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·'

8-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, July 31, 1979

Market Report

Diles

CINCINNATI (AP) - Cattle 100.
Auction early . Steers and heifers •
untested. Cows and bulls steady.
Steers, few standard, 1·2, 1000-1200
lbs, 51.5().54 .50.
Cows, utility , 2-3, 92:&gt;-1575 lbs, 45.0051.50.; high dressing, 52.00 54.70;
cutter, 1-2, 77:i-1225 lbs, 43.50-49.00;
few 50.00-52.00.
Bulls, 1·2, 97:i-1380 lbs, 57 .5~ .50;
idividual, 2010 lbs, 64.50.
Vealers, low choice, 18:i-290 lbs,
80.00-84.00.

~'

,-~;;
,
.

...,...

. WINNERS IN THE DAVE DILES
CELEBRITY GOLF CLASSIC

,

Ind ivi dual low gross -- Gary D ixon
66 .
Individual low net (t ie) -· Kenny
Kerr, Dan Butcher, John Morad 66 .
Team low gross .. B ill Childs. Bob
Schellhase, Steve Henderson, Gary
Dl&gt;on ~ Team low net -- Dale Goldsberry,
Dan Butcher , Rudy Videgar , Jack
Ke rr 52 .
Closest to pin -- John Mound, No . 14.
27 inc hes .
•
Longest drive ·· Gary Dixon, No . lB.
266 pounds. 3 inches.

Howard L. SMith, Superintendent
of Jaclqion County and the Oak Hill
School District, hss been named
President-Elect of the Southeastern
School Administrators Association
for the 1979-al school year. He will
then assume the leadership role of
president of this schoolmen 's
organization in 1981).1981 succeeding
Mr. Bert Severance of Norlhern Local
School District in Perry District.
Mr. Smith hss '!l years of school experience with sixteen years in administrative positions of the Oak Hill
School District. His wife, Cornelle,
and he are the parents of two sons.
Barry is a law student attending Ohio
Northern University and Bruce is a
sophomore at Oak Hill School.
The Southeastern School Administrators • Association is an
organiZation of all county, exempted

I
'
CHRIS SCHENKEL, ABC Broadcaster, received a stllnding ovation
at the dinner held for the participants in the first annual Dave Diles
Celebrity GoU Tournament staged at Royal Oak Park Monday night. A
crowd of over 300 persons attended.

EXTENDED FORECAST
Thundsy lhrougb Satuidsy: A
chance of sbowers or thunderstorms
lhrougb the period. Hlgbs In the low
to mid 808. Lows in the mid to upper
60
·::;:::::::::::;::':::;:;:;:;:::::;:;:::::::;:;:::::;:::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

village, and city school systems in the
Southeastern District which include
sixteen counties. The organization
mejlts six times per year to discUBS
educati~ topics pertinent to successful operation of school districts.
Recommendations and considerations essential to educational
~evelopment
and progress in
Southeaatern Ohio Schools are given
to State Department officials and
legislative representatives by this
functional group.

NEW YORK (AP ) - - The gasoline
crisis, which just a few weeks ago
forced Americans into long Jines at
service stations around the country,
seems to have all but disappeared .
But analysts say its disappearance
is not as mysterious as it might seem.
It's just that supply has on ce again
caught up with demand.
The supply of gasoline is improving
because the·effects on oil supplies of
the Iranian revolution and a drop in
U.S. oil production last winter are
substantially subsiding.
When they were unable In get the
crude oil to make as much gasoline as
they needed, oil companies hsd to
allocate what gas they could make -about 90percent as much as last year.
Under federal rules companies then
had to give priority customers as
much as they got a year ago, with the
rest divided up among service
stations. This meant that many
stations were getting about 80 percent
of what they got a year ago.
Because gasoline thst couldn't be
bought also couldn't be burned ,
consumption was cut sharply.

Statement of Resources and Liabilities
Cash and due from depository institutions . .. .... ......... .... . •.. ....... .. . 1,317,000.00
U.S. Treasury securities . .. . . ..... ........................ ·............ ... 2,428,000.00
Obligations of States and political
subdivisions in the United States ......... . .. .. . .. ... ..... . . . ........... . 1,946,000.00
All other securities .. .. . ......... .. .............................. . . ... . . .. . 30,000.00
Federal fWlds sold and securities purchased
under agreements to resell .. ,. . . .............. . ..................... ..... . 500,000.00
Loans, Total (excluding unearned income) ...... . ............ . .... 7,346,000.00
Less : Allowance for possible loan losses ....... . ........... ... ...... 83,000.00
Loans, Net ................................ ......... ... ............... 7,263,000.00
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and other
assets representing hank premises ........ . ... . .. . . . ....... . ... ..... .. ... .. 84,000.00
All other assets .. ............ ... .. .. ....... . .... . .... ................... , , , 4,000,00
--+TOTAL ASSETS .......... . ..................... .. .. .. ........ .. .... . .. 13,572,000.00

~

ID

~

--+

Demand deposits of individuals, prtnshps.,
and corps ....... , ... , . , , , , , , , , , , , , ........ , . .. .. .. , .... , , ••• . . o •• o. o o, 2,483,000.00
Time and savings deposits of individuals
prtnshps. , and corps . ... ......................... . .............. . . . .. . . 8,724,000.00
Deposits of United States Government . . ...... . . ..... . ... . . . . .... . ..... ....... 4,000.00
Deposits of States and political
subdivisions in the United States ......... . ...... .... ... . . . . . ..... . .. ..... 630,000.00
All other deposits ... ... ...... .. ........... . .... . ....... ... ... .... . . ... ...... 5,000.00
Certified and officers' checks .... . . .. ... . . . . . . . . . ..... . . . .. . .... ... ........ 122,000.00
Total Deposits .. .. . .............. . ...... • ...... . ... .. . ... . ............. 11,968,000.00
Total demand deposits .. . . .. . . . .. . .. . . .. .. .. .. .. . • .. . .. . . . .. . 2,934,000 00 .
Total time and savings deposits . . . .. ...... . .. . .... . ..... . . . ... . 9,034,000.00
All other liabilities .. . .. ... ............. .. . . . . ............. . ............. · .. 11,000.00
TOTAL UABILITIES (excluding subordinated
notes and debentures ) .... . .. .. ............ .. ..... ~· ... .. ......... . .. . 11,979,000.00

--+

ccQ

Common stock
a. No. shares authorized 2,000
b. No. shares outstandings 2,000 (par value) ... .. ... .... . ................ 100,000.00
Surplus ...... , ... . .... .. ..................................... . . . ........ 900,000.00
Undivided profits and reserve for contingenci es
and other capital reserves .......... . ..................... . ..... .. .... · · . 593,000.00
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL .. ... ..... ... .. ..... . .......... .. ·· ·········· ,1.593,000.00 - - -·
TOTAL UABJlJTIES AND EQUITY CAPITAL ........... . ...... ..... ..... 13,572,000.00

0

Amounts outstanding as of report date :
Time certificates of deposit in denminations of
$100 000 or more ... ... .............. . ..................... .... ...... . ... 200,000.00
Average for 30 calendar days (or calendar month ) ending with report date :
Total deposits ........ .. .. ... . ... ............... . .. ... . ... ...... ... ... 11,724,000.00

~

I Marming Kloes, Vice President and Cashier of the above-named bank do hereby
decl~re that this Report of Condition is true and correct to the best of my knowledge and

z

cc

Cit

...
~

belief.

1- - - l -

I

" In essence, you had

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted--Helen Knapp, New
Have n ; Martha Roush, Rutland ;
Delores Wickline , Racine; Mary
Garnes, Pomeroy.
Discharged--Gilbert Cooper , Ida
Dudding.

VOL XXVIII· NO. 76

ASK TOWED
A marriage license was issued to
Michael Lyne Grubb, 32, Carpenter,
and Kathryn A. Carsey, 29, Carpenter.

Memberahip tickets for the 116th
annual Meigs County Fair are now or!
sale at a nwnber of locations.
'11cketa at $5 each entitle the pur~
chaaer to gate admission a.nd free
pading during the entire fair and to
vote or file for the fair board.
It has been pointed out that a
change has been put Into effect thi3
year for riding the rides on the mid·

Houseware

way.

Those purchssing membershlp
tickets must pay an additional 12 a
day In ride all rl each respective day.
Also thoee entering the grounds .m
complimentary tickets, junior fair
tickets, etc., must pay the additional
~charge a day to ride.
General admission is $3 a person
and thlt entitles the iOOividual to ride

Dept.
1st
Aoor

Quality McGraw Edison Fans
Are U.L. listed and tully guaranteed. E;ISy to move &amp;
store.
e12 INCH &amp; 20 INCH BOX FANS
•&amp;INCH TABLE FANS
e12 I NCH OSCILLATING FAN

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Mills. Trans.
Leona Mills
to . ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _•
Columbia . .Gas
Corp.,
Easement, Rutland.
Frank G. Mills, Leona Mills to
Columbia Gas Trans. Corp.,
Easement, Ru.tland.
Guy Swadley, Geraldine Swadley to
Columbia Gas Trans. Corp.,
Easement, Rutland .
Leonard Van Meter, Sr., Mar~ K.
Van Meter to Charles V. Strauss,
Evelyn B. StraUBS, Lot, Pomeroy.
Howard C. Smith, Drema J . Smith
to Vicki K. Wolfe, .80 acre, Pomeroy.
Thomas E. Roush, Rhonda L.
Roush to Denzil Proctor, 100 A. Lot
325,3.61 acres, Salls bury.
Denzil L. Proctor to Thomas E.
Roush, Rhonda L. Roush, Lot 342,
Horton's Sub., Middleport.
Margaret R. Gr06Snickle, Herman
0 . Grossnickle to Carl E. SMith, Inc.,
Right of Way, Olive.
Gerald 0. Bibbee, AdaM. Bibbee to
Carl E. Smith, Inc., Right of Way,
Olive ·Orange.
Gerald 0. Bibbee, AdaM. Bibbee to
Carl E. Smith, Inc., Right of Way,
Olive - Orange.
Clarence W. Barnett, Georgia Barnett to Carl E. Smith, Inc., Right of
Way,Olive.
otto A. Marcinko, Sandra Marcinko
to Carl E. SMith, Inc. , Right of Way,
Olive.
Clyde E. Kulm, Shirley M. Kulm to
Carl E . Smith, Inc., Right of Way,
Olive.
Carl E. Smith, Inc. and B. F. Upton,
Iva P. Upton, Agree for Compressor
site, Orange.
Howard E. Pl\rker, Wibna T.
Parker to Howard E. Parker, Wlbna
T. Parker, Parcels, Chester.
Harold W. Hanson, Vicki A. Hanson
to David Franklin Hanson, 9.93 acres,
Rutland.
Loretto R. Anvil to Carl E. Smith,
Inc., Right of Way, Olive.
H8rold Boston, E. M. Boston to Carl
E. Smith, Inc., Right.of Way, Olive.
Larry A. Millhone, Betty P.
Millhone to Carl E. SMith, Inc., Right
of Way, Olive.
Duane B. Wolfe, Margie A. WoUe to
Carl E . Smith, Inc., Right of Way,
Olive.

assistljnt fire marshal Frank Jewell
said. " It roared down the (first floor )
corridor" and then back again, "and
like a natural chimrnney it went right
up the stairs."
·
A contributing facoor in several of
thedeaths,officials indicated, was the
vinyl or plastic wall covering in the
cprridors which gave off thick, black,
lung&lt;logging smoke.
"The residue (from the smoke) in
the lungs was roo much," said arson
investigaoor Harry McLaughlin.
All of those who escaped the inferno,

Gen. James Wolfe landed his British
army near Quebec and blocked the St.
Lawre,nce River to French shipping in
1759. After a 7:i-day siege, Wolfe led
his troops up the cliff behind Quebec
In the Plains of Abraham, where they
defeated Montcalm's garrison and
captured· the city. Both commanders
died in battle . .

•

from compa ny headquarters in
Memphis, TeM ., said there were no
smoke alarms in the 107-room motel.
"Smoke detectors are relutively
new ," he said. The motel was built in
1969 and newly-enacted requirements
for smoke detecoors in motels and
hotels In Ohio are not retroactive, he
said.
"We consider the building safe,"
Goforth . declared. "We think the
windows are safe. The're · the same
(windows ) as the buildings in your
oown or any oown." He pointed out
that double-thick stay..shut windows
are necessary for air cooditioning and

heating comfort.
The motel had no sliding glass
openings In the outside m either the
first or second floors. The only way in
or out was through the single door in
each room .
.Goforth said it was too early to
provide any damage estimate, but he
said it looked as if it might be ·a total
loss.
"We don't know yet what we'll dQ.
It's up to the engineers In determine,"
he said. "We may fix it up or we may
hsve 00 rebuild rompletely. It all
depends on the structural damage."

.......,.en tine

at

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

-

PEABODY, Kan. (AP) Resldenta at thla community
mourned Tuesday the death of
Grant E . Avery while authorities
searched for clues 111 the al&gt;ductlon and slaying of the
b&amp;nker.
Avery, son of Peabody State
Bank President Wtlbur E. Avery,
was fOWid Monday after an intensive search that began Sunday
night .
Marion County Sheriff June
Joet found the body, clad in a
lhtrt, athletic shorts and tennis
shoes, along railroad tracks two
mlles north of the conununlty of
2,000.
Avery's body hsd a bullet
wound in the head, but ari.autopsy
was scheduled to detennine the
exact time of death, Joet said.
County Attorney John Johnson
said authorities found "some
evidence and clues" near the
body. But he said no weapon was
found and there were no suspects.

Crash kills 17
LERWICK, Shetland lsJandoi
A chartered plane
carrying Shell Oil Co. workel'll
plunged into the sea on takeoff
Tueeday. Officials said 17 d. the
48 persons aboard were dead or
mlasing.
A spokesman for the Deoart(Continued on page 14)
(AP)

without additional chsrge.
Memberahip tickets may be purchased at Spencer's Market, Mid·
dleporl; New York Clothing Hoooe,
Pomeroy; Green Lantern, Pomeroy;
Middleport Depart:nlent Store; Miller
Brothers Grocery, Rutland ; Waid
Cross Sons, Racine; Baum Lumber
Cor Chester ; SIJ88f Run Flour Mill,
Pomeroy; Swiaher-Lohse Phannacy,
Pomeroy; Five Points Grill,
Pomeroy ; Nita Jean Ritchie, Tuppers
Plains; Gloeckner's Restaurant,
Pomeroy; Duncan's Grocery, Darwin ; Gaul 's Shake Haven, Chester;
Helen Baer, Minersville.
Meanwhile, closing time for all
open class entries for the Meig.s County Fair will be 4 p.m. Friday, Aug. 10,
with the exception of the 81Ulual horse
show.
The secretary will be at the fair
board office on the Rock Springs
FairgroWids from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on
Aug. 9 and iO to accept the entries for
the, many cluaes included. Only
exhibits which are properly
ret~~Btered by the deadllne will be
Judaed and receive premiums.

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 1, 1979

HOUSES OFFICES - Two goverrunental Offices are housed in this
structure located at the intersection of Union Ave. , and the Route 7
bypaas m the outairb of Pomeroy. The offices are those of the Bureau of
Employment Services and the Comprehensive Employment Tl'ai$g Act
staff CCETA). The latter staff moved only T\lesday inoo the quarters. The

Proposal
rejected

Jaycees
financing
press box

Our
Insurance Store
Motto.
When yo u bring yo ur in'lurance ncl'd "' tn The In su rance S tore ~
you arc nu t taking the dWI IL'l' that any o ne co mpany

ha s a lithe ans" ""·

Here . at The ln ~ ura ncc Slorl', \\'('arc inrlepenrlent agent s.
We represent a number of fine im urcrs- likcThc Co ntinental
Insurance Co l'npan ic(j, for c .~a rnp lc. TI1J t mcJ ns we can
analyze yo ur requirement-: and select th t: best in ~ urancc
pro tect ion for yn 11 fro111 man~· avai lable alt ernati ves.

Becau&lt;e II'~ r~a vc I hi ; choice, ,1'011 a rc likely lo get more for
your money -- insu rance coverage tha t fit s and is affordable.

Come sec u~ . Let us rcvie\~· and update the protecti on
you presently have.

FAIR- Jolumy. R•li.
song writer
and entertainer of Nashville, Tenn., wlJI be among
artists appearing
at the grandstand of the 116th annual Meigs County Fair on Friday, Aug.
17. Russell's "Act Naturally" sold upwards of 12,000,000 copies and he's
done network television shows including the Dean Martin Show, The
Dinah Shore Show, Music Country, U.S.A., and Pop Goes the Country.

I!''

building, now owned by Jay Hall, wa.s formerly the Jolmson Construction
Co. The interior has been remodeled to provide the office acconunodations. The Employment Service office was formerly located on
Sycamore St., Pomeroy, while CETAhas been located tn the Meigs Cour·
thouse.

Fire destroys fashionable ap·a rtments

HOUSTON I AP ) - At least one man
was critically burned and hundreds of
fashionable apartments were reduced
In rubble Tuesday by a seven-alarm
blaze which officials described as the
worst residential fire in Houston 's
recent history.
Thirteen persons were reported
CHILUCOTiiE, Ohio (AP) - - The
first full contract proposal made by injured in the fire , six of them
Goodyear Atomic Corp. to striking hospitalized. . One man
was
Oil , Chemical and Atomic Workers hospitalized in critical condition with
was rejected Tuesday by union local burns covering more thsn 70 percent
of his body. Several firefighters also
President DeMis Bloomfield.
Bloomfield termed the pro'posal were treated for smoke inhalation.
The fire, which was contained
··ootally unacceptable." saying it was
no improvement over the union 's last shortly after 6 p.m., was the second
disaster to strike the city in a week.
contract.
The strike against the company 's More than o,aoo persons were
\lranium enrichment plant at Piketon evacuated and more than 12,300
by t,600 union members is now In its homes were damaged by the
third month . ·
remnants of Tropical Storm Claudette
The offer was made Tuesday during last week .
a two-hour negotiating session
The blaze was whipped by gusty
between the company and the union In winds . Capt. H.C. Nichols of the
Houston Fire Department said 800 In
Chillicothe.
The proposal ts nearly identical In l,aao a partments were "either
one accepted last week by guards at destroyed or badly damaged ."
the plant. It includes wage hikes of up
Police planned to guard the
to 8 percent over the three years of the apartments through the night, and
pact. Also included Is a cost of living persons entering the premU,es would
allowance and other fringe benefits. be required In show identification or
The proposal features a provision
for a readjustment of the wage
schedu le should there be any
significa nt revision of President
Carter's wage guidelines within the
next year .
Bloomfield said he will formally
outline his objections In the proposal
when the two sides resume
negotiations next Tuesday.

Manning Kloes
July 12,1979 - - -

We the undersigned directors attest the correctness of this statement of resources and
liabiliti;,. We declare thst it has been examined by us, and to the best of our knowledge and
betief is true and correct.
Rodney Downing
Bernard V. FuJII: - Directors
Dale M. Dutton

which raged through the L..shaped withheld identities of the other two
two-story building with temperatures victims pending notificati on of
estimated at between 600 and 1100 relatives.
degrees, did so by smashing their way
"There was ooe thing, a woman and
through thick, double pane floor-to- her baby .. . we had them in the same
ceiling windows.
bag," said Cambridge police Sgt. Bob
The
dead
included
four Kafury, who reached the scene
Parkersburg, W.Va., residents, .Mary shortly after the fire was reported at
Rotunda, 25, and her son, Matthew, 3; 3:26a.m .
Esther Albright, 66 , and her · Two of the victims were found in
granddaughter Sharon Albright, 12. their rooms. They had apparently
Pamela Ricketts, 23, of Columbus, opened their doors and died when the
Ohio, and Ford City, Pa. residents fire rushed inoo the room~ All of the
Samuel Saloum, 62, and his wife, others were found in lhe corridors,
whose name was not available, also fir~ officials said.
Bill Goforth, a Holiday IM official
were listed among the dead. Police

Fair membership
tickets available

ELECTRIC fAN$

p~~=~rtG

" It was like a coal mine fire,"

e

proliferated because of the sudden ..--------~---~~~~-----------,
cut back in supply . But once
Americans got used to the smaller
amount of gasoline available, they
drove Jess and the situation stabilized,
analysts say. Fears of shortages and
the effects of higher prices also
decreased consumption, say analysts.
But the higher.prices did not, as has
been suggested, ease the shortage by
freeing up hidden supplies of gasoline,
analysts say. Rather, consumer
resistance to the higher prices cut
demand, taking pr.essure off supplies.

Meigs
Property
Transfers

can't rule out," he said.

...

COLUMBUS, Ohio ( AP) -- Direct
hogs (Fed.State): Barrows and gilts
steady to .25 lower, · demand
moderate . U .S. 1-2, 200-230 lbs .
country points, 37.00-37.50, few at
37.75, plants, 37.50-38.00, some at 38.25.
U.S. l.J, 230-250 lbs. country points,
36.25-37.25, plants, 36.71&gt;-311.00.
Receipts Monday: Actuals 11,000,
today's estimates 8000.
Cattle, from Colmnbus Producers
Livestock CCH&gt;perative AssociatiOfl,
1.00-2.00 lower. Slaughter steers and
yearlings, choice 59.~.00. good
54.~.00. Bulls market steady. Cows
market 2.00 to sharply lower.
Veal calves 4.00 to sharply lower,
choice and prime 92.00 and down .
Sheep and lambs 2.00-3.00 lower, old
sheep 25.00 and down . .

rationing /~

said Larry Goldstein, an analyst at
TO END MARRIAGE
Petroleum Industry Research
Kathy Sue Seth, Pomeroy and
Foundation, a group supported by the
Brinley Franklin Seth, Pomeroy, filed
oil industry.
for
dissolution of their marriage
Lines and gas station closings

Robert Burnem, Addie Burnem to
James Robert Burnem, Linda Bur·
nem, 7,140 sq. ft., 7,140 sq. ft., Letart.
Wallace W. Amberger, dec. ·to
Margaret I. Amberger, cert. of
Trans., Chester-Sutton.
Edna A. Smith, aka Edna Alice
Smith to Earl A. Smith, Parcel:t,

of Middleport in the state of Ohio, at the close of business on June 30, 1979 published in
response to call made by Comptroller of the Currency, under title 12, United States Code,
Section 161.
Charter number 6441
National Bank Region Number 4

·--cc

DAVE DILES, who sponsored the first Dave Diles Appalachia SemiCIOBed Golf Tournament, w~ keeping busy Monday getting the goU ~ur­
ney underway at Riverside GoU Course, Mason. It was one of the biggest
events to be beld in the Meigs-Mason area. There were 148 area goUers
and 47 celebrities on hand for the event.

Gas supply now
up with demand

THE CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK

Ill

CAMBRIDGE, Ohio (AP) -- State
fire officials are trying to determine
the cause of a killer fire early Tuesday
that claimed the lives of nine persons,
four of them children, and injured 79
others at a Holiday IM .
lnvestigaoors, who pinpointed a spot
along a wall in the northeast section of
the first floor where the blaze began,
are not ruling out arson .
A mobile arson investigation
lab«atory wasat the scene and State
Fire"Mar!!hal William B. Sanders said
there was no doubt about arson being
coosidered. "We try to rule out
everything until we find something we

hogre~rt

REPORT OF CONDmON
Consolidating domestic subsidiaries of the

-.......

Officials ·investigating motel·fire cause

LIVFSfOCK REPORT

(Continued from page I)
in the area."
Exceptional Bluegrass en·
tertalrunent punctuated the evening.
Tom Wolfe of Racine won the golf
clubs that hsd been rafned for
chsrity . J\.)1 proceeds from the golf
tournament will go to chsrity.

Smith named
president-elect
of association

Final death toll nine

The Bend Area Jaycees have taken
on the task of structuring a new press
box for football at Bachtle Stadium,
borne ofthe Wahsma White Falcons in
Mason.
The new facility, which will house
announcers, scorekeepers and
cameramen, will he approximately 10
ft. by 30ft. and will stand over 20 ft. in
height.
• Head football coach Bill Jewell
stated he was pleased that the area
group, headed by President Dave
Gillespie, is constructing the modern
facility and has hopes that on it's
completion, the floor leve l will
provide more space for his weight
lifting and conditioning programs.
To initiate fund raising drives
toward the $4,000 goal, the Jaycees
will be selling quart bottles of allpurpose household cleaner. Tl)e doorto-door campaign .will begin in the
New Haven area Thursday or Friday.
Anyone
wishing
to
make
contributions toward completion of
the press box can. do so by contacting
Dave Gillespie, Steve Halstead, New
Haven., at 382-2334, Greg Gibbs,
Middleport, at992-3443, or any Jaycee
member .

passes to enter, Sgt. Raymond Dickel
of the Houston Police Department
said.
"We have about 60 units out there
right now and they will be there as
long as they are needed, " he said,
adding that 10 In 14 members of the
horseback patrol also would help
guard the apartments.
The pass system was used to
prevent looting in houses flooded by
C1audette last week, he said.
The apartments in the area ranged
in rent from $295 for a one-bedroom
apartment to $4004500 a month for
other ap;~rtments.
Cars jammed the roads to and from

the apartments. The cars going to the
apartments were filled with the
anxious and .tbe curious. Cars loaded
with stereos and clothes inched their
way through the traffic near the
blazing apartments.
Houston Mayor Jim McConn, who
was at the fire, said "hundreds" of
people will be homeless . The city and
private agencies, he . said, were
working oo 'lien· refugee centers.
· "The loss of property is going to be
very, very heavy, ~~ the mayor said.
"Less than week ago we went
through a similar thing," he said,
referring to the destruction wrought
by Claudette.

Fire Chief V.E. Rllgers said the
blaze, firSt reported about 3 p.m., was
the worst structure fire he'd seen in 24
years in Houstm.
·
He said gusty winds made
containment of the fire more difficult.
Officials warned residents in a halfmile radius of the Woodway Square
Apartments to water their roofs In
doUse sparks carried by the strong
breeze.
No cause for the blaze had been
determined. But Rogers said the fire
leaped from building to building
igniting the wood shingles on the
apartments.

Economic index dips in June·.
WASHINGTON (AP )
A
government index for predicting
future economic trends was down 0.1
percent in June, partly due to a
slowdown in employment and factory
orders, the Commerce Department
reports.
0
However, the Composite Index of
Leading Indicators released Tuesday
did not show three consecutive
months of downward movement, a
traditional measure of impending
recession. The June drop .came after a
0.3 percent gain in May and a 2.1
percent decline in April.
"I think the pattern of the index in
the coming months will give us some
clue of how much of a recession we
are in for ," said department

economist William Cox.
The decline began in the second
quarter of this year, according to
earlier department reports on the U.S.
inflation-adjusted gross national
product, and is expected to continue
through the third quarter. The leading
indicators have shown a decline since
December, although the monthly
pattern has been erratic. ·
The Carter administration, ·
acknowledging the economy is in a
recession, has predjcted it will be mild
and short-Jived.
The barometer of future trends fell
1.7 percent in the second quarter of
the year after a 0.2 percent drop in the
first quarter. The index rose in all four

quarters of 1978.
The index in June stood at 140.9, or
140.9 percent of 'the 1967 base period,
compared with a revised 141.1 for
May . Both are . below the 143.7.
reported in December.
The Commerce Department report ·
indicates the average work week fell
and the layoff rate increased in June,
signs ths t consumers may have less oo
spend in future months. Factory.
orders were off, as were vendor
performance and sensitive prices.
five index components showed
improvement : contracts and orders
for plant and equipment, stock prices, ·
building pennits, money supply and
liquid assets.

