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                  <text>10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, July 19, 1979

Announce rural health conference
A rural mental health conference is
scheduled July 24-27 at Baker Center ,
Ohio University.
"The Mountains and Valleys are
Mine " has been chosen as the
conference theme according to Pat
Arnow, public information specialist
for
the
Gallia -Jack son -Meigs
Community Mental Health and
Mentalltetardation 648 Board.
Walter Menninger, MD , Menninger
Foundation, Topeka , Kansas will be
the keynote speaker, Tuesday , July
24.
·On Wednesday, speakers include
Thomas M: Cassidy, MD. medical

d i r ec tor , Ga llia -Ja cks on-Meigs
Conununity Mental Hea lth Center,
Inc.; Mildred Mitchell Bateman, MD.
professor and chairman of the
Department of Psychiairy , Marshall
University ; DavidS. Hargrove, rHD,
President Rural Mental Health Assn.;
J oseph Moriarity, PHD, University of
West Virginia ; Frederick Charlllan,
MD, Associate Professor, Clinical
P sychiatry, New York . State
University; Maxwell N. We1sman , .
PHD Alcohol Control Administration,
Maryland Department of Health and
Mental Hygiene.

Jury finds Woomer guilty
Rooald "Rusty" Woomer, a 24yearo()]d Huntington man whose first
criminal charge was being a
"delinquent child," was convicted
Wednesday of murder following a
bloody rampage last February in
coastal South Carolina.
Sitting in Conway, S. C., a Horry
County jury deliberated only 75
minutes Wednesday before finding
Woomer guilty in the shotgun'l!llaying
of Mrs. Della Louise Sellers, 35, of
Pawleys Island, S.C.
The seven-woman, five-man jury
also foWld Woomer guilty of two counts of kidnapping, one count of
criminal sexual assault and one count
of assault with intent to kill.
· Under South Carolina law, the jury
must decide in a separate hearing
whether Woomer will be.sentenced to
life imprisorunent or death in the electric chair.
Three more murder charges are
pending against Woomer in two other
South Carolina coWJtles.
Authorities said Woomer and
another Huntington man, 41-yeaNid

Eugene Robert Skarr, robbed and
murdered a Colle\On County, S. C.,
coin dealer in the incident which
triggered their flight from police on
Feb. 22.
The same day, a Georgetown County, S. C., man and his sister-in-law
were gunned down while working on a
truck.
In nearby Horry County,
authorities said, Woomer and Skarr
kidnapped, raped and shot two female
store employees. One of them, Mrs.
Sellers, died of a single shotgun blast.
The lower jaw of the other woman,
Mrs. Wanda Sununers, was bloivh
away but she survived.
Skarr later shot himself in the head
with a 3&gt;-gauge shotgun after he and
Woomer were trapped by an army of
police inside a room at the Komo Mai
Hotel in Myrtle Beach, S. C.
In gripping testimony Tuesday,
Mrs. Sununers told the jurors the two.
men sexually assaulted both women
on a coWJtry road near the Pawleys
Island convenience store wher~ the

Thtirsday's speakers include Leon
Ginsberg, PHD, commissioner , West
Virginia Department · of Welfare ;
David M. Richards, D. 0 ., Ohio
University school of Osteopathic
Medicine;
William
Balson ,
coordinator residential forensic units,
State of Ohio; Hugh J. B. Cassidy,
PHD, Professor of Criminal Justice,
Adelphia Univer sity and Paul
J.:ozanoff, PHD, Adolescent Center,
Columbus.
.
Abraham Heller, MD, Wr1ght State
University, and David Looff, MD,
pr1vate practice, Lexmgton, Ky . are
booked for Friday appearances.

women were employed.
Two Qther Huntington men also
have been charged in the series of incidents. They are John B. Fisher, 48,
of 5828 Guyan River Road and Fred
Thomas Whitehead, the »-year-old
owner of the Myrtle Beach Coin Club
and a former Huntington resident.
Fisher, president of the West
Virginia Young Republicans In 1!158, .
was charged with helping to plan the
robbery lhat began tbe trail of death.
Whitehead was charged with being an
accessory to the crimes, according to
police.
·
Colleton County Sheriff John I.
Seigler said that the four · men
originally planned to rob coin dealer
John Turner, 67, of a gold and silver
coin collection valued at several hundred thousand dollars. They planned
to fence the loot through Whitehead's
shop, Seigler said.
Turner was the first person murdered in the killing spree. During the
trial, the prosecution played a tape
recording for the jury in which
Woomer testified he committed aU
four murders.
In his closing arguments, Assistant
Circuit Solicitor John Breeden said
when Woomer confessed: "It was just
like he was walking down Main Street
... and that can only be done by a coldblooded killer."
Woomer's attorney, Cleveland
Stevens, told the court that the dead
Skarr was the mastermine behind the
incidents.

Carpenter
Personals

Save gallons of gas every year, Bank
by mail! Just get our handy Bank-By·

Mr. and Mrs. Lan-y Stansbury and
sons, Reynoldsburg, camped for a
week at Lake Snowden and visited his
mother, Mrs. Dale Stansbury and
other relatives here. Other guests of
Mrs. Stansbury were Mrs. T. J.
Spurlock, Albany, Dick Spurlock,
Colwnbus, and Mr. and Mrs. Merl
Davis, Rutland.
Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Starkey, local,
.along with their sonin-law and
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Wiseman, Harrisonville, were in
Colwnbus to see Mr. Starkey's sister,
Jessie Jewell, who has undergone
throat surgery and is still in a serious
condition.
Mrs. Reece Prather, Westerville,
was the guest of her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Lewis Smith.
Mrs. Noble Hamon is convalescing
at her home following surgery at
O'Bleness Memorial Hospital,
Athens.
Ethel Shell and son, Rolland,
Colwnbus, along with her daughter,
lJnda Shell, Amesville, were recent
guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Mendal Jordan.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Gillogly, local,
and his sister, Bernice McKnight,
Colwnbus, spent a vacation in
Florida. They stayed in the mobile
home of Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Gilkey
at Inverness, Florida, and visited
many places of int~rest including
Cyprus Gardens, Disney World and
Busch Gardens and called to see an
uncle and aWJt, Mr. and Mrs. James
!!ethel at Lakeland. Those visiting at
the Gillogly home on Saturday after
they returned home were Mr. and
Mrs. Ralph Frazier, Gallipolis, and
Goldie Gillogly, Albany.
Miss Vickie Gillogly has secured
employment at Athens National
Bank. Miss Gillogly graduated from
Alexander High School and TriCounty Vocational School this spring.

Mail envelopes and the nearest mailbox
is your "Tellers Window."

~~g~~i~W A Home B"nk
For
Meigs County

SUMMER
CLEARANCE
SALE
CONTINUES

------r.-.. . . .
Racine,

Ohi~

MARGUERITE'S
SHOES
MAIN ST.
POMEROY OHIO

--II!!L'!_ . .. .-d:oiiiiiiiiiiiioiioriiioiiiiooo......

. .J
. r *
..

Furthe~ reductions on men's, boys, children's•. and women's
. summer clothing. Odd lots to clean up. You'll really save.

OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8 P.M.
· ~~~---~---~-~-----1-~-------~~-----~1
WOMEN•s
All sales final.

.WOMEN'S SHORTS
Sizes 8 thru ·20 and extra sizes.

I

SWIMWEAR

!

CLEARANCE ON
! FINAL
REMAINING STOCK.
PRICE
I
Y2 PRICE
~-..-._._...._.._..._.._.,__ _____~---+--..,...-- ~ --· -·
- ---

Regular prices '6.00 to 112.00.

RUSS GIRL

GIRLS SPORTSWEAR

l

J·

SELECT GROUP

·WOMEN'S SLIPS

II
m'.oo •
SALE ss.oo I
1
~~~::~~~~~---~~~~J-----~~-~~I~E------1
Blouses, tops, skirts ana vests coordinates. Girls sizes 7 to '14.

Full slips and half slips, white and
assorted colors, not every size In every
style. Regularly $4.00 to $7.00.

PROGRESS NOTED - Construction of the Ravenswood Bridge is progressing on schedule as is the ac-

Regular $13.00 to

MEN'S SHORTS

~

Jog shorts and bermudas. Sizes 30 to 42.
Usually $6.95 to $10.95. ·

____

PRICE:

_..._..._..._...._._._.._..~------T-----....,..-----.--------- .

I.

BOYS SHORTS

Sizes 8 to 18. Gym shorts, jog
shorts and some cutoffs. Regular ly $3.95to$6.95.

1

DRESS SLACKS

Reguljlr prices $9 .95 to $19.95 . Solid colors ·
and patterns. Selected from regular
stock.

1f2 PRICE .

l

--~-----~---~~-------~··-----+r---------·------------~----~--~---~
MEN'S AND BOYS
MEN'S

SF~~!~~RE!~E~~ I ,,,~ !~~.~ X~~!,~'""'
_

'GOOD SELECTION.

~

1f2 PRICE

I

$4. 9Sto$1l. 95 '

.

112 PRICE

._.._.._...._..._~._..-----------.-1--~~---------~---~-t
MEN'S

KNIT SHIRTS

h PRICE

1

VOL. XXVIII NO. 68

SIZES 38 TO 46 . .

Good selection. solid colors and patterns.
While they last.

CAPS AND HATS
Straw hats, baseball caps, sport caps and
Roll-ups.

MEN'S AND BOYS

~

SWIM TRUNKS
SMALL LOT FOR QUICK CLEARANCE •.

Women's Wear -

PRICE

~----------------._..--.;.....1

I WOMEN'S TOPS
2nd Floor I
I!

Women's summer dresses,
mer coordinates, and junior

Sizes S, M, L and extra sizes, too.
Large selection. Regularly $7.0() to

sumsport-

1f2 PRICE
I 1f2 PRICE
-----~~~~~~~------i--;;;~;;~~;;;~00;CHILDREN'S DEPARTMENT! SALE! .ALBUMS
••N•.

$13.00.

su~~e~ ~~~~

!

bovs

shy~· PRICE

l.

!

HUGE .PILLARS - The huge · pillars for the new
bridge which will span the Ohio River from Ravenswood, W. Va. to SR 338 in Ohio near Portland are

•

e
Today
... in the world

Somoza leaving
MIAMI BEACH (AP) - Ousted
Nicaraguan President Anastasio
Somoza says he11 leave on a
vacation by the end of the week
because the United States has
tried to draw him "into things
over which I have no control. "
Somoza said he won't return to
exile in Miami until ''the climate
gets clarified." He would not
reveal his destination , other than
to say It " could be In this
llernlsphere or in Europe. "
S&lt;mOUI said by threatening to
deport him Wlles.s his successor
relinquished power, the U. S.
State Department was "making
me responsible for an act I had no
control over."

Supporting levy

-----------------------....,.. .

ce!IS road leading to the bridge on the Ohio side. The
new span will connect the Ravenswood area with SR
338 near Portland.
· ·

shown above. The bridge opening will relieve some of ·
the beavy traffic that is presently hindering motorists.

•

enttne

at

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS .

FRIDAY, JULY 20, 1979

MEN'S

1

l

112 P~ICE

Girls
children's
swimwear, summer sleepwear and little

RACINE
BANK

JULY.·CLEARANCE SALE
CONTINUES.

SPECIAL SALEI

People

HOME NATIONAL

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

:ro~

Taken
our regular stock . Regular
prlces$3.79to$9.79-Whilethey last.

Y2

PRICE . .

. '
'
~~~~---~-._..--~-----~---------~~---~---

. ELBERFELD$ IN POME-ROY .

CINCINNATI (AP ) - Leaders
of the Cincinnati chapter of the
NAACP have decided to support
the record 12-mill school tax levy
in August if the money isn't used
to fight the organization 's
desegregation suit, leaders say .
In response , the school board
sent a letter Thursday to the
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People indicating the money from the levy
would be used for salaries, instruction and catch-up maintenance.

Greeting given
MANAGUA, Nicaragua (AP ) Pealing church bells greeted the
Sandinista guerrilla army that
took conunand of this capital city
Thursday . Armed teenagers
careened through town in cars
and trucks, firing automatic
rifles and pistols into the air.
Sldnnlshes were reported between rebels and remnants of
exiled Anastasio Somoza 's
national guard, but most of 11Je
shooting seemed to be from guns
fired in a jubilant victory
celebration.
Hundreds of soldiers frantically shed their uniforms and
tried to nee the city in the path of
the triumphant Sandinistas. The
national guard commander was
reported to have fled the country,
and,his replacement called on aU
troops to surrender.

'Grave threat'
DEERF.IELD, Ohio (AP ) The chief engineer of the
Mahonlng Valley Sanitary
District says the Deerfield
chemical waste dwnp is a ' 'grave
threat" to local water sources
and requires Immediate
legislation.
John E. Tucker sent a letter to
several govenunent officials this
week saying dump chemicals
may drain iQto ·Berlin Lake and
make it unsafe as a reserve waltlr
supply.
Tucker's appeal came lin the
heels of a new effort by state Rep.
Thomas J. Carney, D-Boardman,
to get the dump cleaned up. Carney introduced a biU in the
Legislature Thursday to provide
$1.5 mUllon in state funds to ·
.reclaim and clean up the dump.

Duncan replaces Schlesinger
WASHINGTON (AP) - President
Carter has picked a top Pentagon
official to replace Energy Secretary
James Schlesinger, sources say, apd
was e!q)eCted to complete today the
drastic Cabinet facelift that already
has claimed three other department
heads .
Government sources said Carter
was likely to announce today the
of
Schlesinger's
acceptanc e
resignation and the nomination of
Deputy Defense Secretary Charles W.
Duncan Jr . to replace him .
There was speculation that
Transportati on Secretary Br ock
Adams also might be ousted today .

multimillionaire and former CocaCola executive in Atlanta, has wielded
more power than most Cabinet
secretaries as he managed the
Pentagon on a day-to-day basis.
White House political aides have
high regard for Duncan and have long
S!Jught a wider role for him in the
administration. Duncan, who 1s
known to dislike Brown , ha s
volunteered .repeatedly for more
responsibility.
Powell said he e!q)eCted Carter to
comp lete evaluating his Cabinet
before the weekend and to turn his
attention next week to his own senior
staff. A high administration source
11
Jt •s cut and dried 1 " one source said said the Cabinet reshuffling would be
of the Vuncan decision . Duncar. "completed by the end of the day
refused to confirm or deny It early [today ),"
today, as did White House press
On
Thursday,
in
three
secretary Jody Powell.
announcements in 4\l hours, Powell
Under · the shadow of Defense said Carter had dumped Health ,
Secretary Harold Brown, Duncan , a Education and Welfare Secretary
Joseph A. Callfano Jr . and Treasury
Secretary W. Michael Blwnenthal and
had accepted the resignation of friend
and fellow Georgian , Attorney
General Griffin B. Bell.
~vealing a new Cabinet look for an
election year , Powell said Carter will
nominate :
- Housing and Urban Development
The Me igs Count y Sheriff' s
Department responded to a car fire in

Minor blaze

investigated

Po;;'~~:d~r'f.~~~~t~rings Road, Nati•on's

~:O~~o~ 0:~s :iv~~t~~n~.~n

when his _1974 Volkswagen began to
truss . Fnend pulled over- to the
shoulder and found flames coming
from the engme.
.
Depuhes and the Pomeror Frre
Depart~ent responded to the frre, but
the engme was demoh~ed by the
flames..
.
Depuhes are_ also mvestlgating the
theft of battenes from ·a roller. and
paver from two county v~h1cles
parked along the intersectiOn of
County Roads 30 and 28 .
A Johnson boat motor was stolen
Wednesday evenmg_ from . a boat
owned br Dav1d Hill, Racme. The
boat, which had been Ued up on Old
Towne Creek and the_lock had been
cut off. Deputies are mvestigallng .
A tire cutting incident is also being
Inves tigated . Charles
Estep,
Harrisonville, had parked his vehicle
in the carport at his home and
discovered Thursday morning two of
his tires had been punctured.

goods output down
.

WASHINGTON ( AP ) _ The
nation's output of goods and services
fell at an-annual rate of 3.3 percent in
the second quarter this year, the
largest such drop since the nation was
in the depths of the !974-75 recession ,
the Commerce Department said
today.
The decline, which had been
expected by economists in and out of
government, followed a modest u
percent rise in the first three months
this year. It was : the first dip since
early !978.
The drop was the\largest since the
first quarter of 1975, when " real"
output _ that adjusted for inflation _
feU more than 9 percent, said
Commerce Department analyst
Adren Cooper.

FJitERUN
The Pomeroy Fire Department was
called Thursday at6:58 p.m. to old U.
S. 33 where a car was on fire .
A 1974 Volkswagen owned by
Richard Friend, Rock Springs Road
caught fire when the gas line broke.
The car was demolished. There was
insurance on the vehicle.

CLEVELAND (AP) -TbewilllllDi
oamben drawu Tbunday in the
weekly Oblo Lottery game were:
gold 5; wblte 95; blue 1102; Wlnathou

18593.

Secretary l'a trlcla K. Harris to
One close Adams associate' said the
succeed the controversial and secretary had made up his mind to
leave. But an aide said Adams was
outspoken Califano ;
- Federal Reserve Chairman G. undecided .
It was learned that White House
William
Miller
to
succeed
Blumenthal, who has had frequent chief of staff Hamilton Jordan told
clashes with White House staff Adams in a Thursday morning
meeting that the secretary . had
members;
- Deputy
Attorney General Carter's confidence but there were
Benjamin R. Civiletti to replace Bell. problems with some officials in his
Powell said successors to Miller and agency.
It was understood that, after Adams
Mrs. Harris will be named soon.
Adams may have undermined his issued his statement, an irritated
own position Thursday afternoon with Jordan reached him by telephone
a statement that he had been asked to aboard an airplane to complain that
remain in the Cabinet but was none of the issues Adams raised in his
"considering whether or not I public statement had been broached
during their face-to-face meeting.
should. "
.
One Adams associate said Federal
Adams said he was weighing such
factors as "the commitment of this Aviation Administration chief
administration to mass transportation Langhorne Bond and Federal
and moving Detroit towards a fuel- Railroad Administrator John L.
efficient automobile, the direct Sullivan, a Carter campaign veteran,
accessibility of the president to the are under consideration to replace
Cabinet and ' the responsiveness of Adams.
Bell, who had long said he intended
those with enhanced authority at the
White House to the Congress and the to leave before the end of the year,
American people."
was asked if his resignation was
Asked if Adams was staying, Powell announced now to make Carter's
replied: "The president has not yet actions appear broader than they
had an opportunity to talk with might otherwise seem.
Bell replied: "Hold on two or three
Secretary Adams. He will do so in the
near future."
more days; you'll see that it's pretty

page

fBridg~:l.l
~ closing I

The nation's output, adjusted for for months denied that a recession ,•,·
.
inflation, showed a modest 0.6 percent was on the way, reversed itself last
growth in the first three months of the week and acknowledged that the
year after rising almost 7 percent in economy was in for declining output,
the vigorous, final quarter of 1978. · possibly through the end o:A the year.
The last quarterly decline was
The administration forecasts that
recorded in the January-March 1976 gro!IS national product, adjusted for
quarter with a 0.1 percent drop.
inflation, will fall 0.5percentin 1979. It
A recession traditionally is defined rose 4.4 percent last year.
as two consecutive quarters of
The deteriorating economic
~::
"negative growth." And that's just conditions, which Carter's advisers ::::
:\
~l~ ~
what economists in and out of said could cost more than 1 million ..
·.•.·,
,.,.,
govenunentsaytheUnitedStatesisin persons their job before December,
for, if not more.
was blamed 011 the impact of price
Flaws in the steel floor system of
Growth figures are important hikes enacted by the Orgapization of the Shadle Bridge have been located
because they -reflect personal and Petroleum Exporting Countries.
which may force the closing of the
industrial well-being, which in turn
OPEC has raised prises by more structure for awhile, according to
reflectstheabilityofAmericanstoget than 50 percent since last year.
head contractor, Joe Gordon of
and hold jobs and acquire income.
G. Willam Miller, chairman of the Higgins Erectors.
·
The Carter administration, which
.(Continued on page 12)
Gordon said this morning that a
decision on wheUJer to close. the
bridge or not had not yet beerunade,
but a team of Higge!lB people and
West VIrginia Dept. of Highways fificials were slated to meet with Gordon to discuss the situation today.
It was learned that the DOH commissioners, Charles Miller, was one ·
of those enroute to Point Pleasant.
Until a deciaion Is made, one-way
traffic will cohtinue to be mafn!alned
on the span.
"We are looking at some steel that
may have to 'be replaced in the floor
system," Gordon said.
He said the steel in question was not
part of the superstructure or supporting structure.
Point Pleasant Mayor John
Musgrave said this morning that he
was attempting to learn details of the
situation and had contacted lqcal
DOH supervisor Pete Scmmer, but
Sonuner had said he had very Uttle infonnatlon of what going on.

FAIR KING AND QUEEN CANDIDATES - Candidates for Meigs County Fair King and Queen are,l-r,
Perry Smith, Cindy Pitzer, Ed Holter, Tanuny Miller,
Ralph Jordan, Mary Caldwell, Blair Windon, Patty

\J

broad. They don't need one more
body. " '
A high administration source
compared Schlesinger to Blwnenthal
and Califano, who were fired. "There
are different sorts of resignations and
acceptances," this source said.
Powell declined to comment 01\
reports that Andrew Young, often
embroiled in controversy as ·u.N.
ambassador, might be asked to take
another post, possibly that of HUD
secretary.
The drumbeat of departures riveted
attention throughout the government.
Many congressmen expressed fear
that the sharp changes would undo
gains Carter made with his recent
energy proposals. ·
Asked to explain the departures,
Powell said Carter is hoping to
improve future administration
performance. But at a news
conference Califano said Carter told
him Wednesday night that a major
reason for the shakeup was to "get the
Cabinet and the administration ready
for the 1980 elections."
In .addition, Califano said ·carter
cited a problem with his perfonnanee
"related to friction with certain
(Continued on
12)- -

: dehated·,l

~

Parker and Terri Pullins. The aMouncement of the
winners will be made on Wednesday, Aug, 15, during
activities at youth night to be held at the grandstand .

SQUAD RUNS
The Pomeroy ER Squad made two
runs Thursday. At 4:53 p.m; they
transported Mary Davis to Pleasant
Valley Hospital and at 8:06 Mildred
Tubbs was taken to Veteranl
Memorial Hospital.

�3-TI)e Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pmneroy, 0 ., Friday, July 31,1979

2- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, July~. 1979

Washington
By Clarence
Report Miller

IN WASHINGTON
Marttta Angle and
Robert Walters

In this age of increasing public
awareness it is somewhat of a surprise to fmd that the government is
able to hide anything from anybody.
And today, when more and more
Americans are demanding that their
tax dollars be accounted for, it is
rather surprising to note that one of
Washington's best-kept secrets is· the
cost of administering the White
House.
In this instance it appears that the
Administration is trying to play a
numbers game with the American
people. Despite claims and promises
to the contrary, the White House
bureaucracy seems to be growing at a
fast pace.
White House Office appropriations
. in 1971 totaled $8.3 milllon. The Ad·
ministration's requested funding for
1980 amounted to $18.2 milllon. But
that's not all. Taxpayers were also
asked by the Administration to layout
another $11.9 milllon for the new Office of Administration, a creation of
the Carter Administration which is
supposedly independent of 'the white
House. Ironically enough, this Office
of Administration employs over 70
former While House aides who were
transferred there when the President
''trimmed" the Executive Office
staff.
.

Doubt reign.s on high
By Robert Walters
WASHINGTON (NEA)- Uncertainty about President Carter's chances
for r~lectlon now has reached unprecedented heights -to Vice President Waller F. Mondale, handpicked
by carter as his running mate less
than three years ago.
During recent trips back to his
home stale of Minnesota Mondale
quietly . passed the word' to fellow
Dem~ts: Kindly avoid making any
conurutments regarding the 1982 race
for the U.S. Senate seat from that
state.
Those who have had personal conversations with the vice president on
the delicate subject say Mondale
clearly is . concerned about the
possibility of being out of office if the
carter-Mondale ticket loses in 1980.
!'&gt;1~ndale, a~~rently seeking to
lil111111UZe or eliminate opposition for
the Democratic nomination in the
Senate race, has held public office
during virtually !.is entire adult life
and was a member of the Senate
before joining the Carter ticket.
If he seeks to return to the
legislature, Mondale undoubtedly
would face Republican opposition,
probably from the amen! officeholder, Sen. David Durenberger,
who was elected only last year to fill
the remaining four years of the final
lenn of the late Hubert H. Humphrey.
Dual role creates peer pressure
Sen. Howard H. Baker Jr., R-TeM.,
may encounter some difficulty in retaining his position as Senate minori~ leader while simultaneously runnmg for the Republican presidential
nomination.
Baker acknowledges that "at some
point" late this year or early in 1980
"I'm going to have to focus all my, at:
tention on the presidential campaign."
At that time, he plans to delegate
the day-to-day responsibility for
leading the Senate's Republicans to
Sen. Ted Stevens, R-Alaska, whose title of minority whip makes him the
second-ranking GOP leader in the
chamber.
But Baker already has been placed
in a difficult position by Rep. John B.

Anderson, R-Ill., who· res1gned his
position as chairman of the House
Republican Conference - the ·thirdranking GOP leadership post in that
chamber -when he recently entered
the presidential contest.
Baker says ''the precedent of the
Senate is to the contrary," Citing the
cases ofthen&amp;ns. Al~n W. Barkley,
D-Ky., and Lyndon B. Jbhnson, DTexas, who ran for vice president
while retaining their leadership poslllons.
But that explanation doesn't fully
satisfy Sen. Robert J. Dole, R-Kan.,
who also is a contender for the GOP
presidential nomination.
''I like Ted Stevens, but I didn't vote
for him as minority leader," says
Dole, suggesting that he might try to
press Baker to abandon one of his
roles.
·
Surprise: You don't need us
Some good news from Capitol Hill:
~e chairman of an obscure congressiOnal panel, the Joint Conunittee on
Printing, wants to abolish not only his
job but al:;o the entire conunittee.
The committee's principal job has
been to oversee the work of the
Government Printing Office which
prints the Congressional Record
Federal Register, agency and depart:
mental reports, bills, hearing records
and thousands ofotherdocuments.
Rep. Frank Thompson Jr., D-N.J.,
has .proposed legislation replacing his
House-Senate conunittee with a
seven-member board of directors to
supervise the work of the printing office. The bill is c~ponsored by the
co~ttee's vice chairman, Sen.
Claiborne Pell, D-R. I.
The board would be composed of
three public members and one ·
representative apiece from teh prin·
t~g mdustry, Information industry,
library community and labor unions.
All members would be appointed by
the president and paid only for work
done on meeting days.
The board,. in turn, would appoint
the public prmter and hte superintendent of documents, who are respo'nsible for production and distribution of
government documents. ·

Editorial opinions,
comments
•

Publishers seek
federal subsidies

WASHINGTON ( AP) - Magazine
and newspaper publishers asked
Congress Thursday for new federal
subsidies of their mail charges, but
the Ppstal Service said the cost tn
taxpayers would be $182 million.
"Some way should be found tn
increase the diversity of information
in America and there should be a
lower (postal) rate for a certain
nu.mber of copies to encourage this,"
S8ld Robert Myers, publisher of New
Republic magazine.
Myers, who testified tn a Senate
subcommittee for the Magazine
Publishers of America, endorsed a bill
In grant new taxpayer funds to pay
some of the mailing costs of,
publications. Also supporting the bill
were representatives of the
Association of American Publishers,
the American Newspaper Publishers
Association, the National Newspaper
Association, the American Business
Press and the Associated Church
Press.
Subsidies for the type of mail used
by profit-making publications ended
July 6 after decades of congressional
appropriations. The funding for nonprofit publications is scheduled to be
gaUJered dust in Ule Legislature. "We phased out over the next eight years.
The pending bill would authorize
didn't have any power," Collier
new
funding for two more years for
explained.
the
profit-making
publications and
The Toledoan formerly served as
extend
the
phase-out
for non-profit
director of the Office of Budget and
publications
by
two
years.
management for Gov. James A.
Edward McCaffrey, assistant
Rhodes.
postmaster general, .estimated that
Gov. James A. Rhodes, an avid
golfer, may have go~ten a little rusty ·
during his 17-&lt;lay trade mission to
China, which returned to Ohio on
Tuesday.
Golf isn't exactly a Chinese national
pasttirne, and the governor had no
WASHINGTON (AP)- According
opportunity to chase the little white to President Carter, the new energy
ball until his party arrived in Honolulu proposals he is presenting to Congress
enroute home.
will complete the agenda of campaign
, Helen Rhodes, who was waiting for&gt; prorrnses he made "for legislation tn
the delegation 's return with other be passed."
relatives at a Columbus airport, said
Maybe so. But there's a big
she knew her hlL•band had missed his difference between proposing
favorite recreation.
legislation and getting it passed.
"A whole 17 days without golf There's a lot of unfinished business
that's a record," she said.
in the catalogue of campaign
promises prepared by the White
When Senate Republicans asked Sen. House early in the administration.
Ferald L. Ritchie, R-Wapakoneta, if
And that could be o.ne of the
he was willing to step down as interim problems behind the confidence gap
senator from the 12th District, the 72- Carter is trying to bridge. He gave the
year-old, white-haired man quickly unpress10n that he was going to
said he was.
change.a lot more than was changed.
"It's been remarkable," said
In falr!less, he has tried to deliver
Ritchie, who was tapped'last month tn on virtually every major point.
fill a vacant seat so Republicans Congress frequently has blocked his
would be at full strength during votes way .
on the state budget.
Furthermore, it is likely that some'
"I've really enjoyed it, but I've had of the intractable problems facing the
about enough," he said.
.nation now, particularly in energy and
the economy, would be at least as
severe no matter who was in the White
House.
As Carter has said, there is no quick
fix . .
But as a campaigner, Carter
sugg~ted that he could do some rapid
reparr work. For example, he said he
would strive to hold both the
unemployment and inllation rates to
no more than 4 percent by the end of
his term. He didn't guarantee it but
he did set those targets.
'
He has 18 months to go, but he's not
going In make it. No president could,

Capitol notes •••
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Former
State Budget Director Howard Collier
was back in the capital this week,
saying things some lawmakers
apparently enjoyed hearing.
Members of the General Assembly,
he said, in effect, sometimes take a
bum rap when voting on their own pay
hikes.
Collier appeared before the Senate
Ways and Means Committee in
support of a proposed constitutional
amendment affecting legislative
salaries, along with those of elected
state official:;.
Und#r the proposal, a bipartisan
commission would be created to set
salary levels for the legislators and
official:;. The salaries then would go
mto effect automatically unless
refused by the General Assembly.
Collier, obviously referring to the
bad publicity state lawmakers
received when they raised their
salaries late last year, said it is wrong
for members of the legislature to be
placed in such a delicate situation.
The proposed commission, said
Collier, a vice president of the
Medical College of Ohio at Toledo,
should "help do away with some of the
rancor.''
Collier had license 'to speak on the
subject as ooe-time head of the Ohio
Elected and Judicial Officials'
Compensation Conunission.
That agency was established in the
late 1960s to recommend salaries for
legislators and elected officials but
it~ recommendations us~ally
!'

