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•
••

·•
:

14- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Wednesday,Sept. 19,1979

Gold dealers nervous
LONDON (AP I - A bout· of
nerwusness hit the European gold
markets today as dealers quoted a
wide range of prices on either side of
$375 an ounce. The dollar was little
changed.
London ' s five major bullion
houses fixed the price for this
rnorning 'strading SI'ssion at $376, up
from $371 at the opening and $372 at
Tuesday 's close .
In Zurich, the metal wa.s quoted at
a median price of $373, with a wide
rang of bids on either side. Gold
closed in Zurich Tuesday at $373.50.
The dollar, meanwhile, showed
litUe movement. Here were the
quotes compared to Tuesday 's
closings :
Tokyo -223.675 yen, up from
223.60.
· Frankfurt- 1.6073 West German
marks, down from 1.8088.
Zurich-1.62S4 Swiss francs, down
from 1.6265.
Paris--4.2224 French francs, down
from 4.2250.
Uan-812.85 Italian lire , down
from 813.40.
Amsterdam-1.9866 Dut c h

Rt£ '57.99
;:::,

$4499

Too

CHAPMAN
SHOES
Next To Elberlelds In P t:- merov

guilders, down from 1.9870.
London --a pound cost $2.1395,
down from $2.16.
In the current gold rush , buyers
seem to be coming from everywhere
- "tlle United States, Europe, the
Arabs, Japan and some Martians,"
ooe gold dealer said.
Vincent Tese, a partner in James
Sinclair &amp; Co. a New York gold
advisory service, was exaggerating
ooly a little. Gold's $24.25-a n-&lt;:~unce
price increase Tuesday was a record
as was a closing price of $376 in New
York.
George Perala, manager of tlle
coin and metal division of Deak
Perera, a major coin dealer ,
described business as "very hectic."
Many small investors are entering

County Court
Thirteen defendants were fined
and 10 others forfeited bonds in
Meigs County Court Monday.
Fined by Judge Charles Knight
were James L. Jarvis, Rt. 1,
Langsville, $50 and costs, faj!ure !o
stop after accident; Carlos E . stepp,
Middleport, $150 and costs, 90 days
confinement, 00 days suspended,
driving while intoxicated, $150 and
costs, 90 days confinement, 00 days
suspended, hit-skip; Anthony
Morrison, Marietta, Gerald Pooler,
Reedsville, Doflllid Bennett, Reed·
sville, and Timothy Fry, Middleport,
$15 and costs each, speeding; Diana
Lynn Tillis, Rutland, $5 and costs,
unsafe vehicle; James R. Kinnison,
Rt. 3, Albany, $183, overload; Jackie
· Smith, Langsville, $150 and costs,
three days confinement, license
suspended 30 days, driving while in·
toxicated; James Milliron, Racine,
$15 and costs, improper brakes;
LeOnard L. Schockey, Rt. I, Shade
and GeorgeS. Whited, Stewart, $175
and costs, overweight; John P. Rad·
cliffe, Athens, $250 and costs, over·
weight.
Forfeiting banda were Earl GrU·
fitll, RD, Reedsville, $37.55, disor·
derly; Tony Hutton, Rt. I,
Langsville, Steven 0 . Hill, Rt. 3,
Albany, Charles H. Plasterr, Logan,
W. Va., and Michael T. Gord,
Hopewell, Ohio, $35.50 each,
speeding; George F. Hn.char, Jr.,
$360.50, driving while intoxicated;
Karen Oesterle, Parkersburg,
$35.50, improper passing; Florence
Grueser, Rt. I, Shade, $35.50, lit·
tering; Paul David Milliron, Rt. 2,
Racine, $62.55, failure to stop after
accident; Leslie Whittington, Rt. I,
Middleport , $262.55, physical harm.

DU PONT
RADIATOR PRODUCTS

tlle market for the .first time, he
said, trying to get a piece of the goldboom action .
"We can tell tllat from the size of
U1e orders and the kinds of the
questions they ask," he said.
Gold cost $35 an ounce 12 years
ago - when tlle dollar was tied to its
value and before Americans were
allowed to buy it. Its price has risen
$160 in tlle last year - fSO In tlle,last
two. weeks.
'
It closed in Zurich, Switzerland,
Europe's largest bullion market, at
$373.50 an ounce on Tuesday - up
$20.50 from Monday . In London,
Europe's otller major market, it
closed at $372, up $18.50, after
settling back from a record $376.25
during tlle day.
September gold futures on New
York's Commodity Exchange rose
$22.90 to $382 an ounce.
One of the beneficiaries of tlle
latest gold rush was the U.S.
government. It had coincidentally
scheduled an auction of 750,000
ounces of its gold reserves for
Tuesday, and was able to sell the
gold lor an average price of $377.78
an ounce - for a total of $283.3 .
million. When .the government 1a·st
auctioned gold in August, tlle metal
averaged $301.08 an ounce.
Perola said the $100 Canadian
mapleleaf has been extremely
popular witll small investors since
tlle coin was issued two weeks ago,
though dealers take a. hefher
commission on the mapleleaf Ulan
on other coins because it is seen as a
collectors' item.
For that reason, Deak Perera tries
to steer investors from the gold
mapleleaf to other coins, like the
South African krugerrand, which
don't cmlmand such a premiwn.
"People are calling us and asking,
'What gold coin should we buy?"'
Perala said. '.'We're telling them:
buy the krugerrand or the Austrian
100 kroner or the Mexican SO peso."

continue aroWid Ohio
By The Associated Press
1 A large high pressure cenler
moving south out of the upper Great
Lakes was expected to continue
cl,ear skies and cooler temperatures
over most of Ohio today with some
partly cloudy skies in tlle northwest.
The National Weather Service
said the center would cootinue its
so11thward movement and be located
over Kentucky and Tennessee by
Thursday.
The forecast called for clear skies
tonight and low temperatures in tlle
40s to low SOs. Increasing cloudiness
ill expected in soutllern sections
Thursday with sunny skies
elsewhere over the state. The highs
Thursday wm be from 70 to 75.

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~

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quickly .
eas1ly

Helps
prevent
clogging,
rust, and
corrosion
in cooling
systems.
Sal c 'Ends Sep ternber 29. 1979

G&amp;J Auto Parts
~•

...,.

144 W. Second

St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

G&amp;J Auto Parts
Route JJ

Mason, w. va.

HOW ABOUT THIS?
PARIS (AP) - The leftist
newspaper Liberation tweaked tlle
nose of tlle gold-crazed financial
world today by coming out with a
gold-colored masthead and urging
readers to buy as many copies as
they could.
It claimed each gold-hued
"Liberation" contained 0.4 grams of
the precious metal, and tllat every
copy bought at tlle street price of 59
cents was actually worth $4.60.

"CALL US TODAY.
WE CAN CUT OUR NEW
ARS, OR USED CARS TO
PATTERN YOUR BUDGET
1977 AMC PACER ....•....•...•.•..•.•••••....'3695
1976 BUICK SKYLARK••..•.•......•.••....•3295
1976 CHEVROLET LUV.••.•................•2995
1976 PLYMOUTH VALIANT......•...•. '2695
1976 BUICK ~RE 4 DR-....••••.... •3695
1975 AMC MATADOR ....•...•.....••..... '1995
1974 PONTIAC LeMANS ..•.••••••••.... '2195
1974 CH'EVROLET NOVA ..•••...••.••..•.'1195

SMITH-NELSON MOTORS
POMEROY, OHIO

Area Deaths
\'ELMACARLYLE

Mrs. Vebna Marcella Roberts
Carlyle, 84, Gallipolis Ferry, died
Tuesday at 10 a 111. in the Mercy
Medical Center at Springfield, Ohio
after a short illness.
She was born Dec. 22, 1894 at
Gallipolis Ferry, a daughter of the
late William Roberts and Annie
Sheline Roberts. Her husband, Earl
Carlyle, preceded her in death tn
1969. A son, ReJt, also preceded her
in death in 1952.
She was a member of Wyoma
Pentecostal Church at Gallipolis
Ferry. ·. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs.
Evelyn Bush, Gallipoils Ferry, and
Mrs. Ella Seely, Uvingston, Calif.;
four sons, Branch Carlyle and Hillis
Carlyle, both of Colwnbus, Ohio,
Frank Carlyle, Treernont City, Ohio,
and Dennis Carlyle, Orient, Ohio; 21
grandchildren,
30
greatgrandchUdren and two great-greatgrandchildren.
Services will be beld Friday at
1:30 p.m . at the Wyoma
Pentenco!&gt;tal Church with the Rev.
Noah Callicoat officiating. Burial
will be in the Wyoma Cemetery.
The body will be taken to the
church ooe hour befare services.
Friends may call at the Wilcoxen
Funeral Home after 5 p.m.
Thursday.
~CHARLES GREENLEE

Funeral services for Charles Ray
Greenlee, 53, Point Pleasant Route
2, who died Tuesday morning in
Charleston Area Center following
open hear surgery, will be held
Thursday at 2 pm. at the Wilcoxen
Funeral H&lt;:lne with the Rev. John
Icenbower officiating.
Burial will follow in the Leon
Cemetery at Leon .
Mr. Greenlee, a 53 year resident of
Mason County, was a Master Mason
and an associate of the Good
Shepherd United Methodist Church.
He was 30 year employe of the
Valley Line Co., where he served as
a first mate .
He was born at Leoo April26, 1926,
a son of Dwight L. Greenlee and

·a

Perfect weather will

992·2174

·Mayor's court~

2 Gallia
(Cootinued from page 1)
Dayton Children's Psychiatric
Hospital, $750 1000; Daytoo Mental
Healtll' Center, $.3 millioo, Fairhill
Mental Health Center, $'137,975, and
Fallsview Psychiatric Center,
$457,000.
J..mgview State Hospital, $3.4
mUiloo; Massilloo State Hospital,
$4.7 million; Millcreek Psychiatric
Center ,
$58,000;
Rollman
Psychiatric Hospital, $140,959;
Sagamore Hills, $14G,959; Toldo
Mental Health Center, $5.3 million;
Wstern Reserve Center, $4 .3
million; Woodside Receiving
Hospital, $745,000, Apple Creek
Center, $1.9 million; Broadview
Center, $1.6 mUlioo, Butler Cowtty
Center, $576,000; Cincinnati
Developmental Center, $7.4 mUIIon,
Batavia Developmental Center,
$572,000.
Cleveland Developmental Center,
$200,000; CohunbUll Center, $4.6
mUiloo ; Dayton Center fer Mentally
Retarded, $692,000; Gallipolis
Center, $1.6mUlloo; Mount Vernon
Center, $1.7 million! Nelsonville
Center, $1.5 millioo; Ncrth.west Ohio
Center, $182,000; Orient Center, $5.3
million; Springview Center , $1
mUllan; Tiffin Center, $1.3 million ;
Warrensville Center, $169,000,
Youngstown Center, $588,200, and
Portsmouth Receiving Hospital,
$371,475.
Board of Regentl' - Technical
equipment and energy cooservation
projects, $16 million.
lnstitutloos of Higher Learning
Capital Projects - Bowling Green
State, $7.9 million; University of
Akron, $28.3 million ; Central State,
$7.6 million; Cleveland State
University, $58 million; University
of Cincinnati, $49.1 million; Kent
State, $6.5 million; Wright State
University, $20 million, Miami
University, $22.7 million, Ohio
University, $14.3 million; Ohio State
University, $83.3 million, University
of Toledo, $22.6million, Youngstown
State, $20 million .
Medical Schools - Northeast Ohio
Universities College of Medicine,
$3.2million; Medical ~allege of Ohio
at Toledo, $15 million .
Community Colleges - Southern
State, $5.9 million; Shawnee State,
$5 million; Rio Grande, $4.2 million;
Sinclair, $8.7 million, Cuyahoga, $9.5
million ; Lakeland, $3.6 million,
IAlrain , $1 .9 million ; Edison State,
$3.1 million.
Technical Colleges- Washington,
$2 million;. Marion, $1.8 million;
Cincinnati, $4 million, Muskingum, .
$665,000, Hocking, $2.2 million,
Terra, $12.6 mUlion, Agricultural
Technical Institute, $2.4 million,
North Central, $3.5 million; Lima,
$750,000 ; Columbus, $6.8 million,
Clark, $1.7 million, Jefferson, $1.8
million; Michael J . Owens , $4
million ;· Stark, $6.3 million .
Agricultural Research and
D&lt;Jvelopmer . Center - renovation
and museum, $3.5 million.
/

i

Pearl B. TOOmas Greenlee, Leon,
who survive .
Other survivors include his wife,
TrUba Kimberling Greenlee; one
daughter, Darla May Greenlee, at
home; two sons, Charles Larry
Greenlee, Gallipolis Ferry, and
Lyman Greenlee, Belleville, Ill.; ooe
sister, Mrs. VadaCottrill, Leoo; two
brothers, Millard Greenlee, Leon,
and Gene Greenlee, Hazard, Ky.;
three grandchildren, Charles Scott
and Nathan James Greenlee,
Belleville, Ill., and Miranda Gail
Greenlee, Gallipolis Ferry; and
several nieces and nephews.
Friends may call at the Wilcoxen
Funeral Home after 4 p.m. today.

Eleven defendants forfeited bonds
posted on speeding charges in the ~
couri of Mlddll!plll'l Mayor Fred4
Hoffman Tuellday night.
!
Forfeiting bonds on speeding
charges were: Helen Fif;lds, New;
Haven, P-5; llodney Wh•te,
Bottom, '29; Larry Bausell,2
Galllpolls, $24; Thunas D. Crow,=
Middleport, $23; Kathryn Obllnger,1•
Pomeroy, ~; James E. Taylor,=
Pomeroy, $Z3; Either L. lleMoes,.
Porneroy, $Z3; Aletlla J. W11111er,:
Ractne, $22; Brenda Hysell,i~
Pomeroy, $3$; Cha~mcey Franklin,
Q-olllll City, t22. Fined tJ.O IUld coat.
oo a speeding charge was Jeffrey=
Beaver, Racine.
~
. Al8o tn the court Tueslay night~
Sruwuy Utile, Mlddlepart W&amp;l1 fined~
a25 ani! CIIIU 1111 dilllrderly 11l1111141'=
char.lle; Everett Huffman, Jr., no~
addreall rec«ded,farfelted a ~
bond pollild 111 the same charge and~
Wayne Stswart, Muon, W. Va.,•
forfeited a $150 lmd poeted on
reckleaa operatlm charge IUld a $too;;
bond polled on a po-"11m o~
marijuana charge.
·
·:j

Long=

PHYlLIS A. MULlEN
Phyllis A. Mullen, 64, 605 First
Ave ., Middleport, died Tuesday at
Holzer Medical Center.
Mrs. Mullen was born Dec. 9, 1915,
tlle daughter of the late John and
Inna Hulbert Dillard. She was alao
•
preceded in death by her husband,
Three defendants forfeited bo~
Dr. CharlesJ. Mullen and one sister,
in the court of Pomeroy Mayor::
Frances Fleming.
Clanlnce
Andrews Tuelday night..
~e is survived by four sisters,
They
were
Theodore Woods;
Dorohy J . Morris, Middleport;
Mlddlepm,
$40
posted oo a speedlJC;:
Hartense Jobb, Miami ; Janet
charp;
Vlctarla
Slack, Middleport.;:
. Wurser, Centerville; and &lt;llarlene ·
$32,
speedlnc,
and
Gerald Pooler~
Stoldenhoff, Cos Cob, Coon.; .two
Pomeroy,
'1110,
leaving
the scene ~=
trothers, John H. Dillard of Orlando
an
acddent.
;_
·and Roger Dillard of Pomeroy, and
several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be held
••
iZ
Friday at I pm. at Ewtng Chapel.
TO
END
IIWUUAGES
Burial wcemetery. The family
In Melp County Ccmmon Pleu'
requests in lieu of flowers dmatkins
Court
Stepben Maynard, Mid.l
be made to the cancer 80Ciety.
dleport,
and Rebecca Lyna
Friends may call at the funeral
Maynard,
Middleport, 111ec1 for
home Thursday from Zto 4 and 7 to 9.
dlasolullon rl. marriage.
•
Grlll&amp;ed divorces were Julie Ri~
monel from Larry IUclwond, and
Pamela R. INgell from Jllllllll R~
InpJa, Jr. Tile llllrriqe d. Duaai
B. Wolle and Maqpe Ann Wolfe~
diaolved.
The Tuppers Plains Area
Emergency Squad hal started a
fund drive tn the area It will aerve.
VE'I'ERANS MEMORIAL
Areas covered will be Olive IUld ~
Admitted-Brtan
Bufflngtoq,
Orange Tollll8blpe .lllld Ute IICX them
Pomeroy; Mary Derenberger,.
half rl. Chester Tolmlhlp.
Pomeroy;, Frances Whittington, ,
Mooey railed will be used fat a
Middleport ; . Nonnan Lehew-,,
building to boule the emergency
Portland;
Be sale
Barnhart,vehicle.
Pomeroy;
Mary
Wellman,
Plans are being made to have the
Pomeroy; Walter Jrt, Viet)' Paul;!
emergency unit tn operation by the
WUI!am Clonch.
end rl. thl.s year. AU donatiOO&amp; will be
greaUy appreciated. Further in·
IIEE'I'II THUII8DA y
•
formation can be received by con·
The Metp CowJty Democrat c-'
tactlng Rick Gilmore at 667-a:ie or
tral Comrn!Uee will 11*1 at 7:30!
Helen Newland at 667 .QO&amp;.
p.m. 'lbunday at tbe ClrJ)enten:
Hall on E. Main St., Pwiwoy ,
· :

t\ surprising move

U. S. House rejects .$548.6 billion budget
WASHINGTON (AP I A
suddenly rebellious House is for cing
'Democratic leaders to take a second
look at a $548.6 billion 1980 budget
that went down to surprising defeat.
rejected the spending package, 213192,
W~dnesday
nightsas
Republicans joined with som e
emservative and liberal Democrats
in an unusual coalition against the
budget.
· The votes sends the budget back to
committee, where it is expected to
be changed only slightly before
being returned to tlle floor next
week . The 1980 budget year begtns

Oct. I.
TI1e unexpect ed rejection came
just hours after the House refused to
join th e Senate in raising defense
spending. However, the budget's
defeat seemed to result from
dissatisfaction with overall spending·
levels, rather Ulan from the defense
issue .

On a 62-36 vote Wednesday , tlle
Senate approved its $546.3 billion
version of th e \980 budg et,
containing 3 percent growtll in 1960
defense spending over and above
inflation. The Senate also included
non-binding 5 perC&lt;Jnt "real growtll"

·a

defense increases for flSCall981 and
1982.
The House budget would increase
1960 defense spending by a bout I
percent· after inflation.
Defeat or tlle budget clearly
caught members . of tlle House
Budget Committee by surprise. The
Democratic leadship had prevailed
oo virtually every vote until final
pa ~~ge..

"We were blindsided, " said Rep .
Steph en J . Solarz, 0 -N.Y., a
committee member. Solarz said
"modest .changes" in the spending
levels should be enough to g"in

•

e
VOL. XXVIII

NO. 111

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

More than 100 attend third
annual advocacy conference
By Bob Hoefllcb
·
More than 100 residents of
Jackson , Gallia and Meigs Counties
attended the third annual Personal
Advocacy Conference held Tuesday
night at the Holiday IM near
Gallipolis.
The event was staged by the three
county, Community Mental Health
operation with Mrs. Mary Skinner,
Personal Advocacy Coordinator for
the counties of Gallia , Jacksori and
Meigs as general chairman.
Following dinner, Mrs. Skinner
who emceed the event&gt; spoke on the
value of the volWJteer to love and ex·
tend friendship in the Personal Ad·
vocacy Program .
"Without the volunteer, there
would be no program," Mrs. Skinner
corrunented. She introduced various
guests including Juli Ormsby, Gallia
County program coordinator and
Tom Clay, coordinator in Jackson
County , llothofwhomspokebriefly.
PRJNCJP AL SPEAKERS - Some of the principals
of the tlllrd annual Personal AdvOcacy Conference held
Tuesday night a! the Holiday IM near Gallipolis in·
elude, I to r, Fran Frazier, state coordinator ol rom·
munity awareness of the Ohio Division for Retarded
Citizens ; M.rs . Mary Skinner, Middleport, Personal Ad·

CONfERENCE BEING HEIJJ
Represe ntalives of th• Meigs
Local School District's · Board of
Education and Teachers A5sociatlon
ar• in Columb;,. ioday conferring
with Bill Lewis. fed eral mediator,
assigned to hear the contract
!leUlemenl differences between tllr
board and the teachers.
. . Lewis was in Middleport Tu..day
and a conlerene&lt; was held between
the two groups from 3 to U p.m. A
second coofereoee was scheduled
for today at the Federal Mediation
BuDding, Busch Blvd., Colurnbu•.
Supt. David Gleason Is ropresentlng
the board at the cooforence and
· three members of the teachers
ntgotlatlog team were eiQ)ecled to
be at tb e session.
::::;:;:;:::;:::;:;:::;:;:;:::::::::;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:::::::;:;:::::;:

$102,687 suit
filed in court

Just what you've always wanted ... jackets, vests, shirts,
skirts, pants . . . all proportioned for your special figure .
Great styles .. . great colors . . . great fabrics .. . great prices.
Come in today ... we have a big selection for little women.
SWEATERS
SHIRTS
PANTS

Petite Sizes S·M· L
Petite Sizes S·M· L
Petite Sizes 6·16

~lberfelds . In

$16.00
From $19,00
From $14.00

Pomeroy

Dr. Bernard Niehm director of
consultation and education, cited ad·
vacates as "special people " and
touched upon the attitudes of 25
years ago when it was believed that
all handicapped persons should be
institutionalized. .
Proteges, he said, are sometimes
lonely and confused, as all people
are, but many times they have no
one to turn to for help.
Twenty.five years ago, people
were placed in institutioos 'because
they displayed inapprQpriate
behavior, were considered
dangerous or contagious, helpless,
couldn 1 be trained or were tax consumers," Dr. Niehm said.
· The attitude, he said, was : " Let's
build some institutioos and hire
some people to take care of them. "
Some people sti.II feel this-way, Dr.
Niehm remarked, but he pointed out
that today people with opportunity
can grow and can become tax

I

; :;: ::;~::;:;:;:;:;:;:; :;:;:;:;:;:;:;:~::.::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:·:::;:.·::::.:::;:;:::·:

has Sportswear Separates for You! ·

Republicans joined with 67
Democrats at both extremes of the
political spectrum in opposing tlle
spe nding package . Only four
Republicans voted with 188
Democrats for tlle budget.
The . defeated House spending
package called (or a $29.3 · Qillion
deficit and made no room for a tax
cut that Republicans had supported.
The Senate-passed budget
contained a $31'.6 billion deficit,
higher than the expected $30 billion
deficit for fiscal 1979. The .Senate
also rejected proposed tax cuts.

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1979

Squad sponsoring
fund raising drive

trlssl®

for a 5 percent increase in 1960
defense spending alter inflation is
discounted .
Several congressmen said the
votes rejecting higher defense
spending reflected a desire in the
House to hold tlle budget deficit
below $30 billion and to retain
bargaining room with tlle Senate
when the two versions of the budget
get to a conference canmittee.
"We need this as a bargaining
chip ," said Rep. Norman Y. Mineta,
0-Calif.
The budget was defeated when 146

en tine

at

.

Are you a Petite Miss?

passage of tlle budget next week.
However'; Rep . James R. Jones, 0.
Okla ., anotller committee member,
said the panel miglit have to cut
about $2 billion in spending before
the budget can be passed .
The House, on a 2Zl·l91 vote
Wednesday;
defeated
an
amendment proposed by Rep.
SamuelS. Strattoo , 0-N .Y., to boost
defense outlays by $413 million in
fiscal 1960.
And in a 43-20 unrecorded vote, tlle
House turned down an amendment
by Rep. Eldon Rudd . R-Arir.., calling

Asuit in the amount of $102,687 has
been filed in Meigs Count y Common
Pleas Co urt for inj uries and
damages as the result or an acciden_t
on July 2, 1976 on SR 7 near Five
Points Grill. ,
Filing !he suit were Andrew J .
Gibbs, Donna Gibbs, and Vickie
Gibbs by her next fried, Andrew J .
Gibbs, all of Rt. I, Letart, W. Va .,
against Robert Lagucki, North Field
Center, Ohios.
~
A suit in the amount of $16,210.43
was filed by the Citizens Ntional
Bank, Middleport, against James R.
Pooler and Beverly Marlene Pooler.
,Middleport and George W. Collins as
treasurer of Meigs County.

SQUAD CALLED
The Pomeroy&lt; Emergency Squad
was called to Dutchtown at 2:30p.m .
Wednesday lor Marion (Hammer)
Hawk who was taken to Holzer
Medical Center. At 2: 3Sthe squad
went to Ebenezer St., Pomeroy , for
I.A!Cmard Van Meter who was also
taken to Holzer Medical Center.

