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12- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, July 11, [!179
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~

::1

1:

·~

Two states to go
on. gas strike

\·
!!!

.

By BOB DVORCHAK
Associated Press Writer
Some independent Pennsylvan ia
and Delaware gasoline dealers say
they ;re shutting down their pumps
Thursday to protest federal fuel
allocation and pricing policies, but
deall}rsin other·states say a shutdown
is premature.
The Pennsylvania -Delaware
Service Station Dealers Association
....Y!l!ell Tuesday to strike indefinitely
and spokesmen predicted 60 to 80
percent of Pennsylvania's 8,100 las
stations would close.
"Our main objective, and I'm going
to be quite blunt about it, is to make
the public angry ," said Tom
Anderson , executive director .
Meanwhile, · major oil company
officials said between one-\hird and
me-half of the stations may close,
said Robert Shinn, executive director
of the Governor's Energy Council.
The dealer's group represents 3,7:&gt;6
sU!tions, or about 30 percent, of the
13,000 gas stations in the two states.
However, members of the Keystone
Service Station Dealers Association in
northeastern portions of the state
voted unanimously Tuesday night not
to join the shutdown.
"Local r~idents have been hurt
enough by the oil companies and their

Dunmore, president of the Keystone
association with 200 member dealers
in 17 counties.
The New Jersey Gasoline Retailers
Association is announcing today
whether it will urge a shutdown.
I-ndependents service station
operators ·claim the present federal
allocation system favors stations
owned by big oil companies and they
want it changed. They are also
pressing for permission to rai~ their
profits to keep up with inflaton.
The Permsylvanian and Delaware
dealers voted to strike despite a plea
by Gene Eidenberg, chief of staff to
White Hou~ special assistant Jack
Watson, that they hold off four or five
days. On June 27, Watson persuaded
independents to stay open while a new
allocation formula was stadied.
"You gave us absolutely nothing.
Our backs are against the wall. The
dealers can'tput up with it anymore,"
association president Rudy Molnar,
oold Eidenberg by phone before the
vote.
Elsewhere, dealers report that no
shutdown was planned, or that they
are wailing to see what happens
Monday , when
the federal
Department of Energy is expected to
announce permissible increases in
dealers' profits.

greedy raises, ' ' said .James Summa of

Budget report
WASHmGTON (AP) - Surging
fuel and food prices are aimost
certain to be reflected in a gloomy
economic forecast expected from the
Congressional Budget Office.
The budget office, which advises
Congress on economic matters, is

unveiling its mid-year review of
economic trends today in testimony
by Ailee Rivlin, direcwr of the office,
before the House Budget Committee.
The report will likely project a deeper
recession later this year than the
office had previously anticipated.
Meanwhile, Treasury Secretary W.
Michael Blumenthal was to testify
before the Joint Economic Committee
about the recent Tokyo economic
summit.
Last January, the congressional
office predicted a downturn in the
second half of the year with a 1979
inflation rate of between 6.5 percent
and 8.5 percent and unemployment
rising to between 6.2 percent to 7.2
percent.
The Carter administration is also
scheduled to update its economic
projections this week in light of sharp
increa~s in prices for crude oil and
food.
The administration had predicted a
relatively modest inflation rate and
continued economic growth this year.
However, its new figW'es are expected
to raise estimates for inflation and
project near-zero growth in 1979.
Administration sources who asked
not to be identified said Tuesday the
administration's official forecast for
unemployment by the end of next year
would be rai~d from 6.2 percent to 6.9
percent - an increase of more than
700,000 people without jobs.
In its April projections, the
administration predicted a 7.4 percent
annual rate of inflation, a 2.2 percent
annual growth rate and a jobless
figure of 6.2 percent.
However , last week, President
Carter said hikes in crude oil prices
charged by the Organization of
Petroleum Exporting Countries could
drive the inflation rate up an
additional 2 to 2.5 percent, push the
jobless rate over 6 percent and cut
economic growth by 2.5 percent.
He declared the price hikes made a
recession " much more likely ."

The latest government estimates
put unemployment at :&gt;.6 percent in
June, the lowest point in five years,
and inflation at 13.4 percent on an
annual basis. Economic growth last
year was 4.4 . percent after bein~

adjusted for inflation.
.
Most private economists are
predicting a. moderate 1979 recession
comparable in severity to the 1969-70
downtW'n.
A recession is normally defined as
two consecutive quarters of negative
growth in the gross national product,
adjusted for inflation.
In other economic news Tuesday: The Commerce Department reported
that retail sales fell for the third
con~cutive month in June, giving
further evidence that the nation's
economy may be moving into a
recession.
Retail sales of $70.6 billion in June
were U percent below May's total
and followed declines of 0.1 percent
from April w May and 0.9 percent
from March w April , the report
indicated.
- The Council on Wage and Price
Stability notified two more companies
they have violated the president's
voluntary anti-inflation price
standard.
T)ley are Charter Co., a petroleum
refiner in Jacksonville, Fla., and
Northwestern Steel and Wire Co. of
Sterling, Ill.
The non-compliance listing means
that the companies could be barred
from receiving government contracts
of $5 million or more. It was not
immediately known If the companies
currently have government contracts.
. - The General Accounting Office,
the congressional auditing agency,
said that between :&gt; million and 6
million Americans fail to file income
tax returns each year, even though
their income levels indicate they
should.
The report said the "non-filers" fail
to pay at least $2 biilion a year in
ta•e~ . And some do not get refunds to
which they would have been entitled
had they filed returns.
EGG REPORT
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Eggs Prices paid wcountry packing plants
for eggs delivered to major Ohio cities
cases included consumer grades
including U.S. grades, minimum 50
case lots.
Carton Large A 62-&amp;l'h , Medium A
53'h-55, Small A 43-45.
Sales to retailers in major Ohio
cities, cartons delivered: Large A
white 71-80, mostiy 71-73, medium 6170, mostly 61.a3.
Poultry prices at Ohio farms, hens
. light 6.

ONLY -YOU CAN
SAVE THIS CAR

Op~ning

date
moved .again

Carter considers jobs as summit continues
WASHINGTON (AP) - President evening. The Washington Post today and must act to deal with pressing
Carter is calling employment experts quoted unidentified officials as domestic woes.
to his domestic summit amid reports suggesting Sunday night IS a likely
In related developments:
the administration is predicting the time for Carter to report on the results
- The Congressional Budget Office
jobless rate will climb to nearly 7 of his talks with a diverse group of today predicted the impending
government officials and pri vate recession would be deeper than
percent by the end of 1980.
At a morning meeting today, the citizens.
earlier ferecasts because of climbing
Summoned to the Maryland retreat food and fuel prices.
president was to discuss the jobs
outlook with
experts
from Tuesday night were 10 clergymen,
In its mid-year business outlook, the
goverrunent and the private sector. theologians and sociologists.
budget oHice predicted inflation likely
Powell said Carter wanted to would top 10 percent this year and the
A half dozen governors and a
delegation of mayors were invited to discuss with them the broad currents jobless rate would rise tO between 8.4
spend· this evening at Camp David, of public attitudes toward government percent and 7.4 percent by the end of
Md., the presidential retreat where and the solving of national problems 1979.
- A congressional study has cast
Carter has been cloistered for more in complex and trying times.
than a week.
The president discussed inflation doubt on the ability of synthetic fuels
The administration, acknowledging and the economy, as well as energy, to make a substantial dent in the
a worsening economy, is revising its for three ho!Jrs Tuesd11y with amount of oU the United States
official jobless forecast from 6.2 Treasury Secretary W. Michael · imports until the next century.
The study by the Congressional
percent to 6.9 percent for the end of Blumenthal, Commerce Secret11ry
1980, said administration sources who Juanita Kreps and Labor Secreblry Research Service, said even with big
asked not to be identified. If that Ray Marshall. He also met with federal subsidies, synthetic liquid
prediction holds, 1.3 million more Republican Gov. Richard Snelling of fuels won 't be of much help soon.
Americans could be out of work by the Vermont and a group of economists,
- Energy Department officials said
end of next year than now are.
investment bankers, businessmen and Carter signed an prder requiring air
The new unemployment estimate is union leaders.
conditioners in non-residential
to be released publicly later this week. Afterwards , Douglas Fraser, buildings to be set no lower than 78
Neither the White House nor the president of the United Auto Workers, degrees Fahrenheit this swruner.
Office of Management and Budget said the administration is "probably
the regulation goes into effect
would confirm or deny the report
at the point of no return" politically Monday. The order also prohibits nonDuring the week-long retreat ,
·
·
·
. · , ·.
presidential press secretary Jody :·:·:·:-:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:·.·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:':·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:·:·:·:-:·:::::::::::,::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·:::::::::::::::
Powell said Tuesday, Carter has :(" ··· ·· ···
....... . ··· ······· ......... .. ... .... ··
::::!
decided against removing federal
price controls on gasoline, a proposal
that White House staff members hlld
been considering submitting to their
boss.
"The president has no intention to
deregulate gasoline at. this time,"
Powell sald. He estimated such action
would boost retail gasoline prices to
between $1.10 and $1.50 a gallon,
draining "several tens of billions of
dollars from the economy."
Complex federal rules limit the
amount of increases in gasoline costs
that can be passed on to consumers.
The L~sue of deregulating gas prices is
separate froin the gradual lifting of
prices on domestic crude oil,
currenUy underway .
Powell also reported general
agreement among those 11ttending the
summit that it is too soon to consider
federal actions to counter the
exPected economic slump.
He sald the administration would
"need a better idea of the nature of the
slowdown" before considering action
to counter recession by such means as
blx cuts.
.
In a conference call to reporters,
Powell said the president is finding "a
surprising degree of consensus"
among summit ·participants.
He said Carter !eels such recent
events as the long gas lines at service
stations around the country and
higher oil prices have had a "sobering
effect" that has spurred demands for
action .
The president is expected to remain
at Camp David at least through this

::::

I\

Area deaths

·:,::
·:-:·
RICHARD R. NYE
Richard R. Nye, former Pomeroy
resident, died Monday at a Cleveland,
Ohio hospital.
He was preceded in death by his
parents, George B. and Gertrude
Nye.
He is survived by two daughters,
Mrs. James (Diane) Strawser and
Rachel Nye,..two sons., Robin H. Nye
and Jules S. Nye, one sister, Mrs. R. .
E. (Charlotte Nye) McCullough.
Graveside services will be held at
Beech Grove Cemetery Saturday,
July 14, at 4 p.m.

FREE CLOTHmG DAY
• The Gallia-Meigs Community
Action Agency will hold its free
clothing day for low income persons
on ThW'sday from 9 a.m. to 12 noon.
The 11gency's clothing bank is located
in the old high school building at
Cheshire.
SEEK LICENSES
Marriage licenses were issued to
Tommy Joe Ferrell, 29, Wilkesville,
and Victoria Lynn Grate, 24, Rutland ;
Richards Thomas Yost, 25, Rt. 2,
Coolville, and Sharon Lee Henderson ,
19, Rt. 1, Guysville.

::

::::
{

MAGGIE I.ROSENPANZ
Fulleral services for Mrs. Maggie
Isadora Rosenkranz, 85, Route 3,
Pomeroy, who died Mond11y at
Veterans Memorial Hospital, will be
held at 2 p.m. Thursday at the Ewing
Funeral Home.
A member of Jehovah's Witnesses,
Mrs. R~nkranz was a daughter of
the late Albert and · Sar11h Kaylar
Hoffman and was preceded in 'death
by her first husband, Ira Wolfe, and
her second husband, Herbert
R~nkrJIIlz . A son and a daughter
also preceded her in death.
Surviving are five daughters, Lu1a
Pearl Preston, GallipoUs; Bessie
Ruth Gillespie, Hot Springs, Va.;
Alice Marie Slay, Jacksonville, Ohio;
Virginia Irene Thomas and Mary
Edna Parker, both of Pomeroy; two
sons, Fred Elmer Wolfe, Gasport,
N.Y., and Dale Edward Wolfe,
Reedsville ; 29 grand and 34 great
grandchildren .

Willi"am 8

Partly cloud)', humid and hazy
through Thursday Thursday. Hl&amp;hs
today and Thursday in the low and
mid b . Lows tmlght in the mid and
upper 80s. Chance of rain 00 percert
today and 30 percent tonight and
Thursday.

'

Mayor's Court
Five defendants were fined and two
others forfeited banda in the court of
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
Tuesday night.
Fined were Tony W. Manley,
Middleport, 150 and costs, squealing
tires; Roy Boggs, 45, Middleport, 150
and costs, disorderly manner, and $7S
and costs, issuing menacing threats ;
Randy . L. Phillips, 19, Pomeroy,
speeding 46 In a 25 mile zone, $21 and
costs; Sally Lambert, Middl~.
assault, ~ and coslll, and DaMY
Barrett, no age or ad4ress recorded,
assault, ~ and costs.
Forfeiting bonds in the court were
Dennis M. Smith, 22, Middleport, $100
posted on a charge of Uttering a park,
and ~ fer failure to appear in court,
and Robert F. Seelig, 18, Pomeroy,
$150,leaving the scene of an accident.
oth~

I "

43 arrests recorded

.-Forty-tllree arreata were made by
the Middleport Police Department
during JWJe according to the report of
Chief ol Pollee J . J. Cremear11.
Of the total liJ'I'et!ta, eight were for
disorderly conduct, and aeven on
speeding charges. Five peraons were
charged with littering, four with
allowing a dog to run looae, two each
on criminal trespaasing, .parking
ticketa, improper backing and
reckleaa operation and there wu one
arrest each for p888ing In a no
Jlll88inll zone and failure to stop after
an accident.
Eight cases were dlsmiued by
Mayor Fred Hollman and charges
were dropped In two other Clllllll.
Parking meter collecti0111 for the
mooth totaled $798.50 and the pollee
crul.ser was driven 3,387 miles during
themooth.

NO. 62

A fire d. Wldetermtned origin at the
Old Sayre Station adjacent to Star
Supply in Racine was Wider inveatigatioo today by Meigs County
Sberlff's deputies.
According to information received ,
a couple of juveniles were seen play11111 II'GIInd the building and an old

Today
. . .in the world

Plane crashes
MEDAN , Indonesia (AP ) - An
Indonesian airliner crashed on a
mountain peak in north Swna Ira
Wednesday night, killing all 61
periOIIII aboard, a spokesman for
Garuda Indonesian Airways announced Thurday .
The spokesman said- the
Foldter-ZII crashed oo Mount
Sibray811 near Berastagi, a sum·
mer resort about 5 miles west of
Medan, the capibll of north
Swnutra.

Crash kills 7
WALTERS, Okla . (AP ) - A
tractor-trailer truck slammed into a parked car Wednesday alternoon just north of the Texas
border, killing seven persons,
pollee said.
All seven victims were in the
parked car, poUce sald, and its
two other occupants were injured.
A woman was taken to a
Wichita FaUs, Texas, hospital,
Continued on Page 7

THIS OFFER VOID IF DESTROYED

Q% To 50%

BY SKYLAB ON WEDNESDAY

SALE PRICES NOW IN EFFECT

RIVERSIDE VW-AMC-JEEP

6..... TOOKIE'S FASHIONS
lr 5th Street
New Haven

'. I

Gallipolis, OH.

446-9800 .

Additional bonds
need~d for project

The Racine Fire Department
responded and quickly estlilguisbed
the flames before any majOI' damage
was done.
George WUliam Brown, 3l, Rt. I,
U!tart, W. Va., arrested June 23 driv11111 a 1!177 Vega reported stolen three
minutes earlier. has appeared before
Meigs County Common Pleas Court
Judge John C. Bacon oo a BW of Information charging him with
WJauthorized use of a motor vehicle.
He waived his rights and entered a
gully plea to the charge. Brown was
sentenced to a term of 6 months to S
years in an appropriate state penal institution.
Deputies transported Brown to the
Ohio Penal Medical and Reception
Center at ColwnbWJ today, to begin
serving his sentence.
Walter Arnold, 29, Gen. Del.,
Langsville, hils been ~ntenced to 3G
days in the Meigs CoWtty Jail on
charge of contributing to the
WJruliness of a minor . Tile charge
resulted from . the apprehension of a
runaway girl i!ISI Saturday morning
at his residence . The juvenile had
been absent from her home for a couple of weeks.
Wednesday evening , deputies arrested Mary Garnes, W, Athens , on a
w11rrant fran the Juvenile Court
charging her with child abandonment.
The chllrge had been filed by her
husband, Jimmy Games, Pomeroy.
Mrs . Garnes was lodged in the Meigs
CoWJty Jail pending hearing in the
Meigs County Juvenile Court
sometime today .

'

Bruce Pinkney and Sam Calabretta,
Americare Corp., and Bob Young and
Peter Wright, bond counsel, met with
the Meigs County Commissioners
Tuesday _night to discuss issuance of
additional revenue bonds for the
Pomeroy Health Care Nursing Home.
Pinkney said there is a nl!ed for an
additional $3:&gt;0,000 in industrial
development revenue bonds oo fund
the balance of the original contract
amount.
When the original bonds were
okayed, approval was granted for
fl,OOO,OOO, however , only $1,650,000

TWO SPORTS SCRIBES JOIN to j,rornote a golf tournament Jul~ 30
at Mason. Dave Diles enlists the help of Jaspey (right) for the Dave Diles
Celebrity Golf Tournament. Jaspey is James Sherman Porter, form~r
sports editor of the Gallipolis Daily Tribune. DUes, who got his start m
journalism on the Tribune 30 years ago, is ABC's television football com·
.
mentator and author of biographical books on sports figur1!s.

Southern board
approves budget
Southern's Local Board of
Education meeting in specia l session
Wednesday ni ght , adopted a 1980
budget wtalin g $1,491,552.459.

was issued at the time .
Commissioners will meet in joint
session with the Community
Improvement Corporation (ClC) on
July 24 , to discuss the new proposal.
A news release will be issued in the
near future outlining tlw schedule for
the grand opening and also the
pro cedures for employing personnel
and admitting patients.
'
Mrs. Edna Russell ,R.N ., met with
the board requesting it provide a W
percent match on a 70 - W percent
grant through Title XX for Home
Health Aid Services for a period from
July 1 through J.une W , 1980. The
board approved the W percent match
to be appropriated from revenue
sharing funds.
The board received two notices
from the Ohio Department of Liquor
Control concerning applications for
permits to se ll intoxicating
beverages.
One application is a new class C-2
permit to Larry Allen Vance,
DBA ,Vance's Carry-Out, SR 143,
Scipio Township .· The other
application is for a transfer of class D1 permit from Hugh P. Custer, DBA
Pomeroy Golf Club, Salisbury
Township, to Jay HaU. Jr., DBA

Pomeroy Golf Club.
Commissioners will receive any
public objectio!L' concerning these
permits until Aug . 5, 1979.
It was decided to sell a 1976 Ford car
qwned by the commissioners to
Racine Villa ge for use as a police
crusier .

Wes l ey Buehl ,c ounty
engineer ,disc4ssed various road
projects and his 1979 budget .
At,tending were Richard Jones,
president, Henry Wella and Chester
Wells, comm\ssi.oners.. and Mary

Hobstetter, clerlt.
::::;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::

CHURCH BLAZE KILLS 3
.. NEW BLOOMINGTON, Obio (AP)
- Three members of a Marlon County
famUy died eary Ibis morning in a fire
at the parsonage of the New
Bloomington United Methodist
ChW'Cb.
. .Killed were Shirly Rampal 11nd her
two c hildren,

Joanna,

20 and

Jonathan, 15.
.. The Rev. Vidya Rampal was taken
to Marion General Hospital for
treatment of facial bums.
.. Fire officials said they had not
determined the cause of the blaze,
which broke out 5 a.m.
:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::

MOBO..E HOME DESTROYED
The trailer home of Mr. and Mrs.
William Clonch, 913 Broadway St.,
Middleport, was destroyed by fire at
2:25p.m. Wednesday.
Firemen said the fire which· gutted
the trailer was apparenUy caused by
an electrical problem. Moneblry
losses had not been set this morning .

According to the figures, general
fund receipts for the year will be

$1,491,:&gt;52.49
and
anticipated
expenditures will be $1 ,479,711.44,
leaving a balance of $11,641.05 ; bond
·:::;.;.;:::::::::::::;.;.::::::::::;:;:::;:;::::::::::::.;:;:;.;.:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·
retirement fund anticipated receipts
stand
at $111,26l.li and anticipated
EXTENDED FORECAST
expenditures
at $84,084.64 leaving a
Silturday lllrougb Mooday of
$27,176.47;
lunchroom fund
balance
arm tbrougb the period. A chanc
anticipated
receipts
will
be $132,146.65
e o1 sbowen Silturday aad Monwith
anticipated
expenditures
totaling
day. Partiy cloudy Sunday. Hlgbs
$127,835.80
leaving
a
balance
of
Ill the low to mid 801. Low at nlgbt
$4 ,310.85 and receipts for all other
mooUy !lithe mid 801.
funds are anticipated at $1n,535.68
:;:::::::::::;::::::::::::::::.:·:=:=:=:= :·::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::.
while anticipated expenditW'es from
these hinds amount to $139,340.30
leaving a balance of $38,19:&gt;.26.
The meeting was recessed to 10 a.m.
Showers and thunder5tonns likely July 16 .
and continued warm and hwnld
tonight. The low tonight 85 to 70. MostSQUAPCALLED
'!'lie Pomeroy Emergency Squad
ly cloudy, warm and humid with
achance ri Showers or thunderstonns was called to 307 Spring Ave ., at 2:55
Friday. The high in the mid Ills. The p.m. Wednesday for John Davis who
chance of rain is 60 percent tonight had fallen. He w.as taken to Veterans
Memorial
and to percent Friday.
" _.Hospital.

Weather

•

OSP charges man with DWI

Mid-July Summer Sale
}

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

THURSDAY, JULY 12, 1979

Sllid .

,,

other activities 11way from the
facility, IndividUal room controls
for temperature and hwnidity,
two large patient baths, an extensive physical therapy department, two complete nursing
stations and a large formal
dining room .
The building is fire protected
utilizing an advanced sprini&lt;!er
system, smoke detectors, and an
individual e~~ll system.
Outside of the facility, the •
grounda will be decorated with
flowering shrubs and there will
be a well lighted access road with
a large parking area for employes and visitors.
-.
Anyone wishing information
may call the Americare home of.
fice at 1-457-7353 or Gerald
Hazelbaker, 1-594-3018.
Applications for patients and
employes are available at the
Meigs County Senior Citizens
Center in Pomeroy.

enttne

race car owned by Hilton Wolfe, Jr .•
s hortly before the !Ire was
discovered.
A side window oo the former service station, remodeled several years
ago ; was broken out. Curtains and
pa'pers inside were ignited deputies

Is Having A

Save From

at

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

equipped v11n to transport patien-

ts to medical appoinbnents and

••

·Deputies probing
suspicious fire

Completes course .

MARION- James D. Qullll oll7fl
Chester Road, pomeroy. a General
Telephone eomp.ny of Ohio employe,
baa completed a COtll'l!e offered at the
compiiiY 'a Employe Development ·
Center here.
Trainees at the IChool were taught
the correct methods for climblne
utility poles.
Qua1la Ia an lnltaller-repairer In the
company's Circleville m.trict. .
The school's curriculum includes
more than 90 COUI'IIes and lM!IIllnanl .
Claaaroom training helpl employee~
to develop job skllla and to keep pace
with technological advancement.

•

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VOL. XXVIII

.

tnlffic is being re-routed away from this section of track, but soon will
return to normal as the bridge is almost complete.

