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                  <text>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

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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

.-.,

�2-

~

3 -The Daily Sentine( Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Aug. 21, 1979

Da1ly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Aug. 21. 1979

Trolley idea gains ·s_u pport

I

COLUMBUS, Ohio ( AP ) - It's been AulhOri ly
recently
gathered
called the "trolley folly " but the idea transportq,tion experts and state · and
of :1' state-built 'a nd subsidized high federal official s for a two-day
speed railroad for Ohio is picking up confer ence durin g which the
speed.
authority 's acting •director, Mark
Th e ever-escalating price of Randall, and his
gasoline is fueling the effort by Rep. staff presented fou r bas ic rail
Arthur Wilkowski, D-Toledo, for a rail concepts and 10separa te rail corridor
network linking Ohio's major cities. packages for discussion.
The various proposals would link
Senate President Oliver Ocasek, DAkron, and several other Senate and Co lumbus , Cleveland , Cincinnati,
House leaders journeyed to Japan this Akron, Toled'O , Youngstown arid
summer to observe that nation's Dayton. Springfield, Mansfield ,
famed "bullet trains" - the Japanese Middletown and Canton are also
National Railroad's high speed trains mentioned as stops in some of the
which have been running on a split- . route configurations.
seond schedule for 14 years.
But the grand plans have grand
And the Ohio Ra il Transportation price tags attached.
Startop costs a re estimated from

SOCIAl..~ SI~CllU'fY
Bill Steif
How weU does It work?
Remember, the idea behind Social
By WUllam Stelf
Security is to replace some - not all (Second of 14 parlll)
lost income.
News Item: DOE says government, not oil companies,
This year's payout in Social
Under the 1977 amendments to the
Security benefits is estimated at just Social Security law, Congress
responsible for gas shortage.
over $135 billion. That's more than the stabilized the rate of replacement of
.
Defense pepartment's budget. It lost income.
represents one-quarter of the entire
A single worker who earned the
federal budget.
federal minimum wage and retired at
But you may ask: How weU does 65 must get along on 52 percent of his
Social Security work?
lost income. For a couple in that
The best answer, probably, is : situation, the figure is 78 percent of
Pretty weU- but not perfectly. •
lost income.
doubled since 1970 and total oil conContentious Oongress
In 1976, about 14 percent of retirees
For a single worker earning an
By Richard E. Cohen
sumption has increased from 14
who drew Social Security were living average wage and retiring at 65, the
WASIDNGTON (NEA) -In respon- million barrels a day to 18 million.
below the official federal poverty replacement rate of lost income is 41
se to President Carter 's suggestion to ·an the other hand, mining of coallevel.
percent; for a couple in those cir" say something good " about the nation's most abundant fuel sourThere are explanations for that. cumstances, 62 percent.
Mattie Allison, PaUl Allison, Evelyn · Some beneficiaries may have worked
America, here's something good to ce - has increased less than 10 per'The biggest earners get the least
Cotter,.
John B. Cotter, Ross D. under Social Security for only a short loot income replaced by Social
cent
in
the
past
decade.
say about the 96th Co11gress after its
first seven months in session: It has
Of course, Congress can't produce Decker, Viola J. Decker, Arlene W. time. Some may have retired long Security. That is based on the wellgone on vacation until Sept, 5 and the energy itself and is not solely Fyfe, Edward Fyfe, Clairarina Mc- ago; even if they receive a full founded asswnption that they have
won't bother anyone for a month.
responsible for the nation's wasteful Clung, Brooks McClung, Tella D. Pin- benefit, the wages .on which it is based private pensions, savings or inContentiousness has marked use of energy. But the lawmakers ney, Dwight E. Ross, Ellen Ross, were too low to keep up with inflation. vestments to augment their
congressional performance to date - have studied the energy issues Joseph J. Ross, Josephine G. Ross, Some may have retired before 65, retirement Incomes.
bad feelings between Congress and enough to know that they must over- Myrtle Starr, Marion R. Stockwell, taking less than 100 percent of their
So, a single worker who always earthe president, Democrats and come their regional and partisan dif- Betty .Van Winkle, Robert E. Van benefits.
ned tbe maximum Social Security·
Republicans and even among. mem- ferences so that the pbulic is no longer Winkle to Westvaco Corp., Lebanon.
At the same time, nearly two-thirds covered amount gets about 28 percent
Margaret F. Nunn to Don M. Rose, of those who drew Social Security of lost income replaced if he retires at
hostage to the international oil cartel.
bers of the same party.
Instead, congressional DemOcrats DoMa R. Rose, 60 acres, Lebanon.
·Congress has passed a few bills and
benefits in 1976 were removed from age 65. If that worker is married, he
Eugene B. Postlewaite to Evelyn H. the poverty level by these payments. and his wife when she reaches 6:1 get
drafted some others, but it suffers find little leadership within their own
from an inability to find consensus on ranks or from President Carter. And Postlewaite, Minerals, Lebanon.
In short, without Social Security they about 42 percent of their lost income
Albert R. Dangelo, Wilma L. wD\dd have been officially classified replaced.
important issues. Sometimes it Republicans stand almost solidly opDangelo to Tuppers Plains Chester as poor.
posed to any Democratic plan.
doesn't even seem to want to.
(NEXT: How to apply)
The performance amply justifies Water Dist., Olive.
As a House Democratic review of
Juanita Jean Terrell to Ruth Ann
the record stated, while the national the findings of a recent Gallup poll,
foclis on energy has ''produced near- which shows that 19 percent of the Spaun, Bill C. Spaun, Lots, Pomeroy.
r-----~-------------~-----,
Ruth Wippel nka Ruth Barnett, for- I
,
'
I
unanimous agreement that the United public approves of the way Congress
to
Frankie
Rusche!,
Shirley
merly;
is
handling
its
job
aild
61
percent
I
Letters
of
opinion
are
welcomed.
They
should
be
less
1
States must break loose from the
energy stranglehold imposed by the disapproves. The approval rating has Poling, life estate, Pomeroy.
I than 300 words long (or subject to reduction by the editor I 1
Doris A. Woodyard to Herald Oil
oili)roducing nations, there has been dipped 21 percentage points in two
I
and must he signed with the signee's address. Names may 1
substantially less agreement on the years and makes Carter's 30 percent and Gas Co., rught of Way, Salisbury.
David D. Price, Mary V. Price, I be withheld upon publi(•ation. However, on request, I'
best way to go about accomplishing popularity look good by comparison.
Charles
· B. Mullen, P. Michael I names will be disclosed . Letters should be in good tastt&gt; , 1
this goal. " That's like saying
House Speaker Tip O'Neill of
Mullen,
Brian
0. Mullen to Herald Oil I addressing issues, not personalities.
Massachusetts
is
aware
of
a
difPresident Carter isn't universally
1
popular.
ference . The younger and better- and Gas Co., Right of Way, Salisbury. I
I
Ronald G. Shepard, Affidavit,
The House spent three days educated members of Congress are
debating the bill to give Carter more difficult to lead, he says. "Per- Meigs.
Lawrence E. Klein, gdn. , Robert
authority to impose ·gasoline suasion is the only tool I have."
Klein,
Mary Klein, Timothy Klein,
Although his close aides say O'Neill
rationing in case . supplies run
Larry
Klein,
Rodney Klein, Angela
has
become
increasingly
frustrated
seriously short. But the final product
was so loaded down with exceptions about his ability to get anything done, Klein, Penny Klein to Lawrence E.
-'-I
that Senate Majority Leader Robert the speaker professes that Congress Klein, Patricia A. Klein, one-half I
Byrd of West Virginia called it is responding to the public desire for acre, Pomeroy.
doing all oftheworkaUofthe time.
Melvin E. Cross, Louise Cross to
less government.
"ludicrous.'.'
OOS
Please take into consideration what
On the other hand, he sees no threat Louise Cross, Melvin E. Cross, 91 Dear Sir·
House members who passed a bill
would happen if there were no
in June to promote synthetic fuels to continued Democratic control of acres , Salem.
We
the
B006ter
Club
of
Eastern
·
Booster Club!
concede they did not study carefully Congress as long as "obstructionists
Dale C. Rockhold, A. Diane . High 'School, in an effort to get more
Believe us, the football boy~ would
the adverse environmental con- and elitists represent the Republican Rockhold to Monongahela Power Co., interest into our Booster Club have certainly look fUMy with their footsequences - particularly the threats Party and don't think of the poor and Easement, Olive.
decided to start printing the m'tnutes ball pants on and no jersey. This i,
to water supplies -of taking oil shale, the working man. "
Arthur D. Heiney to Everett W. of our meetings for the public to see what . would happen because the
O'Neill may be right , but Heiney, Alemda P. Heiney, 28 acres,
tar sands and alternative varieties of
just what our club is aU about and Athletic Department cannot afford to
gas from Western lands. Many have Democrats probably will return from Olive.
what we do for the athletes of E.;.tern completely outfit ALL of the athletes.
urged senators to take a more skep- their recess with demands that their
Charles Bissell, Margaret Bissell to High School.
.
The A~etlc Department · does
tical attitude whr n they consider the party get itself in order and produce a Roy Riffle, Frona Riffle, Parcel,
First
of
aU,
we
would
like
to
invite
spend
qwte a bit on the athletic
more positive record to take to the Chester.
bill.
any
tiarents,
·faculty
member,
or
P~·
.
Advocates con!inue to battle among voters the next time they return
Charles Bissell, Margaret Bissell to anyone interested in working for our
This 1s a self-oupporting program
themselves on the relative merits of home .
Glen Bissell, Naomi Bissell, Parcels, Booster Club to join. Our meetings and gets no help from the school fund
ruchard E. Cohen is a reporter with Chester.
nuclear, solar and hydroelectric
are held on the first Monday of each (Ealltern Local General Fund) at all.
power. But in the meantime, the the National Journal, The Weekly On
John M. Wells, Jr. to Frank Wells, month.
(We might add that the school only
nation 's oil imports have more than Politics and Government.
Shirley Wells, Parcels, Olive.
We are reaUy a hard working helps in the way of paying the
John M. Wells, Jr . to Monty Prof- group. We put in a lot cif time to be coaches' salaries. Our athletic deparfitt , Shelley Proffitt, 5 acres, able to furnish the boy and girl tment pays for the electric, bus
Lebanon.
athletes of Eutern High School with drivers, equipment, etc).
George Louis Russell III, Mike better equipment and uniforms. (Last
So, please, get Involved. You will be
Crane Wallace to Steve R. Barnett, year alone we spent weU over benefiting your son or daughter more
Kathy Kutsko Barnett, 55.962 acres, $10,000). W~ feel that our athletes than you are ·aware. And, we hope to
Scipio.
By PETER KING
"The univer sity was buffeted by
here at Eastern High School deserve see you on ~ptember 10, 1979. Mary M. Cousins, Oliver A. Cousins the same as the athletes in the bigger Ealltern Athletic Boosters, H. E. Cole.
Associated Press Writer
change for two decades," Ping said.
ATHENS, Ohio (AP ) - The Ohio "After a penod of incredible growth , to Muriel M. YOwig, Rufus W. Young, schools. BUT WE NEED YOUR
University public information offi ce we went through a period of Lot 359, Middleport.
HELP. The same people cannot keep
BSO lne pnce
John Willard Tillis, Sr., Donna M.
calls it "perha ps the most remarkable enrollment decl ine and ... great stress
Tillis to Milford Lee Hysell, Laura P.
comeback in the recent history of on our financial resources.
higher education ."
"That period of decline has stopped. Hysell, one and one-third acres, Midrods, Rutland .
It 's not quite that. The proper We've had slow but steady growtll for dleport.
Jack
Peavley,
Janet
Peaviey
to
Boyd T. Kinz_el, Audrey C. Kinzel to
wordin g mi ght be " new-found three years."
·
WASHINGTON (AP) - Motorists
sta bility in an advancing era of
The enrollment has hovered around David J . Kaufman, Valerie L. Kauf- . Charles A. South, Barbara A. South,
man, 45 acres, 100 acres, Rutland.
1.079 acres, Salisbury.
who suspect their local service
instability ."
13,060 for three years.
Cornelius Phillips, Barbara Phillips
Char~es Karr, Leona Karr to James ·stations of price gouging can now arm
TI1e university, in this typical
The stability is typical of the way
to
Roger
Adams,
Right
of
Way
E.
Witherell, Jr., Phyllis Jean themselves with a government list of
college town 70 miles southeast of l~n g does things. He is quiet , stable.
Rutland.
'
Witherell,
Parcels, Salisbury.
maximum legal gasoline prices in 20
Columbus, has seen its main-campus He likes things orderly. A philosophy
Russell
Priddy,
Alice
Priddy
to
Freda
Holter
formerly
Freda
major U.S. cities.
enrollm ent dip from an ail·time high professor, Ping "gets his batteries
Roger
Adams,
Right
of
Way,
Rutland
.
Wyatt,
NRA,
to
Betty
T.
Vale,
Paul
C.
The Energy Department released
of 19,314In fa ill970 to 12,814 fi ve years recha rged in solitude, " according to a
W. G. Nichols, Mary B. Nichols to Holter, Lots, Salisbury, Middleport the list Monday in its continuing battle
later. according to Ohio Board of close friend.
to monitor the prices of gasoline being
Regents fi gur es. That's a 34 percent
"He was the cairn we needed to Roger Adams, Right of Way, Rutland . Village.
Ann Grover, Dalton Grover to
Christine Beegle to Harold D. charged by the nation's more than
settle the storm ," sa id Mary
dro p.
Roger Adams, Right of Way, Brown, Olin Boothe, Lot 345, 175,000 service stations.
President Charles Ping arrived in Comga n, a university secretary."
'
Salisbury.
Pomeroy.
But Michael Podhorzer of !he
1975, when the bottom and the sides
"Charles Ping played a central role
Consumer
Federation of America
Anna
L.
Browning
to
Ronald
J
.
Haro!d
D.
Brown,
Catherine
L.
seemed to be falling out of the oldest in get ting the university to calm
Brown, Olin. D. Boothe, Henrietta charged that penalties for pricing
university in the former Northwest down," explained Sam Crowl , an Browning, Parcels, Salisbury.
Anna L. Browning to Ronald J. Boothe to V1deoCom, Inc., Lot 345, 'iolations and the chances of being
Territory
associate profeesor of English and
discovered are so remote "people are
Pomeroy.
· "The inst itutiOn was taki ng on form er chairman of the Fa culty Browning, .132acre, Racine -Sutton.
Anna L. Browning to Ronald J.
George T. Glaze, Rebecca L. Glaze not afraid of being found in violation."
water. It was nounde ring," said Ping, Senate.
And the department itself
to Stone WOods Limited, Arthlil'
But still the university has an image Browning, .07 acre, Salisbury.
an Episcopal priest who was provost
acknowledged
it has had only 50
C.
Hoffman,
Martha
F.
Winer,
partner,
rerecord,
Salisbury.
Charles
at Central Michiga n University before · problem. Students and out.,f-towners
Nancy Lee Hamilton, Edwin auditors working on c&lt;roplaints of
arriving in Athens.
almost annually gather in downtown 'Hoffman to Frank F. Powers, Ruth E .
Hamilton to McDonough Co., 49.25 retail gas prices. However, the
Pi ng•s new admin istrati on began in the sprin g for spring di sturban c~s 'Powe1-s, Lots, Scipio.
department added that an additional
Curtis L. Jenkinson, Dortha D. acres, 2acres, Lebanon.
pla nning for a fu ture in which the With c1ty pollee wh1ch land students m
Randall L. Roberts, Judy D. Rober- 150 should be in the field soon In
baby boom would be long ended and a Ja il and the university on fr ont pag_es. Jenkinson to Curtis L. Jenkinson,
dec linin~ pool of high school seniors
The . . adnuss10ns
off! ce Dortha D. Jenkinson , Lot. Mid- ts to Ralph Larry Durst, Shirley Ann response to President Carter's recent
Durst, 6,000 sq. ft., Letart.
order w increase the size of the
was forecast. The university issued a com mi SS ioned a study wh1 ch dleport.
Denrus H. Manuel, Anna G. Manuel auditing staff.
Lane A. Daniels DoMa L. Daniels
!().year ed ucational plan and mission · confirmed that some students and
Federal rules have regulated the
statements outlining its goals.
their pa reny; are scared off by the to Tony A. Taylor,'velmaL. Taylor , ! to Randy A. Wheeler, Vickie L.
acre, Rutland.
Wheeler, Parcels, Letart.
price of gas at retail stations for the
Some of the goals have been spring flii .g.
re a liz ed . Tw o new co lleges Ping has found this subj ect most
William D. Winebrenner, Dorothy
Marvm T. Kelly, Burna~ene M. past five years. The current ceilings
osteopathic medicine and health and troubling. The administration . has A Winebrenner to John M. Powell Kelly to William Fred South, Sr., . range from a low of 86.2 cents a gallon
for regular in Dallas to alinost $1.15 a
human services - have·been added in tried everythmg from street parties to Deborah L. Powell, Lots If/,
BeatricE. Smith, Lot, Middleport.
Grover B. Stout to Jmuny K. gallon for premium in New York. The
Ping 's fou r years, as has ernphasis on fr ee e n te rt~,i~me~t . ?,~ a y fr ?m Syr&amp;cuse. .
lif e- long educa tion . The ind ebted downtown on r10t mght, but nothing
Rollin 0 . Snowball, dec. to Frances Nelson, Donna J. Nelson, .64 acre, maximum prices are based on tbe
wholesale gasoline price paid by the
dor mitory system , left one- third ha ~ worked. Th1s year a student group H. Snowball, Cert. of Trans., Sutton . Chester.
.
Clayton Bogard, Rosalie Bogard to station operator plus taxes and a
empty during the enrollment cru nch. trymg ha lt the disturba nce~ was Syracuse.
Ray Rouse, Orpha Rouse to James Jerry Bogard, Manlyn Bogard, Par- maximum margin of 15.4 cents a
has become financially solven.l1 n the credited w1th moderate success 1r1
gallon to cover overhead and profit.
last two yea rs.
holdmg down arrests and VIOlence.
Snodgrass, Jr., Lois A. Snodgrass, 63 eels, Lebanon.