DEADLINE Oct. 6
The deadline for registering in the
November election is 9 p.m. Oct. 6.
All persons who have moved since
the last election or who have
changed their name via marriage
since the last election should stop by
the board of elections office located
~~~Pomeroy Masonic Temple.

vocacy Coordinator for Gallia , Jackson and Meigs
Countt•; theRe¥ . WlW...M

07
•

, .

F.,,. .

- advocate for five years; Jull Ormsby, Gallia County
Personal Advocacy Coordinator, and Richard G···-.r,
a protege for five ye;~rs, who gave~ opening~ .

House expecfed
·
b
•11
n
ve
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to· apr
-...-......

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.

OOLUMBUS, Ohio ( AP ) - House
approval was expected today of a
major capital improvements bill
which some lawmakers are
beginning to call "a wish book."
It cleared the House Finance
Committee on Wednesday; 14-4 , with
a lot of pork barrel amendments and
in an atmosphere that approached
custody within 16 hours, he said.
comedy.
Peterson had been sent to Green
One member likened it to "buying
Bay Correctional Institution in 1971
for yourwife one of everything in the
from Taylor County, Wis ., lor
Sears &amp; Roebuc k catalog ."
burglary and auto theft.
Rep. Robert E. Netzley, R-Laura,
But first he escaped from custody
added seriously, however, tllat he
in September, 1977, in Wausau , Will. ,
thinks half of the projects never will
where Sheriff Louis Gianoli of
be built. Either that, or a big tax
Marathon County said he had been
increase is on Uie way, he predicted.
arrested on a burglary charge.
Language in the document, which
"His lawyer took him out of the,. grew in cost Wednesday from $764
&lt;;ourtroom, and . officers wanted to
million to $770.3 million , due to
put handcuffs on him, but the at·
committee-added projects, says
tomey objected," Glanoli said.
funds may not be released unless
"Petetson took a powder .:•
state tax revenue estimates, on tlle
Peterson fled down a corridor, and
wane lately, ensure that the money
authorities hesitatt&lt;l to fire shots at
will be there .
·
him for fear ' of hitting bystanders,
Even tllen, GOP Gov . James A.
the sherUI said.
Rhodes and the seven-member
"They called him the spiderman
Cootrolling Board, which has a
becauSe he could crawl all over the
Democratic majority , would · set
place," Gianoli said.
priorities.
A month after the Wausau in·
Four Republicans on the
cident, Peterson was in custody
committee, including Netzley, not
again in Chippewa Falls, Will.
' only had doubts about future state
He escaped by leaping froma
inccme. They also deplored allowing
second-&amp;ory window on the Chip- ·a group of eight persons make
pewa CoWJty Cpurthouse ..
dec isions on behalf of all
lawmakers.
Rep. Waldo Bennett Rose , R·
Lima, ranking GOP memb er,
accused himse If and other
lawmakers of "abdicating our

Wisconsin convict :
•
remains at large
CHILLICOTHE, Ohio (AP ) - A
yoWlg Wisconsin convict with' a
talent for taking a powder was
reported Wednesday to have logged
another escape, disappearing from
Ross County Jail with five other
prisoners after a guard was overpowered.
All were recaptured by Wed·
nesday night except Robert Wiley
Peterson, 22, of Cadott, Wis .
Peterson was waiting !rial on an
attempted murder charge . Police
say shots were fired.at an Ohio highway patrol trooper Aug. 7 in Colwn·
bu.s while Peterson was allegedly
driving a car reported stolen in Eau
Claire, Wis.
Authorities said Peterson had fled
May 29 from custody of prison of·
fidals in Green Bay, Wis., while
being readied for a hearing on a
January escape from a prison at Fox
Ulke, Will·.
After the Ohio shooting, Pete,rson
was captured Aug. 21 in Gaston
County, N. C., where he was accused
of assault with a deadly weapon trying to strike a deputy sheriff with
a car.
Gaston County authorities
claimed Peterson's car was involved
in a chase with speeds reaching lOS
miles an hour.
He also was charged with carrying
a concealed weapon, possessing a
stolen car, driving without a license
and speeding.
In Chillicothe, Sheriff Thomas
Hamman said a jailer received a
minor hel!d cut in the pre-da wn jail
break. Five of tlle fugitives were in

Weather
Rain tonight and Friday, oc·
casionally heavy. Low tonight in the
mid 50s. High Friday in the upper
60s to low 70s. Ch~n·e-1if rain is 90
percent ~~night and riday.
EXTENDE OUTLOOK
Saturday through Monday:
Showers possible early Saturday.
Fair Sunday and Monday. Highs
In the 60s Saturdily and tn the mid
to upper 70s by Monday. Over·
night lows In the 40s early Satur·
day and In the low 50s by early
Monday.
~~

Two persons hurt
in traffic mishap

responsibilities.''

The
sweeping
proposal,
Two persons were injured in a one·
.
introduced
just
Tuesday
on
behalf of
vehicle accident in.Meigs County on
Rhodes,
cleared
tlle
committee
after
CR 12, two and six-tenths of a mile
just one hearing .
south of SR 124.
Nearly tllree dozen amendments
Called to the scene at 1:30 p.m.,
were
added, many ·or tllem by
the Gallia·Meigs ·Post,. Highway
committee
members seeking
Patrol, reports a north bound
projects
in
their
home districts.,
vehicle operated by Joyce E . Mc·
Rose,
despite
his
no
vote on the bill,
Clellan, 18, went out of control when
added
$125,000
for
canal
projects in
a bee flew in the window and stung
his
area.
thedriver.
•
Another $7.2 million, removed
The auto passed off the right side
from
the bUI Wednesday, will be put
of the roadway and struck a tree.
back
when the Youth Commission
McClellan and a passenger, Ran·
decides
what it wants to build. That
doll North, 31, Northup, displayed
would
hike
tlle package to $777.5
visible signs of injury and were tran·
million
,
compared
to $500 million tn
sported by SEOEMS to Holzer
tlle
capital
improvements
bill two
Medical Center.
years
ago
.
McClellan was admitted for treat·
The committee added one. major
ment of a laceration to the right
amendment
that didn't involve
forehead, and is listed in good con·
spending.
dition.
Rep . C.J. ·McLin Jr., D-Oayton,
North was treated lor a contusion
inserted
language requiring t!Jat IS
to the right upper eyelid and right
percent ofw1 stat~ construction
elbow, and released.
contracts and purchases be .awarded
The vehicle was demolished.
,),

•

to minority contractors. McLin is
one of the Legislature ' s most
influential blacks.
Rep . Robert J . Boggs, . 0Jefferson, added $000,000 for a
juvenile detention center in his home
county of Ashtabula , contingent on
tlle raising of a $500,000 local share.
Rep. WU!iam L. Mallory, 0·
Cincinnati, got the committee to go
along with $500,000 more for a
renovation at Holmes Hospital in
Cincinnati.
Rep. Thomas R. Johnson , R·
Camtridge, successfully amended
the bill to get $300,000 for
Muskingum County Community
College.
·
And so it welit.
Committee Chairman Myrl H.
Shoemaker, O.Bourneville •.declined
to comment on Rose's commnt tllat
the bUIIooked like "a wish book," or
that the funding is questionable. ·
He did tell the committee, as it
was about to adjourn, that the
measure inade him feel "like the
little boy whose mother had not
(house) broken him · in properly."

Stolen
vehicle
located
A 1977 Chrysler Cordoba owned by
George Hackett reportedly taken
Wednesday from a parking space at
Meigs High School has · been
recovered.
·
Sheriff James Proffitt said no
arrests have been made tn the in·
cident. The vehicle was found 10
minutes after it was reported stolen.
SherUf Proffitt today-issued a war·
ning after his office received several
complaints from residents in the
Letart Falls area regarding out of
county Insurance salesmen. Apparently some agents have gone to
homes of senior citizenl! claiming
they represent l\ledicare.
Complaints have been aired that
some salesmen exert pressure on
residents to pay $360 as a fire year
premiwn for insurance for Medicare
coverage.
Residents are asked to check with
local inauraf!.ce agents on any lnsuranee matters. before paying any
money for insurance.

1\t

producers.
"We need to be concerned about
some~. We all ~ care and
help, Dr. N1ehm swd an cmcllllion
as he urged full community
awareness.
The Rev. Wllliam Mlddleswart,
pastor of St. Paul Lutheran Church
in Pomeroy, an advocate for five
years, stressed that the needs of the
handicapped are the same as any
other person's. They need someone
to care, listen !pid scrneone to answer- someone kind, loving, firm,
patient, thepastorconunented.
"Make them feel needed; they are
needed," Rev · Middleswart stated
advising that the handicapped with
proper consideration and training
can find their niche in life.
Fran Frazier, State Coordinator of
Conununity Awareness of the Ohio
Division for Retarded Citizens, in
her talk stated that becoming an ad·
vocateisthemostimportantthinga

pe~=~-~~~~

~iv~~~

sometimes do not meet die "norrriil"
established by some people.
She Pointed out that "It 15 not
positive" not to be attracUve by
these norms and cited the vast
amount of money spent pn cosmetics
alone by people who want.lalbe
attractive.
She stressed while Ute hall·
dicapped are more than~·
they are, first and f~ (Wla.
and while they need the suppc. .
others, they, in turn, have something
they can give the advocate.
Ms. Frazier urged that the outside
prepare for those who are "Inside"
and that the proper approaCh to con·
diti'!f'S be taken so that peaple csn
be accepted as individuals.
To stand up and say, "I believe in
myself and what I'm doing" is the
first step to community awareness,
Ms. Frazier conunented. Advocates,
sbe stated, have accepted another
person in their lives. She urged ac·
tion by more people so that they can
leave as much in the world when
they are no longer here as they were
given by God when they were born.
"The greatest thing you can do by
the things you do and your acts is to
help another person grow,' ' she concluded.
Rounding out the conference were
several short talks by volunteers
and their special friends. Floral
theme napkin holders made by the
handicapped along with pots of ar·
tificial flowers, given as door prizes,
were used oo the tables.

more

ATTENDS FAlL FESTI\'AL
- James F. Alexander, U8iltut
dl~tor of llpeCial projlnDII for
• the Ohio ColllllliuloD OD Aline.
will attend a fall feaUval Oct. 5 at
the Melp County SeDior CIU..
BulltliDC In Pomeroy. Tbe [ltlbllc
Is Invited to attead tbe festml
wblcb features a nmber af ac:Uvltlea iDcladiDg pm-, eal,rtaiDJDeat and bomemade
p~ele.
),,

.

..,

�'

3 - The Daily Sentinel. Middleport·Pornero)'. 0 ., Thursday, Sept. 20, 1979

Kennedy candidacy
has liule .i mpact • • • .

••••
• •••
••••

•

•

•

'

',

.

' .-

· : ···

=

/

WE GO\
EfJOUGl4

COAL TO GH
US TH~ U TH E
NEXT' 500

YEA&gt;:IS...

House Democrats support measure
WASHINGTON (AP) - House
Democrats, concerned about
soaring prices of home heating oil,
voted Wednesday in favor of
reinstating price contTols on the
fuel.
The action came as congressional
leaders were predicting House and
Senate passage of a standby
gasoline rali'&lt;ming compromise
reached Tuesday night. And the
Senate Energy Committee was
poised to approve President Carter 's
proposal for an Energy Mobilization
Board to speed action on priority
energy projects.
By voice vote , the House
Democratic caucus adopted a
resolution asserting "it shall be
.Democratic policy in the House that
mandatory .allocation controls for
(heating oil and diesel fuel) be reesta bUshed."
The resolution carries no force of
law and is not binding on the 276
Democratic members of the House.
But sponsors said it would send a
clear message to other legislators
and the White House that someihing
must be done to curb rising fuel
jX'ices.
Prices of \!eating oil have climbed
60percentsince last winter, to about
80cents a gallon. Contro ls on heating
oil and other "middle distillate"
fuels like diesel fuel and kerosene
were lifted in 1976 by President
Gerald i. Ford.
Rep. I'eter H. Kostmayer, D-Pa.,
the ~f the House resolution ,
' lleagues
that ·" the
told
utroo
increases m prices in
the . eight mon ihs alone justify
tfifestablishment of price controls."
Later. in an interview, Kostmayer
said the purpose of the resolution
was to pressure caner into using
authority he already has to reimpose
heating oil jX'ice controls. "He can
do it right now," Kostmayer said.
"And I think he will."
Several months ago, the
Democratic caucus went on record
favoring reimposition of price
controls on crude oil , which are
being lifted gradualiy by President
Carter. ·
Meanwhile ,
the
Carter
administration indicated it would
accept the compromise reached late
Tuesday by House-Senate conferees
on a mechanism to allow the
jX'esident to ration gasoline during a
severe petroleum shortage.
The compromise would give
Congress two shots at blocking such
a move - first when the rationing
plan is drafted and then again i( ihe
president attempts to impose it.
The agreement marked a
crmpromise between the House
proposal to give Congress the power
to block a rationing plan at the time
of imposition and the Senate desire
for congressional review at an
earlier stage irl the process.
,
Sen. Bennett Johnston , D-La., the
top Senate negotiator , called the
crmpromise "one that is workable"
and predicted Senate approval.
"We provided .for congressional

input, but not to an extent that it will
cause a ,talemate. Ard when all is
said and done, we will have a
rationing plan that can be put into
effect if we get into real trouble and
our oil is cut off," he said .
Rep . John Dingell , D-Mich., head
of the House conferees, said: "I
think we have someihing that can be
sold to the House,... a plan I feel the
president will aceept."
However, Rep. Clarence Brown,
R-Ohio, said he was one negotiator
who muldn't support the finished
product, saying it ccmbin3d "ihe
worst of both" House and Senate
approaches.
Under the compromise, the
president could move to impose
rationing - subject to a veto by
eith er house of Co11gress - if U.S .
petroleum supplies dropped by 20
percent.
The 20-percent requirement could
be waived, but that woulld require
approval by both chambers.
And in a crucial agreement! that
broke a week-long stalematte, the
conferees also decided too give
Congress a limited chance to scrap
a rationing plan once it is drafted

Chalk up a new role for White
House press secretary JO\ly Powell :
good Samaritan .
When Carter 's staff photographer,
Karl Schumacher, was pinned
between two motorcadp vehicles
durin g t he president 's visit to

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INTEREST OF

MEIGS-MASON AREA
ROBERT HOEI'LICH '
CltyEdiWr
PubUIM&lt;I dady n~piSahuday by The Ohio

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NatioDII IadvrrtillDJ n:preuotallvr,l...audou

Allocllkl , Jill Eudkl An., Clnellnd. Ohio
441U.

Subfulpllua r~~ld : Oellvend by carrier
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Ruu\e wbtn: carrier Hnoit'l' uutavalblblr, Our

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Tbe O.Uy SeuUael, by mall lo Ohiu and W e~ l
Vlrllaia . ooe y~ar $3:1 .00 : Sl2 muntbll Sl7.SO:
Ulr ~ mouUul IID.i(). Elle'o'·here SJIUIO : sl.-;
muot.lti IZI.M ; Wrft munUta Sll.OO.
'I'~ Auod aled rress 18 n:clushely e nlltkd
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endUed to Uw IM'Wip&amp;Pf'r and alJe~ tht ltwlll
~· pubiiJitwd ~rttn.

''

and before it goes on the standby
shelf.
However, to doo so would require
a vote bby bothh chambers, which in
turn would be subject to a
presidential veto. And that means it
might require a veto-overriding twothirds margin in Congress to send
the president back to the drawing
board.
The Senate Energy Committee
was expected to vote its approval
·today for a four-member board that
would have nearly all ihe powers to
cut through government red tape
ihat the president requested.
Ardin other congressional energy
developments Tuesday:
- The Senate Finance Committee
approved a $3-a-barrel tax credit as
an incentive for high-technology
production of fuels that can
substitute for conventionally
produced oil and natural gas.
-T he
House
Agriculture
Committee backed a $600 million
program of government loans and
loan guarantees to build plants that
manufacture gasohol -a gaso line
and aalcohol motor-fuel mixture.

WASHINGTON ( AP I - Sen.
F.dward M. Kennedy's emergence
as a likely challenger for the 1980
Democratic presidential nomination
is having little visible impa ct on
President Carter's autwnn political
plans.
·c arter , according to aides and
political advisers, will do little
campaign-type traveling befor e
November and will not hasten an
lfllnouncement of his own candidacy
because of Kennedy 's moves.
In fact, the one new item added to
Carter 's political agenda for ihe
coming six weeks was prompted
largely by the president's decision to
leave heavy politicking for !all'\]', as
he had planned before. the
Massachusetts senator moved
closer to a direct challenge.
The added item is a get-together
here with ISO to 200 prominent
Democratic supporters from around
the country who . by their presence,
will seek to demonstrate that
Kennedy has no monopoly on ihe
aliegiance of party wheelhorses.
The idea emerged from a meeting
of Carter backers Mooday night at
the Watergate apartment of Robert
strauss, a political ally who is
Carter 's special Mideast peace
negotiator .
Some at the meeting urged that
the president, who was not present,
hasten an announcement of his
candidacy because of Kennedy.
Administration sources who asked
not to be named reported
Wednesday that White House chief

Steubenville. Ohio, Powell not only
was among the first to rush to ihe aid
of U1e fallen cameraman but hopped
into an ambulance and accompanied
Schwnacher to a hospital.
X-rays revealed no fractures but
Schumacher 's shins are still tender.
Remember when a youthful driver
crashed broadside into the
presidential limousine when Gerald
R. Ford visited Hartford, Conn., in
1975'
When Carter went to Hartford last
week. local police thoughtfully
placed a tow truck in th e
prcsi tlenLial motorcade.

A1r Force One is not immune to
th e gremlins that afflict all aircraft.
When Carter's jet pulled to a slop at
U1e Ha11ford airport. an Air Force
l'

of sta ff llalllilton Jordan and Cart er

press scc1'Ctary Jody Powell argued
th at the president should bide his
ti111e. con t1!ntrating in the coming
weeks on his effort to build a record
of legislative sueceAA in Congress.
A clear majority agreed, after
which the idea of a dinner or
similarly well-publicized function
for Carter supporters was broached
because participants from outside
,Wash ington "said they 'had people
who were itching to 'get going " in
support of the president, a White
House aide said.
He added that there was general
agreement the president should not
openly campaign so far in advance
of , the presidential prunaries, the
first of which occurs Feb. 26 in New
Hampshire.
The function , fer which no date
has been set, is being organized by
Robert J . Keele , a political
consultant and Carter ally .
Another result of the meeting was
a move Tuesday by Powell to dispel
any doubts about the president's
quest for re-election . "I can 't
imagine that there is any doubt in
anyone's mind" about ihat, he said.
AI present, Carter ha.!l only two
lxips on his tentativ~ schedule this
fall - to Chicago Oct . 15 for a
Democratic fund-raiser and to
Cambridge, Mass., Oct. 20.
The Cambridge event will find
Carter sharing the platform with
Kennedy at the dedication of the
John F. Kennedy Library.
Powell told reporters Wednesday

Washington
By Clarence
Report Miller

that Carter 's immediate travet
itinerary is so skimpy there are no
present plans for him to visit F1orida
again in advance of a midNovember non-binding vole' among
Democratic convention participants
on their preference for the 1980

Baseball At A Glance
Bv The Associated Press
AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST
W. L. Pet . GB
a·altimore
98 52 .653
Milwaukee
9() 62 .592 9

'

Boston

nomination .

fl(ew York

Kennedy has said his decision on
the 1980 race will hinge on Carter 'g
efferts to ease the current economic
situation. He has suggested more
forceful implementation of wageprice controls and indicated he
believes a tax cut may be called for
within a year .
The senator elaborated on tbose
concerns as ihey relate to energy
Wednesday in remarks to the
American Newspaper PUblishers
Association , saying he believes
tougher energy conservation
requirements would be cheaper and
more effective than a major
synthetic fuels development
program .
The administration has scaled
clown the $116 million synthetic fuels
program outlined by Carter in his
address to the natioo in July,.
Kennedy al!K&gt; said Wednesday he
would like the proposed "windfall
profits" tax to "really tax" the
industry. That tax would be levied
on increased industry income
resulting from Carter's proposed
phase-out of d&lt;mest ic oil price
conlxols.

Detroit
Cl eveland
l or onto

Cal iforn ia
KansasC ity
M innesota
Tex as

Business
•
mirror

cerns

85
81
82
77
50
WEST
82
80
78

65
69
70
75
102

.567
.544
.539
.507
.329

Chic ago

New York

13
17
17
22
49

Cincinnati

Houston
Los Angeles
San Franc isco

70
72
74

.539
.526 1
.S13 4
.503

San Oiego
Allanta

Ch ic ago ~
S~attl e

77 76
67 84
6.3 90

Oakland

51 101 .340 30'1&gt;

.444 u v,
.412 19 V,

Texas 9, Oakla nd 4

· Boston 8, Toronto 0
~ New
1
1

77
56
WEST
86
83
74

74
93

.510 u v,
.376 34 1!1

66

.566

68
78
68 85
63 89
60 90

.Sso 2 •;,

.487
.44.4
.414
.&gt;100

12
18 h
23
25

Wednesday 's Gatnes
Montrea l 3·4. New York 1·1
St . Louis 6·2, Chicago 3·3, 2nd
game, 10 innings
Atlanta 6, Houston S
,
Pittsburgh 9·S, Philadelphia 6·6
Cin c innati 3. San Diego 2
Los Angeles 7, San Francisco 2
Thursday 's Games
Pittsburgh (Candelaria 14·9 ) a t

sv,

Wednesday 's Games
"Chi cago 6, M innesota o
York 2. Cleveland o

De tro it 5, Balt imore 0

Ph iladelphia 1Lerch9· 12 )
Montreal (Schstzeder 10·4) and
Sanderson 8·7) at New York (Kobel
6-9 and Scoll J.1) , 2
Chicago (Lamp 1) -8) at 51. Lou is
(Martinez 14 -7)
.
Atlanta (Matula 8·9) at Houston
!R ichard 16·13)
Cincinnati ( Norman 11 ·11) at San
Oiego (Jones 11 ·11 )
San Franc isco (Knepper 9·111 a t

Kan sa s Cit y 6, Cali forn ia 4

Milwau kee 12, Seattle 1

Thursday 's Games
· Boston ( Renko 10 81 a t Toronto

(Moore 4·61

Balt imore ( Palmer 9·6) at Detroit
!Chr is 3·2)
Cal iforn ia ( Barr 9·12 1 at Kan sas
Cj ty IChamb,.la in • 21
New York. ( Righett i 0 OJ a t M in
nesota &lt;Eric k son 2-9)
Only games sc hedul ed
Friday ' S Games
Oetro i tat Boston

Los Angeles (Wel ch 4·6)
Friday's Games
Pittsburgh at Ch icago
Montreal at Philadelphia
St . Lou is at New York
c inci nnati at Houston
Los Angeles at san Diego
Onl y games scheduled

C leve land at B al t im ore
' N f w York at T or onto
. Mi nnesota at M il wauk ee

, Texas at Ca li torn !a
Ka nsas C1t y at Oak land
' Ctl icago at Sea ttl e

Today In Hlatory
By The A11odatecl Press
Today is Thursday, Sept. 20, the
263rd day of 1979. There are 102 days
left in the year .
Today's highlight in histcry :
On this date in \51.9, the
Portuguese navigator, Ferdinand
Magellan, set out from Spain oo a
voyage to find a western passage to
the Indies. One of hl.s ships .
eventually circled the world.
On this date :
In 430 B.C. , th~ Greeks defeated
the .Persians in a decialve naval
engagement, the Battle of Salamis
in the Aegean Sea .
In Hi65, Spaniards massacred French Huguenots at Port Royal, ·
F1a .
,
In 1881. Chester Arthur took the .
oath as the 21st President of the :
United States after the death of 1
President James Garfield, who was ;
shot by an assassin In July.
;
In 1938, a hurricane swept over ·
parts of New Jersey, New Ycrk and :
New England, taking nearly 700 ~
lives.
In 1973 , the British-French
superoonlc airliner, Concorde, made
its first landing in the U.S. at the
dedication of the Dalias-Fort Worth
International Airport.
In 1977 , Vietnam was admitted to
the United Nations.
Ten years ago : A Viebtamese
airliner and an American Air Force
jet collided over South Vietnam ,
killing 64 Vietnamese.

straight up or down vote . It was all
or nothing. You weren't permitted to
single out those provisions you supported and those you opposed.
Granted, one's particular conabout specifics o( a bill can of.
ten be dealt with through the amend·
amended. The amendment, as
ment process . Bul ' should such an
amended, offered as a substitute for
amendinent fail. as they more often
the~.ey· ~ndrnent, as amended, was
than not do , then you a • . back with
ag :. t.O .
the dilemma I mentioned earlier:
1 preceding is a short verbatim Also in some instances, bills come to
excerpt from the Congressional the floor with a closed rule, meaning
sergeant r ushed forward with a big
Record, of the recent debate on H.R: that no, or only certain predeterfoam fire extinguisher.
«73, the Foreign Assistance Ap- mined amendments caThus, as
Although the extinguisher was not
propriation biD for 1900 on the floor
much as you may want to propose
used, acrid smoke poured from the
of the U.S. House of Represen· the elimination of a program, as
undercarriage of Air Force One. It
tatives. II r~minda me of the old Ab- much as you may want to change the
was a case of overheated brakes.
bott and Costello routine of "who's
wording of an item in a bill to make
Nothing serious.
on first." Such is the maze of much it more consistent with your point of
of the proceedings of the Congress.
view, as much as you may want to
Legislative bills are seldom sim- reduce the amount of money
ple; they normally contain a com· authorized or appropriated for a
plexity of issues. This is particularly particular program, you can 'I
true of appropriation bills. Take for
because the rule under which that
instance the recently passed bill H. bill is being considered precludes
R. 4394, the appropriations bill for
you from doing so. ·
the Department of Housing and Ur·
Fortunately, the bill I mentioned
ban
Development
and
for
sundry
in·
at
the outset, H.R. «73, the Foreign
NEW YORK ( AP ) - It has made
dependent
agencies.
The
bill
was
so
Assistance
Appropriations bill for
men wealthy and it has made of
broad
and
covered
so
many
issues
191!0,
had
no
such restrictions with
them fools, and if you want to see
that
most
members
could
not
help
respect
to
amendments
that could be
how it works you'll probably get
contradicting
their
political
con·
And
fortunately
, there were
offered.
your chance over the next few .
victlons
regardless
of
how
they
cast
enough
members
that
were
able to
weeks. Perhaps you might even be
their
vote.
If
they
voted
for
final
sort
through
the
maze
of
the
amend·
an exhibit.
passage of the bill, many no doubt
ment proceedings I cited earlier, to
You would have company. Uncle
had
to
swallow
hard
to
ac·
gain
passage of an amendment I
Sam decided some time ago to
commodate
certain
provisions
of
the
·calling for an across-theauthored
auction government supplies of the
bill
they
personally
opposed.
If
they
board
cut
of 4 percent in all but a
metal because, among other things,
went
in
opposition,
many
did
so
with
handful
of
our country's foreign
he sought to depress the price by
Get professional
similar
reluctance
because
of
the
assistance
programs.
The total cuts
increasing the supply.
'
results at a
fad that there were a number of
amounted to approximately $180,000
That goal seemed logical for many
fraction
of the cost. ~
provisions they favored which they
million.
reasons.
would have liked to support but
As I've stated many times before,
. Firsl,. off, the sales would benefit
of
the
total
makeup
couldn't
because
United States must stop trying to
the
the dollar, whose value had been
of
the
bill.
H.
R.
4394,
ranged
from
be
all
things to all people. We are a
moving inversely to that of gold .
~~ -t •
for
the
·
your
basic
housing
programs
of limited resources. To connation
Uncle Sam wanted to promote the
America's
No. 1
less fortunate, to COIIlliJunity plan·
tinue to operate on the pretense we
notion that his paper money was juSt
•
Home
Carpet
ning and development, to consumer
•
are not i! dangerous to our continued
as good, even better, than gold .
Cleenlng
protection, to environmental
economic health and well-being.
He also wanted to help attraCt
System
I
quality, to disaster relief, to
As for my other point, let me close
\
foreign funds in order to help correct
"
veterans pensions, to the New York
by saying, seldom does a member of
to some small degree his imbalance
'
City
Loan
Guarantee
Program.
Congress
have a clear cut choice to
of international payments. He
I
RENT
$}00
---Final action on the bill required a
make when voting on final passage
figured that many of ihe buyers
1 FOR
PER HOUR I
of a bill. Seldom is the issue presenwould be foreigners, maybe Arabs .
I
ONLY
14-HourMinimum) I
ted in black and white tenns. Most
It didn't work out as planned. Gold
African
krugerrand,
a
pure
troy
often the lines of the question are
buyers bid prices to record highs,
ounce, can be obtained from coin
softened with grays and gray has
indiCating demand far exceeded
dealers at a minimum premium ·of
never been my favorite color .
supply, regardless of how much ihe
about 5 percent over bulk prices.
U.S. Government put up for sale.
You may have to pay a state sales
Auction prices reached $378 this
too .
tax
week .
r---------------------------~ •.
You can buy in larger quantities
When you match that price
•
as well . Bullion in 401kmnce ingots
against those of less than two
I~
can be had at wholesale prices if five
