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VOL XXVIII

NO. 51

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at

POM EROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

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enttne
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"(__) ·

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Street repair
given $8,000

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. JUNIOR DMSION were Aaron Young, Gallipolis,
~~place and Joluiny Moody of Akron, second place.
First place wumer received $100 and second place $50.

•

Pictured, front, 1-r, Aaron Young and Joluiny Moody·
back, Bill Young, grand croaker and Dave Jenkins. '

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WINNERS IN THE SENIOR DMsiON of the annl!lll f~g jump were Bay Painter, Athens, first place
With a J.ump of 13 feet and nine and three quarters inches, Rtchard Akers, Dayton, second place in the jump

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BY BOB HOEFLICH
Federal Revenue Sharing Funds for
1980, totaling" about $14,000, were
allocated when Middleport Village
Council met in regular session
Monday night.
Council agreed to set aside $8,000 for
a new street.department truck; $1,000
for an energy saving program at the
village garage and $5,000 on a project
to provide lights in some areas of the
Middleport Community Park.
The village has made application
for a grant for the energy saVing
program garage and wUI make an
application for outdoor recreation
funds to provide lights at the
Middleport Park. The allocations set
aside from Federal Revenue Sharing
Funds wUI provide the local share
needed-W percent of the projectshould the grant applications ·be
approved.
Clerk-Treasurer Gene Grate read a
letter from the Consumers Council
announcing a two day workshop at
Ohio State University on June 29-30,
the workshop being designed to
instruct those attending on actions to
be taken about high utulty rates.
Lawrence Manley appe11red before
colindl to complain about mosquitoes
which are coming from unmowed lots
in the Sycamore St. area. Mayor Fred
Hoffman said other complaints have
been received and he advised that the
property olvners will be
told
something must be done.
Council, through emergency
measures, . passed legislation
providing financing for the purchase
of a new fire engine. Funds for the
purchase wUl come from a one mill

and first in SpeCial events, Ivan Faske, Athens, third
plaa; and Danny Grueser, Pomeroy, second place in
spec~! events. Ftrst place winner in the frog jump .
rece~ved $150, second, $75 and third, $25. Winners in the
spectal events received trophies.

Letters ol opinion are welcomed. They should be less
than 300 words long (or subject to reduction by the editor )
and must he signed with the signee's address. Names may
be withheld upon publi!;ation. However, on request,
names will be disclosed . Letters should be in good taste,
addressing issues, not personalities.

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Important decision
The Meigs Local school board is once again faced with an important
decision which wUl greatly affect the
school system during the next several
years.
·
The selection of a sUperintendent is
certainly, an important decision and
should be given much serious consideration by the board.
As a concerned parent, I woUld like
to urge the board to give consideration to applicants who are
qualified and are presently living in
Meigs County.
It is only reasonable to assume that
a qualified person who is already
familiar with the .school system and

1HE AGONY OF DEFEAT- UtIle Kim Akers, In the junior dlvlslim
of the frog jump, was unhappy about
the whole tblng. Sbe didn't seem a
bit Interested 1D jumping ber frog,
"Digem."

Recital held ·
FRIGIDAIRE
AIR CONDITIONERS
KEEP YOU

·COOL I
.~,. ............
.

SEE US

BAKER FURNITIJRE
Middleport, 0.

Piano students of ~. Ernest
Whitehead, Reedsville, presented a
recital at her home Tuesday evening.
Perfonntng solos and duets before
their invited guests were Caralyn and
Maralyn Barton, Amy CoMolly, Amy
and Beth Berkhimer, Aleshia Holsinger, Deleah and Deedrah Sanders
Angie Collins and Melissa Scar:
brough .. Kay Balderson and Susan
Hannum, former students of Mrs
Whitehead, who are now studying
with CoMie Morris, Parkersburg, w.
Va., were guest performers.
Following the program,
refreshments were served to the participants and their guests, Mr. arid
Mrs. Richard Barton and·Kevin, Mr.
and Mrs. WArren CoMolly and Tina
Mrs. Jenny Berkhimer, Mr. and Mrs:
Robert Sanders and Jonathan, Mrs.
Harold BraMon, Mrs. Virgil Holsinger, Mrs. Larry Collins, Mrs. Francis Andrews, Mrs . .Lelis Scarbrough
Mrs. Florence Wyers, . Mrs. Lyi~
Balderson, Mrs. Gladys Williams
Mrs. Roy Hannum, Ernest Whitehead
and Juli.

Quick,
like an
bunny...

residents of the area could do a much
more efficient job.
.
I would ask that you contact members of the school board and make
your wishes known to them .
It was stated by one board member
at the last meeting that public opinion
would not be considered in the
decision of selecting a new superintendent. I feel that the elected board
members should consider the wishes
of the residents of the district and
should make a decision which wUl be
in the best interests of providing
quality educatwn for students of the
disirict.
The selection of a superintendent
will greatly affect the educational opportunities of our children. Once the
selection is made, nothing can be
done. That is why I feel that board
members should be made aware that
parents are concerned that the best
applicant for the position is hired.
The board will meet on Thursday
June 28 at Meigs Junior ~gh Schooi
at 7:30 p.m. It would urge all interested parents to not only contact
board members but to also be in attendance at this meeting to voice
their opinions.
The .selection of a local qualified
person who is familiar with the
system and is interested in residents
of Meigs County should certainly be a
benefit to our district. - Mr. and Mrs.
Warren L. Perrine.

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EVER FAITIJFUL Dan Smith, right, was on hand
as usualalll!ouncing the annual Frog Jump and derby.

HOSPITAL NEWS
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
Saturday Adm issions- Lavinia
Simpson, Racine; Thomas Drake
Pomeroy.
'
Saturday Discharges--Edward
Shepherd, Shirley Morris, Lucretia
Werry.
Sunday Admissions--sarah Bush
Letart, W. Va.; Florence Hannay'
Middleportr ; Judith Bacon, Pomero/
Sunday Discharges-Alice Dawson.

With Smith Is John Arnott who kept
ps In senior division.

records ri all jum-

. Dr. Timothy B. Moritz, deparbnent
Associated Press Writer
ctirector, said the rehired employees
COLUMBUS, Ohio ( AP) · - Talks will not be penalized for their actions
were to resume today between the He said there was insufficient
state mental hea~th deparbnent and evidence to warrant their dismissal.
three unions, but the head of one
Moritz added, however, that notices
group says all fired workers must be of terminations are expected to
rehired before a new contract can be remain in effect for a few hundred
discussed.
.
other employees untll the deparbnent
The negotiations were ordered by has time for a more thorough review
Franklin County Common Pleas of evidence or the completion of
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Judge William T. Gillie. He acted appeal proceedings.
Dlatharges, June 22
after members of the American
Brindza
countered
"They
LesterA&lt;&amp;Jns, James Bentley, Jr., Federation of State, County _.and . (department officials) h~ven't gone
Jerry Bradley, Leonard Book, Carroll Muntct.pal Employees struck factlities far enough by reducing the amount"
Burnette, Jr., Louise Burcham Don- of the Ohio Department of Mental of those dismissed. He tenned the
na Gilkey, Mildred Gregory 'Ethel Health and Mental Retardation on firings
"indiscriminate
and
MEETS WEDENSDAY
Harper, Marilyn Herrell, Charles Wednesday.
selective," and said they were done in
The Long Bottom Community Hysell, ~rothy KU!m, Shirley Lilley,
The department announced Sunday a "very arbitrary and capricious
Association will meet Wednesday, Bobby Miller, Edith Nash Verdie that several hundred employees fired manner."
June 27, at 8 p.m. at the community Penix, Barry Porter, Carl" 'Ratcliff as a result of the one-day strike would
He said some of the employees fired
building.
Frances Riegel, Edith Thomas Tarn: be reinstated.
·
were not scheduled to work
my Triplett, Mevena Towbridge
But Robert A. BrindZ!I, executive Wednesday, and others who did take
"fUESDA Y SESSION SET
Alvin Waggoner, Edan Wills Sarah director of AFSCME Ohto Council 8, part in the job ·action returned to work
'
~ld Sunday mgbt that he expected to without any difficulty.
Harrisonville Senior Citizens will Wooten, Linda Yates.
meet Tuesday at 6 p.m. at the town
Blrtbs, June%%
c ontmue to pursue the balance of
" It was a partial step to cleanse
hall. Persons are to bring a covered
Mrs. Jerry Smith, son, Bidwell; Mr. ftrmgs that are before us" at the talks their hands about the innocent ones"
dish and own table service. Birthdays and Mrs. Russ Elliott, son, Gillllpolis; today.
before today 's talks Brindza said
will be observed.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Kay, daughter
"We're notgoingto be talking about
The department' is offering ·to
Southside, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs: a new contract until all the employees rehire, subject to conditions of the
GARDEN CLUB MEETING
Mark Hatten, son, Wellston.
are·back to work," he said. "At that Ferguson Act, all employees who
The Rutland Garden Club will meet
Discharges, June 23
point, there better not be one person have not been involved in violent acts
this evenirig at7 :30 p.m. at the home
Loretta Bates, Mrs . Bernard Bays · left ~ut on the street."
.or threats to persons or property
of Mrs. Judy Titus. Mrs. Virgil Atkins and son, Dorothy Clonch, Ralph
Brmdza said about 7 ,~ members Moritz said. He did not offer specifi~
will serve as e&lt;Htostess.
Coburn, Rodney Cook, Clifford of~~~ .uruon stayed off thetr jobs at 29 figures listing how many workers
The group plans to visit the Adena Cuckler, Finley Davis Virginia facthttes. They were protesting the would be rehired.
at Chillicothe on Wednesday, June 27. Drwnmond Edison ~ Beverly deparbnent's unwtllingness to begin
Those who plan to go are to meet at · Harper,~. WUlilpn Harris and son, contract ~egotiations with 'it and two
Today's bi~thdays: Broadway
the Rutland Methodist Church at 9 Brent Herdman, .Sarah Jerrell, other unwns, the_ Communi~ations P:oducer Geoge Abbott is
F"im·
a.m.
Elanore Keels, Susan Kelly, Charles ~o~kers ?f Amertca and the Ohio ctirector Sidney. Lumet is 5590S~
Martin, Emma McGhee Lawrence Ctvil Serv1ce Employees Association. and ~ngwriter Carly Slmo~ is 34r
McManis, Carry Montgo~ery Isabel
The department dismissed 1,381 Architect Robert Venturi is 54
.
ASK TOWED
Mullett, James Nelson, An~ Par- employees under provisions of the . !'J?Ught for today: Women f;..give
Marriage licenses were issued to son, Gladys Riley, Mrs. Terry Rucker sta_te's Fergu"-?n Act·, which bars
tn]urtes, but never forget slights _
Mike Beliveau, 24, Montreal, canada, and ·son, Velma Russell, Bradley slrtkes by pubhf employees.
Thomas
Haliburton Canadian jurist
and Linda Young, 19, Racine ; Robert Saunders, David Scott, Pearl
1796-1865.
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Daniel Pennell, Jr., 19, Pennsylvanla, Seymours, Bethany Shafer, Nicholas
and Julia Ann Smith, 17, Racine. Smith, James Snyder, Jr.
Births, June Z3
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Musick, son,
Jackson; Mr. and-Mrs. Jon Onnsby
dB:ughter, Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs:
Michael Rouse, son, Jackson.
Discharges, June 24
Crystal Brandeau, Ryan Brickles, .
Thomas Broyles, Deborah Buck, Raymond Canter, James Case, Jason
Conley, Nora Cross, Vicky Elliott
Randy Foz, Carl Hall, Jeffrey Hash:
Frances Johnson, Sylvia Mooney,
Marcella Phlllips, Willi8111' Pierson
Mrs. William Redman III and
daughter, Mrs. Danny Robinson and
son, Flossie Russell, Ethel Sayre
MaryWiUis.
· '
Births, June 24
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Taborn son
Hamden ; Mi-. and Mrs. Richard Me:
11
Carty and son, Gallipolis; Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Winebrenner and son
Syracuse.
'

ELBERFELD$

SALE! KODAK HANDLE CAMERA

Your
money

MULTIPLIES!
Hop to it! The sooner you open one of our high interest
earning savings ac.counts, the sooner you'll begin to
see those dol~ar signs! With daily computing, your in terest earns mterest ... and th at means money in the
ban!&lt; ... for you! Get the facts
1
.

.

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Farrtters Bank
POMEROY, OHIO
$40.000 Maximum Insurance For Each Depos~or
.Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporat~n

t

.

Talks resume today
By LINDA WEINSTEIN

REGUlAR PRICE '34

SALE

SQUAD CALLED
The Pomeroy Emergency Squad
answered a call to Monkey Run at 7:58
a.m . Monday for Gertrude Bass who
was taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital. at. 2: 16 a.m. Monday the
un1t was to West. Main St. for Oian
Price who was having difficulty
breathin g. He was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospit~ l.

$27~

Just 4 To Sell - Easy to hold, easy to use
design- bright clear instant pictures in color.

CAMERA DEPT. 1ST FLOOR

.ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

TUC:SDAY, )ijNE- 26, 1979 '

REGA'ITA RACES- Many race fans turned out for the 15th aMual
boat race Sundny during the Big Bend Regatta despite the extremely cold

~ay

weather. Race act.ion was fast and close all day. Racine w'as fairly safe.
There_were few nunor accidents, and only one major one, with no one betog tmured.

consumer prices up 1.1 percent

WASHINGTON ( AP) - Continued
rapid increases in the price of
gasolin~ and other petroleum
products helped push consumer prices
up 1.1 percent in May, the fourth
straight monthly increase of I percent
or more, the government said today.
Still, there was some moderation in
food prices, which rose 0.7 percent
last month. This led Labor
Department economist Patrick
Jackman to suggest that "the food
situation, for the long run, is starting
to look better."
Prices have been going up about 1
percent a month since the start of the
year. A 0.9 percent rise in January
was followed bv increases of 1.2

percent in February, 1 percent in
March and U percent in April.
II consumer prices continue to rise
for the next seven months at ~e same
pace as the last five, the aMuai
inflation rate would be 13.4 percent,
Jackman said.
The Carter administration had
hoped to hold price increases to about
half that rate this year. An economic
slowdown or even a recession could
help retard the upward price spiral
later this year, although economists
expect any such decrease will be
smaller than in previous recessions.
At the . same time the Labor
Department was releasing the
Consumer Price Index for May, it
released its monthly statistics on
workers' earnings.

Average weekly earnings rose 0.2
percent in May, the report said. When
adjusted for inflation, eamings were
down 3.1 percent since May 1978.
Workers' spendable income - what
is left after Social Security and
income taxes are subtracted - was
unchanged from April and when
adjusted for inflation, was down 3.3
percent for the year.
Gasoline and fuel oil prices were the
biggest culprits in the May inflation
rise, the Labor Deparbnent said.
" Gasoline pr ices increased 5
percent in May, bringing the increase
so far this year to an annual rate of
55.1 percent," the report said.
Home heating oil prices rose 5.3
percent. It was the fourth consecutive
large increase and helped push the

" :,
overall cost of housing up 1.2 percent
in May. ·
Jackman said the rise in petroleum
products was responsible for one-fifth
of the increase in consumer prices.
Food prices had been increasing at
rates near I percent sinee December,
so the May rise of 0. 7 percent
represented the first relief. The
decline had been expected because of
recent moderation of farm and
wholesale food prices.
The Consumer Price Index stood in
May at 214.1, meaning that a
marketbasket of goods and services
that i::ost consumers $100 in the 1967
base period cost $214.10 last month.
The Labor Department said the
index was 10.8 percent higher than a
year ago.

(T;t:t::d~*•j;;:~w;w;;:tw:::J
.....

"BY LARRY EWING
The murder trial of Forrest Jones,
28, Crown City, charged in COMection
with the Oct. 29, 1978 death of Lewis
Phillips, ended Monday afternoon as
LOS ANGELES (AP) - A
Clinton County Common Pleas Judge
federal safety judge expressed
Paul E. Riley handed down a directed
hope Monday that the nation's
verdict acquitting the defendant of
grounded DC-10 jetliners may be
the charge against him.
allowed to fly again by the end of
Later in the afternoon, Judge Riley
the week.
filed the following entry, releasing
The statement came as a
Jones from his 117 day stay In the
hearing was to open on an appeal
Gallia County Jall :
.
by the plane's builder, McDoMell
"The Court, over the objection of
the Prosecutor of Gailla County, Ohio,
Douglas Corp., (lf the Federal
hereby dismisses the Indictment
Aviation Administration's groundated February 26, 1979, charging the
ding order1 which stemmed from
defendant with a violation of Section
safety problems discovered after
2903.02, Revised Code of the State of
a crash In Chicago last month.
Ohio, based on the following findings
WUllam Fowler, ~ef adof fact and reasons: The Court finds
ministrative law ju~e for the
there was insufficient evidence
National · Transportation Safety
presented by the State of Ohio to show
Board, praised the "good-tllith efthat Lewis Phillips was murdered by
forts" by both McDonnell
the defendant and that defendant's
Douglas and the FAA "to resolve
motion for acquittal, pursuant to Rule
this situation in the next five or
29A, must be sustained for lack of sufsix days so the DC-10 wUl be able
ficient evidence to sutaln a conviction
to fly once again. "
of such offense."
.
That acquittal calile following a
morning of testimony during which
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) --The
two prosecution Witnesses were
Senate has approved by a 28-1
called to the stand.
ma rgin a bill allowing
Robert E. Griffith, Crown City,
municipalities to combine in eftestified that on the evening of Ocforts to force utility companies to
tober 29 he was picked up while hitnegotiate a single rate for large
chhiking along SR 7 by three men in a
areas.
maroon auto.
Sen. Kenneth B. . Cox, 0Griffith placed the occupants in the
Barberton, said the bill is Infront seat of the car in the following
tended primarily to overcome
positiol1": Roger Lambert, driving;
; confusion about the method un·
Drexel Gullet, seated center, front
der which Colwnbia Gas of Ohio
seat; Forrest Jones, far right, front
Inc. negotiates 755 individual
door.
community rate scheduled. ·
"The guy by the door was doing
The bUI is permissive, and
most of the talking, " Griffith
cities still could seek their
·
testified.
separate schedules, Cox said.
"Jone,'l was talking all the way
The House measure was sent to
down the road how 'be ' was working
Gov. James A. Rhod:;es::.;_.- ---'--1 on a gun, or cleaning a gun and the

Decision coming

gun went off accidentally," Griffith
continued.
During cross examination, Griffith
testified in the negative when asked if
he knew any of the occupants of the
auto on the night in question.
"How did you come to put a name
on them?" defense attorney Allen
Teegardin asked .
"Down here (in court)" Griffith answered.
" Who was the 'he ' being
discussed?" Teegardin asked.
"Idon'tknow,"Grlffithanswered.

