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8- The Daily Sentinel. MiddleiJ(lrt·Pomeroy , 0 ., Monday, July 23 1979
EXTENDED OIJTLOOK
Wedneaday through Friday,
warm and bumld with a chance of
showers eacb day. Hlgbs In the 80s
to around 90 and lows from the mid
00 to the low 7011.

ATHENS LIVESTOCK SALES

Saturday, July 21, 1979
Feeder Steers (400·800 lbs.J choice
82·89, good 63. 75·81 ; Feeder Heifers
(400·700 lbs.1 choice 69·82, goad 39·68;
Feeder Bulls (&gt;400·800 lbs. I choice
81.50·93.50, good 48.50·82.
,
Slaughter Bulls (over 1,000 lbs.J
50·58, cow and ca lf pairs 460·,750 ;
Slaughter cows, utiliti es 38 ·46.75.
Slaugher cows, utilities 38 ·46.75,

canners and cutters 35·41. :JO, stock

cows 42·48.50.

Veals (choice and prime&gt; 76·96,

baby ca lves (by the head) 39·47.
Hogs (No. 1, barows and gilts,
200 ·230 lbS ,) 39.90·40 .10, SOWS
23.25·24.75, pigs (by the head ) 8·39.
Slaughter Lambs 50·54, feeder
lambs 50·55.50.
OHIO VALLEY LIVESTOCK CO.
Saturday, July 21, 1979

Trends : Feeder cattle 1.00 to 4.00
lower. Cows 3.00 to 6.00 lower. Veal
calves ready . Total head : 570.

Feeder Steers : Good and Choice,

250 to 300 lbs. 82 ·91.75, 300 to 400 lbs.
79.50·91, 400 to 500 lbs. 79·91, 500 to 600
lbs. 68.5089,600 to 700 lbs. 64.50·77 , 100
to 800 lbs. 62·75, 800 and over
61.75-74.25.
Feeder Heifers : Good and Choice,

250 to 300 lbs. 86.75·92.50, 300 to 400 lbs.
81.75-89.75, 400 to 500 lbs. 67·79, 500 to
ENJOY CLEANING CAR - Crenson Pratt, Middleport, spends most
600 lbs. 59-75, 600 to 700 lbs . 5H7. 100
to 800 lbs. S3·64, 800 and over
of his summer time washing and wru&lt;ing his car. The car is over a year
52.50·65.50.
old but Crenson likes to keep it looking as new as IJ(lSSible.
Feeder Bulls: GoQd and Choice. 250
to 300 lbs. 82-92, 300 to •oo lbs. 72-86,
400 to 500 lbs. 68·75.75, 500 to 600 lbs.
. 64-67.76, 600 to 700 lbs. 61.75-6•.50. 700
to 800 lbs. 57.75·61.75, 8oo and over
57.25-60.75.
Holstein Steers and Bulls (300 to BOO
EVERGREEN, Va. (AP) - Three
.The injured man was taken to lbs. I 57·68 .
Bull s (1,000 lb s. and over )
people were murdered and a fourth Lynchburg General HospitaL His
51.50·56.50.
was wounded this morning at a house condition was not available
Slaughter
Cows
(utilities )
near this Appomattox County immediately.
41.50·47.80, (canners and cutters)
community, state IJ(llice said.
A state police spokesman at 35·42.50.
Springer Cows (by the head 1
Appomattox said someone reported 300·5101
Cows·Calves) (by the head )
hearing shots and screams at the 375·775; Veal Calves 90·110, Baby
house about 8 a.m.
Calves60·145.
HOGS - Top Hogs (210·2301 37.50 to
When IJ(llice went to the house, they
Boars 25 to 26.25, Pigs (by the
found lhree men dead and a fourlh 39.75,
ERIE, Pa. (AP) - A 30-inch
head) 10 to 25, Sows (450 lbs. and
wounded . Their identities were not over123 to 29.50.
shark was discovered washed up
released immediately.
on the shores of Presqua Isle
Police said lhe four were surveyors
State Park Sunday morning , park
who were staying at the house while
police said.
FOOTBALL MEETING
working on a job for an Appomattox
The shark, found by a life
All
boys interested in playing
County firm.
guard at Beach No. I on the Lake
football
at Soulhern High School this
Police said they had no suspects and
Erie Peninsula, apparently had
fall
are
toreiJ(lrt
this evening at 7 p.m.
that no motive for the shootings had
not been dead long, police chief
the
high
schooL
at
been determined.
Dan Pascanio said.
It apparently had been placed
PAINS OF OLD AGE
in the water by someone and
EVENT JULY 31
AUGUSTA'
Ga. (AP)- Golfer Rod
there is no cause for alarm, said
The Heart AsSociation "swim-aFunseth was 'talking about his injured
Pu.scanio, adding that aU 12
right hand and came to a painful than" will be held Tuesday, July 31 at
beaches at the park wo..ld re.
Middleport Pool from 6 to 8 p.m.
conclusion.
main open.
Applications for those who wish ·to
"I
lhink
I
have
arlhritis
8n
my
The shark was sent to the Penn·
participate
may be picked up at the
middle
two
fingers,"
he
said.
"My
sylvania Fish Commission for
Meigs
Inn
or at the pool, Roberta
index
finger
hurts
and
sometimes
my
study to detennine its species, he
today .
O'Brien
announced
thwnb
begins
to
ache.
Oh,
it's
just
old
said.

Police seek murder clues

Shark discovered

age.."

.

EFFECTIVE JULY 1

SA-V INGS RATES
ARE GOI.N G UP
As of July 1st
the Farmers Bank
Will Be Paying Higher

PASSBOOK

computed Daily
Compounded Quarterly

90 DAY CERTIFICATE ............ ~.i~~-~~.~~-1-'-~~~:~?............. 5%%
1 YEAR CERTIFICATE .............~~~~~-~~-~~:~~~. ~-~ ............... 6%
4 YEAR CERTIFICATE ............ ~i.~~~~-~-5-1-'-~~?:??............. 7114%
6 YEAR CERTIFICATE .............~~~~~~~.~~:~??:?. ............. 7lh%
8 YEAR CERTIFICATE
.............
~:~.i-~~~.~.1 :~.~~-.~~
7~% .
.
4Minimum
YEAR MONEYInterest
CERTIFICATE
rate of 111•% under the average 4 year yield of
0

...........

..

JESSIE M. ORR
Jessie M. Orr, 77,. 1621 E. Hudson
St., Colwnbus, died Sunday at Doctors
North Hospital.
~Irs . Or-r was a former resident of
Meigs County. She was the daughter
of the late David Spencer and Mary
Fell .
She was a former employe of
Practical Burial Company.
She is survived by five sons,
Marion, Allen, Starling, Marcus and
Alba Orr, eight grandchildren, , and
seven great grandchildren, and four
sisters, Hattie Frederick , Verba
McDole, Marguerite Rasp and Elsie
StahL
Funeral services will be held
Wednesday at 10:30 a.m. at lhe Long
Funeral Home Northeast Chapel, 5528
Cleveland Ave. Friends may call at
the funeral home today from 7 to 9 and
Tuesday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9. Burial
will he in F.orest Lawn Cemetery.

HOSPITAL 1'EWS
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
Saturday Admissions---George
Deem, Racine.
Saturday Discharges-Raymond
Ridgway, Emrna Johnson, John
Powell,. Norman Matson, Samuel
McKinney, Jr., Mark Michael, Clara
Shuster , Mae Lightfoot, Mary
Stanley, Walter Jewell, Mary Smilh.
Sunday Admissions-Dale Howell,
Syracuse; Judith Smith·, Racine,
Emma Wayland, Middleport; Ronnie
Powell, Pomeroy:
Sunday Discharges-Ronald Miller,
Mary Morarity.

HOlZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGESJULY20
Coreen
Andersen,
Nora
Arthur ,Wilma Bahr, Orpha Booth,
Margare! Coder, Evelyn Daft,
Gertrude Davis, Ella Eabs, Michael
Emerson, Gregory Gooderham,
Matthew Griffin,. Art Hartley, Jr.,
Anna Kessler, Mrs. Gary King and
son, Margaret Kowalski, Ruth
Larkins, Sherry Mayes, Lila Merola,
Richard Miller, Dwight Rees, Mrs.
Harold Rippeth and daughter,
Cynthia Sanders; Mrs. James Shaw
and son, Edward Shemelia, James
Steinbeck, Bobbi Strugill, Mrs. Jack
Thacker and son, Olive · watson ,
Robert Waugh.
BIRTHS,JULY20
Mr, and Mrs Larry Hill and son,
Gallipolis Ferry.
DISCAHRGES,
(Continued from page 1)
JULY21
Funeral services will be held
Kathy
Belcher,
Bmma
Blanksenship, Farrah Brumfield, Tuesday at 2 p.m. at the White
Margaret Camp, belva Campbell, Funeral Home in Coolville with the
Ruth Casto, Jason Conn ley, Dustin Rev. Guy White officiating. Burial
Cottrill, Mrs, Chester Dawson and will be in Carthage Cemetery. Friends
daughter, Mabel Day, Stella Saught, may call at the funeral home at
.
'
Francis Helton, Benjamin Hill, Mrs . anytime.
Dennis Hurt and daughter , Diann
SQUAD CALLED
Jewell, Ruth Johnson, ·.Mrs. Arne
. J?nes and daughter, Patrrcra Jordan,
The Syracuse ER Squad was called
Vrvran McCormrck, Tina Molden, Sunday at 1. 30 am for Johnny
W'll
'
Racer • Carolyn
Roth ' · Grueser who was
· taken
· · to University
' tam
.
Barbara Russell, Phyllrs Russell, Hospital, Colwnbus. At 9:50a.m. they
Amy Searll, Verna Shafer • Mary transiJ(lrted Dale Howell to Veterans
Shupe, Robert Stmmons, Marte Memorial Hospital .
Smith, Opal Stover, Clarre Turner,
Marienna Baughn Irma Waldron ,
BUFFINGTON SPEAKER
ROsalynn Whobrey, Gladys Wills.
Rev.
Eddie Buffington wiu be
BIRTHS, JULY 21
speaker
at Mount Moriah Baptist
Mr and Mrs. Chuck Wolle, son,
Wednesday
evening .
daughter, Jackson; Mr. and Mrs Church
Buffington had been incorrectly
Robert O'Dell and son, Gallipolis.
identified in lhe Sunday TimesDISCHARGES, JULY 22
Dian Canter, Mrs . Clarence Sentinel.
Chapman and daughter, Verna
Gibbs, James Harmon , CArl
THREE SQUAD RUNS
Madden, Melinda· Moore, Brenda
The Middleport ER Squad was
Myers, Robert Polcyn, Billy Singer, summoned three times Saturday.
Recta Smith, Lafe St. Calir, Mrs.
The first call was at 4:08p.m. to the
DAvid Wilkins and son.
Middleport Pool for Roger Carson, 17,
BIRTHS, JULY 22
who was taken to Holzer Medical
Mr. and Mrs. Hobart Mantini, Center. ,
daughter, Addison; Mr . and Mrs
At 5: ;37 p.m. to were called to
Kenneth Nolan, daughter, Bldell; Mr. Sycamore Street for Clara Hall who
and Mrs . Eugene Canaday, son, was dead on arrivaL At 6:07 to Fishe6
Gallipolis.
Street for Don Stivers who was taken
to Holzer Medical Center.

Two die

VOL XXVIII

By XevlJI KeUy
Although they were not in complete
agreement, MiddleiJ(lrt Vlllage Councillhembers accepted figures for the
village's 1980 budget as presented by
clerk-trealturer Gene Grate.
The budget totals $674,269 which according to Grate will represent deficit
spending.

DR.BERCTAP
Dr. Tap became a citizen of the
United States in 1966. He was licensed
by the Ohio State Medical Board in
1967.
He was a member of the American
Academy ol Medicine, Hamlltoo
County; A,Jrierican Medical Associa·
lion, Ohio State Medical Aasociation
and the Gallia County Medical Society.
0
He was also a member of the
American Urology Association, and
the Central Ohio Urology Aasociation,
Gallipolis Elks Lodge, Gallla County
Historical Society, National Rifle
Association, Knights ol Colwnbus in
Cleveland and Annenisn Benevolent
Union. He was ·a member of St. Louis
Catholic Church.
Funeral services will be held 10
a.m. Tuesday at St. I..ouiB Cathallc
Church with Rev. A. J . Golublewski
officiating. Burial will 'be in MoUnd
Hill Cemetery.
Friends may call at the WaughHalley-Wood Funeral Home today
·
from5untll9p .m. ·
If friends so desire, in lieu of
flowers, contributions may be made
to the American Heart Association .or
Gallia Cowlty Historical Society
Water Tower Preservation Fund.
Both may be directed to Mrs. Lola
Mae Suiter, in care of Cmunercial
and Savings Bank, Gallipolis.
Pallbearers will be Dr. Charles
Holzer, Dr. Neal Prendergast, Dr.
Sigismund Harder, Dr. R. H. Alonzo,
Leo Calandros and Dr. A. J.
ooLamerens.

35-4 E. Main

Pomeroy, 0

S

PECIAL
MON. THRU FRI.

FOOllONG
&amp; FRIES
Check this Healthy

SALAD BAR
• 5 different dressing•

•• noturol v-tobleo
• Homemade cole ulad
• Homem1de potato ulad
• 4 extra items

ELBERFELD$ JULY CLEARANCE
MEN'S
SUMMER

SHI

$1,000.00.

MONEY MARKET CERTIFICATE
INDIVIDUAL RETIREMENT ACCOUNT
Substantial Penalty For Early Withdrawal

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

Far111ers
POMEROY, OHIO
b. 0 ....w

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

7%%

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

fDESDAY, JULY 24, 1979

Council approves budget

Treasury Securities.
$10,000 minimum . Interest rate equal to the rate of 182 day treasury bill rate, As
determined at weekly auction.

NO. 70

en tine

at

e

Dr. Berc Tap,
56, succu~bs
Dr. Here Zenop 'J'ap, 56, a resident
of 52! First Ave., Gallipolis, died at
9:30p.m. Saturday in Holzer Medical
Center following an apparent heart .
attack.
Dr. Tap had been in failing health
the past three years. He was a
specialist in urology at Holzer Clinic,
Ltd.
He was born Feb. 1, 1923, at lsl.an·
bul, Turkey, son of the late Nlshan
Zenop and Annenuhi Tap.
He is survived by his wife, Ruth
Distler Tap, whom he married on Jan
28, 1961, at Hamilton, Ohio.
· Two sons survive : Jim and Greg
Tap, both at home. One brother,
Nurhan Tap, Montreal, Canada, survives .
Dr. Tap had resided in Gallipolis
the past 11 years, moving to the Old
French City from the greater
Cleveland area.
Dr. Tap graduated from the Univer·
sity -of Istanbul Medical Facility in
1947. He served at Haydar Pasa
Model Hospital and was a first lieutenant in the Turkish navy .
He was in general practice
medicine in Istanbul from 1948
through 1953, He served his residency
in urology at Haydar Pasa Model
Hospital in Istanbul from 1953
through 1956.
He was certified by the Turkish
Board of Urology in 1963. Then he ·
served as assistant chief of urology at ·
Haydar Pasa Model Hospital from
1956 through 1958.
He came to tne uruted .States on JU·
ly 1, 1008, and served his internship in
the United States at Mercy Hospital,
Hamilton, Ohio, in 1958 and 1959.
He also served his residency in
pathology in 1959 and 1960, and
generirl surgery at Mercy Hospital in
1960 and 1961.
Dr. Tap served his urology residency at Cincirulati Good Samaritan
Hospital in 1965 and 1966. He served
his second and third year residency in
urology at Huron, Ohio Hospital 1966
through 1008.
He came to Holzer in 1968.

•

YOUR
CHOICE

lf2

PRICE
'
Good selection
- men's s'hort sleeve shirts, dress shirts, sport shirts, western
shirts, knit shirts. All sizes.
Regular Prices $5.95 To $5.98
7~

