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                  <text>Damage estimated at hundreds of thousand do!lars

D-10-The Sunday Times&amp;ntinel, Sunday, AIIJ(. 19, 1979

One hurt, three drivers charged
GALLJPOU S - One person was injured and lllree were cited in four accidents reported Friday by the Gallia·
Meigs Post State Highway Patrol.
At 4:45 p.m., Frank WiUord, 59,
Vinton , was driving west on SR 124
north of Rutland when he feU behjnd a
bicycle ridden by Charles L. Neutr.ling, Jr., 15, Langsville.
When Wilford attempted to pass
Neutzling, Neutzling swung out into
the lane and WiUord struck him.
Neutzling suffered incapacitating
injuries · and was taken .to Holzer
Medical Center, where he is reported
in satisfactory condition. The mishap'
is still under investigation.
Earlier in the day another accident
occurred on SR 124 iu Syracuse when
Lawrence E . Manley, 40, Middleport,
slowed ttis car on 124 to make a right
turn. Juanita Wilkinson, 41, Pomeroy,
was following behind Manley and
swung left of center while Manley appeared to be making the turn.
Manley then turned back into the
lane and struck the front of Wilkin·
son 's car. There was moderate
damage to both cars and Manley was
cited for improper turn.

Motorcycle hits girl
M'IODLEPOllT-·Police are
investigatin g the injury of a
Middleport girl, Paula Jones, early
Saturdav morning.
The Middleport Emergen cy Squad
was called to the parking lot of a dairy
shop in lower Middleport at 2:26a.m.
for Miss Jones who was, according to
reports, in jured after having been
struck by a motorcycle.
Miss Jones was taken to Veterans
Memoria l Hospital and later was
transferred to Holzer Medical Center.
A police investigation and report are
expected to be completed over the
weekend.

At 11 :40a.m., Estella E. Lanier, 44,
Galllpolis, was driving north on SR
160 and slowed for traffic when her
car was struck from behind by a
vehicle driven by James M.
Markham, 49, Vinton. Markham had
been unable to stop. There was sllglt
damage to the Lanier car and
moderate damage to Markham's car,
and Markham was cited for failure to
keep assured distance.

Violent storm causes heavy ·area flooding

Richard P. THomas , J8, Cheshire,
was driving south on County Road 20
and met ~ northbound car operated
l;ly David A. Jones, 18, Cheshire, on
the curve. The vehicles collided head·
on.
There were no injuries. Damage
was slight to the Thomas car and
moderate on Jones ' car. Thomas was
cjted for failure to yield.

Agent Henry probing case
GALUPOLIS - Agent Herman
Henry of the Bureau of Criminal In·
vestigation (BCI), London, 0 ., has
been called In to assist Gallla County
.sheriff's deputies investigate an
alleged rape involving an elderly
Kanauga resident.

Deputies were dispatched to the
scene at 1:30 a.m. after a Kanauga
residen.t reported a 75 year~ld
woman neighbor had been assaulted
and raped .
The elderly victim had gone to the
neighbor's house for help after the
alleged assault.
Medical attention was given at the
scene and the victim was taken to
Pleasant Valley Hospital. The in·
cident is under investigation.

City commission
meeting Tuesday

Houston homicides
'out of hand'

GALLIPOUS- The Gallipoiis City
Commission will meet in special
session Tuesday night at 8 p.m. in the
Municipal Court Room .
Agenda items include:
-Reports of city officials.
-Consideration of resolutions
authorising city manager to advertise
for bids for sewer line on Chillicothe
Rd.; authorizing city manager to
advertise for bids for sale of excess
items; and, apprving and adopting
draft environmental review.
-Consideration of ordinances
exempting the city from Ohio
prevailing wage law; amending
ordinance 78-51 (pay plan); and,
authorizing city manager to enter into
contract with Combs and Associates
for consulting services.

CAMPERS are shOwn here taken a swim at Camp Allbury.

46 attend alternatives camp

HOUSTON (AP) - The bodies of
four children, tlu'ee of them bound,
have been found after officials
answered a call to a house fire they
say was deliberately set. The deaths
prompted Mayor Jim McConn to say
the .city 's spiraling homicide statistics
were "completely out of hand."
Three of the children, who ranged in
age from 3 to 12, were bound hand and
foot when their bodies were
discovered Friday, authorities said.
One of the girls had been raped and
two of the other victims were
strangled, said the medical
examiner'S office, which said

sm~ke

inhalation and carbon monoxide
poisoning were factors in' all four
deaths.·
The city has had 388 ljomicides this
year, compared with 265 the same
period last year , including the
decapitation slaying of a woman
whose body was found July 'J:I in the
apartment complex where a second
woman was slain last week.
"What type of person could
decapitate a victim, what type of
e person could tie youngsters up in a
• house and set fire to it?" McConn
• .asked Friday.
FBI statistics show crime
skyrocketing in several of the South's
cities. Officials in Atlanta and
e major
New
Orleans
have asked state
e'
e troopers to help them patrol city
streets, but McConn said he is not
•
ready to seek state police help.

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~al

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cestate :

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Today
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Wit lisT. Leadingham
Realtor

FROSTING THE CAKE

!

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When the time comes to sell your home, the inevitable question
will arise . Which items will stay with the house and which will not?
Certain items carry little doubt such as tacked down wall ·to-wall
carpeting , storm windows, and items permanently attached to the
house or property . They would normally stay .
.
,
It 's a good idea to inc lude as man~ exrras as poss1ble. If '(OU II have •
no further use for draperies, particularly when they were made for an •
odd ·si1ed window, be sure to Inc lude them . That porch furniture you I
wil l have no future use for or that extra lawn mower may be just the 1
" frosting on the cake". The idea of getting something extra Is a strong 1
motivating force , especial ly if it seems well suited to its present sur·
1
roundi ng s.
one bit of advice . Items should either stay or go! Do not try to sell 1
th em to the buyer . The sale of a home is a big enough negotiation I
without muddying the water .

I

11 there is anything we can do to help you in the field of real estate
please phone or drop in at LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE, 512Second

................................

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Ave., Gallipolis. Phone 446·7699 . We ' re here to help.

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CIUCKENS !ri'OLEN
POMEROY- Meigs County Sheriff
JamesJ. Proffitt reports deputies are
investigating the theft of an un·
determined amount of chickens
Friday, fr001 the Myrtle Stanley
Farm at Rt. 2, Albany.
According to the report, sometime
Thursday night or early Friday mor·
ning, Mrs. Stanley's chicken house
was entered. The incident is still under investigation.

'79 TRANS AM
Air, am ·fm tape, silver, 4,000 miles, new Riviera
trade, showroom cond.

'79 .TRANS •AM
Air, fm stereo, white, cast alum. wheels, 9,000
miles, super nice.

'79 MALIBU 2 ll~'
Air, maroon, 7,000
new one.

sg~~mpare
r'

$7995

this price with a

'78 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME
Air, blue, 7,000 miles, am·fm, Rallye wheels.
Sha

'78 PONTIAC -GRAN PRIX
Air, 10,000 miles, new Bonneville trade. Expect the
best.

$5495

.'78 CHEV. CAPRICE 2 HDTP
Air, am -fm stereo, Rallye wheels, 22,000 miles.
Nice .

'77 TRANS AM ,
Air, black with gold bird, am-fm ·tape; new prem.
tires . We sold it new.

Sunday Shoppers Welcomer

Death ends
boy's dream

fwt"

Many of the counselon and campers are participating in the camp for

second or third time. In her
second year as camp nurse, Susan
Frazier ll8el a week of her vacation
time from Holzer Medical Center to
participate. A former camper,
Dorothy Jone~~ ol Gallla, has returned
this week as a cook with Nettie Carter
from Kerr.
Another former catnper, Debbie
Osbourne, has returned as a coun·
se1or. Georgeanne Shiulet, a student
ol Rio Grande College, Ia a cocounaelor. The other 12 counaelon
and Ufeguard are VOlWlteers from the
staff of the Gallla..Jacklon-Mel@l
Conununity Mental Health Center.
the

Come In and Browse Around

RE'jEcr FINAL OFFER
DEFIANCE, Ohio (AP) - Some 65
striking nurses at Defiance Hospital
turned down Friday what the hospital
said was its final contract offer.
Details of the proposal were not
disclosed , but a spokeswoman for the
Ohio Nurses Association said the
raises it would have provided are
substantially less than what the
nurses received two years ago .
The hospital made the proposal at a
negotiating session Thursday, the
first held since July 23. Nurses went
on strike June 14.
The nurses group said it was willing
to resume talks next week, but there
wa~ no immediate response from
adm inistr a tors.
KEYS ON SALE
VINTON - Any student attending
North Gallla High School wishing a
locker key should do so next week.
The school secretary will be available
from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Seniors and
juniors should report on TUtisdays,
sophomores on Wednesday and freshmen, Monday.

e
VOL. XXVIII

NO. 89

at

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

•

enttne

Monday evening
GALLIPOLIS-The , Gallipolis
Kiwanis Club wiU have an interclub
meeting Monday night at Athens,
with six Galllpollbjns signed up to
make the trip.
. The lujlf.ifozen, who will meet at
4:15 p.m., at McDonald's, are l're81·
dent Bill MUstead, President-elect
Larry L. Boyer, Larry Lambert,
Millard Cassidy, Don Wareilime, and
Albert Durose. Any other Kiwanlana
who want to go should he at
McDonald'sat4: 15. ·
· Tile Athens club meeta at5: !I at the
Sportsman P,ub restaurant.

Hundreds rA. fans packed into the
center ring of the Meigs County
Fairgrounds Saturday night to watch
the events of the fair's 1979 tractor
pulllng contest.

MIKE HALEY, K.ingabw'y Road, at the wheel ol his modified tractor,
"Granny's Delight," which he built from ICI'IItch. Haley has been at the
vehicle fer some four years l1'lllkin« change~~ from time to time. Cll8l not
COWJting labor has added up to about $8,000 and the vehicle is used only
for tractor pulling events such as the annual pull at the Meigs Fair Satur·
day night when Mike came in second in his clus. He a1ao constructed a
trailer for the tractor sc that he can haul to events around Ohio. Haley is
employed as a welder at Midwest Steel in Pomeroy.

SEATING was at a premium in the center field t1 the Rock Springs
Fairgrounds Saturday night when hundreds of fans .crowded into~ area
where the annual tractor pulllng conle!lt was taking place. This small
group pictured found the top of a large grader parked nearby a vantage
point fi'QI'I'l which to watch activities.

. Despite rain, large crowd attends .f air
Despite rain which hit the Meigs
County Fair Saturday afternoon · all

Weather

New KODAK
EKTRALITE 30
Camera Outfit

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS .

MONDAY, AUGUST 20, 1979 ·

Kiwanis to meet

DETROIT (AP) - A 17-year.old
boy whose dream was to join the
Army collapsed and died of a heart
attack durin g a routine military
physical examination. "There wasn't
anything anyone could have done to
save him, " said his father .
Darrell Evan s collapsed while
walking across the waiting room of
the armed services testing offices in
Detroit.
Doctors who performed an autopsy
said Evans died of a heart attack
brought on by abnormal development
of the heart muscles. They said the
condition is congenital and gives no
warning signs.
father, Daniel, a 39-year~ld Ford
autoworker from Livonia, said after
his son 's death Wednesday. "He
wasn't the type to be tired and laze
around all day ."
Evans said he approved of his son 's
plan to join the military and signed
the enlistment papers Tuesday from a
bed in Annapolis Hospital in nearby
Wayne where he was recovering from
back surgery.
"Darrell was his own boss." Evans
said. "I raised him that way. He said
he really wanted to enlist, so 1 said
OK.
"He passed the physical Tuesday,
everything except the knee. He f~ll off
a minibike when he was 12 and it
sometimes swelled up . So the doctors
wanted to see him about it
(WedneSday) ."

•

Hundreds watch
tractor· contest

"He was always active," Evans '

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BOSTER GRADUATES
Patrick Lee Boster, BOD of Rulb
Boster, Mabeleoe Drive, a~
Eugeoe B08ler, Tblrd Avenue,
GalllpoUs, wu graduated from Ohio
State Unlvenlly School ol Welding
Eugloeerlng oo June 5. Pat Is a 1974
graduate of. Gallla Academy IUgb
School, where he was president of
lbe studeat body and eaptaiD of the
football team. Boster Is the fint
Gallla COUiltlao to ..,.,.,me a welding
eogloeer. He Is employed by Combw!Uoo Engineering, St. Louts, Mo.

GALUPOLIS - Teenagers from
Gallia, Jackson and Meigs attended
swruner CIIIIIP frllll Augpst 13-18 as
part of the Alternatives Program.
The 48 girls and boys from the ages t1
12 to 18 spent the week at Camp
Asbury in Rio Grande swimming,
fishing, hiking and in sparta aC·
tivities.
Besides softball and volleyball, the
campers·played "New Games" which
are "games that stress having fun In·
stead of winning," explained CoDirector, Unda Krasner.
Indoor activities included square
dancing and arts and crafts. In arts
and crafts, campers created
decorations for the(r own T-ilhirta.
Each morning during the week
campers joined in small discussion
groupe with counselors. They cho8e
from a wide variety of topics Including "What I Want to he When I
' Grow Up; For Smokers Only; Fan·
tasy; and Weight Reductioo."
The Alternatives Camp was
designed "to provide altematjve for·
ms besides alcohol and drugs to
feeling good,' said Carl Tucker, Coor·
dinator of Alternative~~. "The camp
provides recreational activitie~~ that
these teenagers don't ordinarily
receive. An activity where people join
together helps people cope with them·
selves and society. They can find new
8Illiwers to old problems." He added
''that the main purpose is to have

BY KEVIN KELLy
time in his cruiser until the water
A violent swnmentonn dpmped receded from the road.
four inches of rain ml caused exReports of looting in some of the
tensive property damage to trt~ounty stricken heme~~ were limited to people
resldenta early Sunday momlng.
picking up floating debris.
No lnjurle~~ were reported in the
At least one traffic accident was atstorm which lasted from 12:30 a.m. to lrfbuted to the flooding on 35 when the
nearly$ a.m.
flashing signal Iighta at the raUroad
Gallla, Meigs, and Mason counties crossing next to Thaler Ford began
were hardest hit by thWlderstorm ac· flashing on and off. Floodwater had
tivtty
caused the signal tQ abort, and at 9:50
"The whole county waa affl!!!ted in a.m. PaulS. Keever, 85, Athens,~
some way," said Galiia CoWlty · ped at the crossing to see If a train
Sheriff's Deputy John McGI.Mess. was approaching. He was struck in
"Some cars landed lit ditches and one the rear by a car driven by Myrl E.
· wasfoundtmderabridge."
Coaltley, 57, Logan, who ~d been
Suffering · the most from over· unable to stop. No lnjunes ':'ere
flowing cree1u1 was the northern part reported and damage to the vehicles
t1 Galllpolla around U.S. 35, Bulaville was moderate.
Road and 0. J. White Road. Campen
The sheriff's department reported a
at tbe Gallla County Junior car stalled .in the water .on 35 and
Fairgrounds were a1ao flooded out, began floating away until deputies
while water sWl surrounded low.lying were able to stop it.
spota around Holzer Medical Center
Both 35 and SR 160 were closed for
late Sunday morning.
several hours. By 10 a.m. water had
The Gallla County sheriff's depart· receded enough to open up the r~d,
ment began receiving calls for but local residents were seen outs1de
aaalatance soon after the stonn ended their homes trying to salvage
and was out in the Jackson Pike area p!ll!ll!88ions from their fiood.fltricken
helping residents fer the better part of homes.
. ,
In Meigs CoWlty, the sheriff s
Sunday, said Chief Deputy Robert
Hartenbach.
department reported the storm was
GALLIA AREA HIT HARD- Flash flood waters swept through bo~ell on homes. Residents spent Sunday in cleanup efforts as they attempted to clqr .
Deputy Don Bowen said be had responsible for two power outages in
o.
J.
White Road, Gallipolla, at approlrimately 3 ~.m . Sunday for~ the debris from their homes and projlerty: Due to rescue efforts by thoee wakened
been sent out to assist on Bulaville the western part ol the county. Power
evacuation rA. dazens rA. residents. Flood waters rose m to seven feet Within the by the storm, there were ·no injuries suffered.
Road and was stranded for a short
(Continued on page 8)

'

High Tuesday from around 110 to the
mid 118. Variable cloudiness tonight
and Tuesday with a good chance of
showers and thunderstorms. · Low
toirlght in the upper 60s. Chance of
precipitation is 50 percent tonight and
60 percent Saturday.

Winners ol the evenlll include:
5 000 pounds, modified - first
~ fourth, respectively, Jeff
Pendleton, Wa.sblngton C. H., Mike
Haley, Pomeroy; Harold Ford,
Coolville · Roger Smith, Lucasville.
6,000 ~Wlds - John Stevens, Point
Pleasant; Jim Hughs, Mt. Perry;
Richard Scott, WUiiamstown, W.. Va.;
Robert Loor, McConnelsville, and
Jim Johnson, Thornville, first
through fifth, respectively,
8 000 pounds - first through fifth,
resPectively, Jl!lle Wagner, Racine;
Tony Carnahan, Racine; Jim John·
son Thornton; Chria Reichley,
~erset; Dave Watson, Tuppers
Plains.
9,000 pounds - Don Bottrell,
Albany; Jollll Clouse, Somerset;

NO MAJOR DAMAGE
No major 1torm damages were
place went to Carl Seals, second to reported by CGIIllly residents over
events proceeded as scheduled.
In the evening the weather cleared Jimmy Daniels, third to Storts and the weekend to the PtiiDeroy and
and the Rock Springs faiirgrounds DeWitt, fourth to George Davidson, Middleport PoUee Departmeota and
the MeigJ Coauty Sberlff'1 Deperlwas packed with residents who turned and fifth to Charles Bowen.ock.
meot. Fred Morrow; ..Ohio Power
out to see the horse pulling contest,
CIIIDpuy IUIIIIger, laid biB eomthe tractor pulling evenlll or to enjoy
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
puy bad oo oataga.
the action on the midway.
Wednesday
through Friday - A
In the horse pulllng cootest under
·:::: ::::::::::::: :::::::: : :: ::: : :;:;::: :::::::::::: ::: ::: ::::::::::::::: :::::::::::: : ::: ~:: ::.
3,200 pound teams category, Dale Ar· chance of showen. or thunderstorms
each
day.
Highs
in
low
to
mid
Sis
nold won first place and Bill BowerMEET TONIGHT
Wednesday dropping to the mid to
sock won second.
A
special
meeting ol the Eastern
In the teams over 3,201 pounds first upper 70s by Friday. Lows in the low
band
boosters
will be held at 7:30p.m.
to mid 60s.
this evening at the high school.

Indiana man injured

Grover Salser, Jr., Racine, and John
Depoy, Guysville, first through fourth, respectively.
Four wheel modified - First
through third, · respectively, Jack
Gaston, Stewart; Dan Mansfield,
Guysville, and Dave Howell,
Glouster. ·
Road stock - Clayton Johnson,
Reedsville; Don Buck, Coolville, and
Jerry Stover, first through third,
reapectively.
CHAMPIONS EDilBlTED
Charles Carr, Tuppers Plain!~,
exhibited the grand champion ram
and the grand and reserve champioo
ewes and Mrs. Eleanor Leonard,
Route 3, Pomeroy, exiblted the reser·
ve champion ram in the Suffolk breed
of sheep at the Meigs County Fair.
Carr won five blue ribbons, in ad·
dltion, with his sheep and Mrs.
Leonard won two.

FREE CWTHING DAY
The Gallia-Meigs Community
Action Agency will hold its free
clothing day for low income persons
Wednesday from 9 am. until noon.
The Agency's clothing bank is located
in the former high school building at
Cheshire.