:\oloi

DISCUSS PRESS BOX PLANS - Greg Gibbs,
Wahsma head football coach BIJI Jewell, and Ron
Robinson, left to right, are shown discussing fwxl

raising projects to aid In the coeta of a new ..- IJoz
for Wahama High School. Gibbs and Robinson ' an
members of the Bend Areil Jaycees, an orpnlzatiCIII
that will attempt to ral8e t4,000 needed ffr the project.
II

~.

,,

�e:rrl\ ~aRT WOQnl ~R.-TE LE G"-""" -ro

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wi!dnesday, Aug. ), 1979

i
'

3-l'he OaUy lientinel, Mlddleport·Ptmeroy, o., weaneaoay, Aug. 1, u1~

Columbus blocked agr~ementHULM£
•

COLUMBUS, 'Ohio tAP I -- The City
of Columbus helped sidetrack a
November ballot proposal whi ch holds
pro mise of adding a major
rn rporation and 5.000 job5 to its
economy.
Hep . Micha el P. Stinzia no, DCo lumbu s, said City Attorney
Gregory Lashu tka and others blocked
legislative agreement on July 20, just
before lawmakers adjourned until
Sept. II .
The deadline for the Legisla ture to
place an issue on the November ballot
is Aug. 8. And unless there is a s pecial
session before then, which isn't likely.
the
proposed
co nst ituti onal
amendment must wait untjl June 1960.
SHnziano's amendment allows 83
municipal electric power systems
around the state to combine for the
rnnstruction and opera tion of power
generating faciliiie s.
But it also has the potential of
facilitating pla ns for Ame rica n
Elec tric Power Co. to acquire
Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio Electric
Co.
Stinziano said AEP officials, if the
deal goes through, plan to move their
headquarters from New York City to
Columbus, along with about 5,000 jobs.
The
propose d
municipal

coo perative fi gu res in th e AEP
acqui sitio n beca use the U.S.
Securities and Excl1ange Co mmission
wants to ma ke ce•·tain AEP's
expanded OJX'rations in Ohio face
some competition. AEP already owns
tl1e Ca nton-base'&lt;! Ohio Power Co.
In July 1978, when the SEC granted
ten tative approval fo r the AEP
takeover, it specified that a statewide
municipal cooperative would have a
positive effect on its final decision.
The Ohio Constitution does not allow
such a venture·by the municipals, and
that is why Stinziano introduced his
amendment.
All went well until the lawyers
representing the c1ties and the half
dozen other Ohio investor-owned
utilities became concerned about
future competition for service areas.

Slin zia no thought he had a
comprom ise in place un til the
morning of July 20 when Columbus
city officials demanded a last-minute
change.
They wanted stricken from the
proposal a Senate amendment which
said the Legislature could pass laws to
regulate service areas . In place of
that lanb'llage, they wanted to provide
that the Legislature would regulate
the cooperative of municipals and not
the individual

HEALTH

Business
•
mzrror.
•

NEW YORK (AP ) -· Several years
ago American Cyana mid Co. set up a
plan to ·save e nergy in its
conglomeration of m11nufacturing and
office faciliti es , and learned the
results can be measured in dollars .
The chemical conce rn estimates it
saved $19 million last year. Its U.S.
and Canada fu el bill was $106 million.
Had it used energy in the old way it
would have spent about $125 million.
That's the beginning. The company
expects to do much better in future
years, when the program is extended

uu

Brown's charts told story

PM.CSpltolldeas
putting them m storage.
WASHINGTON (AP) - - First, there
The committee's senior Republica n.
were Harold Brown 's charts of blue, Sen. John Tower of Texas, had been
green and red lines playing nuclear Leaning back in his chair, one foot up
lag and telling the story of who would on the table, and peering over his hall
have how many warheads after the glasses at Hart 's numbers.
first or second exchanges of missiles
Tower doesn't like the treaty and
ifthe United States and Soviet Union Hart's figures didn't set well with
fought the war to end all wars .
him .
It was all part of the defe~e
The next day, Tower arrived with
secretary's case for the SALT treaty. charts. His indicated the Soviets
Sen, Gary Hart, D~olo., aiso had wouldn 't do much more without SALT
some charts. The senator, a member than they could do with the treaty.
of the Senate Armed Serv ices
Sen. John Warner, R-Va ., came up
Committee , supports the treaty . His with a chart designed to show the
charts had two columns with numbers Soviets could mo ve ahead with
in each. They showed Hart' s · weapons development programs
estimates. of how many nuclear under SALT.
By this time, Sen. John Culver. J)..
warheads the Soviets would have with
the trea ty and without the treaty.
Iowa, dec ided he had seen enough
Given Hart's position on SALT, no charts.
on·e was surprised that he estimated.
" It might be time to initiate the
tl1e Soviets would ha ve a lot more chart limitation talks," suggested
warheads without SALT.
Culver.
At the other end of the long
With its ICBMs, SLBMs, ALCMs,
committee table, right next to the GLCMs, etc., SALT ha s more
easel holding Hart's charts, sat Sen . alphabet terms than the New Deal.
Hoger Jepsen, H-Iowa .
So, it 's no wonder senators began to
When his turn to question Brown get a little confused over ordinary
carne , Jepsen produced his own visual names.
aides . Not charts,. but pictures of the
"I would like to compliment Gen .
hulls of B52 bombers , sitting in Brown," said Warner. referring In
stora ge in a field .
Gen. David C. Jnnes.
Jepsen asked Brown if those stored
" Gen . Meyer , you've been
bombers w~ren 't being counted in the associated with the ABM treaty, isn't
treaty as !1art of the U.S. strategic that ri ght ,'' Jepse n asked Gen.
arse nal. Yes, indeed , replied Brown, Edward C. Meyer, Army chief of
. because the United Stat~s didn't want staff.
to give the Soviets a chance to avoid
"No," replied the genera l. "That's
having their bombers counted by Gen . Stu Meyer ."

Washington
By Clarence
Report Miller

Our economy is bad and getting
worse. Many ask how bad? I don't
want to sound like a doomsayer, but
let me spell out a few facts which will
serve to underscore the extent of our
current financial plight.
-Inflation is up sharply, averaging
an linnual rate of 13.2 percent so far
this year. Such inflation is unprecedented in peacetime, except for
PUBLIC NOTICE
sio nat e and understandmg
the war transition year of 1946. InBids will be receiv ed by ways today Much to your cred flation for the first six months of 1979
th e Villa9e of Middleport. it , you go ou t of your way to be
Ohio, Me1gs County at the kind .
.
was the worst for any similar period
Ma yor 's Off ice Of the LI BRA (Sopt. 23 - 0cl. 23)
in
Zayears.
V i llage Hall , 237 Rac e Fr iends will occu py part of your
Street, until 4 P .M. August day and aad a grea t deal toward
- Rising inflation is causing a
13, 1979 for the following maK ing It a pleasan t one . Benemassive lax increase as wagemateria ls:
11 cial comm unic at ions wil l take
earners
are pushed into higher tax
360 Tons, more or less, place
.
Asphaltic Concrete in place
brackets
.
The present 13.2 percent
SCORPIO
(Oct
.
24·Nqv.
22)
You
and rol led.
rate of inflation is causing a 21.4 per175 Gallons, more or tess, co uld .fin d It poss ible today to
Tack and-or Primer in ob tain sometl'1 1n g you ha d your
cent increase in individual income
place.
heart set on getting . Much will
taxes.
Stree ts being cons idered be due to your own efforts .
- Projected increases in unemfor r epairin9 is availabl e at SAG ITTARIUS (Nov . 23-Dec.
• th e Mayors Office, 237 21) You r approaches to things
ployment
have eliminated the
Race Street , Middleport, are bo th cre ative and th ought·
Ohio.
possibility
of
a balanced federal
fut . maKing it Qu ite easy for
The Villa !1e reserves the other to go al ong with your
budget unless immediate policy
r ig ht to r e1ec t any or all ideas . You can profit from th is .
changes are made to improve the
b id s.
Gene Grate ' CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) economic outlook. As unemployment
Clerk-Treasurer You 're a bit of a roman ticis t goes up; tax revenues go down, and
tod ay, and lll al' s good . To
CBJ 1, 8,2tc
crea1e a balance in hie . we al l
mandated govenunent assistance to
need to dwe ll In tile sentimen the jobless increases, further comtal world from lime to time .
pounding the problem.
AQUARIUS (Jan . ZO·Feb. 19)
Beca use you reall y c are . yo u'll
- American worker productivity,
ta ke th e lime to be th oughtful
the
source of all real wage increases
Bernice Bede Osol
and consid erate to all who se
and
the key to economic growth, acpa ths yo u' ll cross . Need les s to
tually dropped at an aruJUal rate of 4.6
say, yo u'll be popular.
PISCES (Feb. 2·0-March 20) percent over the first quarter of this
More doors than usual are
year.
open to you today If you
-Savings and capital investment as
to en ter th em . Peo ple
WJ'Birthday choose
are in a genero us mood and a percentage of income in America
will make your way eas y.
are the lowest in the Western world·.
ARIES (March . 21 -Aprll 191
Aug . 2, 1979
Thi ng s look pretty good lor you Without investment capital we can
Th1s commg yea r you ma y in th e romance depa rtm en t not hope to make meaningful adekperienc e a more active so- today . Clla nces are you ' ll
vances in productivity.
Ci a l Ide and a not able gain 1n
spe nd the day wi th one wh o
popu lanty Muc h of th is will be means a lot to you .
There is ·no question, our country's
due to an mcrease 111 your self- TAURUS (April 20.May ZO) That economy is in big trouble. Even the
co nfidence
artisti c abili ty you possess is
Administration, which for the longest
LEO (July 23- Aug . 22) Oth ers,
pou ring out o f you ' today .
time
downplayed the likelihood of a
espec1alty the op pos ite sex,
Yo u' re es pec!a iJy sharp at ! ~k ­
lind 't'O U rnos t appealing today Ing old , worn 1tems and tu rnmg serious
recession, has now
and will :;eek ou t yo ur COrTJ P~ ·
them int o things of be.auty .
acknowledged
that one is on the way,
ny . Your charm and wi t are
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) You
As
a
result,
some
estimates predict
sho wing Find ou t more of what
cou ld hear of som e lhm g quite
l1es ahead for you in the year
llaneri ng !O you r ego that w111 that this year as many as two million
fo llow1ng your bi rthday by
make yo u fee t good today . more Americans will be added to the
sendmg for your copy of AstroYo u'll know you ' re app reci atranks of the unemployed, a roster
Grapll let!er . Ma ll S1 for each
ed.
10 Ast ra-Gra ph. P 0 Bo)( 489.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) which now munbers some 5.9 million
Rao1o Cl!y Stat 11... n . N ,Y. 10019.
There 's no t too mu c h you mind individuals.
·
Be sure to soe c lly b~rth da te.
doing today Yo~ · ~ t take any
We
can't
just
wish
our economic ills
VIRGO (Aug
23- Sept . 22)
projec t and turn 1! 1nt o a labor
away. Our country's economic conThose who are oear to your
of love .
heart will ft: o..
ur con1pas INEWSPAPFR CNl ERPRISE ASSN f
dition will not improve by itself. I

ASTRO•GRAPH

~'Your

" OK, who ·s t!Je w1se guy that put the dra ft Kennedy fe tter in my To Be S1gned folder?"

1 ...

I

·'

CINCINNATI (AP) -- Los Angeles
ouUielder Dusty Baker sidled up to
Manager Tom Lasorda on tlieir way to
the clubhouse after the Dodgers hung
on to defeat the Cincinnati Reds 7~
Tuesday night.
"The way we play these games,"
Baker told his graying manager,
"we're going w make you the most
strategic manager in the league."
. Lasorda, whose bullpen has an
earned-run average hovering around
7.00 since the All-Star break, .went to
the mound five times in · the ninth
inning of the Dodgers' 7~ victory over
the Reds.
Four Los Angeles pitchers allowed
four ninth-inning runs, but rookie
Dave PatterSon got the last two Heds
out tD save the game.
" If I'm going to lose weight, I need
that walking," Lasorda said.
Not only did Lasorda juggle his
bullpen in the ninth , but he also broke
ooe of the cardinal rules of baseball.
He ordered Patterson to intentionally
walk Joe Morgan Ia .252 hitter) with
two outs w face Dave Collins I .339).
With Hector Cruz on second, Morgan
was the potential winning run .
"That was a dangerous move, "
Baker said. "Collins is probably the
hottest hitter in the National League
right now. "
The explanation wa s vintage
Lasorda. " I checked · the salaries.
Morgan makes more than Collins,"
Lasorda deadpaMed .
''It's no disrepect for Collins. It's

So that you may conform and feel completely at ease. gentlemen, the
managem en t furnishes these Bee Gees T-shirts."

to overseas operations. Present

.

lead in runs batted in with 81, and I tis
25 home runs puts him thiru behind
Schmidt and Chicago's Dave
Kingman.
His fieldin g, throwing and
baserunning aren't bad, either, if you
like understatements. Despite all this,
Winfield insists : "People just don't
know who Dave Winfield is."
Atlanta's J 'hil 'Niekro knows . The
Braves• right-hander gave up three of
the five Winfield hits and two of the
four Winfield RBI that helped the
Padres to a 10-3 rout of the Braves
Tuesday night.
" I've had a consistently good
season," he says, "but !let my peers
determine how good a player I am.
(Pittsburgh's Dave) Parker is a great
player and you hear people talk about
him a lot. People just don 't know who
Dave Winfield is."
In the other NL games, Phil
Niekro's brother, Joe, became the
first 15-game winner when the
Houston Astros beat · the San
Francisco Giants 6-4; the Los Angeles
Dodgers held off the Cincinnati Reds
7~. the Montreal Expos blanked the
St. Louis Cardinals :;.o, the
Philadelphia Phillies bested the
C'hicago Cubs 4-1 and the New York
Mets edged the Pittsburgh Pirates 2-1.
Astros 6, Giants 4
Craig Reynolds' tw&lt;H'un triple in
the Houston second helped the Astros
beat San Francisco and give Joe
Niekro his 15th victory against six
losses.
A fielding error by Reynolds led to
three San Francisco runs in the
seventh. The Giants added a ninthinning run on Jack Clark's single.
E;q10s S, Cardinals 0
Rudy May pitched a three-hitter in
his first start of the season and
recorded his first shutout since Sept.
26, 1978as Montreal blanked St. Louis.
Rodney Scott scored on Andre
Dawson's first-inning groundout to
give May all the offense he needed .
PhilUes 4, Cull6 1
Nino Espinosa's six-hitter helped
the Phillies beat the Cubs. Bake
McBride's insid&lt;Hhe-park homer got
Philadelphia started . His drive to
nght-center appeared to have been
caught by center flet&lt;t_er Jerry Martin.
after a long run, but he collided with
right fielder Scot Thompson and the
ball fell loose.
Mets Z, Pirates I
An HBI single by Lee Mazzilli and a
run-s~oring grqundout by Willie.
Mootanez backed the combined fourhit pitching of Torn Hausman , Wayne
Twitchell and Ed Glynn as New York
trinuned Pittsburgh.

Dodgers hang on,
defeat Reds, 7-6

•

SUN PROTECJ'JON
you get ready to go out in the sun to do
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
your gardening or for recreation, you
DEAR DR. LAMB - I am 42 years should probably Wle one of the
old and of medium complexion. I physical blocking agents on all of the
usually get a healthy tan by routine areas of the skin that are apt to be exexposure to the sun - gardening, out- posed to the sun. And since It's an
door recreation but not sun bathing.
allergic-type response, the an;
· This swruner I have had rather ex- tihistamine medicines used for
treme skin irritation - ·redness, allergies may also help.
severe itchy dryness - and it seemed
DEAR DR. LAMB- My question is,
to follow a period outdoors. I was told how do you figure a woman's
by a dermatologist that it was an menstrual period days to find the 24th
allergic reaction to the sun and that day? Do you count from the first day
that wasn't uncommon . He gave me of her period or do you count from the
an ointment to use but said that day she siops her period?
avoiding the sun is the only real treatDEAR READER - The first day of
ment. This is very hard to do.
the menstrual period is considered
· Would you please comment on this. the first day of the menstrual cycle. If
Is it likely to be a permanent condi- the period lasts for four days, the
tion? Is there a medication which fourth day of the period is the fourth
would prevent or offset the effect of day of the ~ycle.
moderate exposure? I have noticed
I get quite a few letters asking for
some itching even on mild spring information about this and usually it's
days and hate to accept the idea that I becaW!e someone thinks that she is
cannot enjoy outdoor activities going to use this method to avoid
without a reaction.
pregnancy, I'd like to caution you
DEAR READER - There is such a against thinking that that's such an
~on se rvation.
thing as solar urticaria which simply effective measure. A woman who is
Steam heat trap s should be
means hives or allergic-like skin absolutely regular may ·menstruate
examined,
for example, to determine
reaction to sun exposure. I gather the 14th day after ovulation. This
if
the
hea
l
is
blowing through instead
from your remarks that's what your always means that you know after
of
being
utilized
. The problem is a
dermatologist thinks you have.
ovulation when it ·occurred rather common one not difficult to rnrrect,
This is truly an allergic-type reac- than before. There are quite · a few
tion to sunshine, but have hope variations involved and a woman who said Steele.
Lighting is a major wastrel. In his
because there are things that can be is regular all the time may just not be
opinion,
fluorescent lamps,. which U5e
done to protect you.
regular the critical month.
less
energy
and generate less heat
In the first place, the nonnal
than
do
incandescent
lamps, and
p)Jysical and chemical barriers to
therefore
reduce
the
need
for air
sunlight do help, For this reason, I am
coo
ling,
should
be
considered
.
NAVY GIG
sending you The Health Letter
Steele and his associates learned
number 7-10, Your Skin : Sun, Aging,
CHARLESTON, W. Va. (AP )- Its
that
boilers often operate at low
~pots And Cancer. It includes in it in· last assigrunent was carrying naval
efficiency.
a tend ency easily
formation about protecting the skin officers between a giant cruiser and
measured
by
examinmg
what goes up
from the sun. Other readers who want the French Riviera. Its next task will
the sta ck. Too little air equals poor.
this issue can send 75 cents by check be to carry local emergency crews to
combustion ; too much wastes heat.
or coin with a long, stamped, sell- scenes of river disasters.
Cyanamid regularly checks all its
"We've been looking for years for
addressed envelope for it. Send your
boil ers
· with
sophisti cated
request to me, in care of this something like this for water rescue," instrum ents. " Recent innovations
newspaper, P.O. Box 1551, Radio City said Richard Gray, chief of emergen- permit us In fine tune them," sa id
Station, New York, NY 10019.
cy services for Charleston and
Steele. The result : 5 percent to 15
I would suggest that every day Kanawha County, of the retired cap- percent of total savings.
when you first get up that you use one lain's gig.
The value of any such program,
of the SWlScreens that contain p ABA
Gray has a ·crew of 15 volunteers however , is onl y as good as
(paramino benzoic acid). Use them who ha~e taken aU. _s. Coast Guard mana ge ment parti cipation and
carefully, since some PABA prepara- • course m boat handling and WJII be backin g.
lions stain clothing. In addition , when able to man the 28-foot vessel.

uu

Dave Winfield buys tickets so kids Diego Padres.
who can 't afford them can see
lie leads the National League in
baseball games for free . Dave hitting with a .345average, is tied with
Winfield also hitS very well for the San Philadelphia's Mike Schmidtfor the

savings come from U.S. and Canadian
facilities only.
When Cyanamid bega n the
program , it sought by 1960 a 14
percent saving over 1972 usage, in
keeping with an industry goal set by
the Department of Energy. It reached
· t6 percent by 1977 ; it aims for 30 in
1980.
Whil e these figures seem
extraordinary -- sa vings equalled 12
percent of profits last y.ear -· they
were achieved without damage to
product or job quality. TI1e reverse
was true; waste alone was eliminated.
That's the beauty of energy
efficiency, say its advocates. It often
pays for itseU. if not immediately then
in a period of years. Although its
potential was igno•·ed for years, it is
simply effi cient busin ess.
Whi le the chemical industry is said
to be energy-intensive, meaning it
uses a lot of energy . most other
compa nies can benefit from keeping
an eye on the fuel bill, and save 10 .
percent to 30 percent, says Cyanamid .
First they should have an audit,
perhaps by a consultant such as the
E. I. duPont company (which
developed expertise in auditing its
own plants ), said Eugene Steel,
corporate manager of energy

lawrence E. lamb, M.D.

Berry's World

Winfield paces Padres

Cleveland Elccll·ic llluminating Co.
had gone along with the idea of letting
th e Legislature reg ulate serv ice
area s . Earlie r , CE I wante d a
provi sion to freeze the municipa ls'
service areas as they currently exist.
But Columbus was adama nt about
its amendment, wl1ich was offered in
th e Senate and de fea t ed 13-15 .
Stinziano asked the House to reject
the Senate version, and his proposal
was left in limbo.
.
Without the support of Columbus
.and the other municipalities involved,
it would never be approved on the
ballot , he said.

\

wish it were that easy. Some strong
medicine is necessary. medicine that
the current Administration has
heretofore been reluctant to
prescribe.
In the ab5ence of meaningful action
in this regard by the Administration
and by the majority leadership in the
Congress, a package of proposals has
been put together by the Republican
minority which I think merits serious
consideration by the Congress. The
plan, which is designed to avert the
worst impact of the recession and set
the economy on a long-tenn path to
recovery, calls for a combination of
personal tax cuts, savings Incentives
and depreciation adjustments. The
total of the recommended cuts combined amounts of $36 billion. One of
our most pressing economic needs is
to restore purchasing power to consumers and expand supply. It is anticipated that the aforementioned
combination of cuts will do just that.
More specifically the plan calls for
the following:
- An inunediate and pennanent ·
reduction in personal income lax
rates of at least 10 percent.
- Indexing personal income tax
rates to eliminate the continual and
unlegislated tax increases caWied by
inflation.
- A freeze on Social Security taxes
at their present 1979leve!s.
- Eliminating of the outmoded
''useful life'' concept for
depreciation, and replacing it instead
with a speed-up in depreciation rates
for structures, equipment and
vehicles to facilitate the expansion
and modernization of the nation's
productive capacities.
We as a nation cwmot sit idly by
and watch our economy come down
around us. We mUBt act, and act now.
The aforementioned plan · Is ·not
suggested as a cure-all for now and
ever after, It is proposed as a means
out of the current recession we find
ourselves in. In conjunction with conscientiOWI spending restraint, the
Congress would be wise to put Its partisan consideration aside and to act on
this proposal now, before the situation
gets any worse.

Sen. James Exon , D-Neb., kept
referring to Adm . Thomas Hayward,
chief of nava l operations, as "Adm.
Haywood."
.
At 'one point, Exon called Jones,
"Gen. Rogers," which prompted the
general to respond, "Senator, I'm
Gen . Jones. 1 almost called you Sen.
Mobil. "

Wolf Pen
News Notes
Ann and Charlotte Lambert were
visitors of Mrs. J . R. Murphy and enjoyed swimming.
•
Peggy Murphy enjoyed a week's
camping trip with Mr. and Mrs.
Harley Jolmson and family at Forked
Run.
Barbara Murphy spent a couple
days with Mr. and Mrs. John Downs,
Adam and Eric of Jacksonville, 0.,
last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Murphy, Robbie and Veronica, and Mr. and Mrs.
John E. Murphy and Chris of Racine
and Iva Johnson were Friday, Saturday and Swulay visitors of Mrs. J. R.
Murphy and daughters.
Iva Jolmson and Ida Murphy were
recent viSitors of Mr. and Mrs. Clair ·
Giles .
·
·
Barbara Murphy was Monday overnight guest of Mr. and Mrs. John E.
Murphy and Chris.
.
Debi McEwen and friends frtm
Berea, Oh., were last Tuesday ·
visitors of Barbara Murphy.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul ·McElroy and
Mr. and Mrs. Bill McElroy, Jeff and ·
Joey. were weekend visitors of Mr . .
and Mrs. Carl McElroy of ColwnbWI . .
While there they attended a ball

Look for
the right
handgun
ByR.T. KERR
Associated Pres• Writer
BOULDER, Colo. (AP) - · As more
and more staies open big game
hunting to handgunners, shopping for
a suitable firearm has become a
90!Tletlmes bafning, and e•pensive.
proposition for the newrnmer.
Many states, such as Colorado , have
taken away some of the mystery of
selection · by setting certain
minimums. In Colorado a hunter must
use aUeast a .357-caliber Magnum
with a minimum barrel length of four
inches.
For the hunter not hampered by
budgetary problems, a .H-caliber
Magnum with target sights and stocks
is a logical choi~ . The now famous
Smith &amp;Wesson Model29 is a favorite,
but often is sold for as much as $500 by
some dealers who claim they have to
pay retail prices or more to get them .
Ruger has designs on this market with
a stainless .44-ca liber Magnum
revolver due for release soon at a
price of less than $350.
There are other options available,
though, for the shootist on a budget
who can be happy with less gun that
still qualifies when lapped on the
shoulder by the game warden. When a
spending ceiling of less than f3lO is
applied, the field Ia narrowed considerably. Buyers then can chOOIIe
from domestic utility models
produced by S and W, Ruger, Charter
Alms or Abilene.

game.

Mr. and Mrs. John Downs, Adam
and Eric, of near Glouater spent
several days with Mrs. J . R. Murphy •
and family.
Adam and Eric Downs spent the
day with their grandmother, Mrs. J .•
R. Murphy . Robbie Murphy !pent the
weekend with his grandmother. Mr. •
and Mrs. Robert Murphy were in Cincinnati to attend a ball game and to ·
visit KingJJI3land.
Peggy Murphy was a visitor in
Colwnbus for two weeks.
Barbara Murphy spent a few days
in Colwnbus then flew to Alabama to '
visit her slater, Cannel Murphy, for
twoweekll.
Miss Peggy Murphy spent a week in
Uverpool, N. Y. visiting with fanner
minister of Zion, Mr. and Mni. Don ..
Kennedy and family.
Mrs. Donald Worley and Stacy of
Beckley, W. Va. spent Wednesday
night through Friday with Mr. and
Mrs. Charley D. Smith, Karl, Charles '
and Kevin. Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp ...
were Friday visitors.
Jo and Stacy Worley visited with
her grandmother, Iva Johnson,
Friday afternoon.
Iva Johnson spent Sunday night
with Mr. and Mrs. Charley D. Smith.
Tammy Johnson spent a few days
with the Lawrence Napper family of
Aberdeen, Ohio. They were fonner
residents of Ball Run .

..

