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                  <text>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

~

~

~

�~-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, June 13, !979

2-The Dailv Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Jwte 13, 1979 .

Editorial opinions,
comments

Washington Today

USSR

'

:Ill&gt;

I

!

•

.:

tl

• '

nears

end of the. -~,road·· as leader

Washington
By Clarence
Report Miller

I.

bos:~.l~reshnev

snagged in the Senate, Brezhnev's eventual elimination of all atomic pursued.
By BARRY SCHWEID.
While the tr.eaty was in the final
critics w.ill fault his strategy and try to weapons. And he started off by
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - When force a tougher line of bargaining in proposing to the Russians a drastic stages of negotiations, Carter did not
say much in public on the subject.
Leonid Brezhnev ascends the swmnit tl1e future.
and mutual cutback ilj a rms.
But now that there is a treaty, he
Carter flies to Vienna with much
The Kremlin turned Carter down .
in Vienna, Austria, he will also be
He settled for more modest again is beating the drums hard for
starting toward the end ~f the roa~ as more on his mind.
His first week in office, Carter reductions, a little ,more . than arms control, making the tr~aty's fate
a world leader.
In an era sure to be remembered dustry sources the cost of generating · His career as boss Of the Soviet publicly &gt;)eclared .his goal was the Presidents Nixon and Ford had and his own inseparable.
for its great excesses, it is a bit ironic one kilowatt of electricity with Union is nearing a close. It is time to
that perhaps the greatest problem we nuclear power is 18 percent le!!S than begin writing his politicaiJ!pitaph. In
face ls not one of too much, but of too generating a kilowatt of power with it, Brezhnev, a proud man, wants
little. There is n'o doubt that America coal and 38 percent less than credit for slowing down the nuclear
is plagued by a score of "too- generating it with oil.
arms race.
muches": too much taxation, too
Nuclear power holds the solution to
Jimmy Carter approaches the
much bureaucracy, too much spen- many of our energy problems, but one swrunil in a very different way.
,
ding; the list can go on ad infinitum. is forced to ask himself, "what about
He, too, is determined 'to put ~
But it is the problem of too litUe our risks?" What about Three Mile constraints on the long-range ',
energy which may prove to be the one Island ? The fact is the nuclear in- bombers and intercontinental 7'
problem too tw:ge to deal with - dustry has achieved a performance missiles that make life on this planet ~
unless we realize the urgency of it standard second to none. The nation's hazardous to the health of Americans, 1
now.
70 reactors, with approximately 300 Russians and everyone else.
~
Presently, the United States energy years experience among them, have
But Carter has a lot more at stake I_
demands amount to 77.5 quadrillion never had a single radiation related than does the 72-year-old Brezhnev.
British Thermal Units. The best fatality. A study b.y the National Unlike the Soviet leader, who already
estimates point to a 60 percent in· Acadetny of Sciences found that in is witnessing a power struggle over
crease of nearly 50 quads to 125 producing the same amount of e!ec· his succession, Carter is a political
quads, by the year 2000. Oil and coal, trical power, the health risk leader who hopes to have a future .
the two stars of the energy game do associated with coal energy produc·
That future, most specifically a
not appear capable of shouldering the lion is considerably greater than that second term in the White House, could
burden. Oil is too scarce; and most of of nuclear power. Still, it is true that hinge in part on the treaty he and
what oil there is, OPEC controls. Coal there are risks involved. But what Brezhnev will sign on Monday in a
presents· problems with respect to venture in life is without ris~? Just Viennese palace.
health, safety and the environment. because 2'15 people n:cently died m a
Their place in ·histocy will be
But there is a third proven player • cr~h of a J?C·IO, should we all stop affected by the treaty and how
waitiing on the sidelines for the chance flymg? The unportant pomlts that the thoroughly they set the stage for
to get back in the game as a regular.
risks be put in perspective. We m~ . serious negotiations over another, and
Nuclear power a relia:.ie veteran consider all that we have to gam more comprehensive, weapons
of the energy gan:e, can go a long way against the great odds of a serious control agreement.
toward helping us meet our in- nuclear ae&lt;;ident occurring. The
For Brezhnev, hobbled by old age
creasing energy needs. In fact, there government spo~red Rasmussen and several physical ailments, the
may be little alternative available to Report issued in 1974, concluded that signing represents the end of a
us at thls stage. Short of nuclear a nuclear accident causing 10 or more mission. For Carter, there is a very
energy, there appears to be few prac· deaths would be likely only one~ in difficult and uncertain fight ahead
"Oh, nothing much ... The Avon lady came by .. : And a couple of calls
tical alternatives that we can turn to. about 200,000 years of plant operalton. with the Senate over ratification.
Conservation caMot solve the shor·
The Three Mile Island accident has
Ove~ the weekend, Senate Majority from lake lot salesmen ... Mow was your day?"
tage, only lessen Its effects. Solar served to heighten our concern wii.b Leader Robert C. Byrd said the treaty
energy, geothennal, biomass, wind, nuclear safety and has prompted was saved from certain defeat by
hydro, sea power - these exotic government regulators to take every Carter's decision to proceed full-11peed
energy fonns are many years and precaution to insure. that the highest with the MX mobile missile system.
billions of dollars away from prac- standards are observed in the con· The MX, allowable under the rules of
tical application. And while I am not slrucllon and maintenance of our the new SALT II treaty, has
suggesting we overlook them, they nati~n 's nuclear facilities: The neverthele!!S been criticized by some
must be realized for what they are, production of nuclear power·does en- liberals as overly expensive and
By Tom Gillem
proposal to require · the state's top
"The prospect of getting 60 votes is
energy alternatives in their fetal tail risks, but they are calculated contrary to the spirit of abms control.
Assoeialed
Press
Writer
judges
to
run
for
re-election
on
their
slim,"
House Judiciary Committee
stages which ·are altogether un· rlsks. They are ~ we have to take.
If the treaty is defeated, or weighted
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A records rather than against opponents Chairman Harry J . Lehman, D- ;:-···
feasible ecnomically, and will be so President Carter said on May 8, "It's down with substantive amendments;
willlikely stir up a major bipartisan Beachwood, said last week after the
foranumberofyearstocome.
oat of the question to preemptivelY Brezhnev wfil 'take -heat tto/6 some r-----r~-----:--:---,-------1
Is
d
Kr-'-"ha
dliners
I
Lctkn "" op~D.hl. • ~ •flromnl. Thty sll1111ld bl' lt'u 1
House
floor debate - if it reaches the resolution cleared his panel.
The economics of the matter shut down all the nuclear power plan- Red
.. ,. genera an
t:JJUUI
r
. I IAH:IIXIwonhkMII40rlllb~l 1DrPII~rtlon bytiiP...tllur l I
III I K 'I Iddr rn Namromly I
noor.
·
Lehman had to ask some
demand that we find a cost efficient ts in the country." He is right. To For nearl"'v seven years ' he had to II bfuclm••l-tlfHdwltloiiK"
• llhlldd ~~Jot~ publinUoa Ho•fvtr 011 rt~~utsl 1
Rep. Dennis J . Wojtanowski, D- representatives to vote favorably on
and inunediately acce!!Sible energy meet our energy needs we must overcome their resistance to striking 1--.,.
'- cUwlund i..t:"'" l hHld k ,, ,OO&gt;d aa.ll'., 1
Newbury, an opponent of the con· passing the. resolution out of coin·
alternative to our finite fossil fuels, proceed with the development of compromises with the Americans.
1Mdrtt•'~"'''•""
·'''Pfi"'OMIIIIrJ
l
sti.tutional
amendment resolution, mittee, despite the fact they oppose
and thls is what nuclear reactors nuclear technology - we must do so
If, after all that, the treaty is 1
•
l
, , said the House Rules Committee may the concept.
provide us with. According to in· cautiously -but we must proceed I ·
\
Ul
")'
'J'
' ', II
l}f,,_ l
.,
T• •,
never assign the proposal to a vote of
.
.
·.
·.,,
•
I
The resolution, which must first be
_ _ _ _ _ __._ _..;,.._ _' _ _ _ _ _;....,......,_ _ _., I ···~
June!J,l979
the full House.
approved by voters, applies only to
'I don't know U the speaker wants the Ohio Supreme Court and the 11
Dear Editor:
to
bring it to the floo• and allow tile state courts of appeal.
Congratulafions on your
most
overwhelming defeat of this
Under the proposal, the governor
promotion! You have certainly earsession,
except
for
the
litter
proposal
would
fill vacancies in the judgeships
ned it!
By The Associated Press
that"
received
only
27
votes
,"
by
picking
one of three names
And I want to congratulate the
Today ls Wednesday, June 13, the
Wojtanowski
said.
·
recommended
by a screening corn··~
whole staft ,for keeptna the
!64th day of l971l. There ·are 201 days
But
others
feel
House
Speaker
mittee.
·
•
quiet period for six months before she "discount" ads in separate pages - Vernal G. Riffe Jr., D-New Boston,
By Lamar C. Miller, D.O.
left in the year.
The
appointed
judge
would serve
came to my office with convulsions keeping most of our newspaper for may decide to let the measure meet two years, then stand for election to a
Clinical Associate Profeoaor
Today•s highlight in history :
which had been misdiagnosed by just that -the county news.
of Family Medicine
On this date in 1956, Britain turned
Many of these people who . visit its fate just to dispose of the matter. full six-year tenn by running on his
anotherphystctan-,~psy.
• :·
Ohio Uolvenlty College
the Suez Canal over to Egypt after
Several previous merit selection plans record instead of against an opponent.
Unless. auch s~ hematomas ,others go on tripll and describe the have
of Osteopathic Medicine
operating th'i! waterway for 74 years.
died in legislative committees.
The ballot )Vould ask if the judge
QUESTION: What kind of. brain are dlagj;l~ ~ and treat- placesandpeoplethey see; the letters
On this dale: '
In
either
case,
many
legislators
feel
should
be retained-.yes or no ..:. and
In 1502, Christopher Columbus damage is a person likely to receive ment l1eglm1 they can lead to coma to the editor from people who have the chances of adopting the resolution the judge would have to get a 55
and even ·d~th. The ncommended something to sing about, or something are doubtful since a three-fifths percent favorable response.,,
discovered the West Indian island of from a blow to the head?
trea!!Jigpt -ill 811rgecy • to . drain the to gripe about; the happenings In majority of 60 votes is needed.
ANSWER:
Several
things
have
to
Martinique.
In 1841, the first Canadian be looked at when a peniOn receives a collectl,'!Y ~ blpod iln!!Claxnp the rup- every nook and vale of our comtty; It
,)Ill brings each of us cl.osertogether.
blow to the head. First, the type of inparliamen( opened in Ottawa.
We may never meet the others in
In !940, Pa'ris was declared an open jury will depend upon the location of
person
- but for awhile each day we
from
of
hemawma
is
generally
better
than
city in World War II.
the blow. A second controlling factor
share
each
other's
joys,
visita,
com'
with
the
epidural
variety.
In 1942, the U.S. Office of War is the previous condition of both blood
QUESTION: What is a brain con· plaints, the sorrows of death, and
Information was created, with vessels and brain.
pollUcs- allln each issue.
,
broadcaster and writer Elmer Davis
A blow to the front or back of the cusslon?
It is the one link that can bind each
ANSWER: This is a rather vague
as director.
head produces a recoil in whlch the
and
every family together in Meigs
"waste
basket"
diagnosis
given
to
In 1967, U.S. Solicitor General brain moves away from the striking
County!
brain
injury
resultiing
fr&lt;m
head
Thurgood Marshall was nominated by force. This movement results in a
Keep up the good work!
President Lyndon Johnson to be the bruise on the side opposite the site of trauma. It cannot be substantiated by
SincerelyAgnes C. Hill.
any
x-rays
or
tests
and
merely
means
first black on tl1e SUpreme Court.
the blow where the brain makes sud·
In 1973, President Richard Nixon den contact with the bony skull. This that some type of shock or bruise has , P .S. I realize It is the advertising By tbe Edlton of (:o11811Dler Reports lightweight model with a grip
ordered a S(k)ay freeze on all retail kind of brain injury we Call a contra· occurred to the brain. A concussion that keeps the newspaper solvent; but
Whether you play tennis like a diameter of four and a-half inches ..
prices in a dove against inflation.
coup type. It is usually not life can, however, be a serious injury if I do appreciate the fact that the Daily beginner or a Wimbledon champion, (Some racqueta, Including the
Ten years ago: Withdraw! of U.S. threatening or permanently precautions are not taken to prevent and Sunday Sentinel keeps most of the ch0011ing a racquet of ~ right size
combat troops from South Vietnam damaging, unless the striking force ls future brain trauma and the patient full page ads separate fr&lt;m tlie and weight can make a big difference popular Davis brand, use a different
number code, so It's a ,good Idea to ask
"meat" of the reading material!
does not receive proper rest.
began with the pullout of a unit quite violent.
in the way you maneuver around the the salespersoo to explain the
fighting in tl1e Mekong De Ita.
Traumatic blows to the side of the
court.
coding. )
Five years ago : The heir to the skull, especially toward the front, can
For example, Consumer Reports
To find out if the grip Is right for
British throne, Prince. Charles, cause a common form of internal
notes, with a racquet It's too heavy, you, pick up the racquet as you would
delivered his first speech from the bleeding called a hematoma. In. the
you may .develop both a chronically in a game. Your fingers shouldn't
floor of tl1e House of lArds, the first head ··region there are two majoc
late swlngnd a stiff shoulder. With one wrap completely around so they touch
such address made by a member of varieties of these localized collections
that's too light, your strokes could your hand. Instead, there should oo a
the ro.yal family in 90 years.
of usually clotted blood - epidural
become "wristy," cauaing you to small gap. Ask yourself: Does the
One year ago : Israel completed hematomas and subdu r al
overpower the ball and lose control.
racquet feel comfortable?
withdrawal of its invasion forces from heiJl!ltomas.
Racquets come marked with the
In addition to size and. weight, con·
Lebanon, turning most of a six-mileThe epidural type is the most im·
letters "L," "M" or "H," indicating slder your options for sttlnging. While
wide border strip over to Lebanese mediately life threatening, but for·
whether they're light, medium cr many excellent models come pre·
Christian militiamen rather than to tunately is also the less conunon of
heavy.
Generally, If you're of slight strung from the factory, you can exer·
U.N. troops.
the two. This kind of hematoma is
build,
you
'II probablY do best with a else more control over your racquet's
Today's birthdays: Former football produced when an artery (middle
light
racquet.
If you're of larger composition by purchasing a frame
star Red Grange is 76. Actor Richard meningeal) is ruptured and the rapid
build,
a
mediwn·welght
model is pro- and having it slrwig at a pro shop cr
Thomas is 28.
blood accumulation causes com·
bably
fpr
you.
Hardly
anyone
the sporting goods store.
Thought for to,day: One is easily pression of the brain tissue. Within
heavier
racquets
these
days.
, Although most professional players
fooled by tl1at which one loves minutes to a few hours loss of con·
To
find
out
what
weight
is
best
for
prefer gut strings to nylon, Conswner
Moliere , French -, actor and sciousness, permanent neurological .
you,
try
both
lights
and
mediums,
Reports has found that amateur
playwright, 1622-1673.
damage and even death will result
picking the one that lets you time your playei'B -even some better ones unless inunedlate surgery ia perstrokes and take a controlled swing often can't sense the difference. The
fanned.
with little-physical strain. Keep in fact is, you may prefer nylon strings
111E DAIL\' SENTINEL
A subclural hematoma is produced
(USPSU~MOI
mind that the one-ounce or so dlf. because they cost less and are more
in the same manner and in the same
ference between a light and medium durable than those made of gut. And,
region of the brain as the epidural
is great enough to affect your stroke unlike gut, nylon Isn't affeded by
type. The important difference is that
and timing, but too ~ to- affect dampness.
DEVI..I fED TO 'I1IE
in
this
case
a
vein,
rather
than
ari
ar·
how
hard you hit the ball.
Flnall_y, If you're just starting to
MERESt OF
tery, is ruptured. The hem4to11111
MEIG&gt;o-MASON AREA
.Also keep ln mind that tthe size of learn the game of tennis, It would proROBERT HOEFLICH
therefore expands much more slowly
the racquet's grip can be an impor- bably lie wise for you to look foc the CltyEdJtor
and
often stops ·the vessel from fur·
Publllbed dally el.ceptS.blrday by The Oblo
tant factor ln your game. A racquet least expensive racquet available at
Valley Publlsbh!g CompiBJ· Mllltbnedla, 111&lt;!.,
ther bleeding by the mere presence of
whOle ·gr~p~ toO small will tend to the proper size and weight. There'S a
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio 4$7•. Buloea
its
own
size
in
the
closed
space
bet·
twist
l!Fyour liand on off-center Iiiia, wide variety of inexpensive factoryOffice Pboae 1ft- 2151. Edllorial Pbo~e
ween the skull and the brain. Very of.
ltl-%157.
making you lose control. If the grip is strung rnodela from which to choose.
Second clau jtol&amp;age paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.
ten an Interval of time (quiet period)
too large, you'll have a tough time And, if you decide that tennis lsn 't for
NaUo01lad 1trd1lq represeu&amp;atlve, t.odoo
when the patient sems to have ~o
ANocbllel, 3101 Euclid Ave., Clnel..d, Ohio
keeping a flrm hold of the racquet.
you, relatlvel,y little will have been
-.m. .
.
rA,t.~~~
· TVn"'
symptoms is misleading to both the
.
The
!lrlJ&gt;,
1,1.
m!!asured
·
b
y
Its
clr·
.
lost.
•
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~
~·
!!IJ.
!
.
t'~
~~
A;
InC
-r7VI'I'V
..
·
""
~
Snblcrtpttoa l'lltes: Delivered by catTier
.physician and the patient. .Evenl
. , ! ~ ' c!iunfe'fence in inchea. Almost all rac- On the other hand, if you become a
whl"rr available II centa per ~11:. By Mruor
'""""'"'''"'"~A.i5
w
, I ~"Wi•'t'
,tl!f'i'f,;AiQf-: ~ T."-J~
Routt wberee~~rrler tervlte DOtaVJllable, One
tually, the hematoma - either
qqets are avalll;lble in the most com, .frequent player, you'll have given
moalh, $UO. By m.~U In Qbio 1Dd w. Va ., Oue
" Eilher sdmething's wrong, or that's one ot .
through
rebleeding
or
continual
slow
mon
middle sizes - 4 318, 4%, 4 5/8, yourself time to get a feel. for the
. Ye~~r, f!7.51 ; S!J: IIIODtlll, fU.50; Three DlOD•
those new slit skirts.''
expansion - will cause conyulsions
Chi, .... ; ~·~ $32.1Q year ; Six m•utht
and 4 '1'4 - which you 'II generally find game. And that wUJ.helP. you make an
$17.• ; Tlaree moath!, $1.M. SulMcrlpdon prtce
and headaches. For instance, I peron the frame along with the weignt informed decision on how to invest
fucluda Suocbly Tfmn· ~nUnrl .
sonally saw one woman who Will! ina ·
designation. Thus a 4'k L is a your money in good equipment.
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Mets romp o,ver Reds

Commission to take action
against Northfield permit
NORT HFIELD, Ohio (A P) ...:. The
Ohio State Racing Commission has
told No rtheast Ohio Harness ,
operators of the Northfield and Grandview meetings at Northfield
Park, that the commission will take
action against Northeast's racing
penn it
The ~mmission notified the racing
operators that they intend to revoke,
'suspend or diminish the group 's
racing penni! because of alleged rule
violations during a race April 20 . The
officials also notified track operators
that their pennit to operate harness
racing for the !9BO season may be
denied
·
The ·alleged wrongdoing
involves
betting machines not turned off after
the fourth race began on April 20.
About 125 winniitg tickets, totaling
about $3.400, "(ere reportt&gt;dly sold .

Most of the tickets were allegedly
purchased by mutuel clerks af(er.the
race was completed. . .
The racmg -commtsston charged
that track operators engaged m
co ndu ct detrn:nental ·to the best
mterests of racmg and ,failed to stop
wagermg and lock machines when the
front of the s_tarting vehicle "reached
the startmg line.
Wtlltam F . Snyder'. a ge neral
partner m N?rtheast, satd revocation
of Nort~east s racmg permit would be
a first m the history of Ohto racmg.
. He ~lso ob1e:ted ~o the ~mount of
attention the rac-e has recetved.
"I wtsh the whole thmg were
dropp ed"
• . S,nyder sat"d· "I don't want
I'm
any publtctty ... As far as
c~ cerned, the matter IS long ove,~
wtth and ought to be long over wtth.

The shoe for t®ay 's
textured clothing.
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SUMMIT

~CHAPMAN SHOES
FATHER'S DAY
JUNE 17, 1979 ·

Next to Elberfelds in Pomeroy, 0.

Propo·s ai for judges to run on
record stirs debate on House floor

Today in history

.,

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_.,,._

BEEF FOR
YOUR FREEZER

IH

Health Review
..

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~=e~t· ~~ ~~P~

Consumer Re1 MH'ts

What's your racquet?

were going togetlO."
While Mazzilli contempl~tes · going
into the fortune-telling field or the
stock . market, Cincinnati wonders
whaltl has to do to beat the last-pl~ce
Mets, to whom they have now lost
four out of five games thls season.
It was a five-run Reds' outburst
against Met starter Pete Falcone and

U.S.D.A. CHOICE
COOKOUT TIME

Royals 7, Red Sox 6
With two out in the ninth and the
Red Sox . leading 6-4 on Carl
Yastrzemskl's two-run homer in the
eighth, Wilson hit what appeared to be
a routine game-ending fly ball which
clanked off Rice 's golve as
centerfielder Fred LyiUI cut in front of
him. Braun then homered off loser
Dick Drago to tie it up.
In tl1e loth, Geocge Brett singled
and went all the way to third when
Durrall Porter's bunt rolled through
tl1e vacated secood base position Jerry Remy had broken to cover first
- into short right field for a double. Al
Cowens followed with a game-winning
sacrifice fly.
Rangers 1; Brewers 6
Buddy Bell, who drove in two
earlier runs with a homer and single,
drilled a tie-breaking single to cap a
three-run ninth inning rally . N~t only
didn't the Brewers get the last out,
tl1ey never even got one out in tl1e fa tal
ninth. Lary Socensen held a 6-4 lead
but walked Larvell Blanks, hit John
Ellis with a pitch and then threw
wildly to first on John Grubb's
sacrifice as Blanl\s scored. Billy
Sample, who earlier hit his first major
league homer, singled off Bill Castro
to tie the score and Jerry Augustine
intentionally walked Al Oliver before
Bell's game winning hit.
IDdlaos 11, Angels 10
A two.()ut, two-run homer by Toby
Harrah in the bottom of the ninth off
Dave LaRoche tied the game. Bobby
Bonds followed with a sjngle off loser
Mark Clear, stole second and scored
oo Andre Thorntoo's single, his fourth
RBI. A .tw()ofun single by Tom
Dooohue in the seventh gave the
Angels a 9-7 lead after they blew a IHI
bulge. The rally gave Bob Hood, the
sixth Cleveland pitcher, his first
victory,~nee last July.
Yaukeesf, Tw!Ds 1
Roy White and Mickey Rivers
Last weekend, the R. C. Cola soft· stroked rWHCoring singles in a tie·
ball team participated in a forty team breaking, three-run ninth inning and
tournament in Colwnbus and came the Yankees got four-bit pitching from
away with all the marbles. The local Guidry and Ron Davis. Rookie Darryl
club finished ·ihe tourney1flth1 Wins Jones started tl1e ninth off with a
and no 'losses, and placed three double and one out later White sipgled
to snap a 1·1 tie and send Jerry
players on the All-Tourney team.
Koosman
to his fifth consecutive
The three all-tourney players were
Ed Baer, Dave Fife, and Bob Whaley.
Whaley won the Golden Glove award,
and pitcher Tom Woods captured the
Most Valuable Player Award.
Coach Gene Wise credited the SUC·
cess to a great team effort. 'ream
members are Rick Ash, Baer, Gary
Clark, Jerry Davenport, Tim Eber·
sbach, Dave Fife, Keith French, Greg
Gibbs, Danny Gillispie, Dave
Gillispie, Bill Halley, Wally Hatfield,
George Hoffman, Danny Hood, Tim
Hood, Mike Johnson, Ed Kincade,
Speed Pratt, Sam Robinson, Don
Swisher, Whaley, Gene Wise, and
Woods.

By HERSCHEL NISSENSON
AP Sports Writer
The game's never over until the last
man is out...and sometimes it's not
even over then.
The California Angels and
Milwaukee Brewers never did get tl1at
elusive last out Tuesday night,
blowing two-run leads in the ninth
inning and losing, respectively, to the
Cleveland Indians 11-10 and the Texas
Rangers 7~ .
The Boston Red Sox, leading
· Kansas City 6-4, appeared to have the
last out t-and their' sixth consecutive
victory+ in sight when Willie Wilson
lofted a catchable fly ball, but left
fielder Jim Rice turned it into a threebase error, Steve Braun followed with
a game-tying homer and the Royals
pushed acorss a run in the loth to beat
the Red Sox 7~The ' New Yock· Yankees scored
tl1ree times in the ninth to beat the
Minnesota Twins 4-1 despite an injury
to pitching ace Ron Guidry.
In other American League action
the Chicago White Sox clobbered the
Baltimore Orioles 12-4, ihe Detroit
Tigers trounced the Oakland A's 9-2
and the Seattle Mariners defeated the
Toronto Blue Jays 5-!.
Along with the agony of ninth-iMing
losses - "I've got a bad headache
from that 0ne," said Milwaukee
Manager George Bamberger - was
the ecstacy of Detroit third base coach
Dick Tracawski managing a game for
tl1e first time in his 27 years in
baseball. "Happiness is a seven-run
lead in the ninth," said Tracawski,
who will fill in until Thursday's
arrival of Sparky Anderson, · the
Tigers' new skipper.