monihs ago, when the inert yellow
are purchased together, but that
Announces -The Relocation Of His Office ~
cortunodity sold for less than $300 an
might cost you ~ore than $750,000,
ounce, ·you realize the extent of
FOR
:
plus a sales tax in some states.
Uncle Sam's miscalculation .
More to your style might be a 10.
True. he made profits and he
GENERAL PRACTICE
ounce bar, which the investment
attracted foreign funds, but he didn't
house of Bache Halsey Stuart
And
help the dollar much. As few events
Shields sells at a relatively small
have, the auctions told the world
ALLERGY AND DERMATOLOGY
premium plus, in some states, that
how much people preferred an ounce
sales tax .
of gold to a U.S. dollar bill.
At
Why do people buy? Because Utey
Uncle
Sam's
experience
distrust paper money, ' whlch is lo
notwithstanding, you too might have
say they distrust the condition of the
notions about gold that you cannot
2924 JACKSON AVENUE
world 's economies, the U.ll.
sw·press. Be advised that it is
PO IN T PLEASANT , WEST VIRGINIA 2!515 50
economy in particular. That 's why
available, but that it can bring you
Office Hours: Monday-Friday 9 a.m. · 6 p.m.
anxtety a;; wel\:'.!t$tfecu!i!l1f.Y,OU Uncle Sam's ideas dirln't pan out.
In contrast, gold buyers believe it
seek . ~·
~ •
Telephone: Office 304-675-6971 Home 675-6517
retams value.
You can buy coin s. The South

SAY 11lAT AGAIN
The Cltairman : The question is on
the amendment offered by Jhe gen·
tleman from Wisconsin, Mr. Obey,
as amended, as a substitute for the
amendment offered by the gentleman from Ohio, Mr. Miller, as

Jimmy's Whitehouse
.WASHINGTON (AP ) - Readers
of ihe Wall Street Journal were
treated to an eye-&lt;: atching full page
advertisement last week that
featured a line drawing of the White
House with some walls stripped
away to show the interior.
The headline at the top of the page
said the ad 's text "tells how Johnson
Contro ls gives you total control of
the new energy regulations."
A series of lines linked the text to
specific sections of the White House,
such as a basement boiler room or a
wall where one might expect to find
a thermostat.
The unstated ·implication seemed
ui be that products of Johnsm
Controls, Inc., help keep President
. Carter and his family comfortable
while eonservi,ng energy. .
When Michael H. Cardozo, senior
associate White House counsel, saw
the layout , his first thought was
about the policy of discouraging
commercial exploitation of the ·
presidency or the White House.
Then Cardozo checked further and
discovered. as he told a reporter,
that there is no~ a single product of
Johnson Controls in the section of
the White House pictured. m the
advertisement.
Without checking the rest of the
Wh ite House complex for the
presen ce or absence of ihe devices,
Cardozo telephoned the Milwaukee
firm and won a quick agreement
that the ad would not be used again .

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD

'

I

..

.' ·

•••••
•••••••

AI' Spuns
"The object." said Kansas City's
Hal Mt·Rae, ".is to win this th ing not run away with it. " The subject
was the American League's West
Division title.
Mc Rae and th e second-pla ce
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Royals beat the division -leading
EAST
California Argels 6-4 Wednesday
W. L. Pet. GB
Pittsburgh
91 59 .607
night . winning for ihe second time in
Montreal
89 59 .601 I
the three games of this series but
St . Lou i s
79 71 .527 12
. remaming exactly where they were
Ph i lad e lph ia
79 73 .520 13

~

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Royals keePing pressure on Angels

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Red Sox decided divisional
honors
in
a one-game playoff . And ,
ix'hmtl.
" I looked up at th e scoreboard an&lt;&amp;
since the Royals and Ange ls meet
suddenly it occurred to me: We're
fo ur times more this seaso n, Brett's
going to play 162 games and we're
prophecy may ~ realized.
''The only thing that will matter, "
going to end Up in a tie," said Kansas
said McRae, "is who's best in
City third basema.n George Brett,
who had two hits and drove in a run. , Octo ~er. If we get into the playoffs,
th is thing will be history ."
" l really think there's a chance it
Darrell ·Porter drove in three runs
will hawen."
while Larry Gura and two relievers
It happened last year in the East,
combined on a six-hitter to defeat
when the New York Yankees and
ihe Ar gels.
Meanwhile, the Chicago White Sox
shut out the Minnesota Twins IH), the
De troit Tigers upended th e
Baltimore Orioles ~. the Boston
torso .
Red Sox blasted the Toronto Blue
"People will see this big yellow
Jays 8-0, the New York Yankees
strip around me and get the wrong
trimmed the Cleveland 'Indians 2-() ,
idea," joked Thompson . " Now I
ihe Texas Rangers beat ihe Oakland
know why they call it a 'flak jacket.'
A's 9-4 and the Milwaukee Brewers
It 's because you t8ke a lot of flak if
bombed the Seattle Mariners, 12-1.
you wear it."
White Sox 6, Twins 0
Twin s Manager Gene Mauch
admits he 's playing favorites in the
battle lor the West top spot : he
lebanon results
wants Minnesota to win it. But the
Twins were shut out
second
LEBANON , Ohio (AP) - Willing
consecutive time by the lowly White
To Try drove to the wire to win the Sox
$1,100 featured pace mile at Lebanon
The Twins managed just four hits
by a length Wednesday night and
off Ross Baumgarten and now
pay $5.?Q. $4.60 and $3.
haven 't scored in 18 innings. Chet
The winning time was 2:06.:h'i. Jo
Lemon .and Jim Morrison hit twoJoe placed, paying $7.20 and $4.20, run singles lor the winners.
and Coffee's Edge was third to pay
Tigers 5, Orioles 0
$4 .60.
Steve Kemp scored one run and
The 3-8 double of Wortha Try and drove in another, backing the fourLucky Lusty returned $85.40. The hit pitching of Jack Morris and
crowd of 1,192 bel $105,691.

Thompson .using 'flak jacket'

-

CINCINNATI 1AP I - Rookie
quarterback Jack Thompson is
practicing this week wearing a " flak
jacket" similar to the one i;purned
by Ken Arderson la st week before he
suffered ~ baek injury. ·
"It 's kind of cumbersome, " said
Thompson . "I don 'I know if I'm
going to want to wear it on Sunday in
the game with the Houston Oilers.
"I've always ~n one to try to
look nice for ihe game. But ibis ihing
makes me look like I've gained 20
pounds, even th ough it only weighs

five owtces."

And erson found the jacket
hampered Ius passing and decided
against wearing it in the game
against the New England Patriots.
He was injured m the first quarter .
Thompson's
most
serious
objection , however, is the color. The
model the Bengals purchased, for
about $300, is yellow . It is designed
to protect the ,quarterback's upper

a

' SAN FRANCISCO (AP I .- Gary
Nolan visited this week with his old
teammates on the Cincinnati Reds
during their series with the San
F'rancisco Giants, and the Mght·
handed pitcher talked again or
making a comeback in the major
leagues.
"I'm not interested in the financial
part. I want to play. I love II»
game ;" said the 31-year-old Nolan .
Nolan has already staged one
comeback in his baseball career,
mising most of the 1973-74 season

1
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because of a shoulder problem and
then coming .back from shoulder
surgery to win 15 games in both 1975
and 1976.
He was traded by the Cincinnati
Reds in 1971 to the California Angels
who released him after the season.
His last regular season appearance
· was Sept. 18, 1977, an unspectacular
3 1-3 inning stint.
Nolan, who has a career record of
110.70 with a 3.06 earned run average
over 10 seasons, has not pitched for
anyone since be left the Milwaukee
Brewers' training camp with
shoulder problems in the spring of
1976 .
"I went to Phoenix and worked out
and felt fairly respectable at the end
o{ March, " Nolan said. "f pitched in
one ball game, but I knew in my
heart it wasn 't going to be enough. I
knew it was only a matter of time
before it got worse ."
Nearly two weeks ago, he had
surgery on his right shoulder, per-

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COLIJMBUS, Ohio
P ) ·~~'Bb'b"
Yoder , a thre e-time college
volley ball All -Ameri can a,t the
University of Souihern Califon{ip ,
succeeds Doug Tegerneier as Onio
state University's volleyball coaf:h.
Yoder , 24, from San ·Clemente,
Calif., also played oo the United
stat es' team m the 1977 World Cup
and on an Americar team that
wured China in 1977. Tegemeier
coached ihe Big Ten Conference
team on an interim basis last
season .

CLEVELAND [AP ) - The
Cleveland !lrowns say the 80,385seat Municipal Stadium has been
sold out fer Monday night's Nationa l
Football League game against ihe
Dallas Cowboys.
, 'The anno1111c~ent •WI'Iinf$day
means the game will be on local
television .
RICHFIELD , Ohio (AP) Cleveland Cavaliers' President Nick
Mileti says the team lost $570,000 in
fiscal 1979 following what he called·
one of the most disappointing
campaigns in the National
Basketball As9lciation club's nineyear history .
Beset by injuries, the Cavaliers
failed to make 'the playoffs for the
first time in four years and saw a
dramatic drop in ticket sales. The
club also was h11rt by a lease battle
with the Coliseum management.

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abo11t coming to camp in Ute spring.
As far as I'm concerned, I'm on the
way back now.
Nolan's major league career has
been a series of peaks and valleys.
He broke in with the Reds in 1970 and
in his first year, he finished with an
111-7 record.
In 1972, he' was 15-5 with a 1.99
E~ but over the next two years,
arm troubles reduced him to two appearances with the Reds in 1973 and
two more with the Indianapolis farm
team In 1974.

Sports briefs.

TOLEDO, Ohio (AP I ..,- Eihel C.
Allman . 35, a successful coach at
Chicago Latin High School, has been
named women ·s basketball coach at
the University of Toledo.
Allman . a native of New York
City, replaces Janet Witker, who
resigned after coaching at Toledo
last season.

II' ,·o ur orga 111 1at;on or
,·lu b n eed ~ a prog ram .
\\ t•'l l he

formed by Dr. Frank Jobe; whose
earlier surgery helped him in his fir·
st comeback in 1975.
"After I saw Dr. Jobe yesterday
(Monday ), he was excited," Nolan
said. "He said it tW11ed out better
than anybody wbo ever had the
operation done. He said it was ex·
ceptionally loose and he didn't an·
ticipate any problems.
"''ve talked to five clubs, and
there definitely will be no problems.
They 're definitely interested in
following my progress and talking

,

I

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)l(tN'l'll

Mileti said in his annual tetter to
shareholders that the financial
statement renected an 8 .percent
increase in team expenses last
season and .. an extraordinary
professional · fee incurred in
successful efferts to improve ihe
lease agreement ."

Ouantifies limited

CLEVELAND ( AP ) - The Wahoo
Club says it has launched a drive to
create a permanent endowment for
a baseball scholarship at Cleveland
State Umversity honoring the
memory of former Cleveland
..
Indians slugger Luke Easter .
A check for $1,000 was presented
to University President Walter B.
Waetjen at a Waboo Club luncheon
to launch the fund Wednesday .
The scholarship is to be presented
annually at the close of the CSU
baseball
season
to
the
underclassman . who has best
exemplified ihe spirit of Easter .
The Wahoo Club is devoted to
promoting basebali in Cleveland.

now5.77

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SAN FRANCISCO (AP I - Cary
Nolan, who has been making a living
dealing blackjack in Las Vegas
since he left the Cincinnati Reds in
1977. is talk.lng about making
another comeback as a pitcher.
Now 30, Nolan said he has had
another operation on his ailing
pitching shoulder and feels fte can
pitch again .
·

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carrying the Tigers past the Orioles .
The
loss .
coupled
with
Milwaukee's rout of Seattle, left at
ihree Baltimore's magic num~r for
clin ching the ' East Division crown.
Red Sox 8, Blue Jays 0
Butch Hobson cracked a pair of
doubles and drove in three runs,
backing Bob Stanley's three-hittet
and powering Boston past Toronto.
Yankees Z, Indians 0
Tommy John picked up his 19th
victory with 82-3 innings of thre~it
pitching and Reggie Jackson hit his
26th homer of the season to boost
New York over Cleveland.
~gers 9, A's 4 Mickey Rivers' tworun single highlighted Ute six-ron
tliird inning that helped Texas beat
Oakland. Jim Sundberg walked
twice in the outburst, the second
time with the bases loaded. ..
Brewers 12, Mariners I
H&lt;me runs by Buck Martinez, Ben
Oglivie and Sixto Lezcano paced the
Brewers' 19-hit attack and kept
Milwaukee
. mathematically alive
. in ·
the East race .

Nolan may attempt comeback

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:ro. 1979

Pennant race makes Bench, Reds happy
AP Spurts
II doesn 't take much to get Johnny
Bench excited . Just throw him into a
pennant race and watch him go to
wor k.
•
Bench's two-run homer gave the
Cincinnati Reds a 3-2 victory over
the San Diego Padres and boosted
,their lead in the National League
West to 21'2 games over Houston ,
which lost to Atlanta 6-S.
· " I don 't know how he could play
any better, unles.• he got a hit every
time up ," said Reds Manager John
McNamara of his sta r catcher, who
is hitting .282 with 22 home runs and
iS RBI and has been the team's
hottest hitter down the st retch.
"He 's had a very good year ,

t·spetlaliy s inc.:l' lhl' All -.'it&lt;J r lJreak
when h(• 's hit owr .300. And he'~

done so me job catching.··
Bench, whose torr id seeund half or
the season plii('es him amon g the

fa vorites for the NL's most valuable
p!ayer awa rd, isn't e xactly enjoying

tho grind .
" I'm ~oing to be 50 years old
be fore this th ing is ove r," he said.
" It 's wears you out. I'm tired

menta lly and physically. ,
·Not many people expected the
Ast ros to rema in tlose for so long.
Bench was asked if Houston, wh ich
entert ain s the Reds for t hree games

this weekend , can win the division
with a rookie catcher - Bruce
Bochy.

Today's

Sports World
By Will Grimsley AP Correspondent
Th ere' s nothing like college
football to tum grown, dignified men
and women into a babel of bannerwaving, horn-tooting juveniles. They
go into spasms over cleated knights
in plast ic and synthetic armor who
spend three hours wrestling for a
result that makes the mob want to
tear down the goalposts .
The
combatants
ar e
dist inguishable by their namboyant
1
colors and weird nicknames . There
are scores of Tigers and Bears, plus
Trojans, Spartans, Boilermakers,
Spiders and even Webfoots and
Buckeyes I a hard Ohio nut wilh a big
brown eye).
But in the final analysis, only
mathematics count. Last week our
score was gaudy 41.,11, .837 with th e
Fighting Irish I Notre Dame I and
Bruins ( U C LA~ tlie surpri se
specials. Season score: 71-20, .78().
Expect no drastlc upheavals this
week .
Southern California 33, Minnesota
20 : How can a Trojan on a white
horse be unseated by a Goph er ?
Alabama 37, Baylor 7: They call
them the Crimson Tide , Red
Elephant&lt;; and Scarlet Doom . This
one is the Bear 1Bryant ) vs. the
Bears.
Oklahoma 47, Tulsa 13 : The

a

alwa y s formidable Sooners rely on a
wishbone b aH-handling H ou dini

named Julius Caesar Watts. Wot?
Texas 34 , Iowa State 9: The
belated debut of the "Hook ;Ern
Horns" gang. The Longhorns haye a
hatchet man named Hatchett. .
Purdue 111. Notre Dame 15: The
Boilermak\rs will do a littl e
90d.erin8 on 'ast week's conquerors
~ Micbljl3r.
·
Micbj6ln 43, Kansas 3: Speaking
,
~ MiGligan, lhey bounce back with
lr.:l~ Dickey and a more diversified
attack . What's a Wolverine?
Perm State 30, Texas A&amp;M 13 : The
best team in the East still gives
ground grudgingly. Seriously, now ,
are there any lions in Nittany ?
Nebraska 35, Iowa 9: Shhh, shhh ,
shhh . Not being risque, but is it true
avid Corn husker fans even wear red
unmentionables?
'
Michigan State 33, Miami (0 .) 10 :
If good things come in clusters, can
Spartan gridders ma tch their
basketball brothers ?
Mississippi 19, Missouri 14 : If
Mizzou has to be shown , Steve Sloan ,
Ole Miss' young sideline genius,

Be nc h," he said with a smile.
Elsewhere. Pittsburgh's lead over

Mtln t1·cal

1n

the NL East was

reduced to une game when the
Pirates sp lit a twi-night double-

header in Philadelphia , winning 9~
an d losing 6-5. wh ile-lhe Expos took
a pair from theMets, 3·1 and 4-). St.
Louis and Chicago spl it their
tw in bill , with the Cards victorious 6:\, then fall mg 3-2 in 10 innings. Los
Angeles beat San Francisco 7-2.
Bra ves 6, Astros 5

Glenn Hubbard slarrimed a threerun homer and Bob Horner had a
two-r un shot to pace the Braves, who
had another hero in Ga ry Matthews.
With the tylng run un second ;md

'Jug' has new

fee structure

13~

Ge orgia 21 , Cle m son 1 7 ~
Ma r yland 18, Miss. St. 14 ; Te nnessee

36, Utah 7: S. Carolina 24, Duke 7;
Vanderbilt 24, Citadel 12;·'Virginia
22, VMI 19; Va. Tech 18, Wm . &amp;
Mary 14 : E. Carolina 17, Wake
Forest 14.
MIDWEST
UCLA 23, Wisconsin 14: Kansas St.
26 , Oregon st . 7; Syracuse 18,
Northwestern 14 ; Ohio St. 43,
Washington St. 13; Indiana 25 ,
Kentucky 10; Central Mich. 20,
Bowling Green 14; Ball St. 22, Kent
.St. 12; .Ohio U. 23, Marshall 14 ;
Memphis St. 19, Wichita St. 14.
SOUTHWEST
Southern Methodist 27, N. Texas St.
14 ; Tulane 21, Texas Christian 7;
Arlington 22, NW Louisiana tO ; La .
Tech 33, Liimar t4 .
fAR WEST
California 28, San Jose St. 12;
Stanford 24, Army 7; Air Force 20,
illinois 17: Arizona 24, Texas Tech
20 : Colorado 32, Drake 15: Hawaii
27, New Mexico 14; Utah St. 20,
Col orado St. 10; Wyoming 18,
Richmond 15: Arizona St. 32, Toledo
20 .

first Cincy season
more recognition than any team in
baseball. My son Mll&lt;e, since age 7
has had Johnny Bench posters all
over the house. I couldn 'I turn
around without seeing one. And now
I'm associated with these guys, a
high-class bunch of guys."
· Fishcer admits he had some conce rn about how he'd .get along with
some of the Reds players, particularly the club 's pitching ace Torn
Seaver .
' 'I mean what could I say to him ?' '
Fischer said. " As far as ability wise,
I was always the seventh, eighth,
ninth or loth man on any pitching
staff I was on, especially in the
twilight of a mediocre career .
"And I'm no Finstein, as I guess
you know. But here's a sure-bet Hall
of Famer and he made it easy. He
treated me with a lot of respect. He's
made me feel at ease."
Fischer wasn't at ease during the
Reds first series of the season when
Seaver got off to a rocky start against the San Francisco Giants.
Fischer was told to go out to the
mound .
"I was nervous," he recalled.
" And then the fourth game, (Mike)
LaCoss gives"up five runs in the first
im ing. I ca lled my wife and said,
'Don 't worry. l'll be home -shortly.'

,.

two ou t in th l' runt~ . Art Huwt• belt ell
a long drive to ri ~ht fi eld which
Matthews ca ught over his shoulder
while twnbling to the ground.

Pir ates 9-5, Phillil'S 6-6
The Pirate&gt; rallied from a 6-1
deficit with eight runs in the last two

innings of the first game , then were
given a dose of the same medicine

by the Phillies in the nightcap.
Ph iladelphia was down 5-1 but took
tile second contest when rookie
Keith Moreland singled in the tying
run in the sixth and pinch~1itte r-l'et e
Ma c ka n in 's
fielder 's · c hoice
deli vered the winning tally.
In th e fir st gam e, Ma nny
Sanguillen 's pinch-hit t riple broke a

Bench emerges as
Reds' big leader

SAN DIEGO I AP) - Just as in the
days
of old , Johnny Bench is leading
may have something to show .
the
Cincinnati
Reds on a pennant
Washington 25, Oregon 14: The
chase
.
And
though
you might not
Huskies have quarterbacks with
fro"l
his
hitting,
the ordeal
guess
it
intriguing 'munes - Tom Porras
is
beginnin
g
to
take
its
toll
on the 31!porous' ) and Tom Flick.
year-&lt;lld
catcher.
North Carolina 2S, Pittsburgh 20:
"I'm going to be :;o years old
Pitt has a lot of talent that gets
before
this thing is over ," said the
slowed in rich So uthern tar ,
exhausted
Bench after hitting a twowhatever that is.
run 'homer to lead the Red s to a 3-2
Florida State 32, Miami (Fla. ) 10:
An intrastate rivairy that should go · victory over the San Diego Padres
·
w the Seminoles. Do they really Wednesdar night.
"I'm tired mentally and I'm ·tired
carry tomahawks ?
phys ically ," sai'd Bench , whose
Arkansas 23, Oklahoma Stat.e 7:
homer was his lllh in the last 28
Lou Holtz 's quarterb ack Kevin
&amp; anion broke all of Joe Namath 's . games.
passing marks at Beaver Falls, PA.
Brown 21, Yale 14 : A left-handed
quarterback named Larry Carbone
should paint Yale's blue bluer.
The others:
EAST
DELAWARE, Ohio (AP) - The
Cocnell 23, Penn 7; Harvard 20,
directors of the Little Brown J ug
Col umbia 6 ; Dartmouth 27,
Society, citing innationary times,
Princeton 13; North Carolina St. 20,
hav e raised the fees for the Little
West Va. 14 ; Boston College 15,
Brown Jug, · creating at least a
Villanova 7; Lehigh 15, Colgate i ;
$260,000 race for the middle leg of 3Temple 25 , Delaware 13; Rhode
year-&lt;lld pacing's Triple Crown in
Island 17, Holy Cross 13; Navy 27,
1982.
Connecticut 13 ; Rutgers 30, Bucknell
,Hank Thomson , th e s oc iety 's
7: Temple 25, Delaware 13.
president, said the new fee structure
SOUTH
will become effective in three years.
Auburn 25, S. Miss. 10; Louisiana St.
He estimated the Jug purse would
31, Rice 7: Florida 27, Georgia Tech
range from $260,000 to $275,000 in

Fischer has enjoyed
SAN DIEGO (AP) - Except for
the first weekend, Bill Fischer has
loved almost every moment of his
first season with the Cincinnati
Reds.
" This is my 31st year in pro
baseball," the Reds pitching coach
said , "and this one year has made
my whole career worthwhile - no
matter what happens from here on
out. No matter what, even if we win
five straight div ision championships, this will have been the
best year.
"Even if they fire me at the end of
the season, this will still be the
gr eatest. "
There is little chance of Fischer
bei ng fired after his first season as
pitching coach of the Reds. He has
been given credit for helping many
of ~e club's pitching, but he ;s just as
exc1ted about being around the
Reds .
.
"I really feel proud," Fischer.
said. "yOu walk through airports
and people,. look at you. The pilot
welcomes ·you on the plane. People
Ln the stands say things.
''Shoot, last year at this time I was
down in the Instructional League
worrying about this kid pitcher or '
that guy. Now, I'm in a championship race .
"And Cincinnati over the last 10
rears, has had more pu blicity and

... " Not uulvss tu~ lld llll' is .luhnny

"It 's inev itable r m· going to slow
down. But when I do , someone else
will be there to pjck us up ."
The Reds' victory moved them 2',1
games ahead of the Houston Astros
in th e Nation al League West. But
Bench, who has played on four
World Series teams, said the race
isn 1t over yet.
;,The Astros can defin itely wm it
in the Astrodome when we play
lherelhis weekend ," he conceded.
"They've beaten us there all year ."
He admitted his experience has
been a key factor in his team's
remark abl e dri ve t o overtake
Houston in the second half of the

season .
Could the Reds have dtlne it with a
rookie ca tcher behind the plate'
"Not unless his name was Johnny
Bench," said lhe 11-tirne All-Star .
Bill Bonham, ~ . earned the win,
his sixth in eight decisions since the
All-Star breali . But the tall righ t·
hander had to leave the game with
one out in lhe sixth when his arm
stiff ened .
"I think it's just fa ti gued," he
said. "I should be able to pitch in
four or fiv e days."
Bonham credited his secon d half
success to his new .pitch, a curve
ball .
"I'm now a three -pitch pitcher ,"
he ·said. "I started throwing the

1982 .

curve b all to g o w\th m y [astba\l and

.

change-up after the All-Star game.
Th al,'s made all th e difference' '
"The Padres were tied at 1·1in the
sixth when Bob Shirley , i-16, gave up
a single to George Foster and Bench
crashed his homer to left fie ld to put
Cincinnati on top 3-1.
"That big blow by Bench put us
away," said Padres Manager Roger
Craig . "Right now , I th ink they're
th e best team in the Nationa l
League. They 've got some big
horses and some guys th at can r Wl
and they're getting good help from
their bullpen ."
San Diego rallied for a run in the
sixth .on a walk to Biti Fahe;· and
Tim Flannery's triple, his first extra
base hit in the ma jor leagues.
Tonight the Reds planned to send
Fred Norman, 11-11, out to fa ce th e
Padres' Randy Jones, i l-11.

The directors also~d the 1982
fees for the Jugette, making it a
$100,000-plus event for 3-year-&lt;lld
pacmg fillies in three years.
Thur ma n Downing of Sh aker
Heights, Oh io, was elected to the
societ y's board of direc tor s.
Downing succeeds Joh n Simpson Sr.
of Hanover, Pa.
The other officer.s were re~ lected ,
headed by Thomson "as president,
Tommy Thompson as vice president
and treasur er .and Rachael
Pliickebaum as secretary. They are
from Delaware, Ohio.

Wedn esday's

Sports Transaction s
By The Associated Press
FOOTBALL

National Football league

IHi tie 1n the mnth . Philadelphia had

jumped in front mostly thank:; to a
grand-slam homer by Mike Schmidt
in the seven th . The Pirates got three
m the e ighth on four s ingles a nd an
·error .
It was the 40th time the Pirates
have come from behind to win this

season .
Expos 3-4, Mels 1-1
After tough losses to the Pirates
Monda y and Tuesday , Montr eal
might ha ve seemed ready to
collapse . But strong pitching by
Rudy May , who threw a si• -hitter in
the nig htcap, and Ross Grimsley,
who won his first game sin c-e June
26 . boosted the Expos withm a game
of the East lead.
The E xpos won the second game
desp ite a first-inning collision that
saw second baseman Dave Cash get

cut on the head and right fielder
Ell1s Valentin e bruise his jaw. Both
pla yers had to leave the game,
Substitute shortstop Spe ier and
Cash each homered in the nightcap.
~~ the opener, Tony Perez knocked
in t w0 rWlS and scored the other for
Mon treal.
Cardinals ~2. Cubs 3-3
Dave King'man had two home runs
w increase his major-league leading
wtal to 47 but it was a lOth-inning
shot by Jerry Martin that clinched
the CUbs' second-game victory. St.
Louis woo the opener as Ken Reitz
and Keith Hernandez had two-run
triples and Ted Sinunons homered.
Dodgers 7, Giants 2
Rookie Rick Sutcliffe won his 16th
game - he's lost nine - and Roo
Cey had a three-run homer for the
Dodgers.

Ohio Sportlight
ffiLUM!lUS, Ohio ( AP ! - Wayne
stanley offers an example of why he
left Iowa State foc a similar job a s an
assistan t college football coach at
Ohio State, rema ining with head
man Earle Bruce.
"Dexter Green was so good that he
probably would have won the
He1sman 1f he had played here
and that 's the diffe rence hetween
the two places rig ht there,' ' he saJd.
Green, a ta lented tailback, did not
win the Heisrn aR as College Football
Player of the Year at the Iowa
school. Ohio State has tu rned out
four He isman winner s : Les
Horvath, Vic Janowicz, Hopalong
Cassady and Archie Griffin (twi ce 1.
It 's enough of a difference for
tOr ee other current Bu ckeye
assistant coaches to leave Iowa
State. Bob Tu cker , Pete Carroll and
Steve Szabo followed Bruce when he
replaced Wood y Hayes at Oh1o

State.
' ·At Iowa Stale, you can go
undefeated and still not win the
national champlooshi p," Said Szabo .
"Here you can win it all ."
Carroll notices a difference in the
talent. too . "Generally, the team
speed here is much, much better.
And m the skilled positions. our
athletes here are faster and there
are many more of them . They're not
any b1gger here, but that's not
surprising." he said .
Dennis Fryzel, ·a rocmer head
coach at Tampa and assistant at the
Air Force l&amp;i year, serves as Oh io
St"ate's new derensive coordmator.
" I honestly beUeve that being an
assistant here is as close to bt' lng a
head coach as you can get. The
talent here is super - our secondary
"' particular. This is the best group
of tota l a thletes I' ve been assor 1ated
wnh ," said Fryzel.

10%- OFF
Any Flannel Shirt, Winter
Coat or Jacket and any Sweater
Friday &amp; Saturday Only.

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Demandfor low tar MERIT MENTHOL continues to-buildassmokers
discover what research has already proven-that MERIT MENTHOL
delivers taste equal to-or better than-leading high tar menthols!

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fu llback.

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CIVIC IMPROVEMENTS

are1ust
some of the many extra benefit s that Y0U'f n.JOY . along wilh the plea -

te r .

su re of sho ppt ng In att r acti 11e, fam li1ar surround tngs'

COLLEGE
UNIVER SITY OF TOL E DO Named Ethel C. All m an women's
basket bal l coach.

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Meigs seventh grade

-= ~-·· . -

has 14•0 win Tuesday
The Meigs seventh grade football
team opened it.'! 1979 season Tuesday
night with a victory over Jackson 14·
0. The game was played at Meigs
Junior High Stadium, Middleport.
Meigs scored in the first quarter
on a one yard sneak by quarterback
BretKom.
The play capped a drive carried
by the running of tailback Joe Bar·
ton. The extra points were scored by
James Acree to make the score 8-j),
The game became a defensive bat·
tie until late in the •fourth quarter
when fullback Mark Hanunond
crashed over from the one. The con·
version run by Steve Crow was
