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8- Tbe Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Aug. 13, 197~

I

Area Deaths

POLLYANNA mOl'tfPSON
PollyaiUI8 Thompson, 25, formerly
of Rt. 1, Cheshire, a resident of 1502
Hunter Ave., Columbus, was dead on
arrival Sunday at University
Hospital. She was born Oct. 10, 1954 in
Gallipolis to George Frederick and
Marjorie Pauline Thompson, Rt. 1,
Cheshire. She graduall!d from Kyger
Creek High School and attended Mar·
shall University.
In addition to her parents, she is
survived by two sisters, Mrs. John
(Nan) Heiskell, Cheshire, and Mrs.
Charles A. (April) Duncan, Northup
and a brother, George, at home .
Miller's Home lor Funerals will announce arrangements.
HENRY D. PETITI'
Henry David Pet;tit, 74, 275 Thur·
man Ave., Columbus, died unexpectedly around 8 a.m. Sunday at
Good Samaritan Hospital, Zanesville.
He wu a caretaker at Redbird
Stadium in Columbus.
Mr. Pettit was born April 17, 1905, in
West Virginia, the son of Joseph and
Mable Pettit. He was a veteran of
World War II. He was preceded in
death by a firs! wife, Mary Butler.
Pettit is survived by a second wife,
Glenna George Pettit; four
daughters, Freda Colley, Columbus;
Margaret Abel, Odemaun, Minn.;
Janet McFann, Ironton, and Tammy
Smith, Columbus; a step'ISOn, Robert
George, Columbus; 21 grandchildren
and 13 great-grandchildren; a
brother, Albert, Pomeroy; and two
sisters, Lucy Wierd, Mount Vernon,
and Belva Snyder, no address given.
Funeral services will be at t p.m.
Wednesday, the Rev. Everett
Delaney officiating, at the ~iler's
Home For Funerals. Interment will
be · at Beach Grove , Cemerery,
Pomeroy . .Friends may caU at the
funeral home Tuesday from 2-4 and 79p.m.
GREEN WADE VANCE
Green Wade Vance, 82, Pomeroy,
formerly of Dunbar, W. Va , died
Sunday at hif residence.
Mr. Vance was born March 16, 1897
the son or the lab! John and Willie
Mennix Vance. He was also preceded
in death by two daughters and one
son.
Mr. Vance was a retired carpenter.
He is survived by his wife, Daisy,

moving slowly

three sons, Drexel of Pomeroy, Noah
of St. Albans and Tom of Dubar;
seven daughll!rs, Zelma Lester, St.
Albans; Juanita Harrison and Irene
Workman , both of Dunbar; Aretta
Swaney, Columbus; Audrey Gardner,
Jackson County, W. Va.; Freda
Harrison, Cross Lanes and Alice Hill,
New Smyrna Beech , Fla.; two
brothers, Lawrence and Brooks, both
of Cincinnati; two sisll!rs, Grace of
Cincinnati and Alice of California; 53
grandchildren, 83 great grandchildren
and two great great grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held
Wednesday at ll a.m. at the Keller
Funeral Home in Dunbar. Burial will
be in Wells Cemerery. Friends may
call at the Keller Funeral Home this
evening from 7 to 9 and Tuesday from
2 to 4 and 7 to 9.
·

••

::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::

DWELUNG DESTROYED
home on
Mulberry Heights burned to the
ground about 3 a.m. Mouday morning.
.. The home was known as the "old"
· Cannen Evans property and liad .
recently _been purchased by Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Sheets · who are · In
Florida. '
.. The fire was discovered by a
neighbor, Mrs . Martha Struble, wbo
was awakened several times by her
dog. The animal seemed persistent .
and Mrs. Struble got out of bed to
investigate the behavior of the dog.
Looking out a front window she saw
the home engulfed in flames.
.. An unoccupied frame

~:::::::::::::::::: ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:::::::::;:;:;:;:

OBSERVING BIRmDAY
Mildred Wolfe , Racine, a resident of
Pincrest Care Center, Gallipolis; ..will
observe her 9lst birthday on Monday,
Aug. 20. Those who wish may, mail
cards to her in care of the cenrer.
PARENTS Wll..L MEET -·
There "!,ill be a meeting of parents
of kindergarten children in Sotitbern
Local School District Aug. 23, at 7:'30
p.m. in the high school cafeteria,
Parents who \Ia ve not enrolled their
children may do so at the meeting.
Parents are to bring birth certificare,
TB testing record and immunization
record.

AUAN BOSTER, DVM, ANNOUNCES
THE OPENING OF HIS NEW
VffiRINARY CLINIC AT
438 UPPER RIVER ROAD, GALliPOLIS
(Approximately 1 mile above. Silver Bridge)
Hours : Mon. thru Fri. 10 am til12 noon; 5 pm til7 pm
Sat. 9 am til12 noon

QUEEN CONTEsT BENEFITS - Mason County
Bank purchased Jack CuUen 's 1,060 pound steer Friday
night for 85 cents per pound at the Mason County Fair
Steer Sale. The bank donall!d it for resale with
proceeds going toward the Mason County Fair Queen
conrest, annually sponsored by the banking institute.

.

.

MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) Backed by riot~quipped police and
packing a pistol on his hip,· Mayor
Emory Folmar kept his pledge that
Ku Klux .Klansmen would not thread
their whi,oo power march through his
city without a parade permit.
Klansmen began the 50-mile march
Thm;sday In Selma, walking the route
of a historic civil rights protest with
vow~ to go "armed to the hut," and to
d~str~&gt;' any challenging enemy.
But the end of the march , scheduled
for tl\e grounds of. the Capitol, took
' pJac~ .I:JEliJi!ld ~e J&gt;arred windows of
polipe,valllj.qq, ~~ndl!Y when f\early 200
Kl"''smen were -arrested as they
. entcr~q . the, ,cily. without the permit.
TM whitil-robed, hooded marchers
surrendered wiThout resistance ,
Bill Wilkinson, the Imperial wizard
of the Invisible Empire, Knights of the
Ku Klux Klan, and organizer of the
march, was silenced as he and hi s
followers were arrested bY Police
Chief Charles Swindall.
Speaking into a bullhorn, Swindall
told the marchers: "You are violating
the law by parading without a permit.
You are now under arrest for that
violation."
Wilkinson of Denham Springs, La.,
then stepped forward to say, "We are
marching for civil rights." But
Swindall inrerrupll!d him , saying he
could not speak because he was under
arrest.

.

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
Saturday Admissions--Robert
Crump, New Haven ; Gladys Artis,
Mason; Mary_ rt~rce, L911~ Bottom;
Jac'li Neff, Middlepoct. .
· Satuql~y ... pisc,barges--Richard
DeM;oss , Ethel Carson, Chester
carson, .Ollie Boston, , Robert Fife,
Tommy Larie, .Virgil l?llillips, Audria
Arqgl&lt;:l .
. .'
Sunday Admissions--Mitchell
Sable, Racine; Cindy Crabtree,
\lbany; V,era Drehel, Middleport;
.jlelvin Cross, Langsville.
Sunday Discharges-Luther Bartow,
Charles Justis, Vera Glass, Gladys
Artis, Hattie Sellers, Helene Sayre,
Melvin Forrester,Sr., Jack Neff.

Quick,
like an
bunny...

Your
money

MULTIPLIES!
Hop to it! Th" sooner you open one ot our high interest
earning savings accounts, the sooner you'll begin to
see those dollar signs! With daily computing, your interest earns interest ... and that means money in the
bank ... tor you! Get the facts!

Farttters Bank
POMEROY, OHIO
·~o.ooo Mmnum Insurance F01 'Each DepositO!

Member Federal Deposit lnsu•ance Corpo1ation

The steer was resold to Empire Furniture of Gallipolis
for~ cents per pound. Pictured above, left to right, are
Ray Weaver, and A. K. McClung, Mason County Bank;
1979 fair queen Jennie McCallisoor, Skip Meadows of
Empire·Fumit\Jre, Dick Ord, President of the Mason
County Bank and Jack CuUen,
,

Klan march blocked

HOSPITAL NEWS

,,

Middleport council okays HUD .application

Huge oil slick

As the marchers were taken away,
they chanted, "The K-K-K is here to
stay." Police booked 186 adults and 12
juveniles for the parade law violation
and released the adults on $500 bond
each. The juveniles were detained
until a hearing today . .
Once freed, Wilkinson promised to
try again.

DAV MEETING CANCEU..ED
The re~Wlar Tuesday meeting of
Meigs Chapter 53, Disabled American
Veterans, has been cancelled and in
lieu of the meeting a picnic will be
heldat6 p.m. at Forest Acres Park on
the .New Lima Road near Rutland.
Those attending are to take a covered
dish. '
SQUAD HAS BUSY DAY
The Middleport Emergency Squad
answered three calls over the
weekend.
At 5:39 p.m. Saturday, the unit was
called to Brownell Ave., for Jack Neff
who was taken to Vewrans Memorial
Hospital. At 4:55 a.m. Sunday
morning the unit went to Route I for
Minnie Brown who was taken to
Holzer Medical Center.
The squad was called to 70
Riverview Drive at 2:34a.m. Monday
for Michael Clem who had a
. nosebleed. He was treall!d on the
scene .

"We will march to the Capitol in
Montgomery and hold our rally," he
said. "It may be six months."
It was an echo of his pledge.of four
days ago, when he and his band,
jeered at by blacks, marched through
Selma and across the Edmund Pettus
Bridge, retracing the route taken in
1965 by the Rev. Martin Luther King
Jr. and his followers to open Southern
voting booths to blacks.
"We are going through to the stall!
Capito!," Wilkinson said as the
marchers set out, "to erase the shame
of the 1965 march to the white race."
Said his spokesman, Bill Riccio: "If
the enemy confronts us, we will
destroy the enemv."
GET UCENSE
A marriage license was issued to
Terrance A. Smith , 23, Reed SVI'Ue ,
and DebbieJ. Graham, 22, Reedsville.
PROCEEDS DUE TOMORROW
Proceeds from the recent swJm.a.
thon, held at Middleport Pool
sponsored by the Megis County Heart
Association, Should be turned in by
noon on Tuesday. Aug . 14.
Awards will be presented during an
awards ceremony which 'Will be held
the same day at 2:45p.m. at the pool.

CORPUS CHRISTI,"Texas (AP) The huge oil slick adrift in the Gulf of
'&gt;lexii\O has resumed a slow
olOrthward movement, and experts
admitted Sunday they simply do not
know where it will go next.
"Revived currents of about 1 knot
were pushing our drift buoys steadily
northward," said Carl Posey of the
National Oceanic and Abnospheric
Administration.
"We're sort of back to where we
were . .We're not saying it's headed to
· shore; we just don't know right now,"
Posey said.
'
Officials of an oil spill task Ioree
who braced for a catastrophe last
week have said the situation is not
likely to get much worse than the few
scatte.red "tar balls" that have dotted
rllSOrt beaches in southem Texas.
But scientists said the oil spill
claimed its first known victims In
Texas over the weekend. Two birds,
identified by wildlife experts as bluefaced boobies, died Saturday on the
beach of South Padre Island. The
goose-like birds dive to catch fish and
probably dove Into the oil, said Bob
Stratton of the La!Wna Atascoca
Wildlife Refllge.
The runaway Jxtoc I oil well 500
miles south of here has been spewing
30,000 barrels of crude into the Bay of
Campeche since it blew out June 3.
Mexican officials said Saturday they
have slowed the flow by stuffing
U!nnis ball-sized balls of lead and steel
into the well. Tiley had no estimall! on
how much the flow had been reduced.
Officials of PEMEX,
the
government oil monopoly, said they
· might know this week whether the
metal bells would cut the flow enough
to allow them to seal the we.llhead
wlth cement. Otherwise, they said,
they might have to wait several weeks
while two relief wells are drilled to
relieve pressure in lxtoc I.
Sen. John Tower, R-Texas, who flew
to the Texas coast SUnday to meet
with shrimpers worried about a
contamination . scare, said the
situation would remain "critical" for
some time in Texas.
"It's not over yet. So far, we're in
relatively good shape, but the oil Is
still flowing. Considering the fact that
it will be Sepll!mber before the first
relief well• is complell!d, we're going
to be critical for liOIIle time," Tower
said.
The leading edge of the main sliek
remained well offshore near the
Texas-Mexico border. A lew scattered
patches have broken off and were
floating 15 to tOO miles offshore In
Texas waters, according to Coast
Guard officials.

COUNCIL MEETING SET
Syral'U!Ie Village Council will meet
thiS everung at 7 p.m.

MEIGS COUNTY

CLINIC CANCEU..ED
An immunization clinic· scheduled

for Tuesday at the Meigs County
Health Department, now locall!d in
the f&lt;irmer Meigs General Hospital
building, has been cancelled due to
county fair week duties.
The pubUc is also advised that the
department has been assig!'ed new
telephone numbers. They are 992-$26
and 992-$27.
SQUAD Rlll':
The Pomeroy Emergency Squad
answered a call to Route 248 at 4:38
p.m. Saturday for Mary Pierce who
was taken to Vell!rans Memorial
Hospital.

AUGUST 14-15-16-17-18
Tuesday, August 14
9: 00 a.m. -Admission will be charged at gates
10:00 a.m.-Judging Domestic Arts
4:00 p.m.- Weigh-In Swine
4:15 p.m.-Weigh-In Steers
4:30 p.m.-Weigh-In Lambs
6:00 p.m.-All Exhibits must be in place
7:00 p.m. - Demolition Derby
8:00 p.m.-Junior Fair Swine Showmanship and Judging

FLUSHING SET TUESDAY
The
fire hydrants in Middleport will
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
be
flushed
Tuesday, Aug . 14, at 10
DISCHARGES, AUGUST 10
p.m.
.
•
Hobart Adkins, Thomas Arney,
Jennifer Barrett, Thelma Bell,
Adeline J?~0,5, Jielen Qempsey, Pearl ,
Fields, Albert Finey, Bobby Foul .•
Sandra Gatewood, Anna Harris,
Luther Harvey, Veronica Johnson,
Morris Justice, Wanda Legley, Adele
Long, Hope Mauch, Ashby Maze,
Mary Montgomery, Paul Rollins,
John Sanders, Roy See, Paul Simpson
&amp;., Jill Williams, Sylvia Williamson, .
William Winoors, William Wooldrich.
BffiTHS AUGUST 10
Mr .
and
Mrs.
Vernon
Cash,daughter, Wellston.
DISCHARGES AUGUST 11
Mrs. Michael Blackburn and
"-1ughter, Cabel Bolt, Jean Childers,
, Mrs. Jerry Collins and son; Virginia
Cremeens, Harold Davis, Minnie
Forth, Madge Goheen, John Graham,
Mrs. William Hager and son , Pamela
On Hanes men's and boys all
Henderson, Mrs. Joseph Holtz and
white cotton knitted
daughrer, Cheryl Knight, Bernard
underwear and Hanes
Rollins, David Mi tc hell, William
'\
Miller, Marion Patrick, Sandy Queen,
regular and gripper boxers .
Mrs. Carl Ross and son, John Terrell,
Melissa Thomas, Charles Tyree.
BIRTHS AUGUST 11
Mr . and Mrs, • Robert Allen,
DESCRIPTION
REG.
' daughll!r, Oak Hill; Mr. and Mrs.
Stephen McMannis, son, Hamden;
RETAIL
Mr. and Mrs. Milton Avery, son,
MEN'S CREW NECK T-SHIRT, 100%cotton .•..• 3/$5.99
Ironton .
MEN'S V-NECK T-SHIRT, 100%cotton .• , • , •••. 3/$6.49
UISCHARGES, AUGUST 12
MEN'S BRIEF, 100%cotton .•.••••..••• , •••.• , 3/$5.79
Marshall Adams, Hiram Callahan,
James Dennis, Ada Herold,. Charles
MEN'S GRIPPER BOXE~, 50% cot./50% pol •••• 3/$6.99
Howard, Mrs. Robert Hunt and
BOYS CREW NECK T·SH/IRT, JOO%cotton •...•. 3/$3.99
daughll!r, Susan Luckadoo, Mary
BOYS BRIEF,100%cotton •...•.•.....•.....•. 3/$3.99
Morgan, Brenda Perry, Debra
Sanders, Elsie Schaffer, Margaret
OFFER GOOD THROUGH SEPT. 2, 1979
Sheline, Caro line Stiltner, Ami
Williams.
· ·
BIRTHS AUGUST I2
Mr . and Mrs . Samuel Scott,
daughrer, Langsville.

r-------------------------------------..
ELBERFELDS

BY BOB HOEFLICH
Middleport Village Council Monday
night approved the HUD application
of Arthur H. Winer, Marietta, for the
construction of a 36-unit non-elderly
apartmenl complex on Middleport's
Page St. at a cost of ' more than one
million dollars.
The complex to be composed of 24
two-bedroom units and . 12 three·
bedroom units would be located where
a nursing home had been planned
earlier. The property for the complex
is under option and the project had
earlier · been approved by the
Middleport Planning Commission,
Mayor Fred Hoffman reported.

Mayor Hoffman reported that
another apartment complex in the
!'age-Powell St., area, for the elderly,
planned by Winer, has tie~n approved
for construction by the Farm Home
Administration . The six acres of land
for that project have already been
purchased, the mayor said. Cost of
that project is also in the
neighborhood of a million dollars .
I..ast night , Council aloo approved
the e11gineering contract of Floyd G.
Browne Associall!s for the extension
of sewage facilities , The extensions
planned would be in the areas of
Broadway, Elm, Railroad and Powell
Sts. One grant applied for is $330,300

and another 1s for about $180,000 so the
village will have 'over a hall million
dollars in sewage e~ll!nsion projects
underway through HUD grants.
Mayor Hoffman and Buckeye HillsHocking Valley Regional Planning
Commission were commended by
council members lor their work in'
completing the applications and
securing grants for the village,
C'harles Hysell appeared before
council with a petition requesting the
abandonment of an alley in the Maple
St. area . Council tabled the petition
for study and will take up the matter
at the next meeting. Officials' said
they have no objectign to closing the

e
VOL. XXVIII

NO. 85

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

alley .
· Counril approved the rePDl:_t of
Mayor Hoffman for receipts of $961 in
fines and fees and $142 in merchant
police collections for a total of $1103 in
July. Clerk-Treasurer Gene Grate
reported · that Ashland Oil has
increased all grades of gasoline by
three cents a gallon as of July 26.
Apparently some street resurfacing
for the village is just around the
corner. Council accepll!d the bid ol
the Shelly Construction Co. lor hotmix
at $24.50 a ton and tack at 90 cents a
gallon . Shelly was the low bidder with
York Construction Co. also bidding.
The Citizens National Bank was

•

.at

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

TUESDAY, AUGUST 14, 1979

Official fair
program •••
Wednesday, AugusH5
.
9:15a.m. -Junior Fair Beef Showmanship and Judging
10:00 a.m.- Draft Horse Show- Tractor PUll Area
!O:OOa.m. -HorseConfonnation
12:00 noon -4-H Flower Show Ju~ng (Jr. Fair Building)
1:00 p.m. '-Open Class Beef Judgmg
.
4-H Rabbits and Poult:y Judging·
Senior Divisiol')- Rabbits Judging
2:00 p.m. -Flower Show Judging ·
4:30p.m.- Twilight Horse Harness Racing
Uttle Miss and Mister
Contest -Show Ri~
6:30p.m.- Horse Show -Center Fteld
-Open Class
8:00p.m.- YOuth Night -A Family Affair

I.

