<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="15906" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/15906?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-06T14:25:54+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="49030">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/3a7c9699d3e89f4099ec2ddf3cdf4657.pdf</src>
      <authentication>6f14af648bdd9bfc2b02375f0239b4ba</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="50934">
                  <text>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.

•

�2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pome~oy. 0 ., Thursday, Aug. 23, 1979

3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Aug. 23, 1979

§'rt:IN

DON'T WoRRY.

IN WASHINGTON

WE'VE GoT A PIECE'

Martha Angle.and ·
Robert Walters

1-!E:.LLO, CoNGRE~~?

~(I&lt;V
~TN .

N~wa.

NEA .

01= TJ.l£ HI!.J-,

Today's

To judge a judge
By Richard E: Cohen
WASHINGTON (NEA) - Congress
is preparing to tackle one of the most
ignored problems in the federal
establishment -what to do with
federal judges accused of corruption,
favoritism, inability or senility.
Because the Constitution gives
federal judges lifetime appointments,
litUe can be done about their shortcomings short of a lengthy impeachment trial in the Senate.
Eight judges and one Supreme
Court justice have ben impeached in
the nation's history, the most recent
in 1936. But many congressional and
legal experts believe Congress has
become so burdened that future impeachments of judges are only a
remote possibility.
Democratic Sens. Sam Nunn of
Georgia and Dennis DeConcini of
Arizona have an answer. They want
to give the courts greater power to
discipline theit errant members.
"Tile public with its increased skepticism demands that all branches of
government accoWJt for their actions," said. DeConcini. "Although
most Americans have a high regard
for the overall integrity of the federal
judiciary, the past and recent publicity surrounding the acts of several
U.S. judges has provided ample opportunity for questions to arise.''
The critics cite several examples of
judges who have disgraced the
courts.
Perhaps the most . notorious was
Willis Ritter of Utah, a cunnudgeon
who rari his court according to his
own rules. Often he would refuse to
schedule any criminal cases for months at a time and then conduct dozens
of trials within several days . Chaos
usually resulted as lawyers lacked
the lime to call all witnesses or present evidence.
Herbert Fogel of Philadelphia
made it a practice to show up late in
his courtroom and treat all parties
with contempt. Local lawyers have
not had to worry about him sine~ he
resigned in 1978 after refusing: 'to
testify on the basis he might incriminate himself before a grand jury

investigating building contracts.
Then there was the Ohio judge who
handled major labor cases and
employed as a secretary a laborunion officer whoperformed no
secretarial services.
Nunn and DeConcini have drafted
legislation that gives any citizen the
right to lile a complaint a bout a
judge's conduct. A group of IOCBl
judges could hear the complaints and
its decisions eould be appealed to a
national Court on Judicial Conduct
and Disability.
Either body could request judges to
retire, recommend that no further
cases be assigned to them, or censure
or reprimand them.
Although judges could not lose their
seats against iheir will, the national
court could recommend that they be
impeached by the House of Representatives.
Opponents of the bill contend that it
threatens, the independence of the
judiciary. Sen. Birch Bayh, D-Ind.,
said during an earlier debate on the
bill ; "We must have judges who have
the courage to stand up and say, 'This
is what the Consiitution provides, "'
without having to fear being run out of
office by other judges or Congress.
Many judges prefer to keep the informal procedures that now allow
judges thelilllelves to resolve problems concerning their colleagues.
However, support for the NunnDeConcini bill has become so strong
that Senate passage is likeiy this fall.
And there is a good prospect that the
House will approve the bill next year
and send it to President Carter for his
signature.
·
When he introduced a similar bill in
trm, Rep. Bob Kastenmeier, D-Wis.,
who chairs the House subconunittee
handling the bill, said the measure
would improve public confidence in
the judicial system by assuring
judges will properly perform their
duties.
If enacted, the bill also would
benefit the vast majority of judges
who should not be tainted by the
misdeeds of a few of their colleagues.

second night of the trip .
The first full day of the trip was first
lady RosalyM Carter's 52nd birthday.
Carter ordered a cake brought to the
table with an inscription in icing :
"From Your First Husband."

-r~ -------------------------,
Ltl~rl
~flcGmn!.

ul oplnlua l tf
Th• .• tlloKld bf ltu :
I IIIII JOIJ lletrdl IO DI I or tUb jf r\to redu t\1~" b~ Lht tdl\&amp;t l 1

I •aclmunbt •lcatd .. 1\h thr.lca~ ·· uld~u 'IOamn m•! 1

I

bt •lthhrl~ UpolO pu~lln llua . Ho•rHr, Oil r tqunt, 1
I 1111111t1 •UI bt dJICIUit11 . J.A flf~ 1~ould lw Ia lood Iaiit, 1
I lddrtniiiJ luuu , ~ol ~ro cot lttlu
I

i
I

Bench sets home run record

Comm~~tary

Briefly noted

Jimmy's Whitehouse
ABOARD THE DELTA QUEEN
( AP ) - If there was ever any doubt
that Jimmy Carter's Mississippi
River float aboard this paddlewheel
steamer is more of a campaign trip
than a vacation, there is now further
evidence; Reporters have composed a
campaign song about it.
The songs crop up every four years
as reporters, whiling away the time
between presidential campaign stops,
compose satiric lyrics to familiar
tunes and lampoon the events on
which they report .
In this case, the target of a
reporter 's wit was the president's
assertion that he is campaigning for
his energy proposals and not his own
re-election.
,
" Jinuny Carter Went A..Steamin" '
is sung to the tune of "Will the Circle
Be Unbroken ' " The first verses go
like this ;
"Jinuny Carter went a-6teamin',
"Down the river to St. U&gt;u,
"Jinuny Carter went campaignin ',
"But for who, Lord. but for who?"

Editorial opinions,
comments

•,
L't~&amp;i
:
:

g.

I

tI ••• ?Jtt.

I

Good opening night

Dear Sir :
The· Meigs County Fair was a suc~ess . An inter.faith religious service
on opening night got it off to a good
start.
Officers of the Meigs Co.
Ministerial Association deserve much
praise for the hard work they put into
" Was it taxes on oil profits ?
it. Their program was good and well
" Or for rebates for the poor ?
organized
from start to finish.
"Solar power ? Or mass transit?
Special music presented by the
" Or a stay through '84?"
The song has eight verses and may "Voices of Liberty ", an inter-faiih
have more before Carter's week-long singing group, was beautifully
Mississippi trip ,ends Friday in St . rendered. Rev. Richard Thomas, vice
president of the Ministerial Associa·
U&gt;uis.
lion, is not only a fluent speaker, but a
The riverboat trip is a working tslented mll.'!lician. He was-the leader
vacation not only for Carter, but also of the meeting and did a superb job.
for press secretary Jody Powell and
Areal highlight of the meeting was
other staffers accompanying the when Rev . Robert McGee introduced
president. in PoweU's case, at least, it Dr. Lewis Telle, the guest spaker. His
seems to be doing him some good.
subject was "The Twenty-third
Powell's moods tend U&gt; reflect the Psalm". He had .it well organized and
president's rating in the polls, and beautifully delivered.
although Carter's popularity is near
He showed all the marks of an exrock bottom , Powell, on this lazy cellent preacher and had perfect atriverboat trip , seems to be his old, tention ,from his audience. The atteneasygoing, wisecracking self.
dance w;is better than the year before
He even seems to miss the daily and should have been doubled. All
White House news briefings that often
found him using bitter sarcasm ID who missed it, ·missed a spiritual
tum aside pointeq questions. So much feast.
Lei us appreciate what God has
so, in fact, that near midnight one
night, as the steamer was pausing in a done for us and come to worship and
lock , Powell casually leaned against bow down. Let us kneel belore the
the railing on an upper deck and Lord, our maker. For he 1s our God;
fielded ques tion s from several and we are the people of his pasture,
persons in a crowd of seve ral hundred
who stayed on after shaking hands
with Carter.
What sort of fuel does the steamer
use, Powell was asked .
The press secretary, ~igarette and a
nearly empty tumbler in his hands, PAULSTOWOLI\ RECEIVES PIN
Paul R. Stodola was presented a pin
replied ; "Well, fa- the last three hours
it's been running on Ja ck Daniels." for 19 years perfect attendance and a
chevron from Lions International for
Even presidents ·aren't immune his record when the Pomeroyfrom the little incidents that mar Miqdleport Lions Club met at the
vacations.
Meigs Inn at noon Wednesay. The
· A nervous waiter spilled a dish of group also began plans for participa•
seafood coquille down the back of lion iJ) the 1980 Meigs County Fair.
Carter's jacket at dinner on the

•

·

SOCIAI.J SI~CllliTY
----------~Bi~II.S~~~if~--------Wbo cao get benefits?

By William Stell

(Fourtb of 14 parts)

You, your dependents and your survivors are eligible for Social Security
benefits only if you've been under the
program for a minimum amount of
lime.
To become fully insured, you must
have been under Social Security
about 25 percent of your working life
from age 21 (or 1950, whichever is
later) until you reach retirement age,
become elisa bled or dle.
So, today's young worker needa 10
years of coverage (40 quarters) out of
a working lifetime of around 40 years.
For older workers, ihe requirement is
on a sliding scale according to age.
Example; Workers who became 62
in 1977 needed 16 qll(lrters rl.
coverage, while those who turned 62
in 1978 needed 17 quarters. The
maximwn of 40 quarters will be

Meigs
Property
Transfers
Don V. Tufto, Velma L. Tullo, Kenneth D. Jolmsen, Wilma F. Johnsen to
Reed Jeffers, Helen E. Jeffers, Gene
L. Jeffers, Martha E. Jeffers, 40
acres, Scipio.
Jerrie Neal, James R. Neal to
Roger Adams, RightofWay,Scipio.
State of Ohio to Meigs County,
Easement, Sutton.
Vicky S. Epple to Robert T. Reeves,
Marjorie Reeves, Parcels, Chester.
Dwight W. Corbin, Delores J. Corbin to Edna M. Lavender, Lots,
Syracuse Village.
Dan Cremeans, Barbara Cremeans
. to James David Barrett, 5 acres,
Rutland.
R. Marie Turner, Affidavit, Dan·
ville Village.
Mildred J. Fisher, Affidavit,
Pomeroy.
Herman C. Warner, Amber Warner, Teddy A. Warner, Suzanne Warner to Mark C. Warner, Cindy S. Warner, .63acre,Salillbury.
Donald F. Bradford, Jr., N. Louise
Bradford to Don V. Tullo, Kenneth D.
Johnsen, 40 acres, Scipio.
William c. Quickel to Joseph
Eugene Kropka, Cheryl Colligan
Kropka, Lot, Middleport.
Ernestine Williams to Jane A.
Daniels, Donna T. Daniels, 1.079
acres, Rutland.
1
Ernestine K. Wllliams to Paul S.
Robinson, Alice F. Robinson, 1.193
acres, Rutland.
E. Roy Johnson, De!Uah Johnson to
Robert Allen Silvers, Karen June
Silvers, 13 acres, Salem.
James J . Proffitt, sheriff, Barbara
Jane Pooler, etal by Sheriff, to
William M. Pooler, 60 acres, Chester.
Martha Heines Anderson, Frances
Anderson, Edward ·W. Coles, Deborah
K. Coles, Wllliam Coles, Minnie R.
Coles, Bonnie J. Meacham, James A.
Meacham, Winifred Marks, Orville
Marks, Evelyn Gilmore, Elza
Gilmore, Franklin J . King, Luella
King, Charles King, Sandra L. King,
Walter E. King, Edward King, Jr.,
Susan King, Joan King, Cledith J .
King, William J. King to Frances
King, Parcels, Scipio.
Katerine Millikan, dec. to Jennie
Sue Tarowsky, Sara Lee Yoakam,
Hugh C. Rousey, Rita (Dollie)
Rousey, Norman C. Rousey, Cert. of
tran.s., Lebanon.
Lester P. Manuel, Helen E. Manuel
to Alvin Stover, Mary Stover, 2.005
acres, (100 acre Lot 223 ), Letart.
Edward King, dec. aka Park Edward King, dec., to Frances King,
Leota Morris, Louise Norris, Martha
Heines Anderson, Edward E. Coles,
Billy Coles, Minnie Coles, Bonnie
Meachem, WiMie Marks, Evelyn
Gilmore, Franklin Junior King,
Charles King, Walter King, Edward
King, Jr .. Jack F. King, William E.
King, Kathryn Spencer, Afl. of trans .,
Scipio.

reached by those who become 62 in
1991 and thereafter.
Before 1978, you gained a quarter of
covered wages of as little as $50
.during the three-month period. That
pennitted a lot of people 'not normally
covered by Social Security to
moonlight for a few days each quarter
to gain coverage.
In 1978, the system was changed to
an annual basis, so that one quarter of
coverage was credited to the worker
for each $250 earned in 1978. This
amount rises annually to reflect increases in the nation's wages. In 1979,
for example, it was $260. ·
This stili permits some
moonlighting by uncovered workers
to gain Social Security protection. But
the amoWJts they must earn - and
pay into Social Security - are a bit
more substantial.
Farm workers and domestic
workers used to be treated differently
as far as qualifying fa- Social
Security. However, the 1977 amendments ID the law brought them under
the same general provisioDll as
everyone else. Tiley had to earn at
. least $250 in 1978, for example, to gain
one quarter of coverage.
Beneflts.for survivors are given under a less strict rule than for retirees.
For instance, benefits are payable
to surviving children of a wage eart)er
who was covered by Social Security
for as few as six of the 13 quarters
preceding his death.
So, if·the deceased had worked only
a little over three years and had been
covered by Social Security half that
lime, the system would 'pay survivors' benefits to his children. That
is strong insurance.
To be eligible for disability benefita,
workers over age 30 must be "fully insured" and must have been covered
by Social Security for five of the 10
years just before their disability
began. Workers disabled before age
30 are covered somewhat more
liberally on the iheory they 'd have
had less chance to be employed a full
five years.
(NEXT: Help for aged poor)

Today in History
By The Associated Press
Today is Thursday, Aug. 23 , the
22Sth day of 1979. There are 130 days
left in the year.
Today's highlight in history ;
On this date in 1500, Christopher
Columbus was accused of mistreating
natives in Haiti. He was arrested and
ordered sent back to Spain in chains.
On this date ;
·
In 1775. King George III of England
proclaimed that there was open
rebellion in the American Colonies.
In 1639, Hong Kong was taken by the
British in a war with China.
In 1914, Japan declared war on
Germany in World War I.
In 1937, Japanese military forces
1
la,nded at the Chinese city of
Shanghai.
In 1944, Allied troops fighting in
France in World War II captured the
port of Marseille.
In 1962, the •U.S. Telstar satellite
relayed the first live televis ion
program between America and
Ew·ope.

By Don Graff
Farming may not be the most profitable' occupation year in and year
out, butit apparently is the healthiest.
American farmers, as a Health Insurance Institute study of governmel)! data figures it, have fewer days
off the job due to illness than workers
in 10 other major fields. In 1977, for an
example, a farmer averaged 9.1 days
of restricted work activity" compared
to 11.4 days for white collar and 12.4
days for blue collar employees.
On the other hand, loolling at health
from another standpoint, it's educalion that makes a difference. The
healthiest group averaged 16 years of
schooling - 13.5 work-interrupted
days compared to 35.6 days for those
with less than nine years at the
books.
But on another hand, income makes
!he difference, with Americans with
incomes of $25,000 at the top of the
heap. Now that really figures.
. Economical cbarlty
It's an ill Wind and all that, and the
good the current blast labelled energy
shortage Ia blOWing is in the form of a
windfall for charities.
Major charitable organizations in
many parts of the country are reporling significant increases in donations
of automobiles, mostly of the gasguzzling variety.
Erstwhile owners are finA'"" it a
good way to get rid of in~~nient
behemoths and in the proces.s to come
out ahead, thanks to the tax deduction
for contributions, ol what they could
expect on the used car market.
Goodwill in Washington, D.C., according to a wire report, has collected

some 70 vehicles so far this yw
where ordinarily it geta three or four
during an enttre year. Even energy
city itself, Houston, notes the trend. .
The charities in turn sell the cars, .
usually on bids, for rock-bottom
prices. But these still beat what old
~othes bring.
It sounds like an arrangement that
puts everyone ahead, except pouibly
the tamum. But it does raise qt1e41·
lion; What do the new owners do with
the guzzlers?
Donate them to other charities?
WID the baUie, I- !he warr
President Carter's multibillion-.
dollar synthetic fuel program Ia runn'ing into heavy flack here at home and
it hasn't yet charged the congressional front trenches.
.
But it gets a vote of confidence from
a foreign authority, no leea than
Albert Speer, the production gent..
who kept Nazi Gennany's indllltry
going until the plants were OVerJ'Wl by
Allied annies.
Speer, in a recent German preu
report, recalled that when Hitler
ordered the German ecorxmy to go 1111·
a wartime fooling in Augult ol 11138,.
the development of a synthetic
gasoline industry was the most 1mporlalit project. In the light ol the.
German aperience, he doesn't think
the Carter goal of 2.5 million barrela
of synthetic oil per day by 1990 Ia out
of line.
.
'
Which, in the light ol the ezpertbe
with which he speaks, should be taken,
as some encouragement.
On the other hand, maybe it
shouldn't, considering where it got
Nazi Germany in the end.

'Ohio perspective'
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Opinions helped Akron deal with an emergency
are mixed as to whether the state sewer situation, along with other
should provide emergency finsncial communities which had "rather
assistance to communities hit by cataclysmic situations with which
natural disasters or other calamities . they couldn't cope." .
But the trend seems to be that some
help Bhould be given, especially in Gov. James A. Rhodes doesn't like to
view of bureaucratic delays in seeking be kept waiting when he wants certain
assistance supposedly available staff members to come to his office.
under a proliferation of federal
One aide says Rhodes has a
progr8ms.
telephone setup that allows him to caD
The stale Controlling • ard, which any ooe of several key aides by
presides over Ohio's emergency pushing individual buttons which r1n«
funds, affirmed that policy this week their phones.
,
when it provided the City of RaveMa • It doesn 't stop ringing until the side
$480,000 to make emergency repairs . answers. "It's quite an invention. It
on its public water supply system.
rings loud. You excuse yourself
The water system was seriously quickly if you have a call on another
damaged by a major fire Aug. 4, ' and line," the staffer said.
Maya- Paul Jones requested the
$480,000 as part of a $700,000 repair Ohio pBys the bill for both prosecuti011•
project. He said $220,000 appeared the and defense when state employees, Iii
maximwn the city could get underan certain situations, get called belor~
application it filed with the U.S. the eihics corrunisslon on charges ol
Department of Housing and Urban violating eihics stallltes.
Development.
The Ohio Occupational and Physical
After considerable debate, the Therapy Board received $3,000 froll!
boatd decided to provide $240,000 as a the state thia week to pay for the
state grant, and the remainder of the defense of one of its employees.
$480,000 as a !~year loan, to be repaid
At!Drney General Wllliam J. Brown,
all a- in part with whatever amount by virtue · of existing laws, wiJf,
the city eventually receives from the . represent the board as prosecutor a&amp;,
federal government or from the l!pC(XTling hearing. At the same.
insurance policies held by the City of time, it is his obligation to defend 1
Ravenna.
!?late employees when charges result
Rep. Robert E. Netzley, R-Laura , from perfonnance of their duties.
said he was disturbed by the trend of
Brown requested approval of lhlf..
the tate handing over its emergency $3,000 payment, enabling him IIi:
funds to local communities who have appoint special counsel f&lt;r the board :
iheir own tax and other revenue employee. The controlling board went :
SJurces.
along with the request to avoid art '·
However, Sen. Harry Meshel, D- otherwise obvioll.'!l conflict of interest. ;
Youngstown, noted that the state

wm the Waterford AU.Star U!Ue •
League tournament. Although no

acores w~re avajlable, here's how the
games went.
The first game saw Tuppers Plliins
down Federal Hocking, outhitting the
loeers12-7.
Vic GWillan led the hitting with two
lingles and a triple · while Jay
Carpenter had two singles and a double.
Tom Everett had a triple and single
while Mark Shrlvers had a double and

Vic GWillan got the win with help
from Roger Ballier.
' The semld Tuppers Plains win
came at the elqieJiSe of BarlowVincent although the !OBers outhit the
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
who walked out during batting
TigeraS-6.
Chet Lemon's one-day walkout · practice, reportedly because he
Balaer and GiiJillan again did the ended just as suddenly as it began - wasn't allowed to take his swings
pitching.
much to the chagrin of the Milwaukee befoce Wayne Nordhagen and Alan
Jay Carpenter socked ·the game- Brewers.
Bannister. "It's a great feeling to
win!ling horne run. P . Collins and
Lemon, who walked out oo the cone back and help the ball club win
Shrlvers each bad a double while O!icago White Sox prior to Tuesday because I watched the guys lose 'a
GUWian and S. White had a single night's double-header, came back double-header here on television last
each.
Wednesday night and slapped a tie- (Tuesday) night."
In the championship game, Balser breaking eighth-inning single to give
It was the Brewers' turn to be
went all the way oo the mound, fann- his team a 4-3 triumph and snap the solemn after Lemon's hit drove in
~Pg ten and walking s!J;, R. Bi.UeU and Brewers' four .game winning · streak. Lamar Johnson to snap a :hi tie and
B8i..er each had a triple for the win- "It was like a stage set - like a leave Milwaukee 6~ games behind
lien, and Carpenter, Everett, E. Col- movie - me getting the W'ir\ning hit first1&gt;lace Baltimore.- nine games in
Una, and J. Caldwell each singled.
after what happened." · said Lemon, the loss colwnn - in the American
League's East Division.

Lemon ends walkout

• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •! •

•

••

No''c
MEIGS TIRE CENTER

••

WILL CLOSE FOR·

th'l.
VACA•TION SATURDAY, •• ' Blue JaysRed
Sox 9, Twins 4
Jim Rice and Fred Lynn drove in
AUGUST 25
•e game
runs to help Bob Stanley win his first
since the AU..Star break as

•
•
••

•
•e
·••

THANK YOU FOR. YOUR BUSINESS
SEE YOU IN SEPTEMBER

:

I•

MEIGS
. TIRE CENTER

••
•

•

••

PllbUIIbod di!Uy ..~pi Salanla7 b)'Tbl! Oblo
Volle7 PllbUIIblq Compooy· Mal-, Ill&lt;.,

••

,.•'

111 Coart SL, Pomeroy, OIIJo . . .. Bui.Deu

;

Pbo~

IIWII7.
Secad daM po1t.11e paid at Pemeroy, Ohio.
NIUODI.Iadwrllllq ~atatlve, t.adGI.
Auoda&amp;tt, Jill EadJd An., Clevelud, Oblo

...•

•.,•

.

y
~

•

....•
·",.
\

"In our album, I'll title this one
Texas. ' Smile!"

'Oil Man

from

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

....

Buckeyes finish
no-pads practice
OOLUMBUS, Ohio ( AP ) - The Ohio
state University Buckeyes finished
their final day of no-pads practice
Wednesday without any new injuries,
the Big Ten team 's officials said.
Offensive tackle Tim Brown, who
had been hospitalized for a week
because of a gallstone attack, put in
his first full day of practice after a
light day 'I)Iesday.
Football trainer Billy Hill said
linebacker Keith Ferguson, who
missed three days of practice with a
bruised foot, was ID begin running
today.
And sophomore Jerome Foster
rejoined the team. He had earlier told
Coach Earle Bruce that he did not
plan to return because of "personal
problems."

1977 I ' I
GRANADA

ECONOMY SPECIALS

2. 1974
PINTO WAGONS
Both are 4 cyl.

Automatic transmission, six
engine. A-C.

cyl.

1977 CHEVY
CONCOURS
door. ·dark brown with tan
top and Interior. six cylinder.
A-C.
4

•4295°0
Deluxe model , auto. A-C,
AM+ FM stereo, . factory
warranty .

Reduced Price

'3995

00

1979 FORD'
MUSTANG
4 cyl. auto., A-C, P-S.. AM FM.
radial•

'5695 00

NEW BEER SPONSOR
CINCINNATI (AP)
The
Cincinnati Reds and Anheuser-Busch,
Inc. have signed . a three-year
agreement under which AnheuserBusch will become the prime radio
sponsor fer the National League ,
baseball team's radio broadcasts.
The agreement covers the 1980, 1981
and 1982 seasons.
stroh's Beer is the current major
game sponlllr of the radio broadcasts.
Stroh 's began its BS.'l&gt;ciaton with the
Cincinnati team in 1971.
The Reds radio. network includes
about 125 AM and FM stations in
about 100 nuirkets, according to the
Reds office.

e• ~~::-a~ter~g40t~~=':'altw~
e

Oakland .

Saturday, Au~. 18, 1979
ccattlel
Slaughter Steers: Grade, 57·62.
Feeder Steers (-400·800 lbs.) Choice
73·76.50; Good 60·72.
Feeder Heifers C-4()0-700 lbs.l Choice

66· 73 : GOO(I50.50·65.50.

