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                  <text>8-Tbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday , June 5, 1979

Wednesday . June 6

IN 1 HE

ASTRO·GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

-

m

any help in repair of the leVee which was once a busy
gathering spot for boaters and river watehers. Of.
.ficials feel that erosion has caused much of tlle damage
to the levee.

Au-ditor's office says money
wasted on substandard coal
By TOM GIJ,LEM
delivertes were obtained from state-s
Associated Press Writer
Gilbert, an auditor's spokesman, said
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The the Piqua coal was so poor the power
state audilor's office says thousands company had to burn an additive with
of dollars may be wasted each year by it to produce adequate energy
state institutions and municipal power discharge.
plants that buy substandard . coal
A similar overpayment of about
without knowing it.
. $400,000 is expected to be announced
The audilor gained state Controlling this week following an aut,lit of coal
Board approval Monday to develop a purchases at the University of
method that coal burning facilities Cincinnati, Gilbert said.
"We feel that if the Situation is this
can use 1o adjust · the price of
purchased coal with its quality . bad in just two institutions, there
Battell~·c. ~emorial ,Institute In probably is a lot of money being
ColwnbuS will be paid $27,000 to wasted ," Gilbert said.
develop the method.
He said 27 state facilities burn about
Steve Koch, an auditor's examiner, two million tons of coal annually, arid
told the board that the city of Piqua's 10 municip;ll power plants also are big
municipal · poyrer plant made coal users. Battelle is developing a
overpaymenh: of more than$43,000 for way to adjust coal priceS by quality
substandard coal from Jan.l-ApriJ 30, because those facilities and the
1978. A supplemental finding of "11,000' auditor's office lack the expertise, be
in additional overpayments is said.
expected this week.
The board also approved a $170,900
Koch said the Piqua plants also contract to develop a new method of
received five coal shipments from removing sulfur from high-6ulfur Ohio
Kentucky which weighed an average · coal. The state Department of Energy
18.2 percent less than the invoiced ton- will contract without competitive
nage. The true weights of the bidding with Polymer Research Corp.

SNAPPER SALE
ONE WEEK ONLY

of America of Brooklyn, N.Y.
Eric Johnson, an energy specialist
with the department, said the
research will seek a way 1o remove
organic sulfur, which is part of the
molecular structure, from coal. It
could take three years to C&lt;llllplete.
The goal is to clean high-6ullur coal
using current washing and polymer
methods to such a degree that
expensive smokestack scrubbers
would not be needed to ~e power
plant ·~sSion5 comply WI~ federal
standards, he said.
,., .
In other business, the sevenmember
board:
-Deferred a ,_l?,epa.rtment of
Administrative SerVtces request 1o
release '161,000 in emergency .funds to
repair sidewalks around the
Statehouse.
-Deferred a Department ·of Mental
Health and Mental Retardation
request for approval to enter into
several hundred service contracts for
fiscal 1980 in the division of mental
. retardation and developmental. d~
abilities.
.
Several board members said they
wanted 1o retain legislative oversight
oo the contracts, which will deal with
315 group homes' in the division. Board
President James R. Marsh said a
special meeting probl!bly will · be
called 'to cooslder the Individual
contracts.

NEVER AGAIN WILL BE BE ABLE TO OFFER
THIS FINE MOWER AT THIS LOW APRICE

Swim•••

(Continued from page 11
ners and lntennedlates lllU8t preaent
a card from the prevous skill level.
students Interested in advanced
Ufesaving should have a good working
knowledge of swlfi1mlng and have
passed their 15th birthday'
Here's a schedule of lessons: June
18 through 19: 8:15a.m. 1o 12:30 p.m.
Advanced lifesaving; 8:30 to 9:30
a.m., adult beginners; 9:45 to,ll a.m.,
begiMers, 6 and up, and advanced
beginners, H:l5'a.m. to 12:30 p.m.
BegiMers,, a snli~U ,Ciaaa of five
year-olds will be Wldertaken If In·
structor Is available.
July 9 through :111, 9 to roJs a.rii.,
~,.and advanced .~rs,
· 10:30 to 11:45 a.m., beginners and in·

'

30" RIDER ELECTRIC START
SALE '888•

liSTS1008.75

·
,,

,:rl~'V~

30" RIDER .HAND START

r'

·r

.... Ti~'r ss9s.1s ·
GRAVE~Y
204.C:ONDOII ST.
·
,

SALE '788

11

'

TRACTOR SAlES &amp; SERVICE
POMEROY, 0.

992-297S

==

"

Manning Roush, OWner

Open la.m.-5:30 p.m. Mon.thru Sat.

tennedilites.

.Thinking About
A New Model ·Car

• •

THE NEW

.

.

WE'LL ARRANGE THE MOST CONVENIENT
TUMS FOR YOUR BUDGET.
'THE FRIENDLY IWVK"

~

.

.:·'IC(.
.
. '\:

..}'

·-.,.·

..,
I

Mmber F _0.1- c. Deposits Insurance tD 140.000.

-·

.

.

1979 c
the
and

. \.' S ·

DIXON , ET AL. ,

dec Ia

emergencv,
HERE
~:alrious
ordinances
genera and per

CAROLYN SUE KING,
Def endant. ·
No . IJ , lSO

• nature

NOTICE BY

MEETS WEDNESDAY
The ladles aulllary of' the Mid·
dlepr.rt Fire' Department .will meet
by Mayor Andreyls. Attendln!l '~- :~ Wednesday, June 6at7:30 p.m. at the
( Con~inued from page I 1
Is asking for a rate increase for Mayor Andrews, Wehrunll l'~;.;ni::k, fire hall.
Harold Brown, Bill Young and Rod
Hostesses are Marilyn Epple,
prisoners.
The new rate Is $14 the first day and Karr, council men¢ers, Mrs. Wallon Beasle Darst, Sue Imboden and Katl)y
• 10 per day thereafter. This means an and Chief Webster and Donnie Ward. Chadwell .
increase in cost to the village of $4 per
day. No action was taken on the

request.
Allee Globokar met with. council
regarding the condition of a. grave on

her lot at Beecb Gl'Qve. She asked how
she could get dirt mov"'l from the
grave. Mayor Andrews !old her he
would check on the sltuatioo loday. •
BeUy Baronlck, coullcil member,
stated she had been told the cemetery
was In very poor condltioo. Mayor An·
drews stated that this was not true
that the · cemetery had been mowed
and cleaned. .
CowlcU lliao dllcuued 1be cle8nlog
&lt;If privately OWDed lots. CoaacU urged
raldeDII to clean lbelr loll. ResideD·
II bave wiill'ju!Y 1 to do so wltb no eJ:•
cepUoos. If lbe vWage cleau lbe loll
lbe cnmers will be billed for lbe work
done. .
Chief Jed Webster's report for his
department showed the departnl4!nt
investigated 35 accidents, made 34
III'Tl!Sta and drove, 4,199mller.:.
Steve · Hartenbach, meternian,
issued a report showing 1,214 tickets
had been issued last month and $2,9CMI
collected frorn tlle meters.
The resignations of Aaron KeltQD,
cemetery trustee and Harry Davis,
nlember of the board of Public Affairs
were read and accepted.
The meeting was opened by prayer

Hospital News

Rober Medical Ceaier
, Dtscharges, JUDe 4 .
John Aelker, Margaret Brooks,
Mrs. Harry . C!laflli and son, Jack
Crank, Eliz!l~th Dotaon, Belhanyle
Elliott, Juanita Fluharty, David Huddleston, Gwen Hutchinson, Connie
Jones, Len9re Klnnlard, Shirley Mitchell, Shawn·Paugh, Earl Saunders,
Mary Smith, Wll11am Tawney.
Blrtba,-JUDe 4
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ward, son,
Hamden. Mr. and Mrs. Jolm Nuce,
son, Gallipolis.

ELBERFELDS

Vete1'8111 Memorial H08pltal

Admitted - Robert R. Crwnp, Hart·
ford; Helena White, Gallipolis; Fran··

ces Gibbs, Hartford; Eugene Fisher,

Pomeroy; Margaret Freeman,
Carlisle; Evelyn Murray, Middleport; William Rusell; Pomeroy;
Gladys Harron, Parkersburg;
Florence Eblin, P01peroy.
Discharged -.,Rebekah~SQUAD RUN
The Middleport Emergency Squad
was called to the office of Dr. James
Conde at 8::11) p.m. Monday for Mae
Hawk, Route 4, Pqrneroy, a )Xllllible
heart attack victim. She was taken to
Holzer Medical Center.

.
SQUAD CAl 1 m
The Pomeroy Emergency Squad
. answered a 'call to 1 Oak st. at 11:17
a.m. Monday for Eugene Flaher who
was taken 1o Veterans Memorlal
Hoepltal where he was albnlttetl.

SHOP

MASON.FURNITURE
FOR THE BEST DEALS IN THE
'rRI STATE AREA

MASON FURNITURE
Mon., Tues., Wed., Friday &amp; Sat.
8 : 30to5:00Thursday till12 Noon

OPEN E~ENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONLY .

·m '-ss92 .

COUPLES GET LICENSES
Marriage licenses were lilaued to
Fred11rlck William Sisson, 32,
Syracuse, and Cannel Mary Hunt, 35,
Syracuse; Roger Barnhouse, 25, Mid·
dleport, and Tanya Ughtfoot, 18, Mid·
dleport; Kevin Sheppard, :111, Racine,
and Susan A. :Voat, 23, Ra~-

BY BOB HOEFLICH
Two Meigs County school districts
expect to be in dire financial straits as
a result of Tuesday 's primary elections.
Emergency operating levies in both
the Eastern Local and the Southern
Local School Districts went down to
defeat
Eastern voters defeated an eight
mill levy , for thre~ years, by a vote of
463 to 295. Southern Local voters
defeated a 6.5 mill levy, five years
339 to 272.
'

,
The Eastern Local Board of
Education, in desperate need of funds, pointed out that the levy would
have brought in$123 ,800.
Last June, a one year emergency
levy was passed generating approximately $152,795 for local
operation.
The board indicated it does not
believe it can operate the school
system without the help of yesterday's emergency !evy. There are indications the district will run into
problems before the end of the 1979

Herman Grate

Mason; w. Va.

New from Joanna ...

~o~OYin·

with the

'F~flet» Swftpp•

hemline.
It's a tancy winaow shaae
at a plain low prlc9.

• Joanna Western's
Kordovin window shade
now comes with a scallop
hem line at a stock shad~t
price.
.
• Kordovin Is translucent
plastic. . .
• Comes in Ivory, Apple
Green, Curry, Tiger Lily,
Celery, Paris Blue and
White.
• Bring your window
measurements because
Kordovin shades will be
cut to lit right at our sto're .
• Kordovjn can save up to
8% in heating fuel coste
and up to 21% In alr
co~ditioning costs.
37Y•" WIDE ~ 8' LONG $8.98
Larger widths avallablo.

we carry
In stock 111 sizes wlnsllades In different qualillts
d~w

ond colon and .we cut shadH to
your measurelrH of charge.

ELBERFELDS

calendaryear .
The Southern Local Board said a
two-year emergency levy passed by. ·
voters earlier, did what it was supposed to do - allow the board t.o
bQrrow money to reopen schools
which had been closed and to keep
them open .
_
. The board sought additional funds
for expenses and general school
operations.
Here 's how the precincts of Eastern
voted in yesterday 's primary :

VOL. 'XXVIII

NO. 37

Yes No
Precinct
Yes No Precinct
22 74
North Chester
39 56 Part, Lebanon
7 24
South Chester
28 62 East Letart
18 25
Part West Chester
46 62 Letart
55 59
Part : Lebanon
.-0 10 Racine Village
51 47
Long Bottom
24 61 Syracuse ;
37 51
Olivedale
53 62 Minersville
Reedsville
'38 36 Racine Precinct
76 59
272 339
Orange
67 114 Total
In Tuesday's only race in Pomeroy
Total
295 463
Here 's how the precincts of the Village, Hollie Green, a fonner counSouthern District voted on the tax cilman, defeated Robert Anns, 110-54
to get t)le Republican nod for mayor.
measure :
lncwnbent mayor Clarence Andrews

•

e

did not seek reelection.
Votes given to other Pomeroy candida tes, a ll un opposed, were Jane
Walton, clerk-treasurer, 129 ; Rodney
Ka1T , for council, 126, and E. F.
Robinson for board of public affairs, 133.
Only 166 votes were cast in the
Tuesday 's election, ran extremely
light count
AJ; the Republican nominee, Green
wUI be opposed for the mayor 's post
in t.he November election by Roger
Davidson, an independent candidate.

en tine

at

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 6, 1979

WHS graduates 91 students
" believed there wa s no reason he
By Judy Owen
th e tale of Richard Bach' s
Before a crowd of nearly 900 "Jonathan Livingston Seagull," a
couldn't fly as fa st or as high as the
parents, faculty and friends, Joni very special seagull who reached
ea gle and after days and days of
Denise Clark, valedictorian of the beyond his simple routine existance
practice he found that he could. He
1979 graduating class of Wahama to grasp something more from life.
had dared to ask himself the
High School, told her 90 classmates " Jonathan ,"
question, 'Why not' '"
he
explained,
"We are ending our times in high
school and begiiming to build our own
lives in our own ways."
A recitation of the poem "If," a
sununary of life, highlighted Miss
Clark's valedictorian address at
Additional plans for the annual Big Pomeroy-Mason Bridge and going
Tuesday night's combined
Bend
Regatta June 21·24 were through Pomeroy.
Bacalaureate and commencement
when the Pomeroy Chamber
outlined
Quickel said he hopes to have the
exercises in teh Wahama High School
of
Commerce
held
its
noon
luncheon
parade
better organized than last
gymnasiwn.
year. Tickets for the Jeannie C. Riley
After the reading she said, "If we meeting at the Meigs Inn Tuesday.
Bill Quickel, co-chairman of the show are not yet available but should
each try to do what is right and never
event,
reviewed activities to be be within a day or so. The Jeannie C.
stop striving to be the best we can, life
featured
. A parade will kickoff Riley show will be held Friday at 7
will be lull of happiness and selffestivities
Thursday beginning at p.m. and at 9:30 on the Meigs Football
satisfaction ." ,
In his salutatory address, Gregory Middleport and traveling through Stadlwn.
Along with Miss Riley will be VonAllen Stodola focused on the wisdom Pomeroy. It will line up at 6 p.m. on
of Charles P. Kettering who once said South Second Street and leave at 7 del Moore in a tribute to tile late Elvis
"Our interests are in the future p.m. A second parade will be. held on Presley. At S {J.m. Thursday at Midbecause we are going to spend the Saturday at 11 a.m. beginning at tbe dleport a tennis tournament will be
rest of our lives there."
Reflecting briefly on past experiences of the 1979 graduating
class, Stodola said, "Even though we ·
may never forget these memories,
tonight represents a pause in our lives
- a pause between past events and
future challenges.
"We believe we are ready to face
the world and seek our places in socieBy BILL DENSMORE
Chicago, Agin said.
Associated Press Writer
ty," he said,. "but finding these places
In both cases, he said, the crack was
will present challenges to face and
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - A barely visible to the naked ey~ . but
goals to work towards." Stodola hairline crack stretching barely two was confirmed by painting a red dye
aaured his classmates that "Life will inches along a thin lip iii engine-jlylon over the suspect area. The crack then
be filled with new challenges for us - mounts was respo~sible for the latest appeared as a tiny red scratch.
"At this point, we really have no
challenges that will test the order grounding .DC-lOs, an American
knowledge and know-hows we have Airlines maintenance official who saw idea what caused it, whether it was a
stress crack or what," he said.
obtained through our teachers and the crack said today.
The cracks were found as
The crack was found in two planes
year sof education. "
"As we work towards our goals we now grounded at San Francisco mechanics began the first of periodic
will meet challenges and changes, International Airport, said Dean Agin, 100-flight./Jour inspections ordered for
travel to different places, meet new the airline's manager for aircraft the DC-]0 by the FAA. The order
followed the crash May 25 of ah
people and make new friends. But," maintenance here .
Visual inspections ordered last American Airlines DC-10 while taking
he concluded, "no matter how far we
- go or how many people we meet, we week by the FAA for the same area of off from Chicago's O'Hare In can never forget our years at the engine wing mount failed to turn u'"national Airport.
The plane dropped an engin e on
Wahama or the people we shared up evidence of the cracks, he added.
takeoff
, and crashed, killing 275
But
he
said
that
doesn
\
necessarily
them with."
mean
they
weren
't
there
.
.
persons,
including three on the
In addition to the valedictory
"My personal opinion IS that they ground.
· ·
and salutatory s speeches, a BacAgin declined to speculate on how
were probably there and . not
calaureate address, delivered by
identified," he said, "because the long the pylon structure would remain
the Rev. Dr. John E. Wildman of the
original !FAA order) specified a intact with the crack. But he said that
Mason United Methodist Church,
visual check and confirm with dye when mechanics reported the first
The Rev. Dr. Wildman advised the
crack on Monday, his reaction ·was
check only if necessary ."
graduating seniors to "never sell
He said the first crack was found quick: " That airplane ' s out of
yourself short. You can accomplish
Monday night on an American DC-10 service," he said he told them .
which had arrived at the airport
more in your life than you even
earlier. On Tuesday, he said, FAA
dream of now ."
regional inspectors viewed the crack.
"Reaching your goals won 't
Then about 8 p.m. Tuesday, a
come easy," he said, "you'll have to
similar crack wa s found by me- .
work at it. And you'll always need to
chanics going over engine wing
remember to look to the positive,
mounts on another DC-10, which had
play down the negative. "
arrived
as Flight 65 from Newark via
The Rev. Dr. Wildman then told

"With faith in God, confidence m
yourself and the drive to succeed
you can do anything you w~" The
Rev. Dr . Wildman promised.
" Always ask yourself, 'Why not'?"
The Commencement Exercises
!Continued on page 101

Additiona_l Regaua plans outlined

...........
PRACTICE SPEECHES - Valedictorian Joni Clark and
Salutatorian Greg Stodola cfu!cuss the speeches they presented to their
classmates and nearly 900 guests at Tuesday night's Wahama High
SChool Commencement Exercises.

Commissioners sign agreements
The Meigs County Commissioners
Tuesday night signed three
agreements with the Colwnbia Gas
Transmission Corp. presented by
engineer Wesley Buehl.
The argeements granted pertnl!slon to Colwnbi&amp;- Gas Tran-

·Body found
ClllCAGO (AP) -The death loll in
the nation's worst aviation disaster
rose to 275 persons Tuesday after an
additional body was found near the
site where an American Airlines DC·
10 crashed shortly after takeoff May
25 from O'Hare International Airport,
authorities said.
Of tlle victims, Z12 were passengers
aboard the Los Angeles-bound widebodied jet. The other three who died,
including the body found Tuesday,
were on the ground and died as the
plane exploded in flames and debris
scattered over a wide area.
Cook County Medical Examiner Dr.
Robert Stein said the latest body
discovered was that of a white man. It
was found under 3 inches of dirt and
debris in a burned-cut hangar at the
abandoned airfield where the jetliner
crashed.

Fears dismissed

l
'

Eastern, Southern Voters defeat tax issue·s

Pomeroy village

&amp;'b
~'

·~~~~~:\:~~·~~r::~.~~~:.,!

KING ,

Plaintiff,

INIWU'A,...INTIN"Ml MIN-I

,altonal Blink ·

,.....,,..,.

~ARRY

] 'Birthday

Walk-Up Teller Window Open Friday Evenlngs,S to 7 p.m.

' .,· '!!!.1.1

ROSS

- MAY REEVES

END MARRIAGES
· In Meigs County Common Pleas
Court Daphne G. Cremeans, Rt I,
Reedsville, filed suit · for divorce
~~e~rvin P. Cremeans, Rt. 2•
Rebecca s. Smith was granted a
divorce from Robert E . Smith.

SEE US FOR AN AUTO
LOAN TODAY

MladlepOrt,o.

"

An

pro-.·e,

Defendctnts .
·which ...... .
PUB~(CATION
Case No. 16.669
the Codi
TQ: Carolyn Sue K ing ,
- LEGAL NOTICE and WH
whose l• st known addr ess
In pu rs uance of an ord er
traffi( and
was 46(!98' Scout Ca m p
of sal e in 'p a r titi on fr om
provisions
Road , Lo.ng Bottom , Oh io
Cou'
r
t
to
m
e
d
irect
ed
,
I
sa
id
June 6, 1979
revised to comply
Yo u are hereb y notif le: ct
w ill off er for sal e. at publi c ! hat you have been named
current State Ia~;
Demand s on you where your au cti on , a t th e door o f th e
W H E 'R E A S ,
1 h
a defen·daht. in a le~al
work. is co ncer ned may be a CourthQU Se i l1 the V i llag~ of
codification of such or·
trille heavier this co min g year Pomeroy , M eigs County , ac tion en tiffed Harry King ,
dl-.ances, tQgether with th:t.
Pla int iff , vs . Carolvn Su e
but' th e reward s will be worth y Oh io, on the 141h dt~~y of
new mauer to bt adopted,
K i ng , D efendant. This
at your best effo rt s. Be a July , 1979, at 10 :00 A .M ., action
the matters· to be ameniled
- ha ~ been assig n ed
produce r, not a sh1 rk er
, th e follo wi ng des cribed
and those to . be repealed
Case Nc . 17 . 150 and is
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) You r eal estate situated In the Pending in th e Court of
are before ' the councjl .
m a'1 not wo rk well under presCoun t y o f Meigs , Sta t e of Co mm on Pl ea s of M ei g s
Be It ordained by the
sure toda y" so tr y not to leave Ohi o. Town ship o f Sci pio , County , Ohio .
Council of the Village of
MiddleAort . as fOIIOW.S : .
.
tasks to·th elastmin ute . Ai so- nno mor e part ic.ularl y
The obj ect of the Com descr ibed a s follow s :
sec
1. That the or · ·
th is is not a good ti me to
PA~VELN0 . 1 : Being in plaint fs the obtain ing of a
dinances of the Village . of
th e t er .
e xperiment wilh untes,ted pro- the southe~ s t quarter ot di ·vor ce and
Middleport, Ohio. pf a
cedures. H.ow to get al ong with Section No . 23, Town No . 7, m ination of a marriage
gen~ra 1 and perma.nrf'lt .•
c ontraCt
between
the
other si gn s is on e o t the Range No . 14 , ofth e O .C.P ., paru.es,
nature.
as
rev1sed ,
the settlement or
sections _you' ll· enjoy in yo u,r and bounded ..as fOllows : · the property rights at the
re.cod !fied , rearranged and
new Astrb-Graph Le tt er. Mall $1
Beginn i ng 30 rods South of parti es, and the issue · of
consolidated into - com .
lor each to A s tro~ Graph , P.O. the North east corner of suppor t and custody of the
porfent
codes . · titles.
Box -489. Rad io City Stalion . said quarter Section and 46 ~ cnildren .
ch"pters and sectioris wit_h
N .V. 10019. Be sure to specify
rods and 22 I inks west of the
the 1979
Rep l acement
Y o u ar e ·requ i red t o
east line of sl!l id quarter answer the
birth sign
Pages to the Codified
c ompla i nt
CANCER (June 21·Juty 2Z) Section ; th ence (1 l West 23 within 28 t1ays afler th~ ta st
Ordinances are t')ereb,y
1
a,pproved and apopted .
Keep a low profile socially rods and 3 links , ( 21 south public~tt i on of . this notice,
34 rod s and 16 links ( 3 ) wh ich will be published
· One book .form copy of
today and, above all , steer East 23 rods and 3 l inks, (4 )
the .1979
Replacement
clear ot clique s.. Don 't iet an - Norlh 34 rods and 16 links once ~ach week tor Si)l.
Pages sha II be certified a.s
other involve you in pe tty poli· · to the place of beginning, successive weeks . The l ast
correct by the Mayor anr:t
publicat ion will be made on
tits.
coQtaining Five (5) acres, June 26, 1979, and th e 2S
the Clerk of Council. a't ·
LEO (July 23-Aug. ~2) It 's possi- with right of way from this days for answer will
tached to this Ordinance as
tlte yov could be a b\1 m~re land through lands now commence on that date .
a part h'e reof ' and f illi!d
reStless than usual today and Owned by Wm . C. R eeves
With the permanent Or' ·
tn c ase of your failur e to
make changes just for sake of and Lon a Reeves to the answ er · or
dinance records of tt'le
o t h er w is e
change . Th ink your moves pub.lic highway .
Vi l lage . .
r- espond as required by the
fl
PARCE.L
NO .
2:
SEC . I I : Th e following
Rules
of
Ci v il
th rough before going o on Beginning in. the l ine be - OHio
'o rdinance
material is
ttl e
final
tangents .
tween Sec tion No . Twenty . Pro cl? dure .
hereby add ed , amended or
VIRGO (Aug. 2J.Sept. 22) In- ttlree (2 3) and Seventeen t1earing on this matter will
repealed a·s respectively
stea9 of looking for your { 17) at the ·Southw est beheld after th e e1( piration
indicated in order ~ to
lrlencls ' faults today . look for corner of a lot of land of 42 days after .the last day .
com pl y with curr'ent State
of
pub
l
ication
of t his noti ce
their vi rtues.
formerly deeded by Jesse or as soon there ~ fter a s can
l.a w .
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Nor· Page to Joh11 Page ; thence be sc heduled by th e ,Court .
303 .98 Traffic Code Of ·
malty you 're willing to share East Twenty -one rods to
rense
General ·
·h h
the East side of the Athens
L arry Spencer ,
Misdemeanor
lullvwhatyouhavewll ot ers, and Gall ipolis road to the
Ctassi .f ication . &lt;amended)
Clerk Ot"C'ouri'
but today you may be a trifle West l ine of a lot of land
Chap . 331 Operation
of M eigs County .
too self-serving for your own formerly deedea by Jesse
Generaily
. (Amended)
Ohio
good. Don 't be stingy .
Page to Samuel Page ;
339 . 11 use of Studded
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·NO\I. 22) Be thence South on said line
Tires
ana
Chain's,
your own person today , but not and along the East side ot 15) 22. 29 , 161 ' 5. 12 ." 19, 26 ,
(Amended l
· · · ·
at the expense of Others. Treat the road to ttle ' Northeast 61C
373 .02 (f) Riding UpOn
your associates tt1e way you 'd corner of a . lot of land
Seats ;
Handle
Bars ;
like to be treated if the roles deeded by me to Martin
Helmets · and
G lasses .
were reversed .
Rupe ; thence West about or to th~ State road as now
(Amended l
. SAQITTAF.IIU,S jt_.~.ov. 23-Dec. t wenty -one rods to the line traveled; thence Nor .
529 .06 Posting liquor
21) Don't 1ef an Old grudge with between sections twenty - thwardly along State Road Age
Warning
Signs .
.
t hree
anct
seventeen ;
about thirty -one rods and
(Amended )
:
a co-worker precondition your thence North along said fifteen a net one -half links or
529 .08 Sale or G ift on
thlnklngtoday: Hi5orhermeth- li ne to the place of to Col urn bia Downing ' s Election Day . (Rep!ealedl
ods may be superior, but you'll beginning. conta ining some South line '; thence West
549 . 05
Unlawful
never know If your mind Is two acr:es. (TlOre or less, along said Downing·~ South
Possession ot Dangerous
cloied.
and is a part of Sections No . line t~bout twenty rods , or
Ordnance . (Repealed)
CAPRICORN (Dee. zz.Jan. 111} Seventeen (17), Town (7) , to the East line of said
SEC . Ill. This Ordinance
For one who usually deals with Range Number Fourteen Section · t'wenty -three ;
is hereby dec lared to be an
life reallsUcally, your practical~ (14 ) in the Ohio Company's thence South along said · emergency mej!sure and ·
East l ine about thirty rods
lty could desert you tOday, PurchaSe .
its immediate passage is
necessary 'i n order to
PARCEL
NO.
l : to the place of beginning
Involving you In somelh\ng··
preserve , protect an·d
both complicated and Illogical. Beginning thirty rods South contain ing three acres aild
from the North East corner sixty -four rods, being so
ma intain the hea l th, safety
AQUARIUS(Jon. 2G-Fob. 11) Be - of I he south East quarter of mUch of Section seventeen,
and welfare of the citizens
prepared to exert some extra section No . Twen l y -three. in . town seven , ran_g e
of Middleport, Ohio and for
effort today . If you nope to town
seven,
Range· f,ourteen. i n the
Ohio ·the· further reason thclt It is
acnleve an. Important goaL Fourte.en " of the Ohio. Company ' S Purchase.
necessary to bring the
Ybur 'chancea are good, but Company's
Purchase;_ · The -amOunt conVeyed r:lV
Traffic and General Of .
you'll have to work at it.
· thence West seventy rods ; this deed being ten acres Jfenses Codes into com .
PISCES (Fob. 20-Morch 20) lhen ce South ·aboul lhlrty and eighfy .four rods more pl iance wi t h current State
WeU-Iormulated plane should rods to L. S . Townsend ' s or less .
law as r equir¢.d by Artic le
REFERENCE
DEED : 1 )( v 111; Section 3 of the Ohio
not be •llered. Stick 10 your land ; ttlence East seventh
Vo l ume 201. P age 67, Meigs Constitu tlon .
original blueprtn\s even thoug~ · rods to the East line of said
·
County Deed Recor..&lt;fs . The
SEC . rv : This Ordinanc·e
twenfy .. three ;
You mau' be· faced with an Section
then ce North along said
appraised value of said shall take effect and be ih
unexpected change .
.
East line thirty rods to the
property beinQ $.4,633 .33 . force
immediatel'y
ARIES (March . Z1·Aprll 11) place of beginning ; con .
The above property will rollowing its passage and
Tread warily In Joint venturea taining ·thirteen and one - Qe sold at the door of the ap'p rova I . _
.
today. SL!rface ·conditions may 'eigf'!t)l acres more or less
courthouse by the Sheriff
Pass~d the 14th oay of
appear calm, 'but unuaual un- save and except six acres · ~or not tess than two-.thir.ds May , 1979 .
· -tlercurrenta cou ld teael to oft the west sicte ot said
the
appraised
value Attest : Gene Grate
ltiCk) developmentl.•
tract of land, now owned
thereof.
Clerk
TAUIWI (Apri' S.IIoy zt) Bo and by A'. -M ., Reeves.
Terms of Sele : Ten '
M . L . Kelly
percent payable at 'the time
Pres . of Council
.doubfyt..:tfulln lmportontone·PARCEL NO. 4: Also .
to-one retatkmahlpe today. Do another tot or parcel of · of sale and fhe balance IS) 29; (61 S, 2tc
payable to the Sher i ff
nothln"erratlcthltcouldupaet land ; beginning at the
•
Southeast corn~r of the
with i n thirtY' days .
aomeone whou ualatanCe above described lot ; thenr::e
vou need at tt'tla time.
east about seventeen rods ;
(61 5, 12. 19,26 (7) 3, 10, 6tc
~~

. LEVEE IN BAD SHAPE - The Middleport levee
is in deplorable condition tllese days with the road edge
collapsed, and tlle ramp's edge almost too rough 1o
launch boats. Village officials have been·Wl8ble to get

EDNA MAE REEVES

LEONARD
BORING ,

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF MEIGS COUNTY ,
OHIO

FLORA

~ ~ur

~

OF MEIGS COUNTY ,
OHIO

Plaintiffs ,

- u

11

CO MMON PLEAS COURT

ATLANTA (AP) -Declines in the
rate of some major birth defects may
indicate that fears of widespread
deformities caused by chemicals and
radiation are "much ado about
nothing," says a national Center for
Disease Control researcher .
·A new CDC study shows that the incidence of two of the most common
birth defects - open head and open
spine - declined measurably from
197()-71 to 1976-77, officials say.
Rates of anencephaly, or open
head, declined 5.4 percent, and spina
bifida, or open spine, dropped 6.7 percent.