First

-

the hunter must decide
whethe~ he wants a single action or a
double action . Simply explained; the
shooter must cock the hammer each
time he shoots a single action. A
double action can be fired by pulling
the trigger through a full cycle which
cocks the hammer, then lets it fall.
The double action also can be fired
single action.
A double action in- the hands of a
true shootist is faster if a second shot
is needed. Single action enthusiasts
will argue that a second shot isn't
needed that often if the handgunner
knows w.bat he's doing. ·
An S&amp;W Model 13, the cheapest
domestically manufactured . 357 ~
caliber Magnum available today, was
tested and found to meet the rigors
required of a hunting ann.
The Model13 comes in either blue or
nickelfinish, the former available at a
suggested retail of $147.50 and the
latter at $161.
The Modell3 was used in simulating
a test which requires the Colorado
handgunner to put four of six shots
into an ll-inch circle .at SO yards
shooting from any natura l position
without artificial rest.
A 6-inch barreled Ruger with
adjustable sights also was put through
the paces and, not surprisingly,
produced a somewhat tighter group .
However the stainless Ruger is more
expensiv~, retailing at about $192.
. For the hunter wanting In take
advantage
of
the
growing
opportunities to hunt with a pistol, the
plain vanilla Modell3 offers a chance
lo get in on the sport for much less
than $200.

just a tremendous amount of respect
for Joe Morgan," he said.
J'a tterson retired Collins on a
grounder to second, earning his third
save in less than a month tn the
Dodgers' anemic bullpen and making
up for a disappointing performance
Monday night, when he gave up two
doubles which brought home five runs
in a !4 Reds victory.
"I threw so poorly Monday night.
When I have a bad performance one
night, I like to threw right away the
next night, " Patterson said.
The game was what has become a
typical rnntest for the !979 Dodgers.
They grabbed a HI lead through three
innings on RBI singles by Steve
Garvey. Baker, Joe Ferguson and
Steve Yeager.
Don Sutton, &amp;-12. gave up two
scratch runs in the fourth, helped by
Baker:s dropped fly ball. He had to
leave the game in the si•th inning
when a Collins grounder struck the
inside of his left knee. The injury
didn 't
see m
serious,
but
precautionary X-rays were taken .
Joe Beckwith, a starting pitcher in
Albuquerque a month ago, stopped the
Heds until the ninth . Then relief ace
Terry Forster gave up two doubles
and a walk, making the score 7-{J.
With one on, Ken Brett gave up a
double to left by Hector Cruz. The hit
missed being a home run by less than
a fool.
"My heart stopped when I saw that
ball," Lasorda said.
· But Patterson killed the rally and
the Dodgers handed the Reds their
sernnd loss in nine games.
Cincinnati 's Hay Knight, whose
three..-un double gave him 25 HBI in
his last 17 games, saw some
consolation in the near-victory.
"This is the way it was in '75 and
'76," said Knight as the second-place
Heds dropped to 31h games behind the
Houston Astros, wt10 lead the National
League West . "We can't play great
every night but we can come back and
play well. "

Foster, Griffey
making progress
CINCINN-ATI (AP ) -· Ailing
Cincinnati Reds star George Foster is
making satisfactory progress while
injured teammate Ken Griffey will
contin ue to play, according to the
team 's physician.
Dr. George Ballou said Mooday that
Foster, the slugging left fielder who is
on the l!i-day disabled list because of
what the Reds describe as a pulled
muscle in the thigh area, "will
continue two-a-OOy treatments of
whirlpool and ultrasound and will
continue to rest the area, " Ballou
said.
riffey has been in and out of the
lineup because his knee stiffens and
swells.
" He has no change in the
intermittent impingement which he
has in . the anterior medial
compartment of his left knee, " Ballou
said. "He will continue to play as long
as he feels he is capable of doing the
job."
Griffey was seen last week by an
orthopedic surgeon in Pittsbilrgh who
suggested that surgery might be
needed to correct the damage.
"I would say at this point he should
be able to play until the end ofthe
season," said Reds President Dick
Wagner . "U surgery is required, it
would be at the end of the year. "
Griffey's attorney, Tom Reich, was
scheduled to meet Tuesday with
Wagner to discuss Griffey's status.

Reich denied that th'e Reds
entertain any · selfiSh motives that
might sacrifice his client's playing
future .
"I'm sure the Reds management
does not want to extract performance
in return for potential disability later ,
I'm positive about that," Reich said.
The injuries to Griffey and Foster
have forced Reds Manager John
McNamara to perform a . daily
juggling act with his starting lineup.
"I'm just concentrating on making
up the lineup the best I can using the
people I have available," McNamara
said.
Despite
all
the
injuries,
McNamara 's shuffling has produced
the National League team's first big
surge of the baseball season.
Second baseman Joe Morgan hinted
that the absence of Foster and
sometimes Griffey may have caused
the Reds to display a little extra
effort.
"Maybe it has (,done so)
indirectly," Morgan said. "Really,
it's just a situation where people are
just doing the things that they are
supposed to do. But any time you take
two regulars out of the lineup, it's
going to be rough.
"The key is we haven't been getting
behind. You don't need power if you
don't get behind: It's totally different
if you're only' a couple of runs
behind."

.

WINDOW
FANS
VARIOY OF
MODELS TO
,-&lt;

"

I

I

•

f.

Hunting safety
course offered
By Greg BaUey
There will be a hunter safety course
August li-lH5at the l.zaak Walton Club
grounds near Chester.
Under the provision of Senate Bill
419, first-time hunters must complete
ah approved course before purchasing a 1979 hunting license.
With squirrel season fast approaching, first-time hunters,
especiaUy the youth of the county,
will want to take advantage of this

course.

State Game Protector Andy Lyles
and NRA Instructor Greg Bailey will
conduct the course that includes basic
fireann skills, first aid, hunting laws
and ethics, field care of game.
wildlife identification, and basic
wildlife management. The course will

begin at 6:30 each evening.
The course is open to any youth, or
adult 12 years of age or older. Anyone
over i1 that is interested in becoming
a hunting safety instructor is
welcome , and Mr. 'Lyles will organize
that course at the first meeting on
August&amp;.
Registration is now open and will
remain so until August 5. The class
size is limited to the first 30 people to
sign up. Interested parties may
register at Jim's Gulf in Pomeroy or
the Daily Sentinel office on Court
Street in Pomeroy .- Interested persons may also call and register with
Mr. Lyles at ~7 or Bailey at 9492065.
There is no charge or fees for the
course approved by the Ohio Division
of Wildlife. The I.zaak Walton Club
grounds are located between Chester
and Bashan on Shade ruver Road .

SCI&lt;YI'O RESULTS
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -· Unique
Reward charged from sixth place into
the lead in the stretch and scored a
hall-length victory in the featured
race at Scioto Downs on Tuesday
night.
·
The winner. circling the mile in 2:03
2--5, paid $11.20, $5 and $4. The Booger
Lady returned $4 and $3.20 for second
and Towner Lobell, $5 for show.
The 2-7-4 first race trifecta was
worth $1 ,697.40.
.
A crowd of 4.517 wagered $333,880.

....... .., .: ' .·',

32 qt. STYROFOAM
COOLER &amp; 10 lb.
BAG OF ICE
$250

CITY LIMITS
DRIVETHIW

748 N. Second St.
Middleport, 0.

TRACK AND FIELD
MALMOE , Sweden ( AP ) -· Led by
Clancy Edwards, who swept the 100
and . 200 meter~. Americans won all
bot one men 's event and 12 of 16
competitions
overall_ in
an
international track and held meet.
Edwards won the 100 in 10.45, and
the :m in 20.63.
Other winners in the meet were
Henry Marsh , a gold medalist in the
Spartacade 3,000-meter steeplechase,
who took his specialty here 111 a
stadium record 8:24.56, and Pan Am
Games 800 champion James
Robinson, who took the event in
I :48.22.

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NEW HAVEN BRAVES - Girl's Pee Wee Softball Team ended the season with a 9-1 record and were
Champions of the Middleport Tournament. Seated, left to right , Darla Hoffman, Ally so~ Wolf, Deena White, Pam
Frye. Joanna Frye, Angie Tennant. Standing. Amy Wofe, Na ncy Rolhns. Amy MacKm~ht, Coach Joyce Moxley,
Lori Moxley, Michelle Gress, Kristin Layne. Not pictures, Christine Howes, Stephame Lmn and Beth Layne,
Assistant Coach.

NO. 2's

CIIOOSI FROM
1'J '

·

gg~

�4- Tbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday , Aug. I, 1979

TOURNAMENT CHAMPS - Champions of the
Middleport Pony League Tournament were the
Wilkesville Twins. ·Front row, 1-r, Phil Bailey, Jason

Keffer, Walter Norris, Matthew Knox Walter Games
Terry Jeffers, John Coen. Back, Coa~h Don Oney, Ed
Lester, John Lowe, Dan Peyton, Jeff Oney, Bill Norris,
Coach Danny Peyton.
•

Sports World
By Will Grimsley A P Correspunde11t

BIRMINGHAM, Mich. (AP ) -- On
the.calendar, it's the last of golf's Big
major
championships .
Four
Traditionally it is the toughest, the
least prestigious, the least publicized.
What's the matter with the PGA
National Championship, anyhow ?
Once the blame was laid to poor
courses . That's been rectified.
Recently, it has been played on the
nation ' s finest, most challenging
layouts, such as Oakland. Hills, just
outside Detroit, this week .
Once they said the trouble lay in the
original format - - match play, headto-head, sudden death . Too often, the
star players -- the Hogans, Demarets
and Sam Sneads -- were eliminated in
the 18-hole early rounds, stripping the
event of its glamor for the windup .
This was changed in 1958 when the
tournament was given the regular 72hole medal design.
This didn't help, either. The PGA
remained the orphan child of the
"biggies," outshooe by the Masters,
U.S. Open and, since Arnold Palmer
led the Yankee march across the
Atlantic, the British Open.
But the PGA plugs along, 63 years
old, reflector of the game's legends,
once the pride of the pros but no
longer the pet of .the guys on tour who
now have their own event.
While the late Bob Jones in the '20s
was undisputed monarch of the
amateurs -- and of all golf -- the
feisty, benickered Gene Sarazen and
the flamboyant Walter Hagen set up a
little kingdom of their own in the PGA,
out of Bobby 's reach .
Sarazen won three times, the first in
1922 and the last ll years later. The
majestic Ha gen, who was known to
appear on the first tee in a tuxedo
after an all-night party , won five in
the space of seven years in the 1920s,
including four in a row . Then came the
era of Ben Hogan, Byron Nelson and
Sam Snead, playing eyeball-to-Eyeball
thrillers until match play was
abandoned to satisfy the TV appetite .
After that, the hiatus. The PGA lost
; much of its flavor. It evolved largely
· into just another 72-hole tour event. Its
: saving grace was that it remained the

BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
Things have been perfect for Dave
Garcia in tlle past week or so. For Don

Zimmer, they've been perfectly
awful . And Tuesday night took the
.
.
founu an
1ast Jewel m g!!~e.
quadruple crown should anybody lake
·1want to cry, " said the manager of
the f1rst three -- Masters, U.S. and the Boston Red sox.
Bnllsh Opens -- as Hogan did in 1953
It wasn't only that Zimmer's team
on_ly to snub the PGA.
lost a double-header to the Cleveland
rhe PGA has not lacked for talent. Indians, 11-10 in 11 innin gs nnd ~-0 . It
It has been dressed up, well promoted
and placed on the traditional
championship courses. But it still
doesn't get the public 's pulse s
pumping as do the Masters or the
Opens. Why ?
Maybe the PGA needs a fresh
BALTIMORE (AP) -- Quarterback
makeup .
Bert
Jones was ambidextrous last
Why not return it to the old match
sea son . He threw · pa sses right play format ' Golf tournaments, big handed, but turned lefty to comb his
and small , are too much alike. Four
rounds, 72 holes, final round Sunday
on TV . With the same cast and
characters, they can become a drone,
as TV ratings indicate.
129 ;
La nsford ,
After all , that's the game the Minnesota ,
average guy plays on weekends - - Californi;~ ; 126; B Bell, Texas,l25.
DOUBLES--Lynn, Boston, 29; G
head-on , quarter and two-buck
Nassau . There is no reason to feel that Brett, Kansas City , 28 ; Lemon ,
Chicago, 27 ; Cooper, Milwaukee ,
the formal would jeopardize TV
·
revenues . The late Fred Corcoran 26; Boehle, Seattle, 26.
TR!PLES--GBrett,
Kansas
City
,
pushed for years for a match play ·
13;Molitor,
Milwaukee,
9;
tournament with use of medal
Randolph, NewYork, 9; Wilson ,
(c umulative) scoring that would
City , 8;A Bannistr,
Kansas
carry to the 18th hole.
Chicago , 7; Porter, Kansas City,
It 's worth a try.
7; R Jones, Seattle, 7.
HOME RUNS--Singleton,
Baltimore, 26;Lynn, Boston, 26; Rice,
Boston, 25; Baylor, California, 25;
Thomas, Milwaukee,24.
· TODAY'SMAJOR
STOLEN BASES--LeFlore, Detroit,
52; Wilson, Kansas City, 44; Bonds,
LEAGUE LEADERS
Cleve! and, 26 ; Wills, Texas, 26 ;
By The Associated Press
Bumbry, Baltimore, 25.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
BATTING I 250 at bats )- -Downing
PITCHING (10 Decisions)--R
California , .331i ; Kemp, Detroit:
.331i; Lezcano, Milwaukee, .334 ; Davis, New York, 9-1, .900, 2.29;
.Boehle, Seattle,.330; Lynn, Boston, Kern , Thxas, 10-2, .833, 1.37 ;
.32!1 .
Clear, California, lll-3, .769 , 3.26 ;
RUNS--Baylor, California, 81 ; G Zahn , Minnesota, 9-3, .750, 3.24 ;
Brett,Kansas City , 80; Lansford Barrios, Chicago, 8-3, .727, 3.61;
California , 77 ; R Jones, Seattle, 76; Eckersley , Boston, lUi, .706, 2.96;
Lynn, Boston, 74; Rice, Boston, 74. Flanagan, Baltimore, 14~, .700,
3.68; John, New York, 14~ •. 7~
RBI --Baylor, California, 96; Lynn,
Boston, 82 ; Rice, Boston , 82; 2.74.
STRIKEOUTS--Ryan, California,
Stngleton, Baltimore, 80; Kemp,
Detroit, 77.
168; Guidry, New York, 125; Jenkins,
HITS--G Brett, Kansas City 142· Texas, 116; Flanagan, Baltimore, 108;
Ri ce, Boston, 129;
Sm~lley: Eckersley, oston, 96. ·
..A.

Front, 1-1', Dave Demosky, Dave Follrod, Allen

team

King;

Jimmy Boyer, Jimmy Farley, Terry Wayland. Back,
Coach John Hood, Dave Hoffman, Jeff Wayland, BI.D
Powell, John Cremeans, Greg Bush, Coach Jim
Farley- Absent was Steve Powell and John Ward.

d

was how th e Sox were dropped .
They held a 10-5 lead going into the
ninth inning of the first game, but poor
relief pitching allowed the Indians to
tie the game and send it into extra
innings. Then Toby Harrah won it for
Cleveland with a run-scoring double
with two out in the 11th.
Len Barker . combined with Sid
Monge on a two-hitter as the Indians

won the second game.
In other American League action,
Baltimore defeated Milwaukee ~ ;
Kansas City edged Toronto 6-S ; Texas
routed Detroit 11-3; . New York
whipped Chicago 7-3; California
turned back Seattle 8-1 and Oakland
beat Minnesota Z-1.
Orioles 9, Brewers 5
Ken Singleton's two-run homer

Jones ready to lead Colts

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

WIN PRIZES TOO!

CARRIER NEEOED IN SYRACUSE
CALL 992-2156

The Daily Sentinel

hair because of a persistent shoulder
injury.
Now fully recovered from the injury
that lumled h1m to three games in
1978, Jones is ready to guide the
Baltimore Colts back to respectability
10 the National Football League.
"He's ready to roll," offensive
guard Robert Pratt said of Jones ,
"With Bert in there, our offense has
unlimited potential. Last year we had
no long threat to· speak of, but now
other teams just can 't look for the run
or the short pass."
" It gives all of us confidence to
know tha t the right play will be called
in the right situation," added wide
recei ver Glenn Doughty . " It's
contagiou s throughout the whole

team .''

In 1977, when the Colts won their
third
c onsecutive
American
Conference East championship, Jones
led ' the NFL with 224 completions,
tossed 17 touchdown ~asses and
gained 2,686yards. The season before ,
he had 24 TDs and 3,104 yards .
Aft£r being hurt in the final
exhibition last year , Jones didn't play
until the seventh game of the regular
season -- and then was reinjured in
the fir st quarter against the New York
Jets.
Following two more weeks on the
sidelines, Jones returned to complete
three scoring passes in a nationally

televised Monday night game against
the Washingtoo Redskins .
Jones was in obvious pain several
times, with his right arm hanging
limply at his side, but he peformed so
well that some critics and several of
the Redskins insisted he was faking .
But the following week, after
completing 12 of 17 passes against
Seat~. Jones was hurt again and
went out for the season. Without him,
the Colts lost their last five games and
finished at 5-11.
Bill Troup, who had 10 TD passes
and 21 interceptions as Jones'
replacement, has since been released
and the Colts acquired veteran Greg
Landry from Detroit as the No. I
backup.
A weight program helped rebuild
the shoulder, but Jones also played a
lot of tennis during the offseason.
"Once I got the strength up ,'; he
said , "I tried to regain coordination
throughout my entire body. I'm
throwing as good a s ever .
Everything' s normal, even my pulled
back muscle."
The pulled muscle is an annual
malady for Jones. He doesn't know
why, but it happens every training

season.
" I thought I did enough work this
time not to get it again," said Jones,
who·expects to play a quarter or more
in Friday night's exhibition opener at
home against the Philadelphia
Eagles. " But I guessit'sa good sign."

Tri - County

Bengals' Burley
.likes cheering
WILMINGTON, Ohio (AP) Cincinnati Bengals defensive end
Gary Burley doesn't mind assuming
the role of a cheerleader.
"It's all in fun," explained Burley,
who frequently gets fans wound up at
home games when he hegins circling
his fist in the air. "I enjoy the crowd .
Basically I'm a crowd pleaser. When I
get going , the people enjoy it."
Burley said his enthusiasm goes
back to his college days at Pittsburgh
under Johnny Majors.
"He inspired enthusiasm," Burley
said. "We had that enthusiasm and we
won a lot of games in the fourth
quarter .
"You see, I've been enthusiastic all
my life. If you sit back and wait, you'll
get tired. If you don 't let your mind
tell you you're' tired, though, well,
then you just stay strong.
"When I'm waving my fist in the
air, tOying with the crowd, I get a
mental lift. I enjoy myself and have
incentive to play even harder,"
Burley said.
Not everyone appreciates Burley's
waving of his clinched fists to the
crowd after making a tackle.
"Well, places like Pittsburgh I keep
it to a minimum or I might have to
keep my helmet on going back into the
locker room," Burley said. "The only
time anybody ever said anything to
me about it was when we were playing
Oakland. (Former Oakland coach)
John Madden , I heard him screaming
at me .
"But I'm not there to please John
Madden . I'm there to help the team
win and to please the fans."
At 6-fool-3, 269-pound Burley, who is
entering his fourth season in tbe
National Football League, is big
eljOugh to take care of himself should
a nyone be come offended at his

capped a fOur-run third inning, anf i
Eddie Murray hit a grand slam home/-~
in the ninth, powering Baltimore over
Milwaukee . Sammy Stewart, 7-4,
earned the victory in relief of Milte
Flanagan for the Orioles, who have
won !'2 of their last 14 games. Stewart
allowed only three hits in 51-3 innings.
Royals 6, Blue Jays 5
George Scott slammed a twD-I'Un,
seventh~nning homer to lead the
Royals over Toronto. Scott's blast
over the lef~enter field fence off
Jesse Jefferson, 1-8, followed a leadoff
single by AI Cowens and erMed a 5-4
Toronto lead. It was his fifth homer of
the season .
Reliever Marty Pattin, 4-2, gained
the victory.
Rangers 11, Tigers 3
AI Oliver collected three hits as
Texas rocked four Detroit pitchers for
16 hits and rolled to an easy victory
over he Tigers. Oliver had ooe of sii
Texas doub)es, along with two singles,
and drove in one of the Ranger runs.
Four Texas players knocked in tWo
runs each -- Dave Roberts, John
Ellis, Pat Putnam and Nelson
Norman.
Yankees 7, White Sox3
Jim Spencer hit a three-run homer
to power New York over Chicago for
Ron Guidry's ninth vlct..-y . Spencer's
13th homer of the year came in tbe
fourth inning off Randy Scarbery, H .
Guidry is 9-7.
-"'gels 8, MeriDen I
Dave Frost pitched a five-hitter and
Bobby Grich singled twice to drive In
three runs and lead Callfcrnia past
Seattle. Grich singled in the sixth to
drive in the first two Angels' runs. In
the seventh , his single scored one and
capped a five-run Angel rally.
A's %, Twinll
Pinch-rumer Larry Murray scored
from third on a wild pitch by
Minnesota 's Geoff Zahn in the ninth
inning, giving Oakland it8 victory
over the Twins.
Zahn, 9-3, threw the hall in the dirt,
it bounded away from catcher Butch
Wynegar and Murray se&lt;red standing
up.

Sport Shop

theatrics.
"Besides, I got 10 guys behind me,"
Burley pointed out. "AU I know is that
last year we had one of the most
inspired defenses in football."
The Bengals young defensive
stalwarts have dubbed themselves the
WEBB defense -- Wilson Whitley,
Eddie Edwards, Ross Brower and
· Burley.
.
Burley also said one-time Bengal
Coy Bacon encouraged him to be
somewhat cocky.
"He would see a guy who wasn't
giving his all and he wouldn't
hestigate to tell him that he was
dogging it," Burley explained .
"Needless to say, It didn't make him
popular with a lot of the players."

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• Ball Gloves
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'

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD
By Tile Assocloted Press
AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST
W . L. Pet.
Baltimore
71 4-j .676
Boston
62 -40 .608
Milwaukee
63 OJ .594
New York
S7 48 .503
Detroit
S3
.515
Cleveland
53 52 .sos
Toronto
32 7• .302
WEST
Californ ia
61 -16 .SIO
Minnesota .
55 48 .53•
T~xas
S5 .. 9 .519
KansasCily
52 52 .500
Chicago
-141 59 '38
4S 63 .•17
Seattle
Oakland
30 77 .280

so

KENT, Ohio ( AP) -- Cleveland
Browns rookie guard Brent Walson
gave Canada a try last year, but the
former University of Tennessee star
found only disappointment nor th of
the border.

Watson, se lected by the Browns in
the lOth round of the 1978 college
player draft, opted to join the
Montrea l Alouettes of the Canadian
Football League for his first pro year.
The &amp;-foot-4 , 256-pounder said, " I

Only game sc:neduled
GB
7 1J2

8 1/ 2
1.
16
17

39 1/2
•

,.1;,

7'17
1•
16'1&gt;
31

Tunday's Games
Cleveland 11 -3, Boston 10·0.
game 1llnnlf19S
Baltimore 9. Milwaukee 5
New York 7. Chlc,ago 3
Kansas Clly 6. Toronto 5

. RUNNERS-UP - Pomeroy Royals, runnei'S-up in
Middleport Pony League Tournament Front row !of'
Nick Leonard, Jay Evans, Mike Ke~edy, Ken 'Me:

lsi

Texas 11 , Detroit 3
California 8, S..allle1
Oakland 2, M i nnesota 1
Wedne&amp;dav's Games
Minnesota (Hartzell5 ·6) at Oakland
(Langford 5·12)
Boston (Eckersley 10·5 ) at
Cleveland !Clyde 3·2)
Baltimore ( D. Martinez 13·8) at
Milwaukee (Sorenson 12·10)
New York CFu9ueroa 4·6) at
Chicago t Kravec 9 ·9)
• Toronto &lt;Huffman A-11) at Kansas
City !Gala 8·8)
Detroit !Wilcox 8-Al at Texas
(Comer 11 ·6)
Seattle (Honeycutt 7-1) at Callfor ·
nla (Azue 8-1)
"
Thundoy •s Gomes
Boston at Mllwauk~

NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST
W, L. Pel. GB
Montreal
S7 OJ .570
By Greg Dalley
Pittsburgh
57 -45 .559 1
Chicago
5-I -46 .5-10 3
Racine captured second place in the
Philadelphia
5-I •9 .S24 .. ~h . Meiga-Mason Pony League with a 6-l
St. Louis
51 .9 .510 6
New York
OJ 56 .OJ, 13 '12 win over the visiting Pomeroy Royals
Monday night.
WEST
Houston
61 '7 .565
Kent Wolfe went the distance to
Cinci nnat i
58 51 .532 3'17 pick up the win, fanning eight and
San Francisco
52 55 .485 8'12
walking three. Wolfe allowed just four
San Diego
.9 59
12
hils.
.
Los Angeles
4S 61 ,,75 15
Atlanta
OJ 63 .-406 16
Wolfe also led the winners in the hitTuesdiy 's G•mes
ting department with a double and
New York 2, Pittsburgh 1
two singles. Jay Rees and John Por·
Philadelphia'· Chic ago 1
ter each socked a double, and Alan
Montreal$ , St . l ou is 0
San Dlego10, Atlanta 3
smacked a single.
Los Angeles 7, Cincinnat i 6
Randy Stewart took the loss.
Houston 6, San Francisco o ·
Stewart,
Chris Allen, and Brian
WtMinesday ' s Gimf!s
Whaley combined to fan eleven and
Philadelphia ! Moles 2·2) at New
York !Ellis 1·3)
walk seven.
Chicago !McGlothen 9·8) at Mon ·
Stewart led the Royals at the plate
!real !Grimsley 8·6)
as
he banged out two singles. Allen
St. Louis I B. Forsch • ·9) at Pll ·
tsburgh (D. RObinson 6·5)
San Dif!OO (Jones 8-61 at Atl,anta
!Solomon,., ,
Loo Angeles (Hough 2·1) at Cin · TRIM ROSTER
cinnoll !Bonham
San Francisco ( Bl ue 8-8) at Houston
KENT, Ohio ( AI' ) -- The Cleveland
( K . Forsch7 ·6)
Bro wns have reduced thei( Nationa I
ThUrsday's Gimts
Ch icago at Montreal
Football League roster tD 67 players
Philadelph ia at New York . 2
with the release of defensive end Cliff
St. Louis at P ittsburgh
La boy of the University of Hawaii .
San Diego at Atlanta
As of toda y, the roster still includes
Only games scheduled

Racine takes second place

,5.

had a double while Mike Kennedy had

a single.

Racine finished the season with a
l&lt;h'l record while the Royals went out
with a 6-0 record and fourth place in
the league.
Linescore :
p
100 000--1 4 2
R
~020-662

Girls' softball
tournament slated

felt I'd have a better opportunity to
play up there because, looked at the
statistics and saw the Browns '
offensive line had led the NFL in
allowing the lea st number of
(quarterback) sacks the previous
year. I figured they had plentY of
experience and depth.
"I signed in June, but the training
camps up there start in May. I
reported to Montreal just two days
before their first exhibition game and
that was a real disadvantage to me. I
hadn 'I done much pass blocking in
college and I didn't get much of a
chance to learn," he said.
•"Then I hurt my shoulder in
practice, was on the injured reserve
list for five weeks, started two games
and they cut me. So I didn't really get
that much experience out of it," he
added .
Watson is vying with another
rookie, Pete Pullara of TennesseeChattanooga, for a reserve spoi on the
Browns' 45-man roster.
" I don't really know what my·
chances are," he said. "I'm just
trying not to think about it. Last year
in Canada, I worried about everything
and I got a bad stomach over it.
"My pass blocking is coming along.
1have good quickness and a lot of it is

ASenior Girls League SoftbaU tournament is slated this weekend,
August 3, 4, and 5 at the Syracuse and
Minersville Fields. Tbe championship
game or games of the tourney will be
held at Syracuse on Sunday beginning
at 6 p.m. Tbe games begin Friday at 6
S·•&gt;
.
and 7:30p.m.
In the first game at Syracuse, Two
Rivers Ford and Forest Run lock hor·
ns, followed by a contest between
Pomeroy and Hit 'N Misses. At 6 p.m.
at Minersville, New Haven lac~es
Mason , followed by Syracuse and
sta rting safety Tony Pete rs, who left Middleport.
camp nine days ago for personal
The winners of the first two games
reasons. Peters ha s since asked the play Saturday at II : 30 a.m. at Minerclub to renegotiate his contract.
sville.
The Browns next must reduce the
At 10 a.m. at Syracuse Saturday
morning, the American Legion
-- On a light day at the Na tional roste r to 60 players by Aug. 14 .
Sports Festival, Justin Wheating, the
tangles with the winner of the New
PLASTICS INDUSTRY
Haven-Mason contest. The winners of
former Engli sh na tional team
NEW YORK (AP ) - About 1.5 per- Syracuse-Middleport plays at 1 p.m. '
member from the North Jersey Field
Hockey Club, scored two goals to lead cent o1 the total oil and natural gas Saturday.
the East to a 5-1 rout or the West for consumed in the United States each
Tbe losers of the first two Friday
year is used to produce the games meet at 10 a.m . Saturday at
the gold medal.
The South trimmed the Midwest 2-1 petrochemical feedstocks from which Minersville while the losers of the two
most plastics resins are made, ac- Friday Minersville games play Saturfor the bron ze .
In women 's field hockey, Charlene cording to the Society of the Plastics day at Syracuse at 11 :30 a.m.
Morell had one goal and one assist to Industry.
lead the East to a ~ shutout of the
West for the gold. The South claimed
the tronze with a 3-2 decision over the
Midwest.
In roller speed skating, Chri s
Snyder won the 500-meter sprint gold
medal with a time of 1:00.4. Mary
Hool , with a time of 1:03.2, collected
the women's 500-meler sprint gold
medal.
YACIITING
TOENSBERG , Norway ( AP ) -Richard Dobson of New Zealand
sailed to his second coosecutive
victory in the second race of the 1979
Ok·Dinghy
yachting
world
championships. He also won the first
race Monday .
In the second race, Christer
Berendtsson of Sweden placed second
and Lennart Persson of Sweden was
third.