Feeder Bulls (-400·800 ll!s.J Choice
72.25·76; Good 53.50·72.
Slaughter Bulls lOver 1,000 lbs. J
55.75·600.
Slaughter Cows, Utilities 42 .50·
· 52 .25; Canners and Cullers 42.50·45.
Veals !Choice and Prime) 75·43.50.
Baby Calves (by the head) 51·90.50.
IHovs

Hogs (No. 1; Barrows and Gilts, 200·

130 lbs.) 37.70 -39.

sows 26.10·28.70.

Boars 23·24.85.
Pigs (by the head) 6·24.

Casey Kasam
WMPO
SATURDAYS ·
8 til Noon

(Lambs)

Slaughter Lambs 50·57.50 .

I

J

l~\IJIJI~

()It '1,111~ II()N'l,ll

rfJJll!KI)(JfJ!iJ!!CJ

ROOF PAINT
fer lqlrlalinc

hint Jobs u. 0.,
."SUftiR QUALifY"
• Red '8.95-'15.95 pl.
• ' - ' '13.75 pl.
• Alumiull '9.95

now

79
While
Supplies
Last

LABEL MAKER

OLDSMOBILE
CUTLASS SUPREME

l!atremely ch~roble flurt alkyd P*lnts
rormull1ed tor maximum fiOU

301 V-8 engine, automatic, AC. power steering, radio, road
wheels. ·

aftcl tQUfptnenl . Prime new tetvenllttl
s11rfOUI with SP · U·\ VInyl -Zinc
Chf"'ft\OM NletOI CondiUoner ; ~taclly

IIALVA ·GUAaD PAINTS

retention enCI weather

re1111an~• ·

l!llCOII.. t tor metl\ roots:, bulkllnt••
W06d !flm, ltlutten. lewn turnltwe,

Master

MECHANIC®

• With 3 Rolls (318-ln . x 6-Ft.) Tape •
Self·s1ick pl asti c tape is ideai for la beling school
supp lies. toots , many oth er it ems. Ju st rotate dial
to le1ter , numb er or pun ct uation mark and
squeeze trigger to spell out nam e, address, etc.

Includes 3 rolls colored tape .

500145

QUANTITIES LIMITED

ruaHd surfaces with No . I4·A lhd L"cl

,.,,m.,.

Spreocl nte OrJttPima••ly 500 Muar•
mt 1M" 1 anon . dtt~tndlna on 1urtac•

0

Pressure
No Panic Selling.
"Our Can Sell themselves"

Athens Livestock Sales

Bobby Bonds and Toby Harrah had
three hits each in the Ill-hit Cleveland
attack that buried the Angels. Indians '
Boslal pounded Minnesota in a game started Dan Spillner, th'l, gave up just
live hits, including a solo homer by
washed out after eight innings.
Lynn collected his 106th RBI of the Rick Miller in the third and a tw(H'Wl
season with a seventh-inning double !!hot by Wlllie Mays Aikens in the
andRicedeliveredafirst-inningrun ninth .
Tigers 3, A's 1
with a single, raising his total to 102.
Califocnia 's Don Baylor leads the
Alan Trammel's third bomer of the
season, a two-run !!hot in the first
majors with uo.
Meanwhile, carl vastrzemski inning, helped carry Detroit past

197~

'6295°

"Fun and Games" for all Meigs Anderson, Tony Kemedy.
CONES -Brett Jones, Valerie Jef.
County youth and 4-H horses were
held Friday evening at the fair. There fers, Tammy Kennedy, Kristin
were 14 different classes and five Anderson, Brenda Williams.
BARREL RACE - Tammy Ward,
awards ere presented in each clliss.
Winners, first through fifth, respec- Tanuny KeMedy, Valerie Jeffers,
Judy Sargent, Bobby Williams.
tively, were ;
POTATO RACE - Brett Jones,
!"'LE BENDING - Brett Jones,
Brenda Wllliams, Rosy Detter, Tony Mike Bowles, Mae Nakamoto, Betty
JoHunt, Darren Hayes.
Kennedy, Valerie Jeffers.
SLAG RACE - Brett Jones, Tony
FIGURE 8 BARRELS - Tammy
Ward, Brett Jones, Brenda Williams, Kennedy, Kristin Anderson, Mike
Bowles, Rosie Deeter.
Tony KeMedy, Valerie Jeffers.
EGG &amp; SPOON RACE - Brenda
CATALOGUE RACE - Penny
Dewhurst, Sis Herdman, Dinna Williams, Brett Jones, Deb
Woodyard, Tammy Ward, DaiTen
Roush, Brett Jones, Beth Gloeckner.
DASH FOR CASH- Tammy Ward, Hayes.
Brett Jones, Beth Gloeckner, Judy . COB RACE- Deb Woodyard, Mike
Bowles, Brenda Williams, Brett
Sargent, Brenda Williams.
DRUNKARD'S PARADISE- D!!b- Jones, Lori Hayes.
PICK-UP RACE -Tony Kennedy,
bie Woodyard, Brenda Williams,
Mica
Jones, Brenda Williams, Kriatin
Brett Jones, Beth ·Gloeckner, Mike
Anderson,
Rosie Deeter.
Bowles.
RIDE &amp; RUN - Bobby Williams,
IN UNE BARRELS- Brett Jones,
Greg Cole, Brenda Williams, Kristin Beth Gloeckner, Gene Cole, Deb
Woodyard, Brett Jones.
High Point Award winner was Brett
REFINERY EXPLODES
Jones. He received a halter and lead
JIDDA, Saudi Arabia (AP J -An oil· strap donated by a friend.of 4-11.
pumping station at Ras Tannura on
Mike Bowles received an award for
the Persian Gulf blew up Wednesday, CCA Chairman of the Meigs 4-H
killing two workers and injuring six, Pleasure Riders.
Arabian American Oil Company
Clean stall awards were presented
!llurces said.
to; Debbie Woodyard - Overall, Jeff
The sources, who declined to be Arnold - Wedoesday, Mike Bowles •
named, said the cause had not been Thursday, Darren Hayes -Friday;·
determined, but "it appeared WJ!ikely
to be a case of sabotage" and would
have olnly a "minor impact" on crude
oil exports. They said a fire continued
to burn after the explosion.
Ras TaMura is th~ major !!hipping
point for the 9.5 million barrels of
crude oil Saudi Arabia exports daily.

•

V.W. -- AMC -- JEEP

"

'

•

A1TENDS CAMP Randy
Stewart, son of Mr. and Mn.
Roger Stewart, Pomeroy, attended Valley Vlata Sporlll Camp near
Balllbrld&amp;e reeeoUy. He received
profeulooal lo•lruclioo to
bueball from Ted Kluazew!iki and
Bill Wolfe. Randy wfll be ID the
eigbtb grade at Melgl JIID!or High
1hls fall. Randy rceived recopiUoo u belt plteher duriDg bli
week at camp.

RIVERSIDE

Gas Savers
''

e••
e

Fair horse show
results listed

Royals 3, Yankees 1
2,987 hits and tying him for 15th place
George Brett drove in two runs to
back the five-hit pitching of Larry
NEXT TO KROGER'S IN POMEROY
on the aU-time hit list.
•
·
After the eighth inning, a storm Gura and carry Kansas City past New
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . flooded the playing field. The umpires York.
waited one hour, 27 minutes before
MariDers 6, Blue Jays 3
cancelling further play.
Larry Cox and Ruppert Joues each
Indians 13, Angels 3
hit two-run homers to power Sea!Ue
Mike Hargrove, Rick Manning, past Toronto.

'

"

WLbe 111e for pubUa~tloa of aU DeWI dJa.. icliea
credited to dte mew1paper aDd allo tbt local

•

LABOR. DAY

I

ROBERT IIOEFLI&lt;JI
City l!dllor

Tbe Allotlated Prell il nchulvely eaUtlecl

ee

TH RU

I

INTEI\ESTOF
MEIIJil.MASON AREA

SUblcrtpUoa r11e1: DeUvert4 by carrier
wbert avallable to ceatl per we&amp; By MoCor
Roate wllere eanier Hrvk!e DOiavaU.ble, 0111
moalll, A.ll.
Tbe DaU7 BeaU..~ by ...u Ia Oblo aDd Ileal
Vlrpnia, ODe year $SUO; 8b: IDOIItlal h.1.51;
Uuu moatlu tzo.oe. Ellewllere $31.tD: all
moo&amp;ha PUt; &amp;Uu moatba flUO.
~

!)..4

5

•

a!;~~:~~~t!~e~taB=

ee ·Cleveland
in a rain-6hortened contest, the
Indians blasted the
e California Angels 13-J, the Detroit
•• ~er~~yth~~~~;~
~~
New Ya-k Yankees 3,.1, and the
e SeatUe Mariners bested ihe Toronto

ll!

1979 v.w.
RABBIT DEMO

Offlct Pboae liZ- !111. EdHorlll

JOHNNY BENCH

play.
Mike LaCoss, 14-5; was the winning
pitcher and lowered his ERA to 2.82,
second best in the National League.
. Loser steve Rogers, 11-8, retained
the league ERA lead at 2.78 although
he left the game in the second inning
after being struck on the pitching arm
by a line drive hit by Ray Knight.
" I never ~w it, so I couldn't
possibly get out of the way,'' Rogers
said. "I heard it more than felt it. I
was lucky my arm was against my
body."
Rogers said · the ball struck the
fle!ihy part of his right forearm and
·made a severe bruise but didn't break
any bones.
" II could have been a lot worse. It
could have hit him on the elbow," said
Montreal Manager Dick Williams.
"We have a day off now, and we won't
know right away if he'll have ID miss a
tum."
Ironically, Rogers, who bad his
right elbow operated on last
September, said that Wednesday
night "was the first time in a long
time the ·elbow ilidn ~ hurt."
The Reds' victory let them keep
pace 11'.. games behind the Houston
Astros in the National League West,
but the Expos fell three games in back
of the Pittsburgh .Pirates in the
Eastern Division .
Supersub Dave.Collins had four hits
fa- the Reds to take over the team
lead in batting with a .330 average.
Joe Morgan broke out of a zero-for-13
slump with two singles, two runs and
an RBI.
·
Warren Cromartie had a perfect
four-for.four night fa- Montreal.

a single.

I

DEVOTED TO'l'IIE

publllbed bereto.

By Greg Bailey
The Tuppers Plains Tigers recently

•

ousrst...-1

ntw~

wins LL tournament

'

Berry's World

challenge fa- ihe club record, also
slammed a two-run homer, his 22nd,
in the first inning.
Bench's towering drive down the
leftfield line was his 15th home run of
the season and ihe 32jith of his career.
· He had lied Frank Robinllln for the
club record Monday night, and earlier
this season passed TonY Perez for the
lead in runs batted in.
"I was happy fa- him," said Perez,
who 's now with Montreal. "I played
with him for a good many years here,
and I knew that someday he'd do it."
, Perez, who still ranks .third on the
Reds' home run list behind Bench and
Robinson and ahead of Ted
louszewski, homered for Montreal in
the second inning . The Expos' only
other run scored in the sixth when
Perez hit into a base!Hoaded double

Tuppers Plairis squad

•

1'IIE OAO.Y SENTINEL

"IU.

BY ASSOciATED PRESS
CINCINNATI· (AP) - Johnny
Bench can't pull ihe ball anymore his
ctltics said, so he should take' an
occasional hit to right field and mark
time until he's ensh.rined in baseball's
HaU of Fame.
Maybe that's why Bench especially
savored his record-breaking three-run
homer . Wednesday night in the
!]llcinnati Reds' 7-2 victocy over the
Montreal Expos.
"I watched It - I figured with two
outs I could affocd to -and when the
ball went over ihe fence I jumped a
lltUe bit and said 'Wow! ' right out
loud," Bench said.
· "I doo't know how long it (the
record) wl!l stand, but right now I'm
the home run king and that's a hell of
a feeling."
George Foster, who could someday

Sentinel sports.

condition .

No

S110P QUI COMI'I.Eit PAIIiT DEPMlMEIIT

EBERSBACH HARDWARE
PH. 992·2811
110 W. MAIN

POMROY

VALLEY LUMBER &amp;
SUPPLY..
CORPORATION

923 s. 3rd Ave.

Middleport, 0.

992-2709 or 992·6611
Open: 7:00 to S:OO Mon. thru Fri.
7, oo to 3:00 Saturday

�•
4- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Aug, 23,1979

5--The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., ThUI'!Iday, Aug. 23, 1979

I Fishing outlook I Richard,
By The Associated Preoo
Here is the weekly Ohio fishing
repcrt as issued on Wednesday by the
Oepilrtment of Natural Resources :
,.
LAKE ERIE
. Water temperature 89 degrees and
· clear. Smallrnouth bass are taking
: shiners and crayfish. The island area
and rocky shorelines are the better
areas. Walleye fishing is fair . Fish 15' 25 feet of water and use weight
forward spinners. The western reefs
are good along with Gull and Kelley's
. shoals. Perch are being caught on
minnows . The better areas are
Catawba, Marblehead, Port Clinton
and Toledo Intake. Fish 18-25 feet
deep for perch.
CENTRAL OHIO
INDIAN
LAKE
Water
temperature 72 degrees, clear to
cloudy. Fish lily pads for bass using

B•seball AI A Glance
By The Associated Press
NATIONAL I,EAGUE
EAST
W. L. Pet. GB
Pittsburgh
73 52 .584
~ontreal
68 53 .562 3
Chicago
67 56 .545 5
St. Louis
65 59 .524 Jlh
Philadelphio
64 62 .508 9lf2
New York
51 71 .AlB 20'12
WEST
Houston
11 55 .567
Clnclnnotl
71 57 .555 l'h
Los Angeles
59 67 .468 121(,
San Franclilco
58 69 .-457 14
San Diego
5.c 74 .422 10'1'
Atlanta
50 77 .394 22
Wednesday's Games
Pittsburgh 8, San Francisco 6
New York 5, Houston o, completion 01
Tuesday 's protested gome.
Houston 3, New York 1, regularly
scheduled go me
Los Anl)eles 7, Chicago 2
Atlanta 4, Philadelphia 3

spinner baits or weedless spoons. Try
Old Indian Lake drifting worms for
walleyes. Charmel catfish fishing very
good. Use prepared baits, worrns or
cut bait after dark. Outlook good.
BUCKEYE LAKE Water
temperature 79 degrees. Bluegills on
red or wax worms. Try the mouths of
the bays around vegetation. Channel
catfish on hard bottOIJl. Use worms.
Uebs ISland is the best area for
catfish . Outlook good.
NORTHWEST OHIO
BERLIN RESERVOIR - Water
temperature 80 degrees and clear .
Crappies are being caught arotind
submerged trees and brush in
morning and evening. The best
crawie baits have been maggots and
nightcrawlers. Walleyes are being
taken in 6-16 feet depths on
nightcrawlers and artificial lures.
NORTHEAST OHIO
LEESVILLE LAKE - Water
temperature 71 degrees and clear.
Use cut bait or nightcrawlers and fish
from shorelines after dark for catfish .
Good muskie fishing reported. Troll or
cast at the edge or near weed beds.
Try surface lures early or late for
bass. Outlook fair.
MOSQUITO LAKE . - Water
temperature 76 degrees and dear.
Some walleyes being caught drifting
nightcrawlers In 12 to 15 feet of water .
Channel catfish on prepared bait or
cut bait after dark. SOIJle perch being
caught by · anglers drifting worms .
Outlook fair.
TAPPAN LAKE
Water
temperature 72 degrees and clear .
Bluegills hitting lakewide on red
. worms. Bass are hitting plastic
worms and crankbaits early or late in
the day. Outlook fair.
SOUTHEAST OHIO
OHIO RIVER (Gallipolis-Pool)
Water temperature 79 degrees and
cloudy. Bass fishing reported good.
Use spinner baits and fish the bays in
the main river. Bluegill fishing good
around weedbeds. Use crickets.
Sauger fishing very productive. Fish
near moving water at roller dam. Use
nightcrawlers or spinners. Outlook
good.
JACKSON CITY RESER-VOIR Water temperature 82 degrees and
clear . Fish any structure using
surface baits and poppers for bass
early or late in the day. Bluegill
fishing very good with fly rods and
rubber spiders. ·
SALT FORK LAKE - Water
temperature 83 degrees and clear.
Try surface plugs at dusk for bass.
The best areas are the bays near U.S.
22. Walleyes are being caught in 10-15
feet of water. Troll the southern
· shoreline of Pinecrest Loop Trail.
Muskie fishing is good. Troll large
plugs along the eastern shoreline near
the dam. Outlook good.
SOUTHWEST OHIO
ACTON
LAKE
Water
temperature 81 degrees and clear.
Largemouth bass are hitting crank
baits and spinner baits fished along
the shoreline. The best ·bass fishing
has been along the east shoreline
during the early morning . Bluegill
fishilig is good. Most are being caught
in shaDow water on red worms and
wax worms. Channel catfish are being
caught on nightcrawlers at night

BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
J .R. Richard not only throws
fl~es, he puts out fires.
One of baseball's hardest throwers,
the Houston Astros' right-hander was
sailing into the ninth irming against
.the New York Mets Wednesday with a
five-hit shutout.

Astros top Mets,3-l

Then he gave up two hits and a run,
and Houston Manager Bill Virdon
started thinking about his bullpen. But
he didn't bring anyone In , because he
figured he didn't have anyone better
for the immediate situation.
" I would nothaveusedanybody else
unless I thought J .R: was wild,"

·
Virdoo said. " But he had good stuff,
and I'd just as soon have him out there
as anybOdy to, get one out."
It turned out to be a good decision Richard ended the gaine with a
flourish by striking out his loth batter
and preserved a 3-1 victory for the

Spillner excells, Indians
post 13-3 romp over Angels
ANAHEI!YI, Calif. (AP ) -It had all
the appearances of a good day for the
California Angels. Their ace was on
the mound against a former long
reliever who moved into Cleveland's
starting rotation recently bo;cause of
injuries and illness on the Indians'
pitching staff.
The game Wednesday was a
runaway, but it was the Indians, not
the Angels, who won easily. And it was

Dan Spillrier, not Nolan Ryan, who
excelled on the mound in Cleveland's
13-3 runaway.
The Indians battered Ryan and two
California relievers for 18 hits- three
apiece by Mike Hargrove, Rick
Manning, Bobb¥ Bonds and Toby
Harrah - and tienefitted from eight
walks In their easy victory.
While that was going on , Spillner
allowed only five hits, walked one and

Sports briefs

struck out six in hurling his second
cxmplete game In six starts.
The American League Western
Division-leading
Angels
thus
completed a 12-game homestand
against four non-&lt;:ontenders with a
dismal 5-7 mark.
"Our offense hasn't been up to
said Cfllii91'Jlia slugger Ooo Baylor,
who was being kind to the Angels'
pitching staff. "We haven't had the
consistency we had during the f1rst
hall of the season."
The Angels were ~ prior to the
All.Star break but are 15-19 since then.
The Indians, ~11 since Dave Garcia
became their manager last month,
scored 30 runs in the three-game
series at Anaheim Stadium.
"This is a great game to go home
m ,'' said Garcia, a former manager
of the Angels whose teiun c&lt;mpleted a
l&amp;i!ame road trip with an 8-8 record.
"We hit the ball pretty good the last
two days."
·
The Indians had lost live games in a
row before their 12--7 triumph over the
Angels Tuesday night.
"Thal'sthe way this game is," said
Garcia. "We might have reached a
stale point, we were on the road for
such a long time . We're anxio\15 to get
home. Maybe that's why we hit so well
the last few days."
Garcia Wl\11 fired by the Angels
nearly 15monthsago. He said he holds
no ill feelings. In fact, the cmtraty is
true.
"I love Mr. Autry (Angw' owner
Gene Autry), "nobody could have
treated me better," said Garcia. "I'm
pulling for the Angels, but not when
they're playing the Cleveland

par::

National League West leaders.
The game marked the ninth time
this season that Richard had struck
out·at least 10 batters in a game, and
boosted his Nlrleading strikeout total
to 232.
Elsewhere in the National League,
Pittsburgh beat San Franc ~&lt;.'0 8-8;
I.Ds Angeles stopped Chicago 7-2;
Atlanta ll'immed Philadelphia 4-3;
Cincinnati whiPPed Montreal 7-2 and
st. I.Duis putscored San Diego 8-5.
• Pirates 8, Giants 8
Tim Foli 's tie-breaking, two-run
single with two out In the eighth Inning
led Pittsburgh over San Franclaco. Ed
Ott walked to open the innltlg, was
sacrificed to second and then pinchhitter Bill Robinson was Intentionally
walked. Both runners advanced on a
grounder by Omar Moreno before
Foli's line drive hit scored Ott and
Robinson.
Kent Tekulve, 8-8, the fourth Pirate
pitcher who came on In the eighth;
was the winner. Gary Lavelle, San
Francisco's fourth pitcher, 7~. was
charged with the loss.
Dodgers 7, Cube Z
· Ron Cey drove In three ruhs with a
base!Hoaded triple, and Joe Ferguon
drove In two more runs with a 110lo
home run and run-ec~ring double to
lead I.Ds Angeles over Chicago.
Cey's triple highlighted a fourof'Uil
uprising in the seventh inning, when :
the Dodgers chased loser Mike
Krukow, ~.Ferguson, who h&lt;mered
in the fourth , · contributed his RBI
double to the seven th-inning outburst .
Oiarlie Hough, 4-4, pitched the first
ii: innings for the Dodgers to get the
victory. Bobby Castillo hurled the
final three innings in relief.
Braves 4, Pbtllles 3
Gary Matthews drove In two runa
and Gene Garber notched his 22nd
save
as
Atlanta
defeated
Philadelphia . Winner Eddie Solomon,
:&gt;-10, aUowed only two hits In six
innings. But after walking Mike
Schmidt leading off the Phllllea'
seventh, Sol&lt;mon pulled a leg muade
and was replacell by Joey
McLaughlin , who held the Phiilles in
check until the ninth, when the first
two batters reached base.
Garber came In at this point and,
after loading the bases and hitting
Greg Luzinski and walking Dave
Rader to force in two rimS, pitched out
of the jam with the help of a double
play .
CIU'dln... 8, P..tres $
Ted Simmons belted his 2lat h&lt;mer
and Keith Hernandez doubled twice
and drove home two rms, helping St.
I.Dui:l beat San Diego.
The Cardinals, aided by a Padres
I!ITOI', scored four times before loser
Bob Owchinko , 4-3, retired a batter.
.Rookie John Fulgham posted.his sisth
victory in 10 decisions while
scattering 13 hits.

