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                  <text>14-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0., Wednesday, June 13. 1979

CourtPOMEROY
ntws
Two defendants were fined and
three others forfeited bonds in the
court of Pomeroy Mayor Clarence
Andrews Tuesday night.
Fined were Ralph Rose, Racine,
$200 and costs on a charge of destruction of property, and Carl Hendricks,
Pomeroy, f30 and costs, left of center.
Forfeiting bonds were Paul Mitchell, Langsville, $50, posted on a
charge of squealing tires and $25, contempt of court; Sally Pierce,
Pomeroy, $50, insecure load, and
Glen Cole, Pomero~, $50, dri ving un·
der suspension.
MIDDLEPORT
Four defendants were fined and a
fifth forfeited a bond in the court of
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
Tuesday night.
Fined were Dennis Smith, 22, Mid·
dleport, $10 and costs, passing in a no
passing zone ; Larry Lewis, 7:1, Middleport, f25 and costs, disorderly
marmer; Billy Lewis, 18, Middleport
f25 and costs, disorderly manne~
charge, and Ronnie Eblin, 19,
Rutland, $13 and costs, speeding.
Forfeiting a $44 bond posted on a
speeding charge was Fisher L. Cristi
20, Ripley, W.Va.
'

Rubber workers
talks resume

By OWEN ULLMANN
AP Labor Writer
WASHINGTON (AP ) - The. United
Rubber Workers and B.F. Goodrich
Co. are resumirrg negotiations with
high e&lt;pectations of fashioning a pat·
tern contra ct agreement for the .tire
industry by Thursday.
While talks remain deadlocked in
the union 's five-week strike against
Uniroyal Inc., bargainers for
Goodrich and the URW reported
progress as they planned to resume
negotiations today with the help of
federa l mediators.
TI1e union and company say that by
Thursday they should either have an
agreement or likely will give up in
failure.
" Both sides are pretty knowledgeable of what the issues are,"
URW President Peter Bommarito
said Tuesday after a half-day
bar gainin g session. "I don't think that
a lot of time ought to be wasted in it
I bargaining) ."
Bommarito said he hoped he could
MEIGS COUNTY
settle
on a new pact with the nation 's
· N.ineteen defendants were fined and
fourth
tire maker within "a
13 others forfeited· bonds in Meigs day or largest
two."
Court Monday.
A new three-year agreement with
Fined by Judge Charles Knight
Goodrich would set a pattern for all
were Albert Martin. RD, Pomeroy,
$10 and costs, stop sign; Stephen B. 55,000 of the URW's members at the
.Halley, Cheshire, Bonnie Dailey, Rt. "Big Four " tire makers, which also
4. Pomeroy; David W. Marcellus, include Uniroyal, Goodyear and Firestone.
Athens, and Jimmie W. Johnson.
About 8,300 workers struck 11
Racine, $15 and costs each, speeding;
Uniroyal plants on May 9 in a dispute
Henry Beaver, Rt.l. Long Bottom, $10 over President Carter's voluntary
and costs, failure to yield; Steve
McGrath. Rutland, two charges of
theft, three days confinement and cost
only on one charge and 10 !Jays con·
finement and costs only on the second
charge; and Henry E. Bahr, Rt. 1,
Long Bottom, $10 and costs, improper
.

anti -in flation wage guidelines .
Workers at the other companies have
stayed on the job under e.densions of
their old .contracts, which expired
April 20.
Uniroyal has pledged w stay within
the 7 percent annual ceiling on wage
and fringe benefit increases proposed
by the president, but Bommarito has
rejected such a settlement.
·
However, the guideline has not been
a major issue thus far in the union's
recept talks with Goodrich because
the company has not ruled out a
settlement with the union that exceeds
the guidelines.
Bommarito contends the URW and
Uniroyal
reached
tentative
agreement in April on economic
terms that would 'liave broken the
guidelines, but that the company
reneged under heavy pressure from
the administration. The company
denies ever reaching a firm or
complete agreement with the union .
Bommarito accuses U!)iroyal of
backing out of the deal after the
administration threatened to stop
buying tires from the firm .
That prompted the URW and other
unions to step up their court challenge
of the guidelines. The union won a key
vicwry on May 31, when a federal
judge ruled that the administration,
la cks authority to deny federal
contracts to guideline violators.
The government, which is appealing
the ruling was scheduled to argue its
case today before the u s Court of
Appeals.
·
· ·

H ealth D. ep artment
li
•

requests po

ba~~i~~·E.

