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                  <text>D-12- Thc SWl\IUI' Tunes-S,•ntinel . Sunday. Aug. 2\i, 1979

BRIDGE

By Th(• Assuriatt-d Press

totals during the first half of next
Here is U1 e " ~ri c ultural advisory
week will push many soils back to
for Ohio as prepared Saturday by
near
saturation .
Haying
Ole Agricultural Weather Center at
opportunities will be poor again for
West Lafayette, Indiana :
Uw coni in ~ week.
,.
Saturday night, scatte red showers
Some summer sun will dry central
will start to spread northward
and northern sections of the state
across centr al sections of the state,
today, but the rapid return of a
and by Sund ay morning, rain is
lingering rainy period wiU prevent
likely. statewide.
most n ~w cuts.
To really put the final blow to our
Scattered showers will remain in
F'riday promise of a few days of dry
the forecast Sunday through
weather. The extended forecast is
Wednesday , so any cuts put on the
now ca llmg for scatterd showers , ground Saturday will fa ce a
daily, Monda y U1 rough Wednesday.
continuing risk of wetting from cut
Eva porative loss rates will
to dry harvest .
average .15 of an inch today central
Sprayin g
and
harvetsing
a nd nor th , but more so uth ern
conditions will be acceptable for a
sections of the state will receive
large part of the state today. Surface
another quart er to a half in ch of
winds . will hold below threshold
rain .
level s for con trolled drift and
Soi I surfaces will dry slightly
uniform appli cation.

........... ~ ..... Gj~i"" ...l
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CEstate
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central and north today. but rain

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! he

si tuat i o~

is_ thi ~. Yo_
ur

~ome

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is for sale. A prospect wants to

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buy 1f.buf sa ys , I l1ke 1t, I like 1t. But I will not have the money tor a
couple of mon t hs . Can I m o ve in unt i l we f inalize the sale?"
One of the bes t ways t o kill a sale is to allow a prospective bu'ier to
move _i~ a _c o_nside rable t ime before se ttl emen t . Often when this oc - •
curs, tt •s drff 1cu! t to get to get him to sett lem ent. He may keep finding •
fh 1n gs w r ong w1th the h_o use . keep insist ing they be fixed, or even
worse demanQ tha t a n ad tus tment be made in price.
•

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Somet in:'es th e r esult is even more disastrous. The seller becomes

e
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d1 sgusted w1th all the all eged com plaints and ca lls the whole sale off
He m ust then sta rt all over again .
· •
~rimy op i ni on, i t is better t o let a house sit empty than to let a pro- •

spec f ive buye r m ove in before closing the sale. Although it is not gOOd
fo_
r a house to be em pty, i t 's sti ll a faster and surer way of selling it
With the least trou ble.
If th ere is anyth ing we Cdrl do to help you in the field of real estate

As yo n can sec , poor

NORTH
+A Q J 7
• J 76
t A K 10
+A K 10

However, expert East had

EAST

• 10 9 3 2

• K864
¥ 5I

• 54 3 2
• 43 2

ca rded all his four spades in

claimed the grand slam.

Vulnerable : Both
Dealer: North
West

North East

Au tomatic. blue, low miles, showroom cond.

'78 GRAN PRIX

2 NT

Pass

4+

Pass

4 NT

Pass

7•

Pass

Pass

Pass

Victor

for dummy
play , bid seven hearts.
There are any number of

ways to play the hand , but
the Hog decided on his own
line . He played two rounds of
trumps

and

cashed

minor suit jacks.

$8990
$4895

$7995
$4195

·,

I

I

I

$5295

,A I

6,900 miles . Sti l l smells new .

'77 BUICK ELECTRA
2 Dr . Hdtp ., loaded wi th power assist s, silver with silver landau top .

$5995
$3995
$3895

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L .J. Burgu ndy wi th mat ching landau top, loaded. N ice, new Gran Pr ix
trade .

1

/-

20%0ff
SUGG RETAIL

~Cross Your Heart" Soft Siders··

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gLiving®bras

A ir , whi te with burgundy I andau top, R: allye wheels.

$6295

'76 BUICK SKYLARK
4 Or ., air cond ., one owner , V -6 eng. Econorny'he,re.

y
Welcome/ ,
Come In and Browse Around

$5495

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~ i can't believe it's a girdle· s1ylesl
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.

ELBERFELDS
IN
POMEROY
~
LINGERIE DEPARTMENT, 2ND ruJOR .
.

5',2;}- **1rtrtrk*

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at y

Vlasova had been " under heavy
escort since the defection of her
husband."
Tass quoted Miss Vlasova as
saying the grounding was
"outrageous ." Earlier , In the
presence of Soviet officials, she had
!Did American negotiators, "I love
my husband, but he made his
decisioo to stay here and I made .
mine to leave."
However, Schell said Miss
Vlasova and Godunov had agreed to
defect together. He said Miss
Vlasova "began to ·Waffle" two days
before Godunov sought asylum .
Schell said he had warned the
State Department on Thursday that
(Continued on page 10)

•

enttne
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

MONDAY, AUGUST 27, 1979

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
proposed state transportation
budget which contains no gasolide
sales tax increase and does not allow
f&lt;r maj&lt;r new construction goes
before the House Finance
Conunlttee Tuesday.
The $1.7billion document includes
1546 million in federal funds that
won~ be spent unless the state can
cane up with its share of highway
funding.

Pomeroy Police have

buslnesl! houses early Sunday morning. Police Chief
Jed Webster said Plcke01 used a heavy log chain attached with wrenches in his alleged window breaking
l!pl"ee! which started at the Excelsior CG. on E. Main
and moved down into the bualnes8 !lection. Some
glasaes cracked and broken were large window fronts

~

~ Support Can Be Beautiful• bras ~

'76 MONTE CARLO

•

failed, but it was restored . A
suggestion that the pa~ngers be
transferred to a secluded airport
lounge was rejected, McHenry said.
Forty-gine Americans and 10
other non-Soviets left the Moscowbound plane early Saturday.
McHenry, who was not permitted
on the aircraft, rejected a Soviet
suggestion that U.S. journalists be
allowed to talk with Miss Vlasova.
McHenry said U.S. officials
wanted Miss Vlasova to get off the
plane and tell them she was leaving
of her own volition, but said there
were "ather alternatives,'' which he
did not specify .
He said one reason the
government ac:U!d was because Misl!

New ·construction projects
not included in proposal

&amp;milled Ronnie M. Plctens,.23, Racine, who allegedly
went on a window breaking ipree at SOD'le 19 Pomeroy

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~and Cotton bras

'76 PONTIAC GRAN PRIX

to hold the plane until U.S. officials
collld talk privately with Miss
Vla!llva.
Henry Owen, U.S. ambaSsador at
large, said President Carter was
being briefed on· the stalemate
"several times a day" during his
weekend at Camp David, Md.
Owen said Carter was making
policy decisions in the negotiations,
but declined to specify 1"hether he
was referring to talks at the airport
and elsewhere in New York.
Meanwhile, the passengers
aboard the Aeroflot jetliner were
probably "quite uncornf!l'table" as
a result of their long confinement,
McHenry said.
At one point, the air cooditioning

And the Soviet news agency Tass
on Sunday published the text of a
telegram from the ballerina's
mother, Alexandra Gerasimova
Drozhdina, asking Carter to end the
"cruel abuse of elementary human
rights ."
"For two days my daughter has
been subjected to cruel moral
tort\ll'e," It said.
The woman charged : "The
American auth&lt;l'ities are setting
absolutely illegal conditions f&lt;~" the
departure of the .aircraft with my
daughter and other Soviet
passengers aboard ."
The Soviet Union has formally
protested to both the · United States
and the United Nations the decision

POMEROY·MIDOLEPORT, OHIO

VOL. XXVIII NO. 94

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LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) -Two
JX'Iaoners died today in a burst of
gunfire at the city jail where
inmates were holding three guards
hostage , officials Said. One of the
guards was wounded slighUy before
the three-4ay siege ended.
Pollee sharpshooters with
automatic weapons entered the
second-floor lockup and began
emptying tbe celli! and taking the
inmates tD a nearby county jail.
Three guns were recovered . .
All three guarda later emerged
from the sec011d-floor lockup. The
wounded guard walked without
assistance and the other two were
unhanned.
Police Lt. J.O. Smith said seven or
eight shots rang out at 5:32 a.m. In
the lockup where 84 inmates had
been holding the three guards
hostage since Saturday morning.

in businesl ~ wtule others were only windows In
doors. The windows were not really broken out by the
chain and wrenches but they .were damaged with
cracks and hole. and will have to be replaced. Olief
Webster said that Pickens Ia on parole from a penal institution. This Ia the front window r:i the Pomeroy
National Bank which had several large holes in It as
weU as being cracked to the top followings window
breaking spree in Pomeroy earl)' Sunday morning.

Seven people injured
in three accidents

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But Soviet officials said Miss
Vlasova, 36, wanted to return to her
homeland and was afraid to leave
the plane to · meet privately with
American auth!l'lties f!l' fear that
they would spirit her away.
Chief U.S. negotiator Donald
McHenry,
deputy
U.S.
representative ID the United Nations
Security Council, told repo~rs late
Sunday that the crisis would soon be
over. However, McHenry did not
disclose the basis for his optlmiBm.
Meanwhile, Orville Schell,
Godunov's lawyer, said he and
Godunov were certain Miss Vlasova
wanted to remain in · the United
states. The dancer was standing by
near the airport, the attorney said.

e

VANDAL CHARGED -

Aug . 26

LJ P. EE

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$3995

Black , AM FM·Tape, new Pre m bi ll board t ir es, one loca l owner . 79
Trans Am t r ade.

i

NEW YORK (AP) -The mother
of ballerina Ludmilla Vlasova
appealed to President Carter to end
the "cruel moral torture" as her
daughter and 52 other Soviet citiZens
remained aboard an Aeroflot
jetliner grounded at Kennedy
International Airport since Friday.
Carter was "cl011ely involved," a
state Department official said, l!S
negotiations dragged Into another
day over the fate of the wife of
Bolshoi Ballet star Alexander
Godunov, who defecied last week .
American
officials
want
assurllnces that MlM Vlasova, also a
member of the internationally
renowned troupe, was returning to
the Soviet Union voluntarily.

month period beginning Oct. 1.
Despite
the
efforts
of
Transportation Director David Weir
and lobbying by supporters, Gov,
James A. Rhodes did not endorse the
tax increase.
Without the governor's backing,
the proposal drew less-thanenthusiastic reviews from · an
already tax-ehy Legislature. It will
be dropped from House Bill 656
before the House Finance .
Committee
reviews
the
transportation budget.
The federal fiDlda included In the
budget are expected ti) be replaced
by a provision saying the money can
be spent if additional state funda are
available.
The transportation department,
whose budget is traditionally
separated from the state's overall.
He said some of the inmates spending document, has been
apparently turned against the operating on a three'-rnonth budget
ringleaders of the siege and began included in an Interim spendlng bill
firing . "The prisoners themselves passed on June 30.
have revolted against the leadership
There's some agitation within the
of their spokesmen," Smith said;
Legislature to put the transportation
The dead prisoners were Identified department on a fiscal year
as FeUx Lorenzo and Eugene Shaw. beginning Oct. I, three months alter
L«enzo, Serving a !&amp;I}.year term for the financial year starts for other
a previous crime Involving hostages, state departments.
had been seen earlier wearing a
Supporters of the plan say the
guard unlftrn1.
change would give legislators more
Guard William Nellon, 52, was time to W()l'k on the transportation
grazed in the hand and leg. He was budget. But department officlals
taken from the jail by ambulance. claim the switch would Cl!USe
The other guards were identified as ll'Oblems In scheduling contruction
Dave Murray, 35, and Bob Hansen, starts ihat have to be moved from
52.
one year tAl tbe next.
The shooting ended the siege that
House Finance Commitee
began when an unknown number of Chairman Myrl Shoemaker, Dinmates overpowered a guard, took Bourneville, said he expects the
his gun and used it to take the other transportation budget to be ready
two guards hostage In the lockup. for floor action shortly after the
Starpshooters were stationed on Legislature resumes regular
the roof of the three-story pollee sessions oo Sept. 11.
building, situated about 4 miles from
Shoemaker also said he ell)lects to
the Strip casinos.
receive a proposed capital·
Earlier In the day pollee had improvements budget from the
agreed to a list of 18 demands issued Rhodes administration early In
by the inmates dealing with jail
September. He also plans to move
conditions and prisoners' rights, but that document quickly to the floor.
the prisoners refused to release their
hostages.
Sffilth said "they didn't like all of
them (the pollee responses) ."
The points that were . denied
Included demands for better
representation by public defenders,
improved facilities for Sunda¥
religious services and radios In
every ceU.
.
A local att~r~~ey and a television
newsman had served as mediators
during negotiations with the
NEWMATAMORAS,Ohio (AP)inmates.
Sffilth said the first two demflnds Teachers In the Frontier Local
could not be met because they were School District In Washington
outside pollee juri8dlction, and the County walked off their jobs thla
thlrd'was Impossible because not an morning, refusing to wcrk any
longer without a contract.
jail cells had electrtcal outlets.
Classes are not scheduled to begin
The prisoners had demanded
better medical care, access to court until Wednesday, but teachers were
recorda and an exercise area. They to have been at wcrk · today to
also complained about cold food and prepare for the opening of scbool.
lukewarm showers, and sought
The teachers' contract expired
better laundry service, complaining last January. The action today
poorly-done laundry "makes us look follows intense negotiations during
even worse when we go to court and which the Frontier Local Educaticin
Association said the school board
confront the judge."
offered little In tenns of salary
improvement or Improvements in
non-economic issues.
·
Association President Kevin
Official resigns post
Whitby said last minute efforts to
McARTHUR, Ohio (AP) -Vinton arrange a meeting between the
county's director of elections has board and the teachers failed
resigned because the county board because not all board members were
r:i elections would not adopt a punch- avfl,ilable Sunday. Whitby said
another meeting is set for thla
card system of voting.
George Booth, who served In the afternoon.
Superintendent Charles Brown
pOst for 'll years, wanted the county
to do away with paper ballots, which had no comment.
are still in use In only 12 r:i Ohio's 88
COWltieii.
SQUAD RUN
The paper ballots take longer to
The Pomeroy Emergency SqUid
tally than do machine-counted was called to the Pine Grove Road
ballots. Booth wanted the county to Sunday fer Hugo Kaptelna who was
make the switch before next year's taken · to Veterans Memorial
presidential primary.
.
Hospital.

"Nobody wants to get in the
middle of a tax Increase at the
beginning of a recession," ooe Ohio
Department of ,Transportation
official said in explaining the
unpopularity of a proposed 4 percent
sales tax boost on the wholesale
price of gasoline .
The tax would have raised an
estimated $244.1 million f&lt;r state
and local governments for the 21-

Two prisoners
die in battle

~~*******PLAYTE~ *******~~

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. IMPALA SEDAN

Seeking entertairunent? Or information' Then look no further
than the Pomeroy and Middleport
Libraries! A veritable treasuretrove of data and enjoyment is
stored on the shelves of the libraries,
and iJ is all available at no charge.
The Bookmobile also offers excellent ·servic-e to those of you in
other vicilJities.

Aug . 19, 24 .

Ballerina's mother seeking Carter's help

make available S329,000 In
uncompensated services
during the fiscal year
which begins on July 1, 1979
and ends on June 30, 1980.
Uncompensat~
servicn
w ill be- available upon
request to c:lig lble pers.ons
on a first -come first-serve
basis until the annual com ·
pl iance level Of 1329.000 Is
satisfied . Eligible persons
are those who are In neec2 Of
care and whose family in ·
come does not exc~ the
current poverty income
guidel ines .. tabllshed by
the Community Services
Administration. Income is
defi ned In accordance wifh
the Community Sendces
Administration gu idelines
definitions. This notice i s
published pursuant to
federal law set forth at •2
CFR 124.SOS Notice of
Ava i lab ili ty
of
Un compensated Sen• ices.

Jim and Susie Soulsby are anXiously awaiting the arrival of the
$5000 they won ln. the Ohio State Lottery. It should be about a month
before they process is complete. According to Susie, they have the
money spent about ten times, but
then again, who wouldnt have!! !

LEGAL NOTICE
TO BIDDERS
Notice · is hereby given
that sealed bids will be
received by the City
Manager of the City of
Gallipolis, Oh io at his Office
in the Mun icipal Building
tor approximately JOO ·tons
(more or less) of snow and
ice salt, approximately 5
tons (more or less} of
calcium chlor ide, and ap ·
prox imately 75 toms (more
or less) of cold mix for use
by the City Street Depart ment .
Bids will be received at
the above named Office un ·
til 12 :00 Noon, on Friday ,
August
31 , 1979 and
publicly opened and read at
that ti me and place . Bid
forms may be obtained in
the Office of the City
Manager .

queen-jack of spades. The
Hog held one spade and the

'78 CHEV. MAILBU 4. DR

'77 TRANS AM

(Do yo u have a qu estion fo r
th e expe rts? Write ·· Ask th e
Experts ." care. ol thts news·
paper. Individ ua l questions
will be answered If accompanied by s iJmp ed, self-addressed envelopes. Th e
mos t in tere s ting qvestions
wifl be used tn th is colu mn
and w1fl receive copies of
JACO BY MODERN .)

points

10,813 miles . Nice.

E CHARGER SE

1N EWSPA P F. H F.NTEHPHI SE ASSN .)

trump showed three aces
and the Hog, adding at least

'78 CHEV. NOVA

Regency, loaded with ext r as, silver , one local owner .

have opened one notrump .
Now your best r ebid i s an
underbid of two hea rts.

points for his dummy play .
His {our-club bid w as
Gerber, North's four no-

'78 CHEV. CAPRICE 2 HDTP

'77 OLDS 98 SEDAN

rebid. With a balance d 16
high ca rds points you should

Mollo's Hideous

Cl assic , cruise, AM ·FM. Rallye wheels, 22. 127 miles. Sharp.

3

• J 873
Partner · re spo nd s one
hea rt to your on e-diamond
opening . A California reader
wants · to know the correct
rebid . -There is no corr ect

Hog uses a special point
count in which he adds three

three

8-25-B

+ A5
¥A J 3
+ K QJ 2

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

Air , AM FM , 10,240 miles, new Bonnevill e trade,lik.e new.

Pon1iac trade .

You hold :

Opening lead: • 3

$5995 $5495

Tudor , 6 cy l., aut omatic,

Ask liM IXDIPtl

South

Dummy retained tht:: ace-

'79 CHEVELLE TUDOR

very bad player, had come
to the Hog's rescue. He dis-

an effort to give his partner
a count. So the Hog simply

•

Ai r , cru sie, ca st alum . wheels, custom in1erior , low mileages .

been fooled and gone down if
it had not been that West, a

• J 76
• J 76

rest of the trumps to come
down to a three-card ending.

'79 TRANS AM

ent pain .
Even the Hog ·would have

¥AKQII98

kings. Then he ran off the

~

discarded his three sma ll
spades as quickly as poss ible and without any appar-

• Q98
• Q98 5
SOUTH
• 5,

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king of spades in order t o
retain both t.he dia mond and
club queens.

WEST

• 32

East

had bee n forced to blank his

8-25-A

m

Incidentally, library hoW'S are
By Jayne Lee Hoe!Ueb
10:30
a. m. to 8 p. m. on Mon-.
Quite an unusual house in quite an
day;
10:30
a. m. to 5 p. m. Tuesday
unusual location!
through
Saturay,
and 2 to 4:30p. m.
· I'm speaking of the home of Dele
Sunday.
However,
the ho\11'8 will
and Ainy Hill, located in a very
change
Sept.
4
to
10
:30
a. m. t~ 8 p.
rustic (to say the least) location outm
side. of Racine. The house is an Aframe, which. was designed by the Mondays through Fridays, 10:30 a.
Hills themselves after they weren't m. to 5 p. m. Saturdays, and 2 to 4:30
satisfied with standard A-frame p. m. Sundays. Please, take advantage of this marvelous service! ]
plans.
The hideaway home has some
Where has the summer gone?
very WJusual features, including a
Area
students will be seeing their
Jacuzzi, which is a whirlpool-type
vacatiQO
come to a screaminl! halt
sunken bathtub ; a living room with
when
school
starts Tuesday in the
Ole ceiling the full height of the
Eastern
Local
School District, and
house, open staircases which lead to
Sept.
5
in
the
Meigs
and Southern
upper floors with each overlooking
districts.
"It's
been
a
short
summer,
Ole floor below (there are three in
Chllrlie
Brown!
"
all) and a chlnmey extending from
Ole basement through all three other
stories, over 42 feet high and 10 feet
wide. Additionally, the hoUBe'is very
tastefully decorated, and each
room's decor is related to the rest of
Remeber
the house.
SUNDAY
And the Hilli! had never even set
GENE WEST, Falnnont, W. Va.,
foot in an A-frame before they drew
will be the viSiting evangelist In a
their own plans I
series of gospel meetings to begin at
the Chapel Hlll Church of Christ SunDon't forget Marilyn Turner's conday,
Aug . 26 and continuing through
cert this afternoon.
Thursday,
Aug. 30. The sehedllle of
She will present some lovely light
services
will
remain the same on
melodies in her deep contralto voice
Sunday:
Bible
Study, 9:30 a.m.;
that I'm sure you would enjoy.
Morning
Worship,
10:30 a.m.; SwtThe prsentation will be this afterday
evening
worship,
6. Service. lrill
noon at 3, at the Meigs Junior High
be
each
evening
at
7:30, Monday
School In Middleport·. A freewill of.
through
Thursday'
fering will be taken to help cover expenses.
NOTICE OF
Mter the concert, the personable
AVAILABILITY
·Miss Turner will be mingling with
OF UNCOMPENSATED
SERVICES
the audience in an lnfonnal gatherAugust 26, 1979
ing. Do try to attend . It 11 be well
Holzer Medical Center,
located at 38S Jack$0n
worth your while.
Pike, Gal lipolis, Ohio, will

Defense blunder cues game

dummy's minor suit ace-

•

I

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

•

pl ease phone or drop in at LEADINGHAM R: EAL ESTATE, 512 Second ·
~ ve ., Gallipoli s. Phone 446 -7699, We ' re here to help,
e

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MOVE IN BEFORE SffilEMENT?

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Realtor

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Willis T. Leadingham

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Today
'

·: ;;::::!R
t&lt;ro
:rru
: :;: : :n
r:::d
:::::::rt:r/;e:: : : : : R.i~:' ';.'::r:tt: ::::::::/1/ijf

----- - - - --.,.-- -·

Statewide rain expected Sunday

Execution
scheduled
CARSON CITY, Nev. (AP ) Jesse Bishop wu scheduled to
die in the gas chamber today, but
public defenders are staWng to
give the confessed murderer
more time to live.
Bishop had opposed appeals
and other legal delays, calling ·
them a "farce" that violated his
rights and "prolonged the suffertng" for him and hla family.
But u.s. Supreme Court
· Justice William Rehnqulst on
Saturday iaaued an indefinite
ally of execution, and provided a
aerie~ ol questl011.1 to be . answered by the attorney general's
office and the public defenders
who asked that the execution be
stopped.

Rehnqulst . set a deadline of
midnight Tuesday. The defenders
were expected to wait unW after
the current death warrant for
Bishop expired at midnight
tonight.

Sniper examined
HONOLULU (AP) - A mental
hospital outpatient held as a
suspect In a l!niper shooting that
lett six people wounded was
eiBIOJned a day earlier by
specialists who found "nothing
unusual" In his behavior, offlclala say.
·
Robert Ernest Mlller, 35, was
booked for investigation of attempted murder Saturday nigh~
lJl minutes after il sniper opened
fire on a crowd of people along
Walklkl's main thoroughfare,
pollee said. A .22 caliber rifle was
recovered llbortly afterwards
from a secon&lt;l-elory construction
(Continued on page 10)

Seven persons wre Injured in three
accidents investigated by the GaiiiaMelgs Post State Highway Patrol
over the weekend.
At 1 p.m. Sunday, Ernie K. Davis,
22, Langsville, was driving east on
SR 124 In Meigs CoWJty when a car
driven by Mary J . Bums, 16, Radcliffe, came left of center striking
Davis ' car head-&lt;Jn.

Ohio records seven
traffic fatalities
By The Associated Press
At least seven people were killed
in accidents on Ohio roads this
weekend, according to the Highway
Pairol.
Only two of the victims were
drivers. Three were paSsengers and
two were pedestrians, Including a II).
year -&lt;lid Morrow boy hit by a car in
Warren CoWJty Sunday .
The patrol counts traffic deaths
from 6 ,p.m. Friday to midnight
Swtday.
.
The dead :
SUNDAY
MORROW - David A. Odorn, 10,
of Morrow, struck by a car on a
Warren County road.
DELAWARE ...:william P. Seils,
2i; of Bucyrus, in a one-car accident
oo U.S. 23 In Delaware County.
SAINT MARYS - Mlletus H.
Miesse, 76, of Celina, a passenger, in
a two-car.accident on a Saint Marys
city street.
SATURDAY
DAYTON - Dawn F. Pugh, 30, of
Daytnn, a pedestrian struck by a
ftelght train at a Dayton railroad
crossing.
JACKSON-Marlin K. McGowan,
30, of Jackson, a passenger, in a onecar accident on Ohio 139 In Jackson
County.
PORTSMOUTH - Willlam C.
Brodt, 54, of Blue Creek, in a two-car
accident on U.S. 52 in Scioto County.
CAMBRDIGE - Ronald J . Iiay,
16, of ·Senecaville, a pas.enger, in a·
ooHar accident Qn Ohio 761 il•
Guernsey Count,y.

Both Davis and Bums and a
passenger In Bums' car, Pam J.
Bums, 15, WUkesville, were injured
In the mWtap.
Pam Burns was treated and
released from Holzer Medical Center while Davis and Mary Bums
were admitted. Mary Sums was
cited for left of center.
Earlier Sunday, at lO :.S a.m.,
Gwenda Christian, 20, Oak ijili, was
driving east on U.S. 35 near Rio
Grande when sl)e attempted to pass
a vehicle traveling ahead of her. She
lost control and collided head-on
with a car driven by James W.
Doughty, 32, Columbus.
Both drivers and a passenger in
Doughty's car, Betty Lott, 49,
Columbus, were Injured and taken to
Holzer Medical Center, where
Christian and Doughty were ad·
mltted. Lott was transferred to
University Hospital.
Allen Oiler, 31, Gallipolis,' was in·
jured In a one-car accident at 2 a.m.
Sunday when he was traveling south
on SR 7 below the Meigs CoWJty line,
lost control of·hla car and went Into a
ditch. He was taken to · Holzer
Medical Center and admitted.