Roscoe Tanner defeated Joon Sadri, S.
4, 7~ in the third round of the $200,000
Association of Termis Professionals
Championship.
In other action, second-seeded
Harold Solomon blasted Nick Saviano,
~. S-1; Vince Van Patten upset Tom
Okker of the Netherlands, 6-2, 6-3;
Peter Flemming, seeded No.1, edged
Tim Wilkison, 6-2, 3-6, S-2; Francisco
Goozales of Puerto Rico beat Jaime
Clnclnnotl7, ~ontreal2
Fillol of Chile, 6-4, 3-6, 6-1; Brian
St. Louis 8, San Diego 5
Gottfried outlasted Chris Lewis S-1, 7Thursday's Games
(No games scheduled)
6, and ttie Nastase of Romania
Fridey~s Gemes
defeated Bruce Kleege 6-2, 7~.
~onlrealat Atlanta, cnl
BROOKIJNE, Mass. (AP) - TwoClnclnnatat New York, (n)
Houston at Phlldelphla, (n)
time defending champion Manuel
Pittsburgh at San Diego, en)
· Orantes of Spain defeated Harry Fritz
St. Louis at Los Angeles, en)
of Canada 6-1 , 6-1 in the opening round
Chicago at San Fr~ncisco , (n)
of the U.S. Pro Tennis championship.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
In other matches, top-aeeded Jose
EAST
Higueras
of Spain beat Peter ReMert
W. L. Pet. GB
/1.11,
6-2;
Britain's
Joon Uoyd defeated
Baltimore
80 43 .650
Boston
76 48 .613 4'12
John Kodesof Czechoslovakia 6-4, 6-1;
Milwaukee
76 52 .594 6'1,
Ivan Lendel of Czechoslovakia beat Indians."
New York
68 56 .S.CB 12 1h
Steve
Krulevitz 1&gt;,3, &amp;.2 and Ross Case
Spillner, ~. allowed a solo homer to
Detroit
66 60 .524 15'12
Cleveland
63 63 .500 18 112
of Australia elimiilated Ivan Molina of Rick Miller in the third inning and a
Toronto
39 87 . 3$0 42 1fl
two-run shot by Willie Aikens in the
Colombia, 6-3, 6-4.
WEST
ninth, but otherwise, ·the 27-year..,ld
.MAHWAH,
.
N.J.
(AP)
Chris
California
70 57 .551
Minnesota
66 59 .516 w,
Evert Uoyd outlasted Mimi Jausovec right-hander was nearly perfect.
Texas
62 64 .192 7'12
"I went out there ln the first inning
of Yugoslavia 6-4, 6-7, 6-2111 the $75,000
Chicago
56 71 .441 14
and
it kind of scared me," he said.
WOOten's
Termis
Cup.
Seattle
5.c 73 .425 16
In other action, Ivanna Madruga of "Everything was up and I was kind of
Oakland
40 87 ·.315 16
Wednesday's Games
Argentina outlasted Arm Klyomura, 6- erratic. After that, I got the fastball
Cleveland 13 , California 3
2,
6-7, 6-3; Jearme DuVall suprised down and the breaking ba1I over."
OetroiiJ, Oakland·I
Ryan, 13-9, was making his third
Terry Holladay 6-2, 6-3; Virginia
Chicago 4, ~llwaukee J
Kansas City 3, New York 1
Ruzici of Romania defeated Hana start since being sidelined for three
Boston 9, Minnesota -4, 8 innings, rain
Mandlikova of Czechoslovakia, 7-5, 6- weeks with a pulled muscle in his
shortened
4, and Britain's Sue Barker defeated pitching elbow. He lasted only 3 1-3
Sealtle 6, Toronto 3
· !Only games scheduled)
innings, allowing five hits and six runs
Bettyarm Stuart 6-1, ~ .
Thuriday's Ga"'es
while walldng six and striking out just
HOCKEY
Your "Extra Touch"
Texas (Jenkins 12·9) at Baltimore
LOS ANGELES (AP) - The I.Ds ooe.
(McGregor 8·4), (n).
Florist Since 1957
along sandy areas. Outlook good.
"I threw the ball better today then I
Oakland !Langford 8·131 at
Angeles Kings acquired center Andre
Cleveland (Wise13·7), &lt;nl.
GRANO LAKE ST. MARYS
st. Laurent and Detroit's top draft have since I injured my arm," said
cOni¥ games scheduled)
Water
temperature
70
degrees
and
pick for each of the next two years in Ryan. "It's the f1rst day I was
Friday's Gomes
.cloudy. C)'awies are being caught in an agreement that kept Dale McCourt actually able to pop the ball and my
California at Toronto
Oakland at Cleveland, (n)
2-4 feet of water on minnows and jigs. a member of the Red Wings.
curve was sharp. I just couldn't get
&amp;!altle at Detroit, (n)
The
best
largemouth
bass
fishing
is
the curve over.
BOWLING
PH, 992·2~
l8altimore at Chicago, (n)
along the shoreline using spinner baits · SARASOTA, Fla. (AP) - MarshaU
"This is the first time in a couple of
'New York at Minnesota, (n)
352 E . Main, Pomeroy
,Boston at Kansas City, (n)
and crank baits. The charmel cat Holman averaged 234 for Bix games moo ths I had no idea where the ball •
Your FTD F1?]i~l·-~...l
!Milwaukee aiTexas, cnl
tie, Montreal, 34; Youngblood. New fishing is good in the sandy and gravel and grabbed a 27i&gt;in lead over Steve was going ."
York, 34; Parker, Pittsburgh, JA.
TRIPLES - Templeton, St. Louis bottom areas.,_,Fish at night and. use Cook and Dennis Lane after one round
13;
McBride, Philadelphia, 11; live bait and prepared catfish bait for In the $70,000 Sarasota Professional .
TODAY'$ MAJOR
Moreno, Pittsburgh, 10; T . Scott, St. best results. Outlook good .
Bowlers Association Open .
LEAGUE LEADERS
Louis, 10; DawSon, Montreal , 9 ; Win SHOP
By The Associated Press
field, San Diego, 9.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
HQME RUNS
Kingman,
BATTING 1325 at bats) - Lynn,
Boston, .347; Rice, Boston, 335; Brell, Chicago, 40; Schmidt, Philadelphia
SCIOTO DOWNS
Kansas City,
.333;
Lezcano, 39; Winfield, San Diego, 27; Clark,
FOR THE BEST DEALS IN THE
Alfred Dreyfus, a staff officer in the
~llwaukee, .332 ;
Boehle, Seattle, San Francisco, 26; Horner, Atlanta,
COLUMBUS,
Ohio
(AP)
25
;
MaMhews,
Atlanta,
25;
Lopes,
Los
French Army, was acquitted of
TRISTATE AREA
.329.
Wildwood Brook, driven by Jim ll'eason in 1906, nearly 11 years after
RUNS - Lynn, Boston, 99 ; Baylor, Angeles, 25.
STOLEN BASES - Moreno, Pill·
California, 95 ; Breit, Kansas City, 95 ;
Pollock, won the featured eighth race his first conviction and impriso,nment
Rice, Boston, 94; R. Jones, seattle, 90. sburgh, 55 ; North, San Francisco, 50 ; at Scioto Downs Wednesday night for on Devil's Island. After his first trial,
RBI-·Baylor, Callforla, 110; Lynn, Taveras, New York, 38 ; Lopes, Los
new evidence showed another ollicer
his third victory in 11 starts.
Mon., Tues., Wed., Friday &amp; Sat.
Boston,' 106; Rice, Boston, 102; Angeles, JA; T. Scott, St. Louis, 33.
PITCHING (12 Decisions) had
sold secrets to Germany but had
Singleton, Boitlmore, 94; Thomas,
Wildwood
Brook
took
the
lead
ai
thf.
8:30
to 5:00 Thursday till12 Noon
Tldrow, Chicago, 10·3, .769, 2.60;
~ilwaukee, 91.
halfway
pole
and
went
on
to
win by 1I'• been protected by a friend of the
Romo,
Pittsburgh,
10·3,
.769,
2.39;
HITS - Brett, Kansas City, 171;
OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONLY
Pittsburgh, 9·3, .750, 2.94; lengths. He paid $4.80, $3 and $2.00 for general staff. This evidence was
Rice, Boston, 164; Bell, Texos, 156; Bibby,
Emile
Zola
suppressed
and
novelist
LaCoss,
Cincinnati
,
14·5,
.737,
2.82;
Lynn. Boston, 151 ; Lansford. Call lor· Blyleven, Pittsburgh, 10·4, .714, 3.71; a time of 2:06. Second was Gilchrist
Herman Grate
nla, 1-48.
County, who paid $3.60 and $2.20. Joan was imprisoned for denouncing the
Mason,
Va.
773-5592
J.
Nlekro
,
Houston,
17·7,
.708,
3.01;
DOUBLES· - Cooper, Milwaukee,
fraud in his novel "J''Accuse. ' '
37; Brett, Kansas city, 36; Bell, Seaver, Cincinnati, 12 ·4, .706, 3.16,· Coy returned $2.20 for show.
Texas, 35; Lynn, Boston, JA; Lemon, Schatzedr, ~ontreal, 9·4, .692. 3.02.
The ninth race trifecta of 3-7-IO paid
STRIKEOUTS
Richard , $3,612.
Chicago, 33.
Houston,
252;
P.
Niekro,
Atlanta,
150;
TRIPLES- Breit, Kansas City, 16;
The crowd of 3,800wagered $287,591.
Molitor, Mllwauk.e, 13; Wilson, Kan· Carlton, Philadelphia, 147 ; Blyleven,
PiHsburgh,
134.
sas City, 11; Randolph, New York, 10;
Porter, Kansos City, 10.
HO~E RUNS - Lynn, Boston, 36;
Rice, Boston, 33; Singleton,
Baltimore, 31; Thomos, Milwaukee,
31; Baylor, California, 28.
STO~EN
BASES - LeFlore,
Detroit, 62; Wilson, Kansas City, 56;
Crur, Seottle, 35; Bonds, Cleveland,
31; Bumbry, Boltlmore, 28; Otis,
Kansas City, 28.
PITCHING (12 Decisions)- Dovis,
New York, 10·2•. 833, 3.10; Zohn, Min ·
nesola, 10·3, .769, 3.38; Drago, Boston,
9·3, .750, 3.10; Eckersley, Boston, 16·6,
.727. 2.75; John, New York, 16·6, .727,
2.90; Caldwell, ~ilwaukee , 13·5, .722;
3.39; Clear, California, 10·4, .714, 3.12;
Kern, Texas, 10·4, .714, 1.38.
'
l •
STR IKEOUTS- Ryan, California,
178 ; Guidry, New York, 147;
•'•
By The Associated Press

GENERAL
INOIANAPOUS (AP) - Indiana
University basketball Coach Bobby
Knight, who was found guilty
Wednesday of aggravated assault in
slugging a police officer in Puerto
Rico during the Pan American
Games, has reportedly offered his
resignation lo the university.
Knight disclosed his resignation
offer in an interview with the
Indianapolis Star.
Knight was sentenced to six months
in jail and fined $500 by San Juan
Superior Judge Rurico Rivera. He
was tried in absentia.
PULLMAN, Wash. (AP)
Wa.shuigton State University senior
Hayward Harris collapsed and died
during a team football practice. He
was 21.
Washington State Coach Jim
Walden said Harris, a defensive
tackle, was taking part in his first
practice session and was Involved in a
non-&lt;:ontact, response drill when he
collapsed.
BALTIMORE (AP) - City police
held two men on charges of assault
with intent to murder former
Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Joe
Gilliam. Gilliam was lleaten Mondl!y
night.
Narcotics detectives said the
beating of Gilliam apparently was
drug related.
TENNIS
MASON, Ohio (AP ) - Top.ooeded

~~·

MASON FURNITURE

MASON FURNITURE

Sports World
Traffic was tangled, as il usually is
in Manhattan during the afternoon .
The driver edged Into the stream of
cars oo a tum and Del vin Miller
grinned.
"That ·~ it," he said, a note of
admiration in his voice. '' It's just like
driving In a harness race . You've got
to squeeze 'ern a little."
Miller knows a little something
about harness driving. He's in his 50th
year of training trotters and sitting in
sulkys and, at age 66, he shows no sign
of slowing down. He'll be on the rail,
behind Butch I.Dbell in Saturday
night's $237,765 Yonkers Trot, opening
leg of the trotting Triple Crown.
You aiso can look lor him in next
Saturday's Hambletonlan
the
Kentucky Derby of harness raclng, at
Ou Quoin, ill., and the Kentucky
Futurity, last leg of the harness Triple
Crown, scheduled fcc Oct . 5 at
Lexington, Ky .
"There are older drivers around bu1
they doo 't drive as much as I do," said
Miller. "You know, a few years ago,
back in the SO's, I finished second in
th e Kentucky Futurity. Fred Egan
won the race. When we pulled up, I
said Congratulations.' He grinped and
said , 'That wasn't a bad 75th birthday,
was it?'"
Miller, a Hall of Farner, has won
3,119 races and earned close tO $II
million in purses during his fabulous
career. ·He has raced all over the
world from France to Australia to
Rhodesia and is considered the sport 's
international 11lllbassador. Why not
take it easy , then ?
"Well, I've been trying to cut back,"
he said, "but when your friends get a
horse and say, 'Can't you take him ?'
well , I just can 't say no .~·

PINEHURST, N.C. cAl' l - Tom
Watson tends to take the long view of
golfing history.
He 's well aware of the significance
- and the Ia cko! significance - in the
money-winning recor d of $-102,636 he's
set already this se ason , a record that
has other touring pros shaking their
heads in wooder and admiration.
But the thoughtful Watson keeps it
In perspective .
"The money is nice, of course, but I
·don't place a lot of importance on
recor&lt;ts of that kind ," he said before
teeing off today in the first round of of
the defense of his Iitle in the $250,000
Hall of Fame Golf Classic.
" The purses change 9:l much that
the money is not reaUy a mea sure of
your abi!i(y."
And as an example, he went to his
friend and menwr , Byron Nelson .
" In 1945 he woo (a record ) 18
to urnaments and was se cmd in three
others," Watson said . "' He won
$63,000. A record like that, 18 wins,
what would that be worth with today's
purses?" He paused and answered his
.9wn question . "Well over a million.
·'So a comparison of my money with
his money is not an adequate or
accurate ccrnparison of the seasons.
• "In the end , when it 's all over, you 'll
be remembered by the tournaments
you woo , the major tournaments you
won , and the golf courses you won
them on and your scoring average.
Things like that.

Flanagan, Baltimore, 146; Jenkins,

Texas, 13; Koosman, Minnesota , 122.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
BATTING (325 ot bois) - Her·
nandez, St. Louis, .345; Templeton,
St. Louis, .327; Horner, Atlanta •. 318;
Knight. Cincinnati, .317; Winfield,
San Diego • .317.
RUNS - Hernandez, St. Louis, 91;
Lopes, Los Angeles, 91; Moreno, PIIISburgh, 88; Schm idt, Philadelphia,
87; Parker, Pittsburgh, 87.
.
RBI- Kingman , Chicago, 94; Win ·
field, San Diego, 93; Schmidt,
Philadelphia, 90; Hernandez, St.
Louis. 86; Clark, San Franci sco, 86.

HITS - Templeton, St. Louis, 167;
Hernander, St. Louis, 164; Matthews,
Atlanta, 164; Garvey, Los Angeles,
162; ~oreno, Plllsburgh, 156.
DOUBLES -.. Hernandez, St. Louis,
38; Rose, Ph iladelphia, 35; Cromar '

Desigaed for ( &lt;A
Basketball tp· ~
Compeli.tioa .')·:~r ' '~ -~,
CONVERSE!'! All STAR
/•i ·
.
LEATHER BASKETBALL SHOES ""'""'

2ND AVE.
'[

GYM BAG

..•

1

h
RRICE
w/purchase of any All Star basketball shoe.

•

....
••
••
~

·cLOTHIERS. .
'.

•

INDIANAPOLIS (AP ) - Hottempered, outspoken, and often
surJirising Bobby Knight Is up to his
neck In controversy again.
While Puerto Rico tried to decide
whether to seek his extradltloo on an
assault eonvlction, Knight offered to
resign Wednesday as Indiana
University's head baskethall coach.
Knight was sentenced to six mmths
in jail and fined ~0 earlier
Wednesday after he was found guilty
of slugging a Puerto Rican policeman
In the face during last month's Pan
American Games.
·
"I offered my re~ignation at
Indiana University because the
univeraity has to have the opportunity
to do what it freely and clearly thinks
is best for Indiana University,'' said
Knight. "It isn't my deaire to do
anything other than coach basketball
at Indiana University. That isn 'I niine
to say."
Knight made his remarks in a
telephone
conversation
with
lndtanapolis Star Sports Editor Bob
Collins from an undisclosed location
in Montana where he is vacationing.
Knight's sudden actions took
everyone - including university

·••

heritage house

•

OF SHOES .

..

IN MIDDLEPORT 0.

1J
v

officials by surprise.
"I really don't have any crounent,"
said W Vice Pr~dent Edward
Williams. "Any comment would have
to come fo'om the president (Dr. John
Ryan). Resignations of coaches are

Laurel Cliff
News Notes
Attendance at the Sunday morning
service July 28 was 74, choir members present, 10. There was a quartet
composed of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Barton, Mrs. Martin and Pastor
Shook.
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Higginbotham
and daughter, Erin, Columbus,
visited recj!nUy with Pastor and Mrs.
Shook.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Howell visited
recently Mr. Howell's father, Mr.
VemO!l Howell, and sister, Mrs.
Kathleen Poulton, Canton.
Mrs. EI1Jl8 Fox spent the weekend
with her sister, Mrs. Irene Countryman, Greenfield.
Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd Wright spent
the weekend with his mother, Mrs.
Beulah Oechil, Lancaster.

Browns hoping line questions
will be solved before Friday ·
BEHEA, Cillo (AP) - The fuzzy
porvait that is the Cleveland Browns'
defensive line may begin to clear
when the Browns meet the
Wllltlingtm Redsklns Friday In the
final exhibition tune-up.
The Browns leave 'their BaldwinWallace College training facUlty on
Thur!lday and fly to Wllltllngtoo for
· the encounter under the lights.
Coach Sam Rutlgllano believes his
NatOJ&gt;al Football League squad will
be "at leu\ 30 to 4G percent" better
than It was last season, and he
attributes much of ' tbat expected
Improvement to strength on the
defensive line, a weak spot for the
Browns last last ,.,ason.
During the pre«ason, the Browns
acquired veteran defensive ends Jack
Gregory from the New York Giants
and Lyle Alzado from the Denver
Broncos. Those two strong111en have
seen little playing tim';,,IIO far, and
since both have made ,alli&gt;ro as a
light-61de defensive end, me must
move to the left side if both are to play
simultaneously.
But last year's starting defensive
ends, Mack Mitchell and Mike St .
Clair, are still around.
Rutigliano plans to open against the

Redsklns with Alzado on the right side
and St. Clair on the left. Gregory will
alternate with Alzado, wjiUe Mack
Mitchell will spell St. Clair on the left
side.
And since the Redskins game is the
Browns' last drll9S rehersal, one
might think the rotation plan will
carry over into the regular season.
But that all depends ...
Rutigliano says if Gregory
" surfaces," he will become the
regular righ,l defensive end and
Alzado will move to the left side.
"Alzado can play either end without
any great problem," Ruttgllano said.
But he emphasized that St. Clair can
hold onto a starting job by playing up
to his potential. The 25-year..,ld native
Clevelander has been plagued . by
frequent penalty calls the past two
seasons.
.
The defensive tackle spots seem set
with veterans Jerry Sherk and Mickey
Sims. But Sherk is expected to sit out
the game to recover from a muscle
tear In me of his legs.
So the New York Jets, the Browns'
opponent a week from Sunday in the
season opener, will have to wait until
then to see the four-man front
Rutigliano says will improve the
Browns.

the president's business, not mine ."
Ryan could not be reached for
comment. Williams would not say if
he had spoken with Knight in the last
few days.
Despite Knight's resignation offer,
it was unlikely that university
officials would accept it.
Knight was not present at his trial
for the incident involving policeman
Juan . de Silva. District Court Judge
Rurico Rivera postponed Imposition
of the sentence until Aug. '1:1.
A spokesman lor the Puerto Rican
Justice Department declined to
comment on whe!her the government
will ll'y to extradite Knight. One
department source said local
authorities !l'obably will not ask for
his return to the island because he's
not wanted there.
A spokesman for the office of
Indiana Gov . Otis R. Bowen has said
the governor "indicated he would not
be willing to .allow Bobby Knight to be
extradited."
Under PUerto Rican law Knight was
allowed to stand ll'ial in absentia.

Wolf Pen
Mrs. Myrtie Wilson of Columbus
spent a couple of days with Mrs.
Helen Johnson ..
Mrs. Carl Mourning of Elyria was a
recent visitor of Mrs . Helen Johnson.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill McElroy, Jeff and
Joey, were Sunday visitors of her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Bing.
Mr. and Mrs. Clair Giles enjoyed
gomg to Hart reunion also celebrating
Mr. Samuel Hart's birthday. There
were 51 guests and nine unable to attend the Hart reunion held at Mr. and
Mrs . Ronald Starders • home of
Springfield.
A birthday dinner was enjoyed at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Clair Giles
honoring Thelma Giles. Those attending were Mr. and Mrs. Cecil
Giles, Summer and Donald, Sandy,
Frank Giles and Cheri Stanforth of
Rutland. After dinner cake and ice
cream were enjoyed along with cards

crowd were lawmen, lncludlnc Ollef
of Pollee John Taylor -a KlWIIIIU,
Slierilf James Montgomery, llld
Ueut. Ernest Wigglesworth ~ tile
Ohio Highway Patrol. .
Ken Toml!nson, Wildlife offlctr llld
Gallia County Gun Club's Law lllbn ·~
the Year, and Merrill Mc:CormkS,
retired Wildlife division officer, _..
there.
Part of the difficulty in law enforcement, Diles said, Ia tbat oftlcen bavt
"little support by judges." All ~
Gallia County's judges 1HI'e p1 mrt
Wednesday night to bear him: a-Id
Calhoun, conunO!l pleas; Thamal
Moulton, juvenile and probate; llld
James A. Bermett, municipal.
Introduced by President • elect
Larry L. Boyer, the speaker devoted
most of his hourlong add!WI to a journalistic autobiography. Diles attributed what success he baa bad to
one nnan-the late Harold W.
Wetherholt, publisher of tbe
Gallipolis Daily Tribune fnJm 11124 to
1953. " Most decent--most
genUemanly-man I e\ter !mew,''
Dllessaid '
·
However, he credited Nan Moon,
his English teacher at Middleport
with encouragement, lauding him for
his imagination. He was only lt In
I947 when Nan Moore rectmiiDellded
him to Wetherholt for a job u Middleport correspondent d the Tribune.
A stringer paid three centa coii!IDD
inch, Diles wrote Yellow Jacket footb811 games at great length; End~ tbe
Golden Era season, he ·advene!J
criticized the Blue Oevlla for an
dlles-2 ~ pasting of Nellonville,
and that evoked an equal and oppolite.
reaction which offended the bucldinl
young sports scrivener. Diles sent In
his resignation with his last atr1nc ~
Middleport news. Wetherholt talked
him out of quitting and thus preserved
his career.
Diles worked for the Asaodated
Press, and from there step by step Illto ABC television. He said tbat be bad
not been on the air since Memorial
Day, but had renewed bla COIItract
with the clear stipulation tbal ''no one
could tell me what to say, and I will
not give up my Ohio residency: I'll
work four or five days in Detroit and
spend the other two or three days at
my home at Racine."
Diles said tbat he thought bls forte
was interviewing people: "I'm not
afraid to ask anything, and 111111 I
avoid embarrassing them."
and gilts. Barbara Milrphy also
visited.

SPECIALS
"Little Boy~

Boys

JEANS

JEANS
100%Cotton

Reg . &amp; Slim Slle
4-7
Green-Brown-Blue

s

~$599

Reg. $7.95

E
Juniors

WESTERN SHIRTS
Long Sleeve
Flip pocket,
Jl!!lrl snaps.

SALE $795
Ret,. llS.OO

CORDUROY
JEANS
Blue
Denim
Converse

dlfficulttoday.
It was annual Law night for the
Gallipolis Kiwanis club, and 39 rl the

Hot-tempered Knight offers
resignation to Indiana U.

. ,Junior_

...:

BAHR
.

~.

• Single unit outsole for top traction
and wear
• Soft. strong leather upper with
padded tongue and ankle collar
for comfort an~ support
• Heel wedge lessens leg strain

..•••••

..

Near Stiffler's in Pomeroy
2nd Street
992-3586.
Pomeroy, 0.

. .
" The money changes. Wmnmg
doesn\ change. "
Watson, who has woo twice as many
tournaments as anyooe else on the
PGA Tour this year, was going after
. his fifth victory of the season in the
event on the famed No .2 course et the
Pinehurst Country Club.
Altoough he's been in a mUd slump
~ meaning he hasn't won - for a
couple of months, the factdoe·s little to
detract from his role as a favccite for
the $45,000 first prize .
"I'm hitting liO!Ile good shots,"
insists the man who seems well on his
way to a third consecutive Player of
the Year tiUe .
And he has a history of IJCQI'ing
repeal victories.
He's won the Byron NeiiiOn three
times. He'swon the Western Open two
times . He's won the Bing Crosby two
times . And he's won the British Open
two times, acquiring more than half
his career victories in those .four
events .
Among his major challengers here
are U.S. Open champion Hale Irwin, a
former winner here, Hubert Green,
Andy Bean, Johrmy Miller, Tom
Weiskopf, Larry Nelson, TOOl Kite,
England's Peter Oosterhui:l and big
Howard Twitty, a runner-up here a
year ago and again last week. in the
Westchester Qassic.
The tournament is sponsored by
Colgate.

..

. for Schoo.l or
. Campus 8ahr's .
Has the Wearln'
Apparel For You.

KIDDIE SHOPPE

"

..•

Top on

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

1

7

'
f•~gc

School Time and After,
These are the Fashions Kids Favor.
· And Moms, Too!!!!

So , on Saturday,Miller'Will start his
day in Indianapolis, driving Bonded
Yankee, an enll'y with Tyler B, in the
Fox stakes. "Oiarley Keller, the old
Yankee outfielder, owns the horse .
He' s a good friend," said Miller. After
the race, he 'll jet to New York and zip
over to Yonkers by hellocopter,
arriving just ahead of the race's
posttime.
If he's late, don't be surp~ised if
they wait for him . Miller is the Babe
Ruth of his sport. He was in the race
field the first time a starting gate was
used and was ooe of the drivers who
urged adoption of the technique. He
aiso pioneered use of the safety
helmet.
Whep Miller first . began driving,
harness races were somewhat more
haphazard than they are today .
"There was a starter and he'd
always warn you oot to start ahead of
the pole horse," he said. " Time after
time we'd re-start the races. Guys
would look for any edge they could
get. Posttirne would be 8 p.m. and
we'd be lucky to get the first race
going by 8:20. Everyme agreed we
needed a better system."
Harness racing discovered the
solution quite by accident in the late
30's. A newsreel of the sport was being
filmed with the camera mounted in
the rumble seat of a car. The
cameraman told the drivers to line up
behind a folding gate cooll'aption
attached to the car.
''That was the answer, '' said Miller.
"Older drivers didn't want it. They
were against any chimges. You know,
they said. 'My pappy and grandpappy
drove this way and this is the way I'm
gonna drive, too .