NEW BRIDGE GOES UP - Conrail Railroad is constructing a new
railroad bridge over Leading Creek south of Middleport. Presently raU

Tookie's Fashions
Big Pric~ Reduction
Thursday 7/12/79

Construction delays, trucking
strikes and other WlcontrQJiable
events have caused another delay
in the. opening of a new 100-bed
nursing home in Meigs County.
The IQO.bed. nursing home
facility scheduled to be opened in
August will now open in midSeptember according to a
spokesman for the builder,
Americare Corp. of Colwnbus.
It was originally stated that the
facility, located on former Route
33, three miles north of the Rock
Springs Fairgrounds, w.ould open
in July.
Later, the opening was revised
to August and now tile opening
will not he lield until September.
The finn hopes to stage a
public open house prior to the
opening of the facility , he only
one in Meigs County.
In 11ddition to the 100 beds, the
facility includes well equipped
lounge areas, beauty and barber
salons, an examination room for
private physicians, a specially

Weather

One defendant was fined and fl.;
forfeited bonds in the court al
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews
Tuesdlly night.
.
Forfeiting bonds were Paul Card,
Racine, $370, posted on a charge of
driving while intoJicated; Jolll Ray
HunnelJ, Anitquily, $$0, driving
without an operator 's license, and $2S,
contempt of court; Edna Smith,
Pomeroy, $370, driving while ·
. Intoxicated; Paul Richard Qua Us,
Pomeroy, · $28, parking ticket
violations; Danny D. Brown,
MinersvUle, $250, reckless operation.
Fined S200 and costs in the court on
IN HOSPITAL
a
petty lar&lt;:eny charge was Stew
Jeanne (Clark) Null, former Meigs
McGrath,
RuUand.
resident, Is a patient at the Bethesda
Hospital in Zanes•'ille. Cards may be
sent to Room 438.

SURGICAL PATIENT
MARRIAGE DISSOLVED
Mrs. ·William .Strauss, Route 1,
In Meigs County Common Pleas
Court the marriage of Leslie J . Fl~ming, formerly Sandra Kay
Whittington and Frances J . lngrsham, Pomeroy, Is a surgical
patient at St. Joseph Hospital in
(Continued from page I)
Whittington was dissolved.
ParkersbW'g, W. Va . Cards may be
If anyone is interested in any item
sent to Room 412.
mentioned they may call the Meigs
County Cancer Society at 992:7s:~1 oc
stop in at the cancer office located on
the second floor of the senior citizens
(Continued from page 1)
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
building.
Tom ·and Mike Williams Insurance
Admitted-Larry Dillon, Reedsville;
"We want to help you protect your- Agency, Inc., of Portsmouth. He is 11 Lela Easterday, Racine; Sandra
self against cancer," says Michael. member of the National Association Sweeney, Pomeroy; Mark Michael,
The ACS recommends three active of Ufe Underwriters, the local, state Pomeroy;
Patricia
Cleland,
health steps: (I) adopt preventive and National Independent Insurance LangsvU!e; John Rein, Minersville.
habits, avoid cigarette smoking, Agents • Association, and the
Discharged--Virgil Day, Vera
overexposure to sunlight, and other American College of Olartered Ufe Drehei, Elmer Young, Jr., Patty
known causes of cancer ; (2) have
medical checkup regularly; (3) learn Underwriters, attaining his CLU Hornsby , Anna Wheeler.
degree in 1!174.
cancer's seven warning signals and
Williams has fostered growth and
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
go to a doctor or clinic if one should be development of his community
noticed.
through leadership of various civic DISHARGES, JULY 10
Thomas Angel, Charles Beach,
Twenty·~me and five tenths cents is functions. He is a member of the ParNancy
Bradley, Burl Burke,
used for service · which is direct tsmouth Junior Chamber of comassistance to cancer patients and merce, president of the Portsmouth, Elizabeth Campbell, John Casto,
their families. The Meigs Unit has YMCA, president of the Scioto County Bernice Durst, ~Ma Johnson, Irene
equipment on loan for cancer patients TB and Respiratory Health McGraff, Mrs. John Null and son,
to belp make their stay at home more Association, vice president of the Boy Robin Randolph, Marilyn Riffie, Jay
comfortable.
Scout -Council, and president of the Simms, Michelle Smith, Madge
Information and guidance services 'Portsmouth Association of In- Tredway, John Tyler, Merle
Underwood, Avonelle Wells, Mary
concerning the Meigs cancer patient dependent Insurance Agents.
and his family are provided. In adWilliams has also served his coun- Whiting , James Wilson.
dition, there are volunteers who try as a sergeant in the United States BIRTHS, JULY 10
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Brown,
provide transportation for patients to Anny, during a three-year .tour of
their ,physician's office or clinic for duty inGennany.
daughter,
Jackson
check-ups and treatments. There are
Prior to his election as District 1 Mr., and Mrs. Akers, son, Frazier's
W.
Va.
also trained recovered cancer patien- Governor, Williams . had served Bottom,
Is who might help new cancer patien- Rotary as a district representative, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest HID, son,
Is in relieving some of their fears, as chairman' of the District Mem· McArthW'
anxieties and difficulties.
bership Development Conunittee, MR. and Mrs.Oaniel Williams,
Thirteen cents IS used in fWld and as team leader for the District 689 daughter, Gallipolis
raising and 9.6 cents IS used in and District 975 Group Study Exmanagement. So 77.5 cents is used for change. In this capacity, Williams led
reaearch, education and service.
five young business men from Central
"We wish to thank all of you who and Southern Ohio on a six-week tour
contributed or helped in any way. U of Australia.
you were missed during the crusade
The subject of Mr. Williams • adand still want~ help in the preven~on dress will be "Let Service Ugh! the
of cancer maU a check to the Meigs , Way," the theme adopted for this
County Chapter, P. 0 .,. Box. 692, year by Rotary International
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769,
Michael President James L Bomar Jr
stated.
·
' ·

Cancer. •.

residential buildin&amp;s from btltnl
heated dur ing the wintll' ta
tempera lures bigber tllan • 4ocJ lia.
Mayor Richard Cllner o( Pttlrll,
ru., chairman of the u.s. coat.of Mayocs, said he wu amt1111 . _
invited to !Qday's ~. AIID
invited were Mayers Henry Maltr llf
Milwaukee and Coleman YOIIIII· 4lf
Detroit, said Carver.
Another source, who asked not 10 be
named, said Mayors Maynard
Jacksori of Atlanta, Richard Hatcher
of Gary, Ind., Tom Bradley of Los
Angeles and Edward Koch of New
Yerk Cit:t.Jrtece invited. ,

Body Shaper
Offer good on styles 62726,
N2728 and N2712 only. Offer
ends October 31 , 1979.
Get instructions In Lingerie Department on the 2nd floor.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

I

FISHING RELAXATION - Ed Miller is still fishing for his first big
catch this swruner. After that, he'll try for his second big one. This is one
of many ways to relax during the hot sununer days.

The GalJia-Meigs Post State
Highway Patrol reported tour traffic
accidents Wednesday in which one
·person was injured.
At 9:50 p.m., Oddie Bush, 66,
Gallipolis, was driving north on SR 7
when he lost control of his car, went
off the road, came hack onto the road
and struck the guard rail.
Bush complained of injuries, but
was not immediately treated. Hi, car
was demolished. Bush was cited for

OWl ..
. At 9:85p.m., Beverly J. Dowell, 29,
Racine, was driving east on SR 124
when she struck and kllled a deer.
There was no damage, no injuries,
and no citations.
Earlier Ill the day, Melvin R. Orwnmond, :12, GallipoUs, was driving
south on County ROad 1 at 6:W p.m.
when another car sid~wiped him.
The incident is still under Investigation.

TAKING NO CHANcEs -George Hobatetter, Pomeroy realtor and
former vice president of the Pomeroy National Bank, waa taking no chan- .
ces Wednesday of Skylab falling oo him. He secured himself in the vault
at the Pomeroy National Bank waiting word that Skylab waa down and all
waaclear.

•

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•

r

"I

I

�3- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport.Pomeroy , 0 ., Thursday , Ju]y 12; 19'19
2- The Dally Sentinel, Middlepart-Pomeroy. 0 :; Thursday. July 12. l!n9

•

Jimmy's Whitehouse
WASHINGTON (AP) - Boink!
Boink! said the chisel. Scratch!
Scratch! said the shovel.
For several days last month, two
workmen carefully dug out and
replaced broken patches of concrete
in the White House sidewalk that runs
alongside the West Wing offices of
President Carter and his staff.
Thus , begins another story about
waste in government.
Not that the sidewalk didn't need
work, and a lot of it. Some of the
cracks were almost lar ge enough to
swallow a small child.
But hear this'
A few weeks later, while Carter was
jetting arou~d the Far East, other
workers appeared and dug up most of
the newly patched sidewalk and
replaced it from curb to curb with
fresh concrete.
Police agencies have high-priority
access to tight gasoline supplies·. That
mdudes the Secret Service, charged
wtth Carter's protection.
Last weekend, a Secret Service
statiOn wagon turned up at a closed
truck stop at Thurmont, Md., near the
Camp David site of Carter's domestic
summit.

LO, an attendant materialized and
pumped 12 gallons of gas into the
wagon . No problem .
For bureaucrats here, running the
government while the president
sought solutions at Camp David to his
domestic woes was not always easy .
Take the seemingly simple matter
of reacting to good news emerging
from a sea of misery.
One thing all presidents have been
good at is responding to good news.
Such was not the case, however,
when the government announced a
drop in unemployment and a slowing
of the inflation rate. That happened
Friday morning.
Operating perhaps on the theory
that the boss should have th.e privilege
of hera lding favorable developments,
the agencies that normally react to
such reports deferred to the White
House.
But Carter and his high command
were cloistered at Camp David .
It was early evenin ~ before the
"fndians" manning the White House
in the absence of the "chiefs" were
able to draft a formal reaction to the
morning reports.

Business mirror
NEW YORK (AP) - The Ji!TC
report that cash value life insurance
policies are a very poor way to save
money isn't the last word on 'the

You Can't Find
Better. Why
Settle For Less

·1977 MALIBU 4 DR

-

~2975

305 V·8, auto., P.S., P.B., air,
radial tires, vinyl inerlor , color
red . Radio. Priced to save you
money . Cru ise .

1971 MONTE CARLO '1295
Real solid &amp; very clean inter ior,
green finish, blk. vinyl roof, V ·8,

automatic,

P.S.,

P.B. ,

radio,

clean &amp; priced to go.

1974 CAMARO CPE.

1

1695

V·8, 3 speed, std. trans., good
t i res, just right for someone to do

his own work .

market.

Priced

1976 MUSTANG II

below

'2795

4 cyl., auto . trans ., good tires,
radio, vinyl int erior , good
economy .

1974 CHEVELLE WAGON
Was Sl S9S- NOW 11295
2 Seat, V ·8, automatic, P .S., runs
&amp; drives nice, needs some metal

r

work . •

1978 MONZA WGN.

'3995

Local 1 owner &amp; less than 11.000
miles, V·6, auto. , P.S., w·w tires,
radio, luggage rack, medium
blue with spotless interior . Want
a showroo"!'l cr, at a savings?

VISIT OUR LOT, CHECK
OUR NEW CAR &amp;TRUCK

DISCOUNT PRICES
WE WANT
YOUR BUSINESS

..,_
-

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
'' )·,mr C:ht•r,,· IJt•lflt•r' '
9n·2126
·
Pomeroy
Open Evenings i il S :OO p . m.

· ·- -

subject, even if the statement can
hardly be · challenged, even by
insurers.
Federal
Trade
What . the
Commission undoubtedly has done is
to provoke a reaction from the
industry , whose assets range between
$350 billion and $400 billion. Atid that
reaction, finally, might clear up a few ·
things.
Such as the questions of why
savings should ever have become
linked with life insurance, why
insurers pay such low returns on the
cash in policies, and why you have to
pay to borrow that cash - your own
cash.
The first reaction fram . the ,
American Council of Life lnsurane '
was that the report was inaccurate
and it's conclusins wrong. But ·more
will come later. It has to, with aU
those billions of dollars involved.
The major point made by the FTC
staff was that cash-value policies pay
an almost insignificant amount of
interest, on average only 1.3'percent a
year, and that, moreover, this low
rate isn't made clear to buyers.
Many agents have a standard
answer for the low return. "You're
buying protection ; the savings ares
incidental," the say. Viewed that way,
the prospect of nevertheless
accumulating savings is appealing.
But it depends on the view. In
selling the policy, the salesman
seldom fails to stress the savings
factor as an important bonus .
"Imagine, you get protection and
money you can borrow when you need
it,
It is straight or ordinary life policies
that accumulate savings. It is the kind
salesmen love to sell, not just because
it is profitable to them but because,
they feel, such policies are good
protection.
For one thing, they can't he
cancelled . The premiums can 't be
raised. They have those cash and Joan
features. They can be changed to
other forms of life insurance. Agents
extol them, correctly, as flexible.
They can, in fact, be converted to
term life insurance, with the cash
value built up in the straight life
policy being used to pay premiums.
Term life insurance has no savings
feature; it is sinop!y protection

_J

Carter praising SaUdi Arab
Washington Today
WASHINGTON (AP) - President
after
blaming
the
Car ter,
Organization of Petroleum Exporting
Countries for America 's economic
woes, is now praising Saudi Arabia as
a good friend of the United States.
The president at first accused the oil
cartel of causing world suffering and
possibly an election-year recession in
the United States. He seemed to be
running for re-election as . though
OPEC were .j)is opponent.
But now he has gone out of his way
to thank the cartel's most important
member for pumping a little more oil,
promising to ease fuel shortages but
swelling for a while the petroleum
inoports Carter has promised to cut.
The president's zigzag runs counter
to the advice given him by his
domestic policy aide, Stuart
Eizenstat, who had said "a statement
which goes light on OPEC ... will not
convince the public that anything is
different ."
The seeming inconsistency thus
leaves question s about whether
Carter can seize what his advisers tell
him is an unprecedented opportunity
to rally \he nation, cure the nation 's
energy sickness arid enhance his
chances for re-election.
Ironically, the cartel's huge price
increases were seen in the White
House as a political windfall for
Carter.
As OPEC acted, American voters
were fuming in gasoline lines ,
inflation was running at an annual
rate of more than 13 percent despite
nearly a year of anti-inflation efforts
by Carter, a recession was viewed as
all but certain and the president's
approval rating had sunk to virtually
the lowest point of any president since
the advent of public opinion polling .
The price increase, while it
promised to worsen inflationary
pressures and dampen economic

growth, gave carter someone else to
blame.
It also added to a crisis atmosphere
that may have scared ·Congress
enough to follow where Carter wants
to lead .
WhitP. House press secretary Jody
Powell said the OPEC boost and long
gas lines had made Congress more
receptive to Carter initiatives than at
any tinoe since he took office.
Maybe so . After rejecting virtually

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A bill
allocating funds to Ohio's 616 school
districts in 1979-1981 is by far the most
important measure approved so far
this year by Ohio's lawmakers.
Next would come a bill that makes
more Ohioans eligible for the so-ealled
homestead property tax exemption.
The exemp.tion presently affords
property tax relief to Ohio
homeowners aged 65 and older and
those who are permanently and
totally disabled.
The latest change in the homestead
law increases to $15,000 a year the
income · an elderly or disabled
homeowner can have and stU! qualify
for the exemption. The previous
yearly maximum had been $10,000.
The still-pending two-year budget
bill contains about $15.1 million to
extend the homestead exemption to
about
60,000·80 ,000 additional
families.
The list of enactments goes downhill
fast in terms of statewide
significance.
A review of bills passed by both
houses since they convened in
.January shows that a majority of the
62 measures deal with local
governments and their problems.

For instance, one new law lets
Muskingum County acquire an
abandoned prison site from the state
lor use as a multicounty con:ections
center, if federal · funds are
forthcoming .
Another gives a downtow.n
Cleveland pr~inct another crack. ~
year at reversing a 1978 voter dectston
to forbid liquor sales. Usually, a
defeated local option liquor question
caMot be reconsidered for four years .
There were other new laws that
clarified municiptd and township
speed limits, brought county
recordkeeping systems out of the 19th
century, and placed open oorning of
debris at construction sites under
local control.
A handful of bills could be viewed as
helpful to consumers.
Among these are proposals limiting
the right of. insurance companies to
refuse to renew health and accident
policies - as a subtle substitute for
cancellation . - licensing motor
vehicle salvage dealers, and
regulating persons who sell franchises
so-called
" business
and ·
opportunities."
A.
Rhodes,
Gov . . James
incidentally, has not acted on some of

DEVOTED TO TilE.
OOERESTOF
MEIGS-MASON .&lt;IlEA
ROBERT HOEFt.ICH

City Edlier

lft-ZU7.
Sttood claN poiWJ~! paid al POIDmly , OW..
Natfoulad·;erdJklg npteHotattve, .........
WodaiH, 3111 EucUd Aw .• Ocnlud, ObJo
4411$.
Sat.crtpUoa ratft: DeU\Icrtcl b)' earner
wllere a\'atllblc M cu11 pc:r wttk. 8)' Mu&amp;or
Rou&amp;e wbert tan"kr lft"Vice Dtlavallable , ODe

moatb, 13 .M. By mall ID ObJo ud W, Va., OM
rear, S%7.51; 5l1 moaih•, I1UI ; l'1lrtt mooJ
lhl, $1.51; Ebcwbert f32.• year ; Sb moatlwl

$17.11 ; T1ltft montb, .... . SUba(rtpUoa pri«
IDctudtt_§uday T1mri· SeaUDC'l.

MANY MORE. COME IN. PRICE POSTED.
LET'S DEAL NOW.

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

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with Auto-Magic® FM Tuning System

Buy now for sensatio nal savings on a receiver with Auto-Magic,
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;. [ VI~

CHARGE 17 tM OST S rQR[SJ

Reg. 299.95

Open Evenings 8 P.M.

!! A DIVISION OF TANDY CORPORATION

Games Last Week
Foret Run 10 Hit N' Misses 2
Syracuse 9 Pomeroy o
Am. LegiOn 7 Masono lforfei1l
Two Rivers Ford 16 Mdp1 . 4
STOLEN BASES : North, San Fron · Two Rivers Ford 9 Mdpt . 8
cisco, 35 ; Morano, Pittsburgh , 33 ; Forest Run 18 New Mavens
Scott, Sl. Louis, 25 ; Scott , Montreal , Feenney Benne" AllJ. Leg.
22; Cedeno, Houston , 22 .
Pomeroy 10
PITCHING (8 cecislons J: N i ekro, Hll N' Misses 9 Mdpl. 2
Houston. IJ 3, .813, 2.87 ; LaCoss, Cln · Two Rlyers Ford u Mason 5

The first half of play in the Meiga·
Mason
Junior Girls Softball League
Lee, Mon -

Francisc o, 6·3, .667 , ~ . 29 ;
treal , 9 s, .6-o&amp; J , 3.36 .
ended Monday, July 3.
STRIKE O UTS : Richard , Houston, Haven Reds won the firSt
Ul ;
Ca rlton,
Philadel phia , 108 ;
Perry, San Diego, 100 ; Swan, New
York , 98 . N fekro, Atlant.a, 97 .

AMERICAN LEAGUE
BATTI NG 1200 at bats ): Smalley,

•

New Haven Reds

8·0

Syracue

6·2
5·3

The New
half with a

$339

67 :

R ice,
Boston ,
21 ;
Thomas ,
M ilwaukee , 21 ; Baylor, California,
21 ; Si ng leton, Ba l t imore , 19.

STO LEN BASES : LeFlore , Detroit.
45 ; Wilson . Kansas City , 37; Wills,

6995

• Few 1100's, model 916
•Few 1200's
•Also Miscellaneous

tacmery.

Mldd . Wranglers
Mason

H

J.S

New Haven Bears

2-6

H

Pomeroy

o-e

Recine

G•m•s
New Hoven Reds 14 Syracuse 0
Lelarl16 N. Hoven Bears 7
Mldd . 11 Mason 16
Pomeroy 19 Raci ne 18

Salisbury 9 Mldd . B

POMEROY
CEMENT BLOCK,

1

MODULAR
HOMES

.It

ftad1e

lhaek
OliALE~

_;;,;;;.;.;,;;;.;.._,1

KINGSBURY
HOME SALES

CO~

The Department Store of Building

.·····

e
;WITOFHPURCHASE
EITH ER e

e

•

4

&lt;?" •.• ,

·R~

••
e

~:~~EE 944

e
e

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e

• High!p]li t~ ocrylit lini~h
• Nev1!r needs point inQ · j\1!1hose
c. leon
• Won' t warp. chip. rot or peel
• Authentic wood gra i ~ le~ture

••
•

• 844
•
• 11.79
•
• ••••••••••••••••
25' POWIITAPl

REG.

BROWN POLYSTYRENE

SHUnERS ,5" x 39"
PAIR

~~vs

t)l( '1,111~ )I()N'l,ll
(
112" VARIABLE SPEEO

REVERSING DRILL

•

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. WOOOGRAINED EFFECT

• 10.69

~\.J..IJI~

,_,

••

•••
••
•

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Since 1915

;:~3499
• ~~&amp;· lock up to 700 R~M
• Drives &amp; relll(Nes screws
• Do.Jble in~uloted

•

Or~ls

wood, metol. mosonrv

~~ 1 • C~

-&lt;Ill COOI II()U, TOOl&gt;!

PICNIC TABLE FRAME

REG.2297

34.95

• Sturdy, rigid frame
• Easy to ossPmble (less lumhf&gt;r)
• Rust resis tonl hardw01e
• Qrll(lmentol scrolls, antique finish

FOLDS EASILY FOR STORAGE

RAISED PANEL

SERVICE

·: DOOR

WITH TEMPERED
SAFET YGLASS
2'6"x 6'8"x 1·318'
2' 8" X 6'8" X 1·3/ 8'
J ' Q" X 6'8" X 1·3/ 8:

PAIR

.,.,..

Reg. 119.95

Dealers

Few Mossbergs
Remington 700
High Powered Rifles

n

New York , 8·0, 1.000, 2.04 ; Kern,
Texa s, 10·2, .833, 1.64 ; Cl ear, Califor·
nia , 9·2, . 181, 2.52; Zahn, Minnesota,
7·2, .778, 3.24 ; John , New York , 13·4,
.765, 2.62 ; Barr ios, Chicago, 8·3, .727,
3.61 ; Palmer , Baltimore, 7·3, .700,
3.20 ; Drago, Boston , 7·3, .70, 3.06.
·
STRIKEOUTS : Ryan, California,
151 ; Gu idry , New York , 9'1;. Jenkins,
Texas , 97 : Eckersley, Boston, 82 ;

· eOhio Building Codes
eAFHA&amp;VA
See our tot model today.

Look for th1 s
s1gn •n vo ur
ne11il hbor hood ...

• Ammunition • 22 Cal. Rifles
• Few Guns Left
Remington 870
,.....

Meigs got two runs in the sixth on
back~ck home runs by Brown
andFOiler.
Other Meigs hitters on the night
besides tboee mentioned were Chitck
Kennedy, Cliff Kenedy, and Brown
with a double each, and Steve Uttle,
Jerry Fields, and T. Wayland with a
single each.
Meigs goes to Logan Saturday for
two games and then to Glouster on
&amp;mday foc anotehr twinbill.
Linescore: .
M.
321 002 0-- 8 9 3
W.
.
250 313 X-H 10 I
UWe (LP), Owens (4), Whitlatch
(5),J. Wayland (&amp;),andT. Wayland.
Cox (WP), Maerker (4) and T. Mon·

Koosman, M i nnesota, 81.

