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                  <text>1}.111-The Sunday Tlmes&amp;ntinel, Sunday, May 27, 1979

Husband,wife honored
PMEROY - Ron Meredith, son of equestrian studies.
.Rlchanl and Mary Meredith of Route
Nine months . are spent on the
··a, Ppmeroy, bas been named West Meredith Ill acre campus which has
• Vlrglnla 's Small Businessman of the more than two acres under roof, in·
·· Year.

~ · ' Meredith, who owns the Meredith

":Manor School of Horsemanship at
.:Waverly, W. Va., was presented the
~wan! by Gov. Jay Rockefeller in
~ ceremonieS at the governor's office in
' Charleston earlier this month.
• Tb1s llllllual awanl presented to the
..;outstanding small businessman in the
. state, is spoosorell by the small
· •Bu.slnes.s Administration. Meredith
:was accmpanled to cliarleston for the
:ceremonies by his wife, Kay, and
, ' their two !KIIll1, Kevin and Shaun.
- The Merediths have just returned
• from Washington, D. C. where they
: were guests for special pr,oi!Eams and
..:a receptloo held in the Ra~e Ganlen at
-the White House.
~ A feature of that program was the
'selectioo of a national winner and the
: awllrd presentation by President car-

- ter

• The Meredith Manor School of Hor~aemanshlp since 1973 bas been af-

'fUtated with Salem College in offering
~~ bachelor of science degree in

eluding three .b arns, three indoor
arenas, severi;., donnitories, two
classrooms, .a blacksmith shop and
school, offices, and a fire departmen~.
The school elfers eourses in all
phases of the equestrian science and
enrolls students from every state and
seyeral foreign countries. It now has
an erirOllment of over 150, and about
300horses •
Meredith got intO the business
throqgh his wife, Kay, who excelled In
horsemanship and spent her sum·
mers on the show circuit.
In 1961 the Merediths decided to
make a try at teaching horsemanship,
and began building their facilities. A
year later they bad contracted with
Marietta College for $40 a student for
a physical educatim credit.
Things continued to develop and by
the next year the Merediths found
that more and more people wanted to
learn to ride hones and become involved in the pleasure horse industry.
The program and the facllltles were
elQl&amp;nded.

In 1966 the American Horse Show
Association approved the school. The
next year the Social Security Administration of the United States gave
its approval, and in. 1968, the school
was opened to foreign students after
the U. S. Justice Department Jm.
migration and Naturallz8tion . Service, gave its approval.
In 1970 both the ..Veterans Administration and the West Virginia
Department of E;ducation gave approval to the school.
In addition to administering the
school, both Mr. and Mrs, Meredith
are involved In show competition and
judging, both in this coUntry and
abroad.
·

Drew
Webster Post 39, American Legion, pays tribute to
I'AYS TRIBtrrE - The firing squad of

OOUNCll. WILL NOT MEET
MIDDLEPORT - Due to the
Memorial Day holiday, Middleport
Village Council will not hold their
regular meeli!l8 on Monday, May 28.
Next regulal'
meeting will be
heldonMonday,June 11. ·

deceased aervice!llen In ceremonies held on the
Pomeroy parking lot Mmday morning. Commander of

rouncll

e

~

·~----------------------------------~

THALER FOR SALES INC.
A SPECIAL DEAL ON ALL

1979 LTD 2 DR,

Medium blue, 302 engine, power
steering and brakes, auto. trans.,
air conditioning, 'am·fm stereo

radio, exterior accent, protection
group, tinted glass, special value
pkg . A, dual mirrors, electric
clock, bumper guards, wsw tires.

Slk. l'!o. 786
Was

1979 FORD LTD 4 DR.

Lt . medium pine, 302 engine,
power steer. and brakes, aUto.
trans., air, tilt wheel, speed con trol, front &amp; rear bumper guards,
exterior accent, dual remote mirrors, convenience group, am-fm
stereo, tinted glass, wire wheel

covers. Slk. No. 527
Was

Now•6750

Now

'6970

~--------~----------~~--------~
1979 FORD LTD 4 DR.
1979 FORD LTD 2 DR.
·1979 FORD LTD LANDAU
302 engine, power steering and
brakes, auto. trans., all vinyl seat
trim, air, convenience group,

elec . clock, front ond rear
bumper guards, rear defroster,
am·tm stereo radio, exterior ac·
cenl group, linted glass, wire
wheel covers. Slk. No. 448
WAS
17961
'7640

Dove grey, red vinyl roof, 302

'I

1979 FORD LTD 2 DR.

'6300

1979 FORD LTD 4 OR.

9 Passenger, 302 engine, power
steering and brakes, aulomal/c
'r.ns ., air cond., deluxe luggage
back' dual rear sea's' ex'erlor
occenl, prolecllon group, 1/nled
glass, dual remole mirrors, Slk.
~~:sa

WAS

' 17430

wheel, sjleed control, front and
reor bumper Q.uards, am-fm
stereo, radio, dual remote ·mir·
rors, rear defroster, wire wheel
covers. Slk. No. 608
WAS
~60
•7160

~------------1

1979 FORD LTD WAGON

~
302 engine, power steering and
... brakes, aUtomatic trans., air con(; -dltloning, front and rear bumper
guards, ~xterlor accent, t inted
•· ~ glass, dual remote mirrors, wire
wheel-covers. Stk. No. 526

Dr., medium blue glow, 302

engine, power steering and
brakes·, automatic· ~rans., air, tilt

guards, conv. group, dual mirors,
rear bumper guards. Slk. No. 567
WAS
17421

,.___________,. ____________

;'

4

engine, poWer steering and
brakes, · automatic trans., air,
s~ed control, rear bumper

sam

Dark blue, special value pkg. B,
302 engine, power steering and
brakes, front &amp; rear bumper
guar ds, automa I lc trans. , air,

