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                  <text>Marker not stolen
·• I
I

I.
CLARENCE (KYEI NICHOLS
Clarence (Kye J Nichols, 74, Pearl
St., Middleport, died Sunday morning
at Riverside Hos~ilal in Columbus.
Mr. Nichols was born June 24, 1904
in Middleport, a son of the late
Raleigh and Melissa Van Kirk
Nichols. He was also preceded in
death by a brother, Elden.
Surviving are a brother, Ralph
Nichols, Erwin, Pa.,live nieces, three
nephews.
Fwieral services will be held at 10
a.m. Wednesday at the RawlingsCoats Funeral Home. Burial will be
in Middleport HIU .Cemtery. Friends
may call at the funeral home from 2 to
4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Tuesday.
·
MARGARET GANS
Margaret Gans, 67, Lasley St.,
Pomeroy, died Sunday afternoon at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Miss Gans was born Feb. 7, 1912, a
daughter of the late Fred and Anna
Wetzgel Gans. She was also preceded
in death by a sister, Kathryn.
SurviVing are three brothers, Carl
of Crestline; Alfred of Pomeroy, and
Clarence, also of Pomeroy.
Miss Gans was a member of the
Sacred Heart Church and the Sacred
Heart Guild. She operated the
Mulberry Ave. Restaurant in
Pomeroy for many years.
Funeral services will be held at 10
a.m. Wednesday at the Sacred Heart
Oturch with the Rev. Father Paul
Welton officiating, Burial will be in
Sacred Heart Cemetery. Rosary ser·
vices will be held at 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday at the Ewing Funeral Home
where friends may call anytime after
7 this evening.

BROOK HUNTER
Brook Hunter, 70, a resident of Rl.
1, Cheshlte, died 8 a.m. Saturday at

her home.

She was born Feb. 23, 1909, in Pecks
Mill, W. Va., daughter of the late
George and Susan Woody Martin.
She was preceded in death by her
husband, Montie, in 1971. Nine
children survive : Bernard,
Gallipolis; Roger Rutland; Dallas,
with the U. S. Army in Gennany;
Eugene, at home; Mrs. Pearl Smith,
Mrs. Wayne (Goldie) Morrow, Mrs.
Jerry (Roberts) Temple, all of'
Columbus; Mrs. Ennil (Edna)
Freeman, Chaprilansvilie, W. Va.;
. Mrs. Eugene (June) Stowers, Pecks
Mill, W. Va.; Mrs. Joe (Wilma)
Gilkey, Middleport; twenty-three
grandchildren,
nine greatgrandchildren; two brothers, Boss
Martin, Henlawson, W. Va.; Jack
Martin, Logan, W. Va.; three sisters:
Mrs. Betty Adkins, Henlawson ; Mrs.
Gracie Ellis and Mrs. Maxine Bartrwn, .both of Huntington. One
daughter preceded her in death.
She had been mseveral months.
Funeral services will be held 3 p.m.
WIICinesday at Miller's Home lor
Funerals with Pastor E. F. Anspach
officiating. Burial will follow in Mina
Cemetery.
Casketbearers will be Ted Perry,
Ennil Freeman, Jerry Temple,
Wayne Morrow, Joseph Gilkey and
Eugene Stowers.

wood, Ohio. 'l'he Hoods woul.d have
celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary this December.
Mrs. Hood is survived by her
husband, along with, one son, Roger
Hood, Gallipolis; one brother, Morris
E. Haskins, Gallipolis, and four grandchildren survive.
Mrs. Hood was a ~duate of Alderson-Broaddus at Phillipi, W. Va. She
attended Marietta College and
Denison University and graduated
from Marietta College in 1929.
She WllS a member of Beta Theta
Sorority at Marietta College and a
member of First Baptist Church of
Gallipolis . where she served as
deaconess.'
Funeral services will be held 2:30
p.m. Wednesday at the Willis Funeral
Home with Rev. Joseph Godwin and
Rev. Alvis Pollard officiating. Burial
will follow in Mound Hlll Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 7 until9 p.m. Tuesday.
·
Pallbearers will be Hank Thompson, Carl Waugh, Ted Wiseman,
Thompson Casey, Owen Cantrell, and
Bob Hood.
.Honorary pallbearers will be John
Cornett, Paul McNealey, John O'Dell,
Stanley Saunders, Bob Mackenzie
and Howard Branrton.

If you have become especially
discouraged bec.ause the theft ~f a
tombstone reported by Sheriff James
J, Proffitt Indicates that happenings
are falllng · to a new low, be not
dismayed. It was a mistake.
Sheriff Proffitt said that the tombstone was reported stolen Wednesday evening from the Miles
Cemetery in Rutland.
However, be reports todi!Y that it
was not stolen.
According to the latest infonnatlon,
F. W. Wilcox, fanner trustee of
Rutland ToWilllhip, notified the
sheriff's office 'Friday evening that
his wife remembered seeing a Logan
Monument Co. truck at the cemetery
on Tuesday afternoon.
·
Deputies were WJable to make. contact with the Logan Monument
people until saturday morning and at
that time learned that the company
had picked up the monument to have
names of children relettered.
A
daughter bad made arrangements to
have the work done and apparently
had not notified other members of the
family.
Sheriff Proffitt ehended thailks to
Wilcox and the township trustees,
Harold Dewhurst and Fred George
and Township Clerk Edna Swisk for
their concern and assistance in
·clearing up the matter.

HOSPITAL NEWS

Rio offers
VETERAN MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
Saturday Admissions-·Thomas
Portland; Maggie Gilmore,
programs for Sayre,
Racine; Irene
Middleport;
Susan Sellers, Racine.
Saturday Discharges-Hirman
swnmer youth Pauley,
Cecll
Martin
Christy,

Haning,

Again this summer, Rio Grande
College and Collimunily College will
offer summer enrichment programs
lor area children.
,
.
Two programs, one lor children
ages 3-6 and a second, for children
ages &amp;-12; are offered through the Rio
Grande Department of Education.
The Kindergarten Summer Enrichment Program for u year olds will
begin June 19 and meet each weekday
until July 11. Each day's activities
will begin at 10 a.m. and end at 11:30
a.m. in Yale Hall on the Rio Grande
campus.
The second enrichment program,
which deals with the Natural Sclences, is,_ open to childi-en ages &amp;-12 and
will begin June 19 and meet each
weekday \hfough July 11. Each day's
activities will begin at 12:30 p.m~ and
end at 2 p.m. at the Instructional
Resources Center, !11 the _basement of
Holzer Hall, on the Rio Grande campus.
• Parents wishing to enroll· their
children may do so by calling Elaine
Holter, Professional Education
Department, Rio Grande College and
Community Cqllege, ~.ext. 203.

DIVORCES GRANTED
Deborah L. Hawley has been.granted a divorce from Bruce Hawley in
the Meigs · County Common Pleas
Court and waa awarded custody of
two minor children. Pauline Von
Ebelnsiem was granted a divorce
frcrn Carl Von Ebeinsteln and was
given the use of her former name,
VIRGINIA HOOD
Greathouse. Charles E. Wilson was
VIrginia Kathrine Haskins Hood, granted a divorce from Cathy Wilson
74, a resident of 329 Fourth Ave., with Mrs. Wilson receiving custody of
Gallipolis, died at her home around -10 one minor child and James A. Goody
a.m. Sunday. She had been in failing and Donna S. ·Goody were granted a
health since October.
divorce. Filing for dissolution were
·Mrs. Hood served as secretary and Robert Bollinger and Diana .Lyme
director of the Haskins-Tanner Bollinger, Welchtown.
Clothing Co. for several years.
She was born Dec. I, · 1904, in
REVIVAL TUESDAY
Gallipolis, daughter of the late James
Dan Haynuin and the Country HymL. and Hattie Morrts Haskins. She ntlmers will be singing at a revival at·
married Burhl Dye Hood on Dec. 19, the Fathers House in Hartford, W,
1929, by Robert W. Peirce,
,_ at Rich· Va., starting at 7:30p.m,Tuesday.

TOO GOOD TO BE KEPT ASECRET
..•OUR 6MONTHS CERTIFICATES
We want everybody to know about
our Savings Certificates! A minimum
deposit of $10,000 wi ll yield the
highest rates allowed when held to maturity. It's a great way to save. Get facts!

Farmers Bank
POMEROY, OHIO
$40,000 .Maximum lnsura~ce For Each Deposrtor

Member federal Oeposrt lnsu;ance :CorPOration

Cun-

ningham, Hattie Powell, Paul Taylor,
Frances Gibbs.
Sunday Admlssions-.John Keck,
Pomeroy; Nancy White, Pomeroy;
Velma Keller, Middleport.
Sunday Discharges-None.
HOLZERMEDICALCENTER
Discharges, JUDe 8 '
Eivira Barr, Katherine Bellamy,
Norma Berry, Lorena Bonecutter,
Mrs. Ricky Buck and son, Kristma
Bush, Iva Buxton, Sandra Carr, Jacquellne Cash, Avonelle Cobb, 'Brian
Daniels, Lela Davis, Allee Dill,
Michale Drummond, Ruby Duncan,
PeMy Elliott, Ira Evans, Richard
Hackett, Kevin Heaton, Brad
Jenkins, Margaret JOhnson, Merle
Johnson, Michael Jordan,.Ricky Joy,
Donald 14arcum, Mary Morrbon, Sue
Nutter, Mary Roberts, Helen Salts,
Nevylle Shackelford, Gertrude
Swackhamer, Arcllle Swartz, Ethel
Thompson, Gayle Trueglio, ·dharles
Yerian, Elva Westfall, Doma White,
PhyllisWickline, Clara Yinger. .
lllrtbs,JUDe8 ·
· Mr. and . ~s. David Haley,
daughter, Point Pleasant; Mr. and
Mrs. Michael Claar, IGII, Hamden.

Congress.looks into DC-10
WASHINGTON (AP)- Congress is
beginning to take its own look into
what is wrong with the now-grounded
DC-10, asking the Federal Aviation
Administration to explain its response
wthe ·crash that took 275 lives.
In the hearing today, a House
·subcommittee headed by Rep. John
Burton, l).{;alif ., planned also to look
into the process by which the
government decided eight years ago
that the jet was airworthy·.
" I think Burton will express
people's feelings about the DC-10, now
it's up, now it's down, up-down, updown,'' a member of his staff said in
advance of the hearing.
Scheduled as an opening witness
wss Langhorne McCool Bond, who
last week became the first
government official to ground an
entire fleet of jets. Burton long has
been at odds with ·Bond, who was
appointed by President Carter.
''He's a disaster,'' Burton said of ·
Bond last week. "His con·s tant
changing of mind-about this DC-10, for
instance, h.ad endangered lives. This

Four persons were injured and two tenths of a mile south of milepost 6, in
vehicles demolished during four MeigsCountyat1:25a.m,
Saturday IICCidents investigated by
The patrol reports that a north
the Gallia-Meigs Post, Highway paund pickup truck qlerated by
PatroL
W~ L. Buckley, 28, Pomeroy, turTimothy E. Davidson, 20, Pomeroy, ned into the path of a south bound auto
was cited on a charge of DWI driven by Walter Arnold, 29,
following a one-vehicle, two-i!ljury, Langsville.
accident on SR 124, at CR 28, in Meigs
Buckley claimed injury, but was
County.
not immediately treated. A
Callecfto thefiCelle at 7:20p.m., of- ~er, Twila S. Buckley, 28,
fleers repdri !Jiat lln eOst,bound auto, .Posperoy, was transported by .
operated by'l'lmdthy E.' DaVIdson, '20, SEOEMS ·to Holzer Medical Center.
Pomeroy, failed to negotiate a curve, ·She was treated for a cervical strain
passed Off the left side of the fi!Bdway and released.
snd struck a guardrail.
There were severe damage to the
• Davld!!on and a passenger, Bruce Buckley pickup. Tbe Arnold auto was
Bwman, 20, Racine, displayed visible demolished.
signs of injury and were transported
Buckley was cited oo a charge of
by the Racine Emergency Squad to making an improper left turn.
Veterans Memorial Hospital for
A Gallipolis Jl!Venile, Catherine A.
treatment.
·
. 'l'nlesdale, 17, was cited on a charge
Davld!!on was cited on a charge of of DWI following a one-vehicle
DWI. His vehicle was demolished.
. mishap on SR 160, one and eightTwo persons were injured during a tentha ofamilesouthofU.S. 35.
two-vehicle accident on SR 143, three- ·

Fort Gay .couple
~eld ,. on ch~rge
AFort Gay, West VirginiA man and

of grand theft auto and . felonious
1!!188ult for Athens County authorities
· 'The Gallia department received ~
.bulletin at 10:45 p.m. from the Athens
County Sheriff's Office to be on the
lookout for an auto ~ a couple
wanted in connection with possible
kidnapplngandautotheftcharges.
Deputy Roger Brandeberry stopped
thecarandarrestedthepair Carolyn
Russell 28 snd Earl Hutchinaon 22
on SR 7' j~t inside the Gallipolls 'city
limits, moments later.
•
::::::::::::::::::::::=:=:::=:=:=:=:::::::=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:::=:=:=:=:::;:;:::.::::::::

Birtbs,June9 .
EXTENDED FORECAST
Mr. and Mrs._ KeMeth Criss,
Wednellday through Friday: Fair
daughter, Jackson.
Wedllelday BDd 1bunday. A cballce
Discharges, June 10
of showen Friday. Hlpa froQJ the
Mrs. H. Michael Carlton and son, upper 7011 to lbe lllld !M!a W:ednesday;
John Clunielewski, Usa Green, Mrs. Wlll1lllDg to lbelllfd to
bY. '
David
. Hall and aon, Geneva Howell, Friday. lAWs ill'"-~
""' '5os ·w· '"""' y,' '
Mrs. David Kisor aad son, Mrs. rlalogto 'tbelilll!Y'Frlday,
Harold Manring and daughter, .:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:=:;:::::::::::::;:=:::=:=:::::=:=:=:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Rebekah Mitchell, Joe Muihare,
BOOKMOBn.E TtiEsDAY
Michael Nelson, Delorea .Riffe,
Dorothy Spencer• Teresa Swatzel,
Tue!lday 's schedule lor the Meigs
Amanda Taylor, Walter Tomboin, Boolanoblle includes- Keno, ·3-3:30
JackWbeatley,NancyWilllamson.
p.m.; ReedBvllle, Reed's Store, 4-5;
lllrtbs, JaiJe 10
Tuppers Plains, Arbaugh Addition,
Mr. and Mrs. George Buckley and 5:30-6 :30; Chester, Methodist Church,
son, Wellslon; Mr. and Mrs. Krishna 6:45-7:45; Riggs Addition, ~:30.
Kool, daughter, Bidwell; Mr. and
Mrs. .Timothy Howard, son, New
CHESTER TRUSTEES MEET
Haven; Mr. and Mrs. Carl Shriver,
Chester Township 'trustees wiD ·
daughter• Thurman.
meet at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the town
hall.
.
.
VBS ·nus WEEK
Bible school will be held at the First
Southern Baptist Church, Mulberry
SALEM TRUSTEE'l MEET
Ave., PomerDy, beginning this
A
meeting of Salem Township
evening and running through Friday
Trustees
set lor June 29 bas been
with classes from 8:30 to 8:30 each moved ahead
June 22 at which time
evening. There will be classes for an regular to
business will be Iranpre«hool through teens. All children
sa~.
of the community are invited.

\llle
..

FL.E XS·TE E L

1•'1.'\IE l ' I'IIOLH'l'I~ HE!l Fl ' Rf'.:ITl ' HE

Stylish Beauty

. l'; ·

tt

\~r:e.), ~ Luxur~ous Comfort .

: FS-~ ~
-q ~

Russell, who had sustained a
hand . during the
disturbance leading to the charges,
was transported to Holzer Medical
Center for treatment. She was treated
for a stab wound to her left ann and
tendon lacerations and admitted.
~)he is being held on charges of
felonious assault and grand theft
auto.
HutcllJnson Is being held chargea
of complicity to grand theft auto and
felonious assault
Two female juveniles, children of
Russell, taken into custody at the
time of the arrest, were later released
to their father, Ruaaell's estranged
husband.
·

woman were 8ITE!8ted late Saturday serious cut to the

L~stmg Durability

SOFAS • CHAIRS • SECTIONALS
SOFA-SlEEPERS
RECUNERS ·. ROCKING RECliNERS

BAKER FURNITURE

DRIVER'SEDREGISTRATION·

Called to the scene at 10:40 p.m., offleers report that Truesdale's north
bound auto went out of control in .!1
curve, paase4 off the right side of the
roadway, traveled through the lawn
of a home own(!ll by Mildred Houck,
and struck a tree.
·
There was moderate damage to the
vehicle.
An auto operated by Richard A.
Johnson, 29, Pomeroy, Incurred
severe damage during a one-vehicle
accident on Bulaville-Addlson Rd.,at
!2:30p.m.
The patrol reports that Johnson's
south bound auto pa8lll!d off the right
' side of the roadway and overturned.
Johnson was cited on a charge of
exceasive speed for conditions. There
were no injuries.
·

driver cited
. Two cars were damaged aild the
driver of a third vehicle involved was
cited to mayor's Court as the result of
an accident on East Main St. at 2:20
p.m. Sunday. .
Pomeroy Police said a bicycle fell ·
from a truck driven by Sally Pierce,
Pomeroy. A car driven by Martin
MeAngus, 18, Pomeroy, following the
truck came to a quick stop and a car
following the McAngus vehicle and·
driven by Gary Wolfe, 32, Racine, was
unable to stop 8lld struck the rear at·
the McAngus car: There were
medium damages and Pierce was
cited to court on an insecure load
,charge.
·

BARBECUE
&amp;.fRIES

'119
FEA

5 Soft Serve
Flavors This Week

McCLURI"S
I

.' '

l

n •

r,.. &lt;i

......
MJIJ
t.~ •
I

~

'I

~

E . Main Pomeroy,O.
Phone Ahead 992-.6292 .

FATHERS' DAY''
GIFT IDEA

TRIMMER
-QUALITY CONSTRUCTION
. . BY TORO AND TRUE TEMPER
-ELECTRIC AND CORDLESS MODELS

From Only

$24_95

HOUSEWARE DEPT.-1ST FLOOR

Elberfelds

NO. 41

en tine
/

POMEROY ·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

TUESDAY, JUNE 12, 1979.

John Wayne, 72,
movie hero, dies

Forty eight persons attended the
Bloodmobile Monday with 44 pints of
blood received, 32 of which . were
replacements.
Six gallon donor was Mace! Barton;
foW' gallon, Ellis E. Myers; three
gallon, Jeanette Lawrence; one
gallon, Debra J. Carder; first time,
Marjorie Canton and James Will.
Assisting were Ferndora Story, R;
N., and Doctors L.D. Telle and E. S.
Villanueva, Clerical workers were,
Mary Nease, Jean Nease, Jean Sayre,
Martha Lou Beegle, Helen Pickens.

Bike falls;

M

CAUTIOUS MOTORI8I'S
Meigs County Sheriff. James J.
Proffitt urges area motortsts to use
caution now that all of the schools in
the county have dJsmlssed for summer vacation.
The children will have their minds
00 other things and may not use
caution when near the streets and
ds
roa ·

VOL XXVIII

at y

By ROBERT LOCKE
He wanted, a hospital offiCial said,
Allsoclated Press Writer
"to be with his children , his grandLOS ANGELES (AP ) - John children ... He would tolerate discomWayne a Hollywood hero lor nearly fort just to be near his family."
50 yeai-s and 200 movies, built his
His seven children were at his side
image as a learle51j, determined when Wayne, known to friends and
fighter . That was the way "The fans as "The Duke," died at 5:30p.m.
Duke" died - in a courageous light Monday at the UCLA Medical Center.
His 72nd birthday was celebrated
with cancer.
All the disease began its final May26.
assault and as the pain became more
"He was -and is- an American insevere, Wayne sometimes refused the stitution," said actor Chariton
drugs that could have eased the way , Heston. "It's not surprising that, to
the end, Duke gave an example of
courage that made him more than an
actor and friend,"
•
Hospital administrator Bernard
Joyce Hoback, Erma Roush, Macei Strohm, amouncing the death at a
Barton, Emma K. Clatworthy, Grace news conference three hoW's later,
Drake, Jeanette Lawrence, and Ver- said Wayne's family plamed a
private funeral.
non Weber.
Countless fans had been following ·
Retired volunteer senior citizens
assisting were, Pat Ingels, Cecil Wayne's final battle since Jan . 12,
Bradbury, Hazel Thomson, Charles when a routine gallbladder operation
David, Bernadine Meier, Alice turned into a nine and one-half hour
ordeal as surgeonS found cancer in his
Struble, and Clarence Struble.
Donors by communities: Pomeroy- stomach and removed it.
The next live months brought small
Jeffrey J. Hilleary, Marjorie Caton,
Mary L. Starcher, Lura R. Swiger, successes -release from the hospital,
Homer Baxter, James A. WW, Lois J. an ovation at the Academy Awards..,
gradual,
inexorable
·Yant, Patty J. Barton, Edna Triplett, and
Howard P. Logan, William W, Rad- deterioration . He was back in surgery
ford, Patricia A. Imboden, Dennis J. May 2. This time the cancer wsa in his
Gilmore, Patricia Vaughan, Virgil K. intestines.
Wayne - who played the cowboy,
Windon, David M. King, L!lrry G.,
Fisher, Ralph T. Spangler, Ola L. the marine, the admiral, the football' ·
St.Clair, Joseph C. Hall, Jacqueline player - was granted scant ex·
D.Brickles; Syracuse - Millon E. pectation of progress, though he was
(Continued on page 8)
Roush; Middleport - Joyce V.Bartrum, Jeff Daniels, Linda L. Haley,
Mary E. Bacon, Peggy Lewis, Kenneth E. Imboden, Sarah J . Fowler,
Debra J .Carder, James R. Dailey,
Larry Milch, Charles W. Searles;
Racine - Joyce Ritchie, Martha Lou
Beegle, Jeanette Lawrence, Charlotte
L. Wamsley, Loretta K. Hill; Long
'
Botton - Kathy D. Stone, Tbomas 0.
Pomeroy Puhlic Library will host
Stone, Harlan A. Ballard, Henry
Bahr; Reedsvllie - Mace! Barton, the amual Meigs County Art Show In
Richard Barton; Rutland - Mary E. conjunction with th.e Big Bend RegatDavidson, Donna M. Davidson; Bid- ta June 21-24. Entries must be
well . Mary Searls; Limgsville - Ellis brought to the library by Friday, June
22 at 5 p.m. Judging will be completed
E. Myers.
by !0:30a.m. Saturday, June23.
Entries will be divided into two
categories: FROG ART and NONFROG ART. They will be subdivided
by age : small children through kin·
dergarten,
grades 1throngh 4, grades
Clear tonight. Lows. around 50.
5
through
12,
and adults.
Becoming partly cloudy and breezy
WiMers
will
receive a ribbon plus
Wednesday. Highs around 80. The
five
silver
dollars
for first place,
chance of rain is 10 percent tonight
three
silver
dollars
for
second place,
and Wednesday.
and one silver dollar for third place.
Artists may use any medium (such
:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::
as
macrame, soap sculpture, oil
EXTENDED FORECAST
paint,
etc.) and. need not be Meigs
Thursday through Saturday:
County
residents.
Possible showen or thundenloflllB
Entries
will be on display until MonThursday, Partly cloudy Friday. A
day,
June
25 at 8 p.m. They may be
chance of show en Saturday. Highs
reelaimed
beginning Tuesday, June '
In the 80s Thursday and Friday aDd
26
at
10:30
a.m. Any entries not
. the 70s Saturday. Lows In the low 80s
claimed
by
Tuesday, July 3 will
Thunday and in the 50s Friday and
become the property of the llbrary,to
Saturday.
:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:,:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:; be kept or not as they see lit.

