had difficulty
getting out of sand of a bunker, sand
that was wet and heavy from morning
rains, and made boegy, while McGee
birdied fro111 111-20 feet.
That gave McGee a 2-shot lead with
one hole to play. He used a putter from
off the green to salvage a scrambling
par on the final hole . that made
meaningless Pate's closing birdie.
Pate, who :tarted the day one stroke
'
back, also shot" 68 for 213.
Andy Bean, the defending cham·
pion, and J. C. Snead tied for third at
277. Bean .shot a 68, Snead 70. Ray
Floyd wsa next at 72-278.
Craig Stiuller, who shared the third-

AP Correspoode!ll

in~ilie : ltews

.

0

By Will Grimsley
NEW YORK (AP) - Spectacular
Bid goes after the Triple Crown in the
Belmont Stakes Saturday - a strong
favorite to score a third consecutive
, sweep of the racing jewels - and
more attention may be centered on
the men than the horse.
The reason: The bad blood that
sizzles between the Bid's pimply 19year-old jockey, Ron Franklin, and
the volatile 37-year-old Angel Cor·
dero, one of the sport's toughest
saddlesmltbS.
The kid who rides the Bid apparently hasn't forgotten the lesson
that Cordero and the veteran Jorge
Velasquez infliected on him In the
Florida Derby in the spring,
provoking Franklin's boss, Buddy
Delp, to give him a royal chewing out
in front of everybody.
Cordero is still seething from the
charge of "unsportsmanlike conduct"
that the kid leveled at him after the
Preakness May 19 - an accusation
which race analysts thought was an
unjustlfied slap.
Franklin, .boxed in by Cordero and
Velasquez in the Florida. Derby,
pulleii clear and won by 41'. lengths.
Nevertheless, 'fl'ainer Delp called his
young rider an "idiot" and considered
shifting to another rider . The
teenager, forced to the middle of the
track by Cordero on Screen King, also
survived the Preakness encounter and
won by 51&gt; lengths. Screen King
finished third.
Franklin again will be aboard
Spectacular Bid in the 1'» mile
Belmont while Cordero's schedule
hangs in abeyance. Even if not reassigned to Scr•en King, chances are
he will get another mount or at least
tangle with his less experienced rival

'

By The Associated Press
GOLF
CHARLOTTE, N, C. (AP) -Jerry
McGee, playing catchup golf most of
the back Side, · registered a !-shot
victory in the $350,000 Kemper Open.
McGee, caught and then passed by
Qnrushing Jerry Pate, took ~mmand
With a birdie against Pate's bogey on
the 17th and finished off his final
round In 4-under-par 68.
McGee claimed the third victory
with a 272 Ictal, 16 strokes under par
on the raln-&lt;lrenched, 7,16().yard Quail
Hollow Country Club course.
DENVILLE, N. J. (AP ) - Mike
Higuera of Edgewood won his first
major tournament by taking the
$50,000 Dodge open title In a playoff
against Bob Ross of Baltwtrol.
Higuera and Ross finished
deadlocked at 6-under-par · 282 and
Higuera defeated Ross on the second
extra hole with a birdie.
LA MOVE, isle of Jersey (API ~
Scotsman Sandy Lyle won an international golf tournament by 3
strokes to pick-up first prize of $10,000.
Lyle shot a final round of 69 for a 13under·par 271. Howard Clark, with a
69 for 274, was second, one stroke
ahead of Briton's Bernard Gallacher,
Tony Jacklin, Michael King and Sam
Torrance.
NEW ROCHELLE, N. Y. (AP ) Nancy Lopez shot a 2-under-nar 70 in a
heavy rain to successfully defend a
'100,000 Ladles Professional Golf
Association tournament. She shot a

round lead with McGee, took himself ·
out of it with a horrendous 41 on the ·
back nine . He finished with a 76 and
was well back at 280.

Local Howling
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
Sunday Miners
S1andongs Week ol4-29 -79
w. l.
Hoi Shol s
89 31
Alley Ca1s
72 48
Pinbuslers
.
1 1 49
Country Bumpktns
64 56
Sunday Duds, lie
64 56
Men's high game - Rick Ma rl in
t89 ; Rick Martin and Les Gibbs 169;
Rick Marlin 165.
Men 's high series - Ri ck Martin
523; Ralph Gi bbs 479 ; Jell Martin 44 1.
Women ' s h igh

game -

cu.~J ~as ·stroking the ball well, " he ~~~n ~~~j. Sheryl Gibbs

Sports World

-------.

•

15

Today's

..-:~~~

~Cblr

this wife's birthday, "happy birthday.
JUl."
McGee, 35, who collected $63,000
from the total purse of $350,000,
opened the tournament with a spectacular 61 , blew the lead cin the second
daJI and had to play catclt·up golf
most of the way on the final nine holes.
" When you shoot 61, you're supposell to win," . he said. "After
shooting 61, if I'd lost the tournament,
well, I don't know whether I could
· have come back from that or not. "
· ·1 A d h "d 1.
B uth e won
1 . n , e sat . pa 1ence
was the key.
Trailing Pate by one shot, McGee
missed birdie putts of about six feet on
the 13th and 14th holes and lefl a
longer one hanging on the lip of the

DeSales captures
Class AA crown

four-round total of 280 at the Wykagyl
Country Club.
The victory, worth $15,000, gave
Lopez her third straight victory and
fifth in nine tournaments this year to
boost her winnings to $118,475.
Pat Bradley shot a 70 on the par-72,
6,410 yard layout to finish second with
284.
PINEHURST, N. C. (AP) - Julie
Gwnlia of Edina, Minn., won the 18th
hole for a l·up decision over Beverley
Davis of Raeford to take a victory in .
"the 77th North and South Amateur
Golf Championship.
MOTORCYCLING
SALZBURG, Austria (AP) Favored Gregg Hansford of Australia
won ·the 350-cc, the above 50Ckc and
the 250-cc races in an international
·mOtorcycling competition. ·
In the 350-cC event, Hansford rode
his Kawasaki to victory in 26 minutes,
16.36 seconds. The Australian placed
first in the above 50Ckc race on a
Kawasaki In 28:44.13. Hansford's
winning time on a Kawasaki in the
25&lt;kc event was 22:37.40.

BO.WLING
SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP)-Mark Roth
and MarShall Holman won their
second national doubles title in three
years, beating Larry Laub and
Palmer Fallgren 406-374 in an ~.000
Professional Bowling Association
doubles tournament.

Rhonda

Lue11e
Women ·s high series - Sheryl
Gibbs 41 l ; Gwen Martin 407 ; Luelle
Marlin 393.
Team high game - Hot Shots 327;
Pinbuslers 307: Hot Shols 304.
Team high series - Hoi Shots 930;
Pinbuslers 870 ; Sunday Duds 834 .
148 :

Sunday Miners

Standings Week of 5·6·79
Hot Shol s

w. L.

97 31
77 51

Pinbusters

Alley Ca1s

74 54

Country Bumpkin s

Sunday Duds
/\&gt;\en 's high game 238. 201. 186.
JIAen 's high series -

Ri ck

70 58
66 62
Martin

Rick Martin

625 ; Rillph Gibbs 474; Jeff Martin 445 .
Women's higli game - Sheryl Gibbs
152 ; Rhonda Gibbs 141 ; Sheryl Gibbs
140.
Women 's high

series -

Sheryl

Gibbs 408; Ann Morris 379; Gwen
Martin 349.
Team high game - "Hot Shols 368,
306 ; Hot Shols and Sundar Duds 300.
Team high series - Ho Shols 974 ;
Pinbuslers 821 ; Alley Cals 797.
Sunday Miners
Standings Week of S-13-79
w. l.
Hoi Shots
105 31.
Pin busters
79 57
Counlry Bumpkins
76 60
74 62
Al ley Cals ·
74 62
Sunday Duds
Men ·s high game - Rick Martin
266; Ralph Gibbs 166 ; Ri ck Martin
and Ralph Gibbs 165.

59~~~~P~i~b~~r~~ ; Jef~~r{i';:'~~~ ,

LANDS A BIG ONE - Larry
Cocbraa, PoiDt Pleasant, was
really lucky flsblog recently at
Hidden Lakes. Cochran landed a
six pound large moulb bass.

Glassboro State
defends III title
MARIETTA, Ohio (AP )
Glassboro State got big results from
its little guys Sunday to successfully
defend its NCAA Division II baseball
championship;
Matt McArow, a 5-foot..'l righthander, struck out a series-record 10
batters in a 3-0 victory over
Stanislaus State while 5-foot-7 Tak
Upshur opened the game wi!h a
homer and walked away with Most
Valuable Player honors in the threeday, four-team tournament.
McArow gave up just one walll in
recording his sixth victory against
one loss for Glassboro, whick closed
the season at 29-5.
The New Jersey team added insurance tallles in the seventh as Joe
Davis singled in a run and in the
eighth when Frank Albano scored on
a pair of fielding miscues.
Losing pltcl)er Louie Souza scattered 10 hits and struck out seven as
his record fell to 13-7. The Warriors,
division titlists in 1978 and 1977, relur·
llf
nedtoCa · omiawitha34-2.'1ledger . .
Glassboro won its way to the cham·
pionship game with victcries of 7-3
over Mansfield (Pa.) State and 18-2
over Stanislaus. Stanislaus downed
Rhode Island College 12-4 and Mansfleld ~ besides losing twice to
Gtrsboro .

Women's high gam e - Sheryl Gibbs
180; Luette Martin 144; Gwen Marlin
135.
Women 's

high

series

-

Sheryl

Gibbs 434 ; Luette Marl in 372; Rhonda
Gibbs 356.
Team high game - Hot Shots 352;
Country Bumpkins 315; Sunday Dugs

302.
Team high series - Hot Shols 937;
Country Bumpk ins 830; Plnbusters
825.
'
End of second half .
Wednesday Earlybirds

May2, 1979
Final Standings

w.

l.

Roya I Crown
92 44
New York Clothing
71 65
Riebel 's Used Cars
70 66
Jack's Club
64 72
King Builders
62 74
Swisher and Lohse
45 91
High series - Belly Whitlatch 557 ;
Debi Hawley 529; Donna McFarland
519 .
High game - Debi Hawley 212;
Belly Wh itlatch 199 ; Donna Me·
Farland 195.
High

team series -

High team game - Royal . Crown
763; King Builders 750 ; Royal Crown

742.

PREVENTION
IS THE
BEST POLICY
As an independent insurance

agency, our primary function is
to provi de pol icies which afford
f inancia l protection in case of

loss.

But, we also have a vitlll Inin loss preven tion, as
shoul d our c li ents . We encourage
care, caution and safety . ...
pr eventi ve m easures which can
teres t

keep that c ar ac c ident f rom hap-

pening", that bui lding fire from
starting, that home bu rglary
from being c ommitted .
Prevention saves life, l i mb and
property .. a nd helps contrOl in·
surance co st s and premiums .
When losses d o occur, our
polic yho lders can count on protecting and servi n g in time and
need. But we still say - preven ·
tion is the best poli cy .

SOCCER
BIELEFELD, West Germany (AP )
- Hamburg won the 1979 West Ger-

DALE C. WARNER
INS.

man soccer championship on a

scoreless draw against host Bielefeld.
after Stuttgart, the only team with a
chance to catch the league leaders,
was routed at home by Cologne, 4-1.

992·2143
102 W. Main

Pomeroy

TENNIS

PARIS I API - Bjorn Borg and
Vitas Gerulaitis shattered the dreams
of two highly rated youngsters in the
French Open championshipa. Borg
beatGillesMoretton 7-5,6-4,6-2, while
Gerulaitis defeated Ivan Lend! 6-2, 61, 6-3. Borg and Gerulaitis move into
the quarterfinals of the tournament,
the world's most prestigious event on
slow clay.
Hans Gildemeisster beat Tim
Gullikson 6-7, 6-3, 4~. 6-1 , 6-3.
In the women's singles, two
American hopes fell . Hana Mandllkova edged Betty Ann Stuart 6-4, 76, and Wendy Turnbull overcame
Anne Smith 6-1, 7~.
GREENVILLE, S. C. (AP) Fourteen-year-old Susan Mascarin
upset top-seeded Renee Richards Hl,
6-4, 6-2 to win the women's title in the
Southern Tennis Championships.

POMEROY CEMENT .

Royal Crown

2237; King Builders 2156; Jack's Club
2115.

Euclid 3-2.
DeSales left fielder Bob Esselstein
ran his two-day hit total to six, leding
the Stallions pa,st Trenton Edgewood
7-4.
Meanwhile, Akron St. Vincent -St. .
Ma ry, Akr on Manc hester and
Jeromesville Hillsdale rule as the
Ohio girls softball champions .
St. Vincent - St. Mary nipped
Dayton Chaminade - Julienne 2·1 in
Class AAA, Manchester whipped Germantown Valley View 6-1 in Class AA
while Hillsdale defeated Portsmouth
Clay 4-1 in Class A.
The six charnpionshipa wound up
the 1979-1979 season for Ohio high
schools.

By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sports Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP I - The
frustrations of 27 years ago· were too
much for Brad Landon .
"You hit that home run and I was
starting right up the fence in the·
stands," an elated Landon told his
son, Denny, moments after Cardington Uncoln 's 1.0 victory over
Edgerton Saturday for the Class A
state prep baseball title.
The older Landon had pitched a
regional tournament semi..final virtory in 1952 for Cardington Lincoln .
But that year the Pirates lost in the
regional finals , prolonging a hex that
had reached 44 years until1979.
Cardington was the first Morrow
County school to even reach the state
tournament since Iberia in 1935.
Young Landon was an unlikely
hero. It was only his second homer
this season and the fourth of his high
school career.
"I've been nervowt. I just told
myself to relax, swing and make contact. I just hit it and rilll, " Cardington's designated hitter said of his
36(klout to left field.
It broke up the best-played game of
the 1979 tournament. Winning pitcher
Brian Jackson gave up just one hit.
Andy Curry, Edgerton's losing
hurler, surrendered oniy one single
other than Landon's shot.
Oregon Clay in Class AAA and Columbus DeSales in Class AA joined
Cardington as first-time state champions in the sport.
Qay right-hander Keith Belcik
choked of! a two-run last inning rally
to edge 1963 king and 1978 runnerup

'

The Departme nt Store

Dolly Gallagher Levi was the full
name of the character in the musical
" Hello. Dolly ."

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446-9800
,,

.

.

I

•.

' .,

.'I'

�..

. ~-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday , .June~ . 1979 .

4- The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Monday. June 4, 1979

'

~ASFBALL

SCOREBOARD

Baseball AI AGlance
By The Associated Press
AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST
W. L. Pel. GB
Baltimore
31 20 .608
Boston
29 20 .592 I
New York
28 24 .538 3' 1
Milwauk ee
29 25 .537 3' 1
Detroil
24 22 .522 4°'
Cleveland
23 27 .460 71 '
Toronto
13 40 .245 19
WEST
Texas
30 21 .588

California
. Minnesota

Chicago
Seattle
Qakland

)1 22 .577

28
25
20
18

I

2

21 .571 1
26 .490 5
34 .370 11' '
35 .340 13

Saturday 's Games
Minnesota B. Boston 2

Detro it 9, Qakland 3

Foster's big bat giveS
· Reds split with Phillies

Ma r t inez, Ba l. 7·2, .778, 3.33 ; Jenkin s,

- Ozark 's aUegation that he uses a
By TERRY KINNEY
"corked bat" is a compliment in
AP Sporb Writer
Koosman, M in, 7 J, .700, 3. 68.
disguise.
.
CINCINNATI
(AP)
George
STRIKEOUTS - Ryan. Cal , 78;
After Foster belted a home run
Guidr y, NY , 71 ; Jenkins , Tex . 65; Foster, who launched four home runs
Koosman. Min, 53 : Kra vec. Chi. 52 . in two days against the Philadelphia some 450 feet and high into the cenPhillies, says manager Danny terfield stands Saturday, Ozarjt said
TODAY ' S
MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS

Tex . 6 2.. 750. 3.57; Baumgrln, Ch i, 5·
2, .714, 3.06 : Wa ils, Cle, 7-3, .700, 3.51 ;

By The A's sociated Press

NATIONAL LEAGUE
BATTI NG I 115 at bats) - Brock Sl
L .374 ; Mazzilli, NY , .353 ; Rose, Phi.

:951; Winfield , SO. 349 : Murphy, All.
.348.
RUNS - Lopes, LA, 50; Concepcn,
Cin . 38 ; Kingman, Chi , 37 ; Parrter ,
Pgh, 36 ; Puhl, Htn, 36 ; North, SF , 36.
RB I -