Bloodmobile gets
46 pints Monday
Forty-six pints of blood were ·syracuse; Charles W. Searles and
received at the August visit of the Joseph White , Cheshire ; Barbara
bloodmobile Monday with 49 persons Mullen, Martha J . Nicholson, Joyce
atll!nding.
B.Bartrum, Helen E. Blackston,
Of the 46 units. 22 were Freda Durham , Cash Bahr, Sarah J .
replacements. Gallon donor was Fowler, Kenneth Imboden , and
Robert W. Smitih, Pomeroy ; hve Patricia!&lt;, ·~an, all of Middleport ;
gallon donor was Sarah J, Fowler, Mary Davidson. and Donna Davidson,
Middleport. There were si• first time Rutland ;
Carolyn
Charles,
donors.
.
Minersville; Carroll Teaford, Racine;
Doctors assisting were Dr. L. D. Kathy D. Stone, Ori&gt; Smth, Harlan A.
Telle and Dr. E. S. Villanueva . Nurses Ballard, Howard Parker, Darrell
were · Ferndora Story , Lenora Hawthorne , Tim Hawthorne, and
Leifheit, and Mary Geyer .
Henry Bahr , Long Bottom ; Gene
In charge of the canteen were the Hillin , Huntington; Mary K. Searls,
Women 's Guild of the Catholic Church Bidwell ; C.1arence Mcintyre, Dexter;
and Katherine Welsh . In charge of Mace! Barton , and Richard Barton,
loading and unloading were Delmas Reedsville ; Ellis Myers, Langsville ;
Kerns, Melvin Lovesee, Gene William Stanley, Shade,
McElroy, and Homer Young .
Clerical workers were Mary Nease,
Jean Nease, Jean Sayre, Martha Lou
Beegle, Mace! Barton, Helen Pi ckens .
Joyce Hoback, Erma Roush, Grace
Drake, Emma K. Clatworthy,
Jeanetll! Lawrence, Twila S. Childs.
Beulah Strauss, Freda Durham and
A resolution to place a 2.3 renewal
Vernon Nease .
levy on the ballot in November was
Assisting from the Retired Senior passed when Syracuse Vlllage Council
Volunwer Program were Maurice met in recessed session Monday night .
Loti, Grace Turner, Bernadine Meier,
The renewal is for current expense
Clarence Struble, and Alice Struble, (street lighting) . Council, in other
Donors were Robert Vaughan , business, agreed to lay culvert at the
Sharon . Welker, David M. King , west end of the park and place asphalt
Homer Hysell, Jeffrey J . Hilleary ,
on l-ee Circle.
Lura R. Swiger, Marjorie L. Caton,
Attending were Mayor Eber
Michael Caton, Mary L. Starcher, Leo Pickens, Janice Lawson , clerk, Troy.
L. Vaughan, Rowena H. · Vaughan, Zwilling , Jack Williams, Willie
Debbie Grueser, Charlie Stone, Billie Guinther and Kathryn ·Crow, ~:()unci!
Joe Spencer, Joseph C. Hall, Virgil C.
members, Robert Wingett and
Windon, Debra Buck, and Robert W.
Smith, all of Pomeroy; Milton Roush, Herman London .

Syracuse council
seeks renewal levy

GRETA SUTTLE, a county school supervisor, holds an airplane
made of popsicle sticks, one of some 375 exhibits of work done by Meigs
County school students being displayed at the 116th annual Meigs County
Fair. Mrs. Sutton was one of several staff members completing the school
display in the senior fair building.

LARGE DISPLAY -The Hillbillies 4-H Club composed of both girls
and boys have a large display area to show their work during the past
year at the junior fair building at the Meigs Fair. Some of the members
with the display, from the left, are Bill Dyer, Randy Osborne, Carla Rife
and Becky Rile.

Food prices ffisturb · Carter
WASHINGTON (AI' ) - President
Carter's chief inflation adviser says
he hopes the food industry will "look
aga in" to make sure it is giving
consumers a fair shake on food prices
now that it knows the government is
!~king over its shoulders.
All red Kahn made the sta rement
after Carte r summoned 16 food
industry representatives, including
top executives of major supermarket
chains, to the White House Monday to
demonstrate his concern over rising
retail prices.
Carter told the group he was
"parti cularly disturbed " that
supermarket prices have been going
up when farm prices have been
coming down . " We are very
l'OOl-erned about this trend," he
emphasized during the meeting,
which lasted more than an hour.
But a supermarket spokesman,
Robert 0 . Aders of the Food
Marketing Institute, said Carter was
told he had been given faulty data on
food prices. Aders also said the food
representatives stressed that they
were not gouging the consumer.
" I'm sure we convinced the
president there has been no
profiteering at all ," Aders, who is

president of the institute, told
reporters after the meeting .
He didn 'I deny' that retail prices
might still be increasing while farm
prices are declining , but said this
reflects the normal food industry time
lag and that the trends even out over
time.
Aders also said any real reUef from
rising food prices depends on
controlling inflation , as the cost of
food goes up along with ever)thing
else . "It all depends on the general
inflation rare, " he said.
Aders, the group's spokesman, said
several supermarket executives told

Carter they were not increasing their
overall profit margin at consumers'
expense. But he said he didn't know
whether this was true of the entire
industry.
About 30 retail food firms have been
named by the administration's
Council on Wage and Price Stability
as probably not complying with the
government' s vuluntary price
guidelines. However, none of these
firms was represented at the meeting.
Supermarket chai ns that were
represented included the Kroger Co.,
Pathmark, Albertson's , Safeway ,
Jewel, A&amp;P, Winn-Dixie and Super

Valu. Representatives of the meat
industry also atll!nded. ,
Kahn told reporters Carter voiced
skepticism over the assertion that the
government's food-price figures were
wrong. The data, Carter said, showed
that while farm prices declined at an
annual rate of 17 percent in the last
three months, retail prices increased
at an 8 percent annual rail! .
"We've been particularly disturbed
recently because the price of the food
to the farmers has been going down
substantially and the price of food to
the consumers at the retail ouUets has
still been going up quite rapidly,"
Carter said.

•

25,000 feared dead in disaster
were knocked out.
NEW DELHI, India (AP) - water 18 feet high crashed over the
United News said a helicopter crew
sleeping
town,
burying
much
of
it
in
Unofficial press estimall!s of the
dropped food packages to survivors
mud.
death toll in the Machu River dam
"I rushed into my house only to find clinging to trees near Maliya village,
disaster ranged from 10,000 to 25,000
downriver from Morvi.
today as more monsoon rains that the ' wall!r-wall was following
Army troops were dispatched to jQin
hampered relief efforts and the me," an engineering student, in the search and rescue work, but
Patel,
told
the
United
·
Harjivanbhai
search for bodies.
The Hindustan Ti'lles said its Nei;\'S of India. "I hastily collecll!d my washouts delayed them.
·Prime Minister Charan Singh sent
estimate of 25,000 victiins was based family and climbed to the roof. The Agriculture Minister Brahm Perkash
water
in
no
time
had
filled
up
to
the
on the populations of Morvi and the
to the scene of the disaster. Textile
nearby villages of Lilapur and ceiling level."
The flood warers ran off quickly, workers in Ahmedabad, the capital
Adepar, all hard hit when the the
leaving
thousands of shattered and industrial cenll!r of Gujarat, said
swollen river flooded over one dam
and
mud up to the second they would work the Independence
buildings
and broke through another one ·below
floor
of
some
buildings.
Not a single Day holiday Wednesday and donate
it law Saturday in the northwestern
utility
pole
was
left
standing,
and their earnings to the stall!'s flood
stare of Gujarat.
relief fund.
power
communications
and
electric
The United News of India said the
toll could go as high as 10,000, and
stall! officials said at least 1,000
.drowned in and around Morvi.
· The worst previous dam disaster on
ROSEMONT, Ill. ( AP) - The could have triggered the collapse.
record occurred in 1962 at Belluno,.
Federal Aviation Administration
partially
built wooden roof of The
Italy, were 2,300 died.
spokesman
Neal Callahan said he had
Rosemont
Horiwn
arena,
within
sight
Flights bringing food and rescue
of airplane turbulence
never
heard
of
busy
O'Hare
International
Airport,
workers were cance led Monday
on the ground
causing
any
destruction
lies
like
matchsticks
over
a
grid
today
because of the weather. Buses were
although
"
large
jets
do
give off minidispatched to Morvi with relief as investigators try to find out why the
tornadoes
,
as
we
call
tllem."
supplies and they were to evacuate roof fell, killing five workmen .
"We can reconstruct everything
survivors. But their progress was
here," · said F;ric Mees, a design
slowed by washed out roads.
Morvi is near the cenll!r of Gujarat consultant on the roof, "but lives are
state, about 300 miles northwest of gone."
Mees, a design engineering
Bombay . Acityof60,000people, it was
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -The IS.
consultant
on the roof, said Monday's
once the capital of a maharajah's
realm and was a prosperous collapse did not. occur from too much year-old granddaughter of Gov.
community on the banks of the weight. But he did not rule out the James A. Rhodes, Missy Moore,
wind as , a possible factor, perhaps snipped a red ribbon symbolizing the
Machu.
Saturday night, afoor more than 20 causing the partially finished roof to opening of the 1979 Ohio 1)tall! Fair a
lew rnil)utes before 6 a.m. today.
inches of rain in 24 hours, the flooded act as a sail.
"The fair is open - a new record, ·
"Afl
it
takes
is
for
one
thing
to
go
river burst an 80-foot-high earth dam
seven
minutes," said Rhodes '
wrong,"
he
said.
"Anything
you
can
four miles above the city. A wall of
referring to Ute brevity of t~
think of can happen."
Witness~s said
the collapse traditional opening ceremonies.
The All-Ohio Stall! Youth Choir and
occurred shortly afll!r a low-flying
the
All-Ohio State Fair Band provided 1
SQUAD RUN
plane roared overhead m its way to
music
for the crowd of early bird
The Pomeroy Emergency Squad O'Hare.
fairgoers.
was ca lled to the home of Mr. and
Fred Schroeder, an architect with
Fair officials make no secret of
Mrs. Leo Vaughan Monday for her the firm of Anthony R. Hossi, which
mother, Mrs. Roma Harrah, who was . dcsigiled the arena, said it was "very their desire to shatll!r last year's
taken to Veoorans Memorial Hos{&gt;ltal wild and very premature" to record attendance d\lring ·the 1:Hiay \
where she was admitted .
speculate about whether the plane fair .

Investigators probing cause

\

Fair opened

'
"¥':

·' '

20%
OFF
3/$4.79
3/$5.19
3/$4.63
3/$5.59
3/$3.19
3/$3.19

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

'

Planning Commtssion fees lor
building permits were increased
eff~tive at once. The ordinance
providing for the increase- about two
and one-half times the present ratewas passed upon an emergency bBsls.
The engineering study of the Brown
firm on extension of the sewer
facilities was approved upon the
request of the Middleport ~ard of
Public Affairs.
,,
Council discussed requests for
resurfacing of two alij:Y!'J~Ilt it was
the opinion of the body, tliat streets
should have priority for resurfacing ·at
(Continued on page 8)

en tine

20% OFF
SALE

.

named the ofhc1al depository for
active and non-active funds of the
village for the , neKI two years as of
Aug . 23 .
A village government ·
seminar was announced for Sept. 25-28
in Dayton under the sponsorship of the
Ohio Municipal League.
·
Council discussed the pointing up of
village hall which has been underway.
Carl Horky, chairman of the project,
said that pointing up has not been
completed and that sandblasting will
have to be done after the pointing up is
finished. Council will ask workers of
the T. and S. Construction Co. to meet
with it in the near future.
Upon the request of the Middleport

FINISHING TOUCHES -Amy Luckeydoo, PeMy
.Clark and Elise Meier, I to r, of Middleport Brownie

Troop 1254 were busy putting the final touches on the
troop's county fair display Monday afremoon.

.~

�3-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., TUesday, Aug . 14, 1979

2- The Dally Sentinel. Middl•port-Pomeroy, 0 .. Tuesday, Aug. 14, 1979

Pirates win 9-l but don't count Phils out

Editorial opinions,
comments
Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

•

Ohio perspective

'

Answering pools, not needs
\ ~. J

·By Richard E. Coben
WASIDNGTON (NEA) - As time
passes, it becomes clearer that Jimmy Carter's Camp David energy
summit was organized !JlOre to lay
the groundwork for · his second
presi!lential campaign than to launch
a new energy progrifll. .
Carter's supporters can point to the
flurry of new proposals he sent to Congress as well as to the changes he
made in his Cabinet and White House
staff. The fact is that most of these
steps were either planned well in advance or represent little change in
Carter policy.
The significant factor was that they
were designed to kick off Carter's reelection bid in grand style. Unfortunately for the president, the expected boomlet fizzled and his poll
ratings remained at about the wpercent approval level of a month
earlier.
The reasons should he apparent.
Look at the personnel changes first.
At the Department of Health,
Education and Welfare, Incoming
Patricia Roberts Harris lacks the experience and acjministrative ability of
predecessor Joseph A. Califano Jr. on
the issues facing her department, but
she shares ·his liberal bias about the
ability of government to solve the
public's problems. She almost certainly will battle White House aides
on key issues, as did Califano.
The economic-policy switches sending G. William Miller to replace W.
Michael Blumenthal at the Treasury
Department" and Paul A. Volcker fo
replace Miller as chairman of the
Federal Reserve Board had little
policy significance and primarily
reflected '·Blumenthal 's problems in
doing business with Carter's staff.
Moon Landrieu at Housing and Urban Development and Neil- E.
Goldschmidt at Transportation take
over their departments too late to
shape new programs or revamp old
ones hefforethe 1980campaign.
Griff\n B. BeU had been grooming
Benjamin R. Civiletti to succeed him
Bll attorney general for several months . Similarly, James R. Schlesinger's departure from the Energy
Department was long expected and
Charles W. Duncan Jr. was chosen only to get that woeful bureaucracy in

order.
The major question stenuning from

~~it~e~~ t~n~~~ ~ ~~~er~~~ Po&amp;~lBLY
1

more effectively.
Nor does the designation of
Hamilton Jordan as White House
chief of staff carry much
significance. Jordan was always the
top aide in the Carter White house and
giving him the title won't help him
with his admitted weaknesses in administration and social grace.
Carter's energy proposals were
either his own warmed-{)ver plans or
ideas that had gained favor in Con- ·1""\.gress despite their serious problems,
as later debate would show.
9IXII.Y HfN . N6:1'!S
The centerpiece of Carter's televis- ·ed message was an $88 billion crash
program to develop alternative fuels
from the nation's coa1, oil shale and
gas. But, as The New Republic noted,
these synthetic fuels are extravagantly expensive, will produce little s upply in the next decade and will help
WASHINGTON ( AP) - What do
finance the major energy companies. congressmen do while on vacation '
The House passed a much more Crank out press releases, of course.
limited version .before Carter 's
The month-long congress ional
speech and the Senate Energy and recess that began last week did not
Natural Resources Conunittee has stem the river of news releases .and
raised serious questions about the en- other forms of paperwork that
vironmentaldangers of the plan .
continues to flow on Capitol Hill even
The other major Carter proposal when the place is deserted .
was creation of an Energy MobilizaHouse Republican Leader John
lion Board that could bypass legal re- Rhodes was quick to issue a news
quirements that have delayed con- release blaming Democrats for the
struction of energy facilities. While tact that Congress had gone home - a
many members of Congress agree · recess the GOP leader said he didn't
that regulation and red tape have think was warranted in a time of so
caused unnecessary delay, they say many pressing national problems.
the new plan goes too far in removing
Where was Rhodes at the time ?
important safeguards.
Home in Arizona , of course.
Finally, Carter set a limit on oil im·
And while Rhodes was accusing
ports that economic and energy Democrats of fleeing town with
analysts agree is well above the unfinished work on their . hands,
amount that would be consumed Democratic leaders were · busy
·anyway. And his message proposed cranking out papers of their own
no immediate steps lor energy con- justifying the break.
servation.
House Democratic Whip John
In his nearly desperate attempt to Brademas of Indiana issued a livesave his presidency, Carter has left page paper entitled "Congress and
the image of action but little Energy: a partnership with the
substance. As Rep. Paul Simon, D· people."
Dl., said recently, Carter's fault is
It ticked off a long list of energy bills
that he makes decisions "by studying on which the House had acted during
national polls rather than national the past two month s - including
needs. And that does not result in el- standby gas-rationing, the presi dent's

capitO
• I

fective\eadership ."

productive, [or turning out enormous

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- A new
state law put,s more teeth into an Ohio
Department of Insurance regulation
on advertising of health insurance
policies.
The statute; which officially went on
. the law books Friday, is designed to
better protect consumers who buy
, what they believe is " non cancellable" sickness and accident
policies.
Under the old law, an insurance
company could say a policy is "noncancellable," but that would not
necessarily mean that it is
"guaranteed renewable."
An Ohioan who bought such a policy
thinking it automatically could be
renewed might be mistaken. There is
no state Jaw requiring an insurer to
renew 8 policy when it expires.
Now anyone adverti$ing the
noncancellation provisions of a policy
must clearly describe with equal
emphasis both how it can be cancelled
and be renewed.
"The substantial part of the law is
basically pretty much repetitive of
our rule " said James F Mosier
assistant' director of the insuran~ .
bill. An example: " Of the · fWlds department . "But the penalty section
authorized to be appropriated by this
act for nuclear-attack submarines, .10
percent of the funds must be used to
dev elop a coal-powered attack

ideas

proposed new tax on oil companies,

submarine. ' '

Other Harkin amendments call for a
stu dy of "feasibility of transporting
MX missiles on abandoned Amtrak
lines," development of a solarpowered cruise missile , gasohol
torpedos, and required military
courses in transcendental meditation .
And, as a clincher, Harkin's tongue ..
in-{!heek legislation would give the
president the power to draft members
of Congress and order them to make
"twice-daily fast trots aroWld the
Washington Monument."
Just a practical joke on his
colleagues? Or on the taxpayers, who
paid roughly $200 to have the mock
the
amendments printed in
Congressional Record ?
Not really, says Harkin aide John
Fitzpatrick . He claimed the
amendments comprise a delaying
strawgy Harkin and other House
liberals plan to use to fight a section of
the bill that would revive military
registration .
In all, some 200 amendments have
been printed in "the Record-by Harkin
and ofuers in iliis group.

and synthetic fuels subsidies.
Translation: the August recess is· a
well-deserved rest.

Business mirror
NEW YORK (AP ) - Viewed as a
piece of machinery ; the United States
once hummed while other nations
sputtered. Into the fac tory went raw
materials, and out came finished
goods gr~Uy enhanced in value.
The United States, it was said, had
put it all together: the raw materials;
the ability to raise capital; hard ,
smart work ers , a nd innovative
mana gement. II was "productive." It
was efficient.
There was an attitude too, that with
luck and perseverance a person had
the chance to raise his living
standard. While it didn't always work
out that way, it happened enou gh to·
create the generalization .
By ge tting it all together,
Americans achieved the highest
material standard of living in history.
It was the r ewa rd for bei ng

Once an amendment is printed in
the Record, its sponsors are entitled to
speak on it for fo minutes and to
demand a roll-{!all vote - another 15
Rep. Tom Harkin, D-Iowa, was a bit minutes. Thus, floor debate can be
more fa nciful. He began his vacation tied up in such a fashion as easily as
leaving behind a stack of amendents through an old-fashioned filibuster .
to a pendivg defense authorization

percent, and in the first half of this
year it actually declined by . 3.3
percent. It now costs more, not less, to
turn out goods and services.
What happened to make "it" come
apart? Many reasons. The major
disagreement is how to weight the
separate reasons, and how to deal
with them through legislation and
leadership. But they are well known .
- Cap it al investment has been
lagging.
.
- lnOation is cited as both cause ,,.:::::::::..._:=_:_____________________
and effect.
- Dec lin e in money spent on
research and development .
- The United States now produces

COMMENTARY
Donald F. Graff

Briefly noted

more se r vices than good s, and

productivity increases are difficult in
the service industries.
-Growth of government .
-Govenment regulations.
- Enviromental costs are included
in those " nonproductive" projects.
- Worker attitudes. Some observers
say workers are bored, coddled, goalless, anatagonistic , etc.
- Work restrictions. Imposed by
labor , government and m~nageme nt .
There are other reasons too, and
they are equally understood . There is
no inabi lity to under stand the
problem. The difficulty is in getting
action on the problem.
That is, apathy, inaction,
procrastination - whatever it be
ca lled - is as much a part of the
productivity problem as ail the others

By Don Graff
That business about clouds and linings may have some application even
to clouds of pollution.
A source of enviromental concern
of late bas been the crop-damaging effects of acid rain, which returns to
earth chemical particles spewed out
by industrial operations and absorbed
by the atmospheric moisture.
Now comes a report from the
Department of Energy's ArgoMe National Laboratory suggesting taht
acid rainfall in moderation may be
not only tolerable but beneficial to one
important cash crop.
During two years of experiments ~t
the laboratory, plots of soybeans
treated with simulated acid rain of
the strength of household vinegar not
only survived but registered improved yields .
The finding, although still tentative
and subject to continuing research, is
regarded as of special significance to
the shaping of a national energy program. Coal, seen as the primary
replacement for imported oil, is also a
primary source of the sulfur dioxide
emissions that contribute to acid rain.
It 's some consolation to know that
the earth below will still be fruithful
if, as the price of energy in·
!lependence, we must smoke up our
spacious skies.
·
But somehow the prospect of coastto-{!oast soybeans doesn't quite raise
the spirits as did those old-time
amber waves of grain.

amounts of goods at the lowest price.
Since more goods could be produced
at no greater cost, or at a decreasing
cost, the prices of those goods could be
lowered and still leave a profit for
manufacturer, middlema n a nd
retailer.
Now the Jomt Economic Committee
of Congress warns Americans that,
unless they put it all back together
again, their living standards may fall
in the 1980s, a consequence of a
decline in productivity growth.
The statistics give warning : In the
15 ·years to !965, productivity grew at
an annual rate of 2.6 percent. From mentioned.
1965 to 1973 the increase was at a 2
percent rate. And from 1973 to 1978.
only l percent a year .
It didn 't stop there. Last year the
Today in History
rate of increase fell to about 0.4
By The Associated Press
Today is Tuesday , Aug. 14, the 226th
1111!: DAILY SENTINEL
day
of 1979. There are 139 days left in
(USI'SIIWtll
the year.
.
Today's highlight in history :
On this date in 1945, President
Ha rry Truman announced the
unconditional surrender of Japan and
!he end of World War ll.
On this date : In 1784 1 the first
Hussian colony in Alaska was founded
on Kodiak Island.
In 1848, the Ore gon Territory was
organized .
In 1900, the Boxer Rebellion in
Ghina ended as U.S. Marines helped
capture Pek ing.
In 1917, China declared war on
(;ennany and Austria in World War J.
In 193.\, Congress passed the Social
Secunty Act.
In 1973, American bombing in
Sweets are bad for the teeth, as
f'a rP!Jodia caine to a halt, marking tMe everyone knows.
officia l end to 12 years of U.S. combat
But everyone may be wrong, some

The sweet result
of research

action ill Jndochi nf-1 .