In Washington

Meigs
Property
Transfers

1

I B~ ·.
I ••• ?Itt- ~,.,..,....t,:

8

l
l

t ers need h e }p

O.U. enrollment stable

G

l"

··

list available

$40 million to $3.5 billion, depending
on which plan is picked - and which
one voters approve.
Besides the massive cost of starting
the rail system, the state would face
another hurdle. The Constitution
prohibits the state from lending its
credit to private railways. Twice
Ohioans have voted down a change in
that provision .
The rail authority released $2:ill,OOO
report' last year which said the state
could support a fast intercity rail
system that would serve 1.2 million
passengers by 1965. But the study said
startup costs would top $1 billion for
the roadbed and equipment:
Even if existing rights of way were
to be used, roadbeds would have to be
rebuilt whandle trains whistling by at
speeds of up w 150 mph.
There are lesser levels of service
under study, however .
These include :
- Conventional technology with •
· trains running on existing rights-ofway, making use of existing track,
upgraded, to handle speeds of 110
mph. Cost : $1.2 billion.
- Conventional technology with
dieseliJowered trains on existing
track with minimal upgrading .
Speeds : up w80 mph . Cost : $1 billion.
-Contract service using 'dieselpowered trains on existing track with
no upgrading of any facilities. Cost :
$40 million . Drawback: service would
likely be subordinated to Amtrak or

By Greg Batley
Senior leadership, team experience, a returning backfield, and
12 lettermen - what better ingredients could go into a high school football
team that is anxious to get the Sellson
started?
Thill season the Meigs Marauder
grid squad boasts just such credentials as it tries to better the 1978

second place finish in the tough
SEOAL.
Veteran head coach Charles Chancey and his staff have II seniors and
18 juniors (three lettermen ) on their
teann roster, headed by co-eaptain
Robert Parker and Van Willford.
The Marauder squad also has
nearly all of its defensive starters

~

Coonhound

BASFM••

championship

a..eb.'llJ At AGlance

By The Assoclaled Press
All Times EDT
AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST
W. L. Pel.
Baltimore
80 .2 .656
Boston
75 47 .615
Milwaukee
74 51 .592
New York
67 55 .549
Detroit
65 59 .524
Cleveland
61 63 .492
Toronto
39 85 .315
WEST
California
70 55 .560
Minnesota
65 58 .528
Kansas City
~ 60 . 516
Texas
61 6-j .488
Chicago
ss 69 .........
Seattle
39 60 .312
Monday •s Ga"'i!S

set Saturday
GB

s
7'1'

13
16
20 .
•2
•

5'h
9

l .. IJ,

31

Balt imOf"e 3, Texas 0

Milwaukee 5, Chicago 3
Minnesota 10. Boston s
New York 17, Kansas Citv •
Cal ilorn ia 6, Cleveland 5
Detroit 7, Oakland 3
Seattle 7, Toronto .4
Tuesday's Games

Business

Ch icago 1Trout7·6 and Scarberry 2·

7) at Milwaukee ( Sorensen 13 ·12 and

Mitchell2·7l

Texas (Comer 11 ·81 at Baltimore

(0 . Martlner1H )
Boston (TUdor 0·01 at Minnesota
IKoosman 15-101
New York (John 16·6) at Kansas
City (Splittorft 12·121·

•

mzrror...

Cleveland ( Pa:w:ton 7-.Jl at Calitor ·

NEW YORK AP) - One billion
dollars of liquid capital waiting to be
tapped by small and medium-size
companies. One billion dollars of
capital whose owners seek an
association with growing companies.
" Never has there been more equity
or venture capital to invest, most of it
privately; than there is now, " said Jay
Cooke, an investment banker who
concentrates on emerging and
medium-site concerns.
The statement shocks some who .
remember that just a few years ago,
as recently as 1977, even Fortune 500
companies found a shortage of eager
investors. And smaller companies '
could find almost none .
1
The statistics docum~nt the
problem. In each of the easy years of
1968, 1969 and 1972 there were more
than 1,000 public offerings of $2
million to $25 million. In 197~ there
were 36. In 1977, just &gt;5.
But now, says Cooke, the money's
there, bags of it.
Banker-brokers who concentrate in
smaller companies, those not among
the 2,000 largest corporations, found
money for 100 smaller companies last
year .
And the trend is up. "We estimate
there 'll be more than 200 such
financings in 1979, and about 400 in
1980," said Cooke, managing director
of Laidlaw Adams &amp; Peck's corporate '
finance department.
The turnabout, says Cooke, is- slill
very little understood by those who
remember the dark days, when
companies with sales under $100
million couldn't raise a nickel and
were for ced instead into mergers.
Compounding their difficulties was
th e demise of scores or investment
banking-securities firms . There are ·
about 50 left now, and 25 of them are
" major s" or "subrnajors," who deal
only with large companies.
In· fa ct, the majors and submajors .;
simply don 't find it profitable to deal :
with any but the top 2,000 •
corporations, all of whom have sales
of at least $100 million . Majors are not :
in the venture capital business.
That leaves to Cooke's firm , and its ~
competitor s, the thousands of ·
companies with sales of less than $100
million - some in fact with sales of
$400,000 or even less, who badly need
equity or debt capital.
And it is in such companies, Cooke . ,
contends, wherein lies the action, the
chance to get In early on some of '
tomorrow's technology . giants, tbe ,
chance to make a bundle of money
through appreciation.
Smart investors have learned of the
opportunities. Institutions now "
recognize that smaller companies can ,
constitute a quality market. And
individuals too, " Mr . &amp; Mrs.
America " to Cooke, have also
Ie ::. rn~ d.

1m! DAR.YSENTINEL

(USI'SI-1

nia !Frost 12-71
Detroit

! Chr is 2·0)

at

Oakland

I KIngman 3·41
Toronto (Huffman 5·131 at Seattle
1Rawley 5·61
Wednesday ' s Gimes
Cleveland at Cal if orn i a
Detroit at Oak land

Ch icago at Milwauke-e
Boston a1 M innesota
New York at Kansas City

.A 1979 U.K.C. world's coonhound
championship regional qualifying
event will be held Saturday at the
Shade ruver Coon Hunters Club.
The club house is !coated at the
Rock Springs Fairgrounds, one mile
north of Pomeroy on County Road 20,
off U. S. Route 33. Signs will be
posted .
All U.K.C. registered dogs are
eligible to run in the event. They will
be drawn out together and run under
~hampionshlp rules. The 1979
regional qualifying event rules are
applicable .
Only non-hunting judges will be
used and entries will be accepted only
as long . as qualified non-hunting
judges are available. Entries wiU
close at 9 p.m. and the entry fee is $15.
All winners must have plus points.
The U.K.C. Master of Hounds for
the event will be GleM Greathouse .
The Shade River Coonhunters Club
wiU also be holding in conjunction
with the qualifying event a U.K.C.
licensed bench show with entries to
close at $ p.m. and an entry fee of $5
and a non-licensed treeing contest af.
ter the bench show. Entry fee for this
event is S2 with aU reentry fee.
Those w!Jhing more information
may contact Carl Hall, 992-7222;
Oscar Smith, 992~ or William
Smith, 992-5~ .

Toronto at Seattle
Only games scheduled

NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST
W. L. Pet. GB
Pl"sburon
71 51 .585
Montr~a l

Chicago
St. Lou is
Philadelph ia
New York
Housfon
Cinci nnati
Los Ang£11es
San Francisco

San OiOQO
Atlanta

68

5 1 .511

2

~

58

7 ,, ,

67 54 .554 •
.525

60 .516 8
50 70 . 417 20 'h
WI;ST
71 54 .568
69 57 .5-Ul 2'h
~

61

61

, .66() l JI/]

57 68 ,. 454)4
53 73 .421 18'''

48 77 .384 23

Monday 's Games

Chi cago 2, Los Ange les 1
Atlanta Ph iladelph ia 2
PiMsburon 6. San Franc is.co s
Houston 8. New York 1
Montreal Cinc innat i 2

SCIOTO RESULTS
CO LUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) - Super
Tweety led from wire to wtre to )Vi.n
the eighth race feature at Scioto
Downs Monday, in a time of 2:06 1-5.
The winner returned $6.60, $3.20 and
$2.60.
Second was Cliff, returning $3.411
and $2.60, while R. C. Miracle paid
$4.00 to show.
ln the ninth race trifecta, the
combination of 1().4..5 paid 1283.20.
The crowd of 3,186 bet $293,242.

s.

s,

St. Louls6, San 0iOQ03

Tuesd1y 's G1mes

L05 Angeles !Sutton 10·12 1 at
Chicago (Caudill 0·4)
· Atlanta (Matula 6 ·9 ) a t
Philadelphia ( Lerch 7· 11 )
San Francisco (Kilepper 8·8) at P it
hburgh (l&lt;.ison8·6)
Houston CLaCorte 1·1) at New York

(Falcone H )

Montreal ( Palmer
ci nnat i (Sea ver 11 5)

5·2)

at

Ci n

TODAY '$
MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
By The Associated Press
AMERICAN LEAGUE
BATTING 1325 at bal5) : Lynn ,
Boston , .347: Rice, Boston, .336 :

BretT. Kansas City , .333 ; Down i ng ,
California • .330 ; Le1cano , Milwaukee,

BASEBAU.
NEW YORK ( AP ) - Fred Lynn of
the Boston Red Sox was named the
American League Player of the Week
for Aug . 13-19.
Lynn, who leads the league in five
batting categories, and is among the
league-leaders in seven others, is in
contention for the AL nipie Crown .
He hit .522 during the week , with 12
hits in 23 at-bats, and raised his
season average to .3« . He also hit five home · runs, giving him 36 for the
season .

Sf . Louis, .329 , Winf ield, San Diego,
.321 ; Knight , Cincinnati, .320; Horner,

.328.
RUNS : Lynn, Boston, 97 ; Brett,

Atlanta , .319.
RUNS : Lopes, Los Angeles, 91 ;

Kansas City , 95 ; Rice, Boston , 93 ;
Baylor , Callforn ia, 91 ; Jones,Seattle,
89.
RBI : Baylor , Californ ia, 109 ; Lynn,

Hernandez , St. Lou is, 90; Moreno,
PitTsburgh ,
88 ;
Schm i dt ,
Philael£11phla , 86; Parker, Pinsburgh, ·
85 .

Rlc£1 , Boston, 162 ; Bell , Texas, 1.5.4 ;

Clark , San Francisco, 82 .

nla, 147.

Garvey ,

Boston , 105: Ri ce, B05ton, 101 ;
RBI : Kingman . Ch icago, 93 : Win·
Singleton. Baltimore, 94; Kemp, fi eld, San Diego, 91 ; Schm idt.
Detroit, 90.
Phil adelphia , 90: Hernandez , St.
HITS: Breit, Thomas City , 169 ; Louis, 84: Parker , Pittsburgh, 82:
Lynn, Boston. 149 : Lansford, Ca lifor ·

DOUBLES : Cooper, Milwaukee,
37; Brett, Kansas City , 36; Bell,
Texas, 34; Lyn'1, Boston , 33 ; Lemon ,

HITS : Templeton, St. Lou is, 165:
Los

Angeles,

161 ;

Her·

nandez, St.Louis, 160; Malthews,
At lanta , 159 ; Moreno, Pittsburgh , 153.
DOUBLES : Hernandu, St. Louis,

Chicago, 33. • .
36: Rose, Philadelphia, 35: Parkers,
TRl PLES : Breit, Kansas City, 16; Plltsburgh , 34; Cromartie, Montreal.
Molitor, Milwaukee, 12; Wilson , Kan · 32: Buckner, Chicago, 31 ; Reitz, St.
sas City, 11 ; Porter. Kansas City , 10: Louis, 31.
Randolph, New York, 9.
TRIPLES : Templeton, St. Louis,
HOME RUNS : Lynn, Boston, 36; 13 ; Mc Bride, Ph iladelphia, 11 ;
Rice, Boston, . 33: Singleton , Moreno, Pittsburgh , 10; Scolt, ·St.
Baltimore, 31 ; Thomas, Milwaukee,

Louis, 10; Dawson, Montreal, 9; Win·

30: Taylor, Californ ia, 28.•
. STOLEN BASES :•LeFiore, Detroit,
62; Wilson, Kansas City , 54 : Cruz ,
Sealtle, 34: Bonds, Cleveland , 29;
Bumbry, Baltimore, 28.
PITCHING 112 Decisions ): Davis,

field , San Diego, 9.
·
HOME RUNS : Kingman , Chicago,
39; Schmidt, Philadelphia, 39: Win·
field , San Diego, 27; Horner, Atlanta,
25 ; Lopes, Los Angeles, 25.
STOLEN BASES : Moreno, Pit·

New York. 10·2, .833, 3.19; Zahn, Min ·
nesota, 10·3, .769, 3.3S ; Drago, Boston,

50 ; Taveras, New York, 35 : Lopes,

9·3, .750, 3.13: Eckersley, Boston, 16·6,
.727, 2.75; John, New York, 16·6, .727,
2.91 : Caldwell, Milwaukee, 13·5, .722 ,
3.39; Clear, &lt;;alitornia, 10·4, .714, 3.12:
Kern, Te•as, 10·4, .714, 1.40.
STRIKEOUTS : Ryan , California .
177 ; Guidry, New York. 147 ;
Flanagan, Baltimore, 14&lt;!; Johnson,
Texa,,s, 141 ; Jenkins, Texas, 135.

returning, and as most ri the other
teams in the league know, Meigs is
rather already weU known for its
defense year in and year out.
Barring injuries, the other league
teams just might have difficulty fin ding paydirt against the Meigs defense.
Those starters back on defense include Tim Faulk at middle guard,
Dave Davis at tackle, and Robert
Parker at a defensive end. Then one
will lind Willford and 'junior Jerry
Fields at linebackers, and Dave
Hysell at a cornerback.
Dan Thomas will again be at a deep
back spot. Word has it that those boys
weren't satisfied with a second place
finish last year.
How about this for a problem -five
lettermen returning to the backfit!ld?
Sophomore quarterback
Bob
Ashley l"iU be calling the si8Jlil..~
again this season, and be built qui•
reputation for himself last year as a
freshman pall5er and runner.
Willford and Fields both carried
quite a few tacklers with thern as they
carried the pigskin through the line
last season.
ruck Blaettnar and Thomas both
are speedsters that a defense better
match. Although not a lettennan,
sophomore Roger Kovalchik is expected to see quite a bit of action as a
speedy tailback.
If there is a major weakness on this
year's squad, one might look at the of.
fensive tine .
Only two starters are back on the
tine, Tim Faulk and Parker. Both
have leadership qualities, and rio one
should be surprised if by the season
opener at Belpre on August 31 that
tine is beefed up and ready to go .
Those lettermen returning are
Ashley, Thomas, Blaettnar, Willford,
,fields, Chris Judge, Faulk, guard
ruck Basham, guard Todd Snowden,
Davis (also known as Miner), Parker,
and Hysell.
Barring injuries and with a beefed
up offensive line , fans might well be
pleased with what !bey see from the
Marauders this year.
A schedule and roster follow:
PLAYER
Poe.HLWtYr.
David Hoffman
QB ~10 150 10
Bob Ashley-x
QB 6-1 164 10
Greg Thomas
QB 5.{; 120 10
Dan Thomas-x
WB ~10 160 12
Chris Ingels
E fl.9 I&amp;:I 11
Tim Basham
TB H
1411 II
ruck Williamson QB $-10 1411 12
David Irmarelli
WB $-10 150 10
Rlck Blaettnar-x TB 6.0 178 12
Brian King
WB ~ 139 11
Todd Ead
FB ~10 1:i5 11
Greg Bush
FB ~10 160 10
Brent Sisson
WB ~10 145 10
Van Willford-I
WB IKl llrl 12
Jeff Wayland
E :&gt;-11 148 II
Dennis Thornton FB ~II 16:1 10
Jerry Fields·I
FB 6.0 205 II
Dan Hysell
FB 5-!1 125 10
Roger Kovalchik TB fl.9 170 10
ScottStout
C ~10 160 11
Chris Judge-x
c 5_10 160 11
John Morris
C ~10 160 11
Tim Fulk-x
c 6•1 180 12
Robert Nakamoto G G.O 185 10
Dave Harper
G 5.{; 150 12
ruck Basham-x
G &gt;a 1&amp;:1 12
Larry Byer
T ~ 11 196 11
Larry Cotterill
T fl.9 192 10
Mick Reed
T 6-l 175 10
Bill Powell
c ~11 169 10
ToddSnowden-x
G lh'l 210 12
Tom Schoonover
G &gt;a 183 11
ruchard Dean
T IKl 200 11
Dave Davis-x
T fl.9 265 12
Robert Harmon
T lh1 225 11
Mark Burson
G ~ 128 10
Mike Edwards
T ~10 I &amp;:I 10
Mark Boyd
T fl.9 170 10
RobinSlater
T IKl ~ 11
Robert Parker-x
G 6•1 185 11
KevinSmith
E lh'l 170 11
Brent Houdashelt E :HI 138 10
E &gt;II 11rl 12
Dave Hysell-x
Joe Powell
E fl.9 149 II
Brian SwaM
E !i-10 150 II
Randy Murray
E IKl 173 10
x- Denotes lettermen.

MARAUDER SCHEDULE
Aug. 31at Belpre
Sept. 7 Pt. Pleasant
Sept.l4 Wahama
Sept. 21 Open
Sept: 28 Logan
Oct. 5 at Wellston
Ocl.l2lronton
Oct. 19 at Jackson
Oct. 26 Waverly
Nov. 2at Athens
Nov. 9at Gallipolis.

MARAUDER CAPTAINS - Robert Parker (77),
left, and Van Willford (32) are flanking Meigs Head

Coach Charles Chancey in this Sentinel 5Jl4)11s photo.
Both will serve as captains for the 1979 squad.