HIGHWAYS CLOSED
.. Due to beavy raiD fall over !be

weekend, two blgbways were cloeed
Moact.y momlng.
.. The Oblo Department of Highways
in Meigs County reported Route W
cloaed al Lanpvllle aad Route 881 at
Saowvme. 11le routes ""re expected
to be reopened soon as lbe
backwaters re&lt;!eded.
.. The Meigs County Department of
Hlgbways reported no roads closed
due to tbe water.

Stolen car
recovered

Meigs County Sheriff James J .
Proffitt reports a 1974 Che\orolet
·Vega reported stolen Saturday
morning from Roger Little Used
Cars at Pomeroy has been
recovered.
The vehicle was
discovered Sunday afternoon sitting
along
County
Road
40
approximately one-tenth of a mile
Mostly cloudy wlih a chance of off U.S Route 33, near Burliogbam.
showers or thunderstonns tonight · The Pomeroy Police dusted the
·
and Tuesday. U:lw tonight In the mid vehicle f&lt;l' fingerprints .
The sheriff also reports Olarles
60s. High Tuesday in the low to mid
McLain, GaWpolls, was driving
Ills. Chance of rain Is 40 percent
north on state Route 7 near
tonight and Tuesday.
Bradbury,Saturday afternoon and
struck and killed a deer that ran into
EXTENDED FORECAST
his path. There was slight damage
Wedne1day lhrougb Friday: ID his vellicle. ·
Chance of abowen or tlnanderatorma
Sunday, Olarles Hysell, Meigs
eacb day, Higba In the 80s and lows County Dog Warden, reported tha
In the lOB.
someone had apparently backed a
vehicle into the fence at the county
dog pound. A metal post was bent,
The vehicle and driver are unknown.
ASSlST GlVEN
Debbie King, Route 2, Racine,
The Middleport Fire Department
reported to the sheriff that
answered a call at 2;·15 p.m. Sunday
to assist lbe Lakin Fire Department sometime after II p.m. Saturday
night, someone punctured the tired
in extinguishing a fire at Ul~ Lakin
on her vehicle. The incident is under
State Hospital.
investigation.

Weather

'•'

Frontier
teachers
striking

t

�3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport Pomeroy 0 Monday, Aug 27,1979

~

2- The Dally Sent mel MtdcUeport Pomeroy 0 Monda) Aug 27 1979
wr 1 ng and ncorporated
nto a consent a gr~efTlent to
be s gned by the part E&gt;S
wh ch agreement is for
AN ORDINANCE TO potent al prox m ty of real
appl cat on
PROIIIDE FOR EQUAL property owned used or
(Cl The total number of conc11 at1on purposes only
H o us 1 N G
o p
occup ed by any person of
un Is n each building and does not const tute an
PORT UNITY IN THE
any part (:u lar race color
wh ch were rented durlng adm ss on by any party
CITY OF POMEROY
creed
re 9 ous be e l
the per ad and the number that the law has been
Consent
OH tO
nat onal or g nor hand cap of such un ts wh ch were v a lat ed
Whereas the populat on
by d rect or
nd rect
r ented to ) one or more agree ments shal be s 1gned
on beha If of the Board by
of the c ty of Pomeroy
methOds
8 ack persons and to { l
15 cha rman
ono nc tudespeopleotdf
(2 ) To make any
one or more Spantsh
(d) The Board 1S
ferent races reeds sexes
represent at ve
to a sur.nam.ed persons
For
rei g ous
bel efs and prospect ve purchaser or
purpose'.5 hereof a un t s author zed to seek the
nat anal or gfns and
lessee that any hous ng n a
rented dur ng the per od f cooper at on and ad of the
Whereas the C ty Coun
o~rt r lt:tr block
ne Qh
dur nQ the per od f become Oh1o Real Estate Board or
c 1 of the C ty of Pomeroy Qorhood or area may un
occup ed by a new tenant Oh o C vll R ghts Com
n any
n
bel eves n pr nc1pl ~ of dergo s undergo ng or has who had not prev ously m ss on
vest gat on under th s or
equal r ghts and pr v eges undergone a change w th
res ded n the bu ldmg
d nance
for all c t zens and
res~ct to rae al color
(0) Report form s ap
(e)
If the executive
Whereas
the Un ted
rei 9 ous nat onalty or
pied by the Board shall n secre
ry determ nes that
ethn c compost on of such
elude a request for volun the taco
States Congress had adop
mp t a nt la cks
ted as me nat ana pol cy to block
ne ghborhood or
tary
nformat on con
sonable grounds upon
prov de
w th n con
a rea
rn ng m nor ty em rea
wh ch to base a v olat on of
st tut onal 1 m tat ons tor
( 3 ) To nduce or attempt
ce
fa r hous ng throughqut our to nduce the sale or I st ng
ployment pract ces of the th s ordinance he shall so
for sa e of any hous ng by
owner or agent s gn ng the mform the Board and the
country
Now Therefore Be I or
repre se nt ng that the
report and concern ng ad Board m ay 10 ts d scret on
vert s ng by the owner or d1sm ss s uc h comp amt or
da ned b~ the Counc of! he presence for a nti Cofpated
agent
n med a d reeled
s uch further
n
C ty of omerov Sta te of prcosence 0 persons
any
pr mar ly to m nor ty per order
vest ga t on as ma y be
Oh o
part cular ra ce
co lor
necessa r y prov ded th at
Sect on l Oeslnnat on of re g ous prese nce of per
sonss I 0 n 6 F
H
ng the
Board shall not d1sm ss
Poltcv That t ~s hereb y
sons ot an~ part c ular race
Boae;=d
air 005
such camp ia nt w1thout f r
des,~ nated to be the con
color re 9 ous bel ef or
(a) There s hereby st
a ffording the com
t nu ng pqllcy of the C ty of nat anal or g n n the area
created the Fa r Hous ng pie nant
an opportun ty to
Pomeroy to do all th ng s w 11 or may result 10
Boa rd to cons st of th ree appear before.the ,Board
necessary and proper to
a
The lower ng of
(3)
members who are
(f ) If the execut1ve
secure for all fs c t zens property va ues
f th
the r r ght to equa hous ng
b A change n the rae al
qual fed e lectors o
e secretar y w th respect to a
wh ch nvo ves a
opportun t es regardless of color rei g ous nat ana ty
~ut6 1 acnd
~~ot ~~~ d ~~~ vmatter
olaf on of thts ordinance
the r race color creed
or ethn c compos It on at the
mun cpa county sta te or fa1ls
to cone I ated com
sex
mar ta
s tatu s
bock
ne ghbor hood or
1
1
p a tnt after the part1es
rei Q ous bel ef nat ana l area n wh ch the property
~~,~a 1a 1e;:;,ee~be
~ n 'bt
have n good fa1th at
or g n age or hand cap
s oc.ated
B d A d 1
1 d te
mpted such cone hat on
Sect on 2 Oef n tions
c
An
nc r ease
n
oar
ny u Y appom e
falls
to effect an mformai
That as used In th s or
cr m nal or ant soc a l
Board member who s run
hat on agree or a for
beha v or n the a rea
~hna~ I fo~eanya~t~~~it ~! ~i~ cone
d nance th e follow ng ter
mal consent agreement or
ms s hal l ha ve fhese
d A dec ne n qua l ty of
d squa l fed from further de
1nes that a com
mPitn nos
the schools se rv ng t he
membersh p on the Board piaterm
nt s not suscept ble of
I 1I Rea l Estate Agent area
The day the Boa rd member concll at1on h~ shal not fy
(f) For any r e rson or
f es pe:t tons w th the the Board 1mmed1ately and
Real Estate Agent nc ludes
any real esta te broker real
rea estate age n to cause
county Board of E lect ons the Board sha ll thereafter
s hal l be the date of the schedule
estate sa les man or an or coerce or a ttempt to
publ c hearing
agent thereat or a ny other cause or coerce ret a I at on
dlsqual t ca t on No Board to determa ne
a
person
pa r t n ersh P
aga nst any person because
me m ber sha 1be appo nted v olat1on of th swhether
ord1nance
assoctat on or corporat on such person has lawf u ly
who s employed n any has been committed The
who for cons derat iOn sell s
opposed any a ct or fa lure
rea l estate or le nd ng r
Board shall serve upon the
pu rch ases exchanges ren
to act that Is a v o at on of
st tut iOn
respondent a statement of
ts negot ates offe rs or at
th s ordna nce or has n
(b) The Board members charges and a summons
te mpts to negot ate the good fa th f le d a com
h II be
t
d
b
th
shal serve upon all n
sale purc hase excha nge pia nt
res t f ed
par
~;yor o?ftfe0 ~e'inbe~sf re and
teres ted partes a not1ce of
or rental of realfroperty or tic paled or ass s ted n any
s t ap po nted one s ha I now the t1me and place of
ho lds h mse l
out as way n any proceed ng un
off ce for a term of one hea r ng The respondent or
engaged n the bus ness of der th s ordnance
year one for a term of two h s author zed counsel may
sel t ng
purchas ng ex
(g ) To deny any person
years and the other for a
le such statements w th
chang.ng rent ng or other
access to or membersh par
term of th ree yea rs and fthe
Board pr or to the
w se tra nsferr ng any n
part c pat on
n
any
!h
h II b
terest n rea proper Y
mult pi e I sf ng serv ce
e r successors s a
e hear ng date as 1t deems
1n support of ts
( b ) Board Board means
real e state
broKers
~~fe~~~e~rs for terms of necessary
pas lion ·T he hearmg shal
the Far Hous n~ Boa rd organ zat on or other sr
The Mayor sha ll f II a I be opened to the public ex
11 ce
crea ted by th s ord nance
organ 2 at on or
11 aca nc es by appo ntment cept that the respondent
(c)
D1scnm•nat on
fac fy re lat ng to the
tor the unexp red term A may request n wntmg a
0 s c r 1m 1nat 1n g
or bus ness of se 1 ng or re n
Board mem ber whose te rm pr vate hear ng t he deter
Oiscrimmate The te rms t n 9
h0 us ng
or
has exp red s ha 11 be m nat1on of such request
d scr m nat on d scr m n
d scr rn nate aga nsf a per
e 191ble for re appo ntment shall be d scret10nary w th
at ng or d scr m nate mean son n the ter m s or con
to the Boa rd
the Board The hear ng
to render a ny d fference n d to ns of such access
( c} Th e exec ut lie sha
ll be he ld not less than
treatment to any person n membersh P
or
par
sec re ar y of the Board fifteen days after serv ce of
the sa le lease rent a or t c pat on
h 11 b
t d b th
statement of charges
f nanc ng of a dwe ll ng or
&lt;hl To do a ny ot her th n~
~;yor i na,J'f~a~l te aX eme athe
nd summons The sum
hous n~ un t beca use of a or engage n conduct wh c
ployee of the c ty of mons so ssued must be
persons race color creed
wou ld otherw se make
Pomeroy
gned by two members of
sex
mar fa I s ta t u s
unava lab le equa l hous ng
(d) The Mayor may sthe
Board and the ssuance
rei n ous bel ef nat anal opportun t es
d th
1 f
Sect on 4 Poshng of
recom men
e remova o of such summons shall
or g"fn age or hand cap
re the attendance of
not1ces
r~,v r:;::e~e{ ~ff th3u~Oa6~ requ
(d) HOUSing HOUS ng n
named persons and the
e ludes
any
bu ld ng
(a) Ever y rea l estate
ma feasanc e n off ce tothe produ ct on of re levant
tac 11 ty or s tru cture or par
agent shal post n con
c ty counc
The c ty doc ume nts and records
ton thereof wh ch s used
sp cuous oca t on n that
cou nc 1 may remove a The fa lu re to compl y w th
or occup ed or s ntended
port on of h s place of
member of the Board from a summons shall canst tute
bus ness norma lly used by
off ce by the vo te of two a v olaf on of th s or
arr anged or des gned to be
used or occup ed as the
h m for negot at ng the ter
th rds (2 3) of the counc 1 d nance
home
res den ce or
ms of a sa e or ease of
only after ha v ng f rst
nterested partes
sleep ng place of one or
hous ng a nd eac h person
9 11 en to s uch member a maThe
y at the r opt on ap
who operates a mult un t
copy of the cha rges aga nst
more pe rsons grou ps or
fam 1 es a nd any va ca nt
res de nt a bu ild ng con
h m a nd an opportun ty to pear be for e the Board 1n
la nd offered for sa e or
ta n ng more tha n two un ts
b publ c y heard n person person or by duly
sha I post at a l t mes when
lease fo r the cons ru ct on
ore by counsel n h s own author zed represent at ve
or local on thereon of such
prospec 1ve tena nts are
defe nse
and any suc h and may have the ass stan
c;e of an attornef The par
bu ld ng fac l ty or st ruc
be ng nterv ewed n a con
removal shal be flna
ture
sp cuous ocat on n tha t
(e) Two mem bers of the t es may presen test mony
(e) Lendmg lnstttuhon
port 1on of h s hous ng
Board s hall const tute a and ev dence and the r ght
Lend ng nst tut on means
bus ness norm a l Y used by
quorum for the purpose of to cross exam new tnesses
any bank nsurance com
h m for negot a t nj;l the ren
conduct ng the bus ness s hall be preserved A ll
tal of a hous ng un t
thereof A vacancy on the test1mony and ev1dence
pany sav ngs a nd loan
assoc at on or an y ot her
thereon a not ce prepared
Board s ha ll not mpa r he s hal l be g ven under oath or
T he
person or orga n zat on
by the Board wh ch con
r gh t of the other members by aff r matlon
regu arl y engaged n the
ta ns
th e
fo low ng
to exerc sea 1 the power of Execut ve Secreta ry sha ll
keep a full record of the
bus ness of lending money
language pr nted n blacK
the Board
or guarantee ng loans
on
a ligh t co lored
(f) Each member of the heanng wh ic h record shall
( f)
P erson
Pe rso n
backg round
n not less
Board shal se rve w thou r be publtc and open to n
means one or more n
than fourt een po nt type
sa lary but shal be pad spect on by any person
and upon request by any
d 11 dua s cor pora t1 ons
It sa v ola t on of the Fa r
necessary and ac tual e&gt;&lt;
pr nc pal party to the
pa rtners h ps assoc at ons
Hous ng Law of the C ty of
penses expended 10 per
labor organ za1 ons legal
Pome roy State of Oh o for
form ng the bus ness of the proceeding lhe Boa rd shall
tu rn sh such party a copy
repres entat ves
mutual
any rea l es ta te a gent or
Board
o nt s tock
tor any person own ng or
(g) The Boa rd s c ha rged of the heanng record f
com panes
com pan es trusts un n
manag ng a mu lt un t
w th the fol ow ng dut es to any at such cost as the
apa rtment dwe ll ng to
mplement the stated Board dee ms appropnate
corpora ted organ zat ons
(g) If at the concl uSion of
trus t ees
tru s t ees
n
1 Deny hous ng to any
pol ceofth 1sord na nce
bankruptcy rece vers and
person because of ace
(1) To
nvest ga te a l the hear ng the Board shall
f due ar es
color creed sex mar ta
1 t 5 0f
1 f 1 determ ne upon the prepon
Unlawful
status
rei g ous be ef
camp
an pract cesun wh
aw ch
u
de rance of the evtdence
Sec t on 3
hous ng
that the person complamed
Mousmg Pract1ces t s ha I
na t a na or g n age or han
are f led w th t
a9a nst has v alated th s or
be an unlawf ul hous ng
d cap
(2} To n t ate com pia nts
d nance the Board shall
pract ce and a v olaf on of
2 0 scr m nate aga nst
of un lawful hous ng prac
th s ord nance
any perso n beca use of fha
t ces on the bass of after consu1tat1on w1th the
( 1l For any person or
persons ra ce co lor creed
aud t ng or test ng carr ed Law D rector n e)(etut ve
session state ts f ndmgs to
real estate agent
sex mar ta l status age
out by ts sta ff or volun
&lt;I )
To d scr m nate
rei Q ous be ef nat ona
teers author zed by the and cause the Law D1rector
to pre pare and ssue an or
aga ns t any person n the
or g n or hand ca p w th
Boa rd
der under Board d~re ct ve
se ll ng
leas ng
respect to the terms con
( 3 ) To endeavor by con
rent ng
d tens or pr v leges of
c 1 at on to reso ve such requ1nng the person com
s ub eas ng
plamed aga nst to cease
ass gn ng or otherw se
hou~ ng
acco mm odat ons
com pla nts
a nd des st from s uch
transferr ng of any nteres
or n the furn sh ng of
( 4 ) To ho ld hear ngs sub
fa c t es or se r v ces n co n
poena w tnesses compel unlawful conduct and to
n a hous ng un t
take such aff1rmat1ve ac
(2)
To d scr m nate
nect on therew th
the r attendance
ad
IF YOU BELIEVE YOU
m n ster oaths take the t on as wt I effectuate the
aga ns t any person by
purposes of th1s ord inance
re f us ng to negot at e
H AVE
BEEN
t t
1
maki ng fal se represen
DI SCR MIN ATED AGA I
es oath
monyo
personun
w th not ce that f the
der
andany
10 connect on
tat ons on the ava lab tv NST CONTACT THE C TY
therew th to requ re the Boa r d de term nes that the
ofthehousng unt orw •
OF POMEROY
FAIR
d to to
mn t on person campi a ned agamst
HOUS ING BOARD THE
pro uc n r exa
a
draw ng fr om the market a
has not after f fteen (15 )
hous ng un t wh1 ch 1s fo r
OH 0 c V IL R GHT S of any booKs or Ftapers calendar days follow ng
sa e lease s ublease or
COMM ISS ON OR THE u
rel a t ng to any mater un
serv ce of 1he Board s or
renta
DEPARTMENT OF
der nvest gat on or n der campi ed w th the or
5
(3) To nclude n the ler
HOU SIN G AND URBA N quest on belore the Board
der the Board w II recer
ms
co nd t o n s
or
DEVELOPMENT
(51 To re nder a t least on
ce a yea r to the Mayor and t ly the matter to the Law
r 11 leges of any sale
Sec t on 5 Reports to be
to the c ty Counc a fu 1 D rector for enforcement
(h) Upon recert I cat10n
e ase
su bl ease
rental
F ed
tt
1
ass gnme nt or other tran
(a) On or before J anuary
f~ t~[epo;~gf a re~so~ to the La1.11 D.rector for en
st er of any hous ng any
1 1980 every owner of
menda t ons
forc~ m~nt h~ shall seek
com pliance by appropr ate
clause cond ton or restr c
twen ty f ve (25) or more
(6) To recomme nd to the
c
VII acflon brought 1n the
ton d scr m na t ng aga nsf
renta l ho us ng
un ts
Mayor when t deems
ocated n one or more
necessary educa t ona and name of the Fa.r Housmg
any person n the use or oc
bu ld ngs n the C tv of
Other programs des gned Board of the C1ty of
cupancv of such ho us ng
to promote the purposes Pomeroy Oh10 before a
Pomeroy sha I f e w Th the
court
of c ompet en t
Fa r Hous ng Board a wr I
s ta ted n the ord nance
( 4) To d scr m na te n the
1unsd1 Ct on In any s uch
turn sh n9 of any fac11 t es
:~~m~f~~tserrt~~t~
n~
t~e
(7
To adopt rules and proceed 1ng where the
repa rs mprove ments or
followm g paragraphs for
grofseg~~~~!~r the conduct cour t detemlnes thai there
serv ces or n th e terms
has been a v olatlon of th1s
the three month per ad
(8) To do such other ac ts
cond T ons pr v leges C"'
beg nn ng w th October I
th t
d ordmance the court sha I
tenure of occu pancy of any
1980 and fo r eac h three (3)
a
a
re
necessary
an
co mpensatory
person
proper to pe fo rm those award
month Per Od t hereafter
(b ) For any lend ng n
du f1 es w th which t s damages and where ap
pun t v e
charged un der the terms of pr o pr ate
st tut on to d scr m nate n every suc h owner sha I f le
damages along w th at
w th the Board w th n th r
th s ord nance
end ng mone y guaran
torney
fees
The
court may
l y 1~0 ) days afte r the end ol
sect on 7 Procedur es
tee ng loans accept ng a
a so order such other rei ef
and Entorcement
deed of trusf or mortgage the three mont h per ad an
as t deems necessary or
or ot herw se mak. ng add t ana l wr tten report
(b l Reports f led hereun
(a) Any person sub ecled a ppropnate
ava able funds for the pur
(i) fa t the conc lus 1on of
der sha r be s ~ned by the
to an unlawful hous ng
pose
acqu s t on
con
owner of th e bu ld ng or h s
pract ce may f1 e w1th n 360 the hear ng the Board s hall
struct on
a te rna t on
rehab tat on repa r or aut ho r zed agen t shal be days of the all eged de term ne upon the prepon
v1olat on w th the Board a derance of fh e ev dence of
ma ntenance of any on a form to be suppl ed by
the record that the person
n wr t ng
nous n? or d scr m na te n the Board on request a nd compla nt
com pia ned aga 1nst has not
shal
conta
n
the
tal
ow
ng
sworn to or aff rmed
the f x ng of the ra tes ter
mfo r mt:t t on
v o a ted th s ord nance the
wh ch shall state the name
ms
co nd t o n s
or
(A) The nam e and ad
Board sha I state and
and address of the person
prov s ens of any such
fl'Ub l s h ts f ndlngs a nd
dress of each bu ld ng the
a lleged to have comm1tted
financ a\ ass stance
ssue ts order d sm ss ng
name and address of the v olat1on com pia ned of
(c) For any person or
the compla nt
and the part cu Iars thereof
real estate agen t w th owner th e name and ad
Sect on 8 Scope of Or
and s uch other 1nforma tlon
respect to any proh b fed dress of the ma nag ng
agent the name and ad · as may be requ~red by the d1nance The provts on of
act spec t eo n th s or
dress of the res dent
Board The Board may also th s ord mance shall apply
d nance to publ sh or c
hous ng located
n tate to al
culate or cause to be custod an the tota l number corrobor a te or
w1th n the terr tor al I m1ts
of un ts n ea ch bu d ng compla nts on the bas s of
pub ! shed o c rcu ated
(exc lud ng un ts ren ted or test ng ca rr ed out by Its of the C ty of Pomeroy
any not ce
statement
alia lab e for rent on y to s t aff
or
volunte e r s State of Oh o
lost ng or advert sement
Sect on 9 Other Legal
or to announce a pol cy or employees of the owner or a uthor zed by the Board
(b) Upon the Ill ng ol a Action Noth ng conta med
to make any record n con of a manag ing agent) the
n lh s ordinance shall
apprmomate renta range co mpla n1 the execut ve
nect on w th the pros pec
pre \fe nt a ny person from
for a one two a nd three
secretary of the Board
t ve sa e ease sublease
exerc1s ng any right or
bedroom apartme n ( f the sh all make s uc h n
renta or f nanc ng of any
seek ng any remedy to
hous ng wh ch nd cates bu d ng conta ns such a vest gat1on as he deems a p
propr a te to asce rta n fa cts wh ch he m gh t otherw se
rei a nee dete m nat on or vn t) and the number of
un ts occup ed on the last
and ssucs If the execut ve be e ntitled or from f1lmg
dec son based on race
day of the three month secretary sha ll determ ne any compla nt w1th any
color c reed sex mar ra
status
age
rei 9 ous per od lor January 1 1980 that there a e reasonab e other agency or court of
law or equtty
for the n 1 a t re port) by ( 1 grounds to bel eve a
bel ef nat ona or g n or
Section 10. Severab•llly
one or more Black persons v olat on has occurred he
hano ca p
(d ) For any person or and by (I) one o more sha II attempt to cone I ate Sect on and sub sect1ons Of
thts ord nance and the
real estate agent to ass st Spa n s h surnamed per
the matter by methods ol
se11era l Darts
and
n com pel or coerce t he sons
n t al confere nce and per
( 8 ) The Iota number of
do ng of any ac t dec a red to
suas1on w th all nterestcd prov s ons thereof are
hreby decl ared to be 1n
be an unlawful hous ng appl can ts tor r en ta un ts
partes and such represen
de pe nde nt sect ons s ub
n each bu ld ng dur ng the
proact1ve unde r th s or
tat ves as the pa rtes may
sect on s
part s
and
three mon th per odh and choose to ass sf them Con
d nance or to obstruct or
c 1 at on confe rences sha ll prov1s ons and the hold ng
prevent enforcement or the number of sue ap
be ntorma a nd noth ng of any such sect on s ub
com pliance w th prov sons pi cant s who we re ( ) B ack
persons and ( } Span sh
sa d or done dur ng such sec t on part of prov1s on
of th s ord nance or 10 at
th e r eo f to be un
n t al confere nces shall be
tempt d rectly or nd rec tly surnamed persons For
made publ c by the Board cans t tutlona vo d or nef
tocomm t any act declared purposes hereof an ap
pi can! means a person or a ny member of th e feet ve for any cause sha ll
by this ordin ance to be an
n a ff ect nor render n\fa l d
who personal y appears
Board or ts st a'f unless lhP
unlawful hous ng prac t ce
part es a gree thereto n a ny other such section sub
(e) For any person or befor e the owner or a
sect1on part of prov son
manag nQ agen t whet her
wr nng
real estate agent
the reof
&lt;c! The te rms of con
1I 1 To nduce or attempt at the bu lei ng n11o lved or
Sec t on 11
Effect ve
to nduce the sale transfe r at an off ce of the owner or C1l1at on agreed to by the
part es s ha ll be reduced ro Date Th s ord rlance shall
of nterest or I st ng for of a manaq nq age nt to r
MODEL FAIR:

HOUSING
ORQINANCE SOS

sale of any hous ng by
mak. "9 represental o 1s
reyard ng the el( sting or

th e purpose of r en t ng a

un t whether or no1 such
person subm ts a wr tten

BASFPAI' SCOREBOARD

C00GH 1

WE:'RE ALL GONNA - HACK 1 -~REATH
/!) L.OT fA'6tER - WUE£zEt
NOW T!-IAT CALIFANO'S

- CotJGH I 1/ACI''- GONE

m1

rri:

r.

r

AMERICAN lEAGUE ALL STARS senior teague
Frmt 1-r Pam Brauer MiriamSI!ison Lori Rupe Cin
dy Crooks Laura Smith, Sandi Miller back Barbara