• With Universal
Mounting Bracket

'

choices.

Te)(aS. 25 ; Bonds . Clevela nd, 23 ;
Cruz . Seattle, 22.
o
PITCHING ( 8 Decisions) : Davis,

By
ALL AMERICAN
Meets

Mos1 11ems

Pirate hit in a row. The last run of the
frame scored on Rennie Stennett's
groundout.
Houston is in the midst of its longest
losing slide of the season and holds
just a 5\'z.game lea&lt;\ over Cincinnati
in the NL West.
Padres 7, Phlllles 3
" I made three mlstalses and all of
Utem went for home runs," said
Phillies hurler Randy Lerch, 4-3. His
errors came to Jerry Turner1 Dave
Winfield and Gene Tenace in
consecutive at-bats in the opening
inning.
"I threw most of the pitches where I
wanted to. The trouble was that the
~adres hit them where they wanted to

. Terry Wayland and Otuck Kennedy
each reached on a Wellston error, and,
Brown singled both runners home.
Then Wellaton came .up .jnth, five
runs to take a 7~ lead and just kept
adding to that margin the rest of the
game. The hosts plated three runs in
the fow1h without the benefit of a hit.
Tboee runs came aa the result of four
walb, an error, and two fielder's

Kemp.

lie. 6: Jones, Sea"le, 6.
HOME RUN S: Lynn, Boston , 24 ;

• 3·Way PA/ Monltor/
CB Switch

also ava ilabl e a1

two runs back in the

bottom rl the first befoce Meigs took a
5-2 lead with two runs in the second .

Mels t, Dodgen 3
John Stearns' bases-loaded single in
the lOth scored Lee Mazzllll with the
winning run and gave the Jast-placein-the·West Dodgers their 12th loss in
IS games and 27th in the last fl .
The Dodt!ers blew a threH"Wt lead
built on Reggie Smith's first-Inning
home run and J()f! Ferguson's twiH'WI
double in the third. The Jast-iJI..tbe..
East Mets tied it with the help of 10me
sloppy fielding by Dodgers left fielder
Von Joshua, who threw away a relay,
"What happened was typical," said
Smith. "We killed ourselves witb
mental mistakes and sloppy play. We
have to work. our way out of the
mental mistakes and I don't know If
- over fences:"
we can with the guys in the Uneup at
·
. Garry Maddox homered for the present."
Phillies , who · started the game
Braves 6, Cube 5
Bob Horner's two-run homer and a
without Pete Rose in the lineup for the
two-run
double by Rowland Office
first time this season. Philadelphia
Manager Danny Ozark rested Rose paced AUanta.
.and played red-hot Del Unser at first .
"They were throwing me fast balla
Tuesday, Unser had set a major inside aU night. I was looking for them
league mark with pinch-hit homers in and I hit them," said Office, who aliO
had two singles.
three consecutive appearances.

M innesota , .350; Downing, Cal ifornia,
.3.. 1; Bochte, Seattle, .JJS; Mollfor ,
M il waukee ..JJJ ; Ada ms, M innes.ota ,
.332.
RUNS : Lansford. Cal.ifornia , 70 ;
Bayl or , Californ ia. 68 ; Brett , Kansas
Ci ty , 61 ; Ri ce, Boston , ~ ; Ot is, Kan
sas City, 6-4 .
RBI : Baylor , California , 80 ; Ly nn ,

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F'llllbu rgh , 6 3, .667. 3.70 ; Li l1ell , 51 .
Lou is. 6·3, .667 , 3.25 . Knepper , San

Randolpt'l , .N ew York , 8; W i lson , Kan ·
sas Ci ty, !. : Molitor , M i lwaukee. 1;
~orter . Kansas City . 6; M eyer, Seat·

Reg. Separate
Items 509.80

Meigs took a quick ~ lead in the
top rl the first when Ken Brown and
Bob Foster both walked. Art
Fogelstrom then stroked a three-run

ev~ got

Salisbury
Letart

cinnat i. 9·3, .750 , 2.31; Andujar,
Houston , 10·5, .607 , 2. 73 , Blyl even,

Brett, Kansas Clly , 23.
TRI PL ES : Brett, Kansas City , 12:

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RUN S :

4·1
4·3

DOUBL ES : Lynn, Boston, 26 ;
Wash ington, Chicago, 25: Cooper ,

I

14~~
homer across the right field fence,
one of three Meigs homers on the

on July 27.
The league cbampioo widll be
detennlned by a two-out.rJ-three
serla playoff between the wiMer of
the first half and the winner ol the second half of season play. If the same
team wins both halves, then there will
be, if necessary, a two.oot.rJ-three
series playoff lor second place. Tbese
games will be held durlnl! the week of
July 30.
Individual and team trophies will
be presented loc both the first and second place wtnnen.
The league tournament for the
Junloc Dlvilion will be held 011 July
28, 29, ani! 30 at SyrBCIIII! tutd
Minersville. This WUl be a doubleelimination tournament open only to
Junioc team1 in the ~
softball league.
There will be individual and team
trophies given foc both first and se·
cond place winners rl thb lollmey.
The final standln8a and games of
the first half ol Junior League play Is
aa follows:

Det roit, 63 ; Bocnte, Seaffle, 63 .
HITS : Brert . Kansas City , 120;
Small ey, M innesota, 115; Lunsford.
Cali fornia . 112 ; Rice , Boston, 111 ;
M olitor , M i lwaukee, 111 .

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DIVISION B

Phi ladelphi a, 30; Kingman, Chicago,
9 ; Winfield, San Dieoo. 20 ; Ma "hews.
Atlanta , 19; Foster , Cincinnat i. 19;
Lopes, Los Angeles, 19 .

Boston , 75; Rice, Boslon ,

Aad1o Shack

Pomeroy

HOME

.,,
..

~.

5·1
6·2
2-5
2·5

10; Scott, St . LO\J is , ~ ; Winfiel d , San Feeney Bennett Am . LeQ ion
0 1(090 , 9; McBri de, Ph i ladelph i a, 8; Two Rivers Ford
Bowa, Phlla de lp,., ia , 7; Moreno, Pitt · Middleport SuP&lt;'rstars
sbu rgh , 7; Hernandez, St . Louis , 7,
Mason

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TRIPLES: Templeton. 51 . Louis,

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Rose, Phlladelph•a , 2~ ; Matthes ,... S yn~euse
Afl anta, 2.. ; Mall i Ill, New York , 23 ; H it N • M ISHS
H er~~mdez , St . Louis. 23 ; ReiTz , Sf. Haven Hitters
Louts, 23.
Pomeroy

•
..

AM

DIVISION A

DOUBLES : Griffey, Cinci nnat i, 25 : Forest Run

~

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Diviaion B teams are Feeney Ben· out-«-three series playoff of the
divison winners for the league cham·
plonship.
Individual and team trophiea will
TODAY ' S MAJOII
be given lor both first and second
. LEAGUE LEADERS
place winners.
By The AUOCi~teCI Press
The league tournament for Senior
NATIONAL LEAGUE
BATTING 1200 at bals l · Brock , St . Girls will be held on August 2, 4, and 5
Lou is, 332 ; Foster , Ci nci nnat i • .330 ; at Syracuse and Minersville. This
Mazzi pli , New York, .326 ; Templeton ,
St. Louis , 324: Fimmons, St. Louis , double-elemination tourney is open
only to league members.
.321.
RUNS : Kingman, Chicago, 69 : · Individual and team trophies will
Foster, Cinc innati , 68 ; W infield, San be given for both fim and secood
D1eoo, 67 ; scnmidt, Phi l adelphia, 65;
place finishers rl the tounuiment
Clark, San FranciSCo, 59 .
Current
standings and games in the
HITS : Templeton , St. Louis. 111 :
Garvey, Los Angelts , 111 ; Matthews, senior league are aa foUoW!l :

PlabU..beddiU:r tlctptS.baidly by Tltt Ollki
Valley Publlsltln( Compuy·Muldmedla, lac: ••
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Off!« Pboo&lt; tft· !IM. EdllorW no.

The Nationwide Supermarket of Sound

. their fifth consecutive loss; San Diego
blasted Philadelphia 7·3, New York
edged Uis Angeles ~ in 10 innings;
Atlanta stopped Chicago 6-5, and
CincinnaU bested St. Louis 6-1.
Pirates 5, Astros 1
Dave Parker and Willie Stargell
started off a four-run, five-hit seventh
against J .R. Richard, 7·9, with
consecutive home runs. John Milner
then tripled, Bill Madlock singled hino
in and Ed Ott singled for the fifth

Wellston bats banged out 10 against
four Meigs pitchers. They also yielded nine balle8 on balls.

By Greg BaUey
nett American Legion, Mason, Mid· sparkling 11-4 record. Saliabw'y flniah·
The Meigs-Mason Senior Girls Soft· dleport Superstars, and Two Rivers ed second at 7·I.
ball League is divided into two Ford.
The second half of play atarted
divisons .
Each team will play the teams in Monday, July 9. Games will be played
Diviaion A teams are Forest Run , their own division twice and each every Monday, Wednelldlly and Fri·
Hit 'N Misses, New Haven Hitters, team in the other division once. At the day during the month rl July 10 that
Pomeroy and Syracuse.
end of the seasoo, there will be a two-. the league schedule will be completed

::

Rece~ver

Schatzeder threw the ball down and
away rut be came up high with- wbat
looked Uke a lorkball," said I vie. "I
got all of it."
And the Giants got the best of the
Expos foc the second straight night,
becoming the first team to win .a
series at Olympic Stadium -thts
season. Montreal is 2U at home and
leam the National League East by 4,.
games.
Elsewhere In the NL, Pittsburgh
beat Houston 5-l, handin~ the As!Tos

Girls' softball information given

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mistakes and key errOI'll allowed host
WellBton to take a 14-3 win.
Meigs pounded out nine hits, but the

By Greg Bailey
The Meigs American Legion bats
came Blive .last night, but mental

mE DAILY SENTINEL

.1

surrendered just three hits in eight
innings.
' 'Opposing pitchers usually have to
come in with a ~ pitch and they were
being a little cautious," said Curtis,~
5. " I felt that I had to be aggressive so
I didn't pull any punches out there. I
wanted to get to the point where I had
to make-tliem hit my best pitch."
lvie didn't have to hit Schatzeder's
best pitch because the Montreal
hurler, 4-2, made a mistake.
" In my previous two •!·bats .

Bats come alive, Meigs loses,

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By BARRY WU.,NER
AP Sports Writer
John Curtis spent aU night throwing
lefts at the Montreal Expos but it was
teammate Mike I vie who provided the .
·
knockout punch.
Clirtis became the first left-handed
starter to beat the Expos since May
11, pitching a nifty four-hit, I~ victory
Wednesday . The lone run came on
!vie's 12th homer of the season,
leading off the seventh against
Mpntrul 's Dan Schatzeder, who

"'

the measures which were sent him
becauseheleftonJune30fora 17~y
trade mission to China.
Typical of other measures enacted
in what some have tabbed a year of
" legislative letharg y" are those
which require lighting efficiency .in
state
buildings and
requite
· participation of minocity banks in the
holding of interim government funds .

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every proposal made by Carter over advice : " assert leadership ... shift
the last two years to curb the U.S. cause for inflation and
thirst for inoported · oil, the House problems to OPEC ...
pasSed the president's oil-profits tax opportunity." He said it
and Congress began talking seriously Carter's last chance. ·
At first Carter followed that fead.
about reviving a standby plan to
He
said OPEC's pt1ce boost would
ration gasoline. Criticism of Carter's
cause
" worldwide suffering." Then he
decontrol of domestic oil prices
said
it
makes a U.S. recession "more
receded.
likely."
Then Powell said it is " at
Eizenstat wrote a memorandum to
Carter dated June 28, which was later root of all our economic problems."
published in the Washington Post. His

•

Curtis, lvie give Giants, l-0 wtn

'.

,,

"

.,

~

�4- The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Thursday, July 12, 1979

Sparky wants hurlers
to learn pitching art

Long hurls :qo-hitter
By Greg Bailey
Fir.st roWJd action .in the Syracuse
Little League Tournament was concluded with three more teams ad·
vancing to second roUild play.
The PQllleroy Tigers whitewashed
the Gallipolis Tigers 11~. Fruth's
Pharma cy blank ed Glouster

Wednesday 's Sports Tran sactions
By The Associated Press

BASEBALL

American LeaguP.

CHICAGO WHITE SOX - Sig ned
Bobby Douglass , p itcher, and ass ig n·
ed him to Iowa of the A merican

associa tion .

·

National League

ST . LOU IS CARDI NAL S - Cal led
Roger Freed , i nf ielder, from Spr Ingf ield of the Am eri ca n Asoci fttion .
Optioned Kei th Smith, outfielder, to
Spr ingfield .

BASKETBALL

National Basketball Association

NBA - Named Joe Axelson to an
administrative position .

INDIANA

PACERS -

Signed

Frankie Sanders, guard .

FOOTBALL
National Football League
CINCINNATI BEN GALS - Signed

Jack Thompson ; quarterback .

DENVER

BRONCOS -

Signed

Dave Preston, running back, to a
ser ies of one-year contra cts. Si gned
llave Jacobs, kicker .

LOS ANGELES RAMS - Traded

lsiah Robertson , linebacker, to the
Buffalo Bills fOr an undisclosed draft
choice .

SEATTLE SEAHAWKS - Signed
Manu Tui asosopo, nose guard, to a

American Legion !Hl, and Vinton
dwnped the Pomeroy Yankees !G-5.
Parker Long tOBSed a no-hitter for
the Pomeroy Tigers and walked j~t
six batters. Tim Spurlock took the
lOBS for Gallipolis.
For the winning Tigers, Vince
Knight, Todd Hysell, Daren Hayes,
and Jackie Welker each had two hits .
Tim Swisher got the win in the
Fruth's victory. Steve Campbell ws
tagged with the loss , The winners
outhitGiouster 7-4.
Swisher also furnished the power at
the plate ils he banged out a home rWJ
and double. Alex Au8tin added a
homer.
Todd Diehl pitched Vinton to their
win over the Pomeroy Yankees. '
Charles Knopp got the loss. Brian
Rawk slammed a h m rW! d t
0 e
an WO
singles, and John Diddle helped out
with three hits .
Tonight the New Haven Cubs meet
Green ··m the f"Irs\ game ·of the second
roWJd at 6:15. Then the Point
Steelworkers tangle wi•.h the Mid·
dleport Indians followed by the Mur;
·t
'
ray C_1 y-NewHavenHedscontest.
Fndsy fmds the Middleport Braves
taking on the Gallipolis Red Sox, Ad· ·
daville going against Tuppers Plains
and the Gallipolis Senators meeting'
.
the Athens Medics.
Saturday has just two games on
tap. The Pomeroy Tigers tangle with
Hubbard's Greenhouse, and Fruth's
·
meets Vinton.

series of contra ct s through the 1983
season .

HOCKEY

National Hockey league

WINNIPE G J ETS - Signed Lyle
Moffat, left wing , to a one ·year con ·
tract .

In a 1961 NBA game against the
BOilton Celtics, Bob Pettit of St. Louis
made 19 consecutive free throws.