BY ASSOCIA'fED PRESS
last two innings of the sene...,nder.
Kent Teltulve, the ..Pittsburgh "Remember about this time last year,
Pirates relief ace, can remember we played two big series with the
when the tables were turned, and he 's l'hlllies, and they beat us good.
not counting anyone out of the
Houston , the West Divisioo leader,
National League East Division race meanwhile, was helping Pittsburgh
yet. - least of all the Phlla!lelphia open up tlie East with a 4-1 victory
Phillies.
· over the Expos behind the pitching
The Pirates completed their four- prowess of big J .R. Richard.
~me aeries at Phila!lelphla Monday
In the only other NL game Monday
rught, winning IH and taking three of night, Lou Brock distinguished
the crucial games. The loSB' left the himself with his 3 OOOth career hit
Phils, the defending division singling twice in St.' Louis' 3-2 victory
champioos, eight games beck. The over the Olicago Cubs.
Montreal Expos, who also lost
Astros 4, Expos!
Monday, are 21&gt; back.
Richard collected his fifth
"The situation was the same last coosecutive victory with a five-hitter .
year. " aald Tekulve. who pitched the striking out seven. At ori.e point:

current research suggests. We are indebted to the National Geographic
people lor the information that
chocolate may actually have some ef.
feet in blocking tooth decay.
Should it prove out, it would certainly be a welcome relief from the
recent trend of research, which is to
lind just · about anything and
everything edible a threat to health.
But it is to be hoped that marketing
entrepreneurs don't get carried away
in exploiting the discovery. Some
things might take considerable getting used to - like chocolate
toothpaste .

is much stiffer, which is a good
thing .""

Under the statute , which was
sponsored by Rep. Eugene Branstool,
D-Utica, a violation would .be
constdered an unfair and deceptive
act.
The superintendent of insurance has
authority to order that the act be
stopped, to suspend or r.Voke a
person's license to engage In the
business of insurance and to prohibit .
their employment by any· insurance
company or agency in the state.
The superintendent may also
request the attorney general to seek
an injunction to prohibit such acts.
Courts could impose civil penalities of
up to $1,000 for a single offense and up
to $10,000 within a six-month period.
MQsier said the department's rule
has been in effect since Oct. I, 1974.
"To my knowledge, we've had no
violations," he said. ''The rule is
being complied with pretty much
across the board.:'
But MoSler satd t~ de~rtm~nt
supported Branstool s leglslahon
because the new law's fines are much
tougher than the departmental
regulation could allow .

Today's

Sports World
By Will Grimsley AP Correspondent
He i.s, quite frankly , a legend, pure
and simple.
In the teeming playgrounds of New
YorkCity, where basketball is treated
as something of a religion, Connie
Hawkins remains the high priest of
the sport.
They still talk about him in hushed
tones and wooder just how good he
might have been. In the summer
leagues in Harlem where players
outdo one another with acrobatic dunk
shots and moves tbat border on
magic, they still remember the Hawk
and bow basketball squandered his
talent.
Coonie Hawkins was 'l/ years old
when he got to the National Basketball
Aasoclatioo in 1969 - a rather
advanced age for a rookie. A decade
pssaed from the time he was the best
high school basketball player in New
York until he was allowed in the NBA.
The years in between were spent in a
limbo created by the ·rulers of the
game who decided that Connie
Hawkins shouldn ~ be allowed to play
their sport .
Meet Hawkins today and you are
impresaed by what an articulate man
he is. But in 1960, he was a semiliterate teen-ager, caught in the web
of the college basketball fix ing
acandal, implicated by Innuendo and
psinl.!d with the broad brush that bpt
him out of the game he was so good at.
He had been plucked out of the
University of Iowa by the Manhattan
di.strict attorney , brought home to
answer questions about some men
who tlnltered with point spreads.

HEALTH
Lawrence E. Lamb ,M.D.

CHANGE!! Wl'l1l AGE
By Lawreace Lamb, M.D.
.DEAR DR. LAMB - I have high
blood pressure and hardening of the
arteries. I've bad cataracts removed
from both eyes.
I got new glasses just a few montha
ago and In that short time my vision
has worsened. I also have trouble
remembering names. For the past
year or two, I have become forgetful /
and somewhat confused.
Is there anything I can do to retard
the hardening of the arteries? Could
hardening of the arteries cause me to
lose my mind altogether and become
completely confused later on?
I'm Tl and know these conditions
are common with older folks.
DEAR READER - First, about
eyes. Vision depends on more than the
lens in the eye. Cataracts ~ olve the
developing of.an opacity in the lens of
the eye Itself. When the . opacity
becomes sufficient to obstruct light
rays entering the eyes, it can cause
blindness. When a cataract Is mature
or causing significant difficulty in
seeing, the lens can be removed as it
was in your case.
The problem is you can alsO have
changes in the retina at the back of
the eye. This is the screen where the
visual images are projected by the
lens . The retinal screen can be affected by circulation to the eye and
you 11 have to depend on your eye doc·
tor's evaluation of your status. If the
retina has too many changes in it,
then the improvement that you might
expect from cataract surgery doesn 'I
occur.
I am sending you The Health Letter
nwnber 13-6 on Cataracts. Other
readers who want this information
can send 75 cents in cbeck or coin with
a long, stamped, seU-addressed
envelope for it. Send your request to
me, in care of this newspaper, P.O.
Box 1551, Radio City Station, New
York, NY 10019.
.
Chaoges in the arteries can lead to
changes in brain celiB. The brain ceU
changes can alao occur without
significant changes in circulation. We
have a lot yet to learn about this area.

We don't have any really good "
answers for mo&amp; of these cases. In
!Orne ~ces, if you can identify a
circulation problem in the arteries of
the neck, surgery can be used to im·
prove circulation.
About the only thing I can offer In
that department is to have an evalua·
lion by a neurologist to make certain
that you don't have some Wtderlying
medical problem that can be corrected. If the problem really is the "
changes In brain celiB often seen with ~
age, limited things can be done. There
are medicines that help to relieve
BSIIOCiated amlety and depression.
It's important in such Instances to
remain active, have goals and try to
maintain your interest in life ..It also
helps to stay In the same surroundings If at all possible. FamiiiM objects and surroWldlnp seem to help
reinforce the functiOII.'I of the brain
and enable the per!IOil to avoid some
confusion.
Some ol these problems are not just
something that happens In old age . ~
Some may he from diseases that have
not been fully defined yet. You see
them occurring in people in their"early 50s and sometimes even before

:!::tu~U: :f~ ~

LOCAL HERO
AKRON, Ohio (AP ) - Thirteenyear-{)ld Craig Kitchen ha s become
something of a local hero since he is
the first Akron native to win the
annual All-American Soap Box Derby
since 1949.
Kitchen , ignor ing the rain and
winds that hampered racing
Saturday, rode his gravity powered
miniature car down the 9M-foot Derby
Downs slope in the four fastest times,
taking the honors in the senior
division, lor 13-to-IS..year-{)lds, in the
42nd running of the race.
Kitchen , whose top speed was 28.35
seconds, said, "It's about time Akron

•
roc p. la nnr,ng

I

i

major shakeup

• • ••
••

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD
All Timn EDT
NATIONAL LEAGVE
EAST

Pittsburgh
Montreal
Chicago
51. LOUll
Philadelphia
New York

Wtdntsd•V 'I Games

W. L.

Pet.

67 ., . 578

Gil

63

50 .558 2'h

60
60
47

se .soe

61 53 .535
55 .522

s

6 1h
8

Son Francisco ol Chlcaoo
Son Di~ at Pmsburgh
New York at Atlanta
LOS Angeles at St. Louis
Montreal at Houston

Philadelphia at Cincinnat i
AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAsT

W. L. Pet. GB
.oil6 18'12 Baltimore
76 39 .661
71 ... .617 5
Boston
Houston
6'1 50 .580
611 so .576 9 1h
Cincinnati
65 55 .542 41h Milwaukee
New York
62 · S3 .539 14
Sen FranciKo
56 62 .475 12 112 Cleveland
60 58 ..508 17 1h
SanDI~
53 16 .olol5 16
Detroit
60 58 .508 11'h
Los Angeles
52 65 ..... 16 .Toronto
37 81 .3U oiO'h
Atlanta
47 11 .308 21)12
WEST
M-IY 'IGamn
67 52 .563
California
Pittsburgh 9, Phliodelphla 1
Minnesota
62 54 .534 3'h
51. Louis 3, Chlcaoo 2
Kansas City
61 56 .5231 5
~ouaton 4, Montreal I
Texas
60 58 ..508 6 1h
Only games scheduled
Chicago
532
64 .453 13
TUtiOIY'SGtmH
ol9 70 .A12 18
San Francisco (Curtis 7-7) al Sea tile
35 8A .294 32
Oakland
Chicago &lt;Krukow9-7)
Monday 's Games
San Diego (D'Acquislo 8-9) at Pll·
Boston 6, Minnesota s
llbUrgh !Candelaria 10·8)
Chicago
7, Balli more o
New York (Ellis 2-S) at Atlanta
New York 3, Texas 2
&lt;Brizrolara 6-6)
Mllwauk"&lt; 5, Kansas Cllv A
Montreal (B. Lee 10·9) at Houston
Delroll5, California 3
(Andujar II-II
Toronto A, Oakland 2
LOI Angeles (HOOton 10·8) al 51.
Cleveland 6, Seattle o
Louis !Donny 6-9)
Tuesday's Games
Philadelphia !Carlton 11·9) al Cln ·
Minnesota (Redfern 6·1) at Boston
clnnall (Bonham 6·5)
(Eckersley 15-5 or Tudor 0-(Jl
Chicago (Wortham 12 -111 at
Baltimore !Slone 9·70
Texas (Medlch 5·6) al New York
(Tianl8·6
Kansas City (Leonard 8·8) at
Milwauk-. (CaldweillH I
Detroit (Robbins H) al California
IAase B-71
Toronto (Huffman 4· 13) at Oakland ·
2 yr. old ranch, 3
(Morga n 2-61
bedrooms, 2'fJ baths,
Cleveland (Wails 11 ·101 at Seallie
family room wllll wooct
(D.
Jones 3-10)
IIUrnlng llroploco, 2 cor
Wednesday's Games
flrlgl, central air conToronto at Oakland
dlllonint, tn IMII, big
Minnesota at Boston
lot In Syracuse, close ••
Chicago al Baltimore
school.
Texas at New York
Coil 992-2621
Kansas City at Milwaukee
For Appointment
DelrollaiCallfornla
Cleveland at Seallle

~

w~on . "

"

Berry's World

,~.1•••~

ly TIM Aaaocla!M Prna

WEST .

66

FOR SALE
BY aNNER

Be still and eat
your sunlight
From Japan comes word of another
research breakthrough involving
food.
It appears that it may be possible to
convert sunlight directly into electric
energy by using as a catalyst a component of a common garden vegetable
- spinach;
It may never prove commercially
practical, but it could prove
psychologically helpful to legions of
mothers.
They may now be able to promise
offspring that they'll get a real charge
out of eating their spinach.

provided the same kind of late lighting
for the Royals in the top o.f the inning.
Elsewhere In the American League,
Chicago defeated Baltimore 7..0;
Boston edged Minnesota 6-li; New
York defeated Texas 3-2; Detroit
trimmed California 5-3; Cleveland
blanked Seattle 6..Q and Toronto beat
Oakland 4-2.
White Sox 7, Oriol.s o
Lamar Johoson doubled to ignite a
four-run Chicago fourth inning and
singled home a run in the seventh as
the White Sox defeated Baltimore on a
five-bitter by Steve Trout.
Jim Palmer, Baltimore's three·
time Cy Young Award winner coming
offthedisabledlist,madeararerelief
appearance in the last two inn~s and

Yukon Territory was
~stablished in 1898, two years after
the Klondike gold discovery. The area
wa~ first explored in 1842. Gold in the
Klondike attracted enough people for
the territory to be set up, and seUgoverruilent came a few years later.

..........
.•,.-·
r.

SAN DIEGO (AP ) - Saying, he is
losing his money and his patience,
Ray Kroc , millionair.e owner of the
San Diego Padres, decllned to give
Manager Roger Craig a vote of
confidence Monday and promised a
major shakeup.
,
Kroc, who purchased the Padres
baseball club five years ago and
promised to build a contender, hedged
when asked whether Craig's job was
safe.

"I'd have to say no ·comment to
that, " he told The Associated Press in
a wlephone interview.
The ~year-{)ld owner said he
presently has no plans to seU the
National League club and is "willing
to spend $S miUion to $10 million" and
will "try signing Gralg Nettles and
Joe Morgan if they become free
agents this laD ."
He also . confirmed he plans to fire
most of his scouting staff at the end of
the year. " Whatever we've done is not
good enoll8h . I want to do better."
Kroc aired his unhappiness as the
Padres appear headed for their lOth
sub-.500 finish In the club 's 11-year
existence .
Lose'rs of 10 of their last 16 games,
the Padres are tied for fourth in the
National League Westem Division
with a 53-66 record, 151&gt; games out of
first.
Craig, who took over the cl~b a year
ago when Kroc fired Alvm Dark
during spring training, wa~ in
Pittsburgh and unavailable for
comment. Craig, 48, guided San Diego
to an 114-78 record last year - the
Padres' first-&lt;!ver season over .500.

--

-

II

--~~;--------------.J

..

Sat. 9 am 11112 noon

off."

This also was the story Morabito
said he told Yankees' owner George
Steinbrenner on Sunday when
SteinbreMer called him for !letails.
Steinbrenner said, "There is no place
in baseball or the Yankees
organization for this sort of thing ... if
true, I would be appalled. "

--

OUR HUGE

..,.,....,

IS STILL lh PROGRESS

GOODYEAR - ·ROAD KING

...
.,..

John FuHz, Mgr•

Next to

·'Ill!"'·

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Bu t, happily, in this competitive business, our Insurance Store
is not confined to one line of merchandise. We can selecl
from the policy offerings of a number of fine insurers, like
The Continental Insurance Companies, for example.
As a result, when we recommend a policy from the large
stock available to us, you can"be sure you are getting
insurance prole&lt;::tion thai sui ts your needs and is affordable .
Because we have freedom of choice, you have a better
chance to get exactly th e insurance you need.

The Insurance' Store.

.

MEIGS TIRE CENTER

...
...-

''Freedom of Choice!
Not all insurance agencies
have it!'
· It's true ... some insurance agencies represent only
one insurance company. So the best that company offers is
all they can offer you. And that may be okay.

TIR;E SALE
.

n:

AllAN BOSTER, DVM, ANNOUNCES
THE OPENING OF HIS NEW
VETERINARY CUNIC AT
438 UPPER RIVER ROAD, GALUPOUS

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!he

Martin denieS
b are IDCI
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SEE US FOR ALL YOUR RV NEEDS

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breaking RBI single in the eighth,
lifting Ron Guidry and New York over
Texas.
Tlgers5,AIIgell3
!Au Whitaker's threeof'un double
with two out in the sixth inning rallied
Detroit over California and Nolan
Ryan. Ryan, making his first ~ since he pulled a muscle in his right
elbow in New York on July 25, carried
a 2-C lead into the sixth.
Indians 6, Mariners 0 · .
Mike Hargrove and Bobby Bonds
belted home runs to back Rick Wise"'s
five-hit pitching as Cleveland beat
Seattle. Hargrove delivered a two-run ,
shot in the second, and Bonds added a
solo hm~er in the third off Seattle
starter Floyd Bannister, 6-12 .

·
CINCINNATI (AP)
Pete Rose
him out. In a 34-game stretch from the only Philadelphia Phillies reguW:
early July·until tast week, McNamara who hasn 't been injured this year is·
used 31 different batting orders.
amazed at his team's bad luck in
"They'rechanges notfor the sake of health department.
changes," "McNamara satd. "They're
"I think analyzilig our injury list
changes due to injuries. I'd rather teUs the story" said Rose wbo
play the same eight guys."
played 16 years 'with the Cin~innaU
George Foster, who has missed 40 Reds.
games, pinch hit SUnday, his first
The Phillies and Reds open a two·
appearance smce July 22 because of a game series here tonight . Bll~
pulled thigh muscle. Ken Griffey will Bonham 6-S pitches lor Cincinnati
have surgery Tuesday on his ailing against t'he Phillies' Steve Carlton
NEW YORK (AP) - New York left knee and is out for the season. 9.
'
Yankees Manager Billy Martin
There's more. JohMy Bench has
"We've had 15 guys on the disabled
Monday denied he was involved in the had pains in the back and the instep list and six.of them had broken bones.
Chicago incident in which a wm~an and must rest about once _every lour Injuries are just a part of the game,
allegedly dropped her pants, leaving games. Dave Concepcton lias bee? out but in the 17 years I've played, I've
her bare bottom to be autographed by Wlth a grom pull and thumb tn)ury. O&lt;lver been on a team with so many
some Yankees and reportedly Ray Knight, Joe Morgan and Tom broken bones" said Rose whose
photographed by Martin.
Seaver have been out for short spells. team is trying io catch the Piitsburgh
"I wasn 't even around" Martin was
"Some times Mac's had eight Pirates in the National League East.
quoted as saying in the New York positions to fill and only 10 healthy
The Reds, who will start George
Post. " The rest of it about me taking people," Bench sa1d.
Foswr in left field for the first time
photographs Is a stone lie. "
The healthy ~es, the unexpected since he carne off the injured list, trail
The incident surfaced Saturday ones, have carrted 1\le team. Like the Houston Astros in the National
night when Chicago Sun-Times Collins, who's tailed off recently but is League Western Division by 41&gt;
. columnist Mike Royko retated the hitting near .320. Junior Kennedy is games.
.
accoUnt of the mother of a ~year-ol!l hittin&amp; a ateady .:1811 oubbln&amp; lor refuaed to blame llle team'a
!an. ROO!emary Glynn was trying to Morgan and Concepcion . Rool&lt;le pitching problems as the Plllllles
get autographs for her son, but.was Harry Spilman hovers around .300 in trailed Pittsburgh by seven games
unable to get on the Yankees' bu s Aug. spot duty.
going into Monday night's gam_e.·
1 after the team 's game against the
"The players make the manager,"
"Most teams having the adversity
White Sox at Chicago.
McNamara said. "The moves are that we've had would be 15 or 18
Glynn was angry because an dictated by the players and the games out. Just look at what
unidentified blonde woman got on the situation.
happened to the Dodgers," who;&gt; won
bus and bared her bottom, which was
" Danny Murtaugh (the former the pennant last season.
signed by several Yankees . Royko's Pittsburgh manager ) taught me
"But we still have 44 games to go so
story reported that Martin followed never to ask more of a player than he there's a lot of time left. What people
the · blonde off the bus and could give me. That has been the case don't realize is Pittsburgh still has a
this year. I have confidence in the 17-game road trip left.
photographed her.
Martin said he and his 14-yeaNild people we have on the bench. I'm not "We're not in a bad position. 01\ly
son, Billy Joe, were in the press room afraid to use anyooe on this team any one or two games separate the fifth
at Comiskey Park talking with White day ."
and third11lace teams. So it doesn't
Sox owner BiD Veeck .
McNamara, rewarded with a new take that much to make·up ground,"
;,I came "down later and saw her cootract in mid-&lt;l!!ason, said the Reds said Rose.
outside the bus ," Martin reportedly are blessed with an intangible that . The Phillies will be without catcher
said. " So did my son. He was shocked. comes only with experience.
. Bob Boone, who broke a finger and
He said he couldn 't believe things like
" I've aald all along that character lS slugging third baseman Mike
this went on."
very important in this team. They Schmidt, who has a groin liljury.
Mickey Morabito, the team's public know how to win . They've all done it The Reds who were Idle Monday
relations director, said he and Martin before. We're g~ing to win it again this · night, trail~d the Astros by four
were the last members ·of the year," he predicted.
games before Monday night's game
Yankees' entourage to board the bus
between Houston and Montreal.
that night. Morabito said the woman
had gotten off the bus by then,
although she did drop her pants lor the
third night in a row in front of the bus.
Morabito was quoted by Royko as
confirming that the woman's bottom
was autographed by the players. But
Morabito said a researcher for Royko
had called him and misquoted . him.
"She botched up the quotes ,"
Morabito said, adding that he never
had seen the blonde come on the bus.
(Approximately 1 mile above Silver Bridge!
"I was told that our traveling
Hours:
Mon. thru F"r i. 10 am til12 noon; 5 pm tll7 pm
secretary (Bill Kane) threw her right

.