48 donate 44 pints of blood

on

Meigs High Scl\ool students interested in driver's education lor the
summer months should 1'\lgister at
the principal's office by Friday of this
· ·~ ,.. "Those .....
rt in the
"'~"''' must be~..,
paof age and
program
16 years
mustbeMeigsHlghSehoolstudeilts.

e

JOHN WAYNE

Four injured, two cars·
demolished in 4 wrecks

Dilclulrlea, JuDe 9
by the Gallia CoUnty Sheriff's DepartMrs. Anthllly M1Dns and son, Carol ment, and are being held on charges
Ann Barnett, Mildred Battrell,
Michell Breeyear. Freda Burnette
.
,
Karen BW1111, Charles Burt, Jerimlah
Carpenter, Minne Collins, John Cook, ·
Jr., Lucinda Cook, Melinda Counts,
Melissa DeiJisanti, &amp;bert Ellison, .
KeMeth Emmerson, David Evans, ·
Mrs. Charles Frecker and daughter,
Andrea Gilllland, jl!rs. Roger Hall
and son, Evelyn Hartley, Tabnon
Upscomb, Richard Malone, David
Meller, Jr., Marie Morlardy, Mrs.
Lewis Pack and daughter, Raymond,
Potter, Linda Roach, Betsy Stapleton,
Carl Thomas, DeMis ViarS.

and other evidence .shows that he just without all the facts to conclude that .
doesn't know what he is doing."
defects in the certlficaliOil proeti&amp;s
Another witness expected , to be were, in fact, the direct cause of (tne)
called• was Philip A. Hogue, who until , accident, it is entirely appropriate
Thursday was a member of the and necessary for the subcommit~
National Transportation Safety to explore the possibility," Button
Board, the agency that investigates said in amouncing the he8ring. ~
airplane accidents.
He made the statement a few days
On Friday, the day after Hogue's after American Flight 191 crashed '611
three-year term ended, the Airline takeoff May 2ii, kUling 275 persons:;
Passengers Association - an
Since then the FAA issued ~
organization of air travelers whlch "airworlhineb directives," Whieh
sued to ground the DC-10 - had the effect of grounding the planes
announced he was taking over as until certsin parts were inspected
director of APA's newly created ,.;,d, if necessary, reliaired. Wedno:!IWashiitgton office.
. day the plane's certificate to fly was
At an NTSB briefing after last suspended.
· ·;
month'S crash of an American . On Sunday, the FAAorderedengille
Airlines DC-10 in Chicago, Hogue said mount inspections on all L-lOlls and
he would ground the DC-lOs if the two other models of Wide-bodied je,\s
choice were his and that he wouldn't opera ling In • the United States,
fly on the plane until some questions although a spokesman said "we have
were answered. ·
· no indication, no information there·Js
Burton, chairman of the gov- anything wrong with an)' of th~
ernment acli vilies .and transport aircraft." The spokesman, Fred
subc.ommittee, decided to reopen Farrar, said the FAA directive ,
hearings last held in September.
enforcing a manufacturers' advisory,
"While. it· would be premature was "pW'eiy precautionary."

•

In ~ Pomeroy

Staff Sgt. alive
SAN ANTONIO, Texas (APJ :_
Staff Sgt. Wibner W. Higgs Jr.,
J:nissing and declared dead for 18
months, has been brought back to
llfe - at least as far as the Air
Force is concerned. He is,
however, still missing, officials
said Monday,
Higgs, 33, was reclassified,
from dead to absent without
leave, on the basis of an FBI investigation that detennined
Higgs is alive and had been
working in southeastern Texas
since his disappearance Dec. 31,
1977.

Suit dismissed
MARION, Ohio '(AP) - A
lawsuit charging the Marion
County Board of Elections with
unlawful acts in last Tuesday's
Democratic prinuiry in Marion
was dismissed Monday.
The apparent loser in the
mayoral primary, Ayers Ratliff,
had charged that Board of Elections officials Wegally allowed
Republicans to vote in the
Democratic primary without
challenging their party affiliation .
or having them sign aflidavjts.
Ratliff claimed that a high
switchover vote by Republicans
for 1ilii opponent, Ron Malone, led
to Malone's victory.

Pomeroy Library
will host annual
art show

Weather

Forest plane
crashes
GRANGEVILLE, Idaho (AP)A U, S. Forest Service plane
caught fire and slammed into a
river in the rugged north&lt;entral
Idaho mountains Monday .
Authorities said one person was
killed and nine others were
missing.
Two of the passengers aboard
the twin-engine DC-3 survived the
crash in the Selway-Bitterroot
Wilderness area . Rangers
refused to give up on the missing
and ordered an air, water and
land search on the tree-covered
slopes along the Selway River,
strewn with crash debris.
"We're still holding out hope,"
said Nez Perce National Forest
spokesman Steve Ylaterman. ·
A dozen paramedic smoke jum·
pers parachueted to the crash
site and' lilalntained an overnight
vigil on both sides of the river in ·
case any of the missing eight men
·and one woman should turn up. ·A
spot was cieared lor hellcipters to
land.
MARION, Ohio (AP) - The
haliot-by-hallot recount of voles
cast in last week's primary election in Marion has been completed, according to the deputy
director of the Marion County
Board of Education.
But the results of the recount
will not be certified ·as official until the office confers with the
secretary of state, Jack Boyd
said Morufliy .- The (ina! ligures
were mailed to the secretary of
state's office late Monday afternoon, he said.

•

BRAVE THE COOLER TEMPS - A hot weather
standing room only crowd should have existed at the
Middleport Swinunin,~ Pool Monday. Only a lew

residents, however, braved the coole; temperatUres,
accented by chilly winds, and most of those basked in
what little sunshine there was at poolside.

E~-Cuban

pilot first to
hijack U.S. plane in 4 years

MIAMI (AP) - The first man to
hijack a U.S. plane to Cuba in 4'h
years was tentatively identified today
as Eduardo Guerra Jiminez, according to a State Department
spokesman.
That was the name of the Cuban air
force pilot who flew a MiG jet fighter
under U.S. air defenses when he
defected to Florida in 1969.
State Department spokeswoman
Sue Pittman said today the hijacker
was thought to be Guerra.
The hijacker told the crew of Delta
Airlines Flight 1061 he was carrying
an explosive in a bag, and fOl'ced them
to fly him and 194 passengers to
Havana Monday night, FBI special
agent William Nettles said.
"He said, 'I 'm sorry. I have to get to

th is," said Sam Kass of Boca Raton , 1 laughed.
Fla.
But lor some, the air piracy was
The captain and crew who dealt fearful. Fay Rudomen, 79, visibly
with the hijacker were hustled away shook as she said, "I feel miserable."
by the FBI soon alter the plane landed It was the first \ime she had flown
here, a Delta spokesman said. The alone. ·
.
captain later refused comment.
Della Flight IO(il had been comOne passenger was arreste~ on mandeered when It passed near
charges of inter! erring with a Wilmington, N.C., abOut 7 p.m. EDT
member of the flight crew · and Monday. The plane had taken off
assaulting an FBI agent dW'ing from New York's Kemedy Airport
questioning in Miami, Nettles said. He less than an hour earlier.
was identified as Lawrence Winters,
It landed in Havana at 8:30 p.m. af42. addfess unknown.
ter two Cuban Air Force jet fl8bten
Patrice Robbins, 19, came off \he re110rteony \ed It to the mt\eld.
plane sporting a T-f!hlrt with "-Cuba" Passengers said they were taken to
emblazoned on the front. She bought the tennlnal and allowed to browse in
it at a souvenir shop at the Havana the shops.
airport while the L-1011 was being . The plane was piloted by Capt. Yinrefueled .
ce Doda of Miami, said Delta
Havana,"' Don Donner of Fort
"An adventure- it SW'e was," she . sookesman WaltJureski.
Lauderdale recalled.
.
Cuban authorities were waiting lor
the plane. They led the hijacker ,
described by passengers as bearded,
stocky and wearing a green army
shirt, away in handcuffs. The New
York-to-Fort Lauderdale flight then
returned to the U.S. , landing at Miami
International Airport al2: IOa.m. with
all passengers and 12 crew members
unharmed:
·
Guerra, 37, shocked officials on Oct.
5, 1969, when he landed a MiG·I7 at
CHARLESTON , W.Va. (API - Stu about 8: 20 p.m.
Homestead Air Force Base in a plane
The coach, who had just completed
Aberdeen,
the fiery , energetic
that carried 40 rounds of anununilion
what
he called "one of the best
basketball
coach
who
VQwed
two
and two cannons armed with 160
recruiti.n
g seasons in Marshall's
years
ago
to
restore
l'tlarshail
rounds. He was not picked up on U.S.
history,"
was on the second day of a
University
to
basketball
prominence
,
radar until just before his landing.
two-week vacation .
died
Monday
night
of
an
apparent
Guerra was then a lieutenant in the
· The 5·fool-5 Aberdeen came to
Cullan air Ioree. He said he left his heart attack while vacationing in Marshall
in 1977 after serving as the
Florida.
family and homeland because he
associate
head coach at the
Aberdeen,
43,
was
stricken
at
6:50
wanted to he away from the Castro
University of Tennessee for 11 years
p.m.
in
New
Smyrna
Beach,
Fla
.
He
regime . Two years later he was
coach Ray Mears.
arrested in New York on drug died a I Fish Memorial Hospital at under
Aberd een was credi ted with
charges.
recruiting two of the top players in
He told police then' that he had been
Ten nessee's history, Ernie Grunfeld
unable to lind a job in the United
and Bernard King. &amp;fore coaching at
States. "Flying is my business, and I
Tennessee, Aberdeen coached lor
can't find work anywhere."
seven years at Acadia University in
It was not known today whether
Ontario, Canada,' where he produced
Guerra's family h{ld ever joined him
se vera l
Canadia n
national
in the United States.
championship teams.
Passengers said the hijacker had
Although Marshall suffered hack-toseemed nervous during the flight , and
back losing seasons in his first two
was seen carrying a duffle bag into
years as head coach, ending with a 14the front cabin. They didn't see him
15 record in 1977·78 and a 12-16 record
again until the plane landed in
this past season, Aberdeen recently
Havana. There, they said, the man
said he felt the Thundering Herd's
yelled his apologies.
current recruiting season had made
"When we were in the terminal in
U.e team into a viable contender for a
Havana, a Cuban - he looked like an
Southern Conference championship.
official - told me the hijacker was a
Aberdeen, who is SW'vived by his ·
defector from the Cuban air Ioree who
wife and three children, graduated
decided he wanted to return to his
from Tusculum College in 1957 and
homeland. I don't know why I was told
ea rned a master's degree' two years
later from Springfield (Mass.) College.
·
Acco rdin g to Evenson, funeral
arran gements are to be announced
later today,
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
was advised recently the village 's application for funds under the Com- ·
munity Bl!ICk Grant Small Cities
0 • 0
Program has been screened by the
Department of Housing and Urban
Development (HUDI for com·
pleteness and was accepted for
U
review May 11,1979.
A copy of the application is
This morning in Meigs County Com- Rt. I, Dexter, who was found guilty on
avallable at the mayor's office Mon·
mon
Pleas Court Robert Radebaugh, May 6, of trafficking In marijuana afday·Friday from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.
ter a three day jury trial in Meigs
Anyone interested may review the ap·
County
Common Pleas Court, was
plication at those hours.
sentenced
to one to 10 years by Judge
COUNCIL RESCHEDULED
The application is for $330,000 to be
John
C.
Bacon
but was relea'sed under
Due
to
the
lack
of
a
quorum,
a
used to. extend the sanitary sewer
·
system to Broadway Street below regular meeting of Middleport $5,000 bond awaiting appeal.
.
Prosecuting
Attornery
Frederick
. Park, Elm, Page, and Railroad Village Council scheduled lor Monday
Streets. Included in the project are night was no\ held. The meeting has W. Crow represented the Stale of Ohio
some sidewalk construction and been rescheduled for Thursday at ahd Radebaugh was repreSented by
Attorney Charles Knight.
·
7:30p.m .
street resurfacing in the same area .

MU' s Aberdeen
dies in Florida

HUDaccepts
fund application

Radebau.uh aet 1-10
fior tr.•offi C k zng
• pot

TALK . WITII "MIZ ULLIAN" - Five:year-old Leslie Lyons of
Pomeroy was presented an au~ographed picture by Lillian Carter,
mother of President Carter, followirig Ohio University's eomlilencement
program Saturday. Mrs. carter was flown to Athens from Georgia by
·Leslie's lather, Leonard Lyons, who received a bachelor's degree in ac·
c:ounting .and an associate degree in aviation from Ohio. He is a tran·
sportation pilot for the university. Following graduation he flew JWs.
Carter and her bodyguard back to Georgia.

•

,

.,

�3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, June 12, 1979

2-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, June 12, 1979

Mets' Twitchell ends Reds' winning streak

Business Mirror

'Inc.' on the scene for
small busfuessmen~ ~
'hoping that these or other small
businesses eventually would pay to
have it continue.
Audacious it was. As Paul Kellam,
editorial director, puts it : "A
readable Harvard Business Review
for small business... a management
tool for the harried chief executive
that he could find nowhere else."
There would be an emphasis on
problem solving,
on share
experiences, "not on profiles or
history, but on how a top executive
solved a problem, or failed to solve
it." It would teach, but not
pedantically.
It was a gamble but, in intrepreneurial style, one butressed by
faith. As small businessmen, Inc.'s
founder s felt nobody was more
neglec ted than the ordinary,
independent business person.

By JOHN CUNNIFF
AP Business Analyst
BOSTON (AP ) - Beyond the
window a seagull sweeps by the spar
of a l)oat anchored near the great
stone wharf. The .granite buildings
across the harbor still seem ready to
receive cargoes of cocoa and leather.
An unlikely place, it would seem, for
a magazine that aims to be a
coosultant in modem management to
"smaller" companies, those with
sales between $1 million and $25 million, or maybe a bit more or less.
Understandable, though, when you
consider that "Inc.," a new maga:cine
for small business, is part of an
organization whose origins are

marine.
Inc.
appeared
suddenly,
audaciously and unrequested this
spring in 400,000 business mailboxes,

Editorial opinions,
comments

In Washington

E;ocperience told them .
They knew too that others felt the
same way . Smith's Machine Shop, as
it's been said, can't be treated like
General Motors. And yet, the law
sometimes tried to do so. And big
government, business and unions too.
Inc. didn 't have the usual gestation.
A staff was assembled last fall and a
slick, full color edition was out by
April, in time to catch the eye of ad
managers before they closed their
budgets for 1980.
·
The goal of publisher Bernard
Goldhirsh and Kellam was to serve
"particularly those passing from the
entrepreneurial stage to the
professional," a phase they h3d
recently gone through themselves.
The new venture was capitalized at
$2 million, a vastly different
endowment than that which financed
his first publication, "SAIL," which
evolved from a celestial navigation
course Goldhirsh devised in order to
eat.
· That was in the mid-19605 when, just
graduated from of M.I.T. and with a
yearning to teach, he spent all his
money on a floaling classroom,
sailing the Caribbean, teaching
youngsters about various disciplines.
SAIL succeeded. Others publications followed: MOTORBOAT and
MARINE BUSINESS magazines,
SAILBOAT AND EQUIPMENT
DIRECTORY, . and MOTORBOAT
AND EQUIPMENT DIRECTORY, aU
published by United Marine
Publishing, Inc.

Not··so democratic AAA
'· .· .

I

I
l

By Manb8 Aogle~d
Robet1 Wallen
'(LUtoftwo
related eoiWDDB)
wASHINGTOr{(NEA) - MilliollB of
free road maps and travel guides are
dispensed llMuaUy to members of the
American Autmnobile Association,
but Information about the AAA's $14
miiiion investment portfolio is a
closely held secret.
Hundr~ of AAA tow trucks are
dispatched &lt;laily to provide emergency repair service to disabled cars. But
the drivers of those autos have little
opportunity to particpate when their
organization adopts policy positiollB
in their name.
Operating from a massive office
building in the Washington suburb of
Falls Church, ·: Va., the nation 's
largest and most influential
motorlsta' organization Is long on
membership services but short on internal democracy.
A confederation of 189 semiautonomowl'loeal auto clubs and 10
owned-and~rated divisions, the
AAA bolas· :&amp; national convention
every year to' consider resolutions on
a broad range of environmental,
energy and trllll!portation Issues.
But almost all of the AAA's 20.5
mii!ion membe~ are excluded from
the decision-making process because
convention delegates are selected by
a small, ' Self-perpetuating group of
leaders within each affiliate or
division.
In the Washington area, where the
AAA operation is totally controlled by
the national federation, members
aren 'I even given advance notice of
when.•or _.where 'the national convention Jll ro ~,held.
SOIJl,e _!~ c.lu\&gt;8 hold annual mem•
berslilp ineetlngs, but others view any
forni ' Ql:'g~831!-ioO\ll . participation as
an UI\D~l'Y. &lt;\iY.~.rsion . "You can't
expect tO have a meeting and invite
every member of the division," says
an official, ,'~ the Washington-.rea
club. "I'm not
to recommend
. about
•'
it."
.
As a result,'the AAA often acts and
sounds like an industry. trade
association rather than an
'
organization of consumers. In recent
l' years, it has:

.

•i
••

- Sought to cripple the Federal
Trade Commission's proposed rules
requiring a full pre-&amp;le irupection of
used cars.
- Sided with the major auto
producers in their efforts to delay for
two yeal'l! the tough federal poUutioo
controls.
·- Opposed the mandatory installation of air bags, in favor of
"easy-tD-USe seat belts" - despite
evidence that seat belts are ineffective because they are seldom used.
Most AAA members know only that
the organization wants to leU them.
about Its policy positions and finances, because copies of its resolutions
and financial statements are
provided only in response to specific
requests.
The one118ge financial statement
that is distl'ibuted is hardly a model of
full disclosure. One line, for example,
Usts more than $14.1 m!Wcn in
"retained earnings" at the end of
1977; the most recent year for which
information is provided.
A request for detailed data
produces only a general response: "A
sizable portion ... (is) reinvested in
operations" while "the remainder is
held in an investment fund for future
needs."
The organization purports to
disclose how it spends almost $115.2
miiiion in annual operating costS by
lumping all Its expenses into four
broad contracts - salaries, direct
costs, sales expenses and general expenses.
IncoiJle· is classified into similarly
vague categories. More than $3.2
miiiion in "earned premiums" is
listed, without any explanation of
either type of premium or sourceS
from which they wre collected.
One item, however, is enlightening:
The AAA earns more than $13.5
million annually in travel agency
commissions, a fjgure th8t explains
why its lobbyists spring into action on
Capitol Hill whenever Congress
threatens to pass a law that would
require travel agents.
·
Federal regulation of that indutry
may not be high on the agenda of most
motirlsts, but the AAA never has been
notably concerned about representing
the views of its members.