Kingman, Chi , 44 ; Winf iel d,

Texas moves into first
place with 4.;.2 triumph

SD, 43 : Fosler , Cin , 41; Garvey , LA,

" l hope I'm not known as the quiet
By FRANK HROWII&lt;
man
any more,'' said Grubb Sunday
Murphy,
All.
36.
Baltimore s. 'Texas 4
AP Sports Writer
HITS - Winfield, SO, 74; Russell ,
California 5, Cleveland 2
night
after he had homered, singled
In mid-May, they were calling John
LA, 72 ; Rose, Ph i, 71; Ga rvey, LA , 69 ;
Chicago 7, New York 0
scored three runs in helping
twtce
and
Grubb "the quiet man," perhaps
Moreno , Pgh, 67 .
Toronto 6, Seattle 2
the
Rangers
to a 4·2 triumph over the
DOUBLES - Rose , Ph i, 20 : because his batting average had
Supdav's Games
New York 3, Ch icago 2. 11 inni ngs Parrish , Mtl , 16 ; Croma rt ie, Mtl , 15 ; dipped below .200 and the Texas Baltimore Orioles. "The last three
K Hrnandz, St L, 15; Reitz, Sl L 15 ; Rangers were a listless third in the weeks, I've been trying to pump up a
Boston 8, Minnesota 2
Matlhews. All , 15; Baker, LA, 15.
Kansas City 6, Milwaukee 1
little. I've always given 100 percent,
TRIPLE S -· T Scott. St L. 7; American League's West Division.
Cleveland 5, California J
Tem pl eton . 51 L, 6 ; Moreno, Pgh, 5;
Detroi t 2, Qakland o
Then Grubb started to hit, and the but some people said I didn 't look
·
Winfield. SO. 5; 6 Tied With 4.
Sea tile 10, Toronto 5
team's fortunes improved. Grubb had aggressive enough."
HOME RUNS - Kingman, Chi , 19 ; hit in his last 16 games and Texas has
Texas 4, Baltimore 2
He was aggressive Sunday night,
Schmi dt , Ph i, 16; Murphy, All , 13;
Monday's Games
moved into first place by percentage raiSing his average to a much louder
M!nn esota CEric.kson 0-5) at Lopes, LA, 13 : Winfield, SO, 13.
.311 and collecting one-third of the
Baltimore (Flanagan 5-4), (n)
STOLEN BASES - Moreno. Pgh, points.
· .
Texas I D. Eflis 1-3) at Bos ton 21; T Scott , 51 L 18 ; Taveras. NY . 16;
(Torrez 4-3). (n)
North, SF, 15; Ma zzi ll i, NY , 14;
Kansas City (Gale 5·3) at New York Cabell. Hln , 14; Lopes, LA, 14.
(John9-l) , (n)
PI TC HIN G (6 Decisions) - LaCoss,
Milwaukee I Caldw~ll .1 -41 " ' Cin, 6·0, 1.000, 2.51 ; Reed ,' Ph i, 5·1,
.833, 3.75 ; J Niekro , Htn, 8-2, .800, 2.70 ;
Chicago (Baumgarten 5·2J. (nl
B Lee, Mtl , 5·2, .714, 3.92; Knepper,
toronto (Huf_
f man 2-5) at California
SF , 5-2, .714, 3.48; Ruthven, Phi, 6-3,
(Knapp 3-2) , (n)
Cleveland (Wails 7·3) at Qakland .667, 3.22 ; Sykes. Sf L, 4-2.. 667, 5.03 ;
Moska u, Ci n, 4-2, .667, 2.95.
I Keough 0-7), ( n)
STRIKE OUTS - Richard , Htn, 89 ;
Detroit (Wilcox 4·21 at Seattle
Car lion , Phi , 61 : P Niekro. All, 60 ;
!Honeycutt 2-5), (n)
Per ry, SO, 56; Hooton , LA, 55 .
Tuesday's Games
Texas at Boston, (n)
M innesota at Ba ltimore, (n)
third hit of the day and broke a l-1 tie.
By KEN RAPPOPORT
Weekend Sports Transactions
Kansas City at New York , (n)
Krukow was touched for four hits in
By the ssociated Press
AP Sporto Writer
Mtlwaukee at Chicago, (n)
seven
innings and improved his
BASEBALL
.
Toronto at California, (n)
Bruce Kison would like to have the
record
to
2-4. Bruce Sutter worked the
Cleveland at Qakland, (n)
American League
NEW YORK YA NKEES - Placed pitch back. Better yet, he'd like the last two innings, recording his lOth
Delroil at Seattle, (n)
Reggie Jackson, outfielder , on th e 15- official scorer to take the hit back.
day di sabled list.
"I wanted it so bad," said the Pitts- save.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Phlllles 6-2, Reds 4-12
National League
EAST
burgh Pirate pitcher.
Bake
McBride hit' a three-run
W. L. Pel. GB · SA N 01 EGO PADRE S - Signed
What Kison wanted was a no-hitter
28 18 .609
John Stevenson , short stop.
Montreal
homer
in
the sixth inning and Bud
- and what he got was a one-hitter
St . Louis
27 19 .587 1
FOOTBALL
Harrelson's
RBI singl'e keyed a twoafter Barry Evans doubled for San
Philadelph ia
28 23 .549 2• 2
National Football League
Pittsburgh
25 22 .532 3' ,
BUFFALO BILLS - Signed Jon Diego with two out in the eighth inning run rally in the ninth as Philadelphia
21 26 .447 71 2 Borcha r dt, offensive tackle , Tom
beat Cincinnati In the opener of their
Chicago
18 29 .383 10' , Mullad , tight end . and Paul Lawl er, Sunday.
New York
double-header
.
A 7-1 victory notwithstanding, Kison
WEST
cornerback.
The
Reds
won the nightcap as
sulked and smarted afterwards about
Houston
32 23 .582
George
Foster
drove in four runs with
Cincinnati
29 23 .558 1' 2
the scorer's caD on the ~lay . In fact,
a
pair
of
homers.
Foster, who has hit
San Francisco
26 28 .481 51, 2
when Dan Donovan of the Pittsburgh
College World Series
Los Angeles
26 29 .473 6
in
his
last three games,
four
homers
Press ruled a hit on Evans' grounder
By The Associated Press
San Diego
25 3 1 .446 71, 2
hit
No.
9
of
the
season
in the third
past
third
baseman
Phil
Garner
At Omaha, Neb.
Allanla
19 33 .365 ll' ,
No.
10
with
two
men on the
inning
and
Saturday's Games
Kison glared at the pressbox and
Saturdiiv's Games
First Round
seventh.
San Fri!ncisco 8, Chicago 6
raised a threateneing fist skyward.
Texas 11 , Connecticut 5
Cinc innati 4, Phi ladelphia 2
Mets 9, Braves 4
Kison couldn't complain about his
Mississippi St. 6, Fuller ton St . 1
San Diego 3,. Pittsburgh 1
John
Stearns
drove in three runs
hitting support, though. The Pirates
Losers ' Bracket
Atlanta 7, New York 6
with three hits, leading New York
Pepperdine 9, Miami 3 (Miami backed him with five home runs St. Louis 12, Los Angeles 5
el iminated)
over Atlanta. Winner Pat Zachry
Houston 2, Montreal 1
including two by Bill Robinson.
Sunday's Games
Sunday' s Games
limited the Braves to five hits through
Elsewhere
in
,the
National
League,
Winners' Bracket
Pittsburgh 7, San DiCj!O 0
six
innings and Skip Lockwood
Texas 8, Mississippi St . 2
the St. U!uis Cardlllals defeated the
Philadelphia 6·2, Cincmnati 4·12
·finished
up for the Mets, completing a
Arkansas
10,
Ar
izona
3
Chicago 2, San Fr ancisco 1
Los Angeles Dodgers 6-4; the Chicago
losers' Bracket
and recording his ninth ·
six-hitter
St. Louis 6, Los Angeles 4
Fu l lerton St. 8, Conn ec ti cu t 3 Cubs edged the San Francisco Giants save.
New York 9, Atlanta 4
2-1 : the Philadelphia Phillies stopped
(Connect icut eliminated}
·
Houston 5, Montreal 4
Stearns had RBI singles in the first,
Mooday's Games--the Cincinnati Reds 6-4 in the opener
Monday's Games
. Losers' Bracket
Montreal (Lee 5-21. at Allanta
of a double-header before a 12·2 loss In when the Mets scored four times, and
Fullerton Sl. (56 -14) vs. Arizona (43- the nightcap; the New York Mets In the sixth and eighth innings. Willie
(Brizzolara 1·11, (n)
Los Angeles (Sutcl iffe 5-3) at Pitts- 24 )
Montanez hit his third homer of the
Pepperdine (51 -17) vs . M iss issippi ·walloped the Atlanta Braves 9-4 and
burgh (Rooker 2-), (n)
season
in the third inning with Stearns
the Houston Astros nipped the MonNew York (Swan 4-4} at Cincinnati St. 148-11.
Tuesday's Game
aboard
to provide the eventual win!Seaver 2-4), (n)
treal Expos 5-4.
Winners' Bracket
Philadelphia (Chr istenson 0-2) a t
ning
run
for New York.
Cardinals 6, Dodgers 4
Texas 55-6) vs Arkansas (48·13)
Houslon (N ieman 1-01. (nl
Astros 9, Expos 4
Garry
Templeton
smas.
~
ed
four
Only games scheduled
Joe
Niekro
gained his seventh
hits, stole two bases and scored three
Tuesday's Games
and eighth of the
straight
victory
NBA
Playolls
AI
A
Glance
San Diego at Chicago
runs to lead St. Louis over Los
By The Associated Press
Montreal at Atlanta, ( n)
with
relief
help from rookie
season
Angeles. The Cardinals scored three
Championship Finals
Los Angeles at Pittsburgh , (n)
Bert
Roberge
and
Jeff Leonard
unearned rWJs in the sixth inning
Best of Seven Series
New York at Cincinnati. {n)
capped
a
four-rWl
third
inning when a
Gamel
aided by an error by Los Angele~
Philadelphia at Houston . (n)
two-run
double
as
Houston
defeated
Washinglon 99, Seatt le 97 ·
San Francisco at St. Louis, (n)
shortstop Bill Russell . Dodger right·
Gamel
·
Montreal.
bander
Burt
Hooton
was
victimized
by
Sea ttl e 92, WashinQ ton 82 '
I:&lt;lekro
scattered
nine
hits
In
7
2-3
three errors and gave up four
Game .l
TODAY'S
innings
before
needing
help
fronm
Sea l11e 105, Washington 95
unearned rWls. The Cardinals' Pete
MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
Game•
By The Associated Press
. Vuckovlch struck out 12 and scattered Roberge, who gained. his first major
Seatl le 114, Wash ington 112, OT
league save.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
seven hits.
GameS
BATTING (115 at bats) - Smalley,
··o ·rf
,,Af''"
Cubs 2, Giants 1
Sea ttle 97, Wash ing ton 93
Mm, .384; Boehle, Sea, .358 ; ~arew ,
Dave Kingman hit his 19th homer
Ca! , .355 ; Kemp, Det, .350; L Johnson ,
Chi, .336.
and fourth in three days and Mike
AUTO RACINE
RUNS - G Brett, KC, 43 : Otis KC
COLLEGE STATION, Texas (API Krukow gained his first victory since
41; LeFlore, Del, 38; Lansford ' Cal '
Darrell Waltrip came from nearly a May 4 as Chicago defeated San }
38 ; Baylor, Cal , 38.
'
'
'
·
RB I - Bay lor, Cal, 53 ; Lynn, Bsn lap deficit to put a lap on the field and Francisco. The hom~r was Kingman 's
45 ; Porter •. KC, 41 ; Bochte, Sea , 40 ; handily win the $180,000 Texas 400
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio
Cooper, Mil , 39; Horton, Sea, 39.
University student Glen BarHITS - Smalley , Min , 73 ; G Brett , Grand National stock car race.
Waltrip linished a lap and two car
tholomew posted a 20-Becond victory
KC, 70: Remy , Bsn, 68 ; Carew Ca l
66 ; Lansford, Cal , 66.
'
' lengths ahead of Bobby Allison.
over runner-up Denny Hammond in a
DOUBLES - McRae, KC, 16 ; Allison edged Buddy Baker by a
CINCINNATI
(AP) - An In- 10,0011-meter run Sunday that drew
Bonds, Cle, 15 ; Lemon, Chi, 15; B Belt, ·
Tex. 15 ; Thornton, Cle, 14; C Washgln , length , and Cale Yarborough was dianapolis man's belief that six and about 3,000 participants.
Bartholomew, a St. Louis native,
seven are his lucky numbers netted
Chi, 14; G Brett, KC, 14; Otis KC 14 fourth , a half-length behind Baker.
TRIPLES - Grell, KC, / ;,Gr iff in:
Waltrip's average speed of 156.199 him more than ~.ooo Sunday.
bettered the time of 1978 winner Matt
Tor, 5 : Wilson , KC. 5 ; A Banni ster
mph was a track record at the I woThe man, identified by track of- McGowan by 34 seconds, winning the
Chi. 4: R Jones, Sea, 4.
' mile Texas World Speedway oval. He
ficials
as John S. Jones·, held the lone race In 31 minutes, 12 seconds.
HOME RUNS - Singlelon, Bal. 14 ;
winning ticket on the lOth race trifec- McGowan finished sixth last year.
Lynn , Bsn, 14 ; Thomas, Mi l 12 · collected $21,500.
Cooper, Mil, 11 ; Baylor, Ca l, 11'.
'
ta at River DoW1'18 and picked up a
It was Bartholomew's second
STOLEN BASES - LeFlore, Oet,
Thought
for
today
:
In the past, track~ecord playoff of $64,654.40.
straight
victory. He won a five-mile
26 ; Wilson, KC, 23; J Cruz Sea 22 ·
Otis, KC , 19 ; Wills, TeK, u'.
' ' ~ose who foohshly sought power by Jones was the only one at the track run In Lancaster, Ohio, last week.
Brothers Robin and ruchie Smith
PITCHING (6 Decisions) - Kern , ~tding the back of the tiger ended up to bet that horses in post positiorut
Tex. 7-0, 1.000. 1.36; John , NY , 9-1, mstde - President John Kennedy three, six and seven would finish in finished third and fourth, respec.900, 1.79 ; Clear, Ca l, 5·1. .833. 2.96 : 0 1917-1963.
' the first three places.
tively, for the second straight year.
Peggy Cleary of Columbus, a PenHe said after the race that he
always plays the numbers three and IISylvania State University student,
seven and uses handicapping charts was the first woman to finish.
Mark Davis was fifth, and rounding
to determine the third number he
out the top 10were Ernie Watts, Mitch
wants.
The 7-3-jj combination of Sasibou, Bentley, Marty Withrow and Jamie
ONE WEEK ONLY
Pampered Brother and FaUltless Doucett.
Twist placed in that order in the race
and gave Jones his big win. In a successful lrifecta bet, the horses can
finish in any order as long as they are
the first three.
Cedar Knoll, ridden by Juan Solo,
'
scored a two-length VIctory over Lake
I I
Texoma In the featured $6,000 ninth
race,
returr11ng
$9.211,
$3.00
and
$3.80.
1
LIST 1008.75
Lake Texoma returned $3.60 and $3
and lhird..place Two Ways to Toast
.
paid $4.00.
· The 3-5 daUy double combination of
Another Bard and Sizable Profit
returned $41.
LIST 1895.75
· The crowd of 7,863 wagered
$910,751.
•
Kansas Citv 4, Milwaukee 3

he thought Foster was using an illegal
bat with cork in the barrel to provide
more resiliency.
"Maybe It's a compliment in a way,
to say no one could hit a ball that fw
without the bat being illegal ," Fosler
said after hitting three more home

37;Sc hmid t, Ph i. J6 ; K Hrnand z, St L
36 ;

Bruce Kison just
misses no-hitter

,,

1

OU student cops .

RACINE-Carol Ann Morris and
Becky Crow, both 1979 graduates of

runs Sunday.

The first one didn't help the ctn:
cinnati Reds In a 6-tloas, but the nezt
two padded the Reds' 12-2 victocy In
the seconcj game ri the doubleheader.
"I wasn't kidding," Ozark said Sunday. "I don't make statements like
that unless I believe them."
Cincinnati nuinager John McNamara .said he knOW!! illeg!ll bats
have been used occaslonaUy by some
teams. But he said Feister would
never use one becauseofhlslntegrtty,
and because he doesn't need one.
"He is a strong·mao. When he hits
the ball, he hils it a long, long way,"
said McNamara.
Fosler let' the other Reds call him
"Corky," but said be set the record
straight when some of the Phillies
called him that.
"I just smiled and told them I didn't
need any cork in the bat- there's Iron
in it. The Iron"8 right here in the
wrists and anns," he said slyly.
Infielder Bud Harrelson, who ended
his brief retirement when Larry
Bowa was Injured, drove In the winning run for Philadelphia In the first
game with a nine Inning single.
That ended the Phillies losting
string at six games, the club's longest
winless stretch since the 19769e8BOII.
Pete Roee and Bake McBride had
homered earlier for the Phillies, ·who
added an insurance run IIi the ninth
ona sacrifice fly by Mike Schmidt.
The Reds scored oo doubles by
Cedar Geronimo and Vic CorreU,
Foster's home run and a throwing
error by Sclunldt.
· Reliver Ron Reed, 5-1, got the victory while Pedro Borbon, 2-2, was
charged with the loss, also in relief. ·
Tom Hume, 4-4, struck out nine and
scattered eight hits in going the
distance in the second game. After
eight shutout Innings, the Phlllies
scored twice In the ninth on a
sacrifice fly by Del Unsser and a
home run by Schmit.
Fosler's two home runs accounted
for four RBI's. Dave CollinS ent4-for6 and drove In a pair of runs, Hume
helped himself with two hits and two

Becky Crow

Texas hits off Jim Paimer, 6-3.
Doyle Alexander, 3-3, held
Baltimore to a run and five hits in
s~ven innings.' Jim Kern pitched the ·
last two innings, survived Pat Kelly's
ninth-inning RBI single, and recorded
his ninth sa ve.
In the other games SUnday, the
Detroit Tigers blanked the Oakland
A's 2-41, the New York Yankees beat
the Chicago White Sox 3-2 in II innings, the Boston Red Sox blasted the
Minnesota Twins 8-2, the Kansas City
Royal s defeated the Milwaukee
Brewers 6-1, ihe Cleveland Indians
topped the Ca lifornia Angels 5-3 and
the Seattle Mariners rocked the
Toronto Blue Jays J().S.
Tigers 2, A's 0
Mark Wagner hit a sacrifice fly and
Lance Parrish smacked a seventh·
inning home run to back the five-hit
pitching of Dave Rozema and carry
Detroit .to its eighth victory in nine
games.
Rozema, pitching the Tigers' first
complete-game shutout of the season,
beat Oakland for the first time in six
career decisions.
Yankees 3, White Sox 2
Roy White 's lith-inning single
scored Thurman MWlson from second
base, ca rrying the Yankees past the
White Sox.
Chicago had taken a 2-41 lead on Mill
May's two-run double in the second,
but New York came within a rWl on
White's seventh·inning sacrifiCe fly
and tied it in the eighth on a double by RBu.
·
Munson.
Dan Driessen homered oQe pitch aiRed Sox 8, Twins 2
ter Foster In the third Inning off starFred Lynn, Carlton Fisk and Butch ter Jim Lonborg, who pitched 2 l-3ln·
Hobson drove in two runs each as nings and got his first decision this
Boston blasted Minnesota. The Twins season, a loss.
got a run in the eighth, when Bombo
Rivera tripled and scored on a
grounder, and another in the ninth on
4 DA V SPECIAL
Ron Jackson's homer.
Royals 6, brewers I
MONDAY
Marty . Pattin pitched a five-hitter
THRU
and beat M1wa11kee for the 13th time
in 16 career decisions as the Royals
THURSDAY
clipped the Brewers. Darrell Porter
and Pete LaCock each drove in one
run and scored twice to pace Kansas
City's eighth victory in 10 games.
·
Indians 5, Angels 3
Duane Kuiper's two-run single in
With the I)U rchase ot 3 pc.
the ninth gave Cleveland its winning
chicken dinner.
margin over California. The Angels ·
scored twice in their half of the inning
on a run-scoring double by Carney
TRYOUT
Lansford and a sacrifice fly by Dan
DELICIOUS
Ford.
. Hot Fu~ge Cakes, 79c
The Indians' Toby Harrah, used as a
designated hitter for the first time in
his career, went 2-for-3 and reached
base eight times in 14 trips to the plate
. .' , ' '
in the three-game series.
Mariners 10, Blue Jays 5
Dan Meyer's third-inning grand
I
•"'"' ' '!
l 'li
slam powered Seattle past Toronto.
)Vleyer'_s fifth home run and second 354 E . Main Pomeroy, c.
grand · slam this season gave the
Phone Ahead 992-62 92
Mariners the lead for good.

Carol Morris

~ Bridal
~ shower

'

·held here
A brid81 shower was held recently
honoring Joanie Woods with Connie
Collios, Pauline Eynon, and Kim rut. fie as hOS!esses.
·
' Games'
played with prize,s go, ing to Mildred Dtle, Wilma Reiber, '
and EDen Swartwout.
Others attending were Mary L.
Roush, Cordle Collios, Margaret and
Christina Eynoo, -t&gt;onna, U!is, Kathy, .
Melissa,'David and Paul Dtle, Robyn,
·Rachel, ~ Robert Reiber, Sharon,
Je88y and Vince Reiber, Wilma
Reiber, ',Debbie and Chris Wolfe,
Phyllis Harris, Mildred Shuler, Ellen
and Anne Swartwont, Ruth Smith,
Dorothy Smith.
Sending gifts were IUichel Downie,
· Dorothy, Pam and Sandy Harden,
'Mrs. Pat Brown, Suzanne Teaford,
and Mary Ann Fowler.
Joanie Woods, daughter of Mrs.
Mary L. Roush, Syracuse, and David
W. Collios, son of Pauline Eynon and
the late Glenn R. Collios, Sr., Racine,
were married Saturday.

were

Members welcomed

McCLURr,S
-

'

RUTLAND-Six new members were
welcomed at the May 29 meeting of
the Rutland Chapter of TOPS (Take
Off Pounds Sensibly).
Mrs. Debbie Grate, leader presided
at the meeting with Belah Belle
Wright being honored 118 the weekly
queen and Patty Imboden as her
runner-up. Mrs. Wright was
presented a dollar and a song was •
sung in her honor.
New offlce111 named were Marcia
Elliott, secretary, and Kathy Stewart,
co-leader. Patty Imboden was appointed to be In charge of recording
pictures and measurements.
Members were asked to take a diet
recipe to share with the group next
week. The Topsl symhol was explain- ,
ed by Mrs. Grate.