Bass, Syracuse, Leeman
Alltop, Jr., Parkersburg, Keith G.
Aeiker, Sr. , Pomeroy and James S.
The Meigs County Health DepartEakins, Racine, $150 and costs each, ment has received information from
three days confinement, DWI; Dimple the Ohio Department of Health in
L. Eakins, Rt. 2, Racine, $10 and regards to Polio in Amish Comcosts, no muffler ; Thom as K. Roush, munities. The number of confirmed
Rt. I, Minersville $10 and costs no cases of Ohio has now risen to 10 in the
muffler ; Paul J. Grady, Racine,' $15 United States and two in Ontario,
and costs, parkjng on highway; Canada since January I, 1979. The U.
Maxwell Stevens, Rt. I, Reedsville, S. cases occurred in Pennsylvania
$100 and costs, driving under (6), Wisconsili (2), and Iowa (2); of
suspension, $10 and costs. left of these cases, 8 are Amish, I to an· old
center;· Mark Zulinski, Athens, $100 order Mennonite sect, and the
and coSts, two days confinement remaining case was an unvaccinated
permitting unlicensed operator t~ non-Amish person who had close conoperate car; Danny Robson, tact. with an affected Amish Com·
Pomeroy, three days confinement, mwuty.
Tw~nty~e.ven Ohio counties have
costs only, driving under suspension ;
Steven Schnider, Rt. l, Reedsville, $20 been ldentiftCJI as having 00 broadly
and costs, left of center.
defined Amish conununities with a
Fo·rfeiting bonds were Gerald total. Aoush population of apHendrick,s, Minersville, Bryan Shank, proxunately 26,000. To date, no Polio
Pomeroy, Ernest Stephenson, West cases have been identified In Ohio,
Milton James Staebler Athens Gary but travel by Ohio Amish to affected
Bumg~rdner, Parkersburg, Edward areas ~d Amian from affected areas
Curtis, IV, Proctorville, Randall have VISited.
Hornsby, Coolville, and Joseph R.
Holmes, Geauge, Tuscarawas,
Roush, Letart, W. Va ., $35.50 each, Coshocton, Knox, Wayne, Stark and
speeding ; Gary K. Vance, Parker- Trumbull counties conlain about 90
sburg, $37.55, left of center; William . percentofOhlo'sA!nishpopulation.
E. Larkins, Rt. I, Portla nd , $260.50, no
The remaining counties with known
valid operator's license; Daniel E. ~~h resi.dents ar.e.: Ashtabula,
Rairden, Hartford, $3~2 .55 , DWI ; Licking, Vmton, Uruon, Medina,
Timothy E . Davidson , Pom eroy , Guernsey, Gallia, Logan, Ashland,
$300.51), DWI; Violet Satterfield, 'Rt. 1, Perry, Jackson, Hardin, Richland,
Reedsville , $21.35. illeeal boat motor.
Authorized CATALOG
SALES MERCHANT

ISears I
Phone 992-2178
234 E. Main St.

Pomeroy, 0.
OWNED AND OPERATED BY
Jack &amp; Judy Williams

Opeh : Mon . thru Wed. 9-5,'
Thur. 9·12. Fri . 9·S, Sat. 9·2
Satisfaction Guaranteed
or Your Money Back

SPECIAL
10 lb. Bag

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

CITY LIMITS
DRIVE THRu
748 N. Second St.
Middleport, 0 .

Middleport police
arrest 37 in May
Thirty -!Ieven arrests were made by
the Middleport Police Department
during the month of May, according
to the monthly report of Police Chief
J. J. Creme8118.
Of the total arrests, eight were
charged with driving while in·
toxicated while seven were on disor·
derly manner charges. There were
three charged with assured clear
distance; two each for speeding;
failing to yield the right of way, im·
proper backing, and conswning
liquor in a motor vehicle on the street.
There was one arrest each for
blocking an alley and gas pwnp-,
passing over a double yellow line,
failure to stop after an accident, running a stop sign, unsafe vehicle,
assault and theft. Two cases were
dismissed.
The department collected $696.50 in
parking meter collections during the
month and the police cruiser was
driven 4,167 miles during the month.

Fobrics
..

'

0

vaccmes

Morgan, Adams, Defiance, Morrow,
Washington and Madison.
The Center for Disease Control has
recominended the following "before
traveling to affected . Amish areas,
children should complete their
routine polio vaccionation. Routine
polio immunization for adults in the
United States is not currently recommended, and adult travelers to af.
fected Amish areas who anticipate
short stays and little close personal
contact with the Amish are probably
at minimal Increased risk. However,
uninununized adults who anticipate
prolonged stays or close contact
should Insure that they are protected.
This can be accomplished by receipt
of at least two doses of inactivated
polio virus (IPV) a month apart
before travel or; if IPV is not readily
available, atleast two doses of TOPV,
~ weeks apart. If there is time for
only one dose of vaccine before
travel, a single dose of TOPV should
be given."
Ohio Department. of Health has
requested that Health Departments
vaccinate unimmunized adults who
anticipate prolonged stays or close
contact in Affected areas to
qualifying persons over 18 who
request it. Independent medical
judgment will be made In all instances.
The Meigs County Health Department does have Trivalent Oral Polio
vaccine · available for unimmunlzed
adults who qualify and will be
traveling to affected areas for a
prolonged visit or those who will be
having close personal contact. If you
have a question in regards to needing
the vaccine please call the Meigs
County Health Department or your
private physician.