TENNIS
NORTH OONWAY , N.H. tAP )
Jimmy Connors defeated Eliot
Teltsher &amp;-2, 6-1, in the first round of
an international tournament.
In other action , Roscoe Tanner
defeated Lloyd Bourne 6-2. 7-5;
Guillermo Vilas of Argentina downed
Juan Nunez of Chile 6-1 , 6-1 ; Harold
Solomon beste&lt;i John Bartlett of
Australia, 6-3, 6-1; and Brian
Gottfried beat Chile 's Jaime Fillol, 75, &amp;-1.
In second round play, Eddie Dibbs
defeated Tim Garcia, 6-3, 6-1, and
Jose Higueras of Spain ousted John
Sadri, 6-1, 6-1 .
SAN DIEGO (AP ) - Bettyanne
Stuart defeated Stacy Margolin 1-0, 75, lh1 in the second day of first-round
play in a $75,001 tournament.
In other first round matches, Kathy
Jordan easily defeated Zenda Leiss 63, &amp;-I; Lele Forood beat Leslie Allen 76 (7-3), 6-1; Barbara Hallquis ousted
Rosemary Casals 7-5, 4-0, 8-2; Diane
Desfor defeated Argentina 's Virginia
Martina
Gonzalez, 6-4, 6-1;
Navratilova beat Jeanne Duvall &amp;-2, 61, and Virginia Wade of Great Brita.in
lopped South African Brigette
Cuypers 6-3, 6-1.
SOUTH ORANGE , N.J . (AP) -John Lloyd snapped a slump by
scoring a first-round victory over Bert
Hoyt &amp;-1, 7-0, 7·2 in the $75,000 Grand
Prix at the Orange Lawn Tennis Club.
In other action, Anand Amritraj of
India rallied fer a~. 7-5, lh1 triumph
over Ricardo caho of Australia;
Bruce Nichols heal George Amaya of
6-2, 1~, 7~; Christopher Roger·
Vasselin of France beat Fritz
Buehning, 2-0, 6-3, 6-2; and Andres
Maurer of West Germany eliminated
Steve ·AJger of B,ermuda 6-3, &amp;-1.
SPARTACADE
MOSOOW (AP) -- The U.S. men's
basketball team beat Estonia 7~
and the American women's team lost
to the Russian Federal Republic llZ88 at The Spartacade Games .
In boxing, middleweight Andre
McCoy, the last remaining American
·in the event, took a big step toward a
medal when he took a close decision
over Eduard Mkrtchaynan of Soviet ·
Armenia.
McCoy boxes in the group finals
Thursday, and a victory wolild insure
him a spot in the gold medal bout
Saturday against the Soviet national
champion from the other group.
NATIONAL SPORTS FESTIVAL
COWRADO SPRINGS, Colo. (APl

•

Only

Sports transactions
FOOTBALL
Nollonol Footblll League
BAL TlMORE COLTS - Released
Tim Black of SMU and Raymond
Peyton of
Miss issippi
Staie.
linebacker ; Tim Gibbons of Missouri,
kicker ; Orin Griffin of Albany State.
wide receiver; Paul Rice of East
Texas State and Dave Riley of West
Virginia, running backs; Lucien Nib·
bs of Norlh Carolina A and T and Earl
Brvant of Jackson State, defensive

28
Inches

Nlde

Pascuallnvltari, forward.

,_,

come.
"I figure I'm just here to work as
hard as I can, get as much experience
as I can and I feel I've done pretty
fair . I just hope the coaches think so,
too, " Watson said.
Watson, who studied psychology .in
college, was voted the outstanding
lineman for Tennessee as a senior. He
alsO played in the Blue-Gray All-Star
game that year, getting good marks
from the pro scouts in tbe crowd.
"I don't consider my time up in
Canada a waste," he said. "I think I
learned some things from the
experience. Now I just want to make
this football team ."

MEIGS-MASON COUNTY
PONY LEAGUE STANDINGS
Final Standings 19!9

Team

W. L.

12 2
10 3

Middleport

Racine

7 5
6 6

Pomeroy A's
Pomeroy Royals

Mason

5
5
3
1

Eastern
Rutland

Syracuse

SPECIAL

FISH-N-CHIPS .••••••. 84e
WITH FRIES ••• .-••••. $109
ADOLPH'S

DAIRY VAllEY
992-2556
STOW. Main

~omeroy, o.

This 150 Watt Light Bulb .,..

.,... Or This 16.3 Cu •. Ft. Refrigerator

\

Instead of the usual H._",
Amana packs 2" of loam
wall Insulation around the
rBirigerator section PLUS
21h" of foam wall Insula·
lion around the zaro·de·
gree · freezer. Plus the
Amana one·pleca lnsu·
llnerr"', Magna-_seal door
gaskets.

·linemen.

CLEVELAND
BROWNS
Released free agent Cliff Laboy of
Hawaii, defensive end.
NEW YORK JETS - Waived draft
choice Keith Brown, safely.
HOCKEY
Nallonol Hockey League
BUFFALO SAVRES - Named J im
·Roberts an assistant coach .
BASKETBALL
National Basketball Association
LOS ANGELES LAKERS ~amed Paul Westhead an ·a ssistant
coach.
Women's Basketball League
Named John Nucatola supervisor of
officials. Named Meg Griggs public
relations director. Named Janet Gal
operations assistant.
SOCCER ·
NEW YORK APOLLO - Waive~

just a matter of experience. You have
to learn your techniques and
assignments and the rest of it will

THIS WEEK'S

Sports briefs. • •
By The ASllodated Press

Cullough, Brian Zirkle, Chris Allan. Back, Coach Ed
,Kennedy, Tony Jewell, Randy Murray, Brian Whaley,
Randy Stewart, John Smith, Otis Core, Doug Allen. Absent was Coach Roger Stewart.

Browns' rookies seeking NFL action

i:-:1 •••
••• •••
:.:m
· •••

lndiaDs Win lOth straight

Today's
•

REGULAR SEASON CHAMPS - First place in
regular season play went to the Middleport

Morris, Marie Musser, Brian Gibbs, Angel McDaniel,
Tony Shoemaker. Third row, Coach Ron Morris, Billy
Layh, Coach Bob Williams. AbBent was Christy Hysell.

RUTLAND DODGERS Pee Wee team finished
sec:ood in the league this seasOn. First row, 1-1', George
Adkins, Marty Hart, Joey Snyder, Shawn Fettey,
CharUe Barrett. Second row, DeMy Welch, Roland

ONLY 28" WIDE COMPLETELY FREE-0'FROST™, YET IT USES LESS ELECTRICITY
THAN A 1SO·WAn LIGHT BULB!

llllllil®

INGEL'S FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY

106 N. 2ND AVE.

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

.

5
8
8
10

�6- The Dailv Sentinel, Middleport-Porneroy. 0 ., Wednesday, Aug. 1, 1979

Cburcb bus golden anniversary

Rev. Will Cwxliff, the Rev. Jim Cundiff, the Rev. Roland Wolfe, the Rev.
Ed Grindley and the Rev. Bertha
Rlghthouse.
Former pastors include Rev. C. T.
Moore, Rev. Lawrence McDaniel,
Rev. C. P . Smales, Rev. Eva Koontz
Hayman, Rev. Carl Clendenen, Rev.
Charles Upker, Rev. Joseph Morgan,
Rev. Lawrence Fick, Rev. Robert
Salser, Rev. Lewis .B. Snellenberger,
Rev. Albert Shea, Rev. Carl Feidler,
Rev. Clare St. John, Rev. M. C.
Larimore, Rev. Roy Williams, Rev. ·
Harold Holmes, Rev. William C.
Thorpe, Rev. A. E. Miller, Rev.
Howard C. Black and the present
pastor is the Rev. Mr. Bass.
Guest speaker lor the observance
held on :.June 24 was Dr. Terrell C.
Sanders, superintendent of the Central Ohio District of tlie Church of the
Nazarene.

ACLU fights funding restrictions

privacy .

JOSEPH HOLMAN
Marine Lance Corporal Joseph W.
·Holman, son of Carl and Goldie M.
Holman of 4642() Star Route 124,
Racine, has deployed to the
Mediterranean Sea.
He is assigned to Battalion Landing
Team One Slant Eight, (BLT I-ll ),
base at Camp Lejeune , N.C.
His unit is the ground element of a
Marine Amphibious Unit (MAU) , the
force-in-readinellS for the U. S. Sixth
Fleet, on-&lt;!all to project combined airground forces ashore . BLT I-ll will
participate in a variety of training
exercises with other Sixth Fleet Units
and with those of allied nations . Port
visits are scheduled in several
Mediterranean coastal cities.
A 1977 graduate of Southern Local
High School, Holman joined the
Marine Corps in July 1977.
. KEVIN McLAUGHLIN

.
Manne Pfc. KeVlD D. McLaughlin,
son of K~nneth E. and Carole E.
McLaughlin of P. 0 . Box 209,
Pomeroy, has been proJ_TJOted_to his
pr~nt r~whlle servmg .wtth 2nd
Manne DIVISion, Marme Corps Base,
Camp LeJeune, N.C.
..
.
A 1978 graduate of M~•gs High
School, Rock Spnngs, he JOilled the
Marine Corps in October, 1978.
STEPHEN WAGNER
TORREJON D. AROOZ, Spain Technical Sergeant Stephen E .
Wagner son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward
J. Wa~er of Rt. 3, Racine, has
reenlisted in the U. S. Air Force at
Torrejon AB, Spain.
Sergeant Wagner, whose Air Force
career began in 1966, ts a postal
specialist at Torrejon. He is assigned
to a unit of the U. S. Air Forces in
Europe.
. .
The sergeant is a 1965 graduate of
Southern High School.
(

.

physicians within a 4&amp;-hour period,
attesting that such crimes have been'
committed against the victims.
Judy Green, president of the
Women's City Club, said her
organization will speak to legislators
about the issue.
" The injus tices of this new
amendment against poor women , who
most restrictive of a ll states in terms already have so much working
against them, are shameful ," she
of lega l choices for poor women.
"Our cowardly legislators, wishing said.
to mollify a single-issue lobbying
group (a nti -abortion advocate s )
slipped the amendment in secretly
without testimony, discussion or floor
debate," she said .
Charlene Ventura,- public relations
director for the Cincinnati YWCA,
0 lh ll,·l•·n Hottd
said the law "virtually insures that
women and girls who are victims of THE MOST POPULAR COLUMNS?
ADULT ACNEthe crimes of rape and incest would be
HUSBAND STEALER
una ble t o te rminat e unwanted
READERSALL :
.
pregna ncies.
Adult acne and husband hijacking:
She sa id U1e bill requires U1e sworn
and sig ned sta tements of two these two disparate subjects drew the
most reader mail during the summer
months.
Acne, I was told -and told and told
- is not limited to adolescents.
Several of you chided me lor suggesting that the lesions might be a
DANIEL WILLIAMS
Navy Airman Daniel k Williams, form of herpesvirus, although a doc·
son of William E. Williams or tor friend says the two conditions are
Pomeroy recently returned from a sometimes confused by lay people.
Here ~s a sampling of adult-acne
deployment to the Western Pacific.
He is assigned to the aircraft responses:
carrier USS Constellation; homeported in San Diego. While deployed, his DEARHELEN : '
Both my husband and I are in our
ship operated as a Unit of the U. S.
Seventh Fleet.
40s and still have acne. He also gets
During the eight-month cruise, the cold sores (herpes), but there's a big
Constellati on participated in a num- difference.
Doctors told me I'd grow out or
ber of training exercises with other
Seventh Fleet units and with those or acne. When I didn't, they said it would
allied nations. Additionally, the Con- go away when I had a baby. Now they
stellation transitted the South China say, ''after menopause."
Sea and Indian Ocean in response tr
People also said, "Be patient"
the tunnoil in Iran and North Yemen
about my age-14 lack of bust. Well,
The Indian Ocean assignment luc
I'm still waiting for one condition to
resulted in his eligibility for the Nav~
Expeditionary Medal. _
In adition , she said, the Ohio
restriction cuts off federal , state and
loca l funds for counseling and referral
ser vices by family planning clinics
and menta l health agencies in the
state.
. Ann Mitchell of the Freedom of
Choice Coalition sa id the "compulsory
preb&gt;nancy provision makes Ohio the

Helen Help

US. •

While deployed, he had the opportunity to visit Japan, Korea,
Singapore and the Republic of the
, Philippines.
The Constellation is 1,072 feet long,
displaces over 110,000 tons and carries
a crew of 2,800 officers and enlisted
men. She can accorrunodate approximately 85 fighter aircraft and
more than 2,150 personnel assigned to
an attack aircraft wing.
Williams joined the Navy in June
1978.
'

BAKED GOODS
In breads there are classes for
whole wheat, white, banana nut,
while there are also classes for bakIng powder biscuits, muffins, and
yeast rolls with three of each to be exhibited.
For cakes there are categories lor
angel food (not iced) , butter with a
yellow or white frooting, butter with
chocolate frosting , chiffon, banaria,
coconut either white or yellow batter,
devil 's food, pound, chcolate, loaf
cake, and donuts, either glazed or
cake.
For cookies with six to be exhibited,
the classes are oatmeal, brownies,
chocolate chip, gingersnaps, plain
drop, molasses, and ice box; and in
the pie division the classes are for apple, cherry, berry, lemon, pecan,
peach, pumpkin, and raisin.
VEGETABLES
In the vegetable division, exhibitors
can enter clsses for asparagus, broccoli, brussel sprouts, whole beets,
sliced bests, shellie beans, shelled
beans, plckeled beans, snap beans,
whole beans, cabbage, carrots, com,
greens, kraut, lima beans, parsnips ,
peppers, ma,pgoo stuffed, sweet
potatoes, whole, quartered or green

soup, and canned squash.

FRUITS

CHARLES H. KNIGHT
BARBARA M. KNIGHT
ATTORNEYS-A T·LA W

ANNOUNCE THE REL.OCA TION
OF THEIR LAW OFFICES TO:

Phone 742-2100

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TOILET TISSUE ••••••••••••••• !2~~·: .. 99e
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TEEN QUEEN PEACHES .•••••••••• 694
12 oz. Hormel Canned

SPAM LUNCH MEAT••••••••••••. $1.39
16 oz. Sweet Briar

APPLE SAUCE ••••••••••••••••••••• 2/794
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TEA BAGS •••••••••••••••••••••••••• 51.29

211 E. SECOND .ST.

TOMATO JUICE •••••••••••••••••••••. 69e
32 oz. Stokely

(Across from the Post Office)
POMEROY, OHIO
KNIGHT LAW OFFICES
992-2151
'----~--------._--------~

STOKELY GATORADE••••••••••••••• 57e
10'12 oz. Campbells Old Fashion

VEGETABLE SOUP. •••••••••••• ~ •• 2/594

AUG. 2-3-4

Calendar

WEDNESDAY

SOUTIIEAST Ohio Garden Tractor
Club meeting, 8 p.m. Wednesday at
the scout building behind the
firehouse in Chester. All interested
persons are invited to attend .·

•

fiNE
FOR

POMEROY LODGE 164 F&amp;AM
Wednesday 7:30 p.m. All master
11188008 invited.
MIDDLEPORT Youth League wiU
hold a picnic and swimming par!)
Wednesday at Middleport Park. Picnic from 8 to 7:30 and swimming party from 7:30 to 9:30. Coaches will
notify players what to bring.
TIIURSDAY
cWC potluck dinner Fi. Meigs
Thursday 6 p.m. Those needing transportation to meet at Sacred Heart
Catholic Church parking lot 5:45p.m.
Bring own table service.

'

46 oz. Stokely
CHEMICAL ENGINEERS
NEW YORK (AP ) - During the
next few years record numbers of
new chemical engineers are expected
to be seeking jobs in chemical process
industries, according to Chemical
Engineering magazine.
Luring students to enroll at U. S.
chemical engineering schools are
:high starting salaries and plentiful
job opp ortunit ies, say s the
publication.

~-- -Social

classes

RUTLAND
DEPARTMENT
STORE

CHEESE SPREAD..

Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth McCullough
and children, Laura and Ken, have
returned from Mrytle Beach, S. C.
where they spent a week. They were
Blso in Charleston, S. C. sightseeing.
Mrs. Mildred Henry of Florida bas
spent the past several days here
viBiting Mr. and Mrs. Patrick
Lochary.

There ate canned fruit classes f~r
applesauce; sliced apples, blackberries, whole, half, spiced and sliced
peaches, sliced, whole and half pears,
plums, raspberries, aprt~. and
cherries.
PRESERVF11, JAMS I JEI J m
In preserves which can be 9hlblted
in any sized jar there are classes lor
peach, pears, cherry, strawberi'y, red
and purple plum and tomato; while in
jums the classes are black raspberry,
grape, peach and strawberry. The jelly classes are apple, crabapple,
blackberry,
elderberry, grape,
peach, plUin, raspberry, and
strawberry, while In spreads the
are for pear honey' honey.
peach hOney, peach butter, apple butter, quince honey.
PICJUES, RELISHES,
CATSUP AND SAUCES
The pickle classes are sweet and
mixed cucumber, dill pickles, and
bread and butter. Piccalllli, chowchow, end of the garden and sweet
pepper relish are the relish classes,
and there are also classes for tomato
catsup and chili sauce.

(CBS) ; 7, "Alice," 22.0 (CBS ); 8,
HOLLYWOOD (AP) -,- ABC led "CHiPs," was in 29th place.
Leading the shows was ABC 's "Mork &amp; Mindy, " 21.6 (ABC ); 9,
CBS in their continuing nip-and-tuck
network rerun battle and won the "Three's Company, " which had a "Laverne &amp;Shirley," 20.7 (ABC); 10,
"Vega S," 20.6 (ABC)
national Nielsen ratings for the week rating of 23.6.
ABC
won
the
week
with
an
overall
This weeks N ielsens refle ct a
ending July 29.
NBC 's highest-ranked show, rating of 14.9 and CBS was a close widespread belief in the industry
second with 14.6. NBC was third with a · about the American TV viewers'
rating of 12.3. CBS had fin ished or tied tastes - - give them light situation
for
first in four of the preceding five comedy, even if they've seen it before.
come and the other togo. -M.L.M.
weeks.
All 10 of the top-rated programs were
DEAR HELEN.
The
A.C.
Ni
el
se
n
Co
.,
whi
ch
reruns
, eight of them sitcom reruns.
My doctor describes my postMeanwhile,
a critically praised twocompiles
ratings
estimates
for
the
adolescent acne as the excessive propart
CBS
News
special - "Blacks in
three
networks,
says
each
rating
point
duction of oil coupled with excessive
equals
about
750,000
homes
equiped
Amer
ica
:
With
All Deliberate
growth of skin cells. The cells don't
slough off at a normal rate, plug the with one television set or more. The Speed?" - finished third from last
sebaceous glands and eventually latest figures were released Tuesday . and sixth from last oo Nielsen's list .
"WKRP in Cincinnati" continued its
The bottom 10 :
become inf~cted with bacteria,
performance
in
sumriler
ratings,
56, "The Bad News Bears." 9.4
good
creatin'g pustules.
showing
up
second
in
the
list
.
CBS
(CBS);
57, "Just Friends," 9.4 (CBS);
A dermatologist hasn't cured the
58,
"Supertrain
," 8.7 (NBC ); 59, "CBS
pulled
the
show
off
the
air
for
a
sh
ort
problem (which I've had for 34 years)
time
last
season.
'
Reports
(Part
!)," 8.1 (CBS ); 60,
but he's helped me control it. By the
The wp 10 for the week:
"Welcome Back Kotter," 8.0 (ABC );
way, health insurance covered moot
1, "Three's Company," 23.6 (ABC ); 61, "Operation Petticoat," 7.6 (ABC );
of the treatment. -BLOSSOM
2,
"WKRP in Cincinnati," 23.0 (CBS); '62, "CBS Reports (Part II ), " 7.2
DEAR HELEN :
3,
"M-A.S-H," 22.6 (CBS); 4,' "Taxi ," (CBS); 63, "BattlestarGalactica ," 7.0
Please leU the couple with adult
22.3
(ABC); 5, "Lou Grant, " 22.2 and "Hardy Boys," 7.0 (both ABC );
acne that it can be cured easily and
(CBS);
6, "The Jeffersons," 22.2 6S, "Project UFO," 6.4 (NBC).
cheaply. First, discontinue medica.
lions, both inside and out. Then go to a
bakery and buy bakers' yeast (n((
"brewers"). It costs around 75 cents
per pound.
Take a generous tablespoon in a
small amount of warm skim milk
morning and evening, on an empty
stomach. Don't eat for at least 20
minutes.
If this doesn't get the desired
results, then go to a doctor who
speclali2es in nutrition - holistic
Prices Effective Thru Sat., August 4
medicine clinics are usually good in
this field. - READER
· Eckrich
DEAR HELEN :
When I was 38 and still breaking out
5
with acne, I went to a dennatologist,
who had a list of foods moot likely to
be the eause. These included fish,
cheese, chocolate and nuts. Alter
testing, I refrained from eating the
ones that bothered me. Now at S3, I
l2 oz . Pkg.
still find that roquefort cheese and
chocolate leave their tnarks, but it's
worth it once in a while to have a candy bar. -MRS. I.W.S. .
DAIRY
PRODUCE
Now, an answer to "Single and Enjoying Every Minute of It" who blam8 oz. Kraft
3 lb . Rainbow Cooking
ed wives for straying husbands. -H.
Sharp Shredded
89~
~~-~ .
DEAR SINGLE (writes a New Jersey
18 Size
woman) :
I wonder how those sweet husbands
~~~~
you describe would react if their
1 lb. Parkay Quarters
wives cooked and cleaned for some
30 count California
handsome bachelor?
~~~.~~
You say men would play Mr. Handyman for their wives if they were ap- ·
lib. Ore Ida
preciated at home. Ha! Some men
aren't built that way.
Greeting one's husband with a lov.
Ing kiss makes more sense than hit4
ting him with complaints. But a passionate embrace? A tired male would
rather have a relaxing drink. I resent
4 Roll Cottone lie
your implication that all marriage
dllliculties can be dissolved with a
wife's passion. It's a two-way street:
men must show appreciation too.
6'h oz. C.hicken -of-the-Sea
There will always be husbands in
search of other women, not because
4
these females need handymen, but
because such men are ever in search
of handy women to feed their egos. 29 oz.
JOANNE

THURSDAY
FRIDAY

&lt;

tomatoes, tomato juice, vegetable

Rerun ratings battle races ·on.

Syracuse church has anniversary

CINCINNATI ( AP l -- Restriction of
Medicaid funding for· abortions in the
19600hio budget will be challenged by
the American Civil liberties Union
and several Cincinna ti women 's
groups.
Ma rg e Robertson, executive
director of the Cincinnati ACLU
office, announced Tuesda y that the
organization will file a court challenge
w the budget restriction within 10
days.
The announcement was made at a
new s confer ence a t th e YWCA.
Several officials of women's groups
denounced the restri ction. whi ch
prohib its Medica id fu ndin g of
abortions except to prevent the death
of the mother. The women's groups
said they will support the suit.
Ms. Robertson said th e ACLU will
claim that the state law violates
federal laws and the constitutional
guarantees of freedom of speech,
equal protection under the law and

.,_:·._ , :,:,_p·,, ,e,",'r' soP~n~f;~~~=''\

Homemade godds asked at Fair
For the Meigs County homemaker
who specializes in preserving her own
fruits and vegetables, making her
own jellies and jams, and baking her
own cakes, cookies and pies, the
Meigs County Fair, Aug. 14-18, is the
place to display her expertise,
Mrs. Frances Goeglein is chairperson for the baking and canning
·department which has a total of 110
classes with exhibitors pennitted to
one exhibit in each class. The only entry fee is the purchase of a membership ticket.
The rules specify that entries must
be registered either Aug. 9 or iO between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m. in the
secretary's office on the Meigs County Fairgrounds. Each exhibit is to be
labeled and those with lids are not to
be covered.
Baked goods are to be displayed on
a disposable paper or aluminum plate
and wrapped with a transparent
covering. Alter the judging only a
small portion will be kept for display
with the exhibitor to take the rest.
Premiwns and ribbons will be
awarded in aU of the classes, blue,
$!.SO; red, $100, and white, 75 cents.
All exhibits must be canned or made
in either 1978 or 1979.

The 50th anniversary of the the Rev. Robert Salser was pastor.
Sjracuse Church or the Nazarene was The bell and bell tower were made
observed recently.
possible by Glenn Cundiff, Claude
The church was begun as a mission Quillen and others ~nd .were
Sunday school under the leadership of dedicated in 1964 with the Rev.
Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Arnold. On Sun- William C. Thorpe as pastor. The
day, June 30, 1929, the mission was present parsonage was completed unorganized into the Church of the der the leadership of the Rev_Harold
Nazarene by Dr- C. A. Gibson who Holmes in 1961.
was the Central Ohio District SuperinNew sanctuary furniture was in·
tendent. The Rev. C. T. Moore Wa!. the stalled while the Rev. A. E. Miller
first pastor.
was pastor in 1968. During the leaderSome or the first members of the ship of the present pastor, the Rev.
church were Mr. and Mrs . C. L. Ar· Dale T. Bass, since December, 1975,
nold, Mrs. Vazie Lee, Mrs. Abalene new carpeting has been installed,
Moore, Mr. and Mrs. Rex Ackley, several class rooms have been
Mrs. Cora Sousby Cannan, Mr. and remodeled as well as the fellowship
Mrs. Claude Quillen, Mrs . John hall, tables and furniture have been
Cowie, Mrs. Oma Cowie Hysell and purchased or built and sidewalks and
Rev. Bertha Rlghthouse.
outside lighting installed
·The present church building was
Some of the members who became
dedicated by District Supt. Dr. Har- ministers later include the Rev. Bob
vey S. Galloway on Dec. 13, 1941 when Stewart, the Rev. Morris Wolfe, the

7-TbeDaUySentinel,•::~.~-~~:.•·.:;~~ep~~===.~,-~1~'11~9~-----------~-----------------------------------,

GRILLING

CHOICECHUCK

ROCK SPRING Grange will meet
at 8 p.m. Thursday at the hall . The
hall will be vaeated that night for the
Meigs County Fair.