...

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l

OFFICE HOURS: 9:30 to 12, 2 to S (CLOSE AT NOON

I

1\IRNS TWO- Jimmy Starcher,
son of Jim and Je811ie Starcher, Rt.
I, Long Bottom, celebrated his
seeond blrtbday May U . Attending
were his parent&amp;, his grandparents,
Charles and Grace Price, Cbester,
Teddy and Lori Mundry, Tlm and
Paula Dillon, Robert, Penny, Bobbl
and Brett Price. Sending gUts were
Jesse and Margie Davls, Savanuab,
Georgia and the Sparks ol Mason.
Refreshments ri cake, potato cblpe,
lee crea111, Kool-Ald and coffee were
served.

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chapter by Dale Smith, associate
patron. The ladies in the East wore
corsages, gifts of the worthy patron,
Thomas Edwards. The worthy
matron lind worthy patron made a
gift to the chapter of table clothes for
the dining tables.
Guests were registered by Mrytle
Sisson, Ella Smith and Evelyn Lann·
ing. Potluck was served following the ·
meeting by Georgia Watson, chair~ of the Eastern Star conunittee,
assiSted by Caryl Cook, Chlorus Gaul,
Edna Slusher, and Judy Jewell .
Potted plants and floating candles
decorated the tables.

hudson'

A Very Special Day!
MOND_
AY - JUNE 4, 1979

AND

•

\

presided at the meeting attended by
·
Distinguished guests presented and
welcomed were Roberta K. Mindling,
past grand matron, and an honorary
member of the chapter ; Florence
Manring, grand representative 'to
Wisconsin ; U!uise Stewart, grand
representative to .Washington; worthy matrons and worthy patrons of
visiting chapters, LoweD, Marietta
Racine, Mt. Moriah, Albany, Thea:
New Marshfield, Euphemia Harrisonville, Minear, Athens', and
Evangeline.
Also presented were past matrons
of Pomery Chapter, Sylvia Midkiff,
Dorothy Woodard, Marie curd, Ruby
Vaughan, Ella Smith, Evelyn Lanning, Marjorie Crow, Mabel Goeglein,
Florence Well; and past patrons,
Thomas Edwards and Dale Smith
both Knights of the York Cross of
Honor, and ruchard Vaughan;
honored masons, James Buchanan,
conunander of the Ohio VaUey Commandry 24, Knights Templar; Harry
Manring, conunander of Athens Commandry 15, Knights Templar.
The 56-year members recognized
were Ruby Diehl and Ann Massie.
Also introduced were Louise Stewart
district president; Jean Moury'
district secretary; Jo Anne Mcllaf:
fey, grand page ; those with former
grand appointments, past ll'iatrons
and past patrons of other chapters.
The new members, Jacquellite
Carsey and Dinah and Eric Gryszka
were presented Bibles from the
85 members and guests.

_L_o~!~~~~~-==~s!~~':R!!2:::.~&lt;&gt;_M_E!~~~-----~

NATIONAL .MINE SERVICE CO.

675-4079

Annual inspection of Pomeroy
Chapter 186, Order of the Eastern
Star, was held Wednesday night at thti
Pomeroy Masonic Temple. Inspecting officer was Lois Pauley, deputy
grand matron.
Ann Hemsley, worthy matron, and
Thomas Edwards, worthy patron ,

3-PIECE
BEDROOM

OF

H:ICKORY MODULAR .BLDGS.
POINT PLEASANT AIRPORT

OPTOMETRIST

editor; Debra Spencer, co-editor·
Keith Wolfe and Randy .KeUer, phot~
editors, and Kay Balderson, Karen
Probert, Susan . Hannum, Dawn Sorden, Lawrence Pooler, Marcy sexson,
Kathy Pooler. Baseball lettermen
":ere J~hn Beaver, Roger Gaul, Robbte Smith and Gary Briggs. Given
recognition were Dan Spencer, Rusty
Wtgal, Jeff Goebel, c&lt;K:aptains · Dan
Spencer and Wigal, SEO aU-6larts ·
Brian Bissell, most hits; Greg Wigal:
best defense ; Jeff Goebel, most improved ; Dan Spencer, )lest pitcher;
Angel Blake, high points in girls
track. Dan Spencer and Lllurie Matthews received the Ivan B. Walker
. awards as the outstanding girl and
boy athletes.
The high scholastic award went to
Karen Probert and Lowell Ridenour '
won the DECA award. Miss Probert
valedictorian, and Debra · Spencer'
salutatorian, were given special
recognition.

Eastern Star holds annual inspection hefe

I

••fAMILY OUTING"

l

r

•

Vocal music awards went to underclassmen including Donna Persons, soloist ; Brenda Riffle, most.improved ; Roger BisseU, outstanding
member with Aogei·Blake, Cindy Pitzer and Susan Hannum, tying for
second. The directors award went to
Rocky Pitzer and Susan Hannum.
Outstanding bandsmen awards
went ·to Paul Harris, seventh grade·
Brian Collins, eighth ; Sarah Goebe{
ninth ; Denise White, lOth ; Janet
Mora, 11th; Susan Hannum 12th
Mark Rice received the award 'forth~
most improved junior high band
student anq Kenny Newell, the most
unproved high school band student.
. Perfect attendance awards went to
Cindy Harris, Mark Jones Tim
Probert, Pam ruebel, seventh grade ·
Jenni Burke, Julie Elberfeld eighth:
Joe Sayre, Paul Sprague,' Donn~
Jacks, Charles Massar, ninth , and
Kenny Newell, loth . Annual staff
recognition went · to Cindy Pitzer,

"" ·-----~-------------

PARK RESERVED FOR JOINLY SPONSORED
l

EAST MEIGS - Numerous presentattons were made when the annual
awards assembly was held at Eastern
High School.
Seniors winning awards included:
Dawn Sorden , Eng.lish; Karen
Pro,bert, ~cience; Depra Spencer,
Semor busmess and office education·
Cindy Pitzer, home economics:
Michael Hayman, industrial arts :
K!lren Probert, D.A.R. Winner; Da~
Sorden, Ohio scholarship board of
regents recognition ; Steve Barber
Hocking Tech scholarship; S~
Nannum, Ohio Valley scholarship ·
Kay Balderson, Susan Hannum'
David Hedrick, Judy Holter Cindy
Pitzer, Karen Probert, Dawn'Sorden
and Keith Wolfe, senior music awards. David Hedrick received the John
Philip Sousa award and Susan Hanown and Hedrick were named to the
All American Band.
Rhonda ruebel was given special
acknowledgement as spelling · bee
champion.

at Eastern

----,
N. w" COMPTON, O.D.

,-------

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Becky receive&lt;! the Sousa Award
also. She has been in the · band for
eight years and was· president during
her senior year. She was an officer in
the choir for two of the four years she
took part, and has been active four
years in the Modern Music Masters
Club.
Becky participated in the variety
shows three years, was in the Pep
Club for four years, served on the
yearbook staff two years, was a class
officer in her sophomore, junior and
senior years, was in the junior.Unior
play cast, and was the j\lllior allendanl for the Christmas dance. She
was also a homecoming queen candim candidate in her senior year, and
the basketball sweetheart queen that
· year.
S~ is lisle&lt;! in "Who's Who AmongMus1c Students in American High
Schools", "Who 's Who Among
American High School Students'' and
"Who's Who Among American High
SchQ&lt;&gt;l Students." She is a member of
Trinity Church in Pomeroy.

RUTLAND-The 5llth annual RusseU, Kentucky, Uma; Eleanor
Rutland Alumni Association reunion Amsbary, Huntington, W. Va .;
held on the Saturday of Memorial Day Gladys Amsbary, Gallipolis ; Kenny
weekend was attended by 368 Rutland Baylor, Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs .
High School alunml and guests.
Steve Grimm, Gallipolis; Marlene
Red and black, colors of RHS, were Hoffman, Gallipolis ; Helen Alkeson
used in the decorations which Mansfield; Linda Ball, Mr. and Mrs:
featured false ceiUng, posters por- Dwight Brown, St. Albans, W. Va.;
traying scenes of the 50's drawn by Mr. and Mrs . James Barrett, Marion;
Robin Kessinger, and tables adorned Dana Barton, Mr. and Mrs. Bill
with flower arrangements donated by Brewer, Mr. and Mrs. Tim Hall,
theRullandFriendlyGardenClub.
Merlyn Farm«, Donald Smith, Mr.
Larry Rupe, president, extended and Mrs. Claude Russell, Helen
the welcome, and the Rev. Alan Williams, Myrta WUson, Robert
Blackwood, Pomeroy, gave the . in- Romine, Artie Houdashelt, Andrea
vocation. Lilly Kennedy gave the Parks, Mr. and Mrs. MarshaU
secretary's. report, and June Phillips, Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Rathburn
Lambert, tbe treasurer's report.
and Gary Rife, Columbus.
During the business meeting Suzy
The Rev. and Mrs. Sammy SirParker Carpenter was chased as chfield, Colorado; Mr. and Mrs. John
president for the 19M alumni and was Brogan, West Vlrgina; Mr. and Mrs.
authori2ed to sell!ct ber own officers. Andy Brooker, Virginia Foss, Mr. and
The Association voted to admit to Mrs. Charles Stewart, Emogene
the alumni association and reunion aU Davis, Mr. and Mrs. George Hysell,
those students . who would have Mr. and Mrs. Claude Montgomery,
graduated from Rutland High School Nancy Haddox, Athens; Suzy
had the consolidation not taken place. Carpenter, Reedsville ; Mr. and Mrs.
T)le by-Jaws were amended so that a David Carson, Loveland; Mr. and
woman could serve as president of the Mrs. Blaine Carter, Jr .; Mr. and Mrs.
associaton.
·
WU!is DiUon, John Jeffers, Ronald
A discussion was held as to where rule and Jay Stiles, Albany; Patty
the alumni could meet after the high Clark, New Haven; William Clark.
school gymnasiwn is sold, an action Pickerington; Russell Little, Picker:
reported by one of the members. It ington ; Mr. and Mrs. Charles Corder,
was decided by llllanimous vote that Akron; Mr. and Mrs. Aocil Cross,
reunions should be held in Rutland. It Dorothy Deemer, Jackson.
was decided that if the gymnasiUm is
Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Kettering, Mr.
obtained by a local association, then and Mrs. John Dyke, Fairborne; Mr.
the alumni officers will investigate and Mrs. Charles Easter, Galena ; ;
the possibility of helping defray ex- Dorothy Emmons, BrookviUe; Joetta
penses for pennission to continue us- Eskew, Newark; Mr. and Mrs . Gary
ing the faciUiy. It was decided that George, ZanesviUe; Lanna Goode,
this matter will be brought up again New Martinsville; Marlilt Goff,
at the 1980 reunion.
Michigan; Clyde Kennedy, .chigan;
The association also decided that Jean Vandemark, Vlrgtn~t: Lurene
funds accumulated by the group Kennedy, Galenta; &lt;leraldine
should be deposited in a savings ac- Spurlock, Reynoldsburg; Darrell
count. The reunion concluded with the Smith, Bucyrus; Mr. and Mrs. Tom
song, "Three Cheers for Rutland High Williamson, Centerville; Brenda and
School" led by former music teacher, Gilford Turley, Vinton; Mary
Mrs. C. 0 . Chapman, and ac- Woodrum, Enon ; Mr. and Mrs. Dan·
companied at the piano by Catherine ny Yarbrought, Wadsworth ; Hazel
Shenefield.
Grueser, Canton; Mr . and Mrs.
Door prizes were won by Sharon Michael Nicholson, Belmont, W. Va.
Pratt and Roger BIB~k . The Rev. Mr.
Ronald Nicholson, Hilliard; Larry
Blackwood had ute c..»:~lng prayer.
Patterson, Worthington; Mrs. Ray
Following the dinner a dance was Phillips, Lancaster; Howard Pond,
held with Kenny Hysell formerly of Williamsport;
Mildred Hoye ,
"The Jays" during the 1~ era as Reynoldsburg ; Mr. and Mrs. Dana
emcee. Tables lighted by candles HyseU, Grove City; Mr. and Mrs.
were provided for the alumni. A Elmer West, Maryland; Donald King,
dance contest was won by Darrell · Maryland; Rosanna Kitchen, West
Smith and his guest of Bucyrus, ami Jefferson; Mr, and Mrs. Burnie
Mr. and Mrs. Billy Kennedy, Rutland . Knapp, Springfield; James Manning,
Those alunml and guests retwning Fairborn; Mr. and Mrs. Oral L&lt;lwery,
from out-of-the county were Charles Hebron; Mr. and Mrs. Jim Lynd, MinSi~. Uma; Mr. and Mrs. Wayne ford; U!retta McQuaid, U!rsin ;
GERALDSEU.ERS
David Martin, WesterviUe; Ester
WILDFLECKEN, Germany_ Staff Metheney, Wellston; Mr. and Mrs.
Sgt. Gerald E. SeUers, whose wife, Edwin Nelson, Wooster ; Mr. and Mrs.
ruchard Nelson, Delaware; Harry
Joyce, Uves in Pomeroy, Ohio, recen- Plummer, Carroll; Bob Pope,
tly was assigned as a motor sergeant Newark; Geraldine Reed, Cincinnati ;
with the ii4th Engineer Battalion in Mr. and Mrs . Junior rule, WesterWUdfiecken,
Germanythe
.
SeUers entered
Army in VI·ne; Kathleen Rodgers, Mid·
February
.
dietown; Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Smith,
1972
The sergeant is a 1971 graduate of Amesville; Mr. and Mrs. John Smith,
Southern High School in Racine, Ohio. Florida! Carl Reeves, Florida ;
James Titus, Botkins ; Mr. and Mrs.
His mother, Mrs. Ada F · Rowe, Robert n" S1 Albans RaJ h Ward
lives on Route 2, Racine. His father;
nue, ·
;
P
,
Gerald Sellers, lives on Route 2, Mid- Groveport, and Pauline Wineborne,
dleport. .
•
Groveport.