Two cars were heavily damaged
and a driver was injured in an ac·
elden! on Uncoln Hlll Rd., Pomeroy
at 2:56p.m. Sunday.
Pomeroy police said that cars
driven by . Robert Schneider, 20,
Lawrenceburg, Ind., traveling south
and Gary Snouffer, 23, Pomeroy,
SPECIAL SESSION
collided on a curve.
The
Board
of Trustees of Columbia
Schneider was taken to ~ Holzer
will
meet in special session
fownship
Medical Center by the Pomeroy
at
7
p.m.
Thursday
at the township
Emergency Squad for treatment of
building, Gloria Hutton, clerk,
injuries. Tile accident is still under in·
vestigatlon.
• 'reports.

Meet the new KODAK EKTRALITE
30 Camera Outfit with swing -out
electronic flash , ready day or night,
indoors or out. It features automatic
ex po sure contro l and it 's simple to
use- jusl aim and shoot.
Th e outfit
is co:~p~
l e~te~;;;::~~~:ll
with
film a nd
:-;-_,.,..IC.
batl eries.
~ilf£
~~-

~~sh!

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

1;:;1

REsERvE CHAMPION STI!!ER ·- The reserve
champioosteer was purchased by Ohio University Inn,
Athens for 81.10 a pound at the Meigs County 4-H FFA
Junior 'Fair Uvestock sale Friday niMt. The animal
I

was owned by Todd Tripp, Rt. 3, Pomt: ..,. Shown are,
· 1'1' Ralph Jordon and Cindy Pitzer, fair king and
q~n. Todd Tripv and Garnet Engle, representing the
Ohio University Inn.

CHRISTMAS IN AUGUST -It was Chrtatrnas in
August for employes of The Farmers Bank and
Savings Co. who were given an outing in Cincinnati
over the weekend. Employes are pictured as they
prepared to load onto a chartered bus at the bank's
parking lnt just after 12 noon Saturday. The employes
and their families - on the bus when the photo was
taken- were guests at the Hospitallty Inn, attended the
New York Mets.Cinclnnatl game Saturday night and
visited King's Island Sunday -a gift of the bank. Pic·
lured are front, I to r, Nancy Stanley; Julie Hy~!ll ' .

Roger Hysell,-·Suiie Abbott,
Wllloo, ShanJn '
Werry lrls Payne, Evelyn Lanning; back, 1 tor, Ted
Reed, 'president, who was 'unable to accompany the ·
group due to other commitments; Dick Stettler, Chrla
y eauger, Jon Karschnllt, Paul Reed, who made all t1
the plans for the outing; Sue Lightfoot, Jeannie Werry,
Brenda Weber, Sharon Smith, Joan Vaughan, Pam
Pars0118 and Jenny Smith. Mr. and Mrs. Thereon John- ·
son and Mr. and Mrs. Paul Kloes and aon, Paul
Michael, also made the trip.by car, joining the lfoup ID
Cincinnati.

�3-The Dally Sentinel Middleport-Pomeroy 0 Monday Aug 20 !979

2- The Datly Sent mel Mtddleport Pomeroy 0 Monday Aug 20 1979
sole of any houstng by
the purpose of r ent ng a
MODEL FAIR
un t whether or not such
mak ng represental tons
HOUSING
person subm ts a wntten
reQardln~ the ex stmg or
ORDINANCE SOS
AN ORDINANCE TO po.1enftal pro,om ty of real appltcat on
~~) The total number of
PROVIDE FOR EQUAL property owned used or unt1s
n each buildmg
occup1ed by any person of
HOUSING
OP
whtch were rented dunng
PORl UNITY IN THE any part cular race color
the penOd and the number
creed
rei ~·ous belief
CITY OF POMEROY
of such unt ts wh ch were
nat onal or lg1n or handt cap
OHIO
rented to ( ) one or more
Whereas fhe population by d1rect or ndirec t Bla
ck persons and to (t }
methOds
o1 the C1ty of Pomerox
(2) To make any one or more Span sh
Oh o ncludes people of dlf
surnamed persons
For
representat1ve
to
a
feren traces creeds sexes
purposes hereof a untt s
re g ous
bel1efs
and prospecftve purchaser or
ren ted dunng the penOd tf
lessee that eny hous ng tn a
nat anal or gms and
orr.rt cu lar block netgh
durtn9 the pert&lt;X:Itf become
Whereas the C ty Coun bQrhQQd
or area may un
occup ted by a new tenant
c 1 of the C1ly of Pomeroy
believes '" pnnCiple of
equal nahts and pnvtleges
for all Cit tens and
Whereas
the Untted

Statu Congress had adop
ted as the nat1onal poliCy !o
provtde
w thtn con
st t1.,1tlonal ltmttat ons for
fa r housm9 throughout our
country

Now Therefore Be '' or
dained by the Counc I of the
City of Pomeroy Slate of
Oho

sec t on 1 oes19natton of

Polley That '' s hereby
des1~nated to be the con
t nu ng policy of the City of
Pomeroy to do all lh1ngs

necessary and proper to
secure for all fs cttizen~
thetr rtght to equal houstng
opportuntt es regardless of
the r race color creed
sex
marttal stat u s

rei Q ous belief

nat1onal

nat1onal

Untawful

leas ng

d scr m nate

agamst any person by
retus1ng to negot tat e
makmg false r epresen
tattoos on the avatlabtl ty
Of the housmg unIT or w 111
drawtng from the market a
houstng un t wh ch s tor
sa le lease sublease or
rental

To nclude n the ler

ms
cond t ons
or
nv leges of any sa e
ease
sublease
renta
asstgnment or oiher t r an
sfer of any hous ng any
clause cond tton or r estr c
fton d sc r m nat ng aga nst
any person n the use or oc
cupancy of such hous ng

r.

(~)To d scnm nate tn the
turn sh ng of any ta ct It t es
repatrs improvements or
services or n the terms
cond1tions pr v leges or
tenure of occupancv. of any

person

I

(b) For any lendi ng m
stttutlon to dlscr m nate n
lendtng mcmey
guaran
tee ng loans/ accep tmg a
deed of trus or mortgage
or
otherwise
mak ng
avatlable funds for the pur
pose
acquts t on
con
struct1on
alternatton
rehabllita 1ton
repa r or
matntenan c e of any
houstng or dtscr m nate n
the fixing of the r ates fer
ms
condlt ons
or
prOVISIOns of any such
f inancial ass stance

(c) For any person or
real estate agent w th
respect to any proh b ted

act spec fted tn thts or
d nance to pub sh or c r
culate or c ause to be
publtshed or ctrcuiated
statement
any nott ce
lost ng or adverttsement
or to announce a pol cy or
to make any r ecord tn con
necft on w th the prospec
t ve sa le lease sublease
rental or ft nanctn~ of any
hous ng whtch 1nd ca tes
rei ance determtnat on or
dec ston based on race
color creed sex mantal
status
age
reh~tous
bel ef nat anal or g n or

hand cap

(d ) For any person or
real es tate agen t to ass st
n compel or coerce the

dong ol any act declared to

be an unl awfu l hous ng
proact ve under th s or
d nance or to obstruct or
prevent enforcemen t or
compltante wtth prov1s ons
of th tS ord nance or to at

tempt d rectly or 1nd reclly

to comm t any act declared
by th s ord na nce to be an
un awfu l hous ng pract ce
{e) For any person or
real estate agent

(1) To nduce or attempt

to Induce the sale transfer
or lts1mg for
-1

of tnterest

munt c pal county state or
federal level at any ttme
wh le a member of the

relal1ng

sp cuous locatton tn that
portton of hts housmg
bus ness normally used by
h m for negot at1051 the ren
tal of a hous ng untf
thereon a nottce prepared
by the Board wh ch con
tatns
th e
follow ng
language pr nted n black
on
a
light co lored
background tn not less
than fourteen pont type
tt tS a v alation of th e Fa r

Hous ng Law ollhe C1ty of

Pomeroy State of Ohto for
any real estate agent or
for any person own ng or
managtng a mult un t
apartment dwelling to

to any

person because of ra ce
color creed sex manta !

reli9 ous

belief

nat anal ong n age or han
dJCap
2 D scnmtnate aga nst
any person because of that
person s race color creed
sex manta! status age
rei!Q ous belief nat1onal
ong n or hand cap w th
r espec t to t he terms con
d t10n s or pnv leges of
hous ng accommodattons
or n the turn shmg of
fac 11 t1es or serv ces tn con
nect on therew th

IF YOU BEL EVE YOU
HAVE
B EE N
DISCRIMINATED AGAI
NST CONTACT THE CITY
OF POM EROY FAIR
HOUSING BOARD THE
OHIO CIVIL RIGHTS
COMMISSION OR THE U
S DEPARTMENT OF
HOU SING AND URBAN
DEVE LOPMENT
Sect on 5 Reports to be
Flied
(a) On or before January
1980

every owner of

rental
loca ted

hous tng
un ts
n one or more

1

twenty f ve 125) or more
build ngs

n the C1ly of

Pomeroy shall f le wtth the
Fa r Houstng Board a wr t
t en report rrov dtng tn
forrnafton se torth n the
follow ng paragraphs for
the three month pertod

beg nn ng w th October 1
1980 and for eac h three 13)

month per ad thereafter
every such owner shall ftle

w fh fhe Board within thir
ty 130) days alter the end ol

the three month per od an
add t on a I wri t ten report

(bl Reports fled hereun
der sha ll be siQned bY the

owner of th e butldtng or h s
authonzed agent shall be
on a form to be supplied by
the Board on request and
shall conta m the fol iowmg
nform.:\t on

(A) The name and ad
dress ol eac h bUilding the

name a nd address of
owner the name and ad
dress of the managtng
agent th e name and address of the restd en t
custod tan, the total number
of un ts tn each bu ldlng

(exc luding units rented or

ava labl e tor rent only to
employees of the O'Nner or

ol a managing agenll the

approx male renlal ranQe
for a one two and th r..ee

bedroom apartment (1f the

build ng con tains such a

unlll and the number

of

un ts occup ed on the last
day of t he three month

per od lor January 1 1980
lor the 1n t al report) by I )
one or more B ack persons
and by ( •&gt; one or more
Span sh surnamed
sons

per

IBI The total number of

appl cants for renta l un ts
n each butldlng durn~ the

three month penOdh and

the number of sue ap
pltcants who were (t l Black

persons and

(II )

before

the

execut ve

Board may n tts d scretton

necessary

matter wh ch mvolves a
v olaton of thts ordmance
falls to conctltated com
plamt after the 9.artles

have n good fa11h at
tempted such conCIIiallon

at an offiCe of the owner or
of a manaq lng agen • for

~

fa Is to effect an mforma 1
coned tafton agree or a for
mal consent agreement or
determines that a com

pia nl s not susceptible of

concillatton he shall not fy
the Board tmmedtately and

the Board shall thereafter
schedule a publ c hearing
to determ ne whether a

Young never had evaluation

vtolatton of thts ordmance
has been commItted The

Board shal l serve upOn the

respondent a statement Of
charges and a summons
and shall serve upon all '"
terested part es a nottce of
the ttme and place of
hear ng The respondent or
hts authortzed counsel may
ftle such statements wtth

WASHINGTON (AP) - Andrew
Young never took the Hamilton
Jordan staff evaluaUon test That was
for lesser offtctals
Instead when Prestdent Carter
cleaned house m the Cabmet the U N
ambassador
submttted
hts
restgnatton along wtth the rest -of the
admtmstration s top echelon
Young s was not among the
restgnattOns Carter wanted even
though the prestdent satd at the tune
that the outspoken ambassador had
created problems The prestdent also

satd that Young had made great
strtdes t.11 unprovmg U S ties wtth
Afrtca and nurd World nattons
Now less than a month later Young
has restgned for real after meeting
secr etly on hts own wtth a
representattve of the Palesttne
Liberation OrgantzaUon and then
giVIng the State Department a false
account of the episode
At the time of the shakeup that led
ID the replacement of ftve Cabtnet
members Jordan passed out
evaluatton forms for a checkup on

NEW 14-PART SERIES
ON SOCIAL SECURITY
It MEDICARE BENEFITS
STARTS TODW I

How did the system begin??

•

parttes and such represen
tattves as the rart ies may
choose to assts them Con
c I at on conferences shall

nformal and nothing

appears

manag n9 agent whether
at the bu ld ng nvolved or

tn
be
provtded that

the Board shall not d1smoss
such com pia nt w1thout fir
st affordmg the com
pla1nant an oppOrtunity to
appear before the Board
(f) If the executive
secretary w th respect to a

or an y member of the
a o_ard or tts staff unless thP
part1es agree thereto In

or a

made publiC by the Board

wrmng~

(C) The terms of con
c llahon agreed to by the
parl1es shall be reduced 10

•

I~ttsbrn gh when the l'trates blanked
the Los Angeles Dodgers 2 0
However Houston s lead tn the NL
West was sbced ID I 'k games over
Cincmnau - the smallest smce June
18 - when the Astros succumbed ID
the Philadelphia Phillles two-run
nmth tnntng rally 3-2 while the Reds
were beaUng the New York Mets 6-.&gt;
Elsewhere the Chtcago Cubs
downed the San Otego Padres 3-1 and
the St Lows Cardinals whtpped the
San Franct!ICO Gtants 4~
Pirates 2, Dodgers 0
Btl! Madlock s two-run homer wtth
two out m the bottom of the mnth
wung broke up a sccreless duel and

order such further
vestlgatton as may

admmtstration appotntees below the
Cabmet level
Mayor Of the members f r
Young ranked wtth the Cabmet so
s1 appotnted one shall now
he
wasn t covered by that process
offtce for a term of one
year one for a term o1 two
But some of the questtons the Jordan
years and the other for a
evaluaUon form rwsed seem to go
term of three years and the Board pnor to the
stratght to the problems that came to
t hetr successors sha ll be hearmg date as it deems
appomted for t erms of necessary n support of 1ts
a head last Wednesday and led Young
t hree years
pos tton The hear ng shall
to qrnt
The Mayor shall 1111 all be opened to the public ex
vacanctes by appotntment cepl that the respondent
The form mcluded 30 questions
for the unexptred term A may request m wnt ng a
asktng for a report on the employee s
Board member whose term prtvate heanng the defer
has exp red sha II be m10at1on ol such request
work habtts personal tratts pohttcal
el!gtbie for re appomtment shall be dtscretlonary w1th
and dedtcatton to the
sktlls
to the Board
the Board The heanng
(c )
The e&gt;&lt;ec uttve shall be held not less than
admmtstrauon s goals
secretary of the Board ttffeen days after serv1ce of
Some of the questions do seem
shall be app01nted by the the statement of charges
a
p
p
r
o
p
r
t a t e m the Young case
Mayor and shall be an em
and summons The sum
ployee of the C1 ty of mons so ssued must be
For example the form asks how
Pomeroy
s1gned by two members of
conftdent the person Is, on a scale
(d) The Mayor may the Board and the 1ssuance
recommend the removal of Of such summons shall
rangmg from self-doubling to cocky
any member ol the Board requ~re the attendance of
Young certainly had no shortage of
tor neglect of duty or named persons and the
self&lt;onftdence even as he restgned
malfeasance n offt ce to the ~reduct on of relevant
C1ty Counc I The C ty documents and records
1 really don t fe el a btt sorry for
Counctl may remove a The ta1lure to comply with
J-~~~~ anyth111g that I have done
he satd
member of the Board from a summons shall consttute
oifiCe by the vote of two a vlolat on of thts or
How frequently does thts person
th~rds (2 3) of the counCil
d nance
come up wtth new tdeas• the form
only after havmg ftrst
The nterested part es
~-&amp;..- asks Young comes m on the high stde
g ven to such member a
copy of t he charges a gat nst may at their opt on ap
of that one That s what got hun miD
pear before the Board 1n
h m and an opportun ty to person
by duly
trouble Some of his tdeas were too
be publiClY heard n person authorized orrepresentative
or by counsel 10 hts own and may have the assist an
new too op111tonated and too blunt for
defense
and any such
ce ol an attorney The par
the world o( diplomacy - or for the
remova shall be f nal
le) Two members ol the ties may present test1mony
good of the admmistraUon he served
Board shall constttute a and ev dence and the r ght
How loyal to the administration '
quorum for the purpose of to cross examtne wttnesses
Syndicated colummst 6111 Ste1f IS the author o1
Young s loyalty ID Carter never was
conductmg the bustness shall be preserved All
a 14 part senaiozat1on of an Important new
thereof A vacancy on the test• mony and evtdence
a
questton He was the prestdent s
shall
be
gtven
under
oath
or
Board shall not tmpair t he
book en tilled What You ve Got Com mg In
The
frtend
as well as his ambassador But
nght of the other m embers by afflrmat1on
Socoal Secunty And Medocare
Executtve Secretary shall
to exerctse all the power of
hts
free
lance dtplomacy was a
keep
a
full
record
of
the
How does Soc1a l Secur ty work? How does
the Board
hearing whiCh record shall
1
problem
politica
(f) Each member ol the
one apply for benef1 ts? How lo ng must a
Board shall serve wtthout be public and open to 1n
Independence and IDlttattve are
spect on by any person
person pay mto Soc1al Secu nt y&gt; Whi Ch hospl
salary but shall be pa1d and
upon
request
by
any
ftne
but tn effect Young was
necessary and actual ex
tal and med1cal b1i ls are cove re d by Med
pnnc pal party to the
purswng
what he thought should be
penses expended n per
care?
formtng the busmess of the proceechng lhe Board shall
admmistration foretgn pohcy when he
1urn1sh
such
party
a
COPY.
Board
1ng record 1f
held hiS unauthortzed July 26 meeUng
(g) The Board Is charged of theat hear
such cost as the
w th the tollowmg dul1es to any
with the PLO represent.aUve Even
Board
deems
appropriate
mplement the stated
(g)
If
at
the
conclus
on
of
after
tt blew up Yo~ declared that
pollee of th s or:d nance
the hearing the Board sha II
(1) To
nvesl1gate all delerm1ne
I
could
not say to anybody that gtven
the prepOn
By WDIIam Slelf
complatnts of unlawful derance ofupon
the Great Depression of the 1930s
the same sltuaUon 1 wouldn t do tt
the
evidence
housmg practi ces whtch that the person compla ned
(Fint of lt peril}
In 1935 after ftve years cl savage agam almost exacUy the same way
are filed w lh I
a9a
nst
has
VIOlated
lh1s
or
What
IS
Social
Security'
(2) To tn ttate comp iatnts
economtc
depresston President Which leads to question 24 on the
dtnance the Board shall
of unlawful housmg prac
Put as sunply as posSible Soctal Franklin D Roosevelt sent Congress personr .valuatton How well does
after
consultal
on
w
lh
the
t1 ces on the basts of Law Director tn executtve
Secunty IS msurance against losmg economlc-eecunty legislation based thts per'l(lD take direcuon '
audttmg or test ng earned sesston state its findingS to
mcome because of disability or on recoounendaUons of a special Not w 11 enough as 1t turned out
out by tts staff or volun
cause the Law D rector
teers author zed by the and
reUrement This msurance protects Committee on Economic Security
to
prepare
and
tssue
an
or
Board
der under Board dtrecftve
you your spouse, your children Congress then enacted the Social
(3) To endeavor by con
the person com
c ltatton to resolve such requtnng
even your parents m certam Wlusual Security Act which FDR signed miD
platned
aga
nst
to
cease
compl a nts
and desist from such
cases - by replacmg smne of your lost law Aug 14, 1935 On that date less
( 4) To hold hear ngs sub
un lawful conduct and to
poena w tnesses compel take
mcome
than 15 percent of all U S workers
such afftrmattve ac
thetr
attendance
ad
Soctal
Secunty
ts
the
cheapest
m
tton
as
wtll
effectuate
the
were covered by any kind of
Today In History
mtmster oaths take the purposes of th1s ordtnance
you
can
buy
agamst
the
risks
surance
reUrement
system
By
The
Associated Preas
testt mony of any person un
not1ce that tf the
der oath and m connec t ton wtth
of
Amencan
life,
desptte
the
gnpes
The
law
signed
ln
1935
was
far
from
Today
IS Monday Aug 20 the 232nd
Board
determ
10es
that
the
therewtth to r equtre the
complatned aga nst
you may have heard about tis nsmg comprehellSive but tt fumtshed a day of 1979 There are 133 days left m
product on for exam nat ton person
has not after f1fteen (15)
of any books or papers calendar
cost In recent years
base for all changes ever since Those the year
days
following
relatmg to any matter un
servtce
of
the
Board
s
or
But
let
s
back
up
for
a
moment
and
are explained m detatlm my
Today s htghhght m history
changes
der tnvesttgatton or tn der complied with the or
quest on before the Board
see
where
the
tenn
Soctal
Security"
book
What
You
ve
Got
Coming
m
On
thiS date m 1791 Alaska was
the Bollrd Will recer
(5) To render at least on der
came
from
and
what
s
behind
tt
t1fy
the
matter
to
the
Law
Soctal
Security
and
Medicare
For
discovered
by the Dantsh navtgator,
ce a year to the Mayor and
for enforcement
The
tenn
was
used
by
English
to the C ty Council a full Dtrector
your
copy
send
$1
50
pi~
50
cenl3
Vttus
Bertng
(h) UpOn recerl hcal1on
wntten report of all ts ac
economist Lord William Bevendge postage and handling to What On this date
to the Law D' rector for en
ttvtt es
and
r ec om
torcemenl he shall seek
who defmed tlas a job when you cna You ve Got Corning in Social Secunty In 1776 George Washmgton eluded
mendattons
compliance by appropr ate
(6) To recommend to the
work and an mcome when you can't
and MediCMe m care of thia the Bnttsh m Brooklyn N Y and
vii actton brought n the
Mayor when tt deems cname
of the Fatr Housmg
tn·
European
craft
guilds
orgamzed
newspaper P 0 Box 489 Radio City moved hiS anny across the East River
necessary educat1onaf and
of the C1ty of
Other program s des1gned Board
surance-beneftt
plans
as
far
back
as
Statton
New York N Y 10019
1D Manhattan m dense fog
Pomeroy Ohto before a
to promote the purposes court
the
Middle
Ages
and
vanous
kinds
of
of
competent
Example
The
1935iaw
created
old
In 1833 the 23rd Amertcan
stated tn the ordmance
IUrlsc:hctton In any such
protected
voluntary
msurance
funds
Benjamtn HarriSOn was
age
msurance
for
retired
workers
Prestdent
(7) To adopt rules and proceedtng
where the
procedures for the conduct court detemmes
people throughout Europe from the only Amendmenl3 enacted m 1939 born tn North Bend Ohto
that there
of 'ts bust ness
of thts
16th century on
before the ftrSt monthly beneftl3 wre In 1914 durmg World War I
(8) To do such other acts has been a vtolaflon
the court shall
that are necessary and ordtnance
But It wasn 1 unUI otto von Blsmar· payable, expanded the program to Gennan forces occupted Brusssels
award
compensatory
proper to perform those
and where ap
ck s Gennany m the 1880s established provide for workers' survivors and Belgtwn
duttes with wh ch 1t ts damages
proprlate
punitive
charged under the terms of damages
tis sociallllllurance plan that a whole dependents
In 1941 tn World War ll the Sovtets
along w1th at
this ordtnance
torney
fees
The
court
may
natton
received
protection
Gerchanges
again
were
made
m
blew
up thetr Drueper Dam as
Major
sect1on 7
Procedures also order such other reltef
ftrst
govenunent
1950s
brlngmg
fann
workers
German
troops swept across the
many's
was
the
the
and Enforcement
as tt deems necessary or
m
operated
compulstory
social
and
the
self
Ukrame
household
employees
appropnate
&lt;a&gt; Any person sub1ected
(I ) If at the conclus1on of
to an unlawful housing
SUI'ance
employed under Social Security s In 1961 the East Germans were
the heanng the Board shall
practtce may fl e wtth n 360
From there the tdea spread world coverage other changes were made busy butlding a wall along most of the
days of the alleged determ1ne upon the prepon
derance of the evtdence of
wtde so that now more than 100 m the law, such as providing benefits 2&gt;-nule border between East and West ~
v•olat1on wtth the Board a
the record that the person
complaint m wrtttng
nations have systems ID collect con- for the disabled
Berlin
complained agamst has not
sworn to or afftrmed
vtolated th s ordmance the
But probably the biggest change In 1968 troops of the SoVIet Umon •
tnbuttons - that ts taxes - from
whtch shall state the name
and address ol the person Board shall state and
cttizellS and pay out these taxes as cap1e m 1965 when Congress and Iolli" other Communist countries ••
alleged to have comm1tted publiSh Its flndmgs and
beneftts ID make up partly for ear- established Medicare under the mvaded Czechoslovakta to halt the •
the v olaton complained of tssue 1ts order d1smesstng
the complaont
rungs lost when people die or become Social Security Administration
and the pariiCU Iars thereof
country s move IDward more liberal ••
Section 8 Scope of Or
and such other Information
old
disabled
or
stck
•
That added Insurance to pay rule
The prov soon of
as may be requ red by the dlnance
••
this
ord1nance
shall
apply
The
Uruted
States
did
not
embrace
hosplta1
costs
for
retired
workers
and
Board The Board may also to all housing located
••
corroborate or tn ttate
this tdea wholeheartedly for a long thetr spouses Retirees were also
wlthiO the temtor al lim ts
compla1nts on the basis of of
•
the City of Pomeroy
time
given the option of paymg a small
test ng carr ed out by 1ts
•
State of Ohio
staff
or
volunte e r s
The myth pei'SIBted of the In monthly fee for tnsurance ID cover
•
Secllon 9 Other Legal
authonzed by the Board
dependent little guy who through doctors charges
••
(b) Upon the fi110g ol a Action Nothtng contamed
In lh1s ordmance sholl
hard work mdivldual Initiative and
complatnt the executeve
In
the
1970s,
Congress
tinkered
with
•
prevent any person from
secretary of the Board
•
tluift had made It on his own and the taxes-and-benefits fonnulas used
exercis!Og any r ght or
•
shall mak e such In
•
seek1ng any remedy to erected his fortress agamst all out m Social Security The tinkering was
vesttgatton as he deems ap
•
whiCh
he
might
otherw1se
propnate to ascertain facts
••
stdeforces
made necessary by Inflation A
be entttled or from filing
and Issues If the executive
any complo1nt w th any
That IS of course just a myth no method was devised to automatically
secretary shall deter mtne
other agency or court of
that there are reasonable
bemg makes tt on his own and keep beneftt payments up-tiH!ate
human
laworequ ty
grounds to bel eve a
many are buffeted by forces over with pnces and keep the top amount
Section 10. Severability
vtolat on has occurred he
and sub secteons Of
which they have no control what of annual earrungs subject ID Social
shall attempt to conciliate Section
thts ordinance and the
the matter by methOds of several
soever
Secltrtty taxes up-to.date wtth wages
parts
and
tntttal conference and per
provls tons thereof are
One such major econonuc force was
suas on wtth all Interested
NEXT loll wcnttug•}