Berry's World

I
I

••

I

·1•

1

]

·1"

·t

I

' - •••

l

the New York Mets'Wayne Twitchell
sole credit foc ending the Reds' threegame winning streak.
."Their guy (Twitchell ) was super.
Any time you give only one hit in five
innings plus, you are doing the job. We
couldn 'I hit him, that's all there was to
it," McNamara said after Monday
night's 3-2 Mets victory.
It had started out as just another
dreary game for Manager Joe Torre
and the Mets.
Starter Jesse Orosco gave up single

l

•

" Wait'// you hear the price! "

J

Capital Ideas

Carter ready to ~heel and
·deal for Senate votes on SALT

projects and military bases for president.
important votes on Capitol Hill was a
Baker's marigold bill is bottled up
way of life .
in the Senate Judiciary Committee,
Carter took office as an outsider and which is chaired by Sen. Edward M.
until now he's refused to play that Kennedy of Massachusetts.
game. But White House lobbyists have
There is no sign Kennedy is willing
convinced the president he must come to yield to pressure to hold hearings on
.through with a favor here and there to the marigold bill.
.
pick up critical votes on SALT.
Carter might try to .build public
However, informed silurces say support for the marigold by going on
Carter balked at the suggestion he television and appealing to patriotism
give every member of the Senate the by telling the American people that
water project of his choice.
the United States has no national
If the president insists on being, flower.
He could address a joint session of
more selective, he ought to look at
some of tl\ll favorite causes of key cOngress and, in a· bipartisan spirit,
senators.
quote Dirksen's description of "a field
For example, Howard H. Baker Jr. of blooming marigolds tossing their
A bit farther in the future is of Tennessee, Senate Republican heads in the sunshine and giving a
By Don Graff
Spanish the first language of the Phillippe, which should be a leader, is taking a· tough stand on glow to the entire landscape. The
tempestuous one. You know those SALT. Baker says he 's leaning ·marigold beguiles the senses and
United States?
againSt the treaty. .
ennobles the spirit of man."
It could be, and within another French.
But
for
nearly
10
years,
Baker
has
All he's likely to get for his trouble is
generation ·:If a current reading of
been
the
Senate's
leading
advocate
of
Sen.
Alan Cranston, D-Calif., singing
population growth rates Is anywhere
designaling
the
marigold
as
the
the
praises
of the yellow poppy, Sen.
near cl011e to the mark.
national flower.
Lowell
Weicker,
R-Conn.,
TOO FEW WOMEN AT ARMS
According to U. S. Immigration
Baker
took
·up
the
cause
of
the
rhapsodizing
over
mountain
laurel,
Service reckoning, the annual in- '!'he Anny has a problem ..
marigold
upon
the
death
in
1989
of
his
and
Sen.
Daniel
Patrick
Moynihan,
DIt Is not meeting its recruitment
crease in the U. S. population of
father-in-law
,
Sen
.
Everett
Dirksen
of
N.Y.,
filllng
the
Senate
chamber
with
quotas
for
women.
What
makes
it
Hispanic origin is at least 12 percent.
praise of the rose.
This includ~s natural lnctease and worse is that the Navy and Air Force illinois.
Earlier
this
year,
once
again,
he
"
Could Kennedy resist pointillg out
are.
legal Immigration plus the continuing
that the marigold, while hardy and
The brass concerned wiih the pro- introduced his marigold bill. ·.
massive infiow of ilegallmmlgranta.
Three state legislatures, including colorful, also is known to have a
At that ·rate, Hispanics will out- blem thinks the glamqr of sea duty
that
of Carter's native Georgia, have pungent, some might say foul,
number blacks as the largest 1llinori- and piloting . planes may have
adopted
'resolutions supporting the fragrance?
something
to
do
with
it.
It's
difficult
to
ty group In the country within a
as the national flower.
marigold
meet
that
compelition
with
your
basic
decade. But growth will not, of
What
easier
way to win support for
Army
activity
slogging
through
the
course, stop there. If it continues al12
SALT?
percent for another 20 years, mud under a heavy pack.
Unfortunately, the marigold issue
True, but have they considered
Hispanic - Americans will number
contains the seeds of yet another
some 250 miiiion, half the total eliminating KP?
political problem for the harried
population and far and away its
Today in History
largest single ethnic component.
By
The Associated Press
~ at least, : would be the inTOday is Tuesday, June 12, the 163rd
evltable mathematical· result If prefrom
day of 1979. There are 202 days left in
' senlgrowlh rates for all groups in the
the year.
population continued unchanged for
~ts
Today's highlight in history :
the next 30 years, The Environmental
I I.....
•
'VI
On this dste in 1943, the TransCanadian Highway , connecting
Fund, which made the projections, · 1 - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - -- - - - '
observes. That, however, is what is Alaska with the 48 states, was opened
•
least likely to happen.
to traffic .
Such popalatioo trends do nut conOn this date:
tinue indefinitely. They may, of
In 1665, New York City was
course, go up. But it is much more
By the Edllon
Manufacturers argued against incorporated under English law.
common for a spurt of explosive
ofCoiiiUIIIer Reports
CU's proposed standard, citing the inIn 1838, the Territory of Iowa was
growth to be followed by a downturn.
During thla Intematiooal Year of creased cost of producing safet;/ organized.
We should hope so. Not for any the Child, considerable attention Is mowers. In Ma. Karpatkin's wo~
In 1917, King Constantine I of
reason of preserving an eUmlc status being focll8ed on the consumer role "One argument was that people Greece abdicated in favor of his srin,
quo, hut because a total U. S. popula· played py American · youngsters. should be aUow4lCf to decide for Alexander.
.
lion of 500 mlllloo (that is, one.Jialf After all, they do have hundn!ds of themselves whether they wanted to
In 1944, in World War II, Germans
billion) a generation fr Jm now would miiiions of doUars in spend in the pay more for a safer mower. But launched flying-bomb attacks against
be beyond the capabilities of the na- marketplace.
Britain.
·
children have no such choice."
lion's resources to support with, in the
In 1963, the Mississippi black civil
While the children's problems can
Although much of the dlscWIBion
words of The Environmental Fund, and debate.has been devoted to adver- be addressed by consumer groups, rights leader, Medgar Evers, was shot
"anything resembling dignity."
tising practice~~, other problems fac- government agencies and enlightened to death in front of his home in
There is one thing to be learned Ing young consumers are also Impor- manufacturers and advertisers, Ma. Jackson .
from such hypothetical projections, tant. For e:rample, product safety - Karpatkin also believes that
In 1977, the convicted assassin of
however. And that is that the which should be of concern to childhood consumer education needs Dr. Martin Luther. King Jr., James
American population Is never static. everyone - has spectaJ implications to be further developed.
Earl Ray, was captured 54 hours after
It is ever changing, and ever different for children.
he
and six other inmates escaped
One way In which Consumers Union
in composition today from what It was
"As coilsumers, children are not in is working to help, she notes, Is from the Brush Mountain state
yesterday and will be tomorrow.
a position to make judgments about through Its new children's magazine, penitentiary in Tennessee.
Such change is the hallmark of a their own safety,'' says Rhoda H. Penny Power. Using attractive picTen years ago: A 15-year-old
dynamic Society.
Karpatkin, executive director of Con- tures, games and stories, It provides Brooklyn, N.Y., boy who had lied
sumer's Union. "They don't know Information children need to cope abo11t his age to join the U.S. Marines,
what products or substance~~ are with everything from television Dan Bullock, was killed in Vietnam, .
hazardous ...: they must depend on advertising to product··ufety. The becoming the youngest Ameriean
adults. They're the victims of a magazine will be fonnally launched serviceman to die in the war up to that ·
ANOTHER SEXUAL BARRIER
serious marketplace abuse: •insuf£1- in January 1900 with both an English time.
Five years ago: U.S. President
Sl'ORMED
cientconcernforc hildsafety."
and a Spanish edition.
Richard
Nixon was welcomed to Cairo
Are we ready for Bob?
In her opinion, much of tl!e abuse
''Our hope with Penny Power Is that
How about Mitch and Van?
arises because manufacturili-s and It will increase consumer con- ·by large crowds of EgyptianS who
Ready or not, we're going to be advertisers see "children and child- sciousness in children," Ma. Kar- cheered him along the ten-mile route ·
. heal'lng of them in the weather related products as a market to be ex- patkin says. "In that way, we hope to into the city from the airport.
One year ago: It was reported that
reports . Beginning this year, Atlantic plaited rather than as a respollBibill- have an impact on their thinking
an
estimated 1,800 persons had been
hurricanes will·be carrying male as ty.''
about advertising and safety, and on
killed
in guerrilla warfare in Rhodesia
weU as the long famlliar female
II 's not just a matter of safe toys their buying and budg_eting pracsince
January.
tices."
,
· names.
. .
and safe children's clothing, Ma. KarToday's birthdays: Banker David
It's partly a sexual • equallzlng patkin notes. Child safety products Rockefeller
is
64.
Former
gesture and partly to increase varie- such as car aeat restraints - have at
congressman
and
diplomat
George
ty. It was getting so that If you had t1mea been found Inadequate for their
mE DAILYSI!NTJNEL
(USPS
ICHIOI
Bush
is
55.
Singer
Vic
Damone
is 51.
heard of one tropical stonn named JIUI'POieB, too.
Entertainer Jim Nabors is 46.
Agnes or Caroline, you thought you
Sometimes, safety hazards can be
~~~~.--~,Thought for today: Don't use the
had heard of them all.
found in such products as playground
conduct
of a fool as a precedent - the
Pacific typhoons have bel!n carry- equipment, poisons in the medicine
DEVOI'EIJ T0111E
Jewish
Talmud.
INTEIIEST OF
ing mixed-gender names for a year cabinet, cleansers in containers
MEI-..sCINAREA
now, but their Atlantic counterparts without childproof· •closings, - .., ROliEI\T HOEn.JCH
.
•
ctlyEdlto.
(there's no difference between a hur- fireworks,matchesandsharpobjects
.
l'llbllolloddlly ......tSalardafbyTbeOll•
ricane and a typhoon other than the lett within reach ot !lllail children,
Valley 1'IIIIUAlq ~:ompoay. Maldmeclta, Ia&lt;.,
ocean that happens to spawn a par- And, the fact Is, YOIIIIIslelll (reIll ~ &amp;L, Ptmerey, Olllo ...,., . . . . .
ticular storm) required mo~ lnvolv- quently use products designed for an Olfko
. . 1111. Editorial tiW157.
ed International negotiations. Agree- plii'Chued by adults.
"
Secoud dau po1&amp;1.1e ..ld It Pomeroy, Olllo.
NaUo•l ad·/ertbiD« repraeotaUve, t..Dd011.
ment 011 name lists covering the next Take, for example, the lawn
Alloclalel, .3101 Eacllcl Ave., Clevelaad, otdo
five years has now ~n reached mower. When Consumers Union t41l5.
''
Tuesday .
Sablcl1pdoa nt.es: DeUvered by e.rrler
among the Interested ·maritime na- developed a lawn mower safety stanwben IVIlllble M cen~ per week. B)' Motor
"Reverend,"
npw a title of respect
lions.
dard for the U. S. Consumer Product RD~te wbtre can1tr aervk:e oot avalllble, o.e
for
eccleslastes,
Ia found in the Bible
This year's second At)antic storm Safety Commission, 11 was dealing
moilth, $1.10. By maU In Obto aDd w. Va., o.e
Year, tz'j'.st; Six 1110111tbs', $14.5e; Tbree mua.in refel'eiiCe to God.
will be christened Bob, a later one will with a product that children use·
&amp;111, SUO ; lrJ~e"latre $32.11 )'ear: Sis IIMiathl
" ... holy and reverend Ia his riame."
be Juan. Mitch is scheduled for 1900 They mow lawns as part of the!~ $17.81;
Three mouthl, SUO. SubscrlpUon prtee
-Psa.l11:9.
lncludet Su.Uy Tlmea-SeoUnd.
and Van later.
household cho,res to to make money.
By DONAW M. ROTHBERG
Associated Press Writer
·
WASHINGTON (AP) -It looks like
President Cl!l'ler is ready to wheel
and deal for Senate votes on the SALT
treaty.
For presidents like Lyndon Johnson
and Richard Nixon, trading water

Commentary

Los estados unidos?

0

By BOB GREENE
AP Sports Writer
Steve McCatty w&lt;re the green and
gold of the Oakland A's. But he fell
right at home in Detroit's Tiger
stadium.
" I was excited, s\.U"e I was excited,"
McCatty, a native of Troy, Mich., said
after making his first major league
appearance in Detroit. "It was nice
having aU the relatives here, but it
didn't have any effect on me."
It was Detroit's Lou Whitaker who
affected the rookie A's pitcher the
most as Detroit trimmed the A's 3-1.
The Detroit second baseman, last
year's American League rookie of the
year, singled and scored the game's
first run in the first inning. He also
scored in the fourth when Detroit tallied twice to chase McCatty and hand
the Oakland starter his first loss in
five decisions. ·
In other AL games in an abbreviated schedule, Toronto stopped
Seattle 2-0, California defeated
Cleveland 9'4. Baltii!tore bl~nked the

best pitch - I had good location with it
and I used it as my out pitch."
Twitchell, HI, retired 16 of the 18
hatters he faced while allowing one
walk and striking out four. The Mets
rallied for two runs in the fourth and
got the winning Ially i}l the fifth .
"Based on what he did tonight, and
on liis three previous efforts in which
he !tad good lOcation, I will give Twitchell a start next Wednesday," Torre
promised. " It sure. wasn't a waste .
bringing in Wayne. We got a win

2.

In the fifth, Joel Youngblood
walked, Frank Taveras doubled to left
and Mazzilli dumped a hit into short
right field, driving in Youngblood with
the winning run. It was the New York
center fielder's first game-winning

4.().

Jack Morris; 4-2, went the distance
for Detroit.
Red Sox 4, Royals 0
Dwight Evans doubled home the
first run and two more Boston runs
scored on reliever AI. Hrabosky 's
throwing error as the Red Sox broke
up a pitching duel in the loth inning to
stop Kansas City.

TICKETS ON SALE
Tickets for the Jeannie C. Riley
show to be held at the Meigs High
Sladium in Pomeroy as a.part of Big
Bend Regatta weekend on· Friday,
June 22, are on sale at Fruth Pharmacy and Poin'I'View Cable TV in
Point Pleasant and at the Alcove in
Gallipolis. Advance tickets are 50 centa cheaper than tickets at the box offlee on the night of the performance.

The Royals' Steve Busby allowed
Blue Jays Z, Mariners 0
only two hits in 91-3 innings before ·Dave Lernanczyk tossed a sjx-hitter
being saddled with the loss. Boston's and Rick Bllsetti added a two-run
Bob Stanley, 7-4, allowed only four single to give Toronto its victory over
hits as he went the distance.
Seattle. It was Lemanczyk's second
With the bases loaded and one run shutout of the season and his seventh
in, Jerry Remy bunted back to Kansas complete game.
City reliever Hrabosky. But the
Both Blue Jay runs eame in the first
pitcher threw wildly to home plate, al- inning as loser Floyd Bannister
lowing two more runs to score.
. loaded tlui bases on a pair of walks
Angels 9, IndlaDS 4
and a single by Rico Carty before
California exploded for six runs in Bosetti slapped his single up the
the ninth inning to overtake middle.
Clevel;md. Brian Downing and Larry
Orioles 6, White So:o 0
Harlow drove in two runs apiece in the
Ken Singleton doubled in two runs
inning after the Indians had inoved to and AI Bumbry added a twQo;un pinch
a 4-3 advantage in the eighth. After single to back the five-hit pitching of
Cleveland pitcher Dan SpiUner loaded Scott McGregor as Baltimore racked
the bases on two walks and a single, up its sixth straight victory by
reliever Don Hood hit Willie Aikens to blanking Chicago.
force in a run. Reliever Mike Paxton
Singleton's double was the big hit in
came on to face Downing, who the thr~un fifth inning and Bumbry
doubled home two runs and Harlow came up with a bases-loaded single in
then singled home two more runs. The the sixth.
Angels added · their final run on a
It was McGregoc's first victory of
double by Dldde '111011.
the year against two losses.

BRING YOU ••

Had Twitchell failed, he might have
been released, because Torre baa
been attempting to reorganize bla
mound corps.
"! have a contract through nest
year," Twitchell said. "But I knew
there was a chance I could be
released. It would have been the end
of baseball for me as I wouldn't have
gone to the minors."
For now, at least, the Mets' long
reliever is safe.

r-;;;1
• • •••••

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD
Baseboll AI A Glance
Seattle at Detroit, (n)
By The Assocloted Press
Baltimore at Chicago, (n)
AMERICAN LEAGUE
New York at Minnesota, (n)
EAST
Boston at Kansas City, (n)
W. L. Pet. GB Mllwauk,ee at Texas, In)
38 21 .644
Balt imore
Boston
36 21 .632 1
NATIONAL LEAGUE
New York
32 27 .542 6
EAST
Milwaukee
32 28 .533 6'h
W. L. Pd. GB
Detroli
27 26 .50'1 8 St. Louis
32 21 .604
Cleveland
27 30 .474 10
Montreal
n '22 .•385 1
Toronto
17 43 .283 21'1' PhiladelPh ia
31 27 .5:W 3°J'l
WEST
.
Pittsburgh
28 25 .528 4
California
36 24 .600
Chi cogo
25 28 .472 7
Minnesota
30 26 .536 4
New York
22 32 .423 101J'l
Te xas
31 27 .534 4
WEST
Kansas City
32 28 .533 4
Houston
36 26 .581
Chicago
· 28 30 .483 7
Cincinnati
33 26 .559 11/o
Seattle
24 37 .393 12'h San Francisco
29 31 .483 6
Oakland
19 41 .317 17
Los Angeles
28 :W .452 · 8
Monday's Games
San Diego
27 35 .435 9
Toronto 2, Seattle 0
Atlanta
22 37 .373 12112
California 9, Cleveland 4
Mondey's Games
Detroit 3, Oakland 1
Montreal,6, Atlanta 5, 11 Innings
Baltimore 6, Chicago 0
Philadelphia 4, Houston 2
Boston 4, ·Kansas City 0, 10 Innings
New York 3, Cincinnati 2
Only games scheduled
St. Louis 9, Los Angeles 7
Tuesday's Games
Only games scheduled
Seattle (Abbott 2·7) at Toronto
Tuesday's G1mes
,
(Jefferson 1·5), (n)
·
Houston (Williams 2·21 at
California (Frost 3·3) at Cleveland . Philadelphia (Espinosa 5-5), &lt;rl
' (Wise 6·5), (n)
Cincinnati (Bonham 2-11 at New
Oakland !Minetto J.l) at Detroit (P. York (Falcone 0·5), (n)
· Underwood I·Ol. In)
Pittsburgh (Candelaria (4·4) at San
Oakland (Minetto 1-11 at Detroit {P, Diego (Perry 5·4), (n)
Underwood 1-0), (n)
St. Louis (Denny 3·.oil at Los Angeln
Baltimore (Flanagan 7·4) at (Welsh •·3), (n)
: Chicago i'Kravec 6·4l. lnl
Chicago (Holtzman 4·4), at San
• New York (Guldrr 6·4) at Min · Francisco (Knepper 5·2), (nl