-

...

"THE RECESSION IS FALLING! THE RECESSION IS FALLING/"

gave up Chicago's last run on a homer
by Greg Pryor in the ninth.
Red Sox 6, Twins 5
Butch Hobson belted a home run off
relief.!!tar Mike Marshall with two out
in the eighth inning, lifting Bo&amp;on
over Minnesota. Hobson connected off
MarshaU alter Fred Lynn had capped
a four-run Boston seventh with a tworun homer off Minnesota starter Dave
Goliz to tie the score at 5-5.
The Twins had taken a ~ lead in.
the first inning before the Red Sox
battled back to tie the score. Jim Rice
had his 31st homer in the fourth before
the four..-un Boston seventh.
Yankees 3, Rangers 2
Oscar Gamble delivered a solo
home run in the third inning and a tie-

Dave Collins second• Consistently?
"This is the first time I've mana ged
in a situation like this,'' said
McNamara.
A look at recent box scores bears

· HURRYI
SALE ENDS AUG. 18, 1979

.;..

011Htb~NEA. II'I e ~~

Larry Biittner and a acrifice fly by
Mike Vail had tied it 2-2 In the CUbl .
seventh.
Brock's first sing~!! came after ·
Templeton had singled and sent the
fleetleadolf hitter to third. TempietQII
then scored on a groundet· by Keith
Hernandez.

~

~

The

2-2 pitch from t amp.
The hit struck Lamp on the right
hand, bounded back toward the th.Jrd .
base line, and Brock was on easily.
Lamp left the game with a severely
bruised hand.
It was Garry Teri)pleton's sacrifice
fly in the ninth, however, that gave the
Cards their victory. An RBI double by

Rose analyzes
MCNamara pr_aiSe
• d J.Or mOVeS Phils'
·
inJ'uries

·· ~,~j
:.: i
•••

:l:: .

BY ASSOCIA'I'ED PRESS
What can be more dramatic in a
bsseball game than a two-{)ut home
run in the top of the ninth?
one in the bottom of the ninth .
Both Kansas City and Milwaukee
provided those late theatrics Monday
night, with the Brewers getting the
last laugh on pinch-hitter Ben
Ogilvie's bomer.
"Oilce he (Kansas City pitcher Dan
~isenberry) got behind, I knew if I
got a good cut I'd have good chance
to hit it out," Oglivie said after giving
the Brewers a s-4 victory with his shot
over the right-field fence at
Milwaukee's County Stadium.
Coincidentally, Oglivie's dramatic
homer came not long after Amos Otis

a

.-•••

••

in the fourth, and Houston added two
more runs in the fifth on RBI hits by
Leonard and Jose C.'ruz.
Cards 3, Cubs 2
Brock singled in the first inning off
Cubs right-hander Dennis Lamp for
his 2,999th career hit, and his
milestone hit came in the fourth on a

Ninth inning homers give KC, Brewers
-come-from .behind dramatic victories

''I knew the people they were asking
about, " he said. "But that's aU . We
had talked basketball . I talked
basketball with a lot of people."
He was accused of being an
intennediary, of introducing players
to gamblers. "It was a lie," he said.
Hawkins was victimized because he
couldn't defend himself. He was not
exactly sophisticated in those days.
" Sophisticated?" he laughed. " Hell
no, I wasn't sophisticated . I was 17
and I was damned ~ared."
The investigators questioned him
CINCINNATI (AP)- Paul Blair, a
1&lt;:1' two weeks. His story was checked, gold glove center fielder, played
and rechecked and finaUy he was shortstop and third base for the
pennitted to return to Iowa. When he Yankees last year when New York
got there , Iowa wasn't interested was hit hard ·by tnjunes dunng the
anymore. He had been implicated. pennant stretch.
The fact that he was cleared meant
He knows what it' s like to see a
nothing. Iowa couldn't take a chance, team beset with injuries. But Blair,
and neither could anybody else.
who . no~ plays sparingly for
"I went home to Brooklyn, but I Cl!lcl/lnali, says he marvels at the
couldn't get into a game," he said. different combinatioos used this year
" Even in the schoolyards, guys were by Reds' Manager John McNamara.
afraid to be seen with me, afraid
"He's
moved
players
they'd be linked to the scandal magnificently, " said Blair of
McNamara.
through me ."
The Irony of it was that Connie
. "A lot ~f teams have that , m~y
Hawkins was clean. He had been different ltneups.. but they _don t wtn.
cleared of any involvement. But the. Thts team wms, Blatr satd .
implication was there and it was
Wtth 42 games left, the Reds are
enough to freeze him out of the game. four games behind Houston, 10 games
For four years, Hawkins played above .500. It has been a consist~nt
with the the Harlem Globetrotters, season - the team hasn 't lost hve
barnstorming with them, playing on games in a row.
the fringes of organized basketball.
It 's happened lately with a lineup
Then came the American Basketball McNamara would have cringed at in
League and the Pittsburgh Rens, a April . Hector Cruz batting third •
pretty long jump shot away from the
NBA. which had barred him for life.K
.

ing to be as sharp as a razor with all of
their mental facilities intact.

Ri~hard, 12-11, retired 19 straight
Monireal batters.
Jeff Leonard scored three runs and
di'ove in a fourth with two singles and .
a double for Houston, which now leads
C.'incinnati by 4 ~ games in the NL
West.
Terry Puhl singled hm~e one run
and Art Howe's double "cored nnothrr

99i2101
In

REUTER-BROGAN .
INSURANCE
SER'IICE\
.
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214E.MAIN ST. ,

POMIROY,O.

m:suo or·m-s•u

"YOU DON'T IUY A POLICY,
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J._;;;;;;;;............

..1

�-

5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Aug . 14, 1979

r-- -Social Calendar

By Jayne Lee HoefUeh .
Lucille Leifheit, congenial fair
· board member, Is certainly doing her
share to make the fair a success!
She's been bustling about, supervising the setting up of exhibits, and is
doing an excellent job organizinl! the
process. Lucille has taken a part of
her vacation from the Meigs County
Welfare Department to fUl her duties
atthe fair .
Several attractive and unusual
displays were being set up Monday by
4-H members, and an especially cute
one was done by the Eastern Meigs 4H Club. The display carried out a
theme using the characters of Charles
Schultz's "Peanuts," and is a real addltlon to the junior fair building.
Junior Fair queen Cindy Pitzer was
informally dressed yesterday as she
prepared materials for the 4-H
displays, but will be dressed in her
finery later to make personal appearances throughout fail- week.

of Brazil, Ind. receiv.l:,d an invitation for the church 's'68-voice choir with
its Mighty Soilnds ofJoy to sing at the Fellowship which is expected to be
attended by over 1500 men. Mark Deakins, associate minister of the
church, is the agape choir director. Mrs. Barnes, a gr~duate of Meigs
High School, is pictured second row, left.

MIGHTY SOUNDS OF JOY - Vicki Manley Barnes, daughter of
Faye and Clifford Manley, Middleport, and wife of Morton Barnes, son of
Mrs. Dorothy Woodard, Langsville, sings with the Mighty Sounds of Joy
which will be perfonning at the Indiana State Christian Men 's Fellowship
to take place in the Indianapolis area, Oct. I. The First Christian Church

• Sulky drivers are busy with the
final preparationa for harness racing
to be held lit 4:30 tomorrow, Thur·
sday, and Friday. Almost any ,time,
you can see a racehorse trotting
around the track worlting out for the
races. Announcers for the races will
beN. Keith Bradley, Bowling Green,
on Wednesday and Thursday; Friday
will see Richard Fissell of Marengo,
Ohio calling the races. The judge will
be Francis Nee! of Colwnbus, and the
starting gate will be handled by Ralph
Godwin of Celina, Ohio. The photo
finish service will be provided by C.
R. Baker of Richwood, Ohio. We 're
lO!Jking for some e:lhllarating races
this year, with plenty of starters plus
some good local talent in horses and
drivers.

The fair already has several
visitors from afar, like Dana Bradford of Salinas, California; and Kim
Ketchka of Indianapolis, Indiana ,
both being granddaughters to fair of.
ficials Mr. and Mrs. Wally Bradford.
Closer to home, former Meigs Sheriff
Bob Hartenbach, now workirlg with
the Gallia County Sheriff's Depart·
ment, is taking some vacation time to
Were you at the grounds last night
be at the Meigs County Fair during
for the fair openihg? Thought sure it
the week.
was you standing beside the ferris
The circus hasn't come to town, but 'wheel! No ? Well, in that case,l'll see
it looks that way on the fairgrounds . you later in the week . You will be at
Ten colorful tents have been set up in the fair- won1 you ?
various areas, with four being com-

TOPS trophy presented
The red and blue contest concluded
with the reds achieving a loss of 19
pounds, and the blues, a loss of 10. It
was announced that the Area
Recognition Day will be held in
November at the Holiday IM in
GallJpolls. Marcia Holcomb was
welCOOled into the membership. Mrs.
Betty Clark, area captain, spoke on
activities of other areas and noted
that the anew club is organizing in
Gallipolis.
~
Teresa Wood, leader, presided at
the meeting with refreslunents beinl!
diet ice tea and cheese and crackers.
Tuesday's meeting was cancelled due
to the Meigs Cd'unty Fair.

Flowers, a diploma and a trophy
were presesented to Mrs. Mildred
Riley at the Tuesday night meeting of
TOPS (Take Off Pounds Sensibly) OH
tinger, ·Elijah" Craig, Joe Custer, 570, at the Meigs County Fairgrounds.
The recognition came to Mrs. Riley
Amos Sorrell, Violet Hartinger, Mr.
has reached her weight goal. A
who
and Mrs. Charles Searles , Mr. and
Mrs. Carl Searls, Faye Reibel, and circle of light was made by the KOPS
Richard, Stephanie and Jennifer (Keep Off Pounds Sensibly ) during
the ceremony.
Bolin.
Other callers were Mrs : Harold
Mcintyre, Melody and Mona, Dunbar,
W. Va . The couple received several
calls. of congratulations during the

Golden anniversary celebrated here
mother, Mrs. Lizzie Hartinger, moved into the home in 1869 when she was
nine years old.
Hosting the celebration were Mr.
·and Mrs. Searls' dsughters. Mrs.
Jean Craig and Miss Carolyn Searls,
and their grandchildren, Jennifer
Craig, Steven Craig, Cindy Craig, and
Pat Custer.
Others attending were L. D. Har-

The golden wedding anniversary of
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Searls was
celebrated Sund~y with a dinner party at their Middleport home.
Mr. and Mrs. Searls were married
on Aug. 10, 1929 by the Rev. Fred I.
Gardner in the home where they now
live. Mrs. Searls (Martha ) was born
in that home as was her father,
Lawrence Hartinger. Her grand-

Wolf Pen

day.

/&lt;

News Notes

Happy Harvesters hold Memorial services for
Mrs. Ruby Erb, a deceased class member
A memorial serv ice for Mrs. Ruby
''
Erb, a deceased member, was held at
the Friday meeting of the Happy
Harvesters Class of Trinity Church,
Pomeroy .
Mrs . Phi lip Meinhart read
"Although the Curtain Falls", and
.Mrs. Lwl'c/h·c ,md I'II/I Mrs. Joseph Cook presented "Ever
Close in Mind and Heart." Members
bowed in silent prayer as a conclusion
to the mm norial service.
SYRACUSE-Mr. ami 'vfrs James
During the meeting conducted by
R. Lawrence, Syr::tru.se, cJ re a n nounc~ Miss Erma Smith, the birthdays of
ing the birth of their second child, a Mrs. Lillie Houck and Mrs. Edith

Announce birt/1

seven pound , one oLmc ·p ~on , Jason

Alexander. He was bo•·q 011 ~ug . :1 at
the Holzer Medl&lt;'cl Cel' cr and was~~
mches long. Mr ·md ~"' t.;, w1 ·me
luwe a da ughter, Jennifl'r Hocllt'llc..
21 months old.
Kathy Stewart achieved her KIPS
Maternal grandparents are Mr. and
tKOPS In Waiting ) goa l and also
Mrs. Jolm Crooks , Columbus. Paterbt•tame monthly queen for the fourth
nal grandparents "rc Mr. and Mrs. dlVIsion receiving a rash award at the
Clarence Lawrence, Portland. Ray
Rutland TOPS Oh 1456 Tuesday night.
Ward of East Liverpool is the paterAs wi1mer of her division , Ms .
nal great-grandfa ther. and Frances
St••w·n1
was presented $3 as was CinH c~wth ornt .)~
'. rtl· i :o.: a grE:&gt;at,:, f, . 'l"r. monthly queen in the
g-reat ·)..:rnldJ, tl. ·r·.
1' 1 1 1.\ iswn. Ms . Krauttcr displayed
11
lirief case purchased for the
w•·Jgrt recorder and commented on
rules for the monthly queen selection.
Shn was also the recipient of the picnic basket. award in an earlier contest.
Jo Ann Eads was named fhe new co-

Lanning were noted. Get-well cards
were sent to Mrs. Marie Houck, John
Terrell, and Eyerett Dailey. It was
noted at that the Sept. 7meeting, Mrs.
Cook will be the devotional leader.
Miss Smith presented devotions using scripture from Romans 2, verses 1
through 11, and then gave her thought
from the month from II Timothy 2,
verse 3. The meditation was on endurance. Miss SmiU1 said that the
power to endure is one greatly needed
and often lacked. She said that people
frequently speak of "enduring the

Mrs. Joseph Johl1son and dsughters
and a friend , Miss Howard, of ·
Satellite Beach, Fla. , were recent
visitors llf Mrs. Helen Johnson and
other relatives.
Iva Johl1son, Mr. and Mrs. John E.
Murphy
and Chris of Racine were
heat of summer and .the cold of
Sunday visitors of Mrs. J . R. Murphy
winter", but that enduring has a
deeper meaning than small inconve- and dsughters.
Mr. and Mrs . William Russell of
niences. She said that endurance is a
Minersville
were Sunday visitors of
quality that the Christian needs when
Bertha
Russell
and Earl Russell.
he is faced with pain and sorrow and
Mr
.
and
Mrs.
Robert Reeves, Bryan
that everyone needs to endure
and
children
of Chester, were
through the grace of God . A prayer
Tuesday evening visitors of Mrs.
concluded the meditation.
Door prizes were won by Mrs. Neva Dorothy Reeves.
Seyfried, Miss Smith, Mrs. Houck.
Mrs. Stella Kloes and Mrs. Meinhart
served chicken salad, salad, bread
slicks, mints and coffee. Mrs. Freda
Duffy was a contributing hostess .

K. Stewart achieves KIPS goal

Homecoming plans- made
Plans have been completed for the
annual homecoming of the Asbury
United Methodit Church on Sunday .
The Rev . John (Dick) Sauvage,
forme rly of Syracuse, will be speaker
at the wm·ship service at II a. m. Sunrlay school will be at 9:50a.m. and a
basket lunch will be held at !2:30p.m.
An afternoon program will beature
the Parables, a singing group from
Elkins, W. Va . The public is invited.

SCOTT LEE Autbenon, son of
Amanda Autbenon, observed hls
lint blrtbday Sunday. Cake and
Ice cream were served to Roy BDd
Mlsly Zimmerman, Pomeroy,
Becky and Dewey Autbersoo, Blll
Hawk, his grandmother, Laurs
Autherson, and Roy Buchanan~
Pomeroy.

weight recorder. Georgene Grate was
queen of the week in weight loss with
Kathy Stewart as t11e runner-up. She
was presented a dollar and members
sang in h~r honor.
Net loss of weight for the meeting
was 19 pounds with 12 showing a
weight loss, and si~ a weight gain.
Members were r ive n ca lorie

Mr. and Mrs. Kenny Roush, Route
4, Pomeroy, are announcing the birth
of a son, Jason Albert. The baby was
born on Thursday, Aug. 9, at the
Holzer Medical Center. He weighed
seven pounds, 10 ounces and was 21 ·
inches long.
Paternal grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Albert Roush, Route 4,
Pomeroy . Maternal g reatgrandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Coleman, Pinsonfork, Ky. , and the
maternal great uncle and aunt are
Mr. and Mrs. Paul (Alice ) Tackett,
Pinsonfork, Ky.

SHOP

MASON FURNITURE
FOR THE BEST DEALS IN THE
TRISTATE AREA

MASON FURNITURE
Mon., Tues., Wed., Friday &amp; Sat .
8:30toS :OOThursday till12 Noon

'

INFANT SON RETURN HOME
Charles Albert Tyree, six month old
son llf Mr. and Mrs. Lannie Tyree,
was returned home from the Holzer
Medical Center Sal!lrda~ after
several days' hospitalization.

~ OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENi ONLY
773· 5592

JOI!S INCREASE
WASHINGTON ( AI') -- The
number of people employed by
insuranc~ companies in the United
States has nearly tripled since 1945,
according to the American Council of
Life Insurance.
It says that in 1945 the insu rance
business em pl oyed so me 600,000
persons in all of its branches. Today,
the business employs some 1.7 million
persons.

Mason , W.Va.

'~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
' ----~~;;;;;;o;;;;;;;o;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;....-;;;;;;;t&amp; '·'

~IDAY

WE ~TERN

. Debbie Graham

Miss Graham becomes ·engaged
Garland Graham and Mrs. Eloise
Wollard &amp;Mounce the engagement of
their daughter, Debbie Graham, to
Terrance Allen Smith, son Df Mr. and
Mrs. Grant Smith, Reedsville:
The Of&gt;l'n church weddinR will be an

event of Aug . 18 at 2 p.m. at the Reedsville Church Df Christ, Reedsville.
The receptloo will be held immediately following the ce11ffiony at
the Belleville Locks and Dam park.