Cincy loses, 5-2, Astros gain·
one game with 8-1 win
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Houston Astros have begun
what pitcher Joe Nlekro calls their
"biggest and most important" road
trip-of the season , and he says now is
the time w run for daylight.
Houston opened a three-game set in
New York Monday night with an ~1
victory over the Mets , snapping a
four-game losing streak. Niekro threw
a two-hitter and became the first 17game winner in the National League.
That victory, coupled with
Cincinnati's ~2 loss w Montreal,
allowed tbe Astros to open a 21'.!-game
lead over the Reds in the NL West
Division .
'
After the Mets series, Houston
moves to Philadelphia for three
games, then winds up its road trip in
Montreal with three games. The
Astros won't see the Astrodome again
until Aug. 31, when the Mets pay a
visit.
"We can 't just relax. at any time ,"

said Niekro, who walked t.hree and
fanned six. "We have to play like we
did early in the year. A couple of onerun victories will give us a better
mental attitude."
In the rest of the league, Pittsburgh
ouUasted San Francisco 6-5 in a raindelayed contest, the Chicago Cubs
edged Los Angeles 2-1 , Atlanta
downed Philadelphia ~2 and St. Louis
rallied w beat San Diego 6-3 .
Expos 5, Red 2
Larry Parrish lined two home runs
to left, and Tony Perez added a
wwering shot over the center field
wall to power the Expos to their fifth
straight vicwry.
Dan Schatzeder, 9-4 , won his fourth'
in a row with relief help from Scott
Sanderson and Woodie Fryman, who
got his seventh save.
Parrish now has 19 h&lt;roers on the
seailon, Perez 12. George Foster and
Johnny Bench homered for
Cincinnati .,Bench 's shot, No . 14 this

Sports briefs •••

.

By The Associated Press

TENNIS
TORONTO (AP) - Bjorn Borg of
Sweden set up a triple match point
with a fiery ace, then watched John
McEnroe hit a backhand long to beat
the young American ace lh'l, 6-3 in the
men 's singles fmal of the Canadian
Open tennis championships.
The match broke a Z.2 standoff
between the pair in matches this year
and evened their records lifetime.
McEnroe had held a 3-2 edge going
into match .
Borg, the top seed, earned $211,000
for his first place finish while
McEnroe woo $14,000.
CLEVELAND (AP) - Stan Smith
defeated llie Nastase 7~. 7-5 w
capture the $10,000 first prize in the
finals of the $50,000 International
Tennis Open Championships.
Smith also teamed up with Bob Lutz
wbeat Francisco Gonzales of Puerto
· ruco and Fred McNair lh'l, 6-4 for the
doubles crown.
MAHWAH, N.J . (AP) - Bettyann
Stuart upset 17-year-&lt;lld Pam Shriver.
1.0, 6-3, 7.0 In the first round of the
$75,000 Women's Tennis. Cup.
In other matches, sixth seeded
Virginia Ruzici of Romania defeated
Pam Teeguarden 6-3, 6-2; No.7 seed
Regina Mariskova of Czechoslovakia
ousted Barbara Potter 6-3, 6-4, and
Mirna Jausovec of Yugoslavia downed
Kathy May Teacher 6-2, S.l.
MASON, Ohio ( AP) - Harold
Solomon, second seeded, defeated
Joyn Austin 6-2, 6-1 , in the first round
of men's singles in the $200,000

Association of Tennis Professionals
Dlampionships.
Mexico's Raul Ramirez needed
three sets to beat Andrew Pattison,
Zimbaswe Rhodesia lh'l, 4-0, 6-1.
Third-seeded Brian Gottfried blasted
Dominique Bedel, France, 6-1 , S.l.
BROOKUNE, Mass. (AP) - Topseeded Jose Higueras of Spain scored
a 6-4 victory over Andy Kohlberg and
Dlris Lewis, 11th-seeded entry from
New Zealand eliminated countryman
Onny Parun 7.0, 6-3 in .the opening
round of the $175,000 U.S. Pro Tennis
&lt;llampionship.
In other matches, loth-seeded Hans
Gildemeister of Chile whipped Emilio
Montano of Mexico lh'l, 6-3 and Dean
Joubert of South Africa suprised
Australian Mark Edmondson &amp;.2, S.l.
GOLF
PLYMOUTH, Ind. (AP) - Sally
Little scored a ·one-stroke victory over
defending champion Pat Bradley in a
$100,000 Ladles Professional Golf
Association tournament.
Little sank a 4-loot putt for par to
finish the f&gt;4.hole tournament with an
S-under par 208. The victory was
worth $15,000 and boosted her season
earnings to $97,392. It was the second
victory this year for Little, a native of
South Africa who now lives in DaUas.
Bradley had a final round at 69.

year, tied Frank Robinson's club
I
record of 324 lifetime.
"We had our shots and just didn't
deliver," Reds Manager John
McNamara said. "Every game IS
crucial. We just picked up three
games on Houston. So we lost one.
That's all."
Pirates 6, Giants 5
Pinch runner /Jberto Lois scored
the winning run oo a passed baU by
catcher Mike Sadek in the eighth
inning, allowing the Pirates to
msintain a lead of two games over
Montreal and four over Chicago in the
NL West.
Pittsburgh tied the game for the
third time in the bottom of the fifth oo
John Milner's sacrifice fly, ~d a halfinning later, the game was delayed by
rain for 3 hours 42 minutes.
Jack Clark had given the Gi1111ts a !i4 lead In the top of the fifth with his
24th home nm of the sea~n. Stargell
homered for the Pirates, his 23rd.
Cubs Z, Dodgers 1
Barry Foote hits his secood homer
in two games, and Lynn McGlothen
doubled and scored to pace the CUbs w
their fifth straight victory. Bruce
Sutter pitched the ninth and got his
32nd save, breaking the club record of
31 in 1965 by Ted Abernathy and
equaled by Sutter In 1977.
busty Baker's 17th homer of the
season, off McGlothen in the eighth,
provided the Dodgers with their only
run.
The NL record for saves is 37 by
Clay Carroll and Rollie Fingers, and
the major league mark of 38 was set
by John Hiller.
"I don 't ·worry about the nwnber of
saves," Sutter said. "WIIU1ing is
important."

Braves 5, Pblls 2
Phil Niekro picked up his 16th
victory of the year, and AU1111ta
rallied for three runs in the ninth to
beat the Phils . Jerry Royster's
sacrifice Oy snapped a .Z.2 tie, then
Jeff Burroughs drove iii two mtire
runs with a single.
·
Niekro, who also has lost 16, pitched
eight innings before Gene Garber .
finished up, getting his 20th save.
Cards 5, Padres 3
St.lDuis dealt San Diego Its seventh
straight loss with two runs lil the sixth
and three more in the seventh, two oo
a single by Ken OberkfeU. Bernie
Carbo and Tony Scott each drove in
runs in the seventh, and Carbo added
another RBI hit in the seventh off
Gaylord Perry.
Silvio Martinez, 11.0, scattered nine
hits for the victory.

BASTION OF
FREEDOM OF CHOICE

hburgh , 55 ; North , San Francisco,

Los Angeles, 34; Scott , St.Louis, 33.
PITCHING 112 Decisions) : Tidrow,
Chicago, 10·3. .769, 2.61 : Romo, Pit·
lsburgh, 10·3, .769, 2.38; Bibby, Pit·
tsburgh , 9·3, .750, 2.87 ; LaCoss, Pll·
tsburgh, 10 · 4, · .714 , 3.71 ;
Niekro,Houston, 1J.7, .708, 3.01 ;
Schatzeder, Montreal, 9·4, .692, 3.02;
Seaver, Cincinnat i, 11 ·5, .688, 3.19.
STRIKEOUTS : Richard, Houston,
NATIONAL LEAGUE
222; Niekro, Atlanta , llll ; Carlton,
BATTING (325 al bats) : Her · .. Philadelph ia. 147 :_ Blvl~ven, Pit·
nandez, St . Louis, .341 : Templeton , tsburgh , 134; Perry, San0Jego,l32.

MEIGS TIRE CENTER
RECAPPED - NEW TIRES

STOCKED WELL
IN ALL SIZES

REGULAR, MUD TREAD,
PASSENGER, TRUCKS, RV's

Here; at The Insurance Store,
we ' re free to sell you what you really need!
Some in s u r~ n ce agenls oil er the policies o f a single insurance
company. And 1ha1's okay. Every good insurance company
of fers policies that provide cxce llcnl benefit s 10 many people.
Bu t here al The In sura nce S10re we offer more.
We are independe111 agents. Thai means we arc free to review
and recommend I he po li ~ ie s , coverages and services
o f 11111111' leading companies . .. like The Cominentallnsurance
Co mpanies, for example. So yo u have a better
chance to gel !he in surance proicciion thai exactly fil s
yo ur special requirements.

SEE US BEFORE YOU BU'("

MEIGS TIRE .
CENTER, INC.

·ai,

\·:

Meigs has strong leadership, 12lettermen

214 E. MAIN ST.

I

Mgr.
Next to Krogers

Jolin Fultz,

992·2109

Pomeroy,o.
.....

•

"'

POMEROY, I'

"2·51 30 or "2·51lt

·-·-- -:~,-

"YOU DON'T BUY A POLICY
YOU HIRE AN AGENT" '

_ _ _......;.;,..;.:,;.;;;..;,;;,;,:~:.:._-~-J

�.-

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Aug. 21, 1979

small but a powerful voice

Stella Parton
Meigs Cow1lians have not had a
chance to say '' Hello, Dolly, " but
Thursday night they did give a big
greeting to Stella - Dolly Parton 's
younger sister. ·
Stella , a complete switch in her
naturalness from Dolly with her wigs
and elaborate costwning, was
greeted with enthusiasm as she
moved on stage to appear at the
Meigs County Fair. Some of the fans
who packed the grandstand or sat on
the race track clapped along in
rhythm while others sang along as
Stella belted out their favorite country tunes . Stella i.nvited fans to take
pictures and willingly signed
autographs.
While Meigs Countians apparently
liked Stella on stage, they would have
found her even more likeable behind
the scenes.
A real down-t&lt;Hlarth person, Stella
in no way depends upon the successful
career of her sister, Dolly, as a
springboard for her own ambitions
and it 's obvious that she has no plans
to adopt the gimmicks of Dolly to
enhance her career.
"We're friends but our careers are
totally separate," Stella commented
in an informal interview at the dining
table of Mrs. Lucille Leifheit before
the Thursday night show.
Unlike ·many performers, Stella
said she had no pre--show "butterflies" Thursday evening before
going on stage.
"I know my show, " she sal·d.
Much smaller than she appears on
stage - without those high heels Stella is a delight to interview. She
frankly admits that she tires of the
steak dinners on the road.
. "I like to get back home where I can
fish and make !ned talers and corn·
bread," she remarked in a soft, easy

GIRL WINNERS - These are the Beven pretty
babies selected as girl winners in the annual pretty
baby contest staged Saturday at the Meigs County Fair
Wlder the sponsorship of the Middleport Business and
·Professional Women's Club. Each Winner received a $6
gift certificate from Elberfeld's and each contestant
received a blue ribbon. From the left are Julia Ann
King, birth to three months, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Dano King, RuUand ; Cynthia Renee Hawkins three to
six months , daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R~ald E .

t
.._
"
--- - - ·"'- • ,
STELLA PARTON, sister of world famous Dolly Parton, chats with
Mrs. Lucille Leifheit, Meigs fair board member, Thursday evening
before going on stage at the Meigs County Fair. Stella used Mrs.
Leifheit' s home near the fairgroWJds for a short time to change and
prepare for her grandstand attraction sl!ow.

"STELLA'S FELLAS" setting up for her Thursday

Opera concert slated Sunday

...

.....

'-

....
••••

be "The Last Rose of Summer,"
"Beautiful Dreamer," "Sum·
mertime," "Indian Love Call," and
"Till There Was You." Admission is
free and the public is cordially in·
vited.
Miss Turner is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Wayne Turner, Rutland,
and will be visiting with them until
the end of August. She has made her
home in Milan, Italy for the past 15
years, where she ~eaches voice.

When Miss Turner returns to Italy,
she will begin her sixth season with
Swiss· Italian Radio at Lugano, where
she records regularly. She will also
face a phonograph recording session.
She plans to spend about two more
years in Italy before she returns to
the United States, to reside in New
York City.
Accompanying Miss Turner at Sun·
day's concert will be Jane Wise ,
Rutland.

OMo
State
4-H
projects
named
here
•••••
,
. , tl

RECEIVES HONORS FOR PER·
FORMANCE- Terri Lynn Johason,
Mason, recently received first place
honors for her piccolo solo per·
formance at the West VIrginia State
4-H Round-up held lit Jackson's Mlll.
Her winning selection was titled
"Sonata In F Major for Piccolo"
composed by G. P. Telemann.
Before participating In the state
finals, Ms. Johnson competed In the
lnstrumental solo division at both
county and area levels. Johnson Is
president of the Four Corners 4-H
Club In Mason County and will be a
senior at Wahama High School. Sbe
Is also a member of the Wahama
Marcblng Falcon and Concer1 Bands
In which she plays both flute and pic·
colo. Sbe Is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Dana V. Johnson, Mason, W.
Va.

Roush-Etlwards
,ynunzon held
I t:t

The descendants of John and Amanda Aumiller Roach Strauther and
Nancy Gibbs Edwards held their an·
nual reunion at the Hartford Corrlmunity Building on Saturday August
4.
•
Those in attendance were Mr. and
Mrs. Stephen-Johnson, Valerie, Amy
Brooke, Stephen, Mrs. Nellie Schools,
Pl. Pleasant.
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Stewart Tim
Nancy, Mrs. Donna Grinstead: Mrs:
Dolly Turnbull, Mason; Mr. and Mrs.
Strawford Ohlinger, Mt. Alto; Mrs.
Helen Spears, Cheshire; Mrs. Amelia
Roach, Mr . and Mrs. Charles Kearns ,
Mrs. Joyce Zerkle, Stewart and
J ames , Hartford; Mrs. Bessie
Ohlinger, Mandy, Joshua, Steven and
Chris Miller, Dale Roach and David,
New Haven.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ohlinger,
John , Tammy, Robert Jeff, Bobby
Joe, Mr. and Mrs. Donald Zerkle,

The 1979 Ohio State Fair 4-H foods
project participants from Meigs
CoWlty were Kris Snowden interna.
' do you
tiona!
foods; Rhonda Jeffers,
thing with food; Denise White, teens
entertain; Kila Young, plain white
yeast breads; Bill Dyer, tricks for
treats; Linda Riggs, quick meals;
and Mary Colwell, special yeast
breads .
Those receiving grand champions
reserve champions, and honorabl~
mentions in foods were: Greta Ken·
nedy ; grand champion; Amy Connolly ' reserve champion; Lori Lea Burke
and Delani Baker, honorable men·
tions in foods to take and share ; Bill
Dyer, grand, and Jodie Schake!
reserve champion in tricks for treats:
Rhonda Jeffers, grand champion and
Kim Eblin, reserve, do your thing
with food ; Denise Stegall, grand
champion, malting it with meals.

Linda Riggs, grand champion
~nya Wise, reserve champaion; ~
Birchfield, honorable mention, and
Dorua- Crane, honorable mention
quick meals; Beth Ritchie, grand
champion, Aprtl Parker, reserve, tas·
ty meals; Terrie Starcher, grand
Michele Barr, reserve, and Amy
Louks and Chris Black, honorable
mention, all-American foods; Kris
Snowden, grand, in foods with international flavor ; Denise White, grand
champion; ' Lisa Collins, reserve
Tammie Starcher, Pam Murphy, and
Kila Young,. honorable mentions
teens ~ntertain; Kila Young, grand:
Tanurue Starcher, reserve, and
Becky Eichinger, honorable mention
bread, plain white ; Beth Ritchie'
grand , and Mary Colwell reserv~
champion, bread special. '
Rhonda Jeffers. grand, Kris

Snowden, reserve, and Oixie Eblin ,
Rocky Pitzer, honorable mentions,
outdoor cookery I; Denise White,
grand, and Tammie Starcher,
reserve, outdoor cookery IT; Cindy
Pitzer, grand, teri Pullins, reserve,
and Carrie Karr, honorable mention ,
preserve and serve I ; and Cindy
Pitzer, grand, Brenda Calaway.
reserve, preserve and serve II.

ton, w. Va.; Mr. and Mr~. Don
Lemaster, Donnie and Becky, !:'lew
Cwnberland, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
James Dobson, Brad, Sandra, Sharla
and Sarma, New Cwnberstown, 0 .;
Miss Leslie and Donnie Longsworth,
Wichita, Kansas; Mrs. Therma
Hickenbottom, New Cwnerstown ;
Mr. and Mrs. Joe LaFranboise,
Plymouth, Mich. ; Col. and Mrs.
Thorne Longsworth and son, Paul,
Omaha, Neb. Mr. and Mrs. William
Cornell, Racine; Mrs. J&lt;;sther West,
Racine, Robert Dobbin, Lincoln, R.I.,
CharlieDobbins,Newport,R. I.; Sara
Hagearty of West Hartford, Conn. ;
John McSwegin and son Paul New
Manchester, W. Va.; al.d M~. and
Mrs. Gordon West and Rhonda, John
and Melody , Racine .

~ he

Alice M. Roach, Ottie Roach, Mrs.
Rlchard Johnson, Mrs. Stella John·
son, Mrs. Linda Illle, Donna and
Debra, Mrs. Mona Gibbs, Mr. and
Mrs. Sunny Gibbs, Rex, Ethel Louise
Gibbs. Letar1.

night performance at the Meigs County Fair.