nullified by a penalty.
_
Leading the Meigs defense were ·
Acree, Crow, Doug Priddy, and Ed·
die Miller . Offensive standouts in·
eluded Bobby F osler, Trey Castle,,
Nick Bush, J ohn Longstreth, Larry
Parsons. Jack Welker and Matt Rif·
ne.
The Meigs seventh grade squad
will play at Belpre on Oct. I.

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BUFFALO B l LLS - Sig n ~ d Ni ck
M ike-M ay er . ~ic k er . Rel eased Tom
Dempsey, k ic ker .
NEW YOR K JET S - Waived Bob
M a rti n, linebac ke r .
PHIL ADEL PfjiA
E AGL ES Placed Bill Ber gey , linebacker , and
Wade Key , guard, on the injured
r eser ve list. Ad ded Tom Luken,
guard, and Sam m y Joh nso n,
fj0CKEY
National H.o ckey League
MINNESOTA NOR T H ST A R S Announced the r et irem ent of J . P~
Parise, forwa rd.
ST . LOUI S BLU E S - Signed Joe
M ichel etti and Jack Brownschidte.
defensemen , and Bla ke Dunlop , cen ·

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Schoo ls, clini cs. taw en forcement ...
all 1hese community needs are ! upported

by you r ta•e s. . an d the ta xes or the
merc ha nts whose store:o. you pa tro niz e!
Thaf s why loc al merchants say:

.,•

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itO PhiUp Morrl• Inc. 1979

••

!Kings: Bmg' 'tar;' 0.6 mg ni~oline- .
c 100' i:11 mg" tar;' 0.7 mg nicotine ev. per cigarell&amp;, FTC Reporl May '78

Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined .
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous
to Your Health.
.

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":

Kings &amp;lOO's
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•!t) l JJ:~ I'rl Ullb 'l ~Mi..l f (

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�6- The Daily SPntincl . Middlcoort -Ponll'rn~ . 0 .. Thursday, Sept. 20. H/19

L \'"'""~ •o'
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B

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y

Library

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Leuers

September 19,1979
Dr. Dorpthy Sinclair
School or Library Science
Case Western Reserve
University
Cleveland, OH 44106
Dear Dr. Sinclair :
I am certainly looking forward to
being guest lectLirer for your class in
Public Library Management on October B.
I plan to bring along the lilide show
that OVAL put together . It conta ins
much information on what OVAL
does for the people or southeastern
Ohio and how it helps the libraries
give better service. .
In addition, I am taking pictures of
the library staff and buildings here .
in Meigs County. Of course, when I
say "library stall," I am also including the wonderful people whose
wages are paid by CETA and Community Action but whose working

o•'

'll l l'ill~ r S Ill

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A
R ,~· 0:: .,,,"'

he

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hours are spent at the Library. It is
really important that more people
realize that CETA and Community
Action do provide essential serv ices ·
to the libraries and other public
agencies by paying the salaries of
some excellent, hardworking people
the public agencies cannot alford to
have on thei r payrolls.
Besides the slide show and photos,
I also plan tt&gt;bring copies of some of '
my Ubrary Letters colunnns, including this one, and copies of some
of the publicity which the Sentinel
has generously included.
And, ll ever my tape recorder
works and my husband remembers
to work it at the right time, I will
also have a tape of the weekly Your
Libraries from WMPO radio.
Yours truly,
Ellen Bell
Librarian
Serving All of
Meigs County

at the B. H. Sanborn Missinary
Society on Oct. I at the churcl) with
Mrs. Alwilda Werner to handle that.
Thank you letter was read from Mrs.
Iv~ Turner for a gift sent her. Mrs.
Werner opened the meeting with
prayer and devotions were given by
Mrs. Mary Brewer on the topic,
"Misuse of the Tongue" from ''Our
Daily Bread.''
Mrs. Texanna Well had the Bible
quiz . Cake, coffee and tea were served to Mrs . Well, Mrs. Werner, Mrs.
Brewer, Mrs. Golda Roush, Mrs .
June Kloes. and Mrs. Katie Anthony .

lht ·~

tn

Olno i.llld a

duz~ JI

still arc

other
Ill

d.ot k ;tl111ul tln-1r ( 'ltrt:-illllil :-- tar• •

tlw~

i llld ! luhud~ IS L'U IIlpiCttflHH.'. .

t"an 'i lake movie Sto th e raung board
ttw da\· beron.• Christmas and still

wtll

~htJ WIIll-! 1'111' ( "il n SliiHIS .

~t:I1CS, t !ll!Ci lt'l' UWill'I'S

\ "

Fellowship dinner noted

the

Chester
News
Notes
Hy Clari&lt;'t' Allen
'l'lw l.adi"' Aux iliary of the fire
department met Wednesday evening
at the firehouse. Pres ident C'leo
Smith opened the meeting with
prayer . followe&lt;i with roll call . The
secretary's and lhe treasurers
report was given by Opal Hollon .
Conunittee reports were given. Cleo
resigned as president and vice

11 1 t;w!. tlwall'r uWill'l' :-: IH•n: :II 'L'
lle~pp.\ ah11Ul tilt• :-.JluutiOn .
Ill S4.·ptcmb~r wlwt ~uu
p\~1ytng

To knuw

wall be

u1 Dcn•m bL•r IIH'ans y:&gt;U

ha ve lO buy a movie witl10ut st.•c mg
ll .

Ht.•sitles , theaters wou ld have

io

put up large amounL"-' of muncy 1n
guaran tees to play Cl movie ltuH

~ -;m

llopL' f~r a Chn ~tma!' rdeast- . '11lCY
ha v~ togctthe111 done in time for the
l"d ltn g bo~rd to see th('m." he smd .
" 1\ uto mobi le cuin panies a!l show
U1c1r nl'Wcars about the same tune

of year." he aducu. " You don 't find
General Motors say mg, ·we're going
to show our ears la ter , because we
dtdn 't get them finished yet.'

liti ~at ion·

in federal court.

Cll ristm&lt;:~s

is comi ng to Oh10
without blind bidding, Th:-tt means
So,

no movie company ca n a sk for bids
president Erma Cleland was named
in
tbis state on a new movte before
president lor the remainder of the
e&amp;hibitors
have had a chance to see
year. Margaret Christy was named
H.
vice president. The greeting cards
Whi le thi s ha s it s obvtous
have arrived and can be bought
advantages
for th eater owner s,
from members . RoJI call was anth
ere
could
be
some prob lems too .
swered by those named a hove and
Will the movie companies finish
Marcia Keller, Opal Wiekha,m,
their p ictw·es in time for an Oh io
Clarice Allen and lnzy NewelL
sc r eening for exhibitors so the
Mr. and Mrs. Rick Hollon, Parkersburg, are announcing the birth of a bidding can take place a nd the
son on August 29, at the St. Joseph mo vies sh ipped in time for
hospital. Mrs. Opal Hollon was a Christmas ?
Mov ie compani es have said
recent overnight guest of .Mr. and
th
eaters
in states like Ohio may mi's
Mrs . Hollon and sons.
out for a couple of weeks on pictures ·
Mrs. Cleo Smith spent the Labor
. that will be pl a~iJ1g in Michiga n. for
Day weekend in Perrysburg with
ex-3.rnple . where Ulere is no law
Mrs . Jean Stratton and Fred
against blind bidding.
Dresch.
, Char les Suga rman. who owns SIX
Dr. and Mrs. Billy Robert Allen, screel'\5 in Columbus. doesn't think
Westerville, were weekend guests of
Mr. and Mrs . Clayton Allen. On Mon- Ohio wLII lose out.
" l think they'll get th'e pLctures
day the Aliens were joined by Mr.
finished in time," Suganuan said .
and Mrs. Dick Goehringer, Heather
"Thev have to get them firusheu so
and Scott, also of Westerville, who
spent the day with them.
Mr.and Mrs. Virgil Wood,
Springfield, were recent guests of
Mrs. Letha Wood.
D. D. Cleland, Columbus, visited
Labor Day with Denzel Cleland and
the Clayton Aliens.
Mrs. Kathryn Baum has been
returned to her home from St.
Joseph hospital in Parkersburg.
Douglas Wickham, Richmond,
called on Mr. and Mrs. John
Wickham, 'Monday.
Mr . and Mrs. Hoger !:Ialley recently returned home from a trip to
Ithaca , N. Y., where they picked up
their son, Brian, and Rosemary
Hubbard of Racine, who had attended a seven weeks architectural
course at Cornell University .
Mr.and Mrs. Arthur Orr and grandson, Bob Bill Lee, attended the
wedding of their granddaughter,
•Kathy Lynn Newnan, at Martel, 0 .,
on 'Saturday. They were overnight
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ed Newnan,
Galion .

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AT

RIO GRAND
COu.EGE
AND
COMMUNITY COUEGE

be !Iu s year .

"The;· haven 't sent any listS to
.Ohio." he smd . " In all of Ohio, no

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ca mpus we re commi tt ecL was
insane at the tim e of th e earlier
crimes.

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1

But state and Fairfie ld County
authorities want to jail Milligan for
parole or probati on violations.
resultin g from convictions for two
robberies committed before the
rapes.
Th e defendant was on probation
for the robberies when the rapes

MASON, W. VA .
1 am pleased to have Connie Swisher joining the staff on
Thurs., Sept. 20th .

SPECIAL THIS MONTH
UNIPERM Reg . $22 .50 NOW $'18.50
SENSOR CURLY Reg . 528.00 NOW 523.50
SENSOR BODY Reg . SJO .OO
NQW S27.SO
Pr'ice Unl ess Condition &amp; Trea tmen t Needed .
FROST! NGS, Reg. $20
NOW$18
HAIR CUT, BLOW DRY CONDITION
FOR' GUYS &amp; GALS Reg . 58 .50
NOW $7.50 &amp; 56.50
Individual Styl ing &amp; Ha ir Care Where the Newest Looks
Are Yours .

CALL 773-5404

~ere

Speciai~

Plans for the fall open-!)ouse rounip and pack meeting of Chester
•b Scout Pack 2J5 were made at a
!Cent meeting of the pack conunit-

"'·
The roundup will be held on Sept.
I at 7::.1 p.m. at the SCout Hall in

the National Hunting Fishing Day
celebration sponsored by the Isaac
Walton League Saturday atRoyal
Oak Park from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Cubs
will recei ve details from their den
mothers.
The pack received a plaque for

Chester and any boys between the
ages of eight and II interested in
either cub scoutmg or the webelo
program are to attend. Registration
will be taken at that time so boys are
asked to take at least one parent.
Members of the pack will attend

r_]oy Scouts receive awards. Wednesday
scribe badge.
Tim Curtis, one skill award ,
quartermasterbadge.
Scouts earning badges of achi evement were :
Tim Curtis, scout badge; Ray
Maxson, tenderfoot and second class
badge; Jeff Newell , tenderfoot, second class, and first class badges ;
and Greg Hibbs, tenderfoot and secondclass badge.
The awards were presented by
Scoutmaster Gale Osborne. Parents ·

Vour !J'ocial Security
Most people can take care of
;early all of their social security
&gt;usiness by telephone, according to
;;ctwin Peterson, Branch Manager or
he Athens .Social Security office.
Ising the telephone is not only-more
onvenient, but Is also a time and
nergy saver, conside~ the cost of
asoline and the possibility of
aving to wait to talk with a social
ecurity representative. Using the
!lephone also allows social security
ersonnel to serve you more efcienUy .
Peterson then listed some of the

Social Calendar

MAURICE BARNEIT, Speaker

nnJRSDAY

with the p

THIS WALKING UNIT of scouts from the Chesler Pack 235 was awarded a plaque at the Point Pleasant Parade . Brent Norton and Matt Harris
are carrying the flags .

CHJE'.Sr'ER CUB SCOUT PACK 235 won a plaque at the
'arade at Point Pleasant and a first place award in the Chester Labor
lay Parade with this float.

CHESTER - Chester Boy Scouts
· &gt;I Troop 235 were presented skill
•wards and merit badges in a
ceremony Wednesday night.
Earning awards were :
Jeff Newell , lour skill awards , two
merit badges and senior patrol
leader badge.
Ray Maxson, seven skill awards,
&gt;ne rne.rit badge and patrol leader's
t&gt;adge.
Greg Hibhs , two merit badges,
!ISSistant senior patrol leader badge.
John Hein. one skill award and

SEPTEMBER 23 to 28, 1979

1'0.\1 EIWY. Oil 10

him of other legal entanglements .
Ill a Fau-fic ld County hearing
Mon(~IY , Milligan' s attorneys Alan
Goldsberry and Stephen Thompson
of Athens so ught to nullify guilty
pleas eo tered by thetr elient in 1975
tn tTim es m mmitted before the
rapes in Columbus.
The attorneys argue that Milligan,
who was diagnosed as having 10
different peroonalities when four
rapes near the Ohio State University

JANEfS HAIR-GO-ROUND

.

/lutto•l'll/11 11111/ .l111i11 ,-.;,,.,.,.,

from his multiple personality
"" condition ! drf' attempting to relieve

' 245-SJ5J

Ch n s tma s pict ure s have been

'

hase of fries &amp; soft drink.
~
'

IOW!r All-Beef Hamburger

GNOUA CLUB Thursday at
of Mrs. Albert Smith at 7:30
Ellen Couch assistant hostess ,
Slusher devotions and Erna
program.
SPRINGS Better Health
Thursday I : 15 p.m. at home of
11J Conkle, Cheshire. · Helen
ton program, Louise Bearhs
c t. Those who plan to attend to
n at Rock SPrings Methodist
r hat 12::.1 p.m.
JGS COUNTY Tubercul!J8is
!liJI of TnJstees meeting 7: 30 p.m.
"f..daY at Meigs IM, Pomeroy .
/IIDDLEPORT CHilD CONSERITION LEAGUE, 7::ll p.m. Thurs' night at the home of Mrs.
~Ima Osborne. Mrs. Osborne will
•vide the traveling prize and Mrs.
ncy Morris will give devotions.
s. Janet Duffy and Mrs. Peggy
tris will be hostesses.

..
GOOD
THRU

APSE CHAPTER 453 Southern
lh school Thursday 7:30p.m.
FRIDAY

SUNDAY

HADE RIVER Lodge 453, F and
'• Chester, Friday, 7 p.m . Work in
nter mason degree. All master
BOOS invited.
•AST MATRONS, Evangeline
•pier, Order of the Eastern Star,
np.m. Friday night at the temple.

IMEX WATCHES
COMPLETE STOCK

matters that can be taken care of by
telephone :
- Applying for social security or
supplemental security income

of the scouts attehding w-ere Raytnond Maxson, . Donald Maxson ,
Geneva Maxson, John Newell,
Flossie Dill and Cleland. Members
of the scout conunittee attending
were Raymond Maxson, Donald
Maxson and Geneva Maxson.
- Osborne spoke on the importance
of scouting to young men , as well as
to their parents and the conununity .
He said that a scout not only learns
how to take care of himself in the
,outdoors but also is trained in public
speaking and civic and conununity
responsibility .
Boys 11 years of age or older not
now in scouting are invited to con tact Osborne at 985-3915, or attend a
scout meetin'g. Troop 235 meets
everyMondaynightfrOill7to9p.m.
at the old school building above the
firehouse in Chester.

Past Officers

pyment,..
-Applying lor Medicare.
- 'Requesting a change of na'Ue or
address on social security cards.
- Reporting events that rnB Y affect receipt of checks, such as starting or stopping work .
- Reporting a lost or stolen-check .
- Replacing a lost · or missing
social security or Medicare card .
- Getting help with filling out
Medicare fonns.
- Getting an estimate of monthly
amount.
- Requesting a statement of earnings reported to a person 's social
security record.
- Getting an answer to any
question on social security , SSI, or
Medicare and requesting copies of
free publication on these programs.
To do any of these things, just call
the Athens Social Security office ~t
592-#18. Meigs County residents call

Club meets

992~22.

Announce birth
POCEATELLO, Idaho - Mr. and
Mrs. Vern Clark, Poceatello, Idaho,
are announcing the birth of a
daughter, Jennifer Lynn, on August
I.

She weighed seven pounds, 10 OWIces, and was 19 and one-half inches
long.
.
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Henry Whealdon, Patriot, and Mr.
and Mrs. Walter Clark, Ashton,
Idaho.
Great1!randparents include Mrs.
Rilla Rusk, Gallipolis, and Mr. and
Mrs. Walter Jenkins, Bidwell.
A great-grandmother, Anna Skinner, lives in Idaho Falls, Idaho.

RACINE-The Past Officers' Club
of Racine Cahpter 134' Order of the
Eastern Star. met at the Masonic
Temple Thursday evening .
Mrs . Grella Simpson had devo:
lions entiUed "Give Us Time" and
concluded with the Lord 's Prayer in
unison . Mrs. Louise Stewart's letter
of thanks for a monetary gift given
to her by the past officers was read .
Mrs. Cora Webb discussed a gift for
the district president to be given at
the reception and she and Mrs .
Simpson were nained to buy the gilt.
Tjle Christmas party was planned
for the second Thursday in
December with a gift etchange of $2.
A covered dish dinner will be serted
at 7::ll p.m .. at the Temple . Each
member is to contribute something
on the program. Dues will be Pl!id at
the Christmas meeting and dev~&gt;­
tions will be given by Opal Diddle.
Mrs. Webb had the program using
readings, "Rooted and Grounded in
Love" and " I Believe" by John D.
Rockefeller, Jr .
Refreshments were served during
a concluding social hour.

· ATTEND MEETING
Mrs. George Schneider and Mrs .
Arthur Sylvester of the Syracuse
First United 'Presbyterian Church,
and Mrs. Richard Vaughan'and Mrs.
Dwight Wallace of the Middleport
church were in Chillicothe Tuesday
lor the Scioto Presbytery meeting.

SAnJRDAY

25% OFF
Limited Time Only/No Coupons Necessary

K• •nnPih Mc Cullough R Ph
Charles Riffl e R P~ .
Ron,l d Hann1ng . R. Ph
Mon lh ru Sal 8 :00a .m to9 p .m
'&gt;u nd,l y 10 JO to 12 : JO ~n d I to 9 p Ill .
P RE &gt;C R I P r iONS
PH . 9'12 29.; \
r 11('11d ly Scrv l &lt;(l
1

r11,,, n

-··- ---

O~n

N1qht &lt; I !II

0

._....._...._.._. .......

-

How long ha~ it been since you paid 1 5~ for a hamburger''
A long It me nght'' Burger Chef " is bringing back their 15~
hamburger price and it's the same delicious IOO~k AII Beefhamburger that Burger Chef " has made available
for burger lovers eyerywhere . With the purchase of an
order of fries and a soft d~ink . you can have a hamburger
for on ly 15(&lt;'. A price you ha.ven 't seen in a long time .
698W.MAINST.
POMEROY, 0.
Offer not valid where other discounts apply
Good Only at Participating Burger Chef" Restaurants

BU~er

.CJief

CON l't NlJE FIG liT
LM;CASTEK, Ohto l AP!
Attorneys fur WLI!iam M~ligan , who
was found innocent of rape la ~t year
by reason of insanity stemming

Food Service
Technology !'l•'

Gospel . Meeting

Our Constitution has provided the
American people with a more enduring and practical goverrunent
and a greater degree of prosperity
than any other people have ever had .
The excellence of this document
deserves our confidence and support . The Daughters of the
American Revolution urge that you
celebrate Constitution Week by
studying the basic principles of the
Constitution of the United States.
Read your Constitution.

cub scouts make plans for open house.

'

might not lure more than a few
Compctitio~ dn ves them to make
dozen people pa st th e box offi ce.
the deadline ."
Blind btuding now is Lllcgal Lll Oh io
Sugar111an sa1d he wasn 't sure
and SOII\C other state s. A leg&lt;LI w
·hat'thc
Ch ristma:-: IllUVles here will
cha lle nge of the Ohio law by the
Motion Picture Association still ts in

~hester

b&lt;;oked . et - Ll the law has been
complied with , and I have no reason
to think that it has not."
Chnstmas movies this year in
other states include "1911," "Star
Trek. the Mov Le," "The Black
Hole," "The Jerk,' ' "The Electric
Horseman." "Kramer vs. Kramer"
and " All That J azz ."

be ra tctl . The co mf&gt;::llliC:-1

Burger Chef " offers Inflation Fighter

and Mrs. Phil Globokar thanked the
Announcement of a fellowship dinner at the church on Sunday, Oct. 7,
group lor remembrances while they
was made when Friendly Circle met
were ill. Mrs. Roy Mayer, program
at Trinity Church Tuesday evening.
leader, used "My Search lor God"
by Helen Fisher Rice with poems by
The meat and beverage will be
provided by the Church Council for
Mrs. Rice being read by Mrs .
the meal which will ·follow worldHauck. There was group singing of
wide conununion services. Canned
"A Story to Tell"' and "I Know Who
goods for the food pantry were
Holds Tomorrow " , accompanied by
brought by members to the meeting
Mrs. Lawrence Stewart. Mrs. Mayer
gave the of.feratory prayer .
presided over by Miss Elizabeth
Fick. A letter of appreciation was
Mrs. W. H. Perrin and Miss Erma
read from Mrs. Robert K. Wilson , a
Smith served a dessert course to the
former member. now residing in . 14 members attending .
Savannah, Ga.
A card was prepared for Mrs.
James Fugate who is recovering
from surgery. Mrs. Donald Hauck
}MWTOMEET
The ilhens District United
MeotJillSI Women will hold their annual meeting Sunday. Sept. 23,at linmanuel Church, Logan, beginning at
2 p.m. A social hour will begin at 1
p.m. ; the 1980 program material will
be on display.

ulitu tA P 1
IIIOSt part!" vi' Alla'rll'il

alr('ady kn uw what muvtcs

Dorcas Circle meets
Remembrances for residents of
the Meigs County Infirmary were
discussed during a · meeting of the
Dorcas Circle of the B. H. Sanborn
Missionary Society Tuesday night at
' the home of Mrs . Sarah Fowler.
The circle will remember a
women on her birthday at the inlinnary .this month and will alsv
take a tray of fruit to the residentS.
Both the new scholarship girl, Glynda Rice of Judson College, and the
foreign missionary, Murray F.
Sharp, were sent birthday cards.
Plans were made for the program

'T'lJe jerk' among Christmas movie fare
1'\II .LI MI!I IS.

.... ' ,;·. ,·\

-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy 10 , Thursday, Sept. 20, 1979

IMORGASBORD Saturday from 5
a p.m. at Wilkesville Pythian
-ters hall; children, $1.25; adults,
Proceeds will help pey lor
ilding .
tNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS, monthly
1eting, 6:30 p.m. Bring covered
h, table service.
Proclamation of the President
United States, and by Act of
~lll!re!LS,, this is Constitution Week.
Daughters of the American
jNo•lution11rerrtil'1d all citizens that
freedoms of religion, press and
and the rights of petition and
!sfn~bly are guaranteed to us by
Constitution. We must be
to protect our rights and
te&lt;ioms; lor once lost to us, they
never be regained. Read your

CHAIN

•

HI...;;.:: ·~ .

-.... ; _~:"f::Lf'Jl:
... ... .•.·.,; .•.

SAWS
SEVERAL MODELS
NOW IN STOCK I

entering a noat in the Hillbilly
Parade at Point Pleasant on Sept. 8.
The noat had earlier takena first
place award in the Chester Labor
Day parade. The Pack also received
a plaque lor their walking entry in
the Point Pleasant parade.

IT.\I.I ,\N i\HT

LOS ,\Ntd•: U ·:s· ' ill' 1 - Some 75
ltall~n drawtngs and prints from th ~
17th and lRU1 ce nturies. along with
sm ne 20 . ·: renlly &lt;i l'quired prints a nd
dra win gs from the 17th to 20th
n:n tun e:;, ilre on view through Nov .

tn

at the I,(JS ,\ngcles County

!\J u....,emn of Art.

The exlubitwn wLU. include works
hy V crone~e. Domenico Tmtoretto
and Frann·sco GuardL

MODULAR
HOMES

l

By
ALL AMERICAN
Meets
'

I

'

'

'

:t'•

eOhio Building Codes
eAFHA &amp; VA
See our lot model today.

'i
l
I
I

committed.

Prosecutor James Lu se charges
that Milligan violated the terms of
hi s probation by fai ling to report to a
proba tion officer and by engaging in
crimmal at1Lvlty .
Milligan ha s been a patient at the
Athens Mental Health Center since
his acquitta l on the rape charges
Dec . 4, 1978. ·

'

I

I

1100 E . Main
Pomeroy, Ohio
992-7034

•

Har_risonvill~
Social News

Labor Day visitors of Letha Cowen
were her granddaughter, Dietta
Jewell and friend , Wayne, Edna
Steinmetz of Wyandotte, Mich., and
Agnes Peyton of Talski.
Mr . and Mrs. Allen Lease (Vickie
Nutter ) of Kenton, 0 .• announce the
birth of a daughter Sept. 6. Mr. and
Mrs . Willie Collins, Kenton, are
grandparents and Mr. and Mrs . K.
c. Welsh are great-grandparents.
Mrs. Wilma Hinds , Zanesville, is
spending a few weeks with her
mother, Letha Cowen and sister,
Dena Welsh.
Darrell and Bonnie Napper and
son visited Mr . and Mrs . Chuck Patterson ,ecenUy.
Mr s.
Fern
Wiseman,
·Massachusetts. and Mrs . Charles
Jeffers, Athens , were recent visitors
of Letha Cowen.
• Kennetll 'Welsh \'\&gt;lied 'lblll'!day
evening with his cousin , Mr. and
Mrs. Rowland Dais, Kingsbury Rd .Dena Welch , Wilma Hinds and
Letha Cowen called on El.za McCall
Thursday afternoon . Mrs. McCall
will be 91 in January.
Mr. and Mrs. K. C. Welsh and
Letha Cowen attended the Wood
reunion at Forest Acres Park at
~utland Sunday .
Mr. and Mrs. Franklin Townsend,
Westerville, visited Mr . and Mrs.
Clair Waggoner recenUy.
Mr. and Mrs. John Williams were
called to Somerset, Ky. due to the
death of Mrs. Williams' mother .
Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Gilkey and
Mr. and Mrs . Asa Jordan are spending a week at their trailer homes in
Florida.
" Mrs. Alice Whaley, Columbus,
spent a day with her sister, Lola
Clark and Frances' Alkire.

.
.

\\

(

....
·'

Sizes 8-20
1n Montoro s uede
Assorted Colors

The National Bank Park System 's
annual operating budget amounted
to $5 million in 1946, according to
National Geographic. It now exceeds $500 million . Nine thousand
lulltime _ employees and more
seasonal ones than that now work to
keep the system going.

unmistakably

r

$7500
·aAHR CLOTHIERS
ONLY

N.2NDAVE.

J

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

--.

~
~

�8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. Thursday. Sept . 211. 1n79

Mrs. Hayes commissioned for Chester Council

Play scheduled to open
HUNTINGTON - "The Night of
the Iguana," considered by critics to
be one of Tennessee Williams' most
powerful dramas, wiU be presented
by Marshall University Theater at 8
p.m. Wednesday. Oct. 10, through
Saturday, Oct. 13, in Old Main
Auditorium.
Donald Weed of Chesapeake and
Nancy Smith of Vallejo, Calif . will
•Pile~ in the roles of Rev . Shannon
and Hannah Jelkes, whO were ·por.
trayed in the film version by
Richard Burton -and Deborah Kerr
according to Dr. William G. Kearns:
MU professor of speech, who will
direct University Theater's first
student production of the season.
Reserved seat tickets will go on
sale Wednesday, Sept. 26, in the
Theater Box Office, Old Main Room
11J7. Tickets will be $2.50 each and
special student group rates will be
available. Marshall students with In

Ca rds will be admitted free .
Seat,; may be reserved by calling
the box offi ce, 696-2306, weekdays
fromnoonto4p .m.
Against the backdrop of a sha bby
resort hotel in Mexico, "Night of the
Iguana" is a poignant and painful
tale of hwnanity and its emotions,
concentrating on the · growing
awareness between Shannon, a
defrocked minister, and Hannah, a
gentle New England spinster, of
the ir mutual need for companionship and roots.

BWODMOBILE VISITING ·
MASON - American Red Cross
Bloodmobile will be at til!! 'Mason
Fire Department on Sept. 24, from 26 p.m. This is sponsored by the
Ladies Auxiliary of the Mason
Volunteer Fire Department.

C HI·~~Tt-: 11-Th c coiiUIIISSIOn of
F.lizabeth Hayes as deputy stale
· cuuncilor for Chester Council 323,
Daughters of Anl.erica, was
presented at the TUesday nigtt
meeting of the council at the hall.
Mrs. Margaret Tuttle., recording
secretary , read the commission of
Mrs. Hayes. It was accepted by the
Council and Mrs. Hayes was
escorted to the altar by the
fiagbearers, and Thelma White, on
behalf of the Council presented her a
gift.
Mrs. Leona Hensley presided at
th e meeting attended by 28
· members. Mrs. Dorothy Lawson, it
was reported, is confined to the

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
Betty Francis Dunning,

Holzer Medical Ccnlcr . ~rs. Hayes
read a note from a member. Zana
Gainer. Hebron, and noted that she
is not well.
Mrs. Tuttle: recording secretary,
·read a letter from Ruth Shannon, national council secretary, concerning
the new law book which the council
received. There was also a letter
from Belle Prairie · Council 21i9,
Belpre, inviting Chester Council to
its 30th anniversary, Sept. 24, dinner
at6:llp.m.
The time for the Oct. 2 mel/ting
was set at 7:30p.m.
Quarterly birthdays were observed. Tbe table, covered in white,
featured two arrangements of
flowers , gifts at each place, and a
decorated cake made by Mrs. Tuttle. Seated at the table were Thelma
McMannis, Jean Kresge, Betty
Roush, Mary K. Holter, Doris
Grueser, Elizabeth Hayes, Miss

Julie Rose, Laura Mae Nice, and
Leona Hensley.
Present besides the ones mentioned were Alta Ballard, Mabel Van
Meter, Letha Woods, Ada Morris,
Nina Windle, Helen WoH, Erma

9- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,O., Thursday, Sept. 20. 1979

r

Ger'ald Wayne Dunning,
Defendant.
No . 11211

TO :

nino,

THERMAL BACKED

CURTAINS

Celery, Natural, White
and Gold.

BLANKETS

For These Cool Nights

I

KITCHEN
TOWELS

2/99'

THROW RUGS AND
MATCHING LID COVERS

3/99'

WASH
CLOTHS

3!99'

5!99'

.
.------'WEEKEND SPECIAL!------.

4 PLY YARN

KNIT FABRICS

77e

'1 44

vs.

r•r·

PACKAGED

DISH
CLOTHS

Plaintiff ,

Court of Common Pleas of
Meigs County, Pomeroy ,
Ohio, 45769 .
The object of the com ·
plain t is the ob taining of a
divorce and the ter mination of a marriage
contract between the par·
ties, the settlement of the
property rights of the
ties, and the custody o the
minor chi ld .
You are reql)ired to an·
swer the complaint within
28 days after the last
publication of this notice,
which will be published on·
ce each week tor sh&lt; sue·
, cessive weeks: The last
publication will be made on
October 25, 1979, and lhe 28
days for answer will com mence on that date.
In case of your failure to
or
otherwise
_answer
respond as required by the
Oh10 Rules of
Civil
Procedure ,
the
final
hearing on this matter will
be held after the expiration
of 28 day~ after the l ast day
of publication of this notice
or as soon tttereafter as can
be scheduled by the Court .

All Colors

VARIETY OF

Dunaddress is

been assigned Case No.
17271 and is pending in the

BATH SETS

Asst. Sites

whose

Dunning ,

3 f'C .

PILLOWS

Gerald wayne

Gerald Wayne Dunning,
Defendant. This action has

In Prints and Solids

THROW

•

unknown:
'I' ou are hereby notified
that you have been named
a defendant in a legal ac·
tion entitled Betty Francis

KITCHEN

DRAPERIES

NOTICE By
PUBLICATION

Yd

Larry Spencer,
Clerk of Court
· of Meigs Coutny ,
Oh10
(9) 20, 27. 110) 4, 11, 18, 25,

6tc

-------