'I'

EVANGELINE CHAPTER 172,
Order of the Eastern Star, 7:30p.m.
Thursday night at the Middleport
Masonic Temple.
SATURDAY
RUMMAGE AND BAKE SALE in
basement of Middleport Masonic
Temple. Sponsored by Harrisonville
Eastern Star. Bake Mle Friday only
with nmunage sale Friday and Saturday.
WESTERN BOOr CB CLUB Saturday 7 p.m. at club bouse on Oak Grove
Road, Racine . Members urged to at·
tend. New memi:Mlrs are welcome.
ICE CREAM social at Bashan
FirehOuse, Saturday beginning 6
p.m. ; sponsored by auxiliary and fire
department; cake, pie, coffee and soft
drinks also for sale. Stringed music
entertairunent.
SUNDAY
ANNUAL WEBER Family
Reunion, Sunday, at Reedsville Lock
and Dam. Bultet dinner at noon ;
tholle attending to take bingo prizes.
All relaUves and frienda welcome.
TEAFORD fAMILY Reunion Sunday at Racine Lock and Darn, West
Virginia side; basketlunch at noon.
. ANNUAL REUNION of the descen. dants of Orlando and Kathryn Davis
will be held Sunday at Forest Acres
Park, New Uma Road, Rutland. A
basket dinner will be held at noon. In
case of rain the reunion will be held in
the basement of the Rutland Church
rl Christ, also on the New Uma Road.
Relatives and frlenda are invited.
JORDAN AND MICHAEL reunion
Sunday at noon at roadside park on
south side of U.S. l3 between Darwin
and Rock Springs Fairground.
Everyone welcome. .
REVIVAL now in progreM at
Carltoo Church, Kingsbury Road ,
Friday, Saturday, and Sunday 7:30
p.m. nightly. The Rev. James Lewts
of the Clui8tlan Brethren Church,
New Haven, guest speaker.

Stivers ville

STEAK
LB.

ARM
ROAST

1]$}69

FRENCH CITY

GROUND

.

49

$

BEEF

WIENERS

LB.

79~

U.S.D.A.
CHOICE
BONELESS

ENGLISH
ROAST
LB.

•1''
DEL MONTE VEGETABLES

FROZEN BANQUET
Turkey, Chicken, Chopped Beef, .

Cream Style Corn

11 OL

Whole Potatoes

PKG.

Peas

Ls.19~

MIX or MATCH

MARZml

3

SLAW
24 OZ. JAR

NEW
CABBAGE

Whole Kernel Corn

or Salisbury

DRESSING

FRESH SOLID HEADS

Cut Green Beans
French Style Green Beans

DINNERS

News Notes
Thooe visiting Mr. and Mrs. R. R.
Durst and Tom recently were Mr _and
Mrs . Bud Gluesencamp and
daughter, Columbus ; Mr. and Mrs.
VIctor Durst, Scott, Jason and Kelly,
The Plains; Mr. and Mn. Douglas
Circle, Racine ; Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Morehead, Portland; Mrs. Mike
Evans and family and Leota Birch,
local.
·
Henry Talbott and Mr. and Mrs.
Alex Mills, Steubenville, Mrs. Mary
Louise Ours, Huntington, W. Va. , and
Mrs. Pat Lemay Hauger, MarUnsburg, were callers anlie home of
Mrs. Nell Middleswart recenlly.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Van Meter,
Columbus, were recent weekend
guests of Mrs. Ada Van Meter, Mac
and Missy.
Mrs. Myrtle Lewis and Brenda,
Buffalo, W. Va. returned home Saturday after spending the past month
with Mr. and Mrs. Blll Bryant, Debra
and Dave.
Mr. and Mrs. Louis De Luz were
dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Abels, Long Bottom, on a
recent Sunday.
·
Mrs. Zetta Boyd, Mrs. Ruth Sereno.
and Mrs. Rena Taylor, Parkersburg,
W. Va., spent Sunday afternoon with
MrS. Iva Carpenter and daughter.
Sidney and Ruda Durst were Sunday eallers at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Edgar Brewer recently.
Sherry IUtchle, Minersville, was an
ovemlght guest of Missy Van Meter
recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Blaine Dalley and
sons Reedsville, visited Mrs. Gussie
Dall~y and Mrs. Betty Triplett recently.lt'

FRESH LEAN

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

FRESH

CANS

. ·--------------I
COUPON
I
--

-

-

I

. ,_ 49

II

30~ OFF

II

ON 1 LB. CAN

LARGE

I
I
I
I

I
I
I
I

SIZE

CANTALOUPES
EACH

69~

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

FOLGERS

VAC PAC
COFFEE
LIM IT 1 PLEASE
Expires Sat., Aug. 4, 1979
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

I

PEACHES
THIS YEAR'S

CROP

NEW WHITE

POTATOES
10 LB. BAG

�8- The DAilv SP.ntinel , Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Wednesday, Aug. 1, 1979

Marriage plans noted
Plans hove be!!n completed for the
open church wedding of Carla Sue
Teaford, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Dale Teaford, Route I, Racine, and
Danny Eldon Morris, son ul Mr. and
Mrs. Walter Morris, Pomeroy.
The wedding will be held Saturday
at 7:30 p.m. at the Racine First Bap.
ti.st Church with the Rev. Don Walker
ulficiating . Music will begin at 7 p.m.
with Janis Carnahan, Racine as
soloist.
Guests will be registe~ed by Qelb
Vartan and VIcki Cundiff, Syracuse.
Becky Crow of Racine will be the
maid of honor, and the bridesmaids

will be Peggy Neigler, Racine, Tam·
my Snider, Hebron, and Carol Morris,
Pomeroy. Jeff Newell, Middleport,
will be best man, and the ushers will
be Dale Teaford, Jr., Dennis Teaford,
and John Blake, Pomeroy. B. W.
Kerns, Mason will be the ring bearer,
and Monica Hill, Letart, the flower
girl.
Immediately following the
ceremony a reception will be held in
the church social room. Megan
Manuel, Marilyn WiWanis, Phyllis
O'Brien, and Vicky Cummings will be
hostesses.

Wedd~m=~·;~e~,p~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~-----,

Little Miss, Mister contest planned
Meigs Count? youngsters from four
through seven years of age are in·
vited to take part in the annual Little
Mister and Miss Meigs County Con·
test to be held on Wednesday, Aug. 15,
as a part of the 116th annual Meigs
County Fair.
The contest, moved from its usual
Saturday schedule, will be held in the
show ring under the sponsorship of
the Middleport Business and
Professional Women's Club with Mrs.
Janet Korn as chairman. Children
taklna part must have been horn bet·

ween Aug. IS, 1972 and Aug. 14, 1975,
and must be residents of Meigs Coun·
ty.
Out.uf-county judges will select the
winners and the two winners will each
receive a $50 gift certificate from the
Elberfeld Department Store.
Deadline for entering the com- .·
petition is Aug. 13. Entrants must
complete the entry form ac·
companying this article and send It
with a $1 entry fee to Janet Korn, 19
Anne St., Pomeroy. Entries without
the entry fee will not be accepted.

vows
.exchanged

ENTRY FORM
IJTII.EMR. AND lJTII.E MJ88 MEJGSOOUNTY CONTESl'

--UttleMr.
--UttleMl.w

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ADDRF.SS ••..

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lliiLD'SAGE ............. .... BmTHDATE ............ · .. ..
'

'Breath of Life campaign opens
POLLY'S POINTERS
Polly Cramer
four hours, then wipe clean. This
works so great that my mat looks like
new. -COlLEEN
DEAR POLLY -Please tell me how
DEAR POLLY- Dish drainers and
to pack·a man's wool suit in a suitcase racks now cost so much, and the
so it does not get wrinkled. I packed drainers in particular often .become
such a suit for a plane trip and had to badly stained. Do not use cleansers or
have it pressed before I could wear it. abrasives. Soak the drainer for about
Also; if mothballs or crystals are two minutes in warm water and
used In a garment bag In the closet household bleach and then scrub with
how can the odor of the mothballs be a plastic scrubber. Rinse with Clear
removed?- HAL
water, dry thoroughly and after it is
DEAR HAL- No matter how a suit completly dry spray with furniture
is packed if the bag is"loosely packed wax and polish. It is then easier to
the clothes will shift and be wrinkled. keep it clean and water drains off
Jacket sleeves can be folded toward more easily. The tray will be more
the front of the jacket, tissue slipped · resistant to further stains and will
between the front and back of the coat look better and last longer. - MARY
and even between the sleeves and the B.
jacket itself. I usually use plastic dry
Polly will send you one of her sij(ned
cleaner's bags instead of tissue. thank-you newspaper coupon clippers
Pants can be laid flat with one end if she uses your favorite Pointer,
hanging over, such a hag laid over the Peeve or Problem in her colWIUI:
part In the bag and then the other half
Write POLLY'S POINTERS in care of
folded over it.
this newspaper.
If some wrinkles do appear when
the garment is unpacked put on a coat
hanger, hang on the shower rod and
MICHOLSEN REUNION
rub a wash cloth wrung out of warm
The annual Nicholson family reuwater over the wrinkles. Leave to
dry. A friend with whom I was once niort will be held Sunday at Forest
traveling taught me this and I have Acres Park. All relatives and friends
are welcome to attend.
used it many times.
The odor of mothballs can be a
lingering one and the best remedy I
know Is to hang the clothes on an out·
,side line on a warm breezy day. RECENT GUESTS
POlLY
Recent guests of Nora -Mills, Mid·
DEAR POlLY - The best thing I dleport, were Mary Mills_Realm, Mr.
have ever used to clean a rubber and Mrs. Kenneth Wakley, Mickey
bathtub mat is hair shampoo. Rub all and Steven, all of Marion.
over the mat and let it stay for about

Pock suits carefully

NEW HAVEN - The 1979 "Breath
of Life" Chairman for New Haven
was announced today by the
Bluegrass Chapter of the Cystic
Fibrosis Foundation.
Mrs. Claudia Thomas who has condueled a previous campaign for the
Foundation, will again lead local
volunteers in coordinating the New
Haven Bike·A·Thon.
Making the announcement, Charles
Thayer, President of the Bluegrass
Chapter, said, "Because of the con·
tinuous support and concern shown by
· people like Mrs. Thomas, thousands
of lung-damaged children
everywhere are able to breathe a lit·
tie easier. "
The Bike·A·Thon; to be held in Sep.
!ember or October will help support
the research and improved patient

MASON - A birthday party for
Craig Martin · Yeaguer and Erin
Nicole Yeager was held last week by
their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Marty
Yeager at their home.
Each had their own miniature cake
of Raggedy Ann for Erin Nicole, and
Andy for Craig Martin, which was
placed on their high choirs for the
twins' first birthday. They received
several gifts.
Punch and cake were served to
their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Yeager, Mr. and Mrs. Lou
Burton and Mrs. Rhoda Yeager, all of
Mason; Mr. and Mrs. James Diehl,
Mrs. Gertrude MitcheU, Pomeroy;
Mrs. Donna Knapp, Syracuse, Ohio;
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Smith, Mr. and
Mrs. Joseph Lish, Lisa and Frankie,
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Noble, Jeff and
\

lhOFF 60" SINGLE KNITS
Surline Plain, Plaid
Printed &amp; Plain Interlock, Ponti and
Sweater Knits Suitable for Dresses,
Sweaters, Tops, Slacks and Blazers.
OFF 36" &amp; 45" WOVEN FABRICS
Calicos
Quiana knits
Ginghams
Eyelets
TO~

St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45789.

care necessary to increase both the
quality and length of these children's
lives.
Cystic Fibrosis is an inherited, in·
curable disease, affecting one in
every 1,000 children born. It is
believed that one in every 20
Americans are carriers of the CF
gene. Although there is no way to
identify the potential parents of a CF
child, the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation
is curently funding research atmed at
finding a practical test to detennine
these carriers, as well as controlling
this dreaded disease.
Since 1955, the Foundation has in·
creased the average llfe expectancy
of a CF child from Infancy into young
adulthood. "Our . progress has been
tremendous, but we still have so far to
go," said Thayer.

Merritt reunion held
The second annual Merritt reunion
was held recenUy at the Racine Locks
and Dam.
The Rev. Wilbur Butor gave the
blessing preceding the potluck din·
ner.
,
Attending were Mrs. Goldie RoWns,
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Brinker, Mr. and
Mrs. Freddie Brinker and SOil, Jarod,
Billie Brinker, Mrs. Linda Brinker
and daughter, Joanie, the Rev. Mr.
Baxtor, Clara Capehart, Katherine
Blessing, Mr. and Mrs. Harry KJ.
ingini!Smith and daughter Naomi,
Deasle Ratliff, all of Letart, W. Va.
Mrs. Ph!Wp Kinzel, Roe Kinzel, Mt.
Alto, W. Va. and the former Anna

Mason Area News Notes

CLEARANCE SALE CONTINUES

· SUITABLE FOR

Send Entry and $1 entry fee before AUg. 13 to Mrs. Janet Kom, It Anne

Mae KinZel, Akron; Mrs. Edith
AWson, ...ancy Carol Phalem and
daughters, Cheryl and Lisa, Nitro, W.
Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Kinzel,
Coraopolis, Pa. ; Mrs. Zelia Calligan,
Wisconsin; Mr. and Mrs. Bert
Rollins, !Wnois; Stanley Shields and
Agnes Cromin, Canton; Mrs. Maggie
Winebrenner, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon
Winebrenner; daughters, Mary,
Paula and Rebecca, Mr. and Mrs.
Tom Weaver and son, Chris,
Syracuse; Mrs. Mary Weaver and
daughter, Peggy, Mrs. Linda French
and children, Chip, Andy, Maggie and
Sara, St. Louisville.

Past Matrons Club meets .

Chris, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Ross, Amy
and Shawn, and Pam Burton, all of
Mason.

Star, their husbands and families en·
joyed a picnic recently at Forest
Acres Park.
Charles Kina had grace precedins
the picnic. Volley ball, badmitton,
Return from vacation
and other games were played by
Mr: and Mrs. Denver Rice and SOil , some while others enjoyed socializing
Bill have returned from a vacation at and taking pictures.
JeykeU Island, Ga. They were joined
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
there by Mr. and Mrs. Chester Rice Olarles Kina and Olester Kina. Mrs.
and Ginger James, College Park, Ga., Eugene Alkinl, Mr. and Mrs. Bob
and Mr. and Mrs. George Chambers Jewell, Mrs. Don Wilson, Mr. and
and son, Clint, and daughter, Emily,
Mrs. Doug Bbhop, Mr. and Mrs.
East Point, Ga. Spending a weekend Stanley Kaldore, Renee and Rudy
with them were Mr. and Mrs. Norman Kaldore, LaW11 and Denise Cobb, Jeff
Yeauger, Melbourne, Fla., former Ji.,.on, Heather Campbell, Mrs.
Middleport residents. After leaving Virgtl Alkin.s, Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Jeykelllllland, the Rice family spent Nelson, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Rice,
time with the Chesler Denver Rice Mr. and Mrs. Nonnan Wlll, Mr. and
and George Chombers families. Emi· · Mrs. P. J. Pauley, Gina and Kim, and
iy Chambers returned to Ohio for a Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Erlewlne.
visit with Mr. and Mrs. Denver Rice.
RUTLAND-Members of the Past
Matrons Club of the Harrisonville
Chapter ~. Order of the Eastern

MASON - Mr. and Mrs. John Cut·
tis Roush, West Columbia, Mrs. Mary
Roush, Mason, and Mrs. Evelyn
Nicholson, Clifton, W. Va. spent
several days vacationing at Myrtle
Beach.
The family was met at Myrtle
Beach by Mrs. Nicholson's son and
granddaughter, Master Sgt. P . E.
Nicholson and Amber of McGuire Air
Force Base. Nicholson is the brother
of Mrs. John Curtis Roush and Mary
Roush.
Mason aDd Area Penouals
On Sunday Mr. Thelma Exline and
daughter, Barbara, Joan Bennett, of
Elizabeth, W. Va. vilrited Mrs.
Exline's sister~ Mrs. Norma Riggs,
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Anderson at
Mason, and While there observed the
birthday of Mrs. Riggs. The honoree
received several cards and gifts.
Refreshments were served to the
above named and others present in·
eluded Mr. and Mrs. George Bumgar·
dner and children, Kim and Lisa, Mr.
and Mrs .. David Eads and son, J. R. ,
of Pl. Pleasant, Mr. and Mrs. Chuck
Anderson, Jamie and Todd, Mason.
Mr. and Mrs. George Bumgardner,
Kim and Lisa of Bankok, Thialand,
are visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Anderson and her grandmother,
Mrs. Norma Riggs and other
relatives.
Mrs. Vicki Yeager entered the
Pleasant Valley Hospital on Monday
where she is to undergo ;,a ton·
sillectomy.
·
Miss Cindy Foglesong of Kingsport,
Tennessee and her sister; Cathy
Foglesong Conner of Charleston, W.
Va. were here to assist In the wedding
of Miss Terri Proffitt and Mr. Rick
Dye of New Haven.
Mrs. Charlene R•\therford of

The Treaty of Versailles, drawing
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
up the terms for ending World War I,
DISCHARGES, JULY 31
Mrs. Michael Bames and son, was signed in 1919.
Clarence Bartl~tt, Todd flack, Lilly
Brown, Sarah Broyles, Mary Buck,
Freda Casto, Marissa Childers, Mrs.
James Council and son, Ismaiel
Dixon, Sally Ervin, Beverly Ginther,
Tim Klein, Jennifer Lane, Merritt
Maloney, Joshua Profitt, Lena Raike,
Charlotte Rowland, Harry Shugrue,
Barbara Smith, Bertie Thacker ,
Richard Thomas, Mrs.Michael
Wolfong and son, Mrs. Timothy
,Williamson and daughter, Mrs .
Howard Fiegler and son.,

KWIK SEW PATTERNS 1h PRICE
We SeM&lt;:e All Machines
Shapen ScissJrs

Daughter born
Mr. and Mrs. WWlam Ollbome,
Loog Bottom, are ll1llOWlCing the ,
birth I'll a daughter, Kelly Amber, Ju·
ly II at the Holzer Medical Center.
The Infant weighed six pounds, 12
OUIIC.W and wu 20 inches long. Mr.
and Mrs. O.bome have another
daughter, LorTe Diane, five.
Maternal granclparenta are Mrs.
MIJile, Stone, Mason, and Gary DiU,
Long ~ttom. Maternal great·
fll"lllldp&amp;rent are Mrs. Goldie DIU,
Loog Bottom. Paternal gr&amp;ndp&amp;rents
are Mrs. Da Oabome, ReedsvWe, and
HalT)' Olborne, Pomeroy. Paternal
great.gandparenta are Mrs. Wilma
O.bome, Pomeroy' and Mrs. Ethel
Robbtna, Belpre.

KAHNS

SLICED

Smoked Picnics .. ~J9¢

Mr. and Mrs. Dale Machir ul Route
3, PCIIDI!I'O)', are announclna the birth
ul their HCond daughter, Shanna
Elaine Macbir. She was born 011 July
13 at St. Joseph Hospital,
Parkersburg, W. Vo. and weighed
elgbt pounds, 12 ounces. Mr. and Mrs.
Mllchlr have a dalllhter, Sara Ann,
qetwo.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Dean ul Route 3,
Pwoy are tbe maternal grand·
1-nnto. and tbe ..temal grand·
parents are Mr. allll Mrs. Charles
Mac!U', RllUte 3, Ptmto 01 . Maternal
gmot1J'81ldpm!nta are Mr. and Mrs.
George Genhelmer, a...ter.

WEBER REUNION
The annual Weber family rewlion
will be held at the Reed.lvWe LocU
and Dam Sunday with a buket dinner
at noon. Thole attending are to take
lteml for bingo prizes. All relatives
and friends are welcome.

CUBE STEAK.........~:!2
SUPERIORS FRANKIES

.

or

19

·

WATERMELON ....... !~.
VALLEY BELL

Middle ol Upper llock In ,.omeroy, 0 .
tl'lr11 Tll11 r1, I let .
11.111 ...

~ . Ill .

l'rl ,

CI•M4hn••v

HAM

CANNING
NEEDS

CABBAGE

24oz.

99'

·1sc

&amp;
HOMEGROWN
PRODUCE

Kraft
24

oz:

lb.

LB.

ONIONS
2 I.B. 694

69

4

Valley Bell

CHOCOLATE DRINK Gal.
"·

$}59

MARGARINE.... :~c;.99

¢

BORDEN'S

¢

SHEDDS SPREAD

II ,II'I..Sjl . lll . MOll .

29'

Hunts

59

Chocolate Milk.{~~! 1

HARTLEY SHOES, INC.

FOR ALL YOUR

LB.

e_

WI EN ERS ...•.•...... :~c•..79
12

"Sa ll y. you' re not giving i1 a

BOILED
$p9

$
149
BACON ... ~8~.

Announce birth

PEACHES

•

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU AUGUST 4

chanr.:e to answer ''

NEW HAVEN
BEN FRANKLIN STORE

FABRIC SHOP
115 W. 2ND AVE.

$}l9 CATSUP

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

STARTING AUGUST 1ST

No Charge or Layaway

24oz.

M011.·Sat 8 am-1 0 pm

SALE

No Redemption Tlclcets Honored On This Solei

'-~c..:. ' :,p-_}

Store Hours:

Lawrenceburg, Ind. vtstted recently
with her grandmother, Mrs. ~
Yeager.
Mr. and Mrs. Dallaa Walker visited
over the weekend with their daughter
and son-In-law, Mr. and Mrs. Nick
Howard and family at Richmond, Ind.

BACK TO SCHOOL

DRESSES, QUILTS, ETC.

Wedding vows were eachanged on
July 21 by Sallie Rolle Perry and Ed·
ward Lee Hayman at the hlme of Mr.
and Mrs. Dave Ji'enstennaker, Col·
umbus.
The bride is the daqgllter of Mr. and
Mrs._Frank Taylor, Columbus, and
the groom is the 80il of Mr. and Mrs.
Gerald Hayman, Racine. Mrs.
Hayman, 1011, Keith, Mrs. Robert
Hart, Brice and Beth Ann, Racine,
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Jewell, Barbara
and Sob, Letart, W. Va.; Phyllis
Young, Middleport; Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Haymen and Brian, Laurel,
Md.; and Gloria WhiU.tch, The
Plainlattended the wedding.
Following their wedding trip the
• couple will reside at llll!l! Haveodale
Rd., Colwnbus.

Somebody
needs
a hug.
Right now.
And that's what it's all

about. A hug, and a kiss,
and a pinch of moonlioht

3; ·99¢

CORN, GREEN BEANS ~oJ
OR PEAS •••••••••••••s~z!.
FLAVORITE

Court'St.
Pomeroy, 0 .

us.

BREAD............~:~..4/$} SHERBET. .........~=~~. 99
L_COUPON

I

COUPON

32 Ol

$}99

COUP ON

NESTEA

BANQUET

FRIED CHICKEN
GOESSLER
JEWELRY

_

INSTANT TEA
3 oz.

$}79 .