dual remote mirrors. accednl
sir/pes, 1111 wheel, clock, linled
glass, wire covers. Slk. No. 748

~~~

•·t--------·--+-----------t-----------ol
•

6320

1979 FORD TltUNDERBIRD

'7040

1979 FORD TltUNDERBIRD

· · Polar white, dark i ade roof , 302
engine, power steering and
~ brakes, automatic trans_, air con d/1/onlng, speed control, till·
wheel. electric rear defroster,
AM-FM stereo 8 track tape,

1/nled glass, /ighl group, interior

Light blue, 302 engine, power

steering and brakes. GR78xU

wsw radial tires, air condition ing, speed control, tilt wheels,
convenience group, tinted glass,
wire wheel covers. Stlc. No. 77S

accept group_ Stk . No. 773

Was
$1473

NOW '7380

' 1979 FORD THUNDERBIRD

Midnight blue mel/ ., ·dove grey

Polar white, 302 engine, power
steering and brakes, automatic
trans., air conditioner, speed con-

•.;
""

roof, all vinyl seat trim, JO:i!

engine,

trol, lilt wheel, AM·FM stereo

.

.•. 51746

While with dark red roof , 302
- engine, power steering and
. ,: brakes, automatic trans _, air con - ... dltionlng, convenience group,
· " speed control, interior' decor, tilt
~ .. wheel, electric rear defroster,
AM·FM slereo,

• 771

8

!rack. S!k. No.

- WaS

51557

·1979 FORD

NOW

17550

THUNDE~BIRD

~ ; Dark red, white roof, 30:2 engine,
t

-- power steering and brakes(
" automatic trans., air CO!'Idition lng, speed control, tilt wheel,

1/nled glass. wide body side

was

Was

NOW '7720

Black, 302 engine, power steering
and brakes, alr conditioning, all
vinyl sellt trim, speed control, tilt
wheel, dual accent, paint strlpes,
power seat, interior decor group,
tinted glass, front cornering
tamps, elec. rear defroster:. Stk.

NOW

17

460

1979 ..fORD TltUNDERBIRD
Polar while with while roof,

Slk. No. 703

-

NOW '7820

S89G6

-1979 FORD TltUNDERBIRD

Pastel Chamois wilh red roof, 302
envine, power sleer/ng and

' L/ghl medium blue. 302 engine,

rub strips, air cond.. Interior

wheel,

group, vinyl seal trim, speed and

control, AM·FM stereo, AM·FM

brakes, Interior deCor,· bumper

decor, tlntei;l glass, power lock
tilt, elec. defroster, power win -

power steering and brakes, tilt
speed control , cbnve·
nience group, tilt ·wheel, speed

stereo with tape, tinted glass witt!

dows, AM ·FMI ape . Slk. Na. 617
Wu
51796
NOW '7720

wheel covers. Stk. No. 775

1979 FORD'JHUNDERBIRD

1979 FORD THUNDERBIRD

Midnight blue, 302 engine, power
steering an_d brakes, automatic
trans _, air cond., speed control,
elec. rear detr.o ster, Interior
decor, tinted glass, dual mirrors,

. Sliver with blue roof, 302 engine,
power steeririg and brakes,
automatic trans.,·air conditioner,
tilt wheel , spee·d control, elec.
rear defroster, tinted glass, con -\
venlence'group, prot . group. Stk .

wheel

$7661

NOW

Was
$1165

NOW '7240

No. 623
16640

. was
$7127

Now'6800

Thaler Ford Sales, ·Inc.

Avoidsecretions
crushing from
the tick
and prevent
tick
contacting
skin
mouth.
Chemicals such as fingernail polish
remover or mineral oil may be ap. plied to the tick to facilitate Its
removal by gently pulling after
waiting about 20 minutes.
Clean the area of the "bite" with
soap and hot water and apply an an·
tibiotlc cream for burns or cuts. If
local swelling or drainage develops in
tbe next two days .or if illness with
feve11 or rash develops in the next two
weeks, contact your doctor.

Firefighters killed
SHELBY, N.C. (AP) - Four
firefighters were killed Friday
evening when a burning clothing store
exploded, burying the firefighters and
an unknown number of other people
under debris, authorities said.
Officials at Cleveland Memorial
Hospital said 30 to 40 people had been
treated for Injuries from · the
explosions and fire.
Hospital officials confirmed that
four firefighters
were dead on arrival
shorUy
after 8 p.m.
Officials said they did not know how
many people were buried beneath the
store's rubble .
The fire , which was stlll out of
control as of 8: 30 p.m., started late in
the afternoon, then turned into an
inferno after three explosions rocked
the clothing store. The blasts knocked
down a wall, destroying a fire truck,
authorities. said.
· Authorities said at least 14
volunteer fire department units and
100 firefighters and rescue workers
were at the scene in downtown Shelby
battling the blaze . Heavy black smoke
covered Uie town, located 55 miles
west of Charlotte, and high winds
hampered firefighting and rescue
efforts,
Fire officials said they do not know
what caused the fireor the explosions.

FOR A GOOD DEAL SEE
Tom Sprague, Melvin .. 'Ltttle, Nancy Fowier, ROd
Ferguson, John Koehn, Bob Ross and Jim Thaler.
24 Hr. Wrec;ker Service.
Phone : 446-3575 Day, 446·3650 Night ·

PH. 446-3575

NEW CARS

It only takes i ·minute
to get abattlr dial.
.
.

:-- '
•

·~

CfnCAGO (AP) - Two federal
safety officials -one in Washington,
the other at the crash scene in Ollcago
- disagree over whether Amllflcan
Airlines Flight 191 was "doomed"
when an engine fell off.
One expert says It was impossible to
control the aircraft once the engine
separated, .while apother says loss of
· the engine al90e would not have
!rippled the plane fatally.
.
Investigators said Monday that
flight data recorded on the jwnbo jet
!J:bows the crew was trying to correct
the DC-111!1 problems before It crashed
Friday near O'Hare International
Airport, kllllng at least 273 persons.
As ·· a
government-or~Jre!l
inspection of engine mOWtting bolts ori
all
DC-10&amp;
got
underway,
Investigators turned up a second
lnken part from the engine assembly
of the airliner. They said it was not
clear what role, If any ,It played in the
nation's worst air disaster.
The dispute over whether the big jet
could have been maneuvered to safety
without Its englDe surfal;ed )lfonday
between Langhorne Bond, head of the

Tick season here

cuts and abrasions and tbe eyes and

NOT NEAR RECORD
Although it may seem rain has
fallen for a long time In Ohio, the state
Is still 38 days and 38 nights from the
record. Northeast Ohio has received
the most rain over the IIIII two days,
generally In the three to !our inch
category, amoi!Dts ·over the remaln&lt;jer of the state vary down to about an
inch or two over the southwest.
I

NO. 31

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

•

at

•

ELBERFELD$

commander_.w!!o_spoke on the significance of the day,
and Frank Vaughan, who served as master of
ceremonies. Music was provided bY the Meip Hiilb
Band, the Meigs Senior Citizens Olorus, James
Soulsby, Lynetta Whittington, vocalists, and Jtnuny ·
Parker gave a reading.

""'en tine
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

TUESDAY, MAY 29, 1979

Officials
disagree

for Cub Scouting, Richard C. Raab - Powell, Jeff Sawyers, C. Robert
vice president for exploring, Robert Schaub, Dr. Stewart'H. Smith, John
D. Carpenter - vice president of Ad· Speer, Loren A; Trelster, Martha
ministration, Dr. George J. Hill - Trocin, Cecil H. Underwood, Phlllp
Council Commissioner, Dr. Ricl1anl Vallandingham, Robert Vass, Jr.,
o. Comfort - Assistant Council Com- Jim F. WAgers, Wlllls White, and
missioner, and Charles F. Bagley, Ill Keith Whitten, all from the Hun- Assistant Treasurer, all from Hun- . tlngtonarea.
tington.
Melvin Robertson. and Harry
Also elected from the Ashland area Sunderland from Mlltoo, W. Va.:
were: Morris L. Griffiths -vice presi· Richard B. Meyers of Cheapeake,
dent for Boy Scouting, Harold E. Ohlo, James Farley, Vltus Hartley,
Kelley • Vice president for Finance, Charles Lanham, and Robert Wingett
and Saul r.. Kaplan -treasurer.
from Point Pleasant, W. Va.; George
Elected as members of the Council Ingels frCilll New Haven, W. Va.;
GAU.JPOLIS - With summer approaching, parents are reniinded of Boanl were: FW. Melvin Adams, WIUiamEachus, Miles T. Epling, and
the prevention of diseases caused by Joseph Amsbary, L. B. Amsbary; Dr. Beman! Nlehm, Galllpolla.
ti ks
Robert Agee, Richard Barton, Dr.
Serving from the Ashland area will
c ·
Parents should carefully elUIIlllne Jack Baur, ,Harold Burdick, Clinton be: Dan L. Coleman, Robert J. Dlla,
each child every night at bed time as Burley, Bernard F. Caldwell, T. J. S. Cecil E. FAnnin, David Glockner, H.
'well as checking yourself. Comb the Caldwell, V. E. CHilders, Her!lert David Hermanaclorfer, J. Edwanl
scalp to be sure no tic'"· are on the Colker, Robert J. DeLaney,JiMle S. Maddox, Donald Putnam, Jr., Arthur
..
child and check in the ears. Diseases Dillard, Marcus Diniaco, A. C. Dodge, G. Quade, John Schneider, William
caused·byticksgenerallyrequirethat Earl Dorsey, Jr., E. C. Edwards, M. Steen, Erland P. Stevens, Jr.,
the tick be in tbe child more than 6 or Robert T. Forney, David Fox, Jr., Walter M. Thomason, and Hugh Wit·
8 hours. If you remove any ticks every Uoyd R. Frankel, Frank E. Han- tich.
shaw, Sr., David Harris, John W.
Coucnll Members-at-Large for
night,yourchildshoutdbesate.
What to do if a tick is on your child: Haens 1 Pr. Robert Hayes, Frederick 197&amp;-19111 are: Charles Bevans, BerIf he is not burrowing in, simply 0 . Helm, Col. Jim Higman, James C. nard Billups, Russell Dunbar,
pickhimoff
Hosier, John Jenkins,.J. G. Jennings, Charles Hanshaw and Phyllis White,
·
If he .18
· burrow
'ed m,
· remove 11 c;,.
.. Dr. Richard McCray, Barbara all of Huntington: Doug (:ole from
with {orceps, a bent twig, or fingers McDaniel, Patrick R. McDonald, Ashland, Ky.: William R. Knight and
covered by paper or a leaf, Pull gent- Lyle McGinnis, Jr., John R. Molt, Bob William Wise from Pl. Pleasant, Guy
ly at first, then with more force, 1 E. Myers, Ray Nisaen, James Perry, Pennington from Grayaon, Ky., and
dlrecUy outward from the body. Pull John F. Pleasants, --Dr. Lucius · L. David Tawney from Gallipolis,
from as close to the skin as possible.

302

engine, power steering and
brakes, automatic t.·ans., air
cond., inferior decor group, all
vinyl seat trim, conv. group,
speed control, protection group,
power side windows, wire covers.

1979 FORI111tUNDERBIRD

WIS

NQW '6740

1979 FORD TltUNDERBIRD .

Was

AM·FM st~reo , wire
covers. Slk. No. 626

.' mldg_ , rear: se·a t speaker. vinyl
seallrlm. Slk. No. 603
5776J

-

wire wheel covers. Stk. No. 702

, ~ 1979 FORD THUNDERBIRD

1 •

ond

glass, Interior decor, power lock,

NOW '7590

'

steering

group, power seat, elec .
defroster, speed control, tinted

lock group. 51k. No. 646

: Was

power

brakes, 'air conditioning, conv.

- with 8 track, protection group,
power windows, power seat,· interior accent, tinted glass, power
~

NOW '7140

1979 FORD TltUNDERBIRD

-

·~

was
18165

, 6690

No. 701
was
51577

VOL. XXVIII

HUNTING TON - Officers of tbe
Tri.State Area Council, BOy Scouts of
America, were elected at the Coun·
ell's Annual Business Meeting Conducted last week, at the Marshall
University Student Center.
Elected for a third tenn as Council
President was Leo M.. MacCourtney
of Huntington. Other officers elected
were: Budd L. Moser - vice president

51251

17975

Meredith Manor School of Horaemanshlp, Waverly, W.
Va. The awanl was presented to Meredith in the
Reception Room ·of the Govern()f's Mansion in
Charleston, W. Va: earlierthis month.

MacCourtney heads M-G-M council

·THUNDERBIRD$ AND LTD'S
'IN STOCK
1979 LTD 4 DR.

BUSINESSMAN OF THE YEAR - Receiving the
West Virginia Small Businessman of Uie Year Awanl
from Gov. Jay Rockefeller is Ron Mereith, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Richard Meredith, Route 2, Pomeroy.
Meredith and his wife, Kay, own and !!l&amp;nage the

the squad on the right is Edgar Van InWagen, survivor
of the Bataan Death March of World War IT. Buglers
were Vicki Boyles and Fred Y-\lung, Meigs High
students.

PROGRAM PARTICIPANTS- Some rl. the principals of the annual Memorial Day program of Drew
Webster Post 39, American legion, held in Pomeroy
Monday. From the left are Pomeroy Mayor Clance Andrews, who gave a welcome; Past Cmunander Rod
Karr, James Hampson, Lancaster, district second vice

Federal Aviation Administration, and
Elwood Driver, vice president of the
National Transportation Safety
BOard.
Bond said in Washington that it
would have been impossible for the
pilot to land the crippled plane at
O'Hare once the engine separated. He
said the plane was "doomed" from
the moment it left the runway.
''There is no certification procedure
for flying without a whole engine
assembly," he said. "There is no pilot
training to deal with that eventuality;
no aircraft has ever been in the ·air
under those circumstances. There is
no reason to think- that once that
engine came off the airframe, that it
would fly ."
But Driver said investigators
maintain a DC-10 will fly with two
engines after the third has separated.
"The proof of it is that it did go from
ground zero to 600 feet, and it did not
leap up there on rubber bands,"
Driyer said."! don't want In get into a
fight with Langhorne Bond, but he's in
Washington and we are here (in
(Continued on page 12)

Bid_well men,
child killed
over weekend
.

Two pel'SOII8 were killed and two
others injured In an auiHemi tractoNraller accident Sathy on U.S_
35, at the junctlm of SR 279.
Fatally injured were Ronald E.
Cordell, 19, Rt. I, Bidwell, and Aaron
A. Peck, 26, Rl. 1, Bidwell.
Called to the scene at 11:56 p.m.,
the Gallla-Meigs Post, Hlghwaf
Patrol reports that a north bound autn

Weekend rains Wted Sunday
evening just in time to allow a
pl.eaMnt, but chilly, commencement
evening for the 70 seniors of Eastern
High School.
' .
Debra Renee Spencer and Karen
Elizabeth Probert, saluta!orian and'
valedictorian, reipectlvely, were
apealters for the event, the last this
IIJI1ng for the three high schools of
Meig/J County.
In ber talk, Miss Spencer stressed
the~ roles of seniors who, she
llllid, will now have to accept the
1'1!1(:imsiblll~ of their own action.
~ dted changes that will take place
In their lives as they face realities of
every day living and accept responsibilities.
.While the future will hold more

FATHER'S DAY SPECIAL·
'

$} 00 .REFUND
By mail when you buy any Hanes Men's white ·
lightweight all cotton underwear or Hanes
Boxers.
Also $1.00 Refund on boys' Hanes T-shirts and
Briefs and men's Hanes under Color Briefs, TShirts and Pocket T·Shirts.

CLOSED All DAY MONDAY MEMORIAL DAY

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

'•••llll•••••••••••••••••••••.l

EXTENDED OUTLOOK

'l'lnlnUy lbrclalb Salllrday: Fair
'Hlanday and Friday.

'

CIWice, of

thudentonoa Salorday. Hlch•
. . . . ., frooa tbe upper 'IGI to mid
. ., cllmN111 to tbe upper • 111111
lew • by Salorday. Ovemlcht Jon
mid Ill to low • early Tlnlnday
ud mid to upper . . early Saturday.

· Money action filed
A suit in the amount $18,123.97 has
been fUed in Meigs County Common
,... Pleas Court by the Farmers Bank and
Savings Co., against Robert Harold
' Harrison and Mary Jean Harrison,
Sanford, Fla.
A suit for right of way was rued Joe
P. McKenzie, Hillard, and Rosezella
Marie McKenzie, Hlllard against
Lynn J. Holmes, Athens.
F1llng for divorce w'ere ~nald, H.
Weaver, Rt. 4, . Pomeroy, agamst
Katherine T. Weaver, Rt. 4, Pomeroy ;
Emily G. Boggs, Middleport, against
Roy Boggs, Middleport: Deborah
Dia(le Millhone, Reedsville, against
David Eugene Mlllhone, Bashan. •
' .Filing fir dlaaolutlon were David R.
Wells, Reedsville, and · Mary
. Elizabeth Wells, Reedsville; Donna
Powell, Long Bottom, and Ivan
~well,
Rt.
2, Pomeroy.

.

\

operated by Cordell, traveling at ·a
high rate ol speed, failed to stop for a
stop sign at the lnteraectton, and
drove into the path of a aeml operated
by Mile&amp; . R. Cook, 53, South ·
Charleston, traveling Cll8t on ~·
The aeml tractor-trailer lltruck the
Cordell auto broadside on the driver's .
side. The auto spun around back·
wards and came to rest In the ftlt
bound lane of the highway. The Hlll1
came to rat In the medium,
Cordell and paueilger, Peck, wen
prmounced dead at the ~Cme. Their
bodies were removed by CIIIIIWII
Funeral Home.
A aecond puaenger, Rickey L.
Miller, 21, Bidwell, displayed In;
capacitating sign of injury and wu ·
transported by the Gallla Volunteer
Squad to Holzer Medical Center.
Miller was admitted for treatment
of facial taceraticm, conCIIISion, and
a fractured leg. He ia lilted In
satiJfactory cmdition.
,
Cook claimed Injury, bot wu not
inunedtately treated.
.
The ~wo weekend fatalities brings
(Continued on page 12)

Holiday Traffic
.. 'Ole number &lt;&gt;f bollda:f' trafflc
deatlu wu eipeded to be lower th(J
Memorial Day weeltend than tbe 528
recorded In 1978, ba! a NatloDBI Safety
Council official said be expected tbe
PLAQUE PRESENTED- A memorial tribute was preaerited to For·
final count to top 500.
rest Bachtel, Middleport High School teacher and coach, at the MHS
.. The council estimated that 500 to 100
Alllffilil Association banquet Saturday night. Mrs. Bachtel pictured here
people would die In traffic accldeuts
with Alumni president, Mlck Oillda, displays the plaque presented to her
during the tbreeoday hollday that
by Chuck Stobart, head football coach at the University of Toledo, and a
began at 8 p.m. Friday aod ended at
member of the 1949 team which Coach Bachtel coached to a championmidnight Monday.
ship. See story on Page 6.
.. By Monday eveolo&amp;, as J11811Y
motorlits began their homeward
journeys, the coUDcll had logged a
total of HZ traffic deaths acro11 the
natloo,-sald Jack Recbt, a spokesman
for tile couocll.
.. 'Ole runolng total compiled by Tbe
Associated Press reached t58 ao
midnight fell on the West Coaot, then
challenge and more responsiblllty for graduation.
class, introduced the speakers.
roae to t8f as more deatho were
seniors, they also will have more
~though seniors have looki!Q forThe Eastern High· School Chorus, reported.
freedom. She urged ber classmates to wan! to graduation, the time and the directed by Gale Douthitt, presented
"be fighters" and not be walked over. forthcoming changes In theif lives two numbers and James D. Page, .. Last Memorial Day 'weekend, 528
She stressed that they be good "make lis a bit nervous," Miss principal, presented the clasa of 11179 persons died to traffic-related
accidents, Recht oald. He said be
citizens, care about others and above Pfoberi conunenled. She extended to Clark Lee, superintendent.
By Tbe Associated Pre11
expected
thilJ year's total eveutually
all, "never look uPon yourself as a thanks to the faculty and parents for
Dorael Larkins, president of the to exceed 500, but to fall shy of lut
The number of perms killed ln.
nobody."
their roles in the education of clasa district!&amp; boanl of education, presentraffic accidents acroaa Ohio thl$
year's coUDt.
Miss Probert traced the years of the members.
ted diplomas. The benediction was by
Memorial Day weekend decllneci:
:~~;~i~~~~;~~1~~~!~~~~;1;~!~~~~~j~~~~~;~~j~!r:~m~j~~Jj;!~l~l~l;l~l;l;lt~~~~;m;@: markedly compared with 1aat year,;
class of 1979 from early school years
The top 10 students were recognized the Rev. James H. Leach.
through high school when, she said, and included Mlsa Probert; Miss
Organ music was p~eaented by Lori
according to state Highway Patrol
s!ljdents were gtven more and more Spencer, Dawn Renee Sorden, Susan Wood, Pomeroy, and a nUDlber, "A
figures.
:
decisions to make. She also cited ti)e Elaine Hannum, Brian Rusty Wlgal, Parting Blessing" by the chorus
The pahol reported Tuesday;
different paths of life that her Lawrence Lee Pooler, Randy Keith preceded the recessional, "Fanfare
morning that at least 11 people died 011
classmates will now take following Keller, Laurie Gayle Matthews, Vida and Recessional," by the band.
Ohio's roads this holiday weekend;
Van Weber and Lowell Allen · Receiving diplomas were:
seven fewer than the total during the.
Ridenour.
equivalent 78-hour period a year ago.
Robert Charles Avis, Rose M.a r y
Class members entered the Bart lm us, Steven Gale Barber. Kay
The weekend count began at 8 p.m.
auditorium to "Royal • Pageantry
Friday and continued until midnight
!Continued on page 121
March" by the band under the direcMonday .
ParUy cloudy tonight. Low 511!1 to 55. tion of James Wilhelm.
The dead :
Meigs County sheriff's deputies
Considerable cloudiness Wednesday
David Alan Hedrick, class
MEETS TONIGHT
MONDAY
Memorial
Day
began
the
with a chance of thunderstorms main- chaplaln1 gave the invocation and The Middleport Chamber of Cc:m- investigation of vandalism complaints
CINCINNATI - Rebecca J. Calvin,
ly in, the afternoon. High 75 to Ill. The Lawrence Lee Pooler, class merce will meet at 8:30 p.m. this involving 23 mailboxes on SR 681 and 22, Cincinnati, when she lost control of
chark:e of rain is 20 percent tonight president, gave the welcome. Randy evening at the Masonic Temple in SR 124 In the Reedavllle area .
her three-wheel motorcycle on a
and 40 percent Wednesday.
Keith Keller, Vice president of the Middleport.
According to complaints, maUboxes Hamlltori County road.
WARRENSVILLE HEIGHTS · located near the highway were
smashed. with a blunt object Oscar Gamble, 54, Cleveland, IIi a one.
apparently from an individual in a car accident on a city street.
UNCOLN HEIGHTS - Kenneth
passing vehicle,
g,eriff James J. Proffitt requests Olisley, 35, Uncoln Helglits, when hla
that anyone having any infonnatlon motorcyr;)e collided with another
regarding the incidents should contact motorcycle on a city street.
TOlEDO - David B. Aseltyne,
his office. Information will be kept
Toledo, In a one-car accident on a city
coofidential.
It was reported that the US Postal street.
SUNDAY
Service .will be called in to assist with
MEDINA - Terry L. Ware, 21,
the investigation.
Deputies investigated two traffic Medina, in a two-car crash on Ohio 18
accidents over the long Memorial Day In Medina County.
PORTSMOUTH - Rodney C.
period.
The first occurred at 1:17 a.m. Crabtree, 17, Lucasville, a ps.uenger
Sunday on SR 124 at Mlnersvllle were In a two-&lt;:ar crash on Ohio 3481n Scioto
Aimee Huston, 23, Syracuae, lost County.
CANFIELD - Maureen Connelly
control of her car during a
rainstonn.The vehicle ran off the Benlakis, 22, Boardman, a paaaenger
right side of the highway striking a in a twCH:Br crash on Interstate 880 In
telephone pole then cmtlnued on and Mahonlng County.
SATURDAY
stru~k a tree. Ma. Huston was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital for CHILLICOniE - Cheryl A. Smith,
17, Chillicothe, in a ontH:ar accident
treatment of minor injuries.
A second accident occurred at 3:50 m a Olllllcothe street.
MENTOR - Frank l'alfalvi, 47,
a.rn. Sunday on SR 124 at Dorcas.
Deputies sal~ 8 deer ran into the path Mentor, In a two-car accident on a .
'
of an auto operated by Pamela Theiss, Mentor street.
!}ALLIPOLIS -Ronald E. CordeD, .
Rt. 3, Racine.
·
· The animal was killed . Tbere was 19, Bidwell, and Aaron A. Peck, 26, .
cmunencement Sll'ldaY evening in the high , school
EASTERN GRADUATION - Senior boys at
moderate damage to her picko~~p Bidwell, a passenger, in . a. two-car
Eastern High School got about the serious business of
auditorium. ,
accident on U.S. 35ln Gallia County.
truck.
:.
·
~
-l
· ~

73 Eastern seniors graduate

·Hanes®

-

Weather

Ohio highway
deaths down

Investigate
vandalism
complaints

�2-TbeDI.llySentinel, Ml(ldleport-Pomeroy,O., Tuesday,May29,1979

3-The DaUy Semmel, Mldd,leport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday. Msy 29, 1979

.

Beverly Hills tragi:c fire
occurred three years ago
CINCINNATI (AP) - The wound&amp;
·-are. still sore on the second
; ..Wvenary of the fire that destroyed
-- tbe Beverly Hills Supper Club at
, Soulhpte, Ky., kUling 185 persiJ~ on
_. .: ·Memorial Day weekend in 1977.
; NoW, Richard Schllllng and his
. IIIIis, who owned the club, are
; ~to go back in business, this
·11me acroas the Ohio River m Ohio.
· -;. '· At thuame time, life giles m for the
· IIIII"Vivcrs of the fire, while -damage
-clalma which grew fran the case are
. being reeolved at a steady pace.
· · . In a period of 18 months, mtlre than
_.$10,230,000 in damage letUements
. have !leen made.
. · "And this Ia mly the beginning,"
. lllid lead plaintiffs' attorney Stanley
C2!ealey. Lawyers are scheW!ed to go
Dec. 3 into federal court in &lt;;ovington,
·· Ky. -agalrist 43 aluminwn and wire
:· _manufacturers.
.
'Ibree cues have already been
;. ~ out of court.
: .Clelley said It will be some time
· • ·before It wW be detennlned how much
: money wW be received individually
; by relatives of the survivors.
'- 'l1le money and property has been
•: invfllled by a trustee of the court.
;; For I!I8JlY silrviwrs and their
-:.friend&amp;, the memories are still bitter.
; · Friends and relatives of a party of
: 13 · from Jackaonburg, Ohio, near
·:Middletown, have vowed to stop the
:·Sc:hiJilng famlly fro~!~ buUding a new
· ;~ club in Butler County, ~rth of

Cincinnati.

.

Aon Schuman, lost his wife of 13
years, and lout cl011e friends in the
fire. He spent 20 days in a hoapital,
recovering from burns.
Now he's back at his truckloadlng
job, remarried and moved from
suburbsn Delhi Township, to Bright,
Ind.
Hli scars are hardly visible .
"Those ~le in the burn IJ!Iit at
Cincinnati General Hospital are
fantastic," said the father of two sons.
" Per9011ally, I don't care about the
money. I just don't want people people around here- to forget . l don't
want them going to places like that."
Schuman -and his wife went to the
club that night with "our four closest
friend&amp;, Bob and L«ry Sykes and
Gary and Shana Latrell. The men
were in voluntary fire department together. Tile girls wanted to see John
Davldaon (who was singing at the
club).
The succeSil of the litigation has
buoyed him.
.
"They (all the defendants) killed
165 people and I want to see that it
never haJllll!llll again," he said.
Originally, he did not ezpect to live.
"I filed the suits for my. kids," he
said. "They already lost their mother.
I wanted them to have something. I
couldn't even talk or write, so I made
Xs."
· Shuman has become close friends
wtth Chesley, his lawyer.
'

'

.; In Washington
'

BY MARTHA ANGLE AND
ROBERT WALTERS
• LEXINGTON, . Ky. (NEAl
;Nettber politics nor honeracing Is
·wdqae to Kentucky, but in no other
·ate are both ventures taken more
;aertoualy by the participants and en--_.10Yedtors
. __more
ughly by the spect
_
horo

laton

• unlike this year's Kentucky Derby,
~ 's no odds-on favorite to win the
.Democntic gubernatorial contest.
-BUt .:S the CCiltenders round the final
~ ·uid heac) for the finish line, the
. J!fay • primary election, the fans are
-!lelng treated to a typically colorful
_ imchpec:tacular race:
- . ; Three Democratic candidates, one
. ~ the governorship and two
ilthen runn1n11 for lieutenant gover(lOr, an! all~ed to have been offered
~ope" inducements- in the form
·Cif cllh or political appointments - o
· - ~wfromtheirCCiltests.
. · ' A task .force of apprcmmately 40
· ·ilplt8 from the Federal Bureau of In·
. ·. ·;estiptlon 1a widely reported to have
· CliinVergecl on the _state for what one
. Dewsp.per account caUed "the most
· far-nachlng lnvesUgatim of oHicial
· C:GiiliptloninKentw:kyhlatory."
·Several gubema!oclal candidates
bave publicly c_h arged that
· Democratic Gov. Julian M. Carroll,
· . prohibited by tbe state's constltutim
from serving more than one term,
· used his political influence in
WuhingtCil to thwart the empinelment of a special federal grand
. jlirJ to COIIIider the FBI's evidence.
· . Canoll allegedly wanted the in·
vt.tlption stalled to avoid em~t for IU handpicked sueformer state Coounerce Com·
qa.iOIIel' W. Terry McBrayet, one of
lllll '·'aerious" contenders eQMlCied to
.4lend a collective total of almost fl
i1Jilllon In the primary CCillest.
· .·:Amclnl! thole vying with McBrayer
M: U. Gov. Thelma
~~ely
- beloved as the · unofficial · den
. _ ~" cf Kentucky's Democrats
_·. .te her penchant for ~ing the
__JICiwl!r of her own party s governor
· 1f!1en be leaves the state.
: When Carroll was in Geo~ last
. Yl!!l"· Ms. Stovall used the OCCasion to
call the enUre state legislature into

c-or,

Stova!l•

special session. But she then refused
to preside over the Senste + one of
the lieutenant governor's few constltutional responsibilities.
On another occasion when Carroll
wsa out of the state, Ms. Stovall or·
dered a special audit of the state's
construction funds. When she waii
secretary of state many years ago,
she pardoned a group of prisoners
while serviilg as acting governor in
the absence of both the governor and
lieutenant governor:
,
·
· Also in the field Ia John Y. Brown
Jr., a mu!Umilllonaire- at 45 after
having bought and sold fur fast food
chains .(Kentucky Fried Chicken, H.
Salt Fish and Chips, Lum 's and Ollie's
Trolley) · and three professional
basketball te·a ms (Kentucky
Colonels, Buffalo Bills and Boston
Celtics). Brown's most successful
business venture, by far, was Kenlucky Fried Chicken. But he long ago
had a falling out wtth the man unlversally Identified with that chain,
Colonel Harland Sanders.
As- a result, the whitHUited,
goa~ man everyone in Kentucky
calls ''The Colonel" is a prominent
fixture in the television conunerclalB
promoting another candidate, former
LouisvilleMayorHarveyi.Sloane.
Sloane's endorsers also include
world heavyweight champion
Muhammad Ali, a Louisville native.
But Brown, not to be outdone, has
enlisted his new wife, Phyllia George,
a fanner Miss America turned
television network sportscaster.
Tllere are two other "serious" contenders, state Auditor George Atkins
and Rep. Carroll Hubbard Jr., D-Ky.
In the November general election one of only three to be held in the
. nation this year -the Republican candidate undoubtedly wW be veteran
Republican politician Louie B. Nunn.
Finally, there are three longshots in
the Democratic contest including a
Lelington poetess wboSe campaign
plaUonn included a commitment to
crosa-fertllizing a banana plant wtth a
tobscco plant.
The resultant bam to manlclnd, she
explains, will be a product that can .be
either smoked or eaten.

Berry's World

, I

"Is this the end of the gasoline line? " ·

••

"This Is all due to that man," he
said of the progress being made in
Utigation. "If it wasn't for him
making that early investigation, and
the state tried to stop him, we
wouldn't have gotten anywhere. ;,
Meanwhile, the Schillings' request
for a zone change in BuUer County is
pending before the BuUer County
Corrunission members at Hamilton,
Ohio.
"We wanted to COllie to BuUer
County. This will be a high class '
restaurant," said Richard Schilling
Jr., during his presentation May 21. ·
Plans call for a capacity of 1,000
with 100 employees in a new building.
The artist's rendering looked similar
to the northern Kentucky club.
The Schilings salvaged $000,000
from the insurance money, court
records Indicated.
" It is like a knife in my heart to
hear of the plans the SchUllng family
has for BuUer County," said Mrs.
Lewis Conrad. She lost her mother in
the fire. The mother was one of a party of 13 celebrating the retirement of
a teacher.
She complained that a new club
"would be a continuing reminder of
the tragedy."
About 11 persollS led by a minister
spoke at the hearing.
"! hope they can start up again,"
said a former long time employee of
the old Beverly.
"It wasn't their fault. It's been very
hard on them," he said, adding he
wished they would reopen in Kentucky.

N.e:.R_. 19

.

.

The Daily Sentinel

\

·~

•

'

Knight hero
•
•
zn 3-2 wzn
~
....

View from Ohio Statehouse

Capital
notes

Rep. Roher! E. Netzley, RLaura, is
!mown as a hardnosed conservative
by fellow legislators and constituents.
But when he offered a floor
amendment this week to give certain
delinquent taxpayers a seven-day,
rather than a threeday reprieve, he
evoked a complaint from Rep. Helen
H. Fix, R-Cincinnati , who is also is
pretty conservative.
"It.'s liberal -enough as it is," she
said, which prompted Netzley to
object, smilingly: ''I've never been
caUed a liberal in my life."

SPORTS

'

House Bill 20t, the budget proposal
for the next biennium, in its present
form, appropriates a total of approximately 3.5 billion dollars for
primary and secondary education in
Ohio. This Ia $784 million more than
was spent on primary and secondary
education in the previous bisennlwn.
House Bill 20f Is presenUy being considered by the Senste Finance Committee.
However, the specific distribution
of -the primary and secondary
education appropriation will be determined by the provisions of Senste Bill
59. Senste Bill 59 passed the Senate on
May 8, 1979. This bill was introduced
in the House on May 9, 1979, and is
COLUMBUS, Ohio ( AP) - Imagine eurrently being considered by the
this: It's nearing midnight on Friday, House Finance -Appropriation ComJune 29, and a joint legislative mittee.
cooference ·committee is trying to
In Its presentform, one of the things
agree on the aU-important state Senate Bill 59 would do ls allow a
budget bill.
school district making application for
Republican Gov. James A. Rhodes a loan to request pennission to imand top legislative leaders all have pose a school district income tax to
their bags packed to leave the next make nectllllllll'Y n~ principal
day on a longplanned trade mission to and interest payments. The school
China.
district could impose a muimurn of
The big spending bill must be one percent income tax. However, the
passed and signed by Rhodes by a authorization to impose this income
Saturday midnight
deadline- tax can be granted only if the parOtherwise, all state spending, tiCular district meets all the specific
including payrolls, comes to a halt. · conditions set out in the bill.
This doesn't appear right now as a
One of the conditiCIIS is that a board
likely scenario, but it could happen, of educatim must have failed on two
and some of the officials involved occasiollS during the preceding two
have given it some thought.
years to convince district residents to
"U the budget still has not been support their school through an inpassed; 1 won't go,'' says House crease in property. taxes. Tile district
Speake~ Vernal G. Riffe Jr:, D-New would also have to be ellglbie to apply
Boston, one of those invited by Rhodes for a loan from the Emergency School
to go on the trip to the other side of the Advancement Fund.
globe.
Tile application for the loan would
''That's a good question (about what liave to be for the purpose of enabling
would happen)," replied Chan the school district to avoid a fillancial
Cochran, Rhodes' administrative clostng.ln addition, the district would
assistant.
have to request permission to propose
The $16.3 billion, two-year budget an Income tax to ralae the r,ev~nue to
bill, already approved by the House, repay the loan.
'-./
now is In the Senate where changesUnder Senate Bill 59, the Superinsome of which may not be agreeable tendent of Public Instruction would
to the House - are cootemplated.
detennine whether a school district
One of the possible changes could be met all the conditions. If the condeletion of a 2.S percent property tax . dltions are met, the Superintendent of
cut voted by the House for Ohio's Public Instruction would ask the Tax
homeowners. Some senators say the Commiasioner to determine the rate
cut is unconstitutional because it of school district income tax that
doesn 't include all commercial and would be required to meet the cost of
industrial taxpayers, and indicated paying the proposed loan. The Com·
they want it deleted.
missioner would have fifteen days in
House supporters of the cut say they
think it is not up to the legislature to
determine constitutionality of bills
before they are passed. " That's the
job of the courts," said one.
The Rev. Kenneth Grimes, chaplain of
the Ohio House, Jrought chuckles to
the chamber this week when he ended
his session-opening prayer by saying:
"Let the (legislative) process
continuetogrindaway. But Lord, how
about a drop or two of oil? Amen."

Hot Pirates returning home

E:i'fA fo21'WOI:e!li~.:T'fi.EG~

HUlME

which to certify his esUmate.
·
The Superintendent would then
decide whether an income tax would
-enable the district to borrow and
repay enough from the Eriaergency
School Advancement Fund to avoid a
school closing.
If the Superintendent approves of
the income tax, the Controlling Board
has to make the decision whether or
not the loan would be granted. A
resolution proposing a school district
income tax would have to be adopt,ed
before the Cootrolllng Board could actually disburse the loan proceeds.
Tile school board's resolution
proposing the tax would take effect 30
days after adoption unless prior 1to
that time a j\eUtion signed by 10 percent, of the district's electors
requested an election on the question
of whether the tax should take effect.
If a petition were filed, a special
election would be held on the queston
90 days after adoption of the
resolution. If a majority of those
voting did ~ot app~ove the tax, it,
would not go mto effect.
Under the provisions of the bill, a
school district income tax would be

If the authority for the tax was
granted and if the electors did not SUC·
ceed in keeping the tax from going Into effect, the tax could be imposed for
a maximum of four years. However,
the tax could not be levied In any ~
those years unless authorized by the
Controlling Board and could only be
imposed in an amount sufficient to
enable the school district to meet the
principal &amp;nd interest payments on a
loan from the Emergency School Advancement Fund.
Senate' Blll 59 Is presenUy being
heard by the House Finance • Appropriations Conunittee where the
proposal Is subject to the possibility of
major revision. I'd like to know your
opinion. .Please write: State
Representative Ron James, The
Statehouse, Colwnbus, Ohio4321S.

By Clarice Allea
HoUon, Erma Cleland, Clarice Allen,
·Opal Wickham, Margaret Christy,
AUXILIARY MEETS
Election of officers weas held at the Clara Conroy and Karla Chevalier,
iltr. and Mrs. Clayton Allen were
Wednesday evening meeting of the
Ladies Auxiliary of the Fire Depart- weekend guests of Dr. and Mrs. Billy
ment at the fire house. The meeting Robert Allen, Westerville. They at·
opened with The Lord's Prayer tended the funeral services of Cecelia
followed · by roll call. Minutes of the Carpenter at the Evans Funeral
previous meeting were read by Home in Colwnbus Monday morning.
secretary Clarice Allen · and the
Mr. and Mrs. Oris Frederick spent
treasurer's report by Opal Wickham. weekend in Westerville with relativeS.
Conunittee reports were given and His father, Henry Frederick, has been
cards were ordered which will be for ill and was hoapitaUzed.
sale by members. It was noted that
Howard and Charles Knight and
new kichen curtains had been made John Wickham attended a ball game
and hung by Sheila Taylor. Plans for in Cincinnati Wednesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Wood ~
the Memorial Day barbecue were
discussed. Cards were signed by Springfield, were weekend guests of
members attending for two members Mr. and Mrs. Roy Christy and Mrs:
who were ill. At the close of the Letha Wood. Callers on Sunday were
meeting, new officers were installed: Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wood, local, and
President, Cleo Smith; vice- Mr. and Mrs. Harold Hawk, Dean and
president, Erma Cleland; secretary, - Kristle, Tuppers Plains.
Miss Mary Hibbs spent the weekend!
Karla Chevalier and treasurer, Opal
Hollon. New conunittees wiU be in Marietta wtth Miss · Fiuth Ami' .
named at the June meeting. Memhesr McCain.
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Neuman, Kathy
-~!tending were Cleo Smith, Opal
and David, Galion, were weekend
guests of Mr. and Mrs. ARthur Otr.'
Sunday guests were Dr. and Mn~
Roger Grueser and Jenny, Logan;•
Mrs. Martha Lee, BW Bob and Becky,
Bashan.
'
'
Roy Betzing, Po19eroy, called on'
Mrs. Letha Wood and Mrs. Freda'
Miller and Lenora Betzing, Friday:
Mr. and Mrs. james Hollon and Mr.
and .Mrs. Rick Hollon, Parkersburg,'
Colby was an Army major when the were weekend Visitors of Mrs. 0pa1;
·
,
elite cadre -of Norwegian-American Hollon.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Charles
Eichinger
and
volunteers parachuted into occupied
Norway in the spring of 1945, as World Suzannah, Colwnbus, spent a recent'
War II was drawing to a close. Tlleir weekend with Mrs. Opal Eichinger '
,
mission was to work wtth local and family.
Allen
Weber,
Akron,
and
DonResistance units to sabotage railways
ferrying Nazi troops from Finland Weber, Topeka, Kansas, were gliests ·
of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Keller. They '
into France and Gennany.
called on Mr. and Mrs. ClaYton Allen~
KARACHI, Pakistan (AP) - Tile on Wecjnesday evening.
Denzel Cleland caUed on Mr. and 1
widow and daughter of executed
Mrs.
George Abbott of Mt. Herman,
former Prime Minister 1;ulfikar All
~
Thursday.
Bhutto have been rele~~sed .from
Miss
Debbie
Taylor,
Columbus,
was:
detention in a police camp near
Islamabad and flown here, the a recent visitor of Mrs. Opal
Eichinger.
goverrunent says.
..'.
An official announc~ent M~nday
said Nusrat Bhutto and her daughter
Benazir asked to be flown to Karachi,
where they live. Their release had
been promised for several weeks.
llllutto, 51, was found guilty of
ordering the assassination of a
political foe in 1974. The man was not
killed in the attack but his father was.

a

r

AP ~rts Writer
Bill Robinson, Grant Jackson and
the rest of the ~ittsburgh Pirates are
delighted to be back home tonight.
Lee Mazzilli and the rest of the New
York Mets are no doubt thrilled to see
them out of the ·Big Apple .
On Sunday, Robinson hit a ninthiMlng home run to break a tie and
give unbeaten Jackson his third
victory as the Pirates beat New York
2-1.

. And on Monday, Robinson hit a run·

giving up only four hits . Bob Weich
took over in the loth but Dan Driessen
slugged his first pitch of the inning
into the right field seats .
The Dodgers, who .had missed
several opportunities in the first nine
iMings, quickly tied the score when ·
Reggie Smith hit Mike LaCoss' first
pitch of the bottom of the lOth over the
right~enter field fence .
los Angeles stranded 16 runners in
all, Including the bases loaded in the
fourth and 12th innings.
"We had some golden opportunities,
but couldn't cash In on them," noted
Manager Tom Lasorda .
· Said Rau: "I didn't tire at all, and I
wasn't upset ab&lt;iut coming out for a
pinch-bitter in the ninth because we
had a chani:e to win it. But we had our
chances long before the ninth, too ."
The Dodgers loaded the bases ·
against LaCoss In the fourth inning
with only one out, but Gary
Thomasson struck out and Joe
Ferguson flied. out. Los Angeles had
runners on second and third and only
one out in the seventh but Davey
Lopes popped out and BIU RusseU
grounded out.
After Knight's bases~oaded single
In the 13th, the Dodgers fought back
with a double by Derrel Thomas and a
run-ecoring single by Lopes making it
3-2 with only one out. But reliever Tom
Hume got Russell to fly out and struck
out Smith to end . the follr-bour
marathon.
Dave Tomlin, who was a central
figure in Friday night's brawl
between the two teams, earned the
win, his second in three decisioiiS _

scoring single in the first inning, a
two-.-un tie-breaking pomer in the
fourth inning and a double to trigger a
three-run ninth as Pittsburgh, witb
Jackson picking up his s!xth save,
ripped the Mets 6-1.
"This will give us the impetus for a
run at Philadelphia and Montreal,"
Manager Chuck_Tanner said. ''We're
going home for 12 games with a ~
road trip, two wins in a row and a
chance to beat some teams and get
things together ." The Pirates are 5'k
games behind Philadelphia and

Montreal, tied atop the East . The
Phillies and Expos open a senes
tonight in Montr~al while Pittsburgh
· hosts Chicago.
In Monday's other National League
games, Atlanta beat San Francisco 41 Chicago defeated Philadelphia 4-1,
Cmclnnati nipped los Angeles 3-2 in 13
innings and San Diego shaded
Houston S-4. The Expos and St. Louis
Cardinals were idle Monday.
Robinson hit his ninth homer of the
season, with Dave Parker on base, off
winless Pete Falcone to break a 1-1 tie
in the fourth inning and give sorebacked John Candelaria the victory .
Braves 4, Giants I .
Atlanta beat San Francisco in a
sloppily played game Sunday .
Manager Bobby Cox thought his
Braves could do hetter, so he chewed
them out. And they did better. Then
.
3..() for their berth in the regional final. Cox played it low-key.
"I don 'I think clubhouse meetmgs
Liberty Union hurler Jeff Hosbor
pitched a one-hitter in the semifinal win baU games. Good pitching does,"
game to extend his record to 12·1. he said. He got it from Mickey Mahler
Liberty Union scored two runs in the who aUowed eight hits, struck out
second inning and one in the fifth seven Giants and walked one in his
before ending the season in the finale firSt complete game of the season.
with a 23.4 record .
"I felt strong, had a good fastball, a