Washington today
WASHINGTON ( AP ) - President
Carter s Mideast policy ISII I so
much m d1S31"ray as 1t ISm search of
a game plan
Like some NFL halfbacks the
preSident seems to favoc.J he stutter
step He carnes the ball for the
Palestl/llan cause a while sidesteps
the Jewish voter and then - tripS
himself up
The other backs GYrus Vance
Zbtgmew Brzezmski and Robert
Strauss are trymg to look like a
team But sometunes they get m
each other s way
R1ght now Carter s forward
progre:;s has been halted but that
may be a temporary condillon
If Egypt and Israel don t make
headway on an autonomy plan next
month Carter IS likely to take the
State Department and Brzezmski s
adv1ce and pick up the ball ms1slmg
on a homeland for the Palestm1ans
But how far he can carry 1\
depends on a number of factors
Will the Palestl/llans decide to JOin
the Israeli Egyptian negotiations'
Can Egypt and Israel mc h closer
to a deciSion on the future of the 11
rrulli1on Palestm1ans livmg on the
West Bank of the Jordan River and
m Gaza '
Will Carter s ubmit to Arab 01!
pressures or will he penrut Egypt
and Israel to keep gropmg for a
Palesttruan solution'
Will the Soviet Umon and the Arab
reJectiorusts let up on Egyptian
PreSident Anwar Sadat who IS
tr ymg to come to tenns With Israel'
And ts Garter willing to tangle
w1th Jewtsh voters a nd other
tr adihonal fnends of Israel wh1le he
makes anolller run for the White
House'
So far the Palesllmans ar e
boycottmg the negotiations
Taking their Signals from the
Palestme Liberation Organtzat10n
they are holding out for a promiSe of
statehood
That doesn t seem to be m llle
cards
Israel cannot nsk havmg a
Palestm1an state on 1ts doorstep In
a conflict the tiny Jewish state
would be hard-pressed to defend tis
population centers
But spectal envoy Strauss came

back from the M1ddle East surprised
With llle progress Egypt and Israel
are makmg on an autonomy plan for
the 1 1 million West Bank and Gaza
Palestmtans
There co uld be more when Sadat
and Prune MmlSter Menachem
Begm meet m Haifa on Sept 5
Strauss will go back to llle Middle
East around Sept 10 to fmd out
W1tl1 Carter on a MISSISSIPPI
steamboat Vance shutUing down

~
j,._-:..-'1

from a Martha s Vmeyard vacatioo
Brzezmski s role as murky as ever
and StraiiSS msp1rmg ster1es atJ.,o~t
disarray tt Is no wonder U.S
Mideast policy looks confused.
How else could It look wtth Andrew
Young fer ced to resign for bavmg
unauthortzed talks with the P!.D
still on the JOb as US ambassador
at the United Nations representmg
a policy he lllmks IS kind of
ncUculous

HEALTH

.r - - - lawrence E lamb MD

POSSIBLE COMPUCATIONS
By Lawrence Lamb M D
DEAR DR LAMB - I have read
several tunes that certain foods
cheese bemg one of them should not
be eaten when a person IS taking
monarmne OXIdase (MAO ) mhib1tors
which a re som etunes prescribed for
high blood pressure
I m taking Aldomet for high blood
pressure so will you please teU me if 11
IS an MAO and whether there are any
foods I should not be eatmg , ..so com
men! on D1 ur1l
DEAR READER - Rest easy
neither Aldomet nor L• uril are MAOll
The MAO group of cherrucal com
pounds are pnmartly used as mood
elevators
The1r act10n m thi ' regard was
discovered when some of these
medicmes were used m the treatment
of tuberculosiS Tbe mood-elevatm ~
Side effe~ts ltteraUy resulted m som e
of the patients dancmg m the wa rv
Newer preparations have been c. I 1
by som e mves tlga tors
'psychic
energizers
It s true that som e drugs m this
gr oup w11llower blood pressure and
have been used t o t reat high blood
pressure Because of the availability
of many other medtctnes that do the
JOb better 1t s Jess likely that anyone
will be takmg any of these medicmes
to lower blood pressure today It s far
more likely that a person may be tak
mg one of these to combat depressiOn
and to elevate the1r m ood

S()(:IAL SI~&lt;:t'Rffl'
Bill Ste1f
Facts especially
for women
By WUllam Stell
(Sixth of 14 parts)
One of the most common quesbons
concerrung Soc1al Secur1ty IS What
tlappens if both husband and wife
work'
That question IS conunon today
because - unlike the 1930s when
Social Secunty was founded - half the
natiOn s women are m the work force
What the wife m a working couple
gets uut of Social Secunty depends on
both her salary history and her
husbands
Without domg pa1d work the wife 1s
entitled to a benefit half as large as
her husband s at age 65 But if her
own eanungs history entitles her to
an age-65 benefit greater than what
s he d get as her husband s dependent
she gets the higher benefit
If her ~anungs history entitles her
to a benefit lower than the age-65
wife s beneftt she teclmicaUy gets
h er own worker s benef1t plus the dif
ference between that amount and the
dependent s benefit That can make a

take effect and be n force
from and after the earliest
penod allowed by law
ATTEST Jane Walton
c er k
APPROVED
Clarence Andrews
MAYOR
DA TED 12279
1"'2027?c

b1g difference 1f for example her
husband loses his Soc1al Securtty by
working after age 65
W1th something like one m three
Amertcan marriages ending m divor
ce these days another question
arises Does the divorced w1fe of a
Soctal Security beneftc1ary get
anything from the system'
The answer IS yes - if the couple
was mamed at least 10 years the for
mer husband IS retired or dead and
she bas applied or reapplied after
December 1978
The ehgtble divorced wife gels an
amount equal to 50 percent of her ex
husband s benefit, asswrung that both
have met the age requirements
And 1f the divorced husband
remarries his second wife also
qualifies for the wife s benefit when
she reaches retirement age
Soc1al Secur1ty authorities say 1t 1s
possible for one retired worker to
wmd up with four or five ex Wives
rece1vmg a wife s benefit
Example A working chap marr1es
at 20 divorces and remames at 30
divorces and remames at 40 divor
ces and remarries at 50 divorces and
remarnes at 60 If he takes his nor
mal rehrement at 65 and divorces on
ce agam at 70 he could then have fiVe
ex wtves each drawmg 50 percent of
his retirement heneftt assuming all
the women had reached the required
age
Reason Benefits for ex wtves don t
count toward the family maxunum
tmposed on Soc1al Secunt~ benefits
(NEXT Wldo•n benefits)

'#

There are a lot of things you can do
to help contrql your high blood
pressure that do not tnvolve
medicme To g~ve you a better tdea of
this I am sending you The Health Letter number 1-6 Blood Pressure Other
readers who want this ISSUe can send
75 cents m check or coin With a long
stamped self,...ddressed envelope for
1t Send your request to me m care of
this newspaper P 0 Box 1561 Radio
City Stahon New York NY 10019
You re nght about the MAO!! caustng problems if you eat certain foods
Speaif~eally you can tlave an acute
criSIS m elevated blood pressure and I
do mean acute So anyone who s tak
tng any of the monanune ODdaae m
hibttors should have been told by his
phys tclan to avotd foods that have a
Iugh tyrarrune content
These are foods that mvolve agmg
or breakdown of the protem So cured
and processed cheeses m particular
are a problem It also can occur with
sour cream Chianti Wines sherry
beer ptckled herring liver canned
f1gs raiSins bananas or avocados the latter particularly tf they are
overripe
Other foods that may cause a problem are c hocolate soy sauce and
pods of broad beans yeast extracts
and meats prepared w1th tendenzers
The names of the medicmes that
are monamme o~dase inhiblton that
are most commonly used include
Eutonyl Eutron Nanlil and Pamate
None of these IS a dangerous
medicme when used properly and m
fact they have been very useful In
treatmg depressions But a person
does need to be aware of the complications that can occur wben be Is
talung such medicmes And one of
these IS the problem of acute high
blood pressure criSIS if you use any of
the food substances menttoned here

Today In History
By The Associated Press
1oday ts Monday Aug '!I the 239th
da~ of 1979 There are 12Al days left m
the year
Today s htghltght m history
On this date m 1659 Amenca s first
011 well was drilled near Titusville
Pa
On th•s date
In 55 B C Julius Ceasar led hiS
Roman forces tn an mvas1on of
Br1tam

Grueoer Teresa Ferrell L4lret1a Pettit Terri Wilson
Carta Moms, Kim Batey and Rcse Kimes Absent was

Tonia Ash Coach IS Hazel Ewing

Seaver posts 11th straight
win 8-0 over former team
NEW YORK ( AP ) - Tom Seaver
gets no satisfaction out of looking up
at the practically-barren stands at
Shea StacUum during the three-game

series between the New York Mets
and the team they traded hun to the
Cincinnati Reds In fact be found
the scene depres5Uig
The 34 year-old nght bander

LA Rams ready
for 1979 season
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
With the dress rehearsals over and
the curtain gomg up on anolller
Natlooal Football League 9elllllln
next Saturday night m Tampa Bay
the Los Angeles Rams Buffalo Billll
and tlle New York G1ants are In
mldseason form
We are ready foc the season
proclauned quarterback Pat Haden
who ended his preseason witll 11
completioos In 22 attempts for H9
yards and a touchdown as llle Rams
ended their ~ exhlbtltoo schedule
with a 23-7 victory OVI!!r the San
Diego Olargers Saturday night
Los Angeles trying fer Its seventh
consecutive Na tional Conference
title lo!il defensive tackle Cody
Jones lor the season with a ruptured
Achilles tendon while Chargers
guard Doug Wllkerson s sea.on
ended prematurely due to tern knee
ligaments
The hitting was hard but the
mjurles are also a Sign of it bemg the
last exhibition game said Charger
quarterback Dan Fouts who added
I think we re ready Naturally
lllough we re not happy with the
mjur1es
In j ured pnde is the G1ants
malady They scored just 12 potnts
m their final lllree preseason games
- aU without a touchdown
The latest insult was a I~ loss to
the New Yock Jets Saturday rught
TODAY 5
MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
lly The Assoclotecl Press
AMERICAN LEAGUE
BATTING (350 al bats)
Lynn
Boston Ul Downing California
333 G Brett Kansas City 331
Kemp Detroit 329 Rice Boston
329
RUNS Lynn Boston 99
Baylor Catlfornta 98 G Brett Kan
sas City 97 Rice Boston 94 R
Jones Seottle 92
RBI - Boylor Callfornlo 118
Lynn Boston 107 Rice Boston
102
S•ngleton
Boltlmore 91
Thomas Milwaukee 97
HITS - G Brett Kansas City 174
Rice Boston 165 B Belt Texas
163 Lansford California 155 Lynn
Boston 153
DOUBLES - Cooper Milwaukee
38 G Breit Kansas City 38 B Bell
Texas 36 Lynn Boston 34 Lemon
Chlcavo 34
TRIPLES - G Breit Kansas City
16 Molitor Milwaukee 13 Wilson
Kansos City 12 Randolph New
York 10 Porter Kansas City 10
HOME RUNS - Lynn Boston 36
Rice
Boston
33
Thomas
Milwaukee
33
Slnolelon
Baltimore 32 Baylor California 30
STOLEN BASES LeFlore
Detroit 63 Wilson Kansas City 61
J Crul
Seattle 36
BOndS
Cleveland 30 Wills Texas 29
PITCHING (12 Decisions)
R
Davis New York 10 2 133 3 11
Or avo Boston 9 3 7SO 3 10 Cald
well Milwaukee 14 5 737 3 33
John New York 16 6 707 2 90
Flanagan Baltimore 18 7 720
3 33 Clear California 10 4 714
3 .o Zahn Minnesota 10 4 714
3 70 Kern Texas 10 4 714 1 52
STRIKEOUTS - Ryan Callfor
nla 179 Flanagan Baltimore 150
Guidry New York 150 Jenkins
Texas 139 Koosman Minnesota
128
Weekend
Spor.ts Transactions
By Tho AIIOCioted Prell
FOOTBALL
Notlonol Football League
CINCINNATI
BENGALS
Placed Dennis Law wide receiver
on the reti red list
NEW YORK GANTS - An
nounced resignation of Dick
Scesnlak offensive line coach Ap
pointed Bth Austin assistant coach
DETROIT LIONS - Signed Scott
Hunter quarterback
and Don
Morrison offe nsive lineman

ThiS Is still the exhibltioo se&amp;90n
and 1\ doesn I mean a lllmg center
Jim Clack SBid I m not going to
start werrymg We ve got 16 games
Everyone IS now 0-0
We re ready
sa1d Pro Bowl
liriebacker Harry Caraon speaking
strictly foc the Giants defense
which coughed ~ just 31 points m
lhe four preseason games
The opening kickoff Saturday
rught set the tone fer the G1ant.s
whe n Em1e Pough fumbled at the 17
yard Une settmg up a l~yard
touchdown pass to Scott Dierking
from Matt Robinson who started for
the f1rst time smce Coacb Walt
Michaels awarded him No I status
over Richard Todd
Joe Danelo supplied aU the Giants
offense With field goals of 51 and 56
yards
The Bills like the Atianla Falcons
fm1shed the preseason without a
win losing 48-21 Saturday night to
the Oakland Raiders who got a pair
of touchdowns passes from Ken
Stabler to Ray Chester
We re not ready to start the
season the way we played torught
sa1d Buffalo Coach Chuck Knox It
looked like they hadn I been coached
at aU
In other games Saturday St Lolll.'l
edged Chicago 1~7 Tampa Bay
tamed Cincinnati 24-13 Green Bay
outlasted AUanla 45-35 and Dallas
rupped Pittsburgh 16-14
On Friday Mianu completed Its
perfect preseason log with a 14-}3
wm over Philadelphia Cleveland
defeated Wllllhmgtm 21 9 Baltimore
beat Detroit 17 7 New Orleans
edged Houston 1~7 Denver beat
New E ngland :ZIH 7 in overtune and
SeatUe overwhelmed San FranciSCO

:»-20

Barrington
takes legion
tournament
ST JOSEPH, Micb (AP ) Barrington ru behind the three-hit
pitching of Art AevenDIIM defeated
host St Joeeph ft-2 to capture the
American Legion G~ Lakes
National Regional Bueball title
The Il11nols state champions will
now play In the national !InaJa begin
ning Aug 29 at GreenvWe Ml.u
Aevennann a right-hander, gave
up two runs In the bottllll of the first
lrmlng Sunday on a walk and two
singles but then retired 19 batters In
a row before allowing a tw~~
single In the seventh
Barrington rapped 11 hits off St
Joseph slarter Erik Wolff, !ICOrlng
lone runs In the first and sixth, and
puahlng two acroas In the seventh
They added another Insurance run m
thee1ghth
St Joaeph reached the finals by
knocking off Louisville Ky , 3-2 on
Friday and SteubenvWe Ohio the
tourney favorite on Saturday 2 1
Barrington went through the
double-ellmlnatloo tournament un
defeated, downing Louisville 6-2,
downing Louisville 6-2 Rockport
Ind, 5-2, SteubenvWe !_o-3, Appleton Wls , 7-3 and St J011eph In
the title game
\1

Bueboll At A Glonce
By The Associated Press
AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST
WL Pet GB
83 .4] 659
Baltimore
79 52 603 6 112
Milwaukee
76 51 598 7112
Boston
69 57 S48 u
New York
69 61 531 16
Detroit
66 64 508 19
Cleveland
41 88 318 .0 112
Toronto
WEST
California
71 59 5&lt;16
Minnesota
67 60 528 2112
Kansas City
68 61 527 2112
Texas
62 58 477 9
Chicago
56 30 434 14112
seattle
ss 76 420 16'12
oakland
41 90 313 3o•r,
S.turdoy 1 Games
California 24 Toronto 2
Seattle B OetroJU
Kansas City 1 Boston 0
Baltimore at Chicago 2 ppd un
playable grounds
Cleveland s Oakland 3
Minnesota 4 New York 1
Milwaukee 5 Texas 2
Sunday s Games
Baltimore 12 4 Chicago 7 3 2nd
game 13 Innings
Detroit 4 9 Seattle 3 B lsi game 10
Innings
Toronto9 California 3
Cleveland 7 Oakland'
Kansas City 6 Boston 3
Milwaukee 6 Texas 2
New York at Minnesota ppd ran
Mondoy 1 Gomes
Oakland (McCatty B 81 at Toronto
&lt;Huffman514l
Baltimore (0 Martinez u 10 and
Palmer 7 4) at Minnesota &lt;Goltz 11
9and Hartle I 5-11) 2
Seattle (Honeycull 9 9) at
Cleveland (Paxton 7 7 or Sp liner 8
3)
Calflfornla !Barr 8 101 at Detro t
&lt;Billingham 8 6)
Boston (Tudor 0 1 or Stanley 12 9)
at Chicago (Kravec 11 11 l
M lwaukee (Sorenssn u 121 at
Kansas City (Gale 9 91
New York (Beattie 3 5) at Texas
(Jenkins 13 10)
Tuesday 1 Gomes
Oakland at Toronto
Seattle at Cleveland
California at Detroit
Boston at Chicago
Baltimore at Minnesota
Milwaukee at Kansas City
New York at Texas

haunted the Mets by flrmg a four
hitter as ClncUVIati won ~ g~vmg
them 15 wtns m their last 19
I think the stuation m New York
IS bad fer baseball lllSisted Seaver
who set a personal record with his
lith stialght victory
I spent 10
years here and It s depressmg
When asked how he felt he S81d
My shoulder Is tender rut I do
what I have to to wtn I uae what I
have to win baseball games now I
don t think I m quite the
NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST
overpowering pll.cher I have been at
WL Pet GB
different tunes during my career,
75 53 586
Pittsburgh
rut I m still a powl!r pltcber when I
69 53 566 3
Montreal
69 57 548 5
Chicago
have to be
67 60 528 7 12
51 LOUIS
Seaver struck out five and did not
65 6.4 504 10 h
Philadelphia
walk anyone m reglstenng his fourth
51 74 &lt;4011 22 ;,
New York
WEST
shutout of the se11110n He has eight
74 56 569
Houston
complete
games
and
51
74 57 565 112
Cincinnati
careerS.utouts
60 69 -465 1]112
los Angeles
Seaver 13-6 drew 20 619 fans the
59 71 454 15
San Francisco
55 76 l20 19 ( 2
San otego
largest noo-promotiooal crowd of
so 78 391 23
Atlanta
the season - and tlle old-time Met
S.turday 1 Gomes
rooters got their money 8 worth
Clnclnnatl8 New York 4
Son Franclsco5 Ch1cogo2
Seaver also produced wtth the bat
.Houston 3 Phlladelph•a 1
collecting a smgle and a two"'"un
Monlreal.al Atlanta ppd rain
double
St Louis 5 LOS Angeles 4
P ittsburgh 4 San Diego 3 19 In
Pete Falcone 5 10 matched
nlngs
Seaver for six lmmgs as neither
Suncloy s Games
team scored but the Reds broke
Clnclnnat18 New York 0
Los Angeles 4 St Louis 1
through m the ~ventb He1ty Q-uz
Pittsburgh 9 Son Diego 2
ooe of the Cincinnati bencb bngade
Chicago' San Francisco 1
who had a triple double and twO-run
Houston' Phlladelptua 1
Montreal at Atlanta 2 ppd rain
single In the game opened the
Mond•y 1 Games
mnmg \Vith a double
Atlanta (Brluolaro 6 8) at New
He remained at secood when
York (Kobel 5 7) preceded by com
Seaver s sacrifice attempt went
plot on of suspended game of June 17
Houston ( I-aCorte 1 21 at Montreal
right to Falcone but then scored on
&lt;Rogers
11 81
Dave Collms RBI Slllgle to left
Ctnclnnatl (LaCoss u 5) at
When Joon Steams playmg left
Phllacalptlla (Christenson 4 9)
ChiCago (Krukow 9 91 at Son
field lllrew past catcher Ala
Diego
(OWchlnko 4 BJ
Trevino the ball rolling to the
Pittsburgh &lt;Bibby 9 3) at Los
backstop CoUins went aU tbe way to
Angeles &lt;Sutton 11 121
Only games scheduled
third He scored oo Joe Mergan s
Tues&lt;htysGames
Slllgle
Houston at Montreal
Leading off the eighth JohMy
Cincinnati at Phlladelpllla
New York at Atlanta
Bench playing despite a bad back,
Chicago at San Diego
surpnsed Mets third baseman
Plll!burgh at Los Angeles
Richie Hebner by lay~ down a
St Lou is at San Francisco
perfect bunt fer a base hit After two
men were retired Melli reliever
Nollonol Football Leogue
Dale Murray who had taken over
At A Glonce
fer Falcone intentionally walked
BY The Auoctatecl Press
Cruz to get to Seavl!r Seaver
Exhibition
Frldoy 1 Gomes
promptly slanuned a double off the
Cleveland 21 Washington 9
Ie!Weld wall m one bolD'lce
M laml14 Philadelphia 13
Four more nlnth-i1111ing hits off
Baltimore 17 Detroit 7
Murray and Ed Glynn gat Cincinnati
New Orleans 10 Houston 7
Denver 20 New England 17 ot
four mere rwiS wtth Cruz capping
Seattle 55 San Francisco 20
the rally with his two-run single
Soturdoy s Games
befere Seaver finally hit mto an
51 LOU I! 10 Chicago 7
Tampa Bay 24Cinclnnalt 13
tnnlng-ending double play
New York Jets u New York G an
We are going to win this thing
ts6
because of olD' pitching meaning
Green Goy 45 Atlanta 35
Oakland o48 Buffalo 21
guys Uke Seaver Bill Bonham and
Dallasll Pittsburgh 14
Tom Hume and our bench
Los Angeles 23 San Diego 7
especially people like Cruz whom
nobody hears about said Reds
Manager Joon McNamara
Mets manager Joe Terre swnmed
up the game succinctly saying It
was too much Tom Seaver That s

aU
Ed Kranepool who managed two

of the four hits off Seaver, noted
It s ldnd of nice to see my old
mates Seaver and Jerry Koosman
(17 10) of the Minnesota Twins
pitching so well and being In the
pennant race It brings back
memories

Tournament scheduled
The SyT&amp;cuse Fire Dept Is holding
a Sanctioned Slo Pitch Softball Tour
nament for Claas B Teams - at
Syracuse Sept 1 2 and 3 Entry fee
Is $60 and two balis, for a sanctioned
team and $70 foc 8 nOO-IIIUlctiOOed
team and two balls Individual a war
ds will be given to the top three

teams

PREVENTION
IS THE

BEST POLICY
As an independent msurance
agency our primary functton s
to provide pollcles which afford
financial protect1on In case of
loss
But we also nave a vital In
terest In toss prevention as
should our clients We encourage
care caution and safety
preventive measures wh1ch can
keep that car accident from hap
penlng that building fire from
starting !hat home burglary
from being committed
Prevention saves life limb and
property
and helps control In
sura nee costs and premiums
When losses do occur our
policyholders can count on pro
feeling and serv ng tn II me and
need But we still say - preven
lion Is the best policy

Sentinel sports
Watson successfully
•
defends golf title
PINEHURST N C (AP ) - Tom
Watson , g1ven second life when
Johnny Miller bogeyed the 72nd
hole, successfully defended his title

Buccaneers
stop Bengals
CINCINNATI ( AP) -Ending the
Nallooal Football League preseason
with two straight v1ctones produced
only a modest celebration m the
Tampa Bay locker room
Two straight losses endmg their
preseason evoked little m ore than
mild disappomtment among the
Cmcmnatt Bengals after the
Bucc aneers 24-13 VIctory Saturday
rught
Such 1s the nature of the exhibition
season
We re commg along good and
we ve got more depth than we ve
ever had Tampa Bay Coach John
McKay sa1d nonco!ll1lllttally
I
don t think we 11 score a lot of points
but we can play With a lot of teams
We were flat
sa1d Cmcmnati
Coach Homer Rice We started off
good, then all of a sudden we got a
couple of mterference calls didn t
get a fourth and one and we got a
little flat On defense we let them
con trot the ball on us
All of the Bengals soormg came m
the ftrst half on a one-yard
touchdown run by Archie Grlffm and
field goals of 39 and 49 yards by
Cllns Bahr
Tampa Bay scored on a 1!1-yard
field goal by Neil 0 Donoghue and a
ooe-yard touchdown run by Ricky
Bell 111 the first half Quarterback
Doug Williams came off the bench m
the second half to ftre touchdown
passes of 8 and 41 yards
Certamly our quarterback
Situation 1sn t the worst 1n footbaU
McKay deadpanned Mike Rae and
W1lhams have played well m
battling foc llle No 1 !ip\lt
But he was concerned about bemg
penalized three time !oc have an
melig1ble man down f1eld oo punts
Were gomg to have to look and
see if what we re teachmg IS
wrong he said
BeU who set a club rushing record
last year wtth 679 yards despite
rruSSing four games sa1d the Bucs
are much better than they ve ever
been m their yoWig history
We re slowly building
SBid
BeU It s about t1me for thmgs like
that to happen
BeU SBid that at 215 pounds he s
about 10 pounds lighter than last
sea90II though he feels the we1ght
loss hasn t cost hun any strength
Gary Burley, the Bengals huge
defens1ve end m1mrruzed the
unportance of the loss
I overcommltted a couple tunes
but those are mistakes that are
easily corrected wheo you see them
on fUm
Burley said
I m not
disappomted I llllnk if thiS had been
a regular season game there
wouldn t have been any doubt that
we would have won
The regular season will be a
whole different story
Burley
predicted

m the Hall of Fame Golf aa.tc
Sunday '\Vlth a w!Ming par on the
second hole of a sudden death
playoff
Watson and Mlller, who waa
seeking an end to a three-year non·
wtn11tng string each finished the
regulation 72 holes on the famed No
2 course at the Plnehurlll Country
Club m 272 12 shots under par
That set up the playoff for the
$45 000 first prize
Both men scored routine pars on
the ftrst hole On the ~~ecood, Watson
reached the green In 2 and Miller
was m the fringe about 60 feet away
He took 3 to get down and Watson
tw011utted fer the vlctery, his fifth of
the season It virtually assured him
of a thtrd consecutive Player of the
Year title
The first place check pushed
Watson s earnings already at a
record level, to $447 636 fer the year
and put hun within reach of the
$500,000 mark
While 1t may have been a
disappomtment for Miller - wbo
held a lofitroke lead when ~
started - his strong perfOCIIIIDC8
served notice lhat he's back again,
and a gam Is a factoc In the game be
dorrunated befoce plunging Into one
of the most puzzling slurnpll In the
history of golf
It was his best tournament llinee
his last v1ctcry, three loog years ago
m tlle British Open
Miller, playing behind Watson
over the fmal 18 of regulation play,
had a l-6troke lead with one hole to
go but drove Into the )iney waodl,
made bogey and set up the ~off
Miller had a closing 70 Watal a 88
that mcluded a dramatic eagle-3 on
the 16th hole

tL scores
By The AIIOCiolecl Press
Saturd•y s G1mes
Charleston 2 Rochester 0
ToledoS PawtuckeiO
Columbus 3 Syracuse 1
Richmond 4 5 Tidewater 2 4
Sunday s Games
Richmond 3 TideWater 2
Taledo 5 Pawtucket o
Syracuse 6 Columbus 2
Rochester at Charleston post
paned ram
Mondays Games
Columbus at Rochester
Toledo at Syracuse
R lchmond at Charleston
Tidewater at Pawtucket
Tuesday s Gomes
Columbus at Rochester
Toledo at Syracuse
R chmond at Charleston
Tidewater at Pawtucket

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M•dd!eoartL 0
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State Fa m l fe and
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Awards cOfiSISt of jeckets CaD
992-3495 or 992 2009 or 992·7777
Drawings will be held Wednesday
rught Aug 29

MEETS TONIGHT
The regular meeting of the Isaac
Walton League will be held at 7 p m
this evening

DALE C. WARNER
INS.
"2 2143

w II' a n
r o1r ro1

tOl

i'

LWtll u •4Uooo~tv"­
Tht (II\' ICIIfi&lt; .IJnii,WIP

�4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Aug. 27, 1979

s- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o ., Monday, Aug. 'r/, 1979

Basics heart of Seaver's ·-s uccess
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
For a pitcher, T&lt;m Seaver has all
lhe classic moves - the smooth
windup, high kick and strong, clean
follow-lhrough.
And what he mainly relies. on is
classic, too : curve ball and faStball .
Nothing fancy . Just simple, oldfashioned stuff, but he usually puts it
in the right place at the right time.
The basics have always been at
the heart of Seaver's success, and
they were working at their basic
best Sunday when Cincinnati's

stylish right-hander stopped the
New York Mets IHl with a neat fourhitter.
" I threw curves on the first two
pitches," said Seaver after winning
his 11th straight game, " because I
wanted to establish that I could use
it. I had a good curve in the bullpen
but sometimes you lose it when you
get on the mound ...
Seaver also was pleased with his
fa stball , especially in the later
innings. He struck out five in the
game, raising his career total to

· Today's

Sports World
By Will Grimsley A P Correspondent
Once again, we have learned th e
basic truth in the axiom first offered
a few years IIllO by Marvin Miller,
high guru of major league baseball
players.
It was Miller who warned that
baseball owners should be less
concerned with the contractual
demands of their employees than
they are with each other. "The
owners," explained the guru, "must
be protected from themselves."
In the wake of the Ray Kroc affair,
you would have to say there was a lot
of wisdom in that observation.
Kroc, the .hamburger king, has
announced hi5 withdrawal from
baseball, · saying the game has
brought
him nothing
but
lll!gravation . Some fans of his San
Diego Padres, of course, feel
preci5ely the same way about that
ball club.
Shortly after setting out on a oneman crusade against inflation by
reducing the price of his burgers by
a nickel or so apiece nationwide,
Kroc was focced to reach into his
· cash register for a cool $100,000 fine
inflicted by Commissioner Bowie
Kuhn .
That's gratitude foc you .
Kroc, whose $500 million fortune
makes $100,000 seem like tip money ,
responded by telling baseball it
could "go to hell ," and by turning
operation of his ball club over to his
son-in~aw, Ballard Smith, whose
qualifications for the job include a
stretch as prosecuting attorney in
Meadville, Pa.