be

Bnzwlara htt my bat wtth a ptt,ch
and tl JUSt went out
Bahnsen
explatned I htt the ball hard like I
always try to do when I go up ID the
plate but thiS one just took off It was
a thrill espectally at that time of the
game because we only had a 3-1 lead
It made thtngs a lot easter for me
When Ba~J!tsen lugged hiB hfeUme
119 batting average !lack ID the
dugout he found pttchtng coach Jun
Brewer lymg passed out and they
were fanmng htm I don't know if he s
come to yet
De51nte thetr fourth consecuhve
tnumph the Expos failed ID gam on

dlsm ss such complamt or

sa d or done dunno such
mt al conferences shall be

owner

the

secretary determmes that

Span sh

sur named persons
For
purposes hereof an ap
pi cant means a person

who personally

vesttgatton under thts or

dlnance
(e) If

(b) The Board members
shall be appo10ted by the

sha ll post at all t mes When
prospect tve tenants are
betng tntervtewed n a con

status

on behalf of the Board by
t1s cha rman
(d) The Board IS
authorl zed to seek the
cooperation and aid' of the
Oh1o Real Estate Board or
Oh10 CIVil R1ghts Com
mlsston
n any
n

member shall be appo nted
who 1s employed In any
real estate or lend ng '"
stttu1 on

to the

hou s ~ng

Consen t

agreements shall be stgned

d1squalif1ed from further
membership on the Board
The day the Board member
files pelit10ns Wllh the
County Board of Elect ons
shall be the dale of the
d squalifiCal on No Board

bus ness of selling or ren
ttng
hous1ng
or
dt scr m nate agamst a per
son In the terms or con
dtttons of such access
membersh•P
or
par
t clpa fton
( h ) To do a ny other thmg
or engage n conduct wh cfl
would otherwtse make
unava lable equal hous ng
opportuntt es
Sect on 4
Post• ng of
not•ces
(a) Every real estate
agent shall post '" con
sp cuous loca tton n that
port ton of h ts p ace of
bus ness normally used by
h m for negot at1ng the ter
ms ot a sale or lease of
hous ng and each person
who operates a multi unit
res denttal buildtng con
tatn ng more than two un ts

1 Oeny

BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
Stan Bahnsen was burnmg on all
cylinders Sunday
The veteran pttcher wrtggled out of
two jams after relievtng Bill Lee tn
the Stxth tnnmg and also htt the ftrst
home run of hiS 12-year major league
career a tw&lt;&gt;-run shot that helped the
Montreal Expos defeat the Atlanta
Braves 5-! and remain two game~
behind Pittsburgh m the National
Leaue East
Bahnsen s seventh tnnmg homer off
rookie Tony BriZZOlara was hts ftrst
hit of the season and hiS ftrst home run
in 453 offtclal btg league at bats

that the law has been

vtolated

Board member who s run
nmg for any public offtce
shall be automattcally

(g) To deny any person

lac 1ty

Expos in contention, top Braves

HULME

whtch agreement Is for
cone• II at on pt.Jrposes only
and does not const tute an
admtss•on by any party

Board Any duly appointed

access to or member sh tp or
parttetpat on
tn
any
mul t pie list no servtce
r eal
es tate
brokers
organ zatton or other sr
v ce
organtzat on or

subleas ng
rent ng
asstgnlng or otherw se
transferr ng of any nterest
tn a houstng un t

(3)

(3) members who are
C1ty and shall not hold any
publiC offiCe at the

quallf ed e ectors of the

tic tpated or ass sted tn any
way tn any proceed ng un
der th1s ord nance

Houstng Practtces It shalt
be an unlawful housmg
pract ice and a v oat on of
tht s ord nance
( 1) For any person or
rea l estate agent
{1)
To d scrt m na te
agamst any person m the

To

created the Fair Hous ng
Board to cons st of three

oppOsed any act or la1lure
to act that s a vtoiatton of
th s ordtnance or has tn
good fa lh f1led a com
pia nl test1f ed
par

ong n age or hand cap
(d) Hous1ng Hous n~ tn
eludes any build1ng
fac I ty or structure or por
tton thereof wh ch s used
or occu pted or s tntended
arranged or des gned to be
used or occupted as the
hom e
res dence
or
sleeptng place of one or
more persons groups or
families and any vacant
land offered for sale or
lease for the constructton
or locat on thereon ot such
butldmg fac tiity or struc
ture
(e) Lendtng 1nshtut1on
Lend ng mst futton means
any bank nsurance com
pany sav ngs and loan
associ;:~tton or any other
person or orga n zat on
reg ularly engaged tn the
busmess of lending money
or guarantee ng loans
( f)
Person
Person
mea ns one or more n
dtvtduals
corporat ons
partnersh ps assoctaftons
labor organ zat ons legal
representat ves
mutual
co m panes
totnt stock
com panes trusts un n
corporated organ zat ens
t rus tees
tr ustee s
tn
bankruptcy rece vers and
f duetanes

(2)

Board
Ia) There IS hereby

increase
'"
cr mtnal or ant soetal
behav or n the area
d A decline tn quality of
the school s serv ng the
area
{f) For any re rson or
rea I estate agen to cause
or coerc e or attempt to
cause or coerce ret a hatton
agamst any person because
such person has awfu lly

(C)
Olscrlmtnat1on
O tsc rtmenateng
or
Otscrimmate
The terms
discrimination d scr mm
at ng or d sc r mtnate mean
to render any dtfference n
t reat ment to any person n
the sale lease rental or
f nanc ng of a dwelling or
houstn~ untt because of a
person s race color creed
sex
mart 1al s tatus

selling

report and concern ng ad
verttsmg by the owner or
agent In medta dtrected
prtmanly to m norlty per
sons
Sect on 6 Fatr Houseng

s located
c
An

created by th s ordina~ce

nto a consent agreement to
be s gned by the partes

E:•. .1T. A I'OerW~~lR£6~
N E A 79

the comp la nt lacks
reasonable grounds upon
wh1ch to base a v olaton of
ployment pract,ces of the thts ordtnance he shall so
owner or agent stgnmg the Inform the Board and the

represent ng that th e
presence or antlctpated
presence of persons of any
parttcular race
color
reltg ous presence of per
$ons of any parttc ula r race
color r eri~ 1ou s behef or
nat1onal ongtn n the area
wtll or may result tn
a
The lower ng of
property values
b A change tn the rae al
color rei Qtous nationality
or ethn c compost t ton of the
block
netghborhood or
area tn whtch the property

any real estate broker real
est ate salesman or an
agent thereof or any other
person
partn e rship
assoc afton or corporat on
who f or constderat on sells
purchases exchanges ren
ts negot ates offers or at
tempts to negottate the
sa le purchase exchange
or rental of real property or
holds htmsel
out as
engaged tn the bustness of
selltnq
purchas ng
ex
changt ng r ent ng or other
w se trans fernng any n
terest '"real proper ty
(b) Board Board means
the Fatr Hous ng Board

3

elude a req uest for voi un
tary tnf ormat on con
cer n10 g mtnortty em

(3) To nduce or attempt
for sale ol any hous ng by

11&gt; Real Estate Agent
Rea l Estate Agent ncludes

Set! on

(0) RepOrt forms ap
plied by the Board shall n

to tnduce the sale or list ng

origtn age or handtcap
Sec t on 2 Def tnttions
That as used n th s or
d nance the follow ng ter
ms shall have th ese
mP..1nlnos

rei QIOUS bel ef

who had not prevtously
res ded 10 the bu tld ng

dergo ts undergo.ng or has
undergone a change wtth
res~t to ra e al
color
reltQIOUS
nattonal ty or
ethntc composttton of such
block
ne tghborhood or
area

wn t ng and mcorporateo

hreby declared to be '"
dependent secttons sub
sec ttons
parts
and

prov slons and the holdmg

of any such sectton sub
sectton part of provlston
thereof
to
be
un
constltuttona 1 votd or 'net
fecttve tor any cause shall
n affect nor render tnval d
any other such sect on sub
sect1on part of provts on

thereof
Section

t1

Effectove

Date Thts ordtna nce shall

take effect and be In force
from and after the earliest
periOd allowed by law
ATTEST Gene Walton
Clerk
APPROVED
Clarence Andrews
MAYOR
DATED 22279
(8 ) 20 27 21c
I

Ten years ago V V Gtrt was
elected Prestdent of Indta m an
election that was seen as a personal
trtumph for Prune Minister lndtra
Gandht
Ftve years ago PreSident Gerald
Ford formmg a new government
nom mated Nelson Rockefeller as Vtce
Prestdent

••

~

RESERVE CHA.MPION HOG - The mterve
cliiunplon hog, owned by Blair Wlndon Rt 3
Pomeroy wu purchased by Chester Agri Service at
the Meigs County 4-H FFA Jwuor Livestock

Friday n1gb1 for $2 40 a pound Pictured 1-r Blair Wm
don, owner Dale Kautz of Chester Agri Semce Cindy

ended I os Angelu hve ga me
wmntng streak John Candelana and
Kent Tekulve held the Dodgers to four
hits while Madlock's 12th home run of
the season was Pittsburgh s seventh
hit off Burt Hooton
Phlllles 3 Astros 2
Garry Maddox trtpled home the
tymg run m the mnth mntng and
scored the wtnner on Larry Bowa s
51ngle handing the Astros thetr fourth
consecutive setback Joaqum Andujar
took a 2-1 lead mto the nmth but the
Phillles took the lead before a batter
was retired on Bob Boone s leadoff
smgle Maddox triple and Bowa s
smgle
The runs made a wmner of Steve
Carlton who hurled a two-httter and
didn t allow a hit over the ftnal seven
lnnmgs 111 boosting hiS career mark
against Houston to 2:&gt;-9 He ytelded
two runs m the ftrst inmng when Cratg
Reynolds walked and scored on a
trtple by Terry Puhl who carne home
on Cesar Cedeno s sacriftce fly
Cubs 3 Padres I
Barry Foote s two run homer
backed the ftve-lut pttchmg of Rtck
Reuschel and Bruce Sutter and
powered the Cubs to thetr fifth
stratght tnumph They scored an
unearned run off Randy Jones m the
stxth when Reuschel led off wtth a
smgle and was forced on a bunt by
Ivan DeJesus who stole second
continued to thtrd on catcher Bill
Fahey s throwmg error and scored on
Bill Buckner s sacriftce fly Wtth one
out 111 the seventh, Jerry Martin drew
a walk off Steve Mura and Foote
homer ed Reuschel pttched etght
scoreless JMtngs and Sutter was
ntcked for a run m the nmth
Cardinals 4, Giants 0
George Hendrtck drove m three
runs wtth his lOth and lith homers and
John Denny a nd Mark Ltttell
combtned for a stx htt shutout
Hendrtck led off the fourth mmng w1th
his ftrst homer and added a two-run
shot tn the etghth

PltzerandRalphJordon fatrqueenandking

sal=•-----------------

Oglivie 's blast tops 'Fexas
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
Mike Caldwell thinks the lefty-for
lefty and nghty for-righty percentage
m baseball ts a b1t overrated but the
Milwaukee Brewers southpaw can
thank that strategy for hiS 13th
Vlct«y
Texas Rangers rtght-ltander Doc
Medtch took a three-httter and a 3-2
lead miD the mnth 111nmg Sunday m
Milwaukee He got one out then
walked Gorman Thomas Left-ltanded
slugger Ben Oglivte was up next
At that juncture Rangers Manager
Pat Corrales had three chotces leave
m Medich who had worked less than
100 lnnlngs thiS season bnng tn n ght
hander Jun Kern or put left-hander
Sparky Lyle on the mound
Corrales played the lefty-for lefty
percentage sending m I yle wtth hts
3 72 ERA and 4-7 record Kern - wtth
a 1 4() EHA a 1~ record and 20 saves
twtce as many as Lyle - stayed m the
bullpen
Oglivte w~rked the count to 3-1 and
lined Ly le s next pttch a shder up
mto the nght&lt;enter held bullpen
where Kern sat tdly
It was No 24 on the seaSiln for
Ogtivte the Brewers won 4-3 and
Caldwell got the vtctory wtth a ntne
hitter
I was just hoptng they would bnng
In Lyle tnstead of Kern Caldwell
said
I thtnk that left rt ghty
percentage thmg ts overrated Kern
can get anybody out wtth hts veloc tty
In other Amencan League games
the Kansas Ctty Royals downed
BaiUmore II 7 the Chicago Whtte Sox
l!dged the Boston Red Sox 3-2 the New
'iork Yankees got by the Mtnnesota
ll'wtns 4-3 the Californta Angels beat
the ToroniD Blue Jays 4-2 the Oakland
A s eked out a 3-2 vtctory over the
Cleveland Indians and the Seattle
Marmers outscored the De!rott Ttgers

