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10- The Daily Senunel. MlddleporH'omero), u ., Monday, July 9, 1979

Democrats plan Senate hearings·this week
COLUMB US. Ohio 1 AI' ) - Majority
Democrats plan Senate hearin~s this
week on one of the i&amp;SUt'S th"t caused
the defea t of the two-year slate budget
btll June 30.
An amendment call ing for cha nges
in Hamilton County's murucipa l court
system triggered some of the hottest
Sennte floor debate , and helped
convince all of the chamber 's 15
Republicans to vote aga inst the bill.
The Leg islature th en had to pass an
interim July budg et.
Sen . Sta nley J . Ar onoff, , R·
CincinM ti , said tltis weekend that the
hearings should have been held before
the court proposa l was made a part of
the budget by way or a June 28

comm ittee amendment .
To hold U1em now, Aronoff said ,
"only spotlights the absurdity of what
Ute Democratic majority did to the
budget. They we re so embarrassed by
the obvious lack of hearings on a very
substantial amendment that they ar e

trying to rcrree~t e hearings."
Senate Finance Chairman Harry
Mc shel,
D ·Yo~ngstown ,
plans
Tue.&gt;day and Wednesday sessions
devoted to the proposa I which, in
essence, is designed to elect more
black judges in Cincinnati .
" Some people say they have
problems with it, " said Meshe l, when
asked why he scheduled the sessions.
Added in the conference committee
by Sen . William F . Bowen, DCincinnati , one of Ohio's most
influe ntial black Democrats, the
amendment makes two court districts
of Hamilton County for election
purposes.
The city, with its heavy
concentration of blacks, would be one
district , while the remainder of the
county would comprise the other. All
jud ges would have countywide
jurisdiction .
Some observers speculated that
Meshel 's move may be a sign that

Temporary census
The U. S. Census Bureau has issued
another call for Mason County
residents to apply for temporary jobs
which are now open. The work involves compiling lists of addresses in
the county for use during the 1981J census.
•Temporary census workers usually
work three to four weeks each and
will be paid on a per-address collected
basis. For an eight-hour day , the
average worker will earn $27 to $30
per day plus 17 cents-per-mile for any
driving done in a private vehicle. Ap·
plieants for the jobs must be 18 years
old or over, a U . S. citizen , and pass a
written test.
The work involves driving or
walking to compile lists of addresses
of each dwelling unit in designated
areas of the county. These address
lists will play a vital role in taking the
1980 census.
They will be used to produce
mailing labels for the census
questionnaires to be sent to each
household in America on March 28,
1980. '
Then , a few weeks following the
April I Census Day, census officials
will use the address lists to determine

work~rs

which _households have not returned
their completed questiolllUI)res. Ceo·
sus takers must then make personal
visits to each non-responding
household to collect the information
required on the census fonn .
The 1979 address collection activity
in the county is part of a Census
Bur&lt;au program involving 35,000
temporary workers na,lionwide to
com pile lists containing •approrimately 30 million addresses.

CUBS·PHILS SLUG
CHICAGO (AP) - When U!e Cubs
and U!e Phillies are swinging where
the pitchers are throwing , anything
can happen and often does.
On May 17, the Phils beat the Cubs,
23-22, in 10 innings, the winning run
being a home run by Mike Schmidt.
No major league records were set, not
even the total of 45 runs in one game.
That belonged . to .the CUbs and
Phillies of anotl!er era. Back in 1922
the CUbs slugged their way to a 26-23
victory over Philadelphia and set the
major lea gue mark of 49 runs by botl!
teams in a. game.
·

r-------------------------------1

I N. W. COMPTON, O.D.

I
I

LJemocrats may be willing to bend a ha 'e "ve ry delimte fi na ncia l
bit on the court issue and possibly impact."
others which resulted in all 15 GOP
The Leg islature will reconvene July
senators voting against t)le budget. · 16 in a n effort to·resolve the impasse
Aronoff said he doesn't see it that and hopdully avoid having to adopt
way .
another interim budget for August .
" U there have been an y movements
Meanwhile, Aronoff sa id he had
toward any concessions, I have heard done research into the question of
none ." he said.
whetl!er GOP Gov. James A. Rhodes
He speculated that Meshel and can veto the court proposal and other
Bowen, rather than making a permanen.t law changeF ;~s well as
concession , are seeking to justify
what already has been done.
He said U!e hearings should be in the
Senate Judiciary Committee, which
has had U!e same proposal in the form
of . a separate Bowen bill, since
February.
Meshel claims that while his
committee has no bill offic ially before
it, it was his panel which worked on
the budget in the Senate initially .
He also said the proposal, along
with the other changes in permanent
law which Republicans opposed, all

:

OPTOMETRIST

I

OFFICE HOURS : 9:30 to 12, 2 to S (CLOSE AT NOON
ONTHURS.) - EASTCOURTST .,POMEROY .

:

I
1
L----------------------~---~----·

OLYMPIC TENNIS
ST . LOUIS (AP) - Jinuny Connors
has never been much for Davis CUp
action but, surprisingly, he is strong
for tennis in U!e Olympics. It hasn't
been part of ·the program since 1924,
but Connors thinks it's time for a
change .
" I'd like to see it," he said. "It
would only be for two weeks once
every four years, arid I think U!at is
something everybody could do. "

He has now moved to Ralnsboro af.
ter three years on the BarUelt-Barlow
parisb of tbe United Methodist Chur·
cb. His address Is Box 214, Ralnsboro,
Ohio 45165.

5Y4%
0

...

0
.... .. .......

Minimum $1,000.00 . Interest rate of 1'14% under the average 4 year yield of
Treasury Securities.

MONEY MARKET CERTIFICATE
SlO,OOO minimum . Interest rate equal to the rate of 182,·day treasury bill rate. As
determined at weekly auction .

INDIVIDUAL RETIREMENT ACCOUNT
Substantial Penalty For Early Withdrawal

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

Fat•ttters
.,

......_

.... ....

Hof Stuff squad
posts fifth win

County."

90 DAY CERTIFICATE ............ ~.i-~i-~~-~-s:'-'-~~~:~~............. Slfz%
1 YEAR ·CERTIFICATE .............~~~~~.~~-~~:~~~:~. ................ 6%
4 YEAR CERTIFICATE ............ ~i.~~~~.~-~~ ~~?:??............ .7%%
6 YEAR CERTIFICATE .............~~~:~~~.~~:~??:?.
71fz%
8 YEAR CERTIFICATE ............. ~!~.i.~~.~-~~:~.~~:~~............ 7%%
4 YEAR MONEY CERTIFICATE

POME~OY,

NO CAUSE has been detennined vet in the con-flagration which gutted the hOme of a Gallipolis
·
physician Sunday.

COLUMNIST MOVES
Tbe historical colllDlD of James
Sands wW continue despite the
peripatetic character of his IHe as a
clergyman.
Wben the column started be lived at
Centerville (Thurman post office)
and stayed there for three years after
graduallug from seminary. " But I
have had an interest In the history of
, southern Ohio for many years, " be
said, "having grown up In Lawrence

ComputedDaily
Compounded Quarterly

OHIO

a~

$40,000 Maximum insurance for each Depositor
Membet Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

7%%

VOL. XXVIII NO. 60

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

•

enttne
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

TUESDAY, JULY 10, 1979

Skylab count down to crash hegins
If Skylab begins to re-enter at the
"If U!e middle time-frame holds
latest midpoint time, it would scatter . good, we are in an excellent set of
its hundreds of pieces of molten d~bris orbits," said Richard G. Smith, .head
of NASA's Skylab task force. "That
harmlessly into U!e Indian Ocean.
On the previous forecast, issued six turns out to be U!e set of orbits with
hours earli.er, some of the debris the least population under it."
All the orbital paUls in that middle
would have dropped over- west central
Australia , a sparsely populated area , time-frame pass over various sections
but under the latest forecast tbat area . or the United States. All also traverse
large stretches of ocean.
would be spared.
However , later forecasts could put
NASA continued to emphasize that
Australia back into the picture. And if the chances are slim any pieces of
Sky lab should stay up another hour Skylab will cause injury or damage.
beyond that point , the debris would But the agency advised that people
fall in the United States and Canada . wlio hear news reports Skylab is
Trackers said· the c Skylab was coming their way head for the lower
orbiting at an altitude of 110 miles, a floors of a house or building.
drop of eight miles in 24 hours. AI 100
Smith
cautioned
that
the
miles, it will .begin to glow from the predic tions, made by the North
heat of re~ntry . At about 70 miles , it American Air Defense Command, are
will begin to break apart .
not · precise because of different

natural forces working on Skylab.
These include · variations in the
gravitational pull of land masses and
oceans , atmospheric friction and
solar flares, which heat up the
atmosphere and increase drag on a
satellite.
Even NORAD's final prediction,
coming two hours before expected reentry , will be only 20 percent
.accurate, he said. That means the
station could come down anywhere
over a 15,tJOO.mile path .
If present predictions hold, Smith

said, NASA probably will make no
attempt to delay Skylab's re-entry a
few orbits by sending commands to
fire the craft's thrusters and decrease
the drag . That is an option officials
plan to use only if it appears the
station is headed for re-entry on an
orbital path over heavily populated
areas.
Instead, Smith said, the thrusters
will be fired about eight hours before
the predicted re-entry to start Skylab
tumbling. That, he said, will prevent
the big vehicle from skipping through
orbits, like a stone on water, as it

.

strikes the ever-thicker atmosphere.
Previous space vehicles have skipped
in just such a manner, delaying their
fiery plunges for an hour or more.
The debris will fall over an area 100
miles wide and 4,000 miles long, with
the heaviest pieces traveling farthest
because of their velocity. When they
hit the ground, the smilll pieces will be
traveling about30mph and U!e largest
ones about 250 mph .
NASA has calculated the odds of
anyone bein2 struck at 152 to one. The •
odds of a particular individual being
hit are 600 billion to one.

Albany man ·faces
Today
.. . in the world
littering charges

ORLEY M. RIFE .
Orley M. Rife, 76, Rt. 4, Pomeroy ,
died Saturday evening at University
Lightning can be as important Hospital,Columbus .
ecologically
as
rainfall
or
Mr. Rife was born at Dexter the son
temperature. The death of a tree of the late William a nd Mryta Huttton
struck by lightning can mean life for Rife. He was also preceded in death
other thmgs such as insects and birds by four brothers. Mr . Rife was a
which are dependent on dead trees . • retired farmer.
He is survived by his wife, Ethel
Darst Rife, one da ughter, Phylli s
BOARD MEETING SET
Wooten, Rt . 4, Pomeroy, two sons,
The Southern Local Board of Francis of Baker, La. , and Cecil of
Education will meet in speical session
Wednesday, July 11 at 7 :30 p.m.

As of Ju~ 1st
the Farmers Bank
Will Be Paying Higher

at y

e
WASHINGTON (AP ) - Skylab's
"countdown to crash" ticked
relentlessly on today as the faltering
hulk streaked toward a nobodyknows-where plunge back to Eartl! on
Wednesday .
The space agency in its latest
forecast at 6:SS a.m. EDT today said
. the 77.5-ton station now is expected to
fall out of orbit in a 121&gt;-hour period,
between5 :ii4 a .m . EDT and 6:24p .m.
EDT Wednesday.
The midpoint of that period was set
at 12:09p.m . That midpoint prediction
now has remained fairly steady within a range of 12 minutes - for
three straight forecasts, making
midday Wednesday the likely re-entry
time.
But trackers can't be sure when or
where the debris will fall .

Another SO million addresses have
been purchased from commercial
mailing list companies.
The Census Bureau is an equal op·
portunity employer. County residents
interested in applying for the temporary census jobs should contact:
Bureau of Census, Hotel Daniel
Boone-, Room 316, Washington and
Capital Sts., Charleston, W. V. 25301 .

SAVINGS RATES
ARE GOING UP

·

Democrats could unify their own
caucus - two members voted against
U!e budget which failed 11&gt;-17 - "their
victory very well could be shortlived."
Aronoff said Rhodes asked to see
"the list of garbage " in the budget
before he departed June 30 on his
China trade mission to China . The
governor is to return July 17. ·

needed

EFFECTIVE JULY 1

PASSBOOK

line item expenditures over which the
veto power is clear .
He said he found an attorney
ge neral 's opinion dated Sept. 11 , 1975,
requested by House Speaker Vernal
G. Riffe .Jr. , D-New Boston. He siad
the opinion hoids that the governor
can veto permanent law changes in
appropriations bills.
Thus, he said , even if Senate

•

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES,July 6
John Anderson, Mrs. David Ball and
daughter, William Barnett, Mary
Byer, Mrs. Jerry Campbell and son,
Howard Campbell, Virgil Caudill,
Juditl! Christian, Charles Collins,
Ernest Covert, ~ Craft, Mrs . John
Davis and daughler, Francis Dement ,
Ray Fisher, Mrs. Michael Fortner
and son, Myrtle Gillespie, Chad Grow,
Ruth Hall, Hazel; Harding , Richard
Hollingshead , Melinda Howell ,
Darleen Hussell, Jessie Jeffers,
Kimberly Johnson, Stacy Krebs,
Terry Moort, Editl! Osborne , Forrest
Payne , Ernest Riley, Jr., Gladys
Scshroder, Nellie Starr, Ellen
Stewart, William Thacker, Patricia
Walker, Gary Whalen, Mrs. William
Yerian and daughter, p·amela York :
BIRTHS JULY 6
· Mrs. and Mrs.Charles Moore, son,
Jackson ;Mr.and Mrs. Ricky Pickens,
son, Point Pleasant
DISCHARGES, JULY 7
Carolyn Barnett, Ryan Brenneman,
Myron Brian, Frank Carlson , Jr.,
Mrs. Edward Coleman and daughter,
Carol Curtis, Finley Davis, Mrs.
Douglas Duhl and son, Susan Elliott,
Melissa Hancock, Julia Hysell, Aaron
Matson, Shelly Mayes, May Roush,
Charles Rowland, Ricky t Saunders,
Mrs. Claude Sutliff and son, Karen
Simmons,
Andrew
Rhodes
BIRTHS, July 7
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Perroude,
son, Gallipolis
·
Mr. and Mrs. Steven Taylor , son,
Point Pleasant
Mr. and Mrs. John Null, son, Bidwell
DISCHARGES, JULY 8
Judson Clark, Elija Davis, Leroy
Davis, Don Fish, Eskey Hill, Bruce
Jamison, Jr., James Kemper, Jr.,
Pamela Sickles, Lorene Sigman,
Wilma Terrel, Ida Mae
Thompson, Patricia Ann Van Sickle,
Connie Waugh , George Woollun.
BIRTHS, JULYS
· Mr . and Mrs. Jac k Hughes,
Jackson .

Hot Stuff earned il! filth victory
against
two defeats by beating the
Marysville, Calif. , 10 grandchildren
and five great grandchildren . two Slick Chicks 1~ behind the pitching
,
sisters, Faye Wood, Canal Winchester of Missy McDade .
McDade faced IS batters allowing
and Vesta Canode, Albany.
Funeral ser vices will be held no r\ms on five hits.
Fine defelllle led by Tara Orebaugh
Wednesday at 2 p.m . at the Bigonyand
Brenda Bales combined to tum in
Jordan Funeral Home in Albany witl!
the Rev . Olin Harvey officiating. two double plays to stop scoring
Burial will be in Mt. Olive Cemetery . threats.
Leading hitters for Hot. Stuff were
Friends may call at the funeral home
Kim Polcyn 2 for 2 with a home run
after 2 p.m. on Tuesday.
and double , Stephanie Carter, 2 for 2
with a homer, Tammy Smeltzer 3 for
3 with 3 singles.
Missy McDade helped her own
ATHENS LIVESTOCK SALES
cause by going 3 for .3 with a homer
Saturday, July 1, 1979
and two doublel!. Amy Neal and Carey
1Cattle 1
Feeder Steers (.400·800 lbs .) Choice Hood both were 2 for 2.
Winning pitcher was Missy McDade
80 50·97 ; Good 6-4.50·79.50.
Feeder Hei fers (.400 700 lbs. l Choice and loser was Wendy Gatewood .
71·85 ; Good 53.50·69.50 .
Feeder Bulls 1400·800 lbs .l Cnolr
79 90; Good 62 .50·78.
Sl au ghter Bulls (Over 1.000 !bs vi ·
66 .

REVJV AL PLANNED
There will be a revival at Rutland
Ve als (Choi ce and Pr ime) 87.50· Freewill Baptist Church July 12, 13,
and 14 with the Rev . Paul Taylor as
106.50.
Baby Calves (by the head I 65·98 .
guest speaker . There will be special
!HOGS I
singing . The public is invited to
Hogs ( No. l, Barrtows and Gilts,
attend .
200·230 lbs . 1 40.70·41. 50. ·
Sows 30 .25 ·34.80.

Slaughter Cow s Utiliti e~
Canners and Cu tter s 46 . 7 ~ ;, I.

t? : ... :,c;;

Boa r s 25·25. 75 .
Pigs I by the head ) 19·33.
(lamb• I
Slaugh ter La mbs 69.50·70.50.

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Wednesday through Friday Cbance of showers Wednesday and
fall' Thursday and Friday. Hlgbs In
80s and loWllln the 60s.

JAYCEES PLAN SESSION
The Shade River Jaycees will meet
Tuesday , July 10, at Bp.m . at U!e court
house in Chester.
All young men between 17 and 35
years of age, who are interested in
se lf-impr ovement and community
involvement are welcome to attend .

O'Leary resigns
WASHINGTON ( AP) - John
O'Leary resigned as deputy
secretary of the beleaguered
Energy Department on Monday ,
saying, " I'm just plain dead

tired ."
O'Leary's letter of resignation
to President Carter, dated Monday, came as the president was
meeting at Camp David to consider major changes in the
nation's energy and e&lt;:onomic
policies.
But O'Leary and some of those
close to him denied that he was
being forced out of office as part
ol a shakeup of the Energy
Department. O'Leary said recent
rumors about resignations had no
impact on his decision to leave of.
fice .

Motion rejected
NEWARK , Ohio {AP ) ..
Licking County Common Pleas
Jud8e Neil McLaughlin on 'Monday rejected a motion by Licking
Township trustees that would
have halted a rock concert at
Legend Valley Park this
weekend.
Laughlin ruled the show could
be held - provided the promoters
meet certain conditions and
provided fair weather prevails.
Licking Township residents
complained \hat a previous concert result in traffic jams, litter
problelill! and vandalism by con·
cert-goers . Township trustees
sought a restraining order to halt
this year's show .
Laughlin told Cleveland-based
Agota Production.• that. gravel
roilds through the park must be in
place by Thursday and parking
areas must be lighted .

A citation was filed in Meigs County
Court against Arley G. 1\fnrkin, 52, Rt.
2, Albany on a charge of littering.
Complaints were r.eported to the
sheriff's department Monday that
several trash bags were found thrown
into a field along county road 14 off
county road 18.
Sheriff James J . Proffi\1 urges area
residents to join in the drive to curb
the Ulegal dumping that is occuring in
various sections of the county by
obtaining license plate !'Umbers and
descriptions of vehicles involved and
repor ting such incidents to the
sheriff's department.
Th e sheriff 's department also

New directories
will be available
Telephone customers In th~
PIIIIeroy -Middleport areas should
begin receiving their new directories
this week.
General Telephone Co. said the
books will go to some 5,700 cuatomers
in Letart Falls, Middleport, Pomeroy,
Portland , Racine and Rutland . .
J . L. Parker of Athens, cli!trict
customer service ma111111er, said any
customer not ~ving a directory by
July 23 J hou.ld notify the t:m~pany 's

business office.

.

Effective with the boob Is a new
repair service nun.~ • The listing,
which appea" u "592.,.,;,.," is long
distance, so " I " mtul be dialed first,
Parker explained. Howe-ver, there 's
no charge for repair service calls, he
added .

received a complaint -from a Long
Bottom resident regarding obscene
phone calls.
Sheriff Proffit said if you receive an
obscene phone call hang up. Don't
listen to it and then notify the sheriff's
department so a record can be made .

TIIREE BONDS FORFEITED
Three defendants forfeited bonds in
U!e. court of Syracu:se Mayor Eber
Pickens Monday night.
Forfeiting bonds were Je{fre¥ E.
Proffitt, 24, Rt. I, PorUand, $100
fleeing an officer and $150 driving
under suspension; William B.
Davids on , 21, Middleport, $20 .70
speeding .

ONE-LANE 11tAFFIC
TI'Uflc uq tile Slladle Bridge In

Polat Pleuut bu beell ratrlcted
to oae 1a2 oiace Moiadlly due to

repair won.

VAN REPLACED - The 1957 van which was
originally a bread truck converted into use as heavy
duty rescue vehicle for use by the Middleport Fire
Department is being taken out of service. Firemen

·

Motorlall are advlaed tbat lrafflc
will ...., tile brfdce In alle11111lln«
dl~tlona ud lhorl dela)'l are aD·
tldpated. Truck lraffic abould use
allenlale rouleo, wlll!n poaalble, for
lbe cluratloo ollbe repair project.
Ooe laoe of tbe apu will be closed
at all timet uttl completlm of the
pro~llate lhlB fall.