llL

2

PRICE

~~~-:-~~~
ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

Grate said the village's income
would be $256,145 opposed to total ex·
pendltures of $374,764, leaving ' a
deficit of $118,619.
Grate went on record as opposed to
the budget as it stands, while Mayor
Fred Hoffman stated he found the
budget acceptable.
"By actual receipts and expen·
ditures, you're going into overspending," Grate said.
Grate said the budget listed aU in·
come the vilh!ge receives from its
general fund, federal revenue sharing
and other sources. Wllh the figures at
hand, it would not be enough to meet
vlllage services in the upcoming year.
'"The money stays the same," he
sta!ed, "and with devaluation you get
"
I ess. "
There remained the possibility the
budget could be funded from otl)er
departmenl'l, but it posed the problem of overdrafting, he continued.
Hoffman disagreed with Grate's
findings, stalinB he saw it differently,
allowinj! the village to operate under
the budget, since there are adequate
year-end t.lances in each fund ,

Hoffman said the village budget.
would be $854,048 which includes income plus existing balances.
"I don't think that would make any
difference, " said Councilman Marvin
Kelly. " If yoo don't have the money, .
you can't spend it."
.
Disagreement then centered
around whether· or not estimates for
the fire truck could "stand on its own
bottom, ... as Councilman Dew~y Horton put it.
Horton requested the fire iruck
estimate be lelt out of the budget, narrowing the IJ(lSSible deficit from
$118,619 to $11 ,046. Additionally, if
four percent was cut from other

estimates, the budget would balance.
Discussion stalemated, and Hoff.
man requested suggestions after
council decided against a Special
budget meeting Tuesday night.
Grate suggested the budget be filed
with the state, as the village was late
in doing so, and the fine pints be
discussed later. Council then approved to file the budget as it stood.
In other action, council tabled further discussion on the exterior work
done on the city biulding by K and S
Construction, Minersville.
Council also approved figures for
an estimated 360 tons of asphalt and
175 gallon of tack to be used to repair

Hudson, Riverview , and Park Streets
and several alleys in the village.
Clerk-tresurer Grate was instructed
to seek bids.
Council also received an expression
of thanks from Lee Wood, financial ·
secretary · of United Mine Workers
(UMW) District 6, for efforts to in·
form the public on H.B. 21 and the
amendment supiJ(lrted by Rep. Ron
James (D·Proctorville ) making coal
companies responsible for the cost of
excavating its own fueL
The battle'.s not over," Wood said.
"We want to keep the ball rolling , and
we believe, in aU truth, that we're
right."
'

1

Top-priority search ·h ,eg~s
for new reserve board chief

began inviting all sub-Cabinet level
INTERESTING POINT - Shown with lOth District Congressman
presidential apiJ(lintees to a Tuesday
Clarence E . Miller (left) during his recent visit to the area are (left to .
afternoon meeting at lhe White House
right), Congressman Miller, Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman, Jon Buck,
wilh President Carter.
training coordinator for the Gallia-Meigs, CAAYouth Conservation and
Mea nwhile , Ca rter summoned
Community Improvement Project Program (YCCIP), and Colonel
members of the White House staff to a
"Chip" Wanner, Army Corps of Engineers representative. Congressman
meeting late Monday.
Miller expressed his supiJ(lrt for the YCCIP program which is concerned
Uncertainty about the significance
with the preservation and improvement of Gallia-Meigs area resources.
of Carter's dramatic moves to revive
YCCIP provides training, wages, and supiJ(lrtive services for 16-19 year
his presidency put new pressure on
old school dropouts. During his visit, Carla Kauff and Steve Secoy, YCthe dollar in world money markets
CIP participanl'l, were able to meet the congressman.
Monday as lhe price of gold bounced
back over $300 an ounce.
Powell acknow !edged that the
changes ordained by Carter were
bound to spark "some degree of
disturbance" and said that is why the
president acted swiftly to, accept five
. .. in the world
Cabinet resignations, including that of
Treasury Secretary W. Micha el
Blumenthal.
Asked why Carter was holding a
rare
evening news conference , Powell
A Jackson County Common Pleas elected a new one.
The
allegedly
ousted
board
filed
suit
said the president wanted to "provide
By The Associated Press .
stalled early today.
Judge has ruled that an April 21
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Waves 4 to 7 feet high crashed
F oreca sters at the National
meeting at Rio Grande College called charging that the petitions circulated an opportunity for people who do not
·United Stata is throwing the 7th
by \lissident members of lhe Buckeye to call lhe meeting were improperly live on the Eastern Seaboard to watch ashore and water from the Gulf of Hurricane Center said Claudette was
Fleet Into an International effort
Rural Electric Cooperative for the distributed and the meeting iself was it."
Mexico surged into lhe sand dunes located about 165 miles east of Corpus
to save thousands ol Vietnamese
The White House spokesman near Corpus Christi as Claudette, Christi and remained stationary for
puriJ(lse of ousting the Board of in violation of the Cooperative's Code
boat people adrift · off the
Trustees was invalid and . that the of Regulations, and further claimed reiJ(lrted he and hrs assocrates were . downgraded from a tropical storm to several hours. But they said the
coutlinell of SOutheast Asia.
puriJ(lrted removal of the trustees was that the members of the c~p did not encouraged by results of a new Gallup a tropica l depressi on remained depression was expected to begin
The ezpanded air and sea
'
moving slowly westward today .
follow the code in removing lhe board poll that indicated 36 percent of 539
lherel ore null and void.
search by the U. S, Navy comes
Americans who were questioned
Around dawn, C.laudette's center
During the fall and winter ot J978, and in electing a new one.
as other nations bolster the atlOTI was located near latitude 27.2 north
On July 5, both sides of the believe Carter's Cabinet and staff
several members of the cooperati\'e
temPt to save the refugees, Jam·
and longitude 94.7 west.
.
beca me disenchanted with the controversy were heard by Judge changes will help the country.
med ,in boats tossing in the Sooth
on
Of
those
surveyed
,
12
percent
Forecasters
said
the
highest
Thomas
Mitchell,
sitting
operational policies. of the company,
China Sea.
0
sustained 'winds were about 35 mph,
' thought lhe shakeup would mak.e
assignment in GaUia County.
manager and Board of Trustees.
Long-Bnge patrol planes "are
but a few squaUs up to gale force were
In a decision filed Monday, Judge matters worse, 42 percent thought rt
Fueling the dissatisfaction was a
flying daily ml&amp;sions In the Sooth
likely and could move onshore along
long strike against the cooperative by Mitchell upheld the board's charges would make no difference and 10
China Sea to locate and seek help
.
the Louisiana apd upper Texas coast
members of the International and enjoined those elected in April percent were not sure.
Citing
the
figures,
Powell
sard:
.
later
today.
.
.
for refugees in distress," U .
from
taking
any
further
action
as
a
Brotherhood of Electrical Workers,
"There
has
been
a
great
deal
of
semt·
COLUMBUS,
Ohro
.
(AP
)
Small
craft
from
Port
O'Connor
to
Commander Gordon Peterson
result
ollhat
meeting.
and a period of bad weather when
hysteria
here
in
Washington,
which
I
Complete
desegregation
of
C?,lumbus
Biloxi,
!11iss.,
were
being
urged
to
said Monday nigllt .some members were without
lhink, based on this most recent schools thrs fall could lead to specral remain in port and persons were
electricity for several da)'s.
Gallup poll, has been confined to this problep1s" at the secondary level, urged to stay ~ff the Gulf beaches
These adversities were followed by
side of lhe Potomac.:· .
according to a reiJ(lrt th~t " .expected today. Swimming and surfing would
a considerable increase in lhe rate
WASHINGTON (AP ) - Users
Powell,
holding
hrs
hrst
regular
to be handed to U.S. Drstrrct Judge be unsafe today along lheTexas coast,
charged by the coo perative to
of diet sodas and other foods con·
in
about
a
month
,
Robert M. Duncan Wednesday.
forecasters warned.
press
briefing
members for service .
taining saccharin are a step
to
lhe
Gallup
figures
as
"a
The
preliminary
draft
of
the
report
Elsewhere showers accompanied
referred
A series of meeting s were held by "'
closer to being assured the proIJ(lsitive
reaction.
"
cites
problems
in
scheduling,
student
in
spots by thunde;storms, were
rather
surprising
mem~rs during the fall and winter of
ducts will remain on store
Asked about mail reaction receiv~ partic ipation in ~xtracurrrcular widely scattered over states east ?f
197&amp;-'lll
to
require
company
officials
to
shelves at least two more years.
by lhe Whrte House, he s~rd: I actrv1tres and rn plannrng for startrng lhe Mississippi River early thrs
answer questions about company
The House on Monday tenhaven
't checked rL I assume rt would lhe middle schools.
.
morning.
policy .
tatively approved extending until
be
negative,
however."
The
action
will
have
a
"negatrve
Rain and lhunder were reported
Some attempt was rpade to answer
June 30, 1981, a moratotiawn that
la
st
week
impact"
on
court-ordered
busing,
the
from
Florida into southern New
The
White
House
lhe ,questions, but the answers were
has blocked a planned saccharin
NEW YORK ( AP ) -- Exxon Corp. volunteered figures on a fa vorable reiJ(lrt said.
Engla.nd
and from the Gulf Coast
apparently not satisfactory to the and Standard Oil Co. of Indiana
ban since mid-1977. Monday's
to
Carter's
July
15
energy
The
report
asks
pefl1lission
to
wait
a
through
the
Ohio Valley into the
response
dissident members.
reported big second-quarter profits address .
voice vote was expected to
year
before
transferrrng
JUntor
and
eastern
portion
of the mid·Mississippi
An estimated 135 members of the . Monday, even lhough -· lhe firms
become formal with an on-the·
senior
high
school
students.
It
Valley
.
cooperative met on April 21 and, by a noted -· they had not raised gasoline
record tally today .
There also were showers and
unanimous show-of-hands vote, and oil prices in lhe United States fast .:.:.:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: proposes combining desegregatron at
the
higher
levels
wilh
a
planned
thunderstorms
from the upper
removed the existing board and enough to ccver rising costs.
NUMEROUS COMPLAINTS
conve~sio~ to middle schools but Mississippi Valley across much of the
The companies attributed the profit
Numerous
complaints
were reassrgnmg eleme ntary school northern Plains, extending into the
NEWPORT, Ky. (AP) :... The
GARBAGE WARNING
increases -· 20 percent for Exxon, the rece ived by the Meig s County
this September.
central Rockies and from western
Reynolds Metal Co. has lost its
Rutland Mayor Gene Thompson nation's largest oil ~ompany, and 36 Sherlfl's Department Monday when It students
Duncan has indicated lhat he want a Oklahoma through the Texas
bid to be dismissed as a defenreports his office has been receiving percent for Amoco -· to substantial was reported members of the systemwide plan operattng thrs Panhandle.
·
dant in litigation in connection
complaints about garbage pileups increases in earnings from overseas Unification Church were In the area.
.
. Thundershowers were expected to
with the BeverlY' Hills Supper
Church members were reported to September.
outside local residences.
operations.
In
a
section
on
finance~ , the report
reach
from lhe Mississippi Valley to
Club fire May 28, 1977 in which
Foreign
operations
return
more
Thompson said there is an
be soliciting funds in Rutland, projects total desegregatron costs. of lhe Atlantic Coast during the day,
165 dlild.
.
ordinance ruling residents must because they do not carry the price Syracuse, and Racine. Sheriff James
Judge John Diskin; Campbell
arrange to have their garbage hauled controls oil companies must deal with J. Proffitt has advised residents to $8.9 million next year and $11.1 mrlhon with showers also scattered across
the following year. School offrcrals Montana and Wyoming into
Circuit Court, refused Monday to
away, and he warns anyone not on the domestic market
exercise their own judgment about have repeatedly urged that the state Nebraska.
dismiss Reynolds of Rlclunond,
complying with the ordinance will
Exxon's profil'l, hfter the write-off, donations to the church.
be ordered to pay all desegregation
Skies were expected to be sunny
(Continued on page 10 )
prosecuted, as lhe pileups present a were $830 million for the second
Deputies are also Investigating the
.
over lhe Southwest and the Pacific
health hazard.
quarter or $1.88 a share, up from $690 theft of a bicycle owned by Chuck costs.
Superintendent Joseph L. Davrs has Coast, with readings expected to be
million or $1.55 a share a year ago. Hensley, Tupper Plains. The bicycle
Revenues for the quarter rose to $19.6 was belleved taken around noon relused to comment on the report mild to warm in most of the nation ..
containing the request for a two-phase
The worst of the sununer heat -- 100
billion from $15.5 billion. in lhe 1978 Sunday.
approach
to
busing.
.
degrees
and higher -- was moving
quarter .
·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::":::::::::::::::::::::::::::
The
school
board
on
July
2
lost
rts
into
western
Texas and New Mexico
AmO&lt;Jo said its profits in the second
appea
I
to
the
U.S.
Supreme
Court
of
through
the
Southwest
and into the
quarter were $401.2 million, or $2.74 a
Dwtcan's
order
to
desegre~ate.
valleys
of
California.
Landfill evaluation
share, compared to $294.2 million, or
The.system was ready to unplement
Temperatures around the . nation
$2.01 a share, a year ago. Revenues in
a
b~srng
plan
last
fall
when
Justrce
early
today ranged from 48 in Arcata,
lhe quarter rose from $4.1 billion to up fur consideration
Wrllram
Rehnqmst
granted
a
stay
~f
Calif.,
to 97 in Needles, Calif.
$4.6 billion .
lhe order pendrng the high court s
Oil companies have come under
Evaluation of the existing Meigs
.
Middleport squad busy
heavy fire for reaping huge profits County Landfill site and IJ(lSSible site review
After lhe Supreme Court ruling was
during times when energy supplies expansion is one of the three major announced, Duncan asked school
are short, and there were indications items up for consideration at the July officials to update the 1977 plan.
The MiddleiJ(lrt ER Squad was
that Exxon may have tried to 31 meeting of · the Buckeye Hills·
The middle school concept divides called out four times Monday and
minimize its reported profits.
Hocking Valley Regional Develop- the system into an elementary level of twice this morning.
"These companies are attempting , ment District executive committee.
At U:30 a.m. on Monday they were
grades kindergarten through five ;
within the rules of the game, not to err
The session is set for 7 p.m. at the middle schools, grades six through summoned to Railroad Street for five
on the side of overstating ·their profits Clair Building in Marietta. Other tops
month old Joanna Clark. She was
at a time when a lot of political include loan planning for an elderly eight; and senior high, grades nine taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
decisions have to be made about housing project at B~verly and an up- through 12. Presently , Co lumbus at 1:45 p.m. they were called to Lasley
them," said Sanford Margoshes, who date on aging programs and relations junior highs house grades seven St., Pomeroy, for Marie 'Custer who ·
follows Exxon for the Wall Street firm and relatiO!lll with the Ohio Corrunis- through nine.
The 83,400-pupil school system is 36 was also taken to Veterans Memorial
of Shearson Hayden Stone.
sion on Aging and an increase in percent nonwhite. Duncan wants all Hospital; at 2:05 p.m. Frank
mileage reimbursement rat.e .
TEACHER HONORED - Everette Holcomb, local vocational
schools .in the system to be between Laudermilt, Pari· Street was taken to
20.9 percent and 50.9 percent Veterans Memorial Hospital; at 2:46
teacher of agriculture at Meigs High School was honored by the OVATA
p.m. to South Second Street for ·
(Ohio Vocatlorial Agricultural Teachers Association) in Toledo July &amp;nonwhite .
William
l.Alwis who was treated at the
11th for 15 years of service to vocational oganiations. The local leather
scene.
MEETS
THURSDAY
Showers and thunderstonns likely
waa one of the nearly 100 leaders honored In Toledo during the 30th annual
FREE CL01111NG DAY
The Gallia-Meigs Community
tonight and Wednesday. Continued
conference. Special higllllghts of the lcoelleaders program include this
Free
clothing day will he held at the . This morning at 1:12 a .m. Henry
warm and muggy with lows upper 60s Mtion Agency, board of trustees, wilt Salva lion Army, Pomeroy on Eblin, Sr., RD., Pomeroy, was taken
year's two state winners, three st~~te farmers and an outstanding proto low 70s and highs again in the mid meet Thursday, July 26, at 7:30 p.m. '111ursday, July 26, from 10 a.m. until to Holzer Medical Center and at 5:55
gram in farm business management. Holcomb was sele.cted as outstan80s.
Chance of rain is 70 percent in village council ch~mbers at noon. AU area residents in need of a.m. Jack Neff , Brownell Ave., was
ding teacher In Districtl7 this year. Holcomb is pictured In second row,
Cheshire .
taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
tonight
and Wednesday.
clothing are welcome.
second from right.
WASHINGTON (APl - · President chairman G. William Miller to be
Carter and his staff pressed a top· treasury secretary. Whrte House
priority search Monday for a new press secretary Jody Powell told
Federal Reserve Board chief as the · broadcast reporters Monday:
Whit e House summoned top "-- "That (Miller 's replacement ) ,will
appointees and presidential aides ,to hav.e our top prrorrty and will he the
meetings with the president.
·
dectston, lhe re~lace,r,nent , that rs
Carter· also scheduled his first probably named frrst.
nationally televised news conference ·
Powell reiJ(lrted that White House
since May 29. It will be held meetings on finding a new chief
Wednesday at 9 p.m. EDT. in the White central banker were held Sunday-@d
House East Room . .
Monday .
.
In last week's Cabinet upheaval
Late Monday afternoon, according
Carter tag gged F ederal Rese rv~ to sources, White House officials

Today Cooperative election

ruled invalid Monday

Expand search

Tropical storm
hits Texas area

Desegregal •
co uJd }ead {
maJ"or problem

Time extended

Exxon, Sohio
profits up
20 percent

Loses big

Weather

�3-The Daily Sentinel, Middlepor.-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, July 24, l!r/9

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, 'July 24, 1919

E~torial

opinions,
comments

ETTA

N.E.A .

Names
in News .

7~

isn'i

Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

Anybody but Kennedy~ ~
"hospitality " they properly can accept from an outsider to "whatever
you can eat or drink at one sitting" a meal or a round of drinks. But
John B. Connally, the former
Texas governor and treasury
secretary now running for the 1980
Republican presidential nomination,
has never been accused of being a
small-time operator.
The Connally campaign organization devised a scheme to invite, three
or four at a ti'me, several dozen journalists and their spouses to spend a
weekend at Connally's Picosa Ranch
near San Antonio, Texas.
But many of !hose invited declined
the opportunity to partake of five
meals, a steady flow of drinks and a
choice of swimming, tennis, skeetshooting or horseback riding - as
well as some informal political chatter.
Because the plan generated little
more than unfavorable publicity and
criticism of Connally and his guests,
the campaign's communications
director, Julian Read, won't even
disclose the names of those who accepted the invitations.

to
~~--L_a_w_r_e_nc_e_e_._L_a_m_b_.
HEALTH

M_
.o_.- - - - -

Not just potassium loss
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.

Donald F. Graff

Briefly noted
Sen. Edward Kt•nnedy

Better to bicker?

While many Americans are· willing
to make personal sacrifices to
alleviale the · energy crisis, the
Washington-based Citizen's Choice
apparently prefers petty bickering.
A purported "g rass roots"
organization, Citizen 's Choice was
established several years ago by the
Chamber of Commerce of the United
States in a futile effort to counter the
influence of legiti'mate public-interest
groups.
Citizen's Choice is unwilling to ac·
cept one of the most modest of all
energy-conservation measures: set·
ling office temperature controls at 78
degrees in the summer and 65 degrees
in the winter.
Complaining about "arbitrary
regulation" that "could be injurious
to health," the group has issued a dire
Not for publi~ation
warning
that ~"a bnormal
temperatures
will
certainly lead to a
Washington journalists traditional·
marked
reduction
in
the nation 's proly have abided by an informal
ductivity."
guideline that limits the free

have strained the ligaments in my
shoulders because my shoulders also
hurt.
j am taking Bufferin and Anacin
but it doesn 't help. This happened two
months ago. The reason I haven't consulted my doctor is that the same
thing happened to my neighbor. She
went to see her doctor and he told her
to take the same medicines I'm taking but it takes time to heal. I'm in
great pain and am looking forward to
your answer.
DEAR READER - I hope that by
the time you get this, you've long
since seen your doctor. If you have as
much pain as you say, I'm certain
that he can do something to make you
more comfortable.
Your letter is a classic example of
mistakes that people make too often.
They assume that because someone
they know has been treated for a
similar condition that the same treat·
ment is right for them. Often it's not
at all. If you had a dislocation of your
shoulder or if you had a dislocation of
any of your joints, you might need
treatment for that.
I think it's probably healthy for peo·
pie to swap opinions about their
symptoms and their treatment and it
certainly does help to improve people's knowledge of health. But it's a
mistake to try to diagnose and treat
yourself.

DEAR DR. LAMB - I'm suffering
from potassium loss. My doctor gave
me too much diuretic. I became weak
and my muscles were sore all ovei·
my body. I could hardly get out of my
chair and couldn't waik at first
without using a walking cane and taking Bufferin for pain.
Can you tell me if I will ever get
over this and what I can do to cure it•
I am overweight and 73 years old and
I know that doesn't help.
DEAR READER - I'm confident
that your total problem is not because
of low potassium. It 's more likely that
you have pain and are taking Bufferin
for it because of some arthritic problem which your doctor is fully aware
of.
A loss. of potassium from diuretics
can cause a person to be very weak. It
can cause other problems as well. The
changes in the body that occur from
either an excess loss of sodium or
potassium can- be quickly corrected
by simply taking enough of either .
sodium or potassiwn.
Fruits are the major food source of
potassium. You can also get some
from vegetables.
I'm sure your doctor has done blood
tests on you to evaluate your
chemical balance. From those he has
TilE DAILY SE~TINEL
a pretty good idea what net:ds to be
l USPS 14S.960 I
done , either in terms of medicine or
~&lt;b
~6' ..__,....,._,.._.d._
diet in your particular case. Because
of your interest, I'm sending you The
DEVOTED TO Tim .
Health Letter munber 10-12, Salt:
INTEREST OF
Your Vital Sodium and Potassium
MEIGS-MASON AREA
ROBERT HOEFLICH
Balance. Other readers who want this
City Editor
issue can send 75 cents with a long ,
PubU1bed W.Uy ucepiSiturday by TheOhJo
stamped, sell-addressed envelope for \'aile)' Publishing C(lmpany -Multimedia, lnc.,
Ill Court St. , f(]meroy, Ohio 45161. Busl11ess
il. Send your request to me, in care of Offlct'
Phone 99%· !156. . EdJturbi.l Phout
this newspaper , P.O. Box 1551, Radio 9!12-!157.
St'cond rlus po.. tage paid at Poml!ro)', Ohio.
City Station, New York, NY 10019.
National ad tt:rtis!Q reprtsentatlve, Laodoo
. DEAR -DR. LAMB -I slipped off a Assoclates, 3101 Euclld .he., Cleveland, Ohio
.
.
six.foot ladder and caught myself ~115
Subsrrlptiun rates : Delivered by carrier,
from falling, but now my hands are where available 90 cents per week. By MO:Ior
painful ani!, swelling and I ca n't even RouLf where carrier service oot nalliil&gt;le, Ont.
m&lt;1nth, 13.90. By mall In Oltlo and W, Va., Om·
hold .a ..c.up_. of ·coffee. I have no Year,
f27,5G: Six monU.s, $14.50: Thret mouJ
strength in my hands and the pain is ths. JUO : Ebewbert $32.00 year ; Six months
fl7.00 j .Thto..'t: munth ~ , f',tc. SubscrlptiiiD prke
so excruciating, it hurts me in my !ncludes
Sundav Tim t&gt;~· Sentinel .
chest and stomach. I think I must

Garcia
replaces
Torborg

'

COMMENTARY

Capitol
ideas
PM-Capitolldeas
WASHINGTON (AP) ~ Defense
Secretary Harold Brown doesn't like
to share the spotlight.
·
That has become painfully clear at
the televised hearings the Senate
Foreign Relations Commi ttee is
holding on the SALT li treaty.
Brown didn't mind sharing the
witness table with hi s Cabinet
colleague, Secretary of State Cyrus
Vance. And he doesn 't object to
having a couple of Pentagon aides
sitting at his side . .
But he draws the line at people like
CIA Director Stansfield Turner; Gen.
George Seignious, head of the Arms
Conu·ol and Disarmament Agency;
and Lt . Gen. Eugene F. Tighe, head of
the Defense Intelligence Agency.
At one committee session last week,
Brown arrived to find places set up at
the witness table for himsell; William
J . Perry , head of research an'd
development at the Pentagon;
Seignious; and Tighe.
Brown rold Seignious and Tighe to
sit elsewhere. They moved to seats
reserved for aides to the witnesses. As
a result neither man got to give his
prepared testimony and their •
appearances were rescheduled.
There may have been a little more
involved when the committee
scheduled Brown and Turner for a

By Don Graff
earlier in the warm season.
There's more to the running mania
· Now comes further word on the
than exercise.
iocusts from New York 's Hudson
There's also the development of a River valley, where their presence is
thriving new business - a pair of having an effect but nothing along the
businesses, in fact.
lines of the biblical plagues.
A!l more and more runners get into
The valley is one of the nation's rnathe action, there's naturally more and jor cherry-growing regions. Thanks
more demand for running shoes. And to the locusts, this year's ripening
at prices of from $35 to $100 and more fruit is being ignored by the birds
per pair, there are naturally second which ordinarily take a considerable
thoughts about throwiniS a used pair . bite out of the marketable crop. In·
away.
stead of feasting in the on;hards, the
A!l a consequence, according to a birds are gorging on locusts and a
Wall Street Journal report, running cherry harvest far larger than in re·
shoe repair shops are springing up all cent years is anticipated.
over the country, more than a thouIt is a reminder of how intermeshed
sand opening in the last two years.
earth 's ecology is and how its natural
The resoling charge runs around functioning may better serve man 's
$12 or $14, a real bargain considering interests at times than his efforts to
that for a dedicated runner a good reshape it to his supposed needs. The
sole may have up to 1,000 miles in it.
instinctive reaction to the locus! is
That's getting a real rwi for your that it is a destructive pest to be war·
money.
red against.
A reaction currently not shared by
The helpful locust
Hudson valley . cherry growers,
A plague, as it turns out, need not however. If warned in the future of a
always be a disaster.
plague of this type on their houses,
Under the right circumstances, it they would likely rush to open the
can actually prove a boon.
doors in welcome . Takes one to know
The circumstances in this case in· one?
volve the re-&lt;!mergence of the 17-year
locust on the East Coast, a natural Well, it's out in
phenomenon which received quite a
bit of attention when first reported the open now.
joint appearance at' a closed session
on whether or not the United States
could detect Soviet cheating.
Brown refused to testify with
Turner and the CIA director ended up
cooling his heels and finally leaving .
" I was scrubbed ," he told reporters .
In this case, it's known that Brown
and Turner have given sharply
differe nt views- ro the annoyance of
the defense secretary ~ on how long it
will take the Uni\ed States to recover
the monitoring capability of hases lost
in the governmental upheaval in !ran.

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

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Letters of opinion are welcomed. They should be less
than 300 words long {or subject to redu~;.tion by the editor l
and must he signed with the signee's address. Names may
be withheld upon publicatioh. However, on request,
names will be disclosed. Letters should be in good taste,
addressing issues, not personalities.

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The C.I.A. has agents placed in
United Nations activities in two supposed oases of neutrality, Geneva and
Vienna .
We have the word of a Soviet
publication, New Times, for it. In a
rECCent expose, the weekly reported
that·no less than 30 of the 44 members
of the American U.N. mission in the
Swiss city were agency personnel. As
for Vienna, the charge is that the
headquarters of the International
Atomic Energy Agency have been
thoroughly bugged with proceedings
·monitored from th_e U.S. embassy.
Allegations of agent infiltration
electronic eavesdropping and othe;
forms of playing the game by special
rules are par for the course of international power relations and usually are
dismissed with no or very little comment. But, considering the source,
these may deserve some attention.
After all, the Soviets are experts on
the subjects .

I ...t~~,.,r;:~~~t,=.,.._ I
Resident upset
To The Editor:
At the school board meeting held on
June 28th the Meigs Local Board of
Education was to vote on the position
for Superintendent. Many concerned
citizens were present and had collected over l:a!O signatures stating
they felt Mr. Dan Morris should be
considered for the position over 'Mr.
Gleason.
However, it ·appears the board had
its minds made up prior to the
meeting. I am sure it would have been
awkward for them to back down from
this decision after they had already
asked Mr. Gleason if he would accept
the job, however, they should have at
least reconsidered in view of the
many concerned taxpayers of Meigs
County.
Mr. Morris, in my opinion, as well
as many other parents, is more than
qualified for the position. Three of the
board members, Mrs. Sheets, Mr.
Ki1,1g and Mr. Pierce, when asked lor
a reason why they voted for Mr.
Gleason, could not give a satisfactory
answer. It appears truy Mr. Morris
has much more expenence for the
position. Maybe the board could give
a better reason if they had not hired a

professor from 0. U. at a maximum
of $500 to do the job lor them.
The past two superintendents' per·
forrnances have been very poor. Do
we the people of Meigs Local want
this again, without any regard for our
students' welfare?
I feel the board should listen to the
people of this county. Maybe they
forget that we trusted them to do a job
for us when we elected them to the
board.
I think if the board doesn ~ want to
listen to the wishes of , the people,
maybe the board needs replaced.
Why wait until November and have a
superintendent for three years we do
not want?
Let's all get together and work for
the wellare of our school system now.
Hire Mr. Dan Morris who ,has worked
for our school district and can well
serve our needs. Let's give our
children the kind of education they
deserve.
This is our school and let 's keep it
that way. We not not need people like
Mrs. Sheets, Mr. King and Mr. Pierce
on the board. If they will not listen to
the people, it is time to replace them.
Aproud and concerned
citizen of Meigs County,
James Clifford
Kingsbury Rd., Pomeroy

CAIRO, Egypt (AP) - Egyptian
Vice President Hosny Muabarak will
be sitting in for the chief of state when
the Moslem holy month of Ramadan' '
starts this week.
President Anwar Sadat, a devoted ':
Moslem, will be vacationing·•
throughout Ramadan as he does every_'
year, his government announced
today.
.u
Ramadan, during which faithful ~
. Moslems fa st from dawn to dusk,
starts Wednesday.

NEW YORK (AP) -- Comedian- •
activist Dick Gregory is urging ''
Americans to support new efforts to

aid the Vietnamese boat people, '
saying it i.s an "emergency" that ·
cannot be ignored.
''A group of human beings on the "
water are dying to the tune of 1,000 per "
day," Gregory said at a rally Monday
on the steps of St. Patrick's Cathedral.""
''One deatll is too many.''
He was in New York to muster "
support for a newly formed .;
organization, Child Trust. The 5&lt;&gt;- ~
member group hopes to act as a ·'
catalyst in coordinating national
efforts to aid Vietnamese refugee "
resettleme nt and to stop the e
dro,.nings in the South China Sea of ~ .
'the ethnic Chinese who have fled
Vielllam.
'"

Lemon.

Lemon turnejl i~ down , but Torborg,
his pride hurt decided only to honor
.
'
.
the remainder of hiS current contract.
"I can't get down on myself or
anybody else," he said. "I think of
how important the Lord is in my life,
and my family . You can look at it as
just a job, but I'd like to stay in
baseball, whether it be the major
leagues or the college level. "
The players, used to the ways of
base~ll and the constant comings an
goings of teammates and fronl office
penonnel, took the change in stride .
" I felt I lost a good personal friend
and a good manager in Jeff," said
outfielder Bobby Bonds. " It came as a
surprise. I thought he would finish out

It

PROPHET HURTS
,,
AUGUSTA, Ga . (AP) - Pro golfer
Mac McLendon wa~ a psychic at the .
Masters Tournament in April and it '!
proved painful to ~ of all people - his . ~:
wife.
AfU,r the first round, he told his
wife, Joan, "I'm playing so poorly, I ~
just know I'm going to hit someone
and hurt him."
The next morning, Mac hooked his
~ shot on the first hole and the ball ~
hit his wife . She was taken to the ·:
hospital with a shoulder injury but ,
quickly returned ro the course.
,,'

Berry's World
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By The Associated Press
American League
East
W. L. Pel. GB
Balli more
64 32 .667
Boston
58 35 .624 4 ,12
Milwaukee
59 39 .602 6'12
New York
53 •4 .S46 11'1'
Delroit
48 77 .sos · 15'1'
Cleveland
.. 52 458 20
Toronto
- 70 ·293
Wes;z'l
·
36
Caiilornia
57 42 .576
Minnesota
53 42 .558 2
~~~~~s City
~
: ~ ~,1,
Ch icago
45 52 .464 " '''
Seallle
42 57 .•24 IS
Oakland
26 7J .263 31
Mondiy
's Games
Ballimore7,
Oakland
4
California 9, Boston 2
Cleveland 5. Milwaukee •
Ch it ago 11 , Delroil3
New York 6, Seallle 2
Kansas City s, Texas 4
Minnesota 7, Tclronlo6
Tuesday 's Games
Sea ll!e IBannisler H and Jones
J.8) 01 Ballimoro !MacGregor nand
D. Mar1inezl2-71 . 2. tn).
Oakland !Morgan 0 ·51 al Boslon
!Eckersley 10·5), 1n1.
•
Calilornia (Aase 7-71 al New York
(John 13·5), In) .
M i lwaukee (Travers J._., at Detroit
i P . underwOOdl·OI. In).
Kansas City (Gale 7·81 at Chicago
IKravec 9·81. lnL
Cleveland (Wise 9 l l al Minneso•a
(Koosman 11-81, (n).
!Only games scheduled )

!:

Wednesday 's Games

· Texas al Toronto , (n)
Sea !lie al Ball•more. 1n1
Oak l and at Boston. ( n J
California at New York , InI
Milwaukee al Detroit, (n)
Kansas City al Chicago, (nl
Cleveland al Minnesota, In I
Nation• I League

East
W.

Montreal

53
53

Pittsburgh

Chicago

Philadelph ia

St . Louis
New York

Pet. GB
38 .582

L.