On four-day week
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Employees in one state agency have gone
on a four-day work week to conserve
gasoline as part of a plan ·by Gov.
James A. Rhodes to reduce the state's
conswnption of the fuel by 10 percent.
Rhodes called on May 24 for the
state 'to aocomplish the ' reduction
over the next 60 days. State agencies
were given until June 14 to submit
gasoline conservation .plans to state
Administrative Sernces Dtrector
William Wilkins.
The state Rehabilitation and Services Commission was the first agency 1o comply with the dlrectiye by
putting its :lllO Colwnbll'i·based employees on a !~hour, four-day work
week starting Monday .

smission io install an eight inch gas
pipe line under and across county
road 13 at a point approximately
5,1108 feet southwest of the centerline
of SR 124 in Rutland Township. Permission was also granted to install
an eight inch gas pipe line under ahd
county road 13. at a point approximately 27 feet east of where
township road 342 intersects with the
centerline of county road 13 in
Rutland Township and to install an
eight inch gas pipe line under ahd
across county road 12 at a point approximately 201 feet southeast of the
centerline of county road 13 in
Rutland Township.
Bill Grueser, Shade River
Jaycees, infonned the board that the
Jaycees wish to withdraw the sponsorship for a tennjs court on the
Chester Commons . The club
requested commissioners sponsor
an application for a shelter house
and picnic tables to be placed on the

conunons.
The board agreed that this application would probably be better
received by the residents of the com·
munity and would be of more benefit
to young and old alike.
It was agreed to sponsor the
Jaycees in their application for a
shelter house and picnic tables to be
placed on the conunons.
Attending were Richard Jones,
president, Henry Wells, and Chester
Wells, commissioners and Mary
Hobstetter, clerk.

Hairline crack
·causes gro~ding

held and at 8:30 p.m. a talent show
will be presented on the stage being
built on the upper parlting lot in
Pomeroy.
There will be a carnival on all four
days of the Regatta. Friday's activities include a frog art judging con·
test at the Pomeroy Ub~ary; an eata-l.hon on the stage, sponsored by
Burger Chef ; another tennis tournament at 5 p.m. and a water ski show
by French City Ski Club. The Grande
Chorale from Rio Grande College will
perform at 6 p.m.
There will also be excursions on the
P. A. Denny, a quilting exhibition and
an arts and craft show on Friday.
Coronation of the new Regatta
Queen at 12:30 p.m. will highlight
Saturday's activities which inchlde
the USAF Band at 2:30 and "Flying
Circus" at 5 p.m., the annual frog
jwnping contest at 6 p.m. and at 8
p.m. the fifth annual Grand National
Frog Derby will get underway. Also,
excursions, quilting and fireworks
will take place on Saturday.
,
Heritage Sunday activities 'will
begin at .noon at the Meigs County
Museum. Mrs. Thereon Johnson
reported thai a handicraft cfu!play by
Shirley Huston; a spinning demonstration by Pat Phiison; a wood carving demonstration and display by
Bill Mayer; and a fiim "Rivers, Ralls
and Roads" by Don Adlita will be
featured. Frances Goegleln will
display antique telephones and switchboard, compliments of Carl Barnhill and a lapidary cfu!play and
demonstration will be given by Mr.
and Mrs. Howard Nolan.
Xi Ganuna Mu Sorority will have a
concession stand at the street garage
and in the yard next to the garage
there will be a Tom Sawyer-Becky
Thatcher look-alike contest by Nonna
Newland.
Robert Holiday will display a
collection of old gasoline engines and
I Continued on page 101

Announce development program
A
3,500-well
supply
development program whicll will
make substantial volumes of
natural gas available to gas
custome rs in Ohio
was
announced today by John M.
(Jake 1Koebel, Callia-Meigs area
mana ger for Columbia Gas of
Ohio.
The program is being
undertaken by Columbia Gas
Transmission Corp., Columbia of ·
Ohio's primary pipeline supplier.
Both companies are units of the
Columbia Gas System.
Columbia
Transmission
supplies natural gas to seven
Columbia affiliates and 68 other
gas distribution companies in
Kentucky, Maryland, New York,
Ohio, Pennsylvan ia , Vir ginia ,
West Virginia and the District of
Columbia.
Koebel said about 20
independent produ cers are
participating in the multi-year
proje ct which ultimately is
eKpected to develop more than
700 billion cubic fe et of gas.
That 's enough gas to hea l a hallmill inn homes for 10 yea rs.
The combined drilling
operations will be condu cted 111 a
IPu-couety area of Nol'!hwestern
.l 'ennsylvania and Western New
York •nd have bee n named

Proje ct Penny (PEN for , million cubicfeet per day by 1984.
Virtually all of the 3,500 wells
Pennsylvania and NY for New
will be drilled by the independent
York) .
producers on acreage now leased
Project Penny is believed to
by
them, or acreage which
be the largest gas development
Columbia
Transmiss ion is
program of its type ev~r
making a vailable throu gh
undertaken in the Appalachian
farm out agreements . Under
area, Koebel said.
these agreements , producer s
"This project is just part of
drill
the well s and agree to sell all
an overall ga s development
gas
found
to Columbia
program in which the Columbia
Tra nsmission .
Gas System has invested $1
The first 550 wells are
billion over the past few years,"
expected to be completed by the
he noted, adding, "Another $3
end of this year.
billion are earmarked for supply
In 1979 dollars, the 3,500 wells
development during the next 10
which
will be drilled as deep as
years_
5.500 feet - and related pipelines
" The payback from this
and · other facilities will cost
con t inu ing investment is an
producers in excess ot $450
improving natural gas supply
million
.
that will permit Columbia
The
wells will be drilled in
distribution companies to once
McKean
, Venango , Crawford ,
a gain serve new customer s,
Erie and Warren Counties in
something they haven't been able
Pennsy lvani a and in Chatauqua ,
to do for the past several years,"
Wyoming,
Allegany, Cattaraugus
Koebel said .
and
Livingston
Counties in New
In Proj ec t Penny, it is·
York
.
expected that some 3,500 wells
Columbia Transmission has
will be drilled on more than
been conducting test drilling
500 ,000 acres and that .more than
throughout the area since 1974.
550 miles of uew pipeline will be
The
26 well s completed to date
con strut'ted and 7,700 hor:-..·J)()wer
ve
shown significant volumes
.ha
of compression will '·be " "'i alled
of natur al gas, a fact which when
w bring the ga&gt; to mark~t.
ma&lt;lc available to producers
While onl y iimited QII Hntities
serve~\ as th e catalyst for Pr oject
of gas will be produced II 1J:-. vear,
production is expected lt• : ·· .-l'I J t_J(l

Pcnm: .

NEW SANITARIAN - Frank Petrie, Rio Grande, has been nanied
new administrator-sanitarian of tlle Meigs County Department of Health.
I.n his position, Petrie will handle the field duties of the sanitarian nd the
office duties of the administrator. Petrie will be involved in inspection of
food service facilities, taking water samples, issuing sewage permits,
and other related activities in his sanitarian work. Petrie graduated from
Rio Grande College in 1970. fcle has worked in the field of sanitation and
health-related. positions with the Gallia County Department of Health
. three years, and the Ohio Department of Health for seven yea~n . He was
unit head of recreation for the Ohio Departmel)t of Health working mostly
out of Columbus before accepting the local position. He and Mrs. Petrie
have two children, a daughter, Brandy, eight, and a son, Gus, 4.

•

�2-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, June 6, 1979

3- The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, .June 6, 1979

Rhodes selling pay increase
Ry ROBERT t:. MII .U :R
Assoriatrd Pnss Writt&gt;r

COLUMBUS, Ohio 1AP 1 - Gov .
James A. l!hodes has been effeciive in
selling many state lawmakers on the
idea of putting $800 annual teacher
raises into the pending school sub(;id)'
bill.
They are not in the Senatepassed
bill yet. but . those insisting on them
include House Speaker Vernal G.
Riffe Jr:, DNew Boston, which makes
their insertion a good bet.
How did Rhodes do it, over ela ims
by edu cators and oth ers that the
across-the-board hikes in each of the
next two years would be unfair to

Htfft:. tnudcnta ll \ . dtdn't lwvl' tv be
lower pmd teachers. whil&lt;' s trippin~
~··u
ld on the tdca · b) Hhudcs . The.
fro111 the bJIIH n pron~d fumltng lc\'c b
spt·&lt;lkt·r
lou ie:, at the rdtScs frum a
fur ·spcl' Jal ami 1·uea tional prug rat ll:i . '
s'lq.!,
htl
y
(lifft;~l'cnt
pc r s p e~..· tiv l!.
ih.' \\'C ilt n ~ tlt to t he llt•art uf th~
lluwever.l
le
thinks
they
would hell&gt;
Jlliltter . politically, and tuld the
lawm;,~kcr s they !lave bt'C II voting l&gt;cmm TL.It s, mure tha n the t.;OP .
:\ poten tia l L'ct mlidall' fur guve rnur
hu.dlt.:r swns uf money fur edu('ation
111
W82 . Hiffl' ha s noted many times
vear after ) ear wtthout getting credit
thett an) D~mt..K.Tal with statl'wide
;uniHtiuns
must run well Hl the btg
The teachCI'S will know where the
t'lt i ~S.
raises ca me from . he is repOrted to

for 1t.