Sl,500 trailer fire

The Pomeroy Fire Department was
called to the trailer home of Raymond
Johnson, noute I, Shade (Pratt 's
NOQUORUM~OMEgfiNG
Fork) at 9:52p.m. Monday .
Due to the lac_k of a quotum, a
Fire Chief Charles Legar said that
regular meeting of Middleport Village miraculously the fire had put itself
Council was not held Monday night . out. It had started from a skillet left
Council members on hand for the on the stove . Smoke and fire damage
regular session were Charles Mullen, to the .1978 trailer was set at
Carl Horky and William Walters along approximately $1500.
witl! Mayor Fred Hoffman and ClerkTreasurer Gene Grate. The meeting
was rescheduled for next Monday
evening .

Middl~port

PORTABLE CASSETTE
TAPE RECORDER
RQ- 2309
MODEL NO.

,'

'4995

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

lNf~ftMEDIATE WINNERS -;- Girls listed as intennediate winners
of the Miss Majorette of West Virginia contest held Saturday at Wahama
High &amp;hool were, left .t o right, Karla Underwood, Charleston, 13-15 year
olds; Michelle Legg, Poca, 10..12 year olds ; and Joetta Ratliff, Gasaway,
HI year olds. In the open ~petition , twirlers froin Ohio, West Virginia,
Ken(ucky, and Pennsylvarua participated. Mrs. Gloria Buck Wallace was
contest dlt;ector of the NBTA Sanctioned event.
•

BEGINNING WINNERS - First place winners in the beginners
class at the Miss Majorette of West Virginia contest held Saturday at
Wahama High School have been announced. They were from, left to right,
Lisa Henthorne, Che~ter, W.Va., 7-9 year olds; Kelly Yoho, Cameron, 1315 year olds; and Michelle Earley,· Weirton, W. Va. , UH2 year olds.
Hostesses for the contest were Bernadette Nemeth, Junior Miss Majoret. te of America; Kelly Manach, Junior Miss Majorette of Pennsylvania;
Jennifer Martin, Miss Majorette of the Midwest from Ohio; and Rachel·
Livingston, Miss r.tarjoette of the East from Pennsylvania. The winner
not shown was Milissa Evans of Bluefield, W. Va .

fighting fires and is a vital piece of
fire-fighting equipment.
The department has supplied air on
severa l occasions to neighboring
departments during major fires and
will continue to do so once the new
vehicle is put into service.
The fire department is asking for
public sQpport in the project in order
to provide U!e best possible service.
Donations may be sent to the Fire
Department Headquarters, 286 Race
St., Middleport, or may be given to
any firemen . Checks should he made
payable to the Middleport Fire
Department Rescue No. 17 Fund.

Miller wants Carter
to (lake some ·action

CHARLESTON, W.Va. ( AP) United Mine Workers President
Arnold Miller says he's tired of talk
a nd is ready for the Carter
Administration to take some action to
lasso U!e nation's energy problems.
" I believe U!at when you have a
problem, you sit down and talk about
it. But U!e quickest thing to turn me
off is double talk," Miller said, adding
that each time he speaks with Energy
Secretary James Schlesinger he gets
a different answer on possible
Solutions to the crisis.
"They're willing to hear what I have
to say, but I can 't see any point in
talking any more. It's time for

Panasonic'

MUSIC DEPARTM.ENT • 2ND FLOOR

firemen seek donations

The Middleport Fire Department, in vehicle through donations aJid public
its continuing effort to build, has game parties held each Monday
made another improvement in the night,and by borrowing some of the
purchase of a new step-side van to be needed money, if necessary.A fund drive headed by firemen
used as a heavy rescue vehicle.
The department states the new John Metzger and Kenneth Imboden
vehicle will better enable the will begin Aug . 3. Grace Pratt will
department to bet ter serve the head a citizens committee which will
conduct a house to house canvas Aug .
community and surrounding area .
The new van replaces the present 1957 5.
The fire department hopes to have
model which was converted from a
the new vehicle in service sometime
bread truck .
Cost of the new vehicle is in August. The older vehicle has been
apprroximately $13,000. The van will in service since 1976 and has made
be outfitted with heavy rescue gear over 200 runs . The vehicle carries
and an air cascade system presently breathing air for masks used in
carried on the older vehicle. The
department hopes to pay for U!e new

ELBERFELD$

AUTOMATIC STOP. ONE TOUCH RECORDING.
BUILT IN CONDENSER MIKE - TAPE
COUNTER - VOLUME AND TONE CONTROLS

have purchased a new van for heavy duty rescue pur·
poses. The department is seeking public support for
payment of the new vehicle . Shown with the vehicle is
John Metzger, ftmd drive chairman.

Edward Kennedy recently, bUt is not
involved~ in the draft Kennedy·
movement.
Miller said that the Energy
Department was "a damn joke ever
since they set it up and it's been a ·
bigger joke under &amp;hlesinger th!m

ever."

Now, the Energy Department needs
to be cleaned out "with someone lXII in

U!ere who can actually finalize plans
to get us off oil, and onto alternate
sources of energy," Miller said.
He said the high price of oil iB
making it economical to develop coal
conversion technology. But he said he
hasn 't seen any emphasis on that
development.
action.''
"I talked to the Administration
Miller, in a recent interview, said
that if tlie president was campaigning people before Carter's last energy
for re-election today " I don't think the speech (in APril). They were talking
membership of this union would about choosing between coal
endorse Carter today under any conversion plants in Kentucky and
West Virignia. I said, 'why choose?'
circumstances.''
Miller, who has been resting on Develop both."
Miller said he was not invited to
doctors orders after a recent illness,
would not say who the union would conferences at Camp David this
support if it witl!draws its backing of weekend with Carter, even though two •
representatives from the AFJ....CIO
Carter.
"I would consider anyone who were.
" What business is it of the AFJ....CIO
might be able to get us out of the mess
to be talking about energy?" Miller
we're in."
Miller said he has talked with Sen. asked. ·
On another topic, Miller said he will
attempt again to merge three of the
union's western districts - 15, based
DAMAGE SUIT FILED
in
Wheatrldge, Colo.; 21, based in Fort
A suit in the amount of $60,000 has
Smith,
Ark.; and 14, based in
been fil4\d In Meigs County Common
Pittsbw'g,
Kan. Miller said he may
Pleas Court by Dorothy .F. Benrz and
bring
up
the
proposal at ' the next
He11fy Bentz, Racine, against Bessie
meeting
of
the International
Pullins, Middleport.
Executive
Board
; scheduied for
The suit is f~r injuries, dsmages
Beckley
later
this
I!IOnth.
and lost of earnmgs as a result of an
The districts, all small, have sent
accident that occurred on Sept. 2t1,
representatives
to the IEB in recent
1977 on SR 338 near the village of
years who have opposed Miller.
Racine .

.

•It

.

�3- The Daily Sentinel Middleport:Pomeroy, 0 .. Tuesday, July 10, 1979

--SrfiithSefeCtad~tO--l

President summons citizens
looming recess10n.
w,ith inflation rWlning at an
rate of more than 13 percent so far
year, and with an election-ye•
recession considered
certain, Carter 's political future
hinge on the decisions that flow
the domestic summit.
The president, turning his attentiW
'
to economic issues, discussed
over dinner Monday
__re_n_c_e_E_._L_am
__b_.M__.o_.__________ economy
wilh several members of C~l:~
and other officials, including ·
Reserve Board Chairman G. Williala
B-12 SHO'l'S NEEDED
blem is by injecwig the vitamin B·l2. Miller and Robert Strauss, C.a11er!!a
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
Once it's inf4!Cted, it can be picked up multipUrpose troubleshooter .
DEAR DR. LAMB -I had a portion directly by your bloodstream and you
Earlier in the day, Garter
of my stomach removed because of a don't have to depend on intrinsic lac· welcomed another
bleeding ulcer. Due to my operation I tor Olj your .digestive system to pro- delegation, this one
have been told to take B·l2 pills-and to vide it to your circulation.
members in key positions to
get B-12 injections to prevent or corSo the answer to your question is the fate of his promised "bold and
rect a type of anemia that develops that you do need B-12 injections, not forceful" program to curb oil imporll.
when people have had this stomach just pills.
Shortly after that meeting, Deputy
operation. My question is, are the
DEAR DR. LAMB - I have iloticed Energy Secretary John F. O'Leary
B-12 pills alone sufficient?
that you suggest using com oil to submitted his resignation to the White ·
DEAR READER- You're talking lower one's cholesterol level. I'd like House . O'Leary, though , said tile
about pernicious Anemia, to give you to know if taking the same amoWlt of· move was not related to Garter's
more infonnation on this subject. safflower oU has lbe same effect. I'm di~ussions.
Other readers who want this issue can n!lt quarreling with your opinion, but
The White House would not say
send 50 cents with a long, stamped, smce I 11M! safflower oU, I'd like to advance who Carter's guests would
self-addressed envelope for it. Send know if it's doing more harm than for today's ~conomics discussion
your request to me, in care of this good. I am taking two tablespoons camp David, other than that they
newspaper, P. 0. Box 1551, Radio City daUy.
prominant individuals from
Station, New York, NY 10019.
DEAR READER- Apparently you private
sector.
Nor ·
As The Health Letter I'm sending have misWlderstood my remarks. I administration spokesmen say
you explains, B-12 is absorbed into do not recmunend taking either com would be included in a planned
your
bloodstream through the small oil, safflower oU or any other oU to session with religious and ethical !
WASHINGTON (AP ) - As the
intestine.
First, though, it has to be . lower one's cholesterol. I do recom- leaders.
bearers of bad tidings, Energy
acted
on
by
a substance from your mend that you use one of the polyun·
Participants in that
Secretary James R. Schlesinger and
stomach
called
the
intrinsic
factor
.
saturated
oilii
for
cooking
and
salads
would include
reportedly
his deputy, John F. O'Leary, catch a
Terence Cooke of New York ; the Rev .
lot of heat on their frequent trips to Without this substance the B-12 can- ratberthansaturatedfats.
not be absorbed. After surgical
That doesn't mean I think you Theodore Hesburgh , president of
Capitol Hill.
And, as the level of frustration over removal of a major portion of your should add ll lot of fat to your diet. Notre Dame University; Rabbi Mark
fuel shortages grows, demands that stomach, it may not produce enough Quite the contrary. The prevailing Tanenbawn of the American Jewish
one or both be fired or rumors that intrinsic factor. That same thing can opinion among heart specialists is Congress; and Robert Bellah and
happen to the stomach without that you should limit your total intake David Riesman, both university
they are about to quit grow.
of fat of all types, saturated, monoWl· sociologists .
O'Leary recently appeared before a surgery causing pernicious anemia .
Obviously, if you swallow Vitamin saturated and polyunsaturated.
Participants in Monday's two
subcommittee chaired by Sen .
You do need some polywiSIIturated sessions said Carter gave them no
Edward M. Kennedy, who asked B-12 you still won't replace the intrtnindication of what he would propose,
about reports the deputy energy sic factor provided by your stomach. oilii in Y0\11' diet and safflower oil is a
The way doctors get around this pro· good source of this. It's relatively low
or when.
secretary was about to quit.
in saturated fat and high in polyWl"The president did more listening
"I
haven't
submitted
a
saturated fat. Com oU.
than anything else," Sen. Lawton
resignation," replied O'Leary.
The fat in fish contains some of the
Chiles, 0-Fla., said of the economics
"But it's been reported in The New
By Don Graff
that achievement, there are also
most UJIS81urated fats in our food·.
session .
York
Times,"
said
Kennedy.
We can blame profiteering oil com- crucial differences. The question
"Well, in that case, I'll immediately former Texas goVernor's name .
.
mark in the case of synthetic fuels is
~e~ can blame the greedy oil _ex- not technological feasibility or even go back to my office and resign so the A press release put out by Roth's
porting cartel.
so much availability of natural sup· Times can be accurate," responded office spelled it Connelly .
l)aniel Marcus came to Gapitol Hill
O'Leary.
Or we can blame a bungling Energy plies as it is price.
,
,_
I
to
get approval for his appointment as
Under
further
prodding
from
Department.
Initial cost of synthetic fuel would
to
the
Department
of
general
counsel
Kennedy,
O'Leary
conceded
that
he'd
But we aren't doing much blaming be high, up to $10 or more above re·
The Turkish situation has annoytd
WASHINGTON (AP ) - Turkey ,
of oursehres for the chaotic situation cent prices for imported natural like to move on to another job some Agriculture.
and
worried policy-makers at the
sick
man
of
Europe."
has
rarely
"the
It should have been no problem for
we've gotten outselve sinto at this crude. As OPEC goes its merry price' day. Then, looking at Kennedy, the
State
~partment.
looked"
less
healthy
than
now.
Its
stage of the fuel shortage.
hiking way, that gap is ste~dily nar· often-mentioned non-eandidate for the 35-year-old lawyer with a good plight is causing grave concern in the
They
are aMoyed at what they see
reputation
.
We should. Instead of rising to the rowing, and consequently synthetics president, O'Leary added that others
as
Turkish
obstinacy on the Cyprus
But to some members of the Senate State Department.
challenge, Americans seem to prefer are becoming steadily more in government seem to have similar
question
and
at il.s attitude on tbe
is
in
The
Turkish
economy
Agriculture Committee, there wa s a
challenging each other. In the long economical . But- and it is a big one thought•.
overflights.
Some
State Departmept
shambles,
with
a
crushing
foreign
That brought laughter from the potential flaw in his record. Marcus'
lines creeping toward erratically - politi~ rather than the economics
officials
feel
it
has become an
debt
and
dependence
on
imported
oil.
.Pwnping sttions in many parts of the determine the OPEC price. The ex·. audience and a broad grin from previous job had been deputy general The government of Prime Minister ingrained political habit for Turkey io
counsel at the Deparyment of Health ,
country, drivers jockey for position porting COWllries charge not ac- Kennedy .
Bulen! Ecevit is so shaky that his use its endemic problems as leverage
Education and WeUare.
Every
time
Congress
quits
for
a
with sometimes violent conse- cording to what it costs them to proparty boycotts sessions of the for more aid .
Sen.
Jesse
Helms,
a
Republican
week
or
so,
a
nwnber
of
members
quefices. When they aren •t at each duce bu\ to how much the importing
But some officials see the Turkish
head out over the oceans on official from the tobacco-producing state of of legislature to avoid a quof1!1D and
other, they are castigating nations can be compelled to pay.
point
of view : A United States
prevent
a
vote
of
no&lt;enfidence
that
North carolina, wanted to know if
Washington for not doing something.
'if the price of natural crude can be business in far off lands.
dominated
on the Cyprus question by
could
topple
him
.
Was the speaker of the House Marcus "assisted Mr. Galifano in any
But in Washing, they are doing raised by OPEC virtnally at will, so
the
Greek-Amer
ican lobby in
To
the
east,
Turkey
's
ethnic
something _ bumping into each other can it be lowered. Unlike the syn- . planning an overseas trip during the way in his anti-smoking crusade? " Kurdish population has renewed its Congress, giving a new friend liiCe
in pursuit of near-instant solutions to thetic rubber industry, synthetic oil Fourth of July recess, · a reporter "No, sir, not at all," replied Marcus . autonomy campaign, and the stable, Egypt billions of dollars in aid while
"And you would do nothing to
the crisis.
would be vulnerable to undercutting asked Thomas P. O'Neill Jr., D·
·
Mass.?
adversely
affect the tobacco friendly government of Iran has been Congress refuses to grant Turkey $50
Now that the bloom is off deregula- should OPEC choose to cut its price to
"Yes," replied the speaker. " I'm programs?" persisted Heims. "No, replaced by an Islami c regime million in military aid.
lion of domestic oil production and $12 or $15 a barrel.
Those officials privately say they
opposing the very basis of the
sir," replied Marcus.
solar energy so far has taken off only
Once synthetics reached volwne going to Nantucket."
are
fearful of the potential for more
secularism
Kamal
Ataturk
brought
to
"You understand," said Sen. Walter
What will Jim Brady's first duty be
as far as the White House roof, the production, unit price might
instability
in Turkey, more
Turkey
SO
years
ago
.
solution of the moment on Capital Hill reasonably he expected to drop. But when the former aide to Sen. Bill D. Huddleston from the tobacco
"slippage"
away
from NATO.
Ecevit has imposed martial law in
is "synfuels"~ That is shortspeak for not in the foreseeable future to levels Roth , R-Del., becomes press producing state of Kentucky, "that an effort to keep peace.
Ecevit
has
followed
a policy 61
synthetic fuels, gasoline substitutes at which OPEC could still profitably secretary to presidential candidate some of us have a natw-al susp.icion of
developing
better
relations
with tl¥!
Turkey's
internal
woe3
have
been
anyone from HEW who goes over to
derived from coal, shale, tar sands, operate. In such a situation, a major John Connally ?
Soviets,
and
the
Soviets
have
compounded
by
for•ign
problems.
Its
Probably to learn to spell the USDA."
various !ann crops and other unlikely industry would be in a continually
occupation of 40 percent of Cyprus responded enthusiastically.
sources.
vulnerable situation even with
It would be a major blow to thie
continues to be a major irritant irr
With at last count several dozen govenunent as a guaranteed purCarter
administration i£ TurkeY,,
relations with the United States and
bills in the congressional hoppers chaser of last resort.
Greece. And negotiations between strateg ically located astride the
There may be something to be gaindesigned to promote synthetic proTurkish and Greek communities on Soviet outlet to the Mediterranean,
duction, the House has now passed ed in synthetic fuels, but in
were to slide into non-aligned status,
Cyprus have been suspended.
and sent on to the Senate one plan themselves they are no substitute for
And now there is a dispute with the as Iran and Pakistan have .
Wider which the federal govenunent a balanced energy program involving
So the administration has reacted
United States, which wants to fly U-2
Martha Angle and
would Wlderwrite produc\i.on of two conserv'ation and development of a
spy planes over Turkey to monitor cautiously to Turkey's problems. The
rnillion barrels of. synthetic fuel per range of alternative sources.
Soviet missile tests, making up for the Ufl\ted States is participating, to the
Robert Walters
Without such a program, we could
day, more than 10 percent of current
loss of radar stations in Iran. The . tune of $200 million, in a $1.4 billion
national conslJlllption.
well find ourselves with an $18 billion ·
missions may be critical in Western aid program tluit it hopes will
Private industry would be . en- synthetic elephant instead of answer
persuading the Senate to verify the give the Turks an opportWlity to put
couraged to get into costly synthetic to the fuel shortage. And then who
MINNEAPOLIS (NEA )
their economy in order.
drastic loss in their representation at SALT II treaty.
would we blame?
It is not pressing Turkey on the U-2
Ecevit's response·has been to deny
We'd find someone.
Although the Republican Party is a the 1980 Republican presidential conproduction with the assistance of
federal loans and guaranteed purlong way from resolving the multi- vention - because of a delegate ap· permission unless the Soviets indicate question and it is letting the United
chases - the Pentagon would take a
candidate struggle for its 1980 portionment formula forced upon the tacit approval. Moreover, the Nations play the leading role in
quarter of the total output. According
presidential nomination, party party several years ago by the American request and the Turkish mediating the Cyprus dispute.
The administration is plainly hoping
to current estimates, five years would
leaders already are making elaborate Southerners themselves.
response were both leaked to the
be required to begin producing
plans for next year's general election.
press ,
making
an T.urkey 's long -term orientation
Convinced that the South would be Turkish
Members of the Republican Na- increasingly receptive to future accommodation that much more toward the West and toward
significant quantities of fuel at a
democracy.
development cost of some $18 billion.
Today in History
tiona! Conunittee were told at their Republican presidential nominees, difficult to reach.
"If money and know·how are the
By The Associated Press
recent swnmer meeting here that the the Southerners - led by Mississipprerequisites, this could be a good
Today is Tuesday, July 10, the 19lst RNC staff already has lined up many pi's Clarke Reed - successfully battlpart of the answer to the energy pro- day of 1979. There are 174 days left in of the country's most respected ed for a delegate selection formula
blem. The technology for producing lhe year .
political consultants and camp~ i ~ n tailored to favor their region.
synthetic petroleu products has been
Today 's highlight in history :
managers to compile a dctailc&lt;! lull
Although each state's voting
available for years and is currently
On this date in 1850, U.S. Vice designed to get the GOP nominee off strength at the presidential conven·
proving itself. South Africa, a pariah President Millard Fillmore succeeded to a fast start.
lion ·is based on a nwnber of factors,
In past years, the caildidate:, uf by far the most important component
among the oil-supplying nations w tht presidency on the death of
thanks to its racial policies, already is . President Zachary Taylor .
both major partie&gt; were focced to of the formula is the state's support of
well advanced in meeting most of its
On this date :
spenC. at least two .veeks follow;ug the the GOP nominee in the last presidenIn 1890, Wyoming became the 44th nominating convention dcvel0ping tial election.
requirements through coal conversion.
'
sta te of the Union .
straegy and tactics for the general
But the "SWI Belt" strategy was
Also, there is the precedent of the
In 1943, Allied forces landed on the election campaign.
shattered in 1976, when Southern
To minimize that delay next year, Democrat Jimmy Carter swept
successful World War II effort that island of Sicily in World War 11.
created a domestic synthetic rubber
In 1953, the Soviet chief of internal the political professionals - many of through Dixie, caiTying every state of
industry after the Japanese conquest security , Lavrenti Beria , was purged them now working for competing the Confederacy except Virginia.
of Southeast Asia cut off supplies of fr om the Communist hierarchy in the GOP presidential hopefuls- are conA1l a result, when the Republicans
the natural product.
So viet Union .
tributing to a special "briefing book" convene in Detroit next year to select
But if there are similarities with
In 1962, a Tclstar conununications -that will he offered to the candidate their presidential nominee, Reed's
satellite was launched into orbit from picked at the convention.
Mississippi will have eight fewer
Ca pe C"naver a l, Fla ., to relay
In addition, RNC fWld-raisers are delegates than allotted it at the 1976
lliE DAILY SENTlNEL
telev is ion be tween Am erica and working to take advantage of an convention. Other Southern states
tUSPS 14S-,_J
Ew·ope.
obscure provision of the Federal and iheir losses include:
In 1968, Maurice Couve de Murville Election Campaign Act that allows a
Alabama, down 10; Arkansas, down
became Premier of France after the national political party to contribute eight; Florida, down IS ; Georgia,
OE \'0 TED TO ntE
up to $4.2 million to Its officially down 12; Louisiana, dowr• 11; North
resignation of Georges l'ompidou.
,
lNTEROO' OF
In 1973. the Bahamas became designated candi&lt;late.
carolina, down 14; South Carolina,
MEIGS-MASON AREA
ROBERT HOEFLICH
independent after three centLII"ies of · The party is seeking 420 wealthy down 11; . TeMessee, .down 11, and
•
City Editor
donors each willing to ·contirubte Texas, down 20.
British colonial rule.
Publlibt.'d dH Uy t ll't:pl S.Ulniay by Thr Ohio
Vallry PubiJsh..iug Company-1\tultimedla, ID&lt;' .,
Ten years ago : Soviet Foreign $10,000 to a special "1980 Presidential
Becai!M! the Republicans are cut·
Ill Court Sl., Pomt&gt;roy, Ohlu .S71!. HU8inr:tA
Minit er Andrei Gromr ko called for a Trust." The Republican nominee will ting the total nwnber of convention
Office Pbuoe m - tiS.. EdHurhtl Phooe
new era of fri endly relations with the also receive the same amount of delegaes from 2,259 to 1,993, no state
m-tl57.
Sfi'ond claAii poltagt paid .at Pomeroy, OhJo .
U.S. "nd indicated Soviet interest in a public funds provided to the will enjoy a substantial increase in
Nadooal•d 1rr1islnr, rtprrselllatlve, LaDdon
futu re conference wilh President Democratic candidate in the general delegate strength.
Anocilllu, 1101 Euclid Aw ., (1t \•eland , Ohlu
~11 5 .
Ri chard Nixon . ·
election campaign.
Other big losers include four border
SubtcrlpUoo nte5: Drlh' c n~d by l'llrritr
Fi ve years ago: The Arab oil
. states - Kentucky, down tO;
wbe~ nailable 90 (.'enlli pt"r week. Hy Motor
Roo\e wbr~ til rr-ier ~t rvlcr Dot .available, Om
na ti ons agreed to lift an embargo
Maryland, down 13; Missouri, down
muolb, SUO. By tw~U In OhJo aDd W. \'a .. 0 11e
.
aga
inst
the
Netherlands
imposed
nine
12,
and West Virginia, down 10- and
Yu r, f%7 .50; Six months, Slt.SO: Thr'-'C muuJ
"We have a moody problem child, too - b/.Jt
•'•
months earlier because of Dutch
lbl , IIJip : Eh;ewbtrl! IJZ.ot year : Sil months
a trio of Northern states- New York
'SUN BELT' STRAGTEGY
$17.1t; Thret moaths, $'-00. Subsc ripti on prfre
ours IS a . PROFESSIONAL BASEBALL
support for Israel in a Middle East
down 31; Ohio, down 20, and PeM:
BACKFIRES
loclud~ Suoday T'iml"t- Sf&gt;ntfn£"1.
PLA YERI "
confli ct.
sylvania,
down
20.
The Southern states will suffer a
WASHlNGTON (AP) - President officals , summoned prominent
Garter, after hearing economic advice private citizens to camp David today
from members of Congress and other . to discuss rampant inflation and a