40 .570
.565

52 40
52 44
45 46
38 l3
West

Houston
Cincinnati
San Francisco

1
""

.542 3'17
.495 8
.418 ll

S6

«

.560

Sl

A9

.510 l

48 51 ..as Tv,

San Diego

46 55

.4SS lO if1

Catcher Gary Ale under, a special
project for Torborg , a former major
league catcher, said, " It's not his fault
we haven't played to our potential.
Everybody on the team has been
behind him , but we just didn 't play
well enough."
The dismissal was announced by
General Manager Phil Seghi, who
said, "I had the feeling we were
drifting, and it was time we did
something about it. We felt , at first ,
the situation (of a lame duck
manager ) would work out. But, the
way things were going, we felt a
change had to be made."
The Indians are sixth in U)e seventeam American . League East
Division. They were 4:h'i2 under
Tor borg and had lost four in a row and
seven of their last eight.
Garcia, 58, was a winning manager
in his first outing Monday night as the
Indians nipp~d the Milwaukee
Brewers 5-4. But there was no thrill in
It for the former manager of the
California Angelll.
''I was a lltUe reluctant to take it
because I like coaching third base,"
he explained. "I'm kind of .an
organization man and they've been
good to me. When I got fired from the
Angelll (in 1978), they gave me a job.
"I don't · think about next year. I
don't care whether I last one day, one
week or whatever. I'U niake the
decisions to the best of my ability . And
there won't be any pep talks for these
guys, either. You can't be a Knute
Rockne with a modern ballplayer.
"Should they name a new manager
(next year), I hope he would show
consideration about hiring me back as •
a Utird base coach. I sincerely believe
I'm an interim manager, but it makes
no difference to me."
Torborg, who had been hired as a
roach in 1975 by Frank Robinson, got
his first chance to manage when
Robinson was fired on June 19, 1977.
Torborg's overall record as a
manager was 157-201.
Garcia's Angels team• in 1977 and
·1978 were 611-ll7.

Transactions
By The Auocialed Press
BASEBALL
American League

CHICAGO WHITE SOX -

At ·

tivated Bill Nahorodny, catcher, from
tne disabled list .

CLEVELAND INDIANS

~

Fired

Jeff Tor bOrg, manager . Named ·oave

Garcia , manager.

BASKETBALL
CLEVELAND CALAVIERS Named Sian Albeck head coach.

Named Ron Hrovat executive vice
president and general manager .

Named J immy Rodgers player per -

sonnel director.

FOOTBALL
Notional Football League
BUFFA LO BILLS - Signed Mike

Kadish, defensive tackle, to a series
of one ·year contracts for an un ·
disclosed amount .

CINCINNATI BENGALS -

An ·

no.unced that Deacon Turner, running

back, lett camp.
DENVER BRONCOS - Waived
.Jeb Blount, quarterback; Russell

Ellis and Herman Coulter, rvnning
backs. Announced the retirement of
Gerald Goren, I inebacker .

HOUSTON OILERS - Signed Greg

Stemrlck, cornerback, to a three ·year
contract. Cut Jii'n Ries, defensive
back; Juan Walton and Dann.y
Gadeken, linebackers ; Elroy Stoglin

and Greg Murphy, defensive ends;
Jeff Perllnger, defensive tackle, and
Jan Slahle, placekicker.
MINNESOTA VIKINGS - Ac ·
quired Mark Nichols, linebacker, on
waivers from
•9ers .

the

San

Francisco

'

r·•t
SECOND PLACE WINNERS Craig 8Glen,_ left, IUid Mark
GeogleiD shared second place
honors ID lbe fishing derby wllb a
caleb totaling tbree and oDequarter pounds.

FIRST PLACE WINNER- Jim
Gruelier took lint place honors ID
the boys' competition lor tbe
longest !lob. Eight-year old
Grueser landed a 28 aud one-haU
Inch catfish weighing Dine and one·
quarter pounds.

·

34 parti"CI"pants in annual fishing derby event

•••••••
•••••

Allanta
Los Angeles

•

't

GIRLS' WINNER - Five-year·
old LesUe Lyons who caugbt a one
pound, five ounce catfish, took
lint place honors In the girls ' dlvl·
sion at the Meigs County Fish and
Game Association's annual fishing
derby.

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD

the year.-"

~

'

••••
•• •••
n•••

CLEVELAND (AP) -- Jeff Torborg
is not the kind of guy to get mad when
adversity strikes. Some people say
that's the very reason why he was
fired Monday as manager of the
Cleveland Indians.
Torborg, 37, was replaced on an
interim basis by Dave Garcia , his
. d base
ch
th IJ'
coa and close friend.
The affable blond, with his three
sons tp tow , spent Monday evening in
the Indians' clubhoqse , saying
goodbye to his !!Mrs, his coaches,
the media and ,eryone else who had
befriended him dUring his two years
as manager here.
Torborg spoke quietly while sitting
at the desk in what was now Garcia's
office. On the small blackboard
behind the d&lt;!sk, one of Torborg's
' ha d scraw Jed lfl
· Ia rge 1ette rs
sons
"Good Luck Uncle Dave."
"When you come into a job like this,
as soon as you take it, you start
·
be f' ed h
'd 'th
Ir ·" e sal WI
a
prepanng to
wry smile. "Some people said I was
too nice a guy, but I doo't buy that. I
kicked butts when I had to.
"I don 't think Dave will ever be the
type to yell at anybody, but he 'll get
his point across. I still say you can' t
alter your personality to fit your job ."
Ttl'borg ' has been a lame duck
manager for nearly a month. He
announced he would resign at the end
of the year after it became kn&lt;lwn that
Indians President Gabe Paul had
offered the manager's job to Bob

LONDON (AP), - More than 40 ~
years ago, the King of England left his •
throne to marry the woman he loved. '
A memento .of that wedding is now in '
the possession of a British buyer who
spent $4,350 for it at auction.
Sotheby's, the art auctioneers, said '
the 15-page order of service was sold '
Monday at a
sale of
literary
manuscripts
and historical documents . The
document · is inscribed by the Duke ·
and Duchess of Windor.
"
Edward Vlll became the duke when he abdicated on Dec. 10, 1931i, because '
the Church of England, of which he as •
king was secular head, frowned on his
1937 marriage to American divoreee :
Wallis Warfield Simpson. The duke ·•
died in 1972. The duchess, now 83, lives •
in P,aris.

"Excuse mel I'm odd marry me ?"

made a startsmce being hit on the left Biittner who made a fine tltrow to the
elbow with a pitch July 10 and hadn't plate which barely missed getting
homered- since July 6, Sl]lashed bis Driessen .
30th homer fII' a 2-1 triumph .
"He still hasn't touched the plate,.,
Sitting in the training room with his said Caudill, who came to the {.'ubs
left elbow in a rubber sling and his from the Reds in a deal for Bill
right shoulder, injured while sliding, Bonham after the 1977 season.
in an ice pack, Kingman angrily
"I never could figure out the
waved reporters away and hollered tD Cincinnati organization," said Caudill
a trainer to "shut the damn door."
who originally was signed by St. Louis
Until the ninth inning, Tom Hume and then traded to the Reds.
was in search of his first shutout of the
"They traded for me and then sent
seasoo and had limited the Cubs to me to AA ball," said Caudill. " I had a
four hits.
't3-3 record in AA before they moved
"I was trying to get him out with a me up to AAA. I never felt
slider," said Hume, who had run the comfortable with that organization."
count to 1·2 on Kingman. "He hit the
Caudill's last start was against
slider. It was a good pitch and the Montreal and he lost a game in which
same pitch I thr'ew him before which he allowed two hits tiut both of them
he mlsse&lt;! . I don't know how good he were homers.
hit it but he hit it, it was a home run
"He's pitched real good for us,"
and I lost. "
said "Manager Herman Franks. "He
Caudill allowed a run in the fifth kept us in the game. He has real good
without yielding a hit and maintained stuff''
.
Dan Driessen shoii!d have heen called
Franks was still amazed ·at
out at the plate by umpire Steve Field. Kingman 's homer and said, "He
Driessen walked to open the fifth, reached out for it, it looked like a
srole second, went to third on an damn good pitch. He didn't have a big
outfield fly and scored on Ray swing but he doesn't have ro have a
Knight's sacrifice fly to right-fielder big home run swing to hit it ouL"

' CHICAGO (AI') - · Bill Caudill still
ls seeking his first major league
pitching victory, but as far as he's
conce'r ned it doesn't make a
difference as long as the Chicago Cubs
beat the Cincinnati Reds.
.
"I love beating the Reds," Caudill
said after the Cubs had rolled to a pair
of dramatic victories Monday. " As
long as we win, I don 't care if r ever
get a decision."
The Cubs had to go an extra nine
innings Monday for a 9-8 triumph in 18
innings to complete a game suspended
May 10. They fell behind in the lith
inning but tied it on a run-6COI'ing
single by Steve Ontiveros who also
singled in the winning run in the 18th
inning.
Then, despite a ' fine effort by
Caudill, they found themselves
trailing I~ in the ninth inning of the
regularly scheduled game.
Larry Biittner singled tD open the
ninth and Dave Kingman, who hadl,l't

MONTEREY, Calif (AP ) -It
known what they discuss&amp;~, but it wu
certainly a fiveo~~tar gathering when.
former Secretary of State Henry;
Kissinger and former NATO
commander Alexander Haig met here
with West German Chancellor Helmut.
Schmidt.
0
.
Schmidt, whose visit to the United'.
States was not announced, and &lt;
Kissinger arrived in Monterey orl'
Sunday, the Monterey Peninsula ·
Herald said Monday. They met wit!L
Haig, former supreme commander of
NATO forces in Europe, industrialist '
David Packard and Bechtel PresideJlt ;
George Shultz, the newspaper said. :
The nature of thr meeting was not
disclosed .
,·
Shultz was st:cretary of the treasury
and secretary of labor in the NixOI)
Administration .. Kissinger was t~
secretary of state under Nixon, and 9
Haig formerly headed Nixon's White
House staff and was a deputy , to
Kissinger. Packard is a focmer board
chairman of the Hewlett-Packard'
Corp. and a former secretary of
defense.

IN WASHINGTON

By Robert Walters
WASIDNGTON (NEA) ·If Sen. Ed·
ward M. Kennedy , 0-Mass., decides
to seek the presidency in 1980, at least
10 percent of the electorate probably
will reject his candidacy because of
his personal conduct 10 years ago.
For the second ti'me in less than a
year, a national survey undertaken
by a major magazine indicates that ·
there is a significant group of
anybody-but-Kennedy voters that lms
neither forgiven nor forgotten the
senator's Chappaquiddick auto accident in the summer of 1969.
• The most recent poll, cmrunissioned by McCall's magazine and con·
dueled by The Gallup Organization
Inc. of Princeton, N.J., consisted of
interviews with almost 1,500 adults.
More than one-quarter of all
respondents - 27 percent - said they
believe Kennedy's behavior during
and after the accident is indicative of
a serious flaw in his character.
The survey produced a strong cor·
relation between those who said they
were not likely to vote for Kennedy if
he ran next year and those who
believe that his character ls flawed or
that he handled himseU improperly at
Chappaquiddick.
When asked specifically if Kennedy's behavior at the time of the ac·
cident was an important factor affec·
ling their decision probably not to
support him, 11 percent answered in
the affirmative.
The results of the McCall 's-Gallup
poll are strikingly similar to those of a.
national survey commissioned late
last year by Time magazine and conducted by Yankelovich, Skelly and
White Inc. , a New York p,olling
organization.
Some political observers believe
that if Kennedy runs for president, he
will be rejected summarily by at least
10 percent and perhaps as.many as 20
percent of all voters because of his
personal behavior.

~ Reds lose twinbill to Cubs

foli:[ WO\Zlll SlAI&lt;:·TEU:G""""

HULME

•1 57 .418 14
40 58 .408 15

Monday 's Games
Ctlicago 9, Cincinnat i 8, 18 innings,
completion of s.uspended game .
Chicago 2. Cinci nnati 1, r egularly

scheduled game.
Pillsburgh7·0, Allan! a H
Hovslon 3. 51. Lovis 2
San Diego6, Philadelphia 5

Los Angeles 3, New York 1
Montreat 8, San Franc isco J
Tuesday 's Games
Cincinnat i {Norman 6·8) at Pitt -

sburgh (Kison6·4), (n).
Chicago I Lamp 7·51 al Houston (K .
Forsch l -61, In) .
Allanla (McWilliams 1·21 or B.
McLaughlin 1·31 at St. Louis
IVuckov lch 8·2, 1n1
Montreal (Rogers 9·6) at San Diego

IPerrv 10·61. In) .
.Philadelphia !Lerch 6·81 at Los
Angeles (Hooton8·7), lnl .
~·
New York I Kobel 4·51 at San Fran·

cisco (Montefusco 2··0, ( n ) .
Wednesday ' s Games
Philadelphia at Los Angeles
New York at San Francisco
Ci ncinnati at Plttsburgtl , ( n l

Allanta at St . Louis, (n)

Chicago at Houston, ~ n )
Montreal at San Diego, (n)

·
,
·
The Meigs County Fish and Game
Association held its annual fishing
derby Saturday at the club's grounds
on West Shade Road. There was a
good turnout of 34 boys and girls, and
about 50 more fish were landed.
First place in the boys' division for
the longest fish went to eight-year old
Jim Grueser.
Jim landed a 28 and one-half inch

one

Dent who landed a
pound cat.
Other derby winners were Allen
Tripp, Matt Horris, Rodd Tripp, Doo
Tripp, Scott Grueser, Jeff Tracy, ,
Donna Grueser, Christopher LyOM,
and Ronnie Denny:
The Fish ·and Game Association
wishes to thank all those who helped
make the day a big success.

Kelly, Garcia play _important roles
Pat Kelly and Dave Garcia know
their roles uSually aren't starring
ones, but they were both leading men
Monday night.
" If I had my way, I'd be playing,"
said Kelly, one of Baltimore's super
subs, whose pinch grand slam with
two out in the eighth inning gave the
Orioles a 7-4 triumph over the
Oakland A's. " We've excelled
because we haven't accepted that
role. We still have get-up-and-go in
us."
Meanwhile, Garcia took over as
Clevela nd 's interim manager,
replacing the fired Jeff Torborg, and
the Indians rallied for four runs in the
sixth inning on Bobby Bonds' two-run
homer and Duane Kuiper's two-run
single to•beat Milwaukee 5-4 and end
the Brewers' club record-ty'ing 1().
game winning streak.
"I was a litUe reluctant to take it
because I like coaching third base,"

Niekro hurls 3-2 win
over Cardinal learn
Joe Niekro has been knuckling
under to Phil Niekro all these years.
But Monday night, he was a
fingertip ahead of his older and more
illustrious brother - if only for an
hour or so. Enjoying his finest major
league season, Joe Niekro won his
14th game for the Houston Astros
Monday night with a 3-2 decision over
the St.Louis Cardinals.
That was the highest victory total
for a pitcher in the major leagues so
far this year - until brother Phil also
won his 14th a little while later,
stopping the Pittsburgh Pirates 11-0 in
the second game of a twi-night
doubleheader .
The lesser known of the Niekro
knuckleballers scattered six hits,..
walked only one and recorded six
strikeouis , while improving his record
to a sparkling 14--'.
Phil Niekro, now 14-11, tossed a twohitter in his duel against Pittsburgh's
Jim Rooker . A run~oring single by
Bob Horner in the first inning and a
two-run double by Bruce Bent-diet in
the fourth staked Niekro to a :Hi lead,
all the runs the Atlanta right-hander
needed .
The Pirates won the opener 7-1 as
Tim Foli drove in four runs and Bert
Blyleven hurled a four-hitter .
Elsewhere in the National League,
the Chicago Cubs beat the Cincinnati
Reds -~ in 18 innings in the
completion of a suspended game, then
came back tD win the regularlyscheduled game 2·1; the San Diego
Padres edged the Philadelphia
Phillies IN; the Montreal Expos
stopped the San Francisco Giants 8-3
and the Los Angeles Dodgers turned
hack the New York Mets 3-1.
Padres 6, PhUIIes 5
Dave Winfield, who hit a two-run
homer in the eighth inning to tie the
game, stroked an RBI single in the
ninth tO give San Diego its victory
over Philadelphia. In the San Diego
ninth, Gene Richards singled off loser
Ron Reed and took second on
shortstop Bud Harrelson's throwing
error before Winfield drilled the

caUish that weighed nine and a
quarter pounds. Second place went to
Mark Geoglein and Craig Bolen who
combined on a three and one quarter
pound catfish ..
First place in the girlll division went ·
to five-year old · Leslie Lyons wbo
caught a one pound, five ounce cat·
fish. Second place winner was Kim

single.
Expos 8, Giants 3
.
Dan Schatzeder· fired a five-hitter
and Andre Dawson and Tony Perez
belted successive homers in a six-run,
second inning , carrying Montreal
over San Francisco.
Mike Sadek drove in all the Giants's
runs with a he belted a three-run
homer in the sixth.
Dodgers 3, Mets I
Jerry Reuss, 3-8 scattered seven
hits as Los Angeles beat New York.
New York center fielder Lee
Mazzilli was injured after a collision
with right fielder Dan Norman in the
sixth as the two chased Davey Lopes '
drive ro deep right center, which
wound up as an inside-the-park
homer. Mazzilli suffered injuries to
his mouth and rib area.

REI).FACED
PlllLLIPS, Wis. ( AP) - A redfaced black bear is prowling
Wisconsin's north woods - and the
coloring is caused by more than just
embarrassment.
While keeping two Department of
.Natural Resources foresters treed for
two hours recently, the 250-pound
beast spray-painted his face crimson
when he bit open a paint can and
rolled in the mess.
the foresters, David Bailey and
Roy Gilge, both 29, were spraypainting the boundaries of a DNR
timber sale in the Flambeau State
Forest here when the bear appeared.
The bear wandered off eventually
and the men made a dash to their
pickup truck.
·
"We didn't think we would get out of
the woods alive ro tell the tory," said
Gilge .
On the average, Americans watch
television for 6 hours and 10 minutes a
day, with older women spending the
most tlme before the set: 8 hours and
4minutes.

Garcia said. " ! don't thinK abOut next
year. I don't care whether I last one
day, one week or whatever. I'll make
the decisions to the best of my ability.
Should they name a new manager, I
hope he would show consideration
about hiring me back as third base·
.coach. I'm kind of an organization
man.''

Elsewhere in the American League,
the California Angels trounced the
Boston Red Sox 9-2, the Minnesota
Twins nipped the Toronto Blue Jays 76, the Kansas City Royals edged the
Texas Rangers 5-4, the New York
Yankees trimmed the Seattle
Mariners 6-2 and the Chicago White
Sox thumped the Detroit Tigers U-3.
India u.S 5, Brewers I
Cleveland's four-run sixth matched
four Milwaukee runs in the top of the
inning, three on Dick Davis' home
run. Sid Monge pitched three innings
of scoreless relief and first baseman
Andre Thornton ended the game with
a diving grab, which he turned into a
douple play .
Angels 9, Red Sox 2
Atriple play didn't help the Red Sox
as Joe Rudi's third grand slam of the
season capped a six-run California
first inning and the Angels breezed

behind Dave Frost's four-bit pitching.
Twins 7, Blue Jays I
Bombo ltivera tripled with one out
in the bottom of the ninth inning and
scored on a wild pitch by reliever
Mark Lemongello to give Minnesota
its fifth straight victory. Designated
hitter Danny Goodwin slanuned a
two-run homer to tie the game B-e In
the sixth inning.
Royals 5, RaDgers l
George Brett, who hit three home
runs Sunday night, hammered a
double and two RBI singles as Kansas
City handed the slumping Rangers
their sixth loss in seven games. Frank
White homered for the Royals, woo
scored what proved to be the winning
run in the eighth on a walk, sacrifice
and Willie Wilson's double.
Yankees 6, Mariners Z
Chris Olambliss drove in two runa
with his IOOth career homer and a
sacrifice fly and Jim Spencer
slammed a two-run homer while Ed
Figueroa went five innings for his first
triumph since May 9:
White Sol&lt; 11, Tigers 3
Mike Squires had three singles and
a double, driving in two runs and
scoring two, while Jorge Orta and
Rusty Torres homered· (or Chicago.

by ·GIII Fox

SIDE GLANCES

.•

.

'!~
~

"It's so isolaled and idyllic It makes you suspecllhere's a
nuclear dumping ground just beyond the treesl"

HIGH MILEAGE RETREADS
H-15
13" 14"-15" L-lS
$15.95 $16.95 ~17.95
..

..

Plus Recappable
casing/F.E.T. aoc .·

'

..

NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS -

Named Mike Holovak director of col·

lege scouting, Named Bill McPeak
director of professional scouting.
Named Mike McCarthy personnel
assistant.
NEW ORLEANS SAINTS - An·
nounced thai Dano Bivins, wide
recelver,left camp.

NEW YORK GIANTS -

1!2 Price of new
tires with a new
tire guarantee
whitewalls (no extra charge).

Waived '

Jerry Golsteyn, quarterback; Mike
Mince and Daren II Meyers. defensive
backs ; Bob Turner, running back .

AMPA BAY ' BUCCANEERS Waived Bob Rippentrop, tight end,
and Calvin O'Neal, linebacker. Ac·
quired Toney Williams, defensive
lineman , on waivers from Detroit.

UCLA

COLLEGE
~
Named Robert

Newman head crP.w coach.

c.

MEIGS TIRE CENTER, INC.
700 E. Main, next lo Krogers

992·210t

PCI\"troy, 0.

�5-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport -Pomeroy. 0 ., Tuesday. July 24. 1979

ewe meets for regular meeting here

4- The Dally Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. Tuesday , July 24. !979

Two tournament losses end

11le regular m~nthly m~ting of the
CWC of the 8acred Heart Catholic
Chureh wu held July 12 at 8 p.m.
11le meeting was preceded by
Mass. In the absence of Catherine
Welsh, president, Patricia McKnight,
vice president, presided. The meeting.
waa opened by prayer followed by the
pledge to the flag. Following roll call
of offlcen the minutes of the last
meetinl and the report of the
treasurer were read and approved.
The sick conunittee reported that

Meigs' legion team season
By Greg Balley
The Meigs American Legion team
wrapped up its season this past
weekend by being knocked out of the
legion tourney up at Athens.
On Saturday, the locals [ell to
Athens 10-5 and then on Sunday bowed
to Wellston 19-2.
Saturday Athens pounded M-eigs
pi~hing for 14 hits while Alan Myer
and reliever Wilson limited Meigs to
just five safeties.
Myer and Wilson fanned four and
walked eight while three Mei~s

Today's

hurlers walked eight and struck out with a four-for-four day.
no one.
Athens got two runs in the bottom of
In the game on Sunday, Meigs ~om­
the first inning, but Meigs cut the lead milled six errors while Wellston
to 2-1 in the ·top of the second when banged out 13 hits enroute to that lopJerry Fields slammed a home run sided win .
over the left field fence. But with four
Jeff Montgomery got the win while
runs in the bottom of the third , Athens Skidmore was tagged with the loss.
was off and;running .
Wellston pitchers walked seven and
Fields led the Meigs hitting with his fanned eleven while Meigs pitchers
homer and a single. Steve Litle, Tim gave up eleven walks and struck out
Skidmore, and Terry Wayland got the nine.
other Meigs hits. all singles. Art
Dav-e Kennedy led Meigs at the late
Chonko was the big stick for Athens . with a !Jiple and single while Chuck
Kennedy lmd Cliff Kennedy each had
two singles. Little, Tom Owens, and
Fields each singled. Benson was
Wellston's big hitter as he went threefor-six at the late.
Meigs finshed their regular season
play with a &amp;-20 record before last
weekend's tournament. The Meigs
team is composed of boys from Meigs
and Gallia counties.
AP Correspondent
.Linescore:
M.
.010 000 004 - 5 5 0
A.
204 030 !OX-10 14 0
there have been some grim
Brown (LP), Owens (4), Skidmore
coincidences.
(5) ahd T. Wayland.
Calvin Jones, a University of Iowa
Myer (WP) , Wilson (9) and May.
football star , was on the cover of the M.
001 100 000- 2 9 6
seventh issue in 1954. He died in an W.
224 030 35X-19 13 5
accident two years later. or more
Skidmore (LP), Owens (3),
immediate impact, Laurence Owen, Whitlatch (B) and T. Wayland.
U. S. figure skating queen, perished
J. Montgomery (WP), Cambell (7)
with other members of her team in a andT. Montgomery.
Brussels plane crash March 15, 1961
while her cover story was being
readied by SL
"Covers then had to be prepared
three weeks in advance," Bingham
recalled . "There was no way to.
change it before it 'hit the stands."
The Gallipolis striders Running
The SI covers haven't become . Club is sponsoring the 5th annual Rio
family albwns. The Irwin family of
Joplin, Mo., has the framed covers of Grande Bean Dinner Distance Run
two sons - Hale, the two-time U.S . Aug. 11 in conjunction with the annual
Open golf champion, and his brother , Rio Grande Bean Dinner at the Bob
Phil, shown in a Colorado football Evans Farm, Rio Grande.
There will be two races, a three
uniform , tackling a Penn Stater after
at 9:15 a.m. and a six miler at'
miler
a game in 1970.
9:30
Details of the races were
Too bad Bold Ruler, the great
published
in last Sunday's Timesracing thoroughbred and sire, didn't
Sentinel
except
for the registration
live to see his progeny propagate the
form.
slick covers. The Ruler himself was
Registration forins may be obtaincaught thundering down the stretch in
ed
at Holzer Medical Center at Dr.
1957. Later covers featured his son,
Charles
Holzer's office, Newberry's
Secretariat; grandsons Foolish
Sporting
Goods, and the Raccoon
Pleasure and Bold Forbes and great
Canoe
Libery,
or the Gallipolis Daily
grandson Seattle Slew plus three other
Tribune.
descendants.