Teegardin: "You're not sure;~~
was being discussed?"
'Griffith: "No."
Teegardin : "Are you absolutely
certain For rest made that
statement?"
Griffith : "Yes."
Teegardin: "You got the impression that's what they thought
happened, didn 'I you ?"
Griffith: "Yes."
As the second prosecution witness
of the day, Deputy Jimmy Speara
(Continuedonpage8)

EXTENDED FORECAST
Thursday through Saturday:
Warm wltb a cbaoce of showers
1bursclay, Friday ud early Saturday. Hlglls !brougb tbe period In tbe
aos. Lows~ tbe 50111bllfl!lay.

;~~~~:~f~t~;~~i;~~~~i~~:~~;;;;~;i;i~it~t~~;~~~~~~~;~~~~~~~~:~~~tt~~~~t~~t

Park director lists
upcoming activities
Middleport Park Director Pat Kitchen today announced upcoming activities at the municipal pool.
Openings are still available in the
intennediate (7-11 years) and advanced swimmer and Senior
Lifesaving (15 years and up) for the
July 2-13 sessions. Lessons are $10.
Lifesaving is $15.
July 2 wUl be the Heart Fund SwimA-Thon from fi.jl p.m. lntereslecj persons are to contact Mrs. Kitchen at
the pool at 992-9968.
The pool is open Monday through
Friday from 12 noon until 5 p.m. and
on Saturdays and Sundays fr1m 1 to 6
p.m. Dally admission is $1 for adults
and 75 cents for students. Season
tickets are available at the pool.
Night swimming will be on Mondays and Fridays from 7 to 9 p.m.,
weather permitting. Admission is 75
cents for adults and 50 cents for
students, with season passes not
being accepted.
U any adults would be interested in
having the pool open at other times
through the week, please contact Mrs.
Kitchen with your opinions.
Openings are still available for
a~t lessons (16 years and older)
July 1&amp;-27 fr1m 5 to 7 p.m. Contact the
pool for further information.
A third set mlessons wUl be given
July 1&amp;-27 if enough interest is shown.
Call the pool ~ if interested.

levy approved by town voters last' fall .
Mayor Hoffman said Treasurer
Grate would have to certify that $5,000
is available as the village's part of a
program to light the Middleport
Community Park through an outdoor
recreational grant . Grate said he
would not certify those funds because
the $5,000 was not appropriated and is
not available . Councilman Allen King
highly criticized Grate's stand on the
matter. However, the problem was
eliminated by the allocation of the
Federal Revenue Sharing Funds.
The street committee reported It
will meet before the next meeting to
recommend what streets are to be
repaired this summer or fall. Grate
suggested that council not act until
after the next tax settlement so that
the entire recomrrlended work could
hi: paid.
Mayor Hoffman announced
Congressman Clarence Miller and
representatives from the U. S. Corps
of Engineers wUI be in Middleport at
12:30 p.m. on July 3 to look over the
town and discuss village matters. He
asked all council members if possible
to be present for that meeting.
Council discussed improvements
that have been done to the Middleport
levee which is in bad condition. The
Mayor reported that Lewis Sauer ha~
given a $50 donation on the work and
Councilman
Charles
Mullen
volunteered a $20 donation last night.
Any individual or business wishing to
contribute to the improvement project
is asked to contact village hall.
Boaters are particularly invited to
help with the project.
Attending the meeting were Mayor
Hoffman, Clerk-Treasurer Gene
·Grate and council members, Carl
Horky, Dewey Horton, William
Walters, Mullen alld King.

Meigs Cowttians
'

injured in wreck
Two pe...._ were In~ Ill ~­
traffic accidents· lnveti ·fed' Jllonday by the Gallla-Meiss P01t state
Highway Patrol.
At 9:45 a.m. Michael A. McGuire,
17, Langsvtlle, was driving west on
SR 124 in Rutland when his car ran off
the road strllting a utility pole.
Both McGuJre anda pasaenger,
Mark McGuire, 15, also of Langsville,
were taken to Holzer Medical Center
for medical treatment. They were
listed In stable condition today. There
was severe damage to the McGuire
car and the miJhap is under investigation by the patrol.
Lewis R. McBride, 22, Bidwell, was
driving north on SR 180 at 9:44 p.m.
when his vehicle ran off the road
when he attempted to paas another
vehicle.
McBride's car hit an embankment
and overturned. There waa severe
damage to the McBride car and McBride waa cited by the patrol for DWI.

Weather
Clear tonight. Lows in the mid 508.
Partly cloudy Wednesday. Highs In
the low to mid 80s. The chance mrain
is near zero tonight and ro percent
Wednesday.

MEETS TONIGHT
The Middleport Chamber of Commerce wtlJ meet this evening at 8 p.m.
at the Middleport Masonic Temple.

Bill approved

BATON GRAND CHAMPS - The Regatta baton high point grand
champions at the loth annual Riggs baton contest at Meigs High this year
were, I tor, senior diVision, Lori Mi~hell, West Portsmouth (Lori ws also
recipient m the travel trophy) ; jlmlot division, Amy Flohr, Belpre;
juvenile division, Melynda Conaway, Glouster, and tiny tot divisjon,
Dawn Parsons, Poca, W. Va. Approximately 200 tWirlers took part in the
competition from Ohio, West Virginia and Kentucky.

WALK.OFF WINNERS - The loth annual Riggs Baton contest Mila
Regatta Queen walk -(Iff winners and twirl-df winners were picked Sun·
day out of over 200 entranlll for three states. Winners were; I tor, Michelle
Lesg, 12, Poca, W. Va., advanced regatta queen; Rebecca Wallaa, S
Grove City, beginner regatta queen; Lciri Langfitt, 15, Parkersburg,
Va., advanced twjrlo(lff winner, and Judy Riggs, contest director, prellellting awards. The contest :was sponsored by the Meigs Band lloolters.

w:

w

�3- The I?aJ.ly ~ntlnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, June 26, i9'19
2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, JWJe 26, 1979

Houston ·r emains 5% games in fro,n t of Reds

·Additional Big Bend Regatta action photos

HOUSTON (AP) - The Houston
Astros - held scoreless for 142-3
Innings - erupted with a four-run
seventh inning keyed by Enos Cabell's
two..run trlple and beat th~ Cincinnati
Reds ~ for a split of their' tWi..night
doubleheader Monday.
Cincinnati right-hander Tom Seaver
combined on a three-hitter with two
relief pitchers and George Fosler hit a
two..run homer in the 'first inning as
the Reds won the opener 2-1.
The Astros scored a rWJ in the first
Inning of the opener but coiild not get

uniracked ljlltil the seventh Inning of .
the nightcap when they scored four
runs with the help of live Ilits. Jose
Cruz doubled to score one run, Cabell
brought home two more with hls triple
and Denny Walling added Houston's
fourth run with an RBI single.
Prior to their seventh-inning
uprising, the Astros had loaded the
bases In the fourth and sixth Innings
against Reds starter Mike LaCoss.
Randy Niemann, ~ scattered six
hits for the victory. LaCoss, 11-2, was
relieved in the seventh and got the

loss. ·
Foster wli.d his 17th homer of the
Cincinnati provided Seaver with a season, into the len field bleachers,
quick 2-0 lead off loser J.R. Richard in . Cra1g Re~olds lrJpied off the right p
the first game in'ling of the opener. f1eld fence m the Astros' half Qf the
Ken Griffey walk@d with two. out anct f~rst and st:ored Houston's lone run on
-------------------------International League
By The Associated Press
Monday 's Resulh
Char leston 4, Rochester 3
Co lumb us 4, Tidewa t er 2
Richmond 7, Syracuse 2
Tol edo 4, Pawtucket 3
Tuesday ' s Games
Rochester at Charleston
Tidewater {1 1 Co lum bus

Ri ch mond ar Sy r acuse
Toledo at Pawtucket
ednesday's Gam es
Rochester ar Char les t on
Richmond at Syracuse
Tol edo at Pawtucket
. New York Yankees at Co l umbus,
exhibition

SCIOTO DOWNS

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ensign
Brei took the lead at the stretch and
came on to win the featured eighth
race at Scioto Downs Monday night by
a half-length.
Ensign Bret covered the mlle In 2:02
and paid $8.80, $3 .60 and $3.20. .
Connoisselh' was second and returned
$3.20 and $2.80, while Whooshe.e paid
$4.80 to show. ·
The first race trifecta combination
of 3-7-10 paid $285.
A crowd of 4,035 wagered $372,314.,

Cesar Cedeno's sacrifice fly.
Seaver ihen allow~ only one more
base runner - a walk to Derury
Wa tling in the fltth inning _ until
Cedeno led off the seventh with a
single. Cedeno stole second base but
Jose Cruz took a called third strike
and Seaver got Enos Cabell and
Wailing on grounders to end the Astro
lhreal.
Seaver pitched 72-3 innings and
Georg~ Blanda, quarterback and
relievers Dave Tomlin and Doug Bair place,kicker, played for 26 seasons In
finished up, with Bair recording his both the National and American
lOth save of the season.
Football Leagues.

ELLIOTT APPLIANCE
220 EAST MAIN STREET

CHURCH FU) T- Egypt's Plague of Frogs was
the theme of this attractive float by the Middleport

First Baptist Church in the Saturday Big Bend Regatta
Parade. The float was given second place in the •'fro
theille"
g

POMEROY, OHIO

!~ !HlRD- The Vnited Mine Workers Sup porters Club won third place honors in the frog ·theme
divisiOn w1th this entry m ~Saturday's Regatta parade.
·
··

WE BOUGHT

LL tournament slated,
summer results given
Powell's Super-Valil and the
Pomeroy Youth League will sponsor a
Little League tournament this coming
weekend on Saturday and Sunday
with rain dates to be the followipg
weekend, July 7and 8.
Hubbard's Greenhouse of Syracuse
is the defending champion.
Entry fee is $10 plus one new game
ball. All games will be played on the
two ball fields behind Meigs High

SchooJ.

Hubbard's gets things rolling at 10
a.m. Saturday morning against
Powell's Giapts. At the same time,
the Pomeroy Pirates meet the New
Haven Reds. Then at 12:30 p.m., the
Middleport Braves are pitted against
the Pomeroy Yankees and Tuppers
Plalos goes against the Rutland
Dodg·· '.
At 3 p.m. the Middleport Indians
play the Mason Rangers and the New
Haven .• CUbs tackle !he Pomeroy
Tlger.J;'
Winners of the Hubbard's-Giants
game and Pirates-Reds will meet
then at 5:30 p.m. At the same time,
the winners of the Braves-Yankees
and Tuppers Plains-Dodgers games
will meet.
The four remaining teams will
square off on Sunday beginning ·at
I :30 p.m. The consolation contest and
the championship game will begin at
4p.m.
Pee Wee players may be used, and
trophies will be given to the first four
teams. Individual trophies will be
presented to the first two teams.
Smoking by coaches will not be per·
milled oo the field, and each pitcher
may pitch no more than six innings
per day. There will be no stealing of
home, and the ten-rule will apply af.
ter four innings.
The Dally Sentinel T·Ball team captured the Middleport T·Ball championship with a downed Sugar Run
A8hland In the final game after the
Ashland team drew a final round bye.
The Sentinel earned the right to play
in the championship contest with a 21·
9 drubbing of the Middleport Rams in
semi..final play.
In Saturday's first round action,
Sugar Run Ashland rolled to a 23-9
win over the Rutland Cubs, and the
Syracuse Colonels downed the Mid·
dleport Bucks.
The Rams went to .a 2(h'l win over
the Racine A's, and the Syracuse
Bears handled the Racine B's. The
Rutland Devils fell to the Daily Sen·
tine! Z&gt;-15, and the New Hsven Mets
romped over the Middleport Tigers

ningham taking the loss.

In T-Ball action Wider the lights at
Syracuse, the SyraCiJse. Bears rolled
over the Syracuse Colonels 25-10 last
night. The Bears finished their season
with only two regular season losses.
Doug Lavender, Chris Stewart, and
Andy Baer each homered for the winners with Stewart also getting a
double. Kevin Burgess and Brian
Weaver each had a double in three at
bats.
Jason Qulllen led the Colonels with
a double.

I

Syracuse pitching yielded a total of
24 walks as the Racine Pee Wee team
captured the Syracuse-Racine-Letart
Pee Wee crown with an 111·16 extra in·
ning win over )1ost Syracuse. Each
lea81 had eight ldts,Wfth Chris Diddle
getting the . win and Shawn CunI

'

WHOLE THINGI

night With two singles, and t;lrian
Weaver had one single.
Linescore:
R
m 264-18 8
s
563 002-16 8

Racine pitchers gave up 14 w~
and fanned eight while three
Syracuse hurlers fanned just four. In
three meetings this season, Racine
has won twice while Syracuse won on·
ce, and a total of four runs was the dif.
terence in the three contests.
Chris Jewell led Racine with a
single and home run, and Msrk Potter
and Brian Kiehl each had a single and
double. Dave McMillan had a double
and John Tuttle a single to round out
the hitting.
·
Chris Baer and Cunningham led
Syracuse with a double and single
each, and Barry McCoy had a home
run. Shane Simpson had another good

Must reduce inventory

RIVER DOWNS

CINCINNATI ( AP) Baby
~reyhound took an early lead Monday
m the $8,000 featured eighth race at
River Downs and won by a head
covering the six furlongs in 1: 12.1-5
pay $5, $3 and $2.20.
Here's Inez placed to pay·$3.20 and
$2.40 and Creme A Levre was third
paying $2.60.
•
One More Roe and Delta .ThWJder
combined 2-9 in the double for $135.40.
The crowd of 3,944 bet $441,991.

JUPITER THE SPACE Frog took first place h
•
onors in the frog division In the Big Bend Regatta
parade held Saturday.

SU'ITON TRUSTE:F3
The Sutton Township Trustees will
hold their regular mooting Tuesday,
July 3, at 8 p.m. In the Syracuse
Municipal Building. The 1900 budget
will be discussed.

•• •• •• ••
••• •••

TRUSTEES TO MEET
Bedford Township trustees will
meet Jlily 7 at 6:30p.m. at the home
of the clerk. The budget for the year
1980 will be prepared.

Bv The American Press
Baltimore

Boston

MilwauKee

New York

Detroit
Cleveland
Toronto
California
Kansas City
Texas

41
39
. 32
32
24
WEST
42
39
39

Minnesota

Chicago
Seattle
Oakland

W. L. Pet. GB

48 23 .676
« 25 .638 3

31
34
35
38
51

.569

.534

.478

7'h

10

14

.457 15'h

.320 26

32 .5611
33 .542 2
33 .542 2
36 32 .529 3
32 39 .551 81h
31 43 .549 11
22 52 .597 20

Monday's Games

.:•

Tuesday' s Games

Cleveland (Barker 0·0) at
Baltimore (Fianagan8·5), (n)
~lew York (Tiant 3-2) at Toronto
(Lemongello J.7) or Lemanczvk 7·4)
(n)

•

Boston (Eckersley 8·3) at Detroit
(MorriS.H) , (n)
Milwaukee (Travers S·JJ at Min-

nesota (Hartzell3·5). (n)
Caiifornlo &lt;Aase 5·5)
(Matlack 4·4), (n)
Oakland (McCatty 5·2)
City (Splittorff 9·5), (n)
Chicago (Barrios 7·3)
(Bannister3·6), (n)

NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST
W. L. Pet.
Montreal
41 25 .621
Pittsburgh
35 31 .530
Chicago
34 31 .523
St. Louis
34 31 .523
Philadelphia
36 34 .5N
New York
27 38 .415
WEST
Houston
45 30 .600
Cincinhati
38 34 .528
• 35 37 .486
San Francisco
Los Angeles
33 41 .446
San Diego
32 oiJ .427
Atlanta
28 oiJ .394
Monday's Games
Cnicago B, Philadelphia 2

•

••

••

••

GB
6

•••

7

at Texas
at Kansos
·
at Seattle
·

Wednesday's Games

IT WOULDN'T BE a Regatta
parade without a clown and a frog.

Tuesday's Games

Philadelphia at Chicago
New York at Pittsburgh, (n)
Montreal .a t St. Louis, en&gt;
Atlanta at San Diego, (n)
Cincinnati at Los Angeles. (n)
Houston at San Francisco, (n)

Cleveland at Baltimore, (n)
Boston at Detroit, en&gt;
Milwaukee at Minnesota, (n)
Oakland at Kansas City, (n)
California at Texas, (n)

Wednesd•y . June 27

ASTRO. GRAPH

e

As requ ired by Section
1513 .30 of the Ohio Revised
Code, the Chief of the
Divis ion Of Reclamatron
hereby makes public not ice
of the proposed· Mined
Land Re clamation Proiect
bei ng consi dered in Me igs
County .
The abandoned mine site
being co nsider ed i s located
i n M eigs County , Scipio
Townsh i p, Sec t ions, 14 . 15,
20, and 21 . The proposed
project area com prises
approxima tely lOll acres .
Th e Chi ef of th e Divis ion
of ReclamatiOn will for .
malty ·pre sent the above
proposed project al the
Boa rd on · unr ec lciimed
Strip Mine Land Meeting to
be held July 9, 1979 , at the
St a) eho use In Columbus
Ohio .
'
If
you
have
any
quest ion s , feel tr ee to
co ntact th is office at (614)
466 .4850 .
•

(6) 26 , (7) 2, 2tc
J

-•OUr
CD:rlhd

ay

••

iUSPSI4WIIIJ

""-'~· ~=· -

Pablilbea -IJy ncepUII!tanlay by ntOblo
Valley Pablllldq Compaay. Hu.IUmedll,lnt.,

·Ill CGIU1 St., Pomeroy, Olllo 6S1tt. BuJDeN

T

DRYER

0

WAS
'259.95
SALE

•.•

Olflce PboDe tJ2.. !151. EdJtortal PboH
IIWIS7.
Secoad clau po1iq:e paJd at Pomeroy, Ohio.
NIUODallct"lriltq: N!JnRDtatfvt, r..ad(lll.

R

SALE

:=

.U.octalel, 3111 EucUd Ave., ClevelaDd, Oblo
14111.
.
Sublcrtpttoa nlel: Delivered by carritr
where avalllble to ceata per week. By Motor
Route wHre carrlerle,vkoe DOt 1\'IIOable, Oat
moatb, f3,11. By mall ID Ohio aDd W.Va., O.e
Year.z.. $!7.5!! Sb: Dioa&amp;IU, ••ut; Three moaJ
Uu, "'A; Ellewbere PUG year; 811: moaths'
..UI; Tin&lt; moallu, ..... 8abo&lt;rtpll011 price
IDehldel Suda-v Ttma- SmtiDel.