Also in Class AA , host Trenton
good
curve and a good slider - and
Edgewood triwnphed over Belpre in
the
wind
was blowing straight in,
the semifinal Monday 4-3, and then
which was great," Mahler said.
went on to defeat Loveland H~st 3-2. Atlanta Stadium is a home-run
.
loveland had ear her defeated . hitter's dream .
Sprmgfteld Shawnee 9-a, scormg two
It was for Glenn Hubbard, who hit a
~earned runs m the bottom of the three-run shot off Giants starter Phil
e1ghth mrung for the VIctory.
Nastu. " It was a good pitch, a slider
For Shawnee, wh1ch ended the down by his shoes, and he just golfed it
s_eason wtth a 13-7 mark, 1t was the out .. said Giants Manager Joe
first lime the school ever reached the Alt~bellL
reg1onal tournament.
Class A action saw Edgerton slip by
Fostoria St. Wendelin 1~ at Deshler,
while
Miller
City
defeated
Cridersville Perry 4-3. The regional
championship will be determined this
afternoon.
AI Urbana College Monday, it was
Fremont St. Joseph 2, Versailles I in
I offer a total prog r~m to help
the first semifinal game, while
prot ect yo ur family:s way of living
Pitsburg Franklin-Monroe got by
ilnd build finan cial security for your·
Batavia 12-9 in the second.
retirement v.ears. Call me for details.

Ohio tourney
delayed by rain
By The Associated Press
Rainy weather over the Memorial
Day weekend delayed the Ohio high
school boys baseb~ll regio nal
tournaments, but action finally got
under way Monday and was to
continue today .
Cincinnati Elder, the defending
aass AM champion, swept Hamilton
Garfield 11-3 in their regional final at
Wright State College Monday . Elder,
~3 had earlier defeated Trotwood
Madison 10·4 in their se mifinal
contest, while Garfield, 17-6, had
downed Kettering Fairmont East 3.2
in nine innings.

Senior catcher Joe Myers was the
powerhouse for Elder . He went three
for five in the championship contest,
including a double and three RBI.
Meanwhile, Marietta downed Lima
Senior 9-1 in their Class MA regional
final at Westerville on Monday . Lima
had edged out Worthington 2-1 in eight
iMings In one semifinal match, while
Marietta had trounced Grove Port !().
3 in the' other.
In Class M baseball, Ottawa
Glandorf slipped by Baltimore
Liberty Union 4-2 in their finale at
Lima, after defeating Ontario , !..()_
Liberty Union blanked Oregon Stritch

rorlbdays
Families

,,

~

-•

" INDIANAPOLIS (AP)-'- The court·
ordered truce between the U.S. Auto
·Club and Championship Auto Racing
Teams has ended, and the rival racing
• organizations are going their separate
ways wtth a desperate plea from
• 'Indianapolis 500 chief steward Tom
' -Binford.
"By the 1980 race, we've goi to puU
• purselves together,"_ he told some
-~ 2 000 persons at the annual Indy
~- ·V.ctory Awards Banquet Monday
• night.
Binford said he was reluctant to
bring up the subject at the dinner
'
honoring winner Rick Mears and the
other 34 drivers, but he said the chaos
and controversy that at times
jeopardi2ed the future of the world's
richest automobile race made some
comments necessary.
·~ ~
uThere's no way we can go on
:: separately," said Binford, respected
equally on both sides of the often
~bitter conflict over control of
i championship car racing in the United
States.
"There are things that have to be
done. ~t's get 'em done. But we can't
do l't until we're all Chasing the same
rabbit.. .until we're aU in t he same

Middl!!oort. 0 .

Pam Lee, Alhens

;

camp ."

..;,

·-

:·i

•·

· For at least one rug
· ht ' howeve r '
both sides were smiling as the 3S
drivers Picked up shares of a recordf

Ja net Grov es, Gallipolis
xx -Kim ('" nni Pv r~rkt..nn
xx -THda_.f:=.anr!n. Jack son
Anne Greene, Jackson

s

Indypurseof$1,2717955. Mears,rl,o

Bakersfield, Calif., driving in just his
*270 401
second Indy race, too k horne • •
for his three-hour drive on Sunday.

"'IbisiSagreathonor,'' said Mears,

the pole-position starter who t00k the
lead 18 laps from the finish when
teammate Bobby Unser lost fourth
gear. "I can't explain what it feels
like "

seat tl e

Fridav. June I

seattl e al washington , !n l
sunday. June 3
washington at Seattl e (Coliseum ) ,
if necessary .
Wednesday, June •
· seattle al washington . &lt;n&gt; . it
necessary .
TRIP L.ES - G Breit , KC , 6 ; G riffin ,

, 5 ; A Ba rm ist er , Chi , 4; 11 Tied
M~rs who stayed up near the lead Tor
With 3.
HOM E RUNS L ynn , Bs~ , 14 ;
the enUr~ race, finally got his chance
Singl eton . Bal, 11 ; Thomas , Mtl. 11 ;
when a yellow1caution Ught slowed the Sm
a lley , Min, 10 ; Horton, Sea , 10 .
entire field. He was able to close the
S TO LE N BASES - LeF lor e , De l .
gap behind Unser, and the two Roger 20 ; WilSon . KC , 19 ; Otis , KC, 17 ; J
. Sea . 17 : Wills . Tex . 16 .
•~ Fenske teammates appeared headed Cruz
PITCH·ING (5 De c i s ion s) - Kern .
, 1
for a wheel-to-wheel duel to the finish . T ex. 6 -0. 1.000, 1.19 ; John : NY , 9 1,
.900, 1.95 ; Baumgarten , Cht , 5- l, .813 ,
When Unser dropped ,back , four· 2.35
; 0 Martinez , Bal. 7-2.. 778, 2 .95 ;
-' ·· time champion A.J . Foyt came up to Sp li ttor ,f. KC. 7-0 . . 778 , 2 ..95 ;
Koosman , Min , 7. 2, .778 , 3.52 ; Jenkms ,
second place but he limped across the Te)(
, 6 -2 . .750. 3 .44 ; Palmer . Bal , 52 ,
finish line· ju~ three seconds ahead ~f .714 , 2 .95 .
I
STR I KO UT S Jlyan , Ca , 66 :
third-{&gt;lace Mike Mosley when hiS
Guidry , NY , 61 ; Jenkins . re:-: . 61 ;
engine went out on the last lap.
Kr avec . Chi, 49; Koosman . Mm . 49 .

should our cl ients. We encourage ·
care, caution and safety ... :
preventive measures ·which can '

keJp that car accident from happenin~. that building fire from
starting, that home burgtary
from being committed.
Prevention soves life, limb and
property .. .- ond help• control Insurance costs and prem iums.
When lOsses do occur, our
policyholders can count on protecting and serving In time and
need . But we still say - preven-

tion Is the best policy.

992 · 7155

DALE C. WARNER .
INS.
992-2143

102W. Main

l !(l!Tlf'I J' :I '

~.

1B

Fr .

,,,, .,q •

Pomeroy

··~-

KARR &amp;VAN ZANDT

P Sr.

P-lB Jr .

I

C Jr .
OF -P Sr.

ss

lB
p

lB

c

55
lB
P-lB

1\nniit Ash. M eigs

Sonia Ash. Meigs

Beth Bartrum, Meigs

c

Brenda Conkel , Waverly

Brenda McFadden, Wellston

HONORABLE MENTION

I

So.
Sr .
So.
Sr.
Hr.
Jr .
Jr .
Jr.
Sr.

SPECIAl.

I

1975
CHEVY VAN
-.
350 V-8, auto .• P.S., P. B., radio. tape. 23 channel CB,
paneling, carpeting. seals and table roof, bent. good
rubber . blue and white finish.

Only •3795 00

CF So.

Sandy Rankin, Athens ; Tina Adkins. Gallipolis ;

Jayna Riggs, Ironton ; Robin Reed, Ja~kson ;
Patty Gallagher, Logan ; Dodle Chapman, Me1gs ;
Cindy Bearhs, Waverly ; Mitzi Hatley , Wellston .

See one of thesit courteous salesmen : Petfl. Burri$, Mlrvin KMblvgh

or George Harris.

Ind icates repeater from 1978 squad .
2 x' es - Indicates unanimoos choice.
Positions are listed for olavers althouQh they
were selected regardless of position . No selection
~its made of a Most Valuable Player or of a Coach
of the Year . Two n ine-player squads chose~ . b~t
expanded to 10 and 11 respectively due to t1es 1n
voti ng.
x -

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
"You'll Like Our Qualify Way of Doing Business" ,,
GMC Financing
1
POMEROY
Open Evenings unlit 6:0011115 p.m. Sat

992-5342

·AMC/JEEP OIL AND
LUBE SPECIALS
l.

But, we also have a vital In·'
terest in loss prevention , as ·1

CO II11Jlll lY

C Sr.

Beth Exline. Jackson
Cathy Morek, Jack son

sunday's Game

105 , Washi ngton 95
Tuesday's Game
wa:shington at Seat tl e (Coliseum
&lt;n 1

JB

Sr.
Jr .
Jr .

P

Anita Brown. Athens
Lisa McDaniel, Ironton

Washington 99.• Seattle 97
Thursday's Game
seatt le 92, wa shi ngton B2

to provlqe policies which alfor~ 1
financ ia l protection In cose of
loss .
-

2B Fr.
C Sr.

Pepper Staten. Wellston
Dusty Staten, Well ston
SECOND TEAM
Kelly Kyle. Athens

Championship Finah
B~5t of Se\o·en Series
Game 1

As an independent insurance
agency, our prlmarv function Is

Acc 1den1 As suranc e

SOUTHEASTERN OHIO ATHLETIC LEAGUE
1979 SOFTBALL-ALL-LEAGUE TEAM
PLAYER - TEAM
POS. YR.

Terri Wilson . Meigs

N BA Playoff• At A Glance
By The Auociated Preu

IS lHE
BEST POLICY

) tate Farm L•l e ano

Ca thy Nye, Logan

·Mears joined by his wife Dina, hib
psrents, ' car owner PellSke and his
crew told the banquet crowd and a
state;..ide television audience that his
victory was almost unbelievable.
"Three years ago when I was
driving across the Baja desert, I
never thought I'd even be _in a
championship car, let alone wm the
Indianapolis SOO," he said.
The total purse topped $1 million for
the loth straight year , and this year's
prize package was nearly $127,000
more than the previous record
$1,145,225 set last year. ,
.
The only larger winners shares m
Indy history were both claimed by AI
Unser, who pocketed $271,697 for his
first victory in 1970 and a record
$290,363 for his third triumph last
year .
Nine of the drivers, including Foyt,
both Unser brothers, former winner
Gordon Johncock and fourth-place
finisher Danny Ongais, did not attend
the banquet.

PREVENTION

MIKE SWIGER

Yock Emerson, Log a n

-Mears wins 1979
Indianapolis 500

Cubs 4, Ph lilies 1
Bobby Murcer hit two home runs, a
solo shot in the seventh inning and a
two-run clout in the ninth. But it was
Bill Buckner who had the gamewinning hit, a two-out, eighth-Inning
triple that broke a 1·1 tie and gave t_he
Cubs their victory over Philadelplua.
Dick Tldrow, obtained last week
from the New York Yankees, took
over for Mike Krukow and allowed six
hits and one run in five relief Innings
to chalk up his first NL victory. In
three appearances ( 10 iMings) with
Chicago he has a win and a save and a
sparkling 0.90 earned-run ·average .
Padres 5, Astros 4
Dave Winfield drove in three runs
and pitcher Randy Jones drove in two
to· lead San Diego past the Astros.
Jones, recording his fifth victory,
needed ninth-inning relief from Hollie
Fingers, who picked up his sixth save1

Ask me about
.Ufe Insurance

x-Bec ky Kuhn. Logan

Otester News Notes .

O'ri'AWA (CP)- England's Queen
Mother
Elizabeth Is coming to Canada
Some state lawmakers get their
to
go
to
the
races and gather the clans.
cliches mixed up.
Her visit to Canada in June will
Two favorites around the capitol are
those that suggest that a bill is good Include formal dinners, an evening at
"but not a panacea," or another may the International Gathering of the
be fraught with dangerous implication Scottish Clans In Nova Scotia and an
afternoon at the horse races in
and could "open a pandora's box."
Sen·. R. Kinsey Milleson, DFreeport, Toronto.
An itinerary for her visit released
slipped wring a Senate hearing this
week when he sought to evoke the Monday said she will arrive in Halifax
ALGIERS, Algeria (AP) latter .. Discussing a bill, he said he June 26 and spend four days there
three-day
trip
to
before
taking
a
Presidenl
Tlto of Yugoslavta has
didn't want it to open up "a panacea's
Toronto.
begun
a
tour
of nonaligned nations
box."
seeking support against a Qaban
NEW ORLEANS (AP) - It was a effort toward closer ties between the
Tnday's birthdays: Comedian Bob nostalgic Memorial Day weekend for Third World and the Soviet Union.
Hope Is 76 years old. Dancer and CIA Director William Colby.
He made his first stop Monday in
choreographer Pearl Lang is 57. . Now a lawyer in Washington, D.C., Algiers, his first visit here since the
Comedienne Beatrice Lillie 1a 81.
Colby headed the CIA from 1973 to (Ieath earlier this year of ~Bldent .
Thought for . today: TwO things ~ 1976. He was in 'New Orleans the past Houari Boumedlenne, one of his
bad for the heart - running up stalts weekend to celebrate the 34th staunchest Third World allies. He wW
and rwming down people - Bernard anniversary of the World War II meet with President Bendjadld
Baruch, American businessman and Operation RYPE mission with 42 of its Chadll.
sta-tesman, 187().1965.
55 survivors .

•

lt

imposed 11pon school district residen·
ts and eatates, and would be levied
against the same income used to
determine the taxpayer's state in·
come tax. _If a person were not a
resident of a school district for the en·
tire year, his taxable income would be
proportionately reduced.

Names. • •
in
the
news
•

NORWICH; England (AP)- Prince
Charles, heir to the British throne.and
the country's most eligible bachelor,
says what he really needs is a good
wife.
Charles told an audience of school
principals on Tuesday that he was
deluged with mall after a
controversial speech last February in
which he blamed management for
many of Britain's labor problems.
"By far the best was a postcard
which simply said 'What you need Is a
·good wife,'" said Charles. "I'm sure
that's exactly what I do need."

LOS ANGELES (APl - Ray
·-· ~ Knight, a man designated to replace
- - Pete Rose at third base for the
Cincinnati Reds, was understandably
'
down after grounding into a double
·~ · play that ended his team's 11-7 loss to
Los Angeles on Sunday.
"I was angry with myself_," Knight
said. "I was in the hotel coffee shop ,
and John (Cincinnati Manager John
,,
McNamara) came by and said, 'It's
killing you, isn't it?' I said, 'Yeah,'
and he told me to forget it, that I'd get
:;
another chance.
The second chance came Monday
night, in the 13th Inning of a l·i tie. ·
Knight driUed a &lt;llarlie Hough
'imuckleball Into center field with the
''bases loaded and the Reds hung on for
-·a 3-2 victory snd a spilt of their four'game series at Dodger Stadium.
Cincinnati, with a two-game lead in
the National league West and a five·
game advantage over the fourth-place
Dodgers, continues its road trip
tonight In Houston while Los Angeles
opens a tbr!le-game series at home
against the San Francisco Giants.
-, Knight said of hts game~nding
.double play Sunday : "I was angry
'With myself.! !mew I'd get over 1t but
·I hate to lose.lt's a situation that I felt
•direcUy responsible for.
_. "I wasn't thinking about Sunday's
game when I was up there in the 13th
·inning. All I was thinking ab&lt;iut was
that lmuckleball. It's tough to hit."
Knight's single scored Ken Griffey
and Dave.Concepcion, who opened the
..
13th with a walk and a single off
Hough, 1).2, the fifth Dodger pitcher.
, · Doug Rau started for Los An~eles
•N
·and worked nine scoreless mnmgs,

By BRUCE LOWITI

•16 PLUS TAX
95

VOLKSWAGEN
TUNE-UP SPECIAL

ALL RABBITS

BEETLES •10~ 5 · Pws TAX
RABBITS 1 1349 PLUS TAX

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,,

�._..j7;;;;;B~;s7)~ receives alumni scholarship .

'.
4-The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, May 29,l!r79

Twins whip 'cOusins' again
.;JJASEBALL SCOREBOARD
Baseball At A Glan'ce
By The Associated Pre ss
NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST
W . L.Pct. GB

Montreal
Ph lla delp hl~

St . t.ouls.
Pittsburgh
CPIICigo
New York

25 15

.625

27 l7
22 18
20 21

.6lo4

.550 3
.488

51 ,

19 17

. A63

61 2

l .S 26

.366 10 1 '1

WEST
(inclnneti
26 19 . 5 ~8
Wouston
26 23 .531
Sin Franc lsto
2S 23 .521
l:.OI Ang•ltt
23 26 .469
Sin O ltgD
20 29 . A08
Atlanta
18 17 . AOO
Sunday ' s Games
Ph ill&lt;ll' ltil'li a 6. Ch icago 4 '
Montr11•1 8·3, St . Louis 3-11
P lt~t\11~ 2, New York 1
Los ·•l'tgelt~ a. Cin c innat i 7

t

2
21 z
5
8
8

HOuttOf\ C, Sal'\ O i ~O 2

Atla nta

~

10. San Francisco R

Monday ' s Gam es
P ittsbUrgh 6, New York 1

..:. Atlanta 4, San Fra n.c isco 1

r .. Chlcogo 4 , Ph i ladelph i a 1
Cinclnnatl 3, Los Angeles 2. 13 in ngs
'Sen Oleq_o .S , Houston 4

i

_,10nly games scheduled

Tuesday's Games

~

Philadelph i.a (Ruthven 6-2) ' at
ntrea l (Rog er s 4-2J. ( n )
Chicago (Holt sman .4 -2) at Pift · urgh (0 . Robinson l -3) , {n )
New York (Zach r y 3-0l a t St . Louis
uckov ich 4-2 1. (n 1

lxon 0·21, In !
(Brizzolara 1-0 an d P .
lekro S-7l at San D iego (Owch inko l end Mura 2-2 L 2. (t -n)
Sen Franc isco (Knapper 5-21 at Los
hgeles (Hotfon 4 -21. {n )
·
Wednesday's Games
Philadelphia at Montreal , (n )
Chicago at P ittsburgh , (n )
New York at _St . Lo uis, (n l
~· Cinc i nnat i at . Houston , (n l
' Atlant a at san Diego , (n )
Sen Franc isco at Los Ange les. (n )

Con c epcion . Cin, ~ 8 . c.; r i ttey , L1n , 58.
C abe ll. Htn , 58 .
D OUB L E S· -Ro se. Ph i, 18 .
Pa·rri sh . MIL 15 ; Bu ckner , Chi. 13 ;
Re it z, St L , 1"3 ; Matt"ews , Atl. 13 ;
Morgan , Cin . 13 ; Gr i ffey , Cin . 13.
TRIPLE S T Scott . Sf L . 7;
Moreno . Pgh , 5 ; W infield , SO , S.·
Buckner . Chi , 4; Dawson , Mt l, 4.·
Lopes . LA . 4 : Metzger . SF . 4 .
HOME
RUNS
Schmidt ,
Ph ingman , Chi , 14; Murphy , Atl , 13 ;
Dawson , M I L II ; Matthews. At l , 11 .
STOLEN BASES - Moreno , Pgh ,
18 ; T Sc ott , St L 14 ; C abell. HTn , 14 ;
Taveras, NY , 13 : Lope s. LA . 13 .
PITCHING (5 Decis ions I - LaCoss ,
C in , 5 0, 1.000. 2.51 ; Lamp , Chi , 4-1,
.800, 4.26 ; Reed , Ph i, 4-1, .800 , 3 .9.4 ;
Moskau , Cin . 4- 1, .800, 2 .66 ;__ Wel c h,
LA , 4-l , .800 . '2 .91 ; Ruthven , Phi , 6 -2,
,7 50. 1.52; J N lek ro . Htn . 6-2• . 750, 2.44 ;
K n eppe r . SF . S-2, .714. 3.03 .
STR I KEOUTS - R ichard, Htn , 8 1 ;
Carlton , Ph i. 55 ; P Niekro, Atl , 51;
Swa·n , NY , 50 ; Sutton , LA , 49 .

TODAY'S "-MAJOR LEAGUE LEIIDERS
By Tht Auocieted Press
AMERICAN LEAGUE
BATTING (100at bats ) - Sma ll ey,
M in , .390 ; Ke mp , Oet, .388 ; Carew ,
Cal. .353 : A Ban,ist er . Ch i , .35 1:
Bochte , Sea , .346 .
.
.
R UN S - G Brett , KC, 39 ; Otis . Ki .
36 ; Lynn , Bsn , 36 ; L eF lore , Oet 35 ; C.
Washi ngto n , Chi. 35 ; Smalley , M in , 35 .
R BI - Ba y lor, Cal , 47 ; Lynn , Ba sn,
4 1; Porter . KC. 39 ; Coo per . Mil , 36 ;
Nettles , NY , 3S ; Horton , Sea . 35 .

By HERSCHEL NISSENSON
AP Sports Writer
The Minnesota Twins have found a
bunch of " cousins" among the
American League's weak sisters.
And just to keep things all in the
family, shortsto p Roy Smalley,
Manager Gene Mauch's nephew, is
leading the way.
The Twins broke a five-game losing
streak Monday by outslugging the
Oakland A's 1().7, That boosted their
record against the A's, Seattle
Mariners and ToronlD ·Blue Jays, the
AL 's three worst teams, 10 1~.
In addition, they are $-2 with Detroit
and 3-2 over Cleveland, giving them a
22-4 log against teams with sub-.500
records. The only winning teams the
Twins have played so far are
California, Texas and Kansas City.
They are only 4-14 against those clubs.
" All wins count the same. They
don't put asterisks by the wins over
the second-division clubs," said
Smalley, who hit a two-run firstinning homer - his lOth of the season
-and singled home two more runs ID
cap a tie-lreaking four-run seventh.
Elsewhere, the New York Yankees
won in Milwaukee for the first time
since 1977 by edging the Brewers 2-1 in
10 innings, the Kansas City Royals
outlasted the Baltimore Orioles 5-4 in

1ti innings, the Texas Rangers beat the
Baltimore had tied it in the ninth on
Bosto~ Red Sox 5-2, the Olicago White Ken Singleton's o~ite-lield homer
Sox trimmed the Cleveland Indians 6- after the Royals had taken a 4-3 lead
1 and the Detroit Tigers downed the in the eighth on Brett's two-run homer
Toronto Blue Jays 6-2. .
off Dennis Martinez. Gary Roenicke
The Twins broke a !Hi tie in the also homered for the Orioles.
. Rangers 5, Red Sod
seventh. Jo~n Castino singled home
the go..ahead run, Rob Wilfong walked
Fergie Jenkins and Sparky Lyle
with the bases loaded and Smalley • checked Boston on nine hits and AI
who also doubled . and scored in the Oliver lashed a two-nin homer in the
third inning, singled home the final fll"st inning as the Rangers posted
two runs. The three hits boosted their eighth consecutive triumph over
Smalley's batting average 1D .389. . the Red Sox dating back · ID last
Yankees 2, Brewers 1 '
season. It was the third time in as
Micke)' Rivers lined his third home many outings Jehkins had beaten his
nm of the season with two out in the former team since he was traded back
lOth inning to ruin a fine pitching to Texas two years ago. Buddy Bell's
performance by Milwaukee 's Bill double play grounder got the winning
Travers. The blast gave rookie Ron run home in the fifth inning and Bwnp
Davis his first major league victory. Wills' added a two-l'un single in tile
Davis, recalled ftom the minors on · eighth.
Sundey, relieved Jim Beattie with
While Sox 6, IndlBDB 1
runners at first and third and one out
Alan Bannister drilled three singles,
in the eighth, worked out of trouble
and allowed one hit the rest of . t11e
wa.v.
Royals 5, Orioles 4
· George Brett, who had already hit ·
for the cycle (single, double, triple,
home run) in the first 15 innings, led
off the 16th against Sanuny Stewart
with his second homer of the night and
sixth of the year to power Kansas City
over the Orioles.

.,,

drove in one rW!, and scored two and
Ken Kravec l)eld Cleveland hitless
after allowing three hits in the first
inning. The White Sox w;ent ahead
with two runs in the 5eco,idi Rusty
Torres doubled home the (ltst run
Greg Pryor added a sacrifi~by. Bill
Nahorodny, Bannister .and " Ralph
Garr.singled a run home in tile fourth ,
fifth, and sixth innings, r~tlvely,
and Nahorodny homered in theeighth.·
Tigers I, Blue Jays Z '
,
Chii(!IP ·Summers, acquired ~. front
Cincinnati over the weekend, cracke¢
his first American League ho~ lc!' ·
ignite a three.:run second-inning while
Jack Morris scattered· seven hits in
recording his first complete game of
the year. Summers, who added two
singles, triggered Detroit's three-rurt
second with a two-out homer and ,
Aurelio Rodriguez and Lynn Jones;
added RBI singles.
,::

.-------------------~moo YKOOJ.OOlMm m

AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST
W . L . Pet. GB
29 17 .630
Baltimore
'16 18 .59 1 2
Boston
25 21 .543 4
New York
26 22 .542 4
Milwauk ee
19 2 1 .475 7
Detroit
20 25 .444 81 2
Cleveland
12 35 .255 171 ~
Toronto
WEST
California
28 19 .59 6
Minnesota
'16 18 .59 1 1 ~
12
Texas
27 19 .587
Kansas City
27 20 .574 1
Ch_icago
n 23 .500 .4 1· 2
Seattle
17 3 1 .3541P 2
Oakland
16 32 .333 12 1.,
Sunday 's Games
Cleveland 5 -4. N ew York 0-5
Boston 1, Toronto 0
California 4-9, Chicago 2-1
Detro i t 5-10, Baltimor.e 1-3
kansas Ci ty 2. Minnesota .,
Oakland 2, M ilwa ukee 1
Texas 7, Seattle 3
Monday 's Games
Minnesota 10. ·oakland 7
Chicago 6, Cleveland 1
New York 2, Milwaukee 1. 10 in n ings
Detro it .6, Toront o 2
Texas 5, Boston 2
Kansas City 5 . Baltimore 4, 16 in nings
Only games' scheduled
Tuesday's Gam es
Detro i t (Baker 1-3) at Toronto
(Garvin 0-1) , (n ,
Oakland (Keough 0-7) at M innesota
(Erickson 1-4&gt;. lnl
Cleveland ( W i lkin s 2-2) a t Chi cago
(Wortham s·-4), (n l
New
York
( Hunt er
0 -31 a t
Milwaukee (Haas 2-3, (n )
Boston (Stan ley 4-3 ) at Texas
(Ale x ander 2-J l. (nl
Baltimor e (Palmer 5-2) at Kansas
City (Splitlorff 7-3l. (n)
California &lt;Barr 2-0 J at Seattl e·
(Parrott 2-0) , {n)
Wednesday' s Games
Detroit at Toronto·. l nl
Oakland at M inn eso t a , (n l
Cleveland at Ch icago , (nl
New York at M i lwa ukee (n)
Boston at Te xas, ( n )
Baltimore at Kansas Ci ty , In J
Cal i fornia a t Sea tfle , (n)
TO DAY 'S
MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS

e~z~roA~~o~~~e::~~s ··,
BATTIN G (10 at ts ) ~ Brock ; St L ,
.376 ; Cin, 339 : Mazzill i, NY , .335 . '
RUNS Lopes , L A , 110 ; Con '
cepe ion , Cin , 35 : Puhl. Htn, 33 : North ,
S~ . 33 ; Schmidt. Ph1 , 32.
R Bl - M"rphy , All. 36 ; Kingman .
Chi, JS ; Schmidt, Ph i, J~ ( Fosler , Cin ,
33 ; Garvey , LA , 33; Winfield , SO. 33 .
HITS - Rose, Phi.6S ; Russell, LA ,
85 ; W lntield. so. 63 : Garv ey . LA, 61 : ·

HOW'S YOUR

HOSP ITAUZATION?

CA~()

,__ _____ ..
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I

992-3443

Transa~tions
Weekend Sports Transactions
By The Associated Ptess
BASEBALL
American League
DETROIT T I GERS Sold M ill
May . c atcher, to the Chicago White
Sox . Placed Cha mp Summers , firs t
basemen -outfielder. on the roster .
NEW YORK YANKEES Sen t
Brian Do yle , second basemen , to
Columbus of the
In ter national
L eagu e . Recalled Ron Davis , pit che r ,
from Co tumbus .FOOTBALL
National Football Lngue
D ENVER BRON COS Sig ned
Char li e West. defensive back .
M I NNESO TA VIKINGS Signed
Jim Marsha ll . de fe nsi ve end.
NEW E N GLAND PATRIOTS Signed Ken McCarron , placekick er :
R ict1ard Rodenberger , w ide r eceiver ;
and Larry Dor sey , defensive back ..

THISTLEOOWNS
'- NORTH RANDALL, Ohio (AP) _
Jut-Q' Gin, ridden by Gary Cooper,
came fr~behind 1D win the $11,000
Western
ervePrepatThlstledown
Monday.
· .,
Jug 0 ' Gin paid f6.60, $3.80 and 13.
The place horse, RoWld Circuit, paid
$5.80 and 13.40, and Royal Potion
returned $2.20 for show.
The winning time for the mile and
one,sixteenth was 1:47 1-5.
It was Cooper's third win,of the day .
The 9-4-8 trifecta of Indian Tavern,
Pepperstone and Carihe Pirate paid
$800.10.on 110 winning tickets.
Attendance was 7,603. The handle
totaled $971,904.

~rcr
built can send
Jack, Jr.

toco1lege.
mtlll'

- NT
"""'IOOay.
" WOI1II
dWJ
Md

""1lh a Homrowrwr"s Wan
lrum tht Cily Loon f.ompoll'l

ynu can turn lh:u ~· In· ,
CT't".L-.iRR value lniO money.
l!p Ill l40.000.
EnooKh to send your
Sl~ nr da~lf'r k1 rolqr.
Or rt'miMitl the hwX' from
m~m "' amc. Or to makt
a spK~ dmm ronw- lr\Jt.
. Sinct' 191l, cry l.Dall

has ear!W'd !he I rust ()(Ohio
pr.'fflf. Trll:ll us wiCh ~r
!()all \\(" nnd ways kl hdp.

went from first to third on a wild pitch
and scored on Riel&lt; Mannings '.
sacrifice fly .
Andre Thornton then doubled and
when he tried for third he was cut
down on a relay started · bY
rightfielder Claudell Washington.
uThat 's all there was, wasn' t it? ,"
said Cleveland Manager Jeff Torborg.
"We ran ourselves out of the first
inning and then he got lOugh. He's a
pretty good yoWlg pitcher." ·
"I started feeling better in the third
inning" said Kravec, who won his fifth
straight decision and has a :&gt;J record,
"and really put it together in the
fourth."
In one stretch, Ktavec retired 14

Watson wins
Ohio tourney
BY GEORGE STRODE
AP Sports Writer
DUBLIN, Ohio (AP) -Tom Watson
is a man on a working vacation for the
,
next two weeks.
%e winner of four National PGA
Tour events this year, including the

Mr

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Social Calendar
,

MONDAY
BETHEL 6, International Order of
Job's Daughters, 7:30 Monday night
at the Mldd!t!J!Ort Masonic Temple.
' BAKE SALE Monday at Chester .
Conunons beginning at 11 a.m. spon·
sored by Flve Point Stitcher J. L. 4-H
Club.

Kravec, ChiSox top Indians
CHICAGO (AP) - Ken Kravec,
after doing a complete turnabout in
hurling the Olicago White Sox to a 6-1
victory over Cleveland Monday,
recalled the Indians could have had
him cheap .back in 1969.
"They drafted me out of high school
on the 20th round," said Kravec. "And
I wanted to sign. But they never called
me, so I went ID college. They could
have had me real cheap. For what
ever they wanted.''
The Cleveland native got back at the
team that didn't sign him by hurling a
turnabout three-hitter. All three hits
came in the first inning when the
Indians scored their only run .
"I didn't have anything," said
Kravec. " If it hadn't been for the
defense, I would have been long gone.
I was struggling and lucky ID get away
with it."
All the defense did was throw two
runners out at third base. Bobby
Bonds singled ~t was thrown out at
third after Paul Dade singled. Dade

John

Pomeroy
A1uma1 AllloelaUon scbolanhlp
:. wilmer.

!'-tlanta

~

964;

:': JANA BURSON -

~-~~~

str;~ight

before hitting Duane Kuiper
with a pitch with two outs in the
eighth. He walked four and struck out
eight, getting Bonds three times.
The White Sox got ID loser Wayne
Garland, 2-5, for two runs in the
second inning on a run-&lt;~coring double
by Rusty Torres and a sacrifice fly by
Greg Pryor . Bill Nahorodny singied in
a run in the fourth and hit his fifth
homer .in the eighth. Ralph Garr and
Alan Bannister each drove in a rWI .
Bannister, one of the American
·League's leading hitters with a .351
average, had three singles and scored
twice .
"I'm not thinking of any batting
title . Not W!til Sepl\!!"her," said
Bannister. "~'s:n just .. ~itting them
hard and letting.them Qe.W where they
fl
....
i
may ."
,.'t.#
'
Torborg wa!i"'di'Sappointed irt
Garland's performance and hoping
for a better showing since G!!rlan~
was coming off-_A.Jol!f;hit coinpl~
game vi~~l o~er 'l'o~to.
I
"He was!J1t ileal
arp,'_' said
Torborg. "He Ilia's stl warmmg up ,
We've had miserablither and all
our pitchers are fee
it."
,
The ~Q. tei¢1!!&lt;111
again tonight
with Riclllln~":WI!I',tlul(t 5-4, pitching:
for. Chi~a~o,al!Bin,st ~eland rookie;

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honing his already
considerable
skills
Memorial
Tournament
Sunday,
is . Ertc Wilkins, 2-2.
for the U.S. Open.
.
Watson terms the Open his No . 1"
priority in a season already gUttering
with winnings ef more than $353,000 - ,
just under $9,000 below his all-time
single season total in 1978.
"li's my top ll"iority because I've
had a chance to win it twice. I haven't
done it. i\nd I haven't even been in
qontention the last three years," he
we reserve the right
said.
For a man of Watson's fierce pride,
to lim~ quantities
a gnawing
that must be
disappointment.
His victories this year are twice as
many as any rivals. His money total is
almost double that of runner-up
!..aMy Wadkins' $17'1,000.
He's well on his way to a third
straight sweep of the Professional
Golfers' A&amp;&lt;tociatlon Player of the
Year, Vardon Trophy and moneywinning titles, unprecedented in the
sport. .
"I'm going to practice ~ard. I've got
work to do on my driving. I made
.l}listakes with my driver here and the
fairways will be much narrower at the
Open. My irons were only adequate.
My putting is what carried me," said
Watson,a Masters champion and twoCENTE"R
time British Open king.
His 285 total, 3 under par, was the
lone sub-par effort in the select
internationjll field for the Memorial.
Watson crutsed 10 a 3-!thot :victory
over runner-Up Miller Barber.
Even host Jack Nicklaus, a
disappointing 27th with a 29!1 total on
his · own Muirfield Village course,
admits beating Watson is a tall order
these days .
"Tom is playing so much better now
than anyone in the game. He 's going
to have to play PP"rly for somebody to
beat him, " said Nicklaus, still winless
in 1979.
.
'
.

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PRICES G~D NOW TlfRU MAY 26

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WEDNESDAY
POMEROY Chapter 1116, Order of
the Eastern. star, amual inspection,
May 30 at the Pomeroy Masonic Tern·
pie. All Eastern star members in·
ylted.
WILDWOOD Garden Club, Wednes.
day, 8 p. ·m. at the home of Mrs. Mae treasurer.
Named
to
the
executive
committee
Holter with Mrs. Evelyn Holter as coholtess. Members are to take and were Ed Kermedy, Sue Zirkle,
Johnanna Shul~r. Jane Bourne, Pat
name an Iris for roll call.
Wood and Brenda Hysell,
The financial and necrology reports
were posted. Preceding the banquet
the invocation was given by the Rev.
Waid . Radford. There was. group
The Riverview PTO recently einging of "America, the Beautiful",
endorsed the approaching school levy the "Purple and the White", and the
to be voted on in Eastern Local Alma Mater, with Mrs. Lucille
District June 5. Heading the Swackhammer at the plano. The
conunittee for levy promotion will be evening's prosram Included an
Margaret Cauthorn . Lees, local (Jriginal poem by Linda Darnell
superintendent, presented most Mayer.
Music for dancing was provided by
informative information on the
currend needs concerned with levy "Whiskey Rlverr Band." .
Returning for the reunion were
support.
these
out-of-county alumni and their
Newely elected officers- president,
guests
:
l,!arlene PUtman; secretary, Jenny
lll!rkhimer; and treasiO"er, Geraldine
Holsinger were in charge of the
PRACflCE SLATED
business meeting.,It was reported that
Donna
Johnson, woi-thy matron of
,the Variety Show, recently held at the
Racine
Chapter,
annoW!ced today
)chool, was quite successful. Thanks
that
a
practice
session
for inspectioo
'Were! extended to JeMy NewlWI for
will
be
held
on
Thursday
at 7 p.m. at
the contribution of ceramic were
the
Masonic
Temple.
giveh to the PTO for public
liontributlons as well as Sue Hayman
MEETS WEDNESDAY
fpr 1the making of curtains for the
OAPSE
Cbapter 17, Meigs Local,
echool. The sixth grade class received
will
meet
Wednesday
at 7:30p.m. at
the banner and money for the highestMeigs
Junior
High. Bob LeClain, field
llercenlage of parents in ~ttendance. representative, will he the speaker .
• Students of the fourth grade
recorder class an(j chorus members of
MEETING PLANNED
fll'ades five and six provided music for SOFTBALL
There
will he a meeting Wednesday
the approximately 80 people in
at 7:30 p . m. of the team
~ttendance.
representatives of the Meigs County
:·E~venteen employees of the school
Softball League at the Pomeroy
were recosntzed and honored by the
Pl'O group. In turn, romm mothers United Methodist Church.
The league is being organized
ilerving the school for the year as well
through
the efforts of the Meigs
OS voliDiteer library aides were County Ministerial
Association.
recognized by the teachers. Special
Subjects that will he discussed will
thanks were extended to recognized
jlarents attending their last Riverview team rosters, scheduling, entry fees
and eligiblllty. All churches in the
~ meeting as a parent.
county are urged to join, even if not a
• Refre~ents were served.
part of the Ministerial Association.

BLDGS~

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RIVERDOWNS

CINCINNi\Tl (AP) ~ Trenthor 's
Comet won by a nose. in the first
division of Monday's $10,000-added
Pegasus Handicap at River Downs.
Bold Failing led all the way in
winning the second division of the
feature raee.
In the first division , the winner·ran
the mile and 70 yard course in 1:46 3-5
and paid $11.80, $4.20 and 13.
Hasty Tam was second and paid
$3.20 and $2.60, lfhile Royal Stearic
paid $2.60 10 show.
In the second half of the feature,
Bold Failing ran the distance in I : 45 25 and paid $3.211, $2.60 and $2.20.
Bold Intention was second and paid
$4.40 and $2.40, while Prince Stearic
paid $2 .20 10 show.
The daily double combination of 3-1 ,
War Banquet and John Beard, paid
$122.60.
A crowd of 8,219 wagered . $851,24£.

FACTORY DIRECT

I

Riverview PTO met

We don't just se ll you a nd forget you. We're here to serve you!

..'

Maclal1ti

ab

~

. n~~~l~o~Q

POMEROY ...Over 400 alwnm, · Class of 1916: Rev. and Mrs. Wald Mrs. Paul Kautz, Colwnbus ; Kathryn
Class of 1954 : Mr. and Mrs. Ray RQmine Pickerington· Mr lild Mrs .
many with gue~, attended the ban· Radford, Beaver.
LegarSpencer,AnnaMarie,Fla..
Hines, Belpre; Mr. and Mrs. Donald Wilhn Strauss F1~,'
quet and dance m celebratloo rl the
Class of 1919: Elizabeth Chase,
Class, of 1940: Dr. and Mrs. John Yeauger, Mr. and Mrs. R. G·. Martin Roush ~- . Va •
103rd annlver'!IIII'Y of Pomeroy High · Dayton.
Whitcolt)b, Detroit, Mich.
DeLavel, Athens; Shirley Wipple, George Smith, Roger An1ll '~ ·
School and the 61st ~ual g~~lil18
Claas ~f 1~: Willard Meyers
Class of 1943: Ann Tucker. Colwnbus; Mr. and Mrs. Howard Kit- . and Mary Engliall, Columbul':
of the Pomeroy Alwnru Allsoctation.
Ashworth, Kent, .George Reuter, Pon- Chepeachet, R. 1.
chen, Marietta; Mrs. Ann Hatfield
Class of 19111· Mr and Mrs o.vid
Joe Struble.was toaatmas!"r for the tlac, Mich.
Cl88S rl 11146: Eleanor Smith Collins, Spring:(ield; Mr. and Mrs. Brown, Richfleid; Mr. and
Mille
banquetpeld m the Meigs High School
&lt;:'- oll829: ~·and Mrs. Thomas Walter, Toledo. .
Richard Leifheit, Springfield..
RQberte, Newark.
·
cafeteria wh1ch featured the ~ck, Colwnbus, Frances Oy. HarClass of 1949: Mr. and Mrs. 0. H.
Class of 1955: Bill Hysell, ColwnClass of · 1963 . Hatold E ene
~roy High School trophy display ru, Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Wmce, Jr ., Zanesville; Mr. and Mrs. bus, Mr. and Mrs. Douglas E118lish, Smith, Mansfield; Jean ~
andp1duresofthevariousclaBses.
Rice, Stow; Mr. and Mrs. Cecil John Douglas Guysville· ·Mr. and · Colwnbus. ·
p k burg w v .
The PHS colors, purple and white, H~, ~ton; Bertha Wetzel Mrs. T. M. Cottrtn, Carroll; Mr. and
Class of 1956; Mr. and Mrs. John P.
~of 1
~ ~
were used In the floral atrangl!lllents Koenig, Worthington : .Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Be~ ~hoza, McMurray, Young, Lancaster.
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Jcbn Sc!IIIW
which adorned the banquet tables. Dale Bailey, Marengo, Mr. and Mrs. Pa.; Frankie W1pple, Columbus; Mr.
Class of 1957: Brenda Eimer Col- terbeck Marietta· Mr and MnJ.
These were provided by the Winding Paul Sweeney, Anmterdam ; Mf· and and Mrs . George Vaughan , wnbus . .
'
Dave Thylor FostOna· "M.,y ~
Trail Garden Club, the Pomeroy Mnl. Robert Richards, Gallipolis; Chillicothe; Mary Hill Nicely,
Class of 1959: Mr. and Mrs. Terry dal Letart 'w va.
Stnl. .
GllrdenClu,b,ndtheWildwoodGarden James Clarlt:, &lt;leves; Mr. ~d Mrs. Walton, Ky.; and William Tubbs , Phalin, Vincent; Rose Horak Col~bus; ' Breneta''wacner ll'Dll~
Club.
Homer Mldldff, Richwood, · Edith Phoenix, Arizona.
Denison, Pittsburgh, Pa.; Cormie Logan· Lance' Hart Kemon· Ulldli
Classes were seated together at Ables GUkey, Galllpol.la ; Mr. and
Class rl 1950: Bormie Kelley, Woodgeard Brown, Knoxville, TeM.; Kram~r Columb 111 ~ uid ·
aDd'
tables marked with pennants bearing Mrs. Donald Coburn, Florida; and F1orida.
Charlotte Murray RQwley, Ironton; Mrs. AUi-edSisaon,Gallllll;
·
-:
the class year. During ~roll call of . Mr. and Mrs. E~er Coolpton.
Class of 11!62: Mr. and Mrs. John Mr, and Mrs. Frank Sununerfield,
Class of 19116: Doi1na Reibel Sbato
classes, Mrs. W. 0 . Damitz and Mrs.
.Class of 1933. Stanley Houdashelt, Tubbs, Washington Court House.
North Lewisburg; Mr. and Mrs. Gene GaUlpolls.
· ·
'
Uswin Nease of the Class of 191t were Mr. . and Mrs. Thomas Scott,
recognized as the oldest graduates at· . Gallipolis.
tending. Asa Hoskins, a Pomeroy
Class of 1113t: . Wllbelmlne Smith
High School graduate and fonner Maier, Monclova;· Anna Sattler
teacher, reminesced 1111 his days Jn ~abaa, Canton; otho Keenam,
. Orient; Mr. and Mrs. Han')' Shone,.
the classroom.
The alumni seholarshlp was award· S\aJ.Kon, Calif, Kathryn Peters, Ar:
I I
I I
ed to Jana Burson, daughter of Mr. cadia; Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas Vasco,
and Mrs. Fred Burson. Jana, a Amherst.
graduate of Meiga High School, will · · Class of 1936: Margaret Nease
attend Ohio University in the fall, She Davia, Athens; Da Allee Wads ~ulatorian of her graduating class, dellcarper, Kirkersville; Jea~ne
listed in "Who's Who Among Hines, Columbus; Mr. 8!ld Mrs. Miles
American High Scboo!Students'', carper, Klrketsvllle ; Jeanne Hines,
received a Nat!~ Merit Letter of Columbus.
.
Class of 1937: Mr. and Mrs. Miles
Conunendation, the DAR Good
Citizenship Award, the Geometry ~Farland, Colwnbus; Paul Car·
Award, the Biology award, the u. s. nuchae!, Webster.
Marine Distinguished Musician
Class of 1931 : Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Award, and the outstanding junior Tate, Middleburg.
band ml!lllber award. She played In
Class of 1829: .Mr. and Mrs. Tom
POINT E S
.
themarchingbandforfquryears the Smith, Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. · - - -··P•L•A•A-N•T•A•IIIRIIP.iOiiRiiT-----------•61.71.51..i'li01.71.9. .
concert band for four years, the jazz Donald Will, Worthington; Mr. and
bandror~eeyears. EdKe~. r------------------------------------------r------------------------------------~--~presldent, made the amouncemant.
The 1980 officers elected were Dan·
.I
ny Morris, president; KeMy Wiggins,
·i
first vice president; Paulette Har'·'
rison, second vice president; JoAnn
an
W111iaml!, secretary-treasurer; and
Iris Payne, assistant secretary.

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~~ perspective on value.

$109
®.

. ,.
'

Blue Cross .
Blue Shield ..

Value added.
~ Aeg•sllt oe(l Mtrlo,s Bluu CrosS A 5~0CIBI•oll

" ' Rego slered Mark S !Jiue Stljeld AUOCitl1oon

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,.'

Ji

. l: 1:, i
...',

• 1·1

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I

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�7-Tbel..N:Ul,)' ~lWICll Jt.Uu.~yva•-a.

6-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Mtl29, 19'79

ORDINANCE NO ._ 1081 -79

Middleport Alumni Assn. meets S~turday
MIDDLEPORT -A special tribute
to the late Forrest Bachtel, Mid·
dleport High School coach,. and his
1919 championship football team was
a lqhlight of the annual Middleport
Alumni Association rewlion held
Saturday night.
David Diles, ABC sportscaster, was
toastmaster for the banquet attended
by nearly 400 alumni and guests. In
his introductory re1I181"ks, Diles
.........,..
reflected on his years at MHS and the
~- ~ ~~·role which the teaching staff bad in
shaping his future . Diles talked about
1
the accomplishments of Bachtel
before introducing Omck Slobart,
bead footll coach at the University of
Toledo, and a member of the 1949 .,
championship team, who presented :;: ·,
the ·other team members, Harold
Hinkle, Don Payne, Roger Dillard,
RGicOe Wise, , James Buell, Jim ; ~.
~~~ Dick Walters, and Bill
'l } ,
..........r.
~e alao introduced Dr. E. R. Keig of .
St. Petersburg, Fla., team physician
at that lime, Don McKenzie, the assis- committee making the announcetent coach, and Bob Byer, manager of ment.
theteam.
Given Susan G. Park MemOrial
Before presenting a memorial pia· Scholarships of $3(111 each were Julie
que ~. Mn . Bachtel, Stobart gave a Byer, daughter of Mr. and Mn. Bob
tribute·to Bachlel. "He gave us hope Byer, Middleport; Kevin King, !1011 of
when we felt everything WBB lost. He Mr. and Mrs. William King, Midgave us faith when we didn't know dleport; Julie Kitchen, daughter of
what was there, and he gave us Mr.nd Mrs. Edward Kitchen, Mid·
courage when we really needed ", dleport; Mike Riley, son of Wilbur
Stobert commented.
Riley, Ironton; and Lori Withee,
He described Coacl) Bachtel as a daughter of the former Jennifer
''man who always held true and Daniels, Gallipolis.
believed In the grest principals of
Rick Hovatter, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Ufe."
Richard Hovatter, · received the
His philosophy, according to Geroge H. and SUsan Mae Lewis
Stobarl, wu to "hold on and to hang Memorial Award, donated by the
lnunWthlngscameyourway."
Rev. Dr. Edward Lewis and
The'Plaque which he presented to Lawrence L. Lewis.
Mn. Bachtel was inscribed "In
Miss Byer will attend Rio Grande
memory of FOrrest Bachtel, beloved College to major In art education. At
teacher and coach of Middleport High Meigs High School she has been in the
School." The alumni stood in tribute marching, concert and pep bands,
as Mrs. Bachtel responded with ap- assisted with the senior play. She atpredation noting ·that her husband · tends Heath United Methodist Church
"got his Dowers while he lived" and is senior princess of Bethel62, In-,
through the visits of many of the ternatlonal Order of Job's Daughters,
players during his years rl home con- Middleport.
flnement.
Miss Kitchen will also enter Rio
Mn. Carol Tannehill, Middleport, Grande this fall to major In educaand Mn. Kitty Dallas, St. Paris, lion. She is currently employed at
daugbtera of Coach BliChtel were pre- Burger Chef, Pome.-oy. She Is a
sent for the ceremony. Also introduc- member of the Heath United
ed was Carl Wolfe, Racine coach now, Methodist Church, and at Meigs High
a former MHS coach. A book on was 'on student council, a reserve and
highlights of the 1949 championship varsity cheerleader, in the pep club,
team compiled by Bob Byer, Roscoe and an off!~ assistant.
.
Wlae, and James Singer Vinson was · Hovatter :Will enter the Musklngwn
presented to the team members pre- Area Technical College at Zanesville
sentalongwithseveralotheralumnl. to 'major in petroleum engineering.
Recognized and presented orange . He Is employed at Village Pbarmscy . .
pompons with black "M's" were Or- . At Meigs he was in the National
ville Chambers of Montgomeroy, Honor Society for two years, played
Ala., who traveled the farthest and . foo!;baU and baseball for three years,
W&amp;ll also the oldest drum major of the and was on the wrestling team for one
MHS band; Max Lambert, the oldest year. He served on the annual staff,
football caplaln; Sarah Dawn Owen, was a member and officer of the Varoldest valedictorian; Paul Smith, slty MClub, and in tile cast of both the
oldeet class president; and Grace junior and senior class plays.
French, the oldest alUIIUii baving
Pictures · and lnformatiori on the
graduated in the class of 1917.
other students receiving scholarSCHOLARSHIPS
ships, not available at this time, will
Six scholarships were a wattled with be reported later.
Mn. Nan Moore of the scholarship
PROGRAM

