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•

Gloeckner's bull

12- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, U., Wednesday, AIUi! . l5. 1979

39 arrests recorded during July
Thirty-rune arrests were made tires ; parked on sidewalk.
the county court. The pollee cruiser
The department turned 17 of the was driven 4,008 miles durin~ the
during July lzy the Middleport Police
Department according to the report cases over to juvenile court and two to month and parking meter colleCtions
&lt;i Police Chief J . J. Cremeans sub·
totaled $1,113.
mitted to Middleport Coun~ll Monday
night.
Of the total arrests, seven were for
disorderly conduct; six for speeding;
four for assault and three each for
DALE F·. SPENCER
WILBUR HARRIS
driving while intoxicated and
Dale
F.
Spencer, 83, 1204 Fairwood
Wilbur Harris, 67, 227 Springdale
unlawful intoxication.
Ave.
,
Colwnbus,
died Monday evening
Two persons were charged with Ave. 1 Wintersville, a former resident at Mt. Carmel Hospital, Columbus,
· possession of stolen property; two for of Meigs County, died Aug. 7 at the St. following an extended illness.
Medica l
Center
in
petty t!left ; two for overload and two John's
Mr. Spencer was born near Chester
Steubenville.
.
for possession of marijuana , There
son of the late Cassius M. and
the
Mr. Harris was a member of the
Willi one arrest each for running a stop
Fidelia
Rice Spencer. He was also
sign; leaving the scene of an ac- United Meti1odist Church . He was a preceded in deati1 bv his wife , Mabel
cident; destruction of property ; bad veteran of World War II and a retired Ott Spencer in 1977.
checks; spinninli: tires ; squealing emp loye of Wheeling-Pittsburgh He was a former resident of Belpre
Steel, railroad department.
· Surv iv in g are his wife, Irene hut has lived the past 39 years near
Hickabaugh Harris, a son, Charles R. Columbus, where he was in the
WE WILL
of Union ville, Mo.; three daughters, contracting business as a carpenter.
Mrs. Darold (Dorothy ) WilliS of He was a member of the Brookwood
CLOSE
Empire, Ohio; Mrs. William (Janet) Presbyterian Church and Knights of
Corriston of Wintersville, and Mrs. Pythlas,
He is survived by one daughter ,
Eugene (Ruth) Hanlin of Unionville,
Mrs.
Joseph (Bonnie) Brown ,
Mo.; a brother, Walter Dick of
two grandchildren ; two
Westerville;
Syracuse; two sisters, Myrtle Durst of
bro!J!ers,
Charles
R. Spencer, Belpre,
Coo lville, and Ethel Rainey of Point
and
Dwight
E.
Spencer,
Chester; one
Pleasant, W. Va.; 20 grandchildren
sister,
Mrs.
Wayne
(Evelyn)
Brickles,
and four great-grandchildren.
and
several
nieces
Tuppers
Plains,
Funeral services were held at 11
and
nephews.
Middleport
a.m . Friday at the Dunlope Funeral
Funeral services will be held
Home in Wintersville. Burial was in
at 2 p.m. at the Spencer
Thursday
Union Ce metery.
·Funeral Home in Belpre with the Rev .
Earse Mauler, Jr., officiating. Burial
will be in Rockland Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral home
anytime.

Wand champion

Area Deaths

.David GlOeckner, Route 2, Raclne, exhibited the grand champion and
reserve champion bull In the judging of Hereford cattle at the Meigs
. CountyF-'t'Wednesday.
Gloeclmer won first place In the bull clalta lor two years and over, and
in the junloryearllnJ bull class.
..
Earl Co~:, Route 2, CoolvWe, took firsts In the senior bull calf dlvialon·
pair ol bulla, any age, bred and oyned by exhibitor; the b9Bt pair of junioc
helfen: the best produce of cow, two anlmal8 and the best ci sire, three

mlimall.
.
· Lea Ann Gaul, Route 3, Pomeroy, won the award for th best cow, two
and over, with Roger Gaul, Route 3, Pomeroy, exhibiting the best junior
Y~ heifer, and Rogle Gaul, Route 3, Pomeroy, exbiblting the best
junior heifer calf.
In the Semllltal breed, Joe Lucas of Route 3, Athens, exhibited the
grand cbamplon and !'llllei'Ve champion female while taking four first
place ribbonS In the Judging.
·
.WilllamB and Son, Rou!e 2, Coolville, exhibited the grand champion and
reserve champion females in the Llmousim breed and took two flnt place
awards in other categories.

AT NOON
THURSDAY
FOR THE FAIR
heritage house

VOL XXVIII NO. 87

FIT FOR CAMP
. . US

..

lWO'S COMfANY

Main St.

Junior Holsinger, Reedsville. The twins were five oo

NEW RIDE - A brand new ride, featuring huge
kangaroos, is being used at the Meigs County Fm and
the younger set loves it. Pictured on the ride Tuesday
are' Jay ilnd Jolu! Holsinger, twin sons of Grace and

.

ACTIONS Fll..ED
A suit for support under the
Reciprocal Agreement Act was filed
in Meigs County Common Pleas Court
by Deva Ann Cornwell against Paul
E.Cornwell.
Barbara Neal, Pomeroy and Loren
Neal, II, Gallipolis , filed for
dissolution of marriage.

Hall named WHS
basketball coach

July 30. With them is Gary Andrew Bates, 14, son &lt;i
Gary Allen Bates who owns the midway rides, along

with hls brother, Eric Bates.

County Court

HOSPITAL 'EWS
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
Admitted -- Doll y Cleland,
Middleport ; Judith VanCooney,
Pomeroy; Ubby Roush ,Ra cine ; Paul
Wolfe, Racine ; Robe rt File ,
Middleport;
Harold
Jeffers ,
Pomeroy.
Discharged-George Warner, Earl
Clark, Millie Price, Connie Petrie,
Dwight Oliver.

Go ahead, drive you~ tank dr.ybut you'll not find better August

,

ARPET
BUYS!
.

·

.

Attractive

\on b\end

smart acr!~~~:.~v
outsl~d
~

'5

99

dom-shear .

r\ch nv\on 0~0~~""'"
A gracelui. l'nely

;ar~~O%
and

1 sturvY

co ntinuou"s
·

oac ....

Wi th a pile ~on ..,.arns
a luteathta~·
htamenl ~ 'i
lection ol ore
In an e~CI IH1 Q se
colo rs .
1ng l ·"eed
v•

$89S

ASK TOWED
A marriage license was issued to
Terry Clark, 20, Lima, and Debbie
Hatfield, 18, Hutland.

sq. 'Jd-

GOLFERS SUMMONED
All Meigs High School students who
want to go out for the golf team are to
meet coach Oliver at 10 a .m.
Thursday Aug. 16, at the Mason
Riverside Golf Course.

ERA REALTY
REEDSVILLE

-

2

Bedrm . trailer with 2

covered porcheS 1 3 car
garage. Flat lot, $23,000.
Owner willing to talk. .

REEDSVILLE - Home

with 2 car garage and
nice business building
with his &amp; hers rest rm s.
$25,000.

Conserve! Save time, energy, gas and money ... shop

INGEL'S
FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY
106 N. 2ND AVE.

"TWO IN ONE STORE"

MIOOLEPORT, 0.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
2Y2 Qt. (2.3 liters)

WHI STLING
TRIG' TEA
KETTLE
whe re c r!'lltsmcn st1ll care"

• Fast-heating
aluminum
• triggeroperated
spout
· Coffee Brown·or Goldenrod Yellow
1S33

IS34

$595

FORKED RUN AREA

- Neat, sm. 6 rm . fur ·
nlshed summer house.
1.50 acre. S21,500 .
j

•

at y

I

'

1
ACRE
near
Reedsville. City water
tap available . $2,000 .

Call Virginia Ha';'man
985·4197

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
~LOSED

THURSDAY, AUG. 16th
FOR THE MEIGS COUNTY FAIR

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

RESERVE CHAMPION BULL - The reserve champion hull &lt;l the
Hereford breed, open class, at the Meigs County Fair Wednesday, was .
won by an aruma! owned by David Gloeckern, Rt. 2, Racine. Pictured,l-r,
are DaVId Gloeckner and A. J. Willbarger.

•

enttne

THURSDAY, AUGUST 16, 1979

PRICE FIFTEEN CEN IS

4-H awards presente

=

·

Sixteen defendants were fined and
12 others forfeited bonda In Melga
Lewis Hall was named by · the Couilty Court Monday.
Mason County Board of Education
Fined by Judge Charles Knight
Monday night as head varsity basket· were Edward Lemaster, Pomeroy,
ANNUAL,PICNIC
ball coach at Wahama High School.
The Middleport Business and The board, during its regular David Phillls, Zanesville, Denzil W.
Professional Women's Club will hold meeting, also selected Keith Sayre to Mcintyre, N. Canton, Lawrence W.
Stewan, Rutland, and Robert M.
their annual picnic Monday, Aug. 20, serve as assistant basketball coach.
Johnston, Jr., Rt. 3, Raclne, $15 and
at 7 p.m. at the Racine Locks and
Hall, a resident of Mason, has com· costs each, speeding; Michael Wolf,
40% OFF
Dam picnic grounds located above pleted three years as an English
New Haven. Persons are to bring their teacher at Wahama. Sayre, who Reedsville, $10 and costa, left of cenHOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DRESS SHOP
own table service and a covered dish . resides at New Haven, has taught ter; Homer L. Welsh, Rt. 4, Pomeroy,
Dllldlu'&amp;e~, Aaaut 14
$10 and CQ~~ts, improper backing; Un·
Porn
0.
special education in the county and is da Beaver, Racine, $10 and COlts, no
Lealie Adldns, Mrs. Vernon Cash
presently physical education in· headlight; IUchard E. Robinson, and daughter, Elizabeth Clark,
structor at Wahama.
Clayton, N. M., $25 and costs, fishing Catherine Conn, Finley Divis, Shawn
without a license; Daniel Dudding, Olodge, Edward Owlfee, Vergle Hoff·
Racine, $15 and costs, unsafe vehicle; man, Harriet E:J:llne, Brenda H)'lell,
Diana L. Aleshire, Rt. I, Racine , $15 · Elsie Lakin, Ronnie Limbert, Henry
FEES ANNOUNCED
Because of raiSing cost of ad· and costs, ei:Jlired operator's license; Layne, Barbara Lopez, Connie Mash,
ministering and implementing all James J. Hawley, Pomeroy, $10 and Jeutca Maynard, Doria McDonald,
AT $1.00 A GALLON
health department programs Meigs costs, defective muffier; IUchard Don McMannia, Dwayne Mount,
County Health Dept. has adopted the Caruthen, Rt. 2, Pomeroy, .$25 and Carol Plerc e, David Robbins, Rhon·
following fees: Sewage disposal costs, unsafe vehicle; Steven da Sirnrnl!, Ruth Swisher, Sandra
system installation permit will cost Schneider, Rt. I, Reedsville, costs, 15 Whitely, Sandra Woodall.
BIRTHS AUGUST 14
$15 effective September I and sale of days confinement, hit-eklp; Gordon
Mr.
and
MRa. WUllam Strausaer,
property inspections will cost $25 ef- Grigsby, Erie, Mich., $150 and costa,
son,
Jackilon.
·
three
days
conflilement,
license
fective September 1. These fees must
Mr. and Mrs. Basll Greene, son,
be charged in order to continue to suspended 30 days, DWI : Carl Van·
give more and better service to the Way, Tuppers Plains, costa, domestic Leon, W.Va.
violence.
people &lt;i Meigs County.
.
Forfeiting bonds were Grace An·
SWIMMING PARTY SLATED
drew,
Racine, $37.55, stop sign ;
SQUAD RUN
The
Baseball Asaocialiro
The Middleport Emergency Squad Sharon L. Vllllnes, Swnter, S. C., will holdRacine
a swirruning party at London
Junior
McGuire,
Galllpolis,
Bennie
N.
was called to the office of Dr.Jarnes
Pool in Syracuse Friday, Aug. 17,
Conde at 4:45 p.m. Tuesday to Rinehart, Rt. I, ReedsvWe, and Owen from 7:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m.
transport Jeremy Morris, one-month- Jarrell, Columbwi, $35.50 each,
Ali players and parents are urged to
speeding; Earl Lee, Athens, $185.50,
Thi s is thE sale for YOU ! Beaut if ul. f irst~ quality broad old, to Pleasant Va Uey Hospital.
attend.
Uniforms are to turned in and
loom . instal led wall-to-walt in your home ... at a tow , tow
overload ; Allen W. Jones, Wellston, .
officers
elected.
sate pri ce that once again proves just HOW affordable
$35.50, no oversize permit; Donald G.
fuxury is. when you shop and save at
Hysell, Rt. 4, Pomeroy.. Sidney
SQUAD CALLED
The Pomeroy Emerpncy Squad Manuel, Rt. 1, Racine, Garry M.•
was called to E. Main St., Tuesday for Adams, Athens, and Michael Gard,
Mrs. Mayme Buchanan, who was Rt. 1, Reedsville, $35.50 each, driving .
having difficulty breathing . She was over fresh paint; John M. Well, Rt. I,
laken to Veterans Memorial Hospital. Long Bottom, $60.50, reckless
operation.
(Continued from page I )
Lanshery. Long Bottom, beet; Donald
r ne beSI ol 2
beautiiu\t
REUNION PLANNED
resl llenl . c urable a our choice ol
W. Manuel, Route 2, Racine, cucumThe
third
annual
reunion
of
.
the
le&gt;J el -loDP carpet ~~ p~\\erns B acked
sq. 'Jd·
SPONSORING EVENT
ber; Beulah Hill, onion; Canon, the
Victor C. Young, Jr. , family will be
st'j\lsh 3-cotor tw ee
The
Gallia-Meigs
Fraternal
Order
largest
squash and the largest sweet
held at 1 p.m. sunday at the Hoyal
m 1u\ e .
po(ato.
of
Police
will
sponsor
a
countryOak Park. Relatives and friends are
Edison Hollon won first place In the
invited. Those attending are to take western show featuring "Windy
Holcomb"
on
Sept.
19
,
at
Meigs
hay
show in the 75 percent or more
ti1eir own table service.
Junior High in Middleport.
alfalfa clus and the 75 percent or
There will be two 'shows, one at 6 more clover claM. Earl Dean, Route
p.m. and one at 9. Tickets are $5 each 3, Pomeroy, won first place in the all
CLOSING THURSDAY
The courthouse will close Thursday and persons interested in securing gr88S hay and the 49 percent or lea
at noon so that employes may attend , tickets may call Ray Manley ·at 992- legumes, and Roy Holter won first Ill
the fescue class.
2302.
the Meigs County Fair.

TWO'S CO. DRESS SHOP

•

e

Jeans!
ANY PAIR QF JEANS

GRAND CHAMPION BUlL - The grand· champion bull of the
Hereford breed, in the open class, at the Melg.s County Fair Wednesday ,
was owned by David Gloeckner, Rt. 2, Racine. Pictured with the winning
animal is,l-r, Mandie Rose, David and Mrs. Gloeckner.

'following big parade
By KEVIN KELLY
Four-H, Boy Seouta and other youth
orpnizationa were honored on the
. main stqe oC the Meigs County Fair
Wednesday night.
Ceremonle~ were ldcked off with a
parade featuring several different
4-H Hoata. Fair royalty, illeluding
~ andy Pitzer and King Ralph
Jordan, ~~Jere on hand to make the
presentatlona.
.
Flnt place winner in the noat
category were the Hillbillies, with the

-

'
Alfred Angels following
in second

Champion, Tara Guthrie.
lnaecta - Grand Champion, Missy
Complete 4-H awards are u Calaway; Rellerve Champion, Donna
follows :
Crane.
Creative Arta - Grand Olampions,
Out8tanding - 1. Mi&amp;ed-Up H«Angle Spencer, Amy Ritchie ;
shosa: 2. Five Point Star Stitchers.
Fair Booth - I. Merry Makers; 2. Reaerve Champions, Becky Edwards,
Eastern Meigs 4-H Club.
Allee IUtchie.
Advanced Woodworking I - Grand
Gun Safety - Grand Champion,
Melvin Van Meter; Reserve Cham- Champlm, David Leonard ; Reserve
Olalnpiclil, BW Elam.
.
pion, Brenda Bentz.
IUfflnlahed Furniture - Grand
Hmne FumishingJ - Grand Cham·
pion, Tammy Johnaon; Reserve Olampion, Terry Pullins; Reaerve
Champion, KeUy Whitlatch.
Woodworking II - Grand Cham·
pion, Robert Jeffen ; Reaerve Cham·
pion, Tommy Pullins.
Electricity - Grand Champion,
'
Rlct Long ; Reserve Champion,
harness.track. The Alfred Angels (above J won second
YOUTH AWARD PRESENTATIONS at the Meigs
Nicky Leonard.
place in float judging Wednesday evening.
County
Fair
were
preceded
by
the
float
()lll'ade
on
the
Welding - Grand Champion, David
Riggs; Reserve ChamPion, BW
W•ther pennittlng, the Shelly Coal St. between No. Second and No. Miller.
.
.
Ccmpany wiD be resurfacing several Third; alley running from Locust St.
Lawn Power Equipment - Grand
lltnlell and alleys in Middleport on to Mulberry between So. Third and Champion, BW Dyer; Reseve Cham·
Fourth.
Friday.
According to Mayor Hoffman, this pion, Robert Jeffen.
There will be no parking Friday on
Mrs. Jeanette Thomas, Middleport, the multi-purpose bullding. It was
The proposed annexation in the
Model Rocketry - Grand Cham·
the streets being resurfaced: b a part of the yearly resurfacing and pion, Mark McGuire; Reserve Cham· village of Racine was discussed at wappointed as a member of the Meigs reported that excellent progress was
Cooperation II liked from residents maintenance program established pion, Mark Cline.
great lengti1 when the Meigs County C&lt;lunty Mental Retardation 169 board now being made oo the structure.
10 U.t a faat ~ efficient job can be several years ago. Cost ol this year's
Attendlilg were Jones, Henry Wells
Tractor I - Grand. Champion, Jeff Commissioners met in regular session to fill the une&gt;&lt;pired term of Wilbur
project is approximately $9,000 and II Arnold; Reserve Champion, Billy
accompllahed.
and
Chester Wells , commissioners
Perrin.
The
term
expires
in
1981.
Tuesday night.
Same dull will be Involved In being finanCed by the one and one- Dyer.
A discussion was held concerning and Mary Hobstetter, clerk.
Richard Jooes, preside!\! of the
cleaninll the areas in preparation for hall mill levy which residents are Bicycle - Grand Champion, Pam board, announced a decision on the
reaurfac:lng. Only minor in· paying for street repair.
annexation will be made at the Aug .
(Continued on page 9)
convenience ahould be Involved for
21st commission meeting.
l'llidentl ft the areas, but the imWesley Buehl, county engineer ,
provement will be of benefit to
the work at the multi·
discussed
YOIJTI{ CHARGED
l'llidents, according to Mayor Fred
purpose building and various highway
Hoffman.
projects throughout the county.
AKRON, Ohio (AP)- A 17-year-&lt;lid
The foUowing streets and alleys wiD
Elmer Bowles, employe at the
be resurfaced: Riverview Drive, en- Akron youth was arrested Wednesday ·
county
landfill, also met with the
Ure length; one block of Hud!lon in connection with the wounding of an
Southern Local's Board of board. A lengthy discussion was held
street between No. Flnt and No. Ohio Highway Patrol trooper near Education Tuesday night employed on the operation of the landfill.
last week .
Second: eut end of Hooker St. bel· Oli!Ucothe
Valerie Jolmson as an elementary
Police
said
the youth, wh~ name teacher for the 1979-80 school term. · The board granted approval to the
ween So. Fourth and alley; two blocks
Meigs County Board of Elections to
ci Parlt St. between Page and Broad- was not disclosed because he is a The action WB! taken during a special use a portion of the building on Union
way; alley running from Main to Un- juvenile, is believed to be Me of two meeting.
Ave., now occupied by CETA, as a
coln between So. Third and So. Four· persons involved in the shooting. He
In other matters, the board passed voting location.
th; alley running from Race St. to was arl1e!!ted at the home of a relative . a resolution of urgent necessity so
Authorities continue to search for that the Letart Falls Elementary
Robert W. Peterson, 22, who has been School furnace can be repaired
charged with attempted murder in the without waiting for lengthy periods of
EXTENDED OHIO
Aug . 7 shooting of trooper Thomas J . advertising for bids.
FORECAST
Scott, 31, near the Ross-Pickaway
A lunch room policy was adopted
Br Tbe Auoclatect Preu
County line.
The Middleport Emergency Squad
for the new schol year setting lunches
Satanlay tbroqb Moaday: A cbaaPeterson is an escapee from the
was
called to a two-car accident two
ee ul !Ihnen er tbaudenlorml Wisconsin State Reformatory in at the junior and senior high schools miles north of Chester on Route 7, at
'Satanlay ud SaDday. Fair Mooday. .Green Bay and also iS wanted by at 86 cents and 60 cents at the elemen- 8:31 this morning.
lAw Ill tile upper 101 to low •• HJib Akron police on an aggravated tary schools.
Arron Bohrer, 9, and Orle Welch,
Ia lbe
Reduced lunches will be :!! cents
robbery charge ,
both
of New Martinsville,' W.Va. were
with adult lunches running 75 cents
transported
by the squad to Veterans
without mllk.
·
Memorial
Hospital.
Student breakfasts will be 25 cents
At 1:12 p.m. Wednesday, the squad
with the reduced price being 15 cents.
a· run to ti1e apartments on
made
Milk for adults will be 25 cents; sanBrownell
Ave.
for
Donald
dwiches wiD be 40 cents, and
Armentrout.
He
was
taken
to ·
vegetables and salads will be 30 cents.
Memorial
Hospital.
Veterans
The next regular meeting Willi set
John Tillis, Jr., age 7, was taken to
. for p. m. on Aug. 21 in the high school
the
office of Dr. H. R. Pickens at 2:03
cafeteria. Attending were board
p.in.
for treatment of minor injuries
members David Nease, Shirley John·
obtained
in a bicycle accident. Ann
son, Sue Grueser, Betty Wagner and
Davis,30
Riverview Drive, was
Dallas Hill.
treated by Mid~leport medics at 2:25
p.m., then transported to Pleasant
Lari$sa Long exhibits Valley Hospital. The Pomeroy
Squad was called upon for the
trasnsportation due to the Middleport
grand champion rabbit Squad
being on duty at ti1e Meigs
'
County
Fair.
Rabbit judging was completed at
the annual Meigs County Fair Wed·
nesday.
.
LESSONS CANCELLED
. Larissa Long, Route 3, Pomeroy,
Swimming lessons at Middleport
won four first places and exhibited a Pool scheduled lor Friday and
grand champion.
Saturday !lave been cancelled. The
Shannon Spaun, Pomeroy, and Jay lessons will be given Monday through
Anthony Neutzling, Pomeroy, bpth Wednesday of next week. Mary
YOUNG FAIR ROYALTY- Amber Cumings, 4, daughter d. Rei: and
won blue ribbons in the judging. ·
Blaettnar is the instructor.
Kathy
Cumings, Syracuse, and Jacob ShaneHall,4, son of Jack and Mary
In the judging ol various breeds of
·
Hall,
Rutland,
were named Litlle Miss and Mister Meigs County at the
poultry at the fair, Patti Hoffman,
Meigs
County
Fair
Wednesday night. They were selected from a field of
Route I, Pomeroy, won a first place;
34
contestants
after
being interviewed by Mrs. Janet Korn. Mrs. Korn
CHAMPION STEER - Grand champion in the 4-H dlvison of market
Christine Napier, Route I, Bidlftll,
Willi general chainnan of the .contest on beh&amp;lf of the Middleport Business
Clear
tonight.
Low
in
the
low
50s.
ateen, Hereford Semmil!li breed, at the Meigs County Fair Wednesday,
won three first place ribbons: Beulah
and Professional Women's Club, sponsors. The winners received $50 gift
wu won by an animal owned by Rodney Tripp, 14, son of Mr. and Mrs.
'HW, Route 3, Pomeroy, won three fir· MosUy sunny Friday, High incthe low
certificates from the Elberfeld Department Store. Judges were from the
80s.
The
chance
of
rain
is
10
percent
Alvin Tripp, RD, Pomeroy. Rodney was also reserve champion
sts; Barbara Miller, Route 4,
Polilt Pleasant Women's Club.
and
:!!
percent
Friday.
tonight
ahowman. Grand Champion showman was David Gaul.
·
Pomeroy, won one fl!'St place.
place.

