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D-12-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday , July l, 1!179

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Letters of opinion
welcomed . Th~y sliould be less I
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300 words long 1or subject to reduction by the editort 1
an·

~an

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and must he signed with the signee 's address. Names may
be withheld upon publication. However, oo request,
names will be disclosed . Letters should be in good taste,
addressing issues, not personalities.

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Strike causing higher food

connects Rt. 218 with Lincoln Pike
near Rt. 141.
As I was growing up, this road was
always kept in a good, paved condition. Whoever takes care of roads in
Gallia County has let this road tum Into a hole-covered, dirt road during the •
past two or three years.
.
Last winter, after a snowfall, that
road was nearly impassable due to
the fact that no one bothered to do
anything to it.
The four or five inches of snow had
to melt off the road. It is a shame to
let such a once heavily travelled road
fall into dilapidation through neglect.
-Vicki L. Johnson.

.

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iu.

Expresses thanks

.•
e

Willis T. t."eadingham

:

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Realtor

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:

GENERAL VS. LIMITID PARTNERSHIP

•
•

Bl!ying commerc_ia l real estate differs in one respect from buying a
famrly ho!'"e . The trme and opportun ity may be r ight to buy a piece of
commerc•al property, but one buyer may not be able to ra ise enough
e mone y. I~ fht~ case, additiona l moi1ey may be found by terming a
p~rtnersh r p w•th one or mor e other persons who will share the f'nan • e c 1alload .
1
1
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Th e_re are two ki_nd ~ of par t nership arrangements. The general part• nershrp an~ the _llmded partn ership . The basic difference is in the
·e degre_e .of f~n a n c t ~ l r esponsibil ity . In a gener al partnership, all partne r s. sha re '·" p_r oftts and losses. There is no l imit of liability .
·
Wt th t~e 1.1mtte:d partner sh ip, one partner must be a general partner
e but the ltm•ted part_ner 's l iability is lim i ted to th e amount he has in :
·• v_e sted: Be sure Y9 Ur lawyer advises you in this ar ea for your own
• ft na nc tal and legal wel l -being .

e

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If there is anything we can do to help you in the field of real estate
please phone or drop in at LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE, 512 Second
~&gt;ve .• Gallipolis.

Phone 44H699. We're here to.belp.

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SWIM TRUNKS
Boys sizes 8 to 20 · men's sizes 30 to 42 •
Good selection of styles.
·

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Entire stock of bath towels,
matching hand towels and wash ~
cloths, plus all terry cloth kitchen
towels and potholders.

7

Discount

No.

7

Regals

Trans Am.

Electra

SAVE 20%

CHILDREN'S JACKETS
Sizes 2 through 14. For wear now ·and
school days later on .

0

SAVE 20%

SALE PRICE $200

SWIM WEAR SALE

STOP IN
WOMEN'S READY TO WEAR

ON.THE 2NifA.OOR

DEPARTMENT 2ND FLOOR

AIJ of our pre -teen, junior, · missy_ and
women's sizes Included .

See our new selection of women's fall
coats and use our layaway plan.

Plus entire stock of children's swim suits.
· Suits.

SAVE 20%

-SAVE 40%

MONDAY &amp; Tt:JESDAY
IN THE CHILDREN'S DEPARTMENT
ON THE 2ND FLOOR

KIMBALL PIANOS

SPECIAL SALE PRICES
l

See our selection of Kimball
pianos on the 3rd floor. Good selection of styles, sizes and wood
finishes ..

SAVE UP TO 30%

I

MEN'S SHORTS

I"

SAVE '300

---4iti-o'f'Jul:Y5AIE---~·-w-·"-·-·M-EN_'_s_s_u_M_M-Efi_ _ _...

Denim cut -offs, jogging shorts, walking
shorts, tennis shorts. Sizes 30 to 54.

lI

CAPS &amp; HATS
Baseball caps, sport caps, visor caps,
straw hats, terry hats, roll -up has. Entire
stock included. Regular prices $1.()() to
$7 .95 .

SALE
PRICE

SAVE 30%
SUMMER SHORTS
Sizes 8 to 18. Jogging shorts, gym shorts,
denim cut -offs, terry cloths and cotton
polyester blends.

Discount

Limited quantity In sizes 29 to 36 waist.
By wrangler.
·

SAVE '39.95

EUREKA UPRIGHT
· SWEEPER

2

Riviera

$1500

Century

w

Small Down Payment.

2

Has 6-way Deal -A-Nap rug height adjustment .

Regular 5109.90

~~EE '6995 COMPLETE

5

LeMans

SIOOO

MONDAY AND TUESDAY
SAVE ~0%
t
WOMEN'S

sgoo

48 Months To Pay

·

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S'AVE 25%
___.___

En~r~~~~~~m~~~~~~~~mas; ~
I

RUSS. GIRL
SPORTSWEAR
"

Girls slies 7 to~. cQOrdlnailng skirts, slacks, vests·
and blouses. Regular prices S8.00 to $15.00. While
they last.
·

1f2 PRICE
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CLOSED ALL DAY WEDNESDAY, JULY 4TH

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
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enttne.

at

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MONDAY, JULY 2 1979

OHIO

·PRICE FIFTEEN GENIS

while others ·ended block• des of
several major truck stops .
" We ' re still supportin g th e
shutdown 100 percent and we' re
asking tho se who can afford it to stay
home," sai d George Ober g,
representative of the New England
IT A. " But a lot of guys are getting

+.

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\J

checks
ur mzs"ha,ns

15 killed on Ohio highways

Announces
.

.

Meigs deputies
assist in manhunt

Weather

_..;_..

.._

4TH OF JULY CLEARANCE

. shorties and ensembles. Big selection. All sizes.

.SAVE 20,% .

__

Fine sel~ction of styles and colors In boys
sizes 6 months to 6x, girls sizes 6 months
to 6x and 7 to 14.

• cleaning set included .

Catalina

_._..._.."""""'

CHILDREN'S SHORTS

lop tilling disposable dust bag ~ Edge ~ Kieener to
clean along baseboards ~ headlight · 6·piece tool

Price ·

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4th OF JULY SALEI

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price in the Ohio cities surveyed
dropped a cent over the month , falling
to $2.64 per pound for a name brand.
But the average cost of a 10'%-ounce
c:an of tomato soup which sold for 23
cents a month ago went up by an
average of one-half cent. That meant
the price of the item had increased by
two percent.
The price of a 18-ounce pack of
chocolate chip cookies went up from
$1.11 to $1.14, bu t a 12-ounce pack of
frozen orange jui ce remained
unchanged at 95 cents.
The average total cost for the
selected items in the surveyed cities
was as follows:
Ath ens , $21.65 ; Canton, $19.65;
Chillicothe, $21,87 ; Cincinnati, $22.05;
C.1eveland, $23.04; Columbus, $21.92;
(Continued on page Bl

Early deliveries
help.gas crunch

WHITE JEANS

SAVE30%

pound saek of ~ ran u la ted sugar went c:ut pork chops by the pound r ose fro m
up a n average of two cents, from $L13 an average of $2.06 a month ago to ·
$2~ 11 at the end of June.
to $1.15 .
A ga llon of store -brand whole milk
The bottom lin e on the shopping list
reach~d
$2 at Marietta, but cost $1. 35
was higher in 12 cities, with a top of
$23.33 at Steubenville; and lower in at Fremont and $1.34 at Toledo. The
a v era~e of $1.70 among survey cities
seven, down to $18.41 at Toledo.
was
just a cent higher than a month
Among meat items, hamburger,
ea
rlier
.
chuck roast and bacon prices dropped
A
pound
of name-bra nd stic k
while whole fryin g chicken and center
ma
rgarine
declined
fr om 67 cents to
cut pork chops went up. Hamburger
averaged $1.50 per pound among the 66 cents for the month and an 18-ounce
19 cities chec ked, down from $1.53 a jar of peanut butter was down from
month ago. The per-pound pric e of a $1.18 to $1.1 7. The price of peanut
bone-in-blade chuck roast dropped butter ranged from so cents at Toledo
from 1.74 to I. 71 on average over the · to $1.30 at Steubenville and $1.29 in the
Kent-Rav'l'"a area .
same period. ·
Althou gh groce ry who lesal ers
Name brand bacon averaged $1.84
reported increases in the cost
recently
per pound, down from $1.92 a month
coffe
e
because of severe weather in
of
ago while whole frying chicken by the
South
America,
the average coffee
pound went from 67lo 70 cents . Center

hungry ami hurt by this ."
The shutdown by the independent
haulers wa s called to protest ,high
i
die sel fuel pri ces and short supplies,
I
\
the 55 mph speed limit arxl weight
, I
regul• tions that vary from state to
sta le.
White House officials have propqsed
a plan pledging support for uniform
weight regulations arxl equitab le fuel
o~~p
distribution, and designating eight
~inter sta te highway s as " safe
corridors" ror drivers.
" I think we've gained more than I
J0
"r
ever figured we would," said Dennis
.
_
.
The Gallia-Me1gs Post State High - Sryder of the western South Dakota
Pictured with Mr. Downliig are James Clstworthy,
60-YEAR MEMBER - Rodney Downing, center,
way Patrol reported four traffic ac · ITA.
left, district deputy grand master of the 12th Masonic
Middleport businessman, was presented his 60 year
cidents over the weekend. There were
District, and Glenn Crisp, right, worshipful master of
membership pin by Middleport Lodge 363, F amd AM.
no injwies.
EXTENDED FORECAST
the Middleport Lodge.
At 4:39 p.m., Saturday, Davis T.
Wednesday througb Friday : Fair
Thorriils, Jr., 26, Columbia, S. C., was
driving west on U. S. 35 near the june- Wednesday. A cbaace of abowen or
lion of SR 32S when an unknown tar tbuodeutorms Tbursday aod
passed in front c( him . Someone in the Friday.'HlgluJ lbrougb tbe period ID
car hurled a rock at the windshield ol tile IIGs. Lows from tbe ujper 50s 1o
the truclt. ,.,.. was no damage arxl tbe ....
Leb anon. when h\s motorcycle road.
By The Associated Press
TOLEDO - Thomas McGee, 21, of
no citations were isSued.
The deaths of seven persons Sunday crashed on a Warren County r oad.
Carroll E. Kimes, 41, Long Bottor.1,
WESf
JEFFERSON
Opal
L
Swanton,
in a two-car accident on
in separate accidents boosted Ohio 's
was driving west on Meigs County
weekend traffic death count to at least Austin , !3, of Westerville, in an Ohio 2 in Lucas County.
Road Sat 5:17p.m. Saturday when his
accident on U.S. 42 in Madison
FRIDAY NIGHT
15, the Highway Patrol said.
car went olf the road ljlld struck a
afT AWA - Julie Powell, 9, of
The patrol counts traffic deaths in County.
utility pole . There was no damage to
SATURDAY
Prattville, Ala ., in a two-car accident
the state each weekend from 6 p.m.
STEUBENVILLE
Ida on Ohio 66 in l'utnam County.
his car and no citations were issued.
Friday to midnight Sunday.
Pizzoferrato, 20, of Steubenville, in a
At 2 p.m. Sunday, Jli.nis L. Davis, rellreme~t
SUNDAY
40, Reedsville, was driving south on
MEDINA - Richard W. Davis, 25 , two-car accident on Ohio . 43 in
Meigs County Township Road 319,
Harold W. Bradford, 2286 ('ark wood of Grafton , in a tw~&gt;-Car accident in Jefferson County.
FOSTORIA - Isabel H. Garcia, 27 ,
north of SR 681 , when her car went Ave ., Columbus, has retired from Medina County
left of center and was struck by a car Columbia Gas r:l Ohio after 30 years
GREENVIlLE - Christopher A. of Fostoria, and her son, Arnollo
driven by Teresa R. Causey, 18, also of service.
Jones, 19, of Greenville, when his Gar cia Jr., 4, in a car-train accident
of Reedsville. There was moderate
Bradford, 55, joined the gas com- mo!Drcycle crashed on Ohio 571 in at a Seneca Coiinty railroad crossing.
PARMA - Edward N. Farone, 25,
Sheriff James J . Proffitt reported
damage to both cars and Davis was pany in 1949. He has held several . Darke County .
cited by the patrol for failure to keep positions Including fitter, equipment
KENTON - David L. Reed, 17, of of Parma, in a one-car accident on a that a unit from the Meigs County
Sheriff's Department assiste~ the
left of center.
operator, and construction inspector. Waynesvil(e, in a two-car accident on Parma city stree\.
SPRINGFIELD - John F. Seavey, Ohio State Patrol and Athens County
The patrol also reported PhiUp D. Bradford was plant technician when a Hardin County road.
Davis, 20, Kanauga, was westbound . he retired.
NEW RICHMOND - Michael S. 38, of Springfield, In a one-car ' Sheriff in a short manhunt off U. S. Rt.
50 west of Albany late Sunday
on SR 588 at an excessive speed SunBradford was born in Great Bend, Mills, 23, of New Richmond, in a one- accident on a Clark County road.
CINCINNATI - Boel Hammarson, afternoon.
day when he failed to negotiate a cur- Ohio and serv~ with the Merchant car acCident on Ohio 132 in Clermont
19, of Gothenburg, Sweden, in a twoThee juveniles were taken into
ve,lost control of his car, went left of Marine from 1942 until 1946. He is the County.
center, striking a sign owned by Don son of Mrs. Enna D. Bradford of
LEBANON - Keith 0 . Sandy, 30, of car accident on a Hamilton County custody after being flushed out of a
wooded area between Rt. 50 and
L. Harrison, Rt. 3, GaUipolis. There Marysville.
county
road 71.
was slight damage to Davis' car and
Bradford has one daughter, two
The
youths
reportediy were in a ~
he was cited for speeding.
sons, and four grandchildren.
stolen vehicle and had been involved
in hitsklp. A chase ensued and a state
patrol cruiser was damaged.
Deputies
Sunday
morning
investigated an accident on county
road 28, one mile north of Bashan.
Beverly Diles, 20, RD Racine, was
traveling north on county road 28
when her car failed to make a sharp
left curve arxl slide off the road on the
Early deliveries of July allocations said Jaycees spokesman Armando right. There were no injuries, heavy
damage to the vehicle . No citation
and poor weather, which cut fuel- Gutierrez.
consuming travel in some areas,
Among the callers' suggestions for was issued.
Fred Burson, Rt. 1vShade, notified
stretched gasoline supplies through reducing consumption or increasing
the weekend, as the gas crunch supplies : a four-day work week, a the sheriff's office that sometime
continued to hurt areas dependent on four-day school week, investigation of between 9 a.m. arxl 9:45 a.m. Sunday
tourist dollars .
"where the government is hiding the the windshield on his pickup truck was
The problems of the gasoline crisis oil," mandatory jail terms of three broken by rocks. A rock was found
were compounded by the July Fourth days for speeding violations, more lying next to the truck. Burson could
holiday atmosphere, with more people government spending on rapid transit offer no explantion as to why the truch
had been damaged. The incident is
wanting to be on the road, and by enij- and more bicycle paths.
of -the-month supply shortages at
Tourism along East Coast beaches under investigation
John Freeman, Minersville, while ·
many stations.
was cut by bad weather and the gas
Few stations were open over the shortage, with restaurant and motel operating a tractor on county road 29
weekend in most areas, especially in operators in some areas wondering if Friday afternoon , lost control when
the heavily populated East.
they'll have much if any profit this the tractor hit a rough spot in the road
causing it to go off the road and
However, American Auromobile season.
Association spokesman Bare Wade
Joseph Calo, manager of George's through a fence owned by Earl Cross,
said 75 percent of the ' stations Restaurant in Galilee , RL, said Racine. The incident is under
surveyed · along tnierstate 80 in business is off 10 or. l2 percent from investiga lion
· Nebraska were open Sunday, and this time last year .
about half of all the stations in the
Attendants at .Rhode Island's
Scarborough State Beach said 800
state were pumping gas.
Clear tonight, Lows between 5511!111
Elsewhere in the nation 's heartland, people were on the beach Sunday,
60.
Swmy Tuesday. Highs in the low
between 40 percent and 60 percent of under overcast, rainy. skies - a
80s. The chance of rain is near zero
stations in the Dakotas were open.· fraction of the usual 10,000.
tonight and Tuesday.
In California , where lines at the
Wet weather in Maine combined
stations first developed, those ' few with early deliveries of July
SQUAD CALLED
ststions open on Sunday had no lines. allocations to shorten gas lines, state
The Middleport Emergency Squad
Meanwhil ~. some residents of energy officials said . But at the same
~lllda 's Dade County, including lime there were fewer cars on the answered a call to 482'h Locust St. at
3:55a.m. Mond&amp;y for Mildred Millaun
Miami , spent part of the weekerxl at road than normal.
home, conserving fuel and taking to
Meanwhile, reduced driving cost who w.!s taken to Veterans Memorial
the telephone lines to protest fuel · New Jersey's Division of Taxation Hospital.
At 6:24 p.m. Sunday the unit went to
shortag es. A seven -hour call-in about $3 million in gas taxes last
sponsored by the Greater Miami month and has cut heavily into toll 353 North Fourth Ave. for Minnie
.Jaycees got over 400 responses.
road and bridge aQd tunnel..:rossing Clark who was also taken to Veterans
Callers were asked wbo they revenues, officials said. However, bus Memorial Hospital. Saturday, the
Newberry and Gomer Jenkins. Other members of the
AN OLJ).F'ASIDONED chicken barbecue is one of
blamed for the shortage, and "it's ridership has increased by 25 percent, , \jlli\ went to the office of Dr. Jamllll .
Southwestern Athletic Boosters Club helping out
many highlights of the 1!179 GaUipolls River Recreatlon
running
about 50-50 between the said Port Authority spokesman John Conde for Julia Hysell, Syracuse, who
yesterday we1-e Jleniece Newberry, Page Sheets, Jean
Festival. Preparing Sunday's meal .along the Ohio
was taken, to Holzer Medical Center.
government
and the oil comp~nics ,'' Hughes.
Rlv~r hank were, left to right, Oscar Davies, Leonard
Briggs and Lois Jean Sheets.
·•·
IC
t
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-Associated Press
Striking truckers wheeled their big
r(gs around New York City's Time s
Square arxl drank iced tea in the
North Carolina governor 's mansion as
drivers in other states packed up their
blockades and headed back to the
highways .
A spokesman for one group of
independent drivers predicted the
three-week -old shutdown could ~ end
soon - but with a flurr y ill' activity.
"I think it will be resolved soon ,
because I think it's going to escalate ,"
WilUam Hill of th e Independent'
Tru ckers Unity Coalition told a group
of striking drivers in Pittsburgh on
Sunday. "The government is going to
be in a position where they have to
gi ve immediate relief."
Hill said "weak leaders" were used
by the White House to call for an end
to the shutdown. However. he said,
"the reports I have had indicate that a
large majority ol the ~ nation's
lndep&lt;!l!dtnt lniCkers lflll · hold olit
until their demands- ... are met."
· Truckers in Pennsylvania, Colorado
and Alabama voted during th e
weekend to remain idle. "The calls
I'm getting in here now are calling for
.more vigorous ,action," said Bill
White, national representative ol the
International Truckers Assoc iat ion.
But members. of the New Jersey
Coun cil of Independent Trucke rs
voted Sunday to return to work toda y,
calling off pi cket lines at oil
distribution centers arourxl the state.
Atlanta's Independent Truc ker s
United voted to go back to work until
Sept. 15 " to determine If the problem
is over!' Arxl some groups in South
Dakota, Washington state, Arkansas
and Missouri freed tbeir members to
return to work.
Truck traffic and shipment of
foodstuffs reportedly have risen
steadily in most parts of the country
over the last several days.
Soljle Massachusetts dri ver s
planned a c-rinvoy in Boston toda y

'

!

PQMEROY~MIDDLEPORT,

NO. 55

p~1ces

Truckers hit road,
strike may be over

MEN'S •15.95

.__..---·~·-~-----~---------·--'---·-------

Gran Prix

2

5

•

BOYS

PONTIACS

..,_. .". . ."...,_"___"

---·---+--·~~-·---·~·-"---"-----·-·-"_.

SE L.ECT GROUP

REG. '6.50 TO '7 .50

e

Bonneville

LeSabr~

SAVE 20%

TIES

ll8ld today'
There wtll be oo regular residential or business deliveries, Normal

....12_.,.____.,.____ 11

,

1

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New Car Inventory Reduction
BUICKS

_.._..___

Home Furnishings Dept. 1st Floor
All of our bedspreads in full, twin, king or
queen sizes. Many have drapes and
pillow shams to match, also on sale.

WEMBLEY

·················~-············~··

No.

•

BEDSPREADS

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months. pr ice aver ages advanced

three times and declin ed three times.
Seve ra I gr·oce ry manage rs in
Athens said the trucker action , rather
than causing shortages, is causing
higher prices. One said his cost on
per ishables is up 10 percent in the past
two weeks . Another said a case of
lettuce costs $6 mor e this week than
the week befor e.
A store manager in Portsmouth
re ports gr eat diffic ulty gett ing
produce . Grocers in severs 1 cities
complained of not being able to get
from
Florida·.
wat ermelons
Wholesalers in Akr on expressed
concern that
shipments of vegetables, meat
and oth er fresh food will be severely
curtailed. A store operator in Athens

pla nned to personally · go south to
dri ve a produce truck ba ck.
On the shopping list, the .Verage
cost of 10 pounds of Jdaho potatoes
increased from $1.78 to $1.95, up 9.5
pe rcent in the•monthly survey. Fresh .
tom atoes by the pourxl increased 11.9
percent ove r the May-June period,
from an average of 67 cents to 75
cents, while a head of lettuce rose on
average from 55 to 68 cents, up 24
percent.
Biggest tomato barga in was three
pounds for 69"cents - 23 cents a pound
- in a store at Conneaut. In the KentRa venna area a pound of tomatoes
was pr iced at $1.04 per pound. .
Grade A .eggs by · the dozen
increased on average by 10.8 percent,
up from 74 cents at the end of Ma y to
82 cents at the end uf June. A five-

e
VOL. XXVIII

ENTIRE STOCK

Home Furnishings Dept. 1st Floor

.J un. 1 it wuo $20.92. In the p~si six

Excellent selection of styles and colors In
all sizes. Regularprlces S7.95to $22.00.

SAVE 25%

POSTAL HOURS GIVEN
GAUJPOI,JS - Tbe post oHice
wtll operate oo tile usual bollday
man acbedule lo observa!H!e of IDdepeodeoce bay oo Wednesday •
July 4, Postmaater Rlcbard ~ '

lobby wlodow.service wt11 be closed '
with tile exception of Jockbox service. Special Delivery service will
be provided IUid man plek-iip from
collection boxea wlll .be oo a bollday
acbedule u posted oo tbe IDdlvldual
boxes. Normal mall service will
resume Tblll8day, Jaly 5.

-

MEN'S SHORT SLEEVE
SPORT SHIRTS

• All girls summer sleepwear
. el.iHie boys short sleeve shirts (2 to 7l
e Entire stock girls tops

•

~

IF

SAVE 40%

MEN'S &amp; BOYS'S

C£state :
:

...

--------~~~----~·~·._._
_____·~·---~----·--~-~--·-------·---·~~"----w--------------1
SAL.E CONTINUES
SALE CONTINUES

...l ·- .............
....................
· ~al ~~Todav
.
B
~

...

