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                  <text>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.

• All mettl Vlbr•~
Oroomer rii'l ll
bttttr btr.
• Exclull¥1 8-way
Dlti·A· Nip •

height tdjUII ·
men I.
• Duel Edge
Kittner c l11n t
lram WIU •IO·Il!llll .

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.
.

• Aoto· Mttlc ®powemead
tdjUIII to tny ClrlJII
helghttutomttlctlly.

• Vlbrt-Groomer ® bttttr btr
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

�3 - Tile Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Alm. 22. 1979
2·- Tile Dailv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Aug . 22, 1979

,.

Editorial opinions,
comments

Today's

Berry's World

Washington··
By Clarence
Report Miller

~Washington . today

I'

I

The world's sllckest pickpocket will
sting American taxpayers for $12
billion in 1980. Inflation, while causing
great commotion on the consumer
front, quietly pushes taxpayers into
higher tax brackets, !him snatches
their earnings, with nary a notice.
And inflation is aided in its role as an
invisible agent of the IRS by our antiquated tax laws -laws based on the
archaic assumption that prices will
remain stable.
In the reality of today 's economy,
though, prices do not remain stable,
and inflation is galloping away with
our dollars at a 13 percent annual
rate. Higher prices mean higher
salaries, which in turn mean higher
tax brackets. For instance, take the
case of a worker with a wife, two
children, and . earnings of f7 .50 an
hour, or about $15,000 in 1979. After
his four exemptions and the standsrd
deductions, the tax bill comes to
$1,375. If we assume approxlmatly a
10 percent inflation rate, and that admittedly is S(Jmewhat optimistic, the
cost-«·living adjustment brings his
salary to about $16,550 on the year. If
his taxes had gone up propor·
tionately, he would be paying $1,517.
But because he is now in a higher tax
bracket - only because of inflation he must now pay $1,712. Inflation and
our tax laws have teamed to literally
rob this worker of $195. And for every
tax bracket he moves up due to in·
flation he loses still more money.
In an9ther case, a famUy earning
$25,000 In 1979 will have to earn $27,750
in 1900 jiiSt to break ev.cn - again
based on the same inflatlbn rate used
above . But this jump in earnings
leads to a jump in the tax bill of $831.
Most of this jump, $649, is "pure
profit" for the government!
I have cosponsored legislation
which would put an end to this praclice. H.R. 365 is a bill to modernize
our tax structure by providing cost-of-

circuinstances are special. "The).nd
result emerging from the passa~ of
this legislation would most likely be a
barrage of administrative appeals
and possibly lawsuits," he says.
According to th~ Congressional
Budget Office, the national guidelines
would pennit an average increase in
hospital expenditures - and costs of 11.3 percent this year. The
administration had aimed for a 9. 7
percent ceiling, but inflation has
worsened since the program was
drafted.
The idea Is to get hospitals to stay
within the voluntary guidelines this
year lest·they face mandatory .limits
in 1980. The budget office figures that
without government action, the cost
increase this year would be about 14
'C 1979by NEA ,
percent.
.
Meyer writes that the current
"Pat, what would you think of our throwing a
proposal has so many "exclusions,
exceptions and contingencies as to
little 'deposed ruler party'?"
'
make it unlikely that it would have
L ________________________
_J
any bite."
Meyer argues that real progress •
will require a change in the system of
incentives that now tend to push
health-eare spending upward. When
the insurance company is going to pay
anyhow, there is no P..essure on the
Bill Steif
doctor, the hospital or the patient to
hold down the bill.
How to apply
· plying for death benefits should brilig
Meyer suggests that if the
lor benefits
to the Social Security office the death
government Is going to do more than
By \VWiam SteU certificate of the deceased as well as
"paper over or postpone the
(Third ofl4 Jlllrla)
other documents, such as marriage
problem," it has to change the system
Before you get your first job, you and birth certificates. And, of course,
so as to create Incentives for less
are responsible for applying for a the deceased person 's Social Security
costly health insurance and care.
Social Security number - in person, if number.
you are 18 or older - at your local
Much of your routine business with
Social Security office.
the Social Security Administration
There are 1,300 such offices around can now be done by phone;
the coWJtry.
Social Security has established 31
In about six weeks, you get a card "Teleservice" centers aroWJd the
with your number. You then give the nation to handle your questions. The
number to your employer, who specialists at these centers are able to
automatically withholds your Social S(J)ve nine out of 10 problems by
Security tax and matches it with an phone. Consult your telepbone direcaspect to gold that grates on the old equal amoWJt from his business.
tory to find out if your area has a
all-American ideals, like growth.
Your number will follow you the · ''Teleservice''center.
If you advocate gold, in a sense you rest of your life.
(NEXT: Who Is covered?)
are urging an anti-60Cial act- akin to
You '11 find your local Social
making for the lifeboats before the Security office listed in your phone
COLUMBUS - State Senator
other passengers find out that the ship book under . "U. S. Govemment,"
Oakley C. Collins (R-lrontonl reports
might sink.
• J ' • • it appears that there Will be only one
·usually .Wider the subdivision
Gold-buyers also can be seen as "Health, Education and Welfare
By The Associated Press
statewide issue appearing on the
contributing to the problem from Department." (Often the phone book
Today iB Wednesday, Aug . 22, the November baUot. This will be the sowhich they are trying to protect a!Bo contains a separate listing for 234th day of 1979. There are 131 days called "ban the bottle law."
themselves. Gold is, after all, a non- "Social Security Administration" WI· left in the year.
Although the deadline for plactng
productive investment. It builds no der "S. ")
Today's highlight in history :
issues on the ~ovember ballot has
factories, creates no jobs, doesn't
On this date in 1910; Korea was now passed, that does not mean that
A,t the other end of the spectrum,
even pay any dividends.
those groups proposing Issues bave
you go to your Social Security office formally annexed by Japan.
The gold bugs have been right in the two to three months before
On this date :
stopped their efforts. One such group
past, and those who now predict that retirement .to fill out an application
In 1485, King Richard Ill of En gland which is continuing their efforts is the
gold prices will go higher still may be for benefits.
was killed at the Battle of Bosw~o .h, Committee for Fair and Impartial
right again.
Redistricting (FAIR ). FAIR is conWhen doing so, you nonnally have ending the War of the Roses.
It may turn out that they have done to bring your birth certificate,
In 1654, the first Jewish emigrant to tinning its drive to place a proposed
a great .service for their customers, marriage certificate (if you're· ap- America, Jacob Barsimson, landed in constitutional amendment on a
more than earning their subscription plying for benefits with your spouse) New Amsterdam.
statewide ballot to eliminate the ef·
fees, book royalties and seminar and children's birth certificates (if
In 1776, during the Revolutionary forts of gerrymandering.
admission charges by helping many you're applying for benefits for them War, British General William Howe
The term "gerrymandering "
people preserve their assets in a time as well).
landed 10,000 soldiers on New York 's originated back in the tMOs when
of economic trouble.
· Governor Gerry of Massachusetts
You should check with your Social Long Island.
But popularity, acclaim? For the Security office to find out exactly
ln 1846, the anne&gt;&lt;ation of New redistricted the Massachusetts
bringers of bad news, that may be too
which records you need as well as to Me•ico as U.S. territor y wa s Legislature so inequitably and un· ·
much to e~t.
fairly that some of the legislative
find out U alternative records - such announced at Santa Fe.
In 194), German forces reached the districts took such odd shapes that
as immigration or baptismal papers11IE DAILY SENTINEL
can be used in place of a missing birth outskirts ' of the Soviet city of they were dubbed to be "salamanIUSPSII&gt;. . l
Leningrad in World War II.
ders." The combination of the.gover·
certificate.
In
1968,
Pope
Paul
VI
arrived
in
nor 's name and the salamander
It takes about a month to "ad·
judicate" - that is, process - your Bogota, Colombia, beginning the first designation for the legislative distric·
ts resulted in the term "gerrymanclaim. Then all you have to do is wait papal visit to Latin America .
Ten years ago: Some 5,000 anti- dering." The purpose of gerrymanfor your checks to start coming.
For help in figuring the size of those Soviet demonstrators clashed with dering is to draw up legislative
checks, consult my book "What police m Czechoslovakia 's second district lines so that one political parYou've Got Coming in Social Security largest city, Brno, and two person s ty has an advantage in electing candidstes from its political party over
and Medicare." For your copy, send were reported killed .
Five years ago: Panama and Cuba those candidstes of the opposite
$1.50 plus 50 cents postage and han·
dling to "What You've Got Coming in re-established diplomatic relations, pclitical party.
Gerrymandering not only cna occur
Social Security and Medicare" in ending a 12-year estrangement.
One
year
ago:
United
Airlines
asked
in
Ohio butit does exist at the present
care of this newspaper, P. 0. Box 489,
the
U.S.
Civil
Aeronautics
Board
to
time.
The way in which Ohio's ConRadio Oty Station, New York, N. Y.
approve
routes
that
would
link
eight
stitution
provides for the establish·
10019.
with
cities
on
the
ment
of
the
Ohio Legislature's districAmerican
cities
Filing for disability insurance is
ts is particularly susceptible tn
somewhat more complex tban filing China mainland .
Today 's birthdays: U.S . Labor gerrymandering activities. The Ohio
for retirement benefits. Phone the
Social Security office before your Secretary Ray Marshall is 51 years legislative districts are created by the
visit to find out wbat documents you old. French fa shion designer Marc State Apportionment Board, which is
need to bring In for proof of disability. Bohan is 53. Actress Valerie Harper is comprised of elected political of·
ficials. Ohio's congressional districts
Widows and other survivors ap. 39.
are drawn by the General Assembly
itself.
By having what essentially amoun·

In~~

SO&lt;:IAI.J Sl~CllUTY

Business mirror...
NEW YORK (AP) - If the
description of todsy's Americans as
the "me generation" is indeed

accurate, then gold is the perfect
investment for the times.
First of all it is a "winner."
Inflation may be making a hash out of
other people's finances, but if you own
gold, you're staying ahead of the
game.
Uke many of today's other avenues
toward self-improvement, gold is
solitary. There's no part ownership in
a larger venture, no dependency on
what some hired management .or
elected board of directors does.
As a protest against big government
and big-government spending, gold
makes as clear a statement as any
· tax-eutting proposition on any ballot.
The govenunent can print all the
· excess dollars it wants, the gold bugs
· say, but it can't print gold.
Mter a decline from about $200 an
ounce to just above $100 in the early
dsys of the gold sales by the Treasury,
the price of gold has tripled in the past
three years, passing S300 . this
summer.
But the buU market in gold is
somehow a joyless ooe. Recollections
of the skyrocketing stock market in
the 1960s, with all its speculative
excesses and subsequent exposures of
· corporate chicane'!, evoke images of
brass bands an celebrations of
prosperity.
The mood is much different now.
One long-time .gold bug lamented in
his newsletter ·recently that, despite
the clear-eut success of his forecasts,
he was still widely described as a
crank.
"How could it be," he mused, "that
our predictions, even after they have
already come true, are ,still so
disbelieved by certain segments of the
press and the vast majority of
investors?"
One possible answer is that
Americans aren't used to gold, the
way Europeans are supposed to be.
There is a bet-against-the-future
1

Yard Sale

Yard Sale

living adjustments in tile individual
tax rates. Indelling the tu rates
would save taxpayers f9 billion extra
dollars in 1979, and $12 billion in 191Ml.
Added sa~ for the taxpayers coin·
cidlngly me&amp;~~ less. for the government to spend. With less money to
throw around, the government would
have to tighten its purse strings, and
this could well lead to a reduction ol
the inflation rate, as well aa a near·
certain shrinkage ol the bureaucracy.
In fact, Canada has found that in·
delling has been chiefly responalble
for that country's dedlnlng rate ol
growth of government expenditure.
In 19'14 the Canadian government's
expenditures growth rate stood at 1~.9
percent. By 19'17 It had dropped to 2.1
percent. Additlooally, more money in
the tallp&amp;yer's pocketbook allows for
more purchasing ol .cortunodltles he
or she desires. And these added COli·
sumer expenditures will help our ,
overalleconomytoexpand.
As the law now stand!, the government can continue to spend more .
dollars by reaping the benefits of Ita
own windfall profits. What's worse,
the government can utilize infiatlon to
. bring about what amounts to .a
hushed-up tax lncreue - by doing
nothing at all while inflation takes Ita
toll .
Without the pa9S118e of this lndexins
bill the government stands to gain $1
billion to $1.5 billion for each per·
centage point of inflation. 1blals moet
unfair, because, as I have explained
to my colleagues, it is government
practices which sparked our ·
skyrocketing Inflation and whlch COli•
tinues to fuel it. I cosponsored the in·
delling legislation because it marks a
signlflcant step toward providing
relief for the lopaylng public, and I
will cootinue my efforts to provide
taxpayers with such sorely needed
relief.

YARD SALE ot James Swain 's
on CR 28 above Eastern High

School. July 13 and 1-i fr om 9
to? Everything imaginable.
BACK TO school yord sole.
10• 1/t S. 2nd, M iddlepor t.
August , 1, 2, 3.
TEN

FAMILY

Vord

Sale.

Minersville Hill. Fol low signs.
Everything from baby' s to
adult's . Antiques , furniture .
AugustS , 9 , 10 .

t

.h•
.' .
'

•'

YARD SALE starting Augu st
:10-25 . Time 9-5 each day.
E-verything you need for
school.
ieans, sweaters ,
blouses . shoes and oil kinds of
what-nots . Address 1855 Fron t
St., Middleport, OH .

FOUR FAMil V. FrL . Aug. 24 . 9
om . 1635 Lincoln Hts .,
Pomeroy. Lots of furniture ,
adult and children' s clothes ,
crib , dishes, Craftsman edger,
misc . Ra in dote, Sot.

THREE

FAMILY Yard Sole.
August 23 and 24 . Hutch ison

Su:b-Oivi sion. Rutland. N iclnsky residence. Winter and
summer clothing. Two studd·
ad snow tires and misc .

" DISGUSTING'"

ts to the politicians drawing Ohlo'a
legislative and congressional dlstrlc·
Is, the representatioo which the
public deserves does suffer.
Gerrymandering can also ln5ure thai
an incumbent legislator will have no
serious re-electioo problema. Bowl·
dary lines can also be juggled to
create safe .eats lor one party ..- the
other. In addition, where legislative
or congressional seats are ''cut and
dried" in favor d. one -candidate or
one party, individuals who would
become excellent legislators never
take the chance to aeek office since
they know there is no poulble way in
which they could win.
Tile Ohio Constitution provides that
the Ohio Apportionment Board is
responsible lor establishing the boun·
daries of Ohio's 99 Houoe of Represenlatives district~! and the 33 Ohio
Senate districts. This Board must
" r~ap~orti~n" the state into
legislative districtllalter each decen·
nial census. This means that the Allportionment Board will be redrawing
tllestatelegislativedlstrictsafterthe
1980 census. Tile apporl!orunent plan
which this Board draws In 1981 will be
the plan under which aU legi.olaUve
candidates will run for election up
through~ 1990 election.
Tile Uruted States Constitution
establishes the way In which
congressional districts are to be
drawn. Article I, Section 4 of the U.S.
Constitution requires that the states'
legislatures est a bllsh the
congressional districts within their
state.
The U.S. Constitution also requires
that a state legislature must redraw
Its state's congressional districts al
least once within a tO-year period.
'J'!Ie Ohio Constitution is silent regar·
ding the subject of congressional
redistricting. Tile only Ohio Law on
the subject Is the statute which ac·
tually sets forth the boundaries for
Ohio's 23congresslonal districts.

Auto Sales

Auto Sales

YARD SA L!=;. Se th residence. 197 4 VEGA HATCIII!ACK . call
Li ncoln Hill , PoiT)eroy. Thun· 303·675-1501 or ~-675- 2&lt;88
or ~ - 675· 1553.
day only 9-5 .

YARD SALE . Wed . 22 . Thurs . 1976 TRANS AM, 400 engine.
Make ofler. 9'12·5032. 796 S.

23 , Fri. 2~ . lots of chi ldren's
clothes . Time from 9-6 . Corner
of College and locust ,
Rutland.

3rd A ve., Middleport.
1974 DODGE CORONET 4-door
Custom. 992-5858 .

YARD SALE . Sat urday , August CUTLASS
SALON . low
25 . 9-3. Roin coriceh . Clothing , mileage. Good condition .

toys . boot and
trailer , 992-5870 after 4pm.
household items, Scally's, 870
1969 DODGE DART. &lt;·door.
Ash , Middleport.
new point, ntw tires , $600.
Potatoes, $tl per hundr&amp;d.
Pigs , 7 weeks old, $20 each.
Strow $1 .25
per bale .

Pets

for Sale

985-&lt;10&lt;4 .
HOOF HOllOW. EngBsh and 1969 CAMARO. SILVER and
Western .
Saddles
and
harness. Horses and ponies .
t(uth Reaves . 61~- 698· 3190 .
Bording &amp; Riding Lessons ond
Horse (ore products.

black, front and rear' spoi lers,
cowl hood , mucl1 more. A· 1
condition
inside and o t

$3500, 742-2143.

u'

RISING STAR Kennel. Boor· 1979 PlYMOUTH HORIZON TC
ding . Call367-0292 .
3 . Sp&lt;Jrl package . Low
POODlE GROOMING . Judy mileage. Rust proofed. 27 to
Toylor. 614·367-7220 .
35 m.p.g. $4900. 742-2143

YARD SALE . Saturday. Aug .

after 5.
AkC REGISTERED b oxer puppy. $125 . 6 w eek s old. 1976 PlYMOUTH VOLAR E. 2.
992-2726.
door. Maroon with white vinyl
FEMALE AKC reg. poodle. top, radial tires , power steering. power brakes. slant six
White . Phone 985-3803.
engine. good g~s mileage.

25. 9-4 . Lee Circle . Rustic Hills ,

29,000 miles. Good condition.

Syracuse .
Clothes
and
household Items. Some baby
items .

;;---

1978

vW

DASHER .

mile s. ,Good

gas

12,700

mileage .

_ _ _ .:.;c._
304-882-2252
. _ _ _'

Pl1one 992-3198.

·'

GMC BUS camper. Fully soil·
\ onto; nod . $500. 992-7378 .

197.. PINTO . SI ,OCX) miles.
Auto . trans ., radial tires, excellent
condition .
Coli
9'1:1·5190.
1978 JEEP CJS, 304 11·8. Levi
pockoga . P.S., P. B., olumlnu,
spoke wheels , 35 Gumbo
t ires, headers. Toke over
payments. Coll992-6363.
1976

OI.DS

REGENCY.

All

power . S3995, or will take
frod•ln . 949-2818 7:30 unti13
or 9•9-2150. Moy be nen ot
Carpenter's Pennzoll in
Racine.

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUTY,
OHIO
ESTATE OF GEORGE
DEWEY PULLINS( lkl

Dew•J.

Pu 11ns,

DECE SED
Cue No. 22713
NOTICE OF
APPONTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On August 17, 1979, In the
Meigs County probate
Court, Case No. 22783,
Ethel Smith, 1558 Nye
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
was
appointed
45769
EMecutrlx of the estate of
George Dewey Pullins, aka
Dewey Pullins,. deceased,
late of 15.Q9 NYe Street,
Pomeroy, Ohlo.c5769.
Robert E . Buck
Probate JUdO&lt;!
Clerk

I§&gt; 22, 29 19) 5, 3tc

Led by three Ali.SVAC performers prove their 2·2·1 record in 1978 in the
and seven other lettennen, Hannan SVAC and 2-7-1 overall mark.
Trace's Wildcats will be out to imThe Wildcats defeat!!d South-

By Will Grimsley AP Correspondent

Collins' rep_o rt

TodJly in historv.

Jfildcats have 10 returning lette~men

Sports World

\

'

WASHINGTON (AP). - President
Carter considers his hospital cost
cmtrol bill a ce~terpiece of the fight
against inflation, but a private analyst
suggests It would be no more than a
Band-Aid.
Astudy published by Tile American
Enterprise Institute for PubUc Policy
Research says the spiraling cost of
health care is fueled in large measure
by tax and insurance policies that
ease the pain of a big medical bill.
Carter's cost control proposal,
rejected in the last Congress, is
headed for the House next month. The
House Ways and Means Committee
has approved it; the hospital industry
and some Republicans vow to fight it;
and the Senate Finance Committee
has refused to consider a similar
measure.
So the prospects for enaciment are
clouded at best. And the study by Jack
A. Meyer, formerly with the Council
on Wage and Price StabUity, says the
bi1J wouldn't put more than a
temporary lid on soaring hospital
costs anyhow.
Tile cost containment bill would
impose mandstory price controls next
year for hospitals that flunk a
complicated three-phase test. In
effect, there would be three sets of
guidelines: national, state and
hospital-by-hospital. A hospital
exceeding all three would face
cmtrols unless it could convince the
govtl&lt;nment it faced special
circumstances.
And as Meyer noted, few hospitals
would not argue that their

HT seeks .improvement

,

The first team to arrive in Rome for
. the 1960 Olympic Games was the
· ·American swimmins squad, a group
, of superb teen-age Neptunes who
retrieved world supremacy in the
sport for Uncle Sam.
The names bring back memories ...
Lynn Burke, Chris von Saltza, DoMa
De Varona, Carolyn Wood, Lance
Larson, Jeff Farrell and the others ...
a crop of kids who were so dedicated
to their sport that they overcame the
. roadblocks we traditionally place In
front of our amateur athletes. .
The American swimmers did all
right in those. Games. The women, led
by von Saltza's three golds, won five
of the nine events and the men took six
of 10. They did so well that they were
rewarded with a post-ampetition side
trip by rail to Naples.
" We were kids, remember, " Burke,
a double gold winner, said the other
day, recalling her adventure on that
train. "We were running through the
cars, yelling and screaming and
letting off steam. Suddenly, a, hlmd
came out of one of the compartments
and grabbed me."
It was like 90mething right out of
. Agatha Christie's "Murder on the
. Orient Express ." inside the
ampartment sat Soviet gymnast
. Larisa Latynina, herself a winner of
three gold mi!dals at Rome . With her
was an official of the Soviet team and
, a translator . " Burka, " they. said,
pronouncing the silent 'e' on the end of
Lynn's name in a way that sounded
: Olllinous. " We want to talk to you."
Lynn Burke, age 16, quite frankly

was frightened. Remember this was
1960 - just after the U-2 spy plane
incident and the shattered Vienna
SI!IIUTiit - when the Cold War was
positively frigid .
"I thought," said Burke, "they were
going to kill me ."
The questioning began.
uWhere do you live? " the Russians
asked.
"In a regular house, just like other
people," the swimmer answered.
"You lie," the Russians snapped.
"When do you go to school?"
"From 9 to 3, just like other kids, "
she said.
"Impossible," said the Russians.
" When do you traizi?"
"Before ·school."
"Ues. You are lying."
Burke sat in that compartment for a
lmg time , answering questions and
wondering how she'd like it in Siberia.
She was rescued only·when the other
American kids missed her and began
through
that
train ~
going
compartment by compartment,
looking for her.
Larson, who's now a dentist, locatect
Lynn and excused her from the Soviet
hosts. "Was I ever glad to see him,"
she said.
The Russians meant no hann. They
simply were trying to get some insight
on the training habits and living
conditions of the American
sw.immers, wondering how these
precocious kids had been able to
produce their peak performance at
the Rome Olympics, without benefit of
government subsidy.

