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                  <text>D-12-The Swulay Times-Sentinel, SWlday, July 29, !979

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Big Bend .area welcomes visiting celebritie

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Carter c8binet appozntments wzn prazse
WASHINGTON (AP) -- President
Carter 's final two selections for his
revamped Cabinet are drawing praise
on Capitol Hill as the Senate hastens
to confirm some of the earlier
nominees before its August recess.
Patr icia Roberts Ha rris became the
first to win Senate approval, bei ng
confirmed Friday as secreta ry of
health, education and welfare. Mrs.
Harris, former secreta ry of housing
and urban development, replaces
Joseph A. Ca llfa no Jr., who was fired
as HEW secretary last week.
Also confirmed Friday wa~ W.
Graham Claytor to be deputy defense
secretary, a spot vacated by Charles
W. Duncan Jr ., Carter's choice to
become energy secretary. Since last
week, Claytor has been serving as
acting transportation secretary.
Elsewhere, the Senate Finance
Committee conducted hearings on G.
William Miller 's nomination to be

treasury secretary and the Senate
Judiciary Committee completed three
days of hearing s on Ca rter's
nomina tion of Benjamin R. Civilitti to
be attorney general.
Both nominations are e&gt;&lt;pected to go
Ill the Senate floor next week in time
for action before Congress recesses
Aug. 3 for one-month break .
Meanwhil e, Ca rter completed
filling the vacancies left by last
week's Cabinet purge as he .appointed
form er New Orleans Mayor Moon
Landrieu as secretary of HUD and
Portland, Ore., Mayor Neil
Go ldsc hmidt as secretary of
transportation .
Rep. Henry s. Reuss, chairman of
the House Committee on Banking,
Finance and Urban Affairs, termed

successful mayor and is well known to
our committee through his frequent

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appearances before us "
Wisconsin ~mocrat said. '

the

WASHINGTON (AP) - - President billion in May.
The nation's huge trade deficits of
Carter's choice as the new secretary
of treasury says the administration is the past two years, coupled with the
determined to halt the latest slide of continuing worsening of inflation,
the U.S. dollar on world money have been the major causes of the
slide of the dollar.
markets.
Miller is still chairman of the
"We are absolutely committed to a
sound dollar," said G. William Miller. Federal Reserve Board, which has
"We will not permit the dollar to also attempted to help the dollar by
deteriorate from its present level." increasing interest rates. It raised its
Mllier, who as treasury secretary ·bank lending, or discount rate, to 10.5
percent last week, the highest ever.
La ndri e u 's nomination a " good will be the administration's top
But this approach was criticized
economic spokesman, made his vow
appointment. "
by the House Committee on
Friday
Friday
before
the
Senate
Finance
"Mayor Landrieu knOI\'S housing
Banking,
Finance and Urban Affairs.
during
a
confirmation
Committee
and cities, is widely respected as a
In a statement released by COmmittee
hearing on his appointment.
Meanwhile,
the
Commerce Chairman HenryS. Reuss, D-Wis., the
Department offered support for the committee urged the Fed "not to raise
dollar Friday in a report that showed interest rates at home as a way of
the nation 's trade deficit narrowed in propping up the dollar abroad."
Reuss said " raising interest rates
June to $1.9 billion, down from $2.5

:

~al

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Today

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Willis T. Leadingham

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Realtor

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HOW MUCH TAXABLE PROFIT?
When you se ll your llorne at a prof i t. the difference between the
cost and th e se ll ing pri ce is taxab le (unl ess you defer it by buying a
more ex pens ive home) . T he i m portant cost ba sis is the sum of the
original cost plu s th e dollar -value of improvements and selling ex ·
pen~es . Although th e aver age homeowner can usually determine the
amount or iginally paid for the tlom e, he usually lacks information
regarding improvements whi ch have been made during ownership.
Amounts spent for' r eplacem ents, alterations or improvements
wh ic h increa sed ttl e va lue of the property can be added to the original
cost basis to determ ine th e ga in or loss at sale . Not onl y should the
homeowner know th e doll ar amou nt s of the improvements, he should
be able to substantiate t hese fa cts in the event of an IRS examination .
So ke ep those r ecor ds and chec k stubs.

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If there is anything w e ca n do to help you in the fie ld of real estate

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please phone or drop on at LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE, 512 Second
~ve ., Ga llipo lis. Phone 446-7699 , We ' r e here to help.

e

VOl. XXVIII

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TWO COPS KIU..ED
BILBAO, Spain (AP) - - Terrorists
killed two national policemen in a
barrage of machine-gun fire Saturday
at a suburban checkpoint in this
Basque city of northern Spain ,
authorities said.
Eyewitnesses said the policemen
were shot by gunmen who drove past
the checkpoint in the city's residential
Elorrieta distriCt in a speeding car.
One policeman died instantly and the
other died after being taken to a
hospital.
The officers were the 80th and 8Jst
victims of political slayings in Spain
this year . No group claimed
responsibility, but the shooting was
presumed to be the work of the ETA
separatist group, fighting for
autonomy for Spain's Basque region .

home

by

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8
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6
4

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s

'79 Chev. Malibu Tudor
Air, maroon, 7,025 mil es, showroom cond.

$5295

organ1ze

Despite heavy rains which
have soaked the area In n!Cent
da)'ll, the Dave DUes Celebrity
Golf Tournament wu scheduled
to get underway at 1 p.m. today
at the Rlve1'3lde Golf Course in
Mason, W. Va.
Sports and television
celebrities began arriving in the
Big Bend area over the weekend.
Approldmately 150 persons attended a party Sunday night at
the Diles home near Racine .
Following tod!iy's golf tournalni!nt which ends at 6:30p.m.,
a dinner for partlclpanta only is
llcbeduled at Royal Oak Park.
Hen is a llst ol committee
members who have worked hard
In preparation ol today 'a tour-

$5495

'78 Pontiac Gran Prix

Air, AM -FM ,. 10 ,230 m i les, new Bonnevi lie tra de. Nice .

$5995

$5495

'78 Chev. Impala St. Wgn.

$5995

$4995

'78 Chev. Nova

$4695

$4295

3 seats, air , c ru ise , P.wi ndows, w hite, worth more.

Tudor , 6 cy l. , au to., P. steer i ng, 10,8 13 mi les . Li ke new .

F
d

'78 Chev. Malibu 4 Dr.
V -6 eng., air cond ., r ad io, R. window defogger, 22, 436 mil es.

$4695

Foed ud Bevence
Larry Powell, George Harris,
Denny crown, Paul Simon, Bobby Crow and Paul Elch.
lAdet.. Cammlttee

1"

'78 GMC Pickup

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Nine persons dead
in Ohio accidents
I

$4295 .

3 speed , 6,927 miles . St il l sme ll s new .

'78 Fairmont St. Wgn.
1'

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'78 Ford Granada ESS ·

sr

m
$!

.,

11

c.

This smart looking hom e organi zer in
rich triple engraved pecan finish will bring
com pi iments to most any dec o r and
call up a whole new wo rld o f styli s h liv ing .
Open both doors, reac h to the bac k and
flip the top forward - th e s e lf·supporting
hing e makes t hi s surfac e su itab le for
typing , wr iting·, sewing , or fo r us e as a
re freshm e nt cente r and is ideal for
living room , family roam or de n.
A really beautiful pi ece of furniture
a t a low,low , pric e !

$5995

'77 Pontiac Gran Safari
J seat St. Wagon, one owner , power windows, seat, cruise, really

shar

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'77 Chev. Impala Sedan

G
99

A ir, m etall ic gr ey , expect 1he bes t.

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19
19

'76 Dodge Charger SE

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Silver meta llic , AM ·FM -tape, crui se control. Sharp .

19
19

8'

Pl
19
he

NE
51'
&amp;
In

tI

By Tbe Associated Press

,

Five pedestrians were among at
least nine persons killed this weekend
in Ohio traffic accidents, according to
the state Highway Patrol.
Two of the pedestrians were killed
in a Medina County crash .
The patrol counts traffic deaths
from 6 p.m. Friday until midnight
Sunday.
The dead : SUNDAY
TALLMADGE -- Daniel Cla ir
Burkett. 16, of Tallmadge, a
pedestrian struck. by a train at a
railroad crosstng Ill Tallmadge.
STRONGSVILLE
Gary
· 24, of Cleve1and, wbe n .h.IS
. ch"tuto,
R1c
motorcycle crashed on a Strongsvtlle
c1ty street.
MILLERSBURG -- Wynn E .

For Slereo

2 Dr . Hdtp ., loaded w ith power ass ists, 22.236 m iles. Extra nice.

Regen cy, loaded, si l ver , on ~ local owner .

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'77 Buick Limited
'77 Olds 98 Sedan

~·

• Server
• Buffet

14,585 mi les, AM ·F M , stereo, new Pont iac tr ade.

A

r;
st

j .i -r _...

• Desk for home office
• Refreshment bar

6 c y l. , automti c, one owner, loca l owner, nice .
H
d
L

!::::
.j
.

I.

... today's ultimate in
versatility for any room in the home!

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Air, cru ise, ta pe, power door lock s, one loca l owner, sharp .

Sunday Shoppers
mel
Come In and Browse Around

"This continuing expan·sion or
intrusion into wbat has traditionally
been executive responsibilities must
be curtailed," Rhodes said. ''The
Legislature bas the right to declare Its
intent as to how appropriated monies
will be used.
"However, once the intent is stated,
is
the
administration 's
it
respoosibility to execute ,the actual
implementation of those goals," he
said.
Additional controlling board
involvement can ooly lead to delays In
implementing needed services at a
cost to Ohio citizens, he said.
The 1979-1981 budget will take effect
imll)ediately, replacing a 30-day
interim budget passed June 30 aild
signed by the governor before he flew

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Mullet, 35, of Fredericksburg, in a
one-&lt;:ar accident on U.S. 62 in Holmes
County .
WARREN -- Jim T. Stewart, 19, of
Newton falls, a pedestrian struck by
a car on U.S. 422 in Trumbull County.
SATURDAY
WAUSEON -- Gregory P. McClain,
4, of Lyons, a pedestrian struck by a
car on a Lyons village street.
LISBON - - Irene Kirkham, 51, of
Beloit, in a two-car accident on U.S. 62
in Columbiana County..
CAMBRIDGE -- Davtd G. Sentz, 26,
of Uhrichsville, in a one-car accident
oo Ohio 541 in Guernsey County
MEDINA - Lois A. Hackworth 17
' '
of Sterling, and Kenneth Graham, 9,
of Medina, both pedestrians struck by
a vehicle on Ohio 57 in Medina County.

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.off to China on a 17-(iay trade mlllllioo.
"It is a fair and equitable budget,
arrived at through bard wor!l of ·both
the legislative and executive branches
of government and thrqugb
CQ9perative detennination to deal
with the most pressing needa of the
citizens of Ohio," Rhodes said •.
The governor cited funding of public
education as ·the most pressing
problem dealt with by the spending
plaJl. It provides ~.5 million, a record
$784 milliOn mcrease. over two years.
The budget provid!ls a 10.7 percent
increase in Aid to Dependent Children
benefits, a freeze in tuition fees at
state colleges and universities and
increased eligibility under the
homestead property tax exemption
program which will provide '18.2
million in tax relief. . .
.
Rhodes said the budget will assiJt
those suffering from mental Ulnesa
and retardation through increases in
community treatment program
funding and through continued
upgrading of mental health programs.
State employees will get pay raises
averaging 8 percent and state1111id
dental and eye care, under ti)e budget.
· The raises will be retroactive,
effective July 1.
Rhodes issued a "stern warning to
public administrators to be cautious
in spending taxpayer dollars" in his
message.
"There are a nwnber of signs oo the
horizon which could mean cutbacks
during the next two years, and all
public agencies should be on notice
that we will not hesitate to make these
ctits if they are needed to balance the
budget,'' be said.

Weather
GETl'ING READY - 'lblnp _.. betJinnlng to
hwn at Rlvendde Golf Coone, Ma*l, Monday morning In preparation for the fir1t 81U1ual Dave Diles Appalachia semi-dosed golf tournament. The event
began at I p.m. The 1'1!gi.stration table was Jll&amp;JUieil by

Diane and Wube Roush. Loulse,left, and her husband,
Bob, are co-owners ol the COIIJ'Se. In all, 1411 area
golfers and 47 celebrities will participate. Following
the event, a diimer with outstanding entertaimnent will
be held at Royal Oak Park beginning at 7 p.m.

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

SHIPMENTS WRAPPED-UP
.. Today was lbe wrapup of tomato
shipment for some Letart area
growers, an upriver check revealed
today.
.. One prominent grower- said heavy
rains during the past eouple of weeb
did cause some quality Joss to the
tomatoes aDd at limes shipments
were delayed a UtUe longer than
normal. However, there wu oo
-verification thai tomatoes rotted In
lhe fields u a result of the nlns.

..

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Auto theft case
pro-be CODtm'UeS

o.;!'::re

BOOSTERS TO MEET

The Meigs High School Band
Boosters will meet at 7 p.m. thiB
evening in the band room of the high
school.

New Haven Welco~nes
Two New Businesses
By Mindy Kearns

Two new stores have opened their
doors in New Haven - Health Aid
Pharmacy, which opened July 5, and
Investigatioo continued over the The Watermelon Patch, July 23.
weekend into the auto theft complaint
Health Aid Pharmacy, formerly
. filed by Terry Clark, Rt.1, Racine.
Village Pharmacy, is located at 309
Melga County sheriff's deputies Fifth Street, and is owned and
said Clark's 1963Ford was taken from
the riverbank at Racine. Deputies are operated by Randy Lowe, a New
Haven Resident.
ahto investigating dalna8e to two gaa
Lowe operated Village Pharmacy
pwnpa and a Ugbt post at Cecil
for three years. He is · a 1975
Roseberry's Pennzoll Station in graduate of West Virginia
Racine and the breaking o1 a light at
Carpenter's Pennzoil at Racine Both University. The pharmacist and his
wife Wendy are the new parents of a
incidents occurred Saturday rught
De ti
llecklnfl damag
baby daughter, Kelly Ann.
f
pu esEaarel Ric'dg "-d A ehi 8
Also working at the pharmacy is
ence onby Paul
g e Spencer
e nuara"n through
ve c1e
owned
Pharmacist Camille L. McNeill,
the 1
time during the night
wife o!Dr. Samuel P. McNeill, Point
attempting to make., Pleasant. She is a 1978 graduate of
contactwithSpencertQascertaln who West Virginia University.
WB!I driving his car.

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Varlable cloudiness, wann and
humid tonight and Tuesday with a
chance ol showers or thunderstorma.
Lows toolgbt near 70. mp. Tuesday
near 90. The chaDce ol rain Ia 30 percent toolght and 40 pei'cent Tuesday.

The pharmacy features a 10
percent discount on all prescriptions
filled for senior citizens, and it also
maintains a complete patient profile
system.
Hours for the new store are 9:30
a.m. to 5:30 p.m., Monday through
Thursday; 9:30 to 7 on Friday; and
9:30 to 5 on Saturday. A grand
opening will be held August 1.
The Watermelon Patch, owned
and operated by Darlynn Sue
Gaffney, is housed In the former
Forget-Me-Not Florist building on
Fifth Street.
This shop features children's
clothing, maternity fashions ,
handmade maternity "unfiorms and
handmade gift items.
The store specializes in Maverick
jeans and tops for children. and will

also carry dress clothing dUrtng the
holiday seasons.
Mrs. Gaffney is seeking persona
who make craft Items and are Interested In placing them In her shop
for sale. Interested pel'!lons can call
her at 882-3410. Handniade gifts and
crafts are sold on conslgmnent.
Audrey · Llevlng, · Mrs. Gaffney's
mother, Is an employee of the shop.
S!Qre hours are from 10:30. a.m. to 5
p.m.
Mrs. Gaffney and her husband
Larry, an employee of Ohio Power
Co. at the Racine Hydroelectric
Project, have two children, Eric, 11
and April 10, both students at. New
Haven Grade School.
The Watermelon Patch will be
holding a grand opening celebration
on August I, 2 and 3.

Beverage Se rve r

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$3895

'76 Monte Carlo

Partlq

Sheriff Jim Proffitt and Gary
Wolfe.
Eal«&lt;aaDmeat
Dorothy Karr, Horace Karr
andJ . D. Story.
Toarumeal
Gary Roush, Bob OUver, Bob
Roush and Bob Green.

Dick Follrod, John Muuer, Dr.
Ray Pickens, and Qub Bahr.
1'nmlpor11td•
J . B. O'Brien, Dr. Harold

d

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nard Fultz.
Public Reladoa
aadTickell
Pat O'Brien, Red Tucker, Chod
Hwnphreys, Jim Thomas, Bill
Childs and George Hackett.
Aclvertlltag
Don Mills, Jack Kerr,
Margaret Follrod, Phil Kelly,
Rlch Rupe, Pat Mills and Mary
Pickens.
HOIJIIIalJty
Louise Rouah, Mary Roush,
Nona Nelson and Pbyllilt Hackett.
Trupblos aad Awudl
Ernie Shuler, George Morris,
and Benny Ewing .
Cbarlty
Tom Wolfe, Ted Reed, Joe
Young, Chod Humphreys, and
RlckCrow.

CammiUeee

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districts and added two judges.
Rhodes vetoed a bill passed by the
last Legislature that attempted Ito
make the same changes.
" In addition to reiterating my
objections to this course of action as
expected in that veto, I ai30 express
my strong reservatioos regarding the
inclusion of this provision, which is
totally unrelated to the appropriations
process in the biennial budget
legislation," Rhodes said . " This
provision serves only to subvert and
manipulate the legWatlve process."
The vetoed items expanding the
Democrat-dominated state
Con trolling Board powers would have
required various agencies to, submit
reports and seek approval for
expending slate funds .

Brown, Roger Morgan, and Ber·

IIIUIIellt :

$4995

$5995

But he left in about $1.5 million in
financial and technical assistance
offered to local school districts by ihe
state to encourage their voluntary
efforts to desegregate. This includes
S400 for every student transferred
voluntarily within their districts for
desegregation purpoSes.
" It is through such voluntary effort,
supported by state financial and
technical assistance, that Ohio's
schools should be . given the
opportunity to resolve their own
Jl!:Oblems," Rh~es ·said.
The section _concerning Hamilton
CoWlty Municipal Court was placed in
the budget by Democrats in efff6! to
give black judges a better chance to
be elected in Cincinnati. It would have
divided the countywide court Into two

Tee off time
1 p.m. today

IS

'78 Olds Cutlass Supreme

Air, Ral lye wh ee ls·, AM ·F M , 8, 411 m iles. SHarp .

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

MONDAY, JULY 30, 1979

HIGH POINT, N . C .

Some of the prices are close to loa:-~ value.
Check with vour banker for down payments.
WAS

"My most serious reservations
about this bill do not concern spending
priorities, but a number of new
administrative provisions provided
for in the bill," Rhodes said in his veto
message.
"Some require new reports from
state
agencies
du.Plicating
information easily available from
&lt;Xher sources," he said. "They would
require responsible officials to waste
time on needless paper work."
Rhodes struck out language
· requiring the state Board of
Education and the slate Department
of Education to determine the
existence of racial segregation and
. racial isolation , and then to eliminate
it ln Ohio's primary and secondary
schools.

CASARD

Discount Prices
1

en tine

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

NO. 74

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Gov.
James A. Rhodes signed Ohio's '16.4
billion, two-year spending plan today
after vetoing '1:/ items, including
certain language dealing with school
desegregatioo and a controverlaal
Hamiltoo County court plan.
Rhodes also . block~ an effort to
place more power in the state
Con trol.ling Board with 15 vetoed
items that specifically gave the sevenmember board more authority over a
.
variety of state agencies.
In general, the Republican governor
praised the budget written by the
Democrat-eootrolled Legislature as a
sownd appropriatiOO$ bill which, like
the docwnent he submitted last
winter, contained record expenditures
for education and no new taxes.