nesota IK®sman 7·4 • In)
O'lly games scheduled
Mi lwaukee (Sorenson 8·51 at Texas
Wetlnesdoy•s Gomes
(Comer 5·5) , (n)
Atlanta al Montreat, (n)
·Boston !Rainey 4·3) at Kansas City
Houston at Phl(adelphla, (n)
I (Gale
5·4) , In)
Cincinnati at New York, (n)
Boston (Rainey 4·31 at Kansas City
Pittsburgh al San Diego. (nl
(Gale 5·4l. (n)
St. Lou is at Los Angeres, (n)
Wednesdav's G.ames
Chicago at San Francisco, (n)
California at ioronto. 2
Oak land at Cleveland, In)

Meigs summer results
By Greg Baney
Last Saturday, holt Powell's Giants
&amp;Ule from behind to hand the ~d·
p!rl Braves·a '-2 aetbaclt. Bobby
railer fanned twelve and walked
.eil,butheldonforthewin.
Sean Doidge led the Gluta with
- . singlea .while Bret Kom and
_...
OlraldMooreeachhadtwoslngles.
Shawn Baker took the loss, fanning
Ill and walldng five . Baker also led
a. Braves in hitting with three

·e

llngles.

' o•

Kids as consumers

I

Chicago While Sox ~ and Boston
needed !Oinnings to down Kansas City

RBI this year and helped the Mets get
ooly their sixth win in 19 one-run
games.
Despite the euphoria created by
"rwltchell's effort in a game which
may have saved his bigleague career,
Torre indicated that he was still
hopeful of a trade to aid the Mets'
woeful pitching staff befoce the June
15 deadline.
"You can't have enough pitching
and ours doesn 'I come close to what I
want," said Torre.

~ l_:_._._:_j

G&amp;J ,Auto .Parts '1HE PROFESSIONAlS"

"-Cl&amp; ISU...a. Ral
'-rln

j

'

fourth when Torre called his bullpen
on the dugout phone.
Twitchell answered the call and
showed the Mets skipper that he luld
reached the right number.
Twitchell, a 31-year-old righthander
signed by the Mets as a free agent in
spring · training , forced Junior
Kennf!ly to ground into a fore~ 9ut to
end 'the inning. He pitchl;ld one-hit
relief the rest of the way to pick up his
first victory of the year as the Mets
fought back.

because of it."
The Mets got to Reds starter and
loser Fred Norman mainly because of
his wildness. Norman,~. walked Lee
Mazzilli and J(!hn Steams to open the
fourth, got two men out, but then gave
up a double into leftcenter field to
Alex Trevino which tied the score at 2-

McCatty makes debut at Detroit

.Thoughts

••

l

NEW YORK (AP) - Cincinnati , runs in the first and third innings and
"I felt good from the start,"
Reds Manager John McNamara gives had two men on with two out in the Twitchell said. "My curve was my

.....
.=... . ... .'
·-·· ·7·. .
9,!' ·''
'

.~~-

· .Jor

,"

,I
'

I

I"

'

'

'

I;

: ::: : ~

The New Haven Reda defeated the
wlaiting Muon Little League team,
1•10 recently. Matt Thompson fanned
lleven and walked six to pick up the

a.rti

M
·
aeo 4-st It 1
p
001 1- 7 5 e
In T·Ball actioo Jut night It
Racine, vlaltlng Syracue Bean
trounced the hoata, 30-10. Chrll
stewart led the Bears with two
doubles. Scott lJale, Doug Lavender.
and Andy Baer each had a double.
Roy Johnson led Raclne at the plate
with a double.

wiD.

Thomplon a1ao led the Red! In hitwith a triple and double. Boyd
Nclrthup and Rod Long each had a
double while Mike Wolfe and Robert
Vlcken alngled.
' ..
HyaeU led the Mason attack with a
double and two singles. Blimltz, Mitchell and Sparks each had aslngle for
· the losers.

ClllliJ """.

I

Unescore:

blned to fan eight and walk elibt.
Olarlle Knopp took the Yankee
loss He fanned n11111 and waiDd am.
KnOpp had two doublllll and
Kennedy and Dave lfendricb each
had
t...U.us
"'-·-·one n..--..aer..............
HOIICharandKnoppllllchhldalingle.
Unescore·

CW811

.,

SET

'

'

Combination Wrenches In Heavy
Gauge VInyl Roll-up Kits With PP&lt;:k·
ets for Each Wrench

1781

P1rtl Plu• ' ,,_.. Plul
FLYINQ SAUCER NJ1on Melli

Plrtl
Colorful DECK

Cotton

HAT .

11y Greg lW!ey

In Utile League action, the New
Haven Cube rolled over the hot
Pomeroy Yankeell 2U behind a twohitter by the Cube' Rolllna. The pit-

eher fanned aeven and walked one. He
a1ao slammed a homer, triple, and
double.
.
Gress hit a triple and doUble wbllt
Also In Little League action, the Dawson had three doubles and Friend
New Haven Cube downed the holt · had two singles. Clark, Pl8ntl, and
Pmlel'oy Pirates 23-1, aa l)aWS()II fan- Friend each doubled while Planta
ned six and walked just one to get the singled.
win. Dawson, Gress, Friend, . and
KnopptookthelossfortheYankeel
Brooks each had two singles to pace and Willls finished up in reUef.
the winnen. &lt;lark had a triple, Hoschar and Hendricks gat the Ollly
RolllDS and Friend each doubled, and two yankee hits, singlllll. Mark HamPlants, Nicks, and Gandee each had a . monds had a fine game on defense for
single.
the Yankees.
Todd Cullwns, Huey Eason, and
Llnescore: ·
Mark EWot shared pitching duties for NH
10 3 7 4-24 14 1
the Pirates. They walked nine and py
0 0 o.o- 0 2 8
fanned sev~n. Joe Fields had a single
Jarnea Acree pitched a ~tier
for the Pirates' only hit.
and holt Rutland·Dodgers went on to
Llnescore:
win 11-1 over the Pomeroy Plralel,
c
11 I a 3-2 3 Acree also smacked two home nn
P
0 1 0 o- 1 while Kenny Wlae and David Hoover
each doubled. Doug ~. Jack
The vlaltlng Middleport Indiana Peterson, Danny Davia, o.rrtn
roUed to a 24-7 victory over the host Cremeans, and Hoover each had a
Pomeroy 'Yankees last night. Scott single.
·
Gheen homered and doubled while T.
Acree fanned eight and walked jlllt
Welch had a triple, double, and two two while the Dodgers tagged Todd
singles to pace the.attack. Steve Crow Cullwns with the loss. Culluma and
had a triple, double, and single. D. Rod Harrison combined to walk five
Thomas had a triple and single. John- and strike out three.
11011 singled twice, while Shuler, Wise,
Llnescore:
H9Qd, and Terry each singled once.
000 1- 1 0 2
P.
. Wise got the win with relief ~lp R
334.1-11 t 2
from Welch and Gheen. They rom·

141

G&amp;J AUTO ,P:ARTS CO•
-"OVER 50 YEARS OF SERVICE"

,,•

.

•\

••

�~The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, June 12, '1979

Day camp
·training
'begins

'Queen for a Week'
named at TOPS meeting

Duo top
losers named
last week

Sunday School a'ttendance on June 3
was 39, the offering $25.05.
• Attendance at worship services was
2!i with Rev. Richard Thomas
speaking on "The Fire of the Spirit"
from Acts chapter 21. Nina Robinson
and Thelma Henderson sang a special
number "Victory in Jesus" for the
service, which was a service with

At last week's Slinderella Diet
Training sesaiOflll for Meigs County Classes at Middleport, Shirley
Girl Scout day camp workers will Johnson and Marjorie Hoffner were
begin this Week.
· the top losers with Pearl Phalen,
Mrs. Becky Mankin day camp . Mary Brownlilg, Elva Dailey and
director, Is asking that persons in- • Donna .Guinther as nmners'up. Two

Jill

terested In helping with day camp
come to a work sesalon Wednesday at
Camp Klaahuta near Chester, 9 a.m.
to 2 p.m. Thoae attending are to take a
sack lunch, a knife, a small piece of
.rope, a sit-upon, camp idea book, and
halldbooka.
Additional training will take place
· on June 18 arid June 25.
. Day camp is set for July 9 through
13, with registration to be 1n by June
15tothedaycampdlri!ctor.Registralion fonns are available from scout
leadel'!l.

Report heard on
Nativity Deanery
•I

I.

Michael Sellers
,..,.,
.1

urns seven years

Area U.S. Servicemen news...
STEPHEN WAGNER .

JOE HOLMAN
Marine Lance Corporal Jll'leph W.
Holman, son of Earl and Goldie M.
Holman of 46420 Star Route 124,
Racine, · has deployed to the
Mediterranean Sea.
He is assigned to Baltallon Landing
Team One Slant Eight, (BLT 1~ ).
base at Camp Lejeune, N.C.
Hia unit Is the ground element of a
Marine Ampblbious Unft (MAU), the
fon:Hn-na~ for the U.S. Slsth
F1eet, 011-aall to project combined airground forces uhore. BLT l~ will
participate In a variety of tralnlnll
exercises with uther Sixth F1eet units
and with those of allied nations. Port .
visits are scheduled in several
Mediterranean coastal dtiell.
A 1977 graduate of Southern Local
High School, Holmall joined lbe
Marine Corplln July lrTI.

=

.SUMMER

~ ._ JoJi.$
.E Jlf Jal.iO&lt;U
,.._....

Alfred Prayer Service is at 7:30
p.m . Wednesday evening.
There will be a wedding on June 10
weight loss opened the meeting of Diana Massar ahd Kevin. Buckley
presided over by Mrs. Grate. Kathy at Allred Church2:30 p.m.
Stewart, co-leader, gave the
Daily Vacation Bible School at
treasurer's report and Marcia Elliott Alfred church will be June 111-22 with
the secretary's report. Welcomed Janice Pullins the director.
were two new members, Liz Jacobs
Conn! Sue Woode, granddaughter of
and Frances Hysell. Jo Ann Eads Mr. and Mrs. Charles D. Woode ,
gave the weight report noting that graduated from Walter E. Steb.)&gt;ins
there were 13 tops, two turtles, and High School on Sunday, June 3 a! the
one gainer. Total loss was 38 pounds. University of Dayton Arena (she was
Record · keeping expenditures were one of the top 2!i students of the class
approved by the club, and each of 1979 which was a large class) .
member made a bid for weight loss Congratulations, Conni!
Sharon Henderson
during the week. The winoer wiU be
Several local people attended ser·
presented a prize. Bids will be taken vices for Mrs. Michaels, mother of
each week with the winner from the Nellie Parker of Alfred Church and
week before to provide the prize. community at Ewing funeral home on
Members
not reaching their goals will Sunday with burial at Ravenswood,
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Lee Hender- caster.
pay
a
fine
of :;o cents.
son, Route 1, Guysville, are announcThe bride-elect is a 1978 graduate of
W.Va. Mrs. Michaels was 93 and had
Articles on weight loss were read a lengthy illness.
ing the engagement and approsching Eastern High School and is employed
marriage of their daughter, Sharon with the Bureau of Public Debt of and presented to each member with a
Recent visitors of Grace Swartz
Lee, to Richard Thomas Yost, son of Parkersburg, W. Va. Her fiance is a letter to hllllbands stating the dozen have been her children and their
Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Yost, Lan- 1973 graduate .of Berne Union High rules for hllllbands who want to help families from Ravenna, Akron and
School and he is employed with the their wives lose weight.
Salem, Ohio as well as her sons, Ver·
Viking Natural Resource Corpora- Members were asked to take a diet non and Millard and families, local.
recipe to the next meeting. New
members are welcome and informaThe Marble Arch of the entrance of
·
place on July 14 at 2:30 p.m. in the tion may be obtained from Shorty Hyde Park in umdon opens its main
Wright at 742..'1062 or Marcia Elliott,
gate only to the British Royal Family.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Thomas,. 289 Alfred Methodist Church with the 742-2233.
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, held an Rev . Richard Thomas officiating
open house and buffet supper Sunday
evening following graduation exer·
SHOP
c1ses at the Hocking Technical Col·
lege. The affair honored the Thomas'
daughter, Rebecca; and a friend,
Nicholas Depoy, who were members
FOR THE; BEST DEALS IN THE
. of the graduating class.
· Debbie Grate was ."queen for the
TRl STATE AREA
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. Ken- week" at the June 5 meeting of. the
neth McLaughlin and grandaon, Scott Rutland Chapter of TOPS (take off
Howell, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Morris and pounds sensibly)' with Edna Mae
son, John' Mr. and Mrs. Steve Price Swick as her nmner-up.
Mon ., Tues., Wed ., Friday &amp; Sat.
and daughters, Stephanie and Stacey,
A dollar was presented to Mrs.
8:30
to 5: oo Thursday till 12 Noon
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Werry, Mr. and Grate and members sang a song In
Mrs. John Blaettnar and Mary, Mr. her honor. The recognition came as a
OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONLY
and Mrs. Ralph Graves, Mr. and Mrs. result of her 'weight loss during the
Herman Grate
James Depoy of Bralnbridge, Rhonda week.
.
Southern, Dan and Greg Thomas, the
.
773·5592
Mason, W. Va .
The TOPS pledge and the roll call
hosts and the honored guests.
with each member reporting in

Open house held ti~openchurchweddingwmtake

SAVE
20-50 40 &amp; 50%

Alfred
Social Notes

·ON: DRESSES, SLACKS,

. BLOUSES, SHIRTS
AND MORE

MASON FURNITURE' .
MASON FURNITURE

NOW THRU JUNE 17

HOURS: CLOSED MONDAYS AT NOON
. . . . •.....lUES.-SAT.
9:»5:00
,,
'

~

'

-·

~1i!llr~~~~~~~

~· ~-~ AN·D THAt YOUR FOOD BUDGETS WILL LOVE !

working

..
· ARMOUR'~·SAt.f··

for

you

I

SUPERIOR

FRANKIES .....!~..~..99e

ARMOUR .' : ~)

TRitt.. ·
'

•

c..j

..., '-&gt;

-

,:•·~

:00

•

. ......C..EON

..We're here

to make sure
the power's there
at the flip of a switch."

M~~l'

,..

-· ·12Oiutt

. $tit

'ARMOUR

..

FRESH LEAN

GROUND

VIENNA
'

. 5 OZ. CAN

BAKER
FURNITURE

39~

Tl DE......... .I!.t.~.~-$ 4
DISHWASHING LIQUID
DAWN ........ ~~-~;. 89~
59

VALLEY BELL

.

$169

2% MILK..........~~~... .
$

con
AGE
24 oz. 1.
CHEESE ••••••••••.••••••••
BROUGHTON

·

09

"Peaking uni ts, llke the oil units at Walnut Station, provide
the company wi th an option when we need to meet increased
· customer demand. It•s only a small part. but when needed, we
can fire up immediately." Harold O'Brien, Maintenance Supervisor

..

. S01Jen claw• a w.eek,

lhe

24 hours a dav,
Co/umbu•

"""'"'of

and Soothom Ohio
E~ ComP&lt;Inv •••
workllllf for 110•·

.{

~

CoCumbu,

/oufhptvJ

COLUMDUSAND SOUTHERN O HIO El!CTRIC COMPANY
2 I ? N. FRONT 51 . COLUMDUS. OHIO 432 1~ '
.

~catchganr

NOTICE TO GIRL SCOUTS
· Meigs County guo! scout troops who
plan to · participate In the Regatta
parades are asked to contact Mrs. Pat
Thoma, service Wlit director.

·

r

cz

We Are Carpet Specialists

.

O•EI""'''"·

.

u..

LUX •••••••••••••••••~i!!..

29~

CABBAGE ••••••••••••~~·.

TOMATOES •••••••••~;. 99~

4

BUNCHES $100

.

BANANAS
3 lb. $} 00

PAK 16 OZ. BTlS.$1 09
Plus Tax &amp; DEP,

89~

ROOT BEER

ALL

WEEK

DIET RITE OR

•.

Owned &amp; Opelated by llani1 Furniture &amp; Cap8ta.

DR. PEPPER

RC COLA .

8PAK~.Okgg~

brushes or d!lmaglng scrubbers
Do Not

Bath

19~

BARR~LHEAD

7-UP

2 LITER BOmE

trained cleaners
o We heat the water we use
•. No harsh chemicals, stiff

Your Hot Wohtr

TOILET SOAP

NEW .

APPLES ••••••••••• ~~~~~ 89~

8

o Our men are professionally

· ··

CARPET carpet
$}99
Cleaner
14 OZ.
FRESH~ ••••••••••••••••••

GOLDEN DELICIOUS

PK 16 OZ. Bns.
Plus Tax' &amp; Dep.

300 sq. fl . Minimum

franchises available throughoul the Unrted Sta!es ,w.

·16 Ol

GREEN
ONIONS •••

.lvlng .
room
and hal

··scOTCHGARD'' Carpet Protector. APDkator

s

LOAVES

GENERIC (White)

•Fat• s. ...

. COWMBUS VISITORS
Mrs. Harry Davis, ~s. Margaret
.~work ·
Lehew and son, Ted, were In Colwn·
bus Saturday to visit Mr. and Mrs . • . WE FEATURE GENUINE
Ro!lerl Lehew and daugbars. They
went especially for the graduation of
Charlotte Lehew from the Whitehall
High School. On- Sunday Ted and
Dave Dancus of Galllpolia left for a
CARPET PROlECTOR
Uklay fishing trip In Canada.'
Availa!Jie Only From Your Licensed

lB

s 139

BREAD

AIR WICK

LAUNDR4 SIZE SOAP POWDER

GRAND

• Sp•clll C.nMtdlllatea
• Wltlr • - • • &amp; Deodorizing
• hi !Ill• • Otllling

5 LBS.
OR MORE

FAVORITE

BEEF. ....... ~ ................................:.~ ....

. SAUSAGE

IS HERE _5_93-6_848.......__

"Proper plnnning of interconnections irl a total power grid
system is criticnl to the company's ability to meet the customers'
peak demands."
· Eric Engdahl, Senior Power Siting Engineer

~:30p.m.Sunday.

Sharon Henderson engaged ·

up.

TOOK IE'S FASHIONS ANNOUNCE

TORREJON D. AROOZ, Spain Michael Allen Sellers, son of SSG Technical Sergeant Stephen E.
JULIE BYER, new honored queen of Bethel62, International Order of
Wagner, son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward
llld Mn. Gerald E. Sellers, observed J. Wagner of Rt. 3, Racine, has
Job's DaughterS.
b1a IIYenth birtJ.tay with a surprise reenlisted in the U. S. Air Force at
party at his. schoOl, Hia mother and Torrejon AB, Spain.
bla aunt, Cbeeyl Lee, bosted the party
Sergeant Wagner, whose Afr Force
and all ~ bia c'e!!!ID!8tes and bia first career began in 1966, is a postal
lfllde teachen attended along with specialist at Torrejon. He Is assigned
Ida lister, Amy Da1l11 Sellen. Cake, to a unit of the U. S. Afr Forces in
Ice cr.m, mints and koolald were Europe.
read from Rita~ Ida Cuunta. ~~ wu alto beld at the hlme of. The sergeant is a 1965 graduate of
Mary Wlpple, He!- Brlcldll, Mlcbael'a grandparents, Mr. and Southern High School.
Lindner
and
children,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Cathertne Biron, and 81. Jobn VIlla Mrl. CWill Roulh. A down motif was
Mr. and Mrs. Vergil Hayes recently
DAVID TIEMEYER
held a surprise party honortng her James Pace, Mr. ancl Mrs. Sam Orphlnace. Mn. Patrtcla McKnlcbl carried out iiJ the decorations and on
Marine Private First Class David
mother, Mrs. Ellen Wilson, Pomeroy, Marion and Mr. and Mrs. Bob reported U.t 16 •u.nded the IIJ'Bdua· the Cake. A.._.,ft. were Mrs. Sellers
breakful.
,,.._,.
L. Tiemeyer, son of Loretta A.
Creamer, Mr. and Mrs. Russell Miller tim
an the occasion of her 88th birthday.
The committee f~r the llick of the and daughter, Amy Dawn, Kenneth Tiemeyer of 103 Laurel St., Pomeroy,
The party was held at the Hayes • and children, ~etta,. Mr. and Mrs.
~t ~~ has reported for duty with 3rd Force
home In Columbus. Mrs. Wilson's two Myron Allstalter arid daughter, parilh reported Paul Alidmrl, Mary s;t~·
Wlpple,
Catherine
BlnJil,
Marpret
Service , Support Group, ~ · on
Wapakoneta,
Ms.
Rhonda
Wilson,
&amp;Liters, Mrs. Kathryn Carter,
Gail,
and Amy lluiWa W. Ilwu 111o lloulb. Kay Gl111!8er, Rodney and Okinawa.
Jackson,
Mrs.
Charlotte
W'J.!son
and
Wapakoneta, and Mrs. Margaret
noted thlt AIN llaclnfood 1r Milly. Sending gifts fJ'GI!l Gennany
He jolned,the Marine Corps In April
Bachman, Colwnbus, were present. Mrs. Mary Pavey, Springfield, Mr. !Wipltallzed. Meulllen will be ._Mlchael'sfather,SSGGeraldE.
ROBERT IMIIODEN
1rTI.
Many friends and family enjoyed and . Mrs. Bruce Scholl, Chillicothe, ·
Marine Lance Corporal ~ L.
Clll'duedprayen. ~·~~uncle, SG. Chester A.
Mr. and Mrs. Wllll.s Ohlinger, Mr. and
cake and Ice cream.
Imboden, SOli of Frances lmhriden of
llit lbe ll'eet!ll •'IIUh
.
.
TERRY
LuNSFORD
Those attending from Columbllll Mrs. Bud Magie and daiJihter,
Route 1, Rntlend, wu awarded the
'...
• 'I
WRIGHT·PATTERSON - Terry Good Conduct Medal. .
were Mr. and Mrs. Paul Johnson, Logan, and Mr. and Mrs. Ted Fisher,