POLLY·s POINTERS
Polly Cramer
.
and put ll1 a bucket with hot detergent ·
suds. Soak about 15 to 20 minutes and
By Polly Cramer
then scrub with a nylon pad or brass
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - I would like to brutled brush. NEVER use steel
have some information on cleaning wool.
The inside of the body can be cleanoutdoor gBll grills, both inside and out.
Also, how about the racks ? - MRS. ed wtth oven cleaner but never put
any part in a self·deaning oven. The
D.C.M.
DEAR MRS. D.C.M. - For average exterior, can be washed with
cleaning after use, tum the grill on detergent and then rinsed. If the outhigh to bum off the grease, then side becomes quite worn looking it"
remove the loose grease with a win&gt; can be cleaned with stove polish or
brush. The "burning off " should take painted with a paint Utat will withstand a high temperature. Remember,
aboutiO minutes.
For a more thorough cleaning that one can stnve to have the grill too
may not be necessary more than once clean and lose the "seasoning " like
or twice a season, remove racks. etc. that of a cast-iron skWet. - POLLY
OUTDOORGRllLSP~

MEIGS COUNTY

50~
or bring shopping bag

MEIGS
HUMANE SOCIID
THRIFT SHOP
Middleport

."·ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW
ANNOUNCE THE RELOCATION

OF THEIR LAW OFFICES TO:

.

~·,..,

·~:;..;

./

1 ;

SQUARE DANCE,
Royal Oak Park recreation building
Friday, 8 to II p.m. Bill Bush of Hun:
tlngton, caller.
.
SUNDAY
ASBURY UNITED METiiODIST Major oil companies announce restrictions
CHURCH, HOIIIeCGIIIing, Sunday.
John ~' lint, a Mobil spokesman, said
Sunday lchool at 9:50 a.m. ; worship
BALTIMORE (AP ) - Pointing to
!ei'Yice at 11 a.m.; baUet dinner at increasing processing costs and the previous contract, under which
12:30 p.m. Afternoon program to interest rates, three major oil the parent company absorbed the full
feature the ParableJI, Elkins, W. Va. companies
ha ve
announced costs and discounted sale prices
PubUc Invited.
restrictions on credit cards for retail associated with handling the cards,
e&gt;&lt;pired July 31.
REUNION, Deacendanta of Willlam purchases.
He said the company decided
R. and Sadie E . Bailey, Twin City
Mobil Oil Corp. said Friday it will no
Shrine Pull, SwJday with bactet din- longer accepf Master Charge or Visa against renewin g the contra ct
ner at nooo. RelativeJI and friends in- credit cards, leaving it to Individual because of the costs and because
vited. Take own table 8llrv!ce.
Mobil dealers to make their own many dealers complained of having to
ALL CONTEST CLASSES HORSE arran ge ments with car\1-iss uing check lon g li sts of delinquent
SHOW, Vinton County Junior banks if they want to continue cardholders before going ahead with a
· sale.
Fairgrounds, McArthur, Sunday, I allowing sales on the cards.
Texaco Inc. told the Balti.nore Sun·
Mobil officials said the restrictions
p.m. There will be •100 payback
that
on July IS i~ began assessing a 3
classes and calcuttas. For further in- become effective Sept. 30.
fprmatlon call Scott Fee,~

DEAR POLLY -Our child js afraid
of thunder so we turn a fan on in his
room during a stonn to help drown
out the noise. Wben the feet in a
c\!ild's sleepers become worn, cover
the bottoms of the feet with iron-on
patches. -RITA
DEAR POLLY -I just had to write
and tell you how well the boiled
linseed oil worked on . laminated
plastic. My Denlllh walnut table was
severely marked with smudges and
everything I had used seemed to
make them WOI'!e. Thanb to your
Pointer It almost looks like new
again.- MRS.C.M.
DEAR POLLY - I al-ya ma1oe a
point of having a raw potato in the
house to use for minor bums. Scoop
out a hole and stick your finger in the
potato. The burning stops and the
healing starts. U needed for a larger
area I use a potato peeler to make a.
little pile of raw potato and use it as a
poultice. Burning &amp;e1188tion stops
inunedlately. -PHYUJS
Polly will send you one of her signed
thank-you newspaper coupon clippers
if she uses your favorite Pointer,
Peeve or Problem in her colwnn.
Write POLLY'S POINTERS in care rl
this newspaper.

lARS
IAIHSD
rog. rot .
12.50

ao

Wednesday, August 15
9:15 a.m.-Junior Fair Bee£ Showmanship and Judging
10: 00 a .m. - Draft Horse Show-Tractor Pull Area
10:00 a .m .- Horse Confonnation
.
.
12:00 noon-4-H Flower Show Judging (Jr. Fatr
Building )
.
1:00 p.m.-Open Class Beef Judgmg .
4-HRabbits and Poultry Judg1~g ­
Senior Division-Rabbits Judgmg
2:00p.m.-FlowerShow Judging
.
4:30p.m.-Twilight Horse Harness Racmg
6:30pm. -Litle Miss and Mister
Contest-Show Ring
6:30p.m.- Horse Show -Centerfield~n Class
8:00p.m .-Youth Night- A Family Afiat.r

KNIGHT LAW OFFICES

992-2151

THURSDAY, AUGUST 16TH

CAMDEN PARK
OPEN UNTIL 5 P.M. ONLY

EVENING RESERVED
FOR

SECOND NATIONAL BANK
ASHLAND

ANNUAL PIQIIC

SUPII SidMJM nmD

reg. rot.

12.811

MEAD

JJO

ROLUNG
WRITER
blue rag. rat. 98'

52°
ILUNT 4-IHOIIS Reg. Ret . 69'

.. . . . . ; JAS.
SCIS

29°
MIAD -.cT. Reg. Ret. 11 .59

MEADhS Reg. Ratai149'

FILLER

PAPER

680 ~II !50•
IUUDer U1111l1D

lB.! Alia Rag. R1t, 29' .

WAIST SIZES 29 to 42.
THESE WRANGLERS ARE 12 OZ. D.ENIM. NOT 9 OR 10 OZ.
AS FOUND IN SOME STORES.
WE ASK YOU TO LIMIT YOUR PURCHASE TO THREE PAIR.
SALE ENDS SATURDAY

ear aus

•• MEN'S WEAR.__. • •

DEODORAI1
3%-0l. lEG. In. $2.29

BOOK
~

ONE '8.95 SHORT SLEEVE KNIT SPORT SHIRT Willi EACH PAIR OF
(12 OZ. DENIM WRANGLER) JEANS. BOOT RARE, STRAIGHT LEG.

OLD SPICE
STICK ·

RELIANCE

Walter 0 . Robinlm to Village oi
Rutland, lot, Rutland.
James Crisp, Sr., dec., to Nellie R.
Crisp, Cert. of Trans., Salem.
Annlnta G. Taylor to Kenneth H.
Hager, Arlie Opal Hager, lot in oil,
gas, Orange.
.
Randall L. KeaUey, Victoria S.
Keatley to Ronald R. Richards,
Kathryn V. Richards, 2 acres,
Chester.

FREE

percent processing fee on credit-card ·
sales of diesel fuel by Tel&lt;ilco
retailers.

$137

Meigs.
Property
Transfers

SALE STARTS
THURSDAY, AUG. 16

ANNUALHOMECOMrnNG
ON SUNDAY
The Zion Church of Christ will hold
its annual homecoming on Sunday,
Aug. 19. The Watchmen team of
Chesapeake will deliver the messages
and provide special music.
Sunday School is at 9:30a.m., morning worship at 10 :30 a.m. with a
basket dinner at noon. There will be
afternoon services at 2 p.m. and
evening services at 7:30" p.m. The
public is invited to attend.

.CREAM
$177

5-SUIJICT 2110-0'•• X 11

(Across from the Post Office)

POMEROY, OHIO

The Youngs, Brad and Jan presented Miss Heilman
wit h a red carnation corsage and many residents
called throughout the day. Miss Heilman has two
sisters, Felicia Grueser and Florence Heilman and two
brothers, Albert and Walter Heilman, all local.

MISS ADDIE HEILMAN, left, celebrated her 90th
birthday Friday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Victor
Young, Jr., E. Main, Pomeroy. Helping Addie
celebrate her birthday was George Hobstetter, right,
who presented her a cake to help mark the occasion.

AUGUST 14-15-16-17-18

211 E. SECOND ST.

Closed Every Monday Except Labor Day

HermanGra ~

1

All you can carry in
grocery bag for

BARBARA M. KNIGHT

coWlt ers.

August baby born

SUMMER CLEARANCE

CHARLES H. KNIGHT

A'M'END ANNUAL PICNIC
Mrs. Glayds Cumings, Mrs. Fay
Wildermuth,
Mrs. Genevieve
Meinhart, Miss Erma Smith, Mrs.
Golda Roush, Mrs. Helen Kennedy,
and Mrs. Edith Sauer attended the annual picnic of Gallia CJJunly Salon 612,
Eight and Forty, held Sunday evening
at the home of MrB. Inez Marchi,
Gallipolis.

TIJESDAY
SPECIAL MEETING, Southern
Loeal School District Board ol
Education, 7:30p.m. Tuesday in high
school cafeteria.
FREE BLOOD PRESSURE clinic
· Tuesday from 10 a .m. to I p.m. at
Harrisonville Town Hall. Everyone
welcome.
REGULAR MEETING of Meigs
(llapter 53, DAV, Tueaday evening,
cancelled In lieu rl a 6 p.m. picnic at
Forest Acres Part near Rutland.
Those attending are to take a covered
dish.
WEDNESDAY
PAST PRESIDENT PARLEY,
American Legion Auxlliary, potluck
dinner Wednesday at 6:30 p.m. In
River Boat room at Athens County
Savings and Loan, Pomeroy. Meat
will be provided.
PAST PRE;SIDENTS, Drew
Webster Poet 39, American Legion
Auillary, Riverboat Rocm, Pomeroy
Office of the Athena County Savings
and Loan Co., beginning with potluck
at6 :30 p.m.

mercial, one, senior citizens'; one,
sheriff's department; one, emergen·
cy squad; one, draft horse; and two
for ticket sellers.

Tonight, they'll smaah 'em up,
crash 'em up, at the demolition derby
which starts at 7 p.m. Don't be misled
by the posters -they have a misprint
reading 8 p.m. instead of the correct
7. And it's advisable to get there early
if you plan to attend, because the
grandstand fills up in no time. Wednesday evening, youth night will go in
full swing as the gr~d attraction.

I

CAP

ERASER

i~Jo

WELCH'S GIAI'E

JAM ,or
- JELLY
rag. rat. S1.99

3-~'149
I.IM Reg . Ret . $2.95

PAPER MATE
NWER
POUlT

$166
lOSS 1.5-01. Reg . Ret. 19' .

a.oz.

BARREL
·O.PASTE

66°

35°

PIIK

�I
6-,,., Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Aug. 14, 1979

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Tuesday, Aug. 14,1979

DICKTRACY

Your Best Buys Are Found in the Sentinel Classifieds
1~

Word&lt;; or l lnder
r.a ~ h

I d~y
2 dA)'5

1.2:5

I 81"1

1.00
2.2!i

lida)'s

:\.00

3.75

F.ach word over the minnuuru

LICENSED BOILER
OPERATION WITH

lht&gt; 1 dily filii' .
In tnf'mnry, ('nrd of Thank.'&gt;
and 0lllluHry · lil'('llL~ f&gt;'r '"C1rd .

STATE OF OHIO

Ciish in ml-

· LICENSE.

Mob1le Home sa les ""'f Yard
SHies are accepted only ~ilh
Cmt• ufll!P Stlllint~l

Apply to Personnel Of·
fice , Holz er Medical
Center, 446 -S105.

r,.ui.Ji i ~ht.•r

rest&gt;rves !he
light to edit or rcjert &lt;tn)' ad.s
dt'l'llled objel'tiunal.
The

1

OlD COINS, pocket watches.
class rings , wadding bands,
diamond s. Gold or silver. Call

J. A. Wamsley, 742-2331 ,

WANTED: SAW logs. Paymen t
upon dali\lery to our ya rd. 7:30

OH. 678-2980.
ANTIQUES. FURNITURE. glass, ·

china , anything. See or ca ll
Ruth Gosney, antiques. 26 N.
2nd. .
Middleport.
O H.

992·31 61 .

P'Ublishcr will not bcresPQnsible
111'11.' lncorrt•t:l in·

for mort' than

Pets for Sale

&lt;;t•r1i tm .

Ptlmw !!92-21~

Yard Sale

NOTICE
WANT-AD
IAPVERTISING
DEADLINES

BACK TO sc hool yor.d sole .
104 VtS . 2nd. Middleport.
A ugust. 1, '1 , 3.

TEN FAMilY

Yord

Sale.

Minersville Hill . Follow signs.
Everything from baby's to
adult' s. Antiques , furniture .
August S. 9, 10.

Monilay
N1MJU un Saturdny
Tu e~da r

thnl ~' ri th1y
&lt;P.M.
lh1• day beforl'publkatioil

Sumtuv

1

4 P.M:

I!

F r iday llflmu&gt;on

~

YARD SALE . August 15-16.
Wednesday and Thursday,
9-4 . Nice cl othing , toys, fu r·
niture, baby clo thes , dishes,
appliances .
etc .
J.
Lisle
residence in Syracuse. Rain or
shi ne.
. YARD SAlE . At Helen Slack's'

d;ng. Call367·0292 .

GOING OUT of business. All
poodle s,
pomeronion ,
peklnese, block pam puppy
great coot line. Phone 696-111
after 5prll.

tpoodles ,
pomeronion .
pekinese. block porn puppy ,
great
coot line . Phone
696-1111 after 5pm.
AKC
DOBERMAN Pins.cher
pups. Litter registered . Championship bloodlines. Show
quality. Wormed . Ears crop-

AKC YOPJ(SHIRE terrier pu~
pies. 992-3629.

. the vent at the yard sole for $2
ploose return it as there was o
mis ta ke on the price . 991-7A7A
or 992-'1977 .
-----~-

ME IGS COUNTY
SOCIETY .

HUMANE
Pets

991-6 760.

ovoilo ble for odoptio, and in·

-- ___

forma t ion service.
.....___

___

·~

Lost and Found
FOU ND: ll llLE ye ll ow kitten

oh Con dor St. 991-3760.

~

FOU ND : ELKHOUND
typ e
mole dog . 992-2B67 oher 5 .

new 1\sh o-G r oph Leller which

lOST: MALE beagle. opprox . 1
yea r old. Collar and tog.
8/(Jck , white and ton . Very
friendl y. Disappea red Soturdoy. 985-4273.
'

489 . Aad ro Crty Station. N Y
10019 Be su re to speci fy bi rlfl

~ ----------~

WA NTED: WAITRESS

over

? 1.

Night shill . No eYpereim:e
t'! acessp ry . Friendl y Tave rn ,
Middi_!Por1 , OH~-----

1.

AKC REGISTER ED boxer pup- '
py . $12~ . 6 weeks old.

Bernice Bede Osol

August 15, 1979
ltu s com1 ng year Will be a fun
one lor you hecau se 0 1 the many
ne.w . l11ends - you 'll be rnakmg .
One m particular wrll help ge1 au
mvolved 111 lresh rn terests.
LEO (July 23- Aug . 22) Some
mformation that you will find
qw te help tlJI may be passed on
to you today 1n a soc1al encounter w1th a trrend Do more lis ten·
mg than talkmg How to ge1
along w1th other srgns rs one of
the sect1ons you 'll ~nJOY rn your
begm !'. Wllh your brrlhda.y Mall
5 1 lu1 eifctl 10 As lro-Graph . Bo:.

date

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22} An
1rnpor tant goat can be achieved
todc.y d you 1ake things a step at
a trm . Be sure ot your fooling
befo1e making eac h move
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Knowledge gainod from a past e.:peri·
ollC:e ca n be put 1o good use

TWO PUPPIES. male. 5 weeks
old. paper trained , to good

Auto Sales
1974 VEGA HATCHBACK . cull
303·675·1501 ·or 305·675-2488
or 304·675· 1553.
1976

OLDSMOBILE

Cutlass.

742·2692.

ASTRO·GRAPH

'Birthday

desciptions . Humane SoCiet~ .

GOING OUT of business. All

POODLE GROOMING. Judy

Methodist Chu rch.
1\u gust 19 , 1979. Sunday
S c ~oo l · 9:50. Worship Service
11 :00. Bask et lunch !2 :30pm.
Pro gram . 1:45 prn. Gues t
minis ter Rev. John Sauva ge,
Special music in after noon by
the Pa rables . The pub lic is invi ted to a tt end.

W

MEIGS CO. Humane Scciety.
992-6260. Pets available lor
adoption and Information service .

Toy lor. 61-4-367-7220.

992-2726.

=::_:_-,--.,.-

yellow and white, 1 turtol;e.
Short hol r and long hair all ·
beautifu l. Humane Society

$2100. 992.5057.
1970 VW BUG , dependable.

VVednesday,Augusl15

WOULD THE party that bought

KITTENS. ONE black. 2 tiger I

home. 9.C9-2275.

RISING STAR Kennel. Boor-

today when you 'll be confront ed
by a similar sit uation. Benefit
!rom what you've learned
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Ncv. 221
Because you 're not tiketv to be
decei\led by outward appearanc es toda y, you wUI handle vou rsetl
admirably in sticky situAtions
Follow your Instincts

SAGfTTAAIUI (Nov. 23-Doc. 2t)
Although you usually prefer tunc·
tionlng tndf3pendently, you will
lind that you 'll !are beller today
with pa rtn ers rather than doing
thing s solo.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jin. t8)

Be reasoneble about the size of
the reward you expect lor your
ellorts today. What you do will
be acknowledged in small ways.
,AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
You'll be a soci al asset today
because you'll know how t o put
other s a\ ease and get them to
ta lk about themselves. They 'll
love you tor it.
PISCES (Feb. 2()-Mar&lt;:h 20)
Your thoughllutness toward
loved ones will be deeply appreciated today. The litUe things
· you 'll do for th em will show you
realty care. and that you have
their best interests at heart
ARIES (March 21 -April 19)
'l'ou·re very good today at work ing wi1 h 1hings requi ring a ere-

Chester
News Notes

992·7721.

I NEED to find homeS for
several' cats and .C k ittens.
Freddie Houda• helt, 398
Grant St., Middleport. Phone
992-2520 offer 6.

Barding &amp; Riding Leuons and
Horse Core produch .

ped. Shots. 304·675·11163.

~ '"Your

FREE PUPPIES. 11 Irish Setter.'
Four ore long haired. Will be SENIOR CITIZENS. I bedroom
for
rnet . Rental
Iorge
dogs .
Sh ade opt s .
assistance
O\IOiloble .
6I4-696· I234.

'

REMODELING
Gutter work, down
spouts, some concrete
work,
walks
and
drivewayS:.

Mobile Homes Sale's

!FREE ESTIMATE)

1974 14 • 70 mobile home.
.Good condition . 992-5658.

V. C. YOUNG Ill

197-4 Mark line. 50x1 ~ . 2 bedr.

:. l.C in excellent conditi.on.
Con be seen at Kingsbury
Homes or call Joe Young at
Pomeroy National Bonk ,

992-2133. Pricod at

U UOMont!ll)mtr, .rd .
L•ng svl lle, Otlll)

614 ·UN24S Evenln11s
'2 Mi tes E.ut l)f Wilhsviflr
SUPER
GOOSE
STOCK
TRAILER NOWAV4 1LA8LE ,

--

Vinyl and Aluminum

For Sale
COAL. liMESTONE, sand.

Siding

gro\lel. calcium chloride, fertilizer . dog food , and all types
of salt. Excelsior Soh Works ,
Inc., E. Main St., Pomeroy,

BISSEll
SIDING CO.

fitt Farm, Portland OH. Prices
change day to doy with the
market.

call for 1 Free Siding
Estlmlte, 949·210t or
949-lUO. No sunday
ulls.
· 6-14-2 mo.

Services Offered
NOW HAULING limes tone in
Middleport- Poemroy
area.
Call for free estimate.

367·7101.
PAINTING AND sandblasting.
Free estimates. Coll949-2686.
DOZER . END loader and dump
truck . Will do basements,
ponds,
brush ,
t imber
limestone ,
and
grovel :
Charles Butcher. 742· :?940.
I HAVE openings for plano
students. Joan Robinson , 349

S. 3rd. M;ddlepart. 992-3039,

atlve or imaginative twls1 Pu1
your originality to productive
uses.