And before retreating , Kroc
offered the observation that
"There's more
future
in
hamburgers than baseball."
Now if the public suggestion that
he would go after Graig Nettles and
Joe Morgan in the free-agent
marketplace this winter was worth
$100,000 fine, how much do you
suppose those last two remarks
ought to cost?
There was some surpise when
Kuhn came down as hard as he did
on the hamburger man but the size
of the fine merely emphasizes that
the commissioner means to deal
harshly with loose-lipped owners
who go around sounding off publicly.
Remember when Commodore Ted
Turner pulled tile same routine
befoce the first re-entry draft in
1976? Kuhn fined him $10,000 and
suspended him for one year. Why the
huge jump in the penalty for Kroc's
indiscretion?
Well, there were some significant
differences in the two events. For
one tiling, the commodore sooinded
off at a World Series party - a
more-{)r-less private affair for
baseball's family.
In fact , Turner did it on a buffet
line, tweaking San Francisco owner
Bob Lurie that he would sign Gary
Matthews away from the Giants, no
matter what.
Kroc popped off publicly in an
interview he knew would be
published. He had to know, too,
based on the Turner affair , that
Kuhn would be listening.

•

Sports briefs
TENNIS
BROOKUNE, Mass. (AP) - Hans
Gildemeister of Chile upset
defending champion ·Manuel
Orantes of Spain 6-4, 6-4 to advance
to tile final of the 5:1lld Annual U.S.
Pro Tennis Championships at
Longwood.
Gildemeister, seeded loth, took
charge at the outset and moved into
the final .againsi top-eeeded Jose
Hlgueras of Spain, who defeated
seventh-seeded Tomas Smid of
Czechoslovakia ·6-4, 11-2.
MAHWAH, N.J. (AP) - Girls
Evert Lloyd staged a comeback for
a 6-7, 6-4, &amp;-I victory over Tracy
Austin in the finals of the $75,000
Women's Tennis Cup at Ramapo
College .
NEWPORT, R.I. ( AP) - Topseeded Ken Rosewall of Australia
beat Tom Okker of Holland 7-6, 6-4 to
capture the title in the $77,000 TeMis
Legends Classic at Newport Casino.
In the Masters division foc players
45 and older, Frank Sedgman, 51, of
Australia, defeat~ Torben Ulrich,
50, of Denmark, 6-2, 6-3.
MASON,Ohio (AP) - Steady rain
forced postponement of the finals in
singles and doubles cocnpetition of ·
the $200,000 Association of TeMis
Professionals championship.
Tournament officials said the
finals were scheduled to be played
today at a site yet to be determined.
GOLF

PINEHURST, N.C. (AP )- Tom
Watson , given second life when
Johnny Miller bogeyed the 7:1lld
hole, successfully defended his title
in the Hall of Fan\e Golf Classic with
a winning par on the second hole of a
sudden deatll playoff.
.
Watson and Miller each finished
the regulation 72 holes on the No.2
course at the Pinehurst Country
Club in 272, 12 shots under par.
MAPLEWOOD, Minn. (AP)
Root..:e Betll Daniel scored an 11-

under total of 208 as her four~roke
lead over Hollis Stacy held up after
the final round of the $100,000 Patty
Berg Golf Classic was canceiled due
to heavy rains.
BOWLING

SARASOTA, Fla. ( AP) - Nelson
Burton Jr . suffered a 7-10 split in the
ninth frame but rolled three strikes
in the final frame to beat George
Papper 203-210 and win the Sarasota
Open bowling tournament.
Burton, a 37-year-{)id Hall of
Farner from ·St. IDui5, won $8,000 for
the victory and has earned $33,870
thil; year.
WORWCUPGAMES
MONTREAL (AP) - The United
States, with 119 points captured the
men 's championship whUe East
Germany, with ' IOS points, took the
women's title in the World Cup
Games.
The Americans were led by
Renaldo Nehemiah who won the ll~
meter hurdles and by Larry
Myricks, who got off the second
longest long jump in hi5tory - 27
feet , !Ph inches.
BASEBALL
WIUJAMSPORT, Pa. (AP) ~though Dai Han-Chao pitched a
no~itter, Taiwan needed two extra
innings to defeat the pint-Bized kids
of Carnp\Jell, Calif., 2-1 foc the Uttle
League Baseball World Series
championship.
NOGALES, Ariz. (AP ) - Bill
Gavin scattered seven hits to lead
Detroit to a 6-5 victory over
Honolulu, Hawaii and the Babe Ruth
13-15 World Series baseball
championship.

2,861 but he got two in the sixth
inning, both on fastballs.
· "I've been throwing very well
lately and I've had a good fastball
late in the game. Those two
strikeouts came late and that's
unusual for me now. That proves to
me that l was throwing well."
In other Natiooal League games,
Houston trimmed Phlladelphia 4-1 ;
Pittsburgh routed San Diego &amp;-2;
Chicago defeated San Francisco 4-1
and IDs Angeles whipped St. LDuis 41. A twi-night !loubleheader between
Atlanta and Montreal was postponed
by rain .
Seaver, 1~. didn't allow a walk
while pitching his eighth complete
game tile year. Pete Falcone, ~10,
matched Seaver foc six shutout
innings before Cincinnati scor.ed
twice in the seventh on RBI singles

by Pave Collins and Dave Madlock smashed four hits,
Concepcion .
including a tw&lt;H'un homer, as
Astros 4, PhDlles 1
Pittsburgh defeated San Diego.
Houston fh;.s t baseman Cesar
Kison, &amp;-7, capped a five-run
Cedeno smashed five hits and Pirate second inning with his first
sparked a two-run eighth-inning career grand slam. It was the third
rally with a triple to lead Houston career home run for the Pittsburgh
over Phlladelphla. The triwnph right~ander.
enabled the Astros to hold their halfMadlock drilled his 13th homer of
game lead over the Reds in the the year in the third inning, a twoNational League West.
run shot that chased loser Bob
Craig Reynolds's single followed g,irley, 6-13.
Cedeno's triple in the eighth and
"I didn't get to see it clear the
provided the Astros with their fenC\!," said Kison about his grand
eventual winning run.
slam. "I hit three h&lt;me runs and
Rellever Peter Ladd, 1.0, was the I've yet to see one of them go out.
winner with eighth-inning relief help I'm never going to win the slugging
from Joe siunbito, who gained his · per~tagefcr pitchers, it was just a
17th save.
very lucky tiling."
Pirates 9, Padres 2
Cubs 4, Giants I
Pitcher Bruce Kison socked a
Dennis Lamp and Bruce Sutter
l(l'and slam home run and Bill
collabcrated on a slx~itter as

'

Chicago defeated San Francisco.
Lamp, &amp;-7, pitChed the first 61.,1
innings, allowing five hlta and
striking out five. Sutter then CIIIDI! In
and registered his 33rd save - four
shy of the National League reccrd.
Larry Bilttner'ssaa-lfice fly In the
third inning provided the Cubs with
their winning run off John
Montefusco, 3-6.
Dodgen 4, Cardlllalal
Steve Garvey slugged a homer,
doubled and singled and drove in two
runs to lead Los Angeles over St.
IDuis. Rick Sutcliffe, 12-8, scattered
eight St. IDuis hits befcre needing
ninth-inning relle( help from Robert
Castillo, who gained his fow1h save.
The Cards' IDu Brock moved Into
12th place on the all-Ume hit list with
his 3,008th career base hit, a double.
He surpassed AI Kaline.

Brewers-Royals begin important series
BY ASSOCIATED PJU;SS
The Milwaukee Brewers and
Kansas City Royals begin an
important three-game series in
Kansas City tonight but their
thoughts are likely to be elsewhere.
Uke in Minnesota and Detroit,
where the American. League
division-leading Baltimore Orioles
and California Angels will be
playing the Twins and Tigers,
respectively.
For tile first time since June 6, a
team other than the Boston Red Sox
15 on the heels of Baltimore in the AL

East. Milwaukee climbed into
second place, one game ahead of
Boston, by downing the Texas
Rangers 11-2 Sunday while the Red
Sox were bowing to the Royals 6-3.
Nevertheless, the Brewers dropped
one-half game to Baltimore - they
trail by 6'h games - when
Baltimore swept 11 double-header
from the &lt;llicago White Sox 12-7 and
4-3 in 13 innings.
The Royals are still in third place
in the AL West but are only one
percentage point behind Minnesota
- tire Twins' game with the New

15 games. Th&lt;mas hit hill 33rd
homer in tile first inning and Cooper
belted his 20th in the fifth. both times
following singles by Sal Bando.
Royals I, Red Sox 3
Willie Wilson cmtinued hill torrid
pace against Boston with four hita,
me RBI , two runs and two stolen
bases as tile Royals f""'pleted a
sweep of tile thr""1!ame aeries.
Wilson , who had a game-winning
inside-the-park homer Saturday,
singled and sccred in the third
inning, rapped a rUI'HCorlng single
in the fourth to give Kansas City a 32 lead and trip!~ and scored In tile
sixth. The speedy left fielder, who
also singled in the eighth, is batting'
.514 against Boston with 19 hits In '11
at-bats.
Blue Jayo 9, Angelo S
Jolm Mayberry !licked two solo
home rU!JS and l&lt;lck Cerone drove in
five runs witll a tw&lt;H'un h&lt;met, tworun double and base~oaded walk.
Washington 9;
Miami
14,
Rookie Butch Edge and Torn Buakey
Philadelphia 13; New Orleans 10, held California to seven hits whlle
Houston 7, and Denver 20, New
Nolan Ryan was the loser as the
England 17 in overtime . On
mue Jays got a measure of revenge
Thursday night, Kansas City shut for Saturday's Zt-2 shelling .
out l'&gt;finnesota 25-0.
"Yesterday was over and today was
Miami and IDs Angeles wound up
a new day," Cerone said.
as the only two unbeaten teams in
Orioles 1%-4, White Soli. 7-3
the exhibition season whlle Buffalo,
Gary Roenlcke 's leadoff home run
Atlanta and Minnesota were an 1}.4
in the 13th inning gave the Orioles
preseason collar.
their sweep. Doug Deancee' grand
The Steelers, "who have beaten
slam, ooe of four Baltimore homers,
Dallastbe last three times it counted
helped the Orioles take the opener as
(two of them Super Bowls ), were
Mike Flanagan became the AL's
two seconds and 47 yards away from
first 18-game winner. Roenlcke's
yet another triumph - but Rafael
homer was the first one allowl!d by
Septien of the Cowboys covered that
Ed Farmer since jolng the White Sox
yardlll!e with a last1llaY field goal
June 15. Ken Singletoo, Rich Dauer
that beat Pittsburgh. It wiped away
and Eddie Murray also homered for
the bad memory of a missed extra
Baltimore In the opener.
point on the Cowboys' first TD.
The day was dampened, however,
" It wasn't a perfect hit," said
when Baltimore Manager Earl
Septlen. "l tried to rush It and l
Weaver was slapped with a threehooked lt. I'm very excited. The · day suspensioo by league President
coaching staff told me they trusted
Lee MacPhail after filing two
me after tile first me. :.. That was protests in tile opener. The lint wu
just a bad kick."
on behalf of the players, who
David Whitehurst passed for two
claimed the outfield "as not In
touchdowns, one of them a 30-yarder
playable condition.
to James IDfton , and rookie Eddie
In the fifth inning, Weaver was
Lee !.very scored twice on a 3-yard
e~ctedbywnpireRonLu~after
run and a 42-yard pass play from
he filed another protest " because of
Lynn Dickey in Green Bay's victory
umpir~ integrity."
over Atlanta. June Jones' three TD
ngers H, Martaen W
passes and rookie Lynn Cain's pair
Steve Kemp hit two solo homers in
of !-yard plunges accounted foc the
tile opener, Including a gllll&amp;Falcons' scoring .
winning shot in the lOth Inning, and
Pat Haden's 9-yard toss to Charles
hit a two-run h&lt;mer to tie the
Young, Jeff Rutledge's ll-yard flip
nightcap in the seventh inning.
to Elvi5 Peacock and Rod Perry's
Champ Summers won It with a pinch
22-yard run with an interception of a
homer in the eighth. Kemp allo had
Dan Fouts pass propelled the Rams
three singles in the double-header.
past San Diego.
Kemp and Jason Th&lt;mpaon hit
Carl Allen's interception of a Bob
successive home runs In the sixth
Avellini pass on the game's first
inning to tie tile opener after
play preceded rookie Ottls
spotting Seattle a 3-1 lead.
Anderoon 's &amp;-yard TD run in the
Indians 7, A's 5
opening minute that started St.
Wayne Garland and Sid Monge
IDuis on the way to Its victory over
ctmbined for 61-3 innings of 11trong
the Bears.
relief and Dave Rosello drove In tile
Tampa Bay's Doug Williams
tie-breaking run with a sixth-inning
threw for two TDs against
double. Garland, who underwent
Cincinnati, me of them covering 41
surgery in May 1978 for a tern
yards to Jimmy Giles, and the Jets'
rotator cuff in his right shoulder,
Matt Robinson tossed a pair of
allowed three hits In 31-3 IOCOI'eleu
scoring passes against the Giants,
innings in hi5 first appearance since
one a 5o-yarder to Bruce Jlarper.
lll!gravating tile injury June 25.
Yor~ Yankees was rained out - and
just 2'h in back of tile Angels., who
lost to tile Toronto Blue Jays !1-3.
Elsewhere, the Detroit Tigers won a
double-header from the Seattle
Mariners 4-3 in 10 innings and 9-8
while the Cleveland Indians
defeated the Oakland A's 7~.
Two-run homers by Gorman
Thocnas and Cecil Cooper powered
the red-hot Brewers over Texas
behind the eight.Jdt pitching of Billy
Travers. It was Milwaukee's third
victory in a row and 13th in the last

Stabler wants to rebound
from last year's disaster
By The Associated Press
Kenny Stabler of the Oakland
Raiders is ready to prove that last
season was a fluke - but the oncehopeful Detroit lioos may be about
to founder .
~'· Stabler, who had a horrendous
1978 campaign when he threw 30
interceptions and just 16 touchdown
passes, showed Saturday night he's
gotten his scoring eye back. He
completed TD strikes of 5 · and 9
yards to Raymond Chester and
wotmd up completing 12 of 17 passes
for 137 yards, guiding the Raiders to
a '48-21 romp over the Buffalo Bills.
"! feel good about playing this
year," Stabler said. Derrick Jensen
also scored twice for Oakland on
rWJs of 57 yards with a fumble on 'tile
opening kickoff and 5 yards in the
third period.
The Lions came alive in the second
half of the 1978 season behind Gary
Danielson,
the
National
Conference's No . 3 passer last year,
and were favored by many to win
this year's Central Division title.
They were so confident of
Danielson's leadership that they
dealt veteran Greg Landry to
Baltimore - but their hopes were
dealt a severe blow Friday night
when Danielson tore ligaments in his
right knee late in Detroit's 17-7 loss

RIVER DOWNS

. CINCINNATI (AP) Mr.
Researching heads a field of eight
horses set to run the one-mile $5,500allowance feature today at River
Downs.
Grand Time cooquered a wet
track Sunday afternoon to win the
$6,000 allowance feature race by
four lengths. The winner, ridden by
Alex Fernandez, ran the six furlongs
in I: ll 4-5 and returned $6.20, $3.60
and $2.60.
Da' White Judge finished second,
paying $2.40 and $2.20. Accolation
showed at $2.60.
The daily double cornblna~lon of 79, Nora F. and Smuggler, both
ridden by Perry OU2ts, returned
$92.60.
The crowd of 8,180 wagered
$897,050.

to tile Colts.
He underwent surgery Saturday
and may miss the entire season.
Barring a trade, Detroit will have to
rely on Joe Reed cr rookie Jeff
Ktmlo.
"It's a disaster any time you lose
your quarterback," said Coach
Monte Clark. "I can't think of a
worse thing to happen to us, but it
did."
In Saturday night's other games it·
was Dallas 16, Pittsburgh 14; Green
Bay 45, Atlanta 35; Los Angeles 23,
San Diego 7; st. LDuis 10, Chicago 7;
Tampa Bay 24, Cincinnati 13, and
the New York Jets 14, New York
Giants 6.
On Friday night it was Seattle 55,
San Francisco 20; Cleveland 21,

Spectacular bid
back into action
STANTON, Del. (AP)
Spectacular Bid is back and his new
"Shoe" seems to fit perfectly.
The Kentucky Derby and
Preakness Stakes winner ended a
nearly three-month absence from
the racing scene SUnday, romping to
a 17-length victocy in an $18,000
allowance test at Delaware Park.
And there was one word to
describe Bid's return to racing spectacular. ·
Bid's return WBSl't the whole
story, only half. Veteran jockey
Willie Shoemaker, Spectacular Bid's
new rider, was the other half.
Bid, the 3-year-{)ld son of Bold
Bidder, had not raced since his
Triple Crown hopes were dashed by
a controversial thtrdiJlace finish in
the Belmont Stakes on June 9. On the
morning of that race, Spectacular
Bid injured his hoof when he stepped
on an open safety pin in hi5 stall, an
injury that some feel prevented the
colt from wining the Triple Crown.
But there were no signs of the
Injury Sunday as Spectacular Bid,
who carried 122 pounds, covered the
11-llknile test in a track recocd time
of 1:41~. Bid's performance broke
a record set at the Delaware track 19
years ago and equaled twice aince
tllen.

YOU'LL FIND

IT ALL AT THE
FRIENDLY
ONE/

Oultlde Ohio Cal Free 1~78
Col/ todoy fo'
Dr. lltJorlere
yot1r Fr« copy

of Dr. Ri'I~M'l
,,rro·rmali~

i1rochurt

tM do·lt-youtsetf tet1

If ao, w•lcorne to th•

IOCIII hMdqUolt1~r• for ,.

your buNchng end remodeflng n..dt . . .
Th• FtNIHIJr On•J

EROY CEMENT BLOCK
The Department Store

of

•

.-

Polly Cramer
HELP FOR

WATER-BrAINED DRAPES
By Polly (;ramer
POLLY'S PROBLEM

Tabl&amp;ba Dawa McGuffla
boldlq ber aliter, Heather
Marte.

Birth announced
Mr. and Mrs. Harry McGuffin,
Moundsville, W. Va. are BMOUIICing
the birth ol their IK'OOd daughter,
Heather Marie, born oo June 21, at
the Ohio Valley Hoepltal, Wheeling,
W.Va.
Maternal grandparents are Mr,
and Mrs. William Thomas ol Martina Ferry. Paternal grandparents
are Mrs. Dorothy McGuffin, Middleport, and the great.gandparetns
are Mr. and Mrs1 Cleo Whytaell,
Martln8 Ferry, and Mrs. Bessie
Ashley, Middleport.

r--

Social Calendar

MONDAY
OH KAN Coin Club will meet
regular lealion Monday evening
at the Riverboat R!Jom, Melp
Bnlncb, Athena County Savinga
and Lou!, w. Main p,....... U)'. ow
ol town t:Oin dealers. will be present at 7 to aeU and trade collect ,. items. A coin auction will
rullow the meeting with prizes
and refreshments offered.
Anyone inlenlled In coinl, currency or membel'!lblp is Invited to
· attend.

m

SOl
ATHU.'l. -

' RN

DEAR POlLY- Kiodly tell me
how to remove water staiM frooJ the
lining ol draperies that have been
dry cleaned but the cleaning did not
remove the statns. The lining Is

child's name (andmyh118band'salid
lnlne, too) I put down eacli item d.
clothing, etc. that will be needed as I
tbiDk olil When trip time comes, it
Is quick and easy to pacll with no
worries about whether I have forgotten the camera, pilla and so oo. l.JNDA

DEAR LINDA - It Ia also good to
waahable but I have had no suecess · make a list rl. things that must be
removing such marks from other
done at borne beforeleaving, suCh as
cottondrapea. -GRACE
stopping the newspBper, notifying a
DEAR GRACE - Perhaps a
neighbor and so on. -POLLY
reader can help us for I have never
DEAR POlLY - I fold a bath
been able to learn rl. a way to do this
towel over a tiHype dress belt to
successfully. Just be glad the water
lllllke a quiclrle apron rather than
marta are on orily the lining ol the
pinning a towel around my waist. draperies. -POlLY
BEATRICE
DEAR POlLY -I use a buliKype
DEAR POLLY- My Pet Peeve is
baster to suck the excess grease
thole friends who date their letter
from \be pan in which I have cooked
just "Monday'' or ''Tuesday" and do
hamburgel'll and find this Is easier
not put the date of the month. I am
than clralnlng olf the fat.
left wondering what Monday or
Also, I keep a pair rl. swimming
Tuesday. -MRS. L.D.H.
goggles in the kllcben to put on when
Polly will send you ime ol her signI peel oolons. -OONNIE
ed thank-you newspaper coupon
DEAR POI.LY - About a week
clippers if ahe uses your favorite
before going on a vacation or a
Pointer, Peeve or Problem In her
weekend trip, I lllllke a list rl. the
column . Write
POLLY'S
things that will be needed. I have
POINTERS In care of this
three children and under each
newspaper.

the tradiUonal bride and groom
centei'plece. A blue and yeUow color
scheme was carried out.
. Refreshments ol cake, punch, nuta
mints and coffee were served. The
mints were made by Ruth Brooks.
Attending were Charlbtte Van
Meter, Genevieve Guthrie, Joan
Calaway. Alma Jane Pullllls, 'Clara
Follrod, Nina Roblnllon, Virgie
Buckley, Mary Jo Buckley, Martha
Elllott, Allee EUlott, Brenda Boyles,
Beth Ritchie, Patty Edwards,
Roberta Hendei,'.SOII, Susan Pullins
and Juon, Sharon Yost, Gayann
·Burke, Cora Kanbner, Wilma
Seamaa, Effie Watson, Joyce Ritchie, Sharon Boyles, Shirley Ed~. Teresa Evans and Rebecca,
Marilyn Robinson, Lori and Lee
AM, Usa ,Henderson, Debbie Watsoo and chance, Carolyn Grueser,
Betty DonoVan, DorothyROblnson,
JUanita Guthrie, Marlene Donovan,
and Michelle
and Ossle Mae
Follrod.
Sending gifts were · Marjorie
Keebaugh, Betty Farrar, Mattie
Pullllls, Alma Swartz, Lucille Carr,
Pam Hendersoo, Dorma Brook&amp;,
Ruby Burke, Eleanor Douglas, and
Virginia Burke.
Game prizes were won by Joan
Calaway, Carolyn Grueser, and
Shirley Edwartls. The door prize
was woo by Alma Jane Pullllls.
PICNIC CHANGED
Due to the weather cooditions, the
annual picnic of the Ladies
Auxiliary of Veterans Memorial
Hoospital will be held at .6:30 pm .
Tuesday at the East-West Room at
tile hospital rather than at the home
of Reva Simll.