DEVOTED TO 111E '
INTEREl!TOF
MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT HOEFLICH
Clly Editor

Publlsbe.l daUy uceptSaturday by The Obiu
Valley Publbhllli Company . MulUmed.la IDe

·111 Cour1 SL, Pomeroy, ObJo 45769. oullnea;
Office Pbone 99%- 2UC. Editorial Ph
tt2.Zl57.
. one

.t

9791l ) ' IE ·'

t.r ~~A-

·--.::-~--,

" THANK YOU' You're looj{ing very '1940s',
too! "

Second claaa post.age paid at Pumeroy. Ohio
NaUonal ad Jertlslq repreaentative Laooo.:a
A11odale1, 3111 Euclid Ave. CJevela~d Ohl

ftllS

'

br

•

o

sub.crtpUon nfes: Delivered
carrier.
where avaUablt to cents per week. By Moto~
Route wbrre carrier service not available O!le
mmltb, S.'I .!JJ. R)' nwll in Ohlo and W Va ' Or f'
Yt!ar, .$27.50 ; '\iK months, 114.50: Tl~ree· ~ 0 ;1 J
llul, SU&amp;: E1s•·whcre !:32.10 year; Six months
~! 1.00d; !~r . &lt;e
. m~tnl.h ~ . $9.00. SubJ~crlptl•• rl price
~~.~r1l1 etSundayTimei·Se~tinei .

Such reorganization, In my
judgement, was nothing more than a
ruse; an effort on the part ol the Administration to mislead the American
public. I pursued this point at
hearings held. by the House Appropraitions Subcommittee on
Treasury, Postal Service and General
Government of which I am a member. Richard M. Harden, Director ol
the Office of Administration, testified ·
at the hearings that the actual
operational staff of the White ·HOWle
was composed of 4811 employ~. at a
coot of $22,274,000. Both of these
figures were in conflict with, and considerably higher than th08e supplied
by Hugh A. Carter, Jr., Special
Assilltant to President Carter for Administration, who also testified. A
quick check of figures sh~ that this
"trirruned" White House budget Is
nearly twice the size that President
Ford's was. And what benefits have
been derived fnm this s!M:Idli!d
budget saving reorganization undertaken by the White House? Hugh
Carter cited the pooling of
messengers from among the various
units of the Executive Office as an
example of •the efficiency we have
gained." Somehow, the pooling ol
messenger.! seem hardly an impressive achievement.
Now I realize that it is going to take
a lot of dollar.! to support the
President and the White House. It
always has; it always will; But that
does not mean that the American
public should not be told just how
many dollars it does cost.
What we need is more candor and
opeMess on the part of the Administration.
The White House office is not a
:'gift" to the American people; there
18 no rt;ason In hide its price tag .
Rather ,lt 18 a part of this government
"of, by, and for the people. " And the
people deserve to know how their
money is being spent.

taxpayers would pay an additional
On the surface the White House
$118 million this fiscal year and $64 staff was cut when the President
million next year under the bilL He eliminated slx units of the Executive
would not take a stand on the bill office, reducing the stafffrom 485 emsaying it represents "a policy issue 0 ~ ployees to the present 351 employees.
which the Postal Service defers to the However, most of these "cuts" were
Congress and the president."
simply mad~ ~n paper by IranThe only testimony against the bill sferrmg the individuals in question
came from Nor man Halliday of the from one payroU to another, without
National Association of Greeting Card actually changing their work
Publishers. He termed the bill a locations or responsibilities. The
measure to subsidize a special resul! is that you have fewer people
interest and said any federal funds showmg up _on the White House
should go to all mail users, including · J!IIYrOlls. But. m truth, moot are simthose who use first-class mail.
ply bemg pald from another source
The magazine and newspaper for ~oing the same work they always
.
publishers stressed that the federal did·
funding holds down costs to
If we combme the projected 1980
subscribers who receive issues persoMel and budget figures for the
through the maiL
While HollSI! Office and the Office of
Edwin Heminger, publisher of the
Findlay, Ohio, Courier; said his
newspaper has subscription rates of
up In $52 per year.
"With the increase (in mail rates)
of two weeks ago, we may have to
increase all subscription prices again
... ," Heminger said.
"The Courier is not unlike many
other newspapers around the country
for whom the Postal Service plays a
Donald Graff
vital role in the dissemination of local
.I
news and information to our citizens."
Myers said mailing costs for
sending 75,000 copies of the New ·
Republic went up from $3,353 IAl fl ,:165
per week between May 1979 and now.
"A breathing space is needed for
subscribers and publishers alike " he
have to be thoroughly restructured
It's abnost like the old.days.
~~'
Passenger terminals are crowded and millions of miles of track renew.
. trains are jammed and a reservatio~ ed.
Even with such a multibillion-dollar
for a peak Ira vel period can be the
investment, trains would not be prohottest ticket in town.
viding the most passenger value for
But it's not the good old days.
our
money. The private auto, at least
With the exception of a few refitted
for a variety of reasons, Ule soaring blue-ribbon runs, equipment is dingy the fuel-hungry powerhouse we have
prices and shortages of energy among to decrepit. Schedules are erratic been accustomed to, may weU be on
them .
service is so spotty that it may n~ Its last wheels. But for moving large
The administration now expects an longer be possible to get there from numbers of people long distanCes in a
inllation rate of 9.8 percent this year here and the condition of most fuel-tight economy, buse&amp; and the
and 8.1 percent in 1980. It roadbeds gives new meaning to the superjets have the advantage. Trains
acknowledges that unemployment expression "roughing it".
could not pay their way. To be farecould reach 6.9 percent next year. The
competitive,
they would continue to
But travel we will, and a conFederal Reserve Board anticipates siderable chunk of the gasoline--short require subsidies.
,
more severe problems on both fronts. public is rediscovering the railroads
That may well be worth it to relieve
Carter said Sunday night he has as a means of doing so. There is even traffic conges ion in the heavily
worked hard "to put my campaign some talk that the energy shortage populated urban corridors. But
promises intn law - with mixed may bring about what eight year.! of elsewhere the passenger train has
success."
Amtrak reorganizing and federal sub- become an expensive anachronism.
On Monday , in Detroit, he added : sidizing have failed to achieve - The curre.nt energy shortage has only
"In a time of shadowy dread and rehabilitation of nationwide temporarily slowed its final journey
fear, of growing anger and passenger service.
into history.
frustration, the only fl1111 ground on
If it's good old days we hanker for
That might abnoot qualify as a hapwhich we can regroup and rebuild our PY ending to the energy crisis, but we might more realistically hope that
own confidence is to be honest about don~ expect it to be written. If recent the oil producers will open the taps
ourselves. The energy proposals history- the aftermath of the 1973-74 again and lower the prie&gt;'! as look for a
which I presented last night and this oil embargo -is any guide, the rush of railroad renaissance.
morning .... will complete the list of new customers will as rapidly rush
campaign promises that I made in away (rom the trains and back to
Full speed ahead
1976 for legislation to be passed."
And Am~ricans think we have it
autos as soon as the fuel supply im·
But there is a lot on the list that proves.
tough in the energy crisis. Consider
,
has~ 't passed, and may not before the
And if it does not, if the shortage what may be asked of West Germans
end of Carter's current term.
proves to be for the very long haul as - the first ever speed limit on the
Take taxes, for example. ·
we are warned, it is unlikely that autobahns.
While Congress has passed two
That superhighway network is not
trains could be the most effective
major tax cuts during the carter means of meeting the nation's chang- only a source of national pride but a
administration, and has included
11_1eans of letting out national aggre&amp;some features the preside~! proposed ed mass transportation needs.
slons now that Germans no longer
Thanks
in
large
part
to
decades
of
m the name of reform, it hasn't come
neglect
of
what
once~was.a prime na- malle war. The equivalent of 100
close to the total tax rewrite he
tional asset, rehabilitation is now miles an hour is abnost crawling
promised.
when ~ car can do I~ and hundreds of
White House aides said the last much more !him a matter of extenthousands
of drivers want to do 11.
ding
routes
and
providing
new
rolling
Congress approved 32 major
For
the
foreign
driver adventurous
stock.
Before
passenger
service
could
administration proposals, and many
eno~h to jol~ the traffic flow, the exbe
restored
to
anything
resembling
of them grew out of the campaign. The
ctirrent Congress hasn't added much. operating efficiency, the existing penence can provide an inkling of
And the original promises list was a freight-oriented rail system would what it must have been like with the
Panzer divisions rolling through the • .
good deal longer than that, although
~
Ukraine.
not every pledge involved legislation.
Nevertheless,
the
Bonn
government
;
When White House aides assembled
is
cautiously
suggesting
that
Ger'
every promise of the 1976 campaign, Hoffman, Cert. of trans., Orange.
mans
accept
a
limit
as
their
contribu,
they produced a 111-page book.
Gerald C. Eblin·to Melva T. Ebl
lion to the ·west's energy-saving ef- ,,
Divorce Decree, Rutland.
fort. Gennans - drivers, .auto clubs, •
Keith M. Woods, Gertrude Woods to manufacturers, politicians well ,.:
Robert L. Stewart, Dorothy J. aware that drivers vote - have ·
Stewari, 1.114 acres, Salisbury.
reacted With rage and the govern- · ·
Keith M. Woods, Gertrude Woods to ~ent has retreated, for the tbne be- • '
Roger K. Stewart, Unda L. Stewart, mg.
5.630 acres, Salisbusy.
The proposed maximiun speed is
Keith M. Woods, Gertrude Woods to 130 kilometers an hour, a bit more
Richard A. Kerns, Sandra K. Kerns Ross Stewart, Jr., Wanda Stewart, than 80 mph. Imagine the reaction u ~
to Kenneth C. Riggs, Judith A. Riggs, 100 acres 306, 2.545,100 acre 307 0.150 German drivers were being asked to •
Salillbury.
•
' accept the 55 mph their American ~
1.1183 acres, Orange.
Rodney Howery, Marilyn Howery
Albert Weisenfeld, Sally Ruth counterparts are supposed 'to ••
·
'J
to Jerry Arthur Draper, Lots 17 18 Weidenfeld to Undsey E. Lyons observe.
Columbia-Carpe~ter.
' ' Elizabeth G. Lyons; Lot 4, Arbaugh'~
The Panzers would probably be
Edith Ora Betzing, dec. to Bernice 4th, Olive.
brought out of storage.
·

COMMENTARY
F.

Destination history

I

Wash·ington today

Berry's World

Administration, It totals 500 people it
a cost of $30.1 milllon.

Property
Transfers

Phil Niekro catches brother's record.

Today's

Sports World

By HERSCHEL NISSENSON
. Phil did it over nine innings in hurling Philadelphia Phillies 1.0 and the San the ninth, when he needed help from
the Braves tn an 8-2 victory over the Diego Padres defeated the New York Grant Jackson after retiring 17
AP Sports Writer
consecutive batters.
Atlanta's Phll Niekro has caught his l'hicago Cubs . Joe lasted only 42-3 Mets 3-1.
Two-run
homers
by
Willie
Stargell
In the opener, the score was tied
brother, Houston's Joe, . as the innings. in the nightcap as the Astros
and
Phil
Garner
in
the
opener
and
twice
before Gamer's homer in the
By Will Grimsley AP Correspondent
N~tlonal League 's only 13-game dropped a 9-5, 4-2 double-header to the
John
Mtiner
in
the
nightcap
helped
the
sixth
gave
the Ptrates a 7-S lead.
wmners and it looks like someone else Pittsburgh Pirates.
Pirates
to
their
sweep
of
the
Astros.
Braves8,
Cubd
Elsewhere,
CinciMati
routed
exposure
St.
potential
riches
and
national
may catch the rest of the Astros
. A sparkling diamond earring
Milner slammed a first-inning homer
Two-run singles by Rowland Office"
Louis
16-4,
the
Los
Angeles
Dodgers
of
the
NI'L?
before
too
long.
glistellll from his left ear. Even in the
"We weighed the offers and the
The Brothers Niekro each whipped the Montreal Expos 7-3, the in the second game and Bruce Kison · and Jeff Burroughs highlighted
sweltering humidity of midblt~ked the Astros oo ·four hits ·until Atlanta's slx-run fifth iMing that
Manhattan he is the picture of alternatives," he said. "Montreal surrendered six hits Thursday, but San Franci.'lCo Giants nipped the'
erased a 2.Q Chicago lead. Office
sartorial elegance with his pointed- offered us the better deal."
to tie the score and BurroughB'
singled
The ''We" was not editorial. Sitting
toed shoes, tapered pants, suede
bases-loaded
hit put the Braves on top
at Tom's elbow was Jimmy Walsh, the
JBCket and leather vest.
4-2.
Burroughs
hit a solo homer in the
. Tall, dark and macho handsome, he Alabama dynamo who handles Joe
ninth
.
could stop pedestrian traffic at Narnath's business affairs.
Dodgers 7, ElqlOII 3
Walsh denied the suggestion that
:Hollywood and Vine, New York's 42nd
Steve
Yeager,
Joe Ferguson 'and
and Broadway or the corner of the Bills had offered Coulsneau a
Davey
Lopes
slugl!lld
home runs and
Bourbon and Canal in New Orleans. contract in the 11,2 million to $1.3
Burt
Hooton
scattered
slx hits as the
But be careful you aren't tempted to million range - "in excess of any
Dodgers
·
broke
a
five-game
losing
pull any of that "TU!tti-frultti lt's ever sought by a No. I draft choice ...
streak.
·
including Earl Campbell, Tony
spring again" stuff.
'
The offensive outburst followed a
• Tom Cousineau is one of the Dorsett and Ricky Bell."
. ST . LOUIS (AP) -If the Cincinnati in part In the frequent absences manage~ ~id of the Astros. "The closed-door pregame meeting
"We went back to the Bills, as late
roughest, toughest hombres to be
Reds
ever get healthy, there still may ~~ntly of George Foster with a groin thmg we d JUSt like to do is be able to following charges during the AU-Star
·coughed up ' from college football as last Tuesday," he said, "and we be time for them to reassemble what IDJury.
put the same eight players on the field break by several players that Reggie
ranks last season - rated by the pros were told, in effect, 'This is the was knOwn as the Big Red Machine.
"I feel that we 're going tn catch mght after night. Then, we'd take our Smith had "quit on us." Smith,
on the basis of tlie National Football market - take it or leave lt."'
angered by the remarks, said
In the meantime, third baseman them anyway ," the Cincinnati chances."
League draft as the most desirable
following the meeting that "I gave my
Ray Knight appears to have
'hunk of beef on the market.
side of it and everything is now geared
blossomed as a replacement for Pete
But the NFL, with all of its millions
toward a more positive attitude."
Rose_and ~ds ready and able to
of dollars, doesn't get him. The
Giants 1, PhiWes 8
contribute hiS part.
-Montreal Alouettes do -in one of the
John Curtis hurled a seven-hitter for
"Ray Knight has emerged as a
strangest twists in years.
his second consecutive 1.0 shutout and
team leader," Reds Manager John
Picked by the Buffalo Bills, the SDarrell Evans drove in the only run
McNamara declared after Knight
foot-3, 227-pound All-America
with a fourth-Inning double. Curtis
slugged a grand slam homer and
linebacker out of Ohio State chose tq
struck out five and dldn 'I issue a walk
drove home two additional runs at the
cast his lot with the neighbors across
expense of the St. Louis Cardinals
and was in deep trouble only twice but
the northern border.
was helped by some fine defensive
·
Thursday night.
BY
GREG
BAILEY
win
.
The
Tigers
got
only
three hits a plays.
"I saw a game in Torontn between
"I've. always tried to be
Jay Carpenter and Vic Gillilan double and single by Long and' a
the Argos and Alouettes," the
Padres 3, Mets I
aggressive," observed Knight. "It's
allowed
the Athens Medics just one single by Shank.
imposing athlete said at a hurriedly
Pitcher Randy Jones doubled and
just that I'm finally getting a chance
Brian Wedge was charged with the scored what proved to be the winning
hit, and carpenter socked two home
called news conference in New York
In play. It's been worth the wait."
WILMINGTON,Ohio (AP) - In two
runs
to
lead
Tuppers
Plaisn
to
a
1~
loss.
Wedge also led the Medics hit- run and Dave Winlield cracked his
Thursday to discl08e his decision.
Knight, who is batting .312, put two
"It's a' different game than ours. The years, »-year-old quarterback Ken of his 94 hits for the year to good use romp over the Medics in the Syracuse ting with a double and single. KeUy 23rd homer. Mets starter Kevin Kobel
field is longer and wider. It is a more Anderson might be a practicing . and sccred four times in helping Uttle League Tournament last night. Riffle had a double in a losing cause retired the first 12 Padres before
open game. !like a lot of movement. I attorney. Right now, he's the only Cincinnati overwhelm St. Louis 16-4 .In a closer contest, the Pomeroy and Alex Austin and Paul Donohe~ Winlield homered, giving him a
experienced signal caller in the oo an attack totaling 19 base blows. Tigers held on for a 7-4 win over had a single each.
·
consider it a great Opportunity."
league-leading 73 RBis. Winfield haS
Four
teams
of
an
original34
remain
Fruth's
Pharmacy.
He is the first NFL No. I draft pick Cincinnati Bengals' summer training
hit eight home runs and driven in 18
He singled home a run in the middle
In the Tuppers Plains win. Royce in the tournament that concludes runs in the last 18 games.
camp.
to prefer the Canadian League.
of .a five-run uprising against Cards
"I took classes in both the spring starter Pete Vuckovich, 8-7, in the Bissell contributed two singles in the Saturday. Tonight at 7 Green I takes
Cousineau had tn ·suppress a smile
when someone asked him if he chose and summer sessions (at Northern first. He next walked before crossing win, and Gillilan added a triple. Paul on the Gallipolis Red Sox, and at 8:15
the Canadian Football League over Kentucky University-Chase College of the plate a secOnd lime, grounded out Collins, Steve White, Mark Shrivers, Tuppers Plains meets the Pomeroy
Tigers. The wiMers will play
the NFL because it would enable him Law), so two more off...,asons should and sccred a third time after reaching and Eddie Collins each had a single.
TIDSTLEDOWNS
about do It," Anderson said. "I'd like on a fielder's choice.
Rankin Wall charged with the loss, tomorrow at 8: IS while the con-·
tn be "a big fish in a small p&lt;lid."
NORTH RANDAlL, Ohio (AP) "I've played against the best and to go into private practice, someday."
A sacrifice fly by Knight in the and he also had the only Athens hit a solation game begins at 7 p.m. Green Heriberto Rivera Jr. rode Hoaxler to
The eight-year veteran spent almost eighth preceded the frrst bases-loaded single.
'
has a 10.1 record while the Gallipolis an easy victory Thursday in the
held my own, " he replied evenly. "I
The Tigers plated four runs in the Red Sox own an outstanding 14-0.
can play in the NFL. Personal as much time throwing during the off- homer of his career, a wallop to leftfeatured eighth race at Thistledown
security had nothing to do with my season as he spent with the law books, center oft st . LDuis reliever Will top of the first, then held on for the
Racetrack.
and he says he's throwing as weU as McEnaney in the ninth.
win as Chris Shank turned in a fine
The winner, who ran the slx
decision."
Annual event Saturday furlongs
Cousineau has been holding hls own he ever has. •
in 1:13, paid $10.4o, $4.40 and
"He threw me the slider away, and I job of relief as Parker Long got the
"We had the receivel'll in the last fouled it off," recalled Knight after
ever since he first picked up a football
The Meigs County Fish and Game $3 .60, while second-place Marlin
as a kid back in Bloomington, Ind. He week of March, so I started throwing blasting a 1-2 Mct;:naney delivery .
Associatipn is sponsoring its annual Drive returned $5.80 and $4.40 and
survived the notorious football earlier than I USIIIIllY do," Anderson "Then he came back and hung one
fishing derby on Saturday, July 21'at thrrd-place Doctor Kurt paid $5.
regimen at Ohio State under Woody said. "The more you throw, the better over the plate. When I get two strikes
The trifecta of Hasta Larista (II),
its Shade River Club House. Children
Hayes . He was All-Big Ten as a you throw ."
Stop
Talkmg (5) and Lightning
on me, I gei a little protective."
15 and under are welcome. Prizes will
Mostly, he's been working out with
freshman, Moot Valuable Player in
Missile
(10) returned $357.90 on 140
Knight's slam was only his fifth
be awarded and refreshments will be
the Orange Bowl as a sophomore, AU- wide receivers l.saac Curtis. Doll Bass major league homer, leaving him
wiMing
tickets.
served. The derby will be held from 8
American and the Cleveland and Billy Brooks.
The crowd of 4,~ wagered a tot&amp;!
uncertain for a time whether the blow
a.m.
till2
p.m.
Anderson broke a bone in his hanQ would clear the wall in Busch
Touchdown Club's Collegiate Player
A membership diMer will be later of $493,443.
COLUMBUS - "Welcome Aboard·
In the final pr.....ason game last Stadium.
of the Year as a senior.
at 6 p.m. The club house is on West
"I knew I'd hit the ball good, but Ohio's Boating Program" is the tit!~ Shade River Road near Chester. WatWhy would a man with such season and missed .the first four
impressive credentials scorn the regular-eeason games. The Bengals that's ooly my third home run of the of a new film produced by the Ohio ch for signs.
got off to a 0-S start, Coach Bill year,'' he elljllained. "I don't know Department of Natural Resources
ut JJebtarLI
Johnson quit, and ihe team finished 4- how they feel. It'll take a few more to (ODNR). ·
·
know for sure."
The 18-minute, 16mm film will be of
12 under Homer Rice.
PONY LEAGUE TOURNEY
The Bengals ooly opened camp
The Reds, via their second straight special interest to boating clubs, outThere
will be a Pony League TourR!VEROOWNS
Friday, but Andersoo alre.ady was victory, closed to four games behind door groups and othel'!l interested in
Pomfnly
nament
at
Middleport Park beginning
CINCINNATI (AP) - Spaghetti anxious for the sea9011 to begin .
the Houston AstriiS, the frrst.place watercraft operation and safety.
July 26. The entry fee is $20 plus two
Tree, Jim Bo's Pal and Sankaty Ught
Fklw•Shop
The film, produced for Division of
club they trailed by 10 games on July 4
all were to carry top weight of 113
in the National League West.
Watercraft, discusses the role of the new balls. For more inlonnatioo, call
. MUiud VanMeter
powtds in the Queen City Oaks Prep,
"Houstnn's got a good ballclub. Division in providing information to 992-5064 alter 9 p.m.
the feature race over a mile and 70
They play hard. I just don't think boaters, licensing watercraft and enyards today at River Downs.
they're the No. I team,'' said Knight . ·forcing Ohio's boating laws. It also
In Thursday 's featured six-furlong
COMPUTER TAUt
"If we play like we're capable of shows how the Division uses licensing
sprint, Cato Grande circled the field
In'! ANGELES (AP) - 'nle market playing, I thlnk we can overtake fees and other revenues to build and
and woo going away in a time of I: 12 for automated olflce product.t will ex- them."
maintain boating fa·cllities
1-S seconds and paid $24 .~. 17.20 and ceed $15 billion by 19112 reports AM
McNamara, after
watching throughout the state. Besides
®
$5.40. Decide On returned $5 and 13.40 International.
'
Cincinnati's irregulars put tngether outlining the responsibilities of the
tn place, and Seminole Princess pald
Included in the category are· such the Reds' heaviest hit bombardment Division of Watercraft, the film also
fi .BO to show.
conunon items as duplicalonJ and of the Y.ear, was thinking much the ~usses the responsibility of inU'H'unkin and Prince Playboy, the such exotic Items as luer optical same thing.
diVlduals to properly equip, maintain
4-8 daily double combination, recognition systems that turn typed
"We want tn try to get our people and safely operate their craft.
returned S29 .20.
copy into computer language.
healthy, " said McNamara, referring
"Welcome Aboard: Ohio's Boating
A crowd of 4,666 wagered $486,456.
Program" is available for viewing
without charge from the FUm
Ubrary, Ohio Department of Natural
Resources, Fountain Square, Columbus, .:1224 phone (614) 466-3138. The
film ~hould be reserved at least 30
days lll advance. The film can also be
25 Year Warranty
"I thlnk our pitching is very sowtd," and predict they'U win a certain purchased for $150 a copy.
CINCINNATI ( AP ) The
4 ColoiS to chose from.
Cincinnati Reds' pitching has been a Bench said. "Mike (LaCoss, 9-3) is an number of games," Bench said. "That
pleasant .surprise IAl catcher JohMy All-Star pitcher in every respect, and would get everybody aU excited and
UNLEADED FUEL
CALL TODAY
Bench. In fact, he says it's not the Tom (Seaver, 9-S) is throwing weU make lt rough to live up to."
But he Wall emphatic about the
again.
The
whole
staff
has
been
ANDREWS,
Tex. (AP) - By 1985,
fault of the pitching staff that the Reds
club's pitching being good enough to more than three-quarters of all rriotor
FOR A QUOTE
aren't in first place in the National exceptionally good.
"Our problem has been our carry the Reds to a division fuel will be unleaded, predicts
League West.
"Our pitching is better than I incoosistencies. There have been championship, if the team is back on Phillips Petroleum President William
C.Douce.
·
thought it was ," Bench said as the games when we just didn't play good, track offensively.
"That
remains
tn
he
seen,
but
and
there
have
been
ones
you
feel
like
Reds prepared to launch the second
NEW lLAMA
half of the baseball season Sl'z games you should have won but you let sUp hopefully it is," Bench said .
Chester, 0.
985-3301
is
good
"Certainly
our
pitching
away
.
KNIVETON,
England (AP) - A
behind the Houstnn Astros. "It's tbe
"Those could be the difference enough. Any team is lucky tn have female llama born on election day at
rest of us now who have to do our job."
three or four good starters, and we
between
us and first place."
Bench, batting .252 at the .All-Star
Bench
said
one
loss
that
was
hard
to
have them."
the zoo
in this"Maggie." village has 1
been
named
break, included himself among tbe
stomach
was
a
10-3
decision
to
the
Reds who didn't produce up tn
NOW THRU NOV. 15, 1979
expectations during the first half of Chicago Cubs last week after the Reds
had led 7.0.
the seasoo .
"Games like that you shouldn't let
Others who will have tn pick up
happen,"
he said. "You shouldn't give
during the stretch drive include Dan
up
10
runs
to anybody in the seventh,
Driessen , hitting .242, and Joe Morgan
eight
and
ninth
innings."
at .273.
Your love ·
Bench
purposefully
underestimated
The AU-Star layoff he'lped calm his
the
Red's
pitching
during
spring
back spasms, - Bench said, ana be
deserves
planned to return to the lineup ln St. training to take the heat off the .
the finest
Louis as the Reds began a four-dty relatively young staff, he said.
"I
don't
like
to
stick
·
my
neck
out
road trip.
rings ...

Knight's aggressive play
leads Reds to 16-4 victory

An d erson
·
S'
Bengal
g eneral

Green, Red Sox
tangle tonight

Boating film
now aval"la ble

cwLQualiiM

ROOFING/SIDING

CORRUGATED
ASPHALT
SHEEIS

Bench likes Reds' pitching

·BAUM TRUE VALUE

Der~yshire

..

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• Sco"'d·Down Frame
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748 E. Moln
Pomeroy, o.
992·2114

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1st-Bantam Reel &amp; Boron Rod plus entry fee 2ndGraphite Gold Rod, 3ni-Normarc Filet Knife. ' Weigh Your Bass Here

THE TACKLE BOX
Phone992-6193
OPEN MON.-THURS. 9to 6
FRI.&amp;SAT.9to8
OPENSUNDAY10TIL4
4 mlles east of Pomeroy on SR 124, Syracuse, o.

..

.

f.

�4-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Fr)day, July21J, 1979

5-Tbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, July 20, 1979

.

-

Women wondering .why

Wolfe misses sign,· hits winning ·home run • Discrimination causing worry among women

APSports
Larry Wolfe was supposed to be
sacrificing Rick Burleson to second.
Instead, he got Burleson aild himself
all the way home - and the Boston
Red Sox closer to the top of the
American League East.
"I thought the hit-and-run was on,"
Wolfe said after misreading a bunt
sign from third base coach Eddie
Yost, swinging away and hitting his
third home ruri of the season to break
a fifth-inning tie antl help the Red Sox
beat Seattle 7-1 Thursday night.
In the rest of the AL, Baltomore
split with California, taking the
nightcap~ and losing the opener 4-3;
New York mauled Oakland 1(}.2;
Milwaukee beat Toronto 3-2 in 11
innings ; Detroit defeated Minnesota
6-3 ; Cleveland nipped Kansas City 2-1,
and, In twin bill, Chicgo swept Texas 96 and :i-4.
"IfoWld out I was wrong (on Yost's
sign) when I got back to the dugout,"
I Wolfe said. "They told me it will cost a
~
fine from the Kangaroo Court." To
; which Manager Don Zimmer sa id,
: "It's going to cost him $1. I'm glad he
' hit the homer ."

n

. COLO\' · ,

.

.

.

,.~.,.,,, , ~

Dennis Eckersley scattered six
Seattle hits and was nicked for the
Mariners' only rur in the fourth inning
when Dan Meyer singled and Leon
Roberts tripl"d.
Angels 441, Orioles .
Gary Roenicke drove in two runs
and Mike Flanagan pitched a six-

entertainment
at golf event
Some outstanding musical groups
will perform at the diMer following
the Dave Diles GoU Tournament.
The tournament is to be held July 30
at Riverside Golf Club in Mason, W.
Va. A diMer and an evening of entertainment will take place immediately following the tournament,
at Royal Oak Park.·
The Vinton CoWlty Frogwhompers,
· now called A Touch of Grass, along
with the popular George Hall are
among the groups lined up to entertain.
Tournament chairman Dave Diles
also has promised that Michigan
Baskctbail Coach Johnny Orr, a
mucb,lought-after speaker, is certain
to get u;&gt; am! entertain the audience.