'

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setback.
Guidry allowed all four Minnesot~
hits before leaving after the seventh
inning with an apparent back injury .
Guidry was wheeled out of the locker
room on a stretcher. His neck was in a

brace and he appeared to be groggy
but X-rays showed no fractures or
nerve damage. Th e pr eliminary
diagnosis was a muscle strain off the
spine.
White Sox 12, Orioles 4
Junior Moore and Chet Lemon hit
two-run singles in a seven-run second
inning and Wayne Nordhagen and
Claudell Washington slugged home
runs as Chicago snapped Baltimore 's
si .~..game winning streak. Ken Kravec
was the winner while loser Mike
Flanagan was unable to retire a
batter in the big second inrring .
Tigers 8, A's 2
Designated hitter Rusty Staub
knocked in three runs with a homer
and a double and rookie Pat
Underwood won foc th e second time in
as many major league starts by
hurling a six-hitter for his first
complete game. Jerry Morales also
homer ed for Detroit a nd Alan
Trammell became the first Tiger to
steal home since AI Kaline in 1973.
Mariners 5, Blue Jays 1
Dan Meyer, Joe Simpson and Larry
Cox delivered RBI sin gles in the first
inning and coasted behind Glenn
Abbott's six-hit pitching. Meyer also
homered for Seattle's final run in the
ninth.
'

a lot defensively."
Cincinnati contributed two costly
errors to the monster inning in which
only four runs were eamed. Second
baseman Junior Kennedy and left
fielder George Foster both had
fielding errors. Added to New York's
five hits were three walks.
After a double by John Stearns and
a walk to Steve Henderson, Doug
Flynn reached on Keimedy's error to
load the bases , .
By this time, Reds' starter Bill
Bonham was gone and loser Manny
Scannienlo, ~2. was on in relief. He
walked pinchhitter Ron Hodges forcing in the fiist run. With one out, ,
Frank Taveras slashed a double past
first that sent hom the two rwtS.
"I never remember an inning as big
as this," Foster reflected, "without a
ball being hit out of the park. They
always kept the pol boiling, always
had men on base."
...
Mazzilli was intentionally walked to
reload the bases and Richie Hebner,
who missed six games with a lower
back sprain, singled in two runs. Then
came Foster's error on a soft fly to
·teft by Willie Montanez. When Foster
dropped the ball, Mazzilli scored the
sixth run of the inning.
After Stearns filed out, .Henderson
singled Mootanez to . third and boUt
men scored when Flyl)ll slammed a
long drive over the he11d of Cesar
Geronimo ·in center for an inside-the·
park homer. It was his second homer
of the season and only the fourth of his
five-year career.

·

Earlier, Flynn had tripled and he
subsequently added a single. "1 was
just trying to hit the ball hard," said
Flynn, whose average rose to .224
with the three hit,s. "I haven't been
too successful hitting the ball in thls
ballpark and I was just looking foc
something over the plate."
Torre said the most surprising
thing that happened all game w811 as
Flynn came sliding across the plate, ,
head-first. "When Doug scored, Maz·
zilli started jumping up and down
yelling that he was right."
Dale Murray, 4-S, the last of three
New York pitchers.,picked up 1/te win '
despite allowing Foster's 13th homer
of the season in the eighth foc the final
a ncinnati run.

FRONTS ........~.~.l
CALL

REMODI~LIN(;?

TOLEDO RFJIULTS
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) - Perette
Hanover I'm Happy, Terrrys Woe
and Reg:.t Rachel won tl1eir divisions
of tl1e $46,-360 Ohio Sires Stakes stop
Tuesday night at Raceway Park.
They topped a field of 36 3-year-old
filly pacers entered in the second leg
of the series leading to an $83,000
championship finale foc the eight top
point-scorers here Sept. 2.
Perette Hanover set a new track
record of I: 59 I-'S in winning her
division .

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reliever Mike Scott that triggered the
10-run response which was the largest
single inning in club history for the
Mets, who came into the National
League in 1962. It was also the largest
inning in the NL this season .
" This was definitely not a gameplan situation," said Torre. "And I
would have to say that they helped us

Angels, ·Brewers losers in
Americari League Tuesday

Berry's World

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12-6 WID

R C bests 40 teams
in Colwnhus action

d;

.

NEW YORK (AP)- Lee Mazzilli's ·
contribution to the Mets' gamewiMing !Oi'un sixth IMl1tll TUesday
in New 'y rut's 12-d'1~ 'qyer 'lite Cincinnati Reds was a prophesy.
"I had a premonition," S!lid Maz·
zilli, "that we were going to score 10
runs af\er they got their five. I said to
•Joe Torre; theMets' manager that we

•
Ill

MASON, W. VA.

�4-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., Wednesday. J1111e 13, 1979

Transactions

Anderson named .Tigers manager
SCOREBOARD

II) HON llZWONKOWSK I
Pn·~s Wrih•r

The Tigers were 27-26 under Moss,
and Campbell said he was " just not

Assul'iatl't'l

Dt.TROIT i AP l - Fiflyth ree
into the American Lea gue
season. Jim Campbell saw the Detroit
GB
Tigers "just rocking along·· a notch
abO\'C .500.
I
So the team 's pres1dent and -genera l
5
6'' mana ge r decided to rock the boat by
7
firing low-key skipper Les Moss and
9
1
Toronto
17 4J ,279 2J 1 hiring Gl'Orge "Sparky" Anderson, a
WEST
se lf-&lt;lcscrib€d "crazy e&lt;trovert and
Cal ifornia
36 15 .590
wild enthusiast.··
Texas
32 27 .542 3
Anderson, 45, fir ed last Novemb€r
Kansas City
33 28 .541 3
after nine seasons and two world
Minnesota
30 27 .526 4
Chicago
champion ships in Cincinnati. abq·eed
29 30 .491 6
Seattle ·
25 ~7 .. 402 1 ]1 7 Tuesday to a fi ve-year contract With
Oakland
19 42 .311 17
the Tigers - the longest pact ever ofTuesday's Games
fe
red a Detroit manager.
Seattle 5, Toronto 1
Cleve land 11 , C~lifo rn i a 10, 10 in
" We're bUilding an organ ization
nings
here, " Campbell sa id . " I think Sparky
Detroit 9, Oak land 2
can be a cornerstone."
Chicago 12. Balt im or e 4
And er son will reportedly ea rn
New York 4, M inneso ta 1
$110,000 a year with Detro it.
Texas 7, Milwaukee 6
Kansas City 7, Boston 6, 10 innings
Moss. 54, will be paid off for the
Wednesday 's Games
of his one-year agreement
remainder
Californ ia (Aase 5·4 and Eddy 0-01
and
has
a
spot somewhere in the
at Toronto ( fv\oo re 0-0 and Lemongello
1-71 2
Detroit system " if he wants one,"
Oakland (Keough O-BI at Cl eveland Ca mpbell said.
(Garland 2-7) , (nl
Seattle (Parrott 4-11. al Detroit
(Wi lcox 4-31. (nl
By The Associated Press

AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST
·W. L. Pet .
Balt imore
38 22 .633
Boston
36' 22 ' .621
New Yo rk
33 27 .550
M ilw auk ee
32, 29 .525
Detroit
28 26 .519
Cle vel and
28 30 .483

~amPs

satisfieti'• · with the team 's pro~ress.
But , " had Sparky not been
""ailable, we would not have made
th e move at this time, " Ca mpbell
said.
Anderson had been mentioned as
the leading cand idate to manage
several clubs since leaving the Reds.
" Everybody was say in g I'd go
somep la ce where I could take over a
winner. ". he said by telephone from
his Ca lifornia home . " But this Detroit
club, it 's the b€sl young team I can
see. I really enjoy working with good,
yo ung kids.
" I see the same things on that
Detroit club I saw when we were
starting out in Cincinnati," he said.
" I'm e.~~: .tremely enthused ."
It was only late Monday morning
that the Tige rs contacted Anderson .
The deai was announced Tuesday
afternoon, catching many Detroit
players on their way tG tJ. o ball park
for a game against Oakland.
" I was just totally sh',.:ked," said
relief pitcher Johr. Hiller, the only

player left from Detroit's 1968 world
champions. " I just hate to see
anybody get fir.ed .."
roach Dick Traeewski ran the club
during Tuesday night's 9-2 victory and
will be in charge for tonight's game
against Seattle.
Anderson arrives ·Thursday, and
said veteran right-hander Jack
Billingham , .who played six seasons
uncter Anderson in Cine inn a ti, will

International League

By The Associated Press
Tuesday's Results

·.. we just got one goal to start : to get
together, to live and die together, to
ge t this thing solved," he said: .
The firing-and-hirin~ was "qmte
une.&lt;pected, " said .Moss, an
Oklahoma native who had just seen
the team go 11-5 on a 14-day road trip,
then edge Oakland 3-1 at Tiger
Stadium Monday night.
"The progress of the ball club was
the only thing that was brought up (by
Campbell) ," said Moss, adding he
would have liked at least a full
season 'schance, but "that's the way it
Anderson will be Detroit's 28th
manager.

Tidewater 4, Rochester 2
Charleston 5. Syracuse 4

Pawtucket 5, Columbus 4

NEW YORK YANK!;ES - Signed
Freddie Toll iver, William Filson and
Chris

Hu~y

Lein , pitchers , and

Demand for blood col)tinues, but
with so many donors 'out of town on
vacation, the supply goes down.
Before you go add the Red Cross to
your list; give blood before you go.

Columbus at Pawtucket
Thursday's Games
Rochester at Toledo
Charleston at Syracuse
Columbus at Pawtucket

Only games scheduled

YO~R

to Oneonta of the New York -Penn

League and Filson . Leln and Gayden
lo Paintsville , Ky., of the Appalachian
DETROIT TIGERS -

Signed

Daniel Lamar, catcher, and assigned

him to Billings, Nlont. , of the Pioneer
League .

·

ST. LOU IS CARD IN ALS. - Signed

Steve Jer man second baseman, to a
Class A contra,t.

SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS ~
Signed Mike tvie , first baseman , to a

five -year contract.

FOOTBALL
National Foolb~tt League
.
CIN CINNAT I BENGALS - Signed
Max Montoya, offensive tackle.
HOCKEY
National HOCkeY League
NEW YORK ISLANDERS - An -

Marshall , defenseman, and named
him coach of Fort Worth of the Cen tral Hockey League.
VANCOUVER CANUCKS- Signed
Ron Sedtbauer. tell wing, and Bob
Manno, defenseman.

COLLEGE
EASTERN WASHINGTON
UNIVERSITY - Named Dick Zornes
head football coach .

LIFE A.T•-•

New York (Beattie 3-Jl at Min -

nesota (Zahn 4-ll , In)

Boston (R enko 4-2) at Kan sas Cit y

WE HAVE A
WIDE SELECTION OF

(Gura 3-51. (n)

Milwaukee ( Haas 3-5)

(Jenk ins 7-2). (n)

at

Texas

Thursday's Games
California at Toron to, (n)

Oak land at Cleveland , (n)
Seattle at Detroit, In)

f~MV~mt\NDS
~1m ffi~ VAD!

New York at Minnesota , (n l
Milwaukee at Texas , (n)

Only games scheduled
NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST
W. L. Pet. GB
32 22 .593
St. Louis
Montreat
31 22 .585 1/2
Philadelphia
32 27 .541 2112
28 26 .519 4
Pittsburgh
Chicago
25 29 .463 7
New York
23 32 .418 9'h
WEST
Housfon
36 27 .571
Cinci nnati
33 27 .550 11/ 2
30 31 .492 5
San Francisco
29 34 .460 7
Los Angeles
San Diego
28 35 .444 B
22 37 .373 12
Atlanta

c

'

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a
~

CAMPUS PE RMA -PRESS
SHORT SLEEVE

. Atlanta (Maluta 3-41 at Montreal
(Rogers 5-3), (n I
Houston (J . Niekro 9-2). at
.Philadelphia (Ruthven 6-31. (n)
Cincinnati (LaCoss 7-0) at New
York (Hausman 0-0l. (n )
Pittsburgh ( Kison 3-21, at San Diego
(Qwc~ i nko 2-2), (ri)
St. Louis (8. Forsch 3-4) , at Los
Angeles (Sutcliffe 6-4!. tnl
Chi cago ( Krukow 2-5) at San

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Chicago at San Francisco, (n)
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52; Porter, KC, 47; Bochte, Sea , 47 ;

Cooper. Mit, 44; Horton , Sea , 44.
HITS - G Brett , KC, 84 ; LansfonJ,
Cal, 80 ; Smalley , Min , SO; Remy, Bsn,
. 73; Rice, Bsn, 73.
DOU!!LES - Thornton, Cle, 17 ;
Lemon , Chi. 17 ; C Washgtn , Ch i, 17 ;
Lynn, Bsn, _l6 ; Bonds , .Cle, 16; McRae,

KC, 16; B Belt, Te&lt; , 16.
TRIPLES- G Breil. KC, 9; Ran ·
dolph , NY, 5; Grilfin . Tor . 5; Wilson,
KC. 5; 6 Tied With 4.
HOME RUNS - Lynn, Bsn , 16 ;
Singleton, Bat, 14; Thomas, Mi l, 13;
Grich . Cal, 13; R Jones, Sea , 13.
STOLEN BASES - Le Flore, Del ,
29; Wilson, KC, 26; J Cruz. Sea, 22;
Otis, KC. 20; Wilts, Tex. 18.
PITCHING (6 Decisions) - Johm ,
ny , 10-1, .909, 2.23 ; Kern , Tex . 8-1, .889,
1.8; D Martinez, Bal. 9--2, .818 , 3.04;
Jenkins, Tex. 7-2, .778, 3.334; Claar.
Cal, 6-2, .750, 2.91; Rayn, Ca l, 7-3, .700,
1.92: Waits, Cte, 8-4, .667, 3.38 ;
Palmer , Bal. 6-0, .667, 2.95 .
STRIKEOUTS - Ryan , Cal. 94;
Guidry, NY, 80; Jenkins, Tex, 73;

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can use all summer.

LIMIT ONE WiTH COUPON
cOUPON EXPIRES JUNE 16
TWINCITYGATEWAY

-PAM PER POP ON HIS DAY -

Taveras, NY , 18; Lopes, LA, 18 .

PITCHING (6 Decisions) - La Coss,
Cin, 7, t.OOO, 2.35 ; Zac~ry , NY. 5-1,
.833, 3.59; J Niekro , Htn , 9-2, .818, 2.46;
Knepper, SF , 6-2, .750, .387; lamp,
Chi. 5-2, .114. 4.61: B Lee , Mil , 6-3, .667,
3.88 , Ruthven, Ph i. 6-3, .667, ,3.41;
Vuckovich, St L 6-3. .667. 2.97.
STRIKEOUTS - Richard. Htn , 100 ;
Perry, SD, 70; Carlton, Phi, 68 ; P
Niekro. All . 65 .

r :~~RTS........~ 4~~
BRIEFS...... ...

MASON, W. VA.

____________________________,

' .

.

It

-PAMPER POP ON HIS DAY-

THRE£ TO PACKAGE

. _1

I ~

men·s

KI~DS OF
- PAMPER POP ON HIS DAY MEN'S CAMPUS BRAND
BOXER &amp; BRIEF STYLE

BELTS

Hare's a Pop Saver , Fruit of the
loom underwear.

Pamper Pop on His special da1 with
super Scamp H ol.ISes llpper s !rom
Stiffler's .' Several styl813 to choose hom .
Alw ays a favori te.

~

THURSDAY
FRID·AY
SATURDAY
JUNE 14-15-16

$ 99~

HOUSE SLIPPERS

•

For Fatner·s day glvlngl Man ' s.
tamoulll Fruit ol the loom solid
color pocket tee shlrta In your
choice ot taslllon colora . Save
now I

Shop now lor men 's fashion bette
In assorted colors, styles and
wldtns . Pamper Pop on nls
special day with ~llta !rom
Stiffler 's.

For Father·s Day glvlng l Men ·s
paJamas made of plain and fancy
printed cotton . broadcloth in a
variety of patterns and colors .

··i
~ _KNIT

PICKENS HARDWARE&lt;

POCKET
T-SH IRTS

-P AMPER POP ON HIS
BOSTON BRAND
ASSORTED FASHION

PAJAMAS

- PAMER POP ON HI S DAY -

"

!SOLID COLOR

Kravec, Chi, 62; Koosman , Min ; 59 .

TODAY'S
MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
Bv The Associated Press
NATIONAL LEAGUE
BATTING (12Sat bats) - Brock, St
L. .367 ; Rose . Phi • .353 : Winfi eld. SO,
.353; Hendrick , 51 L .351 ; Murphy ,
Ali, .348.'
RUNS - Lopes, LA, 67 ; Kingman,
Chi, 43; K Hrnandz, St L, 42; Royster,
All , 42; Concepcn, Cin, 41 ; North , SF,
41.
RBI - Winfietd , SO, 53 ; Foster, Cin,
49 : Kingm~n. Chi , 48 ; Simmons, St L,
45; Garvey, LA, 45 .
HITS- Winfield , SO, 85 : Rose, Phi,
2; Garvey, LA, SO ; Russel l, LA, 79;
Templeton, St L. 75.
DOUBLES - Rose, Phi. 21 ; Mazzlltl, NY , 19 ; Parrish . Mti.1B;
Buckner, Chi , 17; Reitz, St L. 17;
Hendr ick, ~~ L, 17; Baker, LA. 17.
TRIPLES - Templetorj , St L, 7; T
Scott, 51 L, 7; Winfield , SD, 7;
Moreno, Pgh , 5 ; J Cruz . Hln . 5.
HOME RUNS - Kingman . Ch i, 20;
Schmidt, Phi, 18 ; Lopes, LA, 17;
Simmons, St L, 16; Winfield, SO, 15.
STOLEN BASES - Moreno , PQh,
23; T Scott, St L 21 ; North, SF, 21;

dads.

ALL KINDS OF GIFTS- FOR ALL

- PAMER POP ON HIS DAY MEN 'S PERMANENT PRESS
FANCY BROADCLOTH

Men's wasn and wear roDe!l tn no.
Iron fabrics. Good seloc t ion . Robes
lit for a king come from Still ier's
Comfortable and rela411ing .

''

I

AND OTHER POWER TOO~S

Wednesday
.
"Theater," found twice in the New
Testament, is a Greek word meaning
a place for viewing or a spectacle.
Give blood before you go on
"... and they rushed with one acvacation.
cord into tbetheater." -Aclill9:29.

LE\JI.S

::·:·

ROBES

.

~

$10~.?

- PAMPER POP ON HIS DAY " A ROBE FIT FOR A KING "
COMFORTABLE LOUNGING

SAWS, DRILLS, SANDERS,

··'··

Blu e suede leather and nylon up·
per:, . G ive Dad's feet a treat: Sizes
6YJ to 12.

Now Is the t ime to stock up at thh!l
low price! Men 's famous Maverick
Automatlck blue denim jeans in
, assorted styles. Great values!

jean Clothes That Fit
Like A Glove.
And keep on fitting. ...

GIFT SUGGESTIONS

permanent press walking shorts
i assortment of colors
patllems . Give.Dad Our Best

JOGGERS

DENIM JEANS

$1299;

to Special 6ifts
BLACK &amp; DECKER

SHORTS

-PAMPER POP ON HIS DAYMEN'S COMFORTABLE

- FATHER 'S DAY SPECIAL-

For get

'

. •..

.:. :·:

For

SPORTSWEAR VALUES FROMSTIFFLER'S -JUST FOR DAD!

MEN'S MAVERICK AU TOMATICK

shopped at tt~e Grand Central Mall on mghl.
Thursday.
·
·. Mrs. Ada Van Meter and Leota
Mrs. Aria Fox and Bill of Belmont Birch and Mr . and Mrs. 1'ommy
and Ne ll Middleswart VISited Mr . and Holter enjoyed a family gathering and
Mrs. Dan · Talbott and fa111ily on cookout at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Saturda y.
.
Ronnie Holter , Racine, Memorial
Tom Dur;t, local, Victor, Scott and Day .
·•

Mrs. Ada Fox----' "''" '
Ohio. Mrs. Nett Midulesw"
and Ml'S. Wesley A'Uen and
of
Portland attcn derl the wedding of
Jnoc Allen and H01w ld Hidgby ut
Sandy Hook , Ky. recently .
Mr. and Mrs. Billl.lcrry, Mansfield;
Victor Durst , Scott , Jason and Kelly,
The Plains: Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell
Bess. Wcllsvilie, Ohio; Jim Ritchie,
Mlnersv ile, a nd Missy Van Meter,
local, were weekend callers at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. H. R. Durst and
Trim.
Mrs. Myrtle Lewis and Brenda and
Mrs. Larry Fowl e~· . and children,
Buffalo, W. Va , spent Tuesday and
Wednesday. with Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Brya nt, Debra and David.
Miss Leota Birch and Mrs. Mike
Evans and Matthew shopped in
Gallipolis on Tuesday.
Mrs. Tina Bowen, Haymond Bowen
and son , Gene of Norfolk, Va., Mrs.
Emma Blankenship, of Columbus,
David Sneed, Ppca, W. Va ., Mr. and
. Mrs. Aaron Sneed and Robert Sneed
of Mt . Alto, W. Va., and Mrs. Irene
Jones and daughters, Letart, W. Va .,
wererecentguestsofMr. and Mrs. W.
s. Long . .
Mrs. fern Cooper apd Miss Mabe,l
McDaniels o( Springfield, Va., were
Memorial Day weekend guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Louis DeLuz.
Mrs. Ruby Bryant, Mrs. Penny
Middleswart, Mrs. Betty Ward, Trey
and Zachary, and Freda Carpenter

MEN'S POPLIN &amp; DOUBLEKNIT
SUMMER WALKING

.::

Only games scheduled.

eMotes

IJurst, The Plains. attended the

i(cr!s-l'hlllics game at t{ivcrfront
St&lt;1tlium '. in Cincinnati on Frid(;ly

assorted styles. colors anc1 panerns .
Give Qad our best on his day.

MEN'S eOMFORT PLUS
POLYESTER · KNIT

Pittsburgh at San Diego, (n I

TODAY'S
MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
By The Associated Press
AMERICAN LEAGUE
BATTING (125 at bals l
Smalley, Mtn, .367 ; Kemp , Del. .356 ;
Carew, Cat. .355 ; Downing , Cal, .345 ;
Boehle, Sea, .340.
.
1
RUNS - G Brett, KC. 50 ; Oti s, KC.
46 ; Lynn , Bsn , 45 ; Lansford, Cal , 5 ;
Baylor, Cal, 44.
RBt - Baylor, Cat. 55; Lynn, Bsn.

proudly recite to

JH '\~H I

Choose !rom a good selection of
famous Campus Brand knit shirts in

Francisco (N.ontefusco 1-2) (n)
Thursday's Games
Attanta at N«Jntreal. (n)

Leaders

t~~~:~~~~~~·

Thoughts

KNIT SHIRTS

SLACKS

- PAMPER POP AT STIFFLER 'S-

Wednesday's Games

f.

a

a strong backer of private·
most dealers feel Uley
fear from Khomeini 's

stores that remain .
Dealers readily admit that buyers
have traditionally been at' the
salesmen's mercy when it comes to
judging the quality and durablllty of. a
carpet. Some customers hire
freelance "carpet · appraisers" to

MEN 'S PLAIN AND FANCY
FAMOUS CAMPUS BRAND

San Diego 6, Pittsburgh 3
Los Angeles 9, St . Louis 3 (nl
San Francisco 7, Chicago 2
Only games scheduled

f

~

fi~~1~; Now,
rooms . Khotneini was
with the Islamic

•Maverick eHanes •Vanderbilt •Boston

Tuesday's Games
Philadelphia 4, Houston 0
New York 12, Cincinnati 6

s

By THOMAS KENT
visitors the names of Americans,
Associated Press Writer
Britons, Frenchmen a nd Germans
TEHRAN, Iran (AP ) - Ira n's " who always used to buy from me, "
Persian carpet market - where but odd with a sigh that most of them
tl]ings seemed up in the air just a few ha \•e ll'ft. The big spenders now are
months a~o - has emerged still well -to-do Iranians leaving their
prosperous from the Islamic homeland who hope to take some of
r~ volution .
their money out in the form of carpets.
Iranian regulations now limit each
Its well-heeled foreign customers
have been replaced by Iranians departing traveler to the equivalent of
seeking a discreet way to get cash out · about $280 in Iranian currency, and
of the country .
foreign money in Iran is difficult to
So the carpet business, a blend of get. But customs men often ignore a
hallowed national tradition and costly carpet or two under a trav~ler's arm.
The Iranian customers have driven
traps for gullible buyers, still runs on
sweet tea and vociferous bargaining_ up prices, providing a continued living
in a string of tiny shops on traffic- to the merchants. A 6-by-8 foot Qom
choked Ferdowsi Street. Not that the silken carpet that sold for $1,500
revolution has not left its mark .
before the revolution plunged to $1,000
Photographs of Ayatollah Ruhollah in the chaos of Shah Mohammad Reza
Khomeini, the nation 's Moslem Pahlavi's overthrow.
But now it is up to $2,000, and the
revolutionary leader, are plastered
over the plateglass windows of the values of some carpets are rising by
shops. Portraits of the Imam All, a 7th 10 percent every six months.
century Moslem patriarch, gaze down
In addition, half the 50-odd
inside the shops on piles of neatly Ferdowsi Street stores have closed
down since the revolution . Dealers
carpets.
;.'N:hen KhQmeini returned to Iran on • say some owners had planned to move
31 from his Paris exile, carpet anyway _
because of traffic congestion
dialers loaned him several of their and others have emigrated abroad .
valuable specimens for his This means more business for the

w1a ware
that many of these receive kickbacks
on e~ a sale is made.
The new Iranian buyers are more
discriminating than IJlOSt foreignol'S,
however. In recent month s, Iranian
customers have been pressing for
higherquality carpels, includiolg more
intrica te designs and the best
vegetable-based dyes in place of
chemical dyes now commonly used.
This demand has sifted down to
Iran 's provinces, wher e women
weavers spend 9 to 18 months on an
average specimen. Many of the
carpets have 1,100 or more hand-tied
knots per square inch.
In one Ferdowsi Street shop, a
merchant displayed a 4-by 6-foot
Turkoman style rug for $700, with a
central design of black diamonds and
intricate rectangular bOrders . Other
popular styles are pastel-colored Qom
ca rpets and traditional Persian
designs based on trees, flowers and
animals.
Carpet merchants appear confident
that . a steady stream of departing
lramans Will keep thetr busmess
ahv.e, at least until formgn _tounsm
rev1ves. They say many lran~ans are
slo~ly closmg . up hom~ and
busmesses, and will be leavmg over
th~. ne&lt;;, one to two years.,
.
Don t worry a~,ut l~an s Persl~n
carpet mercha~ts, grumed. David
Somekh, a promme~t Fe~,do~Sl Street
wholes:!~~ and retailer. Were domg
all r1g _t.
accom pa'ny Ulem to stores,

'

•

•Scamps •Haggar

•Com pus

Flying Carpets still flying

Gayden, outfiel der . Assigned Tolliver

Leaque.