Street resurfacing
project set Friday

Commission discusses annexation

' Southern hoard
emplOyS teacher

Accident victims
transported today

apper.,.. to,_ ...

Weather

,,

\J

�.

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Thursday, Aug. 16, 1979

3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Aug. 16, 1979

No official support given·
NEWYORK (AP) - Vernon Jordan
wa s frustrated . Th e executive
director of Ule National Urban League
was describing a cocporate plan that
would put black youngsters to work . It
got no official support, he said.
"I'm absolutely mystified," he told
a meeting of the American Assembly.
·-rm at a loss to understand why
mayors and other public officials
haven't said this is something we
should encourage ."
The plan, he said, was brought to
Camp David by him and David
Mahoney, ch;lirman of Norton Simon
Inc. There was no response, he said
sadly. A White House aide in the
audience stood up. It would come, he
said .
Jordan smiled. " But after two
monUls," he said slowly.
Mahoney first described the plan in
April and again in early July at Camp
David. And now, with Jordan, Prof.
Eli Ginzberg of Columbia University
and Alan Kistler, AFL-CIO field
director , he did so again for the
Amer can Assembly this past

weekend.
The assem bly brings together
expetts on va rious subjects at Arden
House. Harriman, N.Y. Its decisions
often become public policy.
The plan was simple, said Mahoney.
He ordered his officials to add 250
unemployed minority youngsters to
the Norton Simon payroll. They would
be brought into the mysterious world
of the corporation a nd trained in
permanent jobs.
''What incentive do your executives
have for carrying out the order '" one
of the 60 auUlorities in the audience
asked. " If their bonuses depelld on it
they'll respond," he snapped.
"Won 't the program cut into your
productivity'" he was asked. He
confessed he didn't have the numbers
to prove or disprove the contention,
but said he doubted the company
could be hurt very much.
Norton Simon has sales of $2.8
billion, he explained, and it employs
25,000 workers turning out HuntWesson foods, Canada Dry beverages,
Max Factor cosmetics, Avis cars and
various liquors.

Ule press corps.
Carter a nd his wife wandered into
Ule party unannounced, just in time
for Ule traditional cake-cutting.
When the birthday celebrant looked
askance at the little plastic knife
provided for the occasion, the
president
offered
a
joking
explanation : "We used· all the other

THE U.S. AND YOU

lllt::-r..

Specwlists in disaster
I

By William SteU
The biggest single item most
Americans own is a home.
But what do you do when your home
is wrecked in a tornado, a flood, an
earthqudke, a hurricane or a severe

winter storm?
.
You may have some insurance, but
chances are it isn1 enough. Nor is it
likely to cover some items.
The place to turn, as hundreds of
thousands have in the past 26 years, is
the Small Business Administration.
That's what the folks in Wichita
Falls , Texas , did a few months ago
when a tornado destroyed 7,000
hhomes, businesses and apartment
unil'. That's what the people around
Fort Dodge, Iowa, did in June when
high winds cut a swath through the
area . The people around Palm Beach,
Fla., turned to SBA after late-April
flooding; so did folks in six New Mexico counties that suffered severe springtime storms.
Once SBA arrives on the scene,
hard-hit homeowners can find out
quickly if they're eligible for longterm, low·interest federal loans to put
them on their feet again.
Last year, for example, SBA made
74,:&gt;16 berne loans totaling more th;ln
$300 million. The pace was even
brisker in the first four months of this
year - 34,244 loans totaling almost
$129 million .
Yet ma ny people don 1 know about
this program. It works this way, says
Mi chael Massie, a disasteroperations specialist at SBA:
- First you have to be in a declared
disaster area. The president declares
major disasters . But many areas
have minor disasters - minor to all
except the people involved ; they can
be declared disaster areas at a governor's request. An SBA.&lt;Jeclared
disaster area normally encompasses
at least 25 homes where at least a
quarter of the damage is uninsured.
- Once this is done, SBA speedily
sets up a field office. If an SBA
regional office is close, the agency
sends representatives from that office to advise about home loans. (That
includes loans for mobile homes.)
- For a disaster Joan, you need: a
schedule of losses, including personal
property losses such as autos, color
TVs and stereos (but not luxury
items , like antiques ); your best
estimate of real~tate damages ; a
copy of your most recent federal
income-tax return (to ascertain your
creditworthiness ); a copy of your
deed or mortgage; a copy of your ins urance policy and copies of
insuranc..,;ettlement sheets ; the title.
or registration of your auto, if it was
destroyed.
- Then you have to fill out an ap-

plication and give credit references.
- Once you 've pulled the papers
giving your "pre-disaster condition"
together, the package is turned over
to an SBA loss appraiser, who makes
his own appraisal and goes over loss
estimates with you. He may give you
helpful hints.
- The appraiser submits his report
to his SBA office. If everything is in
order, SBAA makes its loan decisions
·within a couple of , weeks. Once a
positive decision is made, you 11 get
your SBA check in about 12 ·days. If
, the loan is large, it may be disbursed
in several chunks.
"Typically"' says Massie, "the
start for repayment is deferred about
five months to let the borrower get on
, his feet ." The loan may he for one
year, 30 years or any period in between. The interest rate will be 7.375
percent. (Congress is considering
lowering the rate, but don't count on
it. )
SBA home loans under $5,000 normally require no collateral. If the
loan is above $5,000, it11 nonnally be
secured by a second mortgage.
The idea is to restore your home to
its pre-disaster condition. But if you
face problems bringing your home up
to county or city code standards, SBA
will allow you enough money to make
needed improvements, too.
If your home hils been hit by a
natural disaster, don't hesitate to
seek SBA assistance. You can get it
through the "one-stop centers" SBA
sets up after disaster-area declarations. Or you can get the information
you need from your local chamber of
commerce or your state or local civil
defense organization. Don't be shy
about it. SBA is out there to help you.

PRIZES DIPLOMA
TAMPA, Fla. (AP) -Running back
Ricky Bell of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers hild a signal honor in 1977
when he was the first man selected in
the National Football League draft.
But he says that was topped by the
events of June 7, 1979.
Bell received his college diploma
from the University of Southern
California on th;lt day. "It was the
greatest day of my life," he said.

•

'I've asked Or. Sigm un d Fernfrum here to address the board on cop 1ng wi th
fee li ngs of gu1lt that may arise in association wi th obsc ene profits...
Auto Sales
1974 VEGA HATCHBACK . coli

If Carter's week-long trip down the
Mississippi River next week on the
Delta Queen steamboat begins
sounding like a Mark Twain
adventure , there may be a reason .
An unscientific survey of the two
bookstores closest to the White House
turned up this fa ct:
Within
24 hours of
the
announcement of the trip, Ulere was a
run on one book. The oncei&gt;lentiful
copies of Mark Twain 's "Life on the
Mississippi" had all been purchased.

303·675·1 501 o• 305·675·2488
o• 30.4·675-1553.
1976

OLDSMOBILE

Cutlass .

$2100. 992.5057 .

1976·TRANS AM . 400 engine.
Make offer. 992-5032 . 796 S.
3rdA ve., Middleport.

1974 CADILLAC SEDAN. 34 ,000
miles . 992-5133 .
1966 BU.ICK. GOOD second
cor. 985-4346.
197 ~

CADILLAC

SEDAN

Deville. E~J.tra clean , body
good , reg . gas , AM-FM B·

track . Cruise control , loaded
with extras . $1500. 992-3718 .

In Ulese days of rising prices and
concern about the cost of food , the Air 1974 DODGE CORONET 4-dooc
For ce, it seems, is particularly Custom . 992-5858.
careful to collect from its passengers
payment for each of the meals served COUNTY: MEIGS
· PU8LIC NOTICE
on its White House jet fli_ghts.
The
lollowing documents
Rather than incorporating in its were received
or prepared
overall transportation bill the cost of by The Ohio En ·
Protection
each repast- served to White House vtronmental
Agency during the previous
staff members and reporters week. The effective date of
final actiQn rs stated .
traveling with Ule first lady, for each
The Issuance date of each
example, it collects individual meal proposed action is stated.
bills. Staff members are billed upon Anyone aggrieved or ad versely affected by a final
their return for each meal served.
action to issue, deny,
For reporters, however, it is a pay- modify, revoke, or renew a
itt license •. or varian as-you-go arrangement. After ea~h perm
ce; or TO approve or disapmeal, Air Force stewards make their prove
plans
and
specifications, may file an
way up the airplane's aisle, collecting appeal
wilh The En·
cash for each breakfast, lunch or vlronmental Board of
Review Suite 305, 395 E.
dinner.
Broad St.f Columbus, Oh l9,
When one reporter balked at paying &lt;15216,
w thin thirty (30)
for a flight meal she had declined, the days of lhe effective date,
to Ohio Revised
stewards were forced to collect an ~ursuant
Code Section 3745.07, unless
additional 35 cents from each such f inal action · was
passenger to make up the cost of the . preceded by the same or
substantially the same
food .
proposed aclion . In ad·
No one's meals, including Mrs. dition, pursuant to Section
3745.04 of The Revised
Carter's, are free.
' The first lady's office is sent a bill
Till! DAn. Y SENTINEL
for her food , and it is paid after each
!USPS I - I
trip from her official travel
allowance, if the trip involved duties
representing the president, or by her
DEVOTED 11) ntE
hosts, if it involved political chores .
IN'I'I!REST OF
When the president was about to
board a train to Baltimore last week
to demonstrate his support for mass
transit, press
secr eta ry J ody Powell heard a
departure announcement for the
Amtrak train, "The Congressional."
That was not the train the president
wanted, Powell said, getting in a few
digs at Congress while carrying on the
president's campaign against the
influence of lobbyists.
" It goes ·in two different directions
at the same time," he cracked,
adding, " It is pushed and pulled by
special interests."

Code, notice of the filing of
lhe appeal shall be flied
wi1h The Director of The
Ohio
EnVironmental

EPA, P. 0. Box 1049,
Columbus, Ohio43216.
ApJ1roval of plans and
specifications

Protect ion Agency! 361 E.
Ohio Departmen t of
Broad Streef Co umbus, Natural Resources
Ohio 43216. wifhln three (J)
Olive Township, OH , Ef days after the appeal is fective date 08-b6·79.
filed wi!h T~e En ·
This final action not
v i ronmental ·Board of preceded by propoS&lt;'d ac ·
Review . All such final ac- lion and is appealable to
tions are so identif ied . Such EBR, Vault Latrine tor
persons may req_yest an ad- Forked Run State Park
tUdica1ion hearlng before Group Camping Area .
The Ohio EPA on a
proposed action to Issue, 181 16. lie
deny, modifyt revoke, or
renew a perm tt , license, or
v~riance ; or to approve or

disaP.prove plans and
spectftcations. Within thir ty 130) days of publication
in a newspaper in the af tected county, any person
may also: (I) submit writ·
ten comments relating to
actions, proposed actions,
verified complaints, enforcement
campi iance

schedule

letters

Friday, AUGUit 17

Bernice Bede Osol

or

preliminary staff deter·
mlnatlons on permits 1o In-

meeting
regarding
proposed actions or on
preliminary' staff determinations on permits to in-

notice of further actions or
proceedinqs. All requests'
for aditJd tcation hearings
and public meetings, and
other communications con cerninSJ' pyblic meetiltQs,
adjudtcation
hearings ,
verified complaints. and
regulations, should be ad ·
dressed to The Leg a I

Records Secl ion. Ohio
EPA, P. 0 . Box 1049,
Columbus, Ohio ~3216,
(6 U ) 466·6037. Unless

otherwise stated in partitular notices, all other
communications including
comments on proposed ac tions should be addressed
either to The Division of
Authorization and Com pliance (Air} or Permit

and

Approva l Section

&lt;Water) , whichever is ap·
propriate, at The Ohto

RCA II. Wh:d1.,
•.!
•
f

HI '1,111 ",

H.

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CAPRICORN

(Doc; .

22-Jan.

Augu•l17 , 1979
Po sttrve thmllmg wtll be your copadner thiS com1ng year g tvmg
you that added mgredtent you 'll

need to go afl er some of your
more secret de5ires Your cilanc es for success are ex.cellent
LEO (July 23-Aug. l2) You II be
amazed at how much you will be

able to accomplish today 11 you
Wtthoraw to a QUiet place The
fewer people who are about the
more you 'll get done. O•scover
wtth whom you best get al ong

romantically by sending lor you
new Astra -Graph Lener wh tch
begtns w tth yo ur btrlhda y Matt
S1 fo r each to Aslr o-Grao n 8 0J
489 Rad •o Ctty Stahon . N Y

10019 8e sure to spectfy btrttl
date
VIRGO (AUiiJ . 23-Sepl. 22) Per·
sons you ass oc tate wtth tod a)
couto M ve a c6n stoerable tnll u·
ence on your over all ou tlook
Seek o ut yout more stable pals

!Fab. ZO.March

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IO l ett e r , number o r pun c tu ati on mark and

SNAPPY COUNT, owned by Dorothy Karr of Pomeroy, raced the
bead of the pack to win first place In both the fourth and ninth races at the
MeigS Fair Wednesday . ~ nhandng the lO:Cal interest was the fact ~t
Snappy Count was driven by Burdell McKinney, Middleport, who was Ul
the winners' circle several times during Wednesday 's race program.

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l-1NCINNA'fl (AP) - Cincinnati
Reds
outfielder Ken Griffey said ,
"' after surgery
in California, that his
knee injury was not as serious as
thought and raised a remote
possibility of returning to the team
.... t ,. '
late in the season .
"There was about half an inch of
erosion on the femur (upper leg bene )
and none on the kneecap like th ey
.,.. r' ·,
thought there was," Gri(fey said from
,,...""
• ' ') f •,
his hospital bed in Los Angeles, Calif.
"The doctor said the cartilege was
very small. The whole operation took
\.L.. only about an hour. There really
wasn 't that much done. From wliut J
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AND THE CROWD cheered as Burde.ll McKinney, Middleport, drove
his " Meigs Beauty" to first place honors Ul the seventh race at the Me1gs
County Fair Wednesday everung .

IIWII'l.

DeWI pabUibN be~ID.

dleport, were in the lead at the halfway mark but both feU behind later.

owned by John Foster, Piketon _Third and Chrlstifer Mike in the two year
in the fourth was Tickle My Toes, old pacers field with the blanll:et
owned by Mike Swatzel, Vincent, donated by WMPO Radio.
formerly of Pomeroy, and driven by
Brooks Sayre of Syracuse. Third in
the ninth was Townson, owned by
Myron Bailey of Pomeroy.
First in both the fifth and the loth
races, for' two year old pacers, was
Christifer Mike, owned by Don
McRoberts of Piketon. Second In both
races was Boozln Buddy, owned by J .
A. Yoder, Colwnbus, and third in both
raC(!s was Smooth Melvin, owned by
Bess Wlneberger, Gallipolis, and
driven by Don Spencer, Vincent.
Winners of trophy blankets for the
best time of the day were Spooky
Boom Boom with the blanket donated
'
Get professional
by the Royal Crown Bottling Co., In
the two year old · filly pacel'l! class;
results at a
I
Smokey's Dream In the three year old
fraction of the cost. i
trotters divisions with the blanket
contributed by H. and R. Firestone,

201

Others wtlt show a smcere tntereat todBty 1n catennQ to your
needs and dotng wnat mev can
to pleaH you Be appr ec1at tve
and recipr ocal
ARIEl (Mirch 21-Aprlllll) Gen eral cond111ons that at!ect you
are ra t! l¥ stab le today. so do
what you fee t r~ u to be done wtth ·
sell -assurance and conhdence
TAURUS (April 2G-Mey 20) You
ha~te g ood . po ~er s of concen tr ation today Use them cons trvcttvely on thtngs requtr tng keen
mental or creat 1ve all rlbutes
GEMINI (Miy 21 -June 20) An
e»ecelle nt day to go shoppe ng lor
hou&amp;ehold ttems You tMd to
deal wil h ttle on pr act•cal terms
today It ''n 't likely you'd maMe
loolish purchases
CANCER (June 21-Jutr 22)
Make p111ns today to take care ol
personal des•res For once 11
toolt s like you may be able to do
what you wanT w•th Ou t too much
outs1de tnterlerence

MEIGS-MASON AREA
ROBERT HOEFLICH
City Editor
Publbhed daUy ~..... Sotuday by Tbe Ohio
Vlll&lt;y PublllhtDI Co-y- MIIIUmedlo, Ill&lt;.,
Ill Cout SL, Pomeroy, Oblo 4$711. au-.
0111« Pbooe fn. !154. F.dllortal P -

Tbe DaUy SooU..~ by maD ID Obl9 allll Weal
YlrJ(Dla, eae year $3UG; Six moatbl hUt;
&amp;Uet matbl tzt.IO. E!Rwlat~ pa.•; 11:1
moatbltzll.•; tlueemoa\bafll.M.
Tbe Atnelated Pnu II ntlulvely uUUed
&amp;o &amp;be UIC! for P'lblJcatiOD of IU DtW1 dilp.tc-.
crtdlled to &amp;H aewap.per aDd allo &amp;be local

IN THE FIFTH race for pacers at the Meigs County Fair Don
Spencer, Vincent, fonnerly of Pomeroy, and Burdell McKiMey, Mid-

111

getttng needed cooper al ton !r Om
vour mate or an y partnershiP
St tuatlton Don t try to work.
atone
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fob. 11)
Look lor th 1s day to oe both producttve ana reward tnQ 'fou 11
settle down to busmess and
won ' t let lri..,oiOI.JS 1nterests stde track you

PISCES

sial I; (2) request a public

sial I; and-or 13) request

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0c:l . 23) Everythmg you do t oday wtll be done
wtth cons tderatton and care tor
the o ther gu y You'll wm admtra t ton These Quah tteS wt ll not go
un not1ced
SCORPIO (Oc;l . 24-Now. 22) Your
logtcal evalua l tons are ttavored
wtl t} senstt1v1 1y t oday mak mg you
an excellent oerson t o gtve
adv1ce Don t hold back your
th oug ht s
S AGITTARIUS (Nov . 23-0ec . 21)
Tt1 tngs you get mvolved tn today
should event ually work ou t You
k now now to use adv antageously
alt the resources avattable to
You shOuld have good luck today

ASTRO·GRAPH

Authori1ed

SHOP

773 -5592

•

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knives on the Cabinet."