.·\nd whe re do must uf OhiO 's
have said .
r\$l l,lte polltil'Ja ll that he IS, Hhudes tcm.:llers. and L&gt;cmocrats.livc ·: That 's
carne r ight out and told a mee llng of right. in the c ities.
Both liiffe and Hhodes have other
House Hepublicans that the teacher
reason
s ft1r b1:11d&lt;.ing the teaeher hikes.
raises c·ould help them get re-dected,
Hhodcs
has long been a · political
and possibly elect other Republicans.
adversary
uf the p hiu F:ducation
in 1980.
· Association. and its ch ief lobbyist ,
.John Hall . who have worked against
him ceidt tim ~ he has run for
J,.\over nor .
The. governor was repor ted having
told the .meetin g of House Republicans
that if they will s upport the hikes. they
can show Ohio's teachers " they don 't
need .John Hall ."
llifle has reason to be on the outs
with
the OEA, as we ll , because it
would do if they were in the presi·
spent
mone y to try to defeat one of his
dent'sshoesrightnow .
lieutenants
, Rep . William E .
lop
Laborillg for support
As " draft Kennedy " movements Hinig. ONew Philadelphia, in the 1978
continue to spring up around the coun· Democratic primary . Hinig survived,
tryside, White House political with financial assistance from the
Democra tic
Ca mpaign
opratives are working hard to nail House
Committee
.
headed
by
Riffe.
down support for Carter among key
The big teachers' lobby tried to beat
Democratic constituencies - ineluding, mostly notably, organized Hinig after he withheld his support
from a public employee collective
labor.
Although AFL-CIO President bargaining bill. at the time an OEA
George Meany has frequently ex- prior ity.
Hiffe joins Rhodes in saying the
coriated Carter's economic policies,
legislature
has not received credit for
the White House remains confident
massive
increases
in state school
that most unions will recognize and
reward administration efforts on subsidies.
He notes that state school subsidies
behalf of programs dear to the hearts
have
been increased by the legislature
of labor. "
from
$1.1 billion in 1971-1973 to $3.5
While Congress has rejected many
billion
in the proposed subsidy bill .for
of his initiatives, the president has
1979-1981.
fought for a long series of legislative
" That's a lot of money ," he said,
proposals cherished by the wtions noting
efforts by the OEA and others
minimllin wage boosts, common site
w
go
to
the statew ide ballot seeking
picketing, cargo preference, labor
voter
approva
l of higher state taxes
law reform - and has promised to
for
schools.
veto others, such as modlfications of
Soundin g like Rhodes on the
the Davis-Bacon law, which are
ca mpa ign trail , the 21-year House
anathema to labor.
Vice President Mondale and White veteran remarked " I' ve said it before
House aide Landon Butler recently and I 'll say it again , we don 't need any
met with key leaders from the more taxes right now to pay for
building trades wtions to remind schools."
them of P&lt;~SI administration help and
to seek their loyalty in return . Heads
of other major wtions are being
'mE DAlLY SENTINEL
systematically wooed as well.
IUSPS 145-NO I
So far, only the chiefs of the
Machinists Union and the Retail
~~~~~·~"'· Clerks have openly jwnped to KenDEVOTED romE
nedy. The big question mark remains
INTEREST OF
th~ intentions of Doug Fraser, head of
- MEIGS-MASON ARM
ROBERT HOEFLICH
the huge United Auto Workers and a
City Edl!&lt;&gt;&lt;
longtime Kennedy ally on national
DAVID BUSKIRK
AdverU•lD&amp; M0111er
health insurance whose defection
Published daily except Saturday by The Ohio
from the Carter ranks . could be
Valley Publishing Company- Multimedia, Inc.,
devastating. So far, Fraser has reIll Court St. , Pomeroy, Ohio 4576!1. BuslneSJ
Office Phone 992- 2156. Editorial Phone
mained mwn and is likely to stay that
992·2157.
way until he finishes the big auto in·
Second class poatage paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.
Notional advertisin~ representative, Landoo
dustry contract negotiations this fall .

.L.
.

HEALTH
Lawrence E. Lamb , M.D.

Problem digesting
milk

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~

.

•

'•
•

~

•

"I am the GREAT and POWERFUL OZzzzzz ... chug!"

All quiet on energy front

A.s.!lociates, JlOI Euclid Ave., Oeveland, Ohio
44115.

.'

~

1

In Washington
By Martha Angle and Robert Waite,..
WASHINGTON ( NEA)
.
Republicans see)ting Jinnny Carter's
job, whle nomtally quick to second·
guess his every move , are remaining
remarkably quiet . about the presi·
dent's efforts to deal with the .current
energy crisis.
Not a single GOP president candldate has stepped forward to attack
Carter's energy program or to offer
his own proposals for coping with the
soaring prices and shrinking supplies
of everything from crude oil to
gasoline.
George Bush and Robert Dole have
suggested that Carter convene some
type of national energy council or conference to serve as an authoritative
source of information about the
causes and scope of the country's
energy problem.
John Connally, a vehement
defender of the oil industry, has
abruptly muted his praise in the face
of public fury at Big Oil, and is
scrambling to come up with a new
and more saleable position.
Ronald Reagan plans to address the
energy issue only after he becomes an
official candidate - which is to say,
not before. fall. And Howard Baker,
GOP leader of the Senate, will go
along with any proposals drawn up by
his colleagues there but isn't drafting
.
his own as of now. ·
There are several · reasons for the
unusual reticence of the GOP
presidential contenders, not the least
of which is the fact that all of them
. have previously advocated precisely
the move undertaken by Carter decontrol of oil prices to stimulate
production and curb consumption.
Yet now that prices are soaring and
conswners are screaming, decontrol
has lost its political appeal. So the
Republicans, grateful that the onus is
on Carter, are hunkering down and
ho~ing that nobody asks what they

~

,.'

Washirtgton today.
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
WASHINGTON (APJ - There may
be fuel in them there fields , but the
revenuers don 't look upon gasohol as
an w1mi•ed blessing.
They 're worried that all the tiger
may oot wind up in the tank.
To make gasohol, you've got to
make alcohol, which runs head-&lt;Jn into
the government's strict rules on
distilling the stuft
It seems that alcohol good enough to
burn can easily be alcohol good
enough to drink.
The government does not look with
favor upon homemade alcohol, and,
with good ~eason . There's a lllt. of
money involved. The ta• on· !DO-proof
alcohol for drinking purposes is now
$10 .50 a gallon , and theoe's concern in
Wa s hington that grain alcohol
distilled for fuel could be diverted into
illegal whiskey.
One Midwestern farmer who
wanted to build a still to produce
alcohol to fuel his tractors claimed the
government treated him more like a
moonshiner than a pioneer in a new
technology.
There has been a lot of talk in
Congress and elsewhere about the
productionoof' alcohol to be blended
with gasoline as a way to ease oil
supply problems. Gasohol already is
on the market in some areas. legisla·
tion bas been proposed to promote its
develo~ment .

But Sen. Birch Bayh, D-lnd., says
the process has been slowed. in part by
the very government that is trying to
find ways out ol the energy problem.
Bayh said that is particularly true
of efforts by farmers and famt belt
communities to build stills that could
provide fuel for the local market.
The trouble is that alcohol has been
produ ce d for beverages or for
industrial use but not, until lately, for
fuel. As a result, government
regulations don ' t take that into

account.
The Bureau of Alcohol, Firearms
"

Washington
By Clarence
Report Miller

because of an enzyme liberated by the
Acidophilus in the milk itself before
it's digested.
Enzymes are proteins and the acid
DEAR DR. LAMB - I pave just digestive juices in the stomach will
found out I cannot digest milk. Any start breaking them down before they .
advice you can give me on this would have a chance to take any action.
be greatly 'appreciated. My doctor Also, the idea of increasing the types
has me using Acidophilus and I am. of bacteria that are in the colon isn't
When one thinks of the FederBI the bureau for demanding additional
OK, but I can't use. any other dairy very practical from the point of view bureaucracy one thinks of paper· information is zero."
products such as butter, cottage of milk intolerance. The absorption of work ; one thinks of fonns filled out in
Though the cost to those complying,
cheese and so forth. I don't like to the milk sugar is. in the small in· triplicate, of regulations requiring in terms of time and effort is very
drink milk. I get most of my calciwn testine, not the colon. The small in· detailed compliance.
high, little consideration is apUntil recent years little attention parently given this fact lly . the
from cottage cheese and butter. Our · testine is relatively free of bacteria.
health food store has Acidophilus capLact-Aid is an enzyme and it acts on was given to the cost of preparing bureaucrat. He appears to be consules and Lact-Aid. Which of these is the double sugar in the milk before such paperwork. Few stopped to corn- cerned only with his immediate
best or is something else I can use? Is you drink it. It splits the double sugar pule the time spent in filling out the needs. With respect to the business
this something I will get over or will I just in the same way that the enzyme ' myriad of forms required by the coriunwtity, the co~t of preparing
such forms, more of~ than not, is
have it the rest of my life?
does this in your small intestine.
Federal Government.
~ately,
DEAR READER - You're not as
Cottage cheese will have less lac- however, due to the increasing bur- passed onto the conswner in the fonn
unusual as you might think. About 80 lose in it than milk Simply because of den being imposed by such of high"r prices.
.
The growth of Federal paperwork
percent of the adults in most ethnic the femtentation process and the and regulations a nwnber of studies have
groupS have such a problem and the elimination of a certain amount of been conducted to ,detennine the ap- over the last few years has been subabout io percent of the Anglo-Saxon the double sugar in the liquid whey. proximate cost of such compliance.
stantial. In 1972, 145 million manHow much double sugar the cottage
One such study completed· recently hours of uncompensated private secadults have this problem.
The basic disorder is the absence of chees.e contains depends a lot on how by two profe5!1ors from Virginia's tor labor were necessary to complete
sufficient enzyme in the small in- it's made and whether you can George Mason University illustrates Federal forms. In 1977, 210 million
testine. This is an enzyme that splits tolerate it or not depends a·lot on how quite clearly the nature and scope of man-hours were required - a 45 perthe double sugar of milk into single severe your enzyme deficiency really the problem . The study points up that . cent increase in justfive years.
These estimates do not include
suga,.. so it can be absorbed. When is.
there are built in incentives for the
the sugar is not split and absorbed, it
I hate to disillusion you but you're bureaucrat to expand the paperwork I.R.S. forms . If we add the workload
acts somewhat like a chemical lax- not going to get any ·significant burden rather than reduce it. The imposed by I.R.S. forms, the total for
alive causing gas and diarrhea.
amounts of calcium from butter. It's professors explain that " unlike 1977 becomes a truly staggering 823
I am sending you The Health letter all fat and a little water.
private industry in which individuals million man-hours. That is a lot of
nwnber7·2,MilkProducts : Good And
are promoted and rewarded by time and effort. Dollar estimates put
reducing costs and increasing ef- the figure as high as $100 billion a
Bad. Other readers who want this
ficiency, the bureaucrat is rewarded year for the nation as a whole.
issue can send 50 cents with a long,
stamfl':d, self-addiessed envelope for
. for expanding the Size and scope of
ObViously there is no easy solution
·it. Send your request to me in care of
goverrunent. He receives promotions to the problem at hand. Repeated ap··
and increases in pay , prestige, and peals for restraint on the part of the
this ne)\'spaper, P.O. Box 1551, Radio
LEWIS HARPER
authority by expanding the agency 's bureaucrat have yielded little im·
City Station, New York, NY I0019. It
will give you consid.erably more in•
WRIGHT-PATTERSON, Oh. _ budgetandthenwnberofworkersun- provement. One novel approach, supformation on the problem of milk in·
der his supervision. Since the bureau ported by the authors of the study
lewis Harper, son of Mr. and Mrs. itself rarely produces an easily quan- mentioned, is a proposal being Of·
tolerance .
There are some people who hilve Lewis Harper of Rt. 4, Pomeroy, tifiabie output, the bureaucrat must fered by Senator Orrin Hatch of Utah.
damage to the cells in the intestine enlisted in the U. S. .Air. Force, ac- provide some tangible evidence that The Hatch bill would require the
and loss of normal bacterial flora and cording to T..Sgt . Orene Gabbar!l, Air the agency is perfonning some ac- private sector to be compensated by
tivity. This tangible evidence takes the administering agency for the
develop· intolerance to milk be~ause Force Recruiter here.
of this. These are probably in the
Upon graduation from the Air For· the fonn of paperwork."
paperwork they are asked to fill out. I
minority. Most people with this pro- ce 's six wl!eks basic military training,
The result they conclude, is that the am confident such an approach would
biem inherit the tendency.
Harper will receive training in the government bureaucrat uses paper- prompt each agency to more
Acidophilus has been highly prcr Electronic CaJ:eer Field. He is a 1979 work as a means to exploit the private carefully evaluate the worth of the
sector and by so doing increase his forms they are putting out and would
moted and it may have some graduate of Meigs High School.
beneficial effects. The rigid scientific
Harper will be earning credits own budget and perquisites . "The lead to a substantial curtailment ol
testing ·thiit's. necessary to sholf how towards an Associate Degree through bureaucrat reasons . that since t~e . such activity.
much good it· does, if any, has really ·the Community college of the Ail' private sector is not compensated for
'Time is money, and Uncle Sam
not ~n reported to date. Certainly if Force while attending basic and other the time a nd effort expended in filling 'should stop wasting that which does
it dqes any good, it will have to be . AirForcetechnicaltraining·schools . • out government foFms, the price tu not belong tu hlm. . 1

a nd Tobacco tried to help solve the
problem and issued a pamphlet for
producers,
wouldbbe
gasohol
explaining procedures for getting -~-·
permit for alcohol production.
·
But Bayh sa id it was too
complicated to be much help.
So he has proposed legislation to
simplify the process and ease the
restrictions on small producers. ·
They 'd just have to guarantee that it
wasn't going to be used that way.
The new Tules would require that
gasohol producers denature the
alcohol by adding substances that will
make it unfit for drinking. They would
also have to keep detailed records on

.•'

• •

FIELD DAY HELD - Pomeroy Elementary
School students were on a field day held Monday at the
Pomeroy football stadiwn. The children enjoyed '!W'Y

production and use, and guard against
diversion of the alcohol.
Presumably, the new rules ·would
spare people like Lance Crombie of
Webster, Minn.·, from problems with
the revenue agents .
Crombie built an inexpensive solar
still to produce alcohol for fuel,
although he said the sheriff advised
him not to. It turned out the sheriff
knew what he was taiking about.
According to Crombie, he had no
sooner gone into production than two
federal men showed up and
confiscated the still.
He finally applied for a federal
permit, and says it came through six
months later.

Names. • •
in the news

SAN FRANCISCO ( AP ) - The
Caifornia Court of Appeals has turned
down a request from the convicted
assassin of Sen. Robert Kennedy for a
reduction in his prison sentence.
The decision Tuesday came just
afte r the lith anniversary of
assassination . Sirhan
Sirhan,
convicted in the Los Angeles hotel
shooting , had urged the court to cut
· his total period of confinement
because of voluntary work efforts and
social adjustment.
The Community Release Board has
set May I. 19115, as the date Sirhan is

,,

e ligible for parole . Sirhan can now
appeal to the california Supreme
Q&gt;urt.
AUSTIN, Texas (AP ) -Relatively
speaking, the University of Texas'
collection of Albert Einstein
documents is only second to one.
The Hwnanities Research Center at
the university says its acquisition of
another Einstein man!L5Cript makes
its collection second only to that of
Princeton 's Institute for Advanced
Study.
The manuscript on unified field
theory completes an earlier one
already at the research center,
director Carlton Lake said Tuesday.
He said the manuscript " contains
more' than 500. pages and has 32 parts
... The work was ·done by Einstein
from ahout 1950 until his _death in
1955."
The Einstein holdings at UT total
more than 700 manuscript pages, as
· well as letters , portraits and
photographs.

,,
,,

By KEN RAPPOPORT
AP Sports Writer
Steve Carlton isn't having a Cy
Young Award-winning year so far,
but he usually looks like a Cy Yo\1118
winner·to the Houston Astros.
like Tuesday night, when the twotime winner of baseball's most
prestigious pitching award led the
Philadelphia Phlllies to an ~ victory
with a one-hit beauty.
That masterful performance improved Carlton's lifetime record to 23·
9 over the Astros, and gave the
faltering Phillies a shot in the ann.
They had lost eight of their previous
nine games.
Rookie Jeff leonard got the.only hit
off Carleton - a line drive single to
left~nter in the seventh inning.
While Carlton pulled his record
over the .500 !nark at 7-6, the Phillies
brought their offense back to life with
a 17-hitattack that included Mike Sch·
midt 's 17th home run of the season. In
their previous nine games, the

l~orman
'

TOKYO (AP) - The Duke of Kent
was guest of honor when Olinese Vice
Premier Wang Zben (Wang Chen)
gave a banquet in Peking, says the
Xinhua(Hsinhua) News Agency.
The duke, vice chairman of the
BritiSh Overseas Trade Board and
cousin of Queen Elizabeth II, arrived
in Peking Monday for an eight-day
visit. He opens a British energy exhi·
bition in the Chinese capital .
Wednesday .
in a speech at Tuesday's banquet,
Wang said the Duke of Kent was the
first member of the royal family to
pay a goodwill visit to -China .

Phillies had scored but 13 runs.
In other National League games,
the Pittsburgh Pirates whipped the
Los Angeles Dodgers 3-1; the St,
Louis Cardinals defeated the San
Francisco Giants 5-4; the Cincinnati
Reds beat the New York Mets 6-1 ; the
Atlanta Braves stopped the Montreal
Expos 4·1 and the San Diego Padres
routed the Chicago Cubs 11-3
Carlton gave up four walks and
struck out four in pitching the fourth
one-hitter of his career. The Phillies
scored all the runs they needed with
five in the fourth inning on eight hits,
including McCarver's two-run double.
Sclunidt added a sixth run with his
towering homer in the fifth inning.
, Pirates 3, Dodge,.. 1
Dave Parker hit a two-run homer in
the first inning, triggering Pittsburgh
over Los Angeles behind the combined seven-hit pitching of Bert
Blyleven and Kent Tekulve . Parker 's
homer, his 11th of the season, came
off loser Don Sutton and followed a

one-&lt;Jut single by Tim Foli.
Blyleven yielded a leadoff home run
in the second to Gary Thomasson, his
sixth of the season, and left the game
in the eighth in favor of Tekulve after
issuing consecutive waiks to Dusty
Baker and Thoamsson.
Cardluals 5, Giants 4
Jerry Mwnphrey drove in the tying
1'W1S in the seventh inning, then
tripled in the ninth and raced home on
a Jl8.!!Sed hall to give streaking St.
Louis a tight victory over San Fran-

cisco.
Mumphrey opened the Cardinal
ninth with his triple off reliever Ran·
dy Moffitt, and after intentional walks
to Keith Hernandez and Ted Simmons, dashed home when Giant cat·
cher Mike Sadek let a Moffitt pitch
get past him.
·
Reliever Mark_littell pitched out of
a ninth-iMing jam to claim the Cardinals ' sixth straight victory.
Reds &amp;, Mets 1
Dave Concepcion .hit a three-run

stops NY Mets,

By TERRY KINNEY
AP Sports Writer
CINCINNATI (AP)- Fred Norman
throws a pitch he caUs an "off-speed
fastball " that makes batters lunge
once, twice, then chop the baU into the
·
dirt .
" I throw it about · three-quarter
speed ·and it sinks," Norman said
after beating the New York Mets 6-1.
" I throw it different than I used to,
across the seams. I'm not a power
pitcher anymore ."
Norman, at 36 a sometimes starter
for the Cincinnati Reds, improved his
record to 3-5 Tuesday in his best effort
of the season .
He retired the first 11 Mets he faced
and gave up just five hits before Pedro
Borbon took over in the nirith .
"Normari tricked us the first time
through the lineup," said Mets
Manager Joe Torre. "He was. in and
out - fastball, curve, changeup,
screwball - by the time we started
hitting, we were losing six to
nothing.' ;
Three of the Mets' five hits off
Norman were doubles.
Lee Mazzilli got the first and was
left stranded when Norman struck out
Joel Youngblood to end the fourth
inning.
Elliott Maddox doubled in the sixth,
but was thrown out trying to stretch it
into a triple.
In betwee n, Steve Henderson
doubled and scored on Doug Flynn's
single . Alex Trevino followed that
with a pinch single, the first Mets
pinch hitter to get a hit in the last 27
attempts.

Berry's World ·

Meanwhile, the Reds teed off on
previou.sly unt,&gt;eaten Kevin Kobel,
scorilig twice in the first on RBI
singles by George Foster and Dan
Driessen, in the third on Driessen 's
lOth home run and three times in the
fourth on Dave Concepcion's sixth
homer of the season.
"We got blown out early," said
Torre, who was disappointed in the •
performance by Kobel, 2·1. " His
rhythm' was awful. He seemed to ruSh
himself. He was working too dalpll

...,

fast."
The Mets also were playing without
Richie Hebner, hitting .309 and
leading the team in runs batted in.
Hebner was hospitalized Tuesday for
treatment of'an acute muscle strain in
his back and may be out until Friday .
"That was a real blow," said Torre,

Sign heing changed

LATONIA RE'!ULTS
FLORENCE, Ky . (AP)
American Ronda, going off at 19-1,
won the $1,000 featured pace mile at
Latonia on Tuesday night, paying $41 ,
$17.80 and $11.40.
Bouncin ' Barney was second,
returning $20.80 and $5.80, and Miss
Best paid $4.80 for third.
The 2·1 double of Miss Timely C. and
K.C. Arrow returned $26.60.
The crowd of 1,106 bet $101,387.

Baseball
poetry.••
WELCOME HOME, PETE
On June 1, 1979
It was mighty fme ·
For a few days
fie hasn 't really changed his ways.

,,

SPRINGDALE , Ohio 1 AP J- Until
receniiy, a four-foot by 2().foot neon
signature of Pete Rose decorated the
outside of a restaurant in this
suburban commwtity near Cincinnati.
But since Rose has left the
Cincinnati Reds for the Philadelphia
Phillies, Jerry Poinsette has changed

1~19

by Nf:A InC

&lt;iJt..,. ~

" Well, one thing - we . don 't have lo worry
abou t injuring anything at diseos. "

L ._

-------:--------

.

.,

SPORTS

homer and Dan Driessen hit a solo
shot to power Cincinnati over New
York. Winner F red Norman had a
five-hitter through eight innings
before getting relief help from Pedro
Borbon.
·
Norman retired lhe first II Mets he
faced and was in trouble only once,
when New York scored in the fifth in·
ning on a double by Steve Henderson
Braves 4, Expos I
and a single by.Doug Flynn.
Bob Horner broke a scoreless tie
Alex Trevino got a landmark single with a three-run homer in the sixth in·
for the Mets in the fifth inning. It was ning, leading Atlanta past MontreaL
the first successful pinch-hit by New Jerry Royster was on base with a
York in its last27 attempts.
single and Gary Matthews ·with a
walk when Homer connected against
Montreal starter Scott Sanderson,
sending a drive over the left-field fence for his sixth homer. Right-hander
Rick Matula was the winner, yielding

The Daily Sentinel
five hits in seven innings. Matula was
removed for a pinch-hitter in the
seventh when his back tightened.
Padr:es 11, Cubs 3
Dave Winfield slugged a double and
a triple and Gene Tenace and Dan
Briggs smashed h001e runs to pace
San Diego over Chicago beind Eric
Rasmussen's six-hitter. Loser Dennis
Um!p was racked for seven runs;
three of them in 2 2..,'1 innings .

GARAGES
1 CAR

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Reinforced Slab
Included

CALL FOR
FREE ESTIMATES

992-2772

@

BUDJJINC?
REMOJJEIJNC?
we can help
2"x4,.x8'

Rose 's Champion Restaurant to
Champs Restaurant.
Now, he's hoidlng a contest to get
rid of the sign.
He's asking those interested to write
in a postcard te lling in 25 words or less
to say why they want "the world 's
largest Pete Hose autograph. "
Two loca l judges will select the
winning entry.

STUDS
ONLY

LUCITE HOUSE
S~~t PAINT
R

• Excellent
Durability
• Built-In
Primer
• Water
Cleanup
• Choice of
Colors

•

Before game No. 1
.
They made a presentation
As the fans waited in anticipation
The REDS M.V.P. award for 1978
Was made to PETE at homeplate.

We still love you, PETE,
And wish you th.e best •
I hope your PJllLUES win the EAST
And our Reds win lhe WEST.
· Louise Gilmore
Pomeroy, Ohio
June 3,1979

Monday, ~ompeted in a long jump cmpetition staged
before the stadiwn with students arid adults cheering
them on.

his restaurant's name from Pete

His baseball cap was still red
His hair a little longer on his head
His unifonn was gray you see
.. 'l'he white Chad changed to a red P .
TheNo.14was'stillonhisshirt .
A lot of us still feel the hurt.

•

6~1

whose club is in last place in the
National league East.
Concepcion , who has equalled his
home run proouction of last season,
said despite the fast start he 'd be
satisfied to repeat his career high of 14
homers that he hit in 1974.
" If I get two more before the AllStar break, maybe I get 14 again. I be
happy with 13 or 14," he· said.
He 's more concerned with
maintaining a .300 average and
driving in 70 runs, which would be his
most RBI since '74.
" I have :jO now (third best on the
Reds J and that's pretty good for a
second hitter, " Concepcion said . "You
"look around the league and you not
find anybody hitting second with more
RBI than me ."

It is against Oklahoma law to get a
fish drunk .

'I')

LONG JUMP. PARTICIPANTS- Students from
Pomeroy Elementary School, during their field day

Carlton, Phils blast Astros
,,

WASHINGTON (AP ) - That old
country lawyer from North Carolina
may soon have a federal judge in the
family .
Sen. Robert Morgan·, D-N .C., has
recommended that President Carter
appoint Sam J . Ervin Ill to the 4th
u.s. Circuit Court of Appeals. And the
choice has the OK of Republican Sen.
Jesse Heims.
Ervin, son of the retired North
Carolina Democrat who chaired the
Senate Watergate Cviniilitlee and
described himself as just a country
lawyer, was one of five men selected
by a presidential search commit~.
Carter's recommendation must be
approved by the Senate.
Morgan said Tuesday he felt the
junior E r v in 's experience as a
Superior Court judge would make him
an outstanding member of the bench .
Helms , who had made it clear he
could not s uport some of the other
ca ndidates due to philosophical
differences, sa id Ervin enjoyed
" broad bipartisan respect."

competitive activities, and the younger children en-.
joyed games. Students hiked to and from their school.

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