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NOTICE OF APPLICATION TO
THE PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION OF OHIO
FOR AN INCREASE IN ELECTRIC RATES

jul~

Kitchen

Rick Hovatter

The prOjjram for the evening bus; Virginia Covert, . Rio Grande;
featured Franklin Ginther's Upper Charles Brooks, Mansfield; James
Arlington dance band, "The Bowles, Point Pleasant; Clnda and
Baritones", who brought a rowtd of Gene Abbott, Carroll; Bal'bara and
applause as they opened with the Mid· .. John Mayer, Grove City; Joan Wood
dleport fight song. Their selectlms Beahm. Knoxville, ·Tenn.; Mr. and
were popular dance tunes throuch the Mrs. Jobn Case, Columbus; Ira
years with couples dancing the waltz, Miltoo, Wayland, Big Prairie, Ohio;
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Graves, the jlt- 1\fr. and Mrs. Harold Moore,
terbug, BID Childs and Hazel Ginther, Pikesville, Ky.
the twlat, Ed Kitchen and daughter,
Jane Sauer Welker, Gahanna;
Julie, the dlaco, Carl Gheen and Julia Leland Brown, Woodbridge, Va.; ?.Jr.
Gheen.
and Mrs. Peter Klein, Arlington, Va.;
Alter the band played tile ''Orange Russell Rou8h, Pataakla; Asa Bradand Black", Mlck Childs, alwnnl bury, Clrclevile; Robert Mitch,
president, presented filril clips of the Wheeling; Freddie Robinson, ColumMlddleport band and football teams. bus; Kay Darst Barnett, · St.
He introduced his showing presenta- Oalrsville; Richard Koehler, Columtlon by showing oo film, L. W. Me· bus; Wllllam Diles, Athens; Herschel
Comas,' longtime tea.c her and Knapp, Sabina; Harland DeVol, Plain
superintendent, walking through the Oty; Oleva Lockett, Shaker Heights;
Middleport High School and out onto James Leland Crans, Cincinnati;
the empty football field and then Judy Martin Cavotte, Nelsonville;
showing the cUps of "hOw It was" Charlene Cockran, GaJIJpolls; Jane
beforti the years rl consolidation.
Vincent and Dorotby Casey,
The dinner Willi prepared and served by the EvangeUne Olapter, Order
LONG GRADUATI!21
of the Eastern Star, Middleport.
Jan
M.
Long, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Music for dancing following the
Lewis
Lorig,
Middleport, graduated
banquet program was presented by
from
Capital
University
Law School.
the Skokie Valley ~ of Columbus
. of which Jim WiJdermuth, an MHS CoounencemenLexerclaes were Sun·
day, May 31, at Veterans Memorial
graduate, was drummer.
Officers arranging the banquet Auditorium, Columbus. Aitendlng the
were Childs, president; Cherole ceremonies In addltloo to Mr. andBlake Burnette, vice president; -Mrs. 1Dng were Mba Dorothy Long,
Sheila Reeves, secretary; and Nancy Pomeroy, and Mr. and Mrs. Ray Re_d·
Miller Beaver, treasurer. Ed and Pit man, Ray and Lori rl Malon.
Long Ia presently working as a lepl·
Kitchen handled . the decoratlms.
Intern
for the proaecuUng attorney of
Favors were orange and lilack key
Plckaway
County. He Ia a former aid .
rings from Downing-Childs Into
State
Senator
and CongreS8111811
surance, and matches and naptkina
Douglaa
Applegate.
H~alao holds a
from the Citizens Natiooal Bank.
Bachelor
of
Art8
degree
from Ohio
Among the out.of-Q!Wity alumni
State
University.'
·
returning for the banquet were GorHe and his wife, SUsan, are Uving in
doo and Mary Hennesy, Columbus;
Worthington.
Lucy Erlewine Lake, West Jefferson,
Jennifer Scott, GaJIJpolia; Lyslon
Fultz, Zenia; Anita Fultz Mason, ColFive years ago: President Rlch8rd
umbus;
Bruce
Bingham,
Nixon
created a Cabinet-level
Ravenswood; Beverly DiJ:on, Poptlac, Mlch.; Janet Stobart Jordan, envlron.mental ·quality council. to
Ripley, W.Va.; Larry Estep, Colum- coordinate a Federal attack on
. bua: Mr. and Mrs. Jan Houck, Colum- pollution.

Th e substance of th e rate re11 islons proposed in the Applicat ion and Complaint and
Appeal fi led on Man:: h 1. 1979. is es follows :
A new supplement, Supplement No . 22 - Inter im Schedu le for Reco..,.ery of Non·
Purcha$Cd Power Costs, has been proposed co&gt;~e r i n,g the peri od of January ,
Febr uary anc! March of 1978.

i n c lud ab l ~

'Curre nt

.

General Se N ice schedules contaiM a similar clause with a minimum charge of
fiheen cents (1 54l. Cu rrent Residential and Pr ivate Area lighting schedules con tain no
such clau se .
All ra1e schedules are svs tem -w1de .
The residential rates have been modi lied and tm;reased

a~

follows :

RESIDENCE SERVICE - SC HEDU LE R-R
Present

Proposed

Per Month :

Winter

Summer

Summer

Customer C har g e ~
En ergy CheHge
First BOO KWH
All additional KWH

$5.00

$5.00

$8 .00

$8.00

3.531
1.50&lt;

3.53&lt;
3 .53&lt;

5.35&lt;1

5.354 pe r KWH
5.354 per KW H

1.80&lt;1

SMA LL USE -LOAD MANAGEMENT - SCHEDULE R -R-1
Present
Per Month :
Cu stomer Charge
Energy Charge
First 700 KWH
Next 100 KWH
Over 800 KWH

Winter

Summer

Propo$ed

$2.75

$2.75

$4.00

3.254
3.2511

3 .25d

4.354
4.35d

1

.so;

N/A
NIA

1.80&lt;1

Su mmer

Customer Charge
Energy C!urge
First 400 'KWH•

$2.76

$2.76

PropoJed

Winter

~

$6.00

$5.00

Winter

Customer Charge
Demand Charge
Ali KW of billi nQ demand
Energy Charge
'
f irst 150 KWH per KW of bi,VIn g
demand but not tess than
KWH

ysoo

All add1tional KWH

$4 .00

\A

4.354 per KWH
N/A per KWH

8.80d
8 . 8~per KWH
5 .70&lt;1
e)latSS of 6 KW maximum demand in summer months and

•Plus 150 KWM per KY., tn
110 (presen t). 130 (proposed) KWH per KW in exr;ess of 6 KW ma ~ i mum demand in
winter months.
Nex t 600 KWI-i
All additional KWH

3.60&lt;1
2.60&lt;1

3.40d

2.40&lt;

. 5.10&lt;1
2. 70&lt;

5.404 per KWH
2.90f per KWH

2 .00G

2 . 0~per

0 .9SG

KWH

1.504 per KWH

PROPOSED RATE - OPT IONAL DEMAND AA 1'E ·· SCHEDULE RLM

' .

$ 8 .00

Ne)l t· 1250 KWH
All additional KWH

Summer

Present ·
Per Month :
Demand Charge
On -Peak Hours
Fir$1 50 KW or len of
ma~t i mum demand

W.nter

Summer

-

Propo!ied

Winter

·force from and
earliest da t e
~: ew .
,., Passed. the

:'t~:St~ 9 ~9ene

.,.

. clerk

Sf55.00

Next 950 KW
2.75
Nut 2000 KW
2.60
Over 3000 KW
2.45
E)lcess KVA deman d charge .35
Off-Peak Hours
E)ltess demand
1.50
Ena rgy Charge
First 200 KWH per KW of
mu imum demand but no t
ten then 50.000 KWH as fol lows ;

$205 .0 0

AND
ALL

BUILDING SUPPLIES FOR

HOME IMPROVEMENTS

2tc

'

POMEROY cEMENT

6.50

6 .25
6 .00
.50

7.50 per KW
7.25 per KW
7'.00 per KW
.50 per . KVA

1.50

2.00

:2.00 per . KW

ALL
WEEK

fo r each 150 foot span of wire . The AL·2 sched ule has been modified to reflecn $1.75
increase in the base ra te of the 1 75 watt lamp, and a $0.10 increa$8 per uni t of underground
circuit .

Th e minimum capocitv which may be contracted for has been decreased from 30,000
KW to 10,000 KW. The demand charge hai been increased from $1.75 per KW to' $2~ 0
~er KW, the excess KVA charge from $0.35 to $0..40 per KVA, 'he energy char9f from
0.48C to 0 .609 pe r KWH, end the credit per hour of interruption hi$ been inCreased f rom
0 .24• to 0 .2Bt per KW .
'

2 .65&lt;1
2.4 ~

2.70&lt;1
2.70&lt;1

1.95&lt;1

2.151

2.90¢: per KWH
2.3154 per KWH

250 KWH per KW of
maJ~~ i mum demand but not
less than 50,000 KWH

1 .05-

1.35G

1.4D;

1.6~

pe; KW

This is a new schedule setti ng monthly rate s for &gt;~arious sizes of street lidhts as follows:
175 watt mercury vapor - $4 .76 , 400 watt mercury vapor - $7 .75, 100 Vltatt HPS vapor$5.75 , 250 watt HPS \l&amp;pcl( - $9.00 and 400 watt HPS vapor - $10.00.1
t

8PAK~OZ.99e

demand but not less
than 100,000 KWH
O.SO!t

0 .80&lt;1

0 .60&lt;1

o.ao; oe• KWH

It is e5t imated thai the rep resentative standard residential percentage increa~ will bl8
36.90%, th e representative Small Use - l oad managemen t residential percen tage incr~se
will be 26.98%, the represen tat i\te small commercial and industrial percentage increase will
be 36.91 %, end ' the representatiw other commercial and industrial percentage incraase will
ba35.38%, if the increases sought are granted in full ,
&gt; ' I
ANY PERSON , FiRM, CORPORATION, OR ASSOCIATION MAY FILE PURSUANT
TO secnoN 4909,19 oF THE REv1seo coo E. AN OBJECTION TO THE tNcREAsE
OR INCREASES PROPOSED BV THE COMPANY WHICH MA Y ALLEG E THAT THE
COMPANY'S APPLICATION CON-T AINS PROPOSALS THAT ARE UNJUST AND DIS·
,
•
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CRIMINATORY OR UNREASONABLE.
....._

Primary Voltage Credits - Multiplier for KWH increased from .95 to .97. Discount per KW
o f demand increased from fifteen cen t1 {15f l to· fifty cents ~ 509 ) per KW.

Proposed

Present
Winter

Summer

$6,000.00 $9,000.00
1.75
2.70

Over 3000 KVA
~
Oft-Peak Hours
EKcess demand
0.90
Energy Charge
First 180 KWH per KVA of
ma"imum demand
1 ,2Qot

Winter ---summer

I

$12,000.00
3 .75

$15,000.00
4.70 per KVA

0 .90

1.20

1.20 per K VA

1.50&lt;1

1.554

1.751 per KWH

$22.50

0 .8~

1.10&lt;1

1.154

1.35t per , KW~

0 .784

I

0 .5&amp;1

0 .154 per KWH

PRIVATE AREA LIGHTING SERVICE - SCHEDULE_S AL·1 AND AL·2

.

t ,

Further informati on may be obtained from Cblumbus and Souther~ Ohio Electric
Company, 216 Nort h Front Street, Cotumbu.s, Oh!o 43216, Attentjon Refes Otpardnent
or from The Public U_
t ilitiel ' Commis~lon of 01\ lo, 180 Eau Bro1d Straet, Columbus,\ Qhi~

43215.

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COLUMBUS AND SOUTHERN OHIO ELECTRlC COf.1PANV
Ben l . Ray , Pruldent e"d Chief Executive Officer

The Al•1 schedule has be'n modified to reflect the followina increa5es : $0.95' in the

&gt;'

(5J 29 ( 6 1 5 . 2t c

--::-:-~:-::-:-------

Today .In Hl111ory
By lbe Associated Press
Today is Tuesday, May 29, the !49th
day of 1979. There are 216 days left in
the year .
Today's highUght in history :
On this date in l7lJO, Rhode Island
ratified the U.S. Constitution,
completing approval by all of the 13
original colonies.
One year ago: China's Foreign
Minister Huang Hua charged at the
United Nations that the Soviet Union
is the most
potential source

L a rry Spence r .
Cl er k Ot.C"OUrf
ot M e i gs Co unt y .
Ohio
( 5) 22, ')9 , (6), 5 . 17 , 19 . 26,
61 c

Carrier Needed
MIDDLEPORT~ OHIO

MONKEY RUN, POMEROY, 0.
CALL

TH.E DAILY SENTINEL
POMEROY, OHIO

992-2156
Make your own spending money and eam prizes.

.

VALLEY BELL

TOILET
TISSUE

·

DOG

DatUNK $369

4

roll 89~
pak .

STYLF25 LB. ·
ALL

.,59

CHOC. MILK

GAllON '159

SOFT PAK

All STAR

'FRUIT DRINK
GAllON 79'

2% MILK
59
GAP. CARTON '1

GOOD LOW LOW PRICE

BUNS

8 PAK

49~

HOTDOG OR HAMBURGER
HOLSUM KING SIZE

B.READ

LOAF

39'

PRODUl::E

RED ROME

LB

APPLES ········~·~·:.89
. LB:•• 234
CARROTS ••••••••
.

4

.
: 2 LB 99~
TOMATOES
............
.

.
.
HD 39~
LEITUCE
._..............
.

WEEK

8.

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THURSDAY
ONLY

NOt ~~

'

Bv Caro l yn G Thoma s
Depufy Clerk

SUPERIORS ·BOLOGNA..........~: .. 99~
lARGE
SAVORY BACON.:~ ................... ~·..·89~
EGGS
MINUTE STEAKS .....................~: ..!199
ooz. 59e
SUPERIORS FRANKl
2% MILK

MATE

~~t~rn

The Cornpanv 's Appl icati on and Complaint and Appeal -states that the r te of
on l~ e value Of th e pwperty affected is inadequate, unju~t, unreasonable an~ insuff ient
to y1etd just compen&amp;atlon and that the raun proposed w1ll not produce mo., than fair
return on such propeny and are necessarv tor the assur~mce of adequt!lte 11rvtce, implbvt- .
ment of earnings and financial 10undness .
·- '
\.
4
The Comparly prays that the Com minion ! 1) approve: the proposed
for N. wspaper Publication; (2) fiJII a date for a hearing; (3 ) find that the pr asen t ,ra~ t prices, eh1; 911
a.nd other provisions of the schedules affected by such Application and Complaint ~nd
ApPial, including the O!les contained in ColumbUs CitY Ordinance No. 105-79 ; are unjUst
and unreasonable and insufficien t to yield just compensation for the •rvice renctfred
thereunder ; 141 f i n~ that Columbus City Ord inance No, 105-79 is unlawful; (5) find end
determine that the rates, pri ces, charges and ·other provisio ns of the schedules tendered
for filing are just and reasonable, and approve such schedules in tht form tendered and make
such schedules effective as soon as h is practicable to do' so ; 16) fik and dltermir1e thtjust
•nd reesonable pricel and chargss to be cherged and collected by the Company ftlr the
utllitv service with in the City of Columbus; and (7) grant to th e Company 1uch othertnd
further relief to which It may be entitled.
1
'

hCM1ng be-t or e lhr5 COur t
on the l )lh day o f Jun (!,
1979 , a t 1. oo o 'c toc l&lt;. PM
Any pe r son desir-tng lo
f ile exceptions l here t o
mus t fil e I hem iJ I l ea st l ive
days pr i or ·to t he da te se t
l or hoari n g
G1ven u n der rn y hand
and se al of said Cou r t , th is
25 th day o f May 1979
Robert E Buck
Judge

' '

BROUGHTON

16 oz.

HYLAND

All rates are s1.1bject to the ~u el Cost Adjustment clause in R IDEA No . 1.

per KWH

0ver 450 KWH per KW of ,

Demand Ch~rge
On -Peak Hours
First 3000 KVA or less
of ma)limum demand

COKE
PWS TAX &amp; DPT.

STREET LI GHTING SERVICE - SCHEDULE SL

2.90( per KWH

Sta te Ol OhiO , VIZ ;
th e su r v•vi ng spouse . the
next . ol
kin,
the
bene"ci ar i es u n de r l he
w d l . and to th e att or n ey or
atto r neys r eprese n ti ng any
of
t he a fo remen t io n ed
pe r so ns ·
Ida M Ch r is t ie , R . 0 No .
1. Po n1eroy . Ohio. (C ase
No . 22704)
You a r e her eby not i f ie d
tha t t h e In ven t o r y and
App r a 1.se m ent of th e es t a t e
o f l h e afo reme nt io n ed,
dece a sed , l a te o f sai d
Cou nt y , w ere f i led in t his
Cou rl Sai'd In ventor y an d
App ra 1semeh l will be . fo r
0 1 ft l('

Pub t1c a tion of fh1 s notice,
WhiCh w itt be p u bl iS h ed
once each week t or s tx
successive wee k s . The l ast
pu b l ication will be mad e on
Ju ne 26, 19 79, and t he ' 28
d ays tor an s we r
wil l
comme n ce on tha t da te
In ca se of you r failure to
a ns w e r
or
othe r w ise
r es p ond as r eq ui r ed by th e
O H io
Ru l es
of
Civi l
Pr oce d u r e,
t he
l in al
11 car ing on th is ma lter wi ll
heh c l d aft er the ex p irat ion
o f &gt;~ 1 day s a n cr t he tas t day
of publi c at ion of th is noti ce ·
or as soon th er ea ft er as ca n
be sc h edul ed bv t he Co u r t .

CH ICE MEATS

Sinc!l1915

Mawimum cherge has ,been changed f rom SOd per KW and 59 per KWH to 6~
and 64 per KWH .