~~~~~-­

PARKING LOT

I

I

TWO DAYS ONLY

State Representative Ron James
(D-Proctorville) announced today
that the Ohio General Assembly has
.now appropriated over $92 million to
' establiSh the Ohio Energy Credits
Program permanently in Ohio law
'\I The PW'pOSC of the Energy Credits
f Program is to help elderly or
1, disabled low income homeowners
.~: ~~renters pay their winter heating

f

SHOP

MASON FURNITURE
FOR THE BEST DEALS IN THE
TRISTATE AREA

1

•

"About 360,000 Ohioans will be
). eligible for the energy discount this
~ year under the new law, " stated
,1 Representative James. " It is well
known that rising energy costs have
~)Placed the elderly, poor, and
~ disabled in such a dangerous con~ ditioo that they may be forced to

MASON FURNITURE

I

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

y

OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT
Herman Grate
773·5592

choose between heated hb~es in
winter cr food and medical care.' '
The Energy Credits frogram is
designed to assist these people on
fixed incomes to pay their fuel bills.
The new permanent Energy
Credits Program will be administered solely by the Ohio Department of Talllltion. Elderly or
diS~) bled homeowners and renters
who had an adjusted gross income
last year of less than $9,000 or' who
hltd an income of $4,500 for the first
six months of this year will be
eligible.
The amount of the credit will be 30
percent off home heating bills for
elderly' and disabled persons who
earned less than $5,000 for a full

MUST FUND SYSTEM
MANSFIELD, Ohio ( AP) - A
judge has ordered the Richland
County
commiSSioners
to
adequately ft!nd the county cowt
_system.
A. Ross Sieverling , retired
Ashland County probate and
juvenile judge, Mooday ordered the
commissioners to allocate money
"as immediately and responsibly
necessary to continue the
administon of justice of the courts of
Richland County."
The judge was assigned to the case
by the Ohio Supreme Court.
The action was initiated by Judges
Max Chilcote, Rex Larson, David
Arbaugh and Richard Christiansen.
Named as defendants are
commissioners Richard McFarland,
Dale Cook, and David McGinty,
Auditor Freeman Swank and county
Treasurer George Griffith.
The suit cha'rged that the
commissioners failed to provide th~
courts "sufficient furids for the
continuing administration of

~

:fi
Hush

Pu~l~®

comfortable
change of pace
Beneath this elegant day a nd
evening sandal lies a heart of
pure c omfort fxciling
c ombinations of brushed
p igsk in leathers with matc hing
smooth trims highUghl &lt;1very
m ove you make. The fit's a ·
· natural Good look s never tell

The judges have charged the
commissioners have appropriated
general
fund
moneys
for
discretionary items and for nonpriority items instead of for the
~~cOntin uin g administration of
justice ."

NEW AND USED

l

\

I

..

RECEIVES PLEDGE CARD - Rio Grande
President Paul C. H.llyes, left, receives ·a pledge card
lot the college 's "Challenge for the Second Century"

1

Colors:
•Pewter
•Black
•Brown

'

VIC TOIIIA

MATCHING SAGS

THE
SHOE BOX

FRIDAY NIGHT SPECIAL 5 TIL 10

MENU

Wagner Broadcasting makes
.$5,000 pledge to Rio CC

"We believe that Rio Grande
College and Community College is a
valuable a.uet to our area and deserving of all the suPPQ~'t""e can give, "
said Paul Wagner, president of
Wagner Broadcasting, Inc. ·of
Gallipolis.
Paul and Dene Wagner of WJEH
and WYPC radio exprel!Sed this sentiment as they presented a $5,000
., pledge to the college's "Challenge
~: tor the Second Century" Campaign.
• Rio Grande College and Comc..nunity College president, Or. Paul
1-C. Hayes, said. "The Wagners • ef.
~oris to promote and support not
only the college but all of
\ Southeastern Ohio is a major source
of conununity pride · and we
gratefully acknowledge this."
The Wagner Broadcasting pledge
is part of the ongoing public portion
of the campaign. Community ccmmittees in Gallia. Jackaon, Meigs
and Vintoo Counties are seeking
I financial support for the college's
1 future growth from area busineS5
I and industry.
The "Challenge for the Secorxl
1 Century" is sliiUJUy more than one .

I

Salad Bar

and more than halfway to
Its $4.9 milllon goal. S2.6 million has
been pledged thus far.
The clltllpalgil'lllielul to provide Ide
ditional funds for academic scholarshipa and construction of a Student ·
Conununity Center.
Hayes said, "The total dollar
figures pledged to the campaign in·

year olcl

MERCED. Calif. f AP ) - Five
persons were killed when a KC-135
stratotanker crashed and burned in
the first airplane crash at Castle Air
Force Base in a de&lt;:ade.
Two

other

minor injuries after the plane

slratotanker because the crew

included two student pilots and an
instructor pilot, said U, James
Berg, a base spokesman .
The last crashes at the . Central

only

-

·Coffee or Milk

'$625

ITEMS TOO NUMEROUS TO MENTION.

.

COME EARLY!
vLAMPS
v FURNITURE
'

AU ITEMS
CASH &amp; CARRY.
NO REFUNDS.
AS IS.

-~

\\\ \\\ 'l.

v PICTURES
r/ETC.

IN CASE OF RAIN, SALE WILL BE HELD INSIDE

ENTERTAINMENT
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
NIGHT

•.

JU LEGAL
8['.'rRAG6S SOLD

who

crashed during a landing
Wednesday .
Officials
were
uncertain who was flying the

LIVING COLOR
PACKAGE SPECIAL

Tea,

SO DON'T MISS OUT!

servicmen

managed to escape were treated for

\ LIFE SIZE

Wine,

$2~~.

.

Plus Tax

PHOTOGRAPHED
..('

$17.00 when you
pick up your package.

RIDE
THE WIND

VOU Gl:l A1.1.

.' 16 x 20 rr = ...... :_: ...:

5 PIECE GROUP

I

Not Available On Groups.

P~i!fl, &amp; Locu.~t Dr.J n Middleport

. '"" PLUS
'

MONDAV, SEPT. 24
J; I

'' ~-·.
~"
I

TIME: 11 am til4 pm

BEN FRANKLIN STORE
200 E. MAin St. in Pomeroy

OR

I~

.

.
~«·

I

Friday as a result of the combined
action of the cold front and the low
pressure system . There may bhio
tonight and Friday .
Highs today were expected to be in
the low to mid 70s, while lows tonight
will be in the low to mid 50s.
Minnesota to Colorado by early
tonighl. The front is likely w .enter
oorthwest Ohio by ~'riday morning
and slow down while moving across
the sl.ate.
Rain is expected to continue
Friday as a result of the combined
action of the cold front and ·th,e low
pressure system. There may be
heavy rain at times across southern
Ohio ronight and Friday.
Highs today were expected to be in
the low to mid 70s, while lows ronight
will be in the low to mid 50s.

15.

New applicanl:! can request application forms from the Depart·
ment of Taxation in various ways. A
toll-free number 1-1100-282-4310 has
been established to answer any
questions and to take requests for
applications. New applicants can
also write the Department of
Taxation, Energy Credits Program,
P. 0 . Box 2619, Columbus, Ohio,
43216. In addition, application {orms
will be available at post- offices,
banks, savings and l&lt;&gt;an institutions,
state and local government offices,
utility companies, fuel dealers,
libraries, trailer parks, senior
citizens' centers, housing projects,
and other such places. The Ohio
Commission on Aging plans to con·
duct programs to reach people in
rural areas.
"Ohio makes the largest effort of
any state in America to aid needy
citizens to pay tli~ir utility bills,"
concluded Representative James. ''I
want to urge everyone in my district
to sign up lor the program il they are
eligible and to assist those who are
eligible to sign up. The program will
help to alleviate the burden of this
winter's hi.jlh heating bills for those
with limited incomes, and we want
to make certain that everyone
eligible receives this benefit."

REP RillS

Coupon must accompany Ol'del' .

1978 IMPAlA 4 DR............................. s5495·
11 ,000 miles, V-8, auto., P . S., P.B., air conditioned, vinyl trim, white
over camel finish, truly a cremepuff . _
.

1976 CHEVELLE MALIBU CLASSIC ........... s2295
.4 door, 76,950 miles, V-8 engine, automatic , P .S., P . B., factory air, tint:

glass, am·fm stereo radio, clean interior, dark blUe finish .

1976 MUSTANG II ......................... :...... s2795
&lt;4door, auto. trans., good t ires, radio, vinyl interior, good economy .

1975 CHEVY G-10 VAN .......................... s2499
6 cyl., std. trans ., radio, speakers, partial conversion with carpeted In ·
terior, bi!d , air vent &amp; skyroof .

1976 CHEVY C60 ................................ Jf1995
Cab chas~ls, 292 engine, 2 speed rear axle, 825x20 tires solid cab &amp;
good mechanically . 102" to axle .
• '
·

1972 VOLKSWAGON BUS ........................
s2495'
'
Tr~vel or recreation, fold -down seat, ice bo x· good tires

tenor.

'

Mlleagebylocalowne_r .

~i;;'ve aulo.,

PS, PB
'

Cle1~n

Cpe. Local one owner car, Air, clean car.

VISIT OUR LOT, CHECK OUR NEW

CA~

&amp; TRUCK

DISCOUNT PRICES

'

WE WANT YOUR BUSINESS

H

Your Chevy Dealer"

992·2126

Pomeroy
Open Evenings 8 P.M. \

SPECIAL OF THE WEEK

1978 OLDS CUTlASS SUPREME BROUGHAM
Ex!ra Sha_rp, extra clean, low miles, local, one Owner. Completely
equ•pped w•th all the eXtras.

'5995.00

1974 AMC

1977 FORD
MUSTANG II GHIA
Automatic trans. , power steer ·
ing, air conditioning, AM ·FM Stereo radio.

JAVELIN
Dark greeh metallic paint with
white vinyl ~op . Automatic trans.,
power Slejl[ing, A/ C

1

'4495

1995

2 PICKUP TRUCKS

1978 FORD

1-77 DODGE 34 Ton
1-76 CHEV. lJz Ton

BRONCO
Dark .brown, white spoke wheels,
all terrain tires, lock-out hubs,
automatic trans.

'6495

''WANTED"

I•

OF ANY YEAR OR MODEL.

' 1
1
1
l

FROM vouR coLoR NEOAnves
Um11 one order per coupon . KOdak Of &lt;.amp~
colOr nog~hvls. al tM ..,. soze.

1
1
1

VALID SEP. 17 THRU SEP. JO, 1171

I

L- ·------- ·--- ·· -··-- ·..

-- ----~

·V -Illage Pharmaar:;

'·

POMEROY .MOTOR CO.

GOOD USED VOLKSWAGEN$

J

LoJ
'

·

!.ru Color Reprints -II

12 for 11.89

clean in·
,

1973 CHEV. IMPALA ..............................s1295 ·

PRICES REDUCED

: I

•

OlDS 88 RO'VIU. ..............':.-........ '3095

. . Black ; inyl roO!, biack -~y.

SAVE ON BOTH

r---------------------~

CARDINAL SUPERMARKET

THE MEIGS INN

Ml!i8 LINNENBRUEGGER
Ww..BESPEAKER
Mila Gertrude Lirmenbruegger of
.Athena will be gueSt speaker at the

12

GROUPS AT NO E-XTRA COST .

C-0-M-J-N,G .... One Day Only
iATURDAY, SEPT 22
TIME: 11 am to4 pm

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

GREAT fALLS, Mont. (AP) The Air Force denied Wednesday ·
that a Z.year-old boy who died at a
civilian hospital was refused
treatment hours earlier at a military
facility .
The son of Airman Dan Grieger
and his wife, Susanna, was buried
Wednesday at Oak Harbor, Ohio.
The angry parents have
demanded
an
Air
Force
investigation. Mrs. Grieger says a
medical technician refused to admit
the child Saturday to the
Malmstrom Air Foree Base hospital
four hours before he died of
meningitis.
Mrs. Grieger said the airman
refused to admit her son Danny
because she had forgotten her base
identification card.

Coupon eSpecial

/. F-R-E-E.~ .2-COLOR CHARMS on
l1
SINGLE SUBJECTS

FROM ATHENS, 0.

By The A~soclated Press
A low pressure system is moving
from the western GU of Mexico
toward the Ohio Valley- and is
expected to reach Kentucky by
Friday1 with rain spreading w the
north arxl northeast of the system's
path and into Ohio.
National Weather
Service
forecasts indicatl! that the rain will .
reach southern Ohio early tonight
and the northern part of the state bY
tate tonight.
A rnld front approached Ohio from
the west this nwrning and was
expected to exterxl from Minnesota
to Coloraoo by early tonight. The
Iron t is likely to enter northwest
Ohio bY Friday morning and slow
down while moving across the state.
Rain Is expected to continue

sure a security and permanence at
::,tuuon unequalled in ito
~CUBe and Middleport First
"'The - fund's· --worklnl! ' enJ ·~ ··~l'I;WI.IIY\eria:":t~~ .. h d...... ~ .. all
Sunay.
15 the ruling eader of the
dowment , e a ~. ww ow 111
First United Prebyterian Church in
to proceed with OW' coune of in·
Athens and a librarian there for 28
creased scholarship opporturuues yean. She now serves oo the Departfor area young people·
ment of Ministry in the Scioto
Presbytery. Mill Linnenbruegger
will speak at 9::11 a . m. at the
Syracuse Church, and 11 a.m. at the
Middlep(ll'l Church. She is serving at
the churches in the absence of the
Rev. Leslie Stansbary, interim
California · base occurred in 1969
pastor.
when three Air Force B-52lxmbers
were involved in separate accidents,
· $5,100 WINNER ·
Berg said. Six people died.
Meigs CountY has anotber $5,000
Before Wednesday's crash, the
winner In the Ohio Lottery's three
KC-135 had made several ather
card match game. She is Mrs.Na0011
practice landings in which it touched
Wyatt, Minersville, who purchased
oown, then took off again without
her winning ticket at the Pomeroy
stopping, said Maj . l..e&lt;&gt; Vrana, a
Krre.
Her cash prize will be
public information officer.
jresented . in about four weeks.
James Soulsby, P(llleroy, was also a
recent winner of $5,000 in tile three
VETERANS MEMORIAL
~rd match game.
Admitted--Robert Morehead ,
Portland; Billy Brewer, Portland;
Richard Dean, Middleport; Wllllam
SEEKS DIVORCE
Filing for divorce is Betty Francis
Th001a, Pomeroy.
Discharged-Eunice Nutter, John
Dunning, P&lt;meroy, against Gerald
Moon, John Landaker, Clareoce Wayne Dunning, address unknown .
. Norris, Oscar Imboden, Russell Filing for dissolution are Regina
Tucker, Joseph Pettit, Wanda Dawn Grate, Rutland and Ronald
Eugene Grate, Rutiarxl.
Powell.
Holzer Medical Center
Dlleblrlell, Sepl. It
MEETS MONDAY
Virginia Arbaugh, Margaret
A special meeting of Pomeroy
Bowman, Patricia Brown, Brenda Village Council has beell set for 7:30
Dwm, Bernadine Gilmore, r.tn. p.m. on Monday, Sept. 24.
William Chaptonstall and daughter,
~ Harrison, Ruth King, Ray
Mullln, Roney Ramsey, Della Scott,
Paul Sinclair, steve Slllw, Esther
BASKETBALL
Thomas, James Vallance, Betty
·
NaiiOnal
Waugh.
Boskelboll Association
ATLANTA HAWKS - Waived
Blrtlil Sept. II
Claxton, guard, and Rickey
Mr.and Mrs. Ronald Ringling, ,, Tim
Brown, forward .
son, Jackson; Mr. and Mrs. Daniel . NEW YORK KNICKS - Waived
Colby, son, Jacbon; Mr. and Mrs. · Tom Hocks, guard, and Kim Goetz,
forward .
David Ward, daugbter, Wellston.