!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

••

~

CllyEdllor

comes to yoU for advice or
instruction . This person will
follow what you say to the
letter.
ARIES (Morch 21·Aprii 19)
Someone you may meet today
could took very appealing to
you, but before you become
deeply involved, allpw ample
tltne to get acquainted .
TAURUS (April 2Q.Moy tO) It
might be difficult for anyone to
work in uniso,n wlth you ~oday .
Vou kn ow what you want but ,
because you're so ·contradictory , you leave Otfters guessing .
GEMiNI (Miy 21-June 20) II
you're invOI\ied in a physical
activity today, don't try any
fan cy routine you're not up to
t~andllng .
Yo.u could tnrow
something out of whack,

A

••
•••
•
••
••
•••

ROBERT HOEn.Iat

VIRGO (Aug . 23-Saiu . 22) Un· soughl
changes in your plans
may pop up today. Thing s

:"
t

DEVOTED T0111E
lN'I'EIIE8T OF
llo!EIGS-MASON AREA

won't go haywire if you take th e
lime neces sary 1o.switch dlroc·
lion. Avoid Impulsiveness.
LIBRA (Sopl. 23·0cl. 23) Long
shots won't pay off today .
tv.
. · Oe!lber~te first to get a good,
perspective on· any important
issue . Even then move cau-DI
liously .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 221 Un·
expected surface issues could
~
June 21... 1979
throw you ·in a quandry and
Compl ete projects conscien- ha\fe you, bouncing from one
liously on ce you initiate them project to another today . Main·
this coming year. Industriou s taln the Inner resolve to stick to
effort and slick-to-itiveness pay what you start.
surprising dividend s for you .
SAOtnARIUS (Now. 2J.Dec.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) You 2t} Therejs nothing wrong with
won 't have any trouble getting your game plan today , nor who
money today . The problem is you are dealing with . Vfhat's
yo u don' t know how to hang on stopping you from pro gress is
to It, so th ink before you Indecision in your thinking .
spend. How to get atong with CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jen. 11)
other sign s is one of the Don 't get too involved today
sections you 'll enjoy in yo ur with new, unfa111111ar lntereats.
new Astro.Graph Letter .fh ~ There are some possible combegins with your birthday. all ,rlt:lltions: you ' re not teklng Into
$1 for each to ABiro-Graph , a,ccount.
P.O. Box 489, Rodio Cily $ta· AQUARIUS (Jon. 20.Fob. 11) II
lion, N .Y. 10019. Be sure to thln'gs promised to ygu don 't
specify birth sig n·.
.
·
come a". today, don ' t be too
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) To the disappointed . Chances are
wodd you rnav aiJpear ccilm and they woutdn '1 have worked ·out
co llec ted today . However, well , anyway.
deep down , you are not as sure PISCES (Feb. ZD-M~rch 20) Be
of your::ell as you shou ld be certain you know what you 're
AelaJC !
· talking about when someone

Bernice Be de Osol

·

'l

•

111EDAILYSENTINEL

Whirlpool

I
G
E
R

••
•
••

13

R
E
F

R

.•••

Montreal 3-8, St. Louis 2·2. 1st game
11 Innings, completion of suspended
game of May 17
Los Angeles 4, San Diego 3
Atlanta 6, San Francisco 1

Weclnedoy's Games

irlpool

••

5'12
81h
11'/2

Philadelphia (Lerch 4·5) at Chicago
(Holtzman 5·6)
Pittsburgh ( Biyleven 4-2) at New
York (Hausman0·2), (n) •
Montreal (Grimsley 7·4) at St
Louis (Denny 3·5•, (n)
·
Cincinnati (,H&lt;!fne 5·5) at Houston
CJ . Nlekro JJ .jJ, (n)
San Diego (Shirley 2·7) at Los
Angeles (Sutton 7·7), (n)
Atlanta (M. Mahler 2-8) at San
Francisco (Biue7·6), (n)

-

•

13'12

Pittsburgh 8·0, New York i·4

"1/1

•••
••
•

1/2

6'12

15

8\

~a~
·~.~·u~il~·.~.··~~.

••
~

Cincinnati 2·0, Houston 1·4

Baltimore 3, Cleveland 2
TorontOt3, New York 1
Only games scheduled

OUR LOSS IS YOUR GAIN

.....

%

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD
a••eball At A Glance

by July 1st

.

:·: I •
••••

EAST

We Need
HELP!

u;

TO MEET

. , Chicago at Seattle, (h)
In the second roWJd on SWJday af·
temoon, Sugar Run topped the
Syracuse Colonels, and the Mid·
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
dleport Rama plated two runs in the
NATURAL RESOURCES
last inning for a thrilling 10-9 win over
DIVISION OF
RECLAMATION
the Bears. The Sentinel handled the
FOUNTAIN SQUARE
Mets 111-10.
COLUMBUS ,
OH 10 43224
Thanks was extended to all participating teams and all who helped .
LEGAL NOTICE
with the tourney. The sponsor of the
ABANDONED MINED
LAND RECLAMATION
tournament was Valley Lumber.
PROPOSAL
1~.

THE

'
••
•
••

Model EET132DT

$368

13 CU. FT.

•...

,...

·-

00

~

••

•
•••
•

We'll sell you what you need~
While some in surance agencies se ll the policies of only on~
company, The Insurance Store represents a number of
fine in'sur.crs. That mean s we can review your insurance needs
. agains1 a wide range of available coverages and services. -·
. With freedom to choose among companies like
Contmen1 al ln s uran~e. for example, it stands to reaso n that
we can come closer to finding the insurance
prol ection th ai fits you r needs and is affordable. Our freedom
&lt;1f choice is your opponunity.

~

3.
•

=

:=

i
•

~
o::.!

Tend to your knitting and
the cat will make off with
the yarn ball:
Nothing unnerves a puf.
fin ' pal like.telling him you ·
can be coWJted on to carry
out his ashes if he keeps
smoking.

....
'

I

.••
~

Whirlpool

Whirlpool

•

'

-~

RANGES

ReaWJ '37Us

Model RFE3160W

I

DISHWASHER
T"

•.

-

~ODEL

$33soo

•.3 38°

·.
''

Regular '384.95

.

'

"

SDF5000W

0

ELLIOTT APPLIANCE ·11

220 EAST MAIN STREET

·.

.•

,,

POMEROY. OHIO
"

•I

�5-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, June 26, 1979

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Tuesday, June 26, 1979

Four local students receive

scho~rshfps ::·,,,,,,, , , , P;;~,~~Y,, ,,,,,_, ,,,,;i; ·

:··: Personal
Notes
·

ATHEN&amp; - Four Ohio University
students from Meigs County have
received Dean 's Achievement
Scholarships from the university for
the 197~ academic year .
The $500 scholarships recognize
high scholastic acievement and are
awarded upon recominendation of
faculty committees in the students '
academic areas.
The students ate:
Faith Perrin, daughter of the Rev.
W. H. and Gay Perrin, 213 Mulberry
Ave., Pomeroy, who will be a junior
at the university.
Diana Lynn Pullins, daughter of
Edgar J. and Lena Belle Pullins,
39879 Betzing Road, Reedsville, who
will be a senior at the university.
Don Bradley Tillis, son of Amos and
Ruth Tillis, Rt. 1, Rutland, a
sophomore.
Susan Lynn Goebel, daughter of
Frederick W. and Nadine Goebel, Rt.
1, 41342 SR 7, Reedsville, a junior.

ce~!~rtofH:~tirh~~e~du~

The Eskew family reunion was held
SUnday at the Forest Acres Park. At' tending were all 10 children of John
and Roxie Eallew, along with their
chU~ and grandchildren.
1
At the reunion were Mi-: and ·Mrs.
·Ciarehce Andrews and Ray Bill An~drews, Jim Andrews, Norma Zohond,
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Karr and
Jeulca, Mary Wayland and Laurie,
Mr. and Mrs. Dewayne Eskew and
'Mark, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Webster
'and Rick, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Eskew,
,Tom Eskew and Frank Phillippe.
" Mr. and Mrs. Charles Withee, Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Eskew, Mr. and
Mrs. Gene Eskellt _.Mr. and Mrs.
Jtalph Frye, Mr. and Mrs. jlaymond
·Hatfield, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Mar;cinko, Mr. and Mrs. Larry Stafford;
Lo"tta, Larry and PeMy, Mr. and
..Mrs. Eugene Withee, Kevin and Mat-

Chapmari used "Let's Plant a Tree"
with several member&amp; noting that
they have plailted a tree this . year. ,
Mrs. G. A. Radekln talked about ''The
Pregnant Onion" stressing the novelty of the plailt which she uld Ia easy
to grow. She told bow to lranlplant It
and desqibed It aa an old faahloned
.folk plant.
Miss Ruby Diehl used aa her topic,
"Tips on Preparing Plailll for Ezhlbition." She named several different
flowers and dlacusaed bow to cut and
prepare them for display. She mentioned daffodils as a good flower for
cutting. .
Members Wore corsage~ they had
made. Refreshments were served by
the hOitess lllllisted by her mother,
Mrs. G. A. Radekln.

::: oftheDextercOiliiJiunily.
·
POMEROY PERSoNAlS
Mrs. Henry Turner presided at the
Mrs. Lois Hawley and daughters, meeting which "opened jVith devotions
Mrs. Debbie Hawley: Mrs. Becky by Mrs, Holliday using scripture from
Kloes, and Mary Beth Hawlay and Luke 11, verses 5 to 10, and a meditaher friend, Barbara Custer, are spen- tion from ''The Daily Bread," entitiding a we.!k at Myrtle Beach, S. C.
ed, "Taking It All to God in Prayer."
Mrs. Kim Hanuner Martin and son, She also gave a quotation from
Steve, of Colwnbus, were ll&amp;turday Hawthorne, "Happiness is a Butterfguests of Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hoeflich Iy." ·
and Jayne,
.
Members gave _the club prayer,
s. Sgt. and Mrs. Howard McDatiiel creed and collect and for roll can
and daughters, Lori and Missy, are ' named a plant which can be started
visiting here from Fort Ord, CaUfor- from a slip.
•nia with tlleir parents, Mr. and Mrs.
The annual Ohio AsBociation of
Albert Pettit, Pomeroy, and Mrs. Garden Clubs was announced for
Marge McDaniel, West Colwnbla.
Aug. 7, 8 and 9 at the Univel'!lity of
Meg Lochary, 4aughter of Mr. and Akron. Theme will be ''Gardeners
MI;i· Charles Lochary of near United." Mrs. James Nicholson
alicago, m. is here vtsltlng her gran. donated the traveling prize which was
NARAIIATMAN
dparents, Mr. and Mrs. Lee Story and won b~ Mrs. Virgil Atkins. Hostess
·Nara Oatman, Chester, Ia a
Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Lochary.
gift was won by Mrs. Nicholson.
surgical patient at Pl~t Valley
For the program, Mrs. Lawrence H06pltal. Her room nwnber Ia 111-Ql.

' Recital heard

Diana Pullins

Don Tillis

Mountain State Art, Craft
Fair to begin this Saturday

Entertains recently

.

TAKES FIRST PLACE
Taking first place in the Big Bend
Regatta ·talent show Friday night
were the Dark Hollow Blue Grass
Boys.
Making up the group were Brent
Patterson, guitar, Bob Taylor, banjo,
and Harold Hager, guitar, all of
Racine, and Rick Boring of Reedsville on the mandolin.

music and instruments in Europe.
Sharing the audience with him will
be the Costas who both play guitar,
banjo, dUlcimer, autoharp, and liddie. Karen, a behavior analyst at
Greenbrier Center, performed
previously under the. name, Karen
McKay, and; besides playing fairs
and festivals, taught mountain music
at heritage conferences and to 4-H
groups. Batiads, religion, blues, and
fiddle-hanj'o tunes comprise her and
her husband, Jim's, act.
Besides being a musician, Jim is a
restorer of antique furnitUre and
designs imd constructs log buildings.
He has been . performing
profe&amp;l!ionally for 13 years and entertains crowds with old time, Irish, .
·and ragtime songs, V(est :Virginia
ballads, religious tunes, and music
madefamousbytheCarterfamily.
Special appearances are on the
roster for four other entertainers
during the five day festival.
On June 30, July 1, and July 4, Bill
Hairston, former music coordinator
for the fair, is scheduled to perform.
His specialty is traditional folk music
and story telling with audience involvement.
Hairston's repertoire includes Appalachian-rooted Negro spirituals
and heavy traditional Sounds. The
scholar in Appalachian music accompanies himself on guitar or
autoharp.
The lwfountain Heritage Players,
proud of their group's youthfulness
(membersrangeinagefrom5lto69),
will appear for the. first time as a
group at this fair on July 3. Although
the trio, William· (Buddy) Koontz,
Emmett Shafer, and Shelton (Bill)
Miller have been playing music since
h
t e 1930s, they only recently combined their talents into the Mountain
Heritage Players. Their specialty is
old time and bluegrass, with Shafer
providing the vocals.
Trapezoid, from Montrose, w. Va.,
will appear July 1 and 2. They are
noted for their unique niusic on the
hammered dulcimer and are equally
competent on the fiddle, banjo, mandolin, and bowed psaltery. Group
members designed and built many of
the instruments they play. Trapezoid
has produced an album, "Three
Forks of Cheat," on Rounder Records
and has appeared in concerts,
colleges, clubs, and festivals
throughouttheUnitedStates.
On July 3 and 4, the Critton Hollow
String Band will appear. Their sounds
are classed as traditional although
th
1
bl
e group P ays uegrass, too. One
member, Sam Herrmann, was chosen
West Virginia. F1uharty has per- National Hammered Dulcimer Chamformed at the Newport Folk Festival, pion in 1978. She and her husband,
the Smithsonian Folk Life Fest, and Joe, and brother and sister-in-law,
appeared on the David Frost Arnold and Patti, make up the family
televtslon show·
group. Other instruments played by
Three other musiclana who are part Critton Hollow are fiddle banjo
of the everyday music features are · guitar, and bass. All members ar~
Frank George of Spencer, and Karen vocalists
McKay Costa and Jim Costa of
Each ·group will . perform inLewisburg.
termittently during the day. On July
George, who has played at the fair 4, the main concert in the music tent
since 1966, is strictly an in- will be from 2-4 p m
strwnentalist on the banjo, fiddle,
· ·
dulcimer, or hanuner dulcimer. His Dt'r.·rt
past petfonnances include y aie and n J
t
Harvard Universities, folk festivals in
David and Cindy Smith, Basban,
Virginia, North Carolina, and Texas, announce the birth of their first child
and the Smithsonlal Folk Life Fest. Michelle Renae, May 29 ai Holze;
George was part of a touring group Medical Center. The infant weighed
which demonstrated appalachian seven pounds .and 10 ounces.
Maternal grandparents are Denver
and Neva Curtis, Chester; paternal
·grandparents are Eldon and
Margaret Smith, Beckley, w. v·a .,
maternal great-grandmother is Mary
Peirce, Long Bottom, and P!lternal
great-grandparents~are-.. Okey_ and .. . .
Ruth McCallisier, Hamlin, W. Va.
.

ch '/d bom

New arrival noted
·Mr. and~- Terry Sayre, the former Sharon _Blllj! of Pomeroy, 588 Sun
Valley, Gallipolis, are annoWJcing the
birth of_their first child, Misty Dawn,
horn on June 7 at the Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
·
The baby weigh~ sis pounds, eight
OWlces and was 21 mches long. Paternal grandparents are Roy and
Kesterson, Langsville, and the maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. '
Vernon Bing, Pomeroy. Maternai
great-grandmothers are Mrs. Pearl
Hoffman, Middleport, and Mrs.
Florence Baer, Minersville.

Maxine

Ptano students of Mrs. ·June Van
Vtanken presented a •recital recently
at the Pomeroy United Methodsit
Church.
Selections included · "Sugar
Cookies" by Mary Lou Butcher ·
"Playful Poodle" by Dawn Keesee:
"Waltzing Poodle" and "Music Box
Dancer" by Debbie Downie who was
then joined by her mother, Mrs. Janet
, Downie for "The Angelus"; "Gypsle
".Echos" and ''For Once in My Life" by
-~Iaine Smith; "Funny Bunny" by
Amy Luckeydoo, joined by her
·mother, Mrs. Sandy Luckeydoo for
I'An Old Nursery Tune."
• Other selections were "Day
_J)reams" and "Blue Gnus" by Lori
•Pickett; "Astronaut Adventure" and
"African E:~plorer" by Edward Coff.
man; "Birds Come F1ying" ..nd
."Behind Closed Doors" by Renee
~Smith; ''The Floral Clock" a1ld "A
. ~.DaY in Spring" by Karla Smith;
•f'FOUow Me" and "Swans on the
"Lake" by Heather Cullums; "Sing
;J.ittle Birds" by Elaine and Renee
.Smith who were then joined by their
~!ster,
Karla, for ' :The
-merrymakers."
: Fill' the cloelng, Mrs. Sandy But~ sang "I Saw a Man." Assisting
•at the reception were Sandy Butcher,
~lyn Cullums, Sandy Luckeydoo,
4nd Janet Downie.

"Cash On The
Barrel-Head"
'
There's Not ·A
Barrel In Our

. Mrs. JWJe VanVranken entertained
recently with a bridal shower
honoring Connie . ltomine, recent
bride of Eddie Johnson.
The refreshment table was centered with a floral arrangement and
an umbrella cake baked and
decorated by Peggy Taylor, one of the
guests. Games Wf!l'e played. ~ atWEEKEND IN DAYTON
tending were Lou Smith, Ernestine
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Richards
Werry, Kathy Price, Rae Young, spent the week in Dayton with Mr.
Susie Casto, Darta Hawley, Margaret anCI Mrs. Paul Gomer. They went
Sheridan, Debbie Glaze, Brenda HUI, especially for the wedding of the
Jean Werry, Mildred Arnold, May Gomers' daughter, Paula, to Capt.
Romine and Marie Romine.
Ceaser Sharper.