The group's vehicle developed
mechanical problems before the
Meigs County appearance and as a
result Mrs. Lucille Leifheit, genial
fair board member who resides just
at the edge of the fairgrounds , opened
her home to Stella and her "fel)as " so
they could get into their costumes.
Seated at Mrs. Leifheit's dining
table, Stella was completely relaxed,
cordial, pleasant and a real down to
earth gal during the informal in·
terview. The only real problem was

Markins reunion held
A reunion of the descendants of Buddy of Northup·; Mr. and Mrs. John
Amanda and Singleton Markins was A. Dean, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Reed,
held Sunday at Forest Acres Park Robert, Jr. and Charles, Mr. and Mrs.
·John Walter Dean, Jeremy and
new Rutland.
Those attending were Mr. and Mrs. James. Pomeory ; Mrs. Betty Sayre,
Kenneth Mark.ins, Racine ; Mr. and Racine ; Mr . and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Eldon Markins, Carpenter; Mrs. Bruce Markins and Misty, Carpenter ;
Alma Wood, Racine; ~r . and Mrs. Mr . and Mrs. Gary Welch, Miss Lori
F'rank Markins and daughter, Welch and Bill Burbridge, PageviUe,
Charoletta, and children, Annetta and and Miss Kathy Rupe, Carpenter.
Afternoon visitiors were Mr . and
Mrs
. Robert Reid , Mrs. Virginia
·
Smith and son. Joshua , Pataskala .

BOY WINNERS - These are the winners of the
boys division of the annual pretty baby contest held
Saturday afternoon· at the Meigs CoWlty Fair. From
the left are Ricky Hoover, Jr. , son of Mr. and Mrs. Rick
Hoover, Middleport, 0 to three months ; Andy Myers ,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Tom Myers , Pomeroy, three to six
months ; Matthew Blair Ault , son of Mr. and Mrs. Den·

Turns six

nis Ault, Pomeroy ; six to 12 months; Rex Howard
Oleadle III, son of Mr. and Mrs. Rex Clteadle, Jr.,
Albany, 12 to 18 months ; Anthony Gibbs, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Gregg Gibbs, Middleport, 18 months to two years ;
Ryan Backus, son of Vicky Vackus, Route 3, Pomeroy,
two to three years, and Joshua Cain Hail, son of Mr.
lilld Mrs. Jack Hail , Route I, Rutland, three to four
years .

Announce birth
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
E. Sellers, Wildflicker, Gennany , are
announcing the birth of a daughter,
Samanths Lynn , at the Pleasant
Vailey Hospital, Wednesday. The

baby weighed ~ even pounds, Mr. and
Mrs. Curtis Roush, Pomeroy, Mrs.
Adda Rowe, Racine, and Gerald .
Sellers, Middieport, are the grand·
parents.

. Jane Johnson received her 75-pound
nbbon at the Mason Slinderella Class
meeting last week. Madaline Johnson
lost the most weight for the week . At
the Middleport ·class, four new
members were welcomed. Donna
Guinther lost the most weight and
Judy King was the runner-up . T,;,enty
pound ribbons were presented to Elva
Dailey and Marjorie Hoffner. In~
formation on the Slinderella Classes
may be obtained from Jo Ann
Newsome, 992-3382.

REVIVAL SLATED
The Put God F irst youth group of
the Bradbury Church of Christ will
sponsor a revival on Aug. 31, Sept. I
and 2 at the church with .Ronald
Overholser of Cincinnati portraying
the life of Saul of Tarsus. Services will
be held at 7:30 each evening. The
publi c is invited.

Now phones are much more than Just sornctl11ng
to ta lk on They've become an mtegral part of today's
home decorat1ng schemes. So you should choose your
phones as carefully a' yotJ wotJid ~ new lamp or rug
And the GTE Phone Mart makes 1t poss1ble
to do JUS I that
There you can hold up dozens of beaut1ful
phone styles and colors aga1nst your
wallpJper sample or fabnc swatches or pa1nt
ch1ps. to see 1f 1t's exactly whilt you wan t
Then when you do p•ck your favontes.
you can JUSt take them home w1th you
So next nme you feel 1n sp~red. come
p1ck out some new accent p1eces at the
GTE Phone Mart . lt's a whole new way to
see you r pho ne company

SUPERIORS

SUPERIORS

POLISH SAUSAGE ......... ~~:.99~ FRANK IES .................. !~.o:. 99¢
SUPERIORS .

CHUNK BOLOGNA • ••••••••• 79~ CUBE STEAK ... ~ ........... :~·.H$2
LB.

DAIRY
BROUGHTON

BUTTERMILK .......'......... Y~. ~~.~.. 89~
BROUGHTON

•

ICE MILK ....................... ~~..~~~ .. s1 19

5TH AVE. CANDY BARS ................................. ~.~.~~.~ ... 89~
SMALL GRADE A EGGS ..................................~~~.~.... 43~
PAPER TOWELS.........................................~~~~~~.~~~~ ...49~

ICE CREAM .................... :~.~~~.}l 29

PORK-N-BEANS........................................... }~.~.~~~~ .. 3Pl00
FAVORITE BREAD ............ ,....................~~..~~.~.~~.~~~ .. 4/$100

VALLEY BELL

MISTER BEE

ICE MILK BARS ............. ~~g... sp9

POTATO CHIPS.............................................~.~~. . ~~: ...... 79~

LEGA L NOTICE

ALL STAR

SCOT lAD

Publi c Uti li ties Com·

CHOC. MILK DRINK ....... ~~~:...s1 29

SALTINES .........................................:........... ~:~~·..~~~ ...... 49c

'
VALLEY BELL

SQUEEZE-A-SNAK ...........~. ~~·..~~~ .~~~~.~ .·~~~~~~. ~~~~~~..... 79c

Put a new Phone
in your I ife.

m ission of Ohio has sched-

uled ior hearing Case No .
78-1438·EL·AIR , b2ing In
th e Matter oi th e Appl i·
cat ion of Columbu s and

VALLEY BELL FESTIVAL

1/2

BUITERMILK

So uthe rn Ohio El ec tri c
Com pan y f o r an Increase

GAL

89c

area . On Monday, September 10, 1979, a public
heari ng will be held at
9 :30 A.M , at the offices
oi the Commission , 180
Ea st
Broad
Street,
Columbu s. Ohio . At that

FOR THE BEST DEALS IN THE
. TRISTATE AREA

MASON FURNil'URE
~OPEN

be afforded an

MARCAL

Herman Grate

1

773 · 5592

Mason, W.va.

-

SUPER MARKET- OPEN DAILY 9 TO 10 P.M.
SUNDAY 10 TO 10
\

'279

?.PAK 16 01.
BTLS.

'I)

16 West Washington, Athens

DOZ.

RC OR
DIET RITE
COLA

8 PAK

THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISSION OF OHIO
By :
David M. Polk .
Secretary.

CANNING JARS

FACIAL TISSUES ................................... ~.~?.~~: .~.~~....... 39~

t est1m ony.

EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONLY •

REG •

.

COKE

oppor·

LB. 39~

KRAFT

tun ity to ' p rese nt public

Mon. , Tues ., Wed., Friday &amp; Sat.
8:30 to 5 :00 Thursday till12 Noon

PEACHES

•

ALL Wf~K

time intereSted part ies Wi ll

FRESH

PlAIN WHITE

Service in its entire service

MASON FURNITURE

Bonnie Lieving

Receives ribbon

in th e Rates to be Charged
and Collected lor Electric
SHOP

sponsored by the Middleport Business and
Professional Women 's Club and had 134 entries. Mrs.
Janet Korn was general chairman and announcer for
the event and Mrs. Lucille Leifheit is the fair board
member serving as superintendent of the contest. The
Elberfeld Department Store provided $6 gift certificates for ea·ch winner.

Sherri Might was queen for the
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Lieving gave a
week when the Rutland TOPS Club supper for their daughter, Bonnie, on
metatthe club room Tuesday.
her sixth birthday Thursday, August 2
Runner-up to the queen, all based at their home. The cake was baked by
on weight .loss, was JoAnn Eads. ~. Bonnie with the help of her sister,
Might was presented a dollar aii8 Vickie. Cake and ice cream were sermembers .sang in her honor. Weight ved by Vaierie Lieving.
loss for the week was 13 pounds, with
She received several gifts from
weight gain for the week being 24 Mrs. Alma Hesson, Mrs. Katie Root,
pounds, showing a net gain of II New Haven; Mr. and Mrs. Orland
pounds for the 17 members weighing LaRue, Nitro, W. Va.; Mrs. Don Me·
in.
Coy, Pl. Pleasant; Mr. and Mrs. Den·
Cindy Krautter presided at the nis Guess and son, Jason, Logan, W.
meeting with the secretary and Va .; her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
treasurer's reports being given. Ar· Leo Clark, Vickie and Valerie
rangements were made to purchs Lieving; her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
purchase a new set of scales.
Bill Lieving.
All wished her many more happy
birthdays.

that she had forgotten to bring her
hats and feels that the hats are a
" must " for her performance:
However, Deputy Sheriff Keith Wood
loaned her his "lid" for the first few
nwnbers of her performance so ail
went well.
Asked about her famous sister,
Dolly, and the possibility of her
copying some of Dolly's approaches
to stardom, Stella indicated that
she 'II do it her way.
"There 's room for Stella Parton,
too," she remarked .

Why you should
bring your wallpaper to the
GTE Phone Mart.

Longsworth reunion held locally ·
The Longsworth reWlion was held
on Aug . 5 at the summer home of Mr.
and Mrs. Gordon West, Racine.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. W. E.
Longsworth of Charleston, W. Va. ;
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Longsworth,
Steven and Mary, Winchest.er, Va.;
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Longsworth
and son, Blanc, Plymouth, Mich.; Mr.
and Mrs . Frank Longsworth
Brecksville, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. Dal~
. Longsworth, New Comerstown; Mr.
and Mrs. Brian Longsworth and son,
Jefrey, Dayton; John Longsworth,
Racme; Mr. and Mrs. Charles Dobb1ns, Pawtucket, R. 1.; Jolm Hagear·
ty, West Hartford, Conn.; James Dobbins, Raleigh, N. C.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul McSwegin, New
Cwnberland, W. Va .; Mr. and Mrs.
Roy Posey, Leeann and Kathy , Weir·

ROYALTY presented prizes to the winners of the
pretty baby contest at the Meigs Fair Saturday af.
ternoon . Making the presentations were I to r, Cindy
Pitzer, junior fair queen; Amber Cwnings,.daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Rex Cumings, Syracuse, Little Miss
Meigs County; Jacob Shain Hall, son of Mr. and Mrs.
JacJ Hall, RuUand, Little Mister Meigs CoWlty, and
Ralph Jordan . Meigs Junor Fair King . The contMt was

·yaps meets

drawl.
Ste-lla, in the short time she has noted during her Thursday night perSinging since she was nine years before going on stage before each per· fonnance . If you caught her Saturday
old, Stella considers it a great com· formance , learns all she can about the night appearance on the "Hee Haw
plirnent that people come to see her locality. At Rock Springs Thursday Show" you probably detected that apon stage. She will play 250 days this ' rught, she was studying a Meigs COWl· parently on television the "mover "
year across the country and these ty Fair premium book. She gauges bit is removed either vo!Wltari!y or
engagements will include 70 fairs. her dialogus on such backgroWJd in· otherwise from her nwnbers. UnStella considers fairs the least formation and Thursday she was doubtedly, the "mover " routine
glamorous of her appearances but she making notes on the palms of her han· enhances her appearances.
Stella is backed by four musicians
loves the performer-audience ds apparently for local references
which, in her country drawl, she tags
relationship and feels thai the feed· during her performance.
back from audiences is vital to her as
Stella is not a dancer. As she puts it, "Stella's FeUas" during her stage ap·
, a singer.
she's a ~~mover," as you no doubt pearances.

Marilyn Turner, a visitittg opera
singer and opera teacher, formerly of
Rutland, will present a public concert
at 3 p.m. Sunday at the Meigs Junior
High School in Middleport.
· . Miss Turne,r has studied classical
music in Italy, and also at the Cin·
cinnati Conservatory of Music and the
Manhattan School of Music in New
York.
Some highlights of the program will

Hawkins, Middleport ; Anastasia Shuler, six to 12 months, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Shuler, Middleport;
Amy Young,12 to !Bmonths, daughter of Mr. and Mis.
Edward Young, Pomeroy; 18 months to two years,
Tabitha D. Large , daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James
Large , Langsville; two. to three years, Jackie Allsha
Bacon, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Bacon, Middleport, and Aimee Beth Mills, daugbter of Mr. and
Mrs. Randy Mills, Syracuse, three to four yeal'!l.

We

Federal Food Stamps-

lhe

',

Right To Umit Quantities

Plus Tax
'

~

99 e
Qept.

29

�ftfl\l~ fji}'ft ~ THATICIWIILEDWOIIOOAIIE
~ ~ ~~ byHonrfAmotd
LH

DICit TRACY ·
6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Aug. 21. 1979
SAY

Your Best Buys Are Found in the Sentinel Classifieds
Help Wanted

WANT AD
CHARGES

l A DY

lSWotdt:; or Under
r;~sh

I dav
2daYs

J ctays
6 days

C1utt~l'

1.00

1.25

1.50
1 80
3.00

1.90
2.25
3.75

f.J~ch worrt ll\ 'I'T I~ mmimum
IS words i~ 4 ccnl:i per word per

da)'. Ad., runnin ~ other than con-

S(!('utive da~· s Will bf rhar,l!ed ;ll

tht I day rate
In m emor~· . Card nf Thanks

;md Obi tua ry . r, l'en l~ per word,
S.1.00 mm irnum . Cash in ad-

N EE D S

ride

to

YAR D SAlE at Jam es Swain' s
McDortold's in Gal lipolis . Willon CR 28 above Eastern Hig h
ing to ~ha r e ex penses . To be
School. July 13 and 1-4 from 9
there 9-5. 992-2576 offer 6pm . · to? Every thing imoginoble .
B.._BYSITT ER NEEDED in Raci ne
BACK TO schoo l yard sole.
or eo . 9Aq· 2862 .
IO,.•;,s. 2nrl . M i ddleport .
DEPENDABLE BABYS I TTE R in
my home. 5 day s a week .
7-4:30 pm . 2 chi ldren. 18 mo.
and '1 mo. References requ ired , fTlUSf
have
own
tra nspor ta t ion . Denise Wo lfe.

9.9.2377 .

SOMEONE TO put up ha y on
shares . 9-49 -2531 evening s.

n t lll't'.

Mobitt• Homt• sail'S and Ya rd
setlcs a re at·rcpted only 'A1l h

cash w1th ordl'r. ~ce n t l'harge
for &lt;~tis ca rry injo!; Bcx Numbu In
C)tn· of The Sentinel .
The Publis ht'r reserves th L

riWH to edit tlr re ject an;· ads
det&gt; med objretion al. The
Publi shN will not tw• rl!sponsibll'
for mort' thHn unl' im·orrl'Ct in-

CHIP WOO D . Poles mo»e .
-d iameter 10" o n largest end.
$12 per ton . Bundled slab. Sl 0
per ton . De livered to Ohio
Pollet Co., Rt . 2. Pomeroy .

'1'12·2689

Phon I' 9!11-2156

OLD FURNITURE . ice boxes .
bras s beds , ir on beds , desks,
etc., comp lete households.
Write M .D . Miller, Rt . 4,
Pomeroy or coll992-776q .

NOTICE

OLD COINS . pocket watches ,
cl ass rings , wedding bonds ,
diamonds . Gold or silver. Call
J . A . Wamsley , 742-2331 ,

sert ion

WANT-AD
A_DVERTISING
DEADLINES
Mondtl\'

Noun on St~tll rd ar
1'4l'Sd UI'

thru t~n &amp;1 y
1 P.M.
the d:~y be fon • pu blica tion

Suntlil )'
1 P.M.
Fr id a~· &lt;J ftPrmvm

Notices
GUN SHOOT , EVERY FRIDAY
7,30 PM RACINE GUN ClUB.
FACTORY CHOKE GUNS ONlY.
MEIGS COUNTY HUMANE
SOCIETY . 992. 6260 . Pots
ovo iloble for adopt ion and informa tion service .

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

OH . 678·1980.

ANTIQUES , FURNITURE. gloss.
chino, anything. See or call
Ruth Gosney , antiques. 26 N .
2nd.,
Middlepo rt ,
OH .

'1'12·3161 .

Pets for Sale
HOO F~ HOllOW, English and
Western .
Saddles
and
harness. Horses and ponies .
Ruth Reeve,. . 614-696 -3290.
Ba rding &amp; Riding lessons and
Horse Care products.

RISING STA~ Kennel.
d ing: Coll367-0292 .

Boor·

AKC REGISTERED bo•er pup-

PY· $12S . 6 weel&lt;s old.
9'12-2726.
FEMAlE AKC reg. poodle .
White . Phone 985-3803.

block , tr ont and rear spoilers,
cowl hood , mu ch more. A - 1
cond ition . inside and ou t.

A ugu st , 1, 2, 3.

3 . rSport

3S m.p.g. S•900. 7•2-21•3

YARD SALE ston ing August
20-25 . Time 9 · 5 each day .
, herything yo u
need for
school.
jeans ,
sweaters ,
blouses , shoes and all kinds of
what--nots . Actdress 1855 Front
St ., Middleport , OH .
FOUR FAMILY Fri. . Aug . 24. 9
am . 1635 lincoln Hts .,
Pomeroy. lots of furniture .
adult and children's clothes ,
crib , dishes, Craftsman edge r,
misc. Rain date, Sat .
THREE FAM'Il Y Yard Sale.
August 23 and 2-4 . Hutd'lison
Sub-Di vision. Rutland . Nicinsky residence . W inter and
summer cloth ing . Two studded snow tires and misc .
YARD SALE . Seth residence ,
lincoln Hill . Pomeroy . Thursday only 9-5.
YARD SALE . Wed . 22 , Thurs .
23 , Fri. 24 . lots of children' s
clothes. Time from 9 -6. Corner
of College
and
Loc ust ,
Rutland .

pack age . low
mil eage. Ru st proo fed . 27 to

303- 675- 1501 or 305·675-2488
or 30-4·675· 1553.
1976 TRANS AM . 400 engine.
Make offer. 992-5032 . 796 S.
3rd Ave ., M iddleport.

1978

VW DASHER . 12.100
G oad gas mil&amp;age.

3().1·882,-'-2:2:::;
52:.:_.- - - - 1976 PlYMOUTH . VOlAR E. 2·
door. Maroon w ith white vinyl
top . radial tires , power steerIng, power brakes . slant six
engine, good gas mileage.
29.000 miles . Good condition .