TAUAUS (April

20-Moy 20) Be
satisfied with small gains today
Instead of look.ing for the big hit.
Pennies, back-to-back will add
up to dollars.
GEMINI (M•y 21 - Jiolne 20) It
won't be difficult getting others
to rally to your canner today.
Your leadership qualities are

evident. You 'll set ttle proper
eMample.

CANCER (June 21-July 22)

ThiS
Is a good day to gently remind
one who owea you something
that It Is long peal due. His
reaponse should be favorable at
thiallme.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.I

patient in a Zanesville hOspital and ·
her uncle, Henry Frederick, was
hospitalized in Doctors Hospital,
·eolwnbus.
Dr. and Mrs. Billy Robert Allen
BY l1..ARICE ALLEN
Westerville, spent the weekend with
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Carsey spent a
The Ladies Auxiliary of the fire Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Allen.
week
in Dayton visiting Mr. and Mrs.
deparbnent met Wednesday evening
Mrs. Elma Reuler and son, George,
at the firehouse with Cleo Smith Akron, and Mrs. Kathy Frietag and Carl Knicely, Mr. and Mrs. Junior
presiding. The meeting opened with Mary Elizabeth, Canton, spent a few Ash and Mrs. Beryl Wyatt.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Alkire
Cleo reading from the Scriptures, clays with Miss Lucille Smith. On
followed with The Lord's Prayer. The Wednesclay evening they all visited Racine, visited the Bob Alkires Thur:
secretary's reiJilrl was read by Karla with Eleanor and Carolyn Smith, sclay evening before they and Mr. and
Mrs. Dutch Hewitt flew to California
C,'hevalier and the treasurer's report Pomeroy.
by Opan Hollon. Committee reports
Mrs. Charles Goeglein and for a ten clay visit with Rev. and Mrs.
were given and cards were ordered. A Charlene, Flatwoods, called on Mr. Lewis Campbelle.
Mrs. Norma Lee spent the past
note of thanks from Clara Conroy was and Mrs. Clayton Allen Sunday
week visiting in Johnstown with Mr.
read. Plans for the firemen's food evening.
and Mrs. Richard McKnight.
stand at the county fair were
Mr. Roy Wiseman was returned to
discussed . Roll call was answered by
his
home after being in Pleasant
Betty Newell, Clara Conroy, Ethel
Valley Hospital for a week. He is
OtT, Cleo Smith, Opal Hollon, Clarice
slowly improving.
Allen, Karla Chevalier, Margaret
Mrs. Carroll Gheens and daughter,
Christy and Opal Wickham.
Jul1a, spent a few clays with Mr. and
Mrs. Ethel Pullins, Pomeroy, wa.s a
r!'Cent weekend guest of Mr. and Mrs .
Mr. and J'ylrs. Arthur Crabtree spent Mrs. Willie Collins, Mansfield Oh.
Buel Ridenour.
an afternoon 83 guests of her brother~ecent visi!prs of Mr. and
Roy
WISeman were Ben Caster and
Miss Beth Wilson and Miss Cassie in-Jaw and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Sheet.s were Saturday overnight Frazier in GalliiJillis.
daughter , Fontelle Spencer
guests of Miss Laura Jean Eichinger.
Mr. and Mrs. Reed Jeffers trav.eled Charleston, W. Va. and Mr and Mrs'
Silnclay guests of Mrs. Opal to 'New Boston, Illinois where they Sam Lewis and daughter, Nita fro~
'
Eichinger were Mr. and Mrs. Charles visited their children, Mr. and Mrs. Florida.
Eichinger and Suzannah, Miss Bar- Richard Jeffers and daughters and
bars Fisher, Colwnbus, and Mr. and Mr . and Mrs. John Dunham and
family . They enjoyed a corn roast and
Mrs. Don Eichinger, Rio Grande.
Recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs. potluck supper which the Dunhams Woodgerd, all local. Greatgrandparents include Zelia Perry and
Jolm Hayes have been Mr. and Mrs. hostedforneighborsandfamily.
Myron McKenzie , Mrs . Lucy
Mr. and Mrs. Mendal Jordan at- Mrs. Dennis Fraley, local, Mrs. Alma
Hanaw•lt, Cohnnbus, Mr. and Mrs. tended the Pickaway County Fair at Wood, Racine, and Mrs. Hamilton in
George Frederick, Waterlord, Mr. Circleville a.s guests of Mr. and Mrs. West Virginia . Other children of the
and Mrs. Robert Burke, Mrs. Ruby Frank Lands, Pickaway County couple are Dana Edward and Michael
Wayne.
Burke, Alfred, and Amy Schultize, Grange Deputies.
Columbia Grange No.2435 held a
Logan.
Zelia Perry remains in a serious
meeting with Ha'rrisonville
joint
Mrs. Elizabeth Hayes and Mrs. condition in O'Bieness Memorial
Grange
No. 1734 ·and Eldon Barrows
Francis Spencer attended a Tup- Hospital, Athens.
perware assembly in Zanesville on
'!'ina and Roberta Sclunidt have was candidate for degree work. NorMonday .
been visiting their grandmother, Mrs. man Will was Master of the fourth
Mrs. Cleo SmiU1 spenl a few clays Wanda Oxley, great-grandmother, degree team with members from both '
with her daughter Alic-e and family in Mrs. Dale Stansbury, and other 'Grauges assisting. Allegra Will, LecMichigan.
relatives in Ohio. Mrs. Oxley will take turer. presented an interesting
Mr. D. D. Cleland, Colwnbus, them to their home .in Pe~ylvania progr!llll with Arthur Crabtree in
charge of some extra nwnbers. A
called on Mrs. Clayton Allen and Den- and visit her daughter and son-in-law.
rei Cleland, Thursday.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Jordan and boWJtiful potluck supper preceded the
Miss l.AJciJle Smith spent a week · sons visited with Mr . and Mrs. Nor- meeting and beautiful bouquets were
furnished by Garden Club members
with her cousin, Opal Hayden, Ur- man Shaner and children, Athens.
bana.
Errol Pickett of Florida spent a Ruby Diehl, Stella Atkins and Allegr~
Mr. and Mrs . Virgil Wood, vacation here with his mother, Laura Will.
Mr. and Mrs. Dorsey Jordan and
Springfield, were weekend guestB of Krebs and other relatives. ·
sons
were in Colwnbus on Sunday to
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Christy and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Fraley are
visit
their
daughter, Virginia Jordan,
Letha Wood.
·
vacationing at Myrtle Beach, South
who
has
an
aparbnent near her work.
Mr. and Mrs. Larcy Roush and Jean Carolina.
Ann have retwned to their home in
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Fraley are
Winter Haven, Fla., after visiting annoWJcing the birth of a daughter,
with Mr. and Mrs. Oris Frederick and Katrina Lynn, on July 13 at O'Bleness
Mr. and Mrs. Vlrgil Roush.
Memorial Hospital, Athens. GrandIn 1971, an Australian woman who
Mrs. John Hayes received word parenls are Mr. and Mrs. Clarence had taken a fertility drug gave birth
that her WJcle, Carl Duckworth, Willi a Fraley and Mr. and Mrs. Carrol to nine babies. Only two survived.

Harrisonville
Social News

Ca.rpenter
Personals

Mrs.

TWO SCHAEFER SC093 8 compartment ice cream cabinet .
new, $2068 eo. like new with
worrenty only $700 .
1
Kelvinaror FPOS frozen display
case, new $2380, like new only $900. 1 Wyatt J prong mile
shake mixer with S.C. cups ,
new $3.49, use-d I year $125 .
Plus other ice cr.am equl~
ment. All above purchased
separa tely . $2425. Buy all
together f irst $2150 tokes all.
61-C -235-8510
during day .
Evenings 614· 237 -.C.C02.
10 H.P. GRAVELY tractor. 40"
mower. 1ulkey. blade. Sean
Craftsman iO h . p. 36" riding
mower. 843-:2211 .

14 FT . AlUMINUM boat. 4 h.p.
hinrude motor. Electric tro lling motor. Morine battery .
New tro ller. Coli after 5pm.
992-3 112 or 9'92· 5 t 38 .

Rellnonco
30 Year Terms

A- No

HARDWARE

STOVE SALE. GAS·WOODCOAL. BIG REDUCTION IN
PRICE.
UPHOLSTERING CUSHION

filler machine. Davenport and
cha i r , naw
cho ir
and
upholstery m9terial . 992-5162 .

1978 KAWASAKI KZ 750.
992-7382.
1978 STARCRAFT 19 ft . w;th
175 h.p. Mere motor. SS prop.
Custom mode convau. $6800.

992·5170.

lUMP COAL, $39 ton cash,
delivered. Also , Cobra Com 89
CB ban with power mike.
antenno and over 50 feet ce&gt;

ax. $150.992.7126.

SALE PRICES
·Jack W. Cars~y

·

. _ _ . Phone 992-2181

BLOCK &amp; BRICK

Pomeroy, Ohio

992-5547
1·25-2 mo.
PALS! I ···
TELL YOU THAT
SI&lt;.INNY ONE KILLED
A MAN ··· RIGHT
ANO HI!;;
I

GREAT MAN LIKE THE
WARBUCI&lt;o IEV£R ea!
ON A FIUliY FOIIEIG.N
TRAMP ST£AMER IN

H. L wmes;

~R$T

TOPS, FURNlTURE
Free Estimates
3rd St., Racine
'

949-2000
7·5·1 mo.

with dishwasher ond
breakfast bu1 family

room with wooa-burning
fireplace, laundr•f' area,
formal dining, living
room has sliding glass
doors leading to a large
redwood deck and op·

742·2819. Raymond Harll1ld.

SIX ROOM house on 2 ocr"
for sale on 124 at Langsvi lle,
OH . Call after .Cpm ., 742-2357.

tiona I woodburner, most

newly carpet, all
draperies, gas heat,
front porch. Bank ap·
pra1sa1 at$30,000.
Call 992·2897

MIDDLEPORT,

FOUR

roam

house. both. good condition.
By owner. Phone 992-52.C7 .

do uble

deck,

double

100x200. $29,100.00.
2 BUILDINGS -

Walkin',
Hister Walt'

good
REAL ESTATE
FOR SALE

In ·

Four and one -third
acres, Wild wood

F latwoods

Road, la ys all in one
piece in a secluded sec ·
t ion for

privacy . All
utilities availab le . Pri c -

ed lo sell fast at
$10,000.00.
GeorgeS. Hobsteller
Owner
Box 101 , Pomeroy, Ohio

Phone 992-5739

FOR SALE. 1.45 acres in town.
1968 Ford Torino. Glenn c ..
diff. Sr. , Syrocu5e. 992-7081.
TWENTY
ACRES near
langsville .
3
bedroom
remodeled
hou se. Alum.
siding, insulated, storm win·
dows. Lorge
born. out.
buildings. $36,500. Owner
may help finance , 992·7733.

BEAUTIFUl LANDSCAPED 2
acres of land, oil utilities Installed. Septic system with orrioter approved for 2 homes.
Included with this lond, n ice
trailer. Home ready to move
into before you build or rent
fo r
monthly
income .
Overlook s
town .' Coli

671&gt;-30_7'-4"-.- - -- - -

beer

reslaurant with

ficense, establish -

ed many years. Cal l
now.
ACREAGE
IN
POMEROY
3
bedrooms, formal dining R., nice kitchen,
garage and part base·

men!, fru it trees, lots of

grapes , many other
features . $25,000.00.

MIDDLEPORT - 2
business rooms wlfh
apartments over, been
rented for many years,

Ideal business locallon.
$33,500.00 .
LOVELY REMODEL·
ED - 2 story frame, 3
bedrooms, formal din·
·ng, large eat· In kitchen,
Jasemenf. storm win-

uti I ifies,

carpeting,
knotty pine kitchen, 1112

balhs, and 2 ca r garage.
$17,000.
NEW LISTING - Large
9 room frame on· corner
lot. can be made Into 2
apts . Close to stores &amp;
schools In Middleport.
Want only $15,000.
MINERSVILLE
Above all floods , 2
bedrooms, bath, nat.
gas heat, T. P . wafer and
· lot 178x245 for only
$12,000.
75 ACRES - Timber,
locust posts, city water

close by . Wan I $25,000.00
but will accepl offer, if
right.
RIVER VIEW - 3
bedrooms,

bath,

nat.

gas furnace. city water

dows &amp; doors, porches,

large yard . $35,500.00,
NEW LISTING - Mid ·
dleport, 1'1&gt; story brick,
lovely kitchen, lots of
remodeling, large lot,
porches, many olher

&amp; garage near Krogers.

Asking $1? ,000.
RACINE
Old

3

bedroom home in need
of repairs. Nice varnish ·

ed trim, city water, nat.

features .

CLELAND REALTY
WHERE
REAL
ESTATE
IS
A
BUSINESS NOT A
SIDELINE. LIST WITH
USTOOAY .
. REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland Sr.
Henry E. Cleland Jr.
992·2259
992-6191

With a sack
on m' back '

H~a .no idea then she'd' qrow into
th f1ne.succe.:;sful operation
she is t'daLJ '

SEWING MACHINE Repolrt ,
aervice, all moket, 99:2-2214 .

The Fabric Shop, Pam..-ay.
Authorized Singer 5aln and
S.rvl(e. We sharpen Sclaaon.

EXCAVATING, dozer, laoder

WINNIE

lob

nlghr

phone

IN FACT, l'HEY LIKED

OH , MOM, I 'TH INK I 'VE HIT ON A

II-i EM ~ MUCH ·
'THEY WANT ME
TO OOALL 'THEIR
COSTUMES
HEREAFTER !

G0/.0 MINE/ THE REfS A

RJR77JNE m

DISCO MARKETS!

gas heat, and bath for
only $12,000.
TO SETTLE YOUR
SELLING PROBLEMS
CALL 992·3325 OR
DROP BY OUR OF·
FICE AT 216 E. 2ND ST.

·

-

PUlliNS EXCAVATING. Complete Service. Phone 99'2·2478 .

INSURANCE
Lost your

license?

Phone

992-21A3.
E·C ElECTRICAl Controc:tOC'
serving Ohio Valley r-elon.
Sh( dar• a week, 2.C houn ser.
\lice. Emergency colla.· Call

13ARNEY

882·2952 or 882·:1&lt;15.1.

HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex·
cavatlng,

1eptlc

MAW!! IT'S TIME 'IE

M'-1 MAN SNUFFY 15 A
MAN WHO THINKS FER

syatema,

dozer. backhoe. Rt. 143_
Phone I (614) 698-7331 or
?•2-2593.

· GOT BACK TO YORE
CHORES!!

HISSELF- -

BE MADE

IN THE ROCK AND

Rutland. Ohio. Pone7•2· 2008.

eludes 3 rentals and a

STOCK for Immediate
delivery: varioua alzet of pool
kits . Do-lt- youraelf or let ut
install for you . 0. Bumgardner

IN

5aln. Inc. 992·572•.

Will HAUL llmeatone and
gra,.•t Alio, lime hauling and
spreading . Leo Morrlt Truck·

•3

sure of two

A U tah reader asks 11 there

one ' o£

lhose

do uhlf' r

is

ever was ~~ l'ace c:a rd ealled
the Valet.
Yes . It Is the Fre nch name
for Ihe jack.
J:\' t-:\\.'SI' AI'Eli .E :'&lt;I' TI-:H i 'H I S ~: ,\ SSf'-,; 1

·(Do you have a q uestio n for
the experts ? vtf,.ite Ask the
Experts." care of this newspaper. Individual quastlons wl;f
be answered if accompanied ·
by stamped. self-a ddressed
envelopes. The most interest mg ques tiOns w111 be used in
this column and will receive
cop1es of JACOBY MODERN.)

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
34 Ostrich's
lin the
cousin
shower
35 Place apart
5 Diamond
37 Seaweed
position
product
10 Border on 38 More
11 Wee poem
like Tim
13 Scotch's
39 Pert girl
companion 40 Her name

Yesterday's Answer
14 Pavarotti 's
means "pure"
birthplace U If not
7 Sinclair
24 Ceausescu's
Lewis's
country
15 Dutch
DOWN
nickname
commune
I Stationed at
25 Influence
16 Barbara 2 Aerie, to
8 Oid song
27 Grass
an eagle
Geddes
9 Elastic
cutters
17 "C'- Si
3 Disenchant- 12 Shred
30 Stockpile
ment
16 Soup base
31 Hospital
Bon''
19
Witch
worker·
4
After
zeta
18 Anglican
5 Instigate
gathering
33 Sheltered
cleric
20 Disbw-se
36 Malfeasance
20 Companion 6 Graven
37
or polish
21 Practice
22 Author of
"Brave
Men"
23 Hunger for 1=-+-+---1
25 Falk
%6 Nonsense :
sl. .
27 "Sc.arla.ce"
star
Z8 Pulpit
signo{)ff
29 Heming
way's

''The and the
Sea''
32Swedlsh
di:ttrict
33 CObbler's
tool
I

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:

lng, Phone 7•2·2~55 .
ROOfiNG. ROOF repolr and

AXYDLBAAXR
L 0 N ·G FE L L 0 W

Ia

aiding, other maintenance. E1

R Roofing and Siding.
61 ~ ·388-8860 or 614·388-879?.
ANN'S CAKE Doc:orotlng Suppilot. ~16 O.born Rd ..
Roodtvllle. OH ~5n2. Far In-

One letter sim&gt;IY stands for another. In this sample A is
used for the lhree L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and lormarion of lhe words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

PEANUTS

formation call. 667·6-485. Will

INTERSTATE 40 ...THAT'S

be open late If you nood
something.

WHAT WE WANT...

S &amp; G Carpet Cl10nlng. Steam
cleaned . Free estimate.
Reasonable
rates. Scotthguar~

defense had four tricks in and
East was now
trumps ..

~~"-

on Route 7. 985-~ .

operators

was

n £&gt;~ativf'

thf'

992·3525or992.S232.
EXCAVATING , dozer .
backhoe ond dltcher. Charlet
R. Harlleld. Block Hoe Service.

lot

ruff . Now he l ed hi s ace of
diam o nds to force dumm y to
use its singleton tr ump . The

Wesl did have support for
both spades and diomonds bul

ElWOOO IOWU5 REPAIR Sweapera, toOst•rt. iront , all
small oppllancet. Lawn mo.r.
next to State Hlghwoy Garage

cancelled?

Pass

bcwfanglea negative doubles
designed to as k partner 10 b1d

plet• Service. Phone 949· 2487
or 949· 2000. Racine , Ohio,
Crltt Bradford.

b..n

2¥

South's. two-hea rt jump was
supiJilsed to. be a weak jump
.·overca ll. bu t wets rather
slrong for a weak bid. West ·s

Business Services
BIIADfOitD. Au&lt;tl..,_, Cori&gt;

AUTOMOBILE

I+

Pass

Alice in Wonderland. East" s
opening bid wa s subminimum.

or Rover JeHen. day phone

- 'lft-3325
.216,E. Second Slr"l
NEW LISTING ~ Lot
·90x200 In good location
on Lincoln Hill. Room
lor two houses. $9,000 . .
BIG 2 STORY - II
room home with all

Pass

The b1ddmg of loday·s hand
looks like somelhi ng out of

and boc:kho. work; dump
_rrucks and lo-baya for hire,

608 E . MA IN W.lalliiilall.i~
PnMI"ROV . 0 .
CLOSE IN ~ aboot 6
yrs. old, lovely ranch
type, 3 bedrooms, fully
equipped kitchen, din·

Obi.

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sonlag

6·6·1 mo.

992-7089 .

deuce to ask for the lead or
diamonds -· th e lower -r J nk ing side suit. West ruffed and
obliged by underleading his
di amond ace. East t o JI&lt; hi s
king and led a third clu h.
South discarded a diamond
and Wcsl made his seco nd

another suit

Pomeroy

NEW THREE bedroom all e lectr ic
home ,
gorog• .
dishwasher .
d is posal ,
corpeted , large eat- in kitchen
rural water , Ohio Power. ove~
1 ocre, in country . Near
Langsville and mines . $.43 .000.