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

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at

Gov. Rhodes signs $16 billion state budget

C£state· :

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Sound dollar is Miller's objective

·············~····················

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J.andrieu , former president of the employed by a large commer~ial
U.S. Conference of Mayors and now development firm in New Orleans,
also drew support from Sen. Russell
Long, D-J.a., chairman of the Senate
Finance Canrnitt.ee.
But Sen. William Proxmire, [).Wis.,
chainnan of the Sena,te Banking,
Housing and Urban Affairs
would worsen the recession, thus Canmlttee, said he wlli wait to bear
actually undermining international testimony befll'e deciding whether to
support J.andrieu's nomination.
confidence in the dollar ."
Sen. Bob Packwood, ranking
Miller became the first top
government official to say the nation Republican on the Senate Commerce
already is in a recession Friday when Committee, praised the choice of
be told the Finance Committee the Goldschmidt, a fellow Oregonian, to
recession started in· the se cond replace ousted Tr11nsportation
quarter of this year and may continue Secretary Brock Adams.
Packwood said he was "looking
until the second quarter of next year,
forward
to working with the mayor as
with unemployment rising to 7.5
percent from the current level of 5.6 secretary of tr11nsportation for the
benefit of Oregon and the nation ."
percent.
But he argued that the Goldsclunidt bad been mentiooed as a
administration should stick to its potential Democratic challenger for
current economic policies that stress Packwood's Senate seat next year.
The selection of J.andrieu and
fighting inflation, rather than try to
also seemed certain to
Goldsclunidt
spend the country out of a recession, a
maneuver tried in past recessions. He please the nation's big city mayors,
said such spending this time would woo have complained about cuts in
the administratioo's urban programs.
only W'orsen inflation .

I· I

$3295

ELBERFELDS
IN POMEROY

Sewing

Buffet

THE WATERMELON PATCH - A new store featuring children's clothing and maternity fashions has opened
on Fifth Street in New Haven. The store, The Watermelon Patch, ill owned by ·"D•r" Gaffney.

I'

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NEW PHARMACY IN NEW HAVEN - Randy Lowe, a New Haven resident, recenily bought the former
Village Pharmacy, located at 309 Fifth Street, and changed the name to Health Aid Pharmacy. Shown outside the
st9re are Lowe and aiJother pharmacist empl9yee, Camille L. McNeill.
I

�3-1'DeU8l.ly :seDUilet, Mlddleport·t'OOlel'O)', U., Mmday, JWy au, 1\1"/Y

2-'lbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday , July 30, 1979

IN WASHINGTON

WI-IERE TI-lE: CA~UALTY
COUNT FROM

Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

.

.

HURRICANE: JIMMY
;~
&amp;JiLL RISt~G ...

EDfl'ORS NOTE: Marilla Aogle Ia oo
malenllty lave.
By Robert Wallen
WASHINGTON (NEA) - Despite
President Carter's tough lalk about
i.mpolinjj llringent limits on future
petrolewn Imports, he actually has
establlahed very generolll! ceilings.
Carter. says he will not allow "one
drop lllore" than 8.2 million barrela of
o11 per day tQ be imported this year.
But net Imports during the fim half of
the year amounted to only slightly
more than 7.7 million barrels per day.
That means that during the last half
of 1979 the country could import
· almCJII 8. 7 milllon barrels of oil daily
-the highest rate in history - and still
meet the president's goal.
'lbe ceiling for future years Will ~
pegged to 1977 net imports, which
totaled almCJII 8.6 mllliori barrels per
day -the greatest aniount of oil ever
purchased from foreign sources.
While Carter logically mighi have
· aelected. 1978 imports as a standard
for the future, that goal would have
been diHicult to attain because they
amounted to fewer than 8 milllon barrels per day.

Today's commentary
Revolutionary postscripts

York, Rhode Ish!nd and Texas. And at
least two emergency measures were
implemenle\1, on a volunlary or mandatory basis, in Connecticut, Louisiana, Massachusetts, Minnesota,
Missouri and Pellll8ylvania.
But no special action of any type
was taken in another 29 states, apparently because gasoline was readily available.
ANINSTANTFWP
.
The first attempt to conduct and nationally distribute an instant survey
of voter attitudes has proven to be
less than a resounding success.
The experiment was conducted In
Columbus, Ohio, inunedlately followIng President Carter's widely
publicized mid...July speech on the
energy crisis.
Colwnbus was chosen because it ts
the leadin,g test market for a
sophiaticated two-way cable television produced by a subsidiary of
Warner Conununlcations Inc.
Called "Qube," the Warner system
provides subscribers with a special
home console. By pressing buttons on
the instrument, viewers can register
opinions that are immediately
labulated in a central location.
Colwnbus residents were asked five
questions designed to measure their
reaction to Carter's speech, with the
results lnunedlately relayed to NBC
and then disseminated to that televi·
sion network's national audience.
But only 8,135 households of the approximately 32,000 wired into the
Qube system - slightly more than 25
percent - participated in the unprecedented survey, raising questions about the validity of the sample.
In addition, the National Council on
Public Polls, an association of the
country's major survey organizations, publicly criticized NBC for using "poor judgment" in publicizing a
highly unscientific polL
"While NBC tried to make clear
that the survey was neither national
nor scientific," said the council, ·~ts
beavy reliance on the poll in Its postspeech program lent the impression
there were national implications."

Ohio perspective

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -- Ohio
motorcyclists who prefer not to wear
crash helmets won't have to worry
about a proposed change in state law
mandating their use until next year,
the bill's sponsor says.
Rep. Frank Manhic Jr., ~arfield
CAIJFORNIA~EST HlT
Heights, said he expects House
passage of his measure this fall , but it
Which state was most severely afstill must clear the Senate.
fected by the recent spot shortages of
Manhlc, a first-term legislator, said
gasoline? According to a just- comhe has assurances the Senate will go
pleted study, only California was forcalong with the bill reinstating the
ed to resort to four different manstate's helmet law and that the
datory emergency measures to deal
governor will sign it.
with the crisis.
However, completion of the entire
The survey, conducted by the Nalegislalive process probably will not
tional Governors' Association, idencome until early next year, which
tified the states that required
would make the proposal take effect
mlnlmwn porchases, odd-even sales,
in
the 1980 cycle riding season at t~.eflag systems to designate fuel
earliest, he said.
availability and measures to keep
The House Transportation and
aervice stations open.
Urban
Affairs
Committee
New Jeney, Maryland and Virginia
recommended the measure for
were forced to institute all four
passage "June 5, but the Rules
measures. But unlike California, each
Committee, which places. legislation
of those states made at least one of
before the full House for floor votes,
the stepe voluntary.
took no action on it before the General
Minimum purchases, odd-even
Assembly recessed July . 20 for a
sales and flag systems were used in
seven-week break.
hard-hit Delaware, Florida, New
Manhic said House Speaker Vernal
G. Riffe Jr. , D-New Boston, told him
the Legislature prefers to wait at least
a year before changing previously
enacted legislation. Ohio's old helmet
NEW YORK (AP) - If you don't in order to become a shareholder you law was repealed July 10, 1978.
11
like to deal with brokers or pay their must buy through a broker.
'
l'm a freshman legislator ,"
commissions, you can stiU buy stock
Even if a person bought only one Mahnic said. "I'm not going to change
in some American 'companies. And share from the broker in order to what's been happening around here
pay only $5 or a bit more for tbe qualify for the investment plan, the for 200 years."
bookkeeping charges . .
Under the bill, anyone operating or
broker would be compelled by.
The way was cleared a few days ago economics to charge a minimum lee ,
by the National Association of perhaps $20 or $25.
Investment Clubs, which hopes
That's where the National
eventually to make shares in as many Association of Investment Clubs
as :1110 or 300 companies available comes in. It already is a member of
under it's stock-buying plan.
many plans. Now it offers to buy for
··There is a hitch, if you want to call it members, for a one-time bookkeeping
that: You must belong to the fee of $5!or each company purchased.
association, which has an annual So far, the association is offering to
membership fee of $15, but that might purchase stock in 14 concerns, but
not be a bad idea. Numerous benefits Thomas O'Hara, chairman, believes
BLOOD tRANSFUSION
are offered to members .
the service could become so popular
By
Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
But first, the details : Many that the list will quickly grow, even to
DEAR
DR. LAMB - I wish you
hundreds of companies have plans 300.
that enable their shareholders to buy The plan could become a great would discuss blood transfusions odd amounts of shares, either promotional tool for the association, the effects 11,11d how soon one recovers
quarterly or monthly , by sending in especially since it now views itsell as completely. How long does it take for
whatever they can afford, in some spokeSIDan not only for clubs but for the blood to get to the outer surfaces
instances only $10.
all small investors, who sometimes of the body? I had a hysterectomy and
14 days later I hemorrhaged and
With that money, and with get lost among the bigs.
dividends from shares already owned, For the $15 a year membership fee, underwent three more operations for
the company or its agent, a hank the association provides an investors repair. I was in the hospital 23 days
usually, buys shares or fractions of manual or learn-by-doing textbook, and had 10 blood transfusions. I am 58
them at the going price or even at a the monthly magazine Better fears old and have always had a good
discount, plus a tiny handling fee.
Investing , low-cost seminars and health record.
I'm wondering how much r1 the
Once a person is a shareholder, he meetings, and lobbying.
recovery
tinle was related to gelling
or she need never again pay a
f
the circulation hack or my muscle
brokerage commission in order to
tone. A relative Said the blood recirJID"chase more shares. But initially,
culates every 24 hours, but w.hat
about to the outer areas of the body?
My gynecologist did notice how my
coloring was coming back. II took
quite a while for the pink to come
back into my cheeks. I've always had
a ruddy complexion . .
DEAR READER - An average
adult has around seven quarts of
blood in the body. The heart at rest
wiU pump about five quarts a minute
so your blood is constantly on tbe
move. A vigorous athlete may pump
over 30 quarts a minute even though
all the blood in his body may only be
about seven quarts.
When you have a transfusion, the
blood inunedlately enters into your
circulating bloodstream. If you require a transfusion, you usually have
a lot of other things wrong with you.
I'm sure that was true in your case.
You needed a transfusion to replace
the blood that you had lost.
Whenever you lose blood, aU the little vessels in the body undergo
changes. The tiny capillaries in the
. skin may contract. This causes the
skin to appear white.
Although you probably had perfectly nonnal circulation, you may have
been low on the tolal num~r of red
blood cells for a while after the
surgery. It's common not to replace
all the blood that's been lost and
sometimes it would be difficult to do
so anyway. As a result it may take
several weeks for the bone marrow to
"My, my. the president isn 'I doing too well 'in
regenerate enotigh new red blood
your book. ' How do you feel about his 78cells for all the recovery to take
degree rule for pub(lc buildings ?"
place. Whenever you have a normal
of blood In your body again
amount
__)

Business mirror

_(!':J

riding a motorcycle or snowmobile
would be required to wear a helmet
with chin strap fastened.
The measure was amended in
committee to set a noise limit for
motorcycles and oo establish a cycle
education program administered by
the Deparlment of Highway Safety. ln
addition, tests for an operator's
license would have oo include driving
in actual traffic situations, and
examiners would be required to have
cycle licenses themselves .
Mahnic said a floor amendment
may be offered to raise the allowable
noise level slightly above the 82decibel limit now contained in the bill.
That limit, effective Jan. 1, 198Q, for
all new cycles, would exclude those
·made by the primary American
manufacturer.
The safety department has
complained about the portion of the
bill mandating actual road tests for
licenses instead of simulated
situations, but Mahnic said no
changes are expected.
"We have a lot of riders here (only
two states have more ), and we should
set a precedent as far as testing,"" he
said.
·Texa s, Illinois and Michigan
already require persons to perform in
actual traffic situations before they
are licensed, he said.
"U Texas can do it, we can,"
Mahnic said.
Proponents of the bill say helmets
will save lives, while opponents argue
that the state should not require
cyclists to take safety precautions.

HEALTH

· ~~~----L_a_w_r_en_c_e_E_.L__am__b_.M_._o_.__________

c
L

Berry's World

1
d

s
a
(

-------

BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
Houston pitcher James Rodney
Richard, imposing at &amp;-f!!Ot-3, stood at
home plate -- where he is anything
but unpo&amp;ng. He carried a helmet a
bat.' and a .105 batting average with
which to terrome Los Angeles pitcher
·
Terry Forster.
Richard is up to .121 now thanks to
the ninth4nning single he trlt Sunday
night. Later, he scored on Cesar
Cedeno's triple and the Astros bad a 43 triumph over the Dodgers.
After the victory returned his

1~

Tough talk, easy limits

and everything ts working perfectly,
your &amp;na11 capillaries in the skin will
open up and you 'lllook perfectly normal.
The skin is somewhat r1 a deceiver
about circulation. A person may faint
because the arteries in his leg
muscles all open up and there's an increase in blood flow to his muscles. As
a result there isn 't enough blood flow
to the brain. In a deep faint the small
vessels in the skin may contract at the
same time so even though there may
~ more blood in the leg veins than
usual, the skin over the leg., may be
chalky white.
I 'm sending you ~ Health Letter
number 6-4, Blood Type, Rh Factor
and Transfusions. It will give you
some general lnfonnation on blood
typing that may be of interest to you.
Others who want this information can
send 75 cents by check or coin with a
long, stamped, self-addressed
envelope for it. Send your request to
me, in care of this newspaper, P.O.
Box 1551, Radio City Station, New
York, NY 10019.
As a physician I'm constantly
amazed at how much blood is
transfused and how few diHiculties
are really caused by it. It's truly a
miracle. That's not to say that no one
ever has difficulties with transfusions, but considering the frequency
of their use, it is miraculous.

THE DAILY SENTlN EL
!USPS 145-11111

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREnOF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
ROBERT HOEFLICH
City Edltar
Published daUy except Saturday by Tbe.Ohlo

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Office Phoo.e !lt2~ 21M. EdiWrtal Pllooe
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Subtcriptloo rates : Delivered by curie11
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Vl!ar. 527.50: .~is munths, flUO; Three moa4
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$1 7.10; Thr~'t Ul•l nUt~. 19.00. SuMcrlptlon prt,;;j
incl~e~unrlay Times·&amp;ntlflt:l.
.

.J

ByDouGraff
Nicaragua and Its erstwhile
strongman have at ~ parted company, but the Individual who perhape
contributed more than any other to
that denouement is not around for the
celebrations.
Pedro Joaquin Chamorro Gardena!,
editor of the newspaper La Pre!WI
and for !ong"years the mCJ8I tenaciously outspokeJl opponent of the Somoza
dictatorship, was murdered in
January of 1978.
The responsibility for his death is
still not precisely fixed, and may
never be. But 11t the time, it was widely believed to be the work of Somoza 's
agents. If so, the crime turned out to
be not a paralyzing blow to the opposition but a boomerang for the regime:
Chamorro 's death and the attendant publicity transformed the
Nicaraguan situation from just
another case of Latin American
domestic unrest into a regional ar.l
then world issue. From then on,
Somoza was on the defensive and his
overtl)row progressed more swiftly
than even the Sandinlsta rebels who
accomplished it might previously
have believed possible.
The life of its editor was not,
however, the only cost to La Prensa of
the Nicaraguan civil war. In a final
destructive spaam before their surrender, Somoza 's troops demolished
the paper's presaea and offices.
That was not to be the end of La
Prensa, however, any more than
Chomorro's death silenced his opposition. The Chomorro family, observing
that the paper's mCJII important asset
- its stsff - is still largely Intact,
already is arranging to reswne
publication.
Pendin,g rebulldin,g of La Prensa 's
own plant, they expect to publi.!h on
borrowed equipment - rented from
Novidades, the former Somoza family
newspaper.
That is a businesslike form of poetic
justice that newspaperman Chomorro
would ~ly have appreciated.

1UE AYATOlLAH IS NOT
CHARMED
who are we to believe - Karl Man:

or the Ayatollah Khomelnl?
The former laid It down more than a
century ago that the opium of the people is religion. Not so, the latter,
now
says .
Music
fulfills that socially undesirable function, at least in revolutionary Iran.
Declaring that music bas a drugllke
elf~ in that It "stupifies persons
listening to It and makes their btain
inactive and frivolOUB," the holy
man's holy man lias banned It from .
Iranian radio and television.
It thus joins alcohol, Western
movies and coeducational swinuning
as officially certified and proscribed
paths straight to lieU in reborn !ran.
It's conceivable the ayatollah might
have had second thoughts about taking .such a drastic step had be heeded
one William Shakespeare, who
observed:
The man that bath no music in
himself,
Nor is not mov'd with concord of
sweet sounds,
Is fit for treasons, strategems, and ·
spoils;
The motions of his spirit are dull as
night,
And his affections dark as Erebus :
Let no such man be trusted.
But then, the second thought probably would have been to ban
Shakespeare as well - if he isn 'I
already.
Actually, the ayatollah isn 'I so
much in conflict with Marx on this
subj~u going him one better.
Religion, as he would have It practiced in his brave new Wamic
republic, Is more than an opiate. It'sa
total anesthetic.

BY ASSOCIATED PRESS

bom~r .

The next day the Georgia senator
was quick to dampen their optimism .
" I have riever said this treaty did
not have flaws," said Nunn.
In an interview, · Nunn was
extremely cautious in expressing his
views on specific provisions of the
treaty.
But Nunn has long maintained that
SALT II is meaningless unless it is
part of a coherent defense program,
which be believes would call for
substantial strengthening of U.S.
forces.
So, Nunn's position was hardly a
surprise. The problem for the
administration is how to deal with it.
If President Carter is willing to
boost the defense budget to the levels
sought by Nunn, he is certain to lose
the votes of opponents of bigger
military budgets such as Sens. George
D-S.D.;
WilHam
McGovern,
Proxmire, D-Wis .; and Mark
Hatfield, R-Ore.
And he'd touch off another political
storm among liberals who already
claim Carter's budget priorities short
change the needy.
If there was a bright side for the
administration at the day's
proceedings, it was In the reaction of
Sen. John C. Sten~s, D-Miss.,
chairman of the ~d Services
Committee.
',
Stennis occupies a unique position
as chairman of the Defense
Appropriations subcommittee as well

as the Armed Services committee.
As a result, Stennis has a powerful
role in authorizing military prograrll.!
and also in ap):roving the money for
them.
Stennis remains uncommitted on
SALT. His reputation as ·a
conservative and strong supporter o1
military preparedness would lend
special weight to a decision by Stennis
oo support the treaty .

Meigs
Property
Transfers

Salisbury.

.