Today In History
'jly The Associated ·Press
Today is Monday, June 4, the 155th
day of 1979. There are 2iO days left in
,
the year.
Today'a highlight In history :
On this date in 1944, Allied forces
entered the Italian capital of Rome in
World War U.
On this date :
In 1647, the English army seized I
England 's King · Charles I as a
hostage.

~~~~~~~------~~ (
YOU CAN'T BEAT OUR PRICE! ! FACTORY DIRECT · ,

NEVER AGAIN WILl BE BE ABLE TO OFFER
THIS FINE MOWER AT THIS toW APRICE ·

SALE

For Complete Information CaU

Southern High ..SChool, have been accepted at Ohio Uni~ersity for the fall
quarter.
•
Both Carol Ann, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs . Carl Morris, and Becky,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A: E. H.
Crow, have excelled in the music programs at Southern. Carol has been in
the marching band and choir for six
years, was majorette for four years
and head majorette for a year. Sh~
· was a member of the Modern Music
Masters foc three years, recipient of
the John Phillip Sousa Award and has
studied piano for 10 years.
·
Carol has also been on student coun~il for two years, was a·p participant
m the annual Morton Mathematics
Contest sponsored by the
Ma_th~tic.s Department at. Ohio
Uruverslty m 1978, took part m the
local Junior Miss Pageant, and was a
member of the basketball sweetheart
court. She is a member of the Sutton
United Methodist Church at Racine,
.and her hobbies are tennis and motor-

~ycling.

Rutland alumni meet
for successful reunion

FREE
SALAD

..........

A wards given

Local graduates accepted by OU

,.

�.

6 - TheDaily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., Monday. June 4, 1979

·-····-·· ·-

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·-

GOLDEN ANNIVERSAltY - Mr. and Mrs. Sylvan Cleland
celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary on May 6 with an open boose at
~ir home on Route 124 in Rutland. The celebration was hos_
ted by their
SIX children and grandchidren. Sylvan and DoUy were married at
Pomeroy on May 7, 1929. Nearly a hundred relatives and friends called
during the open house . ·
,:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::,:i::

Helen Help

·• US. • •Bv Helen Hottel
'lJVE-TOGETHER' CONTRACFS

MAKE IT ALMOST-MARIUAGEBy
Helen Bolte!
DEAR HELEN:
People say they'd rather livetogether than get married because
they feel freer and less structured by
rules. But since the Marvin and
. Frampton cases, everyone stresses
the importance of signing cohabitation contracts.
Please leU me, is tljis really much
different from marriage, where the
partners sign a certificate wbich entitles them to certain legal rights?
Seems to me we're coming full circle . When "living together" becomes
as contractual as S&lt;H!alled legal pairing, we'll see a big marriage boom. STUART
DEAR STUART:
The boom, according to early
statistics, may already by underway.
Living -toge_ther these days is becomIng more a trial run for matrimony
than a pennanent non-conunitment.
However, even trial runs need
rules. For cohabitors, I'd suggest a
new book "The Living Together Kit"
by attorneys Toni Ihara and Ralph
Warner :t8.95, Nolo Press), which
deals with legal, financial and social
aspeets of this . now-popular Indoor
sport. It discusses common-lsw marriages (only about a dozen states
recognize them presently) and such
considerations as insurance, joint
buying, taxes, CW!tody of children (If
any), inheritance rights, gay
togetherness; also offered are a
number of sample contraets. Had Lee
and Michelle drawn up one of these,
everyone - except their lawyers would have benefitted. - R

I s~~:;; I

Hoofs
and
Paws
\
~"::~~:~~~ ~~;~;~~~ j

Gene Jeffers residence with 10 members and two advisors in attendance .
The club members discussed saving
pop bottle caps for .a money-making
iJroject, project books and· raffle
tickets. Ping-pong was enjoyed by the
club members for recreation .
Refreshments were served by Martha
Jeffers. The next meeting will be
June 15. -Chad Sayre, reporter.
The Alfred Angels 4-H Club met
May 19 at the Tricia Sams residence
with 13 members and three advisors
in attendance. Business discussed ineluded a bake sale and selling Stanley
products. Demonstrations were given
by·Lori Robinson, Tara Guthrie, and
Brenda Calaway. Word games and
kickball were enjoyed by the club
members for recreation. Refreshments were served by Tricia Sams.
The next meeting will be June 9 at the
Brenda Calaway residence. At this
lime the club members will give
demonstrations on canning and
proper table setting. - Tammy
Calaway, reporter.
The Rutland Roadrunners met May
18 at the Margaret Edmonds residence with 13 members and two advisors
In attendance. Advisors helped memhers with problems In filling out
project books and supplied information on project requirements.
Reports on . health - an exercise
demonstration; and food, preparing a

POMEROY - Meigs Senior
Citizens Center activities located at
the Pomeroy Junior High School is
open 8:30a. m. to 4:30p.m. Monday
through Friday.
.
Monday, June 4 - Physical Fitness
lt::lO a.m.; Square Dance 12:30to 3 p.

r--

Tuesday, June 5- Physical Fitness
11 :30 a.m.; Chorus 12:30 to 2 p.m.
Wednesday, June 6- Social Security Representative, 9:30a. m. to 12:30
p.m.; Making a Medical Profile 11 a.
m.; Games I to 2:30p.m.
Thursday, June 7 - Physical
Fitness 11:30 a. m.; Kitchen Band
12:30to2p.m.
Friday, June 8 -Art Class 10 to 12
noon; Physical Fitness 11 :30 a. m.;
Bowling 1 to 3 p. m.
Senior Nutrition Program, 12 noon
to 12:45 p.m. Monday through Friday_
MONDAY - Baked Spaghetti,
brussel sprouts, apricots with cottage
cheese, oatmeal cookies, Italian
bread, butter. milk.
.
TUESDAY- Pot roast beef, mashed po~toes and gravy, buttered com,
ice cream, bread, butter, mi!ll.
·
' WEDNESDAY - Baker pork chop,
hash brown potatoes, buttered carrots, apple crisp, bread, butter, milk.
THURSDAY - Soup beans with
ham bits, buttered beets, cole slaw,
canned pineapple, cornbread, butter,
milk.

Me.i gs
Property
Transfers

Announce birth

Social Calendar

I

MONDAY
POMEROY Garden Club Monday
at 7:30p.m. at home of Mrs. Howard
Nolan, Syracuse.

m.

FRIDAY - Chicken salad sandwich, vegetable soup, buttencotch
pudding, crackers, milk.
Coffee, tea, and buttennllk served
dally . Please register the day before
you plan to eat. Pomeroy 992-7888,
Portland, 843-3364. Menu for the
DEAR HElEN:
Satellite Site at the Reorganized
The woman who wrote about her :&gt;- ' Church of Jesus Christ of the Latter
year-old retarded son, asking If IQs Day Saints, Old Town Flats, is si.IJillar
en change, touched a nerve. .
totheabovemenu.
My mother brought a cousin home
- with her when he was 9 years old. The
• boy was not a talker.' He'd liver in
~---~ very repressed conditions. Many considered him "slow." I was :1ll at the
time and must coofess I more or less
ignored him; too.
After he grew up I began to wonder
what kind of person he was. When I · Eugene Everett Hawkjns, Mary
took the lime to pry, I found be was Lou Hawkins to Dale L. Davis, Karyn
smart enough, though the years of D. Davis, lots, Middleport.
people pushing him into the
Burl L. Putman, Bnnie S. Putman
background had done a great deal of and Ivan Chevalier, Lydie Chevalier,
damage.
pro tunc Judgment, Olive.
I worked with him for three years
Elsie M. Chambers, dec. to Robert
and he became a fine, outgoing man, Chambers, cert. trans., Middleport.
able to.hold a good position.
Frances E. Hewitt t Michael L.
. Yes, Helen, as you say, people im- DaUey, Owen F. Dailey, 4 acres,
prove mentally with proper training Lebanon.
.
.
and attention. The brain grows like
Clifford Whittington, Barbara Whitany other part IJf the body, sometimes tington to Roger Adams, right of ay,
much faster. + O.M.P _
Rutland.
DEAR HELEN:
Manning D. Webster, Mary A. WebYes, yes, yes, retarded children im- ster to Harold H. Blackston, Helen E.
prove with tender loving care! My Blacbtoo, 2acres, SalisburY_
daughter, too, is a "special · child."
Mildred Frank to Garland E.
She has a learning disability and at Brady, Stella L. Brady, parcels,
age 9, she's at second grade level. But Columbia .
our, school has special education
Lucille C. Story, Leo R- Story to
teachers who work with each child in- Columbus and Southern Ohio Electric
dlvlduaUy. She has improved tremen- Co., easement, fl1!dford.
dously within a year, and today she
Janice Story Lochary, Charles D.
was the only one in her class to get a Lochary to Columbus and Southern
perfect math score, preparing her for Ohio Electric Co., easement, Bedford.
third grade.
Margaret Johnson, Chester JohnWith the extra help her teachers son to Columbus and Southern Ohio
'provide, she'll be able to keep up with Electric Co., easement, Salem.
the other children. We're very proud
Richard Lee Stewart, Donna D.
of her, and ·so grateful that our Stewart, aka Do1Ul8 Darlene Stewart
daughter has these very special to Columbus and Southern Ohio Electeachers.- P.D.
tric Co., eilsement, Salem.
Lynn Shuler, Johnanna Shuler to
Got a problem? An adult subject for Columbus and Southern Ohio Electric
. discussion? You can talk it over in her Co., easerpent, Letart.
column If you write to Helen Bolte!,
Martha Mays t RObin Lovell, Mary
care of this newspaper,
Lovell, 2Jl96acres, Columbia.
. Giuilietta Girolami, Guido J.
Girolami, Vidia Girolaml, Gemma M.

Mr. and Mrs. Ricky Hoover, Sr.,
Syracuse, are announcing the birth of
a son, Ricky Eugene, Jr., born oo
May 10 at the Pleasant Valley
HOBpital, Point Pleasant. The Infant
weighed six pounds, 14 ounces and
was 21 inches long.
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Manford Hutton, Route 1, Ml&lt;!dleport,
and Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Hoover,
Route I, Middleport. Greatgrandparents are Mrs. Hazel Me'
Cloud, Middleport; Mrs.·Mae Moore,
Gallipolill; and Mr. and Mrs. Wesley
Young, Rutland.
·

1

RACINE CHAPTER 134,

O.E.S.

will have Inspection Mwday at 7:30

David Moore

_Graduates
'

CHESIRE - DaVid A. Moore, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Freddie T. Moore of
Cheshire graduated from Rio Grande
College on May 00, 1979. Agraduate of

Meigs High School in 1975, he attended Rio Gr~de for four years,
where he received a Bachelor of
Science Degree in Secondary
Education, majoring in Social Science.
Moore was very active In extracurricular programs, such as
band, choir and the Rio Grande
Chorale. He was a member of the
group for three years at which time
he served as vice president his junior ·
year and president his senior year.
The group has perfonned throughout
the states en Ohiq, West Virginia, Ke11tucky, Tennessee, and the state of
Florida, where tbey performed at
Disney World in Orlando.

Casci, Paul L. Casci, Lily E.
strickland, John Strickland to Tracy
H. Whaley, Grace Whaley, lot,
Pomeroy.
Gina Menchini, dec., ,to Jacqueline
E.Menchini, Ernest C. Menchini, Jennifer E. Menchini Foster, cert. of
trans., Pomeroy.
E. M: Harrah, Roma Harrah to E.
M. Harrah, Roma Harrah, parcel,
Chester.
James Bailey, Celia E. Bailey to
Cynthia L. Lowther, Dennis Pedings,
parcels, Chester.
Edward Huber, dec. to Lena Huber,
now dec., ·Katharine s. Duffy, formerly aka Katharine S. Huber,
Kathryn Huber, Ruth Kauffman formerly Ruth Huber, Alice Globakar
fonnerly Allee Huber, Paul Huber,
cert. of trans ., Pomeroy.
Lena Huber, dec. to Katharine S.
Duffy, Ruth Kauffman, Alice
Globakar, Paul Huber, affid. for
trans., Pomeroy.
Ruth Kauffman, Katharine S. Duffy, John Duffy, Jr., Allee Globakar
Phillp S. Globakar'to Mary S. Erwin:
Gregory Erwin, parcels, Pomeroy.
Howard Eugene Well, Tel!Bnna J.
Well to Howard Eugene Well, TexannaJ. Well,1.6acre,Chester. .
Roger Steart, Linda St,ewart to
Douglas G. Allen, Pamela· Allen, 0.5
acre, Cllflster.
·

CARDI·NAL BACON .................... ~.~l

By Marion C. Crawford .
cruel to animals likely to love chUdren
MelgsCoualyHumaaeSoclety
all the more? Is that the proposition,
POMEROY - Those of us who care or is cruelty an evU streak in .the
for animals are too often a"c"-"ed of nature of some humans which makes
lovin_g animals more than people. The sel_fless l~ve, whetht;,r for humans or
unfau-ness of this .charge is deeply ammals, lffipossible . . .
.
felt, but sometimes difficult to ex- . "When Queen Victona was urgmg
press.
Members of this House to support the
Lord Houghton of Sower by, a Cruelty to Animals Bill ofl876 did any·
member of the BritiSh Parliament noble Lord suggest that Her Majesty
and a long time champion of animal (who had nine chUdren) cared more
welfare issues, was recently faced for animals than for children? _
with this charge.
"If not, how many chlldren does one
During a debate in the House of have to have to be exempt from ~
Lords on · hare coursing; Lord imputation? How can one dlsporve 1t?
Houghton disputed the charge. His The more on analyses this t~unt, the
expression of concern for all living more unfalf it becomes. W1th .great
things speaks for many of us.
respect I ask that we should hear no
"With your Lordships' pennlasion more of it. Hansard (Holl$C of Lords
I want to avail mysell of the oP- Report ) Monday, June. 19, 1978." .
Continuing along th1s same vem,
portunity on this occasion to refute the
suggestion which came my way in the was Phyllis Wright, HSUS Director of
course of the debate on the ChUd Animal Sheltering and Control, spoke
Protection Bill Second Reading stage at Parkersburg last week. Phyllis, in
last month. Namely, that 1 probably her usual good humor, told of being
care for animals more than I care for questioned about this very thing, as
children.
have aU of us. Her reply Is a good one.
"1 am by no mans alone In this When quizzed by people as to why she
experience because one frequently does not work with children. or other
hears this kind of remark. I am not oommunity endeavors, she replied,
going to quote what was said or who "And when did YOU last work with ·
said it; it is on the record. All I want to children or in other community endo for a moment or two is to reply to tt deilvors? i\1 least I am doing
on my own behalf and on behalf and on something to make the community a
behalf of many others who suffer, if I better place to live."
may say so, from this kind of tnAs Phyllis also says, "Year after
sinuation.
year, mUllons of unwanted pets are
"I do not equate animalS· with euthanized. In addition, millions of
children, nor do I make them alter- strays die of disease or lnjllfl'I'This is
natives In my affections, my concern, a people problem. Responsibl~ owners
or my work. They are a different who leash, license, and neuter their
species each with their rights and pets will be the solution to the pet
claims upon the living world. It is not overpopulation problem."
a matt.er of prioritles...of 'either-or', it
'-.
is a matter of the moral standards of
Those of us who concern ourselves
human beings, and those to me are all with animals do so in order to alllvlate
embracing and aU pervasive.
this situation and the resulting suf"They are all that justifies the fering to these same poor creatures.
continued etdstence of mankind. 1 am
If all readers could be in our Blloes
not called upon to apportion my for one week ·and see the really nice
deepest feelings between chlldren and animals that are abused, neglected,
animals. I care. about all living things cruely treated, end up sometimes
- and for the weak and helpless most being euthanized because there are
of aU .
just not enough homes to go· around,
"Moreover, I have no obsessions; 1 you would know why we spend hours
am not a fanatic; I ani -not crazy. I weekly in their behalf. What have
reject the proposition that fondness YOU done lately for chlld, 111an, or
for animals implies soole lack of beast?
concern for human beings. Do I have
We have lots of dogs, puppies,
to prove a love of children by being "kittens, cats for adoption, folks, if you
cruel to animals? Is the person who is want one. Please call us at 992-7853 or
992-7680 ... and don't forget our Thrift
Shoppe in Middleport when you do
Paul G. Sigman, aka Paul Sigman your spring cleaning.
toN. RuthGosney,IOIS,f&gt;\lddleport.
Any serviceable item, be it clotheS,
Grant A. New!and to Linda household appliance or furniture, we
Newland, parcel, Olive and Orange;
can sure use ...ind The animals will
Vester Walker, Jr., Reva L. Walker benefit by your generosity. The shop
to Dean SchrOck, 3.002 acres, is open Thurday through SaturayRutland.
.
There will be the regular monthly
Dooald H. Ours, dec. to Allie Jane meeting of the Humane Society,
Ours, I.Jnda S. Hogue, Ralph R. 'Ours, Thursday, June 14, at the- Thrift
' affld. for trana., Lebanon.
.
~ All.members are urged to atAllle Jane Ours, Linda S. Hogue,
James F. Hogue, Raljlh R. Ours to
Carl Richardson, Betty J. Richardson, parcel, Lebanon.
REPLACE THAT

seek was enjoyed by the club memhers for recreation. Refreslunents
were served by Margaret Edwards. Denise Turner, reporter.
The Meigs County Junior Leadership Club mel May 23 at the Extension
Office with three advisors and 26
members In attendance. The memhers discussed what programs they
wanted and a conunittee was fonned
to organize the programs. Also, the
group voted to go to Kings Island in
June. John Bramer, Director of the
Conununity Mental Health Center,
talked with the group on leadership
and the qualities that make a good
leader. He also discussed how to atlain goals and the goal decision
making process. Recreation included
a film clip from the movie "Star
Wars." Refreshments were served by
.Tanunie starcher, Denise White,
Renee Trussell, Cindy Pitzer, and
Terri Pullins. - Tanunie starcher,
reporter_
The Rutland Road Runners met ,
May 11 at the Kim Birchfield residence with 11 members and two advisors
in attendance. Dates of judgings and
4-H camp was discussed by the club.
A drawing contest wa5 held for
recreation. Refreshments were served by Kim Birehfield. The next
· meeting wiU be May 18 at the
l\1Brgaret Edwards residence. Denise Turner, reporter.

p.m. at the Masonic Temple. A
covered dish dinner will be served to
members, officers and distinguished
guests au p.m. ,.,.. ·• ·- ·- •
JAYCEE-ETTES Monday at 7 p.m.
at home of Nancy Burns, South Third
Street, Middleport.
EASTERN Athletic Boosters Monday 8 p.m. at Eastern High SchooL
Everyone welcome to attend.
TUESDAY
SUTTON Township Trustees
Tuesday at 8 p.m. at municipal
building in Syracuse.
POMEROY Chamber of Commerce
Tuesday at noon at Meigs Inn.
POMEROY Chapter 186, O.E.S.,
7:45p.m. Tuesday at the Temple.
.
WEDNESDAY
CHESTER GARDEN CLUB
meeting Wednesday e\lening at horne
of Mrs. Buel Ridenour.
.

LONGHORN CHEESE •••••• 'I •••••••••L~~.'1

HAMS

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ATTENTION: BIG OR LITTLE FARMERS. WE BUY
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DOMINO PURE CANE

SUGARS $} 09
Limit One w-$10.00 purchase

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FROM HIGH FOOD PRICES -SHOP HERE!
QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED
SALE DATES JUNE 4 • 9, 1979
FOLGERS

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Buy One Bag at Regular Price and Get Second Bag FREE! .

CREAMY OR CRUNCHY

BATHROOM TISSUE

SKIPPY PEANUT BUTTER ..................;........ .~ ~~ $109

HOLLIE GREEN

1

MAC. &amp;
CHEESE

MAYOR
OF POMEROY

7 oz.

8gc

Pkg.

BOX

PASTE .... ---··: ............................ 3 6ca0~ 89$
'MEDIUM WIDE EX-WIDE or KLUSKI
.
INN MAID NOODLES ...............................~ 8p~;: 49~

Ow~~· . ,!.,$ ~ zt,."~. .;.·

16-oz.'
Pkg.

'

Proudly Presents
It's

KA~FT PARKAY

8-oz.
Pkga.

Borden

.•

~~~------~------~ ·

FRUIT DRINK...•.•••.••••••••.••••~A.~. 79~
VAUEY BELL '
'h GAL · 89~
UnERMILK. .· · .

B

Vl

.• .,..,.. l / 917t

!:?

~

Guu d "C...-.i•l

"

01

BRUSSEL SPROU TS

l

89c

Asst Ftavon

·•·••·····•···············•

l imo! Dn11 wu f

~~

.... ,.,"P'" P"' lotJtoltlr

lEU. CM11Cf(l!tf

.

Aov••

81u• &amp;lo!•l
00 10 05

I

VOS ! ORE S

POTPIES

2% MILK~ ....... ,...•.....••..•...!i!!-;. •1 69 .

,,~

Pkg.

BANQUET ."

!!ROARINE
•

12-Ct.

Can

VEGETABLES ................................... 2 :;::

Featuring the BEST in BLUEGRASS
JUNE 8, 9, 10, 1979

lomll 11n 11 \Oo ol l\ r ntJ)NW!

16 -oz.

CFRAOUSLlFLOWER . BROCCOli SPEARS
TV ACAES

]

u; •• Cll uf)!ln 1141 • l11on llt

Jug

ORANGE
JUICE

:.1.•

ICE CREAM CONES ~
49( ~-

FREEZER VALUE - FROSTY ACRES

.,_.._·DAIRY fALUEs·....,..._

81li ANNUAL BWEGRASS SHOW

.I::f IJ _I.~.
:'I

11 ~ r OR! s ·,• CAHOrNAI f OODs 1OR Es
l
KEEBLER HOLLOW TREE _:=!:I- •

FABRIC SOFTENER

·

Eixl!l Miles We.!/ of ParkNshw~. Wesl Virxiniu
on Ruuie555 · OneMileQ[fRoules 50und 7

WHITE

~.~D.V.Qc.

KRAFT DINNERS

REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE
FOR

'

JUICY RIPE
CANTALOPESeach

39e

CUCUMBERS5~'1°

FRIENDLIEST SERVICE IN TOWN!

'

)

WE DO CUSTOM .MEAT CUniNG
FOR ICE FRESH FRUIT OR VEGETABLE SALADS

VAUGHAN'S

NOMINATE

.

99

•

BAKER
FURNITURE

l-EWIS FAMil-Y, Saturday-Sunday, JIMMY MARTIN, Friclay•Saturday· GOINS BROTHERS All
Three Days; RAYMOND FAIRCHil-D, All ThrH Days; RAl-PH STANLEY, Sunday ; OSIORN.E
&amp;ROTHERS, Saturday-Sunday; BOYS FROM IND .• Friday-Saturday; CVOUNTRY GOTLEMEN
Saturday.- Sunday; MAC WI SEMAN, Satur&lt;Yy-Sunday, .
.
'
All ThrH Days, Adults: $15.00, Children under 12, $2.00. Single Day Gale Admission· Fri&lt;Yy Adult1
$5.00; Children under 12, $1.00 . Saturday, Adults $1,00, Children under 12 11.00 Sundiv Adul~ ~ 00
Children un~er 12, Sl.OO.
.
.
. . ~'
•
,
•• -· , .
A lot .ot art• and crafts, FrH camping lor the weekend. Plenty ol , _ fj~W:Itvallable No
alcohol allowed In stage aru . For aCICIItionallntormation pllone (6141 915-2310.
- · pets or ·

49

HALF •••••••• •••

DUTCH LOAF, HONEY LOAF,
. PEPPER LOAF AND BREAKFAST LOAF• ••••••••••
LB.

CARPO

'

TAVERN

SUPERIOR FRANKIES.... ~ •••••• !~!l!-••.89e

Kenneth D. Johnsen, Wllma F.
Johnsen, Velma L. Tufto, Don V. Tufto, to Orville W. Marks, Winifred
Marks, 8.50383 acres, Scipio.
.
Sandra Hill to Dennie Hill, 4.75
Dallas Blevins, ' Josephine Blevins
acres, Sutton.
Virgil RoWih, exec., Gerald 0. to Clifford J . Baclmer, Carolyn v.
Violet, dec. to Everett 1.._ Schultz, Bachner, Lot, Middleport.
Do
it
with
quality
PbDllp W. Kelly, Lois G. Kelly to
Beulah B. Schultz, .51 acre, Orange,
Armstrong carpet expert
John Henry Selp, dec., to Betty J. Michael W. Kelly, one-third acre,
installationSyracuse.
Seip, cert. of trans., Letart.
carrie E. Smith to Irene La Mont,
Velma V. NeweU, dec. to Claire
Newell, Hobart Newell, cert. d. Cert. for trans., Middleport. ·
Ruth M. Smith, Affidavit,
trans., Orange.
Eugene E. Underwood, Ruth M. Un- . Saliabury.
Robert D. Manley, Nancy Manley
derwood to Rot(er J. Fortney, Rita A.
Middleport, 0.
to Ruth M. Smith, Lot 24, Riverview .
Fortney, I acre, Orange.
Acres,
Middleport.
'-~-;.;;.;;;.;.;;:;;;;..:.;.::;;.,.._..J
Roy Edward Showalter to Richard
Fetty, Glenna Fetty, parcels,
Langsville and Rutland.
Clifton H. Williams, dec. to Grace
Williams, Clifton H. WI11lamS, jr.,
Vera May WilliaDlll Tannehill,
Thomas H. Williams, John Percy
Williams, Ava-Zc] Sisson, cert. trans.
Gladys t. BoliWorth, dec. to Elmont
L. Bosworth, cert. of tran8.;Salem.
Arina Quivey to Debra Mullins,
Jo~eph Junior Quivey, parcels·,
Scipio.
.
.'
Damon R. Ferrell, U!1da Lee
Ferrell to Damon R. Ferriilr,Uooa ·
Lee Ferrell, lots, Syracuse: , .
Mollie B. Johnson, affidavit,
Salisbury.
Tracy H. Whaley, Grace Whaley to
Eugene F . Eskew, Marguerite
PRIMARY ELECTION JUNE 5
Eskew, George Pierce, Sally Pierce,
right of way agreement, Pomeroy.