2 ·- 8 • IO's
2 - 5•7'!5
10 - Wallets

Representative James, the state is
foUowing various procedures to inform Ohioans about the program.
In the first place, any person who
has previously received the energy
credit will automatically receive a
new application in the mail from the
Department of Taxation by October

Rain expected in Ohio Friday

Till~

ON!: Giant

REMEMBER!

30, 1979. On December 15, the Depar·
tmmt of Taxation win have received
all the applications and'will issue acceptance or rejection notices.
" It is extremely important that we
get the word out on the Energy
Credit PrQ8fam 8ll soon and 'as
thoroughly 8ll poasible," Represen·
tative James said. According to

Five killed in airplane crash

Southern Photo's--..

I

Spaghetti
(all you can eatl
Garlic Bread,

PRICES TOO LOW TO ADVERTISE.

capital campaign from Wagner Broadcaating
President Paul Wagner and VIce President Dene
Wagner.

'

'

AGREEMENT. REACHED
DAVTON , Ohio (AP) - Officiais
, said Tuesday that . a · tentative
contract agreement has been
reached between the International
Union of Electrical Workers and
General Motors wrp.
Union 3p0keoman Jerry Borstell
said the pact is similar to the United
Auto Workers agreement with GM.
Borstell said he expects
ratification of the contract by the
end of the month.
It affects about 32,000 ~nion
members nationwide.

'\.\~tl ,l'\ ~ 4'

Denies charges

) I

justice ."

Weekend At Meigs Inn

'

tl

so good .

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

SALE STARTS AT 9 A.M.

year, and 25 perce~t · 'orr home
heating bills for !hMe wbo rarned
between $5,000 and $9,000 for the full
year. Those whose fuel charges are
included in rent payments and thOile
who use fuel oil, bottled propane,
coal, wood, or kerosene will receive
a one-time payment of $125.
The energy discount on heating
bills covers the five winter heating
months from November through
March, but because of the late start
this year, the November credit will
be given retroactively in December
and January. The one-time payment
for fuel oil of $125 will be sent out on
or about February 15.
The deadline for applications due
to the Tax Commissloo is November

\ \ \.\\\ \ ~_ ~

FRIDAY, SEPT. 21 &amp;SATURDAY, SEPT. 22

i

*

I

GeneralAssembly appropriated$92 million

Cleland, Goldie
Neutzling, Ada Bissell,
Goldie Wolle, lnzy
Keller, Mary Hayes,
Newlun arxl C8therine.Miller.
Mrs. Helen WoH W,!IS the pialllisll

Plaintiff,
· VS ·

•

WE WILL BUY YOUR CAR.

.'
'q'
.'
••
:I
I0

' I

"

I t
I I

•''
''
.' ''

.,

�10 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport -Pome roy, 0 ., Thursday , Sept . 3!, 1979

11- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday , Sept. 20, 1979

"' ,,, i

DrCKTni\rY

,

'\t fi~N}

Your Best Buys Are 'F oulld in the ·Sentinel Oassifieds
Notices

Yard Sale

Auto Sales

WANT AD
CHARGES

MEIGS CO UN TY HUMANE
SOCIETY . 992-6260 . Pou
avai lable fo r ad option and informat ion ser vice.

YARD SALE . • families . 112
Brick St.. Pomeroy . Con~y

1974 VEGA HATCHBACK , call
303-675-1501 or 305-67S-2488
or 304-675- 1553.

I ~ Words or Under

GUN SHOOT EVERY SUNDAY I
PM FACTORY CHOKE ONLV.
RACINE GUN Cl UB.

rh:tt~e

C1tsh

I d•y
Zda;ys
3 daJs
6day!l

1.00

1 2.5

LSO

I.!Ml
2.2:5
3.75

1.1(1

3.00

Each word over~ minimum

Lost and Found

IS word! Is 4 cents per word ptt
&lt;Illy. A~ n.mntn~ other than ronse..·utive days wtll be ehar~ed at
thto I day rate

FOUND MEIGS High Sc haa l
o reo : Fe ma le lris n Setter . Red
in co lor , red co lla r. Humane
Society. 992-6260.

In memory, Card of 'Thanks
vance.

lOS T: BLACK cocker s panie l in
Cherry Ridge-68 1 a rea . Col i
9'11-60'13.

Y~ rd
salt'5 are accepted on!\' with

FOUND RACI NE area : Sc hool
rin.g. Gold in color. 949-2 122.

Clt tl'"" ~ Sentinel

FOU ND: COLU E dog on Kreger
parking lot. Friday evening.
Dog gri elt'i ng for owne r·. Call
9'12-5308.

and Obituar)' · 6 ('t'nts per word,

$3.00 minimum . Cash !n adMobile Home sales and

cas h with orcif&gt; r. 25 cent Chclrfo{e
for 11ds ca rrying Box Number In

The Publisher reser\'t•s thl' •
ri!;!:ht to t.'di l or rPject &lt;m~· ads
d ee m ed objecti o na L The
Publisher will nul ht&gt; ti'SJlllnsibll'
for more tho!in

Ullf'

st&gt;rtion .

incorrt•l't

in-

Phonem-2156

NOTICE
WANT~AD

/A_DVERTISING
DEADLINES
Montmy
on Saturday

~ oon

Tuestla\'

thru Frid-a\·
4 P.M .•
tht day t&gt;t-furt' flll hl k ation
Sunday
4P.M.

Friday aflt'moon

The
Gallia -Meigs
Community
Action
Agency is accepting applications for fhe follow ing positions:
1. CETA Intake Of·
ficer - This position is
responsible for com plete determination of
eligibility lor ail CETA
Titles. or Programs and
lor Targeted Jobs Tax
Credit. Duties include
using the Intake System
and forms established
by the Prime Sponsor,
referr-ing eligible ap ·
plicants to appropriate
programs or other ser ·
vice providers, and
preparing and submit ·
ting
required
documents and reports
to the Office of Manpower Development .
Requirements include a
degree in Administra ·
tion, Social wo,.-k, or
Related
field .
Knowledge ot CETA
Programs helpful. Some
travel requ ired. Entry
level salary is S9,75S.
Application deadline is
September 25, 1979.
;8 1
Education
t Specialist - This position is responsible for
assisting tt)articipants in
obtaining their GED;
providing
part ·time
work e xperience, supportive SJI'!Yice, and job
placemerrt . Duties in·
cll•d e
p roviding
c la ssroom training, test
assessmel'l t,
in d i.,i dual iz ~d instruction,
and coun se ling . Requirements include a
minimum of a Bachelor
Degree in EducatiDn
with t e aching ex perience in reading. Ex ·
perience with CETA
Programs helpful , some
travel required . Entry
leve l salary is $10,504.
Application deadline is
September 26, 1979.
Applications for these~
positions are available
from the Ohio Bureau of
Employment Services
or the C. A.A. Office in
Cheshire.
Affirmative
Action / Equal
Op ·
portunity Employer .

You ' I I
tract i t down
much f as ter
wi t h a

WA NT AD

Help Wanted
OR LPN with Phar·
macology. full time. 3· 11 shift .
Shifting differ~n toi l. Pinecre st
Care Ce nte r, Judy Barkus ,
-4-46- 71 12 .
RN

CAR SALESMAN . Send resume
to Box 7• 3, Pomeroy, OH
45 769 . No ex pe r ien c e
necessary .

Yard Sale
YARD SA LE . Sept . 20 and 21.
300 Wrignt St., First street
,post Pomeroy Elementary. ·
Watch for signs. Clo thing ,
baby's and children's, beds.
curtains. disnes and . misc.
Held Ra in o r shine .
YARD SALE in progress. All
sizes clo th in g . cu rt a ins
be dspread s. lamps , sewing
machin e , a lso CB . 1 mile west
of Dexter , o n CR 4.
GARAGE SALE . 3 family
Ga rage Sole. Saturday , Sept.
22. lasts oil day . Clothes a nd
lo ts of misc. items. Do ve
Grueser residence , beside
Salisbury Elementary School,
Old Rt . 33. Phone m -351&gt;4 .
PUBLIC NOTICE
Notice is hereby given
that on September 22nd,
1979, at 10 :00 A.M. a publi c
sale will be held at 105
Union Avenue, Pomeroy,
Ohio, to sell lor c ash the
following collateral to -wit :
1971 Chevrolet Monte
Carlo --_NO. 138571K 144030
T976 Ford Granada 2 Dr.
Sedan .. No. 6E82F 162223
The Farmers · Bank &amp;
Savings
Company ,
Pomeroy , Oh io, reser~es
the right to bid at this sale.
(91 19, 20, 21, 3tc
PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF PAULINE M.
MARK INS , DECEASED
Case No. 22107

NOTICE OF ·
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On Sept. 11 , 1979, in the
Meigs County · Probate
Court, Case No . 22807, J .
William Brown, Rutland ,
Ohio 45775, was appointee
E xecutor of the estate of
Pauline
M . Markins,
deceased, late of Rutland ,
Ohio 45775.
Robert E . Buck
Probate Judge Clerk
(91 13, 20, 27, 3tc
NOTICE ON
FILING OF
INVENTORY AND
APPRAISEMENT
The Stale of Ohio, Meigs
County Court of Common
Pleas, Probate Division
To t he Exec utor or Ad ·
m inis"trator of the estate, to
s uc h of the following as are
residents of the Slate of
Ohio, viz : ·· the surviving
spouse, the ne•t of k in, the
be neficiaries under the
will; and to the attorney
and attorneys representing
any of the aforementioned
persons ~

Thomas
A.
Clark ,
Syrac use , Ohio, Case No.
227«.
You are hereby notified
Ihat the Inventory and Ap·
prai sement of the estate of
the
aforementioned,
deceased{ late of said Coun ty , we re lied In this Court .
Said Inventory and Ap praisement will be for
he aring before this Court
on the 1st day of October,
1979, at 1 :OOo'clocl&lt; P.M.
An y pe,.-son desiring to
ffl e e x ceptions thereto
must til e them at least five
days pr ior to the date set
for hearing .
Given under my hct.nd
and seal of s aid Court, this
lOth day of Se pte mber 1979.
Robe rt E . Buck
Judge
By Carolyn G. Thom'a s
Deputy Clerk

striper un iforms . something
for everyone. 19th, 20tn ond
21st . 10om to ?

1976 PLYMO UTH VOLARE . Excellen t condi lion . 29 ,000
miles . $2400. '1'12·31'18 .

GARAGE SALE . Friday and
Saturday . 9-? Green house
beside Sta te Highway Garage
on Rt. 7 . Misc.

1977 THUNDERBIRD , excellen t
condit ion . Rad ia ls . AM-FM,
ai (, PS, PB, recli ning seots, 2
new studded rad ia l snow
tires . 2A7-3594 after 5.

YARD SALE . Thurs. a n·d Fri .
9-5. 761 Ash St .. Midd leport.

goes . S.10

1'173 DODG E PICKUP . 3-18
engine, white spoke whe els,
sliding bock glass, good condi·
lion. $1 800. 247-3863.

GARAGE SALE. Sept. 21 ·22.
John Keck , Mulbe rry Hts ..
Pomeroy . l ots of rea l good
dr esses a nd snoes. You may
try them on . Also, misc. items .

1972 PINTO RUNABO UT. A·
speed, for parts, has 4 mog
wheels , $28 ea . new. 2 new
recapped tires, $150. Also,
slant six 1973 Dodge eng ine ,
55.000 miles . Numerous new
po rts, $150. Pap·up camper.
Sleeps 6. refrige ra tor and
sink , $450. leonard Boss.
Syracuse . m -5006.

YARD SAL E. Maso n. WV. 10
Fosler Dr. . up st reet o t cor
wash. 10 am to 6pm . Friday
and Saturday , Sept. 21 -2'2 .
FOUR FAMILY Gara_ge Sci e.
O ne day only . Sat., Sept. 22 at
147 . Sm:rtn 3rd A ve. , Middleport , Ohio. 8 am ·? 2 white
uniforms , size 16 in good con·
dition . Children"s dotMas . Nice
dresses and many items.

YARD SALE . Fri. and Sat . 10
om til ? at Buck's residenCe ,
129 Mulb.r ry Ave., Pomeroy.
Stereo stand , winter coots ,
clothing · children's, women's
and men 's. and misc. items .

1970 GMC CHURCH .bus, 5.4
passenger in good shape,
ready to go. Con be seen at
39" Beech St ., Middleport or
co11992-5770 or 949-2208.

YARD SALE . Friday. Sept. 21.
Beside lo r ry's Groc e ry .
Syracuse . Baby 'dre s ses .
matern ity
clothe s ,
nice
dresses , size 18 and 20.

Wanted to Rent

GARAGE SALE . Sept. 20-22,
across torm Minersville Bol l
Fie ld.

WANTED TO Lease: Coal property for deep mine operation . Must be 48" in thick neS!I .
367-7593.

FOUR FAMI LV Yard Soia.
Dusky St., Syracuse . Thursday
and Friday.

Sale, Rent or Trade

Pets for Sale

FOR SALE or rent, Nice 3
bedroom modular located in ·
Portland areo . Set up on lot or
can be moved. Coil otter • :30,
304-273-5272.

HOOF HOLLOW, .Eng l;sh and
Western .
Saddles
and
harness . Horses and ponies .
Ruth Reeves . 614-698-3290.
Barding &amp; Riding lessons and
Horse Core products .Western
boo ts , Children's SJ 5.50,
Adults $29.00.

For Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Pork ,
Route 33, north of Pomeroy.
large lots . Call9'12· 7• 79.

RISING STAR Kennel. Boarding. Coii367-0!292.

3 AND 4 RM furn ished and un furnished
opts.
Phone
9'12-5434 .

REGISTERED CHOCOLATE poo-

dl•. $fi:O. 992-6260.

COAL . LIMESTONE . sand,
gravel, calcium chlor ide , fe rtil izer, dog food , and all type s
of salt . Excelsior Salt Work s.
Inc.. E. Ma in St .. Pomer oy.
m -38'1T .

·

WINTER POTATOES. C.W. ProHill form . Portland . OH . $8 o
nundred ond $50 hundred .

ANTIQUES. FURNITURE . glass .
chino , onytMing. See or call
Ruth "Gosney , antiques . 26 N.
Middlepo rt ,
OH .
2nd .,
992-3T61.

DUROC BOARS. Purebred .
Reedsville. 614·378-6311 .
21 FOOT OF wrougnt ir0f'1 ra iling. Beige carpet 8x 10 . Pull
down ceiling light . Mo vie proieclor and screen . Aher 5. call
7•2·2020.

WANTED : SAW logs . Payment
upon deli very to ou r yard.
7:30-3:30 weekdays. Blaney
Hardwoods , SR 339, Barlow,
OH 678-2960.

POTATOES . R~ Pontiac. Ken·
nebec, S8 per 100 lb. Smail $.4
per 100 lb. 3 miles west of
Darwin between Gold Ridge
and CR 1• on TR 145. Cecil
Toben.

WANTED , JUNK. Batteries,
radiators. motors, auto. tron a.
No Sunday coils, q49-:i!563.

CLARK RE SIDENCE, Syrocuse.
Cor ner Crook1 and 4th . 3
piece bedroom set, kitcnen
table, .C chairs, 4 dining room
chairs , wal l mirror , cord table.
radio. 21amps, TV R.C.A. . Call
992-3083 or 9'12-272().
ELECTRIC FURNACE, new.
suitable for trailer or small
hou se. F.M. Guthrie, 33 Townsend, Ath e ns, OH . Phone
5'12-2158 .
1978 ST AR CRAFT
boal ,
Stordeck 19ft ., 140 n.p . Mercury engLne and traile r, Excelle nt olr purpose boo t. Pr iced to sell. 992-2196.
'12xi S RUG . $15 . m -5534 .
DARK PINE dining room table
with ex tra leaf and .C captains
cha irs. 992-5083.

Porn eroy Landmark
1 EXCELLENT UNICO 16 CU. FT.
COPPERTONE REFRIGERATOR

BALDWIN PIANO. I year ald.
Coli cred it department,
61 '-5'12-5122.

'250

Real Estate for Sale
REA L ESTATE Loans. Pu rcha se
and refinonce . 30 year terms.
VA. No mo ney dow n (e ligible
ve terans ). FHA · As low as 3
per ce nt down (non-ve terans).
Irela nd Mortgage Ca., 77 E.
State, Athens. 614-592-3051.
REAl ESTATE : 1 acre lot in Rig·
gs cres t Manor, betw een Tup·
pers Plains and Chester.
Pnone 985-3929 and 985-&lt;4 l 29 .
SEYEN ROOMS and both. 2
acres . 992 - 25~ .
40 ACRES LAND on Bai ley R~ n
Rood . Good hunting , ti mbe r,
all mine ral rights . $1 2,000 .
742-2442.

CLARK RE SIDEN CE, Syracuse.
co rn er of Crooks e nd Fou rth ,
Neor sw im dub . boll fie ld ,
tenni s cou rts , pro pose d
marino , 6 rooms and ba th
fra me . l ot 100 I( 150' s•o.ooo.
Coli 992-3083 or 992-2720.

Pu rt ho:. se
and
Refinance
30 Year Te rm s
A- No money down
(e lig ible ve te ran s)
FHA- AS low as 3%
down (non -veterans )

IRELAND
MORTGAGE
CO.
77 E. State, Athe ns

NEW
LISTING
• Establ ished business in
Pomeroy , " THE KID·
DIE SHOPP E " . Cali for
details .
NEW LISTING - ·30
a c re s. va t ant land ,
sec luded , on a good
townsh ip road. 7 a cr es
tillabl e,
bal a n ce
WOOdland . Has many
uses. ONLY $13,350.00.
NEW LISTING - Ap·
proKimately 25 a c res of
bu ilding s ite s , 4 lots
alr e ad y
s urveyed .
W a ter ,
e lectr ic
availabl e, on a raod ad·
jace nt to good subdivi·
s ion. Cali for f inanc ing
available . $27,500.00.
LOVELY
2 · 5TORY
FRAME - 4 bedrooms,
equiped kit c he n , :2
baths, lots of carpeting
and paneling, N.G . forc ed air hea t, full base ·ment, garage, ca r port.·
patio. A low $28 ,500.00 .
NICE
1 · FLOOR
FRAME - 3 bedrooms,
bath, N. G . .heat, storms,
glass e nc losed porch ,
part basement, garage,
about 3 acres, fruits and
grapes and others .
$25,000.00.
MIDDLEPORT - Love ly home locate d in e x ·
c ellent ne ighborhoOd
brick and fram e.
bedrooms, 1112 baths,
c arport, patio, fenced
yard. This you must see .
$59,500.00.
REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland, Sr.
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
992· 2259
992-6191

5

Headquarters
Appliances
Sales &amp; Service

1 NEW FUEL OIL FURNACE
CLEARANCE PRICED
- --

POMEROY

L~~P.MARK
Q~ ·- ,J A~¥ ~~~.arsey

,

~. Phone PJ2·2181

I

5071
O s born
Rd ..
Reedsville, OH, 45772 .
For information Call
667~5 . Will be OPen
late If you ne e d
something.
9·14·1 m o .

C. R. MASH
VINYL &amp; AWM.

SIDING
•New Home
•Addons
* Remol~ings
*Free estimates

MONTGOMERY
TRAILER SALES
uno Montgom t r., Rd .
L an g ~v lll e , Ohio
6 H ' " 4?•S E ve ning '
1 M tles Ea \1 o l Wol keso.rl ll•

S U P~R

GOOSE

STOCK

T RAI LE R NO W AVA ILA BLE
J

OPENING SEPT. 11th
Classes: Ba lle t
TIP&amp; Jan
Ages-4 and up
Shirley Corpenter
Instructor·
·choreographe r
Located in Rocine, 0 .
(f orm t rlv
We11v ttrs
Skiff Building)
Ph . 949-2710 or 949-2150
8-29-T m o

Services
OHered

All Masonary Work
Foundation,
Brick Laying,
Concrete Finishing.
Free Estimates
992· 5304, 992 ·2238
B-21 -1 mo.

Real Estate lor Sale

DON'T S j&lt;~I ~ LV~
THe &amp;RAI&lt;E; IN
Hl7 CAR HAD BE'E'N
SA~OTAI&gt;cD -- AND HE'
KN'EW THE MAFIA
WA ~ AFTER HIM~

vv ..,.... ' :;c;JMioTM IN(S;
IN A PUNCH
M 16H'T DO.

EVE N IF HE ~U R VIVED THAT
~
cAA; H IN THE LAI&lt;E.. NE )(T TI~IE
HE M16HT NOT 8 E SO LU CI&lt;Y ;
~0 HE
DECIDED TO

.

()

Roger Hysell
Garage
J ,, mile off Rt. 7 by -pa ss
on St . .R t. 114 tcward
Rutland .

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992 · 5682
• 30-lf c

H. L Writesel
Roofing
New, repair,
gutters and
down spouts.
Window cleaning
Gutter cleaning
Free Estimates
949 ·2862--949 · 2160

5rAV OEAO
T I~ L

THE HEAT

COOLED~

MiCk 's
Barber &amp;
Style Center
, lntroduces'-

HAIR STYLIST

$9 ,500.

RENOVATEO
2
bedroom home, na t. gas
fu r nace. c arpe ti ng , d in ·
ir'tg area . 2 car gar a ge
and extra lot . $25,000.
70 ACRES - Will sell at
a lillie ove r 5200 .00 per
ac re .
NEW LISTING - 27
a cres ne ar F orked Run
Lake . Water and elec.
a vailabl e . $15.000.
STONE Nice one
bedroom hom e with
bath, nat . ga s F.A. fur na ce with city water and
2% a c res . Reduced to
$20,000 .
NEW LISTING 2
le vel acres wl1h large
s hade trees. 3 be droom
home, ce ram ic ba th ,
n a t. gas F . A. furna ce.
G arage with too l room.
Ideal for fam ily.
NEW LISTING - Clean
60 a cre f a rm at All red .
Lots of buildings , good
fe nces, minerals and
farm hou se. A real tra c tor fa r m .
BUILDING LOTS - In
Baum Subdiv is io n, will
w e lcome offer . Other s
a t Syra c use, Rocks prings, Rutland , Pomeroy
and near Rutland .
Call 992-3325 or 992·3876

·Housing
Headquarters

992· 2367

'-----

&lt;J.-

Yesterday's ) Jumbln CHAMP DELV E ARTERY BRI DGE ·
Answer: Wha t the te legraph could have been wh en
it was first in11ented- A ' 1GAEAT HE LP"
Tbursday, Se pt. 20

.BRIDGE.

BORN I.OSER

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

RACINE, 0 .
949-2748 or

• 86
t K 10 5 3
• A Q6 4

Pomeroy , 0 .
8·26·1 m o .

•

E~PERIENCED

WEST

•J

Servlctr

+J 42
. I J II!I I!

From "'• 11r 9•st
lhl lldoJ•r Rld lat~~or
tm.IIIHt Htll f!r Car • .

. ·t

Sm~h

Nelson
tillS, Inc.

Ph . 992-2174

ElWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers , toaste rs , Irons , a ll
small appli ances . la wn moer,
n e~~: t to State Highwa y Garage
on Route 7, 985·3825.
SEWING IMCHINE Repairs.
service . al l makes. 992 ·1284 .
The Fabric Shop. Po me roy .
Autna rized Singer Soles and
Service . We sharpen Scissors.

Mobile Homes Sale 's
1974 1&lt;4 x 70 mobile home.
Good condition. 99'2-5658 .
1972 l't'NN HAVEN 14x65 J
bedroom.
1970 'lindale 1 ~2.63 with ex ·
panda, 2 bed r.
1970NewMoa n 12x60 3 bedr .
1973 Sk yli ne 12x55 2 bedroom .
1972 Bonanza 121152 . 2 bedr .
B &amp; S MOBILE HOME SALES.
PT .
PLEA SANT , · W Y.
304-675-442• .

For Lease
LARGE BUSINE~ budding In
Pomeroy for lease . For mer
Wor ner Barber ond Beauty
Shop. Also, 3 bedroom o pt,
upsta irs, fu rn ished o r unfur nished .-cJ'92-2S28 e venings .

BIG AUCTION overy Wed .. 7
pm . Hartf ord Co mm unity
Cen ter. Hartford , WV, 4 miles
ab ov e
Po me roy -Ma so n
Bridge .

A 8

--

UTIT..E ORPHAN ANNIE

Vulne rable : North-S o uth
Deale r : S outh

Pome roy

I RECKON I' LL
MEET Ot l! E RlGHT

OH . LE M Sfl HE JEST CAR ~ I fS
THAl TO BAlANCE HIMSElF
0'1 IH " N&lt;\RilER PLACES ...
WEll , WE MIGHT AS WE'LL

uP 'TI·!' 1 RAIL,
L!'&lt;E AS NOT···

ROOtiNG

Wes t

North

Ea l'iit

2+

Pa ss

Pass

Pass
3+

Pass

Pass

Pass

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan So ntag

AL TROMM

CONST.