Wllllam H. Lambert, Linda S. Lamto Paul M. Nease, Debra A.
Nease, Lots, Pomeroy.
Alice M. Stanley, Daniel Stanley,
Shirley Stanley to Lester Howell, Lots
32, 33 and 36, Scipio - Pageville.
Clyde_J. Morlan, Ethel M. Morlan
to Jimmy K. Nelson, Stephen K.
Nelson, Roger E. Bolen, John W.
Bolen, 34.72, . 96.8 acres, Sl acres,
Orange.
Charles Bissell, Margaret BlsseU to
Clyde R. Smith, Stella Jo Smith, 1.587
acres, Chester.
. Ivan Chevalier, Lydia Chevalier to
Ivan Chevalier, Lydia Chevalier, .876
acre, Olive.
Wilbur H. Leifheit, Julia Leifheit to
Otis S. McCUntock, EIIUIIB J . McClintock, Easement, Sutton.
David Andrew Crow, Mary Lou
Crow to Otis S. McCllntock, EIIUIIB J.
McClintock, Easement, Sutton.

playing for the Angela this season

personal. For Dan Ford, it was.
just do my job."
Carew left Minnesota with a sweet
Both California Angel players made
life miserable Sunday for their former Angels contract and no hai-d feelings ,
team, the Minnesota Twins.
but there was considerable bitterness
Carew had four hits, for the 40th in Ford's case. He was extremely
time in his career and the second time unhappy in Minnesota and just
this year against the Twins. Ford wanted out of town .
"I think Danny likes to beat these
belted a two-run horner among three
hits to help the Angela beat Minnesota guys, " said Carew. " 1 know he likes to
9-3.
beat Gene (Manager Gene Mauch )
"I don 't get up over ai)Y ballclub " .and he likes to stick it to Calvin
said Carew, the seven-time Ameri~ (Twins owner Calvin Griffith.) "
SliU mindful of"his unpleasant time
League batting champion who is
in Minnesota , Ford ·said: "Even
though it hurt me, I felt the experience
(with the Twins) has helped me over
the long run. It's been a benefit for me
playing in the Twins' organization . It
FWjfBAI!
was my first chance to play in the
majors and the experience helped me
Buenil At A Glance
become the player I am today."
· By The Anociated Press ·
In other AL games Sunday, the
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Baltimore Orioles beat the Kansas
EAST
. W. L. Pel. GB Ci ty Royals 6-4; the Milwaukee
Montrea l
S5 42 .567
Brewers trinuned the New York
Pittsburgh
lh
56 ... .560
Yankees $-3 ; ' the Detroit Tigers
C~lcago
Sl ... . 551 1112
defeated
the Toronto Blue Jays &gt;4 ;
Philadelphia
52 49 .515 5
St. LO\JIS
the Cleveland Indians stopped the
50 47 .515 5
New York
42 55 .433 13
Chicago White Sox ~ ; the oakland
WEST
A's nipped the Seattle Mariners 2-1
Houston
60 46 .566
and the Boston Red Sox edged the
Ci ncinnati
~ 50 .533 3 'h
San Francisco
51 54 .486 8'h Texas Rangers :1-2.
San Diego
.. 59 .449 121?,
Carew and Ford teamed up for the
Los Ange les
... 60 .423 15
first
runs asainst Minnesota, and the
Atlanta
43 62 .410 15 '1'
Angels
were never headed. Carew
S.turday•s Gomes
singled to lead off the (irst and one out
New York 6, Chicago 4
Cinc innat l 8·5, Atlanta 68
later, Ford blasted his 13th homer of
Pillsbur gh 5, Montreal 3
the year, off loser Darrell Jackson.
51 . Louis 5, Philadelphia •
Rudi later had a three-run homer
Joe
HO\Jston 5, Los Angeles 2
for the Angels to highlight a four-run
San D l eoo~. San Francl sco3
Sunday's Gomes
eighth .
New York .C, Chicago o. 1st oame, 7
Orklles 6, Royals t
Innings, ra in shortened
Gary Roenicke hi,t two homers as
Chicago at New York. 2nd game ,
Baltimore beat Kansas City for its
ppd .• rain.
Montreal5. Plllsburgh 3
loth victory in 12 games. Left-hander
St. LouiU, Philadelphia 5
Scott McGregor won his sixth game in
San Francisco •· Sen O l~ o 2
the last seven decisions although he
Clnclnnall9, Aflanta 4
needed relief help.in the seventh from
HO\Jston 4, Los Anllt!l"' 3
Monday 's G•mes
Dave Ford, who gained his first save.
St . Louis ( Denny .t ·8 and Thomas O·
Brewrn 5, Yaakees 3
0) at Montreal {Lee 10·6 and Val mer
Sixto
Lezcano
hit a two-run single
2·2) , 2.
New York (Swan 9·9) at PiMsburgh and Paul Molitor scored twice,
1Candelaria 9· n.
leading Milwaukee over New York for
C~ltago
(Revsc hel 9-7) al a sweep of their fight-marred threePhiladelphia 1Rulhven7·5) .
LOS Angeles ISulcllffe Hl at Cin - game series.
Bill Travers and Bob McClure
cinnati !Seaver 10·5).
San Francisc o (Knepper 7-5) at combined to scatter nine hits for the
HO\Jston (Andujar 11 -6) .
Brewers, who lost third baseman Jim
Only games schedvled.
Gantner
by ejection because of a
Tuesdly's G•mes
seventh-inning scrap with the
New York at Pillsburgh
C~icago at Philade lph ia .
Yankees' Lou Piniella. The trend of
St. Louis at Montreal
battling started in Milwaukee' s ~
San Oie&lt;;~o at Atlanta
vicoory Friday night.
Los Angeles at Cincinnati

~

San Francisco at Hou5ton

~rt

-·" '

game shortened by rain to seven
innings.
" ! don't get up for the Dodgers any
more than any other team," said
Richard. "1 just try to prepare and
relax in every game 1 pitch."
He wasn 't fully relaxed until he had
scored the winning run .
"As 1 reached the plate, I wanted to
make sure I touched it, so 1 just
reached down with my hand," · said
Richard, 9-11. "It was a joy. 1 had no
thoughts in my head . It was the thriU
of victory." For Los Angeles it was
the second defeat in a row ,after six
consecutive victories.

Expos 5, Pirates 3
Montreal, knocked out of first place
for the first time in 45 days Saturday
night, held a team meeting before
Sunday's game and promptly
returned to the top spot.
Andre . Dawson drove in three runs
with a bases-loaded triple and Rusty
Staub cracked a pair of RBI singles as
the Expos salv,ged the finale of its
four-game series with Pittsl!urgh.
Cardinals 6, PhilUes 5
The visiting Cardinals scored four
runs in the fifth , complete their threegame sweep of Philadelphia, and
passed the Phillies by a fraction of. a

ATLANTA (AP) - Maybe his
famlly inspired him.
Cincinnati third baseman Ray
Knight, whose hometown is Albany,
Ga., gave out 162 tickets for the Reds'
weekend series with the Atlanta
Braves. And with family and friends
in the stands Sunday, he drove In five
runs with two doubles and a homer as
Cincinnati defeated AUanta 9-4.
" It was by far. the best RBI
production of my career," Knight
said. "When you hit sixth, you're not
in a position to drive in runs. But I do

make contact and l always have."
Knight doubled in two runs lit the
second inning and scored on a single
by Cesar Geronimo as the Reds
)resented left-llander Fred Norman,
s.a, with a three..-un lead.
Knight hit a drive over the left field
fence in the seventh for his fourth
hOme run of the season and then
batted in his final run with another
double in the eighth.
Dave Collins doubled in two more
runs in the fourth to chase Atlanta
starter Rick Matula , &amp;-7, who walked

six batters, a high for him thill season .
"Matula was wild tonight ," said
Braves Manager Bobby Cox. "He
couldn't get (the ball ) to the place
where be wanted it."
Nor man, who helped hill own cause
with a run«oring single in .the fifth,
gave up three hits and one run during
the first five innings. He left the game
in the sixth after surrendering hits to
the first four batters.
Jerry Royster hit a sacrifice fly in
the second to get the Braves on tbe
scoreboard. A single by Barry Bonnell
and a grounder by Joe Nolan scored
two runs in the sixth. Bob Horner
singled in Royster in the seventh for
the final Braves run.
After the Reds defeated Atlanta
of the Irish Republic , in a Wolfrace,
three
times in the. four-game series,
won after a bad clutch cost Zunino a
Cincinnati
Manager John McNamara
one-minute penalty .
he
felt
hill team, now in second
said
MOTORCYCUNG
place,
3'h games behind Houston in
IMATRA, Finland (AP ) - Dutch
private Suzuki rider Boat Van Dulmen the National League West , would win
the pennant.
led from start to finish to win the
Finnish . Road Racing Grand Prix. · "We thought so when we were 10
Randy Mamola of San Jose, Calif., games hack . Now we're three back
and 1 still think we can," he said.
was runner-up.
The Braves, meanwhile, occupy the
division ceilar behind San Diego and
Los Angeles.
"I'm looking forward to the San
Diego series," Cox said about a series
with the Padres that starts 'fuesday in
Atlanta . "If we get out of last place,
it 's San Diego and the Dodgers who
wnMINGTON, Ohio (AP ) - The we've got to beat."
Cincinnati engais' offense showed
some stunning moments Saturdily in
the team's first scrimmage, and
nobody was more happy about it than
Custom
the defense.
" It was great to see the offense
perflrllllike that, " said Jim LeClair,
center linebacker .
"Got to bave points to win , got to
bavepoints. I'm not worried about the
defense. We 'll~ all right. But I love
to see those offensive guys doing the

Sports briefs.
By The AIIIOCiated Press

GOLF
PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Lou
Graham sank a three-foot birdie .putt
on the first hole of a sudden death
playoff to ~t Bobby Wadkins in the
$250,000 Philadelphia Golf Classic.
Graham · and Wadkins both
completed the 72-nole tournament at
273, 11 strokes under par. -Wadkins
car"ded a !-under-par 70and Graham a
tournament recQrd-equaling &amp;4 in the
final round .
NOORDWIJK, Netherlands (AP) Graham Marsh of Australia fired a
final..-ound, 2-underiJar 70 to win the
$70,000 . Dutch
Open
Golf
Championship by one stroke.
Marsh finished with a mole total
of of 285. Mike Gregson and Antonio
Garido shared second place at 286.
STE. JUUE, Quebec (AP) -Amy
Alcott sank a ~oot eagle putt on the
18th hole for a 70 to win the $150,000
Peter Jacl&lt;sln Classic with a 7-underpar 285. Nancy Lopez finished second
with a 71 for a 288.
MAEBASHI, Japan (AP) Tatsuko Olwlko of Japan birdied the
first extra hole to win the SSS,tm
Junon Ladies Open in a playoff with
Taiwan's '1\J-A-Yu. The two golfers
finished the ~ole event tied at fiveunder-par 217.
AUTO RACING
COLLEGE STATION, Texas (AP)
- A.J . Foyt turned in an ·average
speed of 162.93 to beat Tom Bigelow in
the United States Auto Club Grand
Prix :1110 at Texas World Speedway.
Foyt now has won five of the six
USAC Indy car races this season and
also leads the USAC stock car division
standings.
HOCKENHEIM, West Germany
(AP ) - Alan Jones of Australia
scored a front-cunning victory in the
German Grand Prix, giving his Saudi
Williams team its second straight
Formula I triumph. Williams'
teanuna te, Clay Regazzoni fmished
three seconds behind.
MALLORY PARK, England (AP)
-- Ricardo Zunino, driving an Arrows,
set a lap record fer Mallory Park with
an average speed of 121.6 mph , but
finished second in the 75-lap race in
the Aurora AFX Formula One
Championship series. David Kemedy

point in moving into fourth in the
East.
St. Louis' percentage is .511i48311,
while Philadelphia's is .5148514.
"At the ~ginning of the aeuon, we
got off to a great start. And on our Jut
home stand we played the way J
thought this team could," said
Philadelphia Manager Damy Ozark.
"In between, we've been a rocky bollt
and it looks like half the time we're
going to sink."
·
Giants 4, Padres Z
Jack Clark hit a two.cun horner and,
Joe Strain contributed a rim«&lt;l'ing
single, carrying San Fralicisco put
San Diego.
MeiBt,CubsO
Lee Mazzilli and Riehle Hebner
drove in two runs apiece,llftln8 New
York over Chicago. Kevin ~obel and
Ed Glynn combined to hold the CUbl
to two hits ~fore further play wu
cancelled by rain in the aeventh
inning.
The second game of the schedulad
twinbill will ~ made up Sept. 18 as
part of a doubleheader.

PECIAL

S

HOT FUDGE
CAKE
Reg.89C

The Bengals, who lost the first six
games last year but finished with
three strong victories, are hoping to
pick up where they left off.
The offense played the defense for
80 plays Saturday, scoring the first
time down the field and doing it just as
it had against the Cleveiand·Browns in
the season-ending 43-16 game.
The offense scored two touchdowns
and Chris Bahr kicked field goals of 4ll
and 60 yards.
The team was off Sunday. DriUs
resume on Monday .

225

SmRI~

LocustS!. in MldaJeporl
Ph. 992·5248

full upper &amp; lower

0" One Low Pn;e.

for a

59'

Featuring 5
Flavors of Ice Cru m

Bengals' offense
has good outing

~U5
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Monday thru Friday

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for Cw tOm FullrlpfJi!r tf full lnw1r d•ntur1J.

For Complete Information CaU

1-800-282-6410

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Outside Ohio C•ll Free 1~78
Cglltoday for
Dr. Riviere
your Frrt copy
of Dr. Ri ~in·, 's
i"fo·rmalivr
bf.oclrur'
Dr •.Ro11alcl F. Rhlert
Or. A.J . Sluhli • Dr . G.J . S!omblulh • Or . C. W. &amp;tal
Or . W D. Kimball• Dr. J.C. Murph~ • Or . V.W,. . Stuln
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M oor~

Co..mbws. Ollki4JW

Tlgen 5, Blue Jays 4
Lance Parrish hit two solo homers
EAST
W. L. Pel. GB and Steve Kemp added another basesempty blast to power Detroit over
Balt imore
69 34 .670
Boslon
Toronto . Rookie Pat Underwood
62 37 .626 5
Milwaukee
63 41 .605 6 11&gt; scattered II hits, including a solo
New York
55 .. .534 14
homer by Rico Carty. Underwood was
Detroit
52 49 .515 !"6
Cleveland
50 52 .490 18'11 relieved in the eighth by Aurelio
Toronto
Lopez, who won hill eighth save.
32 72 .308 37'h
WEST
" Parrish is going to be one of the
Cal iforn ia
60 4S .571
great
players in the game," said
Minnesota
Sl 47 .535 ~
Detroit
Manager Sparky Anderson .
S4 .. .529 ~·;,
Texas
Kansas City
Indians 9, Wblte Sox 6
50 52 .490 8'1'
beat Seattle. Morgan, 1-6, didn't allow
Chicago
4S 51 .447 13
Rick Manning's grand slam homer a hit alter the fourth inning to post his
Sea tile
44 62 .415 16'h
following a two..-un shot by Gary victory after nine majCM" league
29 76 .276 31
Oakland
Alexander capped a seven..-un second losses.
Soturday•s Games
inning, leading Cleveland over
Oakland 6, Sea tile 5
Red So:.: 3, Rangen %
Toronto J, Oetron o
Chicago. Rick Wise was the winner
Carl
Yastnemski
's RBI groundout
Milwaukee 9, New York 2
with sixth-inning relief from Paul in the sixth inning scored the winning
Cleveland 10, Chicago 5
Reusc hel. The triumph was the run in Boston's victory over Texas.
Kansas City 6, Baltimore 3
seventh straight for the Indians, all Mike Torrez earned his lith victory
Boston 1, TexasO
Cal ifornia 5, Minnesota o
since Dave Garcia took over the against six losses although he was
Sundoy's Games
managerial reigns from Jeff Torborg. cuffed for 11 hits by the Rangers.
Delrolt 5, Toronto~
A's 2, Mariners 1
Torrez staggered 71-3 innings before
Cleveland9. Chlcaoo6
Milwaukee 5. New York 3
Rookie Mike Morgan pitched a reliever Dick Drago came on to earn
Baltimore 6, Kansas City .4
three-hitter for his first major league his sixth save. Yastrzemski knocked
California 9, Minnesota 3
victory and Oakland scored a pair of in his 64th run of the year with his
Oakland 2, Seattle 1
unearned runs in the first inning to ground ball.
Boston J, Texas 2
Mondoy •s Gomes
BOSion 1Renko 8·5) a! Cleveland
1Wa i!Sl0·9) .
Baltimore (Stone 8·7) al Milwaukee
(Slaton 10·51 .
New York (John 1J.6) at Ch icago
(Wortham 11 -9) .
Toronto (Stein 3·1) at Kansas Clly
(Gura 6·7).
' Delroll (Morris 9·5) at Texas (John ·
son 4-12).
You're 17 or older. You're a high school
Seallle (Parrott 8·7) at California
or about to be. You're a U.S. citizen or
graduate
IBarr J.6).
Minnesota !Goltz 9·7) at Oakland
an alien with a green card.
IKingman J.J ).
You're all of thosethings and more: you're
Tuesday's Games
someone
who's looking for a challenge. Someone
Baltimore at Milwaukee.
New York at Chicago.
who can accept the demands of responsibility
Toronto at Kansas City
and
leadership.
Detroit at Texas
Seattle at California
You're someone who can experience pride
Minnesota at Oakland.
in genuine achievement. Because you're who you
AMERICAN LEAGUE

"

For nine innings, Richard WI'S the
pitcher the Astros needed. He
scattered five Los Angeles hits and
struck out eight Dodgers to raise his
major league-leading total to 182.
When it was over, he had recorded his
ninth straight victory over Los
Angeles since 1976.
Meanwhile, the Reds beat the
Atlanta Braves 9-4, the Montreal
Expos bested the Pittsburgh Pirates
5-J, the St.Louis Cardinala clipped the
Philadelphia Phillies ~. the San
Francisco Giants beat the San Diego
Padres 4-2 and the New York Mets
blanked the Chicago Cubs ~ in a

Inspired Knight paces Reds

For Rod Carew, it wasn't anything after a long career with the Twins. "I

Rick Waits, Cleveland Indian
southpaw, sa ng the National Anthem
before a 1978 game against Toronoo.

Allee L. WHite to Roger Henry,
Mabel Henry, LoU, Pomeroy Vlllage.
Gall Larned formerly Gall P. Mendelson to Stephen V. MendeiBon, 33
acres, Olive.
Edward Beasley, Wanda L. Beasley
to Jay Hall, Jr., Lot 284, Middleport.
Three Easements, Leading Creek
Cons. Dlst., Pomeroy.
Five Right of Ways, Roger Adams,
Pomeroy.
Ernest C. Menchlnl, Debbie Menchini, Jennifer E . Foster, 'I'hoanui
Foster to Jacqueline E. Menchlnl,
Lots, Pomeroy.
Ro~rt H. Barker to Buckeye Rural
Elec. Co., Easement, Scipio.
Laura Bernice Reilley Engle, Fred
C. Engle to Howard Beasley, Lot 284,
Middleport.
Belhlebem Baptist Church to First
Baptist Church, Lots 24 and 24, Wolf's
Add., Racine Village.
Vivian I. Phelpe to Arnold Anderson, Wilma Anderson, Lot 17, Burns Add., Letsrt.
Wllllam N. Pickens, Frances M.
Pickens to Wllllam Eugene Pickens,
2.9 acres, Lebanon.
Jack Riggs Stanley, Karen Y.
Stanley to Edwin K. Florence, Barbara Y. Florence, 6.80 acres,

team's lead to 3\2 games over the
Cincinnati Reds in the National
League 's West Division, Hous ton
Manager BiU Virdon admitted he had
thought of sending a pinch-hitter up in
Richard's pia~. The game was tied , it
was the ninth inning, and, well, there
was that batting average to think
about.
"Sure, that always cro~ your
mind in that situation," said Virdon,
"but we decided if he was all right we
would go with him. And. f&lt;rtunately ,
he was the hitter we needed ."