.

~
- ~ti-----La_w

HEALTH

Editorial opinions,
comments

Capitol
Ideas

COMMENTARY
Donald F. Graff

An $180 billion elephant?

'·
......
"
''

LaCoss named to NL
·'AA' All-State _Squad I all-star team today

Steve Wamsley and Jake
""' Currance can barely remember
'" what It's like to lose a b~seball game
and that's why they' are the two
leading cha~acters on this· year's
West Virginia Class AA All-State
~·

team.

Wamsley, a senior and Currance a
junior, pitc~ed and batted Tygarts ·
Valley to the Bulldogs' second
· · consecutive
Double-A
state
championship this year.
Wamsley , who plans to attend
Davis &amp; Elkins College and play
both baseball and basketball
finished his career at Tygarts Valle;
·with a 2HI pitching record~ this
spring- and a .489 career batting
average. The 6-foot-1, !~pounder
plays shortstop when he isn't pit.. ching and also played football for
·· · Coach Floyd Thomas.
'
Wamsley, who hit .482 ( .510 before
' tournament play 1. finished the
: season with a 0.38 earned run
.. average and struck out 98 batters in
55 innings.
Currance, who will try to help the
little Randolph County school make
it three in a row in 1980, is a firstteam outfield selection, but was 7~
. this season as a pitcher and won the
final game 2·1 against Williamson. ·
West Virginia Slate College ·
baseball coach Calvin Bailey toda y
' announced his fourth recruit for 1\el&lt;t
season.
He is Jack Smith a 5-11 165 catcher
from Wahama High School .
In signlng Smith coach Bailey said
"Jack has the strongest ann of any
high school catc her I have seen ln

NEW YORK YANKEES - Reac·

•

•••••
•• ••
•••

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD
Nobody Offers More Than Goodyear

Baseball At A Giance

By The Associated Pren
NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST
w. L. Pel. GB
48 30 .615
Montreal
30 36 .5« Slf1
Ch i cago
&lt;L5 40 .519 ] lh
Philadelph ia

Goodyear
qualtly ,• grelll

Goodyear
f l lue
• DfDel'ldlbl e

tord

•

Al

Pi ttsburgh
. Sf .· LOU iS
New York

48

•linu.,.

con
on
e r

t h
ad i a I 5 .
light truck
and
sp i rt
t i res.

Complete

lt l lS

,.,.

""

F"r ic e

HT1nd

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

'" u,.

41 .00

IIUI· lJ
ER1JIU
F"1hU
G RU•U
HRFUU
fei:U .. ll
GA i h \1
HR 1UH
L.R11•11

SI.GP
4UIO

NGO

,

..

61. 00

balan ci ng
and custom
r i ms at low ,
low pri ces.

""'
,.,

.519

7 1/ 1

·~ 49 .519 7 '12
1

32 47 ..05 16 12

WEST
Houston
S3 35
Cinc innati
45 -42
San Fntnci sco
.. , 45

San Diego
Atlanta
Los Angeles

.602
.517

1111
..77 11

-40 49 . .U9 1Jih

377

35

49
52

.430 15
.402 16'12

Monday 's Games

Philadelphia .t, San Francisco2

Chicago 7, Atlanta"
Montreal J . Los Ange les 0
St. Louis 6, Cincinnati 3
Only games scheduled
Tuesday 's Games

Chi cago CReuschel 7-51 at Atlanta
CSolomon
Cnl
San Francisco (Whitson 2 ·4) at
Montrea i (Sanderson5 ·51. (nl
San Diego (Jones ~ · 6 1 . at
Philadelphia (Espinosa 8·7l. ( n )
St. Louis (Fulgham 2·1l at Cin ·

•·•J.

c innat i (Seaver 7·.5). (n )
Los Angeles CWelch .t -5) at New

12.36

sn)

11 61

York (Swan 8·61. (n l
Pit-tsburgh (Bibby 3·21 at Houston
(Andujar 10·• 1. (n J

MEIGS

1181
$1 79

sas

TIRE-·tENTER

""

992·2101

700E . Main

NeMtto

Wednesday's Games

Los Angeles at New York (nl
Chicago at Atlanta , (nJ
San Francisco at Mon t real. (n )

in Porn

Kansas City !Gale 6·61 at Cleveland
1Barker0·21 , (nl

SHOP

Minnesota (Zahn 7·2) at Detroit
1Young 2·11 , (n)
Texas (Johnson 4·9) at Chicago

MASON FURNITURE

(Worlham8 ·8), lnl
Boston (Stanley 10·51 at Cal ifornia
&lt;Barr 5·4), In I
Baltimore !Stone 6 · 7) at Oakland
(Langford H I, In}
New York (Guidry 6·5 ) at Seattle

FOR THE BEST DEALS IN THE
TRISTATE AREA

MASON FURNITURE
Mon., Tues., Wed., Friday &amp; Sal.
8:30 to S:OOThursdav lill12 Noon

Wednesday's Games

Three more teams

Baltimore at Oakland
Milwaukee at Toronto, (n)
Kansas City al Cleveland, (n)
Minnesota at Detroit, (n )

OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONLY
Herman Grate

Texas at Ch icago, (nJ

advance in toumey

\I

We'D sell you what you nee«l
\

While 'ome insura nce agencies sclllhc poli cies of onl y one
compa ny, Th e In surance Slo rc reprcscn; s a number o f
fin e in surers. Tha t me ans we can re view your insurance needs

against a wide ra nge of availa ble coverages and ser vices.
Wi&lt;h freed o m 10 choose among co mpan ie~ like
Colllincntal lnsurance , fo r exa mple, it stand s 10 reason Ihat
we can come cl oser lo findin g ;he in sura nce
prolcc li o n ;hal fit s your needs a nd is affordable . Om freedom
of choi ce is your opporiunity.

POMEROY,O .

Three teams advanced to the
second round last night in the
Syracuse Little League tournament .
New Haven Reds, the Middleport
Braves, and the New Haven Cubs all
posted wins.
In Game one Rodney Long hurled a
no-flltter for the Reds in an lHl win
over the Pomeroy Pirates. Jeff
Freshette led the Reds with a triple
and single while Matt Thompson and
Long each had two doubles. Todd
Cullwns and Rod Harrison shared the
pitching chores for the Pirates.
In the second game the Middleport
araves just got by Cheshire ii-4 with
Shaun Baker and Nick Bush doing the
pitching for the Braves. Baker got the
win and Bush did a fine job of relief.
Brian Wamsley was tagged with the
· loss .
Baker led the Braves at the plate
with two singles. Donnie Becker, Trey
Cassell, Bush, Paul Duff, and Tim
Cassell each had a single for the win·
ners.
Rodney Morgan had a double for
Cheshire wl)ile Brian Peck and
Gilmore each singled.
In the last game of the night, the
Cubs rolled over the Gallipolis
Yankees 13-1 on a one.IJ!tter by
Dawson. Sloan got a single in the first
Inning for the only Yankee hit. Sheets
took the loss.
Dawson had a home run and double
while Clark had a double and single
for the Cubs. Plants had two singles,
Friend had a double, and Gress had a
single.
Tonight, Tuppers Plains meets Bid·
well, Reedsville goes against ~e
Gallipolis Senators, and the Athens
Medics meet the Gallipolis White Sox.
Wednesday · sees the Pomeroy
Tigers battling the GaJUpolis Tigers,
the Glouster American Legion again·
st Fruth's, and Vinton against the
Pomeroy Yankees. First game begins
at6 :15.

scored on a single by Templeton.
Templeton led off the ninth with a
single, stole second and scored on
Mwnphrey's single.
"We've been hitting, and we've
been making the plays - it's our
pitching (that) has been very spotty,"
said Cardinal Manager Ken Boyer.
"Our bullpen has been pretty well
worked with three doubleheaders in
eight days."
cardinal starter Pete Vuckovich, 85, didn't give up a hit Wltil the fourth
inning. He took a three.IJ!tter into the
ninth, when Cincinnati scored three
nms.
Dave Concepcion walked to start
the Reds' ninth, and Joe Morgan
singled to keep his consecutive game
hitting streak alive at 16 games.
Two outs later, Ray Knight tripled,
scoring two runs, and Cesar Geronimo
singled in Knight. Mark Littell came
in to retire' Dave Collins to end the
game and earn his fifth save.
"We tried to get something going,
but I guess we were just it litUe late,"
said Knight. "Too little, too late."
Cincinnati starter Bill Bonham, 3-3,
fooled the cards early with his
changeup, but yielded 10 hits and five
runs in 5 2r3 innings.
"I just haven't been able to find any
consistency," said Bonham , who
underwent elbow surgery last
September. "I guess we'll have to sit
down and talk about it and see if I
have to change the way I'm throwing,
or the way I'm pitching to batters, or
what."

Only games scheduled
Tuesday's Games

( Bannister A-7) , (n l
On l y games scheduled

Berry's World

\

hander currently is .on a streak of 351-3
consecutive scoreless innings
covering his last 23 appearances, and
his ERA has dropped to 1.08.
Perry, the 1978 Cy YoWlg Award
winner who will turn 41 on Sept. 15,
owns a ~ record with eight complete
games and•a 2.48 ERA. He recorded
his tOOth strikeout of the season
Sunday in beating the Mets.
LaCoss, who blazed out of the gate
with·eight straight victories, has an 1J.
3 mark and a 2.41 ERA. SUtter, the
winning pitcher in last year's AII.Star
game in San Diego, leads the league
with 19 saves and had a 1.17 ERA
going into Monday night's game at
Atlanta.
It will mark the first AII.Star
appearancce for LaCoss, Niekro,
Sambito and Andujar, who was
selected to the 1977 team, but missed
the game due to an injury. It will be
the fifth appearance for Perry, who
has represented both the National and
American leagues twice.

CINCINNATI (AP)- Rookie Terry catcher , is on the injured-disabled list.
Kennedy , the son of Chicago Cubs
Kennedy is making the most of his
General
Manager Bob Kennedy ,
chance to play whUe Ted Simmons,
doubled
twice,
~ored two rWls and
the St. Louis . Cardinals' , AII.Star
drove in another Monday night in the
Gards' 6-J victory over the Cincinnati
Reds. He's 13-for-43 since being called
up from Springfield two weeks ago .
"It's the realization of a dream I
had, to make it in the big leagues- to
even make it to the big leagues,"
Kennedy said. "When Simmons
comes back and is ready to play,
that's when I'll worry about what's
going to happen to me."
Kennedy said it's exciting, but
tough, for a 23-year-old rookie to be
thrust into a starting role replacing a
San Diego at Philadelph ia, (n)
highly-regarded veteran such as
St. Louis at Cinc innati, ( n )
P ittsburgh at Houston, ( n )
Simmons , who beat out Cincinnati's
Johnny Bench in the balloting for the
AMERICAN LEAGUE
National League All-Star team this
EAST
year.
W. L. Pet . GB
Baltimore
56 29 .659
"I told John the only thing worse
Boston
52 31 .627 3
then taking Simmons place was
Milwaukee
49 49 .556 8
taking his (Bench's) place," Kennedy
New York
48 38 .558 8 111
said. " I pity that poor guy."
40 .(! .482 15
Detroit
Cleveland
40 45 .471 6
Keith Hernandez led off the Gards'
Tor onto
28 60 .318 29 '1' second inning with a single, Kennedy
WEST
doubled him home one out later, and
Cal ifornia
51 . 37 .580
Te)(as
49 36 .576 'l z after another out Ken Oberkfell
Minnesota
&lt;L5 39 .536 4
singled in Kennedy.
Kans.as City
43 42 .506 6 1J1
Garry Templeton singled to start
Chi c ago
3il 46 .• 52 11
the
St. Louis fifth , went to second on
Seattle
37 51 .• 20 14
Jerry Mumphrey's single, moved to
Oakland
47 65 .270 7'1'
Monday ' s Games
third on an infield out and scored on
Tor onto 7, Milwaukee 1
Hernandez' sacrifice fly .
Cleveland 8, Kansas City 2
Kennedy and Oberkfell repeated
M i nnesota 5, Detroit J
their double-single routine in the
California6, Boston a
Ch i caoo 5, Texas .t
sixth, but this time Oberkfell also
Baltimore 7, Oakland 3

•••••
•• ••
•••

HVated Ric h G ossage, pi tcher . P laced
J uan Beri quez. outfielder . on the 21·
dc:t';' disabled l i st.

IN WASHINGTON

0

J 1m
' Barker, W"ll"
I Iamson.

Mankowski , th i rd baseman, on the 15:
dav disabled list . PurchaseQ the con ·
tract of Tom Brookens, i nfielder,
from Evansvil l e of the _A mer ican
Assoc iation .

Niekro , Joaquin AndUjar and reliever
Joe Sambito of the NL West Divisionleading Houston Astros when the AllStars meet next TUesday for the
golden anniversary AII.Star Game in
Seattle's Kingdome.
Also picked for the NL mound staff
Tuesday ·were Gaylord Perry of the
San Diego Padres, Mike LaCoss of the
Cincinnati Reds and reliever Bruce
Sutter of the Chicago Cubs.
Niekro, Andujar and Sambito all
have played vital roles for the
surprising Astros, who are off to the
best start by far in the dub's 18-year
history .
·
Niekro, 13-3, won eight consecutive
starts from May 13 through June 13,
earning him NL Pitcher of the Month
honors for May, while Andujar, who
received the same award for April,
has picked up three of his 10 victories
in relief.
Sambito , the league's hottest
pitcher out of the bullpen recently, has
10 saves and four wins. The left-

Kennedy leads Cardinals, 6-3 win

disa_
bled fist . Activated Rick Mi ller, ~-. Wahama; Danny Marks, C&amp;lhoun ;

outfielder.
DE TROIT TI GERS - Placed Phil

Washington today·

I

NEW YORK ( AP) - Steve Rogers
and Steve carlton , who both flirted
with no-hitters last week, were among
those named Tuesday by Manager
Tom La sorda to an eight-man
National League pitching staff for
next week's AII.Star Game.
Rogers, of the NL East Divisionleading Montreal Expos, hw-led 71·3
innings of no-hit ball Saturday in
Montreal against Las'o rda's Los
Angeles Dodgers before finishing with
a four.IJ!t victory . He also leads the
league's starting pitchers in shutouts
(five ) and earned run average (2.39)
through Sunday.
Garltqn, 1().3, allowed only one hit a leadoff double in the seventh-inning
by Elliot Maddox ·- and retired the
first 18 batters in his 1-&lt;l victory over
the New York Met.s at Philadelphia
last Wednesday. The left-bander has
two one-hitters this season and 103
strikeouts.
The two will join pitchers Joe

Wahama and was ius! named to the
AA all state baseball team second
team.
outfield or pitch.
It's not WlUsual in high school but
it's interesting to note that VanZant,
Fox, Daniel and Minnick are also
sucressful startin~ pitchers.
Second Team
Pitchers - Paul Fitzwater, Clear
Fork; Rick Sidwell, Paden City ;
Bruce Moles, Calhoun.
Catcher • Jack Smith, Wahama.
First base - David Mahon, CeredoKenova.
JACKSMITII
Infielders - Anthony Petrucci,
Fairview
; John McSweeney, St.
Inks With State
Marys; David Hayhurst, Pennsboro.
Outfielders · Joe Conaway,
WUiiamstown; J . R. Carpenter,
four years."
Parkersburg Catholic; Billy Booth,
Smith is considered an excellent Peterstown .
hitter and hit over 400 for his four
Utility - Roger Dona!JUe , Vinson ;
years of high school play. Smith led John Rayburn, Ceredo-Kenova .
his team in doubles and runs batted
Special Honorable Mention
in.
Pitchers - David Armentrout,
He also lettered in football at ChapmanvUle. ·
Catcher · Mike Cassidy, CeredoKenova.
First base • Pete Oliverio .
Monday '&gt; Spcrh Tranuction&gt;
Clarksburg Notre Dame ; l'im
By the AS&gt;ociated Pren
Pelfry, Vinson.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
CALIFORNIA ANGELS - Placed
lnfielders · Robert Botta, HunFrank Tanano , pitcher, on the 21 da y tington St. Joe ; Mark .~mlth ,

Mason,

Boston at California, (n}
New York at seattle, (n)

w. Va.

.'

ROUTE.
CARRIERS
EARN MONEY!
. . . and in these days you need those
extra dollars for fun and school.
You'll enjoy doing this important job
with girls and boys your age. Have
fun and get paid too!