June 13, 1979

Today's Topi'c: -.

American League

nounced the retirement of Bert

Wednesday's Games
Richmond at Toledo
Tidewater at Rochester
Charleston at Syracuse-

SHOP FOR THE MAN IN

Baltimore . (Stone 4-5) at Chi ca'go

(Howard 1-3, (n)

sta rt as scheduled against the
.Mariners,

goes."

Toledo 3. Richmond 2

s~ The Daily Sentinel, Midd!eport-Pomeroy, 0 . ,-Wednesda?,

By the Associated Press
BASEBALL

PACKAGE OF THR H
WH ITE FRUIT-OF-LOOM
Give Dad our .Best on Hta Specl&amp;l
Day! Peckag&amp; of three famous Ftuil
ol lh&amp; Loom white perm press
handkerclllatf . Great Ides!

$1 °~G
.

OF 3

I

·

LIMIT ONE WITH COUPON
COUPON EXPIRES JUNE 16
TWINCITYGATEWAY

I

I

•

,

I

·

I

I

•

I

LIMIT ONE WITH COUPON
COUPON EXPIRES JUNE 16
TWINCITYGATEWAY

.

.-

I
I
I
I
I

·

lOG CABIN SYRUP
99,

No. ISS
24oz. Btl.
LIMIT ONE WITH COUPON
COUPON EXPIRES JUNE 16
TWINCITYGATEWAY

·

.

------~-----------------------~---------~--------------T------------------------c~'(CoMPiETEPANCAKE
MIX I ·
TANG ORANGE DRINK
. 1 SUPER SUGAR CRISP. CEREAL 1
HUNrS SNACK PAK PUDDING :
NO. 155
.
I,
~ ~o. 205 , , •'1 A9
99'
l
4 Pak Ctn.
79c
· No. 155
1
89,
• 2 lb. Box
I
, .Jl7JJZ. Bt1. ,
..
,
I
18 oz . Box
•
·
No. 145
I

GOOD Q.UALIT't'

HANDKERCHIEFSfi-l
'

PillSBURY PlUS CAKE MIXES :
PillSBURY FROSTING
No. lOS
. I Asst.
No. 125
89~
2 FOR
16oz. Boxes
•1 19 I Flavors 16oz. Can

1
I
I

·

n

.

't

·f

LEATHER

f!
, .

LI~E

VINYL

BILLFOLDS
Your choice ol line leather
like vln.,.l billfolds. Auort:td
styles. Shop early lor best
satectlonr

$199

TO

•

LIMIT ONE WITH COUPON
COUPONEXPIRESJUNE16 ·
• TWIN CITY GATEWAY ·

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COUPONEXPIRESJUNE16
TWIN,CITY GATEWAY

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LIMIT ONE WITH COUPON
COUPONEXPIRESJUNE16
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

(
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-------------------~-----------~~~-~~------,------------------------

T' ·

HUNfS MANWICH
IS oz. ,
1• 29 .
2 . Cans
ONE WITH COUPON
.:-._)~~~~~~EXPIRES JUNE 16
~·
ITY

BIG JOHN'S BEANS 'N':"FIXINS'
No. 145 .
5C)c .

1
I
'·

20 oz. C_a n
LIMIT ONE WITH COUPON
COUPON EXPIRES JU,NE 16
N CITY GATEWAY

I
I
1
I

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LUX DISH LIQUID
No . 20S
99,c .

32 oz. Btl.

.

LIMITONE WITH COUPON
COUPONEXPIRESJUNE16
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

______________________.. __ _
ALL AUTOMATIC FOR DISHES
No . 205
, .69
1
so oz. Box

�6--The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, J1111e 13, 1979

7-TheDailySentinei, Middlepo:.-Pctn'iiiir~·~~O~.,W~edr~l:es~d~ay~,~JLUI~e~~l97~9~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-----~=~--~::;;~--.:-----------,

.

f"- Social Calendar

Six Meigs County.girls grr to Girls ' State
' I j

' .

.•

Federalist Parties, to one of the 25 begin Immediately upon arrival of the · place on Tuesday morning, with the educated woman and her rplea.
On FridaY a program will . be
cities which are named for famous girls.
general election that afternoon. On
presented
on the Ohio court system
Saturday afternoon an orientation Wednesday all phases of government
Ohio hom women, and to one cl the
with
the
Honorable
Alba L. Whltesi!le,
five counties named for past Depart- and discll!lllion of political party swing into full action.
ment of Ohio president of the organization will be offered and the
The inaugural banquet and cer~ judge and Georgene Howell, a
American Legion Auxiliary.
evening formal opening will feature monies, a fonn;~l affair, will feature fonn~r judge, heading the panel. The
Approximately 60 girls cornpl'lse a the Honorable John W. Brown, ad- many highlights. Frank D. status of women In government will
city with a city government advls:or mlnistrator, Ohio Lake Lands, as t!Je Celebreeze, Chief . Justice of the be the topic of discussion Friday
·
Supreme Court will give the oath of eveiung when Misll Susan Phllllps,
and a counselor. It Is here that the keynote speaker.
government functioning begins and is
On Sunday, the citizens will deter- office to the elected state officials. school board member, Mrs. Emily
carried out by each citizen's par- mJne their party's candidates at the Gov. James A. Rhodeswilldellverthe Leedy, director of Womeli'-· Services
ticipation In COWity and state govern- city, county and state ca4cuses. Sllll· main address of the evening, and Division, Bureau o' Jidnployment Ser·
ment activities, gillded by numerous ·day evening, citY election will be held there will be appropriate remarks viceil; and Rep. Marie Tansey, and
staff members.
·
and on Monday evening the mayors of from dignitaries of the University, Ohio State Treasurer ~rtrude W.
each city will lake the oath of office.
American Legion Auxiliary, Donahey will be Oil the prOiram.
The ·programs emphasize the
Alan ·E. Norris, a repp;esentatlve
The primary election will lake Ame.rican . Legion, and Forty and
various phases of government and
•
and
member·of the Ohio Constitution
Eight.
·.
On Tlwrsday, a bus tour to include lbwlsion Commission will analyze the
points of interest in Columbus and a Ohio Constitution on Saturday morn.
.
visit the State Copito! where the Girls ' Ing and the John M. Aahbroo,
.
.
.
State officials will meet with their representative cr1 the ' 17th Ohio
. ·. ~&lt;::.
counterparts, will be taken. That District, will close the program on
'
evening, following a picnic at Saturday evening.
Mrs.
Lester
M,
Merritt
of Columbus
Polly Cramer
Bemlohn Field, military seJ;'VIce
is
the
director
cr1
Bupl\eye
Girls·
representatives
and
Mrs.
Nodine
'
'
State.
Henniger
Miller
will
discu8s
the
BY ELNORA PEPPER
beginning for exploring three new -~.,--------------------­
directions at the Center: stone sculpDlreelor of Public
NAIL POLISH ON RUG
DE~ A.S. - The first ttung you·
ture, jewelrymaking and soft. sculp1Df0111111Uon and PubUcatlono
By
Polly
Cramer
mJist
do is find out definitely what
CHARLESTON, WV - H the gas ture. "Since Bill Hopen Is 1111 artist-in:
POUY'SPROBLEM
your
Mig is made of. The best recomshortage keeps you clsoe to home this residence in Harrison County this
DEAR POLLy -I spilled pink na11 mendation is to consult a professional
summer, there's no need to worry year, this is a unique opportunity to
polish
on my off-white bedroom rug rug cleaner. Not only do the fibers in
about putting 110me spar~ into your introduce students to .the virtues of •
and
am
afraid to try anything on It · the Mig have to be considered but the
sununertlme activities. Just seek out carving In limestone," comments
since
the
rug has never even been ''fastness" of the dye. Do not try
Pyles.
the Crafts Center at Cedar Lakes.
cleaned.
Could
you tell me how to anything Without first testing in an InThe Grafts Center is offering 14 • "The Center's light metals studio
remove
this
·
pollali
from what 1 think COillplCUOWl spot. Chemically pure
crsft - painting workshops during the has just been completed," he conis
a
nylon
rug.
A.S.
amyl acetate or banana oU bought at
weeks of July !t-13, Ul-20, and 23-27.
tinues. This fi~t workshop will give
most drug stores could be applied
Owing July 9-13, the Ci'afts Center potential metalsmiths an opportunity
Prices Effective Thru Sat., June 16th
directly
Q11 such a stain with an eye
will offer frame loom weaving, to learn the basics using metals such
dropper
,left
on
for
a
few
minutes
and
1
machine quilting, stone sculpture and is silver and brass."
then sponged off with a clean white
Pyles indicates that he believes the
woodtuming. Advanced watercolo~.
$
cloth.
Work from the outside ln.
introduction to jewelrymaking, soft new metals studio to be the first In the
'!be following is. ellen recommendsculpture, tradltl01181 blacksmithing slate not associated with a college Clf
ed
but lhould not be used on rugs .
French City
·
.
·
.
and vegetable dye have been stated university system.
made
of
acetates
or
other synthetic
for the week of July 16. The final
"The fabric soft sculpture
fibers or blenda. When s~ln is dry ap·
week, July 23-27, features experience workshop offers something new for
.
Missionaries
are
people
who
go
out
ply polish remover with an eye dropIn basic joinery, Door loom weaving, students to try In fabric," explains
Ho~emade
·
·
$
into
the
bush
cl
New
Guinea
and
Zaire
split oak basketry, stained glass and Pyles. "Sculptural forms may be to convert pe!!ple to ClniBtlanlty, per and let it absorb, and soften the
poUsh.
ule
dull
edge
of
a
spoon
to
tole and decorative painting.
uUUtarian, hung on the wall, Clf
scrape iif as much as po8Sible and ap": .
According to' ·Tim Pyles, Ci'afts placed in the home to attract at· right?
Only
partially
right, SBYB Elale Up- ply more of the remover to the reCenter coordinator, July marks the tention - the possibilities are en- scomb, lay actlv\ties director of the · maining slain until it disappears.
DAIRY
PRODUCE
dless," Pyles concludes.
Pomeroy Seventh-day Adventilt Sponge and blot dry. TEST FIRST to
The Crafts Center program is spon- Church.
24 oz. Broughtons
6 oz.
see effect on your carpet. -POLLY
liOred by the west virginia DepartUnited Slates and Canada,
pJent of Education through Its forIn the
DEAR POLLY- In answer to Mrs.
instance, miSslonarlea are
MASON - Mrs. Dallas (Rhoda) Vocational Bureau. For complete physicians and IIIIJ8es •t the Ad- W.G.N.'s question about . wasp and
Yeager was surprised on her 85th bir- details concerning the workshops, ventlsts' . Monument Valley Hospital bee stings I agree with the answer
thday with a dinner at the Meigs IM meals and lodging, contact the Ci'afts in Arizona, caring for Indians on the that a pule of soda and water is good
on Saturday evening and · she was Cente~, Cedar Lakes Conference Ceo- reservation. They are also cllfl")'lng to use If one is at home. Hone is stung
equally surprlsecj oil SUJiday when a ter,.Ripley, WV25271. (~72-6263).
on a special ministry to.the deaf alld . while away ,camping or hunting, a
lib. King Queen
Yeager famlly reunion honoring her .
blind. Others are teaching · and very old remedy ts to make a. mud
was held at the Mason United
•14's
preaching to special language and paste using enough water, lemonade,
llf~thodlst Church.
'
coffee or what-have-you with the
ethnic groups.
She received a birthday cake, gifts, .
Mrs. Upscomb amounced that earth liO It &lt;;an be applied , Those who
flowers as·wellas cards.
·
members ~ the Piuneroy chuich will are allergic to such stings should be
Thoae of the Immediate family athearareportontheworkofAdventlst rushed to a doctor immediately. Pk
tending the dinner at the Meigs Inn In·
North American missiCIIII at services M.M.J. · .
eluded the. honoree; Mrs. Yeager, .,
this
Saturday
DEARpeppers
POLLYtry- putting
When them
cooking
hosts and ~. Mr. and Mrs.
o'clock
service. afternoon
. at their 2 . stuffed
In ~~-----------------·_ , _..,.
Charles Yeager, Mr. and Mrs. James
18 1 · SMucker's
"Adventists have specialized your tube cake pan. It holds them in
Diehl, Mr. and Mrs. Ron Rutherford,
Cincinnati; Michelle and Tracy
••
Rlitherf~ of Columbus; Mlas Jo
scomb · said. "The fastest growing
POlly will send you one of her sign·
1~ . ' .
Ellen Diehl, Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. &lt;
20 oz. Sweetbrier
work Ia ·among Spaniab-spealdng ed thank~ou newspaper- coupon clip' '
,,
Ralph Ross, Shawn and Amy, and Mr.
peoples, especially In NeW York City, pers If she""' your fav9rite Poirtter,
and MtS. Marty Yeager, Cralg limd
Florida &amp;tid California:"
'
Peeve or Problem in her column.
Erin, all of Mason.
Mrs. Upscomb noted that the Ad- Write Polly's Polriters In care of this
'
&gt;10 oz. Maxwell House ·
Forty-two persons attended the
'·- {~ '. :/~~
ventlst Church currently airs two newspaper.
" ~~'.td•·'~i
runion on Sunday which llicluded the
television programs and one
previously named 18 persons and Mr.
•
syndicated radio program
Mr. and Mrs .. Dano InnatiOIIII!ly
and Mrs. J9hmy Fry, New Haven;
Spanilh. A large centerof ~
Mr. and Mrl. James Fry, Ruth Ann
17 oz. D!!l Monte
to
blind per!IOOS is located at the
lriKing with daughter Chrllllan
and Sue Ellen; Mr. and Mrs. Max
Record Braille Foundation
'
Eichinger, Max lllld Becky, Scott and
"
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Dano
King, Rutland, \in Lincoln, Nebl'lllllla. , , . ,
Jennifer HW, all of Pomeroy.
announce the birth of a daughter,
'
!::
Sport Shop
Mr. 8!ld Mrs. Clarence Yeager, Mr. Julia Ann. born May 24, at tJolzer
.
'
r
1Sif2
oz.
Armours
and Mrs ... JCif Jordan, Mr. and Mrs. Medical Center. The Infant weighed
VACA,TION BIBLE SCHOOL
Denver ' Gibbs, Annette and
'
.
.,
seven
pounds
and
eight
and
.one-half
Dally
vacation Bible S4;hool will hlj,
Stephanie, all' of Letart, W. Va., Mr. ounces and · measured 19 inches In
• Fishing Tackle ai)CI Rods
held
ff!llll8a.m.
untlll~::lla.m. June
and Mrs. Andy cross, Racine, and length.
&amp; Reels '
; '·.
18 through June 22 at the Alfred
'
Paul Cross and Diane ~ller of
29 oz. Golden Isle
•
Guns
and
Reloadihg
Grandparents
are
Mr.
and.
Mrs.
United
Methodist
Church
With
"I'm
cmwcotoo.
·
.e Bal( Gloves. ·
Charles King and Mr. and Mrs. His; He's Mine" 81 the theme.
Charles Davidson, all of Rutland; and There will be a picnic at noon 0!1
ecamplng Equipment
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Rathburn, Colum· Friday, June 22 and a Friday evening
eArchery
'
btl!.
program at 8.
WE8TJ;RN SQUARE
elndoorGames
50 Ct, Kl~nex
The
couple
are
also
the
parents
ii
.
Workers
Janice
Pulllns,
direcDANCE PLANNED
eWe have Gift Cer·
There wiU be a western square two other children, Jodie, age 10, and tor i 'lbelma Henderson, Florence
tlficates
Spencer, Rev. Richard lboiDBI,
dance on Wednesday, June 20, at Timmy, age 6.
N""t to Muon County Fair
Margie Guthrie, June Avis, Charlotte
Grounds, Grandview Hgts,
Royal Oak Park recreation building
Van Meter, Doris Dillinger, Gay Ann
Pt. Pleosanl, W.Va.
from 8 to 11 p.m.
12 oz. Armour Treet .
Burke,
Nina Robinson, Dorothy
Johnnie Jones cl Kingsport, TeM. a
Calaway and Ruth Brooks.
national caller will be doing the callSOWMONTOPLAY
Children of the area are Invited.
ing and all western square dancers KINGS ISLAND, Ohio (AP)- Harold
are cordially Invited ,to attend. · A Solomon, ninth-ranked world
Jumbo
special invitation is being given to professional in 1978, is the . latest
PHONE 67S-2f88
VISlTING HERE
-.
j;'
members cl area club dancers; professional signed to play in the
Opett
Sunday
I
p.n
•.
·•
p,m
.
Mr.
and Mrs. James Bailey of
Monday thru Saturday
traveling dancers, and those who may · $200,000 Association of Tennis Cbu18 Vista, Calif. are here visiting
9 a.m ~ to 8 ~. rn.
be camping In the area . ProfessionalS Championship Aug. 2(). Mrs. Ralph Spencer. Mr. Bailey and
26.
Refteslunents will be served.
•
Mrs. Spe~~cer a~ COU8ins. It is the
I
Other name players signed include Baileys first vlalt here In several
Arthur Ashe and Roscoe Tamer.
' .
years.
· )
When the 33fd annual seMion. of
Buckeye Girls' State opens at Copilal
University Saturday, six Meigs Coun·
ty senio~ girls will be among the
almost 1,300 from over the slate part!clpa t!ng in the nine -day
. "govertiii!enl-!n..action" leadership
training workshop.
Going from here will be Lori Jean
Kloes and Janel AJ\n Horky, both of
Middleport; Charlene Ruth Goeglein
and · Tracey Lee Jeffers, both of
Pomeory, ·and Carmen Kay
Carpenter of Racine. The girls a.re.
sponsored by the American Legion
Auxiliary units of Pomeroy, Mid·

dleport, and Racine w'ith the Middleport Citizens National Bank and
Pomeroy Xi Ganuna Mu as cosponsors.
All have been selected on the basis
of recommendations !rpm school
principals an'd are considered to be
outstanding students possessing high
qualities of scholarship, an interest in
Arilerican government., high moral
character, courage, self-reliance,
mental alertness and a willingnel!S to
lake initiative and to assume respon·
sibility.
AI Girls' State, each student is
assigned to either the National or

Craft Center offers
variety ·of workshops

-~

POLLY·s POINTERS

RUTLAND
DEPARTMENT
STORE
Phone "742-2100

Missionaries
active at home

.
.
g:
LOAF................. 1•7 .

ECKRICH PIKLE &amp; PIMIENlO·LOAFLa.·
ECKRICH OLIVE

BOILED HAM ...........·••••• ~~~::~l-.19
HAM SALAD•••••••••• ~ •••••••~~~ •• l;19

I• .