Jet, owned by Doris Newhart, Marietta, was fil'l!l and third, respectively,
while Spooky Boom Boom, owned by
J . W. Ratcliff, McArthur, was second
and first, respec1tively.
Lucky Crystal, owned by Neil
Walls, Peebles, was second in the
sixth. The second and seventh races
were also for tw()-year old fillies and
first and fourth, respectively, was
Shame On Me, owned by Ron
Newhart, Marietta . .
Second and fll'l!t in the two races
was Meigs Beauty, owned by Burdell
McK.ioney, Middleport. McKinney,
also drove the horse to the victories as
well as driving horses owned by Mrs .
Dorothy Karr of Pomeroy to wins in
other races.
YACHTING
The third and eighth races , for
PLYMOUTH, England (API three year old trottel'l! , saw Smokey's
Seventeen yachtsmen were known to Dream, owned by Edward F. Ruth,
have died in the disastrous storm Oak Hill, as first place winner.
which hit the Fasinet yacht race and
Second and third, respectively, in
other vessels in the 20,000 square the two races, was Hopeholder, ownmiles area of the Atlantic between ed and driven by Don Spencer of Vin·
southern Ireland and Cornwall.
cent.
The dead include 13 Britons, one
Spencer, formerly of Pomeroy, is a
American, Frank H. Ferris, who lived son cl. the late Sidney Spencer who
in London, and one Dutchman. was a well known area trai11er and
Nationalities of Ule other two dead driver. Third and second, respectivewere not immediately certain .
ly, in the two races was Maybe
Ships and aircraft continued to Marken, owned by Kenneth Owen,
search into the early hours of Marietta.
Thursday, seeking one yacht still
In the fourth and ninth races , these·una ccounted for and possible cond division for three year old trotsurvivors of the score of yachts sunk, tel'l!, Snappy Count, owned by
abandoned or in distress. Rescue Dorothy Karr and driven by Burdell
· services said the dealh toll was McKinney, was first in both.
certain to rea ch 19.
Second in both races was Jonalu,
By BOB HOEFUCH
An excellent evening of twilight
harness horse racing was presented
for Meigs County Fair fans Wednesday evening.
The race program was extended
from six to 10 races in order to acconunodate the large nwnber ·of
horses on hand for the racing card.
Adding to the interest were several
locally owned horses and drivel'l! who
came in for their share of the wins.
In the first and sixth races Bretta

--

'

William Steif

tq:..1=1 .' 19

What if it does hurt productivity a
sli ght bit. No company is at 100
percent efficiency, he said.
The social problem is said to be a
time bomb whose fuse is lit. For a
quarter -century
black
youth
unemployment was more Ulan 20
percent ; now it is more than 30
percent. Most Americans, however, ' think the situation has been ..__ .
.unprovtng
. .
:----..._
Under Mahoney's plan, the 1,000 ·
largest industrial corporations and - -..fll-l-11.
the 50 largest banks and retailers, n~lt~IIIM
each would hire only 10 minority
youths for every Ulousand employees.
"This could open up 200,000 jobs,"
he said. In an interview later he said
again, as he had last April, that
200,000 jobs would "open the doors to
half the presently unemployed
minority youth~ ."
But wouldll't the Mahoney plan
merely take jobs from others who
needed them ? Kistler considered the
question . In his opinion, he said, it
wouldn 't, thus seeming to put the
AFL-CIO imprimatur on the program.

Knives out at White House
WASHINGTON (AP ) - The knives
were out at the White House the other
week during the Cabinet purge,
accor din g to none other than
President Carter himself.
The president made that disclosure
at a festive ga thering in the White
House press room that celebrated the
birthday of one veteran member of

Excellent racing card entertainS fairgoers

E:.TTA ~~~ woi1T• ST~a:T'HtGt7A"'

HUlME

.

..
~-

.

,,
""

undct sta nd , J'll .have a cast on my leg
for only two or three weeks," Griffey
sai d.
Griffey said he e•pected to be in a
cast for several months . He said he
would discuss his possible early
return with orthopedic surgeon Dr.
Frank Jobe.
" I don't know . J really can't say. If I
heal to a point where I can, J might be
~ble lo. But J don't know until talk to
nr. Jobe."
. 'J'l1e .316 hitter was injw·ed July 13
~ nd played in only 14 more games
before dec iding on surgery.

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,

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., Thursday. Aug. 16, 1979

Meeks has champion stallions

'I

year for harness racing at the Meigs County Fair.
Bachelor Boy has been used as the lead horse for many
years at the local fair. He i.s owned by Mrs. Flossie
Allenswoi1h, Middleport.

'

By The Assocla!ICI Press
All Times EDT
NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST
l. Pel.
; Pittsburgh
69 ~9 .585
~ Montreal
64 51 .557
, Chicago
6~ 54 . 53~
• St. Louis
60 · Sl .513
; F'hllodelphle
61 59 .508
• New York
49 6 .416
WEST
Houston
70 51 .579
~ Cln~lnnall
66 56 .541
San Francisco
57 63 .475
~ Los AngeiH
S4 65 . ~54
, San Dleoo
. 53 68 ..cJS
; Atlanta
•1 73 .392

. i t Jo..

By The Associated Press
Here is the weekly Ohio fishing
report as issued on Wednesday by the
Department of Natural Resources:
LAKE ERIE
Water temperature 72 degrees and
clear.,Whi\e bass fish ing is very good .
Fish the reefs of the we~te rn basin.
Use !ii!l.nherS'. Avon Point and Bass
islahllrareas are the best. Walleye
fishing remains good. Look for deeper
water at 40 feet or more. Fish at 20
feet as they rema in suspended.
Outlook good.
CENTRAL OHIO
BUGKEYE L&gt;\KE
Water
temperature 79 degrees. Bluegills on
red or wax worms. Try the mouths of
the bays around vegetation. Channel
catfish on hard bottom. Use worms.
Liebs Island is the best area ·for
catfish . Outlook good. ·
ALUM CREEK
Water
temperature 76 degrees and clear.
Some Crappies 11-20 feet on minnows
and jigs. Fish around old bridges.
Walleye are 10-20 feet deep in the
lower basin. Try weighwd spinners
tipped with nightcrawlers or weighted
crank baits.
MAUMEE RIVER Water
temperature 74 degrees and cloudy.
Good &amp;ass fishing in ~ feet of water
from shore. Use spinners and
nightcrawlers. Bullhead and channel
catfish fishing very good. Use
nightcrawlers and cut bait after dark .
Freshwater di'Um fishing very good.
Use nightcrawlers. The best area
remains Buttonwood and Wa terville
Bridge . Outlook good·.
SOUTHEAST OHIO
KNOX LAKE - Water temperature
78 degrees and cloudy. Bass on
surface lures and crank baits around
vegetation. Channel catfish on
shrimp,
chicken
liver
and
nightcrawlers. Fish any deep water
drop-offs and the sand or gravel bars.
Crappies on minnows around logs and
trees . Outlook good.
NORTHWEST
MOSQUITO LAKE - 77 degrees
and clear. White bass are being
ca ught along the shorelines by casting
small lures and drift fishing with
nightcra wlers . The best blue gill
fishing is around shoreline cover. The
mo st popular bluegill baits are
maggots and red worms. Channel
catfish a re hitting nightcrawlers on
the bottom in off shore areas. Outlook
fair .
BERLIN RESERVOIR - 80
degrees and clear. Crappies are being
caught aro und submerged trees and
brush in morning and evening. The
best crappie baits have been maggots
and night crawlers. Walley es are
being taken in S-16 feet. Depths on
night.crawlers and artificial
lures.
NORTHEAST OHIO
CHARLES MILL RESER-VOIR Water temperature 77 degrees and
cloudy. Bass are being caught along
shorelines in 6 to 8 feet of water !flrly
and late in the day. Use nightcrawlers
or spinners . Try jug fishing the north
end of the lake after dark. Use cut
bait. Outlook good .
MAUMEE RIVER Water
temperature 74 degrees and cloudy .
Good bass fishing in 4.jj fee t of water
fr om sho re . . Use spinne rs and
nightcrawlers. Bullhead a nd c hann~ l
catfish fi shi ng very good . Use
nightcrawlers and cut bait after dark .
" Freshwater drum fishing very good .
Use nightcrawlers. The uest area
remains Buttonwood and Waterville
Bridge. Outlook good.
SOUTHEAST OHIO
OHIO RIVER (Gallipolis-Pool)
Water temperature 79 degrees and
cloudy. Bass fishing repPrted good .
Use spinner baits and fish the bays 10
th'e main river. Bluegill fishing good
around weedbeds . Use crickets .
Saugerfishing very product ive . Fish
near movin g water at roller dam . Use
nightcrawler or spinners. Outlook
good .
JACKSON CITY RESER-VO!H Wfter temperature 82 degrees and
cl~r . Fish a ny structure using
sutface bail' and poppers for bass
eatly or late in the u:1y. Bluegi ll
fishing very good. Use fly rods and
rubber spiders.
SALT FORK LAKE - Water
temperature 83 degrees and clear.
Try surface plugs at dusk for bass.

w.

,.

ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW

ANNOUNCE THE RELOCATION
OF THEIR LAW OFFICES TO:

.-

211 E. SECOND ST.

Transactions
By The Associated Press
BASKETBALL
(Nation a 1Basketba II Assoc fation)
INDIANA PACERS Named
M ichael Burns an executive vice
president.
HOCKEY
American Hockey League
NEW BRUNSWICK HAWKS
Named Joe Crozier head coach .
Na11onal Hockey League
HARTFORD WHALERS - Signed
Chuck Luksa , defenseman, and Dave
Debol , center .
FOOTBALL
Nationa I Footba II League
ATLANTA FALCONS - Released
Marvin Mon tgome r y, offens i v e
ta ckle, and Mark Sullivan, defense
end .
BA L TIMORE COLTS - Acquired
Brian DeRoo , wide receiver, on

~ considered
•. COLUMBUS
. Regulations
concemlng conunerc1a1 and sport
fl.shlng In Ohio will be considered at a
public admJnlatrative hearing on Fri·
day, Aug . 31 in Colwnbus.
The hearing, conducted by the Ohio
Department of Natural Resources'
(ODNRJ Division of WUdlife, will
begin at 9:30 a.m. in the Conference
Room rJ. Building C, FOW!tafn SqWll'l!,
11152 Belcher Drive.

-

JEANS-

Several commercial fishing regulations will be considered. These in·
elude, but are not limited to:
-Olanging the minimum commercial size limit on white baas from 9 to
ll.lnchea.
- Prohibiting coounerctal filhlng
from May 1 to Sept. ll within one mile
rJ. the Lake Erie lhore from Lorain
Eut to the Chagrin River.
- Prohlbllin« gill net fishing within
m feet rJ. the water surface.
- Restricting the legal size of gill
net mesh .
- Prohibllin« the sale rJ.Ibh ca1J8ht
by sport angling.
-&lt;:hancln8 the filin(c date for commercial flsiing license appllcations.
- Regulatin« the legal time period
for removing flab from seines and gill

I•

A

nets.

- l...lmltin« the length of gill net
allowed aboard or in the water at one

V

A

0

Sport fishing reguiiUons to be considered lnclllde ..tUng • dally t.g
and P"' n'on limit rJ. Ill% fill'
walleyes taken In Lake Erie and Ita
tribuWies, removing the I~ ~
limit m iu'gemouth bus at Stewart
Lake and prollibllinl! the l.rnporting
and ltlling rJ. silver carp, black anwr
and bighead carp.
The hearing will be conducted in IC·
cordance with the AdmlnlstraUve
Procedures Act, Chapter 119, Ohio
Revlaed Code. Any Interested penon
can give ~ony at the hearing fllr
Ill' against the propo!led regulations.

3-Speed Automatic Stereo
Changer with Dust Cover
Buill-In 8-Track
Re,corder/Piayer
AM/ FM Stereo Receiver

Speakers with 8" Woofer,
, 5" Midrange, 3" Tweeter

the lam six innings.
Catcher Hob Boone agreed. "This is
lik~ he was throwing early in the year.!
He had good command of the corners.
When the guy's putting it there, it's
· easy to call a good game."
The l'hillies gave Espinosa a tworun cushion in the second inning.
Boone singled through the box off
loser Fred Norman, 10-9, who was
trying for his IOOth career victory.
Larry Bowa tripled to the gap in leftcenter, scoring Boone, and Espinosa
singled Bowa home.
The Philliesadded another run after
the Reds made it 2-1 on Spilman's RBI
hit . Greg Luzinski singled off the left
field wall leading off the fifth and
advanced to second on an infield out.
Garry Maddox singled off reliever
Frank PasiOI'e to score tbe winning
run.
Espinosa's complete game was
preserved
in the eighth when he
TIUSTLEDOWN
induced Junior Kennedy to ground
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio (AP) Favored Hail Fager, with Antonio into a double play after Collins' single
Graell in the irons, stepped the six scored Cesar Geronimo with the
furlongs in 1:12 in an easy victory in second Reds' run."
It was the eighth complete game for
the featured allowance Wednesday at
Espinosa,
now third in the National
Thi.stledown .
League
in
wins behind the Niekro
Graell, the leading rider at tbe
brothers.
meeting, recorded his fourth win of
"Tonight 's the best I ever saw him
the afternoon .
Hail Fager retumed $3.20,. $3 and
$2.60,
while
second-place
Marlborough Way paid Ul.60 and $7.
O.K. Marvin returned $5.60 for a third·
place finish.
·
There were two healthy trifectas in
the ninth race because of a dead heat
between Flying Brian and Crooked
Cross for second place behind
Smugglers Kid. An 11-7-4 trifecta paid
$2,407 .20, and an 11-4-7 trifecta
returned f.!.222 .10.
The crowd of 4,716 bet $534,972.
t:INCINNATl .(AI') - . Nino
Espinosa!s wife phoned him from the
Dominican Republic tw~ nights ago
for a couple of reasons.
"My wife called me to tell me happy
birthday. And she told me to win,"
said Espinosa, who celebrated his 26th
birthday Wednesday night with a 3-2,
five-hit victory over the Cincinnati
Reds, snapping a four -game
Philadelphia losing streak.
Espinosa was at his best, or at least
his best since the opening weeks of the
season when he won his first five
games. He allowed a run-scoring
double to Harry Spilman in tbe second
and n bloop RBI single to Dave Collins
in the eighth in coasting to hi.s 13th win
against six losses.
"I feel real good and I feel I'm
throwing the baU real good," said
Espinosa, who faced only 19 batters in

pitch and I saw him two years in the and three healthy pitchers - ·Randy
Dominican Republic," said Reds Lerch, Dick Ruthven and
Manager John McNamara .
C.'hrlstenson· - to make a lUI at first
"He's probably been our most ·place.
consistent pitcher for the whole
"U we' Fe going to get back In dill
season," Boone said.
race, we're going to need acelle!¢
Espinosa was asked about the , pitching.! don't look fOI' any one game
difference between pitching this year to do it. We've got to put togethel' a
and in New York, where he led the streak," Boone said .
Mets in victories two years in a row
For the Reds, sUI14~ games behind .
division-leading Houston after the
with 11 and 10.
"I think it's ·being with a different Astros lost Wednesday, McNamara
team. I pitched a iot of good games in said the ieam can only hope to play
New York and came up with a loss," well while Houstoo falters .
Espinosa said.
"We have to be thankful fw- what w~
Boo~e said it would take a can get from the other teams,
consistent
and Steve Carlton
said.

..._rry

MEIGS COUNTY

AUGUST 14-15-16-17-18
Friday, August 17
8:00a.m.-Jr. Fair Demonstrationslndiviqual and Team (Show Area)
1:00 p.m.-Pet Show-Show Arena
2:00 p.m.-FlowerShow Judging
4:30pm.-Twilight Horse Harness Racing
7:00 p.m.-Junior Fair Market Steer,
Lamb and Pill Sale
8:00 p.m.-Johnny Russell-Pattie Powell
and Bob Gallion

0

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o f program 4. An a ux inpu t let s you add a 2nd
re corder o r othe r a ud io co mpon ent. 13· 1202

.

Reg.

I
i
l

By The Associated Press
Woclnftday•s Resutll
Charleston 3-6, Tici&lt;!Water 1·3
Tole&lt;lo 7, ColumbUs6
Syracuse 1. Rochester 0
R lchmond 9, Pawtuckel4
Thursday'i Gam11
Pawtucket at Tlci&lt;!Wal&lt;!r
Charleston 11 Richmond
Columbus at Tot!!do
Rochester at Syracuse
Friday's Gamts
Pawtucket ol Tidewater
Charleston at Richmond
Toledo at Columbus
RocnMt!r af Syracuw

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MODULAR ,-_
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HOMES
By

ALL AMERICAN
Meets

KINGSBURY
HOME SALES
1100 E . Main
Pomeroy, Ohio
992·7034

.We generate over .
100 billion·kilowatthours
of electricity a year

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We're concerned with your good
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...
Near Stiffler's in Pomeroy.
2nd Street
992·l586
Pomeroy, 0.

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
MA DI VISIO N o r

lANDY r:o HPO RATION ·

These days, depending upon foreign
oil can be uncertain and cosily. To say
the lea::.l.
At A.E.P oil is not our fuel for power
generation.
Coal .. .abundant American coal ...
is our main fuel.

In Touch With
Your Doctor!

Cover

D~e~ l e r s

Luo k l o r 1hrs
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Village Pharmacy
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The coal we burn is the equivalent of
saving 140,000,000 barrels of oil.
. . ..... ., · Jr country, pur customers and our shareholders. '

We also operate our own extensive
coal transportation fleet. We have
available 3,200 rail hopper cars, 510
barges and 26towboats.

Conserve oil?
We've been doing it for 72 years!

we see a busier, beHer America

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Appalocnlan Power Co., Indiana&amp; Michigan Eloc!rlc Co .. Kon!ucky Power Co., Klngopo~ Power Co., Michigan Power Co., Onlo Power Co., Wheeling Eloclrlc Co.
.

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We burn over 37 million tons a year.
And we burn it in conformance with
L:ui, t::rH Clt::a, i Air regulations.

American Electric Power

271 N. 2nd Ave.

.'

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· Clarinelte-96 by Realistic

RACK OF INFANT CLOTliiNG
SHORTS • DRESSES • SWIMSUITS

. 'I

II

Frid•y's Games
Chicago el Basion, tnl
Kansas City at Betllmore, !n)
Minnesota at New York, (n)
Texas at MllwaukM , (n)
Toron1o at California, (n)
Clev&lt;!land at Oakland , (n )
Detrolte!Seattle, ! nl .

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LATONIA RESULTS
FLORENCE, Ky. (AI') - Dee
Dee's Duffy captured the $1,100
featured pace mile Wednesda y night
in the ninth r ace at Latorua, pa)1ng
$4.20, $3.20 and l'i.40.
.
Pio C.'hadek was second, returmng
$4.40 and $5, and Sand And Gravel, the
show horse , paid $4.60. Winning time
was 2 : 02.1~ .
Lady In Luck and Bumblebee
Shane, 11-4, paid $78 in the double .
Allen dance was 1, 716 and the
m~tuel pool totaled $138,539.

I

•

3 TABLES OF PANTS

FOR BOYS &amp; GIRLS FOR BACK
TO SCHOOL.

Hours :
9: 30 to 5:00
Mon . thru Sat.
9:30 to 8 :00
Friday

7B 39 .&amp;67
73 ~ . 62~ 5
70 so •.583 9 112
64 53 .5.47 1~
62 5I .517 17 1h
61 59 • .508 18 112
38 82 .317 41 112
WEST
California
67 S4 .554
Minnesota
62 541 .525 31f•
Kansas City
61 5I .513 6'h
Chicago
53 66 . .US 13
Oakland
36 &amp;5 .2911 31
Wodnelday•s Games
Oakland J, Toron1o 1
Boston 9, Minnesota 5
Balli more 2, Chicago 1
New York~. Texas 3
Mllwaukee6, Kansas City 5
Oe1rolt6, California 1
Seattle 3, Cleveland 1
Thurlday•s Games
Chicago (Proty H I el Boston
!Tudor 0·0). (n) .
Kansas City !Spplttorfl 11 ·12) at
Baltimore (D . Martinez lU), (n) .
MlnneSQ1a !Zahn 9·3) at New York
tHunt"r 2·7), (n) .
Texas ! Derwin 3·3) at Milwaukee
!Sorensen 12 ·12) , !nl .
!Only games sche&lt;lule&lt;ll

Baltimore
Boston
Milwaukee
New York
Detroit
Cleveland
Toronto

time .

e

lh Price Sal.e Continues
DRESSES

15
17
22

•

992-2151

The Nationwide Supermarket of Sound&lt;!!&gt;

0

JUST IN TIME FOR
THE PREm BABY OR THE llffiE
MISS CONTEST.

~'h

12'12

W. L. Pet. 01

POMEROY, OHIO'
KNIGHT LAW OFFICES

V

BUFFALO BILLS - Acquired Tom
Rusk, linebacker, on waivers from
the New York Giants. Waived Mike
Fr~nckowiak, t ight end .
DE NVER BRONCOS - Waived
Ell iott Walker, running back .
DETR O! T LIONS - Placed Dan
Gray, defensive 1ackle, on the injured
reserve
list .
Acquired
Rich
McGeorge, tight end, on waivers from
th e Green Bay Packers.
MINNESOTA VIKINGS Uncondi1ionally released Bob Lee,
quarterback .
NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS Traded Leon Gray , offensive tackle, '
to Houston for t he Oilers No. 1 and No.
6 draft picks in1980.
SA N DIEGO CHARGERS - Placed
J im my Carter, offensive guard, on
the injured reserve list.
SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS - Placed
Scott Bu ll , quarterbac~ . oninjured
waivers .

18'12

AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST

1legulations

Complete Stereo
Record/Play
Music System

Released Ch\Jtk White, wide receiver .

B'h
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•'•

COMPACT STEREO SYSTEM~

wa ivers from the New York Giants.