S-4 Royals 11 Orioles 7
Wtlhe Wtlson smacked a bases
loaded tnple wtth two out m the top of
the lOth 1n111ng as Kansas Ctty
clauned 1ts third VICtory m the four
game set wtth Baltunore
Ortoles
nght ba nder
Don
Stanhouse 6-3 loaded the bases m the
lOth on three walks one tntentional
bef~re Wilson tripled Wilson then

scored on a st ngle by AI Cowens
Royal:! reliever Steve Busby ~
got the w1n after rettrtng two batters
wtth the bases loaded m the ntnth
George Brett had a twCHun homer
for Kansas Ctty and Pete LaCock had
a two run double
White Sox 3 Red Sox 2
Jorge Orta whacked a Slllo home
run and the Whtte Sox scored thetr
wmntng run tn the e tghth after a
mental error b) Boston catcher Gary
Allenson
Wtth one out m the etghth Ralph
Garr smgled and went to third on a
SJngle by Mtke Squtres orta then
grounded out to ftrst baseman Carl
Yastrzemskt who threw home Garr
was trapped between thtrd and home
but Allenson held onto the ball
allowmg Garr to retreat sa fely
Lamar Johnson then grounded tnto
a f~rceout which should have heen
the thtrd out m the tMtng Instead 1t
scored Garr wtth the wmnmg run
Yankees 4 Twins 3
Leu PtmeUa drove tn two runs Ius
seven th tnmn g smgle provtding the
margm of vtciDry and handed Hon
Gwdr) hts stxth stratght wmmng
deCISion
The Yankees scored a run m the
fourth on Roy White s squeeze bunt
then added two more runs tn the fifth
on an HBI double by Bobby Murcer
followed by PimeUa s stngle to rtght
Grndry went 72 3 mnmgs and Rtch
RIVERDOWNS
CINCINNATI (AP) - Ed s Dehght
won lhe $15 000-added Eagle Stakes
Sunday at Htver Downs runrung the
stx furlon gs m I 11 l-5 ID return $3 80
$2 80 and $2 80
Ed s Delight ndden by Robert L
Batrd led by ftve lengths before gotng
Wide tn the stretch but recovered to
wm by hal[ a length Jeante s Fancy
was second and paid $3 and $3 20 and
Door Kmg returned $3 80 to show
The 2-5 datly double combmatwn of
Alta s Mr Ned and Jttterbug Dot
returned $191 60
A crowd of 8 928 wagered $952 346

Gossage mopped up getting hts lOth
save Gossage has saved each of the
Yankees last four WillS
Angels 4 Blue Jays 2
Bobb) Gnch drove m three runs
With a twcrrun homer and a stngle
and Don Baylor drove m his 108th run
of the season wtth a sevenfb tnntng
51ngle for Cahforma
Angels starter ChriS Knapp making
his ftrst start smce he ruptured a disc
agatnst ToroniD on June 4 went ftve
scoreless tnntngs Don Aase ~ the
thtrd Angels pitcher got the wtn
A s 3 Indians 2
Ricke) HenderSiln s tw&lt;rrun double
capped Oakland s thr..,.,.un second
l)lfltng and Mike Norrts sea ~tared stx
hits as the A s completed a three
game sweep of Cleveland Oakland
has won four tn a row tts longest
wonnmg streak of the year
Mariners 8, Tigers 4
Leon Roberts and Willie Horton
each homered and Julio Cruz drove m
two runs wtth a stngle for Seattle
Flo)d Banntster 7 12 got the wtn wtth
seven mnmgs work
Manner s
reliever
Byron
McLaughhn ytelded a two-run homer
ID pmch httter AI Greene wtth none
out tn the nmth and Randy Stetn
came on to get the ftna l three outs on
strtkes

KARR APPOINTED - Horace Karr, East Mags has been appomted to the Ohio Wildlife Council Karr well-known Chester area
restdent building contractor and athletic supporter stands in a food patch containing com millet, buckwheat and sunflower

Collins atones,
Reds dump Mets
CINCINNATI (AP ) - When Dave
Collms led off the Cincmnatt Reds
fifth mntng he was greeted by boos
from fans who thought he had
nusplayed Gtl Flores mstde-the-park
home run the previOus 111nmg
They were just lettUJg me know I
had made a bad play Heck I knew
that satd Collins They were bootng
and I was bootng too
Colhns scored twtce and drove tn
the wtnnmg run 111 the etghth mrung

•••
~
••
!: : • •
•••••

I •••

L---

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD
Bueball At A Glance
By The Associated Press
All Times EDT
NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST
WL Pet GB
Pittsburgh
71 51 582
67 51 568 4
Montreat
Chtcago

St Louis
Philadelphia
New York

Houston
Ctnclnnatt
Los Angeles
San FranctKO

66~5504

63 58
64 59

so

WEST

71l
69
57
57
53
A1

69

521 7 12
520 7'h
A20 19 /,

~

5&lt;1&lt;

66

S51
A63
460

56

llh

12 h
13

67
San DiegO
12 424 17 11
77 379 23
Atlanta
Saturday s Games
ChiCago 3 San Diego 2
Montreal2 Atlanta 1
Cincinnati A New York 3
Los Angeles 5 Pittsburgh t
51 LOU S 5 San FranciSCO 4
Phlladelph1o1 Houston 0
Sunday s Games
P1ttsburgh 2 Los Angeles 0
Monlreal5 Atlanta 1
Ctncinnatl6 New York 6

Chicago3 San Diego 1
St Lou is A San Francisco o

AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST
W L Pet GB
Balttmore
79 A2 653
Boston
75 &lt;16 620 A
Milwaukee
73 51 589 7 h
New York
66 55 5A5 13
Detro•t
64 59 520 16
Cleveland
61 62 A96 19
Toronto
39 .0 317 41
WEST
California
69 55 556
Minnesota
64 58 525 A
KansasC ly
64 59 520 A / 2
Texas
61 63 492 8
Chicago
s 68 447 13'12
Seattle
51 73 315 30
Oakland
39 85 315 30
Saturday s Games
Boston 8 Chicago 2 5'h 1nn ngs
ram

Oakland A Cleveland 1
Baltimore 9 Kansas City 2
New York 5 Minnesota 3
Texas 7 Milwaukee 3

Cahforn1a 7 Toronto 5
Detroit 7 Seattle A
Sunday s Games
ChiCago 3 Boston 2
New York A M10nesota 3
Kansas C ty 11 Ball more 7 10 n

nmgs

Sunday as the Reds defeated the New
York Mets 6-5
After play111g 85 games Collins ts
batttng 317 and trails only George
Foster and Ray Kntght among the
Reds top hitters The U'Ony IS that
Collms would never hitve ~~yed so
much thts year if Foster antMPen Ken
Gnffey hadn t been tn)ured
The only thing I think about when I
go out there IS that I don t want to let
anybody down and I don t want to let
satd the onetime
myself down
Californta Angel and Seattle Mariner
I was jUSt !Do aggresstve, Collins
satd of the way he tned to make a
shoestrmg catch of Flores looper,
which rolled ID the warnmg track I
made up my nund ID try ID catch ll,
but when I got there I couldn t But tt s
better to be too aggresstve than not
aggresst ve enough
That play ended up helping us
more than you nught thmk Collins
srud I came back that JMtng more
detenruned to get somethmg gotng I
got a double and scored and we ended
up scormg Iolli" runs
That btg tnnmg gave the Reds a
three-run lead but Dan Norman s
p111ch home run m the seventh tted the
game at 5-S before Collms drove t.11 the
wtnmng run wtth a sacrifice fly t.11 the
etghth
Rtchie Hebner stngled m a run for
the Mets m the ftrst mmng but
Cincmnati carne back wtth a run on a
s1ngle by Foster
Here s the way the scormg went
F1ores got hiS ftrst home run of the
season m the fifth, but the Reds
chased Dock EiltS wtth one run on a
SJngle by Dave Concepcton two more
on a Single by Knight and another on a
stngle by Geronuno
Joel Youngblood smgled tn a run for
the Mets m the stxth and Norman hit
a two-run homer his ftrst of the
season to he the game tn the seventh
They (the Reds) will never be
accused of qUJtung for sure satd
Mets Manager Joe Torr~ who saw
Ctncmnati wtn every game of a three
game senes by rallytng m the late
tnnmgs We had used up everybody
and we had nobody to hold them late

Philadelphia 3 Houston 2
M lwaukee 4 Texas 3
Monday s Games
Callforn•a 4 Toronto 2
Los Angeles
(Sutcl iffe 11 8) at
Oakland 3 Cleveland 2
ChiCago (McGlothen 12 8)
Seattle 8 Detroit A
Atlanta (Mahler 3 11 &gt; at
Monday s Games
Philadelphoa (Espinosa 13 9 )
Texas (Allard 1 1) at Ball more
san Fran,lsco (Montefusco 3 A) at (Flanagan 16 7)
Pittsburgh (Biyleven 10 A)
Chicago 1Kravec 11 10) at
Houston (J Nlekro 16 71 at New Milwaukee !Travers 10 5)
York &lt;Swan 12 9)
Boston (Torrez 13 7) at Minnesota
TIIISTLEOOWNS
Montreal &lt;Schotzeder 8 A) at C1n
(Zahn 10.a)
NORTH RANDALL Ohio (AP)
clnnatl &lt;Norman 10 9)
New York (Tianl 9 6) at Kansas
Jockey Homero Htldalgo rodP Clear
San Olego (Perry 10 10) at 51 LOUIS C1ty (Gale 9 8)
Consc1ence to her second stratght (Martinez 10 6 )
Cleveland (Barker 3 A) at Cohfor
Tuesday s Games
n1a (Barr 8 10)
VIctory tn the $21 550 Hunting Valley
Los Angeles ot Chicago
Oetroll (Chris 2 0) at Oaklan~
Stakes Sunday at Thtstledown
Atlanta at Philadelphia
(Minetto 1 4)
Racetrack
San Francisco at Pittsburgh
Toronto (HUffman S 13) at Seattle
304 E. MAIN
The wtnner took home $12 930 m
Houston at New York
(Jones 3 11)
Mo~treal at Cinc innati
Tuesday s Games
gammg her fourth stakes vtctory of
San D1ego at St Lou1s
Chicago at Milwaukee 2 n
the year Clear Consctence a flve
Texas at Baltimore
POMEROY, OH.
year old mare cove red the stx
Boston at Mlnnesoto
furlongs m 1 10 4-!i
New York at Kansas City
Cleveland at Cahlorn~a
Clear Consctence patd $10 20 $4 60
NFL Scores
992-7687
DetrOit at Oakland
Natoonaf Football League
and $3 40 whtle Noble Card returned
Toronto
at
Seattle
Exhibition
Season
$3 80 and $3 20 and third-place Bold Fr•Ciay s Gimes
Soctety patd $6 60
Phllodelphla 31 Bait more 17
The tnfecta of I I~ patd $264 on 319
Pittsburgh 27 New York Jets 14
Saturday s Games
wtnntng Uckets
ChiCago 17 Cmclnnatl13
A crowd of 6 9S7 wagered a total of
Washington 16 Atlonta 6
$884 604
Tampa Bay 14 New Orleans 7
San Diego 7 New York Giants 3
lnftation Creation! Thats what Capital has a tot more borrowing power
Green Bay 7 Buffalo 6
todays boommg rise In hOme than you thought To start your applicalls
Detro1121 Cleveland 10
values It means your hOme probably cation for a Capital Home EQUity
KansasCIIy20 51 LOUIS3
loan just send tn the COUpOn Of call.
Dallos 16 Houston 13
M1am121 Minnesota10
Los Angeles 21 Seattle 17
coupaliS
key
Denver21 Son FranCiscoO
Sunday s Game
I
New England 35 Ookland 14
Thursday s Game
I would like
Kansas City at Minnesota
tobOIIOW
Friday Aug 24
Cleveland at Washington
Philadelphia at Miami
Detroit at Baltimore
Houston at New Orleans
New England at Oenver
San Francisco at Seattle
Saturday Aug 25
Chicago at 51 LOUIS
Tampa Bay at Cincinnati

STARCHER INSURANCE

Inflation Creation!
This
the
to a
Capital Home Equity Loan

354 E Mam

Pomeroy, 0

S

PECIAL
Mon Fn

Aug 20-Aug. 24

3 PC.

CHICKEN
DINNER
'1.99
Don't Forget
To Register For
Tht CAR SWEEPSTAKES
(No Purchao Necessary)

YOU'LL FIND
IT ALL AT THE
FRIENDLY

ONE/

~=M~

New York Jets at New York Gtants

n ., F e ely O.,s
Are you • member

Atlanta vs Green Bay
Milwaukee
Bulfolo at Oakland
P1ttsbDrgh at Dallas
San Olego at Los Angeles

or

tht do It younelf Nt7
If 10 welcome to the
loct~l

hudquartef"' for ,.

at

your building tncl ,.
modeling need•
Th• FMttdly Orttf

LOANS UP TO 825,000

-WITHOUT Af'I'I!CTIHG YOU" ,..UENT MOflTOAGEf

•

MEROY CEMENT BLOCK
The Department Store
of
Smce 1915

Saturday s
Sports Transacloons
By The Associated Press
FOOTBALL
National Football League
DALLAS COWBOYS - Signed
Mike Kincaid defensive back Waived
Curtis Anderson defensive lineman

Where you oen

~

llarl.
toen ••• • •
• •
byeoupon
Dl' phone! '•.
0

300 West Second Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 (992 2111)
358 Second Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 (446 1973)

�S-Tile uauy ""'"WM:I, MlOOieport-t•omeroy, 0 ., Monday, Aug. 20, 1979

Chester .cub scouts visit Mr. ·Cartoon recently

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday , Aug. 20,1979

Meigs Countians-take top flower show honors

i

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'

CHESTER CUB SCOUTS attending WSAZ's Mr. Cartool! recently were left to right, front, Kyle Davis Randy Kesterson, Billy Scarbrough, Mike Yotmg,' J. C.

Guinther, and SeottStarcber: back row, Brent Norton
Matt Harris, Kirk Fick, Brian holley, Ronnie Maxson,
and Keith Karsclmlk.
'

CHESTER-The Chester Cub Scout
Pack 235 recently went to Huntington
to appear oo the Mr. Cartoon show
Before returning home they ate at ~
local restaurant there.
At a recent committee meeting of
Pack 235 conducted by conunlttee
chalnnan, Kathy Davia, Den 1
leaders, John and Connie Karschnlk
advised the conunlttee that they
along with seven cubs would be
transferring to Pack 234 under the
leadership d. Brenda and Keith
Weber.

Otllers withdrawing from the committee were Mrs. Davis, Don Maxson,
webeloes leader; Gale Osborn, assistant webelosleader; Geneva Maxson,
Den 2 leader; Bob Davis, scouting
coordinator; Kay Fick, secretary;
and committee members, Jean Sim
,and Joan Scarbrough.
Den I recently took !' tour d. the
Fanners Bank and Savings Co. where
they were presented favors, and the
Pcmeroy Post Office where they
learned about the postal system. On
the tour were Brian Holley, Billy

PROPER INFLATION
NEW YORK (AP) - "Maintaining
proper air pressure in new and
retreaded tires not only extends tread
wear, it's economical and saves oil as
well," says Robert Berg.
Berg, coordinator of the Tire
Retread Information Bureau (TRIB),
says average inflation for most
passenger tires is between 22 and 26
pounds a S&lt;JUare inch. If " tire

registers below that amount, "it
generates excessive heat, which is a
cancer that eats away at both the tire
body and its tread and slowly destroys
the integrity of the tire and
ultimately its safety.
'
" If a tire is overinflated, it
eventually_ will .fail as well. At the very
least, 11 will prematurely wear out in
the center of the tread," he adds.

SUPERIORS CARNIVAL

Scarbrough, Keith Karsclmik, Kyle
Davis, Mike Young, J. C. Guinther
Mike and Eric Sim, and J~
Karschnik accompanied by Joan
Scarbrough, Jean Sim, Kathy Davis,
and leader, Connie Karschnik.
Den 1 of Pack 234 will have a gettogether and wiener roast at the
Karschnik residence on Aug. 21.

Ask me about
Life Insurance
forTodays
Families
I offc:r a tota l program to help
protect your fa mily's way of .living
and build fi nancial security for your
retir erne.nt vea (s. Call me for details

MIKE SWIGER .
MitldleoortL 0.
lhU

rU,_

992-7155

) tate Farm life an d

&amp;

Acc1den1 ASsurance

Company
Home Qtt1te
n•.,m ,rg•o'l, l!li noJS

9

g~ ·

.

WIENERS •••••••••••L~~

18

arrangement featuring weathered wood lily leaves
vines, mums and hemlock, and the "res~rve" award
f?l' her vertical design in "Uly White." While it was a
f1rst "best of show" award for Mrs. Erwin she has
several times received the "reserve best ~f show"
award.

RlJTII ERWIN, Route 3, Pomeroy, a member of
the Chester Garden Club, won both the "best of show"
and the "reserve best of show" for outstanding artistic
arrangements entered in the Friday flower show at the
Meigs County Fair. She took the "best of show" rosette
for her entry in the "How How, Brown Cow" with an

HO.RTICULTURE SWEEPSTAKES WINNER for
the Fnday flower show at the fair was Mrs Ada
Holter. She displays here one of several of her bl~e rib-

Brooks Sexton, Minford.
Rut!\ Erwin of the Chester Garden
Club, who had won the reserve best of
show in the Wednesday show on her
artistic arrangement, won both the
best of show and the reserve best of
show in the Friday show. Ada Holter,
Holter, of the Chester Club took the
horticulture sweepstake~ award
while Robin Manuel, five-year-old
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Manuel, Racine area, was the junior
gardener for the day. Both the
sweepstakes award and the junior
gardener award are given on the
basis of points for · ribbons accwnulated in the horticulture and
junior divisions.
The winners, listed first second
and third, respectively; in the Friday
show:
ARTISTIC ARRANGEMENTS

''Golden Wedding", a mass design :
Pauline Atkins , Rutland Garden
1
Club; Ruth Erwin, Chester Garden
Club, and Peggy Crane, Pomeroy.
MONDAY
" Orange Blossoms", In the
MIDDLEPORT Business and
Japanese
manner: Janet Botin
Professional Women aiUlual picnic
Rutland Friendly Gardeners; Ali~
Monday, 7 p.m., at Racine Locks and
Thompson, Winding Trail · and Mrs.
Dam picnic grounds located above Atkins.
'
New Haven. Bring table service and
"How
Now,
Brown
Cow",
including
covered dish.
weathered wood : Mrs. Erwin, Mrs.
SOUTHERN
ATHLETIC Thompson, Mrs. Bernice Carpenter
BOOSTERS will hold a work session BendO' theRiver .
'
at the football field Monday at 6:30
"Black Tie and Tails" modem
p.m. Please plan to attend.
design : Betty Dean, Ches~r Garden
SOUTHERN LOCAL Band Club, Mrs. Erwin, Mrs. Carpenter.
Boosters, 7 p.m. Monday in band
"Red as a Beet"' including
room. Parents of students in grades vegetables
and fruit : Bernice
seven through 12 who wish to par- Carpenter, Pat Holter, Chester
ticipate in the band during the 1979-81 Garden Club, and Mrs. Crane.
year are urged to attend the meeting.
"Lily White"' vertical design : Ruth
REGULAR MEETING of Meigs Erwm, Pat Holter, Bernice Carpenter.
Local Board of Educatlim 7:30 p.m.
"In a Purple Haze", a stabile : BunMonday at l!'e Meigs Junior High ny Kuhl, Chester Garden Club; Suzy
School; meetmg date a change from Carpenter, Rutland Friendly Garden
Tuesday.
Club, and Bernice Carpenter.
1UESDAY
"Green as Grass", exhibition table
MIDD~PORT MASONIC Lodge
pictures: Marianna Mitchell,
363 meetmg 7 p.m. Tuesday with work Pomeroy ; Pat Holter, and Janet
in fellowcraft degree; all fellowcraft Bolin. ·
and Master Masons invited.
JUNIOR DIVISION
THE EASTERN Local Board of
" Tickled Pink", including
Education will meet Tuesday, Aug. 21 weathered wood: Tone Chapman,
at 7:30p.m. to discuss persoMel mat- Pomeroy; Angela Chapman,
ters.
Pomeroy , and Donia Crane
WEDNF.'IDA Y
Pom~roy.
'
POMEROY- MIDDLEPORT Lions
Zinnia, dahlia flowered, .specimen :
Club, noon Wednesday, at the Meigs Donita Manuel, first and third; Robin
Inn .
Manuel, second, both of near Racine.
Zinnia, cactus flowered, specimen,
Angela
Chapman, Pomeroy; Cheryl
HAIRDRESSING
TORONTO (AP) - Women now Folmer; Route 3, Pomeroy.
Marigold , large type: Robin
represent 60 percent of the students in
Manuel,
first and third; Donita
Ontario-licensed hairdressing schools
Manuel,
second.
geared to male clientele, and their
Sunflower : Robin Manuel first and
numbers are growing.
third;
Donita Manuel, second.
"In the past five years more and
HORTICULTURE
SPECIMENS
more women have been enrolling ," .
Hybrid lj!a rose : no first; Pat
says Jean Andari, head of the Toronto
Barber School. " I say it's terrific." Holter, second, Ruth Erwin, third .