GROWING OW

Friday &amp; Saturday

CARAVANS
PLUS
COUNT DRACUlA .
AND
HIS VAMPIRE BRIDE
Sunday thru Satur9a y
July 22-July 28

Clint Eastwood

-EVERY WHICH WAY
BUT LOOSE

WASHINGTON (AP) - In the
United States, the number of people
100 years or older jumped 43 percent
between 1974 and 1978, according to
the American Council of Life Insurance.
The COWlCil says this makes centenarians one of the fastest-growing
segments of the population.
There were 8,317 centenarians in
1974, according to Social Security Ad·
ministration statistics, but this group
increased to 11,922 by 1978.
The council says 54 persons in every
10,000 will live to 100 while 278 in
10,000 will survive to age 95. Women,
'it adds, seem to have a better chance
of living to 100, as 7 out of 10 centenarians today are women.
FIRST RAIL PENSION
WASI-DNGTON (AP) -The first
jointly-sponsored pension plan In the
United States was established in 1880
by the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad
and its employees' union, according
to the American Council of Life Insurance.

The New International
Version

children's Bible.

Your child 's life 1s a speci al gi ft So give a special gift in return o ne that will help kee p him growing for a lifetim e. Give your
child the New lnlerna lional Version Child ren's Bible .
T~ e NiVs accuracy and read ability make it the perfect mo dern
English translation for memo rizalion; '
its dignity and cadence make the
l011rn ing process easier th an ever
before . Incl uded are 36 full -colo r
illu strations. 8 pages of co lor maps.
plu s presen tat ion . fam ily and
church record pages.
Cha llenge you r ch1ld lo grow
mentally and spiritually. G ive him i
the New lnlernalion al Ve rsion
!
C hildren's Bible. Now in ful l-color '
·
clolh cover, ju sI $7.95.

Give your child
the gift to grCMI by.

hit a pair of solo homers - while
Reggie Jackson hit a two-run homer
and Brian Doyle .drove ln three runs
with a double and a bases-loaded walk
In the Yankees' victory .
Brewers 3, Blue Jays 2
Ben Ogilvie's one-&lt;&gt;ut homer In the

Outstanding'

Tonight thru Thursday.
July 25

ROCKY II

hitter to give Baltimore its split in the
second game. California won the first
game when Dan Ford's single broke
an 11th-inning tie.
Yankees 10, A's 2
Luis Tlant checked virtually
everyone on Oakland -- Jeff Newman

\

"--··

MIDDLEPORT
BOOK STORE
99 Mill St.

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD
Baseball AI A Glance
By The Associated Press
East
W, L. Pel. GB
Baltim ore
60 32 .652
Boston
57 32 .640 11h
Milwaukee
55 38 .591 5112
New York
50 43 .538 10112
Detroit
46 45 .505 13 112
Cleveland
43 46 .573 16'12
Toronto
39 65 .309 32
West
California
56 39 .5119
Texas
52 41 .559 3
Minnesota
48 42 .553 51h
44 48 .~78 10 1/ &gt;
Kansas City
Chicago
43 50 . ~27 12
Seattle
40 55 .421 26
Oakland
25 70 .260 31
Thursday's Games
California 4·0, Baltimore 3-3, 1st
game 11 innings
Chicago 9·5, Texas 6·4
Boston 7, Seattle 1
New York 10, Oak l and 2
Milwaukee 3, Toronto 2, 11 innings
Detroi t 8, Minnesota 3
Cleveland 2, Kansas City 1
Friday's Games
California (Barr 7 -4) at Baltimore
(McGregor 3·3&gt;. In I
Seattle (Parrott 6·7&gt; at Boston
(Torrez 9-5), In)
Oakland !Kingman 0·21 at New
York (John 13-42), In)
Toronto (T. Underwood 3·121 at
Milwaukee (Siaton9-4) , (n)
Detroit (Morris 8·5} at Minnesota
(Jackson 2·1) , (n)
Cleveland (Waits 9-81 at Kansas
City (Gale 6·8) , (n)
Chicago IBumgarten 9-5) at Texas
(Johnson 4-10) , '(n)
Saturday 's Games
·Seattle at Boston
Oakland at New York
Milwauk.ee at Cleveland
Toronto at Minnesota
California at Bal timore
Chicago at Detroit
Kansas City at Texas
Sunday's Games
Milwau kee at Cleveland, 2
Chicago at Detroit
California at Boston, (n)
Seattle at New York
Oakland at Baltimore, I n I
Chicago at Detroi t, ( n l
k' ;m !;aS City at Texas, (n)

Sund· 1 's Games
Milwaukee at Cleveland, 2
Chicago at Det roit
Californ ia at Boston , (n)
Seattle at New York
Oakland at Baltimore, (n)
Toronto at Minnesota
Kansas City at Texas, 1n 1
National League

East ·

W. L. Pet. GB
Montreal
50 36 .581
Pittsburgh
46 39 .552 2112
Chicago
47 39 .547 3
50 42 .543 3 .
Philadelphia
44 43 .506 61(,
St. Louis
New York
37 50 .425 13'1•
West
Houston
54 42 .563
Cincinnati
49 45 .521 •
San Francisco
46 48 . 469 7
San Diego
44 53 .454 10'1•
Atlanta
40 52 .&gt;135 12
Los Angeles
37 57 . 39~ 16
Thursday's Games
Atlanta 8, Chicago 2
Pittsburgh 9-4, Houston 5-2
Cincinnati 16, St. Louis 4
San Diego 3, New York 1
Los Angeles 7, Montreal 3
San Francisco 1, Philadelphia 0
Friday's Games
Atlanta 1Brizzolara 5·31 at Chicago
1Reuschel8·6) , In)
Houston (Richard 7-101 at Pit·
tsburgh !Candelaria 8-7), In I
Cinc innati (Seaver 9·51 at St. Louis
(Denny 4·7) , (n)
New York (Swan 6-61 at San Diego
I Perry 9-6), In I
Montreal (Rogers 9-6 or Grimsley 851 at Los Angeles (Sutcliffe 8·81 , (n)
Philadelphia !Carlton 11 -81 at San
Franc isco (Montefusco 2-•&gt;. (nl
Saturday's Games
Atlanta at Chicago
Houston at Pittsburgh, (n)
Cincinnati at St. Lou is, (n)
Philadelphia at San Franc isco
Montrearat Los Angeles, (n)
New York at san Diego , (n)
Sunday ' s Games
Cincinnati at Chicago
Atlanta at Pittsburgh, 2
. Houston at St. Louis
Montrea l at San Francisco, 2, (n)
Philadelphia at San Diego, In)
New York at Los Angeles

GOLF
LYTHAM ST. ANNES, England
(AP ) - Ha le Irwin shot a 3-under-par
68 to take the second-round lead in the
106th
British
Open
Golf
Championship.
Irwin 's 36-hole total is 136, six shots
under par and two ahead of Spaniard
Severiano Ballesteros.
Ballesteros matched the British
Open record on the 6,822-yard Royal
Lytham and St. Annes Club course
with a 6-under-par 65 for a 138.
First round leader Bill Longrriuir
shot a 74 that put him third at 139
while Tom Watson carded a 68 for a
140, four shots back in fourth.
Jack Nicklaus and Dennis Clark
were the only others under par at 141,
both with second-round 69's. ·
COAL VALLEY , Ill. (AP ) -George
Cadi shot a 7-under par 63, matching
the competitve course record, to grab
the first-round lead in the $200,000
Quad Cities Open.
Victcr Regalado shot a 64 to stand
alone in second place. Canadian Dan
Halldorson and Dennis Sullivan were
tied for third at 65 .
Bunched at 66 were Jeff Mitchell,
Larry Webb, Doug Pewell, Peter
Jacobsen and Morris Hatalsky.
BASEBALL
NEW YORK (AP )- Pitcher Nolan
Ryan of the California Angels was
named the American League Player
of the Week for the period of July 9-15.
Ryan pitched two comple~ games,
allowing only seven hits and one
Wlearned run in 6-0 and &amp;-1 victories
over Boston and the New York
Yankees. The xictory over the
Yankees was the seventh one-hitter of ·
his career. Ryan leads the majors
with ISO strikeouts and his five
shutouts are !cps in the A.L.

DID YOU KNOW

DAD'S ROOT BEER BOTTLE CAPS FOR CHARITY

~.

C.. BOITLING CO.
Middleport, Ohio

Mill Stt !el
992 -3542 or 992 -3344

CLEVELAND (AP)
- When Sarah Smith's boss at a local
bank waa promoted, Sarah was
certain llhe was ~xt In line for the
bou'a job.
. And when the position went to a less
experienced male with credentials no
better than her own, Sarah filed a
complaint with the Ohio Civil Rights
Commission,
charging
sex
diacrlmlnation,
A year later. Sarah was still al tbe
same desk, her con\plalnt having been
dlsmll8ed before It had even been
lnveatipted.
The Sarah Smith described bere is
lictiUous, but a national orpnlzation
for office workers called Working
Women says such Incidents are not
infrequent, according to surveys
taken In Dayton, Columbus and
Cleveland.

.

and Jesse Davis, running backs ;
Gene Settles, linebacker : and Robert
Evans and Dave Smith, defensive.,.
back.
PHILADELPH lA EAGLES . Waived Mike Hogan, fullba ck.
ST . LOUIS CARDINALS - Signed
AI Chandler, tight end, to a series of
tour one-year contracts, and Terry
Stieve, offens ive guard, to a series of
three one "year contracts. Announced
the retirement of Pete Alla rd , cen ter.
Released Annise D~vis , running
back,
and
Mi c hael
Oottery ,
linebacker .
Canadian Football League
MONTREAL ALOUETTE S Signed Tom Cousineau , linebacker, to
a multi -year contract .
SOCCER
American Soccer League
NEW YORK APOLLOS - Waived
Paulo Mala , forward . Placed Charlie
McCarthy , forward , on the 1-day
di sabled list.

STUTI'GART, West Germany (AP)
- Top .,seeded Wo jtek Fibak troWlced
Pavel Slozil 6-1, 6-4 to gain the
quarterfinals of an international
Grand Prix tennis tournament.
Rolf Gehring eliminated South
African John Yuill 6-4, &amp;-7, 6-1.
In oiher singles matches, Tomas
Smid defeated Jan Kodes 641, &amp;-3, and
Zejlko Franulovic beat Dominique
Bedell 6-3, 6-2.
In doubles action, Colin Dowdeswell
teamed with Frew McVlillan to beat
Pavel Hutka and Jaire Velasco 6-3, 6-2
to gain the semifinals.
WASHINGTON ( AP) - To[Hleeded
Guillermo Vilas defeated Marty
Riessen 6-1, 6-3 to gain the
quarterfinal roWld of the $175,000
Washington Star International men's
tennis tournament.
In other action, Eddie Dibbs
defeated Butch Walts 6-3, 6-4 ; Jose
Hlgueras beat Pat DuPre 6-3, &amp;-I;
Hans Gildemeister crushed Rick
Fagel G-2, 6-4 ; Elliot Teltscher beat
Mike cahill 6-2, G-7, 6-3 ; Jose-Luis
Clerc of Argentina downed George
Hardie 6-2, 6-3 ; and Victor Pecci of
Paraguay defeated Raul Ramirez of
Mexico 6-2, 6-3.
BOWLING
TUCSON, Ariz. ( AP ) - Ed Ressler
won his last seven matches in the
fourth round to take the lead in the
$70,000 Tucson Open.
Ressler finished with a 7,'1!J7 total,
128 pins better than Joe Berardi. Dave
Kappel won only three of his last
seven matches to drop to third with
6,129.

B:r Clarice AUea
A SUlJllise party honoring Miss
l.aura Jean Eichinger for her 16th blrlhday was held at the borne of Mr.and
Mrs, Phillip Werry. Swimming
followed With a wiener rout was enjpyed by the guests and the honoree.
Guada were Cassie Sheeta, Beth
1'1lson, Rodney Keller, Jan
Eichinger, Gene and Greg Cole, Kenny Chapnan, Ranee Truuell, Brei
lilathews, Lowell RidenOUr. Don
Eynon, Joe Bowen, Janet Werry,
Leonard Myers, Ray and Eddie
Werry, Onlta Jean Ritchie, Mr. and
Mrs. John Wolfe, Mf. ~ Mrt!. Phillip
Werry, and Opal Eichinger. Sending
gifts were Anl!el and Pebbles Blake,
Afamily picnic was held Sunday at
the home of Mr. and Mn. Richard
Gaul, Mark and David. 'l'hoee attendinR were Mn. Gladys Deem, Por-

Th" S tu t 111h Sup., ~11ort h
StiUCTalfl bnl '"ll er A nd fot
9 uod re as o n It \ ~p, cl ou'lo ,

\'• rulll • 1nd 10usl1 Co m" h 1
.and ~rr on e. tod• y

DOUG'S MARINE
SALES &amp; SERVICE
992-5652
Pomeroy, 0.

COLLEGE
EMPORIA STATE UNIVERSITY
- Named Bill Quayle athletic direc ·
tor.
PRINCETON
UNIVERSITY
Named Diane Schumacher women 's
basketball coach :

SEE US FOR YOUR FAIR NEEDS
Let us be your Headquarters for all your
animal, plant and pet
needs, and for your
projects :

Get the "modern
supply" habit
for all your
Fair needs.
We welcome you .

'

Garden Seeds - Fertilizer - Hydrated lime Moss- Allis -Chalmers Lawn &amp; Garden Tractors.

for the rider :
Saddles - Boots, Hats, Kerchiefs, Decals, etc.

MODERN SUPPLY
399 West Main Street
99 -2164
Pomeroy, Ohio
The Store With "All Kinds of Stuff"
FOR PETS - STABLES - LARGE AND SMALL
ANIMALS. LAWNS - GARQENS.

GAMDEN PARK RESERVED
SATURDAY-JULY 21st
"ANNUAL SUMMER OUTING"
ENGINEERING DEPARTMENT
CONSTRUCTION DEPARTMENT
_ AND

K.V. COMPUTING DEPT.

SUNDAY

UNION CARBIDE TECH. CENTER
9: JCl am
10:30 am
7: 30 pm

CHURCH OF CHRIST
Reedsville, O.,.SR 124
John Tyler, Evangelist
(30' ) 195 6910

OF

OPEN TO PUBLIC AFTER 5 P.M.
U.S. 60 WEST-HUNTINGTON
CLOSED EVERY MONDAY EXCEPT LABOR DAY

dismissed or adjusted before · the complaint process functions.
Many also complained about factInvestigation.
- Thirty-five
percent
were findings that were held, contending
dismssed for "no probable cause" or that while the emplqyer is often
"for other reasons."
·
represented at such meetings by an
-Seven percent were conciliated. · attorney, the employee bas no
-Less than 0.5 percent · were representation.
/
brought to public hearing .
Ellis Ross, OCRC executive·
Women who complained to the director, reportedly said he. has no
Equ11l Employment . Opportunity • doubt ,his agency will support the
Comission for its performance group s recommendatwns for
somewhat better - 77 percent felt improving the agency's effectivene!lS.
they bad been treated fairly but the Chester Gray, Cleveland director of
majority also felt L1ey were not fully the
employment
opportunity
Informed of their rights and were not commission, said his agency would
given adequate Information on hOw look closely at the finding•
·

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Also a gilt will be given to
the pastor who has the
largest number present
from his church.

Mr. and Mn. James Martin, Reno,
0 ., former Chester rosidenta, called
on Mn. Opal Elcbin«er, recenUy.
Mrs. Larry Cleland, Mn. E!lllll
Cleland, Gftl! and Mary Hibbs attended the ball g~ In Cincinnati on
the Fourth of July.
Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Allon and Mr.
and Mn. John Wickham spent Sunday in Westerville with Dr. and Mrs.
Billy Robert Allen. They were joined
by Mr. Darrel CleUIIIid, Colwnbus,
0., for dinner.
Mr. and Mn. Roy Christy, Mn.
Letha Wood, Mr. and Mn. Robert
Wood spent Sunday in Gallipolis With
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Beegle. They were
joined by Mills Sandy Wood, Belpre,
Mn. Mary Cox, Pt. Pleasant, and Mr.
and Mn. Bobby Wood, CharUe and

Tartan Farm has breeding
establlshments In both Ocala, Fla.,
and Lexington , Ky.

~•

Middleport and Pomeroy,

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5
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OPTOMETRIST

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1 OFFICE HOURS: 9:30 to 12, 2 to 5 !CLOSE AT NOON
I .ON THURS._)- EAST_tOURJ ST., POMEROY.

'

••pROFESSIONALS''

THE

AUTO PARTS PEOPLE .
••

NOMAMR

WHAT YOU DRIVE

\WVEGOT
YOUR PLUG
AUTO

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We give you precise
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altr
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Citizens of

.•

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I N. Wa COMPTON, O.D. , :

Mn. Opel Kloes and Mrs. Margaret
Eichinger were recent callers of Denzel Cleland and Mr. and Mrs. Clayton
Allen.

:"'

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what's going on."

Amy, Racine.

-'
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case, file anyway.
"If your complaint is answered with ;
'personality conflict.' don't buy it.
"Once you've filed a charge, check
with the agency In question weekly,
because otherwise, you'll have no idea

G&amp;J AUTO PARTS

Mrs. Vinton Jones, Charleston, w.
Va.; Mr. and Mrs. John Wickham,
Mr. and Mrs. ·warden Ours, Chester.

Mn. Jackie Starcher called In the aftemoon.
Mrs. Gladys Croy spent several
days in Harriaburg, Pa., wtth her
nieces and famWes, Mr. and Mrs.
Elwood Caqlenter and Mr. and Mn.
Sam Fleck.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthw- Orr and Paula
Orr were recent vlaltors of Mn. Inez
Orr. Parkersburg.
Mr. and Mn. Raymond Wllsoo,
Rochester, N. Y., were recent guests
of her mother, Mn. Jessie Weber and
other relaUves.
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Neuman, Jane lllid
David, Gallon, Bob BW Lee, Baahan,
spent Thursday night With Mr. and
Mn. Arthur OrT. Dl'. and Mn. Rcfler
G~"~~Mer and Jennifer, Logan, jOined
them oo Friday for a trip w Weirwood, Va., where they vlalted Mn.
Orr 'a sister, Mr. and Mn. Rudy
Walch and vialted other poinq of in·
terest in Virginia and W.t Virginia .

In the meantime, Ms. DowdyCornute, who is the new affirmative
action officer for Capital University in
Columbus, has these words of advice
for women who feel they have been
discriminated against:
"If either agency says you have no

With 16' Tape

It Is with regret that 1 announce the closing
of our Middleport, Ohio flower store. Due to increasing cost 'and a lack of sales growth we
find it impossible to continue growth .

RtMLINE

PAATSPLUS

·MECHANICS
CREEPER
~ .,~~ 31" ..,gtl't .... ~ l'lylofl
' tww ~ •olle...
rl'lm~

/l!ll

"••Cioroocl

aoo p1oaeo neao-

1'/z TON
HYDRAULIC
JACK

~~.:.:
Heny

Thank you for your years of patronage and
: I hope when you have flower needs In towns
, where our stores are located that you will
· allow Dudley's to serve you as we have in the
past. Tha~k you again for your patronage.

Very Truly YourS.

JOHN DUDLEY,
PRESIDENT DUDLEY'S FLOWERS

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tland, -Mr. and Mn. Larry Circle,
Shane .and Grant, Misa Florence Circle, Mr. and Mrt!. Douglaa Circle,
Kim Follrod, Becky Lee, Mlchael
Deem, Ray Deem, Mr!l. Unda Patterson, Brenl and Terry, all of
Racine ; Mr""alid Mn. Ho\lrard
Blazer, Teresa and Lisa, Mn. Mary
JohnBoo, Mr. and Mrs. John Ours,
Belpre; Mr. and Mn. James Cornell,
Mr. andMr!l. RicltStobart, Pomeroy;
Mr!l. Lucretia Stobart, Tamml and
Tonya, Middleport ; Rocky Pitzer,
Long Bottom; Tanvnie, Terrie and
Scott Starcher. Minersville; Mr. and

Peat

VIsit Our Pet Shop Soon.

How To Grow Sprituall~
1 Peter 2: 1·2; II Peter 1:
5·11 ; I Cor, 15: 15-18.
·
Bible Cla sses
Mor ning Worship
Evening Service

Three questions which
well affect your spiritual
tlfe f~om tile cradle to
gravel. Does a Christian sin
everyday, in deed, thought
or word?
2. Were the Disciples sav ed before the day of
Pentecost?
3. Do you have to be sanefilled wholly, as a second
definite work of grace, to
make it to Heaven?
· Hear these questions
answered at the Wesleyan
Holiness Arminian Convention, July 21, 1979, 7
p.m., Maplewood Litke
1'12-way between Syracuse
&amp; Racine, Ohio) on Rt. 124.
~ev . Clyde Morris,
Speilker
Rev, Willard F. Carney
Moderator

Cattle Halters - Horse &amp; Pony Halters - Whips - Leads - Stock
Canes - Blankets - Fortex Tubs &amp; Buckels - Galvanized Tubs &amp;
Buckets - Shampoos - Fly Sprays &amp; Repellents - Brushes - c urry
Combs - -Grooming Supplies - Veterinar ian Supplies - Saddles Rabbit Feed &amp; Supplies - Purina Fe&lt;!ds &amp; An imal Heallh Aids for All
Farm Animals.
. ... and for those who farm :

The Cleveland office of Worjting
W&lt;men surveyed Ohio women who
filed complaints with OCRC and the
Equal Employment Opportunity
Commission. .
Of those surveyed, 86 pei"Ct!flt said
their cases had not been seWed by the
OCRC, according w Raquel DowdyCornute and Claire Skinner,
volWlteers with Working Women.
. They
claim
that
OCRC
Investigations st11ff tra,ining are
inadeqWite, and complainants , are
ofum pressured to take whatever
settlement 1111 employer offers before
adequate
investigations
are
conducted.
They also say that of 5, 700
employment discrimination charges
processed by OCRC In 1978-79:
- Fifty-eight
percent
were

Chester News Notes

Sports briefs

TENNIS
BAAS TAD, Sweden (AP) - Sweden's
Bjorn Borg beat Italian Antonio
Zugarelli 641, &amp;-1 tc reach the '
quarterfinals of the $110,000 Swedish
Ope.n tennis c~mpionships.
In other matches, Balazs Taroczy of
HWlgary outlasted Bob Carmichael &amp;- '
2, 6-7, 7-5; Per Hjertqvist beat David
Carter &amp;-3, 6-7, &amp;-2; Mark Edmondson
downed Andrew Jarrett 6-3, 6-1 and
Kjell Johansson defeated Nikki Spear
6-3, 4-6, &amp;-3.

S"wt .YOUR R.C., NEHI, UPPER 10, DIET RIT

Tigers 8, Tw)JI!l 3
eighth inning boosted the Brewers into
Lance
Parrish
drove in three runs,
a tie with Toronto, tflen Stxto
LeZcano's one-out shot in the 11th beat two with a triple in Detroit's four-run
the Blue Jays. Bill Castro got his third fourth inning against Minnesota, and
victory without a loss with 3 2-3 rookie Pat Underwood woo his fifth
innings of shutout relief for game without loss with ninth-lnnin8
relief from Aurelio Lopez. RuatY
Milwaukee.
Staub added two RBis for Detroit with
a first-inning single off loser Jerry
KQOSIJlan and a sacrifice fly In the
sixth.
'
Transactions
Indians 2, Royals 1
By The Associated Press
. BASEBALL
A bobbled bWlt and a wild pit~
American League
spelled
troqble for Kansas City .s
SAL TIMORE ORIOLES - Placed
Dennis Leonard, who allowed only
Jim Palmer, piTcher, on disabled list .
five hits in losing the game. In tl1e
FOOTBALL
National Football League
first Leonard bobbled Toby Harrah's
..
CHICAGO BEARS - Wa ived Bon
bunt.
Andre
Thornton
singled,
IK!OI'
Illl!
Rives , linebacker . Signed Jim
one
.
Then
Leonard
wild-pitched
Snlckers, linebacker ; . Rocco Moore,
Harrah to third, from where he scored
tack le .'
Rick Morr ison , w i de
receiver; and Jim Rogers, running
on Cliff Johnson's sacrifice fly.
'
back. ·
White
Sox
9-5,
Ra1J8enll-4
,
HOUSTON 01 LERS- Signed M ike
Ralph Garr was Chicago's big gun
R.e:infeldt, safety, to a multi -year conwith a two-run homer In each game
tract . Released Krls Ordlnelll, CMarl&lt;
Cuh ill and Oscar Ramirez. quar - against the Rangers. Chet Lemon alilo
terback; Tim Whetstone , wide
homered for the White Sox In the ·
receiver ; Ri chard Anderson, ti ght
nightcap while Richie Zisk bad a twoend: Wilbert Cunningham, offensive
tackle ; Tim Jones, offensive guc'!rd ; , rWl clout and Pat PUtnam and Buddy
Steve Chambers, tackle ; Joel Briscoe
Bell solo shots for Texas.

a••~:~,~·~;~~~ 12.~

::DRAULIC

TOOLBOX
lnduslrt8 1 quality . w1l h l1ff out
tray Meuures 1!1" x7"d '4"
Heavy duly hii'IQO , l1!1 1t h
11anc:11e. The cho1te o1

1099

G&amp;J AUTO PARTS CO.
WEST SECOND
·POMEROY

"OVER

50 YEARS
OF SERVICE"

�-

7-Tbe Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, July :ll,1!r19

•

WASHIMG'OON (AP)- ExCept for
a year ago, cattle feedlot Inventories
on July 1 were the largest In six years,
· accord~!~~ , to the latest Agriculture
Department quartedy survey.
.The department said '1'1!11riC\ay the
~ ~ caUie being fed for . the
slaughter marl!et tot,aied 10.~ mll1lon
bead on July l, a .drop of 6 "percent
from more tbail 10.9 million a year
ago.
. H-er,'except for the year-ago
mark, the July 1 .Inventory of feedlot
caUie was the rnoet at midyear since
1973 when 12.7 miWon head were on
hal!d In the 23 major betf atates,
offi(Ws sald:'l'l!olle produce about gc;
percent of the nation's beef.
Bob Remmele, • spedali8t In the
~p8rtnlent's Economics, Statistics
arid Cooperatives Service, said a
number of factors are Involved,
includlna uncertainty about the
economy and whether consumer

-·

The Long Bottom Community
Association recently held its monthly
meeting with Leona Hensley
presidir\g. The meeting was OJ!ened
with the Lord's Prayer and the
Pledge of Allegiance.
The election of new officers was
held, with Mrs. Hensley elected
president of the ,club for the second
year. Mae McPeek was named
secretary; Harlan Ballard, . vice
president; Ernestine Hayman,
FIVE GENERATIONS- Jason Parker marks the fifth generation of
treasurer; Melody Roberts, news
the Lola Griffin family. Left to right, Marjorie CoMolly, grandmother of
reporter; and Virginia Newlun, ac·
Jason, Jason on the lap of his great-great-grandmother, Lola Griffin,
tlvities chairwoman.
Beulah Schultz, great-grandmother and Arlene Parker, mother of Jason.
'fhe ice cream social was discussed
They all reside at Tuppers Plains.
at length. The social Is to he held at
Red Crispin's Corner in Long Bottom
between the Methodist Church and
the Post Office and servil\g will begin
at 5 p.m., Saturday, July 21. Francis
Delilah Dawn Darst celebrated her Andrew and Bill Thurston are to line
first birthday June 16. A party was up Ute entertainment (country and
pop music) for the event. Andrew will
given In her honor by her parents.
Helping Dawn celebrate the oc- have a hay wagon on hand for the
casion were her parents, Delilah Dar- various bands and vocalists to
st and Saridy Clonch, her cousin, present their selections. Anyone
Corey Darst and parents, Dandy and wishfng to perform contact Andrew or
Sherry Darst, Grandma Bonnie Darst Mr. Thurston; those wishing to make
and Jim Kauff, great-grandmother donations of money or ingredients for
Gertrude Stivers and Bill and Mary the ice cream or baked goods, please
call a member. Support is needed!
Rumfield.
Those attending the meeting were:
Dawn receive\~ many nice gifts in·
eluding three cakes, a panda bear Leona Hensley, Mae McPeek, Mr.
cake from her mom, a clown cake an.d Mrs. Harlan Ballard, Mr. alld
from her grandmother Darst and a Mrs. Francis Andrew, Bill Thurston,
puppy dog cake froni BiU and Mary Mrs. Virginia Newlun and family,
Rumfield. Refreshments of Kool·Aid Dorsal Larkins, Mr. and Mrs. Joe
and ice cream were served with the Bissell, Emerson McDole, Tom
Hayman, Sammy Rairden, Ernestine
cake.
Hayman, Melody Roberts.

Celebrates birthday

Dawn Darst

All Swiss men must serve In the
military service. When they complete
their training they keep their guns
and equipment at home, ready for im·
mediate call to duty. Switzerland can
mobilize an army of 600,000 within 48
hours.

Form.er residents visit Meigs
Mrs. Evelyn Hanunond, Chicago,
Ill., and Mrs. Lorene Hargrove of
California, daughters of the late F.
Ray Wilson, long-time Pomeroy In·
surance agent, made a brief visit to
Meigs County last week.
Before visiting here, they had a
reunion In Columbus with their
brother, Raymond, of New York. This .
was the first time In 28 years all three
had been together.
They were reared in the Harrison·
ville area, where their father was a
school teacher. Raymond and Mrs.

Hanunond graduated from Scipio
High School Harrisonville and Mrs.
Hargrove g;.aduated frorr{ Pomeroy
High School.
They were accompanied by Mrs.
Hargrove's two sons and Mrs. Hammond's youngest daughter. They
visited the graves of their parents and
called on a few former neighbors and
classmates. Among those were: Leo
Dell Davidson Felix Alkire Hazel
Stanley, Stell; Atkins,. Ruby Diehl
and a cousin, Paul Stanley.

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Letters of opinion are welcomed. They should be less
than 300 words long 1or subject to reduction by the editor I
and must be signed with the signee's address. Names may
be withheld upon publication. However, on request,
names will be disclosed. Letters should be in good taste,
addressing issues, not personalities .