3'12
6

Wednnday•s Games

(Across from the Post Office)

judging held

The best areas are the bays near U.S.
22. Walleyes are being caught in 10.15
feet of wawr. Troll the southern
Horse and pony confonnalion judg·
shoreline of Pinecrest Loop Trails. ing was held Wednesday at the Meigs
Muskie fi shing is good. Troll large County Fair.
plugs along the eastern shoreline near
First place winners were: Sherry
the dam. Try the bays opposite the Indestad with Clipper Ett, English
park headquarters office. Outlook ·horse ; Jeanne Welsh, Middleport,
good.
with Squeaky, pony, 48 to 56 inches;
SOUTHWEST OHIO
Cole Stables with Tinkers Surprise,
ACTON
LAKE
Water pony under 48 inches; Cole Stables
wmperature 81 degrees and clear. with Bandit Talent, Appaloosa
Largemouth bass are hittin g crank stallion; Tribles Win of Cole Stables,
baits and spinner baits .fish ed along . Appaloosa mares and geldings; Cole
the shoreline. The best bass fishing Stables with No Name, Western horse
has been along the cast shoreline conformation, yearlings; John
during the early morning. Bluegill Boston, Long Bottom, with Boss Man
fishing is good. Most are being caught Mill, Western hnorse conformation,
in shallow water on red worms and stallion, any age; Cole Stables with
wax worms. Channel catfish are being Top of the Hill, Western gelding, any
caught on nightcrawlers at night age; Carol Carson, West Columbia
along sandy areas. Outlook good.
with Tagalong Tufty, Western mare,
GRAND LAKE ST. MARYS four or older, and Cole Stables with an
Water temperature 70 degrees and entry in the Western mare, three and
cloudy . Crappies are being caught in younger.
2-4 feet of water on minnows and jigs.
Th e best largemouth ba ss fishing is
along the shoreline using spinner baits
and crank baits. The channel cat
On Dec. 6, 1917, 1,500 persons died .
···
•
fishing is good in the sand and gravel when an ammunition ship collided Clarlnette"'-95 by ~ealistlc.i
bottom areas. Fish at night and use with a vessel in Halifax Harbor.
live bait or prepared catfish bait for
best results. Outlook good.

GB

• Chlcogo6, Sen Frenclsco5
! Pittsburgh 5, San.D ieoo 1
New York 6, A!Ionia 3

Horse, pony

Weekend fishing report

Philadelphia 3, Clnclnnatl2
Los Angeles&amp;, St. Louls5
Monlreal3, Houston 0
Thurlday•s Games
Sen Francisco (Nepper B·7) at
Chicago (McGlothen 9-8) .
San Diego !Perry 10·9) ot Pitt sburgh (Kison 7·6), (n).
New York (Falcone 3-9) at Atlanta
(P . Nlekro 15·15), (n) .
Los Angeles (Sutton 10·121 at St.
Louis !B . Forsch6-10l, (n) .
·only games scheduled
Friday's Oamos.
San Dleoo at Chicago
Atlanta at Montreat, (n)
Los Angeles at Pittsburgh, (n l
New York a1 Cinci nnati, (n)
Sen Francisco at St . Louis, tn)
Philadelphia at Houslon, !nl

•

BARBARA M. KNIGHT

GOLFERS TO MEET

•

••

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD
'

All Meigs High School students who
want to go out for the golf team are to
meet Coach Oliver at 9 a.m . on Frl·
day, Aug. 17, at the Mason Riverside
Golf Course.

...
•

' •• II~ ~··
: •
I

CHARLES H. KNIGHT

RIVER DOWNS
CINCINNATI (AI' I - Jeswrapped,
ridden by Homero Hildago and
carrying 122 pounds, was favored with
Wee Sel today in the $3,700 featured
eighth race at Rivet Downs.
Lynco Jo covered thew.. furlongs in
1:04 4-5 Wednesday to win the $6,000
featured eighth race, paying $10.80, $4
and $3 .80.
·
Favored He 's Hot placed, paying
$2.80 and $2.60, and Smart Trader was
third for $3.80.
The 2-4 double of Grand Pro and
Little Queenie returned $37.60.
•
The crowd of 5,571 bet $637,060.

Espinosa slops Reds, 3-2

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1n ad&lt;lltion, Coen won six first place
Vern L. Meeks, Route 5, Athens,
has the junio( and grand champion ribbons with his draft horses and
draft horse stallions and Dave Coen, Meeks won a first place.
Route I, Guysville, the junior, senior
and grand champion mares on exhibit
at the annual Meigs County Fair.

EIGHT-YEAR.Q!D Tanuny KeMedy, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. J . R. KeiUiedy of the Tuppers Plains
area, aboard Bachelor Boy Is outrider for the second

ue u.wy &lt;M:Jaunea, Mllloieport-.l'omeroy, u., 'l'hW'IIIIIY, Aug. 18, 1979

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�7-lbe Dilly SenUnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Aug. !&amp;, 1979

test is similar to that uaed by the
department of highways to check .
visual akllls.
Band members ol Eastern. Blld.
' Meigs high schools .had a night at the
fair yesterday evening, u they performed at Youth Night and in the
parade. Members were permitted
unlimited riding for $2, ·and the fair ·
OJad Sayre, son of Mr. and Mrs. a local optometrist, is being uaed to board made a $50 donaUoo to each
Uoyd Sayre, was attracting quite a test vision in several ways. Among band for Ita particlpaUoo In Youth
bit al attenUon with his pet goat, the things being tested for are color- Night eventa.
Madam Bambi. The cute animal was bllndnesa, depth and perception
Unfortunately, all the entranta in
being led around the fairgrounds oo a viewing, direction ri. eyes, tlnd
Utile Miss and Mister Melg,s
the
leash by Cahd, and she and her owner atrength ci. near and far slgbt. The
County
Fair contest, couldn't win, but
· are very popular falrgoers.
the judges finally, after much
thought, selected Amber Cuming,s,
Meigs alumnUB Jeff Daniela has
daughter of ~- and Mrs. Rex
been giving the Meigs Band Boosters
CUmlng,s, and Jacob Hall, son ol Mr.
a helping hand with their refreshment
and Mrs. Jack Hall, to fil the hOilored
I"RIDAY
stand this week. A 1979 graduate of
WESTERN SQUARE DANCE, positions. Both of the winners are
Meigs High School, Daniels returned
Royal
Oat Park recreaUoo building, darlings! And ao were some al the
to work for "old times' sake" - a nice
Friday,
8 to 11 p.m. BW Bush of Hun- l011ers!
gesture!
tington, caller.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Birchfield
SUNDAY
Brenda Neutzllng, Pomeroy, Is
and
daughter, Kim, have become so
ASBURY UNITED MEmODIST
among the lucky few w)lo are sucinvolved
in fair activities that they've
cessful in midway games. She won an CHURCH, Hcmecoming, Sunday.
put
a
camper
on the grounds for the
enormous teddy bear Wednesday in Sunday school at 9:60a.m.; worship
week.
Mrs.
Birchfield
Is, as UBual,
service
at
11
a.m.;
basket
dinner
at
the game that entails throwing a
puWng
tn much time working for the
12:30
p.m.
Afte)-noon
program
to
baseball into a large milk can. Never
feature the Parables·, Elldns, W. Va. Meigs Band Boosters. She and her
could get the hang ol that!
mother, Mrs. Pear) Utile, were
Public invited.
operators
of refrealunent atands at
REUNION, Descendants of Wwtam
Pomeroy IMlddleport Uons
area
fairs
In
past years. Mrs. Uttle,
Club is performing a valuable service R. BDd Sadie E. Bailey, Twin aty
an
excellent
cook, has volunteered
Shrine
Pa'rk,
Sunday
with
backet
dinthis .week in Ita booth in the Rock
her
time
previously
to prepare food
ner
at
110111.
RelaUves
and
friends
InSprings Grange Hall. An lnstrwnent,
for
local
organlzaUona.
This year, she
vited.
Take
own
table
aervi.ce.
owned by Dr. Dan W. Cmlpton, O.D.,
made
the
hot
dog
sauce
for the
THIRD ANNUAL reunion .of the
boosters, UBing about 100 pounds of
Victor C. YOWI8,Jr.,familySunday,1 hamburger. Now that'salot of sauce!
DISCO DANCE
p. m. at the Royal Oak Part shelter.
SET ON SATURDAY
RelaUves and friends are Invited and
U you like to boogie and disco's
A disco dance will be held Saturday are to take their own table service.
your
tblng, then be sure to make the
from 9 p.m. to mldnlght in the 1 JACKS REUNION, Forest Acres scene at the disco dance Saturday .
his;Jiway garage a~ the Meigs County Part Sunday with dinner at I p.m. ntghtin the county highway garage oo
Fau-grounds. The dance is open to the Eveeyone welcome.
the fairgrounds.
dance is being
p~c . and Dave Brown will be the
ALL CONTEST CLASSES HORSE sponsored by the Meigs County 4-H
disc jockey.
dance is sponsored ,
count y J. u01or
·
Junior Leadel'lJhlp Club, and will run
by the Meigs County 4-H Junior SHOW, Vinton
Leadetship Club Admission is fl 50 Fairgrounds, McArthur, Sunday, 1 from 9 p. m. to midnight. Admlssloo
per person this being in addition ·to p.m. There will be f!OO payba~ will be f1.60 in addition to the cost of
any charge made for entering the clasaell and calcuttaa. For further In- entering the fairgrounds.
grounds.
formation call Scott Fee, 596-4662.
"Oh, you beauUful doll" will be on
MONDAY
the
minds al all tho6e who attend the
MIDDLEPORT Business and pretty
contest Saturday at I p.
Professional Women annual picnic m. in baby
the
show
arena. Dozens ol
Monday, 7 p.m., at Racine Locks and "beautiful dolls" will
AUDREY THEOBALD
compete. I pity
Dam picnic grounds located above
the judges!
SURGERY PATIENT
New Haven. Bring table service and
Audrey Theobald, Second Street, covered dish.
Only two days ri. the fair are left, so
Middleport, underwent surgery
If you bave been procrastlnalin8, now
Tueaday at Riverside Hospital,
Is the Ume to come BDd see all the
Columbus.
lovely exhiblta and take in the rides.
You'll be glad you did!

Social Calendar

BEST OF SHOW-Mrs. Betty Dean of the Chester Garden Club was
the winner of the "best of show" rosette in artistic arrangements with her
abstract c0n.struction in the "House of Green Gables" class. The arrangements featured a single yellow sunflower in an otherwise all-green
design.

RESERVE BEST OF SHOW-Mrs. Ruth Erwin of the Chester Garden
Show won the reserve best of show in artistic designs for her "Bye, Bye,
Black Sheep" arrangement of artichoke hearts, caladium leaves, and
multi-flora rose vines in a wooden base painted black.

: ::;::;:;:;:;:; : ;:;:: : ::::;:;:;:;:;:;: ;: ;: ; :; :::::;:;:;::::: : ::: : :: :;:;: ; :;:;:;:;:;:;:;:; :;:;:;:;:;: ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:; :;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: ::;:;: ;:;:;:;:;:;:; :;:;:;:; :;:;.~:

:\ The second

Nease and CaJ
Osburn, Huntington, W. Va.; Mr. and
Mrs. James Shreeves and Jay,
Parkersburg, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
Earl Harden, Beth Nease, Weston, W,
Va. ; Mr. and Mrs. Ear] Harden II and
Earl III and Paul, J ., Canton ; Mr. and
Mrs. Robert A. Harden, ii and Eric,
Marion; Mr. andMrs.JamesHarden,
Jacob and Janet, London; Mr. and
Mrs. Keith Lisle, Jason and Robert
Nicholas, West Jefferson.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert R. Harden and
Sandy, Racine; Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Harden, Mrs. Florence Harden Potts,
Mr. ani! Mrs. John Lisle, Todd, Scott
and Travis, Mr. and Mrs. Don Lisle,
Syracuse; Mr. and Mrs. Don Harden,
D. J . and Michael, Mr. and Mrs. Earl
Yates, Oak Hill ; Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Jenkins , Kimberly and Mary
Rochelle, Minersville.

HOWARD McMD.JJON
. ARRIVES FOR DUTY
DAYTON - Master Sere ant
Howard W. McMillion, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Marie McMillion of Rural Rt. 1,
Mason, W. Va., has arrived for duty
at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base
here.

Mason Area
News
Notes
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Kearns, Mrs. ·

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Fred Spencer have returned from a
vacation to London, England, where
they visited Mrs. Kearn's sister and
hUB band, Mr. and Mrs. George Smith.
Kearns returned on AugUBt 11th
and Mrs. Spencer returned the first of
July after and enjoyable sight-eeeing
vacation and reunion.

The

Mn. June Sayre presided at the

meelinll durlni which

Ume the new
oftlcers named were Doris E. Sayre,

FOR
ALL

THE FAMILY

THE
SHOE BOX

'

Middleport, Ohio

NEW
SUPER PLENAMINS®
EXTRA STRENGTH.

Brewer reunion held
Attending were the foUowing : Mr.
and Mrs. Earnest Brewer, Racine;

. Mr. and Mrs. Rollin Lawrence,
Peoria, lll.; Miss Sylvia Brewer,
Racine, R. D.; Mn. Audrey Brewer,
Portland; David D. Brewer, Reynoldsburg; Mr. and Mrs. Gary Toyergson
and Todd, Medina; Mr. and Mrs.
Edgar Brewer, Portland; Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth Brewer and Teresa and
Kennth ll, Columbus; Mr. and Mrs.
David L. Brewer, Medina; Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Brewer, Long Bottom;
Mrs. Marilyn Beall and Mark, Columbus; Mr. BDd Mrs. ~e Fitch, Long
Bottom; David · Allen Brewer,
Porltand; Mr. and Mrs. George Todd,
Columbus; Vanessa Todd and Jimmy
Ray Todd, Columbus; Mrs. Grace
Byen and George, ColumbUs; Mrs.
Addle White and Mrs. Faye Brewer,
New Brighton, Pa.; Mn. Laura

THERAG~N~~YADEC
AND
M

WHERE IT COUNTS.

130
TAB 1=TS
1

• · ,·"r'' l h•• V1 •r,...,u, E and
l•r' •• •, m ,,.. Zu1c than

II '' ' Jqr l'.' f,.'
,., •hor Mt Jd r&gt;{ ond rw 1rc th e

SPECIALS

Good thru Sunday

NEW, FROM REX ALL. THE VITAMIN MAKER.
,-----· - ~

MRS. ESTU.. COUJNS of Minford, an accredited judge of the
Oblo AssoelaUon of Garden Clubs,
judged tbe over 250 entries In the
Wednesday flower sbow, "Color In
Uterature", staged at the Meigs
Couuty Fair. lntenll!t In the oral
judging waa blgh as Mn. Colllns
commented on the good aDd bad of
eacb dlaplay.

SWISHER LOHSE
Pharmacy

Llt11e Bovs

JEANS

.
I

Ret. &amp; Slim SIZe
4-7
Green~Browi)·Blue
5

•

Cha rles R•ffl ~ A. Ph
Ron ,1 ld H.lnmng . R Ph

ro;Pnrwt h M LCvl louqh . R Pl'l

Mon th ru 'io'l l 8 00 i' m to¥ p m
JO iol1 JOitnc:ISiotp rn
~R E&lt;:,C RIPTI O N S
PH 911 2t.iS
F nendly Se r v •ce
Po m or oy 0
f Ma1n
Ooen Nlghl '&gt; ld iQ

_____.....___ ___
~unday l O

.....,

~ $599

Reg . S7.95

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Juniors

WESTERN SHIRTS
Long Sleeve
Flip pocket,
pearl snaps.

SALE

$795

Reg. S15.00
Junior
'

·T op on Catnpus

,.,/.~":l.l

For School or
Campus Bohr's
Has the Wearing
Apparel For You.

In a 1953 basketball game, Niagara
defeated Siena, 88..'11, in six overtime ,
periods.

BAHR
.
CLOTHIERS
N.

AVE.

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The

Byers, Racine; Terry D. M01!18burger,
PICNIC PLANNED
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Mart
Plans were made for a family picGamtt, Columbus; Mn. Leanne
Beegle, Racine; Mr. and Mril. Clyde nic to be held on Aug. 2111lt 6:30p.m.
Cl011e and Roy, Waterford; Jerry and at the Roadside Park on Route 33
Sherte Cloae, Watertown; Mrs. Lula when the Sew-Rite-Sewing Club met
Brewer BDd Ella Mae, Belpre; Ray Wednellday night at the home of Mrs.
Brewer, Marietta; Dennis Dobbins, Betty Wehrung. Mrs. Ann Browning
Portland, and Mn. Ethel Johnson, gave the treasurer'• report. Games
were played with priZM 11o1na to BarPortland.
bara Mullen, Jon! Hoffman, Pandora
Collins, Shirley Batty, and Lenora
McKnight. Othel'll there were F1o
strickland and Evelyn Gilmore.
Refreshments were served.

II

SUMMER CLEARANCE
All you can cany in
grocery bag for

soc

or bring shopping bag

MEIGS
HUMANE SOCIEJY
THRIFT SHOP
Middleport

Boys

JEANS

100%Cot1on
Denim
Reg.&amp; Slim
5 Size 8-16

~ $~99 .
E Reg.$ 4.50
Boys

WESTIRN
SHIRTS

L.ong sleeve, long tails,
asst. solids &amp; fancies.
8-16
Reg. $13.75

. ~ $799
L
E

BY lAMAR C. MILLER, D.O.
become a reality for moot medical
Clllllcal Alloclate Prof-r professional!.
afFIIIIIIIyMedldne
We often order testa wlllch could be
OldeU..wniiJ'CeiJece
considered ~ In order to
af Olleopathlc Medlcllle
protect ourselves from malpractice
'I1IE MALPRAtTICE MENACE
suits. A physician may be 96 percent
Doctor and hospital bills BDd the sure ol hla or her dlagnoels, but to
cost ol medical care In general are ol- limit lepl llablllty will very often
ten cited along with uWUea and gas, have ezpenalve and exotl~ diagnostic
as some prime examples of teats run.
''runaway" inflaUon. The facts do
For Instance, a remarkable new
seem to bear this out, especially when . diagnostic tool caUed a CAT scanner
we consider the comparable costs ol can give physiclana Information not
five, ten, and 20 years ago. Before we previously available by other
asswne that doctors and hospitals are methods. This machine costs over
becoming very wealthy, let's really • •1100 and paUent chargea are conanalyu the caU8eS and underlying sequenUy high. There are times when
balls ol this rapid Increase in medical uae of this machine Is medically ·
care expenses. Fallure to do so slm- · sound. However, very often It is uaed
ply deprives us of the reasons respon- for legal - not medical - purposes.
sible for this inflaUon.
· That Is, so the paUent's record will
During the last several decades, show you uaed the most sophlsUcated
more and more laboratory tests have diagnostic procedures available. ·
becune required as a prerequisite for
Malpractice settlements often ln"routlne" hospital admission. Pallen- volve large sums. Who paya the bill on
ts are subjected, for example; to chest these '100,000, ~.ooo and ,1,000,1100
x-rays, complete blood counta, setUements? The insurance comserologies, urine analysis and In some ponies, ol course. Do insurance comhospitals TB skin testa and blood ponies loae money? Never I The COlt
sugar analysis. These are required by ol doing business is paued alq to
our hospitals even when S&lt;M:alled the physician who usually pays
"minor" surgery Is to be done.
horrendous premium costs.
No excepUons can be made. Why?
Orthopedic surgeons in some parts .
MosUy because Inspection teams of the country, for example, have to
from the American Hospital pay Pl,OOO to $t0,000 a year in
Asaoclatioo, American Osteopathic premlwns to maintain Insurance
AssoclaUon, and American Medical protecUon. But who really pays? It is
A.uociiltion will not accredit a not hard to guess. You pay each lime
ho8pital which does not perfonn such your doctor increases fees·.
tests on each patient.
The conStant threat of lawsuits
against both hospitals and doctors has
created a style of pracUce which has
been called "defensive medicine."
This approach to health care has

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CORDUROY
JEANS

STAR WARS

T·SHIRTS
Size 8-16

Cinch waist,
zipper fly.

~ $}099
E

Reg . $3.98

SALE

$298

WRANGLER JEANS,AND SPORTSWEAR
FOR ALL THE FAMILY

I have not
retired and
have no
Intention
of retiring.

Dr. R. D.
Thomas,
OPTOMETRIST
346 THIRD AVE.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO, 45631

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BAN·o SHOES

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WOMEN'S ALL WHITE

CANVAS·•.•....•••••• ~14"

:'

LEATHER ....•..•.•.-.~~!19 99

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THOM MeAN

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LEATHER .NURSE MATIS. .......... ..s22.99

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MEN'S Aa.L WHITE

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LEATHER RANG

'23
heritage house
99

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Your Family Shae Store ·
In Middleport

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THURSDAY, AUGUST 16TH

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Mrs. Wilma Blake has returned
home after visiting several relatives
in ColumbUB.

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BETTER THAN

'f)

I

The

Health Review

Mrs. Charles Cartwright and Mrs.
Laurene Lewis visited recently with
Mr. and Mrs. ' Allan Harris and
family, Pomeroy Route.

Defensive back Mark Adamle of
Purdue Is from a footbaU family, his
father having played at Ohio State
and his brother for Northwestern.

W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Hart,
Coolville; Mrs. June Sayre, Howard
Sayre, Syracuse; Mrs. Paula Swatzel,
Marietta ; Mr. and Mrs. Bryce Sayre,
Brian and Bethany, Jackson, Eldon
Krider, Racine.

The

HIGH POTENCY VITAMIN&amp;MINERAL SlJIIILDDT.

Sgt. Randy Lewis has received an
honorable discharge from the U. S.
Anny after spending three years in
the service, two and one-half years
were spent at Heildroan, Germany.
He is the son of Mrs. Donald Smith
and grandson of Laurene Davis.
Lewis Is employed at Kyger Creek.

PAINS OF OLD AGE
AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP) -Golfer Rod
Funseth was talking about his injured
right ham! and came to a painful conclusion.
"!think I have arthritis in my middle two fingers," he said. "My index
finger hurts and sometimes my
thwnb begins to ache. Oh, it's just old
age."