Lunsford, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Shennoo Jobnllan, Dr. and Mrs. Lewis New Riclunond.
The Good Conduct Medal IIIJDiftes
Lunlford ~ Tuppers Plains, enlisted faithful aDd obedient -me durlnc a
In the U.S. Aii' Force, according toT· three-year period. To 88111lt Wtetec!
1
Sgt. ~ Gabhart, Afr F~ Man- IDUIIt achieve and D!l..,..ln
Recruiter here.
an llllbJemiobecl· CCIIIduct r.eard fir
Clime
~
to 2 p.m.
at
Upon graduatloo from the Afr F~r­ the entire period.
'
~
W!!III..U lllliln'll!ll!\'lle. Sponsored
ce 's sii weeks buic military training,
Imboden
Ia currently .ervin~ attbe'
by aam..mDe Senior Cltlrena. All Terry will receive training in lbe
Marine Corpe Air StatiCIII, S.ufort,
. . auoflll . . . arewelccme.
Mechanical Career Field..-Terry Ia a s. c.
:
JIJCIGS CHAPTER 53 DAV 1979 graduate of Eastern High l!chool.
A 11186 IIJ'Bduate of Rutland Hilll"
. Te I WMft.m. at bome on ButTerry wl!l be eamin&amp; credlta tower· Sebol, he joln8d the Marine Corpe In
.....~ Of.
ds an Associate Degree tlrougb the March 19'111. Imboden•• wife, Patricia,~
... ·• WiiW.ihG TllAit. GulleD Club, ·a Commwlity College cl the Afr Force Ia the daughter of Odeaa Roulll of
p.IIL Ta ..., at the home of Mrs. while attending basic and other Afr 3m4 Bailey Run Roed,PclllervJ.
Force technical training schools.
. Qn Beelle, Racine. Plants auction
to be beld. Mrs. DoWe Hayes to have
the )li'OP'am on ma1dng corsages.
CHRIS ANGEL
YOUR HEADQUARTERS
"Only a Rose" will be the
Navy Airman ' Recrul~ Chrlstoqher
A. Angel, SOli of Larry J. and Dorothy
an'lllllemellt theme.
FOR
L.
of Boz 531, New Haven, W.
· UG'UL.AR MEETING, Racine Va.,Angel
completed recruit training at
Loclce '461, F and AM, 7:30 p.m. the haa
Naval
Training Center, Grat
Tuelday.
Lakea,lli.
.
WEDNESDAY
During the eight-week training
, AMIIUAL MEETING, Pomeroy
cycle,
he studied general military
Owplier 10 RAM, . 7:30 p.m. Wed·
designed to prepare blm for
subjects
··· 111c111; 8:111 p.m. annual meeting
furthe~
·academic and an~job
S.wadb Council 46, F and SM. Electraining
In
Cllle of the Navy's 115 basic
IICIII tl ofllcers, officel'll to take
occupational fields.
rUdlll.
.
Included In hiB studies · were
r raNJ:Y-BENNETI POST 128,
seamanship, closeo()rder drill, Naval
Analcan Legkln, 7:30p.m. Wednes· history aDd first ald. Personnel who
day night at the hell.
complete .this course of Instruction
.iUN'IOR AMERICAN LEGION are eligible for three ·hours of college
' AUXJi.IARY, Feeney-Bennett Post credit in Physical Education and
128, 7:30p.m. at the hall.
Hygiene.
POMEROY·MIDDIEPORT Uons
A 1978 graduate of Wahama High
Club, Wednesday noon at the Meigs School, Mason, W. Va., he joined ll)e
Neil Lealberw~d, Control Operator
Inn.
Navy in March 1979.
MIDDLEPORT AMATEUR
Middleport, o.
·GARDENERS,
8 p.m. Wednesday at
The demand for electricity increases as days get longer
the home of Mrs. Harry S. Moore.
and l!otter in Columbus and southern Ohio.
Mill Kathryn HyaeJ1 and Mrs. Hugh
,Keeping pace with demand-year-round..,.requires
Custer will be co-lioBtessea.
precise forecasting and a tightly coordinated system.
THURSDAY
STAR
GARDEN
CLUB, 7:30Thurs·
it requires special skills and expertise.
day
evening
at
the
home of Mrs.
It requires special people:
Robert Hotlldey.
We'd like to introduce some of these people and
SATURDAY
let them explain what's involved in meeting t~e need
MEIGS COtJNTY RETIRED
TEACHERS A88oclatioo, annual pic·
for power in the communities we serve.
nlc to be held saturday at 6 p.m. at the
A better understanding is important to us, and you.
Racine Dam park. Spoll.'lt!s and
families invited to attend with
Wendell Wagner, District 6 field '
CALL US COLLECT
1ep1 e1entallve to present memberlhlp banner to local unit. ·
~SPECIAL MEETING, Board of
Trustees of Bedford .Youth Center,
"Plannlug ahead is n big part of my job. Money for equipment,
• More En!IIIIIIICII
1:30 p.m. Saturday at center.
needed repairs and maintenance must be budgeted years in
•LualxplnliYI
Disaolutlon of the organization and
advance."
Wayne Dunlap, Asdstant Plant MDnager, Poaton
" OPENING
•MoreEfll.:hlll
disposition to moneys from the sale of
"One of our responsibllittes Is the ene~gy and peak demand
the center building to the Christian
OFFER .
.forecast which is the fl rst pha~ of operations planning in order to
1 Assembly to be dis!:ussed. The public
•We Guaw111 our work or •• do
provide rellable electric service t_o customers ~t the lowest
is invited.
possible cos I."
Max Morri~, Director of Load Research
ltoYif

Mrs. Ellen Wilson honored on
occasion of her 87th birthday·

I

A report on the recent N!ltlvity
Deanery. at the Lady of Loretta
Church wu given by Barbara Mullen
at the Thlll'!lday night meeting of the
Catholic Women's Club at Sacred
Heart Church.
Thesteubenvllle-zztinctobe¥d
Wednesday wu dilcuued and plannlng to attend from lw'e are Mn.
Mullell, Catherine Wellb, and ~
rna Cucl, 8CC1J11111811ie by Mn.
Dorothy Jenldlll, 8 . - . It voted to contribute $25 to the c11a11ery.
Nen mee11nc will be held Clll Sept. 9 at
theHoly&lt;:n.PirllblnGllluiW.
Durill&amp; u. .,.....,.. Jll ,,_, owr
by Mrl. Wellb, !bank ~ IIGUI._

new members were welcomed to the
classes.
Four new members were taken in
at the Mason class with Pat Layne
losing the most weight, and Gewanna
Johnson as the runner-up.
At the Pomt Pleasant class, there
was a tie for the most weight lost bet·
ween Leona Green . and Frances
Dillon and Geraldine Blessing was the
runner-up. The everung class met and
~Rawson lost the most weight
and Linda Wamsley was her runner-

conununion being given lor Pentecost
Sunday.
Rev . ThomaS conducted services at
2:30p.m. at the County Infinnary.
Nina Robinson and Thelma Henderson attended the District Conterence at The Plains U. M. church at

Plus Tax &amp; Deposit
•

'I

•

8

SUPER MARKET - OPEN DAILY 9 TO 10 P.M.
SUNDAY 10 TO 10
We

PAK 16 OZ. .

BTlS.

99~

Plus Tax &amp; Depos~

Federal FO!ld Stamps- we Meserve 1nt~

'
I,

'

�6-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, JWle 12, 19'19

7-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, June 12, 1979
DICK TRACY

Your Best Buys Are Found in the Sentinel Classifieds
Card of Thanks

WANT AD

CHARGES
1:» Wonb CM" Under
'
C&amp;sh
Charge
1day
1.00
1 2$
2days

150

3days

190

110
300

&amp;days

!2$

37S

Each word over the minimwn
15 words I! 4 cenls per word per

day Acb runnin~ other than coo-

secuti\le days wdl be charged at
tht 1day rate

Jn memory, Card of TharW
and ObltUBry 6 cents per word,
13.00 minimum Ca•h In advance.
Mobile Home sales and Yard
sales are accepted only with
cash with order:-. 25 cent charge
for ads careymg Boa: Number In
Cart of The Stntmel

'Mle PublWler ruerves the
righ1 to edit or reject any ad&gt;
deemed objechonlll
The
Publisher will not be respcn!tble
for rTKn' than one im.'(lrncl m-

,.rtion

THE FAMlLY OF LURA CROOKS
would like to expren our
sincere o~d n.arffelt thanks
to relafi~es . fnends and all of
her wonderful neighbors for
their kindness ond S'f"mpothy
sl-lown us during the dMp loss
of our mother and grand·
mother We cannot find words
to eJ(prMs our opprectatlon
for the beautiful floral or·
rongements , food donat ions
and man., cardt. A special
thanks to Rev Harvey Koch
and wife Betty for their help
and his consoling words of .,.
couragement, the Asbury
Methodist Church members
and Asbury Methodist Church
women for their many
prayers ,
the
Syracuse
Emergency Squad. the Ewing
Funeral Home and all of you
who hel~ in any way We
min our mom and It helps to
know we f'la~e so many real
friends wt\o core and wont to
shore our grief II Is at a time
like th is we know the true
mean1ng of
Love
Thy
Nolghbor, JOHNS. CROOKS
ANPFAMlLY
lN LOVING MEMORY of Eloise
8. Wilson on her birthday,

NOTICE

June 12th
God forgive a sudden tear,
A silent wish that you were
here.
Others ore token we know,
But she was ours, ar,d we lov·
ed her son.
To her resting place we
wander
And flowers we place with
care.
But no one knows the heartache ,
A1 we turn and leve ner there
Sodly missed by· Chlldrena nd
Grandchildren

WANT-AD

A!&gt;YERTISING
DEADIJNES
Mooday
Noon on Saturday
Tuesday
lhnl Friday

4P.M
the day before publicatioo

Sunday

4PM
Friday afternoon

Notices

STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
NOTICE OF HEARING

CONTRACT SALES
LEGAL
.
COPY NO . 79 451
COLUMBUS, OHlO
May 9, 1979
In accordance with the
provisions of Chap t er 5511

of the
Oh1n

Revised
t hP

Code

OirPt"'tnr

of
nf

Tnnsportation of Ohio wil l
hold a publ ic hea r1 ng at

M

10 · 00 AM , Ohio Stanctard
T1me , June 19, 1979, in the
Common
Pleas
Court
Room,
Court house
1n
Pomeroy , Ohio for t he
purpose
of
hear1ng
statements on the prbposed
Improv ement and vacat1on
of a portion of State Route
No 124, sec tion 28 20 in
Me1gs County
PROPOSED,
THE
IMPROVEMENT OF A
PORTlON OF STATE
ROUTE
NO
124 ,
CLASS IF l ED AS A MlNOR
ARTERIAL
HIGHWAY.
SAID
HlGHWAY
SITUATED IN SUTTON
TOWNSHIP ,
MEIGS
COUNTY, OHlO .
And being more fully
described as follows ·
Btg1nnmg at a po int m
the centerline of eKisting
State Route No 124, said
po int being o 23 of a mile ,
more or less, as measured
In a northwesterly dlrec: ·
tlon along e)(ist ing State
Route No 124 trom Its
junction w1th existing
County Road No . 34,
thence . in a southeasterly
d1rect1on along or in close
prox•mlty to ex1stmg State
Route No 124, a c urve to
the right, a tangent , a
curve to the nght and a
tangent to a point In the
centerline of existing State
Route No . 124 and there
term 1nate Said point of
term~na110n be1ng o 23 o f a
mile. more or less, as
measured along existing
State Route No . 124 in a
southeasterly direction
from Its tunct1on w1th
County Road No 34 Said
de scri bed portion having a
total length of 0 45 of a
m11e . more or less.
PROPOSED ,
THE
VACATION OF A POR
T IO N OF
EXISTING
STATE ROUTE NO 124,
S ITUATED IN SUTTON
TOWNSHIP.
MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO . SAME
TO REVERT TO THE
ABUTTING PROPERTY
OWNERS AT SUCH TlME
AS THE DIRECTOR HAS
COMPLIED WITH THE
PROVISIONS
OF
SEClTON ll11.07 OF THE
REV lSE D
CODE
OF
OHIO
And bei ng more fully
descr ibed as follows :
Being all that por flon of
exist ing State Route No
124 locate~ between the
beginning and end of the
above
des c ribed
1m ·
provement
and
not
necessary for the con
structlon or maintenance
of
the
corresponatng
proposed Improvement or
needed for anv other public
highway
....
At this hellring, maps
s howtng the proposed
changes and alternate
tocat1ons -and deSigns to the
high-way syst em will be
diSPlayed , the Relocation
Assistan ce Program witl
be discussed and an En
vlronm en tat
Assessment
will be available for
vie w i ng
Ten t ative
schedules for R !ght of -Way
acqu is ition
and
con
struction W1ll be dtsc ussed
Maps , drawings, e n ·
v 1ronmental assessments ,
and other pertinent in .
formation developed by lhe
Transportation Depart ment. and any written
comments received as a
resu lt of coor d ination with
State
Resource s,
Recreation. and Planning
•Agenc 1e s ,
Federa l
Agen c ies, Local Public '
Officials and Agenctes . and
Publ1 c AdVISOry Group s
will be made available to
the publ ic for v1ewing at
the
Tran s portation
Department's D1str•ct Ten
Office . Muskingum Dr 1ve
m Marietta, Oh 1o .
Anyone
wishing
to
su bmit a written statement
or exhlb1t concernmg th•s
proiect may do so by
present ing It at the hearmg
or mailing it to the Ohio
Oepar f ment of Trans portal on , Dis triC t Ten ,
Deputy
Dire c tor .
Musk1ngum
Drive , in
Mari etta , Ohio . The final
date for subm ISS 1on of
statement will be J un e 29,
1979
uevld L w eir, P E
Otrec tor
(5) 18, (6) l. 12, 3tc

i

GUN SHOOT, EVERY FRIDAY
7.30 PM RACINE GUN CLUB.
FACTORY CHOKE GUNS ON·
LY.
lN THE
COMMON PLEAS CQURT
OF MEIGS COUNtY,
OHIO
HARRY KlNG,
Platntlff,
· \" S•

CAROLYN SUE K lNG ,
Oetendant
No . l7 ,150
NOTICE BY

PUBLICATION
TO
Ca rolyn Sue K rng ,
whose la st known address
was 46898 Scout Camp
Road . Long Bottom , 0~ 10
You are hereby not1fl ed
that you ha~e been named
a defendant m a leg at
a c t10n ent1tled Harry K1ng ,
Plam t ltr , vs Carolyn Sue
King , Def endan t
This
a ct1on has been ass•gn ed
case No 17, 150 and Is
pendrng 1n the Court of
Common Pleas of Meigs
County , Oh10
The object of th e Com plaint I S the. obtaining of a
d1vor ce a~d the ter .
mmatron of a marr iage
contract between
the
partres, th e settlement of
the property r 1ghts of the
part1es-, i!lnd the iSsue or
support and custody of the
.children
You are re"vlred to
answer the compra1nt
wllh1n 28 day s aft e r the last
pub l1cat1on of this notice,
Which will be published
once each week for SIX
successive weeks The last
publication will be mad e on
J une 26 , 1979 , and the 28
days for answer will
commence on thai date
In c ase of your ta 1ture to
answer
or
otherw1se
respond as requ~red by the
OH10
Rules
Of
C ivil
Pro ce dur e,
the
fi nal
hearmg on-this matter w111
beheld after th e e x pirat ion
of 42 days after the last day
of publ1 c at1on of this notice
or as soo n thereafter a s can
be sc heduled by the Court
Larry Spencer ,
Clerk 0(c0Uri
of Mer gs County
Oh10
(l) 22, 29, 161. s . 12, 19, 26.
61 C

Wedneeday, June 13

ASTRO·GRAPH
Bern1ce Bede Osol

June 13 , 1179

Past e•perlence can gut de you
vP.ry s uccessfully th1s coming
year tf you w111 rely upon 1t
There1n he the v1 ctone s you
have been seek ing
~EMINl (Moy 21 -June 201 Your
1udgment won "! be as sharp as
11 should be today It 's because
you hav e a tendency to base
your conc lus ions on optlm1sm
rather than on facts How to get
along w1th other signs 1s one of
the sections you' ll enJOY m
your new Astro-Graph l etter
that starts with your b~rthday
Mal t $1 ror each to Astra-Graph,
P 0 Box 489. RadiO C1ty Sta·
lion . N Y 10019 Be sure to
specify btrth sign
CANCER (June 21-Jul)l 22) Fall·
1ng to appreCiate the value
another places on an object or
Situation could wind up costing
you because of your carelessness
LEO (July 23·Aug. 121 Don' t
dea l In deception today, even
to sp11re someone's feelings If
you r views are contrary to
another ' s; tell them the truth
You'll find a taplful way
VIAQO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 221 Make
sure what you are wo rki ng on
today Is really what you want
You r efforts will be rewarded ,
bu t you co uld find you ha~te a
while e tepllant on your hand s
LIBRA (S.p1. 23-0c1. 231 In
havmg a good time today , you
could go to extremes and over·
Indulge Remember , too mu ch
candy at one 11me wtll make
you sick
SCORPlO (Ocl !._Now. !21
Lady Luck Is not sltling on your
back fence today , so don I
co unt o n her to ball you out !f
you get caught exaggerating
SACliTTAAIUS (Now. 23-Dec.
21) Today you have a tendency
to hear onl y whiil you want to
hear Later, when things don 't
work out , you"ll wonder why
you weren 't given all the facta

lnMemory

For Rent

GiveAway

COUNTRY MOBILE Homo Park ,
Route 33. north of Pomeroy.
Lorge lots . Call992·7-t79.

FIVE KITIENS , 6 to 7 weeks
old. _. ca lico, 1 hger 992 7680.
Humane Soci4)ty .

3 AND .C RM fu rnished end un·
furn11hed
opts
Phone
m· S&lt;~:l-1 . .

70,000 BTU floor gas furnace
to someone to pi ck 1t up. It
was in work1ng order wl'len
taken o ut Call992 7102.

IN ME~O"Y of our d.ar loving
husband , Rev Floyd Wise,
who 'paued away 11 years
ago May 31 . He Is gone but not
forgQtten.
Sadly missed by wife Garnet,
ch1ldr el'l and grandchildren.

Pets for Sale

FURNISHED APT. su1table for 3
or 41 construction workers
After 5pm co li 992-.5434 ,
992· 31~ . or992-5914

HOOF HOLLOW, Englosh and
Wettern .
Saddles
and
hornell. Hones and ponies.
Ru1h Roevos . 614·698 3:1'10.
Bording &amp; Riding lessons and
Horse Care producta.
RlSING STAR Kennel. Boar·
ding. Call367·02'n.
IN THE

COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF MElGSCOUNTY .
OHIO
EDNA MAE REEVES
LEONARD
ROSS
BOR lNG ,
Plaintiffs,
vs
.
FLORA MAY REEVES
DIXON , ET AL ,
Defendants
Case No 16.669
- ~EGAL NOTICE In pursuance of an order
of sale m part1t1on tram
s a 1d Court to me d1r ec ted , t
win offer for sa le, at public
auction , at the door of the
Courthouse 1n the Village of
Pomeroy , MEI'1QS county ,
Ohio. on the 14t h do~~y of
J u ly , 1979, al 10 . 00 AM ,
the follOWing described
reat estate s1tuated in th e
County of Me1gs , Sta te ot
Ohio , Township of Sc 1pio,
and more perfl c ularly
descr 1bed &amp;s follows
PAR VEL NO. 1: Being 1n
the S&lt;Jutheast q ua rt e r of
Sec t1on No 23. Town No 7.
RangeNo 14 , oftheO .C.P .•
and bounded as follows .
Beg1nnmg JO rods So uth of
the Northeast corner of
sa 1d Quarter Section and 46
rods and 2211nks west of the
east l1ne of said quart er
Sect ton , thence ( 1) West 23
rods and J lmks, (2) South
34 rods and 16 links (J)
East 23 rods and J l1nks, (4)
North 34 rods and 16 l1nk s
to the place of beg 1nn1ng ,
conta1n10g F1ve (S l acres ,
w 1th nght of way from th1s
land through lands now
owned by Wm c Reeve s
and Lona Reeves to the
public h1ghwav
PARCEL
NO .
2.
Beg tnn.ng m the lin e be
tween sect1on No Twenty
three (2J 1 and Se vent ee n
(17) a t the Southwest
corner of a lot of land
formerly deeded by J esse
Page to Jo hn Page , thence
East Twenty -one rods to
the East S1de of the Athens
and Gall+polis road to the
West line of a lot of land
formerly deeded by Jesse
Page to Samuel Page ,
thence South on sa1d line
and along the East s1 de of
the road to tt1e Northeast
corner of a lot ot land
deeded by me to Ma rt m
Rupe, thence Wes t about
twenty one rods to the line
between sect1ons twenty
three
and
seven teen ;
thence North along said
lme to the place of
beginning, contalnint3 some
two acres , more or tes s,
and 1S a part of Sections No
Seventeen ( 17), Town (7),
Range Number Fourteen
( U l 1n the Oh10 company's
Purchase
PARCEL
NO.
3,
Beg1nning thirty rods South
trom the North East corner
of the South East quarter ot
Sect1on No Twenty thre~ .
town
s eve n ,
Range
Fourteen of the Ohio
Company ' s
Purchase ;
thence West seventy rods ;
thence South about thirty
rods to L S Townsend's
land . thence East seve nth
rods t&lt;J th e East line of said
Sect 1on twen ty three ,
thence North along said
East line thirty rods to the
place of beginning , con
taining th 1rteen and one
eighth a cres more or less
save and except six acres
off the west side of said
tract of land . now owned
and by A M Reeves
PARCEL NO 4: Also ,
another lo t or parcel of
land , beginning at the
Southeast corner of tn e
above described tot ,· thence
east about seventeen rods ,
or to the State road as now
traveled ; then c e Nor
lhwardly along S1ale Road
about th1rty one rods and
fifteen and one half l1h ks or
to Columbia Downing 's
South 1in e , thence West