'

39

en

,..&lt;§l

~~

�8 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleilort-Pom.,-oy, 0 ., Monday . June 4, 1979
)

Your Best Buys Are Found in the Sentinel Classifieds
I

'

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
RE PAl R OF ROOF
FOR
MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
IN
MEIGS LOCAL
SCHOOL DISTRICT

WANT AD
CHARGES

Seated proposal s w i ll be
received by the Board of
Educat ion of th e Mei g5
local School Dis tr ic t ot
Middleport , Ohio at th e
Treasurer 's Office uf"lil
6:00 f&gt; ,M . on June 1a ·, 19 79
and at thett t ime opened
and re~d by th e Treasurer
imm~diatetv
thereaft er ,
tabulated , and a report
thereof
made by
th e

Treasurer to sa id Board at
its next meet ing .
Descript ion
of

provement

loca t ed

im.

at

Meigs
High
Schoo l ,
Pomeroy ,
Ohio .
The
Roofin~

Contractor shall
bid as a Prim e Cont ra ctor .
This includes a l l labor .
materials , equipment , and
serv i ces
r eq uired
to

comp l ete
th is
Sec t i on
which
i nc l udes
new
reclacement ol roof on the
Meigs
H i gh
School .
B.idders will be bidding on •
the in-stallat ion of the
Troca l or Ca rlisl e Roofing
sys t ems
Deta i led
specj t ications
and instructions to bidders
may be obta ined at t he
Office ot th e Treasur er ,
Middlepor t , Ot1i o .
A ce rt i f ied chec k payable
to th e Tr eas urer ot th e'
above board of education
or a satis f actory bid bond
executed by th e bidder and
the su r ety company , in an
_,mount equa l to five
percent ot the bid shal l be
submittect wi th each bid .
Said board of educa tio n
re serves the right to wai\le
informal i t.ies , to accept or
r eject any and all , or pa rts
of any ~nd a ll b ids .
No bids may be wi t h ·
drawn t or at lea st thirt .y
(30 )
days
after
th e
schedu led c l osing time for
r eceip t s of bids .
Board of Educat ion
o t Me igs Loca 1
School D istrict
Jane Wagner .
Treasurer
Souttl Thi rd Avenue
Middl e~ort. Ohio 4576Q
(5) 29 (61 4. 11. 3t c
COUNTY : MEIGS

PUBLIC

N~TICE

The following documents
were received or prepared
by
The
Ohio · En v iron menta I Prptection
Agency during the previous
week". . The effective date of
ea c h final action is stated .
The issuance date of each
propo sed action is stated .
Anyone aggrie\led or ad:
ve rsely affected by a final
action to issue , deny ,
modi fy, revoke , or renew a
perm it.
li ce nse ,
or
variance ; or to appro\le or
to d isappro\le plans and
specifications, may f ile an
appeal Vflth The Env iron mental Board of Review .
Suite 305 , 395 E . Broad St .,
Columbus . Ohio .&lt;~3:216,
within t hirtv (301 days of
the effe ctive date, pursuant
to Ohio Revised Code
Section 3745 .07 , unless such
final action wa s preceded
by the same or· sub ·
stantially
the
same
proposed action . In ad dit ion, pursuar1t to Section
3745 .04 ot The Revised
Code, not ice of the f iling of
the appeal shall be filed
w i th the Director of the
Ohio
Environmental
Protection Agency, 361 E .
Broad Street . Columbus.
Ohio 43:216. within three ( 3)
days after the appeal is
filed with The Environ .
mental Board of Review .
All such final ac tions are so
identified . Such Persons
mav
request _ an
ad .
iudication hearing before
The Oh i o EPA on a
propose«:~ action to issue ,
deny , modify, revoke . or
renew a permit , l icense, or
variance ; or to approve \or
disapprove plans
ahd
specifications, within
thirty (30) days of the
issuance date . ORC 3745.07
does not provide tor ad ·
judication hear i ng requests
or appea Is from orders ,
verified complaints, or
enforcement
compliance
schedule letters , within 30
days of publ ica tion in a
newspaper in the affec te d
county, any person may
a lso : (1 ) submit written
comments
relating
to
actions , proposed actions ,
verified complaints. en .
forcement
compl iance
schedule
letters
or
pre I i mina rv staff deter .
minations or permits to
install ; (2) request a publi c
meeting
regarding
proposed actions or on
preliminary staff deter minations on permi-ts to
install ; and -or (3) request
notice of further acfions or
pro cee ctlnos . All requests
for adjud icat ion hearings
and publi c meetings , and
other
communicat i ons
concerning
publ i c
meetings ,
ad j udi ca t ion
hearings , ve r i fied com .
pla ints , anct regulations ,
should be addr.essed to The
Legal Re c ords Section,
Ohio EPA , P . 0 Box 10.49 ,
Columbus, Ohio 43216 .
(614)
466 -6037 . Unless
otherwise statect in pa n,ticular no t ices , all othe f.
co mmun ication s including
c omments on proposed
actions should be ad .
dressed either to ·Th e
D i vision of Auth ori zation
and Compliance (Air) or
Perm it · and
Approval
Sect i on
(Water ),
whichever Is appropr ia1e,
. at The OhiO EPA , P . 0 . BOK
1049, Columbus, Ohio 43216 .
Issuance of modif ication
to NPDE S perntit COO ·
ditions
Ohio Power co .• Racine
Hydroelectr ic Plant
51. R I. 338
· Racine , OH, Effective

dale OS-21 ·19

Receiving wat er s : Ohio
River
Permit No . 8019 -BD

(6l

4,

lie

15 Words or Under
Cub
Cha.rg~-.,.
ldoy
2dalys
JdoyJ
!days

1.00

1.2$

1.50
I.IMJ

I ,90
2.2$
3.7$

•3.00

Each word over the mlnlmum
15 wordl L! 4 cent! per word per
daly. Ads rw111~ other than con·
aecutive days wtU be charsed at
tht 1 day ratt.

In memory. Card of Thanks
and Obituary : 6 eenta per word,
13.00 minimum. Cuh in ad·
vanee,
Mobile Homt! sales 11nd Yard
sales are accepted only with
cash with order. 2:5 cent charge
for ads carrying Box Nwnber In
Care of The Sentinel.
'0\t Publisher reservf!:.'l the
to edit or reject any ad.1
deemed objectional. The
Publisher wiU not be rt!pt'lf\Sible
fiJI' more than one Incorrect In·
sertion.
Phone 99l·2156
right

NOTICE

WANT-AD

IA.PEERTISING
DEADLINES
Monday
Noon on Saturday

Tuesday
lhru f'lida y

4P.M.
the day before publication
Sunday

4P,M.
Friday afternoon

In Memory
IN MEMORY of our deor loving
husband, Rev . Floyd Wlae,
wl1o passed away II years
ago May 31 . He is gone but not
forgotten.
Sodly missed by wife Gornet.
children and grandchildren .

Services Offered

LOST: MALE Irish Setter . Approx . 2 yrs . old. Area of
BoshO n on Ba shon Rd .
Children ' s pet. Reword .

WATER AND misc . hauling.
Coli. 992· 5858.

949·2466.

mother, Claro S. Collin1, who
passed away 9 years ago June

9'12·5207 .
LOST: NURSING schoo l pin
around Craw's Restaurant or
Vaughan's Cardinal. Contact
Ginny Hubbard at Dr. Pick en's
oHice or call ~2- 3074 .

LEARN GOLD correctly this
summer. Beginners and advanced .
John
Teaford .

IMMEDIATE

OPENING.

Laborato ry Technician. 3-11
shifr. Experienced MLT (ASCP)
or equiva lent. Excellent Salary
and fringe benefits. Shih dif·
ferenta il. Contact: Personnel
Off ic e .
Pleasant
Volley
H9spi tol , Volley Drive, Point
Pleasant , WV . 25550. Phone

HAVE YOU BEEN out of school
for 90 days or more? Are you ·
between the ages of 16 and
19?' ARe ou unemployed? If
you con answer yes to theae
questions, lOU may be eligible
fOr the Ga'llio·MeigS' C.A .A .
YCCIP forestry · techn ician
train ing program.
C.A.A has open ings ~or eligi ble youth in this natural
resource management skill
training program . Appli catons
and further information are
available from the Gallipolis
or Pomeroy OBES o(fices .
C.A.A . is an Equal Employ·
ment Opportunity employer.

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

Pets for sale
'STAR Kennels , boor·

ding and grooming, all
breeds . Cheshire. 367-0292.
HOOF HOLLOW, English and
Waste r. n .
Saddles
and
harness. Horses and ponies.
Ruth RHvas . 6U-698·3290.
Bording &amp; Riding Lessons and
Horse Care products.

Auto Sales
1973 INTERNATIONAL SCOUT
21 ,000 milea, fully equip.,.d,
air, wench , etc., excellent
condition . 992·2121.

1974 GMC JIMMY , P.B., P.S,,
A. .C., 2-whee l drive. $t725.

Call '192· 3580,
1976 CHEVY

4x4

Cullom

Oelu111e
heavy
VJ
ton .
Gunrack , FM converter,
38,000 miles. Take over

paymenls, Call304·882·21!86.
1973 CHEVELLE 350 oulomallc,
P.S. , P. B., AM· FM B· lrack,
$1200 or besl oiler . 949-235-4 ,
1973 OLDS CUTLASS Supreme.
Good condition . 985-33.41 .

GiveAway

mole dog, good with children.
Block and white female puppy . Female miniature collie 1
to 11/J yean old. 3 long haired
lcittens. Humane Society .

'192·7853 .
THREE KITIENS, 6 weeks old. I
mole,

2 female . All

MEIGSCOUNTY , OHO

ESTATE OF ROSA M,
SEARLS, DECEASED
Case No. 22702

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

On May 29, 1979, in the
County Probat e
Court , Case No . 22 .702 ,
Paul Sea rles , Rout e 1,
Cheshire, Ohio 45620 wa s
appo inted Executor of tf'1e
estate of Rosa M . Sea rls .
dece as ed, la te of 689 Beech
St ., Midd leport , Ohio 45760 .
M ~igs

Robert E . Bu ck
Probate Ju dg e·
Clerk
(6) 4, 11. 18 . 3t c

Mllbile Hilmes Sale's
1965 General, 60x12, 2 bdr.

1970Skyline, 12x65, 2br.
1970Sylva, 60xl2, 2 bdr,
1970 Caslle, 60x12 , 2 bdr ,
1973Nobility, 12x60, 2br.
1973 Ridgewood, 70xl4, 3 bdr.

YARD SALE . 2.f Railroad St., .
Middleport . Sunday and Monday from 9-5. Household items
and misc.

For Sale

B&amp;S MOBILE HOME SALES
PT, PlESANT. WV ,

1977 FORD CHATEAU E150

675-~42•
1~x65

GOLDEN

Empress .

949·2409.
1970 CHAMPION 12x60. 2
bedroom .
Appliances ,
building. Situated on nice·
rented lot. Phone 992-7235
after 5 p. m.
~

van. Auto., P.S., P.B. , A .C. , 4
captains chairs , dual gas
fanlu , cruise control , AM-FM
stereo. 32,000 miles. Excellent
condition. $5800 . Phone
992-7291 after4:30.

1977 KAL, EXCELLENT condition ,

1600 miles. No rust .
$950. 992·3453 ar 9'12-2752.

1977 KAWASAKI KZ 1000. Ex·

1976 2· Door Midas motor
home, Doge 360 chassis ,
power steering , brakes .
automatic. many extras. Selfcontained. Actual miles 5.520.
like new. 637 Grant St .. Mid-

cellent condition . $1700 firm .
Inquire at 402 W. Main ,
Pomeroy after S,p.m .

dleporl , OH. Phone m-3131 .

197B '/, SUZUKI PIRT bike 250

10x52 and. 10x60. Fer more information call 742-2308 between 6 and 8 p. m. or

949· 2387 ,

742·2138 .
1975 SCHULT

12x60

2

bedroom, stove, refrigerator,
gas furnonce , porch and
underpinning . Must sell.

For Rent
COUNTRY MOillE Home Park ,
Route 33, north of Pomeroy.
large lots. Call 992-7479.
3 AND .f RM furnished and un . furnished
opts.
Phone

m -5434.
FURNISHED APT. sullabla for 3
or 4 construction workers .
Aflar 5pm call 9'12·5434 ,
m -3129, or'l92-5914 ,
TWO BEDROOM furnished apt.
992· 3129,
992-5434 ,
or
9'12•5914 ,
TWO BEDROOM t roller. Adults

only. '192·3324 ,

WIND POWER 15 KW PTO elec·
tric generator. 675-2245,
RM . like new. Cecil Brinager.
1'977 GLASTRON 15ft. tri·hau l
boot and tilt troil8r , 55 h.p.
Evinrude motor. comletely
equippll!ld. 949·2717 or can be
seen at the RAcine Garagt.

RING· NECKED pheasonl birds,
chicks,
eggs .
Wilmette
Leifheit ,
Rock
Springs.
Pomeroy. Phonf' 992-3446.

FOR SALE -

1977 Wheel

Horse 16 l'l.p. garden tractor
with plow, disc, 32 in. mower ,
tilt cart, snow blade. Appro)( .
20 hours use. $2500 firm .

742-3074.
1'974 YAMAHA 250 motorcycle. 19 cu. h . Frigidaire Frost
Free refrigerator.-freezer .
Phone 742·2932. Carl Morris,

Rulland, OH.
1959 FORD pickup, Runs good.
Body

o

little

rough .

Call

304-773·5707,
RUTLAND HARDWARE 2 doors
down

from

Post

Office .

742-2755, PAINT SALE , Marlin

THREE ROOMS and bath furnisl'led opt. $150 per month.
No children , no pets. Deposit
required . 949·2253.

TWO BEDROOM home. Com-

wanted to Buy

bring vou
extra cash
for
shopping sprees

' YARD SALE . Monday, June 4 Tues ., June 5. laurel Cliff Rd.
Jack Stanley residence .

CHIP WOOD . Pole1 max.
diameter 10" on largest end.

Senour, Divition ol Sherman
and Williamt. Pro-line interior
and exterior flat white , $5.99
gel .: 2 gal . can exterior flat
white regular $22.95. tale
priced $13 .95. Gould pumps
both deep and shallow well ,
sole priced.
MINOLTA XE-7 camera, like
new. Cal l 992-2061 .

BUSINESS
FOR SALE
Same location for
lOyears.

· WESTERN BOOTS from Acme
and Tony lama for work or
dress. We hove a Iorge selec·
lion of boots on hand for men
ond
ladies at Mountain
Leather and GEneral Store,
IQ.t- 106 W. Union, Athens .

10-5:30 .

Real Estate for Sale
-'

608 E . l,.lolllg.l.l.;l
MAIN
PnMFROY , O .
NEWER BULDING
~x60 central heat,large
lot 152x1~ on good
highway and close to
mines. $55,000.
RUTLAND - Aboyt 'I:J
acre, power, gas and
water, Ideal for home or
trailers . $3,000. (Just

Llsledl
LIKE NEW '- 2 story
brick ·.a. frame, 3
bedrooms, formal din ·
lng, L. R . has stone
fireplace,

room,

large

rec.

carpeted

sun

deck . $37.500.
2 LEVEL LOTS - Close

to school, 3 beerooms,

porches,
carpeting,
paneling, many other
features. $26,800,
EXCELLENT -2 story
frame home, 20 to 25
acres of ground, free

gas,

house

has

S

• bedrooms, forma l din·

ilig, wood burner, own
water system . $30,500,
RUTLAND - 2 story

frame, renovated, Iaroe
lot, carport, storage,

BUYING JUNK cars and
. bodies. Also scrap iron and
metals. Rider's salvage, SR
124 , Pomeroy. 992·5468 .
BUYING: Sera~;~ iron and clea.n
cast iron. Batteries, copper.
brass, aluminum. radiators .
leod, insulated copper. etc.
Meigs Metals, Rt . 7 and 33.
Pomeroy.

Jack W. Carsey
Mgr.
P.llone 992·2181
TRUCKS. 2 ton .1973 or1d 1 '/,

lon 1970, Bolh wilh 12 , fl.
boxes .

Phone

992·6173,

992·6206

or

TRAILER SALES

S"G ::tteam Carpet Cleaning .
Free estimate. Contact Gene
Smith or Mike Grate ot
Rutland
Furr1iture
co .
742.2211. After 5 p. m.
992-6809 or n2.2i\14

Real Estate fCII' Sale
3YJ acres in Pomeroy. SEclud·

ed wooded area an lop of hill.
Overlooks ri ver . Wot.r, olec·
tric available. 991-3886.

Pomeroy, Ohio

NEW LISTING: 65 Acre

room

6

house,

barn, 2400 bales 01 hay
cut Off Of II last year.
Located

outside
of
Racine, Ohio near Mor·
ning Star ·church, Sut-

ton Twp, Priced at
$65,000,
NEW LISTING : 84 Acre

farm, 5 room
basement,

house,

located on

YeiiQW Bysh Road out·
sie of Reine, Ohio, Sut -

Twp,

Priced

at

We have several nice

homes ln the Rutland
VIcinity and a grocery
store, Call us for more
info,
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc,
Phone 742·2003
Hilton Wolle, Assoc, ·
Phone 949·2519
George S, HobsteHar Jr,
· Brokor 992·5739
OUR
PROPERTIES
HAVE BEEN SELL·
lNG. WE NEED MORE
LISTINGS OF ALL
KIND.
STORY AND 1/t frame house
with 7 rooms and bath. Com·
pletelv remodeled . Wall ·to
wall carpeting, forced oir fur·
noce, also wood burning
stove. 1 Outbuilding, nice
garden spot. On 11Jt acre lot'
close to Meigs M i nes .

742.mB .