Carew has four
•
hits, Angels wzn

Washington today
WASHINGTON (AP )- The SALT
debate has spawned a lot of talk about
heavy missiles, Backfire bombers and
whether the United States can "trust
the Russians ."
Opponents of the arms control
treaty between the United States and
the Soviet Union are drafting
sweeping changes which, if approved,
would kill the agreement.
But the issue that could decide the
fate of SALT II has nothing to do wjth
its wording . 'That issue is how much
money the United States should spend
on defense.
Sen. Sam Nunn, ~a . , who 1s
looked upon by the administration as
a senator with unique influence in the
treaty debate, laid ou\ the budgetary
issue last week at a session of the
Senate Armed Services Committee.
Nunn publicly demanded a
commitment for substantial annual
increases -- $7 biUion to S9 billion -- in
the defense budget, starting with the
one President Carter would send
Congress next January.
Without such a commitment and "a
demonstrated willingness of this
administration to make the hard
political and economic choices
necessary to undertake and sustain
that commliment," Nunn said, he
could not vote for the treaty.
Some treaty supporters chose to
. find a silver lining in the fact Nunn did
not criticize specific portions of the
treaty . He said nothing about the
Soviet heavy missiles that bother
some of his colleagues or the Backfire

4~3

Richard's pitching, bat tops DQdgers,

Editorial opinions,
comments

IN WA~J.liNGToN,

HOW'S YOUR
HOSPITALIZATION?

cALLMutual C\
~aha~
,...,.. ,..,. ,.., .....
Gregg Gibbs
L-...,---"/ 99H443

are, the Army will give you a $2500 cash bonus
- if you qualify- for serlling four years in a military skill designated by the Army.
In addition, you'll receive over $419 a
month to start (before deductions), a chance to
travel, and earn 30 days vacation with pay each
year. Plus many other benefits.
.

o•• ARMY OPPOR'IUNmE5
593-3022

ANSWER: If you guessed electri city went up the
most m the last 20 years. guess agam. First Class
Postage went up the most. 275%.
Electricity, on the other hand, has gone up the
leastQn the national average, one kilo~att :hou r of
electnaty now costs only 61% more than 1! did in 1959.
Of course, your electric bills have probabl y
gone up more than that
After all . if you 're like mosL electric customers,

you're using considerably more electricity today than
you used to.
But wheq you think of all the· ~l«tricitydoes
for yo.ur ~v0\11l ·find it's ~a
· ·
· ·*~.
. -is""""'-~
• ·•, .·,.·
~fi *hen""''
.
r""'- knoW'
. ,•
"" .· · · '·"
gone up on evHything else.
·,'
Al6 l%. 8183%. Cl'l43%. D) 204%. E) 275%.
F 1185%. G1155%.

(Source - U.S. Burea u of Labor Statistics)

Ohio Power Company

'

�..

Abandoned dogs left by irresponsible
owners causing problems in Ohio
LEBANOJ\, Ohio (AP) -- Greg and
Dan Shellenbarger have temporarily
aba ndoned their hobby of collecting
prize rabbits because of Warren
County's fastest-growing problem -wild dogs.
Hesidents say roaming packs of
dogs liave killed livestock, caused
property damage at homes and fa rms
and harassed children. One coun\y
official said wild dogs are probably
the county's worst daily problem.
Dogs have broken into the closed
barn at the Shellenbarger farm in
Waynesville twice this year and killed
and eaten most of the boys' prize

Siamese Satin rabbits.
The county paid $120 for 10 rabbits
killed a week before the Warren
County Fair. But dogs broke in aga in
and killed eight more last week.
" I just wonder what · we're up
against," said Sue Shellenberger,
n\other of the 12--and 13-year-old boys.
"We won't dare buy any more
rabbits now" until they find out what
is getting into the cages, she said.
"Day in and day out, it's probably
the worst problem in the county ," said
co unty purchasing agent Bill
Brannock, who paid out $11,275 last
year for dead livestock and property

POLLY'S POINTERS
Polly Cramer

lv1 r. rmd M 11'. Gu)l A. Husse/1

Golden anniversary
celebration planned
Mr. and Mrs. Guy A. Russell, Rt. I,
Middleport, will celebrate their 40th
wedding anniversary wlth an open
house at the Riverboat Room of the
Athen.s Collllty Savings and Loan on
Sunday, Aug. 5, from I tU 4p.m.

Russell is a retired employee of
Kai•er Aluminwn, Raven.swood, W.
Va . They are parents offour children:
Ron from El Paso, Tex.; Peggy from
Queretaro, Mex., and Catherine and
Anthony Russell of Middleport.
It is requested that gifts be omitted.

Rape laws inadequate

'

AKRON, Ohio (AP) -- A veteran
Akron polic e officer wa nts th e
l:.egislature to get tou gher with
· rapists.
Detective Dick May said he was,"contactin g every arealegislator ,
every rape crisis cen ter, every police
sexcrimes unit. " And he predicts that
his petition drive to change the rape
penalty laws is "going to rock
somebody lin Columbus ) because,
dammit, nothing's bein g done. "
May said he has felt frustration for
a long time because of existing rape
laws. He said he has investigated 200
rape cases in the last two years and
contended the system is too lenient on
rapists and too harsh on rape victims.
The dete ctive ha s no s pecifi c
program for making it easier to
convict rapists or for reducing what
he called the sometimes unfair and
abusive questioning of rape victims
by defense lawyers.
But he proposes three cha nges in
the law that he believes would
increase the time convicted rapists
spend behind bars.
-.{;reate a new crime j:'ategory -aggravated rape - - which would carry
a penalty of 15 years to life in prison.

Currently ; rape is punishable by
anywhere from fo ur to 25 years in
prison.
Under May's proposal , aggravated
rape could be charged if th e accused
had a prior rape conviction, 'used a
deadly weapon in committing the
crime, participated with other
persons in committing rape, or raped
more than one person in the same
incid~ nt.

--Require that rape sentences run
consecutively with sentences for other
rapes or crimes committed during the
same incident.
Currently, a judge can limit the
lime se rved by stipulatin g tha t
several sentences run concurrently .
--Make rape a crime th at
disqualifies an offender from being
paroled. Such a provision would make
rape the only crime in Ohio with such
fixed sentences.
He said creating the new category
of aggravated rape is his key proposal
and he believes it has the best chance
of passage in the Legislature.
May doesn't think his proposals are
too severe. Rape "is an ugly, vicious
crime .. I think it is the most serious
crime, next to murder."

Nehaclima Garden Club meets
NEW HAYEN - Mrs. Douglas
MiUer, Mrs. Dannie Harbour and
Mrs. Carroll Adams, Jr. were
hostesses at the July meeting of the
Nehaclima Garden Club held at the
New Haven Public Library.
The meeting was called to order by
the president, Mrs. Roy Jones.
Devotions were given by Mrs . Carroll
Adams. She read two poems, "Begin
the Day With God " and "The Flag .. .
What We Make It," and closed with
the group singing, "Ameli ca."
Roll call was given by naming "The
Most Useful Garden Gadget."
A letter of thanks was read from
Donald Roush for sending him to the
State Conservation Camp in June.
The By-Laws of the club were read
by Mrs. Carroll Adams, after which
the following were named to serve on
the various committees for the annual
progressive dinner to be held on
August 6. Mrs. David Simonton and
Mrs. Harold Moxley wlll serve as co-

chairpersons of the appetizer course
with Mrs-. John Campbell, Mrs. Sam
Longenacre, Mrs. James Lockhart,
Mrs. Hobie Lowe and Mrs . Roger
Estergaard assisting. Mrs. David
Fields, Jr. and Mrs. Donald Bumgardner will be in charge of the main
course with Mrs. Carroll Adams, Jr.,
Mrs. William C. Gibbs, Mrs. Douglas
MiUer, Mrs . Harry MiUer, Mrs. Dannie Harbour, Mrs. Larry Wiley, Mrs.
Mel Clark, Mrs. Bill Howard, Mrs.
James N. Roush and Mrs. John Thorne assisting. Mrs. Chester Weaver
and Mrs . Tom Hoffman will be in
charge of the dessert course wlth
Mrs. Phil Batey, Mrs. Howard Joe
Burns, Mrs. Harold Bumgarner,
Mrs. Roy Jones and Mrs. Michael
Merritt assisting.
It was announced that the Fall
District Meeting would be held in
Madison, W. Va . and that Class IV
Flower Show School would be held at
Pipe Stem State Park, Sept.ll-13.
Mrs. Donald Bwngardner, Mrs.
Howard Joe Burris and Mrs. Dannie
Harbour will serve on the Queen's
Reception for the Mason County Fair
on July 31, which is sponsored by the
Mason County Bank.
Mrs. Phil Batey was in charge of
the program. She showed two films,
"Ruth Stout's Garden" and "Catfish
Man of the Woods . "
'
Others attending the meeting
besides the hostesses, Mrs. Adams,
Mrs. Harbour and Mrs. Mnler were
Mrs. James N. Roush, Mrs. William
C. Gibbs, Mrs . David Fields, Jr., Mrs.

- --= -- .

SUGAR'S GONE HARD
By Polly Cramer
POLLY's PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - How can I soften
confectioner's sugar? It has been kept
in an airtight container but still is as
hard as a rock. I hate to throw It
away. -Joan
DEAR JOAN - Have you tried a
rolling pin ? I have never had
powdered sugar harden as youro has
but if it did I would try putting it in a
wlre strainer and crushing the lumps.
How about this, readers? -POLLY

Helen Help
US. . . By llt•lt ·n lloltt •l
HUSBAND CHANGES HIS MIND
ABOUT WANTING WIFE BACK
By Helen Hottel
DEAR HELEN.
My wife left me for another man . I
tried understanding, and because I
loved her very much, I told her if
things didn't work out, I'd always be
waiting. (This happened once
before. )
Well, things didn't work out. It's six
months later and she Clllled last night
to take me up on my promise.
But meanwhile I've thought
through our relationship and realjze I
took a lot of guff just because I put her
on a pedestal and refused to see her
faults . Frankly, I'm enjoying my
freedom and want to go ahead wlth
the divorce. We don't have children.
I hate hurting her when she already
feels rejected; also I don't break promises easily. I guess why I'm writing
is to have someone tell me I'm not a
cad if I don't ·take my wife back. Will
it be you? -JAKE
DEAR JAKE :
Yes, it will be me.
Your Wife is long overdue for learning she can't have her Jake and cheat
him too. -H.
DEAR HELEN:
My husband and I lived together
four years before we got married.
And then the fights began! We both let
down because-maybe - before, we
were afraid the other might walk out
if we didn't stay on best behavior. Or
perhaps we didn't like the feeling that
we were locked in.
Anyway, we split, and the following
year I met George who shows me
more affection in a day than Fred did
in two months. He 's wonderful to my
children, is a good companion and
lover, very understanding; in fact he
seems perfect and I care for him
deeply. But will I still, if I divorce
Fred to marry him, or will it be the
same old disappointments?
Does marriage always ruin a
beautiful relationship? Please ask
other former live-togethers who have
made it legal. Oo they regret getting
married ? -MEGAN
DEAR MEGAN :
No, marriage doesn 't always ruin a
Phil BBtey, Mrs. John Thorne, Mrs.
John Campbell, Mrs . Chester
Weaver, Mrs. Howard Joe Burris,
members, and guest, Miss Wendy
Harbour.

DEAR POLLY -To remove rust
from the chrome on the car we use
mud from the back yard. GenUy rub it
on the chrome, rinse well and the
chrome will shine like new . .SADIE
DEAR POLLY - Do tell Ftank that
rust stains can be removed from
porcelain wlth a pumice stone that
can be bought at a plumbing supply
house. -B.W.S.
DEAR POLLY - Instead of using
fluid starter in your barbecue try briquets dipped in paraffin. To prepare
them melt one bar of paraffin in the
top of a double boiler and then pour
the warm paraffin into cardboard egg
cartons. Fill each pocket half full and
then place a briquet in each one.
When the paraffin cools and sets
break the pockets apart and store the
treated btiquets in a cool place until
needed. -MRS. T.H.
Dear Readers - Do handle the
paraffin with care. Hot paraffin can
give one a selious burn.- POLLY
DEAR POLLY - To rid jars, cull",
vases, etc. of foul odors I lay them on
their sides for a few days and the odor
leaves.
I put a little salad dressing on a
facial tissue and remove any dust
from my house plants. They look pretty and glossy.
When I scorch food I am cooking on
top of the stove I run cold water in the
sink and leave this pan of food in the
water for a few minutes. The loose
food is then poured into another pan
and the rest is scrubbed away. There
is no bwnt taste to the food that is
saved. - HELEN
Polly will send you one of her signed
thank-you newspaper coupon clippers
if she uses your favorite
Pointer,Peeve or Problem iii her column. Write POLLY'S POINTERS in
care of this newspaper.

I q ff~· r a total progr&lt;nn to lwlp

you r famdy' s wety of ITv1ng
cmd blu!d f111annal secunty for y•our
tl.'lll t •rn ~::nt years Call me for di:ldJis
p r&lt;Jit.'d

MIKE SWIGER
Midrt leoo rt, 0 .

992 ·7155

i h ll ,.."'

damage caused by wild dogs.
He's already doled out more than
$10,000 in similar payments this year
to some of the coun ty 's 85,000
residents .
The largest single claim this year
involved the killing by dogs of 10
registered sheep, for which the county
commissioners awarded $4,200 in
damages under county animal claim
provisions.
Brannock said horses, cattle, sheep,
mules, goats and donwstic rab.bits are
all covered by these provisions.
He said the county will register .
about 14,000 dogs this 'year, but he
estimates thst a bout 56,000 more dogs
are in the county, mostly running
wild.
Brannock said the largely rural
county near Cincinnati has long been
a dumping ground for dogs no longer
wanted by their owners. He said rapid
development of the northwestern and
southern ends of the cpunty is
compounding the problem.

Got a problem? An adult subject for
discussion? You can talk it over in her
column .if you write to Helen Bottel,
care of this newspaper.\ Copyrlght
19'19 by King Fea~ures Syndicate, Inc.

ullimate .•ffect will be be neficlal to yo1..
LEO (July .3-Aug. 221 You may
be the first one out of the
ota&lt;tlng blocks today , put you
might not be a good stre,ch
runner . Don ' t begin things and
leave them half lin lshed. Find
out more of what lies ahead tor
yoU in the year following your
birthday by sending for ~our
co py of Astro-Graph Letter .
Mail Sl for each to A.s tro-Graph ,
P.O. Box 41B9, Radio City Sta·
lion , N.Y. 10019. Be sure to
specify birth date.
VIRGO (Aug. 23--S.pt. 22) See.
ing only the negati~e side of
si!Yations toc;tay will prove selfdefeating . Be optimistic and

ASTRO GRAPH

bring in more dogs," he said, adding
that most people don't pay the $6 og
license fee .

0

Bernice Be de Osol

July 31, 1971
Tnis comi ng year you may be
subJec;=ted to some changing
conditions not or your own
choosln!J. Don 't be discouraged ah ,uld this happen. The

354 E. Main "Pomeroy, o

S

HOT FUDGE CAKE
~
Reg. 89c
Check this Healthy

SAlAD BAR

to do something you . could
regret.
AOII&gt;\RIUS (Jon. :ZO.Fob. 11)

Important decision• should not
be made for the sake of expediency ' today . Carefully
weigh and e·valuate every a~
pect before you make a move.
PISCES (Fob . 2G-Morch 20)
Coworkers may be a trifle difficult to get along with today , so
give them the kid-glove t reatment. Do nothing that could
create ill will.

r-------------------------------1
I N. W. COMPTON. O.D. .:
I

OPTOMETRIST

I
I

2

NOON

I
·I

~~------------------------------·

EICKRICH SMOKED OR POLISH SAUSAGE.~~. . s1.99
ECKRICH 12 Ol SLICED BOLOGNA........... ~-~- s1.49
ECKRICH SMOKED UNKS ..................... ~~- ?~:..sl.49

• Homemade cole ulad

eHomemade potato salad
• 4 exira

BACON. ENDS.... ~.~-..~.1

items

---------

PRODUCE

BABY BEEF"SALE
SIDES-

U.S. NO. 1 OHIO GROWN

POTATOEs..~.~..~.$ 399

cuT, FROZEN &amp;
WRAPPED FOR THE FREEZER

ardinal

RED

.GRAPE$............ ~·... 79~

'119

LB.

We're
convenient

.
BUNCH
CELERY
....................
.

,

NAeiiCO

2
RITZ ClACKERS ....................:................I.~~· 79

Del Monte Fruit &amp;

Sliced or Halves

PEACHES
.••••••
~.1!11! -~ ••••••••••••2: .o.z; ~::•• •49 ~
DelMonte
.

PUDDING CUPS ••••••••••••••••••!~!-.~~~: 89~

INSTANT

3

·Del Monte

IESJEA

Limit I and $10.00 purchase

JELLO
3 oz.
GELATIN
00
5/$1
·DESSE-RTS
size

POP

17 oz.

'1

SWEET
PEAS. •. ••. •• ••• ••• •• ••• ••, ••, Cans
Van Camps
15 oz •• ,
PORK-N-BEANS •••••••••••••••••• ~... 3 Cans

Jar

SHASTA6

394

SALE DATES JULY 30 •
AUGUST 4, 1979

QUANTITY RlGHTS RESERVED

..

-....

29

WHOLE ...............~~·.. $}
SUPERIORS
oz.
12
HALF.....................~~:.$ 49 WIEN ERS .............. ~~~;. 894

VAUGHAN'S

~

:

I

• s different dressings
ee natural vegetables

.

Hunts

TOMATO SAUCE •••••••••••••••••• 2 ~sa~~Heiners Bonus Buy

1

Duncan Hines

CAKE .

BREAD •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 L:a:~ssl.OO

Yellow or WhHe

.MIX·····················
Nu-Soft

:~~ER .....~.~.~
1
Xlt·XIJ il•J:I

79$

89

1

15C Off Label

,""&lt;~&gt;0 SIORES ~ CARDINAl 1000 ST ORES

:;;, ·
z

24oz. Btl. 99~
CRISCO OIL ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
MAXWELL HOUSE

12 -oz.
Cans

COFFE E. . . . . ~. .~2

AIS1. REG. 6 DIET FlAVORS

39

s.O SIORES • CARDINAl FODO s{ ORES

..."'

..

Xet•x••;;;::-u 1

-.

~

z

."'
REG., DRIP, ELEC. PERK OR ADC
,..,•
."'
ERA DETERGENT..~ ••••••••••••••••••••~.~. s2.59 -z.
"&lt;bo

PEPSI

a

z

i5

"'"'u
•
"'
"'

u

~

0

·oR

C)
~

::':::~...
STORES

"'

GARIIINAi' 1#

DIET
PEPSI
PAK

8
16 oz.
BTLS.

'109

DAI~Y &amp;

We believe your banking should be hassle-free. Our

ORANGE JUICE ....................

ing to make your banking better.

Open Fri. 9 A.M . to 3 P.M.
Walk -up tell er window
and auto-t e ller window
Open Friday Evenings s to 7 p .m .

I

~

I I
l

I

~''.

.....
.'l
I I

'

I

I I I

€b
~,.., ,., , I
; ~I

.

32·01.

i

.}

Mmber F. D. I. C. Depq·s its Insurance ·to ........

.·
1»1~.................................40
-

roNrs CHOICE

'

12 OL pkg.

EGGS •••••••••••••••••••••••~?.~~~. 69~
.

STRAWBERRY SHORTCAKE
KRAFT

PAR KAY

0

WATCH FOR OUR PROMOTION
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY

v gal.ctn. $}69
ICE 'CREAM •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
Borden

99$
.
BANQUET DINNERS ••••••••••••••••••••••• 49C

FROSTY POPS •••••••••••••••••••~ .::::t.~:~:

4

11 oz. Pkg.

La rAe

MIGHTY HIGH

OFF

u

Asst. Flavors

I I

: T"

,

."'

2

American, Pimento or Swiss

KRAFT SINGLES

~

PEPPERONI
SAUSAGE
DELUXE

-

"'az

Bordens

Certon

SOUR CREAM .......... ~::::~!~: 95~
' ' ''

lilbeN ~attQNI Bank

~~&gt;

FROZEN FOOD VALUES

Borden

"Tiu• Frit•ntlly Run/, .,

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••

Asst. While &amp; Decorator Design

MINUTE MAID CHILlED

auto-teller windows are just some of the ways we're try-

JUMBO
ROLL

· RMELS

2% MILK ............1.1 69

you can take care of transactions as you need to. our

Mladleport,- 0 .

BOUNTY

Plastic Gal. Jug

Iorden

ttil3, Friday 9 til 3 and 5 til 7, and on Saturday 9 til12 so

POMEROY CEMENT
BLOCK CO.

bitt today. carefully conalder
what might happen llthoy tall.
Impulsiveness could ' lead you

ARIES (March Z1-Aprll 19) Be CANCER (Juno 21-July 22) This
very careful today how you Is one of those days when your
haridle things for others . .extra~agant whims could get
Mismanag,meht • ot ar1other 'a the better of you . You could
affair's could cause you frus- buy something costly you may
trating complications. ·
not truly need .
TAURUS (April 211-May 20) NortNEWSPA.PfA t:NTEIII~$! ASSN.)
m~tlly, you 're Very practical and
realistic In striking bargains.
TOday , hOwever , you mlg~t
agree to do something that w1ll
nQI be lo your ultimate advantag e.
QEMINI (lily 21-Juno 201 Make
11 a po int to take you r duties
and respon elbllltles seriously
today instead of trying to postOFFICE HOURS: 9: 30 to 12, to S !CLOSE ,AT
I)One fhinga . Rationalizing Isn 't
the answer.
ONTHURS. J - EASTCOURTST .,POMEROY .