Phone2?2-3i98.
GMC BUS camper. Fully selfcon ta i ned. $500. 992-7378 .

SALON .

low

1969 DODGE DART. 4·daar,
new pa int , new tires, $600.
Potatoes. $8 per hundred.
Pigs, 7 weeks old, S20 each.
Strow
$1 . 25
per
bole .

98S-41Q.I .

For Rent
COUNTRY MOBilE Home Pork ,
Route 33, north of Pomeroy.
lorg~ lots. Call992-7-479.

Answer line
~

furnished

opts.

9'12-5.:J.&lt;.

new discovery ?''
ANSWERline : No . The fi rst
treatise on the nature of diseases

By Mrs. Franclli Morris
Mr. and Mrs. Don Wadsworth and
Dorothy Sayre of Philadelphia, Pa .,
other relatives and many friends
came for funeral services for Ollie
Mae Cozart, August 11, at the First
Baptist Church.
Mr. and Mrs. John Fisher brought
her fathe r, Henry Roush, home after
a visit with them. Mr . Fisher returned
borne and Mrs. Fisher remained for
awhile. Mr. Roush entered O'Bleness
Hospital , Athens, and underwent eye
surgery Monday and returned home
Wednesday.
Mr. and Mrs . Ralph Webb were
honored for their 48th wedding anniversary with a 6 o'clock diMer
Thursday, Aug. 9 at the home of Mrs.
Grella Simpson. Others sharing in the
celebration were Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Badgley, Helen Simpson, Vera
Beegle , Rev . and Mrs. Don Walker
and Teresa Shuler.
Mr . and Mrs. James Snodgrass and
·son have moved from the Dale
Cleland property to their new home in
Rutland .
Legirj,ll Hart returned home after
spending a week with her uncle and
aunt, Mr . and Mrs. James Brace and
family at Crown City.
Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie Grinun of
Florida are spending two weeks with
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Roderick

•

M, . and Mrs. Edison Brace and
Mrs. Pearl Adams visited Donald
Haddox at Greenup, Ky.
Mr. and Mrs. Crill Bradford, Jr. of
Worthington and her mother, Mrs.
James Dougan of Gahanna spent
Saturday with Mr. and Mrs. Crill
Bradford, Sr.
Mr. Earl Hart went to Florida with
' Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Hart.
Mr. and Mrs. Wiley Ours, Mr . and
Mrs. Mark Yoachim and daughter
spent the weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Ours at Columbus.
Mrs . Vernon Harrison and
daughter, Sherrie, of Columbus came
to the home of her parents, Mr. and ·
Mrs. Blythe Theiss, to attend the
funeral of her cousin, Mrs . Mary Lou
Wolfe.
Mr . and Mrs. Bud Simpson of
Seymour, Ind . spent several days
with his mother, Mrs. Gretta Simpson .
-,
Mr. and Mrs. 'Delbert Morris of .
Athens visited Mrs. Ura Morris and
Mr . and Mrs. Clifford Morris Sunday
afternoon .
Miss Wilma Rose of Columbus is
spending two weeks with Mr. and
Mrs. Ward Sayre and is visiting her
aunt , Mrs. Mildred Wolfe, at
Pinecrest Care Center, Gallipolis,
who wiU observe her 91st birthday
Aug. 20.

SENIOR CITIZENS , 1 bedroom

Grimm.

I

" :-:.;..~-

Sm~h

*

NelsQn

Motors, Inc.
Ph. 992 -2174

Pomeroy

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING
Federal Housing &amp;
Veter•ns Admin . ·LNns.
CAPTAIN EASY
&amp;A9Y!'... WHAT
WA'5 THAT ODD
NOISe I HEARD
.JU9T THEN l ...
EA5-Y! Al&lt;.e
'{OIJ THERS
ll '

Hours9-1 M., W., F.
Other times by. oppolntment. .
107 Syc•more IRHrl
Pomeroy, 0.

WHA'T PR. .J'EI&lt;YL./..
THAT'9 5TRANG5 ...

HE' '5EE'M5 TO HAV5
HUNG UP ON ME!

FURNISHED APT . 3 rooms and
bath. Yard . downstairs. Call
bewteen 4 and 6 pm .

992·1937.
TRAILER. ONE adult only .
'1'12·3181.

216 E. Second Street

WANT IT SOLD - Com pact 2 bedroom home
neatly

for

cared

in

Pomeroy . A good
starter or ret irement
home with large extra

lot. Just $25,000.
COUNTRY HOME -

For Sale
liMESTONE.

automatic F .A. furnace,

sand .

gravel, calcium chlor ide-, fer·
tilizer , dog food , ond all types
of salt. El(cersior Salt Works,
Inc ., E. Main St., Pomeroy.

new bath, large kitchen

MONTGOMERY

J&amp;L BlOWN
INSUlATION ,.
VINYL AND
AWMINUM SIDING

TRAILER SALES

elnsulotlon
• Storm Doors
• Storm Wlndowo
• Replocement
Windows
eGutterund
Down Spouts
FrH Estlmltes
JAMES KEESEE
Phone "2-2772
8-17-1 mo.

"51 mo

bedroom

POTATOES AT the C.W. Proffitt Fa r m . Portland OH . Prices
chang~t day to day w ith the
market .

and 2 porches. $18,500.
FAMILY HOME - 3

HARDWARE

STOVE SAlE. GAS·WOODCOAL . BIG REDUCTION IN
PRICE .
LATE
SEASON
specials :
Vermeer 605 Super C Baler ,
$500 under list price. Vermeer
605 F Demonstrator. Save .
Gary Aspin , Daxler, OH .
40 CHANNEL CB with Turner
Plus Two power mic. 5 ele&lt;ment
long John
beams .
7.t2 -2187 .

GRAVElY TRACTOR. I pair at
end tables , 992-7537 .

CANNING TOMATOES, Pick
your own. Field weed free. $3
a bu . Andrew Cross, Adams
Rd ., letortFolls, OH .
CANON FTB 35 mm single lens
reflex camera. Excellent con·
dition . 992· 514-4 .
NEARlY 600 Meigs Countians
suffered property losses dur·
ing Morgan' s Raid in 1863.
Their names . addresses and
itemized list of their exact
Iones ore contained in 140
page paperback
reprinted
book of original 1864 state
published report on 4,375
Ohioans who filed damage
claims .
Reprinted
book
" Morgan' s Raid losers", can
be ordered from publisher
RobertS . Vore . 705 MacKenzie
Drive, lima, Ohio. 45805, for
$12. postpa id .
HOMELITE 5 h .p . riding
mower. 700 bu . of ear corn .

98S·3928.
1978 KAWASAKI

home,

nice bedrooms, l ots of

closets, 2 full baths,
family room with wood
burning f ireplace , wOOd
doors and thermopane
windows . 2 car garage
and over one acre. Ask ·
ing $69,900 .

POMEROY

~

Good 3

bedroom frame home,

bath ,

shower ,

base ·

~

Mswl: I'M

BOB'S GENERAL
CONTRACTING

'1'12·2214 .
DUROC BOARS.

purebred.

CHILO'S JOHN Deere riding
tractor and wagon . Phone

985-3803.
ONE FOLDING wheel choir
and walker. like new. Call

7•2-197S.

Headquarter$ for
H otpoi nt and
General Electric
Appliances
Sales &amp; Service

SALE PRICES

Ita•= ·

Jack W. Carsey
Mgr. ·
Phone 992· 2181

3

bedrooms, bath , wood
burner, new wood burn ing f ireplace, large kif chen, basement, and 6
acres .
Want
only

$16,000 .00 for quick sale.
BUILDING LOTS -

Pomeroy ,
Syracuse ,
Rock
springs, Baums
Sub·divison , Racine and
Rutland area .

NEW LISTING -

AI

Maplewood Lake ,
6
room frame home. bath,
basement, and 1 acre

for only $10,000. 16 fl .
righl·of·way .

Housing
Head i.larters

WILL HAVE vacancy tot elderly
lady 2nd of September. Room ,
board and laundry . Core if
needed . Reasonab le pri ces .

9'12-6022 .
HAVE VACNACY to core for
the elderly in our home .

9'12-731 • .
WILL OOd ~nt i n~ . root pain·
ling . ao
carpenter work .

'

RACINE, 0.
949·2748 or
992-7314

IN SYRACUSE
Ph. m-37•3 or "2-3752
8·1·1 mo.

8·6·1 mo.

BOB'S
UPHOLSTERY

AWNINUM
&amp; VINYL SIDING
BY
J&amp;l INSULATION

CAR SEATS, BOAT
TOPS, FURNITURE

Free Estimate

Free Estimates
3rd St., Racine ·

CALL
992-2772

949-2000

Siding

BISSELl
SIDING CO.

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

eROOFING
.VINYL SIDING
II GUTTER &amp; SOFFIT

651 Beech Street
Middleport, 0.
992-2356
7251 mo .

Call tor a Free Siding
Estimate, 949-2801 or
949-2860 . No Sunday
calls.
6·U·2mo.
Give Away

Services

FREE PUPPIES. 'h Irish Setter.
Four ore long haired . Will be
I orge
dogs.
Shade

OH$red

61A-69b· l2!J.&lt; .

All MasonaiY Work
Foundation,
Brick Laying.
Concrete Finishing.

BEAUTIFUL KITIENS and coh .
Amer ican Domest ic ond Persian. Moy be seen at 2-4-4
Sycamo re St., 992-6260.
COLLIE
terr i er ,'
female ,
blonde, short hair, young .
Humane Society. m .6260.

Free Estimates
992-5304, 992-2238
8·21 -1 mo.

608 E.
MAIN
PnMI=~OY . O .

ONE MALE. one female holt
collie. half shepherd pups.

OLD RT . 33 - About 2.«1

9'12·7768 .
.
HAMSTERS .

acres, home, barn and

MoocHspough , 992-3915.

building, loads of
building sites. This pro·
pert you must see to appreciate. $178,000.00.
PORTLAND - About 56

acres, pasture, woods,

and tillable .
building sites .
$23,900.
NEW LISTING 6 years old .

Many
JUST
About
Lovely

Phone 992 -6323

l'l..l011J6
'{ou,\.
!JIGKU...

n5·1 mo. pd .

with beautiful fireplace,
garage, hardwood floors
with

carpeting .

$42,200.00.
NEW LISTING - Mid ·
dleporl, 2 bedrooms,
dining

room,

carpeting,

some

lion. $16,200.00.
NEW LISTING - Mid ·
dleporl, 2 bedrooms,
bath, full basement,
garage. Other features .
$18,900.00 .
MIDDLEPORT - E• cellent
location,
4
bedrooms, 1112 baths,
modern kitchen,
air and heat,

large liv ing room.
$59,500.00 .
POMEROY - 1 floor
plan, 3 bedrooms, dining
room, nice k i tchen, nat.
gas

heat,

en c losed

porch, basement and
garage ,

fema le , young adult. Place in
country . 992 · 6~60 .

Camping Equipment
FRANKliN TRAVEl trailer , 22
ft. Good condition . Also Trail
camper . Sleeps

197-C 14 x 70 mobile home .

Good co_n dition . 992-S858.

sil( .

'1'12·3640.
Auctions
BIG AUCTION every Wed.,

1965 GENERAlbOx12 , 2 bodr .
1970 Sylva. 60x12 , 2 b.dr.
1970Castle, 60x12, 2.bedr .
1974 Morkline. 50x12 . 2 bedr.
1969 Valiant , 12•60. 2 bedr.

1967 Nallonol , 12x50, 2 bodr .
B' S MOBILE HOME SALES, Pl.
PlEASANT, WV . J0.4·b7S-4A24 .
BIG SELECTION of pr• owned
10's , 12's. ond U ft. wide
homes . Kancugo Mob i le
Home Sales. 614 -440-9662.

7
pm . Hartford Community
Center. Hartford , WV . 4 miles
obove
Pomeroy · Mason

12 x 63 Fore1t Pork
mobile home on 1/r acre lot in
Harrisonville. 992-36-40.

8rldg,.:
• :_·- - - - - - -

bedroom, 1 v-, bath. 992-2514 .'

1973

197•

GOVENOR

THREE

paneling,

cellar . Very nice loca ·

central

Jolene

fruit

trees,

about 3 acres. $25,000 .00.
CLELAND REALTY
WHERE
REAL
ESTATE
IS·
A
BUS I NESS, NOT A
SIDELINE.
BROKERS
Henry E. Cleland Sr.
Henry E. Cleland Jr.
992-2259
992-6191

• AK

. .

CALL 4463643
MEIGS CO. FARM - 37 ACRES - New listing .
Frontage on Rt. 124 with approx. 4-5 acro:s bottom,
20 acres pasture and balance In woodland (some
timber reported) . Includes chicken house corn crib,
shed barn plus other 0\Jtbulldlngs. The remodeled
hOm~ has • bedrooms, eat-In kitchen, utility room,
cellar house, large porch&amp;. vlnylsldlno . FREE GAS
FOR HOUSE .
POMEROY - NEW LISTING WITH 6 ACRES l'h story 4 bedroom home Just . 1 mile from
downtown. The home Includes a new eat-In kitchen,
large master bedroom utility room, large patio,
nat gas hot water heat1ptus 2 outbuildings and lots
of room for the kids to play. $27,500. owner anxious
for quick sale.

500 Second Ave.

GaiUpolls, ·Ohio

EAST
• J652

WEST

--- -

-- --

'" A 110 I i 13 2
• 98 7 4
• Q J 10 2

WORK, GENERAL

+J

.

• Q 10 9 8 7

SOUTII

+ KQ101874J
-- - .

CONTRACTOR

• 6 53

ORPHAN ANNIE-HAPPY DAZE

Rl. 3
Pomeroy, Ohio
992 -ss•7
1-25 ·2 mo.

• 63

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer : North
West North East
Pass
1+
s• . Obi. Pass
Pass
Pass 7•
Pass

AND A JiEW. HOME

FOR YOI:I AWD YOiJR
CA~tl'f ... WAt&lt;T YOU
TO liVE NEAA
'THE PI ANT ...

Real Estate Loans
and

Purchase

Refinance
30 Year Term s
A - No money down

Ope ning lead: • K

(eligible

veterans)
FHA - AS low as l %
down (non-veterans)

IRElAND
MORTGAGE
CO.
E. Stale, Athens

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sonl!'g

AIJ..EYOOP

'

I•'

In this hand from " Masters and Monsters" , we see ·
the Hideous Hog at his best.
In explanation of North's
seven-spade bid , Victor
Mollo has mentioned that at
Griffin Club a large cash
bonus would be given to the
first pair to bid and make a
grand slam between the
hours of 10 and 10 :30 and
North was trying for that

592-3051

• ·n1 mo.

Roger Hysell
Garage
lo~ mile off Rt . 7 by -pass
on St . Rt. 114 toward
Rutland .

bonus.

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992 -5682
4 JO ·ttc

vASOUNE ALLEY

Pert

Don't matter~
r wouldn't vote

fie's prob'll.l
runnin' fer
~orne fool
office'

tad. up

a !&gt;iqn?

H. L Writesel
Roofing

fer 'im

nohow'

949 -2862--949-2160
45 tic

WINNIE
ILL HA\E MY 5-.J FF
CLEARED OUT " ~. ON ,
IKJM , AND YOU CAN

BRADFORD, Auct ion" r, Complete S.Nice. Phone q49-2-487
or 949.1(.'()0_ Aoci ne. Ohio,
Cr ltt Bradford

HAVE: YOUR O FJ:ICE
~A:::: t&lt;.

. _ ___,,B

sw-periJ , toosteriJ , irons , all
IJmoll appliances . lawn moer .
next to State Highway Garage
on Route 7, 985-3825 .

SEWINC MACHINE Repairs,
ser"Vi ce . all makes , 992-na. .
The Fabric Shop. Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Soles and
Service . WeiJhorpen S(inors .

EXCAVAfiNG , dozer . ICQjer •
ond backhoe wo'r k ; dump
trucks and lo-boys for hire,
will haul fill dirt, top Joil,
limestone and gra vel. Call Bob
or Roger Jeffers , day phone
992· 708q ,
night
phone

BARNEY

'1'12·3525 or '1'12·S232 .
EXCAVATING . dour .

UNK SNUFFV!!
TH' FISH ARE

backhoe and ditcher. Charles
R. Hatfield. Black Hoe Service.
Rutland , Ohio. Pone 742·2008.

BIT IN' DOWN
IN DRIBBLE
CREEK!!

PUlliNS EXCAVATINC. ComAUTOMOBilE

liME

,

A-W~5TIN!!

INSURANCE

been cancell~? lost your
operators
l_i cense?
Phone

9'12-2143 .
E-&lt;;: ELECTRICAL

Contractor
s,rving Ohio Volley region.
Six days a week , 24 hours service. Emergency coils . Call

882-19S2 or 882.:J.&lt;S..
HOWERY AND MARTIN Excoveting , septic
dozer, backhoe.

systems ,
143.

PEANUTS

Rt.

Phone 1 (bU) 69B-7331 or
7·2-2S93 .

DO '.(OU KNOW WHAT
A FREE AGENT IS

NEXT 'fEAR I'M GONNA
BE A FREE AGENT

IN STOCK for Immediate
delivery: various sizes of pool
kits. Do-lt- yourself or let us
install for you . D. Bumgardner

Solos, Inc. '1'12·5724.

After studying the dummy
at length and reviewing the
bidding (such as it was), the
Hog decided that maybe his
only play for 13 tricks was to
score a diamond ruff with
dummy's ace of trumps and
to prepare for a trump coup
against East

·Once his mind was made
up the Hog ruffed the heart ,
led a diamond to dummy's
ace , rUffed a second heart,
led a diamond to 'dummy' s
king, ruffed a third heart ,
led a club to dummy, ruffed
a fourth heart, led a second
club to dummy and ruffed
dummy's last heart.
Now he led his last diamond, ruffed with dwnmy 's
ace and watched poor East
underruff. Then he led a clut
from dununy and made tht
last three tricks with the
king~ueen and 10 of trumps.