Social Calendar

JUNIOR GARDENER - Five-year~ld Robin Manuel, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. ponald Manuel, Racme, received the junior gardener
award at the Fnday flower show. She received ribbons on four of her five
entnes, one of which was this large sunflower.

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Library

.,l,:f·~o'

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y

Letters

Ronnie Burkhamer
Box 122
Minersville, Ohio 45763
Dear Ronnie,
How could I have put Brian's name
instead of yours in last week 's letter
to Tracy Beagle? I apologize a
thousand times and more.
MIDDLEPORT PERSONALS

Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Dabo of
Largo, Fla. are here visiting their
son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and
· Mrs. 'Thomas Kelly and family · They
will be in Ohio until the end of August.
Mrs. Marie Steiner has returned
from a vacation In northern Ohio. She
visited her sons, Earl and his family
at Warren, and Ray and his family at
Cleveland. On one Sunday the family
had a picnic.
Visitors of Ed and Eloise Stiles and
Nina Stiles Craddock and son, Mat·
thew, at their South Third Ave., Mid· dleport home have been Mrs. Beulah
Latham, Barbara Latham, Mr. and
Mrs. William Varley, and KeiUly,
Warren ; Mrs. Mildred Minge!,
George Mingel Rochester, ·Pa.; Mr.
and Mrs. W. W. (Norma Butcher)
Wilcox, Sandusky; and Roger Stiles,
soo of Mr. and Mrs. Ed Stiles, Columbus, and his son, Jason, Shelbiana,
Ky.

L
I
6

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(10\\"\"

tJ&gt;.\0\)\.t

''"''"~

\"~"!-~~· \'\

\~ !' s

'\"1•;..1 ~·t

you have really read a lot of books
this summer and worked hard at
telling about them. You certainly
deserve the credit for what you've
done.
Patti and your mom have planned a
good party, I think. There will be
movies, games, food and a prize for
the person _who gave the most reports.
Ruth will give a similar party at Middleport for the Summer Reading Club
members there . .
The Pomeroy party will be here at
the library on Thursday, August 23, at
2 p.m. Middleport's party will be at
Middleport Library on Friday
August 24, at 2 p.m. H you can't get 1 ~
the
party at the library where you
gave your reports, let us know if you
can get to the other one instead.
Thanks for being a good reader. We
need more people like you!
Sincerely,
. Ellen Bell, Ubrary
Serving All of Meigs County
t'ffiST LAW
WASHINGTON (AP ) - In 1840
New York state enacted the first Ia~
to ensure that the proceeds of a life
msurancepolicy paid to a widow were
exempt from claims of creditors
according to the American Council of
Life Insurance.
Today, life insurance proceeds are
exempt from creditors in every .state,
. 1t says.

,-----------------~----------- -~ r.
I

I
I
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N. W. ·coMPTQ_N, O.D.
OPtOMETRIS't

OFFICE HOURS: 9_:30 to 12, 2 to S (CLOSE AT NOON

I
I
I

~.;.O~,!~~~::~..-::.~S_!~~':RJ.:2::.:_':_0_M_E!~~-------~·

bon winners, a hugh celoaia. Mrs. Holter Ia along-time
garden club member, belonging to both the Wildwood
and~ Chester Clubs.

CARDINAL SLICED ·.

l

Floribunda rose: no first; RuthErwin, and Janet Koblentz .
Grandiflora rose: Ruth Erwin.
Climber rose : Janet Bolin, no second, no third.
.
Gladioli: Bernice Carpenter, first
and third; Ada Holter, second.
Zinnia, dahlia flowered: No first;
Addalou Lewis, secood, and Elsie
Folmer, third.
Zinnia, cactus flowered : no first
Ada Holter, Addalou Lewis.
'
Dahlia, decorative type : Francis
Schaeffer, Flatwoods Road,
Pomeroy; Mary Schaeffer, second
and third, same address.
Dahlia, cactus type: Frances
Schaeffer, first and second, Ada
Holter, third.
Dahlia, pompon type : Mary Schaeffer ; Ada Holter, Alice Thompson.
Marigold: no first or second, third
to Bernice Carpenter.
Sunflower : (small variety), no
first, Joyce Manuel, second; Alice
Thonpson, third.
Sunflower : (large variety) no first,
Joyce Manuel, second, and Ada
Holter.
Chrysanthemums : no first, second
and third to Bunny Kuhl.
Celosia : Ada Holter, Elsie Folmer,
and Joyce Manuel.
Other annuals: Joyce Manuel, first
and second, and Elsie Folmer, third .
other perennials: No first; Mrs.
Bunny Kuhl, second and third.

!FARM FRESH PRODUCE

PREVENTION
IS THE

VAUGHAN'S

As an independent i nsurance
our primary funct ion is
'? prov tde pol icies which afford
t.n ancial protection in case of

SALE DATES AUGUST
20-25, 1979

j

.
'

• All ~gts welcome . • Groups $1 . 00 exlr~ per person. • Compare the
!o'ill?e at less th~n 61t_a pidure . • Sce ni c b.ad:grounds .-v.ail.able . • Fut
del1~ry . • Sal1sf.-.ct1on Alw.-.vs or CJ8( deposit chHrfullv refunded .

"Ask about our classic portrait"

v
__
.:.,.,.:l
_
E.....
--=.J

r
size

STRIPPED SHORTBREAD ........................ 99•
DEL MONTE PUDDING CUPS

4 pak.

89•

PORK IN BEANS ........................ 3 16 oz. 89•
FOULDS

MACARONI &amp; CHEESE DINNERS ........ 4 '.~;:~ '1 00
FRESH LIKE

VEGETAaE SALEI

13·01 . Cut Or"'" l••nt
13·01. Fr.nch Sty._ GriNfl a..n•
1·\lt ·Ol. CrHm Stvte COfn
12 -ol . Whol• Kem•l Corn
1• \li ·OI lwHI P•••
14-or. Slic.d C•"olt or
11·01_- YIQ· AII M ind V•v•t•blet

ARMOUR POmD MEATS ............ ~ ................ 2·~~~· 89•

'

~

00

ARMOUR VIENNA SAUSAGE ..................... 2

GREEN BEAMS ................... 2 ~::

79'

&amp; CARROTS ........................... .2 ·~~::

79'

SPINACH ................................... .2·~~~:· 75'
BEETS ................................... 2 't~::

Chum snoHnduded;n

7

~1 5-oz.$100

phoi05.

~Jars

$f0.96
plus tax ·

fo ro StnRIII

n

~

PURITAN OIL '••••(fi~) ••••••••••••..••••••••.•••••• 32 OL
SAVARIN COFFEE······ •••••••••• •· ••••••••••••••• lb. can

Our One Low Price, No Hklden Ch•riC!t

For Complete Information Call

1-800-282-6410

VAllEY BELL

CHOC~

FREE

Outside Ohio Call Free 1-800-848-6478
IJr. RMere pay• for-the call!
CQ!/ trxlay for
your Frtt ropy
of Dr. Rlvitr&lt;' 's
infdrmati'Jt

b;ochurt

Riviere Center
Dr . Ro~1ld F. Rh·ltrt"
Dr . A..J . Slathli • Dr. G J. S1t1mbau11h • Or C W Bul
Or. W. D. lilmhalt 1 01. J .( . Murphy • Dr. 'w.,L . Siuh (
111 I• W l\d1m1 • Dt . G .A. Mo01e

,... r ' t.,lwlnptvA AH.

PHOTOQAAPHEA HOURS :

Tues., Wed., Sat. 10 to 1 - 2 to 6
Thurs., Fri. 10 to 1 - 2 to 5:30 - 6 t~ 8
185 Upper River Rd., Gallipolis, Ohio

("t) fMrn~u ~. P'IIO 431~

v

DRINK.........~~h~ 1 69
1l oz. pak

BANQUET .

. DINNERS ••••••••••••• •••••••••• 69~
BANQUET

·

·

2 lb

,

FRIED CHICKEN •••••••••••• : ••••

199

BIRDSEYE

BORDEN

COOL WHIP·················· 8 oz.
DRUMSTI

0

1.59

z

1.99
99'
1.99

'ba Sl ORES

5

5

WHEATIES CEREAL ••~~~~~~t~.l~t ...............18 oz. bax
TETLEY TEABAGS •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••1oo ct. pak
MONARCH SHORTNING •••••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 lb. can $1.]9
MONARCH CIDER VINEGAR......................... gat Sl,89

{ul/11ppn nr /()wud~tnrur~.

.

~

"
"'

______... .

~. ~'''-~·-

for CuJtbm Fulf llf'f'l! r &amp; f ull lnwer dll'lturl!J.

:2

c:-~~N·:L ~~~

TAB, SPRITE or

$05
$225

~~·:; ,.89•

~

Cans

Op&lt;l-

...! _,.color charms packa~eool ~&lt;oup

18 prints just

NABISCO

DEL MONTE

That add s up to a Perfect Po rtrait Packa ge

10~wallet

CRISP TENDER

CAMPBEll

2-Poses, 18 Color Prints,
One Fantastic Kmart Price!

2-8x10's
2-5x7's

Pkgs .

992· 2143
102 w. Main
Pomeroy

21 lliRU AUG. 25 TUES.-SAT.

·

Lb .

&amp;

INS.

..__ _ _ _ The Saving Place

~I'G.

LONG SLENDER MICHIGAN

DALE C. WARNER

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

l

Lb

GOLDEN CHIQUITA or DEL MONTE

MAXWEU HOUSE

c:=-•
• . . -......

.

:J
BANAIIAS ... ........................................ 4 ':o~· s1 °0
CARROTS........... .- ................. ............... 2 49c
RED RADISHES ................................... 3 ~~~- 49c

loss.

Bur, we also have a vital in·
terest in loss prevention as
should our c lients. We encou'rage
ca r e, caution . and safety
preventive measures which cc!il
keep that car accident from hap·
penmg , that bu ilding fire from
start ing , that home burglary
from being committed .
Prevention saves lite , li mb and
propert y ... and hel ps contr ol insurance costs and premiums
vyhen losses do occ'u r, · our
poh 7yholders can count on pro tecting and serv ing in t i me and
need . But we still say - preven tion is th e best poli cy .

~

.

_ g~

BARTLEn PEARS. ...................................

PEARL STREETS
MIDDLEP.ORT, OHIO

~ge n cy,_

I

WASHINGTON STATE

ardinal

BEST POLICY

$119

'
BACON •••••••••••••••••••
.

When it com~s to growing and
showing flowers and foliage plants
Meigs Countians really have it
altogether.
·
The proof was in the two Meigs
County Fair flower shows staged
cooperatively by the Meigs County
Fair Board and the Meigs County
Garden Clubs Associaton with Janet
Bolin and Suzy Carpenter as
chairmen.
The artistic arrangements of both
shows were exquisite. The specimens
showed a.real talent for growing and
grooming flowers, and the potted
plants were nice enough for the most
fastidious homemaker.
Friday's show entitled "Pot-pourri
of Color" was judged by Mrs. Marian
Hendricks of Orient who was accompanied by a student judge, Mrs.
r---~-----

BRAUNSCHWEIGER ~6 gc

~

�7-The Dal_ly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Aug. 20, 1979
DICit TRACY

6- The D.9ily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Aug . 20,1979

Your Best Buys Are. F ~und in the Sentinel Classifieds
Tueaday , August 21
.

ASTRO·GRAPH
Bernice Bede

O sol

~ 'Your

W

15 Words or Under
Cash
Charge

1day
2days
3days

'Birthday

liday s

August 21, 1919
lady luck IS likely to play a
promment rote m your under·
tak1ngs th iS com1ng year . Be
ready to move swiftl y once she
gives you the go -ahead signal .
LEO (July 2l·Aug 22) Don 't be
hesilant to tak e on :some thing
toda y yo u we ren ' tt oo successful w•tt"l prev1ously. The odd s
have now swi tched to yo ur
favor Fmd ou t more of what
hes ahead lor you in the year
following yo ur bi rthday by
sen d1ng lor you r co py of f',st roGraph l e11er Mail S1 for eac h
to Astra-Graph , P.O. Box 489,
Rad1o Ci ty Station , N.Y. 10019.
Be sure to specif y birth date .
VIRGO 1Aug. 23·Sept. 221 U's
very 1mportan tloday to let your
nobl er 1nstincts surface and to
treat those you deal wit~ com·
oass 1onatety . Good things will
happen as a result . ·

LI BRA (Se pl.

23·0ct .

SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Nov. 22) lm·
portant goats can be achieved
today provided ypu do nothing
er ratic . Use your co mmon
sense and you 'll be a winner .

1.00

1.2S

1.10
1.90
3.00

1.90
2.2$
3.7S

The PubUshel" reserves the

right to edlt or reject any ads
de emed obje c tio nt~ l . The
Publisher wi.)J not be respol"lS.ible
for more than one incorrect insertion .
P hone 992-2156

I

WAN'J.I JAD .

l!A_DVERTISING
I DEADUNES
Monday
Noon on Saturday

likmg today provide d you operat your h1ghes t standa rds.
Don 't be infl uenced by an
associa te wllh devious inten -

I P.M.

the day before publicatioo
Sunday

AQUARIUS (Jon 211-Feb. 19)

Wanted to Buy
CHIP WOOD . Poles max .
diameter 10" on largest end.
$12 per ton . Bundled slab. $10
per ton . Delivered to Ohio
Pallet Co., Rt . 2, Pomeroy .

IIUie about .

(Ap~l

211-May 20)

If

there Is a domE!sHc problem
you 'd like res olved . toda.y is
the day for you to do it. Don't
wait on others to take ihe

Initiative .

GEMINI (Miy 21-Juno 20) Second efforts should prove succe ssful lor you today , so don ' t
oe disappointed if you don 't
grab the brass ri ng on the fir st
try , Keep pl ugging and you· ll
be a winner .

CANCER !June 21-July 22) Your

material prospect s are ~ery
encourag ing at th is lime,so
keep your eyes peeled !or
opportunity. Howe~ er, steer
clear o! wild specu lations.
I NEWSPAPER ENTHlPRISE

~SSN

1

NOTICE TO MOTOR
VEHICLE DEALERS
In accordance with Sec tion 307 .86 of t he Ohio
Revised Coc,je, sea led bids
wi II be received by the
Meigs County Board of
Commissioners, in their of ·
fice, located in t he Cour thouse, Pomeroy, Ohio, un ·
til 4:00 P .M. on August
28th, 1979. Bi ds will be
opened at 6 : 30 on August
28th and read a loud for the
following vehicles : TWO
(2) used 19 passe nge r
school buses. Buses to be
uoed by the Meigs County
Board of Retardation . Said
buses are to comply to all
safety regu lations, all 1979
Ohio M inimum Standards
for school bus construction,
as adopted by the Ohio
Department of Education/
and all other t)ertinen
provisions of law .
The front of the envelope
enc losing the bid must be
marked " Sealed Bid ,
School Bus ." Bidder Ia fur ·
nish their own bid form s.
The Meigs Coun1 y Com ·
missioners reserve the
right to reject a ny and all
bids, or parts thereof.
Price, availability of ser·
vice and delivery date will
be consi dered in award ing
contracts .
Meigs Cou nty
Commiss.ioners
(8) 13,20,21c
We call the office cheapie
The Pirate- when the coffee kitty ,needs a transfusion, he gives no quarter.

Pet•

992.268'1.
OLD FURNITURE, Ice boxes,
brass beds. i ron beds , desks,
etc.. complete households .
Write M .D. Miller, Rt. . ol ,
Pomeroy or coll992-7760 .

-

Langsville and mines . $-43 ,000.

Give Away
FREE PUPPIES. V1 Irish Setter.
Four are long haired. Will be
Iorge
dogs .
Shade

614·696- 1234.
BEAUTIF UL KITTENS and colo .
197-t 14 x 70 mobile home.
G~ condition. 992-5858.

1965 GENERAL 60x12. 2 bodr.
1970 Sylva , 60x12 , 2 bedr.
1970 Castle. 60x12, 2 bedr.
1974 Mark line . .50x12, 2 be(tr.
1969Vollant, 12w:60, 2bedr.
1967 National. 12x50, 2 bedr.

BIG SELECTION of pr•own.d
IO's, 12's, and lot ft. w ide
homes . kanougo Mobile
Home Sales. 61-t-4.6-9662 .
8 x 35 MOBILE HOME. New
Gibson refrigerator , water
heater and ttO\Ie, almost new
furnace. $2800 or best offer.

American Domes tic and Per·
sian. Moy be seen at 244
Sycamore St., 992-6260.
COLLIE
terrier , female .
blonde. short hair, young.
Humane Society. 992-6260 .

BEAUTIFUL

MEDIUM

olzod

white !ong haired female ,
looks like sheep dog but
smaller. loves children.
Humane Society. m ·6260.
SIX weeks old , mole puppy.
looks like a little bear. Is
wormed. 992· 7205.

ONE MALE. one female half
collie, hall ohephard pupo .
992·n6B.
HAMSTERS .
Jolene
Moodiopough, m -3915. .

Auto Sales
1974 VEGA HATCHBACK, call
303·675· 1SOl or 305-675·2488
or 30A·675-1553.
1976 TRANS AM, 400 engine.
Make offer. 992·5032. 796 S.
3rd Ave. , Middleport.

1974 DODGE CORONET • ·door

Services Offered
NOW HAULING limestone in
Middleport- Poem roy or eo.
Call for free estimate.

367·7101.
PAINTING AND sondblasllng.
Free estimates. Cal l9~9-2686 .

DOZER, END looder ond dump
truck . Will do basements,
ponds ,
brush ,
timber ,
limestone,
and
gravel.
Charlet Butcher . 7~2- 2940.

Custom. 992-5858 .

BABYSITTING . 7:30 · 5:30.

1966 BUICK. Good second car.

Monday-Friday. Will care for
any age. Experienced . Will
gi._ e references . For informa·
tion , call 992-3.4•9 or 992-3550.

$175 . 985-4346.
CUTLASS SALON .

Low

mlleage. Good condition.
992-5870 after 4pm.

1'164 CHEVROLET pickup, 6 cyl.
$200 or best offer, 992-5270.

Headquarter~ for

1971 FORO COUNTRY sedan

MSUT SELL 1974 Chevrolet Impala. Runs good. Needs some
body work. $250 or best oHer.

OH . 678-2980.
ANTIQUES, FURNITURE, glou ,

:JOA.77J.54tt or :JOA.n3·5471 .

cllino, onytlli ng. See or call
Ruth Gosney. antiques. 26 N.
2nd .,
Middleport .
OH .

Camping Equipment

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Pork ,

Minersville Hill. Follow signs.
Everything from baby's to
adult' s. Antiques, furniture .·
August 8, 9, I 0.

YARD SALE . Footer St., behind
car wasll in Mason. August 18
and 20 tll ru 2~ . lots of girls'
clothing.
YARD SALE 'Starting Augusl

'

. Phone 992· 2181

992·6022.

REAL ESTATE loons . Purchase
and refinance. 30 year terms.
VA . No money down (•llgible
veterans) . FHA · As low as 3
peor c•nt down (non-veterans) .
Ireland Mortgage Co., 77 E.
State, Atllena. 614· 592-3051 . •

SENIOR CITIZENS, 1 bedroom
opts . for
rnet . Rental
ass i stance
available .

992·7721.
FURNISHED
house .

TWO

bedroom
deposi t.