RIPLEY - Craftsmen whose art is
making music will be an entertairunent highlight of the 17th annual MoWttain State Art and Craft
Fair June 30-July 4 at Cedar Lakes,
near Ripley. Over 12 musicians andor groups, many·who have petformed
at the fair before and several
newcomers, will provide one major
concert from 6 to 8 p.m. daily as well
as ''mini-&lt;:oncerts" during the day at
various fairground sites.
Headlining the bill of daily entertainers will be the Puinam County
Pickers, a Culloden, W. Va., based
group known for its musical talent in
folk, rock, country, swing, blues, and
bluegrass. The four member band has
performed concerts In small rural
communities, nationally known
music halls and in Europe. They
recently produced an album, "It's
About Time," on the Rose Record
label.
The . Puinam County Pickers will
appear nightly at the fair from 7:15 to
Bill the music tent. They will also perform on opening dliy from 9:15 to 10
a.m. prior to the ribbon cutting
ceremony which epens this year's
fair·
Aunt JeMy Wilson and her grandson, Roger Bryant, from Peach
Creek, W.Va., will be seen each day
at the fair. With Aunt Jenny on banjo
and Bryant on guitar, the duet will
provide traditional Appalachian
music sounds. Aimt JeMy, a regular
at the Art and Craft fair. is also seen
in the opening minutes for the
television show, "Real People."
Bryant, who accompanies his grandmother on all her appearances, will
be emcee for all the fair shows.
Two other entertainers on the daily
bill are Paul Crane and Russ Fluharty. both specialists in old lime music
and bluegrass.
Crane, from Fairmont, W.Va., accompanied himself on guitar and barmonica in his folk music repertoire.
He has appeared on WSM Radio in
Nashville and has played at fairs and
festivals in West Virginia and
surrounding states.
F1uharty. of Mannington, W. Va.,
has the dlatinction of being the ooly
musician scheduled to appear this
year who has pelfonl'ad at all past
Mountain State Art and Craft Fairs.
He Is accompllshed on a variety of instrwnents, including the fiddle, banjo, and the dulcimer, which he has
playedfor49years.
The founder of the Mountaineer
Dulcimer Club, which boasts an intemational membership, has played
at almost an the fairs and festivals in

Misty Dawn Sayre

i\l

Eskews hold reunion

Star Gardeners meet

Store.

CONVENIENT TERMS
ARRANGED ON ALL
PURCHASES

BAKER

FURNilURE ·
Middleport, 0.

. '

Striking a balance betwem
needs and budget:
.

Employers.know
that flexibility in
health
care
protection
• •
IS Important.

.

thew, Mary Eskel\', Betty Combs, Mr.
and Mrs. David Eskew, Kandl, Beth
and Amy, Mr. and Mrs. Ferry Fields
and Terry, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Shuster and Shawn, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles HaUield lind family, Judy
Sargent, Fred Kinch, Lori Faulkner
Jerry Matson, Roberta Marcinko, Jr. :
Marie Marcinko, Denny Melodie
Larkins, Angie Larkins, Be~y, Fern,
Rcky, Jeff and Wayne Stafford, and
Mr. and Mrs. Andy Eskew.
PAUL MILLER
Navy Seaman Recruit Paul A.
Miller, son of Karen F. Thacker of
17511-2N. Second St., Middleport has
completed recruit training at' the
Naval Training Center, Great Lakes,

m.

During the eight-week training
cycle, he studied general military
subjects designed to prepare him for
further academic and on-the-job
training in one of the Navy's 85 basic
occupational fields.
Included in hia studies were
seamanship, close~rder drill, Naval
history and first aid. PersoMel .who
complete this course of instruction
are eligible for three hours of college
credit in Physical Education ·and
Hygiene.
~·

Diet class .
activity·
reporterf

Two celebrate birthdays

ON HONORS LIST
A Mason County student is on the
second semester honors Ust at
Phyllis, Roger and Kathy Berkley, Parkersburg Conununity College.
Evelyn Sargent of Route 1, Leon, is
Eva and Mark'Berkley Sam and Sanamong
50 students named to the list.
dy Juniper, Sanuny,' Lana Todd
Her
major
is nllrs~.
J~rrr . and Jennifer, Roger and
V1rg1rua May~. Donnie and Teresa.

Sllnderetia Diet Class activity
reported by Mrs. Jo Ann Newsome
this week included for the Mason
class a ro pound ribbon to Jo Ann
King, and 35 poimd ribbons to Melissa
Hoffman and Mary Jewell,
At the class Mary Jewell lost the
most weight and her runner-up was
Mqna Russell.
Shirley Johnson again this week
lost the moat weight and Pearl Phalen
was her runner-up in the Middleport
morning class. At the evening Edwina
Scott was the biggest loser and
Marilyn Bishop her runner-up. At the
Point Pleasant class, Jill Anne
Walburn lost the most weight and
Frances Dillon was runner-up. Donna
Dawson and Chris Wilson were the
ones losing the most weight at the
evening class at Point Pleasant.
FIRST-AID TRAINING
Persons are needed to fill a first-aid
training course. If interested in
taking the course call Susan Robinson
at 992-7066.

. Californians visit local~
Mrs. Rosalie H~ and daughters,
Jol~ne and Leslie, FoWttain Valley,

and Mrs. KeMeth Davis, Rutland,
and Mr. and Mrs. Milton Hood, MidCalif., have been here visiting Mr. dleport.
While here the 16th birthday of
Jolene was celebrated with a family
party. Attending besides her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. DavMr.
Students of Miss Mercedes Condon and Mrs. Hood were Mr. and Mrs.
will present a recital Sunday at the John Hood, Jeff and Todd, Mr. and
Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ, Mrs. Uoyd Wright, Tammy and
Latter Day Saints, at 3 p.m. with the Jason Wright. Jolene's father, Jim
public being invited to attend.
Hood, who was unable to come here
Russell Radcliff will serve as with his family, telephoned during the
master of c;eremonies for the evening.
program with Mrs. Barbara Dugan as
A decorated cake and ice cream
hostess. Refreshments will be served. were served. Gifts were presented to
Children taking part will be Cindy the honored guest.
·Allen, Heather Shuler, Teresa Shuler,
Joy Stohart, Patricia Pauley, Carol
Morris, Carla Shuler, Linda Evans,
BIGGS REUNION
Kathy Baker, Lori Adams, Teresa
The Biggs family reunion will be
Van Meter, Dixie Dugan, Linda _held July 8 at the southbound park on
O'Brien, and Becky Evans.
U.S. 33. Basket dinner at noon.

Plans recital

POMEROY - Aaron and Amy
Whaley, children of Bob and Shelia
Whaley, celebrated their birthdays
Wednesday at their home. Aaron was
seven, and Amy was four.
Mr. and Mrs. Whaley served a Big
Bird cake and ice · cream to the
children's grandfather, Herb Whaley,
and his wife, Mary, Eddie and Coleen
Whaley and Melissa, Gene and Sheila
Whaley, Carla, Sandra, Pammy and
Brent, Jo Ann Scarbrouger and Billy.
The family also enjoyed cake and ice
cream on 6~r at tl\e home of their
grantliil'?,t'her ; '.N~I'li '.:J B~rldey . in
GallipollS. 'Attending were Rick,

THOMAS SAYRE
Thomas D. Sayre, Portland 1s undergoing observation and tr.;.tment
CLOSING ANNOUNCED
at Univensity Hospital, Columbus.
Racine Satellite at Reorganized
Cards may be sent to Room 721.
·
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day
Saints will be closed Thursday only,
June28.
MEETING WEDNF.'!DAY
Ohio Valley Conunandery 24,
Knights Tempiar, will meet Wednesday, June 27, at 7;30 p.m. There '
SHOP
will be election and installation of of
fleers . All Sir Knights are welcome.

MASON FURNITURE
FOR THE BEST DEALS IN THE
TRISTATE AREA

FLORENCE HANNAY
Mrs. Florence Hannay was admitted Sunday to Veterans Memoria'
Hospital, Room 139.

MASON FURNITURE
Mon., Tues., Wed., Friday &amp; Sat.
8:30 to 5; 00 Thursday till12 Noon

. In 1929, the
circumnavigation of
made by the Graf
German !iirigible was
Capt. Hugo Eckener.

first aerial
the globe was
Zeppelin. The
commanded by

OPEN. EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONLY
H~manGrah

(

773 -5592

Mason, W. Va.

-ATTENTIONDue to circumstances beyond our control,
there may be a few items not available in
our Summer Savings Sale as advertised
staring Wednesday, June 29th. If tHese do
come in ·later they will be put on sale at
the sale price. Thanks,

Rail's
BEN FRANKLIN
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

~

I .

' -

COAST TOILET SOAP •••••••••••••••••••••••••• !.E~.~1!:.~~~29e
GENERIC. WHITE TOILET TISSUE ••••••••••••••••••• ~.~~~.69~
GENERIC WHITE PAPER TOWELS ••••••••••••••••L~;.~~~~ 49~
SHEDD'S MARGARINE SPREAD•••••••••••••••• LL~;.~~~~39~
STOKELY TOMAlO CATSUP••••••••••••••••••• ~~.~Z:.~?!!I!.. 39~
FAVORITE BREAD •••••••••••••••••·•••••••••~~~~l:.~~~~~~.-4/'1 00
AMOCO OIL (AU SEASONS) ...........................~~~~!.C;':~~. 69~
EGGS •• :.~~~~.~.s.~~'!: ..................................... ~z.E~..49~

PEPSI COLA

MT. DEW

8

PAK

16

$109

oz. ans

PLUS TAX &amp; DEPT.

PRODUCE

Your Blue Cross
and Blue Shield
Plans· believe flexibility in health care
protection means being able to offer
alternatives. Alternatives in health care
programs which help many companies
strike a balance between their needs and
budget As a matter of fact, more and
more companies are considering health
care packages in which the patient can
share in the cost of benefits in return for
lower rates. These kinds of options are
important in today's world, where
businesses are looking for ways to use
dollars more effectively.
Of course, Blue Cross and

•

Blue Shield
Plans are well
known for top of the line benefits that
pay ~he full cost of most hospital
serVIces... pay the doctors' usual,
customary and reasonable charges for
cpver~d services and pay major medical
benefits of up to a quarter of a million
dollars. And dental coverage, America's
fastest growing health care benefit can
be designed right into group health care
packages for companies with as few as
10 employees. ·
.
Top of the linecoverage. Sound,
affordable alternatives.
That's value added.

.
3
$100
BANANAS ••••••••••• LB.
.
TOMATOES
2LB. 99~

.
'..:
.: I'
.'
..""' ..

R.ORIDA

CITRUS PUNCH s oz.5/$1

.'

POTATOES ............!~.~~.$1 49

.
•
''

'

!

BARRELHEAD

.

!

.'

·'

99$
PORK .SPARE RIBS ..............................~~. 99$
RATH 1 LB. ROLL SAUSAGE ................. ~. 99$
12

oz.. PKG.

FRANKIES ••••••••••••••••••• •••• •••••••

6

ICE CREAM SANDWICHES ••••• ~~~
BROUGHTON

·

ih

BUnERMILK •••••• .-••••• ~~!·.

89

89·

BROUGHTON

ICE MILK. •••• ••••••~..~·~~~~~~

DIET RITE
OR

R.C. COlA

'.
..
..

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

~

Federal food

®, Regiat•;•d Mark a Blue Cros1 Auaei•Uon
" ..ocl etlon

•

'.,
Ill

'•

We ResetYe

lh~

Right To Umit Quantities

~.

.~

THURS.
ONLY

..

·Value added.
®' Reglat•r•d Mtrki· Btue Shield

LB $}49
(Whole or HaH) •••••••••••••••••• .-.

2iiTER SOmE

t

DAIRY

BROUGHTON

ROOT BEER

-~

GALLON JUG

$}Sg
CHOColATE DRINK ••••••••G.~L.!~~~.

BONELESS HAMS
LB. $}99
00 .SIRLOI.N STEAK ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
SU~ERIOR

IDAHO

•'

BliJe Cross ..
Blue Shield;

.

2% MILK

VALLEY BELL

MEAT
SUPERIORS TAVERN

ALL-STAR

·816 ~~-Bns. 99~ ~~Price

8 Pak

39

�'
~ :.. 'rhe Ua Uy Sentmel, Middleport-Pom e roy, 0 , Tuesda y, June 26 , 1979

lf\J~Nf fii}'i} ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~ ~

Your Best Buys Are Found in the Sentinel Classifieds
COMM ON PL EAS CO U H 1

SIGNIFICANT

OHIO

OF M E I G S COUN TY ,

EFFECT ON TH E

L E ON A R D

AGENCIES , GROUP , AND

PERSON S
The council of the vtllage

ot M •ddtepor t proposes to
request the U S D epa rt
men ! of Housmg and Ur ban

ro

-

IS Words or Under
r-asll
Clla rge
I day
100
125
2day.s
I 50
1.90
3days
IIMI
2Zi

v&lt;

FLO R A MAY REEVE S
DI XO N. E T A l ,
Defendan ts
Ctlsc No 16 669
- L E G A L NOTI CE In p~Jrsuancc ot e1n orde r
o f sale 1n part1t1on fr om
s. a1d Cou rt to me dtre&gt;cted . 1
.... 111 offer for sa le , at PIJbl tc
auc t 1on , at the door , of th e
Cou rt nouse tn the Vt 11ag e ot
Pomer oy. Me1gs County,
Oh10, on the 14th day of
July 19 79 at~ 10 00 AM ,
the follow•ng des cr tbed
real esta t e Si tuated tn t t1e
County of Me tgs , Sta te of
Oh10, TownShtp of Sc1pto,
and more pa r ltcu la r ly
descr tb ed as follows
PAR VEL NO 1: Betng m
lhe Sou theast qua r ter o f
Sec:t1on No 23 , Town N o 7,
Range No 14, o f the 0 C P ,
and bOunded as tollows
Begtnntng 30 r ods South o f
the Nor t t1east co rn er of
s. a td quarte r Sec t 1on an d 46
rods and 211 tn ks west of the
east li ne of satd q ua rt er
Sect ton Thence { 11 wes t 23
ro ds and 3 ltn ks , (2) Sou th
34 r ods and 16 li nks (JJ
East 23 r ods and J l tnk s. ( 4 )
No rt h 34 r ods and 16 links
to th e place of beg tn ntn g,
conta 1ntng F tve (5~ acre s,
w flh nght o f w ay fr om fh1S
land thr ou gh lands now
ow n ed by Wm C Ree ves
a nd Lona Reeves t o the
publ iC h ighwa y

INT E RESTED

Department

RO SS

BO R lN G,
Pl atnttlf s,

re lease

federa l funds under Tt tle I
of t he Houstng a n d Com
mun l ty De\le lopme n t Ac t ot
197 4 (P L 9J 38 31 to be used

for t he following p r o tec ts

( 1l Cons truct san1 tar v
sewer f atil1hes •n t he
M ar,na West N etgh b or f"\ood
cons •Si tnQ of Broadway St
be l ow P a r k St., Elm St ,
Page St an d Railroa d St
2 Cons t rlJ CI Sid ewalks on
Broa dw a y a nd El m St
3
Resu rf ace st r eets

dtsru pt ed
by
sewage
co nst ruct,o n
The esltm ated to t al of the
abovernent•oned ac t t'lt t tes
w ti l be $330.300
I T h as been determtned
t h at such r eq uest f or
re lease o f fu nds w tlt no t
c ons t itu t e
an
actto n
st gn tf tc an tl y a ff ect tng the
qua, lty o f the hu m an en
v•r on men l
an d ,
ac
c or d mgl y , t h e City of
Gall tpOi tS ha s ctec tded not
to prepa re an En v tron
menta l I mpa ct Stat em ent
under thl! Nat ional En
v1ronmen t al Pol le y Act of
1969 ! PL 911) The r easons
for SUCh deC IS IOn not tO
prepare suc h Statement
are as follows
A pub A publ tc mee t mg
was h el d on M ay 31. 1979
W1th no negat ..... e com m ents
bem g
re c e tv ed
Con
structton 1S w it h tn the
ex1 Sttng v il lage r.ght of

PARCEL

NO .

An
En 'lt ronmental
Rev•tw Record respe ctr ng
the pro ject has been made
by the v illage wh•ch
document s the env~ron
mente! revtew of the
proje c t and more fully sets
forth the reasons wt1y suCh
Stetem ent Is not required
Th i s
Env 1ronmen tal
Review Record IS on file at
the ebove address and is
available
for
publtc
examtnatlon and copy ing ,
between 8 00 a m and 4 00
p m
Monda y t hrough
Frtday
No fu r the r en vi ronm en t a I r e" tew of such
- proje c t IS proposed to be
conduc ted , pri or to the
reques t for re l ease of
Federal fund s
All •nterested ~gen cte s ,
groups ,
and
persons
dlsagreemo
wtth
th ts
decision are •nvtted to
submtt wr.tten comments
for considera tion IJy the
Village Council to the Ctty
Hall
Such written com
ments shou ld be recetved
at the abo"e address on or
before Ju ly 10, 1979 All
such comments so rece1ved
W1ll be cons•dered and the
village wtl l not reCluest th e
re l ease of Federal funds or
take any admtn•strat1ve
act 1on on the w1th1n pro 1ect
pr1or to the date spec ified
in the preced ing sentence .
Fred Hoffman ,
Mayor
V i llage of
M•ddleport
(6) 26, \tc

Pu:ih:~~L

NO

NOTICE OF

NOTICE tS hereby gtven
that the VIllage of M•d
dleport. Oh io, pursuant to
the requ•rement s of U s
Department ot Hou si ng
&amp;nd Urban Developm ent
Wtll
hold
a
PUBLIC
HEAR lN G on Wednesday ,
July 11. 1979 at 7 p m at
Middlepor t Vt llage Hall ,

237 RACE STREET

The purpos e o f l h ts
hearing is to
- Generally dtscuss the
contents of the d raft of the
Envtronmenta l
Asses sm ent and Ftnanclal
tnformat•on pertatntng to
the
proposed
1m
provements to the exl stmg
sanitary sew erag e syst em
1n the Powell Str ee t Are a of
M1ddlepor t
- Obtain comments and
adv ice from all concerned
c1t1zen s on the proposed
•m provem en ts '" ref erence
to thetr feasibility , cost.
and tmpa ct on th e com
mun•ty and th e en v tron
ment '" general
Generally pr ov tde for an
encourage publ tc par
tic•pation tn the pl anntng of
publi c fa cil tftes
- Meet the requtr em ents
of the U S Oep~rtment of
Houstng
and
Urban
Dev elopment for a Com
muntty Block Grant
Draft cop1 es of the En
vlronmental As ses sment,
whi c h
In cl ud es
the
proposed
tmpro vements
the Env•ronm ental A ssess
ment and ftnan c ta l tn
format ton w•l l be a v atlab le
for Publ ic tn sp ec tton from
June 27 unt il July 11 ,
Monaay thr ou gh F r 1da y ,
between th e hou rs of 6
o'cl ock a m and 4 o' cloc k
p m at tl'le Ma yor ' s otl tce ,
237 . Ra ce Str ee t , M •d
dleport , Oh 10

RE F ERENCE

D E ED

Volum e 201 , Page 67 , M e1g s
County D eed Record s Th e
appratsect va lue of sa •d
pr operty bemg $4, 633 3J
Th e above propert y will
be sold at th e door ot th e
Co urtho use by the Sher iff
for not less than two th 1rd s
th e
appra tsed
v al u e
ther eof
T e rm s of Sa l e
T en
per cent payabl e a t th e ttm e
of sal e and t he balan ce
pa y ab le t o t h e Sh ert ff
wtth tn thtr ty da ys
( 6 ) 5 12. 19, 26 PI 3, 10, 6t c