MATERIALS CO.
773-5554

PICKENS HARDWARE
MASON, W. VA.

MASON, W. ·VA.

�4- The Daily Sentinel, Middlep&lt;Jrt-Pomeroy , 0 ., Wednesday , June 6, 1919

~,

...

•• ••
••
••••

5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday , June 6, 1919

Marshall records 12th save

•••••
•• ••
•••

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD
Baseball AI A Glance
By The AssQciated Press

AMERICAN LEAGUE

EAST

Boston

w. L.
31
32
31
29
25
25
13

Baltimore

Milwaukee
New York
Detroi t
Cleveland

Toron to

20
21
25
25
23
27
42

Pet. GB
.608
.604
.554 2' '
.537 3' '
.521
.481 6'2
.236 20

,. ,

WEST
California
Kan sas City

33 22 .600
3123 .5741 17

Minnesota

29 22
TeJ~.as
30 23
Chicago
25 28
Seattle
21 35
Oakland
18 37
Tuesday's Games
Boston 9, Texas 3
M innesota J . Baltimore 1

.569 2
.566 2
.472 7
.375 12' '
.327 15

Kansas C1 ty t~p llft orfl 8-4) at
Baltimore ( 0 . Mi\rtinez 7-2}. (n)
M innesota ( Koosman 7-3) at New
York ( Guidry 5,4) . (n)
M inn esota ( Koosman 7-3) at New
York !Guidry 5·4l. (n l
Texas (Comer .5·4) at Mil waukee
iS""ensen 7·51, l nl
Toronto (Jefferson 4-5) at Cali fornia
(Fross t 3·3), In )
Cleve land ! Wi se 5·51 at Oakland
I McCalty 4 0) , In)
·
Detroil (Morris 3-1) at Seattle
{Bann is ter 2-5L (n )
Thursday 's Games
Minneso ta at· New York
Te xa s at M i lwaukee
Chicago at Boston , In)
Kansas City at Baltimore, (n)
Only games schedul ed

NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST
.
Kansas City 3, New York 1
W. L . Pel. GB
Mil wauk ee 5. ChicaQo J
Montreat
29 19 .604
· Califor nia 3. TorontO o
St ..Lovis
28 19 .596
Cleveland 12, Oakland 3
Philadelphia
26 23 .531 3' '
Detroi t 3, Seattle 1
21 27 .436 8
Chica~o
Wednesday 1S Games
New ark
19 30 .386 10 1 2
Chicago ( Barr ios 4-3) at Boston
WEST
(Stanley 5·3 ). (n )
Houston
33 24 .579
Ci ncinnati ~
30 24 .556 Jl '
27 30 .474 6
~as Angeles
San Francisc:o
26 29 .473 6
San Dieg o
26 31 .456 7
Atlanta
20 34 .370 I I' '
Tuesda v' s Games
San Diego 11 , chicago 3
Allanta 4. Montreal 1
Tuesday's Sports Transactions
Pit tsburgh 3. Los Angeles 1
By The Associated Press
Cincinnati 6, New York I
ASEBALL
Philadelphia 8, Houston 0
American League
St . Lou is 5. San Francisco 4
BALTIMORE ORIOLES Ac·
Wednesday 's Games
tivated Doug DeCinces , infielder .
New York {Orosco 1-2) at Cincinnati
Traded Larr y Harlow, oufflelder, to I Bonham 2-11
· the California Angels for Floyd
San Oiego IR . Jones 5-3) at Chicago
Rayford , inf ielder , and an undisclosed (Reuschel p,. .8). In)
amount of money.
Los Angeles (Reuss 2.4) at Pitts .
National League
burgh !Whitson 1.2). (n)
·
ATLANTA BRAVES - Activated
Philadelphia 1Lerch 2-4) at Houston
Biff Pocorobd , catcher . Optioned !Richard 6·4l. In)
Jamie Easterly, pitcher , to Richmond
San Francisco I Nastu 2-4) at St.
of the Internati onal League .
Louis (Sykes 4·2) , In)
American Soccer League
' Thursday's Games
LAS VEGAS SEAGULLS - Signed
San Diego at Chicago
Braulio Castro, forward , ·
San Francisco at St. Louis, (n)
NEW JERSEY AMERICANS On ly games schedu led
Si'gned Jim May , goalie , and Ray
Walsh , defender.
FOOTBALL
National Football League
LOS ANGELES RAMS - Signed
Jeff Rutledge. quarterback, to a
TODAY'S
series of three one:year contracts .
MAJOR lEAGUE LEADERS
Signed Frank Jordan, k i cker .
By The Associated Press
PHILADELPHIA EAGLES ~
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Signed Curtis Bunche, defensive end,
BATTING
I 115 at bats ): Brock , St
Max Runager , punter, and AI Chesley,
Louis , .374 ; Rose. Philadelph ia, .355:
linebacker.
Mazzilli , New ·York, .352; Winfield,
PITTSBURGH STEELERS Waived Laverne Sm ith , running back, San Diego, .350; Murphy , Atlanta,
.
Andre Keys, w ide receiver , and .348.
RUNS : Lopes, Los · Angeles, 52 ;
Richard Benneft and James Cowan ,
defensive linemen . Signed Ri ck Concepcion, Cinc innati, 39; Parker ,
Pittsburgh . 38; King·man, Chicago ,
Snodgrass, kicker .
ST. LOUIS CARDINALS - Signed 37 ; Matthews, Atlanta, 37 ; Puhl ,
Eric Williams, linebacker to a series Houston , 37 ; North , San Francisco , 37 . ·,
RBI ; Kingman . Ch i cago, 44 :
of one-year contracts . Signed Chris
· Garl ich, linebacker , Roger Cook, Winf ield, San Diego, 44 ; Foster,
tackle, and Bob Trudeau, running Cincinnati, 42; Garvey, Los Angeles,
38 ; Schmidt, Phil~delphla , 37.
back .
·
HITS : Winfield , San Oiego. 76 ;
WASHINGTON REDSKINS Signed Rich Milot, linebacker , and Rose , Philadelphia , 75 ; Russell , Los
Angeles, 74 ; Garvey, Los Angeles, 71 ;
Tony Hall , wide receiver .
Mazzilli , New York , 68.
.
.
COLLEGE
DOUBLES : Rose . Philadelphia, 20 ;
. CLEMSON Named La w son
Hol land an assistant football coach . Parrish , Montreal , 16·; Nlazzilli , New
INDIANA
PURDUE . IN . York , 16; Reitz , St . Louis, 16; 6 Tied
DIANAPOLIS - Named Mel Garland With 15.
TR IPLES : . Scott; 51. Louis, 7;
head baskelball coach .
OREGON
COLLEGE
OF Templeton , St . Lou1s. 6 ; Winfield, San
EDUCATION - Named Gary Cun - .Diego, 6: Moreno, Pittsburgh , 5; Cruz,
n i ngham athletic · director and Hquston , 5.
HOME RUNS : Kingman, Chicago,
director ot the health ahd physical
19 ; Schmidl. Phi ladelphia, 17 ;
educatio·n departments .
PRINCETON - Named Rob Orr Murphy, Atlanta, 13 ; Lopes, Los
men's swimming coach . and Emily · Angeles, 13 ; Winfield, San Dieqo, 13.
STOLEN BASES : Moreno, PittsManwaring women's basketball
burgh , 21 ; Scott, St. Louis, 16;
coach .
ST. PETER 'S COLLEGE - Named Taveras . New York , 17 ; Lopes, Los
Ange les, 17 ; .North , San Francisco , 17 .
Ed Agresta head football' co ach .
PITCHING 16 Decisions): LaCoss ,
Cincinnati, 6·0, 1.000, 2.51 ; Reed,
Phi lade I phi a, 5-1, .833. 3. 75; Nlekro,
SPECIAL
Houston , 8 2, .800, 2.70; Lee, Montreal ,
10 lb. Bag
6·2. .750, 3.46 ; Knepper, San Fran cisco, 5-2, .714, 3.48 ; Ruthven,
Philadelphia 6·3, .667. 3.22 ; Sutcli ffe ,
Los Angeles. 6-3, .667 , 3.77 ; Lamp ,
Chicago, 4·2, .667 , 4.62 .
STRIKEOUTS : Richard, Houston,
99 ; Carlton , Philadelphia, 65 ; Swan ,
New .York , 60 ; Niekro, Atlanta, 60 ;
Su lton . Los Angeles, 58 .

''

Transactions

Leaders

By BOB GREENE
AP Sports Writer
Mike Marshall saved the game for
Paul Hartzell, then saved the night
for the media.
" I don't know why everybody is
around me," Marshall protested to
reporters after lle had. made his 30th
appearance and posted his 12th save
of the season. "Paul Hartzell did the
pitching tonight."
Then, when reporters became im·
patient as they waited for Hartzell to
finish icing his ·ann in the off-llmits
trainer's rooin, Marshall carried the
container of ice to the locker room,
giving newsmen a shot at the winning
left-bander.
Hartzell, 3.J, allowed only three
singles and retired 13 consecutive batters before being lifted in the ninth
following a one-()Ut pinch double by
Pat Kelly and a single by Eddie
Murray as the Minnesota Twins beat
the Baltimore Orioles 3·1.
In other AL games Tuesday, B~ton ·
defeated Texas 9-3, Kansas City
downed the New York Yankees 3-l,
Milwaukee stopped the Chicago White
Sox s-3, California edged Toronto 3-2,
Cleveland bombed Oakland 12-3 and
Detroit downed Seattle 3·1. ·
Marshall, who has won eight ·games
and has figures In 20 of Minnesota's
victories, retired the final two batters
to end the game.
Sea, .355 ; Carew , Cal , .355 ; Wilson,
KC •. 350 .
iWNS - G Brett, KC. 44; Otis, KC,
42 ; Lynn . Bsn , 41 ; Lansford, Cal , 39 ;
Baylor , ·Cal. 39 .
RBI - Bay lor, Cal . 55 ; Lynn , Bsn,
47 ; Boehle, Sea , 44; Porter, KC, 42 ;
Cooper , Mil , 40;, Horton , Sea, 40.
HITS - Smalley, Min,J6 ; G Brett,
KC, 71; Remy, Bsn, 68 ; Baylor, Cal,
66 ; Lanstord, Cal, 67.
•DOU BLES Lemon, Chi , 16 ;
McRae, KC, 16 ; Bonds, Cle, 15; B Bell.
Tex. 15 ; 5 Tied With 14.
TRIPLES -G Brett, KC. 7; Griffin ,
Tor , 5 ; Wilson, KC, 5; Randolph, NY,
4; A Bannister, Chi, .4 ; B Jones , Sea , 4.
HOME RUNS - Lynn, Bsn, IS;
Singleton, Bal, 14 ; Thomas, Mil , 12 ;
Bayl or , Ca l, 12 ; 5 Tied With 11 .
STOLEN BASES - Le Flore. Del,
27 ; Wilson . KC, 23 ; J Cruz , Sea, 22;
Otis, KC, 20 ; Wills. Tex . 18.
PITCHING (6 Decisions) - Kern ,
Tex , 7·0, 1.000, 1.36 ; John, NY, 10·1 ,
.909 , 1.90 ; Clear,' Cal , 5·i. .833, 2.79 ; D
Martinez, Bal, 7-2, .778, 3.33 ; Jenk ins,
Tex , 6.2• .750, 3.57 ; Waits, Cle, 6·3,
.727. 3.45 ; Koosman, Min, 7·3, .700,
3.68 ; Splittorff, KC , ~· 0 , .667, 3.69.
STRIKEOUTS Ryan, Cal , 78;
Guidry , NY, 71 ; Jenkins, Tex . 65 : T
Underw~ . Tor , 54 ; Kossman, Min, 53 .

· Red Sox 9, Rangers 3
Two-run homers by Fred Lynn and
Carl. Yatrzernski and a solo shot by
Jim Rice powered Boston past Texas.
The victory moved the Red Sox back'
into first place in the American
League East for the first time siri.ce
May 17. Johnny Grubb had three hits
for Texas, to extend his hitting attack
to 18games.
Angels 3, Blue Jays 0
Frank Tanana pitched his first

complete game of the season, a four·
hitter, and Bobby Grieb and Don
Baylor homered to boost California
over Toronto. Tanana walked two an(l
struck out three to raise his record to
!i-3.

two-out jjingle in the first lnnl!)g o
Seattle starter Glenn Abbott, 2-7.
Seattle 's Willie Holton clobbered a
apparent home run· that became.
single when it hit If' loudspeak!
suspended 1111 feet above the playin
field.
Royals 3, YBDkees I
Larry Gura scattered three hits t
hurl Kansas City past New York.
Gura, a..'i, struck out three hits t
hurl KansasCitypast New York.
Gura, 3-6, struck out three batter
and walked two liS the Yank~' ion
run was unearned.
Kansas City scored twice In th
second with the help of an error. Pet
LaCock and Hal McRae singled. The
losing pitcher Luis Tiant, 1-2, flelde.
Fred Patek's bunt single and hit hill
in the back of the head with the throw
LaCock scored on the play anc
McRae wound up on third. McRa•
came home on U. L. Washington':
sacrifice fly.

Grieb hit his flth homer of the
season to right field with two out in
the sixth and Baylor, who leads the
majors with 56 RBI, hit his 12th home
run of the season to lead off the
eighth.
Jn'diaDB 12, A's 3
Cleveland struck for two five-run
Local Howling
innings as Rick Waits coasted to his
sixth
straight victory as the Indians
The S~unda _y Mi ners Bowling League
downed
Oakland.
ended i ts w mter season on Nlay 13,
Ted Cox and Andre Thornton each it
1979. The Hot Shots team of Ri ck and
Gwen Martin won fir st place ; the three-run homers arid Paul Dade ad·
Pin buster s. Ralph and Rh onda Gibbs, ded a solo home run in lhe Indians'
came in second and thi rd place went
to the All ey Ca ts. Roland and Ann 15th victory in their last 22 games.
Left-bander Walts, 8-3, allowed nine
N.orri s.
For the m en, Rick Ma rti n received hits as the Indians gave him a 7-0 le_
ad
trophies tor hig h game 1266). high by scoring five runs in the second in·
series 1625) and high average 1170 ).
Hi s high game lied the bowling alley's ning and two in the fow1h off A's star·
ter Rick Langford,l-8.
season high game.
Ra lph Gibbs was presented the ABC
Two of Oakland's runs came on
Brewers 5, While Sox 3
Achievement Award Belt Buck le and Lilr!J' Murray's first homer of the
Milwaukee
downed Chicago as
the league trophy for m en's m ost
season.
Cecil Cooper and Sixto Lazcano each
improved average (6 pins).
Tigers 3, Mariners 1
Li.J ette Mar tin r eceived the trophy
singled home a run in the fifth Inning,
for women's high ser ies w ith ha ndica p
Jack Billingham and John Hiller snapping 2·2 tie. With one out, Paul
w1 th a 615.
combined for a four-hitter and Jerry Molitor bunted for a hit and went to
Trophies were presented to Ann
third on Jim Gantner's single. Cooper
Nv:Jrr is for women 's high ga me (2 19 ), Morales slanunCd solo home run
high ser ies (523). and hi gh averag e Detroit edged Seattle.
then singled to score Molitor and Lez1136. She also won the WI BC
Alan Tranunell drove in Detroit's cano's single drove in·Gantner.
Achievement Award Pin and the winning run with a tw()-()ut double in
Jim Slaton, s-3; got the victory
league trophy for the m06f impr oved
the
fourth
inning.
The
Tigers
picked
while
rookie Fred Howard, 0-2, took
women 's average (9 pins).
The secretary ex presses he r up their other run on Rusty Staub's
the loss.
congratulation s and thank s to ever y roe for a ver y successful season .

a

Wednesday Today In History
Today is Wednesday, June 6, the
!57th day of 1979. There are 208 days
left in the year.
Today•s highlight in· history :
On this date in 1944, Allied forces
· landed on the Normandy beaches of
France. It was D-day of World War II.
On this date :
In 1660, the Peace of Copenhagen
ended war between Sweden and
Denmark and opened the Baltic to
foreign warships.
In 1871, Alsace was annexed to
Germany ·after the French were
defeated in the Franco-Prussian War.
In 1942, the U.S. ·aircraft carrier,
Yorktown, was sunk in the Pacific
War Battle of Midway.
In 1957, the Six-Day War began in
the Middle East, with Israel carving a
30-mile fro ·nt along Egypt's
Mediterranean Coast.

"Remember how nervous I used to be?
Not anymore, since I ~witched to
SANKS Brand and cut out caffein?'

as

THANKS!

JAY-MAR SOFTBALL TEAM

''

~.

•

. The Jay,Mar Slow-Pitch Softball Team
Wishes to Express Its Appreciation to The '
Village of Syracuse for the Use of the Syracuse
Municipal Park Facility During Our Tournament Over the P~st Weekend.
We Also Sincerely Appreciate the
Assistance Given Us by Bill Hubbard and Doug
Hemsley. A Special Thank You to These Two
Syracuse Re~idents.

••

j.

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•

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r:
r~

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"That's right, Carol, SANKS Brand
is 97% caffein-free. And it'slOO% real
coffee:'

,.,.

KINGSFORD CHARCOAL
&amp;GULF CHARCOAL
FLUID 32 oz.
'2.50

CITY LIMITS
DRIVE THRU
748 N. SecDnd St.
. Middleport, 0.

•

•

TODAY' S
MAJORLEAG0ELEADERS
By The Associated Press
AMERICAN LEAGUE
BATTING 1115 at bats ) - Smalley,
Min, .384 ; Kemp, Del, .357 ; Boehle,
~

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•

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DOlT
HIVE CHICKEII FOR

'••

••

Drive in to Bob Evans and take
home some finger lickin' good chick ·
en from the Colonel. Pick up dinner
after work. You'll see us on Eastern
Avenue. Don't drive by. Drive in. ·

8v"*®

DRIVE IN ·

WE DO IT RIGHT.
OR WE DON't OOIT:·

SA 35t;ON
THE COFFEE
YOU BE YOUR BEST.
If you'1·e one of those people who love
coffee , but can't handle caffein, we
. have a ~ uggestion. SANKA • Brand
Decaffeinated Coffee.
If, 97'k cuffein-free: but lOO'if 1·eal
eqffee. So you get full , &gt;ich coffee fl i&gt;vor
without getting nervous and ten"e.
We figul'e that "ettling back with a
good cup of coffee "houlrl be the be't
IJa11 of yom· day. And \li th
SANK A' Bnmd, it e&gt;m be :
Becau:&lt;e it':&lt; 'the lOO'k J·eal
roffee that IPt&gt; ,1·ou he
.\'IIIII' be:&lt;t.

Kings: 8mg " &lt;a( 0.6 mg nicol ine1aa·s: 11 mg" tar:' 0.7 mg nicoline av. percigarenc, FTCReport May '78

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

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Kings &amp; tOO's

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6-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0., Wednesday, June 6, 1979

.

-

AP Spurts Writt•r
_
NEW YORK 1AP J - Major lca~ue
baseball ~ave retiring Un ivers ity of
Michigan · Coach Moby Benedict a
little goingaway present Tuesday,
selectin~ three of his players in the
first roWJd of the annual free agent
draft.
The Detroit Tigers made Michigan
outfie lder Ri ck !.each the first
Wolverine selection . Then the Los
A'ngeles Dodger s chose ·two of

}lllUig:ilt'l' . Wh U ~n.tOUUlt!::i fi'UIII lugh
HcJil!dlct's plll'ht:!rs. left-bander Steve
OIIL' ~ Ia) er wt1u aJrecuty ha ~ JlllHIL'
lluwc and right-hander Steve Perry. up h1s mind about the !outball- :«·hoot lmla) .
l'hambers sa1d that bcm~ the
Leach was the 1Jtl1 player chosen . txlseball dilenuna is AI "Choo Chuo "
·nation
's No .I choice was. something
Howe was No .l6 a nd Perry No.25 as Chambe1·s. Chambers is a s luggin~
he'd
always
dreamed abo ut.
outfie
lder
frJ)m
Harrisburg.
Pa
.
who
Coach Benedict's tea in dominated the
" I didn 't U1ink it would hap pen, .. he
was the fir st player selected 111 the
early selections .
Leach, of t'Qurse, also is a highly- draft , cl'iosen by the Seattle Mariners. said. " llut I thought if I worked hard
Chambers, who batted .484 in 22 and was determined, f might go early .
rated quarterback and must decide
between foottball and baseball. He games this season, had signed a letter Then. when Seattle's scout came
was picked by the Denver Bronws in of inte nt to pia)' fOQtball at Arizona a roWJd , and I knew they had the No. I
t11e fifth round of last month's State . But after the draft's first roWJd, pick. I fil(ured I could be No.I in the
National Footba ll League draft, the the Mariners announced that they had
132nd player selected"in tha t lottery.

Lamar Reds top dr;ft"';i~k"""" \

·cJN'CINNAT1 t AP! Danny
Lamar , the 18-year-old Houston
catcher the Cmcinnati Reds selected
as part of their t'Ornpensation for Pete
Rose, is a determined hitter .
- The Bellaire High School sta r batted
.421 in 38 games this season thanks to
the batting cage he built in his garage .
''My hitting really improved this
year and I think that's what caught
the eye of the scouts . I was about a
.290 hitter until this year, ·• said the 6foot, 183-poWJd Texan in a telephone
interview.
Cincinnati was awarded the first
round se lection in the major league
dra ft from the Philadelphia P hillies,
with whom Rose signed after contract
ta lks with Reds fell through .
The Reds picked seven pitchers in
nine selections in the primary and and
three pitchers in secondary phase of

the draft. The draft continues today .
" It wasn't really ·our game plan,"
sa1d J oe Bowen, chief scout. ·'We'd
like to get some more inlielders no w."
The Reds selected 20th and 22nd in
th e first round.
Using a second first-round pick, the
Reds chose righthanded pitcher
Michael Sulli va n of Clemson
University.
Sullivan, of Woodbridge,. Va ., was
10-&lt;l for Clemson . which won the
Coast
Conference
Atlan tic
championship.
Bill Wilhelm , his college coach·, said
Sullivan has a " major league curve
ball ... There are days when Mike can
really roll it off the table. "
The Reds signed three pitchers in
the second round : John '' Keefe" (',a to
from Fairfield University , Robert
Buchanon of Sarasota, Fla., and
Ric h ar~ Wvsocki of Lakewood , N.J .

·'

nC:Jlton .''
When the Mariners · decided on
Chambers. the New Yor k Mets,
' picki ng second, selected right~1anded
pitclwr Tim Leary from UCLA .
Then Toronto picked catcher Jay
Schroeder of Pacific Palisades, Calif .,
;mother quarterback, who signed a
letter of intent fur UCLA .
Atlanta, which came up with the
National. League's rookie of thed yea r

· Sports .briefs ··

1!,\SEilALJ.
NEW YORK 1 AP 1 - Outfielder Don
Bay lor of the California Angels hit
The extra picks in the second row1d
came in compensation from Atlanta , .:154. drove in ~J runs , and scored 21
which sig ned free agent Mike Lum , himself to win A111erican Leaue player
of the month honors, A.l. . President
and from California .
The Reds picked pitchers Scott Lee M&lt;·Phail a nno unced.
Bay lor had 8 doubles, a triple and 7
Lindquist of Kingsburg, Calif., in the
home
runs while driving in two game·third round and Michael Tolbert of
winning
rWJs. He also had eight
Chicago in th e fourth round .
consecutive
stolen bases and hit
Jeff Russell , a shortstop from
Cincinna ti Wyoming High School, was safely in 22 of the Angels' 27 games
·
taken in the fifth roWJd, while first during the month .
McPhail also announced that Texas
baseman-outfielder Ronald Little of
Ashboro, N.C., was selected in the Rangers relief spec ialist Jim Kern ,
who had a ha nd in eight of his club's 17
sixth round.
The Reds drafted three players in victories in May, was named the
American !~ag ue's Pitcher_ of the
the secondary phase, all pitchers.
They were Larry Mikese ll of Month .
Kern won four games during the
Brevard Communit y College at
month
a nd saved an equal number,
Cocoa, Fla., Mark Pedersen of
without
a loss, pitching 29.2 innings.
Yakima
Valley
College
and
E numclaw , Wash ., a nd Robert Elliott He appeared in 14 games, allowed 18
of Gulf Coast CommWJity College in hits, three runs - two earned struck out :11 and wdlk.O nine e nrl harl
Orlando, Fla .

an ea rned run average of 0,6!:
NEW YORK tAP I - Lou Brock of
the St. Louis Cardinals, who hit .433
durmg the month of May, has been
named Na tiona! League player of the
month , league President Chub Feeney
a nnounced .
Brock had 29 hits in 67 at bats, nine
RBI and scored 11 runs during May in
one of ihe best starts in his career. He
needs only 54 hits to become the 14th
player in major league history to
reach the :!,000-h it plateau. Brock also·
had three homers and stole three
bases in May.
Fee ney also a nnounced that
Houst on Astros r ight-hander J oe
Niekro, who won six games without a
loss in May, has been chosen tthe
National League 's pitcher of the
month .
·
Niekro, 8-2, pitched two shutouts in
the month. His .ERA was 1. 71 during
that time.

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when they.picked BPI) Horner No. I in
last June's dra ft, had the fourth pick
in the reg ular phase this time and
chose outfielder-first baseman Brad
Komminsk from Shawnee High School
in Lima, Ohio.
Among the players chosen were
first baseman Joe Lansford, brother
of California's Carney Lansford, by
San Diego; infielder Todd Demeter,
son of eHnajor leaguer Don Demeter,
by the New York Yankees; catcher
Marc Sulli van, son of Boston Red Sox
executi ve vice president Haywood
Sullivan, by Boston ; pitcher Jeff
Stottlemyre, brother of exmajor
leaguer Me l Stottlemyre, by Seattle;
pitcher Terry Sutcliffe , brother of Los
Angeles pitcher Rick Sutcliffe, by ¥'S
Angeles; and catcher Dave 'Landrith,
son of ex-major leaguer Hobie
Landrith, by Cleveland.
A total of 226 players was chosen
Tuesday, !56 of them in six regular
rounds and 70 in seven secondary
rounds for players previously. drafted
but unsigned . The draft continues
today and is expected to conclude on
Thursday.

ti

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FRIDAY 9 to 8 SATURDAY 9 to 5-

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rHE BARGAINS WILL BE GREAT INSIDE AND OUTSIDE THE .STORE

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• Portraits

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The PhotoPiace
(Bob Hoeflich 1
109 Hi gh St., Pomeroy .

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TWO' DAYS

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MISCELLANEOUS- - -

TWO DAYS

BAR

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JUNE

Wednesday, J.WJe6,1979

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226 players s.e lected in annual June draft
By HAL lliX.:K

7- The Daily

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.t.iALLIPOLIS

OLIVE
r

�8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, U._, Wednesday, June6,1979

Sgt. Gtes~~=visited here
s.Sgt. Gerlad E. Sellers is statJoned recently with his parents, Mr. and
in Wilclflecken, Germany now and Mrs. Curtis ~oush, Pomeroy. He lefl
will be joined there by hls famil in May 13_to begm a two year ~ur of du·
The ship is docked today in a ments complex which looks like a ·'Delta Queen" and a newer sister the fall. ·
·
y
~y in B1tburg, Germany. His address
Editor's note: The following
ship, ''The Mississippi Queen,"
"quaint " Ohio River town, in motel.
Jtory ·about the Delta Queen was
·
S:
Sgt.
Sellers'
Wife,
Joyce,
and
II! Sgt. Chester A. Roush, 301..;o..9008,
I have found a comfortable nook together the last overnight passenger
Madison, Ind . It is not exactly a copy
written by Tom Rail, son of Mr.
their two children, Michael Allen and 36th MMS, PSC Boll 3825, APO Ne"'
from
which to write upon the third steamers on the inland waterways.
of Middleport but has similarities to
.ding. p
York09132.
and Mrs. E. 0. Rail. A former
m omeroy
""' Roush' wif Do . ,
Captain Louden liad his pilot's AmY Dawn are res1
the Big Bend -the lone bridge, the in- deck near the officers' quarters and
resident of Middleport, Rail is a
with her mother. She and the children . "":·
. s e, tti_e, IS staying
license
extended
just
underneath
the
port.Side
bridge
·
from
Huntington
to
finite
shades
of
spring-green,
ridges
free lance writer- in Washlngton,
will join s. Sgt. Sellers in Germany m V•l!lomlle, Calif. while her buswith houses cut into the bluffs, tbe oc- from the pilothouse. Beneath me on Pittsburgh in 1937, when the sometime after their third child is band IS ~ Gmmany. ·He. graduated
D.C.
casional tugboat or tanker passing, the lwo sundeck lounge several Gallipolis roller dam was opened, born. s. Sgt. Sellers entered the anny from Me~gs High School m 1m and
For a couple of days, I have been the houseboats and pleasure cruisers, passengers - sipping wine, playing making upriver navigable to large in February, 1972 and was recently jomedtheU.S. AirForcemJunelm.
aboard the magnificent 1920's pad- the camping spots on the bank. The bridge, chatting while the red, white vessels. He was the first pilot to take
dlewheel passenger steamer, the Kentucky shoreline looks similar to and blue bunting and the nags of the passenger steamer Gordon staioned at Fort Ord, Calif. This is hls
several ststes flap in an intennittent Greene through the Gallipolis locks second tour.of duty in Germany.
"Grand Old Lady of the Rivers ," the the West Virginia.
"Delta Queen."
Indiana resembles Ohio. The wind, just past noon on a beautiful and, years later, "went through the
·
hole" before the Racine dam was
The cruise began Friday afternoon Madison levee is about the same size MaySunday.
RUTLAND - Six new members
The calliope strikes up and a hand- finished.
at . the Cincinnati public landing , a as Middleport's, but is in better repair
were welcomed at the May 29 meeting
Ca~t. Louden talked like a Twain
bnck-paved parking lot, the whole with plenty of space to launch small ful of kids skip stones to the "Music
of the Rutland Chapter of TOPS
character,
describing the WheelingMan
"
tune,
"76
trombones
led
the
big
area being about 10 times the size of pleasure craft and to park the trailers
(Take Off Pounds Sensibly).
·
Portsmouth run as "91 miles of
the Middleport levee. It is a space afterward . The bank is·much gentler parade."
Mrs. Debbie Grate, leader, presid·
Plllling out from the levee, the business.''
that appears very tiny in comparison and grassed upon which congregate
ed at the meeting with Belah Belle
And he knew of a couple "old time
to its sports complex surroundings picnickers and young frisbee players, calliope is blasting blissfully, the
Wright betng honored as' the weekly
including tbe ne'!' baseball stadium: while an assortment of other locals - boilers gathering steam, crankshaft crackerjack" captains from Mid·
Arvel M. Swartz, Affidavit, Orange. queen and Patty Imboden a~ her
dleport: of Henry Nye, "probably
families and solitary sightseers - and piston rotating paddlewheel.
which overshadow the landing.
Larry M. Well, Judy A. Well to runner-up. Mrs. Wright was
Now
cruising.
How
wide
the
Ohio.
dead
before
I
was
born"
and
of
"Big
The steamboat is a wonderful way photograph the Queen.
Jackie C. Well,1.50 acres, Bedford.
presented a dollar and a song was
There are a waterfront sawmill, The mud banks and bottom land in Bill Haptonstall" whom "I met on a
to travel. The pace is slow and senHelen
G.
Carper
to
Samuel
Lee
sung
in her honor.
sible, gentle vibrations and certain tobacco warehouse and abandoned plow, church steeple and billboard boat once.''
Kern,
Peggy
Jean
Kern,
Parcels,
New
officers named were Marcia
"I didn 't know them, " he said, "but
catfishennen and water skiers, can~
sensuality.
Bedford.
Elliott,
secretary,
and Kathy Stewart,
Very early this summer, at the ~\:utse;~~~ lit~~- o~o~~~e~~~ and coal tipple, upriver in late af. I knew they were ·from Middleport.