M rs. Yeager honored

~~~~ CH~~SE

s1.19 =ISHES •. ~:.kg,~35e

VELVEETA CHEESE S2.89 HEAD
2/9f

MARGARINE

39e
LE11UCE .......... .

12 OZ.. REAMS NOO
. OLES· ••• •• ••! ..79e

=:N~:.::~:t ~.U:: ~~ry:e~'h~~~~-~,~mand

°

BLACK RASPBERRY JELLY•••• }l.49

CRUSHED PINEAPPLE.•·•••••• 2P1.29

h

~

INSTANT COFFEE...............J.~r. '~49

County

SWEET PEAS •••••••••• ~~ ••••• ~ •• OOL2/7t

____....

' .

Margaret L. McDaniel, Affidavit,
Middleport.
Marion Dale Kesterson, dec., to
Mabel Keste~on, Cert. ·of Trans.,
Salisbury. .
Dennie Hill to William A. Hensler,
Sharon L. Hensler, 1 acre, Sutton.
Capple Lange to Jack!~ Ray RQbln·
son, Diane Robinson, Parcel, Rutland ,
Village.
Woodrow W. Call, Jr., Mary AJ\n .
Call to Woodrow W. Coli UI, Christy
K. Call, Lots, fomeroy .
. ·
Archie McKinney, Eva McKinney,
Virgil Parsons, Geraldine Parsons to
Warren D. Hart, Judy M. Hart, 1.01
acre, Salisbury.
. Everett L. Schultz, Beulah B.
SchultZ to Eugene T. Gemlan, .51
acre, Orange.
Luther CoiWliiR, Pearl Coleman to
Jay Hall, Jr. 2.64 acres, Salisbury.
A. Ray Brown, M. Eileen Brown to
And"ew L. ·Sylvia, 7.3917 acres,
Scipio.
·
John W. Young, Edith L. Young to
John W. Young, Edith L. Young, Deed
Correction, Olive.
~

-r

TOOKIE'S FASHIONS ANNOUNCE
SUMMER

·~~~

fll ..........

SAVE
2~5040

&amp; 50%

ON: DRESSEs, SlACKS,
BLOUSES, SHIRTS.
'AND MORE
NOW. THRU JUNE 17

HOURS: CLOSED.MONDAYS AT 'NoON
TIJES.·SAT. 9:30-5:00 ·

"

J! Jnn,

•I

''

MIDDLEPORT AMATEUR
·GARDENERS, 8 p.m. Wednesday at .
" ' the home of Mrs. Harry s. Moore. ·
:' ; Miss .Kathryn Hysell and Mrs. Hugh
' · CUSter will be co-hostesses.
'
,
TmmsDAY
" , STAR'GARDEN CLUB, 7:30 Thurs· ,
. day evening at the home of Mrs .
: Robert Holliday.
.

Store Hours:
Mon.-Sal 8 am-10 pm
Sunday 10 am-10 pm

298 SEOOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.
PRICES EFFECTIVE ntRU JUNE 16, 1979

,.,.

,. · Generation Rap
By Hdt•n and Soli' Rootlo'l

, •suss:tinrrE TEACHER' GETS

FRYER .PARTS ....~.49·f
FRENCH CITY DAILY .DELIGHT
·:e
:"
·
.
·
BACON ......•..... .... 7

: REBUT'I.'~LS

. TO HER COM·
. PLAINTS
(
BY ilelea and Sue Bottel
; DEARHELENAND'SUE :
1 After rel.ding the letter from "Sub; stitute Teacher" who complained
• about aJqlost everything, l asked my
: sizth gn!~e claM to let yQu know how
: they feel about substitutes. Enclosed
' are 29 letters. My Only Instructions
lwere to be truthful and express their
i \real feelings,
' • First here are my thoughts:
.: There Is never a way I could judge a ·
;clllld's needs in one day of substitute
11 teaching. As a regular teacher I try to
· :give the stadent snad myself a month
:to adjust t one another and the ex•perience , of a higher grade
:lbeforemaking judgments. All
• :teachers.are ;•tesle!l" the first day of
~schol. A s),lb c~ts the treatme.nt every
'day she Is Ina new classroom. She·b4s
;my sympathies'!
' Also, as many of the letters I've,
,selit point out, a substitute can't
,follow a long-running program plan· ·
· ·ned by the absent teacher. Students
:resent the change and misbehave.
~ A substitute Is a poor person to
make assessments. She doesn't see
:the "real" kids. - REGULAR
'TEACHER AND LlKING IT
•

i
1 (And now for students' letters, 22 of
l

.

'

·which didn't like substitute teaching
~ys. Of ·the seven who approved;
most added, "Because they give me
rachance ·to goof off." It speaks well
~or these sixth,graders that most
(weren't altogether thrilled over that
ichance...far from it. Read on: )

f DEARHELENANDSUE :
[ I really don't like having a subIJtltute teacher because she don 't
jmow what to do or half the assign; ·
~ents, and almostall the ltids"'(lll·
cludingme)act
up. - PATTY
.

.

....

::g·

.~

.

lB.

~

,.

TASTEE ·TREAT ·

'

'

H '

.!

. ·

'.ii iJ J~ •

.. f

,, · .

.,Chunk Bologna ...~7Q~ .
'.

SUPER_
IORS .

'

' ,,

'l'·~e

· ...•

SLAB BACON ......~~.6.9

· l ; I' . '

SUPER~ORS FRANKIES

.

oz.

·
WIENERS ...•.........
12

~

·8·9
. .·.,

PKG~..

HOMEMADE

.

,
, '" .·-.

g ·g~

..

SANDWICH SPREAD.••• ;s~. .

!.

I had lilY first time with a subWell, I was hit by her, the next
she threw me down in my
~· seat .... ana ai got very upset.- KURT
~u"""'··

i

.

I Our clasS sounds like a herd.of wild
elephants when the substitute is here.
It's fun. The day goes by fast. But I
my real teacher better. - TERRI
'

.. .

... ' ..

~···

'

•I'

DINNER NAPKINSuo ••••••••• ~:!'.g; 59c

HEAD LEJTUC[. 3/$1

CA.NNED LUNCH MEAT••••• ~!:n.o::st29

69

.

are

Property,
Transfers

WEDNESDAY
· ANNUAL MEETING, Pomeroy
Chapter 80 'RAM, 7:30 p.m. Wedneday; 8:30 p.m. annual. meeting
BOsworth Council46, F and SM. Elec·
" lion of · officers, officers to take
I.' rituals.
, . FEEijEY-BENNETT POST 128
~ 1American, Legion, 7:30 p.m. Wednes:
,i .day 11\gbtatthe hall.
.
, . JUNIOR AMERICAN LEGION
~ ' AUXI~;y, · Feeney-BeMett Post
, 1128, 7.:30p.ll1•at the hall.
.• POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT Lions
• · Club, Wedpesday noon at the Meigs

.CANNED .BEEF 'HASH •••••••••••~~~~·. ]ge. ,
.
BARTLETT PEARS ................~~~;jge ~

""~ ·

1

.

VIVA TOWELS ......................~·· .79e i

SELECT~D

'

.

SUMMER
CLOTHING
AND .
FABRIC

• I

••

I guesi having a substitute is oliay,
:6utlf she iS not a nice one I don't like .
fhere or him. Their was one In fifth
;grade and boy was she mean. She was
'always pounding the homework on WI•
!she gave ·118 punishment work when
:only two people were talking. But
•some substitutes aren't bad I guess.
'
•-MARK
i Some substitutes hlive it rough with
lus students, but some comeln mean
land ready to kill. I don't like the mean
:OOes a'ixl 'tl!eY setlse that. It w~ks
:OOth way's to give, and lake, it's a little
'i!ame we always end up playing (that
11flther really like) . - KAREN
1' I lik~ substitute teachers. But

,33Ya
' ~"-'·if ~ =.uooriety to

'

'

% ·Off
'
..

NEW HAVEN

.5TH

.,.

'

ST.

sometimes I lake advantage of tbem.
~e of,the teachers don 'I know what
their doing a.•~ we try to help them.
ScxnetltPea \M)' don't lake our advice
'and we goof around while there trying
i\1 find out what to do. They normally
ilon 't give swats. They threaten to tell
the real teacher but they don '1. They
W!ually don't follow the schedule the
other ·teacher glvea him o~ her. JEFF . , ,

'

• "(

2% MILK .. ~ ..... ;~w~.~l

When we have a substitute teacher I
feel I should be extra good. If you
treat th!lffi right they wiU .treat you
right . ..:. ROBERT ·
'

I

.

VALLEY BELL

..

I

.

--

;GOT A .PROBLEM? Or a subjecl
filr diiCIIS8iOn, two generation style?
·
to either Sue o~
iir~. If 7ctll want ~ '
~1bl.llliticlll mother • daughter an- .
,.. In care of this newspaper. (

FLAVORI~E

BREA D.•..........~;A::.. .
NESTEA

]g

·TOILET TISSUE

Limit 1 p,~r Customer
Good Only &lt;tf Powell ' s
Offer Expires June 16, 1979

?!: :: ~ ~ ~ ~; ,:! : ; • ~ ~·!

MO~TON

COUPON

KRAFT

69¢.

r

4/$1

80
• :·... .

'

COUPON

PACK

·

"-'

MIRACLE WHIP
gg~
..·32 oz

·~

.

.· POT
PI ES.... ~ ..
..

INSTANT
4 ROll

.

I

'

.

"- - ·

COUPON

COUPON

--

I0I $}·.

REG. 2 QT.
SIZE
.

·

-

FROZEN

KOOL AID
(015 x5)

·

·

'
·limit 1 Per Customer
,•. :'',t.'l mit 1 Per C"stomer
Good Only at Powell's
· '"·"''·""
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires J
1979 ·
nttAr Ex
June 16, 1919

ET SUP
(EXCEPT BEEF)
'

32

oz.

99¢

Limit 1 per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires June 16, 1979

�•

•

l

.r.•~ '...... .) . •

'

:..

••

If•

~,.'

,,

~

.

·, J £0

n

9-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, June 13, 1979

Supreme ·app~intments announced at
Friday eve me~ting of Mary S/Jrine

..
PKG •. 6 PAIRS-

·~

Comfy orion/ nylon socks. ~·
White with striped cuffs: ,·
One size tHs 9· 11 .

Great for picnics, parties
and bar·b·Q's. Keep~
plate sturdy.
·.
REG.

RCISE S:ANDALS

,7

slide buckle '·..
split lea.t her top. Color
choice.
,, , O,NLY.,ulll$ ·
o~bln~ ;..£•&gt; .~t.J

k

'j!_~.

,.;

tl~

J

~:~;

;I;

:

4

no r.

t•

.·

PAIR

·,

G[ eqt!:!9-t.\Ricnh:s, outd~ , \ (
entett-aihli19·l. Convenient h
... just toss away!

~

..

"."ALU

• ;:,.~
"

AIR BONS

,..~,.";

~

CHOICE ··

t'

\1

'k
~. ~

.;;,,j.t

......,..

t·

·

F'

~

··:.
' ,

EACH--"

.

~
·
·?
/ •

~"147

Cotdtone pocket watch.

Cl'tamparne dial with flll1rtt

openlnc.

,.•

• .

' •J

•

·I

SUNSUITS ..
)'

EACH

.•.

·'' r.· """"I

SFIOWTS

'.

I

CHOICE , ,,

, Cute gingham prints styl·
ed with spaghetti shoulder
ties, elastic waist/leg
openings. Pretty pastels.
Slzes2to4. ·
'

'1'97.
l

'

~

'··

'

~9.95

i'

_';1)~&lt;1•1·

.CH

..' .....

1

~

' A,Jt .... .

. ..._~ . ...

..... POLO .· S.FIIRTii~·

SPEIDEL

'HOICE

. Sterling

ta •

1VIra
E Ac!H .

j STICKPIN
76N5
$12.50 with stones

1

·

.

C•c
'

3

J·.
t~ ;J '"J . :.
-.~ ~• oriii J .fl

59.95

1

ID BRACELETS

·1·

.

Sfin art-lb.9klng short ~l~ye'
' ~1o shi~ in stripe · ·~... ··
•
sOlid desigH. Poly/cotton ..•, EG 12 29
blend. Sizes S·M·L. .
•, •

,.

~

t~ t~ '

.

V:&gt;h,rl.,l-."•

BULOVA WATCHES
Silvertone wrist
witch with black dia 1

;llqy,$, ..

llliVEN

·•~ ,,. l 1.-

.

EACH

FOSTER GRANT

FIU.ED
NECK CHAINS

*LIGHTERS,

KEY CHAINS, MONEY CLIPS, TIE BARS &amp; TACS

SUNGLASSES

GOESSLER JEWELRY

CHOI(E .
• Safe,
break-resistant
,.,plastic frames: ·e · ""'

Elizabeth Flck, Friendly Circle president, at the Friday evening meeting
of the ,Happy Harvesters Class of
Trinity Church.
Miss Flck opened her program with
' a poem, "I Met God in the Morning"
and then commented that happiness
is the greatest paradox of nature. She
said it conslats of not having but of being, not of projecting but of enjoying
and that the person who is unselfish,
kind, and helpful to others is well on
the royal road to happiness.' She closed with a prayer.
Mlas Enna Smith, president, call
the meeting to order and had the
opening prayer. During the business
meeting Mrs . Philip Meinhart
reported on the rummage sale. It was
announced that the next meeting will
be a covered dish dirmer. Miss Smith
thanked the hostesses, Mrs. Homer
Holter and Mrs. Joseph Cook. Mrs.
Ella Smith received the door prize.
other prizes were won by Miss Smith,
Mrs. Eva Dessauer, and Mrs. Lillie
Hauck. Pie and sandwiches were
served.

Pomeroy, o,

Court St.

r---Social Calendar
THURSDAY
ROCK SPRING GRANGE, 8 p.m.
.Thursday at the hall.
PARENTS WITHOUT PARTNERS
family cove~ed dish dinner Thursday
7 p.m. at Mental Health Center,
Gialllpolla. Meat will be provided.
Women to bring salad, vegetable or
dessert. Bring soft drlnka and own
table service. A planning session will
be held following the dinner. Informal'
dance lessonswlll follow meeting. .
.
SATURDAY
INSTALLATION at Meigs Chapter
Order of DeMolay Satw"day 7:30p.m.
Middleport Masonic Hall. Dinner at
·8:30p.m.
MEIGS COIJNTY RETIRED
TEACHERS Association, annual pic·
nleto beheld Saturday at6p.m. at the

I ' . '

30:!.~

SET OF 3 OR 5

Choose terry or waffle
we.ave - 3 per set. Open
we;:JVe knit-5 per set.

67.$

sport· ,, ~ eig-ht, yarn
Ma c!hrn"e wash, dry .·
Mothproof.

Cool orion/nylon blend, ,. ;1 )'
ventilated side panel..1• •.J I
cushion
foot. ~ ne size fit.;., J.;•li
10-13.
(.. ":{
., _.\.! .

·
'
•a
·.

2

, ..
j,.o)·!l•

• R.fG, 1].99' "'' ~MR~S.

'

ROLL-ON ~·''.

•

.

PKG.

.

.

'· '

'·

The roll ·on tnat goes on ,. ;,N'O~

.

·.1 '~ LY

88
1

.

1.47·"' .,,, .

REG. ·1

Or POlYeSter/COttOn Dlendco

,.
,;

.,

• i

\f"i t'!T!

SUMMER DISCO CLASSES

2~: .,,

-

;·p

1$3 97

"

'

·

97

wit~ 9aylight and·blutC'"l'bCHpiCCl£26 • '.::·]' v' c~1:" ·';~
·flash . Etther C110 or C126, '
or
12·exposures.
, 1'2 exposures '.!-"
·' EAt)ti
1

use

.

7.

.

..

!-.~/

GALLI A COUNTY - Section 002

I

SUNDAYS .. ... . ... . , . . ..... , .. .... .. .. ......... ... JUNE 17, 24·J ULY 1. 8.

·.:u ~

7:00·9 :00 P.M ... .. ....... .. ..... .. .. . ......... ..... 10 hours of instruction
community Room, Mental Health Center, Rts. 35 &amp; 160
Cost: $30.00 per person.
Instructor : Mikkl Cast of Casto's Studio of Dance.

""

Let Helene curtis . keep YOUR CHOICE
your hair beautiful! · ·

A field service onenllluon program
for the Eighth District was conducted
Sunday afternoon at the American
Legion hall in Middleport by Mrs.
James Forsythe, the Department of
Ohio Field Service chairman,
American Legion Auxilisry .
Field service relates to work which
is done for veterans or veterans

day afternoon. She is pictured with Mrs. Florence
Richards, Eighth District president, center, and Mrs.
Becky Tyree, a member of the host unit and tbe junior
advisor.

families . Fourteen perao118, including
two men, registered for the orientation program.
Mrs. Forsythe emphasized a
special project which Ia called
"Operation Post Home", a new program for the American Legion and
Auxiliary, which concerns senior

~

The Bethany-Portland-CarmelSutton United Methodist Church
Charge held a picnic at the ,Portjand
Park Wednesday night in honor of the
Rev. Steve Wilaon·who·is leaving the
Charge to attend seminary at
Princeton in the fall.
Gifts were presented to the minister
from each of the churches and for the
occasion Mrs, Margaret Tutt!~ wrote
a song.
The tribute :

"A young preacher named Steve
Wilson clune to a country church one
day,
He captured the hearts of the young
and old with his loving way.
The light that shown within his eyes
I never shall forget,
And to know that he willl,le leaving
soon, fills our bearts with regret.
Steve, we want to .thank you for aU
thegoodyou'vedone,
'
L.

•

'
Poppy Day report heard

Poppy Day report' was given by
Mrs. Zuelelia Smith, chairman, at the
Monday meeting of the Lewis Manley
Post 253 Ameriean Legion Auxiliary
held at the home of Mrs. Ernest
Bowles.
Mrs, Smith noted Ulat '103 was col•
lected. Mrs. Allen Hampton .presided
at the meeting which opened In
ritualistic form with Mrs. Campbell
Harper acting as chaplain. A
legislative report was given by Mrs.

on the swnmer convention held at
WeliBton and presented award&amp; ill
Americanism to Mrs. Harper,
veterans affairs and rehabilitation to
Mrs, Ruth Brown, community service
to Mrs. Charles Saunders.
The nominating committee gave a
report with the same Officera to be re·
talned for anotlier year .
Refreshments were served by Mrs.
Bowles at the conclusion of the
meeting.

l~ SU;MMER
~
FASHIONS .

I

SEE

lWO'S COMPANY

b~~~~!~
REMEMBER
DAD

JUNE 17' 1979

You'll flnd his
diamond rtng he re In
our exclusive new
coUectlon of boldly
handsome rtng
d esigns crafted In
highly pollshed or
Inte res tingly textured
14 Karat gold.

TIMEX WATCHES

'

•I

I

•CHAINS
•KEY CHAINS

,I
t

•IDENT. BRACELETS '
•MASONIC RINGS

•

•MANY OTHER ITEMS

•

.•
I

Glf!~

SUNDAY
WIENER ROAST Sunday 3 p.m. at
Fortlflcatln Hill near Gallipolis,
Brhg own food for family. Sponsored
by Parents Without Partners. Take
SR 7 south and tum right at Rt. 141
near Mound Hill Cemeter.

r

,,•

••
•
•
.,•

2n 1! . MAIN · POMI!~OY

'
~

•l

WHILE OUANDTIIS ·LASt.

SLICED

SLAB SLICED

BACON ............ ~·. 894

.

I

2

SUPERIOR

1

·; ~~
. . _- .. , ,
a ..
.
0
~ , . ' "200-202 E. M~IN ·s;ritif, ~MEROY!· OJtiQ ~t;;
'

rfoi.niffiNEsiiN-l

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PHEBE'S STORE
Thursdoy, June14 lhru June 16
We t 01dly Accept Feel. Food Slam~s
Mondoy lhru Frldoy
9 :001117 :00

Soturdly 9:00.9 :00
CLOSED
SUNDAYS

..

SLICio ~

'

BARGAiNS:- ·IIUEVERY~ ·
..........).;1"'~·~ ;.&lt;or~11· ~'·""·

..

~ ·":"

.·DE.PARTM

· BOILED HAM

1 LB.

5

$} 29

JOWL BACON .
SLICED

2 lB.

'1 69

BAG

I

•

39'

CORN .

BACON ·

,BEN . FRAN
'.,

The memories you 've left for us , in
all the souls you've won.
We pray the Lord will bless you,
whereever you may· roam, If we
never meet again In this world,
We will meet you in that heavenly
home.
. ·
Sometim6~ things happen in our
lives, arid changes must b6made,
We must leave our friends and lov·
ed ones, And journey Qn our way.
It'l hard for 111 to say goodbye, l'm
sure you know It's true'
·But there's one thing we'd like you
to know,
It's been a pleasure knowing you.

•BULOVA, CARAVELL &amp;

CALLA

SALE THUaSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY·lt./e·...
.

'

citizell8.
Upon completion of the orientation
program and 50-hours field service,
pins are awarded. The American
Legion Auxiliary of Feeney-Bennett .
Poet 128 hosted the orientation program with the juniors of the host unit.
·serving a tea at Its completion.

Church Charge holds twilight picnic Wednesday

WHOLE

•1····

3 FOR· , .

.

~

CARROTS

SHAMPOOS, RINSES
~

'\

)

•

CALL BERNIE MURPHY 245-5353 10 REGISTER
OR AITEND THE FIRST CLASS SESSION USTED ABOVE

'

'

Field service orientation held Sunday

Racine Dam park. Spouses and .
families Invited to attend with
Wendell Wagner, Dlatrict 6 field
representative to present membership banner to local unit.
SPECIAL MEETING, Board of ·
Trustees of Bedford Youth Center,
1:30 p.m. Saturday at center.
Dissolution of the organization and
disposition to moneys from the sale of
the center building to the Christian
• Assembly to be discussed. The poblic
is invited.

MEIGS COUNTY- Section 001 ·
, "AONDA YS .. . . . ........ .. ........ .. . . ... .. . . .. . , , . , JUNE 18, 25·J U L Y 2, 9
' 7:30 to 9:30P.M.... ... . , ... . . . , , , .. . . ... .... , .. .. 10 hours of instruction .
Chester Hill Hallin Chester, OHio
cost: $30.00 per person.
· Instructor: Mlkki Casto of Casto's Studio of Dance,

I

.

FIELD SERVICE ORIENT~TION-Mrs. James
Forsythe of Tallmadge, the American Legion Auxiliary's field service chairman, right, explained field
service in an orientation program in Middleport Sun-

Diamonds .. .
the gift
that lasts
forever!

SUMMER DISCO

., .

\.

'

EACH

1

.

:· \

Bowles,
and fl'OID
Mrs. Hampton
reported
on
letters
~ district
and • - - - ; . . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,
depurtment.
A card of thanks was read from
Mrs . Arnold Richards , Eighth
District--"l&gt;resident, for assistance
from the unit during her district appointment. Mrs. Hampton reported

RIO GRANDE COLLEGE AND COMMUNITY COLLEGE
CONTINUING EDUCATION

I ' . "

&gt;w . . .

'I

"-':·\ \ :\(,,\ .:ov..\~1 ~:

16 OZ. SUAVE

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wr~~t

For the oewest Kodak
Pocket cameras. Eight
flashes per bar.

ANTIPERSPIRANT
,,,

~i

lt,· '-; lM
FILM CARTRIDGE·
W,

8 FLASHES PER BAR

77

.

,

Choose from Super Heroes
I

SET

'19

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, ' "8fld' pop;art&gt;design . Cottdrt

21x21

Heavy-gauge steel gri"l I,
360·sq, iri. adJustable cook ing grid . Heat controls.

. ·t2Jm:.pf· ~; ~;~ B o:-s

' Bir:ACHJ 1 -~:l

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EACH

1

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~AGI~UBES

dry!1.5oz~slz.e , ,

·....

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For ID~titD!Itic type x REG. 2.29 '
cameras. · "'Guaranteed to NOW. ONLY
flash.,.,.JA,!Ji~e~. _
,., _ ,,., ,

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SQUARE .SMOKER. . .

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;
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SKEIN

BUDDY L

~"i~ ft&gt;-

9 71/tt ·

ONLY

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:r~ ~J-

if!•

DIS.H CLOTHS '

~"~ ~SPORT . YARN

t.J
100% Orion acrylic, J-ply

",: ":·· j(--1 """' •~'~

.

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Friendly Circk meets

EA.

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TODDLER GI~LS' GINGHAt,'l

CHILDR~~;~!

STONERINGS

. fOf\ FATH~~~

I •

'12 GAL. SIZE

li'KG .

'

'(

MD

··3·at#&gt; \, t'

.nn:..·

FullY. Insulated! With
hihge·d · spout cover!
Yellow with white trim .

,..

·

·

'"

quality
alumlnufl!l foil, 12·in wide.
Buy now)'save!

t~:·

•

FOAM JUG.

.

DIAMONDS

'\

7
~;
~
•
. ,). ~

1

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J.?......~'Jt .

,.

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Qiam ;~¥'

'· .

6·oz. bags of favorite summer treats . .Choose from·
many flavors.

·'

-;·-·~·1R)XER1

n ~ '·'

·'

.~~111to ... ~·. ·

•• , . ~~lr.:.i:_.l,· ·'

I"

.

'

First choice
for Father's Oay..

.. '

PICNIC

· -s·.\:':" 1'""'" '

"The· Royal Road to Happiness"

•., ·•!.:: ~

·

1.79

1

c

Sept, 15; 7 p.m., Imperial House
Nor!Jl, .Colwnbus; Bethany Shrine 4,
banquet and reception honoring Twila
M. McDonald, supreme worthy guide,
Holiday Inn, Parkersburg, W. Va.,
Aug. 4, 7p.m.
Date for official inspection was set
for NOV. 26, 19110 with Lafayette
Shrine 44, Gallipolis, to be the host
shrine. Aschool of instruction was set
for June 26 at 8 p.m. at the Pomeroy
Temple. Plans were made for a bake
sale Thursday, June 21, in front ofthe
La Mar Beauty Shop, Second st.,
Pomeroy. Baked goods can be taken
to the location anytime after noon.
Dessert and coffee were served In
the dining room after the meeting.

wia the meditation topic of Miss

WHITMAN'S

•WOMEN'S, MISSES
'' '

b~tom'-Wi ti·

.

NATURAL BAMB90
·PLATE HOLDERS ·

TERRI ROLL TOP
SPORT SOCKS
'"

&lt;eonto~~~~ ~~ttural wood -:

Supreme appointments were an- Jerusafem, held at the Ma$onic Temnounced at the Friday night meeting ple in Pomeroy.
of Mary Shrine :rl, White Shrine of
The appointments are" J~ue .
Fowler, suprenie instructer ; Jesse
Brinker, ·supreme watchman of
shepherds ; Thomas Edwards,
material objective; Marie Hawkins,
BIBLE SCHOOL JUNE 18-ZZ
The POmeroy United Methodist .women's special obituary; and MaxChurch wUl have a bible school June ine Wingett, supreme special frater·
18-22 with all youth of the community, nal relations.
VIvian May, worthy high priestess
pre«hool through junior high, invited to altend;
and Thomas Edwards, wa~hman of .
The c~ will be held from 9a.m. shepherds, presided at the meeting.
to 11:30 a.m. and will Include Bible Jnvitations were received from Cedar
le!ISOIIS, llorlea, crafts, singing, Shrine 60, banquet and reception
gamea, · and refrealunenla. Sessions honoring Ruth Hartsoe, supreme worwill qxm with hand puppet skits. thy chaplain, Bukley 's Garden
Thoae attending are to take Bibles. Restaurant, Fairview Height!, ID;
• For Information on tranaporation, Delaware Shrine 53, banquet and
resident! may telephone 992-2507. The recep~on honoring Fred Williams,