Buy for wear now or early tall use. Boys
sizes 8 to 20. Regular prices $9.95 to
$17 .95. Men's sizes 36 to 48. Reg1,1lar
prices $13.95 to $48.50.

1f2 PRICE

Road bad·

:e

_.

. SUMMER JACKETS . .

Money actions
filed in court

:

·-·-· ·-

MEN'S &amp; BOYS'

Wants answers ·

the faith, giving heed to seducing
spirits, and doctrines of devils."
There i,s only one water to quench Dear Editor :
I am wrtting concerning the traffic
Dear Sir :
your thirst for your spiritual life, with
I would like to comment on the ar- promise of eternal life, and thlit is the light at Unioll Ave. and Mulberry
ticle in Sunday's paper, "The Many Living Water and Bread of Life Jesus Ave. This light has always been used
Mysteries of Myriam."
Christ. - Gloria Johnson,
1, to assist the Pomeroy Elementary
School, safety patrol and was turned
We are becoming more and more Rutland, Ohio:
to stop and caution when school is out
aware that there are facets of our
so
traffic could proceed, without the
Uves and beings that are hidde)l to our
school children crossing.
natural eye. Some call these things
supermatural , some spiritual, Dear Editor:
I called the mayor's office on June
psychic1 etc. Everyone knows this
18
We have just returned as represenMonday morning. I was told there
would be a cowicil meeting that
and has experienced at some time in
their life a ''searching " for something tatives from the 33rd annual Buckeye evening and the matter ·-would be
Girls' State where girls from all over discussed.
outside of his own fleshly limitations.
I spoke to different council memThe reason for this Is not new. When Ohio met for li week oflearning.
At Buckeye Girls' State we were bers after the meeting and they said
God breathed into Adam the breath of
life and he became a living soul, he faced with many challenges as we the matter was not brought up.
I caUed the mayor's office this week
beglbt to be a spiritual man. Not just met our roommates, campaigned for
an
office
and
finally
fiUed
ollr
..
and
was told he told the clerk to brinu
flesh , but also spirit, with a desire put
positions.
9
in him by·Almighty God to commune
Free lime was almost impossible. It up, but she did not think it was.
with Him and know Him personally. Each day we were either busy in our
I was told it would be brought up
Until a person comes to know God in government functions or listening to next council meeting, July 2. A frtend
of mine called also this week, wonthis way, through faith in His Son,
Jesus Christ, this inward search for special speakers. Among them were, dering why the light had not been
"something" spiritual, supernatural, Governor Rhodes, Secretary of changed and she was told that the
Treasury Ferguson and the Chief .
etc., cannot be quenched.
Justice of Ohio Supreme Court.
council had decided not to change it.
Today we are flooded on every side
Purpose of Buckeye Girls' State is
In the past, It has always been
with opportunities to investigate the to give young woinen an opportunity routine to help the flow of traffic to
supernatural: astrology, horoscopes to see how our govenunent is run.
change this ligh1, when school is out.
to guide our lives , psychic
What you get frm' Girls' State -This may seem like a small matter,
phenomena, witchcraft, occult pracdepends on you. If you are en- but with the cost of gas reaching soon
tices.
thusiastic and willing to work, the $1 a gallon, and we are asked to con. · The Word of God firmly warns us to
avoid seeking knowledge or power rewards are great. We both met many serve, a person can waste a lot of gas,
.from arty other source than God Him- girls who will be friends forever. We waiting on a light to change, that is
'seH ... Deuteronomy 18:10-12, Jer. would like to thank the Business and not serving the purpose it was set up
Professional Women and the Kiwanis for.
10 :2. .
for
sponsoring us. Also thankS to Mrs.
Sincerely, Frances J. Wright.
In Isaiah 47: 13-14 God warns that
Hamilton
and
Sharon
Hlll
for
P.S. If council has made this
Mildred
the astrologers, stargazers, etc., shall
choosing
us
as
representstives.
It was decision and can give a legitimate ex"be as stubble ; the fire shall burn
an experience we wiU remember planation, then I think we should be
them ; they st\811 not deliver themforever.
informed.
selves from the power of the flame
'!&gt;hank
you,
Jayne
Simpkins
-span·
... " In Daniell :20, 2:2, 27,47, 5:7-15-we
sored
by
Business
and
Professional
read of the King of Babylon seeking
knowledge from astroiogers and Women and Ellen Chambers - sponmagicians only to find disap- sored by Kiwanis Club.
pointment, and calling on Daniel the
..
prophet of God for true wisdom.
GALLIPOLIS - Charging that the
We, as Christians, do not deny the
terms of a promissory note have been
existence of a power given to those
To the Editor:
violated, Jackson Production Credit
who seek it other than from God, for _ ..' ,have JUSt _«;turned to West Association filed suit _Thursday in
we have an enemy, "the devil, as a VIrguua after VISiting my parents Gallia Count~ Conunon Pleas Court
roaring lion, walketh about seeking who hve on Ingalls Rd., a GaU1a Coun- against AnthOny D. and Ann L. Cen- ·
whomhemaydevour!' !Peter5:8.
tyroad .
_ _.
namo,UpperArlington,O.
Now I thought West V1rguua had
In I Timothy 4:1 it says, "Now the
The credit association seeks
Spirit speaketh expressly, that in the some bad roads, but not many com- judgment amounting to $97,086.84,
latter times some shall depart from pare With ingaUs Road, a road which plus interest.
In another case, · Di'avo Marks
Equipment Company, Brunswick, 0.,
filed suit against BB and M Coal, Inc.,
Eureka Star Route, in Gallia County
Common Pleas Court.
The complaint for goods and services seeks judgment against the coal
compimy totaling $17,663.3.1, plus interest.

Reader responds

-. SAVE40%

CONTINUES MONDAY, JULY 2ND AND TUESD~Y; JULY 3RD

C:OLUMBUS, Ohio (Al' l - Effects
of a strike by independent truckers on
groceries in Ohio range from none to
severe, depending·on who you talk to .
But there is evidence the strike is
causing higher prices.
· The monthly Ohio Associated Press
marketbasket survey Shoi\&lt;S produ ce
costs are up
sharply in sample cities over ·a
month ago. Produce depends heavily
on trucks for quick movement to
markets.
Overall, a random check in 19 Ohio
cities · revealed the total cost of 17
standard grocery items was up 34
cents over the previous month. The
~verage of $21.69 for the shopping list
compares to $21.~ the previous
month . A year ago the same shopping
list cost an average of $2!1.96 and last

•

•

,.

"

�3- The Dally Sent mel, Mlddleport-Pomerov I) , Monday, July 2, 1979

2- The Dally Sentmel Middleport Pume1ol 0 Monday July 2, 1979

New banking policy starts July I

fTTA ~~~-r"-'iZ 1!ti:'G~
HUlM~

N(.R

79

On July I, 40 of BancOhio's 41
I h.tl accordmg to Ban cO h10
( 01 UMllUS Ohio I Al'l - ;itarlmg
affiliates
m 40 of Oh1o s 88 counties
Monday " cus tomc1 of BunctJhw Offi CialS IS t he lllOSt ObVIOUS will merge to form the $t 2 bllhon
N.ol 1onal B.onk 1\IIIU&lt; .oble lu 11 .Ilk mto ddvcmtagc U1e averilge customer wtll bank approximately the 34th largest
.my of 215 off1ccs act oss th e st.o tc .ond see as a result of lhe largest bank
1n the country
meq~er m Amencan history
tndkc d tlcpmilt or w1thrh m .t!
The merger was made poss1ble by
state leg1slat1on that ,went mlo effect
Jan 1 Previously, Oh10 banks were
prohibited from branchmg beyond
county hnes
To celebrate the merg er the
company w11l open a savmgs account
of $5 for every bab} born m the sUite
.
on July 2 The bank estimates 424
Ohwa ns \\Ill be born that day
Because BancOhw IS maltmg a
maJOr cmmmtment to the future of
OhiO 11 e 11anted aS) mbohc gesture to
future Ohioans, s-a1d Cha1rman
Robert G Stevens
( I don't want to use her name because
By MARION F CRAWFORD
While&gt; concedmg the advantages of
there are those who would 1&lt;11\e ad
Meigs County Humane Society
POMEROY - There were so many vantage of her and drop every cat m stalew1de bankmg to certam
thmgs that happened w1th the the county on her) But, honestly, I customers however the chamnan of
Hwnane SoCiety last week that I don't know what we 'd do Without her the competmg C1ty Natwnal Bank and
rrust Co sa)s h1s f~rm has chosen not
yes I do, a lot of poor arumals
didn't get to tell you m my prev1ous
to
make use of the new leg1slat10n
would
be
put
to
sleep
art1cle that I must sU!rt out by telling
C1ty Natwnal has opted to keep the
Anyway, I asked her how she was
you about a dog named Meatball
She was an older Beagle and ob- gettmg along w1th the 13 or 14 ammals 19 banks m 1ts holding company as
e~utonomous entJltes becauS€ of the
VIOusly a dog that everyone m the she was canng for us temporarily
ps)Cholog1cal advantages afforded
Rutland area kne\\ and liked She had She sa1d, "Fme, except for one and
bv
giVlng each bank grea ter authonl)
no permanent home but everyone 11 s the one that needs medicme put m
and
respons1b1hty a t the loca l level
had a handout for old Meatball when Its ear a couple tUlles a day I asked
accordmg
to Cha~rman Robert H
how
she
caught
11
to
work
on
1ts
her
she came around and the v1llage
Potts
ears
and
she
says,
'
Well
I
walt
until
children all had a few pets 'left over
We are tak1n g a different
11 s eatmg and not pa)'lng any at
for the gentle old lady
approa ch
than
One da) Meatball was crossmg the tenllon to me and I pounce on 11 "This ph1losoph1cal
road and a speeding car hit her The woman names each of her charges BancOh10 l'otts sa1d
C1ty Natwnallater th1s )ear plans to
car d1dn t even slow down - JUSt even though she knows she won't have
seek
shareholder approval of a new
dragged the dog a lew yards and left them any more than a week or so and
corporate
name Bane One Corp he
has
to
'pounce
qu1te
often
to
keep
l1er suffenng m the nuddle of the
road Another dnver corrung from the them all m tine or to grab as one or sa1 d He explamed that Bane One
oppos1te d1rect10n stopped, got out of two try to go outdoors- bul she keeps would have 19 afhhate banks across
Ohw bul those bank.&lt;; 11ould remam
his car, gently p1cked up the anunal a good sense of humor through 11 all
She also knows when she gels an mdcpendent w1th local chairmen and
and put 1! off on the s1de of the road
B) th1s tune everyone m the ne1gh anin'lal back for the second tune and boards of d1reclor s
Under th1s S}stem customers of
borhood had gathered and was fran has thoughts about the type people
anl
g1ven Bane One s)stem - Bane
who
will
take
an
aruma!
and
then
t1cally deciding what to do
One
of Columbus for 1nslance decide
they
don
t
want
1l
and
drop
A call was made to the Humane
Soc1ety and our one agent V1v May, 11 somewhere Can you 1magme would not be able to conduct bus10ess
JWllped mto the HS van slopped by havmg that many strays rwmmg al say, Bane One of Coshocton
But Potts said Bane One s planned
and picked up Joyce Miller and w1thin around your house ' I sure can t We
nunutes were putting the badly hurt of the Hwnane Soc1ety appreciate this S) Stem allo11 s the head of each bank
dog onto a makeslult htter for lran woman (and her very tolerant along 11 1th the board of dtrectors to
actual!&gt; se t pol1c1 regardmg
husband ) more than we can say
sport to the vet
In cloolllg folks, I 11ould like to tell mvestmenls loans and other matters
I called and alerted the pet that
11~e thrust of each bank can be
they were on the way, but I m sorry to you about JUSt some of the ammals
report that poor old Meatball decided 1\e have available for adoptiOn We catered to the area Polls S&gt;nd "h1le
she'd had enough by the t1me they got have every color and type kitten ) ou each afflhale 11111 still be able to draw
as far as Kings Anns and closed her mg1ht wanlel&lt;&lt;:efl.l long haired ones at on the assets of the ent1re system
B,mcOhiO Chairman Robert r.
the moment If Interested m seemg
eyes for the last hme
Sle1
en s ms1sts ho11 ever that
992-7853
992
2592,
992-M27
them,
call
Perhaps if the dnver who hit the
BancOh10 branches w1ll be able to
ammal had transported that ammal or 992 7680
In dogs, we have a great qwct lady m,untam a commumt} presence
to the vet m1ffiedlatel), 1! could still
be runmng, havmg a good lime m who IS part Beagle, about 2 or 3 vears "1lh area presidents contmumg to be
Rutland , but very seldom does the old and so lovable We have a httle 1espons1ble for their locale
A spokesman for the swte s largest
gwlty culpnt ever do the 'nght puppy who IS brown w1th a white
bo~
nk
Cleveland Trust sa1d h1 s
thing
so many helpless ammats chest short ha1r and long ears -sort
compan)
like C1l) Nat10nal 1s
of
like
a
Beagle
too
but
IS
only
about
7
he suffermg Llfllll death U!kes them
seekm
g
shareholder
appro,al of a
weeks
old
and
sure
loves
to
kiSS
you
This past week m fact on Sunday I
corporate
name
got a call from a woman who was We also have a) oung female German co mmon
warned Sick about a very pregnant Shepherd who looks like she \\On t be An1enTrust for afhhated banks
Gwnea P1g - a cute little black and very b1g I d say shes about 4 to 6 F: \ entua ll\ though Cleveland Trust
white angora wl\e,had slopped eating months old and " very mce anunal pla ns to go state11 1de along lhe same
and movmg about. Here was a woman who loves to be hugged and petted If hnes as Ban cOhio the spokesman
s~t ld
With children whom she helped out on mterested call992 7853
many occaswns by bab)Silhng w1th
their children and domg the m11lion
and one thmgs that chlldren request
of their parents after they leave the
nest but when mother needs help no
one 1s ever around She could not hnd
anyone to U!ke her and her s1ck little
pet so called me
I went and p1cked her up and wtlhm
45 nunutes we had the pet bel ore a
•
vet He gave 1l a couple IOJechons of
statistical fact Most people have
POISON IVY
flmd nounshment and some other
QuestiOn What IS the difference become sens1t1zed by the tune they
strengthemng medicmes , but JUS! a between polson IV) and pmson are 12 years old smce this plant and
few hours after we got back home she sumac'
other smular poisonous planls are
called to tell me through her tears
Answer POlson IV) as the name prevalent world w1de
that httle 'Sa ndy ' had died I don't Implies, IS a vme and the polson
QuestiOn Where should one look for
know wh1ch of us at that pomt felt swnac plant IS a rather large shrub these po1sonous ptanls ' How d&amp; you
worse I guess Gwnea P1gs are really However 11 IS unposs1ble to tell wh1ch recogmze them '
delicate tittle anunals -or I'm a Jmx 1s the culpnt merely by observmg a
Answer The most common one 1s
or something -' both tunes her pels VICllm s rash Both of these poisonous polson Ivy (tmocondendron rad1cans )
have died after we d taken 1l to a vet plants, as well as another one called which grows m every state m the U S
fQ.r treatment I'm so sorry There are po1son oak cause 1dent1al eruptions except Cal1forma and Nevada It
a lot of Me1gs Counllans 1\ ho ve lost characteriZed by tmy watery blisters grows as vmes' atU.ched to trees,
pets who undersU!nd your gnef
called vesicles which erupt w1thm 24 fence posts or rocks and also creeps
Last week I asked those of you who to 48 hours alter contact w1th the of along the ground The old adage
own kittens and cats, and who let fending plant These hny bhsters then
leaflets three, let 11 be most
them run loose to put some sort of break and run, eventually drymg or character1sh cally descnbes th1s
ldenllflcallon tag on them There 1s cakmg on the skm They are all ex plant The three separate oval pomted
somethmg else that I wanted to state tremely 1tchy, as anyone can tell ) ou leves can vary m color from green m
at that pomt and neglected lo do so A who has ever had th1s menace
SWlUller to yellow, red or brown m the
lot of cal owners don't know thai putAfter lastmg anywhere from one to fall of the year
tmg a collar on a cat could be very, three weeks, the rash and sca les
P01son oak comes m l\\o vanet1es,
very dangerous lor th1s particular disappear The skin IS usually left eastern (IOJocodendron querc1fohwn)
ammal
unblemiShed, but excess1ve scrat and western (toXIcodendron div5r
A cat must have the type collar that chmg can result m scars and secon- s1lobum) The eastern spec1es 1s
will shde over 1ts head eas1 ly m the dary mfectwns of the skin A good found southeast of a line betwen
eHnt 1t gets caught on a branch or reason to ref ram from such action 1
Texas and New Jersey It looks just
some other protruding 1tem
QuestiOn I'm 65 years old I used to like an oak leal, but grows as a low
I don't know of even a nea collar be very allergic to po1son 1vy Several shrub m sandy or dry soils The
that should actually be worn on any tunes lately while weedmg my garden western spec1es, as you rrught guess,
outs1de cat
and smce cats get mto I have accidently touched polson 1vy IS found along the west coast from
fleas probably faster even than dogs vmes without havmg any reactiOn northern Cal,iforn1a to Canada This
they need some protectiOn
How IS this possible?
type likewase resembles an oak leaf,
E1ther weekly powdenng or a flea
Answer There 1s good evidence but 1s Irregularly lobed
and hck U!g that can hook to the1r that the very yotlflg and the very old
Polson sumac (toXIcodendron verstretchable cat collar IS best Check have a decreased sens1hv1ty to these rux ) IS fotlfld prunanly east of the
lour cat 's ears often too as those poor po1sonous weeds Children tlflder the Mississippi anywhere from Canada to
ammals suffer a lot from ear nutes
age of three very rarely acqwre thiS Central Florida It grows as a tall
Speakmg of cats Honestly, I wtsh rash People tend to become decreas- shrub With 7-13leaflets pa1red on each
all of you could have heard the mgly sens1t1ve as they get older We s1de of a central stem and a smgle leaf
telephone conversatiOn I had the have no sc1entlf1c reason to explam at the lip This shrub favors swampy
other day w1th the woman, who U!kes this phenomenon of decreasmg sen- land
care of stray cats and kittens for us, SitiVIty, but we do know 11 1s a

Meigs summer results given
By Greg BaUey
got a two-hiUer from Zane Beegle and
Kent Wolfe for a 4-1 WUl over v1slhng
Mason The two hurlers fanned eleven
and walked JUSt three
Beegle socked a tnple and smgle
while Wolfe and Jay Rees each got
two smgles Jeff Sopher and Scott
Fredenck each got one hit
Steve Lyons took the loos, fanrung
four and walking three Ronnie
Bradley and George Zuspan each had
a single for Mason Racme and the
Pomeroy A's are both now 5-2 on thP

Editorial opinions,
comments

Hoofs and &lt;paws

"N1ce try, but I don't thmk 1t'll work "

-

ORDINANCE NO
1083 79

'