I
I
Kathy Foster

R.R. No. 1
Box365G
BeeVile, TX 78102
Dear Kathy,
I expected to be on vacation this
week, with my mom as my guest. But
she hadn't been in Ohio an hour before
she decided there wasn't enough to do
and she wanted to go home ' So here I
am with my nose to the grindstone.
I can appreciate that you want a little more action.- although from my
vantage point, we've had all the ac·
lion I can stand for awhile. Ruth
Powers and I worked for several months getting ready for the two librarysponsored trips on the riverboat (in
addition to our regular work ). And
then the Friends had a homemade
items sale (for which I made "Berry
Good" pies) and Pomeroy Library
hosted the Meigs County Art Show, all
at the same time. Now Ruth and !are
still working on the reports for the
riverboat project.
This past weekend the Friends of
the Libraries sponsored a book sale a1
the Gallia County Flea Market. It

wound up being run almost entirely
by library staff. I was really happy
about that, although I can understand
why the few remaining active Friends
were too busy with other things to
participate.
The Friends of the Meigs County
Libraries have done a great deal this
year. They raised well over $1,000 to
buy a card duplicator and help paint
both libraries, I would really hesitate
to ask them to do any more fund raising, even th~tigh making at least
one of our libraries accessible to the
elderly and disabled is a worthwhile
cause.
Asking the Friends to sponsor some
programs lor adults Is an excellent
idea. And having a series such as
"Meet Your Local CiVil Servants"
might be good for the politicians and
the people as well as for the libraries.
But, first we need more Friends.
We lost our most active supporter
when you moved to Texas, Kathy.
Believe me, we miss you.
Sincerely ,
Ellen Bell, Librarian
Serving Ail of Meigs County.

Summer camp set
for blind children ·
A camp for blind children will he
held August 5-12 at Camp Mohaven,
DanVille, Oh. It is sponsored by t)le
Christian Record BraiUe Foundation
which has scheduled more than 30
camps for blind children in the United
States this Sl!lllffier, according to
Albert Dittes, pastor of the Pomeroy
Seventh-day ·Adventist Church.
Anyone who knows a blind or VlSually- impaired child who would enjoy this
kind of experience should call Pastor
D1ttes at . 551-2178 to make
arrangements.
The fo"!ldation~ which provides
many servtce.s for blind and partially
sighted people, began National Cam·
ps for Blind Children in 1l!J67. Blind
k1ds between the ages of rune and 19
have the opportunity to swim, hike,
make friends and even practice ar·
chery by shooting balloons on a
target.
"There Is no cost to the campers,''
says Dittes, "except transportation to
and from camp. The program Includes canoeing, horseback riding,
crafts, campfires - even beeper
baseball where the kids can hear the
baUcoming. "
The foundation receives no govern·
ment aid for the camp program. It is
funded by gifts, wills, legacies and
public contributions.
Christian Record Braille Foun·
dation, an outreach of the Seventh·
day Adventist Church, is headquartered in Lincoln, Neb., (Box 6097),
and offers free material to the
visually impaired.

CB Club met
In recent months, the members of
the Big Bend CB Radio Club, Inc.,
have been very busy.
The club members had a safety
break for the travelers over the
Memorial Day holidays held In the
parking lot of Eastern High School on
Route 7 with the help of Burger Chef
and the R. c. Bottling Company. The
club also helped with .traffic in the
Syracuse Bike Hike for Cystic
Fibrosis.
Donations were made by (he club
for the Heart Fund, the Tracy Hein
· Fund, and the Middleport Rescue
Squad.
The club also sponsored club memhers in the Hike Bike for Mental
Health and the Syracuse Bike Hike
for Cystic Fibrosis.
Plans for the near future include a

Social Calendar
FRIDAY.

they came from behind the moon after entering 1unar orbit. Phl)tograpm
such as these served to remind us of the beauty and uniqueness of our own
planet.

• 'Ibey plan to reconvene Sept. 11.
Remaining bllliness Included a

(astronauts Arinstrong and Edwin
Aldrin ) could even bend down,"
cObert said. "With the 'contingency
lunar sample return container,' theY
could grab a few samples and head
back Into the module In the evenl·theY
had to abort the mission right away.
That way, at least they'd haw
something to show for their efforts.
·•we made it as a long arm with 1
grab at the end of it," Cobert recalled.
"One of them attached a goU club to it
and smacked a golf ball."
On the later Apollo 14 flight, the pole
gave golfing astronaut Alan Shepard
Jr. what must have beenhlsbest drhe
ever because of low gravity.

House-approved, November ballot
· proposal giving conatltutlonal
sanction to a 2~ percent pt"operty tax
cut conlaiMd in the state budget bill.
It nmalned under study by the Senate
Ways and Means Cunmlttee.
The budget biU awaited action by
. Gov. Jamell A. Rhodea, after causing
a partisan deadlock that th•arted a
, plan for tbe Legislature to adjourn
June 28.
The to rut would apply only to
' homeowners and occupants of fann
homelteadl, and eltf!lude lndwllrlal
and commercial real estate owners in
a W8Y which has railed constitutional
c!Qubts.

Big Run and Elk Run
HOSPITAUZATION?
CALLM=
· ·.

Grll99
~----··
I 99H443
biDbS

•

WITH A FRESH . PEACH
SUNDAE OR SHAKE
992·2554 .
570W. Main

0.

....

'" Remember the good old days
when we didn "lgel along with
the neighbors?'"

-~
1r------MEIGS

lI

~QUIPMENT

1

co.

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Ph. 992·2176 11
Hours : 1-SMon.· Frl.
1·12S•t.
f .
Closed Sund1y
International
N.W ldH .j j
Harvester
Equipment .;.II

1 Pomeroy.. 0 .
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THE UNBELIEVEABLE
IS GOING ON AT SMITH NILSON
COMI ON iN AND MAKE THE liST DIAL. YOU
CAN AND YOU WIU. STILL GET 100 GAU.ONS
Of GAS FREEl

OURING THE MONTH .OF JULY
WE ARE GOING TO GIVE FREE
100 GALLONS OF GASOLINE
Willi M1J new car pun:hlled from our stock.
So dan111011J llbout ... Let

I

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the sporisor, Rep. Edward J. Orlett, DDayton. It was approved 112-25.
Rep. Harry J. Lehman, D-Sbaker
Heights, won 67-18 Howle passage of
another measure which updates state
bankruptcy laws and prevents having

OOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - House

committee today a November ballot
proposal giving residential and farm
property owners a beUer tax break
against Inflation.
But time was running out, and
unless it or something like It amends
the coristitution In November, . an
already financed property tax cut of
2"" percent for homeowners and .
residents of farm homesteads may he
pUt IntO serious jeopardy.
·
The Senate and House planned to
adjourn after today's session until
Sept. 11. The deadline for placing
Issues on the faU ballot is Aug. 8.
Sen. Neal F. Zimmers Jr. , DDayton, called off a Thursday
meeting of the Ways and Means
Committee; whieh he chairs, after it
became bogged down In complicated
amendments. Zimmers headed a
subconunlttee which late last week
changed the majCJ!: thrust of the
House-passed proposal.
The Dayton attorney said the
proposal as It left the Hollse would
permit separation of real eatate Into
clas9es for taxation purposes, and
that he doesn't think the state Is ready
to go that far.
'
Currently, the major classes of real

classified at uniform rates . with
certain special category exceptions,
such as senior citizens who receive a
homestead exmption that lowers their
tax bills.
Zirruners' subconunittee stripped
the proposal of most House ~nguage,
oot added provisions to legalize the
property tax cut for hOmeowners and
residents of farm homesteads as
contained In the state budget bill.
Hou.se and Senate leaders had
requested Zimmers to make that
addition, rut the axing of the House
language caught House sponsors by
surprille and they are prevailing on
the Senate to restore it.
Senate President Oliver Ocasek, [).
Akron, said he felt the 2'&gt;0 percent
bkdget cut might be unconditional
since it exclUdeS commercial and
industrial property owners.
Zimmers said he thought the main
motivation of the House, when it
adopted the amendment In late June,
was to overcome constitutional doubts
on that question. But he indicated the
Hou.se came up with language that
went much further, whether it
realized it or not.
The chairman said he thinks
changing the constitution to allow
taxatlonofrealestate by class "would
open a Pandora's box." Other states
which have done so have been hit by
administrative nightmares.
Rep. William E. Hinig, D-New
Phi.li.Jel}itia, spoilsor of the House
proposal, said Zimmers was wrong on
his motivation for the amendment.
Its Intended purpose, said Hlnig, a
recognized authority on taxes and
chainnan of the House Ways and
Means Committee, was to allow
county auditors to ease an unfair
inflation burden on residential and
farm property owners. Their property
values Increase much more with
inflation than those who own
commercial and industrial property.
Currently, auditors may freeze tax
revenues at prior year levels by
rolling back certain millage rates. But
because of the uniform · rule of
taxation, all classes of property bave
their rates reduced equally.
Thus, Hlnig says, homeowners and
farmers are hearing the brunt of
inflation for buSiness and' industry.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - House
members have concurred In Senate
amendments and sent Gov, James A.
Rhodes a bill · changing coverage
reqUirements of Ohio's minimlllll
wage laws.
It raises from $95,000 to •150,000 the
annual sales volume a business can
have before It must pay the minlmlllll
wage.
Wednesday's House vote on
concurrence was 83-2.
By a vote of 85-0, the House also sent
Rhodes a measure requiring certain
steps to be taken before a utility can
discontinue a customer's service.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio
highway patrolmen could purchase
retirement service credits for time
served In other pubUc capacities
Wtder a bill now pending In the Senate.
At the urging of Rep. Dale Van
Vyven, R-Cincinnatl, the House
approved It 87-4 'l'bursday. He said
only a few officers could benefit from
the bill. It applies only to active
members of the patrol's retirement

the mtlilh "' JuiJ.
~

DD JOU blow ~ 111111J mills that wil bille JUU based

antlll1979 E.P.A. ...... Raliltl?
19791iuiCil t.ESMRE 100 pl. d taM J111l700 miB ~ith 301 on&amp;iH
301

en&amp;~ne

1979 I'OIINC CATUA 100 pl. wl taU JUU 1100 miB with 3111 qine

Wilma Mansfield, M.D.
Family Practice Medicine

!

1979 PONNC GRAND All. 100 pl. wl lib JOU 1900 mile with 301 t11&amp;ine

I

I

tI
TRACTOR PRICE

ta ster , easler wfth over 20 aftachmenfs. This man -size fractol- affords
ex tra weight and traction. All -gear drive gives you maximum work
power per gallon ft;' Qas ... no flt~ iC dr ive loss .

REED'S COUNTRY STORE J71·6125

ce-·

Seeds - Bird Seeds -Oyster Shells and Grli - Fertilizers' - Lime_
men'.&amp; Mortar: Stock Salt.- Water Softener- Remedies. Salt . Litters.
Vacc1ne · Roohng · Paints - Red Br~nd Fencing . Baler and Binder
"~:wine- Sprays - Gales.
·

SUGAR RUN MILLS
Mulberry Ave.

99~·2115

Pomeroy

I
1·.
I'
,1

TOUI MI!J!AGI MAT VAIT WITH THE WAY YOU DIIVE
AND WIATHII ·coNDITIONS.

We are the Frillndly D.,.ler, Check UJirh ,. b•
you buy any car. We C41n s,.,., You Money! I I

SMITH NELSON MOTORS INC.
500 fAST tiAIN

1:
I'

·

Fo~ instance, the bill provides that a

person who declares bankruptcy may
keep $4,000worth of equity tnhis home

and $'100 In an automobile, among
other things.
Lehman said Ohio's present
bankruptcy laws are antiquated.
some date back to the .191h century:
There currently is np provision
allowing a baDkrupt Individual to
retain his car, for instance, he -said.
Among the measures sent to the
governor by the Senate were those
creating a division of civil
conservation In the natural resources
department and repealing the
current haH~ill

residential, commercial,

~ustrial, and agricultural- must he

ions of corn and :l!O,OOO of wheat was bought1or the fourth year, which
\viii begin on Oct. I.
· Sales for the fourth year now total
about 3 million metric tons - 2.08
million of corn and 917,000 of wheat:
the department said.
· Total sales for the current year add
up to more than 14.8 million metric
tons, includingll.3 million of corn and
3.5 millioll of wheat.
A metric ton is 2,205 pounds and is
equ;~l to 39.4 ooshels of corn or 36.7
bushels of wheal.
Russia was given approval by the
United Stales to buy up to 15 milllon
tons of the two grains combined this
year, the same as In 1977-78.. No
clearance has been announced that
the Soviet Union .·can buy more than
the 8 million metric tons maximun\
specified In the agreement di!ring the
fourth year.
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Environmental Protection Agency
says it will temporarily ban the use of
DBCP, a pesticide which has caused

ll' DOESN'l RAIN
ON1111SPARADE
FORT KNOX, Ky. (AP) ...; Military
Ufe continued u USUlll at Fort Knoll,
while the Baltimore District of the
Corpa of Engineers "sllp lined" 13
miles of plastic pipe to restore the
cnunbllng sewer system.
Polyethylene pipe was inserted, or
slipped, through brd!en and rootInfested clay and concrete sewer
lines, passing under homes with a
mlnimlllll of disruption. Without
halting training, other lines went under the parade field of the Anny post,
where 21-tnch plastic pipe Wll8 sUpped
through 24-lnch clay pipe.
With II population ct. t:I,OOO, Fort
Knox is one of the most heavily
populated Anny posts In the United
States.

RIDENOUR'S

·1ce
The~~t•
\S rlg•• •

$111~9!~11.
.a.
P&gt;u • 01 .62 F.E.T.

and old tire.

Smooth-riding Firestone

DELUXE CIIAMPIONe

at-

Polyester cord
prkee
Sh:~

6 .00· 12
5.60· 13
Pt56/800 13
6 .00·13
878 · 1'3
C78·t3
6 .4!).14
B78· 14
C78-14
078· 14

•--'t ruin )'OUr waca- b,.dgett
BlacLiwall
123.00
23.00
23.00
24.00
25.00
2&lt;100
28.00
2&lt;1.00
26.00

F.E:T.

27.00

1.93

11.49
1.57
1.44

1.66
1.73
1.91
1.90
1.75

1.66

Bur a.set
TODAY!

Blackwall

F.E .T.

530 .00
32. 00
33.00

S2 . 10
2 22
2 .38
2 .61
1.58
1.70
1.90
2.44
2 .66
2 .00

35.00
25.00

27.00

28.00
34.00

:16.00
38.00

ftrestone

3 PIECE GROUP FROM
FREDERICKTOWN, 0.
FROM

10 til 2'
GET OUT AND HAVE A GOO/)
AT THE INN ~LACE

THE MEIGS INN
POMEROY, 0.

Si~:e

E7 !H 4
F78· H
071H4
H 7B·l4
5 .60·15
6.00· 11\ L
6.85S· 15
G78-16
H 7!H5
L78- l li

A.ll prices plus F.E.T. and old tire.

BACK BY POPULAR DEMAND

, PH. 992-3629

cancer 1n
EPA Deputy Administrator
Barbara Bll!lll said ~ursday, "We:Vl! ,
concluded that DBCP s r!Sks outwe1gh
i~ benefits, at least during the time it
wUI take t.o consider a permanent
ban."
.
.
Mrs. Blum _sa1d the EPA d~ded to
take the action because of recent
lindlngs ?-f DBCP resi~ues on certain
crops, m some drmkmg water
supplies and in the air near spray
sites."
.
.
The ban on the use of DBCP will
become effective in five days, unless
manufacturers contest the order by
requesting a public hearing, she said.
H a hearing is conducted, the ban
could be delayed for approximately 60
days, she said.
·
l;&gt;BCP is used on cotton, soybeans,
peaches, pineapples, citrus and other
fruits, nuts, lawns, goff courses and
ornamental plants.

You '11 crow over · Barbecued
Marinated Chicken. Combine . 1 _ . - - - - - -. .- -...
package Lawry's Caesar Salad
For all your home entertainment
Dressing Mix With 2 tablespoons
and appliance needs.
water in a jar; shake well. Add 1
teaapoon Seasoned Salt and 1 ~up
DOXOL SERVICE
salad oil; shalte about 30 seconds.
Pour over 2 brofter-lr)rera, halved.
Marinate several hours or overnight.
TV &amp; APPLIANCE
To cook, place chicken on grill, skin
side up; turn every 11-10 miutes and
GAS SO
ERVlCE
baste frequenUy with marinade. Grill
Racine, ·o .
Chester,o.
about 1 hour; serves four.

House also approved and sent
the Senate on Thursday a bill allowing
school boards to establish self·
insurance plans covering students In
athletic programs.
, Some boards already .do this,
sponsors said, but addedthat the
practice has been chaUenged on .
grounds there is no statutory basis for
the plana.

1979 BUICI a£C. 225, 100 pi wl taill JOil 1500 miB with 350 enp.e

deep snow; bu lldoze, grade; plow, till, cultivate ... handle all iobs

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Agriculture Department liBYS the
Soviet Union has bought an .additional
~.ooometric tons of u.s. grain, ·most
of it for delivery in 1979-aO.
Officials said' Thursday the grain
Included 100,000 metric loris of corn
for delivery by Sept. 30, the end of tile.
third year of an agreement calling for
regular purChases of U.S. wheat and
corn.
The remainder - :l!O,OOO metric

The

o1 pUi11 b just buyina a new car from us duli1g

w~h

estate -

sponaora hoped to pull from a Senate

system.

us buy JOII 100 plbls

1979 I'OIIJI*: IOIINEVIllE, 100 pl. wl 11M JOil 1700 miB

them pre-empted Oct. 1 when a new
federal statute takes effect.
The measure !!Jiells out exemptions
under the law which aUow a creditor
to retain certain money and property
when filing bankruptcy.

Property owners
could get relief

CAPITAL BRIEFS

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY

J'

. For An Appointment Please Phone 992-6601

Prompt action was expected In the
HOI!Se on an emergancy bill, already
approved by the Senate, making atate
employee pay raises and benefit hikes
for pensioners and welfare recipients
- all contained in the OOdget bill retroactive Ill July 1.
That measure was Introduced and
rushed through the Senate on
Thl!f&amp;day by a vote of 3l~ ..Senators .
added their approval to three routine
HOUJe measures, sending thein to the
governor.
Meanwhile, the House debated at
length and passed three major bills.
One proposal, by Rep. John .A.
Begala, D-Kent, revises the way the
state reimbur!leS nursing homes for
care of Medicaid patients.
Under the proposal, which won 7&amp;-11
House approval, nursing homes would ·
have their rates based on actual costs,
as determined by the welfare
department. Presently they receive
payments based on what the
department
determines
are
reasonable costs.
Begala's bill went to the Senate
along with another bill providing an
eW:a 13 weeks of benefits, under
specified conditions, to workers who
lose their jobs as a result of major
plant or buslnesa sllltdowns.
Laid-off workers now can get up to
52 weeks of benefits, but the fins! 13
weeks of benefits depend on
unemployment levels statewide, said

BEAT
THE
HEAT

Athens, Ohio
WISHES TO ANNOUNCE THAT

NOW TAKING APP')INTMENTS

C\

!fODil . il~

LAFF - A- DAY

Seed and Milling
HEADQUARTERS

·PoWER

HOW'S YOUR

dolph reunion. They live at Crestoo,
Ohio. .
Sam Williams recently called on
Jewell Story at his boule.
Mrs. Dorothy Hess apept 1 weell: ,
visiting friends and relatives. Mrs.
Hess now Uvea at Daltoo, Ohio.
Mr. and Mrs. Ciarence E. Ran-:
dolph, Sr. and two sooa t:l Mlcldleport, :
Ohio were dinner guesll of their ·
parents, Clarence and Aletlla Randolph, Sr. and their grandmotber,
Inex Randol}it at her home on Bla!
Run.
J
Members of the Hemlock qrove ,
Christian Church attended the revival i
at Orange Christian Chw'ch. The •
speaker was Dr, James Qutaenbery. \
AboUt 11 years ago he wu the 1
minister for Orange and Hemlock •
Grove Christian Churches.
;
Margaret Province and Janet Blgp '
called on Inez Randolph recently.

FOUNDATION, INC.

Beginning July 18, 1979

about three-fourths of the nation's
beef that reaches consi!Jilers.
'l'l!e July I lnventqry In the seven
stales Included an Increase In one :
California 709,000 head, up 3. ~rcent ·
from a year ago.
Declines were reported In the other
six: Arizona 363,000 head, down 3
percent; Colorado 880,000 down 3;
Iowa 1,180,000 d·own 9; Kansas
1,290,000 down 7; Nebraska 1,380,000
down 5; and Texas 1,760,000 down 5.

·

COLllM8US, Ohio (AP) - .Ohio's
lawmUers, with the grueling battle of
the budget ~ them, hoped io tie
some looM ends today and begin what
many feel is a well deserved IIUIIllller
VIICBtlon.

said. "They were made one at a time.
They had to be hollowed out for weight
and have a perfect seal for no
contamination .... They were sealed in
an antiseptic Teflon bag and then put
inside two polyethylene bags which
were sealed."
And just in case something forced
'Armstrong to climb up the lunar
module ladder faster than he had
climbed down, the lab·had an ace up
its sleeve-a 3-loot pole with a net for
some "rock fishing" in the Sea of
Tranquility.
"It had lo he long enough to scoop
off the surface because at the time
there was some question if they

Beatrice Bena and daughter,
Peggy, visited Mrs. Bentz's sister,
Pearl Randolph one day last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Randolph,
Sr. and Mr. and Mrs. Hobart Day
spent four days 1aat week with their
SATIJRDAY
WESLEY AN Holiness Arminian children. Mr. and Mrs. Donald w.
Convention Saturday at Maplewood Randoi}it, Sr. ot Seville, Ohio also
Lake 7 p.m. Speaker will he Clyde called on other relatives.
The annual Randolph reunion was
Morris. Special singing,
·
held
at the Rock Springs Graitge Hall
OLD F ASIDONED ice cream social
at Red Crispin's comer, Long Bot- Sunday, June 24. Attending were over
tom, between Methodist Church aild 90 persons from tl)e family of the late
Post Office, Saturday beginning at 5 Mr. and Mrs. Charles Randolph,
p.m. Country music will he provided. Carrie Randolph Niggemyer, the
Sponsored by Long Bottom Com· oldest person prescent; received a gift.
She also is the oldest child of Mr. and
munity Association.
IDLLBILLY JUBILEE at home of . Mrs. Charles Randolph. Mrs.
Nonna and Burl Coleman, Hudson Niggemyer lives In Athens.
Christina Siders of Marietta and
Valley near Reedsville Saturday.
Donnie
W. Randolph, Jr. of Seville,
Potluck l!t 5 p.m. and music by CounOhio
spent
a week with their grandtry Rebels 7:30to 11. Wienerroastat8
parents,
Mr.
and Mrs. Clarence Ran·
p.m. Adnmission )3.
_
dolph, Sr. and attended Vacation
CAR WASH Saturday at Eber's Bible School at the Hemlock Grove
Gulf in Racine from 9 a.m. until noon. Christian Church.
Outside $2, inside and out $3. Spon·
Mr. and Mrs. Eddie McPherson of
sored by Cannel Sutton Y~~t.h Class.
Marietta vacationed In Tucson,
SUNDAY
Arizona the past 10 days with Mrs.
DUNCAN FAMILY of Tampa, Fla., McPherson's brother, WUford Biggs
will he at the First Baptist Chureh, and wife and two sons. Mr. Biggs is In
Middleport, Sunday. Services at 7 the Air Force.
p.m. with refreshments to follow. ·
Inez Grunder and nephew, Eric
HAYMAN FAMILY will be at Repp, of near Wooster called on their
Racine Baptist Church Sunday 7:30 grandmother, Inez Randolph, recenp.m.
tly.
MONDAY
Jewell Story hal! been In poor health
REVIVAL Monday through July 29 the past two months and spent some
at Keno Church of Christ 8 p.m. time in 0 'Bleness Hospital. She is
nightly. Willard Love, Athens, guest slowly improving lit home.
Clarence Randolph, Sr. visited Ivor
minister. Public Invited.
SWIMMING PARTY at London Logan at Veterans Memorial Hospital
Pool, Syracuse, sponsored by . Wednesday evening.
Pomeroy Youth League Monday at
Inez Randolph and Jane Hazelton
7:30 p.m. for players, parents, attended ladies fellowship meeting
July 5 7:30 p.m. till 9 p.m. at Dexter
manager and cosch.
Christian Church.
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Grunder and
Coffee Break to he held on Sept. 23, two girls spent the weekend with her
l!r19 at the Rock Springs Fairgrounds grandmother, Inez Randolph and unand the members will also be doing cle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
the paging at the Meigs County Fair Randolph, Sr. and attended the Han·
again this year.
The Big Bend CB Club would also
like to extend an invitation for anyone
interested In becoming a member, by
contacting one of the members or at·
tending one of the meetings being
held the second Tuesday and last
Friday of every month at the Rock
Springs Grange Hall.

You ca 11 mow 2-3 acrs of grass an hour with thebig 60" ro-tary ... and-much more. Move 1/ 3-ton of material with hydraulic loader; clear

million a year earlier.
Sales of "finished" caltle by
feedlots In the second quarter also
totaled about 6.11 million head, the
rePort said. That was down 8 percent
from more than 6.62 million in the
same period of last year. .
looking to the third quarter; the
report said feeders expect to market
about 6.23 million cattle, down 5
percent from more than 6.52 million in
July-September of last ·
Department experts say "fed"
caUle prices may remain fairly stable
in . oomtng months, depending on
demand, feed costs and the outcome
of corn and other crops this fall.
The nwnber of cattle on feed In the
seven major producing states · which are reported monthly as well as
quarterly - totaled 7.56 million oil
July 1, down 5 percent from 7.98
million a year ago.
Those seven states account for

·
t•
.
Lawmakers hope to tie -loose en ds, StlJ rt. vaca lORS~~:~r:an:::.~':s_&amp;nd

THIS VIEW OF the rising Earth greeted the ApoUo 11 astrOnauts .-

SQUARE DANCE Friday Meigs
Chapter Senior Citizens Center 8:30 to
1:30. Music by Stringdusters. Ad·
mission $1. Children under 12 ad·
mitted free.

t&gt;.r"Tn,~-GARDEN

slaughter plants ill expected to be
down by about 10 percent or .so in the
last half of this year; reflecting the
continued smaller supply of cattle.
Producers have begun to expand
breeding herda, but lt will take at least
several more years before mueh
impact will be felt In the supply of
supennarket beef.
·
An indication of the herd expansion
was provided In the report, showing
that the July I feedlot inventory
Included 3.45 million heifers and
heifer calves, a decli!te ~ 14 percent
from a year ago.
When pioducers were reducing
their herda !lllarply, they sent many
more heiferil to feedlots for fattening
instead of keeping so many for
breeding pw:poses.
· The quarterly report showed that
placements of new caWe In feedlots
during April.June totaled 6.11 milllon
head, down 7 percentfrom almost 6.6

·

THE OHIO VAUEY HEALTH SERVICES

Is Opening Her Office at:
Mul berry Heights
Po me roy, Ohio

!lemand will support an expansion In
feedlot beef output.
Remmeletoldareporterthat a year
ago- when feedlot Inventories were
larger- caltle prices were Increasing
· and were hea&lt;!ed for further gains.
Also feed coilts were less than they are
now.
, .
That helped put· a bulge In cattle
feedlot lnvento~ a year ago.
A heavy export demand for com
and other grain has contributed to
hlgher feed costs this year, along with
uncertainties over the 1979 corn crop.
Although It appears to he shaping up
as a bumper harvest, USDA fm:ecasts
so far pit It at 6.86 billion bushels,
down fr11111 the record of 7.1 billion last
year.
Allo, many farmers and ranchers
have been able to put animalB on
grass pasture this IIUIJllller iil8tead of
selling them to feed!Qts.
In any case, total beef output by

.

r--------___,
·:

•

Feedlot inventories ·largest m stx years

Ice cream Ten years ago today•••
social set Moon walk makes ·history!!!
for 5aturday .
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - When
Neil Armstrong took that giant leap
for mankind 10 years ago today, he
was toting two suitcases so sterile
they were compared to a football field
besmirched with two fingerprints.
The "rock boxes," crafted from 12by-13-inch all!lllinum Ingots heated to·
1,000 degrees for three hours, were
antiseptically cleaned ~t Union
Carbide's Oak Ridge, Y-12 plant to
less than 10 billionths of a gram of
matter per square centinieter.
Each was cleaned with. distilled
water, isopropyl alcohol, benzene,
freon and nitrogen gas before
ultri)Sonic vibration In a vacul!lll
chamber and inspection for lint under
a fluorescent lig~t.
"Those two boxes that went up In
Apollo 11 were the cleanest pieces of
luggage anyone would take
anywhere," said Harvey Cobert,
Union Carbide's public relations
director. "Less than 10 billionths per
square centimeter - that's about
equal to a couple of fingerprints on the
siie of a football field."
The boxes - now part of the Apollo
display at the Smithsonian Institution
In Washington, D.C. -measure 19,.
by 10'» by 7 Inches, and each held 40
pounds of moon rocks. The boxes were
insulated and highly polished to
reflect sunlight, keep them from
exceeding 150 degrees and minimize
heat loss. When Armstrong stepped
onto the moon, the temperature was
10 below zero.
,
·
Researehers cleaned the boxes In a
filtered room where air was changed
31!6 times an hour so the Earth's
· bacteria wouldn't contammate the
moon and any microbes recovered
from lunar samples would indicate
life on the satellite. Technicians. wore
two pairs of gloves, caps, masks and
nylon jump suits and boots.
"There was a lot of trial and error
and it was months before the boxes
were acceptable to NASA," Cobert

'

-.

''

�8-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, July ro, 1979

CHURCH
NEWS
TRINIT'I CHURCH. Rev. W. H. Perrin .

pastor: lob luck , Sunday Khool supt.
Church School , 9: 15 o.m , worship service, 10·30 o m Choir rehearsal , Tuesday ,
7:30p.m . und.r d irection of Alice Nease
POMEROY CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE ·
Corner Union ond Mulberry, Rev . Clyde V

HeOO.raon, paator. Sunday achool . 9·30
a .m., Glen McClung, supt , mommg wor·
.ahlp, 10:30 a .m .; eveni ng service, 7 30,

mid-w. .k service, Wednesday. 7 30 p.m.
GRAC~ EPISCOPAL CHURCH 326 E.
Main St ., Pomeroy~ lt1e Rev Robert B
GrQvel, rector. Sunday seN!ces . (summer
sch.dule beginning June 3) at 10 a m . Ser vice will alternate between the Holy
Eucharist and morning prayer, effective
June 3 Holy Commumon every other Sun·

day of each month and sermon Church

Khool and nursery care prov1ded Coffee
hour In parish house tollowlng the service
POMEROY CHURCH Of CHRIST. 212 W
Main St John McAnhur. pastor. 81ble

Khool , 9 .30 a .m., morning worship. 10 30
a .m ., Youth m"tlngs , 6 30 p. m , evenirtg
wonhlp, 7 30. Wednesday night prayer

m"tlng and Bible study , 7 30 p.m.
THE SALVATION ARMY . 115 Butternut
Ave , Pomeroy Envoy and Mrs. Ray Win·
lng, oHicera In charge Sunday· holiness
m"ting , 10 a .m . Sunday School. 10 30

a.m. Sunday achool leader. YPSM, Elo•••
Adams . 7:3o p.m ., salvot1on meeting,

varlou1 tpeo~ers end mus•c spectolt .