Doyle T. Shuler to Henrietta Sh;uer, co-leader. Patty lmobden was apheight of night, under moon and stars Kyger Creek, tower five temoon, moon already high in the sky Those were in the old days, when the
.94acre,1.9acre,Salisbury.
· P?inted to be in charge of recording
with steam escaping from the boile; smokestacks, an industrial .complex off bow, sun to set in two or three coal combines had tbe river sewed up.
Paul
Searles,
Exec.,
Rosa Searles pictures and measurements.
off
stem.
Oh,
oh,
Ohio.
The
coal
companies
got
busted
in
hours
room portside and disappearing in the at their base.
Members were asked to take a diet
It is a stretch of river without major 1916. Pilots weren't as good then, but by Exec. to Frank Hoffman, Cynthia
"Welcome to the Home of the
first of morning river fog, I watched
Hoffman,
Lot,
Middleport.
'
.
recipe
to share with the group next
the crew tie down the ship to an old Famous Madison Regatta," reads the industry, just like Meigs-Mason used they were wilder and I knew 'em by
Luther
E.
Gilliam,
Jr.,
Veneva
M.
week.
The
Top,'!i symbol was explain·
·
riverbank oak with a root structure, sign alongside river road. Downtown to be when I was a kid - of driftwood their reputations."
Gilliiam
to
Mary
Hamilton,
20
acres,
ed
by
Mrs.
Grate.
Clearly he is in love with the Queen.
substantial like a spider's web. Two appears to be a respectful couple and johnboat tied to treeti'unk of giant
"
·
men trudged through mud, heaving blocks away, the two to three story oak or towering sycamore; of creeks "She's big and slow, but she can turn Sctp o.
Henry'
E.
Cleland,
Jr.
,
Kathleen
M.
and
hollow
runs;
of
frame
fararOWld
a
tree.''
and pulling on tbe hemp, cursing all brick buildings peering over the
But he's also disturbed about her. Cleland to Allen W. Hamm, Betty Jo ~JHEN
newer brick of a riverfront apart- mhouses and mobile homes; of
the way .
_ _ _ _8
pastures and cows; of cars traveling Capi. Louden told me Coca Cola, Inc., Hanun, .23acre,Sutton.
Clarence C. Ogdln, dec. to Blanche
narrow roads beneath the cliffs, oh, had taken over the boat in early 1976.
carved valley.
"This new outfit was supposed to Wilson, Cert. for trans., Rutland.
Duane B. Wolfe, Margie Ann Wolfe
At thls point during the pleasure of sink a million dollars into boat to Gale E. Osborne, Deborah K.
cruising, I requested permission to repairs," he said, "but I haven 1 seen Osborne, 5.08 acres, .79 acre, Olive.
enter the pilothouse. It was my good it and I wonder where it went. All I
fortune to find therein, alone at the ~een they did was put down new carcontrols, Captain Harry Louden, one pet in the passenger'lounges."
REUNION PLANNED
The ship itself is magnificent, a
of the oldest steamboat pilots on the
The
26th
annual Russell • Higley piece of craftsmanship. "It's got oak,
rivers.
Archer
f!Uilily
reunion will be held
I spent 45 minutes with Capt. teak, mahogany. The floor of the June 10 at Forest Acres Park, shelter
Louden. The riverside seemed to rise passengers' dining room Is ir~n­ house I. Those attending are to take a
wood ..~' .
lllid subside as we chatted.
But a closer inspection does show covered dish, their own table service
He has been on lhe rivers since May
and cold beverages. Coffee will be
15, 1927, a date he recalled her age. She needs to be stripped and provided. All family members are
pleasurably, as if recalling a wedding repainted;. the exterior railings need urged to attend.
day . He has been upon the rivers to be revarnished; the brass is taralmost as long as the "Queen" her- nished. Dry rot shows here and there.
self, which was corrunissioned in 1926. And the bow thruster, an important
Reduced
'•I've been on 'em all,'' he said, ''the steering device, was in need of repair.
to $600
So I asked him what he thought
In 1968, Senator Robert Kennedy
sternwheels, the paddlewheels the
died after being shot while at a hotel in
twinscrews" in 38 years with th~ Ar· Coke was going to do with her.
Features:
"Let
her
go
to
pieces,
it
looks
like,"
Los Angeles, and ~han Sirhan, 24,
my Corps of Engineers and with the
25 push button stitches,
was charged as the assassin. ·
I
Greene Line, predecessor of the Delta he answered .
"Can
I
quote
you
on
that?,"
I
asked.
speed
basting, magic butIn
1973,
West
Gennany
completed
.
Queen Steamboat Company of CinHe
didn't
say
no,
so
I
will.
tonholer,
flip &amp; sew, plush .
of
a
treaty
to
normalize
ratification
cinnati, which now operates the
relations with Communist East
button front drop-in bob·
Germany.
bin. Full 30 yr. warranty.
Ten years ago: Communist forces
·:launched heavy attacks north of
Saigon after shelling more than ioo
towns and military bases in South
Vietnam.
joyce Hutchison

The 'Delta Queen '

Stationed in Germany

a nostalgic cruise

Members welcomed

Meigs
Property
Transfers

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ELECJROMC MACHINE

Health Review
STROKES

QUESTION: I've heard the term
stroke used in a number of instances
which seem to differ from one
another. Are there different kinds of

Mr. and Mrs. Milo B. Hutchison fiance is employed with the Ben-Tom
Rutland, are announcing the engae: Corporation, currently working at
ment and approaching marriage of Daytona Beach.
their daughter, Joyce Elizabeth to
The weddlng will be an eve~t of JuMartin Eugene Seelig.
'
ly 14 at 6:30p.m. at Trinity Church,
Mr. Seelig is the son of Mrs . Harold Pomeroy.
Roush, Pomeroy, and Jack Seelig,
Daytona Beach, Fla. Both Miss Hutchison and Seelig are 1975 graduates
of Meigs High School. Miss Hutchison
will gra~uate from Ohio University in
June With a. bachelor of science
degree in elementary education. Her

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With a new Frigidaire and
with all the features you
would
expect
from
Frigidaire.

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ll--~~~.0. _j
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"strokes?"

REPLACETHAtj•

RANGE

BAKER
FURNITURE

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Thursday's schedule for the Meigs
County Bookmobile includes: Head
Start, 2-2:30 p.m.; Portland, post offlee, 3.;! :30 p.m.; Racine Home
National Bank, 4-5; Wagner's Hardware, IHl; Syracuse Swinuning Pool,
6:1~:15p.m .

MATEO.OAYO, M.D.
NEW OFFICE HOURS
MON.-FRIDAY 5:30 til 8:30 P.M.
SATIJRDAY 9:00-5:00 P.M •.
Located in Formerly Dr. Davis' Office ·
306 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, 0.

ANSWER: The word stroke, which
describes many of tbe same diseases
as the medical term cerebrovascular
accident (CVA), includes three main
types of injuries or problems. These
are called cerebral thrombosis,
cerebral hornorrhage, and cerebral
embolism. I shall explain each of
these tater in today 's colwnn.
In addition, other accidents can
happen to the vessels' in the brain
.such as ruptured aneurisms, blood
clots (hematomas) due to injuries,
and ruptures of anomalous or abnormal congenital blood vessels.
These are not, however, what is
iJOPularly called a "stroke."
QUESTION: What actually hap-'
pens when a person has a strke?
ANSWER: In cerebral thrombosis,
the most conunon type of "stroke," a
large clot called a thrombus blocks
one of the vessels carrying arterial
blood to the brain. This can happen in
the interior of the brain·to a cerebral
vessel or to the artery in the base of
the brain known as the vertebral artery. Very commonly the artery in the
neck leadlng to the brain -the carotid
- becomes blocked in this manner.
The result is loss of blood supply to
the region of the brain that the affected blood vessel services.
This' blood supply stoppage results
in the death (infarct) of that particular part of th~ brain and, thereby,
causes vartous abnormal
neurological losses.such as paralysis
of an arm or leg, and the los.S of
speech or memory. Many times death

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FABRIC
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E. Main 51.
!'omeroy, o.
OWNED AND OPERATEn :.' ,
Jack &amp; Judy WitU • .. ,,
Open: Mon . thru Wed. 9-S,
Thur. 9· 12, Fri. 9-S, Sal. 9-2
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234

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Pomeroy, Oh.

or Your Money Back

Diamonds for him ...
boldly beautiful!

2EM550

· way of resolution which will be
presented to tne Meigs County Board
of Coirunissioners.
It was emphasized that the Chapter
members do not oppose the Commons
being used for a public playground,
and, in fact, they urged that picnic
tables and benches be placed there:
The old court house is on the National
Register, it was noted, and the Com·

mons is a part otthat registered area .
New officers were installed during
the meeting, and .Mrs . Grace Eich,
retiring regent, presented the gavel to
Mrs. Gene Yost, new regent, along
with a regent's pin . Other officers installed were Miss Lucille Smith,
treasurer; Mrs . Pat Lochary ,
chaplain ; Mrs. J . E. Foster,
registrar ; Mrs . J oseph Cook,

hil;torian; and Mrs. Emerson Jones,
librarian. Other officers not present
were Mrs. Clyde Ingels, vice regent;
Mrs. George Morris, recording
secretary and Mrs.; Vernon Weber,
corresponding secretary.
Miss Smith commended Mrs. Eich
for her work in the chapter and she
was given a standing vote of ap·
preciation. Mrs. Eich responded with

Art &amp; Craft Fair set to begin soon

thanks to her officers and other
members for their cooperation;
As outgoing regent, Mrs. Eich
reported on the activities of the
chapter during her two-year term of
office. She spoke of contributions in
the name of the chapter to Drew
WebSter Post, American Legion Aux·
iliary, and to the Boy Scouts. She
noted that the chapter had received
awards for honor ,roll requirements,
top awards for programs, and had
carried out outstanding Constitution

Helen Help
US. . .

at

POLLY·s POINTERS

Members received
via baptism here

Veda Davis
elected as
chapeau

~---Social Calendar

AUTO INSURANCE

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-tNsvRAN'cr. t.A..
EPJE

FATHER'S
DAY•••
JUNE 17

EM641

GROIJP

FROM THE

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SUMMER
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$}49

LOOK OVER OUR MINI DELl
Potato, Macaroni &amp; Chicken Salad.
Submarines &amp; Other Sandwiches.

79.;. HEAD LEITUCE •••• ft~ 39~-

Over a hundred years
ago . a Bulova was one
of the mosl advanced
watches you could buy. II
still is
A. The new Accu tron
Qua rt z Alarm An alarm
watc h. a calendar walch . a
two -11me-zone walc h. an
in1ernat1onal travel walch
Thos remarkable b1t o f
techoologv. $ t95 w11h
strap ( #8 2 t02)

GOESSLER
JEWELRY
pomeroy, 0 .'

court. St.

'25,000
•
FOR INFORMATION THAT

Servz'ce held.

•

Confirmation service was held
Pentecost Sunday, June 3rd, at the St.
Paul Lutheran Church.
Received into membership were
Kenda Braun~Becky Eichinger, Julie
Elberfeld,
ley Hawkins, Reginia
Hawkins,
ott Hill Amy Souder,
steven Souder, and Julie Thoren. The
nine young eople were received
through the rite of Confirmation or
Baptism. Each received a red canna·
lion. The new members have studied
the basic truths of the Bible and the
teachings of the Lutherart Church,
and made their confession of faith in
the Triune God and His way of salvation before the congregation.

LEADS TO THE ARREST
AND CONVICTION OF
Brenda Zirkle

New arrival

Turns seven years

SP 4 and Mrs. Charles {Rick)
McFarland are announcing the birth
of a son, June 1'. The baby weighed six
pounds, six ounces and has been named Charles Naaman.
Maternal grandparents are Mr. and
Mts. Dale Carpenter of Logan. Paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
James Custer, Columbus, .and Mr.
and Mrs. Phillip McFarland, Mid·
dleport. SP4 McFarland is stationed
in Karlsrune, Germany with the U. S,

ECKRICH

Fresh

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POMEROY

SANDAL
HEADQUARTERS

CHAPMAN
SHOES .

Next to Elberfeld! in Pome~ov

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Donation made

tions made by Mike Whitlatch and tbe
Tracy Hein fund.
Plans wre made for a bowling and
pizza party to be held for the youth.
Devotions were on Flag Day and
Father's Day. Bill King had the closing prayer. Refreshments were served by Mrs. Elsie Barnhart and Mrs .
Freda Van lnwagen.

. A diamond rinQ IS a girt thai never fades. It
. rad_1ates true devotion forever in every finely crafted
lone ... In every handsome detail ... in every sport&lt; ling gem.
Choose now from our e•clusove collection of distinguished
doamond rongs for both men and w omen.

·BRAUNSCHWEIGER.••• 1~·••69~

APPLES ..............:~ti:~.

Week observances..
Mrs. Lochary noted that subScriplions to the National magazine are
due, and Mrs . · Ulllan Henderson
reported on marking a grave of a
relative in Maryland with credit to be
given to R~turn Jonathan Meigli
Chapter. There were notes of appreciation from Mrs. Pearl Mora and
Mrs. Ellen Bell.
Mrs. Yost appointed Mrs. Ingles,
Miss Smith, Mrs. Robert Ashley, Mrs.
James Brewington to the program
committee.
The meeting was preceded by the
annual Flag Day picnic with Mrs. A.
tilin music groups such as the Putman
· R. Knight having the table grace.
West Virginians always have been West Virginia vocal groups singing presented at II a.m. only on Wed - County Pickers and Roger Bryant
nesday,
July
4,
the
last
day
of
the
fair
.
Guests were Mrs. Eileen Buck, Mrs.
oroud of their mountain culture, and traditional music. A new highlight of
and Aunt Jennie Wilson play
Each
afternoon
from
1-1
:30
p.m.
Elizabeth Cuckler, Dr. Kathryn
11y Ht•lt•n Bullo•l
oowhere is this pride more evident the fair will be the 2 p.m. gospel sing.
throughout the day to informal setand
from
2·2:
30,
a
craftsman
or
Philson, A. R. Knight, Thereon
han at the Mountain State Art and The mountain heritage vocal groups
TWO NON-MARRIAGES MAKE
tings .
musicial
will
be
on
hand
to
give
inJohnson
, Pat Lochary, and Emerson
will
join
with
Squire
parsons
and
the
:raft Fair, held June 30 through July
A juried, all-West Virginia art show
ESTRANGED BEDFELLOWS
Jones. Members toured the rose
. Heraldsmen, the Goodnews Singers, formal demonstrations, answer is a new addition to the fair , along DEAR HELEN.
., at Cedar Lakes, near Ripley .
garden of the Johnsons . Mrs.
In addition to the 130 artists and the Brighter Side Quartet and the questions, and offer f;~irgoers a chan- with the Homecoming Tent, where
I either have a problem or have Johnson, Mrs. Eich, Mrs . Ashley and
ce
to
try
their
hands
at
pottery:raftsmen, the fair presents a Covenant Quartet to provide a
visitors can chat with old-time craf· caused one, maybe both.
Heidi Smith had charge of ar:elebration of Appalachian folklife program of both old' and ~ew gospel making, dulcimer playing, and other tsmen who spin yarns while they whit·
Jason and I have been living r~gements for the picnic.
traditional
pastimes.
hrongh the annual mountain heritage singing.
together ever since I had hls son, six
Square dancing is another daily lie and carve.
Keith Butcher, a well-known mounJrogram.
The Mountain State Art and Craft years ago. I didn't learn until much
event,
led
by
Rush
Butcher
and
the
Daily events in the heritage reflect tain balladeer, · will present the
Fair is open from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. later that he already has another
.he music , songs, dances and special he.ritage feature Monday, Nicholas County Dan cers. June 30 through July 3 and from 9 family . 1 just thought he was on the
!veryday activities of the isolated July 2, accompanied by cast mem- Exhibitions and lessons will be given a.m. to 6 p.m. July 4. Admission is $2 road a lot, but instead he's crosstown
EUGENE BUCKLEY
· :ommunities of eighteenth and bers from "The Hatfields and Mc- from 9-11 a.m.; 3-,l p.m., and 7:30-9 for adults and 50 cents for children un- at his Maple Street address!
Eugene Buckley, Cheshire, is a,
p.m.
Coys" and "Honey in the Rock."
linetee nth century Appalachia.
He says he isn 't married to this patient at Holzer Medical Center. He
The mountain heritage program is der 12, and includes all events at the
Mike Meador will play and explain
Each day the fair presents a special
other woman , but her children call will undergo back surgery Friday.
only one of the features of the 17th an- fair and free parking.
1eritage feature at II a.m. an&lt;j again tr&amp;ditional mountain musical im- nual Mountain State Art and Craft
For further information, write the him Daddy. I think he supports them, His room number is 215.
1t 6:30p.m. Saturday, June 30, will plements on Tuesday, July 3 and a
More than 130 artists and craf- Mountain State Art and Craft Fair, but at my house, I pay all the bills. He
'eature costwned square and folk woodchopping and crosscut sawing Fair.
has also had
least three affairs
tsmen display, demonstrate and sell Cedar Lakes, Ripley, WV 25271.
· lance groups from around the state, demonstration and contest will be · their work, while well-known mounTO MEET
since we 've been together. I know he
while Sunday, July I. will feature
No. 37 will meet
Mary
Shrine
is using me as a convenience, but
Friday
at
8
p.m.
at
the Masonic Tern·
when I work up the nerve to tell hinn
this, I can't express myself, I just pie. All members are asked to bring a
dessert.
begin to cry.
Then he tells me I'm Number One,
and says that when the other women
call, I should say, "Wrong number"
Two new members were received
and hang up, so they won 'I upset me blackwash persiSts beCause we've
Polly Cramer
via baptiSm Sunday at the St. John
with threats.
been told to watch for certain traits in
Lutheran Church. Peggy White and
I don't thiilk I love him, but he's certain professions.
Brenda White, children of Mr. and
older than me and sort of rules me.
So let's concentrate on the
Mrs. Roy Brunty, were taken into the
gwn
and
whenit
hardens
remove
with
Besides if I turn him out I'll have "superior" people who came off more ·
DEAR POLLY- I have not been
church through the rite of baptism
Mrs. Veda Davis was elected nobody . -WHAT TO DO•
oafish than the man they ridiculed. I
able to remove some chewing gum a dull knife. Of course, I do not know
during the worship and holy commu· chapeau of Meigs Salon 710, Eight and DEARWTD:
what
the
water
would
do
to
the
finish
from my leather jacket even though I
hope he or his friends tell them they
nion service on Pentecost,Sunday, the Forty, at a meeting held Mnday night
Having nobody is better than going should live and be well, 8s they may
have used leather cleaners. l know on you coat. Does it water spot' Day ofthe Holy Ghost.
. at the Riverboat Room of the Athens nowhere with an unfaithful, bossy find no free help available next time
that peanut butter will remove gum POLLY
The two new members now enjoy County Savings and Loan Co., Meigs freeloader.
DEAR
POLLY
THe
following
is
from one's hair but am afraid It might
they need it.- H.
·
the church with privileges of Holy Office.
If you can't express thls in person,
,
hurt my jacket so please tell me how an old restaurant trick I learned while
Communion, sponsors at baptism and
Other officers elected for the 1979-llO then pack Jason's things, take them DEAR HELEN :
to get out of this sticky situation. - working as a waitress. One way to a voice in the work of the congregahave
your
knife
come
outclean
when
year
were Mrs. Iva Powell, pouvior to t~ Maple Street address and dump
This is to the selfish !:&gt;-year-old who
KAREN
tion. They spent two years studying member; Mrs. Pearl Knapp, first them on the front porch together with
slicing
a
meringue
pie
is
to
stick
the
yelled because his mother went to
DEAR KAREN - The safest way I
the Word of God and the teachings of
know of to get out of your sticky silua· knife in a tall glass of hot water and the Lutheran Church. Each child was demi chapeau; Florence Richards, a note that leaves nothing unsaid. And work. My Mom died when I was 13
let
it
heat
through
a
bit
before
cutting
second derni-chapeau ; Mrs. Mary don't cave in! You've already wasted and I brought up a younger brother
tion is to take the jacket to a leather
presented
a
gift.
the-pie
in
pieces.
-AMANDA
Martin, Ia secretaire-cassiere; Mrs. six years of your life. - H.
and sister. Did I cry? No! II helped
cleaner. You failed to mention the
DEAR
POLLY
For
years
I
have
Dollie Hayes, l'aumonier; Mrs. 'Mar·
me become a better person, wife and
sort of finish the leather has but I
jorie Goett, l'archiviste, and Mrs. DEAR HELEN.
mother. To this kid I say, "Stop com·
would be wary of the peanut butter been dipping the knife I am using to
We have . a few retired school plaining about a few missed
Ruby Marshall,la concierge.
because it might leave an oily spot slice a meringue pie in cold water
During the meeting which, was teachers in our area . Why do so many homemade cookies. You've still g&lt;t
that would penetrate right through each time I cut a slice. This assures
preceded by a potluck dinner, a pia· of this breed: Talk down to people ? your MollJ and she's working for you ..
the leather. If you mlist try something no sticking to the knife.- IRMA
DEAR
READERS
There
is
que was presented to Mrs. Marshall Some discussions are conducted like So help her!"- HAPPY
yourself the best thing I know to sugalways
more
than
one
way
to
get
a
job
from the National Jewish Hospital interrogations.
gest is applying an ice cube to the
Correct others' grammar and prodone, so take your pick. ~POLLY
and Asthmatic Center, Denver, Colo,
WEDNESDAY
DEAR POLLY - When any glass
nunciations?
The
plaque
was
in
acknowledgement
CHESTER GARDEN CLUB
Feel superior? Mter all, we have
bakeware or glass dishes are rough or
Wednesday evening at home of the $1,000 which tbe Meigs Salon college educations too, and teaching
meeting
chipped a bit on the edges I simply
For Those
had
given
to
the
hospital
in
memory
Superior coverage for the
.
smooth the places off With fine sand- of Mrs. Buel Ridenour.
of the Marshall children, Sherrie and is just another job.
FALLS
United
LETART
What
inspires
this
letter
is
that
one
lowest possible price..
paper
or
an
emery
board.
Of
course,
•
Summer Fashions
Brian, both ha&gt;:ing died with cystic
of
our
uppity
retired
couples
recently
I am careful not to breathe in the fil· Methodist Women to meet at 7:30
fibrosis .
Stop By ·
ings. Glass is then safe to use again. - Wednesday evening at the home of
Plans were made during the spent an entire evening ridiculing an
NEW LOCATION
Mrs. Rose McDade, Middleport.
meeting to have a stand on the streets uneducated and oafish a man who had
FAYE
Dave
Jenkins, Agent
Poily will send you one of her signed Mrs. Ernest Shuler to have the
TWO'S COMPANY
of Pomeroy on Regatta weekend. A devoted hundreds of free hours helpOne Lynn St.
thank-you - newspaper-coupon clip- program.
report was given on the combined ing them through a sick time. I
......
Pomeroy, 0 .
DRESS SHOP
POMEROY LODGE 164, F and AM, charities drive at Meigs High School defended hinn, but it was like talking
pers if she uses your favorite Pointer,
991 ·6681
Peeve or Problem in her column. regular "meeting, 7:30 p.m. Wed- and the $50 contribution to cystic to the wall.
118E. Main
Pomeroy, 0.
They evidently forget the world
Write POLLY'S POINTERS ln care of nesday ; all Master Masons invited.
fibrosis which was sent to Children's
THURSDAY
needs
generosity as much as scholar·
this newspaper.
Hospital, Columbus.
.
RIVERVIEW Garden Club
The Ia marche to be held in ship.-M.J.
meeting, 8 p.m. Thursday at the home Cleveland, July 15 and 16 was an- DEARM.:
~'ir·":·
of Mrs. Ronald Osborne with Mrs. nounced with Mrs. Martin, Mrs. Pearl
Ail - or even "so many'' -retired
Harliss Frank and !'~Irs · Roy Hannum Knapp, Mrs . Goett, and Mrs. school teachers aren't "uppity" any
serving as co-hostesses.
Catherine Welsh to represent the more than all doctors are demanding,
unthoughtful husbands, but the
EV ANGET.JNE Chapter 172, Order salon .
Next
meeting
will
be
a
potluck
at
A donation was made to the James of the Eastern star, 7:30p.m. Thurs·
H. Smith Memorial Nursery Fund at day night at the Middleport Masonic 6:30p.m. at the home of Mrs. Davis
Harding College, Searsy, Arkansas,
on July 2. Meal will be furnished .
by the Martha Bible Class of the Temple.
FRIDAY
Bradbury Church of Christ.
ROUIND AND Square Dance FriSmith was killed last weekend in an day 8 , 30 to 11 :30 p.m. at the Senior
airplane crash. He ill a fonner Cit~ens Center, Pomeroy. Admission
minister of the ch~ch.
.
IS $! for adults with children under 12
Mr:&gt;· Marrin Wilcox presided at the dmitted free . Music by Sir·
meetmg which opened wtth prayer by ~ d ters
Mrs. Noami King. Mrs. Delores ' mg us
·
Bailey gave the secretary's report.
HAPPY HARVESTERS CLASS, 7
Than-you notes were read for dona· p.m. Friday at the church.
Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter of
he Daughters of he American
'\evolution have gone on record as opIOSing the construction of 'tennis
:ourts on the Ch~ster Commons.
Meeting recently at the home of Mr.
md Mrs. Thereon Johnson, the
;bapter discussed the proposed con;truction. of the tennis couris on the
::Onunons and then took action in the

REWARD

ROUND STEAK ........ ~~~.~ } 59
9

USED SEWING MACHINES

·1Sears I

BIG FRANKS ....... !~·.~l 49

SOFT '~)rEAVE

SUNOAYS •

CATALOG
SALES MERCHANT

GRAPE JELLY ......................... ~~-~~. 79'

LIPTON TEA BAGS ............... !~~.~~~~~.'l.99

We' .adty Accept Feel. Food Stam~s
Monday lhru Friday
9:001117:00
Saturday 9:00-9 : 00
CLOSED

Aut~orized

Superior Knock wurst

INSTANT COFFEE ................... .l.o.~~-.. '3.99

Thursday, June 7 thru June 9

can result when vital areas of the
brain are involved - especially lhose
which control out respiration or heart
beat.
Cerebral hemorrhage, the second
most conunon CVA, is simply the rupture of a blood vessel which results in
a sudden loss of blOQd from the vessel
into the brain. This kind of stroke is
most conunon in vessels in the in·
terior of tbe brain where weak spots
caused by sudden bends or ar·
teriosclerosis are present. Onset is
usually quite sudden and frequently
leads to sudden death or coma. Accompanying severe hypertension is
very often partly responsible for this
type of stroke. Partial or complete
recovery is not as conunon as with
cerebral thrombosis.
The third type which we call
cerebral embolism, can be described
as a blood clot which travels from
another organ, usually the heart, and
lodges iii one of the vessels in tbe
brain. Younger people are affected by
this condition. A young person who
has rhellllll!tic heart condition, for iiistance, can be stricken with a
cerebral embolism when placques of
cholesterol or other organic materials
are loosened from the inner lining of
the hesrt. The same process can occur in a heart which has a grossly ab-'
normal rhythm or fibrillation .
Cerebral embolism is one of the
dangers after surgery on the heart
·and an event for which nurses and
physicians in intensive care units are
trained to be constantly vigilant.
Next week I shall discuss some of
the other vascular accidents which
can take -place in the brain and cause
injury to the brain and nervous
system.

WELCH'S
MAXWELL HOUSE

PHEBE)S STO~E

SALE
FABRICS
1h PRICE

By Dr. Lamar Miller
OU College of Medicine

Miss Hutchison engaged

1

BASEMENT

J5AR.,;.Oj;p7:S';~· tennis court construction here

Brenda Gay Zirkle celebrated her
seventh birthday on May 22 at the
home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Davis Zirkle, Racine.
Games wer~ played wiUJ prizes be·
ing won by Tricili Wolfe, Alissa
Willford, Cissy Lyons and Jennifer
Evans.
A decorated birthday cake, ice
ream and soft drinks were served to
those named and Aimee Wolfe, Shelly
Army.
Sawyers, Sarah Wiles, Terri Zirkle,
and Mrs. Debbie Maynard and Jesse,
Reine; Mrs . Roberta Maynard, New
BIBLE SCHOOL
Haven.
TOBEGIN ·
Sending 'gifts were Chris Wolfe,
Bible school will begin Monday at · Jamie Cwnmins, Jennifer Johnson,
the Bradbury Church of Christ and Scott Hill, Shannon Williams, Chris