at t aso ttll cda t co td el ve r" y
Trensurer
s
her eby
6 Coal
d reel ed to f or wa rd a
pavm ent fo r s uet note
7
Mlk
and
d ar y
AN
ORDINANCE
TO and
ce rt t ed co py of th s or
Sec t on 7 Su ch not e shall
products
PROVIDE
FOR
THE be
th e
tutt
gene ra l
d nan ce t o the Coun t y
B
Bre ad and bak ery
ISSUANCE OF A NOT E IN ob i ga t on o f th e Vil lage
A ud.tor
pr"odu cts
ANTICIPATION OF THE and th e l u ll fa th c red t
Sec t on II
Tha t ,, s
9
Meat
ISSUANCE OF BONDS and r evenue ot the Vt ll nge
hereby founCI and det er"
10
P roduce and dry
FOR THE PURPOSE OF ar e her eb y pl edged for th e
nt ned that at
f o rmal goods
ACQUIRING
A
FIRE promp t payment of 1he
a cltons o f lh 1S Co un c t
In order To be co ns1d ered
TRUCK
AND
THE same Tile pMr Vdt uc to be
co ncern ng and r'" etat ng to illl sea ed b ds shall b e
NECESSARY
AP
rcc e vcd fr om th e sa le of
the passage of t h 5 or
r ece tv ed n the off ce of the
PURTENANCES
AND th e bond s an t c paled by
d nance were adopt ed nan Tr e asur er
South Tt11r" d
EQU IPMENT THERETO
su ch note an d any excess
open mcettng of
th s Avenue M ddleport Oh o
AND DECLARING AN fund s r esu lt ng fr om th e
Counc I
and
that all on or be f ore 12 00 o c lock
EMERGENCY
ss uance o f su t t not e shall
de ber" a l ons
of
th s noon on July 7 979
to 0 1(' t x tent nece ssa ry be
Coline I and of any of ti S
Th e Board o f Educalton
WHEREAS
The != tcrk
u se d tor th e r et r" em ent of
comm !l ees that r esulted n re serves the r ght to accept
Treasurer us I scat off ccr
s u c h note a t matur ty
such form a l act on wer e tn or r e te (:! any and a 1 btds
hns ce rt fed to th s Coun c I toqet 1e r
w 111
nler~ st
m ee t nqs open
o t he
that the est tmafed ltfe o f
h ereon and arc hereby
publ c n com p i ln ce w th
Jane Wag ner
the acQUtS ton here nailer p ledg ed tor such pu r pose
all Jega
requ r ements
men t1on ed s a t lea st t ve
Treasur er
Sec t on 8 Th at9urtlg the
mc lu d ng Sec !Jon 111 22 of
(5) y e ar~ and t hat th e y ear s wh le su ch note r uns
Me gs Lo cal
the Ohto Rev se d Co d e
Scho ol 0 str c t
max mum matur ty o f 11c there st1ilt be lev ed on all
Sectton
12
Tht s or
161 25 I 7J 2 9 3tc
bonds heretnatter r e f err ed II e taxabl e prop erty n the
d nance s hereby d ec lar~d
to s ten ( 10 ) years at d tt1e V !age n add I on to all
to be an emergency Or"
ma&gt;c mum matur ty o f th e other taxes a d rect tax
d nance necessar"y for the
note here tnatt er re f erred annual l y not te ss than thai
mmed 1ate pre se rvall on of
to to be ss uc d n an
wh1ch would have been
the publt c pea ce hea lth
'•&lt; pat on of sa d bonds tS tcvtcd
STATE OF OHIO
11 bonds had been
ano sa fety of th e Vd fage
en~ h t
(8 l years
t
so ld
DEPARTIMENTOF
ssucd w t hou ! the pr'"opr
and Is nhab tant s and for
publi c l y or one ( 1 J year f
NATURAL RESOURCE S.
ss ue of such note Sa d Ia )(
th e fudher r eason that th e
sold p r vate l i
DIVISION OF
shall be v nd ts hereby
aforem
ent
ton
ed
a
cqu
S1t
on
N OW
TH E REFORE
RECLAMATION
ord c r" ed c oni' pu l ed cer
1s 1mmed at ely requ r ed f o
B E I T OR D A INED by the t f ed lev ed and extended
FOUNTAIN SQU ARE
pr"olect properly and t he
Counc 1 of t he V llag e o f UIJOn t he tax dupt ca fe and
COLUMBUS
per son s w lhtn th e Vt ll agfJ
Middleport Me q s County
OH 10 43224
co ll ec ted by the sam e of
wh
erefor
e
th•
s
ordtnan
ce
Oh o
I ce r s n 11 e s ame manner
shall be n fu I f or ce and
Sec t on
1
Tha t
1
s and at tt1c samr ltmc th at
LEGAL NOTICE
e f fe c t from
and
m
t1creb y dec lared necc ss an
ABANDONED MINED
taxes tor general pur"poses
me d a tc ly after t s passage
t o ;sue bond s of t he V It age tor ea ch o t sa d ye a r s are
LAND RECLAMATION
Nnd ap o,.ov a l bv
t he
Of
M ddl epo rt
n
the cc r t f cd ex t end ed and
PROPOSAL
Mayor
prm c pat sun of S9 0 000 101
A s requ red by Sec t on
co
ll
ected
Sad
tax
sha
ll
be
the prupo sc of a cqu r ng a plil CCd n a se parat e and
1513 30 of the Oh o Rev sed
Passed Ju ne 25 197Q
Ir e
truck
and
th e d1 s t 1ct
Code
the Ch e t of th e
fun d
wt tCil
At tes t Gene Grate
nece ssa r y appurtenance s togeth er w t h t h e 1ntercst
D v son of Re el am at on
Cl
erk
Trea
surer
and equ pment her e to
her" eby make5 pub I c no t ce
collected on t he same sha l l
F r ed Hoffn an
Sec t on i
That su c h be rrevocabiy ple dged for
o f the propos ed M ned
Mayor
bonds sh all be dated ap
Land Rec a mat on Pro re c
th e pa y ment o f tt1e pr n
P~"OXtmately July
1 1980
be ng co ns der eo n Me g5
c1pat and nterest ot such
A
ppro
ved
6 25 79
sh at bear tnt erc s t at t he not e or bonds
County
n an
Bernard F Fultz
es t ma ted rat e of '51)( and ft c pat. on o f wh ch t tS Soli e tor"
The abandoned rn n e St t c
on e h all per ce ntu m 6
be1 n g con st d er ed •S loc at ed
lSSUCd when and as t he
pc:r c cnt I
pc:r
ann u m
n Me tg s County
Sctp o
( 7l2 9 21c
same ta ll due
pay.!lbl c scm annuully
Townsh p Sec t 01 s 14 15
Sec
t.
on
9
It
s
hereby
until the pr nc pa l sum s oetcrmtned th a t a ll acts
20 and 21 The propo sed
patd a nd shall rna lure n 10 co nd t ons
Pr"Otect ar ea compr Sf'S
a 11d
t h ng s
subst ant ally equal ann ual rcqu1r ed
appro&gt;~ m at ely
100 ac r es
to
be
done
.. tnStallmcnl s il ll er t he r prece d en t t o and 1n the
Th e Ch ef o f the D•v son
5s uanc e
o f Rec a mat on w tll tor
NOTICE TO
ss uan cc o t su ch note n
Sec t on
3
That
s
malty present the above
BIDDER S
ord er to m a ke t a legal
necessary to 55-ue a nd 111 s val d
pr opo sed p r otect a t t he
Th e Board of Edu c a t on
and
b ndtn Q
Cou n c I her eby determ n es ob i g a t on o f th e V II age
Board on U nn: cfa ·rned
of the Me gs Lo c al Schoo
t ha t a note n the pr AC pal have happen ed been done
Str p M ne Land M('l el nq to
D str ct des r es to rece ve
amount of $90 ooo sha ll be and perfo r 11e d n regu ar
be h eld J uly 9 1979 a t t he
sea led
b ds
for
th e
ss ued n ant ctpat on of and du e form as requ r ed
Statehou se n Columbu s
follow ng
such bonds
Su ch
an
Oh o
1 Stud ent a cct dent 1n
l)y taw that no 1m tat on
1 c tpatory notE' sh alt b ear
It
you
ha11c
Clny
surilncc
of
ndcb t e dn ess
or
nterest at th e rat e of se ven taxa! on e !h er st a t u tory
quest en s t eLl free 10
2 F leet nsur ance
per centum (7 00 percent ) or con Stl tUttona l wt l hav e
co nta ct t h s o ff cc 11 ( 6 J )
3 T tres and t ubes
per ilnnum such tnteres t to b ee n exceeded
:l66 4850
4 Gasol ne o I and anti
n the
b e payable at matur ty
fr eeze
ss uan cc of such not e
Su cn note snail be da t ed th e
(6) 26 ( 7) 2 2tc
5 Fu el o I
Scc l ton 10 Th e C lerk
date of LSsuance and Sha&gt;tl
matu r &amp; on or befor e on e
yea r from da te
Sec t ton 4 Such note snail
be executed by the Mayor
and Cler"k Tre a sur er and
sha ll bear the corpo rate
se at o f sa d Villa ge 11 shall
be pav abt e at th e off ce of
Th e C 11 ze n s Nat on a Bank.
of M d dle port M ddleport
By Robert Walters
m a massive mventory bwldup as a
Oh o
and !;hall exprt&gt;ss
upon t s face th ~ purpo se
WASHINGTON (NEA) - Although
hedge agamst two events they feared
for wt11C h 1 5 ssued and
short
supplies
of
gasolme
and
long
would occur 111 early 1978 ' a nahan
th a t t s ss ued pursuant to
lmes at serv1ce sU!hons are relatively
wtde coal stnke and an OPEC pnce
Ill s ordtAI!Ince
Sec t on 5 "'S ub teet t o th
recent developments, the die was cast
mcrease
r"et f'C IIQn Of SUCh note by
more than a year ago for the latest
The coal strike matenallzed but the
th e o ff tcer 1n cha r ge o f the
Bon d Ret r emcn t F u nd f or
marulesU!twn of the cont10wng
OPEC price hike did not Uneasv
In ves tment n such fund
energy CriSIS "
about reU.mmg their overs1zed mvensuch note s l a ll b e and
Profllgate conswners and mher"eby s awarded and so ld
tones, the otl compames drastically
to Th e C t 2ens N a t• on at
deciSIVe
federal
regulators
must
bear
drew
down their stocks
Bank
of
M ddleport
A reductiOn to bnng mventones
a substantial part of the blame for the
M dd lepo r t Oh to a t th e
oar value thereot tog eth er
down to nonnallevels probably was a
current gasoline shortage but much
Wtt h any pr em um and
of the responsibility lies wtlh the
JUStifiable busmess dec 1810 n but the
accrued nter es t t hereon
and t he Clerk Trea su r er 1s
mdustry dl!ln t stop there By late
petroleum mdustry
h e r" eby autho r1 Zed and
swnmer' both fuel ml and gasoline
For reasons that never have been
d r ec ted to del ve r su ch
note
when ex ecute d
To
adequately expla10ed, the 01! comstocks had dwmclled to their lowest
sucn
pur c haser"
upo n
parues
last
spnng
aqd
summer
allow
levels 111 four years_ even though adpaym en t ot su ch purchase
ed the1r mventones of the t\\O most
dillonal crude ml and refmmg capaclprt ce Th e pro ceeds fro m
t he s ate of suc h note ex
wtdely used relmery products ty had been available durmg the year
ce pt any prem um and
gasolme and heatmg oil - to s10k to
Those "truly precariOus" mvenaccrued 1ntere st sh all be
pa d n to th e pr"opcr f und
extraordinarlly low levels
tones were 'extremely vulnerable to
and u sed tor th e purpo se
Was that Imprudent "drawdown"
any dislocatwn of weather, supply
for whtch such note IS b e ng
the result of mnocent bungl10g and 10and demand," concludes an analysis
ssued under the provt s on s
Any
o f lh ts o rdnan ce
ept
management
or
was
1t
the
pro
prepared by Energy Action, a
p rem tum and a cc ru ed
duct of a carefully contnved mdustry
Washmgton-based public mterest
nt cr cs t rccctved fr om such
sa te sha ll be tr ansf err ed to
plan' To resolve that questiOn, three
group long cnhcal of the mdustry
the Bond Re f1re1H' n l fund
federal departments and agenc1es
The followmg months produced the
to be a pp 1e d t o th e
paymen t of t he p r nc par
now are conductmg full-scale mmterruptwn of !raman crude oil ex
and ntc: re st of such no te n
vest1gatwns
ports and a w10ter that was shghtly
the manner prov d ed by

In Washington

The crude story ••.

law

Sec t on 6 Tile V ltage
he r" eby coven ant !; t ha t t
w 111 r es tr ct the use a t ttH'
pro cee d s o f the no e n sue t
n'anner and to such C)( f ent
t
any
as
may
be
necessa ry a ft er tal\ ng nto
a cco unt r easonable ex
oe c ta! en s a t the ltn c ot
th e
del ve ry
of
and
pa yment fo r such note so
That the; note wt!l not
con5t tute arb !ra ge bonds
unde r Sec t on 103 I c ) o t t he
Interna l Revenue Cooc ana
th e appt cab'" ncomc tax
regula! ons ~Jnde r that
Sect on Tile t ~ c a t ot t err
n
or any ot her o ft ccr
ctud ng
th e
Clerk
Tr ea s u r e r
n a v t ng
respon5 b l 1ty for
ssu nq
the note s autho r zed and
d r eefed atone or tn con
tUnc ! on w t h any o f the
for ego ng or w 11 any o th er
emplone
or
o ff ce r
co nsulf anto tt hc \/llagc t o
g ve an appr op r .at e cer
I l tcat~Ot t he VIllage f or
me l us on n the tru nsc r p t
se ll nq
o f pro ceed ngs
for t h the r ea .. onab (' ex
pe da fton s of the v ltug e
,.- ega rdmg the amoun t an d
use of all such pr oce ed':!
and the fa cts andes! mut e ~
on wh ch t hey a r t&gt; b as ed

•

The current criSIS dates back to
1977, when the 01! compames engaged

rnE nAil Y SENTINEl
IUSPS 145-960!

DEVOTED ro THE

INTERF.'lT OF
... IEIGS-MASON AREA
ROBERT HOEE~ICK'"
City Editor

Publh;nea dally uceptSaturday by The Oh o
\ alley PubllluJDi Cumpany MulhmPdia Inc

Ill Court St Pomtroy 0/do §76! Ou!loess
Offlrl!

m 2157

Phone

m..

21~

Editorial Phone

St.'tond cla~s postage paid at Pomeroy Ohio
Nattunal ad rrtiUDJ rtpresentalive Landoo
Auoci.uws 310J Euclid A\t Clevela!ld Ohio
~

4W 5

Sub5ttlptwn

Delivered by tarrlt&gt;r
when~ aullabl~ '0 ct nlli per wrek 8.} Motur
Houte when• carrier service oot avai!abl..: One
n~te s

munth P !10 8\ mall in Ohio and W Va One

Year a:z· 50 Su monl.h! 114 5(1 lt ret mon
lhs S:S $0 Ebt ~herr $32 00 lear Sb: menth~
J17 00 Thtt-'t! mvntu ~ f9 00 Suh,t:rl ptl n paM&gt;.,
lodude1_l)unda) Tlnu s St&gt;ntinfl
W

colder lhaQ average/ Ne1ther was as
severe as the 011 comparues would
have the public bel1eve, but both had
the expected unpact on supphes that
already were dangerously low
Heatmg ml stocks, further depleted
by the ch1lly wmter weather, now
stand far below the level of any recent
year Refmer1es now must begm a
mass1ve rebwldmg effort 1f a severe
shortage 1s to be averted next wmter
Industry offiCials now readily
acknowledge that the wholesale
depletiOn of supplies last sprmg and
swnmer was, m retrospect, a maJor
strategic miscalculation But they
adamantly 111s1st there was no conspiracy to purposely create a shortage
They have good reason to be defenSive about the possibility of colluswn
At least one tederal ofhc1al, Alfred F
Dougherty Jr director of the Federal
Trade Conuruss10n 's Bureau of CompetitiOn has suggested that lhe CUI·
rent gasolme shortage may be contrived ''

Health Review

year

In Pony League actwn, host Racine

The A s blasted VISitmg Rutland 13
3 w1th Jerry Fields getting the wm
Fields struck out a b1g thirteen batters while walking SIX Fll!lds also
smashed a double and two smgles to •
lead the A's at the plate
Seott HarriSon, Roger Kovalchik
and Mark Boyd each had a double for
the wmners Shawn Gilmore and
Rhett Milhoan each had a smgle
For Rutland, Todd Eads was
tagged wtth the loss, fann1hg seven

and walkmg rune Marty Spangler,
Eads, Mike Edwards, and Paul
Michaels each had a smgle fur the
only Rutland hits
In Little League actwn, Powell 's
G1ants rolled over the host Pomeroy
Pirates, 1~ BI"yan Korn, Bob Foster
and Rodney Roush shared the p1t
ching chores for the G1ants, fannmg
SIX and walkmg seven
Mark Elliott took the loss w1th relief
·from Rod Harnson and Art Hunnell
They struck out five and walked

•

Wellston wrns doubleheader
\

By Greg Bailey
YISitmg Wellston played errorless
Pall aU afternoon as they captured a
twmb11l from the host Me1gs
Amencan Legwn team, :&gt;-! and :&gt;-2
Sunday Me1gs got good pitching, but
once agam, couldn't seem to get
tunely hits
In the f1rst game Me1gs took 1t:s only
lead of the afternoon m the bottom of
the first mrung, 1.0 Roger Carson
reached on an error and after a
passed ball, Chuck Kennedy smgled
himbome
Mter ty10g 11 up m the third mmng

Wellston got two runs m the fourth
An error on the second jlaseman and
Russ Parsons' double/accounted for
one run, and then Doug Campbell
doubled m the other
Rick Maerker went the disU!nce to
get the wm, fanmng seven and
walkmg three Harvey Whitlatch took
the loss lor Meigs
Carson and Steve Little each had a
double lor Me1gs while Foster and
Kennedy had their smgles For
Wellston Lowell Settles went three
for three while Campbell went two for
two

Giants close in
on Cincinnati
SAN FHANCJSCO 1AI') - Willie
McCoye) and Darrell Evans hit
consecutive home runs m the second
mnmg to gl\ e San Franc1sco a 2-1
\1Ctory over Cmcumau m llle f1rsl
game and M1ke Sadek collected three
hits as the G1anls \\ On the second
game 7-3 to s11eep a doubleheade r
from the Heds Sunda)
The G1ants got sensat1onal rehef
p1tchmg m both games Former
C1ncwna11 p1 lcher l' edro Borbon
sa'ed the flrst il ame \ICtory fo r
starter John Curtis b1 rellrmg George
Fosler and Johnn) Bench w1lh the
bases IOilded m the eighth mrung
The s~&lt;eep moved the third-place
(,,ants to w1thm one game of se cond
place Cmcmnal1 10 the Natwnal
League West
The G1ants got only four h1ts 10 the
opener off M1ke Li!Coss 8-3 Bul
McCovey opened the bottom of the
second w1th hiS 13th homer of the
season and 51 6th of his career I) mg
the score and Evans follo11ed "lth h1s
seventh homer of the )ear
Curt1s, H allo" ed a run m the first
10hen Dave ConcepciOn doubled "enl
to third on Joe Morgan s sacnf1 ce and
scored on a grounder b) Ken Gnffe)
In lhe e1ghth the Heds loaded the
bases on an error a smgle by
Concepc ion and a walk to Morgan
Rehe,er (,ar) Lavelle came on to
stnke out Gnffe\ and Manager Joe
Altobelli then brought m Borbon 1\ ho
JOlfled the G1anls m a trade made last
Thursda)
Foster popped to f1rst and Bench
nled to deep center
The Reds took a 3 I lead 10 the

second game "1th three rtlfls m the
second 1nnmg But Cmc1MaU got only
one h1t after the second, and I avelle,
7-4 picked up the '"ctory
Jack Clark s 14th ho\ner m the lh1rd
cut the Heds' lead to 3-2 The G1anls
tied the score 10 the fifth when C1ark
11alked and Evans tnpled to nghl
center

Sadek' hustled -h1s "al to the
1110nmg run m the SIXth leading off
"1111 a double off reliever Mana Solo
11-1 , and gomg to third on a bunt smgle
b' Hoger Metzger
Sadek scored on li!rr) Herndon s
grounder to th~rd base breaking for
the plate after R1ck Auerbach threw
to first S&lt;1dek added a two-run double
m the seventh when the G1ants added
three runs

AMERICAN LEAGUE
BATTING (17S at bal$) Smalley
Mrnnesota

l69
Californ ia
355
Oowntng Cal!tornra
350
Kemp
Detro1t 3A5 Boe hle Seattle HI
RUNS Lansford Cal•forn a 63
Br eff Kansas Ctfy 63 Ot is Kansas
Ctty 60 Rrce Boston S8 LeFlore
Oel r o• t 51 Baylor Caltfornta 57
Smalley Mtnnesota 57
RBI Ba y lor Cahfornra 66 Lynn
Boston 64 Thomas Milwaukee 58
a oc nre SeatTle .sa Sm alley Mtn
nesota 57
HITS Br ett Kansas Ctly 109 Lan
sford Cahlorn•a 104 Sma lley Mtn
nesota 104 R rce Boston S Moltlor
Milwaukee 95

Bo•lon

23

Washtngton Chtcago 22
Lemon
Chtcago 20 Downtng Callforn1a 19
Brett Kansas Ct ty 19
TRIPLES Brett Kansas (tty 11
Wtlson Kansas C tty 8 Randolph
New York 6 Garc ta Balttmore 5
Mol tor
Milwaukee
5
Grtfftn
Toron1o S Bann tste r Chtcago S
Jones Seattle S

THISTLEDOWN
HOME RUNS Lynn Boston 20
NORTH RANDAl I Ohio I APl
Thomas
Mlfwaukee
20
R 1ce
Kenrus1s came from behind to 11 10 the Boston 18 S•ngleton Balt tmore 17
Caltforn a l7
SlO 750 Lady M.mnequm Stakes for Grlch
STOLEN BASES LeFlore Delrolt
fillies and mares Sunday at 38 Wdson Kansas Ctty 34 Cruz
Thistledown pa vmg $4 40 $3 60 and Seallle 22 Bond• Cleveland 21
Wtlls Te)(as 21
S3
PITCHING (8 DeClSIOOS )
Kern
Seond place 1'ra1se the I ucky pa1d Texas
10 1 909 1 .45 Zahn M tn
$8 20 and $4 60 and third place VIctory nesora 7 1 875 3 26 Clear Ca ltfor
Kmgdom pa1d S4 80
n1a 8 2 800 2 76 John N ew York
Tnfecta w1nners were Day Saver 11 ..3 786 2 4~ 3 Slaton Mtlwaukee 8
2 80 N)arl&gt;nez Balt&gt;more 10
i l l Olympic Pnnce (6) and 3.t1 727
714 3 64 Pa lme r Balttmore 7 3
Ca nlwalkforrunmn g 12) The 200 700 3 20 Drago Bo•ton , 7 3 700
wwmng ticket ho lders co ll ected 2 79
STRIKEO UTS Ryan Caloforma
$473 10 each
134
Gutdry New York 89 Jenk1ns
The crowd of 7 148 wagered $937 328
Texas 85
Kravec
Cht cago
Koosman Mtnnesota 73

Ask me about
Life Insurance
forTodays
Families
nffer i'l IO!i\l prog ri'l Tl 10 help
prOI{:'CI you family c; way of h\llllg
and butld finan c1al Sl!cunf) for you r
Tl!trr~rnt: nl \ll2rtr s Call me lor dl!t 1 11 ~
f