Thursdoy-10 a .m. to 2 p.m.Lodies Home
l.ague, all women Invited, 1 30 p.m.
prayer mHting and Bible study, Bob
Ettep, leader
Rev
Noel Herman,

teacher.
BURLINGTON SOUTHERN BAPTIST
CHAPEL. Route I . Shodot- Pastor Bobby
Elklnt. Sunday school , 5 p m., Sunday

worship , S:"S p.m.; Wednesday prayer
service, 7.30 p m.
POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH OF
CHRIST, 200 W Main St , Jerry Paul,
mlnlater, phone 992·7666 Conservative.
non· lnttrumental: Sunday wors1'11p , 10
a .m .. Bible study , II a.m ; worship , 6
p.m. Wedn ..day Bible sludy . 7 p .m.
OlD DEXTER BIBLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH .
Rev.Rolph Smith, pastor. Sunday school,
9. 30
a m., Mrs
Worley Francis,
superintendent Preaching serv1ces first &amp;
third Sundays following Sunday School
GRAHAM
UNITED
METHODIST.
Pr.aching 9 30 o m .. first and second Sunday• of each month, third ond fourth Sun·
doy1 each month, worship serv1ce ot 7 30
p.m. Wedne1doy evenmgs ot 7.30 Prayer
and Bible Study.
SEVENTH· DAY ADVENTIST. Mulberry
Heights Road , Pomeror Pastor, Albert
Ol"es; Sabbath Schoo Superintendent,
Rlto White Sabbath School. Saturday
afternoon ot 2 00, with Worship Service
following ot 3 IS
RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCHSister Harriett Worner , Supt. Sunday
School , 9.30 a m , morn1ng worsh1p , 10 .45
om.
THE HILAND CHAPEL, George Casto.
pastor. Sunday School. 9 30 a m .. evening
worship , 7.30 Thursday evenmg prayer
tervlce , 7 30 p. m
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST. Davod Monn.
minister; William Watson , Sunday school
supt Sunday school, 9 30 a.m., mornmg
worship 10 30 a m
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST. 2B2 Mulberry
Ave. , Pomerov. Paul Silver. Pastor:
Woodrow T. Zwiling, Sunday school
superintendent Sunday school , 9 30 a m.,
morning worship, 10:30; evening worship,
7:00 p m M1dweek prayer service, 7 :00
p.m.
MIDWAY COMMUNITY CENTER. D. .tor
Rd . Langsville. Ohio Rev Clyde Ferrell .
Pastor. Sunday School 11 om. Saturday
preaching services 7 30 p.m Wednesday
evening Bible atudy of 7.30 p.m.
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH. Bailey
Run Road, Rev . Emmett Rowson , pastor.
Handle., Dunn, supt. Sunday school, 10
a m. Sunday even1ng servtce 7 30; Bible
teaching, 7 30 p m Thursday
DYESVILLE COMMUNITY CHURCH .
Rover C. Turner, pastor. Sunday school.
9 30 a.m ., Sunday morning worship ,
10 30, Sunday evening service, 7 30.
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION , Lawrence Manley ,
pastor: Mrs. Russell Young , Sunday
School Supt Sunday School 9·30 a m
E\lening woiship, 7·30, Wednesday prayer
meeting. 7 30 p.m .
MT • MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD.
Racln.- Rev . W. H. Lykins, pastor Morning worsh•p . 9' ,45 a m , Sunday school,
l O·•S o .m , e\lening warsh•p . 7 . Tuesday.
1 30 p.m ., ladles prayer meeting,
Wednesday, 7 30 p m YPE
MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST, Corner
Sixth and Palmer, the Re\1 , Mark McClung.
Sunday school, 9 15 a m ., Don Wilson,
superintendent. Lacy Barton , aut. supt.
Morning Worship , 10 15 am Bible study,
i0.30 a.m at church . Youth meeting, 7.30
p.m Wednesday Wednesday n1ght Bible
study and prayer ser\llce, 7 30 p m
• CHURCH Of CHRIST Moddleport. 5th
and Main, Bob Milton. minister, Mike
Gerlach. superintendent. Terry Yankey.
youth mmister . Bible school , 9 30 am.,
morning wont•up, 10 30 o .m , evening
worship , 7 30, prayer service, 7 p.m.
Wednesday .
THE
MIDDLEPORT
CHURCH
OF
NAZARENE Rev J1m Broome, pastor, Bill
Wh•te. Sunday schoo l supt
Sunday
school. 9:30 a m .. morning worship. 10·30
a m , Sunday evangelistic meeting, 7.00
p.m Prayer meeting, Wednesday, 7 p m.
UNITED PRESBYTERIAN MINISTRY OF
MEIGS COUNTY Dwogkt L. lavon . dire&lt;·
tor
HARRISONVILLE PRESBYTERIAN . Rev .
Ernest Stricklin , pastor Sunday church
school. 9 30 a m Mrs Homer lee, supt ·
mornmg worship 10 30.
MIDDLEPORT. Sunday school. 9 30 a.m ..
Richard Vaughan supt Morning worship,
10 30
SYRArusE , Morning worship , 9 a.m.,
Su~oy school 10 a m Mrs. Sampson
Hall. supt
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD. Rev Bobby Porter pastor Sunday school . 10 o ~ :
Sunday worsh1p II a m., Sunday evening
service 7 p m , Wednesday Family Trai·
•ng Hour, 7 p m Wednesday worship ser·
... ice , 7:30pm
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH. Near
Long Bottom Edsel Hart, pastor Sunday
school 10 o m Chu rch 7 30 p m ; prayer
m. . ting. 7.30 p m Thursday
MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL . Third
Ave .. the Re" W•lllom Kmttel, pastor.
Tl-lomos Kell y, Sunday School Supt Sunday scl-lool. 10 o m Classes for oil ages.
81ble study.
evening serv•ce . 1 30
Wednesday 7 30 p m , youlh services,
Fr1day, 7 30 p m
MIDDLEPOR T FRE~W IL L BAPTIST. Corner
Ash and Plum, Noel Herrman, pastor
Soturdo-, evenmg serv1ce 7 30 p.m .. Sun·
dayS&lt;bool . 10 30a m
MEIGS
COO~ER• T!Cr PARISH
MEH· ODIST l. c ~CH
P +,ard W r, mas D~rec:tor
POr~ ·~.t::ttOY CLUSTER
Rev. Robert McG&amp;e
Rev . Jamn Corb1ft
POM~ ROY . Sunday Sckoal 9 IS a .m.
Wonh1,' service 10:30 a .m . Cho1r rehear·
tal , W, inesdoy, 7 p .m . Re'o'. Robert
McGee, pastor
ENTE~PRISE , Worship 9 a m Church
School 10 o.m
ROCK SPRINGS . Church School 10 am
Worship lOam. UMYF6 30p.m .
FLATWOODS. Church School 10 a .m.
Worth ip 11 a .m.

MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER
HEATH . Church Scho&amp;l 9 30 am War·
ship 10 lO a m UMYF 6 p m Robert
Robinson . Pastor
RUTLAND . Churc h School 9 30 om .
Worshi p 10 30 am Wilbur H•ll , Pastor
SALEM CENTER, Worship 9 a m Ch urch
School9 45 o.m
SYRACUSE CLUSTER
Rev Harvey Koch , Jr
FOREST RUN · Worshp 9 o m Church
SchooiiO am
MINERSVILLE . Ckurch School 9 o.m .
Worthip 10 a.m
ASBURY . Church School 9 50 a m Wor·
shi p J1 a.m. B1ble Study 7 . ~ p.m Thurs·
day UMW fist Tuesday.
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
Rev Oov1d Ham s
Re\1 Mark Flynn
Florence Sm1th
Hilton Wolfe
BETHANY, (Dorcas) , Worsh1p 9 00 am
Church SchoollO·OOo .m.
CARMEL, Chruch School 9 30 a m Worship 10 30 o.m 2nd and .4th Sundays
APPLE GROVE, Sunday School9·30 o m
Worship 7 30 p m 1st and 3rd Sundays
Prayer meeting Wednesday 7 30 p .m.
Fellowship supper f1rst Saturday 6 p .m .
UMW2ndTuOiday'7 30p.m.
EAST LETART . Ckruck School 9 o.m.
Worship service 10 am. Prayer meeting
7 30 p .m . Wednesday. UMW second Tuesday 7 O:lll p. m
RACINE WESLEYAN - Sunday schooiiO
a.m .. worsn lp, 11 a m. Cho~r practice.
Thur•day 8 p.m.
lETART FALL&gt;- Worship serv1ce 9 o m .
Church School10o .m.
MORNING STARorshop 9 30 a m ..
Church School 10 30 a m. , Youth ,
Tuesdays , 7 p.m
MORSE CHAPEL . Ckurck Sckool 9 30
a m Worsh ip 11 a m
PORTLAND. Church School 9 30 a .m.
Worahip 11 a m.
SUTTON . Church School 9 30 o.m. War·
ship 1st and3rd Sundays 10:30 a.m
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Rev Richard W Thomas
Duane Sydanstrtcker. Sr
John W. Douglas
Charles Oom1gon
JOPPA, Worship 9 00 a.m. Ctlurch
School 10 00 o m
CHESTER.. Worship 9 am.. Church
School 10 a.m Choir Rehearsal 7 p .m.
Wednesday Btble Study , Wednesdays ,
730pm
LONG BOnOM , Sunday School at 9 30
a.m. Evemng Wonh1p at 7 30 p m. Thurs·
doy Bible Study. 7 30 p.m.
REEDSVILLE· Sunday School 9 30 o .m.
Mor01ng Worship 10 30 a.m. E\lening Worshp 7:30pm. Bible Study Wednesdays at
7:30p.m.
ALFRED, SunCtoy School at 9 45 a m
Morn•ng Worship at II o m Wednesday
Night Prayer Meeting 7 30 p.m.
ST. PAUL, {Tuppers Plains}. Sunday
School 9 00 a m . Morning Worsh1p at
10.00 o .m. Monday Noghl Bible Study 7 30
p.m .
SOUTH BETHEL (Silver Rodge) Sunday
School 9·00 a m Morn1ng Wosh1p JO·OO
o m Wednesday Bible Study, 7 30 p m
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST. sef\llces
each Sundo-, 9 30 a.m. George Pickens ,
pastor with preaching on first and third
Sunday of month Oliver Swa1n, Supt
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION. Rev Keilh
Eblin, pastor. Sunday School, 9:30a.m. ,
Leonard Gilmore. f1rst elder. evenmg serVICe
7·30 p m
Wednesday prayer
meeting. 7·30 p.m.
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
CHRIST, Duane Worden , mmister. Bible
class. 9 30 .a. m., morning worship, 10·30
a.m .; evening worship, 6 30 p .m.
Wednesday Bible study, 6 .30 p m
NEW STIVERSVILLE
COMMUNITY
Church. Sunday School service, 9·45 a m
Wors~·up sttr\lice 10 30: EvangelistiC S.r·
vice , 7.30 p m Wednesday , Prayer
meeting, 7 30
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST . Pomeroy·
Harrisonville Rd ., Robert Purlell , pastor,
Bil l McElroy, Sunday school supt. Sunday
school. 90:)0 o.m , mornmg worship and
commun ion, 10·30 o.m ; Sunday worshtp
service 7 p m Wednesday evening
prayer meet1ng and Bible study. 7 p .m .
ST. JOH~ LUTHERAN CHURCH. Pine
Grove. The Re\1, William Middlesworth,
Pastor. Church serv1ces 9:30a.m Sunday
SchooiiO 30o.m
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST. Edward
Fryman . pastor Sunday school, 9 30 a m ,
worship seN ice 10 30 a m , Sunday ser·
vices . 7.30 p m . youth group. Wednas ·
day , 7 p.m.
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST. Rev . Earl Shuler.
pastor. Sunday school 9 30 a m .. Church
service, 7 p.m., youth meeting, 6
p.m. Tuesday Bible Study , 7 p m
RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE.
Rev John A Coffman, pastor Fronkhn
Imboden. chairman of the Boord of ChriS·
lion l1fe Sund91. School , 9 30 a.m .. morn·
ing worsh1p , 10 3o. Sunday evemng wor·
ship, 7 30 p m Prayer meet1ng, Wednes·
day. 7 :30pm
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST . Don L Walker .
Pastor, Ronnie Salser, Sunday school
supt , Sunday school , 9·30 a m . mornmg
worship 10 40 a m . Sunday 8\lenmg worship, 7 .30. Wednesday evening Bible
study . 7.30
R. D.
DANVILLE WESLEYAN. Rev
Brown, poster Sunday SchooL 9·30 a .m.;
morning worship I 0 45; youth service,
6 45 p m , evenmg worsh1p , 7 30 p .m ,
prayer and praise, Wednesday. 7·30 p .m.
Sll VER RUN FREE BAPTIST Rev Morvtn
Markin, pastor, Stevel1ttle Sunday school
supt. Sunday school , 10 a m, morning
worship 11 a m Sunday eveninQ wor·
ship, 7:30 Prayer meeting and B1ble
study, Thursday , 7.30 p m .. youth eerv1ce,
6 p.m Sunday.
CHESTER CHURCH OF GOD, Rev Danny
R Cook , pastor Sunday school 9 30 a m ,
worship service 11 o m. , evamng servtce.
7.00. youth service. Wednesday . 7 00
p .m .
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH .
Robert Musser, pastor. Sunday school ,
9:30 a m : Roy Sigmon , supt , morning
worship , 10·30. Sunday evening service,
7 ·30; mid- week serv1ce, Wednesday , 7

p m.
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE .
Rev. Dale 6o11 , pastor, Sunday school.
9 30 a .m., morning worship , 10.45 o .m ,
evangelistic seNice, 7 p.m. Wednesday
services - prayer and praise, 7 p .m ;
youttt meetlnQ , 7 p.m. Men's prayer
meeting, Saturday 7 p m
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN CHRIST.
Elden R. Blake, pastor. Sunday School 10
a.m .. Robert Reed , supt .. Morning ser·
man , 11 a .m., Sunday night serv1ces
Christian Endeavor, 7 30 p.m , Song ser·
vice , 8 p.m., Preoch1ng 8.30 p .m.
Midweek Prayer meeting, Wednesday , 7
p.m • Roy A4ams , lay leader.
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST Located at
Rutland on New L1mo Road . next to Forest
Acre Pork, Re\1 , Roy Rouse postor. Robert
Musser , Sunday School supt Sunday
school, 10 30 am , worship 7 30 p m 8 1·
ble Study. Wednesday . 730 p.m , Satur·
day night prayer service , 7 30 p.m.
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN . Roger
Watson , pastor. Kenneth Byer , Sunday
school supt Morning worsh ip, 9 30 a .m ,
Sundayscnool. 10·30 am . e\lenmg service 7 30 Wednesday Bible Study. 7 30
p m.
MT
UNION BAPTIST. Cocol Cox .
m inister, Joe Sayre, Sunda'r School
Super inten•nt. Sunday school, 9·45 a m ,
evening Worship . 7:30 p m. Prayer
m"tlnQ. 7 30 p m Wednesday
TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF CHRIST.
Randy Koehler~ pastor, Dennis Newland,
Sunday school superintendent. Sunday
School , 9.30 o m., morning church service , 10 30 a.m.. Sunday evening B1ble
study, 7 p.m ..
LETART FALLS UNITED BRETHREN . Rev.
Freeland Norris, pastor: Floyd Norris,

These Messages Of Our Religious Heritage
Are Sponsored Each Week By The Following:
MEIGS TIRE
CENTER, INC.

Church &amp; Of lice IOuppi1E!s

JoM F Fultz. Mgr

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Ph 992·2101

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LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-NO TIME TO REL.Al[

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WE RETURN TO TljE SHIP • ·

FRENCH'S
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RACINE
FOOD MARKET

1 HO' DHlNITEly I
HE WENT THAT WI'\Y ••· YOU •

l09T HIM ? H0

HE 'S 50 TliiN AND WEAK ..
AND THOSE HANDCUFFS ·•
BUT I MUST 6FT HIM
O UT 0 " HERE ··· I

SAW NHAT HAPPENED TO 1HE
THREE WHO FOLLOWED HIM ··

MUST

FAST'

tnW Mila

P. J. PAULEY,
AGENT
Hltionwicle hts. Co
of Columlbus, 0
104W. Mlln
mn11Pomtr0y
El-l? OH. , "''ES ...

"es

CF CCURSE'

"14ANICS, V$CAR !
WHA"T T IME:

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IS

Fulton·Thomp51111
Tractor S*s, Inc.
New

Hal .. nd

ft25101
Tutt~da.\

3 1· 10

ahe ad . s1ra1g h1 up the mounlain Wtlh lhe whole afternoon
ahead nfrne

I be ganlhc c h m b h was a hot day.

W£•dnt'Sd{l\

and lhe dry.

The n so m e1 hmg wonderful h appened

This Sun!lay

1:;;:;::;:;\-yilj:iWji:Fjl~

MIKE SWIGER
STATE FARM
INSURANCE

Dan Thompson Fard, Inc.
4 ~ 1 S. Third,

Fndm

Mkldleport

9t1-JIM

LuAt
4 !/ 44
and tw o

Sururclu.\
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8 25 36

Ltfc . 100 . snli tc1 1111es feels hkc a difficull c hmb on a h ot .
dry da y hs demands and burden s c an dram u s o f ene r gy a nd
the wil l to co nunuc God knnws this . so He gave u s HIS
C hurc h . a f ello w sh ip u f believer s to strengthe n and encour·

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age u s along ltfe "s ro ad
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peek at Sl1m"s
cards!

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25 I J 30

wa y l o I he lonk o ul and we re resung I JOined the group and
con llnued 1hc ht ~e. c hallm g the whole way aboui f ami lie s.

I.IL--L--------; places we had bee n. our ho m e town s
Attend The Church
B e f or e we knew 11 lhc fa u g ue was f orgouen
or Your Choice h o urs h &lt;lll nuwn by W e had arri ved a\ the lower

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VIRGIL B.
TEARJIID SR.

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1979 Kt!ISior AdvcriiSUlQ SeMCe Strasburg Vng1n•a

AWA'r

'

ft'ISIOOII photot:lr•vher

KEN GROVER
PHOTOGRAPHY
Chester. 0

PillA SHACft
Eat In or
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MARK Y STORE
Middleport

..

HOOK I

of Your Oloice

1UE ~In
992-6104

Thi@Sunday

pomeroy

by THOMAS .JOSEPH

ACROSS

DOWN

I Sotanical
S The Fourth

10 EllfOIJ&lt;an
VICTORY BAPTIST - On Ike Route 7
bypass Jam.. E KMs .. , pastor. Sunday
school, 10 a .m.. morning worsh ip, 11
a.m .. evening service. 7.
TRINITY Christian Asaembly , Coolville
Gilbert Spencer, pastor
Sunday
school, 9 30 a.m .. morning worship, 11
a m. Sunday e\'ening service, 7 30 p.m ,
midweek prayer service Wednesday , 7 .30
p.m .
MOUNT O live Community Churck .
lawrence lush. pas lor , Bettie Pigott , Sunday schoolsupt Sunday School and mOfnlng worsh ip, 9 30 g,m Sunday r.~en l ng
service, 7 p.m.. Youth mHtlng and Sible
study. Wednetdoy. 7 p.m.
FAITH BAPTIST Church, Mason, m. .t ot
United SIMI Workers Union Hall , Railroad
StrHt, Moson. PaatOf' , Rev . Joy Mitchell.
Morning worship 9 45 a. m., Sunday
School 10·30 a m Prayer meeting
Wedneodoy . 7 30 p. m
FOREST RUN BAPTIST Rev . Nyle
Borden , pa1tor . Cornelius Bunch.
superintendent. Sunday school , 9.30 a.m.:
second and fourth Sundoy1 worship ser\llce ot 2:30 p m.
MT MORIAH BAPTIST - Fourth and
Main St , Middleport R8\l. Calv in Minnis,
potter. Mn Elvin Bumgardner, supt. Sunday school , 9 30 a .m.· worship service,
10.•5o.m.
NORTH BETHB. United Methodllt
Churct,, Rev Charles Domigan , poator.
Sunday School. 9:30 o.m .. Worohlp S.r·
vice. 10·45 a.m.; Sunday Blblo Study. 7.00
p m ; WednMday prayer meeting, 7:30
p.m
HOUSE OF PRAYER AND PRAISE. Llberly
Ave. , polt Burg~~r Chf, Pomeroy Eug..,e
Anspoh, pastor . Sunday 1chool 10 am ;
morning worship , 11 a.m. Evening worshp. Sunday. Tuesday ond Friday. 7:30

P m.

~

BURLINGHAM SOUTHERN BAPTIST
CHURCH, Route 1. Shode. Pastor Don
Black. Affiliated with Southern Baptlsl
Convention Sunday school, 1:30 p .m.;
Sunday worship, 2;30 p.m Thurtday
ovenlng llblo study. 7 p.m.
PENTECOSTAL . ASSEMBLY . Racine.
Route 124, William Hoback. paotar. Sunday .chool, 10 a.m .; Sunday evenlnQ ser·
vice , 6:30 p m. Wednesday Hnlng ser·
vice , 7.
CARPENTER BAPTIST. Rev. FrHiand
Norris. pottor. Don Cheadle. Supt. Sun·
doy School. 9:30 a.m. Morning Worahlp.
10:30 a.m. Prayer Service, alternate Sunday&amp;.
OUR LORD'S FELLOWSHIP - Paator Dar·
rei (Chuck) McPheroan. MHtlng at Ike old
Baptltl Ckurck at Pagevllle. Sunday morn·
lng, 10 am Evening servftes, iundoy,
Wedneodoy and Saturday. 1 p •.

FRIDAY , JULY70 1n9

I Wwt astray
%Utter

4 Marvin

or Ruuck

ca pital

II Sennmlu
1% Ready for
U - Leone, Air

5 Bluenoso
I Caddoan
Indian
7 Mi5bohaves

14 Flve.franc

8 Graffito 's kin

plucklng

piece
15 Dip down
II Fresh

17 MUit.Bry
squad
It Salt Fr.
za Puule
cheese
%1 '"I - at
the off1ce"
22 Indian stale

8 00- 0H I rent
Str okes
3, 15
Operation Pettu:oal 6 , 13, In
credible Hulk 8, 10. Wa!lhlngton
Wee k In Review 20,33 . Movie
"The Hu man Monster " J7
B 30-Rock ford Flies 3 15 Wel come
Ba ck Koller 6. 13 , Wall Str eet
Wee k 20.33
9 CIO-Movle " The Reincarnation of
,.....-- - - -..
Pet er Prou d " 6, 13. Dukes of
Hauard 8, 10 . Buckeye Holi da y
20, M oney News &amp;. V1ews 33
9 »-Am~ric a After V1et nam 20.
!
Res tles s Earth 33
110 QO-N BC News 3,15, Dallas 8 10,
~
Ten Who Dared 17 News 20
10 3D-Consumer Survival K1 t 10
11 00 - News 3,6.8, 10 , 13 , 15 , Con
3umer Sur \l•va l Kit 20
1 QO-News J ,B, 10. 13, 15 .
1 JO.-Johnny Carson 3,15, Soap
6, 13 . Bonkers 8, Movie ' ' The
Crimson Cu lt" 10, Movie '' The
Raven · 17
12 oo-Juke Bo )( 8. Monty Pythons
Flying Circus JJ .
12 Jo-Movle " Where the Bullets
Fly " 81 12 40- Movie " The
Rel uctant Heroes" 6, Ironside
~ THAT SCRAMBLED WORO GAME
13
~ ~ ~~ 15
byHenriAmoldandBob lee
00-Midnight Special 3, 15 , Movi e
" Frankenstein' s Bloody 1 error "
Unscramble these four Jumbles,
10; 1 I S-Baseball 17
one letter to each S(luare. to lorm
tour ord•nary words
"~stl;f; \ 1D-News 13 ; 2 JD-News 3, 3 os~
News 17 , 4 05-Movie " L ucky
TexM " 17 5 05-Dragnet 17
? /_

~Reproach

Estate
Jr , Sunday school supt. Sunday school,
9 30om .. morning worship , 11 o.m Sun·
day .-venlng service. 7 30. prayer
meetln; , Thursday , 7 30p.m.
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOD Not Pentecostal, Rev . George Ollar,
pastor. Worshi p 1ervlce Sunday. 9 45
a m., Sunday school, 11 a.m ., worsh ip
ser\llce. 7 30 p m Thursday prayer
mHtlng , 7·30 p. m.
MT HERMON United Brethren Church
Sunday School 9.30 a.m. Worship service
10:.45 a.m . Preaching servlcH every Sun·
day alternating with C. E. Wednesday
prayer meeting 7:30 p .m. Re\1, James
Leach . pastor. David Holter, loy leader.
JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES. I mile east of
Rutland , 1unctlon of Route 12• and Noble
Summit Road (T· 174). Sunday Bible Lee·
ture, 9 30 a .. Watchtower atudy, 10 30
a.m .. Tuesday , Bible 1tudy, 7 and 8 15
p.m.: Thursday , theocratic school. 7 30
p.m.; service meeting , B:30 p.m.
RUTLAND FREEWILL BAPTIST Church Leland Haley, pastor. Sunday 1chool , 10
a m ; evening service, 7·30 p .m . Prayer
meeting, Wednesday , 7:30p.m
CHURCH OF GOD of Propheq . located
on the 0 J. White Rood off hlg11way 160.
Sundoy School 10 a .m. Superintendent
John Loveday. Flrot Wednesday nlgl1t af
month CPMA servlcft, sec:oncf WednHday WMB mMtlng, third throuth mth
youth service. George Croyle, pastor.
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL - 570 Gran I St .•
Middleport: Rev . Don Bloke, pastor. Sun·
day school. 9.30 a.m. : morning warship,
10:30 a.m., evening worship, 7 p .m ..
Wednesday evening Bible atudy and
prayer meeting, 7 p.m. Affiliated with
Southern Baptist Convention.
BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRISTEugene Underwood, pastor; Harry Hen·
drlcks, superintendent. Sunday school,
"'.30 a.m ; morning worship, 10·30 om.:
evening worship, 1 p.m ." Wednesday Bible
study, 7 p.m.
JUBILEE CHRISTIAN CENTER - George'•
CrHk Road. Rev. C. J. Lemley. palter;
John Fellure, superintendent. Church
school, 9·30 a .m. : morning' worship,
10·30, e\lenlng service, 7 p.m. Youth
meeting Sunday. 6 p.m. Bible study ln
deplh. Wedneoday . 7 p.m. Cia ..•• for all
ages. Nursery provided for worship ser·
vice
ST. PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH, Corner
of Sycamore artd Second Sts., Pomeroy.
The Rev. William Middlesworth, Pastor.
Sunday School ol 9:45 a.m. and Churck
Services 11 a m.
SACRED HEART. Rev. Father Paul D
Welton. pastor. Phone 992·2825. Saturday
evening Mass, 7 .30; Sunday Mass. 8 and
10 om.: Confe~tlon , Saturday, 7-730
p.m.