Expe r l

pl aye r s.

742· 2328
9· U · ( Pd. J

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING
F e deral Hou si ng &amp;
VeterdnS Adm in . La.ns.

wa s OYer wh at each side had
received in match points.
E ve r y oLhe r pa ir ha d bid six
s pades with Lhe No r t h-Sou th
c ards and were se t beca use of
Lhe heart le ad a nd rull . Nor l hSouth receiv ed a to p sc o re a nd

Eas t-West received a zero.

advant age o r "t he ir oppone nts'
naivet e . On the d iagra mmed
dea l. Eas L-West psyched t he
Inex per ie nced No r t h·SouLh
pa ir o ut of a cold game
contr ac L. buL wo und up with

!N EWSPAPER

nnLhtng but a good story f or

per. 'lrrd,vid4al ques rlons

~N T t.: RI'RI S E

ASSN

SERVICES, INC.

(Do you have a question for
the exp erts? Write " A sk the
Experts." care of this newsp a-

wm

~~U'*VJtJrl

Hours 9·1 M ., W ., F .
Other times by 1ppoi nt·
ment.
107 Syclmore cAt~ r )
Pome roy , 0 .

by THOMAS JOSfPH

GASOIJNE ALLEY

Destro4inq Blatant violat ion of
cit4 propert4! art icle t wo,

CALL 992 -7544

code fo ur !

EXCAV ATING. doz• r. loode'
a nd bockha. work , dump
trucks ond to- boys for hire ,
wi ll hau l fill dirL top sail ,
limestone and grove l. Coll8ob
or Roge r Jeff ers , day pnone
992-7089,
n ight
phone
991-3525 ar 9'12-5232.

You won't be
when L!O U come
in to answer
that summons 1

EXC AV.A TING .
doz e r .
bocknoe ond ditcner , Cha rles
R. Ha ti ie ld. Black Hoe Se rvice ,
Rutland. Ohio. Pone 7A2-2008.
PUlliNS EXCAVAT ING. Complete Service. Phone 99'2-2,. 78 .

..

AUTOM OBILE INSURAN CE
been cancelled? lost your
opera tors license? Phone
m -2143.

1

'-be ltnswered If ac companier:J
the'r effort s.
by stamped. sell-addressed
Sout h ope ne d lw o clubs. a
en velopes. The most interestsLron g . arulicia l ope ning bid
sho w1 ng eit he r a lot of high mg questions wm be used in
this column and will receive
ca rd!' or any ~ t r o n g suit or
copies oY JA COB Y MODERN)
SUi tS .

•

PARK FINANCIAL

WINNIE
3 &lt;D::. SAI:7

- .... ::_ ...1\\::

"T1-IE) -A-&lt;.= D:::J ... C._ lO'l&amp;

E-C ELECHU CAL Contractor
serving Ohio Volley reg ion .
Six days o week, 2i h:&gt;urs service. Eniergency coils. Coli
882-2952 or 882-:US. .

ou-

.,.._::r:z::

\V C'J~J \'

"T"

3 S : '\JCUG'-1 -==-T ...C
~A)
A. ,::~,.,_, ?;:~;::'-.: .....

SO YOtl
~V OL -....:7

_.o

\\}1""'11

~- ~ .J::Jo

~A 3'- ·5 1
--!:, _

i3 '::1/ ~ MEANS W~L L
3L T : ;JONT n .. '\lK.
5~:: ~N0\\5 H.:", V
·,\15 5 "&lt;AI3-E .: AM !

AL _

~..,E

~ :O A S O'I

V\01&lt;.!::

"'R US TO

F GUZ;" CUT SO 'v\E·
~ ' \! 3 W~ CAN 7C

0:'-1?

ACROSS
U Hold back
1 That's rich ! IZ London park
5Tax
DOWN
II Flabber·
1 Kind of cash
gasted
' or labor
11 Eastern
Z Repeatedly
regions
3 Tenn
13 " Streameni"
meaning no
playwright
alternative
a Be on guard 1 Ripen
15 Prefix for
5 Tevye on
miss or able
film
II Wk. day
I Bittersweet
17 Ayesha's story fact
18 The inqulsl·
7 Sesame
live way
8 College foot·
zt In a s,n it
ball award
Zl " Brandy - "
9 Bechann
%% Simba's
U One spe111ng
tresses
of touchdown
23 Famous

Beau
26 Card gam•elw1-l-t-"

HOWERY AND MAR TI N fK .
coveting , se ptic ays tems,
doze r. backhoe . Rt. 143.
Phone 1 (614) 698·7331 or
7·2-2593.

Yest~rday'a ·ADiwer

18 Explosive
device

26 Change
position

8 :oo--Mov ie " Buck R09e rs" 3, 15;
laverne &amp; Sh irley 6, 13; Wallons
8,10; Nationa l Geog r aph ic 20,33 ;
We're Nu mber 1? 17.
·
8 :30-- Be nson 6, T3 ; Baseball 17.
9 :oo-- Ba rney Mille r 6, 13; Eve ning
at Symphony JJ; Bla ck Man ' ~
La nd 20.
9 :3()--Soap 6,13; 10 :()C)--Qu incy 3, T5 ;
2Q.2Q 6, 13; Ne ws 2Q.
·
T0 :3()--Hocking Valley Bluegras s 20 :
Esta mpa F la menca 33. ·
11 :00- News 3 ,6,8 , 10, 13,15 ; ·New
Soupy Sa les 17 ; Dick Cavett 20;
Book Be at 33.
T1 :3()-Johnny Carson 3, lS; Pollee
Woman 6, 13 ; Columbo 8; "A BC
News 33; Movie " The Ido l" 10;
Movie " These Three" 17.
6, 13;
T: OOT2 : 40- Barella
Toinorrow 3; News 15 .
1: 1()-- Banacek 81 1 :3()-Baseball 17. • :
1: 50- New s 13 ; ~ : 00- New s 17 ;
4: 20-Siar Trek T7.6.

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 2i)t;7,
5:20-World at large 17; 5:~s­
Farm Report 13; 5:50-PTL Club
13.
6 :0Q--700 Club 6, 8; Health .Field 101
PTl Club 15.
6: 11)- News -17; 6:3()-Kidsworld 10;'
• Dragnet 17.
6 : ~ 5-Mornlng Report 3 ; 6 :50Good Morning, Wesf V Irginia 13. • ~
6 :5s-News 13; 7 :0G-Today 3,15; 1
Good Morning America 6,13; :
F rlday Morning 8; Batman 10; . '
Three Stooges-Lillie Rascals 17.
7: Is-AM Weather 33 ; 7 :3()-Famlly •
Altair 10; 7:5$-Chuek While
Repor ts 10.
s :oo-cap . Kangaroo B, 10; Leave II ;
to Beaver 17; Sesame St. 33,
·I
8:3()--Romper. ~oom 17; 9 :0G-B ob , ·''•
Braun 3; Phil Donahue T3 ; 151
'
Big Valley 6; Porky Pig and
Frlends8 ; One Day at a Time 101
lucy Sho.w 17 .
9: 3()-Bob Newhart 8; Love of Live
10 ; Green Acres 17.
lO :oo-Card Sharks 3, T5; Edge of
Night 6; Beat the Clock 8, 10;
Morning Magazine 13; Movie
" The Reckless Moment" 17.
-10:3()-HoliywooJ
Squares ·3,15;
. $20, 000 Pyramid 13; Andy
Griffith 6; Whew ! 9,10; 10:55-'CBS News 8; House Call 10.
11 :oo--High Rollers 3, 15; laverne &amp;
Shirley 6, 13; Price is Right 8, 10;
Electric Co. 20.
11 :30-Wtieel ol Fortune 3,15 :
Family Feud 6, 13; Sesame Street
20,33 ;"11 :5s-News 17. ·
12 :00- Newscenter
3;
News
6,8, 10, 13; Mindreaders 15 ; Love
American Style 17 .
,
12 :3()-Ryan' s Hope 6, 13; Search for
Tomorrow 8,10 ; Health Field 15;
Movie· " Lorna Doone " 17 ; ·
Electric Co. 33.
1: oo--Days ol our Lives 3,15; All My
ChUdren 6,13 ; Young and the

.. Rettess 8,10. ·

.-; .. .

WILL HAUl li mestone a nd
gr~wel. Also, lime hau li ng a nd
spreadi ng. Leo Morris Truck·
in g, Phone 742· 245!5 .

'\BARNE Y

S &amp; G Carpet Cl eaning. Stea m
cleaned . Fr e e e sti mat e .
Rea sona ble rate s . Sco tc hguar d . 99 2 · 630 9 o r
7•2-2348.

I SHORE HOPE
PAW'S WATCH IN' TH '
BEANS LIKE I
TOLD HIM

I.

l
J

P F.ANUTS

WELL, HOW DID THE
TRIAL TURN OUT?

PROSECUTING
CLAIMED THAT BIRDS OF
A FEATf.IER WILL
GATHER TOGETHER?

BUT THE DEFENSE
ATTORNEii SAID THAT A
BIRD IN TI-lE HAND IS
TWO INTHE BUSH

L{OU'RE RIGHT ... :A
VER'f DIFFICULt CASE

'

·

1: 30-As the World Turns 8, 10.
2:oo--Doctors 3, 15; One Llle to live
6, 13; 2: 2$-News 17 .
2 :30-Anolher World 3, 15 ; Guldlnu
light 8,10; G lgglesnorl Hotel 17. '
3 :00-General Hospital 6,131 Lilias,
Yoga and YoU'20 ; llo~l..;ucy 17.
3:30-0ne Day At A Time 8; Joker' s
Wild 10; Fllnlslones 17; Over
Easy 2Q.
'
~ :1)()-Mr. Carlon3; Tom &amp; Jtcry 13;
Password 15; Merv Grl ft'to\...6;_
Beverly Hillbillies 8; Sesame St .
20,33 ; Six Million Dollar Man 10;
Spectreman 17 .
Petticoat.
4.: 30- Bewilched 3;
Juncilon 8; Bionic Woman 13; ·
little Rascals 15; Gilligan's
Island 17.
5:oo--l Dream of Jeannie 3; Sanford
and Son 8; Mr. Rogers 20,33;
· Mary Tyler Moore 10; Abbott
and Costello 15 ; My Three Sons
17 .

5:3()-Carol Burnell and Friends 3;
19 Glut
Z9 Retinue
News 6; Gomer Pyle , USMC 8;
22 Sir Thomas 38 Set
Electric Cb. 20; MASH 10; Happy
foot on
Days Aga in 13: Lucy Show 151 I
23 Thyroid
Dream of Jeanie 17; Doctor Who
31 Facilitated
33 .
problem
35 Party
6 :oo--News 3,8,10,13,15; ABC News
Zl Stored,
37Townsman
6; Carol Burnell 171 VIlla Alegre
as
31 Berlin
20; Once Upon a Classic 33.
fodder
outcry
6 :3()-NBC News 3,15; ABC News 13;
Carol Burnett 6 ; CBS News 8, 10;
Bob Newhart 17; Over Easy
20,33 .
7:0G-Three's a Crowd 3; Tic Tac
Dough 8; Three' s a Crowd 6;
News 10; Newlywed. Game 13;
love, American Style 15; Sanlord. and Son 171 Dick Cavett·

20,33.

IN STOCK far Immedia te
deli very: various size s of pool
kits . Co-it- yours elf or le t us
lnttoll for you . 0 . Bumgardner
Sa les, Inc . m -572• .

AUCTIONEER BILL BROWN

pa ire d

West decide d thi s was th e
moment to jam up lhe opponents' auction . He ove r ca JJ ed
two he arts on his single ton ,
intending to· rescue himse lf to
three clubs if he was do ubled . ~
North did nol know what tp
do so he passed. Because EasL
ha d so many hearts a nd o nly
o ne s pade he decide d t o ma ke
a psyc he of hi s own : t wo
s pades .
South passed . He was fl abbergas te d . Wes t p assed a nd
North ca m e Lo .life w ilh a
three-spade cue bid. Unbe lieva bly. eve ryo ne passe d .
The a ce of hea rts was led,
dumm y was e xposed a nd bo th
o f tile e&lt;pe rLs ha d a la ugh al
th e ' ex pense o r the novices.
Aft e r a hea rt. continu a tion at
Lri ck two, W~st ruffed a nd
decla re r m a de 11 tn c ks .
Since thi s was ct duplica te
tournam ent. i t was not kpown
unlil a n hour a fter the sess io n

aga inst novices. often take

RUTLAND

Our regular Saturday evening sale will be mostlv
new merchand ise, a few pie ces of used turn1t1..1re
All kinds of new tools, tool boxe s, toys, furn iture:
stereos, Silverstone pans, auto and bike ac ·
c essories, BM sound mov ie camer a, c arpets, ap pliances, several loads coming In too late to list
(Don'tforgetto bring a chair.)
·
Not Responsible For Accidents
Terms of Sale : Cuh or Check with Positive I. D.

2.

Opening l ead : • A

.ROOM ADDITIONS
HOUSES BUILT

AUCTION

South

f AT WHI LE WE' RE 'WAlliN '...

REMObELING

For your conve nience we moved to a la rge r
build.lng w ith more parking s pac e. our Frida y night
sale IS for cons ignme nts. Anyone having merc han·
dlse to sell, bring it in Friday afte rnoon or early Frl ·
day evening. First Come, First Sold.

Phone 992· 2342, Eve. 992 · 2449
Micldleport, Ohio
Broker
Bill, Br. Mgr.

• 2
941741!
tQ9 7 6
• 75

SOUTH
+AQJIOII3
• K Q 10 5

-

BRADFORD. Au ctionee r. Com.
olete Se rvice . Pt-tone 949·2487
Or 949-2000. Ra cine, Ohio.
Cri tt Bradford.

· EAST

• 97

Racllator ·,.--~

Warehause Auction on Colum·bus A:o1d, Athens, o.,
has mo~ed to Key Mi/it lformer Ziegler Grocery),
The Platns, 0.

DOWNING • CHILDS

..,.

NORTH

9·7 · 1 mo.

2 Evening Sales, Fri., ~pt. 21
Sat., Sept. 22, 7:00 P.M.

Ll
HILL IN POMER
bedroom , 1 bath frame home. Conven
lloc;•tlo•n
~a rg~ living room with f irepl ace, dining room , eat·
tn ktfch e n, full base m e nt , new gas furna ce .
525,000.00.

r I XI I ] ( I I ] t I I l

Answer hare:

(Answers tomorrow)

Gutte:r work, down
SPOuts, some concrete
work ,
w•lks
1nd
dri veways.
I FREE ESTIMATE)

• S·ti c

Main St .

Now arrange the circled iet1e rs to
fo rm the surprise answer , as sug·
gested by the above cartoon.

+K54

MARK MORA

216,E. Second StrMt
. POMEROY _: Nearl y
maintenance t ree . 2
bedroom hom e w ith l ull
base ment and ex tra lot.
Walk to the stor e .
$25,000. .
22 ACRES - Wil h wa t er
a nd
e l e ctr ici t y
ava ilable . Good hom e
s ites for A· Frames .

T HURSDAY .-SEPTEMBER 20, l t7t ·

(1]

ADD ONS &amp;'
REMODELING

7·12

S I mo

I

CIROU

)

and

CLEARANCE PRICED

DECORATING
SUPPLIES

4·23 ·1 mo .

HOTPOINT
GENERAL
ELECTRIC

CARPENTER'S
DANCE STUDIO

· - 'Z'

f92-i l2s

608 E .
MAIN ...........~..~
POMEROY, 0 .

OUT OF
GAS

992-6011

592-3051

BALDWIN organ. " years old.
Cal l credi t deportment , ,
61•-592-5T22 .

1 USED FREEZER s75oo
1 NEW ELECTRIC FURNACE

d·~...

Fe•turing : men ' s &amp;
womtn 1 s
sty l ing ,
perms.
Call for appt. or w•lk in .

For Sale

WESTINGHOUSE UPRIGHT
free zer with quid~ f.reeze unif.
Can be seen in service at 121
7th Ave . , Midd leport , OH .
Price$50.

LIKE NEW

HOUSE WORK done in evenings and Saturdays. Call
74 2-3119.

Real Estate loans

ONE SMALL traile r. 1 or 2 pe rsons. 992-7785 .

WANTED : SAW logs. Payment
upon delivery to our yard. 7:30
to 3:30 weekdays. Blaney
Hardwoods, SR 339, Barlow,
OH . 678-2'/BO.

1973 VW STATIONWAGON 30
mi. per gal . Auto., trans ., im-.
macula te . 378-6155 .

PAINTING AND sandb la sti ng ,
Free estima tes . Call 9.,.9-2686 .

elnsulation
• Storm Doors
• Storm Windows
• Replacement
Windows
eGuHersand
Down Spouts
· Free Estimates
JAMES KEESEE
Phone 992·2772
8·17 ·1 mo .

APT IN Pomeroy. 3 roo mS and
both. 992-5621 , after 5:30.

OLD COINS , pocket watches,
class rings , wedding bands.
diamonds . Gold or silver . Coil
J. A. Wamsley . 7•2-233T.

1970 T-81R:O , 2 door coupe,
new 429 engine, 4 barrel, new
exhaust , less than 300 miles
on engine . PS . P8. Cruise control, electric bucket seats wi th
c_onsoie, rear ~e logger . new
t1res, new ex haust. $1800.
7&lt;42· 2&lt;404 before 2 p.m. or
after 5 p. m.

NOW HAULIN G li mestone in
Midd le po rt -Poem roy a rea .
Co li fo r free es tima te .
367·710 1.

14 ROOM HOUSE and store .
Born and outb"u ildings . 2 1/ t
acres of ground. Pogev ille ,
OH. $35.000. 698-32'10.

OLD FURNITURE. ice boxes.
brau beds . Iron beds, desks,
etc., complete households.
Write M.D. Miller, Rt. 4.
Pomeroy or call 992-7760 .

1973 c nev rol"t Camero Type
LT, 3SO. B cyl. Phone '1'12· 60'13.

INSULA liON
VINYL AND
ALUMINUM SIDING

HAVE ROOMS and board .
A los. will core for e lderly people in our home. 992-7314 .

CHIP WOOD. Poles maK .
diameter 1o·· on largest end.
$12 per ton. Bundled slab. $10
per ton . Delivered to OMio
Pallet Co.. Rt. 2. Pomeroy.
9'12-268'1.

Auto Sales

TO GOO D HOME . J medium
size brown and wntte dog.
Also . .will give dog hou se. Ca ll
m -3580.

SENIOR CITI ZENS, 1 bedroom
opts . for rent . Rental
a u l stance a v a i lable .
m,.n21.
12 x 60 2 bedroom mobile
home. Raci ne a reo. 992- 5858 .

ONE BEDROOM apt1. Contact
Village Manor, 992-7787 .

Wanted to Buy

NEED BABYSITTER . mature,
variable hours. One 1 year old
chi ld. 992-6087.

J&amp;L BLOWN

Television
-·· Vie_wing

byHanri ArnoldandBoolee

CXI)

s~

Announcing Open ing of

~ THAT SCRAMB LED WORD GAME

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one iener to each square. lo form
four ordinary words.

L KOLEY

uszness
ervzces
!1_____
·-------~----·
--·--------~~
fOJil
S
CAKE
_ ANN'

TO GOOD home. two ·block
puppies . Will grow into large
dog . Cqll'1'12-3580.

Services Offered

CALL. IHIS
A SERVICE
STATION ?

, _____

~':lmo ne Society, 992 -6260.

TWO BLOCKS from bu sineu
dis tri ct in Midd leport, out of
high water , 3 bed room, ea t-in
kitcne n, pantry , din ing room,
liv ing roo m a nd bath . Na tura l
gas furna ce . full base me nt
and a ttic , e n closed~ck ya rd.
washer ,
d ~ rang e ,
refrige rator, curtai ns , a nd
ca rpe ting in cl uded in pu rcha sIng price . Coli 992-3243 afte r
6pm for appointme nt.

Judy

HILLCREST KENNELS. Boording. all breeds. Clean indoor
· outdoor facilities. Also AKC:
reg istered Dabermons .
614-446-n95.

2 m;n;atu&lt;e collo e • . Lass;e
LOOK
type , ING
shots
FOR Good
ond home
wormed
for.

WILLING TO drive tractor ·
1
1'173 FORD F-100. 8 cyl. . Sid. tra ile r free for 2 / t mo nths in
exchange
fo
r
ex
perie nce on
shift. $1500. 7-42-2978.
the road . I will poy my own
persona l e ~e p e n ses . Coli
1967 MUSTANG GTA fa stback.
One ow ne r, 49,000 mile s. 9'12-5770.
$2000. 9'12-57bt .
DOZER , END loader. brush
hog . Will do baseme nts.
1971 FORO LTD , runs good,
ponds, brush , timbe r. land
body rough . 4 good tires ,
clearing. c narles Butche r,
$1 :25. 22 Beech St. ,. Mid742·2940.
dlep ort.
1973 CHEVROLET CAMERO
Type LT . 350 . 8 'cy l. Phone
'192-6093.

YARD SALE . Fr i. and Sot . Sept.
21 , 22 . Main St .. RU tland ot
Gold ie Graham's. New and
used items . 10amto6pm .

POODLE GROOMING .
Taylor. 61•· 367-7220.

I

1978 Camero , 12.000 mi les.
305 engine. ai r c o n d i ~o n i ng , BEA UTIFU L HAIRY faced black
reor defogger. Excelle nt con- a nd -n: hite female Benji type .
Hu mane Society, 992-6260.
dition. 247-3863.

YARD SALE . Friday , Sept. ~ I at
32-i Beech St ., Midd leport,
OH . Every thing
eac h.

-----Give Away

m'\t

r:!J ~ ~~ ®

AND YO U

.

7:3()-Prlce Is Right 3; Newlywed
Game 61 Family Feud 10;
Joker's Wild 8; Pop Goes the
32 Nino's
Country 13, 15; All In the Family
•
wde
17 ; MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20,33.
33 One, in
8:oo--Oiff'renl Strokes 3, 15; Fan- , •.•
Reims
tasy Island 6; 13; Incredible Hulk •
9, 10 ; . Washinglon Week In
34 Lwmnox
Review 2Q,331 Movie "Dimen- "
3t Extract
slon 5" 17.
31 Cathedral
8:30-Wall Street Week 20,33 .
·~ • ,
feature
9:0Q--Eischled 3,15; Movie " Diary
of a Teenage Hitchhiker" 6, 13;
'39Say by
Dukes of Hazzard 8, 10 ; To Be
heart
Announced 20; Money, News and . •
10 David's
,..
V Iews 33.
late news
9 : 30-1 ssues In World Com - · • .,.
m unlcallons 20; · To Be Anpartner
nounced 33.
·
10: oo--Dallas 8, 10; Winston Chu~- ,..
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work it :
chill 17 ; News 201 David . :,
AXYDLBAAXR
Susskind 33.
.,.
Ia L 0 N G. F E L L 0 W
I0 :3G-Up Close with Ted Patrick ·'.,
17; C011sumer Survival Kit 20.
'
O ne letter s imply stands for a nother. 1'n thi s sa m ple A is
11: oo-News 3,6, 8, 10, 1R3, T5! New • !
used for the three L's, X f or the two O's, etc. Single letters.
Soupy Sales 17; Two onnies 2Q;
a postrophes, the lengLh and fo r mation of the words a re all
·:
· Book Beat 33.
hinLs. Each day the code letters are d iffere nt.
11: 3o-Johnny
Carson
3, 15 ;
CRYPTOQUOTES
•
Charlie's Angels 6; Movie "Spell &lt;.
of Evil" 8; ABC News 33; Movie
"The Curse ot the Fly" 101 Movie
..
BF
YSVT
YT
QDSVKMYT
FM
" Amelia Earhart" 13; Movie
CT Q T F F 8 p Q
K My T
TV
R SF B M p ,,
" The Harder They' Fall" 17 .
, 12 :.Co-Monty Python ' s
Flying
Circus
33 ;
12 : 4o-Moyle •'
BF
CTBI"Q
DBOT
CBQ
GB P •
"Revenge!" 6.
.,

W

s

1:oo.-r,'lldnlght Special 3, 15; Juke. ••
V M G
M E T P 8 P Q . Y S I H
GT CC
Box 8; Movie "The C.stle of
~
Yesterday' •
Cryp&amp;oquole :
ANIMALS
ARE . SUCH . Terror" 10.
~-.
~ ..
~
FRIENDS-THEY ASK NO QUESTIONS, 1:30-M
. ovle "Son of Slnbad" 17.
;•
. t.li. 11
.
~mCISMS.-MARIAN EVANS (GEORGE , '2 :oo--News 13; 2:30-News3; 3 :20- : ·:
"1' ,.;:,
'
News 111 3: 45-Movle ·~ Revenge
-· - · -- - ·'
l'l ~·
'
·
·
Is My Destiny" 17.
•·
1--....JC,...- ·----:n
, --..._-tm t·-\?c~ 9 t'1 01
· :. ·r; . -~l· 1t1t Klf\9 Fntur~ ·s~~lftcata, ln~c : ' . \··
· ~
...,
i 1

-NA

o (

I

·

1

�12- The Daily S&lt;:ntinel, Middlcport·Pomeroy , 0 ., Thursdov, Sept. 20,

George Oil~r offi&lt;'la tin g. Bunal will
be in ST Virginia La bor er s Union .
In addition to tus mot her, he 1s

survived by his wife. Ann Hamson
Fleming; 60e son and daughler·inlaw, .Bruce and Debra F\emmg, Rt.