WIN PRIZES TOO!
CARRIERS NEEDED IN SYRACUSE &amp;POMEROY
CALL 992-2156

The Daily Sentinel
I,

�4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, July 10, 1979

li-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, July 10, 1979

Happy Harvesters Ckzss meet, enjoy dinner

.

.

LY·s POINTERS

A covered dish dinner preceded the come each year to Independence Day
regular meeting of the Happy we feel renewed faith and hope in t~
Polly Cra.mer
Harvesters Class of Trinity Church future . Referring to the last part of
Friday evening.
Mrs. Philip Meinhart had the table
MOW FORMS ON BOOKS
hever found amoth or seen ' any grace, and Miss Erma Smith was
By Polly Cramer
damage from them and things smell devotional leader. Following a hymn,
POU.Y'S PROBLEM
so much better. They can either be Miss Smith used as ber topic, "Let
Mr. &amp;nd Mrs. Charles Paulsen,
DEAR POU.Y - How does one scattered loosely among folds or put Freedom Ring '', with scripture from Chuck, Eric and Cris have returned to
clean books today ? Most of tllem h8ve in small bags cut from old nylon hose.
Matthew 5. Sbe stated that . as we their home in 'Houston, Texas after
paper composition covers, not - M.H.M.
spending some time here with his
leather. We have so much hwnidity in
DEAR READERS - I have never
mother, Mrs . Clara Paulsen,
swruner that mold forms on them. - done this myself but have heard of it
Hemlock Grove.
JURORS
REPORT
WEDNESDAY
MRS. D.B.F.
Present for a family get-together
many times and plan to give it a try.
Members of the May term grand
DEAR MRS. D. R F. - Dryness - POLLY
this
week were Mr. and Mrs. Bernard
DEAR POLLY _
d F
. jury of the Meigs County Common
and cleanliness are the greatest foes
Paulsen, Tracy and Gayla, Mesquite,
Court
are
to
meet
at
the
.
an
ran
Pleas
of mildew fungus . An alr conditioner Everytimelbuyanewflannel-back- courtroom at 8·30.
Texas; Mr. and Mrs. George Paulsen
Wed sda
will lessen the hwnidity and help the ed plastic tablecloth there are creases Judge John c. saco"~~~orts~e y' and Randy, Ashland ; Mr. and Mrs.
problem. So will light and air.
that have to be removed. I solve the
Robert Paulsen, Angie, Patti and
If paper in the book is damp, dry it problem by" putting the cloth on the
Terri, Albany ; Mr. and Mrs. Jim
and remove any loose mold with a ironing board with the flannel side up,
Hazelton, Jane and Cynthia of
cloth. Spread pages of the book and set my Iron on low heat so it is warm
Hemlock Grove ; Mr. and Mrs. Ray
fan it in the air. Sprinkle cornstarch enough to press the creases and find
Whaley of Burlingham; Mr. and Mrs.
or talcwn powder between the leaves only a small amount of pressing is reMike Hazelton and Jeremy,
of such a book to absorb moisture and quired. - KATHLEEN
Salineville; and Mr. and Mrs. Tim
then brush off after a few hours. This
DEAR POLLY- Now that warm
Hazelton and Joshua J omeroy.
sounds Uke a slow painstaking pro- weather is here I hang my clothes outcess and it is, but for cherished books side to dry and have a way to cut the
it may be worth the trouble. - POL- job in half. As shirts and pants come
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
LY
DISCHARGES,JULY9
off the line they are put on coat
Kathleen Carnahan, Floyd CarDEAR POLLY - I turn a colander hangers and are ready to go right in ~han, Ho~ard Bissell, Maggie
Georgie Alderigi, Navajo Baker,
upside down over the skillet when fry. the closets when I go inside. - BISSell, V~rgwa Li.ght, Roland Light, Katherine Benmtley, Greg Carter,
ing chicken, fish or meat. The steam ROSAUE
Ralph P. BISSell, Nancy Bissell Mrs. William Cased and daughter ,
· can escape but the fat cannot splatter.
Polly will send you one of her signed Hayward Bissell, Kathleen Bissell t~ Donald Douglass, Alfred Dye, Jr., Sue
- MRS. E.J.
thank-you newspaper coupon clippers Howard Lawrence, Sr., Joanne Harding, John McQuire, Mrs. Charles
DEAR POLLY - For years 1 have if she uses your favorite Pointer Lawrence, Parcel, Lebanon.
Moore and son, Verla Myers, Mrs.
used whole cloves rather than moth PEeve or Problem in her column:
Roger Epple, June Epple to Ken- Ricky Pickens and son, John Vance,
balls or moth crystals when putting Write POLLY'S POINTERS in care of neth E. Riggs, Judith A. Riggs, Par- Mrs. Earl Waters and daughter, Zctta
woolens away for the summer. 1 have this newspaper.
Ward, Nellie White.
cels, Chester.
,
BIRTHS, JULY 9
Karr Construction Co. to Herbert L.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Lawson, son,
Grate,
Helen
Ruth
Grate,
Deed
of
r--- --------~
Bidwell
Correction, Pomeroy.
Mr.
and Mrs. David Brisker, son, Oak
Elsie Mae Crouser to Alice
Hill
Levingston, 6 acres plus 140 R
Rutland.
' ·' Mr. and Mrs. Jedrry Van Inwagen,
Mason and Area Personals
TUESDAy
son, Pomeroy
Mr. and Mrs. Harrison Robinson FREE BLOOD Pressure clinic
and family vjsited recently with their Tuesday at Harrisonville Town House
son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Public invited.
Mrs. R1ck Robmson and family at Sponsored by senior citizens of
Barbersvtlle, W.Va .
Harrisonville.
Mr. and Mrs. John Sisson, Mr. and
Mrs. Dennis Harris, Miriam Sisson,
WINDING ' TRAIL GARDEN
Christie Staats, Melanie Sisson and CLUB , 6:30p.m. Tuesday at the home
Larry Keefer, New Haven, spent of Addalou Lewis. Members to take a
from Saturday until Monday at King 's covered dish; table service will be
Island near Cincinnati, Ohio.
provided, Discussion will. be held on
Mr. George Carton took the Clifton the Meigs County Fair flower show
United Methodist Bible School pupils participation.
on a hayride on Saturday evening.
MEIGS CHAPTER 53, Disabled
American Veterans, Tuesday 7:30
p.m. at chapter home.
SHADE
ROVER
JAYCEES
MASON - Several area youths and TIJESDAY 8 p.m. at court house in
councilor, Donna Thompson attended Chester. Men between 17 and 35 years
Luth
of age invited to attend .
eran Church Camp at Camp .. WEDNESDAy
Caesar in Webster County recently.
SOUTHERN LOCAL School Board
Attending the Senior Camp were Wednesday 7:30 p.m.
Melanie Sisson, Lisa Reynolds
MIDDLEPORT AM-ATEURStephanie Estes, Mason Mark Thorn:
pson, David Rose of Ne'w Haven and ~ARDENERS, 6:30p.m. picnic at the
Jerry Oldaker, Hartford.
orne of Mrs. Ferman Moore, Li.ncoln
Matthew Thompson attended Hill, for members and their families.
Junior Camp which was held at the . Those attending are to take a covered
same time as Senior Camp
dish .
.
.. THURSDAY
MEIGS HUMANE SOCIETY
Thursday 7:30 p.m. at Thrift Shop
Middleport.
'
SYRACUSE VILLAGE COUNCIL
Thursday 7:30 p.m.s
REVJV AL Rutland Freewill Baptist
Chuch beginning Thursday through
14th. Rev. Paul Taylor speaker.
By the Library staff
Special
singing. Public invited.
Would you Uke to meet a black rat
ROCK SPRINGS GRANGE, 8 p.m.
snake, a northern water snake, a pair
of garter snakes, and some of their Thursday at the hall.
FRIDAY
~ental
friends ? Brad Kieffer, naturalist at
MARY
SHRINE
,
White
Shrine
of
Forked Run State Park, is bringing
part
some of the park's snakes to the Mid- Jerusalem, 8 p.m. Friday at the
dleport Library at 2 p.m. on July 14 so Pomeroy Masonic Temple, Members
Meigs County children can see them, to take sandwiches or a salad.
learn about them, and even pet them.
·FREE.
POSTS BIG VICTORY
"Most people have a fear of snakes,
Sam
Flanagan, Park ersburg,
but they aren't that bad at all," acof Syracuse, won the
formerly
but
cording to Mr. Kieffer . "I was afraid
tournament
of snakes myself until I got to know national bowling
them." So he is giving Meigs County Saturday afternoon on sports
children a chance to get to know some spectacular.
Flanagan defeated Earl Anthony
snakes - a real "hand-{)n" exin
269
to 257. Flanagan had all strikes
perience !
Kieffer, who spends the 'winter going into tlle ninth only to spare.
Sam, who is on tour most of the
studying natural resources and
~griculture at Ohio State University, time, is , the son of Allee Flanagan,
18 very eager to share his great love Parkersburg.
for the outdoors. He presents family
programs at Forked RWI SUite Park
Thought for today : He who waits to
on Wednesday and Saturday nights do a gre'at deal of good at once will
and hopes more people will come out never do anything - Samuel Johnson ,
to Forked Run to share the fWI of English scholar and wr·iter , 1709-1764.
summer "in the wild.

.

Return home

Meigs
Property
Transfers

Mason Area I

Social Calendar

1

'

the Declaration of Independence, she
said this contains an appeal !() the
Supreme Judge of the World for the
rectitude of our intentions, and noted
that these words came from God fear·
ing men who depended on God for
help in the new country. She $Bid the
10 commandments which God gave to
Moses are the basis'ior the· laws to
govern a nation, and concluded with
two pOems, "I Am Thankful for this
Land" and "The Golden Key."
Mrs. Edna Slusher was welcomed
as a new member. Miss JealUle Hines
of Columbus was a gueSt.
During the business meeting plans
were completed for serving the recep·
lion at the Hutchison.seelig wedding
on July 14 at Trinity Church.
Members sang "Happy Birthday " for
Mrs. Ruth Massar, Mrs. Slusher and
Miss Smith. Sympathy cards were

signed for Mrs. Marie Hauck and
Mrs. Betty Reibel. Get-well cards
were signed for Mrs. Ruby Erb, Mrs.
Gladys Cuckler, Mrs. Wilma Terrell,
and Mrs. Alan Holter. The meeting
closed with singing of "Blest Be the
Tie that Binda.'' Mrs. Slusher was
pianist for the meeting.
.
Door prizes were won by Mrs. Ullie
Hauck, Miss Enna Smith, Mrs.
Slusher and Mrs. Ada Holter.

HOMECOMrnNGSUNDAY
Homecoming will be observed at
the South Bethel U. M. CHurch on
July 22 with Sunday school at 9 a.m.;
morning worship at 10; .basket dinner
at noon and an afternoon service, 1:30
to 3:30p.m. with the Gospel T~nes to
be an afternoon feature.

-----

........

--

-

Tookie's Fashions·
Is Having A

Mid-July Summer Sale

10% 50%

Save From

To

SALE STARTS WEDNE'SDAY

•

TOOKIE'S FASHIONS
5th Street

New Haven

Dental benefits
with real advantages
for employer and
· employee.

Sneak a peek
at a snake///

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and Blue Shield Plans
. believe that regular
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nnportant
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Now, there are a
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your Blue
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you may not find other
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the kind of dental care you
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these are advantages for both .
the employer and the employee:

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TRAINING COURSES designed to meet the needs
of small business.
For •n lormalron and prompl servrce.conlacl . . . John

Direct .Claims l'ayment. Through .our simplified claims
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be paid d!fectly, which reduces pape1 work for both
employee .and employer. .
·
?redeter'!'inatjon Benefits, This is a system that lets you
kno)Y ~ ~dvance of lrejllment, how muc.h your benefits ,Viii pay.
Recogl]l71llg that .t~ere may be.more than one .approach to
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. appropnate and quality care at the m&lt;lst reasonable cos!.
·· lmmed.i ate·Beiiefi.t s. There
·.no. waiting periods.for .tn""tment
of C!&gt;nd~IOn.s that eXIs~~ before the effecHve' date of coverage.
ConsultatiOn. Pr~ctrcmg denti~t~ in the community .act as ·
.consultants to. routUiely tevrew claims: T.hey make slire treatment
IS cost~ffectwe and consistent With good ilentalprai:tice.
Peer Review. A formal· review svstem·has been
es~blished in partnership'with the dental profession to handle
difftcult-to-resolve claims.

o. Herrold

THE CITY LOAN .
BUS I NESS SEf\.VI CES CO.

~

t:\ .1 f1n"n(1 ,\ l se rii! Ct' Of
'0 ~ CO~ TROL D'lA C0/(!'01\&gt;\nON

'

Holds family picnic

right in as part of a group health
care package. *
. To keep the cost affordable most
dental benefits are designed so, that the .
employee shares in the cost of care. For
c_ompanies of 25 or more employees, . .
first -dollar coverage for preventive care
and. several cost~sharing options are . .
availabl~. These options can heip achieve
that all-1mportant balance between
needs and budget.
This is the kind .of flexibility
that you should talk to your
Bltie Cross and Blue Shield.
·representative abo1;1t.

Rog1stered Marks Blue Sh~&amp;IO As!IO Ct;Uonn

*A denta ~ program is ;nailable to Blue Cross and
Blue Shteld enrolled groups of 10 or 11ore
employee,s. qnenrotled gro ups of 25 or more
ma y acqu1re It on a se parale basis.

Dean; Dutchie Klein • Clyde Evans;
Hester · Pal Howard; Sylvia - Anna

Currey.
Company members In nonperforming roles Include Jake Bapst,
Sandra Buckley, Karen Jones Vivian
Jarrel, David Preston, Ubby Mattox,
Robin Kratzenburg, Judy Canter,
Diana Showalter, and Ben Forshey.
Ticket Information and performance times will be announced
very soon.

Bo Dollivon · Ed Roark; Townsfolk of
Three Point • Josie Bapst, Margaret
Lee Rogar; Lavina ·Cheryl Enyart; Buckley, Gene Chambers, Danelle
Beulah • Virginia Covert, Naomi - Clay, Janette Crabtree, Martha
Patsy Schuldt; Amanda ·Georgiana Evans, Beth Fuller, Sherry Harrison ,
Jenkins; Judith • Martha Evans; and Pat Howard, John Hughes, Bob HwnPearl· Janette Crabtree.
phreys, Sbelly Hwnphreys, Zola
·The second production will be Sch· [Oskis, Hayden Uoyd, Lydia Long,
midt and Jones- "110 in the Shade." It Doug Miller, Christine Plants, Greg
will be performed August 9, 10, 11, 16, Plants, Teresa Preston, Regina Prid·
17, 18. Those cast in the second dy, Kathy Roberts, Ann Lee Rogar,
musical are: Lizzie Curry • Karen Patsy Schuldt, Ronda Smittle, John
Polcyn; Bill Starbuck • Karl Bechtel ; Sowers, Joyce Swisher, George
H. C. Curry • Ed Sofranko; Noah Thom[J6on, Teresa Tope, Barbara
Curry • Allen Saunders ; Jim Curry - Wallen, Merlyn Ross and Carol
Jim Cains; ·Snookie • Margaret
Evans; FUe .. Jeff Painter; Toby
TO MEET JULY 14
Hawkins· Ron Baker; Lucille Jensen
All persons who are interested in
• Georgiana Jenkins; Wy Ann the Old Pine Cemetery are asked to
Beasley • Kitti Casto; Agnes Brophy • meet at the Old Pine Church, south of
Virginia Covert; Esther Jarvis • Rio Grande on Saturday, July 14, at I
Cheryl Enyart; Reverend Jarvi:! • p.m.
Clyde Evans; Virgil Blake • Jim
Purpose of the meeting is to
Enyart; Hank Dennis . • Richard reorganize the association for the
Hamilton; Maureen • Teresa Tope; upkeep of this cemetery.

CARROLL NELSON
FORT KNOX, Ky. - Carroll R.
Nelson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Carl E.
Nelson, 655 Syramore, Middleport,
recently completed Phase I of the
'!Wo-SUjtlon Test at Fort Knox, Ky .
The test i.S being conducted to see if
basic entry training can be effectively
reduced from 16 weeks to 12 weeks
and still be administered at two
stations. The second phase is held at
Fort Benning, Ga.
Nelson is a 1977 graduate of Meigs
High School, Pomeroy.

·State-wide, tollfree ,cancer service opens
Association, the Ohio Division and
Franklin Couniy Unit of the American
Cancer Society, Ohio State University
and the OSU Comprehensive Cancer
Center are expected to be on hand for
the ceremonies.
Resource information for the OCIS
is being gathered from each of Ohio's
88 counties on the resources available
in those particular areas including
transportation to and from doctor appoinlments, home nursing services,
homemaking and child care services,
and diagnostic and treatment equipment available at clinics and
hospitals.
The telephone Unes are answered
· by volunteers who have participated
in a rigorous moor orientation •
training program encompassing
clinical aspects of cancer, active
. listening techniques and awareness of
the national and the Ohio Cancer In·
formation Service.
Information provided callers is
taken only from approved sources
such as the Nal!onal Cancer Institute
and AmeriCan Cancer Society
publications, materials from other
· selected cancer institutions, and fact
sheets
by the 0C1S and

Cancer Information Service is
available from Nancy Kesselring
Brant (614) 422·1382, atOhio State.

CC cllitical and research cancer
specialists.
Clinical questions which caMot be
answered on the spot, and which are
deemed appropriate for the OCIS to
handle, are researched and then an·
swered eitber by telephone or letter.
The OCIS maintains an extensiNe
library of publications which can be
mailed upon request.
Those questions which caMot be
answered by OCIS are referred to the
attending physician.
Further information of the Ohio

FARRAR REUNION
The annual Farrar Family Reunion
has been set for July 29 at tlte Gold
Cliff Park at Circleville. A covered
dish dinner will begin at 12 noon. The
reunion will be at shelter houses 7 and
8.

~=:=;;;;;;;the;;os;u;c·;;;;;;;;;;;;;:::::::::::;;;;:;;

MEAT

. .
BLADE CUT CHUCK ROAST.
••••••••••••• Ml; •••'129
ENGLISH ROAST••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~·•• ~ 1 69
ARM . ROAST •••••••••.•••••••••••••••••••••••••lB:•••'169

CHUCK STEAK •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~: .• ~ 1
BONELESS ROAST••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~: •••• 1 79
SUPERIORS BOLOGNA .••••••••••••••••••~: •• 89e
SUPERIORS FRANKIES ••••••.•••••••••• ,!-!1:.:.99 e
VALLEY BELL

.

cHocoLATE 2% ••••• .::.~~.sgc

DRUMSTICKS •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••~.~~~. 89c:

sgc

VIENNA SAUSAGE •••••••••••••••••••••• ~.~~~~~~. 39~
ARMOUR'S
12 OZ. CAN
9

AU. STAR DAIRY

oz.

12

COTTAGE CHEESE .••••~~~·•.
BROUGHTON'S

24

VALLEY BELL

2%

ARMOUR'S

.

$1

BANANAS
3

LBS.

S1 00

'1. 1
~~L~~••••••••••••.•••••••••••••••. }.6.~!;.~q~~~, 4/' 1.00
COAST TOILO SOAP•••••••••••• ~.E~.~~.~~1~~.~~~. 29,.

119

WISK LAUNDRY DOERGENt ••••••••••••••••• 89~
HOLSUM KING SIZE BREAD •••••••••••••••••• 39~
HOLSUM HOTDOG &amp; BARBECUE BUNS ••8.!~~ 49~

..

·RC or

DIET RITE

MILK.
GALLON

10 LB. BAG

TREET ..............................................

oz. $

COTTAGE CHEESE •.••~~~·•.

ICE

69

All STAR DAIRY

®. Ae(llslfHI!Id Marits Blue Cross Assoc•ahon

,..