CHEER

~~~:'f:~= l

84

oz.

Limit i Per Customer

Good Only at Powell

Good Only at Powell

Good Only at Poweli

4, 1979

Offer No. 4026-0
·~~-~~~
49 oz.

2Ig

$

~Il l~

Limit 1 Per Customer

Offer Expires

LEMONADE MIX

DETERGENT

Limit 11"erCustomer

Offer Expires Aug. 4, 1979

__CD_l)PD"'__
COUNTRY TIME

Offer Expires Aug. 4, 1979

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
IOher
4, 1979

�11- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, U., We&lt;llleMay, Aug. 1, 1979
l~'lbe

Average wheat prices highest in 3 years

Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,O., Wednesday, Aug. 1, 1979

WASHINGTON (AP) - Average
prices for wheat in July reached their
highest level in 45 months while June
cern prices were the highest recorded
In three full years, Agriculture
Department statistics show.
Tile Crop Reporting Board said
Tuesday in its monthly report that
higher prices f&lt;r corn, wheat, lemons,
potatoes and grain sorghum
con,lributed most to the 0. 75 percent
increase from June to July in prices
·farmers receive for raw food
products.
The price jumps f..- potatoes, from
'1.22 a hWidredweight to $4.57 as a
new crop went to ·market, and for
ltmoos, from ~.63 to $17.60 a box,
were more dramatic.
But the volume of grain in the farm
economy apparently made the
difference, since lower prices were
repcil'ted for cattle, hogs, broiler
dliekeoa, Gran&amp;•. eu• and

tomatoes.
Soybeans, _at their highe~ level
The boom in prices for key food and since the sprmg 1977 peak, averaged
feed grains hegan in early June after $7.38 a bushel, compared to $7.38 in
repa-ts of problems with the Russian June and $6.40 a year ago.
Average farm prices have dropped
crop.
A Soviet harvest helow its goals ooly twice since a steady upward
would keep the Russians as strong swing began last December- in April
buyers next yeat in the U.S. market, and June by about I percent each
where stocks are plentiful. They have moo til .
The decline in live cattle prices in
purchased more than 14.8 million
metric tons of grain for delivery by July from $a:90 per hWidredweight to
October and substantial jJUrchaseii $6S,50was the third straight drop after
are expected in the next year as well. five mooths of record levels.
They still averaged about 311 percent
Prices at the farm for all types of
wheat averaged $3.95 a bushel last higher than a year ago. COmbined
mooth as a result, That's 23 cents prices for all meat anlrilals were 19
above June's mark, a 94&lt;ent gain percent above July 1978. Hogs
since April and the highest average &lt;lropped from ~- 70 a hWidredwelght
to $37.90.
since the tt .02 of October 11175.
July farm prices were 14 percent
Corn, the maj&lt;r feedgrain for
animals that produce consumer meat above a year ago, the board said. The
and dairy products, rose 24 cents to rep..-t said prices paid by farmers to
$2.73 a bushel nationally, the top meet expenses, incl11ding Jiving costs,
a1ao role 0.75 percent in Julf to a level
reeum Iince _,2.12 In Julf 1117&amp;.

14 percent above July 1978.

Fann prices in June averaged 146
percent higher than a 1967
benchmark. The index was 144
percent higher in June.
Tile July parity ratio for farm
commodities was 73 percent, down
from 74 in June but the same as a year
ago. At 100 percent, the indicator
would mean, tl\eoretically, that
fanners have the same buying power
they had in 1910-14.
- For example, the $3.96 a bushel
price for wheat was 66 percent of the
July parity price for wheat of $5.98 a
buahel.
Growers of lemons, grapefruit,
oranges, calves, sheep, beef cattle
and sweet potatoes, however,
recorded prices above or close to
parity.
Overall feedgrain and hay prices
were 7 percent higher than in June
ancl•perceatabove a)'.., .... Food

grain prices together increased 5
percent to point 32 percent above
July 1978 averages.
The Index for po11ltry and eggs
declined 4 percent during the month, 7
percent below July 1978 averages.

a

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
director of the Agriculture
Department's new office of
transportation says the Carter
administration's proposals to
deregulate railroads and revamp
regulation of the tr11cking industry
should solve many of the problems
agricultural ahippers no'!V face .
Rooald F. Schrader told the Senate
Agriculture Committee's marketing
subcommittee Tuesday that rail
deregulation Is essential to give the
lines Incentives to compete with
trucks and barges In providing better
service to oullying areas.
ADd, .. IIIII, tbl tna1a1 nbm

bill will further deregulate shipping
by those carriers of food products,
some of which can be delayed by rules
that can't keep up with changes in
marketing patterns.
· Raw farm products and some
processed items, such as frozen
poultry and cooked fish, are exempt
from freight-rate rules and
procedures. The Carter proposal
would extend the exemption to such
things as fresh red meat, canned
vegetables and feed.
But Reeder Miller of the A.E. Staley
Manufacturing to. of Decatur, lll.,
spokelimWJ f..- the National Grain and
Feed AssOciation, said the single most
important thing shippers now need is
another regulation : service standards
covering all rail car movements, with
penalties for carriers who don't
perf..-m .

a

f"'OUGtroUT THI
StOft
fANTAUIC U.\IINCI
ON ktOGU HAND
ftiOOOCtt
U\110 Ill OW AU JUIT
AfiWJIAMPtU

•o•

ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY
. . ol . _ ~ ttlml • ,..,.,.a . . .
~ ........., b . . ~n .:t~ KIOVI' Stor., ....,c •
~ ,.... 1n llillll " ..... ao ""Oil( d ~r~ ,.,.,.._,
"""· ........ ofter ycMt W'OYt cftooct of • ~. . "-"' ·

I

:c~

m. ..,.. IIWICII or • r~W'CNC&amp;
......... 'fO'I 10~ IN......._, r'-" eo! lf'll
. . . . . prici ...... J)dloyt,
'IJIIIfWI ..-.... ,._,...
~

.~

:I e~'"=:::-'1
SAil

Kroo- 11 .,....,....., fol ';out totM

...... Wi. , . , . _ . , INnUfkl.... . " yOu .... 1"101 . . ..

Vegetable Oil

~: 01.$149

y01.1.,.,., 111

led. K"'Pf 111111 ...... ¥Our '-n Wlillft'l IN_.. t..nd 01' •
Qllrl9erllbtll brlnd Of rtlf11"1d 'tOV' pt,lfcn.. pnct
OOODIUMh\' , MYJt TMIUJANIOAY . 4UGUl14 . 19"
GALl.ll'OliS&amp; POMI:ROY STORU

WI__.... YNI.atn' TOL..r QUMn'f111 . ..a..IOtD

I

I
I
I
I
I

.• ::

35'

I
I
I
I

Country Club 'lt•Gal.
Ice Cream ......... c'"·

CCWfttOH' lt" . fMI UOOII CO . II'UU AND PIKD
•

I
I

I r.:Q\'\\:

TOT o\L SATISFACTION GUARANTEE
AYONOAL£

I
I

"

12

IDf

TO-.

ltROGER COST CUTTER COUPON
JUMIO
CLOVEIII VAU(V

Grape Jelly .

69c

Qt.
lor

AVONO~U

California
Cantaloupes

IOUNDTOP'

CUT

Green Beans

~o·.

30c

Fresh
Peaches ... __ .. __ .. ,. _
Boneless Top , $
Sirloin Steak ....... ,. _
U.S. GOV'TGIIADEDCHOICE

.Kroger Catsup

Enriched Flavor.'cigarette parks whole
new taste era in low lar smoking.

Qt .

BtL

77c

WHOlE 01 SliCED I&lt; ROGER

A.few years ago, most smokers agreed: low tar
meant low taste.
Then along came MERIT and a whole new taste
idea called 'Enriched Flavor' tobacco. And the
"low tar, low taste" theory was exploded. Exploded
with proven taste in a new low tar cigarette.
No other new cigarette in the last 20 years has
attr.acted so many smokers as quickly as MERIT!
It's clear: MERIT taste is changing attitudes
towards low tar smoking.

Potatoes

~0~-29c

Kroger 20 ·oz.
White Bread ....... .
KIOGEI

99

Grade A
Large Eggs .. _.. ... _oo•.
MAHn IASKn OIADIAA SRICT

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

Embers
Charcoal ·

14·17-ll. AVG.

Fresh Whole
Pork Loin

10$
09
.•.

$ 19

'

12
Df

,....~~~

KROGERCOSTCUTTERCOUPON

e:

Domino
.,.. _
5ugar ..................

c

11

Tomato Sauce·

Showboat_
Pork 'N' Beans ......... ..

~~-16c

I

California
Cauliflower

$

Head

14'1•-o•.

Cano

2-LI.
lliCID,,WHOU
OlnAlf

.

Roast Beef

t

Avelloble Only
lnSto,.. With
DellDepto
Hotfoodo

L
~

•l

IEGULAI 01 CHUI I'AK

Any She Pkg.

Ground Beef

Kings &amp; tOO's

$ 89

REGULAR and MENTHOL
· Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.

L----------------------'

l'lUS DIPOSIT

..

I

C Philip

·--TIOIIIImiOI

EcllridtS..•td Sauaage or IUelbusa ~~-

Fabric
Softener. ...... .. .... ''"·

Morris Inc . 1979

,

I'

11 AM Tli7P'M

!.949

DeiStyle lolltcl Ha111 .... _........... .. _.. .. lb

SAVI 50• KIOGEI CONCENTIIATED

Kings :Brng' 'tar: · 0.6 mg nicotinP.100's:11mg"tar: · 0.7mg nico,ineav.perclgarelle. FTCReportMay'78

AYallable&gt;

'

ltQUDII,,-PtiCIIOPCNIC1CIN. 1-LI. POTArosA.lADo•COL••LAwa
4CIIIINIIIOUI

family , .. Fried Chicken ...... ... .. .. .........

c.ke Donut Stlclls...... .. .. .. .. .... ,....

$2 99
$211
$

599

6 ... 89 c

�•

~I~agySentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesda.h~ug. l. !11'79

12- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0., Wednesday, Aug. 1 1979

Your Best Buys Are .t_,ound
I day

1.00

2days

1.2S
1.90
2.?!1
3.75

1.5(1

3days

\.IKI
3.00

6 d8}'S

Each word over the minimum

15 words LS 4 ceni.S ptr word per
day . Ads runnin~ other than con8el'Utive day s wtll tx&gt; c hart(ed a l
lhr I d~ty rutr .
In memor y. Card of 11\ank.s
tmd OLitUH ry : 6 t-ents' per word .

t:J .OO niinimum . Cash in ad ·
va nr..
Mobile Home !'.lJles and Yard
Sllles are arct&gt;pttd only with

cash with ordrr. 2$ C'tnt ~.:harge
for a ds carrying Boll Num ber In

Ca re o! The Sentlni!l .

Tbe Publisher reserves the
rit!(ht to edit or rejtct any ads
deeme d object ional ~ The
Publhher will not~ re~ns ibl e
for morr tha n one incorrect insert ion .

..

Phont 992-2156

NOTICE
~_DVERTISING

DEADLINES

RISING STAR Kennel. Boor·

ding. Cal l367-02'12 .
GOING OUT of business . All
poodles ,
pomeronia·n .
pekinasa. black ppm puppy
great coati ina . Phone 696-111
after Spm .

POODLE GROOMING. Judy
Taylo .. 614-367·7220.
GOING OUT of business . All
poodles ,
pomaranion ,
~kinase . block pom puppy .
. great coot line . Phone
696-1111 after Spm .

Sunda}'
!P.M.
Friday aflemoon

OFFICE SECRETARY needed al
once . Must be good typist ,
short hond preferred. Must be
accurate.
Good
fringe
b.nafits, Write BaK 486,
Pomeroy, OH 45769 and give
~ omplete resume. All replies
strictly contidentio l. Present
employer will not · be con·
tacted without your permission. Business college prefer·
red but not required .
WE WISH to thank all of our
friends and neighbors for their
k indness and thoughtfulness
in the rtKent illness and death
of our belo\led sister , Eliza
Murl Adams .
The Adams Family, · Rufland ,

OH .

19T.r VEGA HATCHBACK, call
303-675-1501 o• 305.675·2488
or 304 -675-1553.
Supreme 3SO. A . C.', P.S.. P.B.,
tilt wheel, 29,000 miles. Ask·
ing $3800 or $2400 and older
cor . 992-3625.

1969 MACH I. 96 ,000 Miles .

Excellent

614 ·667·3305 .
1979 CHEVROLET

shape .

GUN SHOOT , EVERY FRIDAY
7,30 PM RACINE ·GUN ClUB.
FACTORY CHOKE GUNS ON·
lY .
CAR WASH at Pomeroy Fire
House. Aug . 4. 10.4 . Pr oceeds
to go to Boy Scout Troop 249,
Pomeroy.

Lost and Found
FOUNDi WHITE female k itten .
angora with white fleo collar.
13 weeks old . Powell's Pork·
lng lot , Pomeroy. 992-3760.
lOST: BALCK and whtie poodle and wire terrier lost in
Monkey Run area . Answers to
the name of Bandit Phone

m -nOIJ .

LOST' BASHAN a•ea. Small
white

pony

with

halter.

949-2694 .

Help Wanted
LIGHT PICKUP and delivery in
local area . Cor needed. Call
Mr. Martin , 614-446-7107.

TElEPHONE EVENING sales .
6-9 pm. Call Mr. Finoteri ,
614-•UI6-7107 .

PERMENANT lull limo boby sil·
tar needed 5 days a week for 3
young children . Wr itten
references required. 992·6233
after 5:30pm .

camping Equipment
1976 STARCRAFT FOLD down
camper . Sleeps six. $1400.

742-2978.

Wanted to Buy
CHIP WOOD. Poles mox .
diameter 10" on largest end.

Sl2 ~'ton . Bundled slab. SIO
per 1on. Delivered to Ohio
Pollet Co .. Rt. 2. Pomeroy.

992-261l9.
OLO FURNITURE , ice boKes ,
brou beds . iron beds. desks ,
etc. . complete households .
Write M .D. Miller. Rt. 4,
Pomeroy or coli 9'92-7760.
OLD COINS, pocket watches ,
class rings , wedding bonds ,
diamonds . Gold or sll\ler. Call
J. A . Wamsley . 742·2331 .
WANTED: SAW logs . Poyment
upon deli\lery to our yo rd. 7:30
to 3:30 weekdays . Blaney
Hardwoods , SR 339, Barlow.

OH . 678·2'180.

S1995 . 992· 2531 .
1968 CAMERO 396·350 h.p., 4
speed . ·Headen, Cregar mags,
new paint job, other e~etros .
Coll992-7196 after 5pm.

For Rent
COUNTRY MOBilE Home Pa•k ,
Route 33, north of Pomeroy.
Lorge lots. Call992· 7479.
3 AND 4 RM furnished and Unfurnished
opts .
Phone

992-543-4 .
ONE BEDROOM opts. Contact
Village Manor, 992-7787.
LARGE HOUSE in Pomeroy .
After in Pomeroy. After 5:30.

992-5621 .

WE'RE HAVING a yard sole on July 27 and 28 from 8 til! 6 at
488 South 4th Ave . in Middleport.

YARD SALE" Aug. I , 2, 3. Do;iy
8·8. Rain or shine. One mile
north at Chester on State
Route 7. Turn left onto CR 82 .
One mila. Watch for signs.
lots of furniture , baby items,
clothing , (mens, womens and
boys to 2 toddler) and much
more. Phone985-3519.

GARAGE SAlE . July 30 · Aug.
" · 9-5, Located off At. 7 Bypass
on Old Rt . 143, south of Jock' s
Cafe. Reasonable prices on
new toys , good school
clothing and much more.
Follow th signs to great
bargains .
VA.RO SALE. Wed ., Aug . I thru
Sot. . Aug . 4 10 til 8. 742 E.
Main St ..
Pomeroy, OH .
992·7314 . Low
prices on
everything.

FIVE FAMILY Ya•d Sale. F•i. ,
Aug. 3rd only. 9-4 at the cor·
ner of Park and Page Sts. in
Middleport. Clothes to fit infonts to adult. ,/• bed frame ,
20" girls' bike . black and
whtie TV , lots of misc. Rain
cancels until Aug . lOth. Phone

949-2178 .
YARD SALE . Sla,ting Wed .,
Aug . I , 2, 3. Men' &amp;, women's,
boys and girls' Qothes, od.dsands , junk . 500 lincoln Hill ,
Dremo Smith.
TWO FAMilY Yard Sole. First
house beyond Toll Timbers ,
Thursday and Frlday. Aug . 2 &amp;
3. Rain cancels. Clothing for
adults . teenage girl anl!t in·
font , patterns , air conditioner,
wooden trunk , depression
gloss . jewelry . many other
Items . 992-718-i or- 992-5834 .

YARD SALE . Aug. 2 and 3.f•am
9 tlll6 ot144 N. 4th St. in Mid·
Middleport

·

PLUMS to give away.

992-2021 .
AKC REGISTERED Sl. Boma•d.
4 y.an old to good home In
country .
Glen
Bissell.

BACK TO school yard sale.
104'/ , S. 2nd , M iddleport.
AugUst . I , :2 . 3.

· clothes , men's clothes , white
uniforms and much more' 293
Race
St. ,
Middleport.
Reasonable prices .
GARAGE SALE at 24 Railroad
St. , Middleport. OH . August 1
thru 4th . Lots of nice items .

Choap.
TWO FAMilY

Ya•d

Sale .

Thurs.·FrL 9-4. 1639 lincoln
Hts . Ra in cancels.

and short ha ir. All colors.
Humane Society. 992· 7680.

YARD SALE . Aug . 2ndand3,d.
2 miles on Flatwoods Rood .
Baby items and boys' clothes ,
new bassinet!, wood slove,
old jewelry . cupboards. gun
cabinet. shampoo bowl.

~ 'Calder's

Universe," an

H,t' I'CV

Tro tror Tra iler TruitliiiX . /11c
PARKERSBURG
(3041 42H413.

'1'12·5858.
1965 GENERAl60xl2, 2 bed•.
1970 Sylva, 60xl2 , 2 bed•.
1970 Castle, 60x12, 2 bed&lt;.
1974 Morkline, SOx12, 2 bedr.

1969 Valiant, 12x60, 2 bed•.
1967 Notional, 12x50, 2 b.dr .

B'S MOBilE HOME SAlES, PT.
PLEASANT, WV . 304-675-•424 .
1974 GOVENOR MOBILE
HOME 12 x 52. 23 .000 BTU ai'

REAl ESTATE Loons. Purchase
and refinance . 30 yea r terms,
~ A . No money down (eligible
veterans) . FHA · As low as 3
p9r cant down (non· \l&amp;tera ns) .
Ireland Mortgage Co., 77 E.
State. Athens . 614·592·3051 . TWO STORY 3 bedroom house.
J lots. Now's your chance if
vou need a house . $12,000 .
Owner willing to talk .

992-2082 o• 742-2J28 .
REAL ESTATE: 1 acre lot in Rig·
gscrest Manor. batwean Tuppers Plains and Chester.

Phone 985-392'1 and 985·412'1.
HOUSE FOR :sale near Meigs
Minas. 742-2228 .

RESTAURANT AND bac. D-I
and 0·2 license included. 3
acres . and house, Good
business opportunity. Call

367·0557.
COMMERCIAl BUilDING lo,
sole . 59 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport, OH. Formerly oc·
cupied by Dudley' s Florist. Appr ox. 5000 sq. ft . on 2 floof5 .
S16,&lt;XXl. Owner moy help
finance. Coli 304·485· 1631 or
304·485·2154, ask for Pevton .
19 ACRES , 5 room ho~.~se . CR

28. 2•7-3164 .
FOUR BEDROOM , bath, livingdining on ~. acre lot jn
Rutland. Utility building. Call

.

HOBSTETTER
REALTY

.

NEW LISTING -

1974

Greenbriar
65 ' x 12 '
mobile home. This home
Is permanently secured
and has a bu i lt on f amily
room with
Franklin
Furnace . It has two out·
buildings and is situated
on 1!2 acre 11f2 miles out
681 west at Darwin . You
must see this excellent
home to appreci ate its

SUPPOSE ·

PERFECT

FLY OUT
THERE FOR
A WEEI&lt;,''

beauty . CaiiiOday. Pric ·
ed a! only $27,500.00.
POMEROY - · Large 2
story home with ex ·
ce llent river view . It has
3 bedroom s,
dining
room, sifting room , liv ·
ing room , glass enclosed
sun room and is heated
with gas hot ~ater heat.
The oak tr i m throughout
t he house is really ex ·
cellent. Priced at only

Phone 742·2003

For Sale
COAL ,

liMESTONE ,

sand ,

grovel , calcium chloride, fertilizer , dog food . and all types
of salt. Excelsior SalT Works.
Inc ., E. Main St., Pomeroy .

992·3891.
VERMEER BALER Sales: ports
and service. Balers in stock for
immediate delivery. Phone
742-2877 or 742-2152 .
FORD
itre:s.

DIESEL tractor . New
Excellent condition.

742·2228 o• 742-2832.
POTATOES AT lhe C.W, P•of·
fitt Form, Portland OH . Prices
change doy to day with the
market.
SIX FOOT Oeerborne rear
mounted ower and a set of 2
bottom 14" Deerborne Ford
p!ows, and straw. 985·4271 ,
1979 7V, h.p. Mercury out·
boord motor, new. 1971 Chevy
Malibu , 2-door. 247-3941 after

••

40" G' E. electric rnage . whi te ,

4 burner with deep wall
cooker ; ·clock and timer. Call

99:1·7067 .

CANNING tomatoes lor sale.
Bring containers . You p ick or
we pick. 247 -36-U .
SIMCO WESTERN brown horsa
saddle . Used only few times .
like new, with blanket, bridle,
leod, access. equipment,
Also
lettergroph
$175 .
mimeograph machine with 5
cans duplicotin9 ink , $30.
Charlene Hoeflich, 9CI2-5292 .
ONE

FIVE

foot.

rotavotor.

742·2455.
AlUMINUM MOlDS fo, mak·
ing · .ornamental concrete
items. Picnic table , bird both,
and planters , etc . 742-027 .. 6 .
ONE 3 v•ar old Jersey cow,
vary gentle, $550. One 14 mo.
old 1/ , Jersey and 1/, Guernsey
Heifer. $275. 1 set of 3 pt.
hitch ciJh i ~o~otors , $175 . Or1e air
conditioner , 10,000 B.T.U., us·

ed very litlle , $125. 949-2179 .
KENMORE GAS drye•, $30.
Umbrella baby stroller. $10.

'1'12-7733.
1973 NEW MOON 2 bod•oom
with porch and underpinning
in good condition . Call

992-3991 '
14 .000 BTU air condition ing.
Used \lerylittle. 992-7252 .
STARC:RAFT BOAT rack kit .
Denver
Bloke .
Clifton .

304-773-5775.
CANNING TOMATOES. Han-y
Hill Far m. letart Falls.

.Phone 949·2589
George

S.

Hobstetter,

H11adquarters for
Hotpoint and
General Electric
Appliances
Sales &amp; Servic~

SALE PRICES
Jack W. Carsey

Mgr.
Phone 992·21 B1

GARAGE SALE . Exercise bike,
high cJ,olr, clo thes , misc. Rain
or sh ine . 9-5. Fri and Sat. at
Bill Pullin S e)(covot ing, seventenths mile nor th on 33. Post
Beacon Service Station . Watch
for signs .

exhibilon of 125 works by
the American artist
A)elUillder Calder ( 189111976 ), is on view at the
BARGAINS GALORE . Thrill
Smithsonian's Hlrshhorn Shop. :los N. 2nd Ave .. Mid·
Musewn and Sculpture dleport. Open Thurs., Fri and
Sot.
Garden through May 13.

PnMFgoOV . O .

NEW LISTING - TRU ·
L Y A CLASS HOME In Pomeroy, th is large
·brick is priced far below
fair market value . 10
roOms; 5 bedrooms, 2
baths, formal dining
room , large living room ,
library , large rec . room
in attick , many , many

features . WOULD YOU
BELIEVE - $58,900.00.
NEW LISTING 2
farriily in Syracuse, li ve
in one, rent the other, 2
story brick ; 2 kitchens,
2 baths, gOOd i nvest ·
menf tor the future .

$28.000.00.
E X C E L L E N T
NEIGHBORHOOD
Middl.e port, 111:1 story
remodeled
home ;
3
bedrooms, garage , fenc ·
ed yard , good condition .

$25,000.00.
START A

FUTURE

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

double lot. Should VA or
FHA. Ex ce llent condi -

tion . 526.800 .00 .
ACREAGE IN TOWN
-Goad I floor plan
home , 3 bedrooms,
basement, fru i t trees ,

garden . A STEAL .
$25,000.00.
MOBILE
HOME
- Fully equ ipped kit·
chen, central air, wood
burning
firepla ce,

12x60·1972 Indy. Redu c ·
ed $7,900.00.
WE NEED HOMES $40,000 PRICE RANGE
FOR l QUAL I FlED
BUYERS .
REALTORS
Henry E . Cleland, Sr.
Henry E . Cleland , Jr.
992·2259
992·6191

216 E. Second Street

LITTLE FARM -

This

is for t he gardener.
Young
fru i t ,
small
stream, barn and 2 car
garage. 7 room home,
drilled well , cellar and
on State Rt.

REAL BUY

~

A large

family home i n good
co nditi o n .
3
or

-a

bedrooms, 2 balhs, full

basement, and 2 car
ga rage on large lot .

NEAR TOWN - Corner
lot w i th n ice 3 bedroom
frame home , bath, nat.
gas furna ce, glassed
front p orc h, eat · in kit ·
chen, a 3 room apt.,
garage and carport .

OUT ATHENS WAY - 2

TWO
STORY
house
in
Pomeroy. 6 rooms and both.
992-5621 after 6.
HOUSE FOR sole in Rutland . 3
bedroorris . both . utility room .
dining area. 21 x 13 living
room , 12 x 21 family room,
lots of cabinets in kitchen and
5 x 7 pantry . Metal building
outside' lot 100 )( 2,.0 out of
high water on quiet street.
phone 742·2420.
I V, ACRE WITH 1975 12 x 65 3
bedroom troller . Tuppers
Plains area. 614-667·3305.
FOR SALE by owner : 20 acre
form near langsvi lle . J
bedroom, living room , dining
room , kitchen and baht. Am·
pie storage, utility room in
basement. Aluminum siding
and fully insulated. large born
and small outbui ldings. Well
stocked por1d. $36,500, owner
will accept second mortgage
o's
downpoyment
from
qualified purchaser . Coli
7733 for appointment.

m.

OPPORTUNITY
Rent the 2 tra iler spaces
and
li'le i n
the 4
bedroom ho m e . 1 112
baths, garage and river
view .
INVEST
3 room
business bldg . very
c h ea p
for a
small
business.

OFFICES - One fl . of 7 ·
rms., insulated, ther mopane windows, tile fl .
Ohio Power, city water,
and air cond i tioned .

BUY NOW, FIX UP
AND MOVE BEFORE
WINTER .
CALL
992-3325.

Housing
Head uarters

CENTRAL REALTY CO.
WE HAVE CONVENTIONAL FINANC·
lNG FOR MOST OF OUR HOMES FOR
AS LOW AS 5% DOWN.
JUST LISTED - 14 acres of nice rolling land wilh a
Jl/7 story house that si ts back off the road surround -

ed with maple trees. Lg. pond stocked w ith fi s h.
Nicely located In Morning Star area, Price $33.900 .
LARGE , LIVING ROOM 40x26 -

Home wifh

3 bedrooms. carpeted throughout , large eat· In kit ·
chen, lots of cupboards, on 3/• acres with tots of
trees, and 1112 car garage with storage building

LET'S HAVE AN OFFER - Immed iate possession
- 3 bedroom home, li'ling room &amp;. family room, all
nicely carpeted . Eat -in kitchen equipped with
dishwasher, disposal , and stove, 2 full baths, 'h
basement, garge, nice garden area , on 1 plus ac re in
Racine , $45,000. More land available .

HOMESITE - 1 plus acres, jus! right for modular
or built home of your choice. water &amp; electnc
available .. Only minutes from Pomeroy . $3,000.
S2S,900 - Total pr i vacy is the kev here on 2 plus
acres, the living rm . has brick fireplace, step -down

famil y room , equipped kitchen. full balh . laundry
area, and two bedrooms complete downstairs . the
unf inished upstairs makes expansion possible .

gas furnace . A very attractive small home andl
acre land . Priced for qu ick sale for $17,500.

532.000.00 -

Good J bedroom, all carpeled home

close to Pom e roy &amp; M iddleport . Loc ated on good 1112
ac res of la nd .
·
SHOULD B·e SOLD - 70 ac res, hou se &amp; goob barn ,
about 1,000 feet Of beautiful Ohio River frontage .
Nice recreation spot , minerals, too . Let ' s have an

offer. Price $57,000.
LOTS OF LOTS ~ · From I to 75 acres, bordering
Pomeroy.

MIDDLEPORT - Good 3 BR home approx . 10 yrs .
old, stove &amp; refrigera t or . I g . storage bldg . Pr iced at

535,000.

"'h

JUST LISTED - Mini farm in town, O'ler
acres
of nice land with beautiful old remode led 2 story
home, all carpeted w i th built·ln stove, dishwasher ,
etc . Lots of possi bilities w i th this land close to jr .
h igh &amp; Racine . Priced al $54,000.

RACINE - 2 BR tra iler an nicelof . Ask ing $11.500.
FOUR STARS ~ One grealfealure afler another Abou!J miles oul on 3 acres, large 4 BR home has
split enlry, fully carpeted, equipped kit.. FR has
fireplace. 2 car garage, etec. door opener . Many

other added allra ctions. Listed tor 575,500.
ss ACRES ..:.. Available bac k of Ra c ine, ca n be dlvid ·
ed, timber. $55,000.00 .

NICE COMFORATBLE 8 •oom

WANT TO SELL? - GIVE US A CALL

home on opprox. 2 acres of
levelland with plenty of shade
tr eeS . On Rutbnd Rd .

CALL JIMMY DEEM, ASSOCIATE 949 2388
OR NANCY JASPERS, ASSOCIATE
949·2654 or 949·2591

992-7255 .

Manage.

ment (form•rly Sylvia's
Upholstery) ,
across
from Codner'5 Texaco.

BOB'S GENERAL
CONTRACTING

an 51. Rf . 124 toward ,
Rutland .

Auto&amp; Truck
Repair

eNEWHOMES
e ROOM ADDITIONS
eROOFING
eVINYLSIDING
eGUTTER &amp; SOFFIT

Also Transmission

IN SYRACUSE

HERt' AT THt' SHELTeR, E.VER.YONECAL~EP HER '~LOWE!('~. !!&gt;ECAUS.E- ·
SHE' HA&gt; A TALENT FOR MA1&lt;1Ne.
P~lt'S OUT OF PAPER AND II/IRE!

WHA"'T iHE eUSY

OF THE PEACE
&amp;AID "TO THE:

P~OSPECTlVE 15~1DE:i

AND cSROO-Y\5.

J'

BA(SJH UK.M
.
I