Asklbci!XNPis
You are North and hold :
• 6
• Q42
• KQ&amp;i3!
•

10 7 4

The biddmg has proceeded
(So uth, West. North , East):
I Diamond. I Heart, 2
Diamonds. Pass;
2 Spades, Pass. 3 Diamonds.
Pass;
3 Hearts. Pass. '
A MiSsissippi reader asks

what we would btd.
We jump to five diamond
to show very good trumps,
but neither first or second
round control of clubs (the
unbid suit.)
I NEWSPAPE R ENTE RPRISE ASSN .)

(Do you have a question for
rhe experrs ? Write " Ask rhe
Experts , " care of this newspaper. Individual questions
will be answered if accompanied by stamped, self-addressed envelopes . The
mosr Interesting questions
wi11 be U£..f",1 in this cofumn
and will receive copies of
.JACOBY MODERN.), .

~w6

. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST22, 1979
5:3&gt;---World at Large 17; 5:45-Farm Report 13; 5:50-PTL Club
13
6:00-700 Club 6,B ; Summer
Semester 10; PTL Club 15; 6:10News 11; 6: 30- Chrlslopher
Closeup 10; Dragnet 11 .
6:4&gt;---Mornlng Report 3; 6:50-Good
Morning, West Virginia 13.;
b: 5&gt;---Thought for Today 6; News
13.
7:0Q-Today 3,15; Good Morning
America 6, 13 ; Wednesday
Morning 8: Batman 10; Three
Stooges.Little Rascals 17: 7:1&gt;--- A.M. Weather 33,
7:30-Famlly Affair 10; Lilias Yoga
&amp; You 33; 8:0Q-Capt. Kangaroo
8, 10; Lassie 17; Sesame St. 33.
8:30-Romper Room 17; 9:0Q-Bob
Braun 3; Phlo Donahue 15;,13;
Big Valley 6; Porky Pig &amp;.
Friends 8: Nlte Owt Jazz Stars
10; Lucy ShaN 11 ; Book Beat 33.
9:30-Sanford &amp; Son 8; Love of Life
10; Green Acres 17; Beginning to
Sew 33.
10:0Q-Card Sharks 3,15; Edge of
Night 6; All In The Family 8,10; .
Dating Ga.me 13; Movie "Mrs.
Fitzherhert" 17; Paint Along
with Nancy Kaminsky 33.
10 :30-Hollywood Squares 3, 15;
$20,000 Pyramid 13; Bonkers 6;
Whew! 8; Country Tlm.e 10;
Consumer Survival Kit 33.
.
10:S&gt;-CBS News 8; Fair Fare 10.
11 :oo-High Rollers 3, 15; Laverne &amp;
Shirley 6,13; Price Is Right B,10;
Films of Olin Sewalt Pettlngllt
33.
11 : 30-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15;
Family Feud 6,13; 11 :55--News
17.
12 :0Q-Newscenler 3; News 6,10;
Mlndreaders 15; Young &amp; the .
Restless 8; Over Easy 33;
Midday Magazine 13; i.ove
American Style 17.
12:30--Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Search for
Tomarrow ·8,10; . Not For Women
Only 15; Movie " The Last
Bandit" 17 ; MacNeil -Lehrer
Report 33.
1:()()-Days of Our Lives 3, 15; AI! My
.O&gt;ildren 6, 13; News 8; Young &amp;.
the Restless 10; Lite Around u·s
33 . .
1:30-As The World Turns 8.10; Two
Ronnles 33.

2:0Q-Ooclors 3,15; One Life to Live
6,13; Movie " America at the
Movies" 33.
2:2&gt;---News 17; 2:30-Another World
3,15; Guiding Light 8, 10; I Love
Lucy 17.
3:ro-General Hospital 6,13; Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 20; Rebop 17.
3:30-Mash 8; Joker's Wild 10;
Banana Splits 17; Over Easy 20.
4:oo-Mister Cartoon 3; Password
15; Merv Gi'lffln 6; ; Addams
Family 8; Sesame St. 20,33; SIK
Yesterday's Auswer
Mlllton Doltar Man 10; Mike
DO\Jglas 13; Fltntstones 17.
15 !)ld salts
26 Horror18 Prototype
movie star 4:30-Lone Ranger 3; Hogan's
Heroes 8: Lucy Show 15;
19 French
29 Dodge
Partridge Family 17.
artist
30 Establish
S:OQ-Bonanza 3; Beverly Hillbillies·
22 Pure
again
B; Mister Rogers 20,33; Disco
Fever 10; Sl• Miller Dollar Man
23 Shirley's
32 Breezy
13;
Brady Bunch 15; Star Trek
TV
35'Young seal
17.
36 Shinto
roommate
S:30-News 6; E•pohlo '79 15;
:U Thailand
temple
Petticoat Junction 8; Elec. Co.
~Yokels
20; Mary Tyler Moore 10; Doctor
Who 33.
24 Scoff
b :oo-News 3,8, 10, 13.15; ABC News
25 Racer
6; Family Affair 17; VI Ita Alegre
of fable
20; Once Upon A Classic 33.
26 Bakery
&gt;:30-NBC News 3,15; ABC News 13;
Andy Grlftlth·6; CBS News 8, 10;
output
Over Easy 20.33; Father Knows
27 Grandflesl 17 .
parental
7:00- Cross.Wits 3; Newlywed
26 News.
Game 6, 13; Porter Wagoner 8;
caster
News 10; Love American STyle
15; Get Smart 17; Dick Cavett
Dan
20,33.
31 Salt: Fr.
7:30-Dolty 3; Match Game PM 6;
32 Draw a
· Muppet Show 8; The Judge 10;'
bead
That's Hollywood 13; Wild
Kingdom 15; Baseball 17 ;
33 Pub
MacNeil
-Lehrer Report · 20,33 .
offering
B:oo-Real People 3,1S; Eight Is
34 Capricorn, 1=+-tEnough 6, 13; Dorothy 8, 10;
for one
Masterpiece Theatre 211; . All
Creatures Great &amp;. Small 33.
36 Daze
8:30-Hangln In 8.10•; 9:oo-Movle
37 Guarantee
" Betrayal" 3,1-V Charlte's
38 Tanner's
Angels 13; .1979 Disco Music
material
Awards 6; Movie "The Deadliest
Season"
8,10; ; Upstairs,
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:
Downstairs 20; 1979 Drum Corps
AXYDLBAAXR
International Championship 33.
,Ia LONGFELLOW
IO :OQ-Vegas 13; Fall of Eagles 17;
One letter Simply stands for another. In lhis sample A is
News 20.
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters
IO :Jl}-Best of Groucho 20; n:ooahpostrophes, the length and formation of the words are ali
News 3,6,8,10,13,15; Dick Cavett
1nts. Each day the code letlers are different.
211; New Soupy Sales 17.
· '
11 :30-Johnny Carson 3,1S; Pollee
CRYPTOQUOTES
Woman 6, 13; Switch 8; Movie·
PSFGWUCH
FPSAHO
CHFS
C
"Back from Eternity" 10; Movie
PCQM
C ' BMNSQMBX
BSSV
"The Golden Blade" 17.
ISWRWRZ
UPM
NCFPWMB'F
12 :40-Baretta 6,13; Kalak 8; 1:()()SYY.WNM. - YBCRNWF
S'JCHFP
Tomorrow 3; News 15 . .
Yesterday's Cryploquote: IF YOU THINK YOU HAVE INJ.:20-Baseball 17 ;' 1:50-News 13;
.FLUENCE, TRY ORDERING SOMEONE ELSE'S DOG
3: 50-News 17; • : 10-A ve""•"
. AROUND. - UNKNOWN SOURCE
17: 5: 10-Dragnel 17.
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
3t Catch
1 Moderate
sight of
5 French
4t Over again
seaport
DOWN
9 Grey
1Sink
10 Powerful
2 Actor's ploy
12 Father
3 Hit behind
13 Tokyo's
the tine
Island
4 Needle part
14 Wedding
5 Cease
words
6Shore
15 PoiniA!d end
bird
11 POsed 7 Announce
17 WOOdward's
for office
husband
8 Augment
19 - Blanc
10 Emit light
20 Golfing cry 11 Bowling
21 Tale
alley
begiruting
hazard

Nl!w, repair,
gutters and
down spouts .
Window cleanir'J9
Gutter cleaning
Free Estimates

plate Service . Phone 99:2 -2478 .

The Wiseman Real
Estate Agency

NORTH
+A
• QJ987

+ AK542

ElWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Mobile Homes Sale's

BOXER TYPE DOG. Lt. tan ,

Haven

S &amp; G Carpet Cleaning . Steam
cleaned . Free
estimate .
Sco1chReasonable
rates .
guard. 992 -6309 or 742 -23-48.

Beautifully bagged bonus

F!I.VIT~

Free Estimates

11

18 Years Experience
Will Make Serv i ce Calls

SIX weeks old , mole puppy,
looks like a little bear. Is
worm&amp;d . 992 -7205.

room ,

DOZER . END loader and dump
tru ck . Will do basements ,
ponds ,
br ush ,
timber ,
lim es tone ,
and
gra ve l.
Charles Butcher. 742 -2940.

V. C. YOUNG Ill

sited
BEAUTIFUL
MEDIUM
white long - haired female ,
looks like sheep dog buf
smoller . l o ves chi l dren .
Humane Soc iety , 992-6260.

T.V. room, den, family
Services Offered

Manage-

Reynolds'
Electric Motor ·
Shop

ranch . 3 bedrooms,
large recreation room

POMEROY
LANDMARK

New

(formerly Sylvia ' s
Upholstery),
across
from Codner's Texaco .

Vinyl and Aluminum

GLASTRON BOAT , t~i haul
design . 16 ft .. 1 in .. 19 gal
built-in gas tonk . 80 h.p. Mere
motor. Shore lander tilt tro ller .

I q77 ARAOWGLASS BASS and
pleasure boot with 65 h.p .
Evinrude '
Many
Bl&lt;tros .

ment

ment,
diSposal,
nice
cabinets,
stove
and
refrigerator . Storm drs.
&amp; windows . One acre.

$25,000.
NEW LISTING -

l I I II)( I I I I]

BRIDGE

eNiiW HOMES

BLOCK &amp; BRICK

6·6· 1 mo.

l car garage and 3 lots .

letters to

Answer: How thev. might sleep In Auslralia"DOWN''UNDEA
Tuesday , Aug. 21

e~OOMADDITIONS

UPHOLSTERING

7·5-1 mo .

frame home. Nat. gas
F.A. furnace, basement,

NOT(

0

Now arr,nge the circled

101111 the surprise answer as sug. geated by lhe above cartoon.

' POWER NUDGE INJURY DISOWN
Yeslerday's J Jumbles:

N. L Construction

sid ing . S1B.500.
NEW LISTING - 4
bedrooms, bath, base -

Only $10,500.
NEW LISTING - Nice
remodeled 2 bedroom

J I

CALL 992-7544

A&amp;H
Under

-

(FREE ESTIMATE I

ment, storm drs .. &amp; windows, nat. gas F .A . fur nace
and aluminum

100, low

ZENITH
PORTABLE
stereo.
Also , child's chest of drawers.
9-49-2184 or9.t9-2596 .

Gutter work~ down
spouts, some concrete
work ; walks and

bath,

natural gas furnace , fulf
basement, carpet i ng

mileage. 992-3640 .

I yeor old. 9•9-2377 .

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING

and lg. bedroom down.
Full basement and large
lolfor garden . $25,000.
NEW LISTING - 3

'1'12·3891 .

tCLOAS(j

(Answers tOmorrow)

driveways.

Nice modern looking 3
bedroom home with

SAID.

WELL, DID HE
OR 010/,J' T ME~
DIO YOU H.EAFl
A R&amp;CEIVE'R
CLICK DOWN

3,15; Happy Days
6. 13 ; Mov ie " A Death In
Canaan "
8 , 10 ;
.. Sexual
Revolution 15; Carmen McRae
in Concert at the Palace 20; City
Notebook 33.
8:30-Delectlve School 6,13; Two
Ronn les 33.
9:0Q-Movle " something big" 3,15;
Three's Company 6, 13; Movie
" America at the Movies" 33;
Kldd09 2(),
9:30-Taxl 6.13; 10 :00-Starsky &amp;
Hutch 6,13; America 11 ; News
20.
10 :30-lnslde Yesterday" 8,10; Lock
Stock &amp; Barrel 20.
·
ll : oo~ News 3,6,8 ,10,13,15 ; Dick
Cavett 20; New Soupy Sales 17;
Book Beat 33.
11 : 30-Jahnny Carson 3, 15; Low
Moan Spectacular 6, 13; Barnaby
Jones 8; ABC News 33; Movie
" You're a Big Boy Now'' 10;
Movie " Lover Come Back" 17.
12 :40- Movle " Death Among .
Friends" 6,13; Movie "36 Hours"
8; 1:()()-Tomorrow 3; News· 15.
1:4&gt;---Baseball 17; 2:1&gt;---News 13;
4:1&gt;---News 11; 4:3&gt;---Avengers
17.
·s : oo-Runaw~ys

I
() KJ ()

992-3125
for

TUESDAY .. AUGUST21-1979

...... ~

TOFLY

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

•New Home
•Addons
Remoldings
•Free estimates
992-6011
7-12

L __ __

9'12-7721.

9'12-2657.

Service

S UP E R
GOOSE
STO C K
TRAilER NOW AVAILABlE .

opts .
for
rnet.
Rental
assistance
available .

··=

RacUat9r',----.-.,

lang s ville . Ohio
6U -Ufj ·U 4S Ey"nlngs
1 Mil es E•s l of ,Wi lkt'5V ille

ONE BEDROOM opts. Contact
Village Monaro '192· 7787.

COAl ,

EXPERIENCED

27310 MonTgomery RCI .

·

Reeds"V ille. 614 -379-6311.

Racine Social Events ,

SIX ROOM house in Pomeroy.
Remode led , large lot , natural
gas , mus t sell. Ask i ng
Sll .&lt;XXJ. 992-6168 after b.

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

Phone

Phone 742·2877 or 742·21S2 .

thought to be associated with the
workplace was published in 1700, and
by 1775 the first report of cancer being
caused by a specific work envirorunent was reported. Sir Percival
Poll noted that chimney sweeps
whose work kept them in contact with
soot were prone to cancer of the
scrotum. It is interesting to observe
that this occupational cancer could
have been prevented throlljlh personal hygiene and careful washing of
work . ~lothes. Today research is
trying to define both potential cancer
hazards in the workplace and ways to
either prevent worker exposure or to
determine safe levels of exposure. A
nwnber of occupational hazards
relating to cancer have been found,
especially in chemicals and
processing industries.
Request : " Can drinking coffee and
soft drinks lead to breast disease •"
ANSWER!ine : Coffee, tea, cola
drinks and chocolate contain sub·
stances called methylxanthines.
Recent experiments suggest that
elimination of these substances from
the diet of women with benign or noncancerous breast lwnps (a condition
called fibrocystic disease) seems to
result in a gradual disappearance of
these lumps. However, the answers
aren't aU in. This evidence is only
preliminary. What's needed now is
additional research and the devel~p­
ment of better tests for the
measurement of methylxanthine in
the body .
Call the Meigs County Cancer Unit
992-7531 if you have any questions.

A regula,r feature, prepared by the
American Cancer Society to keep you
informed about cancer.
Question: "Docs cancer occur in
the mouth and if so, is there a warning
sign ? "
ANSWERline: In 1979 an
estimated 24,000 cases of oral c~ncer
will he diagnosed in both men and
women in this country. Cancer can occur anywhere in the oral cavity.
Tongue, lips, salivary glands, and the
pharyngeal area (the area between
the mouth and the esophagus) are the
common oral sites. Oral cancer is not
one of the major foims of cancer in
the U. S. However, it is a special risk
for users of any fonn of tobacco and
for heavy drinkers of alcohol.
Your physician or dentist should
check your mouth for possible oral
cancer at the time of· your regular
examination. In between visits, pay
attention to any mouth sore that fails
to heal or that bleeds rather easily .
Other signs and symptoms may be a
lump or thickening, a whitish Jiatch,
difficulty in chewing or swallowing
food , restricted movement of the
tongue or jaws, or discomfort ln
wearing dentures.
Oral cancer can be treatedt most
successfully when detected early . Get
into the habit of checking your mouth
in a mirror, using a good light.
Question : " Lately I've been
hearing that cancer can be caused by
the kind of work one docs. Is this a

NICE COMFORTABLE 8 room
home on oppro w. 2 acres o f
levelland w ith plenty of shade
trees .
on
Ru t land
Rd .

3 AND~ RM furnished and un·

742· 2255 . SALE: Martin-Sanour
po int, Div ision of Sherman
and Williams . Interior or exterior flat white , S5 .99 gollort.l
Color extra . PRESEASON

CANCER

REAL ESTATE : I acre lot in Riggscrest Manor, between Tuppers Pla ins and Chester.

'1'12·12S5.

Custom. 992-5858.
Good
cond ition .
~2- 5870 after -4pm .

1

REAL ESTA TE l oons. Purchase
and refinance. 30 year terms,
VA . No m oney dow n (e ligible
veterans) . FHA - As low os 3
per cent down (non-veterans) .
Ireland Mortgage Co .. 77 E.
State . Athens . 614 -592· 3051 .

Phone 98S-3929 and 98S-412'1.

19l4 DODGE CORONET 4·door
CUTlASS

Real Estate for Sale

after 5.

TWO SLEEPING rooms
rant . After5 , 992-2409.

Auto Sales
1974 VEGA HATCHBACK . coil

PAINTING AND sandbla sting .
Free estima tes. Call 9-4~ - 2686 .

1979 Pl YMDUTH HORIZON TC

miles.

I K) . ·- IJ

Business Services

367-7101.

$3500. 7•2·2143.

RUTlAND

American Cancer Society

ond

S IL V ~R

TEN
FAM ll Y
Yard Sole.
Mine rs"Vi ll e Hill . Foll ow sign s.
E"V erything f rom baby's to
adult's. Ant iques, furn i tu re .
A ugust8 , 9 . 10.

mileage .