TAVERN HAMS39

59

time and energy. And it is open Monday thru Thursday 9

BUILDING SUPPLIES FOR
HOME IMPROVEMENTS

CA PRICORN (Doc. 21-Jon. 11)

Before taking bualneu gam-

July 30-Aug. 3

auto-teller window helps ~;peed vour banking, saves you

AND
All

look lor po sit iv e alter nat ives as
well.
LI8AA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) Don 't
spend on the basis of what you
anticipate you ' ll have soon .
Commit yourself only ~o the
limits of your bank account .
SCORPIO (Oct. 2~Nov. 22)
Being too self-serving or set lis~ today where personal ambltlona are concerned will diS··
,g!t;ase -~ssoclai!!S.:. II could
even cause them to work
aga inst you .
SAGITTARIUS (Now. Z:I-Ooc.
21) Be helpful and eompas·
slonate toward othera toda y ,
but also be wlee 11 to what YCIJ
do for them . Put Hmlt a on your
generoel tv .

PEC~~'~

DEAR HELEN:
"No Way Out" has a way - through
the front doclr . Her letter brings back
old horrible memolies of the time
when I was a battered wife.
I gathered all tbe money I could
find (not much ) took my six children
and disappeared - 3,000 miles away.
Got a quickie divorce, then moved
back home a year later. I discovered
once the legal ties are broken these
violent men calm down - helped by
the fact the police are on your side.
NWO mustn't feel sorry for a nut
who sees a wife and children as someone to bat around and terrorize.
There's always a way out! -HAPPY,
HEALTHY, WHOLE

Th e De pa r tment Store
O&lt; Building
c; ~(e 1915

----1

fye.ciay, July 11

" As more people move in, they

beautiful relationship. But it can br- .
ing out the worst in a union that was
only good because neither partner
dropped the "best behavior" role long
enough to be honest with the other.
See that this doesn't happen again.
-HELEN
P.S. Note to former live-togethers,
now married : Is it the same? Is it different? Would you rather be married
than merely housemates, or vice versa' Megan (and tbe rest of us) will be
waiting to hear. -H.

-~---.......,

Ask me about
Life Insurance
forTodays
Families

NEW HEATERS
BRIGHTON, England (AP) - · The
luxury Grand Hotel has bought 40
large bedroom heaters to replace the
portable ones stolen by guests.
"We had to order ones which were .
too big to be packed and carried out in
suitcases," says Paul Boswell,
·general manager.

r.-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Monday, July 30, 19'19

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, July 30, 1!179

99~

g~

MRG•

.

'

2 LB.

.-..

~

STEAK FRIES •••••••••••.•••••••••••••• 59
.
COOL-WHIP
..........................8 ~. 69'
Banquet POT PIES .•••••••••••••• t~4/sloo

z·

a

"~ '

.

·-

"'
~'
C)
~

"'

OO· ZO·OI ,$;)

CARDINAL ~ll"

�7-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeruy 0

DICKmACY

.

' .,

Monday July 30 1979

'

Your Best Buys Are Found in the Sentin_el Classifieds
IN THE COMMON
PI.EASCOURT
JUVENII.E DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF
INFANT MAI.E WI I. T
AI.I.EGED DEPENDENT
CHII.D.
• CASE NO. 22150
Unknown father of infant
male W ilt, who cannot be
found or his post office od-

dreu ascertained and who is
the father of infant mole Wilt .
heretofore adjudged depen-

dent ct1ild, will take not ice
tl'\at a motion has been filed In
the Juvenile Court of Meigs
County , Ohio. by the Meigs
County Welfare Deportment •
requesting on order of the
court that infant mole Wilt be
committed to the permanent
custody of said Meigs Cour.ty
Welfare Department. The said
unknown father of infant mole
Wilt it hereby notifi&amp;d that if
the motion for permanent

custody Is granted he will be
permanently divested of all
parental rights and privileges

in resp.ct to the child and the
child may then be placed lor
adoption without his consent .
Said motion will be heard
on ~ t~e 28t~ day of August ,
197q , at 10:00 A. M . at the
Juvenile Court of Meigs County , Meigs County Courthouse,
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Witness my hand and the
seol of this coun this 26th dey

ol

July .
1979 .
Robert E. Buck,
Judge an ex-officio Clerk
of the Juvenile Court

17)30,1!c

WANT AD
CHARGES
IS W(lrd~ or UndN
Cash
Ch.H rge
ldlly
1.00
1.2.:1
2d&lt;tys
1.5a
1.90
ldi!ys
1.&amp;:1
U!i
6dnys
3.00
JJ~
E~tch

word uvcr t~ minimum
IS word&lt;&gt; is ~ &lt;'ent.~ per word per
d&lt;ty . Ads nmmn~ other th11n t'On·
st..,:utive tl a}':l will be cha r ij~ l at
the I day rule .
·

tn memory, Card of Tlumk.s
and Obituary : 6 ct&gt;nt.s per word,
$.100 minimum. Cash in &lt;tdvnnce .

Mobile Home li.llles and Yard
sn lt•s !Ire acc~pt~d only v.ilh
cHsh with order. 25 cent charge
for ads carryinf{ Box Number In
Ctlrc of The Scntint:l.
Tlw Publisher reserves the
right to edit or rt'jcct ar1y ad.s
dt't'mNI ob jediona l
The
Publisht'r will nut bt• rc.sfxmsible
for more them one incQrrcct in·
sert ion .

NOTICE
WANT-AD

~_DVERTISING

DEADLINES

Beverly Crouch, alleged

Daniel Crouch , who cannot
be fotmd or his post office ad·
dress
ascertained , with
reasonable diligence, and
who is the parent of Beverly
Crouch .
heretofore
ad·
iudicated. o dependent child ,
will toke notice that o complaint 'has been fi led in the
Court of Common Pleas,
Juvenile Court DiVision , Meigs
County, Ohio, by the Meigs

Robert E. Bu ck ,
Judge end u -officio Clerk
Meigs County
Juven ile Division
(7) 30, I tc

IN THE COURT Of
COMMON PlEAS
JUVENILE COUR T
DIVISON
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
In The Motter Of
Terry (rou(h aka Terri
Crouch . olleg&amp;d dependent

chi ld
CASE NO. 21867

~

'
I

t

Noti(e of Publication
Dan iel Crouch. who (onnot
be found or his post office address oscerralned , with
reasonable diligence . and
who is the parent of Terri
Crouch ,
heretofore
ad judicated a dependent child .
wil l toke notice thot a compla int has bean tiled in the
Court of Common Pleas ,
Juvenile Court Division , Meigs
County , Ohio, bv th e Meigs
County We lfare Depor tment ,
175 Race Street, Middlepor t,
Ohio, ntquesting on order of
the Court that Terri Crouch be
commit ted to the permanent
custody of the Welfare Deportment .
Said Daniel
Crouch is
hereby notified that if the
comp laint lor
permanent
cu11ody is gran ted . ·he will be
permanently divested of all
parental r ights , all privileges
in respect to the child , and the
chi ld moy th&amp;n be placed for
adoption without his consent.
Said h.aring on the com plaint
will b. held on the 28th day of
,~ ~ugust. 1979, ot ll :OOA. M. in
tM Court of Common Pleas,
Juvenile Court Division, Meigs
County , Ohio, Meigs County
Courthouse, Pomeroy , Ohio.
Witness my hand ond seal
of this court th is 26th day of

July , 1979.

c

5

Robert E. Buck ,
Judge and 8JC·officio
Clerk
Meigs County Juveni le
. Cou rt
(7) 30, " '

WANTED: SAW logs . Payment
upon delivery to our yard . 7:30
to 3:30 weekdovs . ,Blaney
Hardwoods , SR 339, Barl ow ,

Sunday
4 P.M.
Friday arternoon

GUN SHOOT, EVERY FRIDAY
7:30 PM RACINE GUN CLUB.
FACTORY CHOKE GUNS ONLY .

LOST: REO and brown female
Doberman . unclipped ears. In
Bradbury area . 992 -5983 .
FOUND: female beagle, looks
like nuning motehr. White.
block and brown. Wear ing
brown collar . 742-2860.

3 AND 4 RM furnished and unfurn ished
opts .
Phone

992·5•:M .
ONE BEDROOM opts . Contact
Village Manor , 992-7787 .

GOING OUT of business. All
poodles ,
pomeranian ,
pekinese, block pom puppy
greot coot line. Phone 696-111
after 5pm.

GERMAN SHEPARD puppies .

949-2381.

For Sale
COAL,
LIME STONE, sand ,
grovel, calcium chloride. fertilizer . dog food . and all types
of salt . Excelsior Salt Works ,
Inc. , E. Main St. , Pomeroy ,

992-3891 .
VERMEER BALER Soles , parts
and service. Balers in stock tor
immediate delivery. Phone

H2-2877 or 7•2-2152.
FORD
itres.

DIESEL tractor . New
Excellent cond ition .

7•2-2228 or 7•2·2832 .
RUTLAND
HARDWARE
742-2255. One 40 gol. Mar-Flo
auto. gas woter heater, glen
lined, fuel saving, $120. Vani ty cabinet with marble top
with faucets ond pop-up, drain
and supply lines , $9q .9S. One
double bowl sink with faucets ,
$69.96. Special Sole - Roofing.90 lb. roll white , green ,
block granule. $13. 10. 57 lb .

roll block . $9 .55 . 5 gal. asphalt
roofing

plain

or

fobroted .

$8 .30
EIGHT WEEK old pigs. Phone
2·7-2161.
SPINET· CONSOLE
Piano .
Wonted: res.ponsible porty to
toke over low mon t hly
payments on spinet piano.
Con be seen locally. Write
credit monoger: PO Bo.c 537 ,

Shelbyville, IND •6176.
POTATOES AT the C.W. Proffitt Form, Portland OH . Prices
change day to day with the
market .
LARGE· REG . Hereford bull
horn&amp;d . 992 -7752 after 5:30

pm.

1979 7 1/ , h.p. Mercury outboard motor, new. 1971 Chevy
Malibu , 2-door. 247·3941 after

992.2897 .

4.

FOUR ROOM opt. East Main
St ., Pomeroy . 992-3860.

40" G'E. electric rnago , white .
4 burner with deep well
cooker: clock and timer. Coli

GiveAway

992-7067 .
USED AUTOMATIC Whirlpool

CALICO FEMALE cot , 3 kittens .
One block and white , 1 gray
and White. I calico. 992-S \88 .
GREAT DANE male, ton color,
bery young , gentle but very
Iorge . Needs special home.
Humane Society . 992-7600.

washer . Good condi tion. Also
18 in. AMF c~ild 's bicy cle , ex cellent condition. 949·2065 .
1977 KAWASAKI KZ 750 with
wind jammer. 2900 miles. Ex cel lent condition . 992·3453 .
THREE WHEEL bicycle. never
used . Con be seen ot Bradford's Used Furniture Store ,
ne)(t ot Racine Post Office .

949-2000 or 949-2487 .

Mobile Homes Sale's
197. I•

X

70 mobile home.

Good
condi tion .
992-5858.

$7800 .

1965 GENERAL60x 12 , 2 bedr .

Help Wanted
LIGHT PICKUP and dell&gt;~ery in
local area . Cor needed . Call
Mr . Mar tin , 614-446· 7107 .

1970 Sylva. 60x 12 , 2 bed1 .
1970Caotle, 60x12 . 2 bed• .

TELEPHONE EVENING oales .

1974 Mark line, SOx\2, 2 bedr ,

6-9

pm . Call

Mr. Finateri ,

1969Valiont,
6 -~7=10:7:.:=====~
1967 Notional 12x60,
, 12)(50,2 2bedr.
bedr. r~-6~1=4=··=·=

Auctions
BIG AUCTION ellery Wad., 7
pm . Hartford Commun i ty
Canter, Hertford, WV , 4 miles
above
Pomeroy · Moson
Bridg&amp;.

Services Offered
NOW HAULING limestone in
Middleport-Poemrov
area .
Cotl f or
free estimate .

367-7101.

DUTTON DRUGS
Middleport, Ohio
PAINTING AND 5ondblosting.
Free estimates. Call 949- 2686.

POMEROY
LANDMARK
H&amp;adquar1ers for
Hotpoint and
General Electric
Appliances
Sales &amp; Service

SALE PRICES

~

Jack

-··

Mgr .
Phone992 -2181

BOARD ,

Elderly

ori ly.

SAI.ES AGENT
WANTED
Nationally known ct lend•r
m•nuf1cutrin9 comp.ny can
use a with!·JIWJike self sl,uter lor
lull or parttlm@ work . We need a
Silles oriented mu or woman to
sell our e•cluslve line of Clten ders ilnd our utensive line ol
adw~rtising
speci• lliu to
Wslnenes who use ildwerllslng
promotions JIAd bu siness tilts .
The Thos. D. Murphy Co. is a
.PiOn@er in the advertislnglleldstnce 11U. Your 1ccounts are
crotect~ .
commissions .are
mong the mostluuttve In the in dustry . We 're inleresiKI II YOU
itre Citpitble ol being on y11ur own
.and car~ worlc with il minimum
of super'llsion. Write Ptt Murphy, Sales Manater, THe Thos .
0. Murphy Co., RHI 0111, Iowa

laund•y .

Reasonable.

992-6022 .
Real Estate for Sa Ie
TWO STORY 3 bedroom Mouse .
3 lots . Now' s your chance if
you need o house. S12.000.
Owner
willing to
talk .

992-2082 or U2·2328.
REAL ESTATE: I ocre lot in Riggscrest Manor, between Tuppers Plains and Chester.

STORY
!-louse
in
Pomeroy. 6 rooms and both .
992-5621 after 6.

Will Make Service Calls

651 Beech Street
Middlep.o rt,

In Pomeroy , this large
brick is pr iced far below
lair market value. 10
rooms ; 5 bedrooms, 2
baths, formal dining
room , large liv i ng room ,
library , large rec . room
in attick . many , many

features. WOULD YOU
BELl EVE - $58,900.00.
NEW 1.1 STI N.G 2
f amily in Syracuse, live
in one, rent the other, 2
story brick ; 2 kitchens.
2 baths , good invest ·
ment for the future .

$28,000.00 .
E X C E I. I. E N T
NEIGHBORHOOD
Middleport, l'h stor y
remodeled home ; 3
bedrooms, garage, fenc ed yard, good condition .

FUTURE

NOW : With this nice
home in Syracuse. 3
bedrooms, basement,

double lot . Should VA or
FHA . Exce ll ent condi-

tion . $26.800.00.
ACREAGE IN

TOWN

- Good 1 floor plan
home, 3 bedrooms,
basement , fruit trees,

garden. A STEAL .
$25.000.00.
MOBILE
HOME
- Fully equipped kit ·

992-2259

992 ·6191

HOUSE FOR sole in Rutland . 3
bedroom, , both, utility room,
dining oreo , 21 K 13 livi ng
r oom , 12 )( 21 family room 1
lots of cabinets in kitchen and
5 I( 7 pan try . Metal building
outside' Lot 100 x: 240 out of
high water on quiet street.
phone 7-42 -2420.
MODERN Brick home on 5,23
acres . in letart Towns hip .
Three bedroom&amp;, living room ,
dining room kitchen , garage
and carport. Three, 10 feet by
60 teet greenhouses. one pole
shed. 30 feet by 40 feet .
$60.000 . May be seen by appointment , co ll 61 A-247·3752.

RESTAURANT AND ba•. D-1

992·3069 .

ond D· 2 license included . 3
acres . and house , Good
bu siness oppor tunit y. Coli

11/ t ACRE WITH 1975 12 "65 3
bed room trailer . Tuppers
Pla ins area . 614·667 -3305 .

Sl)( ACRES . 7 room house. 3
bedr oom. If interes ted , cell

30"-927-1568.
COMMERCIAL BUILDING lo,
sole. 59 N . 2nd Ave ., Middleport . O H. Formerly occupied by Dudley's Florist . ApproJC , 5000 sq. h . on 2 floors .
$16,000 . Owner may help
finance. Col\ 304·485 -1631 or
30-4-485-2154 , osk for Peyton .

f92 -JJ2S

LITTI.E FARM -

Th is

is for t he gardener .
Young
fruit ,
small
stream. barn and 2 ca r
garage . 7 room home,
drilled well , ce ll ar and

on Slate Rt.
REAL BUY family

A large

home in

good

condition.
3
or
4
bedroom s, 2 baths, full

basement, and

2 car

garage on large lot.

NEAR TOWN - Corner
lot with nice 3 bedroom

frame home, bath, nat.
gas furnace , glassed
front porch, eat -in kit -.
chen, a 3 room apt .,
garage and carport.
bedroom car.peled one

floor plan hom e. Bath ,
utility, porches, &lt;jar age
and large garden _

OPPORTUNITY
Rent the 2 trai ler spaces
and
I ive in the 4
bedroom hom e.
l'h
baths, garage and river
view .

INVEST

-

3

r oom

business bldg _ very
cheap
for a sma ll
business .

OFFICES - One fl. of 7
rms ., insulated, th er mopane windows , tii P fl.
Ollio Power, ci ty water,
and air conditioned .

BUY NOW. FIX UP
AND MOVE BEFORE
WINTER.
CALL
992-n25 .

19 ACRES , 5 room house . CR

26 . 247·3 11&gt;4 .
FOUR BEDROOM . both . livi ng·
dining on ]/• acre lo t in
Rutland. Utility building. Call

742-2754 .

HOBSTETTER
REALTY
PHONE 742-2003

WEST RUTLAND -

3

bed room home w i th
modern kitchen, family
room , uti lity room and
1h basement. The larg e
li ving room is finished
with pine lumber and
has a stone fireplace .
The re 's a two car
de tac hed garage with
work space. Situated on
1.7 acres. Ca ll for more
info.

PRICE REDUCED -

216 E. Second Street

litnv'svllle, Ohio
614 ·Ut-dU E'lenlngs
2 Miles E.;st of Wilkesv ille
SUPER
GOOSE
STOCI&lt;
TRAILER NOW AVAILABlE .

S 1 mo

-

Auto &amp; Truck.
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992·5682
4·30-tf c

CAROL'S STORY A!!OUT THAT RUNAWAY TEEfJ·
AI!IE HEIRESS SENDS EASY TO A RU~AWAY
YOUTH SHHTER IN NE'W YORK CITY ... .
REVIH~Et-ID
GOOCH~

Owner wants to relocate
so we are offering this
home at
a
very
. reasonable pri ce. Home
ha s 3 bedrooms. living
room , modern kitchen ,
laundry room and it has
al uminum siding_ It has
flower gardens, fruit
trees and a nice view of
t he river . Located on

East Main St. Only
$29,500.00 .
1975
BE RR I NGTON
24'x52' mobile home. 3
bedrooms, 2 balhs,
beautiful kitchen, living
room and din i ng area .
Si tuated on 10 acres, l'h
miles out of Salem
C~nter .
Priced
at

$37,500.00 .
POMEROY -

Large 2

story home with ex ·
cellent river view . This
home . has J spacious
bedrooms, living room ,
sitting room,
d i ning
room , sun room and full
ba sement wi th shower.
Outstanding oak trim

throughout. Sel ls for on ·
,ly $28,000.00 .
WE NEED I.ISTINGS!!
Call us loday and
discuss our listing con -

tracl. We'll be glad to
help.
Cheryll.emley, Assoc.
Phone 742·2(103

Hillon Wolfe, Assoc.
Phone 949·2589
GeorgeS. Hobsleller Jr.
Braker 992 -5739
FOR SALE by owner: remodeled 4 bedroom, 2 storv house,
firepl ace . full basement ,
9 A cres. Tuppers Plains·
Chester wa ter, trees, garden ,
fru it , born , po sture with good
lonco-wator , on Stote Route 7
in Tuppr• rs ~'l o in!. , easy walk
!o church,
sotre, school.
Shown by appoin tment .
614 -667 -3271
after 6pm .