'

·Munson crash cause
still undetermined
AKRON, Ohio (AP l - The federal
invest l!!ator who has studied details of
the airplane crash that killed New
York Yankees captain Thurman
Munson Jletieves his investigation
may eoo with the cause of the crash
undetennined.
Edward McAvoy, chief of the crash
federal investigation team, spent the
entire day Tuesday with his crew,
ampleting his work at the crash
scene at the Akron-Canton airport . He
said he expects to release his final
report nell! week at his Chicago office .
The Investigators bave ruled out
mechanical failure ip the Aug . 2 crash
and have no proof of pilot error,
McAvoy said .
Earlier,
tl)e
National
Transportatioo Safety Board ruled out
engine failure as a cause of the crash

First eagle
leaves nest
COLUMBUS - Ohio's first captivebred bald eagle to be released to the
wild has ventured from Its nest.
According to the Ohio Department
of Natural Resources (ODNR ),
Division of Wildlife the eaglet has
flown distances of up to one-ball mile
from its man-made nest.
Wildlife biologists from ODNR al)d
the U. S. Fish and Wildlife Services
(USFWS) placed tile eaglet obtained
from the Cincinnati Zoo on a nest near
Lake Erie in early July.
Tile eagle restoration project is
part of the Division of Wildlife's in·
creased emphasis on non!!~~ffie and
endangered species management.
Tile program is receiving aMimance
from ODNR's Office ol Civilian Conservation.
During the next three to four weeks
the eaglet will have to learn how to
hunt and fish well enough to survive
by itself in the wild.
If all goes well, this could mean that
Ohio's bald eagle population may be
beginning to Increase for the first
time since 1959.
Four of Ohio's five pairs of wild
eagles successfuUy hatched an eaglet
this year. Three of those eaglets survive .
Biologists have dyed the Cincinnati
Zoo's eaglet's tall feathers green so
they can determine if the bird returns
to the same areanextyear.
It was also fitted with a tiny radio
lran!lmitter that will allow wildlife
biologlm to follow its movements and
be able to rapidly locate the bird, in
the event It has problems. Tile transmitter will drop off next spring when
the featliers are replaced by molting.
Ohio's eagle restoration program is
important to Ohio's endangered eagle
population which dwindled from ro
pairs in 1969 to five pairs now, Tile
population declined steadily in the
last ro years due to pesticide
poisoning, some illegal shooting, loss
of habitat from the clearing of
woodlots and by electrpcutions and
colli.oiOIIll with power lines.
Tile joint ODNR - U. S. Fish and
Wildllie Service effort to place more
healthy eagles into the present eagle
population has been aided by the
cooperation of the Cincinnati and
Columbus zoos and the Cleveland
Museum of Natural History,
Tile instltuUons breed their captive
eagles and help supply offspring that
can be released to the wild.
'I

of the twin-engine CCSlOla Citation jet
as the 32-year-&lt;&gt;ld catcher practiced
take-&lt;&gt;ffs and landings at the airport .
MeAvoy and his team reinspected
the wreckage, which is stored at a
hanger at the airport . He said that
while mechanical failure has been
ruled out, there is no evidence to dste
to blame pilot error for the crash .
" About I percent of our
investigations end with the cause
undetermined ," McAvoy said.
"Unless we fmd ""mething more
positive, I will have to make that
determination in this case."
Meenwt.ile, Eugene P. Okey, a
Canton products liability lawyer
representins the M\Won family , said
that an aviation expert hired by the
family would COIItinue his own probe
before ruling out tiM! possibility of
mechanical failure .
" We
haven 't
made
any
detennillation , but there is a very
strong liklihood of litigation," Okey
said.
Earlier in the federal investigation,
McAvoy indicated Munson's limited
experience in flying the jet might
have been a factor in the crash . But he
said Tuesday that he did not mean to
say that Munson was a poor pilot.
MeA voy said investl!!ators will
compile information on flight
elevations, speed and related data for
a computer an8Jysis in an attempt to
determine whether the plane was
flying too low and slow on its fmal
approach .
U the height and speed of Munson's
approach camot be determined, the
final ruling on the case will be cause
unknown, he said .
He met for three hours Tuesday
with lawyers f..- the Munson family
and the two passengers who escaped
from the flaming wreckage, David
Hall, 32, and Jerry D. Anderson, 31,
both of Canton.
Hall, a flight instructor and co-pilot
of the flight , and Anderson sat behind
a mockup of the cockpit instruments
of a Cessna Citation in an attempt to
simulate the crash conditions.

Sport
briefs.

Kroc "burned"' may
retire from baseball

• •

TENNIS
BROOKLINE , Mass. (AP)
Thomas Smid of Czechoslovakia
Paul
eliminated
Australia 's
McNamee 6-4, 7-6, to move. into the
third round of the 52nd annual $175,000
U.S. Pro TeMis Championships.
In other action, Mike Cahill scored a
stunning upset with a 6-3, H victory
over second-seeded Jose-Luis Clerc of
Argentina ; unseeded Jay Lapidus, a
Princeton University All-American,
upset Australia 'sKim Warwick, 11-2,75; Johan Kriek of South Africa scored
a 7-6 , 11-3 victory over Australia's Phil
Dent; and · Ivan
Lind! . of
Czechoslovakia edged Hick Fagel, 6-4,
7-6 .
MAHWAH, N.J. (AP) - Defending
champion Virginia Wade was upset by
Ann Kiyomura 11-2, 6-4, while veteran
Billie Jean King defeated Sylvia
Hanika of West Germany 11-2, 2-6, 11-2
iri first-round matches at the $75,000
Women's Tennis Cup.
In other actioo, Jeanne DuVall
upset Dianne Fromholtz 2-6, 7~, !1-2;'
Sue Barker defeated Kate Latham r.-7,
6-2, 6-3; Ivannan Madruga of
Argentina beat Zenda Liess of 11-3, IHl;
Leslie Allen ousted Dana Kloss of
South Africa 6-2, 6-3; Hana
Mandlikova of Czechoslovakia beat
Bettina Bunge 11-3, ·7-5; and Marita
Redondo topped Linda Siegel when
Siegel retired because of illness .after
losing the first set 11-1.
MASON, Ohio (AP) - Top-seeded
Roscoe Tanner beat Argentinian Lito
Alvarez S.l, 6-lin the first round of the
$200,000 Association of Tennis
Professionals Championships.
In other matches, Jlie Nastase beat
Jose Damiani of Uraguay 11-3, Il-l ;
Jaime Fillol of ChUe defeated Victor
Amaya 4-6, 11-2, 11-2; Brian Teacher
ousted South African David Schneider
6-4, 11-3 ; Tom Okker beat Fred McNair
1~ . 6-4, 6-4 ; and Bernie Mitton of
South Africa beat Australian Chris
Kachel 11-2, 7-6 .
GOLF
PINEHURST, N.C. (AP) - Louise
Suggs, winner of 50 professional titles,
and turn-&lt;&gt;f-the-eentury player Walter
J . Travis were inducted into the World
Golf Hall of Fame.
Suggs, who won both the United
States and British Women's Amateur
before turning pro in 1949, was the
seventh woman named to the Hall.
Travis, who died in 1927, became the
first overseas winner of the British
Amateur in 1904.

SAN DIEGO (AP) - Saying he's
" been burned" in his latest flap,
outspoken owner Ray Kroc said he
may turn over the San Diego Padres
to his son-in-law and "retire out of
baseball completely."
Kroc, the 79-year-&lt;&gt;ld founder of the
McDonald's fastfood chain, has owned
the club since 1974, when his eleventh
hour purchase prevented the
franchise
from
moving
to
Washington, D.C.
He has been under fire since vowing
last week that he was "going after"
standout infielders Graig Nettles of
the New York Yankees and Joe
Morgan of the Cincinnati Reds, who
are expected to become free agents
this fail .
The remarks, made in an
Associated Press interview, brought
accusations of tampering from
Yankees o.wner Georlte Steinorenner
and Reds' President Dick Wagner.
Baseball Commissioner Bowie
Kulm, who reprimanded Kroc in 1974
for beraling his players over a public
address srstem, also reportedly had
strong words for Kroc .
"Yes, l think I've been burned very
good (in this matter), so I'm going to
be far less active in running the club,"
Kroc told the San Diego Union .
" I'm not going to answer another
question as long as !live," said Kroc.
"All of these questions are going to
have to be answered by Ballard
Smith.'' Smith is currently t.he club's
executive vice president.
"U I do this, l'U never answer
another question. Oh, I'll still be the
owner, but my No.I business has
always been McDonald's. That's not ·a
matter of more or less. It's always
been my top priority.''

investigators ruled out mechanical
faUure in tbe Aug. 2 airplane crash
that killed New York Yankees captain
Thurman Munson, and have no proof
of pilot error, an air safety inspector
said.
BALTIMORE (AP ) - City pollee
said they were investigating the
possibility that the beating Monday of
former NFL quarterback Joe Gilliam
was drug-related.
Police spokesman Dennis Hill said
that police are investigating a "very
strong possibUity" the beating was
drug-related. Gilliam has a history of
drug abuse.

western and Southern and tied Kyger Keith Jayne
E 12 H:i
Creek.
QB
12 140
Archie Meadows
Ali.SVAC honorees returning are Steve Montgomery
G 12 150
Jay Bray, running liack ; Kerry Ours, ·Kerry Ours
T 12 190
tackle and Todd Sibley, a junior run- JoMy Saunders
E 12 !52
ning back,
Tim Wright
T 12 165
Archie Meadows, junior · signal Larry Angell
E 11 100
caller, received honorable mention: Craig Chapman .
G 11 150
others returning are Tim Beaver Greg Maynard
G 11 157
. guard; JoMy Saunders, senior' ·
seruor
David Montgomery
T 11 165
end; Tim Wright, senior Iackie; Ran- Lee Mooney
HB 11 145
dy Green , senior halfback; Bruce Tommy Saunders
G 11 157
Waugh, junior middle guard; aoo Todd Sibley
HB Jl 165
Craig Chapman, junior linebacker- Bruce Waugh
c 11 170
cornerback.
Tim Angell
HB 10 140
The Wildcats, according to coach Danny Brumfield
FB 10 150
Larry Cremeens, will be running Keith Campbell
E 10 125
from a wishbone offense.
Rodney Clary
E 10 125
Strong offensive points are HT's Mike Waugh
G 10 !55
returning backfield, overall team Greg Webb
QB 10 150
speed and the fact that no team Mark Beaver
c 9 100
scored ·on the Wj)dcat... the last II Mike Beaver
T t_190
quarters last fall should help the MarkBeMett
HB 9 130
defensive unit.
Steve Harrison
G 9 160
Weal&lt;nesses include the ln&lt;!S of Rick Eddie McGuire
G 9 140
Clary, veteran linebacker who led John Saunders
E 9 158
last year's defense, overall player
size, no depth and fewer boys participating in football this fall .
Hannan Trace opens its 1979 season
Aug. 31 against · Symmes Valley.
HANNAN TRACE
other non-league opponents are Han·
SCHEDULE
nan, W. Va., Huntington and. Aug . 31 Symmes Valley
Sept. 7 at Hannan
Southeastern, both of Ross County.
Sept. 14 Hunt;ngton
Sept. 22 at Southeastern (2 ~I
sept. 28 at Kyger Creek
Oct. 5 at Ironton Sf. Joe
Oct. t2 North Gall Ia
Oct. 19 Eastern
Oct . 26 at Southwestern
Nqv . 2atSouthern

WILDCAT ROSTER
POS. YR. WT,
Tim Beaver
G 12 t68
Jay Bray
FB 12 170
Randy Green
HB 12 1.W

PLAYER

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A

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Durability
• Built-In
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• Choice of
Colors

PICKENS HARDWARE
MASON, W.' VA.

GENERAL

AKRON. Ohio (AP ) -

Federal

Clippers win another,

down Red Wings, 6-2
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Bob
Kammeyer, the winning est pitcher in
the International League, pitched .a
complete game for his 15th victory as
the Columbus Clippers cmtinued their
drive to nail down the IL pennant with
a 11-2 victory over the Rochester Red
Wings Tuesday night.
The Clippers took a 7~ game lead
Into the game with 13 left to play.
Kammeyer spaced 10 Rochester
hits, and , with the help of two double
plays, held his shutout until the eighth
inning when Wayne Tyrone singled in
two roos. The runs were the first the
Red Wings had scored in their last 31
innings.
Denny Werth pace(! the Oippers
with a single, double and triple and
two RBI. The Clippers scored what
proved to be the winning run when
Marv Thompson and Werth collected
back-to·back doubles.
Kammeyer is now 15-7. The loser
was Pete Torrez, 3-2.

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'14 ... 74-8734

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'·

MASON, ·w. VA.

�4- The Dailv Sentinel. Middleport·Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, AuK. 22, 1979

Ohio Sportlight
DAYTON, -Ohio t AP) - Kathy
Spang began swimming and diving
early in her life . At age 16, she took a
job a5 a diving coach at a private club
in nea rby Kettering.
While demonstrating a dive to her
students, she slipped off the high
board and landed oo the edge of the
pool.
. The accident se vered her spinal
co rd and gave her a severe
concussion . She was paralyzed from
th e waist down and confined to a
wheelchair .
That was four summers ago. Today ,
· Ms. Spang is back doing what she
enjoyed so much - coaching diving .
She served this summer as the
assistant diving coach at an area
recreation center where she spent
three hours each week sharing her
slciJls with 18 youngsters.
She also is volunteering to assist
Wright State University diving Coach
Harold Miller .
·
" I just use my first two fingers to
.l;how how their legs a nd back are
pposed to be positioned when they
ve," she said, explaining how she
oaches from a wheelchair.
1 If a student is having a particular
~Jroblem , she said, " I just point out
)!not her student who has mastered the
~lciJI and say , 'Watch him.' Kids learn
.,.ell from each other."
; She brags about the success tha t her
ung divers had this swnmer .
'The kids placed high in · several
all meets and came in second
erall among eight teams in the
'
I burban Swimming Association
piving ChamP.ionships."
• The recreation cente r 's head diving
}oach had high praise for his

~

~

BY ASSOCIATED PRESS

wacky history on ly the New York
Mets could p~ove that a baseball
game isn 't over even AFTER the last
out.
There have been some weird
happenings in the Mets' 19-yea r
history and they have won and lost
games in some strange ways, but
·

assistant's attitude and e•pertise.
" She's know ledgeable a bout diving
and the kids responded well and
followed her advice," said Rick
Taylor . " I don 't think the wheelchair
ever got in the way of her
communication with the kids."
Ms. Spang colleged a long list of
'
swimming and diving awards of her
own before the accident, including a
third place in diving during the
Amateur At hletic Union Jun ior BASfBAII
Olympics.
Baseball At A Glance
She is st Ul collecting ·them . Last
By The Associated Press
summer .. she placed fourth in the
NATIONAL LEAGUE
breast stroke and fifth in the freestyle
EAST
category at the National Wheelchair
W. L . Pel. GB
Pittsburgh
72 52 .581
Games .
Montreal
68
52 .567 2
She is also an eKpert ping pong Chicago
67 55 .549 4
player and · recently played in a St. Louis
64 61 .512 8 V2
Philadelphia
na tional tournament in New York.
64 61 .512 8'12
51 70 .421 19'12
" I put up a good fight, " she said in New York
WEST
describing her loss in the tournament. Houston
71 55 ,563
Sports is not th e only area where she Cincinnat i
70 57 .551 I &gt;;,
has put up a good fight. After her Los Angeles
58 67 .464 12 1!2
58 68 .460 13
accident she was determined to attend SJ3n Francisco
San Diego
54 73 .425 17 v,
school and graduate with her high Atlanta
49 77 .389 22
school class.
Tuesday 's G01mes
Los Angeles 4, 'Chicago 2
"So I returned in a wheelchair and I
Atlanta 5, Philadelphia 4
got kind of depressed because l had to
San Francisco 6, Pittsburgh 1
be carried up and down steps," she
New York 5, Houston o
· recalled . 'I had to depend on too many
Ci ncinnati J, Montreal2
San DiegO 3, St. Louis 2, 11 inningS
people. But I got my diploma with
Wednesday 's Games
everyone else and tha t gave me some
San Francisco (Whitson 5-8) at Pit·
confidence ."
tsburgh IBibby 9-31
Her depression lifted further when
Houston (Richard 12· 11) at New
she began attending Wright State York IKObel5 ·1)
Los Angeles I HoUgh 3·41 at Chi cago
wh~re
she
is majoring in
IKrukow
9-81
comm uni cations . She tra nspor ts
Allanta
!Solomon 4·10)
at
herself in a lift-equipped van and Philadelphia (Christenson 4·71
Montrea l (Rogers 11 -7) at Cinclaims, "I'm on the go all the time ''
" I know how l want to live my life, c innati (LaCoss 13-5)
San Diego (Owchinko H I at St.
and I'll do it," she said.
Louis (Fu lgham 5·41

®

iJ(night·undecided
about court case
INDIANAPOUS (AP) - Trial in
absentia ''is an acceptable procedure
in Puerto Rico," says the attorney for
Indiana University basketball coach
Bobby Knight, charged with
assaulting a San Juan policeman.
Knight , the U.S. coach in last
month's Pan American Games, has
decided not to attend his own trial,
. cheduled to begin . today, sa id
ttorney Clarence Donmger .
Instead , Knight was · to be
represented by Puerto Rican counsel.
; The 31!-year-old coach was involved
In a fra cas with a jJoliceman who
jntervened during an argument over
l"ho had the ri~ht to a basketball court
!luring a ·pracl1ce sess10n . Knight hled
CQ Unt er -charge against tl)e
Policeman, but that was dismissed .
. If con victed, Knight ·could draw six
months in jail and a $500 fine .
· There had been much speculation
whether Knight would show up for the
trial, and Doninger sa id the Indiana
coach
had
considered
four
alternatives .
The first was to stand trial and
bring witnesses on his behalf,
Doninger said .
'"'But there was a cost factor
involved, with witnesses all over the
country. It would be very expensive to
have them there ," he said .
Doninger said Knight also ruled out
two other possibilities, that he " plead

~

a

Transactions
Tuesday's
Sports Transactions

By The Associated Press
BASEBALL
American League

SEATTLE MARINERS - Optioned

Charl ie Beamon, infielder , to
Spokane of the Pacific Coas t Le'ague .
Act ivated Shane Rawley , pitcher .
Nationil League

PHILADELPH IA

further ." ,

Doninger said he did not anticipate
any a ttempt to postpone the tri~l. " We
want to get it over with .".
Knight has been on vacation in
Coiorado and California the past four
weeks and has been unava ilable for
comment on the case .
The charges were brought by San
Juan policeman Jose de Silva, who
skirmished with Knight during the

PHILLIES

Placed Dick Ruthven, pitcher, on fhe

21 -day disabled list. Recalled Dick
Noles, pitcher, from Reading of the
Easter-n League .

BASKElBALL
National
Association

Bas~'etball

INDIANA PACERS -

Released

Steve Green, forward .

FOOTBALL
National Football league'

,O.TLANTA FALCONS - Cut Scott
Hunter, quarterback ; Spike Jones,
punter; Brent Adams, offensive
tack le; George Franklin, runn ing
back ; Ernie Jackson and Charles
'Johnson, cornerbacks ; Jim Bailey ,
defensive end ;
Keith Miller ,
linebacker ; Bill Leer-, c;:enter, and
Jimmy Bryant, wide rece i ver .

BALTIMORE COLTS -

Acqu ired

Bucky Dilts, punter, from the Den verBroncos for an undisclosed draft
choice. Cut Dave Rowe, defensive
tackle ; Marshal l Johnson, wide
receiver ·kitk
re-t urner ;
Jack
Shrawder, defensive end ; Nate
Jackson, fullback, and Lee Cross,
center .

Thursday's Games
No games scheduled

AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST
W. L. Pet . GB
Bal.timore
80 43 .650
Boston
75 48 .610 5
· M ilwaukee
76 51 .598 6
New York
68 55 .553 12
Detroit
65 60 .520 16
Cleveland
62 63 .496 19
Toronto
39 86 .312 42
guilty and pay a nominal fine WEST
70 56 .556
something like $100- but that's California
66 58 .532 3
definitely out . Bobby Knight will not Minnesota
Ki~nsas City
64 61 .512 5'h
plead guilty ."
Texas
62 64 .492 8
He said Knight could also have Chicago
55 71 .421 17
53 73 .421 16
chosen to "ignore this whole thing, but Seattle
40 86 .317 30
that's not viable, either. We wouldn't Oakland
Tuesday's Games
want to do that. The fourth alternative
Milwaukee 3-9, Chicago 2-5
would be for a trial in absence of the
Texas 2, Baltimore 1
Minnesota 7, Boston 2
defendant, as long as he is
New York 6, Kansas City 2
represented by counsel."
Cleveland 12, California 7
[)Qninger said he talked with Knight
Oak land 8, Detroi 11
on Tuesday, and it was the Hoosier
seattle 8, Toronto .4
coach who made the decision " with
Wednesday's Games
Cleveland (Spillnern 7-Jl at Cali for ·
advice by counsel ...
Doninger said he could not discuss nia (Ryan 13·8)
Detroit !Wilcox 10·61 at Oakland
the merits of the case, but he (McCatty 8·7)
a cknowledged it might po se
Chicago (Baumgarten 11 · 7) at
difficulties in the presentation of the M ilwaukee (Haas8 -7)
Boston (Stanley 11 ·9) at Minnesota
defense without Knight there.
(Goltz IHI
" I don't know what would happen.
New York (Beattie 3·4) at Kansas
We're just hoping for the best, hoping City (Gura 8·9)
·
Toronto IStieb 5·31 al Seattle
he would be found not guilty. , We
discussed many things, but it's just !Honeycutt 8·91
Only games sc heduled
best that I don 't comment any
Thursday's Games

J&amp;L BLOWN INSULATION

BUFFALO BILLS - CutCraig Her ·
twig, offensive tackle ; Marvin Swif·
zer , defenSiv~ back ; Jay Sherrill ,
punter-placekicker .

CHICAGO BEARS - Waived Chris
Devl i n
and
John
Sullivan ,
linebackers ; Jeff Sevy, Offensive
guard ; Dave Be'cker and Joe Restic,
defensive back ; Ron Harris and
Jerome Heavens, running ba cks; ·ROn
Robinson, , wide receiver ; . Willie
Washington, defensive tackle, and
Bob Wright, offensive tackle.

CLEVELAND

BROWNS -

C~

Pete Pullara, offensive guard ; Gary
Parris and Anthony King, tight ends ;
Woocly Thompson and Dino Hall , run n ing backs ; Mike Tiagwad and Ken
Smith, wide rece i vers ; Carl McGee,
linebacker; Jim Ramey, defensive
end, and Tom London , defensive

back .
DALLAS

COWBOYS

-

Washington, cornerback; Gary Cobb.