supreme watchman of shepherds,
Rev. Robert L. McGee Ia pastor.

EARS

79'

RADISHES

2

PAK

•

••
••

29'

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.... .~.~~.~-.. 3j$1

Cottonelle ... .... .......... ... .. . 4 Roil 95' lda'ho lnst. Potatoes ..
Amlour

3 oz.

...... ....... .......Single.·...
61/2 ot.

71/o oz. ·

···· ····· ···· ••·•· ··••• ••···· ····· ·······

··• ·•• ·•••···•··

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�10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, June 13,1979 .

56 named to Salisbury honor roll

Anti-nuclear protesters List correct procedure
·
_for obtaining licenses .
·c·onVI•cted
•
. of t respas smg
DENVER (AP)- Thirty-four antinuclear protesters were convicted
Tuesday of trespassing as the first
verdicts were hand.ed down in a series
of mass trials stemming from an April
demonstration at the Rocky Flats
nuclear weapons pla n~ .
U.S. District Court Judge Sherman
Finesilver set se ntencing for 18
defendants on June 25, while U.S.
District Court Judge Richard P.
Matsch set sentencing for 16 others on
July 19.
Meanwhile, two other separate
trials were recessed Tuesday .night
and were tO continue Wednesday.
The de fendants face a ma,imum
fine of $1,000 under the federal
misdemeanor charge, a violation of
the 1954 U.S. Atomic Energy Act.
In each of the four simultaneous
trials, the defendants jousted with
federal judges and prosecutors in an
effort to turn their trials into a forum
on nuclear palicy.

.

.

-

Lt. Ernest \Vjgglesworth, Comma'hder of the Gallia-Melgs Post State
Highway Patrol is concerned that
som e a pplicants for temporary
The defendan tS face a ma&lt;imum permits and certain types of licenses
fine of $1,000 on the misdemeanor are encountering problems with the
charge, a violation of the 1954 federal driver s licensing procedure.
Atomic Energy Act. U.S. District
First lice nse appli ca nts are
Jud ge Sherman Fines ilver set reminded that in order to obtain a
sentencing for June 25 .
temporary permit in Ohio , they must
Thr ee other se,parate trials first visit a deputy regist rar's office
continued Tuesday, and anti-nuclear where dri ver licenses are issued a nd
protesters had some su ccess in purchase a temporary permit apjockeying with federal judges and plication packet.
prosecutors to turn their simultaneous
They must have documentary proof
trials into a forum on nuclear policy. of age, identity and social security
The defendants - 68 in all, divided card, if one has been issued. All apinto four groups for tri;li - are tbe plicants under 18 years of age must be
first large batch to go on trial for accompanied by a parent or legal
trespass ing on federal property guardian, who must sign the apduring the April 29 civil-disobedience plica.tion form at the deputy
protest at Rocky Flats.
registrar's office. After checking the
Federal marshals and plant proof of age the deputy registrar will
security officers arrested 286 persons complete the application, collect a
during the demonstration at the plant fee, and issue the temporary permit
northwest of Denver, which is the application packet.
nation's only facility for producing
After securing the appli cation
plutonium components essential to
modern nuclear

W~plnS

l
I'

, - ~·C'Gsh On The Barrel-Head"

·. BAKER
. :..
-

Third Grade - David Beegle, Bill
honor roll at the Salilibury Elemenpacket, the applicant mn&gt;tt take It to~ tarySchool.
Brothes, .Michele Folmer, Sue Fry,
Making a grade of "B" or above in Lisa Frymyer, ,'\udra Houdashelt, Ar·
state patrol drivers license e~am
station to tak~ t~'.,\*itt~~ ·and vision all their subjects to be named to the tie Runnel, Kevin D. King, Kevin V.
tests. No apw mtment 1s necessary for . roll were:
King, Shannon Slavin, Angle Sloan,
the writ'ten tests; but th'e 'applicant
FiNit Grade - Traci &amp;rtels, Rae Tamra Vance.
sho uld checkto be sure what days and L~ Basham, Melanie. Beegle; Amy
Fourth Grade - April Clark, T~
hours the pi.rticulat' exam station is BrotbeNi, . Heidi CarutheNi, Patrick Q,illwns, Phil King, Brenda Sinclair. .
open for busines~ .' ' '" ,.. '
Cleland, Kelly Douglas, Wally Hatfifth Grade - Jodi Harrison,
All applica nts wishing to obtain a field, Jay Humphreys, Kristin King, ·Rodney Harrison, Scott Pullips, Tim
motorcycle license or motorcycle Marsha , King , Deanna Norris, Sloan, Anita Smith.
.
endorsement, even though they now Michael Parker, Brian Warner,
Sixth Grade - Ruth Fry, Cindy
·hold an Ohio operators or chauffeur A!rron Whaley, Sandra Whaley, Mark Hazelton, Sandy Hoyt, Denise Stegall;
license, are required to purchase a Wyatt.
Jackie Welker.
·
temporary motorcycle application
Second Grade - Jennifer Reed,
packet. They must pass the necessary Wesley YoWJg, Mary Butcher, Jody
written tests on motorcycle laws and Taylor, Christie Sauters, Melodi Carl,
signs, at the exam station and have Traci CastO, Marc Corsi, Joan Simpthe motorcycle permit validated,
before making an ppointment for the
drivin~ test.
,
bicycle applicants are also ex~mpt
Applicants converting valid out-of- from purchasing a packet. They are
state license or an operators license to required to have their birth certificate
a cha uffeurs license are not required and if Wider 18 yars of age, be acto purchase an application packet . . companied by a parent or legal
The necessary forms to process these guardian, who must sign the ap1 CAR ·
applicants will be issued at the state plication form at the exam station.
pa trol exam station . Motorized
According to Lt. Wigglesworth all
procedures pertaining to driver
license testing is listed in the Ohio
Reinforced Slajl
Drivers Handbook. These handbooks
Included
contain aU of the study material
level currently stands at $10,000. necessary to pass the written tests.
CALL FOR
Senate Bil16 raises this .upper income They are available at all State Highway Patrol Posts, Driver License
eligibility level to $15,(0) a year.
FREE ESTIMATES
Exam
Staions, and Deputy
This week the Ohio Senate agreed to
the minor House changes made in the Registrar's offices and are free to the
Senate version of the bill and then public.
sent the measure on to the Governor
for signing into law.
And finally, the Senate last week
passed a bill which deals with nuclear
THIS WEEK'$
waste. Senate Billll would allow used
nuclear fuel rods to be stored at an
atomic generating plant temporarily
but would require nuclear plant
operators to pennanently dispose of
such waste within ten years in states ·
other than Ohio. The proposal will not
be considered in the House.
Under the provisions of this bill, a
nuclear plant operator who violated
provisions of,this bill, would face up to
$25,000 in 'fines for eadh day in
violation. , ; .
Supporters of the bill feel this iS 8
very important issue in Ohio due to
the fact that nuclear experts consider'
992-2556
salt fonnations the best spots to use
as atomic waste dwnping locations
570 w. Main
and the northeastern portion of this
Pomeroy, 0.
state pas-a signfficant collection of
salt fonnations.

*2495

'

•3 water levels help to
save water; 2-speed
motor
•Centrifugal rinse dispenl

DAIRY VALLEY

.•

I

Domino Sugar !
I

c~!

5

THIOUGHOUT THI
S1011 fOI
fA NT AS TIC SA~tNGS
ON ~I()(;.(I · IUNO
'IOOUCtS
l iSHD lEI OW All JUST
A ffW U.AM,US

-lb.

I
I

Bag
LIMIT I lAC WITH COUPON AND $7 50 ADDITIONll PURCHAS£
(IIClUDINC THIS IT!M i
•

4

5 LSS I

_

~.ompliShing on ~ mroe efficient
timetable, the baste ~llfllOije of the
~o-phase aut~nzallon procedure
wlht~ut tbe sacrifice or ~ent of
studies , reports, or tmpa ct
statements required by law on
legislation.

LATONIA RESULTS

FLORENCE, Ky. ( AP ) - Goodness
Skipper wpn the $1,-® featured pace
mile at Latonia by ~ length Tuesday ,\
night in ·2:02 1-5, paying $15.60, $5.68
and $4.
Winning Frost placed, returning
$3.40 and $.1.20, and Cricket Gamaun,
third, paid $7 .20.
,
The 7-1 combination of Knight
Oliver and Buttonwood Lor'i paid
$95.20 and the crowd pf 1,-119 bet
$101,205.

Shor.tening

4~-oz. $~1· 49
can

fild. IC.rover will replitCI!' vour •!em ...,,th the Sollme br111d or

OF

~mOlT

· SUIICT

ro ""lltattl stU!

IU~IIi

&amp;lOCA l tlli S

00111

LIMIT HIS. WITH COUPON AND $7.50 ADDITIOUI
.
PURCHASE tUCLUDINC THIS ll£11
liMil O"fE COUPON ftER FAMIL 'f

I OF
"

:

._...

Vac Pak
&lt;-~~i' Kroger Coffee .

I

I I

.

1
1

(~:1~)!

~

COI'npolflble bfand or refund yOUr purct1a11e prtce

COr't'IIGHT 1t7HHE MIOGII CO .. ITEMS AND .. I ICU

GOODIUNDA'f JUNllUHIUUTU.O.U JUNE

$4.

99

LIMIT 1 CAM WITH COUPON AND S150 ADOITIONll
PURCHASE (UCLUPINC THIS ITEM)

U. In'

IN GALLIPOLIS &amp; POM E.ROY STORES

WI IUU\11 THE IIGH' TO liMIT QUANTITIU . NONl

liMIT ONE COUPON PER FAMII Y

SOLD TO DEAlliS.

·'=DIPOI 'DOD Ullin IIU II T..ll UliiDlf lnl '11. 1171
SdJW TD &amp;ff\ICAiU SllTI I lOCillUU

Fresh
Peaches

' HOME PRIDE

Aluminum Foil
Roll

liMIT ONE COUPON PER FAMil y
UIE 10 lllal UTUIOU
1m

tOUIIOII

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

Evetyttl1ng ~ou tx.Jy at ll. r&lt;Jit!r •5 gL~a r a n leoed lor vou• total
utJ11act•on 'IIIQ.I'diess ol m.anutactu rlll' II ~ ou ar e not sat•s

AVONOA.l£

25 -F t . a s

12

I
I ,.,...,...,/

/ "••••••••••••••••··~··•·•

........,. NETWT .
TOTAL SATISFA CTI ON GU ARA NTEE

Whole ·
Watermelons

Kraft
Miracle Whip

1,.

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•

1

I
1
I

!

$199
Each,

·I
I

LIMIT 2 WAURMELONS WITH COUPON AND $7.50 ADDITIONAL
PURCHASE {UCLUDIMC THIS llEM)
•
LIMIT ONE COUPON PER FAMILy

12

•

I

•

--IIIIIIIIJIIJIIIIII.IIIt

IIIIICIII ...........Ilin l LtCilliiU

OF

I
I
I

·

IROGER COST CUTTER COUPOII
HAGGAR OR BIG YANK

MENS.SUMMER PANTS
Neat ch~ ks , sol ids, plaids In various summ@r
color tones. Filbr lcs of comfor table dlcroncotton and e.uy care polyester . Waist sizes 30 to
40. Point Plea1ant store only .

Don oo ., otfoo "''"d .,
terr y. Waist sl!es to 40.
Keep Dad Cool !

,,,..
f

MENS NYLON

$6 99 $9 99

f
f

GOlD, CROWN

Can

One Sizr Fits
10 TG 13

OUR BETTER 6X5X4 WEB

FULL 2 QUART SIZE

LAW~

AIR POT

ON

SALE!

Tylenol
Tablets ........... .

79~R.

AVONDALE

gsc

Full Cut
Round Steak

$

For Picnic, Home, Patio
amount of bever...,e you want. For
hot or cold drln'-:s.

Reaular

12.99

1

WESTING HOUSE

BEACH TOWELS

: '~ ' {~~,E) ,.,.,$149
I 12
I •v

REDWOOD
LAWN
CHAIR .

ON SALE!
b :6 wood slats . Non tilt
legs. Only u to sell each

store.

lier•tar '14.99

REGULAR OR CHUB PAK

$1Q88

Any Size Pkg.
Ground Beef .....lb.

KlrOGER

Spaghetti

3-lb.:sgc
Box

~o.J.vlf
~o~~

C.~ ~.._c;

·~~~He!'' ~

AND THEPUICHAU OF ONEPKG . ANV VAIIlTV

:
I

&lt;;Freezer Pleezer:
Frozen Treats :

o

I
I
I
I

(ICE CREAM SANDWICHES . TWIN POPS.
NUT t{'IP CONES AND MANY OTHU VARIETIES )
LIMIT ONE PER COUPON

.

I

10~EAR

•'

IN THE HUSK

'

09

Semi-Boneless
Smoked Ham ..... lb.

•

CORN

59

U-17-LB. AVG • .

LIMIT ONI COUPON PEl FAMILY

•

$

SWEET

.
Jar
LIMIT l'JU WIJH COUPON A~D $7.50 ADDtnONIL
.l'tlC~E t£1CLUDI"G THIS IT£111

1
I
I

·Stokely
Fruit Cocktail

U.S . GOV'T GRADED CHOICE
BONE IN

Kroger
· &lt;-~~~ "'. Instant Tea .

:

Rice

S11ve SS .Jl. Just pump the top for the

$844

Ctn .

KIOGU HI NU 2% LOWFAT MilK GAL PAPU uor'"'""

$

4-lb.
Pkg.

. eMoulded Plastic Arms
- •~able Braced Leas
YellGw, Brown, Green

Kroger 0.5%
I .. .. .. .... Plaollc
LOWf at M•lk

.Seedless
White Grapes1b.

DRESS SOCKS

TO

CHAIR

FIRST OF THE SEASON
CALIFORNIA

4··01.

~~

:

STEMS I PIECES

In rust, light blue, brown.

FOR FATHER'$

GOLD
ROASTED

O~V

Peanuts

DAY

REG. 1299.95

INGELS
FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY
'. &lt;

GRANULATED

HAMBURGER ............. 54~
WITH FRIES............... 84~
ADOLPH.'S

means for advancing tbe Gallipolis
completiOn date ~Y two years, OVIA
~oposed 8utho~tion of construelion now. In tbis way, according to
OVI_A te_stlmony, detailed advance
engmeenng and design commenced .
in 1980 could be completed by 19111 a!ld
construction could start in 1982 With
completion. possible by 1!187. Thus
many millions of doll!l~ would be
save&lt;! to tbe affected regton and constdenng ~ inev1~ble inflation in
construction costs this would result in
a substantial saving also to the
Federal gove~ent.
In Ueu of the two-p~ procedure,
OVIA proposed substitutioo of a strict
reqwrement for reporting to Con- .
gress for appropriate action any
substantial change in project purposes,_ benefits, estimated costs,
capaCityin environmental or 8rchaeological findings, to preserve
legislative control, thu ac-

.

- - - · l l l f l l l - l l, lt7t

IMtf T1 MICIIU ITJIJl I LIW 1UU

t

.

I

I

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I

Grapefruit ·

•
'

• ...... .. .. .. .. .46-a•.
can
JUICe
TOMATO JUICE «·OZ. CAN • , , 69•
ROUND TOP

Kroger 20-oz.
White Bread ...... .

.~ HONESTLY FRESH SEAF'OOD~

3-setting Fabric Master
electric dryer

I .

. . . II ........ c:bemlc!als

dustries, and impairment of the p&lt;&gt;silion of the Upper Ohio Valley steel indusuy, including tbe Pittsburgh
DiStrict, in competition with foreign
steel in the Gulf Coast and Lower
Mississippi regions.
In short, Mr. Hull pointed out, the
foundations of the heavily waterway
dependenteconomyoftheUpperOhio
Valley - all of it in Appalachia would be gravely weakened.
Moreover, workers and. investoNi in
the Cetltral and Lower Ohio Valley,
the Missiasipi Valley, · and the Gulf
Coast would also feel the impact, Pll!'·
ticui8rly in such industries as coal
mining and oil refining. The directly
affected region plays 8 cruclal part in
the supply of basic matelals and
energy forms throughout the area of
the eastern Great Lakes and Middle
Atlantic States according toOVIAfin. clings.
int.. a _ , IIIII IIJI)I'Opriate

'

. -,'~

•Self-cleaning filter; offbalance switch; 6 cycles

Ave.

I

SPECIAL.

REG. 1449.95

ser ·

• Automatic Fabic Master
termination plus timed
termination; Wrinkle
Guard"' I
•End-of-cycle signal
•Top-mounted lint screen

'
Kno~ what I see a lot of?

Traditional dress styles.
It's so easy to solve the
problem by going to
Hartley's Shoe.s and choos·
ing a pair Of Jarman shoes
for the fellow that Father's
Day is ail about.
Jarman shoes - shoes for
every dad, whether he 's
swinger, square or middle·
Of-the-road . Comfortable
casuals, all-occasion slip·
ons.

5-temperature washer with
Dua·I-Action agitator

.'

.

'coal: threatens to overwhe~ the existing facilities well in advance of
1989, the presently scheduled comptetion date, Mr_ Hull st.ijed. Thus, traffie in 19119 ia estimated to exceed 60
million ·tons as compared with 37
million tons in 1977 resulting in an
average delay tlr!le of 10 hours . per
tow.
This, he said, would product a rnajor traffic congestion crisis involving
tbe economic waste of excessive traffie delays at costs to shippers
reaching an estimated $88 million for
the two years 1988 and 1990 without
allowance for lnfiation. ·The inevitable consequences of failure to
advance the completion date by at
least two yers would be increased
C&lt;JSts and llggr&amp;V8ted supply problems for consumers of electric
power, gasoline and other petrolewn
products, dimished employment ear-

FURNITURE

l

'··

-. A delegation broadly represen- -creates hazardous ~pproach' condi1ative of Ohio Villley civic and in- lions, thus eliminating a severe bot·
'dustrlal iriterests today presented the tleneck by confonping the 42 year-old
~tion of tbe Ohio Valley Improve- project with modern facilities-serving
ment Aalloclation in support of ac- vital waterway conunerFe !or "\lunceleration of tbe urgently needed dreds of miles above and below ·
Galllpo)js Locks and Dam Moderniza- Gallipolis.
lion Project on the Ohio River and the
Under the existing timetable for the
authorization of 8 program of flood project a report •on required studies
eontrol in tbe Big Sandy and Upper would not reach Congress until 1981,
Cwnberlaild Valleys, Kentucky, w. Mr. Hull stated. Based on. present
Virginia and Virginia, a region fre- practice, Congressional authorization
quently devstated by severe flooding · would not occur until19B2, tbere being
before the Water Resources Subcom: no way to synchronize submission of
mlttee of the · Senate Committee on reports with Congressionallegililative
Envirorunent rind Public ' W'orks schedules. The iirst appropriations of
Williani j, Hull, president of th~ detailed enginee_ring and design funds
,WDciation annoWJced today.
would he unlikely before 1983 with a
With respect to tbe Gallipolis Pro- second installment in 1984-and initiaject tbe testimony stressed the lion of construction late in 1984 or
critlcal importance of advancing the 1985. •Allowing five years to comptec;ompletion date of the project which lion the project could not be finished
ll-ould provide a new 120();foot lock in WJtil1989 or 1990.
aC81181 byiJIIIIinl
a river bend which
Rapidly Iiiia&amp; IIJIIIc, .... r\1
.

992-2772

FINAL
4
DAYS

"

OVIA seeks acceleration of dain project

son, Nick King, Billy Gilkey, Michelle

Principal John Lisle has annoWJced

tl1fl final sill weeks grading period Taylor, PatriCia Davis.

View from Statehouse

JOHN SMITH CAPrAIN
By State 1\ep. RonJame~
ADVJSORY COUNCIL
John ~th, Langsville, has !Jeen
(D-~octorvllle,
~ JUNE 19 . .
named captain of the new Salem
92nd House District)
The eeit. rti!IW!rly schedculed Township VolWJteer Fire Department
During this week's legislatlv,e acmeeting,~ t¥af' HVRDD Regional rather than Don Smith.
tivity, the Ohio House of RepresenAdvisory C!Ji!Jcll; .on Aging will be
tatives passed a measure which granheld June 19 at'tfie Scenic Hills Senior
PRAYER MEETING SUNDAY
Is lu incentives for the installation of
Center, 187 South Spring Street,
A eounty-wide prayer meeting will · solar and wlnd~enerated heating and
Logan,13P;!9. The meeting will begin be held at 2 p.m, Sunday at White's cooling systems.
at 1~· ~~,!!td wjl\ be conducted by, ,fbapel,, ,1)lppers Plains, with Glenn
If the installed system meets
Char~-eslee, Chainnan. Please nlssell as class leader.
eligibility requirements, the bill granreview· ~&amp;~ agenda for itefuS~ ~ :"~" ··~ .:!4\ ~' .
ts an income 1u credit of 10 percent
1
to be 411C1 s~.. . ~
. " ·. v ·
'·o
of tbe cost of tbe system. The income
Lun~ reservations must be made
tax credit would be limited to $1,000,
by calling Mrs. Ruth Hinennan at BASEBALL~G1HURSDAY but Wider certain circwnstances, the
(614) ~1. Pl~ call by 3 p.m.
The Syrac~ersvllle Baseball credit would be caiTied over to tbe
Frida~, J~1~ J q/ let the Center , · Assn.~~ at:r p.m. Thursday at . next two years. In addition, Substitute
know how D;l&amp;nY . will be altendln6 the Syraci!BC mwlicipal building. All House Bill154 would exempt the purfrom your county.
·
]lal'ents; coaches and interested per- chase from state and local sales lues
·
'
sons are invited to atWnd.
and property lues.
Also covered under the bill ill the
question of solar access easements.
Accol'dinf. to tbis proposal, any person ~d be allowed to grant a writd. ~l
ten solar access eBBement to another
person. This ill to ensure that anyone
There's..Not A
who ~tallB ·a. solar system will have
adjliiWite 1acc~ to !he SUillight which
Barrel ;tn'~-'Our
ts ' iiec~ry to operate the solar
collective device. ..
This
measure
Will
now
be
inStore.
troduced and considered in the Ohio
Senate.
CONVENIENT
TERMS
Another important ll).easure which
'
.... '../
passed tlie HOuse tbis week is Sub·'AR~ANG£0 -oN ALL
stitute House Bill 138. Under this
proposial, tbe ~ration of programs
PURCHASES
designed to get injured workers back
on the job would be transferred from
the Rehabilitation Services Commission to the Industrial Commission.
:The, bill's ~ is tCl 'r'1!,1ace the
"::\ ·- .
present systeln with a more effective ·
system which results in the return of
more workers to gainful employment
and which, in turn, reduces workers'
compensation costs in general.
. This bill will also be sent to the
Se114_le'.for consideration. ' ,
·
Iri'Otber recent legislative activity,
the Ohio House has passed Senate Bill
6 which increases and extends property lu discounts for elderly and
disabled Ohioans.
Senate Blll6 extends the discount to
eligible' . citizens by raising the
maxi~um income of persons
qualifying for the Homestead Exemption.. The
. eligibility

11- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, JWJe 13. 1979

Middleport, 0.

,.

10% OFF

16-oz.$

'3295

C1n.

. ;.

.

$23S:~

~ O;eali Perch Fillets .. .. .. ....... lb. .
•
w
.
.
.
'
.
$179
~-·\ Dressed
. · .. .. ·: ~~~

•
=
=

19

"
INCLUDES• t·PIECES OF CHICKEN . l ·ll. •aTATb
SAlAD OR COlE SLAW I • PINNER lOllS

HARTLEY
SHOES, INC.
"Middle ol the upper block

Family Pak Fried Chicken . Each
PAIUIOGE

BNiwurst or Mettwurst

in Pomeroy, 0."

KAHN'S KIEliASSA 01

9a.m .-Sp.m,. !'Aon.~
Thurs .. ,..Sal'.' '

9 a.m.·8 p.m. Fri.

lb.

:·"liJ.SA•

••

Closed Sunda• ~

Stokely ·
Apple.Sauce
..:.,....
.
..·., ,,

;

Smoked
Sausage ,........ .. .
I I ..SHUT
Father's Day Cake .. .. .. ...

'

' ·'

·~ \~ ~.

\

' ' \.

\

lb.,
Each

$549 ·
$269
$269
$499

I
~

•

~~

•

E

~

~·

•

�.

13-The Daily·Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy o Wednesday June 13 1979
DICKTRACY
.
' ., ·
'
'

12- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, June 13, 1979

111}1}~ fe}'ft ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
~ 1.!::!) ~~ &lt;I&gt;
byHonriknoldandBObLee

Your Best Buys Are Found in the Sentinel Classifieds
Notices

WANT AD
CHARGES
15 Words or UndE'r
1.00

Ch~ r~e
1.2)

1.5()
1.80
3.00

1.90
2.25
3.7$

Cash

I day
2days
3days
tidays

Each word over ttie minimum
15 words ~ i cents ~r word per
day. Ads runnin ~ other than C"Onset•ut i\'e days will bt&gt; r har~ed al

1n memory, Ca rd of Thanks
Rnd Obituary : 6 cent.s J&gt;('r word ,
$3.00 mlnimwn. cash in l:ld VIlnce.

3 AND 4 RM furn is hed and unfurni•hed

The Publisher reserv~~S tht·
right to edit or l'f"je&lt;i any ads

objectional.

det"med

The

Publisher will not be resporL.'Iible
for mort than one inco!Te&lt;'t in·

sertion.

Phone 992-2156

992· 3129, or 992·5914 .

Lost and Found

WANT-AD

ApVERTISING
DEADUNES

'

197~ U

Noon on Saturday

Tu&lt;&gt;&lt;lay
thru Friday