Sports World
By Will Grimsley
They leap out at you like colorful
postage
stamps,
each
one
representing a milestone in the
unending parade of sports. Each one
relates a story - usually a
champion's jubilation - and often
marks a trend. Afew portend tragedy.
They are 25 years of Sports
illustrated covers - 1,250 in all - ,
neatly packaged in a soft-cover
edition celebrating ti -.- magazine 's
silver anniversary .

Fifth annl11ll race
slated August 11th.

Wolf Pen

News Notes

and 5 from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
A report on the Diocesap convention held June 13 in Steubenville was
made by Genna Caaci. Theme of the
convention was, "Here I Am Lord . '~
Proposed resolutions iven at the con- ·
vention were read by Mrs. Casei.
The meeting was closed by the vice
president with Mrs. Casci reading
Mary Stewart's prayer followed by a
prayer by the Rev. Father Welton.
Refreshments were served.

r-------------------------

REACH program begins

PEE WEE TEAM TOOK FIRST PLACE IN
LEAGUE PLAY -The "Rutland Reds", a pee wee
team of Rutland, took.flrst place in league action. They
are pictured with their trophies they received Saturday. First row, 1-r. Michael Wril(ht. Timmy Wright,

A . new program, REACH ,
(Rape,Emergengy and Crisis Help)
began operations in Gallia County this
week.
Through REACH, volunters will
provide emOtional support, practical
held and understanding to victims of
sexual abuse . The specially trained
volunteers are available 24 hours a
day, seven days a week, throilgh
Crtmline at ~Th program was initiated because
there is currently no support system
in the community Cot the rape victim .
Tile problem, however, is becoming
more widespread. Crisisline has
received more calls this yearthantast
reported Nancy Kohlreiser, starr
coordinator for the project.
Rape is a frequent crime.
according to the Federal Bureau if
Investigation, a tape is reported in the
U. S. once every 10 minuteds .
"However, it is estimated that fewer
than 50 percent of rapes are actually
reported, stated Celia TI1ornpso.1,
coordinator of the REACH project .
"The rapistis not often the stranger in
the night who jumpa out from the
bushes on a lonely road. Chances are
it Is someone the victim knows and the
crime may go unreported for that
reason .
Calling crisisline does NOT obligate

Jerry Cleland, Jimmy Cleland, kevin Oller, Bobby
Lambert, Jason Rupe, Pete Brickles; second row
Donald Nichols! Steve Quillen, Paul Dalley, Mlchaei
Bartrum, Robbie Eads, Paul Bricldes, Paul Council·
third row, Weldon Bartrwn, coach. Absent w~
Michael Roush and Josh Henry.

Bench's back major concern
ClllCAGO (AP) - Johnny Bench
has been thinking lately about what
scars he will carry into later life from
his years catching for the Cincinnati
Reds.
"Basically, I'm concerned about
my back," said the 31-year-&lt;&gt;ld Bench,
who missed last week's All-Star Game
because of back spasms. "Looking at
it realistically, I think about the
consequences of my back injury more
than anything else. My longevity is
very important to me. I'd like to play
two, possibly three more years.
"I am, of course, very concerned
about my health," Bench continued.
"Basically, I'm concerned about how
I will be physically in later years what
with the back injury and aiL I plan to
have a life after baseball and I don't
want to jeopardize it in any way."
Bench suffered the back injury in a
home · plate collision in June 1978.
HoweYer, it was later determined that
it was partially a congenital problem

They bring back countless
memories for one who was there when
most of it happened. They are a silent
poll for picking the most dynamic
sports personalities of the last quarter
of a century - led by ex-heavyweight
champion Muhammad Ali, naturally,
with a total of 23 covers, 11 as a fatfaced Cassius Clay.
Only Jack Nicklaus seriously
threatened the copper-skinned
warrior-preacher-peacen ik from
Louisville for the spotlight during that
era. The golden-haired golf king'
appeared on 18 covers - first as a
pudgy, overweight kid with a crew
hair-cut and ham-like hips, later as a
trimmed-down, handsome sex
symbol.
The Golden Bear overtook the
"Charger," Arnold Palmer, golf's
rage of the Sixties, who tied
basketball's skyscraper Lew Alcindor
and Kareem Abdul Jabbar (one and
CHICAGO ( AP) - The Cincinnati
the same) for third in the cover
Reds
have been forced to look for
sweepsteakes with 14.
ways to move on the
different
Another basketball player, UCLA's
Houston Astros while
division-leading
Bill Walton, followed with 13 and then
they
wait
for
the return of their
came glowering Sonny Liston, the
slugging
outfielder
George Foster,
fighter whose career and life both · Mr. and Mrs. Carl McEiroy of
By The Associated Press
who
has
been
sidelined
with a thigh
were short-lived, with nine.
Columbus were weekend visitors of
TENNIS
injury.
The awesome Liston graced an Mr. and Mrs. Paul McElroy and Mr.
FREJUS, France (AP) -- John . Foster was sent back to Cincinnati,
inordinate number of covers just and Mrs. Bill McElroy and sons.
McEnroe downed !lie Nastase of where he was to be examined Monday
before he had the world heavyweight
Mr. and Mrs. William Thoma and Romania 6-2, 6-1 and Jimmy Connors
title ripped from his hands by the family of Columbus were weekend defeated Guillermo Vilas of Argentina by team physician Geoege Ballou.
upstart Muslim-convert, Muhammad visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Howard &amp;4,, 7-f&gt; in the opening round of a Foster originally hurt his thi~h two
Ali, in Miami Beach, Feb. 25, 1964.
Thoma. ·
$75,000 all~tar series of exhibition
This helped perpetuate the theory of
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Darnell of tennis matches .
a so-called "cover jinx" which began Pomeroy were recent visitors of Mr.
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP ) --Ninthwith the old Saturday Evening Post, and Mrs. Pa•tl Darnell and Jeff.
seeded Pat DuPre defeated Alvin
Collier's, Life, Time and Look and
Mrs . Iva Johnson, Mr. and Mrs . Gardiner 6-2, 6-3 in a first-round
carried on with Time and SI after the William Thoma, and children of match in the $175,000 Louisville
other weekly slicks had dropped from Columbus were Sunday dinenr guests International Tennis Classic.
the stands.
BASEBALL
of Mr. a;Jd Mrs. Howard Thoma.
Children 's Day services were held
Sl'!'senior editor, Walter Bingham,
NEW YORK ( AP ) ·--Richie Zisk of recently at the Apple Grove United
The Garden Club met at the home of
who terms himself as the "keeper of Mrs. J . R. Murphy and enjoyed a pic- ·the Te)&lt;as Rangers, who hit .526 with
Methodist Church. Mrs. Russell
the trivia," disclaims the existence of nic lunch.
three home runs and nine runs batted Roush led the service with Mrs.
such a jinx although he acknowledges
in from July 19-22, was named the Darrell Norris pianist. The hymn " He
American League's Player of the Keeps Me Singing" was sung by the
Week for that shortened post All-Star congregation. Scripture from Matperiod.
thew 18th chapter and Mark 9th chapLIVESTOCK REPORT
Today In History
Zisk beat out Sixto Lezcano of ter was read by Herschel Norris.
By The Associated Press
Milwaukee and George Brett of
Poems were "A Word to Parents"
CINCINNATI (AP) - Cattle 150. Kansas City for the award.
Today is Tuesday, July 24, the 205th
by
Mrs. Dallas Hill, "Advice to
Auction
early.
Steers
and
heifers
.2.00day of 1979. There are 160 days left in
NEW YORK (APJ --Phil Garner of Fathers," by Mrs. Bob Rhodes,
3.00
lower.
Cows
and
bulls
3.00-4.00
the year.
'
the Pittsburgh Pirates was named the "Some Mother's Child," by Mrs. Marlower.
Today's highlight in history :
National League Player of the Week
Steers, choice, 2-1, 95().1225 lbs, for the period ending July 22, league shall Roush, "Wisdom of a Child," by
On this date in 1946, the United
States made the first underwater test 61.50-03.25; couple. 64.50; good, 2-3, President Chub Feeney announced. Mrs. Milo Richardson, "Love of Little
Children" by Mrs. Herschel Norris,
of an atomic bomb, setting off the 975-1200 lbs, 58.00-01.00; standard, 1-2,
Garner batted .409 during the "THe First Day" by Mrs. Darrell
1075-1365
lbs,
54.00
58.00
.
.
explosion at Bikini atoll in the Paclfic.
abbreviated AU-Star week, collecting
Heifers, choice, 2-4, 800-1025 lbs, nine hits in 22 at bats , including three Norris.
On this date:
Songs were sung by the chlldren
In 1704, the British captured 59.70-02.80; indiyidual, 63.00 ; good, 2- home runs. The infielder scored five
and
a quiz on Mothers of the Bible was
3,
775-975
lbs,
57.1Xh19.00.
Gibraltar from Spain during the War
rW1s and drove in seven more, given by Mrs. Roush.
Cows, utility, 2-3, 1000-1375 lbs, including two game-winning RBI.
of the Spanish Succession.
A wiener roast was heid at the PorIn 1783, the Latin American patriot, 40.00-48.00; cutter, 1-2, 800 llOO lbs,
FOOTBALL
tland
park in the evening to honor all
36.00-46.75.
Simon Bolivar, was born in Caracas,
NEW YORK ( AP) --A challenge to the children who attend the Sunday
Bulls,
yield
grade
I,
1200-1400
lbs,
Venezuela.
the authority of Commissioner Pete
In 1870, the first railroad car from 60.75-64.00; individual, 1620 .lbs, 68.00. Rozelle to discipline National Football School. Forty-five attended. Also a
Vealers, low choice, 260-335 lbs, League players for conduct reception for Rev. and Mrs. David
the Pacific Coast reached New York
Harris and son, Nathan, was held.
75.00-1!4.00.
City, opening the way for
detrimental to professional football
A cake baked by Mrs. Joan Tuttle of
transcontinental train service.
was rejected by an arbitrator.
Racine
featuring a cross, Bible and
In 1929, President Herbert Hoover
James Scearce denied a grievance praying hands was presented the
proclaimed the Kellogg-Briand Pact,
claim by the NFL Players Association
minister and his family. Rev . Harris
which renounced war as an
that challenged the commissioner's
EGG
REPORT
instrument of national policy .
action requiring Randy Crowder and has been sent back to us for another
year.
In 1942, British bombers devastated
Don Reese to contribute $5,000 apiece
COLUMBUS,
Ohio
(AP)Eggs
the German cities of Frankfurt and
to a drug rehabilitation program in
Prices paid to country packing plants Florida.
Mannheim in World War ll .
In 1959, Vice President Richard for eggs delivered to major Ohio cities
The two p;Jyers pleaded no contest
Nixon and Soviet Premier Nikita cases included consume_r grades to unlawful possession, sale and
In the 16th and 17th centuries
Khrushchev had a heated debate in a including U.S . grades, minimum 50 delivery of a controlled substance in
kitchen display at an American case lots.
Florida in 1977. As a condition for people· put hot coals from th~
Carton Large A 61-&lt;JS, Medium A 53- their returning to the NFL, Rozelle fireplace Into a shallow pan which
exhibition in Moscow .
56,
Small A 41-45.
Ten years ago : The U.S. Apollo XI
required them to make the was then slipped into beds to warm
Sales to retailers in major Ohio contribution to a program of their them before the household retired for
astronauts made a safe landing in the
the night.
Paclflc after the first manned landing cities, cartons delivered: Large A choice in Florirla.
on the moon, and President' Richard white 71-30, mosUy 71-73, medium 62Nixon watched the splashdown from 71, mostly 62-64.
SHOP
Poultry prices at Ohio farms, hens
the aircraft carrier Hornet.
1
\\
Five years ago: The U.S. Supreme light 11-9 '&lt;.
Truck lot prices of ready to cook ((
Court ruled that President Richard
,
Nixon must turn over White House broilers and fryers:·Cincinnati 37-40;
FOR THE BEST DEALS IN THE
~
documents subpoenaed for Watergate C.1eveland 37-40.
TRISTATE AREA
cover-up trials.
Today's birthdayS&lt; Theatr ical
producer Alexander Cohen is 59 years
old. Fonner U.S. Food and Drug
Mon., Tues., Wed ., Friday &amp; Sat.
Administrator Frances Keisey is 55.
Kurh Waldheim, former foreign
8:30 to 5: oo Thursday till12 Noon
Republican Sen . . Charles _McC . minister of Austria, is the fourth
Mathias is 57. Artist Alex Katz is 52. Secretary-General of the United
) OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONLY
Thought for today : It is a great Nations. His predecessors were
n•manG~~
nuisance that knowledge can only be Trygve Lie of Norway. Dag Ham- I
Mason, w. Va.
773 ·5592
acquired by hard work - Somerset marskjold of Sweden, and U 11\ant or
Maugham, English writer, 1874-1965.
Burma.

a:m.

get-well cards had been sent to JOhn
Keck and Fred Colburn. Plans were
made for mass for the late Margaret
Gans.
•
Mrs. McKnight announced the
resignation of Maureen Hennessey as
auditor. Plans were made for the annual picnic to be held Aug . 2 at 6 p.. at
Ft. Megis . Persons are to bring
covered dish and own table service.
The ways and means committee
made plans lor a rummage sale to be
held in the church basement on Sept. 4

in his lower back. but the club still
considers it a persistent injury
problem. Bench has been ailing with it
for more than a year now.
Unlike some of his peers, however,
Bench said he has had no problems·
with his hands.
Bench attributes part of this success
to putting his free hand behind his
back when the bases are empty. As a
result, Bench's hands aren't beaten
like those of othr major-league
catchers.
· "I don't have any swelling or what
they call a 'bag of walnuts,"' Bench
said.
Bench takes added precautions to
protect his hands.
"We don't like to publicize it to the
opponents, but I have a thwnb guard I
use on my left hand," Bench said.
"It 's a brace that holds the thumb in
place. I've also gone to a pad the last
year or so, but I've never used a
sponge like some catchers do .

Bench admitted to a 'dead feeling'
on his catching hand, but he doesn't
beliebve it wUI affect him in years to
come.
A group of doctors in Chicago
approached Bench last seasoo about
participating in an experiment.
"They wanted to run some tests to
see about the circulation in the
hands," Bench said. "It's simething
they also do for the ankles and feet.
"They wanted me to come in before
or after a game, but I didn't like the
idea of getting up at eight or nine
o'clock in the rooming to have
someone check my circulation,"
Bench added with a smile.
· Prior to this season, Bench had
caught in 1,500 games ..
"I plan on catching only 96-100
gsmes a year," Bench said. "It could
be a dlfficult adjusting period when
you're used to playing every day. I'll
continue as long as I feel I'm able to
cootribute something on· the field ."

HUMANE SOCIET\'
PICNIC PLANNED
The Melga Hwnane Society picnic
will be held July 29, 4 p.m. at Athena
Acres on Hysell Run, the home of
Joyce Miller and Marloo Crawford.
Members and guests are urged to
bring balhlnl! lUll.! and take advantage of the swimming pool. Each
member will bring a covered dish and
table service widll e provided.

Foster sent home for exaniination

Sports
briefs •.• •

weeks -ago and aggravated the ·injury
in the AU-Star game.
Trainer Larry Starr thought Foster
might be able to play again in a
relatively short time, but it hasn 't
worked out that way.
" It hasn't improved like I thought it
would," Starr said. " It hasn't gotten
any worse, either, but he hasn 't done
anything for quite a while."
The prognosis of the injury has
changed from a pulled groin muscle to
a pulled adductor muscle in his right

Apple Grove
. e dumps
R acm
·News Notes
Eastern team

MASON FURNITURE

MASON FURNITURE

By Greg Baney
Lefthander Kent Wolfe fired a fivehitter and yielded no walks as the
Racine Pony League team downed
host Eastern, 9-2. Wolfe also fanned 14
batters and collected a single and
double at the plate.
John Porter collected a triple and
single for the winners, and Jay Rees
socked a double and single. Allen
Pape and Jeff Sopher each slammed
two singles, and Robert Brown and
·Scott Frederick each singled.
Rob Smith took the loss and teamed
with Daren Jewitt to fan six and walk
five. Mike Bissell led Eastern at the
piate with a single and triple. John
Beaver added a triple, and Smith and
Roger Gaul each had a single.
Racine is now 9-3 on the season
while Eastern fell to 5-3.

thigh .
The adductor muscle controls the
side-to-side movement in the leg,
which will restrict the hitting of
Foster, who is batting .333 with 20
home runs and 72 runs batted ln.
Foster's injUry came at a time when
the Reds were closing on the Astros in
the National League's Western
Division.
The Reds now hope to shore up their
attack in other ways, including
becoming more aggressive on the
bases.
The Reds began the season with a
strong running attack. On May 26,
they had stolen 40 bases_ln 49 attempts
for an 81.6 success ratio.
However. since June 23, and going
into Sunday's doub!Hleader with the
Cub5. the Reds had attempted only 11
stolen bases in 33 games and had been
successful four times.
"We're going to have to start
running ," said outfielder Ken Griffey,
who has a troublesome knee which
has been giving him problems. "We .
can't afford to sit back and meet
power with power anymore. It's not a
powerful team we have."
Second baseman Joe Morgan, who
has a career to!al of 585 stolen bases,
agreed wlth his teammate's
conclusion.
" In order lor us to win. we have to
run . We have to be able to find a way
to steal a run in the close games," he
said.
Morgan, who has been plagued witll
a sore ankle since May 29, now ha,
another problem.
· ,
"! can rur again, but now I've get tO
find a way to get on base," sal~
Morgan.

no~

a sexual

Wn.LSWEDEN 'S NO-SPANK LAW
EVER MAKE IT IN THIS COUNTRY
By Helen and Sue Boltwl
DFAR HELEN AND SUE :
.
·I read in the papers that as of July
1, Sweden will outlaw spanking
·children, and make it illegal to treat
them in "humiliating ways."
Do you think this will ever catch on
in the United States?- NOT REALLY
IN FAVOR
DEARNRIF:
If our mail is a barometer: No.
Every tlme we condemn.spanklng as
the preferred method .of discipline,
we're bombarded with Biblical quotes
about the hazards of rod-sparing. HELEN

crime,· ~

adds Ms. Kohlreiser.
REACH volunteers will see the
victim at the Mental Health Center or
at Holzer Emergency room . They will
explain medical and legal procedures
to the victim. provide companionship,
and if necessary , help with family
members . they will also be present
du~ing police questioning and will
help police and medical personnel be
sensitive and deal effectively with the
victim. Members of the team will be
available for followup as well.
The intensive training program for
REACH volunteers includes Crisisline
trainin g and 18 hours of special rape
intervention training. Members of
Sheriff James Montgomery 's staff
assisted
with
training and
participated as volunteers. Others of
the
25
volunteers
include
represedntatives of the Buckeye Hills
Career Center, Gallia County, Holzer
Hospital ; and Therapists , Social
Workers and otller staff members of
the MHC.
Ms. Kohlreiser sa id that volunteers
will be available for community
education programs.
The REA9l teams will be ava ilable
to Jackson and Meigs Counti es within
the next few weeks .

PICNIC SLATED
The Westem Boot CB Club will hold
a picnic for its members at Portland
Park on July 29, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Person~ are to bring a cov.ered dlsh
and own table service. Thu club will
provide the meat and beverages 'such
as pop and coffee.
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
Admissions--Phillip
Johnson .
Bidwell; Phillip Null , Tuppers Plains ;
Carolyn Reynolds , Racine; Marie
O..ster, Pomeroy.
Dlscharges--Ithmer Neal , Dale
Howell , Terry Walker .

lllh!r&lt;"'"'• ,.,.,..,, " ' ~ po·r "~'~' '' ""'

S«l-t-- •

-m._

t. ?Jtt. 'fdit.h: ~July 18, 1979
Letter To the Editor:
I am writing this letter to express
my feelings about a high school marchingband. ·
Two weeks ago, July 4, ·Southern
High School band was unable to
march in the annual parade at Racine
due to not having enough people. Ali
far as I C!lll remember, this is the first
time this band has been unable to par·
ticipate in the parade at Raciile.
I regret seeing this happen to our
band. There have been some problems in recent months, with leadership, but this is no looger a problem.
Mr. Joeeph Malesick has been hired
as a new band leader.
I wish that each student who
previOW!ly has played in the band and
is still enrolled in school, would give
this new band leader a chance. He is
SOOiewhat strict, but very capable.
He caMot make a decent band
without band members.
I also wish that each parent of a
fanner or present band member
would get behind their son or ·
daughter and encourage them to attend practice sessions and all events.
No band leader will try to take fifteen
or twnty members into a parade and
publicly embarass the students or
himself.
I don 'I know whether the
absenteeism is due to apathy or ,
whether the previous absence of a '
band leader has been the cause, b~t
whatever it may be, plese contact Mr.
Malesick and get back into the swing
of things. Those musical instnunents
are expensive and setting idle ill no
way to Improve your talents.
Mr . and Mrs . Earl Cleland
Band Parents
Southern Local School District

SINGER REUNION
The family reunion of the late Guy
and Iva Singer will be held July 29 at
the Olester Community Hall. There
will be a basket lunch at noon. All

NOTE FROM SUE : Besides, the
United States has had quite enough
unenforceable laws . Why try
another?
DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
My girlfriend and I broke up aft~r
going out together for a month. It happened after Karen and I made out the
first time. Next day she said she was
going with someone else.
The reason is _because my perfonnance didn't come up to her expectations. Okay, so I was inexperienced and not exactly suave. In
fad, I was almost a failure. At 15, is
that fatal?
To save face, I'm thinking of telling
her I was about to quit her, so naturally my heart wasn't in it when we
made out.
I've heard that if you make girls
think you don't want them, they
decide they want you. So, if she
figures I was just bored and not a
nerd, maybe I'll have another chance.
How about it? -PRAYING FOR A
MIRACLE
DEARPFM:
We've· got a better idea: WhY don 't
you look for a girl who thinks a boy's
sensibilities are more important than
his sexabilities. Karen is too
precocious for your type of 15-ye'arold. -HELEN AND SUE
RAP :

I'm a married teen-ager - since I
was 16. When I was at home with my
mom and brother and sisters, I never
wanted to be there. I knew the things I
did were hurting Mom, and I started
straightening up when I met my
future h1111band.
I regret all the things I put on my
mother's shoulders. She stuck beside
me, no matter what. Now I realize she
Is the best true friend a girl could ask
for.
She has helped my husband and me
through a lot. Whenever we needed
her, she was there. Now I'm giving
her her first grandchlld. Through her
and my man's help, I graduated from
high ~K:hool in June. I'll be 18 soon,
and I can say I'm finally grown up
enough to be a good wife and mother.
I only hope I can be as good a person

friends and relatives are welcome.
Could I use your column to say,
•~. . . .~...................................................................... asmymom.
"Thanks a million, Mom. I love
you! "? - LAURA
DEAR LAURA:
Thanks a million for writing. HELEN AND SUE

..

PRICES GOOD NOW THRU JULY 28TH

we reserve the right
to lim it quantities

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~

EgUIPMENT FINANCING &amp; LEASING
TRAINING COURSES designed to meet the needs

OF STORE SLICED
WNCH MEATS

of small business.