Ashtabula, Mr. and Mrs. Brian Sim]&gt;son, Usa and Darin, Baltimore, Mr.
and Mrs. Dallas Sayre, Laura and
Zachary, Manchester; James Sayre,
Jr., California ; Mr. and Mrs. Worthy
Burria, April and Jill, Point Pleasant,

presldellt; June Sayre, vice prealdent ; David B. Sayre, secretarytruaurer; Helen Slmpeon, WUma
The Brewer family reunion was
Styer and Paula Swatzel, entertain- held Sunday, Auglltlt 12, at Portland
. ment and prius.
Park. ~re were 47 attending.
Herbert L. Sayre was the oldest
Prayer was offered at noon by Mrs.
present; Bethany Sayre, the Laura Byers before the picnic dinner.
YOWI8etlt; .James Sayre, U. S. Navy, A business meelln8 was held after
San F~, the one who traveled dinner by the preairlent, David Allen
the fartbeSt.
Brewer, who also gave a reading
Attenclin8 ~Mr. and Mn. Dale about his childhood. The family
Hart, Mr. and Mrs. Dan Sayre, Paul history was diacussed.
: Sayre, ,Mrs. Helen Slmpeon, Joyce,
Gifts were presented by the
Rotltn and Oonlta Man11tl, Mr. and president ot Mrs. Laura Byers, as
• Mn. llerbert L. Sayre, Mr. and Mrs. oldest lady present; Earnest Brewer,
Linley Hart, Mr. and Mn. Rod the oldest man present; Jimmy Ray
Grimm, Racine; Dr. and Mrs. David Todd, the youngf!l( child present. Mr.
, B. Sayre and Ricky Sellers, AnUqui- and Mn. Rollin Lawrence ol Peoria,
: ty; Mr. and Mrs. Roger Saunders, lll., were the one~ travelling the farMrs. Maine Camp, Sharon Camp thest to attend. Mn. Allen Brewer
and Lila Colt and Doris Rogera, Col- had the most children attending.
wnbul; Mnl. Irene Payne, Mr. and Other gifts were presented to Edgar
• M.n. Jamea Sayre, Mr. and Mn. Ron Brewer, Mrs. Mae Brewer, Mn. Ad• Grimm, Florida ; Mr. and Mrs. Max dle White and Mn . Faye Brewer ol
Wolfe, Sandulky.
_ New Brighton, Pa., and Mrs. Ella
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Wolfe-. _of Mae Brewer.

BII .. 'I D~~~

Sergeant McMillion 's wife, Edith, is
the daughter of Ray Pippenger of 1236
Vulcan, Ridgecrest, Cal.

Recognition for weight loss was
made at the Slinderella Diet Classes
held this week. At the Point Pleasant
Class, Gewanna Johnson and Chris
Wilson lost the most weight with
Claire Plants being the runner-up.
Chris Wilson also received her 35
pound ribbon.
.
Pat Layne lost the most weight at
the Mason class, while Pearl Phalen
and Vicky Cottrill were the runnersup. One new member was welcomed.
At the Middleport class, five new
members were taken in and Mary
Jewell lost the most weight and
Beverly Codner was the runner-up.
Information on the classes may be obtained by calling Jo Ann Newsome,
992-3382.

ANNOUNCING

ner.

l'-•a•aJies

'

Mason.

Recognition noted

CHIEF
OUTSIDE
WHITE

Deacendanta ol Mary and Enuna
Sayre held their annual reunioo at the
Racine Shrine Part Sunday. A total of
· 66 pen10111 attended the potluck din-

I lush

Sergeant McMillion, an· electronic
installation section supervisor was
previously assigned at Anders~n Air
Force Base, Guam.
He is now serving with a unit of the
Air Force Communication Services.
Sergeant McMillion is a 1962
graduate of Wahama high School

4-H FLOWER SHOW-Presented ribbons in the 4-H flower show staged Wednesday at the Meigs County Fair were, left to right, Carrie Karr of
the Busy Beavers Club, blue; Becky Rife of the Hillbillies 4-H Club, two
reds; and Denise Lambert of the Rutland Roadrunners, blue.

The

Annual Sayre reunion held locally
. MOTHER-DAUGHTER WINNERS-Mrs. Joyce Manuel ol the
Racine area and her daughter, Donita, were both rosette winners in
Wednesday's flower show. Mrs. Manuel was tbe horticulture sweepstakes
winner having won 12 ribbons on her 20 entries, and her daughter was the
junior gardener. Nine-year~ld Donita had 10 entries in the show and won
nine ribbons. Mrs. Manuel is a member of the Bend 0' the River Garden
Club.

Nease-~!~?!?r:s~~~

held Sunday at the Route 33 roadsideparkwith52attending.
Glfts were presented by James
Harden and Rose Ann Jenkins to Mrs.
Florence Potts, the olctest lady; Earl
Harden, the oldest gentleman;
Robert Nicholas, three week old son
of Mr. and Mrs. Keith Lisle, the
YOWl!lesl, and Leota Kendall, Detroit,
Mich., the person traveling the farthest.
Robert A. Harden had prayer which
· was followed by a poUuck dinner .
Next year's reunion will be held on
Aug. 2 at the Portland Park with dinner at 1 p.m.
Attending were Mrs. Leota Kendall,
Mr. and Mrs. Kenny Kendall, Kathy
Kendall, Michelle Marshall, Garrett
Jones, Detroit, Mich.; Dr. Bill Nease,
Willi

basket dinner at noon. Afternoon services will be held
at2p. m. and evening services at 7:30p.m.
public
is invited to attend. Pictured, 1-r, are Greg Sanderson,
Ernie Perry, Vickie Draper, George Draper, David
Lucas and Wes Richardson.

THE WATCHMEN TEAM- The·Zion Church of
Chrlat will hold Ita annual homecoming on Sunday,
AIJ8. 19. Featured IJPe&amp;kers and singers will be the
Watchmen team ri. Chesapeake. Sunday School will be
at 9:30 II· m., worship service at 10 :30 a. m. with a

CAMDEN PARK
OPEN UNT.IL 5 P.M. ONLY

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EVENING RESERVED
FOR

SEOOND NATIONAL BANK
ASHLAND

~NNUAL PICNIC
Closed Every Monday Except Labor Day

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�o- .i uc: ~IJ)' tolCUI)oi.H~J,

P..-ruUieroy t u .• i nW'SC18y. Aug. lti, 19'79
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lYUUUJ.t:'..,U1

~The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pcmeroy, 0., Th~y,

Baking,canning exhibit winners ·named

JUDGING TIME-Ruth Molnar, Clina.l Fulton, judge for the baking lind
canning diviaion, right, and her sister, Joyce Rice, Roanoke, Va. the judgIng assistant, gave aU of the baked goods the taste test during Tuesday's

Exhibits in the baking and canning
division were judged Tuesday by Mrs.
Ruth Molnar of Canal Fulton assisted.
by Mrs. Joyce Rice, Roanoke, Va .,
with ribbons and premiwns being
awarded In the llOclasses.
The blue ribbons winners were :
Preserves : Mary Taylor, Pomeroy,
peach; Catherine Colwell, Route I,
Vinton, strawberry; Inez Carson,
Route I, Long Bottom, red plwn; and
Eleanor Leonard, Route 3, Pomeroy,
tomato.
'
Jams : Inez Carson, black
Margaret
Jean
Corsi,
Jl.oute 2, Pomeroy, grape ; Esther
Mays , Chester, peach; Mildred
Ziegler, . Route 3, Pomeroy,
strawberry .
Jellies: Joyce E. Manuel, ·Route 2,
Racine , apple and crabapple; Agnes
Dixon, Pomeroy, blackberry; Inez
Carson, grape; Esther Mays, peach;
Mary Kay Rose , Long Bottom; plum;
Agnes Dixon, raspberry; and Patti

Hoffman, Route 2, Pomeroy,
strawberry.
Spreads: Inez Carson, pear honey;
Joyce E. Manuel, peach butter; Jon!
· Murray, Pomeroy, apple butter;
MOdred Ziegler, quirn;e honey.
Pickles: Joyce Manuel, sweet
cucumber and mixed cucumber, and
Inez Carson, bread and butter.
Relishes ! Barbara Murray,
Pomeroy, picealllli ; Inez Carson,
chow-chow ; Joyce Manuel, end of the
garden; and Loris Pullins, Pomeroy,
sweet pepper relish.
CatsupandSauces:EvelynHollon,
Route 1, Minersville ; tomato catsup
and chili sauce.
CaMed Fruit : Evelyn Hollon, applesauce; Shelia Taylor, Route 3,
Pomeroy, blackberries; Esther
Mays, whole peaches; Patricia Wolf,
Route 3, Pomeroy, half peaches;
Mary Taylor, Pomeroy, . sliced
peaches; Patricia Wolf, sliced pears;

Eleanor Leonard, balf pears; Mary
Taylor, plwns, and Inez Carson, cherries.
Canned Vegetables: Catherine ColweD, bru.ssel sprouts ; Joyce Manuel,
whole beeta; Mary Jane Herald, Middleport, sliced beets; Inez Carson,
shelUe beans; Mary Kay Rose, shell·
ed beans ; Mary Jane Herald, pickled
beans; Evelyn Hollon, snap beans ;
Sheila Taylor, whole beans ;
Catherine Colwell, cabbage; Inez
Carson, carrots ; Sharon. Reiber,
Route 1, Racine, com; Sharon
Reiber, kraut ; Catherine Colwell,
llma beans; MOdred Ziegler, peppers; Joyce Manuel, stuffed mango ;
MOdred Ziegler, whole tomatoes;
Patricia Wolf, quartered tomatoes ;
Lenora Leifheit, Pomeroy, green
tomatoes ; Evelyn Hollon, tomato
juice; Susan Jane Pulllns, Pomeroy,
vegetable soup; and Inez Carson, canned squash.
Baked goods: DoiUIB R. Jenkins,

Rutland, loaf whole wheat bread ;
Margaret B. Weber, Rutland, loaf of
white bread; Evelyn Hollon, banana
nut bread; Catherine Colwell, baking
powder biscuits; DoiUIBJenkins,muf·
fins; Allegra Will, Route I, Rutland,
yeast rolls.
Cakes: Mary Kay Rose, angel food;
Mary Kay Rose, butu:r cake, Evelyn
Hollon, chocolate cake, Rebecca Cotterill, Route 3, Pomeroy, loaf cake;
DoMa Jenkins, cake donuts.
Cookies: Christine Napier, Route I.
Bidwell, Oil lineal ; Cheryl Folmer,
Pomeroy, brownies; Margaret
Weber, chocolate chip; Cheryl
Folmer, ·plain drop; Donna Jenkins,
molasses; Evelyn. Hollon, ice box
cookies.
Pies: Mrs. Charles Kuhl, Route 3,
Pomeroy, apple; Marilyn Spencer,
Long Bottom, berry; Evelyn Hollon,
pecan; Catherine Colwell, peach, and
Altona Karr, Long Bottom, raisin.

.

FIRST PLACE WINNERS IN HAY SHOW - First
place wlnnen In the hay show held at the Meigs County
Fair TUesday were Edison Hollon, RD, Minersville,
and Earl and Betty Deem, Rt. 3, Pomeroy. Hollon took
first place In the first and second c~. 75 percent or
J1lQI'e alfalfa and 75 percent or more clover. The Deem
family took first place In the third and fourth claas, aU

Closing Bible school program includes
muszc, scripture readings, .playlet

judging.

•

Music, scripture, and a playlet
were Included in the ciQSlng program
for' the daily vacation Bible school of
the Enterprise United Methodist
Church Friday evening.
Chris Rouse was pianist for the
school and played for the program
which opened with a processional of
the DVB pupils and workers to the
theme song, "Jesus, I'm His - He's
Mine." Jim Parker and Mark Corbitt
led the processional carrying the
American flag and the Christian flag
with Steve Musser, carrying the Bi•
ble.

NEW CHEVY G-20 VAN
Window Van Conversion, uses reg . gas, 350 eng ., P.S. ,
P.B ., AM ·FM stereo, tape, 4 speakers, air cond., aux .
battery, 1.2 volt - electric refrigerator, 4 captain
chairs, sink, bed &amp; dinette, loaded with options.
Brown &amp; beige color .
Llsf$11,918.00 SPECIAL PRICE

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•9967

REAl.

SPECIA~

'2499

1975 CHEVY G-10 VAN

6 cyl., std. trans., radio, speakers, partial conversion with carpeted interior, bed, air vent &amp; sky roof.
-~

Polly Cramer

door, 75.000 miles. Commerci al car, 350 V-8, automatic, p.s., p.b ., p.

brakes, air, color white, bUc.. vinyl interior .
NADA with mileage deduction $4050.00.

Raincoat got the rub

1976 CHEVELLE MALIBU CLASSIC
4 door , 76,950 miles. V-8 engine, automatic, P.S ., P .B., factory air, t int .
glass. am ·fm stereo radio, clean inter ior, dark blue finish .

1972 NOVA

'1395

2 Dr., V-8, au1o., P .S., good tires, radio.

1974 CHEVELLE WAGON
2 Seat, V·8, automatic, P.S., runs &amp; drives nice, needs some metal
work .

1976 CHEVY C60 .
Cab chassis, 292 engine, 2 speed rear a)( le, 925x20 tires, solid cab &amp;
gOOd mechanically . 102" to ax le.

VISIT OUR LOT, CHECK OUR NEW CAR &amp; TRUCK

DISCOUNT PRICES
WE WANT YOUR PUSINESS

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
" Your Chevy Dealer"
992 -2126

Pomeroy
Open Evenings 8 P.M .

verses. Teacher for the class was
Becky Cotterill and her assistants
were Sheille Corbitt, Paula Hall,
Mary Sheets, Patty Parker, Faith
Dickens, Jearmle Robie, Lou Ann
Evans, Beverly Will and Kim Franz.
The students were Jessica Sayre,
Frankie· Dickens, Joshua Dickens,
Megan Evans, Joshua Heck, Jason
Hall, Erica Roble, Ryan Conde, Mandy Sheets, Billy C', Amity Dixon,
Autumn Conde" Jeffrey Sayre,
Chuckie Parker, Billy Crane, Amity
Dixon, Autumn Conde, and 'Cynthia
Cotterill.
Jennie Warth was teacher of the
beginner class with Peggy Crane and
Kathy Parker aa her belpers. The
students were Eric Folmer, Joyce
Davis, ShelUe Smith, Randy Robie,
Mindy Carson, Nicole Pickens, Misty
Butcher, Jeremy Heck, Eric Heck,
Amy Warth, Charles Smith, and Amy
Rouse.
For the primary class portion of the
program,
the children sang "Fishers
DEAR POLLY - I am a rather
of
Men
"
,
"Paul
and SilaB" and "I WiD
strict teacher and not too long ago a
Bring
a
Friend
to Jesus" along with
student wrote something ugly about
thelr
Bible
verses.
Candy Brothers
me on one of the desks. I did not have
waa
teacher
and
Gail
Corbitt, her
much to use to get it off. I tried my
assistant.
Students
in
the
class were
hand lotion. It took the writing off and
Mary Butcher, Amy Brothers, Mindy
the desk felt smooth. -Ms. S.F.
Spencer, Missy Marcinko, Joanie
DEAR POLLY- Thooe long, narrow plastic bags that the newspaper Simp6on, Chris Davis, Mike Parker,
and Timothy Frederick. ,
comes in on rainy days are great to
The middler class students outlined
use for holding wool while knitting. A
. dally lessons and presented
thelr
wire tie can be used to close the top
verses, and then after the
memory
and ·also to hold knitted articles
jWliors
had
presented a playlet,
together. When joining pieces, try us"Paul
and
SllU
In the Roman Jail",
ing round toot~icks instead of pins.
joined
them
for
singing
of "Stand Up
-B.L.G.
for
JesUB"
and
"Walking
on the
Polly will !IOndyou one of her signed ·
Heaven
Road."
thank-you newspaper coupon clippers
Carol Ohlinger was teacher of the
if she uses your favorite Pointer,
middler
class and her assistant was
Peeve or Problem in her COIWM.
Ann
Sisson.
In the ci8.'16 were Darrln
Write POLLY'S POINTERS in care of
Warth,
Bill
Brothers, Artie Hunnel,
this newspaper.

DEAR POLLY- My black raincoat
still looks new except along the edges
where it buttons. Is there a way I can
cover these rubbed spots? -Mrs.J .D.
DEAR MRS. J.D. - Raincoats are
made of so many fabrics. So, take the
coat along when you go to buy some
tape that will cover the worn or rubbed edges without conflicting with the
buttons and buttonholes. ·Stitch the
tape with half on the lop and half on
the underneath side. Go ail around the
collar and down both sides so it will
look as if it were made that way. On
some coats black vinyl strips might
look quite smart. -POLLY
DEAR POLLY- Often when I ant
cooking something I forget whether
or not I have salted it. So now after I
add salt I put a few sprinkles of pepper on the top to remind me that it has
been salted. -MRS.J.M.
DEAR POLLY- My largest bowl is
not big enough to really mix the com
thoroughly when I am making
caramel com. So now I put the popped
com in one side of the clean sink and
it is easy to mix. The mess is easily
cle8J1ed up. -Mrs. R.D.N
DEAR POLLY- The next time you
need a stretch bandage, use nylon
stretch stockings, which are flesh colored and cheap.- TERRY

grass and 49 percent or less legumes. Roy Holter took
first place in fescue. The event !"U lpoiiSOI'M by the
Meig!l Soil and Water ConservaUm District. Dave
Boothe, Vinton County Agricultural Agent, was the
judge. Pictured left to right are, Dave Boothe, Edlacin
Hollon, Betty Deem arid Boyd Ruth, Meigs Count)'
District SoU Cm!tervationist.

Shade River Jaycees given
two state awards recently

Joey Parker, Jo Ellen Crane, Dannie
Hall, Mark Franz, Pam Folmer, and
David BaD.
The Rev . James Corbitt assisted by
Kay Corbitt taught the juniors. In that
class were Mark Corbitt, Steve
Musser, Donia Crane, Valerie Simpson, David Warth, and Jim Parker. ·
T!!Bchers awarded certificates to
the pupils following the program, and
the director presented cards of appreciation to the teachers, officers
and helpers. Tammy Sayre was
secretary-treasurer.

·How does II feel to be No. I •
GREAT!
Jtllt aak any member of the Shade
River Jaycees, espedally Vic Gaul,
Jt., Pal M~y. Bill Buckley, and
VIctor Gaul, Sr., who just returned
fnm the Ohio Jaycees All-State
Meettnc held In Cincinnati last
weekend.
Each Local Jaycee Chapter compete. with other Jaycee cbapters ol
the same size throughout the enUre
state. Each quarter, three chapters
who have accwnulated the most
polnta u-e recognlt.ed by the Ohio
Jaycees as the best three chapten in
their dlvl.llon.
The Shlide River Jaycees received
first place a-rd in the "New
Cha!Jl\!f''' division and a second place
award in Pupulatlon Divison No . I.
The Shllde River Jaycees alao recelv. ed a first place Outstanding Achievement award In their Region 8 Growth
Dlvl.llon. 'l'hla award recogni%ed a
membenhlp growth during the first
quaner oU71.57%.
The Sbllde River Jaycees, which
coven the communities of Chester,
Tuppen Plains, Reedsville, Long Bottom, Buhan, Five Points, Flatwoods,
. Alfred, and the rest of Northeastern
Melil County, U'f moving.
All YOWlll men bet...,n '"" •o- "'

Hypothermia is the medical term
for an e•ccssive loss of bod)' heat . ·

POLLY·s POINTERS

1978 PONTIAC CATALINA
&lt;4

The congregation joined in singing
"America " and giving the pledges to
'the flag and the Bible. The opening
prayer was by the Rev. James Corbitt.
A welcome was extended by Mrs.
Frankie Hwmel, director and after
several songs by the children an offering was taken by Donia en;ne and
Valerie Simpson.
For the program, the.nursery and
beginner classes sang, ''I Am Jesus'
Little Lamb", "Jesus Loves Me" and
'' Praise Him All Ye Little Chlldr~n .: •
They also repeated Bible memory

4-H awards

Casey Kasem

18 and 35 are invited to join this
"Younc Men of Action" .organization
to be a part of the ftl8test-growlng
Civil Club in your conunWlity.
Many internal and external pro-

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ject&amp; re being plaruled to

be completed in the near future.
The club meets the second and
fourth Tuesdays of each month at the
Chester Courthouse.

Area Deaths

(Continued from page 11
Riebel_; Reserve Champion, Angie
Spencer.
First Aid - Grand Champion,
Rhonda Haning, Dellora Woodyard ;
Reserve Chtuilpion, Kevin Napier.
Outstanding, Bryan Woodyard.
Veterinary Science -Grand Champion, Jimmy Schaekel; Reserve
Champion, Kathy Barker, Penny
Biggs.
'
Stre8111l1 - Grand Champion; P~tty
Dyer.
Water &amp; You- Grand Champion,
Patty Dyer.
Rope - Grand Champion, Clinton
Turner; Reserve Champion,- Bryan
Zirkle.
Exploring Our Fores)B - Grand
Champion, Terry Pulllns.
Houae Plants - Grand Champion,
Cheryl Riffle ; Reserve ChamPion,
Barb OlapPelear.
Me, You, and Others - Grand
Champion, Linda Riggs ; Reserve
Champlm, Sherrie Arnold.
. Helpinc at lbne - Grand Champioo, Maralyn Barton; Reserve
Champim, Terwa Guthrie.
Ezplorlng Ohio SollrJ - Grand
Cltamploo, Bl'lllt Bolin; J\ellerve
Champion, Denlae Turner.
Guinea Pigs and Hamsters Grand Champion, Scott Hysell;
Reserve Champion, Tammy Miller.
Plant Characlerlstlcs - Grand
Champion, Patty Dyer.
Home Nursing - Grand Champion,
Roberta Myers; Reserve Champion,
Lou Louks.
~ogy - Grand Champion,
Pam Riebel; Reserve Champion, Patty Dyrer ; Outstanding, Brenda
Bentz; Honorable Mention, Brent
Bolin.
Smail Animals - Grand Champion,
DIDe Eblin; Reserve Champion,
Sherrie Myers.
. Fishing - Grand Champion, Rick
Long; Reaerve Champion, Rocky
Pitzer.
AcquaUc Science - Grand Champion, Angela Myers; Reserve Champloo, Jimmy Schaekel.
Fishing Beginners - Grand Champion, Craig Bolin; Reserve Champloo, Sharon Eads; Outstanding, Jim·
my Schaekel.
Let 'a Explore Outdoors - Grand
Champim, John Riebel; Relieve
Champion, Billy Dyer; Outstanding,
Scott Starcher:
Vineyard - Grand Champion, Jolm
Riebel.
Specialty Crupi - Grand Champi~~g=G=·-Grand Champion, Kevin Napier; Reaerve Cham-

MU..TON G.WILL
Loucks, all of Bexley .
Funeral services foc MUtoo G. Will,
He was also preceded in death by
62, Canal Winchester, formerly of his wife, Ruth and a brother, John of
Pomeroy, were held Aug. 10 at the Pomeroy,
Spence Funeral Home with burial in
Franklin Hills Cemetery.
Mr . Will was the son of the iate VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
Adrnissions--Marnie Buchanan,
William and Edna Garen Will . He was
Pomeroy;
Paul
Hendricks,
a retired school teacher.
Survivors include a son , James of Co lumbus; Lorena Laudermilt,
Canal Winchester; three daughters, Middleport; Ray Lambert, Rutland;
Mrs: Karen Hedges, Lancaster; Mrs. !)essie Boring, Rutland; Michael pion, Billy Dyrer; Outstanding, Lisa
ColllnsPboto. Grand......_ p1 J--"
Sharon Bordner, Carroll and Mrs. Hubbard , Syracuse;
Stephen Pickens, PorUand; Bertha
._,m on, .,,u...er
Janice Krauss, Canal Winchester;
Reibel,
Pomeroy;
Thomas
Shuler;
a-ve
Champion, Angle
eight grand children, five brothers,
Grindstead,
New
Haven;
Richard
Spencer;
Outstanding,
Roberta
of
Massachusetts,
Roland
M&lt;lltgomery and Victor both of Canal White , Pomeroy; Angeja White , Mhe:!er Ga.rdening _Grand ChamWinchester ; Phillip of Colwnrus and Pomeroy.
- ptoo Angie Spencer· Reserve ChamWilliam of Pomeroy; four sisters,
Discharges--Ross Kent, George , . • Denise Lam~ri - Outstanding
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Louise Fisher,.Greenfield; Florence Folmer, Doretba Handley, Darla p&amp;on,
CarrieKarr.
·
Ferrell ,. Mary KUpatrick and Bettv Kelly, Lela Easterday.