SQUADS CAlLEn
The Middleport Emergency Squad
8118wered a call to 112 Maple st. at
12:33 p.ni. Tuesday for Wanda Adams
who was taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital. At 7:57p.m. the squad went
to 430 Headley st. for Jeff Acree who
was ill. He was treated on the scene.
The Pomeroy Emergency Squad
answered a call to Sycamore st. in
Middleport at 2:06 p.m. Tuesday for
Clara Hall who had a back problem.
She was taken to Holzer Medical Cen-·
ter.
VETERANS MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL
Adrnitted-Oell LaBonte, Long Bottom; Wanda Adams, Middleport;
Myrth Wolford, Vinton ; Clarence McDaniel, Rutland ; Debra Butcher,
McArthur.
Discharged-Joseph Petti, Mark
Michael, Bessie Stitt.

FOR 4-H PROJECTS
60" SUEDE
45" CORDUROY
60" BOUCLE
56" WOOLS
· 56" WOOL BLENDS
60" GAUSE (Fall Shades)
Singer Memory Machine
Model2001

.sso OFF

4-H'ers RECEIVE 10% OFF

FABRIC SHOP

115 w. 2nd Ave. Pomeroy, 0.

EXTENDED0Ul1l&gt;OK
Friday through Sunday: Chance of
showen~ or thunderstorms dally.
Highs In the 80s and lows in the 60s.

Holzer Medical Center
Dlleharges June lZ
Pamela Allie, Hilda Berringer,
Lewis Bodlmer, Cabel Bolt, Terri
Canterbury, Dwight Carper, Lisa
Clonch, Wllliam Fielder, Charles
Gentry, Llllian · Gladman, Gwen
Green, Mrs. David Haley and ·
daughter, Allen King, E;thel Knotts,
. Amber Lawson, Dianna Leith, Glildys
Massie, Carolyn McFann, Shirley
Mfnton, Thomas . Montgomery,
Raymond Mount, Arnie Murray,
Babes 0 'Dell, Anna Oiler, Callie
Roberts, Buff Scott, ·sr., Edith Swan·
,son, James Tyree, MaryVavora.
·
Births, Juue 1.2
Mr. and Mrs. Patil Rapp, daughter,
Pomeroy. ·

Bill pending
Continued from Page I
poor. ·
Currently, Ohioans 65 and over and
the disabled, with incomes of $7,420or
less. receive state-paid, 25 percent
discounts on winter heating bills.
These would continue, although the
income. Iunit would be hiked w $10,000
a year under one of several program
changes the bill contains. Certain
type's of welfare families also would
qualify for benefits for t.he first time.
Rep. Dennis E. Eckart, D-Euclid , is
the sponsor of the measure, which
now goes to the Senate .
Sen. Thomas E. Carney, _, D·
Youngstown , who offered the measure
requiring prior notice of nuclear
shipm ents, didn't mention the
accident at the Three· Mile Island
plant in Pennsylvania last March.
But the incident obviously helped
inspire the bill, which w~s introduced
only last month, along with others still
pending to deal with nuclear wastes
and related problems.
"Safety is the important factor
here," Carney said, adding he thinks
his bill enable officials to deal more
quickly with problems that could
occur.
.
Under
h1s
bill,
would-be
transporters of . nuclear . matertals
would have w not1fy the 0~10 Disaster
Sef\'lces Agency of the!f plans 48
hours m advance and m wr1hng .
The agency then would advise the
directors of highway safety and
environmental protection , the
chairman of the public .utilities
commission, and sheriffs of all
counties through which the materials
would pass.
In other action, the Senate approved
31-2 a bill making changes in
contributory negligence, or so-&lt;!alled
''tort" laws. '
It went to the House, along with a
bill by Sen. Anthony 0 . Calabrese, !).
Cleveland, requiring Ohio's insurance
companies to adopt more easily
understood language for customers'
policies within 'three years.
With some lawmakers apparently
smarting from criticism they
received late last year when they
voted themselves a $5,00!J.a-year pay
raise, the Senate received a bill
offering an alternative approach.
Sen . M. Morris Jackson, DCieveland, would have the salaries of
legislators, state officials and judges
set by an impartial commission.
The coml}.ljssion apparently would
resemble a similar group the
legislature created several years for
the same purpose.
Its recommendations largely were
ignored by the legislature. Jackson's
new bill provides that lawmakers
could reject any comm1ss1on
recommendations they didn't like.

BOOKMOBILE THURSDAY
Thursday's schedule for the Meigs
Bookmobile includes :
Salisbury; 2:15-2:45 p.m.; Letart,
3:15-3:45; Racine, Home National
Bank, 4-5; Racine, Wagner's Hard·
ware, ~ ; Syracuse, swimming pool,
6:1~:15.