POODlE GROOMING. Judy
Taylor. 61&lt;-367·7220.

1969 CAMARO,

NOW HAULING limestone in
M idJ ieport -Poemroy are a .
Co li fo r lree - es t i mat e .

Television
Viewin~

SAMPSON?

Services Offered

Auto Sales

Yard Sale

YOUR

DETECTIVE FRIEND,

BUT li\\ GONNA

8E ONE!!

co.

WILL HAUL limestone and
grovel. Also, lime hauling and
spreading. leo Morris Truck ·

lng, Phone 742-245S .

ANN'S CAKE D~orotlng Suppilei , 50716 Osborn Rd .,
Reedsville , OH 4~772. For in·

8-2 1

formation call. 667-6485. Will
be open late if you need

r~

something.

I'

I'

•

1'7' King F;cetur11 Syndlutt , Inc.
I

)

�8- ~Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o.,Tuesday, Aug. 21, 1919

Area Deaths
HARRY BOLINGER
Harry Bolinger, 60, 110 Wolfe Drive,
Pomeroy, is survived by his wife,
Josephine Morarity Bolinger ; two
daughters, Joan Bolinger, Pomeroy,
and Mary Daun Sheets, Gallipolis; a
S,heets,
son-in-law,
Michael
Gallipolis; a grandson, Gregory Todd
Sheets; a granddaughter, Jo Leigh
Sheets; his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Vern Bolinger, Pomeroy; a brother,
Raymond, Cambridge; five sisters,
Mrs. Evelyn DeBellis, Cclumbus;
Mrs. Helen Darst, Middleport; Mrs.
Hazel Genheimer, Royal Oak, Mich.;

Marietta

Deadline close
for board races

Mrs. Dorothy Craft, Hattiesburg,
Miss., and Mrs. Edith Kevan, Las
Ve~;as, Nev.
·
Mr. Bolinger was a member of the
Fraternal Order of Eagles, Aerie
2171; Drew Webster Post 39,
American Legion, and had been
employed at the Kaiser Aluminum
Ccrp. for the past 21 years.
Funeral services will be held at 10
a.m. Friday at the Sacred Heart
Olurch in Pomeroy with the Rev.
Father Paul Welton officiating. Burial
will be in Sacred Heart Cemetery.
Rosary services will be held at 8 p.m.
Thursday at the Ewing Funeral Home
where friends may call at anytinoe
after 1 p.m. Wednesday.

Meigs Ccuntiana interested In becoming members of school
boards have ooly unW 4 p.m. tomorrow (Thur8day) to file petitions
of candidacy with the Meigs County Board of Elections,
In the Meigs Local School Diatrict tlils fall, voters will name
three full term members to the board and one member to an tmexpired \enJI.
Members whose terms expire are Virgil King, Dr. Keith Rlgga,
Mn. Jennifer Sheets and Larry Powell. Powell hill! been serving by
•ppolntment following the resignation of Wendell Hoover.
The unexpired term includes the yean of 19110 and 1981.
So far, flve candidates have filed for the fall terms of lOW' years
on the Meigs Board. They are Ellen Jane Rought, Larry C. Powell,
Dr. Keith Riggs, Warren L. Perrine and C. Arland King.
.
Virgil C. King and Robert F. Snowden have flled for the unexpiredtenn.
.
In the Eaatern. Local District, there are three full term posts
open thia fall and so far, no candidates. l1lo8e whose tenns expire
are Douglas BiaseU, Dorothy Calaway and Jimmy C. C81dwell.
Southern Local School District has no candidates for the board
either. There are two full Ierma open In that district and those
wholle tenns expire are Dallas Hill and David Neasec
On the Meigs County Board of Edu.cation the tenns a! two
members expire. They are Harold Rouah and Oria Smith who have
filed for reelection.

(Ccntil\ued from page 1)
'

'·

board adopted a lunch policy for the
new school year. Student lunches will
be 60 cents compared to 50 cents for
MEIGS FAIR VISITOR - The Meigs Ccunty B~rd of Elections
the
past year and breakfast will be 4()
booth Will! visited during fair week by Ohio Secretary of State Anthony J.
cents compared to 30.
Celebrezze, who chats with booth operator, Jack Brickles, Pomeroy.
Extra milk will be 15 cents, having
been 11 cents last year. Adults • meals
will be $1 with an additional 25 cent
charge for milk.
Goins also reported the controlling
board of the state department of
education has released funds for the
district with which to purchase six
new ilchool buses.
WASHINGTON (AP) · - While decide," the special envoy said.
Bids on the buses were accepted
The goal of the White House
President Carter steams down the
recently
and Goins estimates that the
is
to
produce
Mississippi, his senior advisers are meeting
six
new
buses
should be operating in
gathering at the White House to plan · recommendations for Carter's
the
district
by
next
March.
American strategy lor the U.N. approval by Thursday morntn.g.
The
Pomeroy
National
Bank, FarAlready
ruled
out
is
any
U.S.
debate on the Palestinian issue.
mers
Bank
and
Savings
Cc.,
and the
That· strategy, admitted Robert support for Palestini!ln statehood.
Citizens
National
Bank
were
Strauss, the president's special Carter is on record against it and~ in
designated
as
depositories
for.
the
acMideast negotiator, may be to offer no any event, the administration would
tive
funds
of
the
district
proportioned
risk a break with Israel if it did not
U.S. proposal whatsoever.
Strauss told reporters on his return veto any resolution calling for a on the basis a! capital stock of each
bank for a two year period beginning
·
from Israel and Egypt ,Monday that he Palestinian state.
Aug.
:1.'1, this year,
However,
one
approach
weighed
by
found "considerable hesitation" in
The
board authorized Jane Wagner,
both countries about a nwnber of Strauss in the Middle East was a U.S. trelll!urer,
to request an advance of
possible American approaches l)e resolution supporting Palestinian
taxes
collected
in the amount of
suggested in talks with Israeli Prime "rights" but not defining them.
$250,IJOO
•.
Gieason
said that a part of
Minist er Menachem Begin and Statehood proponents could then
the
money
is
needed
for the ~ugtJSt
claim
U.S.
backing,
but
that
would
be
Eqyptian President Anwar Sadat.
payroll.
a
matter
of
their
own
interpretation.
" We might conclude to do nothing,"
The remainder will be invested unStrausS said.
W
needed in September. Glelll!on said
This would appear to be in accord
he
worked out an agreement with
with Israel 's strong resistance to any
VeteraDB Memorial Hospital
, thehas
banks
to draw 9.95 percent inU.S.-led effort to mo&lt;tify longstanding
Saturday admissions - Vidia terest on funds deposited over
Security Ccuncil resolutions on the Girolami, Pomeroy; Til1!l Jacobs,
$100,000. He was commended by Mrs.
Mideast. Somewhat surprisingly, POm£rOY.
Sheets
for working out the plan.
Strauss found Egypt backing the
Salurday discharges - Dolly
ResipatioDB Accepted
lst'aeli view, possibly because a U.S. Cleland, Paul Burton, Sally Lambert,
The
board accepted the
split with the Begin government could John Shain, Thomas Grinstead, Vicki
resignations
of Barbara Shultz, title I
upset continuing peace talks.
Holsinger, Mary Baker, Libby Roush,
teacher;
Beth
Braden, a teacher
Vice President Walter F. Mondale Michael Hubbard, James Sellers,
work
in
the EMR program,
hired
to
was chairing today 's meeting with Paul Reeves, Goldie Lynch, Mary
and
Phyllis
Dugan,
cook. Dorothy
Strauss, Secretary of State Cyrus R. Russell.
Woodard,
Martha
Graves
and Debbie
Vance and Zbigniew Brezezinski, the
Sunday admissions - Mary Hud- Sebert were added to the substitute
president 's national security adviser. dleston,' Racine ; Gregory Davis,
Vance interrupted his vacation at Syracuse; Cuba Little, Cheshire; Lin- teacher list. Given continuing conMartha 's Vineyard, Mass., to try to da Sturgeon, Pomeroy; Heidi Bailey, · tracts were teachers, Tino Flesher
settle on a U.S. position in tinoe lor the Albany; Kimberly Roush, Miner- and Margaret Teaford. Rufus
Browning, Lee Cadle and Deborah
opening of the U.N. debate Thursday sville; Roy Pierce, Racine.
were named substitute bus
in New York.
Sunday discharges - Pamela Whittatch
drivers
and
Jacqueline Carl and
Strauss ended his mission without Granen, Paul Hendricks, Nina Rupe.
Helen
Milhoan
were named substitute
blaming either Israel or Egypt lor the
Admissions--Barbara Phillips, cooks.
U.S. dilemma. He called them "good Rutland; Pamela Persons, Syracuse ;
Hired as new full-time bus drivers
and strong partners" in the peace Ca rol Wynes , Shad.e ; Gloria
were
Ida Martin and Gloria Oiler and
process and said he found they were Reynolds,
Pomeroy;
Ployd Ed Baer was employed at 25 cents a
making even more progress in their Barnhouse, Pomeroy; Shirley Powell,
own negotiation s than he had Shade; George Deem, Racine ; Helen rnlle to transport two students daily
for special training in Jackson and at
expected.
George, Bidwell; Angela VanCooney, RloGrande.
But as to the Security Council Pomeroy; Harr~ Lyons, Racine;
The special training is mandated by
debate, where the United States is Hobart Day, Coolville; Rhonda Jones,
the state and the board will be reimlikely to lace strong Arab demands to Pomeroy ;
Barbara
Smith
acknowledge Palestinian "rights," Middleport; Edith Manuel, Racine: bursed for a portion of the cost. The
training cannot be provided within
Strauss said he returned without any
Discharges-Clara
Shuster, the district.
recommendation for Carter.
Robert Fife, Barbara Phillips, Gloria
Marie Birchfield was employed as a
"I do not know what he is going to Reynolds, Walter Jewell, Sr.
regular cook for the next school year
and the contract of George Hackett
for a new roof at the high school at a
cost of $138,000 was signed.
Board members made plans to inspect all of the buildings of the district
before the opening of classes. The
tuition rate for the next school year
was set. at $62.46 a month, considerably under the $77.04 charged
last year. The present . policy
requiring employes to have tuber-.
culin skin tests In the fall was continued after a discussion on a' change.
Gleason reported the Ohio
Legislature h8l! asked districts to
outline policies on the sale of junk
foods in the schools. Citizens are
being asked to join a conunittee being
fonned in the local district to for• mulate a policy. Those interested in
doing so, may contact Goins.
A discussion was held on formulating a commendation policy for
the district. Gleason Is gathering information on how .this is handled in
other districts.
The financial reports of the
treasurer were approved along with
several fund transfers.
Attending .the meetin~ were
Why settl e for anything less ? Come
Glelll!on, Goins and Dan Morris,
sample banking the way you want
director of curriculum; board mem·
bers, Dr. Riggs, Mrs. Sheets, Virgil
it to be ... conve nient a:1d plea sKing , Carol Pierce and Larry Powell
ant. Our staff is glad to se rve you
along with James Diehl and Bob
Morris, principals in the district.
with everyth ing from good adv1ce
The board held an executive session
to hi gh int eres t sav ings ac to discuss negotiations with bot)l the
cou nt s · .. low-cos! loan s
to
teaching and non-eaching staff.
Glelll!on
reported before the session
checking .. . and morel Stop in l
he will now serve as chief speaker for
negotiations with both groups.
Dennis Whalen, a Cuyahoga Falls '
Walk ·up t eller window and auto·teller win·
dow open Friday evenings 5 to 1 P.M .
., attorney, has previously been chief
speaker for the negotiations.
A letter -was read announcing that
Wha!en has increased the charge for
his services from $00 to flO an hour.
Mrs. Sheets indicated that
,.; ' ·.
Gleason's serving in this post will
Mllti.II'Oitr
save the district a considerable
OIUO ·
amount
of mf!lley.
.
I
A special meeting was set for 8 a.m.
on Sept. 4 at the Meigs High SchooL
f
.&lt;
Gleason has asked board members
not only to meet that morning but to
462 ;a ; _Us
remain at the high school to attend a
oo oi)O,C-ofl' .'
meeting of teachers of the district on
the
day before classes start so that
MEMBER FUI C
they can get the feel of how things are
going in the district.
I

Administration plans .
strategy on PLO issue

GET A TASTE OF
FRIENDLY
SERVICE...

,,

you
deserve it!

MEl ,lSSA LEE BAUER
Melissa Lee Bauer, 20, 243S Lincoln
Ave., Point Pleasant, djed in Monday
night's crash. She was employed as a
cashier at Heck's Department Store,
Point Pleasant.
She was born June 8, 1959, in Point
Plelll!ant, to Mack Allen and Gilda
Gray (Miller) Bauer. She was a member of the First Church of God.
Funeral services will be held Thlirsday, 2:30 p.m. at Crow-Russell
Funeral llome, the Rev. Dennie
Coburn officiating. Burial will be in
Kirkland Memorial Gardens. Friends
may call at the funeral home after 2
p.m. Wednesday.

CAROLYN W. CARLSON
Carolyn White Carlson, Dearborn,
Mich. , former Pomeroy resident , died
at her home early Monday morning.
Mrs. Carlson is the daughter of
Prances White, Colwnbus, and the
late Jess White, former Pomeroy
High School principal. Besides her
mother she is survived by her husband, Kenneth, a daughter, Bethany
at home, and a brother, Jim, Colwnbus.
Following funeral services at the
United Church in Dearborn, Mich. the
body will be brought to the DeyDDavis Funeral Home at 1578 West
First Ave., Colwnbus where visiting
hours will be held from 2 to 4and 7 to 9
p.m. Wednesday. Funderal services
will be held at !Oa.m. Thursday at the
Northwest Christian Church, 1241!
Fishinger Road. Burial will be in
Beech Grove Cemetery at Pomeroy.

CONTEST OFFERED - The Meigs Soil and Water Conservation
District (SWCD) and the Cooperative Extension Service (CES) are
cooperating with the Chevron Chemical Ccrnpany in offering a no-till
corn contest In Meigs Ccunty In 1979. Any fanner WhO h8l! planted corn
through the no-tillage method is eligible. Interested farmers should cootact the SWCD office or the CES office to get further details of eligibillty
and requirement for entering. The county winner will receive a $100 clll!h
award. the top state winner will receive a trip to Hawaii for two people.
This contest is intended to encourage no-tillage planting in Meigs County.
It is rapidly gaining acceptance by farmers throughout the county as a
method of controlling erosion while increasing and maintaining high
production of high value crops such as corn and soybeans. Deadline for
entries is Sept. 1. Roy Holter, above, does nD-till corn planting in Chester
Township.

(Continued from page 1)
$1,446.00. The machine will be used by
the street department to unclog
sewers about town.
A representative of the firno was
present at the meeting and met this
morning with street department
workers to demonstrate the equipment.
'
Paul Sinoon and James Frecker of
the Pomeroy Chan)ber of Commerce
were present and were advised by
Ccuncil that the parking meters now
on the north side of Main St. in the
business section, will be moved to the
south side where the new paving has
been completed.
ANDREA M. DUDDING
The mayor noted that the work will
Andrea Marie Dudding, 19, Mason , begin in a week or 10 days. Parking in
was kllied in a head-on collision Mon- the new area will be in an easterly
day night at Hartford. She was an em- direction. In the lane where the parkployee of Heck 's Department Store, ing takes place nQw, trucks will be
'Point Pleasant.
pennitted to unload and residents will
Miss Dudding was born March 9, be pennitted short stops, five to !o'
1960, in Frankfurt, Gennany, to Gale minutes.
A. and Ruth E. (Pickle) Dudding. She
Next regular meeting of Council
was a 1918 graduate of Wahama High was changed from Sept. 3, Labor Day,
SchoolandamemberofFaithBaptist to Tuesday, Sept. 4. The mayor's
Church.
repOrts showed receipts of $4,'134.60.
Surviving in addition to her parents Several streets in need of repair and
are two brothers, Dennis E. and the dirt which slides onto the highway
David A. Dudding, both of Athens; a near the Logan Monument So. were
sister, Patricia G. Dudding, Athens; discussed briefly.
Attending the meeting were Mayor
and a grandmother, NeUie Dudding,
New Haven, W. Va.
Andrews, Council members, Bill
Funeral services will be held Thur- Young, Dr. Harold Brown, Larry
sday at 2:30 p.m. at the Foglesong Wehrung, Betty Baronick, and Rod
Funeral Home, Mason, the Rev . - Karr,andCierkJaneWalton.
David A. Dudding officiating. Burial
will be in Kirkland Memorial Gardens. Friends may call at the funeral
home Wednesday from 2-4 and 7-9
p.m.
tax

SQUAD CALLED ·
The Middleport Emergency Squad
made one run yesterday at 3:13 p.m.
when it was called to the home of
Sherry Clark, Cheshire. She was
transported to Holzer Medical Center.

CORRECfiON
· In an accident on Lincoln !!Dad

Sunday afternoon in P&lt;meroy it was
reported that two cars were involved.
Actually, on' vehicle was a
motorcycle· and it was driven by
Robert Schneider, 20, Lawrenceburg,
Ind ., who was taken to Holzer Medical
center.

FOOTBALL MEETING
All boys interested in junior high
football in the Southern Local School
District are to report to the school at
11 a.m. Wednesday.

. ."""'!!!!!"!""!

,I~UJ

Retail sales up,
receipts down

MICHAEL PROFFITT

ASSIGNED TO D..LINOIS
SAN ANTONIO - Ainnan Michael
L. Proffitt, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Homer L. Proffitt of Route 1, Racine,
has been assigned to Chanute Air Force Base, lll., after completing Air
Force basic training.
During the ~ix weeks at Lackland
Air Force Base, here, the ainnan
studied the Air Force mission,
organization and customs and
received special training in hwn!IJ)
relations.
In addition, airmen who complete
basic training earn credits toward an
ass\)Ciate degree in applied science
through the Ccmmunity Ccllege of the
Air Force.
The ainnan will now receive
specialized instruction in ihe aircraft
maintenance field.
Airman Proffitt is a 1979 graduate
of Southern High School, Racine.