LEGAL NOTICE
THE CITIZENS
NATIONAL BANK
OF MIDDLEPORT
Middleport, Ohio
Notice is hereby gtven
that , pur suant to call of it s
d tre c tor s,
·a
sp ecial
m eetmg
of
t he
shar eholders
of
Th e
C tttzens Nat1on a1 Bank of
M•ddleport will beheld at
tf s bank tng hou se at 97 N
Se c ond Avenue , 1n t h e
Vtllaa e of Middleoort on
Tuesda y , Jul y 24, 1979 at J
P M , f or the pu r po se of
con st der tng and d eter ·
m 1ntng by vote whether an
agreem ent to m erge th e
sa td bank and Th e Central
Tur st Company , Nat1onal
Associat ion , loca te d in th e
Ctty of Ctncmna t 1, St at e of
Ohto , under th e provi Ston s
of the lllws of the Unti ed
States , shall b e ratifr ed and
confirmed , subje c t to th @
apprc;&gt; v al of the Comp troller of the Currency ,
W ashington . 0 C , and for
the purpose o f vot tng upon
any oth er matt er s tn
Ctdental to th e propo sed
merger of t he t wo b~ nk ~ A
c opy o f tt1 e aforesa i d
agr eem ent , exec u ted by a
majority of th e d irectors of
ea ch of the two bank s.
pro v td•n9 tor lhe me rg er ,
1S on f il e at the bank and
may be tnspec t ed e1ur.no
bu st ness ho urs
Ha rol d E Hubbard
Pr esident
(6 1 26 &lt;71 3. 10, 17, 41c

Fred Hoffman ,
Mayor
VIllage of
M idd leport , Oh to

&lt;61 26, li e
NOTICE OF
PROPOSED USE
HEAR lNG

Th e residents of MEIG S
County are Inv i ted to
prov ide wr itten and or~l
comments concern1ng th e
po ssi bl e uses of general
revenue shart "' g fund s at
111e proposed use h ear•ng to
be held on Ju• e 6, 1979 at
the Me•gs County Com m lssloner ' s Ottlce fr o m
12 . 00 (noon ) to 1 00 o'c lock

P .M

Ava il abl e fund s a mount
to $90,000 00 Thts f1gur e
Inc ludes funds ex pect ed to
be re c eived tht s year pl us
unappropr iated fund s from
prev i ou s
entitl e m en t
' , per iods
' Sen ior citizens ar e en
c our ~ g e d to anend

v

Show U8 a person who
always insists on standing
on hls rights, and we'll bC
able to point to a nwnber of
others whO have badly

MEI GS COU"N'T'Y
COMMI SS ION E R S
Mary Hob!Stetter ,
,Clerk
{6) 26 , lfc

•

bruised toes.
J

In memory, Ca rd of Thanks
and Obituary 6 cents per won.J,
S3 00 mmunum Caah tn ud vance
Mobtle Home sales and Yard
!Wi les are accepted only wi th
cash with order 25 cent charge
fo r ads carrymg Box Number tn
Care of The Senttnel
The Publisher

GUN SHOO T, EVER Y FRIDAY
7 30 PM RACINE 9: UN ClUB
FACTORY CH&lt;?K E GUNS b N.
LY
I

Lost and Found

37S

Each word over the nummwn
15 words JS 4 cents per word per
day Ads ruMtn$ other than conse-c uttve days Will be charged at
the I day rute

lOST MALE lnsh Setter Ap ·
prox 2 yrs . old. Area of
Ba shan
on Bashon Rd
Children' s pe t
Re word
9 ..9. 2466
lOSl MAN's bdfold 1n the
Mtddleport Monno orea

992· 73137 .
lOST. WHITE faced young cow
w ith long horns, whtte faced
bull . 350 or ..00 lb Hemlock
Gro11e oreo . 992·7677 or

9i2·51172

Help Wanted

reserves the

n ght to edit or reject any ad!
deem ed obj ecti onal. The
Publisher will not lle resporulible
(or moce thin one rncorrect !n-ttrtton
Phone99'2-21::.6

NOTICE

IMMEDIATE

OPENING

laborat ory Techn1ctan, 3-11
shth Expanencad Ml T (ASCP)
or equivalent Excellent so lory
and fringe benef1ts. Sh1ft dtf·
ferento tl Contact Personnel
Off• ce ,
Pleasan t
Volley
Hospital , Volley Dnve, Poin t
Pleosont, WV. 25550 Phone

30.·675·•340 An Equal Op

WANT-AD
A_DVERTISING
DEADLINES
Monday
Noon on Saturday
Tuesday
thru Frlday

portunity Employer

Wanted to Buy
CHIP WOOD . Poles mox
d1ometer 10" on largest and
Sl2 per ton . Bundled slab $10
per ton. Delivered to Ollto
Pallet Co., Rt 2 Pomeroy

OLD FURNITURE, ice boxes,

the day before publicaUon

brCjls ~ beds , 1ron beds, desks,

etc
complete household• .
Write M .D. M11ler. Rt .f ,
Pomeroy or col! 9'12-n60

Sunday

IP M.
Friday afternoon

Notices
PARASOL BOUTIQUE BEAUTY

FIVE Ki l l EN$. 6 to -? weeks
old .4 cal ico, I ttger 992 7680
~I.Jm o ne Sooe ty

OLD COINS, pocket watches ,
clau rings , wedding bands,
diamonds. Geld cr silver. Call .
Roar Wamsley, 742 2331

C. R. MASH
VINYL &amp; ALUM.

COAL,

LIMESTONE,

992·3891
FOR SALE one round table 4
cha1rs, leather look, one
blond bedroom 4 Pc., one
walnut bedroom .4 Pc., I old
walnut 2 Pc bedroom , I long
leggad 'both tub. I marble top
side board Ford tractor model
2000 10 good shape. plate
glass
al so FOR RENT 2
bedro om opt.
furnished
ullht tes patd adults, No pets,
no drunks, m Mason. John
Sheets, three and ha'f m1les.
south M1ddleport, Oh1o

FREE

1711. loberglass OMC

boat with purchase of heavy
duty 2500 lb copoclty boat

doors from Post Offtce,
Rutlcnd , Ohto 7 .. 2-2255 MorFio au to. gos water heater
glass lined 40 gal , 5 year warranty , gas saver mode!, $120.
Electric adding machtne with
typewnter , carriage far billing
and letters, $60. NICE COLLEC·
TORS tTEM - bo)( set of 3 civtl
war commemerahves, Tree
brand from Germany, S150.
lakewood fans with steel
blades, qu iet operatton. Palnt
sale. Martln-Senour dlvlalon,
Sherman Williams , 2 gal. flat
white exterior, $13.95.
MIXED HAY new tufting
Bolens 850 with mower and
sick le bor, Sears rldlng
mower Glllsple Howard, Sit
143, Pomeroy , OH, Phone

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF MEIGS COUNTY ,
OHIO
~ARRY KING ,

TWO AIR conditioners Good
condition One 5CMlO BTU and
one 13 BTU Call 992·2A51
after 5 p m

Mobile Homes Sale's

1979STARCRAFT 1511. Trl·haul
boat, 90 llp Mere wtth power

Plaint tff,

· \.' S ·

CAROLYN SUE K lNG,
Defendant .

"

No 17,150

NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION

TO
Caro lyn Su e Ktn g,
w hose last known addr ess
w as 46898 Scout Camp
Road . Long Bottom , Oh•o
You are her eby nottfted
that you ha ve been nam ed
a defendant tn a legal
ac tton enttlled Ha rry K ing ,
Plamt tff, vs Carol yn Sue
Ktng , D efendant
Th t S
act ton ha s bee n a ss tgned
Case No
17, 150 and 1s
pend rng 1n th e Court bt
Comm on Plea s of MeLgS
Count y , Ot1to
The ob1 ec t of th e Com •
plamt tS the obta1n1ng of a
d tvorc e and
th e t er
m tnal1on of a marr tage
co ntract
b e twe e n
th e
pa rttes, the se ttl em ent ot
th e pr op erty r1g h t s of the
part1e s. . .:tnd the 1ssue of
supp ort and cu stod y of the
1Ch1l dren
Y ou ar e r e qu~r e d to
an s w e r
th e c om p l atn t
w 1t h1n 28 da ys aff er th e lasT
publ1c a T10n ot 11'11 s nOTJCe,
WhiCh w111 be publt s.l1ed
once ea ch we e ~ for st x
succ ess•v e week s. T he la st
publ lcafton Wtll be made on
June 26, 1979, and the 28
day s f Qr an sw er w •ll
com m en c e on that date
In case of y our fa 1\ ur e to
an sw e r
or
o t h er w tse
r espond as requtr ed b y the
O H 1o
Rul es
of
C1v t l
Pr oce d u r e ,
Th e
l tn a l
heartng on th1s maflet Wi ll
beh eld a ft er the ex p tr alton
of 42 day s aft er The last ctay
of p ubl1ca tron of th 1s no tt ce
or as soon th ereaft er as can
be sc hed u led· by tne Co urt
Larr y Spen cer ,
Clerk ot Lourt
of M e•g s Coun t y
OhtO
(5) 22.

29. (6 1, 5, 12, 19, 26,

61C

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OH 10
ESTATE OF PAUL A.
DILLARD ,
DECEASED
Case No . 22718 Docket 12 ,
Page 1 U
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On June .4, 1979, in the
Me•gs County Probate
Court. Case No
22718 ,
Robert C Dtllard , 2699
Erlene Drive, Cinctnnatl
Ohlo 45238 was appointed
Executor of the Es t at e of
Paul A Dtllard , deceased ,
late of 626 H igf'} Street.
Middl eport. Ohio

Furniture.

LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE OF
PROPOSED MERGER

Not 1ce tS hereb y gtven
that application has be en
made to t he Comptro l ler of
the Currency , wa shmgton ,
0 C 20219 tor hts con sent
to a merger of Th e Citizen s
Nattonal Bank of Mtd ·
dleport , M tddl eport, Ohio
and The Centra I Tru s t
Co mp a n y,
N a ti o nal
Assoc 1a tto n , Ct n c l nn a t ,,
OhtO
The aop l 1c a t1o n w a s
accepted for fil tng Jun e 6,

1979

It is contem plat ed th at
all
offices
of
the
ab ovelnamed bank s wil l
co nt inue to be op era ted
Th ts not tc e 1S pu blished
pu rs u an t tosect ton lS (C) of
tile F ederal D epo si t In
surance Act and Part 5 of
The R egu la tions of the
Comptroller
of
t he
Cur renc y ( 12 CF R .5 )
Th e Ctft ze ns
Na t1o n a l Bank
of M idd le po rt
M 1ddl ep or t, Oh to

The Ce ntral Tru st
Com pan y, N A
C•nc in.,att , Ohio
"( 6 ) 26 , (7) 3 10, J7 , 211 , 26 , 6

tc

992· 7~58 .

1974 , .. x 70 mobtle home
Good
condition
$7800

992·511511.
GENERAL 60xl2, 2 bedr.
1970 Sylva, 60x12, 2 bedr
1970Caslle, 60xl2, 2 bedr.
197.4 Morkline, 50&gt;&lt;12, 2 bedr
1969Va!tant, 12x60, 2 bedr.
1967 National, 12x50, 2 bedr
B' S MOBILE HOME SALES, PT.
PlEASANT, WV. 304·675·••2•.
1971 12)(60 2 bedroom, newly
remodeled

trim. Extra equipment $-4500
or best offer .~ 992 - 6330 after 5

pm .

19~

mobile

home .

1977 480 C Cose backhoe.

Galllpolos, 6U·AA6··782
POWELL PLANT setter. $200.
Phone 992·7692.
REFRIGERATOR ,

apl.

slzod

::sv't;.~~~nagkf~~~:~';o~;~~;~
Col1992·2910

furnished

985·3307.

COUNTRY MOBILE Homo Park.
Route 33, north of Pomeroy.
Lorge lots. Call992-7.479

QUAUTY

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

187 ASH ST.
MIDDLEPORt

J&amp;L

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE
CellulOSIC (WOOd fiber)
Thermal Insulation
Save 30 pet_ to 50 pet.
on hHIIIII COli
l!xperlonce and
fully' lnsurod
FrHEI'Call 992-2772
5·17·1 mo.

WANTED
Overweight People
Sllnderella
Diet Claues
7·3t Sf Jouptl CatftDIIC Cl'turctt1

Tuu Marnin1 (IO .H I and
Evenlftgl at 7·Jo-Middleportl

Huth United Meft'toellsl cnurctl
Thurs. Morning {10 . 301 tflel

H. L Writesel
Roofing

949·2862--94Y·2160

992. 5434 ,

or

TWO BEDROOM trailer. Adults
only . 992·332• .
ONE BEDROOM opts Contact
VII loge Maner , 992 7787.
TWO BEDROOM House , newly

ROSE BUSHES
&amp; SHRUGS
%PRICE

POMEROY lANDMARK
Jack

remodeled
kttchen ,
'"
Pomeroy Call992-2288 after 6

Phone 992-2181

12x60 2 bedroom mobile home
In Racine area . 992·5858.
SlEEPING ROOM for working
man only Reasonable rent .

992·6022
TRAILER 1 or 2 adult!! , no pets

Phone 992·3181.
FURNISHED opt . 3 rooms and
both. No pets no children .

9•9·22S3 .

HOOF HOLLOW, English and
Western .
Saddles
and
harness . Hones ond pomes
Ruth t Reeves . 61 .. ·698-3290.
Barding &amp; Riding lessons end
Horse Care products .
RISING STAR Kennel. Boar·

dong Call367·0292
AKC REG. male cocker span .e!
puppy. 8 weeks old Blonde.

$75. Phone 7•2·3176.
REGISTERED

Pokonese

pupptel . 6 weeks old. $125.

843·2c.e.

Auto Sales
197• VEGA HATCHBACK , call
303·675· 1501 or 30S·675·2•88
or 304·675· 1553 .
1973 CADILLAC ELDORADO,
$2000. Good condition. Con be
seen ot 123 Union Ave.,
Pomeroy, OH Coll992·3990
1972 GMC 'It ton pickUp P.S ,
aulo .. V· 8. $&lt;150. 9•9·2801.

1973 VW BEETLE. 949·2•90.
1971 UNCOLN CantinentaL
Body and motor m good
sf;ope Asktng $800. 2 new 1..
in . Gulf Cru1semaster 60 tn
tires $75. 9 .. 9·2813

1975 FORD Super cab. $2500.
304 -882-2982.
.
1973 OLOS 98 Luxury sedan
Full power. Very good cond1 t1on 2 owner cor Actual m1les
46,500. Prlce $2500 tf tnterested coii992·2S31 ,

1975 CHEVY MONZA. P.S ,
A C.,

TV ond Appliances . 985·3307,
Chester, OH

240 PIGS. 6 Ia 10 weeks , $30
eacll 9.. 9-2129 or see David
Graham , Rt . 2, Roclne.

NOW HAUliNG limestone in
Middleport-Poemroy orea
Call for free estimate.

367·1101
PAINTING AND sandblalfmg
Free estimates Call9.49-2686.

ROOM , BOARD, LAUNDRY ,
Elderly cnly .
rates . 992 6022.

Reasonable

WANTED TO DO, Houses, Por·
ches, Roofing, Carpentry or
general
contractmg
Free
estimate 7.42-2068.

HANDYMAN WORK mowing
!awns, painting houses, roofs
ond building sid~wa lks , etc.

Coii6U ·667·3263

AKC Mintature Dachshund
pupp1es . 304·882-2982.

P.B.

USED TV. Black and while $75
up Color $130 up. Ridenour

Services Offered

Pets for Sale

AKC

w. Carsey

Mgr.

p.m

low

m1teage.

ROOFING, TEN years &amp;K·
penance . Free est1mates.
New and reoof. 992-7861.

PIANO TUNING for home and
school. lane Daniels Also
repo1rs , 1.. years experience.
992·2581 or 992 -2082
DOZER , END loader ond dump
truck. Will do basements,
ponds ,
brush ,
timer ,
limestone oni:l grave! Charles
Butcher , 742-29..0 .

POMEROY
LANDMARK

TO GOOD HOME. 6 week
cocker-pekinese Small , block
and white , femole. 992-2.488

and

A-No

money

down

(eligible veterans)
FHA-AS low as

r

IRElAND
MORlGAGE
CO.
77 E.
592-3051

4·23-1 mo.

Free Estimate

SUPER

992-2772

GOOSE

West

1+

Real Estate for Sale
REAl ESTATE: 1 acre lot In Rlggscrast Manor between Tuppers Plains ond Ckestar

on 51. Rt. 124 toward
Rutland.

CONTRACTOR

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

Phone 985-3929 and 985-.129

ousmg
Headquar tt1rs

3% acres in Pomeroy. SEclud·
eel wooded. area on top of h1ll.
Overlooks nver. Water , alec
trlc
available .
S7QOO .

992·3886

-w;~!.~.
I, ~
992-3325

.

216 E. Second StrMt

5 ROOM HOME- Has2

nice bedrooms, modern
bath, full basement, nat.

gas

furnace

and

aluminum siding .
LARGE
FAMILY
HOME - 3 rpoms, ~
bedrooms, l'h baths,
fu ll
basement,
dishwasher
and
disposal. Furnace heal.
NEW . . ME 3

bedrooms,

2 baths,

modern kit., carpeting,_
in all except baths, sun
deck , large 2 car garage
and utility.' Level lot
with lots of trees .
IN -TOWN - 6 room
home with aluminum
siding. Has bath, nat.
gas forced a{r furnace,
city water and Ohio

Power.
RUTLAND
4
bedroom frame home
with bath, nat. gas heat,
city

water, 2 car gerage

and extra lot. $14,000.
LOTS, LOTS, LOTS WOODED,
SOME
LEVEL, SOME READY
TO BUILD ON . WILL
SELL ONI! ACRE .
CALL 992-3325 FOR
MORE
INFORMA ·,
TION.

Housing
Head uart~rs

-

NEW LISTING
PORTLAND- Approx Imately 56 acres, lots of
timber, some building
sites, approximately 5
acres tillable, 15 acres
pasture. $23,900.00.
LETART FALLS, OHIO
- Lovely one floor plan
brock home, hardwood
floors, 3 bedrooms, cen·
tral heat and air condl ·
tlonlng, wood burning
fireplace,
l'l2 bath.
$30,600.00.
HYSELL RUN - 1972
mobile home, furnished,
fireplace, central air,
freezer Included, all
underpinning
and
blocks. $8.900.
MIDDLEORT Two

business rooms, two
apartments over, been
rented many years, excellent

1nvestment.