Freda Davis was queen for the
week when the TOPS (take off
pounds sensibly) Ohio 1456, Rutland,
met last week. Runner-up was
Beulah Wright. Members sang to

Mrs. lnvis and she received a
dollar.
The meeting opened with the cll!b
pledge. Officer's reports were given.
Cindy Krautter, leader, noted that
she would bring a jar far contribUtions to the fund with which to pay
for the new set of scales. She read an
article on why people become
Christy Drake, daughter rl. Mr. overweight. Members gave their
and Mrs. Thomas Drake was - ideas on ways to cut down on eating.
honored with a party on her first birthday.
One year ago : Actor Charles Boyer
Attending we!'e Mr. and Mrs. Jim
died
at the lll!e of 78.
King, Tim, Pam, and Robert
Today 's birthday : Economist
Lawrence, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Gillispie, Penny and Robin, Mildred Walter Heller is 64 years old.
Arnold, and Tim and Jolm Jeffers.
Mr. and Mrs. James Drake and
Carol joined the family for dinner in
the evening. Joe Lawrence lind Donna Misner Visited earlier in the day.
Leona Winnings sent a gift,

Turns one

•'

John Ford won lout Academy
Awards for beat director between 1935
and1952.
"All Quiet on the Western Front,"
the anti-war movie based on the novel
of the same name, woo the Academy
Award for beat picture in 1930.
Adolph Hitler began "The Nig,ht of
the Long Knives," a purge of Nazi
bll!'eaucrats, in 1934. Among the 77
prominent officials killed were Ernest Roehm and Gregor Strasser.
HiUer publicly acknowledged the
murders two weeks later and clainied
the right to kill for the benefit of the
German Reich.
Jacques Cartier made his first landing in Canada at Prince Edward
Island in 1534.

354 E. Main

p~~.~~~

·

S

Aug. 27-Aug. 31

FOOTLONG
&amp; FRIES

'1.19
Don't Forget
To Register For
The CAR SWEEPSTAKES
(No Purchae Necessary)

LOCAL

aealoo at the high llchool at 6:30
p.m. Monday.
roaDAY
LADIES AUXIUARY, Drew
Webster Poet 39, American
Legion, 7:30p.m. Tuesday at the
post home.
PAST MA'I'RONS, Pomeroy
&lt;llapter !IS, Order ol the Eastern
Star, 6: 30 Tueaday at the home of
Mrs. Lucille Swackhammer, for
the llllllual picnic.

Get the Best Buys Now! Big Savings and Dependable Service!

SAVE 550

'I'HUR!IDAY
ANNUAl.; MEETING of the
Meigs County Unit ol the
American Cancer Society. a·p.m.
Thunday In the east-west wing of
the Vetel'8lll Memorial Holpital.
The meeting Is open to the public.
Reports will be given and new olflcen elected.

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Since 1915
'I

Pomeroy, 0.

INVENTORY
REDUCTION SALE!

BOOSTERS Work

Holness Church raised money,
through several projects, to tColumbuiZoo.
Making the trip were Steve Mllllley,
Dwayne Ught, Mike Smith, Junior
l.lanJey, Dorcas Ugbt, Debbie Ught,
cfndy Smith, ~renda Robbins, Kim
.Hudson, Angle Lawhorn, Rhonda Jeffers, and Bob and Nancy Manley,
youth leaders,
Mr. and Mrs. Manley also provided
transportation foc the group.
The class haa p181Uled Its next
meeting for September 8 at the Bob
Ev8118 Fanns, Rio Grande. ·

Art~ you • member of

.1-800-282-6410

POLLY·s POINTERS

The Willing Worken Sunday school
class ol the Mi~diej!ort Independent

T he Fnendly Ones

Assisting were Marilyn Robinllon,
Debbie Watson, and Dorothy Robinson.
The gift table was centered with

'

tt~f~?t~~tf~il~~i! it~~tt~f~{~~:~:~~~t:~:~:::i:~:~:~:~:~:~

D=e·J~
For Complete Information CaU FREE

A bridal shower honoring U2 Ed·
wards, bride-elect of Greg
Winebrenner, was held recently at
the borne of Marlene Donovan.

· RE'I'URNII ROME - Pn ·ltllllaelll R. 8earlel ... retarDt!d !lome ..
te P~ 18 1111 wife, 1'am1Dy, ud
........ .U,ell Rile, after - plella&amp; ...le lralablc at Fort Db,
ud A.J:T. at Aberdeea, Md.llelrlel
llu ell1llted Ia lbe Army Nalloul
Guard, Point Pli!UIDl He Is lbe 101
ol KeDDelb Searlea, RullaDd, aad
PaallDe Searlea, Fo.lorla.

In 1964, the government of South

Vietnam was turned over to a
triwnvirate of generals.
Ten years ago : An Israeli
commando force staged a mortar
attack on a military installation in the
Nile Valley of upper Egypt.

Davis 'Queen for the Week '

, Edwards bridal shower held

.'

\

' 'I •

,.

�7-The Daily Sentinel, Middieport-Pomeroy,

'
6-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0., Monday, Aug. Tl, 1979

JANE WISE, Rutland, at the piano, was the accompanist for a concert by Miss M11rilyn Turner at the
Meigs Junior High School in Middleport Sunday. Miss
Turner, who has sung professionally for a number of
years filled the auditorium with her rich, contralto ·
voice and used no amplification as she presented a program of light semi-classical numbers. The contrast in
volume as she moved smoothly through the program

-Layette
shower

was outstanding and her years of training were quite
obvious to a receptive audience. Miss Turner, standing
at the piano in photo, informally introduced the selections as she moved through the program which included numbers such as "Till There Was You " "You'll
Never Walk Alone," Summertime," ;,Beautiful
Dreamer, " "Without A Song" and "Smoke Gets In
Your Eyes."

Helen Help

us. . .

By n .. l.·n Huth·l

WHEN SHE ASKS lllM FOR DATE

Gibbs celebrate birthdays
The . eighth birthday of Stacey · bs; grandfather, Harold·Gibbs; ruck
Martin, Regina Rice, Pete, Ann,
Renee Gibbs, daughter of Lesley and
Sheryl Gibbs, was celebrated Aug.
Pam, and Aimee Gibbs; Ronnie, Jr.
and William Ohlinger, Betty
II with a party at the home of her
Williams and family , and Pam Bargrandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Edward
ber.
R. Martin, Pomeroy.
Games were played and prizes
The eleventh birthday of Brian
won by Steven Gibbs, Vanessa Jay,
Michelle Gibbs, Mark Franz, and Gibbs, son of Lesley and Sheryl GibBrian Gibbs. Ryan Martin won the
bs, was celebratd on July 15 with a
picnic at Forest Acres Park.
door prize.
His cake, decorated like a baseball
Her cakes were baked by her
cousin, Theresa Hussell, 69, and diamond and topped with miniature
featured a doll cake standing on a players, was served along with hamdecorated sheet cake. It was served burgers, hot dogs, potato chips, and
along with ice cream and punch. punch. After opening his gifts,
Suckers and favors were given to the games were played and fishing enjoyed during the afternoon.
children.
Attending along with those named
Attending along with his parents
above were her brother, Jinuny ; were his brother and sister, Jinuny
Luelle and Jeff Martin, Gwen Mar·- and Stacey ; his grandparents, Eddie
tin, Nancy and Frankie Musser, and Anna Mae Martin; Jeff and
Angela Ohlinger, Eric Hayes, Rhon- Luette Martin and Ryan, Rick and
Gwen Martin and steve, and Binky
da and Lori Gibbs, and Jeffrey. .
Unable to attend but sending gifts and Cammy Morris.
were her grandmother, Helen GibSending a gift were Bob and Pat
Williams and family.

Beegle family reunion held
POMEROY - The Beegle family
reunion was held Sunday, Aug. 5, at
the Archery Building at Royal Oak
Park. The reunion is held in Meigs
County every other year - alternating with the Beegle reunion in
Bedford, Pa.
Bill Beegle, Gallipolis, president
of the 1979 reunion, welcomed 120
guests.
Registration began at 11 :30 a.m.
followed by potluck dinner at 12:30
p.m.
At the business meeting officers
for 'the 1981 reunion were elected.
They are : president, Spencer carpenter : vice president, Robert E.
Beegle, and secretary-treasurer,
Frankie McKelvey.
Miss Vera Beegle conducted the .
memorial service for the departed
members of the clan.
During the·program conducted by
Shirley Beegle Huston, Ted Beegle,
Columbus, gave an interesting
report on the genealogy work he is
conducting on the Beegle Clan. Bill
McKelvey , Portland, played his
guitar and sang several songs.
Locetta Beegle, Pomeroy, received
an encore for her Charleston .
Several mem~rs played Name
1bat Tune. The Cox Family Singers,
W'almlngton, (Rev. Ray Beegle
Family ) sang several selections.
'lbe group began and ended with
group singing of the old favorites
being led by Bill Beegle and accompanied on the piano by Olive
Weber, Long Bottom , longtime
family friend. Benediction was by
Paul Beegle.
Door prizes were won by Charles
'lbel.lll and MBttie Beegle. Jamie
Jenldna, Zanesville, grandson of Ed- ·
vraril Beegle, received gift as
youngest present.

Miss· Vera Beegle, Racine,
received gift for the oldest member
present. Rev. Ray Beegle,
Wilmington, received gift for having
the largest family present.
Ellis Beegle, Everette, Pa. ,
received gift for traveling the farthest. Gifts were donated by Spencer
carpenter, Jean Alkire, Fim Gaul
and Paul Beegle.
Bill Beegle, president, extends his
thanks to.everyone who helped make
the reunion a success. Special
thanks go to following : Kitchen :
Mattie Beegle, Laura Circle, Martha
Lou Beegle, Eileen Beegle, Bonnie
Theiss ; Nominating : Paul Beegle,
Robert G. Beegle, Leanna Beegle ;
Clean-up : Mark Beegle, Bruce
Beegle, Dick Beegle, Ronnie Beegle,
Charles Theiss ; Program : Shirley
Beegle Huston; PA System : Gerald
Powell; Gifts : Jean Alkire Firn
Gaul, Spencer Carpenter ; lc~ : Rod
Beegle; Publicity : Jane Beegle.
The next Meigs County Beegle
reunion will be the first Sunday in
August, 1981.

A roentgen is a dosage unit of
radiation exposure produced by Xrays.
The Office of Management says
Americans spend 784,662,000 hours
each year filling out federal forms.
The U. S. birth rate dropped from
2S.l per 1,000 population to 14.8 in the
50 years between 1925 and 1975.
The first-ever Academy Award for
best picture was given to the
Paramount movie "Wings" in 1928.

WHOPAYSWHATFOR
EVENlNG ?
By Helen Bottel
DEAR HELEN :
I'm about to do something I've
never done before: ask a man out.
We'll be going to a play '( I'm quite
sure he11 accept), but who takes
care of the costs? Do we "dutch," do
I let him buy the tickets and pay him
back later? Do I use my car or his?
Who picks up the tab for the afterplaydrink?-CONFUSED
DEAR CON :
As a general rule, whoever does
the inviting picks up the tab - unless
you know one another well enough to
agree on "dutch."
Buy theater tickets in advance,
and dOJ! 1 bother handing them to
your date before you reach the window. Since you're emancipating,
why waffle'
Assume that you 11 use your car
unless he suggests picking you up which he probably will.
The after-play snack? By then you
may be so mutually comfortable you
can joke, "This is part of the
package."
More likely, he'll say, "How about a
c!rink or something' ". And then it's
on him.
Happy reverse dating. - H.
DEAR HELEN.
This is in response to "A Different
VIewpoint" who doesn't agree with
sociologists that all rapists hate
women-but instead feels that some
simply want sex so bad they can 1
control their urges.
My fiancee (now wife) fell victim
to the hideous act of rape. It was the
man's second charge, but he served
very little time and is now free . (She
knew him and considered him a
friend, he being the brother of her
landlord.) We were married two
months afterwards and are trying to
put the past out of our minds, but
how long this will have a disparaging effect (sexually) on my wife, only time will tell.
In my opinion, rapists are the
worst of all racists-they view
women as a race apart, to be used at
their convenience to displace
frustration and anguish which
developed earlier in their lives. A
convenient time and place is more
important to them than the particular female. My wife's rapist
didn 'I hate her personally - she was
just there. Nevertheless, he hates, or
he wouldn't use violence. He has
caused misery and trauma that
can't be erased, and he should not be
out on the street to repeat his crime!
- YET ANOTHER VIEWPOINT
DEARYAV :
Agreed! Whether a convicted
rapist's crime stems from hate or
uncontrolled passion, he should not
be turned loose with a slap on the
wrist.
Tougher trials, longer sentences
and fewer paroles might show many
of these •'passionate" men that
women are no longer fair game for
their aggressions. - H.
DEAR HELEN :
I have two retarded children.
They're sweet and loving, but I
didn 'I realize they were repulsive
until a woman at the market stared
and said, "Must you expose the
public to them? I won't be able to eat
my dinner tonight!" How could peoplebe so cruel? -MRS. T.R.P.
DEA R MRS. P.:

Miss Marilyn Turner, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Turner,
Rutland, a contralto on Italian radio and television and a voice teacher In
Milan, was presented in an excellent concert of light selections at the
Meigs Junior High School in Middleport Sunday afternoon. Miss Turner
was given impressive applause after each number and a standing ovation
after she concluded her presentation with "Indian Love Call." Rather
than sing encores, Miss Turner mingled with the audience after her concert. Pictured with her is a long-time friend, Mrs. Naomi Chase Howell,
formerly of Rutland now of Gallipolis.

Langsville
LANGSVILLE - Mrs. Qorothy
Jeffers of Gallipolis visited with Mr.
and Mrs. Ron Stiles Thursday. Mrs.
Jeffers and Mrs. Stiles called on
Mrs. Ruth Musser, Athens, who is
visiting at the home of Mrs. Hollis
Grate.
Irene Barnes of Gallipolis and
Dorothy Woodard visited with Mr.
and Mrs. Wendell Gerlach ci
Chillicothe.
Mrs. Sharon Barr and David and
Michelle and Mrs. Elvira Barr
called on Mr. and Mrs. Mike Barr
and son Tuesday.
Dorothea Handley was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hoopital Monday with an injured hand by getting
it in the wringer of her washing
machine. She is home now but still
has a very painful injury.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Barr, David
and Michelle, of Rutland and Mrs.
Elvira Barr spent Sunday with Mr.
and Mrs. Duane Barr and Shawn, of
Jackson. Mrs. Faye Walker has
returned to her duties at the post office after a week 's vacation with her
For some, it comes naturally. You
describe only one repulsive person
here: The woman whose tongue
makes her a monster!- H.
Got a problem ? An adult subject
for discussion ? You can talk it over
in her column if you write to Helen
Bolte!, care of this newspaper.

c!illdren in Colorado.
'Brenda Johnso(J of Racine worked
in the post office while Mrs. Walker
was on vacation.

Fairview
News Notes
By Mrs. Herbert ROWib
Donnita Manuel was an overnight
guest of Heather Shuler recently.
Ricky Sellers attended the Sayre
reunion as a guest of Robin and Donnita Manuel a recent Sunday at the
Shriners park.at Racine .
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Bush visited
Mrs. Betty Pigot at MI. Olive and
their Aunt Susie who was visiting
there. TheY also visited Mr. and Mrs.
Arnold Hupp at Portland.
Mr. and Mrs. Sid Manuel, Mr. and
Mrs. Joe Manuel and son, Tim, were
recent guests ¢ Mrs. Betty McGuire
at Pomeroy.
Mrs. Joe Manuel, Mrs. Denise
Manuel visited Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Hudson at
Minersville Sunday evening.

Carpenter
Personals
Mr. and Mrs. Dwaine Jordan (lnd
family were ht\sts for a hayride and
'' wiener roast for the Albany Pony
' League ball team, their families and
· friends. About 4() attended and en' joyed the evening. Their son, Keith
Eugene Jordan, plays on the team.
' Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Smith, local,
and his niece and nephew, Mr. and
, Mrs. Herb Hanaway, Amanda , spent
· four days
vacationing at places of in,,,
'
terest m the eastern United States.
: ·They visited the Train Museum and
Military Cemetery at Baltimore, Md,
· Luray caverns in Virginia, Harpers
Ferry, W. Va., where a.town is being
restored, along with White Sulphur
•

POMEROY-A layette shower
honoring Mr. and Mrs. Robert Jewell
was held recently at the Harr!Bonville
Presbyteriali Church.
HO&amp;tesses were Mrs. Margl!l'l!l
Douglas, Mrs. ,Frances Alkire, Mrs.
Frances Young, Mrs. Stella Atkins,
and Mrs. Ardis Waggoner.
Mrs. Norma Lee led a devotional
program using the story of the birth of
Christ. Those attending sang "Take It
To The Lord In Prayer" and "God
Will Take care of You" and Mrs. Lee
had prayer.
Games were conducted by Mrs.
Pauline Atkins with Mrs. Stella
Atkins, Mrs. Gloria Riggs 81\d Mrs.
Allegra Will winning the prizes.
Pink and white streamers and a
stork were featured in the decorations. An arrangement ci roses was
used on the pulpit between silver candle sticks with the rosea being a gift
from Miss Ruby Diehl.
The refreslunent table was covered
with a white lace cloth with mint
green underlay. Pink sweet ~ and
miniature mums, a gift from Mrs.
Paul Aikins, centered the table.
Several kinds of cakes, punc4. iced
tea, nuts, mints and potato chips were
served.
Attending were Mrs. Pauline
Atkins, Mrs. Ruby Halliday, Mr. and
Mrs. Glenn Jewell, Mrs. Louise Burbridge, Mrs. Tana Kennedy, Mrs ..Linda Donohue and Crystal, Mrs. Stella
Atkins, Mrs. Gloria RiW, Mrs.
Frances Alkire , Mrs. Margaret
Douglas, Mrs. Norma Lee, Mrs.
Frances Young, Mr. and Mrs. Norman Will, Mrs. Betty Bishop, Mrs.
·Faye Cotterill; Mrs. Winnie Neal,
Mrs. Golda Epple, Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Wiseman, and the honored couple.
Sending gifts were Mr. and Mrs.
Duane Stanley, Mr. and Mrs. Dano
King, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Chapman,
Mrs. Anna Elizabeth Turner, Mrs.
Roberta Wilson, Mrs. Rosalie King,
Mrs. Evelyn Allen, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Davidson, Mrs. Wilda Haning, Mrs. Dena Raymond, Mrs.
Dorothy Frurn, Mr. and Mrs. Clair
Waggoner, Mrs. Lola Clark, Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Sheets, the Star Garden
Club, Mr. and Mrs. Dale Wi.lliams,
Mrs. Lana Gibson, Mr. and Mrs. Ala
Jordan, Miss Ruby Diehl, Mr. and
Mrs. Earold Dean, Mrs. Eva
Claphan, the Rev. and Mrs. Ernest
Stricklin, Miss Martha Stricktin, Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth Welsh, Mrs. Letha
Cowen, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Cotterill and Mr. and Mrs. David
Wiseman.

0.,Monday, Aug. '1:1, 1979

Springs and the New River Bridge,
also in West Virginia. It was a very interesting experienc~.
Mrs. Tim Ruth (Teresa Lovell) and
baby son, Robert Charles, joined her
husband in Colorado this past week.
They went to the airport in Collimbus
and on by plane from there. He is employed in a mine there.
Robert Parker, Middleport, was a
guest of his aunt, Martha Mays, and
Mary Erickson and daughter, Robin.
Goldie Gillogly, Albany , was a dinner guest of her son-in-law and
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Crabtree.
Mr. and Mrs. Boyd Oliver and
Steve, Ashville, spent an afternoon
and evening with Mr. and Mrs. Walter
Jordan and sons.
The Temple Chtlrch United
Methodist Wof~!en group met at the

"

..

SUPERIORS BRAND

FRANKl ES .........~~- ::

CHUCK
STEAK

Pound

OPTOMETRISt

I

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

wonderful fellowship and service
together.

WE" DO

.

¢

.

.:~~K···········~~.".dJ269

CU~TOM

!""·

'

_,-·. ard ina I
&amp; PEARL STREETS

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

MIXED FRYER PARTS ............. Lb . 45~
BREASTS ............................. lb. 11.09
WHOLE LEGS ......................... lb. 69~
SOUTHERN FRESH

PEACHES ...••.....•..••...•..•... ~~:. 29~

s;A~~~s~~·E·························:~:. 39~

79

•••

· ~s~

.

SILVER QUEEN

WHITE CORN .•..~z.~~--~~-~~.~~~~.. !1oo
**LABOR DAY WEEKEND**
SALE DATES
.

AUGUST 27.

RIGHTS
RESERVED

THURSDAY ONLY SPECIAL

RC··· ......

20

a :~KBTLS. 99 ~

16
Plus Tax &amp; Dep. With other purchase

SEPTEMBER 3, 1979

MAXWELL HOUSE
INSTANT

.
.
~~.~.~
.
~4
49
COFFEE

l

L_o~.!~~~~~-::.:~s~:~~!!~·.:.':o_M_E!~~·-;.. ___ .J.

SUCtD "' MAI.VII

'•

•• .,. ..$" ••••

KRAFT

10 LB. BAG 1

¢

69
21 OZ. . 89¢

VIETTI

r\U\11;. •• • • • • • •,

WESSON Olt.•.••••••.•.•.•• Jt«!Z.!&gt;!&gt;!tte 99~
CHIPS AHOY.~~~~~f~ •••.•••• .I.~~.~,._···· s1 09

....~'\lo srORES • CARO INALF OoosroREs

;;; SNOW CROP

~

INSTANT

-oz.

79

BAR-B-QUE SAUCE .!tQ?

u

31
Can

$1

CHGARCOAL

TAB, SPRITE or COK.E PAK 16 oz. BTLS •1.09
POTATO CHIPS MR. BEE ·........... REG. 99' 79~

I

Whole lb. 11.39
Half. lb 11.49
uarter lb. 11.59

BBQ FAVORITES

POTATOES ... • .~~:.~~: ~ 1
CABBAGE··················· .
QUANTITY

Pound

HAMS············

PRODUCE

SOLID GREEN

VAUGHAN'S

,._ ............. ..., "

SUPERIOR TAVERN

MEAT CUTTING

U. S. No. 1

'

wit~ l1er si•ter, F.thei Wright of
Dresd!:ll .
VIr . Ray Alkire took boat tour for a
week to the Bahamas.
Mrs. Nellie Borgan ha s returned
frnm a t.ionth's visit with her sisters
and frunilies, Mrs. Frashier Dowden,
F'urt Ashlev. W. Va ., and Mr. and
Mrs. Samuel Haines, Springfield, W.
Va . While there they took a four hour
boat ride on the Gateway Clipper on
the Three Rivers, toured Washington,
D. C. and MI. Vernon, and attended
the wedding on July Tl of her niece,
Phyllis Mauck to Terry Moreland in
Fort Asbury Trinity Church at 7:30
p.m. After she returned home she was
visited by Mr. and Mrs. Gary Borgan
and family of Reynoldsburg, Mr. and
Mrs. James Borgan and family of
Lancaster, Mr. and Mrs. Larry Birchfield and family of Albany and Debbie Birchfield and Rosella of Albany
and James Hartlev of Alhanv

79

SMORGAS PAC •••••••..•••••.~~·)1 89
SLICED BOLOGNA •.•..•••• ~~.~~- s1 39

r-------------------------------1
I N. W. COMPTON, O.D. :

I

Mr. and Mrs. Dale Bailey of
Marengo, Mrs. Dr. Robert Swerling,
Seattle, Wash., Mrs. Cecil Conley,
Lancaster, were recent guests of Mrs.
Stella Atkins.
Mrs. John Wilson, Columbus, was a
recent visitor of Ruby Diehl.
Mr. and 1\irs. Joe carsey visited
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Payne in Columbus recently .
Robin Gibson, Columbus, spent a
week with her grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Alkire.
Mrs. Waldo Neal visited a lew days

ECKRICH

USDA CHOICE

~

Harrisonville
Social News

BACON................~~.~. 79

Pound
CHUCK
ROAST···············.

~hilrV'

...

0

WPffii~S

USDA CHOICE
BONELESS

CALLMutuaJC\

-~
Gregg Gibbs
I 99H443

Alfred
Social Notes

'

HOW'S YOUR
HOSPITAUZATION?

,.,.,.. ...

Howard Flanders and Hobart Swartz are able tc be out again.
Attending the carr School Reunion
in Woode Grove on Aug. 12 were 22
from various places. Mr. and Mrs.
Attendance at Sunday School on Garrett Christy and a group, local,
Aug. 12 was 28, the . offering was headed by Robert White and local
$15.50.
'
tal""t and the Malone girls from
Worship seJ:viC'e attendance was 29 Coolville area and other local talent
with Rev. Robert Robinson, exchange furnished music and everyone sang.
minister holding the service with
Added to the reunion this year was
Charles 'D. Woode song leader and the Modem Woodman picnic sponFlorence Sperlcer pianist. ·
• sored ~Y Mr . .and Mrs. Ralph HenErnest Taylor is a pa\ient in derson m honor of Charles and Helen
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Woode for th~lr se~ce to the Alfr~
Uoyd Dillinger is also on the sick conununlty m vanous ways, mlist
eluding the use of the Grove on
·
various occasions. We shall hold in
our memories wonderi!ll times and
church. Plans were made for a bake cherish our friends who met with us
sale and a church picnic after the on the occasion of tile Community
minister's family returns. ,Hymn Service Plaque being presented. We
houe we have a few more years of
singing was enjoyed by the group.

J!t•lilift•l:l

'

ORANGE 2
JUICE$
Umit IWil w11h coupon

•

on• coupon 0 " f•m ily

• ,,..,. '

3 oz. jar

12·01.
Car1s

14 9

h,;"Fr" tlln!
00-40.05

CQC9NUT

Jumbo

NU son..................................... ~~.~;. J99~
LIQUID ERA······························.········ .. 5259

Roll

Howl&lt;)

lDAIRY'VALUESI
KRAFT SLICED. AMERICAN

stoR wondering
.........................................6 ~~o:~ $1

If vou'd like to smooth out
the ups·and downs of your electric
bilL we have a way.
ICs called the Equal Payment Plan.
And it's simple. \'ve average out your electric usage and bill you a fixed
ar~o unt each month based on that average. You'll continue to receive a
bill each month showing your actual usage, but you'll pay the fixed amount.
The twelfth month is "settle·up" or final payment month.
We'll automatically review your account every six months, so that .
you'll know whether your electricity costs are going up, or down. or staying
about the same.
If an electric hill you can budget for sounds like a good idea ~and
it doe~ appm~l to a lot of our customers), simply contact us. We'll take it
rro111 11 w I'('.

hill.