.Second summer
registration set

'DAIRY

Value added.
®

Casting in the first performances
are: Ben Rumson • Bob Humphreys ;
Jermifer Rumson • Noreen Bechtel ;
Julio Valvaras • Jeff Painter;
Elizabeth Woodling -Teresa Preston;
Mike Mooney • Ron Baker; Steve
Bullnack • Allen Saunders; Pete
Billings -Jim Cainll; Salem Trumball
• Jim Enyart; Sandy Twist • Doug
Miller; Reuben Sloane ·Greg Plllnts ;
Jacob Woodling· Jolu! Sowers; Sarah
Woodling • Lydia Long; Edgar
Crocker ·John Hughea; Jake Whippany • George Thompson; Cherrie
Jourdel-Teresa Tope; Lee Zln -BarMrs. Dorothy Dandlakis of Athens bara Wallen; Raymond Janney •
entertained with a family patio picnic Ric.hard Hamilton; Doc Newcomb ·
at her home recently .
Gene Chambers; Ja~ Burdette •
RIO G[:lANDE - Registration for
Guests were Mrs. Aleta Lyrm Bur· Hayden Uoyd; Suzanne Duval. •
1
the second five-week swnmer temr of ton, Lisa Ann and Erika Lynn, Orlan·-~~·~~; J~~S:: :
Rio Grande College and Community do, Fla.; Les Jacks, Defi8Dce; Mr. Beth Fuller: Ingrid~ckson ·DanetCollege will be July 16.
and Mrs. Floyd T. Chapman, Shelley, te Cia . Lolita N
- • She
· te ted ·
llin f
Pickerington; Mr. and Mrs. Paul
. Y'
unne12
rry
P ersons m
res
m enro g or Dean Parsons, Gallipolis·, Mr. and Hamso.n; GUnda Wyzlk • Margaret.
Ev
M n1
LaRu
Mitzi
course offerings may do so between 9
ans,
o que
e a.m. and noon, I p.m. and 4:30p.m. Mrs. Emerson Jones, Middleport;
and 7:30p.m. at Lyne Center on the Marine Capt. and Mrs. Karl Russell
Rio Grande campus.
and children, Melissa Lynn and Ken·
The college is currently winding neth Roy, Jacksonville, N. C.; Mr.
down its most successful summer and Mrs. Kemelh Russell, Racine.
session ever, according to Dean S. Missing from lhe flimlly group was
Brown, director of admissions and · Kim Chapman, on vacation at Peeley
COLUMBUS, Ohio - The Ohio Can·
eer Information Service (OCIS) will
records..
Island, Canada.
Nearly 500 persons were enrolled
The birthdays of Lisa Anne and fonnally open its statewide toll.free
the first five week term.
Erika Lyrm Burton were celebrated. te1epfione service, part of a national
"We 're hoping for an equally large A decorated cake and ice cream were network which provides the public
nwnber to take advantage on second served at the gathering. The cake was and health professiooals with accurate IJIHo-date information on canterm offerings," said Brown.
a gift from the Chapman family.
cer,
on July 16.
- Rio Grande's Advanced Scholar
OCIS
is headquartered at Ohio
Proliram wlli also continue into the
State
University
in Colwnbus.
second . swnmer term. Under the
The
service,
funded
by the National
program, 1979 high scliool graduates
DEAN'S LIST
Cancer
Institute
through the Ohio
or high school juniors in the upper 50
Three Meigs Countians have been
percent of thelr class can receive a natned to the dean's list of Hocking State University Canprehensive Can·
full-tuition scholarship for classes Technical College with perfect four cer Cancer (OSUCCC), has in·
this swnmer. Eighty-one students point averages for the spring quarter. formation on sud) clinical aspects of
took advantage of the program first They are Rebecca Thomas, cancer as symptoms, detection,
swruner session.
Pomeroy; Jenifer L. Schmidt, Reed· diagnosis, treatment and
sville, and Susan J. Kennedy, rehabilitation, as well as etiology
(causes ) and prevention.
Rutland.
The toll.free nwnber is I-8J0.282Named
to
list
by
earning
at
ICE CREAM
6522
(inFranklinCounty421-7800).
least a three point average from the
SOCIAL SET
Speakers
scheduled are Dr. David
The Salem Township Fire Depart· area were David E . Fowler, Mason, S. Yohn, OSUCCC dlrector, Dr. c. J.
ment will hold an ice cream social at W. Va.; Ronald Ca.sci and Chris A. Cavalarls OSUCCC associate dlrec·
the fire house in Salem Center Satur- Smith, Middleport; Mary E. Chrlsy, tor and dkector of cancer control and
Tanunie Debord, Tina D. Duffy,
day from 2 to 9 p.m.
Dr. Michael Grever, OSUCCC ctirec·
Other than homemade ice cream, Cheryl Hudson, Rebecca E. Tyree tor of cancer education. They will
and
Jeff
Warner,
all
of
Pomeroy;
there will be cake and pie, san·
take part in opening ceremonies July
dwiches and beverages for sale. Cathy Baldwin, Anna A. Frank, 16 at IOa .m.
Proceeds will help with ,the newly for- Michael Roberts, Racine ; Frances F.
Several officials from the state and
med fire department. The public is in· Helton and Eroc J. Van Meter, Reed· federal
11Mi Ohio State
sville.
vited.

RIO GRANDE - Casting of Rio
Swnmer Theatre Productions for the
19'19 aeason have been announced.
Through the auspices of the Rio
The marriage of Jdln Ray Hunnell
Grande
College and Cooununity
and Violet Faith Hayman is being
College
Theatre
and Music departannounced . The private ceremony
ments,
Lerner
and
Lowe's "Paint
took place at the home of the Rev . Mr.
Your
Wagm," will be presented on
Tennant on June 29. Mr. and Mrs.
the Rio Grande CamPus July 26, "n, 28
Hunnell have purchased the former and
August 2, 3, 4.
home of Garland Brady in Antiquity
and invite friends to visit them.

EACH

Blue Cross .
Blue Shield .

'

'

TV
DINNERS
c

®'

Phone (614) 533-1431

Casting announced for Rio S'ummer Theatre productions
.

the

Dental care, America's fastest growing
group lwalth care .l:Jeneftt

Attend camp

Wedding ·
announced

COLA

8 pak

69

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

Federal Food

we JCeserve 1ne

16 OL btls.
Plus Tax &amp; Dep.

�7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., T uesday, July 10 1979

6- The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pom er oy, 0 .. Tuesday, July 10, 1979

Your Best Buys Are Found
I N THE COU R T

WANT AD
CHARGES

O F MEIGS COUNT Y ,

OHIO

WOODR OW QU EE N ,
P l ai nt i ff .

IMMEDIATE

OPENING .
laboratory Te&lt;hniclon, 3· J I

GUN SHOOT , EVERY FRIDAY
7:30 PM RACINE GUN ClUB .
FACTORY CHOKE GUNS ONlY.

NOW HAULING limestone in

NOTICE

WANT-AD
IA_DVERTISING
DEADLINES

as

"

ASTRO·GRAPH

LAFF- A - DAY

The luxury ocean liner,
the Titanic , s truck an
ice berg on her maiden
voya ge in 1912, claiming
1,513 li ves from the 2,207
aboa rd.

REFERENCE

'1-j

."

The Civil War ended with
. the s urrender fo the Con11 s fed era te Army by Ge n .
" 1 hope you don &lt; mmd..
been a ve r y 1ong d a y .
Robert E. Lee.
.

DEE D

Vo l um e 70 1. Page 67 , Meigs
Cou nt y Dee d Reco r ds The
appra •s cd value of said
pr operty bei ng ~4 , 633 JJ _
The abov e prop erty will
be sold at the door of the
Courthouse bY the Sher1 1f
for not tess th an two thirds
1t1e
appra1s ed
v alue
tll cr co f
1 er ms of Sale
T en
per cent paya!) le at t tle t im e
of sal e and the ba lanc e
payttbl c to th e She r if f
•·1it111 n th •r t y day s
5, 12 19 , 26 ( 7) 3, 10 61 C

TRAilER. after 6, call992-5914

HANDYMAN WOAK mowing
lawns. pai nting houses, roofs
ond building sidewalks , etc.

Call614·667-3263.
PIANO TUNING .for homo and
school . lone Doniela. Also
repairs , 14 years experience .
992-2581 or 992 -2082 .
DOZER , END Loader ond dump
truck. Will do basements .
ponds .
brusn .
timer .
limestone and gravel. Charlas
Butcher . 742· 29•0 .

RIDENOUR GAS Service Ooxol L. P. gas. Chester. 985-3307.
WOULD like to do babysitting
1n my nome ond ages of • &amp; 8.
Contact Judy Humphreys .

m ·7318 .
GiveAway
FOUR PUPPIES, 3 iemala, 1
male. Mott-ler is port collie.

985-3559 .
TWO MONTffS old loveable
block puppy Port labrador,
healthy , nos aU shots, Meigs
Humane Society. 992-2639 or

m -2592PUPPY, REAL cute , has all
shots' block cot, femole ,
short-haired. 2 block kittens , 1
yellow , 1 blue, 1 tiger and 1
brood striped t iger . Con be
seen 01 244 Sycamore St. , Middleport .
·

1974 14 x 70 mobile home.
Good
condition .
$7800 .

m -5858.
1965GENERA160x12, 2 bodr
1970Sylvo, 60x12, 2 bedr

1970Caulo. 60x12. 2 bedr.
1974 Mark line, 50x12 , 2 bedr.
1969Voliont, 12x60, :2 bedr.
1967 National. 12x50, 2 bedr.

8'S MOBilE ffOME SALES. PT.
PlEASANT, WY. 304-675-4424 .
1971 SKYLINE mobi le home. 12
x 60 . Excellent cond ition. All
appliances , washer , underpinning and
deck included.

$5400. 742-2692.
12 x 65 SCHUlTZ, 3 bedroom,
11/, both , 4x10 tip-out , cnetral
o'c., wittl washer and dryer.
Will sell witn or without lot'

Call992·7491 oflor 5:30pm .
For Sale
liMESTONE .

oand ,

grovel, calcium cnlorida, fertiliier, do{, food , and all types
of salt. Excelsior Salt Works ,
Inc., E. Main St., Pomeroy ,
m -38'11

1974 CHEV. PICtCU~ camper
special p.s., p.b ., o .c. $2250
1975 Gran Fury Plymouth.
Good shope, make good offer . i0 1/1 h . truck comper.
Henry Hartman. 985-3839 .
1975 CR 125 t.tondo Elsinore
dirt bike . Good condition .
$300. 992·5785 .

OUACHITA BASS BOAT. Call
m -5298.
1978 YAMAHA YZ 125. $600.
Good condition . 843-25.112.
EUREKA Upright Sweeper.
$20; 4 speed Zentth record
plover with speakers , $30:
Horlequin Romonce books.

40c ea . 256 So. Fourth So .. Middleport.
VERMEER BALER Soles. porfl
and service . Balers in st Ock for
immediate delivery . Phone

742-28n or 742·2152.
6

H. P.

Mere

outboard .

Special Sale

no

Auctions
BIG AUCTION every Wed., 7
pm .

Hartford Community
Hartiord. WV, -4 miles
abo\le
Pomeroy - Mason
Bridge.

~ Center ,

BUilDING .

Trucklood of antique furniture
and glassware. Also new cof·
fee and end tabla sets and lots
of new merchandise. 7 .00 .

592-3051

4-23 -1 mo.

J l4 mile off Rl . 1 by-pass
on St . Rt . 124 toward

Rutland .
Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992·5682
• 30 lie

Vinyl and Aluminum
Siding

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

A NTIQUE love seat . Pink
"Velvet . Recently upholstered
and refinished . Excellent con-

dillon. 992-5834.
BOAT . 1974 Charger 15 ft
with 1978 Mercury 80 hp
motor. 197-4 Murray tilt trailer
Clifford
Hill
Produce ,

247-2063.
FACTORY FORD lopper . $400.
· Clifford

Hill

Produce .

247-2063 .
DOG HOUSE , never usii:l Coli

949-2472
RAYS USED Fruniture, Addison , 367 -0637.
Electric
range , $85, Gos range , $65.
Refrlgerotor, $35. Chest, $20.
Breakfast set, $35 , High choir ,
$72' Bar stool, $10. Coffee
ta lbe, $10, round dining room

lablo, $65. Poro-a-crlb. $25 ,
Baby cor saot. SIO.

1973 CHEVY CAPRI slalion

POMEROY
LANDMARK
Hvadquarlers for
Hotpoint and
General Electric
Appliances

SALE PRICES

9 .........

SJ)

, ..,.-=.

Jack

w. Carsey
Mgr.

Phone 992·2181

'IOU'Rt: L OOKI~ '
WOOZY !.

KI~DA

IHE KIND OF Clz:OOK
WHO 0Pe~AIE5 IN

KJ I

I'&gt;U T \\/HAT WAS TffAT
YOU CALLE D ME
J U!&gt;T THEN ~

OKAY ? ...

Me Y, WA!&gt;H. YOU

THE WEE HOU~~.

tLATMELt

sr. At. 1
North of Chester, 0 .
Phone 985-4202
6 :24-1 mo. pd

Now arrange the ctrcied letters to
form the surprise answer , as sug·
gested by the above cartoon.

Prlntanswerhere: "(

27320 Montgom e r'f' Rd
Lan{! Sv llt ll!. Oh10
6U ·t69-414.5 Evtnlng s
2 ,M ill'S E,Ht of Wll k• svi ll •
S U PEit
GOOSE ST OCK
TRAIL E R NOW AVA I L A IS L E
~

5 t mo

AWNINUM
&amp; VINYL SIDING
BY
J&amp;L INSULATION

I XI I

r r XXX)

THIS IS T~E&gt;... I'M

I SAID, I'M

1\11$ IS "1\1!:' CJPE;AATOR ...

~I~ f'I1T~ ... ST~ I~

~BC9r' -:;rcu MY

I CAtJ H5AR '{oug
~Rf«.TL.Y

PITTSWRbH,,

Wf&gt;J.l£T... WIREO MB f500!

WIRB MG

•i

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING

J

!
!

E~PERIENCED

Radiat9r·~
Service ~
or

l

e

Hours Y· l M . , W., F.
01her limes by l-Ini-

i

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

UTTLE ORPHAN AMMIE--ODD OR EVEN

Pomeroy, 0 .

CALL 992-7544

'COUR SE, to'\~ 6EIH ' HERf MAKES
FOURl EE H .. " AVBE I CAN DO
~OME1HIH ' 10
I
EM GOOO lU CJ&lt;...

~EAH ·· · ELEVE N KIDS AND
' FI\PA" AND " MAMA" MAKES
THIRT~EH 1 WO HPER WH O'D

7-8 -1 mo,

Nllhan
Radiator soeCioJ isi

Smith Nelson
Motors, Inc.
Ph . 992 -2174

J&amp;L

l'49 ·2862-949· 2160

· Pomeroy

d

S·tf c

Real Estate for Sale

Real Estate for Sale

REAl ESTATE loons. Purchase
and refinance. 30 year terms,
VA . No money down (eligible
veterans) , FHA ~ As low as 3
per cent down (non-veteran•) lreland Mortgage Co .. n E.
State . Athens 614 -592-3031 .

HOUSE FOR sol•. 5 roomt and
both. May be seen at 206 But·
ternut Ave ., Pomeroy, OH or
contact Doc Eblin .

TWO STORY 3 bedroom house .
3 lots. Now' s your cnance if
you need o house. $12 000 .
Owner w i lling lo talk .

992·2082 or 742-2328 .
REAL ESTATE · 1 ocrelot In Rlggscrest Menor, betwHn TuJ&gt;
pers Plains and Chester .

FOR

SAlE

house on corner of Fount'~ and
Hamilton . $7000 .. Wl.-'1766 .

MARK MORA
HAIR STYLIST
Fei'tturing:

men's

women's

styline.

&amp;

FOUR BEDROOMS , lull boo•

Mofn St .

992·2367

ment on If. acre
utility
building. Rutland . low th irty 's
LOT FOR sale. Horrlsonville.
Woter top dn lot , driveway ti le
1n. App. 1-45 h . frontage . On

hard

Pomeroy, 0 .
7·10-1 mo.

You Know Slim, Mom'

It's probabh.~

Business Services

NEW THREE .b edroom oi l electric home. Ohio Power - C&gt;Jer
1 acre . Eat- i n kitchen ,
gorboge
d i shwasher ,
disposal. corom lc both oreo ,
utility area . 3 colors of
carpeting. rural water . Neor
langHille . S-43 .000
Call
7~2 - 2819 after Spm . Raymond

road.

$1800 .

m -2020.

Cal l

BRADfORD, Auct ioneer. Com-

LjOU

plete Service . Phone 949· 2•87
or 9•9·2&lt;Xl0 Racine. Ohio,
Critt Bradford.

do

ElWOOD BOWERS REPAIR -

ffOUSE ... FIVE rooms , bath,
utility, in Middlepor t. Poneled
ond woll to woll carpet ing, insulated gas furnace, gorbcge
disposa l, off the str"t pork·

ing . m .70IB

367-7237 .

a&lt;

TWO BEDROOM noute. com·
pletely furnished , wall to wall
carpet, goa furnace , garage,
nice lot. 742-m3.

RESTAURANT AND bar. D"l
and 0.2 license Included. 3
acres
and house, Good
business opportunity. Coli

367-0557 .

Sweepers. toosters , iront, all
tmoll appliances . lawn moer,
ne;~~:t to Stote Highway Goro~
on Roote 7. 985-382~ -

1hen wh4 is he so
secretive?

I could wrinq her

FRUIT TREES
Large garden, old 7
room house, hot &amp; cold
water, drilled well ,
barn, 2 car garage on
small stream . Only
$17,000.
MILLFIELD - 3 Yr.

,.~-

nothinq!

Lola,
Clovia?

SEWING MACHINE Ropo lrt.
service, all makes, 992-2284 ,
The Fobric Shop, Pomeroy.
Aut~rlzed Singer Sales and
Serv ice. We sharpen Sciuors.

r

?

GOLLY, I NEYER MEANT
"'R TH IN651D GET ....--1':=
OUT OF HAND LIKE
To-110&gt; .1

COME ON "'LKS ,
Lli':T1S ALL LEAVE A ND
SEE I ~ 5ffE CAN RUN
-rn o:; PLACE

old 2 bedroom home, full

basement, balh, lol
160xl60. Easy terms if
you qualify .
BARGAIN - Will sell
stock at cost and all fix ·
tures reasonable . A
business two can run . ~
Sll,OOO.DO - 7 rooms.
bath, c ity water, nat.
gas, front porch, storm
windows at a real buy .
2'/z ACRES - In the
tub

bath, modern kitchen,
nat gas furna c e, Ohio

Power, cedar lined,
closets, parquet floor in

the bedroom . Ask ing
$27,500.
NEW LISTING 3
bedrooms,
bath
(ceramic tile), modern
equipped
kitchen ,
natural gas furnace,
carpet tng and a 3 room
apt. wi1h bath, garage,
and corner lot

' near Rt. 7.
Want $30,000.
LIST WITH US AND GO
WtTff
YOUR
REGULAR ROUTINE
AND LEAVE THE
SELLING TO US. CALL
992-3325.
VIRGIL &amp; GORDON,
REALTORS, HELEN
AND SUE, ASSOCIATE
REAL TORS.

__.
Housing ""-·
. .-..: !Head uart-?rs ...

R. Hatfield Block Hoe Service,

Rutland. Ohio . Pone 742-2008.

NEW LISTING -

plete Service . Phone992-2.478.

AUTOMOBilE INSURANCE
been cancelled? lost your
110

Acres, about 30 tillable ,

SO pasture, bal wooded
All fenced . Free gas

Pond . $31,000.00.
NEW LISTING - Lave·
ly 4 bedroom home, 2
baths. Music room, sewtog

room,
heat. Full

Lots

of

N .G . F .A .
basement.

remodel i ng .

$28,500.00.
2 FAMILY UNIT A!ways rented, 1 has 3
BRs &amp; bath, 1 has I BR
&amp; bath, porches, basement. 513,000.00.
ABOUT V. ACRE water, power &amp; gas.
Ideal

for

trailer.

home or
In
town

$3,000.00.
.
LOCATED ON STATE
RT . Now has gos
. pumps and grocery.
Almost new building
40x60 with lots of fron tage . $55,000 .00 cmake
offer I.
DOUBLE LEVEL LOT
- Older home has 3
bedrooms, lots of
remodeling ,

porches,

storage bldg. E xcellent
ne i ghborhood .
$20,000.00.
THINKING OF SELL ·
lNG?- Our listings are
almost ·depleted by
heavy demand
for
houses. LET US SELL
YOURS AT ONCE.
Henry E. Cletend Sr.
Henry E. Clefend Jr.
992-2259 992-6191 992·2548

operators

license?

Phone

992-21A3.
E-C ElECTRICAL Cootroctor
serving Ohio Valley region.
Sl• days a week , 24 hourt ser·
vice . Emergency calls. Coli

882-2952 or 882-3454 .
HOWERY AND MARTIN Excoveting , septic tystems ,
doz.er, backhoe. Rt . 143.
Phon• I (614) 698-7331 or

742-2593.
IN STOCK for immedh::lfe
delivery: various sizes of pool
klt1 . Do-lt- yourself or let us
install for you. 0. Bumgardner

BARNE Y

HOW COME
I GOT DISH ·

PAN HANDS

I GOT ME A
DISH WASHER
AN' 'IOU DON'T

GLORY BE!!
WHEN DID 'IE

DIDN'T--·
I MARRIED IT
I

BUY THAT?

for

appl., 992-2S$3.

Real Estate for Sale
3 1/J acres In Pomeroy . SEclud-

ed wooded"roa an top al hill.
Overlooks river . Water, elec-

lrlc

ovallablo .

992-3886.

North East

Pass
Pass

3 NT

Pass

South
2 NT
Pass

$7900 .