SUIT FILED
In Meigs County Common Pleas&gt;
Court Catherine Althouse and Elmer
Althouse, Okeechobee, Fla., flied suit
for restitution against Ida Martin,
Langsville.
The suit is for instatiments due on
property located in Scipio Township.

•
EBLIN REUNION SUNDAY
The annual Eblin Family Reunion
will be held Sunday at the shelter
house at Royal Oak Park. Those attending are to take covered dishes
and their own table service. Dinner
will be served at 1 p.m.
4-H TO HOLD SALE
The Irish Leprechauns 4-H Club will
hold a rummage sale at the Minnie
Riggs residence from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Friday. The sale location is on State
Route 124, two miles west of
Langsville. The sale is· cancelled iii
case of rain.

Quilt entries taken now
A quilt show will again be a feature
of the annual Big Bend Regatta
Weekend.
Categories for the show, sporuiored
by Trinity Church, Pomeroy, will Include : new applique, old applique,
new pieced, old pieced and
miscellaneous machine quilted.
First place · winners in each
category will receive a $10 gift certifiate from a local store and a ribbon.
Second and third place winners in
each category will rceive ribbons.
Quilts will be judged by number ar.1
will be on exhibit Friday and Saturday, June 22 and 23, at Trinity
Church.
·
Those wishing to take part are to
complete the application below:

Money distribUtion to
schools constitutional

QUILT'SHOW
CATEGORIES:
(I) New Applique
(2) Old Applique
(3) New Pieced
(4) Old Pieced
(5) Mil!cellaneous-Machine Qullted
Entry fee: One Dollar ($1)
Category: ----~-Name - - - - - ---:-Address - - - -- - - ' - Pbone _ _ __ _~--'

Return this form to: Mrs. Dale Smith,
Contest Chairman, 100 . Sprifig
Avenue, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
·

Board elects new officers
The Board of Directors of the
Gallia...Jackson-Meigs Community
Mental Health Center, Inc., today announced the election of officers for the
comjng year. They are:
John Longley, chairperson; Leah
Ord, vice-chairperson and Darnll
Detty, secretary-treasurer.
In addition, the board announced
three new appointed members: John
L. Weber, Editor of the Wellston Sentry ; Dr. Edward Shridan, Opthalmologist at Holzer Medical
Center Clinic and Emil Janko, Fiscal
Administrator, Holzer Medical
Center. The bylaws of the center require a board of no more than 15

members with five mempers
representing each county elected for
two year tenns.
:'
Members of the board are: GalJ.Ill
County- Herman KQby, Ph.D., Johjl
Longley, Edward Sheridan, M.D._Bil8
Emil Janko; Jackson County - Dill'~
rell Detty, Larry Kibler, Churlen~
Howard, Roxie UncJerwood and Jofu;t
L. Weber; Meigs County - ~·
William Middleswarth, Maxine
Wingett,JuneLeeandLeahOrd. :,
The officers for last year whose
terms have expired were Hennap
Koby, chairperson; Leah Ord, vicl!·
chairperson and Roxie Underwood,
secretary-treasurer.
·

Mrs. Huston will display

her wares Heritage Sunday
Mrs. Paul Huston, Syracuse, whose
talents in the field of .crafts are well
known and whose work Is sold by
shops in many parts of the state, will
be one of several people featured at
the Meigs County Museum on
Heritage Sunday, June 24 from 12 to 5.
Mrs. Huston will have on display
many of ber crafts which will include
plaster work, bottle dolls, bam-siding
plaques, dtied arrangements, domed.
glass art, raffia dolls and wreathes,

and silk flower arrangements. She
will also be giving a demonstration
during the afternoon of raffia doll
making.
.
Bill Mayer, a well known local artist, will also be on hand with a dlslay
of his wood carvings and will
emonstrate to would-be carvers just
how it is done.
: ;
The museum will be open 12 noon to
5 p.m. and will offer .a variety: of
entertainment for the entire family. ·