JUST $33,500.00.
NEW LISTING
Located on Olq Rt. 33 Approximately 2•0
acres, building sites,
tillable gro.uild, pasture,
woods. Home, barn, and
other buildings also.
JUST $178,000.00.
SUMMERTIME: and
the MOVING is EASY ...
If you've been thinking
of ltlllnt your property,
IIIII II lhe limo to dO II.
Why wall tor SNOV'f CALL US TODAY AND
LIST til
REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland, SrHonry E. Cleland, Jr.
992-6191
992-2259

THREE BEDROOM house (built
1977). Garage. fireplace, fully
carpeted , S39 MIO. 1 acre lar
on Rt . 124, 1 mile east of
Rutland . Ohio · Power .

RIDENOUR GAS Servtce. Oox·
ol l P go s Chester , 985-3307 . , I 992-25111 or 992-2082.
FOR SALE or lease: llndo 1s
Will DO off1ce cleaning , ltght
lody Fair leauty Salon.
hou sework or Interior pain·
Ra c tt"'a ,
OH .
Buslneu
ling Ho~e retere ncvs, Phone
99
~2~
- 7 ::
033
:::.:.._ _ _ _ _ _

eslabllshod . 247·3o.2

n

Stale, Athens. 6'"-592·305 1.
TWO STORY 3 bedroom house.
3 lots. Now's your chance If
you ne•d a house. $12,01X)
Owner willing to talk

992·2082 or 7•2·2328 .

,,

&amp;-26·8

Your r1g ht-hand oppone nt
one notrump. Hts
partner raises to three . A
reader a s ks: A) Do we double? B ) What do w e lead •
We don 't c onsider a double
to be wo r thwhile. It may
help declarer. We do open
our fourlh·b est spade m
spite of knowin g w e ar e

opens

leadm g mto an a dverse a ce
and queen .
fNE WSPA PE R

ENTERPltJSE

ASSN )

(Do yo u have a ques t1o n fo r
th e experts? Wrtte A sk m e
Experts care o f thi S n e wspa ~
per lndmduaf ques tw ns will
be answered 1f accompamed
by stamped , se ff·addressed
envelopes Th e most mtere stmg qu estton s wtll be used m
this column and wil l rece1ve
cop1es of JACOBY MODERN J

by THOMAS JOSEPH

GASOLINE ALLEY

He asked me to
drop it off but
t.he place was
closed!

I tale.e it

bu in the
morninq!

Wh4 does he put
his laundrt~ in a
cello case? //;~~

'

~~

r&gt;..C,{

•f.J'

r
WINNIE
_

phone

• DO YOU KNOW
WHO THAT JUST
WAf;&gt; ON lJ.I.E
PHONE ?

dozer,

backhoe and dltcher, Charles
R. Hatfield. Black Hoe Service ,
Rutland, Ohio. Pone 742·2008.

HE SAID Hlf;&gt;
NA ME WAS
11
5MOOCH . 11
BUT TI'AT
DIDN'T MAKE

HE:S ONLY TI'E HOTTf;5T I&lt;OCK
STAR IN TI'E COUNTR Y RIG HT
NOW I AND HE WANTS ME
TO DESIGN CO&amp;'TUME.$
FOR HIS WORLD 1'0t/R.1

HE'S REsTLE&amp;S. MAV5E
TI'IS CRU ISE WASN 'T
5-UCH A 600[? IDEA
AFTER A L L.

\

ACROSS
37 Fight with
I Fatigue
38 Oddball
symptom
39 Noted
5 Hope for
playwright
10 Wheat
40 Shakespeare's
by-product
wife
II Coagulative DOWN
substance
1 Having the
13 Pork product knowhow
14 Porter
2 Sourpuss
15 Subside
3 Have
16 Torso, in
accounts
modem lingo 'io settle
17 Bardot' s
4 Discontinue
summer
5 Bowers
18 Olfactory
6 Gardening
sensations
problem
%0 Pmnacle
7 Prefix
for gram
21 Burden
8 As reprisal
22 Famous
9 Eschew
name
the brew
in spying
%3 DimWit

\'

5 ENBE1

I

,

Y esterday'• Anlwer

12 Boring tool
16 U.S.N.

28 Belgian

warrant
officer
19 Way in
21 Inclusive
22 Fail
23 Mental
outlook

32 Bridal·

24 Consort
26 Car's hood,

"Bonanza"
36 Wing :

in Blighty

city
shower
gift
33 English
r1ver
35 Blocker
of

Lat.

l"l •

. 24 Sforza " , , 1,.;,:-4--4-+--1
Castle city

PUlliNS EXCAVATING Com·
plate Service. Phone '992· 2478

25 More than

AUTOMOBILE

26 Seasoning

INSURANCE

been cancel led? Lost ycur
operators
license?
Phone

6--+-+--+...,

herb

27 Engine

992· 21.3.
E-C ElECTRICAL Contractor
servtng Ohio Valley region.
Sl)( days a week , 24 hours ser'lice. Emergency calla Call

,

882-2952 ar 882·3454 .

·-

tune·up
term

f,~.

Z8 "- Luck"
DeLwse

TV

HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex·
systems,
Rt
1.43.

program

BARNEY

Phone 1 (61•) 698-7331 or
742· 2593 .

ALL
SET

I'M

IN STOCK for lmmedlote
delivery· various aizes of pool
kits. Do-lt· youraelf or let us
~ • nstoll for you. D. Bumgardner
Sales , Inc 992·5724

FER MV
BATH·-

I GOT MY BAR

measure

OF SOAP, MY

30 Olemical

WASH· RAG I MV
TOWEL

News 10, Love, American Style

Zll Metric

suffix

31 Tiny bird
34 Alias

RN'MY

BUBBLE GUM

"Barney

VERY GENTLE Quarter Horse.
Western parade saddle.

Millern

Phone 698·3290.

36 Ethereal

ADO ONS and remodeling,
gutter work , down spouts,
some concrete w.orJc, wolka
ond
driveways · (free
estimate). V.C Young, Ill,

DAII.Y CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's
Is

Recine, OH . 9•9·2748 and
992·7314 .

Yard Sale
REAL ESTATE Loans. Purchase
and refinance 30 year terms,
VA. No money down (eligible
vetercns} . Ff1A - As low as 3
per cent down (non· veterans).
Ireland Mortgage Co.,
E.

AsktbclxMpts
+A

t$~"eut'

EXCAVATING, dozer, loader

Bradbury. I floor, corner lot
w tth gar~~:S corport ond rear

.

Pass

Pass

the re s ult of on~ of his steady
free b ids. Of c ourse, Eas t
laid the trap tnto which
South walk e d .
North 1s two notrump wa s
o ne of tho s e unu s ual
nolrumps. It showed no des ire at all to play notrump
and m e rely told partner that
he, North, had a club-diamond two-suit hand
East didn't have anythmg
hke a four-spade 1hand. But
he knew h1s oppone nts and
wa s certain that South would
not be s hut out. And East felt

SEWING MACHINE Repairs ,
serv1ce , all makes. 992· 228..f .
The Fabric Shop , Pomeroy
Authorized Singer Sale! and
Service. We shorp&amp;n Scissors

SALE PRICES

apt. 992·

5.

South

• A 8 2

JUST KEl5P WAL.KIN'!

ELWOOO BOWERS REPAIR SwHpers, taostars . Irons . all

cavatlng , sept1c
dozer, backhoe

~

to

• KQ 5

ALLEYOOP

BRADFORD, Auctioneer, Com plete Service. Phone 949 2..f87
or 9•9·2000 Racme , Ohio,
Critt Bradford

EXCAVATING ,

lead

lurn wo n b y North , the n a
se c ond dtamond tak e n by
North, a dtamond r uff and a
heart ruff.
AI this table West opened
hts a ce of s pades. Eventually, East a~d e d three trump
tri ck s for plus 300.

By Os wald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag .

4·30 ·11c

992 · 7089 ,
night
992·3525 or 992·5232.

h ea rt

You hold .
+KJ7 5 4
• 64

m1le off Rt. 7 by-pass

and backhoe wcrk; dump
.rucks and lo-bovs for hire,
will hau• fill dirt, tcp soli ,
limestone and groveL Call Bob
or Roger Jeffers, day phone

a

FOUR

I'AMitY

Yard

PEANUTS

'' IL FAIT UN TEMPS
5UPER8E II IT 15 A
8EAUTIFVL. DAL.

Sale.

Wed. , June 71 One doy only
572 Grant St , M iddleport, Von

Cooney's. 10.3, Booullful hand
strung beads, boys' clothes ,
slzel to 7. Rain cancela .

I

,, IL PLEUT AVER5E II
IT 15 POURING

to work it :

CRYPTOQUOTES

P HC

F C I M

N K
OH C YA
NK

PHC

' "X
·N

P

RCO

0

AT XV
HX

NK

OAM

YNX
I H XV
RFHRMF

15 . Get Smarl 17 ; Di c k Cavell
20,33.
7 · 3Q.-Dolly 3, Malch Game PM 6;
Muppe f Show 8; The Judge 10;
Nelson Palfer son 13 ; Wild
Kingdom 15; My Three Sons 17;
MacNeil- Lehrer Re port 20.33.
8 00- Laugh . ln 3, 15 , Eight Is
Enough 6. 1~. Universe 8,10, Fall
of Eagles 17 ; Masterpie c e
Theatre 20; All Creatures Great &lt;
&amp; Sma ll 33.
8 JO-Good Times 8,10
9 oo- Movle
" Baltle
of
th e
Generations " 3, 15 ; Charlie' s
Angel s 6, 13; Movie " Report to
the Commissioner " 8, 10; Great
P e rformances 33, Baseball 17;
,
Upstairs, Downstairs 20 .
10 ·00-Vegas 6, 13 ; News 10, Three
by Four 33 ; 10 · 30- Best of
G roucho 20
11. 00- News ", 6,8, 10 , 13, 15 ; Dick
Cavell 20 ; Lowell Thoma•
Remembers 33.
11 :JO-Johnny Carson 3, 15; Pollee
Woman 6, 13; Swlfch 8; Movie ,
" 'The Third Secret " 10, ABC

News 33.

TWO FAMILY YARD Sale at the
Kenneth Turley residence at
Roclne, OH. tllunday ::Z8th,
Friday 29th The •th house
above Southern Hill Schoo!on
Rt. 12.. . 9 am tc4 pm

how
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One let ter s amply stands fo r ano ther. In th 1s sam pl e A is
u sed for the three L's. X fo r th e two O' s, etc S m gle l c Lte r s,
apostrophes, th e le nglh and for ma ti o n of th e " o rds a re all
hints Eac h da y the code le ll crs a re diffe rent.

NEIGLER CONSTRUCTION for

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 27, 1979
at Large 17; 5:45-1
Farm Report 13 ; 5 50--PTL Club
·
13 ; 5. 55--Summer Semester 10
6 00-700 Club 6,8, PTL Club 15,
6 : 10- News
17 ;
6 . 25Chr lstopher Closeup 10.
6 30-Dragnet 17; 6 ' 45--Mornlng
Report J ; 6 · 50-Good Morning.
West VIrginia 13 . 6 :55--Chuck
While Reports 10; News 13.
7:00-Today 3, 15; Good Morning
Am e rica 6,13 ; Schoolles 10 ;
Three Stooges· Little Rascals 17,
7. 15--Weather 33.
7· 30-Famlly Affair 10 ; Lilias Voga
&amp;. You 33 , 8 · 00-Capt Kangaroo
8,10; Leave It To Beaver 17;
Sesame St. 33
8 30-Romper Room 17 : 9 :DO-Bob
Braun 3; Phil Donahue 13, 15; Big
Valley 6; Porky Pig &amp; Friends 8;
Love of Life 10, Lu c y Show 17,
Biography 33 .
9 30-Sanford &amp; Son 8; Hogan's
Heroes 10, Green Acres 17
10 ·DO-Card Sharks 3, 15; Edge of
Ntght 6; All In The Family 8,10;
Dating Game 13 ; Movie "her
Kind of Man" 17 ; Exploring fhe
Crafts: Weaving 33.
10 .30-AII Sfar Secrets 3, 15 , $20,000
Pyramid 13 . Andy Griffith 6;
Whew 8. 10, Daniel Foster M.D.
33 , 10 55-CBS News 8; House
Call 10
11 :00-High Rollers 3,15; Laverne&amp;'
Shlrley6,13 ; Pr ice Is R lghl8,10;
Biography 33; 11 :3()--Wheel of
Forlune 3, 15 , Family Feud 6, 13;
11.55--News 17 .
12 QO--Newscenter 3, Pas~word 15;
Young &amp; the Restless 8; Over
Easy 33, M idday Magazine 13,
Love American Slyle 17.
12 ·30-Ryan 's Hope 6,13; Search for
Tomorrow 8, 10; Not For Women
Only 15; Movie " Stop, You ' re
Killing Me" 17; MacNeil -Lehrer
Report 33.
1:DO-Days of Our Lives 3, 15; All My
Children 6, 13 ; News 8; Young &amp;
the Restless 10 , Watch Your
Mouth 33.
1· 30-As The World Turns 8, 10; Two
Ronnles 33
2:00-Doctors 3,15 ; One Life to Live
6,13; Border Traffi c 33 ; 2.25-News 17.
2· 30-Another World 3,15; Guiding
Light 8, 10; I Love Lucy 17.
3. 00-General Hospital 6, 13 ; . Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 20 ; Infinity FActory
17 , Ra ce for the Yellow Jersey
33
3:3()--Mash 8; Joker' s Wild 10;
· Banana Spills 17, Over Easy 20 .
4 00- Misfer Cartoon 3 ; Merv
Griffin 6; Hollywood Squares 15;
Addams Family 8 , Sesame St.
20,33; Six Million Dollar Man 10;
Mike Douglas 13, Fllntsfones 17.
4 30- Lone Ranger 3 . Hogan's
Heroes 8: Lucy Show 15. Par.
t rldge Family 17
5 :00-Bonanza 3; Beverly Hillbillies
8. Mister Rogers' Neighborhood
20,33; Gomer Pyle USMC 10 ; Six
Mil lion Dollar Man 13; Brady
Bunch 15; Star Trek 17
5 . 30-News 6, Pett icoat Junction 8;
Elec Co 20 , Mary Tyler Moore
10, Odd Couple 15. Doc tor Who
33
6:00-News 3,8, 10, 13 , 15; ABC News
6, Family Affair 17 , Villa Alegr.e
20, Studio See 33 .
6 :JO-NBC News 3, 15; ABC News 13;
Carol Burnell 6; CBS News 8, 10;
Over Easy 20,33; Father Knows
Best 17.
7 oo- Cross· Wits 3, Ne wlywed
Game 6, 13; Porter Wagoner B;

.s 2Q.-World

South's a ce, a dtamond re-

WEll, KNOWFW ROCKY AND LE~A
SURE 15 A I'REAK FOR ME , ..
AND FOR A LOT 0' PEOPLE - ..
COURSE , I DO PAY ifiEM,
BUT ONLY COS'T PRICE ·..

small appliances. Lown moer,
ne)(t to State Highway Garage
on Route 7 , 985-3825.

608 E .
MAIN
POMFAOY.O .

North East
2 NT 4+
Pa ss
Obi

Ope mng lea d:

45 -t mo

THREE BBDROOM homo In

Mgr.
Phone 992-2111

LITI'LE ORPHAN ANNIE

STOCK

WORK, GENERAL

Real Estate for Sale

a gains t

lectmg a very bad score as

Garage

992-SS47
4·25 1 mo. -Pd .

four spades , most declarers
we nt down two tri c k s

H e re is another hand from
the So uthe aslerns to sho w
the steady free bidder col-

BLOCK &amp; BRI~K

.

Pass
Pass

HERE'S MONEY, ANNIE
" 'DO THIO MARKET! NCO
AT 1HAT PlACE WHERE
YOU CAN GET SD /YlUCH
FOR. 50 UTTLE . ..

Roger Hysell

Pomeroy, Ohio

spades.
South r eally s hould ha ve
passed He kne w that hi s
partne r would be s hort m
hea rts a nd thai fo ur s pades
mtg ht w e ll be set At those
ta bles where Wes t dtd play

Vulne rable . E ast - West
Deale r · W e st

N. L Construction

Rt. 3

•n

• 95
• 9 G4 3

TRAILER NOW AVAILABLE

ll•

FUMB LE

thai he h a d the n g ht m e di -

.2

27320 Mont110mfl'l' RG .
l..ilftiiSVII!e, Ohio
41•-ut..tl•s Even1n11s
2 Mllet East of Wilkesville

.

CALL

4-5 tic

6DD!e;:'

TU!&lt;'I'L.~fJ~K ~

MONTGOMERY

AWMINUM
&amp;VINYL SIDING
BY
J&amp;L INSUlATION

E"if'LOY

cme for a ha g h mmar s uit
contract , so he bid four

t A Q108 2
.K108 75
WEST
EAST
• AJ 8 6 i!
• Q 10 9 4
1
• J 53
1• K 6 7
t K J6
• 743
• AQJ
SOUTH
+K

!SIJ1T IT AI~FUI,l.'( HOT
\0 Be W51\RIIJI.? A

1
,,

1VIf&lt;T'(

._,._A1

' \io '.l Q lo 1'12

new houses and repair wcrk.
Call Guy Netgler 949-2508,
Ractna , Ohio

w. Carsey

You FEMeMI3~R

Cell for o Free Sldlnt
Estimate, 949·2101 or
949· 2860. No sunday
cells.
·6·14·2 mo.

State, Athens

WEDGE

What the pri ce of meat appeared to

• 9

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

3%

down (non.veterans)

I Jumbles PlUME

NORTH

BORN LOSER

Siding

30 Year Terms

XXJ ( XI ll)

Free bidders easy target

1% story home wlth full bet•
ment. 2 beck on Lincoln Hts.
Serious calla only. 992-63.47

Jack

gesled by the above cartoon

be - BEEFED UP

Headquarters for
Hotpoint and
General Electric
Appliances

9•9-2H3 .

Give Away

Purchase
Refinance

Evenings at 1·lO·Pt Pleasut,
w va KrOdel Park Club HOUit
For lurtf11r lnrormatlon cetl Jo
Ann Newsome, 61.--992·UU
6 lt mo.

On All

TWO BEDROOM furn1shed apt.

tonn

f&gt;AIJANA'S IJUTTY
CUL Ti ' !

Answer

.

CLEARANCE

992· 3129 ,
992·5914

Now arrange the circled letters 10
the su,Pnse answer, as sug ·

JOIIIEP nfe 81 13

Vinyl and Aluminum

Real Estate Loans

After Spm call 992·5.434 ,
992·3129, or992-59U

FURNISHED APT. suotable for 3

WMH TUBBS

Yesleoday's

51. Rl. 7
North Of Chester, o.
Phone 915-4202
6· 24-1 mo. pd .

992-3100 6·6· 1 ma.

Chester, 0.
H ·l mo. pd.

Box l

FINAl.

992·5.434

TALI&lt;It-.16 TO

BE OANGEFCOUS!