CAPTURES FIRST PLACE - This neat display by Star Grange cap-

ture4 first place honors in the grange exhibits at the 116th annual Meigs

County Fair. The grange received a cash prize of $55. Taking SecOnd
place and a prize of_, was Rarrisonvllle Grange. Third, winning a prize
of MS, was Hemlock Grove Grange.

TO END MARRIAGES
In Meigs County Common. Pleas
Court two suits for divorce were filed .
Filing for divorce were George
Gordon Warner, Rt. 4, Pomeroy,
aga inst Cynthia Gay )Yarner ,
Cheshire; David E. Bills, Reedsville ,
against Tammy L. Bills, St. Marys,

W. Va.
The custody of Timothy Helton, J .·.
was awarded to Kathy Helton subjft~
to visitation rights of the defend;·.ni..
Timothy Helton. Victoria Klein Wo3
granted a divorce from Charles .r
Klein, Jr., on charges of gross negl•
of duty and extreme cruelty .

Inflation Cieation!
lnfllltlon CreetiOnl That's what capital
calls todays booming rise in home
values. It means your home probably

has a lot 'more "borrowing power"
than you thought. To start YoUr application for a Capital Home Equity ·
Loan, just send in the coupon. Ot call. .

This coupon is the key to a
.Capital Home Equity Loan!

LOANS UP TO S25,000

- WITHOUT AFFECTING YOUR PAE$ENT MORTQAG8,l

Where you Clln
llar10bycoUIIOft

orphonel
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JOO West Second Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 (992·2111 J ;
358 Second Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 (446-1973)

I

TWO RIVERS FORD, INC.

WMPO
SATURDAYS
8 til Noon

•

RT. 62 NORTH -

Weekend At Meigs Inn

675-1490

POINT PLEASANT

FRIDAY NIGHT SPECIAL 5 TIL 10
',.
I

MENU

RODS
Reg. $61.88
SALE

$4995

Thin Fin

BAITS
Wa s $2.79
SALE

$195

RODS

Reg. $68.89
SALE

R.,g_ $2.39

$5995

Bill Norman

SALE

$}95

Bagleys Balsa

BAITS

Reg.

SALE

BAIT

5~.39

Reg . $4.39

$1 95

SALE

Stuffed Tomato
Pork Chops
in Mushroom
Gravy
Dressing
Vegetable
1!2 Baked Apple
RoO
Tea, Coffee or Milk

$29S

Natural Ike

As Low As

ENTERTAINMENT
FRIDAY &amp; SATIJRDAY
NIGHT

SALE

ALL LEGAL

* 1979 LTD's
As Low As

'

'

·r -

'6200. 15

*MARQUIS'S

'625

As Low As

*

WHISKEY
RIVER

'66 70.25 _

1979 DEMOS

Some Discounting

'1506.
Off .. 1st

PARTS CLEARANCE SALE
PARTS OLDS • PARTS NEW
WE KNOW THERE WILL BE
SOMETHING FOR YOU.
NON-REtURNABLE PARTS
'
EVERYTHING MUST GO.

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Featured Items

*FORD RADIOS *WHEEL COVERS
• .WHEELS • NEW &amp;· USED
-*USED ENGINE BLOCkS
*FORD LINE-A-BEDS AT COST
*MANY MORE ITEMS

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5 PC. GROUP
FROM

TWO RIVERS FORD ALSO ANNOUNCES A PARTS ClEARANCE SALE - EVERYTHING

LANCASTER, OHIO

CHEEP -- CHEEP. THIS SALE STARTS SATURDAY

BEVERAGES SOLD

Phone 992·6193
OPEN MON.-THURS. 9 to 6
FRI. &amp; SAT. 9 to 8
OPEN SUNDAY 10 TIL 4
4 miles east of Pomeroy on SR 124, Syracuse, 0.

'4578 •.

8 FOOT BED

Plus Tax

\\) \:\\ 'l.

BAITS
Reg

* SOME 1979 F-1 OO's

POINT PlEASANT RESCUE SQUAD Will BE SERVING FREE HOT DOGS FROM
12 NOON TO 6 P.M. ON SATURDAY.

THE. MEIGS INN
Phmw 992·3629

·'•:

,,'
",,
.."
'
•

Pomeroy, 0.

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AUGUST 18TH FROM 10 A.M.-5 P.M.

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See Bobby Roush, Bill (Ole) Hoss, Bob Crosswhite, WM. "Pete" Somerville

.

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�u-•"'' ........, ""''w"''· MIDDleport-Pomeroy
o Th---"·y Aug' 16 1979
·
• ·• w...., ,
· ,

DI~CV

·

ft flji~ !1i)lt

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~ ~~~

byHonriArnoldandBobLee

Unscramble these four Jumbles,

one letter lo each square, 10 form
four ordinary words.

10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Aug . 16, 1979

Your Best Buys Are }~ ound in the Sentin.el Classifieds
In Memory

In Memory

IN LOVING MEMORY OF
LINDA LOU STEWART
WHO PASSED AWAY
6 YEARS AGO TODAY,

the same/
Feed not your loneliness
on empty days,
Bulfilleach waking hour In
usef,ul ways ,
Reach out your hand in
.comfort and in cheer
And I in turn will comfort
you and hold you near ;
And never, never be afraid

to die,
I am waiting for you in
t he sk.y!

brOwn

ponies

morning .
Above Ea stern High School on
SR 7 . Child's pets . Mike Otto.

9B5·3323 .
FOUND: TUPPERS Plains area .
Beautiful tiny long haired
Pomeran ian or Chihuahua .

'1'12·6260.
lOST: AUGU ST 8, in area of
Racine , SR
12&lt;4 . Springer
spaniel. mo le, 2 years old,
wea r ing br own leather colla r,
logs to s tate he has shoh .
Nome is Duke . Reward.

RISING STAR Kennel. Boor·

ding . Coii367·0m .
GOING OUT of business . A ll
poodles ,
pome r anion ,
pekinese, block pam puppy
great coat line . Phone 691&gt;-111
offer 5pm.

POODLE GROOMING
Taylor. 61~ · 367 · 7220 .

Judy

GOir'.IG OUT of business . All
poodles ,
pomeronion ,
pekinese . black porn puppy .
great coat line . Phone

696- 11 11 after 5pm.
AKC DOBERMAN Pinscher
pups . litter registered . Cham·
pionshiP bloodl ines. Show
quality. Wormed . Ear'$ crop-

ped . Shols . 304 ·675·1863.
AKC REGISTERED boxer puppy . $125 . 6 weeks old .

'1'12·2726.

pers Plains. l o ng haired
brown , female . Call 992-6260:
Humane So ciety .

pies. 992-3829 .

992·3025.

MECHANIC .

M inimum 3 years experience.
Must h0119 own tools , many fringe benefits including poid
vocation. hos pitalization , life
i nsu rance' excellent working
condi tions. Apply in person
now thru Thu r~ doy , Aug. 21 :
Rive rside 1/W-AMC-Jeep , 195
Uppe r Ri..,er Rd ., Gallipolis .

60JO BTU air conditioning . Will
sell cheap . 992-3790.

LATE

SEASON
spe ci als :
Vermeer 605 Super C Baler,
$500 under list ,price. Vermeer
F Demonstrator.

Save.

Gory Aspin , Dexter, OH .

DYNAMAA:K 10 h. p . riding
mower with 32" cut, used one
yeor. $350. 949-2656 after
6pm.

GRAVELY WALK behind !rae·
tor with brush hog. 12 h.p.
Wheel Horse tractor with
mower ond blade. Phone

9B5·4202 .

POMEROY
LANDMARK
H&amp;~dquarter;s

for
Hotpoint and
General Electric
Appliance$
Sales &amp; Serv1ce

SALE PRICES
9.-. _ Jack W. Carsey
llllii.J
M 'g r.
'
.
·n . Phone 992·2181

Camping Equipment
21 FOOT SElF contained travel

trailer. Bonanza. Sleeps 6. Ex·
c'el lent
shape .
Stanley
Johnson . 9.C9-2633.

Give Away
FREE PUPPIES. Y2 Irish Setter.
Fou r ore long hoi reef Will be
Iorge
dogs .
Shade

o1 all

desciptions. Humane Society.

992·6260.
TWO PUPPIES. male. 5 weeks

white .
mole .

For Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Pork ,

$12 per lon. Bundled slob. $10

SENIOR CITIZENS , 1 bedroom
opts . for rnet . Rental
assistance

12 x 60 two bedroom mobile
home in Ra ci ne. 992-5858.

FURNISHED
house .

WANTED: SAW logs. . PoymMt
upon del i..,ery to our yard . 7:30
to 3:30 weekday) . Blaney
Ha rdwoods . SR 339. Ba rlow ,

OH. 67B-2980 .
ANTIQUES. FURNITURE . gla" .
ch ino , anyt hing See or call
Ruth Gosney , ant iques _ 26 N.
2nd .
M iddleport.
OH .

992·3161

TWO

bedroom

Security

deposi t .

992·3375 .

For Sale

992·2689.

OLD COIN S, pocket wo tche! ,
class rings , weddi ng bonds.
d iamond s . Gold o r si l..,er Coli
J . A . Wa msley , 7.42-2331 .

a v ailable .

992·7721.

pe r ton . Del ivered to Ohio
Pollet Co .. Rt 2. Pomeroy.

OlD FURNIT URE . tee boxes ,
brass beds , iron beds , desks ,
ere .. complete households.·
Write M .D. Miller . Rt . 4.
Pomeroy or co ll9&lt;12-776/J .

667·307• .

197B YELLOW SUZUKI RM·80.
Good condition . 247-2961 .
197B ORANGE SUZUKI ccl·80.
Good condition . 247·2961 .
FOR SALE : Premium Weorever
Sil..,erstone cookware . Phone

992-259B.
1979 CHEVROlET &lt;4d short
bed. 350 auto ., 2500 miles .
992-5396 after Spm .
BASSETT PECAN . dini0g room
5el , excellent condition . Con·
tac t Bob Ashley , Cheshire.

367.0.80.

Real Estate for Sale

Yard Sale

BACK 10 school yard sole.
10&lt;4 VJS , 2nd , Middleport .

216,E. Second Street

NEW LISTING - Lot
90x200 in good location
on Lincoln Hill. Room
for two houses . $9,000.
BIG 2 STORY 11
room home w ith all
utilit i es,
carpet i ng ,
knotty pine kitchen, 1112
baths, and 2 car garage.
$17,000.
NEW LISTING - Large
9 room frame on corner
lot. Ca n be made into 2
apts. Close to stores &amp;
schools in M iddleport.
Want only $15,000.
MINERSVILLE
Above all floods, 2
bedrooms, bath, nat.
gas heat, T . P . water and
lot 178x245 lor only
$12.000.
75 ACRES - Timber,
locust posts, city water
close by. Wanl$25,000.00
but wi ll accept Offer, if
right.
RIVER VIEW 3
bedrooms, bath, nat.
gas furnace, city water
&amp; garage near Krogers.
Asking $17,000.
RACINE
Old 3
bedroom home in need
of repairs. Nice varnish ·
ed trim , city water, nat.
gas heat, and bath for
only $12.000.
TO SETTLE YOUR
SELLING PROBLEMS
CALL 992-3325 OR
DROP BY OUR OF·
FICE AT 2T6 E.2ND ST.

Housing
Headquarters

CLOSE IN - aboul 6
yrs. old, lovely ranch
type, 3 bedrooms, ful ly
equipped kitchen, din ·
ing , deck, double lot
100x200. $29,100:00.
2 BUILDINGS In ·
eludes J rentals and a
good restaurant with
beer license. establish·
ed many years . Call

. now .

ACREAGE
IN
POMEROY
3
bedrooms, tormal din·
ing R.. nice kitchen,
garage and part base·
men!, fruit trees, lots of
grapes, many other
features. $25,000.00.
MIDDLEPORT 2
business rooms with
apartments over, been
rented for many vears,
ideal business location .
$33,500.00.
LOVELY REMODEL·
ED - 2 story frame, J
bedrooms, formal din ·
• ing, large eat·in kitchen,
basement, storm win·
doWs &amp; doors. porches,
large yard . $35,500.00.
NEW LISTING - Mid ·
dleport, 1'(, story brick.
lovely kitchen, lots of
remodeling, large lot,
porches, many other
features.
CLELAND REALTY
WHERE
REAL
ESTATE
IS
A
BI!SINESS NOT A
SIDELINE . LIST WITH
US TODAY .
REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland Sr.
Henry E . Cleland Jr.
992·2259
992-6191

DOWNING-CHILDS AGENCY
INSURANCE
REAL·....,;·ESTATE

Everything fr om baby's t o
adult's. Ant iques . furniture .
AugustS. 9. 10.
PORCH SALE . Thu rsday and
Fndoy from 9·&lt;4 . Bab y i tems ,
tab le ond
chain .
nice
cloth ing, cotfee maker on
North Main St. in Rutland.
Phone H2· 26-C8 .

post hi ghway garage. Watch
for ilgns . S ize 15 Vr men 5hirts,
very ~ condi tiOn. Fancy
belt buck les. sire "'T boys'
clothotts . Some antiques and
Oepreuion gloss . Alt o sa~t ·
ophone.

B'S MOBILE HOME SALES. PT.
PLEASANT. WV. 304·675·••2• .
1975 SKYLINE MOBILE home 56
x 1-4 in excellen t condition.
Con be seen at Kingsbury
Homes or coli Joe Young at
Pomeroy Notional Bonk ,
992 -2133 . Priced at $8995,
terms o"oilabte.

19721NDY MOBILE homo. 12 x
60. Central air and fireplace .

992·5057 .
BIG SELECTION al pr .. owned
10's , 12's, and l.C ft. wide
h'omes .

Konouga Mobile
Home Soles 614-446-9662

Real Estate for Sale
NEW THREE bedroom all eiEK·
tric
home ,
garage
dithwosher ,
disposal :
carpeted , Iorge eat-in kitchen ,
rural water , Ohio Power, over
1 acre, In country. Near
Longs..,i lle and mines. $43,000.
7.C2-2819. Raymond Ha tfield .

for qu ick sale .

SOO Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio
'

614 ·669·4'211 E\l@lling~
2 Mil@$ EISI Of Wilk,S'tilll!

.IN SYRACUSE

SUPER

G~OSE

STOCK

TRAILER NOW AVAILABLE .

Ph. 992-3743 or m·3752
B+1 mo.

1

592-3051

4·23·1 mo.

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

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
Call tor 1 Free Siding
Estimate, 949-21G1 or
949-2160. . No Sundoy
CIIIS .

C. R. MASH
VINYL &amp; ALUM.
SIDING
•Addons
* Remoldings
*Free estimates
9'12-6011

Rt. :l

Pomeroy, Ohio
992-5547
Hl·2mo.

N\!w, repair,
gutters and
down spouts.
Window clea"ing
Gutter cleaning
Free Estimates
949-2862-949-2160
4·5·tf C

Business Services
BRADFORD. Auctionftr. Complete Service. Phone 949·2,.87

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR toasters. irons, oU

small appliances. lawn moer.
nexf to State Highway Go rage

onRau!o7 , 9B5·3825 .
.
SEWING MACHINE Ropalro, .
ser.oice, all makes, 992-22&amp;4 .
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.

Autl\orl:r:ed S i n~er Sales and
Service. We sharpen Scluors .

.oa

limos lone and gravol. Call Bob
or Rog~r Jeffers, day phone
992-7oB9 .
night
phano
992·3525 0&lt; 992·5232.
EXCAVATING .
dozer .
R. Hotflold. BiackHooSorvlco,
Rutland, Ohio. Pone 7&lt;42·2008.
PULLINS EXCAVATING. Com·
plolo Sorvico. Phono .992·247B .
AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE
been cancelled? lott your
operators
licWnse? Phone

992·2T43.
E·C ELECTRICAL

Contractor

serving Ohio Volley region .
Six days a week , 2~ houn ser·
vice. Emergency coll1 . Call

LARGE 11 ROOM CEMENT BLOCK HOME
overlooking the river in Middleport. F ive bedrooms,
three baths, three car garage. Beautiful lot. Owned
by prominent family, one of the best built homes In
town . $35,000 .
BUILT IN 1B77 - RESTORED IN T970 - If you
want a home to be proud of this is it. Solid brick
walls, high ceilings, old world charm . 3 bedrooms,
bath, living room, dining room, eat-in kitchen with
spacious built-in walnut cabinets. Central heat &amp; air
conditioning. Large lot on Mulberry Ave. in
Pomeroy . Carriage house. $48,000.
TWO HOMES ON A LARGE CORNER lot in Mid·
dleport . Live on one and rent the other. One large 7
room , 2 bath frame, the other sma lls room and bath
brick . A good investment, just $35,000.00.
LINCOLN HILL IN POMEROY - Real nice 3
bedroom, 1 bath frame home . Convenient location .
Large living room with fireplace, dining room; eat·
in kit chen , full basemeot, new gas furnace .
$25,000.00.

882·2952 or882·34S. .
HOWERY AND MARTIN E•·
cavatlng , septic
dozer, backhoe.

IY,ttema,
Rt .

143.

Phone I (61•) 69B·7331 or·
742·2593 .
IN STOCK for immediate
delivery: various sizes of pool
kits . Do-it- your1elf or let us
inuoll for you. D. Bumgardner

Sales. Inc. '1'12·5724 .
WILL

HAUl

limestone and

gro11el . Also, lime hauling and
spreading. Leo Morrit Truck·
ing, Phone 7.42- 2~55 .
ROOFING, ROOF repair and
siding, other maintenance. E &amp;

R Roofing ond Siding.
614-388-8860 or 614 ·388-8797.
ANN'S CAKE Decorating Supplies, 507T6 Osbern Rd.,

RUTLAND - 2 bedroom and bath frame home on
large lot. Recently remodeled, new roof, central
heat . Just $16,000.

Reedsville, 01-4 ~sn2 . For information call, 667-6-cBS. W i ll
be open late If you need.

RANCH STYLE HOUSE IN SYRACUSE - 3
bedroom and bath, 'h Ac. lot, peaceful
neighborhood, double carport. You'll love this one.
$35,000.

S &amp; G Corpet Cloonlng. Stoam
cleaned . Free estimate.

5 MILES FROM .TOWN ON HYSELL RUN - If
you 're looking for peace and quiet in the country but
don •twant a lot of ground to take care of then look at
this! A nice home remodeled on 3f" ac . lot. 3
bedrooms and bath, central heat plus a large wood·
burning fireplace . $25,000.00.
MIDDLEPORT - 3 bedrooms 1!. bath upstairs, 3
rooms and 1Az b~th downsta irs, hardwoOd floor s,
breakfa!t nook . Nice neighborhood. $19,500.00.
We also have building lots town. Call us.

Both in and out ot

DOWNING ·CHILDS
RODNEY, BROKER

BILL, BR. MGR.

Phone 992-2342
Eve. 992:2449
~--iiiMiiiddiiille rt Ohio

something.

Reasonable

.rates .

Scotch-

guard. '1'12·6309 or 742·234B .

Services Offered
NOW HAULING llmes&lt;ono In
Middleport-Poemroy area.
for free estimate.

Coli

367.7101.

PAINTING AND sondblastinr
Free ultimates. Call949·2~

DOZER, END loader and dvmp
truck . Will do bosemenh, ·
ponds ,
brush ,
timber
limestone , and
gravel '
Charles Butcher. 742·2940,
·
I HAVE openings for plano
students. Joon Robinson , ~9

S. Jrd . Middleport. 992·3009.

Auctions
BIG AUCTION every Wed., 7
pm. Hartford Community
Center, Hartford, WV, &lt;4 miles
above
Pomeroy -Ma1on
Bridge.

~TICCAR

n1

WA"iTA PLAY WITH
KNII/E6, MUH! OMY-GRIOAT! LBT'S START
I!IY SLASHIN6 YOUR
FRONT TIRES!