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BASEBALL SCOREBOARD
Baseball At AGlance
By
The
Associated
Press
· NA"
TIONAL
LEAGUE
EAST
w. L. Pe.t .

~~~;~

!!

1

~~ : ~

Rooker 2·31 at Houston, (J . Nlekro
13·31, (n) .
(Only games scheduled)
Frldl)y's Games

GB
4,12
5•;,
s•12
15'12

Pittsburgh
43 38 ,531
Philadelphia
46 41 .529
St. Louis
42 48 .407
Houston
WES13 37
Cincinnati
47 42 :~: s•;,
San Francisco
.u 45 .-489 9
san Diego
41 50 .451 lO'h
Atlanta
38 50 .432 14
Los Angles
36 53 .400 16'12
Wednesday Games
New York 4, Los Angeles, 3, 10 innings
Atlanta 6, Chicago 5
San F~ancisco 1, Montreal o
San D1ego 7, Philadelphia 3
Clncinnatl6, St. Lou is 1
Pittsburgh 5, Houston 1
Thursday's.Games
San Francisco (Montefusco 1-41 at
Montreal (Rogers9·51 , (n).
san Diego (Shirley 4.91 at
Philadelphia (Carlton 10·81. In 1.
Los Angeles (Hooton 7·61 at New
York (EIIIs0·2J , &lt;nl .
Chicago I Holtzman HI at Cincin natl 1Moskau5·3J, (nl .
Pittsburgh ( Blylevenn 6·3 or

LaCoss
dumps
Cards ·
CINCINNATI (AP ) - Mike LaCoss
started the season with eight straight
victories for the Cincinnati Reds, then
he lost three straight. Now he figures
he's back on track after beating the
St. Louis Cardinals, 6-1, Wednesday
night.
"Mter the first loss, that was the
whole load there, and from tben I've
just tried to settle back and pitch my
own ballgame," he said.
LaCoss went the distance with an
eight-hitter despite the sultry night air
in Riverfront Stadium.
·
"On a night like this, the weather
kind of gets ahold of you, and before
you realize it you start doing things
you don't normally &lt;lo," he said. "You
think you're throwing the ball real
well, but the humidity drains you.
"What you're actually doing is
slowing down each time out, so you
have to pick yourseU up."
LaCoss, 9-3, is headed for the All·
Star game to represent the Reds'
pitching staff. In his final start before
the mid.,season break he lowered his
eamed rW! average to 2.30, best
amo~ National League starters. He
retired the first 14 Cardinal batters
before rookie catcher Terry Kennedy
singled.
"look at his slats. He's got to be a
pretty good pitcher," said St. Louis
Manager Ken Boyer.
Boyer said the Cards' starter, John
Denny, was · a victim of his own
wildness.
"He threw too many pitches, 100
pitches in five innings," Boyer noted.
"He's got too good of control to be
pitching Uke that. I don't know what
the problem is."
The Reds scored twice in the third
inning off Denny, 4-7, when ·Cesar
Geronimo and LaCoss walked, and
Dave Collins singled to load the bases.
Junior Kennedy walked, fOI"cing in a
rWJ, and Joe Morgan drove in a run
with a sacrifice fly.
A wild pitch by Denny yielded a
Cinclnna ti run in tbe fifth . Collins
doubled in two runs in the eighth and
scored on KennedY's single.
"The biggest thing about being an
extra man is to stay sharp," said
C&lt;&gt;llins, playing right field for Ken
Griffey. "You've got to stay sharp and
you can't get down on yourseU,
"I'm 26 years old, I know I can hit
and play and I don't like to sit on the
bench, but I know what my role is with
this ballclub."
The Cardinals' lone run was scored
in the sixth Inning on a bases-loaded
sacrifice fly by Jerry Mumphrey.
"That's when I decided I'd better
get somebody out before it was too
late," said LaCoss. "The weather and
the hwnidity made It kind of tough . I
was kind of laying the ball in there ."

FOR INDEPENDENT BUSINESSES
$10,000 ... $20,000 ..• $50,000
$100,000 ... $200,000 and more.

San Francisco at New York. 2
San Diego at Montreal. 2, (nl
Pittsburgh at Atlanta, (n)
Chicago at Cincinnati, 1n1
Los Angeles at Philadelphia, (nl
St. Louis at Houston, lnJ ~
AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST
W. L Pet.
57 30 .655
Baltimore
53 37 .6()4
, Boston
50 38 .548
-Milwaukee
New York
-48 40 .5&lt;.5
41 .... .4112
· Detroit
28 61 .315
Toronto
WEST
California
52 38 .578
Texas
49 38 .563

CINCINNATI (AP) - Detroit
Tigers Manager Spark)" Anderson
wants his young pitchers to learn
baseball by paying attentloo to · the
game.
That's why during a game, If a
pitcher must leave the dugout, he asks
the manager and then must return to
watch the game.
Anderson 's crackdown hegan after
he took over as the Tigers' manager in
mid-June.

"I'm here for a couple of weeks and
I keep noticing the young pitchers
dlaappear from the dugout throughout
3
the game," Anderson said during a
7'h
telephone Interview. "First one, then
1
9 12
another.
They'd vanish. I'm watching
15
30
and they'd just dlaappear.
"I began to wonder, then once
during
one game I walked into the
14
clubhouse and this one eat's reading a
Minnesota
46 40 .535 4
Kansas City
43 .u .494 7'12 magazine and another's asleep on the
Chicago ·
40 .c6 ..c65 10
trainers table.
Seattle
39 51 .433 ·13
"No wonder they don't know how to
Oakland
25 66 .275 27'1&gt;
pitch to the hitters. They don't want to
Wednesday's Games
Baltimore 3, Oakland 1
find out."
Milwaukee 2. Toronto 1, 10 innings
Anderson, who declined to name the
Cleveland 9, Kansas City 8
GB

Minnesota 3. DetroitO
Chicago 5, Texas 3

Boston 9, Cal ifornla 3
Seattle 16, New York 1
Thursday's Gomes
Detroit IP. Underwood 3.0 and
Wilcox 7·4) at Chicago (Kravec 8·7

and Barrios 8·31, 2, (nJ.
Milwaukee !Haas 5·61 at Toronto
(T . Underwood3·11 ), (n).
Texas (Medich 2·31 at Kansa-s City
(Guro Hi". (n) .
·
New York (Hunter 1·51 at Seattle
(Parroti6·SJ. (n) .
(Only games scheduled
Friday's Games

Minnesota at Toronto, (n}

Cleveland af Milwaukee, In)
Detroit at Chicago, (nl

•

Texas at Kansas City , (n)

New York at California, (n)
Boston at Oak,land, (n)
Baltimore at Seattle, (nJ

Summer
baseball
results
In Senior Girls Softball, host
Syracuse raise! its record to ~1 with a
convincing ~victory ovr Pomeroy.
Carla Teaford got the win with
Kellie Rought taking the lOBS.
Tonia Ash led the Syracuse hitting
with a home run and two singles.
Vicki Cundiff had a three-nm homer
and a single, and Teaford smacked
two singles.
Susan Zirkle got a double and single
to lead·Pomeroy .Pomeroy is now 2-4
on the year.
Linescore:
P.
000000~0 75
s.
012 420 X-9 13 I

The Middleport Pony League team
raised its league record to S-2
Tuesday night with a 7·1 win over host
Eastern. Winning pitcher Jimmy
Boyer teamed with Dave Dernoeky to
strikeout twelve Eastern hitters while
walking just one,
Rob Smith took the lOllS fanning
'
eight and walking one.
Demosky led the hitting with 8
double and two singles while BW
Powell had a single and double. Jimmy Boyer and Steve Powell each had
two singles, .Terry Wayland had a
double, and Allen King and John
Ward each had a single.
Mike Bissell doubled for Eastern.
Jeff Newell, Ken Newell, Smith, and
Charley Ritchie each had a single.
Eastern is now S-5 on the season:

TOURNEY AUG. ll·lS
Gary Edwards, manager of the r--:~·~~---·-~-Executive Golf Course Nelsonville '
Your "Extra Touch"
announces that the fil"!lt :umual Senlo;
Florist 'iince 1957
Qtizens Golf Tournament will be held
~
at the course Aug. II and 12. There
~
will b,e large trophies plus money
~wards to the top 6 golfers; for more
FLORIST.
infonnation please call (614) 753-27561
__
_
or write : Executive Golf Course Rt.
PH. 992·26"
I, Nelsonville.
'
352 E. Main, Pomeroy
'--Your ~!2..':.!2.!.!!!-

I
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1
I

_ _j

EFFECTIVE JULY 1

SAVINGS
RATE
INCREASE

PASSBOOK .Compounclld Dolly 5 lf..%
90 -IMY CERTIACATE. ~ ....~~~:~~~ ~!:~·~...... SWJ,
1 YEAR CERnFICATE ...... ~~~~-~~-~-~~·~:~ ........ 6%

4 YEAR CERnFICATE .... ~!~~'!'.~':'. ~~-.~:~ ...... 71;4%
6 YEAR CERnFICATE .....

•

TWINS TOGE1HER AGAIN -Teresa Cremeans, right, and her twin
sister, Gertrude Kaltenbach, visiting bere from Ludwigshafen, Ger·
many.

rwins reunite after
16 ye~r separation
Tereu Cremeans of Broadway St.,
Middleport, and her twin sister, Ger·
trud Kaltenbach of I.Aidwlgshafen
Germany, were reunited thia week
after a ~tim of 16 years.
.Teresa e.me to the Unlted States
with her IIIIIband, J. J . Cremeans, in
December, 19153 and that was the last
time !he saw Gertrud.
Gertrud came to America via jet
but before coming on to Middleport
for a two week vlsJt bere with Mr. and

Mrs. . Creineans and their five
children, she took a bus trip from New
York into Canada and then down to
Washington, D. C. and back Into New
Y~rk. She has traveled extensively in
Europe . In Germany Gertrud
manages the Kaltenbach buainess in
the city of Ludwigshafen.
Gertrud is the second member of
the family to visit her. Mrs. Kallen·
bach visited with the Cremeans family eight year.! ago.

SIO,too minimum. lntorest rote equal to ""'rote Of tn d•y t
IIIII r•to. Aa del....., Intel at w-1~ ou~lon.
,...,.,.,

SUBSTANTIAL PENALTY FOR EARLY WITHDRAWAL

THISTLEDOWN RESULTS
NORTH RANDAU., Ohio (AP) Bended Knee covered the mile oo an
off track in 1:39 4-5 Wednesday to win
the featured $8,000 Allowance at
ThisUedown Racetrack.
The winner, ridden by Tony
D'Amico, paid $10.60, $5 and $4.20.
Second-place Entranced returned
$5.20 and $4.20, while third-place
Annie Rooney paid $3.60.
The lrifecta of I'm for Stephanie
(7), Jodys Miracle (B) and Pat
McCormick ( 4) paid $998.40 on 60
winning tickets.
The crowd of 4,743 wagered $546,959.

Mr. and Mn. Virgil Norris of Mt. Margaret West, Earl and Mealnie.
Vernoo, 0 ., came to Syracuse JWte 22 · Others attending ere Rod, Jane,
and plcli:ed up Mr. and Mrs. Ross Matt, Keenan and Ethan McKee, Mr.
Norrtlllld took them to their home in and Mrs. Harold Hayman, Mr . and
MI. Vernon, where they spent the Mn. Ross Norris, Mr. and Mrs. Virgil
weekend.
Norris and family , Jean Mitchell,
, Th!S was the first linl.e Mr . "and Mn. ·Kevin S.yre, Wayne R. Norrla, Rev .
· Norris had visited Their 1011 and William Powers and Juanita .
family In their new home.
Ross Norris was a nephew ol the
Norrta sold his farm and bought six late Ella Sayre.
IICI'tl; he hu a nice garden thia year,
Mr. and Mrs . Ross Norris
having cut hla first head of cabbage celebrated their 56th wedding an·
ooJune 13.
nlversary on May 20.
While there, the NorrlseJ also attended a family reunion (at the
restaurant of Jarh and aara Porter
In Gallon, Ohio ) of the delcendants of

Layette
shower held
A recent layette shower was · beld
for Mrs. Gerald E. Sellers, the former
Joyce Roush, at the home of
Mrs. Thelma Grueser. Hostesaes were
Ferne and Sylvia Ro1111h and Cheryl
Lee.
A pink, yellow and white color
scheme was carried out In the decorations. Pink and blue booties decorated
each piece of the cake which was
served with mints, chips, Kool·Aid
and coffee.
_
Games were played with prizes going to Debbie Sellers, Kay and Mistee
Grueser, Bobby Staats and Peggy
Caton. Others attending were Thelma
and Rodney Grueser, Arlene and
Rasche! Rowe, 'Mary lind Claudette
Reitmire, Anne, Mary and Francis
Staley, Amy and Michael Selle.r s., and
HoWle Jeffers,
·
Sending gifts were Doris 'Lee,
Beulah Roush, Angie Sellers, Bernice
Winn, Hazel Thcmpson , Pauline Cun·
· ningham, Hazel Weston, Gladys
Wines, Evelyn Lockett, Ada Sellers,
Wanda Pattersoo, Gloria Herdman,
Ann Zirkle, Terri Zirkle, and Debbie
Maynard.

Relalivs ancl"frlends attending were
Jarh llld Clara Porter, Florence.
Ulrey, EJecta Porter, C. RU8Sell
Sayre, Eleanor Daher, Bertha and
Fred Mauren, Roy and Crystal Cook,
Sally and Myran Kempfer, Mid Pato,

People

RACINE
HOME NATIONAL

BANK
RacinerOhio

Department.

Casey Kasem
WMPO
SATURDAYS
8 til Noon
' - - --:· -

SHOE SALE

U.S. 60 WEST

#"FAMILY DAY PICNIC"

The
Shoe Box
•

HUNTINGTON
)

'

Real Estate Taxes. Final day to pay tax

living room, lovely buill·ln kit·

chen

with

dishwasher,

~Ill

ut ility

room, forced air heat, nestled

among shade trees. 5 acres
tillable, wonderful location 1 mile
from Chester off Route 7, 6 m i les
from Pomeroy .

Call
Ruth Stewart
374-7311
Marietta. Ohio

be July 20, 1979

New office hours effective May 29, 1979 8:30 to
4:30, Monday through Friday. Closed on Saturday.

Bill or

MEIGS COUNTY TREASURER
GEORGE M. f:OUINS

SEA &amp; SKI

FOILLE
Ft!SI Aid Sor•y 3 [}l

Sunu n lotion 4 Ol
"l&lt;IIIJ l!SI S2' 60

Mig List S2 39

$1.49

$1.37

STING KILL

TROPICAL
BLEND
Oil or lOtiOn 8 OZ

SWABS

''

Mtg lin SJ

Mig ltst $1 49

~

$1.88

s.79

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

•

$2.39
S3A9
56&lt;
MIQ Ltsi $5 95

2112 QT.
PLASTIC
PITCHER
AdJustable Spout
Ass t Colors
Mig LIS! $2 29

$1.09
SUMMERS
EVE """""'"
Couche
·. ReQular or Hertlal Twm
MIQ LIS! $1 39

QUANTITIES
LIMITED

Pack

~69
JOHNSON'S
BABY
POWDER
Purest ProtecttOn 14 oz
MIQ LISI $2 59

S1A9
25·3819

r-------~~~~~E
. ~· ~------~

0

·

25 ~cres wtih extra nice 2
bedroom home, 548,800 - Large

Tax books open for second half of 1978

••~ 'I1n~ tRt!YI'II

the threads. 54-in . handle.

CONTINUES

CAMDEN PARK

Big sale this week, furniture, radios,
toys, tools, carpet, all kinds of new mer·
chandise, many bargains, come bring a
chair
and
stay
all
night .
Don't forget our Saturday sale, 13 Mill
St., Chauncey, 0.
Not responsible for accidents
Terms of sale cash or. check with positive
I. D.
'
Auctioneer, Bill Brown

lliUlf)lliN

won't abso rb water, splinter, mildew. crack or strip

EMPIRE-DETROIT STEEL
OPEN TO PUBLIC AFTER 5 PM

FRIDAY EVE., JULY 13 - 7:00 PM

DEXATRIM
DIET CAPSULES

Features natural, heavy-duty. brown Palmyra bris·
ties for sweeping up mud, leaves and dirt in the ga·
rage, on patio, walkways, etc. Molded plastic block

SUMMER

SATURDAY-JULY 14th
• UNnL 5 PM

AUCTION

Robert Bruce - king and national
hero of Scotland - died in !329. Only a
year before his death, his 25 years on
the battlefield had culminated in tbe
Treaty of. Northampton, which
secured Scottish independence. His
most famous battle was at
·Bannockburn, where his strategy
defeated an English focce that greatly
outnwnbered his own.

STROUT REALTY

the past 35 years.
A dinner was served by the Church
Women. Mrs. Edna Slusher was a
guest and presented the Keltons with
a gift. Mn. Kell!Jn will leave here on
Aug. 3 ftr their new home in Quinton,
Va._,and will be joined In late August
by her husband.

VISrr lllliEFLv

Mr. and ~- Joe McDonald
enroute to their home in Columbua
frml Florida visited in Middleport
briefly with their couain, Leona Kohl,
Grant St. Mc[lona~d, now retired, was
associated with the Columbus Police

24-ln. GARAGE BROOM
PARK RESERVED

vice president and secretary of
Church Women.
A gift was presented to the couple
from the Church Women and from the
memhers of Vestry. Mrs. Hites read a
letter from Mr. and Mrs. Keltoo ·ln
which they expressed what Grace
Church has meant In their lives over

28's
Mi g l ~SI 53 ~ 5

NEW SCULPTURE
MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (AP) - A
sculpture by Roher! Murray has heen
dedicated at Hooeywell Plaza.
The work is called "Taku." It
coosiBts of a large curved sheet of
steel suspended and supported by
three stmnar curved plales. It Is over
10 feet high and '1:/ feet long and is
pain~ deep red.
Murray says, "I try in my sculpture
to achieve ftr the viewer a sense of !
effcrtless grace. 'Taku' conveys the
lmpresalcirl that it is very delicately
perched on the ground, even though it
weighs seven tons."

Meigs County

. A farewell dinner honoring Mr. and
Mrs. Aaron Kelton was held Sunday
evening at Grace Episcopal Church
with 55 memhers and guests attending .
.
Tributes were paid to Mr. and Mrs.
Keltoo for their years of faithfulness
and service · to the church by Mn.
Robert Hites of Grace Episcopal
Church Women, and Dale Dutton
. warden . Kelton has been a'
seruor
vestryman on three different occa·
sions and served as senior warden for
three years. Mrs. Kelton has been a
Sunday school teacher, president,

Ella Sayre.

Mr. and Mrs. Keith Callahan are
announcing the birth of a son, Claytoo
Amos on March 12 at Pleasant Valley
Hospital. He weighed eight pounds, 12
ounces, and was 21 inches \ong.
Clayton's maternal grandparenl!
are Kenneth and Joy Swan~ . Eureka
Star Route, Gallipolis. His paternal
grandparents are the lale Willard and
Jane Callahan.
Mrs. Keith Callahan is the former
Dian Swank.

MONEY MARKET CERnFICATE

Fifty-jive attend farewell fare

REDUCED IN PRICE

Announce birth

4 YEAR MONEY CERTIACATE

Phone (614) 533-1431

.

71h%

Minimum $1 ,OOO,DO. 1nterest r
ylelcl ofTruaury Securities. • 1• o1 11V•% under the overage 4 year

For rnforma lion an d prom pf service contact ... John o. Herrold

\::u::::I CONfR.OL DI\TA CORJ'ORAflON

~~-~~~~.~.~1:~:~ ••••••

8 YEAR CERnFICATE ... : ~~~~~~~-~~:~:~ ...... 7%%

EQUIPMENT FINANCING &amp;LEASING
TRAINING COURSES designed to meet the needs
of small business.

1';:11:;\ .1 h n.t nCMl ~e rVIce ol

Carol R. Pierce was honored on his
75th birthday July I with a barbecue,
homemade ice cream sod cake at his
lAngsville home.
Children, grandchildren and great·
grandchildren there. for the celebration were Mr. and Mrs. Rusty Pierce
and daughter, Debra and son, Jasdn,
Mr. and Mrs. Kimmy Pierce and son,
. Franklin, all of Salem Center; Mr.
• and Mrs. Charles Newton and son,
Scott, and daughter, Jody, Waverly;
Mr. and Mrs. Danny Johnson of
Marysville; Mr. and !'.Jrs. William
Johnson and son, Phillip of Carroll;
Mr. and Mrs. David Pierce of
Mansfield; Mr. and Mrs. Craig Pierce
of Colwnbus ; Mr. and Mrs. RoMie
Danison of Lancaster; Mr. and Mrs.
Robert E. Pierce and daughter,
Teana, Groveport. Also visJting dur·
ing the day was Ronald Johnston of
Seattle, Washington. Gifts and cards
were presented to the honored guest.

·. Mr. and Mrs. Norris visit son

'

THE CITY LOAN
BUS INESS SERYI CES CO.

•

I

.

Also milable:

players he caught, called a meeting of
his pitchers, eumpting llilly veterans
Jack Billingham and John HU!er.
"I told them they would i!lt with me
as a group on the bench. And If for any
reasoo they have to leave the dugout,
they doo't ask the coach, they come to
me. And they come back and sit oo the ·
bench and learn about pitching," the
Tigers manager said.
Even relief pitchers muot sit oo the
bench and can leave the dugout only
with Andersoo 's perrnWton.
"I told ·~m as long as I'm here that
there's my way arid It gets awfully
bumpy on the highway to Evansville
(the Tigers' minor league affiliate)., "
Anderson saYd In a telephone
inerview.
Anderson said. It had been
unnecessary to Introduce such
IIIe88Ul"es during his nine-year tenure
as manager In Cincinnati because the
circumstances were different. ·
"You have different rules,"
Andersoo told a reporter. "You've got
rules for guys who've proved
themselv.,. Rules fOI" young players
and rules for players who've been
around three or four years.
"Lilte your business. I wouldn't
think a cub. reporter has the same
privileges as an older, experienced
reporter. All businesses are . like
that."

75th
birthday
fare held ·

VALLEY LUMBER &amp;
SUPPLY
CORPORATION

923 S. 3rd Ave.

Middleport, 0

992·2709 or 992·6611
Open: 7:00to5:00Mon. thru Fri.
7:00 to 3 :00 Saturday

Sup@r Sue 1 8 01

22' Oil label
Mig l 1SI 52.09

CORRECTOL
La•at1ve30's
Mlg. ltst$2 .19

$1.37
$1 89

$1.09
CRACKER
JACKS
Snack
• 6 Bo,ei
Pac~

Mlg . list$1 .19

$1.09
TMES£ A~E SUGG£ 5 TEO A 0 P~ IC E S

s.77
WE A£SERVIE THE AIGHT TO
L•IT OUANTITit:S AT SALE PRICES

MILLAGE' PHARMACY
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

992-5759

I

I

�6-'lbe Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, u.,l'hursday, July 12, 1979

7- 111e Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, July 12,1979

State session of Daughters of America held
The 85th Annual state Session of the
Daughters of America was 81Ulounced for Aug. 20, 21 and 22 at Imperial
House South, Da~on, when the
Chester Council 323 mel recently at
the hall.
Mrs. Margaret Tutile, secretary,
read- a communication from Mao&lt;
Stipp, Mt: Arab, the Ohio state Councilor, in which she announced the
state session and called for every

council in the state · to have a
representative there. She ask~ for
'members to send or take gifts for the
SP&lt;--cial tables- fancy work table, orphans and home table, and the 25 cent
''no peek" packages.
In her letter the state councilor extended &amp;ppreciation for the privilege
of serving in that capacity and caUed
for continued dedi.cation to the order
and its principals.

Today's Topic:

Doctor's who rescue youth
BEVERLY HILlS, Calif. (AP) They can lift your face, bob your nose,
unbag your eyes, strengthen your
chin, pin your ears, tuck your tummy,
enlarge your breasts, shape your
fanny and smooth your thighs.
Plastic surgeons are doing aU that
and more, and on a widening range of
patients.
Just a few years back, cosmetic
surgery...was commonly considered a
plaything of vain, wealthy matrons
and aging movie stars - and they
usually denied their operations.
Then PhyUill Diller had not only a
facetift and related surgery but went
happily public as well in 1970. Big
headlines greeted former first lady
Betty Ford's face lift last year. Things
have changed.
"People used to come to me and
say, 'Don't tell anybody I came
here,"' said Dr. Walter Berman, a
Beverly Hills plastic surgeon. "Now