4P.M.
the~)' before publica lion

LOS T:
Fomel
Garmon
Shepherd. light tan face and
legs , block on bock and toi l.
Broke collar fro m home on
Storys Run Rood. below
Midleport, mising 4 weeks. If
seen call Gerold Mathews ,
367-0395 or 992-5207 , Reword.

197~

Mark line, SOxl2, 2 bedr .
1969 Valiant , 12x60, 2 bedr .
1967 National , 12x50, 2bedr.

B'S MOBILE HOME SALES. PT.
PLEASANT, WV. 304 · 675 · ~~24 .
1960 SKYLINE frailer SOxlO. N.
Main in Rutlo'nd. 742-2789. ,

FOUND: Block female poodle ,
older anima (. in the Forked
Run A reo . 378-6291 .

1970

Card of Thanks

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

I WOULD llko lo t11cnk all my
friends,
relatives
and
neighbors who sent cards ,
gifts and visited me on my

1

IMMEDIAH

oI

-

OPENING .

Laboratory Technician, 3-11
s~ifl .

Experienced MLT (ASCP)

or equivalent . Excellent salary
and fringe benefits. Shift dif·
ferentail. Contact: Personnel
Office,
Pleasant \'alley
HospitQI, Yallr; Drive, Point
Pleasant, WV . 25550. Phone

304-67.5·-4340 .. An Equal Opportunity.Employer.

PAPER
HANGER .
PI-lone
992-5621 after 5~ 30 p.m .

IMMEDIATE

OPENING

-

REGISTERED NURSE with administrative experienc8 and
public speaking abilities. In·
volv•s health , , testing ond
presentation Of health information . Cor rquired. Some
evening woi"k. Hourly salary.
Some volunt. .r work . Apply y
June l4, 1979 to Tuberculosis
Clinic, Mulberry Heights,
Pomeroy, 992-3722.

~
.-.;,. .

YI\RD SAL£. 2 lamily, Wed(lol·

good

condition ,

'ml-6168 oiler 6 p.m.
For Rent

TWO BEDROOM furnished opt.

I

992-3129 ,

992-5434 ,

or

992 - 591~ .

TWO BEDROOM trailer . Adults

DON'T JFOI\GE.l

only . 992-~24 .

ONE BEDROOM opts, Contact
Village Manor, 992· V87 .

FURNISHED APT. 3 rooms and
both. No children and no peft .

9~9-2253 .

SLEEPING ROOM for working
man only. Reasonable rent .

992-6022 .
TWO BEDROOM Hause, newly
r•madeled
kitchen ,
in

'-"~'· Coli 992-2288 o11., 6

mobile home
In Racine area . 992-5858 .
4 BEDROOM APT. , subsidies
available if eligible. Coli

992-nn.
EFFICIENCY APT. suiilable lor
ono . Utllllles paid . co·ll
992-5738 .

C. R. MASH

acres in

to~.

VINYL &amp; Al,IJM.
SIDING·

g~rden

space, fruit trees, good 3
bdrm , home, basement·

w-garage,

enclos·ed

porch, dining room .
HARD
TO
FINO .
$25,000.00.
NEWER RANCH - 5
Pts. Excellent condi·
lion, central air II. heal,
large level lot, . fu ll y
equipped
kitchen .
MANY
OTHER
FEATURES . $29, 100.00 . .
NEW LISTING MAJOR
INVESTMENT PRO·
PERTY IN MEIGS CO., ·
POTENTIAL
FOR
COMMERCIAL
11.
RE&lt;:;REAT IONAL
USES . &lt;:;ALL
FOR
DETAILS.
SHOULD BE SOLD -

Cellulosic (wOOd fiber)
Thermal Insulation
Save 30 pet. to 50 pet.
on hutlng cost
Experience anCI
fully Insured
FrH Est.
Call 992-2772
S-17-1 mo.

type house, barn 11. olher
bldgs. Near Long Bot ~
tom . SJ3,500.00.
WE ARE A FULL TIME
REA· L
ESTATE
ORGANIZATION.
"FOR BEST RESULTS
LIST WITH US."
Realtors
Henry E. Cleland Sr.
Henry E. Cleland Jr.
992-2259
992-6191

MONTGOMERY

GOOSE

STOCM

and
Rennance
30 Year Terms
A-Na money down
(eligible veterans)
FHA-AS low as 3%

NEW LISTING - In Pomeroy. · Nice
home with living room . balh, laundry room and
modern kitchen . Excellent view of river and

PAINT SAL£. Marlin

Senour, Division ol Sherman
ond Wi lliams, 2 gal. flat w,hit• ,
Stoinlest
double
exterior steel
paint
$13boWl
.95 . ·
sink and wosherless facet '

$60.00
. 8 coso
lt . wllh
disp
lay
relr igeratar
s;ngle
phose compressor $350.00.

Real Estate for Sale
3 Yt acres in Pomeroy. SEclud·
ed wooded orao on top of hill.
Overlooks river . Water, eiec·
tric
O\la i loble . $7900 .

992-38S6.

.., jn t~e $95,000.00 price range . You must See this one
· ·to apprec iate Its beauty.
·

592-3051

Business Services

we .'h itve other- listings to chOose from. Give us a

BRADFORD, Auctioneer. Cam·

call. We need more llsllngslll
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc. Phont742·100l
Hilton Wolle, Assoc. Phone 949-2589
G"'rge s. Hobstener, Jr. Broker 991·5739

plete Service. Phone 949·2487
or 949·2000. Racine, Ohio.

~p;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;~
C~

ENTRAL REALJY C0..

Crill BradloJd.
ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Swnpera, toasters , irons, oil
small appliances. Lawn.moer.
next to State Highway Garage
on Route 7 . 98.5·3825.
·

I

WE HVE CONVENTIONAL FINANCING FOR MOST OF OUR H()MES !=OR
AS LOW ASS% DOWN .

service, all makes. 992·2284.
The · Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorl~ed Singer Sales and
Service . We sharpen ScissOrs .

Beautiful older completely
· NEW LISTING remode led Mme. newly carpeted with extra large
living II. family room . A huge heat·olator fireplace

EXCAVATING , dozer, loader
and backhoe' work; dump
trucks and !a-boys for hire,
will haul fill dirt, top soil,
limestone and grovel. Call Bob
or Roger Jeffers, day phone

in center is really attractive. J bedrooms and llh

baths II. uti lity room. City water 11.2 wells. Singe! car
garage by house and large bank cellar. Also 5 stall
garage with workshop upstairs. -ApprOK. 1 V2 acre

land. More land available. &lt;:;lose to Pomeroy 11. Mid ·
dleport. owner may take mobile home or other as

part down payment. Asking $42,500.
IMMEDIATE

POSSESSION

-

Real

nice, 3

bedroom home, wi th large liv ing room and fa[Tlily
room , all nice ly carpeted, large eat -in k.itthen
equ ipped w ith dishwasher, disposal , and stove, 2
full baths , 'f"J basement and garage, nice garden on 1
plus acres Of tand in Racine . Priced at $45,000.

$25,900 -

Total privac y Is the key here on 2 plus

acres, the living rm . has brick fireplace, step -down

family room, equipped kitchen, lull bath, laundry
art}a, and two bedrooms complete downstairs. the
· un'f inished upstairs makes ex pansion possible .

992-7089 .
night
phone
992-3525 ar992-S232 .
EXCAVATING,
dozer .
bad&lt;hae and dltchor. Charles
R. Hatfield . Block Hoe Service,
Rutland, Ohio. Pone 742·2008.

PULLINS EXCAVATING. Com·

. 992-2143 .
E·C ELECTRICAL Contractor
serving .·Ohio Volley region .
Six days a wHk, 2..- houn ,.,..
vice . Emergency calls. Coli

MODERN

SAVE ON THIS MIDDLEPORT HOUSE -

9'n·2082 or 7~2 - 2328 .
REAL ESTATE, I acre latin Riggscrest Manor, between Tuppers Plains and Chester .

Phone 985-3929 and 9B5·~ 129.

TWO STORY house located on
% acre in Rutland. Full bose·
,. ment, 1orge living and dining
room with server, drapes and
carpe ting . Utility building and
. gorog'e. Coll7&lt;42-2754.
THREE BEDROOM house large
living room and kirchan' wall·
ta:-wall carpeting. I 1/ t · 'acres.immediafe posse11ion . Priced
at $32 ,000. lntenect :on of' Rt.

7 and 143 . 992-3183.

797-2745 or 7f7·21S2
DO·!Kl ..

6·6·1 mo.

NORTH

1-

•·

•·

,.
I
I

'

•

Good 4

bedroom house at a 'ow price. Plenty of c loset space
and kitchen cabinets, low heat bills. Priced for ex -

tra qui ck sale . $27 ,000.
LOTS - 1 Acre and up near Pomef ov .

JUST LISTED - Nice re modeled 2 bedroom hOme
on blacktop road . Mostly carpete~. F .A. nat. gas
furnace. A very attractive small home and 1 acre
land. Priced for quick sale for $17,500.

OWNER. SAYS SELL and may finance to qualified
person this 4 bedroom fully carpeted house, large
living room with heat ·ol;ltor fireplace and kitchen
equipped with dishwasher, stove &amp; refrlg . Loc. on 5
a cres of land. Immediate possession. Price reduced
to SJ9,000.
SYRACUSE -

an

and V
Morris.

CUSTOM

WOOD

:167-7101.
.
PAINTING AND sandblasting.
Free estimates. Coll9~9-2686.

LEARN GOLF correctly thlt
·summer. Beginner's and ad vanced .
John
Teaford ·.

614-985-'3961 .
HANDYMAN WORK mowing

&amp;

".,..
..
SELECTION•.

SAVE A LOT

with fish , secluded area . Pri_ced Of!ly S42,SOO.

WANT TO,' SELL? - GIVE US A CALL ·
. CALL JIMMY DEEM, ASSOCIATE 949-2388
OR NAN~Y JASPERS, ASSOCIATE
·
949-2654 or 949·2591
.

WINNIE

·'

WINNIE/s PAV5HTi'Rl THAT
~ZY

DRESS LINE SHE

CAME UP WITH 15 601NGID GIVE US A NICE,
HEA LTHY SECOND

sq. yd.

Q.UARTER!

24 Rolls of Cllrpet In
Stock &amp; 100's of Samples
to Choose From.
BUY NOW &amp; SAVE

..
.. .

Call 742-2211
TALK TO

,.

Wendell or Herb Orate

or Gene Smlt~

RUTlAND ·
FURNinJRE

. ·~

BARNEY

GLORV BE!! A PURiV

BALLS 0' FIRE !!

Rutland , ]

BOUQUET OF FLOWERS !!

. UH--

RUTlAND
FURNITuRE .
. .

.'

WE OFFER YOU ...
1. Two lull floou of all new
furniture.
2. Nice selections orused fur·
nlture.
.
3. A lor!lt ...,fldfng lull of •
beautiful carpet.

my

last

two

mond

to

dummy's

ace,

pulled Wes t's last trump and

is

his

claimed .
" ' What t ook you so lovg ?'

asked P e te r ."
t N IO: W~ I-'AI~ ~~ Ii

1-:N'l'F..:BPHI SE ASSN . 1

/For a copy of JACOB Y MODERN, send $1 to: " Win at

Bridge ," care of this newspa·
per, P. 0 . Bo• 489, Radio City
Station. Ne w York. N. Y. 100 19.)

THOMAS JOSEPH

Z6 Revival
word
!7 Adherent
of Attila
:!8 Goddess of
night:
29 Whole
33 Complaining
36 Beheld
37 Tying
the oxfords 1=-+---1-~
38 caustic
remark
39 Fly by

working
41 N.J. court
group

BIRFDAY··
SHPAT ...

on

spades 'while poo r West had
to follow . The n I le d a dia-

40 Not

MAW'S

.,

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how
is

to

work)t:

AXYill.Bi\AXR
J.ONGFI!I.LOW

Orle l etter simply s t:~nd s for another .. lri thi s .sa mple · A ia

'

'

used fo r t h e three 1.'&lt;, X for Ih e two 0 s, elc. S1n gle lette r s.
;~postrophes. lhe l en~th and formali~1n of the wo rds are all ~
h int s. Each day the code l etters ar c different.

;

'

.

•·

Call61~ -667· 3263 .

Pets for Sale
F (ee gas, wit h a 3. t:ledroon'l , l 1f2 story

ROLL ''
-

$795

See the Grate Family at ·

m ond and a club were disw

ACROSS
42 Lack
I Kind of tur·
DOWN
I Cringe
key or war
5 Encourage
2 Famous
9 Potpourri
sailor's
girl
10 Wood ashes
by-product
3 Household
13 Kind of cellar
need
4 The unknown
14 Instantly
John
Yestenllly't Alllwer
15 First lady
5 Dismay
18 Federal Z7 Door holders
18 " Colorful"
8 Soprano,
agents
30 Out of the way
person
Lucrezia
21
carry
on
31 OVerseas
17 Type of
7
Jacket
style
2%
EMnare
message
library
8
Fit
23
Lacking
32
Harrill,
e.g.
19 Holtzman
ethics
34 Pitch or Auerbach 11 Henry Corrunager 24 Citizen
35 Business
ZO Wire
12 Large
of Durang~ letter abbr.
measure
Z5 Name in 38 Tonic's
groups
Z!Govem
18
Reimbursed
· psychiatry fortUier
22 Domesti·
cated

GASOLINE ALLEY

•,

lawns, pointing houses , roofs
and building sidewalks, etc.

·

hous~du ll ba em ent. Large bea utiful pond st ocked

by

rm lool4inq
for Eqqs!

ALL CARPET
NOW ON
SALE

di scarding a

~C4dllw:d'

·:

Services Offered

NOW HAUliNG limestone in
Middleport-Poemroy area .
Call tor free · estimate.

Pass

minor suit hand without
e noug h high cards f~r a

:=1

742-2211

5 ..

this hand which h e pla yed in

;

"r~

Real nice 2 bedroom house. all

21ots . Priced for $21 .500 .

. •I

· DRIVE &amp; 'LITTlE

WORK .

Anything mode of wood . The
Wo?d
Shed ,
Broadway,
Roc1ne, Ohio.

6t

Pass
Pass

Alan Sontag will describe

CARPETING

FROM

5 NT
7•

3+

"Eas t 's tw.o·notrump
. opening showed some sort of

I CLEAN

carpeted, nice cabinets, util ity room, nat. gas heat,

50 ACRES -

lime and fertilizer hauling and
spreading. Also limestone and
grovel hauling. 742·2455.

South

s pad~s .

club fr om dummy . When
Eas t discarded a club. I was
hom e wilh m y lucky grand
slam .
" I led my ten o f s pa d es
and ruffe d a fler West covered with the .ja ck. and fol lowed by ruffing a club with
my kin g of tr umps , A dia -

By Oswald Jacoby
arid Alan Sontag

l

•SAVE ON

Phone 698-3290.
LEO MORAIS Trucking. Will do

North East
2 NT
4 NT Pass

tourname nt . Here
description :

r.

saddle.

ace of

the London Times invitation

· puppies of
a \ r~ '
registered English Springer
Spaniel mo ther, all the pup: les lock like her. We will noi ' · •
et them go unle11 assured of -·
on ew:cellent home, 843-223.4. . ,; ....

61 ~-843-3011 .
VERY GENTLE Quarter Horoe.

t o m y a ce. I next cashed my

Vulnerable : North-south

carded

OKAY, BOYS! JT"S TIME
TO TAKE 11-IOSE
iWO SIG GALOOTS
"THE IR BREAkFAST!

. ;'
i

SPEC I ~l

line-Barth-Swill ColonY Joyco - Motor Homes to to~·
pars, occe11orles and friendly
S9rVice. For directions call

trumps . Nex t came the king
or spad es and a trump lead

...

•

A GOOD
OF END &amp;
BALANCES.

A K 5

Opening lead : + 3

;l
pi

CODNER'S CAMPERS on Rain·
bow&lt; Ridge wi1h lop of lho

fac tory hand . But Blackwood h ad made m e the declarer and he loves to make
me suffer .
" I thoug hl a while before
leading to tri ck two . Then I
played dumm y 's queen of

• J B7 2
• 5

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

I •

MIQDLEPORT
992-3100 6-6·1 mo.

IN STOCK · for immediate
delivery: various sizes of pool
kits. Do-lt· yourself or let us
In~ tall for you . D. BUmgardner
sbles, Inc. 992·5724. .,

t K Q 10 5
+QJIII!

West

lomalo. Call367-0395.
_
HEALTHY ~ months old malo
kittens. Melgt Humane Soci~ '1: ·1

syatems

• 96 4

"

no merc y ,

ha ve a ·s hghtly more sa lis·

• 8

Dealer : East

n

7~2-2593 .

Howard Rotovators
chisel plows. lifO

. PROOUCT h::t~ ·~· 61~ SHOT
LIKE JACK KNOWS "·

TWO KlnENS, one block and ~~~
white mole and one calico i

dozer: backhoe. itt. 143:
Phone 1 (61~) 698·7331 ar

SERVICE

IT WO&gt;I'T' BE LONCj ••• SOON AS
THEY GEl 6ACK INTO FULL

FIVE KITIENS. 6 Ia 7 weok1

HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex-

AND

THE FACTORY ,

187 ASH ST.

Business s ·ervices

SALES

GEl THE J OB

.,

Civil
Mechanical
Archetectura 1.
Lavouts

old . ~ calico. l tiger. 992-7680'.

4·5-lfc

parade

DID JACK SRY
WHEH YOU 'D

I ;

ty. Phone992. 2592.

.. 8 6

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-I'ORTUNE'S DARLING

Chester, 0.

HumoneSociety. .

.. 9 7 4

SOUTH
• A Q 10 9 4

r----=QU':-::'AU,....,TY=--. ;
DRAFTING ..;
.'
SERVICES
•
J

6·3·1 mo.

EAST

UTilE ORPHAN ANNTF.

Ill€

cntille d to think lha tl mi g ht

WEST
.J71S3!

+3

~------~·~5~·6~--1_m_o_.~pd~.:~'!

Ann Ne'!ftSOme, "4-Hl·UI2 .

wh o s howed

Bla c kwooded t o se ven
hearts . O f co urse, Peter was

+

Jack's Septic
Tank Sel\'ice

For fUrther intormttlon ca ll Jo

ma jors and Pete r Weichse l,'!

.. Q J 10 3 2
•• A 3
A K 10 8 7

Portable tolletrental .
Phone 915-3806
Jack Ginther HS-3806

Box 3

normal ope ning llid .
" My three clubs show ed

S-13

+K

estimate. 24 Hour Ser.:
vice. Any day, anytime.

Free Estimates

Western

_....

Residenllal and commercial.
Cioll for

Phone 992-6323

septiC

- ---- ----------' - - -----Exciting tournament play

t&gt; hiVE: 'OJ, WJE:R.

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

4iNEWMOMES
e ROOM ADDITIONS
eROOFING
eVINYL SIDING
eGUTTER &amp; SOFFIT

cavoUng,

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

au; 11\lf-10 I'V~ OOT

~

. ,f .
• r '•

CRYPTOQUOTES

PEANUTS
'

ltE\'!MV
8LANI&lt;ET!

WI1AT IF WE ~-lAVE A
lATE FREEZE TONIGHT?

I NEED ~OU~ BLANKET

iO COVE~ M-1 PLANT5

V. K X 0 K C H H

THIS 15 THE Flf&lt;5T

TIME IN M-1 LIFE I'VE
EVER 5AT UP ALL NIGHT
WITI1 APARSNIP...

'- HCJqF HOLLOW, English and

Y XQ K N 0 C X Q H ,
HCWJC
f' X

Western .
Soddl•s
a,nd
Hornell .~ Horses and ponlis.
Ruth Reeves . 614-698-3290.
Barding &amp; Riding le11on1 ond
Horse Core products.

F DC

YDNAO C

X YY QK H
H MY{ U U I Q U

P D C A
U C N E C.K H

XVVXKFQAWFZ
FDWAOH

" 1nt Kll'\9 Futurn Syndlc•tt, Inc .
. I

formances
33 ;
Oown sf alrs 20.

Upstairs ,

10 ,ro-Vegas 6, 13; Fall of Eagles 17;
News 20; Cross Country 22.
10 , 30-Best ol Groucho 20: 11 ,roNews 3,6,8, 10, 13 , 15; New Soupy
Sales 17 .
11 : 30-Johnny Carson 3, 15; Pollee
to CBS News S: ABC News 33:
Movie " The Guru " 10; Movie .
"Killers Three" !7.
12 : 00- Swltch 8 ; 12 : 40- ManniK
6,13; I :00-Tomorrow 3; News
15.
1: 10-Ko iak B: 1 :30- Baseball 17 ;
1 :50-News 13 ; 4:00-News 17;
4 :20-12 O' Clock High 17.
THURSDAY, JUNE 14,1979
5 :20--World a l Large 17; 5:45-Farm Reoorl13; 5:5G-PTL Club
1~ ; 5 :55-Summer Semester 10.

6 :()(}--700 Club 6,8; PTL Club 15:
6 : 10-News 17: 6 :25--For You
Black Woman 10.
1
6 '30-Dragnet 17: 6 :45--Mornlng
Reporl 3; 6 : SO-Good Morning
Wesl VIrginia 13; 6:5s-&lt;:huck
White Reports 10; News 13 .
7:()(}--Today 3,1 5: Good Morning
Ameri c a 6 ,1 3 ; Schoolles 10;
Thursday Morning 8; Three
Stooges 17; 7:15--Weather 33 .
7:30-Famlly Alfalr 10: Lilias Yoga
&amp; You 33.
'.·, ·:
8 :oo-Capl . Kangaroo 8,10; Leave It
To Beaver 17 .
B:JO-Romper Room 17; 9:ro-Bob
Braun 3; Emergency One 6; Phil
Donahue 13,15; Love ot Life 10:
Love Tennis 33.
9:30-Sanford II. Son 8: i'i9!ji!n's
Heroes 10; Green Acres 11:
W~alher 33.
10:()()--Card Sharks 3,15; Edge of
Night 6; All In The Family 8,10;
Dating Game 13; Moille "Sinc~rely Yours" 17; Exploring the
Crafts : Sllkscreen 33.
10 : 30-AII Slar Secrets 3,15: $20,000
Pyramid 13; 13; Andy Grllfllh 6;
Daniel Foster, M.D. 33.
10:55--CBS News B: Hause Call 10.
11 :co-High Rollers 3,15; Laverne II.
Shirley 6,13; Price Is Right 8,10;
Antiques 33 .
11 : 30-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15;
Family Feud 6,13; Frying Pans
West 33 .
12 :QO-Newscenter 3;

News 6,10;

Password 15: Over Easy 33;
Midday Magozlrie 13.
12 :30-Ryan's Hope 6,13; Search for
Tomorrow 8,10; Not For Women
Only 15; Movie "Thunder over
the P lains" 17 ; MacNeil -Lehrer
Reparl 33 .
1 :oo-.D ays ol Our Lives 3.1S; Young
II. lhe Restless 101 Wild Wild
World of Animals 33.
1:30-As The World Turns 8.10; All
Creatures Great and Small 33 .
2:oo-Doclors 3,15; One Llle to Live
6,13; 2:25--News 17 .
2: 30-Another World 3,151 Guiding
Light 8,10 ; I Love Lucy 17: Een
Festival 33.
3:oo-General Hospital 6, 13: Rebop
17; 3:30-Mash 8; Joker 's Wild
10; Banana Splits 17; Turnabout
20: Trains Tracks II. Trestles 33.
4: 00- Misier Cartoon 3; Merv
Griffin 6; Hollywood Squares 15;
Addams Famllly-8; . Sesame Sl.
20,33; Six Million Collar Man 10;
Mike Douglas 13: Fllntstones 17.
4: 30- Lone Ranger 3; Hogan ' s
Heroes B; Lucy Show 15; Partridge Family 17 .
S:oo-Bonanza 3; Beverly Hillbillies
S: Mister Rogers' ·Neighborhood
20,33 ; Gomer Pyle USMC 10; Six
Million Collar Man 13; Star Trek
17; Brady Bunch IS.
S:JO-News 6; Petti coat Juncllon 8;
E lee . Co. 20: Mary Tyler Moore
10; Odd Couple IS; Doclor Who
33.
6 :00- News 3,8, 10 , 13 , 1S; Family
Altair 17:. VIIIa Alegre 20 : Studio
See 33 .
6 :30-NBC News 3,15: ABC News 13;
C!lS News 8,10: Over Easy 20,33;
Father Knows Besl 17.
7: 00- Cross -WIIs 3; Newlywed
Came 6 , 13; Marty Robbins'
Spalllghl 8: News 10: Love
American Style IS ; Get Smart
11: Dick Cavell 20,33.
7:30-Hollywood Squares 3; Bonkers
6; Malc h Game PM 8; $100,000
Name Thai Tune 10; Nashville
on the Road 13; Dolly IS;
Basebell 17.
8 :()(}--Hizzonner 3,15: Mork &amp; Mindy
6, 13; Waltons B,10: Nova 20.33.
8 :30-" Molher &amp; Me .. M.D." 3.15;
Angle 13; In Celebrallon of
Tulankhamun 6.
9:oo-Qulncy 3,15; Barney Miller 13;
· Hawaii Flve-0 8, 10: VIews of
Asia 20,33 .
9,30-Carter Country 13; 10 :()(}--The
lnnocenl&amp;. the Oomned 3, 15; 2020 6,13; Barnaby Jones ' 8, 10;
Race for lhe Yellow Jersey 33;
Commanders 17; News 20.

I X K

FDC . LCFF C K .
DNKKz . FKQTNA
Yesterday's Cryptoquote; . . FASHION, CUSTOM, OPINION,
· DESIRE AND FEAR HAVE NOTHING TO DO WITH
FREEDOM. - EDWARD CARPENTER

RISING STAR Kennel. Joor'
ding . Call :167-0292 .

News 10; Love America n Sly le
IS; Gel Smart 17; Dick Cavell
20,33.
7:30-0olly 3; Match Game PM 6;
Muppet Show 8; The Judge 101
Thai ' s Holly wood lJ ; W ild
Kingdom 15 : Baseball 17 ;
MacNeil -Le h re r Re port 20,33.
8 ' 00- La ug h - ln 3, 15; Elghl Is
Eno ugh 6, 13; Jeflersons 8, 10; :
Masterpiece Theatre 20: All
Creatures Greal &amp; Small 33.
8 :30-Good Times 8.10; 9 :ro-Movle
"Zuma Beac h" 3. 15; Charlie' s
Ange ls 6, 13; Movie " Paper
Moon "
8, 10 ;
Great
Per -

Woman 6, 13; Your Turn : Letters

~

Ph . 992-2174

BOB'S GENERAL
CONTRACTING

949-2862-949·2160

IMPUTE

BRIDGE -=------· - -" -·····-- ·-

BORN LOSER

Smith Nelson
Motcn, Inc.

992-SS47
4·25
. ·1 mo.· Pd.
.

New, repair,
gunersand
down spouts. (
Window cleaning
Gutter cleaning
Free Estimates

BALKY RO SARY

Answe r: The great ones run from Texas lo Cariada Wednesday, Jun(' 13

Rt. 3

H. L Writesel
Roofing

(Answers tomorrow)

I Jumbles: JOINT

Yeslerday·s

rn t I I 1

PLAINS (Greal Plai ns)

Pomeroy, Ohio

MOn, Ev.nlngs-Mnon, W. v •.,
7:30 St.' .loteph Catltollc Church;
Tues. Morning (10 : 311 and
Ennlnp at 7:J..Midd'-J)Ort;
Huth United Methodht Ch~o~rc:h
Thun. Mornirtt no ::tDI and
Ev.,.ings at 7:lO·Pt. Plelisant,
W. Va . Krodlil Parle Club House.

Now arrange the circled letters to

form the surprise answer, as sug·
gested by the above cartoon.

Print answer.here:

Radiato-' ,.--

CONTRACTOR

WANTED
overweight People
Slinderella ·
Diet Classes

I KI

Service

BLOCK &amp; BRICK .
WORK, GENERAL

5·20-1 mo .·pd.

tJ

1-ATt;;~,HUHLl' D LIKE T'5TROI-L
AROUND ON DECK AND INHAL E: THc
FRE 7 H AIR FER. A CHANGE .•
OKAY. BELOVED POP~

. EXPERIENCED

N. L Construction

ADD ONS and remodeling,
gutter work, down spouts,
some concrete work, walks
and
driva~oys
'(free
estimate) . V.C. Young, Ill,
Racine , OH. 9~9- 274B .

INSURANCE

cancellltd? lost your
opt~rators
license?
PI-lone

WATER AND misc. hauling.
Call992-5858.

TWO STORY, 3 bedroom house.
3 lots. Now's your chance If
you need a house. $12,000.
Owner w i ll ing to talk.

Halklns 94, ·2160.
Athens Are•

AUTOMOBILE
been

882-2952 or S82-J.IS..

house ,
full
basement ,
fi r eplace . fully carpeted, cen·
tral air, enclosed sun porch,
located on 6'/, acres on CR 28 ,
opprox. 3 miles from Ro&lt;:ir'\e. tf
interetted contact Larry Wolfe
9A9•2836 weekends and after
5 evenings.

.Tom

992-277~

7~2·2A55.

8S ACRES - With plenty of good pasture land and
some farm ing ground . Good barn with dr illed well.
Garage ~nd other buildings, farm house. Needs
some repair . Mineral . rights too. GOOd location
about S minutes I rom Pomeroy off Rl . 33. Priced for
quick sale. $37,000.

bedroom

I'LL HAV&amp; THE:!'RI'-15
COCKTAIL? TO THE
Dl'-11'-16 ?AL00'-1! ...
YOUR-ER- LITTLE
FRIEND II/ILL
JOII..I U~1
~TIOWARD

.,...tlrk guaranteed. 20 yeiirs ex· '
perlenc.f . Free estimatts. C4&gt;11 •

pleta Service. Phone 992·2478.

REAl ESTATE Loons. Purchase
and refinance. 30 year terms.
VA. No money down (eligible
vetercms) , FHA · As low as J