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 9'12 -5682

SmHh Nelson
Ph . 992·717•

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING

Gutter work, down
spouts, some concrete
wock ,
walks . ond
driveways.
(FREE ESTIMATE)

V. C. YOONG Ill

BRIDGE

BORN LOSER

... '«Jl)

IT'S

1&lt;6€?

Tl·m.JKIIJ0
ABOUT IT

~TIIfJ0

,I,..
/

'{OU ~IJ ..

'

7251 mo.

BOB'S
UPHOlSTERY
CAR SEATS, BOAT
TOPS, FURNITURE

U TILE ORPHAN ANNIE

Free Estimates
lrd St., Racine

BUT WHEN ONE AT THE
'CLUB" HEARD ~N'S
PRAnLE , HE REALIZED
Y00 WERE STILL ALIVE ...
FORTUNATELY, HE CAME HEliE
BE~ORE IIEI'OIIT!NG TO

949-2000
H ·T mo .

-...
•

.•

••
•
•
•

Free Estimate

... WHICI-I DOESN'T LEAVE

CALL
992-2772

ME MUCI-I T IMS ....

6-6·1 mo .

BOB'S GENERAL
CONTRACT1NG
eNEWHOME$
eROOM ADDITIONS
eROOFING
eVINYL SIDING
eGUTTE!! &amp; SOFFIT
Phone 99Hll3

'l'ou built
LjOur shack in

7-25·1 mo. P&lt;l .

Been m'home
ever since!

1919,Joel?

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

1 built her
501 icl, Mister
Walt!

No reaso..nshe won't las'

me an' BeckL.J another
sixtt..J L!ear !

PUBLIC AUCTION
2 ORCHARD LANE,
ATHENS, OHIO
SUNDAY, AUG, 19
AT 11:00 O'CLOCK A.M.

Take St. Rt. 33 into Athens, Ohio to tho yIn tho north
end Of Athens - turn onto Columbll Avo ~ to
Northwood Dr., turn liSt &amp; go to Orch1rd' Lane
Follow signs.
·
Hoving sold their home, Lester &amp; Adelt Mills will

WINNIE
THE PAIIITS ARE

•

LEAl'HER ... AND

·'

11-IE SWEATER'S
GLITTER

f

Orient, Thlillnd, Jlpln, Hong Kong, Mlnll1, VletSweden, &amp; Denmark In f(fty years

. FURNITURE : Ranch oak love oeat w rmatchln~
end table ; sm . blrcn (Haywood Wakefield) corner
cupboard; Tomlinson dble. dropleaf teacart
w~~lsplay center 1!. drawer wtpado; nl~ht standS/
60 Shaw Walker desk w ! comp. top; dble. dresser
w / mlrror; camphor blanket chest w! Orlental
li~ures 1!. sliver Inlay : hand po inted Oriental
dresser lamp; Oriental jewel bOxe!; Oriental sew ·
In~ basket; Oriental weddln~ basket from
Chinatown; surf board coffee table w/ burl pecan In·
lay : Oriental carvln~ set: American walnut sla'r
stand; 3 school desks; Somsonlte card table w; 4
chairs: La·Z ·Boy arm chair; Berk ·A·Lounger ·
15xl7 fl . nylon ru~ (avocado) ; 8X10 ft . gold ru~ ~
several hand painted prints ; Thai prlntln~ 1 ~
frame; sm . oak !Q. bookcase w!~lass doors; Por·
table TV ; pr. wrou~ht Iron base lamps · Thoren
music bOx w / metal records; very old radio plays ·
. elec . bike exerciser, like new ; portable t '
It '
(Script). like new, etc . GLASS CHINA F'~rr.tErRYer
BRASS, ETC :
'
'
'
App, 30 pes . ~ Heisey like gOblets desserts etc .
German chocolate •et; pressed ~lass ; 8 pla~e sel.
tlng Rosenthal (German) chino ; 8 Bamboo shrlm
set : B Bamboo wine glasses; 8 Star pattern Bam~
cocktail glosses; 6 Bamboo !herbets; 112 pes Nor ·
take china w/~old band, very bea~tlful · Bellalr
dish ; hand pointed German dish . Old' Enlll ~
tureen; a large asst. brass from India etc . lta~nn
flower pot; Norltake hand painted vaM, dated 1 9 ~.
Hahata Budha ll~urlne; RQyal Ironstone bowl~
Oriental hand painted pictures; service lor 1
Bronzeware from Thailand; 1~ . brass plate wiThal
warrior ; Tha1 Celadon lamp w/ sllk shade· Well
vase: Italian glass compote w / 2 hurrlcan~ lom~r
~~e~~·r ~ l~zy •usan w!lish center: monkey pocl
ray ' R~mnat ~rars; ~~ IHIIUtn Qlass
plates; 11 demitasse cups/Saucers; purple 1
tray: 6 pes. Sterlln~ sliver servln~ pes. (whea~~:{.
tern): Mexican pottery ; Blenco ~lass bowl · Pr lbl
figurines (birds on Tortoise) ; pr. bronze' flghtln s
cocks from Thailand; lava stone head ; brass ~on g
wlhammer; hobnail; cobalt blue · Wed e
~
Fostoria; Tawaln art china dish wlflgurln~· ~~;
tal silk print on Bamboo; 2 ant print 1
Swedish tile plaques (Lisa Lorso'n) . 2 w~ ures ; 2
figurines; Brass cat; .lg . ceramic biack elep~!~r~
hammered aluminum servln~ dishes ; lot hand
.~ools, and many other pieces.
,
;The above Items are of hl~h quality &amp; In excellent
condition, like new. Nothing shown before day 01
sale.Lunch on premises. Terms . cosh or check
~1.':,~~.1ve I D day 01 sale. Not responsible for ac ·
OWNERS- LESTER &amp; ADELA MILLS
Auctioneer-Bill Janes, Phone557-J411 or 557 _3133

I

.' '

"""-+--1-+--

·''

RARNEY .

NOT
THAT-A·WAV!!

-.

......
.,.·'

_..,
_.,

,,•

h-;:--t---+-1-+-+--

2

I

FRIDAY, AUGUST 11, 1979
5: 15-World at Large 17; 5:45-Farm Report 13; 5:5o-PTL Club
13.
West ducked, the eight of
6:00--,700
Club 6,8 ;
Summer
NORTH
8.!6
hea rts was played from
Semester
1Di
PTL
Club
lS;
6: 1o+A 10
dummy. and East won with
News 17; 6:30-S,ocletles In
the ace. East . led a high club
• K 8
Transition 10; Dragnet 17.
t AK432
and declarer r ealized he had
6: 45-Mornlng Report3; 6 : ~ood ·
• 10 6 5 2
made a serious error: He was 1
. Morning West VIrginia 13; 6:55- ·
forced to ruff with his next to
WEST
EAST
News 13.
last
Lrump.
• 65 2
+H
7:oo-Today
3, 15; Good Morning
Declarer could no longer
• Q65
• A 432
America 6, 13; Friday Morning 8;
establish a second heart trick .
•QJs'7s • 9
Batman 10; Three Stooges.LIHie
needed two enLries · Lo his
• QJ4
+ AK973 He
Rascals -17; 7:15--A .M . Weather
hand. one so he could drive
39. .
SOUTH
out the queen of hea rts and
7 :30-Famlly Affair 10; Lilias Yoga
+ KQJtll
the second· so he could cash
&amp; You 33 .
• J 10 9 7
the remaining heart tri ck.
8 :GO-Capt. Kangaroo 8.10: Lassie
• 10 s
Because the king of hearts
17: Sesame St. 33; 8:Jo-Romper
+8
was in dummy by itself. there
Room 17 .
was
an
unfortunate
block
that
Vulnerable: Neither
9:0Q-Bob Braun 3; Big Valley 6;
declarer cou ld not hurdle.
Dealer : East
Phil Donahuel3,15 ; Porky Pig &amp;
Conservation or assets is
Friends B; Nlte Owl Jazz Stars
Weol North East South very nice. but this was one
10; Lucy Show 17; Book Beat 33.
I+
2e
time wh en South co uld not
9: 3D-Sanford &amp; Son 8; Love of Life
Pass 4e
Pass Pass
afford to conserv e dummy's
10; Green Acres 17; Beginning to
Pass
heart king .
Sew 33.
It was declarer's own fa ult.
TO :GO-Card Sharks 3,15; Edge of
When he played the jack of
Opening lead : •Q
Night 6; All In The Family 8, 10;
hearts. if • he had played
Dating Game 13; Movie "Highdummy·s. king losing to East's.
way Dragnet" 17; Point Along
known ace (East opened lhe
with Nancy Kaminsky 33.
bidding). there would have
10 : 30- Hollywood Squares 3, 15;
been no defense. 'Ea st would
$20,000 Pyramid 13; Whew! 8;
have played a club. forcing
By Oswald Jacoby
Consumers Survival Kit 33;
declarer Lo ruff. but declarer
and Alan Sontag
Country Time 10; Bewitched 6.
would the n have for ced out
10:5s-&lt;:BS News B; Fair Fare 10.
East's OP!!ning bid was West' s quee n with his 10 and
11 :0Q-High Rollers 3, 15; Price Is
light. but he did hav e three still would have had the
Right B,10; Laverne 1!. Shirley
quick tricks. South's two· trump needed to retu'rn to his
6.1~ FlrlnQ Line 33.
spade bid is a popular conven- hand Lo cash Lhe two es tab·
11 : 3D-Wheel of Fortune 3,15:
tional bid, called the weak lished hea rt tricks
Family Feud 6, 13; 11 :55-News
jump overcall, used by tour· IN I::WSPAPER t-:rn~RI'IU S t-: ASSN 1
17.
nament players. It has also
12 :0Q-Newscenter 3; News 6.10: ·
spread to lots of rubber bridge
(Do you have a question for
Mlndreaders 15; Young 1!. the
games. It shows a good six or the experts? Write Ask the
Restless B; Over Easy 33;
seven·card suit with very lit· Experts." care of this newspa Midday Magazine 13; Love
tie
additional
outside per. Individual questions w111
American Style 17.
strength .
be answered if accompanied
12 :3o-Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Search for
After the OP!!ning lead and by stamped. sell-addressed
Tomorrow 8, 10; Not For Women
th e club continuation. declar· envelopes. The most tnterestOnly 15; Movie "Finger Man"
er ruffed . Trumps were ing questions will be used in
17; MacNeii· Lehrer Report 33.
drawn . and then South led the rhis column and wilt receive
1:0Q-Daysof0ur Llves3,15; All My
jack of hearts fr om his hand . cOpieS o f JAl;OBY MODERN.)
Children 6.13; News 8; Young &amp;
the Restless 10: From the Grand
. Ole Opry 33.
·
1: 3o-As The World Turns B. 10;
2 :GO-Doctors 3, 15; One Life to
by THOMAS JOSlPH
Live 6,13; 2:25--News 17.
ACROSS
39 "-homo"
2:30-Another World 3,iS: Guiding
I Send a
10 Made a
Light B.10; I Love Lucy 17.
sununons
judgment
J :oo-General Hospital 6, 13; Lilias .
Yoga 1!. You 20; Rebop 17.
5 Communicate n Coequal
3:30-Mash 8; Joker' s Wild · 10;
II Combat pilots DOWN
Banana Spi lls 17; Over Easy 20.
12 Headline
I Spy
4:0Q-Mister Cartoon 3; Password
name of 1876
in Canaan
15; Merv Griffin 6; Addams
Family B; Sesame St. 20,33; Six
13 Swingy
2 More
Million
Dollar Man 10; Mike
rhythm
frostDouglas 13: Fllntstones 17.
·
U Isolate
bound
4: 30-Lone Ranger 3; Hogan's
15 Aquariwn
3 Predict
Heroes 8; Lucy Show T5; Par.
trldge Family 17.
,
favorite
4 Superlative
5
:GO-Bonanza
3;
Beverly
Hillbillies
16 Voltaire's
ending
B; Mister Rogers 20,33; Disco
friend
5 Hockey
Fever 10; Six Million Dollar Man
17 Female
players
13 ; Brady Bunch 15: Star Trek
lobster
6 Zola
17.
5:30-News 6; Petticoat Junction 8;
portrayer
18 Kwai
Elec. Co . 20; Mary Tyler Moore
7 Greek
construction
10; Doctor Who 33.
letter
20 Prepare
6:GO-News 3,8,10,13,15; ABC News
8
In
no
the camera
6; Family Affair 17; VIlla Alegre
time
20; Once Upon A Classic 33.
21 Angelus
6:30-NBC
News3,15; ABC News 13;
time
Andy Griffith 6: CBS News 8,10:
22 Kilkermy
Over Easy 20,33; Father Knows
language
Best 17 .
7:00-Cross -Wits 3: Newlywed
23 Street talk
Game 6,13; Around the World to
25 Despised
China B; News 10; Love
26 Give up
American Style 15; Get Smart
27 " Who Can
17; Dick Cavell 20.33.
I - To? 11
7:3o-Hee Haw Honeys 3; $1 .98
Beauty Show' 6; Price Is Right
28 Meander
10; $100,000 Name That Tune 13;
%9Tuma
Pop Goes The Country 1S;
ear to
Ba!eball 17; MacNeil -Lehrer
3! Prefix
Report 20,33.
8 :00- Diff'rent
STrokes 3, 15;
with gram
Fantasy Is. 6, 13; Incredible Hulk
33 Spelling
B, 10; Washington Week In
event
Review 20,33.
31 Sunlamp
B:lo-Wall Street Week 20,33; 9:ooEddle Capra Mysteries 3, 15;
effect
Movie "Take the MOney and
35 Greek poet
Run" 6.13; Buckeye Holiday 20;
37 Pub
Money, News 1!. VIews 33.
measure
9:30-Such Good Companion• 20;
38 Cry from
Cross Country 33 .
10:0Q-Dallas 8,10; Onedln Line 17;
the gallery L......L,.--L.--L-.1-...L..News 20.
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it : 10:3o-Consumer Survival Kit 20;
11 :0Q-News 3,6,B,10,13,15; New
AXYDLBAAXR
Soupy Sales 17: Two Ronnles 20;
Ia LONGFELLOW
Book Beat 33.
·n
:Jo-Johnny
Carson 3, 15; Soap
One letler simply stands for a,other. In this sample A is
6, 13; Bonkers 8; Movie "The
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc . Single letters,
Creeping Terror" TO; Movie
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
"Wizard of Mars" 17; ABC News
hints. Each day the code letters are different
33.
CRYPTOQUOTES
12:oo-Juke· Bcix 3; Monty Python's
Flying Circus 33; 12 :Jo-Movle
" The Tiger &amp; the Pussycat" 8;
OGUQL ,
OJEEL ·
NGE
I G U ' M
12 : 40-Movle "If Tomorrow
Comes"
6; Ironside 13.
PRQJBHM
LGV
PJU
ZGEEGT
1: oo-Midnlght Special 3.15; Movie
"Blood &amp; Lace" 10;. 1: 15-Q E . P G M M H
R
B P. G C Q E Z
Baseball 17.
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: IT'S INCR~IBLE HOW MUCH
1:4o-News 13; 2:3o-News 3; 3:4s-INTELLIGENCE IS USED IN THE · ORLD TO PROVE
News 17: 4:05-Avengers 17;
NONSENSE. ·- FREIDRICH HEBBEI.;
5:05--Draqnet 17.

~.,.Wd'

Free Estlm1tes

11 the following hous•hold furnist11ngs 1rt objects
'1g 111
' chin• &amp; other misc. Items COIIt(ftcl from th~

THURSDAY, AUGUST16, lf7f
B,oo-Prolect UFO 3,15: Laverne !
Shirley 6, 13; Wellons 8.10; Movlt
" Wild Is the Wind" l7l Notional
Geographic 20.33.
B:JO-Angle 6,13; 9:00-Qulncy 3,15;
Barney Miller 6, 13 ; Hawaii Five·
0 8, 10; Girl with the Incredible
Feeling 20; Go:spel Resurrection
33.
9:3o-Corter Country 6, 13; 9:oloOrganlsm 20.
10:GO-Mrs: Columbo 3, T5 ; 20.20
6,13; Barnaby Jones B,10; News.
20; Rudolf Serkln 33.
10:Jl)-Onedln Line . 17; Hocking
Valley Bluegrass 20.
11 : 00- News 3,6,8,10,13,15; Olck
Cavett 20; Book Beat 33.
·
11 :30-Johnny Carson 3, 15; Starsky
1!. Hutch 13; 12th Annual Miss
Black America Pageant 6; Mash
8; ABC News 33; Movie "Quest
for Love" 10; Movie "Fall Safe"
17.
12 : 0~vle "Never So Few" 8;
12: 40- Baretta
13 ;
1 : DOTomorrow 3i News 15.
. 1: 50-News 13 ; 1 : 55-News 17;
2: 15--Movle " The Burning of
Rome" 17; 4: ~.s-Avengers 17.

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

OF COJ~(;

r--::::-:~:-::-::-::~-~--

~:~~~e~~:"any,

I I I I XI ]( I I J

Yeslerday·sj Jumbles: 'CAPON IGLOO MOHAIR BESTOW
Answer: You can't do this wilhout teeth - GNASH

651 Beech Street
Middleport, 0.
992-2356

RACINE,O.
949-2741 or
992-73T4

form the surprise answer, as sug -

gesled by lhe abOve cartoon.

Print answer here: [

18 Years Experience
Will Make Service Calls

Pomtroy

- Now aroenge lha ciodod leners to

(Answers tomorrow)

. Shop

Moten, Inc.

b

Thursday, Aug. 16

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

Rooting

fill dirt. top

r.:

Rutland .

7·12

H. L Writesel

will haul

on St. Rl. 124 toward

· 6·14·2 mo.

•New Home

CONTRACTOR

sw..pers.

' WHV YOU
&amp;IG APE: I'LL
TeACH YOUT-

At;. TME FLASHY DUDE i&gt;ULL5 A
SWITCH&amp;~ADJS, EiA'!&gt;"f TU~"i; AWAY--

by ·p•ss ,

,Vinyl and Aluminu~
Reynolds'
Siding
Electric Motor

IRElAND
MORTGAGE
CO.
77 E. State, Athens

.t:

mile off Rt. 7

WHA"T 'THe SAL..
WHO WAS C.'fCA"Z:t
A150UT ANTI~ESo
DID.

IROOHRRt

4·30·tfc

and
work;for dump
trucksbackhoe
ond lo-boys
hire, •

1970 Castle, 60x12 , 2 bedr .
197.C Mark line, 50x12, 2 bedr.
1969 Valiant, 12x60, 2 bedr.
1967 National. 12x50 , 2 bedr ..

POMEROY -NEW LISTING WITH 6 ACRES 1112 story 4 bedroom home just l mile from
downtown . The home Includes a new eat·in kitchen ,
Iaroe master bedroom, utility room , large patio,
nat . gas hot water hea~lus 2 outbuildings and lots
of room for the kids to play . $27.500. Owner anxious

' YARD SAlE . Thurs ., Fri. Aug .
16 &amp; 17. 9-5. on Stole Rou te 7

lengsvllle, Ohio

E)(CAVATING, dozer. loader

1965 GENERAL 60•12 , 2 bedr.
1970 Sylvo, 60•12 , 2 bedr.

MEIGS CO . FARM - 37 ACRES - New listing.
Front a~• on Rt . 124 with approx. 4·5 acr~ bO"om,
20 acres pasture and ba l.~ nce in woodland (some
timber reported ). lncludef lhicken house corn crib,
shed, barn plus other outbuildings. The remodeled
home has A bedrooms, eat·in kitchen, utility room,
cellar house, large porch 1!. vinyl sidin~ . FREE GAS
FOR HOUSE .

lEN FAM ILY v'ard Sole.
M i ners..,ille Hill . Follow signs.

17l10Montgamtl'"f Rd .

Real Estate Loans

197~ lA x 70 mobile home.
Good condition. 992-5858.

CALL 446-3643

Augus t, I , 2, 3.

TRAILER SALES

M•••ue-

under New
ment (formerly Sylvi•'s
Upholstery),
ocron
from Codner's Texaco.

backhoe and ditcher, Chorl~n

The Wiseman Real
Estate Agency

YARD SALE at James Swain's
on CR 28 abo ... e EaSTern High
Sc hool. July 13 and 1"' from 9
to? E"eryth ing ima ginable .

l /4

Purchase
and
Refinance
30 Year Terms
A-No money down
(eligible veterans 1
FHA-AS low as 3%
down (non-veterans)

992·6260.
AUTO. WASHER and dryer.

Mobile Homes Sale's

CHIP WOOD . Pp.les max .
diame ter I o·· on lorgttst end.

rioter approved for 2 homes.
Included with this land, nice
trailer. Home ready to move
into before you build or rent
for
[Tlanthly
income .
Overlooks
town .
Call

breakfast bar, family
room with wooo-burning
fireplace, laundry area,
formal . dining, livlt1g
room has sliding glass
doors leading to a large
redwoOd deck and optional woodburner, most
newly carpet, all
draperies, gas heat, .
fro~t porch. B.a nk appra•sal at $30,000.
Call992-2897
For Appointment

Beautifully marked
Humane
Society .

3 AND 4 RM furnished and un·
WANTED : WAITRESS o11er 21 .
opts.
Phone
Night sh ift . No uperie·nce furnished
neceu ory. Friendly Ta .... ern .· 992·5•34 .
Middleport . OH .
ONE BEDROOM opts. Contact
Village Manor, 992-1787 .

Wanted to Buy

ocrts of land, ol1 utilities installed. Septic system with 'or·

and

COLLIE· TERRIER type. Red and

needs minor repair . 992-6208.

Professional Services

LANDSCAPED 2

dishwasher

old, paper trained , to good
home 9&lt;49-2275.

Route 33, north of Pomeroy.
lorQe lots. Call992· 7&lt;479.

S'ituations Wanted

BEAUTIFUL

with

(J I D

Roger Hysell
Garage

MONTGOMERY

A&amp;H
UPHOLSTERING

or 9~9-2000 . Racine, Ohio,
Critt Bradford.