it's become commonplace. It's just
burgeoned because of the public
acceptance ....We do facelifts just
about on a daily basis ·now."
Berman, who also heads a facial
plastic surgery program at UCLA
Medical School, said the new
popularity, especially with men,
stems in part from America's
glorification of youth -many people
want to defy the years aod try to
appear young again.
"Older people," said Dr. Raja Srour
of Beverly Hills, "find themselves
competing with
a younger
generatlon ... and the emphasis is
always on youth. In order to c&lt;mpete,
you have to look young and on the go.
"It's no longer just a vanity
operation," he said. "It's more of a
need that society Is putting on the
individual. It'S like you're turning the
clock back a few years."
Technology has kept pace as
surgeons become adept at hiding the
inevitable scars of their scalpels and

learn to do more than had been
dreamed possible just a few years
ago.
"I've had patients on whom I've
done six operations," Srour said. "If
the patient needs it and you believe
you can help her, then definitely you
can operate on the whole body. You"
MRS. PAT THOMA, right, who has resigned as Meigs County Service
can lift everything up ."
Unit Director for the Girl Scouts, was presented a hanging basket by
Dr. Charles Krause, a teaching
Cadette Troop 1180 and Brownie Troop 1001 at a recent ceremony held at
surgeon at the University of
Royal Oal&lt; Park. Pictured here making the presentation to Mrs. Thoma ill
Michigan, said age ill not the only
Palty.Capehart.
enemy. Nature's shortcomings, such
as breasts considered too smaU, or its
generosity - a nose judged too big can often be changed.
· The impact can be psychological as
well as physical and "that's the fun of
doing this," he said. SmaU surgical
changes Improve self-esteem, often
dramatically, and the patient
suddenly pays more attention to
hairstyle, make-up and general
appearance.
The combination of improved
appearance and a richer Self-image
"may change a person 's whole
Sixty residents of the Athens Menoutlook on life," said Berman. who
tal Health Center were present for the
describes much of hill work as
monthly party held by the
"psychosurgery."
HomehuUders Class of the Middleport
Get professional
But Berman and most other plastic
Church of Christ there Tuesday night.
results at a
surgeons Stress repeatedly that· they
Going over for the party were Mrs.
are oniy doctors, not magicians - a
the cost.
fraction
Flo Grueser, Mrs. Clyda Allensworth,
surgeon's l&lt;nife cannot bring mental
Mrs. Peggy Brickles and Mrs. Coleen ·
health, financial success or happy
VanMeter.
marriages and it emphatically does
Games were played with prizes go1
not stop the clock from ticking.
ing to each patient. Mrs. Brickles was
"This ill not clay we are dealing with
at
the
plano
for
hymn
singing.
CupAmerica's No. 1
here,"
Srour said, "We are dealing
cakes,
bananas
potato
chipa,
candy,
Home Carpet
with human flesh and bone and there
ice cream and Kool-Aid were served.
C}esning
is only so much you can do with it."
SYstem
Excess skin can be removed. What
remains can. be tightened up and
smoothed out. The effect of gravity's
I RENT
$}00
I
inexorable tug can be repaired : what
I FOR
PER HOUR I
RECENT GUESTS
has drooped can be lifted .
I ONLY
(4-HourMinlmum) I
Recent guests of Mr. and Mrs.
But time, age and gravity do not
George Freeland, Syrscuse, were Mr.
stop.
and Mrs. RusseU Few, Zanesville.
A facelift, which costs $2,500 to
Mr. and Mrs. Few were fanner neigh$4,500, might last a lifeUme or as little
bors of Mr. and Mrs. Freeland when
as two years. The average is between
they resided in Middleport.
5 and 10 years.
Some people make a minor fhysical
defect the scapegoat for their
problems and failures. "We like to
THURSDAY
MEIGS HUMANE SOCIETY know that kind of thing before we
Thursday 7:30 p.m. at Thrift Shop, operate on them," Krause said;
·"because then we won't operate on
Middleport.
them."
,
SYRACUSE VIlLAGE COUNCIL
Dr.
James
Cosentino
of
the
Thursday 7:30 p.m.s
California Board of Medical Quality
--&amp;..===-=-=.._;=.,_;=:...:=-==~ REVIVAL Ruiland Freewill Baptist Assurance said many - tl)ough by no
Chuch beginning Thursday through
lAth. Rev. Paul Taylor speaker. means all - complaints against
plastic surgeons arise because the
Special singing. Pub)!c invited.
patients expected miracles. ·
ROCK SPRINGS GRANGE, 8 p.m.
But, he acknowledged, a handful of .
Thursday at the hall.
untrained, inexperienced and
FRIDAY
sometime unscrupulous surgeons
MARY SHlUNE, White Shrine of have produced "horrendous results,"
Jerusalem, 8 p.m. Friday at the ranging from severe infection to
Pomeroy Masonic Temple, Members partial paralysis.
to take sandwiches or a salad.
Srour warned of "lots of quacks in
this society who perform cosmetic
SATURDAY
surgery without having had the
ICE CREAM soclal at Salem Center experience or the training."
headquarters of Salem Township Fire
Some practitioners are being
Department from 2 to 9 p. m.
pursued by malpractice suits. A
Homemade ice cream, sandwiches
beverages with all proceeds going ui Poughkeepsie, N.Y., woman was
help the newly organized fire depart- awarded $854,219 in May by a jury
that agreed her Manhattan plastic
ment.
surgenn located her belly button two
CHICKEN BARBECUE and hot inches off-renter after a "tummy
dog trays by New Haven Fire Departtuck" operation he promised would
ment Auxiliary, Saturday, starting at
give her " a nice flat belly."
II a. m. at the new fire station in New
The doctors interviewed said
Haven.
patients looking for a competent
SQUAR DANCE Saturday, 9 p. m. surgeon should check with their
until midnight at Tuppers Plains family physician or another doctor
Grade School. Music by "Blue Knob they know and trust. Or they could ask
Expresa ". SpoMored by Orange Fire theii county medical society or state
Department. Cake walk and refresh- Society
for
Plastic
and
ments on sale.
Reconstructive
Surgery
for
recorrunendations.
SUNDAY
"We want people to understand that
Fer longer Lasting
COUNTY-WIDE prayer meeting, changing· the appearance of your nose
Sunday, 2 p. m. at Hazel Community will not necessarily make you more
Paint Jobs Use Our
Church with Glen BisseU as class successful in your work or in your
leader.
marriage," Krause said. "All it will
"SUPrR QUAUTY"
MASONIC-EASTERN STAR pic- do is change the appearance of your
nic, Sunday, 2 p.m. at the Forest nose." ·
1
Red
15.95' gal
Acres Park, Shelter House 1.
MONDAY
1
MEIGS
BAND
BOOSTERS, 7:30
• Green 13.75 gal.
p.m. Monday at the schoolln the band
room. Plans will be made for the
• Aluminum '9.95 ·
booth at the Meigs County Fair.

Class
sponsors
party

WHY :

PAY

MORE
FOR
CARPET

CLEANING
of

.--------------·

'--------------J
STAR .SUPPLY CO.

r---

Leona Hensley, councilor, presided
at the meeting attended by 31
members. It was reported that Irui
Massar is home from the hospital,
that Dorothy Ritchie is in Mt. Cannel
Medical Center, 793 W. State St.,
Room 511, Columbus, 43222; and that
Ethel Orr is ill.
The Council had a flOilt in the
Regatta parade. Books Of the council
were.audited at .the home of Mrs. Erma Cleland on June 28. Goldie
Frederick reported on a villi! to Hattie
Frederick at the P.iketon Nursing
Home, noting that she Is progressing
nicely.
Quarterly birthdays were observed.
11le honored members were seated at

POLLY·s POINTERS
Polly Cramer ·

Wants to wash wood
DEAR POlLY- What can I use to
wash varnished furniture that will
remove the old furniture polish and
wu that ha.s huUt up on it? - A
READER
DEAR READER- You could wring
a cloth out of the following mixture one quart warm water, one tablespoon of turpentine and one tablespoon
olive oil. Use on a small area at a
tirtle. Repeat until the excess wax ill
removed and the surface is clean, dry
with a soft cloth and go on to the next
area . After aU ill clean apply a THIN
COlli of paste wax and buff. - POU. Y
DEAR POlLY - I mark my picnic
silverware with nail polish so it is
easily identified. The mark lasts
through electric dish washing.
I had some plastic melt on my iron
so I reheated It, put some cooking oil
on the plastic and it curled up. It was
easily wiped off with a paper towel. MRS. L.W.
DEAR POLLY - I do not have a
long-6j)Outed can for watering my
house plants but have worked out a
very satisfactory substitute. I use a
plastic dishwashing liquid botile that
has a screw top with a small hole in

the top. It was first thoroughly washed and now the desired amoWJI of
water cag be expelled with a little
pressure on ,the plastic bottle. Thill ill
also good for watering seeds that are
being started in Utile pots and need
just enough water to moisten the
earth around them. -HELEN
DEAR POlLY - After launderi~
always fold bath and hand towel.i
lengthwise and then crosswise so as to
make hanging them on the bathroom
bars a bit easier and quicker.
When making your own pol holder&gt;
be sure to put a. magnet inside each
one. They will cling to the stove or
n;frigerator and not get in the way or
on the floor. -MISS M.E .J .
DEAR POlLY - I have seen so
'many .dogs and cats who seem to be
loot and are wearing those white or
clear plastic flea collars. U the
owners had taken the trouble to prinl
the name and address on the coUar
with a ballpoint pen many a pet would
be saved. -ANNE .
Polly will send you one of her signed
thank-you newspaper coupon
cliUpers if she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her colwnn. Write POlLY's POINTERS in
care of !hill newspaper .

SHOP

MASON FURNITURE
FOR THE BEST DEALS IN THE
TRISTATE AREA

Social Calendar

P0

a table with a floral arrangement and
a decorated cake 'made by Margaret
Tutile. In the honored group were
Goldie Frederick, Erma Cleland,
Letha Wood, Joe BlsseU, and Keith
Ashley.
Others present were Emma Ashley.
Mary Jo Barrmger of California,
Eileen Martin, Mary K. Holter,
111elma White, Julie Rose, Betty
Roush, Elizabeth f;lllyes , Ada Bissell,
Mae McPeek, Esther Ridenour, Doris
Grueser, Jnzy Newell, Charlotte
Grant, Mae Spencer, Jean Frederick,
Alta Ballard, Laura Mae Nice, Marcia KeUer, Mary Hayes, Mabel Van
Meter, Ada Neutzling, Zelda Weber,
Carolyn HoUey, Virginia Newlun.

MASON FURNITURE
Mon., Tues., Wed., Friday &amp; 'Sat .
8:30 to 5:00 Thursday titl12 Noon

OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONLY
Herman Grate
Mason, W.Va .

773-5592

CHIEF
OUTSIDE
WHITE

WASHINGTON (AP) - President departure brought a ~pate of
Carter's flurry of domestic policy comments from White House officials,
conferences is apparenUy drawing 'tO none denying flatly a report he is
a dose amid heightened speculation resigning.
h1s ·embattled energy secretary,
The Energy Department's chief
James R. Schlesinger is about to spokesman said Wednesday· evening
leave office.
'
Schlesinger had not resigned. But the
There were signs, too, that after a spokesman, James Bishop Jr .,
week of meeting with about 130 stopped short of denying the secretary
official and unofficial advisers and W;IS being fired.
perhaps the most important speech of
White House press secretary Jody
his presidency ahead, Carter was Powell said the report was
about to shake up his staff as he tries ''uninfonned speculation.''
In deal with the nation 's economic and
One sign the president was
energy woes .
beginning work on a speech to the
The subject of Schlesinger' s nation summing up his seminars was

the presence Wednesday at the Camp
David retreat of Hendrik Hertzberg a
key speechwriter.
'
Powell said no date has been set for
Carter's return to Washington, but he
said "for the next couple of days or so
he will be here at Camp David." '
This fueled speculation that Carter
was planning to remain there working
on an address ~~ could be delivered
Sunday evening before besets out on a
planned trip to the Midwest on
Monday ,
. Powell said during the remainder of
hiS stay at the hideaway in
Maryland's Catoctin Mountains,

New mail standards, start Sunday_
SWlday, July 15, marks the start of pieces.
would probably be thanll-you cards,
the new minlmwn and non-61andard
Implementation ol the new policy ll)'lllpethy cards, Invitations, eli:.
size requlremens for envelopes cards was further delayed an additional
However, piecee of thla helghth and
and certain other pieces of lllllii at aU year to coincide with a sureharge on
thlcknesa uceedlng one-lourth Inch
post offices.
·
over-elzed pieces. Thus, a three year
These size standards were recom- span ha.s elapaed since the inUUal pro- ln thlckneu .wlll be accpted but at a
IIUI'charge.
mended by the postal rate commis- ~'
.
Underalzed ltema wW be returned
sion In April of 1976 and adopted by
Under the mlnimwn liJe standards to the sender taped to a standard lize
the Postal Service Board of Gover- which apply to all clulel ol mall,
nors who stipulated that they would pieces which are leu than 3\.1 inchea card bearing an explanation of the
oot be effective untU early 1978 to give high, 5 lnchea long or .rm (IeVen new requirement.. (For il limited
~mers a.t least lwo years to thousands) of an Inch thick wW be un- Ume custcmer11 may remaiJ the convenience card with the orl&amp;inalletter
prepare for change and exhaust their mailable.

supply of

non~onfonnlng

mail

Moot mall falling into thla category

41 dead, others hurt
in hotel disaster
ZARAGOZA, Spain 1AP ) - Fire earner, but there was no Indication
swept through a luxury hotel in the Basques were involved in the
n~r.thwest Zaragoza early today, Zaragoza fire, officials said.
kllhng at least 41 persons and injuring
others, including the 79-year-old
widow of dictator Francisco Franco,
HOSPITAL NEWS
officials said.
Some of the victims leaped to their
VETERANS MEMORIAL
deaths from the six-a tory Corona de Admitted--C;~rla Kauff, Pomeroy;
Aragon Hotel. l'?lice said b(xlies were Bruce Gheen, Pomeroy; Emma
still bemg found m the smotllering 240- Johnson, RaCine ; Hattie Arms,
room structure. Most of the guests Syracuse; Iva Stewart, Minersville;
were believed to be Spaniards.
Wanda Swaru, Pomeroy; Spangler,
Carmen Polo de Franco, the Pomeroy; Cuba Litile, Cheshire;
dictator's widow, was hospitalized Roland Glenn, Reedsville.
with minor- injuries, the Zaragoza ·Discharged-Roy Holter, John Hein.
clinic said. "I led her to safety from a ·
hotel escalator," an unidentified
fireman said .
,
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Mrs. Franco was in Zaragoza with
her grandaughter and son-in-law to DISCHARGES, JULY 11
John Albright, Lawrence Barlow,
see her great grandson enroll in a
Mary
Betts, Ray Bragg, Emory
military academy . The family stayed
Bench,
Thomas Buttrick, Phyllis
in a !l'ivate home bul Mrs. Franco
Clark,
Helen
Cobb, Cora Dingus,
was alone in the hotel, friends said.
Douglas
Fields,
Charles Grimes , Mrs.
Police reported three or four other
Jack
Hughes
and
son, Mary Hunt,
guests were plucked to safet y from
lhe roof of the hotel by helicopters Pamela Johnson, MargaM Keaton,
lrom nearby Zaragoza air base. lre'ne Kennedy , Tom Lewis. Charles
Others were taken to safety on fire Miller , Jule Pemberton, Mrs. Charles
Perroud and son, Ruth Rocchi,
ladders .
Harriet
Fisher, Imogene Skinner,
The blaze erupted about 7 a.m. and
Alice
Smith,
Charles Stephens, Susan
quickly swept through the hotel.
Mrs.
Stephen Taylor and"""·
Stevens,
destroying the first two floors,
BIRntS,
JULY 11
firemen said.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Paul
Tripp, son,
They said they believed the 'fire
Coalton.
originated in a cruller-making
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Harris, son,
machine in the ground-floor coffee
Cheshire
shop.
Mr. and Mrs. James CUfford, Jr,
Basque se par;~ti s t s have been
daughter,
Pomeroy
waging a war on Spanish tourism, the
Mr
.
and
Mrs
. Terry Norman,
nation 's No. 1 foreign exchanRe
daughter, Vinton

ALL WOMEN'S

SPORTSWEAR, PANT SUITS,
SWIMWEAR, DRESSES,
BLOUSES, SKIRTS &amp; SLACKS

(Continued from pqe 1)
where abe ... reported in
llerious condition, and a young
claJ.d was fiown to a Lawton
(Qpital.
'lbe cruh oceurred at about
3:30 p.m. on the H. E. Bailey
Turnpike, four rnllea from the
Teua border. 11le Oklahoma
.tate patrol wu investlgatilljj.

Reduced

ROOF PAINT

30 % JO 50 %

SHORTS &amp; TOPS
From

'333

TO

opel'lltilljj afflcer and Ienior
eucutlve vice president of the
nation 'a Ut!Hargest lndu.ltrtal
company, would succeed
Hamilton.
HamUton's reeJ&amp;naUon follow·
ed a board ol directon' meeting
here that luted well Into the
evening. 'lbe lTf statement said
Hamilton, U, was leaving the $15
billion-a-year conglomerate
"because ci poUcy differences."
Araakog, a West Point
graduate wbo spent m years
worldnc in the office of the

~

'400

60%

TANK &amp;SHORTS SETS
Reg. $8.99

NOW

'5"

\

aecre~ary

BAHR CLOTHIERS
Middleport, 0.
0 pen
M·So. 9- 151115

quits

m wd Rand v. Arult:og, n,

2 Piece Terrv
MEN'S WEARING APPARAL
Reduced Up To

bo~s

chi~

WRANGLER

o1

defe~~~e,

'8.9&gt;

GALYA· GUARD PAINTS
E11tremety durable pure alkyd pelnts

lermutated

tor., maximum

Qlon

releniiCin I!UHI w11ather resistance .

Elltlllent tor metal roots . bulldln,s ,
11111100d trim. shutters , lawn furniture ,
end t(!U ipmertl . Pr i me ntw ,atvan lud
surlaces witt\ SP . lJ61 Vinyl -lin&lt;.
Chromate Metal Condlllon.er , btdiY

ru!lfd surlar~s wllh No . 1.4 -A Red Lead

Pr imer .
s,rud rate

·~~·· ow. lm•'• 'Y SOC!

sa\l•r•

feet ptr QaiiGn , d@pendin'Ol on svrlace
&lt;OnCII Itf'Bn

EASTERN FHA Monday at high
·school7to9p.m.
SALEM Township Trustees budget
meeting Monday 7· p. m. at Salem
Township Fire House. Public Invited
to attend.

WHITE SHOES

SANDALS

Y2 PRICE

30% OFF

TUESDAY

AREA Volunteer Fire and
Emergency Assn. will meet at 7:30
p.m. at the Pomeroy fire station.
1 Group
Men's &amp; Women's

~P

OUR OOMPL£TE PAINT DEPARTMENT

EBERSBACH HARDWARE
PH. M2·21111
110 W. MAIN

POMEROY

ANNUAL HOMECOMING
The Mt. Moriah Church Of God,
Route 2, Racine, will have its 81Ulual
homecoming Sunday with the &amp;ev.
Donald Sheets, Waverly, as the afternoon speaker. There wli.i be special
singing.·Sunday school a:t 9:45a. m.
will be foUowed by a potluck dinner on
the grounds. The public is invited.

SHOES

Sponsored by
Benedict Inc. &amp;
the Ohio Simmental Assoc. ·

SHOES

'9"r.

Values
to $22.99 SALE p

PRICE
N. 2ND AVE.

10 AM- 3 PM

1 Group Women's

'h

heritage

·siMMENTAL
CATILE
FIELD DAY
JULY 17, 1979
VINTON COUNTY
AIRPORT

ANGEL
TREAD
SLIPPERS

.

F SHOES

MIDDLEPORT

ACTIVITIES
eAdult &amp; Junior Judging Contest
• Simmental Cattle on Disp'lay
• Grooming &amp; Fitting Demonstration
• Associated Quee_n Contest

• Lunch &amp; Door Prizes
• Embryo Transplant Discussion by Albert
West, Rio Vista Genetics.

For additional information contact:

id
's

-e
8.
IS

l,
II

rs

st
te

MARGU.ERITE'S

e
n

SHOES

s
!I

e
y

~.

tD
re
nt
I1S

of
~r

le
ly
~s

In

D.

llf

-5
lo
ill

9
I,
11
,e
1t
I(

FOR YOUR MONEY

d

Buy the 288tsblet size ...
get 144 tablets

(R=Ji)

~

FRlE!

Bonldlct, Inc. H14·5H-5226
Byron MJ!Ier 1-614-596-5564

,.
Buy the 144tab/et size ...
get 72 tablets

I I \ \

1

.
.
SWISHER

,--,~~~

LOHSE

.'

Pharmacy
Charles RiHie , R, Ph.

F rie ndiV s.er~o~icf!
E . Mol!O

Pomeroy, 0.

•

---~==~-

Ronald 11anning , R Ph
Mon thru Sat. 8:00a.m . to 9 p.m .
Su nday 10 : JO to ll : lO and S to 9 p .m .
PRESCRIPTIONS
PH . 9'12 -295S

----9l:."~s till9

___....
Pomet oy 0 .

FREE! 12 oz. Dr. Pepper®
at·McDonald's!®
w~h

I

Rsxs/1 Super PltHJamins ... America 's 'f argest
Stilling multi-vitsmin multi-mineral product f

Kennett! McCullough . R. Ph .

2nd St.

.
y

,._TQ.--- Y~OFF

~~

I"

FREE!

Continue
With Further
Reductions

Joined m

in 11116 u generaliiiiJIIIer ol the
defe111e commun.lcations dlvllon
and became an executive vice
president 10 years later.

VIS.4'

iS
le

wi!~

hla ~.OOk-year p01t
as president and chief eJ;ecuUve
ci International Telephone 1o
Telegraph Corp.

fASII ION

s

-·SUMMER
CLEARANCE
SALE
CONTINUES

PLENAMINS
......u;•..-,..lfti,..
...min,.,lt
.., .

resigned

~rll- II- 11 ) 1 1
VA ,~ ~7~·f J ( )J' J

Powell said during a morning
area. He is on the board of directors of
l'hillips Petroleum Co. and has served meeting on unemployment Carter
on a number of federal commissions. said increased energy pric~s would
Democratic National Committee lead to "an economic down-turn."
Powell said Carter plans to confer
L'hairman John White, after apeaking
to· Schlesinger late Wednesday later with major corporation
afternoon, said the secretary told him executives In · discuss the private
. role
in • fighting
there was no truth to the report of his sector's
unemployment.
•
departure.
A friend of Schlesinger's said the
secretary plans to resign, ·but not
before early September. He surmised
Schlesinger would leave because he
sees himself as a political liability to
Carter.
This source, an administration
official who didn't want tD be named, ·
said Schlesinger has commented
privately he has no plans to quit at !hill
Ume.
Energy Department spokesman
Bishop said Schlesinger had stated