Watson keeping
his prospective ,

4 +~ ~'f;Ji;l-1

School Sportables
for Girls &amp;.)Boys

Dave Diles, former Middleport sports, told 56 men Wednesday night
scribe wbo baa just renewed his con- In the Bob Evans shelter house'at Rio
tract as a big gun with ABC-TV Grande tbat law enforcement Is more

By Will Grimsley AP Correspondent

w.

1%.·
··~

Diles Kiwanis Club speake_r

Today's

5

~

E

Denim
Reg. &amp; Slim
s SiEe8-16..
A

~Reg~~~
Boys

WEStERN
SHIRtS
Long steeve, long tails,
asst. solids &amp; fancies.
Slze8-16
Reg. $13.75

$10

$18.00

L

STAR WARS

T·SHIRTS
Size 8-16

Cinch waist,
.zipper fly.

99

~ $]99

Reg. $3.98

SAL£

$298

WRANGLE.JEANS~NDSPORTSWEAR

FOR ALL THE FAMILY

Bringing you fashion's
newest looks In sunglasses
with a wide range of styles
far men and women. Top
quality varletated· and
solid tint lerues. Buy severall

FOSTER GRANT l CoDl-UY
COMPLETE SJOCl.
V. PIICI

----~=~====-~··~~~~~~~--.

SWISHER LOHSE
Pharmacy
•

Kc nne lh McCullough , R. Ph .
Charles Riffle . A. Ph .
Ronald Hanning , R. Pt1

Mon thru Sat. I :00 a .m . to 9 p.m .
Su nday 10; lO lo I':I : lO and 5to 9 p .m .
1
PR: E SCRI PTIONS
PH , 9''l ·29iSI
Friendly S€:rvi c t
Pomeroy C
E . Mam

�I

•

6-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Aug. 23, 1979

7-'f!ae Deily Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pcmeroy, 0., Thuraday, Aug . 23, 1979

Modern Woodsmen hold picnic, program

-21st

~eaver family

. The 21st Weaver family reuilion
wu beld Aug. 5 at the Rock Springs
taJJ'111'0W)Cls.
·
Offlcen for the lm-«1 reunion will
be Lawrence Weaver, · president;
Man:ull Weaver, vice president; and

~-- ~

MuineRolle,secretary-Veaaurer,
Recognized were Quia Merrill, son
of John and Shirley Merrill, the

youngest attending; George Weaver,

~

J

~

the aldellt; and Mr. and Mrs. Owen
Weaver of Nubvllle, Tenn. the ones
traveling the farthest. The 1980 reu-

J
.'
.. '-·.
'f!i'

'_

.

?

.,

i

vJt'~

...

•

*

I

• MODERN WOODEMEN, Camp 10900, Happy Time String Band:
Violet and Garrett Christy, Grove City; Edgar . "Duke" Pullins,
Reedsville; Robert White, Alfred, and Molly Henderson, Coolville. • 1

· ·&gt;_ • . ,.•

ROUTE
CARRIERS
EARN MONeY I
and in these days you need those
extra dollar,s for fun and school.
You"// enjoy doing this important job
with girls and boys your age. Have
fun and'get paid tool

WIN PRIZES TOO!

CARRIER NEEDED IN SYRACUSE
CALL 992-2156

Homecoming planned

The Daily Sentinel

Weekend At Meigs Inn
FRIDAY NIGHT SPECIAL 5 TIL 10 •

MENU

The Labor Day celebration to take
place in Racine was discussed at the
recent meeting of the Racine
Firemen 's Auxilisry held at the fire
station.
Plans were made for the barbecue
dinner and for making 50 gallons of
ice creamfor the celebration which
will take place on Sunday, Sept. 2.
Chris Shain presided at the meeting
with Agnes Boggess leading in the
pledge, and Mae Cleland, the Lord 's
prayer.
A committee was appointed to get
new cabinets for the kitchen. Mrs.
Cleland won the door prize.
Refreshments were served by Ms.
Shain who celebrated her birthday.

Salad Bar

6 Oz. Prime Rih
Baked Potato
Roll
Tea, ·
Coffee or Milk

ENTERTAINMENT
FRIDAY &amp; SAnJRDAY
NIGHT

\\\ ~,, t
ALL LEGAL
BEVERAGES SOLD

Homecoming will be observed Sunday at the Chester Church of God with
the Rev. Walter Thomas as guest
speaker during the morning worshi]l'
service.
There will be a basket dinner at
noon with an afternoon service to
begin at I :30 p.m. with the Rev. Victor Holland, Franklin, as speaker and
special singing by the Soul Seekers
and others.
There will be an evening service at
5:30 p.m. with the Rev . Perry Thomas
speaking. The pastor, Rev. Richard
Robinson, extends an invitation to the
public. ·

Celebration discussed

Shrimp Cocktail,

DOC CAVINESS
BANO')wy_
4 PC.

FORMER STUDENTS of Carr School, Alfred: Row 1: Waid Swartz,
Athens; Garner Griffm, Alfred; Ralph Henderson, Coolville; Charles
Woode and Hobart SlVIIItz, Alfred. Row II: Garret Christy, Grove City;
Leola Swartz, Shade; Nina Robinson, Clara Follrod, Osie Henderson,
Peat'! Randolph, Grace Swartz, Alfred ..

A fanilly appreciation picnic and
community service recogl)ition program of Modern Woodmen of
America, Camp 10900, were held
recently at Woode's Grove, Alfred.
Receivlng recognitioo of coli8Cientious and dedicated community service were Charles and Helen Woode,
Alfred. The Woode's have maintained
a beautiful grove and picnic pavillion
for the community to enjoy for many
years. They were praised for their
faithfulness to home, church, school
and Alfred community. Mrs. Woode is
a former Orange Township teacher,
while Mr. Woode operated the famlly
farm.
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Burke,
Pomeroy, were presented a Modern
Woodmen Certificate for 100% famlly
participation, and largest family pre1
sent.
.
Mrs. Lee (Osie) Henderson related
her memories of the first Modern
Woodmen of America picnic at Woode
Grove in 1907. In that year, there were
log rolling and log splitting contests
for entertainment.
A tribute was paid to the camp ·~ 50
year members: Conrad Rex Bentz,
Arden Depoy, Donald Robinson, Arthur Shanks, Esmond Brandeberry,
Harold Boggess, Lee Hendel'!lon,
Hobart Swartz, Garner Griffin, and
Charles Woode. These fonn the HaHCentury Club.
·
Special guests were former
students of Carr School, a one-room
structure which stands on land adjacent to Woode Grove. A program of
recitations, poems, songs, and a

.
Tenn.; Mrs. Howard Brown, Mrs.
Carroll eox; Mrs. Barry Cox and
Kimberly, Point Pleasant.
Mr. and Mrs. Franklin R. Brown
and Clay, Costa Rica; Mr. Lee,
Hendel'!IOil, W. Va.; Sandy Brown,
Rutland; Mr. and Mrs. Hobart
Weaver, Hillard ; Mr. and Mrs. Lee
Weaver and Keith; Mrs. Daisy
,Weaver, 1bomu Weaver, Suzie WoU,
and Mr. and Mrs. Buster Weaver,
New Haven, W. Va.

nion wu~et for Aug. 3 at Krodel Park
in Point Plaant.
A~ were Lawrence Weaver,
Mr. and Mrs: Charles Hontz and Christian faith, the Bible, the ERA,
Mrs.Kochdefineduaertiveandag·
Keith, George Weaver , Frank and conflict were the topics pwenti,d gressi~e. and talked about the difby Mrs. ~tty Koch, program lea~r ferencea between the words. The
at the recent meeting of the United reuons wby a penon should decide to
Methodist Women of the Forest Run lAke a lint step in 11.18ertlveness were
read by Mary Kay Roush, Hilda
Cbutch.
Yeauger, and Kathleen Scott. Rellective behavior waa esplained by Ann
Wataon, Mary Neaae, Evelyn Hollon
and Mae Holter.
The program .eoncluded with a
dlacuaslon on the conructs · of the
home, COliii11Wiity and church.
Mn. Mary N - opened the
· An auctioo with proceeds to go to
the Order of Eastern Star home meeting with devotions IJI!ing a
maintenance fwld wu planned for for reading from the Upper RoClOl, and
the next meeting when Puneroy "At Day's End." Mrs. Edith Slason
Olapter 1111, o. E. s., met recenUy at read "Country People Serve", and
Mrs. Yeauger an article on the Amish
the Pcmeroy Masonic Temple.
Ann Hemsley and 1bomu Edwards churduervlce.
An invitation was read to a retreat
presided at the meeting during which
time it waa reported that get-well at the Nelaonville Onlrch. Forty-five
cards had been aeni' to Mrs. June ahutln visits were reported.
(
Eichinger and Mrs. Marcia Hobslet- Watennelon was served following the
ter. A report wu given on the meeting.
chapter's ~ci~tion in the Community Club Awards program. A
memorial aervlce wu held for Marie
• OJ.ster, a put matron who would
.J
have received her 50 year pin in
Cathy Laudermi/t
November.
n. birthday d Cathy Laudermilt Invitations were read from Olive
wu oelebraled recently with a party. Chapler for its grand inlpectlon, and
A doll cake
from Wuhlngton County C.plen for
,
• ice cream, potato chips, their friends night observance at
nunts, candy. and koolald were aerv- Marietta 011 Sept. ~
ed. ,....,..._
Pro tern offteen for the meeting
A - -... were Dorothy . and TClOl were Mrs. Mabel Moore, con- .
Roullh, gnndparenil, RllollcS. and
Patricia Roush, Rhoda and Mi.tt ductreu; hmela Vaughan;
Stewart, Sharon, Dorothy, Riciy and u80da~ conductresl; Ells Smith:
Jimmy ·•~.. r Stacey Stone Vincent chaplain , Ruby Vaughan, organist,
and Bru. _ .. Laudennllt,
and 1 Edna Triplett, aentinel.
Johnie Powell, Shane and Lori lnglea,
Clarence. Roooella, Michelle. Allllon.
Kelly and au;, Lee; Mindy and Cori
Seymore, Errln, Davia, Derick

Auction planned
by &amp;tern Star

'

&amp;.vue

RECIPIENTS OF THE MODERN Woodmen Community Service
Award were Helen and Charles Woode, Alfred.
history of Carr School was presented Clark, Akron.
by them. A back-tiHichool tablet and Cheer gifts and picnic platea were
pencil were presented to Garret and deUvered to shut-ins following the
Violet Ouisty, John Van Meter, Nina meeting.

r-~~;-~~~~~

WHY

Robinson, Grace Swartz, Leola
Swartz, Pearl Randolph, Osie
Hendenon, Clara Follrod, Waid
Swartz, Garner Griffin, Ralph
Henderson, Hobart Swartz, and
Charleswoode.
Groilp singing and entertainment
by the "10900" MWA Happy Times
String Band was enjoyed by all . The
Woodmen 's Pledge Service was led
by Garner GriHin, Hobart Swartz,

P'AY

lORE · ·
fOR ·.