Friday and Saturday TV Log

~~l(Jfa/

Of Your Choice This Sunday
RUTLAND COMMUNITY CHURCH. Amos
T1lils , pa stor Danny T1ll1s , Sunday School
Sup! l)undoy School , 9·30 a.m.; followed
by mornmg worsh1p Sunday evening ser·
\lic e 7 30 p m Prayer meet1ng Wedn••·
day 7 30 p .m . WMPO Radio broadcast,
Sunday mornmg, 7 45.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE.
Rev Lloyd D. Gnmm Jr., pastor Sunday
sckoo l, 9 30 a .m. , worship service, 10 30
a .m. Broadcast 11\le over WMPO. young
people s service, 7 p m. Evangeliatic service , 7 30 p m Wednesday service, 7 30
pm
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST, Corner
of Second and Anderson . Mason Pastor
Fronk Lowther , Sunday school. 9:45 a.m ..
worsh1 p service, 11 o.m. and 7 30 p.m.
Weekly Bible Study Wednesday . 7 30
p.m.
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST. Miller St .•
Mason , W Vo Aurlce Mlck, pastor. Sun·
doy Bible Study 10 a m ., Worship II a .m.
and 7 p m Bible Study Wednesday 7 p m ,
Vocal mu s1c.
MASON ASSEMBLY OF GOD . Dudding
Lone, Mason, W Vo . Chester Tennant,
Pa slo r
Sunday School q 45 a .m.,
Ch ildren' s Church 6. ~5 p.m. Young People's Service 6 45 p m Evangelistic Service 7 30 p m Women'• Mlulonary Coun·
CillO o m first and third Tuesdays Prayer
and B1ble Study. Wednesday , 7:30pm.
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION. The Rev William
Campbell. pastor. Sunday Schaal , 9 30
a.m . James Hughes , supt ., evening ser·
v1ce, 7·30 p .m Wednesday evening
prayer meeting 7 30 p.m . .,.Youth prayer
ser\llce each Tuesday
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH Letart. W
Vo , Rt . I , Rev Charles Hargraves,
pastor Worship services , 9 30 am. : Sun·
day schoo l, 11 a.m. , evening worship,
7 30 p m. Tuesday cottage prayer meeting
and B1ble study 9.30 o.m Worsh ip ser·
v1ce, Wednesday , 7·30 p.m .
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH, now located
on Pomeroy Pike County Rood 25, near
Flatwoods. Rev . Blackwood. pastor SerVICes on Sunday at 10.30 a m and 7 30
p m. witn Sunday school , 9.30 a.m. Bible
study, Wednesday, 7 · ~p . m.
INDEPENDENT HOLINESS CHURCH , INC.
Pearl St., Middleport. Re\1. O'Dell
Manley, pastor; So'lny Hudson, Sunday
school supt. Sundell school , 9.30 a. m.;
evttning worship . 7 30 p .m . Prayer and
praise service , Wednesday . 7:30pm.
RUTLAND APOSTOLIC CHURCH OF
JESUS CHRIST. Elder James Miller. Bible
sludy, Wednesday, 7.30 p.m.; Sunday
Schoo l, 10 am. Sunday night service, 7.30
pm
POMEROY WESLEYAN HOLINESS Harri sonville Road Dewey King, pastor:
Ed1san Weaver , osustant, Henry Eblin,

IT WI LL TAKE NOTI11NGBHORTOF ONE 10
GET YOU OFF TI1E

Attend The Olurch

Attend The Church

supt Sunday school 9 30 a m mormng
sermon, 10 30 a.m , Prayer service,
Wednesday , 7.30 p.m
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE .
Re\1 . Herbert G rote, pastor. Worsh ip se rvice , lJ am and 7·30 p m Sunday
School. 9 30 a m Charles B1uell , sup!
Prayer meeting, Wednesday , 7 30 p m
LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST
CHURCH. Rev . Floyd F. Shook. pastor.
Lloyd Wright , Sunday School Supt., Morn·
ing Worship 9:30 a .m.: Sunday School
10:20 a.m .. Wednesday Prayer and B•ble
Study 7 30 p.m .. Sunday even•ng worshtp
7 30 p m Choir Pract1ce Thursday 7 p m
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST. Charles
Russell. Sr , minister R1ck Macomber,
supt. Sunday school. 9.30 o.m , worsh1p
servi ce, 10.30 o .m. Bible Sludy ,
Tuesday·30 p .m .
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS
CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SAINTS . Portland
Racine Road W1lllam Routh , pastor .
Phyllis Stobort, Sunday School Supt Sunday School. 9·30 a m , Mornmg worsh1p ,
10.30 a.m. Sunday evenmg servi ce 7 p m
Wednesday evening prayer services. 7 30
p.m
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST. Rev. Earl Shuler.
pastor Worsl-llp service, 9.30 a.m. Sunday
school, 10.30 a .m. Bible Study and prayer
serv•ce Thursday. 7 ·30 p m
.,
CARLETON CHURCH. Kongsbiiry Road
Gary King. pastor Sunday scl'lool, 9 30
a.m .. Rolph Carl. superintendent evenmg
worship , 7.30 p.m
Prayer meetmg,
Wednesday , 7 30 p.m.
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN . George F
Pickens , pastor, Wallace Damewood ,
Supt. Bible School , 9:.45 a.m Preach1ng
service. IO·•s am , first and third Sun
days, 7 p m. second and fourth Sunday s
Bible study, 8 p m. Tuesdays.
HYSELL RUN FREE METHODIST CHURCH
Rev
Herbert
Ailing ,
pastor Raymond Keesee , Sunday School
Superlntepdent . Morni ng service, 10 30
a.m., Sunday evening and Thursday evening services at 7 30 p m
FREEDOM GOSPEL MIS~ ION ot Bold
Knob Rev Law rence Gluasencamp , Sr
pastor RogerWdlford. Sr., Sunday school
supt . Sunday school9.30 o ., evening war·
ship, 7.30 p .m . Prayer meeting, Wednes·
day 7:30 p .m . Youth meeting, Sunday,
5:30 p .m with Don and Martha Meadows
In chargt~
WHITE'S CHAPEL Coolville RD Rev Roy
Deeter. pastor Sunday school 9 30 o m
worship service. 10.30 a.m Bible study
and prayer service, Wednesday , 7 30 p.m.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST. Brod
Henderson , pastor: Herb Elliot!, Sunday
school supt. Sunday school. 9 30 am.,
morning worship and comunion , 10&lt;JO
am

WELL1. I HOPF &gt;OU
E'&gt;EciEVE IN
MIRACL.CS BECAUSE

TN I'\JG WILL ~\lQRK 1"""5'EL=
OUT 3!'"&lt;:lRE 5H!: EVE '&lt;
GETS WIND 0" IT

RLI1 LIIWI 7U 2717

Church
Church FlmiiY AIDUJTIS
compltle church pl1o
totr•Jtft by ';'IHir lou I pre

~AI&lt;.
PCA..'"'PS I E. , N\AY~::- ~ 1 _::.

Goo:;; """HI"IJG &lt;1/JMS 50

Equipmtflt
SIII&amp;-S.nlct
Fire htinfl,llshers
Flrt 0.11'1 Equip

l'ett&lt;rday"&amp; Allower

zt Road elevation

!I Sutter's
MJU hnd

t Wrapped
11 Sacred sang
15 ""White
Elephant'"

%! H"""'hold

purcha,.
City
II Antelope
%l Brewmg 12 U .S.S.R nver
device
U Margosa tree
%1 Weather II Negative
t% Ca lifornia

land

18 Jewish

word

month

word

24 AtUred
IS Cowardly
Uon
portrayer

_

...,

'1l \1\)Nf ID'il

%f FesUve
t"1 Oturch

.....1

1

!8Enigma
31 Matriarch
n Fonnal
:U Nothing
34 Synunetrized
31 Zot.B book

Anrtehrl-1H

t:;~::l

case

KJ

31 Foreshadow

3t Sweet smell
tO Guard

IN

DAILY CRYI&gt;'fOQUOTE - Here's how to

work

it :

AX'VDLIIAAXR
LONGFELLOW
One letter simply :;ttnds for another In this sample A. ts
Is

used for the three L' 3, X for the two O's, et~ Sl n&amp;le lf lters,
apostrDphea, the len&amp;th and f ormati on of the worda are all
hints. Each ds)' the ~ode letters are dltrtrent

KMAIDIWAY
XASVNWSQYI

WR

ICQ

PAM

DMICAB. - 08.

iHE L.ONG&gt; Fii:UN
WE MIGHT

REMEM~ER'A

3 00--Greatest Sport s Legends 6
Las t ot the W i ld e. Tr l State 13,
Upstairs. Downstai rs 33
3 JO- F BI
6,
Gunsmoke
8,
Emergency One 13
4 oo-Nastw dle on the Road 10
When the Boat Comes In 33
4 3o- Brlilsh Open 6 13 , Sports
Spectacular 8; Pop Goes the
Cou ntr y 10, Rat Pa t rol 17
s oo-Voyage to t he Bottom of the
Sea l , Dolly 10. Abbott &amp;
Costell o 15, American Angler
~b 1 ~ . Once Upon A Classic 20.
Catch 33
5 Jo-Porter Wagoner 10, Little
Rascals 15 , This Week in
Ba se ball 17 ; L e t ' s Grow a
Garden 33
SATUROAY. JULYll , 1t78
6 00 - News 3,10 Go d Has the
Answer , 15 . Wr estling 17,
5 35-World al Lar e 17 , 6 ooSummer Semeste~ 10
Crocketts V Ictory Garden 20
6 lQ-Human Dimension 17 . 6 30-- 6 3Q-NBC News 3, 15, News~ · CBS
Saturday Repor t 3,
Farm
Ne;ws 8,10, Newsmaker 79 13,
Ano ther Voice 33 .
Report 10, Kentu cky At 1etd 13
.40- News 11 . 1 oo - Anl mal s. 7 oo-Abbott&amp;Costelio3 . Lawrence
Welk 13,15 , Hee Haw 6,8, Bugs
An im al s. AnimAls 13 . Mat te rs of
Life 6 , Porky Pig &amp; Friends a,
Bunny 10. Forsyte Saga 20
Public Polley Forums 10 Three
Sneak Previews 33
Stooges Littl e ·Rasc., ls 17
1 J{)-An Insi de Look 3, Please
3Q-.TQny the Pony 3, o.usty's
;;and By 10 , Makem &amp; Clancy

Treehou se 6; Bigfoot &amp; Wddboy 8 oo - Chip s
3, 15 ,
Battlesta r
13
Galactlca 6, 13, Movie " Animal
8 oo--A ivln &amp; the Chipmunks 3,1 5.
Crackers'' 8, 10 . Meeting of
Fangface 6. 13, Ultra Man 17
MindS 20. Hee Haw Honeys 17,
Now arrange the c•rcled letters to
Once Upon A Classic 33
form the surprise answer as sug · 8 30-Fantastlc Four 3, 15. Par
fridge Family 17
gasled by the abOve cartoon
8 JO-Pro Soccer 17 , 9 oo-Swordof
9 OD-Godzllla 3,15. Bugs Bunny
Justice J.\5; Love Boat 6,13,
·
Road Runner 8 10. Sta r Tre.~ 11
Summerfest '79 33 , Upstairs ,
7 :.,
Print answer here: (
10 oo-Superfrlends q. Mov oe The
Downsl •lrs 20
Green Pastur es" 17
10 00 - Superlrain 3 •15 " Fantasy
(Answerstomorrov. 10 30-D 11
D k 3 15
T
a 't'
uc
,; •
arzan
Island 6,13; CB S Reports 8,10
Jumblel SURLY GUESS PAROLE REALTY
,
Super 7 8. Movie Escape from
Einstein's Uni verse 20
Veslerctay s Answer They 're criminals - eating candy during a
the Planel of the Apes " 10
0 3D-Nashville On the Road 17:
11 00-F red&amp;Barnev 3• 15 113o11 00 - N ews 3, 6 , 8. 101 3. 15 .
WUCIW&amp;stmowleii - 'RUSTLERS"
Jetson s 3. 15 Glggtesnort Hotel
Porter Wagone r 17
6, Ac t ion News for Kids 13
11 J011 15 - ABC News 6,
12 GO-Buford J.1S. P~~k Panthe~
Sa turday Night L i ve ] ,15 , Movie
13 . Aw are 6, Movie Champion
" One Deadly Owner " 6; Movie
17
" Bundle of Joy" 8; Movie " In
12 30 Fa bu lou s
Funnies
J
el den! on a Dark St reet " 10;
Ameri can Brmdstand 13 . Tony

FAMOUS e.ATTLE.

\TAMENGj
I I K

.,......,.......,..-..v-..,.......,,.......

CR'VPTOQUOTES

DY

B.

us

31 Grammar

IA

Brown' s Journa l 6 . Fat Albert
L i tt le
Rascals
15.
Cr ockett ' s V1ct ory Ga rden 33
00--M y Fatt1er, My Br other and
Me 3, Po1nt ot V 1ew 6. Ark. II
a 10 Wrestling IS . Body Shop 33
1 Jo- Th1s Wee k In Baseball J ,
M1n1alure Golf 6 , Bob Jones 8,
F il m Festival 10, Marlo &amp; the
Mag 1c M o111e Machine 13 ,
French Chef 33
2 00 - Baseb all
Warm Up
J••
V1ewpomt 8 . Mov ie " How to
Stuff a Wild B•k lni" 10, K1ds are
People Too 13 . Baseball 17 .
Forsyle Saga 33 .
2 1s- Baseball 3,15
2 Jo- NF L Greal Team s 6. Racers

a 10 .

C WTCQRI
XDY

VDP

RDSMQN

GACYRAY
Ynlerday's Cryptoquole: DEPRIVE THE AVERAGE MAN OF
HIS UFE'S ILLUSIONS, AND YOU ROB HIM OF HIS HAP·
PINESS. - IBSEN

XI I I I XXv-

I

Mov1e " The Scream~ng Sku ll "
13, Don Kirshner 's Roc k Concerl
17 Oa v1d Susskind 33
OO--M ov1e " The Ambushers " 3,
Movie " It Conquered the World "
13 Juke· Box 17
Jo--Movie "The Young Rebel " 17.
2 3Q-News 3, ABC News 13,
3 00-Mov•e " Only Two Can
Play"" 3
3 50- 12 O'Clock Hlgk 17 . 4 50Dragnet 17 5 oo-Movle " Santa
Fe Trail • 3

...·'
SUNDAY, JUlY 22. 1979

5 2G-World at Large 17, S lG-AG.
USA
17 ,
6 00- Amerlcan
Problems &amp; Challenges 10 :
Between the Lines 17 .
6 30- Chnstopher C loseup
3,
Treehouse Club 10, Th is I! The
Li fe 13
7 00--Thls Is the Life 3; Thinking In
Black 8. Urban League 10 :
Newsmaker ' 79 13 , Jimmy
Swaggart 11
7 Jo-TV ChaPEl: I J, Eddie Saunders
6, Jerry Falwell 8, 10, The Bible
Answers 13, Chr ist for the Wor ld
17.
8 00- Mormon Choir 3, Grace
Cathedral 6 , Three Stooges &amp;
Friends 17 ; Sesame St 20,33
8 JO-Ora l Roberts 3, Ce lebration of
Praise 6, James Rob ison
Presents 10, Lower L lghfhou3e
13 , Open
Bible IS
9 00-Gospel Sin ging Jubilee 3; Oral
Rober ts 10, , Rex Humbard 6;
Rev Leonard Repass B. Rev
Jim Franklin 13. Maverick 17;
Mister Rogers 20 33.
9 3Q-Eiec Co l3, II Is Written 10;
Blue Ridge Quar tet 13, Sesame
St 20
10 oo--Human Dimension 3, K1ds
a r e Peop le Too 6 ; Robert
Schuller 8. Studio See 33; Movie
" The Great Race" 10; Jimmy
Swaggart 13, Gospel Singing
Jubilee 15, Hatel 17.
10 30- Rex Humbard 3, Gospel
Outreach 13, Movie " North to
Alaska " 17, Zoom 20; Big Blue
Marble 33
11 00- Ernest Angley 8; Rex
Humbard 15, Rev Henry Mahan
13,
Que
Pasa
USA
20 :
Photography Here' s How 33
11 3o-Greatest Sports Legends 3,
Anlme ls Anima ls Animals 6,
Rev R A. West 13; E lee . Co . 20,
Once Upon A Classic 33
12 00-At Issue 3, Issues &amp; Answers
6,13: Face the Nation 8; This Is
The Life 15; Nova 20
12 30- Meet the Press 3, 15 ,
VIewpoint 8,
E vangellstlc
Outreach 13, Like It Is 33

'·

-'

••

.'
• r~

.,

'
'
"
..~

.

...
~·

.;,

�•

10- 'l'h&lt;' Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, July 20, 1979
O&lt;'m~ndm g

poJr t i t.on o t lhe
folto w ,,ut dC'sc r ib c-d r eal
C"ifil!C , lo w tf
PM Cf'l
No
1 he
t o1 1ow1n Q
r c.J I
cst;'ll e
"&gt;ttu &lt;~h '
111
One Hundred
/l.c r •' L o ~ No TI1YC'C' H un
d r f'd
,1111i 1 lV I' tn sa.n
Cou 11 ty of Mc-1gs descr•bcd
,,., tollow s
ecginni n y at
lilt' NorThw es t co rner o t Lot
No
Q n()
Hundrf'cl and
E 1Qh! ce n ( 11 8) H, Horton &amp;
O~brH'Y s
l\ddtt 1on
lo
Pomeroy on th e Sou l I1 lr· n e
o t sa'd On e Hundred Ac r e
Lot No 305 . thence N ort h
4 1 . dc g West N 1nc ty Eigh t
l l"c t to Run St reet, th en ce
a lon(l sr1 1d Run Str f:'e t down
th e r un to a point Nor Th 4 , 7
d c&gt;q Wes t l ro 111 the Nor
lhC'il~l r orncr o t Siltd Lo t
No 118, thence Sou th 4 12
d eq East to !&gt;iltct Nor th eas t
cornc&gt;r ot No , 18 i'll t he
Sou th ltn C' o t said 100 Ac r e
Lo t 305. tt1en cc along sa id
so u th ! tne to th e pla c e o f
be Qtnntnq , oci ng t he West
en d of L.o t No On e Hundr ed
and su. tn said Horton &amp;.
Dabney's
Ad d i ii On
to
Pon 1cr ov
ParcPI
No
2
The

IN THE
COMMO N PLEAS
COURT OF

MEI GSCOUNlY .
O HI O
LEONARD L lEN l Z,
f' ltt1nlrlt.

"

NELLIE R O B EY
Ot.'lendilnh

ETAL ,

N o 16 , 810

NOTI CE BY
PUBLICATION -

H ('pi&lt;.n,., uti
unt.novvn d I \ llltj,
&lt;1nd
rl
dcccac;c-cl
Ill('
l..'n 6.. n('l\'n hp,r&lt;;,. d!\'1~~~~.
IPOcll('('&lt;,
iH1rnrnt&lt;;1rrl t0r &lt;;
t ' t't \•tors
oH1d •l "&lt;,&lt;;rqn~ Of
1,-

\' n t rt"

drt ..,.,

\ "' I'
l

H o p~ m&lt;;

n ~ 110wn

~ohr~

add r c~St.'5

Nf'll 11"

nnd

iHi dr f'S&lt;:. un h. nown,

hv nq &lt;~ nd 11 deceil&lt;..erl
H'•'
1H1 I&lt;.nown
t.c&gt;tr~.

d

'"C'&lt;'S
lcart t ccs. &lt;"d
r'lrn,S. 1rators
f"' \I(' Cu t or s
&lt;1!1d
as &lt;. c1no;; Ot N L·IItc
&lt;1 l '\

il d ct r C 55 t' 5
,
" OU &lt;H(' hN oby t10 1d i('(l
n1,11 it rom p la tnt 11as tJCf'n

R C\ 1' t' \
Ln lo.n ow n

t d t'n 111 ! he Com mon PI£' C1 5
Cour t of M e1g~ Countv .
&lt;11110
(,1 ':&gt;e N o
10 , 810 .

t ollow•nq
r eal - e state
Sttuat c d 1n the Village o f
P!Ym er oy , Count y o f Mei~s
and Stat e of Ohio : Bet ng 1n
100 Acre Lot No . 306 in C.
W DoJb n e'1'S Add i t ion to
th ~ . Vill&lt;'lqe o f Pom crov .
an d more pa r ticu la r l y
.d escr1bed as foll ows : Bei ng
Lo t 118 m C W Dabney 's
Addl tt on to The Vi ll ftge of
Pomcro....Y...:_ e)(cep t i.n,SI
th e re f rom the following
pa r ce l The tot1ow10g real
es tat e sduate d in th e
Village
of
Pc;tmeroy ,
County o f Meigs and Sta te
ot Oh10 : Bei ng 111 100 Ac re
Lo t N o 306 in C. W Dab
ney's Ad d ition to th e
Village of Pomero,x. an(J
more
particularly
descr i b e d
as
follows ·
Bcg1 nning at t he so uthw est
Co rner of Lot No . 118 ,
then c e North 4 1 • degrees
w es t 156 t ee t To a fence ,
th enc e east 87 feet to t h e
eas t 11ne o t sa 1d Lot 118 i
the nce South -on the East
~ine o f sa id Lot No. 118 to
F
s
ry tr ee! ; thence West to
lhe~ pt ace of begmn lng
Reference D eed : Vol
27 1,
Page
361.
Deed
Records Meigs County ,

0

WITH ONE OF OUR ECONOMY USED CARS
SPECIA~

1975 MERCURY BOBCAT
Auto., A-1 Condi tion .
.

$2295

.

$3995

1977 FORD MUSTANG GHIA
, A u1 o .. P S.. P . B., low mi les, air, AM -FM -Tape, c ream co lor,
302 v 8.

l976 AMC GREMLIN •••••••••••••••••••••• s2195
Auto ., ra c k. , P .S., 6 cy1

1977 DODGE ASPEN WAGON

$3295

6 cy l. , 4 sp .. overdrive , a ir , P .S., P .8 ., r ed with wood grain trim, rack .

..

1975 OLDS OMEGA ••••••••• :~:~~!·~ ~u:~· s2195
1978 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX •••••••••••• s4995
Fully equipped . 23,000 mi les.

1976 DODGE DART · •e••e•••••e•••e•ee••• - $1699
Sid trans. , 2dr ., 6cyl .
$1695
1975 MAVERICK •••ee•••••••••••e•e••e••
1974 COMET ••••• •••••••••••• ~~v~~ !~r~·::~. $1295
1974 OLDS OMEGA 4 DR ••eeeeeeeeee•ee.
2 1anegree n ,a uto.
$1295
1974 CHEVY IMPAL.A •• ;;';~~u;:o;: •••••••••s1295
Goodcon d ., aulo.
$595
1968 FORD FAIRLANE eee•e•••eeeeeeeeeee•
·
6 cyl .. au to .• P .S

1975 CHEVY EL CAMINO •••••••••••••••• s2695
Au 1o., P .S., P . B ., a1r , bed cov er

1975 FORD CLUB CAB F-100.:~'~;:~s~·.:=~.s1985
Brown . s1and ., s hor1 bed .
S}995
1975 FORD PICKUP···········••eeee•e••
1974 FORD F-250 · •••••e••••••••••e•e•e••
Au to .• P .S , P . B .. red &amp;white .
s1995
1974 CHEVY C-10 lh TON ......L~~e.~e:~ •••• $1995
Sh ort bed , 23,000 miles, 6 cyt ., st anoa rd .

uouJte itil/es a7Jeiiil

1£1/1111/l'f#rl!lY,kt·I:[IJ'?f
CHECK AND COMPARE

1978 DODGE ASPEN CUST. 2 DR•••••••• s3995
2 D r .• Sla n16, au to ., P S.• P . B ., 1h vinyi roof , AM -FM, r a lleywheel s.

1975 FORD GRAND TORINO 2 DR•••••••• $1995
V 8. aut ., P .S, P . B., air.

1976 CHEVY SUBURBAN ••••••••••••••••••$4995
AM FM·C B , Sil verado Pa ckage, dual a 1r , V ·B, auto ., P S.,
P .B .. t•ltwheel.c ru1secontrot. Sharp .

Ohio
You arc no tified that you
are requ ir ed to answer the
Com p laint Within twent y eight days otter the ~lest ·
publi c a11on
The
last
p ublica t ion will be made on
t he 20day day of Jul y , 1979.

LARRY E . SPENCER ,
CLERK OF COURTS

MEIGS CO UNTY .O HI O
(6 1 8, 15, 22, 29 (7) 6, 13, 20,

lie

.1na Nm c ty SL•vr n :

IIH ' nU~

N or t11 t1 1onq sa•d r.,;s l Hnc.
t 7 1. 1i l et t to tl;c pl ilcC o f

begmn l nq Llbou t 4.05 acrrs .
n 1orc or less l:~C.ccpt i rq out
o f said above descr.b c d
prcn11s es a sl rip o t land
t wenty fi ve f eet in w idth ,

life could have you making
many unproductive changes
today . Take a reall5tic look at
what you are doing .

vou ·re saymg You may mean
no oflense. but someone co uld
'be hurt

ARIES (Moreh 11-Aprll 19) You
have a tendency to chatter

Yo'u'll have to conhnue to be
extra care ful w1ttl your spend·
lng . Again today you could buy
wlthoulthlnk ing about anyth1ng

iJimlessly today w1thout giving
much co nsideration to what

commencing nn th e north

H . S . PARKER . etal.,
Trustee
of
Catrleton
College, a non profit tegal
enti ty .
Plaintiffs ,
\.'S .

The Atto r ney General of
th e State. of Ohio , et al.,
Defendants.
No . t7 ,2D1

- NOT IC E BY
PUBLICATION To Th e Unknown h e1rs ,
devise.es,
legat ees,
executors. a dm inis tr a tors
and llssigns of each of the
fo l lo wi ng : I saac Ca rl eton ,
Dece a sed ; Isaac Carleton .
Jr ., Decea sed, Ada May
Car l et on , a daughter of
Isaa c Carleton , J r ., who ,
may ha ve been rnarr 1ed
but i f marr1e d whose
ma r r ied name IS unk no wn .
deceased ; Arthur Car l eton ,
Deceased . H e l en Ja ~e
Car leton , a daughter of
Isa a c Carle t on , Jr ., who
may ha ve b een married
but if married whose
marr ied nam e rs unknown ,
deceased ; Edgar Wi llia m
C~ r lelon,
D eceased;
W1 ll1 am Car l et on. who is
a lso kno wn as William
Car leton Ill , Deceased, J
E ca rl e ton , Deceased ,
Julia Ca rl eton, Deceased ,
A lma Edw.ir d s, De ceased ,
Edna Carle t on , Dece ased .
E t he l Weedy , Deceased ,
and William Car l Ed wa rds .
Deceased :
You are hereb y noti f ied
th a t a Comp laint has been
filed 1n t he Com man Plea s
· Cou rt of Meigs Coun t y ,
O Ht O, Case No . 17,202 .
dema nding
authori zat ion
to se ll and convey the r ea~
es tate
h e r er naft er
descr 1bed t o th e Boa rd of
Coun t y Commissioners of
Me 1gs Cou nt y, Oh10 . tor the
su m of $25,000.00 fo r the
purpo se of b uilding a
sch oo l for th e m en tall y
retard ed
a nd
furth er
c;lema ndin g that you b e
r e Qui r ed to assert any
cia 1m l hllt you may have m
and to t ha t said r eal estate
or be for eve r barred from
any r tghl , title and in t eres t
in and to sa id premis es .
There 1S a f u rth er dem and
that shou ld 11 be deter ·
mined that thi s pr oposa l of
sale is a deviation from the
pu rpose of t he original
co n vey ance
that
such
de v ia t 1on be deter m1ned to
be wi t hi n lhe scope of the
ge neral 1nt en t of th e
or iginal g r antor and du ly
autho riz ed by law . A sale
by
pr tv at e
sale
1S
dema nded Th e r ea l estate
is d esc r ib ed as follows ·
Th e toll owi ng real es tat e
situate in the County o f
M eig s and St ate of Ohio
and bei ng a part of 100 Acre
Lots Number Two Hundred
and N rne ty Seven in Town
Two. Ra ng e T we l ve and
Nu m ber Two Hundred and
N ine t y E1ght in To w n One ,
Range lh 1r teen . bounded
and descr i bed as f ollows ,
to w 1t .
Beg i nn•ng at a st ake tn
t he Ea st l ine of said Lo t
Nu m ber Two Hundred an d
N 1n ety Seven twen t y t 1ve
tee t eas t o f the So u t hea st
corner of John Duf fie's lo t ;
th ence wes t f i ft y six rod s to
said I saac Ca rl eton 's West
line ; thence So uth along
sai d West l ine twe nty eigh t
rods and f i fteen lmk s,
then ce Ea st fifty six rod s to
th e Ea st l 1ne of sa id Lot
N um ber Two Hundred and
N tn e ly
Seve n ;
t he nc e
North alon g sa1d li n e t o the
p l ace
of
beginntng
Re serving tw en)y five feet
a long the Ea st si de ot the
above d escri bed pr emises
f or a publ1 c st r ee t or high
way
Also r ese r vtng the
right of way across said
pr cm ises in a conve n ient
place until st r eets a r e
regularl y la id out .
Excep ti ng theref r om th e
re a l es tate which was
co n veyed
by
Ca rl eton
Co ll ege to Christia n Ba er
by d eea r ecord ed in Vol.
139,· Page 21'1 of the Me1g s
County Deed Reco rd s. ana
d esc r ibed as foll ows . Th e
fOII Owt ng d es cr1bed real
es tate si tuat e.J tn th e
Cou nty of Meigs and Stat e
o f Ohio. and be1 ng a part o f
One Hundr ed Acre L o t
Number Two H und r ed and
Ninety Seven in Town Two ,
Range Tw el ve tn the Ohio
C om pa ny's
Pur c hase
bounded and de scr ibed as
follows , to wit ; Begi nni ng
a! a sta k e in t he east tm e of
sai d Lot Nu mbe r Two
Hundred and N1n et y Seven ,
twenty fi ve t ee t ea st of the
so uth eas t corne r of Joh n
Dulfi es lot ; th ence west
373 9 t eet. t hence sotuh
471.8 fe et. Then ce east 373. 9
feet to the east lin e of said
lot Number Two Hundred

1974 MUSTANG GHIA ••••••••••••••••••••$2195

1967 vvv ••••••••••••• ~ ••

e••••e•••••••e••

1

S395

4 Dr ., loaded
·
$395
1967 CADILLAC ·······e•••••••ee••eeeeee
1959 FORD 4 DR. •••e • •e • • • e • • • • • • • • • e • • $195

20. 1977.

lht · nor t hwest co r ner of the
~ .1n 1c

and ex tendrng at a

Wtdlh

of lw en t y

1974------------~---CHEVY lUV PICKUP •••••••••••••••• !1395
4 Cyl , • spd .

1974 FORD BRONCO .................... s2895

Till God called him home lo
suffer no more
Sadly mined by wife· Mar·

Rl EBEL'S USED CARS
see Roger Riebel
St .

Rt . 7

Tuppers Plains, 0 .

Plus Exchange
Casings

TIRE SALES

985-3345 or 6.67-3463
1 mile north

•

jorle, Sont, Daughters· In-low
and grandchildren.
'

VALUE
RATED

USED CAR

CATCH
OF THE
SUMMER

LARRY E . S PENCER .

CLER•K OF COUR T S,

ME IGS COUN.TY , O H 10
(61 29 (I I 6. 13. 20 . 27 (8) 3,

1o. 7tc

POMEROY UNITED Methodiu

Churc~ Homecoming. July 22.
Worsh1p 10:30 om. Dinner

I_2:::30;;;pm:::.~P=rog~r~a~m~2~pm==.;;;;;~

SALE

Saturday, Ju!y 21

I

ASTRO·GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

1975 CAD. DEVILLE CPE, .... ... .. ....... ............ .. . '3995
1973 CAD. DEVILLE CPE.................................. '995
1973 CAD. DEVILLE SED.............. ............ :...•. '1095
1972 CAD. DEVILLE SED... ............................. '1295
1978 CAD. DEVILLE CPE.... ............................. '8795
1979 OLDS 98 REGENCY SED. (Demo.) ..............'9400
1970 OLDS CUT. SALON BROUGHAM (Drivers Ed.) ... '6900
1975 OLDS 98 lS .. ...... ... ....... ... ..... ............. '3095
1976 OLDS CUT: SUP. SED............................ 13595
1973 OLDS TORONAOO..... .......................... ... .'1295
1976 OLDS 88 ROYALE SED............................ '3195
1973 OLDS CUT. SUP. SED............. .... .......... .. '1295
1976 OLDS CUT. SUP. BROUGHAM CPE............ .. '3995

~q'our

~'Birt~ay
July 11 , 1918
Thi s coming yea r you will be
better able to consoli date your
forces 10 order to achieve your
aims . Yo ur outer and inner
drives will func11 0n harmon•·
ously .
CANCER(June 21-July 22)AII
th e grand tntenllon s In the
world wttl do you no good
unles s yo u are real1stic 1n yo ur
plann rng A poo r choice o f a cowork er cou ld ruin eve ryth mg
Your new Astro·Graph Letter
te ll s you what he s ahead for
you for th e year followmg yuu ;
buthday Get yo ur s by mailing
$1 for each to As tro-Graph .
P.O. Box 489. Radio Crty Sta·
11on , N. Y 10019. Be sure to
specify birth lime .
LEO (Jul~ 23-Aug.22) It you hnd
yourse lf stuck with those you
consider to be bonng and
unin teresting make th e best of
it and be th e grac1ous person
you mnately are
VIRGO (Aug .23·Sepi.2Z) You
are much too wishy· washy
about your goals to accomplish
much ol any tht ng today
Instead . you may spend all
yo ur hme and energy makrng
excuses
LIBRA (Sept .23·0c:t :23) Your
mind has a ten dency to wander
today fanta stzcng all types of
lhlng s. Take care not to put too
much stock in your dayd reams
SCORPIO

1970 OLDS 98 SED. .... ............... .............. .... '695
1973 PONTIAC CATALINA SED............................ '395
1977 BUICK LESABRE CPE ..... ....... .................. '4495
1977 FORD LTD SED.................................... 13595
1972 PONTIAC LEMANS CPE.... ................ ... .... 11295
1979 FORD LTD LANDAU SED............ ............. 17295

(0ci.I4·No• . l21

Count you r bless1ngs Ieday
and no t all t hOse things you
don 't have You can spend iusl
as mu ch energy on postt1ve
though ts as on negative ones
SAGITIARIUS (Nov .23· Dec.21)
That1deal you ' re cha sing 1s n't
lo be found toda~ , because all
vou can see are th e imperfe ctions in o thers Re vise your
thinking

CAPRICORN

1979 ELDORADO
Big Savings

(0ec.IZ· Jon .191

N. Second Ave.
Middleport, 0.

wHks old. Al l cu te . 698-8899 .