I
i

'(ou hold:
7-ID-B
• Q75
Opening l e ad : + 10
• A K 10 8 4
I
• Q7
+Q~2
A Michtgan reader asks
what we rebid after partner
By Oswald Jacoby
responds one spade to our
aod Alan Sootag
one-heart opening.
This is a very close prol&gt;A, Wisconsin reader sent
us today's hand with these lem . Our preference is for an
comments : "I made what I immediate . ra1se to two
c onsider the automatic lead spades but we would not
of the ten of spades against really criticize a one-noSouth's three-notrump con- trump rebid. We definitely
tract. It certainly was a safe would not rebid two hearts .
lead. Declarer now pro- ( NE WSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN . )
c eeded to make four
(Do you have a question for
notrump.· My partner claims
that I should have opened the e&gt;perts? Write " Ask the
my fourth-best heart. This Expe;ts, '· care of this newspa·
per. Individual questions will
lead would have led to defeat
be answered 1f accompanied
of the contract assuming bf stamped, self-addressed
that my partner would lead enveloPes. rhe most interesta heart back after taking his ing questions will be used in
ace of clubs . I have always thJS column and will receive
been taught not to lead from copies of JACOBY MODERN. )
a tenace into a notrump

__I

4 Wapiti

1 Paired off
I Eucharist
plate
11 Nimble
12 In unison
13 Playful
trick
15 Vital
statistic
I&amp; Coddle
17 Stripling
18 " The
Balcony"
playwright
20 Fashion
boutique
23 Stint
27 Exude
28 Festal
29 Fragrant
wood
31 Disincline

5 Grow complex
&amp; Light color
7 Rowan tree
8 Drudgery
9 Sicilian
city
10 Require
· 14 Longing
I8 Bribed
19 Bengal
feline
20 Just a - !
21 Frenclunan 's
soul
22 Cover
24 Floor
covering
25 - du
Diable

Yesterday's Answer
26 Paving
38 Zest
substance
39 Brazilian
30 Revolve · '
animal
31 Make
merry with
33Gained
34 Regarding
35 Sharpen

40 Steady
customer

36 "Victory"

42 Love
game's
barrier

heroine

43 Femme

word
2Expectam hr.~-4--~4-3 Prong

-

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's

ADD ONS and romodollng ,

to coli

West

We 'think that our correspondent has been taught
incorrectly .
_
The man who sits on a
park bench never falls down,
but he never gets anywhere.
This West hand cries out for
a heart lead. Sometimes it
will cost the leader a ' trick.
On lots of occasions it will
break even. But once in a
while as with today's layout
it will pay real dividends .
The difference between
game and no game with both
sides vulnerable is 700 points
I plus . On~ 700 point swing
I will pay off a lot of 30-point
' ·overtricks.

I Nursery

Racine, OH .

and

you

AN' YOU DON'T?

new houtes ond repair work .

formati on

do

poet

Call Guy Neigler. 949-25011 ,

992-7314 .
CARPET ClEANING during
weok of J~ly 20oh. for In·

What

48 Eared
47 "Enigma

Saleo,lnc , 992-5724.
NEIGlER CONSTRUCTION for

guHer work, down tpouh ,
some concrete work, walks
a·n d
driveways
(free
, ettlmate). V.C. Voung Ill ,
Racine, OH . 9-49-2748 ond

contract.

32 High place b--+-~.J.----l-----11
34 Piercing
tool
37 HiUy spot
38 Style of
cross
U Antics
'u Principle
45 Italian

PUlliNS EXCAVATING. Com·
608 E .
MAIN
PnMIO.ROY . O .

10 4

Vulnerable : Both
D e aler: South

ACROSS

lovely neck!

about

E)(CAVATING . dozer , loader
and backhoe work : dump
truckt and lo- boys for ntr•.
wl l! haul fill dir t, top soil,
limestone and gravel. Call lob
or Rover Jeffers. day phone
992· 7089 ,
ni ght
ph one

OBJECT

by THOMAS JOSEPH

backhoe ond ditcher. Charles

216, E. Second StrHt

BUTTER

~t)Ja.f." t!l"

992-3525 0&lt; 992-5232 .
EXCAVATING , do,., ,

991-3l25

L~,:!,:f~

1ntroduces-

perms.
,
Coli lor eppl. or wofk ln .

742-7754

woods . 4 rooms,

Mick's
Barber &amp;
Style Center

FOUR BEDROOM house. 2
baths, in letart Falls , Oh to.
Partially carpeted on 2 acres
level ground. 247·3663 .

Phone 985·3929 and 985-4129 .

HOUSE FOR sale near Meigs
Mines. 7•2 -2228.

Cellulosic (wood fiber)
Therm•l insul•tlon
Sove 30 pel. to 50 pel.
on heollnt cost
Ekperlenct end
fully Insured
FnHI Est.
Coli "2·1771
5·17·1 mo.

Middl~rl ,

In

• A6

+K J

_

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE

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

SOUTH
+ AKQ2
• I&lt; J 10

.l

107 Sycomore IRur)

H. L Writesel
. Roofing

NORTH
7-10-A
• J7
• 863
• K J 74
• Q96 2
EAST
WEST
• 6~ 43
• 10 9 8
• 97
• AQ542
• Q 10 8 2
• 9~ 3
+A 8 3
• 7~

-'

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES. INC.

'

WAKEN

Answer· H ow the jockey had to ride after he put hi s
o wn shirt on the horse- BAREBACK

think?"

FIC.GER 'mAT'S LUCKY .'

s m.11te sl Heater Cart'

Jumbles. CASTE

- - - -- - ,

HOR N LOSER

GREG ROUSH
Phone 992-7583
992-2282
7-5-1 MO.

6·6· 1 mo .

6-lA-2 mo .

~ro m ttl • ,tar.gesl. . Truck
8UIId Ol•r R.ld i.ltor

I

BRIDGE

ment.

CALL
992-2'772

Call for • Free' Siding
Estimate, 949-2801 or
949·2860. No Sunday

calls .

Yesterda ys

Construction
Extensive Remodeling

TRAILER SALES

Large Stock
Mgr.
Phone ??2·2181

CAPTAIN EASY

New Home

·Free Estimate

~unts
Jack w. Carsey

USED GARDEN
TRACTORS
'AND
RIDING .MOWERS

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

.

pets .

LOT FOR one mobile home,
Restrictions. See Giodo, co
Shammy's, Pomeroy, OH

77 E .

Roger Hysell
Garage

s25 to sso
r

IRElAND
MORTGAG£
CO.
State, Athens

I I t

(Answers tomorrow)

Hotpoint
Air Conditioners

'FURN . APT ., 3 rm. ond baoh.
children ,

187 ASH' ST.
MIDDLEPORT
992-3100 6-6 I mo.

Hatfield.

742-2228.

843-2061.

No

Refinance
30 Year Terms
A - No money down
(eligible veterans)
FHA- AS low as 3%
down (non -veterans)

985-4175.
Mobile Homes Sale's

and

tn

10

TILLIS

Real Estate Loans
Purcha s e

Civil
Mechanical
Archetectura I
Lavouts

with block markings . Will be
large dogs- Keitn Ridenour .

or 992-3129 .

949-2253 .

QUALITY
DRAFTING
SERVICES

TEN PUPPIES . 4 black , 6 while

wagon . $1 000' Also 3 acres of
ground In country. $5000.

COMMUNITY
William and Mary wer e
crowned king and queen of
England in 1689.

PAINTING AND sandblasting .
Free estimates. Caii9.C9-2686.

Unscramble these f~ur Jumble's,
one lener to each square, to form
lour ordinary words

Business Services

367·7101.

Television
Viewing

~

BISSA

M1ddleport-Poemroy orao .
Coli for
free estimate .

COAl,

ft If\}~ m'\l ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAIIIE
\!:/ ~~ ® byHenri.ArnoldandBoblee

'

the ]Sentinel Classifieds

10

Services Offered

shift. bperienced MlT (A.SCP)
- \' S .
t. Or equ ivalent. Excellent sorory
15 Words. or Und er
A U DRE Y
K A TH L EEN
and fringe benefits. Shift dif·
MEIGS CO . Fish and Game
l'ouh
Chargt•
QUE E N,
ferentoi L Contact: Personnel
I dar
I 00
I Z!1
club regular meeting. Shade
D
ef
en
dan
t.
Office, Pleasant Volley
2 da\15
I~
I 00
Volley Club House, Fri ., 13th.
N o . 17128
Hospital.
Volley
Dn"Ve,
Point
'
Jda)os
6-8.
•
1 Rfl
2 :!5
NOTICE
BY
6 d8)'5
3.00
3 7~
Pleasant, WV . 25550. Phone
PUBLICATION
30H7H340. An Equal OpYO L:J are hereby nOI1 f 1Cd
F.arh " 'Otd OW'r thf• rn1nunum
portunity Employer.
that you have be en named
Lost and Found
15 "' onl:i 15 4 cents per "ont Jlet
a de f en d ant in a legal
day Ads runmn~ oth&lt;'r ttum t'On·
NEEDED CARRIERS FOR THE
lOST: BlACK rimmed glosses .
t1CI10n
cn
t
•tlcd
woodrow
st'fUll\'l' day s lo'! lll bt• c har~l'1 1 :JI
POMEROY AND SYRACUSE
Queen ,
Pla•nl• l f ,
vs
' Business District in Mid·
the 1 dll)' rate
AREAS. CAll 992-2156 BETAudrey Kathl een Qu een .
dleport. Reward . 992-2639 .
endant
Th1s
tt
c
t•on
has
WEEN
9:00
and
5:00
.
De
f
In mcmor}'. t.ard uf Thank.~
lOST: 2 fox hounds, femole ,
been
ass1
9ncd
Case
No
.
1 SUMMER JOBS avallablo.
find Obituary 6 &lt;'cnls per word,
black ond white, mole, white
172 18 and •s pcnd•ng •n the
$.1 00 m1mm um Cash in miAbove overage earning~ for
Court o f Common P l eas at
ton spots. Name on collar .
\'Hrltt'
Meig s Cou tny , Pome r oy ,
summer work . Be neat. Cor
Emory Gordon, If found ,
OhtO &gt;l5769
helpfu l.
304 -675-6066 .
phone R'E Gordon 367-7112
Mnblll' Home sales and Vanl
The oo tect of the com
EquoiEmployment Opportunl suit-s are ijLTt'pled on!} wllh
Cheshire, OH .
pla1nt 1S the obta inmg of a
ly .
rn.sh wi th order 25 cent rha rgt'
d1vorc e and
the
t er
lOST ' IRISH SETTER . In lhe
for a(t'i ra rryt n ~ Bo:r Number In
· mina t •on of a marriage
RN OR LPN . Parr time position
Solem Centerorea. 742-21-46 .
Carl' ol TheScnt1nd
contra c t
betw E' en
the • otters opportunity to work in
par t •es and the se ttlement
community health agency proThe Publlsht'r resen•t•s the
ot l he pr opert y r igh t s o f th e
viding family planning ser·
rif!,hl to edJl or rejt"rt an) ads
pMI•es and the cus t ody p f
Wanted to Buy
dt•l'mcd
objf.'l'honaL T hl'
vices
, information and educothe m.nor child r en
Publishe r 1-'111 no! be resport-.Jblt•
tion
,
with
emphasis
on
You are reQui r ed to
CHIP WOOD. Poles max
for more than one tncor n ·d m·
pr eventive
health
care
an swe r
th e comp l a• nl
dtametar 10" on largest and .
st&gt;rt10n
teaching. Traming on the job .S12 per lon . Bundled olab. $10
within 28 days a ft er the las t
Phone 99'2·2156
publi c ation ot th1s n ottce ,
is prO'Vided, continuing educaper ton . Delivered to Onio
Whi Ch Will be puQ,I iShe d
tion encouraged. Meigs Co.
Pollet Co., Rt. 2, Pomeroy .
on ce eac h wee k t or Stx
resident with flexibility of
992-2689.
SU CCCS SIV€ wee k S The las !
available hours is needed. For
pub f •Git ton wil l be made on
OlD FURNITURE, ice boxes ,
more Information colt Planned
Augus t 7 , 1979 , and th e 28
brau beds, iron beds, desks
Parentnood office 992-5912
days f o r a n swer
w il l
ate ., complete households.
weekdays 8--4 . An equal opcom mcnce on that da t e
Write M .D. Miller, Rt. 4.
In case of your f a ilur e to
portunity employer _
answer
or
otherw ise
Pomeroy or call992-7760.
respond as requ. r ed by th e
WANT
TO buy: old 45 and 78
Oh10
Ru l es
Of
C1v il
IN THE
Procedur e,
the
fi n a l
COMMON PLEAS COURT phonogropn records. Call
992-6370 or Contact Martin
hear•ng on this matte r wi ll
OF MEIGS COUNTY ,
Monda\·
behe ld after the ex p 1r a t to n
OHIO
Furniture.
Noon on SJiiUrday
of 28 days afte r the l as t day
EONA MAE REEVES
OLD
COINS, pocket wo1ches ,
of publica t1 on of th1s not1ce
LEONARD
R:OSS
Tuesduy
or as soon the r ea ft er
ca n
BOR l NG ,
class rtngs , wedding bands.
thru Fnd &lt;:~y
b e scheduled by the Court
Plainf1ff s,
diamonds. Gold or silver . Call
4P.M
J. A . WOmsley , 7~2-2331.
tlw llil} before pu blii':Jt ion
L ar r v
~pencer.
FLORA MAY REEVES
Cl er k of Cou rt
D I XON , ET AL .,
Sund;n
of Meig s County,
Def endants .
Yard Sale
4PMOhi o
Case No 16.66 9
f'n day &lt;1fternoon
- LEGAL NOTICE YARD SALE ot James Swain's
( 7) J, 10, 17. 7d , 3 1, (8) 7, 6f c
In pursua n ce of an or der on CR 28 abo"Ve Easter-n High
of sal e in p a r l1f1 0n fr om School. July 13 and 14 from 9
sa id Court t o m e direc ted, 1
w ill off er f or sal e, at pu bl ic to? herything imaginable.
au ctiOn , at th e door o f 1t1e YARD SALE . Thurs and Fri.
Co urthou se· in th e Village of June 12 and 13. lots of nice
Pom eroy , Meigs Coun t y ,
Oh1 0, on the 14t h day of clothing, lamps, fisher Price
LEGAL NOTICE
Wednesday , July 11
Jut.,. , 197 9, a t 10 00 AM , toys and othitr Items . At Don
THE CITIZENS
t he f oll owi n g desc r ibed Hanning's. Bradbury Rd . Rain
NATIONAL BANI&lt;
OF MIDDLEPORT
rea l es ta te si tuated •n the cancels.
Middl epo r t , Ohio
Cou nt y of Me1gs , State of
Oh1 0, Tow nShip Of Sc•pio , YARD SALE . Thurs ., Fri. ond
•ce 1S her eby g•ven
Bernice Bede Osol thaNot, tpursuant
a n d mo r e p art 1cuiar ty Sot. at lester Lathey' s house
to c all of it s
next to churcn in Bradbury.
descr•bed as fol lows ·
directo r s.
a
spec1 al
mee t 1n g
of
t he
PARVEL NO .1: Bemg 111 Rain cancels.
th e Southeast qua r te r o f
sha r e t1o l ders
ol The
Sec t ion No 73. Tow n No 7, RORCH SAlE . 277 Main. Mid·
C.t,zens Na l •onal Ba nk o f
Ra ng e N o . 14, o f the 0 c P , dleport. Fri till ? 9am ·3pm.
Midd lepor t Wil l behe ld a t
and bounded as follows
•Is bank•ng house at 97 N .
Good mercnondise.
Beginni ng 30 r ods Sou th of
Second Avenue , . n t he
the North east corne r o f YARD SALE. Wod., Thurs., Fri
Villilae o f Midd leoort on
Tu esday . Ju ly 24, 1979 at 3
sa-• d qua rt er Section and 46 307 Spring Ave Rain or shine .
July 11 . 1979
ro ds and 17 l ink s wes t of the
P M , for the pu rpose o f
easl line o f said Qua rt er MISC YARD sale, 6th St. ,
Th•s com mg year an opportune -considert n g and de t er
Sec I •on , thence ( 1) Wes t 23 Syracuse. Tues and Wed . 9-• .
s•tuatton may develop where m m1ng by vo te w h et he r an
rod
s ancl 3 h n k S, t 2J Sou th" McCoy .
agreement
to
merg
e
th
e
yo u' ll be ca ll ed on to manage
34 rod s and 16 l1n ~s (3)
sa1d bank a nd Th e Centr a l
sorne thm g for ano th er . and T ur si Co m pany, N at ion a l
Eas t 23 rods an d 3 l ink s, ( 4 )
you'll be able to do you rself a ASSOC I(d iOn , loca t ed In 1he
North 34 r ods and 16 tm~ s
Pets for Sale
lol of good 111 th e pro cess Be Cily of Cincinna t i, St a te o f
l o the pl ace or beg inn ing ,
alert lor soun d jo tn t ventu res
con tami ng l=ive (5 ) ac r eS , HOOF HOLLOW, English ond
Ohio, unde r the prov1S1 on s
Wl ltl rtgh l o f way tram thi s Western .
CANCER (June- 21-July 22) Nor· a t th e taws of the un.ted
Saddles
ond
land through la nds now harness. Hones and ponies
malty you 're qu rte astut e in St a tes, sh all be ra t if ied an d
owned by Wm . C. Reeves Ruoh Reeves . 614-69B-3290
matters' re lating to dollar s an d co nf ir med , subjec t to the
and Lona Reeves t o t he
cen ts, but today thts cou ld be app r ov a l o f t he Cam p
Barding &amp; Riding lessons and
publ•c h•ghway
t r ol l er ol the Cu rr ency ,
your maror weakness Be dou- Washi n gton , D C, a n d f or
Horse Core products .
PARCEL
NO .
2:
bly ca ut1ous How you can get the purpose ot vo t mg upo n
Beg 1nn1ng 1n t he line be
RISING STAR Kennel. Booralong wilh other s•gns rs one of any ot h er matters '"
tween Sec t ion N o. Twenty
the secti ons you 11 en roy m ci dental to the pr o posed
th r ee ('23 1 and Seventeen ding. Coll367-0292.
( 17)
a t the Southwes t A.KC REG . Doberman Pinscher
your new Astro-G ra ph l ett er merger of the two ba nk s A
co rn er o r a lo t of land pups for sale . EKcallent
c opy o f the a f oresai d
that begins with you r bir thday
fo r mer l y d ee d ed by Jesse bloodlines . Hayti and
Mat I $1 for each to As tra-G raph, agr ee n•ent. e)(ecute d by a
Page to Joh n Page , th en ce
P.O Box 489. Aad10 C1 ty S ta- mato r ily o f the d •r eCtors o f
East Twe nt y one ro ds t o Camelot, snow quality. Work·
of the t wo banks,
tion . NY 10019 Be su re to each
the East S1 d e of the Athe n s od, had shoOs. 1-304-675-1863.
prov1d1n g l or th e merge r ,
spe cty btr lh t1me
and Ga ll!po l ,s road to the DOG OBEOIANCE claases for·
is on file at 1t1e bank and
LEO (July 23-Aug 22) Situ a- may be mspec ted dur1 ng
Wes t l ine o f a lot o f land
tions mav develop 111 a umqu e bus•ne ss hou r s
form er l y deed ed bY Jesse ming now. 367-0550.
Page to Samue l P a ge ,
manner today and yo u may hnd
Haro ld E H ubbard
thence Sou t h on sa 1d fine
Prcs1den t
yourse lf betng press ured to
Auto Sales
i:ln d along the Eas t S1 de ot
make so me c o n cessions (61 76 (7 1 ], 10, 17 , .1tc
he
r
oad
to
t
he
Nort
heas
t
l
agatnst your best Interes ts Be
1974 VEGA HATCHBACK , call
co r ner of a lot ot land
l•rm
dee ded by me to Ma rt 1n 303-675- 1501 or 305-675-2488
VIRGO (Aug . 23- Sept 22) T a ~e
Rupc , thence West abou t or JO.t-675-1553 .
1
care of -yo ur duttes and res pon.-.
tw enty one rods to the line
1972 AUDI 100 4-opeed. 4 cyl.
betw een sec t ions twenty
sibllit1es as they arise todaY .
LEGAL NOTICE
Front whea l drtva . $(000.
th r ee and
seventeen ,
Sweepmg thtngs under the rug
NOTICE OF
the nce Nort h along said 992-5785 .
wdl cause you problems later
PROPOSED MERGER
l ine to the place o f
LIBRA (Sept . 23-0ct. 23) NorNoh ce _Js he r eby g1ven
1973 CADillAC ElDORADO .
beg,nn•ng , con tain ing some
mally -yo u condu ct yourse lf ad- Ill a t app l icallon has be en
Excellent condition . $1750 .
two
ac
r
es
,
mo
r
e
or
less
,
m•rabty soc•at ly. bu t today . un- made to th e Comp tr oller o f
Con be seen ot 123 Union A\le .
and is a par t of Section s No
less you rever-y careful . yo ur ~ e (Cu r re n c y , Washi ng ton ,
Seventeen ( 17) , Town (7), Call 992-3990.
tact co uld desert you and
202 19 for h iS c~ n sent
Ra nge Number Fourt een
~ t o a mer ger o f The c ,t ,zen s
1968 DODGE CORONET . Body
( 14 ) 1n the Ohio Company 's
cause you some embarrass- Nii iiOnal Bank of Mi d
Is In good condition. NI!Htds
Pu r chase
dteport, Midd lep or t , Ohio
ment
PARCEL
NO .
J·
work on Irons and front end .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov . 22) Be and T he Cen tr al Tru st
Beg1 nn mg f h 1rl y r ods Sou th $400. 11-43-2542.
N a t to n a 1
con tent w1 th who '( O U are and Compa n y ,
fr om the North Eas t co rn er
"Nhal you have today Env-ying A5~ocia t 10 n , Ci n c in n a t 1,
i97B FORD F·250. ..... . new
of the Sou th East quart er of
o111ers bec au se you feel they O h 10 .
tires, A.C.. tool box , cob
Sec t Jon No T went v -thr ee,
mayhavemore•sonlyawas te
The a p p t •c~ 1 1on w a s
t own
seven,
Range
ligMs . 245-5017 .
ol mental energy
accep ted fo r. f1l 1n g Ju n e 6,
Fo urt ee n o f t he Oh10
19 79
1973 VW BEETlE. 949-2490.
Compan y 's
Pu r chase .
SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23-Dec.
I I IS cont em plat ed th at
th ence Wes t seve nt y rods
21) Yourmemor-ymayno t beup a ll
o f fices
of
t he
1975 CHBV . MONZA. P.B..
l t1encc So u th about lh tr t y
~o par today . so !I tmpo rt an t above 1named
bank s w ill
P.S., A.C.. low mileage. e:w·
rods to L S Townsend's
facts or da ta are passed on to continue to be op er at ed
cellent condition . $2250 .
la nd , the n ce Eas t seven t h
you . JOt the rnforrnat•on down
Thi s n ot ice is p ubl iShed
949-2723.
rods to th e East tine ot sa1 d
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 -Jan . 19) pur suant to sec t ion 18 (c) of
Section t wen t y -t hree ,
Accept no ltnanctal adv tce to- the Fe d er al Depos. t I n
1969 VW. 72',000 miles. Good
thence Nor t h along sa1d
day from persons who lack th e surance Act a_nd Pa rt 5 o f
running condition . $550 or
East l •ne th1 r ty r od s to the
e•pertise to guide you wtsely The Reg u lat•ons of the
beat offer . 992 - 7~1 .
place of bc gi nn•ng , con
· Comptrol l er
of
th e
ta m.ng tlnr t een and one
Poor counsel cou ta cust you a Curr en cy ( 12 CF R 5)
1978 BUICK RIVIERA looded
e•gllU1 acres mo r e or tess
pre!l y penny .
The C• t 1ze n s
with eldros . Still under worsave and ex cept six acr es
AQUARIUS(Jan . 20-Feb . 19) 8e
Nat•onal Ban k
ranly . Call 614-667-3627 o.off the wes t S1d e of sa 1d
o f M1d d te por t
your o wn person loday . Instead
trac
t
ot
la
nd
,
now
owned
667-3759.
of letting others make ma1or
Mi ddlepor t,O h io
and by A M Reeve s
dec•stons for you . They may be
TRANS AM, 1976. 400 engine.
PARCEL NO . 4 : A lso,
The
Cen t ra l Tru st
look•ng ou t for then 1nterests
$3'150. 992-5032.
an o!Jf_er lot or pa r ce l o f
Company, N .A
ra ther than ours
l an d , begi n n in g a t fh e
C•nc• nn ati, Oh1 o
PISCES (Feb. 2D-March 20) This ( 6 ) 26 , ( 7 ) 3, 10, 17 , 24, 26 , 6
So uth eas t cor n er of th e
For Rent
1s not an especiall y good day to IC
abov e d esc r ibed lot . then ce
r.as t abo ut ~e\len t c:en rC" r1 !'1 :
request favors . even fr om perCOUNTRY MOBilE Home Park·.
Or to tt1e St a t e ro ad as now
son you've helped in t he past
Route 33, north._of Pomeroy.
tr ave l ed ,
thence
Nor
Paddle your own car&lt;oe
Lorge loh. Call992-7479.
thw
ar
dl
y
a
long
Stat
e
Road
ARIES (March 21 -Aprrl 19) Ap ·
abo
ut
thir
t
y
-one
rods
an
d
3
AND 4 RM furnished and unNapoleon Bo11aparte abpr oach what you do opt tmlsti·
f 1fleen and on e ha lf links or
furnished
aph.
Phone
call y toda-y . but by the sarne dicated as emperor of t o Qio l umbia Downi n g's
992-5434 .
token don ' t butld your hopes France in 1814.
South 11ne ; thence West
on unrealistic premises . Delu illong sa1d D own ing's Sou th
FURNISHED APT . sulfoble for 3
tme abou t t wen t y r ods , or
SIOn s lead to disappoin tm ents.
or • construction workers .
to 111e Eas t l in e o f said
TAURUS (April 20-Moy 101
Aller 5pm call 992-5434 ,
sec t ion t wen t y t hree ;
Beware ot a tendency today to
The Philippine Islands thence
992-3129, arm-5914 .
Sou
th
along
sa1d
tr eat 1mponan t challenges too were transferred from
East 11ne a b ou t thir ty rod5
TWO BEDROOM furnished apt.
llgt'ltly Miscalc ulations co uld
Spain to the United States to the pl ace at beginning
992-3129 , 992-5434 ,
or
be y0u1 downfall
' con t aining th r ee ac r es and
992-5914.
GEMINI (Moy 21 -June ZO) II in 1899.
s•xty tour r ods. betrlQ so
could be a btl dilftcul t to kee p
much o f Section sevent een .
ONE BEDROOM opts . Contact
in t own s eve n , rang e
secrets today because ol yo ur
Village Manor , 992· 77fJT .
f ou r t een
1n
t he
Oh10
grega nous personali ty Try no t
Company
'
s
Purchase
Noah
Webster
published
12x60 2 bedroom mobile home
to blurt out some thing that' s
TJ",e aTllo unl conveye d by
In Racine area. 992·5858 .
beSt k.eot to your sell
his first dictionary in 1828.
1111S deed b ei nq ten ac r es
1NEWSPA.PER ENTERPRISE ASS N !
UNFURN. 5 roarh apl . In Midand C1() l1ty t ou i rods mor e
dleport. 992-5434 or 992-3129 .
or IL• ss