$48.000'

l'M HOPtfJG YOU .
CAN HELP ME FIND
A MIS51~6 61RL ..A~D
RESTORE HER TO HER
PARE~T!i'l HER:
NAME 'S FL055Y
FOLLETT!

HOW 'THE &amp;ADMAN
EVADED THE NOOSE
Now arrange the circled letters to

form I he surprise answer, as sug gested by the above cartoon.

THE( X l

AnswerhBrs:

I

)WAS(

Ill J

(Answers tomorrow)

BOB'S GENERAL
CONTRACTING

N. L Construction

eNEWHOMES
e ROOM ADDITIONS
eROOFING
eVINYI. SIDING
eGUTTER &amp; SOFFIT

WORK, GENERAl

Phone 992 ·6323
Free Estimates

7-25 ·1 mo. pd.

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

CALL
992-2772

BLOCK &amp; BRICK

CONTRACTOR
Rt. 3
Pomeroy, Ohio

992·5547
'
1·25 ·2 mo.

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

Salurday'sl Ju(llbles: HAVOC

New Home
Construction
Extensive Remodeling
GREG ROUSH
Pbone 992-7583

992-2282
7-5·1 MO.

NORTH
+ K J 53

BORN LOSER

fXJI otJ MY
&lt;&gt;TR6t;T,
llUN \I.OJ'T I

'lbU'~ fl..

Vinyl and Aluminum

Real Estate !.Dans
Purchase

Siding

C:HAALI E:.

Call far a Free Siding
Estimale, '149·2101 or
949·2860. No Sunday
calls.
6-10 mo .

30 Year Terms
A-No money down
(eligible veterans J

FHA- AS

Cellulosic (Wood fiber)
Thermal Insulation
Save 30 pet . to SO pel.
on healing casl
Experience and
fully Insured
Free Esl .
Call992-2772
5·17·1 mo.

WI"Tll
IT'?

77 E . State, Athens

592-3051

· 4-23 ·1 mo .

BRADFORD, Auctionnr , Complete Service. Phone 949-:2487
or 9•9-2(XX). Rac ine , Ohio ,
Critt Bradford .

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers. tocsters , irons . all
small opplionces . lawn moer ,
ne)(f lo State Hig.,woy Garage
on Route 1 , 985-38:25.
SEWING MACHINE Repairs ,
service, all makes , M-228A .
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service. We thorpen Scllson .
EXCAVATING , dozer , loader
and backhoe work ; dump
trucks and lo-boys for hire,
will haul fill dirt, top soil ,
limestone and gra'ole/. Call Bob
or Roger Jaffer&amp;: day phone

992 · 7089 .
night
phone
m -3525 or 992-5232 .
EXCAVATING .

daze, ,

backhoe and dltcher, Charles
R. Hotiield . Black Hoe Service,
Rutland. Ohio. Pone 742-2008.

Yard Sale
YARD SAlE at James Swain'•
on CR 28 above Eo1tern High
Sc~ool. July 13 and 14 from 9
to? Everything imoglnoble.

Mick's
Barber&amp;
Style Center
Introduces-

MAHI\ MORA
HAIR STYliST
Fe,.,turing :

992·2367
Pomeroy, 0 .

Main St .

710·1mo.

AUTOMOBILE

boys ta 2 toddle•) and much

been cancel/~? Lost vour
operators
licente? Phon•

m · 21•3 .
E-C ELECTRICAL Conuoctor
serving O~io Valley rE-gion .
SiJC days o w . .k , 24 hours ser vice . Emers-ncy calls . Coli

8112-2952 or 8112-:M5.&lt;.
HOWERY AND MARTIN h -

Solea. Inc. 992-572&lt; .
ADO ONS and , remodeling .
gutter work , down spouts,
tome concrete work , wailea
and
drivewayt
( free
estimate) . V.C. Young Ill ,
Racine , OH. 949-2748 and

m -731• .
WILL HAUL llmellone and
grovel. Also , lime hauling and
tpreodlng. Phone742·2455.

West

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIF.
A RfAL ~TRIOT .. ·RtSKIN ' HIS
LIFE FOR All OF US HER F. ···
l WOND£R HOW "'ANY FOLKS
' PRE Ct"'-TE A GUY LII(E "DADDY ."

1977 PALOMINO FOLD down.
Folds up to 22 ft _ Like new.
742-2336.
1976 STARCRAFT FOLD down
camper. Sleeps

sl)(. SUOO.

7•2·297-'-8_. - - ---'----

time .' '
Oswa ld:

"T hi s

winners were

East

I+

Pa~s

South
1+

4+

Pass

2+

Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass

year's

Kit Woolsey

and Ed Manfield of Washington . One of the best young
pairs in the world who really
played well but, of course ,
had to have luck also."
Alan : " This hand is really
simple. We just showed it to
illustrate how this tourna-

+K

ment is scored.' •

By Oswald Ja~oby
and Alan Sontag

ment

You hold :

Smith Nelson
Motors, ·Inc.
Ph. 992 -2174·

A COUPLE

Porrierov

A ·2
9 A 2

e KJ865

+ K Q 54

is now history . Here is

A New Mexico reader asks

If we open this 17 high-eard
point hand with one
notrump.
No, we don't We never

open notrump with 5+2·2
distribution.
( NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE' i\SSN . '

(For a copy of JACOBY MODERN , send S1 lo: " Win al
Bridge , " c are of th is newspaper, P.O . Box 489, Radio City
Station. New York , N. Y. 10079.)

gave him and his partner an

USED ~ARDEN
·TRACTORS
AND
RIDING MOWERS
St. Rt. 7
North of Chesler, 0 .
Phone 91H202
6·2•-1 mo. pd .

C. R. MASH
VINYL &amp;AWM.

SIDING
•New Home
*Addons
•Remoldlngs
*Free estimates

ROOFING, ROOF repair end
tiding. other maintenance. E&amp;
R Roo!lng
and
Siding .

61 '-388-8860 Of 61•-388-8797 '

~·""'

AnLJthinq
excitinq
in the
old
Wallet
fam il4
papers,
Walt?

MLJ ancestors

seem to have
left nothinq
but bills!

WINNIE
WI~INIE

-'t4SA HEART-70-HEART
li'lLK WITH WENDY.

YE S~ I DUMPED AN AWRJL
LOT OF RE5PON5151LI1Y

IN YOUR LAP WHEN I
TOoK OFF "THE WAY

I DIO... ANPYOU
CAME TNRf){/611

OF COU I&lt;:5E, YOU C0(/1.0
U ~E A FEW LESSONS
IN HUMA.N RELATIONS
ANO HUMiLITY ...

I!&gt;UT

1l'EN AGAIN,

NO ONE'S

PERFECT,
E:H 1 MOM ?

APMI~LY.I

Nolgler , 9•9-2508.
ANN'S CAKE Decorating Suppl iel . 50716 Osborn Rd ..
Reedsville, OH .c5n2 . For Information coi l. 667 -6..485 . Wlfl
be open late If you need
tomething,

BARNEY

TALK ABOUT
FAST FOOD··

i

THAT'S TH' FASTEST

DADBURN FOOD I
EVER SEEN 1!

ACROSS
I Actor Vigoda
4 Concerning
A.M.
II Golf or
sleeping 12 Time in
history
13 Actress,
Mary14 Gave' off
vapor
15 Harangue
l7 Time period
18 One kind of
geometry
21 Resting on
24 Soldier's
memento
28 Fell affection for
30 Stop
31 Swiftly
32 Hotel
section
33 Vestige
36 Equal :
prefix
39 Dried up
43 Bonanza's
Ben Cart·
wright, e.g.
tGDanish
money
n Set into
motion
48 Comic-strip
exclamation
49 Soup
ingredient
so Guido's
note

zActress,
Lynn-

tributary
4Err
S Soviet
commune
&amp;Type Of

AND UP
CASH &amp;CARRY

dance
7 Pig - poke

Yesterday's Auswer

8 EntiUe
9 Word with
teen

23 Eggs

36 Oil-rich

ZS Scheduled

natioo
37 Maine town
38 Aware of
40 Leak out
slowly
41 Soviet
mountains
42Unwoven
cloth
UChew

21 Boob
27 Branch of
the Rhine
River

10 Mother
of Castor
I&amp;' Phase
19 Prankish
child
20 Make
soundproof
21 According
to
22 Exceed

29 The:
Ger.
34 Mountain
crest
3S "Pack
up aU

your - .. . "

45 Late
March

".

...

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how
AXYDLBAAXR

SALE ON All CARPET IN STOCK

RUTLAND FURNITURE
A'utland,

II

to work

it:

LONGFELLOW

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the Lwo O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Eaeh day lhe code letters are different.

PEANUTS

CRYPTOQUOTES

! 1-lEARD

SOMETHING

MV

PROMISE ..

EIPDRJ

Aeovr A

M

I :JG-As The World Turns 8,10;
Poldark 33; One Life To Live
6,13 ; 2:25-News 17.
2: JD-Another World 3,15; Guiding
l.ighl 8,10; I Love Lucy 17;
James Michener's World 33.
3:00-General Hospllal 6,13; Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 20; Infinity FActory
17.
3:3D-Mash 8; Joker's Wild 10;
Banana Spills 17; Crockett's
Victory Garden 20; Time for
Music 33.
4: 00-Mister Cartoon 3; Hollywood
Squares 1S; 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; Parlrldge Family 17.
5:00-Bonanza 3; Beverly Hillbillies.
8; Mister Rogers 20,33; Gomer
Pyle 10; Six Million Dollar Man
13; Brady Bunch IS ; Star Trek
17.
5 :3D-News 6; Pelllcoat Junction 8;
Elec. Co. 20; Mary Tyler Moore
10; Odd Couple IS ; Doctor Who
33.
6:00-News 3,8,10,13,15; ABC News
6: Studio See 33: Family Affair
"
17; Villa Alegre 20.
6 :3(),-NBC News3,15; ABC News 13;
Andy Griffith 6; CBS News 8,1Q;
Over Easy 20,33; Father Knows
Besl 17.
7:00-Cross-Wits 3; · Newlywed
Game 6,13; Please Stand By 8;
News 10; Love American STyle
15; Get Smart 17: Dick Cavett
20.33.
7: JG-Hoilywood Squares 3; Candid
.Camera 6; Gong Show 8; Price Is
Right 10; Donna Fargo 13;
'"
Abboll &amp; Costello 15; Baseball
17; MacNeil -Lehrer Report 20,33.
8:00-Runaways 3, )5: Happy Days
6,13;
Pilot "The
Dooley
Brothers" 8, 10; Austin City
... I
Limits 20; City Notebook 33.
.'
S :JG-Det~tlve School 6,13; Movie
'11 "1
"Rollerball" 8,10; Two Ronnles
33.
9:00-Movle "Final Crash" 3,15;
Three's Company 6,13; Movie
· "Harlan County. U.S.A." 33;
'".J
Hamler Summerlest 1978 20.
' ·o
9:30-Taxl 6, 13 ; IO : Oo-Barbara ·
).
Walters 6,13; America 17; News
20; IO :JG-Lock Stock &amp; Barrel
. .'
20.
11 : 00- News 3,6,8,10,13,15; Dick
Cavett 20; New Soupy Sales 17;
Book Beat 33 .
'
II : 3D-Johnny Carson 3,15; Movlt
"Cabaret" 6,13; Barnaby Jones
8 ; ABC News 33; Movie
.7
" Homecoming" 10; Movie
" Hercules Against the Bar·

.,

DOWN

I K J

LFXKNXEN

.
CALL 742·2211 TALK TO
Wendell or Herb Grate or Gene Smith

News 6,10;

Password IS ; Young &amp; the
R Eslless 8: 0-.r Easy 33;
Midday Magazine 13; Love
American STyle 17.
12 :3G-Ryan's Hope 6,13 ; Search lor

JJ,

3 Elbe

I Border on

AND UP
Installed and Pad FREE

12 :0Q--Newscenter 3;

Only IS; Movie "Those Redheads
from Seallle" 17; MacNell l ,e hrer Reporl 33.
1 :OD-Oays of Our Lives 3,15; All My
Children 6,13; News 8; Young &amp;
the Restless 10; Dancing Disco

by THOMAS JOSEPH

NEIGLER Construction. For
building good houses and doIng repair work . Coli Guv

'995

TUESDAY,JULY31,1979
Reporl 13; 5:5D-PTI.
Club 13; World al Large 17;
5: S~Summer Semester 10.
6 :00-700 Club 6,8; PTL Club IS;
6 : IQ-News 17; 6 :25-Concerns &amp;
Comments 10.
6 :3G-Dragnet 17: 6:45-Mornlng
Report 3; 6:50-Good Morning
West Virg inia 13; 6:55-Chuck
While Reporls 10; News 13.
7:00-Today 3,15; Good Morning
America 6,13; Schoolles 10;
Three Stooges-Lillie Rascals 17;
7: Is-A.M . Weather 33.
7 :3D-Famlly Affair 10; Lilias Yoga
&amp; You 33.
8: OD-Capt. Kangaroo 8,10; Lassie
17 ; Sesame Sl 33.
8 :JG-Romper Room 17; 9:00-Bob
Braun 3; Phil Donahue 13,15; Big
Valley 6; Love of Life 10; Lucy
Show 17; Biography 33.
9:3D-Sanford &amp; Son 8; Hogan's
Heroes 10; Green Acres 17.
IO :OD-Card Sharks 3,15; Dating
Game 13; Movie "Lady from
Louisiana" 17; Paint Along wllh
Nancy Kominsky 33.
IO:JG-AII Star Secrets 3,15; $20,000
Pyramid 13; Bewilched 6; Whew
8,10; Consumer Survival Kit 33.
10 :5s-CBS News 8; House Call 10.
11 :OD-High Rollers 3.15; Laverne &amp;
Shirley 6,13; Price Is Right 8,10;
Biolgraphy 33.
II: 30-Wheel of Fortune 3,15;
Family Feud 6,13; 11 :55-News
5 : 4~Farm

Tomorrow 8, 10; Not For Women

992·6011
7· 12

7 :30-Thal Nashville Music 3;
Muppet Show6; Price Is Right 8;
Wild Kingdom 10; $1.98 Beauly
Show 13 ; Nashville On The Road
IS: My Three Sons 17; MacNeilLehrer Report 20,33.
8 :00-LIIIIe House on The Prairie
3,15; Baseball 6,13 ; While
Shado,w 8,10; Bill Moyers
Journal 20,33; Movie "Fools" 17.
9 :oo-.Movle "The Rafn People"
· ·'3,15; Mash 8,10; Sp(llelo '79 20;
Murder Mosl English 33.
9 :3D-WKRP In Cincinnati 8,10 ;
Spoleto '79 20.
10: OD-Lou Grant 8.10; Pal dark 33;
Ascent of Man 17; News 20.
IO :JD-Like II Is 20; 11 :OD-News
3,4,6,8,10, 1'3,15; Dick Cavell 20;
New Soupy Sales 17; Book .Beat
33.
II :3D-Johnny Carson 3,15; Pollee
Story 6,13; Rockford Flies 8:
ABC News 33; Movie "A Dandy
In Aspic" 10: Movie "Little Boy
Lost" 17.
12: 4Q-Movle "To Please A Lady" 8;
1:00-Tomorrow 3; News 1S.
I : 3D-Movie "Law of the Lawless"
17: 1:4G-News 13; 3:3G-News
17; 3:5ll-Open Up 17.

17.

wrong and were minus 100.
Peter and I were East and
West and our opponent was
one of the successful six . It

TIUIS

7-30-8

e

the one simple hand from
it"
Alan : "Everyone got to
four spades. (.!:very declarer
lost Lwo clubs and a heart.
Six declarers picked up the
queen of diamonds and
sco red plus 620. Four went

•4••

742·2211

winning game and s lam contracts . Jim Jacoby, another

Oswald : "The fifth
Cavendish invitation tourna -

GOOD SELECTION OF
CUSHION VINYL
camping Equipment

the wrong side of too many

£ormer winner. and Swanson
and Fox, wh'o won last year,
were also well back this

North

Opening lead :

RadlatQr·,..--.-,
Servlc•

RUBBERBACK CAR!ET

on Old Rt , 143, south of Jack's
Cote. Reasonable /rices on
new toys,
goo
school
clothing and much more.
Follow th signs to gr~KJt
bargains .

+QB
+109643

Vulnerable : Both
Dealer : North

CALL 992·7544
7-8 · 1 mo.

SAVE ON CARPET
DRIVE A LITTLE
SAVE A LOT

NIGHT YARD Sole. Wod., Aug.

GARAGE SALE. July 30 · Aug.
• · 9-5. Located off Rt. 7 Bypou

syttems .
Rf. 14J .

IN STOCK for immediate
delivery: variOus sizes of pool
kits . [)o. it- your..lf or let us
install for you . D. Bumgardner

YARD SALE. July 30 th•u Au9.

+642

• 87

Hours 9-1 M ., w_, F .
Other times by appoint-

Phono I (6 .. ) 698-7331 or
7•2-2593 .

3. Union Ave. , close toRt. 7.
Salt and pepper and Avon bottfe collection , misc .

1st. 5 ta 9pm . . Thurs .. Aug .
2nd , I Oam to 3pm. 378 Second
St ., Pomeroy , OH.

INSURANCE

covoting. septic
dozer, backhoe .

EAST
+ 97
•K743

SOUTH
+ AQ864
• 10 5
+ A 10 9 3

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

PULLINS EXCAVATING . Complete Service. Phone 992-2-478 .

YARD SALE' Aug. I, 2, 3. Dally

more. Phone 985-3519 .

&amp;

styling,

perms.
Call for appt . or wane in _

WE'RE HAVING a yard sole onJuly 27 and 28 from 8 till 6 at
488 South 4th .Ave. In Middleport.
8-8, Roln or shine. One mile
nort~ of Chester on State
Route 7. Turn left onto CR 8:2 .
One mile. Watch for signs.
lots. of furniture , boby Items,
clothing, (mens . womens and

men' s

only two-time winners of this
tough, re3Uy expert event . "
Peter: 11 Ves, we were on

WEST
• 10 2
•QJ98

+AKJ2

3%

IRElAND
MORTGAGE CO.

women •s

just out of the top ten this
year. A bad result for the

J 75

• Q5

down (non -veterans)

J&amp;L

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE

low as

+K

minus

and Peter Weichsel were

• A 6 2

WHf&gt;..T'&lt;; 1/1:1 HA.VI~
TWO WIVBS EOf
TOOO

corresponding

48."
Oswald: "I see why you

7,10-A

E~PERIENCED

and

Refinance

BISSEll
SIDING CO.

BlbOT,

Veterans Admin. Loar1s.

Pomeroy,O.

IN.FIRM

IMP score of plus 48 and us
the

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING
Federal Housing &amp;

ment.
107Sycamore (Re•rl

LAVISH

Scoring tournament games

4·5·tf c

CONSTRUCTION

FAIRY

Answer : This f ilm has a good finish-VAA .NISH

949·2862'-949·2160

ROUSH

6-6 ·1 mo.

H. L Writesel
Roofing

chen , central air , wOOd
burning
fireplace,

12x60 ·1972 Indy . Reduc ·
ed 57,900 .00 .
WE NEED HOMES $40,000 PRICE RANGE
FOR 3 QUALIFIED
BUYERS.
REAL TORS

rLOUJYb
_) (]
IBUCHYBI

Rutland .

21l20 Monttomer'r Rd.

4

I I I 1]

l '4 mite off Rt. 1 by -pass
on Sf . Rt. 124 toWard

TRAILER SALES

72SI mo.