DETROIT LIONS -

Waived Don ·

nie Hickman, offensive li neman , and
Nat Terry and M ike Burns, defensive
backs
Pla ced John Mohr ing ,
linebacker, on the injured reserve
1 is1.

argument. Kni ght was arrested,
handcuffed and jailed briefly before
being released .
It was the second time in a week
that Knight was the center of
controversy at the games. He was
ejected in the opening game against
the Vir gin Islands after protesting a
referee's call . A day later, he was
called on the carpet by Pan Am
officials and apologized.

and Matt Burnett, defensive linemen;
Richafd Ellender, wide rece iver ;
Mike Taylor and Randall Young, of ·
fensive linemen; Norris Banks, run ning back ; John Paplham, fight end,
and Bruce Bell. cornerback . Pla ced
FrankUn King, defensive lineman, on
the injured reserve list .

KANSAS CITY CHIEFS - Traded
Tim Gray, safety, to the San Fran ·
ci~co 49ers tor an undiscl osed draft
choice. Waived Zenon Andrksyshyn ,
pun1er ; Eddie Vayton , ki cker .

2:00

Phone

Mt ~

In 14 Karat Plumb Gold.

RBI : Baylor , California, 110; Lynn,
Boston, 105; Rice, Boston, 101 ;,
Si.n gleton, Baltimore , 9-4 ; Kemp,
Oetro i~, 90 ; Thomas, M ilwaukee, 90.

HITS : Brett, Kansas City , 169;
Rice, Boston, 163; Bell , Texas, 156;

Lynn, Boston, 149; Lansford, Califor·
nia, 148.

DOUBLES : Cooper, Milwaukee,
37 ; Brett, Kan~s City, ~ ; Bell,

32 ;

Buckner,

Chicagor

31;

YoungblOOd, New York, 31; Reitz, St .
Bumbry, Battimore,-28.
Louis, 31 .
PITCHING 112 t''!Cisions) : Davis,
TRIPLES : Templeton, St. Louis,
New York, 10·2, .833, 3.19; Zahn, Min- 13; McBride,. Philadelphia, 11 ;
nesota, 10·3, .769, 3.38; Drago, Boston, Moreno, Pittsburgh, 10; Scott, St .

9-3, .750,3.13 ; Eckersley, Boston, 16-6,
.727, 2.75; John, New York, 16·6, .727,

2.90; Caldwell, Milwaukee, 13·5, .722,
3.39; Clear, California, 10·4, .714, 3.12;
Kern, Texas, 10-4, .714, 1.38.

Louis, 10; Dawson, Montreal , 9; Win ·

field, San Diego, 9.
HOME RUNS: Kingman, Chicago,
39;' Schmidt, Philadelphia , 39; Win ·
field, San Diego, 27 ; Horner , Atlanta ,

STRIKEOUTS : Ryan,, California,

25; Matthews, Atlan.t,!l, 25; Lopes, Los

------

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GATEWAY CLIPPER FLEET

94 ;

89.

30; Baylor, California, 28 .
STOLEN BASES : LeFlore, Detroit,
62; Wilson, Kllnsas City, 56; Cruz,
Seattle, 3S; Bonds, Cleveland, 29;

Matthews, Atlanta, 162; Garvey, Los
Angeles, 161 ; Hernandez, St. Louis,
160; Moreno, Pittsburgh, 155.
DOUBLES: Hernandez, St.. Louis,
~; Rose, Philadelpia, 35; Parker,
Pittsburgh, 34; Cromartie, Montreal,

,.ooucn

200 Ct.

Board 6 : 30PM

a stamped self -addressed envelope.
Please Specify cruise Send To :

RUNS : Lynn, Boston, 98; Brett,

Philadelphia, 90; Clark, San Fran ·

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a Personalized
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Porter, KansasCity, 10.

Bre1t, Kansas City, .331 ; Lescano,
HOME RUNS : Lynn, Boston, 36;
Milwaukee, .331 ; Downing, Callfor· · Rice,
B~ston ,
33; · Singleton,
nia, .330.
Baltimore, 31 ; Thomas, Milwaukee,
Kansas City, 95 ; Baylor, California,

RBI : Kingman, Chicago, 93 ; Win ·
field, San Diego, 93 ; Schmidt,

Molitor, Milwaukee, 12; Wilson, Kan - cisco, 85 ; Hernandez. St. Louis, 84.
sas City, 11 ; Randolph, New York, 10; . HITS : Templeton, St. Louis , 166;

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TRIPLES : Brett, Kansas City , 16;

High School Seniors

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Off I(IOC.tt IIAf'IO

FRUIT COCKTAIL··················· 83c

RIVER CRUISE ·

Ohio *Snack Bar Available.

By T he Associated Press

•
AMERICAN LEAGUE
BATTING (325 at bats) : Lynn,
Boston, .346; Rice, Boston, .335;

Te•as, 35; Lynn , Boston, 33; Lemon,
. Chicago, 33 .
·

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RUNS : Lopes, LOS Angeles, 91 ;
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fOt THI$ SIGN
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Quarters

TUE ., SEPT.18- 1stTimein POMEROY ...
MAKE RESV.'S NOW FOR THESE TWO MAIDEN
CRUISES ABOARD THE 400 Pl'SSENGER STERNWHEEL

*.

Cincinnati, .310 .

The victory enabled the Reds to
climb back within I I&gt; games of first-

~001(

The winner paid $5.60, $2.00 and
$2.60. Batty BUI returned $3 and $2.20
for place, and Heraclytis paid S3 .for
show .
The first race trifecta of 6-2-4 paid
$897 .60.
The crowd of 4,585 bet $3i6,893.

CARIBOU CATFISH .

._;;A...,.,.._~

Dan Driessen with the Winning run in
the seventh inning as the Cincinnati
Reds defeated· Montreal 3-2 Tuesday
night to snap the Expos' five'flame
winning stre~ .
Driessen led off the seventh with a
single, stole second and went to third
oo an infield out before Cruz, batting
fer winning pitcher Tom Seaver,
rapped an infield hit that third
baseman Larry Parrish was unable to
reach .
The victory was the lOth straight for
Sea.ver, 12-5, who al.!!o struck out two
Expos to pass Jim Bunning and take
over fifth place on the all-time career
list with 2,1156.
Rudy May, 7-1, suffered the loss in
relief of starter David Palmer.
Cincinnati scored twice in the fifth
inning oo RBI singles by Cesar
Geronimo and Dave Collin s.
Mootreal's Rusty Staub blasted a two·

St. Louis, .328; Winfield, San Diego,
.320; Horn.e r, Atlanta, .319; Knight,

Houston, 17·7, .708, 3.01 ; Seaver, Cln·

cinnati, 12 ·5, .706, 3.16; Schatzoder,
Montreal , 9.·4, .692, 3.02 .
STRIKEOUTS : Richard, Houston,
Chicago, 10·3, .769, 2.54; Romo, Pit 222 : Nie.ro, Atlanta , 150; Carlton,
tsburgh , 10·3, .769, 2.32; Bibby, Pit · Philadelphia , 147; Blyleven, PI!·
tsburgh , 9 3, .750, 2.87 ; LaCoss , Ci n· tspurgh, 134 ; Perry, San Diego, 132.

U.S. GOV'TGRADED CHOICE
BEEF CHUCK

COLUMBUS, Ohio ( AP)- Mudge 's
Sammy, driven by Jim Parkinson ,
woo the featured eighth race Tuesday
night at Scioto Downs by 2¥• lengths.
It was the ninth win in 31 starts for
Mudge 's Sammy, who came from
third at the stretch to win in ~time of

INSULATION
STORM DOORS
STORM WINDOWS
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS
GUTTERS AND DOWN SPOUTS

~...__\••••u• '~

nandez, St. LOUis, .340 ; Templeton,

cinnatL 13 5, .722, 2. 86; Blyleven, Pittsburgh, 10·4, .714, 3.71 ; Niokro,

YOUR FRIENDLY KROGER STORE

MARGAmti£et 69~

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CINCINNATI (AP ) - Pinch hitter rWl homer in the seventh to tie the place Houstoo in the National League
Heity Cruz's infield single drove in game 2-2.
West when the Astros were bl!aten !HI

tsburgh, 55; North, San Francisco,
50 ; Taveras, New YorK , ~S ; Lopes,
Los Angeles, 34; Sco1t, St. Louis, 33 .
PITCH lNG ( 12 Decisions) : T id row,

scioto results

VINYL AND ALUMINUM
SIDING

'.rJ.e
,,..,

,
NATIONAL LEAGUE
BATTING 1325 ~t bats):

Angeles, 25 ; Clark, Sf-, 25.
STOLEN BASES: Moreno, Pil ·

~TORE

DENVER BRONCOS - Wa ived
Steve Schindler, offen~iv e guar-d ; Jeff
Mc intyre , linebacker ; Wylie Turner,
defensive back ; Frank Sm i1h and
Dave Hubbard, offensive tackles,
Charlie Taylor, wide receiver; Ri ch
Tuten , defensive tackle, and Zachary
D ixon, runn ing back.

the ~pires ·m the ~lllth mnmg for
posstble use of a fore1gn substance on
the ball .
Padres 3, Cardinals 2
Paul Dade opened the San Diego
lith with a double, beat the throw to
third on a sacrifice and scored the
winning run on Kurt Bevacqua's
single as the Padres ended a sevengame losing streak. Dade was batting
for winner Bob &amp;lirley, wbo allowed
six hits in 10 innings. The Padres tied
the score in the ninth when Ouie
Smith singled, was sacrificed to
second.and scored on a single by Dave
Winfield .
Braves 5, PhUs 4
Gary Matthews hit his 25th home
rWJ of the season in the seventh inning
tQ break a tie and give rookie Larry
Bradford his first niajcr league
victory . The Phillies had tied the
score with three runs in the sixth,
Atlanta took a ~ lead in the first
inning, which Matthews started with a
single and Barry Bonnell capped with
a twoo£un double.

RUTLAND
DEPARTMENT

linebacker ; Duane Carrell , Punter;
Chris deFrance, wide r-eceiver, and
Ralph DeLoach , defensive lineman .

177 ; Guidry, New York, 147 ;
Flanagan, Baltimore. l46 ; Jenkins,
Texa s. 13,5; Yoosman, Minnesota , 122 .

Cruz~s hit gives Reds win

Avondale Com

Placed

HOUSTON OILERS - Cui Jim Mol

.

~

called time but Falwne released ~he
next pitch an~ay and Leonard flied
out to center fielder Lee MaZZllli .
Or so it seemed . Harvey ruled that
time wasoutand sent Leonard back to
the plate . Two pit chiS later he singled
to center.
Or so it seemed. The Mets had no
first baseman on the field since Ed
Kranepool had gone to the clubhouse
thinking the game was over.
New York Manager Joe Torre
argued that the rules call for all
fielders other than the catcher to be in
fair territory for a play to, oount. The
umpires agreed and The Jeff Leonard
Hour contin ued.
But first a word from Houston
Manager Bill Vtrdon , who claimed
that if Kranepool was not in position
the intervening pitches to Leonard
shouldn't count. Again the umpires
agreed, but Virdoo said he was
playing the game under protest .
Two pitches later Leooard hit
another fly ball which left fielder Joel
Youngblood caught to officially end
the game.
The setback, Houston 's fifth in the
last slx games, trimmed the Astros'
lead in the National League West to
I 1&gt; games over the second-P.lace
Cincinnati Reds, who edged Montreal
3-2. The Expos thus remained two
games in 6ack of Pittsburgh in the NL
East as the Pirates dropped a &amp;.!
decision to the Sari Francisco Giants.
Elsewhere , the Los Angeles
Dodgers downed the Chicago Cubs 4-2,
the Atlanta Braves nipped the
Philadelphia Phillies 5-4 and the San
Diego Padres shaded the St. Louis
Cardinals 3-2 in 11 innings.
Giants 6, Pirates 1
Jack Clark's tie-breaking three-run
homer highlighted a four-run sixth
inning and Dennis Littlejohn hit his
first major league homer in the ninth
as San FranciscQ ended a six-gwne
losing streak. Giants pitcher Bob
Knepper, who scattered slx hit~,
including Dave Parker's first~nning
homer, started the sixth-inning rally
with a single, only San Francisco 's
second hit off Bruce Kison .
Dodgers 4, Cubs 2
Roo Cey's three-run homer followed
by a solo blast from Dusty Baker and
powered Don Sutton and the Dodgers
to a 4·2 victory that snapped Chicago's
s ix-game winning streak . Sutton
notched six strikeouts to become the
15th pitcher in major league history to
reach 2,500 strikeouts.
Sutton reached his strikeout
milestone despite being checked by

Charlie Wafers, safety, on the iniured ·reserve list. Waived Doug Dennison , runn.ing back ; Mcirk

Texas at Baltimore
Oakland at Clevelan d
Chicago at Mi lwaukee
Only games sc heduled

FREE ESTIMATES
JAMES KEESEE
PHONE 992-2772
......

never before have they had to go
through a d&lt;Hlver to end a ballgame .
Suffice to say t hat Doug Flynn drove
in three runs with a single and double
and 'Pete Falcone pitched a 41'..-llitter
Tuesday night - all right, it was
really a four-hitter - as the Mets
defeated the Houston Astros S.O.
Falcone's. toughest c hore was
recording the !mal out.
The fun started when Houston's Jeff
Leonard fouled a ball into the stands.
Right fielder Dan Norman, who had
given chase, was slow returning to his
position so umpire Doug Harvey

h. their wild and woolly, daffy and

•
I

Weird play ends Mets win over As~~~s

5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday , Au~. 22. 1979

--

Middleport, 0 .

INClUDES: 9 PIECES CHICKEN

.023 oz .

BLUE, RED OR

REG. KOOL-AID .••••••.•••••••••. 6/69c

Th.ompson White
Seedless Grapes ..
I '

FamilyPak
Fried Chicken ..................... Eech

'·::J~ . . . . .............. . . . . ... .Ib.79c

:1
II

�'

~-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-PomerQy, 0 ., Wednesday, Aug. 22, 1979

•
KoQsman records ·16th wzn
Tuesday
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
It's been • ·season of ups and downs
for Jerry Koosman with th e
Minnesota Twins .. but at least it 's
better than last year , when it was just
me bi g downer with the New York
Met.s .
Canin g off a 3-15 year. when just
abo ut e~ery thing went wrong ,
Koosman s hrst season in the
American
League
has be·en
specta cular by comparison - even
with his inconsistencies.
"I don't keep track of the streaks
I've had, (but ) I've been good at the
beginning and at the end this season "
said Koosman after improving h'is
record to 16-10 with a five-hit 7-2
triumph over the Boston Red' So~
Tuesday night.
The streaky Koosman started out
this year with seven straight
VlCtortes, then lost the next six.
" Actually, I pitched better ball in
the six straight losses ," said
Koosman, a one-time ~game winner
for the Mets of the National League.
"It just depends on how the whole club
is aoi.niZ."

Tuesday night , the Twins were
doing their best for the venerable
southpaw - especially on defense,
where they pulled off four double
plays and made some superb catches.
" I wa s the beneficiary of a lot of
good plays ton ight," Koosman said.
"Bombo Rivera made a nice catch out
in left and then (John) Castino made a
couple of great plays (at third ).
Elsewhere in the AL, Texas beat
Baltimore 2-1; Milwaukee beat
Dlicago twice , 3-2 and 9-5 ; Cleveland
outscored California 12-7; New York
lrirruned Kansas City 6-2; Oakland
wh ipped Detroit 8-1 and Seattle
defeated Toronto 8-4.
Rangers 2, Orioles I
Steve Comer, with eighth-inning
relief help from Jim Kern and home
runs by Buddy Bell and Richie Zisk,
pitched Texas over Baltimore. Bell
connected for his 15th homer, a career
high , 'in the second off Dennis
Martinez, 14-10, and Zisk's 13th homer
snapped a 1-1 tie in the sixth.
Comer ;I~, has beaten the Orioles
three times without a loss this season ,
and over the last two years has

.• nBS Ea .

allowed Baltimore only two earned
Yankees 6, Royals 2
runs in 33 innings .
Fred Stanley's three-run homer
capped a five-run, ninth-inning rally
Brewers 3-9, White Sox Z·5
Buck Martinez slammed .a_ pair of that powered New York past Kansas
RBI singles, leading Milwaukee over City. Stanley's shot off loser Paul
Chicago in the first game of their
double-header.
Winner
Lary
Sorensen, 14-12, needed relief help in
the ninth from Bill Castro, who
recorded his fifth save.
Sixto Lezcano lined a two-run
homer and an RBI double, and Paul
Molitor had four hits and three runs
batted in, leading Milwaukee's
victory in the nightcap.
Indians lZ, Angels 7
-Cliff Johnson drove in four runs with
a homer and a single to lead Cleveland
over California. Paul Reuschel, 1.0,.
who pitched 42-3 innings of relief,
picked up the victory as the Indians
broke a five-game losing streak.
Cleveland trailed 3-1 after four
innings but rallied with five runs in
the fifth with the..lig}p of Johnson's
three-run homer off Dilve Frost, 12-3.
JohnSon later had a run-scoring single
in a three-run seventh.

.

Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport:Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Aug. 22, 1979

.

Spiittorff, 12-13, followed Roy White's
A's 8, TtJiers 1
.
two-run single that erased a 2-i
right-hander
Brian
Rookie
Kansas City lead and madr a winner Kingman fired a three-hitter and Jeff
out of reliever Rich Gossage, 2-2.
Newman belted a three-run homer as
Oakland cr\ished Detroit. .
·
Kingman, 4--4, struck out a career" I was looking for a pitch over the
plate," said White of his game- high seven batters and posted his
winning hit , "The key in that situation third straight victory as the A's won
for the fifth time in the last six games.
is don't swing at a bad pitch ."

r---

Social Calendar

..

PARK RESERVED
SATURDAY-AUGUST 25th
UNTIL 5 P.M.

FOR
11

ANNUAL OUTING"
.

\

OF

INTERNATIONAL BROTHERHOOD OF
ELECTRICAL WORKERS-LOCAL NO. 317

CAMDEN PARK

I

FRIDAY

ROUND AND SQUARE DANCE at
the Senior Citizens Center, Pomeroy,
on Friday, froml:30to 11:30p.m. The
dance is open .to the public with adWEDNESDAY
POMEROY· MIDDLEPORT Uons miasion $1 for adults, and children unClub, noon Wednesday, at the Meigs der 12 admitted free with their parenInn.
, ts. Music by the Slrinlldusters.
AMERICAN LEGION and
American Legion Auxlllary, FeeneySUNDAY
Bennett rn.t 128, Middleport, will
FEENEY
BENNETI'
POST No. 128
meet at 7:30p.m. Wednesday night. A
American
Legion
first
annual girls '
6:30 dinper will precede the meetings.
Sunday
at 3 p.m. at
softball
banquet
Buckeye Boy and Girl State represenpost
home.
taUves and their parents will be
HAZEL CMMUNlTY CHURCH,
guests with the students to report on
between Long Bottom and Portland
their attendance at the workshop in
off Route 124, will hold its annual
democracy .
homecoming Swlday, with an afternoon service beginning all :30. The
THURSDAY
TWIN CITY Shrinettes, 7:30 p.m. service will feature Dan Hayman and
Thlll'llday at home of Clara Adams the Hymntimers, and will have a
Racine, with Bargara Duga~ speciallpeaker, Dodie Bogard. A dinner will be held at the grounds also.
assisting hostes.s.
OOLUMBIA TOWNSHIP Board of . MARILYN TURNER, opera singer
Trustees, 7 p.m. Thursday for special and clasllical music teacher in Italy,
. will present a publi~ concert at 3 p.m.
meeting at townsl)lp builc!iJ!g.
Monday at the Meigs Junior High
WIUJNG WORKEII&amp; class o1 the School in Middleport. Admission Is
Enterpriae United Methodist Church free to the concert, which will feature
will meet at 7:30p.m. ThiU'IIday at the Marilyn~ some light music.and
several familiar tunes.
home ol Kay Logan.

US 60 WESTHUNTINGTON .

11 .88

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Steam / dry iron, 29 vents, Temp -O-Guide
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Main ST.

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Offer Expires Sept. 1, 1979

Mrs . Margaret Neuman of
Pomeroy was the Friday guest of
Mrs. Alice F~eeland, Syracuse.

.

Men's, Boys' Joggers

Boys' Sport Shirt

Nylon jOggers w1th suede remforcements. Blue. Mer.·s.. boys· 2' 2·6.

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Girls' Newer
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Knit Fashion

Pre-washed co tton for fi t and
comfort. Special
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Girls .si zes 4-14.

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Acrylic
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Syntheltc
leather. Size 4
or 5.

6.50
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Misses' Jersey Knit Tops

50

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sleeves, deep shawl cottar, self scarf.
Misses sizes.

6 88Frt-Right Pants

Sporty Suede Oxfords For·Men

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93rd birthday
Friday.

DENTURE SPECIAL

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Shocks
Tun ed fo r U.S.
ca rs w1th rad1al
tires.
lnstalledEa. 13.88

Installed

BIRTIIDAYFRIDAY
Ben Quiaenberry, well known
SyraCUBe resident, will observe his

Kim Eblin showed the grand champion rabb1t, with Dixie Eblin, showing
the reserve champion rabbit. Alison
Jones was the grand champion
showman in the judging, with Usa
Frymyer being the reserve champion
showman.

"

IU Ca rryout

I"

POMEROY-Mr. and Mrs. Earl R.
DeWees are announcing the birth of a
son, Patrick Eugene, born on July 30
at the Holzer Medical Center. The
baby weighed nlnt! · pounds, five
ounces and was 21 inches long. Mr.
and Mrs. DeWees have a daughter, ,
Tracy, seven, and a son, Scotty, two.
Maternal grandparents are
Pauleen Tillis, RuUand, and John
Tillis, Reedsville. Paternal grandmother is Mildred DeWees, Middleport, and the great-grandfather is
William Haley, Rutland.

In the junior fair judging of the 4-H
project on poultry, Denise Stegall was
the grand champion and Kevin
Napier, the reserve champion. In
showmanship, Napier was grand
champion, and Stegall, reserve champion .