HOLLYWOOD (AP) - It was one of
those " magical opening nights ,"
Frank Langella recalls, when
everything seemed to go right and the
audience stood and cheered at the
final curtain.
Langella, who had known triumph
and failure in the theater, turned to
the other cast members and
admonished: . "Don't trust any of
. "
.
th IS.
A day later, the 39-year-old actor
was in England to start the Walter
Mirisch production of "Dracula,"
which ill,adding to the chill factor in
the nation's movie theaters this
sununer. Even now Frank Langella is
distrustful of the process that brought
him first to Broadway stardom and
had made him a film luminary.
"It has no reality to me at the
moment, " he remarked over lunch in
his lOth-floor· suite at the Beverly
Wilshire Hotel. "My identification
with Dracula ended last Fedruary
when we completed the film . All of the
film company's concern with press
kits, posters, ads and publicity ·
campaigns is foreign to me. Right now
!'mall wrapped up in Harry Crystal."
That's the role he will be playing in
"Those Lips, Those Eyes," the United
Artist movie he'll make in Cleveland
this summer. Harry Crystal is miles
away from Count Dracula, a romantic
singer who is the mainstay of a small
operetta theater. It is Langella's
singing debut, and he is spending his
spare time listening to records of
Nelson Eddy , Howard Keel and
Gordon MacRae.
Obviously Frank Langella aims to

VBS planned
Middleport Church of Christ will
hold vacation Bible school July 31
through Aug. 10 from 9 a.m. to 11:30
a.m.
This year's theme is "God's Word,
Your Door to Adventure." Shawn
Stewart iB director with Cathy Erwin
and Debbie Gerlack serving as
assistants.
Teachers and helpers are: nursery,
Cristi Hess, Debbie Honaker, and
Marilyn Bishop; . blgiMers, Phyllis
Gilkey, Cathy Cooper, and Angela
Baker; primary, Farie Cole, Becky
Fry, and Brenda Fry, middlers,
Mildred Hawley, Grace Hawley and
Sherri Fox; junior, Tom Bowen and
Cathy Hess; junior high, Shirley
Bwngamer; crafts, Mike Gerlach,
·and Clarice Erwin; song leaders,
Debby Melton and Bob Melton; kitchen conunittee, Clyda Allensworth,
Martha Fry and Regina S'Ajlt; office
helper,ShellyFox.
A contest will be held for childten
attending Bible School. Children will
be allowed to earn tickets to be used
at a carnival that will be held Atig. 11
fran II a.m. to I :30 p.m. The carnival
is for children who attend vacation Bible schr~l only.

escape the spectre of Dracula that.
haunted the last 30 years of Bela
Lugosi's career. The Hungarian actor
was reduced to endless revivals of the
stage play or parodies of the role he
created on Broadway and played in
the 1931 movie. One of his final
Frankentein" (1948) .
He admitted that his first reaction
to " Dracula" was negative. Not being
fond of horror movies, he hadn't seen
early Lugosi nor the Christopher Lee
Draculas that were hammered out in
England during the 1960s.
"Then John Wulp called me about
doing a straight version of 'Draet•:a ,'
drawing entirely from the original
play. He saw the Count as a tragic
Byronic figure condemned to eternal
life, and he wanted to produce the play
all of a piece, the costwnes, settings
and acting contributing to the mood.
Tile movie, written by W. D. Richter
("Invasion of the Body Snatchers")
and directed . by John Badham
( ':Saturday Night Fever") ~!so
remains true to the original. The cast
includes Laurence Olivier as
Dracula's scholarly nemesis Van
Helsing, Donald Pleas~nce as the
asylum operator, and Kate Nelligan
and Jan Francis as the more or less
willing victims.

HOME LEAGUE LADIES MEET
The Home League ladles of the
Salvation Army of Athens and Meigs
County met recently for a picnic dinner at Ft. Meigs.
Ladies from Middleport, Pomeroy
and Athens were in attendance. Devotions, "We Need to Grow" were given
by Mrs. Lt. Brookman and Eloise
Adams. A ball game was played with
Jackie Justice in charge.

ANNUAL FISH FRY

111e Wilkesville Volunteer Fire
Department iB busy making plans for
their 23rd &amp;Muai flsh fry which will
be held Sturday, July 28.
Included in the afternoon activities
are children's games, softball games,
and a firefighter's water battle. Plans
also call for a street dance from 9
p.m. until midnight.
·
Persons are to bring lawn chairs.

GREENHOUSE
CLEARANCE
This Week Only-9 till 5
Mon. thru Sat.
On foliage &amp; blooming
hanging baskets.
10" Hanging Baskets ·
Reg. $5.75, Now S3.00
6" Hanging Baskets
Reg. S2.95, Now sr.so

Hubbard's Greenhouse
Syracuse

Now phones are much more than just something
to talk on. They've become an integral part of today's
home decorating Schemes. So you should choose your
phones as e&lt;trefully as you would a new lamp or rug .
And the GTE Phone Mart makes it possible
to do just that.
There you Gln hold up dozens of beautiful
phone styles and colors against your
wallpaper sample or fabric swatches or paint
chips. to see if it's exactly what you want.
Then when you do pick your favorites,
you can just take them home with you.
So next time you feel inspired. come
pick out some new accent pieces &lt;tt the
GTE Phone Mart. It's a whole new way to
see your phone company.

Put a new Phone
In your life.

EGGS ......~~~~ .. 49~
PEPSI
PEPSI, MT.

8

'.S oz.
bottles

$109

For information and prompt service contact .. . John 0. Herrold

Phone (614) 533-1431
'

THE CITY LOAN
BUSINESS SERYICES CO.
(52) "
fiMnd~ l seriAce of

C ONT~OL DATA CO«/''R{ITIO\l

-

.,

992-5776

Why you should
bring your wallpaper to the

SMALL GRADE A

FINE
ASSORTMENT

.

%GAL

VALLEY BELL

'Dracula' ·drawing
blood and screams

GTE Phone Mart.

FRESH

FRESH
HOMEMADE

Business Loons
llso available:

a violent crime,

ll y llt•lt •n u ntl ~•u · lluttd

,.,u

the victim to report a sexual assault to
the
police,
Ms.
Thompson
emphasized. Rape is a frightening
crime that can happen to any woman •
young or old or rich or poor . " Rape is

TO MEET
11le Wildwood Garden Club will
meet ar the home ot Betty Milhoan
Wednelday eta :30 p.m. There will b a
cooliout and members bring their own
halniNrgen and frankfurters:

.

$10,000 ... $20,000 ... $50,000
$100,000 ... $200,000 and more.

l .rll~r• ·~ uptntul wrr "'"'" l!lrd. lll" • i •oul&lt;l l•· h·"
!lui" lot "'"d' IHnM • ''' ••hi.,,.. '" r~llu•.ll"" h! !111· ~ &lt;Iii "''
iiiKI mu• ll•· •i~unJ,.,L~ llw ''it.... ·., lddfl·" ';o•ll~ • " ""
tr 10 illl~dd wpoou ~111111• itl&lt;il ll n'&gt; rl• l ' '" rr ljll&lt;.' l·
IUOitl l"'
t.• ~ ... lu•~d l ••tu·"' •h•"'Ld l&gt;o• 1n ~ ,,.,1 1&lt;1•1•'.

(;em·ration Rap

16 West Washington,

~thens

�I
7- The Daily Sentinel, Middlejlort-Pomeroy. 0 ., Tuesday, July 24, 1979
6- The Daily Sentind, Middleport-Pomeroy 1 0 ., Tuesday, July 24,1979

'

, ~ Legion auxiliaries auend convention
caucuses, prestded over by Mrs. gressman Delbert Latta, who sP&lt;&gt;ke
on the recent SALT II treaty. Mrs.
Florence Richards, Middleport.
' Saturday events included reports Bo!ul presented a citation from
from department chairmen, with Governor James A, Rhodes to Mrs.·
·
Mrs. Marjorie Goett, Pomeroy Unit Junge.
Installation
of
new
offricers oc39, presenting her report on Junior activities. A past presidents • parley lun- curred Sunday, inclUding that of the
. cheon was held at noon at the Com· new Eighth District presdient, Mrs.
modore Perry. followed by the Samuel Snyder, Lancaster·. Honored
guest was national presdient Mrs.
American Legion Parade.
.
On Saturday night, a homecoming Earl Bigelow.
banquet was held in honor of Mrs.
Present at the convention fr«m the
Melain Junge, new auxiliary national tri-a~unty area were Mary Martin,
secretary. A guest of the department Pearl Knapp ; Kate Welsh and Marat the speaker's table was Mrs. Jorie Goett from Pomeroy Unit 39,
Florence Richards of Middleport Unit Becky Tyree fr001 Middleport Unit
263. Guest speaker was Ohio con- 128, Lula Hampton and Florence
Richards from Middleport Unit 263,
and Mabel Brown from Gallipolis
Unit 27.
Polly Cramer
Junior and Senior Goal Ribbons
were
presented to units from
quired
lengthS.-POLLY
POLLY'S PROBLEM
•
Jackson, Middleport, Wellston and
DEAR POLLY - I always keep a
Vinton; special merits to Crooksville,
DEAR POLLY -I have one large and package of pipe cleaners in my
Wellston and Racine; unit actlvitie:s A
two small rugs that my husband makeup kit. They are soft and easy to
to Mary Martin, Pomeroy; unit acmade while in a V.A. hospital.! would bend. I use them to remove mascara
tivities B to Mabel Brown, second
or
eye
liner
from
the
comers
of
my
like to use them as wall hangings .
lace, Gallipolis ; American Education
eyes
or
lids
without
smudging
my
Howdoldothis?- N.M.
Week to Faye Wildermuth, Pomeroy;
RUTII
other
makeup.
DEAR N.M. - If it has not been
The second annual reunion of music, Wellston; selling pins,
DEAR
POLLY
When
ironing
a
done already I would first line the
descendents of the late Frank and Ora
and
Wellston·;
rugs with burlap or heavy canvas. shirt with embroidery on it, such as a Lance was held Sunday, July 15 at Pomeroy
Wellston;
community
Americanism,
They will hang evenly and not sag if bowling shirt, I place a towel (folded Forked Run State Park. The day was
Wellston
and
Gallipolis;
conservice,
you first fasten to the wall strips of in half) on the ironing hDltrd, put the spent visiting, taking pictues, playing
struction
and
by-Jaws,
Jackson
and
embroidered
piece
on
it
with
the
right
wood with nail ends protruding to the
horse shoes and yard darts. Dinner Racine.
side
down,
put
another
towel
on
top
front, such as one puts carpets on.
was served at noon.
The rugs can be pushed onto the nails and steam iron. All the wrinkles come
Those attending were: Mr. and
on these strips. Cut strips to the re- out.
Mrs.
David Elkins and daughters,
After cleaning fish I rub lemon
Wendy
and Velvet of Tuppers Plains;
Juice on it to get rid of the fishy smell.
Mr.
and
Mrs. Joe Lantz of Reedsville,
When moving house plants from
Mr.
and
Mrs. Roger Lance and
one house to another make a cone out
children,
Roger
Jr., Criss and Jenny
of two sheets ol newspaper. Gently
of
Dayton;
Mr.
and
Mrs. Mike Lance
nJESD.U
push up from the bottom over one
PAST MATRONS of Pomeroy plant and secure the ends. This and children, Laurie, Mike Jr., Lisa
i£rin Morris, granddaughter of Mrs.
Chapter 1116 Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at prevents breakage of leaves and and Tracl of Coolville ; Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Epling and boys, Ernie, Eddie Anna Wheeler, Apple Grove, has ben
home of Mrs. Marge Crow.
stems. -DEBRA
DREW WEBSTER POST 39 picnic
DEAR DEBRA - I have found that and Mark of Tuppers Plains ; Mr. and accepted into the honors sectloo of tbe
Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. at Ft. Meigs. many plants move well if slipped Mrs. Bob Young and girls, Amy and freshman class at Bowling Green
Members to bring covered dish.
down inside a very large paper bag .- Angle of Reedsville; Mr, and Mrs. State University. She will enter the
Fl'l!d Houghton and boys, Jinuny and university in September to begin a
.
HARRISONVILLE
SENIOR POLLY
Citizens wiener roast at regular
DEAR POLLY -- The best FrMdle of Athens ; Kathy Houghton major in record producing and
meeting Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. at bookmark I have ever found is a cor- of iCocoa, Fla.; Mr. and Mrs. Dale engineering.
According to Dr. Robert Buhore,
Forest Acres Park.
ner cut from an envelope. The Wilfong of Coolville, Mrs. Do1Ul8
HARRISONVILLE Senior Citizens triangle should be a bout 2 inches each Reed and children, Mary Jo and director of the honors program, only
Tuesday 6:30 p.m. Wiener roast at way and will easily slip over the cor- Robert of Tuprs Plains; Mrs. Bar- M ~ 90 ol 3,000 freslunen are eligible
Forest Acres Park .
nerofthepageina book . -SANDY · bara Cremeans and daughter, Jenny for the program. When she was
EASTERN School Board Tuesday
PoUy will send you one of her signed of Coolville; Keith Eye of Coolville, graduated from Bowling Green High
7:30p.m. at high school library.
thank-you newspaper colwnn clip- Mr. and Mrs. Richard Lutz of South Schoolin June, Erin ranked thirteenth
pers if she uses yoor favorite Pointer, Charleston, W. Va .; Mr. and Mrs . in a clasa of 320.
WEDNESDAY
Erin's mother is the 'rormer Nonna
Peeve or Problem in her colwnn. Charles Lantz of Tupers Plains, and
Chapman of Apple Grove.
POMEROY - MIDDLEPORT Uons Write POLLY 'S POI.N'I'ERS in care of Mrs. Flora Elkins, Rockledge , Fla.
Club Wednesday at noon at Meigs Inn. this
·

Local American Legion auxiliaries Merritt, director of Buckeye Girls •
were present at the Department of State, won the Natlonal Medal of
.
Ohio auxiliary convention at the Honor for the ninth time.
The Golden Press aards were given
Maaonic complex in Toledo July 13-15.
The convention opened on the morn- to the Columbus Dispatch, radio staing of the 13th with Mrs. Lyell Roush tion WWEF in Cleveland, and WlDO. Dayton .•
presilling. Department cmunander 1V ID
Friday afternoon pre-i:onventioo
Mrs. Elden Bohn e:rtended greetings
to all delegates. Mrs. Jack Balzhiser, meetings were held at the Com·
member ol the National Uaslon Com- modore Perry Motor Inn. Awards
mittee, wu awarded the National were presented ~~ ~ Eighth District
Americanism Award and Mrs. Agnes

..

POLLY'S POINTERS

r-

Four local men have been selected
for inclusion In the 1979 edition of
Outstanding Young Men of America .
Selected were Gary Louis Ellis and
William Albert Young, both ol
Pomeroy; Darrell Dean Slone,
Albany, and Don Michael Mullen,
Middleport.
The men were selected from
nominations received from senators,
congressmen, governors, mayors,
state legislators, university and college presidents and de8Illi as well as
various civic groups - including the
United States Jaycees which also endorses the Outstanding Young Men of
America program.
Robert McNickle, son of Lowell M.
McNickle, Racine, has been selected
by the department of the Air Force as
maintenance airman for the month of

Lance
reunzon
held

Free concert Aug. 1
"Live !", a musical comedy by Hy
Conrad, will be presented free from
noon to 7 p.m. on the Parking Lot
State in Pomeroy, Aug. I.
Dealing with a confrontation between an actor portraying Mark
Twain for a film company and the
real Samuel L. Clemens (Twain's real
name), the musical looks at the
heritage of the Ohio River Valley in
the context of changing economic and
social conditions.
Produced by the Ohio River Valley
Heritage Project in Cincinnati,
"Live! On the River" will be sponsored locally by the Big Bend Regatta
Committee. The show is being
produced in river communities
through Pennsylvania, Kent4cky,
Ohio and Indiana during the summer
months.
Further infonnation can be obtained from Kyle Allen at 992-2121 .

Accepted into
honors section

Social Calendar

July.
McNickle is being considered for ·
entry in further competition with
other bases.
"Robert exemplifies the highest
personal and military standards aJ)d
is an inspiration to 9thers. He is the
type of young man we need as our
leaders of the future . We are proud to
have him as part of our organization
· and consider him an exceptional airman"Thomas J . Rush; Col. stated.

Billboard's hot hits!
The following ·are Billboard's hot
.record hits for the week ending July 28
as they appear in next week's issue of
Billboard magazine.
HOT SINGLES
.,.
1. "Bad Girls" Donna Summer
(Casablanca)
2. "Ring My ~II " Anita Ward (TK)
3. "Good Times" Chic (Atlantic)
4. "Hot Stuff" Donna Summer
(Casablanca )
5. "Makin ' It" David Naughton
(RSO )
6. "Gold" John Stewart (!\SO)
7. "I Want You To Want Me" Cheap
Trick (Epic)
5. "Shine A Little Love" Electric
Light Orchestra (CBS)
9. "When You 're In Love With A
Beautiful Woman" Dr. Hook (Capitol )
10. "Main Event" Barbra Streisand
(Columbia )
TOPLP's
I. "Bad Girls" Donna Summer
(Casablanca)
2. . "B reakfast In America"
Supertramp (A&amp;M)
3. "I Am " Earth, Wind &amp; Fire
(CBS)
4. "Cheap Trick At Budokan" Cheap
Trick (Epic )
·
5. " Discovery" Electric Light
Orchestra (CBS)
6. "Candy.O" Cars (Eiektra )
7. "Teddy" Teddy Pendergrass

BIBLE SCHOOL IN PROGRESS
Bible School is in progress this (CBS)
week at the Rutland Church of Christ
8. "Back To The Egg" Wings
from 6:30p.m. to 8:30p.m.
(Columbia 1
On sturday night a cookout will be
9. "Dynasty" Kiss (Casablanca)
held at 6:30p.m. and on Sunday at 7
to. "Get The Knack" The Knack
p.m. a program wid!! be held.
(Capitol )

TAKE A
VACATION

FROM

)

MEAT

FAMILY PAK

CHICKENS ........ ~~- 59'

"Enriched Flavor.'cigarette sparks whole
new taste era in low tar smoking.

.I

12 OZ. PKG •

LEGS &amp;THIGHS .•••• _
••l;l!·,ggc

Not too long ago, smokers believed that if a cigarette had
less tar, it had less taste too. Low tar cigarettes simply didn't
taste very good.
Then along came MERIT and a whole new taste idea called
'Enriched Flavor' tobacco. And in three short years, smoking
changed:
1. No other new cigarette in the last 20 years has attracted
so many smokers as quickly as MERIT!
2. MERIT has swept past over 50 other brands in record time.
3. MERIT is continuing to attract high tar smokers - the most
taste~conscious smokers of all!
It's clear: MER1T taste is changing attitudes toward low tar
smoking.

WINGS .•••••••••••••••••L~~. 59~

·--------------------------·

DAIRY

HI-HO

·----~
GRADE 8 LARGE

...
doz. 79~
EGGS ••••••••••••••••••••••••

ALL STAR DAIRY

. , 49

1% LOWFAT MILK ••~~~••
ALL STAR DAIRY

.

COTTAGE CHEESE ••• ~~.~.59~
BROUGHTONS

I

Vz Gal. 89~
BUTT.ERMILK ..............
.

CRACKERS••••••••••••••• .I.~.B!lf.

CHOCOLATE
VALLEY BELL

DRINK.~~!·.. ~.1

12 Pak 99~

~~I CLE5 •••••••••••••••••

Kings &amp; lOO's

59

79~

49¢
SALTINE CRACKERS•••••••~x•••
SCOT lAD

-

1 LB.

.

~~

ICE
10 LB.

69~

BAG

¢

Mt49
e
AMOCO Oll •••••••••••••••~~A.~ 69
Macaroni &amp; Spaghetti....
-

VALLEY BELL

~

.::c._

(All SEASONS)

.

••

THURS. ONLY

RC

REGULAR and MENTHOL

BANANAS
•

Warning : The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.
'

FRANKIES

BREASTS······ ••••••••~.... 99~

.. .

I

·SUPERIORS

Kings: 8mg' 'tar:' O.G rn gnic01i11e100 ·s: 11 n1g"tar:' 0.7 mg nicotine av. perci garell e, FTCReport May·78

OR

I)IET RITE
COLA
8 PAK 16 OZ. 99~
BTLS.
Plus Tax &amp; Dept.

C Philip Morris Inc, 1979

:
I

�•

•
~etf.&amp;~~ntinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,~·· Tuesday, July 24, 1979

~ fl\}~ft

8- The Daily Sentinel. Midd lei&gt;Ort -Pomeroy , 0 ., Tuesday , July 24, 1979

Yo.u r Best Buys Are Found in the Sentinel Classifieds
WANT AD
CHARGES
1 day
2days

or Unct!'r
Cash
Charl!t'
1.00
\ 2!i

1.50

3 d3)'!

lidays

lOOK WHAT s news! a t Bobs
Body Shop on Depot St.,
Rutla nd . Be s •de ~ body and
p01n t w o r~ . we ol so do o il
changes. gr eo~e jobs s hocks
and mufiler work . H2 -1245 .

I 91l"

1.80

225

3.00

.1

7~

Help Wanted

'

COUNSElOR FOR suppo rti ve
coun sel ing-com m. education .
Bachelor s in re la ted fi eld
pr eferred . Cor requ ired . Send
resvme to: EASO , PO BdM 458,
Ath e ns. OH .4570 t .by Au gust

In memory, C.ti rd of Thunk.~
and Obi lw~ry · 6 Cl'nls per .,.,·onl,
S3.00 minimum. Cash in ml·
vance.
M obilt&gt; Homt&gt; sales and Yard

sa il's !Ire lll'Cl'pted only ...,.1th

cash wiUl order. 2r1 cent

FOUND : WHITE lemo le kitten ,
angora wrt h white fl ea collar .
13 weeks old . Powel l' s Pork·
ing ~1 . ~~~ r oy . 99~ -37~
lOST : BlUE Point mal e
Siamese. Nnyl or's Run or
Breezy His . 992.·c3:.:2:..cl.::
6:..
. _ __
lOST : SMAll mole Siamese.
br own flea col lor. las! seen in
Pomeroy Elementary oreo .
Answers to Bert . 10 year fami · ·
ty peL 109 Un ion Ave .,
9'12 2BV .

Ly .

Each word over the minimum
15 words is 4 c€! nlJi prr wort! per
da y. Ads runn i n~ other than ('(Jn.
:sa:ut1 ve days Will bt&gt; dUirgl'&lt;l al

the 1 da}' ratt' .

Lost and Found ~

GU N SHOOl . EVERY FRIDAY
7 30 PM RACIN E GUN ClU B
F-ACTORY CHOKE GU NS ON·

I~ Word.~

wanted to Buy
CHIP WOOD. Poles mc JC .
d iameter 10" on largest end .
$1 2 per to n. Bundled slob. $1 0
per ion. Delivered to Ohio
Po lle t Co., Rt . 2, Pomeroy .
9'12·2689.
OlD FURNITURE , ice bo)l:es ,
bross beds. iron beds, desks ,
e tc. , comp let e hou seho lds .
Wri te M.D. . Mill er, Rt . .4 ,
Pome roy or coll992-7760.

6

ch.a r ~e

for itd5 carryi n ~ Box Numbt·r In
Curt' of The Srntincl .

ALUMINUM AND vinyl sid ing
mec hon ic wonted . Must be e)( ·
perienced 011d hove ow n
tools . Coll99"2-2772 .

Tlw Publisher reser\'es lht!
to t&gt;dit or rejc&lt;'l any ads
dt•t•me{l
objc c l iurw l. Tht
ri~ht

Pubhshrr will not be ri'Sponsiblc
For morr tl\an om• int•orn•l't m·
st&gt;rtion
Phone 992-2 1a6

IN THE COURT
OF COMMON PLEAS
OF MEIGS COUNTY ,

OlD COINS , pocket wat ches ,
do ss rings , wedding bonds .
d iamonds. Go ld o r si lver. Call
J . A. Wams ley, 742-2331 .