MIKE

SWIG~

Mtddleoort, 0

992 7155

~~~ t e

Farm ltle nnd
Acc1dl] 1 AssunJ l ee

r.

1fl

nanY'

75

NATIONAL LEAGUE
BATTING 1275 al bats) Brock St
LOUIS 352 Hendnck Sf LOUIS 34 1
Mazztllt New York 335 Foster Ctn
331 Templeton, Sf -Louts
cmnat1

327
RUNS

Lopes

LOS

AngelO$ 61

K1ngman Chtcago 58 North San
Franc lsc:;o 57 Royster Atlanta 56

Mallhews Allanta 56
RB1 KIngman Ch•cago

In the second game Me1gs agam
couldn't produce the runs as w1nner
Jeff Montgomery- struck out SIX and
walked two Ken Brown and Tom Owens teamed lor Me1gs, strikmg out
SIX and walking JUSt one
Wellston plated a run m the f1rst ,
and then Me1gs got 11 back m the
third Ahead 2-1 10 the fifth mrung,
Wellston scored three runs for the
margm of VIctory
Dave Cox opened the mmng wtth a
long homer Gary Speraw smgled and
after two were out, Jeff Montgomery
poked a controversial homer to left
field The controversy stemmed
around whether the ball was a homer
and bounced back m, or was a double
that h1t the top of the fence
Me1gs got 1ts run m the third on a
double by Ken Brown, a sacnhce by
Little, and a smgle by Owens Then m
the seventh Jerry F1elds slammed a
no doubt homer' over the left field
fence
Me1gs enterU!ms Glouster at
Syracuse Tuesday for their last home
game of the lkason at SIX a-dock
Lin esc ore
w
100 130 0-5 10 0
001 000 1-2 6 2
M
J Montgomery and T Montgomery
Brown (lp ), &lt;Mens (6) and T
Wayland

HOME RUNS Kmgman Chocago

By The Anoetated Press

Lynn

001 202 0-5 6 0
M
100 000 0-1 4 2
Maerker and Settles
Whitlatch (lp) Fogelstrom (5) and
Foster, T Wayland (7)

f teld
San
Otego
9
McBrtde
Phtladelphta 8 Templeton Sf Louts
8 Hernandez St Louts 7

TODAY S
MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS

DOUBLES

Llnescore

w

65

Foster Ctnc1nnat• 65 Wtnt•eld San
Otego 56 Clark San Franc 1sto, 54,
Stmmons St Louts 52

28 Schmtdf Phtladelph•a 23 Foster
C1nctnnat t 19 Robtnson P ttfsburgh
18 S1mmons St L outs 18 lopes
Los Angeles .a

STOLEN BASES

Moreno

LOU &lt;S 6 2 ISO 2 62 Knepper San
Franc oco 6 2 7SO 4 30 LaCO$$ C n

ct nnatt
8J
Houston 9 .t

727
692

2 51
Andu tar
2 63 Grtms ley
Montreal 8 • 667 4 69 Reed
Phtladetphta b 3 b67 A 30

STRIKEOUTS

Rochard

Houston 131 Perry San Otego 88
Carl ton
Phlladelphta 85
N tekro
Atlanta 84 Swan New York 82

THURSDAY -

JULY 5TH

ALL PLANT PICNIC
OF

OWENS-ILLINOIS GLASS CO.

-

OPEN TO PUBLIC AFTER 5 PM

CAMDEN PARK

U. S. ROUTE 60 WEST
HUNTINGTON
•'
CLOSED EVERY MONDAY EXCEPT LABOR DAY

The New Haven Reds hmshed
regular season play with a 7~ record
Thursday by downmg host Pomeroy's
T1gers 10-6 on a five-hitter ·by Rod
Long Long fanned ten and walked
only three while Welker and Gilkey
combmed lor the losers to fan seven
and walk five
Matt Thompson led the Winners
wtth two doubles and a tnple and
Robert VIckers had two doubles
RliTLAND CUBS - Members of the 1979 Rutland Cubs are as
Jeff Fnshett added a double and follows Row I- Seott Edmonds, Derek Mlller, Jodi Tillis, Kandi Hysell,
smgle while Long and Rusty Scar
Heath Shoemaker Row 2- Junmy Hysell 0 Billy Haggy, Carl WiJliams,
berry had a pa1r of smgles each The Ronme Riggs , Tony Miller, Tony Van Meter
Back -Coaches Dave EdTigers were led by Chr1s Shank w1th a monds and Johnny Miller Not m p1cture - Kevm Musser, Tracee Leark
double and smgle, and Welker had 'a and Jul1e Hatfield
•
tnple
Last Tuesday, the Reds defeated
Middleport Indians 4.0 w1th Matt
Thompson geltmg the wm
Rod Long led the w10ners w1th a
double and smgle while Fnshett and
Jarrue Estegard each had two smgles
Rex Hendrlck.5 and Scarberry each
hadasmgle
Eddie Miller was U!gged wtth the
loss Enc Johnson led the Indians at
the plate wtth two smgles Tony
Mtlwaukee
45 33 &gt;17 9
Baseball At A Glance
N ew York
42 36 538 12
Welch had a double while M1ller
By The Assoctated Press
Detrott
36 37 493 15 112
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Steve Crow, Rick WISe, and Danny
Cleveland
34 42 ~7 19
EAST
Thomas had a smgle each
Toronto
24 57 296 31 112
W
L
Pet
GB
On Monday the host Pomero) Monlreal
WEST
43 27 614
Te)(a5
44 34 571
Yankees fell to the Reds 17 7 Mike Ch• c ago
37 33 529 6
Cal
tfornta
lf2
t5 35 563
St
LOUt
S
38
3o
528
6
Wolfe, Fnshett and Zerkle shared the
0 34 !&gt;11 2'12
37 34 521 6'h Mtnnesota
mound chores for the wmners w1th P•llsburgh
12 36 538 2'12
39 38 506 7Vz Kansas Ctty
Wolfe gettmg the wm Together they Pholadelph•a
33 44 429 11
New York
30 41 423 13 1h Chtcago
Seallle
34 46 425 11'12
fanned SIX and walked one
WEST
Oakland
23 57 278 23
5() 31
617
Fnshett had a smgle, double, and Houston
Saturday's Games
Ct
nc
tnnatt
41
38
519
8
tnple to pace the wmners while Wolfe
Bo•lon 3 New York 2
4(1 39
Franct sco
S06 0
had four smg les and a double Zerkle San
Cleveland 4 Delroot2
35 47 427 15 112
San Otego
Mtnnesota 16 Chtcago 4
and Thompson each had two smgles Los Angeles
33 47 413 16 112
Balttmore 2 TorontoO
32 46 410 161fz
while Hendricks, Estegard and Boyd Atlanta
Mtlwauk.ee 8 SeaUie 1
Saturdays Games
Northrup each smgled Scarberry had
Texaso Oakland 3
New York 9 Chtcago 8 11 nnmgs
a double and tnple
Caltforn ta 8 Kansas Ctty 5
Montreal S P •ttsburgh 3
Sunday's Games
Charlie Knopp took the loss, and B
Ctn ct nnat•2 san Franct sco o
Detro• ! 10 Cleveland 2
Phtlade lphta 6 St LOUIS 4 10 tn
Willis came on m rehef Together
Ba lttmore 10 Toronto7
they fanned ten and walked mne ntngs
New York 6 Boston 5
Atlanta 7 Los Angeles 4 10 1nntngs
Sherman Hoschar led the Yanks' hitMtnnesota 2 Chtcago 1 10 tnntngs
Houston 3 San Otego 0
M1 waukee 10 Seattle 3
tmg With a tnple and smgle while
Sunday's Games
Ca tfornra 14 Kansas City 2
Chocago 58 New York 4 2
Knopp had a double and smgle C
Oakland
13 Texa$12 15mnong•
Montreal
at
Ptttsburgh
2
ppd
Kennedy had a pa1r of doubles
Monday's Games
ratn
Boslon tFmch 0 0) at New York
St LOUIS 13 2 Ph ladelphta 7 1
(John til 3)
In Pee Wee baseball, host Pizza
San Franc1sco 2 7 C nctnnatt 1 J
Cleveland ( Pa)(ton 4 4) at Detrott
Atlanta 2 Los Angeles 1
Shack got by the Middleport
( P Underwood 2 0)
Houston 4 San O tego 1
MusU!ngs 11~ w1th Artie Htlflnel,
Bal1•more (0 Martanez 10 4) at
Monday 's Games
Bnan Tannehill, and Don Dorst
Montreal ( Rogers 7 5) at Ch1cago Texas (Comer 7 6)
Seallle (Jones 2 6) at Mmnesota
sharmg the motlfld for the wmners tK rukow 55)
New
YOrk
(E IIlS
0 0)
at (Jack•on 0 0)
Together they fanned twelve and
Oakland !Morgan 0 1) at Cahforma
Ph t ladelph!a (Esptnosa 6 7)
walked eleven
(Barr 3 o)
Ptttsburgh &lt;Robtnson 54 ) at St
Dorst. sacked a grand slam homer Lou •s (Ma rttnez 6 2)
Only games scheduled
Tuesdays Games
lor the winners while Seott Powell
Lo• Angeles (Hoolon 7 51 al San
Kansas C1ty at Boston
had a tnple Hunnell slammed two D ego (0 Acqu stoo 51
Chtcago at Cleveland
Only games scheduled
smgles while Anthony W1lson and
Mtlwaukee at New York
• Dorst each had a smgle
"roron to at Detrott
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Seattle at Mtnnesota
Lester Stewart took the loss, fan
EAST
Balttmore at Te)(aS
rung e1ghl and walkmg twelve Jeff
W L Pet GB
Oakland at Caltforn•a
54 24 692
Nelson had the only h1t for the Balttmore
Boston
47
28
627
5 112
MusU!ngs but 1t was a b1g one, a
grand slam home run

••••• •••••
• • ••
••••• •••••

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD

)

~emifinals

,__,

Weekend Spor1s TransactiOns
By The ASSOCiated Press

_
~

Amen can League

TRACK AND FIELD
I'Hli.ADEI PHIA 1Af' ) - Ireland s
Eamonn Coghlan caught natwnal
champion Steve Scott at the top of the
stretch and won the featured m1le
race at the Meet of ChampiOns m
3 52 9 Scott was clocked at 3 53 4
Cog hlan s t1me was the fastest m1le
th1s )ear bettermg the mark of 3 53 7
set by VIllanova's Sydnev Maree, d1d
not compete due to a ban under
10ternat1onal amateur rules
The only accepted world record
broken durmg the meet was m the
women s mile when 20-) car-&lt;Jid Mary
Decker won the event 10 4 23 5
Evel)n Ashford won the women s
100 10 11 42
Harvev Glance won the 100-meter
dash 111 10 32 Renaldo NeheJmah
easil y won the 110 lugh hurdles 111
13 30 R1ch Graybehl won the 400mcter hurdles m 50 4 Wdhe Smith
took lhe 400 m 45 77 James Robmson
won the 800 m I 46 5, and m the 5,000.
meter run, Malt CentrO\\ Itz beat
Cra1g V1rgm Centrow1tz hmshed m
13 21 10 and V1rgm m 13 22 36

day
supplemental dtsabled
hso
Recalled M•ke Col bern catcher from
Iowa of the Amencan Assoctatton

The Powell s LiUle League tourNEW YORK YANKEES
nament 1s m the semifmal round
Recalled Bnan Doyle tnftelder from
Tuesday mght after the f1rst two rotlfl- Columbus of the lnterna ftonal
ds were played over the weekend
League Pl aced J1m Beaftte pttcher
The Middleport Indians, the New on the 21 day dosabled l&lt;st Placed
Haven Reds, and the New Haven Mtckey Rtvers, outftelder on the sup
plementay 15 day diSabled ttst
Cubs are already m the senus The
SEATT LE MARINERS - Places
fori team wtll be the wmner of the Shane Rawley ptfcher on the
Pomeroy Yankees·Tuppers Pia illS dtsabled hst Recalled Randy Stem
c her from Spokane of the Pacdtc
contest to be played tomght at 6 p m ptt
Coast League
The fmals and consolatwn games will
Nattonal League
be played Thursday
PITTSBURGH PIRATES - Dp
Followmg are the results of the first t toned Dale Berra tnftelder, to Por
fland ot the Pact ft c Coast League
two rotlflds
ST LOUIS CARD INAL S - Pur
Syracuse lhwnped Powell's Gl3nts chased the contract of Roy Thomas
~ . and the New Haven Reds pttcher
from Spnngfteld of the
squeaked by the Pomeroy Pirates 2-1 Amertcan Assoctatton Opftoned
The Yankees rolled over the Mid- Roger Freed, tnft elder to Spnngf teld
FOOTBALL
dleport Braves 13-4 while Tuppers
National Football League
Plruns gfit by the Rutland Dodgers :&gt;OAKLAND RAIDERS
An
nounced the ret trehle n t of Wtlhe
3
The M1dclleport Indians hanclled the Brown defenstve back
Mason Rangers 15-2 as the New
Haven Cubs got by the Pomeroy
Tigers 12-2 The New Haven Reds
then defeated defending champiOn
Syracuse 3-1

CARPETS
HAVE

~

,.. ....

"- _-: . .;-,HAD
ITI
,.., /'.,.s. . tt,__),
,,
0

BASEBALL

J
CHICAGO WHITE SOX - Placed
Boll Nahorotjny calcher on me 15
begin T uesuay

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DOUBLES Rose Pholadelphoa 2o
Mallllll New York 22, Reotz Sl
Lou.. 22 Matthews Atlanta, 22

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Parnsh , Montreal 21 Hernandez St
Louts 21 Gnffey Ctnctnnatt 21

TRIPLES Scott St LOUIS 9 Won

PARK RESERVED

P•l

tsburgh 32 -.---N"'Orth San F ranCJsco
29 Scott 51 Lou 1s 24 Cedeno
H ous ton 22
Scott Montreal 20
Taveras
New York
20
Cruz
Houston 20 Lopes Los Angeles 20
PITCHING (8 OectStOns) NtekrO
HOU$10n 12 3 800 2 9IJ Ltllell St
Lou is 6 2 750 2 87 Mar1•nez St

e1ght
9ret Korn led the G1ants at the
plate, sockmg two tnples, one double
and a smgle Tun LeMaster, Bryan
Korn, and Gerald Moore each had two
smgles, and Foster had a homer
Bobby Jeffers socked a triple,
Kevm Mowrey a double, and Rodney
Roush and Lee Powell a s10gle each
For the Pirates, Hamson had a
double and smgle Huey Eason, Phil
King and Hunnel each had a smgle

$05

While you wait.

{o ro

$225

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Our Onf' Low Pru:4! No ltlddtn Ch•rJts
for Custom Full upper &amp; ft1lll ~'~"" ' drnttlreJ

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Coff todDY for
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•'

�,,
. 5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, July 2, 1979

Community
Corner
l

By Charlene Hoeflich

This week we give a "tip of the hat "
1\ "first" for the Middleport First
to
Pat Thoma.
Baptist Church-three generations
Pat
for many years now has served
are ~inging in the choir.
Craig Darst joined the singers Sun- as the Meigs County Service Unit
day. His father, Tom Darst, and his Director for the Black Diamond Girl
grandmother, Mrs. Beulah White, are Seoul Council- and she's done a fan·
tastic job!
.
long-time choir members.
'"'
But after day camp this mo·nth, her
resignation is effective. Pat won't be
Swnmer rolls right along ......
giving
up girl scouting altogether,
Suzy Carpenter and Janet Bolin are
calling for residents to "Put a Little she'll just be reducing her load of
Color in Your We" by exhibiting in volunteer work.
During Pat's years as ·service unit
the Meigs County Fair flower shows.
And this year they'll be back in the director, we have seen scouting
old location, the senior fair building. develop into a large active organizaWhile we thought the new building tion in the county devoted to developwas great, and the garden club ment of young women. She has been
members did paml and pretty up the active for the scouts with tl)e Meigs
place, the Fair Board opted lor the County Junior Fair Board and the
scouts have moved into a prominent
location change .. .:.so ......
And we have a few rule changes. In position there with displays and
the past junior class exhibitors had to special recognition.
Many new troops have been
be 12 or wtder. That meant when a
boy or girl reached the teen years and organized, the camp program has
wanted to exhibit in the shows, they been developed, and scout leader
were in direct competition with adult, training activities have been promany very experienced, arrangers. moted by Pat whose contention has
This year the junior division age has always been that only trained
been moved up to "under 19 years of volunteer leaders can do the job.
Pat has done a terrific job -and to
age" and that's good.
her "a tip of the hat."

Two celebrate birthdays

Ryan Hollon

Kimberly Roush

Ryan Wayne Hollon, son of Larry
Kimberly Lynn Roush, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Roush, Letart and Joyce Hollon observed his second
Falls, celebrated her first birthday on · birthday Friday. Joining him for the
June 12 at the home of her parents.
celebration at his Minersville home
A clown cake, ice cream, and
were his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Koo-Aid were served to Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Grueser and Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Michael, Chuck and Becky, Edison Hollon .
Mr . and Mrs. Herbert Roush, Mr. and
Mrs. Lewis Pickett and Tracy, Mrs .
Edna Roush, Mrs. Gladys Shields,
Cindy and Ed Roush, Mr. and Mrs.
Dana Lewis, Mr. and Mrs . Ron
The Harrisonville Senior Citizens
Russell, Mandy and Michael, Mrs.
enjoyed a potluck supper Tuesday
Iva Orr, and Cindy Allen .
Sending gifts were Mr . and Mrs. night at the town hall. Norman Will
.
Dallas Hill, Mrs. Dolly Wolfe, Mrs. had the prayer.
lor
April,
May
and
June
Birthdays
Marie Michael, Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Findley, Mr. and Mrs. Russell Roush, were observed. Margaret Douglas
Mr. and Mrs. George Thaxton and received a gift for being the oldest.
Kevin, Scott Schultz and Lori, Nick Others having birthdays were Louise
and Ryan Adams.
Dixon, Grace Turner, Nellie Borgan,
and Hazel Stanley. Grace Turner baked the birthday cake.
Minnie McGrath had charge of the
meeting during which time plans
were discussed for a trip to the Amish
Country sometime in July. It was
noted that a free blood pressure clinic
will be held July 10 !rom 10 a .m. to 1
p.m. at the hall.

Enjoy potluck

The Meigs County Bookmobile
schedule for this week includes.
TUESDAY- Long Bottom Post Oflice, 3-4 p.m. (short film at 3:45) .
Reedsville Reed's Store, 4:30-5 :30
(short
at 5). Tuppers Plains Arbaugh Housing, 6~: 45 (short film at
Poor little harmless frog
6: 15). Baum Addition, 7:15-7:45.
Lives
in a world all his own
THURSDAY - Coolville Post OfHe
doesn
't ask lor anything
fice, 9:30-10:30a.m. (short film at 10) .
Only to be left a lone.
Arcadia Nursing Home, 10:30-11;
Tuppers Plains K and G Shake Shoppe, 11 :30 a.m.-! p.m.. Chester He has no way of protection
Methodist Church, 1:15-1:45; Keno He cannot even bite
way they treat him at a frog jump
m and Co. Road 211, 2-2 :30; Portland ItThereally
is a sight.
Proffitt's Store 3;3:45. Racine, Home
National Bank' 4:15-5 (short film at
4:30). Wagner's Hardware, 5-5:45• They punch and prod him with sticks
(short film at 5:15). Syracuse Pool6- To make him jump so.far
His little legs are almost broke
7:30 (short film at6:30).
And yet they ask for more!

The Poet's

Corner

lim;

•

FATIIER.SON .
BANQUET SET
The five Masonic Lodges of Meigs
County will sponsor a lather.,o;on
banquet to be held at 6:30 p.m. on
Friday, Aug. 17, at the ~iddleport
Lodge facilities.
Tickets for the event may he purchased at $4 each !rom the worshipful
master or secretary of the live lodges
which are in Chester, Pomeroy,
Harrisonville, Racine and Middleport
· or from members of the ticket committee.
Speaker lor the dinner will be
Richard Wi~n , junior grand deacon
of the - Grand Lodge of OHio from
BeaUsville.

'··

Relatives of Sam and Mcvina Birchfield held a reunion recently at the
Krodel Park, Point Pleasant, W.Va.
A basket dinner was held at noon.
Recognized and presented gifts were
Dal)ny Luckeydoo, the youngest;
Eleanor Elliott, the oldest woman;
Owens Plants, the oldest man; and
Roy Young, the one who traveled the
farthest.
Attending were Mrs. 'Mildred
Brown, Mr. · and Mrs. Willard
Luckeydoo, Tommy Luckeydoo,
Point Pleasant, W. Va.; Effie Roach,
Sue ,- Stephanie and Susan Reynolds,
Southside, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
Everett Grant, Michael,. Pam and
Debbie, Minersville; . Roy Young,
Gauley !!ridge, W. va.; Mr. and Mrs.
James E. Smith, Jimmy and Danny,
Charleston, W. Va .: M'r ""rt 1\1rs.

Helen Help
US. , . By Ht'lt·n BnttPI
IS 'JEKYLL-HYDE' SYNDROME

TYPICAL OF MARRIED~ MEN?
By Helen Bolte!
DEAR HELEN,:
At work, or in company, my husband is Dr. Jekyll. At home he's Mr.
Hyde. I've talked to friends and they
say their men are the same. Their
"outside" faces are nothing like they
show their families.
The minute Arnold walks in the
door he either starts criticizing or
. goes into a sulk. He bosses the kids
and me unendingly, never has a kind
word, and if we don't play up to him
as king, he stops speaking (which is
sometimes a relief!).
No one he wo~ks wi~h would believe
this. They all think he s Mr. N1ce.
I began dream~g of divor~e a week
after I mamed him. Now I WISh I had,
but creature comforts keep me here,
after a dozen ffils~rable years ·- I
couldn't give the children very much
on my own.
However, I've had it with•his constant bitching. Could I use your column
to get rid of Mr. Nasty? I'.d give him
away! Any takers? Any commiseration from others who are also- MRS.
HYDE
DEAR MRS. HYDE :
Either you've got a born stinker
here, or else your "dreams of
divorce" from almost day-&lt;&gt;ne of marriage have put Dr. Jekyll in Hyding.
When a man knows he 's not wanted,
he soon quits trying. And if he's the
resentful type, he'll take rejection out
by playing Mr. Nasty.
Analyze your marriage. Should you
both agree there 's no hope, then end
it, no matter how many creature comforts you lose. But don't be surprised
to learn that Alnold has turned
pussycat in the arms of a new wife. -

.

HOW'S YOUR
HOSPITALIZATION?

Social Calendar

TUESDAY
DINNER at 7 p.m. Tuesday at
Drew Webster Post 39, American
Legion Post Home followed by installation of officers and meeting .
District Eight representatives will be
on hand to install.
HOMEMAKERS · UNLIMITED
meeting 7;30 p.m. Tuesday, River·
boat Room, Meigs Branch, Athens
County Savings and Loan, W. Main,
Pomeroy with preserving and canning to be topics. Public invited.
POMEROY CHAPTER 172, Order
of the Eastern Star, 7:45p.m. Tuesday at the Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
Members to take items for a silent
auction.
BAKE sale at 1 p.m. Royal Oak
Park. Proceeds to be used to purchase band uniforms lor Eastern
band members. All students asked to
contribute. Items are to he taken to
' trading post at Royal Oak. Help is