Wednesday he would continue in his
job "until the president feels hill
services are no longer needed."
But Bishop would not say whether
Carter has told Schlesinger his
services are not needed.
Corter on Wednesday, one of his
busiest days of the week, conferred
with more than 40 government
officials, union and business leaders,
and civil rights figures.
Afterwards, Mayor Coleman Young
of Detroit said Carter was "seeking
criticism across-the-board. I don't
think he ever before listened to a
MAIN ST.
cross-section of genuine friends,
dubious BlUes and outright enemies." .__ _
Pii Oi iMi iERii Oi iY,.,.O;,;,H:,:;IO::,......I

SUPER

NEW YORK (AP) -Lyman C.
Hamilton Jr. on Wednesday

SALE

'
Carter would review options for
reducing oil imports and reviving the
econo'!ly in the face of an &amp;P!I'Oaching
recess1on.
A White House aide, wbo asked to
remain anonymouS, said the !l'esident
had made no final decision related to
energy, although he' was considering
"some pretty bold stuff."
Corter ill expected to endorse some
type of mobilization hoard to cut
through governRient red-tape and
speed up crucial energy projects, said
administration sources who asked not
to be identified. It was not yet clear
how much power the hoard would
have.
An energy task force delivered this
and other proposals to Carter
Wednesday.
The Washington Poot said today the
Energy Department-gave Carter four
options for reducing oil imports by 40
percent tn 60 percent in 1990.
The proposals reportedly call for
slashing imports through a
combination of synthetic fuel .
production, reduced use of oil by
utilities, greater !l'od!lction of hardto-get oU and gas, better insulation of
houses ·and .commercial buildings and
more swltchovers from oil to natural
gas heating.
Among the staff changes Carter ill
contemplating is giving Hamilton
Jordan, hilllongttme aide, more direct
lines of authority in the role of chief of
staff, said an official, requesting
anonymity.
Plans also caU for "chopping off" a
nwnber Of ~~econd-level White House
aides and moving others (l&gt; the Carter
r~lecilon campaign staff, according
to another White House source, who
also asked not to be named.
This source also said Californian
Victor H. Palmieri was under
consideration tD be deputy energy
secretary, a job that will be open in
September when Jolm F. O'Leary's
resigns.
Palmieri, 49, ill a lawyer and real
estate developer in the Los Angeles

attached and . withoit additional
poatqe.)
.
The surcharge on odd and overalzed
mall wW be aeven cents per piece (in
addition to applicable postage and
fees) and wW apply to first claa mall
weighing one ounce or lea and linlile
piece third lcaaa mall weighing two
ounces or leu.
If any ci the follOwing dimellllions
are ex~: I 111 incbel in height,
11 ~ inchea in length or ¥• Inch in
thlckneu or If tbe liJe r11Uo for the8e
pieces does not fall between 1.3 and
2.5 they wW be subject to llll'Cbarge;
To arrive at the l'lltio divide the Jqlh
of a piece by ita height. Plecel found
in the mallltream that require the
surcllarge wW be returned to the
sender for the additional poltage.
Although the regulations may aeem
confuslni bear in mind that the ~
minimum lize applies to all cl• !I of ·
EGG REPORT
mall while the surcharge on nonllandard size applla to all first c1ua
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) _Eggs_
weighing one ounce or lea and IJinCle
piece third claa weighing two OIIIICell . Pt1ceo paid tD country packing plants
or leM. Hqlefully, thla wW clarlfy the for eggs delivered to major Ohio cities
matter but If you have specific ques- cases . included consumer grades 'mcludmg U.S . grades, minimum 50
tions contact your local post office.
case
lots.
•
Carlon Large A 61~ , Mediwn A s:l55, Small A 42-45.
.l?&amp;les to retallers in major Ohio
Cities, cartons delivered: Large A
white 71-acl, mootly 71-73, medium 6170, mostly 61-Q.
Poultry prices at Ohio f8l'lllll hens
light 8.
•

fiT

r!//iJli'O@(JfJJJfl}@

e

Carter's ecollomic, energy summit ending

the purchase of a regular order of fries,

and a Big Mac, Quarter Pounder, or
Quarter
Pounder with Cheese!
*"welgllt Defore cooking 4 oz. !113.4 gm,)"

Offer gOOd oniy at
McDonald's
1715 Eastern Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio
Offer expires 7-15-79.

•

�&lt;)

~The~ct!'ntlnel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0., Thursday, July 12,1979

8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thurllday, July 12, 1979

'flfl~~ fi)'fl Jj.) THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAM_E

Your Best Buys .Are Found. in the Sentinel Classifieds

SAil;)_ I WAN HAVE SOME

FLOWERS O'LiVEREO TO

DOC TEA CARVER'S

WANT AD
CHARGES
Ch~r~e

1 eta~·

1 00

1.2::1

2da ys

J.:iO

1.90

3days

1.80

2.25

6 day~

3.00

3.75

F.&lt;1rh word un:r the minimum
15 1mn.ts 1.~ ~ n•nLo; (ll'r wnrd per

dJt~' Ads runmn~
~('l'Ull\'t

t1a ys

otht&gt;r than eon·

11.' 111

bt• c harfo!;tXI at

tht• lda.v rute .
In nwmory , Card of

Wanted to Buy

WISH to t hank everyone
tor · the lo... ely co rds·, g ifts ,
flow&amp;n and a ll who helped
make our · ce lebration o
wonderful d ay. Spe&lt;:iol thank
you to Masons f or u1 e of hte
Hall . T ha n ~ you a ll.
Bud an d Margaret Douglas .

CH IP WOOD. Poles mo• .
di ameter tO'' on largest end.
$12 per ton . Bundlctd slob. $10
per ton . Delivered to Oh io
Pollet Co ., Rt. 2, Pom eroy.

wE

15 WordsCir Undt-r
C~s h

Card of Thanks

Thank.~

und QbiliJitry : 6 eenl.'l per wont

tl.OO rnU1imurn. Ca.sh in ad wmrt' .

Mol&gt;ill' Homt&gt; sales Hnd Ya rd

Notices
GUN SHOOT . EVERY FRIDAY
UO PM RACIN E GUN CL UB .
FACTORY CHOKE GUNS ONLY.

Carr of't'ht Sentinel.
Tht Publisher reserves the
n ~ h t to edit or reject any ;nh
d1•erned objectional. Th l'
Publtsher will not be responsible
for more than one incorr_ect inso"tlon .

PhonC' 992-2156

NOTICE
WANT-AD
IA_DVERTISING
DEADLINES
Monda y

Noon onSHturday
Tuesday
t hru F'riday
4P.M . ,
the da y Pefore publication

Sunday
4P.M .

F'riday afternoon

IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT ,
M E IGS COUNTY .
OHib
T E ~ AS
EASTERN
TRANSMI SS ION

Lost and Found
LO ST: 2 fox hou nds, female ,
black and wh ite . male, whi te
ta n spots . Nome o n collar .
Emory Gord on , It found ,
phone R'E. G ordo'l 367·7112
Che sh ire , OH .
l OS T: IRI SH SE TTER. In the
Solem Center area . 742·2146.
FOUND : TWO Pekinese. mole
ond female , bei ge color , mol e
has left aye out. Call 992·34 27.
Barbaro or Rodney Karr .

OLD FURNITURE. ice boxes,
bran beds. iron beds . d esk s,
etc., complete households.
Wri te M .D. M iller , Rt . 4,
Po meroy or co ll992-77b0.
WANT 10 buy : old 45 and 78
rec:ords. Colt
phonograph
992-6370 or Co nt ac t Martin
Furnitur e.

VERMEER BALER . Sales. pacts

BOAT. 1974 Charger 15 ft.
w ith 1978 Mercury 80 hp
motor. 1974 Murray tilt trailer .
Clifford
Hil l
Produ ce ,

Yard Sale

2•7·2063_
FACTORY F~D toppoc. $.00.

YARD SAl E at James Swain' s
on CJ\ 28 above Eastern High
Schoo l. July 13 and 1-4 from 9
to? Everything imaginable.

C li ftord

YARD SALE . Thurs . and Fri.
June 12 and 13. lots ot nice
clothing , lamps, Fisher Price
toys and other items. At Don
Hanning's, Brac;tbury fitd . Ra in
cancels,

RAYS USED Fruni ture. Ad·
dl son , ·367·0637 . Ele ct ric
range . $85. Gas range , $65.
Refrigerator, $35 . Chest, $20.
Breakfast set. $35. High choir .
$72' Bar ttoo l. $10. Coffee
taiba , $10, round dining room
table , $65. Port· a·crib , $25,

RN OR LPN. Port time posi t io n
offers opportun i ty to work in
community health agency pro'o'iding family plan ning se r·
vices, inf ormation and educati o n . with emphasi s on
pre ve nti ve
health
care
teach ing. Training on the job
is pro'o'ided, cont inuing educati on encouraged , Meigs Co .
resident w ith fle xibility of
a...oi loble hours is needed. For
more information coli Planned
Parenthood office 992-5912
weekdavs 8-4. An equal oppo rtunity employe r.
WANTED: SOMEONE to mow

yacd. 9'12-7696.

'
YARD
SALE. Thurs., Fri. and
SQt. at lester Lothey' 1 house
next to church In Bradbury .
Rai n cancels :
PORCH SAlE. 277 Main, Mid·
dleport. Fri till ? 9om ·3pm .
Good merchandise .
YARD SALE. Wed., Thurs ., Fri.
307 Spring Ave . Rain or shine.
YARD SALE. Main St .. Rut land.
3 family . Wed . thru Sot.
Clothes , misc. , rugs. 10 :()().
dark .

GARAGE SALE
Robert
Hawk&amp; ,
Grove. 8·6.

July 14 ,
Hemlock

YARD SALE . July 12, 13, 1•.
501 Maple Drive. New Haven
Hts . Furniture. clothes . mi sc .
YARD S'ALE . Thurs.,· Fri., Sat.,

LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE OF

DISSOLUTION
TO WHOM
IT MAY
CONCERN '

N ot ice is he r ebv give n
tha t on the 16th da y of
June . 1979 . t he Bed f ord
Comm un i t y
Rec r ea t ion
Cen t er . a n op .pr o f it co r .
pora t ion , by vi rt ue of a
r eso l u t ion of t he B oard of
D i r ec t o r s an d T r u stees ,
elect ed to d i sso l ve a n d
co rn p tetel y w ind up it s
a ff ai r s, and t ha t a ce r ·
t if ica t e to t ha t eff ect shall
be d ut y fi led in th e Offi ce ot
t he Secre t a r y ot St a t e a t
Colu mbus, Ohio .
All assets of sa id co r ·
po r ation h ave been so ld
i:lnd 'con ... er ted to cash .
T ru st ees and di r ecto r s
'!.ha ll meet on Ju l y 16, a t
7· 30 p . m . at t he Bedfo rd
Comm un ity
Re c rea t io n
Ce nt er Bui lding , Be dfo rd
Towns h ip,
ro
discus s
d isposition of co rpora t ion
fu nds Prop o sals to ei t her
es t ab l is h a sch o la r ship
fun d fo r Be df ord To w n sh i p
High
Sc hool
s t udents
see k in g hig h er edu catio n
or to d iv id e t he corpor a t ion
cas h asse t s bet ween a ll
ch urches and comm u n i t v
gro u ps physica ll y loca t ed
in Bed ford T ow n sh ip wi ll
be discusse d . Th e publ ic is
urg e d t o atte n d sai d
mee t ing .

ss ·
SS :

(7)

Ra t ph

UniOn
A v e .,
Pomeroy ,
lawmower, tool s, glassware ,
radios , 8-trock , guitar, C. jl .,
antennas . lots mo re .
YARD SALE. Fri . Depot St . in
Rutland . second house on left.
side of road , yellow , Fink's
residence . Furniture, Avon ,
clothes , · curta ins , lamps, lots
of odds and ends.
YARD SALE . July 13 , Fri. lOom
to 5pm. 112 Wolfe Drive by
Naylor's Run playground.
Estey chord organ w i th bench
plus music books . $50 . Holton
brass trumpet and beginner

band book . $150. Clalhes ,
table and chairs , and other
misc .

Aud r a

Wel l ,
Secre t a r'y
Board o t Dir ecto r s
&amp; Trus t ees' o f
Bed fo r d Commu n ity
Rec r ea t io n Cente r
5. 12, 2t c

YARD SALE. Sot ., July 14 . 9-5.
York ·barbells . Terry boss
boo1 , new winter coots , Fenton lamp, drapes , new sew ing
machine cobi net , co uch,
e...erything must go , Nex t t o
Rollin Radford residence on
Old Reute 33.
FOUR FAMilY Yard Sale. First
· this year. July 13, 14 , Ma xine
Michael' s on. laurel Cliff . 9am
to 7pm . O ld item s. nice
cloth ing, what-nots, romance
paperbacks.

HOOF HOLLOW , English and
Western .
Saddles
and
harness . Horses and ponies .
Ruth Reeves. 614·698·3290.
Barding &amp; Ridif'IQ Lessons and
Horse Core products.

ding . Call367-0292 .
MEIGS COUNTY , OH 10
ESTATE OF VERLIE B .
MIDKIFF ,
DECEASED
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On Ju ne 29, 1979 , in t h e
Me, g s Cou nt y Probate
Cou rt, Mer y l Houdas h e ld t ,
Rt. 3 Al bany . Ohi o 457 10
was
appo i n t ed
ad ·
minis t ra tor o f the estate o t
Ver l ie
B.
Mid~i f t ,
dec eased, la t e of Rt . J ,
Pomeroy , Ohio .

(7)

Ro be r t E . Buc k
Proba t e Judge
Clerk
5, 12 . 19, 3t c

DOG OBEDIENCE Classes forming now . 614-367-0550.
AKC REGISTERED . German
Shepard
puppies ,
large
pa rents. good temperament .
Phone 304-675-2415 .
AK C DOBERMAN pinscher
pups. Excellent bloodlines,
Hoytt and Camelot. Show
quality, wor med, hod shots .
1 - ~ · 675-1863.

Auto Sales
1974 VEGA ~ATCHBACK , call
303-675-1501 oc 305-675·2•BB

MEIGS COUNTY , OH 10
OF
ROSE
GEORGE ,
DECEASED
cas ~ No . 22759
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
E ~ TATE

OF FIDUCIARY

On _ June 29, 1979, in the
Meigs County Probate
Co urt, Ca se N o . 22759.
Jessie M ig h t. Rt. 1 V int o n .
Oh io 45686 was appoi n t ed
Adminis tr a t r i x o f
th e
estate of Rose Ge o rge ,
decease d . l ate of Rt . 1
vinton , Ohio 45686.
Robe rt E . BU c k
Proba t e J u d ge .
C terk
(7) 5, 12. 19 , J t c

1978 FORD F·250. • •• · now
tool

lighiS. 2·5·5017 .
19731/W BEETLE. 9•9·2•90.
1975 CHBV . MONZA . P.B..
P.S., A .C., low mileage, IK·
cellent condition . $2250.

M9x motor .

au to. gas water heater, gloss
lined fuel saving. $120 . Pa int,
oil base flat late• 2 gal.
$13.95 . Vanity cabinet w i th
marble t op and fouceh with
pop-up , $99 .95 . One de~uble
bowl stqinless steel sink with
faucets $69 .95. 7 qt. canners
$7 .47 . One 9 qt . conner
$13.73 . Jar picker uppers and
fillers.

RUTLAND

$90.
MUST SELL -

3 AND 4 RM furnished and un·
furn i shed
op ts .
Phone

12x60 2 .be-droom mobile home
in Ro«;,ine area. 992-5858.

'n case o t you ' t a'' ur e to _ ___:=-:_::_.:__
- ~_-_::.:_:~-FURN. APT, _3 em. ond balh.
No

children ,

no

pe t s.

9•9-2253.
LOT FOR one mobile home,
Restrictions, SH Giodo, co
Shammy 's. Pomeroy , OH.

For Sale
16 CU . FT. f rost free
refrigerator freezer. A"Y ocodo
green . $275 . 992-7291 after 4.

LUGGAGE

CARRIER

'-'==""'===,_,_-=::.:;'-lJ&lt;J ·au tomobile , 992· 5786 .
HAY

FOR

sole.

After

992-s.413or992-61UL

lac
5.

RIDENOUR GAS Service. Doxo ll .P. gas. Chester. 985-3307.
ing

or

any

ROUSH

Work .

yard

992-5303 .
WOULD LIKE ta do baby si tting
in my home. Prefer children
between the ages of 4 and 8.
In Rocksp r ings areo . Contact
Judy Humphreys . m -7318.

Discounts
Large Stock
Jack w. Carsey

Mgr.
Phone 992-2181

TWO HEREFORD cows with 2
col ...e s for sole. Aftar .5,

992-5.113 or 9'12-6118.
'192·7378 .
BUILDINGS·FARM-ALL STEEL.
For machinery and groin
storage. 40ft . x 48 h . x U h .,
one 20ft. x 13ft., OS door.
$3995 . .COh. • 72ft. x 14ft.
$5220.
Co li
collec t

BISSEU.
SIDING CO~

Extensive Remodeling

GREG ROUSH

1974 1-&lt;4 x 70 mobile home.
Good
condition.
$7800 .

Phone 992-7583
992-2282

992-5858 .
1965 GENERAL60K12, 2 bode .
1970 Sylva, 60xl2 . 2 bedc.

7-5-l MO.

1970Costle, 60• 12, :2 bedr.
19?4 Morkline, 50•12. 2 bedr.
1969 Val iant, 12x60, 2 bedr.
1967Notlonal, 12x50, 2bedr .

REAL ESTATE
.fiNANCING

8' S MOBILE HOME SALES . PT.
PLEASANT, WV. lQ-4·675-•• 2• .
1971 SK~LINE mobile hamo. 12

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

x
• 60 .
lMceiiA JI
appliances . wosher. underpin·
nlng ond deck l nduct.d .

$5.100. 7&lt;2·2692.

Hours ·9· 1 M.,

12 ,.. 65 SCHULTZ. 3 bedroom ,
JIIJ both, 4x l0 tip-out, cnet rol

Pomeroy, O .

Coli 992· 7•91 afloc s ,30 pm .

Coil tor a Fro• Siding
Esllmote, 949-2801 or
949-2160. No Sundoy
CIIIIS .

669·37B5 .
MEN'S COVERALLS $6 .88 pc .
sport

sh o e s,

$12 . 99· $14 . ~ ·' ladies sandals

$5 .88
solos .
Children ' s
Western
boots . Ba i ley' s
Bargain Center , Middleport.

POMEROY
lANDMARK
Headquarters for
Hotpoint and
Genera I Electric
Appliances

CALL 992-7544

J&amp;L

Blown InSulation
JIM KEESEE
Save 30 pc:t. to 50 pc:t.

216 E. Second Street

FRUIT
Large

_, he11tlng cost

TREES
garden,

old

Experltflce ond
fully lnsurtcl
FrH Est.
Coil m -2m
S· 17· 1 mo.

7

room house, hot &amp; cold
water , drilled well ,
barn , 2 car
small

garag~

stream .

on

Only

$17,000.
MILLFIELD - J Yr.
old 2 bedroom home , full
basement, bath, lot
160x160. Easy terms if
you qualify .
BARGAIN - Will sell
stock i!lt cost and all fi x tures reasonable . A
business two can run.

GiveAway
FOUR PUPPIES, 3 lomalo,
mole . Mother Is part collie.

TEN PUPPIES, • black, 6 while
with black markings. Will be
Iorge dogs· Keirh Ridenour .

985-"75.
BORDER TERRIER , malo, bland,
llenillypo. Husky. f. • ma. a ld.
Terrier Beagle type. brown
w ith some block , 4 mo. old.
female . Beagle type , female,
:;! or 3 years old, very gentle.
Meigs Co. Humane Soci8ty ,

992-7680.
TWO BEAGLE puppies, male. 3
or 4 mo. old. Meigs Humane
Socif!ty. 992-7680.
THREE · PUPS , mother is
c hihuahu c;~, father Ben ji type .

5 oeks ald. 985·38a.&lt; .
Siame se .

7•2-2205.
HUSKY PUPPY, ma.l e. 4 mo.
ol~ .
Hu'mane
Society .

992-3886.

Radlat~lr·..----.

Servlc•
F ro m

J•rtRSf

the

l111tdour

R•lliAtor

smsuesr ... . ,. ,
N•t~n

C•r•.
lllfiS

Racli• tor ,..,,;-otlii

Smith Nelson
Motors, Inc.

0

21320Montgom•r'Y Rd .
L•rwu lll•, Ohio

AN AG~EEMENT 10
c:iET SMALLE~.

614·M9·oi14J E venlnw1
; M III!S E•ll Of Wil lteiYIII•

SUPE R

GOO SE ST OCK
TA AILE R NOW AV AILA8LE .

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

e

Mlck's
Sarber&amp;
Style Center

1ntroduces -

MARK MORA
HAIR STYUST

~

· 1n the

woods . 4 rooms , tub
bath, modern l&lt;itcllen ,
nat. gas furnace, Ohio
Power, cedar lined,
closets, parquet floor in
the bedroom , Ask ing

$27,500 .
NEW LISTING - 3
bedrooms ,
balh
(ceramic tile ). modern

naturel

kit c hen ,

gas

furnace ,

c arpeting and a 3 room
aPt . with bath , garage,
c arport and corner lot

100' x150' near Rl. 7.
Want 530.000.
LIST WITH US AND GO
WITH
YOUR
REGULAR ROUTINE
AND LEAVE THE
SELLING TO US. CALL
992-3325.
VIRGIL &amp; GORDON,
REALTORS , HELEN
AND SUE, ASSOCIATE
REALTORS.

Housing
• Head uart?rs

608 E . • .loljlfiiilll.jlo.l
MAIN
POMFROY . O .
NEW LISTING - 110
Acres, about 30 tillable,
50 pasture, bel . wooded.
All fenced . Free gas.
Pond . 531 ,000.00.
NEW LISTING - Love ly 4 bedroom home, 2
baths. Music room, sew ·
ing room. N.G .F .A.
heat .

Full

Lots

of

1

Featur ing : men ' s &amp;
women ' s styling ,
perms.
Coli lor oppt. or wllk ln .
992 -2367
Mlln St .
Pomeroy, o .
7-10·1 mo.

R~

Estate loans

Pur c ha s e
R efinance

and

.JO Year Terms
A- No money down
(eligible veteran s )

TWO STORY 3 bedroom house .
3 lots . Now's your chance if
you need 1;1 hou se. 112 ,000 .
Owner w illi ng to talk .

&lt;m·2082 or7•2·2329 .
REAL ESTATE : 1 ocrelot In Riogscrest Manor . betw"n Tuppers Ploins and Chester .
Phon e 985- 3929 a nd 985-.C12'9.
NEW THREE bedroom oil elec·
trio ho me. Ohio Power . Over
1 a cre . Ea t · in k i tchen .
dish w ashe r ,
garbage
disposal. carom ic both area ,
uti l i ty areo , 3 colon of
ca rpeting . rural water . Near
Langsville. $43 ,000 , Call
742· 2819 after 5pm . Maymond
Hatfield.
HOUSE FOR sole. 5 rooms and
bath . May be seen ot 206 But·
ternut A'o'e., Pomeroy, OH or
conta ct Doc Ebl in .

down

~ nan · v~f e ran s)

IRELAND
MORTGAGE
CO.
E . State,
Athens

77

592-3051

liOUSE FOR sole near Meigs
M ine~ . 74 2-2128.
TWO BEDitOOM houu , com·
plete ly furn ished. w a ll to wall
carpe t. gas fur nac e, garage,
nice lat . 742·2'923.
RESTAURANT AND bor . 0 " 1
and D-2 l icense incl uded . 3
acres. and house, Good
bu1iness ·opportunity . Coli
367-05S7 .
THREE BEDROOM ho use on 1
acre, 37295 Rt .. 124. 99 2 · 2~ 1
992 2082
or
"
· Built 1977 · many
advantages.

FOUR BEDROOM house, 2
baths . In letart Fall s, Ohio.
Partially carpeted on 2 acres
level ground . 2.C7-3663.

THE HEIRS of William Beol of.
fer for sole hi s home and real
property located at 11 Oak St.,
POmer oy , OH , Bid s w ill be oc·
cepted ot th. office of Barbaro
Knight, Attorney at Lo w , Box
723, Pomerey, OH . Telephone

FOUR BEDROOMS, lull bas•

992·2151 . until July 13. 1979 a1

ment on ¥. a cre . utili ty
bui lding . Rutland. l ow th irty 's.

l Oam. Vendoftl reserve the
r ight to re jec t all bi d1 .

742-275-t .
LOT FOR sole, Harrisonville.
Water tap on lot , dr! ... ewoy tile
ln .. App . 145 h . frontage. On
nord
rood . $1800 , Call

HOUSE . FIVE rooms , both.
ufll tly . In Middleport . Paneled
and wall to wa ll carpeting , In·
auloted gas furnace . garbage
disposal . aft the strMt park·

m-~~· ~~~~~~~~~~"V~·~992~-~70~1~8~o~c~36~7~-7~2~3~7.11~

DOWNING-CHILDS AGENCY
INSURANCE - REAL ESTATE

basement .

2 FAMILY UNIT Always rented, 1 has 3
BRs &amp; balh, 1 has 1 BR
&amp; bath, porches, base ment. $13,000.00.
.
ABOUT. 'I• ACRE wa1er, power &amp; gas.
Ideal

for

home

bedrooms ,

fots

of

remocteling,

porchl!s,

storage bld g . E xce llent

neighborhood .
$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. Clelond Sr .
Henry E. Clelond Jr.
992-22S9 992-6191 992-2568

Yeste•day's l Jumbles: IDI OT . DRAMA

1 ~D /1:( ~'(.,;

\.. I"-'"' vt; ltlE' Cl&gt;R ..

New , repair ,
gu»ers and
down spouts .
Window cl.eaning
Gutter cleaning
Ffee Estimates-

949-2862--'949-2160

•A

I

UTTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

DRAFTING
SERVICES

+K

NClfiE 0 ' MY BU SINESS, PROO ' L '( ...
STILL -· WHAT'S 1H' ANGLE?
I' M NOT SO EIUS'f ··· I'LL JUST
5 11 HERE AND WATCH ·-·

RODNEY, BROKER

BILL, BR. MGR.

Phone 992-2342
Eve. 992-2449
Middleport, Ohio

76

• 7 6 53
Vulnerable: North-south
Dealer : West
Wei t

I+
3+
Pass

North East
Dbl.
a
J•
Pass

Pass

Pass

Opening lead : +9

'187 ASH ST.
AI.I.EYOOP

992-3100 6-6·1 mo.

By Oswald Jacoby
and Ala,a Sontag
Here is an apparently simple hand that many players
wollld find too diffic ult . To
start with there is the notrump trap . A club lead will
leave a notrwnp declarer at
least one trick short at the
notrump game.
Still , four hearts would be