"

�8 - ~ ~e Daily Sentniel. Middleport-Pomeroy . ll .• Wl'\lncsday, Aug . :12, W79

.
e
l~e n'ce on~::.~~.p~:;y~~:~
exc
Trophies given for girl scout

Trophies and ribbons have been
presented to several Meigs . County
Girl Scouts in recognition of exceUence in the scouting program.
In each troop an outstanding scout
was selected to be awarded a blue ribbon , and from that group trophies
, were presented to the outstanding
_scout on each age level.
The trophy winners were Deanna
Haggy, of Pomeroy Troop 1271, a
Brownie; Ruth Ann Fry, Salisbury
Troop 1100, a junior; and Kathy
Parker, Southeastern Cadette 1100, a
cadette.
Ruth Arm Fry was named the
" Meigs County Outstanding Girl

Asllley, Junior Troop lol9 ; Ruth Ann
Fry, Junior Troop 1100 of Salisbury ;
Da ra Norris, Junior Troop 1155, Harrison ville ; Shari Cogar, Cadette
Troop 1208, Syracuse ; Kathy Parker,
Cadette Troop 1180, Southeastern
Cadettes; and Dawnette Norris,
Cadette Troop 1116, Harrisonville.
Trophies were also presented to the
outstanding troops by age lev~.
Receiving these were Janice Hag~,
leader, Brownie Troop 1271 , Porntory : Margaret Parker, Pomeroy:
Junior Troop 1100, Salisbury ; and
Patty Capehart, Cadette Troop. 1180,
Cadettes . The
Southeastern
Salisbury Junior Troop was selected
Scout. "
as the outstanding troop in the county
· The blue. ribbon winners from each and Mrs. Parker, leader, was
troop were Deanna Haggy, Brownie presented a trophy.
Troop 1271, Pomeroy; Kim Adams,
At the Meigs County fair, banners
Junior Troop 1204, Syracuse; Melissa and blue ribbons were awarded to
Barker, Junior Troop 1049 : Lisa Marilyn Meier for Brownie Troop
1254, Middleport; Becky Mankin, for

reds .

Junior Troop 1049, Chester ; and Patty
Capehart, lor Southeastern Cadette
Troop 1180. Trophles were sponsored
by the Meigs Irin.
Judging was handled by Jo AnOe
Recjlick, Pat Fraze, and Dee
Lawrence, all active in scouting programs, Athens; Becky Mankin, Meigs
service unit director, and Pat Thoma,
past service unit director, and coordinator for the Meigs County Fair
scout participation.
Scouts receiving ribbons on their
projects at the Meigs County Fair
were : Junior Troop 115, HarrisonviUe : Lind Riggs, two reds; Lisa
·Riggs, a blue; and a white; Kenda
Donahue, a blue a~nd a white; Susan
Arnold, a blue, and two reds; Darla
Norris, three blues.
Syracuse Troop 1204, Junior: Jane
Good, one red, one white; Kimberly
Cogar, one blue, three whites: and

Kim Adams, one-blue.
Middleport Junior Troop 1039:
Tamara Clark, one blue, one white ;
Tina Hendricks, one red; Kimberly
Stewart, one blue; Rhonda Rathburn,
two blues, one white; Lisa :Ashley, one
blue; Kristi Richmond, one blue, one
red; and Kimberly Clark,•one blue.
Chester Troop 1061: Angie ChaPman, two blues, one red; Jodie
Schaekel, one blue, one red; Janet
Werry, one blue, one red ; Donna Curtis, one red, one whlte; Clarrisa Long,
two reds ; MicheUe Capehart, two
reds ; Gina Gibbs, one blue, one
white; Trina Barber, one blue, one
-red; Melanie Mankin, two blues, one
red; Diana Kesterson, one blue, two
reds.
Pomeroy Junior TroOp 1276 : Suzan ·
Thoma, one blue; Trina Reeves, one
red, one white.
Eastern Cadette Troop 1180: Tam-

my Capehart, two reds;' Pam Riebel,

one blue, one red; Kathy Parker, one
blue, two reds ; Carolyn Casto, one
blue, one red ; and Penny Kesterson,
one blue, on red; an«! one white.
Harrlsonvllle Cadettes 1116 :
Dawnette Norris, one blue, one red,
and one white; Mandy Reeves, one
red, and one white.
Chester Troop 1049: Dawn Grueser,
two blues, one white; Lori Hudson,
one red, one willie; Melinda Markin,
one blue, one white, one red; Laura
Farley, three reds; Pam Rinehart,
three blues; Betty Jo Hunt, two reds;
Jodie Lynn Harris, one blue; Terrie
Slarcher, two blues, one red ; and
Me!Wa Barker, one blue.
Chester Troop 1067: Mary Eelwards, one blue, two reds; Tara Morrb,ooered; SusanWolf,oneblue,one
red; Mellsaa Marcinko, one blue, one
red, one white; Lisa Pooler, one red,
ooe white; and Trisha Spencer, two

Annual HolltJn reunion held at Chester
The first annual reunion of the E . R.
Hollon descendants was held Sunday
at the Daughters of America haU in
Chester.
Prayer by Arthur Barr preceded
the basket dinner at noon. Singing
was enjoyed during the afternoon and
it was decided that the 1980 reWlion

will he at the same location on the
fourth Sunday in August.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Roscoe HoUon, Mrs. Opal Hollon,
Chester ; Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Sinclair, Angie and-Ryan, Shade; Mr.
and Mrs. James Hollon, Sherry,
Teresa and Shannm\, Mr. and Mrs.

Rick Hollon and Eric, Parkersburg;
Mr. and Mrs. Jinuny Snow, Spearlish,S. D.; Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Barr,
Middleport; Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
HOllon, Tammy and Scottie, Colwnbus; Mr. and Mrs. Robert Parker,
Bobby and Kelly, Marietta; Mrs.
Margaret McDaniel, Mr. and Mrs.

Bon voyage cookout held recently
A bon voyage cookout honoring Mrs. Jack Ambrose, Vicky Russell,
Keith Johnson, who returns to Judson _Ray and Angie, Mr. and Mrs. RWISell
College, Elgin, Ill. this month alter Mills, Mr. and Mrs. John Werner, Mr.
spending the swruner as youth and and Mrs. Milton Hood, Mrs. Elizabeth
music director at the Middleport Stavin, Gene Slavin, the Rev. and
First Baptist Church, was held Satur- Mrs. Mary McClung.
day at Forest Acres Park near
Mr. a~d Mrs. Asa Jordan, Mr. and
RuUand.
Mrs. Wtllis Anthony, Mr. and Mrs.
He was presented a money tree Harold Chase, Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
from the congregation. Games were Anthony, Mr. and Mrs. Steve Hartenplayed during the afternoon. Allen, bach, Mr. and Mrs. Danny White,
ding were Mr. and Mrs. Gene Hudson Eric and Adam, Mr. and Mrs. Fred
and Joy, Mr. and Mrs. Lacey Barton, Klein and Van, Mrs. Sue Metsger,
Mrs. Mary Brewer and Marybeth, Amy and Shellie, Mr. and Mrs. John
Ryan Cow~n, Mrs. Ancil Van Meter, Metsger; Mrs. Fran Parker and Cin-

' dy, Miss Jerry Pullins, Mr. and Mrs.
Manning Kloes, Lori and Lynn, John
Jacobs, Mr. and Mrs. Kenny 1mbaden, Mr. and Mrs. Bob Campbell
Mr. and Mrs. Carroll Cleland and
Dodle, Chrissy Weaver, Mr. and Mrs.
Tony Fowler, Darla Wilcox, Craig
Darst, and the honored guest, Keith
Johnson.

Kingsbury
News Notes

The congregation of Carleton Church took the church bus to the Poplar
Ridge Church at Little Kyger where
they attended revival services WedDouthitt, Jenny Berkhlmer, Beth,
nesday evening.
Amy and Sara.
Mr. and Mrs. Engene Smith had as
Mr. and Mrs. Garrett Reed of recent visitors Mrs. Ralph Bates and
Coolville spent an evening with Mrs. family wbo visited here from
Verna Rose.
Michigan. They also visited Mr. and
Betty · Bow, student from Ohio Mrs. Steve Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Ray
University, Athens, spent two weeks Roush and family and Mr. and Mrs .
with 'Juli Whitehead while they at- Wallace Hatfield and family.
tended a workshop at Ohio UniverThe youth of Carleton Church along
sity.
with their parents had a swinuning ·
Mr.and Mrs. Harold Sauer of Mid- party at Syracuse Park Thursday
dleport spent Saturday evening with evening. Following the swimming
Mr. and Mrs. Denver Weber.
party they also had a Wiener roast.
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Mundry, Sr •.
Mrs. Sandra Perdas, Mary and Lisa
and Mrs. Randal Powell, Kelly and and Mrs. Ma&lt;&gt;: Perdas of ChamKevin have been visiting relatives in bersburg, Pa. VISited Mr. and Mrs.
Massach~et.ts.
Wayne Beal and Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Toothman have
been visiting with his daughter in
Bristol, Va., where Mr. Toothman is
having medical tre;~tment.
Sunday guests at the WilliamsBalderson home were Mr. and Mrs.
Bill Williams of Charleston, S. C.,
Mrs. Kathryn Dietz of Belpre, Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Dietz of Columbus, and
Mr. and Mrs. Warren Pickens.
Mr.and Mrs. David A. Smith and
Deana spent a weekend with Mr. and
l"f.rs. Tom Drake and daughter, Arme,
fat Gahanna.
Sp orty. colorful fooiwe or wi th little
- Mrs. L. Balderson

Reedsville News Notes
Visiting Mrs. Rose Thomas recently were her cousin [rom London,
England, Mr. and Mrs. Derrick
Tucker and Mr5. Gladys Baughman
and Jack Gale of Gahanna.
Recent visitors of Mrs. Opal Ran'
dolph were Mr. and Mrs. Jay Lawton
and Allen of Sarasota, Fla., Mrs.
Gladys Morgan of Columbus, and Mr.
and Mrs. Bud Stacy of Toledo.
Mrs. Pauline Martin, Jay and Chris
and Mr. and Mrs. ·Thomas Heffing~r.
Tonuny, Kimberly and Renee of
~chrnond, Va . spent several days
with Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Martin, Jr.
and Michael and Matthew.
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Mundry and
Lori visited with Mr. and Mrs. Ed
MiUer and family at Parkersburg, W.
Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Whitehead and
Juli have returned home after a
vacation trip to Myrtle Beach, S. C.
THey were accompanied by Mr. and
Mrs. Ed Hensch of Cuyahoga Falls
and Walt Hensch of Cleveland.
Mrs. Leona Hall and Mrs. Opai
Randolph visited with Mrs. Crystal
Needs .and family at her new home in
Colwnbus recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Douthitt of
Marietta visited Sunday with Pam

reds; Kelly Stewart, two whites;
Elise M~ier, one blue, one red; and
Amy Luckeydoo, one blue, one red.
Sallabury Troop 1220: Tammie
Eblin, one blue, one red; Sue Ellen
Fry one blue, two reds; and Joan
siinPson, one blue, one white.
Pomeroy Troop 1271: . Deanna
Haggy, one blue, one white; Jenny
Buck, one white; Shelly Triplett, two
reds; Nancy Baker, .one red; Jenny
Graves, one red; Elizabeth Graves,
one red, one white; Melissa Dalley,
one white; Jo Ellen Crane, one blue,
one red; and Barbara Coleman, two
whites. ·
Syracll$e · Brownie Troop 1120:
Tricia Michael, one blue, one red;
Misty Swisher, one red.
Syracuse Cadette Troop 1D:
Susan Gett, one blue, one red; Shari
Cogar, one blue, two.reda.
Salisbury Troop 1100, JWliors:
Brenda Sinclair, two blues; Kim
Eblin, two blues; April Clark three
blues; Valerie Simpson, tw? blues;
Ruth Fry, two blues, one white; Sandy Hoyt, one blue, one red.

Live Entertainment!!!

Paul McDaniel and Michelle, Middleport; Mr . and Mrs. Edison Hollon,
Mr . and Mrs. Tom Hamm,
Christopher and Philip, Mr. and Mrs .
Larry Hollon and Ryan, Minersville;
Mr. and Mrs. Delmar Hollon and Bill,
Wayne and Don Hollon, Albany.
Afternoon callers were Mrs. Frank
Amatowitz and Brandon, Middleport;
Mrs. Steve Huffman, Stephanie and
Robbie, Chesler; Ralph Ballard, Dorma Morrison, Bashan, and Torruny
Hollon and son, Albany.

STEVE SCHMUCKER, HOME
ON LEAVE FROM THE SERVICE,
WILL JOIN
DON SMEDWIOK ·
FOR THE FINEST IN BLUEGRAs\ &amp; COUNTRY
MUSIC. (STEVE HAS CUT A RECORD
IN NASHVILLE)

Young, Wesley and Yvette.
Sunday dinner guests of · Mr. and
Mrs. John _.Dean were Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Markins, Racine, and Mr.
and Mrs. John Walter Dean, Jeremy
and James. The dinner was to honor
Anita on her birthday. Following dinner birthday cake and ice cream were
served. Other guests were Mr. and
Mrs. Gerold Gilkey, Tammy and Amber of Athens.
Mrs. Hazel Arnold accompanied
Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Arnold and sons
to Colwnbus where they spent the
weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Lester
Af!Jold and sons. On Sunday they all
.a tttended lhe Brafford family
reunion.
Recent ~est of Mrs. Neva King
was Ralp
of Virginia Beech,
Va. He atso
nded the Carr re1Diian
Sunday.
Visiting recently with Mr.' and Mrs.
Rowland Dais was Miss Jada Burson
of Shade.
Recent guests of Mr. and Mrs. John
Walter Dean James and Jeremy
were Mrs. Yv~nne Young, Wesley and
Yvette Mrs. Mary Houdashelt
Audra ~nd Betsy, Mrs. Roger Swartz:
Jenifer and Jackalyn, Susan and
Charlie King, Mr. and Mrs. Walter
Terrell of Pataskala and Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Ried and Bruce and
Charles.

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU AUGUST 25, 1979
niRNs ONE - JUOII Lee
MIUJICblla. IIIII of DuDe aud
Debn MIUqblba, ldabo Falla,
Idaho, oboerved bla flnl blrll!day oa
.0 Aq. S at lbe home Gl _bla gralld. .. pueall, Fred lllld DoluuJ WWJam.
: 1011, Rulbwd. Deeonled eate lllld
;i lee cream were llei'Ved to hll pueo: II, ~all, Fred lllld Doaaa,
: lllld Ken ud Can!le MIUJICblla.
,. Rid Wllllom•tlll, Bob ud Do.,.
Wllllaml011 aad Jamie I,.yu, put• pudmolber Edltll WllllamiiOil, Bill
: lllld Jaaet Wllllamloa, Darla aud
• Olalla; «rat-treat.euat lllld IlliCit
Z Hartu lllld Al~ill Worner. Seaclla&amp;
i IIIII lllld ...-dl were bla palo
: gnadpueall, Mr. aad Mn. Roy
• McCool, Kettertuc; Mr. aad Mn.
: cbart.. Keaaedy, ·Mr. lllld Mrs.
! F1oyd Keaaedy, ColwnbwJ, aad Mr.
; lllld Mn. WWJam Rowella, Rlllmaa.

i

A PORK LOIN .. ~t~1

=-·--.. . J

..._
_____ The Saving Place

1

_

AUG. 21 THRU AUG. 25 TUES.·SAT.
: sccrrr BRINKER - Mr. lllld
· •Mn. Batcb Brlaker, Pomeroy, en: lertalaed rtteally wllll a blrthdlly
• party Ia boaor ol lbelr 1011, Scott.
. cue, Ice cream, Xool-Aid, aad cof~f~ .ftre oerved to tboee attendlq
~ Mr. lllld Mn. Vlrctl DW, Jeremy,
· Mn. OnJ Bacea, Mn. Caady
~Cartelllll, Cbrla, J - aad Seth,
: Mn. Patty Imboden, Jody aad
: Jobua, Jerry lllld Cbaekle Ja~.
•Scott. Lea, aad Todd Jolmaoa, Ar·
~cllle McXIDaey, Beclly lad Bartle
PlentJII, Mn. Saady Walter lllld
, Slepbule, Mn. Mary Bowen aad
•Doaaa, Mlu O.rleae Dwm aad
;:.,oaalbaa, lllld Am•ada Brinker
:were tile peotl. SeadJac gtfll ftre
,.Mr. aad Mn. Bill HaW.rd, Mr. aad
:,Mn. o-ld Covert, Mn. Edaa
•Howell, Clny Lyoaa, Doaald
~-. Jallal Chapman, Mn .
:Mary RUIIIb, Mn. Jill Plenoa. Mn.
:aam11111 Roaab lllld lamUy. Gameo
•....,re played, wltiJ prlzeo 1ola!l to
• J-lllld Cbrla Cartetoalllld llaJ:Ue

That adds up to a Perfect Portrait Package
• AJio~aesw~komt . • GfoupsSl . OOeatr•per~ . • Comp.il"!' tht
value o~t leu tt..·n 6o1C 1 picture . • S«nk Ndlarounds availo~bte . • Fut

cleliVflY, • Satisfaction Ahwo~ys or 9IC ~ rhf.erfull't' refunct.d . .

"Ask •bout our clusic portrAit"

----

2-8x10's
~
2-5x7's
10-wallet size
4-color charms .."...........

--~

...~- - j

Ch•nn•nollocludo&lt;l ;n
ppho... .

iii prints just

I

${0.96
plus lax

PORK·CHOPS ....~~ ..

:Pienon.

•••

WHOLE

••
..•'
•

WATERMELONS

••

PARKAY

•

••

••

HARTLEY SHOES, INC.

.•
p

"Middle of Upper Block in Pomeroy"

'

•'•

9a .m. -5 p.m. Mon.
thru Thurs. &amp; Sat.

9 a.m.-8 p.m. Fri.
Closed Sunday

!

.
•

PORK
CHOPS·

BACON

69e
J/89e

12

oz.

Wishbone

DRESSING

$} 09

Several Varieties
8 oz.

Barna Blackberry

· JELLY

FRANKIES

10 oz.

CELERY

~•'-

SUPERIOR

BOLOGNA
2LB.

CENTER CUT $129 LB.
END CUT SJ19 LB.
SUPERIOR

$}1!.

-.•
•

'

·,;';)t

$}79

39~ BUNCH

:home

CARROTS
2-1 LB. PKGS. 39~

DUTCH LOAF
, ,.~

59~

'149
·

COTTAGE CHEESE.:.

24 oz.

Gal.

L8.

89'
$ 19

ONIONS
3 LB. BAG 59~
Duncan Hines

CAKE MIXES

Pudding or Reg.
Yellow,

: TIJRNS TWO ~ Aadrea Marie
; Fry, daugbter of Mr. and Mn. Mel
• Fry, New Have11, W.Va., celebrated
~ ber oecoad bJrtbday Aug. 17 at the
of ber graad~renlo, Mr. aad
: Mn. DWord Ferrell. Refreobmeato
: ol a Ble Bird eake, Ice cream, a ad
• Kooi·AJd were oerved, wltb lavon
: goiDC to eac~ p ..t. Alleaclla&amp; were
: Pegy, Robia, aad Cbrta Stout,
: MarOya aad ltevla Deemer, Patty,
: Kelly, Sllalmoa. aad Erin Brogan,
· ltlmberly Jealdas, Mark Allen,
: .uroo Davia, lbe honored p ..t•s
"· ~ molber; Mary, slater, Melallle, aod
~ aunt., Trlaa O.vll aad Teresa
• Ferrell. Liter Ia the evealug, a
: cookout was enjoyed. Attending
: were Mr. aadMn. Mel Fry, Melaale
:'lllld Andrea, Mr. lllld Mn. Richard
• Devil aad Aaron. Mr. and Mrs.
: o.vld Stout, C]lrfl ud Robb!, Mr.
: aad Mn. Larry Brogan. Kelly, Shan·
: n1111, aad Erin, Mrl. NeWe Coolie,
!:Mn. Robert Deemer, Cbrla' and

75'

-•

• Kevla.

.

LB.

8¢

.

MARGARINE .....~.~9

..••"

DART

SAVORY BACON~.

PORK STEAK.....~.99e

••
•

LB.

19

LB

lsg

•••

$}19

99
69~

•

Rainbow
Rust
Pig Skin

992-2556
570W;•Main
Pomeroy, o.

16oz.

$

CENTER CUT RIB

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

'

¢

WILSON'S ·

0

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VAL!EY

KLEENEX

BOLOGNA ..........~~.

FIVE POINTS BAR .&amp; GRILL

.

a·9e

. ·

SANDWICH SPREAD.••L!~

girl plea sing grownup styling . Ea sy
to care for. toot Sturdrl y made to
support g rowing feet!
-

BARBEQUE •••••••••• 79~
WITH FRIES ••••••••· s1 09

White &amp; Asst.

SUPERIORS CHUNK

HOMEMADE

for liHie girls

SPECIAL

200 Ct.

I

AT THE

l

...

Mon.·Sal 8 am-10 pm

8:30 P.M. TIL 1 A.M.

Hush Puppies·
big s•ster look.

THIS WEEK'S

}

Store Hours:

oz.$} 09 FLAVORITE

~
.

MIRACLE WHIP......

ICE CREAM .... ~!~~. 99

HYLAND CHUNK

BORDEN'S ASSORT~D

KRAFT

32

25 LB.$

~

.

$}29

·

349
·DOG FOOD...·.... ~~... ·. TWIN POPS.... ~1!~ ...
[

COUPON

-j

BOLT

PAPER TOWELS
JUMBO
ROLL

2/$1

limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell
Offer EKpires

COUPON

j

-

CRISCO·
JLB· -$}99
CAN

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell

L _C[]UPON

I

~

DETERGENT

-

2 LB.
CAN

,$449

.imit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell
Offer Expires Aug. 25, 1979 ..

_,I

BOLD

MAXV/ELL HOUSE

COFFEE-

COUPON

171

oz.

$449

Limit 1 Per customer
. Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires AUQ- 25! 197S

�CJ/;;t;r-S~OUtSm hold
recent
family
jamboree
.

.
i

.

CHESTER·"·A' family jamboree
was held by the Chester Cub Scout
Pack 235 recently at Camp Kiashuta
near Chester .
The boy scouts were the judges with
the cubs and webelos and their
brothers and sisters playing games.
Ribbons were awarded to the win-

ners. The evening concluded with a
wiener roast and hayride hosted by
parents and friends.
Ribbons went to cubs, ages eight
and 9, and webelos, age 10, as follows:
Chin-ups : Dale Laudennilt and
Dana Eynon, firsts; Mony Wood,
Matt Harris, seconds; A! by Cw-tis

and Randy Kesterson, thirds .
Tire obstacle course: Mony Wood
and Dana Eynon, firsts ; Tinnrny

REGISTRATION SLATED
Registrations for the fall session of
the Gingerbread House pre-6Chool
program at Heath United Methodist
Church, Middleport, are now closed.
Classes will begin on Sept. 5, with
the morning class to be from 9 to 11 :30
a .m. and the afternoon class from
12 :30 to3 p.m . Mrs. Sandy Luckeydoo
operatM the schooL Parents are asked to turn in their applications fonns
innrnediately.