continue through June 15. Classes for Murphy, Ruth Zirkle, Mr. and Mrs.
all age groups wlU be held from 6' 30 Russell Maynard, Samantha and Rus·
p.m. to 8:30p.m. and anyone may at- ty, and Mr. and Mrs . Paul Maynard
tend . For more information, persons
and Jessica.
may call992-7369.

•

PERSON OR PERSONS
THAT SHOT AND KILLED
DEE ANN MANLEY
AND

DUDE HOWARD
GALLIA COUNTY SHERIFF

446-1221
MEIGS COUNTY SHERIFF

992-3371
CAROL W. MANLEY

992-7367

BY MANLEY &amp; HOWARD FAMILIES

�10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wi'dnesday, JW1e 6, 1979

..

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THE PROCESSIONAL - 1979 graduating seniors
of Wahama High School march into the school's gym-

nasiwn to receive their long-awaited diplomas. Ninetyone students were graduated from Wahama in commencement exercises Tuesday night.

LAST MINUTE PREPARATIONS - Members of
the 1979 graduating class of Wahama High School

· make last minute alterations on their caps and gowns
just prior to Tuesday night's commencement exercises
held in the school's gymnasium.

~

en
en

.

'

72 percent of school levies rejected

Wahama
(Continued from page I )
were opened . with the Rev . George
Hoschar, pastor of the Salem
Community Church , giving the
invocation. The Rev. David Fields,
Jr. of the New Haven First Church of
God gave the closing benediction.
Musical selections during the
exercises were provided with the
Wahama Band performing the
processional, the recessional, the
Alma Mater and a special number,
and the Wahama Chorus singing an
original version of ·Barry Manilow's
"Looks Like We Made It." New
lyrics to the song were written by
senior chorus members Kenny
Bond, Lisa Reynolds, Jenny
Badgley, Melanie Sisson and
Belinda Deem.
William M. McWhorter, principal,
and Ronald E. Vance, assistant
principal, presented the graduating
class to Paul Watkins of the Mason
County Board of Education, and
. Robert J. Brewster, Superintendent
of Mason County Schools, who
presented diplomas to the following:

calendar 1979 and would have to
turned down 72 percent of the requests and Bucyrus all failed.
By JAMES HATI'ON
for new money in elections aroWld the
In what was considered a heavy borrow money to remain open.
Associated Press Writer
And in Bucyrus, voters rejected an
slate
Tuesday.
turnout
, Triad residents WlOfficially
Voters approved school levies in
8.3-mill operating levy for the city
Voter
turnout
in
the
spring
primary
passed
a
5.6-mill,
five-year
levy
by
a
districts asking for renewals but
sChool district. The tally was 1,495
which featured no statewide issues vote of 474 to 407.
· was generally light, state elections
Officials of the 1,200-pupil system against and 1,006 for , the three-year
'
officials said this morning . A few had predicted it would run $24,000 levy.
areas with heated local issues pro- short of cash this year, and $107,600 in
(Continued troin page I )
vided exceptions.
1980 if the levy failed .
Votets rejected school tax levies in
In Middletown, the city school
Bill McKelvey will present songs, acOne person injured
companying himself on the guitar. three of four districts where t~ district 's 6-mill operating levy
money was said to be needed just !'o unofficially was defeated by a mere 61
There will also be a stringed band.
Tanya Davis reported that this keep classrooms open.
votes. The levy, which officials said in motorcycle mishap
year's 25 queen contestants will be
The state Department of Education was needed to keep the "heart" of the
One person was injured during a
judged Wednesday, JWie 20. Kathy reported this morning Utat all four system operating, lost by a vote of motorcycle accident in Meigs County
Blaettnaris last year 's queen.
school districts with renewals on the 5,060 to 4,999. It was tbe fourth Tuesday at 9:30a.m.
Ellen Bell, librarian at the Mid- ballot received voter approval; 14 of consecutive levy voted down in
TQe Gallia-Meigs Post, Highway
dleport-Pomeroy Libraries, reported 50 new operating levies passed; five of Middletown since 1974.
Patrol, reports that an east bound cy·
that all tickets are gone for the two P . 12 capital improvement or building
School officials had said it was cle operated by Jeffrey Halley 24
A. DeMy excursions on Saturday. fund levies passed, 15 of 33 bond issues needed to finance all' extracurricular MiddlePort, slid on gravel at th~ in:
There were 400 tickets given away for were approved and the two operating activities, non-state required daytime tersection of Leading Creek Rd. and
and building combined levies courses and busing systemwide.
the two rides.
SR 7, and overturned.
Tickets for other rides on tbe P . A. requested failed.
Superintendent Samuel Dalton said
· Halley displayed visible signs of in·
In the four districts where the levies without the $3.9 million a year the levy
DeMy are still available. On Friday
jury and was transported by the Midnight there will be a potluck diMer were considered critical, only the would have raised, nonstate required
dleport Emergency Squad to ·
and dance at $15 a couple. Kyle Allen Triad Local district in Champaign courses will be dropped, teachers will
Veterans Memorial Hospital, where
is in charge of the excursion rides.
County was successful in gaining have to be laid off and Ute school day
he was treated and released.
shortened .
Quickel also reported that reserved voter approval.
parking spaces will be available in
Tax levies in Middietown, Vanlue
Residents of the Vanlue Local
School District defeated a 6.8-mill tax
hack of Francis Florida and Me.
ASK TOWED
levy 214 to 175. The three-year levy
Clure's Three-In.&lt;Jne.
Marriage licenses were issued to
Dave Jenkins, president of the
8S
would have produced $80,000 each
Jack Richard Wells, 22, Reedsville,
JayQees, said they will be operating
Several calls were answered by the year, with the millage being adjusted and Reannie Kae Lester 18 Ree&lt;ithe dilly-dunker with the cancer Middleport Emergency Unit Tuesday _ as necessary in the second and third sville; Richa~d Malcolm Loo.rick, 28,
years.
society providing the people. Bill . night and Wednesday morning.
Tuppers PlaUJS, and Sandra Ellen
The district could run $42,000 short Warkentin. 25, Middlebury, lnd:
Young i~ this year's Grand Croaker · At 11:59 a.m. Tuesday, the squad
wtth Phil K~lly as grand croacker in was called to Langsville for .James of operating· funds by the end of
charge of vtce and Frog Wayland in Crisp, Sr., who was ill. He was
treated on the scene.
charge of ticket sales.
Fred Crow reported that a lady is
At 3:14p.m. Tuesday the unit went
interested in making a huge cake in to the office of Dr. James Conde for
the form of a frog and if anyone is in- . Helen Archer who was taken to
Holzer Medical Center.
terested in the cake to let him know.
Bill Nelson reported that Chris
The unit went to Page St. at 3:58
Schenkle, ABC Sportscaster, will be p.mofor Sylvia Parsons who was dead
at the Dave Diles Invitational to be upon the unit's arrival.
At 9:41 p.m. the squad went to the
held at Riverside Golf Course in
area of the Hobson railroad crossing
Mason in July.
Prices Effective Thru Sat., June 9th
Nelson said 104 golfers are needed where they picked up Jeff Hawley and
Homemade
andmustbesignedupbyJulyl5.
took him to Veterans Memorial
Jim Frecker, who presided in the Hospital. Hawley had apparently had
absence of Paul Simon, reported that a motorcycle accident and was found
the cleanup of the river bank is going lying In the road by Dr. R. R. Pickens
French City
very well and $400 thus far has been who was traveling on Route 7 into
spent . He ~d donations are being ac- Middleport.
AI 3:22a.m., the squad was called
cepted to continue Ute cleanup
to the jail for Larry Lewis, a prisoner
throughout the summer.
Eckrich
Donations are also being accepted who had been injured when he broke a
for the purchase of blocks for the per- light bulb. He was treated at the
manent stage to be erected on the scene.
parking lot. They sell for $1 each .
Attending were Frecker, Crow,
Quickel, Jenkins, Mrs. Johnson, DonI lb. Blue Bonnet
na Nease, secretary, Bill Mayer, Bill
BOARD TO MEET
Joe Spencer, Phil Kelly, C. E.
The Meigs Local Board of EducaBlakeslee, Mrs. Davis, Archie Stegal, tion will meet in_ speci,;!l session at
Nelson, Pat O'Brien, Fred Morrow, 7:30 . thJs everung. The special
12 oz . Krattl6 Slice
Stan Houdashelt, Bill Gru~ser, John meetings are executive sessions to
Anderson, Joe Young, Ted Reed, discuss the employment of a new
Pimiento Singles
.
Walter Grueser, Scott Lucas, Ellen superintendent for the district.
Bell, Thereon Johnson and Wesley
Buehl.

·Additional

Timothy Edward Adams, Jennifer
RECENT WINNER
Chris
Lee Badgley, John Franklin Barton,
son
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
David
Stout,
Rachel Lynn Beard, Elizabeth Ami
Stout, Syracuse, was a recent state
Belcher, Charles Steve Blake,
Winner In the read-a-thon coiopetl·
Kimberly Gibbs Boles, John Kenlion.
David Is also a student at
neth Bond, Reamona Lea Brady
Syracuse
ElemeJ~tary. He receivGlover, Lisa Ann Brown, Eric Neil
ed
a
calculator
for having colBumgardner, Connie Roush Burton,
lected the most money In the
David Lee Camp, Angela Renee
category of radlng 80 to 89 books.
Casto, Wayne Lewis. Casto, Joni
Pictured, 1-r, Tom Qullter, direcDenise Clark, Anna Louise Cook,
tor of the Mental Health AssociaOrenda Love Cook, Chris Allen
tion of Oblo and Chris.
Davis, Lisa Michelle Davis, Belinda
Jean Deem, Dorinda Lee Deem,
Susan Jane Edwards, Robert Wayne
Elias .
Danny Lee Fields, Lyndon Ray
Five defendants forfeited bonds and
Fields, Timothy Wayne Fields,
a sixth was fined in the court of
Warren Craig Fields, Mark Allen
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews
Fisher, Randall Dewey Goodnite,
Tuesday night.
Jacqueline Lynn Greene, Lesa
Forfeiting were Dora A. Roush,
Charlene Grimm, Kenneth Jotui
Mason, $30, posted on a left of center
Hankinson, Dana Eugene Hartley,
charge; Thaddeus Lewington, GlenJanet Reynolds Hartley, Jeffrey
ford, $30, assured clear distance;
Lynn Hoschar, Delton Clarence
Mark Coughenour, Langsville, $50,
Huffman, Robert Lee James, Larry
squealing tires; Lonnie Temple, ChatGene Johnson, Terry Alan Johnson, . ta, Tenn., $30, opening car door in
Tammy Lee Johnson, Kenneth
lane of traffic and Aaron Hysell, no
address recorded, $300 aggravated
Earnest Kearns, Jr. , Patrick Dale
menacing threats, $300. Fined $30
Kearns, Carol Sue Nelson, Michael
and costs on a charge of driving left of
Ross King, David Brian Knight,
center was Gary Smith, Racine.
Brenda Lynn Rollllh Lavender, Beth
Ann Layne.
Three defendants were fined and a
BoMie Sue Marr, Darrell Ryan
fourth
forfeited a bond in the ccurt of
Marr, Diane Edith Marr, Kimberly
Middleport
Mayor Fred Hoffman
Dawn Martin; Eddie Ray McClure,
Tuesday
night.
Johnny Dean McDaniel, Amanda
Fined were Allen L. Dodson, 20,
Jane Miller, Howard Donald Myers,
Middleport,
and costs, no valid
Tammy Lavonne Ohlinger, Mary
license ; Mark A. Still, '!1, Middleport,
Yvonne - Oldaker, Rocky Lynn
$10 and costs, failure to yield the right
Pearson, William Mark Powell,
of way, and Michael Cremeans, MidLisa Ann Reynolds, Timothy WUson
dleport, and costs, allowing a dog
Rickard , Teresa Ellen Riggs
to run loose . Forfeiting a $25 bond
1 MacKnight, Tracey Ann Roach,
posted on a charge of running a stop
Kaylene Louise Robinson, Carina
sign was Narda Garey, 21, Pomeroy.
Elizabeth Roth, David Scctt Rose, ·
Franklin M. Roush, Kevin James
Roush, Jerry Raymond Roush,
Michael Joseph Roush, Pamela
Jane Roush, Sheryl Ann Roush,
VETERANS MEMORIAL
William Joe Roush II, Donald Oren
Admitted--Catherine
Mees
Ru~ll II, D11ane Kreig Sayre.
Pomeroy; Shirley Long Long Bot:
Lurinda Jo Samsel, Arlene
tom; Hattie Swift, Pom~roy; Clyde
Scarberry, Richard Ray Sines II,
Henderson, Pomeroy; Randy Smith,
Melanie Rae Sisson, Jackie Eugene \ Racme ; Lorena Lauderrnilt MidSmith, Jr., Mark Shayne Smith,
dleport; Jennifer McKinley: MidJeffrey Allen Staats, Charles Arthur
dleport ; Betty Hammack, Point
Stanley, Jr., Gregory Allen Stodola,
Pleasant.
Discharged-Permelia Cox Anna
Randall J'ohn Thorne, Richard Lee
Thornton, Jeffrey Lynn Weaver,
Crislip, William Morris, ' Cloyd
Brookover, Dwight Burton, Maggie
Julie Pickens Weaver, Glen David
Rosencranz, Joseph Stewart, Martha
Werry, Dwayne Clay Williamson,
Roush, Gertrude Johnson.
Larry Joe Winnings, Terry Lee
Winnings.

Mayor's Court

sa

Squ d h
a

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HAM SALAD •••••••••••••• ~ ••••• ::}1.19
BULK WIENERS ••••••••••••••• !~·..sl.29

HAM &amp; CHEESE LOAF•••••••• ~~· ••s1.98
MARGARINE.~~:~. 69e

GOLDEN DELICIOUS
APPLES .........~.~~-

79e

•...· ·..~ft~~
-M' OHAR:fLEY'S
I'I'UL ' ""
SHOES

11 OZ. BANQUET OR MORTON

&amp;

TV DINNERS ••••••••••••••••••••••••• 79'

DOG FOOD. •••••••••••••••••••••3For$1.•Qg

Takes Quite A Dad To Fill A Pair

LIPTON TEABAGS ••••••••••••• :::. s1.29

Florsheim
_It

of Florsheim Shoes

4112 Ounce Alpo

All Flavors

48's

17 oz. Lucks

NAVY BEANS •••••••••••••••• .- 2 c::rs 87~

AND AFTER All HE

29 oz. Del Monte

DOES'FOR THE

SLICED PEACHES•••••••••••••• ~.a.n 79~
••

FAMILY THROUGH THE
YEAR, HE DESERVES
APAIR.

12 oz. Hormel Canned

SPAM LUNCH MEAT••••••••• ~::. $1.39
IVEGAs
.

SPICIAI.

Many other styles &amp; color~ from .which to choose.

HARTLEY'S SHOES, INC.
Middle of Upper Block, Pomero·y , 0.

VIVA TOWELS •• ~················~o!~ 87~

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

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10 oz. Kraft Jet

Boxes

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NEW TEXAS

THIS WEEK'S

992 -2556
570
Mairi
Pomeroy, 0.

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Phone 742-2100

Jumbo

DAIRY VAllEY

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�13- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday , J Wle 6, 1979
·lh •.·

Lost and Found

Spehcer ' De c eased
(t..S E

LOST: MALE Irish Seller . Ap·
pro :.: . 2 yrs . o ld . A rea ot
Boshan
on Boshon Rd .
Ch ildren ' s pet . Reward .

N(l

;t? l ] l,o

ThUJSdil)l .
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.ASTRO·GRAPH

l) t.' f SOn di HI l"'.t l ,liC' · Of M .'lr y
E ll (' n
I C !ly
&lt;11'1
rn

Bermce Be de Osol

t rn.tl
dnd Drst riiJu l rvc A ccou nt o t
Blan c n e
E d W iHCI ~ .
Ad

LOST: NURSING school pin
around Crow's Restaurant or
Vaughan's Cardinal. Contact
"Ginny Hubbard at Dr . Picken' s
office or call992-3074 .

m

n rtn ts tr a trnc o f !he E s la!C'
o t Pc u rl P
Edwarn s.
Oc cca s ca
·
CA S E

NO

~

1660-6

N rne te en th Account o f lhc
H un t rn q ton Nat ion al B a nk
Of Cotunrbu s. Tr ustee of th e

LOST : 600 x 16" spore ti re and
w heel for Jeep, ·Has cover
ewer It, Reward . 949-2179.

lru s t c r ea ted

und e r

the•

June 7. 1979
Your sph ere ol •nlluence soCially w•ll .ncrease cons •derably lh1 s coming yea r This IS a
good p en od lor you 10 JOi n
gr o ups or mg&lt;H11/.fiii Ons where
you can mt:c t peop le who
share 1deas Slmtlar to yours ~
GEMIN I (May 21 ~June 20) You
work bestloda., Without having
ot he rs lookin g ove r you• shoulder Try to arrange ttung s so
you manage th em instead of
them managtng you . Fllld out .
more of what ties ahead for you
m I he year followmg you r birthday by sendmg l or yoUT copy of
Astr a -Graph Le11e r . Mai l St !or
each to Aslro·Gr aph . P 0 !3o •

Lasr W il l Clll d lcsta mc n t of ·

111oma s A May . D e( eas ed
Un less CHeption s
t i l ed thereto , sard ~ c coun t s
Wil l oc t or hC J r tnQ b e f ore
sard Cou rt on l h(' 61h. day o f

are

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT .
PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY: , OHIO

THE

MATTER

Ju~v .

OF

SETTLEMENT OF AC COUNT.5 ,
PROBATE

......
......

.... -"'
NO

-

.,
U1
.,

co nsr de r ed a nd con ti nued
t rorll day to day until
l 1nallv diS po ~ed of.
Any per so n in f er. es t ed
may f ile written excep t io ns
t o s'aid accou nt s or to
m att e r s per.tai nmg ro th e
execu t ion o l th e tru st , not
tes s Tt1an l ive days pr io r to
tt1 ~ d a·te se t tor hear in g

COUNTY ,

Acc ou n t s and vouChers of
f ollowing
n amed
t he
fidu ciar i es have been f il ed
in the Probat e Cour1. Meig s
Coun ty , Ohi o, for a ppr ov et l
and settlem ent :
CASE N O . 2238 8 Fi n al
end D istribu t ive Account of
Fred W . Crow , E xe c utor 'of
the Estate ot Alice E dn a

~I:

C)

MEI~S

COURT ,
OHIO

1979 . a l wnich l rmc
•l CCO unts wil l be

s ara

(O J 6, li e

- ~

'Your
·
'Birthday

:.gn
CAN CER tJune 21 -Jul y 221 i.JI•
clt•flll 'f'

1e.ss yOur ullJ t ~ i ' IIYt'~ o:tr e

R obe rt E . Buc k
J U DGE

llOI 10 plaCe TOO JllU t tl

~ H ; 111 h

can ce o n 's1de IS::OUtl S
·
LEO (J uly 23- AuQ . 22) S u e ~ ~!:o s
IS l1ketr whel t: yo u Hy lu d (• th t:
Qll:!ale st gooa lor me gted t€51
num b er

58.60 ; B. carmers and Cutters 42 to 511.
Ohiu Valley Uvestock Co.
Springer Cows 1by the head ) 375
Marlt;et Report
650.
,\ll prices ta ken from the auction of
to.Jay so tosl e n atte n ll'oe i 'J 10
what F'l t:&gt; or sne ma~ na~e to say
Cows-Calves (by the head ) 41().34() ,
Saturday, JW1e 2, 1979. Trends :
m mailErs alfeclmg both ot
Veal Calves 90 to 110.
Feeder
cattle
steady.
Cow•
steady
to
yuu
Baby
Culves 70 to 130.
$2lower.
Veal
calves
steady.
CAPRICORN IDee. ~2 · Jin . 19)
H~ga
Al locate your ttme produ ct• vely
Total Head: 530
today Unless you establtsh an
Top Hogs (219-230 lbs. ) 41to 43.35.
Feeder
Steers
:
(Good
and
Choice
1
agenda , you ' re l tkety 10 fr1 11er
Boars 30 to32.50.
200 to 300 lbs., 90 to 102 ; 300 to 400 lbs.,
hours away on proJec ts o! l tllle
Pigs (by the head) 12.50 to 37.511.
tmpor1ance
87.50 to 100; 400 to 500 lbs ., 85 to 98.50;
AQUARIUS (J1n . .2~Feb . 19) • 500 to 600 lbs ., 68.50 to 93.50; 600 to 700
Sows 1450 lbs. and over) 38 to 41.
Success ts w1th• n you' Tea ch
lbs., 67.50to 80; 700to800 lbs., 6Sto 78 ;
today through th e soli sell
Take time lor Jhe pleasant ri e s ,
800 and over 64.75 to TI.'J1J.
rath ~H than g mnQ m •mm ed •·
Feeder Heifers : (Good and Choice )
GOLF
ately tor the kill.
25
to
300
lbs.,
90
to
93.50;
300to400
lbs.,
SOUTHPORT,
England lAP I - Scott
PISCES (Feb . 2~M1rch 10) No85 to 91.50; 400 to 5QO lbs., 80 to 90; 500 Hoch of the United States beat Gwyn
se&gt;y outsiders should be k ept
out of you r personal affairs
to 600 lbs., 75.75 to 87; 600to 700 lbs., 70 .Jones of Wa les 5 and 4 in the British
to day . Their commenls and
to 82.50; 700 to 800 lbs., 60 to 71; 800 Ama teur Golf Championship,
influence coul d co mplicate
and over , 55 to67 .
Amer icans Michael Gove and
somethtng good you have
going with another .
Feeder Bulls: (Good and Choice ) Marty West, however, made speedy
ARIES (Mirctt 21· Aprll 11) Yo u
250 to 300 lbs., 95to 100; 300 to 400 !lis., first..-oWid exits on the 6,951-yard par·
have the ability today to sal·
B.'l .50 to 98; 400 to 500 lbs., 80 to 91; 500 72 Hillside course. Gove frittered
vage something good hom areas that appear nonprod uctive .
to 600 lbs., 72.50 to B.'l ; 600 to 700 lbs., 70 away a 4-hole lead against Terry Hig·
Put yo ur skills to use .
to 76; 700 to 600 lbs., 66 to 72.511; 800 gins and lost on the 20th hole.
TAURUS {April 20.Moy 21) In
and
over, 65.50to 70.
.
.
West Never recovered from a
matters of material significance
Bulls (1,000 !bs. and over) 58 to . disastrous start against Barry
todav , don' t be hest ltant to
stand up toJ what' s owed you .
67.50.
Downing, dropping the first four holes
Keeo a cool head however
Slaughter Cows: A: Utilities53.511to witli bogeys and lost 3 and I.
( to~.:w SPAPER EHlEA~ISE ASSN 1
? It • r , to l m diC ., p lri[.J 1"1€ f1 1 m ~,
be a· Shdde l:&gt; har per 1nan y(..11 r.s

,., ,

ilt:HIIlt'&lt;l l O Lii!~
y-Ou Will llOI
ctCt:Oil) PitSt'l a(l \l Ou h VIJ ~ tlJ T r ~ •

t..O n rp ••t(' nl PC&lt;. '&gt;O n
CAS E: NO ?1 -tl l

949·2-11&gt;6.

IN

June 7

l l.i 1

1001 11 fk

IOdi:t 'l'

In

matter :l

where ~ o u re tno sell -s er ".ng
tl' s another star-,
IIIRGO (Auv. 23·Sapt. 22) Un ·
le ss you ·re .. ery care tul to day
you rnay snatch d e feat tr a m the
1aws ol victory Don ' t roc k the
boat when lh tngs are gom~
smoo thl y
LIBRA (Se pt . 23·0cl. 23) Vo ur
tudgmer,t ls very keen tocJa y in
most areea. One exception tha i
cou ld cauae you problema has
to do wi th busi ne ss or llnance
Be prudent.
•

SCORPIO lOci. 24· No• . Z!) II
you ' re entering Into tny type ol
Important 1greement today ,
have e~erything spelled o u1 lo
the smallest detail That wa y,
no m is understand ings wi ll
arise tater .
SAOirtARIUS {No• . ~3-Doc .

YOUR FRIENDLY KROGER

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Cherries .............

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lb .

Boneless Top
Sirloin Steak ....... .

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Peaches .. .. .. ..

U.S . GOii'T GRADED CHOiCE , BEEF CHUCK$

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HOT FOODS AU IlAili I !AI·7PI

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.
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Cantaloupes .

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IN11 GIUOG NO 010• GNY lRO 11ftd

IS reau1rlld

GALLIPOLIS &amp; PO MEilO Y 5TOitES
WI IUU\1[ THI RIGHllO LIMIT QUANTiliU . NONE SOlD
fO DIAL US .

' ·l~:~~ 149

:Ill

nem!o

COI"VIUGHT t•7'1 -- THE KROGER CO . llEMS AND PIICES
GOOD SUNDAY JUNE 3 THRU SATURDA'I' JUNit, 19T' IN

Shortening

1ft

advttnl$ll(]

lllosfachon r ~tgal dl9&amp;5 of ~n .. ta c t ~.~r er H yo., are not satrshed. l&lt;•oge• w oll •&amp;placl! ~our otem ""''" tht! s.trne brant1 or a
compa&lt;&amp;ble b•and or reluncT vuur pu•chase proce

AVONOALE

INI1 GI110G NO 010•
aNY lRO
11Rd
'
.

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Mt,

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!Me$8

Everythong you b\.oy ~ ~ ll.rogtto os tJ~&gt;aran t eea

Grape Jelly

..::::~~~~~

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TOT ~L SATISFACTION GUARANTEE

CLOVER VALLEY

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rNdoly 1Yi rlab141 tor s.ale on sacfl K•oge r S TOll! . l!lC~t as
IP8(:Ificalv· 1'10ted "' tniS ad 11 ....., oo run ().J T cl an IIMlfti!IBCJ
rtlfn. Wi! •Will oliar ~ou your cnotcl! ot a comparabl!l Item.
when lvltlable, rellloctong ·the same sa11ongs or a riii"IChsck
woll enmte you to purchaSe 1\'f! &lt;Hl\oll!r'IIM!l llerrt aT the
p&lt;ICI! ..... th on :Jl diVS

Each

25' OPF LABEL

Wisk
Detergent. ......'!".7~·

Deli Sliced
Ham

1.U..Cad tall Rye

.

, ...·~··
Potalo ....cl

r0 99'c
J

Fresh Glazed Donuts ....

For

. ·.. ...................lb.SJ79
1- usser BoIogna
lrfCUJDIS: f·P'IICII CHtCkiN . 1·LI . P'OTATO SALAD
4 DINNI: ROtll
•

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$549

Family Pak Fr1ed Chicken .... :.Each
Smoked · · ..................... lb .$289
KAHN'S IUILIAIIA Oil

�14- The Daily Sentinel , M iddleport -Pomeroy. 0 .: Wt'&lt;ines'day. June 6, 1979

-

"
. _,

.

-

WANT AD
CHARGES
15 Word!l or Under
Gash
Churgl'
I day
1.00
1.25
%days
1.50
1.90
3days
1.80
2.2:1
6days ·

3.00

3.75

Each word ovt&gt;r the mlmmwn
ts·w.ords is 4 L't!flb per word per
dtly . Ad$ running other ituln l'tm·
sa•utive d.wys ~o~.i l! bl&gt; l."hHrHed Ht
the 1 day rate.
In •rtll!mory , Card of Tt\anks

and &lt;)bltuary ; 6 &lt;.'t'Jits pe r word ,
13.00 minimwn. Cash in i!d·
VllhC't' .

MGbile Honte Slt l ~ 1tllll Yard
sa le;.; are Hl't'eplt-od on l ~· with
cash with order. 25 L'l!nt ch.argl•
f Gr ads ra rrying Box Number I n
CHre uf'rhe Senti nel.

The Publisher rf;':;t&gt;rves the
right t o t!dit or re jt&gt;d
dee~ed

t~ny

obj ecliona l.

ads

The

Publis her will not be rt•s ponsiblc

for more ttwn ont' lnL'Orred m·

· sertion .

Phone 992-21 ~

NOTICE
WANT-AD
IAPVERTISING
DEADLINES
Mondav
Noon on &amp;t l'urdl:l~'
Tuesclli\'
thru Fritiuy

"P.M.
the da y before publication
Sundav
.. P.M.

Fri duy aflernOOfl
In Memory
IN MEMORY of our dear loving
husband. Rev . Floyd Wise.
whq paned away I I years
ago May 31 , He is gone bur not
forgotten .
'
Sadl)l niissed by wife Garnet ,
ch ildren and grandchildren .

GUN SHOOT. EVERY FRIDAY
7:30 PM RACINE GUN CLUB.
FACTORY CHOKE GU NS ON·
LY .
SALE. Chocolate S1.30 lb.
whi le it las ts. Semi -swee1
$1 ,40. C:arousel con fectionery,
M iddleport , OH . Open Mon.,
Wed . Fri.
1AM now giving piano lesson s
for
beginner s and
in ·
te rmediote piano students at
3.4-4 S. 3rd A\le ., M~ddleporl .
OH . Phone Shar on K. Wilson ,
992-37-42 for more informo.
l ion.
Help Wan led
IMMED IATE
OPENING .
laboratory Technici an , 3-f 1
shlh . hperienced Ml T (ASCP )
or equivalent. Excellent so lory
and fringe benefits . Shih differentoi l. Contact: Personnel
Otfice ,
Pleasant
Volley
Hospital , Volley Drive, Point
Pleasant . WV . 25550. Phone
304 -675-43.40. An Equal Opportunity Employer .
EXPERIENCED A IR co nditioning and refr igeration man .
Good pay and holidays . No
phone calls . Gallic Ref rigeration Co ., 152 3rd Ave ..
Gallipol is.
HAVE YOU BEEN oot of school
for 90 dayi or more? A re you
between the ages of 16 and
19? ARe ou Unemployed? If
you con anS wer yes to these
questions , you may be eligible
for the Gallia-Meigs C.A .A.
YCCIP forestry tech nician
train ing program .
C.A .A . has openings for eligi·
ble youth in th is natural
resource management skill
traini ng program . Applicatons
and fut:ther information ore
Ovailoble from the Gallipolis
or Pomeroy OBES offices.
C.A .A . is ofi Equal Employ·
ment Opportun ity employer . '
SITTER IN Syracuse area during summer mon ths for 8 yea r
old boy. 992-751&lt;1 after 4:30
pm .
WANTED: SOMEONE to repai r
plaster. Contact Dwig ht Goins
at Meig• local School District .
9'12-21S3.

CHIP WOOO. Poles mo• .
d1ome ter 10 ' on largest end .
$1 2 per ton. Bundled slab. $1 0
per ton . Delivered to Ohio
Polle t Co .. Rt . 1. Pomeroy.
9'12 · 268~

OLD FURNITURE . ice boxes .
bra ss beds . iron bed s, desks .
etc ., complete households .
Write M.D. M iller . Rt. 4
Pomeroy or c o 1199~ - 77tiJ_
. - ·
OLD COINS, pock,el wa tches ,
class rings . wedding bonds
diamonds . Gold or si lver . Call
, R~er w~ s ley .!..._-41 · 233 1 .

WANT TO buy · old 45 and 78
phonograph · records . Coli
991·6370 or Contact Marlin
Furn tt ure
JU NK
cars and
bodies. Al so scrap iron and
me!ols. Rider's sal vage . SR
124 . P o m~u o y 992· 5468
BUY ING

BU YING. Suop iran and clean
cost tron . 8atte nes copp er .
brass , aluminum. rad iatorS.
lead . insulated copper. et c.
Me1gs Metals , Rt. 7 and 33,
Pomeroy
WANT TO boy· small polce in
counfry or tra de nice place in
Syracuse an a cou ntry place.
9'12· 7730.

YARD SAlE 253 S. 5th Ave ..
Middleport. June 4. 5. 9:00
Children ' s
and
adult' s.
clo l hit'l g
d tshes . k nick ·
knocks. misc.
YARD SALE .,N ice clot hes, tape
player, topes , h9memode
items . what·nots . two beds ,
toys and many other items .
Wed . ThUrs .. Fri . 10 til a. 7-42
E. Ma1n St .. Pomeroy .
YARD SALE . Clothing, misc ..
Harlequin romances . Corner
Forest Run Rd . and Rt . 7. June
6 &amp; 7 . I 0~·3::_.- - -"7"-c-'C""
THREE FAMILY Yard Sole .
Tues ., Wed ., Thur s. lot of
household items , dishes and
appliances at Bill Ru ssell 's at
Five Points . 9 to • TH REE FAMILY Gorage Sole .
Ju ne b and 7. 180 S. 5th Ava ..
lots of good
Middleport
clothing and misc. Y·S.

YARD SALE . Thurs .. June 7th.
Depot St . in Rutland.
GARAGE SALE . June 7, B. 9
a .m .
Cur ta i ns .
books.
clothing , Magnus or gon,
gui tar, blender
scanner ,
misc. North Main St .. Rutland .
Ohio.
THREE FAMilY Backyard Sol e.
June -7, 8. 9. l ots of children's
clothing . toys . and other
Items . Everell Bo chne r' s.
North 3rd A11e .

,..............

VARO SALE in prog res~ . Cor ·
ner College and 3rd , Syrcuse
near PooL 9·4. Jewelry . nice
clean cloth ing . slack s and
dresses .
Pets for Sale
RISING STAR Kennels , boor ·
ding and grooming, ~ a ll
·breeds . Cheshire , 367,0292 .
HOOF HOLLOW . English and
Wes te rn .
Sadd les
and
harness. Hors.es an d ponies .
Ru th R eeve~ . 6U·b9a -3290.