•\' 5 ·

CA ROLYN SU E KING ,
Def endant.
No . 11 . 1~0
NOTICE B Y
PUBLICATION
fO
Ca r ol y n Sue Ki ng ,
wnose l as t kn ow n ad dr ess
WtlS HB 9 B Seoul C a m p
Ro ~Jd , Long Bollom , Oh 10
You a r c her eb y n o t i f ied
that you have been n a med
a ac t endan t in a legal
tH IIone n ti ll ed H arry Ki ng ,
Pii:! 1n l i ff , vs Caro l y n Sue
K ing . D efendant.
T ht5
nc 11on t1 a s b ee n assig ned
Case N o . 17. 150 a nd is
pend ing in the Co uri ot
Co mm on Pl ea s of Meigs
Co unt y , Ohio
Th e obje c t o t tne Com
pl ai nt is t he obta in ing ot a
divo r ce
a nd
th ·c
i er
mon a t ion of a m arr i ag e
c ontra c t
b e t wee n
th e
parti es . lhc sel tt em ent o f
the •Pr op erty r i ght s of th e
pa rt ies , and th e issu e of
supp ort a nd c u stody of th e
,CI1i ldr en
·
Y ou a r e requir ed to
a ns w e r
t he
c ompl a int
w1 thin 78 d a y s a ft er t he l a st

NOTI CE ON FILING •
OF INVENTOR Y AND
APPRAISEMENT
Th e Stat e of Oh i o , Meig s
County ,- Court o• Common
P l eas . Protla1 e O iv1s ion
To
the Ex ec u i o r o r
A(ln 11n is trat or
of
the
cs t.a t e , to such • o f t he
tott ow1nQ. as ar e residen t s

I '• ,

The Department Store,
Of Building
/

CHURCH AND SCHOOL SERVICE - OPTIONAL - SUPPLEMENT NO. 18

3 .75

3 .60
3.45
.35

I N TH E
CO M M ON PLE A S COURT
O F MEI GS COUNTY .
OHIO
HARRY lUNG .
Plaintiff.

WITH OUR PRICED.·RIGHT FOODS

BLOCK CO.

•

$390.00 •

2.4&amp;t
2.25;
1 .7&amp;t

Over 400 KWH per KVA of
maximum demand
0.484

1.80f per KWH
1.804 per KWH

s,

NOTICE TO BIDO E WS.
REPAIR OF ROOF .
FOR
197-9 rep lacem e nt pages to
MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
th e Codified Ord inances
, IN
and
declaring
an
MEIGS LOCAL
emerg ency,
WHERE AS ,
·SCHOOL OISTR ICT
var i ous ordinancu · of a
Sc al ed prop osals will b C'
general a nd permanent r eCe i ve d by t he Boa r d o f
nat_ure ha\' e b ee n passed E du ca t i on ot rt~ e M C'I Q '!&gt;
whiCh should be inc luded in L oc al Sch ool DiS.Ir i c t o t
the Codified Or dinan ces ; Middl epo rt , Ohio a t thC'
ar,d WHEREAS , certai n Trea ! ur e r 's O ff ice un t i l
traffi_c . an d m is d emean or 6 · 0o P M on J un e 18, 19!9
pro_\"ISions
sho uld • . be an d a t ttlal t i m £' ope n ed
rensed to complv with rtn cJ r ead bv t he Tr e~~u rer
t her eatt er ,
current State law ; and 1mm edi at etv
W H E Jil E A 5,
th e t abulat ed , and a repo rt
maa e
by
th e
codification of such or · tt1er e ot
dinances, tog et her with th e T re a surer to sai d Bo a r d a t
new matter to be ado;ted, i ts ne»t t m ee ting
Oc ~c rip l'ion
of
im ..
the matters to be amended
at
and thos e to be re pea le d prov e m en t l oc at ed
Meig s
H i gh
Schoo l .
are before th e Council .
Oh io .
The
Be _it orda in ed . by th e Pomeroy ,
Counctl of the Vtllage ot Roofing Contr a ctor st1a ll
bid as a Pr im e Contr.a cto r .
Middleport as tollows :
T his in c ludes · all tabo r .
Sec
I. That tt1 e or
di~ances of the ~i ll age o f material s. eQU ipment. and
required .
lo
.M _
1ddl epor t, Ohto •. o f a s er vices
Sec t i on
general and pe rm ane nt comp l.e te th i s
wh'ich
i n c.tud es
new
na tu r_e:
as
~evised ,
r ecod1f _1tHl . rea r~ ang ed and rf'olaceOJent of r oo t on lh e
High
Schoo l .
conso ltdat ed 1nt o com · Me igs
Bidders will be b i dd ing on
ponent
cod es , . t it. t ~ s ,
cha p ters and sections wtth t t1e i n sta l l ation o f 11'1 e
Tro c al or Ca rli sl e Root ing
the
1979
Replace"!l~nt
Pag~s to th e coat ft ed systems .
Detailed
sp ec ificat ion s
Ord 1nanc e s are hereby
and instruCtion s to b i dd er s
ap pro v~d and adop t ed .
One book -form copv o t may be ob t ained at t he
t he
1979 Rep la ~~ment Off ice of the Tr ea sur er .
Pages sha ll be ce rt1f1 ect a s M idd l epo rt. Oh io .
A certif i ed ch eck pavabt e
correct by the Ma yor and
to th e Treasurer o f th e
t he Clerk ~f Co~:~ n cil , at
above
boa'rd o t ectu catio n
ta ch ed to th1s Ordmanct: a s
a . pa r t hfereof , and f tl ed or a satis fac tory bid bond
execu t ed by the bidder and
W_tth the permanent or
d1_nan ce records of tht the su r ety company , in an
amount equa l to fi ve
v~~~:te .
per cent of th e . bid sha ll be
ord in.:Jn~~: T~: t;~~~~i~~ subm i tted with each bid .
.
Sai d boa r d ol ed ucation
her eby a.dd ed , ame nd ed o r
repealed as r espectively reserves the right 't o Waiv e
indi tate d in order
s t O itlform a li Ues . to a cc epl o r
comp ly with cu rren t tat~. rejEct any an d a iL o r part s
ol a nv .and a ll bids _.
ta~03 . 98 Traffi c Co de Of ·
N o. bids may. be w it h
f e n s e
G e n · e r a 1 drawn for a t lea st thirty
Misdemeanor
( 301
da ys
atte r
th e
Classif icat ion . ( am end ed 1 sc hedu l ed clo si ng tim e for
C hap . 331
Opera ti on receipts of bids .
Gen erall y . (Amended)
339 . 11 u se of s tudded Board of Education
T i r es
and
Chai n s , o t Meigs Loca l
&lt;Amend ed)
Schoo l District
373.02 (f) Rid ing Upon Jane Wagner ,
Se at s ;
Ha nd l e
Bars : Treasurer
H elmets and
G la sses . South Th ird Av e nue
(Amend ed )
Middlepor1. Ohio 45760
529 . 06 Po slin g LiQuor
Age
warning
Signs . ( 5 J 29 (6) 4, 11 , 3t c
(Amended)
529 .08 sate or G ift o n
Election Day . (R ep lea tectJ
5 4 9 . o5
u n 1a w f u 1
Possess ion of Dang er o u s
Ordnance . (R ep ea l ed)
'SEC . I II . ThiS Ordinance
i s herebydE!-c l ared tobe a n
emergency measure anll
its immediate passag e is
necessary i n order to Con st it u tion .
SEC. IV : This Ord in an c e
pre serve.
prot ect and S&gt;h e~ lt lak e eff ect and be in
maintain the health, sa fety force
immediate l y
a nd welfare of th e cit i zens following i ts pa ssage and
of Middleport. Ohio and for appro va I .
the fur t her reason that it is
P,assed the 14th dav Of
necessary to bring the
Mav. 1979 .
Traffic and General Of · Att est : Gene Gr at e
tenses Codes into co m . Cl er-k" .~
pliance witt1 c urr ent State
M L. Kelly
law a s required by Article
Pre~ . of Counc i I
XVIII, sec tion Jof the Ohio ( S) 29 ; U•) S, 2fc

•

$340.00

F irst 20,000 -KWH
NeJilt 30,000 KWH
Ovar 50,000 KWH

$ 8 .00

2.Oat per KWH

Presiden~o·f ~-0~~~~

(5) 29; ( 6)

-

"

The con tinuou s toad requirement has been deleted, the energy charge has been increased
f rom 4 . 5~ to 6.0Qit per KWH and the min i m~:~m charge from $3.50 to $5 .00 per month.

Other ..chedules tuNe been modified and incre•sed u follows :

2.00&lt;1
1.60&lt;1
0 .80&lt;1

e

OPTIONAL UNMETEAE D COM MERCI AL SERVICE FOR SMAL:.L FIXED LOADS SUPPLEME NT NO . 16
1

220 KWH per KVA of
ma»tim~:~ m demand

4 .25 per KW

TRANSPORTATION
Columbus. Ohio
May 11 , 1979
Contract Sales Legal
Copy No. 79 -420
UNIT Pf;f:ICE CONTRACT
PM5 -0pOs(160·J
Sea l ed proposals wil l be
received at the oHice of the
D i re c tor
of
the
Ohio ·
De pa ~ tm ent of Tran s Por~afJOn . Columbus , Ohio .
until 10 : 00 A .M, Ohio
Standard Time, Tvesdav .
June 12, 1979, tar i m ·
provem en t s ;n :
Athens. Ga ll ia , Hocking .Meigs , Monroe, MorQ an .
Noble ,
Vinton
and
Washington Count i es, Ohio ,
on var io us locations , by
applying retroreflec:tor i zed
polye ster compound center
lines .
The OhiO Department of
Tr~'"!sportat!on
h ereby
n~ tt ft es ~~~ b1~ders t.hat it
Will "ff.1 rmattvel y tnsure
that i!' any contract en t ered •nto pursuant !O thi s
advertl~emept.
mtnority
busine ~s enterprisesw_i ll be
afforded full opportun1ty to
s ub~ it _
b ids in response to
this 11:wt t ~ t1on and w ill not
be d tsc nm lnateel against
on the grounds of ra ce.
co lor, or national original
in consideration for an
award .
" M inimum wage ra tes
for thi s prole ct have been
pr ede t er m ined as reQu ired
b'( taw and are set forth in
~.EJ_d proposal. "
"The date set for com - '
ptetionofthisworkshall be
set forth In the bidding
proposaL "
Each . bidder shall be
r eq u ired tO f_ile with h i s bid
~
ce rtified
check
or
cashier's check fo r an
amount equal to five per
cent of his bid. but in no
event more than fifth
t housand dollars, or a bond
!for ten percent of his bid,
payable to the Director .
.Bidder s must apply, on
the proper forms , for
qua li f ication at lea st ten
day s pr ior to the date set
tor opening bids in ac cordance with Chapter SS25
Ohio Rev i sed Code .
Plan s and specifications
are on file in the Depart mentof TransportC'tion ana
the office of the Distr i ct
Deputy D irector .
The Director reserves
the right to reject any and
all bids .
DAVIOL . WEIR
DIR E CTOR
Rev . 8-17 -73

NO . 1082 -79

Ordinance lo Ap pro \'e, adopt and enact the
An

Summer

Ne~et

$22 .50
3 .26

DEPARTMENT OF

.Lill 011

OROINAN(JE

The minimum monthly charge for breakdow~ service has been increased fro~ $2.50
to $3.75 per KW o f service requirement . The minimum month ly cha rge under ~asonal
service is increased from $2.75 to $5.00.

GENERA L SERVICE - MEDIUM - SCHEDU LE GS-2

·Per Month :

$3.00 per KW

CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO

(5J 21. 28, 2t c

;sh~r1cta1 ~!: eJf~~t

5PECI,AL PROVISIONS APPLICABLE UNDER SPECIFIED CONDITIONS TO
SPECIFIED SCHEDULES - SUPPLEMENT NO. 14

Minimum charge increased from $2.75 to $5.00 .

Summer

$3 .00

Cus tomer Cha/ ge
Demend ChBrge
First 5 KW of billing demand
Over 5 KW of billing defll&amp;nd '"'
Enargy Charge
First 125 KWH per KWof billing
demand but not more than 750 KWH
in winter billinQ month s .

~,ordaln.ed t hat a
!:Ordinance be
d he registrar
~ ehicles .

GENERAL SER V ICE - LARGE - SCHEDULE G·4

$5.00

Winter

HAR.DWARE

peo KWH

$5.00

Per ~onth :

SAYRE

INTERRUPTIBLE POWER - SCHEDULE 1-P

5.70&lt;

maJ~~ i mum

PRESE NT RATE - OPT IONAL SPACE HEATING · SCHEDULE ALM
Per Month:

GaJIJJ)olla; Clifford Cunnlngllamt ty; Betty Hoefilcb Hammer, ColumUma; Jobn Lambert, Point Plea- bus; -Leland Brown, ' Woodbridge,
sant; Coleen Wllilon Oblinger, Dun- Va. ; Ruth Stnin, Lancuter; Narsa
can Falls. ·
·, Van Meter, Olfton.
·
. Nllf!D&amp;R Manley, Columbus; Roger
Other out.of-c:cunty alumni tbere
UghUoot, Galloway; George Mlller, were Alma llumprdner N~
Lancaster; Nancy Hartley Cooper, Keith Bowlea, Mildred Albury
West Chester, Pa.; Mr. and Mrs. Mosley, ll(ary Lou Si:bwabb,
James RoUer, Waldorf, Va.; Betty Emogene Wet.t,r, Marcia Martinez,
Ashley Snow, Guysville; Kathryn William Fultz, W11Uam Stobart, hte
Payne Hayden; Daytoo; Randy Walburn and James Buell.
Becker, Dayton; Marie Mrs. Jamea
Roller, Waldorf, Va.; Betty Ashley
Snow Guysville; Kalbryn · Payne
SPRAY NOW
Hayden, Daytoo; Randy Becker,
AND SAVE
Dayton; Mane Erlewine GUberl,
Springfield; 'Charles Entsminger,
YOUR TREES!
Charlestoo; Ruth strain, Lancaster;
Dormant (pre~entiYe) sprayingRichard Walters, Columbus, Sam
in late winter or early sprlng
Walters, Columbus; Frances
before leaves open-"'helpa elim-Daniels Keffer, Columbus; Jean
Inate destructive lnaectslhat
over-winter on the bark ol1reea
Hartley Cantrell, Gallipolis; Max and
andbushee. How you spray
Ire Mills Lambert, Colwnbu.s;
does make a difference!
Richard and Loretta Roller, Belpre;
Don Payne, Dayton; Esther .Gardner
Vale, Morrow; Janet and Harold
Hinkle, Chesapeake; Carol Andei'IIOII
Painter, Columbus; Judy Barrows,
Athena: PbyUis Townsley, Grove Cl·
ty; Jack Uoyd, Brookville; Robert
Hania, Columbus; John and Judy
Allensworth, Tiffin.
Carla Wliaon Lohrer, Troy; Can·
dace Pope, Bidwell; Mary Bradley
Ott, Roswell, Ga.; Steve Coates, Weat
l?lalnl, Mo.; Don Grueser, Akron!
WlUiain Grate, Charleston, W. Va.;
Carolyn Litchfield, Point Pleasant; .
. .Ideal lor trees up to 25 feet
Paul Moon!, Colwnbus; Naomi Overhigh. Use an growing season tong
turf Durst, GaJIJpolls; Pat Bastlana,
for flowers, shrubS a net trees.
Puts sorayrighton target!
GalUpoUs; Gary Ault, · Springfield;
~ Mae Erlewine Balley, SprIngfield;
Helen Lloyd, McConnelavllle; Marjorie Diles Mltcbell, PbyUia Diles Jividen, Atllena;
lDia Diles Bush and Fred Bush, Betty
Rollah Allensworth, Columbus;
New Haven,'W. Va.
Madellne Johnson Berr!l)g, Grove Cl-

No J~~ t

Winter

Be it ordai ne~ by the
Council of t he Village o f
M iddlepor t as follows :
Sec . 1 That for th e pur pose of pa ying the cost s
and expen ses ot . en forcing
and l!ldmlnisterlng t he tax
' p·r ov i ded tor in thi s or
dina n ee ; and ·tor plan n ing ,
constructing ,
improving
maintaining , ~nd repa iring
public road S. highways ,
and streets ; m a intai ning
ahd repa ii"ing br idges and
viaducts ;
paying
the
mun ici pal
cor por at i on 's
portion of th e costs and
experlses ofl coope ratin g
with the dtpartment of
highways in the planning
improvement , and con ~
structlon of s·tat e high ways ;
paying
• th e
municipal
corporation ' s
portion
of . th e
com ,
pensatiqn. damClg es , costs,
~nd expens,es of pta 11 ning,
constructing ,
r eco n structing ,t i mpro,Ving ,'
maintain ing , and r epair ing
roads anq streets ; paying
any costs apport ione d to
the municipal corpOration
under section 4907 .47 of th e
Rev is ed Code; paying debt
servi ce charges on not es or
bonds of the municipal
corporation iss ued tor such
purposes ;
purchasing ,
trecting and maintaining
.. street a~d traff ic signs and
markers :
purchasing,
.. erecting and maintain ing
:traffic l ights and signals ;
~ an~ to supplement revenue
• calready ava i lable for such
; purposes , there is hereb y
..Jevied an annual li cense
..-tax in acldltion to the . tax
...levied by sectiohs . 4503.02,
:: 4503.. 07, 4503 . 19 . of the
,.
,, Rev1sed Code, upon th e
.-.operation of motor vehicles
~on the p~bl!c roads o~ high 'l"wa_ys wlfhm th e V1llage .
, saed tax shall be at the r at e
ot fiv@ dollar s per motor
" veh.lcle on
al _l
_
m ot or
..-:vehtcles and d1str1ct of
-Aeg istration of wh ich , as
• def ined !n sect ion 4~0~ .1 0of
!'&gt;"the Revtsed Code , 1S ~n th e
~ muni ci pal corporatotn of
Middlepor t. Such tax
t
~ be in addition to th_e ,
at the rates spec1f t
csections 4503.04 and
... of
the Rev is ed
-subi·ect ,
to
Qua
edvctions in the
rovlded in section
,-of the Revised Code
exemptions prov
"'\ections45,03. 16,
-1503. 171 of the
oSdeec.. II ·. Be It

.I.U~1t U1d11M1 t

ba&amp;e tate o f the 400 watt lamp, $0.35 for e&amp;eh additional pole and span of wire and~0 . 10

l;',l'

The following delayed Payment charge cl ause ii included in alll)roposed rate schedu les :
The abOw tar iff is net if full paymen t is recei 11ed within 15 days of bi ll. On all accounts not
so pa1d, an 8dd iti onal charge of live per cent 15%1 of the total amou nt billed, but not len
than twen ty-five cents 1254) w ill be made .

to

base rate of the 100 watt tamp , $1.05 in th e base rate of the 175 watt lamp, $1.65in· the

The Genera l Service rates have b&amp;fln mOdified and increased alfl&gt;tlows :

GENERAL SERVICE - SMALL - SCHED ULE GS·1
Present
Winter-5ummer
Per Month :

Pur suant to the requ iremenu of Section 4909.19 of the Revised Code of Ohio, the
Columbus and South ern Oh io Electr ic Company hereby gi..,.es notice thet on March 1, 1979,
i t filed with the Publ ic Utilit ies Commission of 011 io, an Application and Complaint and
Appeal for author i ty 10 amend and increase i ts rate schedu les which are under the jurisdic·
tion of the Public Util i ties .Comm i ~sion of Oh io.

Or-d i nanc e

"''t

NOTICE TO

esteblish I Municip~ t
MotorVthic:Jel icenseTa x.

1

1

TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN :

An

VU&amp;\O&amp;YJ 1

RC COLA
OR DIET RITE
SUPER MARKET - OPEN DAILY 9 TO 10 P.M.
SUNDAY 10 10 10
We Reserve .fhe Riaht To limit

!:r:
99e
PWS TAX DPST
&amp;

,.
'•

' .'

'·
.,

.' '