needed , if interested call 985-\l35! or
9654117 .

fiCers.
The first and second degree were
given to five candidates by Mrs.
Lucille Leifheit, past master . Two
propoSals for membership were
presented and Jordan awarded
trophies to the Grange bowling team.
The charter was draped in memory
of Gladys Morgan, a 54 year member
of the grange. Mrs. Barbara Fry,
CWA chairman, announced that the
National Grange is publishing a new
cookbook. The legislative report was
given by William Radford. Sympathy
was extended the Morgan family and
communication was read from the
National Grange.
Mrs. Ethel Grueser. lecturer. use_d

a

. USDA CHOICE

LY
DEAR POLLY - When making
large amounts of chili , stew, soup,
etc. to go in the freezer I put it in ice
cube trays with the dividers removed.

I line each tray with foil, let it hang
over the sides and put these trays in
tbe freezer . When they 're frozen I fold
the excess foil over the contents,
remove from trays and put in plastic
bags. These shapes stack nicely and
do not take much room in the freezer.
-MRS. G.R.B.
DEAR POLLY - I like to make
latch hook rugs and lind the work is
easier to do on a hard surface but I
also like to be in the living room with
my husband while he watches 1V. SQ
I put my adjustable ironing board in
front of the couch where I set and set
it at the correct height lot my work. I
have a comfortable level for my work
area where I can relax, look at Tv,
listen to my husband 's conunents and
spend an enjoyable evening workiJ18
on my rug .
Such an ironing board can also be
used as a 1V table in front of the
couch, with a pretty cover on it. An
adjiJstable ironging board can also be
used for a bed tray when one is confined to bed, or for a typing desk with
room lor spreading one's papers out.
+EVELYN
.
DEAR POLLY - When heating
milk or cream soups first rinse the
pan with cold water . Do not dry and
then find the soup or milk will not
scorch.+ MRS. J . M.
Polly will send you one of her signed
thank you newspaper coupon clippers
if she uses your favorite , Pointer,
Peeve or Problem in her column.
Write POLLY 'S POINTERS in care of
this newspaper .

-PANDORA SPORTSWEAR

.j

BONELESS

,

BONELESS

49e

CHIPPED

FRONT QUARTER FRYERS ........ Pound 69'

CHOPPED HAM

·HIND QUARTER FRYERS ............oun1 65'

SLICED BOILED HAM ............................Pound

- ..... ... ......
CHICKEN BREASTS

SUPERIORS .

.

$11'

Pound .

OPTOMETRIST

: . :;

1 OFFICE HOURS: 9:30 to 12, 2 to S !CLOSE AT NOON
1
I ON THURS.)- EAST COURT ST., POMEROY .
.
. I

L-------------~---------

CARDINAL EXTRA FANCY

SLICED
BACON

$1

CALIFORNIA

CALIFORNIA NEW WHITE

VAUGHAN'S

POTATOES 10 ~=~

•

19

'1

•1"

LB.

IFARM FRESH ~RO~~t~~
~9

FANCV GOLDEN

BANANAS .................................

Lb .

LARGE SWEET WESTERN

CANTALOUPE ....................... ..

Each

SANTA ROSA
SWEET LARGE

SOUTHERN PEACHES .........

PLUMS ............................;...........

49c

u.

FRIENDLIEST ·sERVICE IN TOWN!

69c

Lb .

Sweet Mcy
99
WATERMELONS 25 lb. avg. '!. 1
".-

OCUST &amp; PEARL STRE~TS
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

'

SALEDAnSI.ULY 2· 7,1979

. ~_... ':'

QUANTITY

/~- - ---

RIGHTS

RESERVED

MINUTE MAID

~LEM03~~~~ MIX ·' l 89

PAK. l6 OL

BTLS

•

1-Lb.
Pkg.

$1 39 ECKRICH SMOKED SAUSAGE

12 'oz. Sliced

......... EST .SAVINGS IN TOWN!

PEPSI...........~.8

--------·.

.

FRANKIES~~89e
ECKRICH BOLOGNA

Plus

GALA

TOWELS
White decorated or

. , -10.00 Durchase

As an independent insurance
agency , our pr i mary !unct ion i s
to provide poli c ies wh ic h afford
f inancia l protec tion in case of

46-oz.
Can

loss.

But , we al so have a v ital in ·

49~

•lEG , RIPPLIEO

SCOn VIVA NAPKINS ..................."'•

PORK &amp;
BEANS

PRINGLES .... , ......... ,.............. "''"' ..... "' ·.. · Con 99 c

.

25 ·Ft .

REYNOLDS FOIL "................... "...... ".

o• COU NTR Y STY LE

59~

VAN CAMP

140·C•·65C

STANDAAD

should our clien t s. We encour age
ca re, cau t ion and safely ...
preventive measures wh ich ca n
keep th at c ar acci dent from hap ·
pening , th at bu i ldi ng f ire from
starring , m at hom e bu rgl ar y
from bei ng comm i tt ed .
Prevention saves life , l imb and
property ... and helps control in
surance costs and pr emiums .
When losses do occ ur , our
policyholders can count on pro
tec ting and serving in t ime and
need . Bu t we st i ll say - preven
tion is the best pol ic y .
•M

·

12

SHASTA POP .........................6 c~~: 99'

ASST. FLAVORS

loss prev e nt ion , as

·Jumbo Roll

&amp;

ASST . REG . • DIET FLAVORS

39«

Roll

3

$}00

3

$

210I.

Cans

9 ·01

MEDIUM , WIDE or X/ WIDE

.

01

CARDINAL SA~DZWtCH

BUIS
INSTANT
NESTEA

DALE C. WARNER
INS.
992-2143

102 w. Main
Pomeroy

CHARCOALIO '159
QUETS ~:~

59(

or WIE NER

8-Ct
Pkgs.

$ 79
3-oz.

Snyders

CARPET
SAL·E

COOL WHIP
AC~ES YVHOLE

FROSTY

8-oz.
Bowl

111 -oz .

STRAWHERRIES ....... ................... Pko
MT . TOP

35·o•.

APPLE PIE ..............................................

79C
$ 1"

e
~

~

~

! §'
'.AfiOINAL i'S

'I

00-36-06

Pkg.

4MERICAN , PIMENTO or SWISS • e 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 e 1 1 1 1

$'

VALLEY BEU

2%

169
MILK .........G!~. .
Bo.ttle

~
G II

ICE CREAM ..................... c:. ~~

$219

".;0 SToR tS

' -'\
·
'

BORDEN

•

YOG·URT.................. ,.~........ ,,, .. ,,....
-

OP~A~D~~~lFOOO STO RE S
B.B.O.

Al.'t mTURAL

10-Ct.$129

TH BARS ..................................... ~···

CLOSED MONDAY
, AfTERNOON
'

1· lb ,
Can

12-oz.

SIIIGLES

BORDEN

NEW HAVEN·

;"'BORDEN

.

.

-

,

2

8 •01

79(

.
24·oz.$109

Conono

COTTAGE CHEESl ..... •............... , ........ Corton

'

X3 ·11J:IN: I
~

·.

.. i

SAUCE
Reg ., Smokey or Onion
Umll one w •lh c oupon
~~i!nl\ one coupon JNI !emil~

18·01.

49e

Bottt•
r-,~r •• 71'1171

.

Good at C.rdlnal lllo~ll llu1 lt..-M

00-10·01

. ,':

:::;
~

:;;;

_,4)

CAROINAL II&gt;"

,,

,,

~
U

~

·ORANGE JUICE 64-oz.$10'

Turkey, Selitbury Sleek. Be•f Stew,
'Be•f 6 Noodl... Chicken II Noodles or
Chicken A D_umpllngs

FROZEN BQRDEN

299

z

MINUTE MAID

SUPPERS

JUMBO TREAT VANILLA

$

~

«

Q

Jar

KRAFT

BANQUET BUFFET

STOCK

49

LB.$

IDAIRY VALUES/

59;

.

one c~upon per l•mlly

26-oz.

APPLESAUCE

CATSUP

limil UrMP wilh CO!&gt;pOO

MUSSELMAN

Jar

1401.
Btls.

Rtg ., Drip or Elect. Perk

l

Reg. '1.69

POTATO CHIPS

FREEZER VALUES
BIR.DS EYE

DELMONTE

INGSFORD

;
79
15

DUTCH MAID NOODLES ...... .... ......,.. "'•

"·

'

:

$1••

'1"

:',,

l .-

Pound

HAM SLICES ............ ,..............................Poun•

I

N. W. COMPTON. O.D.

. LEAN FRESH GOOD

Jl9

~.,~

:

HALF HAM ,,,,,, .. ,,;,,,,,,,,, ,,,,,,,, ,, ,,,, , ,Pound $ ~···

CHICKEN THIGHS .. ,..................... Pound 99'

PREVENTION
IS THE
BEST POLICY

te rest in

$

--------------1

GROUND •149
BE·
E
F
POUND
Pound~~··

BONELESS HAM ...........,...... ,.

·

25 ROLLS

ON

882-3312

$2 79

WHOLE

WHOLE CHICKEN LEGS .............. Pound 99'

IN

5TH STREET

.

to temptation and commented on the prayer is the most helpful me~ of
temptations of Jesus, the son of God, Christian growth. She read an artrcle
Guideposts about a disab!ed
and his way of handling temptations .
n and the Christian work which
Mrs. Lula Mae Quivey had devotions using scripture from Luke 11
Re~rted ill were Mrs. Audrey
with the topic "Prayer." She said that

Pound

TOOK IE'S FASHIONS

qj()milhii.V

In her review, Mrs. Pratt traced the
history of Israel ~nd commented on
the cause of each king 's failure asking
the question "Did the devil make him
do it?" She noted that all sin is caused
by the sinner's weakness in yielding

STEAK

Polly Cramer

puts economy
on 'gloomy' side

or

An article., "The Devil Made Me Do
II"' by W. W. wwen, was presented
by Mrs. Grace Pratt, program leader ·
at the Thursday meeting of the [.()yal
Women and Men's Class of the Middleport Church of Christ.

.

~
,--------~--------

., ._

FAMILY PAK FRYERS

HELP FOR SOILED DRAPES
By Polly Cramer
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - My draperies
With foam backing came with directions saying to wash in the washer
and then tumble dry . My problem is I
do not liave a washer and dryer- just
a wringer type machine . I cannot afford the price the dry cleaner asks·for
doing this . They really need cleaning
and 1thought you might tell me could
· wash them. -WlNlFRED
DEAR WINIFRED - I suggest that
TIIURSDAY
WOMEN'S Christian Fellowship you take your curtains to a coin laun·
Dexter Church of Christ, 7:30 Thurs- dromat where'They have washers and
day. Theme will be "Fashions of dryers that could be used according to
your directions . If that is not possible
wve" with members to take a rose .
perhaps you have a neighbor or friend
who would let you use theirs. - PCL-

Racine Events

"Safety" as her theme. There was a
humorous safety roll call by 10
members a song by Lisa and Ray
Pullins ~nd several readings including' "Something to Think About"
by Wesley Buehl; "Safety Playing
Ball" by Susan Pullins; "Biey&lt;:le
Safety" by Ruth Ann Fry; "Defensive
Driving" by Francis Shaeffer;
"Freak Accidents on Highways" by
Nancy Radford ; "Lightening Safety"
by wttle Leonard; "Locked Up
'Poisons" by Barbara Fry, and ''This
Could be You" by Nancy Morris.
There was a humorous skit on safelY by Helen and Harold Blackston,
and a closing song by. Lisa an!l Ray
Pullins. Refreshments were served
by the CW A committee. Mrs. wuiSe
Radford brought a cake in celebration
of the wedding anniversary of Mr.
and Mrs. Rollin Radford.

Pr:ogram theme heard-'Devil Made Me Do It '

BATHING SUITS, DRESSES AND MUCH, MUCH MORE

Mutual €\

PN,/P ... CIMI c••ln...
Gregg Gibbs
;. 992-3443
i

I

SUMMER

Now that the Frog jump is over
The prizes and money won,
Won't you be kind enough
To take him back to his pond ?
Name withheld on request.

CALL

r---------------,

Inspection was conducted at the
Friday night meeting of the Rock Springs Grange held at the hall. Mr. and
Mrs. Mendal Jordan, deputy master
and matron, were the inspecting of-

By Mrs. Fraocls Morris
Mr. and Mrs. Frank 'Cleland visited
Josephirte Mallory and Maxine Black
at Meigs County Infirmary Sunday af~e
ternoon.
Mr. Carol Sayre has returned from
Holzer Medical Center and is at the
home of Mr . and Mrs. David Huddleson. He visited Mr. and Mrs. Roy
WA SHI NGTON ( AI' ) - With
Riffle Saturday evening.
economic reverbe rations from the
Rev. Mark Flynn moved into the latest round ot oil price increases still
parsonage vacated by Rev . Steve sound ing, one ofticia l in the nation 's
Wiison.
capital concedes, " It's all doom and
H.
Rev . Don Walker s'_pent a couple of gloom around here."
days with his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Both government a nd private
DEAR HELEN:
Harry Walker at Lizemore, W. Va .
economists now are say in g a
Our 28-year-&lt;&gt;ld daughter lives with
Mrs. Helen Simpson spent several recession probably can'! be avoided .
a man, but swears they are only good da'ys with her son, Mr . and Mrs . Brian
That was the assessment Friday as
friends sharing an apartment Simpson and family at Baltimore.
the nation neared the end of the first
because it's cheaperand more conveMr. and Mrs. Leroy Ritchie and half of a year beset with overa ll
nient. I've told her that we wouldn't Missy of Mareitta spent Sunday with problems of rising inflation and
be shocked if we heard they were Mr. and Mrs. Roger Adkins and personally-ilggravating gasoline lines
sleeping together. Evidently she Roger 11. Missy remained to visit.
and shor t~ g es .
doesn't believe me.
Jirruny Brace of Crown City spent
There was one glimmer of news
Don't you think there should be several days with Mr. and Mrs. Dale ra ising the prospect of a possible dip
honesty between us? -. MOTHER - . Hart and Legina.
· Ill food prices . Th e Ag ri culture
DEAR MOTHER :
Maybe
Mrs. Charlotte Webb of Groveport Department said Friday the prices
there's more honesty here than you spent a couple of days with Mr . and far mers got for raw food and fiber
realize. Where is it written that a Mrs. Bill Cleland.
products declined l percent in J une .·
Mrs. Jack Adams accompanied Mr. The decline was only the second since
shared apartment mearis a shared
bed ? Accept the !act that your and Mrs. Douglas Johnson to Lake pri ces began a steady rise last
daughter has a frienrlly , no-sex ar- Alma Sunday where they enjoyed a December.
rangement with her male roommate, picnic.
But the pervading mood was one of
if that's her story. True not, it isn't
Mr. and Mrs. Crill Bradford of Wor· co ntinuin g negative comme nt on
your concern. - H.
thington visited Mr. and Mrs. Critt Thur sday 's decisio n by the
DEAR HELEN:
Bradford, Sr, Friday and Saturday .
Organization of Petroleum Exporting
In response to the woman who askMr. and Mrs. Aibert Gould of Countries. which decided to raise oi l
ed for advice on how to excape Nelsonville spent Wednesday with her prices to $18-to-$2:l.o0 a barrel amurderous husband : I did the mother, Mrs . Francis Morris .
compared the $12.70 a barrel pri ce set
following and 14 years later I'm still
late last year .
alive and happy, as are my kids :
James Annable, an analyst with the
~· I move out of town with the
Men's Physical Fitness
Co ngress ion al Budget Off ice ,
children. Get a friendly and strong
Next time you walk down Second com mented: " It's rea lly a question of
couple to put you up for a while. Then Avenue of Gallipolis take a minute how deep will. the recession be .
find an apartment in a working-class and just notice the number of over• Ear li er OPEC increases had been
neighborhood with lots or people weight people. Isn't it disgusting! draining spendin g powe r out of
around, minding your business. Make There is something that can help you consumers' pockets.
friends who will be concerned about combat this unhealthy statistic.
"'This will drain more a nd make it
your safety.
A physical fitness program co- very unlikely" a recession can be
2. Tell everyone about your situa- sponsored by the Rio Grande College avoided, Annable said.
tion. Be sure to have someone present Recreation Prj eel and 0 . 0. Mcintyre
Alfred E. Ka hn, the Carter
when he visits.
Park District is being held at Lyne administration 's top inflati on fighter,
3. Get a job and be self-supporting Center of Rio Grande College. -This said inflation probably will top last
so that you can cut the strings.
· ~rogram is for men 17 years of age year's 9 peFce nt rise . He says prices
4. If he harasses, call the law on and over from fHI p.m. on Monday probably will go up about 10 percent
him. (He's probably a coward.) Make . evenings from July 2 to July 30.
compared to 1978.
it clear that you're tlu:.ough.
The five week program, under the
Rl!member, if you're both worrying direction of Tony Landis, will center
about him, no one's worrying about on useful ·knowledge of various
you, so stop feeling "guilty" about physical activities that can help you
leaving a twisted man. You'v got a to look and feel better. So come on out
right to walk in the sun (~- 1 DID IT
to Rio Grande College to have a good .
lime and lose those excess pounds and
Got aproblem? An adult subject for tone up those flabby muscles. You can
discussion? You can talk it over in her live a happier and fuller life. If not for
column if you write to Helen Bolte!, yourself, do it for someone you love.
care of this newspaper.

Scared, tired, and worn out,
No place to go
The poor Frog wonders why ?
They treat him so.

.

Clyde Van Sickle, Point Pleasant, W. .
Va . ; Mrs. Dreama Blankenship, Gail
and Kenny, Proctorville; Jim Vansickle, Point Pleasant; Owens Plants,
Po:Ot Pleasant ; E;,leanor Plants and
Mickey, Point ' Pleasant; Mrs . Jean
Ann Durst, Randy and Ronnie, Cotl&lt;lgeville, W. Va .; Richard Elliott,
Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs. Tom Roach,
Mr. and Mrs . Francis Luckeydoo,
Martin and Danny, Point Pleasant;
Virginia Blatten and Glayds Wills,
Nitro; Mr. and Mrs. Bill Dudding,
Peach Creek, W. Va .; Mr. and Mrs.
Alva Luckeydoo, New Haven; Freda
Bass, Nellie Knot, Sena Hussell, Point,
Pleasant; Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Birchfield, Ricky, Randy and Becky,
Rutland ; Mr. and Mrs. Walter Birchfield, Poco, W: Va.

Rock Springs Grange
holds inspection here

Theobald Milton Houdashelt, Mrs .
SEPARATE ENVOYS
'Clara C~nroy, Larry Bailey, Mrs.
Byelorussia and the Ukraine, conMinnie Jackson, Chester Morris, and stituent republics of the USSR, have
Bentz Martin .
separate representation in the U~ted
Mrs. Mabel Walb rn, Mrs. Mary Nations General Assembly. This IS
Bailey, Mrs. Quivey, and Mrs, Pratt the result of a co,!llpromise after the
were hostesses.
Soviet Union protested against the
· separate admission of members of
.
.
.
the British Commonwealth during the·
Co rnelius Vanderbtlt, Amertcan formative days o! the UN.
millionaire, died in 1877.
·

j

�'

~~bSentii&gt;Pt Mi!ltll..,.,rt-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, July 2,1979

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., M nnday , July 2,1979

-li'flil~ j'i)1} ~

Your .Best Buys Are Found in the Sentinel Classifieds
-----Help Wanted

WANT AD
CHARGES
1~

IMMEDIA TE

Word.oi or Undf'r
Cash

lds.y
2days

Ola t).\t'

1.00

uo

1.2!1

1.90

~ da)'S

1.80

2.1!1

6days

3.00

3 . 7~

Eac h word over the minimum
15 words i.5 4 l'~ nl~ ,., r word pt&gt;t
cltty AWl n.mnin ~ other than ('Q il·
S«'utive days v.11J De char.:ed ill
ttl£&gt; I d ay ratl·.

OPE NING .

Lo bOro tory Tech ni cia n, 3· 11
shif t Exptm enced M LT (ASCP)
or equi val ent. Ex cellent sa lary
and fringe benefits . Shih dif.
forenta il, Co ntact : Personnel
O ff ice ,
Pleasant
V oll ey
Hospital. Volley Dri"¥e , Point
PleaSant , WV . 25550. Phone
' 30&lt;4 ·675 -&lt;4 340. An Equal Op·
,portunity Employer .
1
BARPERSON . Reliob'te , hone st
wi th rel erences . Five Points
1 Bar en d Grill , Rl. 3. Pom eroy.

In memory, Card of Th» n k.~

1md Obit~~ry : 6 cents \&gt;t't word ,

13.00 mm1mmn. Cash in -.d.

vance .

MOOiit&gt; Home sa les and Yard
sales are ac&lt;·epled on ly witl1
cash with order _2.'i cent chBrjje
for 11W carryi ng Box Number Jn
CarP of The Sentinel

The ~bll~lwr reservPS the
rig\11 to edit or reject any ad!i
dt&gt;tmed

objt ctional. -

The

Publis her will nol ~respons ible
f()r m ore ttwn une inl'Orr('('t in-

sertion

Phone 992-2156

NOTICE
WANT-AD .
IAPVER TISING
DEADLINES

1.\ 'S m l"CTIU.\"
" /)flll 'f\ I'IIIJifOll'd hy /11 rge
trt11 Arn.: , ·o m fJ./111• '·' lw d amwal
Ulc' rUX !' !'Q rl l llti! l rtJ ah(Jil/

$18,300

No 'l'('/1 .

/'ranu" Tl'llt lq l'r:JI'IIII.~' . (IIC

PARKERSBURG
(304) 424-6413

Monda}'

Sunday
4P.M.
f'rit!11y aftl'moon

IIJN"

m •t'lltifc •d h1 · th1• l. S J)c·pr o.l
l.a!Jp•·. /Jun ·uu o / J-&lt;Jhor .\'lUll S·
tiD, llillleu n .\'u. / 8 75
Don't JUS! be sa11slu~rl w11h a
JO B Plan NO W to r a ProfesSIO~H! I career Dr1v1ng a " B1 g
R1q" W ear~ a Pr1vate Tru11'l1ng
Schoot and II you rneet our
(JU allll ca\ tonsvou w 1ll be tra1n ·
ed Uy Pr o te ss ron o:~l Instructors
on modetn ~qu 1 oment Tra1 n
on &lt;J PL!rt T1me baf.tS (Sut &amp;
Sun 1 a11d Keep your JOb, or
attend ou1 3 Week Fu ll T1 me
Re s,1dCn t Tr atnmg

Noon on Saturday
Tuesda r
thru Friday
4P.M.
the day ~fore pulllica tio.n

In

wanted to

Buy

CHIP WOOD . Poles ·mol( .
diameter 10" on large!&gt;! end .
$12 per ton . Bundled ~ lab . $10
per ton . Delivered to Otlio
Pollet Co., Rt . 2, Pomeroy .

'1&lt;12·2689.
Notices
GUN SHOOT, EVERY FRIDAY
7o30 PM RAtiNE GUN ClUB.
FACTORY CHOKE GUNS ON·
LV.
PARASOL BOUTIQUE BEAUTY
SHOP . next to Skole· A·Woy
Roller Rink. Will be cl osing as
of July 8. We thank oil our
many patrons for t heir post
years support . Phone 985·&lt;4141