VALLEY BELL ROCKEY MOUNTAIN

ICE CREAM BARS

r

CARDINAL

ICE CREAM
ASST. FLAVORS

SARA LEE

.

10 CT.

,.,..

$139
3\ . 01 .

$, ••

;

16 PAK

£cGs -~~~:~~....... ~ .....................!...~~.. sg~
KRAFT •

ORANGE

&amp;4

oz. sn.

$159

JUICE·························.·······~

KRAFT PARKAV

Half
Gallon

APPLE PIE ............................................ ....

1-Lb.

IIRBIRIIE

Carton

.. 2

FOR

$
:~~-N..c:.N~ .....169

FRESH BORDEN

2o/o MILK ...~ ...................
VAL'LEY BELL

'

1(2

gal.

BUTTERMILK ..........•.......•..•••.......•.. 89

OhiQ 1\Jwer Com
(

-

$159

BORDEN

24

OL

COTTAGE CHEESE ··~·····················

o~

\.
I

1 2.-ot.
Box

.,:~ft: UI(MUJI

SIIBLES

about your
next electric

Working together is the

Limil on e with toUPOf\
one cuuplift.'*' l.~i!y

e

'119

U

•

g§

t;;

rS'

CARDI N~ l \(5

WRAP •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • 371Jz sq. tt. 79'

~

~

Good •• Clltdlftfl Raflll lllu• Sto•u

REYNOLDS

~

«

�•

8- The Daily&amp;ntmcl. Milldlepnrt-Ponwrny . 0. Mnnrl•y. Aug . 'l:l. 1979

Your Hest Buys Are
Tuesday, Aug . 28

---- - -;----~

ASTRO·GRAPH

WANT AD
CHARGES

Bernice Bede Osol

,.

1:J Wnr•l.~ ur U!l(l£&gt;r
Cash
Clt~ri'll'

~'-Your

l !liW

2 da\· ~

~ 'Birthday

.1 r l ;t;·~

1.00

1 15

I 50

I 00

1.80

2 25

H IO
:175
li · '··~ ~
L•rh ~· onl un-r the mmimmn
t5 "' ' 'rd~ ts ~ et•nt.~ pt•r wnrd Jlt'r
d;r Y, lld!i nmniru~ other th;.n t•onSI't'llti\'C d;r ys w·ill be.· l'h&lt;Jrgt'!l 11\
Uw ! d:ty r:1h•

Aug , 28 . 1979
People who have been (!t!l·cut t to
gel close to w 111 makt! them -·

selves a... ailable to you th1s co mmg year A Ch&lt;lnc e · 1nlroduc11on
to the rtght person could be
responstble lor o oentng d oo rs to
places wher e yo u were pr evtous-

(Aug .23-Sepl .

22)

n~h t tu t•dit or re ject uny ads

ohJ t't 'ti nnal. Tht:
l'uh\i.~ l wr w1 llnut bt&gt; respunsiblc
f(lr nwn· than Pllt' incor ret'l ill ·

MEDICAL
CONVENIENCE
The c ran berry is a native
North American fruit.
Long before the Pilgrims
a rrived in 1620, the Indians.
combined c rushed cranberries with dried deer meat
and m elted fat to make
pemmican - a conveniece
food that would keep for a
long time . The Indians a ttributed the cranberry with
properties;
m edicinal
medicine men brewed
c r anberry poultices to
draw poison from arrow
wounds.

f!'-, -· ((·

d,;

7 (

7

1,

\

-:..(

~ ,~ ;_, L

·•
1

Ir . --

. ' - •J

11 11
- ,,_.
.

1965 GE!IIERAl60xl2 . 2bod, .
1970 Sylvo._60x12 , 2 bedr.
1970 Cas tle , 60x 12, 2 bedr.
1974 Mork li fle , 50)!'12 , 2 bedr .
1969 Vo l iont , I 2x60. 2 bedr .
19b7 Notional. 12x50. 2 bed r.
B' S MOBILF HOME SAlE S, PT
PLEASANT , WV . 304 -675-44 24

Help Wanted

5 days a week .
7-•t30 pm . 2 children. 18 mo.
and 2 m o . Reference'&gt; remy home.

quired , must ho ve own
tronspor tati on . Denise Wolfe ,

9_49_·2_3_77. _ _ __ _ __
BAR PERSON . honest , neat ,
depe ndabl e. Apply in person ,
Five Points Gril l, Pomeroy.
Mole or f emale.
O NE PAR T time baby si tter .
7:30 to 2:30 , J days a week
overage
for 2 ch ildren .

949 2450 .

For Rent

WANT-AD
!ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
Mond;t\'
Nuou on Sa t imlay
Tuc ~th1v

thn,1 Fritia v
4 PM . .

tlw

d :1 ~

lx•ftll'l' pub l~t · ation
Su:Hla1·
&lt;!PM .

Fnday afternnmt

Card of Thanks
APPRECIATED the many
cords and gifts rece ived on
August 24th observing my
92n d
annive rs ary . Many
than ks to everyo ne. Ben
Quisenberry .
I

Notices
GUN SHOOT, EVERY FRIDAY
7,30 PM RACIN E GUN ClUB .
FACTOR Y CHOKE GUNS ONLY.
MEIGS COUNTY
HUMANE
SOC IET Y. 992 -6260 . Pets
available for adoption and illformatio n se r vice .
ERWIN'S G ULF Service wi ll be
dosed from August 29 t ill
Sept . 4 lor vocal ion .
CA LL NOW and register for
coke decorating classes
beginn ing soon at the
Carousel Confectionery, Mid·
dleport . 992-6342 .
.

Mobile Homes Sale's
MOBILE HOME and lot in
Mason . WV . Col l304 -773-5905
or992-77 59 .

N o ti ce is hereby given

be held at the offices of The
Citizens National Bank
M idd leport, Ohio t o sell for
cas h
th e
following
co llateral to wit:
one 1978 17 " Zenith color

T.V. Model K 17BOW

Serial No. 6186658.
The C itizens Na1ional
Bank , Middlepo rt , Ohio
reserves th e rig ht to bid af
thi s sale .

IBl 27, 28, 29, 3lc

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Pork .
Ro ute 33 , nor1h of Pomeroy .
large l ots. Call 992-7479.
3 AND 4 RM f urnished and unfurnished
opts.
Phone

;I

ASTRAL
MISUNDERSTANDING
Before
scie n tis t s
u nders to od
seasona l

chan ges,

astronomers

believed t~.at t he sun, in its
apparent path a cross the
heavens" paused over the
Tropic of Capricorn (on
Dec. 21 or 22 by modern

II .

J- ' , "
,~, "'~ ,,. . ~· ··· ·

calendars) and again when
it reac hed the Tropic of
Can~cr (about JW!e 21) .
Anctent astronomers nam-

ONE BEDROOM opts . Contact
Village Manor, 992-7787 .
SENIOR CITIZENS, 1 bedroom
op t s.
for
rne1.
Rental
assistance
o v oitoble .

'1'1n721._:__

the hospi tal- they say they needand
the room ..
still .

"sistere," to stand

Berry's World

PARTLY FURNISHED opt. in
Po meroy .,1 Adults . No pe ts
Sui table for workers . Ph one

992.3201.
SlEEPING ROOMS for 2 o r 3
constr u ctio fl
workers .

OLD COINS, pocket wa tches ,
class rings, wedding bands,
d iamonds . Gold or silver . Co li
J . A. Wamsley . 742-2331.
WANTE D: SAW logs . Payment
upon deli ve ry to our yard . 7:30
to 3:30 weekdays . Bla ney
Hardwoods . SR 339. Ba rl ow ,

OH. 678·2980.
ANTIQUES , FURNITURE , gloss .
china , anything . See or call
Ruth Gosney , antiques . 26 N.
2fld. ,
Middleport .
OH.
992-3161.

Yard Sale
Pets for Sale
HOOF HO llOW, English and
W ester n .
Saddles
and
harness. Horses and pori ies.
Ruth Ree .... es. 614 -698-3290.
Barding &amp; Rid ing leuofls and
Horse Cor' a products .
·
RISING STAR Kennel.
ding. Ca ll367 -0292 .

Boor·

Taylor.. 614 -3b7 -7220 .
AKC REG ISTERED bo ~Ce r pup·
py . $125 . 6 weeks old.

'ln·2726 .

wanted to Rent
REASONA~L Y

PRICED counlry
house in Pomeroy oreo. Phone
985· 4366 evenings.

Auto Sales

·servi ces Offered

1974 VEGA HATCHBACK , call
303-675-1501 or 305-675-2488

NOW HAU LI NG limestone in
Middleport - Poemr oy oreo .
Call for
free
estimate .
367-7 101 .

304·675-' 553 .
1974 DODGE CORONET 4-doo'

0&lt;

Custom. 992 -5858 .

PAINTING AN D sandblasting .
Free estimates. Col l949-2686.

1969 DODGE DAR T, 4- door.
new pa int, new tires , $600 .
Potatoes . $8 -per hundred .
Pigs. 7 weeks old . $20 each.
Straw
$1 . 25
per
ba l e .
985-4104 .

DOZER . END loader and dump
truck . Wil l d o basements,
p onds ,
brush ,
timber ,
lime stone ,
a nd
g r ovel.
Charles Butcher . 742-2940 .

1978 WI DASHER . 12 ,700
m iles . Good ga s mileage.
JQ4. 882-2252 .
I

WilL HAVE vacancy f or elderly
lady 2nd of September. Room,
board and laundry . Care if
needed . Reasonable prices .

1976 PlYMOUTH VOLARE . 2door . Maroon with white vinyl
top. rad ial tires , powe r steering . power brakes . slant six
en gine. good gas mileag e .
29 ,000 miles. Good condition.

Phone 9'12·3198 .
1978 'JEEP CJS. 3().&lt; V-8. lev;
package .
P. S.,
P. B .
aluminum . spoke whee ls , 35
Gumbo tir es , headers . Toke
over payment s. Ca ll 992 -6363 .

1976

OLDS REGENCY .

All

power, $3995. or will tak e
t rade-in . 9-49-2818 7:30 unt il3
or 949-2150. May be seen ot
Carpe n te r ' s
Pen n zoi l
in
Racine .

1978 SPITFIRE CO NVERTABLE .

992 -&amp;:&gt;22 .
HAVE VACNACY to core for
the elderly in our home.

9'12-7314 .

POMEROY
lANDMARK

9'12-7342 .
1975 GRAN TORINO Squire
wagon . Auto. , P.S., P.B., air.

949·2545 .
.
1979 CHEVROLET

4x4

350

auto., 2500 mi les . 992-5396
V-8 . auto . , a ir . Rall y Sports ,
P.5' . AM· FM 8-trod\ , crui se
cont rol. Ph one 992 -668 1. a lter
5 992-3133.

Jack W. Cars ey
Mgr .
Phon e 99 2· 2181

Will DO Jointing. roof _painting, on
carpenter work .

992-2657 .
Will DO baby si tt in g in my
home fo r o child f rom 3 to 9
years of age. Co li Ali ce
Wi lliam s. 949· 2571 ,

Real Estate for Sale
REAL ESTATE loans . Purchase
and ref inance. 30 year terms .
VA . No money down (eligible
veterans) . FHA . As low as 3
per cent dow n ( nan-Vetercn si .
Ireland Mortgage Ca .. 77 E.
State, Athens . 6 1.C-S92-305 1.

Phone 985·3929 and 985-4129.
NICE COM FORTABLE 8 ,oom
home on opprox. 2 acres of
levelland wit h plenty of st1ade
trees . on
Rut l and
Rd .

992-725S .
20 ACRES NEAR langsvil le ' 3
bedr . remodeled
h o use
alum inum siding, insulated:
storm wir1dows , . Iorge bam ,
ou tbuildings . stocked pond .
$36.500. Owner may Help
finance. 992-7733.

HOBSTETTER
REALTY
PHONE 742-2003
NEW LISl'ING -

6°/o
acres on Bashan R o ad . 3
bedroom home, living
room , ki tc hen and bath .
Ca l l Hilton Wolfe for
more details on this nice
home .
Sell
pr ice·

$39,900.00.
N.EW LISTING

;t•s be a uty . ONLY
$35,000.00 .
NEW LISTING 2
bedrooms, living room ,
utility room, bath and
extra n i ce kit c hen .
Located on State St . in
Pomeroy . L et u s show
you th is home and you
can make a reasonable
offer . Call today!!

ce llent 3 bedroom hom e
has knotty pine li v i ng
room acce n1ed w i th a
stone fireP lace. MOdern
k i tchen , family ·room ,
laundry room and 'h
basement. Large 2 ca r
detached
garage .
SJtuated on 1.7 acres

west of Rutland .
For friendly , courteous
sevice, gi\le us a calL
We have other listings to
choose from .
Cheryl Lemley , Assoc .

Phone 742-1003

SEVEN ROOMS and both. 2
o(re.s. 992 - 15~· ----~2 - 3325

216 E . second Street

BUSINESS ROOMS -

For Sale

992.389 1.

ZENITH
PORTABlE stereo .
Also , child' s chest of drawers .
949·2184 O' 949-2596.
1977 ARR OWGL A SS BASS and
pleasure bo at w ith 85 h . p.
Evinrude '
Many
ex lro s .

9'12-2214 .
DUROC BOARS. purebred
Reedsville . b 14-J78 -b311 .
lENNOX CENTRAl air condi·
tioning afld heating with
du cts _99'2 -2560
liKE NEW in-da sh AM· FM B·
track
stereo . 2 co· oxiol
speakers. For more infor mo·
tion. co li 991-37.43 afte r 5.
BOAT . 1960 Glass Magic 18'
boat wi th 19?1 Mercury 135
h.p . outboard and 1960 Gotor
Tilt tra iler $1595 . Ph one
992-668 1 , after 5 992 -J 133 .
CANNING PEACHES now thru
Se pt .
15 . Bob's Market .
Mason . WV . Open 7 days .
.
Phone 304-773-5721
c._:__:___
__
BARLEY . Ph one 843-2105 , Do n
J~_
h_
nso~.·- !.~rt~on:.:d::.._ __
USED HEATWA VE wood bu rn'·
mg slave . $200. 2 double
beds , 1 metal , I ant1quc $100
each . 2 lamps . $.20 eo I r iding
lawn mower . needs work .
$150 . 9 49-2450.
1975 STARCRAFT camper with
owing. Sleeps six . Good con ·
d i t1ons . Or w11l trOde l o r
lives tock 742 -2997 .

•New Home
•Add ons
• Remoldings
•t=ree estimates
992-6011

H/ L Writesel
Roofing
·

New, repair ,
gutters and
down spouts.
Window cleaning
Gutter cleaning
Free Estimates
949-2862-949 -2 160

7·12

.4

Plus a 4 or 5 bedroom
home with 2 baths. f ront
a nd b ack porches, glass
stu cco , furna ce, formal
dining ,
r a n ge
and
r efrige r a t o r ,
2
ca r
ga r age a n d nice l awn .

Only $35,000.
NEW LISTING

-

2

acres, 3 b ed room hom_.e,
bath , extra
shower,
paneling ,
· utility
build i ng a nd pig st',l .
Leading Creek w a t er ,
front
porch ,
and
ca rpet ing . $25,000.

NEW

LISTING

-

6

roam · apt .
with
3
bedrooms, 1112 baths, ci ty water , garag e, and 3
rooms down that have
been used as a sto r e.
Extra lot for a ga rd en .

Aski ng just $27,500 .
ONE FLOOR -- 2
bed r ooms, wall 1o wa ll
carpeting,
fron t
a nd
side por c hes,
ut i l ity
room , al l rooms fully in ·
sulated, 2 car ga r age
and large l evel ga rden

spot. Only $17,500 .
2 LOTS - One set up lor
2 mobil e hom es and
large 8 room house with
I 1J2 baths, 2 c ar garage.
Near stores . $17,500.

STORE BUILDING or you ca n make a hom e
out of thi s one and ren t it
to pay out . As kin g

$12,000.
POMEROY - One acr e
for 51.500.
DON 'T PASS UP THE
OPPORTUNITY
OF
MAKING MONEY ON
THE ABOV E PROPER TIES . SURELY THEY
WILL BE MUCH MORE
NEXT \'E AR . CALL
992-3325 I 0 5!; r, ,

Good
home h as "'
bedrooms, bath , dining
room , carpeted , pane l ·
ed, large carport, other

bldgs. Own gas &amp; water .
$30.500.00.
GOOD HOME - Has &lt;
lois, "' bedrooms, bath,
carpet , so me paneling,
Meigs School Distri ct ,

workshop . VERY LOW .
SYRACUSE - 2 fami ly,
br; c k &amp; block . Hot water
h~at , lots of remodeling ,

l ot, l ots of
f ea tur es.

$28,000 .00 .
Ra n ch
POMEROY type , 3 b ed r oom s, love l y
k i tchen, din i ng, recrea ·
tion room, swimming
pool , carpeting, panel i ng, many
f eat ur es .

$39,500.00.
MIDDLEPORT

-

2

story fram e, hardwoOd
floors with carpeting, 2

baths, lots of remodel ing done. A buy at just

$28,000.00.
LOTS OF OTHER PRO·
PERTY TO CHOOSE
FROM DROP IN
ANDSEEUSTODAY .
REALTORS
Henry E . Cleland

Henry E. Cleland Jr.
Phone 992 -225.9

or
lc-----''1'1~? -6191

Llfl'!lnl llt, Ohio
614 ·" f ·41U Evf'nlnts
2 Mo!n Ea sl of Wtlhsvlltt

A~l I CAN
6AY IS--THIS.

&amp;liTTER &amp;eON

SU PER

GOOSE

5 tf c

4

~

I!IECOME~

form the surprise answer, as sug-

gested by the above canoon.

REfllf~TIT

lmu

MO~ F~E ­

Now arrange the cirded lehers to

THE lEVI!-~ OR
YO U'RE 60NioJA

SlOCN

TRAI LE R NOW AVAILABLE

5EVEilELV!

BISSELl
SIDING CO.
Call for a Free Siding
Estimate, 9-19-2101 or

949·2860.

No

calls.

ment. ·
107 Sycamore Uhilr)
Pomeroy, 0 .

Sunday

Services
OHered
All Masonary Work
Foundation,
Brick laying,
Concrete Finishing.
Free .Estimates
992·5304,992-2238
a.21 ·1 mo.

CALL 192-7544

or

Real Estate Loans

o

Smith Nelson
MotOIS, Inc.

York" 8;

Pur c ha se
and
R efinance
30 Y ea r T erms
A - No mon ey down
{eligi b le ve t era n s)
F HA - A S low as 3%
d own (non -veterans)

Pomeroy

NORTH
• J 10 8 7

IRELAND
MORTGAGE
CO.
77 E .
State, Athen s

Rt . 3

t A K Q 10 5
WEST

BY

J&amp;l INSULATION
Free E's timate

CALL
992·2772
6 6 I mo.

BOB'S
UPHOLSTERY
CAR SEATS, BOAT
TOPS, FURNITURE

ORPIL\N

ANNIE-~TO

THE HILLS

TO

BOB'S GENERAL
CONTRACTING

• 83

• K4

A TRIP TO THE
' M OUI'\fTA I!'1S, ANNIE ·•·

STAV OUT ..

1·15·2 m o .

Frn

work,

Style center

V. C. YOUNG Ill
RACINE,O.
949 -:u•• or
992 -7314
8-6·1 mo.

PUlliNS EXCAVATING . Com·
p late Service. Phone 992-2478.

AU10M081l E

Auctions

40 ACRE S LANO -~; ·sail~r Run
Rd . Good hunting, timber, all
mi 11 ero l right s. $12 .000

BIG AUCTION every Wed ., 7
pm . 'Hortlord Community
Ce n1er. Hartford, WV, 4 miles
above
Pomeroy - Mason
B ri d ~e . _

143.
or

~ea.MAIVJte(
br THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
1 Would rather 1 Further
7 Fish
2 Continental
lD ?:/ Across
resort
3 Wife of
is one

4 Astounding :
mother
1% Kin to cupid
sl.
13 MIX!IIem saint 5 Musical piOO!s
YetJierday's Aluwer
14 Arab
1 Gratify
3Z "For want
official
7 Isle of song %4 Flatter
2S Dugout VIP
of 15 Chinese city 8 Willow
17 Heel-and- 9 Ubyan city Zl Hanuned it up the shoe .. ."
33 Digress
18 New York 10 Racehorse Z8 Bullet
%9 Vegetable
36 Span!sh
11 Picture
City
31
Camel
painter
ZOMuse
19 Raison d'of
poetry
features
39
Born: Fr.
%1 ()qe kind
of biscuit
%2 Construct
23Willlng
27 See 10
Across
30Dutch

Pomeroy, 0 .

WILL ~AUL llm~tone and
gravel. ~l1o, lime hauling ond
1preoding. lea Morris Truc&amp;. lng, Phone 742 -1455.

13UT HOW'D
t1E KNOW
YOU WERE
HOME?

ANN'S CAKE Oe&lt;orottng Supplies , ~16 Osborn Rd ..
R..dsvlne . OH 4S772. Far 1~
formation colt. '667-6-&amp;85. Will
be open la te if you need
somett'!lng.

HE: JU5T 'TDOK BECAU5E I. HAVEN'T
A CHANCE AND TOLD AN&gt;'tWE ... NOT
EVEN WINN IE ...
DROPPED IN
AI30.JT OUR
... I GlJE55.
'1ARRANeEMENT.'
WHY?'

I'M GlAO ')OU AND i\J1'l.J GOT
ALONG 50 WELL, HONEY, BUT
ISN'T IT ODD THAT HE: 5HOULD
13E: HOME:WATCi-IING TIMMY
D\JRI N&lt;3 'THE: DAY ?

S &amp; G Carpel Cl.t onlng. Steam
cleaned . Free e\1irnale .
Reosonoblt
rates .
~otch­
gua,d. 992-6309 0&lt; 742-2:l-18 .

Cuchulain

cheese

31HWTY

34 Nwnero - b-+--!30 Strip
of wood

HEADS. I WIN!!

37 Before

Glr TH'TOP BUNK

38 Ancestry
to Ingrid's

daughter

n Turned
inside out
42 Actor
StaUone

43 Vacillate

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:
Is

AND UP
Installed and Pad FREE
GOOD SELECTION OF
CUSHION VINYL
CALL 742-2211 TALK TO
Wendell or Herb Grate or Gene Smith

RUTLAND FURNITURE
742-2211

•

11 Peer Gynt's

•995

949-2319.
'
YOUNG MALE dog. black,

992-62&amp;:&gt;.

Rt.

698-7331

modernists lead the

eight or nine. but we are oldfas hioned .

Colt lor oppt. or wolk tn .

SALE ON All CARPET IN STOCK

EIGHT WEEK o ld mil(ed breed
puppies. Will be small dog.

RED
DOBERMAN ,
ho u se
broke . Hu mane Socie t y .

systems ,

Certain

perms.

AND UP
CASH &amp;CARRY

GiveAway

short hair. Appears to be
Labrador and Collie. Humane
Society . 992-6260.

this

a.

•4••

IN SURANCE

thin's ...the4'll
qo awa4~

ma4be
not ·

stytlnt ,

RUBBERBACK CARPET

been cance lled? l os t your
op erators
license?
PI-l one
992 -21 43 .

BEAU TIFUL
MEDIUM sized
whife long haired female,
looks like sheep dog but
smaller . l oves ch i ldrefl .
Humane Society. 992-6260.

men's

SAVE ON CARPET
DRIVE A LITTLE
SAVE A LOT

EXCAVATING ,
dozer ,'
backhoe and ditcher, Charles
R. Hatfield . Slack Hoe Service.
Rutland , Ohio. Pone 74:2-2000 .

if 40u iqnores

correct opening lead from : K
10 9 8
The standard lead is the 10.

Most times, Joel.

L._ _ _ __::8 ·26·1 mo.

IN STOCK f o r' immedi ate
delivery : various sizes of pool
ki 1s . Do-it· yourself or let us
install for you . D. Bumgardner
Soles , lnc. 992-572• .

992-5232 .

Mos' times,

iqnored all
his
ninqs!

992·2367

882·2952 0' 882· 3454 .
HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex·

0'

HAIR STYUST

Moln St.

ElWOOD BOWERS REPAIR -

992-3525

He sa4s 40u've

MARK MORA
women's

E·C ElECTRICAl Contractor
serv ing Ohio Volley reg ion .
Six days a week . 24 houts ser·
vice. Emergency calls . Coli

EXCAVATING , dozer, loader.
and backhoe work : dump
tru cks and lo- boy s for hire,
wil l t1aul fill dirt , top so il.
limestone and gravel . Co li Bob
or Roger Jeffers , day phone
997 -7089 ,
n i ght
phone

.. lntrocsuces'-

F-eaturint :

BRADFORD . Auctioneer . Complete Service. Phone 9•9-2487
or 949-2tKXJ. Racine , Ohio ,
Crill Bradford.

SEWING MACHINE Repairs .
service. o il makes , 992 -2284 .
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
Author ized Singer Sales and
Servi ce. We sha rpen Scissors .

Estlmat11

Barber &amp;

(FREE ESTIMATE)

A Kansas reader asks the
preferen ce

importanl weapons defenders
use."
Alan: "They help resolve a
guess into a sure thing ."
Os wa ld: " Whenever you 'r e
giving your pa rler a rurr, you
should tell your partner how
to get back to yo ur hand if yo u
have a re-entry."
Alan : " If you lead a low
ca rd for him to rull, you 're
asking him to return the low ·

MICk'S

down

Heroes

Rutland, o,

ARE '{0\J 5LEEPIN6
.OR ARe I(OU
PLA~IN6 P055VM '?

BEAT f.IIM 6-Z IN
THE THIRD SET!