along sa1d Down ing 's South
line about twenty rods , or
to the East Hne of sa 1d
Sect ion twen f y -three , ,
thence South a lon g Sllid
East 11ne about thirty rods
to the place ot begmnmg
containing three acres and
sixty -four rods , being so
much of Section seventeen ,
1n tow n seven, range
fourteen In the OhiO
Company's Purchase
The amount conveyed by
lh1s deed bemg ten acres
and eighty four rods more
or tess
REFERENCE
DEED
Volume 201, Page 67 , Meigs
County Deed Records . The
appra1sed value Of sa1d
property bemg $A , 63J JJ
The above property wi ll
be sold at the door of the
Courthouse by th e Sheriff
t&lt;Jr not less than two th 1rds
the
appra ised
value
thereof
Terms of Sale . Ten
percent payable at the t1me
of sale and th~ balan ce
payable to t he Sheriff
Within th irty days .

ri

(6)

s.

12 , 19 , 26 (7l 3 10, 6tc

PROBATE COURT OF
MElGS COUNTY , OHlO
ESTATE OF PAUL A.
DILLARD,
DECEASED
Case No 22118 Docket 12,
Page 115

TWO BEDROOM furnul-led apt
992-3129 ,
992· 5434 .
or
m .s9t4 .
TWO BEDROOM trol ler. Adults
only.1192·3324 .
ONE BEDROOM opts. Contact
VIllage Manor, m -nB7
FURNISHED APT. 3 rooms and
bath No children and no pets.
949-2253.
SLEEPING ROOM for working
mon only Reasonable rent

m ·6022.

TWO BEDROOM House. newly
remodeled
k1tchen ,
In
Pomeroy Coli m -2288 af ter 6
p.m.
12K602 bedroom mobile home
in Racinepreo. 992-5658 .
.t BEDROOM ART. sub11d1es
available 1f el1glbie Coli

m .nn

Lost and Found
LOST MALE lr11h Setter. Approx. 2 yrs. old. Area of
Ba11'1an on Bashan Rd .
Children'' pet . Re word.
949-2466.
Famel
German
LOST .
Shepherd, light ton face and
legs, block on back ond tail.
Broke collar from home on
Storys Run Road , below
Midleport. mlsing 4 weeks If
seen call Gerald Mathews,
367·0395 or 992-5207 Reword.

Help wanted
IMMEDIATE
OPENING
Laboratory Technician, 3-11
•hilt. Experienced Ml T (ASCP)
or equivalent. Excellent salary
and frmga benefits Shtft dif·
farentoll Contact· Personnel
Off•ce,
Pleasant Valley
Hosp1tal, Valley On~a. Point
Pleasant, WV . 25550. PI-lone
304·675·43-10. An Equal Op·
portunlty Employer.
WANTED: SOMEONE lo repa1r
plaster. Contact Dwight Gotns
at Meigs local School D1strict
m -2153 .
APPLICATIONS now being oc·
cepted for insurance agent ot
w..tern-Southern life, 218'h
E. Main. Contact M.R. Lehew.
P~ono m -2480
BARMAID WANTED. Apply at
Headquarters 1n Middleport
EXPERIENCED CARPET tn·
stollen. Co117.t2·3117 after 5
~APER

HANGER .
Phone
m.5621 altor s 30 p m

wanted to Buy
~ CHIP

WOOD. Poles max
diameter 1ff' on largest end
$12 per 1on. Bundled s lab. $10
per ton . Delivered to Oh1o
Pallet Co., Rt. 2, Pomeroy
m-2689.

Mobile Homes Sale's

1960 SKVLINE tratler SOxlO. N.
Main in Rutland. 7.t2 2789
1978 MIDAS mini motor home,
Dodge 360 chassis, power
steering , brakes , outo., many
extras Self·contatned. Actual
m1les 5,520. ltke new. 637
Grant St., Middlepor t, OH.
1970 CHAMPION 12x60 2
bedroom
Applian c es .
building. Situated on o nice ,
rented lot Phone 992-7235
ofter5p m

LIMESTONE. •and.
gro~tel. ca lcium chloride, ferllilzer, dog food, and all types
of salt Excelsior Salt Works
Inc., E. Main St .. Pomeroy,
m -3891

BUYING. Scrap Iron and clean
cost iron Batteries, copper,
bran, aluminum. radiators ,
lead. ln1uloted copper etc
Melg1 Metals Rt 7 and 33,
Pomeroy.

Yard Sale
R
YA D· SALE .
Krowsc~:yn
residence. 300 Broadway,
Middleport .
Furntture ,
clothes. mise Tues., Wed,
Thurs.

_---:-:c-::-:---:-----,-

' BIG YARD SALE, Donndo
Narde1, 36.4 East Main St ,
Pomeroy, Ohio, second house
above Francis Florist Friday
and Saturday, June 15' and 16,
10 to 4. lots of clothing all
.
•
sizes . Other 1fems too
numerous to mention Ram
c"a,..n="
ce'-l"'s.,...,._ _ _ _ __
-_YARD CLOTHESLINE SALE, lots
of men's clothing in very good
condition. Lodle1 dresses and
other .item1. Charles Kuhl
residence, Flatwoods Rd .,
one--l'lalf mile off Rt 7,
992·7537, 10 to 8 Tuesday,
Wednesday, Thursday, June
12. 13 and 14 , weatl'ler perm it·
tlng.
YARD SALE Wednesday ond
Thurday9tll.t Good clothes,
•ome Iorge 111as. Small op·
pliancet, elec. blanket ond
m1tc Turn toward htll at TeK
oco Gas Station tn Mason.
One mile out.

TRUCKS, 2 lon 1973 and 1V.
ton 1970. Both w1th 12 ft.
boJ(e5 Phone 992·6206 or
m -6173.
197e V. SUZUKI DlRT b•ke 250
RM . like new. Ceci(Brmoger.-949·2387

ON AU

ROSE BUSHES

WATER AND misc .• l'loullng
Call1192·5858
NOW HAULING l1mestone 1n
Middl8port· Poemroy a rea
Call for free aatlmote
367-7101.
PAINTING AND sandblasting
Free estimates. Coll949-2b86

Robert E Buck
Probate J udge .
Clerk
(6) 12, 19, 26, 31c .

HANDYMAN WORK mow1ng
lawns, pa inting house s; rooh
and bulld1ng 11dewalks, etc.
Call614·667·3263.

LEARN GOLF corractly th1s
su mmer Beg inner s and ad·
vanc:led
John
Te aford .
614-9es.:J&lt;l6].

n~w and r~SMir
doors and windows. All

malnt@nant~ .

Storm

work gtJannteed 20 years ex
perlence Free estlm1tes Call
Tont Hllkins 949-2160
Athe ns Aru
791 2US or 797·2751

EXPERIENCED
Radiat9r..--.,
Service

SmRh Nelsoo

Motors, ·Inc.
Ph. 992·2T74

Pomeroy

SEPTIC TANK

CLEANING
Residential and com ·
mercial.
Call
for
estimate. 24 Hour Ser'
vice. Anv day, anytime.
Portable toilet rental.
Phone 985-3106
Jack Ginther 985-3106

Jac:k'~

Septic
Tank Service
Box 3

Chester, 0.
5·6·1 mo. pd.

QUALITY
DRAFTING
SERVICES

Civil
Mechanical
Archetectural
Lavouts

Real Estate for Sale

SHRUBS

Overlooks river. Water, electrtc available . $7900 ,

ed wooded area on top ')f h1ll.

EROY LANDMI\IKI\ m-31186.

1940 CASE TRACTOR Good
condition. $600. 992-3183.
1978 HONDA 75Q.B. Exeollenl
condition . Phone 992-7605 or
1192-28-15.
GOOD USED TELEVlSlONS.
color and black and white,
HARRISON T.V . 276Sycamore
St .. Mlddlepor1 m -2522
WURLITZER PIANO, very good
condition, $650 00. 992-7437.
also a pair of end tables
S2S.OO.
SANDAL SALE women 's and
girls' $8.88 to $7 88. Men"s and
Boys sport shoes , be1ge,
$12119 and $14119 &amp;AllEYS
STORE, Middleport.

POMEROY
lANDMARK
Headquarters for
l-lotpoint and
General Electric
Appliances

SALE PRICES
Jack W. Carsey
Mgr.
Phone 992-2181

1974 PONTlAC CATALINA, 4·
door. A.C., P.B.. P.S. 55,000
miles Call m .5B59.
1969 MUTANG GRANDE. 302
V-8, auto., 67,000 miles. $400
247·2192.
1972 PLYMOUTH DUSTER .
Very good cond1hon Good
gas mileage. $1250. 992·2378
or qq2·3325 .
1974 VEGA HATCHBACK , call
303 ·675· 1501 or 305·67S-248e
0 ' 304·675· 1553

-·-

---~--

Camping Equipment
18 FOOT FRANKLIN
tro1 ler 742·2348. ,

lrav•l

1

THANK 'VOl), CAPTAttJ! .• .

rx

THE GR:EATONEE&gt;
R:UN FR'OM TEXAS
TO C:.ANADA.

5 UJCE THE SUN's I!ELOW THE:
YARDARM· I 5 U66E5T YOU
Di5Ml55 THEM ~OR DI~~ER,
AND WE ' LL SPLICE THE
MAlNSRACI'!

6-6-1 mo.

Now arrange the CirCled letters to
form the surpnse answer, as suggested by the above cartoon

N. L Construction

XXXXI)

Yesterdays

BLOCK &amp; BRICK
WORK, GENERAL

SIDING
*New Home
*Addons
* Remoldings
*Free estimates
992·6011

BORN LOSER

J&amp;L

'f)U WISH TO Sf E' ~L.U6W

FroM JUR'1' DlJT'(

c.Ml'T Ml'b~5

~~

f;L~~

'It\! ~ BSSffJTIAL
TO '(Q.f~

FII..I..IIJ

BOSS 10 FIIJD OUT.

~You'?

Phone 992-6323
Free Estimate~
5·20·1 mo.·pd .

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag
·---

Great bridge contributor

.•', ''"'""''..
,

ea rly pre-Black wood days

I

He re we see E ly and J o
1Mrs Culberts on ) usmg 1t 1n

• A 97
•J9753
• Q 10 4

.
~

Bermuda

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-UNDERSTANDING HEART

REAL ESTATE Loans Purc~a,.
and refinance. 30 year terms,
VA. No money down {eligible
veterans) FHA · As low as 3
per cent down (non·veterans).
Ireland Mortgage Co., 77 E.
Stole, At~ens . 614-592·3051 .
THREE BEDROOM 6 y.ar old
home, fully carpeted, complete kitchen, central air,
garage, carport, work shop,
gorden, fruit trHs. Over an
acre. Near RutlanCI, 742-2562.

Housmg
HeadquFl(tf!rs

-w;~!~.~J3
·1~
992-3325

.

216 E. S.cond SlrH1
MIL.LFIEL.D-8 yr. old
2 bedroom home , bath,
cen1ral heat, and full
basement. L.ot 160x160
$14.000.
COUNTR:Y - On St. Rt.
with a 7 room frame
house. Has ho1 &amp; cold
water, 2 car garage,
barn, nice garden spot
and 3 acres. $17,000.
NEW LlSTING- AI. 33
out of town Is this 2
bedroom home, bath,
large dining, furnace,
full basemen1, and nice
level lot. $23,000.
BUSINESS - Want to
go Into self employment
and be lndependen1 for
only 523,500.
RACINE - A 3bedroam
older home with nice
WOOdwork but needs a
li111e flxlng , Just look at
the price of only $12,000.
5 RENTALS - Four 2
bedroom opts , up and a
business of six rooms
down . Good Investment
for you at $.44,500.
NATIVE STONE
Remarkably nice Inside
with natural gas fur ·
nace, city water and
sewer 2 112 a c res with
lot5 of trees and lonely
$27,500.
LEAVE YOUR SELL·
lNG PROBLEMS WlTH
US TRY DlAL.ING A
D•E•A:•L FOR BEST
RESULTS .
'

_. " Housing "'Head uarters,.

-..

MONTGOMERY

s howe d one qUi c k tnc k plus

to two qu1ck tricks and very

EAST

•B

• K J 54
• 2

+A9762
• 743

• 9 e6

good trump s upport . so Ely
brought h1s four notrump

conventiOn mto act10n . Hts

+ KJ853

..

btd g uara nteed either three

aces or two a c es and the

SOUTH

kmg of lrumps and asked Jo
lo btd fiv e notrump with two
aces, ftve hearts w1th no
aces , s1x hearts with the ace
of hearls a nd five of a s u1t

• 83

TRAILER SALES
27120 Montgomery Rd
L~ngsvllle, Ohio
61•-ut-UU Evenings
l

M1tes Eilst or Wllk•svtlle

SUPER

GOOSE

STOCK

TRAILER NOWAVAILABL!

-- -

+A K

WANTED
Overweight People
Sllnderella
Diet Classes
MOn Evenii\91-Mison, w. Va ,
7:30 St

Tue1. Mornlnt (IO:Hl -.cl
Evenlnts at 7:Jo-Midd'-POrt;
H•ath UnltM MethodiSt Cfturcft
Tllurs MOrning 111):)0) end
Evtnlnvs at 7: M·I't. PltiSant,
w VI Krodel P1rk Club Houu.
For turtfttr lnlormation ull Jo
Ann Newsome, "4·H2·lll2.
o 3 1 mo.

HAROLb

Real Estate for Sale

TWO STORY house located on
31. acre tn Rutland. Full basement, Iorge living and dining
room with server, drapes and
carpeting. Utility building and
goroge. Call742-275&lt;1.
THREE BEDROOM ~ouse, large
living room and kitchen , wall·
to--wall carpeting 1 Yt acres.
Immediate possession. Priced
at $32,000. Intersection of Rt .
7 and 143. m -31 B3.
MODERN THREE f,odroom
housa ,
full
b r. g ment,
flraploca, fully carpeted central air anclosed sun porch,
located on 6'/ a acres on CR 28,
opprox. 3 mil as from Racine. If
lntarelled contact Lorry Wolfe
9.. 9.2836 weekends and after
5 evenings.

608 E .
MAIN
PnMFROY . O .

hea rts, Ely planned to pass.
South Had s he responded five dia 2.. i monds, Ely would Have

i

North East

GRA"'( •

NOT 60 FAST! FIR~
I WAN"TCHA o'SI-&lt;OW
OOP Tl-1 ' I&lt;'At=T YOU
EruiLT! INSTEADA
SL.ISTIN' tT UIO MEBBE
I CAN USE IT A5 A
ROYAL SA.RGE!

lead: +A

Ask tiM experts
we consider that Ely and Jo
Culbertson were the greatest hu s band-wife pair of all

trump convent10n was too

tim e.
They w ere by far the best
of the1r day. but bndge ha s
I NF WSPA PF.H F.N1ERPRISE A_SSN l

complicated for the players
(For a copy o l JACOBY MOD·
of 1932 and had other ERN . send $7 to
'Wrn at
weaknesses so that 1t disap- Bndge '' care of thts newspapeared years back, but it did per P 0 Box 489 Radto City

have some success m those Sta tion , New Yo rk, N Y 10019)

4-23·1 mo.

NEW LISTING - Ex·
dour
cellent location In Mid· ' EXCAVATING ,
backhoe and ditcher, Cherie~
dlepor1, 1'12 story, 3
R. Hoffleld. Block Hoe Service,
bdrms., family room,
Rutland, Ohio Pone 742·2008.
fenced
le~el
yard,
garage &amp; storage Home
PULUNS EXCAVATING. Cam·
fully
carpe1ed
&amp;
plete Service. Phone 992·2478,
remodeled . PRICED
AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE '"
FOR QUICK SALE,
been cancelled? Lost your
$25,000.00.
operators
licente? Ptlone
NEW LISTING
m.2J43.
Pomeroy Elementary
School district, very
E·C ELECTRICAL Contractor
nice 3 bdrm . home,
serving Ohio Valley region
ba1h, dining room, base·
Six days a w. .k. 24 hours serment area , garden, nice
vice. Emergency calls. Coli
lot. TRY AND TOP
882·2952 or 882·3-15&lt;1.
THIS. $24,000.00.
HOWERY AND MARTIN ExNEW LISTING 4
cavating , septic systems
acres in town, garden
dozer, bockhoe. Rt
143'
space, fruit trees, goad 3
Phone 1 (614) 698-7331 o;
bdrm. home, basement
742·2593:
w·garage ,
enclosed
porch, dining room.
IN STOCK for 1mmedlate
HARD
TO
FIND.
delivery. various 111es of pool
$25,000.00.
kits Do-lt· yourself or let us
NEWER RANCH - 5
ln1tall for you D. Bumgardner
Pis. Excellen1 condl ·
Sales, lnc. m -5724.
lion, central air &amp; hea1,
CODNER'S CAMPERS on RainIorge level lot, fully
bow Ridge with top of the
equipped
kitchen .
line-Barth--Swiss Colony MANY
OTHER
Joy co - Motor Homes to Top·
FEATURES. $29,100.00.
pers, occe11ories ond friendly
NEW LISTING MAJOR
sen,~lce . For directions call
INVESTMENT PRO·
614·8-13·3011.
PEATY lN MEIGS CO.,
;;;;~~;;;;-;-;~--;:--;:-- ' '
POTENTIAL
FOR
VERY GENTLE Quarter Horae. 1&gt;6- _:!
COMMERC I AL.
&amp;
Western parade soddl•.
RECREATIONAL.
Phone 698-3290
USES .
CALL
FOR
LEO MORRIS Trucking. Will do
DETAILS .
lime and fertilizer hauling and
SHOULD BE SOLD spreading. Also limestone and
70 acres, farm, ranch
gravel hauling. 742·2455.
type house , barn &amp; other
bldgs Near Long Bo1·
SALES AND SERVlCE on
tom . $33,500.00.
Howard Rotavators and v
WEARE A FUL.L TIME
chisel t:~lows. lee Motrls
742-2455,
REAL
ESTATE
ORGANIZATION.
ADD ONS and remodeling,
"FOR BEST RESUL. TS
gutter work , down spouta,
LlST WitH US."
some concfete work, walks
Realtors
and
driveways
(free
Henry E. Cletalld Sr.
estimate), V.C . Young, 111
Henry E. Cleland Jr.
Racine, OH. 9-t9-2748.
t
992-?2&lt;9
9 9~ 11 91

Whe n s he s howed h1m the
s pade ace, Ely b1d the g rand
s lam

The C ulbertson 4 a nd 5 no-

592-3051

EXCAVATING. dozer, loader
ond backhoe work, dump
trucks and lo-boys for nlre
will haul fill dirl. top soil:
llmMtone and gra~el . Coli Bob
or Roger Jeffers , day phone
992·7089 ,
tllghf
phone
m-3525 or 1192-5232.

signed off at five hearts.

was the 1dea or using a Four- improved a lot in the last 40
notrump b1d to ask for aces yea rs .

IRElAND
MORTGAGE
CO.
77 E . State, Athens

SEWING MACHINE Repairs,
service, all makes, 992·228-4.
The Fabric Stlop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service. We sharpen Scissors. ... •

4 NT

7¥

One of Ely Culbertson 's
great contnbutions to br1dge

dawn Cnon·veterans)

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAlR Sweeper&amp;, toasters, Irons, all
small appliances. lawn moer,
next to State Highway Garage
Ofl Route 7, 985·3825.

Pass
Pass

A Hawaiian reader asks tF

Refinance
30 Year Terms
A-No money down-.
(eligible veterans I
'
FHA-AS low as 3%

BRADFORD. Auctlonoer, Cam·
plate Servlc•. Phone 9&lt;t9·2487
or 9~9- 2000 Racine, Ohio,
Crltt Bradford

Pass

5+
Pass

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

and

Business Services

4¥

Pass
Pass

Opening

Real Estate Loans
Purchase

Pass

with tha t ace. (/
Ha d she responded F1ve

'
I

Jose~Jh Catholi~ Chwr~h l

4 51 mo

TWO STORY 3 bedroom house
3 lot1. Now's your chance tf
you need o house $12,(XX) .
Owner willing to talk
992·2082 or 7.t2·2328.
REAL ESTATE· 1 ocrelot 1n Rlggscrest Manor, between Tup.
pert Plains and Chesler.
Phone985.3929 and 985--4129.

Q J 10

Vulnerable · Both
Dealer : South

West

m 1932 .

Jo's jump to four hea rts

• 52

WEST
• Q 106 2

~ t:==============~J

4'ITLE ORPHAN ANNIE

1..,2

NORTH

'!

•NEW HOMES
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•ROOFING
•VINYL. SIDING
•GUTTER &amp; SOFFIT

'

BRIDGE

... BUT I C0J 1T WAIJT TH!;

t--~--

BOB'S GENERAL
CONTRACTING

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE

Tuesday 1 June 12

I

Rl.l
Pomeroy, Dhlo
1192·ll47
4·25·1 mo.· Pd.

I

Jumble I Dolt No. 13, containing 110 puules, Ia IVIilable tor St .75pctltpald
lrom Jumbfe, clothi•n•w•paper, Boll34, Norwood, N J 076.tlJ lncfuclt your
n4:m•, tddrtu, zip code •nd mtke chtckt ptytblt lo Newtptptrbooka.

'

CONTRACTOR

4231 mo. (Pd .)

Cellulosic (WOOd fiber)
Thermal insulation
Save 30 pet. to so pet.
on heating cost
Experience and
fully Insured
Free e=st.
Call "2-2772
5·17·1mo.

I

(Answers tomorrow)
Jumbles ELEGY HONEV DROPSY LEEWAV
Answer Very Important 1n automobile c nclesWHEE LS

•AKQIOII

3% acres In Pomeroy. SEcluci-

1977 lOOOcc burgundy Sporster
Spec Dreg pipes. ktng and
queen seats . 2700 miles. Ex·
cellent condition. $2400 firm.
Call anytime 949·2221.

FE;TCH MV liTTLE TI!&gt;Re~S FROM
THE STORAGE C0MPARTM6NT•• AN D
&amp;R1N1!7 HER A&amp;OARD MY YACHT-THERE'~ A PeAR. LITTLE' AN6ELI

CALL
992-2772

C. R. MASH
VINYL &amp; ALUM.

1·30 ""·

AND

Jack W. Carsey
Mgr.
Phone 992·2181

Free Estimate

4-JO·Ifc

'
Al l typ• s roofing, tutters 1nd
downspotJts All fVJNIS hom•

992-3100 6·6·1 mo.

Auto Sales

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FlDUCIAIIY
On June 4, 1979, 1n the
Meigs County Probate
Court , case No. 22718,
Robert c . D111ard , 2699
Er lene Drive, Cincinnati,
Ohio 45238 was appointed
Executor of the Estate of
Paul A Dillard , dece ased,
late of 626 High Str ee t ,
M1ddt eport , Oh10

and
Home Maintenance

187 ASH ST.
MIDDLEPORT

DISCOUNT

LARGE 8 FAMILY Yard ond
Porch Sale, June 11 thru 15 ,
from 9 til 5. On old Rt . 33 at
end of Co. Rd . 19.

Services Offered

Ohio Valley Roofing

COAL .

PLANTS. CABBAGE, broccoh,
couhtlower, brussels sprouts,
head lettuce, tomatoes, and
Iorge selection of b&amp;dding annuals Pots of flowers and
hang ing boskets. Cleland
Greenhouse .
Geraldine
Cleland, Racine.

IYORRASj

CAPTAIN EASY

Pnnt answer here: (

For Sale

WANT TO buy: old 4S and 7e
phonograph records . Call
992-6370 or Contact Martin
Furniture.
BUYlNG JUNK cars and
bodies. Also scrap iron and
metal1. Rider's salvage. SR
12_., Pomeroy. 992·5-468.

4 5 lf c

P~onoll92· 33131

VERMEER BALER Sales, parts
and 1erv1ce. Balers in stock for
tmmediate delive'"Y Phone
742·28n or 742-2152.

.

J&amp;L INSUlATION

Auto&amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682

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

I I (

BY

3/4 m1le off Rt . 7 by-pass
on 51 At. 124 toward
Rutland.

·L-----------'

1965 GENERAL60x12, 2 bedr.
1970 Syl~o~o , 60x12. 2 badr
1970 Castle, 60x12. 2 bedr
197-t Morkl1ne. 50x 12, 2 bedr
1969 Valiant, 12x60, 2 bedr
1967 Not1onal , 12)1(50, 2 bedr.
B"S MOBlLE HOME SALES, PT
PLEASANT, WV 304 675-4424

OLD FURNITURE, ice boxes,
brass beds, ~ron beds. desks
etc., complete households
Write M.O Miller, Rt . 4,
Pomeroy or coli m -n60.
OLD COINS, pocket watches,
clo11 rings , wedding bonds,
diamonds. Gold or sH~er Cell
Roer Wamsley, 7~2- 2331.

New, repair,
gutters and
down spouts.
Window cleaning
Gutter cleaning
Free Estimates
949-2862-949-2160

ALUMINUM
&amp; VINYL SIDING

Roger Hysell
Garage

H. L Writesel
Roofing

byHenr~ArnoldandBotllee

J

I I