+A 982
SOUTH
• K J
¥KQJ 815

Alii liM I!XMPII

CALL
992-2772

Real Estate for Sale

Modular home sit1ing on
over 1 acre of land in
Syracuse. River frOn ·
tage, l bedrooms, 2
baths, complete kitchen

The bidding may have bee n

• 10 5
Vulnerable : North-South
Dealer : East
West
North East South

Free Estimate

Smith Nelm
Motors, Inc.

REAL !;STATE
FOR SALE

ava nt ga rd e. but t he del ense
was supe rb . Ea st took his CJ&lt;:e
of &lt;·l ubs a nd retu r ned th e

'

J&amp;L INSULAnON

Ph. 992·2174

• K 10 5

F'LACf?

BY

•

agai n with his pi ece of cheese

BEI'ORE MY EYES ·• ·

ALUfii,INUM
&amp; VINYL SISING

19 ACRES, 5 room house. CR

didn't like the idea of hi dd ing

• 95
• 1\ 10 7 4

Opening lead:

New, repair,
gutters and
down spouts.
Window cleaning
Gutter cleaning
Free Estimates.
949-2862--?49-21.0
4·5·11C

~:ast

EAST

Roofing

CAR SEATS, BOAT

REAL ESTATE: 1 acre lo t in Riggscrest Manor. beTwMn Tuppera Plains ond Ch"ter.
Phone985-3929 ond 985-4129.

28 . 24? · 31~ .

THE

aQd

Ti&gt;ll5 USED TO BE
ROUTE b6 ...1T'Ll. TAKE
US RIGHT INIO NEEDLES

40

092-6309 or 742·2348.

_tl~:

Auctions
BIG AUCTION every Wod., 7

, H011sing - pm. Hartford Community
Center, Hartford, WV • .c mil"
above
Pomeroy· Maton
Headquarters _ Bridge.
'

'

ALL THOSE WHO WANi
GO TO NEEDLES AND
MV 6ROT~ER SPIKE,
THEIR HANDS ...

CRYPTOQUOTES

I

11 :

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 15,1979
af Large 17; 5:45Farm Report 13; 5 : 5~PTL Club
13.
6:.00- ?00 Club 6,8; Summer
Semesfer 10; 6: I~News I? .
6 : 30~ Chrlslopher
Closeup 10;
· Dragnet 17 ; 6:45-Mornlng
Report 3; 6:50--Good Morning,
West VIrginia 13; 6:55-News 13.
7:1l0-Today 3,15; Good Morning
America 6, 13; Wednesday
Morning 8; Batman 10; Three
Sfooqes·Little Rascals 1?.
7:15-A .M. weather 33; 7:30Family Affair IO;· Lilias Yoga &amp;
You 33.
B,IJO-Capt. Kangaroo 8,10; Lassie
1? ; Sesame St. 33.
8 : 3~Romper Room 17; 9:1l0-Bob
Braun 3; Phil Donahue 13,15; Big
Valley 6; Porky Pig &amp; Friends 8;
Nile Owl Jaz: Stars 10; Lucy
Show 17 ; Book Beat 33.
9 , 3~Sanlord &amp; Son 8: Love of Life
10; Green Acres 17; Beginning to
Sew 33.
10:00--Card Sharks 3, 15; All In The
Family 8,10; Daflng Game 13;
Movie
" The
Kid
from
Cleveland" 1? ; Paint Along with
Nancy Kaminsky 33.
10 :30-Hollywood Squares 3,15 ;
$20.000 Pyramid 13; Whew 8;
Country Time 10; Consumer
Survival Kit 33.
10:55---CBS News 8; Fair Fare 10.
II :llO-High Rollers 3,15; Price Is
Right 8,10; Laverne &amp; Shirley
6, 13; Films of Olin Sewall Pettingill 33.
n : 3G-Whee\

of

For1une 3, )S;

Family Feud 6,13; 11 c55-News
1?.

12:0Q--Newscenter 3 ; Mlndrea&lt;:l@rs
15; Young &amp; the Restless 8; Over

Easy 33; Midday Magazine 13;
Love American STyle 17.
12 :30'-Ryan's Hope 6,13; Search lor
Tomorrow 8, 10; Nof For Women
Only 15; Movie . " The Saga of
Hemp Brown" 17; MacNeil·
Lehrer Report 33.
I :oo-Days of Our Lives 3,15; All My
Children 6,13; Young &amp; the
Restless 10; Life Around Us 33.
1: 3()-As the World Turns 8, 10; Two
Ronnles 33.
2:1l0-Doclors 3,15; One Life to Live
6, 13; Girl with the Incredlbl•
Feeling 33.
2:25-News 17; 2:3~Another World
3, 15; Guiding Light 8, 10; I Love
.
Lucy 1?.
2:4Q-Organlsm 33; 3:1l0-General
Hospllal6, 13; Lilias Yoga &amp; You
20; Rebop 17; Birthday Party for
Josef Strauss 33.
3:3()-Mash 8; Joker's Wild 10;
Banana Splits I? ; Over Easy 20.
4:1l0-Mister Cartoon 3; Password
15; Addams Family 8; Six
Mil lion Dollar Man 10; Mike
Douglas 13; Fllntstones 1?.
4 : 3~Lone Ranger 3;
Hogan's
Heroes 8; Lucy Show 15; Par·
!ridge Family 17.
S:oo--Bonanza 3; Beverly Hillbillies
8; Mister Rogers 20,33; Olsco
FEver 10; Six Million Dollar
Man 13; Brady Bunch 15: Sfar
Trek 1? .
5 : 3~News 6; Petticoat Junction 8;
Mary Tyler Moore 10; Elec. Co.
20; Ooctor Who 33.
6:0G-News 3,8, 10,13,15; ABC News
6; Once Upon A Classic 33;
Family Affair 17; VIlla Alegre
20.
6:3()-NBC News 3.15; ABC News 13;
Andy Griffith 6; CBS News 8, 10;
Father Knows Best 17; Over
Easy 20,33.
7 : 00~Corss -WIIs
3; Newlywed
Game 6, 13; News 10; Love
American Sty le 15; Dick Cavett
20,33.
? : 3~Dolly 3; Match Game 6;
Muppet Show 8; The Judge 10;
That 's Hollywood 13; Wild
Kingdom 15; My Three Sons I?;
MacNeii·Lehrer Report 20.33.
8: oo-Real People 3,15; E lght Is
Enough 6, 13; Dorothy 8,10;
Movie " Elephant Walk" 17;
Masterpiece Theatre 20; All
Creafures Great &amp; Small 33.
8 : 3~Hnaglng In 8,10.
9:110-Movie " The Senl lnel" 3, 15;
Charlle's.AnQels 6.13; Las Veqas
Palace of Stars 8,10; Great
Performances 33; Upstairs ,
Downsterls 20.
IO :IlO-Vegas 6,13; Fall of Eagles 17;
News 10.
10 : 3~Best oi Groucho 20; Movie
" Isadora Duncan" JJ.

I

PIM

TU

WI M ·

I H

TRH

RH

D .R E U

NJ

I

J MDC

T U IA

Z I WE

I H

SR D D

V I B
DUZ

11 :00- News o,6,8,10,13,15; New
Soupy Sales 1?.
11 :3()-Johnny Carson 3, 15; Pollee
Woman 6,1~; Switch 8; Movie.
"Anzlo'' 10; Movie "Young Mr .

Lincoln" 17.
6,13; Ko[ak 8; 1:oo-

12:4~Baretta

~
-~ -~- .....:::::... ... --

~ --

·•:!!":..!'::::
'"---...J

!~1, l t n ~~Z :!;:~
·

T R P .
H J .F B W U
F M E M J S M
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: FORTITUDE IS THE MARSHAL OF
THOUGHT, THE ARMOR OF THE WilL, AND TilE FORT OF
REASON . - FRANCIS BACON
rQ

·•

1?.

~ : 40-NPwt:

5: 3~World

passed in the hope tha t rnayhc
two hca rLs wou l dn ·t m&lt;.~ke . He

• J 64

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIF.

Rt. 3

UPHOlSTERY

deve lo pm ent s

• '6 3 2
• 92
•H I73!

CONTRACTOR

BOB'S

suposcd t o have at lea st seve n
high ca rd points . W c:~ l had
ju st four.
No rth pe~ssed to awan

WEST

+3

WORK, GENERAL

1:oo-Tomorrow 3;

News 15; I : !~Baseball
1: 40-News 13 ;

• Q
+KQJHI

N. L Construction

Real Estate for Sale

ing,

Real Estate for Sale

ea::v.

~a:

NORTH
3·&gt;4
+ AQ 1084
• 3

will houl fill dirt. tap to&lt;l.

Sales &amp; Servrce

Estates,

l.a)t(5

OR '101-'! .. IND.' WOULD

*New Home
*Add ons
* Remoldings
*Free estimates
992-6011
7-12

.I'LL. II~VI"

MMM ...lHIS AIXJJOIY AW E:h0

World 20; Girl with lhe Incredible Feeling 33. :.
..
9'30-Taxl6,13; 9:4Q-Organlsm 33. ·
lO :IlO-Starsky &amp; Hutch 13; Obern· ·
dorf Revisited 6; America It;'
News 20; Birthday Party lor
Josef Sfrauss 33; 10 :3D-'Lock,
Stock &amp; B•rrel 20.
II :00- News ' 3,8, 10, 13, 15; Olck
Cavetl 20; New Soupy Sales 1?;
Book Beat 33.
II : 3~Johnny Carson 3, 15; Movie
"The Last Detail" 6,13; Barnaby
Jones 8; ABC News 33; Movie
"Biller Sweet" 10; Movie "The
Ox-Bow Incident" 1?.
12 :4C}-Movle " The Carey Treat.
ment" 8;

Oswald Jacoby and Alan.Sontag

i-23·1 mo.

• limestone and grovel . Coli

Headquarter~ for
·H olpoinl and
General Electric
Appliances

Mgr.

BRIDGE

BORN LOSER

A '

For Appointment

POMEROY
LANDMARK

"GOULASH" '

Tuesday . Aug. 14

down

592-3051

651 Beech Street
Middleport, 0.
992·2356
7251'mo.

xJ

Mswer: What a ghoul's " making" in !he kitchen -

CO.
77 E. State, Athens

11 Years Experience
Will Make Service C.alls

C. R. MASH
VINYL &amp; ALUM.
SIDING

Ar r x x ro r x x x r

Yeslerday·sj Jumbles' VITAL BOUGH TROPHY POROUS

1nd

~ORTGAGf

Reynolds'
Electric Motor
Shop

gested by the above cartoon.

(Anlwano lomorraw)

IRELAND

REAl ESTATE Loons. Purchase
ond refinanc• . 30 yea r t•rms.
VA . No money down (eligible
APPLES , FITZPATRICK Or· \leterans)'. FHA • As low as 3·
chord . SR
669 . Phone '" per cent down (non-veterans}.
Ireland Mortgage Co., n E.
614·669·3785.
State, .A.thens . 614 · 592- ~l .

RUTLAND

monev

Die! '·' 8. 10; James Michener's

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprise answer. as sug·

[J

down (non -vtftriRS)

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

C·"-NNING TOM.A TOES for
sole. Bring own container S
You pick or we pick . 247-3644.

7-42-:2255. SALE: Mortin-Senour
point, Division of Sherman
ond Williams. Interior or exterior f lat white . $5.99 gallon.
Color extra . PRESEASON

KJ r

RUL~~!

(eligible veterans)
FHA- AS low as 3%

on St. Rl. 124 toward
Rutland.

TRAILER SALES

1976 TRANS AM , 400 engine.
Make offer. 992-.5032. 796 S.
3rd Ave., Middleport.

992-3891.
POTATOES AT the C.W. Prof·

FEW

Real Estate Loans
Purchase

l'.l mile off Rt. 7 by-pass .

992-5057.

car. 985- .Cl-46.

IBOUGERj

IT'S TIME YOIJ
LeARNED A

Answer here:

Roger Hysell
Garage

MONTGOMERY

terms available.

14

A COP!

WHE~E A SMAFCT
SEC~ETAF'i:Y TAK~
HEPt 5HO~AN!:'.

J KJ

LI!ITEN, !IA6Y! IF
ANO ME- AR.E
GON~A MAKE
SE'AUTIFUL MU•!HC,

YOU

Ph. HH7.4 J or H2·3752
8·1·1 mo.

7·25·1 mo. pd .

~.

197:2 INDY MOBILE l'lome. 12 M
60. Central air and fireplace.

IN SYRACUSE

Free Estimates

~TOP

AND

PAWING ME
&amp;EFORJ; I
YE'LL FOR.

'

B' S MOBILE HOME SALES, PT.
PLEASANT, WV . 304-6?5·«2•.
1973 12x63 FOREST PARK

992-3640.
1975 SKYLINE MOBILE home 56

kMESECHb

UpiiOIItlry ), I CrOll
from COdner's Ttx1co.

Phone 992-6323

TUESDAY, AUGUST 14,1979 •
7 : 3~Hollywood Squares 3; Candid
Camera 6; Gong Show 8; PriCe Is
Right 10; Abbolt &amp; Costello 15;
Donna Fargo 13; Baseball 17;
MacNeii ·Lehrer Report 20,33._
8:1l0-fRunaways 3,1 5: Happy Days
6,13; Sunday Morning Tonight
8.10; Gospel Resurrection 20;
City Notebook 33.
8:30--'-0etecllve School 6. 13; Two
Ronnles 33.
9:00- Movle " Return to Macon
County" 3,15; Three's Company
6,13; Movie "And Millions will

KI J

I

Undor New Mltll"·
mont (formerly Sylvia's

8-6-1 mo.

1969 Valiant, 12x60, 2 bedr.
1967 Notiona l, 12JC50, 2 bec:tr.

mobile home on Y1 acre lot In
Harrisonville .
$12 ,.500 .
Franklin travel trailer, X2 ft. ,
good co ndition. Troil Hoven
camper, sleeps sl~« . 1978
Kawasaki 100, low mileage.

eNEWHOMES
eROOM ADDITIONS
eRDOFING
eVINYL SIDING
eGUTTER &amp; SOFFIT

RACINE, 0 . .
949-2748 or
9n-7314

1965 GENERAL 60xl2. 2 beck
1970 Sylvo, 60xl2. 2 bedr.
1970 Castle, 60x 12. 2 bedr.

Good tires . $550 or best offer.

1974 CADillAC SEDAN. 34.000
miles. 992·5133.
1966 BUICK. GOOD socond

byHanriArnoklandBobLee

I

A&amp;H
BOB'S GENERAL
CONTRACTING ~ UPHOLSTERING

ADD ONS &amp;

ONE BEDROOM opts. Contact
Village Manor, 992-n87,

1

'1'12-6260.

Notices
GUN SHOOT, EVERY FRIDAY
7,30 PM RACINE GUN CLUB.
FACTORY CHOKE GUNS ONLY,
HO MECOM ING ASBURY
Ur~ited

3 AND 4 RM furnished ond un·
ap.t t . . Phone
f urn ished

GiveAway

Saddles
and
harnes~ . Horses and ponies .
Ruth Reeves . 6 U -698--3290 .

Weuern .

letart Falls. Wednesday and

~hurs_
do--'y'-·-------

Business Services·

Route 33, n9rth of Pomeroy.
Lorge lots . Coii992-7A79.

wv .

BEAUTIFUL KITTENS of oil

HOOF HOLLOW, English and

YARD SALE at James Swain's
on CR 28 above Eastern High
School. July 13 and U from 9
to? Everything imaginable.

COUNTRY MOBilE Home Pork,

slef· contalned , factory olr,
sleeps six . See at Krodell Park
Campgrounds. Pt. Pleosont ,

992.7680.

~ \,'i} ~~ ·

1

For Rent

Camping Equipme!lt
1979 TRAVEl TRAILER , 32 ft.

992·5434.

OlD FURNITURE, ice boxes,
brats beds , Iron beds , desks,
etc., comp lete households .
Write M ."O. Milhtr, Rt. · 4,'
Pomeroy or ca ii992-7761J.

to 3 :30 weekdays . Blaney
Hardwoods, SA 339, Barlow,

Rotating shifts, ex cellent fringe benefits .

CRSh v.i Ul Ordl'r 25 N!nl c h.1rgc
for Sid'&lt; carryu~ Ho,; Number Jn

Tbt.&gt;

992·2689.

992·2967.

IS word-1 L'l ~ cents pt\r word per
11Ay. Ad'! nmnin~ nthcr lhRn t"'O'l ·
sa-uli\'e d11ys w1ll !.H· ctl!lrflt'&lt;l ill

f;J.OO minimum
nm('('

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

SOMEONE to g ive ~itar
le ssons. Call after 5 p.m.,

thRrge

1 00
l.!iiJ

3days

wanted to Buy

· Help wanted
SENTI NEL CARRIER WANTED
IN THE SYRACUSE AREA: CAll
992·2156,

WANT AD
CHARGES

1 ele VISIOn
• •.
Viewing

ftfl'jlN}fi;}1f ~THATSCRAMBLEOWORDGAME

1979 ICin'iJ Futuru Syndtut~.

t'nc: .

Tomorrow 3,.4; News 15 .

1:35-Movle "The Lucky Stiff" I?;
1:50-News 13; 3:35-News I?;
3 : ~5~Movle
"Walk Softly,
Stranger" 17.

•

'·

�•

e

en tine

at
''

VOL. XXVIII

KOOL-AID STAND- The kids' lemonade stand of .
yesteryear has given way to the Kool-Aid stand of
today. Last week, with soaring temperatures, this

. public. Questions this year include how well does the
government perfonn?, Who's responsible for the
energy crisis?, Should SALT treaty be ratified•, and

OPINIONS SOUGHT - Meigs fairgoers will have
an opportunity to express their opinions on several
vital national issues at this year's fair . Congressman

CiareencenE. Min"llerihaseasmobialeQ!rficersetiupvoncee .. Whain··~;aonalsissuhe?
""'·"'~ .... '"""' · - ""~..

P

z·n0rrt.""'
_n n I

WASHINGTON lAP)- A group vf
West Virginians, wanting to "pound
some cents into Congress," deposited
nearly two tons of pennies at the
Bureau of Engraving and Printing
Monday .
Federal officia ls said it would take
days to process the approximately
$4,700 in coins, which the group,
known as Proposition Nine Cents, said
will be the first of many installments
aimed at financin g the nation 's
federal debt.
Members of the Huntington, W.Va.,
organization left the pennies at the
Treasury Department bureau rather
than on Capitol Hill because Congress

last year, and was launched by coordinator John McCormack, adding
Huntington-area businessmen to he ;1 ill believed the project was a
make Congress aware of the nation 's success and "we were aware all the
anti-inflation sentiments. They asked time Con'gress would be in recess ."
residents to contribute nine pennies to
"We wanted to take advantage of
ca ll attention to the declining value of the opportunity to get to them while
they were back in their home areas to
their dollars.
After the kickoff July 28, creal&lt;! some kind of dialogue in their
Proposition Nine Cents boxes and home towns," he said .
The campaign attracted the
booths received heavy donations, but
th e contributions dropped off as the disapproval of several criti cs,
ca mpaign wore on. By the time the including sen. Rober! C. Byrd, Dcoal truck loaded with pennies left for W.Va ., who said Saturday he believed
Washin gton early Sunday, it was the campaign would "have no effect."
Byrd said although he is
ca rryin g about 50,000 nine-cent
donations - far short of the 150,000 to sympathetic to the campaign ' s
250,000 donations promoters' initial concern about government spending,
is in recess.
there are other causes of inflation.
estimaws called for.
The campaign was named for the
" We set fa r too high a goal for And he said the people who protest
nine cents the dollar lost to inflation ourse lves,"
sa id
campa ign against government spending are
often those who seek federal financial
assistance for projects in their area.

$8,811 collected
for cancer society

BUILD
WITH HIGHER
INTEREST RATES
5 lj4 %
PASSBOOK
Compounded Daily

Minimum $1,000.00
6(JJ
1 YEAR CERTIFICATE................................ to
4 YEAR CERTIFICATE ......~!~!';'!~';'!~!,~0 ~--- -- 714%
..

6 YEAR CERTIFICATE ......~i~!:':~:':.s.':~~~-.o.o.... : 71!2%
8 YEAR CERTIFICATE .....~:~:':'.~~-~~:0•0•0;~~ ...... 7%%
4 YEAR MONEY CERTIFICATE
~lnlmum $1,000.00. Interest rate of 1114% under the average 4 year
v•eld of Treasury Securities.