lor final appointments . Sond ra
Kerns .

BARBEQUE WED ,. JUL V •TH .
MEMBERS ONLY . RACINE GUN

BE IT _ORDA INED by
the Co unc1 1of th e Villag e of
M iddl ep ort , Oh io :
Sectio n 1. Th e l ega l
serv i ces o t th e law firm ot
Squire , Sa nd er s &amp; Demp
sev be and are here by
ret ained . such legal se r
vices t o be in t he natu r e of
leg a I advice and recom
mendat io ns as to the
docum e nt s
and
th e
pro ceedings in c onnect ion
w i th t he issuance and sale
of a b ond anti ci pat ion note
in th e a mount o f $90 ,000 and
Of . r ~ nd e r ! n g an approving
op1n10n w1th res pec t to said
note . In · r ender ing such
legal services , as an in .
depend ent con tract or and
in
an
att or ney -c l ie nt
relation ship , s aid t i rm
sha lt no t exe r c ise any
adm i ni stra t i ve disc r et ion
on b eha lf of th is Village in
the f o r m ulat ion of pub l ic
pol icy , ex pend it ure o f
pub lic funds , en f orcement
of
l aw s,
r u le s
and
r eg ul ati ons of t he St at e,
any coun t y . or ci t es or o f
th is
Vi llag .e
or
th e
execut ion of p ub li c tru sts.
Section 2. Fpr su c h legal
serv ices sai d fi r m shall be
pa id t ees now estima t ed at
S750, and sh al l b e r eim
bursed for a ctual ou t -of
pock e t
ex p enses
(in
el ud ing , but not l imited to,
t r av e l ,
l ong dis tan ce
telephon e a n d - duplica t ing
ex p e nses ) incur r ed i n
re nde r i ng
such
l egal
servi ces, and th e Clerk ·
T reas ur er
is
he r eby
aut ho r ized and d ir ected to
m ak e a ppr opriat e ce r
tif ic at i on
as
to
t he
ava i labi l i ty of f und s tor
such
f e es
and
reim
bursen1ent and to issue an
appropr iate orde r for the
pavment o f the same as the
same
shall
become
payab le .
Sec t ion 3. Th 1S ord in ance
is he reby declared to be an
eme rgenc y ora i nan cc
necessa r y f or t he im
me d i at e pr eservation ot
t he p ubl ic pea ce. health
and s af et y of t he Villagc
and its in habi tant s, and tor
the further re a son that
p r ovis io n must be im
me d 1atety made tor the
r et ent ion of said taw f irm
in order to p roceed wi t h tt1e
sate o f s uch note wh ic h sat e
is necessa r y to pr ovide
f unds t or t he pu r pose of
acqui r in g a f ir e tru ck and
the
n eces sary
ap
ou rtenanc es and equip
Tlent thereto : w he ref or e,
h1s or d inance shalt be 1n
vii f o r ce a n d eff ect fr om
tnd i mmed iatel y after 11'5
las!. age and approval bv
he Mayor .
asst'd June 15. 19 79
Illest Gene Grate
Clerk Tr easu rer
Fr ed H olt man
Mayor
1

pp r ov€d
0 70 7 9
er na r d ~ Fultz
011c i t o r .

' J '1 , 9, 2tc

-·~·~

YARD SALE .

Ju l ~

__.1

.

HAND YMAN WORK mowing
Jowns, pointing houses, roof s
ond build ing sidewalk s. e tc.
Coli 614·b67-J263 .

FOUR FAMILY Yard Sale. July
2 thru 7 at Woodrow Fortney's
on 8oshan-Keno Rd ' 9&lt;49· 2827 .
TWO FAMILY Yard Sole. July
5th , 1979 by Ch uck hans an d
Morviene Beegle. Bicycles .
clothing and many c;&gt;ther
items. Coun ty Rd . 35 , 3 mile s
oft Racine-Portland Rt. 124.
GARAGE
SALE
Behin d
Ro ckspring s Fa i rground s.
lwp. Rd . 79. lues ., July 3. 9 ti l

PIANO TUNING f or home and
school. lane Daniels . Al so
repairs , 14 year s experience.

9'11o2581

DO ZER . E~D: l oade r and d,u mp
truck . Will d o basement s,
po nds .
brush ,
t ime r ,
limestone and g ra.... el. Charle s
But cher . 742-2940 .
RIDENOUR GAS Service . Ooxoll.P . gas. Chester. 985-3307.

Real Estate for Sale

THREE FAMILY Garage Sole.
Hunnel' s on Rose Hill . Thurs·
day and Friday , July 5 an d 6. 9
om to 4 pm . Cameros .
clothing , many other· items .
look lor signs off US 33, norlh
of Beacon Sta tion.

3'11 acres in Pomeroy . SEclud·
ed wooded area on top of hilL
Ov er looks river . Water , elec tr iC
a va ilable .
$7900 .

'1&lt;12·3Ba6.

For Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Pork ,
Route 33, north of Pomer oy
lorg~ lots . Co11992-7479 .

REAL ESTATE loons. Purchase
ond refinance. 30 year terms .
VA . No money down (eligible
velerO!;!S). FHA · As low as 3
per cent dow n (non -veterans).
Ire land. Mortgage Co ., 77 E.
State, Athen s. 6 14-592 ·3051 .
TWO STORY 3 bedroom house.
3 lols . Now's your chance if
you need o house. $12,000.
Owner w il ling t o talk .
992-2082 or 742 -2328 .
REAl ESTATE : 1 acre lot in Rig gscrest Manor . between Tupper s Plain s and Chester .
Phone 985.3929 and 985 ·-4129 .

TWO BEDROOM trailer . Aduhs
only . 992-3324 .
ONE BEDROOM opt s. ContaCt
Village Manor, 99~ - 7787 . ·

Auto Sales

ONE BEDROOM mobil e home .
Adults on ly . 992· 2598 .

1974 VEGA HATCHBACK, co li
303·675· 1$01 or 305·675·2488
or ~04 · 675 - 1553.

FURN . APT. :3 rooms and both.
No peh . No children .

1975 CHEVY MONZA P . S .~
P.B..
A .C. , low rnileoge .

12x52 TWO BEDROOM mobile
home in S~ra cuse . Newly
remodeled . Adults on ly . No
pets .
De-posit
required .
Refe rence
requested .
985 -3504 . If no answer ,

949·2723 .
OWNER LEAV ING state . must
sell . 1976 Datsun 610 4·door
wagon . 1978 Toyo ta Corolla 4·
doo r sedan . 992-3618 .

AFFOLTER

66 ACRE FARM -

1972 OLDS CUTLASS. good
shape, $650 . Coli 992 -7063.

For Sale

1973 CHRYSLER New Yorker .
Good
con dition.
$1300 .
992·2192 or6 14-407b.
1977 FORD CHATEAU von .
P.S.. P.B.. A.C. , lot more ex ·
tras . Ca l1992-7291 after 4.
1970 CHEVELLE SS . 4·speed.
$250 . New tires. 992·6057 .
IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF ME IG S COUNTY,

OF

CONVEYANCE
OF
C E R T IAN REAL ESTATE
OF THE TRUSTEES OF
BETHLEHEM
BAPTIST
CHURCH ,
AN
UNIN .•
CORPORATED
RELIGIOUS SOCIETY IN
THE STATE OF OHIO .
No . 17,203
- LEGAL NOTICE N otice is he r eby giv€n to
th e o ff ice rs and member s
of t he Bethl ehem Bapti st
Chu r c h , a nd t o a ll others
w h om it m;;:~y c oncern, th at
on th e 6t h day of J une, 1979 ,
the
Tru ste e s
ot
th e
Betn tehem Bapti st Chur c h
f il ed in lh e Common Pl eas
Cou rt o f Me igs Countv.
Ohio , c a se No 17 ,203, t heir
cer ta in Petit ion praying
th e Cour t for an order
giving them author ity t o
se ll and con vey in f ee
si mple to the F ir s! Bg pti st
Chu r ch, Racin e, Ohio, an
und ivi d ed on e t hird i n .
tere s t in and
to th e
follo wing described real
es tat e :
Th e following descr i bed
r ea l e-state , situ ate in th e
Count y o f M eigs , in the
Sta t e of Ohio and in the
Vi lla ge o f Ra ci n e, to wi t ··
L ot s Nos. 2.11 an d 75 in
Wo lf 's Addition t o t he
Vi l lage of Ra ci ne, M eigs
Coun t y , Ohio
Re fer ence Deco : Vo l .
108 , P age 48 1, Me iqs
Coun t y· Deed R ecor ds. ·
Sai d cause and Pel ilion
w111 b e he ard on th e 9th day
o f J'u ly , 19 79, or as soon
thereaft er as may be .
Robert W . L ewis
Eb er: W Pickens
Jose ph R . FO reman
Trus t ees o f
Beth l ehem Bapt is t
Chu r ch
6 ) 1 L 18 , 15 (7 l 2, cttc

COAL , LIMESTONE , sand ,
grovel. calcium chloride . fe r·
ti lizer , dog food , and all types
of salt. Excelsior Salt Works .
Inc ., E. Main St. , PomeroY .

HOCKING

' RENTALS -

6 rm .

house plus 1&amp; yr . old 3
unit apts . &amp; mile off St .
Rt . ,so nea r Coolvill e.
Sales Assist.
Virginia Havman

Ph , 985-4197

USED TV . Block and white $75
up. Co.lor $130 up . Ridenour
TV and App liances . 965·3307 .
Chester, OH .

ALUMINUM
&amp; VINYL SIDING
BY
J&amp;L INSULATION
Free Estimate

CALL
992-2772
6·6· 1 m o .

.

H. L Writesel
Roofing
New, repair /
gutters and
down spouts.
Window cleaning
Gutter cleaning
Free Estimates

PHONE 7&lt;2-2003
DREAM HOME

&lt;4 ·5·ttc

REDUCED!!

bedroom home w ith
bath , n ice kitchen and
laundry . Call an d make
us an offer! ! !

WE NEED LISTINGSII
Your appraisal is free if
you are thinking of
listing with us . Just call .
Cheryl Lemley / Assoc.
Phone 742 .·2003
Hilton Wolfe. Assoc .
Phone 949 ·2589
GeorgeS . Hobstetter Jr .
Broker- 992· 5739

SEPTIC TANK
CUANitfG
Residential and com mercial.
Call
for
estimate . 14 Hour Ser~
vice. Any day , anytime .
Portable toilet rental .

Phone 98S-38D6
Jack Ginther 985-3806

Jack's Septic
Tank Semce

NEW LISTING
SYRACUSE
Ex
ce llent condition , ranc h ,
wood surning fireplace ,
fami ly room , garagz , 3
bedrooms, bath, nice '
Kitchen,
good
lo t .

$40,000.00 .
FARM - Free gas, 20

1975 OUACHITA Bass boot :

E XC E L L E NT

Real Estate Loans
Purchase
and
Refinance
30 Y@ar Terms
A - No monev down
{ eligible~ veterans)
FHA - AS low as 3%
down (non- veterans)

IRELAND
MORTGAGE
CO.
77
592-3051

PAIR OF gloss cones , man 's
ond woman's. From Germany .

11&lt;3·2581 .

216,E . Second Street

TWENTY P I G~. 7 weeks old,
$30 each . 400 boles wheat
straw . $1 .25 eo . 985·41 04 .

PLAY GROUND - Just
for th e chi ldren. nice
and teveJ.. Renovated 3
bedroom
hom e,
full
basement , 2 baths,
garag e
and
boat
storage. $48,500,
STURDY - Nicely built
stucch, 9 rooms tor a
large family , 2 baths,
furnace , equipped k i t ·
chen. din ing, fireplace
and full
b asement .
Lar ge yard &amp; 2 car
garage. Only $35,000 .

RUNNING VEARS o f iron
wheel wagon , $50. 1 pair pull·
ing ponies and harness. S475 .
1 Boy m9re w ith more co lt ,
rebred , $380. 1 Sorrel l more
wit h stud colt , rebred to reg .
quarter horse. $400 . 985·3891 .
HARDWICK GAS range . Good
condit ion. $20. Coll742-2420.
BOYS' J· speed AMF bicycle

27"". 9•9·2154 .

RT . 33 NORTH -

1977 OUACHTA boss boot with
trailer. IJ5 hp Mere motor ,
Mere Thru ster motor , $4500.

6

room
r'anch with
2
bedrooms,
bath ,
ca rpeting all t hrough ,
g arage
and
lar ge

992·5675.

garden space. $17,500 .
LITTLI' - J bedroom

POMEROY
LANDMARK

home with bath, n a t . gas
heat, T . P . wa fer and
OHio
Power .
Only

$12,000 .
2
4 BEDROOMS
baths, nat. gay, 2 Cots ,

Headquarters for
·~otpoint and
General Electric
Appliances

one setup for 2 trailers
and large outbuilding o n
level corner lot . Asking

$17,500.
NEW LISTING

4

be'droom ho me , nat . gas
F .A. furnac es, 2 ba ths
equipped kitchen a nd
nice yarc;j for $25,000 .

j

RUTLAND

.

bedroom
t ile b l oc k
bu i ld ing wit h bath , Flat.
gas, city water and elec ·
t ri c for only 512,000. ~

Auctions
BIG AUCTION• Weds ., July
&lt;4th. 1;00 at the Hartford Co m..
mun ity Center, Hartford , WV.
4 miles obo"e Pome1.&gt;y -Moson
Bridge.

-

NOW IS THE TIME TO
BUY AND FIX UP
BEFORE WINTER .

~

Ho_using -...

. Head uart"]rS '

ava ;la bl e .

$22 ,500 .00.

ElWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers . to asters . irom. . all
sma ll applian ces . lawn moer ,
1 next lo Stole Highway Garage
on Route 7, 985·382S.
SEWING MACHINE Repa ir s.
servic£1. oil makes, 991 -228-4 .
rhe Fabric Shop , Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Soles end
Service. We sharpen Sciss on .
EXCAVATING, d ozer , loader
and backhoe w a r~ : dump
tr ucks and lo·boy s f or hire .
will hau l f ill din , top soil,
limestone and gro vel. Call Bob
or Roger Jeffers, day phone
992· 7089 ,
n i ght
phone
992 ·3525 or 992·5232.

GiveAway
TWO SMALL puppies, port
husky , brow,-. and block ,
moles. qq2.5005 .

Ex ·

cellent neighbOrhood ~
Remodeled l'h
story
home, 3 bedrooms, l i v·
ing room , family ~m.
garage w i th storag e,
f enc ed l evel yard, stain ed glass· front windows.

$25,000.00.
HANDY
SPECIAL -

MAN'S
$7,500.00

cou ld make nice home
or rental.
Business
Sites-We
have several.
Businesses- W e have
several .
Business Room ~ We
have seve raL

WE NEED LISTINGS
BUYERS&amp;
FINANCING READY
CALL TODAY
REALTORS

Club House.
For turti'MH' inlormaflon un Jo
·

992-6191

6 )

Jm()

form the surprise answer, as sug·

gosled by tho above canoon.

N. L Coostruction

EXPERIENCED
· Ra'c 1iat9rl-·..--..

Service

WORK, GENERAL

Ph . 992 ·2174

1-\Ei&lt;E'S 'bUR ...'aiX BEAIJ.l WHY
\::Ql'T '(OI.J TAKE&gt; AIJ C\.111~ I~

Rt. 3
Pomeroy , Ohio

Motors, Inc.

'buR MARnfJI L-1~ EV~\:0:'(12,()()
~L-SE:? ..----- - -

9'12 ·1547

Pomeroy

..t -25 1 mo.·Pd .

J&amp;L

Blown ·Insulation
JIM KEESEE
Therm•l insul1tion

Save 30 pet , to so pet .

W~PARIWJAY

on heating cost
11nd
f\IIIY insured

ing with the

Free Est .
Call 992-2772
5·17·1 mo.

~ Olli'IIAJf ~IH&amp;N AI

Free estimates

5-20-1 mo ·pd .

QUALITY
DRAFTING
SERVICES

Gl'll!

AI(] RICH MRS . I&gt;IAC BOND
HAS GONE 011 A WOR~D

Pass
Pass

Pass

SIDING
•
•
•
•

187 ASH ST.
MIDDLEPORT
992-3100 6·6· 1 m o .

New Home
Add ons
Remoldings
Free estimates
992 -60 II

6·24 ·1 mo. Pd .

Then what's

&lt;t·JO·tf c

~.,~er

EX CAVAT'ING .
dozer .
back hoe and d11cher. Charles
R. Ha tfiel d. Block Hoe Serv1ce.
Rutland , Oh1o. Pon e 742-2008 .

'1&lt;12·2143 .

I...

IN STOCK lor immediate
delivery: vari ous sizes of pool
kits . Do· il - yourself or let us
install for you . 0 . Bumgardner
Salin , Inc. 992·5724.

1 Freneh cleric
5 Slopes ·

WINNIE
HON Q:WIE 7HERE

15N'TANYMU51C

• lOMii!ES S TART WA66'1.\GWHEN THE ROCK &amp;&lt;OUP

CCW\IN6 FROM

sq . yd .

\~~~'\,!!ij

j T~ J

·

·

YOUR
SPEAKERS

SMOOcH .SI'fow.5 IJP AT
11 w1NNIE WINK LE
FASHIONS. I

·-

CALL THE WISEMAN
REAL ESTATE AGENCY
C?ALLI POLlS, 446-3643

18 Whale
19 Some
zo Tiny bird
%1 Give the
onceover
!3 - out (allot)
zt X-rated

DOWN
1 Cottonwood

tree
Yeslerdlly'a Alllwer

II Wisdom
Zli Adversaries
symbol
Z'l With
I Type of race ZZ - feeling sapience
7 LaUn
!3 Byre
zt Swiss city
greeting
sound
31 Enraged
8 Close
Land of
3Z Made
associate
the good
of cereal
9 Hennit
neighbor :rlln unison
10 Solons'
Z5 Man of
311 Lady's
assembly
the cloth
name

5 Graham

or Richard

u

Z5 Fashion
All wound
up in

za

to Choose From .

BUY NOW &amp; SAVE

Z7 Pooch
Call742 ·2211
TALK TO
Wendell or Herb Grate
or Gene Smith

Z8"-

Dreamer"
29 Storage

RUWD
FURNinJRE
742-2211

utterance

I 'M
i!&gt;EGINNING
TO WONDER !

30 Juan's
liver

BAJINEY

Rulland

•

I DECLARE,
TATER --'{Q'RE
TH'BEST
DRESSED MAN
IN TOWN

33 Type of

NOT MANY FELLERS
AROUND HERE WEAR
THREE; - PIECE SUITS

truck

3f Invite
35 David's
chief
If
.·~

·o fficer
- 31 Melodic

RUTlAND FURNITURE .

38Highp~

teln

iloors

of all new

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's -how
AXYDLBAAXR

3. A la.-ge building lull ol
beautiful carpet.

' Grate Family at
See the

sdtlfl:' ....,.-+--+--+~-1--

39- Atwill
te Poker tenn.__.__.._..__.__.._

WE OF FEA YOU .. .

li

11-IAT'S A 8EAUTIF-VI..
NEW 6LOVE, LVCV

A60UT A ·
HVNDRED ~EARS!

to work It:

CRYPI'OQUOTES

SR MB

RX

Q C·B·

BWDAOX

GLRA~

MJ L

QCDQ

PLD-KQRKP

GBDAB . - DNBSRD
BDLCDLO
Yesterday'• Cryptoquole: IN REAL LOVE YOU WANT THE
OTHER PERSON'S GOOD. IN ROMANTIC LOVE YOU WANT
THE OTHER .PERSON.-MARGARET ANDERSON
I{)

19Ft Klng F..turn Svndlc.t., tnc .

TUESDAY, JULY 3,1979
5o4S--Farm Report 1.3 ; World al
Large 17; 5:5G-PTL Club 13;
S:SS-Summer Semester 10 .
6:00-700 Club 6,8; PTL Club 15;
6 : 1G--News 17; 6: 25----Concerns &amp;
Commenls 10.
6 :30-0ragnet 17; 6:4S-Morn!ng
Reporl 3; 6 :5G-Good Morning,
West VIrginia t3; 6:55----Chuck
While Reporls 10; News 13.
7:00-Today 3,15; Good . Morning
Amerlco 6, 13; T~esday Morning
8; Schoolles 10; Three SloogesLirtle Rascals 17.
7:15- A.M. Weather 33; 7:30Famlly Alfalr 10; Lilias Yoga &amp;
You 33.
8:00-Capt . Kangar09 8,10; Leave II
To Beaver 17; Sesame St. 33.
8 :30-Romper Room t7; 9 :00-Bob
Braun 3; Phil Donahue 13, 15; Big
Valley 6; Love of Life 10; Lucy
Show 17; Biography 33. .
9: 30-Sanford &amp; Son 8; Hogan' s
Heroes 10; Green Acres 17.
IO:OD-Card Sharks 3, 15; Edge of
Nlghl6; All In The Fomlly 8, 10;
Dating Game 13; Movie "Affect lonatel y Yours" 17; Ex.
plorhig lhe Craftso Weaving 33.
10 : 30-AII Star Secrets 3, 15; $20,000
Pyramid 13; Whew ·a, 10: Daniel
Foster M. D. 33.
10 :55----C BS News 8; House Call10;
11 :00-High
Rollers
3, 15;
Laverne &amp; Shirley 6;13; Price Is
Right 8, 10; Biography 33. .
11 : 30-Wheel of Forlune 3,15;
Family Feud 6,13; ll :SS-News
17.
12:00-Newscenler 3; News 6,10;
You ng &amp; the Restless 8; Midday
Magazine 13; Love American
Style 17.
12 oJO-Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Search for · ·
Tomorrow 8,10; Not For .Women
Only 15; Movie "Blood on the

17; MacNeii . Lehrer

Report 33.
1: 00-Days of Our Lives 3, 15; Ali My
Children 6, 13; Young &amp; lhe
Res I less 10; How To Buy A Home
33 . ..
1 : 30-As The World Turns 8,10;
Poldark 33.
2: 00-Doctors 3,15; One Life to Live
6,13; 2o25--News 17.
2: 30-Anofher World 3,15; ,Guiding
Llghl 8.10; I Love Lucy 17;
Prime of Miss Jean Brodie 33.
3:00-General Hospctal 6,13; Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 20; Infinity Factory
17.
!:30-Mash B; Joker's Wild 10;
Banana Spills • 17; • Crockett's
VIctory Garden 201 Time for
Music 33.
4:00-Mister Carloon 3; - Hollywood
Squares · 15; Merv Grllfln 6;
Razzmatazz 8; Sesame St. 20,33;
Six Million Dollar Man 10; Mike
Douglas 13;, Flintstones 17.
4 : 30-Lone Ranger 3; Hogan's
Heroes 8; . Lucy Show 15; Parlrldge Family 17.
5: 00-Bonanza 3; Beverly, Hillbillies
8; Mister Rogers 20,33; Gomer
Pyle 10; six Million Dollar Man
13; Brady Bunch 15; Star Trek
17.
5:30-News 6; Elec. Co. 20; Petticoat Junction 8; Mary Tyler
Moore 10; Odd Couple 15; Doctor
Who 33.
6o00-News 3,8,13,15; Family Affair
17; VIlla Alegre 20; Studio See 33.
6:30-NBC News3,1S; ABC NeWs13;
&lt;iarol Burnetl6; CBS News 8, 10;
Over Easy 20,33; Father Knows
Best 17.
7 : 00-Cross -WIIs J; Newlywed
Game 6, 13; Please Stand By 8;
News 10; Love American Style
15; Get Smart 17; Dick Cavett
20,33.
7::iG-Hollywood Squares 3; Can...
Camera 6; Gong Show 8; Price Is '
Righi 10; Donna Fargo 13; Burl
eves' America 15; Baseball 17;
MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20,33.
· 8: 00-Runaways 3; ' Happy Days
6, 13; Paper Chase 8,10; You Are
Loved 15; Austin City Limits 20;
C lly Notebook 33.
8: 30-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6, 13; Two
Ronnles 33.

9: 00-E mergency 3,15; Three's

LONGFELLOW

One leiter simply stands for another. In this sample A io
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, clc. Single letters, .
apostrophes, the length and formallon of the words are all
hints. Each day the code
letters are dilferenl.
'

AJOLDPB

MONDAY. JULY 2.1919
1:30-As The World Turns 8,10.
Sarah Vaughan In Concert 33.
2o00-Doctors 3,15; One Life to Live
6, 13; 2:2S-News 17.
· 2:30-Anolher World 3,15; Guiding
Light 8,10; I Love Lucy 17;
D·ovln ·&amp; the Plrtsbur9h 33.
3:.00-General Hospllol 6, 13; ~ebOp
17; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
3:30-Mash B; Joker's Wild 10;
B&lt;~nana Spills 17; Over Easy 20;
Concert on the Lawn 33 .
''00-Misler Cartoon 3; Hollywood
Squares 15; Merv Grllfln 6 ; •
Addams Family 8; Sesame St.
20,33; Six Million Dollar Man 10;
Mike Douglas 13; Fllnfslones 17.
4:30-Lone Ranger 3; Hogan's
Heroes 8; Lucy Show 15; Partrldoe Famllv 17.
·s :oo-Bonanza 3; !leverly H1li61111es
8; Mlsler Rogers' Neighborhood
20,33; Six,Million Dollar Man 13;
Gomer Pyle 10; Brady Bunch 15;
Star Trek 17.
SolO-News 6; Pertlcoat Junction 8;
E Cec. Co. 20; Mary Tyler Moore ·
10; Odd Couple 15; Doctor Who
33.
6:tl0-News 3,8, 10, 13,1S; ABC News
6; Family Affair 17; VIlla Alegre
20; Sludlo See 33.
_. ·11\--NBC News 3, 15; ABC News 13;

Arrow"

stQff

24 Rolls of Carpet In
Stock &amp; 100'• of. Samplos

New list;ng .

Siding . FREE GAS FOR HOU SE .

•

judgment
U Heavenly spot

ldng's -"
II Multitude
17 Boxer, Lee -

furniture .

Frontage on Rt. 22.4 with appro)( . 4-5 acres bottom,
20 acres pastu re and balance in woodland (some
ti"!lber reported)' . Includes chi cken house, corn
crtb , shed, barn plus other outbuildings . The
re~ode l e d home ha s 4 bedrooms , eat ·in kitchen,
u~ll.•tY room , cellar .house, large porch &amp; vinyl

Station , New York , 1'1 . Y. !Ol/19.)

ZGoof
nwnber
3 See 8 Down
15 " ...and all the f Greek letter

2. Nice selections of used fur·
nlture.

37 ACRES. -

(For a copy of JACOBY MOO-

eRN, send $1 ro: ·w;n at
Bridge ," care of this newspaper. P. 0 . Box 489, Radio City

U Soccer

$795

SHP AT ...

1. Two ~ull

4NE WSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN . J

U Showing
SOLind

goods

SALE
FROM

ACROSS

IZ Regard highly
13 Celebes beast

NOW ON