17.

l2 :3Q-Ryan ' s Hope 6,13; Search for
Tomorrow B, 10; Not lor Women
Only 15; Movie "Rawhide" T7.
1:OQ-Days of our Lives 3, 15; All My
Children 6, 13; News 8; Young
· and the Restless 10.
1:Jo-As the World Turns 8, 10.
2:0Q-Dbctors 3, 15; One Life to Live
6,13; 2:25-News 17 .
2:30--Anolher WQrld 3, 15; Guiding
Light 8, 10; I Love Lucy 17.
3,0Q-General Hospital 6,13; Lilias,
Yoga and You 20 ; Infinity
Factory 17.
3 ,30--MASH 8; Joker's Wild 10;
Banana Splits 17 ; CrQCkett's
Victory Garden 20.
4:0Q-Mr. Cartoon 3; Password 15;
Merv Grllfln 6; Addams Family
8; Sesame St. 20,33; Six Million
Dollar Man 10; M ike Douglas 13;
Ftintstones 17.
4 : 3Q-Lone Ranger 3; Hogan's
Heroes 8; Lucy Show 15;
Partridge Family 17.
5:0Q-Bonanza 3; Beverly Hillbillies
8; Mr. Rogers' Neighborhood
20,33; Gomer Pyle, USMC 10; Six
Million Dollar Man 13; Brady
Bunch 15; Star Trek 17.
5:3o-News6; Petticoat Junction 8;
Electric Co. 20; Mary Tyler
Moore lD; Odd Couple 15; Doctor
Who 33.
6 :0Q-News 3,B,10,T3,15; ABC News
6; Family Affair 17; VIII• Alegre
20; Once Upon a Classic 33.
6 :3Q-NBC News 3, 15; ABC Nows
13; Andy Griffith 6; CBS News
8, 10; Over Easy 20,33; Father
' Knows Best 17.
7' 00- C..oss -Wits 3; Newlywed
Game 6, 13; Please Stand By 8;
News 10; Love, American Style
15; Get Smart 17 ; Dick Cavett
20,33.
'
7:3o-Hollywood Squares 3; Candid
Camera 6; Gong Show 8; Price Is
Right 10; Donna Fargo 13;
Abbott and Costello 15; My Three
Sons 17; MacNeil-Lehrer Report
20,33.
:
B:oo-Runaways 3; Happy Days
6, 13; Billy Graham Crusade 8;
WonderWoman 10; Around the
World to China 15; Baseball 17;
New Orleans Concerto 20; City
Nolebook 33 .
8 :3Q-240-Roberl 6,13; Two Ronnles

33.
9 :0Q-Movle " To Kill a cop" 3,T5;

Movie "Breakheart Pass" B, 10;
Tender
Land
33;
Great
Performances 20.
lO :OQ-Three' s Company 6,13; News

TME

ERM

Acres

AXYDLBAAXR

CRYPTOQU 0'1'1!8

WQ

Green

LONGFELLOW

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc . Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

Y S Q' E

10 ;

lO,oo--card Sharks 3,15; Edge of
N lght 6; All In the F amlly 8, 10;
Morning Magazine 13; Movie
" Mardi Gras" 17.
10 : 30-Hollywood Squares 3,15;
$20,000 Pyramid 13; Bonkers! 6;
Whew! 8,10; 10 :55-CBS News 8;
House Call 10. '
1: OG-Hlgh ·Rollers 3, 15; Laverne &amp;
. Shirley 6,13; Price Is Rlghl8,10.
1l : 30- Wheel of Fortune 3, lS;
Family Feud 6,13; 11 ' 55-News
17.
1~ ,oo-Newscenter 3; News 6, 10, T3;
Mln.d readers 15; Young and the
Resfless 8; Love American
Style 17.

AslltbllxDcPIS

signals are one of the most

JAMES KEESEE
Pllone 992·2712
1·17 1 mo.

spouts, some concrete
work, . walks
and
driveways .

backhoe.

Oswald: "Suit

Wlndowl

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING

Phone 1 (6U)
742-2593.

3•
Pass

dummy's cl ub holding lhat
West realized East's unusual
play asked for 'a n unusual
return.''
Alan: " West returned a
trump and East won· with his
single ton ace. He then led .
another spade to se t the

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

e Gulttf'l lnd
DownSpouts

Ph . 992·3743 or 992-3752
8·1·1 mo.

dozer.

Pass
Pass

1+
Pass
Pass

a

17; Sesame Street 33.
9:3Q-Romper Room 17; 9:0Q-Bob
Braun 3; Phil Donahue 13, 15;
Big Valley 6; Porky Pig and
Friends 8; Love of Life 10; Lucy
Show 17.
9' 3o-Sanford and Son B; Hogan's

contract. "

• Replacem•nt

IN SYRACUSE

sep1ic

Nortb East

1, oo-Captaln Kangaroo 8, 10; Lassie

ence signal for a club return
was so incongruous with

Opening lead : • 2

., naulotlon
• Storm Doors
• Storm Windows

Under New Management {formerly Sylvia's
upholstery &gt;.
across
from Codner's Texaco .

covet ing.

·west

and You 33.

Oswald : "Easl's suit prefer ·

Dealer : North

INSUlATION
VINYL AND
AWMINUM SIDING I

UPHOLSTERING

7-5-1 mo.

single ton ?"

Vulnerable : Both

J&amp;l BLOWN

A&amp;H

Gutter

94

+ K 6:;
•KQI87 5

THA1'S WliA"T I

A HEAD IN THESE
TIMES ··

his only re-entry was in
trump."
Alan: " East ca refully led
the three of s pades! West
rulfed the spade return. .He
knew his partner did no t want
a diamond return. and how
could he want a club re turn
when dummy had the ace

+QIOII'il
• J 97 3
SOUTH

tUM TO FIND OUT ...

Free E1fimates
7 25 I mo. Pd.

. 992 ·5547

949-2000

.....
• J

• 762

. . 23 1 iOO .

ALUMINUM
&amp; VINYL SIDING

EAST
.... Q9 4 3

• 2
• J 43

TUESDAY, AUGUST 21, 1979
5, 45-Farm Report 13; 5:50-PTL
Club 13; World at Large 17.
5:55-Summer Semester 10; 6 :0Q700 Club 6,8; PTL Club 15; 6 : loNews 17 ; 6 : 25-Publlc Affairs 10.
6:30-Dragnet 17; 6:45-Morntng
Report 3; 6:50-Good Morning,
West Virginia 13; 6 :5s-&lt;:huck
White Reports 10; News 13 .
7:0Q-Today 3, 15; Good Morning
America 6, 13; Tuesday Morning
8; Batman 10; Three Stooges Little Rascals 17; 7:15- A.M.
We~ther 33 .
7:3Q-Famlly Altair 10; Lilias, Yoga

return a spade. What was noL
routi ne was to indicate tha t

Phone "H323

Pomeroy, Ohio

592-3051

11-27

+A

eNiiW HOMES
e ROOM ADOIT10N5
eROOFING
eVINYL SIDING
eGUTTER &amp; SOFFIT

CONTRACTOR

est or the suits that you migh t
have a re-entry in. A hi gh
card would ask for th e hi g hest
suit. "
Os wa ld: "It was routine lor
East to win the spade lead and

.. 10 6 2

725 1 mo .

WORK, GENERAL

I: 3o-Movle "Two Guys from
Texas" 17 ; 1 , ~News 13; 3:30News 17; 3: SD-Open Up 17.

Strange signaling works

_ _ __;• 30 tf c

BLOCK &amp; BRICK

l :DO--Tomorrow 3;

News 15.

•s1 Beech Street
Middleport, 0 .
992-2356

N. L Construction

THWART

Jurnbl11ook No. 12.,onlllnlng 110 p~u.. a,l• 1v1ll1bt.lor 11 .75 poslplld
I rom Jumble,clothitntwtplper, 80k34, Norwood, N.J.07MI. lilcludlyour
n1me, tddreu. Jfp code •nd m1kt checkl PIYiblt to Ntwtplptrbooka.

18 Years Experientt
Will Make Serv ice CaliS

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

PONDER

WHEN IT'S "FIXED"

Reynolds'
EledricMotor
Shop

J ,1 m i l e off Rt . 7 by -pass
on St . RT . 124 toward
Rutland .

_

,,.;,i,u&gt;j

Ph . 992 ·2174

Roger Hysell
Garage

t__

flllTI.Iml
J1r9n1

Servlc•

H1theln Bi
A1GI1tor

FELON

Answtt': When a jury doesn 't " work"-

sm111nt Mtlttr C1re

Hours9·1 M .. w., F.
Other times by appoinl-

6·14-2 mo.

:laturday'sl Jumbles: EXILE

Radiator~
From the
Tr ll&lt;ll
Bulldorfr Aid letor

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

0 (I I I )
(Answ... tomorrow)

E~PERIENCED

Federol Housing &amp;
Veterans Admin. Loans.

Siding

THREE BEDROOM house and
bo th ,,. B•ndbl.rrv . A ll mdoern
992 -.&gt;8/1.
.

742 24402.

WHA'T
[I
I QUEN'TL.'v'
A WOMAHr
I JEGLIGj
KJ r I

27JH Monlgomt&gt;rY Ret.

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING

Vinyl and Aluminum

Sweepers. toasters , irons , oil
small appliances. lawn moer,
ne}( f to Stole Highway Garage
on Rou~e 7 , 985 -3825 .

608 E .
MAIN
POMEROY , O.
OVER 20 ACRES

nt ce level
s p ecial

t
I I _]

LTEEBEL

TRAILER SALES

Prlntanswerhere:

THREE BEDROOM house in
Pomeroy. Full basem en t , gas
furnace . Coll992· 78~ .

88 .

COAl .
LIMESTONE , sand
grovel , calci um chloride, fer·
tiliz er , dog food , ond ott 1ypes
of sal t . hcelsior So h Wor ks ,
Inc , E. Moin St. , Pomeroy ,

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

Free Estimates
3rd St., Racine

Assoc .

MONDAY, AUGUST 27, 1977
7 ' 00-Cross -Wih 3; Newlywed .
Game 6, 13; Pop Goes the
Counlry 8; News 10 ; Love.
Amer ican Style 15; Get Smart
17 ;' Dick Cavett 20,33.
7:30- That Nas~vllle Music 3 ;
Muppet Show 6; Price 1s Right 8;
Wild Kingdom 10; $1.98 Beauty
Show 13 ; Nashville on the Road
15; My Three Sons 17; MacNeil·
Lehrer Report 20,33 .
8:0Q-Uttle House on ·t he Prairie
3,15; Baseball 6,13 ; Billy
Graham Crusade 8; Bill Moyers'
Journal 20,33; White Shadow 10;
Movie " Cheaper by the Dozen"
17.
9,oo-Movle "To kill a Cop" 3,15;
MASH 8, 10; Once Upon a Classic
20; Murder Most English 33.
9:3Q-WKRP In Cincinnati 8,10;
IO :OQ-Lou Grant 8,10; Poldark
33; At Hlrt Show 17 ; News 20.
10 :30-Loke It Is 20.
11 : oo-tilews 3,6,8, 10 , 13, 15; Dick
Cavett 20; New Soupy Sales 17;
Book Beat 33. ·
11 :3Q-Johnny Carson 3, 15; Pollee
Story 6, 13; Rockford Flies 8;
Movie "The Sheriff of Fractured
Jaw" 10; ABC News 33; Movie
"The Perils of Pauline" 11·
12 : 40-Movle "S unday In New

W~-

L-------------------------------~

949·2589

1976 'IJ TON Si erra Grande
GMC. P.S.. . P.B.. outo., a ir.
rad io.
$3200. Joh n lhle.
Racin e, OH . 949· 2780.

WoT .

.I

Television
Viewing

Unlctamble lhMe four Jumbles,
one letter !o eldl oquare, lo form
foUr ordl~ words.

AT ALL"
1
SAYS
TESS.

BUT IT'S NO TIME

Charming 2 story hor'ne ,
4~
bedrooms ,
I ivi ng
room . kitchen , dining
room , and bath . Drapes
and c arpet go with tn e
house. Situated on .75 of
an acre . Tt1is home has
had lots of tender loving
care and y ou will have
to see i t to apprecia t e

Hilton Wolfe,

1ffl\1Nllel'il ~ THATSCAAIIIIL!DWOIIDOAMI!
r:!J ~ ~~- byHen!!AmoldllldBoblM

TO RE51' · .. GOT

Jr .
Broker ~92 - 5739

742·2143 .

DELTA

1973 23 11, fool Terry travel
frailer . Air conditioning. full
ba th with tub and stlower .
AM-FM with 8-track . Good
condi tion. Co i i992·3S80.

George 5. Hobstetter,

1969 CAMARO . si lve r and
blo(k . fron t and rea r spo ilers .
cow l hood , much more. Ex ce llent condition ins ide and
out.
Price
negotiable .

1974 OLDS
9'12.5786 .

MUST SELL late model travel
troil~r .
28 ',
fully
self contained .
factory · oir .
corpe tod throughou t, many
e)( tro s. See any lime, Krodel
City Park . Pt. Pleosont .

Se lls lor S22,500.00 .
COLONIAL
SPLIT
LEVEL This ex -

:iALE PRICES
I.MDIMUtl ·

contained . air. rear bunk
sleeps six . See anytime :
Kr_?del City Pork..:. Pt. Pleasant.

Nice 2 bedroom home on
a 111tle over an acre. It
has aluminum siding
and
storm
windows .
New roof a nd furnace .
I n t he L angsville areil .

Sales &amp; Service

B USlness
•
servlces
•

Campi~EqUipm~t~·
PRIVATE OWNER wlllsa";t;ce
1979 32 h. hovel ,,a ;!.,, Sell·

COUNTRY LIVING -

H11adqua rters for
Hotpoint and
Genera I Electric
Appliances

3400 miles . Great condition .
Equipped . 30 to 34 m.p .g .

tlte Sentinel Classifieds

REAL ESTATE : 1 cer e lot in Riggsc re st Manor, be tween Tuppers Plains and Chester.

9'12.5786 .

G LASTR9N BOA T, tr i hau l
des ign , 16 ft ., 1 in., · 19 gal
built· in gas tank . 80 h.p . M ere
motor . Shorelander til t trail e r .
1 yeor o ld. 949-2377 .

" How about that.' Now we 've go r ' THE NEW
CARTER.. Remember wh en we had '·THE NEW
NIXON '?"

OlD FU RNITURE . ice boxes ,
brass beds, iron beds, desks.
etc ., complete households .
Write M .D. Miller, Rt. 4
Pomeroy or ( all992-776h.

____

ed each moment "solstice"

" This one's a get-we ll ca rd rr omfrom the Latin " sol" (sun)

992·26ll9.

POODLE GROOMING . Judy.

~2 - 5434 .

1977 CHE VR OLET CAMARO

, _ ;. -J-l;. _;.· )/J

I 1( 11-1/1/

I

NOTICE -

that on Septe mber 7. 1979,
at 10 A.M. a publ i c sa le will

, •.~

._
,-?

Phon t• !~12-215/i

NOTICE OF
PUBLIC SALE

' '
'-..jll'1

CHIP WOOD . Poles max .
diameter 10" em largest end.
$12 per ton . Bundled slob . $10
per ton . Deli ve red to Ohio
Pollet Co., Rt . 2. Pomeroy .

DEPENDABLE BABYS ITTER ;n

th&gt;t•nwd

INfW')PAPER EN TfA PRISt " SSN

1974 14 IC 70 mobile home.
Good condition . 992 -S858 .

\'IJ!ll'l'

Tht• Publi:;lwr rcscrvt•s the

RAd iO Cr ty 3tatr oll N Y 100 19
Be sure to spec,fy bu 1h dd1e
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 23l Dorr 1
hold bac k to da'( on dorng sonwthrng abou t that wh rch you k now
rnlurtrvety to be co ~r ect fll ere s
a bonu s rn rt once you e ~ ~:rt t11e
ell art
SCORPIO (Ocl . 24 -Nov. 22) You
are an rn terestrng per son to be
around today. ollerrng rnuch wr sdom wrth the ught t&lt;luch or tte .. rbTir ty to I Tithe occasron
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec . 21)
Do wh at you kn ow rs rrght and
proper regardrng all vOu deal
wi th l oday Tt1ere IS a nrce
surprrse wartrng because ot yow
ethr cs
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan. 19)
NormCIII)' you don 1 lrlo.e waves m
your lr fe. bul l oday !hf&gt; 'J' aclunlly
help you pull off what ynu seek. to
accomplrsh
rto111 wrth tiH'
curr enl s
AQUARIU S (JBn . 20-Feb. 19) ,, .,
rmpo!lan t person could en ter the
prctuTe IOday and rCnclt'r yOur
load 111 Ide a gr ent deal ITQillcr
And you thoug ht you weren 't
not1ced
PISCES (Feb. 20-Merch 20)
Hih•e an exd trng day today w1th
old friends . VIST!rng ou t-ot· thewa~ or unusual places There 's
more to gain than tust fun and
games.
ARIES (M1r'ch 21-Aprlt 19) Tt1 is
promises to be another e~&lt; treme·
I ~ product ive day Get the dlffi·
cult JO bs done as welt as the mciden tal ct1ores .
TAURUS (April 20-Mey 20) A
chance meeting w•th an old oa t
coul d b r1 ng about a JOyfu l, enter·
ta tn1n g day II m1ght even extend
111 10 the e.... enrng Hope you got
your beauty rest
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) Look
tor the une .. pected t,o occur
today . Ql ... rng you an opportunrty
to go alter some lhrng big you ve
oeen wantmg Chances are you 'll
getrt
CANCEFl (June 21 -July 22) If
you don 't have soCial plan s on
your agenda . you 'd better a,Jtocate t1me l or some because
that ·s how th1 s day appenr s to be
shapmg up.
LEO (July 23 -Aug . 22) Str ong
past eff orts on your part produce
&lt;l success ful occ urrence today
that writ surpn se the tom1ly 11
should mal-..0;:1 everyo ne hoppy

Wanted to Buy

BABYSITTER NEEDED in Rocifle
or eo. 949-2862 .

Muh1lt· Honw -"&lt;l lt•s ;md Yurd
sah·s ;n c atTcpted nnl}' 11•ith
cr1sh with order. 25 n~ nt dlllrgl'
fnr mls t'itrrymg BoK Numlrt·r In
f';m : of The 5\:ntin~l.

There ' s no thtn g wt sl1y -washy
&lt;l bout ·,.ou today You k now wha t
you want and you II go aller tl
Even the une-.oected wtll only
me r ease your dr we Fmd out
more ol what ltes at1eal.l tor you
m the )ear tollowHlQ yow btrttt day by sendtng lor yow covy ot
Astr a-G raph len er Ma rl S 1 lor
each to Aslr o-G rr!plr Bo). 489

Mobile Homes Sale's

In nwmor,·, Card uf Thnn~~
:md Obltu:~r~:. li t·c.•nl~ per wont ,
$.1 00 minimum . C;r.o;t1 m &lt;rt.l ·

ty dented admtllance
VIRGO

f,t&gt;Uitd itt

~~ntinel, Mi~eport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Aug. ?:1, 1979

RMQ

ZKWMQYTO

D

RSJPM.

SQM

ZSH

YDO

RM'TT IM RJQCKO. - STY DYDCM
YetJierday's Cryploquole:
BEsT THING WE;GET FROfd
HISTORY IS THE ENTHUSIASM IT ROUSES; '- GOETHE

THE

20 . .
10:3Q-Taxl6,13 ; America 17; Lock,
Stock and Barrel 20.
11 : 00-News 3,6,8 , 10, 13, 15; D1ck
Cavett 20; Book Beat 33.
1l : 3Q-Johnny Carson 3, 15; Andy
Kautman 6, 13; BarnabY Jones 8;
ABC News J:i; Movie "The VIsit"
10; Movie " Red, Hot and Blue"
17.
.
12:4D-Movle " Betrayal" 8; 1 :oo.

Tomorrow 3; News 13, 15.

1: 2s-Baseball 17; 3:55-News 17;
4 ' 15-Untouchables 17.

,.

�10- The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Aug. '0,1979

World crude oil production hits record
World crude oil production set a record during the first six months of 1979
despite fears that political turmoil in Iran would worsen critical petroleum
shortages, nn industry journal reports.
However, "there's no assurance the brisk pace can be maintained for the
rest of the year, " said the Oil and Gas Journal, adding that because of the un·
certainty, prices will continue to rise unless COI1Sumption drops drastically.
The Tulsa-based journal said in its Aug. 27 edition world production
averaged 61.892 million barrels a day from January to June, compared with
58.736 million barrels a day in the first half of 1978.
The report comes after months of concern over energy shortages marked
by long gasoline lines and rising fuel bills. It was accompanied by other
reports of favorable trends :
+The Lundberg Letter, an authoritative oil marketing journal, said its
survey of 16,700 service stations showed U.S. Department of Energy gasoline
pricing regulations are being followed .

587 passengers
evacuated Sunday
STOCKHOLM, Sweden (API Rescue workers using helicopters
and boats struggled Sunday night to
evac43te 587 passengers, mostly
British, from a Danish ferry that ran
aground in a gale off the Swedish
coast.
The first evacuees, some 300
passengers, arrived in two boats at
the coastal city of Goteborg around
11 p.m. (6 p.m. EDT), said Ralph
Johansson , a spokesman at the
rescue center there.
Th e resc ue operation continued
into the early morning hours and
Johannson said winds reaching 39
mph made ~fforts "tricky."
He reported one of the passengers
was hospitalized with a broken leg.
There were no reports of other
injuries .

Authorities said the ferry, the
8,658-ton Win ston Churchill en route
from Goteborg to Newcastle,
Britain, was taking on water but was
firmly aground near Vinga Island
six miles off the coast.
Rescue officials declined to
speculate on the cause of the
accident.
But ooe passenger said the ferry
may have run aground because it

shifted course to avoid another
vessel.
"We sat to the front of the
restaurant and saw a little tanker
ahead which we felt was on a
collioon course," Nicholas Mercer,
an English teen-ager, told reporters
after he was taken by boat to Vinga.
"I believe the Winston Churchill
avoided the tanker and subsequently
ran aground," Mercer told the
Swedish TT news agency. "We sat in
the restaurant and had dinner when
the lightS suddenly went off and
everything tumbled."
He said he belonged to the
Lancastershire School Symphony
Orchestra, an 80-member group
returning to England following a
tour of Sweden.
Three helicopters assisted police,
coast guard and pilot boats in
carrying the passengers to Vinga.
Rescue officials said the passengers
would be transported to Goteborg to
spend the night in hotels.
'i'he Winston. Churchill, owned by
Danish shipping firm DFDS and
chartered by the Swedish Tor line,
ran aground at 7 p.m. (2 p.m. EDT),
officials said.

+Rep. Les Aspin, 0-Wis., said a study showed American homes and
businesses may bave stockpiled an extra 1 billion gallons of heating oil, and
the excess could ease a threatened shortage this winter.
The reports coincided with the !20th anniversary of the completion of the
world's first commercial oil well.
•
On Aug 27, 1859, Edwin Drake's well near Tittlsville, Pa., struck an oil'
pocket, starting a petroleum fever tbat began U.S. dependence on oil. His
success was discovered Aug. 28 +Oil Discovery Day.
In the first six months of 1!179, average non-communist production reached
~7.8 million barrels a day, according to the Oil and Gas Journal, despite a
shortfall of production in Iran.
The six-month average was 5.8 percent higher than the average for the
same period in 1978, the Journal said.
Saudi Arabia, the largest producer in the Organization of Petroleum Ex·
porting Countries, averaged almost 9 million barrels a day during the period

Area Deaths
OWENS.BRATrON
Owen S. Bratton, 52, 532 Fifth
Street, SW, Strasburg, Ohio, former
Meigs CoWlly resident, was dead on
arrival at the Union Hospital in
Dover Sunday.
Death was
attributed to a heart attack .
Mr. Bratton was born Feb. 7, 1927,
in Rutlnnd, a son of t~ late Oliver
and Linnie Hunt Bratton. He was a
member of the St. John United
Church of Christ in Strasburg and
was a past president of the
Strasburg Lions Cub. Mr. Brawn
was district plant manager of the
Cosmo Plastics Co., and was a
veteran of World War II having
served in the U. S. Navy.
SUrviving are hls wife, the former
Jean Luman ; two sons, Michael 0 .,
Chillicothe, and Stephen M. of
Strasburg; a sister, Mrs. Robert
(Betty) Musser of Rutland, a
brother, Orville Bratton, Cheshire,
and two grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held at
1:30 p.m: Wednesday at the TolandHerzig Funeral Home in Strasburg
with the Rev. William Hameister
officia ling. Burial will be in

HOSPITAL NEWS

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Saturday A~ons---none
Saturday Discharges--Shawn
O'Brien, Tina Jacobs, Phyllis
Knopp, Freida RusseU, Anna Rees.
Sunday A~ons-Matthew
Erwin, Middleport i Adra Swick,
Langsville; David Dunkle, Dexter ;
Paul Fife Cheshire; Meneford
JeweU, Langsville.
Sunday Discharges- -Opal
Webb, Avis Jackson , · Angela
VanCooney, Herbert Seth, Gladys
worth of municipal notes to six local . Dillon .
banks. The city still is attempting to
begin making payments on that
Holzer Medical Center
debt, and there no'w appears to be
Discharges
the likelihood of defaulting on $17.4
Aug. 24 - Ernestine Bauglunan,
milllon in loans held .by three city Annette Boyle, Mrs. Charles
accounts.
Buskirk and son, Terry Canterbury,
Kucinich has oullined a complex Suzetta Click, Charles Collins, Lotte
series · of plans involving the
Collins, William Crouse, William
transferring of funds in city Dillon, Tamela Dobson, Betty Dun·
accounis to meet the defaulted debt,. can, Faith Eisnogei, Jeffrey
as well as the latest financial crisis.
Gussler, Katherine Hagger, Ruthie
But council lawyer John .R . Jolmson, Veronica Johnson, Harry
Climacohas branded the mayor's
Kapps, Mrs. Steven Kearns ~and
plan as technically illegal, daughter, David Merry, Mildred
according to state law.
Mitchell, Mary Mulcher, Julie
After the last council meeting
Newell, Mrs. John Dorsett and
failed to provide an answer,
daughter, Forrest Payne, Leslie
Cleveland Law Director Jack
Penrod, William Perry, Lavetta
Schulman said : "We'll be working
Polly, Betty Robinson, Eric
over the weekend to try and figure
Roderick, Gregory Roderick, Dale
out some method by which the
Russell, Mrs. Roger Schinn and son,
administration can solve this
Loretta Slayton, John Spires, Mrs.
problem over the dead bodies of the
Paul Stacy and son, Mrs. Ronald
council who obviously don't want
Poler and-daughter, Bobby Walkup,
to "
Robert
Williamson, David Wyant.
· Kucin ich has proposed that
BiriiiB
council authorize refinancing of
August 24 - Mr. ansi Mrs.
$14.1 million in loans from the city
Raymond
Davis, a daughter,
waterworks construction fund that
Gallipolis;
Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Sider,
are due Oct. 5. The mayor also wants
a
daughter,
Jackson;
Mr. and Mrs.
council to waive a section of city and
George
Pope,
a
daughter,
Bidwell;
state laws requiring that a bond
Mr.
and
Mrs.
John
Prose,
a
counsel certify the $14.1 million
daughter,
Rio
Grande;
Mr.
and
Mrs.
refinancing, as well as $3.3 million
Charles Smith, a daughter, Leon.
refinancing which already has been
Discbargeo .
approved .
Aug.
25
Roger Berkley, Charles
While the mayor maintains that
Bledsoe,
Jeffery
Call, Charles Cary,
home rule is essential to municipal
Steve
Click,
Brenda
Coleman, Helen
fiscal policy, Climaco warned
Dempsey,
Christian
Diehl, Lillinn
council it would be acting illegally in
Donahue,
Lisa
Grady,
Brett
approving Kucinich 's plan because
Grosvenor,
Johnny
Call
and
son,
the city canol waive state
George
Hillend,
Jesse
Jeffers,
investment laws.
Russell Lear, Jr. , Sylvia Marks,
Danny Mitchell, Billy O'Brien, Mrs.
Ronald Pitchford and son, James
Richmond, Leslie Rister, Mrs.
(Continued from page 1)
Drexel Salyers and daughter, Tracy
Singleton,
Karen Skaggs, Larry
Godunov feared his wife would be
Wells, Roy
Tucker,
Lawrence
forced to return to Moscow and had
Whaley,
Sr.,
Alice
Weinegar.
heen "reassured that she would not
Blrlbs
get on the plane."
Aug
.
25
Mr.
and Mrs. James
Godunov, the first defector from
Mullins,
a
daughter,
Gallipolis; Mr.·
the Bolshoi , was granted asylum in
and
Mrs.
James
Long, a son,
the Unite&lt;l States on Thursday,
Wellston;
Mr.
and
Mrs.
John Hoff.
saying he wanted Ill explore new
man,
a
son,
Letart.
areas of dance.
Discharges
The rest of the Moscow-based
Aug.
28
John BW'Iile, Cathy
troupe left New York early tllday for
Frederick,
Karen
Cantrell, Mrs. Ar·
Chicago , where the y were to
thur
Dempaey
and
son, Christie
continue their American tllur.
Bobby
Halley,
Roberta
Hamilton,
ScheU said Miss Vlasova was
Harless,
Avis
Lawson,
Mrs.
Richard
married previously but had no
McCarty and son, Jessica McGuire,
children by either marriage. He said
Faye
Pancake, Glenn Roush, Terry
he did not know if Godunov left
Roush,
Pearl Seymour, Patricia
relatives in the Soviet Union .
Shaffer, Ernest Yinger.