HILLHOSPITALPATIENT
W,elsh heritage to be
Allen C. Hill, Sr., formerly of Beech.
st., Pomeroy, is a patient at
• d
S
d
·, ·
Hamilton -Hughes Hospital,
reVIVe OD atur ay .
Hamilton, Ohio 45013. Hill •recently
.,
underwent open heart surgery. Cards
Welsh heritage will be reviv.~
may be sent to Room 307.
through song saturday, June 16, ·at
the Welsh Gymanta Ganu to be oold•
lETART MEN CONFINED TO at the Bob Ev8118 Fattn oo State'
HOSPITAUi
Route 35, just east of Rio Grande. ',
The Gymanta Ganu iB a sacred
Walter McDade, Troy, Ohio and music festival, held annually in Welab•
Harold Grimm, Columbus, bOth for· communities. .()riginally, the GymanJ
merly of Letart Fails are confined to fa Ganu was held to bring the com:
hospitals.
munity together to share music and.
Mr. McDade Is a surgical heart· singing. Hymns are sung in part, wt~
patient at Kettering Medical Center, everyone In attendance participating, /
3535 Southern Blvd., Dayton 45729. Most of the singing Ia done In EnglJSh,'.
His room nuinber his 245 bed two.
but there are a few choruses in Welsh.:,
Mr. Grimm is at Riverside
The Saturday evenJns program:;
Methodist Hospital room 5013, Colum- begins at 7, p.m. and is sponsored by•
bus, Ohio.
the Cardiff Club, a Welsh women•sl
group dedicated to preserving Welsh~
tradition and culture.
·:
Although similar Gymanfa Ganus '
DISSOWTION ~XED
· have been held for Ye&amp;rl, and con-•
Ray c. Frank, Racine, and Denise tinue In various locatior-~. this iB thei
Rachelle Frank, Racine, filed for seconil to be beld at the Bob Evansl
dissolution
of
mar.riage . Farmmsoutheastohio. ,
·' •

ELBERFELDS
Father'S Day Sale

MEN'S SHIRTS
'

All of our men's shirts on sale -.

Knits ·

Westerns · Dress ·Shirts ond Sport Shirts.

There's lin excellent selection and you 'll real ·
ly save during this Special Sa te. AH sizes.

",.
'
I

MAKE REPAIRS - Pomeroy village workers were extremely busy
Wednesday as they patched the many large potholes in the surface of the
parking lot. The workers also retrieved this parking meter that vandals
. had thrown onto the river bank.

MEN'S DRESS SLACKS
Men's Dress Stacks - Ideal Father's Day
Gift. Sizes 29 to 48 waist - solid colors and

patterns. The Savings are Great .

FATHER'S DAY IS NEXT SUNDAY

ELBERFLEDS IN POMEROY

•

e
VOL. XXVIII NO. 43

at

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

•

UNTIL 5 P.M.

SATURDAY-JUNE 16th "
FOR

"SUMMER
OUTING"
OF .
•
LARGE INDUSTRIAL CONCERN
OPEN TO PUBLIC AnER 5 PM

CAMDEN PARK

US 60 WEST-HUNTINGTON

. MONDAY EXCEPT

urban school districts which claimed
to be "starved for funds " offer
progranns and services in excess of
state minimum standards.
"The fact that a better financing
system could be devised which would
be more efficient or more thorough is
not material," the court said.
The lawsuit was Initiated Aprtl 5,
1976. Hamilton County Corrunon Pleas
Judge Paul E. Riley ruled eight months later that the funding formula
enacted by the Legislature in 1975 was
unconstitutional on two grounds.
The ruling that the formula fails to
provide a thorough and efficient
school system was overturned by the
appeals court in September. But the .
court upheld Riley 's ruling that the
formula was unconstitutional because
it discriminates against pupils in urban districts .

............enttne
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

THURSDAY, JUNE 14, 1979

By FRANK CORMIER
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP ) + Presi&lt;!ent
Carter headed for Vienna t..:ay,
saying he is approaching his first
summit with Soviet President Leonid
I. Brezhnev "with hope but without
false expectations."
In a statement prepared for
delivery on his departure, the
president said his main goal at the
summit and the "unchanging duty of
every president" is to avoid nuclear
war while maintaining U.S. security.
Carter left with m~est goals for

the summit, where the two leaders
will sign a treaty to limit U.S. and
Soviet strategic nuclear weapons.
He said the treaty "gives us enhanced national security and increased
hope for a peacefUl future ."
While conceding that no summit
can end the "sharp competition" bel·
ween the two superpowers, Carter
said he will try to "broaden our communications with the Soviet leadership" as well as make clear U.S.
views "so that there can be no
dangerous misunderstandings as we
pursue our separate courses."

Butcher guilty

Prosecutor
.
gets 90 days
CLEVELAND (AP ) - An
assistant Cuyahoga County
prosecutor was sentenced to 90
days in jail for his behavior n a
trial that ended Wednesday with
the dismissal of murder charges
against three Chicago men . .
Cuyahoga Common Plas Judge
James A. McGettrick dismissed
murder indictments against
three security guards accused in
the Jan. 30, 1978, fatal shooting of
Thomas Moss Jr. , a striking employee of the Barbar Metal
Fabricating Co.
Shortly after announcing his
decision, McGettrick found John
H. Carlin, an assistant county
prosecutor, in contempt of court
for his behavior during the month-tong trial. Carlin .was lined
$1,000 and sentenced to 90 says in
jail, but was quickly released on
$100 personal bond pending appeal.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Representatives have approved
and sent to the Senate legislation
giving senior citizens free ad·
mission to the Ohio State F~ir in
August.
The measure, passed 79-11 and
sent to the Senate on Wednsday is
sponsored by Rep. Rocco J .
Colonna; D-Brook Park. ·
It would apply to anyone' 65
years of age or older.