OHIO
WOODROW QU EE N,

Plainfifl ,

NOTICE

. ·\" s-

KATHLEEN
QUEEN .
Defendant .
No . 171 28
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION
You a r e her eby notifi ed
that you have been named
a de fendant in a legal
M onday
ac t ion enti t led Woodr ow
Noon on Satu rdar
Queen ,
Plaint iff ,
vs .
Audr ey K alh leen Queen.
Tuesdit)'
De t endant. Th is ac t ion has
thru F'rida v
been. a5signed Case No
~P . M . .
17 218 and is pend ing in the
thto day be fort.• pubI iC'ation
Court o f Common Pleas of
Me•q s Cou tny , Pomeroy ,
Sunday
' i Ohio
45769
~ P. M .
Ttl e ob je c t of the co m
Frida y r1 rtcmoon
pl a int is th e ob ta ining of a
divorce and t he te r
m•nat•on o t a ma rr iage
co ntra ct
betweE'n
the t
par t ies and the se tt leme nt
o f t he proper ty ri ghts of th e
part ies and the c us tody of
the minor child r en .
You are requi r ed ro
Wednesday , July 25
a n swer
the com plaint
w1thl n 2a days a ft er !h e las t
pub lication of lll is. no t ice,
wh ic h witt be publi shed
once each week to r s ix
Bernice Bede Osol
successive weeks . Tile la st
publi c at io n wi ll be made on
Augus t 7, 1979 , and the 28
da ys . t o r answer wil l
commence on tt1a t date .
In case of your failur e to
answer
or
o th erwise
respond as r equired by th e
Ot1i0
Ru l es Of
Civi l
Pro c edure .
t he
l in a t
July 25, 1979
hea r ing on tlli s maHer wi ll
A rnoJe -ac tlve-th an-usual so- beh e td aller th e expi rat io n
Cial c t~ l en da r •s ve ry likely this of 28 days a ft er the last day
co rnmg yea r. You co uld be- of pu()tication ot this noti ce
come mvolved w1 th tw o d iff er - or a s so on ther ea ft e r as c nn
ent fu n groups and enJOy th em be scheduled by 1t1e Cour t
equally
Spe nc e r ,
LEO (July ZJ-Aug. 221 Some- L a r r y
Clerk o f Cou rt
thing you ·re wi s hing lor can
of Meigs Co unt y.
beco me a r eality if you are
Oh io
ore par ed t o d o whttl ' s
reQuired . 1nstead ot waili ng (7) 3, 10 , 17 . 24 , 3 1, (8) 7, 6tc
upon another to do it for you .
How to get al on'g witll ..o ther
s•gns IS one at the sections
•
yo u'll en JOy 1n your new As tra1
'LEGAL NOTICE '
Graph lette r that begins wi th
NO T ICE OF
yo ur bi rt hday Mall S1 lor eac h
PROPOSED MERGER
to As tro-Grap ll , P.O. B o~ &lt;189 ,
No t ice is her e by giv en
Radi O C1ty Sta tion, N Y. 10019 . l11at ap pl ica tion has bee n
Be StJre to speci ty b1 rth t1me .
mad e to th e Com ptro ller of
VIRG O (Aug . 23-Se pt . 221 Goa ls 111e Currency , washington ,
ca r1 be ach1e ve"d today th roug h D . C. 20219 for his consent
the use o f s ublte . md~rect to a me r9er of Th e Citizen s
methods Thi s doe s no t 1m p1y National Bank of Mid
yolJ sholJ td do any th ing that d tepor t , M iddl epo rt , Oh io
Th e Ce ntral Tr us t
could \.Je mterpreted as being and
Company ,
National
unde rhanded
Associatio n, Ci nc innati ,
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. lJJ Be Ohio .
sens1 twe today to the need s o f
The appli ca tion was
th ose yo u' re lan d o!. If ne ces· accepted for filing J un e 6,
sa ry . place lhe~r 1nteres ts 19 79 .
above your own . Th1s "' good
tt is contempla te d that
all
offi ces
of
t he
guy ·· role sut!S you .
above lnamed banks will
SCO RP IO (Oc t . 24-Nov. 22t In
Sl \uat, ons whe1c th ere is so me- con t inue to be opera ted.
This no t ice 1S publi shed
thing a t real valu e at sta l&lt;. e .
you 'll + co me 1nto yOUI own pur s uant to sec t ,on 18 lcl of
the Federal De posi t tn
toda y Cou rage 1S the asse t yo u C,U
UHlCC' Act Jnd Part 5 Of
'
can draw uoon
The RcguliJt ions o f !IH~
SAGITTARIU S (Nov . 23·Dec. Compt r olle r
of
th e
21) Your Judgmen t tsexceptton- Cu rr ency ( 12 CF R 5 ).
att y Keen today. pa rtt cula rt y
· lh e Citiz ens
wh en 11 co me s to :;tr iking bar·
National Bank
o f M idd tepo rt
gams You :11 be la11 to yoursell
Middleport , Ohio
and 10 those w1th wll om you
deal.
The Ce n tral Tr us t
CAPRICORN (Dec . ZZ·Jan . 19)
Compa n y, N .A .
Sometlling you '1e invol ved in
nc innat i, Ohio
11lat appeared rathe r s table (61 26 , (7) 3.CitO.
17 , 24, 26, 6
may be subte cted to an unex· tc
pee l ed chan ge tod ay . Th e s hift
witt benefit you .
AQUARIUS (Jan. 2o-Feb. 19)
Al lies wt"lo have been depen dable m the pa s t will be so again
today . One Sit uat ion you may bot h of you . lt"s not a time to be
lea rn of, anot her you may not.
modes t.
PISCES (Feb . 20-March 20) Use
GEMINI (May 21 ·June 201 Be
your mtui tr on and your 1rnag1 - asser tive today wrthou t bei ng
na1ton today tf you see way s to ove rly aggress1ve in situations
1mp rove your pe rsonal wor king whe re you are conf ro nted with
co ndt\lon s. as welt as the lot o l op pos ition . Sh ea the your
those who tabor at you r stde .
streng th in compassion .
ARIES (March 21·Aprll 19) CANCER (June 21 -July 22)
You 're gtlted today with both Focus yo ur energ ies a,nd e finitiat ive and tma gination Put forts In, ways today to
tllese qualltte s to prod uctive st re ngthen your fo und at ions so
use . such as inspi ring those
that yo u may feel mo re sec ur e .
whose spirits need a boost .
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRI SE ASS '-1 I
TAURUS (April 20-May 2D) In •
joint venture s today it's likely ~
your 1deas will be the ones that
gain the greatest bene lits for
AUOREY

WANT-AD
IA_DVERTISING
DEADLINES

ll

ASTRO·GRAPH

~ 'Your

~'Birthday

Yard Sale
YA RD SALE at James Swain' s
on CR 28 above Eastern High
School. July 13 ond 14 from 9
to? Everything im aginabl e.
YA RD SA LE . Clo thes , mis c.
langsv ille-Dexter Rd . County
Rood across from Small's
Grocery. Fol low s igns . 10om·
8pm .
YA RD SA LE . July 23 . 24. 25 . 26
at l owel l Bing's, 3 miles from
Chester on Boy Scout Camp
Rd .

Auto Sales

1977 C« EVY MONZA 305 V·B.
au to., P,S., P.B., A.C. , AM·
tope. 992-5891.

DoZeR. ENDl~odc; ·and dump

1%5 RAMBLER , good work
car. New tires , run s good.
$250. Coli 9.49-2571 after 5 pm
weekdays .

·.,.---,,--,--

Pels for Sale

HOOF HOllOW , Engli sh and
Western .
Saddles
and
harness . Horses end ponies .
Ruth Reeves . 614-698-3290 .
Ba rding &amp; Riding lessons and
Ho rse Ca re produ cts .
RISING STAR Kennel. Boor·
ding. (a t/367-0292 .
GOING OUT of bus in ess. Al l
pood les ,
pomeronion ,
pekinese. block pam puppy"
great coat line . Phone 696-111
after Sp m .
POODLE GROOMING . J udy
Tayl or . 614-367-7220.
GOING our of business . Al l
p oq dles ,
pomeranian .
pek inese , block pom puppy,
gr e at coo t li ne . Phone
696-1111 after 5pm .
AKC DOBERMAN Pinscher
pu ppies . litter is registered
Cahmpionship bloodline s .
Show quality . Has been worm·
ed.
Temporary s h o t s.
614·67S· I863 .
COLLIE PUPPIES . Full bl ood . 8
week o ld, ad orable co llie puppies . $25 . 992-7300 alter 4:00 .
MUST SELL Tw o 3 yea r quarter
ho rse geld ings, 1 Appaloosa
ma re 4 and pony. All ore gen tle and we ll broken . b ee/ lent
horses. Ca ll992·6162.

For Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Pork ,
Route 33 , north ot Pomer oy .
Lorge lots. Coll9fl2-7479 .
3 AND &lt;I RM furni shed and u n·
furni s hed
opt s.
Ph one
9'12-5434 .

oNe BEDROOM

opts. Con ta ct
Village Manor, 992-7787 .

NICE
LARGE
ho me
in
Pomeroy. Write Bo )( 729W . c· o
the Daily Sen tinel. Pome roy,
OH 45769c:..
· - - - -- TWO ROOM apartment .
· Pri vate both . All utilities pa id .
First fl oor pri vate entrance .
Al so, sleeping room lor rnet .
9'12.blJ22 .
22 FOOT CAMPING tra iler for
1 person in Syrocuse. Utilities.
9'12·2897 .
TWO BEDROOM furnished opt .
1 child, no pets . $150 per
mo . nth plus utiliti es. 949-2875 .
·.;

FOR-RENTSycamore St.

... WJ.&lt;E N We TAKE INVENTQI&lt;Y
HEI&lt;'E, HE/IJ12QD ... WE TRY To Be

Pomeroy

A BIT MOllE SPECIFIC: THAN11 LITTLE HAT THIN(!!lS AND 81~

197.4 GMC Surbu rban, 9pass
trucf.. . 454 C. l. powe r stee ri ng.
brakes , outomotic , radi o.
Michel in 8 ply li res . $1300 or
best o ffer . 992-3462 .
1974 Ford LTD wagon . Al l· new
tires. new shocks. Good ton·
· dir ian . $900 . 992· 6248 .
1978 JEEP J-1 0 tru ck . 6 cyl.,
std skiff. 20 mpg. $5200.
Before 3pm. 985-3597 .
1971 FOR D LTD 2-door. 71 ,668
miles , A .C. $650 . 992-7065 .
1971 CHE VHLE MALIBU 307
V·B, a"uio ., a ir cond .. AM -FM

8-track , air s"hocks , Crogars,
sport mi rrors. Good condition .
Co li after 4:30 . 992-3870.

CHEVY CARRYALL (.20. Good
6 cy l engine, std . frons., fullt

ins ul a t ed
9'12-6398 .

a nd

Auto Sales
19H VEG A HAl CHBACK , call
303-675-1501 or 305-075 · 2&lt;~138
o r 304-675-1553 .
1968 CAMERO , V·B , 4· speed,
Crogor mags , othwe - o ther
extras . Excellent co ndition .
Coli 992· 7 196 alter Spm.
1976 CHEVROLET MONZA hot·
chbo ck, o ulo, trans . Co li
992·6377 .
1973 TRUCK ,/4 ron Int ., 50.000
"miles , 6 cyl. , heavy duty , fixed
for dual wheels . Trade.
Ru tlan d Hardware .
FOR SALE : 1970 Dartge pickup.
Phone 992-2360,
=.~·-

.

·-·- - -

ca r peted .

175 M-F tractor 16 in. 3 bottom
plow . W 2-2877 or 992-7B83
after Spm.
WURLITZER ORGAN wi rh fool
pedals , rhythm beals. like
new. $830. Phone 992-7206
PIANO . Univox C6 mpac elec tr ic piano. Good cond ition .
$250 . 614 - 593 -8010 or
614 -593-5078 .

POMEROY
LANDMARK
Headquarters for
Hotpoint and
General Electric
Appliance~
sales &amp; Serv•ce

SALE PRICES
Jack W. Carsey
Mgr .
Phone 992·2181

-·

RUTLAND
HARDWARE
742-2255 . One 40 gal. Mor -Fio
auto. gas water hea ter , gloss
lined , fuel saving , $120. Vanity cabinet wit h ma rble top
with fau cets and pop-up . drain
and supply line s . $99.95. One
double bowl sink with fau cets,
S69 .96. Special Sate - Roof·
ing.90 lb. roll whil e, green,
block granule, $1 3. 10. 57 lb.
roll blo c ~ . $9.55 . 5 gal. asphalt
roofing pla in or fobroted ,
$9.30
19H VW VAN . Good condi·
lion . 30 mpg. Needs muffler.
$2300 or best offer. 992·3798 .
1978 SUZUKI DS-80. Ex . condi·
lion . Coli 992-539 1.
1977 YAMA HA 125 wit h 1400
miles with helm e t. $625.
992·bll7.:.:2c:..
. .,.·--:c-::=~
G ENE RAL
ELEC TRI C
refrigerator . Freazer, good
condi tion
Signature Men u
Magic e lectric range. good
condition . Small tabl e with 2
cho irs. Fold up legs. To see
Cell 9'12·3069 .

Special Sale

Hotpoint ·
Air Conditioners
s25 to s5o
Discounts
Large Stock
Jack W. Caney
Mgr.
Phone 992-2181
'"'

rr -

SUPER M Formal! tractor 3 bot·
fa m I 4" plows , 8ft. trans port
disc, hay elea votor, 550
Oli'Ver , sal t and mineral
Ieed er, cri b Ieede r. Ni ck
l eonard , Rt. 3, Pomeroy .
1977 16' Storcroft open bow,
conv. top, 85 h.p. Mere with ss
pro p. Stei'l ing Trai ler .and oc·
cess . $3690. Photte992 -' 2791 .
EIGHT WEEK old pigs . Phone
247-2161.
SPINET -CO NSO lE
Pian o.
Wonted: responsi ble party to
tok e over low monthly
paym ents on spinet pia no.
Can bo seen locall y. wq_te
cred it ma na ger: PO BoJC 537 ,
She lby ,;l le, IND 46176.

MONTGOMERY

C. R. MASH

TRAILER SALES

VINYL &amp; ALUM.
SIDING

77310 Mon1gomery R;a .

ROOM , BOAR D. laundry .
Elderly on ly
Reaso nable .
992·bll22.

Llln g~vl ll e ,

Auctions

Mick 's
Barber &amp;
Style Center
Introduces -

MARK MORA
HAIR STYLIST

$7800.

REAL ESTATE loon s . Purchase
and ref inance. 30 year ter ms,
VA. No money down (e ligible
veterans). FHA - As low as 3
per cen t dow n (non-ve teran s).
lre lor'd Mortgage Co ., 77 E.
Stole, Athens. 614-592-3051 .

Fe:"turing : men 's &amp;
sly ling ,
women 's
perms.
Call tor appt. or walk in .

992·2367
Main St.

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

CALL

992-2772
6·6·1 mo .

RESTA URANT AND ba. . D I
end D-2 license in cl uded . 3
a cres . and hou se
Good
bu siness opp ortu nity . Ca ll
J67.QS57 .
HOU SE FOR sole . 130 Buller·
nut' Pomeroy , OH. 9&lt;12-2410 .
TWO ACRE lor near Meigs
Mine No. 1. Rural wa ter
ava ila ble . Best
o ff er .
742· 2746.
FOUR BEDROOM house . 2
both. kitchen . di ning room
living room. utility roOm , por·
t iol ly carpeted. 2 screened m
porches . on 2 a cres level
ground . nice locati on . Priced
rea sonab le . 247·3663 .
3.65 a c res approx . 2 miles
wes t of Rt . 7 on 143 . level
, a c reage .
74'2· 26S6
or
742.2955 .
SIX ACRES . 7 room house. 3
bedroom. If interested, call
J04. 927. 1568 .

Roger Hysell
Garage
mil e off ~t . 1 by-pa ss
on St. Rt . 124 toward
Rulland .
J4

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682
00 li e
ADD ONS a nd remodeling .
gutter work. down spouts .
some concr e te work, wa lks
and
dr~vew oy s
! t ree
esf imo le). V.C. Young Ill.
Rec ine. OH . 949·2748 and
9'12· 73 " .
W ill HAU L lim es tone and
grovel . Al so. lime hau ling ond
sp read ing . Phone 742-2455 .
ROOFI NG , ROOF repo~r and
s iding. o th er maintenance. E&amp;
R Roof ing
o nd Sid ing .
614-388-B860 or 6 I 4-388 -8797 .
S&amp; G CAR PET Clean ing. Steam
cl eans .
Fr ee • es timat e .
Reasonabl e rate s . Scot ·
c hguor d . 992 · 630q
or
742·23&lt;18 .
NEIGLER Construction . For
building good houses ond do·
ing repai r work . Co li Guy
Neigler . 9_4 ~_- ~5:.:0:::
8:..
. --·

Real E'state for Sale
NI CE Comlor toble 8 room
home on opproJC . 2 acres of
leve l tend with plenty o f shade
tr ees , o n Rutland Rd .
992. ' .::
25:.:5:..c.- - - -- --

216 E. Second Street
NEW LISTING - Fully
furni shed ran c h sty le 3
bedroom hom e with
large yard . Has central
hear ing and rurat water .
Peaceful loca1ion o u1 of
town . Only $28,000 .
HEIR SAYS SELL IT Compa ct 2 bedroom
h ome
nearl y
mainte nan ce fr ee in
P omeroy .
A
good
s tart er or r e tire m ent
hom e with la r ge ext ra
lot. Thi s vou mu s t see.
$25,000.
RENOVATING
Owner is now r e model ·
irig this 4 bedroom
home . 2 new baths,
ca"'rpet ing , oil fur'nace,
basem e nt, 2 tr a il er
s pace.s , a nd almost 2
acre s of land. Asking
$21,000.
LIKE
NEW
3
bedrooms, family r oom
with
woodburning
fire pla ce, nea rly all
carpet ed, 2 car garage ,
froot porch, a nd back
s un deck . Asking $69.000 .
375 ACRE FARM - 9
rm . renovated hom e, 4
bedrooms, 2 ba t hs , fr ee
natural gas furn ace, lg .
family rm ., mode rn kit c hen , ba se ment, and 2
porches . · Cattle barn,
36x 120, 2 sHos, and
many other buildings .
New
fences ,
some
woven wire. $235,000 .00.
POMEROY N ice 2
s tory, 3 bedroom hom e
w ith central heating .
Almost ma intenan ce
fre e w ith aluminum
siding, storm door s and
windows. Partial base ment, loo. Ju s t $19 ,000.
LOTS OR ACREAGE We have severa l loca 'tions and diff e r e nt
p rices.
Ll ST YOUR PROPER ·
TY WITH US THEN GO
ON WITH A REGULAR
ROUTINE .
CALL
992·3325.
'

·
Housing "
•, Hea
.-..,;:.
d uar
- t 9rs .,

Blown Insulation

·~HERNUTj

THIS SOV6 &lt;!71\IE
RUNDOWN ON
AD\IEIJTURES "~'VM&gt;W
I!&gt;ANANrJ I6 '

Cellulosic (wood filllr)
Tllermoltnsutatton
Sove 30 pet. to 50 pet.
on lleatlng cost
Experience ond
fully Insured
FrH Est.
Call 992-2772
5· 17-1 mo.

7· 12

I

I

I I· K

CAPTAIN EASY
CSNAT5! r'l,). SH
HE DOE51/'T SE:"E V5
AWORD WE TOLD

OH, DEAR, EASY :

I ALMOST FO!I,SOT
•• DAQPV WANTS

.-ou

TO PHONE HIM

A6

600N~

IPLECOI I
(J

P05518LE!

WHAT iO DO TO 'iHE
DOORS f.!IEFORE THE
11-JHA&amp;ITANTS PO l'i
"I'HEM5ELVE~.

Now arrange the circled leners to
form the surprise answer, as sug·
gested by the above car1oon.

I

Prlntanswerhere : "(
Yeslerday's

l I X)"

TILLIS

Siding

USED GARDEN
TRACTORS
AND
RIDING MOWERS .

BISSELl
SIDING CO.

BRIDGE

LOSER

AI&lt;£ 'btl T~~ rn; WHO SAIJW MY
H\JSBAI.!O'S 1.-1~ IIJirsN '(;u @J£3
HIM ID THB ftlSPIT.M. Al'l"BR
lli6 BUS HIT HIM &lt;:

cans .

6 · 14-2 mo .

g_a me, every declarer except
NORTH
7-24-A
+8
¥ K 8$2
t A Q6
• K J 10 52
WEST
+Q10 95"
¥ AQ 3
• J 10 9 8

E~PERIENCED
Radlat9r ·~
Servlc• ~

Real Estate loans
Purcha se
and
Refinance
30 Year Terms
A- No money down
1eligible veterans )
FHA - AS low as 3%
down (non -veterans )

l m•llelt Mp•l•r Cer• .

592-3051

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

OH•" 1HE POOR
I'll GEl 11,
!o! l\~ ~ HfRE ... BY
DAISy ... GOT10
THE 51QVE .. · GIR LS ' BREAK LT UP ...
GE 1 MORE
I'LL DO fT .. .

Federal

NEW LISTING In
Po m e roy, sta t e ly two s tory r e m ode led hom e,
origi nal hand ·carve d
oak wood w ork , 3
bedrooms. forma t din ·
ing , n ice kitchen , base m ent, in good cond ition ,
large lot . S34,500.
JUST LISTED - M;d.
dleport , re:modeled 2·
family , live in one, rent
the other, 2 baths, many
featu res, needs some
Hnish work . $26,800.00.
A BARGAIN - N ICE
hom e in town , full base ment , 2 bedrooms, exce ll ent
l oca tion .
R E DUCED
TO
$21 ,500 .00.
VACANT LAND - 56
acres, 15 pasture , 5
tillabl e, balance timbe r ,
sev e ra l home sites.
$23,900 .00.
FARM - Approximate·
ly 20 acres, nice fenced
pasture, barn s a nd
other ·
buildings ,
re mod e led
2 · story
home. Free gas and
wa,ter . $30,500.00.
BUILDING SITES - 1·2
ac res ,
s tarting
at
SJ.OOO .OO.
5 POINTS AREA
about 6 yrs. old, 3 BR ,
doubl e c losets, fully
e qu ippe d kitchen , very
nice din ing area , ce ntral
heat &amp; air , deck , doub le
lol
100'x200' . New
dra pes &amp; rods in c luded.
$29.000.

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

WE HAVE FINANCING
AND NEED LISTINGS
FOR OU!I OUT OF
COUNTY BUYERS.
REALTORS
Henry E . Cleland, Sr .
Henry E . Cleland, Jr.
992-2259
992·6191

BRADFORD , Auc tionee r, Complete Service . Phone 9-49-2-487
or 9--49· 2000 Racine, Oh1o,
(ri ft Brpdlord .
ElWOOD BOWE RS REPAIR Swee pers, toosters , iro ns , a U
smel l opp llonces . Law n moer ,
ne.~~:t to Stale Hig hway Garage
on Route 7, q85·3625 .
SEWING MACHINE Repa irs .
sttr 'olice . all make s. 9'92·2284 .
The . Fabric Shop . Pomeroy .
Auth ori zed Singer Solei and
Service . We sho!pen Sci ssors .
EXCAVATING . d oze r, loader
and backhoe work , dump
lrucks a nd to-boys for h tre .
w11l ha ul fill d ir t, top soil ,
limes lone and grovel. Coli Bob
or Roger Jeffers , day phone
992-7089 ,
night
phone
9'12·3S25 or 9'12·5232 .
EXC A VATING ,
dozer ,
backhoe and ditc her , Charles
R. Hatfie ld . Black Hoe Service,
Rutland , Ohi6. Pone 74 2·2008 .
PU LL INS EXCAVATING. Complete Service. Phone 992· 2... 78 .
AU TO MOBILE IN SURAN CE
been cancelled? l ast your
operators
license? Phone
992·2143 .

HOWERY AND MARTIN h ·
coveting , septic. sys tems ,
dozer. backhoe. Rt . 143.
Phone I (6 14) 698-7331 or
742·2593 .
IN STOCK for immed iate
delivery: variou s sizes of pool
kits . Do-it- yo urself or let us
install fo r you . D . Bumga rdner
Soles , Inc 992·5724
·

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

West

North East

PasS
Pass
Pass
Pa""

2•

Pass

4•
5+
Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass

Ask liM I!XMPIS

Hourst-1 M .• W .• F b
Other fimn by llppoint-

ment.
107 Svc•more (Re•r)
Pomeroy , 0 .

ALLEY

¥x
t KJJ098xx

• Q 10

CALL 992·7544
• 7·8·1 mo.

H. L Wtitesel
Roofing
gutters and
down spouts.
Window cleaning
Gutter cleaning
· Free Estimates
. 949·2862- 949 ·2160
• 5 tf c

When this
played in a

You're a friend of
Slim's! You can do no
wronq!

l confess!
1 ru ined

You lost aqain,
Slim! Do4ou
6tilllove me?

clo\hes!

I'll

pa4!

WINNlE

canton

Island
group

DOWN
I Goya subject

10 To boot

%Avoid

II Lamour's

3 German city
4 Backward
child?

Yet~terday's Auswer

much
14 Suffix

5 Afore-

with lemon
15 Up-t€Kiate:

&amp;Museum

26 Tilt

13 Titillate
18 Recipient
19 Tree

mentioned

17 Result in
19 Delighted
20 Chemical

contents
7 Spotty
8Away
from duty
9 Items of
business
11 Incline

%9 French
river

38 - J . Fudd
3% Pocket-size

feature
Z2 Earthly
23 Exculpate
24 Person
Z5 Pound

34 College VIP
36 Induced
37 Typewriter

key

suffix
Z1 Leningrad's

river

1:::-+-11-+-

Z2 Polynesian

9 P.M. till 1 A.M.

deity

24 Conunanded
25 Daniels of

B.Y .O. B.

) i 1111 1\'\1 hu~ /nr tlt l' l 1111 ~ nd1

RlsQ.~'12 HP

Ot:

BULLET- - YOU

AIN'T TREED A
'POSSUM IN

1-8123 RlisO\.P~ HP HYD
1-8183 RIDiso~g HP HYD
6-5260 8 HP WALX BEHIND

26

the Silents
Minister's
talk: abbr.

Z7

Gaelic

rr+-i-

island
32 Beach
color

\JO'RE TH' LAUGH IN'
STOCK OF

• 'POSSUM COUNTY

boy's

t:,--+-+--

33 Experienced~;;-i---j--

THREE WEEK S

35 Checking
hours
38 Fabricate

39 Code
word

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how

2-5460 10 HP WALK BEHIND
2-830 RIDING GRAVE~Y 8 HP

lo

I'M SO WORRIED ABOUT
CI-IARLIE BROW~ I CAN'T
EAT OR 5LEEr... ,

GRAVELY
TRACTOR SALES

to

work

it:

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply stands for anolher. In Ibis sample A is
used for the three L's , X for the two O's, e tc. Single letters,
apoatrophes, the length and formati o n of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are dille rent.

PEANUTS

WELL, IF I(OV 6eT SI~K,
Toq THAT SURE WON'T
Ht:LP I-IlM ...

MA'18E IF ~E TJ.jOU&amp;HT
HE WAS MAKING M!:
SICK, HE'O6ET BETTER

CRYPTOQUOTES

MMBE ! COULD

SEND ~IM A
THREATENING LETTER

FUZHZ
OUZA
SW

NW
LAZ

J

MJD

XLLH

J A L F U Z H'

NA

MN CZ :

VMLWZW
LAZ

FL

LRZAW

- JAXHZ
PNXZ
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: IF YOU ARE AFRAID OF BAD
LUCK YOU WILL NEVER GET GOOD LUCK. - PETER THE
GREAT
© 197t Ktnv Feeturn Syndlr•••· tnc. ·

992-2975 .~omeroy, Ohio
•'

..
..