Lawson and Roger Carpenter, thirds. .
Ray Laudennilt, Tom White and
Bruce Bissell provided the hayride
for the group.
Others attending were Brent Nor·
ton, Scott Starcher, Jolu!, Connie and
Keith Karschnlck, Marilyn and Jodie
Harris, Jean Norton, Eleano~ and
Elizabeth Lawson, Cathie, Pattie and
Scott Wood, Allan, Susan, Tad and
Peter Darling, Greg Carpenter, Paul
Harris, Paul, Sheila, Gary and Donna
Curl,is Jeff Newell, Scott Newell,
Ray Msxson, Vic Gaul,
Greg
Jr., Jodie Schaekel, Ray, Cheryl,
Sherrie Laudei'mllt, Andy Hawk,
Gary and Flossie Dill, and Frank, J o
Am and Rodney Newsome .

my Lawson and Randy Kesterson,
thirds .
Ankle hop : Mony -Wood and Dana
Eynon, firsts ; Timothy Lawson Timmy Lawson and Randy Kesterson, second; Mattbew Darling and Matt
Harris, thirds.
Kneel : Matthew Darling and Randy
Kesterson, firsts; Abby Curtis and
Dana Eynon, seconds; and Dale
Laudennilt and Gary Curtis, thirds.
Pin the Tall : Abby Curtis and Terry
Newsome, firsts ; Tinnrny Lawson and
POMEROY PERSONALS
Matt Harris, seconds; and Mony
Mrs. Carol McLaughlin has return- Wood and Dana EYnon, thirds .
ed from Idaho Falls, Idaho, where she
Seal Walle Mony Wood and Matt
visited for two weeks with Mr. and Harris, firsts; Dale Laudennilt and
Mrs. Duane McLaughlin and son.
Dana Eynon, seconds ; and Jlmmy

Lawson and Matt Harris , seconds;
Matthew Darling and Terry
Newsome, thirds.
Balloon race : Mony Wood, Matt
Harris, firsts; Matthew Darling;
Roger Carpenter, seconds; and Dale
Laudennilt and Brent Norton, thirds .
Bean race : Mony Wood and Terry
Newsome, firsts ; Dale Laudennilt
and Roger Carpenter, seconds; Tim-

WASHINGTON (AP) -' The
Ailriculture Department is standing
bY its figures released earlier this
y~ar that ohowed, on the average, soil
lost to water'runoff' is much less than
had been estimated previously.
'
Based oo a new survey, the
department's Soil Co nservation
Service said on May 9 that nationally
an average of 4.8 tms of soil are lost
ve•ll'lv tD water erosion. That was
about hall the rate of soil loss the
agency had earlier estimated.
The reduced rate of soil loss was
challenged by a number of critics,
including the National Association of
Cmservatioo Districts, which pointed
tD what it cmsidered were faulty
methods used in tabulating erosion
effects.
But the agency . in a new "issue
briefing paper " d istributed by
USDA's Office of Governmental and
PUblic Affairs, said it has " checked
and rechecked" the information and
is convinced the figures " are reliable
and will guide conservationists in
caJTying out the fight against erosion
ID those areas that need it most."
The survey showed that regionally ,
fer example, losses of cropland soil
ranged from a high of 10.6 tons an acre
annually in.the Appalachian states to
a low of 1.3 tons in the Pacific Coast
states.
Soil experts have long held that an
annual soil ioss of 4 tD S tons an acre is
" pennissible" because that 1s the rate
at which new soil can be created
naturally.
However, the report said. in the
Corn Belt - where production of row
crops, mainly corn,ls concentrated the average loss of soil tD water runoff

Hibbs,

'Day Apart ' observance announced nearby

" .

.,

BIRTHDAY SURPRISE- Grace Welch was honored with a surprise ·
dinner recently in observance of her 61st birthday. A decorated cake was
served foll owing the dinner. Attending were Janet, Jack, Cathy and Tara
Morris , Sharon, Sonya and Ricky Wise, Jane, Stevie, Peaches and Steve
Lowery, Pat, Danny , Gary and Sharon Artrip, Donna, Robbie, Donna
Carol, Grace and Bob Jacks, and Roy Stansbury. Sending gifts were
Gary, Jerry, Heather and Jenny Welch, Tammy and John Tibbit, David,
Terrie, Jeff and Davy Welch, Crystal Lake, Ill.

The district "day apart" observance to be held at Nelsonville on
Sept. 6 was announced when the
United Methodist Women of the
Pomeroy Church met Tuesday "evening for a dinner at the church.
Mrs. Glenn Dill reported on the recent school of missions at Ohio Northern University, Ada, .which she and
· Mrs. Robert McGee attended. She
told of the sessions on the parables
and of the information presented on
the Near Easf'
Mrs. McGee talked about the program books and noted that the
material will be oassed Amona the

members so that each may cbose her County Fair", with prayer by Mrs.
topic. Mrs. Gerald Wildermuth Wildennuth. Hymri singing was enpresided at the meeting welcoming
the members and guests, Mrs. Helen
Handley, the Rev. Robert McGee,
Dick Karr and CJar.,nce Struble.
Mrs. Antone Lucke and Mrs.
Wildermuth presented the program,
"God's Wonderful World." Mrs.
Lucke read the 121 Psalm on which
the program was based. Mrs. Wilder-45" Corduroy
muth played a tap of Fred Waring,
-45" Washable Velveteen
"He's God the Wbole World in His
-56" Wool &amp; Wool Blend
Hands" , and there, were poems,
--,SO"
VelOI!r
"Sight to See" and "The Good Old

joyed by the group. A prayer circle
concluded the meeting .

School

sewing

~"Boucle'

--,SO" Gabardine

·--.so" Polyester Knits
1n Plaids &amp; Prints

SINGER OF WEEK
Model
533

NOW
Reg. 5229.95

$}]995

SUMMER
1!2 PRICE SALE CONTINUES

Daughter born

is s.1 tons an acre each year. about
twice the S~H:alled 'pennissible rate .
Ray A. Dideriltsen , who directed the

FABRIC SHOP

RACINE--Mr. and Mrs . Bill
Hensler, Racine, are announcing the
birth of a daughter, Kristen Nicole,
July 15, at the Holzer Medical Center.
The baby_weighed~ven pounds, six
ounces, and was 21 The inches lorig .
Mr. and Mrs. Hensler have a son,
J oey, age four . Maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Joe Bissell,
Mason, W. Va .; and the paternal
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Glen
Hensler, Middleport. Mr. and Mrs .
J oseph Bissell, Long Bottom, and
Mrs. Esta Roberts, Rock Springs are
great-grandparents.

,
:
:
•
'

THRU

2!r

Meet Wednesday

4'.Days Only

Handbags '" sat•n or

den 1m Three new
style s Save at K mart

/ '.··

Br~~e~~~u:ie~e~f ::'e~~~ ...
.,i!?llli.d!!i#i~~flJcs6
: '~
:J]V~····i&gt;it___.,..Adilll
··
Mrs. Hensler and daughter

the home of Geralding Holsinger.
Evelyn Barrinjfer gave devotions.
The treasurer's. report was given by
· J udy Adams. Plans for items to be
sold at the a"l'ual carnival were
discussed. Repair and paneling of
classrooms ws discussed. Margaret
Holsinger had the closing prayer.
Next meeting will be held on Sept.

.'·

•
.WED.

11 at I p.m . at the home of Charlotte
Reed. Attending were those named
and Rhonda Milliron.

SAT.

For

BACK TO SCHOOL
LAY AWAY

NEW RECEIVED

.,.,c

10% OFF

WINTER COATS
Good Til Aug , 25th

TWO'S ,COMPANY
DRESS SHOP
Main St.

4 8 o !Reg68'
Eimers ' sc hool glue
in a 4-oz . botlle.
' Fl~ld

On

r Reg . 96c

4 non-toxic erasers in
novelty design. Save!

. I '--;-- - -- - -

~~'!:

u~ Our Reg. 97'
4-sub ject notebook .
84 . 10'1zx8" pages

Our 88'
4 novelty designed
non -toxic erasers .

2~~ 2.96

Pacl&lt; ol 250 .8'1.x1 t "
sheets typing paper"

Pomeroy

.:

.

: I ·,

.
--

'

.

:~

.

.. ..'..
........... ,,_
'

.l.

--

- -"-=- -"

10 .........

From
FOR SCHOOL
A

Over a hundr ed year s ago, a
Bulova was one of t he most ad ·
vanced watcnes you .could buy . 1t
still is. A. The Bulova Roma
Series tells the time with crisp
Roman numerals. The depen ·
dable fa shions he re tor hi"m ,
$99 95. Day Date, Quartz .

'

~&amp;(l&amp;i'

"QiJneler.s

Ill E. Motn. Pomoroy

,_

'6l-&gt;

Our Reg . 88 '
5- hole notebook
paper, 175·sheet pkg .

'7'3 ¢

I•

CHICKEN PARTS
MEATY BREASTS 99' lb
LEGS &amp; THIGHS - 89' LB.
FRESH WINGS - 59' LB.
BACKS &amp; NECKS-19' LB.
FRESH LEAN

em~~~~~ ·~autiooed

OurReg . 88 '
Package of 16 # 2·
degree lead penc1ls .

Rolling Writ er' pen,

blue or black ink .

3ifJC
(I

Our 58 '
6 1c va 1ue pac. 3 -pc.

,

Bic Pen special.

Package ot 100, 3x5"
inde)( ca rd s

Save'

LB.

$}29

PORK STEAK .
FRESH MEATY

SPARERIBS

CAN. NING
L.l D
.s
'

3

$

FLATS

LB.