~~~-

significance

A New Mexico reader asks
if we approve of opening a
two-card club suit.
No, we don :t. We do open
three-card club suits when
no better bid is available
but with only two clubs w~
can always find a better bid .

by THOMAS JOSEPH

snoopinq'

11111-gotten

AU CARPET

7&lt;2·2593 .

ADD ONS ond remodeling.
gutter work , down spouts ,
sorne concrete w orlo. , woUn
and
dri .... ew ays
( fr ee
estimate). V.C. Young , Ill ,
Roci ne , OH . 9-49·2748 and

accident~

A GOOD SELECTION
OF END &amp; ROLL
BALANCES.

HOWERY AND MARTIN h ·
i:ovoting . seplic sys tems ,
do zer, ba ckhoe. Rt . 143 .
Ph one 1 (61A ) 698·7331 or

Ask,.._ .......

~tUtf. ~~~~

We were

was an

DRIVE &amp; LimE
&amp;
SAVE A LOT

IN SURANCE

been cancel led? Los • your
Phone
operator!.
lic ense?
E·C ELECTRlCAl Co ntractor
serving Ohio Volley reg1 on .
Six day s a week , 2.4 hours ser ·
.vice . Emergency co ils . Call
882 -2«152 or 882-J-'S-' .

finqer
doin' in it?

SAVE ON
CARPETING

PULLINS EXCAVA li NG . Complet e Service. Phone 992 ·2-'78 .

----

remember the

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

North ot Chester, 0 .
Phone 985-4202

It

2¥
3 NT

of failure to open the
bidding ."
Alan ' " All you have to
bear in rnind is that when a
player passes originally, he
will not have more than a
certain number · of high
cards."
O.wald o " Without bother-

1" mite off Rt. 1 by -pa ss
on St. Rt . 124 toward
Rutland ,

51. AI . 7

Alan: " The moment of
truth had arrived. South
paused to think. Eventually,
he played a low spade from
dummy . East took his
queen, cashed the club ace
and led a spade to his partner to set the contract." ·
Oswald : " I see you said
that South passed to think.
Real logic would have told
him that East · would have
opened the bidding if he held
the spade ace, in addition to
his clubs ."

Oswald : " The R in the
code word ARCH stands for
Review the bidding . Perhaps the most important
part of that review is to

Roger Hysell
Garage

USED GARDEN
TRACTORS
AND
RIDING MOWERS

of spades.''

Soulb

By. Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

ct731 mo ( Pd. )

llLLIS

came a diamond to West's

king. Now West led the five

+3

Opening lead:

'

-

AUTOMOB ILE

North East
Pass
1•
Pass
2+
Pass
Pass Pass

lead wa s a diamond .

Dummy's jac k held the trick
and a c lub was led. East
ducked and South's jack
held the tric k. A heart was
led to dummy and a second
club led. East rose with his
king this time while West
discarded a heart. Back

Vulnerable : North-south
Dealer: East

CIM5E - · AHD WilEN WE
'l'&gt;ME HOflll' ... BIMGO ·'

C. R. MASH
VINYL &amp; AUJM.

Civil
Mechanical
Archetectural
Layouts

au

the rationale of the early
play, we find that West's
opening

Television
Viewin·g

way South

reached three notrump or

NORTH
7-2
+ K J 73
¥ A Q 10 6
• J 10
• 942
WEST
EAST
+A 8 5
• Q 96 4
• 6 53 2
• 74
t KB632
• 75
+8
+ A K iO 53
SOUTH
• 10 2
¥ K J 9
t AQ 94
• Q J 76

LI'M'l.E ORPiiAN ANNlE

Pf!one 992-6323

B' S MOBILE HOME SALES , PT.
PLEASANT, WV . 304 ·675·4424.

Real Estate for Sale

Declarer does himself in

E~~tperience

i ng , steam clean . Free
eslimote. reosorJob le role .
Contact Gene Smith . 992·630'1
or Mike Grote 742·2348

992·25 14.

MA'&lt;BB 'bU'RB THro\I.JitJ0 lHE'

eNEWHOMES
e ROOM ADDITIONS
eROOFING
e VINYL SIDING
eGUTTER &amp; SOFFIT

Collulosic (wood fiber)

COMMERCIAL CARPET deon·

1.4x70 197.4 Gover nor 3
b.,droom l lfJ both, ce ntral air ,
owning, building and wood
burner .
In
Middlepor t.

r-----

CONTRACTING

1965GENERAl60xl 2. 2 bedr.
1970 Sy lva . 60)( 12. 2 bed r.
1970 Cast le, 60)(12 , 2 bed r.
197.4 Mark!ine. 50K I 2. 2 bedr.
1969V.al iont, l 2liC60, 2 bedr.
1967 Notional . 17x50 , 2 bedr.

742·269B.

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Ol-11/E:S AA~ 11Al&lt;D Fa'?. /&gt;I£
TO Dl6BST.

BOB'S GENERAL

992 ·5656.

1971 12x~ 2 bedroom , n ewt~
r emodeled mobile home .

BRIDGE

BORN LOSER

CONTRACTOR

197-4 1&lt;4 - • 70 mobile home.
Good
co nditi on. $7800 .

Mobile Homes Sale's

Sai\Jiday'al Jumbfeo: SOUSE MOLDY JABBER RENEGE
Answo&lt;o Whal brides have to be on lhelr big day
nalurally -"G ROOMED "
'
Mooday, July 2

BLOCK &amp; BRICK

Smith Nelson

I I)-( I I XI ]"
(Answers tomorrow)

PEANUTS
MEIGS CO. FARM -

Now arrange tho circled Ionero 10

(]()

Ann NIWiome, 61•·Hl·Jlll.

NEIGLER CON STRUCTION for
new houses and repoir w ork .
Coli Guy Neigler 9-'9·2508.
Ro d ne , Ohi o.

Henry E . Cleland, Sr.
Henry E . Cleland, Jr.

992-2259

) I l

llO : JII ) inc!

W. Va . Krodtl Part~~

9&lt;12·73" .

Make offer .

MIDDLEPORT -

Morni119

WHAi KIND OF
AN AiHI.ETE WA5
iHA'T ROTUND
OI..YMPIC S'TA~ ;;'

tTALUCAI

Evenin11 1t ' :lO ·Pt. Pteuant,

4·23 ·1 mo.

NEIGHBORHOOD

Pomeroy E l ementary,
equipped kitchen, full
ba se m e nt, forced a ir
furnace ,
fiilan ci ng

Thun.

Call lor a Free Siding
Estimate, 949-2101 or
949-2160 . No Sunday
calls .
6·U ·2 mo.

E . State, Athens

$30.500,00.

992·52'16 .

. Phon e 992 -2 181

Chester, 0 .
5-6· 1 mo. pd .

BOJc J

BRADFORD. Auct ioneer . Com ·
plete Service . Phone 949 -2-487'
or 949·2000. Rac ine, Ohio .
Crill Bradford .

608 E , •..~.~o~.:~t.:.:...l
MAIN
PnMFROY . O .

BISSELl
SIDING CO.

Prlnt8!1swerhere: "(

949-2862-949-2160 ..

40 PIGS. 6 to 10 weeks, $30
each. 949 -2129 or see Da vid
Graham , Rt . 2, Racine.

"

4 Slrno

THREr-BEDROOM hou se on t
acre . 37295 Rt . 12.4 . 992 -2581
or 992 ·2082 : Built 1977 . many
od vonfog es .

acres, fen cing, two ·
story nome, barn . other
buildingr Chester area,
gard en , wood burner .

9~
... _ Jack
W. Carsey
· Mgr .

STOCK

GOOSE

TRAILER NOW AVAILABLE .

Business Services

S16,000.

985.3307 .

SU PER

HOME FOR SALE : 124 lincoln
Hil l Rd . Must see to ap·
prec iote. A good buy .' 3 bedr .,
y, both . Iorge l iv1 ng room , f or·
mol dining room , Iorge kitchen . wall 10 wal l carpet ing.
Basemen t. 2 f inished rooms,
lurnoce and works hop . Phone

RIVER

OHIO RIVER frontag e
a t Long
Bott om , 3
bedrm ., 1'/ 2 tath , tra iler
with expand a I iving rm .

GOT AN eye for a buy? Floor
sample sole . Regrigerotor,
ranges . brand new Gibson
refr igerator ' freezer and
range s, aU ore feature pocked
to so-ve you work o,nd time .
Some unit s are } lightly scrot·
ched . All ore priced to se ll.
See them today. Ridenour TV
and Applian ce , Ches te r.

Miles Eitst ol Wilhnltle

992 7255.

Campi ng
lot, 75x415.
F1ve
m 1t es
tram
Coolville - $3,000 .

992·3891.

SALE PRICES
PUBLIC NOTICE
Sa l •sbu r y
To wnship
Tr us 1e cs w•ll hO ld a Public
Hea r i ng on bu dg e t l o r
Fisc al yea r
begi nn i n g
1an uar y 1, 1980 , on · Ju l y 16 ,
1979 Mee tmg t o be he ld a t
777 P e ar t St ., Midd lepor t.
0
Den ve r Hyse l l ,
Pr esident o f Board
fJJ 2 , ltc

5

bedrm . house, n ice lg .
barn, co rn cr ib, other
outbuilding . Mostly i n
hay . Some woods . Min .
r ight s. On paved rd . ·
near Chester.

Rtl .
Ohio

614 ·U9·4245 Evenings
l

proliC . 2 acr es . l 1/ 1 mile off 'Rt.
7. west on 124 . Many ex tras .

$51 .000.00 .
STATE ROUTE 33 - 3

HOUSE
and
s ton e
build i ng and 2 car
garage. In Reedsville .

992·5596 .

l~ng,ville ,

6 ROOM HOUSE ond bolh . Ap·

bedrooms, bath, kit ·
che n , lau ndr y, living
room with stone firel ace
·and 1h basement. E)(tra
large detached garage . .
Situated on State Route
124 .
Sale
price

'.
34 ACRE plus pond
Part
pa s ture ,
part
woods . Nea r Eastern
High . Will d iv ide into
lovely buildin g site .

949·2253 .

l7l10Montgomery

$35.000 .00.
CLOSE TO MINES - 3

SALES ASSOC.,
VIRGINIA HAYMAN
PH. 985-4197

TRAILER 1 or 2 adult s, no pets .
Phone 992 -3181 ,

TRAILER SALES

. THE HEIRS of' William 8eol of·
fer for sole his home and rea l
properly loc ated at 11 Oak St .. ·
Pomeroy , OH . Bids wi ll be oc·
cepted o t the all ice ol Barbaro
Kn ight , Att orney of law , Box
723, Pomeroy, OH . Telephone
992:215 1, until July 13, 1979,
of 10:00 om . Vendors re se rve
the righl'fo rejec t all bids .

Beau ti ful total electric.
3 bedroom home . It has
21J., bath$, den with
firelace , laundry room ,
and extra nice kitchen .
Situated on 4 acres in
Tuppers Pla ins . Sa le
pri ce S95,000 .00

Overweight People
Slinderella
Die.t Classes
MOn. EvtninfiJS·MIIOn, W. V.I.,
7 : ]~ Sl. JOSI!ph CAtholic Ch11r&lt;h l
Tues . Morning 110 :111) 1nd
·Evenlnt• • ' 7:lii·Mielcf1Jport ;
Huth Unilrd Methodhl Church

Siding

0

I KJ

WANU!D

HOUSE FOR sole . 5 rOOm!&gt; and
both. May be seen ot 206 But·
ternut Ave. , Pomeroy . OH or
con tact Doc Eblin .

REAlTY

I NEQUE

Vinyl and Aluminum

NEW TH REE bedroom all alec·
trio home . Ohio Power. Ove r
1 ce r e
Eat- in kitchen .
dis h w asher ,
garbage
disposal , cerami c both area ,
uti lity area. 3 co lors of
ca rpeting, rural water . Near
Langs~i11e .
$43 .000 . Coli
742-2819 o'ft er 5pm . ~aym o nd
Hotlield .

Nice 3 bedroom hOme
overlooking r i ver . Much
work has been done on
thi s home. pri ce has
be e n
reduc ed
to

IIUM8f:fl IIKOKUI

12x60 2 bedroom· mobile home
in Racine a reo . 992· S858.

TRAILER , otter 6, coll992-5914
or992·3129.

! 1/1 story home with full bose·
ment . 2 b eJr. on lincoln Hh .
Seriausc alls only . 997·6347

PRICE

TWO BEDROOM Hou se. newly
remodeled
kitchen ,
in
Pomeroy . Coll992 -2288 after 6
p.m.

Business Services

rHR FE B~DH OOM ·home in
Bradbury . I lloor . co rner lo t
with garage , carport and rear
opt . qn-6345 .