CARPn

CLEANING l

~~~r:~~~phHendeson.

John Coeri, Chief, Coolville
Volunteer Fire Department, thanked .
Get professional
Camp 10900 members for their
results at a
$1,525.00 contribution toward the
fraction of the cost.
"Jaws of Life" equipment which is
now in service in the area. The camp
raised this amount through a community benefit dinner provided by
Modern Woodmen of America In•
Americs'5
No ..1
surance Co., Rock Island, Ill., and a
'Home Ca rpet
fund raising drive in January. Mr.
CJeaning
Coen annoWJced that only $1,400 res... r.m
mains to be paid on the $5,MIO.OO
equipment.
•
Conteat and drawing awards were: ·---------- ..: ---~
SJOO
I
Don Dunfee, Little Hocking ; Joo I RENT
I
FOR
PER HOUR I
Burke, Cambridge; Mark Rockhold, I ONLY
C4·HourMinlmumJ I
Belpre; Kay McPherson, Coolville; 'Jason Pullins and ]';ina Robinson,
Alfred; Waid Swartz, Shade ; Diana
Pullins, Reedsville; Richard Y06l,
...:.,__,
Guysville ; and Charles Bernard .__

lent

---.----------J

_____

.STAR SUPPLY CO.

Dar~.
Whillatch.
Rldl and
Gerri
Darlene
Rought.
Hawley,
Bnnda.
and
Jeannie Roush.

Bati'CUS

ti~unt'on

Course offered
An Ohio University course, ''Social
Psycholoey ", Psy. 336; for 5 credit
houn will be offered Fall Quarter,
1979 at O.via Hall, Holzer School of
Nursing, Gallipolia provided there Ia
lllffldent enrollment. The c1ua will
be held on 1'18da)'!l beginning Sept.
llat 8 p.Iil. Tu!Uon for the courae will
be $145. Dr. Svenn Undllkold, author
of a tenbook IDIOcial peycholoey and
Profesaor of Psychology at Ohio
University will be the instructor. D.
Undllkold will bring to the ciallrocm
a IIII'Vt!Y ol CWTellt theory and
reaeardt conc:ei1lln8 til" devel~
of a pen1011's beliefs, values, and at·
titudes ; the proces uaed in forming
impl'esslons of self and others; interpe[80118) llldng and dWildng; and
the interaction of peraons including
belplng and hurting, conflict, in·
fluence and power, and group
&lt;tynamica.
. A repreaentaUve from the office of

=~t :·=~~

=

Participatioo in the highway safety . ment to safety education. -!t calls for
car pooling, 55 mile per hour driving,
and the silt: month period without a
stonlt Oubs, wu plaMed during a speeding vtcilation. At the conciWiion
meeting of the Middleport BPW Club of the project period, the club will
quaUfy for an award If Its recorda
Monday evening.
n. meeting followed a family pic· show fulfillment of the commibnents. ·
Mrs. Jean Will was accepted into
nic at the Racine Locks and Dam. The
apecia1 project entails a conunlbnent membership and Mra. Frances
to fuel conaervaUon and a commit- Louise Davia read a report from Mrs.
Janet Korn on the Lltue Miss and Mr.
and the pretty baby contest held at
the Mejgs County Fair. A report on
program, a project of the Ohio
Federation of Business and Profes-

Baptismal held'

lclabo Falla, ldabo, wu bapUzed on
. Swlday, July 1~ at Trinity Church,
Pomeroy.
Ritea Wel'e performed by the Rev.
W. H. Perrin. Others attending were
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth McLaughlin,
Mr. and Mn. Fred Wllllamson,
ilf811dparenl8; Mr. and Mrs. Bob
~ and Jamie, Rick William·
100, Kevin McLaughlin, Camp J.e·
Juene, N. C.; and Alan McLaughlin,
Foetoria.

·

By
ALL AMERICAN
Meets
• Ohio Building Codes
.AFHA&amp;VA
·see our lot model today .

ATTEND SEMINAR
Ethel Lo~er:r. Middleport ; Jean

KINGSBURY
HOME SALES

Wood and Linda Morris, Pomeroy,
and Don Barnett, LangBvllle, Ohio
Association of Public School
Employees, Chapter 17 of Melp
Local, attended a two day OAPSE
leadership-bargaining seminar at the
Sheraton Inn North, Columbus,
recenUy.

1100 E. Main
Pomeroy, Ohio
992·7034

America's Largest Antenna Manufacturer

I

.

.

The family of the late Stanley and
lAura Barcul met at Reid Park at

as
seen on
national

TV

CHARGE IT (MOST STORES)

~
~:una:rt.~.~ :!:
Larry Phlllipe, daughten, Rebecca

and Tonia, of Galllpolis, Mr. and Mrs.
BtU BarCill and Mr. and Mrs. Richard

COMPARES TO
ANTENNAS
COSTING 50%
MORE!

Barcus and daughter; Laura Beth.

SUPERCOLOR
SPECIAL

NOW 21

88

SEE all the excitement you 've been missing! Your
TV will come alive with sharp color or crisp blackand-white. so• wide-swept elements capture all
available signals on every channel and pull in
stronger FM radio signals. too. Factory preassembled-just snap open the elements. Gold Alodized®
finish lights rust and corrosion. Made by Radio
Shack in our own USA factories. 1s-11ot

for Guys and Gals

PARK RESERVED
SATURDAY-AUGUST 25th

ON DEAN'S LIST

Seven area residents were named
to the Dean 's LiBt for the Summer
Sessioo I, 19'19, at Hocking Technical
College in Nelsonville,
Earning a 4.00 average were Karla
Ebenhack, Albany, and Steve G. Barber, Rliedsville. Earning a 3.00
average or above were Pamela A.
Dille, Albany ; Kevln W. Yotmg,
Albany ; Nancy Woodward, Coolville ;
Tammie Debon!, Pomeroy, and
Rebecca E. Tyree, Pomeroy.

FACTORY· DIRECT SPECIAL
he·ld TV ANTENNA PURCHASE!

.

•

MODULAR
HOMES

of Mr. and Mrs. Duane Mclaughlin,

Armadillos
are
.

'
DUES
PAYABLE NOW
Dues for the American Legion Aux·
ilisry, Feeney-Bennett Post 128, are
payable now and may be sent to Mrs.
Becky Tyree, Route 4, Pomeroy,
Ohio. The dues are $5.

-

' j_.; Lee McLiiighnn, year old son

Sprlncfle!dforafamilydinner.
.....__ ,.._.t ·
Mr and Mrs
'"'""" ,.. - · were
.
.
Lloyd Barcu1 of VIckery, 011., Mr.
and Mrs. Eugene Barcua and
daughten, Karen and Sara Ruth of
O""~- La ura Schultz and son,
,_, ......
&lt;met, and daughter, Amy, of
Vickery, Mrs. Jeuie Smith, Mrfl.
. Myrtle lA~ of Etna, Oh., Mr. and
Mrs. Bert Baily, 10118, • Brian and
JuaUn, Rex Layne of Etna, Mr. and
Mrs. Richard Howard, sona; Rickey
and Scott, Mr. and Mrs. Ed McGuire
and daughters, Angela and Nicole and
Jerry D., Mr. and Mrs. Don Barcus,
son • Tim and daughter• Tereaa • TCliJl
Halclennan and 1011, Nick.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Barcus, Mr.
and Mrs. Jan . J · liiBrd and 1011,
Jeff, Mr. and Mrs. James Leonard,
Jr., son, Joey, Mrs. Peggy Hanks of
Springfield.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Stroth, sona
Jeremiah and C.d, Mrs. Jean Hen-

clua night.
U anyone desires further informa·
Uon, call the Continuing Education
Office at Ohio Unlvenity, ~ or
toll free 1-«10-282-44011.

the CCA program waa given by Mrs.
Alwilda Werner.
Donna Davidson had arace
preceding the meeting. The traveling
prize provided by Mrs. ~ Reynolds
wu won by Mrs. Werner. Othen attending were Mrs. Mary Kunzelman,
Mrs. Eva Robson, and Mrs. ~
Roush, membel'!l, and guests, Mrs.
Dorothy Sayre_, Mrs. Kathryn
Werner, Harold Henrichsen, and John
Werner.

They're here l Those
rugged ly handso,..e little
ciitters guaranteed to
be the best fr iends
your fee l ever
had. How do
you tell Boy
Armadi llos

399

Signal Splitter Included with ·
Super Color Special

from Girl

Separates UHF/V HF/
FM signals at the set

Armadillos?

Stop in.
and see'

Only one downlead

required.

Value

UNTIL 5 P.M.

FOR

"ANNUAL OUTING"

You must be 21 or accompanied by parents or legal guardian.

OF

THE MEIGS INN
Phone 992-3629

Weaver, Mrs. Shirley Merrill .and
Ouia, Colwnbua; Mr. am Mrs.
Chester R01e, Jeff and Brent,
Racine ; Mr . . and Mrs. Her~rt
Weaver, Sidney; Mr. and Mrs. M&amp;rCU8 Weaver, Mr. and Mrs . .Alton
Roush ' Mr. and Mrs. George Hoff. man, Benny, Jane, Jennifer and Joe,
Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Weaver, Btandon
and JWian, Letart, W. Va .; Mr. and
Mrs. Bernard Ledlie, Langsville; Mr.
and Mrs. -owen Weaver, Nashville,

UA:fW hears program recently

- ,..-

•('

B&amp;PW meets Monday.evening

reunion held

Pomeroy, 0.

INlERNATIONAL BROTHERHOOD OF
ELECTRICAL WORKERS-LOCAL NO. 317

CAMDEN PARK

. US_60 WEST HUNTINGTON

~orRan

Quirut

RADIO SHACK HAS OVER 7000 STORES AND DEALERS IN THE USA AND CANADA!

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

MARGUERITE'S SHOES
102 E. MAIN

POMEROY, OHIO

..

a

A otvlsloN oF TANOY co•PoRATI?".

Mosl 11ems
also illllill ll able at

Aed1o Sheck
Oeal ers
lOOk fOf I hi$

s1gn tn vour

ne1 ghlx uhood

o•AL•A

. ._ _ _ _

_.II

PRICES MAY VARY AT INDIVIDUAL STORES

�I
9-The DailySentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday,Aug. 23, 1979

8-The Daily Senrmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Aug. 23, 1979

Teaford reunion held

Mrs. Georgia Riggs

Georgia Riggs honored
by birthday party
A party was held at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Roger E. Hutchinson,
Hilliard, recently to honor the 90th
birthday of Mrs. Georgia Riggs,
former Meigs resident.
Mrs. Hutchinson is the former Rita
Kay Caldwell and is the daughter of
Mrs. Ada Gilmore of West Jefferson
and Mrs. Gilmore is a daughter of
Mrs. Riggs. Mrs. Riggs has made her
home with Mrs. Gilmore for the past
eight years. Mrs. Riggs is also the
mother of Ray Riggs of near Chester ;
Lois Riggs Leonard of new Tuppers
Plains; Mrs. Lewis Hughes and Mrs.
Estell Mink of Gallipolis, and Mrs.
Earl Shields of Upper Sandusky. Mrs.
Riggs also had two other sons, James

~ ---S~ci;lca~~~--

I

THURSDAY (Tonight)
SPECIAL meeting, Eastern Local
Board of Education , 7:31l this evening
at high school.
SPECIAL meeting, Shade River
Masonic Lodge 453, 7:31lp.m. Thrusay
with work in Master Masons degree.
TWIN CITY Shrinettes, 7:31l p.m.
Thursday at home of Clara Adams,
Racine, with Bargara Dugan
assisting hostess.
COLUMBIA TOWNSlllP Board of
Trustees, 7 p.m. Thursday for special
meeting at township building.
WILUNG WORKERS class of the
Enterprise United Methodist Church
will meet at 7:30p.m. Thursday at the
home of Kay Logan.
FRIDAY
ROUND AND SQUARE DANCE at
the Senior Citizens Center, Pomeroy,
on Friday, from 8:30 to II:Jil p.m. The
dance is open to the public with admission Sl for adults, and children under 12 admitted free with their parents. Music by the Stringdusters .
SUNDAY'
FEENEY BENNETT POST No. 128
American Legion first annual girls'
softball banquet Sunday at 3 p.m. at
post home.
HAZEL CMMUN!TY CHURCH,
between Long Bottom and Portland
off Route 124, will hold its annual
homecoming Sunday, with an afternoon service beginning at I :Jil. The
service will feature Dan Hayman and

The lOth annual Teaford reunion guidance of Dick Wlllll&amp;ey and . win·
was held Sunday, Aug. 5, at the ners were Richie Wamsley, Forrest
Racine Locks and Dam site. A Teaford, Jr., Brandy Wheat, B. W.
delicious basket lunch was served at Ke2ms Teresa Wines, Monica Hjll,
noon preceded by table grace by Leo Kevin Teaford, Melinda Hill, Dale
Teaford Steven Teaford, Sharon
HDI.
During the afternoon pictures were Keams.' Wanda Teaford, Bob Miller
taken by Mr. Hill followed by a and Brian Keams.
Those attending this year's reunion
business meeting conducted by the
president, Carroll Teaford. Janice were : Raymond, Margarete, Suzanne
Lawson gave the secretary's report and Cloist Teaford, Minersville; Bob,
and Jane Teaford the treasurer's Carol, Brett and Teresa Wines, Connie and Mista Wilt, Columbus; Ray
report.
Two births and four deaths were and Roberta Smith and daughter,
Carroll and Eva Teaford, Henry,
recorded during the year.
It was decided to have the 1980 Kay, Melinda and Monica Hill, Dick,
reunion the first Sunday in August at Charlotte and Ritchie Wamsley, Fritz
Teaford , Thelma Walton, Bert
the same site.
Morris Teaford was elected vice- Teaford, Bob Smith, Racine; Brian,
president and retained for the coming Sharon, B. W., and Sonia Keams,
year were Carroll Teaford, president; Mason, .W. Va.; George, Hildred and
Janice Lawson, secretary; Jane Traci Grafton, Robert, Tanuny and
Teaford, treasurer. Committees ap- Jamie Rae Miller, Jack and Jackie
pointed were registration, Raymond Gullltto, Cindy, Candy, Brandy and
Teaford; games, Morris and Mattie Troy Wheat, Ravenna, 0 .; Forrest,
Launa, Forrest, Jr. 1\Pd Daniel
Teaford, and gifts, Jean Hall.
Short talks on the genealogy of the Teaford, Leah Greer, Morris, Mattie,
Teafords were given by James Kevin and Steven Teaford, Torruny
Teaford, Norma Brock and Connie Greathouse, Portland; James and
Jane Teaford, Sampson and Jean
Wilt.
Gifts were given to the oldest, Hall, Janice and David La~, Dale,
Geroge D. Teaford, Engish, Indiana; Wanda, Dale, Jr. and Demus Teaford,
youngest , Jamie Rae Miller, Danny and Carla Morris, Syracuse;
daughter of Bob and Tammy Miller, Allah Teaford and Tammy Snider,
Ravenna, 0 .; traveling farthest , Nor- Hebron, 0 .; Grace Gofourth, Millton,
ma Brock, Bectford, Ind. , and the Ind.; George D. Teaford, English,
largest family present, Carroll Ind.; Norma Brock, Bedford, Ind.;
Teaford. Door prizes were won by Gale and Madonna Teaford,
Raymond Teaford, George D. Palestine, 0. ; Nancy and Carla
Teaford, Brett Wines, Fritz Teaford, Aeiker, Henry and Dorothy Bentz,
Tim Bentz, Racine ; Cecil, Kathy and
Cecil See and Forrest Teaford, Jr.
Games were played IJ!lder the Darlene See, Pomeroy.

and Charles Riggs, both deceased.
Mrs. Riggs, the honored guest, was
the wife of the late Rev. W. K. Riggs
and before the death of Rev. Riggs,
the wuple made their swnmer home
on the farm of their son, Ray, at Long
Bottom for several years.
AT the party, entertainment was
provided by Herb and Barb Blanton
and the Young Gospel of Columbus;
Ada Renee Hutchinson, Hilliard;
Kyle Neds , Mar.ysville , Danny
Rainey, Charleston, W. Va., and
Rebec~a Walisa of Grove City, granddaughter of the late Charels K. Riggs.
There were 92 guests present for the
party. Mrs. Riggs enjoys gOOC/ health
and remains active.
·
the Hymn timers, a~d will have . a
special speaker, Dodie Bogard. A dinner will be held at the grounds also.
MARILYN TURNER, opera singer ·
and classical music teacher in Italy,
will present a public concert at 3 p.m .
Monday " at the Meigs Juruor . H1~h
School in Middleport. AdmissiOn ·1s
free to the concert, which will feature
Marilyn singing some light music and
several familiar tunes.
MONDAY
BETHEL 62, International Order.of
Job's Daughters, 7:30 Monday, Middleport Masonic Temple.
TUESDAY
AMERICAN LEGION AUXILIARY Racine Post 602, 6:30 Tuesday diru{er at the Meigs IM. Dues are
payable now and may be sent to Mrs.
Julia Norris, Route 2, Racine.

RETURN HOME
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Wood and
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Brickles and Jeffery, Gaithersburg, Md., have just
returned from a two week visit with
Mr.' and Mrs. Kenneth Wood, Carrie
and Cathy, Grand Forks, North
Dakota. While there they visited the
Pioneer Daughters Museum , a part of
historic Calvary Square, Ft. Litten,
N. D.; Jamestown, a frontier town
with the world's largest buffalo, and
drove around Devil's Lake. They also
took a short trip into Canada.

HOMECOMING
The Hazel Community Church,
located '&gt;etween Long Bottom and
Portland off Route 124, will be having
its annual homecoming this Sunday,
Aug . 26. A service, fe!lturlng Dan
Hayman and the Hymntirners, and
with special speaker Dodie Bogard,
will begiil at 1::!{I p.m. The service
will be held in conjunction with dinner
on the grounds, and everyone IS
welcome to attend.

TO MEET THURSDAY
The Meigs County Democrat Central Committee will meet at 7:30p.m.
Thursday evening at the Carpenters'
Hall in Pomeroy.

w.

a trip lllto die m01111ta1111. They
visited Blackwater Falll, Cavan
Valley, Seueea Rodla aud Caveflll,
8lld Cui Seealc RallnJad. A cookie
m0111ter cake 8lld Ice cream were
served to Eddie, Coleen, IUld MeU.Illi
Wbaley, aDd BW's parents, Jo Allll
aDd Leoaanl Scarbrough.

Oil

MEET11JURSDAY
Members ot the Rock Springs
Grange will meet Thursday evening
td move back into the hall which had
been vacated for uae durmg the Meigs
County Fair.

REVIVAL SET
A revival will be held at the House
of Prayer and Praise, Liberty Ave.,
Pomeroy, from l't\OlldaY through Sunday, Sept. 2, with services at 7:30
each evening. Evangelist will be Bob
Schrecengost, 16-year-old evangelist
of Cleveland. me public is invited.

TO SPEAK SUNDAY
Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Ruth, missionaries to Korea, will be speaking at
the Mt. Union Baptist Olurch at 7:30
p.m. Sunday. The public is invited.

NEW CARS, TRUCI&lt;S, VANS,
USED CARS, TRUCKS.

1979 QtEVY BLAZER 4 WH. DRIVE
Col.;.. while lop

a.

blue bodY , 350 V ·$.

speed trans .• power s1eering

""'·&lt;10

'7793

NEW CHEVY G-20 VAN

Window Van conversion. uses reg. gas, 350 eng ., P .s..
P .B .• AM -FM stereo, tape , 4 speakers; air cond .• au~ .
battery, 12 volt · electric ~efrigerator: 4 c a~tam
chairs, sink, bed &amp; dinette , loaded w1th opt1ons .
Brown &amp; beige color.
List $11,918.00 SPECIAL PRICE

MANY MORE
NEW Sport Vans, Reg. Vans, Blazer,

We follow doctor ' s orders . .. to
t he letter . . . to see that your
p re scri ption is accurate , . . safe!
W e 're concern ed with your good
health . Get to know us better!

Village Pharmacy
271 N. 2nd Ave.

Yard Sale

Reg. &amp; 4 wh. drive pickups, Luv Trucks.

YARD SALE at James Swain' •

on CR 28 above Ea11Mn High
School. July 13 ond 1• from '
to? Everything lmoglnoble.

New Impala, Caprice, Monte Carlo
Discounted to Save You Money.

TO tchool yord oole.
2nd , Middleport.
A.vvu•t. 1. 2. 3.
TEN FAMILY Yo&lt;!l Sole.
lAC~

104 Yt S.

the

Other Scarce Model To Choose From

program "Water Without Walking"
with ~- Kloes, Mrs. Alwilda
Werner, Mrs. Mary Hughes, and Mrs.
Lillie Hubbard taking part. ·
Mrs. Werner will have the program
at the Sanborn meeting. Mrs. Roma
Hawkins will be hostess for the Circle
meeting in September. Ice cream,
cake and coffee were served by Mrs.
Anthony to those named and Mrs.
Mary Brewer, Mrs. Goldie Roush,
Mrs. Sarah Fowler, and Michl King, a
guest.

M l,.rsvllle Hi ll. Follow tlgns.

Corvett-., Z28 Camaros, 4 speed,
4 cyl., Monm Coupe

SELECTED USED BUYS

..

~-- · ...._..,.:,.

Everylhlng from. baby's to
odul(t. AnUqun. furniture.
Augutt8, 9, 10.

FOUR FAMILY . Fri .. Aug. 2• . '
am . 1635 Li ncoln Htt .,
Pom.roy . lot&amp; of furniture,
odult ond children·1 clothes,
crib, dithM , Croftsmon .ctger,
misc. Ra in dote, Sat.
THREE FAMILY Yard Sole.
lwgutt 23 ond 2&lt;4 . Hutchlton
Sub-Oi'litlon. Rutland. Nlclnikv reslcHnce. Winter and
tummer' clothing. Two ttudded snow tires and misc .
YARO SALE . Wod. 22. Thuro .
23, Fri. 2•. lots of cl'lildren's
clothes. Time from 9-6. Carner
of College and locu1t .
Rutland.
YARD SALE. Solurdoy, Augutt
2~ . 9-3. Rain Cancels. Clotl'ling,
toyt , boot and troller ,
nO&lt;Itehold lleml, Scollyt, 870
Ath, Mlddleporl.
YARD SALE . Soturdoy. Aug .
25 . 9-A. l . . Circle. Ru1t1c Hilll,
Syracuse .
Clothe•
and
houtehold ltemt . Some baby

....

Past Presidents Club meets
Members of the Past Presidents
Club ·of the American Legion Auxiliary, Drew Webster Post 39, met at
the Riverboat Room of the Athens
County Saving and Loan Co. recently
for a potluck dinner.
The Lord's Prayer in unison opened
the meeting. Mrs. Pearl Knapp
presided with Mrs. Harry Davis giving devotions. She read several
poems including "Reflections" from
the August issue of Garden Path.
There was a silent tribute to deceased
members and the plege to the flag.

Round-robin cards- were signed for
Joan Harris of Athens. Mrs. Gerald
Wildermuth, Mrs. Knapp and Miss
Erma Smith were appointed to the
nominating committee.
The Sept. !9meeting will be a picnic
at the home of Mrs. Kaapp with Mrs.
Mary Martin and Mrs. Genevieve
Meinhart to be co-hostesses_ The Oct.
17 meeting will be at the home of Mrs.
Harry Davis with Mrs. Ellen Couch,
co-hostess, and the Christmas party
will be heldatCrows on Dec. 20.

Live Entertainment!!!

In Touch With
Your Doctor!

~

a. brakes,

fOlding R. """'' m irrors, L78~1Son &amp; otf
tires . AM r ad io, H. D. battery .
Slicker Price
Our Special

1976 CHEVY
~

-20' TEC lARK MINI HOME

LesS than 25,000 miles, air , on chi!ssis &amp; body . A clean un it that is
sharp with full equipment.

1978 PONTIAC CATALINA

STEVE SCHMUCKER,- HOME
ON LEAVE FROM THE SERVICE,
WILL JOIN
DON SEDWICK

'2495

~door, 75,000 mites. Commercial car, 350 V·8, automatic, p.s., p.b., p.
.

1976 CHEVELLE MALIBU CLASSIC

GIANT YARO SALE. Moving
. out of ttate , everytl'llng mutt
go. Gunt' garden tool1 . tome
hand tools , knife coll.ctlon .
dlsl'l... tome O.pre11ion.
~ouches, lots of baby 1tem1.
playpen. 2 tlrollort, high
choir. and lato of clothet for
baby. color TV ond 2 block and
White TV 1, motorcycle . golf
clubs, complete drafting kit ,
table sow and many more
items . Watch for signa. Turn
(lgl'lt on CR 339 above little
Hocking .

s2295

4 door, 76,950 miles, V·8 engine, automatic, P.S., P.B,.. fa ctory air, ti nt .

glass, am·fm_!It reo rad io, clean Interior. dark blue f•nlsh .

11

1975 CHEVY G-10 VAN

'2499

6 cyl., std. trans .. radio, speakers. partial conversion with carpeted in ·
terlor, bed, air vent &amp; skyroot .

'4995

1976 CHEVY~
m

Cab chassis,
engine, 2 speed rear axle. 825x20 tires. solid
goocl mechanically . 102" to axle.

cab

&amp;

DISCOUNT PRICES
WEWA

'

YOUR L'IUSINESS

8:30 P.M; TIL 1 A.M• .
· "Your Chevy Dealer"
992-2126

O!'Cn Evenings&amp; P.M.

section about the use of land and "Livestock constitute a storebouse from ruminant animals (such as reserve of grain.
water for livestock and poultry that of food that reduces oUr vulnerability cattle, sheep and goats )."
" Animals not only provide a 50
lllustrates what USDA planner ~ to periods of poor crop production ,"
percent larger reserve than grain, but
cmsider an urgent need fir managing the report cmtinued. "Only 3 percent
For l!llample, the report said, in 1974 they are also available througbout the
resoW"ces more effectively for the of the animal protein consumed by · it was estimated that ''the animals in world," h said. "Grain stocks, on the
future.
·
man comes from fish and the world, not ordinarlly slaughtered other hand, are limited to certain
It also provides a low-key rebuttal aquaculture. Nearly 70 percent of the during the year, cmstituted a 4lklay locations which reduces their
of those critics who over the years animal protein used by man comes reserve food supply" against a V-day vulnerablllty."
have charged that U.S. methods of
WASHINGTON (AP) Egg
food pwuctlon - by relying so rr1 ------------------------,~
!B'Oductloo
totaled
an
estimated
5.12
heavily on livestock such as beef, pork
billion
eggs
last
month,
up
3
percent
and poultry - is wasteful and cruel in
a world where so much hunger exists. '
.
from July of last year, according to
"Livestock and poultry use a wide .
the Agriculture Department. .
range of resources that otherwise
Officials said Wednesday that as of
MAMIE E. BUCHANAN
Columbus, and Richard Friend, Aug. 1 there-.were about 281 million
would contribute little to feeding
Mrs. Mamie E. Buchanan, 77, Pomeroy ; a brother, Jennings B. egg-laying hens on farms, 2 percent
mankind," the report said. "These
Reedsville,
died Wednesday at Hall,
Columbus,
several more than a year ago. They also were
resoW"ces include grBBSlands, plant
Veterans
Memorial
Hospital
following
grandchildren
and
great- working harder .
and animal byproducts, cellulosic
a
brief
Ulness.
greatchUdren
and
several
nieces
and
wastes, crop residues, roots, ' nuts,
" Rate of lay on Aug. 1 averaged 65.4
Mrs.
Buchanan
was
born
at
nephews.
Mr.
Hall
was
a
retired
garbage and wastes from vegetables,
eggs per 100 layers, compared with
Reedsville, a daughtrer of the late riverboat man.
frullll and animals."
64.6a year earlier," the department's
Officiating at Friday's services will Crop Reporting Board said.
Beef cattle and sheep, including David and Sarah Tribbitt Rood . She
those fattened in feedlots, "get by far was a member of the Eden United be the Rev . Floyd Sbook. Friends may
the greatest percentage of their total Arethren Church and had been a call at the funeral home anytime.
WASHINGTON (AP) - Allan
feed from grass and roughage that lifelong resident of M;eigs County.
Grant, president of the American
Surviving are a son, Roy Buchanan,
otherwise would he wasted," It said.
Farm Bureau Federation, says
and ,a daughtrer, Mrs. Nioka .
ALMA H. THOMPSON
President Carter's energy policies are
Zirrunerman, both of Pemeroy; two
Mrs. Alma Hoeflich Thompson, 73, "far more political than practical." sisters, Miss Lucy Rood, Reedsville, Columbus, formerly of Pomeroy, died . Grant's remarks, made available
and Mrs. Martha Buchanan, Wednesday e'vening at the St. Luke here, came in a speech on Wednesday
IN THE COMMON
ORDINANCE
Revised COde.
Hockingport ; a lrother, Ernie Rood, Convalescent Center in Columbus.
PLEAS.COURT,
NO. 1015-79
in Olarlestown, W.Va.
NOW, THEREFORE,
PROBATE DIVISION
Reedsville ; seven grandchildren and
the Villa!!@ ot Pomerov, AN
Mrs.
ThompSon
had
been
confined
"Harassing and threatening oil
MEIGS
COUNTY;
ORDINANCE
TO
five great-grandchildren. · Preceding to the center since April, 1978. On companies, confiscation through
Stole ot Ohio, here~y AMEND SECTIONS 111S·
OHIO
resolves :
01 (a) AND 'SECTION NO.
her in death besides her parenta were March 22, 1978, she was shot In a taxes of oil money badly ·needed for
Sectlol\ 1. That the coun- 1133.01 OF MIDDLEPORT
IN THE MATTER OF THE
cil ot the Village of ZONING . ORDINANCE
SETTLEMENT OF AC- 12 children, tbree brothers and foW"
robbery at the Kenmore Cleaners in exploration and drilling, and
Pomeroy declares that it is
COUNTS
PROBATE sisters.
Columbus where she was employed. compounding regulatory burdens
necessary to levy an In- NO . 171-A
COURT, MEIGS COUNTY,
Funeral serviees will be held at I She had since been blind and through new federal agencies are
OHIO
come tu pursuant to .Sec, a. 11 ordained by lilt coun tion 718.01 of the Ohio ell of the Village of Mid p.m.
Saturday at the Eden Unitect paralyzed.
basically negative actions which add
Accounts and vouchers
Revised COde tor the pur- dlepor1as 1011ows :
of the following named Brethren O.urch with the Rev. Elden
poses of general municipal · sec. 1. That 1115.06 (a) be
She
was
the
daughter
of
the
late
up
to the total energy problem," he
operations, maintenance, amended to read as
fldlcuorles have been filed Blake officiating. Burial will be in the
George and Lena Hoeflich of Pomeroy said.
new equipment, extension follows :
In the PrObate Court, Meigs
and enlar11_ement ot the
A tee 1n accordance w ith
County, Ohio, lor approval church cemetery.
Grant said that a continuing
and was also preceded in death by her
Village .of pomeroy, State me tol 1owlnv schedule of
and settlement : .
Friend may call at the White Funeral husband, Temmy, and three brothers, - emphasis on more government
CASE .NO. 21119 FOUrth
of Ohio, services and amounts, shall accompany
facilit ies; and to provide each appllcatloo for a
Annual Account ot Verlln Heme in Coolville anytime after noon
Roy, Edward and George Hoeflich. involvement in all phases of energy
additional funds for street zon ing_ certificate :