gge

ALL S.T AR

MAGIC BUTTON

~~~~a~
"are tools of limited usefulness" and

that some cooservatioo spokesmen
are worried ''the public will attach too
much importance to the 4.8-ton figure
and turn its back on needed soil

-GATEWAY PARKING. LOT-

FLEA MA·RKET

GOLDEN ISLE

PORK

YOGuRT

•N.•

.

1 00 3

each year .
" That would make as mu ch sense as
lor a clothing manufacturer tD make
all his suits flt an average..Uzed
customer or lor a pilot to base his
coast~o-coast flight altitude on the
average national elevation above sea
level," the new report said .
· Critics also contended that the
agency's survey included millions of
acres used tD grow hay, upon which
eroSion is slight, and that those helped
reduce the national average of soil

CARlONS

*1 00

BEA N 5
30

oz. CAN

49

SWEET ROLLS
PKG.

....;;~--------1

FACIAL TISSUE

ASSORTED VARIETIES

Also , they said, a "universal soil
loss equation" used by the agency did
not take into fullest account the water
runoff caused by irrigation,
particularly in arid regions of the
'West where rainfall - the dominant
cunpooent of the equatioo - is sparse
.,d where much of the water comes
from melting snow In the mountains.
The new paper said the agency
"agrees that the equation was
develope d for states with more
rainfall'' but added that "scientist s
modified the equatioo for the West to
take snowmelt into account " in
arriving at the average Soil losses.
" Nevertheless , the equation is still
the most reliable method for
estimating soil erosion, " it said.
Cooceming the use
pasture and
laay acreages, the report said those
, figures caused only a slight downward
pressure on overall averages.

tit
~

SCOTTIE$
DES·IGNER

BETSY ROSS

. lost. '

THRU

AUGUST
COAT SALE

AUG. 23, 24, 25

farmers and
others against planning cooservatioo
·
programs on the basis of the national
average of 4.8 tons of soil lost per acre . ._ _ _.;.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...,.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ __..__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

our Reg . 4"18

SALE

lunch Box
Metal

,,

ss·.
2

SAT.
Reg . 2.68

SATURDAY

solls and soils that hardly erode at

WED.

2

FRIDAY

survey
, saidtheaveragelossof4.8
tons incl
uded some "highly erodible

115 W. 2nd Ave.
OPEN DAILY 9:30 · 9:30
SUNDAY 1·6

·THURSDAY

stands by
early figures

175' COUNT BOX

·69e
PRODUCE
U.S. NO. 1
HOME GROWN

POTATOES
10 LB. BAG

or

WASffiNGTON (AP) - As of midAugust, the nation's corn crop was
,1ated "mostly good and In some areas
~excellent, "
according to the
Agriculture Department's latest
weekly bulletin on crops and weather
'cmditions .
During the week of Aug. 13-19,'
below-normal temperatures slowed
development of corn and other fallharvested crops in much of the
Midwest and New England, the report
said Tuesday.
" Frost damaged s.me corn in
6\remely northern areas, but this
acreage probably will be salvaged as
lorage ( for livestock )," it said.
: 'N&lt;rthem areas will need a late frost
if the crop is to mature fully ."
Earlier this month, USDA reported
that as of Aug . I the com crop is
expected to produce a record yield of
Ul billion bushels, slightly above the
high set last year.
WASHINGTON (A P) - Large
supplies of broilers and hogs for
!market "should offer consumers good
at the retail store " next month,
lil~~:~~~e the price-depressing
ill
is rough oo )X'oducers,
the Agriculture Department.
another of its "food marketing
' reports, the department sa id
beef supplies in
i;;~~~::~rthat
will continue
to be tight,
report said wholesale broiler
recently have averaged about
jl9,c,ents a pound, which "is less than it
most producers tD raise t•
ilrOIIlers."

GREAT FOR LUNCH
SWEET-N-JUICY

PEACHES

3tB/99e
CAKE MIXES
No . lOS
19 oz. Box

69~

TWIN CITY GATEWAY
Expires Aug. 25

OPEN PIT

BARBECUE SAUCE
No.lSS

18

oz. Btl.

69~

TWIN CITY GATEWAY
Expires Aug. 25

PILLSBURY

LIBBY ' S TOMATO

FROSTINGS

KETCHUP

No.12S
99~
., 16oz.can
TWIN CITY GATEWAY
Expires Aug, 25

MELLO COAST

COFFEE
Lb. can .

S199

TWIN CITY GATEWAY
Expires A~ g. 25 .

32 OI.
Bottle
TWIN CITY GATEWAY
Evn;, • .,.

NU SOFT

FABRIC SOFTENER
33 OI . Btl

99~

TWIN CITY GATEWAY
Expires Aug. 25

�12- The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Wednesda y, Aug . 22, 1979
13- The Dally Sentinel, \lfiddleport-Pc 1meroy 0 . Wednesday Aug. 22 1979
DICK TRACY .
' '
'
'

Your· Best Buys Are F qund in tlte Sentinel Classifieds

ftlt~Nt ID~ ~ TtiAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
~ ~ ~~·
byHenrtAmolclandBobln
unacramble -

For Rent

WANT AD
CHARGES
I~

TRAILER.

1dfl~'

1.00

1.25

2rlt~ys

1.50

1.90

~ th1ys

1,80

6c1Hys

3.00

1~

will br c har~t&gt;d

iil

tht&gt; 1 dar rlltf'
In memon·, Card or Thtt nlc;

and . Obituat)~ . Gl'l'OL~ pe r wunl .
13 00 'minimum Cash in t~d ­
van&lt;'t'
~tnd

Yiird

.&lt;wt lrs are aeeeph'tl only with

cash with order. 25 d mt l'lt:1 r ~c
for nd.&lt;; Cfj n,ing Box Number In
C.t~re

o.f The Sentinel .

The Publisher re&amp;'rves the "
n J.:tlt to edit or rejed a ny ads

deeme d

e'V eni ngs .
22 FOOT TRAILER l or one per·
son. Uti lities paid. qq2-2697 .

obj ecti on a l.

The '

Publistler will not bt&gt; responsible
for more than one itll'(J rrect insertion .
Phone 992-21fJ6

NOTICE
WANT-AD
IAPVERTISING
DEADLINES
Mond;ty
.Noon on Sat urday
Tuesdi:l)'
thru Fr i d &lt;~y
~P. M .

t he day before ]miJlit'a lion
SulldH\'

4 P.M:
F ri day nHcrn!lOrl

In Memory
IN lOVING memory of Okey
Pull l,ns , who passed away one
year ogo on August 22 . 1978.
Dear l ord please lake this
menage lo our loved one up
above
Tell him how much we min
him and gilfe him oil our love
Although his sou l is now ol
rest and free form core and
Although.r;n
The Worl would seem like
hea ven if we had him back
again
And to all who sti ll h,ove their
loved ones , cherish them with
care
For you'll never know the
heartache
Till you find they ore not
!here.
·
Soddenly there
Sadly missed by wife. chi ldren
and grandchi ldren .

Notices
GUN SHOOT. EVERY FRIDAY
7,30 PM RACINE GUN CLUB .
FACTORY CHOKE GUNS ON·
LY .
· MEIGS COUNTY HUMANE
SOCIETY . 992 -6260. Pets
O'l(oilable for adopt ion and in·
formation service.

Help Wanted
BABYSITTER NEEDED in Racine
area . 'il-49-2862 .
DEPENDABLE BABYSITTER...'\.in
my home. 5 days o week .
7·-4 :30 pm . 2 ch ildren. 18 mo.
and 2 mo. Rsferences r&amp;
quired , must hove own
transportat ion . Denise Wolfe .

949·2377.
SOMEONE TO put I.JP hay on
shares . 'il-4~ - 253 1 evenings .
BAR PERSON , honitst, neal ,
dependable. Apply in person.
Five Poin ts Grill , Pomeroy.
Mole or female .

992-6260.
Real Estate tor Sale

COAL , liMESTON E. sand ,
gravel. calcium chloride , fer·
til iter , dog fOod , and all types
of soh. Exce lsior Solt Work s,
Inc., E. Main St., Pomeroy,

'192·3891.
POTATOES AT the C. W. Proffitt Form . Por tland OH . Prices
change day to day w ith the
mark et .

RUTlAND

HARDWARE

7412-2255 . SAl E: Martin-Senour
point, Divi sion of Sherman
and Wil liam s. Interior or e xterior f lat white , $5.W gallon.
Color extra . PRESEASON

STOVE SALE . GAS·WOOD·
COAL . BIG REDUCTION IN
PRICE .
lATE
SEASON
specials :
Vermee r 605 Super C Btler,
$500 under list price . Ver eer
605 F Demonstrator. ave.
Phone 7-42-2877 or 7-42-2152 .
Gory Aspin , Dexter , OH . t

GRAVELY TRACTOR . I pa;r of
· end tables , 99:2-7537 .
CANNING TOMATOES , Pick
your own. Field weed free . $3
·o bu. Andrew Cross, Adams
Rd., letart Falls , OH .
CANON FTB 35 mm sing e lens
reflex camera . E~~:ce l lent condition . 992-51.44 .
NEARlY 600 Meigs Count:ons
suffered proper ty losses dur·
ing Morgan' s Raid in 1863.
Thei r names, addresses and
itemized list of their e~eocf
losses ore contained in UO
page paperback reprinted
book of original 1864 state
published report on -4 ,375
Ohioons who filed damage
claims . Repr i nted
book
"Morgen's · Raid losers", con
be ordered from publisher
RobertS. Vore. 705 MacKenzie
Drive, limo, Ohio . 45805. for
$12, postpaid.

OLD FURNITURE , ice boxes ,
brass beds, iron beds , desks ,
etc.. complete households .
Wri te M .D. Miller, Rt. -4 ,
Pomeroy or coll992-7760.
OLD COINS , pocket watches ,
cl ass rings . wedding bonds,
diamonds. Gold or silver . Coli
J A. Wamsley , 7~2 - 2331 .
WAN TED: SAW logs . Payment
upon dttlivery to our yard. 7:30
to 3:30 weekdays. Blaney
Hardwood s. SR 339. Barlow,

OH . 67S·2'18Q.
ANTIQUES , FURNITURE . gloss,
china, anythi ng. Se&amp; or call
Ruth Gosney , antiques . 26 N .
2nd .,
Mi ddlep ort .
OH

'192·31 61.

'/92.J6.&lt;0.
PRI VATE OWNER wdl so cri fi c&amp;
1C179 32 H. travel traile r. Selfcontained . oil . r&amp;or bunk ,
~d eep s
si)( . See anytime .
Krodel Ci ty Pork , Pt. Pleasant.
MUST SELL lat e model travel
tra i le r , 28 ·.
f ully
se lf co nta in ed ,
fact ory
air ,
carpe ted th rou ghout. many
eliCtros . See any time, Krodel
City Park . Fi t. Pllitesant .

tcil78 KAWASAKI 100.
mileage. 992·3040.

COUNTRY MOBil E Home Pork ,
Route 33 , north of Pom eroy .
large lots. Col 1992 - 7 ~ 7 9 .
3 AN D~ RM furnished ond unf urntsh ed
opts .
Phone
992·543.4
O NE BEDR OOM opt s. ContaCT
Vi llage Mano r W'J . 77 87.
S E ~IOR CITIZE NS, 1 bed room
o(JfS .
for
rnet
Re n ta l
o stis lan c e
av a il able .

GIANT YARD SALE . Moving
out of stole, every thing must
go. Guns' garden tools , some
hand tools , knife collection,
dishes , soma Depression,
couches , lots of baby items,
playpen, 2 strollers, high
chair, and lots of cl othes for
baby . color TV and 2 black) lnd
white TV' s, mo_torcycle. golf
clubs. comp lete drafting kit,
table soW and many more
Items . Watch for signs . Turn
right on CR 339 above Little
Hocking.
20 ACRES NEAR. Langsville' 3
bedr. remodeled hauu,
aluminum siding, insulated ,
storm windows, large barn,
outbuildings , stocked pond.
S36.500. Owner may Help
finance. 992· 7733.

ERA MERCER
-

low

fl.

Hocking River lot. All

flat and e lec. in $3,500.

LONG BOTTOM -

-

2

bdrm . trailer, 2 covered
porches, 3 Ci!r garage,

flat lot. $23,000 . Owner

pleasure boot w ith 85 h.p.
Evin rude'
Many
extras .

willing to talk .

'192·22 14.

REEDSVILLE -

OUROC BOARS , purebred .
Reedsville. 61-4 -378·6311 .

with 2 car garage and
nice business building
with
2
restrooms .

Home

$25,000.

9S5·38Q3 .

FORKED RUN AREA

ONE FOlDING wheel chair
and walker. like new. Coli

- Nea1 sm . 6 rm . fur ·
ntshed summer house
on 1.50 acre . $21 ,500.

742·2'175 .
QUART FRUIT jars far sale.

247·2464 .
LENNOX CENTRAL oir condi·
tlOning and heating , with
ducts. 992.2560.
·

Call
Virginia Hayman
985-4197

POMEROY
LANDMARK
Sales &amp; Service

SALE PRICES

~

Jack

- ·

w. Carsey
Mgr .

•

Phone 992 -2181

197~ 14 x 70 mobile home.
Good condit ion . 992-5858.

1965 GENERAL60x12 . 2 bedr.
1970 Syl~o . 60xl2 , 2 bedr.

8' S MOBILE HOME SALES , PT .
PLEASANT , WV . 304 · ~7 5 · •424 .
BIG SELECTION of pr e-owned
10' s. 12's, and 14 ft . wide
homes . Konauga M o bile
Home Soles . 61111 -446-9662 .
1973 12 K 63 Fo re st Pork
mobile home on •t, acre lot in
Harrisonville. 992-3040 .

1974

GOVEN OR

THRE E

bedroom. 1'/, ba th. 992· 25 14 .

FREE PUPPIES. it Irish Setter .
Four ar e long haired. W ill be
I orge
do g s.
S hade
1

,;,ed

white long hai red female,
looks like sheep dog but
sma ller . love s child r en .
Humane Society . 992-6260.
HAMSTER S.
Jolene
M ood ispough , 992 -39 15.
BOXER TYP E DOG. l t . to n,
female. young adul t. Place in
co untry. W2-6260 .
NICE KITTENS , Po r t Siamese.

Well fed . 843·2653.
TO A good home, -4 beautiful.
long hair kittens . Tiger and
whi te. 8 week s old. 992-2531 .

6 o;ears old . Lovely
ranch . 3 bedrooms,
large recreation room
with beautiful firepla ce,
garage, hardwOOd floors
with
carpeting .

it ' s beauty . ONLY
$35,000.00.
NEW LISTING 2
bedrooms, living room ,
utility room , bath and
extra nice kitchen .
Located on State St. in
Pomeroy. Let us shpw
vou this home and you
can make a reasonable

$42,200.00.
NEW LISTING - Mid·
die port, 2 bedrooms,
dining
room,
some
c ar.peting ,
p~neling ,
cellar. Very nic(· loca ·

offer. Call today!!
COUNTRY LIVING -

lion . $16,200.00 .
NEW LISTING -

Nice 2 bedroom home on
a little over an acre. It
has aluminum siding
and
storm windows.
New roof and furnace.
In the Langsville area .

dleport,

bath , . full

This

Mid·

bedrooms,

basement,

garage . Other features .

Sle,900.00 .
MIDDLEPORT -

Ex ·

cellent
loc ation ,
4
bedrcooms, 11/:z baths,
T .V . room, den , family
room , modern kitchen ,
central ~ir and heat,
larg~
livi ng
room .

Sells for $22,500.00 .
COLONIAL
SPLIT
-

2

ex -

cellenl 3 bedroom home
has k:nottv pine l iving
room accented with a
stone fireplace . Modern
k itchen , family room,
laundry room and 112
basement Large 2 car
detached
garage .
Situated on 1.7 acres

$59,500.00.
POMEROY -

I floor

plan, J bedrooms. din ing
room, nice kitchen, nat.
gas helit, enclosed
porch , basement and
garage, fruit . trees ,
about 3 acres. $25,000.00.

CLELAND REAlTY
WHERE
REAL
ESTATE
IS
A
BUSINESS, NOT A
SIDELINE .
BROKERS
Henry E. Cleland Sr .

Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.

Phone742 -2003
Georges. Hobstener,
Jr.
Broker 992-5739

992-6191

The Wiseman Real
Estate Agency
co.

FARM -

37 ACRES -

Frontage on Rt. i24 with approx. 4·5 acr~s bottom,
20 acres pasture and balance i n woodland (some
timber reported ) . Includes chicken house corn crib,
shed, barn plus other .outbuildlngs. The remodeled
home has 4 bedrooms, ell!t-in kitchen , utility room ,

cellar house, large porch &amp; vinyl sld ;ng . FREE GAS
FOR HOUSE .
POMEROY- NEW LISTING WITH 6. ACRES 11!1 story .4 bedroom home j ust 1 mile from

downtown . The home includes a new eat· in kitch~n ,
large master ~droom utility room , large pat•o,
nat. gas hot water t'\eat~p l us 2 outbuildings an d _lots
of room for the kids to play . S27 ,500 . Owner anx1 ous
for quick sale.

THIS IS WHAT YOU ASKED FOR -

WANT IT SOLD - Com ·
pact 2 bedroom home
neatly cared for in
Pomeroy .
A
good
starter or retirement
home with large extra
NiCe modern looking 3
bedroom home with
automatic F .A . furnace,
new bath, large kitchen
and lg . bedroom down.
Full basement and large

lot for garden. $25,000.
NEW LISTING - 3
bedroom home, bath,
natural gas furnace, full
basement, carpeting

and 2 porches. $18,500.
FAMILY HOME - 3
nice bedrooms, lots of

2 full

baths,

familv room with wOOd
burning fireplace, wood
doors and thermopane
windows. 2 car garage
and over one acre. Ask ·
lng $69,900.

POMEROY -

Good 3

bedroom frame home,
bath , shower , base ment, storm drs. &amp; windows , nat. gas F .A . furnace and aluminum
siding. $18,500.

NEW

LISTING

-

4

bedrooms, bath, basement, disposal , nice
cabinets. stove and
refrigerator . Storm drs.
&amp; w indows . One acre.

Only $10,500.
NEW LISTING -

Nice

remodeled 2 bedroom
frame home. Nat. gas
F .A . furnace , basement,
2 car garage and 3 lots.

-

3

bedrooms, bath, wood
burner, new wood burn ·
ing fireplace, large kit·
chen , ·basement , and 6
acr e s .
Want
only
$, 6,000.00 for qui ck sa le .

BUILDING

LOTS

-

Pomeroy ,
Syracuse ,
Rock
Springs, Baums
Sub·d ivison , Rac ine and
Rutland area .

NEW LISTING - AI
Map lewood La ke, 6
room frame home, bath,
ba sement, and 1 acr e
for on Iy $10,000. 16 ff .
right ·of ·wa ..

" ' ;"'"'

Smith Nelson
Motors, Inc.
Ph . 992·2174

Pomeroy

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSUlATION .
VINYL AND
ALUMINUM SIDING
elnsulatlon
eStorm Doors
· eStorm Windows
• Replacement

Windows
eGutters 1nd

14 ac res of

FAMILY HOME - Lots of possibiliti es wi t h this
real nice 2 story home. Many features, like centra l
air, built·in appliances , all carpeted &amp; so for t h. A
vero; good investment with severa l ni ce bui lding
lots. On approx . 4'12 acres in the center of Racine,

' Rd .
l 7320Mootgomery
L.angnl ll• . Ohio
614 ·669-41 •5 E11ening s
2 M i les East of Wilk uvilte

ment.

107 Sycilmore (Rear)
Pomeroy,

o.

5UPER

GOOSE

NO DIAL t;OUIJD! !:ASY
CAIJ'T HAVE: HUN~ UP-THE: LIIJf'S ~TILL OPEN!

ST OC~

~

CONFOUND IT!

BOB'S GENERAL
CONTRACTING
eNiiW HOMES
e ROOM ADDITIONS
eROOFING
eVINYl SIDING
eGUTTER &amp; SOFFIT

NINCOMPOOP!
f;OMI!THING MAY
&amp;I! WRON&amp;!

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING

N. L Construction

UPHOLSTERING

BLOCK &amp; BRICK
WORK, GENERAL

CAR SEATS, BOAT
TOPS, FURNITURE

Ph. 992·3743 or 992 ·l752
8·1·1 mo.

1 ·25~ 2

Fake drop dupes defense

WEST

Free Estimates
3rd St . , Racine

Rt. l
Pomeroy, Ohio
991-SS47

949-2000

mo.

ORPHAJC ANJQE-TO THE LUT DIETAII.

ALUMINUM
&amp;VINYL SIDING
BY
J&amp;L INSULATION
992-2772
6·61 mo.

Sl2, 000.00 - Good 3 bed r oo m, a ll carpeted home 1
c lose to Pom eroy &amp; M iddlepor t . Lo cated on good Ph
acres of land .
SHOULD BE SOLD - 70 acres, house &amp; gOOd barn,
about 1,000 feet of beautiful Ohio River frontage .
Nice recreation spot, minerals , too . Let 's have an

offOT. Price $57,000.
From 1 to 75 acres, bordering

Pomeroy .

MIDDLEPORT - Good 3 BR home appro x. 10 yrs .
old, stove &amp; refrigerator, lg . st orage bldg . Priced at

$35.000.
RACINE - 2 8 R trailer on n ice lot. Asking $11 ,.500,
I

55 ACRES - Availab le back of Racine, can be divid ·

ed, timber. $55,000 .00 .

INVESTMENT PROPERTY - 2 unit ;ncome plus
space tor two more Units, eac h section has own elec ,
meter &amp; hOt water , separate entran ce and comes
nicely furnished. Let's ta lk about this one.
INVESTMENT PROPERTY - Now r ented as one
u~it, could be made into 2 units, other possibiliti es
w•t1h balance of home on 3 lot s in Pomeroy. Asking

513,500 .

BRICK HOME - Central ai r, firepla ce, J g~d size
bedrooms, Jlh bath, rail ed front porc h and mature
trees , shrubery a ll add t o t he appeal of this fine
ranch stvle home. Priced f or quic k sa le . $3 3, 000.

LARGE SPLIT LEVEl - on 3 Acres, 4 BR home

CAll JIMMY DEEM, ASSOCIATE 949-23 88
OR NANCY JASP E RS, ASSOCIATE
949 ·2654 or 949·2591

592-3051

4 23 I mo.

18 Years Experience
Will Make ServiCe Calls

BRADFORD. Auctioneer , Com·
plete SeNice. Phone 9-49·2-487
or 91119-2000. Raci ne , Ohio ,
Critt Brodford .

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR -

Sweepers, toasters. irons, 011
small appl iances . lawn moer,
ne.ct to State Highway Goroge
on Route 7 , 985·3825 .

Garage
Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682
4 30·tf c

H. L Writesel
Roofing
N·ew , repair ,

SEWING MACHINE Repairs,
service , all makes, W2· 228.c .
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
Author ized Singer Sales and
Service. We sharpen Scissor s.

gutters and
down spouts .
Window cleaning
Gutter cleaning
Free E s ti mates

AUTOMOBILE

949-2862- 949' 2160

INSURAN CE

.4 5·tfc

been cancelled? Lost yOUr
op&amp;rators
l icense?
Phone

HOWERY AND MARTIN E)(·
coveting . septi c systems ,
doter. ba ckhoe. Rt . 143 .
Phone I (61&lt;4 ) 698-7331 · or

742·2593 .
IN STOCK far immediota
delivery: various sizes of pool
kits. Do-it· yourself or let us
instQII for you. D. Bumgardner
Solit s, Inc. 992-5724 .

367·7101 .
PAINTING AND sandbla sting.
Free estimates . Coll9-49 -2686.
DOZER , END loader and dump
truck . Will do basements,
ponds ,
bru sh .
timber ,
limestone ,
and
gravel.
Chorles Butcher . 7,.2·29-40.

HAVE VACNACY to co re for
!he elderl y in our home.

chUd . 949·2758.

Auctions
BIG AUCTION every Wed., 7
pm. Hartford Community
Cen ter. Hartford. WV . ,. miles
abo v e
Pomeroy - Mason
Bri dge.

•s

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer : North
West North Easl

949 ·2101

No

••

••

Pass

3W

Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass

Because of East's vulnerable overcall, South was reasonably certain that East

had five or six spades .
If he had six spades, it was
imporuont for South to talk
him out of winning the first
trick with the ace of spades
and then giving his partner~

· ruff. The ruff would be the
setting trick as declarer
would still lose the ace and
king of trumps.
South tried to obscure the
' issue by sacrificing the
spade king at trick one. Who
could blame poor East for
switching to a club?
South
The club sWitch allowed
2¥
declarer to discard his spade
4•
deuce on the second club
honor and easily make his

or

Sunday

By Oswald Jacoby

CiiiiS .

and Alan Sontag
Players are taught to conserve their resources, not to
win low carda with extremely high cards if they
can be won more eheaply .
High cards should be saved
until they can be used for
their greatest good.
On the diagrammed deal ,

Services
OHered
All Masonary Work
Foundation,
Brick laying,
Concrete Finishing.

'·

De-

clarer only losl one spade
trick and the ace and king of
frump . ·
South made the key sacrifice play quickly, which
helped his success. His dropping the king seemed the
most natural play in the
world.
·
( NEW SPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

(For a ccopy of JACOBY
MODERN, send Silo: " Win at
Bridge , '' 9are 'o f th is newspaper, P.0 . Box 489, Radio City
Station, New York , N .Y.
10019.!

C. R. MASH
VINYL &amp; ALUM.
SIDING
•New Home
•Addons
Remoldlngs
*Free estimates
992-6011
7·12

*

,I

,,

' I

WINNIE
~. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .~ INFAC~,IL:Pf~~~~AANND~H~BRREE:LlW~~5~~~~WNH~E~\;ICD~IDDNN7
Tf.RiEEA;LL~
IZ~E~H~OW~~l
~IEP BECAU5E I O F1= ERE D C LD~E TO DEATH I
' IF IT WEI&lt;EN'T FOR YOU 1 'MJULC?'\I'T BE ALIVE
IF YOu HADN'T lDLD
YOU MADE ME
TO 1/IKE
WAS. AND I DIDN'T
11JiU , +WOUL DN T BE
HERE IN CENTRAL
CITY.

WIN~ .IIE AOOUT

RUNNNG INTO ME
ON T1" AT A'TOLL.

Pi&lt;CM ISE NOT TO
TELL A SOUL
ABCUT YO U -

YO U WITH

KNOW WHAT A WON-

REt-uSED.

DERfUL WI FE: AND
fi\ MILY I HAD !

· ~YOU

~in e,.;mooli4ll-

9JARNEY
DID 'IE HEAR TATER
; TALKIN ' IN HIS
' SLEEP, PAW?

WHAT DID TH'
LEETLE VARMINT
~---SAY?

''GOBBLE GOO GOO
GLIFFLE GLOB"

t•,

Installed and Pad FREE
GOOD SELECTION OF
CUSHION VINYL·

IT'5 LONELY OUT THERE
IN RIGHT FIELD SO I'M
60NNA :STAND HERE WITH ~OU

CALL 742 -2211. TALK TO
Wendell or Herb Grate or Gene Smith

IF ~OU STAND Tl1ERE,

I{OU'LL GET HIT 61?
A FOUL. 13AL.L.

.

xsx

'

RUTLAND FURNITURE

~7~42~-~22~1~1----------------~~~u~tl=a~nd~r~O~.~:

'·

Charlie's

News 20.

10 ;3G-Besl of Groucho 20; 11 :ooNews 3,6,8,10,13,15; Dick Cavell
20; New Soupy Sales 17.
11 :»-Johnny Carson 3,15; Pollee
Woman 6. 13; Switch 8; Movie
" Back from Eternlly " 10; Movie
" The Golden Blade" 17.
12 :40-Barella 6,13; kojak 8; 1 :OilTomorrow J; News 15 .
I :2G-Baseball 17; 1 :5~News 13;
3:50-News 17; 4 , JG-Avengers
17; S: Ill--Dragnet 17.
THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 1979
5;4G-Worfd ~~ L~rge, 17; 5,45 Farm Reparl 13; 5:50 - PTL
Club 13.
6 :00- 700 Club 6,8 ; Summer
Semester 10; Ptl Club 15; 6 :1oNews 17.
6 :»-For You .. . Biack Woman 10;
Dragnet 17; 6 : 45-Mornlng
Report 3; 6:SOo-Good Morning,
West Vlrglnlo 13.
6:5s-News 13: 7:oo-Today 3, 15;
Good Morning America 6, 13;
Thursday Mor;~~lng B; Batman
10; Three Stooges-Lillie Rascals
17.
7, Is-A.M . Weafher 33 ; 7:30 Family Affair 10; Llllos, Yog
~nd You 33 .
B:Oil-Coptaln Kongoroo B, 10; La!!le
17; Sesame Street 3).
B:»-Romper Room 17; 9:oo-Bob
Braun 3; Phil Donahue 13, 15;
Porky Pig and Friends 8; Nfte
Owl Jazz Stars 10; Lucy Show 17;
Book Beat 33.
9:30-Sanlord and Son B; Love of
Live 10; Green Acres 17;
Fireside Kitchen 33 ,
lO:Oil-Card Sharks 3, IS; Edge of
Night 6; All In the Family 8, 10;
Dating Game 13; Movie "Omar
Khayyam" 17; Paint Along with
Nancy Komlnsky 33.
·10 ,31l--Holfywood Squares 3,15;
$20,000 Pyromld 13; Bonkerol 6;
Whew! B; Country Time 10;
Consumer Survival Kif 33.
10 :55-CBS News 8; Fair Fare 10.
11 :Oil-High Rollers 3,1S ; Laverne &amp;
Shirley 6,13; Price Is Right 8,10;
Bill Moyers' Journal 33.
11 :30- Wheel of Fortune 3, 15 ;
Family Feud 6,13; 11 :55--News
17.
12:01l-Newscenler 3; News 6,10;
Mlndreaders 15; Young and the
Restle!s e; Over Easy 33;
Mlcjday Magazine 13; Love
Ameri~an Style 17.
12 ,30-Ryan 's Hope 6, 13; Search for

''

Tomorrow 8, 10; Not for Women

Only
15;
Movie
"The ·
Vanquished" 17; MacNeil·
Lehrer Report 33.