·

'

INSURANCE

Housmg
Headquar :~rs

been cancelled? loat your
operators
license?
Phone •

~~!~.~Ji
I ~.

serving Ohio Volley region .
Six days a ~eek , 2~ hours service. Emergency calls . Call
882·2952 9r 882·3454,

216 E. Second Street

I

'

PLAYGROUND
Large 9 room home with

~~~hs?"~~!~~· ki~ch~~~

garage and near w

2

HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex·
systems,
Rt. 143.

Phone 1 (61•) 698-7331 or
H2-2593.
IN STOCK for immediate
delivery: various si:~es of pool
k i ts . Do-lt· yourself or let us
ln1tall for you . D. Bumgardner
Soles , Inc. 992·5724 .

acres.

REAL BUY -

Here's

a

9 room home built for a

ment,

2

car

garage,

large level lot and all cl·
ly utllllles.
HALF WAY - to Athens
is this renovated 2
bedroom one floor plan

near store.

2 BEDRbOMS -

City

water, natural gas and
one
acre for
only

s12. ()()()'

CODNER'S CAMPERS on Rain·
bow Ridge wllh lop of lhe
line-Barth-Swiss Colony Jayco - Motor H.o mes to Toppers, accessories and friendly ·
service. For directions call

Phono6'18· 32'10.
LEO MORRIS Trucking. Will do
lime and fertilizer hauling and
spreading. Also limestone and
gravel hauling. 742·2455,

SALES

AND ' SERVICE

Howard Rotavators
chisel plows. leo

on

and V
Morris .

742-2455.
1.93 ACRES
4
bedroom remodeled · NEIGLER Construction for
home with 2 full baths, , building houses and repair
fyel oil fYrnace, T . P , lap 1 · work . Call Guy ' Neigler.
and 2 trailer spaces tot 949-2508 . .
rent.
ADO ONS and remodelir'lg ,
BARGAIN - Can be
gutter work. down spouts,

made into a residence or

a small buslness. Bath,
natyral gas and Ohio
Power. Will talk on ·t his .
one.

• Q J 52
• QJ

..•,

WEST
+XQ10
• 76 2
• 8·7 3

'

.'.'

some concrete work. walks
and
driveways · (free
e1timate). V.&lt;;. Young, Ill ,
Racine, OH. 949- 27~8.

soum
+A 4

•A
+ A K 10 9
+KI0761l

UTI'LE ORPHAN ANNIE

.••.

Vulnerable: ' East-West
Dealer: South

'·

BUT NOT AS POOR

"'

..,,'

1-'-----,

,.
'

AS SHE. WAS RIGHT

lifTER UHCLE GEORGE
LOST Hl9 FACTORY·"

1\UNliE. IVY TOLD
MAMA lliAT UNCLE
GEORGE HAS
LITTLE SHOP
I(OW ·,

REAL ESTATE Loons. Purchase
and refinance. 30 yeor terms .
VA . No money down (eligible
veterans) . FHA · AI low as 3
per .cent down {non-veterant).
Ireland Mortgage Co., 77 E.

..

trumps ending in dummy ,
discard his losing s pade on
the king of hearts and lead

.....
c .::

dummy's queen of clubs."
~

Alan: " East takes his ace
and forces South to ruff a
spade with his last trump.
Now South leads his king of
clubs and winds up down two
•because clubs break 4· 1 and

d-1!~&gt;

i

•••

$'715

,-~,yd,

24 Rolis of Car.,et In
Stock &amp; lOG's of Samplu
to Clloose Frem .
BUY NOW &amp; SAVE

TWO STORY 3 bedroom house.
3 lots. Now's your chance if
Y9U need . a house. $12,000.
Owner
will i ng tO
talk .

992·2062 or 742·2328, .

pre ference is a raise to three
notrump. We want to be in
game and would rather try
for nine tricks than for 10.

.,'•
'

You mean

rve qot to make

moonliqhti

some
extra

Moonshinin'! Waxin'
cars at niqht~ Got
a fr'en' what

doe.? it!

mooel,l,

13
14
15

.

''·'
,,'
'

51$&amp;:~tARTI N&lt;7 TO

lAAKE ~IN6&amp; H(ff
, FOR U&amp;ALREADY!

·'

measure

DOWN

eight and
Diego Rivera
medicine
creations
%Help
Zhlvago's
3 1948-49
love
Cold
Military .
War
commission
headline
"Diamond"
4 Eventful
girl
period

Yeatenllly's Allltl'er
t IIi the grand %5 "Why Was
I -? "
manner
27Mezzo12 Avows

~Writer,

11 ThirBt
quencher
17 Moslem

WINNIE

U Hebrew

l Cannon,

brick

potentate
18 Mule
20 Squeal
21 At no time,
in poetry

Eric I Gennan .
engraver
7 Mining
find
8 Luscious
deasert

soprano,

11Mimics
19 CIOIM!Iy

Jermie -

confined
%2 Girl's name
%3 Uke some
roofs

:u Holiday

zz Go~l8ndb'1!Tnr

Z9 Hag
30 ture
31 Presbyter

3t Unresolved

score
37 Actor Germ

affairs

Z3 Reaches
25Marina
itelllll
Z8 Cafe au 21 Actor Rip

%8 Boston's

RUllMD
FURNilURE

Bobby

Z9 Small boat
32

742-1211

Be chwmml
with

33 Go on
HE OUGHT TO KNOW

POLKY· DOTS DON'T GO
WIF CHECKS

FLAT LANDER
SHORE 15
A TACKY

••II

'

&lt;

.,

PEANuTs

...

•

:&gt;::

"'

term

35 Newspaper 1=-+--iemployee

DAILY

1

See tile Grate Family at

the stwnp
34 Electrical

37 Top role
38 Explain
39Set at 40 Bethlehem
product

DRESSER

WOODSTOCK WILL MAKE
A GOOD FARMER

~E ALWA'i5 WAKES

UP EARLY IN
THE MORNING

WHICH ~EMINDS ME
OF HOW GLAD I'LL
BE WI1EN HE 6ET5
f.ll5 OWN BARN .. ,

CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work
AXYDLBAAXR
Is J,ONG FI!LLOW

It:

One letter simply slands for a nother. In this sample A Ia
used for th e three L's, X l or lhe Lwo O's, e tc. Single letters,
aposlrophes , t he le ngth and formati on or the wo rdo are all
hints. Each day tM ~ode le tt ers ,are d1lferent.
CRYPTOQUOTES
PS

UHDHAB

PS

GHXB

H

XBTXBP

H

7: JD-Famlly Affair 10; Lilias Yoga
&amp; You 33; &amp;:DO-Leave It to
Beaver 17; Capt . Kangaroo B, IO;
Sesame St. 33 .
B:JO-.Romper Room 17: 9:DO-Bol'&gt;
Braun 3; Ph il DonahtJO 13,15;
Emergency One 6; Porky Pig &amp;
Friends 8; love of Life 10; Lucy
Show 17; Mister Rogers 33 .
9:30-Sanford &amp; Son B; Hogan's
Heroes 10; Green Acres 17.
10:00-Card Sharks 3.15; Edge of
Nlghl 6 ; All In The Fam ily B,IO;
Dating Game 13; Movie "Payla"
17.
10: 3D-AII Slar Secrets 3,15: $20,000
Pyramid 13 ; Andy Griffith 6;
Whew 8,10; Bit With Knit 33.
10:5$-C BS News 8; Hoyse Call 10;
11 :00-H lgh
Railers
3,15;
Laverne 8. Shirley 6,13 ; Price Is ·
Right 8, 10.
11 :3D-Wneel of ForiYne 3 .1~ ;
Family Feud 6, 13; Sesame &gt;1.
33; 11 : 55-News 17.
12 :oo-Newscenter
Password lS;

3; News 6, 10;
You'n o &amp; U\e

33.

10 Maintain
11

Joel!

.'

ACROSS
1 Artleas one
5 Hacienda

TUESDAY, JUNE 5, lf79
5 :25--World at large 17; 5:45Farm Report 13; 5:5G-PTL CJyb
13 : 5: 55-Summer ' Semester 10.
6 :oo-70Q Club 6,8: PTL Clyb IS;
6: lD-News 17 ; 6 : 25-Concerns 8.
Comments 10; 6 :3D-Dragnet 17.
6 :45--Mornlng Report 3; 6 :50--Good
Morning West VIrginia 13 ; 6:55Chuck Wnlte Reports 10; News
13.
7 :oo-Today 3,15; Good Morning
America 6, 13; TYesday Morning
8; Schoolles 10; Three SToogesLitHe Rascals 17; 7: 15-Wealher
33.

Restless 8; Midday Magatlne13;
Love American Style 17 ,
12 :3D-Ryan ' s Hope 6, ll; Search for
Tomorrow a,10 ; Not for Women
Only 15; Movie "BUCHANAN
Rides Aloen" 17; Elec. Co.
1 :oo-Days of Our Lives 3,15; All My
Children 6.13 ; News 8; Young &amp;
lhe Restless 10; 1 :3D-As The
World Turns 8, 10.

by THOMAS JOSEPH

call 742-2211
TALKT()
Wendell or Herb Grate ·
or Gone Sm lth

WE OFI'ER YOU, .
1. Twa
floors of all new
fumltur • .
2. Nice Nlectlans of uSICI fur·
,nlture. ,
3. A I•" building full of
fleaulilul car1110t:

notrump . A . Maine reader
asks what rebid w e recommend.
This is a to ugh one. Our

~

GASvLINE AlJ.EY

A GOOD SELECTION
OF END ·&amp; · ROLL
BALANCES,

All CARPET
r«MON
SAl£

opening bid. He rebids one

the suit doesn' t run."

&amp; UTTLE

&amp;
SAVE ALDT

6-4-B

You respond one spade to
your partner 's diamond

Oswald : " The simple play
with today 's hand is for
South to cash his ace of
hearts, play three rounds of

ALLEYOOP

.....
DRIVE

'

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

•

service, all makes, 992·2284.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
AuthoriJ:ed Singer Soles and
Service. We shar~n Scissors. ·

SAVE ON
CARPniNG

You hold :

t KQJIII
• 4

Slolo, Athens , 614·592·3051 ,
MODERN TH~EE bedr60m
house ,
full
basement ,
f-ireplace, full)' carpeted, centro! oi r , enclosed sun porch,
located on 6 'h ocret on CR 28,
appioK. 3 miles from Racine.. If
interested contact larry Wolfe
949-2836 w"kends ond after
5evenlngs.

AsklbclxDCPII

• 10 8 52

RUT\MD fURNilURE .

"

Pass

1

SHPAT...

Headquart~rs

Pass

• Pass
Pass

•:

some

Housing

1¥
4t

¥A 2

THAT THAR

trailer lots,
A REALTOR MAY BE
THE BEST MAN YOU
EVER NIRED, DIAL A·
D· E ·A·L.

Pass
Pass
Pass

South
1+
2+
6+

~·

Some wooded,

cleared,

North East

Oswald : "Bad luc k ! All
that South needed was a 3·2
club break . Expert South
would have give n himsel f a
slight extra chance. He
would play jus t two rounds
of trumps before discarding
his spade and attacking
clubs . Then h e could afford
to let dummy 's jack of clubs
hold the second club t rick ,
come to his hand with that
third round of trumps and
make the s lam."
Alan : " This play would
only succeed if the man with
the singleton club held two
trumps, but it risked nolh·
ing. If clubJ broke 3·2 no one
would ruff the second round ·
of clubs and the extra
chan ce would pay off."

Opening lead : +K

BUILDING LOTS- All

tions.

West

"'·
'·•,
, ._
...,

sizes, prices and loca ·

some

EAST
+J7153!
• Q 10 8 4
• 64
+A

+9853

_.••

ElWOOP BOWERS REPAIR -

FROM

II+A

• 96
•KJ95 3

''•
',.

Motols, Inc.

'192·2143.
E·C ELECTRICAl Controclor

coveting, . septic
dozer, backhoe .

NORm

.;'

.

SEWING MACHINE Repairs,

O'Hara " 8; Ironside 13; 1 :~
Tomorrow 3; News 15.

Cautious play helps odds

IJOIL.A!

. ~.

PUlliNS EXCAVATING. Com!

VERY GENTLE Quartet Horse .
Western parade toddle.

farm,

:

tM

backhoe and ditche"r, Charles
R. Hatfield. Black Hoe Service,
Rutland , Ohio . Pone 742-2008.
plete Service. Phone 992-2478.

192-lllS

apT.'·

'

Sweepers, toost-rt, irons. all
small appliancet. lawn ma.r,
neKt to State Highway Gara~
on Route7 , 985 -~25.

AU TOMOBILE

(Answeralomom&gt;W)
COOKIE BEDECK

Jumble look No. 13, cont•lnlng 110 puulea,la IYIIIIble for 11 .75 postp•ld
from Jumble, Cloth! I new
BoK 3-C, Norwood, N.J . 07&amp;48.1ncludeyour
name, 1ddrn1, lip code •n m•k• chKk• p•y•blt to Ntwlpaperboolls.

1 ,

~-23-l mo.

EXCAVATING , dozer, lo0der ,
Ph. 992·2174
and backhoe work : dum~
truck• and lo-boy1 for hire,
will haul fill dirt, top soil , BRADFORD, AuctlonHr, Comlimestone and gravel. Call Bob plete Service. Phone 949-2487
or Roger Jeffert, day phone or 9,.9-2000. Racine, Ohio,
992·7089,
nigh I
phone Critt Bradford.

'192·3525 or 9'12·5232,
EXCAVATING,
dour ,

BOOTH

9:01}-The Rebels 3; Music City
News Counlry Awards 8; Movie
" Jeremy" l5; Prime of Miss
Jean Brodie 20,33; Mash 10;
9:30-ln The Know 10.
10 :\)()-()rlglnals : Women .In Art 33;
Loo Grant 10: Ascent of Man 17;
News 20 .
10 : 30- 0rlglnals :
Writers
In
America 33; Like II Is 20,
11 : DO- News 3,6,8, 10,13, lS; D ick
Cavell 20; New Soypy Sales 17;
. Lowell Thomas Remembers 33.
11 :3D-Jonnny Carson 3,15; Pollee
Story 6, 13 ; Rockford Flies 8;
ABC News 33: Mov ie "Conquest
of Space" .17.
12 :4D-Movle " The People Against
1: 15--Mav le "The Atomic Clly" 17:
UD-News 13; 3: 05-News 17:
3:25--0pen Up 17.

592·3051

992·5547
4·25·1 mo,· Pd.

rI I I r I I I 1

al5o - CHECKBOOKS

•

smith Nea·

carpeting, large garden
space and garage .
2 LOTS - One setup for
a trailer and 4 bedroom
home with 2 baths. n1s
Is a good buy, NatYraf
gas neat, city water

GeorgeS, HobsleHer Jr.
Reol Estate Broker
P,O. Box 21
New Lima R..d
Rutland, Ohio 45775
PHONE 742-2003

...
......

CONTRAClOR

SUPER
GOOSE
STOC:tc
TAAILEA NOW AVAILABLE .

Now arrange the clrcted larters to
form the surprise answer, as sug·
gaOled by lhe above cartooo .

Answer: What auditors who check books often check

~.

Rl, 3

IHE C.ROWD.

A

Prlntanswerhere:
Salurday'•l Jumbles : NOOSE

Bulldozer

614·843·3011.

HOBSIEIIER
. REALTY

..

'

MORTGAGE
00.
77 E. State, Athens

From

FOR ENTERTAININ6

~

Radlatc»r,......_
Servlc•

home. Bath, T.P . water,

Call or see
Hilton Wolfe, Associate
Phone 949·2519,

phonograph
records . Call
992-6370 or Coritact Martin
Furniture.

BLOCK &amp; BRICK
WORK, GENERAL

ONE WHO HOL.C!5 HIS
OPP'ONI!N'l' R'ESPONSISLE

IWALCOLI ()

.....

EXPERIENCED.

BY OWNER: house on 4th St.
For information call992-2766.

REDUCE SAFE and fast with
Gobest Tablets and E-Vop
''water pills''. Nelson Drug.

WANT TO buy: old 45 and 78

...
,,

DEAR LITTLe THIN6'S
QUITE CLEVER A50UT MANII'ULATING POOit LATC.HES .. SO
l'I.L TAKE NO CHANCES
AND LOCI&lt;. HE'Ii! II.J ~
-THE

Real £state Lon
·Purchase
and
· · Refinance
30 Year Terms
A-No money down
(eligible veterans)
'
FHA-AS low as 3"'
down (non:veterlns)

N. L Coilstructioo

MONTGOMERY

famlly . 2 baths, lull bae ·

per ton. Delivered to Ohio
Pollet Co. , Rt . 2, Pomerov.

ROSE BUSHES
and
SHRUBS All
SALE PRICED .

Chaster, 0,
5-6·1 mo. pd.

Box3

'

HOW ~OtJ i3 WILL v QH, 5 EVEirAL
YOUFt TIGE;Ft CUll
HOU~o;,, SHIO
&amp;TAY TlrANQUILIZEP.
MAY EVEN
8ELOVEP POP T
TAI&lt;E A DAY
.TO SLEEP IT
OFF! H0\11 ·

•.'jj' '
",;,.

IRELAND

very nice aljYsiSlB,SOO,
WHEN YOU HAVE TO
MAKE A FAST SALE
CALL
CLELAND
REALTY.
Realtors
Henry E . Cleland Sr.
Henry E . Cleland Jr.
'192·2259
992·6191

$.10,000,00.

OLD COINS. pocket watches,
class rings . wedding bands.
diamonds . Gold or silver. Coli
Aoer Wamsley , 742·2331.

Phone 992-6323
Free Estimates
HO·l ma..-pd.

614-Nf-42U Evenings

13 culbs , new 9-0 golf shoes.

Still A
Good Selection
Of

Jack's septic
Tank Service

2 Miles E•stof Wl lkes~llle

ton

brass beds, iroM beds, deaks,
etc., comple!e households .
Write M .D. Miller. Rt. 4, '
Pomeroy or call m .n61J.

.eNEWHOMES
1 ROOM ADDI.T IONS
eRODFING
1 VINYL SIDING
eGUTTER &amp; SOFFIT

IRUGEDD'
(J I ()

,j

.

F1&gt;r fuflher lnlarm•llon
a~ll Jo Ann Newsame,
"4·992-331%,
6·3·1 rna.
~--------~-

17.

HIM ...'•

--

Residential and com·
merclaL
Call
for
estimate. 24 Hour Ser1
vice. Any day, anytime.
Partible toilet rental,
Phone 915·3106
Joe~ Ginther 915·311&gt;6

27320 Monttome"" A"d .
Langs~lll• . Ol'lio

GOLF EQUIPMENT, carl, bog,

OLD FUANITURE, ice boxes,

House.

SEPTit TANK
a.EAfllttG

BOB'S GENERAL

THREE BEDROOM homo, New
Limo Rd . Central air, garage,
on 1 acre of land. 742-2562.

'

WANTI!n:
ov,rwelght
-··
Sllnderela
DletCiassH
Mon. Evonlngs·Mason,
W, Va,, 7:50 St. JoHpll
Catholic Church; TUH,
Mornlnt (10:501 and
Evenings
11
7: 30·
Middleport;
Heath
Unlled
Methodist
Church Thurs : Milrnlng
(10:50) and Evonlngs at
7:JO· PI. Pleasant, Yf·
VI. Krodel Pork Club

B:oo-Little H·o yse on the Prairie;
Baseball 6, 13; Billy Graham
Crysade 15; White Shadow B, 10;
Bill Moyers' Joyrnal 20,33;
Mov ie " A lovely Way To Die"

r 0

I I

A6AINST

r..m•

7t7-274Sor1f7-271t ,
~ ·· ·pit.

4231 mo. (Pd. )

CONTRACTING

PHONE
614-992-5786

OH . Mon, -Sal.
592-5478.

*New Home
*Add ons _
* RemQidings
* F ree estimates
992·6011

4·5·tiC

MAK·ING
DR.CARVERA
POTENTIAL.
WITNESS

Television
Viewing
MON.DAY, JUNE 4, 197f

. ~~~=.!.-"' ' - - ...

FAILED...

All types rooflnt, tvftfl"s aM

Aftlens ArH

... . . .

~~~~~1 · ~~

P(EIJ '

SAV.C: TRACY.

·UNTYPICAL.L.
''eUT Y,

.,.rleftee. F'rH ntlmatn. Call
Tom Hallllnsf.,·JI60.