~~~~'",":.!......... '

Au1trlia n
and
German
Sh epherd .
qq2 · 3312
or
1192·217e.
TWO KtnENS , one black and
wh1te mole and one co l•c o
fema le . Ca i1367·009S.
HEALTHY 4 months old mole
kit1ens , Meigs Humane Socle·
ty Phonell92·25n ·

RUTLAND HARDWARE 2 door.
down from Post Offil:e.
742·2255 PAINT SALE Marlin
Senour Di~islon of Sherman
and Williams . Pro·lme Interior
and extarlor flat white, $5 99
gal : 2 gol. con eJ(tarior flat
white regular $22.95, sale
pr.ced $13 95 Gould pumps
both deep and sha llow well,
sale priced.

~~~ Ill

Unscramble these four Jumbles ,
one lener to each square. to form
lour ordinary words

Business Services

S-5 wk. old pupp1es . Part

197.C 1_. x 70 mob1le home
Good condition . $7800
992-5858

ID,l ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

ft'iJ~N}

r:!J

A:friend
of Melbas
brother
needs
some
part·

8uqsie's
Bar and

Grill?

~

Fried or
And I 8514
scrambled~
for a q_u~
named Eqqs~

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
%Stint
I Use a let3 More aloof
ter opener
4 Bus station
5

More miffed

5 Rome's

10 Quarter
hills,
of an anna
by number
11 E.R.A.
I Sharif
adherent
7 ExtremiBt
12 Arab official 8 EMOble
13 Ducked
9 Uke the

time
help!

school

%0 EVident
%1 Reason

19 Negative

%0 Companion

%9 Role for
Linda Lavin
30 Navigation

song
%3 Good
citizen

11 Used, aa
food
17 Sanskrll

son
18lslet
• GARY
GETTING- ME
LO'TS OF PRE55 COVERAGE !
MORE 1HAN I GOT WHEN I
WA5 TRYING TO BE AN

n Short

bride's
mother

the i.!suea
14 Per IS Stem from
11 Poseidon's

FAGIN15

Yesterday'• Alllwer

device

Z4Memo -

32 Word for a

28 Eucharist
plate

secret agent
34 Full of
spirit

%8 Now aloft

21 -

nWlClO
24 Blanched

ACTRE$&amp;.

river h + - t - +H Criticize
27 Slower :
%5 Soviet

mus.
28 Type of tire
31 License
33 Come a

LAND
O'GOSHEN!
:L

DING

NIGH
DROPPED

A HUNNERT
AN' SIXTY
POUNDS

cropper
35 Lazy
38 Part of
Hibernia
37 Lifted
38 Dueling
memento
39 Conswned

4G Field maneuvers need t..rl-+-t--r-r-OOWN
1 Hurried
along
Here's how to work
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

it :

One letter s imply s lands for anoLher. In th1s s ample A is
use&lt;l for the lhree L's, X for lhe l wo O's, etc. Si ngle lctlers,
aposlrophes, lhe length and formaltan of th e words are all
h1nts Each day the code lei ters are d11ferc n1

BEANS ARE EA5Y

TO GROW

BUT WHIL.E THE~'RE
GROWING, lfOl! HAVE TO
WAIT FOR. THEM IN
A SPECIAL PLACE

C RYPTOQUOTES

R VKNH W

LAKHTA
HJC

EW

~

VJL
LW

S G KE WU ,

RAVT
FHEN

TUESDAY, JUNE 12,1979
e 00-Baseba ll 3. "Happy Days 6,13;
Runaways 15; Pllo1 " The Dooley
Brolhers" e, 10 : Movie " City
Beneath lhe Sea " 17 : Aus11n City
Ll mlls 20, Cl 1y Notebook 33
e .3()- Laverne &amp; Shir ley 6, 13 , Movie
" The Life &amp; Times of Judge Roy
Bean " 8, 10, Two Ronnles 33
9 00-Three' s Company 6,13 , Movie
" Killer on Board " 15; 01her Side
of Vl c lory 33 , Cakewalk 20.
9· 3()- Taxi 6,13 ; Diplomatic Style of
Andrew Young 20
10 00-Julle Farr, M .D . 6,13, Inside
San Quen11n 33 . America 17 ;
News 20; An Apple, An Orange
20
11 00- News 3,6 ,e , 10 , 13 , 15 ; New
Sou py Sales 17 .
11 · 3()-Johnn y Carson 3, 1l, Movie
" The Black W indm ill " 13. Movie
" The Trackers" 6; Barnaby
Jones e; Movie "The Naked
Runner " 10, Movie " No Minor
V1ces" 17 ; ABC News 33
12 . 40- Movle " Julie " 8 ; 1.00Tomorrow 3, News 15; Movie
•
"The Royal African Rifles" 17
J · so- News 13 , 3·15-News 17 ;
3 .35--Movle " Hell on Devll's
Island" 17 , 5 1()-Dragnet 17 .

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 13,1979
5 .4()-World a1 Large 17:· 5 :45-Farm Reporl13 ; s ·50-PTL Club
13
6 00-700 Club 6,8, PTL Club 15;
6 10- News
17:
6 · 25Chrls1opher Closeup 10 .
6 · 30-Dragne1 17, 6 45--Mornlng
Report 3, 6 50-Good Morning,
West Virg inia 13 : 6 :55--Chuck
While Reports 10; News 13
/
7 00-Today 3, 15. Good Morning America 6,13 ; Sochoolles 10 ;
Wednesday Morning 8; Three
S1ooges·LI1tle Rascals 17, 7 : 15-Wea1her 33.
7:30-Famlly Affair 10; Lilias Yoga
&amp; You 33 .
8 00-Capt . Kanga roo e.10. L.eave l1
Ta Beaver 17; Sesame Sl. 33.
8 :3()- Romper Room 17 ; 9 .00-Bob
Broun 3, Phil DonaHue 13, 15;
Emergency One 6; Porky Pig &amp;
Friends e ; Lucy Show 17; Love
Tennis 33.
9:30-Sanford &amp; Son 8; Hogan 's
Heroes 10; Green Acres 17;
Weather 33.
10 .00-Card Sharks 3,15, Edge of
Nlgh16; All In The Family 8,10;
Movie "Guest Wife" 17; Dating
Game 13, Exploring 1he Craf1s .
Silk-screen 33
10 · 3()-AII S1ar Secre1s 3,15 ; $20,000
Pyramid 13; Andy Griffith 6;
Whew I 8,10: Daniel Foster, M .D.
33.
10:55--C BS News e; House C::all 10.
11 . 00-High Ro liers 3,15; Laverne &amp;
Shirley 6,1 3, Price Is Right 8, 10;
Antiques 33
11. 30- Wheel of Fortune 3, 15;
Famlly Feud 6,13 ; Frying Pans
Wesl 33; 11 · 55-News 17
12 :00-Newscenler 3; Password 15;
Young &amp; the Restless 8; Over
Easy 33; Midday Magaztne IJ;
L.ove American Style 17.
12 : 3()-Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Search for
Tomorrow e, 10. Not For Women
Only 15; Movie " Rock lsland
Trail" 17 ; MacNeii - L.ehrer
Report 33
1 00-Days of Our Lives 3, 15; All My
Chi ldren 6, 13; Young &amp; 1he
Restless 10; Watch Your Mouth
33
1:30-As1he World Turns 8,10; Two
Ronnles 33 ; 2:00-Doc1ors 3,15;
One Life to Live 6, 13. Other Side
of vlctory 33
2:25--News 17; 2:3()-Ano1herWorld
3, 15 , Guiding Llgh1 8, 10, l Love
Lucy 17
3·00-General Hosp l1ol6,13; lnflnl1y
Factory 17 : Lilias Yoga &amp; You
20, COils1eau Odyssey 33.
3:3Q-Mash 8, Joker ' s Wild 10;
Banana Splits 17; Over Easy 20.
4 :00-Mister Car1oon 3, Hollywood
Squares 15; Merv Griffin 6!
Addams Family e ; Sesame 51 .
20,33, Mike Douglas 13; Flln1·
stones 17 .
4 · 30- Lone Ranger 3; Hogan ' s
Heroes 8 ; Lucy Show ll; Par·
1rldge Family 17 .
5 :00-Bonan2a 3; Beverly Hillbillies
e; Mister Rogers ' Neighborhood
20.33. Gomer Pyle 10; Six Mill ion
Dollar Man 13 , Brady Bunch 15,
Star Trek 17 .
5 3()-News 6, Pef11coat Junc11on e,
Elec Co. 10, Mary Tyler Moore
10; Odd Couple 15; Doc1or Who
33 .
6 00-News 3,8,10.13.15 : ABC News
6; Family Affair 17; Villa Alegre
20; Sludlo See 33 .
6 30-NBC News 3, 15, Carol Burnet1
6; ABC News 13 ; CBS News e,lO,
Falher Knows Best 17. 7 00- Cross Wl1s 3; Newlywed ·
Game 6,13 . Porter Wagoner 8,
News 10; Love American Slyle
ll; Get Smar1 17; Dick Cavet1
20.33
7 30-Dolly 3; Malch Game PM 6;
Muppe1 Show 8; The Judge 10;
T~al ' s Hollywood 13 ,
W i ld
Kingdom ll: Baseball 17 .
MacNell .Lehrer Report 20,33
00- Laugh -'ln 3, 15 ; Eight Is
Enough 6.13, Jeffersons 8,10;
Masterpiece Thea1re 20; All
Crea tures Greal &amp; Small 33.
e .30-GOOd Times e,10; 9 00-Mo.vle
"Zuma Beach" 3,15. Charlie' s
Angels 6 , 13; Mov ie " Paper
Moon" 8,10 ; Great Per
formances
33,
Up s1al rs , Downstairs 20.
10 ·00-Vegas6,13; Fall of Eagles 17;
News 20; Cross Coun1ry 22 .
10 ·3()-Besl of Graucho 20, 11 00New s 3.6.e.10,13,1l; New Soupy
Sales 17.
11.30-J ohnny Carson 3,15; Pollee
Woman 6,13; Your Turn Letters
1o CBS News 8; AB C News
Mov ie "T~e Guru" 10; Movie
" Killers Three" 17.
12 · 00- Sw l1ch 8 ; 12 ' 40- Mannlx
6, 13; 1 :00-Tomorrow 3; News
15.
10-Kolak 8; 1· 3()-Baseball 17:
I :50-News 13 ; 4:00-News 17;
4 .2()-12 O' Clock High 17.

e

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE Is

Television
Viewing

W M H J H•W J ,

NVXA

JW EN-

RTAALWU

- A L F V r ·L
S VT M A J E A T
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: NO ONE RISES SO HIGH AS HE
WHO KNOWS NOT WHITHER HE IS GOING.- WILLIAM
OSLER

33r

�8-The Dally Sentinel, MiddlePQrt-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, June 12, 1979

ALVIN JONES
Alviri Jones, Oklahoma City, Okla.,
died Sunday at the Baptist Hospital in
Oklahoma City following a massive
heart attack.
Funeral services will be held at 11
a.m. Wednesday at the Bill Merritt
Funeral Home in Oklahoma City with
the Rev. Mr. Williamson officiating.
Burial will be in Bethany Cemetery
there.
Mr. Jones was a brother-in-law of
Mr. and Mrs. Johnnie Stobart
Racine, and was a frequent visitor t~
Meigs County .

VERLIE B. MIDKIFF

I
'

Verlie B. Midkliff, 65, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy, died this morning at Holzer
Medical Center.
Mr. Midkiff was the son or the iate
Orlando and Della Shumway Midkiif.
He was a retired farmer.
He Is survived by two brothers,
Dana of Albany, and Hollis of Rt. 3,
Pomeroy, two sisters, Ora Sinclair,
Rt . 3, Pomeroy and Alice
Houdasheldt cq, Wilkesville, and
·
several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be held Thursday at 3 p.m. at Ewing Chapel.
Burial will be in Cherry Ridge
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home at anytime .

Bedford
man shot at
The Meigs County Sheriff 's Department reports that it was advised at
12:26 a.m. Sunday by a telephone call
that someone in a blue station wagon
had Wll'ed a shotgun to his trailer and
had just missed the head of Steve
Jones, Bedford Township. ·
Later, deputies stopped a blue
station wagon and arrested Dennis
Tolley and Russ Bartlett on charges
of improper handling and fransporting a firearm in a motor vehicle.
Investigation is continuing in the

case.
Deputies are also investigating the
breaking and entering of the Pomeroy
Gun Club on County Road 25
sometime between Friday night and
Sunday morning. Entry was gained
by breaking out a pane of glass and
some beverages were stolen.

PARENTS wmtOtrr PARTNERS
TO SKATE

.

Parents Without Partners will have
family roller skating party Wednesday from 7:30p.m. to 10 p.m. at
the Skate-A-Way on SR 7, north of
Pomeroy. Skates may be rented or
bring your own.

~conomy

AP ) - to The
naWASHINGTON
tion 's economy (appears
be
slowing down, and government
officials are taking ste s to tr to et
AGUST A BARTElS POTrS
. .
f
P
Y g
Agus ta Bartels p oIts ' 116, Syra.~use g&lt;)()ds
prtce tncreases
or
some
consumer
to slow down too
The latest in a se'ries ·of indicators
died Monday evening at Mercer Nur:
sing Home, Clifton.
on the state of the economy came
Mrs. Potts was the daughter of the Monday from the Co mmerce
late Henry F. and Martha Rotish Bar· Department, which said retail sales
tels. She was also preceded in death . . nationwide fell 0.2 percent in May to
by two brothers, two half-brothers $
billion
71Th1 d · tm t l.so
and one infant sister.
'
.
.
She was a member of the Syracuse
. e ,epar en a
reVIsed tis
Presbyterian Church and had made April ~ales ftgure d~":"ward by n~rly
her home with Mr. and Mrs. Carl $1 btllton to $71.2 billion . The revtsed
ftgure represents a ilrop of 1.1 percent
Weese, Syracuse, for the past several from March.
..
Years.
Meanwhile , .the Carter a dminShe is survived by one halfoflister , lstration announced it would step up
Mrs.Carl (Grace) Wee!!e, Syracuse
and four nephews and two nieces .
Funeral services will be held Thursday at 1 p.m. at Ewing Chapel with
bunal to be in Syracuse Hili
(Contiflued from page I)
Cemetery. Friends may call· at the
taking short walks near his r&lt;)()m,
funeral home at anytime.
hospital officials said.
Cards and letters by the thousands
poured into the Medical Center from
around the country and the world.
As a measure of Wayne 's immense
popularity and aimost legendary
stature, Congress last month voted to
have a gold medal struck in his honor.
Among the other 83 recipients of the
congressional medal were George
Washington and Andrew Jackson.
Death began approaching Saturday, Strohm said, wben "Mr. Wayne
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (AP) - started doing rather poorly." His
A DC-3 plane slammed down and vital signs would not stabilize. He
burst into flames near Fort slept for long periods and, when be
Lauderdale-Hollywood Airport today, woke, "he would look around and ask
reportedly killing three people , for his children.
"No one could predict when death
authorities said. It was the second DCwould
come."
3 to crash in less than 24 hours in the
Wayne had faced cancer before.
United States.
Fire Capt. Skip Walters said the The disease claimed part of a lung 15
plane crashed about 7:20 a.m. on years ago - but the Duke won. "I
Cypress Lake Road and burst into licked the Big C," be boasted after
flames, causing a big traffic jam on that 1964 operation.
Then he went to Mexico and began
nearby Interstate 95.
It was not immediately clear filming "The Sons of Katie Elder "
whether the plane was landing or had another in the long string of westerils
just taken off. It also was n&lt;1, that made Wayne one of the biggest
immediately known if the plane box office draws in Hollywood
·
struck anyone on the ground or hit any history.
Wayne's
last
public
appearance
buildings in the area of homes and
was April 9, when he ambled onstage
small businesses.
" I know that the fire department is at the Academy Awards. He was, he
wetting down the roofs of nearby told a wannly applauding audience
houses, but! don 't know if it hit any of "mighty pleased that I can ambl;
them, " s;~ id Deputy Hugh Spiri of the down here tonight."
Wayne presented the award for best
, Broward County Sheriff's Depicture,
for "The Deer.lJunter," and
partment.
basked
in the lengthy standing
Walters said firefighters and rescue
units were having trouble getting to ovation, declaring It's "jus! about the
the scene "because traffic is backed only medicine a fellow'd ever need."
up for miles " on the interstate, which The face and body were much thinwas filled with rush-llour commuters. ner, worn down by the disease. But
The Florida Highway Patrol the grin was still there. The voice had.
blamed motorists who slowed down to not changed.
John Wayne never stopped being
view the blaze for the stand-still.
On Mooday, a U.S. Forest Service the Duke, the nickname be picked up
DC..J caught fire and .crashed into a from the Airedale dog his family had
river in ,the mountains of north- when he was a child.
He was born Marion Michael
central Idaho. Two people survived
and one was known dead , authorities Morrison in 1907 in Wanterset, Iowa.
said. A search ·continued today for He moved with his family to California as a boy and played football at the
nine people who were missing.
University of Southern California.
After a series of bit pal'IS"an&lt;i odd
jobs around the movie sets, Wayne
got his first starring role in 1930. He
became a star nine years later for his
role as a good~y gunman in
"Stagecoach." He was nominated for
an Oscar in 1949for "The Sands of Iwo
Jima." He won the award in 1970 for
his role as Rooster Cogburn ijl "True
Grit."

John Wayne •••

DC-3 crash
kills three

·Didn't you
receive your
Social Security
check?

appears to .b e slowing down

· , of wholesale and retatl'
mom'tormg
~ood pro~essor~ to make sure lower
ann pttces are passed ~long to
co" sumers. And tl moved to mcrease
by. alIth e . na tion 's lumber. supply
.
f~~e~t~ more cutting tn national
Th ·
a e~l ~~vernr_nent also be.gan an
ef!inateda [~ent co;:rt ru/mg that
voluntar
pena es rom tts
Th
t .wage and prtce program.
Y
ere at1s~1es figures represent a
turnaround from modest sales gains
in the first few months of the year and
booming sales in the final months of
1978.
'.' ll makesjhe important consumer
sector look weaker than .we · had
heretofore reali&lt;ed," said William
Cox, a Commerce Department
economist. "And it's a substantial
part of the economy."
Added Douglas Rice , an economist
wtth Data Resources Inc., a private
forecasting firm in Lexington Mass.
"I think this is consistent 'with ~
faliing economy. "
Data Resources is among the
forecasters anticipating a mild
recession later tliis year. President

AAMA Organizational
meeting .June 14
NELSONVILLE, Ohio - An
organizational meeting to establish a
local chapter of the American
Association of Medical Assistants
(AAMA) is scheduled for Thursday,
June 14, at 7 p.m. in room 204 of
Hocking Technical College.
. Medical assislants encompass all
mdivtduals employed in a medical of-·
fice . This includes such as practical
and registered nurses, medical receptionists and secretaries, medical
technologists and medical assistants
either with or without formal
training:
. A local AAMA chapter would
benefit area medical assistants by
providing opportunities foc cerlification, continuing education, study
programs along with a bi-monthly
journal, professional prestige and
fellowship.
All persons employed in a medical
office are invited to attend the
meeting. Individuals with questions
should contact Kathy Bonewit coordinator of the Hocking Tech Medical
Assistant Technology, at 753.J591,
Ext. 211.

VETERANS MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL
Admitted-Lela Shenefield, Vinton·
Mildred Roush, Uttle Hocking;
Harry Arter, Middleport ; David
Wolfe, Portland.
Discharged--Leona Stewart
Catherine Mees, Susan Sellers'
Joseph Bissell, Effie Lawson, Peari
Ash, Betty Hammack, Evelyn
Murray, Jacob Scott, Iris Morris,
Clyde Henderson.

. ·
Cart~r·~ adVIsers, ho~ever , have so

' far trunsted there will be only a
slowdown.
The declining retail sales figures
Iii
w ch bot h Co" an d R'tee b1amed on'
slower growth in Americans' income ,
are. but the latest of the government
U)dtcators to turn downward.
In recent days the. gov.ernment has
repo~ted declines m tis so-called
leading mdtcators, whtch are a gauge
of future eco nomic a ctivity ·
•

Salem firemen Get training

By The Associated Press
Rising diesel fuel prices apparently
spurred a highway slowdown by
truckers in Mahoning County
Monday.
·
Slowdowns, blockades and work
stoppages have occurred nationally to
protest varying load limits, the 55
mph speed limit and recent jumps in
fuel prices.
.
The Ohio Highway Patrol said 30-35
automobile haulers slowed their rigs
to 20-2!i mph on a heavily used stretch
of Interstate 80 ea'stbound near
Youngstown, causing a traffic jam.
The patrol sald 26 drivers were cited
for slow speed. In addition, two
drivers were. given citations for
failure to display their operators'
licenses and occupying space on a
freeway , the patrol reported.
The inci&lt;!_ent occurred about 3: 15

Public scboQ}s may
get utility break :·

While some in surance agencies sell the policie; of only one
. company, The Insurance Store represent s a number of
fm e msurers. That mea ns we can rev iew your in surance needs
agatnst a wtde range of ava ilable coverages and serv ices.

_.,.,
01110

j

Member

F. D. I. C.

!

h
\,

..,.,

RB
_

,·

D,p ... :. its ln surr-ct ro

or in the early morning hours, for
instance, rather than during daytime
hours when so-called "peak" rates
will be charged.
Schools have no way of making such
adjustments in their schedules said
Sen. Neal F . Zimmers Jr., D-Oiiyton,
whose bill went to the House.
Under the pending bill, a school
could bo: exempt from peak rates lf.lt
accomplished a 6 percent reduction In
energy during the first month of the
new pricing system and maintained.it
"
thereafter.

•

SQUADSMAKETWOCAW

o-rave}

PAJAMAS

. Wit h fr eedom to choose among companies like
Contmemallnsura nce, for example, it stands to reason th at
. we can ~o rn e closer to fin ding the insurance
protectiOn that ftts your needs and is affordable. Our freedom
crf choice is your opport unity.

5

p.m. Monday in Austintown after the
truckers exited from Gate 15 of the
Ohio Turnpike onto the interstate
liighway.
Truckers have complained beC9J1Se
they are paying 00.90 cents per gaJlon
for diesel fuel and as much as $1.!!0
per gallon in some Western states. At
those prices, they say, they are unable
to make a profit on their loads . ..
The
Independent
Truckers
Association on Monday joined in a call
for 100,000 owner-operators to halt
their runs.
·
During the recent steel haulers'
strike, truckers tried to get the
Interstate Commerce C1111mission io
grant independent drivers a
surcharge to reimbUrse them for t!le
cost of fuel. But suc)l a surcharge has
not been granted, except for an 4}8
percent surcharge in Western statq.

TJ!IS FATHER'S·DAY GIVE

We'D sell you what y~ ~1 need!

214 E. MAIN ST.
~41'1 noo.oo .

-LONG AND SHORTIE
2 PIECE SETS
.-PERMANENT PRESS
SOLIDS ANp PATTERNS
-SIZES A, 8, C, D, E
REG. 16.95 ............... , SALE 15.59
REG. 18.95 ......... ....... SALE 17.19