1:oo-Days of our Live• 3, lS; All My
Children 6, 13; News 8; Young
and the Restless 10; Wild, Wild
World of Animals 33.
by THOMAS JOSEPH
1 ,»-As lhe World Turns e, 10; All
ACROSS
DOWN
creatures Great and Small 33.
1 Edible tuber
1 Scarlet's
2,oo-Doctors 3, 15; One Ute to Live
5 Troubled
home
6,13; 2:25 -News 17.
2:»-Another World 3.15; Guiding
10 In the center ZConfederate
Light 8, 10; I Love ~ucy 17; Een
11 Moon goddess
of AbSalom
Fesllval 33.
12 Sprint
3 Earn
3:oo-General Hospital 6, 13; Lfflas,
or dash
4 Lyric poem
Yoga and You 20 ; Infinity
Factory 11.
13 Companion
5 Wallace 3'
3G-MASH
8; Joker's Wild 10;
8 Old-time note
of flowers
Bo~ana Splits 17; Turnabout 20;
14 Residue
7 Get' what's due
Yesterday's Allawer
Earthk.,.,plng 33.
15 Title for
8 Establish,
Z1 Rent
28 Devoutnes.s 4:01l-Mr. Cartoon 3; Password 15;
Merv Griffin 6; Addams Family
Churchill
as an
Z2 "Have gun, 28 Beauty e; Sesame Street 20, 33; Six
18 Animal doc
agreement
will
33 River to
Million Dollar Man 10; Mike
17 Gov. Ca·r ey's 9 With a will
travel"
the Tiber
Douglas 13; Fllntstones 17.
capital
11 Word with
man
35 PrefiX
4 :30-Lone Ranger 3; Hogan'•
19 Time
moon or shoe Z3 Mollusk
with
Heroes 8; Lucy Show 15;
Portridge Family 17.
period
15 Auction,
Z41nside
day or
5:01l-Bonanza 3; Beverly Hlllbillie!
20 Ivy League
for one
info
night
B; Mr. Rogers 20,33; Disco Fever
school
18 Green Bay's %6 Vennont
3i Native :
10; Sfx Million Dollar Man 13;
21 Blow
Starr
city
suff.
Brody Bunch 15; Star Trek 17.
one's hom
5:3G-News 6; Expohlo '79 15; ·
ZZ San Diego
Petticoat Junction e; E lectrlc
sports
Co. 20; Mary Tyler Moore 10;
figure
Doctor Who 33.
6:01l-News3.8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News
Z4 English
6; Family Affair 17; VIlla Alegre
20; Once Upon a Classic 33.
%5
,.,-+-+--1
6:»-NBC News 3, 15; ABC New! 13;
%6 Use an awl
Andy Griffith 6; CBS News 8, 10;
%7- Palmas
Over Easy 20,33 i Father Knows
Besl 17.
Z8 Newsstand
--1--f.--1--1 7:00-Cross·WIIs 3; Newlywed
items
Game 13; Marly
Robbins'
30 Malt liquor
Spotilghl 8; New• 10; Love,
31 Temper
American Style 15; Gel Smarl
17; Dick Cavell 20,33 .
:IZ - Fleming
7
:
30Hoilywood
Squares
3· ·
:W Window
Bonkers I 6; Match Game PM Bi
in a gable
$100,000 Name That Tune 10;
3&amp; Stare at ,
Nashville on the Road 13; Dolly
15; My Three Sons 17; MacNeil.
37 Ask
· Lehrer Report 20, 33.
38 Norse god
8:01l-Proiect
U. F .0. 3, 15; Laverne
39Indlgent
&amp; Shirley 6, 13;
Walton• 8, 10;
tO Volcano
National Geographic 20,33 ;
or vessel
Movie " Damn the Defiant !" 11.
B:»-Angle 6,13; 9:oo-Quincy 3, 15;
Barney Miller 13; Desegregation
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here•s how to work It:
Forum 6; Barnaby Jones 8, 10;
AXYDLBAAXR
Arthur Fiedler: Just Call Me .
Maestro 20; That
Great
lo L 0 N ' G F E L L 0 '19
American Gospel Sound 33.
· One letter simply slands for another. In this sample A Ia 9' 30--Carter Country 13.
used for the thrte L''s, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, IO :Oil-Mrs. Columbo 3, IS; 20·20
apostrophes. the lehgth and formation olthe word! are all
· 6, 13; Onedln Line 17; News 20.
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
10 :31l--Hocklng Vailey Bfuegsra•s
20; Such Good Companions 33.
CRYPTOQUOTES
11 :00- News 3,6,B,10, 13, 15; Dick
Covell 20; New Soupy Sales 11;
E KRI J
ESUI
E F
SE
G IJ J
Book Beat 33.
11 :31)--Johnny Caroon · 3,4, 15;
XF
EVKP
K
Y S D .V E
EVSPD
Starsky &amp; Hutc 6, 13; MASH 8;
ABC News33; Movie "Desperate
EF
ZFQ
ITHGKSP
BVZ
Mission" 10; Movie "This Earth
Is Mine" 11.
SE
BYFJ;iD .
GFPDWIGGFI? 12 :05--Movle. "Ralntree Counly" 8;
·12:41l--Boretta 6, 13; 1 :COYestertlay'tCryptoqaote: A HOSPITAL SHOULD AU!O HAVE
Tomorrow 3; News 15.
ARECOVERY ROOM ADJOINING THE CASHIER'S OFFICE
I :Sil--News 13; 2 : 05-News 17;
- FRANCIS 0'WA1..8H
2:25--Movle "High Hell" 17,
fl;) 1979 ~lnrg Feafurn Synqic•t•. Inc.
4 :21l--Mengers 17.
•'

b-+-+-+-

$995
, AND UP

3, 15 ;

Angels 13; 1979 Disco Mu•lc
Awards 6 ; Movie " The Deadliest
S ~ason '"
8, 10; ; Upstairs,
Downstairs 20; 1979 Drum Corps
International Championship 33.
lO :oo-Vegas 13; Fall of Eagles 17;

~t~V&gt;td

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

SALE ON ALL CARPET IN STOCK

'192·2657 .

¥A4

oH .. ·NOW we

C"AAGIVE THE
GIRLS THE
THit«i6 THEY
SHOULD HAVE ··

AND UP
CASH &amp; CARRY

WILl DO/ointing, roof pain·
ling , on
carpenter work .
Will DO babysitting in my
home. 5 days o week. Any age

Estimate,

·4·99

992·7314 .

¥K2

Call tor . 1 Frn Siding

RUBBERBACK CARPET

Will HAVE vacancy for elderly
lady 2nd of September. Roorh,
board and laundry . Core if
needed. Reasonable prices ,

992·6022 .

... TO HELP YOU
"40'/E AND , GET
SETTLED ...

• AQ1741

Opening lead : • 6

SAVE ON CARPET
DRIVE A LITTLE
SAVE A LOT

NOW HAULING l imestone in
Midd lepart· Poemroy oreq .
Coil lor free estimate .

BOIIUS

• 6

South squandered a king
under his opponent' s ace to
achieve the desired effect.

four heart-contract.

EXCAVATING . dozer. looder
Will HAUl limestone and
and backhoe work ; dump
groveL Also . lime hauling and
truck• ond hboys for hire . _ spreading . leo Morris Truck·
will houl fil l dirt, top so il,
ing, Phone 7-42-2-455 .
limestone and grovel. CoiiBab
ANN'S
CAKE· D«oratlng Supor Roger Jeffen , day phone
plies , 50716 Osborn Rd .,
992-7099 ,
night
phone
Reedsville , OH 45n2. For In'192,35:?5 or 992·5232.
formation coli , 667-6-485. Wi ll
HCAVATING . dour . be open late If you need
backhoe ond ditcher , Charles
something.
R. Hatfield. Block Hoe Service.
S &amp; G Corpe~t Cleaning. S1eom
Rutland, Ohio . Pone 71112-20J8 .
cleaned. Free es timate .
PULLINS EXCAVATING. Com·
Reasonable
rates . Scotch·
plate Service . Phone 992· 2,.78.
guard. 992-6309 or 71111-23.118.

Services, Offered

:;o HERE'S TEN

~SAND ...

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
949·2140 .

l ~ m ile off At . 7 by -pass
on St. Rt. 114 toward
Rufland .

fully ·carpeted, equipped kit ., f amily room has nic~
fireplace , large ut i lity room and plenty of storage
two ·c ar garage has electric door opener . One great
feature after another . Li sted $75 ,500 .

WANT TO SELL? - GIVE US A CALL

77

Shop

LET'S HAVE AN OFFER - lmmed ;ate possess;on

home on blacktop road . Most l y carpete d: F .A . nat.
gas furnace . A very attractive small home andl
aCre land . Priced for quick sale for $17, 500.

IRELAND
MORTGAGE
CO.
E. Slate, Athen s

OURSr

Siding

Refinance
JO Year Terms
A - No money down
( eligible veterans)
FHA - AS low a5 ·l %
down ·( non-veterans)

Roger Hysell

E·C ELECTRICAL Contractor
serving Ohio Vo lley region .
Si x days a week , 2-4 hours tar·
vice. Emergency calls. Call
882· 2'152 or 8e2 -3-4S.C .

COUNTRY SPECIAL - N;ce remodeled 2 bedroom

and

Reynolds'
Electric Motor

'192·2143 .

- 3 bedroom home, living room &amp; family room, a ll
nicelv carpeted. EM·in k itchen equ i pped w ith
dishwasher, ~d i sposal, and stove, 2 full bath s, ,,,
basement, garge, nice garden area, on 1 plu s a"cre in
Racine, $415,000 . More land available .

Purchase

IT'S YOURS. FREE
TMIS !lfAUTI~Ul AND
CLEAR ... OF
HOMe ··· If ...
COUII.5E YOU'LL HAVE.'
IT'S Rf'ALLY
_., OTHER EX!&gt;tNSES .. ·

Vinyl and Aluminum

NORTH
11-22
• J 10 9 5
• QJ 7 6
• J( 8
+A K 4
EAST

•QH2
•&amp;5
+II Till
+ QJ 10
SOUTH
• K2
• 10 9 8 53
• A J 10 9 3

l..ITI1E ORPHAN ANNIE

7·5·1 mo .

Real Estate Loans

,

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

BOB'S
UPHOlSTERY

IN SYRACUSE

I I )rI I I ]

BRIDGE

BORN LOSER

8-6·1 mo .

CONTRACTOR

rI

Wednesday , Aug. 22

RACINE,O.
949-2741 or
992-7314

7·25·1 mo. pd .

Now l.(range the drchtd letters to
fonn the surprise answer, as suggellfed by lhe above cartoon.

Veslerday'oJ Jumbles: BOO
. TY LOFTY DEMURE SOlACE
Answer' What Dr. Jekyll said- I'M NOT
.
MYSELF TODAY

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Free Estimates

WITH

EME~&lt;S-ENC.Y.

(Answers lomorrow)

(FREE ESTIMATE)

Phone 992-6323

J I I

HOW "10 "THINK
IN A DAN6ER:Ol.i6

I tJ

Print anawer here:

Gutter work. down
spouts, some concrete
work ,
Wilks
and
driveways.

A&amp;H
Under New Manage·
ment {formerly Sylvia's
Upholstery),
across
from Codner's TexiiCO.

LA~\!IUII

" B etrayal "

tJ

tMILGRY

S l mo

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST!l,. 1979
B:Oil-Reaf People 3, 15; Eight Is
Enough 6.1 3; Dorothy 8, 10;
Masterpiece Theatre 20; All
Creatures Great &amp; Small 33.
B:JG-Hang ln In 8,10; 9:01l-Movfe

..-

INORMEDt

CAPT AIN.EASY

TRAIL E R HOW AVAILABLE .

CALL 992-7544

JAMES KEESEE
Phone 992·2772
8·17 ·1 mo.

Ohio . Asking only $54,000.

• -·

TRAILER SALES

Hours 9-1 M., w., F .
Olher times by oppo;nt-

Down Spouts
Free Estimates

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

· nice rolling land w i th a l lf:1 story hosue that sits back
off the roa~ surroun~ed with maple trees . Lo. pond
stocked wtth f•sh . )N1cely located in Morning Star
area . Pr·ice $33,900~

LOTS OF LOTS -

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

MO'"' YOU

CALL

New Bsting.

HAVE CONVENTIONAl- FINANC ING FOR MOST OF OUR HOMES FOR
AS LOW AS 5% DOWN.

216.£. Second Street

F rom tl'le I
Bull diH~r "

Free E;stimate

CALL 446-3643

I

MEIGS

r

I .PLEEO
I ()

Henry E . Cleland Jr.

992·22S9

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

$25,000 .
NEW LISTING

GiveAway

$23,900.
NEW Ll STING - Aboul

·we

closet.,

Mobile Homes Sale's

house. Situated on .75 of

Gallipolis, Ohio·

lot. Just $25,000.
COUNTRY HOME -

Headquarter.s tor
Hotpoint and
General Electric
' Appliances

acres , pasture, woods ,
and tillable . Mano;
building sites . JUST

500 Second Ave.

liVING ROOM choir!~ , Jenny
lind antique bed , Early
American round rug , lamp
table , all in good condition.
Priced very
reasonably .
Reason for selling. home for
sole. Con be seen at .COS Spr·
ingAve., Pomeroy.
9 FOOT )( 7 foot white
fiberg lass garage door, $100.
Regu lation site ping pong
table, $25 . Audion -electric
organ , $25 . 992·5606 or see.
H. E. Johnson , 35828 Flatwoods Rd .

preclafe. Si78,000.00.
PORTLANI) ~ About 56

an a(:re . This home has
had lots ·of tender loving
care and vou will have
to see it to appreciate

6

Sle,900 .

CHILO'S JOHN Deere riding
tractor and wagon . Phone

LISTING

LEVEL

1

Federal Housing &amp;
Veterans Admin. LOins .

building ,
loads
of
bui lding sites . Th is pro ·
pert you must see to ap ·

Charm ing 2 storo; home,
4 · bedrooms, l i v i ng
room , kitc hen, d ining
room, and bath . Drapes
and carpet go with the

lv . rm . $16,000.

REEDSVILLE

742-2003

OlD RT . 33 - About 240
ac res , home , barn and

choose from.

7Sx415

I yeor a ld. 949·2377 .
949·2184 or949· 2596 .
1977 ARROWGLASS BASS and

NEW

I SKU'Pj

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING

608 E.
MAIN
POMFROY . 0 .

sevice, give us a call.
we have other listings to

rm .
older
home,
carpeted, barn, . plus 2
outbu i ldings, on 10 lots.

ZENITH PORTABlE stereo.
Also , child's chest of drawers.

HOBSTETTER
REALTY
PHO~E

[~___B_u~sz_·n~e_s_s~S~e_rv
__ic_e_s__~l.

toor ordinary words.

· .:a;..~-· · - -

For friendly, courteous

REALTY
FROST

Real Estate for Sale

SIX ROOM house in Pomeroy.
Remodeled, Iorge lot , natur al
gas , mu st ssll.
A sk ing
$ 11 . ~ . 992-6168 after 6.

west of Rutland .

GLASTRON BOAT, tri hau l
design. 16 ft .. 1 in ., 19 gal
bui ll· in gas tonk . 80 h. p-. Mere
motor. Shorelandar tilt tra iler.

614·696-1234 .
BEAUTIFUL MEDI UM
For Rent

992-7255 .

Witl;l mobile home. 3
bdm., llh bath, expando

1974 Morkline, 50x 1:2 , 2 bedr.
1969 Valiant. 12x60, 2 bedr.
1967 Notional , 12xSO, 2 bedr.

FRANKLIN TRA VE L trailer , 22
ft . Good co nditi on. A lso Troll
Haven camper Sleep s silc.

NICE COMFORTABLE 8 room
home on appro ~~:. 2 acres of
levelland with plenty of thode
trees . on Rutland Rd .

9e5.392e .

1970CaSIIe. 60x12 . 2 bedr.

Camping Equipment

REAl ESTA. TE : 1 acre lot in Rig·
gscrest Manor, between Tuppers Plains and Chesl er .
Phone 985 -3929 and 985· -4129.

8• FT. OHIO RIVER
FRONT - 3.77 acre

CHIP WOOD. Pole~ mo~~: ,
diameter 10" on largest end.
S12 per ton . Bundled slab. $10
per ton. Delivered to Ohio
Pallet Co., Rt. 2, Pomeroy.

'192·2689.

~EAl ESTATE loars. Purchase
and r&amp;finonce. 30 year terms ,
VA. No money down (eligible
veterans). FHA . As low as 3
per cent down (non· veterans).
Ireland Mortgage Co., 77 E.
State, Athens . 614·592· 3051 .

HOMEliTE 5 h .p. riding
mower. 700 bu . of ear corn.

Wante'd to Buy

'192·7721.

APRI COT LONG hair female ,
appea rs to be afghan hound
o d n poo dle ,
medium ,
housebrok en. loves chi ldren .
All shots' Humane Soci ety .

2.2:)

Wtlrds is 4 Cl'nt.s per word (lt!r
d&lt;ty , Ads runnm.: other than con-

Mobilt· llomt' sa les

on ly.

:us

F.ach wont o.'·r r t ht• minim'&amp;n

St..,: ull\'t" d1tys

ONE adult

'192.31 SI.
APT . 992·5131 days . '192·3173.

Words or Under
f&lt;1sh
Cha rge

Real E~tate for Sale

GiveAway

four Jumbles,

one letter to •actt aquare, to form

Television
Viewing

•

�H - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Aug. 22, 19?9

,I

70 dead in latest Iranian fighting
TEHRAN. Iran lAP )- At least 70
dead were reported today in fresh
clashes between rebels and troops in
Kurdistan as Ayatollah Ruhollah
Khomeini's firing squads and whips
kept meting out punishment to
transgress:Jrs of his stern Islamic
code . Oil exports , meanwhile,
dropped below 1 million barrels daily .
Tehran Radio said revolutionary
guards reported killing 60 rebels in
mopping up operations near the

Kurdish capital of Sanandaj· and
identifying them as members of the
ouUawed Kurdish Democratic Party
and "communist supporters of the
People's Fedayeen guerrUias."
The broadcast said several
wounded guards were taken to a
hospital in Marivan , near the Iraqi
border, for treatment , and that 10
guards were missing in action and
presumed killed .

•

'Cash flow' problem zn Ohio
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Officials
say they are not alarmed yet about a
"cash flow" problem which has
surfaced only seven weeks into the
state's new, two-year fiscal period.
However, the state 's biggest school
teacher lobby expressed strong
objections TUesday to the possibility
that money-pinched school districts
may have some of their 1979 subsidies
delayed, even though they would be
received later. ·
Cuts in state payments to public
schools, along with .some for higher
education, are under discussion, noted
Eugene Brundige, president of the
83,000-member Ohio Education
Association, and others.
Richard G. Sheridan, director of the
Legislative Budget Office, and
William D. Keipp, chief of the Office
of Budget and Management, say they
think the problems will level out.
Sheridan said July and August tax
revenues are less than had been
forecast" but Ulat the 1979-1981 budget
anticipated cash shortages during
loan revenue months.
He said collections of general
revenue fund tues in July were $25
million below estimates, and cited
Budget Management projections
indicating a $6.5 mUiion shortfall for
August .
Sheridan said that while cash flow
difficulties are not unusual revenues are received in spurts while
state spending is fairly constant -the
problems have started early this year.
Usually, they do not occur until
around November, the start of a
three-month period of low tax
receipts.
The Legislative Budget Office
director, chief fiscal adviser for the
Legislature, conceded he was puzzled

County Court
Eleven defendants were fined and
10 others forfeited bonds in Meigs
County Court of Judge Cha n ~s Knight
Monday .
Fined were Thelma Johnson, Middleport, stop sign violation, $10 and
costs; Joseph Schuler, Rt . 2,
Cheshire, .overload, $150 and costs;
James H. Woodard, Rt. 3, Pomeroy,
overload, $150 and ·costs; Craig
Weaver, Gallipolis, speeding, $15 and
costs; James Jones, Rt. I, Cheshire,
speeding, $15 and costs; Jeffrey
Friend, Rt. I, Long Bottom, speeding,
$15 and costs; Donald E. Stobart,
Pomeroy, driving under suspension,
two days in jail, $150 and costs;
Richard G. Abels, Rt. I, Long Bottom,
improper . backing, $15 and costs;
Donald W. Price, Rt. I, Cheshire,
speeding, $15 and costs; Robert E.
Hawkins, Rutland, improper backing,
$15 and costs; Darold Annstrong,
Chester, $150 and costs, three days in
jail and loss of driver's license for
seven days on a charge of driving
while intoxicated, and $25 and costs
for consuming alcohol · in a motor
vehicle.
Folfeitlng bonds were Leta L. HaU,
Rt. 4, Pomeroy, speeding, $35.50;
Gary Workman, Huntington, W. Va.,
speeding, $35.50; Paul 0 . Smith, Rt. 1,
Vinton, overload, $38.50; Gregory L.
Vinnlng, Pomeroy, speeding, $38.50;
John H. Potter, Gallipolis, speeding,
$35.50 ; David W. l.JeweUyn, Rt. 3,
Albany, failure to yield right of way,
$35.50; Melvin Duff, Deltter, failure to.
display plates, $35.50; Joy R. Rife, Rt.
1, Cheshire, speeding, $35.50; Edward
Arnott, Rt. 2, Racine, failure to stop
within BliSured clear distance, $35.50;
David E. Bills, Reedsville, speeding,
$35.50.

by an $11 million decrease from
estimates in July sales tax collections.
" I don't know what that might mean,"
he said.
In response to a question, Sheridan
said he sees no signals now for the
start of a recession, which has been
predicted nationally by some
economists.
Ohio's economy relies heavily on
· auto production and sales, which have
been lagging. He said "I won't be

TOURNAMENT SLATED
The Syracuse · Volunteer Fire
oanc·
Department Ia SpoDBorlng
tloned slow-piteb softball tournament at Syracuse Municipal Park
for Class B teaiWI on September 1, Z
and3.
Entry fee Ia .-o and two balls for
all oanctloned leamB and $711 and two
balls for nOJHanctloned teams.
Eacb 8 team cannot bave more tban
two AA team playen. Individual
awards of jackets will be presented
to the players of the top three teams.
Teams can be entered by pboolog
either 992-3495, 992-2909 or 992·7777.
It was also announced tbat London
Pool wm be open on Labor Day for
the convenience of family memben
of ball players u well as the pubUc
aod games will be spo111ored by the
fire department at the park for
Ywogsters on Labor Day.

a

Mayor's
Court
\

Three defendants forfeited bonds
and three others were fined in the
court of Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman TUesday night.
Forfeiting were Everett L. Shuler,
Route 1, Middleport, $27, posted on a
speeding charge; Steven R. Cochrna,
The Plains, $50, speeding, and Ralph
E. Stewart, Mason, $29, speeding. ·
Fined were Ricky Lee Jordan,
Route 4, Pomeroy, $25 and costs,
speeding; Wilbur Sims, Middleport,
$25 and costs, disorderly, and Thomas
Stewart, Middleport, $50 and costs,
disorderly.
One defendant was fined and four
others forfeited bonds in Ule court of
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews
TUe_sday night.
fl k
Fmed $50 and costs on an .open as
charg~ was John Tyree, Mtddleport. ,
Forfeiting bonds were Robert Bla~k,
Pomeroy, $42, posted on a speeding
charg~ ; Arthur Roush, Columbus, $27,
speedmg; Delores. Will, Pomeroy, $30,
assured clear dmance_, and Mark
M
p
$30 fail
t yield
ora_, ~eroy ,
• ure 0
the nght o way.

Ohio will receive its fourth State
Conservationist in over 40 years of
resource conservation work,
Robert R; .Shaw, state conservationist in Vermont, is being
promoted to tbe top position for the
USDA Soil ConserService (SCS ) in
Ohio effective September 16.
Shaw will replace the retiring
Robert E. Quilliam. A native of Indiana, Qui11iam began his career in
that state. He served in Alabama and
West Virginia before coming to Ohio
in 19?0. ·
.
Quilliam, a career conservationist,
will be leaving the federal agency
with over 30 years of service effective
Aug. 17. He plans to stay in Ohio and
live on his Fairfield County farm.
Shaw is a native of Maine. He began
his career in 1961 as an Agricultural
Engineer at Presque Isle in his hotne
state. He was then promoted to Planning Engineer and to Watershed
Planning Staff Leader in Orono,
Maine.
Shaw came to Ohio in 1970 as
Assistant State Conservatiooist for
Water Resources . He served here for
four years before his transfer to Vermont as Assistant State Conservationist. In 1976, Shaw was
promoted to State Conservationist in
Vermont. His return to Ohio as State
Conservationist is effective September 16.

James R. Lee, formerly of Athens,
has been promoted to vice president
of gas supply and utilization with
Colwnbia Gas Distribution Companies in Columbus.
Lee is now industrial gas utilization
director of the dlstributioo companies
which include Columbia Gas of Ohio,
Kentucky, Virginia , West Virginia,
Maryland, Pennsylvania and New
York.
Lee joined the firm in 1960 as an
engineer trainee . He held a number of
positions wit!! Columbia Gas, of Ohio
before going to Charlestoo, W.Va., in
1973 as custotner representative for
Columbia Gas Transmission Corp. He
was promoted to his current post in
Columbus in 19?5.
An Athens native, Lee received a
bachelor's degree in civil engineering
from Ohio University in 1960.
He is the son ol Mrs. William F.
Lee, formerly of Athens, and the late
WUiiam F. Lee. He is married to Nancy Blaettnar, fonnerly of Pomeroy,
and has two daughters, Wendy and
Tracy.
Nacy Biaettnar Lee is the daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Blaettnar,
Spring Avenue, Pomeroy.

(Continued from page I)
patrolled area like the Gallia County
Junior Fairgrounds, but the commissioners reminded her the
fairgrounds were not county property .
The following is the text of a letter
sent to . the commissioners by
Rowland earlier this month on the dog
poundsituation :
Regarding your telephone conver·
control

and

pound . Th is Indeed is seriously need ed, and must be done before the cold

Bodies of four dead dogs were seen
Inside one cage. These rapidly decomposing bodies were t illed with flies
and maggots and added to the stench
in the area . To house dead carcasses
in such close proximity to live
animals shows little more than ex·
treme laziness on the part of the per·
son responsible for removing these
carcasses .
In addition to these specific ex·
am pies Of filth, the area was general ·
ly filthy and Inexcusably kept.
Medical attention for sick and In·
i~red animals: Amongst the dogs we

were mdeed suffering grea.tly and

should not have been caged wtlh other
healthy antmols_. Y~u ~u~l make
ava_llable. a vetenn~r!an W1ll1ng to ~x am me SICk, ~nd lntured dogs and

make a deciSIOn as to whether or not

rel~eve un~ec~ssary suff.erln~ . In ad ·
dlflon to th1s, 1f Is flna~c1ally ,Illogical

Keep tn m•M there Is a three day

an•.mal

Pomeroy; Danny BtsSeU, Cllelter.
900 pound open claa8 - Steve
Hendershot, Whipple; Jim Folmer,
Paneroy; Victor Gaul, Sr., Cbester.
1,000 pound open class - Elsie
Folmer, Pomeroy; Steve Hendershot;
Whipple; DOn Smith, Racine.
Trophies for the event were donated
by Baum L\unber, Chesler; Ridenour
Supply, Chester; M~rn Supply,
Pomeroy; Gravely Tractor Sales,
Pomeroy; Citizens National Bank,
Middleport; and Washburn In·
surance, Coolville.

Antique theft
totals $4,000
Meigs County Sheriff James J.
Proffitt reports his departtnent is
investigating a breaking and entering
and theft.of a number of antiques from
the Harold Barnhart residence at
TUppers Plains.
The entry of the B8rnhart residence
and storage building .was made
!klllletime after midnight Tuesday .
Mrs. Barnhart said a number of old
lamps and lampehades, old clocks,
and bJttJes Wet"e taken, with a total
value of appro!tlrnately $4000.
It is believed two suspects were •
involved, as two seta of footprlnta
were found in Ule garden where the
items Wet"e carried to j!et to the
highway (State Route 7) whet"e they
were place!! in a waiting vehicle. The
telephone line was cut at the
residence .
Entry to the house was made by
forcing a basement window which had
been barred several years ago. Entry
to the storage liuilding was made by
boring out a sectim of the wooden
ovemead door and reaching in and
unlocking it .
~eriff Proffitt requests that anyone
passing through the Tuppers Plains