Mter deliberating two and one-haU
hours a jury found Harry Roger Butcher gulity of receiveilig, retaining o:
disposing of certain property, being a
deputy sheriff badge, the property of
ailother, David Ohlinger.
. But~her was remanded to the
custody of the sheriff until sentence is
imposed on July 2.
Prosecutor Frederick W. Crow, lll,
represnted the State of Ohio and Jim
0 'Brien represented Butcher.
Serving on the jury were Shirley
Johnson, foreman, Bernice Winebrenner, Clarence Lambert, George
White, Thomas Stobart, Barbara
Lester, Pam Holcomb, Dorothy Johnson, Etta Will, Paul Harris, Vonda
Cottrell, Mildred Shuler and Delton
Fowler, alterante.

High pressure system
pushes warm air away
By The Associated Press
A high pressure system over the
Atlantic Coast was pushing warm air
froin the Central Plains inw Ohio
wday. That system is expected to
prevent any significant cloud
development for the next couple of
dsys.
High temperatures are expected to
be in the 80s today and in the 80s and
90s on Friday. Overnight lows will be
in the 50s and 60s.
Precipitation does not appear likely
until the weekend. A cold front in the
Northern Plains is pusing southward.
It could reach Ohio with showers and
thuhderswnns by late Saturday.

"I go to Vienna with the confidence
which can only come from representing the greatest, the strongest and
the most free society in the world, "
Carter declared.
Although surprises cannot be ruled
out, the principal purpose of the summit remains the signing of SALT 11.
But aides say Carter will be"looking
beyond . Vienna with the hope of
promoting a continuing U.S.-Soviet
djalogue aimed at smoothing ''the
peaks and valleys" in relations between the superpowers.
In addition, the U.S. president can
be expected to attempt a firsthand appraisal of Konstantin Chernenko, the
Politburo official some see as having
tbe inside track: to eventually succeed
the ailing Brezhnev.
U.S. officials sprang something of a
surprise earlier this week by
revealing they expect Chernenko to
participate in the summit, the first
between u:s. and Soviet leaders In 4t
years.
Mrs . Carter and daughter Amy are
making the trip and will have their
own schedule, including a Danube
River cruise.
At a news conference Wednesday,
Secretary of State Cyrus R. Vance,
who will accompany ~rter,
dcelared, "We must move away from
tbe peaks and valleys, the ups and
downs we have seen, to a more stable
relationship."
Vance alao told reporters Carter
will stress to Brezhnev that "detente
is a two-way street and that we must
bqth recognize it as such. "
The · strategic arms limitation
treaty, which will face an uncertain
fate when Carter seeks its ratification
by the Senate, is the focal point of the
three-day summit thai. begins Saturday. The pact would impose constraints until 1985 on U.S. and Soviet
long-range bombers and in·
tercontlnental ballistic missiles.
Carter scheduled an address to a
joint session of Congress Monday at 9
p.m. EDT, one hour after he returns
from the summit.
It appears unlikely Carter and
Brezhnev will produce any signed
documents other than those relating
to SALT II.
However, the two leaders could
reach a nwnber of informal un·
derstandings to improve relations.
"Hopefully, out of this can come a
better understanding of the views a11d
(Continued on page 12)

PAVING UNDERWAY - Patching and paving of
streets in the village of Syracuse got underway Wed·
nesday. All streets in the village that have potholes will

CINCINNATI (AP) - Mem·
bers of the black community
have put City Council on notice
that they will not accept a decisin
to give police increased
firepower ~nc; improved , ammunition.
Some 700 persons inarc)led to
the council meeting Wednsday
and demanded a reversal of last
week's decision to provide pollee
with .357-atliber Magnum handguns and "controlled expansion" bullets.
Council members several
times In the last month have had
to i~cxe large, angry crowds expressing their views on police. •
cominunity relations.

be paved or patched. York Constructln is doing the
work. George Holman, treasurer of the village, Is
supervising /be job.

Sheriff investigates cycle
accident, battery thefts
Meigs County Sheriff James J.
Proffitt reports that his department
investigated an accident Wednesday
at 5:30p.m. in the village of Racine.
According to the report David L.
Diles, 17, Rt. 2, Racine, was operating
a mororcycle when he struck the side
of a vechicle operated by Earlene
Stobart, Racine.
The gas feed apparently stuck on
the cycle and caused the cycle to leap
out into the side of the auto. No
citations were issued. Diles compatined of an injury to his leg but was
not treated.
A motorcycle reported 'stolen Sunday was recovered Tuesday in Car·
penter near the Louise Bradford
residence. The motQrcycle was owned
by Chris Pullins, Carpenter. The incident Is under investigation.
The sheriff's department is in-