�U-£ ..C: ~ ~~-~. J:u,,.""""'Q~l~·l U.lUIII;;lUJ 1 V., 4Ut:.'iWI) 1 !~.a.J ~t .t..:UD

~~~f.~~~!~~~~;;~~~1l?~~~~~!~~~~~~~;i;1~~~~~~~~I~~i~;~!~~~~t~!?~~~ii~ifj~i~i?~i~~~~I?t?~W~~I?~~~~t:~:~:::::~:~~i~~tt?t~~~~ttNt~;
~
;;;~::;

~·

[l!i

w···
~:;:;:

!X

*~!~l
o;.• . ..

%=~~

J
•
'*

.

'

Ms. Carnahan named queen
Im
!: : at Racine alumni re.union
=
:;:;:;;;
ij~
·:·:·:·:
;:;:;:;:

Letters ol oplolon are welcomed. They should be less
·dian 301 words long (or subject to reduction by the editor )
aod must be signed with the signee's address. Names may
be withheld upon publication. However, oo request,
oames wW be disclosed . Letters should be in good taste,
addressing Issues, not personalities.

.

:i=i:i:i

oliti·cs not needed

'p
·····

funds available

an&lt;~. much

than a "new" service.

-

,

. By Mrs. Francis Morris
Mrs. Beulah Bradford is a patient at
Holzer Medical Center. Her room is
521A.
·'
·
Mrs. Edison Brace was a patient for
several days · at Pleasant VaUey
Hospital, Pt. Pleasant.

~r

"

hospital after .!'lrgery and is eonvalescing at his home.
Mrs. Ollie Mae Cozart spent a
weekend at her home and will re-enter
St . Joseph Hospital, Parkersburg for
surgery. Mrs. Esther Cairns of TiPP
City came to visit her and was an
ovemildlt ~uest Sunday. Her sister,
Dorothy Sayre, Philadelphia, -came
and Is with their mother, Mrs. Edoa

Racilte Social Events ·

'•'• '•'•

;:;:;:;:

D~

···~·~= -

. ~Tile Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 •• Tuesday, May 29, l~l~

I

Dary Hart, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Gilbert Hart is in · Pleasant Valley
Hospital after an accident at work at
Foote Mineral.
Mrs, Helen Simpson received word
her brother, Roger Wolfe, of
Ashtabula has returned from the

USDA CHOICE

.USDA CHOICE

cheaper
~

The County Commissioners are emMay29,2979
powered
by the state Legislature to
~
Gallia Cowlty Is on the brink ol
be
responsible
for ambulance service
: losing . SEOEMS. County Comwithin
their
county. Our Com-· millloners wt11 be upending public
appear
to have funds
missioners
funds in an attempt to duplicate this
available
to
initiate
a
secondary ser: eervtce. Much has been wntten and
vice;
·
however,
once
SEOEMs has
-· said, pro and coo, in regard to the ambeen
destrOYed
·
and
no
other alter• bulance service in Gatlla CoWtty. A
natives
exist,
the
voters
are almost
". vast difference exists between merely
certain
to
be
placed
in
a
position of
: a transportation service and one
having
to
vote
tax
dollars
for
an am: wblcb'provides advanced llfe support
bulance
service
of
unknown
quality.
• tn transit, 81 with SEOEMS.
Politics have been played with the Present plans for the "new" system
: liVI!II 'ol our citizens and emotions do not include paramedics -a serious
.
•
· bave been lltirred by rwnor and tn- deficiency.
The
issue
then
involves
paying
an
.: nuendo in an attempt to mislead the
apparently
high
annual
fee
for
an
: people. Some of us have been ''too
established
proven,
quality
service,
• busy" to IDlCOVer the facts.
:
Health · profe88ionala who are or being blackmatled Into paying a
.; dedicated to Improving and preser- much greater cost for a ''new" ser: •. vine the hellth ol our cmmunity have vice of unknown quality. The Com- /
t .
•' I.'OIIIiltently iupported SEOEMS. The miSsionen are playing with your llfe
SCHOLARSHIP WINNER - Selh
holpltal baa supported SEOEMS sin- !lJ1d the lives ol your family, friends
ALUMNI QUEEN - Janis Carnahan was crowned
·; ce Its beginning. The Gatlla County and neighbors. Politics has ·no role in Hill, soil of Mr. aod Mrs. David HW,
the
health
ol
our
community.
It
iB
past
queen
by Denny Evans, Alumni president. The other
Racine,
was
the
reelpleat
of
lhe
Uth
: Medical Society Ill a staunch sup• porter · of SEOEMS. Most time for each of us to use our God- 111111ual Paul H. CarnahaD Memorllll
: lmowJedceable professlonal people, given intelligence and insist that Scholllrsblp awarded al the Racine
-: • well u highly trained intensive SEOEMS be retained tn our com- 111gb School AIIUIIIII banquet Saturmunity. The llfe you save could be dayalgbt.
:~ · care and esnergency care nurses at
.: ·. the hospital, are supporting your own. - THE CITIZENS' COM·• · SEOEMS. SEOEMS haa also been Ml I lEE TO SAVE SEOEMS.
: ~ recoplzecf by adjacent counties 81
f~
RACINE - The crowning of Janis
: bein8 the belt source of tranJ.OJ1
Carnahan as alumni queen and the
: aportalioo for the sick and injured.
May 2S,
presentation of the Paul H. Carnahan
1979 Memorial Scholarship to Seth Hill
• Even talevislon repeatedly portrays
-: cqanlzatlons like SEOEMS 81 being
Dear Mr. Editor,
were highllghta of the Racine High
: , the ~ quality emergency IranLast evening the Board of Trustees School Alumni Association annual
:~ · aportalloo. Why must Gatlla County of the Holzer Medical Center by a vote reunion.
: : 111ep bactward towanl the dark ages . ol twelve to eight decided to transfer
Held at the Southern High School
-: by eliminating this service? Wbo wtll the School of Nursing to Rio Grande auditorium Saturday night, the
•J'ellpOIISiblllty for lives lost CoUege and Community College. This banquet was attended by ap; wiu-t this Service? .
wtll change the school from a quality proximately 315 alumni am! guests.
;· Durinl the .f~ quarter of 19'19 in three year dipiOIJ!ll program to a twoDenny Evans, president of the
: : Gallla County; 40.6 percent of patients ·year lissociate degree program at Rio Alumni Allsociatlon, Introduced the
. ·.transported by SEOEMS utilized ad- Grande.
•
queen candidates, Miss Carnahan,
: · vance
llfe
support
·techniques
adDissenting
vigorously
with
this
_,_,_.__. b ___...._..
bef
decision, i want to especially thank Teresa Ervin, and Lisa Warner, and
:. ""'""'"""" y .- -·~cs,
ore ...___
crowned Miss Carnahan, daughter of
11111 u
"""'M
........, trustees
Theodore
·:
- u... M-....... on to the Reed
H
BNeal
ThoTaylor,MD
p ul Mr. and Mrs. James Carnahan,
• hoepltal, wblch includes IV fiulds on
• Cllller ·
maa, · ·• a
Racine .
.: the way to the hoepltal, oxygen, car- Davies, and William P. Cherrington
Hill, recipient of .the $500 acholar: diac monitoring through the for their efforts in behalf of continu- ship, iB the son of Mr. and Mrs. David
telemetry system in dlred contact tng our school in GaWpolls and Hill, Racine, and wt11 be attending
.· with a physician or registered nurse strengthening its quality'and growth. ·Ohio University this faU.
·1n the .. ho8pltal, ud llfe saving
In addition, I am grateful to those
.Recognized and presented gifts
medicaUon. The tremendous cost of colleagues in the medical prOfession, were George · Sayre, Denver,
~ this · vital equipment was funded the faculty and students of the School Colorado, who traveled the farthest,
GOWEN ANNIVERsARY members of right, aeated, I..oUiBe Holman JeWell, Vlilliala JollniOt
• through government grants. 16.8 per- of Nursing, the Alumnae, the and Ann Coe of the class of 1910, the
IIIII back,
the CJas.s.of Ul29 were given
recognition during Carpenter, and Mildred
: cent of the patients received IV fiulds graduate nurses in the Medical oldest graduate ,.ttending. .
and
the roll call of claases at the Racine Alumni Ben Philson, Thomas Sayre,
; enroute, ZZ.7 percent had monitoring Center, and many others among my
Speaker for the banquet was Ben
Association banquet Saturday night. They are, left to .Harold Sargent, standing.
: by the aqnad, and 10.8 used telemetry. friends and associates who con- Philson, class of 1929, who gave a
Scme of .ua are aware of the fact triboted their efforts and support.
conunentary on the energy situation, Wickline, New Matamoras; ·Gladys r
--~·that management of SEOEMS baa
Especially • 1 want to thank and tracing transportation from the days HutchiSon, New Matainotas; Isabell 1
I
I
' llllllle tactical biWidem in regard to cmunend my colleagues, Oscar when railroading was prominent to Wilson, Columbus; Judy Gandee,
,
1
: pllbllc relations IIIII budget matters; Clarke, M. D. and Thomas Morgan, the advent of the nuclear age. He was Columbus; Dorothy McSwegin, New I
OPTOMETRIST
1
; however• the training of their per- M. D. for their part in a might but un- introduced by Gary Willford, third
Cumbeland, W. Va.; .Joy Hartman,
OFFICE HOURS: 9:30 to 12, 2 to 5 (CLOSE
'•
: IOIIIIel, . their performances during fortunately Ull8ucceasful struggle in vice president.
,
(Coqtinul!(l
on
page
12)
I
ONTHURS.l-EASTCOURTST.,POMEROY.
I
, emergencies and the equipment behalf of preserving our very fine
Libby Fisher, first vice president,
~-~-------~-;..____________
· wlllcb tbey use Ia superior to any School of Nursing.
presented the claases with special
. other •rvice available in our area.
Sincerely• recogniUon going to the 50th anSEOEP4S budget Is public inChadesE.Holzer,Jr.,M.D. niversary class. Attending were
fonnaUon, whereas, the use of funds
Departmen~General Surgery Louise Holman JeweU, Virginia Johnby the other· emergency tran- Wants' local re 1·dent
son Carpenter, Mildred McClaskey
llp(irtation aervlce lias remained
Phillips, Ben Philson, Thomas Sayre,
vague, SEOEMS does llOt lnmllport To the People of Meigs Local School Herbert Shields, and Harold Sargent.
cardiac patients with empty oxygen District:
New officen elected were Libby
tanka, or arrive .at accident scenes
There has been a large number of Fisher, president; Alice Williams, fir'' .
with maltunctlontng radios, or have applications from far and near for the st vice president; Gary WIUford,
llllbolanCes that fall in transit to the now vacant supenntendency of the second vice president; Brenda Jobnholpltal, incho forth, 81 haa been wit- Meigs Local School District.
son, third vice president; and Bar- .
' - ' with other units In the area.
I have learned that some of these bara Pierce, secrelary-tre81urer.
SEOEMS operates with crews that applicants are local people who were
Mrs. Maxine Wiligett gave the inare fully trained in the care of the sick born, reared, and educa~ in this . vocation preceding the dinner served
IIIII Injured and are Immediately county.
.
.
by the j~or cjass of 1979.
.
available. their respo~~~e time to an
These applicants are fully qualified
FolloWing the banquet the alwnru
ac:ddellt .or to an emert~ency Ill, not and have knowled•e of the needs of and their guests danced to the music
dlmlnlahed by "drinking coffee" at our schools and '!be children that of"Heather.""DiscoMania"wasthe
· locations unknown to the dispatcher·
attend them.
theme carried outfor the banquet.
BJg questions remain : (1) Why,
It would be an injustice to our school
Out-of-town alumni ami guests here
\
when the origlnalvOlWtteer program system and the children to hire a for the banquet were ROOert Lee,
(wblch III08t of ua supported)·was for- superintendent from some other part Belpre; ~les Lee, MartinB Ferry;
med 81 a siX month temporary of the COWltry that knows nothing of Andrey Bo~chyn, St .. Clair Shores,
Jli'Otll'lffi . until ~ became theneedsoftheschoolsinMeigs local Mich.; Bnan Dudding, BeUevue,
.establlahed, .did the volunteen not District who therefore must spend the . Neb,; Betty Crampton, Mineral
dlaband or merge with SEOEMS a.S . bestpartofhisfirstyear just learning Wells, W. Va.; Mildred Ripley,
pmnloed at that time? (2) Why, if the "ins and outs."
Cllarleston, W. Va.; Becky Smith,
paUert care, ratherthan·their egos, Ill
The local qualified people should be ·Blue Kap; Shirley Stobart, Lexington,
the primary concern, do they refuse given a cjlance to prove themselves Ky.; Martha Bartrug, Woodsfield;
to call SEOEMS transportation when before our local hoard members even Darlene Duncan, Columbus; Mary
they do not have available am- consider going out of the county to fill Cundiff, Toledo; Annette Robertson,
bulancea or drivers · themselves? this vacancy.
·
Pawtucket, R. 1.; Roger Hoschar,
Patients are frequently left walling
If anybody living in the Meigs local West Columbia, W. Va.; MoUy
will other ambulance nms are com- School District feels as I do, PLEASE Fisher, Athens; Unda Franklin,
pleted. (3) Why, If they are truly a let your School Board members know Cleveland;
Yvonne Schaffer,
volWtteer. organization, are they your f~ings. (Give them a ring or aevetanll.
requesttng payment for their ser- write ). - Charles E. Swatzel,
Ronald Goldbertson, New Brighton,
vices? .(4) Why have most of the Pomeroy, Ohio.
Pa.; MaryLouCunflff,Columbus;W.
original volunteers left the
C. Cundiff, Sr., Toledo; Mabel
orpnlzaUon?
/my syltem 81 sopblsticated as
SEOEMS baa a high cost. However,
much of the original cost was paid for
by Federal grants. To attempt to
duplicate the present SEOEMS
system would carry a price tag
beyond the reach •lf. GaWa CoWtty.
Dollars are nOt the only factor! To
throw ·out SEOEMs aild attempt to
duplicate it, wt11 tske time - doting
wblch thole we love may be lost. It
hilS been estimated that it will tske at
Like new 2,500 miles 302 V-8 engine, auto . trans., power
We invite you to use this preferred service with no ser- .1
leut three years to train new crews
steering, power brakes, air. cond., power door lock,
and Iring them up to the present level
vice charge. All those 65 years and over are welcome to
power windows, cruise control, tilt steering wheel.
of SEO~. Three years of Wlcertain
Michelin tires, m . blue finish .
open
an account any time. Stop in and see us now.
handling of the sick and lnjlired and
a1m011t a million dollars in "start up"
00
costa, la too great a price to pay for
something we already have.
See one of these courteous salesmen: "-tie Burris, Marvin Keebaugh
or George Harris.
·
. ·nie County Commlasloners leU iLs
tbeir reason for not reneWing their
contrac.1 with SEOEMS la a lack of
funds. What about the .f579,000 .
carryover January I,• 19'/9, and the
· · ~.000 · In' 19'19 Federal Revenue
· '·'You' ll Like Our Quality Way of Doing Busin~ss"
•• t ~
lharlng Wb,lch can be used wherever
.
GMC Financing '
$40,000 Maximum Insurance For Each DePOSitor
992-5342
Deeded. Tu support SEQEMS this .
•
POMEROY
Open Evenings unlil6:00 -till$ p.m . Sat.
year would eost about $145,000 plus,
Member Federal Deposit Insurance CoriJQratiorl- .
one new vehicle - far less than the

~ROUND

·STEAK ..........•..............
RUMP ROAST

29

CHUCK

LB.

PICK OF CHICK

'

BACON

CHICKEN BREAST .................................. s1 09

LB.

CHICKEN THIGHS .............................. 89c
CHICKEN WHOLE lEGS ......................;..,

•

CABBAGE
CARROTS

VAUGHAN'S

•
ppreCJates e

LONG CR ISPV

•

·I

...

NEW CROP

SENIOR
CIT
.

Are. Preferred People
At Farmers Bank

.

;; • ~ SPtciAL

Because We 'furnish A

Free.Checking Account For You

1979 FORD·LTD SEDAN
Only '7495

·. KARR ·&amp; VAN ZANDT

..

1

·. ·P&lt;)MEROY, OHIO

$100

R. ED OR
DELICIOUS

GOLDEN

APPLES 3

LB. BAG

MARSH WHITE

RAPEFRUIT 4 ;:c. 99*

LB. BAG

5

LB. BAG

DEL

99~

LB.

FOR'l OO

SALE DATES MAY 29- JUNE 2, 1979

_QUANTITY RIG~TS
. RESERVED
NABISCO ASSORTED

·

.,. · k

BAG SNACKS ••••.•••••••••••• :•••~~.;•• 69e
'

NABISCO

pkg

MR. ·sALTY PRETZELS ••••••••• :••••• 59c,
KEEBLER

10 oz. pkg

-

TUC CRACKERS ..................... ~.

·WESSON
0 IL 38 oz. bottle

-coKE

TAX~ o~~s~/~: Bt~ 99,•

O'TliER PURCHASE

~ -

'""'!'I""!I!P"''P"

2 ;,~2~ "' .~.J 09

Sio&gt;n
0010011

I

~:&gt;0 SIOR lS •
"'

Limit two witt'! coupon

DEL MONTE ' l

1

DEL MONTE

Can

DRillS

.

:;;
,.{::)

till"

Jljeii) ift•J:t

fOOO STOAlS

BIROS EYE

AWAKE. ~f

~~z. 89~

2 16 o~.~~! .. uo. 79
GREEN SPINACH .•••••••••••

46-oz.

l•m •• ' ""() w•th

.t ~ &lt;.of,
12-oz.

~~-

ont~ c:o~l'"" ''*' 'I1Mr.IIY
.

~

_

Cans

'

.

DEL MONTE

TOMATOES ....... •••• .... •••••••••• 2 1~:; 99~
CUT OR FRENCH STYLE DEL MONTE

MAiiFFEE 2~::5

G'REEN BEANS.••••••••••••••••. 3 ~~~~:· 51

SLICED, CR_USHED OR CHUNK
DEL MONTE

REG . DRIP ELECT. PERK or ADC
,

89&lt;~

0

STEWED TOMATOES

JIF

;;{

z

TOWELS

SPRITE OR

PLUS

age

JOB SQUAD

.

12 -or .

PEANUT BUTTER ............................ '"

79'

°

·

0

15lJz oz. can 49~

PINEAPPLE···· ·····················•·······

••~~~ .~9.~~E. •• •• •• ••• ••••... •••••••••• .6 9~ I
. !FREEZER VALUESI
BANQUET

Karr &amp; Van Zandt

c::~t~\~\.

LB.FOR

$100

3

a..v"'UST &amp; PEARL STREETS
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

--••1·

----1

·4

ONIONS

nsPecial

---N
...-.-W.----C----M--P-T-- --N--,
0
0

5

SOLID GREEN

---·u

..

Mr. and Mrs. Jack Waver and Kim ,
Mr. and Mrs. Claude RWtyons, Mrs.
Archie Blain and Brice Steele of
Columbus spent a weekend with Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Cleland and family.

U.S.D.A. GRAD.E "A" MIXED

CRISPY SERVE

:t

A

Mr. and Mrs. Billy Hill were recent
dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Albert
Hill.

LB.

STEAK *

'1.99

Mr. and Mrs. Dale Hart visited Mrs.
Mildred Donchue at a Parkersburg
nursing home.
Mr. .a nd Mrs . . Albert Gould of
Nelsonville spent Thursday and Mrs.
Mildred Swift of Columbus spent
Mother's Day with their mother, Mrs.
Francis Morris.
Mrs. Ellen Abramson of Tampa,
Fla.. Mr. and Mrs.
Hill and

Pickens.
Mrs. Garnet Ervine and Mr. and
Mrs. . Rajph Shain were in
Flemingsburg, Ky. to the cemetery to
visit the grave of Henry Ervine and
also visit with Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
Carpenter .
,
Mr . and Mrs. Herbert Sayre visited
Catol Sayre at Holzer Medical Center
~nd reported him improving.

2%

FRIED CHICilEII

$

. BORDEN

limit on• with coupon
CHOC. COCONUT or IANANA

MIGHTY HIGH CREAM PIES .............. .':~:~

Gal.

BORDEN'S ·

MILK
24 oz.

.VALLEY BELL

79
FRUIT DRINKS g::~~~ ~
.

Jt

1

1,1 .

ICE CREAM .~~.~~~;.~~~~ ••••• :.~a:... $} 39
SHERBET••••••~.,J·~ ..................$}39
$ Qg

COTTAGE CHEESE ................. 1.
BORDEN·ASSORTED

$

1

&lt;o&lt;;U SIOR!S • CA ROINALfOOD S!ORlS ' ilteih:::teJ~I
JOB SQUAD
\ - - • •- ·-· ' ,

~

I

~

TOW~ .

"'" 2"

n

l imit I WO .. ,. .. ~~~

P

OMt COYPOA j)ff llrt.ihr

z~

]:!

·-

~

'

'

I;·
$1 09~-~' .

t·

bO
OII IJ

......~111

e

.

. OJO• 4~ ca.-,.. tfo;-.~ 11... t)o••t

(,1)

~

,

rn

00·20-05

~

CAAOINAllll

'

1

�~~~~~6,Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Tuesday, May 29, 1979

I~The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy , 0., Tuesday, May 29, 1979

Your Best Buys Are Found in 'the 'Sentinel Classifieds
WANT AD
CHARGES
1$ Worda orUnder

' !day
%days
!days
&amp;days

Cash
1.00

uo

Chargt'
1.25
1.00

l .lll

2.25

!.00

3.75

E.adl word over the minimum
15 Wordlls 4 cenll per word per
day. Ada nuvtinJ other than ronaeaativt days wiU bt chlrged at
the I day rate .

r.

Card at .,....
and Obituary : e l'elll.'l per word ,
f,1.00 minlmwn. Cuh in ad·
momot")'.

vanco.

Mobtle Helme sates and Yard
ules ire ac..-.pled only wtlh
caah wltl'l order. 25 cent charle
for adl carryilw &amp;1 Nwnber In
Cart of TIM Sentinel.

Tho 1'11blbhc&lt; ,......,.. the
rllhl to edit or r&lt;J&lt;d any ada
deemed objectional. Tht
PubliJher will not be responsible
foe more than one incorrect in·
oerticn.
Pbone IVZ-2156

wanted ta Rent

GUN SHOOT , EVERY FRIDAY
7,30 PM RACINE GUN ClUB.
FACTORY CHOME GUNS ON·
LY.

WANTED TO re.nt : building or
ploce in Pomeroy . M iddleport
- 01' Mason area. 15 mll• radius.
except in Syracuse or New
Hoven . Suitable for church
service. Call9d-2137 or writ•
to Rev. Wilbur Leifheit. Box
467, Racine.

Lost and Found
lOST: MALE Irish Setter. Approx . 2 yrs . old . Area of
Boshon · on Bashon Rd .
Children ' s pet .
Reword .

949-2466 .
LOST: BLACM ond ton fomole
German Shepard. Broke collar
from home on Story's Run Rd .
below Middleport. If s•en. call
Gerald MatheWs . 367-0395 Of'
9'12·5207 .
LOSL ~ERSONAL Biblo bolon·
ing to Ma'rty Foley. If found .
contact Betty Foley. Syrocu1e.

Phono9'12-7305.

Help wanted
IMMEDIATE

· WANT-AD

IA~~RTISING

DEADIJNES
ll!cnday
Noon on Saturday

OPENING .

Laboratory Technician. 3·11

shilt. Experienced Ml T ("SCP)

4P.M.
tht day before publication

Sunday
4P.M.

Friday afternoon

ASTRO·GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

May 30, 1911
severa l new and exc iting ad ventures are on the horizon
th is coming year . They may
even change you r basic lifestyle . Be prepared to welco me
and enjdy a more vibrant and
personable you .

GEMINI (Moy 21·June ZOI Eve·

WANTED. SAWYER to work at
Point Volley Pallet , Scottown.

titHe help from Lady Luck
to8ay . Follow through on any
situation il'\ this area, should
one occur.

LEO (July Zl-Au11. 22) Involve
yourself with some type of club
work or group activity . You mil(
es~cla ll y well with the crowd
tOday.

VIRGO (Aua.

Zl·SOpl.

22)

Something very fortunate cou ld
happen today to make your tot
a grea't deal easier. lt shoi.Jid be
a happy day .

LIIAA (S.pl. 23-0ct. 23) An'
acquaintance could prove to be
very lucky loi' you today by
making a reality of a dream
you 've been nurturing.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Now. Z2) Favorable attention is being
drawn to you today because of
something you are doing . Keep
to this course and capture your
rewards .
..... ,

SAGITTARIUS (Now. 23-Doc.
21) Your judgment is exceptionally keen today , especially In
situations of major signilicance. Weigh the angles and
acl.

CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jon. 111

ARIES (llorc:h 21-Aprtl11) Your
ego could get a boost t~ay,
because others find you extremely attractive. and will tell
you ao. Savor e.very word .

TAURUS (April 2t-Moy 20)
You're likely to feet the urge to
do a little shopping for something you 've been wanting for
the home. You ' re entitled to It ,
so go ahead.

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF CLARA BE
LAVENDER, D~CEASED
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On May 9, 1979. in the
Coulih ·. PrO.b ate
Court, Case No . 22692,
Wilma Ma·rie Rl.zer , P . 0 . '
Box · 213. Syra cuse, · Ohio
45779 was appointed Ad ministratri x of the estate of
Clara
B.
Lavender
. deceased . late of ·s yra cuse:
Meigs County , OHio .
Mel~s

Robert E . Buck
Probate Judge .
Clerk
(5 J 1-4, 21 , 28 , ltc

01.0 COINS, pock•t watches,
doss rings, wedding bonds,
diamonds . Gold or silver. Coli
Roar Wamsley , 7-42-2331.

BUYING

JUNM

caro

ond

BABYSITTER NEEDED. Flexible

(family practitioner) . Excellent
fringe benefits. Good working
conditions . Contact W. S.
Lucas .
Administrator .
Veterans Memorial Hospital,
PO Box 7.419, Pomeroy, Ohio .
Phone 992-21llot. Equol Opportunity Employer.

miles eo1t of Darwin or 7
miles west of Tuppers Plains.
Watch for signs. Phone

995-4253.
YARD SALE. Thurs., Hubbard

For Rent

COUNTRY MOBILE Homo Pork ,
Route 33. north of Pomeroy .
Lorge lots. Caii992-7J.79.

EIGHT

ROOM

house

in

plus utllltios. Call 992·5532 .
THREE ROOMS ond bath lurn.
apt. SISO per mo. No children,
no ·pegs. Deposit required .

9•9-2253.
CAMPSITES on Ohio River near

Clifton , W. Va. Call 992-5782.
ONE BEDROOM mobile home
for rent.
Adults
only .

992·2598.

Mobile Hames Sale's
1965Gonoral, 60xl2, 2 bdr.
1970Shyllno, 12x65, 2 br.
1970Sylva, 60xl2, 2 bdr.
1970Costlo, 60x12, 2 bdr.
1973Nobillty , 12x60. 2br.
1973 Ridgewood. 70x.14, 3 bdr.
1973 Noshuo. 60xl2. 2 bdr.
1973Gov•rnor, 60x12. 2 br.
1914 Mark line , 50x12, 2 br.
B&amp;S MOBILE HOME SALES
PT. PLESANT , WV.
675-4424

WATER AND misc. hauli ng.

Call992-5858.

VERMEER BALER Model 605 C.
Mokes 1500 lb. bole. Eveni ngs
Phone 70-2877 or 742- 2152.

992-6173.
ZenHh stereo,

• ~ speed ,

ntcord
player with speakers, $30. All
in good con.d ition: See at 256
So. Fourth, Ave ., Middleport.
15 FT. LOWE LINE Aluminum
bass boot, 20 HP, M8rc., stick
steering, fully equipped with
trailer . Phone985 -o4339.
1967 23 Foot . Airstream
Tra iler. Phone 1·304-675·3098.
2~ FOOT ALL aluminum · pon·
toon boot . SO hp motor. 15ft.
bass boot , Minkoto trolling
motor, SO h.p. Mercury motor.
II, ft . Runabout. 35 hp motor.
All ready for the river . Try
th8m out.
Robert Hi ll.

949·2013 .
RUTLANO

HARDWARE,
2 doors down

Rutland , O~io .
from Post Office. 7•2-2255.
New and used cosh r,:egisters
and calculatOrs. Paper and
supplies. Martin-Senour !)Oint
Pro Line $8 .10 ga. , 1200 col ors, 2 gol. can e)lterlor flat
late)( house point $13.95,
white only. -40 gal. gas water
heater, gloss lined, 5 year
worranty,
sole
priced ,
$119.95 . M .T,D. lawn mower,
3'A hp 22" cut. sale price,
$125. Also garden supplies.

YARD SALE . June 1, 10 til 5.
Next to State Highway
garage. Rt. 7 . Trucy Andrews
moving to California. Old
di~hes , glass pictures, •tc.

RISING STAR Kennelt, boarding and grooming, all
breeds. Cheshire, 367-0292.

VERY GENTLE Quortor horto.
Western

parade

saddle .

Phone 698.3290.
Au~

1973 II'ITERNA TJ9NAL SCOUT
condition. 992-2121.
l'n4 GMC JIMMY, P.B., P.S..
A.C .. 2-whftl drive. $1725.
Coll992·3580.
FORD F-150, 4x•. ps, pb,
auto , ,

topper .

coll992-5324 .
1975 XL 250 Honda. $500 or
bea toller , 992-70114.
197~ FORD RANCHERO, P.B. ,
P.S., auto. , st. .l belted.
$2195. 992-2374.
1974 VW DASHER .. 992-55-16.
1973 FORD STATION WOIJOn,
A.C., 51.000 miles . $1050.
1972 Dodge Dart Swinger, 6
cyl., 2·door, $1175. Aftor s,:JO
coll992· 71 n .
1978 PONTIAC GRAND Am 11.
P.B .. P.S .. olr. · FM·AM rodio.
742·2777 .
.

AOP ONS AND remodelinQ
gutter work , down spouts.
Some. concrete work·, walks
and
driveway s
( free
estimate:) . V. C.
Young ,
Racine , Ohio, 9-49-27-CS .
WILL DO roofing , po·inting,
gutter, remodeling, plumbing ,
electrical and general repair .
Free estimates . Coll985-AI21 .

1975 II FOOT truck camper ,
self- contained . air condition,
ex-cellent condit ion . 992-2121 .

Real Estate far Sale
TWO STORY 3 bedroom house.
3 lofs. Now's your chance if
you n"d a house. $12 ,000.

Owner

willing

to

talk .

9'12·2082 or 7~2 - 2328 .
THE HEIRS ol Wllliom fleol offer for sole his home ·and real
proJ)e'rty located at 11 Oak St.,
Ponleroy. Ohio. Bids will be
accepted at the office of Bar·
bora Kn ight. Attorney at Low,
8ox: 723, Pomeroy, Ohio. Tel.
992-2151 , until Juna8 , 1979, ot
10 a.m. Appraised price:
$5,250. Vendors reserve the
rigtlr to reject all bids.

mobile

Jack W. Carsey
~
Mgr.
· Pllone t92·2181

STILL TIME to plant dahlias .
SHow stock roots avoilabl•.

conversion. kit . ChevroletGMC. Full time four wt1eel
drive to conventloncf 2 or I,
whMI drive. Complete with

, loch-out hubs. $275. Edolbrock
Torker intake manifold for
small block Ctlevrolet engine .
like new. $60. Jerry Well after

5 p.m. 992-3508.

bedrooms, family room,

BUSINESS
FOR SALE
Beer, WIDe CllrrYOut Iii Pomeroy, 0.

Same location for
lOyears.

PHONE
614-992·5786

living room, (with
fireplace),
kl1chen,
utility and 'h basement.
Large 2 .car detached
aarage. Situated on
almost 2 acres. Call for
an appointment. ·
WE NEED LISTINGS I
Cheryl Lemley, AIIOC,
Phone 742·2083
·
Hilton Wolfe, AIIOC.
Phane 949·2519
Georges. Hobstetter,
Jr.
Brakor 992·5739
5.!5 ACRES of wooded lond

IQ- s~ racing

FUJI

992-5121.

bike .

.

WESTERN BOOTS from Acme
and Tooy lorna for work or
dress. We have a Iorge selection.of boots on hancf for men
and ladies at Mountain
Leather and GEneral Store,
10.4-106 W. Union, Athent ,
OH . Mon. - Sat.
10-5:30 .

located 2 miles from Tuppers
Plains, close by Forded Run
State Pork. All utilities
available, price $6900, wilinH
to talk about price. Co

667·3932.
FOUR BEDROOM home. full
basement. Locatedin Rutland .
% acre, carpeting. draperies

include&lt;!. 742·2754.

592-5-178.

home. lo4x70. 314-675-505.

Auctions ·
and Friday, 7 PM, 537 North
High St., Middleport . Ohio.

NOTICE

Bids w i ll be received at
the off ice of B~rnard V .
Fultz . Pomeroy National
Bank Building . Pomeroy ,
Ohio , unt i l June 2, 1979, et

' 10 ,00 o'clock A.M .. for the

former res idence real
estate of Roscoe Cozart.
situated on State Route 338,
East of !heine, Oh io,
over loo king the Ohio River,
consisting of a one -story
frame dwelling , five rooms
and
bath,
on
ep .
proximately one -acre lot ; ,
For further lnforrriation '
te l ephone 992 -5896.
Ttle EKecutor reserves
the right to accept or reject
any bid .
Robert Cozart.
Executor
Estate of
Eoscoe Cozart
May 18, 20 , 22, 24, 27 , 29, 31

I NOTICE
Th e TOwn of New Haven,