area on State Route 7 and observed a
vehicle stopped almg Sllite Route 7
just south of TUppers Plains llilytime
after 1 am. TUesday morning Is asked
to contact the ~erifrs Office.
The incident Is under investigation.

VOL. XXVIII NO. 92

mospheric temperature was approx ·
imately 92 degrees. we found the dogs
panting profusely . Upon inspection,
we found no water provided for these

canng for the an1ma ls. Th1s person Is
not a volun!eer who can do as .he
plea~es at th1S poun~ . Th~re are stn~t
requ1rements prov1~ed tn the Oh10

per~on

In charg_e ol

coll~cllng

TEHRAN , Iran (AP ) - Kurdish
rebels killed an army commander and
21 troops in heavy fighting near the
town of Saqez in northwestern Iran
today as Arab militants in Khuzestan
threatened renewed violence in their
oil-ric~ province to the south, the
·.(.
,~ ·

. .;,,~

'.. .

official Pars news agency reported. Khuzestan issued warnings that if
Pars did not Identify the dead their spiritual leadet", Sheik Shobeir
commander of the 28th division, but Khaqani, is not permitted to return to
added that 15 soldiers were alllO the province by Saturday, "we will
wounded in the action near Saquez. It react strongly."
gave no casualty figures for the
The type of action was not specified
Kurds: Pars said II troops and 75 but, Ule Arab minority in Khuzestan
rebels were killed in cfashes has
already
sabotaged
oil
Wednesday .
installations and fought bloody !&gt;attles
It said the 28th division , based in with government troOps in their quest
Sanandaj 100 miles south of Saqez, for more autonomy .
' heavy
was rushed to the area after
Khaqani was whisked away by
f.ighting broke out between revolutionary guards from his home
government forces and the Kurdish in the major port city of
rebels, who are batUing for more self- Khorramshahr in July after Arab
rule .
militants clashed with government
Pars alllo reported ethnic Arabs in forces .
Khaqani and his family were
reported to have been taken to the
holy city of Qom , headquarters of
Iran 'srevolutionary leader, Ayatollah
Ruhollah Khomeini, 100 miles south of
Tehran. He has not been heard from
since.
Khomeini warned the Kurds and
Three accidents were Investigated Arabs today against further violence
in Meigs County Wednesday by the and told his own troops they will face
Gallia · Meigs Post State Highway revolutionary courts if they disobey
Patrol.
ocders to crush the uprisings. Three
Richard L. Lambert, 34, Uingsville, more executions alllo were reported,
was driving west onSR 124 at 1:10 !ringing the toll since February to
p.m. when he made a left turn in front 452.
of an eastbound vehicle driven by
Edith L. Rose, 33, Racine, forcing ;:;:~; : ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:; : ;: ;;;:; : ;:; :;:;:;:;::::::: ;:;:;:;:; :;::: ::::;:;: :: :::::: ;:;:
ROtSe 's car to strike his car in the
SPECIAL MEETING
rear.
The executive ct1111mlttee of lbe·
Lambert was cited for improperly
Meigs County Regional Planning
entering an interse'C!l11n.
At 2 p. m. a car driven by Franlt B. Commluloo will meet In special
Jones, 43, Elkhart, Ind., pulled out of session at 3 p.m. Friday at tbe
a private driveway onto U. S. 33 and agricultural conlereoce room of the
' was struck by a vehicle driven by Fanners Baolt and Savings Cc.
Clarence A. Cornell, 68, PorUand. l'llrpose is to awbortze the signing of
Damage was moderate and there a UO,OOO plaoolq gr.,t witb tbe
Fano Home Admlolatratioo.
were no citations.
Later in the day, at 5 p. m., Kenneth :;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::;:::;:;:
L. Swartz, 21, Pomeroy, was driving
north on SR 7 when a car driven by
Gabriel J . Prete, 31, Gallipolis, pulled
out of County Road 5 and struck his
vehicle. There were no injuries and
Prete was cited for improperly entering an intersection.
Schools in the area are still trying to
find qualified teachers. Most of the
vacancies are in the field of special
S'IUDENT REGISI'RATION
education.
Parenti of students who did not atThe schools served by the
tend Meigs Local Schools last year Southeastern Ohio Voluntary Educaand will be attending seventh or tion Cooperative (SEOVEC) list the
eighth grade at Meigs Junior High following nwnber of vacancies:
School are asked to re~r their
-Eleven (11) Teachers of Educachildren in the Junior High Prin- tional Mentally Retarded.
cipal's Office.
-Three (3) Teachers of. Learning
Tbe office is open Monday through Diaabled.
Friday between the hours of. 8 a. m.
-Two (2) Supervisors of EMR
and3p. m.
CUI"OOilll!,
Parents WIBble to make the office
- Three (3) Speech Therapists.
aphours may call 992.J058 for
-Five (5) School Psychologists.
pointment.
Tbe SEOVEC office still has the
following openinp :
-school Psychologist Supervisor
-,Speech-Language-Hearing Supervlaor

}.~ 'To
· : day·\/i
., ..r .
'i ·• .r .

•

-

·· ... .in the world ·

Killer to die
LOS ANGELES (AP ) -

A

Superior Court judge has sentenced Stevie Lamar Fields to die
in the gas chamber for the murder ol a University of Southern
California librarian who was first
robbed and raped.
The sentence pronounced
Tuesday by Judge Bonnie Lee
Martin had been voted by the
same jury which convicted Fields
July 6 in the kidnap-robberymurder of. Rosemary Janet Cobb,
:16. Tbe jury also ruled that he
was sane at the time.
" U the death penalty is appropriate for any human being,
then it is appropriate that Stevie
Lamar Fields should suffer the
supreme penalty, " the judge
said.

State pays off
CLEVELAND (AP ) - The
State at Ohio is considering awarding the widow of John A. Nardi,
once a suspected underwcrld
figure in Ohio, 150,000 because
she is a survivor of a victim of a
violent crime.
Robert S. Tangren , chi~ of the
state attorney general 's claim
aectlon, said on Wednesday that
the payment, the survivor
program 's maximwn award, will
be rocommended this week to the
Ohio Court of Claims in Colwnbus. State investigators have
found no grounds for di.sallowi.ng
the claim.
Nardi was 61 when he was
killed in a bombing incident oo
May 17, 1977. He was then
secretary-treasurer of Teamsters Vending Machine Service
Employes Looil410.

i

r

.

Three mishaps
investigated

Area schools
seek teachers

an

ELBERFELD$

statutes clearly spelhng outthe dulles
of a county dog warden. These re·
be ta~en InfO COnS!derafiOO also.

Closed lunch periods

ava ilable for the number of dogs pre·

CommiSSIOI")er. s meetln~, Aug~st 7,

set at Meigs school

made available at all times. The pre·

area where au~ e&gt;epertlse can be
helptul. We . Wtll, Of course, be
":10n1torlng thiS situation clo~ely. We
s1ncerely hop: thl~ letter will serve as
adeQuate mof,1vatJon to s~ the proper
[o~ of h~ndlm~ and ~annQ. for the
an1mals 1s carr 1ed out m Galli a Coun·
ty .
.
!" ?ther bus mess T.uesday, the CO!f' ·
m1ss1oners opened b1ds o~ a, new f1re
alarm system. for the shenff s depart-

food da ily . Old food must be removed
daily .
,
.

Sanitation : The smell of old dried
up fecal material filled the air surrounding the entire area . This fecal
material must be removed daily .
Fli es covered the animals and this too

is uncalled tor. Admittedly a few Illes
will be present around animals. But
one could barely keep t~e large
, human
numbers
o1 This
fliestooaway
bOdy.
resultsfrom
from the
the
fa cility .
generally
tilthy conditions at this

It " · our understanding that this
report !S t.o be ~resented at the weekly
1979. We are Wtlflng to asiSt you tn any

were also heard for two ~ew ~ump
trucks for .the county engmeer s
flee . All btds were taken under advlsement . by the County Engineer,
James Ba~rd .
.

ot:

Fred w;sttall, Of the Gall1polls city
managers ofttce, and Jim Michaels
ollhe Ohio Env ironmental Protection
Age~cy
the possibility
of
ltllmgals!'m discussed
aban~oned area strip
bage
for the c1ty
.
minescollect1on
and '!llernaltve
!f!eons

of gar·

HlJB
•• c k er surrenders
~· ·

,,

.to FBI a'gents today
•

The flight departed Portland at 9
p.m. PDT Wednesday. At 10:38 p.m.
one of the passengers told the cockpit
crew that he had a bomb on board,
San Francisco authorities said.
The plane landed 10 minutes later in
San Francisco ·international Airport
to refuel before returning to Portland.
After departing from San Francisco
shortly before midnight, the plane
touched down in Portland at 1: 13 a.m.
PDT today and was directed to an
area that had been cordoned off.

Peterson fights extradition
Peterson was captured after he fled
from a North Carolina highway patrol
trooper making routine license
checks. A . car chase followed and
Peterson was cornered in a parking
lot where his car stalled.
Various charges against Peterson
include
a !tempted · murder,
aggravated burglary, escaping prison
and being a fugitive, the Ohio
Highway Patrol said.

Weather
Warm and hwnid with periods of
showers and thunderstonns llkely
Friday. High Friday low to mid
Ms. Probability of rain 60 percent
Friday.

•.*·······;
).,o.

#$Jj:fl~:i ., ~

~=

•

I

t-

!~
&gt;-c-i ·

~\

pavers dollar being blatently wasted
tn lhts c~se , and ':"e do Mpe this will

ment. L_ow btdder was Lynntronlcs,
Galltpohs, at $4,810. Opening bids

(on ladder), Chattanooga, Tenn., who have done the ,
work. Tbe old roof was removed, new sheeting put on ·
and the new roof of fiberboard shingles installed. Baloy
is employed as Spanish teacher as Meigs High School
and with his father-in-law does roof repair during the
·sununer months.

,

and

filth iS uncalled fOr, and must be

holding water in that if is porous and
the water runs directly through it.
Food : No signs of food were present
during our inspection, and lack of
presence of fresh fecal material in dicated food had not been offered
recently . Suitable conta iner s for
holding food are also necessary . The
animal s must have fr~sh wholesome

A NEW ROOF HAS BEEN installed at the Middleport Church of Christ over the past few weeks with
work being completed Wednesday. Shown putting 'the
final touches on the new roof are Fred Baloy at U)e
hase of the latter and his father-in-law, Darrell Brewer

PORTLAND, Ore. (AP ) - A man involving Allbee and Portland Police
bel ieved
carrying
a
bomb U . Rob Aichele whom the hijacker
commandeered a United Air~es 727 asked .to see during the episode,
· ·
en route to Los Angeles and forced the Williams said.
Aichele was one of the officers who
air~er , wiUl il9 persons m aboard,
to fly back to Portland, where he dealt willl Allbee at · that time,
surrendered early today, the FBI Williams said. The spokesman said he
did not know the nature or outcome of
said.
All 112 passengers and seven crew Ule 1975 case.
Wednesday's incident began when a
members aboard the plane were
released unharmed, authorities said. man described as a white male, 34-40
The man gave himself up at 2:25 years old , diverted UAL F1ight 739,
a.m. PDT and was taken into custody from Portland to Los Angeles, shortly
by the FBI who tentatively identified after 10:38 p.m., the FBI said .
the suspect as James Allbee.
A bomb squad then began combing
Ule aircraft for Ule explosive the man
said he had.
·
An explosive device and an
GASTONIA, N.C. (AP) _ Ohio
extortion note directed to United were officials are seeking extradition of an
found Wednesday at the Portland escaped prisoner from Green Bay,
airport , but authocities said it did not Wis. , caught here and charged with
appear the two incidents were related . shooting an Ohio Highway Patrol
FBI spokesman Bill Williams said trooper.
•
-"DccupationalTherapl~
the suspect agreed to release all of the
Robert Peterson , 22, ·says he will
Two districts Ust vacancies in voca- passengers and most of the crew fight efforts to return him to Ohio.
tional agriculture.
shortly after the plane returned to , Peterson and his b.-other were
The special education classroom ~~land International Airport.
stopped by an Ohio trooper Aug. 7 for
vacancies as well as service positions
The only demand that has been a routine traffic check when the
are critical to the districts especially made is that the man wanted to come trooper was shot with a :llkaliber
In as much as Jaw. now requires every back to Portland,." said Williams.
bullet and the two brother~ fled
school district "to provide apNegotiations wilh th~ hijac~er were
Peler9Jn's 17-year~ld b.-other. was
propriate educational programs and conducted o_ver the al!"craft s radio, arrested several days later and is in
services for every school aged han- Williams sa1d.
jail in Columbus Ohio
dicapped child". Due to the critical . Th~ . ~ijacker 's
tentative
The trooper, Thoma;J. &amp;ott, 31, is
sit1111tion the Ohio Department of ~denllflcallon was based on in satifactory condition after being
Education Is willing, in some cir- Information from a 1975 extortiOn case hospitalized in Chillicothe.
cwnstances, to issue temporary
special education certificates to applicants qualified in other education
fields.
For further Information it is urged
that interested qualified candidates
Immediately contact the SEOVEC offices in Atbens at (614) 593-3511 or out
of town Hl00-282-4401. Ask for either
Mrs. Patricia Skinner or Dr. Robert
L. Weinfurtner.

quire~ents must be met. It Is the tax-

sent wooden trough is unsuitable for

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

THURSDAY, AUGU ST 23, 197 9

Commander,21 others
die in latest battle

food or water . This trough contained a

immediately.

en tine

Heavy fighting contin~es

to house and feed a SICk ant mal for
thr~e days Knowtng It IS not a stray.
Ftnally, a close look must be taken

Into more strict superviSIOn over the

at

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

should be euthanlzed to

Water: When we arrived at approx·

Su itable
water containers must be made

Pomeroy, 0.

suffereng ·from severe laceratl~ns In

lhe abdominal area . These antmals

The following points are areas
which require your Immediate atten ·

not meet this need.

remedied

GOESSLER
JEWELRY STORE

e&gt;dremely m~ngy bla~k puppy, and

one black and while mtxed breed dog

ne~essary If the
an1mal 1s a stray . ~owever, If 11 is su~rendered, the SICk and Injured

foul smelling, decomposed material
tilled with maggots. This degree of

Sr h f'r dral. Ad jus ta bl e
st,unl ts s stee l band
SE9 .95

extremely

ho~dlng . period

animals. T~ere was available a
makeshift trough intended to hold

S • l~ert o ne

,. three

must be housed in adequate facilities
to provide protection from the
weather. Your present facility does

statues clearly slate that animals

imately 1:00 on July 3&lt;1, the at·

Oay date .

were

OWEN H. HALL
Owen H. Hall, 84, formerly of Meigs
County, died TUesday night at MI.
Carmel East Hogpital in Columbus.
He had formerly been coofined to the
Winchester Nursing Home at Canal
Winchester. Arrangements are being.
made at the Ewing Funeral Home in
Pomeroy.

SEEKS DIVORCE
O!eryl PatterliOn, P&lt;meroy, has filed
for divorce in the Meigs County
Common
Pleas Court from Bobby J,
SQUAD RUN
The Pomeroy Emergency Squadl Patterson, alliO of Pomeroy. She
answered a call to 127 Mulberr:f charges gross neglect of duty and
Avenue at 3:49 p.m. Tuesday for extreme cruelty.
Dwight Oliver who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
MEETSTIIURSDAY
A special meeting of Shade River
Masonic Lodge 453 will be held at 7:30
p.m. Thursday willl work to be in the
MEETINGS CHANGED
Meetings of the Meigs Local School master mason degree.
District Board of Education have:
been changed for the remainder of. tbe'
SPECIAL SESSION
year. The qrd will meet in regular
A
special
meeting of the Eastern
session at 7:'3o each month, on thn
Local
School
District Board of
third Mondjjy, rather than on thm
Education
has
been
set for 7:30p.m .
third TUesday, through December.
Thursday at Ule high school.

the a~lma~ should be euthanlzed.

lion. 11 is our belie! that by spending
one day of serious and hard labor
these needs can be fulfilled .

#41733

•

or winter sets in. As you know, Ohio

sent, water must be fresh dally, and

Give the most welcome and practical - gift of all. A
beautiful Bulova watch .
Wrist jewelry that tells how
much you care, every single
second . See this style and
many more in our exciting
Bulova gift watch collection .

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
Admitted--Bessie Stitt, Racine ;
Goldie Lynch, Athens ; Edn11
Kennedy, Middleport; Mary Brown,
Pomeroy; Darla Kelly, Pomeroy;
Eliza Powell, Pomeroy; Edward
Martin, Pomeroy ; Clyde Sayre,
Syracuse; Herbert Seth, Pomeroy ;
Opal Wel)b, New Haven; Kimber!)'
Petrie; Pomeroy.
Discharged--Heidi Bailey,
Kimberly Roush , Roy Pierce .

Sheltering . emaciated English Setter pups, one

Department of The Humane Society
PATIENT TRANSFERRED
of the united States, 1 am tiling this
Mrs. Clara Shuster, Lincoln Hill, report with you regard ing the condi Pomeroy, who has been confined io , lions found by Phyllis Wright and
on July 30, 1979 at the Gallia
Veterans Memorial Hospital , has myself
county Dog Pound .
been transferred to the Jackson Care
11 Is my understanding that there
Center
near
Jackson .
are intentions to construct a new

BULOVA CARAVELLE
JUST RIGHT
FOR SCHOOL

FOOTE MINERAL LOSES
The Foote Mineral Golf Team 10$ to
Interlake in the ammal golf matdh
held Saturday at the Lakeside Golli
Ccurse at Beverly.
Nine Foote Mineral team memberu
played against the nine Interlake
players with Foote Mineral shooting .ft
net 78.63 and Interlake a net of 75.811.
Mark Kincaid of Interlake won thE'
low gross with a 77 and a net of 69.
Foote Mineral's fine shooters, Dick
Rupe, Jack Weber and DIXI Mills were
obviously off their game, but Cliff
Northrup shot a surpri!!ing net of 77 tr.•
keep Foote Mineral close in the·
contest. Foote Mineral has challenged.
Interlake to a rematch in October or.t
the Foote Mineral h001e course at
Mason .

Gallia commissioners

Animal

FINE WATCHES

Court St.

1.'

sation with Phy ll is Wright of the 1 v1wed

SQUAD CALLED
The Middleport Emergency Squad
answered a can to 134'f.l Mulberry
Ave ., at 12:46 pm. Tuesday for Lisa
Powell who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

Mr. and Mrs. Jim Folmer and
daughter, Cheryl, Pomeroy, all won
first place trophies in the BMUIX
garden tractor pulling contest of the
Meigs County Fair.
Cash prizes were awarded to thfl
first three places of the variouu
weight divisions with the first plactl
winner in each weight category also
receiving a trophy.
The winners, first through third,
respectively, include the following :
800 pound stock class - Chenrl
Folmer, Pomeroy; Mike Sim,
Pomeroy; Lisa Gaul, Chester.
900 pound stock class - Kenny
Ayers, Lower Salem; Elsie Folme1r,
Pomeroy; Jim Stalnaker, Marietta.
1,000 pound stock class - Jim
Folmer, Pomeroy; Kenny Ayer.1,
Lower Salem; Mike Slm, Pomeroy.
1200 pound stock class - Joann
Ayers, Lower Salem; Elsie Folmer·,

Athens native
Lee . p~o
· mo*"ed
• '

•

lit 2 p.m. Friday at the Walker
Funeral Home in RuUand with the
Rev. Amos Tillia officiating. Burial
will be in Miles Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral bane from 6 to
9:30p.m. Thursday and after 9 a.m .
Friday until time of the services.

Folmer family wins trophies

Ohio gets new

conservationist

e

Area Deaths

ROBERT R. EWING
Robert R. Ewing, 64, died
unexpecedly Mooday at his home hl
Vinton .
·
·
Mr. Ewing was a son of the lei•!
John A. and Grace Ewing. He wa,,
born in Bolivar and was employed as
a bricklayer. He was a veteran of'
World War ll.
Surviving are three sisters, Mrs:.
William (Beverly) Stewart, Bolivar ;
Mrs. Cyrus (Peg ) Able, Boiivar, and
Mrs. Robert (Marjorie ) Bwngardner,
New Philadelphia. Mr. Ewing wa:s
preceded in death by his parents, h~g
wife, Ellen, and one brother, John A.
Ewing.
Funeral services will be conducted

Press reports said more than 100 groups.
"counter-revolutionaries" also were
It said a large number of weapons,
arrested in Sanandaj and that "other passports and mimeograph machines
counter-revolutionary elements in were seized, but the leaders of the
Kurdish Party still eluded capture.
Kurdlstan are being sought."
The Islamic Republican , the
Meanwhile, a married woman was
newspaper of the fundamentalist executed today in the northern town of
Islamic Republican Party, said those Behshahr for having illicit relations
arrest ed were members of the · with a man and her lover received 100
Kurdish Democratic Party, which lashes in public, the official Pars news
Khomeini banned last weekend, the agency reported.
.
People's Fedayeen and other leftist-... A second execution -of an official
of Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi's
regime - was reported in central
Iran.
The woman put to death was Narges
Jabari. Pars said her husband was
healthy so there was no excuse for her
worried unless the revenues are still having sexual relations with another
below estimates in October, after the man .
first quarter of the fiscal year. "
The news agency said Capt. Parviz
Brundige reacted to reports the Shams, former chief of the state
state might give school districts 45 police in the central Iranian town of
percent of Uleir 1979-1980 allocations Arkan, died before a firing squad
the first six months of the fiscal year. after an Islamic revolutiooary court
then make them up with the other 55 found him guilty of torture.
percent January Ulrough June. ,
The executions raised to «8 the
Keip said this move, if finally number of Iranians known to have
agreed to, would help make up an been put to death since the overthrow
expected shortfall of about $80 mUiion of the shah in Fet&gt;ruary.
during the first six monllls of the
Pars also reported that three men
fiscal period.
were given 105 lashes each in
· But Brundige said it would translate Kermanshah, Western Iran, for
into reductions of 9.6 percent over that · drinking alcoholic beverages, and
period for all districts, some of which three were given 50 lashes each for
already will have trouble meeting gambling.
higher salary and other requirements
It said the sentences for drinking
in the state budget.
were particularly heavy because the
offenses occurred during the holy
month of Ramadan .

•

~P.~EI,~r91~1ND BOYS' UNDERWEAR
all Hanes men ·~ and boys·
'.hvhlllt'!. all cotton briefs arid lops regular and gripper boxers.
ends September 1.
Description
Men;s Crew neck T·shlrt-100% •:otton

Men s V·neck T·shlrl-100% Cot·lon
Men's Brlet-100% Cotton
Men·~ Gripper Boxer- SO% Cot/50% Poly
Boys, Crew neck T-shlrl- 100% 1::otton
Boys Brlef-100% Cotton

Sugg.

20%

3/5.99
3/6.49
3/5.79
316.99
3/3.99
313.99

3/4.79

Retail

Off

3/S. tJ
3/4.63
3/5.59
3/3.19
3/3.19

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

·~·----------~~·--··---··- - - - ·

ADVERTISING POLE -Attesting to the popularity of yard, garage,
porch, patio, or •'what~ver" sales by Meigs residents these days is this
utiUty pole on Third Ave. In Middleport, which advertises three such
events through signs placed by the sellers. Looking over the variety of
events listed Is Charlea Smith, Middleport.
f

During the 1979-00 school year, lunch periods at Meigs Junior High will
be closed. Students will not be per. milled to leave school grounds, according to Principal Jolm Mora.
Parents of students living within
walking distance of the junior high
school desiring their children to come
home for lunch must visit the principal's office and make application
for a lunch pass.
.
Students will not be permitted to
leave school grounds without a lunch
pass.
The office is open Mooday through ·
Friday, between the hours of 8 a. m.
and3p.m.

•'

mE WJEH-AM radio station tower off Portsmouth Rd., Gallipolis, fell down around 10:40 a. m.
Thursday, knocking the station off the air. Station
owner Paul Wagner said it may have been caused by .

'·

.

Sunday's storm and recent heavy rainfall. No 1one was
injured in the incident. Wagner said his FM station,
WYpC, would remain on the air and try to handle Ita
sister.station's advertisi.rul.

•

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