Blacks march

PARK RESERVED

within a school district to determine
how much money they are willing to
devote to education, local control
allows for local participation in the
decision-making process that determines how these local tax dollars will
be spent. Each school district can
develop programs to meet perceived
local needs."
.
Concerning the "thorough and efficient" argument raised by the
board, the court said :
"Although plaintiffs attempt to
equate school closings with
'educational deprivation,' the uncontroverted fact is that school
districts • calendar adjustments
(school closings) have never resulted
in any student receiving less than the
full182 days of instruction per year as
required (by state law )."
The justices also noted that several

Carter heads for Vienna
with hope for SALT II

Seniors free
SALE PRICES

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The for- system violates both the Equal
mula under which the sta te Protection and the Benefit Clause ...
distributes money to public school of the Ohio Constitution."
districts has been declared conThe case was filed by the Cincinnati
stitutional by the Ohio Supreme Board of Education.
Court:
.
.
Justice William Brown wrote for
The state's top court ruled 6-1 Wed- the majority, saying: "We find ... that
nesday that the embattled formula the General Assembly has not so
known as the equal yield formula - abused its broad discretion in enacdoes not violate the equal protection ting the present system of financing
provision of the Ohio Constitution. public education as to render the
The deeisio~ reverses a ruling by the s tatut es in question un 1st District State Court of Appeals.
constitutional." ,
The Supreme Court also said the
Concerning the claim that the equal
funding system, while not necessarily y ield formula violates the conthe best one available, does not stitution's equal protection provision,
violate the "thorough and efficient" the justices said :.
provision of the Constitution . In that
"We conclude that local control
ruling, the high court was agreeing provides a rational basis supporting
with the lower appellate court.
the disparity in per pupil exJustice Ralph S. Locher dissented, penditures in Ohio's school districts.
saying, "In my view, the present
"In addition to allowing people

vestigating the t~Wft of batteries
taken from school bWteS parked at !be
bus garage.at Rutland. The theft oc-

Measured-rate .Phone
service under fire
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
initial salvos have been fired in a
renewed fight in the Legislature over
measured-rate telephone service.
Under the so-called measured
rates, customers are provided service
at a base rate and permitted to make
a fiat number of local calls each month + 30 in the case of residences and
oo for businesses.
.,
Alter the maximum is reached, the
customer pays 9 cents for each ad·
ditional call made during the same
monthly billlng period.
Sen. Harry Meshel , !).Youngstown,
received the first hearing Wednesday
night in the Senate Energy and Public
Utilities Conunittee on a revamped
measilred-rate bill.
Unlike last year when he wanted to
prohibit measured rates entirely,
Meshel now seeks only to outlaw their
being made mandatory for state and
local governments and noniJrofit
organizations such as hospitals and
libraries.
His bill has one other Important
provision. It prohibits the Public
Utilities Commission from letting
telephone companies collect business

Strikes Tree
DEDICATED - The Shriners of Ohio are
dedicated people. Each year they set aside a day to
solicit for donations to help crippled and burned
children. On saturday, June 16, Shriner5 throughout
the Buckeye State will distribute tabloid ne~papers In
a giant, one-day effort to once again tell the public
about .the Shriners Hospitals for Crippled and Burned
Children, to tell how to get childreh admitted to these
hospitals if the need occurs, and to collect donations for

hospital funds . The Twin City Shrine Club of Meigs
County will be taking part in the annual drive. They
will be on the streets of Pomeroy, Middleport and
Racine seeking donations. Pictured left to right are
Lorenzo Davis, Sherman Ford, Paul Eich, Sheriff
James J. Proffitt, Walter Grueser and Eldon Kraeuter.
Be sure and look. for the man with the fe1; on Saturday, .'
June 16.

curred sometime between Friday,
June 8 and Tuesday, June 12. Batteriesweretakenfromfivebuses.

Pomeroy Police Investigated an accident on Union Ave. at 11 :54 p.m.
Wednesday. Pollee said an eastbound
car driven by· Kenneth McFann, 46,
Albany, went to the left and struck a
tree . McFann escaped Injury and
there were medium damages to his
vehicle . . He was cited on a reckless
~peration charge.

"

rates in excess of the actual cost of
providing business service.
Ohio Bell Telephone Co., which opposes the Meshel legislation
generally, is expected to bitterly oppose the actual-&lt;!ost provision later
when Its representatives testify.
In the case of government unlta,
Meshel estimated that for state
governmeht in the Columbua area
al'one, telephone costs have increased
about $250,000 a year since meuured
rates were made mandatory for all
non-residential users.
The senator said the estimate
doesn't include Ohio State University,
which may · have experienced a
similar ilicrease.
He said that since the costs of
governments are paid by the taxpayers, the sharp increases amount
to what he called "side door ·
taxation ."
The senator said he has received
mail from Ohio's senior citlzena who
have been told by some phone companies that if his bill · prohibiting
measured rates were to pass, their
rates would be doubled.
Mesht:J said be dldn 't know how the
companies could make such a claim,
since the seniors • bills were not cut In
half when mandatory measured rates
were fully Implemented in July 1978,
(Continued on page 12) .
BASEBAU. MEETING
The Syracuae-Mlnersville Baseball
Association will hold a ~ling
tonight at 7:00 at the SyraCUR
Muni~lpal Suldlng. All Interested
parents, coaches, and fal)S are urged
to attend.
•\