H08STEmR

~~~~~i~

lour ordinal}' words.

992.5865. $.5.000.

-

FEMALE POODLE . 3 yeors old .
Asking $50. 992·3505.

OHIO
MATTER

.

EX TERIOR PAINTING . General
repai r. Reasonab le rates. Free
es timat es .
992 · 6309
or
742-2910 .

YA RD SALE . 32502 Minersvi lle
Rd . Many household items :
Stone Jars, jugs, churns, milk
co ns , some antiques. July 5, 6.
7. 11 am . · 6 pm.

UNFURN . 5 room opt. in Mid·
dleport . 992·5434 or992 ·3129 .

THE

'1&lt;12 ·2062 .

992·3613 .

YARD SALE . 698 laurel Sl. ,
Middleport . Thurs. and Fri. 5 '
6.

ding . Call 367-0292 .

IN

01

I WI LL babysi t in my hom e,
daytime Monday through Fi r·
day with children age s one to
four . Phone Mrs. Glenn Smith

•

TWO BEDROOM furnished opt .
992-3129 ,
992 ·5434 ,
or
992.59 14 .
.

9&lt;12-26'1.

WANTED TO DO . Houses , Porches, Roofing , Carpent ry or
generQI contracting, Free
es timate 742· 2068 .

2-6 ." BIO

OLD COINS. pocket watches .
class r ings , wedding bonds,
diamonds. Gold or sil"¥er. Ca ll
J. A . Wamsley , 7&lt;42-233 1.
ONE h .p, motor .~ or 220.

PAINTING AND so ndbloslin g.
free estimates . Call949·2686 .

South 2nd St. , Middleport , OH .
li nens , be ddi n g, dishes ,
drapes , cur tains, clothing ,
dolls,
si l ve rston e, radi os .
jeWelry . toys . There
is
something f or e\leryone.

Unacramble these tour Jumbles,
one letter to each squa,e, to form

Real Estate for Sale

367·7101.

YARD SALE . july 5, 6. 7 acron
from Enterprise Chu rc h.
-'--YARD SALE. M ond ay and
Tuesday . 291 Walnut , Middleport. Good items .

FURNISHED APT . suitable for 3
or &lt;4 co nstruct ion worker s.
After Spm coli 992 -543&lt;4 ,
992·3129, or992-5914 .

RISING STAR Kennel. Boar-

EMERGENCY .

NOW HAULING limestone in
Mid dleport -Poemroy are a .
Ca ll f or fr~ e
eslinmte .

WANT TO buy : old 45 and 78
phonograph records . Call
992·6370 or Contact Martin
Furni tu re .

HOOF HOLLOW, English and
Western .
Saddles
a,d
horness . Horses and ponies .
Ruth Reeves . 614·698-3290.
Barding &amp; Riding lessons and
Hor se Core products .

1084 · 7Y

·BA SEMENT RUMMAGE Sole.
July 2. 5. 6. A t Arthur' s
Miller' s, Rt. 1, Ru tla nd, OH .
10·4 eo . day .

3 AND 4 RM furnish ed and un·
furnish ed
opts .
Phone
9&lt;12. 5• 3&lt; .

Pets for Sale

AN
ORDINANCE
TO
PROVIDE
FOR
THE
RETENT ION OF CER ·
TAIN LEGAL SERVICES
OF SQU IR E , SANDERS?
DEMPSEY
IN
CON .
NECTION
WITH
PROCEEDINGS
FOR
THE
ISSUANCE
AND
SALE OF A BOND AN ·
TICIPATION NOTE "A ND
RENDERING AN
AP PROVING
OPINION
WITH
RESPECT
THERETO
AND
DECLAR IN G
AN

Services Offered

OLD FURNITURE . ice boxes.,
bra ss bed s, iron beds , desks .
etc ., complete hou se holds .
Write M .D. Miller. Rl. 4,
Pomeroy or ca ll992-7760.

CLUB .

ORDINANCE NO .

Yard Sale

THATSCAAIIBLEDWOADOAME
b)! Henn Amokl and !lob Lee

l!dJ ~~·

~

Col!1llllny 6,13; Movie "Thad~ys
Rose &amp; Eda1e· · •· 10; o:venfng at
Pops 20,33; 9:30--TaKI 6,13.
10:00-13 Queens Blvd. 13; You Are
Loved 6; Charlotte Marathon 17.
10:JO-oPIIot "My Buddy" 13; Boley,
Okl.a homa 33; Rat Patrol 17.
11 : 00-News 3,6,8, 10,13, 15; 11 :30-Wlmbledon Tennis 3,15; Movie
41
The Rookies" 6; Barnaby J,ones
8; ABC News 33; Movie "First

Love" 17.
1 :&lt;45--Johnny Carson 3, 15; 12:Movle "The Legend of Valentino"
1:1S-Tomororow 3.
1: 30-Baseball 17; 1: 55--News IJ;
~:00-News 17; 4:»-12 O'Qock
High 17•
•

a;

.
'

�8 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday , July 2, 1979 •

Operating budget approved
ATHENS - The Governing Board
of the Southeastern Ohio Voluntary
Education Cooperative (SEOVEC)
approved an operating budet for the
agency in excess of a half million
dollars for the 197~ school year at.
its J1111e '!/meeting·.
The board approved a $537,071
budget for SEOVEC, an agency that
pr 0vides selected educational
programs and services assistance to
27 school districts_, four joint
vocational schools and nine county offices it serves in a ten~ounty area.
The budget items for the '79-'80
year include three slate-funded
special education projects, a grant for
the installation and operation of a
computer for instruction al and accounting purposes, payments from
the school districts served by

•

354 E. Main

SEOVEC amounting to $1.07 per pupil
and· state funding for seven regional
supervisory positions : speech hearing - language, early childhood,
school psychologist and low incidence
supervisors, physical and occupational therapist and vocational
coordinator.
In other action, Dr. Robert Weinfurtner , SEOVEC director, described
to Board members the activities of
three summer diagnostic clinics,
sponsored by SEOVEC at Logan, New
Lexington and Newport.
Forty children, aged five through
19, have been referred by seven
districts and will be tested by
qualified school staff to determine
their ability level in several areas.

Clear, cool weather
predicted Tuesday
By The Associated Press
The low pressure center that was
near stationary in southwest Ontario
1/lrough the weekend has finally'
moved to the east, and a large high
pressure system in central Canada
has begun to move south in its wake.
By Tuesday the high pressure zone
will have spread over all of Ohio;
clearing skies and sending humidities
falling, according to the National
Weather Service.
The forecast calls for clear skies
across the state tonight. It wiU be·
mostly sunny Tuesday, with highs in
the mid 70s to low 80s.

Pomeroy,O

S

PECIAL
MON. THRU FRI.

BARBECUE
&amp; FRIES
$}19

Strike••.
(Continued from page 1)
Conneaut, $21.21; Findlay, $22.24;
Fremont, $22.18; Kent-Ravenna,
$21.91; Marietta, $21.29; Massillon,
$20 .91;
Painesville,
$22.96;
Portsmouth, $21.15; Salem, $21.93;
Steubenville, $23.33; Toledo, $18.41;
Van Wert, $22:68; Youngstown, $21.65.

OPEN FOR BREAKFAST
7 TIL 10

4th of July Chicken &amp; Rib Barbecue
Vz CHICKEN OR RIBS

•3oo

(INCLUDES: BAKED BEANS, COLE SLAW, CHIPS AND R~(L)

AT EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL
SERVING AT 1.1:30
LITTLE LEAGUE BALL GAME AND OTHER ACTIVITIES.

SPONSORED BY ATHLETIC BOOSTERS

The purpose of these tests is to determine what type of educational
progrwn is best suited to meet the
needs of the child, Dr. Welnfurtner
said. Children being served by the
clinics include multi-handicapped,
develOpJ11entally disabled, hearing
and perceptually impaired.
The Governing Board also:
- Approved employment of
SEOVEC stafffor 1~.
~- Approved the transfer of the
operation of the Appalachian
Education Satellite Project (AESP) .
from SEOVEC to Ohio University's
Continuing Education Office, AESP
brings in-!!ervice training, seminars
and- WOIIGhops aqd -?~r 1 types of
educational pro~ to the
Southeastern Ohio area vUi satellite..
:;;;. Renewefi the Nelsonville-York .
Ci&lt;y and Washington County School'
Districts as fiscal agents for SEOVEC
for the 1979-al school year.
- Appointed a committed to beglh
searching for a pennanent facility to
house SEOVEC.
-Gave approval for the SEOVEC staff to prepare and submit to the ·
Local Development District a cornmunlty education proposal, which
would stimulate the utilization of
school facilities and services as communlty centers serving child.family
needs.
- Accepted the resignation of
Sherry Allison, SEOVEC low incidence supervisor.

Publisher
grateful

GRAND JUNCTION, Colo. (AI') A grateful publisher is handing out
more than $1 million in bonuses to his
employees for "helping build a solid
newspaper, one that has at least a
decent ceputation."
Although reluctant to discuss the
individual amounts in detail,
publisher Ken Johnson said Saturday
that the bonuses are being paid to
some 200 people, who were employed
by tile Daily Sentinel on AprilJ6,1979.
That was the day Johnson announced
an agreement to sell the newspaper to
Cox tnterprises Inc., owner of the
Atlanta Constitution.
"I'm laying some money on the
troops," he said. "They are· my
friends, and they've been through
good, bad and otherwise. This is a
chance to ·do something for them in, a
meaningful way ."
"All I'm really doing is trying to
share with the staff some of the
proceed:! of the sale," he added. " It's
a very positive way of saying thanks."
Johnson said the bonuses ranged
from "two or three weeks pay" to
several thousand dollars. The Denver
Post reported Saturday that some
were as large as $40,000.Johnson termed reports that one
staffer received $100,000 "on the high
side."
He said he began calling in staffers
individually Friday to thank them for
a job well done and expects to
complete the process early this week.
"They really are very emotional
MEETS TUF.'!DAY
moments,"
he said. "Reactions vary
The Pomeroy Chamber of Comfrom
exclamations
of 'Oh my God,' to
merce will meet at noon Tuesday at
one that said, 'I'm not worth that
the Meigs Inn.
much."'
Johnson, 46, began as a copy carrier
ASK TOWED
with the newspaper in 1949 and
Marriage licenses were issued to worked his way up to become
Dale Edumund Wilfong, 21, Coolville,
and Robin l...e!! Elkins, 19, Tuppers publisher in June 1970. He said he,
plans to stay on with the Daily
Plains; George Gordon Warner, 23, Sentinel,
which has a daily circulation .
Pomeroy, and Cynthia Gay .Conkle, of 30,000 and 40,000 .Sunday, at least
17, Cheshire.
through the 1980 election.
MEETS FRIDAY
Eli Dennison Post 467, American
Legion, Rutland, will meet Friday,
July 6, at 8 p.m. instead of on their
regular meeting night on July 4.

•

BAKE SALE SLATED
A bake sale will be held July 4, from
9 to 12, in front of the Racine Post
Office sponsored by the Racine
Baseball Association which includes
T-Ball, pee wee, little league, pony
and girls' softball.
All parents are urged to donate
items for the sale. Following the
parade T-Ball an~ pee wee uniforms
only are to be turned in at the bake
sale .

EFFECTIVE JULY 1

SAVINGS RATES
ARE GOING UP
.As of Ju~ 1st
the Farmers Bank
Will Be Paying Higher

PASSBOOK
51f4%
90 DAY CERTIFICATE ............ ~~.~~-~~.~-~~. .~~:~~............. 5112%
1 YEAR CERTIFICATE .............~~~~~~~.~~:~?~:~ ............... 6%
4 YEAR CERTIFICATE .............~~-~~~~-~-s-~:~~~:?~............ .71A%
6 YEAR CERTIFICATE .............~~~~~-~~-~~:~?~:?.0
7%%
8 YEAR CERTIFICATE ............. ~!~.i.~~.~-~.~:~.~~:~~............ 7*%
4 YEAR MONEY CERTIFICATE
Computed Daily
Compounded Quarterly

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

Minimum $1,000.00. Interest raie Of 1%% under the average 4 year yield of
Treasury Securities.

SIO,OOO minimum. Interest rate equal to the rate of 182 day treasury bill rate A
determined at weekly auction .
• s

COME IN TODAY AND START THE
SAVINGS PLAN TO FIT YOUR NEEDS

Far:Ittcrs 8ank
t

Q

Q

POMEROY. OHIO

tw

$40,000 MaKimum insurance for each Depositor
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

'

"

r!

.- •.

FLEXSTEEL

The deep-seating, long-lasting
comfort of Flexsteel's line fur ·
niture starts with the unique
Flexsteel springs, formed from

the finest watchsprlng steel.

Flexsteel craftsmen insist on

marenats

Of 111~ fu•~~· yudnty •v

match their skilled workman ·
ship. Frames are of top quality
Ktln ·Orteca nardwood, double ·

dowe~ed and corner blOCked lor
extra strength and stability. The
beautiful upholstery of Flexsteel
furniture Is the result of expert
attention to 'detail, deft handling
of the line Fl_exsteel fabrics, and
skilful tailoring .

BAKER FURNITURE

enttne

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

'

•

,.
·'

TUESDAY, JULY 3, 1979

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Paving project okayed
..

-·-.
CAN YOU IDENTIFY? - This picture was taken many years ago
from the steps of the sheriff's department. The Melga County Sheriff's
Department would like very much to have those in the picture identified if
possible. If anyone -knows any of the gentlemen shown notify Sheriff
James Proffitt. The jugs and equipment shown indicate a bust was made
on a still. The picture was taken by Felger of Pomeroy.

snendlng
•

evel s Wl"ll

BY KATIE CROW
P,omeroy Council Monday night
approved an emergency measure
calling for the paving of Main Street
from Sycamore to Butternut Ave., at a
cost of $8,230.
The State Highway deparbnent
earlier had agreed to pave fmn Nye
Av., to Sycamore and from Butternut
to the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge,
excluding the business section due to
the revenue derived from the parking
meters.
Council also under emergency
legislation passed a resolution
borro~ing f5,500 to help pay for the

~-

Today

go up ln new budget
-

.. . in the world

I

r

•

4TH OF JUJ.Y SIZZLER

Middleport, o.
\'

VOL. XXVIII NO. 56

BASEMENT SALE
COLUMBUS, Ohio ( AP ) - Ohio's Lawmakers will return on July 9 or 10
The MI. Moriah Church of God, Rt.
2, Racine , Mile Hill, will hold a lawmakers may have been set back to try to iron out lhe considerable
basement sale July 5, 6, and 7. more than some people may realize differences between the two houses
when the Senate refused to pass the over the budget, said leaders who
HOSPITAL NEWS
two-year state budget bill after the gave up their trip to China and other
House had approved it.
Far East nations with Gov. Jwnes A.
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
Language in a 31-day interim Rhodes after the budget collapse
Saturday Admissions-Salem Yates, budget ·which sailed through both Saturday.
Racine; Vera Drehel, Middleport.
houses Saturday out of desperation to
Senate President Oliver Ocasek, DSaturday Discharges--Eleanor meet a midnight fiscal deadline says Akron, House Speaker Vernal G. Riffe
Gordon, Ronald Dailey, Clara Conroy , that state spending in July will be Jr ., D-New Boston, and Senate
Terry Grogan, Darrell McPherson, essentially what it was in June .
Finance Committee Chainnan Harry
Velma Keller, Kevin Anderson .
In almost every area of Meshel , D-Youngstowa, canceled
Sunday Admissions-John Hein , government, the two-year budget plans to accompany 111e governor on
Minersville; Anna Wheeler, Racine ; would have increased spending levels the Far East trade mission, which will ·
Paul Burns, Pomeroy; Margaret as of July I.
return on July 17.
Jones, Middleport ; Patty Hornsby,
This means that if the budget bill
House Minonty Leader Corwin M.
.AJbany ; Minnie Clark, Middleport. isn't passed by Aug . I, the state will Nixon, R-Lebanon , and House Ways
Sunday Discharge-Anna Crislip. have saved millions of dollars .
and Means Committee Chainnan
However, it also means ·that about Williann E. Hinig , D-New Phildelphia ,
80,000 state employees will n'ot have went along with Rhodes as planned .
Holzer Medical Center
received an 8 percent · pay .boost 'l'lley had to fly to Chicago in a state
Discharges, June 29
contained in the budget for them , and plane with Rhodes to catch up with
Mary Freeman, Harold Gibbs, Jef- that Ohio's welfare clients must wait
frey Grow, . Emily Hill, Harry Hill, for increases in aid to dependent olhers in the Jlilrty, who left Columbus
Ireland Hunt, Mary Israel, Carolyn children which amount to more !,han early Saturday while the budget
debate was still in progress .
Lambert, Edith McGuire, Pamela 12 percent .
Mercer, Roy Mullina, Williwn NorWhat will happen to !Qe extra
Ronald Parkinson, Brian money ?
SCsliTett. Larry Slacey, Ray Thomas,
"Frankly, I don 't know, " House
~('IIIPSOn, Helen Thorne; Mrs.
Finance Committee Chairman Myrl
FUNDS DISTRIBUTED
Walker and son, Olive Watson, H. Shoemaker, D-Bourneville, said
State
Auditor Thomas E .
EulaWQ!fe.
Sunday .
Ferguson
's
office reported today the
BIR'niS, June 29
•
But he added that it is possible for
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ross, son, the Legislature to put it into some kind fourth advance distribution of 1979
WiUow Wood, Ohio.
of supplemental appropriations biU state motor vehicle registration fees
Dllcbarges, JUDe 30
and give it to state agencies totaling $69,975,783.20 to Ohio counties, townships and villages.
Thomas Bailey, Gladys Byerly, retroactively.
Meigs County received $65,941.47.
Mrs. Randy Boggs and son, Margaret
Shoemaker also said the funds could
Cantrell, Patricia Coy, Larry Crank, be reappropriated for other purposes.
Jr., Leo Davidson, Elma Dexter, But if this is done, the entire budget
Ulllan Donahue, Mary Erwin, Melvin process could be thrown open again
Halley, Rachel JerJDings, Ayrian and lobbying efforts could be renewed
SQUAD RUNS
Lutz, Carl Lawh9rn, Oeorge Linten, by agencies clamoring for more
Pomeroy Emergency Squad was
Lesley Lyons, Phyllis Mullin, Fran- money .
called to Monkey Run~at 12:35 a .m.
ces Netral, John Royster, James
The chairman said he hopes that Sunday for Paul Burns·who was taken
Saunders, Kark Sprague, Goldie doesn't occur, adding, " I don 't think to Veterans Memorial Hospital. At
Terry, Robert Thorson, Virginia Van you are going to see it happen ."
I :41 p.m. Saturday; the squad went to
Meter, Eugene Wess, Misty White.
The record $3 .5 billion for primary Lasley St. for Harold Triplett who was•
Blrtbs, JUDe 30
and secondary education in the taken to Pleasant VaUey Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Tim Lambert, son, document is safe from infringement
Thurman. Mr. and Mrs. Darmy Shoemaker said language in the main
Farleigh, Jr., daughter, Weliston. Mr. budget, which he sponsored at the
and Mrs. Charles Cox, son, McArthur. request of the Rhodes administration,
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley CoM, son, says the school districts will get their
TO END 111ARli.IAGES
Gallipolis. Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Camp- money retroactively whenever the bill
In Meigs County Common Pleas
bell, son, WUkesville.
Court Woodrow Quee11, Rt. 1, Shade,
is enacted.
Dl.scbarges, July 1
Meanwhile, the schools, like other filed for divorce against Audrey
Tracy Aleshire, Dewey Birchfield, government agencies, will get Kathleen Queen, address unknown .
Jo Lynn Bailey, Tupper Plains and ·
Evan Casey, Mrs. Gary Crosswhite continuation payments.
and daughter, Delford EUyson, Jr.,
Only skeleton sessions will be held Gregory Lee Bailey, Tuppers Plains,
Nora Fannin, Phillip Garlic, Mrs. by the Senate and House this week. filed for dissolution of marriage.
Charles ·Lane and daughter, Mrs.
ADen Lunsford and son, Louise
Morris, Audrey Patterson, Mary •
Rater, Thelma Ramey, Dorothy
Sayre, Janet Smith.
Blrtbs, JulyJ
.
Mr. and Mrs. Gene·· oavis, ~.
Pomeroy. Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Potter,
son, Oak Hill.

Substantial Penalty For Early Withdrawal
•• • ,

at

ELBERFELDS

MONEY MARKET CERTIFICATE

•

•

'·

REG. s4.50
CROSS YOUR
HEART

V-erdict in
HAMILTON, Ohio (AP ) -Gary
Morningstar was · found guilty
Monday in Butler County Common Pleas Court ol aggravated
murder in the deaths of two
Florida.residents.
Mo111ings1ar, 1'1, was sentenced
to two life prison terms for k!Wng
Carmen Buetti and Terri BeMet
of Miami, F1a.
Prosecutor Jolm Holcomb told
the Jury of nine wmoen and three
men that Morningstar and an •ccompllce, Alan Scott, killed the
Florida couple rar two pounds of
cocaine Bod •10,000 cash.
Scott already hu been found
guilty of 'murder and was aentellj:ed to 15 yean-to-life In the
Ohio Penltentlarv.

BRA
$299
WHILE SUPPLY LASTS

Ptaytex padded stretch bra with stretch strap, lace cups. ·Sizes 3:i.
through 36A, 32 through 38B. .
.
LINGERIE DEPT. 2ND FLOOR

ELBERFELDS IN ,OMEROY

One hurt, cited
in Monday wreck

The (;allla-Meigs P06t State Highway Patrol reported a traffic accident
Monday night in whlch one persoq taken,however. It was pointed out that
was injured. ,
At 4:45 p.m., Orenda F. Allie, 25, the street department fund was $8,000
Vinton, was driving southbound on SR in the red with an additional $4,00() in
7 when It ill reported she fell asleep at unpaid bills:
Chief Webster sumltted his monthly
the wheel. Her car struck a vehicle
report
which showed hiS deparbnent
driven by Jeffery B. RusseU, '¥1, Mid25 aCcidents, made 28
investigated
dleport, in the rear. Russell was also
arrests,
collected
$2,861 from parking
southbound on 7.
3,683 miles.
meters
and
drove
Allie complained of injuries and
The meeting was o~~ ~y prayer
was taken to Holler Mtdieal ()enter
by the Gallia CoUnty Emergency Ser- · by Mayor A'nilrews. 'lttlendmg were
vice where she was treated and Mayor Andrews, Jane Walton , cle•k,
Betty Barohlck, Yo1111g,. Wehrung ,
released .
and
Rod Karr., council members,
1
Alii~ was cited for failure to keep an
Krautter,
Don Wa rd and Chief
· assured clear distance.
Webster.

OFFICERS INSTAllED - New «iflcers were installed at Monday:s meeting of Carpenl\!rs' Local650. ·
The group includes, seated from the left, Donald
Moore, president; William J . Roush, vice president;
Gary Saunders, recording secretary; Raleigh Hemsley, treasurer, and Mason Fisher, warden; back row,

=:~oo:;t~r~~~orc~::a~Governors ·get
N p
Pr .d t
WASHiNGJOth\ fed)
rulesl ~nt
Carter, ace Wl
er~ es ~
contribute to long ga~J.ine hnes m
urban ~eas, ;s
g;vernor~
new au or~tr 0
. up
_percen
of their state s gaso~ supplies from
the country to the City· . .
That w~~dt be ~d ~d~•on ~thed 5
percent se asl e
ey
ea Y
control.
Carter made the new offer Monday
after ..bemg told federal allocation
_rules p~t the gasolme where the cars
are not.

I

::Ungto

To see Shah
MEXICO CITY (AP)- Fonner
Pre8ldent Richard Nixon Ia expected 'lo travel to Mexico
!10111Ctime this week to visit Shah
Mohammad Reza Pahlavi of
Iran, a U. S. Embassy source
reported Monday night.
"It is true that we think he' ill
coming, but we don't know
when " said the source, who
not ·to be identified. "We
are ready to help out in any way
we can with logistics · or
whatever, but so far there have
been no official requesla for any
kind of assistanCe. "
"In all llkellhood, given what
we know, we can expect Nixon to
visit the shah later this week,"
the source said.

..

.
"'

White sentenced
.

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Dan
White, whose manslaughter conviction triggered a riot by
homosexual5, faced sentencing
today for k!Wng Mayor George
Moscone and Supervisor Hal"Vey
Milk.
White could recel ve a
rnaxirnum sentence of seven
years and eight months in prison,
with the possibility of parole in
about five years. Th.e minimum
sentence that could be imposed
by trial Judge Walter Calcagno is
four years.
Since his arrest after the
shooting of Moscone pnd Milk in
City HaU last November '!1, the
fonner firefighter and pollee offleer has been in custody in the
San Franci8CO Jail.

TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) - A
Toledo bus driver was. report~y
sbot and killed Monday night
during a robbery attempt.
Toledo police report that the
unidentified driver was robbed
shortly before 10 p.m. on the
clty'ssouthwestslde.
.
It ill not known whether the
crime -was coMected with the
strike by municipal workers In
. this northwestern Ohio city, but
officials of the Toledo Area Rapid
Tra1111it Authority canceled late
night runs by their bus drivers In
the wake of the incident.

left to right, Sam Boston, new business representative
and financial · secretary; Robert Larkins, Williwn
Harris and Cecil Rice, all truste.es and Henry C. Peery,
installing officer who has served as business agent for
the past 25 years. The new officers will serve three
year terms. Absent was Harold Wells, conductor.

new authority

The common reaction of several he proposed in his last energy speech.
governors queried . was that they
There also could be some replays of
would have to wait until they see earlier proposals such as the ill-fated
specifics of the plan before la• on automobiles that get poor
commenting on how it might work in mileage, which was part of a package
their states.
Carter sent to Congress in 1977,
Carter planned to work today on Referring to ·that package Monday,
details of a "bold and forceful White House press secretary Jody
program" to cut the-nation's thirst for · PoweU said : "If those proposals had
'imported oil.
been accepted, we woold be in much
He will explain the general outline better shape than .we are now."
of the program in a broadcast speech
This time Carter is taking special
to the nation Thursday at 9 p.m. EDT pains to clear his proposals In
- his third energy speech since taking advance with key members of.
office.
Congress and their staffs. Powell said
The program is expected to include two task forces are heing set up to
a revived standby gasoline rationing include administration and White
plan, federal incentives for producing House officials and representatives of
synthetic
fuels,
mandatory Co!lgress. One deals with energy and
thermostat controls for non- the other to the closely related topic of
residential buildings and a fleshe~ut inflation.
version of an "energy security fund"
Carter said Monday he is convinced
Congress, which so far has rejected
an administration proposals aimed
specifically at curbing otl use, is now
ready to act because of current fuel
shortages, the · threat of a home
heating oil "crisis" next winter and
the sbock of this year's 60 percent
Open house for the public will be price increase by oil exporting
held at BelleviUe Locks and Dwn Sun· countries.
day, July 15, from 2 to 6 p.m. This
" I want a bold and forceful program
project is located at ReedsviUe, Ohio that ... will be highly acceptable and
on Route 124.
tliat we can move without delay ,'1'
The locks where the open house will
told a group of energy advisers
be held are on the Ohio side of the Carter
at the start of a White House meeting
Ohio River. Locks are not accessible Monday.
from the West Virginia side.
Just before that meeting began,
Lock personnel of the Army Corps Energy Secretary James Schlesinger
of Engineers will conduct tours of the told Carter, in a murmured exchange
project, which was built under the
picked up by tape rec~rder
direction of the Corps and is main- microphones, that federal gasoline
tained by the Huntington District of aUocation rules are hurting urban
that organization.
_
areas by continuing to ship gasoline to
Litter bags and Information the country despite reductions in long
material will be distributed.
distance driving.
'"'
Refreshments will be sold by the
Reedsville Little League Boosters. ::::::::::'1!!:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::-:::::
Picnic facilities are available.
••'
OFF WEDNESDAY
Children under 12, because of the
The Ohio Valley Publishing Com. ~
proximity to water, must be acpaay will be clooed Wednesday iD or:·:·
companied by adults.
The auxiliary chamber will be der that employees 1118Y obaerve ID· ·..
closed from 1 to 7 p.m. on the day of depeodeace Day. Publlcatloa will ..
the open house. No morning facilities resume as UBual Thunday~
will be available at 'the locks for :::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::;:;::::::::::~::: ::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::recreation craft.

Open house
set July 15

asked

Driver killed

PLAYTEX

STYLE 56 -

•

paving of Main Street. Paving is
e•pected to get underway within three
weeks it was indicated Monday night .
Council expressed its pleasure in
the support· given by residents at a
Jlleeling last week on the city income
tax measure . Council agreed to have
the village solicitor draw up an
ordinance on the city tax that will be
read at the next meeting.
Bill young, councilman, reported he
attended a Consumer Conference
Council in Columbus recently .
Purpose of the meeting was to get all
mayors to participate in a project to
have a standard rate for all Columbus
and Southern Ohio Electric users.
Young said there are 755 different
rates for the electric company. He
also added that the consumer group is
. in favorable of rule 28 under House
Bill 156.
Betty Baronick, council woman,
reported she is still ' receiving
numerous complaints regarding

workers at Beech Grove Cemetery.
She alleged that they are not working
as they should.
Mayor Clarence Andrews stated the
men are working and he makes
numerous trips_to the cemetery and
the men are always tiusy. It was noted
that the cemetery covers 35 acres and
is hard to maintain.
Council, in other business ,
discussed a bill it had received for
repair on the old cruiser. Council felt it
was extremely high . The matter will
be referred to the village solicitor.
Council also discussed tbe purchase
of a gas powered eel, but no action
was taken . Council agreed to accept
bid:! for the removal of three trees at
Beech Grove Cemetery,
Larry Wehrung; councilman,
suggested, since the streets are
cleaner and people are pleased, that
the streets ·be hosed and swept twice a
week to keep them in the best of
condition.
11 wa s reported that the traffic light
at the intersection of Union Ave . and
Mulberry is not working properly.
Chief of Police Jed Webster is to
contact Baldwin and Son,Columbus,
to see if the light can he repaired .
Jack
Krautter ,
street

I

HEALTii CARE CENTER- The new Pomeroy
Health Care Center located on Rock Springs Road (old
Route 1'1) will be opened In August by ~ericare Corporation of Columbus. The one floor structure can ~c-

commodate 100 patients in four private rooms and forty-eight semi-private rooms. The structure will also
house many other fully equipped and staffed offices to
serve the patients.

Truckers going back -to work
Associated Press
Movement of food and goods on the
nation's highways continues to show
"substantial improvement" and the
trend indicates the nationwide
truckers' protest "should be over
shortly," the Interstate Commerce
Commission reported Monday.
"The facts are - whether they
admit it or not - the truckers are
going back to work," ICC spokesman
Doug Baldwin said in Washington.
The agency's nationwide survey
showed a continued trend of more
owner~er~tor trucks hauling food,
household Items and other goods,
Baldwin said. He said regional offices
mentioning violence in their reports
Monday sbowed such incidents were
down substantially .
. Independent truckers associations
in more than a half~ozen states have
voted to endorse a return to work
following the Carter administration's
announcement of a six-point program
for endihg the prQtest, now in its
fourth week.
The government's program
designated .eight interstate highways
as ''safe corridors" for truckers,
established task forces to deal wil~
truckers' problems and 11ddressed key

grievances concerning allocation of
diesel fuel and weight and size
regulations.
A significant number of truckers'
groups, however, appeared to be
going along with their national
leaders in holding out for more
concessions from the government.
And some protest leaders were calling
for an escalation of strike activity.
Michael Parkhurst, president of the
· Independent tr.uckers Association,
conceded that "people have gone back
to work as they are forced into the
position of going complete bankrupt."
He claimed, however, that '-'the
majority are holding out."
''The battle is not over, •' he said in a
telephone interview from Washington.
In Boston, convoy of 43 vehicles
converged on the Massachusetts
Statehouse for the second time in 17
days, and truckers' represe11tatives
met with Gov. Edward J. King.
A convoy also cirded Daley Civic
Center in Chicago's Loop area
Monday. Bill Hayes, president of an
fllinois group known as the Na tiona!
Council of Independent Truckers, said
reports of a weakening of the
truckers' shutdown resulted from "a
ploy
.. -by the ~overnme.nt. "

a

Lea4tfs of the Independent
Truckers Association, believed to be
the largest truckers' group taking
part in the protest, also have refused
to call for an end to the strike.
The association, which says It has
nearly 39,000 dues-paying members
but represents 90 percent of the
country's 110,000 independent longhaul drivers, estimated 50,000
truckers were still off the job over the
weekend . The estimate could not be
confirmed.

?

SWIMATIION JULY 31
The annual swimath&lt;in to raise
funds for the Meigs County Heart
Fund has been set for July 31 at the
Middleport Community Pool. Mrs.
Pat Kitchen is chairman of the
evening. Ther_e wiU be trophies and
awards. for the most laps completed
by boys and girls taking part. Those
wishing entry forms should contact
·
Mrs. Kitchen at the pool. .
SQUAD CALLED
BUILDINGS RESTORED - These two aged brick buildings on Ea!rt ..
The Syracuse ER Squad was called
Second
Street in Pomeroy have been restored to their natural beauty by
this morning at 5 a.rn. for GleMa
.
sandblasting
done by Gheen's Painting Company. The building on the left
Davis, a medical patient, who was
·
houses
the
office
of Douglas Little, attorney and the building on the right
taken "to Holzer Medical .Center.
wlll soon house the offices of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Knight, also attorneys,
~

.

•

II

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