"You'll Lihe Uur 'J!'!'.Iity W• y of
Dnirt.K B114irsf!u" (,MC Fi~Wn cirlll
P9H342- Pomeroy
Open Evenings Untll6 :00- 'lll

s PM Sot.

101

Disstlstaction with your lot

1n

GREAT

NEW

llDil't Iniss 'l!IR
THE

CAR
VALUES!!

1579'S

I : t b t~am:'-WD1U
•:U 'W.. ;'1,; ; ;

Ill
,, !", Ill
• ,. II" ,,•;

",,,;;~~

s4913 1979 PINTO 2 DR.

1979 FORD FIESTA

3 Dr. Ha1chback, dark red , ~ cyl.. ~ sp., H.D.
Package, wsw radials, H. D. cooling pack., rad.lo,
vinyl , Insert bodY side mldgs .• front wheel drive.

Society .

992-7680.
LASSIE TYPE lemole, 3

old. 7A2· 2A5A .

mo .

Mobile Homes Sale's
197.f 14 a: 70 mobile home.
Good

$7800 .

condIt Ion .

located on

12 x 65 THREE BEDROOM.
located In Cheshi re. With or
without furniture . m-7094 .

Forest Run Rd.

Connie AldridgeOwner
PH. H2..311
SAKEI'1 IUS f e..t. \..er~"""'
will be closed July Ul t hru July

25.
Poullne Iaker.

s4192

Dark brown metallic , 4 cy l. , w sw rad ials, power
steer ing, p lus al l standard equipment S\Jch as rad io,
rear window defroster, more !

PAINTING AND sandblasting .
Free estimates. Coii9A9-2686 .

PIANO TUNING for home and
scl-lool. lane Daniels Also
repairs . 1~ years experience.
992-2581 or 992 -2082 .

DOZER. END Loader and dump
truck . Will do basements,
ponds ,
brush ,
timer ,

RIDENOUR GAS ServiCe. Doxoll.P . gas. Chester . 985-3307 .

HOUSE

1970 Sylva . 60,12. 2 bodr.
1970Caotle. 60•12 , 2 bedr .
197" Morl•dine, 50 x12 , 2 bedr.
1969Vollant. l2x60, 2bodr.
1967 National. 12.SO, 2 bodr.
B'S MOBil£ HOM£ SALES, PT.
PLEASANT. WV . J0.1.67S.U2A .

HEADQUARTERS
BEAUTY SAlDN

Middleport-Poamroy area .
Coil for free
estimate .

limestone and grovel. Charles
Butcher. 742·29.40.

Wanted to Buy
WOOO. Poles m&lt;t•.
diameter 10' ' on loroe-t end.

CHIP

S12 ~r ton. Bundled slob. SIO
per ton . Delivered to Ohio
Pallet Co .. Rt. 2, Pomeroy.

992·2689·.

PAINTING .

Reasonable rates . references .

992·2078 .
ROOM .

BOARD .

Elderly

only.

For Sale

61A·667·6223"' 667·6200.

J. "'· Wamsley. 7A2·2331 .

LOST:

USED BATH tub, sink , com-

DARK

beige

b'awn

color

sma ll

loose leaf notebook with
Wettlnghouse Depot on front

modo. 992-2200.

alpMbet poge I inde•. With
lnsld.. A lso Important
papers .
Reward
Coli

992·3018 .
FOUND: WHITE femole k itten.
ongoro wl1h white flea col lor .
13 w..ks old: Powell' • Pork-

In!! lot . P.,....,oy . 992-3760.

School. July 13 and lA from 9

7A2-2877 or 7A2-21 52.

TWO FA.Mtl Y Porch Sole. 271,
Main St .. Middleport . OH. Fri

and Sat. 20-21. 9 till 3 Good
COUNSELOIII FOR suppor tive
countelin;-comm . edut otion
Bochel01a In reloted field
preferred. Cor required . Send
r"ume to: EASO. PO 1oM AS8.
Athens . OH 45701 by August
6.
FULL ANO port time bartender
Applr in person . See Ro lph
Werry at the Melgt Inn,
Pomeroy. Also, port time
woltre11.

Dlr.ctor ol o six county
South.ostern Ohio Forensic
P· ' .: ot rlc Center . Prefer
MOsten In Psycho109f, Social
Work . Publi c Admlnis.trallon
or related f ie ld. 3-5 y.ars ex·
perlence In odm lnlttraflon of
Human Se~lce orgonitotion
pre ferred . Must
hove
d.mdnstrotable skillt in community relotions , on ability to
wor6c with the crlmlnol jus tice
syst•"'· and on ability to work
with o profenlonal odv•sory
boord.
tosk re•ponsibilitfes Inc ude the estoblis.h~t . m&lt;lintenonce and coor·
diootion of a reterrol srstem
with area municipal , common
pleat and probate cowtt for
the provision of evaluations
and consultation• to court
cos.M by "tabllshed Community Mental Health CliniCI
for relating to Sections of the
ORC dealing with competency
to ttond trial , not guilty by
reason ol Insanity, drug
dependency, drug treatment
In lieu of conviction , oncf
mit igation of peno!tv· Send
VITA to Search CommlttH,
SEQ Forentlc Psycf'llatrlc
Centw. A12 Vinton Pike ..

Ma'lor

Gall ipolis.

Ohio

~5631

by

MUSTA~G

P~OBATE

3 DR. COBRA SJ725

Black, 302 V-B, Cobra hood graphics, auto. 1rans ..
TRX 190/ 65R 390 llres, power steering, 4 way
manual dri ver seat, console, P .tfrt . disc brakes,
elec tri c rear defrost, air cond., ain ·fm stereo w / 8 tr .
tape, interior accent grp., prem ium sound system,

t inted glass, H.D . ba1tery , light grp., power lock

1979 FAIRMONT 4 DR. SED. JS161 1979 FAIRMONT 4 DR. WGN. '6000
Medium biYe, .4 cyl. eng., paint stripes, bench seat,

auto. trans .. bsw radial tires, P . steering, P ./frt.
d isc brakes, am radio, exterior accent orp .• dual
bright remote control mirrors, front pivoting vent

3.36/ 6 cyl . eng., auto. trans ., w sw tires, power steer Ing, power lrt disc brakes, air cond ,, am radi o, ex terior decor grp., tinted glass .

windows, vinyl insert body side mldgs.

COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY ,
OHIO

ESTATE
MANUEL,

'

OF
PAUL
DECEASED

Cau ND . 22741

YARD SALE . "' Poorl St ., Mid·

dleport , OH . 10 1111• . Thursday
and Friday. \ 9 and 20 .

YARD SALE. Sat .. July 21 9.5 .
1 mtte nor-th of fairgrounds on
old 33. Sun lamp with stond .
CIUMn t ile velvet bechpreod .
'¥!' fukl 1 choke ~n borrel to
fit Remington 870. ~me tools.
Olympic barbell sett.

16 CU . H
frost fr•e
refrigerator frHz.er . Avocado
gr. .n. 1215. m -7291 afler4 .
FORO
ifres.

DIESEL tractor New
h c•ll•nt
condition .

7A2-mB or IA2-2832
ENGINE FOR 1972 Datsun 510 .
992-2oe2 .
GREEN BEANS, you pick S. .50
bu . Al &amp;o sm al l
8-13·2353.

(71 20. 27 (81 3. 3tc

2'1, ton window oir condition·
ing. S200, Call ofter 9pm .

2&lt;7-3251.

5000 8TU ond one 13.500 BTU .

HOOF HOlLOW , English and
Western .
Saddle•
and
hornell . Horses ond ponies .
Ruth RHves . 614·698-32'90.
lording &amp; Riding L•nons and
Hone Core products .
RISING STAR Kennel. 6oor·
ding. Coli 367 -m2 .
GOING OUT of bu siness . Al l
poodle• .
pomeran ion ,
pekinese, block pom puppy
great coot line . Phone 6%-111
after Spm .

POODLE GROOMING. Judy
Toylor . 614 -367-7210.
GOING OUT of businen . All
poodles. .
pomeranion .
pek lnese. bloc k pam puppy ,
great toot li ne . Phone
696-1 I 11 after Spm .

MILK GO... T. $7S. Ath mo. lot ·
lot ion. 61A-378-6235.
THREE A.KC registered toy
poodles. Brown mole, brown
female , dark sliver female .
Also puppiet expected on

Aug . 13 . 992·39f&gt;A .

KAWASAKI KD 175. 1975. For
oalo. Ca ii7A2·21106 . _ _ __

Cofl992-2451 after 5pm.
WHEElCHAIR FOR so le. Pracul '
tically "-W· $75 . Coli

m .s.

992-28-19 .
CHEVY CARRYALL C. 20. Good
6 cyl •ngin e, std trans .. fully
insulaled and
carpe t ed .

"2· 63'18 .
175 M·f tractor 16 in . 3 boltom
plow. 992· 2877 or 99"2-7883
offer Spm.

WURLITZER ORGAN witk loot

Cragor mags, othw• otf'ler
extros. Excellent condition.
Coli 992-7 196 after Spm.

1976 CHEVROLET MONZA Mt·
Ca li

992-6377 .
1973 TRUCK y, ton Int .. 50.000
miles . 6 cyl. , heo~ duty, f iJ~ed
for dual wheels . Trade.
Rutland Hardware .

For Rent
Route 33, north at Pomer oy .

992·5.134 .
ONE BEDROOM opts. Contac1
VIllage Manor, "2·7787.
LARGE

home

In

Pomeroy. Write Box 779W, C·O
the Dolly Sentinel, Pomeroy,

Drk. Cordovan metallic, ~. 1 L / 6 cyl. eng .. half vinyl

Polar white. 302 V ·B, cloth seat t ri m, auto. trans .,
bsw rad ial tires, convenience ,grp., power steering,
P./frt . disc brakes, air cond., am rad io, exterior ac·

roof, auto . trans., wsw radial tires, power steering,

OHA5769.

P ./lrt . d isc brakes, deluxe bumper grp .. electric

cent grp., Interior accent grp . • tinted glass, H. D .
battery .

rear def_rost. air cond ., am radio, tinted glass, dual
sport m 1rrors.

TWO

ROOM

opartment .

Private both. All utllltloo paid.
First floor private entrance.
Alto, siMping room for rnet .

992-6022.

FORD

Auctions

PAT, HILL FORD

For A Friendly Deal, See I
Rocky Hupp, Darrell Dodd rill, or Pat Hill-Gen. Mgr.
461 S. Third Ave.
Middle ort, o.

"''"I':;., AUCTION,
FRIDAY 7pm. lots
of new merchandise at Pt.
" Help! .

St.

On ly

1975
&amp;ERRINGTON
24 'xS2' mobile home. 3
bedrooms, 2 baths,
beautify ! kitchen, l iving
room and dining area.
Situated on 10 acres, 1112
miles ou t at
Sa lem
Cenler .
Priced
at

SJI.SOO .OO.
Large 2

story home w i t h ex cellent r i ver view . Th is
home has 3 spacious
bedrooms, livmg room ,
sifti ng room,
dining
room, sun room and full
basement with shower .
Outstanding oak trim

th roughout . Sell s fo r on ·
ly $28,000.00.
WE NEEO LISTINGS!!

garage &amp; level lot. Only
$17,500 .
FINANCING
Will
V.A
or
F . H _A . 3
bedrooms, new bath,

or

large modern

¥1easant l l ~estock Mkt., 1505
Ohio St., Pt. Pleasant. Howard
Beasley, Auctioneer .

kitchen

restroom, all utilities.
One floor approx. 7 yrs.

old . Will take good offer .
WANT LAND - Here 's
70 acres with virgin
timber . All ut ilities
av ailable .

$25,000,

or

HOUSE FOR: sale near Meig:i
Mines. 742·2228.
TWO BEDROOM house , completely furnished . w a ll to wall
co rpet, gas furnace, garage ,
nicalot. 742-2923 .

Clll
us today
and
dlstuss our listing con ·
tract . We ' ll be glad to

Phone 742-2003
H ilton Wolfe, Assoc .

8eauliful 4 BR brick , 3
acres lilwn and pond.

roofing

pla.n

or

fabroted ,

985-4197

a nice 3 bdrm . home

features . $39,500.00.
PRICE REDUCED ranch

3.6S acres opprox. 2 miles
wast of Rt. 7 on 143. Level
acreage .
7.42 - 2656
or
7~2- 295S .

type

WANT TO SELL?· - GIVE US A CALL
CALL JIMMY DEEM, ASSOCIATE 949·2388
OR NANCY JASPERS, ASSOCIATE
949-2654 or 949-2591

992·2367
Pomeroy, o.
7·10·1 mo.

Main St.

FHA- AS

ELWOOD

BOWE~S

REP ... IR -

Sweepers. toasters . iron~ . all
sma ll oppl1onces . lown moer .
next to Stole Highway Goroge
on Route 7, 985·3825.
SEWING MACHINE Repair s,
serv•ce , all makes, 992·2284 .
The Fabric Shop. Pomeroy.
Authori~ed Smger So les and
Service . We sha r pen Scissors .
EXCAVATING , dozer, loader
ond backhoe work ; dump
trucks ond lo-boys fo r hire,
will houl fill dirt, top soil.
limestone and grovel. Call Bob
Of' Roger Jeffers, doy phone
992 -1089 .
night
pho ne

REAL ESTATE loons. Purchase
and refinance . 3D year terms ,
VA . No money down {eligible
veterans). FHA - As low os 3
per cent down (non-veterans).
Ireland Mortgage Co., 77 E.
State . Athens . 6 U-592-3051

BUILDING LOTS ON
SR 7
Near Eastern High
School. Water and el~·
tric available. 2 acres

up to 34acre plots .

Virginia Hayman
985-4197

ERA Real Estate

MEHLER REALTY

low

as

3%

down (non -veterans)

IRElAND
MORTGAGE
CO.
77 E. Slate, Athens
592-3051

4-23- i mo.

BRADFORD , Auctioneer, Complete Service. Phone 949-2.. 87
or 949-2000. Rac1ne , Ohio ,
Critt Bradford.

home,

basement,

-

large

C. R. MASH
VINYL &amp; AWM.
SIDING
•New Home
•Addons
Remoldings
*Free estimates

*

992·6011
7-12
E·C ElECTRICAL Contractor
serving Ohio Volley region.
. Six days 0 week . 24 hours service . Emergency calls. Call

BB2· 2952 or BB2· 3ol3ol.
HOWERY AND MARTIN E•·
covating, septic
dozer, bcickhoe.

systems,
Rt. 1-43.

Phone I (61A) 698-7331
7A2· 2593.

or

IN STOCK for immediole
delivery: various sizes of pool
kits . Do-lt· yourself or let us
install for you . 0 . Bumgardner

Sa les. Inc . "2-572A.
ADD ONS and remodeling,
gutter work, do'&lt;'/n spouts,
some Con crete work , walkt
and
driveways
(free
estimate) . V.C. Young Ill,
Racine , OH . 949·2748 and

992-731A .
WILL HAUL li mestone and
grovel. Also, lime hauling and

spreading. Phone 7~2-2455 .
ROOFING, ROOF repolr and
siding, atl'lar maintenance. E &amp;
R Roofing
and
Siding .

61A·388·8860 or 61A·388·B797.

SAVE ON CARPET
DRIVE A LITTLE
SAVE A LOT

lot,

equ ipped kit . OWNER
-wiLL DEAL, $22,500.00.
A FORTUNE WILL BE
MADE - on th is 240

RUBBERBACK CARPET

'499

acres of nice laying land
In a great location for

subdividing .
Meigs
School D.ist .• waler &amp;
elec .
available .
$178,000.00.
BUILDING SITE
Meigs School
Dlst.,
water &amp; elec. available,
over

1

acre ,

secluded

great

location

c ontemporary

AND UP
CASH &amp;CARRY

SALE ON AU CARPET IN STOCK

for

·9~~UP
Installed and Pad FREE·

home .

Want $3,500.00.
Henry E. Cleland
Realtor
Henry E . Cleland, Jr .
Realtor

'192-2259

P92-6191

offer . Prlce$57 ,000.
From I to 75 a c r es, bordering

perms.

Call "2·2771
5 -17 -1 mo.

w .b.f .p ., central air &amp;
heat, 3 bdr:rns., 1112
baths ,
financing
available. $27,900.00.
START A FUTURE
NOW - with th is cozy 2
bdrm. I floor plan home.
Pomeroy Elem ., full

N ice recreation spot, minerals, too . Let's have an

LOTS OF LOTS Pomeroy.

&amp; .
styling,

men's

for quick sale, owner

COVNTRY SPECIAL - Nice remode led 2 bedroom
home on blacktop road . Mos11y carpeted. F .A. not.
gas furna ce. A very attractive small home andl
oc reland . Priced for quick sale for $17,500 .

G ood 3 bedroom , all carpeted hom e

MARK MORA ·
HAIR STYLIST

will sacrifice, all brick

LOTS - 1 Acre and up nea r Pomeroy .

features. P.r iced at $55,000.00.

w·

large buill-in kit., din -

area, and two bP.drooms c omplete downstairs. the
unfinished upstairs makes expansion possible .

There is a 2 car attached garage and many more

~

ing, family , rec . room,
basement, many other

famil y room , equipped kitchen, full bath, laundry

. GRACIOUS LIVING .- in lhs 7 room , 2 story barn
red house with wh tte trim offers 3 bedrooms
beautiful living room with real beam ceiling, with
glass sliding doors 1o the back patio overlooking a
panorama of dislant hills. The kitchen Is one of the
most bautiful you will find , Including wood
ca blnels, stove, refrlg., &amp; dishwasher that stay

2 story ,

f r ame,

$59,500.00.
NEW LISTING - Your
own swimming pool anlj

step -down

insulating with gas heating budget of only $27 a mo.
Ple nty of wood ca binets, carpeted throuhoul, 4 BR
home. Priced to sell at $27,000.

&amp;

bdrms ., l'h baths, fami ·
ly room, rec . room, den,
large l i ving room, di n ing ,
break .
nook ,
modern bu l lt· in kit .,
central air &amp; heat, tree
house ,
storage ,

Tolal privacy is the key here on 2 plus

$32,000.00 -

LISTING

dleport, excellent loca ·
11on, appx . 2.600 sq. ft . of

2 unit income ptus

Real Estate for Sale
both, kitchen , dining room ,
living room, utility room , pa r·
tiolly cor.peted , 2 tcr..ned ·ln
porches , on 2 acres level
gro~nd , nice location. Prtced
reasonable . 2~7- 3663 .

INSURANCE

liv ing space ,

Rare ly fi nd a

so pet.

on heating cost
Experience and
Free Est.

Bea\Jtifut home in M id ·

br ick

Mick's ·
Barber&amp;
Style Center
Introduces-

Blown Insulation

fully Insured

PnMF' ROY . 0 .

NEW

Call for a Free Siding
Estimate, 949-2801 or
949-2860. No Sunday
calls.
6 · 1~ - 2 mo.

Real Estate Loans

'

608 E .
MAIN

Home with

BISSEU.
SIDING CO.

Purchase
and
Refinance
30 Year Terms
A- No monev down
(eligible veterans)

Real Estate for Sale

3 bedrooms, car pet ed throughout, large eat -in kit ·
c hen, lots of cupboards, on 3/A acres with lots of
tree s, and 1112 car garage w ith storage building

Siding

J&amp;L

'192·3.52S or '192· S232.

N i cely loca ted in Morning Star area . Price $33,900.

RARE ·MEOIUM -WELL DONE! -

mo

Thermal insulation

TWO STORY 3 bedroom house.
3 lots. Now's your chance if
you need o hOuse. S12,()(X),
Owner willing
to talk .
992-2at2 or 742-2328.

JUST LISTED - 14 acres of nice rol ling land with a
11;, story house that sits back off the road surround·

medium priced home in such fine shape. Well done

~ 5 1

Save 30 pet. to

WE HAVE CONV_ENTIONAL FINANC ·
lNG FOR MOST OF OUR HOMES FOR
AS LOW AS 5% DOWN .

tireplac~.

M•l es East ol Wrlkesv11te

Cellulosic (wood fiber)

'192·21A3.

MEHLER REALTY

Vinyl and Aluminum

women ' s

JIM KEESEE

Rei! I Estate for Sale

SHOULD BE SOLD - 75 acres, house &amp; good brn,
aoour 1,000 teet of beautiful Ohio River frontage.
2

Pomeroy

Ph . 992-2174

Call for appl. or walk ln.

949 -2862--9~Y·2160

AUTOMOBilE

ERA Real Estate

$8 .30

houu ,

Motors, Inc.

S UP ER
GOOSE
STOC K
TR.AI L.E R NOW A VA ILABt.E

been cancelled? lost your
operators
license?
Phone

c lose to Pom eroy &amp; M iddleport. Located on good 1112
acres of land.

FOUR BEDROOM

~

PULLINS EXCAVATING. Com-

ONE WALK behind Grovely

lng.90 lb. roll white, green.

Smith Nelson

Fe.:"~turlng:

L.angs"ille, Otrro

6U ·U9-41•s E venings

Virginia Hayman

acres, the l iving rm . has brick

black granule. S13.10. 57 lb.
roll black, $9.55 . 5 ga l. aspnah

213211 Montgomery fn:l .

plete Service. Phone 992-2478 .

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

S25,900 -

$69.96. Special Sale · Raal·

TRAILER SALES

S79, 000

space for two more units, each section has own elec.
m eter &amp; hot water , separate en tran ce and comes
1nicely furnished . Let ' s talk abou1 this one .

auto. gas water heater, gloss
lined, fuel saving, $120. Vani ·
ty coblnet with marble top
~with faucets and pop-up, drain
•and supply lines. S9Cil .95. One
double bowltlnk with faucets ,

I

MONTGOMERY

- xcAVATING ,
dozer ,
back hoe and ditcher . Charles
R. Hatfield. Black Hoe Service,
Ru tland: Ohio. Pone 742-2008 .

Phone 949· 2519

367-0557 .

992-2282
7-5·1 MO.

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

TUPPERS PLAINS

GeorgeS . HObstener Jr.
Broker 992·S739

RESlAURANT AND bor [).1
and D- 2 license includ&amp;d. 3
acr es.
Of'ld house. Good
bu1inen Opportunity . Col i

New Home
Construction
Extensive Remodeling
GR£G ROUSH
Phone 992-7583

4-S ·IIC

help.
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc .

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

Roofing

Housing
• Headquart'.Jrs

INVESTMENT PROPERTY -

tractor and mower, electric
ttort, dual wheels . 12 h.p.
Wheel Hcrse tractor and
mower. 1 t-p Penny Craft
mower, electric start. 5 h.p.
Huffy . 5 h.p. Montgomery
Word mower. 5 h.p. Wh. .l
horse. Tillis Tr actor Soles .

7·8 - 1 mo.

H. L Writesel

I plus a c res , just r ight for modular
or built home of your choi ce. Water &amp; electric
available. Only minutes from Pomeroy . $3,000.

tro Glide. Centennial model .
Many extras . Low mileage.
Reasonable . 9•9-2328.

Natnu

CALL 992-7544

6-6-1 mo.

HOMESITE -

1976 HARLEY DAVIDSON Elec·

107 Sycamore (Rear I
Pomeroy, 0 .

CALL
992-2772

in Rac ine. $A5,000 .

Jack W. Carsey
Mgr.
Phone 99'.1·2 181

ment.

Free Estimate

basement . garage. nice garden area , on 1 pi\Js acre

Large Stock

Other limes by appoint-

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

good offer.
RETIREMENT
A
spot you can enjoy .
Rest ful 3 bedrooms ,
bath , natural gas, fur nace . Only $17 ,500 .
Small down payment.
NEEDS WORK - Good
9 rm . home with 1.17
acres . Large garden
spot.
all
utilities .
Rebuild like you want .
Ask ing, but make us an
offer.
NEW
LISTING
Trai ler lot on Rt. 7 w ith
city water , and 9ther
servies for onlv S2900.
WE CAN OFFER YOU
PROPERTY THAT NO
ONE ELSE HAS. CALL
9f2-332S.

Immediate possession - 3
b@droom home, living room &amp; fami ly room, all nice ·
ly carpe ted . Ea1-in lichen equipped with
dishwasher, disposal, and stove . 2 f\JII baths, 112

Discounts

E)I:PERIENCED
Aadlat9r·,.......-,
Sarvlctr

Hours Y·l M., W., F.

4-JO·Ifc

REMODELED HOME -

Hotpoint
Air Conditioners

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVIC£S, INC.

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

beh ind garag e. Asking $39,500 .

Special Sale

USED GARDEN
TRACTORS
AND
RIDING MOWERS

''4 mile off Rt . 7 by-pass
on St . Rl . 124 toward
Rutland .

fo r the family, full base ment and large half
acre lot . Just $23,500 .
OFFICES - 10 rooms,

CLOSE TO SCHOOLS &amp; CHURCHES -

·:B5·A302 .
RUTLAND
HARDWARE
7A2·2255. One -40 gal. Mor· Fio

COUNTRY MOBIL£ Homo Park ,

NICE

Main

m .soo.oo.

baths,
car

large basem ent, 2

PIANO. Univax Compoc alec·
tric piano. Good condition.

$250 . 61A - S93 - 8010
61 A-593· 5078 .

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING

Roger Hysell
Garage

II

plu sh

~Is , rhythm beats. l ike
new. $830. Pho ~ 9'92·7206.

s25 to SSO

large loll . Caii992-7A79.

1979 GRANADA GHIA 2 DR. '6722

REDUCED -

-

ed wi1h mapl e trees. Lg . pond stocked with fish .

992-6309 .
1968 CAMERO. V·B . A-speed.

trans.

w i th

LISTING

power scop•. $32S . Phone

197A VEGA HMCHBACK . call
:lo:t-675-1501 or 305·675· 2A88
or JOA -675- 1553 .
1976 OLDS CUTLASS Supreme

outo.

home

modern kitchen, family

REMINGTON '12 250 BDL . 10

Auto Sales

chbock ,

bedroom

NEW

rooms, n ic e
carpeting, 1112

TWO AIR condit ioners. One

3 AND • RM furnished ond un·
furnished
opts .
Phone

1979 FAIRMONT 4 DR. SED.

Ph.

Pets for Sale

P.B., A.C. $1595.992-2515.

Robert E . Buck
Probate Judge .
Clerk

pony.

TWO COMPAR TMENT double
drain board cobmet sin k
Good condition . 9A9·2'CK&gt;4 .

tlon wagon , 9 pc"enger. P.S. ,

On Ju ly 17 , 1979, in the
Meigs Cou nt y Probat e
Cour t , Case No . 2274 1,
Lester P . Manuel. 26570
Virginia Valley
Road ,
Rockbridge, Ohio 43149 wsa
appo inted E)(ecutor of the
es tate ot Pau l ManueL
deceased , late o f Route 2.
Racine , Meigs Coun ty ,
OH io 45771.

3

WEST RUTLAND -

POMEROY -

YARD SALE . Clothes. m isc .
langsviii•Dexter Rd . Coonty
Rood acron from Small's
Groc ery. Follow tigns . lOom·
8pm .

1975 DODGE CORONET ota·

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

sand ,

VERMEE R BALER Soles, ports
ond s•rvice. Balers in stock for
imm.dlote delivery . Phone

merch&lt;lndise cheop .

Help Wanted

LIMES TONE.

grovel , calcium chlortde , tertllizer , dog food , ond all types
of soli. hcelsior Sol i Works ,
Inc.. E Main St . Pomeroy ,

"t'ARO SAlE ot Jomes Swain' s
on CR 28 above Eastern High
to ? Everytfting imaginable.

PHONE 742-2003

East

992-38'11.

Yard Sale .

~me

CO"'L .

HOBSTETTER
REALTY

PRICE

Jack W- Cilrsey
Mgr .

TILLIS

216 E . Second Street

Owner wants to relocate
so we are Offering this
hom e
at
a
very
reasonable pri ce. Home
has 3 bedrooms, li v ing
room, modern kitc hen,
laundry room and it ha s
alum inurn siding . It has
flower gardens, frui t
t rees and a nice view of
t he river . Located on

SALE PRICES

OlD COINS. pocket watches.
don r ings. wedding bondt .
d iomonds. Gold or tilver . Coli

fMLt.

7A2-27A6.

l

Business Services

St. Rt . 7
North of Chester, 0.
Phone 985-4202
6·24· 1 mo. pd.

TWO ACRE lot near Meigs
Mine No . I . Rurol w afer
available . Be st
offer .

work s pa ce . Situated on
1.7 acres. Call for more
in fo.

Headquarters for
Hotpoint a·nd
General Electric
Appliances

Hut6cy·German Shepard m ill(,
white tleo color . East ShadeOwl
Hollow Rd.
area .

LOST:

Rd .,

MEHLER REALTY

deta c hed garage w ith

. Phone 992 ·2181

Lost and Found

985 -4197

Hill

ERA Real Estate

room, uti Uty room and
1h basement. The large
living room Is finished
with pine lumber and
ha s a stone firepla ce .
There ' s a two car

POMEROY
lANDMARK

P.S., P.B.. A .C., l'las u tro s.