the most popular contract In
a dupllca te game and the
correct contract in a rubber
bridge game.
However, there is a (rap

C. R. MASH

VINYL &amp;ALUM.
SIDING
•New Home
•Addons
• Remoldings
*Free estimates

992-6011
7·12

GASOI.I NE ALI .EY

BRADFORD. Au ction" '· Com·
plete Service. Phone 949 -24.87
or 949-2000. Roci ne . Ol-lio,
Crl tt BrodfOf d .

Expensive lace ..

I'd be remiss

befittinq a f ine

if I didn't
return it!

~....._l ady!

ACR06S
!Nuptial
7 Point of

SEWING MACHINE Repo in .
service, al l makes . 99'2·7284.
Tl'le Fabric Shop . Pomer oy .
•uthor!J:ed Singer Sales and
Service. We sharpen Scissors .

WINNIE

ph on•

I JU&amp;T DIDN'T
THINK THEY'D
OPP05E Mfo _
8UT THEY
CALLED MY
8LUFF.

EX CA V ATI NG .
da~:er .
bockkoe and ditcher , C11orl"
R. Hatfield . Black Hoe Service .
Rutland. Ohio. Pone 742-2008.

PULLINS EXCAVAT ING. Com-

WHAT ARE WE GONNA
NON? WE'LL

ro

N8'~

oET TI-IO&amp;E
COSTUME&amp; READY
FOR &amp;NOOCH tN
T IME.

OH IDON 'T

6

KN WAOOUT

THAT/

plete Serv ic• . Phone 992-2478 .

land
11 Froglike
1% Ann bone
13 On cloud
nine
14 - liquor.
IS WhoUy
II Ale
18 Favorable
vote
19Sesame
zo Annored
tank part
2% Weight
u BoWld
%5 Declared
%7 Covenant

th is co ·:Jmn and wl.·, receive
CDpie s of JACOBr MODERN.)

3 Square deal

t.enn
4Sumamed :
Fr.
SAbout
I Showed
the way
7 Total
8 Stuck by
the rules'
9Cove
10 Britisher's
fareweU
17 Stagehand
%11nterprel
%3S .A.
monkey

Vestenboy's Answer
38 Noisy
closing
3G Swamp
411 " The Lady' s
32 John
- fo r
and Patrick
Burning"
33 French G .I.
4Z Brazil
34 Stairway post
parrot

!II Lucy's 'ex
Z8 Earthly

r,--'I!;"'""''T'-r.l""""''!---r."-

35 Man's name:j,~__J_.J__
31 Heir
37 Anger
38 Catchword

&lt;m·2"3 .
E·C ELECTRI CAL Contractor
••rvlng Ohio Volley region .
51 • doy1 o wHk , 24 hours ser·
vice. Emergency coils . Coli

882·2'152 ., 882·3.&lt;5.1 .
HOWERY AND MARTJN EK·

39Banking

,

1Vt tema ,
Rt. 143.

Phon• 1 (61•1 698·7331 oc
7·2-2593.

IT SEEM S LIKE ALL
I DO IS FOLD

-- AN ' UN FO::,L-;::
D,---:-::::~r,;:::;::;::J
DIAPERS

DIAPERS

n

tenn
DisiDusion

U Moreover
M Carefree
t5 Wine kHle
41 Candidate

lists

DOWN
1 Respiration
%Sports
car events

ADD ONS and remodeling ,
gutter work . down spout,, ·
some concrete work , walks
end
driveways . (free
.. tlmote) . V.C. Young Ill ,

b-+-+-1-

DAILY CRYPTOQJJOTE Ia

Racln•, OH . 9•9·:1748 and
992·731 • .
CARPET ClEANING durinv

pm. Hartford Community
Center, Hartford, WV, .C miles
above
Pameroy - Moton

envelopes. The most interesting q ue stions wifl be used in

31 Delineated
33 Folsom, e.Q.b--+-1-

been co ncell.cf? l ost your
operators
llcenu?
Phone

Auctions
BIG AUCTION • very W.d., 7

(Do you ha ve a quest ion for
the exp erts? Write " Ask the
Expe ct~ ...··•care of th is newspaP.,er. Ind ividual questions wllf
be answered if accompanied
t;w stamped, self-addressed

Z9Detail

INSURANCE

week of July 20th. Far lnfarmotlon and to call for

lNEWS PAPEP. E NTERPIUSE ASSN .~

by THOMAS JOSEPH

Sw eepers , toast er's, ir ons . all
small applia nces. Law n moer,
ne111 t to Sto l e Highway Garage
o n Route 7, 985- 3825 .

E.XCA VATING , do ~: er . loader
and ba ckhoe wor k; dump
tr ucks and le&gt; boy1 for hire .
wil l haul f i ll d irt , l op t oil.
llme1tone and gra... el . Coli Bob
or Roger Jeffers, day phone

ruffs that tric k and plays a
sec ond trump he will discover the 4-1 trump break
and will have to take great
care to keep from losing
control of the hand when
West gets in with the ace of
diamonds. He can handle
matters by simply refusing
to ruff the second spade.
East will continue and now
South can ruff.
At this point it is a simple
matter t o draw trumps.
West will be out of spades
and South will discard
dummy' s last spade on his
long trump. Then he finesses
the queen of clubs, concedes
a trick to the ace of diamonds and dwnmy takes the
rest of the tricks.

~~··•"t~

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR -

cavating, septi c
doJ:er . bac~hCHt.

West's ace .
.
West will continue with the
eight of spades . If South

+J
• K J 10 9 8

Civil
Mechanical
Archetectura 1
Lavouts,

AUT OMOBILE

• 942

+4

SOUTH

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-WATCH ON THE BRINE

QUALITY

992· 7089 .
nigh I
992· ~25 "' 992·5232.

• 7 54 3

+A 8 3
+K'Jit91Z

THAI TPAMP STfAMfR ...
L'1'tH' IN TW CHAHHEL
AWFUL CLOSE ·-· MU S'T
6£ A Rf ASON --·

MIDDLEPORT

for the unwary. If South
decides to play a low spade
from d wnmy at trick one
East will take the king and
lead back his singleton club.
Later West will give him a ·
club ruff and the defense will
score four tricks.
Therefore, South must rise
with dwnmy's ace of spades
and lead a low trump to

NORTH
7-12
+ AQ4 2
• Q.62
• Q J 10 5
+AQ
WEST
EAST
• 987
+Kl06 5 3

Here's how to work
AXVDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

It:

One letter simply stands for anothe r. In this s ample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc . Sing le letters.
apos t r ophes, the length and rarmation of the words are all
hin ts. Each day the code lette rs are differen t.

PEANUTS

CRYPTOQUOTES

NO, Tl-!15 15 5ALL'!' .. .
I'M ~ I S SISlER ...

l-IE'S WI-!ERE 7

Bcldgo .
BIG AUCTION Solo. Fri. , 13oh.

7 pm. LottWarren, OH at Pt.
Pleo1ont li'o'ettock Market

1505, Ohio So., Po. Pl..sano:
Howard Beasley, Auctioneer.
1-11.

SHOVLD ! FEED
. 11-lE D06 7

ZTVZOT

AQOU

QKVDA

" Da rby 's Rangers" 17.

11 :45-Mash 8; 12 : ~o-McCioud 8;
12 :4o-Mannlx 6,13.
1:oo-Tomorrow J; News 15; 1:•oMovle " The Man Behind the

'

OVBT

Q C

AFVDIF
NA
ETGT
CVJTAFNYI
HVD
MVDOW
INBT
ONUT
QY
QGJXDO
VX
XOVETGC.
QYYT
JVGGVE
ONYWKTGIF
Yesterday's Cryploquote: A HAPPY WOMAN IS ONE WHO
HAS NO CARES AT ALL; A CHEERFUL WOMAN IS ONE
WHO HAS CARES BUT DOESN'T LET THEM GET HER
j)OWN. - BEVERLY SILLS
f"J 1979 Kin ; Features Swondl c•te, In c

r

'

is
De
id

:'s

re

s.

lS

m,

lt
rs

st
lie

Sidestepping tricky trap

H. L Writesel
Roofing

THURSDAY, JULY 12, 1979
B:OD-P rolect U.F.O. 3,15; Mork &amp;
Mindy 6,13; Carnival of · the
Animals 8, 10; Nova 20,33; Movie
" Donovan's Reef" 17.
8:3o-Angle 6,13; Or . Se uss 8,10.
9:oo-Qulncy J,15; Barney Mil ler
6,13; Howell Flve-0 8,10; Great
Performan ces 33 ; Spoleto '79 20.
10 :llO-Davld Cassidy J , lS; 20-20
6,13; . Barnaby Jones 8,10; New•
20.
10 :3o-News 20; lO :J(f-()nedln Line
17; Hocking Valley Bluegrass 20.
11 :00- News 3,6,B,10,13 , 15; Dick
Cavett 20; Book Beat 33.
11 :JD-Johnny Carson 3,15; Starsky
&amp; Hutch 6, 13; Pan American
Games 8; ABC News 33; Movie
" The Vatican Affair" 10; Mov ie

Gun" 17.

992-2772
6-6-1 mo .

Television
Viewing

1 :50- News 13 ; J : 25- News 17;
3:A5-Mov le " Charlie Chan In
London" 17; ,i , 15-Qregnet 17.

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

oppl .. 992-2553.

DOWNING-CHILDS

·

BRIDGE

Racine, OH .

wmning landscaping. 559,900,

CHERUB

CALL

Call Guy N•lgl•c. 9•9-2S08,

YOUR DREAM HOME on a large double lot
overlooking the Blg Bend of the Ohlo River In
Minersville . This beaullful home was buill and oc ·
cupled by one family end It $l1ows pride of ownership . Three bedrooms, ifl&gt; both, large living room
with fireplace, full basement, garage, award ·

soul together- BREATH

Thursday, Jllly 12

new hou1es and repa ir work .

;•

HEARSE

Answer: Drawn by those wh o want to keep bOdy a'nd

NEIGLER CONSTRUCTION Jor

or

XXXXI I I ]"
(Answers torrforrow)

IN STOCK for Immediate
delivery; 'o'ariou s s i ~:et of pool
kill . D~lt· yourself or let Ut
install for you . D. Bumgardner
Soles, Inc. 992 -.5724 .

remod•llng .

trail er.
In
town.
$3,000.00.
LOCATED ON STATE
RT. - Now has ges
pumps and grocery.
· Almost new building
40x60 wllh lots of frontage. S5S,OOO.OO (make
offer J.
DOUBLE LEVEL LOT
- Older home has 3

Print answer here: " [

Free Estimate

4·23 · 1 mo .

Real Estate for Sale

Now arran~ the circled letters tO
form the surprise answer, as suggesled by the above cartoon.

J

I KI

45· 1 mo.

4-S-tt c

FHA- AS low a s l %

REAL ESTATE Loon1. Pur chase
and ref inance . 30 year terms ,
VA . No money d own {eligible
veterans). FHA - As low as J
per cent down (non· veterans) .
Ireland Mortgage Co .. n E.
State . Athens. 614-592·3051 .

gas, front porch , storm
windows at a real buy .

$~8 . 500 . 00 .

PUPPY, REAl cute , has all
shots' black cat. female .
short- haired . 2 black kittens, 1
yellow , 1 blue, I tiger and I
broad st riped II gar . Con be
seen at 244 Sycamore St., M id·
dleport.

Real Estate for Sale
3 1/, acres In Pomeroy . SEclud ed wooded orea on top of h ilL
O...erlook s ri'o' er . Wafer , ele&lt;·
trlc
a ... ollable .
$790 0 .

S12,000.00 - 7 rooms,
bath, city water, nat.

9 ... _ Jack W. Carsey
Phone 992-2181

" ::":;~..~.:..-··- -""

TRAILER SAl.£S

7·B·1 mo.

SALE PRICES
Mgr.

II_

I I t

6-U -2 mo.

E~PERIENCED

w., F .

Other times by oppolntmll!lt.
107 Syeomore (II earl

o' c., with washer and dryer .
Will sell with or without lot'

equ i pped

APPLES. EXCELLENT for cook·
ing. Fi t:zpot ri ck Orchards. SR
689 .
Phone
Wilkes v i l le

992-7680 .

Siding

Construction

Mobile HQII)es Sale's

2'h ACRES

GMC SCHOOL bus campe b
Fully self conta ined. $60Q, Call

HALF

Auto&amp; Truck
Repair
Also ·Transm ission
Repair
Phone 992-5682
4·30-lfc

Cellulosie (wood 11110r1

_Hotpoint
Air Conditioners
1
25 to '50

FOUR

Rutland .

Vinyl and Aluminum

Therm111nsu11tlon

. v=·· ·

Rt. 1 by-pass
on St. Rt . 124 towa r d

New Home

Phone 992-2722 .

Men ' s

l'• m i te off

CONSTRUCTION

197• Kawasak i

Sp,eclof Sole

I CAPH~

MICHAEL SMITH will do maw·

125. Mint cond ition . 2,(00 m i.

9'1~- 2S92-

COUNTRY MOBILE Hame Pack ,

St. Rt. 7
North of Chester, 0 .
Phone 915-4202
6·2A-1 mo. pd.

liberated or plain roofint tor
$8.30 . Roofing brushes $1 .25,
250 ft. coil of 4 in. drain t ile

TWO MONTHS old loveable
black puppy. Part Labrador,
healthy. has oil shots , Meigs
Humane Society . 992-2639 or

Route 33, north of Pomeroy.
Lorge lots. Call m -7479.

PO ZER , END Loader and dump
t ruck . W ill do basements,
pond •.
b r u sh ,
ti mer ,
l imestone end grave l. Charlet
Butcher. 7 ~ 2- 2940 .

call $13 .10, 57 lb. $9.55, 5 gal.

TRANS AM , 1976. .COO engine.

For Rent

9'12-2581 oc 'l'/2·2082 .

HARDWARE

965-3559.

$3950. 992-5032, 9'12-3373.
1973 BUICK REGAL , 9•9-223-4 .

USED GARDEN
TRACTORS
AND
RIDING MOWERS

742·2255. Roofing sole. C)() lb.

9·9-2723.

ONE BEDROOM opts. Con tact
Vi llage Manor. 992-7787 .

LAFF A DAY

bloc~

MArcury

992-S170 .
RUTLAND
HARDWARE
7•2-225S . One •o gal. Mo-Fio

box , cob

9'12. 5.13.&lt; .

a ns wer
or
othe rw is e r
r es pond to the c...,mp ia int as
perm itted by the O H io
R u les o f Ct'o'il Pro ced ure
w i t n in the 11me st at ed.
judgment bY detautt w ill be
re ndered aga ins t you for
th e r etle l demandE'd in Th e
com p lai nt
Larr y E Spence r
Clerk o f Cou rts ,
Common Pleas
Court ,
Meig s Co unty ,
Ohio
O ' Br ien and O 'Br ien
Alfornevs fo r P iainl iH
1001, Co ur t Str ee t
Pomerov . Ohio .457.59
" What ar e .vou look i ng fo r ..-t hat
(6 ) 21 , 28 ens. 11 , 19. U.o. 6tc pound yo u lost la5t week '!"

B-&lt;3-2061.
1978 19 ft . Storcroft 175 h .p .

.a;dl

or 304-675· 1553.
tires , A .C..

PROBATE COURT OF

1973 CHEVY CAPRI station
wagon. $1000' Also 3 acres of
ground in country. $5000.

614·237-27.0.

Pets for Sale

RISING STAR Kennel. Boor·

PROBATE COURT OF

Pr o du ce .

~bycarseat, $10 .

YARD SALE. Friday, July 13 at
Warren Cloy's on 124 east of
Rutland 9 till 4:30. Salt and
pepper shakers, w hat-nots ,
wattle iren , coffee table , 2
organs, table and chain , toys.

Car l
Pr esident

Hi ll

2·7-2063.

July 12. 13, 1•. B·• p.m. 226

vs

. , 7•2·21S2.

7•~ · 2Bn

614-667-3742.

lawns, poin ting houses. roof s
and bu i lding sidewal ks , etc.
PIANO TUNING f or home and
school. lone Dan iels . Also
repa irs, U yeari e x per ience.

ROOM

MONlGOMERY

Roger Hysell
Garage

_TILLIS

mowing

W~ K

EUREKA Upright Sweeper .
$20; _.. speed Zen ith record
player w i th speakers, $30;
Horlequln Romance book s.
40c eo . 256 So . Fourtn St ., Mid·
dleport .
and s•rvice. Bolen in stock for
Immediate del iverv . Phone

Ev el n g s

FrH e stima tes . Call949·2686.

HANO.'I'MAN

Caii6U·667-3263.

plc.ku p

tru ck .

367-7101 .
PAINTING AND sandblasling.

by Henri Arnold andBob Lee

Unscr.amble these lour Jumbles,
one len er to each square, to form
tour ordinary words.

Business Services

M iddlepe r t-Poemray ar ea .
Call f or free
es timate.

Good co ndition . 843-25A 2.

WINDSHIELD FOR 1967 GMC

COPRORATION ,

WILLI A M ' POWELL ,
(a ddre!&gt;s unk no wn
A NTH O NY
AN ORU Lt TE S ,
C A SSIE
AND R UL.ITIE S, (a ddre ss
unkn ow n }
SIDNE Y M . BOWLES .
CATH E RINE F . BOWLES ,
Rt . 3, Bo x 11 SA , Albany ,
Ohio 4 S110 ; OHIO POWER
COMPANY , 305 Cleveland ,
Ohio S W . Canton , OHio
4470 1 ; NANCY CLARK , 40
s.
Ch es tnut
Street.
Ja c k so n ,
Ohio
44640 ;
RALPH C . HALBERT , 2J
M a in Str ee t , E va ns v ill e,
Indiana 47708 ; EA ST OH 10
GAS COMPANY , 17 17 East
Ninttl Str ee t . Cl ev ela nd .
O h io 441 14 ;
G EORGE
COLLIN S, T reas ur er of
M!!ig.,; Co unt y, Ohi o, M eig s
C o unt y
Cou r th o u .,;e,
Po m eroy, Oh io 4 ~ 7 5~.
D E F E ND AN T S
N O. 17211
L EGA L NOTICE
The
abave
named
de f e ndants ,
W i lliam
Powe l l. address unknown,
Anthony Andruliles . ad ·
dress unknown . Cassie
And r utites .
add r ess
un k nown , wi t ! take not ice
that the plaintif f has
br ouqh t th is action nami n g
you as d ef endants in t he
above entitled action by
fit in g i ts c omplaint on
June 18. 1979
The object o f t he com ·
pla int is t o a p propria t e
caseme nt s a nd r ights ot
ways ,
p e r ma nent
in
natu r e , on . over and under
the fallow i ng d escribed
r eal 'es t ate a nd for such
ot her and f ur the r re l ief as
the nat ur e o f tne cas«' may
r equ 1re .
es tat e is
Sai d reat
Si t ua t ed in t he Township o t
Salem , Co unty of Me i gs
and Sta te of OH io, and
de sc ribed as to tl ow S:
Bei ng si t uated in Section
35, Township 8. Ra nge 15 ,
Oh io company's Purcn a se . ~
co mmen cin g at a poin t in
th e north t ine o t said
sec tion , 200rods west ot t he
northea st co r ne r o f sa id
sec t ion . th en ce west to a
po int halfwav between said
beginning po int and th e
northwe st co rn e r o f said
scc t 1on . th enc e sou t h to
sou t h line ot said sec t ion :
t hen ce east to a po int in the
sou th l ine of said section ;
th ence east to a po int in the
sou th line o t said section
200 rod s west !rom the
southeast corner o f said
sectio n . trencc no rth to lhl'
p lace o t beg1n n ing , co n
t a in ing 130 1~ acres. more
or l ess .
Excepting and reserving
28 ac r es off t he southend o f
the above d esc r ibed r ea l
estate I t is the in t ent o f
stt~d
cteed re c orded i n
votume 21 9 page 17 o f_ the
Meigs
Coun ty
Deed
Reco rd s to convev 102 1 ~
a cres o f r eoJl es tate .
E )(.Cep t ing the r efrom 6.0
a cres t ran sf erred t o John
E l mer Ord by deed da t ed
Augus T 17 , 19 75 rec orded in
votume 201 page 385 Me igs
Coun ty Dee d Reco rds and
2 16 acres trans f err ed to
Paul Saunders, Jr . and
Sa ndra Saunders by deed
dated
May
24 ,
1976
r eco rded m Volume 264
page 313 Me igs Cou nty
Deed Re co r ds
Y ou are r e qu i r ed to
a nswe r
th e co mpta i n t
w i th in tw ent y eigh t (2 8 )
day s
after
th e
tast
pub I icalion o f this not ic e,
w hich w ill be p u bl ished
once each wee!\ tor Si)(
consec ut ive weeks and the
last p ublica Tio n w i tt be
mo;~· de on July 26 . t979

sond,

&lt;m-3891.
OUACHITA BASS BOAT. Call
&lt;m·52'18.
1978 YAMAHA YZ 125. $600 .

&lt;m-2689 .

Help wanted
NEEDED, tARRIERS FOR THE
POMEROY AND SYRACUSE
AREAS . tALL 992-2156' BET·
WEEN 9,00 and 5,00.

PLAI NTIFF

LIMESTONE,

gravel , ca lci um chloride, tertll ller , d og food . and all typell
of salt. Excelsi or Soh Works,
Inc .. E. M o! n St.. Pomeroy,

MEIGS CO . Fish and Game
club regulor mee ting. Shad e ... . OLD COIN S, pocket w atches,
Voll ey Cl ub House . Fr i. , 13t h .
class rin gs, w edding bond ~ .
b- 8'
diamonds. Gold or sil ... er. Call
'
J . A . Wamsley , 742·2331.

sa lt•s are IH'rt•pted only ~~o1 th
t'IISh with orde r . ~ cent charge

for 11ds l'aM')'lnt: Box Number In

COAL ,

Servi ces Offered
NOW HAULING lim•stone in

~ ~ ~~ ~

FRIDAY, JUL·Y 13,1979
S:A5-Farm Report 13; World at
Large 17; 5 :5D-PTL Club 13; ·e
II
s :ss-Summer Semester 10.
6:1l0-700 Club 6,8 ; PTL Club 15; IS
6 : lD-News 17; 6 :25-Socletlesln lt
Transition 10 .
'e
6 :30-Drognet 17; 6:~5-Mornlng .y
Report 3; 6 ,5()-Good Morning,
West VIrginia 13; 6: 55-Chuck
White Reports 10; News 13.
7: 1l0-Today 3,15; Good Morning d,
America 6.13 ; Friday N\ornlng 8;
to
Schoolles 10; Three .stooges·
•e
Little Reseals 17; 7:15-A .M.
·!It
Weather 33 .•
7 :3D-Fam11y Affair 10; L111es Yoga ns
of
&amp; You JJ".
·
8 :1l0-Capt. Kangaroo 8,10; Lassie
17; Sesame St . 33; 8:31&gt;-Romper or
Room 17.
he
9 :1l0-Bob Broun J ; Phll Donohue ly
13, 15; Big Valley 6; Porky Pig &amp;
es
Friends 8; Love ot Life 10; Lucy
to
. Show 17; Biography 33.
n.
9,JO-Senlord &amp; Son 8; Hog~~n ' s
of
Heroes 10; Green Acres 17.
lO:IlO-Card Sharks J,15; Edge of ·-lj
Night 6; All In The Famlly 8, 10; to
Dating Game 13; Movie "Island !11
In the Sun" 17; Exploring the
9
Crafts : 33.
10:31&gt;-AII Star Secrets 3,15; $20,000 s,
Pyramid 13; Andy Griffith 6;
Whew! B, 10; Daniel Foster, M.D. rrt
oe
33.
.
10 :Ss-&lt;:BS News B; House Cell 10. ot
11 :1l0-High Rollers J ,lS; Laverne &amp; It
Shirley 6,13; Price Is Rlgtit 8,10;
ld
Biography 33 .
11 : 3D-Wheel of Forutne 3,1S ;
Family Feud 6,1J; 12:00Newscenter 3 ; New~ 6,,0;
Password l5; Young &amp;. the
Restless B; Over Easy 33;
Midday Magazine 13.
/
12:30-Ryan's Hope 6.13; Search for
•
Tomorrow a, JO; Not For Women
Only 15; Movie "First to Fight"
17; MacNeil-Lehrer Report 33.
1 :oo-Days of Our Lives 3,15; All My
Children 6,13; Young &amp; the
Restless 10; Watch Your Mouth
33 . .
1:31&gt;-As The World Turns 8,10; Ah,
Wilderness 33.
2:0D-Oocto,·s 3,15; One Life to Live
i1
f.
6,13; 2:25-News 17.
2'30-Another World 3,15; Guiding
'·
l.:ight 8, 10; I Love Lucy 17.
il
J:OO-General Hospital 6,13; Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 20; Rebop 17.
3:31&gt;-Mash 8; Joker's Wild 10;
Banana Spills 17; Over Easy 20 ;
Controlling I nfletlon JJ.
4:1l0-Mister Cartoon 3; Hollywood
y
Squares 15 ; Merv Griffin 6;
;Addams Femlly 8; Sesame St.
20,33; Six Million Dollar Man 10;
d
Mike Douglas 13; Fllntstones 17.
4:31&gt;-Lone Ranger 3; Hogan's
Heroes 9; Lucy Show 15; Par..
tridge Family 17. ·
s :oo-Bonanza 3; Beverly Hillbillies
~
B; Mister Rogers' Neighborhood
20,33; Gomer Pyle 10; Slx Million
'1
Dollar Men 13; Brady Bunch 15;
Star Trek 17.
S:31&gt;-News 6; Petticoat Junction 8;
,_
Elec. Co ." 20; Mary Tyler Moore
10; Odd Couple 15; Doctor Who
I
33.
6,1)0-News J ,B, 10,13,15,6; Family
Affair 17; VIlla Alegre 20; Studio
See 33.
6:30-NBC News 3,15; ABC News 13;
Carol Burnett 6; CBS News B,10;
Over Easy 20,JJ; Father Knows
Best 17.
7:1l0-Cross-WIIs 3; ; Newlywed
Game 6,13; News 10; Get Smart
17; Dick Cavett 20,J3.
7:30-Hee Hew Honeys 3; S1.9B
Beauty Show 6; Family Feud
B, lO; $100,000 Name That Tune
13; Pop Goes The Country 15; My
Three Sons 17.
B:OD-D Ill' rent
Strokes 3,1S;
Baseball 6,13; lncr•dlble Hulk
B,10 ; Washington We•k In
Review 20.3'3; · Movie "The
Horrible Dr. Hlchcock" 17.
6 :3D-Hello, Larry 3,15; 9 :llO-Eddie
Capra Mysteries 3, 15; Dukes of
Hazzard B.10; Buckeye Ho!Uiay
20; Money News &amp; VIews JJ.
9:3~ne &amp; Only· Phyllis Dlxey 33;
10 :1l0-Dallas 8,10; Ten Who
Dared 17 ; News 20 .
lO :JD-Consumer Survival Kit 20;
11 :llO-News 3,6,6,10,13,15; New
Soupy Sales 17; Two Ronnles 20;
11 :05-To Know The Sound 33.
11 : JO-Johnny Carson 3,15; Pan
American Games 8; ABC News
33 ; Movie "Pretty Polson" 10;.
Movie "What's Up Tiger Lily?"
17.
11 :45-Bonkers 8; l2 :0Q-Monty
Python' s Flying Circus 33;
12 :05-Barette 6,13.
12 : 1S- Juke - Box B; 12 : ~5-Movle
"The Second Best Sec_ret Agent
ln the Whole Wide World" 8.
1 :llO-Midnlght SpeCial 3, 15; Movie
"Web of Violence" 10; 1: 15lronslde 13; Movie "The Gly

1-

:'
'

'

'

Sisters" 17.
2: 15-News 13; 2:3o-News 3; 3:25News17; 3: oi5-Movle "City That
NeV,!Ir Sleeps" 17.

�.'
!I}-Tile

LINGE.RIE ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
SUMMER
JULY
SALE
I
Special group of summer
SPORTSWEAR
JUNIOR

styles, robes, short gowns,
long gowns .and pajamas.
Broken Sizes.

BEGINS FRIDAy I JULy 13TH ALL SALES FINAL

1f2 PRICE

9:30 A.M.

PEN .FRIDAY NIGHT

'

S·ALE

WOMEN'S TOPS
Large selection of colorful tops in
sizes S, M, L and Extra Sizes

Reg. s7.00....................Sale s4.19
Reg. s9.00 .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . Sale '5.39
Reg. sn.OO ................. -Sale '6.59
Reg. '13.00 ...................Sale s7.79

WOMEN'S SHORTS
Denim, polyester and terry styles in
sizes 8 thru 20 and extra sizes.

Reg. SS.()(L.................... Sale s3.59
Reg. s1.00 ...................... Sale s4.19
Reg. sn.OO...................... Sale '6.59
Reg. '12.00 .~ ................... Sale '7.19

SALE

GIRLS'