..

·:.
..

··,

WI:.DNESDAY , JULY 25,1979
·•
5 •15-World at Large 17; 5 :45- .•
Farm Report 13 ; 5 : 5~PTL Club . ,.
13 ; 5:55-Summer Semester 10.
6: IJ0--700 Club 6,8 ; PTL Clu~ 15;
6 : 10-News
17 ;
5Chrlstopher Closeup 10.
•:J.,.....uragnet It: 6 : 45-Mornlng
Report 3; 6 :5()-Good Morning,
Wesl Virginia 13; 6 :5s-&lt;:huck
White Reports 10 ; News 13.
7: IJO--Today 3,15; Good Morning
America
6 , 13 ;
Wednesday
Morning ' 8; Schoolles 10; Three
Stooges- Little Rascals 17 . .
7 : 15-A. M . Weather 33 ; 7 : 30Famlly Alfalr 10; Lilias Yoga &amp;
You 33 .
8 : IJO--C~pt . Kangaroo 8,10; Lassie
17; Sesame St. 33 .
B:3~!1omper Room 17; 9:IJO--Bob
Bra un 3; Phil Donahue 13,15; Big
Valley 6 ; Porky Pig &amp; Friends 8;
Love ot Life 10; Lucy Show 17;
Biography 33.
9:30--Sanford &amp; Son 8; Hogan's
Heroes 10; Green Acres ·u.
10 : IJO--Card Sharks 3, 15; Edge of
Night 6; Al l In The Family 8,10;
Dating Game 13 ; Movie "Lucy
Gallant" 17 ; Paint Along With
Nancy Komlnsky 33.
10 : 3~AII Star Secrels 3,15; $20,000
Pyramid 13; Andy ~rlflllh 6 ;
Whew! 8,.10; Consumer Surlvval
Kit 33; 10: 55-CBS News 8 ;
House ·Call 10.
•
11 : oo--Htgti Rollers 3, 15; Laverne &amp;
Shirley 6, 13; Price Is Right 8, 10;
Biography 33.
11 :30-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15 ;
Family Feud 6, 13.
12 :IJO--Newscenfer 3; . News 6, 10;
Password 15; Young &amp; the
Restless B; Over Easy 33;
Midday . Magazine 13; 12 :15Love American Style 17 .
12 :30--llyan' s Hope 6, 13; Search for
Tomorrow 8,10; Movie 11 0r.
Goldfoot &amp; the Bikini Machine"
17; MacNe il-Lehrer Report 33.
1 :IJO--Days of Our Lives 3, 15; Young
&amp; the Restless 10 ; Best of Ernie
Kovacs 33 .
1 :30--1\s The World Turns 8, 10; Two
Ronntes 33.
2 :00..:..Doctors 3,15; One Life to Live
6,13; Opera Theater 33 2: 25News 17 .
2:30--Another World 3, 15; Guiding
Light 8,10; I Love Lucy 17.
3:IJO--General Hospital 6,13; Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 20 ; Rebop 17.
3:3~Mash 8; Joker's Wild 10;
Banana Spllts17; Over Easy 20 ..
4:1J0--Mister Cartoon 3; HollywOOd
Squares 15; Merv Griffin 6;
Addams Family 8; Sesame St.
20,33; Six Million Dollar Man 10;
Mike Douglas 13; Fllntstones 17.
4 : 30-Lone Ranger 3; Hogan's
Heroes 8; Lucy Show 15; Partridge Family 17.
5: IJO--Bonanza 3; Beverly Hillbillies
8; Mister Rogers 20,33; Gomer
Pyle .10; Brady Bu~ch 15; Star ' ·
Trek 17 ; Six Million Dollar Man
13.
5:3()-News 6; Petticoat Junction 8;
Mary Tyler Moore 10; Elec. Co.
20; Odd Couple 15; Doctor Who

JJ.

26 French city
31 Danish

BARNEY

Tractors In Stock

nswiss

I Run into

number

YOU SENT
FOR HER/

SAT., JULY 28

20% OFF

hand was
match-point

5 Pacific

sl.
16 Countdown

AT PT. PLEASANT
ARMORY

Adm iss ionSl

(Do you have a Question for
the experts ? Write. " Ask th e
Experts, ·· care of thi~ newspaper. Individual questions wifl
be answered if accompanied
by stamped, self-a ddressed
enveJopes . The most i nteresting questions w ilf be used in
th is column and will rece ive
copies of JACOBY MODERN t

by THOMAS JOSEPH
te Indigent
ACROSS

garment
IZ Not very

FEATURING
RECORDING ARTIST:

STAFFHOUSE
ROAD

fNEWSPAPER ENTE RPRISE ASSN . 1

~a1.'6td'

GASOLINE ALLEY

the

'PARTY &amp;
DANCE

three notrump in spite of
that. Let him play it.

chance is somewhat less
Lhan 50 perc ent.

New , repair, •

X

You respond tw o dia·
monds to partner' s one·
spad e opening and rebid
three diamonds after he
goes to two nolrump . He now
bids three notrump. An Oregon reader asks what we
would do.
We pass. W e have told our
partner that we don't like
no trump. He has gone to

Most bridge players would
double six hearts with the
West hand. A few would take
the conservative action of
passing and opening the jack
of diamonds.
•
Against all these players
South would make the con·
tract with correct play,
which is to lead the jack of
hearts and let it ride after
West ducks . This play wins
50 percent of the time . If you
ros e with the king, your

ClOP

7-2&lt;-B

+JX

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

~GRAVELY

210 Condor St.

unreasonable.

Opening lead: ¥A

&amp;

Business Services

1-8122

We can't ! Even though
West's pla y ·is fa r from

veterans Admin . Loans.

New Home

E·C ElE CTRICAL Con tractor
serving Ohio Va lley reg ion .
Si" days o week , 2.C hourt service . Emergency co ils. Call
882-2952 or 882-3454 .
Pf'IMF'ROY . 0 .

Hou11ng

dummy 's king ?

You hold :

GOOD, -DAI&gt;J ·•·
WOO D· .. HOT WA1ER
... you ARE A
HELP IN P. TIME
0:0 NEE D ..

REALEST ATE
FINANCING

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

73 2
l
75432
98 6 3

Vulnerable : East-West
Dealer: South

Ph . 992·11 74

4 -23· 1 m o.

though only about half the
North-South pairs got be·
yond game.
AI one table, expert South
was playing a ga inst· an ap·
parent lamb who really was
a wolf in disguise .
The wolf in sheep's cloth·
ing led ace and three of
trumps. Can you blame
South for hopping up with

SOU Til
+ AKJ64
¥ J LO 9 7 6
t K
.AQ

the ler941t Truck or
I U!I doter R•d l•1or to

Smith Nelsoo
Motors, Inc.

•
•
•
•

• 74

From

IRELAND
MORTGAGE
CO.
77 E . Slate, Alhens

one made six hearts, al-

·EAST

6 •30--NB C News3, 15; ABL News 13 ;
Carol Burnet16; CBS News 8, 10;
Falher Knows Best 17.
7: oo-C ross . Wtts 3; Newlywed
Game 6,13; Please Stand By 8 ;
News 10; Love American Sty le
15; Get Smart 17; D ic k Cavell
20,33 .
1 : 3~Baseball 3; Candid Camera 6 ;
Gong Show 8; Price Is .Right 10;
Abbott &amp; Costello 15; Donna
Fargo 13; My Thr&lt;:e Sons 17;
MacNei l- Lehrer Report 20, 33. ,
B:oo--Happy Days 6,13; Runaways
15; CBS Reports 8,10; Dragnet
17; Au st in City Limits 20; City
Notebook 33.
8 : 3~Pilot 6,13; Baseball 17; Two
Ronnles 33 .
9 :1J0--Three ' s Company 6,13; Movie
" Billy "
15 ;
Movie
"The
Hawaiians" 8,10; Opera Theater
33; Truckers' Del ight 20 .
9 : J~Taxl 6,1J; IO :IJO--Voyage to
the Bottom of the Sea 3; 13
Queens Blvd . 6,13; News 20.
10:3()-PIIot 6,1 3; Lock Stoke &amp;
Barrel 20.
·
11 : 00-News 3,6,8,10,13.15; Dick
'•·
Cavett 20; New Soupy Sales 17;
,•'
Book Beat 33.
11: J~Johnny Carson 3. 15; Pilot
6, 13 ; Barnaby Jones 8; ABC
.,
News 33 ; Movie "Promise Her
Anything" 10; Movie "Flying
. ~:
Tigers" 17 .
12 : 4()-Movle "SPYS 6, 13 ; Movie ··,
" Lone Star" 8 .
1 :00-Tomorrow 3; News 15 ; 1:35- ,,.
,•',.
' Baseball 17 .
2 : 25- News 13; 4:05- News 17 ;
4 :25-Movle "The Star Packer"
•,
17 .

..
..·

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

t

Call for a Free Siding
Eltlmo1e, 949·2101 or
949· 2860. No Sundn

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

I Jumbles:

liTHE PROVE ORIOLE NINETY
Answer : What a certain mountain climber might not
be- "ON THE lEVEL"
Tuesday; July 24

Vinrl and Aluminum

wooo..'.

REAL ESTATE : 1 acre lot in Rig·
gscre s t Manor, be tw een Tu p·
pers Pla i n ~ and Chester.
Phone 985·3929 and 985-4129.

HOUSE FOR sole near Meigs
Mines . 7.42-2228.

Pomeroy, 0 .
7·10·1 mo.

TWO STORY 3 bedroom hous e.
3 lot5 . N ow'5 your chance if
you need a house. S12.000.
Owner wi lling to ta lk .
9'12·2082 or 742· 2328 .

LOT FOR so le. Har risonville
Water tap on lot. dr ivew ay rile
in . App . 1&lt;!5 ft . fro ntage. On
ha rd road . $1800 . Colt
9'12·2020 .

I K

TUE~DAY, JULY, • . 1"9

(Answers tomorrow}

Mobile Homes Sale's
1974 14 x 10 mobil e home.

Real Estate for Sale

J&amp;L

JIM KEESEE.

•New Home
•Addons
•Remoldings
*Free estimates
992·6011

J S lrn n

BIG AUCTION every We d .. 7
pm . Har tfor d Comm uni ty
Cenlec Hertford , WV , 4 miles
above
Po meroy - Ma so n
Bridge .

Good
co ndition.
992-5858 .

Ohio

614 669 4l4S Evt&gt;ning ~
1M dE'S E a 51 of WiiiU!f&gt;Y1 IIe
SU PER
GOOSE
siOC K
TRAILER NOW AVA ILABLE .

For Sale

ll0-H'C&lt;'E5"/\

CALL 992-6009

RIDENOUR GAS Service . Doxoll. P. go5. Che~ ter. 985-3307 .

s•soo.

COAL , LIMESTONE. .and .
grove L calcium chl oride , fer tilizer, d og food , and all types
of sa lt. Ex ce lsior Salt Works ,
tnc., E. Moi11 St. , Pomeroy ,
992-3891 .

Business Services

truck. Will do basements ,
ponds
b rus h ,
time'r ,
limes tone and gro ve l. Cha rl es
Butcher. 742·2q40.

1965GENERAL60 &gt;12. 2 bedr.
1970 Sylva , 60•12 , 2 bedr.
GiveAway
1970 Castle . 60x12 , 2 bedr.
1974 Mark line , 50x12, 2 bedr.
SPRI NGER SPANIELS. Young
196~ Vol iont. 12x60, 2 bedr.
female and mole pup. Block
1967 National. 12:x50 , 2 bedr.
and whi te . Hu man e Society .
B'S MOBILE HOME SALES . PT .
992· 7680.
PLEASANT, W~ . 30··675-4424 .
KITTENS , oi l kind s , a ll sizes .
1972 12 x 60 !railer , 2
Call
Humane
Society .
bedroom
.
s t ove
and
9'12-7680.
, refrig e rator , fuel oil furnace .
BLACK PART poodl e, mo le'
992.5891.
year old . 742-2702 .
1969 12 x 52:2 bedroom mobile
hom e , $3500 . 985· 3504 .

S100.00 t monlh
All utilities paid .

~

-

A

PA INTIN G AND Sandbla s ting .
Free estima tes . Co ll949-2686 .

Television
·. Viewing

byHonriArnoldandBobloo

I RYGOL I
I KJ

ISN'T TI-IAT

NOW HAULING limll'!s tone in

Middlep ort· Poemroy area .
Col i for tree es t imate.
367-7101.

YARD SAl f . House hold good s,
wome n ' s
men ' s , and
chil d ren's clothes , mi se
items . I mile from longsvil e ,
CR 10. 9 tit dark . Phone
VE RMEER BALER Soles . ports
742·266S.
and serv ice. Balers in stock for
FOUR FAMILY Yard Sole. July 1 immediate delivery. Phon e
742 -2677 or 742-2152 .
26 8. 27 . 9 om to ? Route 338 ,
across th e ri ver from Kai ser
16 CU . FT.
fr os t free
Aluminum . Cal l 247-2161.
ref rigerator freezer . Avoc ado
YARD
SALE .
Furnitu re , green. $275 . 992-729 1 ofler 4.
clothing, odds ond 8nds . Wed .
FOR D DIESE L trac tor. Ne w
25 and Thurs . 26. On CR 25 , 1/1
itre s. Exce llen t condiiion .
mile post Meigs High Schoo l. 7.4 2-2228 or 7.42-2832.
Inside if it rain s.
TWO AIR condit ioners. One
5000 BTU and one 13 ,500 BTU .
Cat1992-245 1 otter Spm .

by Roget Bollen

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

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

ENT
TRAP A

Services Offered

1973 O LDS N1n e ty ·Elgh t, full
power, low n\deoge, gef!.
good gas mileage . Excellent
condition . Ask,ing $1995. Colt
992· 2531.

OFFICE SPACE
FUNNY BUSIN ESS

POSING AS
A HOSPITAL.
CRIMfNAL..-

--Notices

--~-,.,-

fi;}'i}

~ ~ ~~ ~~

I

6: IJO--News 3,8,10,13,15 ; ABC News
6; Family Affair 17; VIlla Alegre
20.
6:3()-NBC News3,15; ABC News 13;
Carol Burnett 6; CBS News 8, 10;
Over Easy 20,33; Father Knows
Best 17 .
7: 00- Cross-Wih 3; Newlywed
Game 6,13; News 10; Love
Amer ican Style 15; Get Smart
17; Dick Cavett 20,33.
7:3()-Dolly 3; Match Game PM 6 ;
Muppet Show 8; The Judge 10;
•.
That's Hollywood 13; Wild
Kingdom 15; My Three Sons 17;
MacNeil -Lehrer Report 20,33.
8 : IJO--Real People 3,15; Eight Is ·
Enough 6,13; CBS Reports 8, 10;
Dragnet
17 ;
Masterpiece
Theatre 20.
::
8:30--Baseball 17; 9 :IJO--Echoes of
'·
the Sixties 3, 15; Charlie's Angels
6, 13 ; Movie "Popeye" 8, 10;
Great Performances 33; Upstairs, Downstairs 20.
IO :IJO--Vegas 6,13; News 20; 10 :»--Best ot Groucho 20.
II :O~News 3,6,8, 10, 13, 15 ; New
Soupy Sales 17; Dick Cavett 20'.
II :3()-Johnny Carson 3,15; Pollee
Woman 6, 13; Switch 8; Movie
" Tony Rome" 10; Movie uPsychOut" 17 ; ABC News 33.
12 : 4~Baretta 6,13 1 Kolak 8.
1: IJO--Tomorrow J; News 15 ; 1 : 25Baseball 17 ; 1: 50--News 13; . •
3 : 55-News 17; ~ ' 15-Movle ,.
" Westward Ho" 17.

�•
10- The D~ily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, July 24, 1979

Mayor's Court
CLARA MA E HAl ,L
Funer31 services for Clara Mat•
Hall. 7S, Syca more St. . Middl eport.
who died at her residence Saturday
were held today at 2 p.m . a t the
Seaver Funeral Services Inc. Home "t
Princetnn, W. Va . Bur ial wa s in Oa k
Wood Cemetery at Princ ton,

Mrs. Hall was born Oct. 28 , 1000 in
Middleport , the daughter of the la te
William and Georg ia Collins Ervin .
She was also preceded in death by her
husband , Thomas F. Hall , one son,
Ernest F. Hall. and one sister, Mrs .
Ali ce Hoffman .
She was a member of the Christian
Church of Matoka, W. Va ., Eastern
Star Lodge of Montcabn, W. Va., a nd
owned and operated a store a nd
restaura nt for sever a l years a t
Matoka .
Survivors include two daughters.
Mrs. Terry (Betty Rose) Milam ,
Lorain, Ohio , and Mrs. William (Ann
Marie) Hoofnogle, District Heigh ts,
Md. , four sons , James Edward Ha ll ,
Pomeroy;
Robert Lee Ha ll ,
Gordonsville , Va .; Harry Hall ,
Alhoski, N. C., and Raymond Hall ,
Bowling Brook, !U., one sister, Mrs.
Virginia Husted, Chau ncey, II
gra ndchildr en and, fiv e grea t
grandchildren.

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES JULY 23
Esther Baker, Donna Barker, Jerry
Calley,Sr, Belle Daft, Reva Evans,
Charles Gibbs, Ewstelle Hall , Teresa
Hughes, James Kennedy !1 , Cheryl
McCai n, Me lissa Mantz , William
Ramsey , Sha ron Sm ith , Eric
Karr,Jeffrey Thomas, Ethel Wei!,
Nora Whitt .
BIRTHS JULY 23
Mr . and Mrs Lewis Pauree, son,
Gallipolis

Jn !he

L' l,)Urt

.

of sYracuse Mttyor

J-:\)(' r l'i ckcn" Monday night one
defcnrlant wa s fin ed and another
forfeited a hond .
Vined was David K. Snodgrass, 23,
Hadne. $25 and costs, no motorcycle
endorsement. $25 and costs, expired
rc~ i stration .

Fra nk Hera ld, Jr .. 40 Middleport, on
charges of speeding forfeited a bond
in the amount of $22.70.

County Court
Ear l B. Lee, Athens, charged with
overload , was fined $200 by Judge
Charles Knight.
Also charged with overload,
Lawrence R. Upscomb, Shade, was
fined $175 . Willi am C. Proctor,
Gallipoli s, was fined $151 on a similar
charge.
Char ged with driving under
suspe nsion, Thomas 0. McKay,
!~cine, was fined $50 and given 30
days in the county jail. Randy
Ebersbach, Minersv ille, also charged
with driving under suspension, was
fin ed $50 and given 30 days in the
county jail.
Dany Haggy, Pomeroy, charged
with failure to register, was fined
$35.50. David L. Ramey, Rio Grande,
charged with failure tQ .show avlid
registration , was fined $35.50. Janies
L. Allen, charged willl left of center,
was fined $37.55. Ron W. Prestidges,
West Alton, charged with no eye
protection , was fined $35.50.
. Fined for speeding were Ray R.
Vaughan, Langsville, $15; Barbara M.
Dugan, Racine, $15; Timothy Stevens,
Pa rkersburg, W.Va ., $15; Julia K.
Mitchell, Langsville, SIS ; Daniel M.
Anthony , Proctorville, $35.50; Chester
W. Meadows, Pleasantville, $35.50;
Russe ll Castle , Grove City, $35.50;
Frank W. Hess, Wooster, $35.50.

WINNER - Ruth Ann Dowler, left, Pomeroy, was the winner of a
diamond that was presented to her Monday by Candy Ingels of IngeLs
Furniture and Jewelry, Middleport. At a private sale, persons were asked
to guess the total weight of a loose diamond and Ruth Ann came the
closest. The sale was held July 17 and 18, but is now open to the public.

Thunderstorms will continue
By The Associated Press
More warm humid weather as well
as more thunderstorms are forecast
for the next couple of days . High
pre ssure off the Carolinas continues to
pump warm tropical air from the Gulf
of Mexico into the nation's east half .
Most of the rain over the last 24
hours has been over the southern half
of Ohio with amounts between a
quarter to a half inch common. Cloud
cover will be a little more Wednesday
and thunderstorms will be a little
more prevalant. this Will cause
temperatures lD rise only to the
middle 80s both days.
But it will conti.nue to be humid .
Tonight -- lows will only dip to around
the 70 degree mark. But a moderate

New K mart

We're
· convenient

..
----------------------- --------~

.

.

store will
open Aug. 2
A firm date has been set for the
opening of the 44,552 square-foot K
mart discount department store in
Gallipolis on Upper River Rd.
The doors will open to the public at
!Oa.m. Thursday, Aug . 2.
Now that the opening date is
definite,. an extensiYe advertising
campaign is being prepared. Commenting on this, Manager Larry R.
Wilbourn stated : "Our concept is to
stock only first quality goods and
price everything to move in large
quantities. Present plans for the vpening provide for what we feel will be
remarkably savings to our
customers. '
1

EXTENOEDFORECAST
Thursday through Saturday wann with a chance of showers or
thwtderstorms each day. Highs in
the 80s. Lows in the upper 60s and
low 70s. Thursday cooling to the
low to mid 60s on Saturday.
.;::::::::.;.:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:::·:·:·:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-·

LUCKY COUPLE

We betieve your banking should be hassle-free. Our
auto-teller window helps speed your banking, saves you
time and energy. And it is open Monday thru Thursday 9
til 3, Friday 9 til 3 and 5 til 9, and on Saturday 9 til 12· so

you can take care of transactions as you need to. our
auto-teller windows are just some of the ways we're trying to make your b~joking better.

"Tht• Fril'lrdf.\ · Rmrl• "
Walk ·up tell er window
and auto · t e ll er window
Open Friday Evenings 5 to 7 p .m .

lilQeM lfaliONI Bank
Mladleport, 0.

"
' ·

·~

&amp;b
...

-~~~

·· ~-\.

)

• . j

:.,

~~,.
.
.
t1ember F. D. 1. C. Deposit\ Insurance t11 140.000.

'

.

Mine official disappointed with statements

Families still have
'flajor ·- ~ater problem~

SAN BERNARDINO, Calif. (AP) .,-A San Bernardino couple "lucky to be
alive" escaped with only minor
injuries when th!!ir car was smashed
by a freight train at a railroad
crossing, then dragged more than 500
feet., a Highway Patrol officer said.
The train, pulling about 160 cars,
was traveling about 15 miles per hour
near Ca jon Pass late Sunday when the
engineer spotted a ear that stopped at
the crossing gate- - where lights were
flashing --and then proceeded across
the tra cks, Officer Larry Sanchez
said.
"The train hit the car dead center,
dragged it along the tracks about 540
feet until it came to a bridge," the
officer sai'd . "Then the car turned lD
the left side of the train and was
literally squished between the bridge
and the train ."
jesse Dean Johnson, 58, walked
away from the- crash and his wife ,
Helaine, 45, was treated for minor
injuries at a San Beroardino hospital.

bre eze should make sleeping
conditions bearable for those without
air-eonditioning.
The only relief in sight from the
warm spell is a cool front which
stretched from Lake Superior to
Colorado early this morning. This
front will be approaching northern
ohio on Wednesday, but whether it will
push into the state late Wednesday or
Thursday is unknown.