1, Long Bottom; two. da u ~hters,
Mrs. Johnnie tPamela l Johnson Rt .
I, Portland and Mrs. Ronme (G ma r
John son . Rt . 3. Pomeroy; three
sisters, Mrs. Leonard 1Kathleen)
Coursin, East IJverpool ; Mrs. E. P.
(Josephin e 1 Stephens. Parkersburg
and Mrs. Don 1Wanda l Donaldson,
Fmdley ; two grandchildren. Bruc
Fleming, Jr .. and Charles Johnson.
Fri02,687 has been fil ed in Meigs
CoA suit in the amount of $102,68i
has been filed in Me1gs Cu wlly
Common Pleas Co urt for in jur ies

and damages as the result of an
accident on July 2, 1978 on SR 7 near
Five Points Grill.
Filing the suit were Andrew J.
Gibbs, Don na Gibbs, and Vickie
Gibbs by her next fried, Andrew J.
Gibbs, all of Rt. 1, Letart , W. Va .,
against Robert Lagucki , North Field
Center, Ohios.
A suit in the amount of $16,215.43
was filed by the Citizens National
Bank, Middleport, aga inst James R
Pooler and Beverly Marlene Pooler,
Middleport and George W. Collins as
treasurer of Meigs County.
INAP.RIFE
Death came at 8 p. m. Tuesday to
Mrs. Ina Pearl Rife on the 83rd anniversary of her birth. She died in
Holzer Medical Center, where she
had been a patient since Friday. A
stroke was the cause of death.
She was one of nine children of
John Nathan Scott and Ida E. Hood
Scott, only one of whom survives:
Michael S&lt;:ott, Lufkin, Texas. Her
birth place was Cheshire Twp.
She attended school at Cheshire,
where she met and married Charles
B. Rlfe, who died in 1960. They moved 1to Gallipolis in 1937 and both
worked at the O.H.E. - now the
Gallipolis Developmental Center.
Her father-in-law was a widely
known physician.
Ina Rlfe was a member of the

VISIT BAKER'$
BUDGET SHOP

I

;

FOR NEW HOME
FURNISHINGS AT A
BUDGET PRICE

BA~ER

O.E:.S i, l Cheshire, and it will hold
services for her at Miller's Home for
Funerals at 7:30p.m. Thursday. She
also was a charter member of the
Daughters of America at Kyger .
Mrs. Rife had a special affinity for
dags and cats. and she has a pet
cemetery in ~er backyard. She also
loved nowers, and her home at 925
Fourth Ave. is beautifully ornamented with blooms and other
planls around the house.
Services will be held at 10:30 a . m.
Friday at Miller's Home for
Funerals. The Rev. Alfred Holley,
pastor of Elizabeth Chapel at
Yellowtown, will officiate, and interment will be at Gravel Hill
Ceme tery back of Cheshire.
Pallbearers will "be Clair Athey,
Robert Carson, Junior Plymale,
Woodrow Burnett, the Rev. Marion
Williams and Maurice Walker.
Friends.may call 2-4 and 7.g p.m.
Thur~day at Miller's Home for
Funerals.

PEARL ESTHER SMmt
Pearl Esther Smith, 51, died at
3:15 p.m. Wednesday at Northland
Terrace Nursing Home in Cohunbus. She had also been a patient at
Doctors' Hospital, where she was
employed for years as senior
technician, and at Holzer Medical
Center.
Her home was at Cheshire.
She was born Dec. 4, 1927, at
Logan, W. Va., to the late Montie
and Brook Martin Hunter. She was
twice married and divorced, but the
lather of her five children is Chester
Sutphin. The children are Chester in
Indiana; Mrs. Monita Deardurff,
Coltunbus; Bill, Colwnbus; Becky
Sutphin, Cheshire ; and Bryan Sutphin, Middleport.
•
Five sisters survive: Mrs. June
Stowers of Peck's Mill, W. Va.; Mrs.
Goldie Morrow and Mrs. Roberta
Temple of Colwnbus; Mrs. Wilma
Gilkey of Middleport; and Mrs. Edna Freeman, Chapmansville.
Three brotliers survive: Bernard
Hunter, Gallipolis; Roger Hunter,
Rutland ; and Dallas Hunter with the
U.S. ArmedForce8inGermany.
Last rites will be held at J:ll p.m.
Saturday at Miller's Home lor
Funerals, Eugene Anspach of the
Pomeroy House of Prayer of'ficiating. Bulial will lie in Mlna
Chapel cemetery.
caUlng hours will be 2-4 and 7-9
p.m. Friday.

FURNITURE

BARGAIN DAYS

A marriage license was issued to
Ronald Eugene Smith , 43 ,'
Middleport , and Linda Gayle Walls,
31, Middleport.

VOL. XXVIII

AND SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER .2 2nd.

.

. . SALE

.

EU':fE~[:~GHT
Regular $109.90 value. (sweeper
$89 .95 and tools $19.95). Has
chrome vibra groomer, light, six
position
height adjustment, edge
11
kleener" .

SALE PRICE

I

JUNIOR
TOPS

I
II
.1
I

!

I

!I
!
I
1 $7.00 Tops ......................... Sale $5 .59 I
\
1
I $10.00 Tops ............... ...... ... Sale $7.99 1
Excellent for wea r with jeans, knits,
sweater looks, lor]g arid short sleeve
styles, sweat shirt look s. Junior sizes
small , medium and large .

. 1995 . l

$17.00 Tops ............ :......... ,. Sale $13.59

SeARFs

I

SALff

!· ::c~~~.Lm:E~~~~J~~~~~

l

EMBROIInED TRIM, GOOD

I
I

I

SELECTION OF COLORS AND

l

SIZES. MACHINE WASHABLE.

FROM $200.00 TO $700.00
1-Reg. $1,098.00, 2 pc. sectional matching, 1 corner table, 1 end table, 1 coffee
table S73S.OO.

SALE

$999.00

I 1-Reg. 5867.00 Sofa and loveseat, green
REGUlAR PRICE $2.79 TO $6.99 1 and gold plaid, nylon .
I
SALE $666.00
I
I nylon,
2-Reg. 5889.00 2 pt . Early American
PRICE .
rust or gold.
___ :.,.... ______ ,:.. ____ _!
SALE $688.00

lh

FRIDAY

&amp; SATURDAY SALffl

1-Reg . S895.002pc. Contemporarysuite,

~ greennyl;~e~;t.$695.00

BOYS' J£A.NS
Blue denims, corduroys, cotton
twills, cotton polyester blends.
Our entire stock included. Sizes
8 to 18 in regulars. slims,
huskies, plus studert sizes 26

.

to 30 waist in 30 32 34 inch

1- Reg. 5798.00 Incliner sofa, contem ·
porary, rust nylon velvet.

\
1

I
1
1

I

I

I
SALE
PRICES
_____...,._______,__ j!
SA LEI

Regular price $1.25. Choose bulky
knit orion or banlon panel. One
size fits all sizes 10 thru 13.

I
I
1

SALE
l-Reg.
white . ·

$589.00

5729 .00 Sofa,

SALE

traditional,

off

$529.00

1-Reg. $598 .00 loveseat Incliner, off
green, beige and rust .

SALE

$398.00

1-Reg. $684.00 2 pc . Traditional gold,
green, beige-rust . ·

SALE

TABLE
COVERS
.

72 PRICE

l MEN'S QUILT
l· LINED COVERALLS
1
1

I

l

I
1
i
I
I

and

;;w;;;~~

~-

:'•.

•2711

I
I
I
I1

l
I

1
1

SAL£1

l

HALLMARK
CANDLES

I
I

1
2"x6", 3"x3", 3"X6", 3"x9" and
tapers . Selected from stock.
Regular 40c to $4.25. While they
last .

lh PRICE
.

That 's the way to have

lnclinS;~~·

ON THE 2ND FLOOR

JEANS SALE!
Our entire stock of junior size jeans
misse~ sizes and women 's sizes. A big
· selectoon of styles, straight legs and flare
styles, corduroys, blue denims and white
painters jeans.
·

I
I $14.00 Jeans.. ................... Sale $11.33
j $16.00 Jeans .......... ........... Sale $12.93
I $17.00 Jeans .................... Sale $13.73.
$18.00 Jeans ..................... Sale $14.53

!

SALE PRICE

$988
.

M_E_N-,S--$7_95___ _

fLANNEL SHIRTS

Savings Account now.

sHI RTs AN D TOPS !1 $3495KODAK
HANDLE
I
LNSTANT CAMERA 1

Sizes o to 7. in
looks, sweat
number shirts,
this selection .
Saturday .

flannels , sweater
shirts, velours,
vests. You ' ll l!ke
Save Friday and

I

1

I
I

Discontinued Model No. EK2. No focus ing required, automatic focus control.
I. Built in hand grip.

SALE $24.00

Meip-s Co unty

Pwple

RACINE

~LL

.

I

HOME NATIONAL

' BANK •
c:__./

FDII.
.....- ot.po:••u lo r •n•ur.,;l

.

.

-......

,

. .~

.....

BANK
Racine, Ohio

~

•I

1I
I
I
I

Sizes small (neck 14·14112 ),
medium (15· 15 '12), large t16·16 112)
and extra large ( 17·17 112) SO per
cent polyester, 50 per cent colton,
two pockets, long tails, plaid pat·
terns .

$}89

.

,_

-

. (·
'"':-'"'*""""' _,·'··
- ,.._ .
.

. o.k_

~

' - ··

.

·'~~•.·

Pomeroy many years ago. The wheel is one of two
found in the structure which is being torn down.

brewery operation, look the product
to neighborinl! lowiJs in Mason and
Gallia Counties.
Then came prohibition. The
brewery, which had an accompanying ice plant, closed down.
Workers at the plant lor years were
unemployed. Attem]ll.'l were made·
to keep the Ice plant operating but it
soon folded also.
·
Following the lifting of

prohibition, an attempt was made to
reopen the brewery . Remodeling
was done by several local business
people and a Colwnbus brewery
operator came to town to look over
the possibilities of getting the
establishment back into business.
However, the deal fell through and
the huge building was never
reopened as a brewery.
. Through the years, it chal!ged

Meigs' teachers
will meet Sunday

Wreck claims 3

Claims increase

.

CONTINUES
All weather coats, winter jackets, .
dressy _c oats, all of our ladies'
coats tncluded . Junior sizes l
misses. sizes, half sizes, extr~ '
large stzes. Regular prices from
S56.00to$225.00.
.···

'
·
7-----------------0PEN SATURDAY 9:30 AM TO 5 PM

-

. ..

. ... in the world .'

SALE

EtBERFELDS IN POMEROY

"

.~rodayJ

60, 75 and 100 waH sizes.
Regular price $2.36.
Package of 4 bulbs.

--~-

-.

.

$4.00 Shirts and Tops ......... $3.34 1I Regular $7.95 Kodak Instant Print Film 1
I $68.00 Coats............. Sale $58.00 .
$5.00 Shirt~ and Tops .......... $4.14 1 PR1o
·
I $84.00 Coats ............ Sale $71.00
Sl!lE$7.15
I$9200Coa
··
$6.00 Shirts and Tops .......... $4.94 I
.
ts ........ .. . Sale $78.00
I Regular ·sl5 .75 Double Pack Kodak Ins- 1I $10800
$7.00 Shirts and Tops ..... .... $5.83 1 tant Film.
• Coals........... Sale $92J)0
. .
$7 43 I
SALE $13 75
I Use Our Lay-A-Way Plan To Hold
$!0~ ~h~rt~a~d.-~.:::.:.::_:::_::_:_._L__. - - -·-· ____ ,_:__,______ i The Coat You Like.
~~~~~·~·~

.....

~-

Due to tbe lack of significant Rock Springll Fairgrounds.
Mrs. Bonnie Fisher, president of
pnl8l'elll during a led4!ral mediation
the
Bssociation, 81Ulounced the
~~e~~~~loo held in Columbus Thursday,
meeting
today following yesterday's
a meetJng of the Meigs Local School
·
session
in
Columbus attended by
District Teachers A.siociatlon has
David
Gleason,
superintendent ol
been aet lor 2 p.m. Sunday at the
the district who represented the
board of eduClltion; and Rlta Slavin,
•.'
Don Dlxon, David Bowen of the local
•'
teachers group and Ted Bibler, Ohio
Education Association representative.
Supt. Gleason declined to comment at this time on the Thursday
session and the reported lack &lt;1
.
significant progress made. Bill
Lewis !.s the federal negotiator will!
whom ThUI'llday 's meeting was held.
Mrs. Fl.!her said the association
GREENVIUE, Ohio (AP) Sunday will,discuss the progress of
Three pe~ · were killed Thurnegotiations for a new contract and
sday night in a twOK:ar collision
any action to be taken at this time.
on Ohio 49 near Greenvtlle, the
Gleason Indicated when the
Highway Patrol reported .
district's board of education met ·
The victimS were identified as
Monday that the big difference betLena Lawson, 73, of Pitts)&gt;urg,
ween the board and the association
Ohio; Ollford Gearhart, 61, and
Ia a salary problem.
his wife, Freda, 62, ofGreenvtlle.

II

I

J

,·

..

••

---Lnmu:~--i~~~~;;~~~!~~~~ ·

carefree fun. Open your

' SERVICE

I

....,

Known as the Wildennuth
Brewery, the busine&amp;1 once thrived
In upper Pomeroy .
Some residents remember when
you coold purcbasci a mug r:i. beer at
the front ol the buildlng lor five cen• Ia and keep the nwg. Others remember when a boat owned by the

100 per cent cotton, straight leg
style with hammer look and rule
pocket, very popular, while or
blue denim. Sizes 27-to 38 waist.

! GE .LIGHT BULBS
I

....

A Pomeroy landmark, a massive
structure oo Condor St., well over
100 yean, Ia coming down .

SALEI

II

~

&gt;

TinS PART OF TilE old Wlldennuth Brewery in
Pomeroy, known as the ice plant, is the first section of

the lll8S.'live structure on Condor st., to be tom down . A
tree can be seen growing at the top r:i. the building.

!"'''~ '"Old"t;;,d=;;;k:""'Wifd;;;;,";th"B;;;;;;y:l;;r;;g*;;;;d''='*"-1

--

rl _____

1

•

GENE WOLFE, PRESENT owner r:i. the Wilder·
muth Brewery building In Pomeroy, with a wooden
wheel which wu used in the lee plant r:1. the firm in

MR. LEGGS $11.95
~ PAINTERS JEANS

SALE

I

~

SALE PRICE

I

I
1
1

~

:

Brown duck or olive with red quilt
lining . Sizes small, medi11m , large
and extra large in regulars, shorts
or longs. Permanent press. I deal
for construction workers , hunters
or general wear. Zips from top or
bottom. Action back .

'--.......-----: "' " - -

II

$666.00
1-Reg. $1,762.00 Sofa, Incliner Loveseat

i

\FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY SALEI

SALE

$777.00
1-Reg. 5940.00 2 pc. Contemporary,
multi color stripe herculon .

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 21 , 1979

.

•

••

I SALE FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
¢ .
I
FURNITURE DEPARTMENT
l
$599
99
PAIR
I
JRD FLOOR
I
----------·-----~----·--------..:...------.L--·--------·-~--1
l

tor your next vacation.

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Discont inued pa!terns and colors
from our regular stock. Squares,
ovals, oblongs and rounds.
Regular price $5.4910$9 .99.

~

$484.00

1-Reg. $1,073.00 Sofa, loveseat, chair,
floral matalasse, rust.

enttn·e

J

••'

--~~~~:~~~~~~--~:~~~~:~~~~~~:~~~:~4-----~---------

DOILIES AND

at

'

I

SAI.fl THIS WEEKENt&gt;

l s12.oo tops... .................... Sale $9.59 l " ll L

$

•

''

-·- ·-------~-~!~~-~~~-1!.!:~~!~!~~-!~~C!!II___________

MEN'S DRESS !1
SOCKS
l

-

NO. 112

SPECIAL SALE PRICES IN EFFECT ALL OVER THE STORE ON FRIDAY, SEPTEMB~R 21st

lengths.
·ASK TOWED

MIDDLEPORT

e

LBERFELDS iri POMEROY

Area Deaths
JOHN W. FI.~~ MINf;
Funeral services for J ohn W.
Fleming, 47 .l.un g Bot tom. who &lt;lll'd
Tuesday will be held Sa turd&lt;1y at 1
p.m. at Ewing Chapel with the HeY .

•

l ~7'1

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) - The
Ohio Bureau of Employment Services reported Thursday there
was a 6.1 percent increase in the
nwnber cl. persons filing first
clalma for benefits In the week
ending Sept. 15 over the previowi
week.
The bureau reported 16,Wl2
newly unemployed persons filled
initial clalm8 for the week ending
WI Saturday. 'I'h1s compares
with 15,3.'1l filing the prevloUB
week.
Bureau Atlmlnl.!trator Albert
G. GUes said 735 initial claims
were fUed \Bider all ·other
pi'Oflrams WI week. This brings
overall initial claims \0 16,997,
which Ia 5.4 percent higher than
the previous week.

Wants flood probe
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Robert W. Teater, director of the
Ohio Department of Natural
Resources, has asked the Army
Corps of Engineers to investigate
flooding problems along
Blacklick Creek near~lwnbus.
Residents of over :llO houses
were affected by floodwaters of
the creek Sept. 14 after about six
inches Of rain fell on ceJ!tral Ohio.

Stewart
released
on bond
Tom Matthew Stewart, 31, Mid·
dleporl, charged with murder In the
gunshot death of his slefHion, Keith
Landers, wu released following
pooling of bond ln Meigs County
Court Thursday.
The incident occurred at the
Stewart residence, 235 S. Fourth
Ave. at 12:lla.m. Sunday.
Mrs. Stewart, who Ia separated
from her husband had left the home
about 15 minutes before the
shooting.
Landers was lying on a bed watching TV when' the shooting occurred, it is reported. He was ·struck
in the face.
On Monday Meigs County Court
Judge Charles Knight set bond at
$10,000 and appointed J. B. O'Biien,
attorney , as Stewart's legal counsel.
Prosecuting attorney Rlck Crow
had suggested bond be set in the
amount &lt;1 $100,000 due to the
animosity toward other family
members.

:·:·

hands several times and served as a
garage for large trucks, a tractor
'lales store, an auto repair garage
and more recently lor tbe body shop
of Gene Wolle, a resident of
Riggscrest Manor.
However, time has taken its toll on
the aged structure and it has become
dangerous to leave it stand.
Wolle, along with others, is
tearing down the entire !root part of
the structure.
At prei!ent, it Ia the ice plant portion of the building which is coming

down. A rear section r:i. the building
will remain standing lor me in the
Wolle business. The entire front seclion which faces Condor St., will
come down and Wolle will use that
as a parking lot, again ln conjunction with his business.
Wolle reporta he has been
besieged by souvenir collectors who
would like some object from the
building. There's really very IIWe in
the way of souveft!n left-In the age(!
structure but Wolle did flnd two
aged wooden wheels which were

used in the ice plant to help 1Ift
things to the second story ol the
building.
One of these he hopes to keep for
himself, perhaps, to fuhioo Into a
table.
·
Progress on the tearing down is \.'
slow so it will be actually quite a
1
time before residents find the
. familiar aged building -which has
-.....-~at cia fuelnatlnt

.,._

vers&amp;tlon&amp;l ·j&gt;leee 'for JMriy, iiiiUiY
years - gone from the Pomeroy
scene.

Influenza vaccine available .
CLEVELAND (AP)- Here are
lbe wlnniDg II11Dibert dra'IID
1bunsday ID the Oblo Lottery:

Blue 1!3; Wblte 34 ; Gold I;
WID..-1bon zrtz9.

Substitute rural
carrier exam set
The United States Postal Service
announces an eXamination for substitute rural carrier of record at the
Racine Post Office with the
examinatioo to be given at Parkersburg, W. Va.
Applicants must have reached
their 18th birthday on the date of
filing their applications and must be
citizens who can be noo-citizens who
have been accorded permanent
resident alien statwi in the United
States.
A.ll substitute rural carriers of
record must furnish and maintain at
their own expense vehicle equipment necessary for prompt handling
of mail, but they are given an equipment maintenance allowance based
on the dally mileage scheduled or a
minlmwn allowance per day,
whichever Is greater.
Subetltute rural carriers of record
starting salarlea range from $40.99
per day to $411.61 per day depending
on. the length and character of the
route.
Clsoing date .for submitting application card, PS Form 2479AB, to
the posbnaster at Racine Ia Sept. 26.

Weather
Raln likely tonight. Low ln the low
to mid 50s. Mostly cloudy Saturday
with a chance of showers. High in
the mid to upper 6011. The chance of
rain is 70 pj!rcent tonight and 30 percent Saturday.
EXTENDED OU1UlOK
Fair Swiday aud Monday. A
chance of sbowens Tuesday. WarmiDI during the period. Highs ID
tbe low to mid 7011 Sunday, warmlD&amp;to tbe upper 70&amp; to low 80s
on Tuesday. Overnight lows ID
tbe mid 4011 to low 50s early Sunday, rlslog to tbe low to mid 50s
early Tuesday.

The Meigs County Health Depart- any person with a history of hyperment has received the recom- sensitivity to eggs, chicken, or
mended Influenza Virus Vaccine chicl&lt;en leathers.
from the Ohio Department of
The Illfiuenza Vinla Vaccine lor
Health. 'I'h1s year the vaccine con- 1!118-79 has been assocaited with
tains A-USSR, A-Texas and IHioog
fewer side effects than previous inKong Influenza viruses.
fluenza vaccines. Tenderness, redThe inoculation of antigen ness or induratioo at the site &lt;1 inprepared from inactivated Influenza jection lasting for one or two days
virus stimulates the production &lt;1
have been obeerved in only about
specific antibodies. Protection is af. one third of vaccines.
lorded against only those strains of
The Meigs County Jlealth Departvirus from which the vaccine is
ment Public Health Nurses will be
prepared or closely re!ated strains.
administering the Trivalent Flu
~ual vaccination i.s recomVacclne at the Pomeroy Senl~r
mended lor adults who have such Citizen Center on Monday, Sepchronic conditions as heart disease
of ·any etiology, particularly with
mitral stenosis or cardiac failure ;
chronic
bronchopulmonary
diseases, such as chronic bronchitis,
bronchiectasis, tuberculosis, emphysema, chronic astluna and cystic
fibrosis; chronic renal disease, and
diabetes mellitus and other chronic
A•tociated Preu
metabolic disorders.
School districts in Ohio and PenUse of this vaccine in persons un- nsylvania were lbe latest to be slapder the age of 26 years is not recom- ped with strikea, while legions of
mended .
picketing teachers nationwide kept
Annual vaccinatloo is recom- classes disrupted lor nearly 700,000
mended lor older persons, par- pupils in 11 states.
ticularly those over the age 65 years,
Striking Spokane, Wash., teachers
because influenza outbreaks are . have appealed a judge's back~
cmunoliiy associated with excess work order, and classes opened
death in older age groups. This vac- Thursday for elementary pupils in
cine should not be administered to the strike-bound San Francisco

tember 24, and Wednesday, September 26, 1979 from 10 a.m. to 2
p.m.; Tuesday, Sept. 25, at the lAng
Bottom Methodist Church from 10
a.m. to 12 noon; Thlll'!lday, Sept. 'l1,
at the old Township building In
HarrisOnville from 9:lJ a.m. to 11
a.m.; Wednesday, October 3, at the
Meigs COunty Health Department
Offices located at 238 West ?Ad,
Pomeroy,froin 9a.m. to1 p.m.
U you are unable to.attend one of
these cllnlcs please call the gealth
Department, Opal Grueser, R. N., to
arrange a special time. Phone 9112- •·
6626 or 992.f627.

School strikes keep
700,000 from class

Fleming

'

s~rvices

Saturday

The Dally Seulloel Wiabe11 to ex- 3 Pomeroy; three sisters, Mrs.
tend moot sincere apologle11 to tbe Leonard (Kathleen) Coursin, East
(amlly of John W. Fleming. Due to a Liverpool; Mrs. E. P. (Josephine )
major malluDcUou ID tbe computer stephens, Parkersburg, and Mrs.
ll)lotem, tbe ollllaary for Mr. Don (Wanda) Donaldson, Findlay ;
FlemlD&amp; coulalned errors aud newa two
grandchildren ,
Bruce
material completely ~~~~related to bls Fleming,Jr. and Charles Johnson .
deatb. Followfug II a corrected Also surviving are several nieces,
obituary.
nephews, uncles, aunts, sisters-inFuneral services for John W. law and his mother·in·l~w , Mrs.
Fleming, 47, Long Bottom , who died Bertha Harrison, Apple Grove, W.
Tuesday, will be held at 1 p.m. Va . Mr. Fleming was preceded in
Saturday at the Ewing Funeral death by his father , Charles Bernard
'
Home with the Rev. George Oiler Fleming, Portland.
• Mr. Fleming was a member of the
officiating.
Mr . Fleming is survived by his Veterans of Foreign Wars and the
West Virginia Labor Unions.
V.:lfe, Mrs. Ann Harrison Fleming;
Burial will be in the Bald Knob
his mother, Mrs. Minnie Fleming
Carroll, East Liverpool; one son and .Cemetery. Military rites will be
conducted by the Racine Post,
daughter-in~aw , Bruce and Debra
Fleming, Route I, Long Bottom; two American Legion. Friends may Cll\1
daughters; Mrs . Johrmic (Pamela) at the Ewing Funeral Home
anytime.
J~hnson , Route 1, Portland, and
Mrs. Roonie (Gba) Johnson, Route
1

\

district.
More than 32,500 teachers were on
strike nationwide today.
In Pennsylvania, 811 Neshannocll
district teachers in New Castle went
on strike Thursday; forcing l,DOO
students to go horDe:
The teachers, who are In the ftnal .
year r:i. a ~ear contract, want
negotiations reopened, claiming
there Is too great a dlapartty bef.
ween salaries for teachers with
graduate degrees and new teachens.
Sixteen other dlstrlcls ln Uie state
have strlkea \Bider way, affecting
more than 52,000 pupils.
Middletown, Ohio, teachens voted
Thursday to strike that 11,\JOO.pupD
dlstlict after contract talks with the
board of education collilpsed.
The action by some BOO teachens
came after Middletown voters rejec·
ted a 6-mlll emergency tax levy last
week. The schOol board contends
that without the additional revenue,
it has no money lor salary increues
this year.
In Spokane, where 1,400 teachens
have ]IOitponed the Sept. 5 opening
of 54 schools, the unioo asked the
Court of Appeals to stay Judge
Donald Olson's order to go back to
work Monday.
Public school strikM are illegal In
Washington, the judge ruled.
Despite pickets, IIChoola opened
· Thursday In San Franciaco for
pupils in kindergarten through
grade five ; but only about lwiHblrds
ol the 24,1t'Jl students sho~ up,
district officials said.

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