Howery, Trustee of the m Friday. The body will be taken to
Surviving are two nieces Mrs. production and
use "could
repair, Improvement of the BUILDING :
Trust Created · bY Item
water system and to pay In· Single family dwelling
Second of the Last Will and the church one hour prior to. the
Mlllline
Lind
of
Pomeroy
and
Mrs.
foreseeably
lead
to
the
nationalization
debtl!dness due for fire
or accessory
Testoment of Eddie Lou service where It will lie in state.
Betty Hammer, Columbus; two of U.S. energy industries."
equipment services for
bulldlnv
ss.oo Howery, Decssed
said Villa!!@, and that II Is Two·Famllv
CASE NO. 20121 Tenth
nephews, Earl George Hoeflich ,
neceuary tor Council to
dwellings
Annual Account of Frank
5.00
Columbus,
and Bob Hoeflich of
pass 1tn ordinance, at· Al&gt;llrlments
W.
Porter,
Jr.
L....~rustee
yn10.00
CLESSON DENNEY
Each additional
der Item V of me Last Will
!ached hereto and made a
Pomeroy.
Several
great and greatICE CREAM
part hereof, Imposing a 1.1
unit in excess ot
and Testament ot Jane
Clesson (Mike) Denney, 91, Route 1,
percent Ia~ for the year
the three
s.oo . Louise D. Smith, Deceased Ewlngton, died Wednesday at great nieces and nephews also
SOCIAL PLANNED
commencing Janvary 1st,
MaximYm tee
CASE NO. 22582 Final
50.00
The Rutland United Methodist
1910. and al percent tutor commercial or
and Distributive Account ot Veterans
Memorial Hospital. survive.
Funeral services Will be held at 9: 3ll Olurch will have an ice cre8m social
the year commenc i ng
Industrial
Earnest Lee Wetc~ 1 Arrangements are being made at the
25.00
January 1, 1981 , and Expansion of
Executor of lhe estate 0.
a.m. Saturday at the Schoedinger on the chtirch lawn Saturday. Serving
thereafter for an Indefinite
residential U5eS
Fletcher
R.
Welch, Walker FlUleral Heme in Rutland .
5.00
FUneral Heme, Cleveland Ave., where Will begin at 3 p.m. and in addition to
periOd of time of the ear · E~panslon of otner
Deceased
nlngs of persons and cor ·
tllan residential
Cl&amp;.SE NO. 22337 Final
friends
may call from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 the Ice cream, there will be
uses
10.00
and Distributive Account of
poratlons who are reolden ·
OWEN H. HALL
p.m. m Friday. Burial will be in homemade cakes and pies. Proceeds
Is of the Vi llage of
The fee tor the ap·
Donna
Brooks,
Ad ·
mlnlstratrl• of the estate of
Pomeroy. Ohio, and per· Dflcallon for a certificate
Funeral services f1r Owen H. Hall, Union Cemetery, .Columbus.
will go into the church building fund.
Ralph T . Brooks, Dec•ased
sons and corporations who f~se of land, In·
84,
f(l'lller Letart Falls resident who
CASE NO. 22520 Final
are not residents ot the cludlflil cflllau.es In the use
Village of Pomeroy, Ohio, of land shall be ss.oo
and Distributive Account ot died Tuesday lit Mt. Cannel East
Margaret I . Amb«ger
bulareengolled In business
SEC . 11 . That section
In the V illage of Pomeroy, 1133.01 (permitted uses) R·
E~ecutrl• of the Estate 01 Hospital in Columbus, will be held at I
1
Ohio.
Wallace w. Amberger, p.m. Friday at the Ewing Funeral
Section 2: That a copy of
Deceased .
Residential District :
m 1s Resolution and Or ·
Unless exceptions are lbne.
Add :
Muiii · Famlly
dlnance No. 507 be certified Dwellinvs.
filed theretoL sald accounts
He was preceded in death by his
to the Board of E lecllons of
will be for nearinv before
SEC . ill . That an
parents,
Joseph and Della Smith Hall;
Mei gs County, Ohio, In or · emergency e•l•ts and that
sa id Court on the 21st. day
der that said Board may this
of $ef)lember, 1979, at his wife, Fannie; a daughter, Lillian
Ordinance
shall
make the necessary become law on the earl iest
which lime said accounts
errangement' for sub · dale permitted by law.
will be considered and con · Hall; two brothers, Roy and
mlttlnv the queollon of such
llnUI!d trom day to dey un · Lawrence; a sister, Julia Durst; two
Sec . IV. This Ordinance
levy to the electors of the shall take effect and be In
til finally disposed of.
Village of Porn•rov, Ohio, force from and after
Anr person Interested granddaughters, Doona Mae and
The fund drive of the Middleport William Lowe, Mr. and Mrs. Emmett
as required by ~tion August JJ, 1979
may lie written exceptions Jennifer Riffle.
718.01 of the Ohfo Revised
Fire Department for money to pur- Lightfoot, Nan Moore, Mildred
to said accounts or to mat ·
Possed the 13th day of
Surviving are a aon, Herbert Hall,
COde, at the general elec · August 1979
ters pertaining to lhe
chase a new heavy-duty rescue van ill Hawley, Rockford SpW"lock, Mr. and ·
lion to be held lnsald Attest : Gene Grate
execution of the trust, not Columbus ; a
daughter, Mrs.
Village on the 6th . day of
over the halfway mark.
less than five days prior to
Clerk
Mrs. Charles White, Beulah White.
Randolph T. Riffle, Syracuse; two
November 1979.
the date set tor hearlnv.
M. L. Kelly
To date, $11,100 has been contributed
Section 3: That the ballot
Lorena Davia, Clara Gllkey, Mr.
President of Council
stepsons,
Lawrence
Friend,
to be presented to said
RObert E . Buck
to the fund and $11,100 is still needed.
and
Mrs. Richard Russell, Jim Chadvoters shall be In the (81 23, 10, 21c
JUDGE
&amp;me ot the contributors include: well, Grace French, .C. B. Mullen,
following form, to·wll :
'
Common Pleas Court,
PrObate Division ,
Rita Hamm, Amllnda Murray, Edith Carl DavidJon, Nora Nitz, C. W.
AN ORDINANCE OF 1.1 PERCENT INCOME TAX
POMEROY PERSON.\Ul
Meigs countv. Ohio
FOR THE YEAR tHO AND A 1 PER·CENT INCOME
Wood,
Bill Durst, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Smith, Sibley Slack, Bill Marcum,
18l 23. lie
Ronnie Wood, Gaithersburg, Md.
TAX COMMENCING JANUARY 1 IHI, AND
Hawley,
Mrs. Ira Butcher, Mrs. M. C. Minnie Clart, Rev. Dottie Reynolds,
THEREAFTER FOR GENERAL OPERATING EX·
spent the past weekend as the guest of
PENSES
Wilson,
Mrs.
J. W. Waldell, Mr. and Gr!H Thompson, Mildred Beeson, Mr.
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Nonnan
Mrs.
Thomas
Danner, Mr. and Mrs. and Mrs. James Euler, Mrs. Gena
Shall the ordinance No . 507 provldlnv for a 1.1 per ·
Wood.
cent Income Ia• for lhe yeor 1980, and a 1 percent In·
Richard
Chambers,
Mr. and Mrs. Hawkins, Patricia Hindy, Mr. and
RESOLUTION
come , .. commencing January 1, 19111 to be used for
We, Members of me
Roger Luckeydoo, Cail Matheny, Mrs. Harry Surface, Keith Lynch,
general municipal operations, maintenance, , _
KENNETH RUSSELL
Board of Trustees ot lhe
equipment, ••tension and enlargement of the Village
Terry Byerr, Jane Gilkey, Lena Mr. and Mrs. C. P . Williams, Robert
Bond
Retirement
Fund,
do
HOSPITAI.I'ZED
ot Pomeroy, State ot Ohio, Mrvlces and facilities ; and
hereby agree to purchase
McKinley, Bertha CUster, Mr. and
to provide additional funds tor street r epalr, lm·
Kenneth RuiBell, Racine, has been Mrs. Bob Poler, Mrs. W. I. Swett, Hoover, Otmer Grimm, Dorothy
two notes In the amount of
provement of the water system and 1o pay In ·
S2,000.00 each tor the sum
Evans, Allle Hawley, J. J. Cremeans,
returned to O'Bienness H011pltal in
debtedntss due tor fire equipment and services tor the
ot S4,000.00 with Interest at
Mrs. Lillian Zerl!le, Mr. and Mrs. Dorothy Rife, Dorothy CaldweU,
VIllage be passed? &lt;A malorlly vote I• necessary for
Athens
where
he
ill
confined
to
intenthe rate ot 1 percent per an ·
passage)
Harry Chesher, Mrs. Harold Evans, Clyde Wines, Mr. and Mrs. Eddie
num . Inter"! to be l)llid an sive care, room 3!0. Russell under.
nually. The Village Clerk Is
Harry D. Smith, Jolm Stivers, MrS. Crooks, Mr. and Mrs. Rubin Colllns,
For the income ••• levy
'went major surgery on Aug. 8 at the
directed to draw a check on
Edith Jividen, Mr. and Mrs. Milford Mr, and Mrs. James Buchanan, Mr.
the
Bond
Retlrem•nt
Fund
hospital and was returned to his hmne
Agolnst tile tultvy
In the amount ot S4,000.00
Hysell, Mrs. Ann Bailey, Mrs. Clif- and Mrs. Cleo Kerns, Diana Johnson,
on
Aug. 14. He reentered as an
payable
to
lhe
Village
01
Section 4 : This ordinance
'l'be Port of New OrleaM Pomerov In e•chanil@ tor
ford
Rhodea, Clarice Erwin, Evelyn Jeanie Connolly, Cathryn Ervin, Mr.
Is hereby declared to be an is the second largest In the
en~ergency patient oo Aug. 18.
said notes .
Dent, lsabeUe Powell, Mr. and Mrs. and Mrs. Kermeth WU&lt;m, Jane Ann
emergency
measure
necessary .. for the lm· nation, handllnc annual
Roscoe Fife, Mr. and Mrs. Sam Plan· Warner, Phyllis Joachim and Eddie
Clarence Andrews
mediate preservation of cargo totals l!llceeded only
Mayor
ts. Garlen Burtoo, Betty Lowe, Hayes.
tne public peace, health,
ANNUAL P01UJCK 'IVESDAY
and safety and II shall go by New York.
Jane
Walton
Into effect forthwith. The
The Ladles AuDilary of Veteram
Clerk
the
sold
reason tor
South
Africans
Memorial
H08pltal will hold Its anemergency Is that the
\
LOUIS W. Osborne
1/lllage ot pomeroy has In· domesticated the ostrich in
nual
potluck
picnic at the 'borne of
of
Chairman
sufficient tunds to moke
Reva Simms at 6:30p.m. on Tuesday.
Finance Committee
necessary •treet repairs, 1863 for the bird 's
the
water fashionable and profitable
Improving
All members are uked to attend and
Larry Wehrung
system and to pay In· plumes. By 1914, nearly one
ato
take their recipes for a cook book
H.
D.
Brown
debtedness due tor fire
million ostriches strutted
Bettv A. Baronlck
equipment and services.
being
compiled by the group.
about fenced-in fannyards . Ill 23, 30, 21c

Pomeroy

£·~~~------------~u~~~~~~--=-·

I

Area

n·ea. th s

.

Middleport.fire departnlent

drive reaches halfway-point .

$AVE

•
Pas5ed : 8·20·79
Clarence Andrews
Mayor

Attest :
Jane Walton
Clerk of Council

Yow uLevi" Headquarters

(8 1 23. 30, 2tc

The Grand Duchy of Luxembourg hall a population
ot ~.ooo and a total area
of999 square miles.

Fri. Eve. Aug. 24 - 7:00 P.M.
Main St., Rutland, Ohio

1.0.
Auctioneer, Bill Brown

$AVE

NEW YORK CLOTHING HOUSE

H. D.Browh
President of Council

Bring a chair and eniOY· an evening the
auction way . All kinds of new merc.han dlse, furniture, tools of all kinds, some
toys, bike and auto accessories, radios,
carpet, always something different.
Many Items not mentioned.
Not responsible for accidents
Terms of sale, cuh or check with positive

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

AT THE

and suggestions will be sought before
USDA issues a final report oometime
next. year. The law requires another
appraisal to be made in 1985.
In the Initial voluine, about l'k
inches thick, thousands of statistics,
charts, maps and diagrams are used
in the hundr$ of pages of text to
describe from the earliest beginnings
of colonial America how the natioo 's
farmlands ; !~rests and watef areas
have changed from a primeval setting
into a modern envlrorunent of hUge
cities, highways and intensive
agriculture.
This has produced a drain on the
amolUlt of top-quality land f1r crops
and livestock, has resulted in erosion
ot topsoil at alarmingly high rates in
many parts of the country, and has
depleted supplies of suitable water in
many others.
Thus, say USDA l!llperts, unfolding
studies of those resi&gt;urces will be
aimed at designing policies to manage
them better in the future .
The draft report included one

AUCTION

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

FOR THE FINEST IN BLUEGRASS &amp; COUN~RY
MUSIC. (STEVE HAS CUT A RECORD
.
IN NASHVILLE)
FRIDAY, AUGUST 24TH

FIVE POINTS BAR &amp; GRILL

itemS.

brak.es, air, color whit~. blk. vinyl Interior. .
NADA with mileage deduction S40SO.OO. _

Rear Special

C' c

RESOLUTION
PaaHCI : Autust 20th. 1t7t
Resolution No. 4-79
A
RESOLUTION
DECLARING
THE
NECESSITY OF AN IN·
COME TAX IN THE
AMOUNT OF 1.1 PElt·
CENT FOR THE YEAR
COMMENCING JANUAit·
Y I 1HO, AND ENDING
DECEMBER 1!, lHGJ:AND
A I PERCENT IN1.0ME
TAX
COMMENCING
JANUARY 1 1Hl FOR AN
INDEFINITl PERIOD TO
PROVIDE FUNDS FOR
THE PURPOSES OF
GENERAL MUNICIPAL
OPEIIATIOIU,
MAIN·
TENANCE, NEW EQUIP·
MENT.EXTENSION AND
ENLA GEMENTOFTHE
VILLAGE OF POMEROY,
STATE OP' OHIO, SEit·
VICES AND FACILITIES;
AND TO PROVIDE AD·
DITIONAL FUNDS FOR
STREET REPAIR, IM·
PltOVEMENT OF THE
WATER SYSTEM AND TO
PAY INDEaTEDNESS
DUE FOR FIRE EQUIP·
MENT AND SERVICES
FOR THE VILLAGE OF
POMEROYJ.. OHIO, AND
PIIOVIDINu FOR THE
SUaMISSION .OF SAID
QUESTION FOR THE APPROVAL OF THE ELEC·
TORS.
I
WHEREAS.
It
Is
necessary to have a ~~~Y ot
an Income ta• within the
llmltotions provided by
Section 718.01 of the Ohio
ReviHCI . COde to prov ide
funds tor opere lion ex- ,
penses for the Village of
Pomeroyf Ohio, therefore
moklflill' necessary to levy
a ,.. In excess of the
llmltotion provllled by Sect ion 711.01 of the Ohi o

THE PLACE TO DEAL

arrangements, explaining that it is
time to start drying flowers for winter
arrangements. She talked about keeping colors, techniques for drying, and
the materials which are needed.
The traveling prize donated by Mrs.
Lawrence Chapman was won by Mrs.
Orion Nelson. Table arrangeement .
for the picnic was made by Mrs.
Nicholson. Mrs. Robert Holliday,
therapy chainnan, made booklets ot
dried flowers for the Good Luck Club
members. They were presented to the
members by Mrs. G. A. Radekin,
mother of Mrs. Halliday.
A flower show will be held at the
next meeting to be held at the home ot
Mrs. Eugene Atkins and Miss Ruby
Diehi. Mrs. Joe Bolin will be the
judge.
"Autwnn Splendor" will be the
name of the show with the classes to
be "Covered Bridges", "Country
Churches", "Happy Days are Here
Again", "Little Red Schoolhouse"
and "Home Cooking and Mom's Apple Pie." Specimen classes will be
zinnias, marigolds, dahliall, hybrid
tea roses, potted plants, flowering
and foliage, hanging baskets, and
African violets.

Miss Rhoda Hall who also gave

WASHINGTON ( AP) - The
Agriculture Department, ordered by
Cmgres~~ two years ago to maintain a
cootinuing appraisal of the nation's
!IOU and water, hopes to have ready
this fall a !~recast of how much of
these vital resources will be needed
through the year 7Al30.
A !1raft repOrt setting f~rth an
appral8al of soli aild water resoUrces
as they exlllt and reflecting changes
over the decades was release by
USDA Wednesday.
No specific recommendations were
' included in the draft report, the first
of two that will be used to develop
future policy. The procedure was
ouWned by Cmgress in \he Soil and
Water Resources Conservation Act of
1977.
The secmd volume, officiaLs said, is
scheduled to be ready in November. It
will include demands expected to be
made of the natioo 's aoil, water and
rel11ted resources over tbe next half
century.
After November, public comments

CELEBRATf.S Bffi111DAY 801 Scarbrillqh, Cbeater, celebrated
Ilia DiDib blrtbday Friday, Aug. 17,
at Cua,
Va. BW, aloac ,ttl! Ilia
pueuta, aUDI, WIC:le aDd COIIIID, WU

'Care, share 'projects discussed
The "care and share" project of the
Ohio Baptist Women was discussed at
the Tuesday night meeting of the Dorcas Circle, B. H. Sanborn Missionary
Society, Middleport First Baptist
Church, and it was decided that an article will be contributed each month.
Meeting at the home of Mrs. Katie
Anthony, the special was taken. on in
addition to the layette which IS annually prepared and taken to the
women's conference in June. ·
Mrs. June Kloes had the opening
prayer, and devotions were given by

Soil and water appraisal report due soon

IIANQUET SUNDAY
Feeney Bermett Post No. 1211, Middleport, invites all members of the
American Legion to attend the first
annual girls • softball banquet, to be
held Sunday, Aug . 26 at 3 p.m.

Garden Club mq,ets
Members of the Good Luck Garden
Club of the Athens Mental Health
Center were guests for a picnic at the
Forest Acres Park near Rutland
hosted by the Star Garden Club.
The group repeated the Lord's
Prayer before the picnic. At a
meeling of the Good Luck Club, a
flower game was conducted and
poems were read by the members.
They included "Better, Wiser and
Happier", "A Lovely Day" and
"What Is It You Are Planting?"
Mrs. James Nicholson presided at
the Star Club meeting during which
time it was announced that the Shade
Valley Council of Floral JUts will
sponsor a demonstration of tradi •
tiona! and modern Japanese .a rt at
Royal Oak Park, Sept. 8. Mrs. Irene
Jackson, a national aiJ,d state instructor, will be the demonstrator.
The Rutland Garden Club flower
show will be staged Aug. V at the
Rutland United Methodsit Church
with Mrs . Earl Dea n as
demonstrator.
A thank you note was read from
Mrs. Robert Jewell for a layette gift
she received from the club.
Mrs. Norman Will talked on dried

On the farm scene

HAZEL CHURCH

\

LEVI STRAIGHT LEG JEANS
LEVI BOOT CUT JEANS
LEVI PRBNASHEDJEANS
LEVI BELTS
LEVI WAU!TS
_LEVI DRESS SlACKS
LEVI SUITS
LEVI WESTERN SHIRTS

CANNING SUPPLIES

•PRESSURE COOKERS
•COLD PACKERS
•BLANCHERS ·
.eGAS HOT PLATES
ONE TO FOUR BURNERS

eJAR LID LIFTERS
•ROTARY FOOD PRESS
eCOLANDERS

�Television
Viewing

10-The Da ily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Thursday, Aug. 23, 1979

Your ·Best Buys Are Found in the .Sentinel Classifieds
Wanted to Buy

WANT AD
CHARGES
I~ Word.:l-or

Under
Cash
Charge
1.00 .
1.25

\day
2days

1.50
1.80
3.00

3days
6days

1.90
2.25
3.75

Each word over the minimum

IS words is 4 cents per word 'per
day. Ads rnnn i n~ other than ron·
se{'Utive da ys wdl be cha rged at
ttwt 1d11y rate.
In ml'mory, Card of Thanks

and ()tlttuary : 6 C'e nts per word,
$3.00 minimum. cash in advance.

Mobile Home sale.&lt;i and Yard
sa les are accepted only with
cash witJ1 onle r. 25 cent charge
for ads cai'T)i ng Bent Nmnber In
Ca re of The- Sentinel .
The Publisher reserves the
right to edit or reject any ad!:!

dee med

objecti ona l.

The

Publisher "'i ll nol be responsible

WANT-AD
IAPVERTISING
DEADLINES

OLD FURNITURE , Ice boxes .
brass beds, iron beds, desks.
etc... complete households .
Write M .D. Miller, Rt. 4 ,
Pomeroy or call992-n 61J.

GLAST~ON BOAT , tri haul
desi gn, 16 ft .. 1 in .. 19 gol
built-in gas tonk. 80 h.p. Mere
motor . Sllorelonder tilt trailer.
1 veor old . 9.. 9.2377 .

POTATOES AT the C.W. Proff itt Fa rm . Portland OH, Prices
change day to day with the
market.

OlD CO INS, pock et watches ,
c!oss rings , wedding bonds .
diamonds. Gold or silver. Coli
J. A. Wamsley, 742-233;1.

ZENITH PORTABLE stereo.
Also. child's chest of drawers .

7.42-2255, SALE: Mortin-Senour
paint , Division of Sherman
and Wi lliams. Interior or elr terior fla t whife , $5 . ~ g(:lllon.
Color extra . PRESEASON

WANTED: SAW logs . Poyment
upon deli\lery to ovr vord. 7:30
to · 3:30 weekdays. Blaney
Hardwoods , SR 339, Barlow ,

the day before pu blie~ t ion

old.

GIVE A nice pet o good home.
Humane Society. 992-6260.

In Memory

avai lable lor adoption and in·
f ormati on service .

TIMEX WATCH
REPAIR
DUTION DRUG
MIDDLEPORT

adult

Real Estate for Sale

HAVE VAC~ACY to core lor
the elderly in our home.

9'12·73,. ,

FOUND: AUGUST 21 in area of
Ches ter SR 2-iB . Doberman,
eon not clipped. Red male
neutered. oi or 5 · veers old .
Choker chain .
FOUND: LARGE block short
hair, young mole dog in laurel
Cliff area. 992·6260.

Will DO babysitting· in my
home. 5 days o week . Any oge

ch;ld, 9•9·2758 .

Real Estate for Sale
NICE COMFORTABLE 8 room
home on opprox. 2 acres ol
le\lellond with plenty of shade
trees . o n Rutlo .1d
Rd .

9'12-7255 ,
SIX ROOM house in Pomeroy.
Remodeled, Iorge lot , natural
gas , m'ust sell. Asking
$11 ,000. 992-6168ofter6 .

20 ACRES NEAR langsville' 3
bedr.
remodeled house.
aluminum siding. insulated,
storm windows, large born,
outbuildings, stocked pond.
$36,500. Owner may Help
finance. 992-7733 .

Help wanted
BABYSITIER NEEDED in Racine
oreo . 9-i9-2862 .
DEPENDABLE BABYSITTER in
my home. 5 days o week .
7·4:30 pm . 2 children. 18 mo.
and 2 mo. References requi red . must hove own
transportat ion. Denise Wolfe,
9·9-2377 .
SOMEONE TO put ' up hoy on
!l.hores. 9•9-253 1 evenings .

985·.,&lt;l' .
1969 CAMARO, SILVER and
block, fro111 and rear spoilers,
cowl hood, much more . A -1
condition, inside and out.

$3500. 742·21•3 .
1979 PlYMOUTH HORIZON TC
3 . Sport package . l ow
mi1eoge. Rust proofed . 27 to

BAR PERSON, hones t, neat,
dependable. Apply in person ,
Five Points Gri ll , Pomeroy .
Mole or female.

35

NEED BAB VSITIER for 1st
grodtr . for 2 hour s after
sc hooL After 5:30 , 949·2107 .

:W. -882-2252 ,
1976 PlYMOUTH VOLARE. 2.

Yard Sales

m. p.g. S•900 . 742-2,.3

alter 5.

197B

1/W DASHER , 12 ,700
miles. Good gas mlleoge.

door. Maroon with wh ite \llnyl
top . radial tires , power steer·
ing, power brakes, slant six
engine, good gas mileage.
29,000 miles. Good condition.

Phone9'12·3198 .

YA RD SALE . August 25. Saturday. White residence. Bet·
ween County Rd . lB and 19 on
old RL 33 .
G ARAGE SALE . Fi rday , August
24. 9-5. Riggscrest Manor . CR
28 . 1.2 miles above Eas tern
Hig h
Sc hool.
Maternity
clothes. winte r and summer
clothes. ladies' size 9-12,
garden t iller , weed eater ,
stereo; dishes, bedding, girls'
b icycle , A von jewelry . house
p lants , etc.
25th
Gulf
11ice
and

lamps.

GMC BUS camper. Fully selfcontoil'led· $500. 992-7378,
197.. PINTO . 51 ,000 miles .
Auto. trans .. rodio l ti res. excellent
condition.
Coli

992·5190.
1978 JEEP CJS , JQ.tt V-8, levi
package .
P . S.,
·P. B .•
aluminum. spoke wheels , 35
Gumbo tires , heoders. Toke
over payments. Call992· 6363 .

1976

OLDS

REGENCY.

All

power, $3995 , or will toke
frad.e-ln . 949-2818 7:30 until 3
or 9•9-:2150. May be seen at
Carpenter's
Pennzoil
in
Racine.

1978 SPITFIRE CO NVERTABLE .
3-400 milea . Great condition .
Equipped . 30 to 34 m.p .g .

YARD SALE . Corner of Fifth
and Lin coln . Middlepor t.
Clothes, men s'.
womens',
maternity and ne wborn . B-u ffet , bed lamps and many o ther
miK. items. Fri . ond Sot. ,
August 24 and :25. 9 om·• pm.

9•9-2S.5 .
1979 CHEVROLET

YARD SAlE. ••2 S. 6th, M;dJ'

auto., 2500 miles. 992·5396 .

dleport. Aug . 2.. · 25. 9 om to 5
pm . Children's cl othin g. boys'
bike , portable blocK and
whi te TV , etc. Ra in canc els.
RAIN OR shine . Yard Sole .
Leona St.-wort, Mulberry Hts. ,
Pomeroy. Fri ond Sot. 9-6.
Stereo , records . Corvo i r
wh-It and tire5 , clothes of al l
types , lodie,' clothes to 2• VJ .
bedclothes, mite'

992-7~2 .

1975 GRAN TORINO Squire
wagon. Auto .. P.S., P.B., a ir,

4••

350

For Sale
CANNING TOMATOES, Pkk
your own. Field weed free , $3
a bu . Andrew Cross . Adams
Rd., letart Falls , OH .
CANON FT8 35 mm single lens
refleK camera . Exce llen t con·
dhion . 992-51 •.c .

Work,

Wilks

from Codner's TIXICO;

RACINE,O.

IN SYRACUSE

BLOCK &amp; BRICK
WORK, GENERAL
CONTRACTOR

BOB'S
UPHOlSTERY

ALUMINUM
&amp; VINYL SIDING

CAR SEATS, BOAT
TOPS, FURNITURE

J&amp;L INSUlAnON
Free Estimate

CA.LL

992-2772

949-2000

6-6-lmo .

11----~:.,_.......J

7·5·1 mo.

A-No

money

down

(eligible veterans)
FHA - AS

low

as

3%

down (non-veterans)

IRElAND
MORTGAGE
CO.
77 E . State, Athens
592-3051

LT IN 1877 - Completelyrestored 1970-Sol i
brick stately home on Mulberry Ave. in Pomeroy .
They just don 't bui ld them like this anymore. Cen ·
tral heat and air conditioning. You 've got to see this
~orne to appreciate. Call f or'appointmenJ.- 148,000.

• ·23·1 mo .

,

Rutland.

J4

-

mile oft Rf. 7 by -pass

Auto &amp; Truck ·
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone ~92 -5682
'

NEW LISTING - AI
Maplewood Lake, 6
room frame home, bath,
baSement, and 1 acre
for only $10,000. 16 fl.
. right-Of-way .

·Housing · "
Head uariers .....

----·

COUNTRY LIVING without a lot of ground to lake
care of . J;.,. acre lof - 1'12 story home ;ust five miles
from town on Hysell Run . 3 bec:Jrooms, bath, living
room, dining room, family roo-m with large wOOd burning firelace . Peaceful, 52S,ooo.

REAL ESTATE loons. Purchase
and refinance. 30 year 'erms ,
VA, No mon•y down (eligible
veterans) . FHA • As low as 3
per cent down { non-\leterans).
Ireland Mortgage Co ..
E.
State, Athens . 61.4-592-3051 .

n

REAL ESTATE: 1 acre lot in Ri9"
gscrHt Manor, betwHn Tu~
pen Plaint and Chest•r.
Phone 985-3929 end 985-.C129.

LINCOLN HILL IN POMEROY - Real nice 3
bedroom , 1 bath frame home . Convenient location
~arg~ living room with firepla ce, dining room, eat:
1n K1tchen, full basement, new gas furnace
525,000.00 .
.

RUTLAND - 2 bedroom and balh frame home on
large lot. Recently remodeled new roof
t 1
heat . Just$16,000.
'
' cen ra

DOWNIN.G • CHILDS
RODNEY, BROKER , BILL, BR. MGR.
Phone 992·2J42
Eve. 992-2449
Middlepo.rt, Ohio

tlllllll
+A K 8 7
WEST
EAST
t AQt171
• 642
• J 9 52
•z
t AQJ114
• Q3
• J 5

•o

..

SOUTH

• J 10 5
•Kl0876

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

BUT "~DO'('... THAT

OH hiY "MDt&gt;Y "...
YoU'RE 50 GOOD
••• ANI&gt; 'roiJ PUT
'lOUR DOUGH ON
"TH' LINE ···

J06 ··· HOW" CAN
!WI EVER EARN

Vulnerable: North-&amp;uth
Dealer: West

THAT l(IND

&lt;*DOUGH!

Welt
Pass
2+

!&lt;~MIND,

COME: ON, 1

WANT "TO SEE:
~A"T 'S INS•DE

7251 mo .

lil

H. L Writesel
Roofing
N'ew, repair,
guHersand
down spouts .
Window cleaning .
Gutter cleaning
Free Estimates
¥49-2862--949-2160

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

O ·lfc

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

E)IPERIENCED

Radlat9r·,.......-..,
S.rvlc•

These papers sall
4er shaclt, is

hazard'us
fth'

What's them Thell qoin'
papers aimi n' t' tear down
t"do?
ljer shad;'

l'se a siqht srnarter'n
anlj fool

papers!

health!

•New Home

Motols,lnc.
Ph . 992 ·2174

BR~OFORD , Auct ionHr, Compl•te Service. Phone 9•9· 2487
or 9.49-2000. fitQCine, Ohio,
Crllt Bradford.

Pomeroy

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR

~

SEWING MACHINE Ropolro,
SeNice. all mok ... m -Zl84 .
The Fabric Shop, Pame&lt;oy,
Aulhorlzed Si- Soln and

GiveAway

or R&lt;:tger Jeffers. day phone
night
phon•
992· 7089 ,

MEDIUM

white long

haired

sized
temole,
looks lh sheep dog but

smaller. Loves chlfdren.
Human•Soci•ty. 992-6260.

BOXER TYPE ·DOG. lt. ton.
femo le, young adult. Ploc• in
country. 992-6260.
NICE KtnENS, Port Siomete.

Well foci, 0.3-2653,
TO A good homo, • beautiful,
long holr kittens, Tiger and
wl'llte. 8 wMkt old. 992-2531 .

APRICOT LONG hair fomolo.

9'12·=!525 0&lt; 9'12·!232.
EXCAVATING ,
dozer ,
bock~ and dilchor, Chariot
R. Hatfield. Black Hoo Service,
Rutland, Ohio. Pone U2·2008.
PULLINS EXCAVATING. Complete Service. Phone 99'.2· 2478.

AUTOMOBILE

INSURANCE

been cancelled? Lost your
operaton
licenM? PhoM

dozer, bockhoo. Rl, 1-13,
Phone 1 (614) 698·7331 or
7d-2593.

and white, and tiger. Human•
BLACK ond white Labrador
femole puppy. To good hom•.
Humane Society. 9i)2.6260.

YOUNG MALE dog, largo but
friendly . black. short holr.
Humane Society, 992-6260.

. Auctions
BIG AUCTION every Wed.. 7
pm . Hartford Community
Center, Hartford. WV, 4 mil••
obolt'e
Pom•roy-Moton

Bridge:

WEAR$ OFF?

FOOTSTEPS!

r-------

coveting,

septic