Now 8 ,anga lha circled lette&lt;S to

form the surprise answer. as sug·
gested by the above cartoon.

'--'~"""-......,'""'.._~~~1~

7·25·1 mo. pd.

.mer: ( I I I ) YOU IN

4· lO ·tf C

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST!, 1979
6 :JD- NBC News"3,15 ; Andy Griffith
6 : CBS News 8, 10; Fafher Know!
Besf 17.
7:00-Cross -WIIs J ; Newlywed
Game 6, 13; Porter Wagoner B;
News 10 ; Love American Style
15; Get Sma rt 17; Dick Cavell
20,33 .
, :3D-Dolly 3; Molch Game PM 6 ;
Muppet Show B; The Judge 10;
That's Hollywood 13 ; Wild
Kingdom 15 ; My Three Sons 17;
MacNeil -Lehrer Report 20,33.
S:DO-Real People 3,15; Eight Is
Enough 6.13; Just Friends 8,1 0;
Rat Patrol 17 ; Masterpiece
Theatre 20 ; All Creatures Great
&amp; Small 33 .
8 :3D-Good Times B,10; 9:DO-Funny
Si de of Love 3.15; Charlie's
Angels 6.13; People' s Command

J§i"IIC:E

JKX

SHE PEDDLE&amp; THEM OIJ
THE- SnilEcT AS 1?-UTTO!),
HOLE Fi.0\1/cR$ •• TC
EAf':N ENOU6H MONEY
TO STAY AI.IVt=l

Free Estimates

Phone 992 ·5682

0'

rUJINOj

Phone 992·6323

Repair

Ph . 992-3743 or 99Z·37SZ
·
8·1·1 mo.

A

rI

I I I I j
(Answers tomorrow)

N. L Construction
BLOCK &amp; BRICK
WORK, GENERAL
CONTRACTOR
Rl. l

H. L Writesel
Roofing
New, repair,
gutters and
down spouts .
Window cleaning
Gutter cleaning
Free Estimates

992 ·5547
1·25·2 mo.

949· 2862-949· 2160

ROUSH

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING

New Home
Construction
Extensive Remodeling
GREG ROUSH
Phone 992-7583
992-2282
7·5·1 MO.
Real Estate Loans
Purcl'tase
and
Refinance
JO Year Terms
A-No money down
(elig ible veterans)

FHA - AS

low as

l%

IRELAND
MORTGAGE
CO.
77 E . Slafe, Alhens
592-3051
OJ I mo.

Mick's
Barber&amp;
Style Center
1ntroduces-

MAKI\ MORA
loi~IR

STYLIST

Fe.,turint: men ' s &amp;
women's
styling,
perms .
Call for appt. or walk in .
992 ·2367
Main St.

Pomeroy , 0 .

7 10·1 mo.

Business Services
BRADFORD, Auctioneer, Com·
!)leta Service. Phone 949-2487
or 949·2000 . Raci ne. Ohio,
Crifl Brodford.

CALL 992-7544
7·8·1 mo .

EXPERIENCED
RadiCitQr~

Servtc•

~

SEWING MACHINE Repa irs .
sef\lica . oil makes . 992-2284 .
The Fabric Shop . Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Soles and
Service. We sharpen Scissoh .

949·2160.

USED GARDEN
TRACTORS
AND
RIDING MOWERS
St. Rl, 7

18 Years Experience
Will Make Service Calls

Pass
Pass
Pass

TOO WEAK FOR···

JIM KEESEE

C. R. MASH

VINYL &amp;ALUM.
SIDING .

It's just
I haven't the
,P.ovdry_
qettinq qood! fainte?t idea! That fdma. .t1ouqftt
Who's
was 51
1.1ears

7·12

Edna?

MONTGOMERY

aqo!

14 Unwilling
15 " Arabian

STOCK

TQAilEit NOW AYAILA8LE

7251 mo.
SHE. JUST

PAINTING AND sandblasting.
FrH estimates . Coll9.t9-2686.

PUlliNS EXCAVATING. Com-

Will DO HOUSE cleaning and

plete Ser\llce. Phone 992-2478.

baby selling. hperlencad,
hove reference . 992· 7314 .

367-7101.

been cancelled? lost your
operators
license?
Phone

992-2143.
E·C ElECTRICAl Contractor
serving Ohio Volley region .
Six days a week . 24 hours service . Emergency calls . C:oll

882·2'152 "' 882·305-4 '
HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex·
covating , septic
do~er ,
backhoe.

systems,
Rt . 143.

Phone I (614) 698-7331 o•
742-2593 .
IN STOCK for Immediate
delivery: various sizes of pool
kits . Do-lt· yourself or let u•
install for you . 0 . Bumgardner

Racine. OH . 949·27;8 and
992-731. .
.

614·388·8860 "' 614·388·8797.
NEIGlER Construction . For
building good hQuses and doing repair work . Call Guy

Nelgle, , 949-2508 .
ANN'S CAKE DtKorotlng Supplies, 50716 O•born Rd. ,
Reedsville , OH 45772. For In·
formation call, 667·6485. Will
be open late if you ne.d
something:

WELL SHE

WON'T w(N ANY
POPULARIW

CONTESTS AT
THE P~NT, IF
THATS WHAT
YOU MEAN/

Auctions
BIG AUCTION every Wod., 7
pm . Hartford Community
Center. Hartford , WV . .t miles
above
Pomeray · Mason
Bridge.

tlARNEY

'IOU SHORE ARE
GITTIN' TO BE &gt;=&gt;·'-''- 1-1--r/ ~
OL' FOSSIL WALDO ··
'/ORE HAIR'S
WHI TER'N SNOW

•4•'

LEASTWISE ·
IT AIN'T
MELTED
"'ET

AND UP
CASH &amp;CARRY

SALE ON ALL.CARPET IN STOCK

'995

AND UP
Installed and Pad FREE
GOOD SELECTION OF
CUSHION VINYL

tiZEv

(Fora copy o f JACOBY MOD·
ERN, send Sl to: " Win at
Bridge, " care of this newspaper, P.O. Box 489, Radio City
~fation, New York, N. Y. 10019.)

stitches"

39 " East of -··
tO Freshet
UCampout

DOWN
1 Native-born
Israeli
2 Airport
section
3 Is in the
driver's seat

Yesterday's Answer
30 Dapper
London-born
actor
Heed
French coin 31 " Last Case"
for Dobbin
sleuth
2G Guide
5 Scanty
33 Place
6 Songwriter's
24 Have fun
for coins
25 Stint
topic
7 O'Neill drama 26 Gladiatorial 36 Menu
tenn
8 ''Justine ~'·
settings
27 Range;
37 Arrange,
author
as type
9 Followed
scope

Nights"
bird
16 Anterior:
prefix
17 Who : Fr.
18 Athletes'
vulnerable
joints
20 Fat
21 Dam's mat:e(i""""j2~3[4
22 Well main· h--t- t -- t tained
23 Make lace
21 Footlike
part
25 A Garland
co-star
27 Kane's
Rosebud
28 Angered
29 Progenitor
32 Cage
for hawks
33 Short of
34 Knightly
title
35 M.D.'s
conunand
37 Be rainy
day
conscious

Is

12 God
16 Jaunty
19 Old

CRAZI(, C~ARL.IE
SHE'LL. PUL.L IT
LIKE 5!-IE ALWA~S
DOES! DON'T TRUST HER!

6UT SHE PROMISED 51-/E'O
NEVER PULL IT AWM
AGAIN IF ! GOT WELL. •.

Here's how
AXVDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

to work it:

CRVPTO~UOTES

ISIEATUMA

NXCRY

YUVJTUMA ;

CUTUMA

RU

T I

NXCRY

RU
ZEUN
ZUIRFI
Yesterday' s Cryptoquote: ONE MUST KNOW HOW TO
COMMIT TilE FOLLIES THAT OUR CHARACTER CALLS
FOR. - NICHOLAS CHAMFORT

.,

If)

TomOrrow 3.

1919 Klnt Futures Syndlc8te, tnc .

'

.

'•

·.

You ."

THURSDAY, AUGUST2, 19t,
5:3D-Warld at Large 17; 5 :45Farm Reporl13; 5:5D-PTI. Club
13 ; 5 :55-Summer Semesler 10.
6:Q0-700 Club 6,8; 6: lG-News 17;
6 :25-For You ... Biack Woman
10.

::

!·
::
,•

6:JD-Dragnel 17 ; 6 :45-Mornlng ,.
Report 3; 6 '50-Good Morning,
West Virginia 13; 6: 55-Chuck
While Reports 10 ; News 13.
7:DO-Today 3.15; Good Morning
AmeriCa 6,13; · Thursday Mor·
nlng 8; Schoolles 10; Three
Stooges-Little Rascals 17: 7 :15A. M. Wealher 33.
7:30-Famlly Atfalr 10; Lilias Yoga
&amp; You 33.
B:DO-Capl. Kangaroo 8.10; Sesame
St. 33; Lassie 17.
8:30-Romper Roam 17; 8:45-A .M.
Weahjer 8; 9: DO-Bob Braun 3;
Phil Donahue 13, 15; Porky Pig &amp;
Friends 8; Love of Life 10: Lucy
,.
Show 17 ; Biography 33 .
9 : 30-Sanford &amp; Soh 8; Green Acres
17.
~

IO :DO-Card Sharks 3,15; Edge of
Night 6; Magazine 8, 10; Dating
Game 13; Movie "Harlow'" 17;
Paint Along
with
Nancy
Komlnsky 33 .
IO :JD-AII Sfar Secrets 3,15; $20,000
Pyramid 13; Bewitched 6;
Consumer Survival Kit 33 .
10 :55-CBS News 8; House Call 10.
11 :DO-High Rollers 3.15; Laverne &amp;
Shirley 6, 13; Price is Right B.IO;
Biography 33 .
II : 30- Wheel of Fortune 3.15;
Family Feud 6, 13 .
12 ,QO-Newscenter 3; Password 15;
. ~~~~~l~et~; Restless 8; ,Midday
12 :30-Ryan's Hope 6.13; Search for
Tomorrow 8.10; Movie '"The
Black Knight'" 17; MacNeillehrer Report 33.
1 :DO-Days of Our Lives 3, 15; All My
· Children 6, 13; Young &amp; the
Restless 10; Wild Wild World of
Animals 33.
1 :30-As The World Turns 8,10; All
Creatures Great &amp; Small 33.
2:DO-Doctors 3,15: One Life to Live
6, 13 ; 2:25-News 17.
2: 3D-Another World 3, 15; Guiding
Light 8,10; I Love Lucy 17; Een
Festival 33.
3 :DO-General Hospital 6, IJ ; Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 20; Infinity Factory
17 . .
3:30-Mash 8; Joker's Wild 10;
Banana Spills 17; Turnabout 20;
Earthkeeplng 33.
4:QO-Mister Cartoon 3; Hollywood
Squares 15; Merv Griffin 6;
Addams Family B; Six Million
Dollar Man 10; Sesame 51., 20,33;
Mike Douglas 13; Fllntstones 17.
4: JO ~ Lone Ranger 3; Hogan"s
Heroes B: Lucy Show 15; Partridge Family 17.
S:DO-Bonanza 3; Beverly Hillbillies
B; Mister Rogers 20,33; Gomer
Pyle 10; Six Million Dollar Man
13; Brady Bunch 15; Star Trek .
17.
5 :30-News 6; Pelllcoat Junction 8;
Elec . Co. 20; Mary Tyler Moore
10; Odd Couple 15; Doctor Who

33.

One leller simply stands for anoLher. ln this sample A is
used for th e three L"s, X for the lwo O"s, elc. Single leiters,
aposlrophes, the length and formalion of the words are all
hints. Each day Ihe code leiters are different .

PEANUTS

RUTLAND FURNITURE
lfutland,O.

was

38 He's ' lin

B· l

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

742-2211

card

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-

WILL HAUL limestone and
graveL Alto, lime hauling and
spreading . Phone 74:2 -2455.
ROOFING. ROOF repair and
siding, other maintenance. E &amp;
R Roofing
and Siding .

THEN lJ-;E
DAII:IAGE ISN'T
IRREPARAElLE?

WHILE WE
WERE GONE!

RUBBERBACK
CARPET
.

Soles, Inc. 992·S724 .
ADD ONS and &lt;tmodollng,
gutter work , down spouts.
some concrete work , walks
and
driveways
(free
estimate) . V.C:. Young ' Ill ,

STEPPED ON A
FEW toES ...
RUFFLED SOME
FEATHERS ...

992-731• .

SAVE ON CARPET
DRIVE A LITTLE
~SAVE A-LOT-

Maine
5 Mud
10 - Harbor,
Guam
11 Where the
pope was
born

e.,,

backhoe ond dltcher. Charles
R. Hatfield. Black Hoe Service,
Rutland , Ohio. Pone 742·2008 .

ACROSS

I River in

13 Nasty kid

,, . . . ... , .5 ~ \l@'lt lR9 '
1 Mtl u
ol W l lllt'\Vi llt

WILL CARE for the elder ly in
our home. Also ovailable,
room and
board
care.

INSURANCE

was a waitress
at Phil's Diner!

J1l10 MOI\f9om er'r Rei

NOW HAULING limestone in
Middleport-Poemroy area .
Coli for free ett imote.

AUTOMOBILE

~he

TRAILER SALES

992-7089 ,
nlghl
phone
'1'12-3525 a•992 -5232.
EXCAVATING ,
dou• ,

remaining

the ace of hearts and that a
finesse for the jack of clubs
could not possibly succeed.
He therefore played the ace
of clubs and made the con·
tract when the jack dropped.
North-South's aggressive
bidding was vindicated by
expert card pia~, helped by
the knowledge that West had
shown the ace of hearts at
trick one.

by THOMAS. JOSEPH

992-6011

Services Offered

West's

~-"-

*

Services Offered

end-

of hearts away.
Declarer led a club at
t rick 12 and West played
low . Declarer knew that

Mter the king of hearts
won the first trick, West
realized he had to switrh

•New Home
•Addons
Remoldings
*Free estimates

three-card

dummy in order to save his
heart ace, and declarer
threw the now useless queen

game was reached.

EXCAVATING , daze,, loode•
and backhoe work; dump
trucks and lo-boys for hire,
will haul fill dirt , top soH,
limestone and grovel. Coli Bob
or Roger Jeffert. day phone

3.
Pass

establish

by West's ace . West

winner in a

commended for not overcall·
ing two hearts because of his
limited high--card points ,
dull distrlbutlon and unfa.
vorable vulnerability . North
felt It wu hia duty to bid two
clubs with 10 high--card
points, South jumped to
three spades despite his
minimum opening bid and

fully Insured
Froe Est.
Coli f92 ·Z77l
5·17· 1 mo.

GOOSE

Pass
Pass

I :50- News 13 ; 2 : 35- News 17;
2 :55-Movle " I' ve Always Loved

want' to

ing, North was down to the
heart queen and the ace·nlne
of clubs. West was forced to
pitch a club in front of the

The bidding was optimis·
tic. South had a reasonable
opening bid. West should be

Experience and

SUPER

992 · 2356

South

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

Collulosfc (wood fll,.r 1
Thermilllnsulation
SIVt 30 pcl.lo SO pel ,
on hutlng cost

Middleport, 0.

East

Opening lead : • K

L• ngl ... lllt' , Ohio

651 Beech Street

North

I•

I DOUBT IT CHUIII
••• I ' L~ NMR EIE

Blown Insulation

Phone 985-4202
6·24·1 mo . pd .

Shop

Sundoy

J&amp;L

North of Chester, 0 .

Reynolds'
Electric Motor

No

6·14·2 mo.

Pomeroy

TILLIS

Vulnerable : East-West
Dealer: South

CJIIIS .

Motors, Inc.
Ph . "2 ·2174

t A J 10
• 10 8 5

West

not

continued diamonds. which
South won . South then drew
two rounds of trump and
finessed clubs. the queen
losing to the king.
East returned a heart
which was ruffed by South,
who then played his remain·
ing trump and damond
winners . When he led his last

• 10

or

9~9 · 1101

Love" 17.

was won

•KQJ109i

is Out'" 33 ; Upstairs, Downstairs
20.
10:0Q-Vegas 13; News 20; IO:JDVegas .6; Fall of Eagles 17; Best
of Groucho 20.
11 : 00- News 3,6,8, 10,13 ,1 5; Dick
Cavell 20; Book Beat 33.
11 : 3D-Johnny Carson 3, IS; Pollee
Woman 6,13; ABC News 33 ;
Switch 8; Movie " Forever My
12: 4D-Baretta 6,13; Kojak 8; I :DO-

He switched to a diamond at
trick two.
Declarer won East's king
of diamonds with his ace and
led the king of spades, which

SOUTH

Performance 8, 10; Movie " Word

because partner played a
low heart and he, West, did
dummy's queen of hearts.

• K J

• 643

Call for a Frte Siding .

fhd lator

Nelson .

71~ .

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

' sm•lleost He•ter C•rt .

Sm~h

waL.".l?lnt-lb HI-s
!JAIL&lt;; l~tJT ·100

Siding

From t"• lart.st Tr"ck or
Bwlldoru

Il-l
NORTH
• 87
• Q63
• Q43
• AQ972
EAST
WEST
+ ·S 4
+ A3 2
• J982
¥AK7:i4
t K76 52
• 98

Vinyl and Aluminum

Estimlte,

INFLUX

BRIDGE

6·6·1 mo .

Haurs9·1 M., w.• F.
Other times by appoint·

FROSTY

We4oesday, Aug. 1

992-2772

PARK FINANCIAL
.SERVICES, INC.

GNOME

Answer : Often t he best thing to buy when one wants
to save money - NOTHING

CALL

Housing &amp;
Veterans Admin . Loans .

ment.
107 Sy(amore (Rear)
Pomeroy, 0 .

I Jumoles : WEIGH

YeSielday's

Free Estimate

Federal

ElWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers . toasters , Irons, all
smal l appliances. lawn moer.
ne)(t to State Highway Carage
on Route 7, 985-3825.

AUJMINUM
&amp;VINYL SIDING
BY
J&amp;L INSULAnON

4·5 li e

down ( non -veterans)

bedroom carpeted one
floor plan home . B a th ,
utility , porches. gar age
and large garden .

COUNTRY SPECIAL - Ni ce remode led 2 bedroom
home on blac ktop road . Mosfly carpeled . F .A. nat.

Rea I Estate for Sale

New

CONSTRUCTION

608 E . L~ICIII.l..l
MAIN

SAYS

mile off Rt. 7 bv· pas s

Jr.
Broker 992·5739

behind garage. Asking $39,500.

POMEROY
LANDMARK

Under

Pomeroy, Ohio

Hilton Wolfe, Assoc .

Garage
J4

$28,000.00.
We have other listings to
choose from , When you
are selling our home let
us do the work for you.
We Need Listings!!
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.

Roger Hysell

Television
Vie wine;

byHentf AmoldandBobLee

b
_

I DUSON
I D
THIGE

A&amp;H
UPHOLSTERING

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

Unscramble these tour Jumbles,
one tetter 10 each squar19, to form
tour ord.IMry words.

WE COULD

Business Services

PHONE 742-2003

742-275-4.

conditioning, 16 cu h Sears
slef·defro:sting . Good fur·
niture, underpinning included.
$6500. 992-2483 .

949·2566.

949-2801 .
BEAUTIFUl KITTENS. both lang

CALDER SHOW
WASHINGTON (AP) -

IY7~··.

US. Vept uf

I.ohur. Burt'au of IAhur staliS·
rirs. hlllft:lill Nu . 1875.
Don' ! JUSt be sat 1shed wi t h a
JOB - Plan NOW for a ProfesSIOnal career Or~vmg a " Big
R1g ." We are a Pri vate Train1ng
Schoo l and 1f you meet our
quailhcation s you w1ll be train.
ed b y Profession al lns t rucmrs
on modern equipmenl. ·Train
on a Part Time bas1s (Sat. &amp;
S1Jn .l and Keep your job, or
attend ou r 3 Week Full Time
Resident Tra1ning .

YARD SALE . August J , .. . Oil
lamps , furniture , dishes and
lots of other items . On CR 32,
turn from Rt . 7 by Meigs
Memory Gardens . Go 6 miles
on Eagle Ridge Rd . Phone

FIRST YARD Sale. this y&amp;ar .

~0 KITTENS, 6wooks old
gray . 742-3019 .

YARD SALE at James Swain's
on CR 28 above Eastern High
School. July 13 and 14 from 9
to? E\lerything imaginable.

Aug. 2 and 3. IQ.3 . School

Give Away

llh0141

"$18,300
os q11ufi'J h1· I lit'

van 8-poss., P.S .. P.B., A .C'
EKcellent condition . 9'92-3051.

dleport, behind
Fire House.

the Sentinel Classifieds

WINDOW

Yard Sale
Notices

uj

1974 14 )( 70 mobile home.
Good
condition . $7800 .

1973 OLDS 98 , full power, low
mileage. good gas mileage .
Excellent condition . Asking

Card of Thanks

Ql'(' fOJ:t' t' Offlii iJ:I

Auto Sales

1975 NOVA 350 • · dao•. 30,000

the W..y before publ icati on

tmt·kifl~ t'Ufii/IUIIit!I ltacJ llnflliQ/

Mobile Homes Sale's

miles .

Tuesday
thru Fnday
!P.M.

"Drnws tm~foyed hr lortt

MUST SELL . Two3 year quarter
horse geldings , 1 AppoloosO
mare 4 and pony . All are gentle and well broken . Excellent
horses. Call992-6162 .

Good to eKcellent condition .
$3000f irm . 9'92-5544 .

Monda y
Nopn on S..turday

REO

We ste rn .
Saddlal
and
hornan. Horses ond ponies .
Ruth Reeves . 614·698-3290.
Sording &amp; Riding lessons and
Horse Core products .

1977 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS

WANT-AD

Real Estate for Sale

/NSTR UCJ tON

HOOF HOLLOW , Engl;sh and

15 Words or Undrr
Cash
Chargt'

In

T~AT'S RIGHT
-AND SHE
SAYS IT' S A

TIME.

Pets for Sale

WANT AD
CHARGES

•

1llfl}'i"Mt OO'il

':;) ~ ~~ ®

&amp;:DO-News 3,8, 10, 13,15; ABC News
6; Family Affair 17: VIlla Alegre
20; Studio See 33 .
6 :30-NBC News3, 15; ABC News 13;
Andy Griffith 6; CBS News B, 10;
Over Easy 20,33; Father Knows
Besl 17 . '7: CO-Cross-W~ 3; Newlywed
Game 6, 13 ; Marty Robbins'
Spotlight 8; News 10; Love
American Style IS; Get Smart
17; Dick Cavett 20.33.
7:30-Hollywood SquaresJ; Bonkers
6 ; Match Game PM 8: S100.ooo
Name Thai Tune 10; Nashville
On The Road IJ; Dolly 15; My
Three Sons 17: MacNeil-Lehrer
Report 20,33.
8:QO-Prolect UFO 3,15; Mork &amp;
Mindy 6, 13; Waftons B.IO:
National Geographic 20,33;
Movie '"Dark Command"' 17.
8:30-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13; 9 :DO- .
Quincy 3.15: Barney Miller 6, 13;
Hawaii Five-0 8, 10; Art of Being
Fully Human 20; Bad Boys 33.
9:30-Carter Country 6.13.
IO :DO-Davld Cassidy 3.15; 20-20
6,13: Barnaby Jones 8, 10; Onedln
Line 17; News 20.
10 :3D-Hocklng Valley Bluegrass 20.
11 :00-News 3,6.8, 10.13, 15; New
Soupy Sales 17; Book Beat 33.
II :30-Johnny Carson J, 15; Starsky
&amp; ~ulch 6,13; Mash 8; ABC News
33; Movie '"One Eyed Jacks"" 10;
Karate 17 .
12:05-Movle "Wild Rovers'" · 8;
12 :30-Movle '"La Dolce VIla'"
17; 12: 4D-Baretla 6, 13.
1:DO-Tomorrow 3; News 15; 1:50News 13; 4:15-News 17; 4 :35Avengers 17.

.,''

...
.,.

..•'
.
..
,.
,·

..

�14- The Daily Se~tjnel, Mlddlepmi-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday , Aug. 1, 1979

Pomeroy sidewalk sales Friday, Saturday
--

e
VOL XXVIII, NO. 77

'J'H.IS WAS THE fi rst shuttle bus to be used in the first annual Dave
Diles Celebrity Golf Tournament held Monday at Riverside Golf Course
in Mason. Spectators attending the event parked their cars at Wahama
High School and were taken by bus to the golf course. Driver of the bus
was Alice Globokar. Photo by Mrs. Fennan Moore.

Gas dealers go
to White House
IV ASH IN GTON 1AI' 1 -- Angry
service sta tion owners are ca rrying
their d isgruntlemen t over a bevy of
new gasolino: pricing rules to the
White House and the Ca pitol.
Some of the rules also are bound to
rile fin ancially pressed motorists.
Abcut 2.000 independent gasol ine
dealers were expected to

llHIS!'l

first in

front of thc White House tod ay and
th en move to the Cupi tol steps to l'all
attent ion to their comp laints.
'!11e Energy De pw·tmcnt issued new
rulings Tuesda y &lt;timed partly at
appea s in g the dealers. But the
changes appea red only to make the
stalion owners more incellsl'd.
The rul ings give st&gt;rvice stations
penn ission, starting today. to charge
mot orists

for

!-iUch

services

:1 s

clean ing windshields, fillin g tires and
for honorin g credit cards.
"All the depHrirnent is telling us is
that if we need more money, we can
go out and attlnt.(onizc our
customers," said H1~que Harrx.\r,
spokesman for lhe Nationa l Congrt•ss
of Petrol eum Hetc.llh'rs.
'
.tJnder the rulin gs . rnotor i sl.~ may lx.
charged separately for :-;en'H\ .'S oth(•r
than gasohne. but d&lt;·idt·l·s "r·an 't
mi:ikc this a condJti iJil I 11r hu.dng"
fuel , th e department sa id .
1

Station s m us t ghr· moturi sls the

option uf payin g in ea slr

r~ tthu t h~111 !)y

credit cH rd and th e ex ira non-gasoline
charges, such as for cleaning
wmdshields, a re not mandatory .
The l': nergy Depa rtment did
elim inate, aftet strong dealer protest ,
a requirement that sta tions post profit
ma rgins on gasoline pumps.
Sta tion owners ·claimed the
re quirement was a nti -c ompetiti ve
becii LISC it ·gave other dea lers
knowledge of their costs.
Now, dealers must post only their
max imum lawful selling price , or they
may certify they don 't exceed the
legHlmaximum, the department said.
In another action Tuesday , the
En ergy Department ruled that
sta t1ons owned by wh olesalers or
refiners must maintain current profit
margins as long as they don't exceed
15.4 cents per ga llon, the ceiling
allowed independent dea lers.
Who lesa lers ,
refiners
and
mdependents a ll lamb as ted the
rul ing.
"We're absolutely outraged, " said
Alan Darrow, :1 spokesman for the
t-;ational Oil Jobbers Council , which
n'presents wtlDlesalers. ''lt means we
ca n't claim U1e smne profit margins
a;-; inde pendents.''
. lr'&lt;JIIical ly, independents sa id the
rulmg will ma ke prices cheaper at
refi nc r -an d wholesa ler-owned
st:1tions, thus undercutting them. ,

Construction site
scene of four deaths
HOLB!WOK . Ali?. fA!'
FoUl
peop le were ktlled unJ nmv ·t he rs
were mjured in a series of cra:-:.lr"s a1
an Int ersta te 40 construction :-.ile just
west of here. tlw sl&lt;ll.e Dcpwtnrcnl of
Public Safet\' said.
PcJt.mlmarl Bob V:mtc r sa1cJ thrE.'('
people were killed 1'uesday in one
rh~lin .r eaction

a cc ident when a

tra ctor-tr :uler rig dri ven !J~ ;m Ohi o
man tra \'cling eastbound 1 c.ta mto a
line

•

of

car s

s topped

fur

the

con structwn work.

Investigatgurs said .lw truc k
sla!llll C'll mtn ~~ fl: ttbPd tr ul' k, k!l lur~
the driver. .John W1l tiant Myers, 7fi. of
Flagsl&lt;Iff.
Office rs s·!i il ttrP fl allwd fnll'k \'-"il.S
puslwd off t t~ llH.• sHit• (If ~l··· rnw! . md
U1r tr actor-tra der· rt.ll. d1·iwn by
Mi chuel J. l.ipps uf T'&lt;'ll' l';ms , ohio.
1

th en ran OV('r U1e top of

:1 ~ m·

from

P olice shoot
'h·d·
1 mg ' man
l .

TR OY , Mich. 1 M' r · A 24 -yra r-&lt;~l d
Troy nmn. hiding in his van waiting
for a burg lar. was shot to death b) two
policcnwn who UHJ!)glrt ht• wn s D

burglar . J police spokesman saicl.
Troy Police Capt. G;u·y Mollc•m·opf

called th mridcn t "an nnfurlllna te
set of circumst:.mccs.··
Darid Prior's sister said she visited
the Troy poli ce station to tell officers
he r brother would be hiding in U1e van
that night. ·• f asked for extra
surv eillance and they kil led him ,"
ClaudJa Prior sa id.
According to Mollencopf. l'rior had
decided to spend the ni~ht in the varr
after il th ief had made off with stereo
and radio equipmerrt the 11\'o prer ious
nights .
A neighbor ca lled police reporting a
burglar in the ne ighborho od.
Mollen copf said, and one offi cer
approached the van, opened a door
and shone his flashlight into the
vehicle .
Mollencopf said Pnor then pointed
his pellet gun at the officer and said ,
" You 're dead ."
The officer shot once or t wicc, then
fell to lhe pii H'rnent to av md being
shot by Prr or. the captain said. The
second officer, thmking the first had
been shot. then [I red si x shots into the

van.
Officials saJd the officers thought
they had killed a burglar until a
neighbor told them 1t was the owner of
the van.
The police offi cers were not
identified .

Californ ia, kill ing two young children.
The diildren were aged eight and 12
respective ly and were from Temple
City, Calif. , accqrding to police.
Na rnes were withh eld pending
no ti fical ion of next Of kin .
Office rs said the car and truck then
ran into a third automobile, which
slammed into a car driven by George
MI·I '"vs of Holbrook .
EI~ht of the nine persons injured in
the accident were admitted to the
Hoi urook hospital.
The second accident occured when
Mel 'l'errnain, 24. of Holbrook, who
W&lt; tS worki ng as a flagman rJ t the
const ru ct ion site, saw the first
&lt;w&lt;'idcnt. atte mpted lo run across the
westbound lane of the highway and
w ~ t~· run over by a la r ge dump truck .
Otficers sa id Lipps was booked into
tl1e Navajo County Jail on charges of
vehicular manslaughter.
Varner said it took nearly eight
hottrs to clear lhe wreckage and open
the highway.

DID THEMSELVES PROUD - These five men
did an outstanding job in preparing the steaks served
at a dinner held at Royal Oak Park Monday night
following the first annual Dave DUes Celebrity Golf
Tournament held at Riverside
in Mason . The men
.

.

BIG MAN ON HAND - Big Ron
McDole, former defeDBive eod for
the Wasbington Redoklns and a
native of Meigs County !Chester
area) participated In the lint aimual
Dave Diles Celebrity Golf Tournament Monday at Riverside Golf
Course.

Today

&gt;i ...in the world

'"2 ·~

,·~}~{~

from page I)
men! of Trade said 31 survivors
were taken to a Lerwick hospital
and six bodies were recovered. It
was believed the bodies of the 11
missing men were trapped in the
fuselage of the plane, which sank
after crashing into the sea at the
end of the runway of Sumburgh
Airport.
All the victims were reported to
be British.
Swnburgh officials sai d the
craft, a twin-turboprop Hawker
Siddeley 748 owned by Dan-Alr
Services, overshot the nmway
and slashed into the shallow
water in misty weather. It was
leaving for Aberdeen, Scotland.