per cent down (hon·\leterons) .
Ireland Mortgage Co .. 77 E.
State. Athens . 61~ ·592· 3051 .

THREE

new a!'ld repair.

I
I

I DORIAH

CAPTAIN EASY

storm doon and wlnaows. All

CALL

4·23·1 mo:

SEWING MACHIN£ Repalro,

POMEROY
LANDMARK

. . . _ . . P.h one 992 ·21'81

JUST LISTED- we· have an extremely nice honle
DANVILLE - A bedroof!l home with family room
bath and kitchen . Situated on l.4 of an acre with
smoke house, cellar and 2 other good buildings,
Needs some'work. but well worth $18,000.00.
FARMS- We have 2 in the Racine area. Call Hilton
Wolfe for more info. on these.

doors down from Post Offlc.e,

SALE PRICES

IRElAND
MORTGAGE
CO.
77 E. State, Athens

ed to sell at 540,000.00.

2.

Headquarters for
Hotpoint and
General Electric
Appliances

down ·cnon-veter•nsl

beautifu l f lower gardens with some fru it trees. ?ric ·

Aaron Wolfe, Letart
Falls, Ohio.

HARDWARE .

mo~intenance,

Free Estimate

GiveAway

2~7 - 3638 ,

7~2·2255.

•d.

I KJ

All typfS rooting, JUffUS aM . ·,
dOwnspouts . All types home

• ·5·1 mo.

SQUARE BALES HAY In lield

,RUTLAND

J&amp;L INSUlATION

4231 mo . (Pd. J

70 acres, farm, ranch

WEDNESDAY. JUNE 13.1979
7: 00- Cross -Wils 3; Newlywed

I GIMAC

.

BY

992-6011

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE

Ohio Valley Roofing : ·
and
Home Maintenance :

ALUMINUM
&amp; VINYL SIDiNG

*

J&amp;L

I KJ

Television
Viewing_
Game 6, 13 ; Porter Wagoner .8;

•New Home
•Add ons
R emoldings
*Free estimates

SUPER

~irl

2~7 - 2192 .

WAGON,

ment area, garden, nice
lot. TRY AND TOP
THIS. $24,000 .00 . .
NEW LISTING 4

TRAILER NOW AVAILABLE .

L•~• ~ "!

V-8. oufo .. 67 ,000 miles . $400.

1976 DODGE ASPEN STATION

district,

Purchase

Mgr.

1962 GA(AXIE 500 original ,
excellent shape, 667-3333
after 5.

very
n ice 3 bdrm . home,
bath, dining room, base School

Real Estate Loans

~ Jack W. Carsey

or 992-3325.
197~ VEGA HAT&lt;:;HSACK, call
303-675· I SOl or 305- 675· 2~88
or 30H7S-1553.

Elementary

2Mites East OfWifkHIIille

9~9- 2~10 .

15. 16.·
Main St ., M~ddleport,

Very good condition. Good
gas milaoge. $1250. 992·2378

F'o,-neroy

Auto&amp; Truck
Repair •
Also Transmlss.l on
Repair
Phone 992-5682
4·30-lfc

Ohio
6U-Uf ·of2.U Evenifltl ·

1~ .

DUSTER .

garage &amp; storage. Home
fully
carpeted
11.
·r e modeled . PRICED·
FOR QUICK SALE,
S2S.OOO.OO.
NEW LISTING

Langsvlll~.

* excellent
R.M.. 125 SUZUKI
bike,
condition,

day and Friday, 8 to 5, fi"'t
trailer on right going north on
33 past the old ReuteT Service
Station . 8 track
tape,
macrame plant hangers, small
boys and lots of men's clothing
and more.

PLYMOUTH

yard.

27l20 Montgomery

Mgr,
"' ·
Phone 992-1181 ·

1978

2 FAMILY YARD SALE Thurs·

1972

level

TRAILER SALES

POMEROY LANDMARK
Gil... _ Jack W. C~rsey

day, Thursday , Frldoy ' end
Saturday . 9 til &lt;4 , Third and
COllege Road •In Syracuse.
Slacks , shirts, ladies dresss ,
Iorge and small , misc.

JUNE 1J and 14, 9 to 4, oft Rt , 7
behind Skate-A-Wtiy. Anti·
ques, Avon bottl,s, trombone,
exercise equipment, ·books,
nic• clothing, misc. Rain or
shine.

fenced

HOBSTETTER REALTY

SHRUBS

SALE, Rock Springs
Roo~ . 3 tra ilers past Meigs
Fair Grounds. Juno •• ·

$2~00 .

161 13, ltc

Housing
. Headquarters

room,

AND

Porch Sole, June ·11 thru 1S,

1969 MUTANG GRANDE. :!02

SHERMAN RAY
FOSTER

or 7~2-2152 .

family

J~ mile off Rt. 7 by-pass
on St. · Rt. 124 toward
Rutland.

ROSE BUSHES

LARGt: 8 FAMILY Yard and

Auto Sales
Not ice is hereby given
that the under.signed in ·
t end s to make application
t o the Common Pleas
Court , Probate Oiv isipn of
Meigs Co unty, Otvic , for an
order ro change h i s name to
Ray Steven Foster .
Sltid appli c at ion will be
by pet ition to be filed in
said Court. on or after the
17th day of July 19 79 .
Da ted this 8th da y of
June 1979.

Remarkably nice inside
with natural gas fur ·
nace, city water and
sewer . 21/2 acres with
lots of trees an·d lonely.
$27,500.
LEAVE YOUR SELL ·

NEW LISTING - Ex·
cellent location in Mid ·
dleport, 1112 story, 3

ON ALL

15, 10 II ~ - B.W. TV . $40. partable stereo. $20, Tandeni , ·
bike, $SO and many 1 other
items, Inc . winter maternity
clothes •. l'g.

NOTICE

for you at 544. 500.
NATIVE STONE

~Hysell
I
G~ge

608 E .
MAIN
o&gt;nMFROY . O.

bdrms.,

Business
Services
.,

20%
DISCOUNT

Thur~dar and Friday , June 14,

.,

business of six rooms
down . Good investment

HARR ISON T.V., 276 Sycamore
St., Middleparl. 992-2522.
WURLITZER PIANO. very good
cond ition , $650.00, m -7537 ,

We-dnesday , Thursday , June
12, 13 and 14, weather permit·
ting ,

257

Lang Botlom pr Bas~am
949-2193 or 985-3Sa6

WQ&lt;&gt;dwork but needs a
little fixing . Just look at
l h~_price of only $12,000 .
S RENTALS - Four 2
bedroom apts. up and a

GOOD
color and black and white,

992-7537, 10 to 8 Tuesday.

June 13.

PAUL ORR

Older home wi t h nice

lNG PROBLEMS WITH
US. TRY DIALING A
DeEeAeL FOR BEST
•
• '"
~ . H ··· &lt;
.• RESULTS.
USED TELEVISIONS,

LOTS OF NEW CLOTHING.

Couple or lady to
do light housekeeping for a retired
man. L:ive ih·. ;contact

bedroom home, bath,
large ~ining, furn ace,
full basement, and n ice

Call anylimo 9~9- 2221.
19~0 CASE TRACTOR. Good
condilion $600 ~. 31 •• .

Something for everyone. First
house on left after you qoss
railroad track at 'CtiesHfre at
· the Mary layne residence,

HELP WANTED

Rt. 33
out of town is this 2

BIG YARD SALE . Dorinda
$25.00.
Nardel , 3M East Main St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio, second house , SANDAL SALE, women's and
girls' $8.88 to$7 .88 . Men's and
above Francis Florist. Friday
Boys sport shoes, beige ,
and Saturday , June 15 and 16,
$12 .99 and $1~.99. BAILEYS
10 to ~ - Lot• of clothing, all
STORE, Middleport.
sizes . Other Items too
numerous to mention. Rain
CUCUMBER AND MELON
cancels.
PLANtS, Cleland Greenhouse,
YARD CLOTHESLINE SALE, loiS ,Recine, Ohio.
ol men's cloth ing In very good
conditiOn. ladies dreSses and •
ot~8i-"' items. Charles Kuhl
retldence , Flatwoods Rd.,
one-half mile off Rt. 7,

YARD

stollen. Cal1742·3117 after 5.

NEW LISTING -

also o pair of end tables ,

Headquarters in Middleport.

in·

sand,

1'771000cc burgundy Sporster
Spec. Drag pipes, king and
queen seats. 2700 miles. Ex·
cellant condition. $2400 firm .

YARD
SALE .
Krowsczyn
residence , 300 Broadway,
Middleport.
Furniture .
clothes. misc. Tues . , Wed.,
Thurs.

BARMAID WANTED. Apply al
CARPET

house . Has hot &amp; cold
water, ·2 car garage,
barn. n ice garden spot
a nd 3 acres._$17,000.

liMESTONE,

and service. Balers in stock for
immediate delivery . Phone

IU. Pomeroy . 992-S.68.

lram 9 til 5. On old Rl. 33 at
end of Ca. Rd. 19 .

EXPERIENCED

MILLFIELD - 8 yr . old
2 bedroom home . bath,
central heat, and full
basement . Lot 160x 160.
. $14.000.
COUNTRY - On St.' Rl .
with a 7 room f ram e

and be independent for
only $23,500.
RACINE - A3 bedroom

992·6173 .
VERMEER BALER Sales . parts

Yard Sale

Help wanted .

.

216 E. Se(and Street

go int9 self employment

TRUCKS, 2 ton 1973 and 111J
ton 1970. Both wifh 12 h .
boxes. Phone 992-6206 or

7~2- 2Sn

~A
R!~-~!{9
·1,. I992~3325

level lot . S23.ooo .
BUSINESS - Want lo

992-3891.

951h birlhdoy the 251h of May.
WE WISH to express our heart·
felt thanks to e~H who in any
way expressed sympathy dur·
ing the Illness .and death of
our loved one, lewis louder·
mill. Special thanks to our
monv friends and neighbors
who were so kind to us.
especially the Ohio University .
Hospifal .and Stoff. Words can not expreu l-low we tru ly appreciate all the kind gestures
made on our be~olf . Lewis
laudermilt Family.

2·

gravel, calcium chloride, fer·
til i:r:er, dog food , and all types
of salt. Excelsior Soh WorkS,
Inc., E. Main St., Pomeroy,

BUYING JUNK cars .and
bodies. Also scrap iron and
metals. Rider's salvage. SR

Emma Findling.

12x60

ousmg
Headquarters

For Sale
COA.L.

992-2689.

· WANT TO buy' old 4S and 78

CHAMPION

bedroom .
Appl•ionces , ·
building. Situated on a nice
rented lot. Phone 992-7235
after 5 p.m .

CHIP WOOD. Poles max .
diameter 10" on largest end.
$12 per ton . Bundled slob. SlO
per ton . Delivered to Ohio
Pollet Co., Rt. 2. Pomeroy.

Friday afternoon

x 70 mob!l8 home.
condition .
$7800 .

992-58S8.
1965 GENERAL 60xi2, 2 bedr .
1970 Sylva. 60xi2, 2 bedr.
1970 Caslle , 60xl2, 2 bedr.

OLD COINS , pocket watches ,
clou rings , wedding bonds,
diamonds. Gold or sil\ler. Call
Roar Wamsley , 7~2 - 2331.

Sunday
4P.M .

1

Good

OLD FURNITURE . ice boxes.
bran beds. iron beds , desks,
etc., complete households .
Wr ite M .D. Mille·r , Rt. 4 ,
Pomeroy or coll992- noo.

MQOday

·

Mobile Homes Sale's

LOST: .MALE Ir ish Setter. Ap·
prox. 2 yrs . old. Area of
Bashon on Bo sh on Rd .
Chi l dren' s pet . Reword .

J

MODERN J Bedroom house,
total elec. Home situ ated on
large lot In Hutchlsons Sub·
Dlvison , 742·2047.

Ph pne

FURNISHED APT. suitable for 3
or 4 construction wor kers .
After Spm call 992-5434

• Wanted to Buy

NOTICE

opts .

992- 54~ .

9~9 - 2&lt;466 .

Mobile Hom~ ~les and Yard
sales are accepted only with
cash wilh order. ZS eent charge
for ads carrying Box Number hi
Care of The Sfntinel.

.... .......

COU NTRY MOBILE Home Pork
Route 33. north of Pomeroy:
large lots. Call ~2 , 7&lt;479 .

THERE WILL be Q, Gospel Con cert, Friday , June 15 ot 7:30
p. m. at the Meigs Juni or High ,
Middleport , featur ing Rev. Ed
Erwin of Harrison , Tenn. and
Ruu and The Gospel Tones of ·
Chesler, Ohio.

the 1 flay rate .

Real Estate for Sale

For Rent

GUN SHOOT, EVERY FRIDAY
7':!0 PM RACINE GUN CLUB.
FACTORY CHOKE GUNS ON·
LV .

Unscramble the~e lour Jumbles,
one lener to each square, to form
·tour ordinary "ffrds.

'

..

..
•

...,
.i

c-

11 : 00- News 3,6,8 . 10. 13 , 1S ; New

......•
.,

Soupy Sales 17: Lowell Thomas
Remembers 33 .
11 :30-Johnny Carson 3,1S ; U.S.
Open Highlights 6,13: ABC News
33: Mash 8: Movie "War Devils"
17; Movie "Advise &amp; Consent'
10.
11 : 45--Siars ky &amp; Hulch 6,13: 12:05McCioud 8; 12 :55--Mannlx 6,11.
1:()()-Tomorrow3; News 15:1 :35-Baseball 17; 2:05--News 13;
4:05--News 17 ; 4:25--12 O'Clock
High 17.

'

.
...
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'.
r

"·,,.

••
.'

�14-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0., Wednesday, June 13. 1979

CourtPOMEROY
ntws
Two defendants were fined and
three others forfeited bonds in the
court of Pomeroy Mayor Clarence
Andrews Tuesday night.
Fined were Ralph Rose, Racine,
$200 and costs on a charge of destruction of property, and Carl Hendricks,
Pomeroy, f30 and costs, left of center.
Forfeiting bonds were Paul Mitchell, Langsville, $50, posted on a
charge of squealing tires and $25, contempt of court; Sally Pierce,
Pomeroy, $50, insecure load, and
Glen Cole, Pomero~, $50, dri ving un·
der suspension.
MIDDLEPORT
Four defendants were fined and a
fifth forfeited a bond in the court of
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
Tuesday night.
Fined were Dennis Smith, 22, Mid·
dleport, $10 and costs, passing in a no
passing zone ; Larry Lewis, 7:1, Middleport, f25 and costs, disorderly
marmer; Billy Lewis, 18, Middleport
f25 and costs, disorderly manne~
charge, and Ronnie Eblin, 19,
Rutland, $13 and costs, speeding.
Forfeiting a $44 bond posted on a
speeding charge was Fisher L. Cristi
20, Ripley, W.Va.
'

Rubber workers
talks resume

By OWEN ULLMANN
AP Labor Writer
WASHINGTON (AP ) - The. United
Rubber Workers and B.F. Goodrich
Co. are resumirrg negotiations with
high e&lt;pectations of fashioning a pat·
tern contra ct agreement for the .tire
industry by Thursday.
While talks remain deadlocked in
the union 's five-week strike against
Uniroyal Inc., bargainers for
Goodrich and the URW reported
progress as they planned to resume
negotiations today with the help of
federa l mediators.
TI1e union and company say that by
Thursday they should either have an
agreement or likely will give up in
failure.
" Both sides are pretty knowledgeable of what the issues are,"
URW President Peter Bommarito
said Tuesday after a half-day
bar gainin g session. "I don't think that
a lot of time ought to be wasted in it
I bargaining) ."
Bommarito said he hoped he could
MEIGS COUNTY
settle
on a new pact with the nation 's
· N.ineteen defendants were fined and
fourth
tire maker within "a
13 others forfeited· bonds in Meigs day or largest
two."
Court Monday.
A new three-year agreement with
Fined by Judge Charles Knight
Goodrich would set a pattern for all
were Albert Martin. RD, Pomeroy,
$10 and costs, stop sign; Stephen B. 55,000 of the URW's members at the
.Halley, Cheshire, Bonnie Dailey, Rt. "Big Four " tire makers, which also
4. Pomeroy; David W. Marcellus, include Uniroyal, Goodyear and Firestone.
Athens, and Jimmie W. Johnson.
About 8,300 workers struck 11
Racine, $15 and costs each, speeding;
Uniroyal plants on May 9 in a dispute
Henry Beaver, Rt.l. Long Bottom, $10 over President Carter's voluntary
and costs, failure to yield; Steve
McGrath. Rutland, two charges of
theft, three days confinement and cost
only on one charge and 10 !Jays con·
finement and costs only on the second
charge; and Henry E. Bahr, Rt. 1,
Long Bottom, $10 and costs, improper
.

anti -in flation wage guidelines .
Workers at the other companies have
stayed on the job under e.densions of
their old .contracts, which expired
April 20.
Uniroyal has pledged w stay within
the 7 percent annual ceiling on wage
and fringe benefit increases proposed
by the president, but Bommarito has
rejected such a settlement.
·
However, the guideline has not been
a major issue thus far in the union's
recept talks with Goodrich because
the company has not ruled out a
settlement with the union that exceeds
the guidelines.
Bommarito contends the URW and
Uniroyal
reached
tentative
agreement in April on economic
terms that would 'liave broken the
guidelines, but that the company
reneged under heavy pressure from
the administration. The company
denies ever reaching a firm or
complete agreement with the union .
Bommarito accuses U!)iroyal of
backing out of the deal after the
administration threatened to stop
buying tires from the firm .
That prompted the URW and other
unions to step up their court challenge
of the guidelines. The union won a key
vicwry on May 31, when a federal
judge ruled that the administration,
la cks authority to deny federal
contracts to guideline violators.
The government, which is appealing
the ruling was scheduled to argue its
case today before the u s Court of
Appeals.
·
· ·

H ealth D. ep artment
li
•

requests po

ba~~i~~·E.

Bass, Syracuse, Leeman
Alltop, Jr., Parkersburg, Keith G.
Aeiker, Sr. , Pomeroy and James S.
The Meigs County Health DepartEakins, Racine, $150 and costs each, ment has received information from
three days confinement, DWI; Dimple the Ohio Department of Health in
L. Eakins, Rt. 2, Racine, $10 and regards to Polio in Amish Comcosts, no muffler ; Thom as K. Roush, munities. The number of confirmed
Rt. I, Minersville $10 and costs no cases of Ohio has now risen to 10 in the
muffler ; Paul J. Grady, Racine,' $15 United States and two in Ontario,
and costs, parkjng on highway; Canada since January I, 1979. The U.
Maxwell Stevens, Rt. I, Reedsville, S. cases occurred in Pennsylvania
$100 and costs, driving under (6), Wisconsili (2), and Iowa (2); of
suspension, $10 and costs. left of these cases, 8 are Amish, I to an· old
center;· Mark Zulinski, Athens, $100 order Mennonite sect, and the
and coSts, two days confinement remaining case was an unvaccinated
permitting unlicensed operator t~ non-Amish person who had close conoperate car; Danny Robson, tact. with an affected Amish Com·
Pomeroy, three days confinement, mwuty.
Tw~nty~e.ven Ohio counties have
costs only, driving under suspension ;
Steven Schnider, Rt. l, Reedsville, $20 been ldentiftCJI as having 00 broadly
and costs, left of center.
defined Amish conununities with a
Fo·rfeiting bonds were Gerald total. Aoush population of apHendrick,s, Minersville, Bryan Shank, proxunately 26,000. To date, no Polio
Pomeroy, Ernest Stephenson, West cases have been identified In Ohio,
Milton James Staebler Athens Gary but travel by Ohio Amish to affected
Bumg~rdner, Parkersburg, Edward areas ~d Amian from affected areas
Curtis, IV, Proctorville, Randall have VISited.
Hornsby, Coolville, and Joseph R.
Holmes, Geauge, Tuscarawas,
Roush, Letart, W. Va ., $35.50 each, Coshocton, Knox, Wayne, Stark and
speeding ; Gary K. Vance, Parker- Trumbull counties conlain about 90
sburg, $37.55, left of center; William . percentofOhlo'sA!nishpopulation.
E. Larkins, Rt. I, Portla nd , $260.50, no
The remaining counties with known
valid operator's license; Daniel E. ~~h resi.dents ar.e.: Ashtabula,
Rairden, Hartford, $3~2 .55 , DWI ; Licking, Vmton, Uruon, Medina,
Timothy E . Davidson , Pom eroy , Guernsey, Gallia, Logan, Ashland,
$300.51), DWI; Violet Satterfield, 'Rt. 1, Perry, Jackson, Hardin, Richland,
Reedsville , $21.35. illeeal boat motor.
Authorized CATALOG
SALES MERCHANT

ISears I
Phone 992-2178
234 E. Main St.

Pomeroy, 0.
OWNED AND OPERATED BY
Jack &amp; Judy Williams

Opeh : Mon . thru Wed. 9-5,'
Thur. 9·12. Fri . 9·S, Sat. 9·2
Satisfaction Guaranteed
or Your Money Back

SPECIAL
10 lb. Bag

KINGSFORD CHARCOAL
&amp; GULF CHARCOAL
FLUID 32 oz.
'2.50

CITY LIMITS
DRIVE THRu
748 N. Second St.
Middleport, 0 .

Middleport police
arrest 37 in May
Thirty -!Ieven arrests were made by
the Middleport Police Department
during the month of May, according
to the monthly report of Police Chief
J. J. Creme8118.
Of the total arrests, eight were
charged with driving while in·
toxicated while seven were on disor·
derly manner charges. There were
three charged with assured clear
distance; two each for speeding;
failing to yield the right of way, im·
proper backing, and conswning
liquor in a motor vehicle on the street.
There was one arrest each for
blocking an alley and gas pwnp-,
passing over a double yellow line,
failure to stop after an accident, running a stop sign, unsafe vehicle,
assault and theft. Two cases were
dismissed.
The department collected $696.50 in
parking meter collections during the
month and the police cruiser was
driven 4,167 miles during the month.

Fobrics
..

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0

vaccmes

Morgan, Adams, Defiance, Morrow,
Washington and Madison.
The Center for Disease Control has
recominended the following "before
traveling to affected . Amish areas,
children should complete their
routine polio vaccionation. Routine
polio immunization for adults in the
United States is not currently recommended, and adult travelers to af.
fected Amish areas who anticipate
short stays and little close personal
contact with the Amish are probably
at minimal Increased risk. However,
uninununized adults who anticipate
prolonged stays or close contact
should Insure that they are protected.
This can be accomplished by receipt
of at least two doses of inactivated
polio virus (IPV) a month apart
before travel or; if IPV is not readily
available, atleast two doses of TOPV,
~ weeks apart. If there is time for
only one dose of vaccine before
travel, a single dose of TOPV should
be given."
Ohio Department. of Health has
requested that Health Departments
vaccinate unimmunized adults who
anticipate prolonged stays or close
contact in Affected areas to
qualifying persons over 18 who
request it. Independent medical
judgment will be made In all instances.
The Meigs County Health Department does have Trivalent Oral Polio
vaccine · available for unimmunlzed
adults who qualify and will be
traveling to affected areas for a
prolonged visit or those who will be
having close personal contact. If you
have a question in regards to needing
the vaccine please call the Meigs
County Health Department or your
private physician.

SQUADS CAlLEn
The Middleport Emergency Squad
8118wered a call to 112 Maple st. at
12:33 p.ni. Tuesday for Wanda Adams
who was taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital. At 7:57p.m. the squad went
to 430 Headley st. for Jeff Acree who
was ill. He was treated on the scene.
The Pomeroy Emergency Squad
answered a call to Sycamore st. in
Middleport at 2:06 p.m. Tuesday for
Clara Hall who had a back problem.
She was taken to Holzer Medical Cen-·
ter.
VETERANS MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL
Adrnitted-Oell LaBonte, Long Bottom; Wanda Adams, Middleport;
Myrth Wolford, Vinton ; Clarence McDaniel, Rutland ; Debra Butcher,
McArthur.
Discharged-Joseph Petti, Mark
Michael, Bessie Stitt.

FOR 4-H PROJECTS
60" SUEDE
45" CORDUROY
60" BOUCLE
56" WOOLS
· 56" WOOL BLENDS
60" GAUSE (Fall Shades)
Singer Memory Machine
Model2001

.sso OFF

4-H'ers RECEIVE 10% OFF

FABRIC SHOP

115 w. 2nd Ave. Pomeroy, 0.

EXTENDED0Ul1l&gt;OK
Friday through Sunday: Chance of
showen~ or thunderstorms dally.
Highs In the 80s and lows in the 60s.

Holzer Medical Center
Dlleharges June lZ
Pamela Allie, Hilda Berringer,
Lewis Bodlmer, Cabel Bolt, Terri
Canterbury, Dwight Carper, Lisa
Clonch, Wllliam Fielder, Charles
Gentry, Llllian · Gladman, Gwen
Green, Mrs. David Haley and ·
daughter, Allen King, E;thel Knotts,
. Amber Lawson, Dianna Leith, Glildys
Massie, Carolyn McFann, Shirley
Mfnton, Thomas . Montgomery,
Raymond Mount, Arnie Murray,
Babes 0 'Dell, Anna Oiler, Callie
Roberts, Buff Scott, ·sr., Edith Swan·
,son, James Tyree, MaryVavora.
·
Births, Juue 1.2
Mr. and Mrs. Patil Rapp, daughter,
Pomeroy. ·

Bill pending
Continued from Page I
poor. ·
Currently, Ohioans 65 and over and
the disabled, with incomes of $7,420or
less. receive state-paid, 25 percent
discounts on winter heating bills.
These would continue, although the
income. Iunit would be hiked w $10,000
a year under one of several program
changes the bill contains. Certain
type's of welfare families also would
qualify for benefits for t.he first time.
Rep. Dennis E. Eckart, D-Euclid , is
the sponsor of the measure, which
now goes to the Senate .
Sen. Thomas E. Carney, _, D·
Youngstown , who offered the measure
requiring prior notice of nuclear
shipm ents, didn't mention the
accident at the Three· Mile Island
plant in Pennsylvania last March.
But the incident obviously helped