'6188 1979

Reasonable .

brass beds, iron beds, d..kt .
etc ., complete households.
Write M .D. Miller, Rt . 4 ,
Pomeroy or call m .nblJ

Augus t 3. 1979. An equal opportunity employer.

1979 MUSTANG 3 DR. SED.

laundry .

992-6022 .

OLD FURNITURE , leo bo•" ·

tools . Call 992-m2 .

Karr &amp; Van Zandt

You are kidding yo ursell if you
thtnk the wor ld IS gocng to
en1ertain yo u tod ay; Th ing s
happen to those who make
them happen .

Humane

Virginia Hayman

Services Offered
NOW HAULING limestone 1n

LINCOLN

•P o meroy .
Up s tairs ,
3
bedrooms, both and shower.
~ownsta in, dining room . llv·
mg room , kitchen and half
both. 4 rooms below street
level ,
furnace
room
workshop and 2 finished
rooms. PH. 992·586.5.

367·7101.

SEVEN lABRADOR puppies. 7

FOIIENSIC DIRECTOR

AQUARIUS (Jon .IO-Feb .191

(Feb.20-Morch

992- 7680or7~2- 2155 .

1965 GENEI!Al60xl2 . 2 bodr.

ALUMINUM AND vinyl siding
m«honlc wonted . Must be ••·
per lenced ond hove own

Mr. Karr's Demo.

Inco nsis tency in the direction
of your ou lput an d · ene rg 1es
gets In th e way of your ge tt 1ng
anyth1ng accomplished toaav .
Don' t be a driller

PISCES

TWO POODLE typo outdoor

I

HOUSE FOR so le. ·.130 Butter·
nut' Pomeroy . OH. 992- 2~ 10 .

12A
4 miles from coolville, 3
newer units plus 6 rm .
house on 1. Cill far more

details.

dogt. 1 block with white, 1
br own with white on it. Botfl
mole and 1().11 months old .

·· 992-5858

OPEN
JULY 17th

RENTAL INVESTMENT

KITIENS . Aher 6, 992-2520.

behaved.

GUN SHOOT, EVERY FRib"'v
7·30 PM RACINE GUN CLUB.
FACTORY CHOKE GUNS QN.
LY.

BIG AUCTION every We&lt;! •• 7

992-7680.

1 yr old. hautiful. well-

Notices

Real Estate for Sale

Rea I Estate for Sale

Auctions

pm. Hartford Comm un ity
Center, Hartford. WV , A miles
above
Pomeroy - Mason
white, 1 brood stripe tiger, 1 Bridge .
calico. Humane Society .

IRISH SETTER. female . Approx .

BALANCED FREE

(eE~!rJNERAL

V 8, std .• 4 wheel dr i ve

We mourn for him In alienee
No eye can IH u1 WHp·
But many a tllent tear is i h.ct
While ot.,ert are oal. .p
Peacefully sl. .plng, r"ting 01
lost
The world'J weary troubles
and trial• are patl
In alienee he suffered, in patience he bore

KARR &amp;VAN ZANDT

f ive l c c.·t

12 degrees and thirty
tou r minutes cast to t he
sou th 11ne o f sa•d tract of
land , sai&lt;.l st rip of land
be inq the same now oc
cu p1cd as t he publi c road
through sa td pr emises ,
also reso r vtng tw enty t l v e
f eet along the east side o f
S~ 1 d
above
de scribed
premises for a pub I ic street
or highway
Re ference Deed : Vo l. 29 ,
Page 410 , D eed Record s
Me ig s County , Oh io .
You are no t i f ied th a t you
are r equ ired to answer t he
Comp la int within twenty
eigh t days a ft er th e last
p ub li c at ion
The
la s t
publi ca t ion will be made on
the lOth day of August,
1979

grp. , lots more!

MOUNTED AND

GiveAway
ADORABLE PUPPIES. 7A2·269'.1.

Slant 6, 3 sp, P S., new rad1al fires .

302 V 8, aul u. P S

In Memory -

tNEW!&gt;PAPEA ~NTERPRISE A.SSN I

PUPPY BlACK lab .. B weeks
old. Ca1. black. lomalo.
Female, some long hol r, ~
black . I tiger , I grey and

appearance prot. grp ., dual remote mirrors, turb ine
wheel covers .

ALL
PASSENGER
SIZES

Your Best Buys Are Found in the Sentinel Classifieds
IN LOVING memory of Edward

Ing, P ./frt . disc brakes, am ·fm stereo 8 track tape,

1974 MUSTANG HATCHBACK ••••••••••••• s1995
1974 IMPALA 2 DR ......................$1295
1974.FORD GRANADA 4 DR •••••••••••••• !l995

10)

Bowen, who palled away July

cloth seat trim , auto. trans ., wsw radials, p steer -

1975 PlYMOUTH DUSTEit ............... ,s1895

(April 2G-May

GEMINI (Moy 21-Juno 20) Kid·
ding ~ourself about hOw much
you are capable of dotng at one
time and attempting too many
proJects coul d make you a very
unreliable partner today .

pren,isc s 2'1 .8 feet ea st of

Medium grey metallic, 3.3L/ 6 cyl. eng ., pinstripes,

AM FM , 81r tlc k , V ·6, P .S, P .B ., vinyl roof.

TAURUS

but your personal desires.

line o f said above describ ed

~o utll

IN THE
COM MON P LEAS COURT
DFMEIGSCOUNTY ,
OHIO

11-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, July 20, 1979

REAL ESTATE: I acre lot In Rlggtcrest Manor, between Tuppers Plains and Chester.
Pf'lone 985-3929 and 985-412&lt;i .
LOT FOR sole, Harrisonville.
Water tap on lot, driveway tile
in. App. 145 ft . frontage. On

hard road .
992·2020.

$1800.

Coli

GOOD SELECTION OF
CUSHION VINYL
CALL 742·2211 TALK TO
Wendell or Herb Grate or Gene Smith

RUTLAND FURNITURE
742·2211

'

'

Rutland, 0 .

,

�1,2-TheDaUy Sentine!, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0., Friday, J4Jy ~. 1979

Nations •••

Area deaths

r

ELIZA M. ADAMS
Eliza M. Adams, 64, Long Street,
Rutland, died at Holzer Medical
Center Thursday afternoon shortly
after admission .
She was born Aug. 5, 1914 in
MUifield the daughter of the late
James D. and Rachel Payne Adams,
Sr.She was also preceded in death by
ooe sister, Mrs. Cathrine Lares in
1975.
She is survived by one brother,
James D. Adams, Jr ., Rutland, with
whom she made her home, two
sisters, Mrs. Lawsrence (Emogene)
Bell and Mrs. Inez Wemmer, both of
The Plains, several nieces, nephews
and cousins.
Funeral services will be held
Sunday at 2 p.m. at the Highland

Chapel Church where she had been a
member 32 years. The Rev . Amos
Tillis and the Rev. George Casto will
officiate. Burial will be in Riverview
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
Walker Funeral Home, Rutlan·d,
anytime after 2p.m. on Saturday until
noon on Sunday when the body will be
taken to the church. The family will
receive friends at the funeral home
Saturday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 P.M.

SQUAD CALLED
The Middleport ER Squad was
called to Brick Street, Pomeroy,
Thursday at 5:54 for Jennifer Miller
who was taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

VETERANS MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL
Admissions-Randy Lee, Pomeroy;
Richard Winebrenner, Pomeroy;
Edward Templeton . Pomeroy;
Norman Matson, Racine; Salem
Yates, Racine; Marvin Darst,
Pomeroy.
Discharges-None.

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

PICNIC PLANNED
Drew Webster Post 39, American
I .egion , will hold a picnic at Ft. Meigs
Tuesday at 6:30p.m. Members are to
bring a covered dish.

TRUSTEES TO MEET
Chester Township Trustees will
meet in special session Saturday, July
21, at 7 p.m. at Chester Town Hall.

TRY OUR
·KFC

(Continued from page 1)
Federal Reserve Board and President
Carter's choice to replace W. Michael
Blumenthal ·as Treasury secretary,
gave an even gloomier forecast to
Congress earlier this week.
Miller said the nation's output could
fall as much as 2 percent this year and
that as many as 1.4 million people
could lose their jobs.
"It ap~ears likely that they (the
new Commerce Department figures)
will indicate that real gross national
product declined somewhat after
advancing only marginally in the first
quarter," Miller told Congress.
In other economic news Thursday:
- The most recent Associated
Press-NBC News poll found that more
Americans than ever now say their
families' finances have been damaged
by inflation. Nearly one-third of those
interviewed earlier this Week said
their families ' financial picture had
worsened over the last 12 months, the
highest such response in three years.
- The Commerce Department
reported that the personal income of
Americans rose 0.5 percent in June.
The total for wages, farm income,
interest and dividends had risen 0.7
percent in May.
- The Treasury Department
announced that it had discontinued its
investigation of alleged ·below-market
prices on imported Mexican
vegetables. The anti-dumping
investigation was stopped because
Florida growers withdrew their
complaint to see if the United States
and Mexico.

Duncan •••
(Continued from page I)
members of the White House staff" Jordan, Powell and budget · director
James· Mcintyre.
Mrs. Harris said at · a news
conference sbe had no plans to change
any of Califano's controversial
policies and was unlikely to alter her
blunt ouispoken manner in dealing
with
other
administration
policymakers.
Blumenthal told a gathering of
Treasury employees he was happy
with Carter's decision and was
confident Miller would continue the
same anti-inflationary policies.

BAR~B-QUE

CHICKEN
It's
Delicious

MARRIAGE ENDS
A dissolution of marriage was
granted in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court to Laura E. Carpenter,
Middleport, from Roger E. Carpenter,
Long Bottom.

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT
POMEROY, 0.

Letart Falls one of nation's most
productive tomato-growing areas

MORE SUNNY WEATHER
.. A high pressure area over Ohio
promises a few more days of sunny
weather, according to the National
Weather Service.
.. Afternoon readings will be
generally in the 80s today and
Saturday with lows tonight from the
qpper 50s in the north to the mid 60s in
the extreme so uth.
.. The suruty weather is expected to
last in the Buckeye State through
Monday
with
temperatures
continuing a slow climb through the
early part of next week.

By Kevin Kelly
LETART F ALUl - In their search
for gold in old Mexico, Spanish
COOCJuisladors came upon the plant
with the color ci gold, which became
known 811 tomatoes. They were prom·
ptly Imported to Europe, on the
rumor the t~to had great healing
powers, and soon became a major
staple of western-diet.
Some four hundred years later, .the
tumato hal! yet to lose its popularity
811 a major produce food. It is enjoyed
for ltaelf and in the many food produc·
ts made from it.
·
In and around Letart Falls, there is
ample evidence there is still a market
for tomatoes, as the area is one of the
most productive tomato-growing
areas in the country. Blessed by being

"':':-:::::::::::::::::·:':':':·:':·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·::: ·:-:·:·:·:':'

Weather
Partly cloudy through Saturday.
Low tonight in the mid 60s. High
Saturday in the mid 801!. The chance
of rain is 10 percent tonight and Saturday.
.

41 crewm
· en
rescued after
SAN JUAN , "Puerto Rico (AP) - A
supertanker and a small freighter
collided in the Atlantic overnight,
setting both ships ablaze and forcing
the crews to abandon ship, the U.S.
Coast Guard said today.
Rescue efforts were underway this
morning and 41 crewmen were
reported pic~ed up, including all those
from the tanker.
A Coast Guard spokesman said the
collision occurred between 7 and 8
p.m. Thursday about 20 miles east of
Tobago.
The Coast Guard identified tlie ships
as the tanker Aegean Captain and the
freighter Atlantic Express.
Both vessels are registered in
Liberia, according to Lloyd's Register
of Shipping.
The circumstances of the collision
were not yet known, the Coast Guard
spokesman said. It was not known
how much oil the tanker was carrying .
It was also not known how many
crewme n the freighter carried, he
said, but five men had been picked up
by early morning.
All 36 of the Aegean Captain's crew
had bee~ picked up, he said.

VOL 13 NO. 25

in the state of Ohio, at the close of business on June 30, 19'79 published in response to call
made by Comptroller of the Currency, under title 12, United States Code, Section 161.
Charter number 1980

National Bank Region Number 4

Statement of Resources and Liabilities
Cash and due from depository institutions ...........• , ..... . .. . . .. .... ... . $2,242,000.00
U.S. Treasury securities . . ....................... . ...... . .... . ..... .. .... 6,202,000.00
Obligations of States and political
•
subdivisions in the United States ........................................ 2,221,000.00
All other securities ............................. . ....... , . .. .. , .. . ........ . 56,000.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
under agreements to resell .. .. .... .... ... ... ..... ...................... 4,775,000.00
Loans, Total (exc.luding unearned income) . ...... . .... ...... 12,903,000.00
Less: Allowance for possible loan losses . ..................... 104,000.00
Lollns. Net . ....... .... .. ... .... . .. ..... ........ . , ............ ....... 12,799,000.00
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
other assets representing bank premises . ... ................ , .. ............ 308,000.00
All other assets . ....... .. ....... .. . .... ... . ...... .. ......... ... •......... 203,000.00
'I---+ TOTAL ASSETS .. ........................ ........ ... ................. 128,116,000.00

.,

.-.--....
-...
Ill

I ll
Ill(

Demand deposits of individuals, prtnshps., and corps .......... .. ............ 5,462,000.00
Time and savings deposits of individuals,
partnerships, and corps .. ...... .. . .. . . .... ... .... .. ............ . ...... 17,738,000.00
· Deposits of United States Government ..... . ....... ... . ...... . . . ...... . ....... 4,000.00
Deposits of States and political subdivisions
in the United SIJJtes. . . . . . . ............................. . ..... . ........ 2,580,000.00
Certified and officers ' checks ............... .. : ............... .. ........... 116,000.00
Total Deposits ........... ......... .. . ............ ... ......... ........ ... 25,900,000.00
Total demand deposits . ... ... . ... .. ; .......... .... .......... 6,295,000.00
Total time and 5avings deposits . .................. . ......... 19,605,000.00
All other liabilities ............. . .. . ·........ .. ............................. 162,000.00
TOTAL UABILITIES (excluding subordinated notes
and debentures) ....................... . . ..... .................. .. .. . f26,062,000.00

....,===

.,___+
&gt;- ...

Common stock :
No. shares authorized 12,000
a
!:~ b.. No.
shares outstanding 12,000
(par value) .. . . , ...... .... ........ . .... $300,000.00
;:,Surplus ..................... .. ......................................... 1,500,000.00
00.
.,.Ill(
Undivided profits and reserve for contingencies
.
v and
other capital reserves . .. ........... .......... .. . ; .... ... ...... . ...... . 944,000.00
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL .... ............ . ............. ... ....... . ... . $2,744,000.00
1 - - - + TOTALUABILITIES AND EQUITY CAPITAL ............. . ..... ••... ... $28,116,000.00
Ill(
Q

Amounts outstanding as of report date:
Time certificates of deposit in denominations of $100,000
or more ........... .... ...... ......... ................................ 1,469,000.00
Average for 3() calendar days (or calendar month) ending with report date:
Total deposits ........... . .. ................................... . ... ... 25,743,000.00

z

Ill(

Cll:

0

~

I, Joan Wolfe, Assistant Cashier, of the above-flamed bank do.hereby declare that this
,
Report of Condition is true and correct to the best of my knowledge and belief.
Joan Wolfe
·
July 17,1979

Ill

~
_ _- - J , . .

Edison Hobstetter
Roger Morgan - Directors
Warren Pickens

ASTRONAUT EDWIN ALDRIN walks on the moon in II photograph
taken by his partner, NeU Annstrong. It is still difficult not to marvel
when looking at the moon in tbe evening sky that 12 ci our own kind ac·
tually set foot there . Americans landed on the moon's surface 10 year.~
ago today.
;:;:·:·:;:;:;:::;:;:;:::·:·&gt;:·:·:-:·:·:&lt;·:·:-:·:-:·:-:·:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:

EXTENDED FORECAST
Sunday through TUesday - Fair
SUDday. A ehauce of tbuadentorma
mainly ID tbe afterooo01 111111
evenlugo Monday and Tuesday.
Gradually warmlog trend wltb blgbs
ID the upper 11011 lo low 90o and lo,..
ID the mld 60o to low 708.
'··::: :· : -;.;:.;: ·:·:;;;:.;~:·:·:;.:;..::..:·;.:.;-:·:·:.:;- ·. · .·.·. ·

.. '. ·:··· '·.· '.'.

'''

MEET MONDAY
The Meigs County United Methodist
Men will meet Monday, July 23, at
7 :30 p.m. at the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church.

Manager Earl Weaver of the
Baltimore Orioles was a minor league ·
second baSeman for 13 seasons but
never played in .the majors.

ELBERFELD$

1
ZPRICE
2

FOUR AIRLINE HOSTESSES visited the Thnes·
Sentinel ciflce on their way home to Manila, P. 1., acCOIIIJIWed by their regular pauenger, llix.foot~ght
Roy Elllston, Rt. 2, Patriot. The girls work for Yemen

Men's Knit Shirts
Women's Summer Dresses
Little Boys Shirts
Children's Summer Slep r .,
Men's Caps &amp; Hats
Men's Summer !
Women's ~·
Men's S ~
Men's T;
Men's ~
. va ts

Women's Blouses
Women's Coordinates
Boys Swim Trunks
Record Albums
Women's Slips
Boys Shorts
Men's Dress Slacks
Men's Sport Shirts
Men's Dress Suits

OP E N FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8

,

,

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY

Guests of Roy Elliston

Four Filipino airline
hostesses visit Gallia

PRICE 35 CENTS

individual
as you

GALUPOUS - Roy Elliston, forWhere do you live in Yemen ' In a single .. . and available l
mer basketball player in high school staff home type of situation in Sanaa,
Elliston, a reservoir analyst,
and college in Colorado, his home Yemen.
CONWAY, S.C. (AP l - Ronald
moved here in 1974.
state, brought four petite brunettes to
Are you married? No. We're all
"Rusty" Woomer was sentenced
his llllopted home, Gallia County,
Friday to die in the electric chair for
Friday. They are hostesses for
the murder of a Pawley's Island
Yemen Airways, which covers
convenience .store clerk, one of four
Europe and tbe Mideast.
persons shot to death in a coastal
Elliston, Rt. 2, Patriot, Is six feet
crime spree Feb. 22.
eight Inches tall, and Is a petroleum
The Horr y County jury that
engineer for Texaco Jntema~ional ,
convicted Woomer, 24, of Hunt·
Inc., stationed In Luanda , Angola . He
ington, W.Va., Wednesday reached
was graduated from Colorado State at
its decision after two hours of
Boulder, but got his petrolew;n
GALUPOUS - Wben Margaret
"Before the computers they have deliberation at about 4:40p.m.
engineering from Oklahoma State.
Kelly retires the end of this month as now, " the Jackson newspaper read,
Circuit Judge David Harwell set
The girls are Filipinos, and came to treasurer of the Gallla.Jackson·
"she would stay late in the evenings Sept. 28 as the execution date. The
Gallipolis with Elliston on their way Vinton Vocational School board, she finishing up the reports and tben
hoole to Manila. They are Marlene will have finished 29 yeal"ll with the usually bring them home with her to sentence will automatically be
appealed to the South Carolina
Schuck, Ludette Domapias, Louise public schools - six of them with Cinisll."
Court.
Supreme
Verdote - each with two years ex· Buckeye Hills career Center at Rio
A charter member of the southern
Woomer had been convicted of
perience - and Flor Sarmiento with Grande , which this board operates.
chapter of the Ohio School Business
six years experience as an airline
A grandson, Bill Needham, just Officials, Mrs. Kelly also is a member murder in the death of Della Louise
hostess. They met Elliston in Rome.
graduated from Buckeye Hills. of the Jackson Progress Club, Sellers, 35. She and Wanda SumWhy doesn 1 the Yemen Airways Another grandson is Kelly Needham, Business and Professional Women's mers, 25, were abducted from the
company hire Arabs? It'a against the a junior at Rio Grande College. She
Club for 20 years, Optimist Club for 10 store where they worked the evening
religion (Islam ), the girls said.
was graduated from Jackson High years, and Oak Hill Chapter of the Or· of Feb. 22. They were raped, shot
How do you like Gallipolis? It's the School and joined her class this sum- der of Eastern Star for 25 years.
and left for dead.
most beautiful, cleanest city in the mer for its 50th reunion. Mrs. Kelly
Mrs. Summers survived, her
She is a member of Christ United
world'
also was graduated from Portsmouth Methodist Church and its women 's af. lower jaw blown away by a shotgun
Business College.
filiate. Her leading civic interest has blast that evening.
Her successor will ·be Naomi been the Jackson County Cancer
Woomer was sentenced to life in
Beman,
another
veteran
of
school
Society.
prison
for kidnapping and 50 years
Gallia Caucus of
board clerkships, including the Gallia
for sexual assault and assault with
Board of Education.
OVRDC meets July 26 County
Margaret Kelly stated as secretary
of the Jackson County superintendent
GALUPOUS - The Gallia County of schools, whose jurisdiction inMosUy sunny today with highs in
PUBUC HEARING MONDAY
caucus of the Ohio" Valley Regional cluded a dozen local districts - all but the mid Ins. The chance of rain is 10
POMEROY
- The Meigs County
Development Commission will meet Jackson and Wellston. When a percent.
Commissioners are inviting all
on Thursday, July 26, at 7:30p.m. The merger left only Oak Hill in the coun,:;:::::::;:::;:;:::::::;:::::;:::;:·:·:·:-:·:·:::::;:;:;:::::::::::::::;:::::::;:::;:;:;:::;:;:;:; residents living within the proposed
meeting will be held in the Municipal ty district, Mrs. Kelly went there.
EXTENDED FORECAST
sewage district in the TUppers Plains
Court Room "in the City Building, 518
At Buckeye Hills, according to Julia
Monday
lbrougb Wednesday:
area to attend a public meeting to be
Second Avenue, Gallipolis.
Morse, writing in the Jackson Jourheld in the TUppers Plains ElemenPurpoee of the meeting is to update nal-Herald, "working as treasurer for Warm and bumld wltb scattered af.
last year's projects and submit any the board requires her to take care of ternoon and evening thunderstorms, tary School on Monday, July 23 at 7:30
, .
new projects to the GaUls County payroll, budgets and reports, bills, mainly .Tueaday and Wednesday. p.m.
Highs
from
mid
80s
to
low
90s,
and
Ptirpo!ie
of
the
meeting
is
to
have an
Caucus so that they can be and the investment of the school's
lows
from
mld
60o
to
around
70.
open
discussion
on
the
recent
sewage
pr!Orttb:ed.
money .
.;:;:::::::;:;:;:·:·:···=·=·····:·:·:-:;:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:·· ·:·:·:;:;:. ban enacted by the EPA.

Weather

Jeep Cherokee us" 4-dr.

Jeep Cherokee "S" 'l·dr.
ALL MODELS NOW
IN STOCK
We have received our entire allocation
for I he res! of lh is model year. llmlled
. number of ' 79 Cherokees lefl lo choose
from . See one of our courteous

Veteran director moves

Jeep_,. Cherokee

cast toward production...

Jeep wrote the book on 4-wheel drive!

Page B-1

446-9800 .

Hoffman said this woulil dfrectly af.
feet Southern Ohio Coal Company,
near Langsville. Both Southern Ohio .
and representatives of the United
Mine Workers (UMW) have resear·
ched this section of the bill and have
concluded such a burden placed upon
a coal company would be unfair and
would affect almost 2,000 jobs in
Meigs County and surrounding area.
"The county has benefited from the
huge tues paid by the company,"
Hcifman stated, "and from the large
payroll paid to area residents. This
certainly CBMot be taken away."
Paragraph F, Hoffman continued,
would limit what could be charged for
coal even though it would cos! more to
.,reduce it. Coal can be sold cheaper

Where It Is Inside
Area deaths .••. , ..... , •..•.... .... .. ,. ..•... .. A·4
Cl ass•"f"•e d a d s . ......... • , .................. D-4-9

Farm ... ... . . .. . ....... ............. ... ... c-s-8

"I'm sorry I came down here to
cause the people of South carolina
the trouble "that I have.
"I figured I'd be scared. But I
have Christ with me now. I know
he'll. be with me," Woomer said
crymg.
"I'd like to apologize to Wanda
Summers and her husband and I
hope they cari get their lives back
tog_ether. I apologize to Mr. Sellers. I
know it can't bring his wife back
.with him," he said.
Harwell then addressed Woomer,
saying, "You do appreciate the
horrible consequences that you have
brought the people of South
Carolina. The horror and tragedy
that you brought about by your
Gallipolis commission actions
defy my Imagination.
"If I didn't tmpose the death
to meet Tuesday .8
sentence in this case, I don't believe
I could ever impose it in another
GALUPOUS-The Gallipolis City case. ... It's not something I cherish,
Commission will meet in special but it's part of my responsibility,"
session Tuesday at 8 p.m. In the the judge said.
Municipal Court Room.
"Ma:,: Qod have mercy on your
Agenda items include :
soul," Harwell concluded.
•The second reading of ordinances
accepting and rejecting bids for
typewriters; ·accepting and rejecting
bids for a bond copier; and,
authorizing the city manager to enter
into a contract with Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric.
COMMISSION TO MEET
•The first reading of ordinances
GALUPOUS - Monthly meeting
accepting and rejecting bids for sewer of the 0 . 0. Mcintyre Park Com·
roding cable; accepting and rejecting mission will be held at ap.m. Tuesday
bids on fire hydrants; and, accepting (July 24) at the Raccoon Creek CowJ.
and rejecting bids for repair and-ar ty Park site.
replacement of fire hydrants. .
Members of the commission will
-A meeting in executive sesSion with view the park site, according to Joeet·
the Gallla County Commissioners and te Baker, director of parkS and
the
H.U.D . Committee for recreation, the 0 . 0 . Mcintyre Park
Mapleshade.
District. ·

intent to kill in the attack on Mrs.
Summers.
In the afternoon before the two
women were kidnapped, three other
persons were killed and a valuable
coin collection stolen in Georgetown
and Colleton counties.
Woomer is charged with murder
in those deaths. An alleged accomplice in the slayings, Eugene
Skaar, 41, also of Huntington, killed
himself as jJolice closed in on the
pair at a Myrtle Beach motel shortly
after midnight.
After the sentence was read,
Harwell asked Woomer if he had
anything to say. "Yes sir," he said.

.

at

Jones, Allen cop
Jaycees tournament•..

Lifestyle ..•• •••• .••.. • , .•. , •••...• ...•.•• B-1-10
Local ..........• .•...••.. ...•••.•••.••.••• A-2-8
State and national •••.•• , ••...... ........ ..... D·l

Page·C-1

Sports . . ~ ................................... C·l -4

Gallipolis, Q,
\

•

from mines already in existence Who
have not made huge investmenta in
the area like Southern Ohio has.
"I feel that H.B. 21 is basically an .
excellent bill," he said. "It eliminates
the fuel coat clause and requires
PVCO to review Ute cost of fuel every
six months to determine what cost in·
crease or decrease ·should be permitted."
The bill could be a step in the right
direction, Hoffman £ontinued; but
Pa~agraph F should be deleted to
prevent a negative economic affect on
the area. He bas urged all area
residents to contact Sen. Oakley C.
Collins (R·Ironton) and Rep. Roo
James (!).Proctorville) to ask them
why Paragraph F will not be
detrimental to the area.

Woomer sentenced to death

29 years of ·school service

Three rugged wagons
that areas

our fabulous deals on these Cherokees .
oNLY 7 1NsrocKNow

. MIDDLEPORT -Mayor Fred Hof·
fman Saturday urged residents to
familiarize themselves with a piece of
legislation with possible negative ef·
fects on southeastern Ohio.
Hoffman spoke of H.B. 21, Sec.
4905.01, paragraph F, which states the
cost of extracting fuel for a power
company is contingent lipon the
power company.
"In the case ci a coal. company,"
the paragraph reads, "owned or con·
trolled in whole or in part by the company, such term shall not esceed a
price more than 10 percent above the
average cost per million Bri,tish ther·
mal units of similar quality coal purchased from all independent-like
mining operations ... "

Mrs. Kelly to retire after

JEER CHEROKEE

are.

Airways, covering Europe and the Mideast. They are,
left to right, Marlene Schuck, Flor Sanniento, Ludette
Domapias, and Louise Verdote. Sallyanne Holtz
photographed them as J . Shennan Porter interviewed
them.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

•195 Upper River Road

SUNDAY, JULY 22, 1979

tntint

Hoffman urges area
residents to contact
officials o n H. B. 21

RIVERSIDE AMC &amp; JEEP
.

ttttts

GALLIPOLIS- POINT PLEASJiNT

sales man loday and ask aboul one of
We, the undersigned directors att.est the correctness of this statement of resources and
liabilities. We declare that it has been examined by us, and to the best of our knowledge and
belief is true and correct.

•

owner Don Richard Hill estimates they employ more
than 3() people at picking tinoe.

Questions Paragraph F

Consolidating domestic subsidiaries of the

POME80Y NATIONAL BANK

"It's been equal to the other boys in
farming," he said, comparing his
business with his neighbors. At one
time there were almost 3() or 40 farmers in the area, but the purchase of
land for the new hydroelectric plant
has cut the . number down to about
twelve. But even then, competition
was never too strong: there was
always a market for what they had to
sell.
in these da~s where the in·
dependent farmer is slowly disappearing, the Hill operation is stU!
family-awned and manages to break
even each.year. Both of their packing Iii
houses contain conveyor devices p
which clean, dry and send tomatoes to
packing cases. Since the pickinl( time
fiLL BROTHERS EMPLOYEES are shown in the
(Continued on page A-2 )
field picking tomatoes at the height of the season. Co-

unba

boats collide

JULY CLEARANCE SALE

REPORT OF CONDITION

on a flood plain, the land is especially
fertile and fanners have bene making
a living off it for as long as the area
bas been settled.
Fresh produce is to be found in
abundance here, but tomatoes are the
big Industry for most fanners. Hill
Brothers, a family-awned finn, has
been growing and seUing tOIJIIItoes for
almoat fifty years and is still one of
the major producers in the area.
Clifford Hill, co-awner ci the flnn,
said farming has been in the family
for almllSt seventy years, and like .
other farmers around them, they saw ·
a market for their produce in the
larger Ohio cities like Cleveland and
CinciJUitl. With 3() acres and two
packing houses, the picking season is '
in full sway on the Hill fanns.

''

0

I

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