REG. '12.50 .... ~ ........ ;. SALE '9.99
REG. '15.00 .............. SALE 111.99

REUTER-BROGAN
.INSURANCE SERVICE
POMEROY , O.

992· 5.130 or 992· 5139

" YOU DON ' T BUY A POLICY,
YOU " IRE AN AGENT"

WASHINGTON (API - President ea·rter's proposal to limit a famil y's
annual health-care bill to $2,500 appear.s destined for an election-y ear
congresstonal strugg le wtth overtones of presidential politics.
Influential Democrats who would guide health insurance legislation are,
for the most part , cautiously critical of the latest in Carter's national he&lt;tlth
Insurance plans.
Most appeared unwillin g to pick a direct fi ght with the president over
HealthCare, as his proposal is called . But Massachusetts Sen. Edward M.
Kennedy, who introduced his own version of national health insurance last
month . labeled Carter's plan "inflationary and too inequitable."
"The bottom line is ... we can't afford it," Kennedy told a news conference.
. Carter's limited health care plan would combine Medicare and state-run '
Medic~id plans for the poor in a program estima ted to cost $2:1 billion to $25
btlhon m1983, the first year it would be in effect.
The.bulk of that would go for the federal takeover of Medicaid plans.
Carter's plan would also: .
- Protect everyone aga inst the costs of catastrophic illness by ending limits
on Medicare payments and requiring priva te health insurance plans to limit
a family's liability for hospita l and medical bills to $2,500 a year.
The elderly and disabled wouid not have to pay more than· ha lf that, or
$1,250.
--Guarantee free prenatal care and delivery to all pregnant women,
regardless of what plan covers them. Their children would have free car e for
the first year.
-Require employers to pay at least 75 perl-ent ~f all health insurance

,. premnun s. En1pluyl'CS or Uleir umons r·ould bar~ain wi t h intlivhlucll
comp(tnics tu ·inl'reetsc that sha r e.

: As Carter outlined his limited approach, he was flanked by several longtune congressiOnal backers of a variety of health insurance pla ns mdudmg Reps. James Corman. D-Calif .. and Charles Rangle, D-N .Y.. the
two who will introduce Carter's plan in Ute House.
Rangle, cha irman of one of tw o health subcommittees that will consider
the plan, sa id "it falls short of what many of us wanted," although adding
that he was pleased the adnnm stration was finally sending its long-a waited
l e~tslati on to Capitol Hill.
The chairma n of U1e House Comme rce heet lth subcommittee, Rep . He nry

A. Wa&lt;man, D-Calif. , had a mi.&lt;cd reaction. " While the presiden t's proposal
fa1ls short o( meeting many or. my major concerns," Waxman s&lt;tid, " it's a

program which demonstrates a comniitment to do more than simply provide
catastrophic health care coverage."
House Speaker Thomas P. O'Ne ill Jr ., who said he was committed to
Kcnnedy :s proposal, said he would work toward a compromise. Sen. Abraham Rtbtcoff , D-Cunn. , echoed that call , saying: "lt'is essential that we
submerge personahties for the common good .... There ts enough credit to go
around ."
K~n sas Sen. Bob Dole, a candidate for the Republican presidential
nommahon, branded Carter's plan an attempt to "federalize'' the nation's
health care system.
Likewise, Sen. Richard S. Schweiker. R-Pa .. labeled the proposa l a

•

e

The Middleport Fire Department
was called to the Middleport Elementary School at 2:43 p.m. Monday
where a fire had developed around
some shrubbery. A resident near the
school, however, extinguished the fire
...,before the department •s arrival.
Ofi
The Middleport Emergency Ull!t
e- ·
was called to the office of Dr. Jame5
The Meigs County Sheriff's Depart- Conde at 7:30p.m. Monday for Janet
ment investigated one accident Mon- Hill, Route 3, Pomeroy, who had been
day on Horse Cave Ro!Jd about 500 stung by a bee. Receiving quite a
feet oft Eagle Ridge.
reaction from .the sting, Ms. Hill was
Tanuny L. Blake,. 16, Middleport taken to Holzer Medical Center by the
turned off Eagle Ridge Road and sq~d.
started down the Horse Cave Road
t 10 p.m. the emergency unit went
315
and lost control of her vehicle on loose to
Ash St. for Rev. Eugene Rouai}
gravel on a curve and her vehicle then who was Ill . He was treated on the
went off the road on the left and scene.
struck a tree and a fence owned by
Everette Grant, Minersville.
ASK TOWED
There were no injuries and no cita- ·A marriage license was issued to
tion. Moderate damage was done to &lt;llarles Edward Trader 39 Alban~
the 1972 Ford Pinto.
and Doris E. Fox, 46; Al~y:
'

does away with worry

Carter proposes national health bill

Rising fuel prices
spur slowdown

By ROBERT E. Mll.LER
Associated Press Writer
' COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Even if
no one else does, Ohio's public schools
soon may get a break on their utility
bills.
But to qualify, they will have to use
less energy than they do now.
The Senate approved 26-4 Monday a
bill that would exempt schools from
upcoming time-&lt;Jf-day rates which.
_apparently will be adopted soon by
most of the state's electrical utilities.
Ohio's Public utilities Commission
EASTERNMEETINGCANCEJ.!,Efl already has approved one such plan.
A ·special meeting of the Eastern It is intended to spread the use of
Local School District Board of electricity more evenly throughout
Education scheduled for Thursday each 24-l!our day. Tliis would increase
evening has been cancelled and the the efficient use of electricity which
board will not meet again until its unlike other energy sources, can't be
stored once generated.
next regular session on June 26.
Under the system, it will be cheaper
for housewives to do laundry at night

Direct Depositing

4£;&lt;¥

telephone nwnbers through the township which residei!ls may call for help
in caae of fire.
Officers of the new volunteer dePartment were elected Monday night and
include Terry McGuire, Vinton,
chief; Don Smith, Langsville, captain, and Dick Lambert, Langsville,
lieutenant. Anyone wishing to donate
to the department may do so through
the three officers.

The 21 members of the Salem Town·
ship Volunteer Fire Department completed their fire fighting training
classes Monday night. ·
The new department has a truck
and a headquarters building near the
Salem Center Elementary School.
Several money-making projects are
being planned and donations to help
the new group are being received.
Soon the department will distribute

Car skids

You 'll never have to fret about
recei vi ng yo ur Social Security
check again! With Direct Depqs itmg the Federa l Gove rnment deposits your check direc tly into your
savings Or checking account . .. on
each payment day. What could be
more convenient! Ca ll , come in or
write for all the details. You 'll be
g lad you did.

.
consumer
debt repayment; industrial
production; and wholesale prices.
It was declining farm prices that
Alfred E Kahn the preSident's chief
·
'adviser addressed
anti-inflation
Monday .
'
Kahn told a meeting of newspaper
food editors that the Carter
administration will monitor food
processors and retailers to malte sure
recent farm price declines are lpassed
along to consumers
.

VOL. XXVIII

NO. 42

at y

POM EROY-MIDOLE PORT, OHIO

"~ i ga ntic

·step" toward increased , federa l spending and government

rc~ulat lo n .

But Sen. Jacob K. Javits, RN.Y., said that while Carter's program is not
perfect. it sets U1e stage for Congress to put nationa l health insurance at the
top of .~!:., agenda .
Kennedy. chairman of the Senate Human Resource hea lth subcommittee,
which also will handle the issue, did not appear at Carter's White Hou se
briefin g on the new legislation.
At his own news conference a few hours later, Kennedy said:
"The president 's plan may well become the straw that breaks the back of
the American health care system.,''
Kennedy's pla n would insure everyone ag•inst most hea lth care costs and
im pose strong cost controls on bpth hospitals and physicians. Private insurers ·would provide improved coverage for working Americans while
Medicarc-Mcdicai&lt;l programs would expand services to the elderly and
poor.
The nation 's 1979 health care bill is esttmated to tota l $206 billion. The $23
billion to $25 billion cost of Ca rter's ·plan would be in addition to that, while
Kennedy says his proposal would add only about $5.4 billion.
Hearings on the various nationa l health insurance proposals, including
Ca rter's and Kennedy's, will run most of the year and may come up for a full
House and Senate vote in 1980.
While benefit plans plans often find a generous reception in an election
year, that tendency could conni ct with the current belt-tightening mood on
Capitol Hill .

en tine
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 13, 1979

House approves energy credit
Associated Press Writer
'standards used in similar federal
COLUMBUS, Oliio (AP) - Elderly, , programs, or generally no more than
disabled and iow-incomed Ohioans 125 percent of the national poverty
could receive more than $81.2 million level. The household. could receive a
in state aide to help pay winter $250 maximum payment on the
heating bills under legislation the amount owed a utility company when
House has approved.
a final notice to discontinc service due
A bill giving permanent status to to nonpayment has been sent.
Ohio's energy credit program passed
Meanwhile, a bill providing tax
90-0 Tuesday and went to the Senate. credits to employers who hire jobless
It includes $10 million for a
weather i&lt;alion
program
plus
administrative eKpenses for a to.tal
cost of $83.2 million.
"This is a bold, innovative attempt
!ly the Legislature to attack a serious
problem," said Rep. Dennis E .
Eckart, D-Euclid, its sp.onsor.
The energy assistance program was
set UF on a trial basis two years ago. · Louise Myers, Edward IDad and
The bill would expand the program to Larry Johnson, appointees to the.
pay heating costs up to $2&gt;0 for Forest Acres Park Board, met with
eligible persons. The maximum the Meigs County Coinmissioners
annual income the head of a household Tuesday evening to discuss their
could earn and be eligible would be responsibillties.
The commissioners informed the
raised from $7,420 to $10,000.
Eligible households with separately members that they would be expected
metered heating sources would to establish ruies for governing the
receive 25 percent of their bills for park, to act in a general supervisory
December through April.
capacity and provide management to
If the primary heating source is fuel make the park self-I!up porting.
oil, bottled propane, coal, ·wood or
The members stated they would
kerosene, or if eligible households pay meet and organize and report back to
for heat as part of their rent, there will the commissioners. The combe an annual payment of $125, up from missioners . will make two more appointments to the board.
$87.50 now .
The state TaK Commissioner would
E.A.Wingelt and Dale Hart, agents
run the part of the program for elderly for the petitioners for the annexation
and
disabled
persons:
The to the village of Racine, met with the
Department of Public Welfare .and board to discuss the proposed ancounty welfare departments would nexation.
handle benfits to low income families .
The procedures for annexation
To qualify, a low income household were explained step by step. The commust meet income eligibility missioners set the official date of the
hearing on the annexation at 9 a.m. on
Thursday, July 26, providing the common pleas courtroom Is available.
Wesley Buehl, county engineer, was
present to discuss the slip on Minersville Hill. Buehl stated that he would
inspect the slip and report back to the
commissioners. ·
Mildred . Jacobs, county home
superintendent, met with the board to
request extra help at the infinnary
during vacation. Mrs. Jacobs was
authorized to hire someone to fill in
VIENNA, Austria (AP) - Vienduring vacations at a rate of $2.90 per
nese who want to see Jimmy Car·
hour.
ter and Leonid I . Brezhnev
Bob Bailey, EMS Administrator,
during their surruner visit this
met to lfiscuss the emergency
weekend should turn on their TV
medical services operations. ·
sets. The security screen 'is going
The board informed Bailey that
. to be very tight.
The Austrian director general
for public security, Robert Danzigar, said 1,500 agents will be
working during the four-day
meeting to keep the U.S. and ·
Soviet presidents safe. But a
news report said 6,000 polieemen,
in and out of uniform, will guard
the two leaders.
They will be t&lt;eUtforced by armed Soviet ailll American
security men. ·
Informed sources said up to 600 ·
American and Soviet officials,
adviSers and aides would accompany or precede the two
presidents.

Ohioans from high unemployment allowed under Ohio law.
Walsh said Sen. Charles L. Butts, Dareas was sidetracked in the Senate
Ways and Means Committee, where a Cleve land ,
who
chaired
a
vote on the legislation had been subcommi ttee that rewrote the
expected.
. measure, is ~sing the bill to strike
Sen. Thomas F. Walsh , RCanton , down a porhon of the established
and an Oliio Chamber of Commerce program, wliich provides tax credits
spokesman said they oppose a part of on new investment in machines and
the bill that could prevent businesses equtpment. 'Butts opposed the
from getting other tax credits already investment incentive when it was
enacted in 1977.
The bill, sponsored by Sen. William
F. Bowen, D-Cincinnati, provides new ·
or existing employers with a $100 tax
credit certificate for each jobless
Ohioan hired . The person must have
been unemployed for at least 10
weeks , and the employer · must be
located in an · area of chronic
unemployment defined i1J the bill,
SEOEMS bills were to be paid for the mainly the state's largest cities.
months of Jan. and after June they
Walsh and the chamber oppose a
would be paid only if they were provision dealing with employers who
itemized.
might close or cut back a business
Bailey reported that there could be outside a chronic unemployment area
an operating unit in Tuppers Plains but within the state, and start a new
within the next three months. Bailey fa cility to get the tax certificates. The
requested authorization to enter into bill says those employers can't get
a leaseiJurchase agreement for a new either tax break.
centralized paging communications
Bulls said the section was included
system for the Meigs EMS.
in the bill to keep communities from
He was asked to put the request in competing with each other for
writing after consulting with the businesses thatdecide to move.
prosecutor.

Commissioners outline
park hoard's duties

Security tight

ODNR begins youth
programs Saturday
The Ohio Department of Natural
Resources (ODNR) will begin its 1979
Youth Conservation Corps (YCC)
sununer program Saturday, June 16
at Rio Grande College.
Two four-week YCC sessions will
run from June 16 through July 13 and
July 15 through Aug . II for resi4ent
camps , and from June 18 through
July 13 and July 16 through Aug. 10 for
nonresident camps.
The purpose of the YCC program is
to employ youths between the ages of
15 and 18 in important conservation
work and to give these young people a
better understanding of the natural
environment. This year's YCC
program, administered by ODNR in
Ohio, will employ 1,225 youths.
"The young men and women participating in the YCC program
provide a great contribution.to the im·

provement of our environment," said
ODNR Director Robert W. Teater.
"In return, the program offers a
valuable learning experience in an·
tural resources management for
these young people who will be among
our future leaders in the conservation
field ."

. COUNTY EXTENSION AGENT Bud Carter of
Gallla County and John Rice of Meigs County inspect
the new 4-H camp swimming pool nearing completion
at Canter's Cave 4-H Camp near Jackson. Tliis sum-

''•

'

PRINCESS OF HE'ARTS - Tracy Smith, 9, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Smith, Lin~oln Hill, Pomeroy, has been crowned "Junior Princess of Hearts " in the annual fund drive of the Meigs County Heart Assn.
Voting. for contestants was on a system of one penny, a vote and Tracy,
who Will be a fourth grader at the Pomeroy Elementary School this filii
received 13,,002 votes, raising $138.02 for the heart fund. She received a
bop~ as wtnner. Bonds for winners were donated by the Pomeroy
National Bank, Farmers Bank and Savings Co., and the Racine Home
National Bank.

$25

Bill pending on transport of
nuclear materials through Ohio
By ROBERT E. Mll.LER
officials would have to be notified in
Associated Press Writer
advance of shipments of nuclear
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) _ ohio materials into or through the state,
' ·under a bill now pending in the House.
Senators passed it 30-U Tuesday . It
e.&lt;empts shipments by the federal
government, but imposes hea vy
penalties of up to 10 years in jail and a

$5, 000 fin e on power companies
offcials or others who fail to comply.
In other action Tuesday, the House
approved ~a bill that expands and
puts into permanent law a two-yearold program giving winter heating bill
credits to the elderly, disabled and
(Continued on pa~e 14)

Red Cross plans workshop

Prison practices
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- 0 . S.
Dislrict Court Judge Robert M.
Duncan says certain practices
' which Columbus Correctional
Facility officials contend help
maintain 110:curity and relieve
racial tensicn "may not pass constitutional muster.''
. Duncan commented from the
bench Tuesday during final
argwnents - in a hearing on a
preliminary injunction sought by
the U. S. Justice Department.
The govenunent wants to stop
the facility from segregating
1&gt;rlsoners on the basis of race llhd
us!~g physical restraints on inmates locked in cells.
Duncan is expected to rule on
the case soon.

•

mer more than 250 Gallla County boys and girls will get
to use the large commercial pool built by Carter and
Evans Inc. of Gallipolis and Roger Hornsby Swimrning.Pool Co. of Coolvilie.· ·

When a disaster strikes in Meigs
Subjects to be covered are In·
county, victims look to the American troductlon to Disaster Services,
Red Cross for assislance. But local . Emergency Assistance to Families,
aclilln Is important in the first few Disaster Health Nursing, Survey and
hours after a disaster.
Damage Assessment, and Disaster
To help fill this need for Meigs coun- Administration. The workshop
ty, the Columbus Division, American represents the community's best self·
Red Cross wUI conduct a disaster . help program.
Those interested should call the
preparedness workshop In Ironton,
Ohio on July 10, 11 and 12.
Athens County chapter, American
Individuals will learn that first, Red Cross, 59Hi273 or the Colwnbus
there must be trained local volunteers Division office, 614-253-7981 for more
to survey and access the damage, and infonnation.
inform the local Red Cross chapter or
the Columbus Division office of the
extent of need. Secondly~ local nurses Butch er trial underway
and other volunteers need to be
Jurors were being seated this mortrained to provide immediate
ning
in Meigs County Common Pleas
assistance, set lip shelters, feed
Court
for the case of the State of Ohio
rescue workers and victims.
The first few hours after a disaster versus Harry Roger Butcher.
Butcher was indicted by the grand
strikes are vital. If no one here in
Meigs County is even trained to jury on Jan. 4, 1979.
The charge against Butcher is that
report the damage, Red Cross aid will
that
he did recive, retain or dispose of
be delayed. Even with a prompt
certain
property, being a deputy
report, trained local people are
sheriff badge, the (r(Jperty of
neeiled to give immediate help.
·
Individuals · and . representatives another, David Ohlinger.
Prosecutor Frederick W. Crow ill
from the communities in southern
Ohio and northern Kentucky counties is representing thP State of Ohio' and
Jim O'Brien
Is representing
Butcher,
are invited to participate.
.
.
I
'j

~

~

~

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