Security

992· 3375.
TWO SLEEPING

roomo for

both. Yard downstairs. Call
bewteen 4 and 6 pm .

992· 2937 .
For Sale
COAL,

LIMESTONE ,

oond,

grovel, cal cium ch loride, fertilizer , dog food, and all types
of soh. Excelsior Salt Works ,
Inc., E. Main' St., Pomeroy,

992· 38'11.
POTATOES AT the C.W. Prof·
flu Form, Portland OH . Prices
change day to day with the
market.

RUTLAND

HARDWARE

742-2255. SALE : Mortin-Senour
point, Division of Sherman
and Williams. InteriOr or ex·
terior flat white. $5 .99 gallon .
Color extra . PRESEASON

STOVE SALE . GAS.WOOO·
COAL . BIG REDUCTION IN
PRICE.

your own . Field weird free . $3
a bu. Andrew Cross, Adams
Rd ., letart Fall s. OH .
CANON FTB 35 mm single lens
reflex camera . Excellent con·
dition. 992 - 5 1•~ NEARLY 600 Meigs Count ions
s1.1ffered pr operty losse:s during Morgan's Ra id in 1863.
Their names. addresses and
itemized list of their exact
losse1 are cantained in 1~0
page paperback reprinted
book of original 1864 state
published report on 4,375
Ohioans who filed damage
claims .
Re printed
book
" Morgan's Roid losers", con
be ordered lrom publisher
RobertS . Vore. 705 ~a ckenzie
Drive. Limo , Ohio. 45805 , for
S12 . postpaid.

HOM ELI TE

S

h.p.

ridi ng

1'92-3325
216,E. Second StrHt

WANT IT SOLD -Com ·
pact 2 bedroom home
neatly cared tor In
Pomeroy . A good
starter or retirement
home w'lth large extra
lot. Just $25,000.
COUNTRY HOME Nice niooern lookl~o 3
bedroom home l ·with
automatic F .A. furnace,
new bath, large kitchen
and to. bedroom down.
Full basement and Iaroe
lot for garden. $25,000.
NEW LISTING 3
bedroom home, bath,
natu ral gas furnace, full
basement, carpeting
and 2 porches. $18,500.
FAMILY HOME - 3
nice bedrooms, lots of
c losets, 2 full balhSI
family room with wood
burning fireplace, wOOd
doors and thermopane
windows. 2 car garage
and over one acre. Ask·
ing 569,900.
POMEROY - GOOd 3
bedroom frame home,
bath , shower , base·
ment, storm drs . &amp; windows, nat. gas F .A. fur·
nace and alum i num
s iding. $18,500.
NEW LISTING ~
bedrooms, bath, base·
men!, diSposal , nice
cabinets, stove and
refrigerator . Storm drs .
&amp; windows. One acre.
Only $10,500.
NEW LISTING - Nice
remodeled 2 bedroom
frame home . Nat. gas
F .A. furnace, basement,
2 car garage and 3 lots .
$25,000.
NEW LISTING 3
bedrooms, bath, wOOd
burner, new wood burn ·
ing firep lace, lar.ge kit·
chen, basement, and 6
acres . want only
$16,000 .00 tor quick sale.
BUILDING LOTS Pomeroy , Syracuse,
Rock · Springs, Baums
Sub·divlson, Racine and
Rutland area .
NEW LISTING - At
Maplewood Lake , 6
room frame nome, bath,
basement, and 1 acre
for only $10,000. 1-6 fl.
right·atwav.

·
Housing '
I Head
- - uarters.

mower . 700 bu . of eor corn .

985-3928.
1978 KAWASAKI 100.
mileage. 992·3640.

low

HOBSIEIIER
REALTY
I

Village Manor, 992· 7787 .

CANNING TOMATOES , Pick

ran out of gas with 12 hours to go
before my odd numbered day . .. give me
ten gallons of the c heapest g in I"

Mgr.

992·5434 .
ONE BEDROOM opts. Contocl

FURNISHED APT. 3 roomo ond

•

Jack w. Carsey

3 AND 4 RM furnished and un·
furnished
opts .
Phone

Everything you need for
school , jeans , sweaters,
blou ses, shoes and all kinds of
wllat-nots. Address 1855 Front

Robert E. Buck
Probate JudgeCle rk
(8) 6, 13, 20, 31c

SALE PRICES

Route 33, north of Pomeroy.

rent. After 5, 992-2•09.

PROBATE COURT.OF
MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
ESTATE OF THOMAS 1&lt;. ,
CLARK, DECEASED .
Case No. 22744
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On August If 1979, In the
Meigs Coun v Probate
Court, Case No. 22744,
James E. · Clark, Nelson
Road, La ncaste r , Ohio
43130
was
appointed
Executor of lhe estate of
Thomas
A.
C lark,
deceased, late of Syracuse,
Ohio.

Sales &amp; Serv&gt;ce

Lorgeiolo . Call 992·7479.

20- 2S . Time 9-5 each day.

Sl .. Middlepor_!,_O;.:
H:...
. _ __

'

Appliance~

WILL AHVE vacancy for elderly
lady 2nd of September. Room.
board and laundry . Core If
needed. Reasonable prices.

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

Sale.

.

OLD RT. 33 - About 2.0
acres, home, barn and
building,
laad.s
of
building sites. This pro·
pert you must see to ap·
preclale . $178,000.00.
PORTLAND - About 56
acres, pasture, woods,
and tillable. Many
bUilding sites. JUST
$23.900.
NEW LISTING - About
6 years old. Lovely
ranch. 3 bedrooms,
large recreation room
with beautiful fireplace,
garage, hardwood floors
with
carpeting .
$.12,200.00.
NEW LISTING - Mid·
dleport, 2 bedrooms,
dining room , some
carpeting, paneling,
cellar. Very nice laca ·
lion . $16,200.00.
NEW LISTING - Mid·
dleport, 2 bedrooms,
bath, full basement,
garage. Other features.
$18,900.00 .
MIDDLEPORT - Ex·
cellenl
location,
~
bedrooms, 1112 baths,
T.V. room, den, family
room, modern kitchen,
centra l ai r and heat,
large llving roam .
$59,500.00 .
POMEROY - 1 floor
plan, 3 bedrooms, dining
room, nice kitchen, nat.
gas heat, enclosed
, porch, basement and
garage, fruit trees,
abaut3 acres. $25,000.00.
CLELAND REALTY
WHERE
REAL
ESTATE
IS
A
BUSINESS, NOT A
SIDELINE .
BROKERS
Henry E. Cleland Sr.
Henry E. Cleland Jr.
992·2259.
992-4191

992·3640.
For Rent

Yord

Hotpoint and
General Electric

FRANKLIN TRAVEL trailer , 22
ft . Good condition. Also Trail
Haven . camper. Sleeps six .

Yard Sale

FAMILY

608 E.
MAIN
PnMFROY . O .

&lt;

WANTED: SAW logs . Payment
upon delivery to our yard . 7:30
to 3:30 weekdays . Blaney
Hardwoods, SR 339, Barlow ,

TEN

742-2819. lfoymond Hatf ield.

Auctions

Mobile Homes Sale's

one 10 oech oqoare. 10 farm
four ordinary-·

I----~~--------------~---------------------~
·I
B •
S •

I PERO~

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

I KX

'REAL ESTATE: 1 acre lot in Rlggscres t Manor, between Tuppers Plains and Chester.

Phone 985-3929 ond 985·•129.

PHOPJ.E 742·2003

NEW LISTING
Charming 2 story home,
_.. bedrooms, living
room, kitchen, dining
room, and bath. Drapes
and carpet go with the
house. Situated on .75 of
an acre. This home has
had lots at tender loving
care and you w ill have
to see II to appreciate
It's beauty . ONLY
$35,000.00 .
NEW LISTING 2
bedrooms, liv ino room,
utility roam, bath and
extra nice kitchen .
Located on Slate St. In
Pomeroy. Let us show
you this nome and you
can make a reasonable
offer. Call tooav 11
COUNTRY LIVING Nice 2 bedroom home on
a lime over an acre . It
has aluminum siding
and storm windows.
New roof and furna ce.
In lhe Langsville area .
Sells for $22,500.00.
COLONIAL
SPLIT
LEVEL Th is ex·
cel lent 3 bedroom home
has knotty pine living
room accented with a
stone fireplace . Modern
kitchen, family room,
laundry room and 1!2
basement. Large 2 car
detached garage .
Situated on 1.7 acres
west of Rutland .
For friendly, courteous
sevlce, 91ve us a c111.
We have other listings to
choose from.
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
Phone 7~2-2003
GeorgeS. Habstetter,
Jr.
Br~ker 992-$739

H. L Writesel
Roofing
N~w, repair,
gutter~ an.d
dowo spouts.
Wiodow cleaning
Gutter cleaning
Free Estimates

*New Home
*Addons
*Remoldlngs
* Free estlm•tes

992-6011

?49-2862-?'19-2160 •
·o ·tk
REAL ESTATE
. FINANCING
Federal Housing &amp;
Veter•ns Admin. L01ns.

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.
Hours9-1 M., W., F.
Otlior limn by appoint·
ment.
107 Sycamore (Rear)
Pomerav,o.

7·12

MONTGOMERY
TRAILER SALES
27120 Monf'JOm•r'f Rd.
Langlvlll@, Ohlc ·
614·4'f-4l45 Evenings
2 Miles·Eut ol Wilk~svllle

GOOSE

SU~ER

TRAILER NOWAVAILAILE .

CALL

992-7544

·BOB'S GENERAL
CONTRACTING
eNiiWHQMES
e ROOM ADDITIONS
eROOFING
eVINYLSIOING
eGUTTEf! &amp; SOFFIT

•·! 1 me .

ADD ONS &amp; ·
REMODELING ·
Gu.tter Work, down
spoUts, some concrete
work,
Wilks •nd
drlvtwlys~ .
(FREE ESTIMATE)

V.C. YOUNG Ill
RACINE, Q,
941 ·27ii or
112-7314

Phone 992·6323

Free Estim1tes
7·25·1 mo . pd .

BLOCK &amp; BRICK
WORK, GENERAL
CONTRACTOR

home ·on opprox. 2 acres of
levelland with plenty of shade
tr8es.
on
Rutland
Rd .

992·1255.

VOL/'LL 00 ME THE WO~LP ' 5
ElY CALLING ·
HeR FOLKS PRONTO.. ANO
6EiTTIN6 'EM T'TAI(f THE
OliCNISRY
~NIP!

Smith Nelson
Mears, Inc.

Rl. 3
Pomeroy, Ohio
992-S$47
1·25·2 mo.

Real Estate Loans

INSULAOON
VINYL AND
AWMINUM SIDING
e"lnsuletlon
• Storm Doors
e Storm WI!Miows
• Replacement
Wl!Miowl
eGuHenond
Down Spouts
F""Estlmatn
JAMES KEESEE
P'-•"2-2n2
1·17-1 mo .

BORN LOSER
H~'l(:; IX)

F6,1.R I

A- No monev down
celigible veterans)
FHA- AS low as 3%
down (non-veterans)

IRELAND
MORTGAGE
CO.
77 E. Slate, Athens
592-3051

4·23·1 mo.

BRADFORD, AuctionHr, Com-

.

UPHOlSTERING

plete Service. Phone

9~9· 2487

or 9•9-2000. Racin•, Ollto,
Crltt Brodford.

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR -

1·" 1 CAN'T 8EllfVE
IT! TliOSE O.OTMfS

1+ 1 mo .

ond backhoe work; dump
trucks and lo-boys for hire,

will haul 1111 dirl, lop aoli.

'192-2143.
E-C ELECTRICAL Co0troctor
serving Ohio Volley region .
She doyt a wHk , 2.4 kourt s•r·
vice . Emer;ency calls. Call

992·7089 .
night
phone
992-3525 .,.m.5232. ·

coveting,

HOOF HOLtOW. English ond

RISING STAR kennel. Boar-

ding. Coll367-0292.
POODLE GROOMING. Judy
Toy!or. 614 -367-7220.

AKC REGISTERED boxer puppy . $125. 6 weeko old.
992-2726.

HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex·
septic

dozer, backhoe. AI, 143.
Phone 1 (614) 698-7331 o•
742-2593 .
IN STOCM lor lmmediolo
delivery: various sizes of pool
kits. Do-it- yourself or let us
Install for you . D. Bumgardner

POMEROY- NEW LISTING WITH 6 ACRES w, story ~ bedroom home Ius! 1 mile from
downtown. The home Includes a new eat ·l n kitchen,
large master bedroom utility room, large patio,
nal. gos hoi water heal1plus 2 outbuildings and lots
of room for the kids to play. $27,500. Owner anxious
for qui ck sa le·.

500 Secqnd Ave.

Gallipolis, Ohio .

thin'
r1ew?

ll• mile off Rt, 7 by -.,.ss •
on St. Rt . 124 toward ·
Rutland.

Auto&amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682
.

Pass

Pass

Pass

aces and kings, scoring four
club ruffs and making his
last two high trwnps by

4+

AllktiMIDII'IS
A Utah reader asks what
Hippogriffs are.
They are a mythical fifth
s uit invented by Sidney Lenz
as the basis of a s tory. The

victim picks up a dream
notrwnp hand only to be
beaten when his right-hand
opponent runs off 13 cards in

a green suit.
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE -'SS N.J

(For a copy o f &lt;JACOBY
MOD ERN, send $1 to: " Win at
Bridge, " ca re of this newspaper. P.0 . Box 489, Radie City
Station , New York, N . Y.
10019.)

road

10 Medicinal
plant
11 Hymn tune
13 ww
14 Take one's
pension
15 Soul : Fr.
16 De Ltlise
of comedy
17 Mountain

DOWN
1 Conspiracy
group
2 Texas
cottonwood

3 Tum

pass
!B With laxity
20 Wee fiddle
21 World 's
longest

7 The D.A.

power

river

WINNIE

WILL HAUL limestone and
gravel. Also. lime houlln; and
spreading. leo Morris Truck·
ing, Phone 7•2·2455 .

I.. . I HOPE YOU
C70N'T M INI/ MY
DROPPING IN
ON l-OU LIKE:
11-IIS I

Yesterday's Answer

yellow
4 Stipend
5 Freedom,
with strings
attached
6 Inimical

is one

22 Shirt
fabric

Z3

~~ Thou

B Showing
the white
feather

-" :

1927 song

9 Lady of merit
12 Coat fabric

27 Fabric

16 Ravine
19 River

2!1 Score on

deposit
22 Acrid fruit
23 Fattening
things
24 Mas.senet
opera
25 Calla or
water -

30 Cross to

menace
the lanes
bear
3llnviting.
word
36 Poetaster's
adverb
37 Luau
goody

25 Household
need

26 Adam· or
Mae

27 Chevalier
song

. %S Marine binib--+-+--E
2!1 A "golden"
thing

32 After

SAVE ON CARPET
DRIVE ALITTLE
SAVE ALOT

WOW!!

IT'S HI GH TIME
I SHOOK OUT THIS
OL' DOORMAT

THIS OUGHT
TO BE EASY
PlCKIN'S !!

'499
&amp;
CASH

printemps
33 Be engaged in
34 Grease
or machine b,--t-+-35 Stitcher's
need
37 Neighbor
of Sp .
3B Drastic
39,English

BARNEY

RUBBERB.ACK CARPET

The Wiseman Real
Estate Agency
MEIGS CO. FARM - 37 ACRES - New listing.
Frontage on Rt. 124 with approx. H acr115 bottom,
20 acres pasture and balance In wOOdland (some
timber reported) . Includes chicken house corn crib,
shed, barn plus other outbuildings . The remodeled
home has~ bedrooms, eat · in kitchen, utility room,
cellar house. large porch &amp; vinyl siding . FREE GAS
FOR HOUSE .

Nothin' t'
speak of.
Rufus!

guard. 992-6309 or7•2·2348 .

SIX ROOM llouse In Pomeroy.
Remodeled, large lot , natural
gas,
must sell.
Ask i ng

CALL 446-3643

Anll·

Mr.Pert? Well,now!
That were riqht nice
o' him t'
b4!

ANN' S CAKE D.corotlng Supplies, 50716 Osbor n Rd.,
Reedtville, OH 4Sn:Z. For InSaleo, Inc . m -5724 .
formation coli , 667-6485 . Will
be open late if you need
SEWING MACHINE Repairs, . something.
service , all makes, 992-228.4 .
S &amp; G Carpet Cleonin;. Steam
The Fabric Shop. Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Saln ond cleaned. Free estimate .
Reasonable
rates. ScotchS.rvlce. Weshor~n Sclnon.

AKC YORKSHIRE terrier puppies . 992·3829.

$11 ,000. 992-6168 after 6.

GASOI JNE ALLEY

Joel'

~ · 30 · 1fc

Pass

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
tt Make .a
1 Youngling · fresh effort
5 Cling, e.g.
41 Old Roman

651 Beech Street

sys tems ,

3 NT

e~~

II YNrs ExperltnCI
Will Make Strviu Calls

Garage

Pass

Oswald : " A new book by
Victor Mollo is ca.lled 'Masters and Monsters' . It lea•
b.u·es a group of players
ranging from the 'Hidious
Hog' , an unpleasant expert
to the ' Rueful RBbbit', a
• very nice, very bad and very
lucky player ."
Alan : " The explanation of
the bidding of today's hand
is that the RBbbit, sitting
South, is playing a match as

•T ~AS PRE'TTY S'ruPID OF 'EM
'10 CLOSE: 'T~AT ~ !

6·6· 1 mo.

Roger Hysell

and so on cashing his red

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

Even in:
A. Hatfield . Block Hoe Service .

South

Opening lead : • K

•

992-2356

North Easl

simply waiting."

992-2772

Middleport, 0.

Alan : "Even with the Rabbit as declarer , four spades
is unbeatable . H e ruffs a
club, leads a diamond to
dummy, ruffs a second club

It

THINGS. ASP?

EH, ANNIE"

7251 mo.

Rutland, Ohio. Pone 742·2008.
PULliNS EXCAVATING. Com-

West

CA.LL

COlli.

882· 2952 or 882-3454 .

Western .
Saddles
and
hornell. Horses and ponl•s.
Ruttl Reeves. 61-C-698-32'10.
Bord lng &amp; Riding lessons end
Hone Core products .

HA · HA~ LET ME BE
TilE JUD&lt;iE Of THAT
~Ff .. . DID 'rOll HANOLE

ONE ITEM OF

Free Estimilte

Shop

system."

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer : South

BIISINfSS HfRE
6E~ORE WE

WARBUCKS!

s pades thinking that the Hog
has forgotten his own

.. ..

J&amp;L INSUlAnON

BISSELL .
SIDING CO.

limestone and gravel. Call Bob
or R09er Jeflers. day phone

Pets for Sale

"· IT IS THE

Electric Motor

SwHpert, toasters , Irons, all
plete Service. Phone 992-2478.
small appliances . lawn maar,
,
AUTOMOBILE IN,SURANCE
ne)(t to State Highwoy Garage
bee:n cancelled? Lost your
an Roulo 7, 985·3825.
operator•
llcen t•?
Phone

EXCAVATING, dozer, loodor

.

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

Siding

confused and goes to four

SOUTH
•AQJI U
• A 6:;
t H32

Under New Manegement Ctormerly Sylvia's
Upholstery) , across
from Codner's Tex•co.

Reynolds'

EXCAVATING ,
dour ,
backhoe and dllcher . Charlet

• K 732
t A K8

+JI0974
WEST
EAST
~
+ K 10 9 8 7
• Q J 94
• 10 8
• QJ 76
• 10 9
+AK85
• Q6 3 2

-uu or 992·3752

13.

the Hog's partner . The Hog
has devised a system in
which the Rabbit opens one
club with a balanced hand
and one diamond when he
holds a major s uit. The Hog
can then play all dwnmies."
Oswald: "The Rabbit's
one-diamond opening Is correct in this silly system. The
Hog's three notrump an
overbid. The Rabbit is now

g.zo

NORTH

A&amp;H

Vinyl and Aluminum

C•ll tar 1 FrH Siding
Estimllte, 941·2101 or
941· 2160. No Sund•v

I'LL AAV~ lH~ BABY Fll\W
\tJ 1\IKJ SHAI&lt;l% ~

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE Is

SALE ON ALL CARPET IN STOCK

'9~!uP
Installed and Pad FREE

EVE~~ONE 15 COMPLAINING

ABOUT THE HEAT,
CHARLIE BROWN ...