~~~~by THOMAi JOSEPH
ACROSS

6 American

1 Residence

general
7 Sea bird
region .
8 Extinct bird
or wine
9 European
11 Tabled
river
1% Eat away
10 Yield
13 Needing
14 Famous Moss
more help
17 Shape
15 Energy unlt 18 Space '
Yesterday's Answer
16 Mlne output 19 Iranian
%5 Cicatrix § Make
17 Mrs . Trudeau
monetary
Z8 Sacred
sweaters ·
U East
unlt
!8 Announce 38 Receive
%3 Leftovers
20 French
30 Through 39 Hither and Z'l Rested
playwright
the 40 Adherent
(against)
Z1 Office
32 Answer
41 Never,
Z8 Mod dance
well sign
33 Drooping
in Bo!Ul
place
Z4 Continent: Fr. 34 Tender
42 Eur. country
!!I Miss Evans r-..,...~_,,....;,.....:.:
30 Servile
31 Wiles
331nvite
38Building
wing
37 Describing

44Mlss

b:-+--+--+--t-

. O'Grady

BARNEY

-...,..-- 45 Trifling
HOW 'S
BIZ NESS,
SILAS?

THIS '(EAR , MY

IT'S DOUBLE
WHAT IT WUZ
LAST 'lEAR,
LOWEEZY

41Goin

DADBURN CREDITORS
OWE ME lWICET
AS MUCH

DOWN
10nager
Z Scrooge cryb-+--+~

3 Siouan
Indian
4lnsect
5 Contest

competitor ....,..1.-...1-...L...-l..-

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's

how to work
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

Is

IN STOCK for Immediate
delivery: various sizes of pool
kits. Do-lt- yourself or let us
Install for you. 0 . Bumgardner

! KNOW !-lOW

!.ET'!i PI.M OUR
I-IEART5 OUT!

THAT WORK5 ...

apr.adlng. Leo Morris Truck-

lnp. Phone 7•2·2•55.
ANN'S CAKE Decorating Supplloo, 5071b Osbern Rd ..

L{OU PI.A~ ~OUR ijEART
OUL A~O I(OU !SET A
S1 OMACHACHE!

It:

One letler simply stands for another. In this sample A Ia
used for the three L's, X for lhe lwo O's, etc. Single letters.
aposlrophes, the length and formation of lhe words are all
hJnls. Each day the code letters are difl'erent
. .
CRYPTOQUOTES
DBY
QLVY

Roodovlllo, OH •5772. Far Information coli, 667-648$. Will

be open late If

••

records
43 Bay wino~owll"

systems ,

Soln, Inc. 9'12-572•.
WILL HAUl limestone and
grovel. Aloo, limo hauling ond

West led a low spade
giving dummy the king of
spades! Declarer had no
Pass
safe way to get out of dwnPaas
my. Whichever minor suit
he chose would promote
West's jack of hearts into the
Opening lead : t 2
setting trick . West would
ruff a club lead with his jack
of hearts, or if declarer
chose to ruff a diamond .
By Oswald Jacoby
West would ovreruff with
and Alan S!&gt;nl!lg
that jack of hearts and still
· score his ace and queen of
The proper contract for spades.
North-&amp;uth is five clubs.
Because of a preemptive ! NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN . )
lw!Hlpade overcall by West
and a poor decision by North
(Do you have a question for
to rebid diamonds, the cor- the experts? Write " Ask the
rect contract was lost. The Experts, ' ' care of this newsnine-card club fit was never ~per. Individual questions
even m~ntloned .
wl/f be answered if accompaGame in hearts was a poor nied by stamped, self-adproposition after the dia- dressed envelopes. The
mond lead . South ruffed that m~st interestinQ questions
opening diamond lead
will be used in this column
cashed dununy's . ace-&lt;jueen and will rece ive copies of
of hearts and the ace-king of JACOBY MODERN.)

some

E-C ELECTRICAL Contractor
serving Ohio Voll.y region .
Six days o w . .k. 2.C hours ter·
\lice. Em•rgency coils. Call

992·6260.
WHITE MIXED fomolo dog with

Society. 992-b!l60.

YOU ? YOU'RE N OT ..JU5T IN
IT UNTIL THE NOVELTY

9'12·21-13.

882-2952 0&lt; 882- ~S..
HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex·

992-6260.
SHORT HAIRED kittens, block

TO MA.KE

will haul 1111 dirt, tap toll ,
limestone and grOYel . Call Bob

oppeora to be afghan hound
odn
poodle,
m•dlum.
housebroken, love• children.
All shots' Humane Society.

block on body and ear. To
good home. Humane Society,

ARE GOING

A 0\REER OF 1HIS1 ARENT

EXCAVATING. dozer. lo&lt;idor
and bockhoe work: dump
trucks · and lo-boys for hire,

BEAUTIFUL

VOU •. . YOU

' YOU DONT KNON HO;V
HAPPY I AM ~T '&gt;OU 'VE
i= INALLY DECIDED 10
FOL LDW IN l'v\Y

Service. We shar~n Scissors.

Sw. .pen, toost•rs. Irons, all
tmofl oppllonc•• · lawn ~r .
next to State Highway Go raeon Rout• 7, 985-3825.

were.

North Easl
lt
Pass
3t
Dbl.
Pass

6 French

'rom ttt.e ' .J-r,.lf
lullaoter •Niator
""a I lest Motet" Care .

•Addons
•Remoldlngs
*Free estimates
992-6011

-- .

+109642

' 6-1•·2 mo.

OHered
All Masonary Work
Foundation,
Brick laying,
Concrete rmishing.

clubs. Now the problem was
to hold his losers in the
major suits to three.
Superficially, declarer is
off only the ace"&lt;iueen of
spades and one trump trick.
At trick six declarer led a
club from dununy, overtakIng lt tn his hand and West
trumped. The hand was now
an open book for We~t.
West knew declarer had
started with 3-lHl-5 distribution heca\ijle of the way the
hand had been bid and
played. Now West found an
mgenlous way to defeat the
contract no matter , what
declarer's three spades

IK
•AQ

651 Beech ~treet
Middleport, 0.
992-2356

7·12

OLD RT. 3l - About 2«1
acres, home, barn and
building,
loads
of
building sites. This propert you must see to ap·
preclate. $178,000 .00.
PORTLAND- About 56
.acres. pasture, woods,
and tillable. Many
building sites. JUST
$23.900.
NEW LlSTlNG - Aboul
6 years old. Lovely
ranch . 3 bedrooms,
large recreation room
with beautiful fireplace.
garage, hardwood floors
with
carpeting .
$42, 200.00. •
NEW LISTING - Mid·
dleport, 2 bedrooms,
dining room, some
carpeting, paneling,
·cellar. Very nice location. Slb,200.00 .
NEW LISTING - Mid·
dleport, 2 bedrooms,
bath, lull basement,
garage. Other features.
S18,900.00.
MIDDLEPORT - Ex ·
cellon!
location,
•
bedrooms, 1'h baths,
T.V. room, den, family
room, mOdern kitchen,
central air and heat,
large living room.
$59,500.00.
POMEROY - 1 floor
plan, 3 bedrooms, dining
room, nice kitchen, nat.
gas heat, enclosed
porch, basement and
garage, fruit trees,
aboul3 acres. $25,000.00.
CLELAND REALTY
WHERE
REAL
ESTATE
IS
A
BUSINESS, NOT A
SIDELINE .
BROKERS
Henry E. Cleland Sr.
Henry E. Cleland Jr.
992-2259
99H 191

Excellent defense scores
NORTH

11 YHrl ExPft"leMt

L---------J

608 E . ..r.lliQII'""-.1
MAIN
POMFllOY . O .

AIJ'(mll.l0! ... 6RU1US"?

Will Mlkt Service Calls

Call for a Free Siding
Estimate, 949 ·2111 or
t•9· 2NCI. No Sunday

O O·tf c

Real Estate for Sale

lt.l0, BUT I COI.l'T ~!JAR

Shop

BISSEll
SIDING CO.

Services

Roger Hysell
Ga-age
on St. Rt . 124 toward

Jack W. Carsey
Mgr . '. ,
.. . Phone 992 -2181

Siding

Cl111.

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

I $ 'OlR ~I?; MOI-

Reynolds'
Electric Motor

Vinyl and Aluminum
I

I I ) [I I I I I ]0

BRIDGE

BY

Free Estimates
3rd St., Raclne

~ow an-ange the circled leners to
onn the surprise answer, as sug·
gest~ by lhe above cartoon.

(Answers tomorrow)
ELOPE MODERN GRIMLy
Answer: How to think In a dangerous emergencyWITH YOUR LEGS
Thuroday, Aug. 23

Ph. tt2·3741 or tt2·J752
8·1·1 mo.

8·6· 1 mo.

MBN MEAN!

Yestorda~' s l Jumbles: DUSKY

V. C. YOUNG Ill
m -7314

I0·

' tAITRYN

Prlntanawerhere:(

Uncltr New Manage·
m111t (formerlY Sylvia's
U pilolstery), ecrou

941·2741 ..r

N. L Construction

THREE BEDROOM llouse in
Pomeroy. Fu ll basement, gas
furnace. Call992-7839 .

1nd

cirlveweys.
(FREE ESTIMATE)

.Ill_

J [)

UPHOlSTERING

Gutter work, down
spouts, some concrete

Phone99H323
Free Estimates
7·25·1 mo. pd .

'1:1

WANT IT SOLD - Com ·
pact 2 bedroom home
neatly cared for In
Pomeroy . A good
starter or retirement
home with large extra
lot . Just 525,000.
COUNTRY HOME Nice modern looking 3
bedroom home with
automatic F .A. furnace,
new bath, large kitchen
and Jg. bedroom down.
Full basement and Iaroe
lot for garden . $25,000.
NEW LISTING 3
bedroom home, bath,
natural gas furnace, full
basement. carpeting
and 2 porches, 518,500.
FAMILY HOME - 3
nice bedrooms, lots of
closets, 2 full baths,
tamify 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,
batn, shower, base ·
ment, storm drs. &amp; win·
dews, nat. gas F.A. fur·
nace and aluminum
sidir:'lg . 518,.500 . .
NEW LISTING 4
bedrooms, bi!tth, base·
ment, disposal , nice
cabinets, stove and
refrigerator . Storm drs.
&amp; windows. one acre.
Only $10,500.
NEW LIHING - Nice
remodeled 2 bedroom
frame home. Nat. gas
F .A . furnace, basement,
l car garage and 3 lots.
525,000.
NEW LISTING 3
bedrooms, bath, wOOd
burner, new wood burning fireplace, large kit·
chen, basement, and 6
acres . Want only
516,000.00 for qu ick sale.
BUILDING LOTS Pomeroy, Syracuse,
Rock Springs, Baums
Sub ·divison , Ra cine and
Rutland area .

THE; GENT VOU WERE TAI..KIN6 TO'$
OUT COLD FROM THIS SUMP 01&lt;1 HIS
HE'APt ).00KS LIKE; ~OMEONE
CL0&amp;81:RED HIM FROM !.EHIND!

A&amp;H

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELINI:.

aNEW HOMES
a ROOM ADDITIONS
eRODFlNG
a VINYL SIDING
eGUTTER &amp; SOFFIT

SALE PRICES

'

214.£ . Second Stree1

1969 DODGE DART, 4-door ,
new point . new fires . $600 .
Potatoes, $8 per hundred .
Pigs. 7 weeks old, $20 each ,
Strow $1 .25
per bole .

STOCK
45·1 mo

BOB'S GENERAL
CONTRACTING

Sales &amp; Service

197• DODGE CORONET •· door
low

GOOSE

CALL 992-7544

Real Estate Loans

for
Hot point and
General Electric
Appliances

1976 TRANS AM . .. 00 engine.
Make offer. 992-5032. 796 S.
3rd Ave .. Middleport.

SALON .

SUPER

TRAILER NOWAVAILA!LE .

Purchase
and
Refinance
30 Year Terms

Ha~dquarter.s

only .

mileage. Good condition.
992-S870 after •pm.

HOurst-1 M., W., F.
other times by appoint·
men!.
107 Sy~amore IRNr)
Pomeroy, 0 .

OF I:OUR~~ l"M ON
THe WJE, YOU IDIOT!
W~'Y PO 'I'OIJ ~UPPO~e
I CALI..ED TH~ DESK!
•.,WHAT'!&gt; GOING OI&gt;J
li&lt;J 703""

9'12-2657 .

1974 VEGA HATCHBACK, coli
303-675-1501 . or 305-675·2•88
or J&lt;M-b75· )553 ,

CUTLASS

I
21120 Monttomer'f Act.
Lant5vltle , Ohio
614-M,··U ·U Evt"lntt
2 Mll•s E•st of Wilketvlltt

ANI:' Tl-416 16
ANOTHER 'T.HIN6
'THAT MAI&lt;E&amp;

ITACHUGtn

elnsulatlon
aSterm ooars
eSterm WlnciOWI
1 Replacemllll
WindOWS
eGutterund
DownSpouts
FrH Estimates
JAMES KEESEE
PMntl't2·2772
B-17 -1 mo.

TRAILER SALES

Rl. l
Pomeroy, Ohio
992-5547
1·25 ·2 mo.

POMEROY
LANDMARK

992-3181.

Custom . 992-5858.

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

tJ I lJ

J&amp;L BlOWN
INSUlATION
VINYL AND
AWMINUM SIDING

MONTGOMERY

Federal HOusing &amp;
Veterans Admin, Loans.

Will DO dalnting, roof pain· ,
tlng, on
carpenter work .

22 FOOT TRAILER for one person. Utilities paid. 992-2897 .

Lost and Found

YARD SALE . Saturday .
only. Across from Eber's
Station in Racine . l ots of
school clothes , cho irs.

MOBILE HQME and lot in
Mason, WV . Ca11304-n3-5905
or 992·7759.

9'12-6022.

FOUR HYDRAULIC choirs . .4
dryers, 3 comb out stations
and shampoo choir. Shampoo
bowl, 1 electronic oir cleaner.
I steel f iling cabinet, 3 roller
carts, combs, brushes, perm
wave rods , roller et~ R.C.
cooler .
See
Dorothy
Winebrenner, College St ..
svracuse. OH .

992.s.a. .

ONE

bedroom, 1 1/~ both . 992-2514 .

WILL HAVE vacancy for elderly
lady 2nd of September .' Room.
board and laundry. Care if
needed. Reasonable prices.

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING

992-3850.

ONE BEDROOM opts . Contact
Village Manor, 992-77B7 .

TRAILER ,

THREE

DOZER. END loader and dump
truck . Wil l do basements,
ponds ,
br ush.
ti mber .
li metlon• .
and
grovel.
Charles Bu tcher. 7~2 - 2940 .

MATCHING BED and dresser.
5 small gas healing sto\les.

3 AND 4 RM furnished end unfurnished
opts.
Phone

992·7721.

GOVENOR

PAINTING AND sandblasting.
Free estimates . Coll949 -2686.

CARRY ON truck comper, 8ft ..
sleeps .. . Seff-contoined . Ex·
cellent condition. 9•9-2597 .

Route 33, north of Pomeroy.
Lorge lots. Coll 992-7..79 .

opt!!i .
for
rnet . · Rental
as sis tance
available .

1974

367·7101.

ln . bike, $20. 992-7374.

CotJNTRY MOBILE Home Po rk.

SENIOR CITIZENS , I bedroom

1973 12 x 63 Forest Pork
mobile home on v~ acre lot.in
Harrisonvi lle. 992-3640.

Business SeMJices

NOW HAULING 1imestone in
Middieport· Poemroy area .
Coli for l r ee estimate .

26 IN 1()-speed b;ke. $35 . 20

For Rent
GUN SHOOT , EVERY FRIDAY
7o30 PM RACINE GUN CLUB .
FACTORY CHOKE GUNS ON·
LY.
MEIGS COUNTY HUMANE
SOCIETY·. 992-6260. Pets

BIG SELECTION of pre-owned
10's, 12's, and ,,. ft . wide
l'lomes . Konougo Mobile
Home Soles . 61•· •46-9662.

ROTOTlllER, 3.5 l).p. Briggs
and Stratton . -'08 Spring Ave .,
Pomeroy ofter6pm .

Camping Equipment

IN LOVING memory_ of our
FRANKLIN TRAVEL trailer, 22
dear mother. Mary Eblin, who
ft. Good condition. Al~o Trail
passed away 7 years ago,
Ha\len camper. Sleeps six .
August23 , 197'l .
992·36&lt;40.
,.
God , forgive a sudden tear
PRIVATE OWNER wi ll sacrifice
A silent wish that you were
1979 32ft. tro\lel trailer. Selfhere
contained, air, r,eor bunk .
Othen are token we know
sleeps six. See anytime .
But she was ours and we loved
Krodel City Pork , Pt. Pleasant.
her so
To her resting place we
MUST SELL late model travel
wonder
tia i le r. 28',
lully self And flowers we place with
conta i ned ,
factory
air .
core
carpeted throughout, many
Bu 1 no on e knows the hear·
extraS . See any time , l&lt;rodel
tache
City Pork , Pt. Pleasant.
A!l. we turn end leave her '
)973 23 1/~ foot TfJy travel
there
trailer . Air conditioning , full
Sadly mined by children
bath with tub and shower.
Edith , Artie , Mvrtle and
AM· FM with 8-tro(!k. Good
Madeline and Grandchildren .
condition. Cal l 992 -3580.

B"S MOBILE HOME SALES, PT.
PLEASANT. WV. J&lt;M-675···24 .

9 FOOT • 7 foot white
fiberglass garage door, $100.
Regu lation size ping pong
toble, $25. Audion electric
organ , $25. 992-5606 or see
H.E. Johnson . 35B28 Flat·
woods Rd.

9•9-2381.

4P.M.
Friday urtcmoon

1965 GENERAL60x12. 2 bedr.
1970 Sylva , 60x l2 , 2 bedr.
1970 Castle. 60x 12. 2 bedr.
197.4 Mark line, 50xl2, 2 bedr .
1969 Valiant. 12x60. 2 bedr.
1967 Notiono.l , 12JoC50, 2 bedr .

LIVING ROOM choirs, Jenny
lif}d antique bed , Early
American round rug , lamp
table , all in good condition.
Priced
very reasonably .
Reason for selling, home fo r
sole. Con be seen ot .405 Spr·
ing Ave ., Pomeroy .

CHAMPION BLOOD line. Ger·
man
Shepard
puppies .

Sunda}'

Good condition. 992-5858.

LENNOX CENTRAL oir condi·
tioning ond heating with
duels. 992· :2560.

White. Phone 985-3803.

4P.M.

1974 1• x 70 mobi le home.

QUART FRUIT jars for sole.
2-i7:2-i64 .

992·2726.
FEMALE AKC ...g. poodle.

1'ue.sda y
thru Friday

Mobile Homes Sale's

end tables. 997-7537 .

7422975.

Taylor. 61,.·367-7220.
weeks

CHILO'S JOHN Deere ' riding
tractor and wagon. Phone

extras .

ONE FOLDING wh eel chair
ond walker. like new . Coli

d;ng. Call367-0292.
POODLE GROOMING , Judy

HARDWARE

DUROC BOARS, pureb red .
Reeds\lille. 614 -378-6311 .

Monv

985·3803.

OH .

RISING STAR Kennel. Boor-

6

RUTLAND

9'12·22,..

Pets for Sale

$125 .

9'12·3891.

STOVE SALE . GAS•WOOO·
COAL . BIG REDUCTION IN
PRICE.
GRAVElY TRACTOR. I po;r of

Evi nr,ude'

china. anything. See or call
Ruth Gosney, antiques. 26 N .

2nd ..
Middleport ,
992-3161 .

low

9•9·218-4 or9•9·2S96 .
1977 ARROWGLASS BASS and
pleasure boot with 85 h.p.

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

py .

Noon on Saturday

sand,

1978 KAWASAKI 100,
mileage. m - ~0 .

AKC REGISTERED boxer pup-

Monday

LIMESTONE ,

grovel. calcium chloride . fer·
tilixer , dog food , and oil types
of salt . EJoCcelsior Salt Works,
Inc ., E. Main St., Pomerov.

985-3928.

HOOF HOLLOW, English and
Western .
Saddles
and
harness . Horses and ponies .
Ruth ·Reeves. 614 -698-3290.
Barding 8 Riding lessons and
. Horse Care products.

NOTICE

COAL .

HOMEUTE 5 h.p . ridin g
mower. 700 bu . ol ear corn.

Services Offered

9'12-2689 .

for more tha n one incurrt'd insert icm.
Phone-992-2 1:16

For Sale

For Sale

CHIP WOOD. Poles ma x .
diameter 10.,. on largeat end.
$1 2 per ton. Bu ndled slob. S lO
per ton. Delivered to Ohio
Pollet Co., Rt. 2, Pomeroy.

LCHJ

FIJ

ZLHN Q

DL
RQ

YCDYUDIRC
DL

HRQDYC

DL
DBYV.
NRC
B . OP . PIUA
Yeslerday'a CryptoquOie: IT TAKES LESS TIME TO DO A
TmNG RIC::HT THAN TO EXPLAIN WHY YOU DID IT
WRONG. - LONGFEU.OW
.

you need

something.

S &amp; G Corpot Cleaning. Stoom
cleaned. Free estlmote,
Reaaonoble ~tes. Scotch-

® 191t KinG Ftaturtl Sl'nd,lcaft, Inc.

guard. 992·6309 or7•2·2348.
L ..