NEW LISTING - TRU ·
LY A CLASS HOME -

•

Roger Hysell
Garage

MONTGOMERY

0.

992· 2356

HOUSE FOR sole near Meigs
Mines . 742- 2228.

367-0557 .

Reynolds'
Electric Motor
18 Years Experience

608 E.
MAIN
POMFROY . O .

MONDAY, JULY 30,1979

Business Services
Shop

DUPLEX , 6 rooms and both
eocl-l floor. Cool or gas heat.
Full basement , goroge. Lorge
lot. 415 W. Main , Pomeroy .

Phone 985-3929 and 985-4129.

SIW .

WANTED: THREE style cons cience women needed to conduct fashion shows , locol
work but will require use of
cor. Coli for appointment. In
home interviewing . ~2 - 7054
or 992-39-41 .

rwo

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

w. Cars ey

ROOM ,

Real Estate for Sale
REAL ESTATE loons. Purchase
and refinance . JO Year terms ,
VA . No monev down {eligible
veterans) . FHA - As low os 3
per cent down (non-ve terans ).
Ireland Mortgage Ca., 77 E.
Stole, Athens . 614 -592-3051.

$25.000.00.
START A

TIMEX
REPAIR
SERVICE

OUT ATHENS WAY - 2

B'S MOBILE HOMLSALELPJ
PLEASANT, WV . ]().j - 675 - •~2~ .
LITERARY AWARDS
NEW YORK (AP) Fourteen authors will
receive the 1979 awards for ·
excellence in literature,
given by the American
Academy and Institute of
Arts and Letters, Mlly 23.
Eight writers will get a
$4,000 award. They are
critic-journalist Arlene
Croce; novelist Barry Han·
nah; novelist and short·
story writer James Mc·
Conkey; writer Robert M.
Pirsig ; teacher and critic
Richard Poirier, and poets
Jolm N. Morris , Philip
Schultz and Dave Smith.
The winners of six
special a wards are J ~ph
Caldwell , Bruce Chatwin,
Wallace Fowlie , Richard
Gilman, Diane Jolmson,
a nd James Still.

Don't JUSt be samfted wltt1 a
JOB - Plan NOW tor a Professtanat career Ortvtng a " Btg
Rtg " We are a Prtvate Tramtng
School and tf vou meet our
Qualifications you Will be train ed by Profe55ton al In structors
on modern equipment Tratn
on a Part Ttme basts ISa t. &amp;
Sun .) and Keep your JOb, or
attend our 3 week Full Ttme
Resu:ient Tratntng .

ding . Call367-0292.

992-6022 .

2A7-262A .

IY7J'.'

quuf('J h\· the U.S. Vept (If
l.obu•. Bureau ur Labo r stallf·
rin. bulletin r\'u. 1875.

HOOF HOLLOW. EngHoh ond

SIX FOOT Deerborne rear
mounted ower and o set of 2
bottom 14" Deerborne Ford
plows . and s.Haw. 985-4271 .

SIX PUPPIES. port boogies .

$18,300

Pets for sa Ie

TWO ROOM apartment .
Private bath. All utilities paid.
First floor private enHance.
Also , sleeping room for rnet .
22 FOOT CAMPING trailer for
I person in Syracuse. Utilities.

oj about

PARKERSBURG
(304) 424-6413

Lost and Found
FOUND : WHITE female kitten,
angora with white fleo collar.
13 weeks old. Powell 's Parking lot, Pomeroy. 992-3760.

Ol'('ragt' &lt;'arniiiK~·

Trorror Trailer Tru111i11g. Inc

MUST SELL Two 3 year quarter
horse geldings, 1 Appaloosa
more-4 and pony. All ore sentie and well broken . Excellent
horses. Coll992-6162.

Notices

tmrkin~ mmf'al/ies hac) anrr11al

f&lt; t'IHI

OH. 678-2980.

GOING OUT of business . All
p ood le s,
pomeronian ,
pekinese, bloc~ pom puppy ,
great coot line . Phone
696-1111 after Spm.

County Welfare Deportment,
Auto Sales
175 Race Street, Middlepor t,-.·-·
Ohio, requesting dn order of ·197.4 VEGA HATCHBACK, coli
the CoUrt that Beverl y Crouch 303·675· 1501 or 305·675-2488
be committed to the per- or 304-675· 1553.
1973 TRUCK V.. ton Int. , 50,000
monent ,custody
of the
miles , 6 cy l. , heovv duty , fi)(ed
Welfare Deportment :
lor dual wheels . Trade.
Soid
Daniel Croucl-l is
Rutland Hardware.
hereby notified that if the
1977 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS
complaint lor p&amp;rmonent
Supreme 350. A .C.. P.S.. P.B..
custody is granted, he will be
tilt wheel. 29,000 miles . Askpermanently dives ted of all
ing $3800 or $2400 and older
parental rights , all privi leges
cot. 992 -3625.
in respect to the child , ond the ·1969 MACH I. 96,000 M;les .
chi ld. moy then be placed for
Good to e)(cellent condition .
adoption without his consent. $3000 firm . 992.5544 .
Said hearing on the complaint
197S NOVA 350 • ·door. 30.000
will be ~eldon the 28th day of
miles .
E:.: cellent
shape .
614-667-3305.
August , 1979, ot 11 :00 A.M . in
the Court of Common Pleas,
Juvenile Court Division , Meigs
For Rent
County , Meigs County Cour·
thouse , Pomeroy , Ohio.
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Pork,
Witness my hand and seal
Route 33, north of Pomeroy.
la rge lots. Call W2 -7479.
of tl1 is court this 2blh day of

July , 1q79 .

OLD COINS, poclo:et watches ,
doss rings , wedd ing bonds ,
diamonds . Gold or sih.. er. Call
J. A. Wamsley . 742-2331.

1\u:sd;w

- --"'===='--

f

OLD FURNITURE . ice bo)(es ,
brass beds . iron beds, desks ,
etc. . complete households .
Writ&amp; M .D. M iller, Rt. A ,
Pomeroy or coli 992-7760.

POODLE GROOMING . Judy
Toylor. 61•·367-7220.

4P.M.

" Dril•t•r s

OJ

Monda\'
Noun on SatUrday

I he dCiy before public:Jtion

independenl child
CASE NO. 21~66
NOTICE OF
PUBLICATION

992-26fl9 .

RISING STAR Kennel . Boor-

thru Frid-oy

IN THE COURT OF
COMMON PI.EAS
JUVENII.E COURT
DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF

CHIP WOOD. Poles mow .
diameter 10" on largeST end .
$12 per ton , Bundled slob. $10
per ton . Delivered to Ohio
Pollet Co., Rt . 2. Pomeroy .

Western .
Saddles
and
harness . Horses and ponies .
Ruth Reeves . 6 U - 698 - 3~0 .
Bording &amp; Riding Lessons and
Horse Core products .

Phone992-2i:ie

I NSTRUCTION
emPiu,rt·J hy large .

Wanted to Buy

Television
Viewing

EDYYXXJXJ

IKGX
ZKH

TXXH
NIX

M
NIX

APFRJ

...
".

...
.

..

barlan" 17.

IKE

o.

UHPAH.- HKWPRXPH

VMFEN

Yesterday's Cryptoquote: A GROUCH ESCAPES SO MANY
LITTLEANNOYANCES THAT IT ALMOST PAYS TO BE t&gt;NE.
- KIN HUBBARD

12:4Q-Movle "Mrs. Pollllax Spy" 8;
I : 00-Tomorrow 3; News 13.
I :3D-Baseball 17; 2:00-News 13;
4:00-News 17; 4:2G-Movle
''lawless Frontier'' ' 17.

I

�'
li-The Dally Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, July 30 1979
POTLUCK DfNNER
The ewe will hold a potluck dinner
ThurSday, Aug. 2, at Ft. Meigs at 6
p.m. Persons who need transportation
are to be at the Sacred Heart Church
P*rking lot at 5:45p.m. Persons are to
bring their own table service.

PREVENTION
IS THE
BEST POLICY
As an Independent insurance
agency, our prim ary func t ion is
to provide poli cies whi ch affor d
f inanc ial pr oteclion in case of
loss .
·
Buf, we al so have a vit al in
teres1 in loss prevention , as
should our c lients. We encourage
care, cauf ion and safety ...
preventive . measures wh ich can
keep that car accident fr om ha p·
pen1ng , that buil ding fire f rom
starti ng , that home burg lary
from being committe d .
Preven tio n saves l ife, l imb and
proper ty ... and helps control in
surance costs an d prem iums .
~hen losses do occur , our
poliCyholders can count on pr o
tec f ing and serving in time and
need . But we still sa y - preven·
tion is the bes t poli c y.

Long rebuildi.Dg
effort underway
By The Associated Press
The sky was clear and the drinking
water was declared safe, but for
residents of Alvin, like those of other
nood-battered Texas towns, good
weather marked just the beginning of
a long rebuilding effort.
"The water will subside but a lot of
people have absolutely nothing to go
home to," said Alvin Police Chief
Mike Jez . He estimated the homes of
80 percent of the residents of the town
of 18,000 were damaged .
Tropical storm Claudette caused an
estimated $750 million damage to
southeast Texas. Weekend rains also
caused an estimated $25 million
damage in Indiana, where there is a
chance of flooding through Friday.
Officials in Alvin on Sunday
declared the water supply safe for the
ftrst time since rain swelled water
treatment plants past capacity last
Thursday. A 10 p.m. cutfew also was
lifted and roads in the area were
opened to the public on a limited
basis.
Six Texas counties have been
declared disaster areas by President
Carter and the first 2,000 flood
insurance claims assigned to
adjusters were paid Sunday.
Texas Gov. Bill Clements was flying
over the 10-county area around
Houston today to survey the 7,900
homes that sustained major damage
and 4,400 others that received minor

damage after heavy rains began
falling Thutsday.
"I've lived in Dickinson almost 28
years and I went through · Hurricane
Carla," said Galveston County Civil
Defense Coordinator Bill Brady. "I've
worked every hurricane that has hit
here in the past 211 years. And I've
never seen water like this.
"I figure 85 percent of the homes
and businesses in north Galveston
County were affected by this."
In Indiana, rain fell SuD(jay for the
fourth day in some of the areas
hardest hit. The National Weather
Service issued flood warnings through
Friday for the White River from
Spencer downstream to Hazelton,
where the river is expected to crest 6
feet to 8 feet above flood stage.
The Agricultural Stabilization and
Conservation Service has estimated
darnage to Indiana farms at more
than $25 million. The flooding, which
also began Thursday, swept through
small towns and farms in a l:kounty
area.
The flooding was blamed for seven
deaths in Texas and one in Indiana.
Indiana Gov. Otis Bowen has
declared a state of emergency and
was to gather inf&lt;rmatlon today to
ask Carter for federal ait\
Bill McAda of the Federal
Emergency Management Agency in
Texas said Sunday six offices would
be set up in the areas hardest-hit by
the flooding to aid victims with
temporary housing and assistance
grants.
Telephone service in the Texas flood
area was still distrupted for 27,150
Southwestern Bell customers on
Sunday, and officials said extra repair
crews from Dallas and Fort Worth
would be brought in.

•

a1

Area Deaths
•

FLOYDJ~PEH

Floyd Joseph, 67, Kentucky St.
South Charleston, died Friday
morning at Thomas Memorial
Haspital following a lingering illness.
Mr. Joseph was born in Min~rsville,
Sept. 25, 1911 the son of the late Clara
and David Joseph. He was also
preceded iJl death by his wife, Ruby, a
sister, Ruth, and a brother, David.
He is survived by one son, Charles,
four grandchildren and one great
grandchild; seven sisters, Edith
Kegerreis, and Mabel Hughes,
Monroe, Mich., Mary Farley,. New
Port, Mich .; Martha Hendrein,
Lincoln Park, Mich .; Florence
Custer,
Middleport ;
Phyllis
Harris,Racine, and Esther Joseph ,
Minersville, one brother, Willis
Joseph, Racine.
Funeral services will be held today
at 2 p.m. at the Snodgrass Funeral
Home with burial in South Charleston
Cemetery.

Lauderdale, formerly of Middleport.
Mr. Johnson was the son of the late
L. B. and Nellie Mills Johnson. He was
also preceded in death by two
brothers, -Paul and Harold.
Mr. Johnson was a meat cutter at
the C. O.Fisher Grocrey Store while a
resident of Midldleport.
He is survived by his wile, Betty.
Funeral services will be held
Wedne$y at Ft. Lauderdale.

New Haven man
suicide victim
A·New Haven man was found dead
Saturday evening on a. secondary
Mason County Road from an apparently self-inflicted gunshot
wound, according to a report from
the Mason Count y Sheriff's
Department.

.VOL XXVIII NO. 75

INS.

CHARLES H. KNIGHT
BARBARA M. KNIGHT

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)

+

PQMEROY, OHIO

992-2151

EFFECTIVE JULY 1

SAVINGS RATES
ARE GOING UP

Fuel from trash

PASSBOO 1\

t:·::

,ONEY MARKET CERTIFICATE

7%%

Curtis

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

..

Far·nters

POMEROY, OHIO

.

•

.:l"""s.
&gt;ff!J'"
~\

l ~

Hearing begins

(Across from the Post Office)

INDIVIDUAL RETIREMENT ACCOUNf

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

TUESDAY, JULY 31, 1979

l16. 4 billion biennlwn state
bodget into law today, after
lllllklhg 27line item vetoes.
Rhodes called it "a balanced
budget" and said ''it call!~ for no
new or inqeased taxes.
The Legislature passed an interim oodget bill 00 June :.1
which was signed by the goyemor
who then flew off to China for a
17-day trade mission.
"It is a fair and equitable
budget, arrived at through hard
work of both the legislative and
executive lrancbea of govern·
ment, and through cooperative
determination to deal with the
most pressihg needs of the
citizens of Ohio," Rhodes said.

211 E. SECOND ST.

90 DAY CERTIFICATE ............ ~i.~~~~.~~- :.~~?:~?...... . ........ Slh%
1 YEAR CERTIFICATE .............~~~~~-~~-~~:~~. :~.~
6%
4· YEAR CERTIFICATE ...............~i.~~~~.~-~~~~~?:??................ 714%
6 YEAR CERTIFICATE ......... :...~~~!~.~~-~~:~??:?.~ ............. 7lh%
8 YEAR CERTIFICATE ............... ~~~.i-~~-~-~- :?.~~·-~~ ............ 7%%
4 Y~AR MONEY CERTIFICATE

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Gov. James A. Rhodes signed the