New Haven , W. ,_ Va . is
cuuently accepting bids
for all Town Streets . Any
paving contractor, in terested in submitting a bid
is asked to cor1tact the City
Building in New Haven , at
1-)04 -88 2-3203
All b ids mu st be in
w r iting and must be at ttle
City Building no later than
the 11th of June . They will
be opened and read at a
regular sch eduled Council
meeting on the 12th of
June , 1979 .
Charles H . Smith
Mayor
Wendy L. Diver s
City Clerk
!51
ltc

n.

"EVERYBODY
Shops the
WANT AD WAY

pay""'nta . Coll304·88"2·2886.
1976 CHEVY SCOTSDALE 1 ton
dual w~ls, 1,51, engine, 1,s.pe.cl, FM convertor, twin goa

tonks, tilt whftl. $4000. Coli
304-882·2886.
1973 CHEVEllE 350 automatic,
~ . s .. ~. B., AM-FM B-trock,
$1200 or best offer. 949-235-1.

FIVE MITTENS, 6 to 7 weoka
old. 4 collco, 1 t1110r. 992·7680.
Humane Soclo1y.
GOOD WATCH dog. 18 mo.
old. Hod all shos. Australian
Shephard
and
German
Pollce'.992-232.41 .
THREE KIUENS , one male, two

femolo. Cail367·0095 .
FREE TO good homo. Malo
bard~

LINDMARK
Headquarters for
Hotpoint and
General Electric ·
Appliances

SALE PRICES
. .... _

JackW. Carsey
Mgr. •
- · Phone992·2111
~

19n FORD CHATEAU E150

GiveAway

collie, excellent watch

dog. Minda good. 995-3557.
. BROWN AND ton small 'malo,

von . Avto., P.S. , P.B., A.C., .C
captains chairs, dual gas
tanks, cruise control , A.M-FM
stereo. l2,000 miles. Excellent
condition. $5800 . Phone
WJ -7291 after .41:30.

AlliS CHALMERS "C amoll
round baler. Goad condition.
John O..Cre 12-A combine.

Coli ~9- 28'18 .
ALUMINUM TRUCK topper 36"
high , 8' long, white, sliding
front glass

992-76680.
FIVE MITTENS. 6 wftkl old.
843·2n•··

For Sale
COAL ,

LIMESTONE,

sand ,

gravel, calcium chloride, fer·

.... _
~

992-3891 '.
PlANTS, CABBAGE , broccoli.
cauliflower . brussels sprouts ,
head lenuce, tomatoe1 , .and
lo~ge "Selection of bedding an~
nuols: Pot• of tlowers and
hanging baskets. Cleland
Greenhouse .
Geraldine
Cleland; Racine.

Jack W. C.rsey
Mgr.
, P~t 992-Zlll

2~ ~IGS,

7 w-k• old. Thomas

Sayre,

Grrtat · Benet

~hone 843· 2~91 :

Ohio.

1967 MUSTANG 6 cyl. au1o.
Cabin cruiser. 17 foot. trailer.
65
hp Mercury Motor .

992-:1304.
PONNY. ALSO bull calf . 2 11:.

months ald. 843.2353.

608 E .
MAIN
PnMFROY.O.
NEW LISTING
Pomeroy, Wright 51 .,
Excellent
neighbor hOOd, .25 acre. Equlped
kllchen. Full basement,
air conditioning, dining
bar, wan1 S22,500.oo.
NEW ~!STING - Meigs
School
District.
·Homesltes,

acres,

1- 11/z

electric

and

water.
Starling
at
$3,500.00.
TRY AND TOP THISBrick, ranch, full base·
men!, wOOd burning
fireplace, large rec.
room, family room, 4
bedrooms. modern kit·
chen, 21h baths, garage,

carport, 2 acres;

o1her

many
features .

S60,ooo.oo.
HANDYMAN'S
SPECIAL
3
'bedr,ooms, bath, storage
buildings, lots of space

ROSE BUSHES
and
SHRUBS ALL
SALE PRICED

tlliz•r. dog food , and oil 1ypos
of salt. Excelsior Salt Works,
Inc;; .. E. Main St., Pomeroy .

New

Stiff A
Good S.fectlan
Of

dog,

f.male, 3 or A mo. old. Belawith white markings. 1·belge
pupy, 3 mo. old, both female.
Humane Society, 992-7853 or

windc·ws .

$:130. 985-3585.

medium hair, long ears, 1
year old. Bi-own and black

otrlpod rfli·ed breed

Blown Insulation
.JIM KEESEE

CARPET
a.EANINGFre11.Esllmate
Contact : Gone Smith
or Mike Grato
at Rutland

Cellulosic (w- fiber l
Tllermallnsulallon
. Save 3G to 50 pet.
an IIHHnt cost
Experience and
fully Insured
Free Est.
Call t92-2772
5·17·1 mo.

pc,.

Furniture Co·.

742-2211
.Allers P .M., 9'12-6109
or 742-217•
•·2

Ohio Valley Roofing

I I K

I

~

Ro&amp;lrltysel

Gaaee.

:v, mile all Rt, 7 by-pess .
on 51. Rt. 124
Rutland .

I I I IJ

-•rd '

Auto&amp; Truck
· Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phon.e \192-5682

AN HOUP: TO 170 l!oE!FCRE WA7H
!&gt;HOYii!P OFF WITH e.Ai&gt;JAIJf\1/S,
AHP IJO 01JE'5 GUARDING THE
MIN1·5&lt;1Jl!o!. .. WHATA 6REAK!

..-.....

...,..

At.ID :SHE SAIL!&gt;
WITH JU:ST A 2-6/IZL
C~EW AI\IO THE' 81&lt;!7

MNAt.IA HIM!H;LF!

l'!fCt&lt;Ot\1 WA!PH AIIIP'r &amp;UT FIR!!!oT
! CAN HAND I.E- 'E-M
I'D !lETTER
WITH NO T~OU&amp;LE-Flf\10 ME' A
ONCE WE-'RE
HlPINe

· Ulll&gt;fRWAY!

PLACE-:

ICAPALA

f

KJ I

~- JO · Ifc

Service

Home Maintenance
All rypes roofing,
downspouts. All

EXPERIENCED
Radiator.~--.

and

II

Now arranu. the' circled letters 10
form lhe surprise answer, as sug·
gestod by the above cartoon.

I l I I I ]"

A "[

Prlntanswerh-:

typn

hOme
re~lr .

malnt.nence, ntw tnd

Storm dotrs •nd wlndowi, All
guarantetd. 10 v.. rs ex-

Smith Nelson
Moten, Inc.

wor~

Ptrltnct. Fret flflm•tes. cau
Tom Htsklns NNifO.

·

Affltnl Artl
7t7-2145 ar n7-17U

UD ·pd.

Ph. 992-2174

. In town. ONLY $7,500.(10.
DON 'T MAKE A MOVE
UNTIL YOU'VE DONE
YOUR MOBILE HOME
WORK - 1972. 12'X60',
furnished, equipped kif·
chen,

central

air,

all

underpinning . Lot rents
for S35.oo per month.
5Uoo.oo.
WE ARE . LOCALLY
OWNED &amp; OPERATED
AND ARE IN NEED OF
LISTINGS. CALL TO·
DAY I
REALTORS
Henry E . Cleland Sr.
Henry E. Cleland Jr.
992·2259
992·6191
MODERN

THREE

Pllone 99H323
Free Estimates
5·20·1·mo.·pd .

Pomeroy

J&amp;R OIL CO.......6- N. L Constr~
Raclne. 0.
Wholesale, Distributors
tor fine
Pennull
lubrication products,

BLOCK &amp; BRICK .
WORK, GENERAL

Pomeroy, Ohio
9'12·5547
4·25·1 mo.· Pd .

~ - 4·Pd.

MONTGOMERY
TRAILER~
un1 Monroomtr'y Rd .
L•ngnlllt, Ohio
614 -U,-4245 Evtnln11
2 MIIH &amp;e1t of Wllllesvlllt ·

SUPER

GOOSE

STOCK

TRAILER NOWAVAILABL! .

·4-5-1 mo.

lEO MORRIS Truc~lng. Will do
lime and fertilizer hauling and
spreading. Also limestone and
grovel hauling. 742·2.. 55.

SALES

AND

SERVICE

Howard Rotavators
chisel plows. Leo

on

and V
Morris.

742·2455.
NEIGLER Construction for
building llousn and repair
work. Call Guy Nelgler.

949·2508.

Real Estate for Sale
3'h acres in Pom&amp;ray. SEclud·
ed wooded area on top of hill.
Overlooks river. Water , electric available . 992-3886.

Housing
Headqui1r J~rs

v~!~.~Ji
l

E. Second Stroot
NEW LISTING - · Nice
building lolln Syracuse
on Slate Rt. 124. Out of
1937 1100&lt;1 . Only ss,ooo.
NEW LISTING- Good
2 bedroom home ani:f
bath near shopping. Gas
furnace, full basement,
!rant
porch
and
aluminum siding. In·
sulated. 525,000.
NEW LISTING Large 8
room frame home with ·

1112 baths, furnace heat,
T.P. water, Ohio Power
and five acres of land.
Dishwasher, disposal,
and carpeting all
through. $30,000.
EXCELLENT - New 3
bedroom home In the
country. 2 car garage,
family room with
fireplace, wOOd doors
and windows, on large,
lot.
NEW LISTI.NG GOOd 3
bedroom frame home In

RE~AIR

SEWING MACHINE Repairs ,
service. all makes, 992·228.41 .
The Fabric Shop . Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Soles and
Service. We sharpen Scissors.
EXCAVATING, dozer , loader
O!;'d backhoe work: dump
trucks and lo-boys for hire,
will haul fill dirt, top soil,
limestone and grovel·. Call !Sob
or Roger Jeffers, day phone
992 -7089,
night
phone

992-3525 Of 992-5232 .

water and river view.
~olfor $7,500.
WboDED TRACTS Four 5 Acre tracts with

water

tap,

between

Racine and Nease Set·
llement. 57,500. Don't
wall, pick your home
site now.
WHEN IT COMES TO
REAL ESTATE, WE
WI~L
GIVE YOURS
OUR BE.S T.

Housing ·Headquarters

77

592·3051

plete Service. Phone 992-2-478.

INSURANCE

been cancelled? lost your
operafors
license?
Phone

992-2143.
Contractor

serving Ohio Volley region .
Six: days o week, 24 hours service. Emergency calls. Call

8&amp;2·2952 or 882·3454 .
HOWERY "NO MARTIN Ex·
cavotlng, septic
dozer , backhoe.

MAKE A COUPlE OF IMPORTANT
CALLS ·'· 'BYE, EVERYONE!

systems ,
Rt. 1A3.

Phone I (614) 698·7331.
IN STOCK for imm.dlote
delivery: various sites of pool
kits . Do-if• yourt•lf or let us
inttaU for you . D. Bumgardner
Soles, Inc. 992·572A .

Phone 698·3290.

Pass

Pass

'

You hold :

+ UQJiot

1

-·

J

t A 65

.2

opening two spade bid with
this hand.
No, we don '1. With only 19
high-card points and live
probable losers, the hand
doesn't qualify for ·a forcing
two, but we would not give
any demerits to a player
who chose to open with a two
bid.
·IN EWSPA.PEH ENTERPRISE ASSN 1

61~u.. _,tilf'
by THOMAS JOSEPH

Two rooms...
with a view of
·t.he street ...

.close to all
the stores~

And when Gretchen c;t.;:,rt.c.·~
to school, it's onl1.1 two
alle4s awa4!

ACROSS
I Fortune's
partner
5 Drapery
fabric
10 Trophy
l2 Set stralgl)t
13 Mooch
14 Canio's wife
15 Do it badly
18 Came Into
perception
gradually
18 Unstable
28 "A Shrop-

shire-"

UUvely

DOWN
I Altpect

!Apprised
3Sierrat Work unit
5Famoua

pooch
I Redahank

7 Uke a target on the

Yesterday'• ADiwer·
2% Classy

guy

firing range

•aWhereto

23 Knocking

sound
24 Common

find Gary
9 Be foot•

loose

Z5 Some

21 Well

11 Hold one's

material
2% Actor
Wilder
23 Went Uke

ground
17 Early craft
IJBound

3G

Roman

goddess
3{ In
existence

3Z "Dead duck"
33 Put forth
force

are social
21 Milt Can-

35 Attlla 's

iff's hero
21 Golf terin

39 Zip

followers

blazes
21 Hope·dlest

$'7!5
I ~.!. Yd.

wood
27 Greedy
21 Face : sl.

29 Thrice :
prefix

30 Kind ol

TA~KTO

Wtndell or Herb Grate '
or-Sml"\

ground

34 Bowman's

FURNitURE

742·2211

operative
your .Ufe!

4! "Romola 11
glrl
DAILY . CRYPTOQUOTE- .H ere's how to work

WE OFFER YOU ...
1. Two lull floor's of all ntw
furniture.
2. Nice Hlectfans of used fur·

it:

AXVDLBAAXR
Is

nlture.

LQNGFELLOW

One letter simply stands (or another. In this sample A is
used lor the three L "s. X lor the 1wo O's, etc. Sin g le letters,
a postroph es, lhe length and formation o f the words are all
h ints. E ach day the code l etters are differen t.

3. A J.-ge building full of
bHutlful carpet.

CRYPTOQUOTES

TI-IINK THAT WAS

ACE,

See the GraTe Family at

PARTNE~

~ou

sM,''AA Ace:'

~OU SA~. "A ACE"?

Wi-1~ DON'T WE JUST

CAL.L. IT 11 OUT II?

RSTBZBCN,
MLWP

NSXL

PGL

PHRAPC

PS

ML.SMVL.

zsso
QL

SD

SMLR ·LZ

L J -

SMI'tfSO- .

QC

'

BR

LVLWPOAW

VA. t!o monoy down (•lllllblo

Yesterday's Cryptoquote: WHEN ORDERING LUNCH THE
BIG EXECUTIVES ARE JUST AS INDECISIVE AS THE'REST
OF US.-WIWAM FEATHER
.

- - · --

LCL . -

NSHOWL

Mov.le

/J'tol

H llYRST R

"Sceleweg"

17; .·'

Mastilrplece Theatre 28; Scarlet " ·
Letter 33.
8:3o-Good Times 8,10; 9 : 00- ,,
Charlie's Angels 6, 13; Movie
"Siunt Seven" I , TO; Great
Performances 33; Meeting of
Minds 20.
9: 3o-Movle "This Men Stands
AI-" 3, 15; 10:00-Basebell 17;
News~

R~Al ESTATE loons. Purchaio '
a,nd refinance . 30 year terms;

vehprans) . FHA - As low 01 -~
per cent down (non-veteran•).
Ireland MortgOge Co., 77 E.
State, Athens. 61-4· 592-3051 .

.~.

Joker's Wild ·· 10; "
Fllntstonos 17; Over E~ay 20;
~owell Thomes Remorn...,.s· 33.
A:OO-Mister Cartpon .3; Mtrv
Griffin 6; Addams Farnlly ,1 ; ::
Sesame St. 20.33': Slx Million ·
Dollar Man 10; Mike Douglas 13; ,;.
Space Glnats 17.
.
•
4:30-Bewltched 31 Gilligan's Ia. ,
8, 17; ~ucy Show 15.
5:00-1 Dream of Junnle 3; Beverly •
Hillbillies 8; Mister Rogers ·· .
20,33; Gomer Pyle10; Six Million Dollar Man 13; Bredy Bunch 15; ·. '
I Dream of Jeannfe 17.
· · ..
5:30-Carol Burnett 3; News ,,; :..
Sanford &amp; Son I ; Mary Tyler :~:
Moore 10; Odd Couple 15; Lucy .,;· .
Show .17; Doctor Who 33. · . . , .•
6:00-Nows 3.8,10,13,15; ABC Newe , .
6; STudio See 33; Andy Griffith '" ·
17; Vlfla Alt9re 20.
::;
6: 30-N BC News 3, 1'5; ABC News 13; 1
Carol Burnell 6; CBS Ne- 10; or
Over Easy 20,33; My Three Sona
17.

n Not on ·

·RUIWID FURNilURE

17.
3 : 30-M~sh 8;

7:00- Cross-WIIs 3; Newfy.wed
Game 6,13; Porter Wt9oner I;
News 10; ~ove American StYle
15; Carol Burnett 17; Dick Cavett
20; Walch Your Mouth 33.
7:30-Dolfy 3; Match Game PM 6;
Muppol Show 8; The Judge 10;
That's Hollywood 13; Wild
Kingdom 15; Sanford &amp; Son 17. .. .
.8/ 0Q-Bob Hope 3,15; Eight Ja ·• \
Enough 6,13 ; Jtfferaons 1,10; .. ..

tO CIA

SHP AT •••

WEDNESDAY, MAY3G, 1f7t
5:20-World at Large 17; ~:-·
Farm Report 13; 5:50-PTL Club
13; 5 :55-Summer S.mosler 10. ·
6 :00-7oo Club 6,B; PT~ Club .15;
6:10-News
17;
6;25- .
Christopher Closeup 10; ~::ICIDragnet 17.
·
6 :45-Mornlng Report 3; 6:50-Gciod
Morning West VIrginia 13; ~:55-:­
Chuck While Reports 10; N•--

a,

art
36Goes with
bagels
37 Anklebone
36 Conjecture

RUliJND

6:00-News 3,8,10, 13,15; ABC News
6; Studio ~ 33; Andy Griffith
17.
6 :30-NBC News3,15; ABC News i3;
Carol Burnett 6; CBS News 8,10;
Over Easy 20,33; My Three Sons
17.
7 :Oo-Cross-Wits 3 ;
Newlywed
Game 6, 13 ; Please Stand By 8;.
News 10; Love American Style·
15; Carol Burnett 17; How to Buya Horne 33; Dick Cavett 20.
· 7:30- That Nashville Muslo 3;
Candid Camera 6; Gang Show 8;
HollywOOd Squares 10; Donna
Fargo 13; Abbott &amp; Costello 15; ·
Sanford &amp; Son 17; MacNeil-:
Lehrer Report 20,33.
8:00-Reclscene '79 3; Runaways ·15; :
Wonder Woman 8, 10; ; Auslfn
Cit~ Limits 20; City Notebook J:l.
8:3!}-Baseball3; ,!,.a~~erne &amp; Shirley
6, 13 ; Bernstein at 60 : 33.
9:00- Three's Company 13; Movie :
"The Revengers·~ 15; The ·
Rebels 6; Movie "The Survival :
of Dana" 8,10; Baseball 17; · '
Glenn Miller Memorial 20.
·
9 : 30- Taxl 13; 10:oo-Barbara ;
Walters 13; News 20.
10 :30-Lock Stock &amp; Barrel 20;
11 :00-Nows 3,6,8,10,13,15; ~Ike :
It Is 20.
~
·
1l : 3G-Johnny Carson 3, 15; NBA :
Play:oft 8,10; Diplomatic Style • ·
of Andrew Young 33.
· :
1l :d - Baseball17; 1:00-Tomorrow !
3; News 15.
· ·
L35-News 13; 2 : 3o-News 17; '
2:50-Movle "Mad Dog Morgan'• ···
17 ; ~ : SO-Dragnet 17.
·:

7:00-Todoy 3,15; Good MOrnfrig
America 6, 13 ; Schoolfes lO;
Wednesday Morning 8; 7:15Weelhtr 33.
1:3CI-Famlfy Affair 10; Lilias Yogi
&amp; You 33.
8:00-Capt. Kangaroo B,lO; Sesame
St . 33; 8:30-Romper Roqrn · 17.
9:00-Bob Braun 3; Phil Donlhue
13,15; Emergency · _One 6·;
Hogan's Heroes 8; ~ov. of . Lilt
lO; Lucy Show 17; Mlater Rogerl
33 .
9: 30-Brady Bunch 8; Hogan ~ ! ·
Heroes 10; Green Acres 10.
10:00-Card Sharks 3,151 Edge of
Nlghl6; ,0.11 In The Family 1,10; ;
Dating Game 13;
Movie ·
"Anything Can Happen" 17.
10:30-Ail Star Secrttl 3,15; S20,oooPyramld 13; Whew 8,10; Bit With .
Knit 33.
.
'
10:55-CBS News Bl\ Housa Call 10; ·
ll ; Oo-Hfgh
Rollers
3,15; ,
Laverne &amp; Shirley 6, 13; Price Is · Right 8,10.
11 : 3G-Wheel of Fortune · 3, 15. :
Family Feud 6, 13; Stisarrio St. ,33 • .
12:00-NewscMter 3; Pass-d 15;
Young &amp; Restless 81 Midday
Magazine 13; · 12:2o-~cive :
American Style 17,
'."
·:
12:30-,-Ryan's Hope 6, 13;" search for .".
Tomorrow B, 10; Elec. Co. 33; •
Movie "Written on the Wind" 17.
1 :00-Days of Our Lives 3,15; Young •
&amp; tho Restless 10; News 1;. All •
My Children 6, 13.
1:30-As Tho · World Tur~s 8, 10; ·
2 :00-DQctors 3,15; One ~lie to :
Live 6,13; 2 :30-Anolher World. ;
3,15; Guiding Light I, 10; Studio
See 33.
.1
3 :00-Generaf Hospital 6, 13; Lllln ·'
Yoga &amp; You 20; Infinity Faciory ;.

(Do you ha ve a question fo r
two spades, three diamonds
the exp erts ? Write " Ask the
and · a third club lrick barrExperts," care of th;s newspaing very bad breaks , He per. Individual questions wllf
almost surely must play be answe red i f accompanied
clubs at some stage or other by stamped , self-addr essed
and must also try the spade envelopes. The .most interestfinesse . There is a potential ing questions will be used in
heart finesse also, but the th is column and will recetve
one thing South wants to do copies of JACOBY MODERN!

GASOLINE ALLEY

TUESDAY. MAy 2t. lt7t

13.

• AJ 7
A Utah reader wants to

count his winners.
He is sure of one heart,

Call742·2211

'

3 NT

I

All South has to do to make
three notrump is to stop to

24 Rolls of Carpet In
Stock &amp; 1M's of Samples
lOC-H From.
BIJY NOW &amp; SAVE

VERY GENTLE Qucirter Horse.
Weatern parade saddle.

Pass
Pass

l

Soulb
2NT

By Oswald· Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

AU CARPET
NafON
SMf

614-1143-3011.

Nortb Eaot

L

CODNER'S CAMPERS on Roln·
bow Ridge with top cf the
line-Barth-Swl~t Colony 'Jayco - Motor Homes to Top*
pers , accessories and friendly
service. For directions coli

Weot

AllltiMIXDIPII

know If we recommend an

A GDOD SE~ECTION
OF END &amp; ROLL
BALANCES. .

FROM

Vulnerable: North.SOuth
Dealer~ South
·

Opening lead :· t J

CAIPITING
&amp;
SAVE A LOT

ElECTRICAl

WHY, SURE ··· WHEN I GET BACK
-· JUST REMfMBERED ···GOT 10

SAVE ON

Rullond, Ohio. Pone 742-2008.
PUlliNS EXCAVATING. Com·

E·C

LITTLii: ORPIIAII AIOOE-BIG OPERA'I'OR

4·23·1 mo.

DRIVE &amp; Lm1f

AUTOMOBILE

t AQ 74
• A K 10 9

Real Estlte Loans

IRElAND
MORmAGE
OOs
E. State, Athens

jack. West can do nothing
better than to lead a second
diamond. Now South can
lose the spade finesse while
he still has hearl control and
score his game in spite of
both major suit finesses
being wrong .

•AQ

"''I U.l . P•l, Otl

'

dlamonds in order to lead a
club to his nine and Wesl 's

• K J 43
• 10 9 6.
• J 10 9 8
• s2
• J 8
• Q5 2
SOUTH
• Q J 10
,I M

he wins the first

Henc e,

lrick with dummy's king of

+ K gs;

• a6 4

Purchase
and
Refinance '
3G Year Terms
A- No money down
(eligible veterans)
FHA-AS low as 3%
down (non·veteransl

EXCAVATING ,
dozer ,
backhoe and ditcher, Charles
R. Hatfield. Black Hoe Service,

Pomeroy . Bath, natural
gas
fur:-nace,
front
porch, near shopping.

Asking only$18,500.
NEW LISTING~ Nice
building lot In Racine
VIllage. 69X1BO, · out of
high water near school.
Only ss.6oo .
BARGAIN - Four room
house with bath, city

-

ealry in the play .'

• 8743
EAST

WEST

4231 mo. (Pd.)

Sweepers, tootters, iront, all
small appliances. Lawn ma.r ,
next to State Highway Garage ·
on Route 7. 985-3825.

to take that sp.ac.Je finesse

• 872
• 1\:63

•New Home
•Addons
•Remoldings
•Free estimates
\192-6011

BRADFORD, Auction. .r, Com plete Service. Phone 91,9 -2.1,87
or 'M9-2000. R,acine, Ohio ,
Critt Bradford.

is to keep from being foned

NORTH
+A 72

1&gt;-FT~~

Chester,O.
5-6·1 mo. pd .

4·5-lfc

ELWOOD BOWERS

Finesse timing important

IF MY~ ~ ':lJ .ll$tJIAL-,
I TAI'e lH~ ReST OF niB

SIDING

New, repair,
gutters and
dawn spouts.
Window cleaning
Gutter cleaning
Free Estimates
949-2862--949-2160

CHROME

Oswald Jacoby and Al~n S~ntag _ _ _

BORN~R

Jack's Septic
Tank Senice
Box3

BROIL FLABBY

BRIDGE

C. R. MASH
VINYL &amp; ALUM.

H.• L Writesel
Roofing

I Jumbles: GUILT

produces hla pe111-A BULLFIGHTER

SEPnC TANK
CLEANING

Rl.3

(N1owers IOf11C!"'W)

Answer: When en ef!Oif lo charge Is made, he

ResldMIItl and c6mmorclal. Call for
esll mate. 24 Hour Strl
vice. Any day, lltyllme:
Portable toilet rtntal.
Pllone915·Jack Glntlter 915·31N

CONTRACtOR

Call: 949-2818
or 949-2150

Yes1erday's

CONTRACTING

OPENING SALE

bedroom

h·.o use,
full
ba,ement,
f'repl,ace, fully carpeted, central air, •nclosed aun- porch,
locot.d on 6'1i acres on CR 28,
appro)C . 3 miles from Racine. If
interested contact LQrry Wolfe
9.C9-'836 weekends and after
5 evenings .

BOB'S GENERAL
eNEWHOMES
e ROOM ADDITIONS
eRDOFING
a VINYL SIDING
eGUTTER &amp; SOFFIT

tuners •nd

112-3375

POMEROY

doyo .

1976 CHEVY Ad Custom
Deluxe
heavy
y,
ton .
Gunrack,
FM conv•rter ,
38,000 miles. Take over

J&amp;L

m

eKcept AC. b:c•llent shape.

$5800 .
985-3301
995-4t.W oftor 5.

S&amp;G
DEEP STEAM

Industrial Chemical
Supplies, In addition to
most major brands of
motor oil .

1968 CORVETTE, full options
1974 HOU Y PARK

I

V~ewing

Camping Equipment

~!Y~~~~~
Ask Far

5pm.

spore and snow tires and
wh. .ls, 4-s.,..d, mif"tf condi·
tion. Regufar got. S.. at
Lorry' s Grocery, Syrocus• or

TREE TRIMMING ond Removal.
7A2•3167 or 71,2-2573 .

RUTLAND
3·
bedroom _. ranch on
Salem Slreel. Home has
family room, bath and
nice large kitchen . Excellent outbuilding wl1h
heal and electric. Ask·
lng$39,000.00.
BUSINESS OWner says
selllf Price reduced.
You can own your own
business and have a nice
apartment,
too .
Business does very well
and Is on St. Route 12~ In
Rullahd. Would con·
slder lease. Call today
for all Info.
ST. ROUTE 33 - Larae
3 bedroom • home with
nice kitchen, laundry
room and bath. Situated
on 1 acre. Sells for only
$32,000.00. Call today f ! ·
COUNTRY HOME - 3

..... _

995-433'1.
19n CAMARO . Rolly Sport.
olr. outo., loaded. 992·6681
before 5 pm or 992·3133 after
1977 F250 Ford truck , heavy

PAINTING AND Sandblasting.
Fr " estimates. Call9o4.9-2686.

un

CHARLES BUSH

Phone

duty, P.R.. P.S .. low mlloogo.
Topper. 10 ply tlrM, new

367·7101.

HOBSIEIIER

3ROUGfl COUNTRY pOrt-time

21 ,000 miles, tully equipped,
air, wench, etc., excellent

M iddleport-Poemroy oreo .
Coli for free estimate .

BULK LIME
SPREADING
· POMEROY

992-2374,

Sales

NOW HAULING limestone in

Business Seroices

Motorcraft, Fram, and

Pets for sale

3 AND I, RM furnished and unfurnished
opts.
Phone

Pomeroy, OH. $125 per month

HANGING BASMETS, all kinds.
Bedding plants. blooming.
Vegetobla' plan!! . all ready to
go, potted. SH Don Stobort.
Rt. 2. Racine. Ohio .

St., Syracuse. Salt and pepper
shaken. clothing. misc.

HEAO COOK for girl scout
summer resident camp near
HOOF HOLLOW, . Engllah ond
Western.
Saddles
and
Portsmouth. Experience in
quantity cooking . liv•in . Call - harness. Horses and ponies.
Kathy collect , 61-4-878-1381 .
Ruth R-.s. 614·698·3290.
Bordlng &amp; Riding Leuons and
Horse Care products.

AQUARIUS (Jon. 23-Fob. 11) A OHIO RIVER Auction Tuesday

look for something e)(tremely
nice to happen to you while on
the job today . It could be a
raise, promolion 9r just a
pleasant surprise.

OlD FURNITURE. ice boxes.
brou b.ds. iron beds, desks.
etc., complete households.
Write M .D. Miller. Rt. 1, ,
Pomeroy or coll992· n60.

YARD SALE. Hlghwoy 681 , fivo

your lime IO the type of
things you enjoy doing and th is
will be a very product i ~e and
profitable day for you .

people.
PISCES (Fob. 23-Mon:h ZO)

992-2689.

Yard Sale

Oe~ote

wonderful lime to firm-up relationships important to you .
Good things can happen between you and these spet:ial

ton . Delivered to Ohio
Pollet Co .. Rt . 2, Pomeroy.

256-6363 IMtwHn 7 and Spm .
or 886-88o40 after 5.

992-5-134.
.
ryihing you say and d.o today
will work out to your advantage
FURNISHED APT . suitable for 3
because you employ courtesy
or o4 construction workers.
and char.., which others can ' t · Alter !lpm' call 992-5.434,
resist. How to get along with
992·312'1, or 992- 591~.
other signs is one of the
sections you 'll enjoy in your · TWO BEDROOM furnished opt.
new Astro-Graph letter. Mail $1
992-3129,
992-5434, or
for each and a self-addressed
992- 591~ .
envelope to Astra-Graph, P.O.
Box 489 . Radio City Station , FIVE ROOM furnished house.
Phono742·2991 .
N.Y . 10019. Be sure to specify
btrth sign .
CANCER (Juno 21-July 22) Your
financial affairs are receivi no a

per

bodies: Also icrop iron and
metals. Rjd.r't salvage, SR
124, Pomeroy. 992-5468.

NURSE FOR Pi'r,-aician's oHice

Wodnoodoy May 30

$12 per ton. Bundled slob. $10

30&lt;-675·4:\40. An Equol Op-

992-6233.
EXPERIENCED AIR condition·
ing and refrigeration man.
Good pay and holidays. No
phone calls. Gallla Refrlgero·
lion Co., 152 3rd Ave ..
GolllpOIIs.

thru Friday

CHIP WOOD. Poles max.
diamat•r 10" on largest and.

phonograph records . Call
992-6370 or Contact Martin
Furniture .

hours. Referencet required.
Tuetday

wanted to Buy

Contact: Penonnel
Pleasant
Valley
Valley Drive, Point
WV. 25550, Phone

portunity' Emplover .

Services Offered

TRUCKS, 2 ton J973 and I '!,
ton 1970. Both with 12 ft.
bo xes . Phone 992-6206 or

or equivalent . bcellent solely
and fringe benefits. Shiff dif· . WANT TO buy' old 45 ond 7B
terento ll .
Offi.ce .
H.oapitol ,
Pleasant,

NOTICE

For Sale

Notices

Television

ANDI

CALLED THE
EMERGENCY
NUMBER.

.~

ll:oo-News 3 ,6 ,1,10,13 , 15; Tur- .. nabout ZO; lowell Tho.mal ~;
Rernernbers 33.
::=·
11 :3D-Johnny Carson 3,15; Poll.. ..
Woman 6,13; ABC News : 331
Switch 8; Movie "!&lt;lng Ret" 10.
12 : 3o-Movle "Slev• Queen of .
Babylon" 17; 12:~o-Mannlx
6, 13; Hawaii Flve-0 8.
1:00-Tomorrow 3; News 15; l :SONews 13; 2:30-News 17; 2:~
12 O'Clock High 17; 3 : ~
Upl~
.

�12-Tbe Dally Sentinel, Middleport-P-omeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, May 29, 1979

·Thousands forced to take different flights

On this date:
IIi I W, !he capital of the 8ylantlile
Empire, C0 nstantlnople, 111'81
captured by the Turks. The date II
listed by aome hlstorlana as the end ot ·
the Middle Ages.
·
In 18t8, Wlacmain jOined the Unklll
as the 30th state.
In · 1917, the ·35th · American
president, John Kennedy, was born in•
. Brookline, Mauach~~~etts.
:
In 1943, the AmeriC8118 defeated the
Japanese In the Padflc war Battle' It
Attu in the Aleutians.
.
•
In 1947, a constituent asaembly 'in
India made It illegal to shun part r4
the population as "untouchablea."

· BY ASSOCUTED PRESS
Thousands of passengers scrambled for new flights or cooled their heels in
altport lounges and hotels as a U.S. govenunent-ordered grounding of all DC-10
jumbo leta dlsrupted wol'ld air travel.
·.
&amp;me DC-108 were called back in mid.flight Tuesday, and on the ground
pasaengers were bused hundreds of miles to catch substitute flights or lodged
overnlgbtunWanavaliableseatturnedup.
.
Str Freddie 1..-ker's Skytrain was deraUed. It uses six DC-108 for ita cheavfare flighta between Englar_KI and the United States.
Many toolt the lnconvelUence phU!JIIOphlcally, mindful the inspections were
prompted by the crash of an American Airlines DC-10 that killed at least 273
j!eOplelnthe nation's worst air disaster. ·
"It's better to be safe oo the ground rather than go 'Oh! Oh!' in lhidalr ,"said
singer Pat Boone, who had a reservation for a DC-10 fllght from New York to
Loe Angeles.
'l1l!l Federal Aviation Adminlstralion's decision to ground the three-&lt;lnglne

e

MEMORI~ SPEAKERS - Mrs. Grace

Pratt, left, president of the
Ladies Auxiliary of Drew Webster Post 39, American Legtrin, and Mrs.
Grace Elch, regent of . RetUrn Jonathan Melga Daughters· of the
American R!lVoution, both spoke on the slgnif~ of Memorial Day at

FLOODED AGAIN - Heavy rains the past few
days have caused flooding problems again on SR 554
between Cheshire and Kyger. This section has been
closed frequenUy because of high water. A hearing on
the proposed widening, improvement and relocation,
in part, of 1.02 miles, will be disciiSSed at a public hear·

log May 31. The ~on will be held at 7:30p.m. at ·
Kyger.Creek High School. Division 10 Deputy Director
Glenn A. Smith will discuss location and design details

relocation, right of way acquisition and constructlor:
schedules.

HOSPITAL NEWS
Holzer Medical Center
DlscbarJiea, May Z5
Sonia Adams, Peggy Besco, VIrgil
Booten, Beulah Bradford, Betty Coner, Ladonna Davis, Minnie Dehart,
Mrs, Darrell Detty and daughter,
Zenia Evans, Barbara Figgins, Con·
~· rad Frazier, Dorothy Hall, Patrick
: Harvour, Frederick Healey, Loren
: King, Patricia Lanham, Donna
- Mather, Charles Petry, Louisse Rad·
· f~. Ethel Rainey, Rebecca Shirley,
.Robert Simpson, Dana Smith, Mrs.
George · Spradling and daughter,
Wilma Herrell; Charles Waugh,
Weldon Woods.
lltrtlul, May Z5
Mr. and Mrs. Joune David Jude,
daughter, Vinton.
Mr. and Mrs. David RatiHf, son,
Gallipolis.

CALLOUT

THE-TROOPS

FOR .

PROPERlY
PROTECTION

Area .deaths
NANCY BUSH
Nancy Sue Bush, 21-month-old
daughter of James E. and Sandra K.
Bryan Bush, Cheshire, died around 5
p.m. Saturday in Vetel"IIPS Memorial
Hospital, Pomeroy, aftef being struck
by an automobile in Middleport
earlier in the day.
She was born Aug. 22, 1977, In
Gallipolis. She is survived by her
parents and one brother, James Bush
ll, and a sister, Angelia K. Bush, both
at home.
One sister, Peggy, preceded her in
death in 1976.
Grandparents surving are Mrs.
Eleta Bush, Gallipolis; Are len Bryan,
South Carotlna; Mr. and Mrs. Clyde
Harrison, t.flddleport;
greatgrandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Aaron
Bryan, Gallipolis.
\
She attended the Church of Christ in
Henderson, W.Va.
Funeral services were held I p.m.
Tuesday at the Waugh-Halley-Wood
Funeral Home with Ron Adams of.flciating. Burial was In Mound Wll
Cemetery.
CLARENCE JONE'&gt;
Clarence (Bill) Jones, jiB, a resident

member of the Disabled American
Veterans, VFW P011t No. 4464,
American Legion .Post No. 'II, and
Fraternal Order of Eagles.
Mr. Jones was a World War D
veteran; having served with the U.S.