,•

THURSDAY, AUGUST 2], 1f1t
8:DO-Pro ject U. F .O. 3, 15; Lavern•
&amp; Shlrle~ b,13 ; Waltons 8,10;
National Geogra phic 20. 33 ;
Movie " Damn the Defiant! " 17.
8: 30-Angle 6, 13; 9:0()-Qulncy J,15;
Barney Mil ler 13; Desegregation
Forum 6; Barnaby Jones 8, 10;
Arthur Fiedler : Just Call Me
Maestro 20; That
Great
American Gospel Sound JJ .
9 :3D-Corter Country 13,
10: DO-Mrs. Columbo 3,15 ; 20·20
6. 13; Onedln Line 17; News 20.
10 o30-Hocklng Valley Bluegsrass
20; Such Good Companions 33.
·11 : 00- New s 3 ,6,8,10 , 13,15 ; Dick
Cavett 20;· New Soupy Sales 17;
Book Beat 33.
11: 30- Johnny
Carson
3,4,15 ;
Starsky &amp; Hulc 6, 13; MASH 8;
ABC News 33; Movie " Desperate
Mission" 10; Movie " This Earth
Is Mine" 17.
12 :05--Movle " Ralntree County" 6;
12 :40- Baretla 6, 13 ; 1 :OoTomor row 3; News 15.
1. 50-News 13; 2 :05-News 17;
2 : 25--Movle " High Hell" 17;
4 :2D-AvenQers 17.
FRIDAY, AUGUST 24,1979
; :2D-World at Lorge · 17; 5:45Farm Report 13; 5:5(f-PII Club
13; 6:D0-700 Club 6; 100 Club 8;
Summer Semester 10; Ptl Club
15.
.
6:1D-News 17; _ b :3D-Socletles In
Transition 10; Dragnet 17; 6:45-Mornlng Report 3.
6:5(f-GOOd Morning, West VIrginia
13; 6 :55--News 13.
7:DO-Today 3.15; Good Morning ·
America 6,13; Fr.l day Morning 8;
Batman 10; Th r ee Stooges-Little
Rascals 17; 7: 15--A .M. Weather
33.
7:30-Famlly Altair 10; Lilias, Yoga
and You 33.
8 : DO-Caploln Kangaroo 8,10; Lassie
17; Sesame St. 33 .
8:3D-Romper Room 17.
9:DO-Bob Braun3; Phil Donahue 13,
15; Big Valley 6: Porky Plg and
Friends 8; Nile Owl Jazz Stars
10; Lucy Show 17; Book Beat 33.
9 : 3D-Sanford and Son 8; Love of
Life 10; Green Acres 17; Fireside
KllchE!fl 33.
lO:DO-Card Sharks 3,15; Edge of
Nlghl6; All In the Family B,10;
Dating Game 13; Movie "The
Golden Breed" 17; Paint Along
With Nancy Komlnsky ~3 .
10:30-Hollywood Squares 3,15;
$20,000 P~ramld 13; Bonkers! 6;
Whew! 8; Country Time 10;
Consumer Survival Kit 33:
10: 55-CBS News B; Falr Fare 10.
11 : DO-High Rollers 3, 15; Laverne &amp;
Shirley 6,13; Price Is Right 8.10;
Firing Line 33 .
11 o30- Wheel of Fortune 3,15;
Family Feud 6,13 ; 11:55--News
17.
12 o00-Newscenter ]; News 6,10;
Mlndreaders 15; Young and The
Restless 8; Over Easy 33 ;
Midday Magaz ine 13; Love
Am,..lcan Style 17.
12o30-Ryan's Hope 6,13; Search
For Tomorrow 8,10; Not For
Women On ly 15; Movie " Inside .
Slor~"
l7 ; MacNei l-Lehrer
Report 33.
I : DO-Da~s of our Lives 3,15 ; All My
Children 6,13; News 8; Young
and the Restless 10; Cross
Country 33.
I :30-As the World Turns 8,10;
2 :DO-Doctors 3,15; One Life fo
Live 6, 13;; 2 :25--News 17.
2:3D-Anolher World 3,15; Guiding
Light 8, 10; I Love Lucy 17;
Library of Congress 33.
J :DO-General Hospital 6,13 ; Lilias,
. Yoga and You 20 ; Rebop 17.
·
3:30-MASH 8; Joker's Wi ld 10;
Banana Splits 17; Over Easy 20.
4o00-Mr . Carton 3; Password 15;
MervGrlffln 6; Addams Family
8; Sesame St . 20,33; Six Million
Dollar Man 10; Mike Douglas 13;
Fllntstones 17.
4: 30- Lone Ranger 3; Hogan's
Heroes 8 ; Lucy Show 15;
Partridge Family 17.
5:DO-Bonanzo3; Beverly Hillbillies
8; Mr. Rogers 20,33; Disco Fever
10; Six Million Dollar Man 13;
Brady Bunch 15; Slar Trek 17. ·
5:3D-News ·-6; ·-Expohlo '79 15;
Petticoat Junction 8; Electric
Company 20; Mary Tyler Moore
10; Doctor Who 33.
b:DO-News 3,8,10,13, 15; ABC News
6; Family Altair 17; VIlla Alegre
, 20; Once Upon a Classic 33.
6:30-NBC News 3,15; ABC Ness 13;
Andy Griffith 6; CBS News 8,10;
Over Easy 20,33; Father Knows
Best 17.
7:00- Cross-Wits 3; Newlywed
Game 6,13; She Na Na 8; News
10; Love, American Style 15; Get
Smart 17; Dick Cavett 20,33.
7:3D-Hee Haw Honeys 3; S1.98
Beauty Show 6; Family Feud 8:
Price Is Right 10; $100,000 Name
Tho! Tune 13; Pop Goes the
.Country 15; My Three Sons 17;
MacNeil-Lehrer RoDGrl 20..U.
8 o00-Diff ' renl Strokes 3, 15;
Fantasy Island 6,13; rncredl.b le ·
Hulk 8,10; Washington Week In
Review 20,33; Movie "Journey to
the Center of Time" 17.
.
8:3D-Facts of Life 3,15; Wall Street
Week 20,33.
9:DO-Rocklord Flies 3,15 ; Track
and Field 6,13; Dallas 8,10;
Buckeye Holiday 20; Money,
News and VIews 33.
9 :30- Great Midwest Hot Air
Balloon Rally 20; Gentle Killers
33 .
10 :DO-Eddle Capra Mysteries 3,15;
Onedln Line 17; News 20.
10 : 3D-Con~umer Survival Kit 20;
Pythons 33.
11 : OD-News 3,6,8,10,13,15; New
Soupy Sales 17; Two Ronnles 20.
11 ' 25--To Be Announced 33; 11 :3DJohnny Carson 3,15; 1Soap 6,13;
Bonkers I 8; ABC Newi 33; Movie
' 'The Innocents" 10; Movie "The
Lady and the Monster" 17.
12:DO-Juke-Box 8; Monty Py1hon's
Flvlna Circus 33 .
·
12:30-Movle "Robbery" 8; 12:4QRBI 6; Ironside 13 .
1 :DO-Midnight Special 3,15: 1 :20Movlo "GeraldLne" 17,
1:4o-News 13; 2:30-News3; 3:15-, News 17; 3:25--Movle "Ghost
Diver" 17; 5: 15--Dragnet 17. ·

.'

�Bad storm hits president's cruise
ABOARD THE DELTA QUEEN the White House would issue a
(AP) - President Carter is visiting statement today detailing Carter's
the scene of.Arnerica's most famous plans to use an executive order to
whitewashing - Hannibal, Mo., home increase power production along the
of Samuel Clemens and the fence Tom river.
Sawyer supposedly talked his buddies
The president did not have to leave
into painting.
the boat today to encounter a
Today's activities mark the next to character out of Mark Twain, the
the last scheduled stop on the first name under which Clemens wrote.
family's seven-&lt;iay cruise down the
Up in the wheelhouse reigns pilot
Mississippi on the sternwheeler Delta C.S. Ware, who has worked on the
Queen.
river au but 17 .of hls 66 years.
Late Wednesday, during a stop at a
Ware was in his high, cu.shioned
lock, Carter noted the entire lock and chair Tuesday afternoon when the
dam system on the Mississippi River Delta Queen ran smack into a :JG.
produces only 165 megawatts of
electricity, compared to an Army
Corps of Engineers estimate that it
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·:::::::::::::::::::::::
could produce 2,400 megawatts.
Press secretary Jody Powell said
EXTENDED FORECAST
Saturday through Moodily - a
cbance of sbowen Saturday. Fair
Sunday.
Sboweu
or·
llnmderstorms JIOIIIble Moaday.
SQUAD RUNS
Highs li1011tly lo the 70s Saturday
The Middleport Emergency Squad
w1!111l1Dg to lbe mid aad upet 80e
made two runs Wednesday.The first
Monday. Low upper 5011 .a ad low
was at 1: 49 p.m. to the home of Ann
60s early Saturday aad ID lbe IIIII
PRESIDENT 'S VACATION, CAMPAIGN CRUISE
aboard the steamboat Delta Queen, this week. The 53
Morri s, Route 14ll·.
She was . early Sunday and Moodily.
-Jimmy Carter, acl-ompanied by his wife, Rosalynn,
year old sternwheeler departed from St. Paul, Minn.,
transported to Pleasant Valley ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Friday and will arrive in St. LoUis on August 24.
and daughter, Amy, is sailing on a seven -night cruise
Hospital.
SQUAD CAlLED
The second caU occurred at 7: 16
The
Pomeroy
Emergency Squad
yesterday
evenin
g.
Albert
Keaton,
SEEKS DIVORCE
,
Nelsonville
man
faces
church
B&amp;E
charges
answered
one
~
all
this
morning at 2:34
91'.. Liberty Avenue, Pomeroy, was
According to an entry in the Meigs
a.m.
It
transported
Veria
Warth of
transported
by
the
squad
to
Holzer
Chief Jed Webster of the Pomeroy
County Common Pleas Court, Tarniny
Meigs County deputies returned
Rose
Hill
to
Pleasant
Valley
Hospital.
Lynn Richards, Pomeroy, has filed Herbert Farm , 68, Nelsonville, from Police Department filed the charge. Medical Center .
fo r divorce from Danny Pa ul the Athens County Sheriff's
Richards, Middleport. She charges Department Wednesday morning to
gross neglect of duty and extreme face charges of treaking and entering
cruelty.
of the Methodist Church in Pomeroy,
on July 30, 1979.
In his initial court appearance in
Me igs County Court Wednesday
afternoo n, bond was set by Judge
Charles Knight at $2000. Farm posted
10 percent and was released .

Eleven file for Meigs Local School Board

minute squall that briefly pack6d
winds of almost 70 miles an hour and
driving sheets of rain.
..
"Rain or shine or sleet or snow, t~
Delta Queen she's got to go," sang O\lt
Ware, who swung the boat into a co~
to drive the rocking vessel out of tile
brunt of the storm.
Carter, in the wheelhouse for most
of the storm, later congratulated
Capt. Fred Martin f&lt;r a job "w.ell ·
done."
The storm sent the steamboat's
crystal chandeliers swinging over the
grand staircase, tossed alwninuin
deck chairs about like doll house
furniture and left the presidential ~g
flying in tatters atop the front mast.
Martin called the storm, which had
winds approaching hurricane force,
"very serious," but said .he had
encountered a similar one l8llt fall .
The
sternwheeler's
control
mechanism - two steering rods
instead of a wheel - and digital depth
finder would look like magic to Twain,
a sternwheeler pilot himself in his
early years.

Eleven candidates including a
Middleport husband and wife are
· seeking election to the Meigs Local
School District Board of Education.
Deadline for filing petitions with
the Meigs County Board of Elections
for the board of education posts in
the county was 4 p.m. on Thursday.
In the Meigs Local District, voters

VOL. XXVIII

~\~ ,·

~~
SHOE BOX

LONDON (AP ) - Gold prices
leaped to record liighs in early
trading today on Elll'Opj!an
markets while the dollar was
miJ:ed.
Gold shot to $315.625 an ounce
at mid-morning In Zurtch, up
from Thursday's close of
$309L3'15. The metal posted Its
pnMOUS record in Zurich on
Wednesday when it hit $311.625,
before closing at $309.25.
In London, gold dealers set the
morning fixing price at $314.70 an
ounce, up from Thursday 's late
rate of $309.375.
Gold prices have climbed by
more than 5 percent in E urope so
far lhl.!l week.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Now's the time for buying back·t~&gt;-school, fall and winter items. Special values, excellent seledK!ns all over the store.
Use our convenient layaway plan. We'll gladly help you find your right size and style.

BIC BARGAIN PACK

GREAT
SAVING
PLANS

NEW YORK (AP) - Five bank

LUNCH BOXES

SCOTCH BRAND TAPE

Popular -scenes on stur dy meta l boxes· with

5 BIC BAUPOINT PENS
ONLY

qua lity :r hermos brand

ASSORTED WIDTHS

bottles .

99¢
BOYS'

MEN'S

WINTER COATS
AND VESTS

PASSBOOK
90 DAY CERTIFICATE .... ..~.~~:~~~ .s!:~~~·?? ...... SWX,
1 YEAR CERTIFICATE ...... ~:~~.~~.~.~ .'~~~:~ ••• ••• •• 6%
1

Spec ial

Boys $16.95 Coats and vests
Boys $27.95 Coats and Vests
Boys $29.95 Coats and Vests
Boys $54.95 Coats and Vests

Minimum $1 ,000.00. Interest rate of 1•1•% under the average 4 year
yield of Trea sury Secur ities.

MONEY MARKET CERTIFICATE
SlO,OOO minimum . Interest rate equal to the rate of 182 day treasury
bUI rate. Alii determined at w eekly auction .

SUBSTANTIAL PENALTY FOR EARLY WITHDRAWAL

- COAT AND
VEST SALE
two

day sale prices on men 's

construction. maple,
ne, pecan and
oak finishes.

S15.19
$25.09
$26.89
$49.39

FROM ONLY

REG. 13.79· •••••••••••• SALE 12.95
REG. 15.79 ••••• • • • • • • • SALE 14.65
REG. 17.79 • • • • • • • • • • • • SALE 16.25
REG. sg.79 • • • • • • • • • • • • SALE 17.85
REG. 112.79 ••• •••••••• SALE 110.25
REG. 115.79 • •• • • • •• •• SALE 112.65

'
SALE

JUNIOR JACKETS

$14995

CHILDREN'S

STEREO
ALBUM SALE

WINTER COAT
SALE
Specia l Ba ck -to:Sc hool savi ngs
on w ar m winer coats . Short and
long sty les in corduroy, suede.
ny lon and pol yes ter cotton . Boys
sizes 2 to 7. G i rl s sJ,zes 2 to .4 , 4 t o
6)( and 7 t o 14. Buy your chi ldren's
coats now at these spec ia l sa le
pr ices !
(

$22.00 Coats
$29 .00 Coats
$37.00 coats
$54.00 Coats

...... . .. -., . . . $19.79
•.. •. . .... • ..• $26.09
. ............ . $33.29
.. . ...... . .. .. $48.59

sty les in leather, corduroy, nylon,
. snorkels, down fil led .. . many mor-e.
Sizes ~to so.

PLAYTEX
.SUPER SALE

20% OFF .
*"Support•can be
beautiful" bras.
* "Living'' bras.

* ''Cross your heart" bras

·* "I Can't Believe It's A Girdle"

CANNON
11

JUNIOR
TOPS AND
BLOUSES

NO IRON 11

I

[3A'JK • .

-~

FDil

,•· ·-·-·· .......,.·

RACINE
HOME NATIONAL

BANK
Racine, Ohin

Quality full size spreads
snow white
or antique white.
1n

SPECIAL

FUNDS RECEIVED
State · Auditor Thomas E .
Ferguson 's office reported a total of
' P32,41111.49 has been sent to 74 Ohio
counties as reimbursement for costs
incurred under Ohio's Publlc Defen·
der Program. ·
Meip County received $342.50 as
its share of the total.

Men's S32 .95
Coats and Vests
Men 's 39.95
Coats and Vests
Men's 549.95
Coats and Vests
Men's $79.95
Coats and Vests

Easy care poplin fabric in
assorted colors. Draw str ·
ing or banded waist styles.
Re~ . $21.00.

SALE

•

robberies Monday. Ten bank robberies Tuesday. Three bank robberies Wednesday.' And Thur·
sday ? Zero.
After 18 bank robberies in three
days, and 5114 since the beginning
of the year, bank robbers in New
york took. day off Thursday.
FBI officials said Thunday
wu the first day since June 21
ihat no robberies were reported.
Gov. Hugh Carey directed ihat
more than f! million in federal
Law Enforcement AMistance Ad·
ministration funds be used to
combat bank robberies.
The money will be used to hire
more pollee offlcel'!l and to bUy
improved communications equipment and alarm systems.

winter coats and vests. The latMt

Country, pop, rock , bluegrass, instrumentals. and mov ie sound
tracks .

4 YEAR MONEY CERTIFICATE

6ge

YOUR CHOICE

Huge selection of styles, col ors and sizes. Vests,
snorkels, denims, corduroy
and nylon . Sizes 8 thru 20.

lA FULL
(SER\'ICE i

Robberies doMt

HOUSEWARES

DEPARTMENT

•
•

enttne

at

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

posts are to be filled this fall . Only
one candidate filed and he is Jimmy
C. CaldweU who is currently serving
on the board.
Two posts on the Meigs County
Board of Elections will be filled this
year and only two candidates flied . ·
They are incumbents, Harold RoWih
and Oris Smith.

•

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

FRIDAY, AUGUST 24, 1979

Gold price up

SPECIAL V 4Li.IES

'1.45 VALUE

•

year filed for reelection. The four
candidates who have filed for the
two full terms on Southern's Board
are Donald Dudding, David Lynn
Shuler, Charles F. Pyles and Don P.
Smith.
While Meigs Local District has an
abundance of candidates this year, a
definite shortage was noted in the
Eastern Local District where three

PICNIC SUNDAY
The Syracuse Presbyterian Oturch
will hold a picnic at noon Sunday at
the roadside park m the west side of
Route 33.

OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8 P.M.
LISA PUlLINS
WfNSRffiBONS
Lisa Pullins of Girl Scout Troop
1100, Salisbury, won a blue and two
red ribbons in the project judging at
the Meigs County Fair. Her name was
unintentionally omitted from an
earlier listing of ribbon winners.

NO. 93

Vaughan whose husband, Richard,
flied for a full term on the board.
Mr. and Mrs. Vaughan operate the
Cardinal
Supermarket
in
Middleport.
In the Southern Local District, two
posts on the board of education are
to filled this year.
Neither
incumbent Dallas Hill or David
Nease whose terms will expire this

--------------------------------------------------

BAND

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
Admissions--J'ames Meadows,
Portland ; Joseph Stewart, Bidwell ;
Ber tha Las her , !{uti and; Sarah
Brown, Minersville; Lynn Young,
Racine; Walter Robinson , Rutland ;
Harry Sovel, Parma.
Dischar ges- -Teresa Barber ,
Harr y Ly.ons, Jr ., Jacqu elyn
Glassburn, Vidia Girolami, Rhonda
Jones, F1oyd Barnhouse , Cuba Little.

Jane Rought, Jennifer L. Sheets and
Richard W. Vaughan. Powell, Riggs
and Sheets are incumbents with
Powell currently serving in an
unexpired term slot.
Filing for the unexpired term were
Virgil C. King who is an incumbent
and long-time member of the board,
Robert F . Snowden who is a former
board member and Mrs. Ruby

e

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

SHOES

will elect three persons to fuU four
yea r terms in the November
election. One person will be named
to fill an unexpired term on which.
two years remains.
Seeking election to fuU terms in
the district are Jerry W. Colmer, C.
Arland King, Warren L. Perrine,
Larry C. Powell, Keith Riggs, Ellen

fall •tvles and colors,
, terry cloth, pol v"'-..1~cotton. Junior •lzes S, M, L.

Reg. $ 7.00 .... SaleS 6.19
Reg. $10.00 . • .• $ales 8.79
Reg. $12.00 .• .'. Sale S10.59
Reg. $21.00 .•• • Sale $18.49

KIM FRALEY, Meigs High School band member, is caught in a
m001ent of concentration during her stay at band camp held at Camp
Crescendo, Rio Grande. The band camp concludes this evening. Photo by
Dorset Thomas and Jeff Daniela.

ALTIIOUGH HAMPERED by rains during the
week, the Meip High School Marching Band has been
hard at it l~ming new routines and procedures at

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
,,

practices. Photo by Dorsel Thomas and Jeff Daniela.

Parents protest Gallia ·busing plan
BY KEVIN 1tELLY
Heated exchanges between parents and board members highllghted
the specW meeting of the Gallia
Local Board of Education meeting
Thursday night.
A delegation of more than 20
parents filled the county superin·
tendent's office to PJ;otest the
board's decision to bus kindergarten
classes from Bidwell and Addaville
schools to Cheshire-Kyger Creek to
relieve overcrowded conditions at
both buildings.
The parents felt transporting four
and five year-old children all over
the county was not only wasteful, but
might create a dangerous situation,
especiaJJy in the winter )Donths.
The situation had been created
when nine atra students in Bid·
well 's fifth grade class registered
lhl.!l year, forcing some kindergarten
students to he moved to Addaville,
where principal Alfred Scarberry
sald space was cramped.
Consequently, the board decided
to bus students to rooms at CheshireKyger.
"There's no question the move is
not ideal," sald board president

James Blevins. "The question is
when you 're choosing the least of
evils, by using available rooms , or
solving the problem at Bidwell."
Several parents . voic ed
disagreement with the decision,
stating the kindergarten chlldren
should not be made to suffer a con·
fusing situation at the expense of
nine fifth graders.
" You 're putting these kids
through a very bad time and turning
them against school early," sald one

parent.

parents, sald the board's actions
could affect the school levy on the
ballot this November.
Additionally, with Addaville kin·
dergarten classes meeting at
Cheshire-Kyger in the afternoon ,
parents · complained it would be
early evening by .the time the
children arrived home.
' 'They would have·to ride ihat bus
an hour and a half longer," said one

parent.

P&amp;n!llll 1111ed lbe board to rever·
se lis dedaloll aDd allow coodlllolll

1'be parenll aceased lbe OO.rd of
lbe cblldra'a best lnlerftll IUid of belllg WICOIICel'lled
wttb lbe JII'Oblema created by the

aot actiDc ID

lltualloo.
John Lance, a spokesman for the
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.:;:::·:::·:·:::·:·:::·:·:::

MEETS 'nJESDAY
A meetmc of lbe Melgl Local
Teacbers • Auo. to dlawu lbe
posalbWty of ata111og lbe year
wttboula cootnct will be beld at
7:• p.m. Taeaday, Sept. 4. All
members 81'1! 11111ed to atteod tbe

meetiDc.
:::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::

CLEVELAND (AP) - Here are
wiJIIIlDg 111111bers drllwo
Thursday niRbl ID lbe weekly
Oblo Lottery game: Gold 5; wblle
37; blue 141; willalhon5Z!IOII.
lbe

to remalo as tbey were.
Dr. Gary Toolbacker, new c01111ty
auperlolelldent, went on reeord opJIOilog aoy cbiiJIIeB at lhillstage.
"For a dllltrlcllo cbaoge lis Iran·
aporlaUoo polley on the Thunday
before clas~e~ start Mooday, is a
mistake," he oald. " It would Just be
Impossible."
Dr. Tooihacker suggested he get ·
together next week with a parents'
committee and examine the
possibilities of using whatever
available space at Bidwell to relieve
the situation and keep the children in
the area.
,:
A few pare'\ls. intimated they
would not allow tlleir children to ride
the buses Monday, but Toothacker
urged them not to deprive the
children of their educatioin while the
problem is being resolved .
A .special meeting was decided
upon for Aug . 30 to discuss
Tooihacker 's findings and make
recommendations to the board.
In other action , the board
discussed the possibility of increasing the operatinR millage.
Blevins said the decision must be
made before Sept. 7 if it is to be on

the November ballot. Toothacker
suggested the board have a study
session and exchange infonnatlon
before ihat date.
"We are looking at an extremely
bad situation before the end of next
year," Blevins sald. "There's not
gplng to he any money to do
· anything next year if we don't do
110mething."
The board also hired for the
academic year Sharon Yates, Rio
Grande, as parttime coordinator for
the Title I Program; Minda L.
Walker as DPPF aide at C&amp;dmias
Elementary ; Lois Thomas, Crown
City, as educational aide at Hannan
'!;race ; Peggy Huber, as kin·
dergarten teacher at Centerville
Elementary; David A. Moore, ·
Cheshire, as teacher, and George E.
Hertzke as North Gallia High School
princiPal.
Four resignatioll8 were also ac.
cepted by the board: Betty Joan
Burns, suh&lt;Jtitute cook; Opal Lee
Phillips, fulltlme cook; Christy J.
Wilson, teacher ; and Janice J.
Swoger, North GaJJJa High School
secretary.

Handicrafts
current rage
· cling in the crevices of the piece.
Chalk comes in a rainbow of
colors, and is extremely un·
compllcated to apply. Brushes
are used to stroke on the chalk,
which really gives a delicate·
looking touch to the piece.
After the whole item is chalked,
water·ba~ paint is utilized to
it.
· U you're wondering how '')'ou
touch up any mistakes, or to do
any detaU work you might want
can diacover this craft, Amy Hlll,
to add.
Racine, will be glad to assist you.
The completed plaster figure Is
She 1.8 the operator of ..the "Hogg
then sprayed to seal and protect
Hollow Dabble Shop," which
lt. Any finiBh you desire can be
provides all the materials needed
used, from matte, a non-glossy
for the hobby - brushes, chalk,
spray, to super-Bheen, which
water-based paint, and, above
really shirM!s!
all, over 200 different pieces of
The "Dabble Shop''has been in
plaster.
business only for about a month
The plaster ·pieces come in
now, and is located outside of
practicaJiy every shape
Racine. Just drive for about
imaginable, from roaring lions to
mile past Southern High School,
meek zebras and gentle giraffes,
cross a cement bridge, tum left,
from coDed cobras to enormous
and follow the arrows. Amy con·
zodiac wall hangings. And, to top
AMY HIU. shows some of the wide variety of plllster Items available
ducts the business in a gorgeous , to the amateur craftsman .
it off, the cost of plastercraft Is
A.frame, where she resides with
very reasonable compared to
her family.
·other slmllar hobbies.
She plans to set up classes in
The proceas of colonng the
plastercraft soon, and with her
plaster is, according to Amy, an
present shop hours are 1 p.m. to
Amy has a ~egree in art
experience as a teacher at Mason
easy and fun activity. First, the
10 p.m. Monday .through Friday,
Marshall University, and she 1s
item is pain~ with a special . Elementary School, she should be
and 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. on Saturday,
currently working' on her
successful in training others• in
ivory-colored pilint. This allows ·
and she will be mroe than happy
master's degree. It was while at.
the processes involved. Her
the chalk to go on smoothly and
to "show you the ropes."
tending classes there that she
By Jayae Lee Hoeflich
Handicrafts are the current
rage of the nation for spare time
activity, so If you haven~ found
yolll'l! yet, perhaps plastercraft Is
you~ ''thing! " It 's an enjoyable
hobby, and plastercraft Is so simple that anyone of any age can do

a

from

OPEN SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 5 P.M.

. Camp Crescendo, Rio Grande. Here the full Marauder
Golden fu!gime Band is busy during one ,of its field

I

DEMONSTRATES - Amy demonstrates the teclmlques of chalking
a plaster figurine.
·

was introduCed• to a girl in·
terested In plastercraft who, in
tum, got Amy fascinated by it. In
a short time, she became ad·
dieted to the hobQy,

H this brief view of plastercraft
has intrigued you, and you've
been considering taking up a hobby in handicrafts, try It I It mi3ht

just tum out to be your thing.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="819">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11489">
                <text>08. August</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="50936">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="50935">
              <text>August 23, 1979</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1039">
      <name>buchanan</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="99">
      <name>denney</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="165">
      <name>hall</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="605">
      <name>rood</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="222">
      <name>thompson</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