Bardin g &amp; Riding lessons and
Horse tore products .
AKC
REGI STE RED
white
female m inia tur e poodle . $3S.
Also lavatory wal l hanging
sink fo r both , 510. Call
9'12· 7102.
Auto Sales
1973 INTERNATIONAL SCOUT
11 ,000 miles . fully, equipped.
air , wench , etc ., excellent
condition. 992·2121.
1976 CHE VY 4)(-4 C'ustom
Oeluxe
heavy 'h
ton .
Gunrock . FM converter .
38 ,000 miles . Toke
O'Ver
payments. Coll304·882·2886 ,
1973 CHEYELLE 350 automatic .
P.S.. P. B.. AM-FM S-trock ,
$1100 or best offer. 9A9·235o4 .
1973 OLDS CUTLASS Supreme .
Good con dition . 985·3341 .

APPLICATIONS now being oc·
cepted for insuronQ! agent at
Western-Souther n life. 218'/,
E. Main . C.ontact M ,R. LeheW .
Phone 'N'1· '1-i80

1974 PON TI AC CATALINA. 4·
door. A .C. . P.B.. P.S. 55,000
miles. Colt 992 -5859.

tact

PAUL ORR
Long Bottom or Basham
949·2193 or·985·3586

1979 PONTIAC GRAND Am II ,
P B P S. , o1r. FM AM ra d'to .
7&lt;2·2777 .
Services Olfered

··--

PAINTING AND sandblasting .
Free estiinotes. Coll949-2686.
TREE TRIMMING ond Remo'Vo l.
741-3167 or 742-2573.
LEARN GOLD correctly • this
summer .. Beginners and od Tea f or d .
John
von ced .
6U·985-396 l .
~ -

-·

Auctions

AUCTION
.

~-·--

NOW HAUltNC. limestone tn
Mtddleport ·Poemroy or"eo .
Call f ar t ree
estim ate .
367·7101.

FRIDAY EVENING, JUNE 8, 7:00 P.M.
MAIN ST.., RUTLAND, 0.
V'!e have purchased 140, 000 Century House in surance claim . Some smoked damaged.
·
All kinds of watches, jewelry , ca lculator s large and
small. ice ches ts, lo ts of camping and f is hing equip·
ment , stereos, TV sets, furniture . pots &amp; pans ,
Ironstone d ishes, umbrellas, strollers, toy s, suit
cases, l nterta i nmen t cen te r s, throw ru gs, redwood
furniture , camera s (move a nd instamatic) , hun dreds of pther items nol m enlioned . Bring your OWf."'
c hair . Watch for signs. Refreshments served .
Dea lers we lcome .
Not responsUJie for accidents.
Terms of sale cash or Check with positive 1.0 .
AUCTIONEER ~BILL. BROWN

CO AL . LIMESTONE. sand
gro ve l, colctum chlor!de, fer tilizer . dog food. and all types
of salt. EKcelsior Salt Works ,
lnc., E. Main St .. Pomeroy .
9'12· 38'1 1.

Real Estate for Sale
Mobile Homes Sale's
1965G ttnerol , 60 )( 12, 2 bdr .
l'nO Skyline. 12x65, 2 br .
1970 Syl va . 60xl :2 , 2 bdr .
1970C"ostle , 60x12 , 2 bdr
1973 Nobil ity . 12x60. 2 br .
1973 Ridgewood . 70xlo4 , 3 bdr .
1973 No~Shuo , 60x 12 . 2 bdr .
1973Go'V ernor . 60•12 , 2 br .
197-4 Mark line. 50~C11 , 2: br .
S&amp;S MOBILE HOME SALE S
PT . PLESANT . WV
075 -4424
- - --~

\970 CHAMPION 12x60. 2
bedr oom .
Appllon ces ,
building . Sifuoted on nice
ren ted lot. Phone 992·7235
oller 5 p. m.
l bx52 and 10x60 . For more in·
forma ti on call 742·2308 bet·
ween 6 and 8 p. m. or
74:2-2138 .
197414
-;-ob~~ home .
Good
condition . $7600 .
992·5858 . - --

x7 o

For Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Pork ,
Route 33. north of Pomeroy .
Lorge lot ~ . Co11992·7o479 .

3 AND o4 RM furnished ond un·
furnished
992 ·5434 .

oph .

Phone

FURNISHED APT . suitable for J
or 4 const ruction workers.
After 5pm coli 992-5434."
99:2 -3129 , or992 -5914 .

TWO 8EDROOM furn 1 s h ~ d opt.

991 · 3129 .

992 -5-434 .

or

992 5~14 . ·---~-­
TWO BEDROOM trailer . Adult s
only . 992:.·.:.
33::2:.4.:..- -.,.TWO BEDROOM mobile home.
9'12 · 25 ~B .

ONE BEDROOM opt s. Contact
Vil lage Manor , 992· 7787 .

For Sale

YARD SALE . Thursday. June
7th. I 0 till? - low prices . some
fre9 items . Some used furniture . Rain cance ls. Corner of
College Rd . ond 5th St ..
Syracuse.

1 ~7B CORDOBA. VERY good
condition. 991· 7066.

couple or lady to
do light housekeeping tor a retired
man. Live in. Con- ·

WATER AND mtsc . haultng.
Coii9'12-S8S8 .

Yard Sale

WANTED MAN or boy over 16
to cut gross . 992· 2646.

HELP WANTED

For Sale

Services Oflered

Still A
Good Selection
Of

ROSE BUSHES
and

SHRUBS All
SALE PRICED
Q"' _ Jaclf W. Carsey
~

_..

. Mgr.
Phone992 ·2181

PlANTS , CABBAGE, broccoli ,
couliflower , brussels sprouts.
heod lettuce . tomatoes . ond
Iorge selec tion of bedding an nuals . Pots of flowers and
hanging ba s ket~ . Cleland
Greenhouse .
Geraldine
Cleland . Racine.
TRUCKS , 2 ton 1'17l and 1'1,
ton 1970. Both with 1:2 ft.
bo xes . Phone 992-6206 or
9'12-6173 .
WESTERN BOOTS from Acme
and lony lama fo r work or
dress . We hove a Iorge selection of boots on hand for men
and ladies at Mou11toin
leather and GEneral Store.
104· 106 W. Union , Athens ,
OH .
Mon .- Sot.
10·5 :30 .
S92·S476 .
1977 KAWASAKI KZ 1000. EK ce llent condition . $1700 firm .
'Inquire at 402 W. Main .
Pomeroy after 5 p. m.
WIND POWER 15 KW PTO electric generator. 675·2245 .
1978 '/1 SU ZUKI DIRT bike 250
RM . like new . Cecil Brinoger.
9&lt;~· 2387 .

1977 GLASTRON 15 h . tri· haul
boat ond ti lt trailer. 55 h.p.
E\l inrude motor. comletely
equipp,d. 949·27n or co n be
seen ott he RAcine Garage .
1959 FORD pickup. Runs good.
Body o li tt le rough . Call
304-773·S7,D7 .
RUTLAND HAqDWARE 2 doors
down from Post Office.
742·2255. PAINT SALE. Martin
Sen our . Division of Sherman
and Wil liams. Pro-line interior
ond e•terior flat white, $5 .99
gal. : 2 got. con eKterior flat
white regular $22 .95, sole
riced Sl3.95. Gould pumps
oth deep and ~ hallow well,
sole priced .
1~7 8

STARCRAFT BOAT 18ft.
tra iler and access. includes
Mefcruise 228 h.p. , stainiOss
steel prop. · bu ilt-In re fresh ment center , pod~ed rear sun
and ski deck wifh lull canvas,
includes life jackets . ski
ropes . fi re ex:tinr,uisher and
more . Blue meta flake color.
9'12-3B29 .
USED 24 " cost iron cool furnoce. 992-2974 ,
INT . CUB Cadet tractor with
new 12 hp motor . 42 in .mower . 3 '1, hp rotot iller coop Both in e'xcellent co ndition . 992 -5746.
HUFFY RIDING mower. Good
condltibn.' 7 42· 252-4 .
TWO good
992· 763~ .

used

rockers .
- - - -~

POMEROY
lANDMARK
Headquarters for
Hotpoint and
Genera I Electric
Appliances

SALE PRICES

~
..
-

Jack W. Carsey
Mgr.
Phon e 992 -1181

3 1' J acres in Pomero y SEcl ud·
ed wooded area on top of hil l.
Overlooks river. Water. elec tric a va ilable. 992·3886.
MODERN THREE bedr oom
hou se .
full
bas em en t ,
fireplace . tully carpeted, cen tral air. enclosed sun porch .
lqcoted on ~·It acres on CR 28 ,
opproK . 3 miles I ro m Raci ne . It
interested contact Lorry Wolfe
949 -2836 weekend s and after
5 .evenings .
__ __ _
TWO STORY 3 bedroom house .
3 lots. Now's your chonce 1f
you need a house $12 000.
Owner willing to tol k .
~2 - 2082 or 7-42-2328 .
STORY AND •t, frame house
with 7 rOoms and both . Com pletely remodeled . Wall to
woll carpeting , forced air fur ·
noce . also wood burning
sto\le . I outbuilding , nice
garden spot. On I', acre lo1
cl ose to · Meigs Mines .
742·2218.
REAL ES,ATE : 1 acre lot in Rig gscrest Manor. between Tuppers Plain~ and Chester.
Phone 985-)q29 and 985·4129 .

ousmg
'
. Headquarters

-r;~!~.
~
!\8
I'
"'·332S

.

216 E. Second Street

PLAYGROUND
Large 9 room home with
full basement . 2 full
baths, modern kitc hen,
garage and nearly 2
acres .
.
REAL BUY - Here 's a
9 room home built fo;r a
family . 2 baths, full bae •
ment, 2 car garage,
large level lot and all c i ty utilities:
HALF WAY - to Athens
is this renovated 2·
bedroom one floor plan
home. Batf1 • .T . P. water,
carpeting, lar:ge garden
space and garage .
2 LOTS - One setup tor
a trailer and 4 bedroom
home with 2 baths . This
is a gOOd buy . Natural
. gas heat, city water
near store .
2 BEDROOMS - City
water, natural gas and
one
acre
for only
$12,000.
1.9] . ACRES
4
bedroom
remodeled
home with 2 full bafh:!t.
fuel oil furnace, T.P. tap J
and 2 trailer spaces to
rent .
BARGAIN Can be
made into a residence or
a small business . Bath,
natural gas and Ohio
Power . Will talk on this
one.
BUilDING LOTS - All
sizes, prices and loca ·
lions . Some wOOded ,
some cleared, some
trailer lots .
A REALTOR MAY BE
THE BEST MAN YOU
EVER HIRED. DIAL A·
D·E·A·L .

Housing
Headquarters

""E,

THE BOY
REPRE SENTED YOUTH
S UCC EEDING IN SPITE
OF HANDI CAP-

---

and reftnonce 30 year terms .
VA . No money down (eligtbl e
'Ve te rans) FHA · As low 01o 3
per cen t doVI·n (non-ve te rans) .
Ireland Mortgage Co .. 77 E.
StOle. Ath~tns . 614 ·592-305 1.

Ohio Valley Roofing

and

HOBSIEIIER
REALTY

Home Maintenance
rool lnq, gul!e rl and
downspouts. All types home
rnamten•nce. new Ol lld repo1ir.
s rorm doors ""d windows. All
wo rk guaranteed . 10 veillrs e x ·
All

GeorgeS. Hobstener Jr .
Real Estate Broker
P .O. Box 21
New Lima Road
Rutland, Ohio45775
PHONE 742 ·2003

!yp~s

perieocr Frf't es 1 i mo~t n . Call
Tom Ha sluns H9 -2160 ,

Attil!ns Area

NEW LISTING : 65 Ac r e
farm , 6 room house,
barn , 2400 bal es of hay
cut off· of it last year .
Lo cated outside
of
Racine, Ohio near M or
ning Star Church . Sut
ton Twp. Pri ced af
$65,000 .
NEW LISTING: 84 Acre
farm , 5 room house,
basemen t , located on
Yellow Bush Road out sie Of Reine , Ohio, Sui ·
ton Twp
Pr iced at
$40.000.00.
Call or See
HiltQn Wolfe , Associate
Phone 949·2589 .
We have several nice
homes in t he Rutland
Vicinity and a grocery
store . tall us for mare
into.
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
Phone 742-2003
Hilton wolfe, Assoc .
Phone 949·258~
GeorgeS. Hobstetter Jr.
Broker t92 -S739
OUR
PROPERTIES
HAVE BEEN SELL·
lNG . WE NEED MORE
L1 STINGS OF ALL
KIND.

1 JO

WANTED
Overweight People
Slinderella
Diet Classes
Mon . Evenings -Mason,
W . Va .. 7 : 30 St. Joseph
Catholic Church; Tues.
Morning (10 :30, and
Evenings
at
7:30·
Middleport;
Heath
United
Methodist
Church Thurs . Morning
{10:3()) and Evenings at
7:30 -Pt. Pleasant, w.
Va. Krodel Park Club
House .
For further information
call Jo Ann Newsome,
614 ·99l·3382.
6·3·1 mo .
1

.

gutters and
down spouts,
window cleaning
Gutter cleaning
Free Estimates
•

. IRElAND
MORTGAGE
CO.
71 E .

eNEW HOMES
e ROOM ADDITIONS
eROOFING
eVtNYL SIDING
eGUTTER &amp; SOFFIT

Phone 992 ·6323
Free Estimates
5-20·1 mo. ·pd .

NEWER BULDING -

40x60 cen t ral heat, large
lot 152xl40 on good
highway and close to
mines . $55,000 .
RUTLAND - About 1!3
acre, power. gas and
water, Ideal for home or
tralle'r s . S3,000 . (Just
Listed)
LIKE NEW - 2 story
brick &amp;
frame , 3
bedrooms, torrna·t di n '
i ng , L ..R . has stone
f i replace,
large rec.
room , carpeted sun
deck . $37,500.
2 LEVEL LOTS - Close
to school, 3 bedrooms,
porches,
carpeting,
paneling , manv other
features. $26,800 .
EXCELLENT ~ 2 story
trame home , 20 to 25
acres of ground , free
ga s,
house
has
5
bedrooms, forma l din ing , wood burner, own
water system. $30,500.
. RUTLAND 2 story
frame, renovated, large
lot, carp_ort, storage,
very nice at lust $18,500.
WHEN YOU HAVE TO
MAKE . A FAST SALE
CALL
CLELAND
REALTY .
Real1ors
Henry E ~ Cleland Sr.
Henry E. Cleland Jr.
992·2259
9~2-6191

. NEW LISTING Beautiful older completely
remodeled :'ome, newly carpeted with extra large
l ivin9 &amp; family room : A huge heat·olator fireplace
in center Is reallv attractive . 3 bedrooms and 1112
baths &amp; utility room . Citv water &amp; 2we11s. Singe! car
garage by house and large bank cellar . Also 5 stat I
garage with workshop tJf)stairs : Approx . l lf2 acre
land . More land available. Close to Pomeroy &amp; Mid ·
dleport. Owner may take mobi le home or o.ther as
part down payment . Asking $42,500.

.

IMMEDIATE POSSESSION Real n i ce, 3
bedroom home, with large living room . and family
room, · all nicely carpeted, large ear -in kitchen
eqtJipped with dishwasher , disposal, and st ove . 2
full bllths, 'h basement and garage, nice garden on 1
plus acres of land in Racine. Priced at $45,000 .
S25.~00

- Total privacy is the key here on 2 plus
acres, the living rm . has brick firepl ace, step·down
faffi i ly room , equipped k itchen , full bath , laundry
area, and two bedrooms complete downstairs. ttte
· unfinished ups fairs makes expansion possible.

15 ACRES -

Wllh plenty ot good pasture land and
some farming groun&lt;;t . Good barn wifh drilled well .
Garage find other buildings , farm house. Needs
some repair . Mineral r i.ghts too. GOOd loca ti on
about 5 minutes from Pom eroy off Rt . 33. Priced for
quick sale . $37,000.

SAVE ON THIS MIDDLEPORT HOUSE - Good 4
bedroom house at a low price . Plenlv of c loset space
and kitchen cabinets, tow tteat b i lls . Priced for ex ·
tra quick sate. $27,000 .

Ph. 992 ·2174

~WNER

SAYS SELL and mav linince to qualified
person this 4 bedroom fu ll y carpeted house. 'arge
living room with heat ·olator fireplace and kitchen
equipped with dishwasher , stove &amp; ref rig . Lac . on 5
acres of land . Immediate possession. Pri ce r-educed
t0$39,000.
SYRACUSE
Real ni ce 2 bedroom house . a ll
ca rpeted , ni ce cabinets, uti li t y room , nat. gas heat ,
.
21ots. Priced for $21 .500.

SO ACRES - Free gas, w ith a 3 bedrOom , 1'h story
house, full baem ent. Large beaUtiful pond stocked
with f ish, secluded area . Priced only $42,500.

·WANT TO SELt? - GIVE US A CALL
CALL JIMM' DE EM. ASSOCI ATE ••~ · 2388
OR NANC~ JASPERS . ASSOCIATE
949·2654 or 949 · 25~1

AWMINUM
&amp; VINYL SIDING

BY

J&amp;L INSULATION
Free Estimate

CALL
992-2777

IT FOI&lt;.
YOUR MEATHEAD

HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex·
CO'V Ofing , !.eptic sys tems,
dozer, backhoe . Rt. 1&lt;13.
Ph.one 1 (61&lt;1 ) 698 -7331 or
742·2593.
!N STOCK for immedia te
delivery: vario us sizes of pool
kits . Do-it- yourself or let us
install for you . D. Bumgardner
Soles. Inc . 992-5724 .
CODNER 'S CAMPERS on Rainbow Ridge with top of the
line--Borlh- Swiss Colony Joyco - Motor Homes to loppers. accessories and friendly
service. For directions call
61&lt;-843 -3011.
VERY GENTlE Quarter Horse .
Western por'o de saddl e .
Phone 69B·3290 .
LEO MOR.RIS Tru cking . W!ll do
l ime and fertilizer hauling on d
spreading . Al so limestone and
grovel hauling . 742-2-455.
SALES AND SERVICE on,
Howard RotOVotors ond V
ch isel plows. l eo Morris.
7-42-2-455.
NEIGLER Construction fo r
building houses and repair
work. Coli Guy Neigler .
~4~- 2508 .

ADO ONS and remodeling ,
gutter work . down spouts.
$Ome conc rete work , wolk s
dr l ve1111oys
( free
· and
e~timote) .
V.C. Young, Ill , ·
Racine, OH . 949-27-48 .
S&amp;G Steom Carpet Cleaning.
Free eslimote. Contact Gene
Smith or.. Mike · Grot e at
Rutland
Furn i tur e co .
742·2211 . After 5 p. m.
992·6809 or 742-2874 ,

GiveAway
FIVE KITTENS . b to 7 wee ks
Old . 4 ca lico . 1 tiger. 992·7680 .
Humane Sodety .
'
~
DACHSHUND TYPE . sma ll.
omle , red . 991-2533 or
992· 7690. Miniatu re t"o'llie , .
female', young, red ond white ,
mixed bree d ·smal l. male,
black puppy, 3 . mo. old ..
striped ton and brown f e~a l e .
' Terner ·type blond. 1 year old
with 8 puppi es , I week old.
Humane Society . q92. 7853 or

tJ

TRAILER SALES

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

I

Ye.s terda~•s

•

Jumbles: DOUB T AIDED CANYON TU SSLE
Answer : You can be t a: good tromboni st knows th1 s
about musrc- THE INS AND OUTS

Jumble Book No . 12, containing 110puulea, 11 IVIIItbttlor$1.75poatpl~
from Jumble, clott"tla newsp:ftr, Box 34, Norwood, N.J .07648. tncludt your
n1me, tddresa, zip code an mtke chech payable to Ntwaptplf'booh .

...

Residential and commercial.
Call for
estimate. 24 Hour sero
vice. Anv day, anytime .
Portable toilet rental.
Phone 915·3106
Jack Ginther 915-3106

(Answers tomorrow)

Jack's Septic .
Tanll Service
Chester, 0 .
5·6·1 mo. pd.

45 1

• 7 5 :1
¥ AQ98 7
• 662
• A5

BlOCK &amp; BRICK

WEST
•AK Q

WORK, GENERAL

• 43

EAST
• 10 9 6 6 2
• 2
• 95
• Q 10 9 8 2

•KJ10 7 3

CONTRACTOR

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-CREDIT MAN

--..

9~2 - 5547

mo

oR .. . WE LL ... Pll06ABL Y
WOI'l'T NEEP IT ·" BUT
A MM'S GOl TO KEEP
UP HIS SHF · RESPECT ..,

•

05 ·1 mo.· Pd.

-.
•

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE
Cellulosic (Wood fiber)
Thermal insulation
Save 30 pet. to SO pel.
on heating cost
Experience and
f'lly insured
Free Est.
Call 992·2772
5·17·1 mo.

QUALITY
DRAFTING
SERVICES

Roger Hysell

"
'
"

Garage

..

J'4 mile off Rt. 7 by·pass
on St . Rt. 124 toward
Rutland.

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair

•-.

OO ·tiC

Mechanical
Archetectura I
Lavouts

187 ASH ST.
MIDDLEPORT

Auctioneer , Com·
plate Service . Phone 9-49·2487
or 949-2000. RacinG, Ohio,
CrittBrodtord.
ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers , toaster s, irons , all
small appl iances. lawn moer,
next to State Highway Garage
on Route 7. 985-3825.
SEWING MACHINE Repa irs,
service, all makes , 992-2284.
The Fabri c Shop , Pomeroy.
Author ized Singer SaleS ond
Service. We sharpen Sci ssors .
EXCAVATING . dozer. loader
and backhoe work ; dump
trucks and lo-bovs f or hire.
wi ll houl fil l dirt , top ~oil.
limestone and gravel. Col! Bob
or Roger Jeffers , day phone
992 -7089 ,
ni ght
phone
9'12·3S2S or 9'12-5232.
EXCAVATING ,
dozer .
backhoe and ditcher. Charles
R. Hatf ield. Black Hoe Ser\lice ,
Rutland, Ohio. Pone 7A2·2008.
PUlliNS EXCAVATING . Com·
plete Service. Phone 992 -2478 .
AUTOMOBILE IN SURANCE
been cancelled? l ost your
operQtors
license ? Phone
992· 21&lt;3.
E-C ELECTRICAL Con tractor
ser11ing Ohio Vo lley region.
Slx dov~ o week , 2A hoU rs ser· ·
vic e. Emergen cv calls. Call
BB2·29S2 or 882·34S4 .

Vulner able : East-West
Dealer : South

North East

2t
Pass

3•
Pass

Pass
Pass

+K

STARCRAFT
FOLD down
camper. Reasonab le. Ex cellent condition. 992-6121 .

~

18 FOOT FRANKLIN tra\lel
trailer . 742 -2348 .

by THOMAS JOSEPH

I'm sicl4

of beinq a

failure.
Clovia'

.'

CARPETING
DRIVE &amp; LimE
&amp;
SAVE A LOT

hel d Lhc 10, W est could ho ld
K J 9 and the play of the 10
from EasL w oul d kill a ll end
play s.

You're
not a failure,
Sl1m!

ACROSS
39 Parcel
I Treasury ·
of land
slalwart
40 - Valley,
5 Ready
Calif.
to fight
41 Venison
10 Nimbus
allve
II GarmenL

Hat Pumpinq
The onllJ qood thinq
qas in a
about the job is I qet
qas station? all t.he qas I can use
wholesale!
Biq deal'

1% Arthurian
felllJlle
13 E xpire
14 Farrow
15 Marsh
16 Feather weight

~·

A GOOD SELECTION
OF END &amp; ROLL
BALANCES.

HAPPIER
THAN I HAVE
A R IG HT TO

SALE

BE.

$795
.
sq. yd.

"

NOT ONL) ARE YCU AND I
TOGE:THER AGAIN , b UT
KNOWING WENDY '5 IN
CHARC:E OF MY COMPANY MEANS WE
CAN BOTl-1 RELAX!

Zt

moniker
4 Ooze off

adonunent
15 Iranian's

%5 Anchored

5 Author

ancestor
18 Corrida
beast
21 Wisdom
symhol

28 Newly made
29 Vestige
30 Odd
31 He's often
robbed

22 Earthly

36 Man's

23 Patriotic

nickname ·
37 RoU of cash

Y..terdlly '• Anlwer

group
8 Early

20 Unusual
21 British gun

ascetics

9 Grow complex

22 Vetch
%4 Deep

hymn

Cadence

ZS Be lustrous

25 Note from

-

24 Rolls of Carpet In
Stock &amp; IOO's of Samples
to Choose From •.
BUY NOW &amp; SAVE

II Goat's

6 Brown kiwi
7 Jim Henson ' s

17 Oriental
19 Opposile
of WSW

WINNIE

DOWN
J " Lara's - "
2 Frenzy
3 Underworld

Drury

name

All CARPET
NOW ON
FROM

play . but South

.....

992-

992-3100 66·1 mo.
BR~DFORD .

• K 43

Here is an unusual pl ay
described by Paul Lukacs as
a one-suit squeeze .
The defense s t a rt s o ut
with three rounds of s pade s.
South ruffs the third on e and
ha s to find a way lo avoid th e

Camping Equipment .

condition.

¥ K J 10 6 5
• AQ 4

Wes t

end

kn o\\'S that West would have
thrown tht! juck-10 or nine to
avnid that' so South leads the
last trump t high trump in
dummy 1 and West must
drop the jal'k or 10 to keep
the s ev e n spol. J:'l ow South
lea ds dummy's six . East
m ust play the nine, where upon South play s his qu een
a nd West is caught in an e nd
play due to t he fa ct that
dummy 's eig ht ha s becom e
th e secOnd hi g hes t diamond .
Th e play has only worke d
bec uuse Eas t 's o n e high dia moild was the nine . If East

By Oswald Ja coby
and Alan SOntag

Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992 ·5682

de)(cellent
2121.

easy

Opening lead:

·"

1975 I I FOOT truck camper ,
self. contained, c lr condition ,

Civil

SOUTH
+ J4

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

Rt. 3
Pomeroy, Ohio

SUPER GOOSE
STOCK
TRAILER NOW A.V'AI LABLE.

loss of twu diamoml tricks.
Th e basic play i!-i to strip
the hand ~ nd come down tu a
four-c ard e nding .
West will hiJVC thr own one
diamond anti will still be
holding K .J 10 7 whil e Eas t
will be holding 9 5 a nd two
bla ck ca r·ds . No rth a nd
South each hold one trump
and thre e di am ond s. If West
holds K .J lU 9 th er e is an

1&gt;&lt;;

the boos
28 Colloidal

substance
%7 Mlnlng
goal
28 Term for
an aircraft

Call 742· 2211
TALK TO
Wendell or Herb Grate
or Gene Smith

742· 2211

1;.,.,-j,-

carrier

RUTlAND
.fURNinJRE

32 Hockey ·
BARNEY

Rutland

DADBURN
COMICAL
PILL · PEDDLER

SNUFFY'S OUR
LAST PATIENT FER
TH' DAY, DOC

name
33 Traitor
34 Street
of France
351V's
' ' meat ~

head"
37 Electrical
unit
38 Box

SHPAT .. ;'

RUTlAND FURNITURE .·
WE llFFER YOU .. .
1. Two full floors of all new
fUrniture·.
2. Nice selections of used furniture.
3. 'A large building full , or
beautiful carpet.

llAILY C'R\'I'TO«! li OTE - IIere's how l o work it:
AXYIJtR ,\AXR
•

'
I

.
"

See the qrate Family at

' ' I
I'

99-;t 7b80

l

I

70 .000 BTU floor gas furnace
to someone fo pick it up. it
was in wOrking order when
Ioken ou t. Call992·7 01 2.

s

l_. 0

'G •• E L I. 0

w

One l ett er Sim ply :-.I&lt;J nds for anothe r . In I hi s _sample A is
used f or the ttlree L 's. X f or th e tw o O 's , etc. Single letters,
ap os trophes. the length and formati on of th e words are all
hin ts . Ea r h day th e code lt•tters a1c dift'rrcnl.

PEANUTS
' '
'

IS

CRYPTOQUOTES

FARMERS HAVE

" WOI&lt;R~ ABOUT A
0~ THINGS

I SHOULD THINK
BUG5 WOI)LD BE A
REAL PROBLEM

KICK THEM?

LV
K E•A

TV D V C

T

A K

T;

OLGJVDVC

FLKKWVW
LV

QN WJ

G T

OVGCW •

LGEEVTW

J K

•

------~----

ABANDONED MALE p!Jp,
hound type . B1own with black
markthgs t= r 1endly 843· 2272
olt et .4

.•.
~

'

6 J().. NBC Nl'Wsl , l5; ABC N ews 13:
Ca r o l Burn et1 6 ; CBS News~· 10:
Over Easy 20,33 ; Father Knows
Best 17.
00 - Cro ss -W i l s 3. Newlywed
Game 6, lJ ; · Porter W ag oner 8;
News 10; Love Amer ican Style
15 ; Ge t Smart 17; D ick Cavetl
20,3)
7 JD--Dolly J. M atch Game PM 6!
Muppel Show B: Th e Judge 10:
T ha i ' s Ho ll ywoo d I J ; Wild
Kingdom 15: M y Three Sons 17 ;
M ac Nei l -Lehr er Report 20 ,33 .
8:0Q--La ugh In J; Eight is Enough
6, 13; Billy G raham C rusade
15 , 8 10; Fa ll o l Eagles 17;
Masterp iece T heatre 20 : Bruce
Ford 13.
q :oo--Movie " The Incredib le Rocky
Mou nta in Ra ce'' 3, 15; Ctlarlie' s
A ng e l s 6, 13; Movie " Pockel
M on ey "
8 , 10 :
Great
P er formances 33; Pro Soccer 17;
Upstairs, Downstairs ' 20 .
10 OQ--Vegas 6, 13; News 20 ; 10 : 3()-.
Best ol Groucho 20 .
II : 00- New s 3,6 ,8 , 10, 13 , 15 ; Di ck
Cavell 20; New Soupy Sales 17;
Lowell Tho'm as Remembers 33.
11 : 3()-----Johnn y Ca r son 3,15; Pollee
Woman 6, 13 ; Switch 8 ; ABC
News 33 ; Movi e " 0 -0ay the
Six th ol Ju ne " 10 : Movie
&lt;~ cotter "

Unusual one-suit squeeze

• J 76

Montgomer'f·Rd.
Lan!lultte, Ohio
• 11-669•414' Evenings
1 MiiCs East of Wilkesville
27320

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprise answer. as sug.gested by !he above canoon

mer:aJro( I I I )oN( l I I j

•

~

SAVE ON
Business Services

~WEEFT I

~

42 31 mo. !Pd. )

Box l

SO'THER' TO

A C:AR' E!'&gt;E-

CAUSE HE WAS SUPPOSED 1'0 00 iHI5,

] 0

MAS.T:ER~

•

Business Services

·-

MY !&gt;0&gt;!! L'M ?0 6LAD
YOU R E:MI ~D ED ME!

C ~EEP.. .5AVE'

Pomeroy

1 Acre and Up near Pomeroy .

JUST LISTEP - Nice remodeled 2 bedroom home
on blacktop road . Mostly carpeted . F .A . na t . gas
furnace . A very attractive smal l home and 1 acr e
land. Priced for quick sale for $17 ,500 . ·. ·

Alii.':O U ~D Me:, YA l-IT T LE

r lii.':U LY T110UISHTFVL,

N. L Construction

MONTGOMERY

J&amp;L

SmRh Nelsoo
MotOIS, Inc.

,.

NORTH

4-23 ·1 m o .

EXPERIENCED
Radiator r""'-.-.
Service

DON1T COME 5MARMIN'

PODIATI'itl61

DIDN ' T
OWN

() r

CAPTAIN EASY

-..
--·.-..,...
-.
-

992·6011

4 5 ti c

592·3051
e.

--·

*Free estimates

BOB'S GENERAL
CONTRACTING

State, Athens

608
MAIN
POMI=ROY . 0 . ·

iH E

•New Home
•Add ons
* Remoldings

Real Estate Loans
Purchase
and
Refinance
30 Year Terms
A - No money down
(eligible veterans)
FHA- AS low as 3%
down (non ~ veter.ans 1

-

VINYL &amp; ALUM.
SIDING

New, repair,

p(l

.

~. ....,

C. R. MASH

949·2862-949· 2160

197-lH S or 191 -US1

~,

Television
Viewing
WEDNESDAY . JUNE 6 . 1~7~

,_,_ ....

.... . . ...
.' .................

•'

J

H. L Writesel
Roofing

by Hen n Arno fd and Boo Lee

BITOR

Business Services

'

HEAl EST An l oa ns Purchase

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

unsCJamble these lour Jumctes,
one letter to each square. to lorm
four ordmar)l words

.
'--

WE HVE CONVENTIONAL FINANC·
lNG FOR MOST OF OUR HOMES FOR
AS LOW AS 5% DOWN.

LOTS -

ro

Real Estate for Sale

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

.

ff j t\11.\lt j'j}'if

~ ~ ~~L!;l o1..

~-

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

15-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomer oy 0. Wednesday June 6 1979
DICK TRACY
" '
'
•

MV
AT
WJPXV .
JKXWJKP
Yesterday ' s Cryptoquote: IF YOU 'RE NOT PART OF 11JE
SOLIJTION, YOU ' RE PART OF THE PROBLEM .-ANON
"" t( tng F•itluru S~nlllc •re . lnc; .

17 .

12 :4D--Manni x 6,13 ; Kojak 8; I :OQ-Tom or row 3; News 15.
: 30--Mo"Yie " B ri de of the Monster"
17; 1: 50- News 13; 2 : 44.,......News

THURSDAY , JUNE 7, 197~
5:35---World ' at Large 17; 5 :55Summer Semester 10.
6 :0Q--700 Club 6,B; PTL Clu b 15:
6 : 10- News
17 ;
6 : 25- For
You ... Biack Woman 111.
6 : JD--Oragnet 17; 6 : 45-M ornlng
Report J; 6 : 50--Good Morning
West Virginia 13; 6 : 55-Chuck
White Reports 10; News 13 .
7:01l-Today 3,15; Good Morning
America 6t l3; Thur sday Morning 8; Schoolles 10; Three
Stooge s 17; 7 : I s-weat her 33.
7: 3D-- Famlly Allalr 10; Lilias Yoga
&amp; You 33 .
B: QO-Capt . Kangaroo 8, 10; Sesame
St . 33 .
6 :JD--Romper Room 17; 9 :0Q--Bob
Braun 3; Phil Donahue 13,15;
. Emergency One 6 ; M !ster
Rogers 33 ; Lu cy Show 17; Love
ot Lite 10; Porky Pig &amp; Friends B.
IO : oo--Card Sharks 3,15; Edge ot
N ight 6; Magazine 8,10 ; Dating
Gam e 13; M ovie " R iot on Sunset
Strip" 17.
10 : JD--AII &gt;tar ~ecrets 3,15; $20,000
Pyramid 13; Andy Grllflth 6; Bit
With Knit 33.
10: 55-CBS News B; House Call 10;
11 : 00- H lgh
Roller s
J, 15 ;
Laverne &amp; Shirley 6, 13; Price Is
Right 8,10 ; Walking Tour of
Sesame St. 33 .
·
11 : 30- Wheel ot Fortune 3,15;
Family Feud 6, IJ; Sesame 51.
, 33 ; 11 :55-News 17.·
12 :oo-Newscenter 3; News 6,10;
Password 15; Young &amp; the
Restles s a; M idday Magazine 13;
Love American Style 17.
12 :30-Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Search for
Tomo rrow 8, 10; Not For Women
Only 15; Movie " The B'oy trom
Oklahoma" 17; E lee . Co. 33.
. Oil-Days of Our Lives 3, 15; All My
Children 6, 13; News 8; Young &amp;
t he Restless 10.
: JD--As The World Turns 8, 10;
2: 0Q--Doctors 3,15; One Life to
Live 6,13 : 2 : 25-News 17 .
2 :3D--Another World 3,1S; Guiding
Light 6.10; I Love Lucy 17.
3: oo--General Hospital 6, IJ; Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 20; Rebop 17,
3: 3D--Mash B; Joker's Wild 1.0:
Banana Splits 17; Turnabout 20;
Lowell Thom·as Remembers 33 .
4 :OQ--Mister Cartoon 3; Hollywood
...
Squares 15; Merv Griffin 6;
Razzmatazz 8; Sesame St . 20,33;
Six Million Dollar Man 10; Mike
Dougl·as 13; F llntstones 17 .
4: 3G-Lone Ranger 3; ; Hogan 's
Heroes 8; Lucy Show 15; Par.
trldge Family 17 .
S:oo-Bonanza 3; Beverly Hillbillies
8; Mister Rogers' Ne ighborhood
20,33 ; Gomer Pyle 10; Bionic
Woman 13; Star Trek 17.
S: JD--News 6; Petticoat Junction 8;
Elec . Co. 20: Mary Tyler Moore
10: Odd Couple 15; Doctor Who
33 .
6 :0Q--News 3,8, 10, 13, 15 ; ABC News
6;; Family Affa ir 17; VIlla
Alegre 20; Studio See 33.
6 : 3D--NBC News 3, 15; ABC News 13;
CBS News 8, 10; Over Easy 20,33;
Fthr Knows Best 17.7 : 0Q--Anne
Murray 's Lad les' N ight 3;
Newlywed Game 6, 13; Marty
Robbins ' Spotljght B; News 10;
Love American Style 15; Dick
Ca vett 20 , ~3 .
7: 3D--Bonkers 6; Match Game PM