'Cyclist injured in
Monday wreck

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -- Harry
and EUa Wittkamp and their Leonard
I•ark neighbors have been left high
and dry for eight years by ·
government officials.
That 's how long they've been
without running water.
Their
neighborhood,
in
impoverished Mifflin Township, is
nestled between the city of Colwnbus
and the suburb of Gahanna . And
neither of the municipalities is taking
an active part in solvinttheir water
problem.
"This is Dogpatch," said Mrs.
Wittkamp, referring to the backward
hometown peopled by the characters
of the Lil Abner comic strip.
"Gahanna doesn 't want us and
Columbus won 't take us, " the 73-yearold woman said.
Neighborhood residents blame their
water problem on construction of the
Columbus outerbelt in the early 1970s.
They say the digging interfered with
the water level, causing some wells to
dry up and others to become
contaminated.
U Colwnbus were to annex the area,
water could be piped in by the city.
But only about half of the 100 Leonard
Park homeowners would be willing to
get their water at the expense of
annexation , Mrs. Wittkamp said.
In the meantime, Mrs. Wittkamp
and her infirm, 77-year-old husband,
wash with contaminated water from a
500-ga lion cistern they installed four
years ago. They drink and cook with
water their daughter brings them
from nearby Hilliard.
The Franklin County Department of
Health last year labeled the cistern
water unsafe becalise as it collects in
the cistern it stagnates.
In the · summer, the problem
becomes even worse . " It smelLs like a
public inanure house /' Mrs .
Wittkamp said.
The Wittkamps continue to use the
contaminated water though , rather
than relying solely on gifts of water
from friends and relatives.
"When you boil potatoes, it turns
them black. When you boil soup
beans, they're as hard when you take
them out as when you put them in .
You could use them -as BB 's," Mrs.
Wittkamp added.
The Wittkamps are not alone in
being left with only contaminated

A motorcyclist was injured during
one of two Monday accidents
investigated by the Ga llia-Meigs Post ,
Highway Patrol.
Called to the scene on Woods Mill
Rd., one mile north of SR 554, at 7: 30
p.m., officers report that a south
bound cycle opera ted by Joseph
Swain, 26, Bidwell, went out of cantrol
in a curve and rolled oo its side.
Swain was transported tD Holzer
Medical Center, where he was treated
for a contusion of the right leg, and
released .
There was moderate dam~ge to the
cycle.
Officers investigated a one-vehicle
accident on SR 554, three and eighttenths of a mile east of SR 325, alll :50
p.m.
The patrol reports a west bound
aulD operated by Michael Clevenger,
COMPLETES COURSE
20, Bidwell, went out of control in a
MARION
- James D. Quallsof1761
curve, passed off the left side of the
Chester Road, Pomeroy ,a General
roadway and struck a guardrail.
There was heavy damage to the Telephone Co. of Ohio employee, has
completed a course at the company 's
vehicl e.
Employee Develoment Center here.
The course included procedures for
installing telephones and clearing tine
W
trouble.
QuaUs is an installer-repairer in the
company's Circleville diatrict.
The development .center offers
more than 90 courses and seminars
By The Ass~clated Press
More warm humid weather as well designed to enhance employee job
as more thunderstorms a re forecast skills.
for the next couple of d!lys . High
pressure off the Carolinas continues to
pump warm tropical air from the Gulf
of Mexico into the nation's east half .
Most of the rain over the last 24
hours has been over the southern half HOG REPORT
of Ohio with amounts between a
COLUMBUS, Ohio (j\P) -- Direct
quarter to a half inch common. Cloud
hogs
(Fed.State) : Barrows and gill8
cover will be a little more Wednesday
and thunderstorms will be a little mostly .25 lower, demand moderatemore prevalant. this Will cause light. U.S. 1·2, 200-230 lbs . country
tempera tures to rise only to the points, 39.2S-39.50, few at 39.75, plants,
39.75-40.25, few at 40.50. U.S. 1-3, ~
middle 80s both days.
But it will continue to be humid . 250 lbs. country points, 38.51J..39.25,
Tonight -- lows will only dip to around plants, 39.00-10.00.
Receipts Monday : Actuals 11,000,
the 70 degree mark . But a moderate
today's
estimates 7000.
breeze should make sleeping
Cattle,
from Colwnbus Producers
conditions bearable for those without
Livestock
Co-operative Association,
air..:onditioning.
1.0().3.00
lower.
Slaughter steers and
The only relief in sight from the
yearlings,
choice
62.J)().fi2.50, good
warm spell is a cool front which
5S.00-62.00.
Bulls
market
steady to 4.00
stretched from Lake Superior to
lower.
Cows
market
1.50-5.00
low.er.
Colorado ea rly this morning . This
Veal
calves
steady,
choice
and
front will be approaching ·northern
prime
101.00
and
down.
·
Ohio on Wednesday, ' but whether it
Sheep
and
lanibs
2.()0..5.00
lower
,
old
will push into the state late
Wednesday or Thursday is unknown . sheep 26.25 and down.

More warm eather
forecast for Ohio

MEETS WEDNESDAY
The Long Bottom Community
Association will hold its monthly
, ,yANDAUSM PROBED
meeting
July 25 at 8 p.m. in the
The vandalism and theft of tools
from a CKL Coal Company work site community building.
on Ca dmus Crossroads was
investigated Monday by the Gallia
BQOSTERS MEETING
County Sheriff's Department.
The
Melgs
Band Boosters meeting
According to a report filed by the
will
be
held
July
30 at 7 p.m. in the
department , an undetermined amount
of tools was removed from the strip band room at Meigs High School.
mine location sometime over the There will be a finalizing of plans for
the food booth at the county fa ir.
weekend.
· The department further reports that
the work lo ca tion' had been
vandalized, with a number of gauges
and equipment broken.
EGG REPORT
SQUAD CALLED
The Pomeroy ER Squad was called
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) -- Eggs -this morning at 7:58a.m. to Pomeroy
Prices paid to country packing plants
City Hall for Dale Hoff, a village
employe , who was taken to Veterans for eggs delivered to major Ohio cities
cases included consumer grades
Memori oI ll ospita I.
including U.S. grades, minimum 50
case lots.
Carton Large A 61~5, Medium A 52DIVORCES GRANTED
56, Small A 39-45.
Divorces were granted in Meigs
Sales to retailers in major Ohio
County Common l'lells Court Monday cities, cartons delivered: l..arge A
lD Edna A. Smith, Pomeroy, from white 71-1!0, mostly 71-73, mediwn 62Earl A. Smith, Pomeroy , and to 71, mostly 62-64.
Sharon M. White, Gary; Ind ., fmrn
Poultry prices at Ohio farms, hens
.JQhn N. White, Middleport.
light too few lD report .

Don Nunley, executive board member, Division 1, District 6 United Mine doesn1happen."
Worlten of America, tQday expressed his disappointment and ~mazement at James stated that a "certain board member of tbe United Mine Workers
IOOie of the ltatement.s made last weekend by Rep. Ronald James who 'was swallowed this story (Ohio Power's story) hook, line and sinker. Nunley, the
defendlnc his sponaorship of House Bill 21 which would eliminate the fuel ad- board member representing tbe miners at the Meigs comple1&lt;, said "I must
j111tment clause for electric utilities.
asswne he was referring til me in which case It should be made clear that 1 am
Nunley said the UMWA is not opposing the bill but just an amendment to the not speaking on my own behalf but at the request of the miners who fear for
bill which would severely limit the costs electric companies can recover from their jobs.
their Cllptlve coal vperatlons.
"If Mr. James is truly representing the area where these miners live, we are
Nearly 2,000 miners are employed by Ohio Power Company's Meigs mine the ones he should be consulting with. U he'has talked to UMWA officials, as he
complex In Meigs and Vinton Counties. Those mine workers are afraid that claimed, they were from other parts of the state who would not be affected by
amendment could cause layoffs or tenninations for the men .
the amendment.
'".file only assessment we can make is that the company would have trouble " "We are not in opposition to Mr. James nor the basic purpose of the House
keeping the mines open if they couldn't cover their costs," according to Nunley, bill, We would just appreciate the courtesy of our elected representative
"and as a representative of the miners, it is my job to make sure that this

water. The county he~th de_partment
found that 37 of 68 netghbonng water
sources-- wells in addition lD cisterns
-- were contaminated .
. The prospects for all~viatlng the
situation quickly are not good, satd
David Hamilton, housin g coordinator
for the Franklin County community
development program ..
He said he is now verifying an
estimate of $2110,000 which would
cover costs of bringing ruruiing water .
til the residents . Hook-up· fees would
be about $300 additionally per home.
Hamilton said after the cost
verification is completed, he will
study the options and try to help
residenl8 find a way to pay the Costs.
Karen Rainey, a community
development plaMer for the city of
Columbus , said getting water to
Leonard Park will be difficult without
annexation .
.
"We feel a little stymied," she said.
"There's not much we can do, but we
haven 't forgotten about them."

e
VOL XXVIII NO. 71

The resignations of Florence Circle
and Valerie Johnson, elementary
••a hll s, were accepted when the
Southern Local Board of Education
met In i'egular aesaion.Tuesday night.
In other buainess, the board
employed Shirley Sayre as a teacher
for the IIJ1HO school year, Unda F.
Grindley u custodian of the high
· IIChool, effective August 30, and Jonl

Today

TAU.AHASSEE, Fla. (AP) Attorneys for convicted
murderer Howard Virgil Lee
Douglas say they are confident a
federal judge will grant a stay of
execution for their client, who I!
scheduled to die Thlll'!lday morning in Florida's electric chair.
U. S. District Judge Ben Krentzman was hearing argumenl8 today in hi:! Tampa rourtroom on
an eight-page writ of habeas corpus filed by Douglas ' attorneys .
"I think we've got our best opportunity, " attorney Larry
Saldlng said of the hearing.
"Pretty much what the pattern
has been is that state courts have
denied any requesl8 for stays and
have applied a little different
standards than the federal courta
have."

. .. in the world

Killer wins stay
TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - Con.
Yict«&lt; tiller Howard Virgll Lee
Doualaa won a stay ri execution
on n-lay, just two days before
he nato die in the electric chair.
U.S. Diltrld Judge Ben Kn!ntzIDID IBid Ia bls rulJng thai he was
eonc.ned over whether Douglas
'*I bem pven a public trial as
pranteed by the U.S. ConllltuUon.
Douglu, 43, a fonner fruit
picker and truck driver, had been
ICheduled to die al 7 a.m. Thuraday for the 1973 murder ri Jessie
Atklna Jr., the husband of his former girlfrtend.
The judge said the stay would
be in effect wttll his decision
could be considered by the U.S.
5th Circuit Court of Appeal in
New Orleans.

Natives return
PERNAS
BLANCAS ,
Nicaragua (AP ) - Ten.s 'of
thousands of Nicaraguans who fi.
ed act'OII8 to Costa Rica during
fighting that drove President
Analaslo Somoza into exile have
begun returning, welcomed by a
new govenunent that asks their
help in rebuilding the ravaged nation.
Nicaraguan brothers, welcome
to this free COWltry, " rea&lt;ls the
sign that greeted long lines of
Nicaraguans retlllninj! Monday
on foot, and in cars and buoes at
thl.s post on the Costa Rican
border 80 miles south of

Plane hijacked
CALCU'ITA, India (AP J -

Three hijackers conunandeered

Managua.

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sream &amp; Dry Iron
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Waiting For

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F200HR/9500·311
• Light to hold-easy to handlehandles the same ironing jobs as
heavier irons.
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deep-down steam to get at
deep~down wrinkles.
• Cool touch , break resistant
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harvest outer shell.

2

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

,

a Bangladesh llirliner across the
Indian border to Calcutta today
and threatened to kill their 38
hoetages one by one unless the
Bangladesh govenunent delivers
a Sl million ransom, informed
sources BSid.
The hijackers were believed to
be Bangladesh citizens. Informed
80W'Ce8 who asked not to be iden·
tifled said they were told the
hostages Included a member of
the Bangladesh parliament and
tl)e chalnnan ri the Bangladesh
touriJm corporation.
The Biman Airlines plane was
hijacked 10 minutes after It took
off fnm the Bangladesh garrison
town of Jeasore, 60 miles from
Calcutta, bound for the
Bangladesh capital of tlacca .

First birthday
LONDON

(AP)

-

Louise

Brown, the world's first authenUcated test-tube baby, Is a year
old today, but the controversy set
off by her birth continues.
"She Is the perfect baby, pretty, big for her age, and very for·
ward," her 32-year-old mother
Lesley told the Dally Mall, whi.ch
lligned an exclusive contract witli
the Browna before the baby was
born.
.
"She began talking at 10 mon·
ths, and we think that she's not
only going to grow up into a very
pretty blonde but a very in·
telligent one too," Louise's 39year~ld father, John, told the
newspaper.
Mn. Brown could not have a
baby noml8lly because the
fallopian tubes leactir]g to her
womb were blocked and the
blockage could not be removed
surgically, the same problem 40
percent of the infertile women in
the world have.

Sellers to assist the clerk-{reasurer
for one year.
They approved the non-eertificated
substitute list for the 1979-80 school
year, and the tuition agreement with
Meigs Local for the _vocational educa·
tlon program, and modified the
1979-al appropriation and made
necesary budget transfers.
The.board will meet in special session Tuesday , July 31 at 7:30p.m.

Final swimming
lessons slated
The last session of swirruning
lessons will be held at Middleport
Pool beginning Aug . 6.
Cla8ses that will be available are,
babies up to five years ; beginners, ~7
years; intennediate, 7-9 years; ad·
vanced swinuner, 9 and up; junior life
saving, 12 and up ; senior life saving,
15and up.
Lessons are SIO except for senior
life saving which ls $15. Lessons will
be for a two week period. Mary Blaettnar, Pomeroy, is the instructor.
For additional iliformatlon or thOBe
wishing to register may call Pat Kitchen at 992-9968.

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

WEDNESDAY, JULY 25, 1979

Carter will
speak tonight

resign posts

(Continued from page I )
Va. as a defendant in a civil trial
ivolving about 60 manufacturers
of wire, metal, insulation and
building materials.
The civil trial is scheduled in U.
. S. District Court Dec. 3. Litigation has been conducted jointly in
the state and federal courts.

ELBERFELD$

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

en tine

•

.. . in the world

PORT OF SPAIN, Trinidad
(AP) - Firefighters made
preparations today, and awaited
ordes to put our the iklay~ld
blaze aboard the leaking supertanker Atlantic Empress.
John Inston, heading a Mobile
Oil Co. team working to salvage
more than 60 million gallons of
his comp61ly 's crude oil still
aboard the burning ship, said it
would be decided today when the
firefighters would go Into acUon.

at

TWo teachers

Today

ake preparations

•

diacusslng legislation that affects coal mining with us and the amendment to
House Bill21 certainly could affect us, the people who helped elect him."
. In commenting on another statement made by James, Nunley said he understands that the cost figures for the coal from the Meigs complex quoted by
James are not up to date.
"Lee Wood, COMPAC representative and official spokesman for the UMWA
miners at Meigs, has told me the cosl8 are closer to $34 today rather than $40 to
$60. This is a big difference and is something that should not be overlooked. We
don't want the utilities to be ripping off their customers but we also feel they
should get paid for the costs of their coal," Nunley said.
Meanwhile, Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews has j oined Middleport Mayor
Fred Hoffman is asking residents to contact officials ·involved with HB 21. Andrews said the bill would directly affect Southern Ohio Coal Company near
Langsville.

WASHINGTON (AP) -- President
Carter, seeking to speak directly to
millions of Americans tonight in a
rare prime-time broadcast news
conference, says the media have
exaggerated the extent of his
administration shake-up.
The president and his aides say both
American and foreign . reporters·are
blowing up the power of Carter's inner
circle of faithful Georgiaris, especially
chief of staff Hamilton Jordan.
"The Washingtnn press has grossly
e1&lt;aggerated this," Carter was quoted
as telling about 250 political
appointees Tuesday.
One of those Georgians, asking not
to
be named, quoted the president as
JOINS FULTZ FIRM - Steven L. Story, 24, RallroadSt. , Middleport,
saying Cabinet members won't report
has recently been employed as an attorney in Bernard V, Fultz's law ofto Jordan.
fices. Steven, the son of William and Nona Neison and the late Robert
Ca rter said there has been
Story, is a 1972 graduate of Meigs High School. He attended Ohio State
"considerable
exaggeration in some
University majoring in economics, graduating in 1976. Story obtained his
of
Hamilton's
role ."
quarters
law degree from Ohio Northern University in Ada, Ohio in November,
'I)le
meeting
participant,
who took
1978.
detailed notes, said Carter
FolloWing his graduation, Steven returned to Pomeroy and served as
specifically blamed the WBshington
clerk in the Fultz offices prior to and after taking his bar examinations in
press for the exaggeration .
February, 1979. He was admitted to the bar andswomin together with his
Earlier in the day, two senior aides ,
wife, Karen, on May 10.
reflecting
concern by officials over
Slnce May, Steven has been employed by the Fultz finn to practice law
fo
reign
'
reporters'
negative
after Charles and Barbara Knight dissolved their partnership in the finn.
in
five
or six
comments,
called
Steven's wife I! employed by the William Eachus law office in Gallipolis,
European
journalists
and
one
and she has recently been appoi'lted Meiga Cowtly Lll'w Librarian.
Japanese report!!f to rebut some of
their accounts.
The aides told the reporters the
administration shake-up does not
represent a constitutional crisis and
denied that political advisers such as
and department lawyers described relations.
Jordan, .press secretary Jody Powell
Carter's performance in term,s like:
He assured them Jordan's decisions and media adviser Gerald Rafshoon
"very moving, " Hreally in spiring" could still be appealed to him.
will be influencing basic economie
and "upbeat." ·
"The Washingllln press has grossly and foreign policy decisions .
One participant, who tnok detailed distorted this, which is something
The aides stressed, li,CC«irding to two
notes but asked not to be named, gave they've called for in the past," Carter journalists who artended, that
this accouerson there a partner and said. '
'
replacing Treasury Secretary W.
felt no chasm between himself and
To another questioner, he · said the Michael Blumentiiai with G. William
them, because they represented the administration had failed in Congress Miller does not represent any change
same people .
in submitting co mprehensive in U.S. economic policy or support for
He recounted tiis stay at Camp programs "where we didn 't have the dollar .
David earlier this month and the unity."
.
. The dollar has declined on foreign
theme of his July 15 speech: that
Army Secretary Glifford Alexander ITill!'kets since last week's multiple
Americans were losing confidence in ca lled the personnel forms so firings , and several foreign news
government and society's institutions. "unartful" and "sophomoric" that reports have speculated that Jordan
Of . the five departing Cabinet they undermined the validity of the and other political aides may advise
members, he said no more than two judgments rendered .
.
against politically painful decisions
had gone by other than mutual
The president said he had looked at needed to bolster its value.
agreement. He told them that he had the form only briefly but had found it
Also on Tuesday, Carter:
made mistakes and that he was not a adequate for the White House staff·
-Summoned members of the
person who easily admitted making Still he would appreciate suggestions Senate Finance Committee to the
mistakes.
to ~ke it more professional in the White House and lectured them on the
And , on the point that worried some, future.
importance of passing his proposed
he said there may in the future be
"some nonvoluntary separations, but ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;. ta• on oil profits, which faces delays
and possibly weakening ame~dments.
not niany. ''
ESCAPEE FOUND
He tnld them he regarded his
COLUMBUS, Ohio ( AP) - One of
"fitn ess report" cards as important
two state prison IDmates wbo escaped
and urged each of them to think about July 2 from Riverside Hospital In
fill ing one out on, himself.
Columbus surrendered Tuesday night
He saw three factnrs on the forms as at the Columbus Correctional
most impor tant -- competence, Facility, according to the state
performance and loyalty.
Department of Rehabilitation and
Later, he took questions.
Correctloos.
A Rutland man was found dead in
Answering one, he said his new
The other inmate reportedly was his home Tuesday, the victim of an
chief of staff , Hamilton Jordan, would captured earlier in California.
apparent sel(-lnfllcted gunshot
coordinate White House aides but
Department
spokesman
AI
would. not be any sort of Cabinet Abercrombie said the parents of wound.
Meigs CoWlty sheriff's deputies
secretary or head of congressional Robert L. Hart, 22, brought him to the
were called to the residence of John J .
prison from their borne in New Fry, Depot St., Rutland, at 4 p.m.
Cumberland, W.Va.
Tuesday when his family reported
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.:::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::: they had not seen Fry all day.
Deputies fowtd Fry's body upon investigating.
Following an autopsy, County Coroner Dr. R. R. Pickens ruled his death
was a suicide.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -- The
An inspector for the Southern Ohio
vice, but both the Wlemployment Public Utilities Commission of Ohio Coal Company, Playford 'IJiacker, 54,
compensation claims office and the today granted Colwnbia Gas of Ohio Hamden, Ohio, was found dea.d Mooplacement office will be in operation.
permission to raise its rates for about day at Meigs Mine No. 2 near
Edith Adkins Is the person-in- 113,000 ctislllmers in Toledo by 5.79 Wilkesville.
·
charge of the Pomeroy office which is percent.
· Thacker apparently .suffered a
Wider the supervision of the parent ofCommission spokesman Steven heart attack while worJ?ng and colflee in Gallipolis Wider Manager Bl'ash said the increase will take lapsed at the mine. ~ body was
Emelyn Scarberry.
effect 30 days after the conunission remov~ to the Jenkins FWleral
.
Other Pomeroy staff members are : · approves new rate schedules. He said Home m Wellston.
M. Joe, Chapman, employment inter- such approval would come either next
In other matters, Gary W. Lawson,
viewer; Augusta Stehens, claims ex- week or the week after.
23, Langsville, was arrested Tuesday
The increase allows Columbia
aminer; Peggy Wolfe, employment
expediter; Kathryn Hart and Alice additional annual revenue of $3.7
Freeman, claims takers.
million . The company had asked for
In addition Lee Nonnan, counselor . an 8.9 percent rate boost which would
with Project Employ, will continue on have given it $5.7 million in added
a part-time basis to assist handicap- revenue .
·
·
Mostly . cloudy with scattered
ped persons seeking employment.
The PUCO last week allowed showers and thwtderstonns Thuts:
Tom Stapleton, Work Incentive Pro- Columbia to increase its rates by 5.4 day. Lows tonight 65 to 70. Highs
gram (WIN) specialir., will work in percent to 180,000 customers in Thursday again low to mid 80s.
the office two days a wee.k .
, Columbus. This wlll give the company Chance of rain 50 percent tonight and
·
a $4.8 million increase in revenue . · Thursday.

President- has 'town meeting'
WASHINGTON (AP J - - Assembled
250 strong in the East Room of the

White House, the men and women
Jimmy Carter brought into
government stood and applauded
wh en he entered . Thou gh some
privately worr ied he might eventually
fire them, he broke that tension with
his firstline : " I'm glad I appointed a II
you.''

Thus began an extraordinary ''town
meeting " Tuesda y afternoon between
a president and his top appointees
from throughout the government.
For ooe hour, President Carter
described the nation 's troubles, his
own' failing s and the administration 's
problems. He took questions and
defended his maligned personn el
eval uation forms, described the need
for
loyalty
particularly
with
an
election coming, criti cize d th e
Wa shingto n press corps a nd
reassured his team that he valued
them .
Leaving the White House, ass istant
Cabinet secretaries, agency heads
;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:

EXTENDED FORECAST
Friday through Sunday, warm
with a chance of showers or
tbundentol'IDII each day. Hlgbs In
lbe low to mid 80s Friday, warmIng to tbe mid 80s to low 90s by Suo·
day. Low sin the 60s.
.=:·:·:·::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:

OBES moves job
services-office
In an effort to provide residents of
Meigs County with expanded services, the Ohio Bureau of Employment Services (OBES) will move il8
Job Service office in Pomeroy to the
comer of Union Avenue and State
Route 7 on Friday, July 'll, according
to an announcement by OBES Ad·
ministrator Albert G. Giles. The new
address is 39350 Union Avenue, and
the telephone nwnber remains
992~71.

Giles explained that the move from
107 Sycamore Street will provide
easier access, as well as adequate
parking facilities , for all persons
seeking service and has the cooperation of the Meigs County Commissioners.
Since the move wiU be made during
the normal operating hours of the office, there may be some delays in ser-

--Reportedly narrowed to two the
list of names he is considering for
appointment as head of the Federal
Reserve Board, the "top priority"
vacancy created by last week's
reshllffling.
It is possible Carter will announce
his choice tonight at his news
conference, scheduled for 9 p.m. EDT
in an attempt to get a bigger audience
than his usual 4 p.m. sessions. It is ·
only the second prime-time news
conference to be broadcast nationally
since Carter took office, and the first
to be held in the White House itself
rather than the Executive · Office
Building auditorium.
Sources said the leading candidate
for Fed chief was Paul A. Volcker, 51,
chairman of the Federal Reserve
Bank of New York, followed by Bruce
K. MacLaury, president of the
Brookings Institution, a private thinktank. The sources asked not to · be
named.
Carter had hoped for passage by
early August of his proposed
"windfall profits" tax on oil. The tax
would produce an estimated $140
billion over the next 10 years, much of
whi&lt;;h Carter wants to give lD a new
govemm~nt corporation to spend on
fiilding alternatives to impcrted oil:
Carter , already worried · by
proposed Senate ameiJClments that
would cut as much as $55'billion from
the tax's take, was told by
congressional leaders Tuesday
morning that it probably would be
October before the measure passes.
The president quickly invited
Senate Finance Committee members
to an afternoon meeting in which he
strongly urged approval.
. Carter said passage is a matter of
national security and cautioned
against " parochial or partisan
positions that could damage the
national welfare," according to a
White House aide.
But the committee chairman,
Russell Long, D-La. , said afterward
that no eonunitments were made and
the committee still was divided. He
predicted passage of a bill Carter
would sign, and said he hoped but
could not promise that this would
happen before the end of October.
At the breakfast meeting, Carter
also said he was considering
appointing a mayor as his new
secretary of housing and urban
development.

Meigs coroner rules
death self-inflicted

Colwnhia gas gets
increase approval

. Weather

in connection With the alleged theft of
a car July 11 in Columbus. Deputy
Lou Osborne arrested Lawson while
he was in possession of the car. Colwnbus pollee have advised that
charges against Lawson lire on file
there.

Volcker
tapped
for position
WASHINGTON (AP) - - President
Carter announced today he is
nominating Paul A. Volcker, a fonner
Treasury official and now president of
the New York Federal Reserve Bank,
to be chairman of the Federal
Reserve Board.
In a statement read to reporters by
While House Press Secretary J ody
Powell, Carter said of his choice to
succeed outgoing board Chairinan G.
Wllliam Miller :
"Mr. Volcker has broad economic
and financial experience and enjoys
a n . outstanding
international
He
shares
my
reputation.
determination to pursue the battle
agaillst inflation at home and insw-~
the strength and stability of the dollar
abroad."
·

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