JAMES OWENS
REPORTS FOR DUTY
Navy Fireman Apprentice James
M. Owens, son of James H. and Emrna K. Owens of 165 Locust st.,
Pomeroy, has reported for duty
aboard the miscellaneous command
ship USS La Salle, pennanently
deployed to the Middle East and lndian Ocean.
A l'lrl graduate of Meigs High
School, he joined the Navy in
February, 1919.

Closing the Meigs County
Ccurthouse on Saturdays was
discussed with C. E. Blakeslee,
executive director of the Meigs
County
Regional
Planning
Cmunission, at Tuesdays resuJar
weekly meeting of the Meigs County
Cmunissioners.
Blakeslee discussed the closing oo
Saturdays as it was reported at a
recent meeting of the Pomeroy
Clamber or Coounerce. The board
told Blakeslee it had no part in the
closing of the courthoWJe m Saturdays
becall.'lt the board would not be within
its legal right to do so .
The board referred t&lt;i Section 307.01
of the Ohio Reviaed Cede in which an
Ohio Attorney General's opinion

. . ;,1 the world

EUREKA UPRIGHT

GETS OUT THE
DEEP DOWN DIRT.

Meigs County retail sales tax
receipts for July were up 5.42 percent
compared to July, 1918, but tax
receipts .on motor vehicles for the
month were down 18.73 percent under
July, 1978, according to the report of
Mrs. Gertrude Donahey, state
treasurer.
Retail sales tax receipts for July,
1919, totaled $70,651.42 compared to
receipts of $67,017,00 for July, last
year. Motor vehicle saies tax for this
July totaled $46,544.31 compared to
receipts of $57,275.73 for July , last
year.

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MODEL
1458

·:Quake hits area
PALM SPRINGS, Callf. (AP )
- For the second time Tuesday,
an earthquake shook a sedioo of
Callfomla' with the latest jolt setting off burglar a1anns and
lhaklng Palm Springa realdenta
with a magnitude of u on the
Rlc!Ur acale.
"I thought somebody was lwnberinl down the stairs," IBid
Mille Ouchowny, a reporter at
televiaion station KESQ here. He
said the quake ''110unded like
somebody wu dropping a plano
down the stairway."
Earlier Tuesday, residenta of
Santa Barbara were awakened
by a smaller quake that
meuured 3.3 (II the Rlcht.er
scale.
'

Policy changed

Health bellringers
chairpersons named
Several Meigs Ccunty citizens have
been named Mental Health Bellrtnger
Chairpeople for the September 150ctober 15 fund raising campaign in
the county, announced F. Harrison
Green, President of the Mental
Health Association of Ohio.
"The Mental Health Association is
the oldest and largest ·citizens' volun-'
leer organization in the United States
fighting mental illness and promoting
1
mentai health," said Green.
Named to fill the positions of chair- ·
persons are Mona and Merle Johnson,
Rutland; Barbara Duvall, Portland;
and James and Susie , Soulsby,
Pomeroy.

Included with pr ice of upright

cLEvELAND (AP) - The
Ohio Bell Telephone Company
h8l! chansed a restrictive work
break policy, ending an eight.iJay
strike by 200 service representatives in Cleveland and stemming a threat of a statewide
strike over the Issue.
In the settlement reached
Tuesday, Ohio Bell agreed to
change the break policy and the
membert1 of the Ccmmunlcations
Workers of America union
agreed to tear up strike ballots,
removing a threat of a strike by
211,000 employees In Ohio.

Court battle on
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Actor
Clayton Moore, who battled for

$15,773 RECEIVED
Governor , James A. Rhodes anTO MEET TIIURSDAY
nounced that a fifth tax distribution Of
The Willing Workers Class of the 1979 license revenues totaling almost
Enterprise United Methodist Church $14 million was released ~Y the Ohio
will meet Thursday at the home of
Bureau of Motor Vehicles. Meigs
Mrs. Kay Logan.
County's portion of these revenues Is
$45,773.07.
POTLUCK PICNIC
SET TUESDAY
· FUNDS DISTRmUTED
The annual potluck picnic of the
State Auditor Thomas E .. Ferguson
Ladies Auxiliary of Veterans
Memorial Hospital has been set for has reported the August distribution
6:30p.m. on Tuesday, Aug. 28 at the of $5,600,368.85 in local government
home of Reva Simms. All members fund money to Ohio's 88 coUnties and
are urged to attend and to take 408 cities and villages levying local inrecipes for the cookbook being com- come taxes. ·
Meigs County received $12,500 as its
piled by the organization.
share·in the fund money.
.

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tdjUIII to tny ClrlJII
helghttutomttlctlly.

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brut~ roll gets the groundIn-dirt.

Home Furnishings
1st Floor

ELBE
'

.

BY KEVIN KELLY
Inadequate conditions at the county
dog pound were reviewed by the
Gallia Ccunty Cmunlssioners during
their regular meeting Tuesday afternoon.
A. delegation headed by Sandy
Rowland, Ohio director · of the
American Humane Society, presented pictures and complaints from
area residents about rni&amp;trealment of
dogs placed in the facility on Roush
llollow Road.
Residents have been complaining
about lncreaaing incidents of wild
dogs roaming through .the COW)ty,
prompting one resident to write to
State Representative Ron James (0ProctorviUe) about tl!e situation.
The delegation also consisted of
members cl. the Meigs County
Humane Society, who said they have

•

a1

POM EROY·MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

received reports af alleged cruelty to
dogs in the pound by county dog warden Woodrow Haner.
Rowland had inspected the pound
last week and found it dirty, the dogs
uncared for and food and water below
standard. She also found some of the
dogs were eating the partially decomposed iloi!Y of one dog.
In one previous visit, Rowland had
also found a whip on the premises,
which she took with her when she left.
"Now what else would a whip be
used for other than to beat the dogs?"
she asked.
Some injuries dogs had received at
the facility would mean they would
have to be destroyed, she added. jlt.
this date, the shelter cannot comply
with state standards.
"We're certainly not happy with
our situation here," said Com-

.

-

mis8ioner John l:iaunaers, who explained the facility, because it is in an
isolated area, had been the target of
vandalism in the past.
Rowland suggested the commissioners upgrade the facility by
placing a more pem~~~~~ent person
there. CETA funding could be
arranged for the hiring of such a person, she explained.
The COJJlJJiissioners said they would
plan on constructing a new facility in
the future, but fWJdlng for it would
stlll have to be arranged.
'"!'he best thing we can do now is
take care of this one," said Saunders.
As the county also appeared remiss
In disposing of the bodies of destroyed
dogs, it was also requested the county
arrange with a veterinarian to have
them properly buried.
AlSo on hand at the meeting was

~

Fairfield Ccunty dos warden ruC:bard
M. Test, who sulmitted pound IJt.
spection sheets and other literature to
the commissioners aimed at
upgrading the county faclllty _
E. Joyce Miller cl. the Meip County
Hwnane Society stated the IDIIjor
problem with loose doga was the
owners falling to license them. Stricter enforcement of the 1965 state law
requiring owners -to restrain their
dogs was also in order, they felt:
''You've got to make people buy the
licenses," Miller said. •'The key la enforcement of the law."
·
Commissioner Lonnie Burger
agreed with this sentiment, stating
the county ''will! going into the red" In
its attempts to track down looee dop.
Rowland had initially. suggested the
county move the pound to a regularly(Ccntinuedon page 14)

en tine
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 22, 1979

P.RICE FIFTEEN CENTs

Saturday closing
• •
•
commiSSion
topic

Today
AT
POCKET·
PL!ASIN' PRICES!

.

e
VOL XXVIII NO. 91

Village

Gallia commissioners
ponder
.
county dog pound problems

juatice as televiaion 's "Lone
Ranger," now Ia fighting for the
right to appear in public as the
famed muked man he portrayed.
''When I WIB a kid, I wanted to
be two things + a policeman or a
cowboy," the actor recalled in an
interview Tuesday. "I was lucky
becaWJe I got to be a cowboy."
But laal week, Superior Court
Judge Jerry Pacht temporarily
barred Moore from JJI8klng
public appearances as ''The Lone
Ranger." The company that
OWII8 the rights to the character
claims Moore Is too old. Clayton
refuaes to reveal tu. age, but he
h8l! been reported to be between
65and 70.

'

is no authority in law
for the closing of the courtholliM! on
any particular day ; the courthouse
clllUiot be closed unless all of the
public offices housed in the
courthouse have been closed. There Is
no autha:ity In law which provides for
the number of hours which public
offices must be open; this decision is
left to the discretion of the individual
.office holders."
Blakeslee also discussed the
appl.ication .of the planning
commission for an area development
assistance planning grant in the
amount of $10,000 with the federal
share being $7500 and the applicant 's
share being $2500.
Also
meeting
with
the
ammissioners Wl!n! Mra. Evelyn
Knlsh.t and Mr. and Mrs. 'lbomas
MaRil'l! diJcuasing re[IOIU that the
Boy Scout Camp Kiashuta near
OJ ester Is to be 10ld. The three
objected strongly to any sucll action.
The board slated it would be receptive
to having the property deed to Meigs
Ccunty with the stipulation that the
area must be used solely for youth
organWitioos of the county and the
camp be totally self... ustaining so that
it will calliM! to financial obligatioos
for the county oo maintenance and
upkeep.
.
KEYS RECEIVED -Keys to the new Middleport heavy rescue vehiuse. Residents who
to contribute may send checlls to the Middleport
cle were received Tullllday by members of the Middleport Emergency
Fire Department, attention of John Metzger or Kenneth Imboden. PicMichael Swisher, director of the
tured receiving the keys Tuesday are from the left, Don Slivers, Kenneth
Squad of the fire depai"tment. Funds for the van are being raised through
Mell!s County Welfare Department,
a public contribution campaign with $6,900 already contributed and$6,100
Imboden; Bill Grueiler of the Pomeroy Motor Co., handing the keys to
met with the board to discuss welfare
yet needed. 1be van h8l! arrived and will be painted before being put Into
operalioos. It was agreed to proceed
Jeff Darst, squad chief.
·
with the minimum payment
standard'~ for general relief .
.
E. A. Wingett, an agent for the
petitioners for aMeiBtioo of territory
to the village of Racine, met with the
PASS INSPECTION
board to discuss the anneiBtioo
AU n baleS of 111e Mefil Local
Jroceedings. The board informed
Wingett that it has reached a decision Sc!bool Diatrtct bave paued 1lllte iDto amend the pelitioo as submitted by specUoa by tile State lliClnraY
reducing it in size. Wingett was Palnlaad U't re.dy for llle.opellfDII
Jresented with the board findings and ol ~w- oa Sept 5. Six aew J.aa
EAST MEIGS - Buses of tlie and then proceeds &lt;in the foUowiiig FREDERICK - Will begin his route
asked to contact the other agent for will be reeeived b)' tile dlltrlct
Eastern
Local School District have roads: Long Run, Dewitt's Run, this year, previously driven by Franbel
on!
aext
March.
approval as amended. Wingett has
passed state inspection and are ready Route 124, Route 248, and Sum- cis Benedwn oo licbtlllet Road
agreed to do so and return to the next
about 7:20. The following roada are
for the opening of classes next merfield Road to Eastern.
meeting of the board Tuesday for
then trav:eled to Tuppers Plains: SucBUS
NO.
5
CHESTER
Tuesday
morning,
Aug.
28.
further discussion . At that time the
cess, OWl Hollow, Calaway Rlclge,
District officials are BIUiouncing
board l~ expected to pass a fa:rnal
and
Route 7 north ci Tuppers Plalni.
the
complete
schedule
for
each
bus
resolution for the annexation based on
The
Arbaugh, Weathennan, Morlan
driver
so
that
students
can
be
the amended petition.
Due to
Additions
and Kaylor Road will a1ao
prepared to board the proper vehicles
legalities the board cannot pass a
ride Frederick's bus.
for
transportation
to
and
from
reaolution untU both agents for the
BUS NO. 10 OSCAR PENNINGTON
Considerable cloudiness through classes.
petitioners, Wingett and Dale Hart
His route begins on the Silver
Thursday with scattered showers and The schedule of each bus rouows :
•
have signed the amended papers.
Rldge
Road at 7:10 and then proceeds
thunderstonns.
Low
tonight
in
the
BusNo.
t7HEIENBLAKE
she
Attending the meeting were
to
pick
up .children oo Silver Rldge,
begins
her
route
at
her
home
on
State
.
mid
to
upper
60s.
High
Thursday
80
to
Commisslonrs Richard Jones, Henry
north
part of Sumner Road, Cherry
115.
Chance
of
precipitation
is
60
perRt.
124
at
7:15.
She
proceeds
then
to
Wells and Chester Wells and Clerk
Rldge, those living in Alfred area and
cent tonight and 40 percent Thursday. ecunty Rd. 50, White Chapel, Rice
Mary Hobstetter.
tlioae living along Rt. 8111 to Morlan
Run, Rt. 681, Fire Tower, and Craft
Road.
· The office of Pomeroy Elemenlliry Addition In Tuppers Plains.
BUS NO. 19 PAUL BAER- Leaves
BUS NO. 16 SIDELA PIELDS - School is open from 8 a.m. unW 3 p.m.
his
home In the morning at 7:15. His
She. begins her route from her home for enrollment of students in the
route
consiBta of the following areu:
at 7:25 on State Route 124. Her route Pomeroy and Middleport areas.
begins in Reedsville around 7:30 and
All students new to the area who Boy Scout Camp Road, Sand Ridge,
travel'! west on Rt. 681 to Tuppers have not registered should do 80 Royal Oak Road, Wlpple Road, State
Plains. From Tuppers Plains to before September 5, ~ opening Rt ..7, Bawn Addition and then on to
Chester.
·
Eastern on State Route 7.
school day.
1
BUS
NO.
6
ALFRED
WOllE
BUS NO. 21 VIOLET SATTho6e registering for kindergarten
TERFIELD - She also starts her and first grade for the first time must Begins his route at 7:10. He follon
New Hope Road, Bahr's Lane
Omtracts for supplies for the new
Donald Salmons was employed as a route from her home on Rt. 124 at bring a birth certificate and the ino- the
eastern
portloo a! Swnner Roada' ...
7:
12.
Her
first
stop
Is
at
the.
lop
of
Inmunizatlon
record.
school year were given Tuesday night learning disabilities tutor and the
Ccunty
Road
82, and CoWJty Road
dian
Run.
She
then
proceeds
along
Rt.
1be
immunization
record
must
be
when the Southern Local ·School substitute salary schedule was
Into
Chester
•
124
to
Reedsville
Dump
Road,
west
af
tqHcH!ate
before
the
child
enters
District Board of Education met in approved.
BUS NO. 9 TIIEODORE PULLINS
regular session.
The board approved the necessary Reedsvllle, (township road number 9 scbool or the child should be in the - He starts his route on the Hone
Given contracts were Valley Bell transfers and mo&lt;tifications to the Road, Rt. 681 ), Joppa Rd., to Success proce!IS of getting aU Immunizations
Dairy, dairy products; Betsy Ross, appropriatioos. It was agreed to ~d, Rt. 248, and Rt. 124 to Rlyer- .. through a family doctor or the health Cave Road at 7:30. From there his
route Includes Ccunty Rd. 28, on to
department
baked goods; Sand Hill Ccal Co., coal; requelll a tax settlement from the VIeW •
·
BUS 'NO. 15 DARlENE REED Each sc~lage child is required by No. 248 and on into Chester.
.City Ice and Fuel, fuel oU; Ashland, county auditor for the August payroll.
BUS
NO.
211
MARY
ROSE
She
bus supplles; Pennzoil, motor oil;
The Racine H&lt;me-National Bank She leaves her home In Reedsville at the State of Ohio and the Meigs Local
Meigs Tire Center, tires; I.B.M. and was named the official depository of 7:38. She traveb on Route 124 North of School District to have DPT (4) Polio begins her route In Bashan at 7:12.
Best Office Machines, service on tl)e board for the next two years. Bills Reedsville, County Rd. 56, Rt. 681, (3), Meules (1), Rubella (1), 'and a She follows Ccunty Rd. 32, Flatwoodl
Road from Five Pointa, Chester
business machines and Brown's Fire were approved for payment and tlie a~ Rt. 125 South of Reedsville on to TB skin test within the past year.
Cemetery
Road into Chester. From
To enter kindergarten, a child must
and Safety, fire extinguisher service . financial and activity statements Rlvervlew.
Chedter
she
continues her route to
BUS NO. 2 SANDRA COWDERY - be five years old on or before Se
The board set admission charges for were approved,
Oak
Hill
Road
and then back Into
Bua
nwnber
2
leaves
home
south
tember
30.
pboys varsity football and basketball
Southern District schools are
Chester.
bound
on
Route
124
at
7:
15.
Her
route
"It
is
very
bnportant
to
have
games for the next year at $2 for scheduled to open Sept. 5.
BUS NO. 14 CHARLES ESTEP - '
adults and S1 for students. Bus routes
Board members attending were resumes on Mount OUve Road and children registered properly bef
His
route begins on West Shade RGaCI •,
No.
248
and
Rt.
124
back
to
Riverview.
the
beginning
date
of
school
due
to:
were dicussed and special sessions David Nease , president; Shirley
BUS N~. 12 BILL ~ - His ordering of workbo!Q, textbooks, at 7:10. He then proceeds 011 tblt
wereset'for I p.m. on Aug. 29and Aug . Johnson, vice president, and Sue
31 to conduct negotiations with the Grue~r, Betty Wagner arid Dallas ~ute begl!lS ~I 7:10 from his home. and bus routing," Principal . Bob road; then to the Flatwoods Road No.
~ and Ccunty Road No. 82 to Cheater.
His route begtns on Rainbow Rid~e Morris points out.
teachers.
Hill.
:!tales-- "There

·Eastern district officials
announce school bus routes ·

Weather

New students

•
regist rat Ion
hours giVen
•

Southern board
awards contracts

25

'I

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