614·696-1234 .
BEAUTIFUL KITTENS

Help Wanted
992·2967.
EXPERIEN CED

CB base with power mik8,
antenna and over SO feet co-

AKC YORKSHIRE terrier pup-

SIAMESE CAT. 6 mo. female.
lo .., eable.
Good
t'lome .

long s.., llle

REAL ESTATE
FOR SALE
Modular home siHing on
over 1 acre of land in
Syracuse. River fran ·
tage, 3 bedrooms, 2
balhs, complete kitchen

Cus tom mode can..,au . $6800 .

992·5170.
LUMP CQAL , $38 ton cash,
delivered. Also, Cobro Com 89

Phone 7•2·2877 or 742-2152.

Saddles
and
harness . Horses and ponies.
fluth Ree11es . 6U-698-3290.
Barding &amp; Riding lessons and
Horse Core products.

ACRES
near
3 . bedroo"l
remodeled house.
Alum.
si ding, insulated. storm win·
dews . Lor9e ba. rn , out·
bu ildings. $36,500. Owner
may help finance . 992-77;13 .

'( WE NTY

Business Services

REAL ESTATE: 1 acre lot In Riggscrest Monor, between Tuppers Pla int ond Che1ter.
Phone 985-3929 end 985-A129

197B KAWASAKI KZ 750.
'1'12· 7382.
197B STARCRAFT 19 fl. wilh
" 175 h.p. Mere motor. SS prop.

605

Pets for sale

REAL ESTATE loons. Purchase
and refinan ce. 30 year term s,
VA. No money down !eligible
veterans) . FHA · As fow os 3
per cent d own (non-veterant).
· Ireland M ortga ge Co .. 77 E.
State, Athen s. 61,.·592-3051 .

I I

Real Estate for Sale

fi ller machine. oa..,enport end
new
chair
and
chair ,
upholstery material. 992-5162 .

'1'12·3566.

BACK TO school garage sole.
Aug . 17 . Hutchison subdilliSian . Cor ner House on
New limo Rd . and Happy
Hollow.

'1'12·6260.
FOUND' CHIHUAHUA . Tup-

SOMEONE lo give guitar
lessons . Ca ll alter 5 p.m ..

STOVE SAH . GAS·WOOD·
COAL. BIG REDUCTION IN
PRICE.
UPHOLSTERING CUSHION

EIGHT FOOT truck topper ,
panelled , insulated . $175 .

Western .

Tue :!t dav.

SALE: Martin-Senour
point , Oi..,is lon of Sherman
and Will iams. Interior or ex terior flat white. $3.99 gallon .
Color extra . PRESEASON

742·21&gt;1B.

MEIGS COUNTY HUMANE
SOC IETY . 992·6260 . Pels

TWO

7~2-2255.

pocketbook brought bock
Mexico. $35 . Phone

HOOF HOLLOW. English and

LOST;.

HARDWARE

from

or 992 -2977 .

:!ti n ea

Phone

FOR SAlE : Handmade lecther

Yard Sale

Notices

689 .

Or·

"" · $150. '1'12·7126.

LOVED ALWAYS BY
FAMILY &amp; FRIENDS

Lost and Found

SR

61.·669·37B5.
RUT .LAND

And for my sake and in my
name
Live on and do all things

SUPER BARGAINS . Clothing
and household i tems . Humane
Society Thrilt Shop, 305 N.
2n d, Middleport. Open Thurs.,
Fri and Sot .

FITZPATRICK

chord .

gallant smile ;

available for adoption and infor mation tervice.

992·3891.
POTATOES AT lho C. W. Prol·
fitt Form . Portland OH . Pr ices
change day to day with the
APPLES ,

When I must leave you for
a little while,
Please do not ~rleve and
shed wild tears
And hug your sorrow to you
through the years.
But start out bravely with a

WOULD THE porty that bought
the vent of the yard sale for $2
please return it 01 there was a
m istak e on the pr ice. 992-7474

COAL, LIMESTONE . sand,
grovel, calcium ch loride, fer·
tilizer . dog food , and all types
of salt. b:celsior Salt Work1 ,
Inc., E. Main St. , Pomeroy,

market.

AUG. 16

GUN SHOOT . EVERY FRIDAY
7,30 PM RACINE GUN CLUB.
FACTORY CHOKE GUNS ON·
LY .

Real Estate for Sale

For Sale

INUTE~

Television
Viewing

PEANUTS

M~ 6ROTHER SPIKE!

WOW! IT'S GOOD TO
SEE 'fOll AGAIN!

·

.'
....

' .,

......-·
-., ,'
~

...
1·\;,

I

~·

SO THIS 15 WHE~E
L{OO LIVE, HliH ?
~OO'RE RIGHT, IT LOOKS A
I . LIKE M~ ~OU5E

11M 6LAD OOR MOM
NEVER SAW i HI5

·,

..

w.

V:l

t)

19P9 K lrig

Futures

Syndicate,

Inc .

'

' ~·"~

..

�...•
12- The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Thursday, Aug . 16, 1979

Second quarter corporate profits decrease

MEETS MONDAY
The Meigs County Church of Chrbt
Men's Fellowl!hip wW meet at the
.Rutland Church of Chrbt Monday 'at
•
•
7:30p.m.

WASHINGTON ( AP ) - Corpor&amp;te
profits slipped 2.4 percent during the
second quarter this year, but the
nation's overall economic growth did
not fall as abrupUy as first thought,
the government reported today.
The Commerce Department said
the Gross National Product, which
measures total output of goods and
services, declined 2.4 percent from
April 1 to June 30. Preliminary
estimates released last month had
placed the drop at 3.3 percent.
Nevertheless, the two new statistics
oo profits and GNP · offer further
evidence of the nation's slide into a
recessioo, economists said.
Corporate profits, after taxes and
on an annual basis, totaled $138 .6
billion, compared with $a2 billion
during th e first quarter, the
Commerce Department said. These
figures are adjusted for seasonal
variations.

••

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES AUGUST 1S
Junice Adams, Issac Barnett,
Dwayne Bates, John Bisphop, WU!lam
Callahan, Hattie Canterbury, Carol
Cummins, Cynthia Davis, Elva Davis,
Helen Davis, Beulah Derenberger,
Brian Egg •··s, Roy Eggars, Roger
Fraley, Harold Hagger, Ben Harll.u,
Christina Hatfield, James Holley,
Janet . Hill, Debra Howell, Gilbert
Jones, Mary Jones, Patricia Kuhn,
Edmund Lambert, Delores Masey,
Ken Mercer, Ruth .Pyatt, Martha
· Rose, Robert Schossler, Mrs. Sarno~
Scott and daughter, Tim Slledaker,
Paula Sword, James Tebert, Jerry
Walters, Tracy Whaley, Anna
Williams. .
.
.
BIRTHS AUGUST 15
\If!'. and Mrs. David lewis,_ son , Oak
Hill; Mr. and Mrs. Denver G1bb6, Son,
Hartford.
TOP ANIMAU&gt; IN THE OPEN CLASS AND 4-H
Division - The grand champion and the reserve champion femaleip· the open class and 4-H division a\ the
Meigs County Fair Wednesday was won by animals

RESERVE CHAMPION - Reserve champion In th~ 4-H Divlson of
market steers, Hereford Semmital breed, at the Meigs County Fair
Wednesday, was won by an animal owned by Todd Tripp 12 SOil of Mr
and Mrs. Alvin Tripp, RD, Pomeroy.
' '
·

owned by Lee Ann Gaul, 12, daugbter of Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Gaul, Chester. Left to right are Lee Ann and
Mark Goeglein.

l're -tax profits, meanwhile, fell
from $233.3 billion in the first quarter
to $226.9 billion in the April.June
period, the department said.
Corporate profits are seen as a key
indicator of the economy's growth
because it helps determine how much
money business has to invest and pay
dividends to attract capital.
The revised GNP decline of 2.4
percent compares with a 1.1 percent
increase in the first three months of
1979.
The government also said that the
annual inflation rate declined from 9.3
percent in the first quarter to 9.2
percent in the second three months of
1979, as measured by a broad national
standard cal led the GNP implicit
price deflator .
Today's
reports
follo wed
announcements that interest rates are
rising, housing starts are plunging
and industrial production is fallin g -

1980 AMC
SPIRITS

REUNION SLATED SUNDAY
mechanisms go into action, reducing
The annual Hollon Family Reunion
circulation in the arms, legs and head will be held Sunday at the Community
in order to conserve warmth for vital Hall in Chester. Friends and relatives
organs in the trunk. That is why , are invited. A p'Ji luck dinner will be
people first notice numbing cold in held at noon.
their hands and feet.

MEMORIAL SERVICE
Memorial services for Mrs. Bertha
Caroline Canaday will be held Friday
at 2 p. m. at the Grace Episcopal
Church with the Rev. Robert Graves
officiating. Burial wW be in Beech
Grove Cemetery.

VOL. XXVIII

RIVERSIDE AMC.JEEP

SOLID FALL COLORS. SIZES 3 THRU 18
CLAIMS DROI'
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
number
of
persons
filing
unem ployment claims last week
dropped by 34.7 percent over the
previ.ous week, says Albert G . Giles,

&lt;tate Burea u of Employment Services
administrator.
·
Giles sa id 21,380 un employed

perso ns filed initial claims for
benefits during the week ending last
Saturday, compared to 32,759 the
week of Aug. 4.
Jobless Ohoia ns filing claims under
state and federal programs were
estimated at 143,5574 last week, a
decline of 4.8 percent from the 150,750
total for the previous week, he said.

REG. '12.00.................... SALE '10.19
REG. '14.00 .................... SALE 111.89
REG. 117.00 ................ ... SALE 114.49
REG. '22.00 ........·............ SALE '18.69

Gallipolis, OH.
446·9100

Several employes were hired when
the Eastern Local School District
Board of Education met in special
~~tssioo this week .
The board accepted the resignation
of Judy Elkins, study hall monitor and
employed Mrs. Nancy Cole in the post .
Mrs. Glenda Benedum was employed
as cook at the -high school; Deborah
Taylor as varsity volleyball coach,
and J ames Simpson as high school
vocationa l agriculture teacher
pending (l!rtificatioo .
The milk bid went to Brougton 's and
a vocational contract with Meigs High
School was approved for a fi ve year
period . The board approved using the
multi media drivers education center
and approved the tuberculin testing
and examination policy adoped by the
Meigs County Health Department
along with a policy requiring aU
employes to be tested on a yearly

·woMEN'S
DAYTIME DRESSES
Long and. short sleeved prints· and
plaids . Regular sizes 12 to 20. Extra
sizes 12 1J,to52.

REG. 19.00 ..................... SALE, '7.19
REG. 111.00 .................... SALE JS.79
.REG. '13.00 ................... SALE '10.39
REG. '16.00 .................. . ,SALE 112.79

.

SALE

MARKET STEER
SALE

DEPT.

REG. '30.00
12 Qt. covered stock pot.
Leyse, all aluminum .

FRIDAY, AUG. 17
AT 7:00 P.M.

SALE MEN'S
WESTERN SHIRTS
New fall selection of long sleeve
western shirts in solids, pla ids and

fancy prints. Sizes S. M, L, XL .

~~g~~~~~ A /lome Banh·
For
Meigs County
People

1~'
5ERvlcE
BANK •

Reg . 511.95
Reg. 513.95
Reg. $15.95
Reg . $17.95
Reg . 524.95

...... Sale$10. 19
...... Sale $11.89
...•.. Sale$13.59
.. . .. . Sale$15. 29
. . . •.• Sale $21.19

SPECIAL

MATTRESS ·AND
BOX SPRING
SETS
BY SERTA

RACINE

lWIN SETS .. ..... ONLY 1138.00

HOME NATIONAL

FULL SETS ........ ONLY 1!'76.00

BANK
Racine , Ohio

BRACH'S

SPECIAL

. SPECIAL

The Mei gs County Sheriff 's
Department investigated
two
accidents Thursday.
At 10 a.m. Lottie Lawson , 30, RD.
Reedsville, was traveling south on SR
124 near Long Bottom when a dOe deer
ran into the path of her vehicle and
was killed. There was slight property
damage.
At 2: 15 p.m. David Tennant, 37.
Sunbury, Ohio, struck a light pole at
Roseberry's PemlZOil in the village of
Racine . There wa:; slight damage to
the truck Tennant was driving and
heavy to the pole. No citation was
issued .
. Deputies are investigating a
breaking an entering that occurred at
the Ben Tom Corp early Thursday
morning. According to the ·report a
lock was broken off a storage shed to
gain entry.

REG. 7rJ

CIRCUS
PEANUTS.

·2

FRIDAY, AUGUST 17 , 1979

~
- ~
4

'.Itt

·EL TOWNSON, OWNED BY I'AUL SAYRE, for·
merly of Meigs County and winner in all of his eight
starts since he began racing this year, was winner of
the Sidney Spencer Memorial Trophy Blanket at the
Meigs Fair Thursday. On the left are Ralph Jordan and

. means
court ru1zng
power

two minor wrecks

SUPPORT THE
JUNIOR FAIR

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

. 0
'()

The Personal Service~nsurance Co.
was named for student and football
insurance and approval was given for "
the replacement of speakers for the
amplificati~ system in thme high
school and replae&lt;!ment o! some
seating at the football field .
Board · m~mbers pres ent were
Dorset Larkms, Deryl Well , James
·" 'Caldwell, Dorothy Ca lawa y and
Dougla s BisselL

Deputies check

HOUSEWARES

I

.:~

basis.

BUSTER BROWN
CLEARANCE'

~DAYS

enttne

Board
hires
coach

·--------------------------~----·--·~ ---~~ ·r-----~---~_, ._,._,_.,_.~-"' ~~~~~------~~~-r

CHILDREN'S DEPT.

at

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHI.O

personal in come in July fell far short
of keeping up with inflation.
While personal income rose 1.4
percent last month, much of the
increase was the result of' a 9.9
percent cost-of~iving boost In Social
Security benefits.
" Otherwise, !he report doesn't
suggest much growth ," . said
Courtenay Slater, chief economist for
the Commerce Department.
Wages and salaries-increased only
0.7 percent, while inflation is risinl!.
Wages and salaries increased only
0.7 percent, while inflation Is rising at
more than I percent a month.
This chronic inflation was a chief
motive behind the Federal Reserve
Board's decision to increase the
discount rate .
It is the second increase in less than
a month and the third since
November, when the discount rate
· (Continued on page 10)

Upper River Rd.

FRIDAY, AUGUST 17 AND SATURDAY, AU(;UST 18

. OP~N GRAND CHAMPION - Grand champion in the open class,
Lmlousm breed, at the Meigs County Fair Wednesday, was won by an
animal owned by Cheryl Williams, Coolville.

NO. 88·

the supply of homes and helps raise
their price because demand continues
to be high .
The Commerce Department
reported Wednesday that the average
new single-family house cost $72,200 in
the second quarter, $3 ,900 more than
three months earlier. Sumichrast said
that trend may continue for th e next
12 months .
Another
sector
already
experiencing serious unemployment
is the automobile industry, where
production is expected to fall from an
annual rate of 8.8 million cars in July
to 7.3 million in August .
This is due to swelling inventories
and dwindling sales, factors that have
forced automakers to lay off more
than 50,000 workers . Private
economisis predict that figure will
excee·d 102,000 by the end of the year·.
The Commerce Department
reported Thursday that Americans '

•

2 '79's Are Still Left

ELBERFELD$. IN POMEROY

SALE
JUNIOR SLACKS

explaining why housing starts in July
fell from a seaso nall y adjus ted
1,935,000 units to 1,799,000.
Some builders can't afford to
borrow the money needed to construct
new homes and potentia l homebuyers
are facing increasingly expensive
mortgage rates.
If that housing trend persists
throughout 1979, 20 percent fewer
homes wUl be started than dUI'ing last
year, said Sumichrast, chief
economist
for
the Natio nal
Association of Home Builders.
· This could translate into the loss of
more than 450,000 jobs, from
carpenters to land developers to
IUrnbermill workers, according to
figures supplied by the home builders'
association.
"The drop in housing starts pretty
much fits a . recession scenario,"
Sum1chrast sa1d.
The fall-()ff m starts also depletes

•

e

NOW AVAILABLE
As body temperature drops, defense

signs that economists say point to a
recession and higher unemployment.
The Federal Rese rve Board ,
indicating it will risk recession to
douse inflation, Thursday boosted the
discount rate, or interest charged its
bank lenders, from 10 percent to a
record 10.5 percent.
Meanwhile , the
Commerce
Department said housing starts fell 7
percent last month , while total
industrial output slipped 0.1 percent.
Auto production plummeted more
than 3 percent.
The increase in the discount rate
means that Federal Reserve-member
ba nks, having to pay more to borrow, •
will charge their own customers
higher interest. This tend s to
disco ur age some in vestment and
retard economic growth.
Rising interest rates already have
affected the housing market, said
economist Michael Sumichrast in

BAGS

SALE BOYS'
DENIM JACKETS

companies to make refunds
COLUMBUS, Ohio rAP )
Customers of three electric utilities in
Oh io can expect refunds as a result of
a ruling earlier this summer
th e
state 's
coa l
outlawin g
consumption till! .
More than 1.7 million custom ers or'
Ohio Power Co., Cleveland Electric
nluminating Co ., and Dayton Power
and UghtCo . wi ll receive the refuncts,
said Steven L. Brash. a spokesman for
the Public Utili ties Commission of
Ohio.
Bu t he added that they will be
"extremely small ."
The coal consumption tax, ruled
unconstitutional bv the Ohio Suvreme

Court earlier this s.ummer, meant that
lower polluting, non-Ohio coal wa s
taxed at a higher rate than Ohio's high
sulfur coaL The tax averaged about 25
cents per ton of coal. Brash said.
The PUCO ordered the refunds
·following the court ruling.
The utilities. in a suit filed by
Dayt.on Power and Light, termed the
tax unlawful Since it penalized them
for volunta ril y meeting federal
Enviromental Protection Agen cy
standards by purchasing low-sulfur
coal instead of building cosUy sulfur
removal systems . Those systems
would have resulted in higher
customer rates, the utilities said.
Ohio Power will refund about $1.1
million, while Dayton Power and
• TRACTORPUU..8P.M.
Light will pay some $300,000. A
.. The tractor pull to be held Saturday spokesman for Cleveland Electric
at the Meigs County Fair will be held said the utility did not know the total
at 8 p.m . not I p.m. as was advertised amount of monev its customers wiH
In th e Fair books.

rece ive , but estin1ated they will get
about 2.6 cents for each month since
May .

DAIRY PRINCESS ASSISTED - Janis Carnahan, Meigs County
Dairy Princess, was assisted with her duties at the Meigs County Fair
Thursday by Teresa Stowers, Gallia County Senior Dairy Princess. Janis
assisted Teresa during the Gallia Co!Jnty Fair. Left to right are Jania and
Teresa .

Official fair
program •••
Saturday,Augustl8

10:30 a.m. -Pony Pull
1:00 p.m. -Tractor Pull
1:00 p.m. -PrettyBabf Contest. Show Ring on Hill
4:00p.m. -Horse Pull
8:00 p.m. -Tractor Pull- Center Field

Two persons hurt
in minor mishap
v

CLEVELAND (AP) - Here are
tbe wiDDIDg oumben drawn Thursday 1D tbe Oblo Lobbery:
Blue UZ; Wblte 01; Gold 3; WilHIthln8%al.

Two persons were injured in an accident in Meigs County investigated
by the Gallia·Meigs Post State Highway Patrol Thursday.
Orie Welch, New Martinsville, W.
Va., was driving south on SR 1 when
he attempted to pass a semi-trailer In
his iane. When he pulled out, Welch
discovered another car, operated by
Genevive Taylor, Pomeroy was
coming north In the iane.
'
Welch lost control of his car, which
ran off the road, then came back onto

the road, coming left of center and
striking Taylor's car. 1bere were

visible signs of Injuries. Welch and
Taylor were taken to Veter111111
Memorial Hospital, where they were
treated and released.
Severe dainagewasdone to Welch's
car and moderate to the Taylor car.
Welch was cited for left of center.
The patrol also Investigated three
other accidents Thursday.
At noon in Gallla County, WUilam
(Continued on page 10)

:::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:·:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;::::

Waist length Wrangler "No
Fault" Denim . Sizes 8 thru 20 .

R'EG. sl2.95 ..... SALE sn.69
REG. s14.95 ..... SALE s13.49
JEWELRY
ClEARANCE

SUMMER NECKlACES
AND EARRINGS
Reg. $2.00 ..... .. . .... Sale 99c
Reg. $3.00 ............ Sale $1.49 ·
Reg. $4.00 .. ... .. ..... Sale $1 .99
Reg. $5.00 ...... ·, .... . Sale $249
Reg. $6.00 . .. . .• : • .•.. Sale $2.99
,

GRAND CHAMPION - Grand champion in the open class of the
dairy cattle, -Hobtein breed, Thursday at the Meigs (;ounty Fair W&amp;s an
anlrllal owned by William Howard, Rt. 2, Bidwell. With the animal is Andy Howard, son of Mr. and Mrs. Howard.

ELBERFELDS IN ·POMEROY
t:

HOI.'lTEIN CHAMPION - Grand champion of the dairy cattle, 4-H
division, Holstein breed, was won by an animal owned by Ed Holter,'son
of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Holter, Rt. 3, Pomeroy. Ed was also reserve
showman. Reserve champion was won by an animal owned by Bob Lee,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lee, Rt.l, Racine, Holstein breed. Left to
right are Ed Holter anti Bob Lee.

JERSEY CHAMPION AND RESERVE - Grand champion

rt thl!

dairy cattle, 4-H division, Jersey breed, was won by an animal owned by
Dean C$Idwell, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Caldwell, Rt. 1, VInton. Reserve

champion, 4-H division, Jersey breed, was won by an anlmai owned by
Joey Parker, son of Mr. and Mrs. Leland Parker, Rt. 3, Pomeroy. Left to
right are Dean Caldwell and Joey Parker.

•

I
I

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