WA S H,Y&lt;!IU IDIOT.
Y'MEAN T' TELL
ME YOU A CTUALLY

(Answers tomorrow)

USED GARDEN
TRACTORS
AND
RIDING MOWERS

Civil
Mechanical
Archetectural
Lavouts

Jacll's Septic
Tank ServiCe

or 4 construction workers .

Phone

AYE-AVE, S ll't!

I THINK HE5 .
STil-L O&gt;J DECK

TIUIS ·

DRAFTING
SERVICES

Residential and commercial.
Calf
for
estimate. 24 Hour Ser•
vice. Any day, anytime.
Portable toilet rental .
Phone 915-3106
Jack Ginther 915-3106

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

opts

JU!'&gt;T ?HOW ~I E
THI$ SO- CALLED
"CREWMAIJ" WITH
TH5 HOOKED
NO$E !

Pomeroy

6·6· 1 mo.

3 AND .. RM furnished and un-

For Rent

Ph . 992-2174

5-20·1 mo.·pd.

Pl: l e•ING•~ IN SOUTH
AME~ICA-COUL..D

Printanswerhere : [

MOn Eveftlnts·Mason, W. VI .,

GOT AN eve for o buy? Floor
sample sale . Regrlgerator.
ranges , brand new Gibson
refrigerator freezer and
ranges, all are feature pocked
to sove you work and hme.
Some units ore sllghtly scrot
chad . AU are priced to sell.
See them today Ridenour TV
and Appliance , Chester

7•2-289B.

Robert E EW ck
Probat e Judge
Clerk

(61 12, 19, 26, 3t c

Co il

Smith Nelson
MotOIS, Inc.

Free Estimates

4231 mo . CPd 1

· -~

() I J

CAPTAIN EASY
8·8·8E(; PARDOIJ,
&lt;;IRE AT LEADER!
DID I DO WR0 '-1(;
SRIIJfllill6 THE
TIGER CU6
HEr:tE' T-

7 3()--Hollyw ood Squar e s 3, Candid
Ca mer a 6, Gong Show 8 ; : Pr ice
is Righi 10 , Do nna F argo 13:
P ll of " Bre nda Star r " 15; My
Three Sons 17; Mac Ne il Lehrer
Re por t 20,33.
8 00-Redscene ' 79 3; Runawa ys 15;
CBS Report s 8, 10; Movi e " The
Notorious Landlady " 17 , Auslln
City Llmlfs 20, Clfy Note book 33 .
Laverne &amp; Sh irley 6, 13 ; Two
Ronnles 33
9 00- Three 's Company
6, 13:
E mergil'l&lt;Y 1S; Movie " Subma ri ne x .1" 8, 10; M cGuffey
Lane 20, Border Traffic 33
9 30--Ta xl 6, 13 , 10 .00-Julle Farr
6, 13 ; Crow Dog 33; News 20,
10 3Q.-Baseball17; Lo c k Stock &amp;
Barrel 20.
11. 00-Ne ws 3.6,B, 10 ,13, 15; Lowell
Thomas Remember s 33
11 3()--Johnny Carson 3. 15 ; Movie
" The Macahans" 13; Movie
" The Last Lion" 6; ABC Ne ws
33 . Movie " Decline &amp; Fall of a
Birdwatcher" 10; 12: 4()--Movle
" Ruby Ge ntry" 6.
·
1 DO-Tomorrow 3; News 15, Movie
" The Treasure of Panc ho VIlla"
17
1 :45- News 13 , 3 oo- News 17;
3 2Q.-Movle " Honeychlle " 17.

1

IMETHELt

Phone 992-6323

992·601 1

r )

Servlc•

eNEWHOMES
e ROOM ADDITIONS
eROOFING
eVlNYLSIDING
eGUTTER &amp; SOFFIT

•New Home
•Add ons
* Remoldings
*Free estimates

2

GRILL far 1973 Chrysler New
Yorker. 742-2.. 60

records

TUESDAY , JUNE 26, 1979

EXPERIENCED

BOB'S GENERAL
CONTRACTING

SIDING

sand,

grovel, calc1um chloride, fer·
td lzer dog food , and all types
of salt Excel sior Salt Works ,
Inc E M01n St , Pomeroy,

992-6370 or Contact Martin

pllonograph

Business Services

r(

SHOP, next to Skate·A·Way
Roller Rink . Will be dosing as
of July 8. We tllonk oil our
many patrons for their post
vears support. Phone 985-.f!41
for final oppotntments. Sondra
Kerns

WANT TO buy old 4S and 7B

I

For Sale

Television
Viewing

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, 10 form
lour ordinary words

TWO WHITE ktttans mole -;, nd , L.....::~_..J!~---;-----_:_--------'----_:_------~-....J
f ema le
S t urto1se' shall ~
P'
calicos , ll . co ltco 2 black kitl ens l tg&lt; r slrtped lotten.
lar ge ye llo w cat. 992-7680 or
go to 2.. -4 Syc amo re, Mtd
Ra'c1iat~n'...--..
dieport

trailer . $1000 9•9-2789
RUTLAND HARDWARE,

992-2689

IPM

3·

8eg 1nn tno th 1rty rod s South
from the North East corn er
of the South Eas t quarter of
Sec tton No Tw enty thre e,
town
se ven ,
Rang e
F o urteen of the Oh•o
Company '-s
Purcha se.
thence West se v enty rods ,
thence South about th.rty
rods to L S Townsend ' s
land , th en ce E as t seventh
rods to th e Eas t l tn e of sa1d
Se ctton tw en ty . thre e ,
thenc e North alon g sard
Ea st ltne thtrty r ods to th e
pla ce of begtnn 1ng , con
tamtng thtrt een and one
etghth acr es mor e or less
sa v e and ex cep t si x 11 cre s
off the we st s•d e of sa id
tra c t of land , now owned
and by A M Ree v es
PARCEL NO 4: Al so ,
another lot or parcel of
land , beginn.ng at th e
Southeast corner of th e
abov e describ ed lot th en ce
P. asl about $event een r C~ d s
or to lht- .:~ ldte road as now
tr.ave l ed . then ce
Nor
thwardly along State Road
abou t thtrty one rods and
ftft een and one ha lf l tnks or
to Columbia Oo wn tng ' s
So uth line . thenc e Wes t
al ong satd Down ing 's South
I me about twenty rod s, or
t o the Ea st line of sa1d
Sect 1on twenty -thr e e ,
thence Sou th along sa id
Ea st ltn e about th•rty rods
to th e plll ce o f beg tnntn g
contatn lng t hree acr es and
s1 xt y fou r rod s, be10g so
much of Sec tion sev enteen ,
tn town se ven , rang e
fourteen
1n the Oh 10
Compan y's Purch ase
Th e amoun t con ve y ed by
th 1s deed betn g ten acr es
ftnd etgh t v four rod s mor e
or less

PUBLIC HEARING
ON PROPOSED
IMPROVEMENTS TO
THE VILLAGE
OF MIDDLE PORT
POWELL STREET
AREA
EXTENSION OF
SANITARY SEWERS

J OO

2.

Beg tnnt ng '" th e li ne be
t ween Sec l ton No Tw ent y
th ree (23) and Sevent een
{ 17) at the So ut hw est
corner of a lot of land
formerl y deed ed by Jesse
Pa ge to John Page th en ce
Ea st Twe nt y on e r ods to
th e Eas t s•de of the A thens
and Ga11 1po11s ro ad to th e
We st l ine of a lo t of land
formerl y deeded by Jes se
Page to Samuel Page ,
then ce South on sa td lin e
and alon.g the East s1de of
the road to the Northeast
corner of ~ lot of land
deeded by rr e to Marttn
R~Jpe , thence West about
tw enty one rods to the line
between secttons twenty
three
and
seventeen.
then ce North along sa•d
ltne ... to the p t ace of
begdl ntng ,contatn tng som e
tw o acres, more or less,
and 1S a par t o t Sect 1on s No
Se venteen ( 17 ), Town (7),
Range Number Fourt een
{1 4) m the Oh to Compan y's

wov

6day.s

GiveAway

Notices

WANT AD
CHARGES

E DN A M A E R E EVES

ENVIRONMEN T
VIllag e of M iddl epo rt
237 R ace St ree t
M tddl e p or t , Ohto 45760

TO ALL

..

11\1 I h i::

NOTICE OF
FINOINGOF NO

byHenriArnoklandBob Loe

VIHGMK . - AMTXFTYA
AMTXM
Yesterday's Cryptoquole: WI')'HIN CERTAIN LIMITS, IT IS
AC11JALLY TRUE TIIAT THE LESS MONEY YOU HAVE ,
THE LE SS YOU WORRY.-GEORGE ORWELL

• •'
\
'

11'&lt;15- Baseball 17 , 12:40-Mannlx
6, 13, l&lt;ojak 8
1:DO-Tomorrow 3; News 15 ; 1· soNews 13; 2 30-News 17.

1

�a- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, June 26, 1979

Food short~ge fears spreading over nation

'AG R.I., CULT .~

.

-~

.
THIS COVERED WAGON drawn by two ponies was an added attraction in the Big Bend' Regatta
parade. It was guided by John Houck of Gallipolis.

Cain appealing
court's decision
Gallia County Prosecuting Attorney
Joseph L. Cain has termed yesterday's directed verdict by Clinton
County Judge Paul E. Riley acquitting Forrest Jones of the murder
charge brought against him, "a gross
miscarriage of justice."
1\ccordlng to Prosecutor Cain, the
ruling by the Court, "appeared tn be
an arbitrary and capricious
decision."
Catn pledged this morning tn seek
to appeal the decision, but empha&amp;zed, that such an appeal is an extremely complicated legal process.
The State's right to appeal a
decision by the court Is stri~tly
llmlted by the Ohio Revised Code.
According tn the Prosecutor, at the
close of the State's case at about 11:30
a.m., the Court overruled a motion to
direct a verdict for the defendant.
About two hours later, and without
any additional testimony . by the
defense, the Court granted the same
motion, Catn said.
"It (the Court) denied twelve good
citizens of Gallia County tbe opportunity to decide this case," Cain
said this morning,
The following Is the text of a

May s8les collections

show slight increase
Retall sales tax receipts in Meigs
County for May, 1979 were. up 30.74
percent, or $24,2&amp;1.73, over receipts
for May, 1978, according tn the report
of State Treasurer Mrs. Gertrude
Donahey.
Receipts for May, 1979, totaled
$103,111.2'1· while receipts for May,
1979, totaled $78,996.54.
Motor vehicles sales tax for May,
1979, were down 5.62 percent compared to May, 1978. Receipts for May,
1979, amounted to $6l,o:Jl.l4 while
receipts in May, 1978, totaled
$64,654.84.

statement prepared by Prosecutor
Cain and Sheriff James M. Montgomery:
"Sheriff James Montgomery and
Prosecutor Cain wish to iliank the offleers involved in the investigation
and their many hours of work and the
witnesses who voluntarily gave their
time in the prosecution of the case. In
addition, the Sheriff and Prosecutor
Cain wish to thank the jurors who sat
for five and one-half days listening tn
testimony only tn have the Judge, in
the eleventh our, deny them the opportunity to decide the case.
"Also, the Sheriff and Prosecutor
extend their sympathy to the family
of Lewis Phillips who were denied the
opportunity to have this case placed
before twelve good citizens of the
county for their decision. Sheriff Montgomery and Prosecutor Catn pledge
their continued efforts tn protect the·
citizens. of Gallia County from the
crimlnal element.''
FREECLOTHINGDAYSET .
Free Clothing Day will be held at
the &amp;\Jvation Army, Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy, Thursday from 10 a.m. until
noon . All area residents in need of
clothing are welcome.

, Timothy
A State Highway Patrol report on
an accident in Meigs County Saturday
printed in Monday's Sentinel should
olzer
Center
have read as follows: At 3 p.m. SaturDischarges, June 25
day, Irts M. Williams, Pomeroy, was
Sandra Adkins, Ernestine Baughdriving westbound on SR 124 east of man, Robert Baxter, Garnet Boyd,
Meigs County Road 15. When her Okie Camp Sarah Clark, Jimmy
ve!Jicle tw:"ed left tn go intn a pri~ate Evans, Albert . Finley, Elizabeth
driveway 1t was struck by a vehicle Lycan Leslie ·Lyons Everett Medriven by Ann B. Barrett, Rutland. - Crady: Mrs. Michaei McCalla and
Barrett was passing another west- daughter Jean Ragland Margaret
bound vehicle when the mishap oc- Sheline, 'Rudy Skeens, Mrs. Jerry
curred. There was moderate damage Smith and son Eloise Smith, Derrick
· to Williams ' car with no injuries and St. Clair.
'
no citations.
' Blrtbs,June Z5
Mr. and Mrs. James Walker, son,
Oak Hill.

29.Z2 JUL. 79

WE'LL HELP YOU FILL IN THE BLANK.

Say you've spotted a beautiful compact
or luxury model you're dying to get your
hands on. The price is right, but you're a
little short of cash . Come talk to us. We
have a variety of loan plans with very bearable payments . If yoUfill out our blanks
correctly, we'll fill in yours.
"Th•• Fr;,:",/1'· R1111h "
Walk ·up 1ell er window
and auto·H•II(Ir window

Open Frid ay Evenings 5 to 7 p.m .

F . O :LC

HOSPITAL NEWS

"~" (1(10 .00

Look-alike winners
are announced here
Sue Fry, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
James Fry, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, and Mike
Parker, son of Mr. and Mrs. Leland
Parker, Pomeroy, were selected as
the Becky Thatcher - Torn Sawyer
look-alike contest sl!lged S!IDdaY as a
part of Heritage Sunday.
Sue was dressed in a blue pinafore
and sunbonnet and carried a doll
dressed in an identical costume. Mike
won exlrl! points in the judging by
whitewashing techniques, which in·
eluded swiping three pickets of a fen·
ce at a time with a dripping brush.
Judges were Clare Lochary Nancy
Reed and Norma Newland. Sue and
Mike won $5 prizes amlll contestants
received bags of old fashioned hard
candy.
Attracting a great deal of attention
from the many visitors to Heritage
Sunday staged by the Meigs County
Pioneer and Historical Society also
were displays of antique china and
brass from the collectloos of Mr. and
Mrs. Fred Goeglein and Mr. and Mrs.
Ted Reed along with the brass collec·
lion of Mr. and Mrs. P~ul Elch
gathered from several fore1gn countries.

rt/}i/f)iif/{::::::::::::;:;:;::;:::r:::::::=;::::;::;:;·

•

VOL. XXVIII

NO. 52

.

..

But in North' Carolina, Gov. 'Jim
Hunt, speaking from the back of ,; big
rig, persuaded drivers blocking a fuel
termina l complex to disband .
"You are in the strongest position
with regards to how people and public
leaders fee l about you," Hunt told
drivers picketing the complex housing
Shell, Exxon and Sunoco terminals in
Greensboro.
"U people start ruming out of gas,
losing jobs and ca·m ot get food, they
will start blaming somebody. And I
think you know who !hat will be, ''
Hunt said.

.

The gates of lhe Georgia PQJ;t
Authori~y were cleared of · pickets
when a judge ordered protesters not to
interfere with traffic.
Mea nwhil e, Fort Wayne , Ind.,
supermarkets reported shortages of
chickens,
and
supplies
of
watermelons, peaches and other
produce dwindled in other lndiaha
cities. Panic buying - as much as
$200 worth of grocieries at a time was reported in Carnegie, Pa.
ln Nebraska, hundreds of meat
pa cki ng plant employees were
furloughed because no trucks were
available. Washington cherry

growers who.turned to the railroads to
get tfleir crops to market found there
were not epough cars to keep up with
demand. And in Tennessee, livestock
sales dropped 50 percent in some
areas.

.

.

While truckers picketed Green Bay
packing plants Tuesday, a Manitiwoc
trucking company reported nearly 200
tires punctured. At least 11 gunshots
hit a truck being driven near Camden,
S.C., and . in Alabama, a third man
sought on charges of murdering a
Teamster driver surrendered to
authorities.

••

at

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

far as 1 can see. H

enttne
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 27, 1979

guarded a_fter incidents
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Several
Department of Mental Health and
Mental Retardation employees are
being guarded by special security
personnel following recent acts of
violence, department officials say.
No one was injured in the incidents,
which included gunshots fired into a 1
Hilliard residence, a flaming flare
thrown onto the porch of a Tiffin home
and a brick thrown through a house
window in Harrisburg.
The violence began after a one-&lt;iay
walkout last Wednesday by the
American Federation of State, County
and Municipal Employees.
The department invoked the state's
Ferguson Act, which outlaws strikes
by public employees. It fired 1,381
workers under the act . Several
hundred workers later were
reinstated after the department
reviewed their cases.
On Monday, about 100·, of the
discharged employees, many
carrying signs that read, "I'm one of
the 1,300," jammed a StatehoQSe
heating room where the state
Controlling Board was meeting.
The board refused tn act on all of the
department's requests until it
receives information about the fired
employees and the current status of
mental health facilities.
.
One item the board deferred was a

Trial...
(Continued from page 1)
testified that on the night of October

request for money to provide security
guards for department staff from July
1 through July 16.
Jeffrey Finkle, the department's
legislative liaison, said the board was
not asked to approve funding of the
current security service because the
price tag is under $10,000. .
State law says ·a · department can
enter into a personal service contract
of less than that amount without
Controlling Board approval.
The deferred request Is for an
unspecified amount ·of money tn hire
the guards. The board said it might
take up the issue at special meeting
Thursday.
Dr. Rudy Magnone, deputy
commissioner of the department, Is
among those receiving protection

now. His Hilliard horne was the target
of several--gunshots Friday night.
Finkle 'said the state Highway
Patrol was asked to investigate a hole,
possibly caused by a bullet, in the
office window of the mental health
Director Timothy B. Moritz.
:. AI Dopking, spokesman . for the
department, said the heavy glass in
the State Office Tower lith floor
window was not penetrated, but an
indentation in the pane appeared to
have been made by a rifle fired from
some distance. A patrolman was
assigned to guard Moritz.
in another weekend incident, a flare
was set aflame and thrown on the
porch of the borne of Greg Leopold,
business manager of the Tiffin Mental
Health and Mental Retardation
Center.

Will improve Conrail route
PHILADELPHIA · (A P)
Consolidated Rail Corp. has
announced plans to spend more than
$8 million this year upgrading its rail
route between Columbus, Ohio, and
the Charleston, W.Va., area.
"This will mark the third
·consecutive year Conrail will be
makin'g expenditures in the millions to
rehabilitate this important route,
which serves primarily the coal
industry in southeastern Ohio and
'west Virginia and the chemical
complex
centered
around
Charleston," Conrail President Stuart
M. Reed said Monday.
Reed said 44.2 miles of new rail will

be installed in Ohio, and late this year
another 20 miles will be placed in West
Virginia between Buffalo and Nitro.
In addition, 106 miles of the line will
be resurfaced - the track raiSed,
smoothed am aligned - and almost
14,000 crossties installed between
Point Pleasant and Buffalo, W.Va ., he
said.
About 12,500 crossties are slated for
installation
on
the
Peters
CreekBranch, which connects with
lhe ColumbuiH:harlestOn line near
Nallen, east of Charleston, Reed said.
He added that Conrail has spent
more than $857 mlllion in its first three
years to upgrade the railroad.