MONEY MARKET CERTIFICATE
510,000 minimum . lrlterest rate equal to th e r:ate ot 182 day treasury
bill rate . As determined at weekly auction .

SUBSTANTIAL PENALTY FOR EARLY WITHDRAWAL

We will not be open for business
Thursday aftemoon, August 16, to
observe the Meigs County Fair.

A total d $8,811.85 has been
received by the Meigs Unit of the
American Cancer' Society from Its
crusade, special events and mailers it
was reported at a recent meeting of
the ex;e~utive committee held at
Veterans Memorial HospitaL
It was reported that a rubber ring,
walker and two beds wjl) be pur·
chased by the unit with more equipment to be purchased later and that
transportation would be needed for
patients later.
The Ohio Divisional annual meeting
will be held in Colwnbus on Sept. 15.
The topic of the meeting will be "You
Do Make a Difference."
Obtaining help for the booth at the
fair and transporting equipment to
the booth was discussed. A thank you
note was read from Carl Boxendale,
crusade chairman of the Ohio
Division.
It was reported that the training
meeting at Chillicothe stressed that
attitude was a very important issue in
the fight against cancer. The staff in
Cleveland agreed to increase
educational programs in 198().
At the next meeting on Aug. 30, at 8
p.m. there will be an election of officers and awards will be presented.
Attending were Rhonda Dailey,
Delores Frank, Teresa Collins, Bernadette Anderson, Joann Anderson,
Clara Lochary, Dorothy Will, Enna
Smith and Sharon Michael.

FOUR BONDS FORFEITED
Four defendants forfeited bonds in
the court of Syracuse Mayor Eber
Pickens Monday night.
Forfeiting bonds were Jerry Owens,
31, Syracuse, $23.70, speeding;
Michael R. Priddy, 22, Rt. I, Rutland,
$20.70, speeding; Clyde Richard
Morris, 32, Chesapeake, Va., $32.70,
no motorcycle endorsement, $32.70,
expired registration.
COURT ACfiONS
In Meigs County Common Pleas
Cou rt Sara Elizabeth Haye,
La ngsv ille and Christopher Paul
Haye, Rutland filed (or dissolution of
marriage.
Appointed deputy sheriffs were
Jimmer Soulsby and Donald R.
Eynon.

NO. 86

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

stand operated by Wendy Dunfee, Matt Sehloss and
Kerids Dunfee, I to r, was doing a "land office"
business on Lincoln Heights in Pomeroy Friday.

Area Deaths

MINNIE MILLER BROWN
· Minnie ' Miller
Brown, 62 .
Middleport died Monday afternoon at
Holzer Medical Center.
Mrs. Brown was born .)une 10, 1917
the daughter of the late Perry and
Matilda Kinser Miller. She was also
preceded in death by one sister and
two brothers.
She is survived by one daughter
Mrs. William L. ,(Barbara) Cullen,
Cincinnati ; one son , Joseph C. Brown,
Cincinnati; two sisters, Gladys Miller,
Middleport and Mrs. Walter (Pearl)
Bunce, Cheshire; three brothers,
Leon Miller , Middleport ; Hubert
Miller, Lebanon , Tenn., and Harry
Miller , Anchorage, Alaska; two
grandchildren, Jen nifer and Erin
Cullen, Ci ncinnait.
Funeral services will be held
Wednesday at · 11 a. m. at Ewing
Funeral Ho~e with Walter Bunce
officiating. Burial will he in Gravel
HOI Cemetery. Friends may ca ll at
Ewing Funeral Home this evening
to
9,
from
7

""~"'' and was in local garden club
work for many years.
Miss Genheimer is survived by one
sister, Stella Week , of California. She
was a daughter of the late Mr. and
Mrs. John Genheimer of Pomeroy
who had five daughters and three
sons.
A nunnber of nieces and nephews
also survive including Pauline Carter, with whom she made her home ih
Florida, and Martha Genheimer,
Colunnbus.
Burial was in Beech Grove
Cemetery with the Rev . Carl Hiclts
presiding there .

DANNY RAY DIEHL

Danny Ray Diehl, 32, Pickerington,
Ohio, was struck and killed by lightning Aug. 5.
Mr , Diehl was born and reared In
Rutland.
Funeral services were held Aug. 8
with burial in Forest Lawn Cemetery,
Columbus.
He is survived by his wife, Barbara,
HELEN F.CHAPMAN
two sons, Chad, of Pickerington and
Brian of Racine ; his mother, Mary
Mrs . Helen F . Chapman, 81, Larkin, Pickerington; two brothers,
Coolville, died Monday evening at the Sam Larkin, Gennany, and Torn
Arcadia Nursing Home following an Buck, Grove City; one sister, Mrsf'
Linda Moore, Colwnbu.s.
extended illness.
Mrs . Chapman was born at
Bishopville, a daughter of the late Ira
Lorenzo and Xarissa Bishop Falls.
POLLY ANNA 1110MPSON
She was a member of the Coolville
Funeral services for ' Pollyanna
United Methodist Church, th e Thompson, 25, fonnerly of Rt. l,
women 's group of the church, the Cheshire, will be held at 10 a.m. ThurOrder of Eastern Star at Glouster , ana sday at Miller's Home for FW)erals.
'the Ladies Oriental Shrine a t
Burial will follow in Gravel Hill
Columbus.
Cemetery with the Rev. iolm Davis
With her husband, Mrs. Chapman officiating. Casket bearers will be
operated the Chapman Brothers Store Roy Thompson, Alan Holter, Fred
in Coolville for many years.
Thompson, Marvin Davis, G. C.
Surviving are a son, Ronald F . Thompson and Kail Burleson.
Chapman, Portsmouth; a daughter,
Friends may call at the home from
Mrs, Dan (Barbara) Budd, Big Piney, 6-9 p.m. Wednesday . The casket will
Wyoming; a sister, Mrs. Kate Cook, not be open.
Euclid, and six grandch ildren.
Miss Thompson, a resident of 1502
Preceding her in death were her Hunter Ave., Colwnbu.s, was dead on
husband , H. Hall Chapman in May, arrival at University Hospital Sunthis yea r , two brothers and two day .
sisters.
She was born Oct. 10, 1954, in
Funeral servi ces will be held at 2 Galllpolis, to George Frederick and
p.m. Wednesday at the White Funeral Marjorie Pauline Thompson. She
Home in Coolville with Mr . Timothy graduated from Kyger Creek High
Snyder officiating. Burial will be · in School in 1972 and was active in
Coolville Cemewry. Friends may call several school activities, including
at the funeral home from 12 noon to 2 drwn majorette, National Honor
p.m. Wednesday .
Society, Kiwanettes and class
valedictorian, as well as a !~year
member of the local 4--H club.
HARRY GA-SKILL
Miss Thompson attended Ohio
Harry Gaskill, 96, Zanesvill6'; a University and was continuing her
fonner resident of Middleport, ~as education at Marshall University .
buried Monday at McArthur wnere
In addition to her parents, she is
graveside services were held.
survived by two sisters, Mrs . John
He is survived by a son and a (Nan) Heiskell, Cheshire, and Mrs.
daughter, and among local relatives Charles A. (April) Duncan, Northup,
is a nephew, Charles Gaskill.
·
and a brother, George, at I!Qme. Miss
Thompaon was also a member of the
Little
Kyger
Christian
LUCRETIA GENlJEIMER
Congregational Church.
Funeral services for Miss Lucretia
Genhelmer, 98, fonner Pomeroy
resident who died at Clearwater, Fla.,
where she has made her home for the
past several years, were held Friday
at the Ewing Funeral Home with the
Rev. Robert McGee officiating.
Miss Genhelmer, during her long
years in Pomeroy, was employed as a
bookkeeper with the Peacock Oil Co.,
owned by the Ebersbach family.
She was a lifelong member of the
United Methodist Church, the
Women's Christian Temperance

Youth killed
AURORA, Ohio (AP) Eugene Shurtz IU, 2, of Oregon,
Ohio, was killed and four other
pers011.'1 were injured Monday
when they were struck by a car
that went out of control and
crashed through a fence at the
Sea World amusement park,
police said.
Police said Eugene Shurtz Jr .,
36, and his wife Olarlyn, 34, the
boy's parents, were injured,
along with Phyllis Mayla, 32, and
iJ!lr daughter, Raquel, 10. of Hubbard. The four Injured were
hospitalized, but their conditions
were not available.
Police said a 17-year-&lt;J!d
Warrensville Heights wm&gt;an,
whom they did not identify, lost .
control of the car she was driving
i;J the Sea World parking lot,

Fonda 'cursed'
MOSOOW ( AP) - Jane Fonda 's name Is "like a curse to
Hollywood bosses" because of
her politics,
the Soviet youth
neWllpaper, but in Russian eyes
she's a "symbol of American
freedom fighters" like the
radical black activist Angela
Davis.
"The name of Jane Fonda Is
today on all tbe blacklists of
America ," journalist V. Krivchln
wrote in Komsomolskaya Pravda . " The Pentagon, CIA, FBl, all
are vigilantly watc1Jin8 her ....
She is like Joan of Arc, and they
are threatening her with the
same fate ."

'"Y"

Middleport
(Continued from page I)
this time .
Councilman Allen King reported
that he has received word that two
village structures-\.he fire station and
village hall- have been approved for
energy sav ing grants of $200 each by
the Ohio Department of Energy. The
village will have to provide matching
funds and employ an energy auditor
who would recommend what st~ps
should be taken to conserve energy at
the two structures. The village has
also applied for a grant for a
conservation program at the Park St.
garage ,
Attending the meeting were Horky ,
King, Mayor Hoffman, Graw, council
members, Marvin Kelly, William
Walters, Dewey Horton and Police
Chief J. J. Cremeans.

DAVID GlEASON, NEW SUPEIUNTENDENT of the Meigs Local
School District, points out a large crack in the comer of one of the
c1aurooms in the academic wing of Meigs High School where the exterior
walls of the academic wing are pulling away from the rest d the structure. The cracks are In all of the walls of the wing.

mE ENDS OF THE FINGERS of Dwight Goins, administrative
llllllistant of the Meigs Local School District, are lost In the space between
the floor and the wall in a classroom of Meigs High School where exterior
walla have bowed. The space between the floor and the wall exists in
many of the rooms of the academic wing.

,altonal Ba'Jl
Miadleport, 0 .

£b

''-~ ....

'"'liiiOY:IIQin' .'• .'

-- ~---• . .

..,
•'

\

._&gt;

... l;t~·

F.D.I.C. Deposits lnsunitct t11 54t,_OOO.

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
SEEKS LICENSE
Admitted-Darla Kelly , Pomeroy;
A marriage license was issued to
Perry Keith Hill , 19, Racine, and Rom a Harrah, Long Bottom; Dorotha
Bobbi Kay Chapman, 20, Syracuse. Handley, Langsville ; Jacquelyn
Glassburn, Bidwell; Oscar !rn!xxlen,
Minersville; Golda Lynch, Athens;
SQUAD CALLED
The Middleport Emergency Squad Paul Reeves, Albany .
Discharged--James
Meadows,
answered a call to 1751'. N. Second
Ave. , at 8:22a.m. Tuesday mornlng. Mary Garnes.
Donald VanCooncy , a medical
patient, was taken to the offii:e of Dr.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
. James Conde.
DISCHARGES AUGUST 13
Mrs. William Blanton and son,
Edward
Feustel, Florence Figgens,
BOARD MEETS AUG.21
H;,rold
Luckadoo,
Mrs. Kenneth
The ·next regular meeting of the
Roush
and
son,
Altie
Saultz, Robert
Meigs Local School District Board of
Educa tion scheduled for Tuesday, Speraw, Estell Steele, Larry Stevens,
Aug, 21, has been changed to Mond"y, William Thacker. Elizabeth Welch,
Au~. 20, at 7:30 p,m,
· Della Wickline ,

POINTING OUT HOW A BRICK WALL at the side of Meigs High
School has extended at the b8se to cause a bowing In the exterior wallis
Meigs Local Superintendent David Gleason .

Two firms submit bids for school repair
work cannot lie completed WJW at least the mlddle of September.
· Supt. David Gleason and Dwight Goins, administrative
assistant of the lllstrict, have been investigating pooaible litigation
against thole involved In the construction of the nine year old struc-

. Two ·bids have been received from out of coWJty !inns on
correctional action to be taken on stnlctural defects detected at the
nine-year-old Meigs High School.
. ·
RecenUy, the district's board of education passed a resolution
of urgent necessity which enabled lt to receive invitational bids for
the corrective' work rather than to go the routine route of seeking '
bids on the work thr®gh newspaper advertbements.
The latter process would have taken several weeks and lt was
felt that corrective action would be necessary as lioon as Jllli!Sible.
While the plan waa to llave the corrective work done by the
opening of claases at the high school on Sept. 5, it now appears the

ture.

Walls at the high school In tbe second floor above ground,
known u the academic wing, are bowing. The waJla have pulled
away from the Doors and there are large cracks ih the corners of
the I'OOnll ~the wing.
Whether legal action Is forthcoming hu not been announced
but some word on the pooaibility is expected yet this week.

~

Ai:tractive farm crop exhibits judged
AJUlough the rainy weather ap- · are the fair board members in charge

puently reduced entries in the fann
crop e:a:hibits ol the 116th annual
Meigs County Fair, attractive
dilplaya of vegetables, grains and
fruita u-e still very 111uch a feature of
the fair.
HOIIIed in the coonhunters building,
the crope were judged TueSday.
Hennan Carson and Benny Slawter

of the dilplay.
In the grain judging. Altona Karl',
Long Bottom, displayed the best alx
ears of yellow hybrid com with Earl
Dean taking the blue ribbon for the
best six ears d white sweet com and
another blue for the best six ears of
yellow sweet corn.
Edison Hollon. Route 1, Miner-

Goins said that, according to plans for correCtive action, angle
irons would be welded at Intervals around the base of the wing and
a series of steel bands would be used around the wing and these
bands would be bolted into the Interior steel beams of the buillfing.
In time,~ corrective action could cause the bowing waJla to
· return to normal position, Goins reporta.
A bid is expected to be accepted from one of the two !inns bidding on the project some time this week, possibly this afternoon.
Cart is expected to run $40,000 or more.
The district is in a financial bind not only due to the cost of the
correctional project that must be done to the building, but also to
the replacement of a roof on the high school. ·

a-nt)J. u.. '-"'"' ~ -·'"'""""""''"'
...1:\\to~~"" -

At 116th annual Meigs fair
·'

svllle, look blue ribbons for the best
peck r1. wheat and the best peel! of
tm:~ey .

Patricia Wolf of Route 3, Pomeroy,
first place ribbons in
potatoes with Hmnan Carson, Long
Bottool, taking two blue ribbons also
In that judging. Carson also won a
blue In aweet potatoes.
First place honors in the vegetable
.

toot two

judging went to George Ziegler,
Route 3, Pomeroy, cabbage; Doral
Hill, Route 3, Pomeroy, egg plant;
Fred B. Smith, Pomeroy, tomatoes,
ned; Bernice Bailey, Route 1, Long
Bottom, best plate d green pod bush
beana; Mrs. Charles Kuhl, Pomeroy,
best plate al. yellow pod bush beans;
Herman Carson, best plate ol lima
beana ; Carson, oniona, yellow; Fred
B. Smith, ~irst In bot peppers and first
in sweet peppers; Madeline L. Painter, Middleport, beets; Smith,
carroll!; Mrs. Kuhl, cucumbers,
-green; Ziegler, pickle plate;
&lt;llrlatlne Naper, Route 1, Bidwell,
okra plate; Smith, squash, zucchinl;
Carson, squuh, banana; Bernice
Bailey, squash, other.
Smith won three first place ribbons
in watennelon judging with Carson .
winning one first place in that
division.
Winning first places In apples were
Larry Cowdery, Long Bottom;
Beulah Hill, Route 3, P&lt;meroy, and
Carson.
In the judging of other fruits, first.!
went to Beulah Hill, Roy L. Holter,
Route 3, Pomeroy, and Patricia WoH
won the award for the best display of
garden produce.
In the awards for the largest frult or
vegetable grown, first places went to
Carson, biggest pwnpldn; Fred
Smith, largest watennelon; Beulah
Hill, apple; Carson, tomato; Denise
(Continued on P.iie 12)

co. of~ for a new roof. The new
to be
placed over top of the present roof which hu leaked and allowed
considerable damage to the relatively new structure will Ctlllt
$138,000.
.
TheBe unexpected costs are above the regular expenses in·
curred this time of year wben lllstrict schools are being prepared
for the opening of the new BChool year.

• •ail to d
ay
Apple Grove man hack m J
resident who was being held for trial

less than two weeks ago after the two
attempted to cut through but were
kidnapping, and Waddell, convicted stopped by deputies.
last week of atternpwd aggravated
murder and aggravated robbery,
CHIW INJURED TUESDAY
sawed through bars in a cell repaired
Darla Lambert, 8, daughter of Allah
Lambert, Syracuse, was injured when
;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:::: she reportedly ran behind a pickup
truck that was traveling east into the
EXTENDED OUTI.OOK
left
front lender of a car traveling
Frldly througll SIUiday : Fair
west
on SR 124 in Syracuse Tuesday at
Friday. Cballce Cll abowers or tbuDII
am
.
dentol'llll Salllrday aDd SIUiday.
The
youngster was taken to
Lon ID lbe low to add 511 early
Veterans
Memorial Hospital by the
t:rldly, IDcreaaiDC lo lbe low ...
Syracuse
ER Squad and later
CLOSING '111URSDAY
Swlday. lfilba ID lbe upper 71M to low
Middleport Village offices will close 1101 Friday, tnereaaiDC to lbe low to transferred to Holzer Medical Center.
She is reported to be in satisfactory
at noon Thursday so employees may mid ... by Swlday.
condition.
'
attend the Melga County Fair.
;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:
A complete report was being
compiled by the sheriff's department
Wednesday morning with the driver,
conferring with officials on the
accident.

LANCASTER, Ohio (AP ) - Two
prlBoners who escaped from the
Fairfie.!d County Jail Tuesday by
sawing through cell bars were back in
custody today.
Sheriff's deputies captured Larry C.
McCarty, 17, of Apple Grove , W.Va .,'
in a field between Bremen and Sugar
Grove, soulh of here . The other
escapee, Michael E. Waddell , 28, of
Columbus. was arrested at a home in
Logan.
Mc Carty, a former Lancaster

on charges of attempted homicide and

LARGEST PUMPKIN - Donlta Manuel, daughter ol Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Manuel of near Racine, casts a smile over the largest pumpkin
displayed at the Meigs County Fair this year. Elhlbltor al. the blue ribbon
pwnpkin is Hemwin Carson, Long Bottom.

Official fair

"l'he Friendly l:lank"
Walk-up teller window
and auto-teller window
Open Friday Evenings 5 to 7 p.m.

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 15, 1979

program •••
Thursday, AUgust 16

Olf~r ~don Slylcs N2726 12 126 ar1Cf 11 271?
only Ollt&gt;r rnds OciGIJcr 31 . 1979

LINGERIE DEPT. • 2ND FLOOR

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

DELIGHTFUL RIDE - Eddena 1\IIIIBell, two-year-old daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Eddie RIIIIBell of Middleport, was delighted to ''ride a pain- ·
ted pony" on the merry1!o-round at the Meigs CoiUity Fair Tu~y af·
ternoon. Ridea on the midway are owned by the Batea Brothers of Wintersville.

"

JENNI IIJLL, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Hill, Racine, had
"had It" at the Meiga County Fair Tuesday afternoon. Despite all of the

action .of the fair around ber, Jenni sl!ll)t on and on.

c

SENIOR CITIZENS DAY
lO:OOa.m.-4-HHorseShow
.
9:00a.m.- Junior Fair Dairy Showmanship
and Judging
·
1:00 p.m.- Dairy Cattle Ju(lging- Open Class
4:00p.m.- Open Class Sheep Judgin~
. followed b;11 Junior Fm Sheep ·
Showmanship and Judging
4:30p.m.- Twilight Horse Harness Racing
7:30p.m. -Garden Tractor Pull
8:00p.m. -Stella Parton

'"·

"

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