Supports cuts

KNIGHT LAW OFFICES

enttne

Budget signed

Gary Dale Arnold, 28, was found
EVERETI D.COUI.SON
lying near his pickup truck on
Everett Dutch Coulson, 73, Rt. 1, Robinson Run Road, Secondary 12,
Little Hocking, died unexpectedly after he reportedly shot himself with
Saturday afternoon at his residence . a 30-00 rifle, following a family
Mr.Coulson was born at Stockport, dispute.
Ohio, the son of the late William and
Investigating .the incident were
Elora Wootoo Coulson. He was also Mason County Sheriff James C.
CHICAGo {AP) + Unde{ a
preceded in death by a son, Charles Hall, Deputies S. R. Legg, J. R.
cloud of reports that some OC-108
Arnold Coulson in 1976. He was also Adk ms,
'
G. M. Kearns, an d J . M.
are having operational problema
preceded in ~ath by one sister and Withers.
after returning to the stlea, the
three brothers.
Dr. John Grubb, County Coroner,
National Transportation Safety
992-2143
He was a member of the Center pronounced Arnold dead at the
Board begins hearifl&amp;s Monday to
102 W . Main
Point Union Mission, was a farmer scene, and he was transported by the
help detennine the caWie of
Pom eroy
and worked as a ·tool dresser for
America's
worst air dlsa8ter.
Putnam Drilling co., Marietta Point Pleasant Rescue Squad to
All
138
U.S
.-regiltered DC-108
serveral years before his retirement. Pleasant Valley Hospital and later
were
grounded
after the crash of
He is survived by his wife, Arrena to the Office of the Chief Medical
an
American
Airlines wideMcDaniel Coulson, two sons, John E•aminer in Charleston.
bodied
jet
May
25
that killed 273
Randall Coulson and Lee A. Coulson,
Arnold was a coal miner with the
persons
shortly
after takeoff
both of Coolville, one brother, Earl of Southern Ohio Coal Company. He
from
O'Hare
International
AirMarion and seven grandchildren.
was born in Logan, WV, May 8,1951,
port.
Funeral services will be held and was the son of Lindbergh and
The hearings, expeCted to last
Tuesday at 1:30 p.m. at the White Donna Layne Arnold, Mason.
.about
two weeks, abo come after
Funeral Home in Coolville with the
other survivors include his wife,
a court controvel'!ly over who
Rev. Ronald Vogelson and the Rev. Marion Kay Watson Arnold ;· two
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW
·should be allowed to teat!Iy about
SQUAD CALLED
Roy Deeter officiating. Burial will be sons, Gary Dale, n, and Travis
the crash. More than :;o witnesses
The Pomeroy Emergency Squad in the Coolville Cemetery. Friends . Shane, both at home : a sister, Kathy
are scheduled to appear before
was called to the Chester area at 4:02 may call at the funeral home at Sue Van Maire, Gallipolis; and
ANNOUNCE THE RELOCATION
the board in suburban Roeemont.
p.m. Sunday for Inez Pooler who was anytime.
grandparents, Ethel Layne Gilfilen,
taken to Pleasant Valley Haspital. At
Gallipolis, and Effie Arnold Black,
OF THEIR LAW OFFICES TO:
HARRY JOHNSON
8:52p.m. Sunday, the squad went to
Rutland. Ohio. ·
·
Relatives here have learned of the
the Victor Young home oo E. Main St.
Fun eral · services are slated for
HOUSTON (AP J + John Confor Ruby Erb who was taken to ileath of Harry Johnson. 69. Ft. Wednesday, 2 p.m., at the Gospel
nally advocated an inunediate
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Lighthouse Church, with the Rev.
$25 billion to $35 billion tax cut
Bill Banks officiating. Burial will
HOSPITAL NEWS
SW!day and then sald he believes
follow in the Kirkland Memorial
President Carter is in "real
REUNION DATE SET
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL Gardens.
trouble"
beca115e ri recent
The Jordan and Michael reunion
Saturday Admissions-Eva Milliron ,
Friends may call at the Stevens
''political.
theatrics."
will be held Aug. 5 with a basket Middleport;
Lillian Gardner, Funeral Home after~ p.m. Tuesday.
Connally said a tu cut could be
dinner at noon at the road side park on Pomeroy; Patsy LaudermUt, Racine.
made without being inflationary.
the south side lane of U. S. Rt. 33,
Saturday Discharges-Belinda
' 'The tax cut ought to come to
between Darwin and Rock Springs Bailey, Mark Gillilan, Kimberly Unearths campground
benefit
the working people of this
Fairground. Persons are to bring Conlin, Rex Rathburn, Michael
country
who make .. . $35,000 a
their own table service. Everyone Knapp, Minnie Carroll, Esther Roach,
year and less, who have been
PROCTORVILLE,
Ohio
(
APJ
welcome.
Anna Starcher.
escalating Into higher · tu
Sunday Admissions--Nina Rupe, Excavation work at the site of a new
lracketa J~t becauae of the rate
Cheshire; Mary Baker, Belpre; Ohio River bridge in Lawrence
of inflation, .. he said.
County
has
unearthed
a
former
Indian
Milton Geary, Racine ; Maxine Hobbs, campground.
The former Te:us governor
Dexter; Helene Sayre, Minersville,
who Is seeking the Republican
The
excavation
work
is
being
done
Ruby Erb, Pomeroy.
presidential nomination repeated
by archeologists as part of
SUnday Discharges-Mary Shaffer, enviroiunental clearance foc the new
his belief that Sen. Edward KenMilford Frederick, Judith Smith, bridge to West Virginia along Ohio 7.
nedy, 0-Mass., will be the 19111
Edward Templeton, Vada Cundiff.
Democratic nominee. He said the
Ohio Historical Society archeologiat
belief has been reinforced by the
Stanley Baker said the work began in
HOLZJ;;R MEDICAL CENTER
manner in which Carter reshufApril and should be completed early
fled his cabinet.
DISCHARGES, JULY 27
in August. He said the findings
Franklin Adkins, Caralee Alee, indicate the site was once a stopping
Mary Banks, Mrs. Robert Barker and place for Indians.
son, Lyda Bateman, Janis Board,
Several thousand flint chips and
Minnie Brown , Patricia Brown, hundreds of tools have been found, all
CINCINNATI (AP) + Cin·
As of Ju~ 1st
William Cochran, Sylvia Coleman, about two feet underground. Baker
cinnat! wanta to put its garbage
F1ora Corvin, Beatrice Davis, Teresa said the exact ages of the · artlfacl8
to U8e by converting it into a synthe Farmers Bank
Erit, Mrs. Hobart Fairchild and remain to be established.
thetic fuel.
daughter, Dorothy Grimes, Jesse
But the city m~t decide
Will Be Paying Higher
Halley, Mrs. Donald Johnson and
whether to pay a private condaughter, Russell Little, Joe Malone ,
tractor to do this or go into the
Interest Rates
Mrs. Robert Mantini and daughter,
potentlallyilrofitable buslnesa itIn 1978, commercial fishermen in
Verla Myers, Randy Patterson Jr., the United States landed six billion
sell.
Ann Saunders, Rosalee Sayre, pounds of seafood with a dockside
Acting City Manager Martin
Darleen Shover, Sharon Smith, value of $l.9billion.
Waish has r'econunended that the
Harriet Sterrett, Rebecca Stover,
City Council vote Wednesday to
Charles Swisher, Mrs. Chuck Wolfe
accept a contract with Energy
and daughter and son .
U computed Daily
Conversions of America Inc.
BIRTHS,JULY27
EXI ENDED FORECA!rr
He said the finn would purCompounded Quarterly
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Barnes, son, Tuesday throagb Tbunday:
chase the city's old Center HW InLetart; Mr. and Mrs. James Council, Warm wllb a cballce ol obowera or
cinerator property to produce a
1
son, Langsville.
thundentorma lhrOUBh tbe period.
pellet-like waste recovery fuel. It
DISCHARGES JULY 28
Hlgba In lbe 81111. Lows ill lbe mid to
would also produce steam and
0
Mrs. John Arrowood and daughter, upper lOs.
generate electricity for ind118trial
. ......... .. .....
Laura Bruce, Mrs. Davis Canterbury
needs, he said.
and son, Richard CArter, Cindy
PICNIC PLANNED
The company would finance the
purchase and development coeta
CAsto, Mrs. Terry Clark and The Middleport Youth League will
daughter, Rooald DaVIS, Vera D~ehel, hold a picnic and swimming party
through Ohio Water Developnent
bonds.
Stephen Durham, Jack Shmm, Wednesday, Aug. 1, at Middleport
Wallace
Gilkey,
Maude
Grliiliil,
Mrs.
Park
and
s""~"";"
1
Th
·
·
The city now disposes of ita gar1
-~
Sh · Hod
·
"Q·Q·~·g poo .
e p1cruc
Cl arence Ha II auu
bage at a cost of~ a ton at a landson, em
ge, willbeheldfrom6to7 ·30
dthe
Mrs. Donald Lambert and son, swimming party fro~
fill. The Incinerator system was
9:30.
Charles Martm, Betty McCoy, Ruth Coaches will notify la
h tr to
abandoned several years ago
Montgomery, William Mullins, Linda bring
P yers w a
becall8e of air pollution.
Priddy, Elizabeth Sayers , Peter
·
Mmomum $1,00?.00. Interest rate of 11/o% under the average 4 ye
yield of
WaLsh said the city would pay
Treasury Secuntoes.
ar
Sewar, June Smith, .Donald Stivers,
the same price for 25 years
SPECIAL MEETING
John Tarhembe, Dennis waugh,
protecting itself from In:
A special meeting of the Twin City
Charles White, Mrs. DanDle Wood and
flatlonary costs in the future.
daughter, Florence Workman, Vickie Shrine Club will be held at 7:30 p.m.
$10,000 ~inimum. Interest rate equal to the rate of 162 day treasury bill rat A
Tuesday at the club hOuse in Racine .
Youngblood.
e. s
determoned at weekly auction.
SQUAD RUNS
BIRTHS JULY Z8
Plans will be made to observe ladies
The
Middleport
Emergency Squad
Mr. and TMrs. Timothy Williamson, night and for the Aug 11 visitation of
answered
two
calls
over the weekend.
the
Potentate
.
daughter, Jackson; Mr. and Mrs.
At
9:45p.m.
Saturday
the unit went
Michael Wilfong, son, Middleport.
to 695 Oliver St., for
Lenard 15
DISCHARGES JULY 29
BLOODMOBILE HERE AUG.13
Substantial Penalty For Early Withdrawal
Aaron Adkins, Delmar Alexander, The next bloodmobile visit to Meigs months old, who was taken ' to
Edward Balke Sr., Lewis Blevin, Mrs. County will be on Aug. 13 at the Veterans Memorial Hasp!tal. At 2:42
Gary Burroughs and daughter, Pomeroy Elementary School. Hours a.m. Sunday the unit went to Route I,
LucUie Casto, Frank Clark, Thomas will be from I :30 to 5:30p.m. Walk-in Cheshire, for Nina Rupe a medical
patient, who was taken to Veterans
Craig, Mrs. Lewis· Audree and son, donors are encourage.
Memorial
HOSpital.
Mrs. Gf9rge Fox and son, Joe
Haddox, Willoughby Hill, Gilbert
Hobb, Anita Jenkins, Dottie Johnson,
Lula Lawrence, Mrs. William
Osborne and daughter, Pearl Powell,
Mrs. Curtis Roush and son, Mildred
Rowe, Harold Scarberry, Jacqueline
Walter, Patricia Wells, Mariam
Wheeler, Rebecca White.
, Q
BIRTHS JULY 29
Mr. and Mrs. Randall Nichols and
$40,000 Max1mum insurance tor each Depositor
daughter, Vinton; Mr. and Mrs. John
Thomas, son, Leoo, W. Va·.; Mr. ·and
Mrs. Daivd Booten , daughter, Crown
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
City; Mr. and Mrs. Waiter Stiverson,
son, South Webster; Mr. and Mrs.
Eimer Parsons, daughter, Gallipi&gt;lis

DALE C. WARNER

•

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY·
WILL BE CLOSED ALL DAY
TUESDAY, JULY 31, 1979
FOR INVENTORY ·

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

FRIENDLY CHAT - Walter Grueser, left, prunlnent Pomeroy
boainessman, chats with ABC broadcaster Chris Schenkel Monday night
during a dinner at Royal Oak Park. Grueser was among the 300 persons
attending the function which ended the day long activities of the Dave
Dilea Celebrity Golf Tournament.

DAN DEVINE, left, head football coach at Notre Dame and Dave
Diles talk things over before the start of the Dave Diles Celebrity Goll
Tournament held at Riverside Golf Course, Mason, Monday_Devine was
one ri several celebrities on hand for the event.

WINNER - Gary Dixon, Athens, had the Individual low grOIIS, 66, In
the first annual Dave Diles Celebrity Golf Tournament held at Riverside
Golf Course in Mason Monday. Monday night at a dinner for those participating Bill Nelson, Meigs County chairman Of the event, presented
Dixon with his trophy.

More than 150 participate
'

Diles celebrity golf tourney 'successful'
By Grq Balley
MASON - At I p.m. Monday afternoon at the Rivel'l!ide Golf Course,
Roo Windel'll Of WOWK-TV, Huntington, using his tnunpet, 8Qunded
reveille, lllgnaling the start of one of
the biggest sporting events ever to hit
the Meiga-Mason area.
The first annual Dave Diles
Celebrity Golf Tournament attracted
more than 150 golfel'll, some of whom
were fine gollel'll and othel'll who had
their problems on the 18-lmle COUI'IIe,
ho,wever, not Ol)e of the celebrities or
local entranta could deny that they
had a fine, fine afternoon.
Although IICIIle of the participant,
secretly admitted that golf just
wun't lblllr lpol't, there were some
fine scores turned in.
The individual low gross was Shot
by AlbeN Country Club Pro Gary
Dixon with 1 fine 66. There was a
three-way tie for the Individual low
net between Athens ' Kenny Kerr, Dan
Butcher, and John Morad, each with a
85.
Rwnor has It that the fisb in the

Today
.. .in the world

Denies charges
VAN WERT, Ohio (AP) - Van
Wert County Pro6ecutor Donald
J . Johnoon has denied allegations
of wrongdoing contained in a
petition aeeking his removal from
office.
The petition, signed by nine
county taxpayel'll, was filed
Friday in ccmmoo pleas court after Johnson was indicted earlier
in the week by a special coun~y
grandjury.
.
It accuses Johnson of "wanton
and willful neglect and gross
misconduct in office."
Johnson, referring to the
petltlm as a complaint, said :
"Practically all ol the charges in
thf, complaint refer to the Ridge
Township quarry matter which
was the subject of the previous indictment&amp; and allegations against me. At. I have said before, I
have conunitted no wrongdoing
in my work with any of our township trustees ...

Sohio prices up
ClEVELAND (AP) - Patrons

a1 Sohio, Boron and BP gas
stations in 12 states and the
District of Columbia have been
hit with another' price hike at the
pumps, the Standard Oil Co.
(Ohio) announced.
Sohio said Monday it raised the
price of all gradea of gasoline
sold at · company-operated
statiON by three centa a gallon in
Ohio, Indiana, Michigan and Kentucky.
The Cleveland-based company
said illl prices were raised four .
centii a gallon In Pennsylvania,
West Virginia, !)lew Jel'lley, New
York, Connecticut, Delaware,
Washingtoli, D.C., Maryland and
Virginia.
Wholesale prices to independently-operated · stations
were raised by similar amounts
In each of the twosaies regions .

pond on hole No. 14 are still trying to
figure out where all thoee goll balll1
ca.me from. They say that the water is

two feet deeper ti)Bn before the tollrney Ill! the result of too many water

shots.
And, although the report baa not

seekers wllo had gathered at River- heme here. Chuck Stobart, a Middleport athlete and now head football
Frank Broyles, fanner head foot- coach at the University of Toledo, was
ball coach of the University of Arkan- naturally a favorite. Then there was

side.

sas and now color commentator for popular Ron McDole, fonnerly with

ABC Sports, made a big tmpi'ession
on the Ioca1 follts as he Sfiowed
beel1 confirmed, this reporter was in- everyone some of that Arkansas
formed of a derailed train on the friendline!l8 .
boundary of the golf course, apJohnny Orr, head basketball coach
parenUy the result of too many golf at the University~ Mldllgen, proved
balll1 that had been hit out-d-bounds to be a favorite and drew quite a
onto the tracks.
gallery, a gallery that even boasted
The tournament, spearheaded quite a few Ohio State fans.
mainly by Diles and local
Dan Devine, head football coach at
businessman Bill Nelson, attracted Nolr'e Dame, was pmaed by fans
some of the biggest names in sports. wherever he went.
ABC Sports Broadcaster Chris
Then there were the celebrities with
Schenkel anived late, but still got ln local ties.
his strokes and was a big hit with the
Diles, of course, was raised in
more than 100 fans and autograph Meigs County and now makes his

the Washington Redskins as an Allpro defensive end. McDole spent his

childhood in Meigs County near
Chester, and now owns a !ann there.
The tollrnament atmosphere was
what made It such a huge success.
The playel'll talked freely to the spectators, and the mood was such that all
the celebrity players felt relaxed and
"at home." Diles stated the purpose
ri the event was to improve the attitude towards the area, and that is
euctly what waa aecomplished.
A tip of the hat goes to all the coor·
dinators.
Plans are already underway for

next year's classic, and no doubt it
will be bigger and better than ever.
An out-of-tQwn close friend of Diles
swnmed it all up when asked to comment on the tournament.
"Everyone loves Dave, and we've
all had a fantastic time . We'll
definitely be back next year .•'
A banquet honoring the participants in yesterday 's goll classic
was serv.ed last night at Royal Oak
Park with more than 300 guests in at·
tendance.
After a hearty ribeye steak (llimer
that set the infonnal tone of the
evening, Diles, anchonnan for ABC's
SCOREBOARD show, introduced outof-town celebrities and guests.
After C91J1111ents by coordinator Bill
Nelson, co.chaimian Diles presented
aWiil"ds to the day's golfers. The win-

10 persons are killed in motel fire
CAMBRIDGE, Ohio (AP ) -- About

Hildenbrand,' 28, of Zanesville,
described her escape from th e
stood in small groups around the fire- burning wilding.
dama ged Holiday here Inn this
"There was no way out possible
morning waiting for a chance td go in without busting windows ," Ms .
and look for their belongings.
Hildenbrand sa id . "The windows
A ftre that broke out at about 3 a.m . wouldn't slide. Kids and old people
today nearly destroyed the two-story and everybody had to jump."
brick and wood structure.
Ms. Hildenbrand suffered cuts oo
Ten persons were killed in the blaze . her body when she leaped from her
About 60 others were trea ted at second-floor room .
Guernsey Memorial Hospital and II
Bill Dolan, 32, of Cleveland, who
were admitted .
received slight lacerations on his feet
Many survivors returned to the fire and hands when he jumped from the
scene after hospital treatment.
second floor, said, "Getting out was a
Dressed in a hOSpital gown, Molly hell of a deal. We had to bust the
60 persons, most of them motel guests,

windows. We couldn't get out any
other way ."
·
Robert Foley, 52, of Virginia Beach,
Va., who escaped the flames with his
wile and two children, said he was
awakened by a noise he thought was
an alarm clock.
"I figured it was time to get up.
Then I smelled some smoke. I thought
maybe my wile had been smoking.
Then I woke her when I saw that
wasn't it," he said.
"I went and opened tile hall door
and that's when I knew we were in
tr~uble : There was lots of smoke. She
(his wife) sa1d the glass w1ndows

$60,077 damage
suit filed here
A$60,077 damage suit has been flied
in Meigs County Common Pleas Cou,rt
as the result of a lraffic accident Aug.
8,1977 on SR 7 in Chester Township.
The action was filed by Marilyn D.
and Raymond Wiener , Fairborn,
Ohio, against Dale W.Davis, Pleasant
City, Ohio and ARTIM Transportation
System Inc., Hammond, Ind.
The suit is for injuries as the result
of the accident.
.
Filing for support under the
Reciprocal Agreement Act were
Susaro J . Mcintosh, against Donald
Gene Mclntoch; Judith M. Flowers
against Lowell D.Flowers.
Edna Stobart, Pomeroy, filed a
notice of appeal against Robert C.
Daugherty, administrator ,Bureau of
Workmen's Compensation, et al,
Columbus, seeking the right to
participate in the state lund.
~

were presented.

~

'f~,~

Good Guy Annis weal to Cbrl.l
Scbeakel of ABC, ll'nllll Broylet of
the Unfvenlty of~ 111111 ABC,
and Dan Deville of Notre Dame. AD
t1Uee were blgllly pnlled .by Dllet,
111111 were llldlvidually pvea Ol'llUas they 1'1'ftlved their awanl.l. AD the
celebriUes were moved by tbe local
hospitality they had received.
The evening was capped when
Nelson surprised Diles with a speclal ·
Jolly Good Fellow Award for starting
perhaps the "biggest sporting event
(Continued on page 8)

Dunn hired
as principal

The Gallipolis City Board of
Education moved Monday afternoon
to employ a new principal for Gallia
Academy High School.
Hired to replace retiring principal
James N.M. Davis was John Dunn, a
1~ year veteran of the Fostoria City
School System .
Budget Cornmissioo will be held on all corporation budgets while at 10
Dunn's experience in the field of
Tuesda y, the day after the a.m. on ThurSday, Aug . 10, the
education
includes six years of
organi2ational session, to review all coinmission will meet in special
teaching
at
the
junior high level, three
school budgets and on Wednesday the session to review all township
years
as
an
elementary teachingcommission wUI meet again to review bodgets.
principal, four years as· an
elementary supervising principal,
three years as junior high principal
and three years as assistant principal
at Fostoria High School.
.
Dunn, 41, received three degrees
from Bowling Green State University:
B.A. (1963). M.A. (1968), and
Specialist Degree in 1971.
Dunn 's two year contact with the
Gallipolis system will become
effective on August 1.
In further actioo, it was announced
during the meeting that the
resignation, which had been tendered
last week, of Ed Stewart as assistant principal at GAHS had been
withdrawn.
During the special meeting three
elementary teachers were employed
for the 1979-80 academic year.
Hired were:
-Lynn M. Yoho, a graduate of Ohio
State University with a B.S. degree.
-Lesley J_ Jessen , a graduate of the
University of Akron with a B ..S.
degree .
-Marlene Calhoun, a graduate of the
University of California with a B.A..
degree, and Ohio State University
with a M.A. degree.
· The city school board, further,
approved the text of an agreement
that has been negotiated between the
Gallipolis Education Association and ,
the board's negotiating teB!DB.
The GEA will. meet tonight, at 7
p.m., at GAHS auditorium to vote on
ratification of that contract.
A spokesman for the GEA
·announced last week that those
'111embers wishing to review . the
TAKING SECOND place in last night's Gallla
right, Nancy Wallace, Rhonda Soutbetn, Tanuny
· · agreemen~ should come to the ·
County Junior Fair Majorette competition .was the
Eichinger, Melanie Dillard and Mary Hawley. ·
&gt;
Meigs High School Majorette Corps. Shown are, left to
:. auditorium ' !J,.6 P·I11· '; · . · . : .· · ~ ."
It
~
'
'

Property changes announced
Changes in property valuations
have been completed for 1979
following section 5715.16 of the Ohio
Revised Code,Meigs County Auditor
Howard E.Frank announced today .
The changes will relfect new
construction projects for 1979. Values
may be viewed at the Meigs County
Auditor's Office.
Meanwhile,Frank who serves as .
clerk of the Meigs County Budget
Commission, has announced a .budget
meeting for 10 a.m. Monday in the
auditor's office of the Meigs County
Courthouse to organize the budget
commission for 1979-1980.
The meeting is in compliance with
section ~705.27 of the Ohio Revised
Code, Frank reports .
A special meeting of the Meigs

wouldn't open. 1 wok a chair and on
the second lick the glass broke."
He said his wife and daughter and
son got out right away, but he was
leery about jumping into the broken
glass until someone put a mattress
down. Then he jumped.
Assistant Fire Chief Bob Hosfelt
said, "It was pretty much chaos.
Everybody was bailing out of the
windows."
Police Sgt. Robert Kafury said most
of the guests were made aware of the
fire by alarms.
Bob Yeoman, 22, of Marion , Ohio,
was staying in room 118 of the motel
when he smelled smoke. He broke
thro~gh his window an? f:ben helped
ftrehghters atd other VICtims.
Many persons who were not in jured·
sought refuge it) a nearby Ramada
Inn . Officials there reported that the
inn provided shelter for . about 40
persons.
Red Cross and Salvation Army
volunteers brought coffee to survivors
at the scene.

ner of the tournament was Gary
Dixon fr001 Athens who shot a low
gross of 66. The individual low net
score of 65 was shared by Kenny
Kerr, Dan Butcher, and John Morad.
The team low gross score was 64,
shot by Bill Childs, Bob Schellhase,
steve Henderson, and Gary Dixon.
The team low net was shot by Dale
Goldsberry, Dan Bu~her, Rudy
Videgar, and Jack Ketr of WMPO
Radio who combined for a 52.
John Morad came closest to the pin
on hole No. (14 with a tee shot that landed just 27 inches from the pin. The
longest drive on hole No. 18 was a shot
by Gary tlixon that travelled 266 yards and three inches.
Then three very special awards

..

.

' •,' , ;

' I

,

,

0 • •

I

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