Shell is exploring for oil in the
Shetland area, off Britain 's northern tip, and has a number of
producing wells in the North Sea.

Bundy condemned

MIAMI ( AP) -- Condemned by a
judge as "a total waste of hwnanity,"
Theodore Bundy ha s been brdered to
pay with his life for the beating and
strangulation murders of two sleepi ng
women . But it may be a long time
before the people of Florida collect.
"In a way, this is my opening
statement
," the articul;lte former law
One defendant forfeited a bond and
student
said
in an emotion-choked
six others were finect in the court of
Middleport Mayor F~ ed Hoffman monologue Tuesday shortly before he
was ordered to die in Florida 's
Tuesday night.
Timothy H. Bickers, Rout e I, electric chair.
Vinton, forfeited a $50 bond posted on
"This is just the first ... early round
an overload charge. Fined were Roy ol a long battle," Bundy vowed
Boggs, George McDaniel , Donald between sniffles. "I haven't given up
Lovett, and Brenda Jeffers, all of by any means." It was the first time in
Middleport, $25 and costs each on his five-week trial he had shown any
disorderly manner charges; Emily G. emotion .
Price; Route 1, Shade, $225 and costs
He refused to plead for mercy.
and three days in jail on a .charge of "Absurd," said Bundy, "to ask for
driving while intoxicated, and Patrick mercy for something I did not do."
Mahaffey, Vinton, $25 and costs,
Judge Edward D. Cowart was
disorderly manner, and ,$100 and costs unimpressed .
on a charge of possessing marijuana.
" It's a tragedy for this court to see
such a total waste of humanit y," sa id
Five defendants forfeited bonds and the judge . "You're a bright young
two others were fined in the court of man . You'd have made a good lawyer.
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews I'd have loved to have you prac tice
Tuesday night.
Forfeiting were Edna Smith ,
Pomeroy, four bonds including $500
posted on a charge of resisting arrest ;
$50, disorderly conduct; $100,
intoxication , and $50, open flask;
Charles Baker, Westerville, $370,
driving while intoxicated ; Jeffrey
Lewis, Pomeroy, $30, speeding; Brian
SCHENECI'ADY, N. Y. (AP l -Boggs, Coolville, $370, driving while
Police
arrived on the quiet city street
intoxica ted, and John Ander son, expecting
only to respond to a ca ll
Rutland, $50, open flask. Fined in the about a barking dog. Instead, they
court were Doug Clelland, Pomeroy , found an ankle-de ep swarm of.
$50 and costs, on a-charge of squealing cockroaches that had spilled from a
tires and Larry McG lothlin , house to the street and trees, covering
Huntington, $50 and costs, disorderly one policema n as he stepped from his
manner, and $200 and costs, petty cruiser.
th eft .
Inside, the officers discovered a 64year-o ld woman with her two dozen
dogs, 15 cats, two mice and a parrot -·
all victimized by cockroach and flea
bites.
" It 's unbelievable, but true," said
BESSIE B. MOORE
Bessie B. Moore; 80, of Lockney, W. police Sgt . Rudy Basha, who said the
Va., mother of Russell Moore, supervisor of secondary education, Meigs
County Schools, died Tuesday morning at the Arlington Health care
Center in Patkersburg, W. Va.
IRONTON, Ohio ( AP ) -- A
Funeral arrangements are being Lawrence County grand jury Tuesday
completed by the Stump Funeral indicted an Ironton osteopath on 62
Home at Gr'!-lltsville, W. Va.
felony drug counts.
. In
three
sepa ra te
fe lony
mdtctments , Dr. Lewis Clark Jones
was charged with five counts of
ORGANIZE MONDAY
The Meigs County Budget Com- corruption of others by drugs, five
mission will organize Monday. On SpeCial counts of conspiracy to traffic
Tuesday, the commission will review U1 drugs, 26 counts of aiding and
school budgets; corporation budgets abetting the trafficking in drugs and
on Wed.nesday, and township budgets 26 counts of conspiracy to traffic in
on Friday. The sessions are scheduled
for!Oa.m. each day.

Mayor's Court

before me. But you went another way,
partner. ''
Twice the judge ordered Bundy put
to death "by a current of electricity ...
passed through your body until you
are dead ," for the deaths of Margaret
Bowman. 21. and Lisa Levy, 20. ·
Cowart said the beating of Miss
Bowman ·•was vicioLLS, vile, wicked
and atrocious ."
Both women were attacked with a
crude oak club as they slept in the Chi
Omega Sorori ty house at Florida
State University in Tallahassee the
morning of Jan. 15, 1978. Bundy also
was convicted of three counts of
attempted murder in the beatings of
three other women who lived in the
sorority house and in a nearby
apartment. Cowart sentenced Bundy
to 198 years in prison for burglary.
Louise Bundy, 52, of Tacoma,
Wash ., looked at the murtroom fl oor
as the sentences were imposed on the
son she has ca lled "my pride and
joy '' Then she left. tight-lipped,
saying nothing.
Death · sentences have taken on
added impact in Florida since the
state sent convicted murderer John

Spenkelink to the electric chair on
May 25.
But Bundy 's determinati!ll to fight
his sentence, combined with other
pending trials and an automatic
Florida review process, seem certain
to 'push any potential execution date
years mto the future.
Bundy is due for trial Sept. 17 in
Lake City, Fla., on a charge of
strang ling 12-year-old Kimberly
Diane Leach on Feb. 9, 1978. The
prosecutor there says he expects
Bundy to be made available.
Bundy also is . charged with
murdering a Michigan nurse near
Aspen, Colo., in January 1976, but
Co lorado authorities say they' re
probably the last in line for Bundy. A
l:i-year Utah prison sentence awaits
him for the !974 kidnapping of Carol
DaRonch near Salt Lake City.
Bundy's attorneys have aifeady
announced they will seek a new trial
in tlje Chi Omega case . And they say
they ha ve found a half-dozen
constitutic.Jal grp unds for appeals.
Meanwhile , Bundy ha s an
automatic right of appeal straight to
th e Florida Supreme Court .

In .sci-fi like incident

·Roaches ravage residence
One of the two wanen who Jived in
cockroaches were "ankle deep " in
)he
house, 6-i-year-old Iva Fletcher,
some spots. "The cockroaches were
was
taken to Ellis Hospital , where she
al l over the street. The walls of tbe
was
in satisfactory cooditioo wltll
house were so full that they had
cockroach and flea bites covering
nowhere else tn go."
•
Sc h e n ectady's
health much o[ her body.
The ambulance that transported the
commissioner, Dr . William Bartlett
ca lled the infestation "inc redible " woman, as well as the Schenectady
and added it was the worst he's ev~r Animal Shelter van and four police
vehicles at Ul e scene of the incident,
seen in 20 years c.1 the job .
had
to be fwnigated.
Although city police had initially
James Provost , manager of the
sa id the re wer e '' hundreds of
thousands" of cockroaches around the animal shelter where the pets were
house, exterminator Harry Linindoll taken, said the cats were so starved in
said later "th e number is definitely in the holl.'!e they had fed oo each other's
·flesh . The cockroaches, in turn, had
the millions.''
apparently feasted oo the flesh of
everything in the house, including
each other.
Provost added that severa l of the
mice and the cats had to be destroyed
drugs.
because they were so badly bitten.
The indictments followed a IJ" It wa s a nightmare," Provost said.
month probe by the state Bureau of " I had to shake my head to find out if
Criminal Investigation. Officials said it really happened." Provost said
the drugs allegedly involved were cockroaches stretched from "wall to
amphetamines and barbiturates.
wall and floor to ceiling."
The grand jury contends Jones
The other resident of the house 6&amp;wrote mo re than 13,000 prescriptions year-old Madeline Cooper, was' not
from February 1978 until March 1979. home at the time of the incident. Both
Earlier this month in Lawrence women fa ce cruelty to animals
County Common Pleas Court, Jones charges filed by the animal shelter.
lost an appeal to overturn a decision to
Tue sday night , city officials
revoke his license. The state medical sprayed insecticides over a threeboard revoked his license to practice block area around the infested house
medicine on July I.
and pledged to have the building tor~
down by the end of this week .
Landlord Peter Ga lvin , who lives in
Rotterdam, N.Y., said the infestation
was not his fault. He said the women
Showers or thunderstorms likely had not a llowed him into the holl.'!e In
tonight and Thursday. Lows tonight the past year.
between 65 and 70. Highs Thursday in
Galvin said . he will fight the
the middle 80s. The chance of rain Is demolition since he still hcl&lt;b a
60 percent tonight and Thursday.
mortgage on the property.

Osteopath facing drug coimts

lrisil Saint Columba landed on
lona in 563 and established the first
reh;.{ious community on th e is land.
CONCERT PLANNED
Columba and his monks settled in
The Eastern Hjgh School Mar ching
lru~s . built a tiny chapel, and later. Band will present a show and CO•Icert
expanded their se ttlement to include a for friends and families of members
mon ;tster~.
at 7 p.m. Friday at the high school. A
cookout and get-acquainted period
will follow the show. All family
' :
members of band students are
mrdially invi ted .
T he

char-broiled more than 300 steaks for thsoe attending.
Front, 1-c, are, Paul Eich, Dan Crow; back, Roger
Morgan, George Harris and Bob Crow. Not pictured
but who assisted was Richard Jones.

OFFICES MOVED
The Meigs County CETA headquarters were moved Monday from the
courthouse to 39350 Union Ave., intersection ofSR 7 and Union Ave .

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
Admitted--J enn y Minear, New
Marshfield ; Thomas Simmons ,
Middleport ; Richard DeMoss ,
Pomeroy; Ida White, Rutland; Donna
Larkins, Portland.
Discharged-Franklin Laudermilt,
Milton Gea ry.
SEEK LICENSES
Marriage licenses were issued to
Wilbur Leo Sims, Jr., 37, Middleport,
and Noami Ruth Donohue, 26, Rt. 4,
Pom eroy ; J effrey Jay Warner, 21,
Pom eroy, and Teresa Lynn Thomas,
22, Middleport.

I Continued

-- -~----------------------------~
High School Seniors

We are now making appointments for senJor por·
traits.
We provide a number of previews from which you
make your selection. our previews give you not onJy
traditional poses before oil backdrops but also poses In
beautful outdoor settings.
You'll like our relaxed atmosphere and reasonable
prices.
Call us today to set up your appointment.

Weather

'

ELBERFELD$
WHITE PAINTERS JEANS

'11

95

Young men's sizes 28 to 36 waist. Lengths 30 to ·
36, 100% cotton preshrunk. Big Ben label by
Blue Bell.

THE PHOTO PLACE
(Charlene and Bob Hoeflich j
109HighSt.
Pomeroy

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
.

at

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

en tine
P~ICE

THURSDAY, AUGUST 2, 1979

FIFTEEN CENTS

July grocery prices
.
show slight decline
COLUMBUS, Ohio lAP) - End of
July grocery prices declined slightly
from a mmth earlier in tile Ohio
Associated Press marketbasket
survey, reflecting the availability of
close.to.home summer produce.
With prices down on potatoes,
tomaiAies, lettuce, chicken and eggs,
the average cost or Ule 17 items oo the
shopping list at the end of July was
121.61 in 18 participating cities. A
month ago the same shopping list had
a price tag of 121.69, and a year ago it
was 121.118.
Cost averages went up on seven
items m the list, down on eight and
two were unchanged in price during
the month . Higher averages were
reported for hamburger, chuck roast,
baron, coffee, orange juice, milk and
peanut butter. Lower prices were
rep&lt;rted on chicken, pork chops,
margar ine , eggs , tomato soup,
potaiAies, tomaiAies and lettuce. Sugar
and cookie prices remained
unchanged.
Cleveland was tile most expensive
city for the shopping Iist this month
witll an average cost of $23.1», up .2
percent from $23.04 a month ago .
Toledo,reported the lowest average at
$19.01 , compared to $18.41 a montll
ago. An 18-ounce jar of peanut butter
increased 20 cents in Toledo and

coffee by the pound was 30 cents
higher .
.
The most significant change was at
Painesville, where the shopping list
averaged $21.71, down from 122.96 a
month ago. This was a drop of 5.2
percent.
The highest increase was reported
at Cincinnati, up 3.8 percent, from
$22.05 a m!llth ago to $22.89 in the
latest check.
Some stores apparently used whole
fryer chickens as loss leaders,
prompting a drop of nearly 13 percent
in the per pound price, from 70 cents a
month ago to an average of 61 cents in
the new check. Center cut pork chops
by the pound sold for $2.10, down a
penny on the average .
A dozen grade A large eggs
averaged 76cents, down from 82 cents
a month ago. Fresh tomatoes by the
pound dropped from 75 cents to 65 ·
cents, and head lettuce declined from
6!1 cents a mooth ago to 60 cents at the
end of July.
A pound of hamburger increased
me cent, to $1.~1 . and bone4n-blade
chuck roast by the pound rose from
$1. 71 a month ago to $1.76. A pound of
name-brand bacoo increased from
$1.84 in June to $1.88 in the latest
check.
Store brand milk by the ~allon

Deputies probing
several reports
The Melc• County Sheriff's
deparunent Investigated a single car
accident Wedne5day. No personal
injuries were reported.
According to tile report Robert L.
Humphreys, 38, Pl. Pleasant, was
traveling wes't on
CR 26
approximately three tenths of a mile
off SR 7 when he failed to nesotiate a
trWl and went off the road on the right
and strucka fence . two posts and 12
fence boards were damaged. There

Today
... in the world

wu slisht damage to the car.
Deputies are investigating damage
to a vehicle owned by Debbie Lemley,
Rt. I, Oleshire. According to the
complaint sometime Tuesday evening
someone kicked in the door on the
driver' s side.
Lee All en, Portland , reported
Wednesday evening that a Blue Tick
hound and a Beagle hound were stolen
from his property on Stiversville Road
at a pproxim ately 10 :20 p.m .
Wednesday. The Blue Tick is a three
year old female and the Beagle is a
two year old male.
Deputies are also investigating the
theft of a four da y old Black Angus
baby ca lf from the property of James
Parsons, Rt. 1, Racine.The calf was
valued at $100.
Sheriff Proffitt requests tllat any of
the area farmers with information on
the calf tn contact his office .

Seeks election ·

Deadline Aug. 10'

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP )
There should be an election to
determine which union will speak
for the state Department of Men·
tal Health and Mental Retar,
dation's workers, departmertt
Diredor Timothy B. Moritz said
Wednesday.
He made the proposal at a
rneetln@ of leaders of the four
unions which now repreaent some
d. the department's employee~~.
The proposal would Improve
and clarify the labor situation in
Ohio's 30 mental health facWties,
Moritz said. He asked the leaders
of the Communlcatl0115 Workera
of America, the Ohio Ovil Service Employees Allloclation, the
American Federation of State,
CoWJty and Municipal Employees and the Ohio Public
Workers Union to respond to the
propa!BI by Aug. IS.

Closing time for all open claaa entries for the Meigs County Fair will be
4 p.m. Friday, Aug. 10, with the exception d. the annual horse show.
The aecretary will be at the fair
lloard office 011 the Rock Springs
Fairgrounds from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m on
Aug. 9 and 10 to accept the entries for
the many classes Included. Only exhibita which are properly registered
by the deadline will be judged and
receive premlwns.

in reased three cents to $1.73 for the
month, and a pound of stick
margarine dropped one cenl to 65
cents. The cost of five pounds of
granulated sugar was unchanged at
$1.15 and a 13-ounce pack of chocolate
chip cookies was unchanged at $1.14.
Coffee prices increased over the
check period, from an average of $2.64
in June to $2.80. A W I• ounce can of
tomato soup increased one cent to 22.5
cents.
A 12-ounce pack of frozen orange
juice rose from 95 cents to $!.Oland a
tO-pound sack of Idaho potaiAies
dropped from a $1.95 average at the
end of June to $1.79.
Average prices declined in nine of
Ule reporting cities and increased in
the other eight. Average prices
reported by other cities, with
percentage of change from the
previous month, include:
Athens, $21.52, down .6 percent;
Canton, $19.63 , down .I percent;
Chillicothe, 121.49, down 1.7 percent;
Colwnbus, 22.33, up 1.8 percent;
Conneaut, $20.90, down 1.4 percent;
Findlay 22.63, up 1.7 percent; Kent·
Ravenna, $21.66, down 1.1 percent;
Marietta, $21.42, up .6 percent ;
Massillon, $20.43, down 2.2 percent;
Portsmouth $22.25, up .4 percent;
Salem, $21.74 , down .8 pe~ ce nt ;
Steubenville, $22.76, down 2.4 per::ent;
Van Wert, $22.84, up .7 percent ; and
Youngstown, $20.78, down 4 percent.

Wrecks leave
two injured
Two penons were tndjured and
their vehicle demollahed In a one-car
accident Wednesday evenlflll.
The Gallia-Melga POllt State
Highway Patrol reported Rounne L.
Hale, 19, Vinton, waa drtvtng eut on
County Road 7, west d. Route 180 at 8
p.m. when she last control ol her car,
which ran off the left side ol the road,
and overturned.
Hale and an OCCllpllllt in her car,
Unda Mcintyre, 17, Akron, were injured In the mlahap and taken to
Holzer Medlcla Center wbere they
were treated and releued. The Hale
car was demolslehd and there were
no cltatiOII!!.
The patrol alao reported two accidents in Meigs County W~y.
At 9:15a.m., Everett D. Parlier, 78,
Reedsville, was drtvtng south on SR 7
near County Road 26 and attempted to
merge lett at the same time a car
driven by Gertrude Moore, 64,
Chester, WB5 a1ao merving into left
lane.
Parker forced Moore's car to the
left, and when Moore spotted another
vehicle approaching in the left lane,
she cut back, striking Parker's vehl·
cle in the left front fender .
There w85 slight damage to both
cars, no injuries, and no citations.
Sllght dama&amp;e was done to a car
operated by Carol F. Pierce, 49,
Langsville, at 3:35 p.m. on County
Road 5 when her car struck a I!Wird
rail. There were no cilati0115.

FAIR SERVICES PLANNED -The annual interfaith religious services will mark the opening of this
year's Meigs County Fair. Services will be held on
Monday, Aug. 13 at the grandatand at 7:30 p.m.
Speaker for the services will be Dr. Lewis Telle who
will share bla faith In God. Special mualc will be provided by "'lbe Voices d. Uberty", ecwnenical group,
made up ol local people. The members ol the Meigs
County Mlnlaterial .Woclation will 8ll8ist with various
portionll ol the service. The publlc Is invited to attend.

Shown, I-I', going over the program are seated, the
Rev. Richard Thomas, vice president ol the Meigs
County Ministerial Allloclation and pastor ol the Northeast Cluster United Methodist Churchell, and the .
Rev. Harvey Koch, Jr., secretary-treasurer ol the
118110ciation and pastor d. the Syracuse Cluster d. the
United Methodist Church; standing, Pastor Albert Dlttes, president of the Meigs County Ministerial Asaocla·
tion and pastor of the Pomeroy Seventh-DRy Adventist
Church.

Board seeking construction
fir'!l for roof r~pair ·i o.b
The Meigs Local School District
Board of Education and admlniltnlto.:a are looking for a construction firm to make Immediate
repairs to the Meigs Hil!h School.
Meeting in apedal session Monday
night, the board of education pa.ssed
an ''urgent necessity" resolution to
set down a psttem to be followed In
getting Immediate attention for the
high school.
' The resolution provides that the
board can obtain Invitational bids on
repair work at the school Instead of
the usual process of publishing adverlisements for bids over a four week
period.
With the invltatiooal process finns
can submit bida at once, after the
building baa been inspected so that
repre8elllatives can see the type d.
repair wort needed.
According to plans, a bid can be aC·
cepted Immediately so that repair
wort can get underway and completed for the opening of the high ·

acbooL
·
'lbe board met in executive session
Monday nf8ht wiih Dr. Carl Shermer,
civil engineering professor at Ohio
Unlveralty, and Ted Beegle, a Colwn·
·bus engineer, both of whom had in·

Petition presented

Braden, Mary Ann Francis, BcJrulle
The board ~ -- J - Tajl« fiii' a.
the ~~~Uestiona d. the two engineers. new acbool year, and Harry Yar·
Administrative Assistant Dwight brough lUI welding instructor pending
Goins reported front walls in some certification by the state.
sections show a bowing action .and
Non-&lt;:ertlfled penionnel employed
cracks have appeared around win- Monday night Include Donna N-.
dowsover thepestseveralooth&amp;.
aide; JoanKaldor,cook, andPauletta
District Superintendent David Harrison, substitute aide.
Gleason reports the bOwing walls and
Pending c:ertificatlon by tfJe State
cracb in the academic section of the Controlling Board, the Meigs Board
nine-year old structure would be the also accepted bida oil six school.
ground level sectiOn.
buses.
Funds for the repair work will cune
The bid d. the Glbllon Motor Co.,
from the pennanent Improvement Athens, at $13,623, was accepted on
funds ol the district, Gleason said.
the chassis, and the bid d. f/ ,890.118 fer .
In another action, the board bodies 811bmltted by the Edwin Davia ·
authorized Goins and Gleason to meet Co., Langsville, was accepted.
Friday with Meigs County ProGleason pointed out that the bus. ·
secuting Attorney Rick Crow to body bid of the Davis firm was IC·
discuss pollaible litigation against all' cepted even though It waa about f/5
finns involved in the design and con- higher than another firm becaWJe d.
structloo of the high school building. ' the additiooal di.ltance which would
The board also granted Goins pennis- be required In driving for repalra at
sion to consult with Horace Karr, headquarters ol the second finn.
owner of the Karr Construction Co.,
Attending the meeting were Supt.
which was the general contracting Gleason, Goins, Dan Morrta, ad·
firm on the CO!I8truction of Meigs mlnlstrative assistant; Jane Waper,
High School, to detennlne If he has .treasurer; board members Carol ·
any suggestiona on what has caused Pierce, Dr. Keith Rlgga and VIrgil·
King and Bob Morris, elementary
damages to the building.
The board employed teachers Beth principal.
spected the building.

.
-

.

Data entrys · operator
hired
c

Upon the recommendation of Meigs
h
·
County Welfare Directo Mich 1
w1s ~r,
Me1gs ounty
r
ae
Commissioners Tuesday night

Innocent pleas
COVINGTON, Ky . (AP)

Howard T. Kalsbeck and his aon,
Howard D. Kelly, accused of
pirating $374,000 In securities,
food stamps and money from a
WellB Fargo truck June 18 In
Newport, Ky., pleaded innocent
to the charges Wednesday in U.S.
Dlatrlct Court.
Kelly and Kalsbeck had federal
!l'lbllc defenders appointed to
them during the short arraignment before District Court Judge
Eugene Siler.
Siler set a Sept. 24 trial date for
the biaest robbery In Greater
Qnclmatl history.
Both men · are charged with
COflBJIIracy, theft, transportation
d. interstate conunerce of stolen
gooda, and the poaseBBilin of a
flreann In the commission of a
felony. Kelly Is also charged with
poiiBeBIIion of a weapon with a
,previous felony conviction.

'

MORE

THAN

1,000 persns were on . liand for grand opening

ct~remonies of the new Gallipolis K mart store early this morning. Ribbon.

cuttlnl! ·ceremonies

were conducted shortly before 9 a.m. Sharing the
honor above (center, attired in wh!te) were Larry R. WUboum and his
\~

wife, Unda. Wilbourn Is the manager of the 55,552 square fOOt discount
department slore,lQ!!Bted on Upper River Rd. Gallipolis city officlala,lncludlng members of the city commission and chamber of commerce and
other area leaders were on hand for the event.
·.
·

1 ed -Ro wena Young, SR 882,·
emp oy
Pomeroy, 85 da~ntry operator 1.
Swisher
recommended
the
appointment since the welfare
department will be put on a state-wide
computer system effective Sept. 11.
Meeting with the board were
Kenneth Welsh and a delegation ol
Harrisonville realdenta woo presented
a petition with -127 signatures ag~
the issuance of a C-1 and C-Z liquor·
pennit to Larry Allen Vance, elba,
Vance's _carryout on SR 143 In
Harrisonville.
·
The · issuance of the permit wu
protested due to the close prolllmlty of
the proposed carry-out to the
Presbyterian Church and the
Harrisonville Elementary ScbooL
The commissioners .will !Ue
objection and petition with the Ohio
Department of Uquor Control and,
request a hearing.
In other business, the board asreed:
to review the use of the ODES and 1
CETA Building on Union Ave., SR 7,
as a voting place In Salisbury
Township providing there is enough
space.
County engineer Wesley Buehl
reque11ted
that
the
$15,000
unappropriated balance in the A, L a.
G budget be appropriated · to the
bitwninous account. The request was
approved.
Th.e quotation of Guernsey Aaphalt
Co., for purcha.,e_of asphalt materlala
for the month of August, wu IICCepted
for the county higllway department, ,
The board also dlscuued tbe
(Continued on page 10)

"..

.,,

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