GOOD SELECTION OF
CUSHIO.N VINYL

Here's how to work it :
AXl'DLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter· simply • t~nd s for another. !Q this sample A is
used fo r the three L's, X for th e two O's. etc . Single letters,
apostrophes, the le ngth and formation of t h e words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

PEANUTS

! KNOW ... I HAVE
TO ADMIT IT'S PRt:TT'r'
WARM FOR PLMIN6

-

THE· 0~~~ ONE WHO
HASN'T COMPLAINED
.15 ~UCI{ ...

8A6EBA~~

., 1¥111

nil

.. h,,.

yndlcatt , In~

CRl'PTOQUOTES

·DA

QKR

SNDGM

D GAWR HGYH ,

LK T H KGH
CALL 742-2211 TALK TO
Wendell or He·rb Grate or Gene Smith

RUTLAND FURNITURE
742-2211

l{utlilnd,

QKR

S X Q
HWLH

~XKRGJ.- RGMGKEG

NBUH

KXJHXDGO

L

J K 0
LKRXYH

cr),t.quoee:

-Yesterday's
THE IDEAL MARRIAGE is NOT
'lNE IN WHICH TWO PEOPlE MARRY TO BE HAPPY BUT

o.

8-20

6 :00- 700 Club 6,8 ; Summer
Semester 10; PTL Club 15; 6 : 11}News 17.
6 :31}-Publlc Aflairs 10; Dragnet 17;
6:45-Mornlng Report 3; 6 :50Good Morning West Virginia 13;
6:55-News 13.
7 :00-Today 3,15; Good Morning
America 6, 13; Tuesday Morning
8; Batman 10: Three StoogesLittle Rascals 17.
7: 15- A.M . Weather 3&lt;; 7 : 30Famlly Affair 10; Lit'ias Yoga S
You 33.
·
8: 00-Capt. Kangaroo 8, 10; Lassie
17; Seoame St. 33.
8 :31}-Romper Room 17.
9 :00-Bob Braun 3; Phil Donahue
13,15: Big Valley 6; Porky Pig &amp;
Friends 8; Nile Owl Jazz Stars
10; Lucy Show 17; Book ·Beat 33.
9: 30-Sanford &amp; Son 8; Love of Life
10; Green Acres 17; Beginning to
Sew 33.
10 :00-Card Sharks 3, 15; Edge of
Night 6; Ail In The Family 8,10;
Dating Game 13: Movie "The
ldol"17 ; Paint Along with Nancy
Kaminsky 33 .
0 : 30- Hollywaod Squares 3, 15;
$20,000 Pyramid 13: Candid
Camera 6; Whew 8; Country
Time 10: Consumer Survival Kit
33.
10 :55--{:BS News 8; Fair Fare 10.
11 : 00-High Rollers 3, 15; Laverne &amp;
Shirley 6, 13; Once Upon A
Classic 33.
11 :30-Wheel of Fortune 3 ,15 ;
Family Feud 6,13 ; 11:55-News
17 .

')MAKE EACH omER HAPPY.- ROY L. SMITH

.•

,

.

12 :00-News 6, 10; Mlndreaders 15 :
Young &amp; the Restless 8; Over
Easy 33; Midday Magazine 13;
Love American Style 17.
12 :30-Ryan's Hope 6,13; Search for
Tomorrow 8, 10; Nat For Women
Only 15; Movie " The Wild &amp; thf
Innocent" 17; MacNeii-Lehrr
Report 33.
1 :00-Days at Our Lives 3,15; All My
Children 6, 13; Ne.ws 8; Young &amp;
the Restless 10; Dancing Disco
33.
1 : 30-As The World Turns 8, 10;
Poldark 33 .
2:00-Doctors 3, 15: One Life to Live
6,13 : 2:25-News 17.
2: 31}-Another World 3, 15; Guiding
light ,8, 10; I Love Lucy 17;
Englishman's Castle 33.
3 :00-General Hospital 6, 13; Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 20; lnfl rllty FActory
17.
3:30-Mash 8 ; Joker's Wild 10;
Banana Splits 17 G_ Crockett's
Victory Garden 20; Life Around
Us 33.
4 :00-M ister Cartoon 3; Password
lS i Merv Griffin 6; Addams
Fam ily 8; Sesame St . 20,33 ; Six
Million Dollar Man 10; Mike
Douglas 13; Fl lntstones 17.
4 : 30-Lone Ranger 3; Hogan 's
Heroes 8; · Lucy Show 15; Par.
!ridge Family 17.
~ : 00-Bonanza 3: Beverly Hillbillies
8; Mister Rogers' Neighborhood
20,33; Disco Fever 10: Six Million
Dollar Man 13 ; Brady Bunch 15;
Star Trek 17.
5:31}-News 6; Petticoat Junction 8;
Elec. Co. 20; Mary Tyler Moore
10; Doctor Who 33.
6 :00-News 3,8,10,13,15; ABC News
6; Family Affair 17; Villa Alegre
20; Once Upon A Classic 33 .
6:31}-NBC News3,15 ; ABC News 13;
Andy Griffith 6: CBS News 8, 10;
Over Easy 20,33; Father. Knows
Best 17.
7:00- Cross-WIIs 3; Newlywed
Game 6.13; Please Stand By 8;
News 10; Love American Style
15; Get Smart 17; Dick Cavett
20,33.
7:30-Hollywood Squares 3; Ohio
State Fair 6 ; Gong Show 8; Price
Is Right 10: Donna Fargo 13;
Abbott &amp; Costello 15; Baseball
17; "'¥1cNeii-Lehrer Report 20,33.
8:00-Runaways 3,15: Happy Days
6, 13; Movie " A Death In

Canaan"

'river

,

AND UP
CARRY

8: 00-LIItle House on the Prairie
3, 15; Baseball 6, 13; ; Bad News
Bears 8,10 ; Movie "A Certain
Smile" 17; Bill Moyers' Journal
20.33 .
8:31}-Dr. Seuss 8,10.
9:00-Movle "Love's Dark Ride"
3, 15 ; Mash 8, 10; Once Upon A
Classic 20; Murder Most English
33.
9:30-WKRP In Cincinnati 8,10;
10:00-Lou Grant 8, 10; Poldark
33; News 20.
10 :31}-Dragnet 17 ; Like It Is 20:
11 :00-News 3, 6,8, 10, 13,15; N~w
Soupy Sales 17; Book Beat 33.
11 : 31}-Johnny Carson 3,15; Pollee
Story 6,13; Rockford Flies 8;
ABC News 33; Movie " Night
Mu st Fall"· 10; Movie "A
Gather ing of Eagles" 17.
12 : 41}-Movie " Adam 's Rib " 8:
1:00-Tomorrow 3; News 15.
1: 40-News 13; 2: 00- News 17;
2: 21}-Avengers 17; 3 : 2~
Up 17.
TUESDAY .. AUGUST21, 1979
5 :21}-World at Large 17; 5 : ~5Farm Report13; 5:50-PTL Clu!&gt;

Hog devises silly system
• 3

BY

Refinance

I I I Y' ( I I I I 1

BRIDGE

~

w~ ~fl!iFE!

CAR SEATs, BOAT
TOPS, FURNITURE

JO Year Terms

Now errenge lhe drcled lenora 10
farm lhe ourprlae answer, .. suo·
gosted by lhe 800wl cartOon.

I

ALUMINUM
&amp; VINYL SISING

and

Purchase

AU6&gt;T~ALIA.

(Answers lomorToW)
Saturday's Jumbles: SWOON ENACT FIRING ·DISCUS
An!IWOf: Wha t the astrologer turned. Hollywood gossip
.
columnist had- NEWS ABOUT THE STARS ·
Monday, Aug . 20

J&amp;l BLOWN

7·5· 1 mo.

HOW iHEY MliSIHI
Sol..EEPIN

(J

I

Print answer here: "(

BOB'S
UPHOLSTERY

949-2000

ll

Ph. 992-ZT74

Ph . m

8 · 20

&amp;le6r&lt;~T FAVO~

IN SYRACUSE

Free Estlmiltes
3rcl $t., Racine

b

(J I

CAPfAIN EASY

... AND TWIT DIAII\()OjD

N. L Construction

()

YURJIN

8-6 ·1 mo.

Real Estate for Sale
NICE COMFORTABLE 8 room

5TOCI&lt;

MONDAY, AUGUST20,1t79

r K

uszness
ervzces
1.--------,------------,--,:-.,--:----------:-'
.

rural water, Ohio Power, over

LADY NEEDS rl de to
McDonald's in Gallipolis, Willing to share expenses. To be
there 9-S. 992-2576 after 6pm.

GRAVELY TRACTOR . 1 pair ol
end lobieo. 992· 7537 .

"I

r ae&lt;o,. In count')l. Neor

stotionwagor,, 351 engine,
auto., P.S., P.B., good running
condition. $250. 742-3074 .

BACk TO school yard sole.
IQ.4 1fr S. 2nd , Middleport.
August , I , 2, 3.

dispotol ,

Help Wanted

OLD COINS . pocket watches ,
class rings . wedding bonds,
diamonds . Gold or silver. Coli
J. A. Wamsley , 7•2·2331 .

WANTED: GOOD cool stove or
furnace. 949-2355.

d is hw'aaher ,

carpeted, Iorge eot· ln kitchen,

POMEROY
LANDMARK

992.3161.

NEW THREE bedroom ollelec·
hie
home ,
garage ,

old. no collar · 992-6260.

available for adoption and ifl.

formation service.

.

! PM .

Friday afternoon

Persons whose coo peration is
vitci l to you r needs can be
easily won over today If you ask
lor their support nice ty instead
of demanding II.

TAURUS

on
rod

HUMANE

992·6260 .

1973 12 x 63 Forest Pork
mobile 11om• on •;. acre lot in
Harrisonvllle. 992-36.c0.

Tuesday

, CAPRICORN (Dec . 2l-Jan. 19)
. In you r co mmercial dealing s
today , stick to methods which
have proven to be success ful.
Avoi d experimenting with the
unknown .

should be rather lucky at Jus t
at:lout an yt t1 1ng yo u tack le
tOday . The one exception Ilea
In an area where yo u' re gamblln~ on somett11ng you know

COUNTY

SOCIETY.

VICINITY
Purebrod

742-2923.

thru Friday

1ions

ARIES (Morch ZI·Aprll 111 You

MEIGS

B'S MOBilE HOME SALES, PT.
PLEASANT, WV . :JOA-675-4•2• .

NOTICE

a !~

PISCES (Fob. 211-Morch 20)

Doberman, female. 2 years

l V.

BIG AUCTION 'eve'Y Wed., 7

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0oc 21)
Th ings Wtll work out to your

Conditions shou ld beg in
brighten I n~;~ for you as of today
where your work or career Is
concerned . l=ocus on what -you
Mpe to achieve and do a good
job .

FACTORY CHOKE GUNS ON·

pm . Hartford Community
Center, Hartford , WV, 4 miles
Clbove
Pom eroy - Ma son
Bridge.

Care of The Sentl n ~l.

Real Estate for Sale

FOUND :
Mulbe"Y ·

In memory, Card of Thanks
and Obituary : 6 ce nu per word .
$3.00 minimum. Ca~h in tid vance.
Mobile Home sa les and Yard
sa le!! are aceepted only with
cash with order. 25 cent charge
for ads carrying Box Number In

Lost and Found

GUN SHOOT, EVERY FRIDAY
7:30PM RACINE GUN CLUB.

Eac.h W&lt;lrd over the min.imum
IS words i.s 4 cenb per word per
dtl y. Ads running other than consecutive days will be charged at
the I day rate .

23)

There 's ample justilica1i6n for
your hope fu lness today , but be
realiS tiC •n busin e; ss and finanCial matters . Avoid impul sive
acts .

- - - : -N-o:c
: ti:c-es_ _ _

WANT AD
CHARGES

Television
Viewing

Unser-- four Jumblel,

8, 10;

Sexu·a l

Revolution 15; Carmen McRae
In Concert at the Palace 20; City
Noteboo.k 33.
8 : 3~Detectlve School 6,13; Two
Ronnles 33 .
9: 00-Movle " something big" 3, 15;
Three's Company 6, 1~; Movie

"America at the Movies" 33;
Klddog 20.
9:30-Taxl 6,13; 10 :00-Starsky &amp;
Hutch 6, 13; America 17; News
20.
10 :31)-,- inslde Yesterday" 8,10;Lock
Stock &amp; Barrel 20.
11 : oo~ News 3,6,8,10, 13 ,15: Dick
Cavett 20; New Soupy Sales 17;
Book Beat 33.
11 :31}-Johnny Carson 3, 15; Low
Moan Spectacular 6,13: Barnaby ·
Jnnes 8; ABC News 33; Movie
"You're a Big Boy Now" 10; ·
Movl~ "Lover Come Back" 17.
12 : 40-Movle " Death
Among
Friends" 6, 13; Movie "36-Hours"
B; 1 :00-Tomorrow 3; News 15.
1:45-Baseball 17 ; 2 &gt;15-News 13;
~ : 15-News 17; 4:35-.t&gt;uengers
17.
I

"

'"

•

�8- The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Aug. :11, 19'79

e
VOL XXVIII NO. 91

•

•

enttne

aty

POM EROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

TUESDAY. AUGUST 21 , 1979

Marietta firm gets school repair contract

RESERVE CHAMPION LAMB - The reserve
champion lamb was purchased by Rep. Ron James for
$3.20 a poWld at the Meigs CoWlty 4-H FFA Junior Fair
Livestock sale Friday night. The animal was owned by

Michelle Avis, Rt. I, Guysville. Shown 1-i', Charles
Mullen, representing Ron James, Cindy Pitzer and
Ralph Jordon, fair queen and king, Sonia Carr, sheep
queen, and in front, Michaelle Avis, O)VT!er.

Area Death
LEI..A R. EASTERDAY
Mrs. Lela Rose Easterday, If/ ,
Racine , died Saturday night at her
home. She was the daughter of the
late Asbury and Enuna Batey Smith.
She was preceded by her husband,
Carl·, an infant son, three brothers,
William, Robert, and Josiah and
three sisters, Fern Christy, Mary
Parker and Blanche Easterday.
Surviving are two sons, David,
Lawton, Oklahoma and Marion,
Racine ; three daughters, Mrs. Emma
Adams, Mary Virginia Easterday and
Mrs. Eugene (Myrtle ) Holter, all of
Racine.
A brother, Fred Smith, and sisters,
Sibil Dorst, b()th of Pomeroy also survive along with four grandchildren,
seven great-grandchildren and
several nieces and nephews.
Mrs. Easterday was a member of
the Racine Wesleyan United

Violent stonn

(Continued from page I)
Methodlst Church and a charter
was a~o cut off at Meigs Mine Co. and
member of Racine Grange 2606.
Funeral services will be held at 1 power company workers were still atp.m. Wednesday at the Ewing tempting to restore electricity SunFuneral Home with Rev. David day.
Several homes sustained flood
Harris officiating. Burial wiil follow
in Oak Grove Cemetery. Visitation damage in Point Pleasant during the
will be held at the fWleral home after stonn, with two barns and a home suffering from flood-related fire
7 p.m. this evening.
damage.
"This is the "worst trouble with
flooding here that I have seen in 19
years," said fireman Charley Woods.
A 16-inch water main pipe also broke
SEEK DIVORCES
Two divorces, both on grounby ox during the storm, creating addltional
gross neglect of duty and extreme problems for Point Pleasant's
cruelty, have been CUed in the Meigs emergency service.
In Gallipolis, police chief John
County Common Pleas Court. They
are Mary Franc is Adams, Reedsville, Taylor said very litUe damage was
against Melvin J. Adams, alsc of done, although the department radio
Reedsville, and Judy A. Stewart was knocked out of service by light.
versus Thomas M. Stewart, both of ning.
"There
was
nothing
real
bad,
exMiddleport.
cept for water in people's basements,
besaid.
.
There were power outages in the
city itself, although line foreman Andrew Lemley of Columbus and
Southern Electric reported most of
the damage was to company equipment.
"Lightning is what played hob with
us," Lemley slated. "The water itself
was no big deal."
· He said lightning was responSible
for blowing out several transformers,
keeping his men busy for the better
partofSWlday.
A spokesman for Buckeye Rural
Electric also reported most damage
was caused by the lightning.
As of this morning, damage
estimates were incomplete, but scme
insurance companies in town had
already begun receiving damage
claims on homes, cars, and other
possessions.
"I worked aU day yesterday," said
Caroll Snowden, Gallipolis State
Farm Insurance agent, who said IE
began receiving call at5 a.m. Sunday.
"I got into my four-wheel drive and
slarted helping people, "he added.
As of now, Snowden estimated he
had almost $70,000 worth of
automobile damage to consider while
home and flood damage would
"easily" top $100,000.
Ray Davis, Nationwide agent, had
not yet begWl tabulations of his
claims but estimated roughly he
would be considering $55,000 worth of
damage.
Other agencies in town were still
receiving reports from their
customers.
The storm was similar to one which
also caused extensive damage in the
1
0. J. White-Bulaville Road-U.S. 35
area on July 12, 19'76.
Some area residents have held the
large amount of rainfall this summer
as being partly responsible for the
flooding, as "it has nowhere to go," in
the words of one Jackson Pike
resident.

looking
for a good
savings plan?

GRAND CHAMPION PAIR OF HOGS - The
grand champion pair of hogs, owned by Bill Holcomb,
Albany, were purchased by Ohio University Inn, for 95
cents a pound, at the Meigs County 4-H FF A Junior

Livestock sale Friday night. Standing, 1-i', Ralph Jordon and Cindy Pi~er, fair king and queen, Gene Engle,
representing Ohio University Inn and Bill Holcomb in
front, owner.

campaign.
Yet, Carter said Sunday night in a
c'Onversation ?Jith a group of reporters
aboard the ship, "It's been restful."
Today, he said, might be a little
more relaXing than the first 48 hours
of the trip, when the boat made 11
stops and the president spoke to a
crowd at one lock at 3 a.m. and to
another group a few hours later in a
driving rainstorm.
The president's comments in
McGregor, Iowa, were typical of those

THE DE LTA QUEEN
(AP) - In little towr\S, at river locks,
and even from the decks of this
riverboat , Pres iden t Ca rter is
campaigning hard - for himself and
his energy program - as he
approaches the midpoint of hi s
Missi ssippi River vacation .
At every opportunity, and there
have been almost a dozen , the
president stresses one theme, energy,
and at each stop the trip looks less like
a vacation and more like a political
ABOARD

he made to a picnic of fa ctory workers
in Prairie du Chien, Wis.; to residents
of Wabasha, Minn.; and at hamlets
beside the massive river locks.
"Our nation 's security is threatened
because we have become too
dependent on oil from foreign

Deputies check two accidents
Meigs County deputies are
investigating an accid ent tha t
occurred at 3 a.m. Sunday on State
Route 7 just south of Eagle Ridge
Road.
According to the report, a 1974
Chevrolet pickup truck owned by
Freda Buchanan. Long Bottom, was
traveling north on Route 7 and went
off the road on the right striking four.
newspaper tubes and two maliboxes
owned by Herbert Grate and David
Mann of Rt. 3, Pomeroy .
· Identity of the driver is being

Pomeroy man injured
in weekend accident
A Pomeroy resident was injured in
a tw0o01r accid~nt investigated by
Gallipolis city police early Monday.
John T. Weeks, 21, was driving north on Garfield Avenue at 12:25 a.m.
when he met a soutiJbound vehicle on
the curve coming left of center.
Weeks swerved to the right to avoid
being hit and struck a parked vehicle
registered to Billy Walter, Northup.
Weeks suffered head injuries but
refused treatment. Moderate damage
was done to both vehicles and no
citations were issued.
Police also arrested Douglas 0 .
Couch, 20, Gallipolis, for DWI around
8:30 p.m. Saturday at the corner of

CA~~:h~()

4 YEAR MONEY CERTIFICATE
Minimum Sl ,OGO .OO . Interest rate of 11 14% und er the average 4 year
yield of Treasury Securities.