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

New, repair,
g uHers.a rid
down spouts.
Window cleaning
GuHer cleaning
Free Estimates

KILL

dOwft spovts. All fY'IMS
malltfenaM:e, new •nd r~lr .
Storm doors ancl '!liiMIOW1. AU
worll tuaranttH. 20 yHrs ...

4·30·1fC

H. L WriteSel
·Roofing

Beer, Wine Carry·
Out iii Pomeroy, 0.

$75. m.JS.Io.

·

mo.

949·2862-949·2160

$12 per lon, Bundled slob. $10
m ·2689.

fully lnsurad
FrHEsl.
Call 992-2772
5·17·1

w. Carsey
Mgr,

YARD SALE, 253 S, 51h Ave,

1973 Nashua , 60x12, 2 bdr.
197;J Governor , 60x12 , 2 br .
1974 Mark line, 50x12, 2 br.

pletely furnished . No pets, no
children . 742· 2991 .

Classified Ads

GARAGE SALE. June 5 and 6. '9
til 3. Two residents on Plea·
sont Ridge. 6 family , dishes,
tape player. clothing. tricycle .
hobby horse. curtains , misc.
Follow signs .

Middleport. June ~ . 5. 9:00
long-Children 's
and
adult ' s
' clothing,
dishes . knick knacks , misc.

Auctions

PROBATE COURT OF

linens , · dishes, pictures ,
lamps ,
books,
records,
clothes , dolls, Silverstone, bisque , toys, golf clubs and bog,
Hollywood twin beds, maple
bookcase, bunk beds wHfichest.

Ex.perlence•nd

PLANTS, CABBAGE , broccoli ,
cauliflower. brussels sprouts,
head lettuce. tomatoes . and
large sal&amp;ction of bedding an·
nuols. Pots of flowers and
hanging baskets. Cleland
Greenhouse .
Geruldir1e
Cleland, Racine.

HUGE YARP Sale. Monday and

St .. Middleport. Starting June

Auto&amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
PI!Dne 992·5682

!our Qrdinary words.

OUT TO

CARVER,'•

and
' 1Home Maintenance :_·...
•

• · Phone H2·2181

Tuesday., June~ and5 at Bradbury, across from Radio Station . 9 to 5.

.C. Jewelry, Avon, bedding,

698-8555.

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

YARD SALE, June 4, 5, 6, 9
a.m. til dark , Rose Hill ,' one.
half mile from last light in
Pomeroyh on Rt . 33 . Girls
clothing 1i.J:es new-born to 12.
odds andends. Men and
womens cloth .. larva wall pic·
tures. new topes, kitchen
chairs, baby both tub , cor seat
and toys .

YARD SALE. 8l 0 Soulh Second

and good pay. 9'12-3283.

•

Garage

~'• mile off Rl. 7 by-pan .
on St. Rt. 174 toward
Rutland .

Unscramble these four Jumbtes,
one letter to each square. to form

TYPICAL.!..')', _

$

""5'1'1

CtiiUIOIIC (WOOd IIDer)
Thormallnsulatlon
save JO pet, to 50 pet.
on heating cost

SALE PRICES
Jack

THEN
MUMBL.E5,

1

D-

\9 ~~ ~

~

5ET

~ TH~T SCRAMBLED WOAD GAME"
by Henn Arnold and Bob Lee

l}f}I)Nt jl;)1}

''

.

Blown Insulation
JIM. KEESEE .