B; SIOO,OOO Name T ha t Tune 10;
Nashv ille On The Road 13; Dolly
15 : My Three Sons 17: MacNei l ·
L ehrer Reporl 20.33 .
8 : QO-Hizzonner 3. 15; Mark &amp; M indy
6,13 : Billy Graha.m Crusade 8;
Nova 20,33 ; Bi lly Graham 10.
B: 3D--PIIot " Good 01' Boys" J,l5 ;
· Angie 6, 13 .
,
9 : OQ--Qulncy 3, 15 ; Barney Miller
6, 13; Movie " The Last Giraffe "
8, 10; Views of Asia 20,33.
9 : 311--'Carter Country 6, 13; I O:OQ-The Innoce nt &amp; the Damned 3, 15;
20· 20 6 , IJ ; News 20 ; Com .
manders 17 ; La La Making It In
L.A. JJ .
IO : JD--Hocklng Valley Bluegrass 20;
11 : OQ--News 3,6,6, 10, 13, 15; Dick
Cavett 20; New Soupy Sales 17;
Lowell Thomas Remembers 33.
11: J()-Johnnv Carson 3, 15; Starsky
&amp; Hut ch 6, 13; Mash B; ABC News
33 ; Movie " A Covenant with
Dea th" 10; Mo"Yie " In Search of
Gregory" 17 .
12 :05 - M cCioud
8;
· 1~ : 40 Tomorrow 3: News 15 .
1:40-Movie " Money, 'Nomen &amp;
Guns" 17 : 1: 5D--News 13; 3: 25News 17 ; J :.&lt;s-Movie "Don ' t
Trust Your Husband " 17.

''

I•

.,,

·.

,,
•

�..

'

.

-.'

•
16- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomer=o~y_:_,0.:._·_:_·_:W__:cdn=e::.
_ sda:::Y.:._•J:.:WI=:e::.6!.:,1~9.:_:7D:__ _ _ _~_ _:__+-----------------------------------:;::-;~-r;;--A--;-:;;-;:;-;;,...,

GAL - 554-13.85

PROPERT Y OWN ER

14

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Walte r- Malinowski

Earl

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Roger-

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Louie

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A.

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Gallipolis shaken by
gas spillage .problem

TWP.

N

D • 11

,,--~

SEC. 28
CHESHIRE

0

BY LARRY EWING
Produce, 110 Vine St.
Near catastrophe was avoided this
Lambert was transported by the
morning whe11 a tanker dumped Gallia Volunteer Squad to Holzer
thousands of gallons of gasoline and Medical Center, where he was treated
dle8el fuel onto Gallipolis' VIne Street for back sprains and contusions.
when it overturned, struck an auto, a
McDavid was cited on a charge of
utility pole and a building.
reckless operation. The tanker is
Called to the scene at 5:45 a.m., owned by Halzlt Trucking, Ashland,
Gallipolis City Police report that a Ky.
north bound semi-tanker operated by
With a threat of explosion im·
Donald J. McDavid, 42, Ashland, Ky. minent, city potice, firemen and of.
came around a curve on SR 7, just . ficers of the Gallia CoWity Sheriff's
north of SR 141, at an excessive rate Department and the Ohio Highway
of speed,. overturned and struck a Patrol worked throughout the mersouth bowie! auto driven by Gary A. ning to clear the scene.
Officers estimate that at least oneLambert, 23, Scottown.
The auto and tanker slid into a half of the 8,000 gallon load of volatile
uUlity pole, dislodging a transformer liquids leaked from the tanker.
which fell toward the rear of the semi
Much of the fuel entered a storm
and struck the front of J. D. North sewer on Vine St. and !raveled into

"',,·'

--

d-;/~·.: ~===~===&gt;·:- ='==±--::.=
PROPOSED

CENTERLIN E

END PROPOSED
IMPROVEMENT

BEGIN PROPOSED
IMPROVE NT

THE OHIO DEPARTMENT uf Trnnsportatiun today announced a fJreliminary
location /tJr th«' protwsetl imprm1ement of a sectiun of State Route 554 in Cheshire
TowllshiJJ, Gnl/ia Cuunty ha.• been developed. Construction is anticipated in 1981 if
fu11ds Bre •••aiiBble. The proposed im[Jrovement extends easterly from approximately
1380 fe et ea•t of Cuu nly Road 32 /.4fric• Road/to approximately 240 feet westerly of
County Road 25 /Puplar Ridgeland will involve a minor alignment and grBde change
,., raise th e road uut of hig fr:wHier which ot·curs very frequ en,tiy creJ;Jti.n g an inconveneince to the tra veling publi•·- The plan induded shows the pmposed centerline for
?"

VOL XXVIII NO. 38

7 ::
FA

LV
s~

wl
$1

Mi

w.

II

to

le .

3-4
01

'X
lir

,,

II

.,••.

INVESTIGATS WRECK- Syracuse potiee chief Milton Varian was
the investigating officer of a two-car accident Tuesday afternoon at
Syracuse. One person was hurtin the accident and both drivers were
cited.

"

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~---------------~--------,

One hurt in

! Area Deaths !

SYLVIAL.PARSONS
UeS ,
wreC
Mrs. Sylvia L. Parsons, 73, died
Tuesday afternoon at her home on
One person suffered injuries and Page St., Middleport, as the result of
the two drivers were cited to court self Inflicted wowlds.
·
following a two-car accident Tuesday · Meigs County Goronor Dr. R. R.
at 4:50p.m. on SR 124 in the village of Pickens ruled that death was caused
Syracuse;
by chest wounds inflicted by a .32
According to Chief Milton Varian caliber revolver.
·
Debra R.Spencer, 17, Rt. 3, Pomeroy,
Mrs. Parsons was the daughter of
was traveling west and as she at- the late John William and Cena E.'
tempted to turn into the driveway at Glenn. . She was also preceded in
the Syracuse Post Office a car death by two sisters and a brother.
traveling east driven by George J . • Surviving are her husband, John L.
Beaver, 20, Racine, struck the Spen- Parsons· a son Thomas Glenn
cercarbroadside.
Charlest~n, W. Va.; two brothers:
MlssSpencerwastakentoVeterans John Glenn Cluirleston and Claude
Memorial Hospital by the Syracuse Glenn, Winfield; five nieces, three
ER Squad where she was treated and nephews, four grandchildren and
released.
.
eight greatill"andchlldren.
Miss Spencer was cited to Meigs
Mrs. Parsons was a member of the
County Juvenile Court on charges of Olcott, W. Va.,ChurchofGod.
Funeral services will be held at 1
left of center and Beaver was cited to
Syracuse Mayor's Court for expired p.m. Friday at the Rawlings-Coats
operators license. Both cars were Funeral Home with the Rev. Marvin
demolished.
Marcum officiating. Burial will be in
the Hickory Grove Cemetery at
Olcott. Friends may call at the
funeral home anytime after 10 a.m.
Partly cloudy tonight with the low Thursday.
in the mid to upper 60s. Incre~ing
cloudiness Thw-sday with a good
T\GDAYSATURDAY
chance of showers · and thWiderTne Racine Baseball Association
showers. High in the mid to upper 80s. will hold its annual tag day in Racine
The chance of rain iB 20 pe•cent Saturday, June 9, from 10 a.m. ·Witil
tonight and 50 percent Thursday.
_noon.

T

day

k

Weather

Fran·k Zarb, former energy chief,
named Jlio CC workshop speaker

By EU.EEN ALT POWELL

RIO GRANDE - Frank Zarb, for· govenunent service, first as assistant and Rubber Co., Akron; James D.
. ;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::· mer cabinet level energy advisor for Secretary of Labor, and then as Johnson, Vice President and
· presidents Nixon and Ford, will be the· associate director in the Office of Management Service Director, The
Management and Budget before his Marschalk Co., New York, N. Y.; Roy
keynote speaker for the Rio Grande energy
appointments.
·
Nelson, Vice President, Lodge and
Thirty-low- defendans were fined College and Community College Free
Holder of a bachelor and masters . Shipley, Cincinnati; David Beekman,
and 15 others forfeited bonds in Meigs Enterprise Workshop.
degree
from Hofstra University, Zarb Vice President for Manufacturing,
Held JW1e 18-21, the workshop
County Court Monday.
has
received
two honorary doc- McNally Pittsburg Manufacturing
Fined by Judge Charles Knight brings high school students and torates, one from Hofstra In 1975 and Corporation, Wellston Division,
were Jeffrey L. Hamilton, Belpre, teachers from throughout Ohio to the a second by Quincy College in 1976.
Wellston ; Myles Altimus, Manager
Charles R. Galloway, Claysville, Pa., Southeastern Ohio campus for
His cWTent activities include Staff Development, American Elec·
Brylm S. Clay, Barboursville, Diana discussions by business leaders and writing, lecturing, and memberships !ric Power, Lancaster; Dave
Davidson, Syracuse, Mark E. Banks, college instructors on the merits of on the boards of the National Energy Shepard, Plant Manager, The B. F.
Thurman, Teresa K. Hoffman, the free enterprise system in Foundation, the Energy Fund, and Goodrich Co., Marietta; Gerry Gust,
.
Reedsville, William B. Maddox, Col- America.
Manager Planning and AdZarb's keynote address will be Hofstra University.
umbus, Alice L. Slone, Athens, and
In
addition
to
Zarb,
other·
business
ministration, Anchor Hocking, LaoPaul Earnest Spencer, Middleport, given following the June 18, 7 p.m. and industry leaders scheduled to ap- caster; Gary Robil)son, Manager
$15 and costs each, speeding; John dinner with industrial and business pear at lead di8cussions include : Conununity Relations Southeal!tern •
Kerwood, Mason, J34.50, overload; leaders of Southeastern Ohio.
FWiding for the program relies oo Kathryn Tefft-Keller, Civic Affairs, Ohio District, Colwnbia Gas of Ohio,
Leslie Frank, Pomeroy, $5 and costs,
_Colwnbus and Southern Ohio Electric Inc., Athens; Ted Moore, Executive
unsafe vehicle; Isaac Jackson, top. donations from industry, business Company, Colwnbus; John Ake, Assistant Ashland 011, Inc., Ashland,
pers Plains, $50 and costs, disorderly and foundatiOIU!- The assistance of District Manager Revenue Ky.; Joseph A. Otbs, President, Ohlo
conduct; James G. Mays, Chester, these groups enables free par- Requirements and Regulatory Mat- Bar Association, Wellston; Hugh A.
$10 and costs, !allure to yield; Jerald ticipation as well as free lodging and ters, and Dix 0. Dishong, Assistant Anderson, Purchasing Manager,
D. f'rye, Hartford, one day confine- meals to the students and teachers.
The program announcement came Vice President, Ohio Bell, Cleveland; Western Electric, Columbus.
ment, costs only, trespasing; and
A. G. Kraemer, Assistant Controller,
Educators scheduled to make
Phillip A. Bradbury, Middleport, from Carl Dahlberg, assistant to the The Firestone Tire and Rubber Com- presentations include: George
costs only, no operator.~ license, $150 president at Rio Grande College and pany, Akron; Ralph Negri, Colum- Markins, Instructors of Economics,
and costs, three days confinement Community College. A1l coordinator bus, former Vice President Rio Grande College; Dr. Meno Lovenof the program, Dahlberg said of this
and license suspended 30 days, DWI.
year's
presenters, "This ill the Marketlng NCR Corporation; stein, Charles G. O'Bieness,
Curtis Dalton, Rutland, Paul
William G. Stratton, Fonner Gover- Professors, of Economics, Ohio
Phillips, Harrisonville, Lorna Hall, strongest field since th~ program's in- nor of nlinois and Congressman, University; Kay Michael, Teacher,
Rutland, and John Brennan, P!. Plea· ception four years ago. Mr. Zarb's ap- Chicago, Dl.; Roger Williams, Vice Bidwell-Porter Elementary School
sant, $25 l!Jld costs ech, illegal hun- pearance is extremely timely as swn- President and Regional Operations (Ohio) and fourth place winner of Inting; Nancy Bartimus, Reedsville, _mer apJli"oaches bringing predictions Manager, Bob Evans "Fanns, Colum- temational Paper Company Foun· ··
$10 and costs, failure to yield; Darrell of long gasoline lines, electrical , bus; William Mnich, President and dation contest for the Teaching of
C. Johnson, Nitro, $32 and costs, blackouts and nuclear power demon- Owner, Radio WMNI and WRMZ, Economics; Linda Bauer, Assistant
overload; Shelby F . .Wissman, St. strations.
Zarb, now a general partner with Columbus; T. E. Bailey, Manager Professor Professional Education,
Albans, ~3 and costs, overload ; Carl
Salaried Personnel, Goodyear .Tire., Rio Grande College.
E. Murnahan, Scottown, $78,20, Lazard Feres and Co., spent 1971-77 in
overload; Jack Dawson, Little Hocking, $50.50, overload; Harold L. Patter.~on, Syracuse, $25 and costs,
overload; and Charles W. Cufman,
Rt. 1, Racine, $175 and costs,
overload.
Jack C. Braley, Pomeroy, $150 and
costs, three days confinement, license
suspended 30 days, DWI, and $50 and
costs, no operators license; Michael
L. ~plett, Rt. 2, Pomeroy, $15 and
costs, no muffler; Leonard R. Dugan,
RuUand, costs only, public intoxica·
tiori; Gary M. Johnson, Rt. I, Racine,
$150 and costs, three days confine·
ment, license suspended 30 days,
DWI; WllliamP. Breithart, Pomeroy,
$15 and coss, illegal turn; Lonnie' D.
Mayes, Long Hollow Rd., Pomeroy
and Patrick A. Owens, Pomeroy, $25
and coss each, petty larceny; Floyd
Fitchpatrick, Rt. 1, Middleport, costs
'
only, disorderly conduct.
Forfeiting bonds were Martin A.
•
Moore, Belpre, Paul Richardson,
Chesapeake, Jack L. Clemens, Malta,
Ralph F. Bell, Wellston, John M.
Sellers, Wilmington, Dora Rine,
Newark, and Galen S. Bailes, Poca,
w. va., $35.50 each, speeding; Cliff
Whittington, Jr.; Rt. 4, .Pomeroy,
$35.50, no motorcycle endorsement;
Corbet A. Cleek, Reine, $35.50, unsafe
v·•hicle; Steven Weber, Tiffin, $60.50,
speeding; Marilyn K. Gallaher,
Coolville, $35.50, illegal passing;
Luann Rothwell, Parkersburg, $35.50,
speeding; Daniel Shane, CHeshire,
$35.50, expired operators license;
Brenda S. Tatter.1on, Colwnbus,
,
$82.55, reckless operation; Phillip A.
Bvrd. Albany,$37.50speeding.

SNAPPER S'ALE
ONE WEEK ONlY

NEVER AGAIN Will BE BE ABLE TO OFFER
THIS FINE MOWER AT THIS LOW APRICE
'

30" RIDER ELECTRIC START
LIST 11008.75

SALE '888..

30" RIDER HAND START
LIST 1895.75

SALE '788..

GRAVELY. TRACTOR SALES &amp; SERVICE
204 CONDOR ST.

992·2975
Manning Roush, Owner
Open 8 a .m .·S : lO p.m. Mon. 1nru Sal.

POMEROY, 0 .

SUMMER FURNITURE SALE

Special Sale of Uoyd Fibercraft Furniture,

•

at y

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

'

Assodaled Press Writer '
WASWNGTON (AP) -Wholesale
prices rose a modest o:4 percent in
May - the smallest increase in·nine
months - with a sharp drop in beef
prices getting much of the credit, the
govermnent said today .
The May increase was a marked
turnaround from the 0.9 percent
wholesale price rise in April, together
with increases of 1percent or more in
the first three months of tbe year.
The Labor Department report
offered further proof that the nation's
economy has begun to slow, which
might help ease the high rate of
inflation so far this year.
Wholesale food prices 'fell 1.3
percent in May, the largest drop since
February 1976. Beef prices at
'irbolesale fell nearly 7 percent, the
first decline after five consecutive
month~ of _
large·increases.
· '.'R'a bound to have some effect at
the retail level," said John Early,
chief of the LabOr Department's
division of induslrlal prices: "Most
food changes pass through very rapidly.
At the same time, however, the
wbolesale prices. of consumer goods
II

Deadline extended
The deadline for entering the Big
Bend Regatta Talent Show to be held
Jlile 21 following the mini parade has
been extended to midnight, June 18.
Three winners will be selected with
prizes being $200, first place; $100,
second place and $5(), third place.
Entries sbould be sent to: Big Beng
Regatta Talent Show, P. 0. Box 2,
Pomeroy, Ohio45769.
AU ll!ltries should include name, ad·
dress, and telephone·nwnber and type
of act he or she will be doing.
APPOINTS WILES

Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrewa
has announced the appointment of Or~al (Curly) Wiles, Naylors Run
resident, to the Beech Grove
Cemetery Board of Trustees. He
replaces Aaron Kelton who resigned
due to movihg from the community.

l_)eputies probe marker theft

$9,578 suit filed

.

The Nat(onwide Mutual Insurance
Co., Colwnbus, filed suit in Meigs

County Common Pleas Court In the
amoun~ of J9,578.35 against" Otto A.
Marcinko, Rt. 1, Reedsville, for ln.debtedne,.. due the plaintiff.
A suit for authorization to sell
property has been filed by the
trustees of Carleton College against
the Attorney General of the State of
Ohio, William Brown.
According to court records, thls Is a
"friendly suit".

PRICE FIITEEN CENTS

Ohio plants
get special.
.
.I
permrssron
By 'lbeAB10clated Press
in principle with another Ohio utWty
In a move to save thousands of Ohio to permit It to use . "washed" ·hlgh·
coal miners' jobs, the Carter · sulfw- Ohio coal. This would save an
-administration has agreed to let two estimated 670 mining jobs and 1,005
elec!rlc power plants continue to rurn secondary jobs.
highsulfur coal without using scrubEPA spokesman Jim Slbblson said
bers, and a third to use "washed" the Columbus &amp;: Southern Ohio
coal.
Electric Co. would he allowed to use
Negotiations also repoctedly were washed coal.
under way with a third utility to allow
Carter added, however, ~t "the
It to continue to use Ohio coal, which administration will not proceed at this
because of jts high sulfur content Ume with action under Section 125 of
emits more pollutants when burned the Clean Air Act." That section
than allowable under federal requires uUlities to uae "domellic"
regulations.
,
coal when importing cleaner coal
But Carter also said the ad- would cause economic dlstrel8 in a
ministration would temp..-arUy allow state, even If it means moce exper11ive
other Ohio utilities to imJXJrt cleaner, antiiJOIIution equipment and higher
low-ilulfur coal from out of state.
eleclric bUls.
The action came Wednesday from
"The need foc any actioo under that
the Environmental Protection section will be evaluated at a later
Agency, which agr~d to ease federal time, when the iritpact of the action
air-pollution regulations in Ohio tn taken today can be more fully
save some 7,1100 jobs in mining and sessed," carter said.
related industries.
In Columbus, Ohio Gov. James A.
President Carter issued a statement Rhodes noted that the EPA so far has
saying he was " particularly finned up negotiations with only two
gratified" at the action, which he said utilities, but said, "This Is an
"will neither sacrifice public health excellent start, and we look forward to
nor cause higher utility bUls for Ohio's additional negotiations with other
consumers."
major Ohio coal users who are faced
He said the action would not save with the same problelllll."
every mining job that has been lost
A Rhodes aide said he understands
recently in southeastern Ohio's coal the federal agency is in the process of
fields, but "it may be possible, in the negotiating with a third major Ohlo
future, to expaod on today's action." utility on the same problem. He said
"We will continue our efforts In that he was not sure which utility Is indirection," he said.
.
volved.
The EPA prOJXlsed to raise the
emission ceilings for plants owned by
Cleveland Electric Dluminating Co. at
Avon Lake and Eastlake. The action
means the plants can continue to burn
hlgh-1ulfur Ohio coal without ad~
huge, expensive scrubbers to clean up
plant emissions.
The public has 80 days In conunent
on the EPA proposal.
President carter said the EPA
believes the higher emission ceilings
are legal. He said this action would
save 2,150 mining jobs and 3,225 other
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
posts jobs dependent on the mining
three-day strike against Ohio Bell
jobs.
Telephone Co. by 1,900 worken
President Carter also annoWJCed
has ended with Communleatl01111
Wednesday that the EPA has agreed
Workers of America members
voting to return to work on Thur·
sday.
The union said it reached
agreement with the company
during talks Wednesday on two
issues which triggered Monday 'I
strike.
KUCHING, Malaysia (AP) Atlsllue was a grievance by the
Thirty school children and a teacher
union over the hiring of let•-..
Iralnee drowned today when their bus · p&lt;irary summer help for jobs the
plunged into a: lake outside Kuching,
union clalma could become full.
rescue officials said. They said 14 time positions. The union saya the
yoWigSters were missing and that 23 nwnber of such jobl was reduced
other persons, Including the driver, ,from 30 to three.
survived.
Rescue workers said ·they had
SOU:nl
recovered the Podles of 19 girls from
CIDCAGO (AP)- What started
the lake, 11 boys and the teacher
out as a friendly agreement bet-trainee. All were frm:n the secondary
ween two elderly people to split
school near Bau Lake, site ·of thj!
any lottery winnings worked.out
disaster.
·
fine until they turned lucky and
The bus was en route from the
came up with a $300,000 winning
school to the town of Bau wben it
ticket.
plunged into the lake abou\12:50 p.m.
Now, their friendship has tW-•.
The cause of the accident was ·not
ned sour and their little
immediately known.
agreement is in the hands of
lawyetsandthe court.
It was back In 1974, Circuit
MEIGS GETS $89,11114
Court docwnents show, that
State Auditor Thomas E
Ferguson's orflce announced th~ . Maxine Hayes, now , 78, and
George K. Smith; Ill, agreed to
June,_1979, distribution of $34,269,305
b.uy lwo ' Dllnols LQ!tflry tickets
In Aid to Dependent Children to
each week and · split whatever
453,203 recipients In Ohio 's as coun·
money they won,
ties,. ln Meigs County, $39,6114 was
rece~ved for 1,239 recipients.

a.-

Strike over

30 children kill~ ·

in tragic accident .

luck

Lounges - Rockers - Tables.

EXTENDED OtiTLOOK
Saturday through Monday :
Chance ci showers oc thun- ·
derstonns Saturday and .Sunday.
Fair Monday. Hlgh in the 8Q8
Saturday, falling to the mid to upper 70s by Monday. Low In the mid
60s to low 71ls early Saturday, dropping Into the 50s by Monday.

..

BUY NOW FOR FATHER'S DAYI
ELBERFELD$ WAREHOUSE

,.

MECHANIC ST.

J

•t

'·

•

enttne

other than food rose 1percent in May.
Early blamed the continuing
increase on · rapidly rising gasoline
and fuel oil prices. Gasoline. prices
went up 5.2 percent in May, for an
increase of nearly 12 percent in the
past three month$. Fuel oil was up 5.4
percent, or more !him '18 percent since
February.
Government economists · had been
predicting the slowdown in food
prices. The rising petrolewn prices
· are blamed on a worldwide shortage
and rapidly escalating charges for
crude oil from producing nations.
Wholesale price changes are
included in the Producer Price Index,
which reports prices at three levels:
the wholesale or finished goods level,
when goods are ready for sale to the
final user; the intennedlate leV!!!,
where they have received some
processing, and the crude level, where
goods have not yet receiyed any
pr~~g .
.
.
The Producer Price Index stood at
212.4 in May, meaning that goods tlult
cost $100 at the wholesale level in the
1967 base period cost $212.40 last
month.
The index last month was 10 percent
shead of a year ago, the Labor
STATE OF omo GRAND PRIZE WINNER in the read-a-thon Is
Department said.
. Julie Houdashelt, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Don Houdashelt, SyraCUSI!.
May statistics indicate that prices
Julie is a student at Syracuse Elementary. She obtained the largest
rose 1 percent at the intermediate
number of sponsors to win the grand prize. PictW'ed, 1-r, 'tom Quilter,
level aile! 0.8 percent at the crude
director of the Mental Health Association of Ohio, sponsors of the event,
level.
Julie, and Mrs. Mickey Hoback, teacher.
The governinent has been eager to
see prices at both wholesale and retail
levels start dropping from current
rates whicb, If continued, would plit
Inflation over 10 percent for the year.
The Meigs County She~'s Depart- along SR 124.
.
Higher prices have made it more men! is investigating the theft of a 900
Tile RuUand Township Trustees are
difficult for the government "to to 1,1100 pound granite grave marker assisting in the lnvestlgailon, Sheriff
convince wage earners and from Miles Cemetery near RuUand.
James Proffitt asks that anyone who
businesses to abide by President
Sheriff's deputies were notified remembers seeing a truck parked
carter's voluntary wage and price Wednesday afternoon by Mrs. Ken· along the roadway contact his office.
guidelines.
neth Bell, New Carl.We, that she and
Deputies investigated a minor acIn fact, TreasUry Secretary Michael her husband had · been to Miles cident \Vedoesday everiing that ocBlumenthal,
the
Carter Cemetery and .discovered the large cutred on private property In Racine.
administration's chief . economic monwnent from the graves of her
Terri Zirkle, 18, Racine, WBB
spokesman, said last weekend that mother and father, Mary and Harley parked at Carpenter's Pennzoll. A1l
"the guidelines will need review and Amos,liad been stolen.
the Zitkle ear attempted to pul1 out
updating" in light of rising inflation.
It is believed the theft oec\IIT1.ld the driveway, it scraped a sign.
On Wednesday, the Federal 'within the last two days since there
The department has picked up Ed•
Reserve Board reported that w8s dirt on the base slab. Tracks In die Parlin Jewell , 22, Pomeroy and
Anlericans took on $4.1 billion more in the grass Indicated the monwnent William Richard Imboden, 21,
installment d&lt;ibt than they paid off in was wheeled a short distance and RuUand, on military pick· orders for
April.
possibly placed on a truck parked AWOL.
.
·
They were turned over to Military
Potice Wednesday noon and transported
to
Columbas .

California Red~ood. Springbase Chairs - Chaise

ELBERFELDS IN ·POMEROY

and building on the lower part of town. For a few hours
today , there was a major threat of an explosion.

THURSDAY, JUNE 7, 1979

Telescope Folding Furniture and _John Hancock

BUFFET DINNER PLANNED
A buffet dinner will be held June 9
from 5 to 8 p.m. at the Pythlan Hall:
Wilkesville. The event ill being sponsored by the Pythian Sister.~.
Price of the dinners are $2.50 for
adults and $1.25 for children.
Proceeds to be used on the payment of
the new building.
•
The menu consists of ham. chicken, ·
meat loaf, variety of ·vegetables,
salads, rolls, pie, coffee, tea and Kool
Aid.

WRECK SHAKES CITY - Gallipolis residents
were highly excited this morning when a g..ollne
tanker truck overturned, struck an auto, utility pole

Wholesale pri-c es rose 0.4 percent

County Court

Gl

Chickamauga Creek.
"We could have had. a holocaust
here," Fire Otief Jim Northup said ·
this morning, "We're lucky we
·didn't. "
.
According to the Chief, gas fumes
from the spillage spread lhroughout
the J. D. North building causing an
extremely bazardous condition.
Chief Northup said that any spark
could have Ignited the fwnes. All electricial was shut-off to the building.
"It's a miracle the transformer
didn't arc.when it fell from the JXlle ,-"
Northup said.
.
Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA) investigators were enroute
this morning from Columbus to
e:rarnlne_the damage to Chickamauga
(COQUnuedon page 10)

e.

the improvement and its relationship with existing Stare Route 554, along with the approximate property li11es and the names of the owners. The only alternative to the
woJrk as tJroposed is the 'do nothing" alternative. The Department request• that any individual or f(roup who C"t' contribute to further development- either in SUpport Or in
opposition to these alternatives, either written or verbally, - please contact the
Di•trict Deputy Director of Di•trict 10, Ohio Department of Transportation at the
followin({ address: Glenn A. Smith, District 10 Deputy Director, Ohio Department of
Trai..portatirm, Marietta, Ohio45750 - Phone 614-373-02]2.

:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:

EXTENDED FORECAST
Friday lhrough SUDday: warm
with showers possible Friday and
Saturday. Fair and cooler Sunday.
Hlgbs lD the 80o Friday and Saturday aud lD the 'ro8 Sunday, Over·
olghtlows moody lD the I!Oo.

.

FIRST FROG DERBY ENTRY- ClarerJce Fraley · .
and his wife, Jackie, Rt. 3, Albany, have entered the
first frog that will participate in the National Frog
. jump Saturday, June 23atMeigsStadium In Pomeroy.
The name of the frog is "Chainsaw Sam." Its sire was
1\\

Husky and daJ:n was Homelite. The trainer is Jackie
and Clarence will serve as jockey. Pictured, 1-r, Dave
Jenkins, co-chainnan of the frog event, Clarence,
Jackie and Dave Fox, representing the Jaycees who
are In charge of-the event.
·
'

,.

SQUAD CALLED
The Middleport Emergency Squad
· was called to the business Be!!tion at
1:37 a .m. Thursday for Roy Boggs
who was found In an unconscioua condition. He was taken to Veterans
· Memorial Hospital .
·

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