MONEY MARKET CERTIFic;A TE
$10,000 minimum . Interest rate equal to the rate of 182 day treaiury
bill rate. As determ i ned

at weekldy auction .

INDIVIDUAL RETIREMENT ACCOUNT

7%%

Substantial Penalty Fo r Early Withdrawal

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

Farttters Bank
POMEROY, OHIO
'~0.000

MaXImum Insurance For Each DeiDSitor

Member Fedelal Deposit lnwrance Corporation

DONALD DUCK
LOS ANGELES ( AP ) -

Donald
Duck, the star of 128 Walt Disney
cartoo ns, has turned 45 years old.
His first screen appearance was
June 9, 1934 , as a bit player in "The
Wise Little Hen " but, according to the
man who knows him best, Donald's
real pe•scnality didn 't develop until
hi s second film, "Orphan's Benefit."
The man is Clarence Nash, Donald's
voice in every film.
Nash, 74 and retired for nine years,
said Donald's voice had been inspired
by a pet goat he had raised as a boy in
Independence, Mo., that made "a
strange noise when it was hungry ."

Moms too! Ou r team -mates Include cotton corduroy, denims
and flannel plus 100% acrylic

sweaters for versatility and style
in a wardrobe of neat looks.

VISIT EVERY DEPARTMENT
You'll find girls weor on the
second floor and boys sizes 1to
7 on the second floor, too -

Boys sires 8 to 20 and men's

sizes on fhelst floor. You'll en·
joy seeing what's new lor fall

and winter. Now is the perfect
time to select what you need.

MEETS TUESDAY
The Twin City Shrinettes will meet
at the home of Clara Adams at 7:30
p.m. Thursday with Barbara Dugan
as assistant hostess.

STORE HOURS
Open Monday, Tuesday
Wednesday, Thursday &amp; Saturday '
From 9:30A.M. to 5 P.M. Friday 9:30 to 8 p.M.

ELBERFELD

also voted agalDBt lhe employment of
Elaine Boucher u an elementary art
teacher 18ylog that be bad seen lhe
work of oae of several applicantS who
were not hired.
Mrs. Jennifer Sheets, board memher, said Supt. Gleason had in. terviewed the applicants and had
gone over their records and she felt
that the board should stand in support
of the recommendations of the
superintendent. The board hired the
two with the 4-1 vote.
Hired unanimously were Benita
King, home ecnomics; Christine
Myers, elementary (Title I); Melanie
Wert, EMR and Thomas Ed Harkless,
Marshall University graduate who
will replace Mrs. Paige HWlt, on
leave, as vocal music teacher for one
year.
Owing the dlscusslon on the
teachers, Gleason pointed out that
Sturbois was the only applicant for

the girls' reserve basketball coaching
spot.
·
He also reported that several
vacancies still exist in the coaching
field for the district. He stated,
however, that two students of Ohio
University are interested in coming
into the dlstrlct to establish a gym.
nastics pro!!J'am which was dropped a
couple of years ago because of the
lack of a coach.
Gleason will follow up the interest
of the two para-professionals.
· Besides hiring her to teach, the
board also
Boucher as
cheerleadlng advisor. The post has
been held by Christine Garst who has
resigned as the advisor and as a
teacher. Her resignation as a teacher
will be accepted if a suitable
replacement is located.
Lunchroom Prlceo
Following a report by Goins, the
(Continued on page 8) ·

named

investigation by authorities ; however,
the Mason County Sheriff's
Department reports that the Dudding
car was traveling east on Route 33
when it apparently went left of ~ter
and struck the. westbound Bolinger

car head on. The Bolinger car
swerved across the highway, striking
Edwards who was walking east along
the berm of the road.
At the scene last night were
deputies Sgt. Detner Roush II, P .E.

i .;

I

Watterson and H.N. Rhodes, the New
Haven Fire Department and Rescue
Squad and the Mason Rescue Squad.
All three vic:Ums reportedly were
pinned in the tangled wreckage of
their vehicles.

I

mar~juana

plants seized
Meigs County !ilteriff James J .
Ptoffitt reports Olief Deputy Robert
Beegle and Investigator Gary Wolfe
seized 184 marijuana plants Monday
afternoon along a cornfield near
PLANTS CONFISCATED - Deputy Sheriff Gary Wolfe, left, and .
County Road 'll , a short distance off
Chief Dt:Puty Robert Beegle are shown with 184 marijuana plants seized
County Road l , in Columbia
:~Y afternoon along a eornfield in Columbia Towruhip, Meigs CounTownship.
The plants will be destroyed at a
later date , after Judge Joon C. Bacon
issues an order to destroy .
No estimate of the street value of
the marijuana bas been set, but
deputies advised that it would be a
large sum .
The plants ranged in size from 18
inches to over 7 feet tall.
Deputies are also 'investigating the
theft of a 12 gauge double-barrel
shotgun from a residence on Beech
Grove Road.
Don King reported that the shotgun
was taken sometime between Friday
WEIRTON, W.Va. (AP)- A flash- National Weather Service said more evening and Monday morning when it
flood forced more than 300 people than five inches of rain fell on the area was discovered missing.
from their homes in the predawn - most of it in less than two hours .
hours as a sheet of. water surged
The forecasting service said more
through scores of houses and rain was possible in the area later
businesses early today, authorities today, and that more flash-flooding
said. No fatalities were reported .
could occur.
By daybreak, the water was
Deputy Sheriff Clarence Barnhart,
receding and local authorities were who lives in Colliers, estimated that
assessing the damage as people began the water rose a fool every five
returning to their houses to begin minutes at the height of the flooding .
... in the world
cleaning up, said Weirton Mayor Don
About !50 homes and businesses
Mentzer. No cost estimate of damage were damaged , said John Anderson,
was available.
dlrecior ol the Office of Emergency
The flooding affected residential Services.
and bUSiness sections in low-lying
areas of Weirton and an
CLEVELAND (AP)-Melvin
unincorporated near by town , Colliers,
Bay Guyon , the accused killer of
Mentzer said.
FBI agent Johnnie Oliver, was to
"The water was four . or five feet
be arraigned today in Cuyahoga
high . It ·was the worst storm I have
CoWlty Common Pleas Court on
seen in my 47 years here," he said.
charges of aggravated murder,
"The water simply came from
attempted ag!!J'avated murder
everywhere - we had no warning at
Three persons were injured in ac- and robbery.
aU."
ci dents investigated by tbe GalliaThe indictment was handed
Mentzer said motor boats and four- Meigs Post State Highway Patrol
dow.n Monday by a Cuyahoga
wheel drive vehicles were used to Monday.
County grand jury, which
evacuate some homes.
Donald K. Burger, 18, Bidwell, was· charged Guyan, 19, of Clevelnd,
West Virginia 22 and U.S. 22 were injured but not inunedlately treated
with the shooting death of Oliver
covered with several feet of water at the scene foUowing a one-&lt;:ar acon Aug. 9, with firing a pistol at
early today, but local police said the cident on U.S. 35at 3 a.m. Burger had
other FBI agents in the same inhighways were expected to be clear been driving east on 35 when he fell
cident and with an unrelated roband open to traffic again by mid- asleep at the wheel, hit a bridge and
bery of a thrift store on
morning.
, overturned. There was severe
Cleveland's eastside in July.
Thunderstorms struck the Northern damage to his car.
Guyon, who was apphended
Panhandle Monday night, and the
At 3:52p.m: Bonnie.L. Murphy, IB,
last Thursday night in
Cheshire, was driving north on SR 1
Youngstown after an intensiVe
and stopped to make a left turn onto
week-long manhunt, was being
Little Kyger Road when she was
held in the Cuyahoga County Jail
NEW COURT PROCEDURE
struck from behind by a car driven by
in lieu of $1.3 million bond.
According to an entry in the Meigs · Mary L. Swisher, 52, Cheshire.
CoWlty Common Pleas Court, a new
Murphy claimed injury, but was not
precipe must be filed for each court inunedll)tely treated, while Swisher
case, naming each witness and stating was taken to Holzer Medlcal Center,
MANCHESTER, Ky. (AP) the approximate mileage required for where she wsa treated and released.
Two
brothers were charged with
attendance. The party demanding the Swisher was cited for failure to keep
murder
Monday and a .third
witness must present the Clerk of _-uted distance.
was
named in a warrant
brother
Courts with a check or money order
Earlier in the day, at 11 a.m., David
feud
between
two families
after
a
for $12, plus an additional!O cents per A. WHite, 19, Gallipolis, w~s norinto
a
shootout
that left
erupted
mile for the witness' round trip thbound on Neighborhood Road, north
three
people
dead,
state
police
between his residence and the court· of SR 218\vhen he failed to negotiate a
said.
·
·house. This check or mdney order is curve, went left of center and back
The two men charged were
to be made out in the name of the several times and struck a ditch.
A.T.
Collins, 53, and Bart Collins,
witness, and will be delivered by the There was moderate damage to his
39,
authorities
said.
Sheriff to the witness at the proper car and he was cited · for recklw
time.
operation.

Predawn flood forces

residents from homes

Wrecks leave
three injured

MEETING CANCElLED

A meeting of the Eastem Local
School Board scheduled for Tuesday
night has been cancelled.

184

Guyon indicted

Schooltime and after. these are

Teacbers hired
Casting the dlssenting vote on. two
of the teachers recommended by
Gleason was board member, Dr.
Keith Riggs. He voted against hiring
Sharon Sturbois, a teacher in the
Aiexander School System as an
elementary teacher and girls' reserve
basketball coach.
Dr. Riggs said he wanted to know
more about her ability in basketball
since there is a strong chance Meigs
High School could have a championship girls varsity team during the
next scbool yea~. He wanted Sturbois
to appear before the board and also
said he would accept the recommendations of Ron Logan and Joy
Bentley, varsity girls coach, on Sturbois ' ability in basketball.
Dr. Riggs ~ald be was not ~ay!Dg
Sturboll ill not qualUied, but that be
wanted to mow more about her
qualficatloDS Ia basketball. Dr. Riggs

•

Today

the fashions kids favor ·... and

...

Three persons were killed and a
pedestrian injured as the result of a
head-on collision between two cars at
1!:2!ip.m. Monday on U.S. Route 33 in
Hartford.
Dead are Andrea M. Dudding, 19,
Dudding Lane, Mason, driver of one of
the vehicles; Melissa L. Bauer, 20,
2435 Lincoln Ave., Point Pleasant, a
passenger in the Dudding car; and
Harry 0 . Bolinger, 60, liO Wolfe Dr.,
Pomeroy , Ohio, identifed as the driver
of the second vehicle.
Kevin J . Edwards, 19, Fourth
Street, Mason, who was struck by one
of the cars, was treated for minor
injuries at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
The mishap is still under

countries," he said.
His proposed "windfall profits" tax

would mean that oil company prOfits
reaped from the deregulation of oil
prices "must be shared with all
Americans to help us with
cooservatioo, SC'Iar power and to
become energy-independent," he
said.
Then, in a throwback to his
campaign days ·three years ago, he
withheld until deputies are able to
"I need you to help me. Will you
locate him . There was slight damage said,
do
it'"
Each time he asks this
to the truck, bul no injuries were
question
,
the ar\Swer comes back in
reported.
applause
and
cheers.
Deputies also took reij&lt;l!'t of a deer
It
's
a
campaign,
says White House
kill. According to the report, Lottie
press
secretary
Jody
Powell, on
Lawson, Rt . l , Ree dsville , was behalf of the president's
· energy
traveling sc uth on State Route 124 in program . But, he said, "There
is no
Oli ve Township and struck and killed
doubt
that
when
we
get
our
points
a deer that ran into the path of her across oo energy, we make points
vehicle. The deer had come from tbe politically."
riverbank area . No one in the Lawson
Dr. Walter Baller, a passenger
vehicle was in jured, but there was from Davenport, Iowa. put it more
slight damage to the car.
bluntly: "It's a campaign, f1Q doubt
about it. And he's getting a !!J'eat
response . I think it must be a terrific
ego trip. He can't help thil)k people
are for him. "
The president has kissed babies as
though election day were !&lt;morrow,
and he has shaken thousa.nds of hands.
He's a fast hand-6haker, no doubt
Eastern Avenue and Mill Creek Road. about it, but until recently, he rarely
Timothy A. Burnheimer, !9, spent more than five or 10 minutes at
Gallipolis, was arrested for clisor- it while travelin~ .
derly conduct at 5:03 a.m. Sunday in
the public use area along tbe riverfront.
Items were reported stolen from a
HOW'S YOUR
car registered to John Gaffles, 34
HOSPITALIZATION?
Smithers St., Gallipolis, sometime after l a.m. Sunday.
Gaffles informed pollee persons
unknown had broken into the car and
made off with a CB radio, eight-track
player, ·cash and a flashlight,
PfttllilrGregg~lbbs
•"" c r"' ,
estimated value over f500. Police are
investigating.
99H443

representatives of all finns involved
in the high scbool's construction and
various attorneys including
PlfOsecutor Rick Crow.
.
It has been agreed that costs involved in the corrective action to the
exterior walls plus costs involved in
putting the interior of the structure
back into shape are to be sent to the
Cincinnati architectural firm which
designed the building. Those costs are
to be turned over to the firm's insurance company, Goins sail!.
Gleasons indicated there is a good
possibility that the costs will be !laid.
However, the board authorized
Gleason and Goins to hire David Fry,
Athens, attorney, at $35 an hour,
should litigation evolve from the
situation.
The board at last night's meeting
voted 4-l to hire two new teachers for
the next school year. Four others
were hired unanimously by the board.

Three die-in head -orl crash

Carter campaigns on Delta Queen

PASSBOOK ~~~~~~~d~~~.rterly 5 Y4%

90 DAY CERTIFICATE .....~:~~?:~L. S/2%
1 YEAR CERTIFICATE ......~:~~?:~~ ...... 6%
4 YEAR CERTIFICATE ..... ~:.~~~~~ ... .714%
6 YEAR CERTIFICATE .....~~~~.~0~ JV2%
8 YEAR CERTIFICATE .... ~:.~~-~~t. ... 7%%

By Bob Hoeflich
school will be repaired before school
A contract to repair structural starts on Sept. 5.
A system of angle irons and steel
defects at Meigs High School was
awarded to the Greenlee Construction · bands will be used to secure the outCo., Marietta, Monday night by the side waUs of the second floor
M~igs Local Boa,rd of Education.
academic wing of the nine-year old
Recently, the board passed a structure. The corrective processes
reso!utlon or urgent necessity per- may pull the walls back into line.
mltting It to accept invitational bids Walls are pulling away fr&lt;m the
on the corrective processes needed so structure and pulling away has also
that the work could be done as quickly caused damages to the inside of the
as ]l08Sible.
building.
~wight Goins, administrative
Questioned on the wide range of
· ass~t, reported seven companies bids, Goins said the Greenlee Comwere mvited to bid on the corrective pany was asked to revisit the school
workandthreesubnnittedbids.
and recheck the job and
The Greenlee Company was lowest specifications on Monday.
with a bld of $19,350. Other bidders
The contract calls for final apwere the Kin!! Construction Co., proval on the job by Ted Beegle,
Jackson, $30,420 and Hixon and Son, engineer, Lwho drew up the corrective
Athens, $211,500.
specifications. Beegle is a former
Goins said work will slart Thur- P&lt;meroy resident.
sday. The Marietta firm will put two
Supt. David Gleason said he and
crews on the job so that the high Goins had been in conference with

Family charged

,

TIIREE PERSONS WERE KillED in a heado()n
collision Monday night on US 33 at Hartford. Andrea M.
Dudding, 19, Mason, .and Melissa L. Bauer, 20, Point

Pleasant, a passenger in her car, died in the vehicle
above while Harry 0 . Bolinger, 60, Pomeroy, &lt;lied of in·
juries suffered in his vehicle.

Village income tax
approved in.Pomeroy
.

Any charitable, educational, fraterThe ordinance also calls for the filBy CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Action to place a 1.1 percent income ing of returns and furnishing of in- nal or other type of nonprofit asaocia·
tax before voters in the November fornl8tion by employers and aU those lion or organization whlch.IB exempt
general election was taken by subject to the tax, for Imposing on from payment of real estate taJ:es,
Pomeroy Village Council Monday employers the duty of collecting the would be exempt from.payment of the
tax at the source, and for penalties for income tax.
night.
The in~e tax will take a majority
Both the income lax ordinance and violations.
vote
at the November general elec·
According
to
the
ordinance,
the
inthe resolution declaring the necessity
for the tax were given aU three re- come tax would not be applicable to tion.
.Discuss Expenses
quired readings after Council voted to unemployment insurance benefits,
At
last
night's meeting Council
suspend the rules which call for the pensions, welfare, insurance, social
members
discussed
at length waya to
action to be taken at separate security benefits, workmen's comcut
down
village
expenses.
The police
pensation insurance, interest and
meetings.
department
was
the
prime
area
dividends
from
intangible
property,
A copy of the resclution and the or·
discussed in that respect and at one
dinance will be certified to the Board and military pay and allowances.
time Council passed a motion to llmlt
of Election so that the question of the
fuel expenses to $225 and then later
levy can he presented to the village
rescinded that action and voted to let
electors of the village at the Nov. 6
the
safety department operate under
election.
a
schedule
set by the chief of police,
The ordinance calls for a 1.1 perwith
the
objective
being to economize .
cent income tax for 1980 and a I peron
all
expenditures.
cent income lax conunencing Jan. I,
Betty Baronick, the safety chair1981 and continuing for an indefinite
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The Ohio
man,
and the one calling for volun·
period to provide fWlds for the pur- State Fair's grand champion steer, a
tary
curtalnment
of expe118eS in the .
poses of general municipal opera- I ,245-pound Limosin-Red Angus,
safety
department,
asked for a
tions, maintenance, new equipment, brought $20,000 Monday night at this
of
all
l:ouncil
members
with
meeting
extension and enlargement of village year's Sale of Champions.
the
safety
department
for
6:30
p.m.
services and facilities, and to provide
The 17-month-old steer, owned by
additional funds for street repair, Im- Hilliard teen-ager Darcie Wells, was onSept.l7.
provement of the water system and to sold to Pennington Bread of . A special Council session was also
pay indebtedness due for fire equip- · Wash~gton Court House. The price set for Monday at 7:30p.m. with the
ment.
was well below the $33,256 paid for last chief of pollee and other safety
, The tax, if passed by the electors_in year's grand champion by Wendy's workers. Chief Jed Web$~' was also
requested to keep a check on gas conNovember, would be made on all Restaurants.
sumption
and report back to Council
salaries, wages, commissions and
The reserve champion steer, owned
at
the
next
regular meeting.
other compensations IBrned by by Russ Clark of Covington, was sold
Councilman Larry Wehrung set a
residents of the village, on all to Hunter Meats of Hillsboro for
meeting for the street committee foc a
salaries, wages, commissions and $4,000.
other compensation earned by nonThe grand champion barrow, a 220- p.m. Wednesday night at village hall
residents of the village, on the net pro- pound Hampshire owned by Rusty at which time emphasis will be on afits earned on all businesses, profes- Coe of Jeffersonville, was purchased pediting work and curtailing eK·
sions or other activities conducted by by Bob Evans Farms of Rio Grande penses.
During the meeting with Mayor
residents as well as non-residents, for $10,000.
and on the net profits earned by all
And the grahd champion pen of six Clarence Andrews prestdlns, .Council
•corporations doing business in the meat chickens, owned by Gene List of voted to purchase a sewer cleaning
village as the result of work done or Ashville, brought $5,000 from machine from the Electric Eel
.services perfonned or ·rendered in Evelyn's Restaurant of Evendale and Manufacturing Co. in Springfield for
the vlllage.
Maud.
(Cootinued on page B)

Bob Evans Farms
buys top barrow

.-.,

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