Headquarters for
Hotpoint and
Gen~ral Electric
Appliances

TRACY

,1''':'
Business Seroice3
J
~~~~~~
r ~~~~~
~
J&amp;L
Hysell
Ohkl Valley Roolilt I~

r-

POMEROY
lANDMARK

Hill , oH At, 33,

plicotors with tools . Also
helpers wonted . Steady work

hair,C . Call367·0395.

Notices

6:00p.m., Tuesday, June 5, 10
till *. 4 Family . Toys, clothing ,
misc. Davis residence, Rose

ap·

siding

SMALL ADULT block and while

Lorena M. Rica, Florence L.
McDaniel , Barnise V. Rose.

YAAD SALE , Monday , June 4 ,

THREE FAMILY Patio SOle,
June 5, 6, 9 am to 4 pm , Bth
house on right . Baum Addi·
tion . Su:~ukie 90. exerciser.
nice clothing. books, misc.
Roi n or shine.

Tl-lousand thoughts of one so

last .
Sadly missed by daughterl,

down

Yard Sale

pOrtunity Employer.
EXPERIENCED AIR conditioning and refrigeration men.
Good pay and hOlidays . No
phone calls . Gollio Refrigero·
tion Co., I 52 3rd Ave .,
Gallipolis.

FOLD

camper . Reasonable . fx .
cellent condition. 992-6121.

sand ,

m -3891.

19'75 11 FOOT truck camper ,
se lf- contained , air condition ,
excell ent condition .·992·212 1.

STARCRAFT

LIMESTONE ,

grovel, calcium ch loride. far ·
tilizer . dog food, and all types
of solt . Excels ior Solt Work, ,
Inc .. E. Main St., Pomeroy ,

614-985-3961.

304-675-4340. An Equal Op·

EXPERIENCED

COAL.

Camping Equipment

Help Wanted

dear
Often brings a tiny t.ar.
Thoughts go bock to scenes
long past.
Time rolls on but memories

NOW HAULING limes tone in
M iddleport-Poemr oy area .
Coli for free estimate .

742·3167 or 7n2573.

FIVE KITIENS , 6 to 7 w . .ks
old . .f calico. 1 tiger. 992-7680.
Human• Society.

3rd, 1970.

For Sale

367·7101.
LOST: BLACK and ton female
German Shepard. Broke col lor
PAINTiNG ANP sandblaSIIng.
from ~ome Story's Run Rd .,
,Free estimates . Coll949-2686.
below M iddlepor t. If seen call
Gerold Mothews. 367·0395 or · TRE£ TRIMMiNG and ·Removal .

IN MEMORY of our dear

~ISING

......

.

Lost and Found

- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Monday , June 4,1979

U B D,
VGHEY

SDB

SFAGP

ULDW

VGBHPG . - ABSEAB

LD

BTLSP

Yesterday's Crypt.ote: A Mo\N IS TO GO ABOU'l' Ills
BUSINESS AS IF HE HAD NOT A FRIEND IN THE WORlD
TO HELP HIM IN lT.-LORD HAIJFAX
.

2:oo-Docfors 3, 15 ; One Life fo Live
6,13 ; 2:25-News 17.
2: 3D-Another World 3,15; GYidlng
Light 8,10; I Love LYcy 17;
Washlnglon Week In Review 33.
3:oo-General Hospital 6,13; Rebop
17; 3:3D-Mash 8; Joker's Wild
10; Banana Splits 17; Crockett's
VIctory Garden 20 ; Lowell
Thomas Remembers 33 .
.
4:oo-Mister Carloon 3; Hollywood '
SqYares 15; Merv Griffin 6 ;
Addams Family 8; Sesame St.
20,33; Six Mill ion Dollar M•n 10;
Mike Douglas 13 ; Fllnlstones 17.
4 :30- Lone Ranger 3 ; Hogan 's
Heroes 8; LY&lt;Y Show 15; Partr idge Famlly 17.
5:oo-Bonanta 3; Beverly Hillbillies
8; Mister Rogers 20,33; Gomer
Pyle 10; Bionic Woman 13;
Brady Bunch 15; Star Trek 17.
5 :30-News 6; Elec . Co. 20; Mary
Tyler Moore 10; Odd' Couple 15;
Dcotor Who 33.
6 :oo-News 3,8,10,13,1 5; ABC News
6/ Family Affair 17; VIlla Alegre
20; Studio See 33.
6 :3D-NBC News 3.15; ABC News 13;
Carol Burnett 6; CBS News B, lO;
Father Knows Best .17.
7 :00- Cr'oss-Wits 3; Newlywed
Game 6,13; Please Stand By 8;
News 10; Love American Slyle
15; Get Smarf 17; Dick Cavell
20,33.
7 :30-Hollywood Squares 3: Candid
Camera 6; Gong Show 8; Price Is
Right 10; Donna Fargo 13;
Baseball 17; MacNeii · Lehrer
Report 20,33, .
8 :oo-Runaways 3; Happy Days
6,l3; Billy Graham Crysade IS.B;
CBS Reports 10 ; Austin City
Llmlfs 20 .
8 : 30- Laverne &amp; Shl rley 6, 13;
Makino lhe Scar IIi Leifer 33 . .
9 :0D-The Rebels 3; Three's
Company 6,1.3; Movie '" Nowhere
to Ryn " 15; Movie " Red Alert"
a, 10; I Sought My Brother · 33;
Vl&lt;ieosphere-Chrysanthemum
20.
9 :30-'raxl 6,13; 10·:DO-When The
Weot Was Fun 6, 13; News 20;
America 17.
10 :30-Lock Stock 8. Barrel 20;
li :OQ-News 3,6,8,10,13,15; Dick
Cavett . 20; Lowell Thomas
Remembers 33 ; New Soupy
· ~Ii ies 17.
' , ',
11 :30-Johnny Carson '3, lSI Movie
"Sheila Levine Is Dead and
Living In New York" 13; Movie
"Three BYIIots for a Long Gyn"
6; Barnaby Jones 8; c/lf'C News
· 33; Movie "The Gntet Bank
Robbery" 10; Mo~l ~ "All Mine to
Give " 17.
--12 :4D-Movle "Malaya" 8; . I :DOTomorrow 3; · News 15. ·
1 :-~()- Baseball 17 ; 2:DO-News 13;
4:111-News 17: 4: 30-12 O'Clock
High 17.

,,

-·..
.. .
~

-

�"

•

10 - The Daily Se ntinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monda y, June ~ . 1979

'

.

' Press
By tbe Aasoctaled
Operators at some truck stops shut
down diesel pumps today and truck
blockades impeded traffic at other
service stations as independent
truckers acted on a threat to shut
down rigs nationwide.
A convoy of trucks led by driver
RDbert Somers of Colorado gathered
in Frederick, Md., Sunday in preparation for a protest drive into
Washington, D. C., today.
And about 35Q truckers 'from 13
states vowed Sunday in .Sioux City,
Iowa, to park their rigs indefinitely to
protest high diesel fuel costs.
The truckers are seeking an end to
the high cost of diesel fuel and fuel
surcharges, uniform length for trucks
and suspension of the 55 mph speed
limit which they say is not fuel - efficient for big trucks. ·

Somers said he and two other
truckers len Colorado two days ago
and were joined by others along the
way. He refused Jo estimate their
numbers, saying "it looks like a
bunch."
"We plan a peaceful, organized trip
en route from here to there, but I
wouldn't be a bit surprised" if traffic
is snarled by the convoy, he said.
Somers said his group was to meet
today with congressmen and
representatives of the Interstate
Commerce Commission and the
Department of Transportation. .
Owner~perators from Montana,
Missouri, Kansas, Iowa, Nebraska,
South Dakota, Minnesota, Florida,
Arkansas, Connecticut, Colorado,
North Dakota and Wisconsin were prsent at the Sioux City meeting.
But some of the early results of the

One person hurl
·in four mishaps
One person was injured in four
weekend accidents investigated by
the Gallia-Meigs Post, Highway
Patrol.
Officers were called to the scene of
a one-vehicle accident Sunday, at 3:45
a.m., on CR 42, three-tenths of a mile
west of SR 715.
The patrol reports a 'Yest bound
auto operated by Jlrnmie Rose, ~.
Patriot, ran off the left side of the
roadway and traveled over an embankment.
Rose displayed visible signs of injury, but was not immediately
treated. There was severe damage to
the vehicle.
Harold L. Denney, 26, Crown City,
was cited on a charge · of DWI
following a one-vehicle accident on
Swan Creek, four-tenths of a mile northo! SR 7, Saturday at 6:30p.m.
Officers report Denney's north
bound auto ran off the right side of the
roadway and struck a fence.
There was slight damage · to the

vehicle.
An auto operated by David A.
Nolan, 25, Patriot, incurred severe
damage during a one vehicle accident
on SR 325, three-tenths of a mile south
of milepost 4, Sunday at 7:45a.m.
The patrol reports Nolan •s south
bound vehicle went out of control
when the right front tire blew. The
auto passed off the right side of the
roadway and struck an embankment.
One driver was cited following a
two-vehicle accident Sunday at 4:25
p.m. on SR 7, just north of the
Gallipolis City Limits.
.Officers report a south bound auto
driven by Harold Earlwine, 28, Dexter, had slowed in traffic on 7.
A south bound vehicle operated by
Florence Canadily, 75, failed to slop
and struck the Earlwine auto in the

rear.
There was moderate damage to
both vehlcles. Canaday was cited on a
charge of assured clear distance.

-

We want everybody to know about
our Savings Certificates! A minimum
deposit of $10,0 00 will yield th e
highest rates allowed when held to m aturity. It's a great way to save. Get fa&lt;;ts!

Farttters Bank
POMEROY, OHIO
$40,000 Ma1imum Insurance For Each llepo•tor
Member federal Deposil Insurance Corporaton

terstate 70 just east of Kansas City,
But Betty Bennett. of the 700 Truck
said he couldn't tell any difference in Plaza on Interstate 70 in Blue Springs,
business at midnight. .
Mo., said some independents were
"We're busier than fleas out here, , _ buying little fuel.
he ·said, adding that many indepen"Some are saying, 'I'm just buying
dent drivers had ·not even mentioned enough! to take It home and park it,"
the ·action.
she said.

,-------~-----------------, 1
Lelkn II . . . . . art"~. ney.-... R kR
tM. . . . . '-tlw . .jm. .. ,...,.._ rr.,dle ..... l
_...,.,..,..._.. .... IIRWpm's .....ui.. " - - J

b.! wttlllltW .... .-.n"-. "---· - ~
- - ..... tiUclelcd. Ldkn ..... .., . . . . . . . . .

Deat Editor:
• Just a note to remind you to get
your gasolini! drwns flied.
In case there Is a shortage it never
hurts to have a few hundred gallons
stashed away. Remember the ·sugar
crisis? I still have a few powtds of it.
Gets a "little hard, but I just run the
truck over it and that smooths it out
pretty good.
My coffee Is still holding out. A little
stale- but I've never had to pay three
dollars for a pound of coffee. We got a
bad tip that time when we heard there
would be a toilet paper shortage.
Mine is kind of tuniing yellow, but it
still serves jhe purpose.
I see where Columbus and Southel"!l
is asking for another rate increase.
That's sure good news. Back when I
bought thst stock I thought I was
doing wrong.
We're doing pretty good out here. I
just got my cost of living increase,
and I'm about to sell that land I
bought a while hack when I got that
tip that the road was going through.
Most of my chlldren are doing well.
The two oldest boys work at the plant.
I made a mistake though when I
sent Junior to college. Poor kid only
makes a third of what they pay the
laborers in the plant. I hope he
decides to do what my youngest did.
He went on welfare - lives in a nice
house, has a good car and all - doing
fine.
Oh, yes, guess I &lt;!on 't need to
remind you to vote against those
school levies. I say tbey don't need
that fancy stuff. There's no reason
they can't operate on the same money
they got years ago. I say it's poor
management.
I say if everyone was a good citizen
like me, we'd have some country! -A
Good Citizen.
EGG REPORT
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Eggs Prices paid to country packing plants
for eggs delivered to major Ohio
cities (cases _included consumer
grades including U. S. grades,
minimum 50 case lots).
Carton Large A 57~, Medium A
48-52, Small A 3~.
Sales to retailers in major Ohio
cities, cartons delivered: Large A
white 68-77, mostiy 68-70, medium
57~. mostly 57:09.
Poultry prices at Ohlo fanns, hens
light too few to report.
Truck lot prices of ready to cook
broilers and fryers: Cincinnati
44-45'10; Cleveland 44'¥•-46.

VOL. XXVIII NO. 36

MILLER DISCUSSES GASOLINE SHORTAGE
WITH SECRETARY ADAMS. - During Transportation Secretary Brock Adams' appearance before the
House Appropriations Subcommittee on Transportation, Tenth District Congressman Clarence Miller a
member of the subcommittee, had opportunity to qu~s-

lion the Secretary on the gasoline shortage. Congressman Miller, concerned with the adequacy ri. the
allocations provided rural areas by the Adnninistration 's standby gasoline rationing program, recently
voted in opposition to the proposal when It was considered by the Congress.

Today
... in the world

Hospital News

Grievance issue
leads to strike
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - About
3,000 Ohio BeD Telephone Co. workers
went on strike at 6 a. m. tody over an
unsettled grievance issue.
The strike by members of Local
~ of the Communications Workers
of Ainerlca stemmed froni company
attempts to start having certain
equipment installers climb poles and
over the hiring of temporary help,
union officials said.
Union Vice President said pickets
were set up at 37 compimy locations in
Columbus. He said no meetings have
been scheduled for negotiations between the wtlon and company
management.
.
Meanwhile Thomas Lindeman,
Ohio Bell spoke"sman, said the company had hoped to avert the strike
"because these are not things that
can he very readily resolved once
they go out."
·
McNicols said picket lines were being honored by I ,500 members of the
union's "sister" Local 4310 CWA and .
250 long lines employees of the..
American Telephone I Telegraph Co.
Lindeman said the 2 million customer company hoped to be able
· to maintain service in the face of a
strike, but if there were any interruptions it would be only in the Columbus
area where the strike is centered.
"The real beef is that PBX Technicians have not been required to climb
poles in the past 30 years and they

(Ohio Bell) are arbitrarily changing
that, " McNichols said. " The
employees in this job title do not have
to climb."
Essentially, he pointed out, "this
could very well mean demotion for
cause if an employee is not able to
climb."
McNichols conceded the company
said it would not require an employee
to climb if he were not physically able
nor would it impose a demotion.
However, he indicated, there are no
such guarantees.
"This is a violation of a 30-year past
practice," he emphasized.
Another issue whlch triggered the
grievance was the hiring of temporary help to fill full-time job vacancies.
·
"This circumvents the seniority
right of employees," McNichols so•• .
"I feel it will definitely affect I~'
service," McNichols added •·· "·n
over 3,000 employees on tt.c ;vo m one
city are needed to perfonn day to day
service,lt'sboundtobeaffected."
If a walkout materializes, McNicol
doesn't foresee it being resolved in a
shortperiodoftime.
"I see this as being a difficult thing
to resolve. We have no intentions of
putting signs up Monday and taking
them down Wednesday. We're going
to hold our growtd because we feel
we're right," he said.

VETERANS MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL
Saturday Admissions - Martii1
Cunningham, Racine; Rebekah Long,
Pomeroy; Iris Morris, New Haven;
Joseph Salyers, Reedsville; Cloyd
Brookover, Rutland; Herman
Pauley, Letart, W.Va.
· Saturday Discharges - Ross Kent,
Wilbur Sims, Vera Kreimer, Lena
Adkins, Clarence Nichols.
Sunday Admissions - Brenda Tatterson, Columbus; Clara Shuster,
Pomeroy;· Henry Cunningham,
Pomeroy.
·
Sunday Discharges - RAibert Good,
Joseph Salyers.

BOOKMOBILE SCHEDULE
Tuesday's Meigs Bookmobile
schedule: Long Bottom Post Office,
3-3:30p. m.; Reedsville, Reed'sStore,
4-5; Tuppers Plains, Arbaugh Housing area, 4:~:30 p.m.; Chester,
~ethndist Church, 6:45-7 :45 p. m.;
naumAddition, Route 7, U:30.
1'-··-~~~~----.

LOST

A LIGHT REO DISH
BROWN PEKINESE
In the area of South 2nd St.
in Middleport. If found
please call 992-3474. There
will be a reward.

MRS. JOHN TAYLOR
782 2nd
Middleport, 0.

ELBERFELD$
HOME FURNISHINGS 1ST FLOOR

Today
__ .in the world
1Continued from page 11

recruiter in January, has been
banned from the OSU campus
through the summer of 1980.
The han prohibits the group
from using university buildings
for meetings or office space. It
also bars the organization from
obtaining money from the \
student OM!"anization fund .

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Decision tothy
MENDOCINO, Calif. (AP) Voters in Mendocino County -the
second largest !limber-producing
county in California - go to the
polls today to decide whether a
group of C!llltroversial herbicides
should be used to manage local
forests.
.
.
It is the first time the issue of
herbicides has been put to a vote
in California, the second-leading
lumber state __
If passed, the measure would
ban aertal spraying of defoliants such as 2,4--D and 2,4,5-t whlch
contain dimdn, the most toxic
sublltance known. A mixture of
these two subatances, called
t.cent Orange,...,. used by u_ s.
forces in Vietnam and subsequently banned ·by the federil
'government after evidence that it
caused loss &lt;if memory, birth
defects and cancer.

·Some still jailed
Only a few dozen people
remained in American jails Monday aner a weekend of international protests agai_nst
nuclear power that resulted in
more than a thousand arresta in
the United States and a death in
Spain.

The death ri. .a female demonstrator oil Swtday during International Anti-Nuclear Day
triggered riots throughout
Spain's Pamplona regloa that
. spilled over into Monday.
The slain woman was struck in
the bead by a bulleffrom a pollee
submachine gwt. She was among
2,000 people proesting construction of a nuclear power plant
at Tudela.
In Madrid, authorities said two
civil guards were shot and killed
in apparent reprisal for the
slaying, and extra police weracalled up Monday to control
rioting.

sought a similar order. It used the new
information on cracks as the basis for
reopening the case today .
The intensive inspections of the jets
were triggered by last month's crash
of an American Airlines DC-10 as it
was taking off from Chicago's O'Hare
International Airport. The crash,
which occurred after one of the
plane's three engines fell off, claimed
274 lives.
.
Tjle Federal Aviation Administration ordered the latest grounding
on the recommendation of the
National Transportation Safety
BOard, which is investigating the
crasli.
The board said two American DeIlls had cracks in the aft attachment
points of the pylons. A pylon Is a
structure that holds the engine to the
wing.
lnv~stigators found a l!knch crack
in the aft attachment point of the
pylon that separated from the engine
that fell off American's ill-fated Flight
191.
The NTSB said the cracks in the two
recently inspected planes were
apparently caused when mechanics
improperly removed the engine and
py ion in one section, instead of two
steps. Flight 191 tiad undergone the
same "engine removal and
reinstallation procedure" on. March
30, the FAl\ order said.
.
McDonnell Douglas, maker of the
DC-10, specifies in a service bulletin
that the engine and pylon should be
removed separately.
Ed Slattery, NTSB spokesman, said
it was conceivable the "pre-existing
crack" in Flight 191 could have
caused the failure of the pylon assembly holding the engine to the wiJig. But
he Said he did not think the crack
triggered the crash and that the safety
board h8s not reached a conclusion on
the specific cause of the accident ..
FAA spokesman John Leyden said
the new gr_ounding order involves only

MORNING KINDERGARTEN CLASS at Middleport graauated in
exercises Monday night held at Middleport Elementary
Sch"Ool. ,Speaker was Ellen Ball, librarian at Middleport-Pomeroy ·
Lib~ries, Dan Morris, director of currioulwn and instructions of Meigs
LoCal, presented the diplomas. The invocation and benediction were
given by the Rev . Mark McClung of the ·Middleport Baptist Church.
Flowers w~re presented to the rooni mothers. Pictured, first row, 1-r,
Jamey Utile, Tammy Yates, Jamie Pettit, Kristen Slawter, .Norma
~encement

AFTERNOON KINDERGARTEN CLASS at Middleport Elementary
School graduated Monday evening during commencement exercises at
Middleport Elementary. Pictured, front row, 1-r, Jason Smith, David
Lawson, Tammy Holley, Bruce McCloud, Kathy Perrine, Jimmy Jones;
second row, Toddy Kennedy, Leigh Anne Redovian, Timmy Deem, Shelly

inspection orders stemming from the
Chicago cnlllll: He estlrruited less than

MON •.fRIDAY 5:30.til 8:30 P.M.
SATIJRDAY 9:00-5:00 P.M.
Located in Formerly Dr..- Dalfts' Office
306 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, 0.

.

11 nd ',f /1 '(

I \

IJ 111

( : h IJ I f'l/ll 1 1 H H r Jl 111 11 ",

00

=.~·"""""''"· "" income

Swim program

.

BY KATIE CROW
Pomeroy Village Cowtcil Monday
night approved the placing of a city
income tax on the November general
election ballot. Council will meet Jwte
11 to outline priorities in which the
funds will be channeled.
A public meeting is slated June 27
at 7 p.m. at the Pomeroy Fire Station
London Pool, Syracuse, once again to allow residents to voice their
will•ponsor Ute Americiln Red Cross opinions.
·~earn to swim" program this sum- Village Clerk Jane Walton _told
mer.
cowtcil Monday night it must forSign-up will be beld June 7, at the mualate plans on how tax revenues
pool from 10" a.m. until noon . Pool will be spent. All plans must be excliar~es for classes will be $10 per plained to the public.
student, ex~pt advanced lifesaving · Mrs. Walton also informed council
which will be $20 per student.
regarding a conversation with Glenn
Make checks payable to London Smith, director of Division 10; Ohio
Pool. Please do not call the pool" to Department of Transportation,
register. Late registrations will be Marietta. Smith said there is no
taken at the pool aner Thursday if the weight limit on US 33 and SR 7 going
classes are not full.
through the village. He said the state
An aide t1111inlng course will be held will not put a weight limit on the .
June 7, 8, ahd II from 10 a.m. until designated area .
.
noon. Persons need not be an ex- Sbe also said if the village wants to
ceDent swimmer to help with "the weigh trucks It would have to pur"learn to .swim" program. Persons chase a set of scales. She noted that it
are asked to learn about the trainl!lg cost Washington County $15,000 for
sesslonatthe pool.
scales and an outlay of $30,0110 for one
Students taking advanced begin- year for such a function.
(Continued on page 81
Mrs. Walaon also Informed council

scheduled at

London Pool

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
'

e ·

tax before residents
~estate

that it would have to write
director of highways regarding the
weig~t limit. ·
.
Chief Jed ~ebster saJd he could 0 ?1
aJTest anyone unless the truck IS
weighed .. Mrs. Walton reported thst
the sohcttor and Smith both told her
we1ghshpsare notlegal.
COUNCILMAN
. Larry Wehrung, counc!lmand, pombng hls _fm~,er at the street epartm_ent satd, '.am not at aU pleased
With the functmn of the street ~epartment. I believe the ~roblem With the
street ~epartment IS lack of,supervls10n. He furthe_r added, If the

m:sET .

By The Associated Press
Getting gasoline was no worse a
problem ln most places last weekend
than it has been recently, and
government and industry officials say
the situation should remain stable this
weekend.
"I'd say the weekend went off
without a· hitch, •• said Dwight Conant,
a 3J&gt;Okesman for the I Automobile
Association of America's New
Hampshire chapter. "There were no
ihconveniences that we were aware
of."
" I think people are following the
news very closely; they 're "more
prepared," said Caroline Hymof, a
spokesman for the Massachusetts
AAI).. "They're getting their gas
before noon on Saturday and early on
weekdays."
Ms. Hymof said an AAA survey of
377 service stations throughout New
England over the weekend found twothirds closed Sunday and a similar
number dosed after 6 p.m . Saturday.
But most of those closed in an attempt
to conserve gasoline. Only 6 percent
hsd actually run out of fuel , according

Weather
THEATRETORNOOWN -Thla II aUihitremalnll
· r:l tbe M8aon Drive-In, In Mason, W. Va. from the
dlsmantied screen and the theatre's projection booth.

The drive-in, a locallimdmai-k, was torn down recenty
due to the deteriorl!ting condition of the screen. The
drive-in has been closed for• the past few years,
because of lack tl business. ·

street department does not do a complete turn . around It will have to
chsnge supervisors." He also observed" that potholes are not made
ready before hobnlx ill poured and the
street crew was working on a
sidewalk recently which he felt was
the responsibility of the property
owner.
Mayor Clarence Andrews explained
it was city property.
Wehrung also said .since Jack
Krautter, superintendent of the street
department was not at the meeting he
would personally speak to him about
the situation.

d
Gas no problem
last
weeken
.

REMINDER ISSUED
Principal Jame:~ Pac:e advises
Eastern High School students that
report cards, prom pictures and next
year's schedules are ready to he
picked up.
Students may pick up material
from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. for the remainder r:l this week and all of next week.

,( 11 : 11 1

We Carry the Complete Line of Kirch Drapery
Rods ;_ Curtains Rods - Sash rods - Brackets
-Hooks, pins, etc., etc.

Nardei, Jason Fife, Kevin Barton, Mike Fink, Dale Hennan, '!'racy Ellis
and Larry Nicholson. Abllent were Angela Landers; Tommy Cotte~
and Van Klein. Mary Rose is the teacher and Adeline Snowden is tbe
assistant.

_

From Ira vcrsr. rods to lil'backs .

( ·on w Jr 1

Pullins, Swiie Manley, Valerie Baker, Kris ChadweU; third row, Michelle

c
l l
:~:c~:!~:~t~::~~;p,= Po me_roy . ounci ·. p ace_
s c_tty

\\l th 1 lossw lw,ull y 1\nd wtwthc·r )'Ou c.h!IW&gt;I' to do your winclow wc th
clr,c w Urupc ril's or til f•• c unai ns your Chnlt!ilU rods w ill s tay beau tif ul ·th l' l ·vc a " lcfc•!JIIni' fini~ h uf ;mtiqut! bra )s or anli4 ue wlut c.

NEW OFFICE HOURS

Ratliff, Catina Wolfe, Joseph Smith, Mary Cremeans, Brenda Wright,
cathy Barker, John Will and Jeanie Anns; second row, Erica Ellaa, Jennifer Taylor, Pam Haggy, Jason Ratliff, Teresa Deem, Shannon Roush,
Missy Nelson, Carla Seidenabel, and Lee Ann Cadle; third row, Michelle
Frash, Johnny Pope, Ken VanMatre, Raena Eblin, Loretta Roush, Lorle
Falls, Amy Might, Michael VanMeter , Scott Whobrey, Geoff Cogar,
Susan Houchins, Jeff Peavley, Stephanie Whaley and W~yne Baker. Absent is Terry Sharp. Teacher is Mary Rose and aide Is A~eline Snowden.

·

,KtrSI;h Ch~ I L•a u tl• tPnls yo ur wind.11w lre:llmt!nl a

MATEO DA YO, M.D.

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

TUESDAY, JUNE 5, 1979

Agreement okayed
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohlo (AP) A new wage agreement luis been
approved between the city of
Youngstown and its safety forces
that amounts to just over a 10 percent raise over the life of the contract.
The contract, whlch·nms from .
July 1 through March 15, 1980,
callS for a ~ percent boo.t in pay
upon Its effective date and an additional5 percent on Oct. I.
The base pay ri. city police officers and firefighters will .be
raised from $13,742 to $15,151.

en tine

Feds ground
24 airplanes
By LARRY MARGASAK
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - Federal
officials, concerned that improper
maintenance procedures may have
produced a crack and led to the
nation's worst air crash, have
grounded nearly two d02en DC-!Os.
The grounding was ordered after
similar cracks were discovered in two
jets that had gone through the same
. procedure.
This is t~ third grounding in a week
for some of the jumbo jets.
The latest findings are prompting a
passengers association to go into
court again today to try to get an
order grounding an 137 DC- His flown
by U.S. air carriers.
The
50,000-member
Airline
Passengers ·Association, based in
Dallas•. was rebuffed Sunday when it

ROlLAND FISHER

Funeral services will be held at I
.
p.m. Tuesday fro!D EWIDg Chapel f!lr
.RDlland (Pete) Fisher,_49, Clevelan~,
who . died Saturday at Woman s
Hosp~tal m Cl~~eland. Rev. Freeland
NorriS wlli offiCIBte. .
Bunal will f~llow In Le~ Falls
Cenoetery · Calling hours will be held
at the funeral home any time today
and wtlil the~ of the ~mce.
~er survivors not liS~ m Swtdar s Times-Sentinel a~ five stepchildren, Wayne Me~, Altoona,
Pa.; Charl~tte ~~. Cleveland;
Harold McKim of. Richmond; DaVId
and Kenneth McKim, both of Altoona,
Pa.

Fill gasoline drums

No one objected to the proposed District 10. Deputy Director Glenn A.
widening, improvement and Smith, Marietta, presided.
relocation, in part, of 1.02 miles of
After · discussing location and
Ohio Rt. 554 In Oleshire Twp. during design details, the audience was
Thursday evening's public hearing in asked for inputfor the projects.
·
the Kyger Creek High School
Smith indicated that if money is
auditorium.
available, and there's no future
Appro:rimately 50 persons at- problems, it's possible the project
tended.
could be sold late ne:rt summer.
The bearing was conducted by Ohio
Estimated cost of the project, to run
Department of Transportation, from 0.12 mile southeallt of Stingy
Run Rd. (TR 2), Is $713,000 plus according to Smith.
·
Smith Sllid hearing records will
80,100 IMMUNIZED
remain· open at the district otfice in
LANCASTER, Pa. (AP) - More
Marietta through June 11. During this
lban 80,000 Laacaster County
llklay interval following the hearing,
reuldents bave beea Immunized
the public may submit additional
In apeclal polio cllnlcs set up to
collUlH!nts to tbe District Deputy
stop 811 outbreak of the paralyzing
Director, Musklngum Drive, MarietdlleUe among memben of the
ta, Ohio 45750.
Amish religious sed.
Slate health officials said 56,15%
people were Immunized Sunday
LODGE MEETING SET
8Dd 30,081 olben received lbe vacA regular. meeting of Pomeroy
cine Salarday. Several Amlsb
Lodge 164, F&amp;AM, will be held at 7:30
fiiDllllet were among those who
p.m. Wednesday_All Master Masons
look lbe oral vaccille 011 Sunday_
are invited,
Health officials bave stockpUed
%011,000 doeea of vaccine for tbe
~y lmmlllllzaUa program,
The first U.S. air mail was flown
wblcb coacludes today.
from Washington to New York in 1918.

Goldsmith, told drivers : "if any of
you have perishable loads, you have
until midnight Wednesday to get that
load off and park that truck."
N~ all trucks were parked,
however. Gary Dunkeson, manager
of the Union 76 truck stop on In-

Area
Death

~:£

No one objects to
project at hearing

TOO GOOD TO BE KEPT ASECRET
...OUR 6MONTHS CERTIFICATES

drivers · action were reported In
states not represented at the Iowa
meeting.
About two d02en truckers blockaded a Calumet, Dl., Union 76 Auto Truck Stop at midnight, according to
Ken Kramer, a manager of the station south of Chicago. He said the
peaceful protest prevented independent truckers from leaving. •
In Oklahoma, truckers shut down
the four major Interstate 44 truck
stops in Tulsa and the four largest in
Oklahoma City. Some closed volwttarily; others were victims of
blockades.
·
"We'll stay shut down as long as
they want, I gtless," said BW Campbell, manager of the Tulsa East Union
76 Truck Stop. About ~ trucks
blockaded his station Swtday night
But Jack Ballew, operator of a
Union 76 stop in Oklahoma City, said
he 'd go to court today to seek an injunction to remove the blockades.
In Sioux City strike supporter Eldon

a1

e

Some truck stop operators shut off pumps

;

Partly cloudy tonight and Wednesday with a chance of showers or
thundershowers Wednesday. Low
tonight in the low 60s and high Wednesday in the low to mid I!OlJ. The
·chance of rain is ~ percent ·tonight
and 30 percent Wednesday.

to the survey.
Elsewhere, the situation was
similar. Officials said some stations
ran out of gasoline because the first of
. their June deliveries were not due
until early this week, but that others
which had re~eived their June
allocations took up the slack. And
som~ stations had finished May with a
surplus of gasoline as a result of
conservation efforts.
For next weekend, motorists can
expect more of what they have seen in
·the IJ&amp;St couple of weekends. Many
dealers will close SundBy or limit
hours in an attempt to make fuel
stretch through the month, but
generally , finding gas should not be
much of a chore, particularly durin~
daylight hours.

Ularges £il
. ed
m" theft CaSe

I""L.

Two youths have been charged with
two counts Of theft by Meigs County
sheriff's deputJes following Investlgatlon of a complaint Monday.
Booked were Steve McGrath, 18,
Rl.l, Rutiand, and a 16-year old youth
on parole from the Ohlo Youth Commissi
·
O:r~es resulted from the alleged
thelt of 8 10 speed bicycle from the
Cornelius Phillips residence on Beech
Grove Road lind the alleged theft ol
$100 from the Myrtle Hayes residence
inPqmeroy.
The case Is still under investigati..t.
In other action, at 9:39p.m. Sunday
ev~nlng , a pickup truck owned and
driven by Jimmy Lambert, 29, Rt. I,
Dexter, wu de~troyed by fire. The
vehicl~ was traveling on Horse Cave
Rd. when fire burst out from under
the dash. The Racine Fire Depart-. .
ment responded.

"We are not getting what we want
out of the street department,"
Wehrung stated. Wellrurig wants a
report presented at each meeting ·
what the street department has done.
jX)MPLAINT AIRED

Meeting with council was Mrs. Tom
Myers regarding her husband
parking an empty colil trUck oo the
area near the pond near Beech Grove
Cemetery. She said her huaband had
been warned by Chief Wellllter and
was told he would be arrested If he
continued to parllln the area. Mrs:
Myers explained what a ~rdllhip It
was on her and her children to have to
walk from the Mulberry Ave. apartments to downtown PmJeroy
Council felt It should not Poml out
just one person since loaded trucks do
comethroughthevlllage.
Council lnfonned Mrs. Myers It
would"allow her husband to park his
truck at the pond site until tbey. updated .the weight llmlt.ordlnance. At
the present time , the weight limit In
the viUage Is 3,000 pounda.
Also meeting with council was Mrs.
Mick Swartz, whose husband ia the
manager of Village Green Apartments located on Mulberry Ave.
At the last meeting, coundlwaa informed that Swartz was hauling lrilsh
from the apartments on MulbeiT)'
Ave. and Union Ave. It waa decided
that In order for Swartz to do this service, he would have to obtain allcense.
Last night, Mrs. Swartz aplalned"
that her husband received no IDOIIIp
for these services since he wu tbl
manager.
Council agreed to let Swartz CCIIItlnue with the hauling of truh fnlm
the two apartment buildings.
AlllO meeting with council Willi Jollll
Koebel of Columbia Gaa of Ohio
regarding an ordinance contalnlng a
new clause, gas cost recovery cla~~~e,
rule 28, which has not been In other ordihances. The .new ordinance ·will
amend the last" ordinance puaed.
CouncU wUl study the ordinance and
adonitata later date.
·
Mayor Clarence Andrews informed
council that the sheriff's department
iConiinued on page 8I

CAR HEAVILY DAMAGED
Heavy damages were illeurred to
ooe vehicle In an accident 011
Pomeroy's East Main St. at 5:10.a.m.
Tu~ .

Po~roy pollee said

an auto driven
by NoaJl HyiJ!!ll, 19, MlnemUle,
headjng east, struck a utility pole,
Hysell was not injured. He apparently
fell asleep at the wheel.

.

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