29 he had taken statements at the

Gallia County Sheriff's Department
from Jones, Gullet and Lambert.
Those statements alleged that the
shooting of Lewis Phillips was of an
accidental nature.
Following the testimony of the two
prosecution witnesses, the
prosecution rested its case. The
defense moved that the testimony and
all statements of Roger Lambert and
Drexel Gullet be suppressed.
Judge Riley, sitting on assignment
in Gallia County, denied that motion.
Charging that the evidence presen·
ted by the prosecution was in·
sufficient in that the jury would have
nothing tn consider, "other than the
testimony of these two potential coconspirators," defense attorney
Teegardin then moved the court for
acquittal.
Following a 20 minute recess,
Judge Riley moved tn deny the defen· se request for acqwttal.
Following a break for lunch, and
prior to the opening of the case for the
defense am the seating of the jury, attnrney Teegardin moved that the jury
be waived and the case be tried by the
court.
"We wish not that a jury decide on
the speculative and circumstantial
nature of this case," Teegardin AAid.
Prosecuting Attrney Joseph L. Catn
refused to consent, as required, to the
waiving of the jury.
That motion was denied.
When the jury was resealed, the
defense waived its right tn make an
opening statement, rested its case
without calling a single witness, and
moved that the court grant an acquittal.
Judge Riley granted that motion.
"I grant this motion reluctantly;"
Judge Riley said, "it Is the feeling of
the court that, in all pro.l!!!.billty, your

:':'::::::::ii::::::::::::::r:: :':::::::::::::::::::ttt:t::t:::::r::: ~:1::e~. ~~d~~~~~e~~~
BROAD RULING
wASHINGTON (AP) - Tbe
Supreme Court, in a deelsloa tbat
could carry broad impact for the
ne'WI media, rnled today tbat per·
IODS acCUJed of crimes do not
automatically have to prove "actual
malice" to win a llhellawsult.
Tbe rullllg could make reP.,rters
and their news orgaalzatloDS easier
target&amp; fot llhellawsultl stellllDlng
.from reporting based on public
criminal records or open COIJrl
proceedings.

. refineries don't boost supplies.
. The l~uckers seek lower diesel fuel
prices, higher speed limits and an end
to weight regulations that vary from
state tn state.
The violence of the strike continued,
and one trucker spokesman warned
that the weekend violence in
Levittown, Pa., sparked by the
gasoline shortage and the truckers
protest, was only the beginning.
"This country is heading for an
emergency," said William Hill,
chairman of the Independent
Truckers Unity Committee. "We're
going tn have rioting in the streets as

e

THE MEIGS COUNTY FARM BUREAU No Food" with its "Voice of Agriculture" topic in
Federation carried out a timely theme, "No Crude - Saturday's Regatta Parade.

WRECK OORRECl'ED

neeD Anew CAR?

Mf1rnber

.

morning en route to, a major food
distribution/ warehouse. The trucks
were halted before arriving at their
destination , police said.
The only way to save California's
agricultural industry, which produces
40 percent of the nation's fruits and
vegetables, is to end the inde)&gt;endent
truckers
shutdown,
industry
spokesmen told state legislators on
Tuesday.
While drivers ended their protests
in some areas and tightened their
economic stranglehold in others, an
Energy Department official said the
Carter administation could require an
increase in diesel fuel· production if

?'==~

r- Ar~-;-rj;;;Iiil___l State health offi~ials
CLEMENT D. COOPER
Funeral services for Clement
D.Cooper 65, Syracuse, who died
Sunday at Veterans Memorial
Hospital were held at I p.m. today at
Ewing Chapel with the Rev. Clyde
Fields officiating. Burial was in
Tuppers . Plains Christian Cemetery.
Mr. Cooper was the son of the late
George Washington am Ida Dawson
Cooper. He was also preceded in death
by three sons, Clement Eugene,
George Carl and Kemeth Eugene, two
sisters, Beryl Deem and Marietta
Cooper.
Mr. Cooper . was a member of
Fathers House of Hartford, w. , Va.,
and a former deckhand on a
riverboat.
He is survived by his wife, Leota
Matlack Cooper, ·three daughters,
Mrs. Karen Hood and Mrs. Janet
Compson both of Mason, and Mrs.
Irene Shaw, Pt. Pleasant, 12
grandchildren, tw9 sisters, Mrs.
Georgie Barnett and Mrs. Eula Ward,
T!Jppers Plains, one half-brother,
Dexter Cooper, Annamorlah, W. Va.
1n lieu of flowers donations were
made to the cancer society.
MEDICAL PATIENT
Clarence Gilkey, Railroad Street,
Middleport, is a medical patient at
Holzer Medical Center. His room
number Is 417.

By CliARWTfE PORTER
"
Associated Press Writer
Growing fears of food shortages
spread from the East to the Plains as
California farmers, unable to get the
trucks to haul crops to market, plowed
fresh produce into the ground and
some Midwestern meatpackers sent
their workers home.
And the scattered violence that has
punctuated the truckers' shutdown
erupted again today with reports of
three highway shootings in Illinois
and truck firebombings in Indiana
and New York. Near Woodbridge,
N.J., about 2:i independent truckers
snarled traffic on Routes 35 and 9 this

feelings r"
"The only way the merits of such a
case can be considered, the Common
Pleas Judge S:aid, " is if . the clrcumstances are entirely consistent
with guilt; or, wholly inconsistent
with innocence."
"The court will not allow this case
tn go tn the jury with this evidencewill not thrust upon this jury the duty
of speculating," Riley said.
"We have at the close of this trial
emctly what we had at the beginning ·
- a man dead of a gwtShot wound,"
the Conimon .Pleas Judge continued,
"The case is simply not proved,
there's nothing more to be said."

Oil hike coming
GENEVA, Switzerland (AP) The 13 members of the
Organization of ,Petroleum Ex·
porting Countries apparently are
ready to agree on a new base
price of $20 a llal;el for crude oil,
$3 above their present average
price, sources in the cartel said. ·
The sources said the
agreement to be announced today
at the end of a two-day OPEC
pricing meeting also calls for an
end to the leap-frogging . surcharges of the past three months
and another meeting in September, three months ahead of
schedule, to take a new look at
the' price situation.
The price of $20 for a 42-gallon
barrel of crude would add as
much as 5 cents a gallon to U. S.
gasoline and heating oil prices,
. analysts said.
.

fuel plan
WASHINGTON (AP) -House
members, setting aside major
differences on energy, overwhelmingly approved a plan
Tuesday to promote synthetic
fuels as an alternative to importedoll.
On a 363-25 vote, the House endorsed the nmltiblllion-dollar
assortment of federal subllidies,
loans .and guarantees for fuels
made from coal, shale and other
sublrtances.
Backers likened the effort to
the World War ll crash program
that established the nation's synthetic rubber industry.
House Majority Leader Jim
Wrtght of Texas, one of the main
sponsors, said the full lmpact·on
U . S. supplies probably wouldn't
be seen for at least a decade. But
he called the bill a first step
toward "energy independence"
from foreign sources of oil.

Session planned
MIDDLETOWN, Ohio (AP) The Middletown Board of
Education has voted to schedule
another special election Sept. 11
for reconsideration of a 6 mill
operating levy.
Voters have defeated the levy,
that would provide $4 million,
four times since 1972. ' ,
The board earlier canceled all
school activities, including sporBIG WHEEL WINNERS - Winners in a Blg Wheel Race Saturday
morning were I tn r, Travis Nease, under 5 group; and John Bentley, 5
and up group. The winners and each contestant received a silver dollar.
The event was held in conjunction with Big Bend Regatta Weekend.

ELBERFELDS
MEN'S
WORK UNIFORMS
Matching pants .and shirts.
Our Mr. Leggs quality of cot·
ton polyester blend, full cut,
perfectly tailored. Complete
selection of sizes in pants
from 29 to 50 - Shirts from
14'12 to .20. Khaki, navy, forest
green, charcoal, dark olive.

WORK TROUSERS .......... '8.95
LS. SHIRl'S .................. '7.95
S.S. SHIRTS.................. '6.95
EXTRA SIZES SLIGHRY HIGHER

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

ts.

Air plan delayed
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Ohio
will be a couple of weeks late in
submitting its air pollution control plans to the U. S. Environmental Protection Agency,
but the state apparently doesn't
face punitive federal action.
Marilyn Heasley, state EPA
spokeswoman, said the paln will
not be ready by the July 1
deadline because of staffing
probleiiUI.
"The U.S. EPA knows this.
There have been constant
discussions between us. We ex-.
peel to have the plan ready by
mld.July," she said.

Levy approved
MOWRYSTOWN, Ohio (AP) Voters in the Bright Local School
District have approved a 4.5 mill
levy for school repairs, the
. Highland CoWJty Board of Elections said.
The vote In the special election
Tuesday w.a.s 381-240 and ls expected to genera\e' $400,000 over
five years.
The levy was defeated in
November.

SCHOLARSHIP-Debbie Danner, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
Danner, Middleport, was presented a $500 nursing scholarship by the
Women's Auxiliary of Veterans Memorial Hospital Tuesday evening. A
1979 gradilate of Meigs High School and valedictorian of her class, Miss
Danner was presented the award by Scott Lucas, hospital administrator,
and Mrs. Louise Bearhs, AuD!lary president. She will begin her training
at the Holzer School of Nursing in September.

VOLUNTEER SERVICE-A total of 5,000 hours of
, volunteer service at Veterans Memorial Hospital are
represented here by Mrs. Katie Anthony and Mrs.
Janice Daniels. Pictured from t1!e left are Scott Lucas,
hospital administrator, Mrs. Antbony who received'her

1,000 hour pin, Mrs. Daniels, her 4,000 pin, and Mrs.
Louise Bearhs, Auxillary presideni, who made the
presentation. Qualifying for ptns but not present at the
meeting were Eulonda Haley, 100 hours; Mae Ketcllka,
500 hours; Betty Olrlstopherson, 2,000 hours, hours,
and Mi\ll!le Abbott~ 50 hours. ·

Nursing scholarship given .Tuesday
· A nursing scholarship was
presented tn Meigs High School
graduate, Debbie Danner, and
several members were recognized for
volunteer service at the Tuesday
night meeting of the Women's Aux.

illaryofVeterans Memorial Hospital.
Miss Danner was accompanied to
the meeting by her parents, Mr. and_
Mrs. 'lbomas Danner, Middleport.
She has been ·accepted at the Holzer
School of Nursing and will begin her
training there in September.

Mrs. Louise Bearhs, Auxiliary Christopherson, 2,000 hours, and
presi!lent, presented pins tn Janice Midgie Abbott, 50 hours.
Daniels, 4;000 hours ,of volunteer serDuring the business meeting plans
vice, and to Katie Anthony, 1,000 were discussed for compiling and sell·
hours. Others qualilying for awards · ing a cookbook and JPembers were
were Eulonda Haley, 100 hours; Mae asked tn bring in their recipes. It was
Ketchka, 500 hours; Betty noted that the Auxiliary won fifth

rtwkRi:*G::d~*b:*:dh~!0%2f':::~~=~tt%!\1
Mrs. Warren F: (Phyllis) Sheets,
Gallipolis, and Roger Williams,
Pickerington, Ohio, have been named
to the Rio Grande College Board of
Trustees according to Dr. Paul C.
Hsyes, president.
Mrs. Sheets, a resident of 120 First
Ave., is a f~rmer teacher, now a
homemaker, attended Rio Grande
from 1946-1948 and Ohio Northern
University from 1946-1950.
Service to the college Is not new to
Mrs. Sheets. • Wilen the first Rio
Grande Community College Board of
Trustees was appointed, she was tapped for membership.
Dr. Hsyes said of Sheets' selection,
"We are pleased to have Phyllis
Sheets join our board. She is committed tn making a great future a permanent reality."
Mrs. Sheets, and husband, Atty.
Warren F. Sheets, have three
children, Valorle Gale Sheets
Mackey, who attended Rio Grande in
1973-74 ; Warren Kaven, a sophomore
at the Ohio College of Medicine and
Mark Eric, a Gallia Academy High
School senior. .
Williams, a Gallipolis native, ls a
resident of Pickerington. He is vice·
president, regional operations for Bob
Evans Farms, lnc.

Williams Is a 1968 graduate of Oak
Hill High School and a 19'12 graduate
of Rio Grande College.
His attendance at Rio Grande wos
part of a family tradition that saw his
father Roger and two brothers, Gary
and Ken, also attend Rio.
Dr. Paul C. Hsyes, president of Rio
Grande College and Community Col·
lege, said of Williams' appointment,
"Roger Williams has an understanding of the needs of the people of the
area and this general conunitment to
the college makes him a valuable

PHYlLIS SHEETS

MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) - Vernon
Presley, father of the late rock 'n' roll
king Elvis Presley, died Tuesday at
age 63, a victim of hl!3rt disease, as
were his son and first wife.
Baptist Hospital Assistant Vice
President Steve Reynolds said

Belpre woman dies in US 50 wreck
Mrs. Janet Lee Zeigler,. 48, No. 2
Buckeye Lane, Belpre, was dead on
arrival at Camden Clark Memorial
Hospital as a result of injuries
sustained in an automobile accident
near Little Hocking Monday between
9 and 10 p.m.
. The Ohio State Patrol reports that
Mrs. Zeigler's car was traveling south
on county road 26 when she failed to
stop at a stop sign on US 50.Her
vehicle ran intn the path of an auto
operated by Bonnie A. Nickoson, 35, of
Coolville who was traveling north on
50.
Four other persons sustained
iiijuries and were taken to camden
Clark Hospital.

ROGER WILLIAMii

PUBLIC MEETING TONIGHT
A public meeting to receive input on a JII'OIIOfled oae percent income lax wiD be beld at 7:38p.m.
lhiJ evening al tbe Pomeroy Fire
Station on Butternut Ave.
Relldenll wbether pro or coo
are invited to attend tbe ~~e&amp;~ioo.

Deanna D. Zeigler, 11, was treated
· and released. Mrs. Nick~n was
reported in good comtion as was
Rhoma L. Nickoson , 14. Treated and
released was Lucille A. Wines, 45,
Coolville, a passenger in the Nickoson
car.
Mrs. Zeigler was the daughter of
Walter H. and Lola Young Ford. Mrs.
Zeigler was a registered rnirse, a
member of the American Nursing
Association and the West Virginia
Nursing Association., She was
employed at Camden Clark Memorial
Hospiial for approximately 20 years.
She was a . member of St. Marks
United Methodist Church, Belpre ..

RevaStmma.

The hospital conference at Newark
was noted with Mrs. Bearhs, Joy
White, Mrs. Jessie White, Mrs. An·
thony, and Mrs. Frances Smart allen·
ding. Two donations of money were
acknowledged, one from Mrs. Nan
Moore and the other from LouiiJe
Michaels.
Mrs. Katheryn Metiger had the
opening prayer and Mn. Ethel
Grueser and Mrs. Emogene Simms
presented the secretary and
treasurer's reports.
Salad, crackers and J!Uts were Bei'V•
ed by Mrs. carrie Kennedy, Mrs.
Bthel Hatfield, Mrs. Nettie Hsyes,
and Mrs. Metiger.

Appoints Crow
as president

resource.,,

Willlams and his wife Sue Ann have
two children, Christopher Ty, 6, and
Susan Elizabeth, 4.
One other new board member was
also appointed. He is John Hoyt,
president of the Hwnane Society of
the United States, Washington, D.C.

place in the Community Club Awards
for the·last time period. There will be
no meeting in July, but a picnic will
be held in August at the horne of Mrs.

&amp;lpre Shrinettes, Bethel number 65
Council of Job 's Daughters.
Survivors include her husband ,
William L. Zeigler, as son, William
(Butch ) Zeigler and daughter,
Deama Da'Wll Zeigler all of Belpre, a
sister, Patricia Peet, Hampton, Va.,
and a half-sister, Mrs. Katherine
Grant, Key Largo, Fla.
Funeral services will be held Friday
at 2 p.m. at the Spencer ·Funeral
Home ln Belpre with Rev. · Earse
Mauler and Rev. Roy Wigal
officiating. Burial will he in Sunset
Memory Gardens. Friends may call
at t~e funeral home after 10 a.m. on
Thursday.
·

Presley died at 9:20a.m. "It was a
sudden death, not a heart attack," he
said . "A medical team attempted to
resuscitate him ... but failed."
Presley entered the hospital May 29
with an irregular heart beat. He was
treated in the acute coronary care
unit for two days and then transferred
to the sub-coronary care facility.

Syracuse Mayor Eber Pickens
named Kathryn Crow president of
village council during a brief meeting
Tuesday night.
.
Mayor Pickens, Chief of Pollee
Milton Varian, and council members
extended thanks to the sheriff's
department for their assistance in the
village during the Ulness of Chief
Varian.
Council will meet in regular session
on Thursday, July 12, at 7:30p.m.
Attending were Mayor Pickens,
Troy Zwilling and Kathryn Crow,
council members, Janice Lawson,
clerk, Chief Varian, George Holman,
treasurer, and Herman London.

Weather

Elvis Presley died .of heart failure
Aug. 16, 1977 at age 42. Elvis' mother,
Partly cloudy tonight and Thursday
Gladys Love Presley , died afteLB----wtth a chance of showers and thun·
heart attack in 1958.
derstnnns. Lows tonight near 80.
Reynolds said Vernon Presley had Highs ThursdaY in the low tn mid 1108.
been experiencing increasing The chance of rain Is 30 percent
dUficulty with irregular heart beats, tonight and Thursday.
and the inunediate cause of death was
ventricular fibrilalion - an irregular
and runaway beat of the heart's lower
MARIJUANA PLANTS PULLED
Meigs County Sheriff James J .
chambers, he said .
Proffitt reported thai Sgt. Randy
Forbes
and deputy Keith Wood pulled
His fiancee, Sandy Miller, was in
30
marijuana
plan~ approximately 30
the room at the time of Presley 's
inches
tall
from
a RuUand Township
death, a family spokesman said.
farm.
Bob ·. Kendall of the Memphis
The owner of the property had
Funeral Home, said funeral
notified
the sheriff of finding the
arrangements were incomplete. He
plants
in
a field on his farm. When
said Presley would be buried at
deputies
determined
the plants to be
Graceland Mansion outside Memphis.
marijuana the plants were pulled.

•
I

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