Handel's " Messiah" had
its world premiere m
Dublin in 1742.

•

Notices

Help Wanted

OF COMMON PLEAS

l&gt;ICI&lt; TRACY

Is
PEANUTS

HE~. SALL'(, THI5 15

PePPERMINT PATW... LET
ME TALK TO CI1UCK ...

~' 11 '' 11w I'MTOO BVS'i
'-_..:.::.;...-.:;f':16HT NOW ...

I'MMOVING M~ THIN65
INTO HIS ROOM ...

how
AXVDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

to work

it :

One letter simply stands for ano\her. In this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single tellers,
apostrophes, lhe length and lormalion of the words are all
hint s. Each day the code letters are different.
CRYPTOQUOTES
JINU
IS
IWG
GZLBANUN
LQR
N·IEAIBICANUN
ULBP
LKIWU
L
0 I I G
J L .Q
L N
AS
T Z
Y Z G Z
LQ
I E U I 0 WN
.I G
L Q
L B B A C L U I G.
CABKZGU
P .
ETZNUZGUIQ
Yesterday's Cryploqaole: A FANATIC IS A MAN THAT DOES
WHAT HE THINKS THE LORD WOULD DO IF HE KNEW
THE FACTS OF THE CASE. - FINLEY PETER DUNNE
~

1979 King Features

SvnQtc~e,

Inc

TUESDAY,JULY10,1979 .
7:00- Cro ss -Wlts 3; Newlywed
Game 6, 13; Please Stand By 8;
News 10; Love American Style
15; Ge l Smart 17: Dick Cavett
20,33.
7: 30--Hollywood Squares 3; Candid
Camera 6; Gong Show 8; Price Is
Right 10; Special Place lor
Special People lS; Baseball 17;
MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20,33.
8:00-Runaways 3, 15 ; Happy Days
6,13; Paper . Chase 8,10; Austin
City Limits 20: City Notebook 33.
8:31l-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13; Job
·
Corps: New Direction 33.
9:00-PIIof "Gossip" 3,15; Three's
Company 6, 13 ; Movie "Tell Me
That You Love Me, Ju.n le Moon"
8, 10; Great Performances 33;
Flatbush 20 .
9: 31l-N BC News Special 3, 15; Tax!
6, 13 ,
I
10:00-ABC News Closeup 6,13;
America 17; News 20.
II : 00- News 3, 6,8, 10, 13 ,15; New
Soupy Sales 17; Book Beat 33.
II :31l-Johnny Carson 3, 15 ; Movie "I
Want Her Dead" 13; Movie "Ten
Litt le Indians" 6; Pan American
Games 8; ABC News 33 ; Movie
" The · Bird with the Crystof
Plumage" 17.
11 :45-Barnaby Jones 8; 12 :55. Movie "Million Dollar Mer -

maid" 8.
I :00-Tomorrow 3; News 15; I :3Q-Baseball 17.
1: 35- News 13; 4 ·DO-News 17 ; •
4 :21l-12 O' Clock High 17.
WEDNESDAY, JULY 11,1979
5: 2Q--World ot Lorge 17; • 5:45-Form Report 13; 5:50-PTL Club
13; 5:55-Summer Semester 10.
6:00-700 Club B; PTL Club lS;
6 : lQ--News
17;
6: 25Chrlslopher Closeup ·10.
6: 30--Drognet 17; 6:45-Mornlng
Report 3; 6 :5Q--Good Morning,
Wesl VIrginia 13; 6 :55-Chuck
While REports 10; News 13 . .
7:00-Today 3,15; Good Morning
America 6,13;
Wednesday
Morning 8; Schoolles 10; Three
Stooges-Little Rascols 17.
7: 15-A.M. Weother 33; 7:30-Famlly Affair 10; Lilias Yoga &amp;
You 33.
~ : GO-Capt. Kangaroo 8,10; Lesste
17: Sesame St . 33 .
8 :30--Romper Room 17; 9: 00-Bob
Breun 3; Phil Donehue 13, 15; Big
Valley 6 ; Porky Pig &amp; Friends&amp;;
Love of Life 10; Lucy Show 17;
Biography 33.
9:30--Sanford &amp; Son 8; Hogen's
Heroes 10; Green Acres 17.
lO :ClO-Card Shorks 3, 15; Edge of
Nlghl6; Allin The Family 8,10;
Dating Game 13: Movie "This
Happy Feeling" 17; Exploring
the Crofts 33 .
10 :3Q--All Star Secrets 3, 15; $20,000
Pyremld 13; Andy Griffith 6;
Whew! 8,10; Daniel Fosler, M.D.
33 .
.
10 :55-o-CBS News 8; House Call 10.
II :QO-'Hlgh Rollers 3,15; Price Is
Right 8,10; Blogrophy 33 .
11 : 30-Wheel of Fortune 3,15;
Family Feud 6,13; 11:55--News
17.
12 :00-Newscenter 3; News 6,10;
Password 15; Midday Megezlne
13; Love Amerlcen Style 17.
12 :3Q--Ryen's Hope 6, 13; Search for
Tomorrow 8,10; Not For Women
Only 15; Movie "To -Commit a
Murder" 17; MacNeil-Lehrer
Re[XIrt 33.
1.00-Dayso!Our Lives 3.15; All Mv
Children 6,13; News 8; Young &amp;
the Restless 10: Wotch Your
Mouth 33 .
1 :3Q--As The World Turns 8,10; Two
Ronnles 33.
2:00-Doctors 3,15; One Life to Live
6,13; Over Eosy 33; 2: 25-News
17.
2:30--Another World 3, 15; Guiding
Light 8.10; I Love Lucy 17.
3:00-General Hospltol 6,13; Rebop
17: Bluegrass Ramble Picnic 33.
3:30--Mash 8; Joker's Wild 10;
Banene Sl'llts 17; Over Easy 20.
4: 00-Mister Cartoon 3; Hollywood
Squores 15; MErv Griffin 6;
Addoms Fomlly 8; Sesame St.
20,33; Six Million Dollar Man 10;
Mike Doug los 13; Fllntstonos 17.
4: 30-Lone Ranger 3; Hopan's
Heroes 8: 'Lucy Show 15; Partridge Family 17.
5:00-Bonanza 3; Beverly Hillbillies
8; Mister Rogers' Neighborhood
20,33; Gomer Pyle 10; Six Million
Dollar Man 13; Brody Bunch 15;
Slar Trek 17.
5:3Q--News 6; Petticoat Junction 8;
E lee. Co. 20; Mory Tyler Moore
10; Odd Couple 15; Doctor Who
33.
6 :00:..News 3,8,10,13,15 ; ABC News
6; Femlly Alf~lr 17; Villa Alegre
20; Studio See 33 .
6:30--NBC News 3,15; Carol Burnell·
6; CBS News 8, 10; Fother Knows
Best 17.
,7: 00-Cross-Wits 3; Newlywed
Game 6, 13; Porter Wogoner 8;
News 10: Lave American Style
15; Gel Smort 17; Dick Cavett
20,33.
7: 30--Dolly 3; Match Geme PM 6;
Muppel Show 8; The Judge 10;
Jhet's Hollywood 13; Wild
Kingdom 15; Boseball , 17;
MacNeil -Lehrer ReP&lt;Jrt 20,33.
8:00-Great American Laugh-Off
3,15; Eight Is Enough 6, 13; Never
Soy Never" 8, 10; Masterpiece
Theatre 20; All Creetures Great
&amp; Smoll 33.
B: 30-Good Times 8,10; 9:00-Charlles Angels 6,13; Movie
"Rendezvous Hotel" 8, 10; Great
Performances 33; Upstairs
Downstairs 20.
9 :31l-Sword of Justice 3,15; 10:00VegaJ 6,13; Fall of Eagles 17 ;
News 20.
10: 30--Best of GrouCiio 20; Two
Ronnles 33 .
•
ll ; Oil-Hews 3,6,8,10 ,13,15; New
Soupy Sales 17; Book Beat 33.
11 : 30--Johnny Cerson 3, 15; Pollee
Woman . 6,13; ABC News 33:
Movie" A Talent for Loving" 10;
Movie "Toll Man Riding" 17.
11 :45-Swltch 8; 12 :40--Mannlx
6,13; 12:55-Kolak 8.
1 :DO- Tomorrow 3; News 15; 1:20Baseball 17.
1 :50-News 13; 3:50--News 17;
A:lo--Movle "Blue Steel" 17;
5:1o--Dragnet 17.

)

.

�8--The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., Tuesday, July 10, 1979 ·

;~:·::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;;;:;:;:;:;:.:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;:;:;:; :;:;:;:;:;:;.;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:; :;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:; :;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::

~\I

.A rea deaths

ANNA K. HARRAH
Mrs. Anna Kathryn Harrah, 62,
former Meigs County resident, died
Monday at her home at 1860 Sara ~
Ave., Cridersville.
Mrs. Ha rrah was born in
Minersville, a daughter of the late
John Henry Aloysious and Wilhemina
Christine Grueser Mescher. She was
also preceded in death by a brother.
Surviving are her husband, Robert
Harley Harrah; a brother, Floyd
Mescher, lebanon ; a sister·in-law,
Ruth Mescher of Gambier.
Funeral services will be held at 4
p.m. Thursday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev. W. H. Perrin
officiating . Burial will be in
Minersville Cemetery.

TRAFFIC PROBLEMS are expected to remain for
a while as bridge renovation continues on the Shadle
Bridge at Point Pleasant. Higgins Erectors and Com-

Weather

pany Haulers, Inc. of Buffalo, N. Y. beg!ln repairing
the floor of the 48 year-()ld structure Monday and is
planning to continue work through September.

County Court

Partly cloudy Wednesday. Highs
Wednesday in the lower 80s . Chance
of rain 20 percent tonight and Wednesday.

Twenty-two defelldants were fined
and 18 others forfeited bonds in Meigs
County Court Monday.
Fined were Herbert A. Lamb,
Vin cent, Franklin Bolenbaugh,
Marysville, Ronald L. Pauley, Mason,
Greg A.Wallace, Stockgort, Robert A.
Paoline,
Groveport,
Ronald
E.Richards, Parkersburg, Raymond!

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Tbunday lhrougb Saturday Cbanee of showers Thursday and
Saturday and partly cloudy Friday.
Hlgha in tbe 80s aod lows in tbe 608.

.

; :;:;:;:;:;: ; :;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;~:;:;: ; :; : ;

EFFECTIVE JULY 1

INCREASED
SAVINGS RATES
SENTENCE YOUR
EARNINGS TO

PLENTY OF HARD
LABOR •••

BURNS TRANSFERRED
Paul Burns Pomeroy, who has been
a Patient ~t Veterans. Memorial
was transferred Monday to
illi. Hospital
Pleasani Valley Hospital in Point
Pleasant, W. Va. Cards may be sent
Randall, Fort Worth, Texas; Russell to room 146.
Lee, Vinton ; Mrs. Bart (Ruby ) Long,
Apple Grove; Mrs. Bonnie Wray,
MEETING CANCEU.ED
Jluntington, and Mrs. Herbert (Opal)· A special meetng of the Ladies
Dunn, Vinton.
Auxiliary of the Chester F1re
Thirty-four grand, 48 great- and Department
scheduled
for
five great1jrellt-grandchildren also Wednesday , July II , has b~en
survive.
cancelled. The next regular meeting ·
Six datJI!hters and two sons of the group will be on Aug. I, CillO
preceded him in death.
Smith, president, announced ..
Mr. Slayton was the last of his
family.
Services will be Thursday at 2 p.m.
from Barton Chapel Church, Apple
Grove, with the Rev. Elmer Geiser of· VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
ficiating and Rev. Tonuny Kinnard
Admitted-John Powell, Portland;
assisting.
Frederick Colburn, Pomeroy; Ruby
Burial will follow in the Barton· Erb, Pomeroy.
Chapel Cemetery.
Discharged-La vinta Simpson, Joan
Friends may call at the McCoy- Fetty, Denise Lambert, Mary
More Funeral Home from 2-4 p.m. Bowman Ira Joiner, Paul Burns,
and 7-9 p.m. Wednesday.
Creston Newland.

MAGGIE RoSENCRANZ
Mrs. Maggie Isadora Rosencranz,
85, Route 3, Pomeroy, died Monday at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
She was a daughter of the late,
Albert and Sarah Kaylar Huffman
and was also preceded in death by her ·
first husband, Ira Wolfe; her second
husband, Herbert Rosencranz , a son
and a daughter.
Surviving are five daughters, Lula
Pearl Preswn, Gallipolis ; Bessie
Ruth Gillespie, Hot Springs, Va .;
Alice Marie Slay, Jacksonville,Ohio ;
Virginia Irene Thomas, Pomeroy , and
Mary Edna Parker, Pomeroy; two
sons, Fred Elmer Wolfe, Gasport,
Kentucky, and Dale Edward Wolle,
Reedsville; 29 grandchildren and 32
great grandchildren. She was a
member of Johovah 's Witnesses.
Funeral services will be held at 2
p.m. Thursday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with Larry Carnahan ·
officiating. Burial will be in Chester
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home anytime.

E. Maxson, Reedsville and Mark
McGuire, Zanesville, $15 and costs
each, speeding; Douglas Burns,
Pomeroy, costs only , five days
confinement, DWI, costs, only, five
days confinement, operating under
suspension; Janice L. Davis,
Reedsville, $10 and costs, left of
center ; Max Hill,Rt. 2,Racine, $10 and
costs, unable to swp within assured
clear distance; Richard Caruthers,
·Jr., Pomeroy, $5 and costs, unsafe
vehicl!; Stanley E. Bennett, Coolville,
$15 and costs, failure to yield; Bruce
McMahon, Adrian, Mich., $150 and
JOHN SI..AYroN
costs, three days confinement, DWI;
John Slayton, 91, Vinton, died at the
Robert M. Johnson, Racine, $15 and Pike County Hospital Monday at 6
costs, failure to display plates; p.m.
Ronnie Eblin, Rutland, $15 and costs,
He was born April26, 1888, at Apple
failure to display registration; Kelly Grove, W. Va., to the late George
C.Winebrenner, Syracuse, $30 and Albert and Sarah Cox Slayton.
costs, reckless operation; Arnold E.
He was a retired farmer.
Riggs, Rutland, $25 and costs, no
He married the late Hannah Owens
cycle endorsement; Earl D.Dille, in Mason County. in 1911 .
Ripley,
costs
only, public
Survivors are three sons and three
intoxication; Paul David Mitchell, daughters : Robert O. i London, Oh.;
Langsville, six months confinement,
costs only, 75 days suspended, DWI ,
costs only, six months confinement, 75
SEEKS DIVORCE
days suspended , driving under
Shirley Herman, Middleport, filed
suspension; Kenneth E. Flower, East suit for divorce against Dale Herman •.
Liverpool, $10 and costs, defective Middleport ands Diana Reynolds,
exhaust, costs only, five days Elyria filed for support under the
confinement, DWI, $10 and costs, Reciprocal Agreement Act against
concealed weapon.
Ray Eblin, Pomeroy.
Forfeiting bonds were Betty P.,
Prater, Rt. 2, Pomeroy, $35.50, failure
Today's birthdays: Noveli•t Saul
-to yield ; Leon C. Pierce, Langsville, Bellow is 64 . Broadway composer
$35.50, unabe ID stop within assured Jerry Herman is 46. Tennis star
clear
distance;
Brent
A. Arthur Ashe is 36. Hai McRaeolthe
Bolin,Rutland, $35.50 no . cycle Kansas City Royals baseball team is
to show
endorseine,nt,
registration; $35.50
Ressiefailure
A. Shaffer,
1
Racine, Altina R.Crisp, Langsville ,
$35.50each, failure to register ; Maria
T. Griffin, Gallipolis, $39.50, failure to
register; Kenneth R. Wilt, Nevada,
$35.50, unsafe vehicle; Bernard L.
Weekley, Jr. Athens, Myrl J. Samons,
Gallipolis, Steven J . Carpenter,
Whipple,
John
E .Simonton,
Twinsburg, Randall Barengo,
Marietta, Jack T. Benthall, Gallipolis,
and Martha J, Nicholson, Middleport,
$35.50 each , speeding; David
L.Baldwin, Parkersburg, $35 ,
speeding; Gary VanMeter, Rutland,
and Bob H. Moore, Cottageville,
$360.50 each, DWI; Larry S. Sayre,
Ravenswood, $35.50, left of center.