inspire the bill, which w~s introduced
only last month, along with others still
pending to deal with nuclear wastes
and related problems.
"Safety is the important factor
here," Carney said, adding he thinks
his bill enable officials to deal more
quickly with problems that could
occur.
.
Under
h1s
bill,
would-be
transporters of . nuclear . matertals
would have w not1fy the 0~10 Disaster
Sef\'lces Agency of the!f plans 48
hours m advance and m wr1hng .
The agency then would advise the
directors of highway safety and
environmental protection , the
chairman of the public .utilities
commission, and sheriffs of all
counties through which the materials
would pass.
In other action, the Senate approved
31-2 a bill making changes in
contributory negligence, or so-&lt;!alled
''tort" laws. '
It went to the House, along with a
bill by Sen. Anthony 0 . Calabrese, !).
Cleveland, requiring Ohio's insurance
companies to adopt more easily
understood language for customers'
policies within 'three years.
With some lawmakers apparently
smarting from criticism they
received late last year when they
voted themselves a $5,00!J.a-year pay
raise, the Senate received a bill
offering an alternative approach.
Sen . M. Morris Jackson, DCieveland, would have the salaries of
legislators, state officials and judges
set by an impartial commission.
The coml}.ljssion apparently would
resemble a similar group the
legislature created several years for
the same purpose.
Its recommendations largely were
ignored by the legislature. Jackson's
new bill provides that lawmakers
could reject any comm1ss1on
recommendations they didn't like.

BOOKMOBILE THURSDAY
Thursday's schedule for the Meigs
Bookmobile includes :
Salisbury; 2:15-2:45 p.m.; Letart,
3:15-3:45; Racine, Home National
Bank, 4-5; Racine, Wagner's Hard·
ware, ~ ; Syracuse, swimming pool,
6:1~:15.

SUIT FILED
In Meigs County Common Pleas&gt;
Court Catherine Althouse and Elmer
Althouse, Okeechobee, Fla., flied suit
for restitution against Ida Martin,
Langsville.
The suit is for instatiments due on
property located in Scipio Township.

•
EBLIN REUNION SUNDAY
The annual Eblin Family Reunion
will be held Sunday at the shelter
house at Royal Oak Park. Those attending are to take covered dishes
and their own table service. Dinner
will be served at 1 p.m.
4-H TO HOLD SALE
The Irish Leprechauns 4-H Club will
hold a rummage sale at the Minnie
Riggs residence from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Friday. The sale location is on State
Route 124, two miles west of
Langsville. The sale is· cancelled iii
case of rain.

Quilt entries taken now
A quilt show will again be a feature
of the annual Big Bend Regatta
Weekend.
Categories for the show, sporuiored
by Trinity Church, Pomeroy, will Include : new applique, old applique,
new pieced, old pieced and
miscellaneous machine quilted.
First place · winners in each
category will receive a $10 gift certifiate from a local store and a ribbon.
Second and third place winners in
each category will rceive ribbons.
Quilts will be judged by number ar.1
will be on exhibit Friday and Saturday, June 22 and 23, at Trinity
Church.
·
Those wishing to take part are to
complete the application below:

Money distribUtion to
schools constitutional

QUILT'SHOW
CATEGORIES:
(I) New Applique
(2) Old Applique
(3) New Pieced
(4) Old Pieced
(5) Mil!cellaneous-Machine Qullted
Entry fee: One Dollar ($1)
Category: ----~-Name - - - - - ---:-Address - - - -- - - ' - Pbone _ _ __ _~--'

Return this form to: Mrs. Dale Smith,
Contest Chairman, 100 . Sprifig
Avenue, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
·

Board elects new officers
The Board of Directors of the
Gallia...Jackson-Meigs Community
Mental Health Center, Inc., today announced the election of officers for the
comjng year. They are:
John Longley, chairperson; Leah
Ord, vice-chairperson and Darnll
Detty, secretary-treasurer.
In addition, the board announced
three new appointed members: John
L. Weber, Editor of the Wellston Sentry ; Dr. Edward Shridan, Opthalmologist at Holzer Medical
Center Clinic and Emil Janko, Fiscal
Administrator, Holzer Medical
Center. The bylaws of the center require a board of no more than 15

members with five mempers
representing each county elected for
two year tenns.
:'
Members of the board are: GalJ.Ill
County- Herman KQby, Ph.D., Johjl
Longley, Edward Sheridan, M.D._Bil8
Emil Janko; Jackson County - Dill'~
rell Detty, Larry Kibler, Churlen~
Howard, Roxie UncJerwood and Jofu;t
L. Weber; Meigs County - ~·
William Middleswarth, Maxine
Wingett,JuneLeeandLeahOrd. :,
The officers for last year whose
terms have expired were Hennap
Koby, chairperson; Leah Ord, vicl!·
chairperson and Roxie Underwood,
secretary-treasurer.
·

Mrs. Huston will display

her wares Heritage Sunday
Mrs. Paul Huston, Syracuse, whose
talents in the field of .crafts are well
known and whose work Is sold by
shops in many parts of the state, will
be one of several people featured at
the Meigs County Museum on
Heritage Sunday, June 24 from 12 to 5.
Mrs. Huston will have on display
many of ber crafts which will include
plaster work, bottle dolls, bam-siding
plaques, dtied arrangements, domed.
glass art, raffia dolls and wreathes,

and silk flower arrangements. She
will also be giving a demonstration
during the afternoon of raffia doll
making.
.
Bill Mayer, a well known local artist, will also be on hand with a dlslay
of his wood carvings and will
emonstrate to would-be carvers just
how it is done.
: ;
The museum will be open 12 noon to
5 p.m. and will offer .a variety: of
entertainment for the entire family. ·

HILLHOSPITALPATIENT
W,elsh heritage to be
Allen C. Hill, Sr., formerly of Beech.
st., Pomeroy, is a patient at
• d
S
d
·, ·
Hamilton -Hughes Hospital,
reVIVe OD atur ay .
Hamilton, Ohio 45013. Hill •recently
.,
underwent open heart surgery. Cards
Welsh heritage will be reviv.~
may be sent to Room 307.
through song saturday, June 16, ·at
the Welsh Gymanta Ganu to be oold•
lETART MEN CONFINED TO at the Bob Ev8118 Fattn oo State'
HOSPITAUi
Route 35, just east of Rio Grande. ',
The Gymanta Ganu iB a sacred
Walter McDade, Troy, Ohio and music festival, held annually in Welab•
Harold Grimm, Columbus, bOth for· communities. .()riginally, the GymanJ
merly of Letart Fails are confined to fa Ganu was held to bring the com:
hospitals.
munity together to share music and.
Mr. McDade Is a surgical heart· singing. Hymns are sung in part, wt~
patient at Kettering Medical Center, everyone In attendance participating, /
3535 Southern Blvd., Dayton 45729. Most of the singing Ia done In EnglJSh,'.
His room nuinber his 245 bed two.
but there are a few choruses in Welsh.:,
Mr. Grimm is at Riverside
The Saturday evenJns program:;
Methodist Hospital room 5013, Colum- begins at 7, p.m. and is sponsored by•
bus, Ohio.
the Cardiff Club, a Welsh women•sl
group dedicated to preserving Welsh~
tradition and culture.
·:
Although similar Gymanfa Ganus '
DISSOWTION ~XED
· have been held for Ye&amp;rl, and con-•
Ray c. Frank, Racine, and Denise tinue In various locatior-~. this iB thei
Rachelle Frank, Racine, filed for seconil to be beld at the Bob Evansl
dissolution
of
mar.riage . Farmmsoutheastohio. ,
·' •

ELBERFELDS
Father'S Day Sale

MEN'S SHIRTS
'

All of our men's shirts on sale -.

Knits ·

Westerns · Dress ·Shirts ond Sport Shirts.

There's lin excellent selection and you 'll real ·
ly save during this Special Sa te. AH sizes.

",.
'
I

MAKE REPAIRS - Pomeroy village workers were extremely busy
Wednesday as they patched the many large potholes in the surface of the
parking lot. The workers also retrieved this parking meter that vandals
. had thrown onto the river bank.

MEN'S DRESS SLACKS
Men's Dress Stacks - Ideal Father's Day
Gift. Sizes 29 to 48 waist - solid colors and

patterns. The Savings are Great .

FATHER'S DAY IS NEXT SUNDAY

ELBERFLEDS IN POMEROY

•

e
VOL. XXVIII NO. 43

at

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

•

UNTIL 5 P.M.

SATURDAY-JUNE 16th "
FOR

"SUMMER
OUTING"
OF .
•
LARGE INDUSTRIAL CONCERN
OPEN TO PUBLIC AnER 5 PM

CAMDEN PARK

US 60 WEST-HUNTINGTON

. MONDAY EXCEPT

urban school districts which claimed
to be "starved for funds " offer
progranns and services in excess of
state minimum standards.
"The fact that a better financing
system could be devised which would
be more efficient or more thorough is
not material," the court said.
The lawsuit was Initiated Aprtl 5,
1976. Hamilton County Corrunon Pleas
Judge Paul E. Riley ruled eight months later that the funding formula
enacted by the Legislature in 1975 was
unconstitutional on two grounds.
The ruling that the formula fails to
provide a thorough and efficient
school system was overturned by the
appeals court in September. But the .
court upheld Riley 's ruling that the
formula was unconstitutional because
it discriminates against pupils in urban districts .

............enttne
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

THURSDAY, JUNE 14, 1979

By FRANK CORMIER
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP ) + Presi&lt;!ent
Carter headed for Vienna t..:ay,
saying he is approaching his first
summit with Soviet President Leonid
I. Brezhnev "with hope but without
false expectations."
In a statement prepared for
delivery on his departure, the
president said his main goal at the
summit and the "unchanging duty of
every president" is to avoid nuclear
war while maintaining U.S. security.
Carter left with m~est goals for

the summit, where the two leaders
will sign a treaty to limit U.S. and
Soviet strategic nuclear weapons.
He said the treaty "gives us enhanced national security and increased
hope for a peacefUl future ."
While conceding that no summit
can end the "sharp competition" bel·
ween the two superpowers, Carter
said he will try to "broaden our communications with the Soviet leadership" as well as make clear U.S.
views "so that there can be no
dangerous misunderstandings as we
pursue our separate courses."

Butcher guilty

Prosecutor
.
gets 90 days
CLEVELAND (AP ) - An
assistant Cuyahoga County
prosecutor was sentenced to 90
days in jail for his behavior n a
trial that ended Wednesday with
the dismissal of murder charges
against three Chicago men . .
Cuyahoga Common Plas Judge
James A. McGettrick dismissed
murder indictments against
three security guards accused in
the Jan. 30, 1978, fatal shooting of
Thomas Moss Jr. , a striking employee of the Barbar Metal
Fabricating Co.
Shortly after announcing his
decision, McGettrick found John
H. Carlin, an assistant county
prosecutor, in contempt of court
for his behavior during the month-tong trial. Carlin .was lined
$1,000 and sentenced to 90 says in
jail, but was quickly released on
$100 personal bond pending appeal.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Representatives have approved
and sent to the Senate legislation
giving senior citizens free ad·
mission to the Ohio State F~ir in
August.
The measure, passed 79-11 and
sent to the Senate on Wednsday is
sponsored by Rep. Rocco J .
Colonna; D-Brook Park. ·
It would apply to anyone' 65
years of age or older.

Mter deliberating two and one-haU
hours a jury found Harry Roger Butcher gulity of receiveilig, retaining o:
disposing of certain property, being a
deputy sheriff badge, the property of
ailother, David Ohlinger.
. But~her was remanded to the
custody of the sheriff until sentence is
imposed on July 2.
Prosecutor Frederick W. Crow, lll,
represnted the State of Ohio and Jim
0 'Brien represented Butcher.
Serving on the jury were Shirley
Johnson, foreman, Bernice Winebrenner, Clarence Lambert, George
White, Thomas Stobart, Barbara
Lester, Pam Holcomb, Dorothy Johnson, Etta Will, Paul Harris, Vonda
Cottrell, Mildred Shuler and Delton
Fowler, alterante.

High pressure system
pushes warm air away
By The Associated Press
A high pressure system over the
Atlantic Coast was pushing warm air
froin the Central Plains inw Ohio
wday. That system is expected to
prevent any significant cloud
development for the next couple of
dsys.
High temperatures are expected to
be in the 80s today and in the 80s and
90s on Friday. Overnight lows will be
in the 50s and 60s.
Precipitation does not appear likely
until the weekend. A cold front in the
Northern Plains is pusing southward.
It could reach Ohio with showers and
thuhderswnns by late Saturday.

"I go to Vienna with the confidence
which can only come from representing the greatest, the strongest and
the most free society in the world, "
Carter declared.
Although surprises cannot be ruled
out, the principal purpose of the summit remains the signing of SALT 11.
But aides say Carter will be"looking
beyond . Vienna with the hope of
promoting a continuing U.S.-Soviet
djalogue aimed at smoothing ''the
peaks and valleys" in relations between the superpowers.
In addition, the U.S. president can
be expected to attempt a firsthand appraisal of Konstantin Chernenko, the
Politburo official some see as having
tbe inside track: to eventually succeed
the ailing Brezhnev.
U.S. officials sprang something of a
surprise earlier this week by
revealing they expect Chernenko to
participate in the summit, the first
between u:s. and Soviet leaders In 4t
years.
Mrs . Carter and daughter Amy are
making the trip and will have their
own schedule, including a Danube
River cruise.
At a news conference Wednesday,
Secretary of State Cyrus R. Vance,
who will accompany ~rter,
dcelared, "We must move away from
tbe peaks and valleys, the ups and
downs we have seen, to a more stable
relationship."
Vance alao told reporters Carter
will stress to Brezhnev that "detente
is a two-way street and that we must
bqth recognize it as such. "
The · strategic arms limitation
treaty, which will face an uncertain
fate when Carter seeks its ratification
by the Senate, is the focal point of the
three-day summit thai. begins Saturday. The pact would impose constraints until 1985 on U.S. and Soviet
long-range bombers and in·
tercontlnental ballistic missiles.
Carter scheduled an address to a
joint session of Congress Monday at 9
p.m. EDT, one hour after he returns
from the summit.
It appears unlikely Carter and
Brezhnev will produce any signed
documents other than those relating
to SALT II.
However, the two leaders could
reach a nwnber of informal un·
derstandings to improve relations.
"Hopefully, out of this can come a
better understanding of the views a11d
(Continued on page 12)

PAVING UNDERWAY - Patching and paving of
streets in the village of Syracuse got underway Wed·
nesday. All streets in the village that have potholes will

CINCINNATI (AP) - Mem·
bers of the black community
have put City Council on notice
that they will not accept a decisin
to give police increased
firepower ~nc; improved , ammunition.
Some 700 persons inarc)led to
the council meeting Wednsday
and demanded a reversal of last
week's decision to provide pollee
with .357-atliber Magnum handguns and "controlled expansion" bullets.
Council members several
times In the last month have had
to i~cxe large, angry crowds expressing their views on police. •
cominunity relations.

be paved or patched. York Constructln is doing the
work. George Holman, treasurer of the village, Is
supervising /be job.

Sheriff investigates cycle
accident, battery thefts
Meigs County Sheriff James J.
Proffitt reports that his department
investigated an accident Wednesday
at 5:30p.m. in the village of Racine.
According to the report David L.
Diles, 17, Rt. 2, Racine, was operating
a mororcycle when he struck the side
of a vechicle operated by Earlene
Stobart, Racine.
The gas feed apparently stuck on
the cycle and caused the cycle to leap
out into the side of the auto. No
citations were issued. Diles compatined of an injury to his leg but was
not treated.
A motorcycle reported 'stolen Sunday was recovered Tuesday in Car·
penter near the Louise Bradford
residence. The motQrcycle was owned
by Chris Pullins, Carpenter. The incident Is under investigation.
The sheriff's department is in-

Blacks march

PARK RESERVED

within a school district to determine
how much money they are willing to
devote to education, local control
allows for local participation in the
decision-making process that determines how these local tax dollars will
be spent. Each school district can
develop programs to meet perceived
local needs."
.
Concerning the "thorough and efficient" argument raised by the
board, the court said :
"Although plaintiffs attempt to
equate school closings with
'educational deprivation,' the uncontroverted fact is that school
districts • calendar adjustments
(school closings) have never resulted
in any student receiving less than the
full182 days of instruction per year as
required (by state law )."
The justices also noted that several

Carter heads for Vienna
with hope for SALT II

Seniors free
SALE PRICES

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The for- system violates both the Equal
mula under which the sta te Protection and the Benefit Clause ...
distributes money to public school of the Ohio Constitution."
districts has been declared conThe case was filed by the Cincinnati
stitutional by the Ohio Supreme Board of Education.
Court:
.
.
Justice William Brown wrote for
The state's top court ruled 6-1 Wed- the majority, saying: "We find ... that
nesday that the embattled formula the General Assembly has not so
known as the equal yield formula - abused its broad discretion in enacdoes not violate the equal protection ting the present system of financing
provision of the Ohio Constitution. public education as to render the
The deeisio~ reverses a ruling by the s tatut es in question un 1st District State Court of Appeals.
constitutional." ,
The Supreme Court also said the
Concerning the claim that the equal
funding system, while not necessarily y ield formula violates the conthe best one available, does not stitution's equal protection provision,
violate the "thorough and efficient" the justices said :.
provision of the Constitution . In that
"We conclude that local control
ruling, the high court was agreeing provides a rational basis supporting
with the lower appellate court.
the disparity in per pupil exJustice Ralph S. Locher dissented, penditures in Ohio's school districts.
saying, "In my view, the present
"In addition to allowing people

vestigating the t~Wft of batteries
taken from school bWteS parked at !be
bus garage.at Rutland. The theft oc-

Measured-rate .Phone
service under fire
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
initial salvos have been fired in a
renewed fight in the Legislature over
measured-rate telephone service.
Under the so-called measured
rates, customers are provided service
at a base rate and permitted to make
a fiat number of local calls each month + 30 in the case of residences and
oo for businesses.
.,
Alter the maximum is reached, the
customer pays 9 cents for each ad·
ditional call made during the same
monthly billlng period.
Sen. Harry Meshel , !).Youngstown,
received the first hearing Wednesday
night in the Senate Energy and Public
Utilities Conunittee on a revamped
measilred-rate bill.
Unlike last year when he wanted to
prohibit measured rates entirely,
Meshel now seeks only to outlaw their
being made mandatory for state and
local governments and noniJrofit
organizations such as hospitals and
libraries.
His bill has one other Important
provision. It prohibits the Public
Utilities Commission from letting
telephone companies collect business

Strikes Tree
DEDICATED - The Shriners of Ohio are
dedicated people. Each year they set aside a day to
solicit for donations to help crippled and burned
children. On saturday, June 16, Shriner5 throughout
the Buckeye State will distribute tabloid ne~papers In
a giant, one-day effort to once again tell the public
about .the Shriners Hospitals for Crippled and Burned
Children, to tell how to get childreh admitted to these
hospitals if the need occurs, and to collect donations for

hospital funds . The Twin City Shrine Club of Meigs
County will be taking part in the annual drive. They
will be on the streets of Pomeroy, Middleport and
Racine seeking donations. Pictured left to right are
Lorenzo Davis, Sherman Ford, Paul Eich, Sheriff
James J. Proffitt, Walter Grueser and Eldon Kraeuter.
Be sure and look. for the man with the fe1; on Saturday, .'
June 16.

curred sometime between Friday,
June 8 and Tuesday, June 12. Batteriesweretakenfromfivebuses.

Pomeroy Police Investigated an accident on Union Ave. at 11 :54 p.m.
Wednesday. Pollee said an eastbound
car driven by· Kenneth McFann, 46,
Albany, went to the left and struck a
tree . McFann escaped Injury and
there were medium damages to his
vehicle . . He was cited on a reckless
~peration charge.

"

rates in excess of the actual cost of
providing business service.
Ohio Bell Telephone Co., which opposes the Meshel legislation
generally, is expected to bitterly oppose the actual-&lt;!ost provision later
when Its representatives testify.
In the case of government unlta,
Meshel estimated that for state
governmeht in the Columbua area
al'one, telephone costs have increased
about $250,000 a year since meuured
rates were made mandatory for all
non-residential users.
The senator said the estimate
doesn't include Ohio State University,
which may · have experienced a
similar ilicrease.
He said that since the costs of
governments are paid by the taxpayers, the sharp increases amount
to what he called "side door ·
taxation ."
The senator said he has received
mail from Ohio's senior citlzena who
have been told by some phone companies that if his bill · prohibiting
measured rates were to pass, their
rates would be doubled.
Mesht:J said be dldn 't know how the
companies could make such a claim,
since the seniors • bills were not cut In
half when mandatory measured rates
were fully Implemented in July 1978,
(Continued on page 12) .
BASEBAU. MEETING
The Syracuae-Mlnersville Baseball
Association will hold a ~ling
tonight at 7:00 at the SyraCUR
Muni~lpal Suldlng. All Interested
parents, coaches, and fal)S are urged
to attend.
•\

I

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