Tubes, Halters. Short Sleeved and Sleeveless
Tops. Junior Sizes S, M, L

SUMMER
CLOTHING

JUNIOR TOPS

TERRY JUMPSUITS,
COORDINATES,
PAINTER PANTS
-

CHILDREN'S

SWIMWEAR
OUR ENTIRE STOCK OF
SWIMSUITS AND TRUNKS
REDUCED

50% OFF
LITTLE BOYS'
SHIRTS
KNIT SUMMER SHIRTS AND

SPORTSWEAR

DRESS SALE

FURNITURE
SPECIALS

CHILDREN'S
SUMMER

Select group of chairs: Occasional chairs,
Recliners, Platform Rockers

SLEEPWEAR

Our entire stock of summer
dresses in junior, missy and
half sizes

in Pre-Teen Sizes. Shorts, Blouses,
Skirts, Tops, Jackets and Jeans.

Y2 PRICE

1f2 PRICE
EXTRA SIZE DEVON

SUMMER
JEWELRY

·SPORTSWEAR
SUMMER STYLES, GOOD

Save 50% on Chains, Bracelets,
Earrings and Pins

SELECTION OF SIZES

Y2 PRICE

SAVE 50%

MEN'S SHIRT SALE
Short sleeve shirts including all of our
knit shirts, all of our dress shirts, all of
our sport shirts including westerns . Sizes
S, M , L and XL and XXL . Solids, pat·.
terns , plaids . A terrific selection . Savings
of 30 per ce nt.
MEN'S S 5.95 SHIRTS
MEN ' S S 7.95 SHIRTS
MEN'SS 9.95SHIRTS
MEN ' SS12.95SHIRTS
MEN':i $16 .95 SHIRTS

...........
...........
. . ... . ... ..
, , ,, ... ....
.... . . . . . ..

$ 4. 16
$ 5.56
$ 6.96
$ 9.06
$11.86

BOYS' SHORT SLEEVE

Clearance Sale

Entire Stock reduced for this sale,
srzes 8 to 20. Cut and sewn shirts,
knits and tank tops.

SALE PRICES
MEN'S

SWIM TRUNKS

Selected from our regula r stock .' Sizes 29
to 42 · waist, solid colors and patterns.
Mostly 100 per cent polyester , some cot·
ton bl e nds in the selection. Save 35 per
cent.
·

MEN'S
MEN'S
MEN'S
MEN'S
MEN'S

511.95
$14. 95
$15.95
$17.95
$19.95

SLACKS
SLACKS
SLACKS
SLACKS

. .. .. .. ... . S 7 ..75
. . ......... S 9.75
........... $10.35
........... $11.65
SL~CKS ... . ..... . . $12.95

SALE PRICES

Jog Shorts. Bermudas and Tennis Shorts.
Sizes 30 to 42.

Men's 16.95 Shorts ................. $4.87
Men's 58.95 Shorts ................. '6.27
Men's sg,95 ShortS ............ :.... SG.97
Men's 510.95 Shorts................ s7.67
IN HOME FURNISHINGS DEPT.
ON FIRST FLOOR

TABLE COVERS

Select the table covers you want,
.rounds, ovals, oblongs and squares.
Fine color and pattern selection.
Your Choice.

Sizes S, M, L and XL.
Limited quantity.
While they last.

Y2 PRICE

SAVE 20%
",

Select Group of Living Room Furniture: .
2 pc. Suites, Sofas, Loveseats

Y2 PRICE

Sizes:

SUMMC
ER
COORDINATES
Regular Sized Devon, Bradley
and Douglas Marc

1f2 PRICE

make, limited quantity

SUMMER
JACKETS
Entire stock. Boys' size 8 to 18.
Men's sizes 38 to 46.
Your Choice.

1f2 PRICE
MEN'S SUMMER

CAPS &amp;HATS
Straw Hats, terry cloth hats,
baseball caps, roll ups.
Entire stock included.

Y2 PRICE

SALE
Sizes 8 to 18, cut offs,
jog shorts and gym shorts
s3.95 Shorts ......... ;..........·...... 52.77
'5.95 Shorts .......... ~ ................ 54.17
'6.95 Shorts ........................... '4.87

BOYS'

SWIM TRUNKS
Sizes 8 to lR
Final Clearance Sale on remaining
stock.

Y2 .PRICE
TWO DAY SALE!

JULY CLEARANCE SALE!

MEN'S SPORT COATS
Sizes 38 to 46. Regulars and longs, solid
colors and patterns. Selected from our
regular stock.

Men's '49.95 Sport Coats ........s33.00
Men's s59.95 Sport Coats ....... .'39.00

P SATURDAY 9:30 AM TO 5

MEN'S 3-PIECE
VESTED SUITS
Solid colors, stripes, patterns. Sizes 38
to 46. Good selection picked from our
regular stock.

Men's '89.95 Suits;..............s59.00
Men's '99.95 Suits~ .............. 165.00

.

LBERFELD IN POMEROY

'

.

taxes next year, although he wan~ to
avoid a reduction in individual income
taxes if at all possible. A major tax cut
would likely force a delay in balancing
the federal budget in 1981, a top Carter
priority .
Mcintyre told the Senate conunittee
that the admini.;tration hopes to keep
a lid on spending. "Although we
believe that a mild recession this year
is likely, we a~ believe that we
should not abandon budgetary
restraint," he said.
Nevertheless, some increase in
federa) expen~itures over earlier
estimates will occur automatically to
counter the impact of the recession
and high inflation, the budget office
said Thursday. These include
unemployment benefits, up$1.4 billion
in 1980; food stamps, up $1.7 billion,
and Social Security benefits, up $1.5
billion.
The administration stopped
insisting Thursday that there will not
be a recession, conceding a mild

!IY KA:riE CROW

council is to meet with the SyracuseJa ck Willial)ls was sworn in as a Racine Regional Sewage District July
new member of Syracuse Village 17, at I p.m. at the Syracuse Municipal
Council by Mayor Eber Pickeru Building.
Thursday night.
.
Cou ncil discussed ditching and
Williams fills th e post vacated by
trucks in violation of the weight limit
th e resignation of Herman London on vUlage streets.
who resigned to accept the position as
Council also agreed to notify
manager of London PooL
property owners that they must cut
Counc ilm a n J ohn Arnott, who weeds on vacant lots. If it is necessary
moved to Pomeroy, submitted his for the village to c ut the weeds the
resJgnation which was a ccepted by cost of the work will be added to the
counci l.
property owners' tax duplicate.
CA&gt;unci l wUI appoint a new member
Chief of Police Milton Varian
by the next meeting .
.
reported that the radar on the police
Council , before the meeting , drove cruiser has been checked and found to
to Rustle Hills to view a washout in the be working properly . Varian stat.ed
street . Mayor Pick.e ns contacted the equipment must be checked once a
Roger Jeffers re garding street year.
repairs . Jeffers is to check the area
Mayor Pick eM informed council be
today ,
had received a letter from the office of
. Mayor Pickens announced that
c

~~

MEN'$ &amp; BOYS

'219
BOYS' SHORTS

2-4,
and 7·14

Reduced 50%

GOOD DAY '2.98
100 per cent broom corn, sturdy

Mon~

•

slowdown in th e economy of 0.5
J!Crcent th is year may already be
under way . It blamed the
Organization of Petroleum Exporting
Countries, which has raised world oil
prices 60 percent this year.

continue its downtllfll in the third. ·
"We think ihe recession that Is
implied by our forecast will be
rela tively mild and short-lived, " said
Gramley, a member of the president's
CA&gt;uncil of Economic Advisers.

In its mid-year update on the
economy , the administration~ said
inflation and unemp)oyment will be
worse than thought previously .
Consumer prices will increase 10.6
percent while joblessness will rise to
6.6 percent this year and 6.9 pereent in

But some private forecasters are
saying the recession will be serious.
One, Michael K. Evans of EvaM
Economics, Inc., of Washington ,
believes unemployment will pea~ at
8.6 percent neJrt year.

1980.

Gramley acknowledged to reporters
that " there is a possiblity our forecast
may underestimate" the extent of the
downturn .

President carter, who has been
conducting a domestic summit at
Camp David for more than a week,
may have more to say about economic
problems and oU prices when he
delivers a nationwide address
Sunday.
Carter economic adviser Lyle E.
Gramley told reporters Thursday that
the economy probably began slowing
in the year's second quarter and may

Budget Director James T. Mcintyre
also sounded a note of caution
Thursday, saying that while he hopes
Carter can propose a balanced budget
for fiscall981 , " I think we'll just have
to wait and see with the uncertainty
-we face in the economy .... "

Williams given office oath

Reg. 115.00

Clearance Sale

MEN'S DRESS SLACKS HOUSE BROOM

MEN'S SHORTS

SHIRTS

Y2 PRICE

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

FRIDAY, JULY 13, 1979

WASH!NG'l'ON (AP) - A top
'carter admini~tr alion official is
indicating the president will propose a
ta• cut if a recession this year is
worse than expected .
"We are sensitive ...to the fact that
ill the coming months economic
conditions may change more
sub.• tantially
than
we
now
anticipate," Budget Director James
T. Mcintyre said today in testimony
before the Senate Budget Committee.
If that happeM, he said, "we will
modify the tax and the budgetary
r ecommendatioM that we make to the
Congress .... ''
CQnsiderable support for a tax cut to
ease the impact of a recession and
high inflat ion has s urf aced in
Congress in recent weeks, although
opinion is divided over whether the
c ut should be primarily for
busines."res, or for businesses and
individua ls.
It is thought that Carter might
propose a reduction in Social Security

WRANGLER
SPECIAL

SUMMER

enttne

u.s. recessron comrng1

JUNIORS'

PRE-TEEN

•

••

Reg. '6.00..................... Sale '4.19
. Reg. '8.00 ...... ;.............. Sale SS.59
Reg. '10.00 ................... Sale 16.99
Reg. '12.00 ................... Sale '8.39

1f2 PRICE

aly

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Quality Wrangler in
Sizes 3 thru 15/16

Y2 PRICE

Two Racks of Quality Sportswear

NO. 63

SHORTS SALE

Denim Wrap Around Skirts ........ Sale '5.00
Reg. '23.00
Denim Sport Jackets ............... Sale '8.00

AND JEANS

CUT AND SEWN STYLES

VOL. XXVIII
.

JUNIOR

Reg. '7.00.............. .. .. .. . Sale 54.89
Reg. '9.00...................... Sale 16.29
Reg. su.oo.....................Sale 16.59
Reg. su.oo ................... Sale '9.09

TOPS, DR ESSES, SHORTS

e

1f2 PRICE

- ---

••

IN 11IE GOOD OlD SUMMER TIME - Colleen Re~r, 8, daughter
of Mr. and Mn. Joe Relaer, New Jersey, is bere visiting relatives. Colleen
opencll the nice days playlnjj frlabee with the other childnm on Lincoln
. Heights during her vialt.

~ple
Today
.. .in the world

Death penalty
roLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
Hearing:! are Wlder way in the
Senate on a bill to reinstate
Ohio's death penalty, but final ac·
lim still !a months away.
The Jiroposal faces t . sled·
dlniJ, due largely to the strenuous
oppo!ltlon rA Judiciary Chalnnan
Marlgene Valiquette, D-Toledo.
She says she wm't call for a vote
at leu! unW September.
It Ia believed, however, that
there are enough votes m Ms.
Valiquette's committee and in
the full senate to approve it.
Her panel heard It for !be fi"'t
time Thlll'!lday ' although she has
had the measure since February
when It was approved 60-26 by the

Houae.

Gas hike soon
WASHINGTON ( AP) -·
Motorists will pay three cents. to
five cenbi extra for a gallon of
guollne under new federal rule:J ,
laklnl! effect Sunday, that are intended to boClllt the prrAit margins
rA aervlce statim operato...
The effecbi ri the new pricing
regulations were expected to
show up at tbe gasoline pwnps
earlynen week.
AI the same time, the Energy
Department Is closing a loophole
ln lbi regulations to forbid the
practice called "banking," which
enabled g88ollne · retalle"' to
raise prices above federal
celllngs.

Tanker hijacked
PIKEVIlLE, Tenn. (AP) Glinmen hijacked a gasoline
tanker and released lts driver
tulharmed after emptying the
truck's 9,oqp-gallon cargo,
author!Ues say.
The driver, Johnny Chancey,
25, of Soddy·Dalsy, was foWld after the robbery Thursday on a
road about five miles outslde
Ptkeville, 40 miles north of Chat·
tanooga, Bledlloe County She~ff.
G. B. Meyers BSid.
The lanker, minus its cargo,
waa found In Spring City, about20
mlles northeast of Pikeville.

However, Mcintyre insisted;
" Inflation is still the major threat to
the American economy and we
continue to believe that movement
toward a balanced budget remains
Congressman Clarence E. Miller appropriate to keep cool the fires of
stating the House of Representati~~s inflation. "
has approved a bUI which incltlde5 a
Rudy Oswald, chief economist for
$7.5 million for riverbank erosion the AFL.CIO, said he fears tbe
control programs under the economy will be " predominantly
coordination of the U. S. Army Corps worse" than the president believes
of Engineers.
and urged the administration to
The funding is for section 32 of the prepare for a more serious downturn.
1974 Water Resources Development
The current unemployment rate of
Act, which authorizes the Corps to 5.6 percent is higher than the under-5
conduct
streambank
erosion percent rate that prevailed prior to
'demonstration projects under local the deep 1974-1975 recession, when
g overnmental sponsorship along joblessness hit a post-war peak of 9
major inland waterways. Funding percent.
was included in the Energy and Water
Sen. Lloyd Ben~en, D-Texas,
Development Appropriations bill:
chairman of the congressional Joint
Attending were Mayor Pickesn, Economic Committee, said the
Janice Lawson, clerk, Chief Varian, cou ntry needs a tax cut to help get out
Herman London, Troy Zwilling, Mick . of tbe recession, but agreed tlu!t
Ash, Kathryn Crow and Jack goverrunent spending should be held
Willii'ffiS, council members .
in check.
·

gas supplies available this weekend
PAIR PLEADS GUILTY
.. Wtlllam Kauff, charged wtlh
aggra1·ated assault and Gregory Allen
Roush, charged with a drug abuse
off enSf. ea ch plead guilty to Meigs
Counly Common Pleas Court
Thursday .
.. Both were released on t heir own
recognizanc e pending a pre-&lt;~entence
lnvestlgatton.
·f

·:·:·:-:-:-:-:-:.:-:·:·:·:·:-:-:-:-:-:-;;:·:-::;.;:::::;.;-:::·:-:-:: ;.;.:-:-:.:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:

Two troopers
shot Thursdav
PIQUA , Ohio ( AP) - Two Ohio
Highwa y Pa t rol troopers were
wounded Thursday night in an
exchange of gunfire with a 17-year-old
girl at an Interstate 7 ~ rest stop east of
[~qua . the patrol said .
The girl was no( hurt and
sur rendered, the patrol said.
• Trooper Paul Meddles, 23 , was
listed in guarded condition Friday
morning
in Piqua
Memorial
Hospital 's intensive care unit. The
palrol said he had been shot in the
shoulder and lower back.
• Trooper Robert Painter, 26, was
treated for a wound to his left hip and
released .
According to the patrol's report,
Painter noticed a car parked illegally
at the rest stop. A routine registration
check of the car'sdriver, a ~year-old
man, indicated he was sought on a
warrant from Williams County , the
patrol said . Two young women , one 18
and the other 17, were also in the car.
Aided by Meddles, Painter was
gettili g the man into the patrol car
when the 17-year-{)ld girl began firing
at the officers with a .25-&lt;:aliber
handgun, the Highway Patrol said.
Although wounded, Painter and
Meddles returned fire, the patrol said ,
and the girl threw down her weapon
and surrendered.
The troopers called for an
amb ul ance for themselves a nd
arrested the two women, the patrol
said.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) - There
should be ample gasoline supplies in
Ohio this weekend, the Ohio
Automobile Club reports. But it
' cautions motorists to be aware of
shorter station operating hours.
An Associated Press survey of
gasoline prices in 16 Ohio cities
indicated less change this week than
in any week since weekly price checks
began in mid-May.
Averag es show the .cost of regular
gasoline at self-serve pumps declined
one-tenth or a cent , from 83.7 to 83.6
over the week. The most significant
change was at Piqua where the price
average declined 4.4 cents per gallon.
Unleaded gasoline at self-serve
pumps increased on average from 86.8
cents to 97.9 cents while averages on
regular and unleaded fu el at full serve.
pumps dropped less than one cent per
ga llon .
The auto club reporu that fuel
availabi lity has improved in
Kentucky, West Virginia, Tennessee
and Michigan, and none of those
states impose purchase limits. It
reports the Indiana turnpike
continues a lil;!al\on limit on gasoline
and 25-gallon limit on diesel fuel.
Pennsylvania has odd-even gasoline
rationing in effect.

Ohio station managers are shifting
prices and hours as they continue to
shop for customers while trying to
cope with less fuel than they want.
The Standard Oil of CA&gt;. of Ohio is
advertising in metropolitan Ohio
Sunday newspapers the addresses and
operating hours of · company-owned
stations in those cities. It involves Zl7
s tations · In Cincinnati, Dayton,
Columbus , Toledo, Cleveland,
Youngstown and Akron .
Sunoco Dealer Ralph West of
Dayton turns to no brand gasoline to
keep his station open 24 hours a day
and said It forces him to raise prices.
This week, West has Sunoco fuel so be
sells regular gasoline at full service
pumps for 87.9 cents per gallon, down
from $1.02.9 a week ago. His unleaded
fuel price is down from $1.05.9 to 92.9
cents.
" But next week when I run out of
Sunoco I'll have to raise my prices
again," he said. "I'm just trying lD
survive~ with my customers.
" When other stations close up the
street, they (customers ) come to me
and I really don 't want that. "
In Massillon, a Texaco dealer said
his allotment is lower than last month,
while a Sohio dealer said he is gettin~

Date changed for
Meigs fair event
The annual Uttle Mister and Miss
Melgs Cow!ly Contest to be held at the
Meigs County Fair In August under
the spon8orshlp of the Middleport
Business and Professional Women's
Clubs will take .•on added stature lhlB
year.
The annual event has been
scheduled for .6:30 p.m . on Wednesday, Aug. 15, rather than on the
final afternoon of the fair. The contest
will be beld in the show ring and the
two winners will be taking part in

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Sunday lbrougb Tuesday, cbaDce

more fuel in July than in June . Aii
Exxon dealer in Youngstown said he
has gasoline to sell two days out of
every five while a Sunoco dealer there
feels July will last longer than his fuel
allotment.
A Sohi&lt;i dealer in Athens said his
July allotment works out to 1,400
ga~ons a day. He opeM at 1.0 a.m .
daily and when the allotment ls sold,
usually by mid-afternoon, he closes. -

"People now are used to buylnjj
gasoline in the daytime," commented
Mark Kat2bach, owner of an ARCO
station on Cleveland's west side . "so
it's all steady business. We really
don't have the long ·unes any more."
Katzbach expe~ to have enough
gasoline to last through July if
competing stations don't run out.
When they close he said his business
doubles.

Mrs. Kerr, first gas customer
Mi-a. Uly Km at 30t Ridge Aenue,
Rio Grande, Is the first new customer
In years In the Gallia-Melgs area to
receive natural g88 service from Col·
wnbia Gas of Ohio. Service was con·
nectedonJuly 12.
The Public Utilities Conunlsslon of
Ohio m June 6 granted Colwnbla permission to end a seven.year
moratoriwn on service to new
cust&lt;mers, granting authority to ac·
·cepl growth in all customer
classiflcatinS.
"The addition of Mrs. Kerr as a
customer of Colwnbua Gas of Ohio Is
a momentous occasion for both Col·
wnbia and the Gallla·Melga area,"
said J. M. Koebel, the g88 c&lt;mpany's
Gallla-Melga manager.
" And lhlB Is just the start. Natural

gas, a clean and effldent energy
source that Is among !be lowest priced heating'fuel.s available, Ia back llld
we look forward to sharing lhlB
resource with many, many more

.customers. ''

·

Koebel lD'ged everyone ctUTentiJ'
waiting for gas service to be paUent,
since It will lake time to accommodate all potential Cllllomen,
some rA whom flied tbelr appUcaU0111
seven years ago,
He advlaed anyone just now
deciding to apply for gu .-vice to
make application at the 1-a gu
company office 88 soon u JIOW,.l)le, 10
tlu!t they can be servecl mere Npfdl)'.
"We plan to aerve as IIIUly new
customers 88 we can, " Koebel IBid.
"and we ask you to bear with uauntll
)Ve catch up."

festivities ~ !be jWlior fair for the
remainder ~!be week.
Boys and glrl.s participating ln the
contest must be four through seven
(Continued on page 10)

ER squads kept busy
The Pomeroy Emergency Squad
was called to Sprin g Ave. all: 18 p.m.
Thursday for Harry Davis who was
having difficulty breathing . He was
taken to Holzer Medical Center. AI
2:20a.m. Friday the squad went to
Bunker HUI for William Morris who
had become ill in his vehicle. He was
taken to VeteraM Memorial Hospital.

of sbowen and tbundenlorma Sunday. Fair Mooday aDd TUesday.
Three ca lls were answered
Hlgb temperatures in tbe 808. Low at . Thursday and Friday morning by the
nlghlln the tiOs.
Middleport Emergency Squad.
At 4: 18 p.m. Thursday_the unit was
·:::::::::::::::::::-:::::::·:·:·:·:·:::::::-:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
called to the home of Harry Stover
who was taken to Holzer Medical
Center.
At 5:29p.m. the unit personnel took
Variable cloudiness and continued Sarah Dunn from her apartment over
very warm and humid tonight and Mark V to Veterans Memorial
Saturday with scattered showers or Hospital
thundersto111lS. The low tonight near
At 8:07a .m. Friday ihe squad was
70 and the high Saturday in tbe upper to Hock Springs Road for BUI Folmer
~.The chance of rain is 40 percent
who was taken to Pleasant Valley
tol!lght and 00 (lj!rcent Saturday. "
Hospital.

Weather

CJJ':VELAND ~AP) - Here are
tbe wlDDlug DUDJbers drawn TblD'sday ID lbe Ohio Lottery:
Blue 357; White 03; Gold 9; wm...tboo 18911.
·

'I

KEEPING CooL ~ Ryan Nltz ata)'ll cool from the 8uimner heat by
ftoatlng J)ll his inner tube In the Middleport~·
,
/!If

'

I

I

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