Skylab crashdown: the ·final hours
WASHINGTON (AP) - Just hours
before Skylab's expected death-dive,
the space agency today started the
huge station tumbling through space
to try to Increase the likelihood it
would drop its tons of debris in the
Indian . Ocean rather than on North
America.
"We think this is the safest and most
prudent action we can take at this
· time to give us the absolute minimum
probability of casualty of any sort
from Skylab," said the National
Aeronautics
andSpace
Administration's Richard G. Smith.
A radio signal was sent at 3:47a.m.
EDT today to fire nitrogen gas
thrusters which started the 77.!&gt;-ton
craft "wobbling and rolling" as it
passed through an altitude of 92 miles.
Confirmation that the maneuver
worked carne 30 minutes later when
Skylab passed within range of a
tracking station in Madrid, Spain.

NASA spokesman Bob Gordon
reported, "The rate is not as high as
anticipated at this time, but
indications are that Skylab is
beginning its final entry to earth."
The action was intended to delay
Skylab's fiery re:entry about 30
minutes, until about noon EDT. On
that timetable, the 'tons of Skylab
debris that did not burn up would fall
harmlessly into the Indian Ocean.
The decision to start the craft
tumbling was made after the North
American Air Defense Corrimand,
which has been tracking the
spacecraft, issued a revised re~try
prediction at 12 :35 a.m. EDT today. It
forecast Sky lab was likely to re-enter
over the north Pacific, posing a
pOtential threat w North America,
primarily Canada.
The earlier predictions had placed
the most likely r~try area in the
south Atlantic or Indian oceans, far

ELBERFELD$

from land.
The latest NORAD prediction said
Skylab would re-enter between 8:48
a.m. and 1:48 p.m. EDT, with the
midpoint, or most probable re-entry
time, at 11:18 a .m.
At that midpoint, Skylab would start
dumping its debris in the central
Pacific near the Equawr and spread it
over a trail 4,000 miles long and 100
miles wide in a northeasterly
direction. If the re-entry occurred 10
minutes alter that time, the debris
could be dropped on the portions of the
state of Was.hington and Canada.
That orbital track passes across the
northwest tip of the United States
north of Everett, Wash., arcing across
south central Canada, north of
Montreal and Ottawa, and across the
state of Maine, north of Augusta.
"We decided to change our plans
and initiate the twnble early to allow
us an extra 30 minutes to get back

8 TRACK PLAYER

VOL. XXVII,I NO . 61

PASSBOOK

Compounded Daily

5 lj4%

90 DAY CERTIFICATE ......'::i~:~~~~!:~~~~?...... S'h%
1 YEAR CERTIFICATE ...... ~~~;.~~.~.~:·~~~:~~ ...... 5%%
2 YEAR CERTIFICATE ......':~.;~:~~~ !~:~~~·~...... 6%
4 YEAR CERTIFICATE ......¥!~t\'!~\'!t!.~.o.. P9 ..... 7%%

6 YEAR CERTIFICATE ......~.i~!~~~ .'}:~~~-.o~·- · .: 71/2%
,8 YEAR CERTIFICATE .....~:~:':'.~':'.~::o.o.o:~~ ...... 7%%
4 YEAR MONEY CERTIFICATE
Minimum 51,000.00. Interest rate of 11/4% under the average 4 year

yield of Treasury Securities .

MONEY MARKET CERTIFICATE
SlO,OOO minimum. Interest rate equal to the rate pf 182 day treasury
bill rate . As determined at weekly auction .

SUBSTANTIAL PENALTY FOR EARLY WITHDRAWAL
" Tht• frit&gt;fldlr Ru11!.- "
Walk -up teller window
and auto -teller window
Open Friday Evenings S lo 7 p .m.

/JtbeM ,altonal Bank
Miodleport, o.

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action filed
CINCINNATI ( AP ) - ASouth Point
woman whose 14-year-old son hanged
himself in the Lawrence County Jail
15 months ago is suing county officials
for their alleged negligence in his
death.
Emma Carrico filed a $3 million suit
in U.S. District Court Monday,
contending that negligence by
Lawrence County Jail officials in
Ironton led to the suicide of her son
Gene.
The boy was found hanging by a
bath towel in his cell March 28, 1978.
He was in custody for carrying a
concealed weapon and delinquency.
Defendants in the suit are Lawrence
County Sheriff James Howell; his
wife, jail matron Eloise Howell; his
son, jail employee James Howell Jr. ;
former jailer Charles Yontco; former
dispatcher Dawn Schroeder, and the
Lawrence County Board of
Commissioners.
Mrs. Carrico, a widow with two
other children, is asking for $2 million
in punitive damages, $1 million in
compensawry damages and $2,475 for
funeral expenses.
She claims in the suit that jail
officials were "guilty of intentional,
wanton, callous acts" that led to her
son'sdeath. Her son, she alleged, had
lhreatened suicide several times, but
was left "unsupervised" by jail
personnel.
The charges were denied by Mrs.
Howell, whose husband was
unavailable· for comment Monday
night.
"We watched him as careful as we
could," said Mrs. Howell. "We made
sure to watch him every half hour."
She said she· was surpcised by the

'39

•VINYL SHOULDER STRAP
•AUTOMATIC AND MANUAL
CHANNEL SELECTOR
•OPERATION 'BATTERY or ELECTRIC

Be sure to se.e all t~e other tape ptavers, recorders, compon.nt stereo
systems, CBs. rad•os, scanners . Now on display all famous r'nf.kes .

ElBERfELDS IN POMEROY

suit.

F. 0.1. C. O.poslts Insurance 111 140.~.
(

·

"I didn't expect it. I didn 't know
anything about it," she said.

Gallia board
files actiQn

FRESH

LB. $149

Crime on rise

$}l9

WIENERS .................... ~.~-?~ .. 89

$}69

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POTATO CHIPS ....~~. ~-~---· ·

2% MILK ..............~~.1: .. ..

~~~:~~.................~~·... ~ 169

French City

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CUBE STEAK ...................1~:.. ~ }
ROUND STEAK ................1~·...~.1

99

WASHINGTON (AP) -Crime
esperta say Americans should ex·
pect continuing increaaes in
vtolent crime - but the rises
probably won't be as sharp and
startling as the barebones
statlBtlcs indicate.
Government and academic
spectallsta are studying the latest
FBI figures for clues to the cause
of a 17 per cent surge in the
violent crime ·rate, by far the
largest in this decade.
FBI officials say a statistical
quirk distorted the size of the in·
crease. But even after that quirk
Is taken into account, the figures
still show a definite and
somewhat puzzling upward
trend.

Air base use
FINE ASSORTMENT

LUNCH MEATS

north-northeast. The front-running
squall line had already hit the coast.
In New Orleans -where. part of the
ciiy lies saucer·like below sea level the greatest .threat was water.
Massive pwnps at the City's 21
pumping stations were readied for
heavy work.
Flash.flood warnings were posted
for 90Utheastem Louisiana. Possible
high tides were estimated at up to 6
feet. FIOO&lt;kootrol gates oo canals
and bayous were closed. · ·
Most ,public schools in the New
Orleans area cancel!!d todats
swruner classes. Charity Hospital
canceled its 150 outpatient clinics,
which normally handle 1,400 patients.
Bob developed so quickly and so
close to shore, just 400 miles south of
New Orleans, that most big oil
companies went str;Ught into the
evacuation phase of their hurricaneemergency plans .
It caught at least one fishing party
out in the Gulf. The Coast Guard sent
a helicopter to r~ue tile five

fishermen . Another Coast Guard
helicopter crew reported helping a
disabled vessel caught in heavy seas
but gave no details.
There are thousands of oil and
natural gas wells in the Gulf, and
hundreds of production platforms and
drilling rigs standing on steel legs.
Evacuation left them battened down
and empty.
In some instances, oil and gas
production was shut down. Many rigs
are automated, however, and they
kept crude oil and natural gas flowing
througb undersea pipelines.
On shore, residents who pulled back
from low-lying areas faced a shortage
of gasoline for family cars. New
Orleans city officials asked all service

or Diet
7-UP OR

BAIIRELHEAD
ROOT BEER
·

8

·16 OL
bottles

$}09

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -The
office of U.S. Sen. Jolm Glenn, D·
Ohio, says the senator is to
organize a meeting between
congressional and. local leaders
to decide on continuing efforts for
development of ail Industrial
park at Rickenbacker Air Force
Base.
The Defense Department last
week approved and sent to the ar·
med services committees of both
hou.les the Air Force's plan for
•disposing of excess property at
the Colwnbua base.
The plan allows 2,000 acres for
public or private use, sets aside
1,350 acres ·for joint militarycommunity use and relains 630
acres for Air Force Reserve and
Air· National Guard troops
. remaining at the base after active duty personnelleave.

The Gallia County Local School
Board ti Education has filed a
$250,000 suit in Common Pleas Court
against a construction finn, its architect, and their insurance agent.
The suit charges A and S Contracting Co., Piketon,' breached tenns
of agreement for construction done in
1m. The work, the Board claiml!, was
... "shoddy and defective, violating
the company's warranties on
materials and equipment."
Also named in the suit is architect
George L. Walter, Dayton, for failure
to provide "preP!Ired proper studies,
designs, develoPment documents,
drawings and specifications, and
plans as required." The materials
Walter· did t~ in were "defective"
and "incomplete," according to the
action.
Aand S's insurance agent, Buckeye
Union Insurance Co., Colwnbus, was
also charged for aUegedly refusing to
honor the damages caused by the
ineffective work.
The Board is asking (or a $250,000
settlement "jointly and severally"
from the three defendants, as well as
court cells. A jury of eigbt has been
requested.
;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::.

EXTENDED Otm.OOK
Friday through Suoday - Chance
of ahowen Frldlly aDd Saturday aDd
partly eloudy SUDday. Hichi in the
upper 11011 aDd lower 908 Friday aad
the lower 8011 Saturday IOd SllDday.
Lows in tbe mid aDd upper 801.
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.

Guilty plea enter(3d
Bobby E. Milbourne, Middleport,
has entered a guilty plea on a Bill of

Information in Meigs County Common Pleas Court to two charges of
breaking and entering.
Both incidents stemmed from
· separate Band E's 11t the Middleport
Swimming Pool.
Milbourne was released on his own
recogillzance pending a pre«ntenet.
investigation. ·

4

BY KATIE CROW
"Progress against cancer continues
to be an Issue of great concern to us in
Meigs County," says Sharon Michael,
assistant public information chair·
man rJ. the Meigs Cancer Unit.
"We know that progress in treating
leukemia has saved more lives than
the conqutlSI of polio; the Pap test
alone has saved more lives than the
measles vaccine, and the conflrmatioo of the casual link between
cigarette smoking and lung cancer
has a UfHBving potential com·
parable to the discovery of the tuber·
cle bacillus causing TB," says
Mlchae.
"But much more work haS to be
done on other various kinds of cancer.
So when you contribute; you provtde a
way for . the continuation of un·
derstandlng and for the investigation
into the complex diseases called can·
cer," Michael said.
The American Cancer Society concentrates ita efforts in three main
program areas : research, education
and service.
Twenty-eight and nine tenths cents
rJ. each dollar is used for research.
This past year about 80 pe~nt of the

Will buy more
Mexican oil

research budget went toward con·
tinulng investigation in the cause and
prevention of cancer.
"We know now that cancer is best
considered not as one but a 100 or
more different . diseases," stated
Michael. "Researchers are making
dramatic gains against sune cancers
and less against others. But I am
sure, states Michael, that your dollar
has been and wW be used )'risely in the
cancer research."
Twenty..seven cents ,f each dollar
goes towards educlitrng the public
and health profeaaionala in the
various area ·of cancer prevention,
detection and treatment.
It has been found that children in
kindergarten through third grade can
asswne respo1111ibillty for keeping
healthy and devel~ behavior that
will protect themselves against can·
cer.
"Many programs are available for
these youngsters besides a no
smoking program since they are con·
stderlng the pros and cons of smoking
even at this age," states Michael.
Films, free literature and free quit
smoking clinics, information on ways
to quit smoking and self-help
materials are available to adults.
(Continued on page 12)

stations in southeastem Louisiana to
remain open through the emergency,
but most closed at dark.
Officials · advised evacuation
Tuesday for a 250-mile coastal strtp
stretching from New Iberia to the
Mississippi border.
While )he Gulf Coast was bracing,
some residents in central Alabama
mopped up flood water Tuesday night.
Nearly 3 inches of rain fell near the
Birmingham Airport in little more
than one hour.

Area Six
Health meets
July 16
The Review Committee of Area Six
Health Systems Agency, Inc. will bold
a meeting July 16 at the Lafayette
Motor Hotel in Marietta, Ohio. The
business meeting will begin at 7:30
pm. and Is open to the public.
The Review Coounlttee Is a stan-

Cancer progress
•
maJor
concern
IN TilE GOOD OW SUMMERTIME - The old tune with the lyrics,
"your happiness lies, rtght under your eyes, back in your own back yard"
rings true for Cindy Soulaby, Pomeroy Elemenlary School student, who
merely has to go out the back door to her back yard to swim in this attractive pool al the hothe of her parents, Mr. and Mrs . James Soulsby,
Union Ave., Pmneroy.

$}49

OF stORE SLICED

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

MUSIC DEPT. 2ND FLOOR

SAUSAGE

Valley Bell

en tine

WEDNESDAY, JULY 11, 1979

NEW ORLEANS (AP)- Hurricane
Bob, the first Atlantic storm to bear a
man's name, battered abandoned oil
platforms and drilling rigs off the
Louisiana coast early today and .
threatened the land with flooding and
high tides.
The storm, the second of the 1979
season ·in the Atlantic, developed
suddenly Tuesday, forcing 8,000
offshore oil w&lt;rkers w head for land
and sending thousands of coastal
residents is search of higher ground,
officials said. Some public schools
were closed and one hospital shut" its
outpatient clinic.
Though rated a wesk swrm, .with
winds just higher than the 75 mph
needed ·for certification as a
hurricane, Bob moved up through the
Gulf of Mexico pushing torrential rain
ahead of the eye.
The weather bureau said early
today the storm had picked up slight
forward speed to about 17 mph, and
the center was about 140 miles southsouthwest of New Orl~ans. moving

95

BEEF

Reg,

assisllmce requested by any country. .
The Federal Aviation Admlniatration
was warning aircraft from poMible
re~ntry zones, and the ,Justice
Department was set to handle liability
claims anywhere in the world.
The Federal Preparedness Agency
set up an elaborate system for
handling emergency situations in the
United States,
Meanwhile, Canadian civil defenae
officials in Ottawa issued a
statement: "We can'tstop it (Sk~~b)
from falling , but everything is in pw~ce
to minimize the danger should it come
down in our region."
Skylab was launched May 14, 1973,
and was inhabited· by three different
teams of American astronauts for
periods up to 84 days. It has been
floating around as a piece of space
junk since the last crew abandoned it
in Febrt!&amp;ry 1974.

Hurricune threatens·south

GROUND

• Dan Dee 1 lb.

fields over ocean and land areas,
weather and solar activity.
NASA estimates about two-thirds of
the space station will burn up from
atmospheric friction during the
flaming dive back to Earth.
But the agency expected about 500
pieces, weighing a total of more than
20 tons, to survive, including a 5,1~
pound airlock shroud and a 3,900pound lead safe which protected the
film from radiation when astrol)auta
were aboard the spacecraft.
As Sky lab began its final two days in
orbit, NASA established
a
coordination center in Washington to
follow the spacecraft's progress and
be ready to dispatch emergency
teams wany areas of the globe where
debris might cause injury or damage .
Defense Depar1ment medical and
engineering teams were . on alert
·around the world to provide

.

HOMEMADE

LB.

at y

POM EROY-MIODLEPORT, OHIO

1~3~3:.=~:.::~::.:::.:..:::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::~

$3 million

·

•

e

ROBERTS SOLID STATE
PORTABLE
'

over the Indian .Ocean," Smith said.
" H we didn't do it, we-would increase
the likelihood of coming down over
North America and picking up the
possibility of North Africa. "
He added, "We have looked at this,
and in the worst case situation we find
no condition where we fail and create
a hazardous situation that was worse
than what we started with,"
NASA continued to emphasize that
even if parts of the giant station hit
land, the chances of injury or damge
are slim. If . news reports indicate
fragments are headed for particuar
areas, the agency suggests people
take no special precautions except
perhaps to stay indoors.
The sudden shift in the prediction
indicated the difficulty in forecasting
the demise of an orbital vehicle. The
rate at which it falls depends on such
things as variations in gravitation

ding conunlttee of the Area Six

Health Systems Agency Board rJ.
Trustees. Its major purpose Is to par·
ticipate in the Ohio Certificate of
Need Program by reviewing
proposed projects and making recom·
mendations to the Ohio Department
of Health.
The major items to be considered
by the Review Committee are as
follows:
- Good Samaritan Medical CenterConstruction of Medical Arts

Building·

.

- · fie~ Ce111ficate of Need

Manual.
Area Six Health Systems Agency
Inc. is the conditionaUy designated

Williams
Rotary
speaker

Health Systems Agency for 18
Eastern and Southeastern Ohio coun·
ties.
· For further ir)fonnation please con·
tact Thomas A. Lindstrom, Executive
Director at (614) 374-2200.

Mike Williams, Governor of
District 669 of Rotary International,
will address the Rotary Club of Mid·
dleport-Pomeroy on Friday, July 'tl,
at its evening meeting at the Heath
United Methodist Church. A past
president rJ. the Portsmouth Rotary
Club, Wllllams Is devoted to the prin·
ciple of service to his profesaion, his
community and his country. He is
vice president and treasurer of the
(Cor!tinued on page 12) · ·

BOSTON (AP) - Energy officials
say President Carter has "'""anged to
purchase more oil and natural gas
from Mexico and Canada within the
year to ease eJqJeeted shortages of
' home heating oil next winter, The
Boston Globe reported Wd.ay.
The Department of Energy said
more Mexican oll would flow
northward as a result of discussions
between Mexico and the United States
but gave no details on how much more
oil would be available, according to a
report in the Globe. .
""-&lt;.
Canadian natural gas suppliers
have applied for additional export
licenses thllt could result In
significant increases in the volwne of
gas imported by the United States, the
newspaper reported.
U.S. oil companies buy most of
Mexico's exported oil, at a price $4
higher than the OPEC base price,
which ranges from $18 to $23.50.
.•
Five percent of America's natural ·
•• .
gas is imROrted from Canada, which
GROUP ENTERTAINED - The Dark Hollow
could increase to 7 percent with the
Blue Grass Boys, a Meigs County group of young
new export licenses, according to
musicians, entertained at the July 4th celebration of
John Treat, energy department
the
Rutland Fire Depar1ment. The group also
spokesman .

SQUAD RUNS
Three calls were answered Tuesday
and early Wednesday morning by the
Middleport Emergency Squad with
three patients being taken to Holzer
Medical Center.
At 1:59 p.m. Tuesday the unit went
to the Flatwoods Road for John
Anderson and at 8:11p.m. to Route 1,
Middleport for Carl Stewart. At 4:24
·a.m. Wednesday the unit went to
Route I, Middleport, for Mrs. Luctlle
Casto.
·

- -~

~

II;'·.

&lt;ecefY

\

won $200 as first place Winners in the Big Bend Reptta
Talent Show. Making up the group are Brent Patterson, Robert Taylor, Rick Boring and Dennis Wolfe.
\~

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