Army In the South Pacific. ·
Funeral services will be held I p.m.
Wednesday at Proapect Enterprise
Baptist Church with Rev, Charles T.
Glassburn and Rev. Jack Finnicum
offidating. Burial will be in Mlna
Olapel Cemetery. .
Friends may call at the Waugh·
Halley-Wood Funeral Home from U
and HI p.m. Tuesday. The body will
lie in state one hour prior to services.
Military graveside services will be
conducted by VFW Post No. 4464 and
American Legion Post No. 'II.

·Eastern•••

Bidwell
•••
Continued from page
r

·'

I)

Gallla County's highway death toll for
1979 to six.
Two-year old Nancy S. Bush,
daughter of James and Sandra Bush,
Cheshire, was accldenUy ldlled after
heipg run over by a pickup truck at
5: 10 p.m. Satlll'day evening In the
driveway at the Qyde Harr1aon
residence on Leading Creek Road.
According to the report, the pickup
truck was driven by Ladonna J.
Taylor, ~. Rt. I, Middleport, was
following another vehicle into the
Harrison driveway. The chlld avparenUy ran into the lett side fo the
vehicle and was knocked to the
ground, then run over by the left rear
wheel.
The Middleport Emergency SqQild
was notified at 5:20p.m. MelgJ Coun·
ty Sheriff's Department was notified
by the hospital at 6:12 p.m. that the
chlld was dead on arrivaL at the
hospital.
. No charges were expected to be ru.
ed.

Barri~ger,

Joe

Dinsmore · BoylesJ

Janet Lynn · Brooks. Terry Robert
Randall Glenn Browning,
Brown , _
Barbara Eh!line Buchanan, Sherri
Joan Buchanan , Harold Clark Jr .•
Bruce Eugene Conde, Robert Dale

'

ssgss
Regular .
$189.95
6 pc. Tool Set

19
. 95

5

INSURANCE

at

enttne
I

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

.

.

.

The Meigs County Commissioners
and county engineer Wesley Buell!
Tuesday night were requested to
make a &lt;:hange in the superintendent
anq other personnel at the Meigs
County Highway Department.
• A petition, bearing 100 sigll!ltures,
was' presented to the board by
Kenneth Lawson , Herman Lawson
and Ml1ford Frederick, of Eagle
Ridge Road.
· The petition stated they were fed up
with
excuses . from
the
superintendent's office .and tired of
paying out money for repairs of their
equipment due to the conditions ol the

road.
They also voiced objections to the
type of mix being used for patch work
and stated that they felt the materials
being used was not of ~e qual,ity
needed to do the job.
A large delegation from the western
part of the county again requested
commissioners assume the pperation
of Forest Acres Park.
Since its inception the park has been
operated by the Leading Creek
Watershed Association.
Officials of the Leading Creek
Conservancy District liave stated it
will be ~ble to operate the park this

Governors given
new power

Pitzer, Lawrence L~ PoOler, Karen
Elizabeth Probert , Terri Lynn
Pullins, Connie Lorene Jones Rankin,
Kimberly Kay Reed, Diane Elizabeth
Rice, Lowell Al len Ridenour, Roger ·
Ira Riebel 11. Margaret Evelyn Riffle.
Robin · Jo Ritchie, Jeffrey Delbert
Root. Michael Dwayne Salser. Susan
Kay Shields, Dawn Renee Sor.den.
Terri Mae Stevens Sorgen, Debra '

SAL

EUREKA E.S.P.

Model2097

PRICE

$14ms

• Infinitely variable
;,··
Rugullltor sliding scale FREE
height· adjustment
TOOL
• Powerful 6-amp motor
• Convenient auwil.atlc SET
cord rewind
• All-metal V/bra-Groomer
• Extra-large dust bag
• Headlight and dual Edge
KJeener

IN

POMEROY

1Needed
A

Pick
.

~

And Louisiana Gov. Edwin
By Tbe As8octated Press
President Carter, hoping to ease the Edwards, who already has special
summer gasoline squeeze, is giving power to deal with fuel problems said:
governors new power to allocate the "What'we need is not authority. What
fuel in their states. But many we need ls fuel."
The executive order, which will
governors say they "don't need the
emergency power and don't plan to expire Sept. 30 unless It ls extended,
applies to all states. But the White
.use It anytime soon. . e •
An executiVe 'bl'der announced by Holllll!'·satd"!Jil!St leglalatures already
Carter at a n~s conference Tuesday · have empowered governors to act on
,
gives the · 'governors of 17 states' ga59line problems. .
Carter said the order would allow
. ·powers they now lack to manage gas
sales and relleve long lines caused by governors to regulate service station
hours, impose minimum purchase
shortages or panic buying.
However, one of those ·governors, requirements and asalgn ·motorists
Otis Bowen of lndiana, ·complained: alternate days for gas purchases.
"The president gave us no teeth to . The order will not allow governors
to close stations to discourage driving
enforce Ulis."
or conserve gasoline.

York ·Construction given job
Patching and paving of streets in asphalt at $34.50 a ton.
. S\reets having priority are
Syracuse will get underway soon.
Council Tuesday night accepted the Bridgman from Fourth to the area
bid of York Construction Co., [nc., near the Nazarene Church; a portion
Olauncey. The bid calls for 200 too, of Sixth street ; Ash Street past May
more or leas of asphaltic mix, at $28.50 street and Third Street to Sixth street.
In other business, it was announced
at ton.
The other bid received was from that the restrooms at the PQOI are open
· Shelly Co., Thornville, for 200 tons of in the evening to accomodate those
paying bsll.on t~ two fields.
Council will meet in regulat session
.8250,000 action filed
on Thursday, Jlllle 7, at 7:30 p.m ..
A suit in the amount of $250,000 has
been fUed in Meigs County Conunon
Pleas Court by ·Pamela Price,
-administratrix· of the estate of
WUliam C. Mlddleswart, deceased,
against Freda Middleswart Proffitt.
Tbe action is f()l' the wrongful death
of the plaintiff's fathe~ and a survival
claim.
.
WWlam C. Mlddleswart Clled on
July 4, 1977. Freda Mlddleswart
Proffitt plead guUty to murder of
plaintiff's decendent, William C.
Mlddleswart, 8nd Ia presently serving
time in a penal institution.

.
APPUCANTS SOUGHT

;!;!;!;!;!;!:!;!;!;!;!;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;!;!;!;:;:;:;:;!;!;!;!;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;

The n.llia-MelCJ Commlllllty AcUon Aaency atalf will be 111t1q avpllcatto.. for the Summer Youth
Employment Program (SVEP) on
June 8 at the Pemeroy C.A.A. Offlee
lD the Melp Couty Conrtboale.
Melp eonaty yontb, ages 1f ~~~roach
Z1, wbo uve not applied at lbelr
scbeoll ·or the ODES office, may avply between I a.ID. to ll:SO a.m. and
1 p.m. to I p.m.

;!~;: ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:~;:;:::;:;:;: ;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::;:::::::;:;:::;:

year .Unless park operation is
assumed by the county it will be
closed.
After a lengthy discussion
commissioners agreed to operate ihe
park through Labor Day of 1979. At
that time a r.View of the situation will
be made to determine future county
participation. .
·
It was pointed out that maintenance
work at the park will be done by CETA
employes, which will keep county
expenditures at a minimum. [n
addition, a schedule of rates to be
charged· for use of the park will be
adopted, which will assist in making
the park self-ilupporting. · .
Victor Gaul of the Shade IUver
Jaycees was present to discuss the use
of the "ConunonS" for a tennis cow1,
and to present petitions bearing the
nsmes of those in the area for and
against the project.
Commissioners stated that the
project had created quite a bit of
contr~versy and dlasagreement
within !he conununity.
A conclusion was reached whereby
the prosiopsed location of the project
was moved from.the southwest comer ·
of the lot to the northwest comer.
Thl.!i location will elirnlnt!te the use
of a nsrrow alley surroundlni! the
Cornm9ns placing It farther from the
residential area. And, in addition will
not affect the drainage of surface
water as the northwest comer is a flat
area.

The plan, however, ls subject to a
ruling from the prosecuting attorney
as to the county being the owner of the
property.
.
County engineer, Wesley Buehl,
infonn"'l the board that his labor
force at the highway department had .
chosen to work four to 10 hour days a
week. The mechanics and office
personnel will work five eight hour
days. The new working arrangement
will take e{fect the week of June 4.
In other business, Columbia Gas
Transmissiion Corp., was granted
permission to Install a 10 inch gas pipe
line under and across county road 16
at a point approximately 1,600 feet
northwest of SR 124 In Rutland
Township. Commissioners aplJ'Oved a
one year IV -D contract between the
Meigs County Walfare De!18rtment
and the prosecuting attorney1or Chlld
Support Services; entered into an
agreement through the county
welfare department to provide
transportation services for TIUe XX
participants at a cost ef. $985 w1th
services to be rendered by the
Conununlty Actl9nAgencyl; accepted
the bid of Guernsey Aspat Co., to
supply bituminous materials for the
month of June.
,
A request by the Veterans Service
office for an · additional Jl,OOO for
salaries was tabled untll additional
Information can be obtained.
' Attending were Richard Jones,
president, Henry Wells, and Chester
Wells, commissioners, and Mary
Hobstetter •
clerk.
·

S

COLOR TV's

WASHED &amp; DRYER

'568"

'588

REFRIGERATOR

REFRIGERATOR
.
.

·'549

.•399

Jlbn.,.~, Blnlc

~
.: ·. ' . .·.
~

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

WEDNESDAY, MAY 30, 1979

.

Total Value

ELBERFELDS

Officials

•

' .

(Continued from page! )
Ellen Balderson. Deborah Ann Durst

up for the temporary loss of the wide-body planes.
Long lines were also reported in Miami and Philadelphia.
Across the Atlantic, about .1,1100 people were held up in London's Gatwlck Ali-p&lt;irt after Britain's Civil Aviation Authority grounded all nine American-built
DC-lOII flown by Brttish carriers.
.
Laker Airlines, which offers the lowest-priced regularly scheduled fllghta bet·
weenEnglandandtheUnltedStates calledbacktoLondq~.twoU.S.-boundDC­
JOB in midair + one en route to Los Ai.geles, the other to Detroit.
Along with American, United and Western, the U.S..alrlines that fly DC-108
are : Continental, N~tional, Northwest Orient, World , and Trans (ntemation8,).
M08t substituted other planes where ~ible and urged travelers to check
their flight schedules.
'
.
Other foreign illrlines which reported voluntarily grounding their oc.io Oeeta
for safety inspection were Swlssair, Scandinavian Airlines Systems, The Royal
Dutch Airline KLM, Venezuela's VIASA, Italy's Alitalia Gennany's Lufthansa,
and Japan Air Unes.
'

,: Petitioners seeking changes
; in Meigs highway department

Deeter, Timothy Roger Dillon,
of 52 Uncoln St., Gallipolis, died at 11 Howard
Keith Dorst, Diana Lynn
p.m. Saturday in Holzer Medical Evans, Leslie
Vernon Frank, Brenda
Renee Spencer, Richard Dan Spencer,
Center.
Kay Frecker, Mark Alan Gillilan.
RusseH Eugene Star(!her, She'rrie
Mr. Jones worked for the H. R. Gregory Vance Ginther. Jeffrey Paul Jane
Starcher. Melba Jane Thomas.
Goebel.
Mark
Wayne
Hall
,
Susan
Holdennan Constructioo Co.
Elaine Hannum , Timothy Dwane Sara Darlene Wells Warner, VIda Ann
He was born March 28, 1911, in Hawthorne. Michael
Richard Weber. Bryan Keit~ White. Brian
Gallia County, son of the late Albert Hayman, Malinda Beth Headley, Rusty Wigal, Iva Renee Wilson and
David Alan Heqrick, Paul Wayne Williom Keith Wolfe.
Jones and Es\her Shoemaker Jones.
He ls survived by his wife, Opal M. Holsinger . Judy Sue Holter. Paula
Kay Hysell , Debra Lynn Jewett.
Cremeans Jones, whom he married Peggy
June Johnson. William Dale
HITS - Smalley , Min , 67 ; Remy,
Aug. 5, 1939, In Gallipolis.
Kautz. Randy Keith Keller, Valerie
Bsn, 65 ; G Brett , KC, 63 ; Carew, Cal 1
One son survives, Rev. Donald Mon i ca La Bonte , Kathy Ann 60
; Baylor , CaL 60.
Jones, · Rt. 3, Gallipolis. Four Lawrence. Terry Leon Life, Clirford
DOUBLES Lemon, Chf , 15 ;
We'll protect almost
.
Wayne Longenette, Terry Michael Bonds , Cle , 13 ; C Washington, Chi. 13;
daughters survive: Mrs. Donald Lunsford. Shirley Marie Bennett G Bren , KC, 13 ; McRae , KC , 13 ; Otis,
anything you own o• rent (Delma) Karr, and Mrs. · Charles Lyons. Ronnie Dale McGrath. Ronald KC . 13 : B Bell. Tex . 13.
·home, apartment,
(Betty) Wise, both of Middleport; William Masters. Laurie Gayle
condominium, and
Cheryl Marie Mowery.
Mrs.
Aland . (Barbara) Lopez and Mathews,
possessions.
Jackie Glenn Parker, Cynthia Sue
Mrs. Clyde (Ruth Ann) Dunlap, both
Give us a ull.
of Gallipolla. Sixteen grand and one
great.grandchlld survive.
Two sisters survive: Mrs. Nate
(Geneva) Rapp, Mt. Sterling, Ohio;
Mrs. · Delbert (Alllerta) Tomlinson,
(Continued from page 1 )
Pinellas Park, Fla. One . brother, Chicago )."
Wilber Jones, London, Ohio, survives.
The discovery followed the finding
a·mQuickel or
Fire
guts restaurant
Two brothers and one sister preceded on Sunday of a broken 3.inch bolt that
Junnle St•rcher
her in death.
officials believed to be responsible for .
• 992-:6677 .
He attended Nease Settlement Bav- the separatio~ of the engine from the
WELLSTON, Ohio (AP) - A fire
'Aci'OII from file 'COUrtwhich broke out Sunday night gutted tist Church in Pomeroy. He was a jet's left win!!.
·flouRin Pomeroy.
!he historic four-iltory Wellston Coach
It is not known if the broken bolt
House in Wellston.
·
.
caused the flange to break or if the
Firefighters from Wellston and
~~·
broken flange caused the bolt tO snap,
several area communities fought the
MS. CARNAHAN ,
K£Ht:
FAA officials said.
blaze.
Driver said that in the next phase of
~fuJNCE
(Continued from page 8)
'
Firefighters fought the blaze into
COMPANY
the investigation, all three of 'the
!he early hours on Monday.
Conneaut; Curtis Bradford, plane's engines will be sent to Tulsa,
. Wellston fire officials report no Arlington; C. W. Salier, New York, N.
mjunes despite !he fact that a dance Y.' Mr. and Mrs. John Wingett and Ok~~ ~~Ae~%~ti:~~ inspection or
was being held in the building when daughter, Etta Perry, Columbus; R. replacement of engine mounting bolts
the fire broke out.
A. Elllnger, Staunton, Va.; Mary · on all 134 DC·liJs owned by U.S.
Brummitt, Cleveland; Wlbna Sayre, operators and said all . jets not
· Worthingtoo; Della Cross, Gahanna; inspected by 3 a.m. today must be
Bruce Beegle, Columbus; Mary grounded.
Louise Ours, Huntington, W. Va.
In other developments, Cook County
Pauline Darrah, Parkersburg, W. Medical Examiner Dr. Robert Stein
V'a.; Carolyn Masale,Dublin; Mr. and said there had been positive
Mrs. Donald Shively, Columbus; 1\lr. identification of 12 of the victims. He
and Mrs. Nonnan Roush, Charleston, said their names would be released
W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Ron McDade, after relatives are notified.
Athens; Mr. and Mrs. WUbui- Holter,
iEFRIGERA TORS • RANGES •
Stein said bodies of "one infant and ·
Akron; Mr. and Mrs. Robert Euler, a very young chUd," which he saw in
Elkview; W.Va.; Janet Oyler and her the temporary morgue at the airport,
FREEZERS • WASHERS • DRYERS
husband, Charlotte, N. C.; Mr'. and were not among those ideotified. He
o I picked up an applicaMrs. Charlea Schuler, St. Clairsville; said he didn't kno\V if their deaths
SPEED
QUEEN
. tlon for a low coat loanl
Mr. and Mrs. George Wallace, Colum- . raised the death toll, or if they were
25" CONSOLE
bus; Mr. and Mrs. Clare Carpenter, listed among the 271 pasaengers and ·
On qualifying. I got the
.HEAII' DUTY
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Carpenter, crew who were kW.ed. Two persons
caah I needed on the apoJ
Belpre; Mr. and Mrs. William also died on the ground. ·
. . • and at terms suited to
Stewart, Athens. ·
American Airlines said it knew of no
my
budget!
Mr. and Mrs. Critt Bradford, Wor- infants abQard Flight 191 and didn't
tl)lngton; Mr .. and Mrs. Chris Hill, know if the death loU should be
Shadyside; Mr. and Mrs. Charles revised .
"The Friehdly Bank"
Jewell, New Haven; Mr. and Mrs. Ed·
"We won't know until Dr. Stein
ward Dr011, Freedom, Pa.; Mr. and identifies !hem," airline spokesman
· Walk-~p teller window ·,
Mrs.
Berruird
Gainer,
Barbertoo;
Mr.
Art
Jackson
said.
''We
don't
know
of
17' CU FT FRIGIDAIRE . 15 CU FT ADMIRAL
and al!tn·teller.window
.
and Mrs. Franklln Longsworth, any infant on board. A very Yt&gt;ung
Open
~rlday
Evenings
s
to
7
p,m,
.
Brecksville; Mr. and Mrs. Norm child could have had a ticket. Maybe
FROST PROOF
Styer, Waterford ; Mr.and Mrs. not. We will revise our records death
FROST PROOF
Dwaine Sayre, McCutchenville; Mr. count when we know for sure that
and Mrs. Glen Kimes of P !here are additional deaths."
. ' . . .•l ·
95
arkersburg, w. Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
A
memorial
service
for
all
the
.
Charles Perry, Holland; Mr. and Mrs. victims' was held near the airport
Carroll Cleek, Columbus; Mr. and Monday . About 1,100 persons came to .
I
Mrs. James McClaskey, lndustry, the church, where abOut 40 sat in front •
MANY MORE VALUES· HURRY!
.
$)
,... · ''· :·? ~ . . •
Pa.; Mr. and Mrs. Charlea Cline, pews reserved for friends and famUy
,
.;.:
...........
.
Moundsville, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs. of the dead.
1
11N.
::-"fr
.
.
.
t
· ··
Richard Holter, Reynoldsburg; Mr.
Jackson said the airline flew to
· ~.
/'
and Mrs. Larry Holter, Groveport; Chicago all relatives who wanted to
, 1!- .• •
,.
Mr. and Mrs. Roger WUiford, Tup- attend the memorial service or who
pers Plains, Shirley Preston and her "just wanted to be here for whatever
M.mt..r F .D: t.{
,,.u·N'tl .. lo .,. ~ ·-Ni
reasons."
·
husband of Vinton.

DAVIS. QUICKEL_

.'

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Shaver, son,
Gallipolis.
Mrs. Thomas Grimm, daughter,
Mason.
Dlacbargea, May Zl
Dorothy Adams, Hllda Berringer,
Elmer Belue, Donna Clagg, Thomas
Daniels, . Emma Elckleberg, Artha
Hornsby, Gaye Johnson, Hubert
Johnson, Reva Johnson, Tiffany
Johnson, Mary Kirkman, Shawn
Lambert, Ann .Lemley, Leslie Lyons,
Mrs. Lester Malone and daughter,
Earl MArtin, Vivian McCormick,
John Van McQuire, C4rol Pltchofrd,
Evelyn Runyan, Ronald Saunders,
Wanda Scarbrough, ~rude Sergent,
Mrs. Monte Sheets and daughter,
Merry Simmons, Russell Sprague,
Mrs. Dennis Wright and son.
lllrtbs, May Zl
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Henry,
daughter, Wellston.
Dlscllatgea, May Z7
Crystal Barnett, Sarah Buffington,
John Cwmingham, Terry Davis,
James Graham, Bert Handley, Kelley
Henry, Betty Lane, Ashby Mave,
Dean Mllllken, Louisa Mullins, Sarah
Murphy, Mrs. lUck o\Jsely and son,
Joshua Qulllen, Robert Rice.
Births, May Z7
Mr. and Mrs. James Knapp, son,
Letart.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Sommerville,
daughter, Gallipolis.
. Mr. and Mrs. Tom Skinner,
daughter, Gallipolis.
Dlacbarlea, May Z8
Juel A!J!brole, Hoo.rt Blutoo,
Mabel Bryant, Joha CbmleleWikl,
Leelle Cohoe, Mn. Harold Coot and
son, Mn. Wayne Davia D ud .On,
PeiiiiY Davis, Le1111 Depriest, Jaulta
Ferrell, WliUam Gl'lllwo, Mn.
Thomas Grimm 111111 daacbler, Donna! HaD, Jobn ,Harmon, MRs. Dane
KJug 111111 daughter, Debbl LoDdermllk, Marcella PldJJJpe, Marvin
RadabGqll, Dorollly RGaae, Llllda
Shaver, Llllda Taylor, Charles
Weaver.
Blrtba, May Z8
· Mr. and Mrs. Michael Hamllton,
daughter, Jackson.

VOL XXVIII NO. 32

.the annual Drew Webster Post services in Pomeroy Mmday. Mrs. Pratt
introduced aUXi1iary associates on the speakers' platf~. Elected of.
ficials, Gold Star Mothers, World War r Veterans, Boya and Girls Stall!
candidates were recognized. Opening prayer was by Joe ZwWing post
chaplain, and benediction Was by Gema Cue!, auxiliary chaplain. '
I I

jets pending new checks of their engine assemblies left about to,IXXI DC-10 seats
empty on U.S. carriers alone + about 12 percent of domestic capacity, the industry estimated.
.
.
.
The order followed discovery of "grave and potentially dangerous deficien· ·
cies" in the engine assemblies. An engine fell off the ill-fated Am.,tcan plane on
Friday.
.
·
.
Eight U.S. carriers have 134 DC-!08 in operation. Foreign airlines haye at
least that many, and while they·were not'bound by the FAA order. many grounded their )eta.
· Joseph Scott, an American spokesman In Chicago, estimated about 17,000
persons nationwide were bumped from DC-lOB. About 3,200 persons were bumped in Chicago, he said:
At O'Hare International Airport, the scene of Friday's tragedy, about 300
pe&lt;)ple were bused to Detroit or Indianapolis for other flights, Scott said.
In Los Angeles, frantic passengers dashed from counter to counter .and
argued with ticket clerks ss airlines tried to juggle routes and planes to make

.

·. BAKER FURNITURE

._o.-,..,,;,,

.a·~.&gt;.:.'il;'.'
.lBJI!~
.•.

•'
'··''""·' ·
candy store. Long abandoned, the 11tructure reportedly
Ia now the property ci the Stale r4 Ohio. Pomeroy
Mayor Clarence AndreWI says hi8 requests to the
dlvilllon office of the Ohio Department of HighwayS
that the structure be town down have gone unan·
swered.
'

REQUESTS UNANSWERED - Scme motorists
are afraid that thla old structure which overloolls Nye
Ave., in Pomeroy, will topple over any minute. Some
older residents reinember when the building was
called "Uncle Hen's" and \Vas a small grocery m.1

...

'

STUDENTS AccEPTED - Two Meigs County
high school juniors have been accepted to attend a
swnmer introductory course in drafting at Cornell
University l.J) New York. The course Ia from June 26 to
August 10 with the students staying on campus. Taking
advantage of the summer program are Rosemary
Hubbard, Southern student, daughter of Larry Hubbard, ltadne, and Helen Holter, Racine, and Brian

Bailey, Eastern student, son of Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Bailey. Both students CllrrenUy attend vocaUonal
claSIIes at Meiga High. Rosemary has received a
scholarship from Cornell to help with the coat r4 the
summer program. Shown ls, i to r, Charles Corder,
Meigs ct;afting instructor, Brian BsUey, Roeemary
Hubbard, and Tim Flesher, guidance councilor.
'

Officials ·testing computer
to determine crash causes
.

CHICAGO ( AP) Federal
inspectors and American Airlines
officials - apparenUy not satisfied
the loss of one engine wss the key
factor in the nation's worst air crash
-plan to pr:ogram 8 computer to see
how the DC-10 jumbo jet would react if
Ita hydraulic system .wss damaged .
The National Transportation Safety
Board and the airline said Tuesday
they are trying to determine whether
the falling engine damaged other
parts of the plane - such as the
hydraulic system that provides power
to critical controls on the plane's
wings and tall .
· American officials said they plan to
program a computerized aircraft
.simulator · at the airline 's training
center in Dallas to learn how the
jumbo jet would have reacted if two ol

s

I

its three hydraulic systems failed
·when the engine fell off. The simulator
is used to train pllots.
"We are looking into the hydraulic
syatem of that aircraft and tracing the
trajectory of that engine when it came
off the top of that wing. We want to
lmow what happened -what kind of
damage might have been done to the
wing," said Bob Buckhorn, a board
spokesmnn.
The hydraulic system provides
power to the aUerons, flaps, elevators,
ri.Kldet and apoUers - devices !hat
help control the plape.
·
Buckhorn added that the safe.ty
board won't know what caused the
crash lor several months.
Investigators say Flight !91's
trouble began Friday when a 3-inch
bolt in the left wing engine assembly

T team fi n ds· pazr
•
d ea d h US ban·d. serzous
•
~:4

.

.

·

'

.

·
HILUARD, Ohio (AP) _ Shots husband Donald, 35. Pollee said Maule
fired by an unidentified gunman who ned the house and went to the store
later took his own life killed 8 Hllliard after throwing a piano bench at the
woinan and seriously injured her gunma.~.
husband, according to authorities in
Maule was listed in guarded.
this Columbus suburb:
condition at a local hospital · with
The couple's daughter was struck wounds in the ann snd chest. His
an~ injured by the man when he daughter Heidi, 14, was treated for
invaded the couple's home Tuesday, head lacerations and released. Pollee
but her injuries did not appear to be said the man apparently let her go
sertous.
after Malile escaped.
The woman was Identified by the
The girl told pollee at the hospital
franklin Coynty coroner's office as !hat she was alone in the home when
Brenda Maule, 35. Hllllard police Lt. !he man forced his way in. She said he
Michael Poole said she was shot in the tied her up and took her to the
bsck of the head and the gunman shot basement, then waited for her
himself in the side of the head. Poole parents. She also said that when he
said a chrome-plated .357-callber freed her, the gWllll8n claimed he had
Magnum· revolver · found near the· killed her mothe rand planned to shoot
man's body apparently was the himself.
weapon used.
·
Hilliard Mayor Roger Reynolds said
Mrs. Maule's body wsa in. the !l1e gunman came to \be hollle with a
kitchen of , her home, while . the suitcase containing a gun, gauze and
gunman was found dead ai the bottom ether.
of the basement stairs. The bodies
The family apparently moved into
. were dlacovered when a Columbus the house last fall. Mrs. Maule was an
police SWAT team, aided by Hilliard agent for Nationwide Insurance, with
pollee aild Franklin County sheriff's her. office located in 'tlie home. Her
deputies, invaded the home about four husband worked for the computer
hours after the first report of tile department
of
Nationwide's
shooting .
Columbus horne office.
. .1
Authorities said .the incident
Douglas Swope, manager of a bank
__ _.pparently was the result of a · branch next to the holise, called tbe
domestic disturbance, but declined family "very friendly , outgoing, the
additonal discussion of. possible kind of people you'd like to have for
motives.
neighbors."
First word of the shooting came
Reyn~lds declared a state of
when police were summoned .Ill a emergency in the area. ordering· two
nearby '·grocery· to attend to bullet neighborhood bars closed for about
wounds suffered by Mrs. Maule's two hours.

y

cracked on takeoff and the engine tore
away .from the •jumbo jet. There Ia
disagreement over whether the
aircraft still could have been
maneuvered to safety. .
·
~ plane nose-&lt;lived toward tbe ·
groundatthe northwest ~nd of O'Hare
lnblmational Airport and exploded on
impact, kWing at leaSt ·273 perll!'na;
The safety board plans to begin
tearing down the three engines of the
wrecked plane nest 'Tuesday a~
America.n's main~enance
headquarters at Tulsa, Okla.
.
Two groups of safety board
engineers also will fiy to CaUlornla tO
begin · working with McDonnell
Douglas engineers to help dele~
the cause of the crash. · '·
The
Federal
Aviation
Administration in Washington
grounded all 134 U.S.-owned DC-Uli
because of "potentially dange1'11114
defidencles" 111 the assembly holding
the engine to the wing.

.•,

Final count 508 .dead
By Tbe Alsoctated Prell
Although there w,u less motoring
than usual because of aasoline
shortages and stricter enforcement of
the 55 mph speed ll.tnjt, 601 pel'IOtll
died in traffic accidents over the
Memorial Day weekend.
The National Safety Council llld
there were reporta of more motorllll
taking shorter trips than ever hilm;
getting to destinations and returning
on one. tank of gasoline.
·
And , the safety cOWlCU said, !bole ·
on the trips probably had more
passengers as !hey bunched up i'ather
than take two cars. Acddenta under
such conditions could attribut~ to a
death roll over 500 despite fewer mllea
driven at relatively lower speeds.
The death count, compiled by the
Associated Press from 6 pm. Friday
to midnight Monday, compared to 1128
last Memorial Day weekend.

TWO SQUAD CALLS
The Middleport Emergency Squad
was caUed at 2':21 p.m. Tueeday for
Amanda Murray, 247 N. Third St. Due
to a manpower shortage, the call was
transferred to the Meigs Emergency .
Service which transported Mrs.
Murray 1o Pleasant Valley Hospital.
At 7:45 pm. Tuesday the squad was
called . to 916 ·Locust st. for Nona
Winebrenner , No treatment ' was
required.
I

\'I

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