Cleveland faces
another default
CLEVELAND ( AP) - Another
default may be on the horizon for the
city of Cleveland if Mayor Dennis J.
Kucinich and the City Council are
unable to bridge a chasm between
them that appears to be widening
each day.
Three council meetings caUed in
four days failed to produce any
action on the mayor's request for a
series of ordinances designed to
avoid defaUlt. In fact, the last of
those meetings, Saturday, drew only
21 council members when 22 .votes
would be required to pass the
measure .

Cleveland, Ohio's largest city ,
defaulted last Dec. 15 on $14 million

EPA documents
avai1ahle for
p,ililic viewing

According to Middleport Mayor
Fred Hoffman, the necessary En·
vironmental Assessment document.s
have been completed on the Page St.
project in Middleport and are
available for public inspection at the
Mayor's office, 237 Race St., Mid·
. dleport, between the hours of 8 a.m.
and 4 p.m. Monday through Friday.
The project consist.s of reconstruction of Page St. to a two-lane 20foot width highw11y from Powell St.
to the boat laWlching facility on
Raiiroad St. Some CW'b work,
drainage and driveway construction
will also be involved.
Changes in width, grade, and
alignment plus the drainage, curve
and intersection improvements in
this proj ect will enhance safety for
all users of the improved street
through longer sight distances, expanded side clearance for passing,
better vi.'!ion , improved, turning at
intersections, plus a drier (and thus
safer ) road surface.
This was considered the minimum
proposal that would properly
upgrade this street.
According to Division 10, Ohio
Dept. of Highways/ this project
should be available to process for
sale when Federal Off.System funds
become available in October.
Agencies offering comment on the
environmental assessment of this
project were Ohio Dept. of Natural
Resources, Ohio Dept. of Highway
Safety, Ohio Histone Preservation
Office, Ohio E;nvironmentai Protection Agency, U. S. Dept. of 'the Intenor, U. S. Dept. of Agriculture and
the U. S. Corps of Engineers.
ASK TOWED
Anyone wishing further inRalph
Edward
Searls, 21 , Rutland ,
formation on the project may con·
and
Bernice
Roland
Barrett, 16,
tact tile Middleport Mayor's office
J,angsville.
or Division 10, ODOT at Marietta.

Ballerina's

Blrlbs .

Aug. 26 - Mr. and Mrs. Gregory
Lane, a son, Crown City; Mr. and
Mrs. Dale Sisson, a son, Minersville;
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Massey, a
daughter, HamdeD.

+ 500,000 barrels a day above its self-imposed ceiling.
Communist production averaged more than 14 million barrels a day, a 3.8
percent increase over the same period in 1978, and the Journal said the
Soviet Union, the world's largest producer, boosted daily output to 11.5 ,
million barrels, up 2. 7 percent'from last year.
The United States, ranked third behind Saudia Arabia and the Soviet
Union, averaged 8.6 million barrels a day, up0.4 percent.
Meanwhile, the Lundberg Letter survey concluded for the first time that .
federal gas price controls 811! actually working.
.
Publisher Dan Lundberg SS!d dealers ·seem to be obeying federal rules
that fimit profit.margins. He attributed rising prices to wholesale price In·
creases.
"What is happening is that although the retail price has continued to go up,
the margin of profit allowed for dealers is set at 15.4 cents per .gallon over
acquisition costs and they are generally obeying the guldellnes," Lundberg
said.

Sign-language class slated

Grandview Union Cemetery.
Friends may caU at the funeral
home from 2 to. 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
Tuesday.
AUCE WINEGAR
Alice Winegar, 82, a resident of 133
Second Ave., died at 5:15p.m. Satur·
day in Hol2er Medical Center. She
was a retired employee of University Hospital, Colwnbus.
She was born Aug. 2, 1897, in Pl.
Pleasant, daughter of the late Allen
and Ida Catherine Presley Hartley.
She married James E. Winegar on
Dec. 29, 1921, at Akron. He preceded
her in death in 1966.
The following nieces and nephews
survive : Mrs. Owen (June) Cantrell,
Gallipolis; Mrs. Richard (Sara
Daune) Owen, Middleport; Mrs. Jim
(Ida Lee) Roller, Waldorf, Md.;
Mrs. Henry (Nancy ) Cooper, West
. Chester, Pa.; Mrs. Carolyn Sue
Hickman, Middleport; Jack Har·
Uey, Charleston, W. Va., and Don
Denison, Berkley, Calif.
Three brothers and two sisters
preceded her in death.
The Winegars returned to
Gallipolis from Colwnbus in 1965.
She was a member of the
American Legion Auxiliary ,
,
Gallipolis.
Funeral services will be held 2
p.m. Tuesday at the Waugh-HalleyWood FWleral Horne with Rev.
Frank Hayes officiating. Burial will
be in Gravel Hill Cemetery,
Cheshire.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 7 until 9 o'c:Iock this
evening.
American Legion AUiiliary services will be held 7:30 this evening.

The Gallia.Jackson-Meigs ComniWllty Mental Health Center an·
noWlced the beginning of a sign
lan811age class on Tuesday, Sept. 18,
from 7-ll:30 p.m.
This is. a reminder for people to
call the Center and sign up. Tbe in·
structor for the course is a specialist
in sign language and Is teaching the
alphabet, basic vocabulary and
idioms.

Miller announces staff appointments
Due to the recent departure of his
top assistant Dave Brown, who '
resigned to accept a poaiti~ in
private enterprise, loth District
Congressman Clarence Miller today
announced the appointment of Phil
Straw as his Executive Assistant,
Linda RO\ferick as Washington Of.
fice Manager, and Mrs. Judy Norris
as District Office Manager. All three
are long time employees of the
Miller staff.
Phil Straw, a native of Athens, is a
graduate of the University of Ken·
lucky, where he received a degree in
journalism in 1967.
He has been with the
Congressman's office since 1970. He
and his wife BeckY, a native of
Belpre, Ohio, and daughter Amy,
reside in College Park, Maryland., ,
Linda Roderick is a six-year
veteran of the Miller Washington
staff. Originally from Canton, Ohio,
Linda formerly served as the
Congressman's personal secretary
before being elevated to her new
post. Linda attended Mary

Cardiology review
session Tuesday

(Continued from page 1)
site at the front of the Sheraton·
Waikiki Hotel.
Miller was charged six years
ago with wounding a 50-year-old
woman in another sniping in·
cident in Waikiki. However, a
state judge dlsmisseri the attempted murd,,. charge m
February, 1974, after a team of
psychiatrists found him mentally
incompetent to stand trial. At
that time, Circuit Judge Masato
Doi ordered Miller confined to the
Hawaii State Hospital for the
mentally ill, saying he would be a
danger to society if released.

WALLET LOST
.John Lightfoot has reported that
he lost his waUet sometime while on
a run with the fire department to the
Happy Hollow area. Anyone finding
the wallet is asked to caU Lightfoot
at 992-3786, the Ohlo Power Co.
r.here he is employed.

.

As indicated previously, the cour.;
se Is designed to aid teachers in the;
public schools, p.Uell8ionala in tb(
medica] field , parents and the!'
general public to communieate will!;
hearing impaired individuals Inclassroom settings, emergency
situations, and for pleasure. The fee ·
for the class is S5 for the entire nine
week session.

A training session entiUed Cardiology Review will be . held on
Tuesday evening at 7 o'clock in the
Fifth Floor Classroom at the Holzer
Medical Center. Acting as the in·
structor for this most infonnative
class will be Gene H. Abels, M.D., a
member of the h&lt;&gt;~pital Medical
Staff.
This special program on Car·
diology is open io all interested
hospital persoMei and emergency
medical persoMei who desire to
take advantage of such an
educational opportunity, offered at
no charge.
Dr. Abels will conduct in depth
discussions on Anatomy and
Physiology, specifically the struc·
IW'e of the heart, circulation and
function of the heart; approach to
patient assessment; cardiovascular
problems ; a normal Elec ·
trocardiogram ; Arrhythmia
re&lt;;ognition ; cardiac drugs and prehospital treatment. To close the
evening, those attending will be in·
volved in a practice session with
supposed "patients" and Arrhyth·
miaAnnie.
Those interested in attending are
urged to be at the 5th Floor
Classroom of the Holzer Medical
Center on time Tuesday evening so
that the Cardiology Review may
start prompUy at 7 o'clock.

Washington
College
in
FredericksbW'g, Vl.rglnia.
Judy Norris, a seven year veteran ;
of the Congressman's staff, is a ;
resident of Lanca,.ter, Ohio, where ,
she resides with ~er husband Bob ~
and two daughters Michele and ,
Melissa. Judy will ~ge the •
Congresaman 's district office which :
is located in LanCBllter.

Apple Grove
News Notes
Recent visitors of Mr. and Mri
Ronald RusseU and family were Mr,
and Mrs. Dana Lewis of Clifton, Mr:
and Mrs. Bob venoy' daughter Robin;
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Russell, Mrs. Ethel
Clark of Pagetown, Mr. and Mrs. Don
RusseU, Eari .•RW!Sell', Mrs. Bertha
RusseU, Mr. and Mrs. Steve Hagey
and children of Wolf Pen.
Don Bell is a medical patient at
Holzer Medical Center.
Mr. and Mrs. Don BeU and Mrs.
·Doris Hensler enjoyed a cookout at
the home of Mr. and .Mrs. David Hensler recenUy .
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Bell were recent
dinner guests ol Mr. and Mrs. Don .
Bell.
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Rou..h and
daughter, Kim, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
Roush, Mrs. Iva Orr, Mr. and Mrs.
Louie Pickett and daughter, Tracy,
were shopping at the new K mart
store at Gallipolis.
PATIENT AT HOLZI".R
Troy Zwilling, Syracuse, i.s a
surgical patient at the Holzer
Medical Center. The rocm number is
223.

HOG REPORT
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Direct
hogs (Fed-State ): BarroWliB[ld gilu
.25lower, demand moderate. U.S. I·
2, 210.230 lbs. country pointa, 40.50411.75, few at 41, plants, 41·41.50. U.S.
I.J, 23(}.250 lbs. COWllry points, 39.7540,50, plants, 40.25-41.25.
Receipts Friday: Actuala 8,200,
today's estimates ·8,00),

VOL XXVIII NO. 95

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Nation's schools hit
by teacher walkouts
district's 43,000 pupils, but union of.
By 'lbe Alaociated Press
ficials
said 65 percent to 70 percent
Thousands of striking teachers
were absent .
.were olf the job in seven slates again
In Louisiana, a strike by the 1,1100·
today. In Oklahoma City, the school
member
Jefferson
Parish
district refused to send negotiators
back to tbe bargaining table, saying ·
it might be illegal to do so.
Other strikes were reported in
suburban New Orleans, where more
than 2,000 teachers walked out, and
in some scbool districts in Michigan,
Ohio, Illinois, PeMSyivania and In·
diana.
Oklahoma City Scbool Superin·
tendent Thomas Payzant ref used a
request by the striking American
Federation of Teachers to resume
By Associated Press
talks today.
Mild,
rainy
weather is expected to
In a statement issued Monday
the Buckeye state.
continue
across
night, Payzant cited language in a
The
National
Weather
Service says
state law barring teacher strikl'.'i
weak
high
pressure
system
the
that says school boards are relieved
keeping
skies
cloudy
will
hold
over
ol the duty to negotiate with teacher
of
the
eastern
United
States
moat
organizations that strike.
' 'That is extremely disap· through Wednesday. The warm,
pointing," federation President hwnid air associated with this
Mike Barlow said. "That indicates system has resulted in periodic
to us the superintendent and the showers and thunderstorms across
board don't wan! to reach a set- the state, and the threat of rain
remains.through Wednesday.
Uement."
Temperatures are expected to
Payzant said less than half of the
range
from the low to mid 60s across
system's approximately 2,300
the
state
tonight and highs will be in
teachers observed picket lines Moo·
the
low
to
mid 80s Wednesday.
dav. the first day Of classes for the
Scattered showers and thun·
derstorms were reported in northern
Ohio during the night. Several heavy
lhWlderstorrns developed early
today in extreme northeastern Ohio
from Cleveland to the Pennsylvania
border. The southern part of the
state, however, generally was rainfree .
Skies were cloudy across the state
and some patchy fog was reported.
Overnight lows were in the mid to
upper 60s.
Some progress was reported
Monday toward ending a walkout
by bus drivers whose fourth
EXTENDED FORECAST
strike in ,seven years left some
A ciiiDce of abowen or tbwl800,000 Southern California comdentorma 'lbunday tbrwgb
muters stranded, put ·extra
Salunlay.
HJg._ ID tile upper 7011
pressure on gas suppUes· and
to
low
11011:
LowaiD
tile ....
clogged freeways.
But in Northern california,
another 600,001 riders in the San
Francisco area faced loss of ser·
vice later in the week .
In Ohio, meanwhile, trains and
Mostly doudy with a chance of
buses roUed again for 200,000
showers
or thunderstorms tonight
Cleveland commuters with an
and Wednesday. Lows tonight in the
agreement to resume contract
mid to upper 60s. Highs Wednesday
talks Tuesday. in the low to mid 80s. The chance ol
rain 50 percent tonight and Wed·
nesday.
BROOK PARK, Ohlo (AP ) The Ford Motor Co. aMounced
MEETING CANCELLED
the layoffs of 4,400 woriCers at its
· A regular meeting of Middleport
casting plant in the Cleveland
Village CoWlcil scheduled for Mon·
subwi&gt; of Brook Park, effective
day night was cancelled due to the
Monday.
lack of a quorum. The three COWl·
The workers wiU return to their
cilmen who reported for the planned
jobs Sept. 4, the day after the
meeting were Marvin Kelly, Dewey
Labor Day holiday .
Horton and William Walters.

Rainy weather

will continue
around Ohio

Progress TWted

Weather

Federation of Teachers entered its
third day today without a budge in
financial positions by either side, a
federal mediator said.
None of the parish's 85 public
schools was closed. Classes were
staffed by administrators, substitutes and non-61riking teachers.
Less than half of the '11 ,500 pupils
in the district showed up for school
Monday.
In teacher strikes elsewhere :
- Nearly 2,300 teachers struck
five districts in Michigan on Mon1day. The Michigan Education
Association estimated 411,000
teachers in the state were without
contracts, including the 12,000
teachers in Detroit, where classes
are scheduled to begin Sept. 5.
-Teachers in two southern Ohio
districts struck Monday. Only 13
percent of the 6,001 students in the
Ohio Valley Local School District
showed up for classes while 78 percent of teachers stayed off the job. In
the Frontier Local School District,
none of the 78 teachers reported for
work to prepare for classes for I, 450
students scheduled to begin Wednesday.
-An orientation meetinj;( for 3,600
students in Park Ridge , ru., was
called off Monday when about :100
teachers formed picket Unes. Strikes
alsO were reported at the DeSoto
Consolidated School and schools in
the Sparta School District.·
-some '00 teachen in -the Chartiers VaUey school district in Pennsylvania struck Monday, while a
walkout of 400 teachers at Bethel
Park continued. Both districts are in
the Pittsb~h area.
- The leadership ol the Tippecanoe County Education
Association in north-&lt;:entrallndiana
said a strike of the system 's 387
teachers would begin inunediately
after an approval vote Monday
night. Mean,while, the 270-member
Crown Point Teachers Association
picketed one high ~hool Monday.
.~

Cooperation so ught
Principal Robert Morris is seeking
parents' cooperation for those who
might be transporting their children
to Pomeroy and Middleport Schools.
Morris said that sometimes,
parents transport a pupil in the mornings to the buildings and ask that
the child return home on the school
bus. This creates a problem in ad·
ministration ln that sometimes a
child . would not ride the same bus
home that would take him to school
in the morning .
Parents transporting children in
the mornings are asked to report the
euct location of their horne to the
office of the schools so that the child
can be put on the correct bus for
returning home.

Mrs. Roush, grand champ
cake decorating fair winner

DRILLING HOLES
George and Larry
· Greenlees, of the Greenlees Construction Co., Marie!·
Ia, are working at the Meigs High l!chool where they
,are drilUng holes in the side of the academic wing. Hardened steel rods will be nm from the side of the struc·
lure and bolted into the interior structural steel of the

Flac~Mist
NON-AEROSOL

Col&lt;?gne Spray
ONCE-A-YEAR SPECIAL
ONL~$295
IN ~AVORITE COTY FRAGRANCES:
EMERAUDE, L'AIMANT, L'ORIGAN, IMPREVU
See all the other items by Coty - Cologne • Powders - Perfumes · Lipstock - Gill Sets. On the 2nd
lloor,

MRS. NANCY ROUSH is pictured with the cake which won for her the
best of show.in the advanced teachers division in cake decorations at the
Ohio State Fair. Her silver goblet and other prizes which she won.with the
attractive cake are also pictW'ed.

~ Wages

:)
:"{·

WASHINGTON (AP)
are not keeping up with inflation, farm income will be less than expeeled this year and U.S. investments overseas are on the increase, government figures show.
·

\('
}:::

;:;:;:;

figured at an anriual rate.

.. ..

I rE1T:§~g;.::_::::::=::.::::
.1.1.1

.·.·.·.·

~~

~=W~~~~~==:== •

American workers a year from now will buy 5 percent less than they do now, the department said.

:.:!!,1.,,:.:',,•.:,

1\,uft~:!::~i~i§:!~~~§JI@M~
Ballerina, 52 others
RAISES RATE

NEW YORK (AP) - Cbaae
MallbaU811 Balik IOday raised lbe
prime rste to 12'1• percent, tile
blgbeat level ever for loaDS to
major corporalloos.
Cbaae, the nation's tblrd
largest baak, did not explala the
IDcreue from 12 percent, but
ecoaomlc aaalyaw bad expected
the lncreue foUowlng recent IDcreuealn other Interest rates.
1be Federal Reserve moved
lut week to force up abort-term
Interest rates iD an effort to con·
\troliDflallon.

Nancy Roush continued her long
line of wins in cake decorating by
coming up with grand champion and
best of show honors at the Ohlo State
Fair.
A resident of Tuppers Plains, Mrs.
Roush entered four cakes in the Ohio
The Meigs County Sheriff's Office
State Fair.
investiga~ one accident Monday.
She won three blue ribbon first
Edna L. Buchanan, Route I, Reed·
places and a red ribbon second sville, reported she was traveling
place. She went ahead in the ad- east on County Road 34 in the Mor·
vanced teachers division to be nJng Star area and lost control of ber
named grand champion and won a 1m Chevrolet Nova in gravel on a
silver goblet for having the best of curve. The vehicle ran off the road
show·in the division.
on the left, striking and knocking
Her winning cake, suitable for a down five fence posts and wire,
man's birthday observnnce, is a 10. owned by Harrison Smith, Racine.
inch beveled cake with colorful, The front of the vehicle came to rest
edible bird plaques - aU done in in a small creek.
exquisite colors. The cake features
No injuries were reported, but
pine boughs and cones, all edible, there was .slight damage to the left
around the top layer and colorful rear fender.
bird feathers, edible also, around the
Sheriff James J . Proffitt reports
ljase.
that Robert Stanley of Huntington,
Mrs. Roush recenUy showed the W. Va., notified the office Monday
same cake at Louisville, Ky., that approximately 14 window~ were
Parkersburg, W. Va., and Erie, Pa.
broken out of a house he owns on
At Erie, she won first place in the New Lima Road. Apparently, the
men's birthday cake division and damage was done sometime in July .
won the Wilton Professional
The incident is under ln·
Medallion against some 70 cakes In vestigation.
the professional division of tlie show.
Mrs.·Roush was in Fort Wayne, Ind.,
FREE CLOTHING DAY
In July where she took a number ci
Free clothing day will be held at
classes in furihering her cake
the Salvation Army Headquarters,
decoraUng art.
Butternut Ave., Pomeroy, Thursday
Tbe State Fair winning cake wUI
be displayed at the International from 10 a.m. until noon. All area
show to be held at Providence, R. !., .• residents in need of clothing are
welcome.
next nlonth .

,,

building. This is one of two corrective atepa being
carried out by the company to improve structural
defects which have developed in tbe !'line-year old high
school. The corrective processes are expected to be
completed by Sept. 5 when classes open at the scbool.

\·\ w ages way behmd mflation·~·\;

Deputies probing
minor complaints

Rich, captivating, irresistable!

.1'

en tine

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

ELBERFELDS

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

at y

e

Ford layoffs

FAIRVIEW
Mr. and Mrs. RusseU Roush and
Mandy Russell visited Mr. and Mrs.
Eddie Hupp and son, Jeremy, Sunday
afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Manuel, Robin
and Dnnlla, visited Mr. and Mrs.
Gilbert Hart, and her father, Earl
Hart a recent Sunday at Racine. Earl
Hart went to Florida Monday with
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Hart wbo will be
making their home at St. Cloud, Fla.

•

hack in USSR today
NEW YORK (AP) - A 73\'z.hour
showdown over 'ballerina Ludmilla
Vlasova's departure from the United
States could have been setUed long
before a compromise finally cleared
the way for her return to Moscow,
i:J.s. and Soviet officials agree.
But they disagreed Monday on
who was to blame for the episode,
each saying the other was at fault in
the diplomatic stalemate.
And both sides claimed vindication when Miss Vlasova
declared she chose to return to the
Soviet Union without her husband,
Bolshoi Ballet dancer Afexander
Godunov, who defected last week.·
Miss Vlasova and 52 other Soviet
citizens returned to Moscow early
today aboard the Aeroflot jetliner
detained at Kennedy International
Airport while U.S. authorities sought
assurances that she was leaving
voluntarily.
·
_
In Moscow, the Soviet news agency Tass said Miss Vlasova bad
"displayed the feeling of lofty civic
duty and colll'age in the face of
police threats and blackmail " in
returning.
It did not mention Godunov's
defection, the most recent in a series
of defections by Soviet ballet stars,
inclwjing Mikhail Baryshnikov and
Rudolf Nureyev.
Miss VI.asova left the United
!jtatea following a compromise in
whlch U.S. officials were allowed to
speak with her in the ''non-coercive
environment" they had demanded.
President Carter and · Soviet
President Leonid Brezhnev reportedly took active roles in the set·
Uement.
The New York Times reported
today that the two national leaders
exchanged messages during the
weekend in an effort to bring the incident to a conclusion.
Tass said the United States was

..

guilty of "crude provocation" aimed
at "worsening Soviet-American
relations. " It accused the United
States of ·:acts ol cruelty" to women
and children aboard the jet.
Soviet negotiator Evgeny
Makeyev called the settlement "a
victory of justice," adding, ''Our
stand was right from the beginning."
However, the Carter ad·
ministration, which has criticized
the Soviets for hwnan rights
violations involving the emigratioo
of Jews, said it defended Mills
Vlasova 's freedom to decide where
she wanted to live.
White House press secretary Jody
Powell said the incident established
a principle that foreigners have a
right to choose freely whether to
leave the United States.
' The standoff came at a time when
the Carter administration is trying ·
to sell the SALT II anns treaty to
(Continued on page&amp;)

Man injured in
Rt. 33 mishap
One person was injured during a
one-vehicle accident investigated
Monday by the Gallia-Meigs Post,
Highway Patrol.
Called to the scene on U.S. 33, fourtenths of a mile north of SR 7, at 7:06
p.m., officers report a north bound
pickup, towing a trailer, operated by
Robert Haley, 22, Pomeroy, went out
of control wben the trailer began to
sway.
The vehicle was demolished when
it passed off the right side of the
roadway, struck a guardraU and
traveled down an embankment.
Haley displayed visible signa ci injury, but was not immediately
treated.

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