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�'
2-The Daily Sentinei, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, June 14,1979

B~od;:., i~s!:::::~:d

Prrss
.
Today is Thursdav..June 14th. the
165th day of 1979. There are 200 d~)' S
lefl in the }'ear. This is Flag Oar.
Today's highligh! in his!ory :
. On this date in 1777, the Continenl&lt;JI
Cpngress in Philadelphia made the
Stars a nd Stripes the nationa l flag .
On this date :
'
In 1775, the u.s. Army was founded
as the Continental Co ngress in
Philadelphia
authoriz ed
the
recruitin g of ten companies of
riOemen to serve one year .
In 1846, a group of setllers at
Sonoma, Ca lif. , proclatmed the free
Republic of California.
, In 1922, President Warren. Harding
became the first president to make a
radio speec.h , broadcasting over
Baltimore's WEAR at the dedication
of a memor ial to Francis Scott Key at
Fort Mcllenry .
In 1940, the Germans occupied Paris
in World War II.
In 1941 , President Franklin
Roosevelt ordered the freezing of
C:erman and Italian asse ls in the
United States.
' In 1944, American for ces fighting in
the Pacific began the invasion of
Saip;m Island in the Marianas.
: Ten yea r s ago : The Sovie ts
Qroposed to the Chin ese that
negotiations begin in Moscow within
the next few months to settle !heir
lj)rder disputes.

Berry Is Wo rId
-

ll

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Ohio Perspective

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.
By O_JANE UUSTO~
AssocJatL•I Press Wnter
· C'OLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) _ When a
woman who never finished high school
but has devoted her life to makmg ·a
comfortable home for her family loses
her husband , she may become a

'

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1I ...

" Call me if. I mean. "'!hen y ou ge t to the
office! ..

~~=

June 12, 1979
DearSir: .
I read in your newspaper that Dale
M. Dutton Is planning to jockey the
frog known as "Reemo". I want to
protest this andl am writing a
s\erarate letter to William Young the
Grand Croaker of the Ohio Society for
the Promotion of Bullfrogs; Inc. to
!jus effect. The reuon for this Is that
· last yea~. I attended a bullfight in
?&amp;drld, Spain. Tbe professional
bulJitghter on that occasion was El
Gazebo. 1!:1 Gazebo on that day was
haVing a rugged time handling the
bull. All of a sudden, El Gazebo
flashed his cape in a manner and the
bull completely disappeared from the
arena. The next time, the bull was

By FRANJ&lt; CORMIE
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP)
As
President Carter flies to Vienna
today, he is accompanied by his usual
aerial e ntourage - but it may be
different next week when he heads fo r
Tokyo.
The grounding of DC-10 jumbo jets
has had an effect, even at the White
House.
It seems the grounding order has
deprived the airline industry of so
many seats, at a peak travel season,
that it's difficult to come by large jets
available for charter.
Tr&lt;&gt;ditiona lly, the White House
Transportation · Office charters two
Boeing 707 airliners to haul Carter's
press entourage overseas, dividing
the cost among the news organ-

Business Mirror
1L
king towardS a 'W tergat_e
1 00
a
1
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I year' for Social Secun"ty
1
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PHILADELPHIA (AP) - "Rocky"
was a sleeper when it came upon the
fihn scene two years ago, but
Sylvester Stallone's sequel, " Rocky
ll" will open with all the trappings
Hollywood money can buy .
Film publicist Mike Weiss says up
to $100,000 has been spent on
promotion here - a parade, banners,
signs, lavish post-premiere party for the fihn that opens tonight. The
rest of tbe country can see it Friday.

By JOHN CUNNIFF
dreamed.
AP Business Analyst
Someday, though, prices won't rise
NEW YORK (AP) - We've been so swiftly. How -and when it comesplaying the "if only" game for years through hard collapse or soft landing,
now, counting the dollars we would by year's end or sometime later - is
have made if only the stock market debatable. Bui when it does, the game
had risen a bit, if only inflation had becomes the reality.
departed and left us in peace.
What happens to the stock market
For years it was just a frivolous still won 'I be fully predictable, but the
pastime . We knew inflation would not impact on personal pay checks ,
cjisappear, and we knew that during savings, insurance and planning is
such economic chaos the stock market · fairly well known. A missing inwasn 't likely to rise very far. But we gredient is the degree of impact.
As inflation slows, the paycheck is
likely to catch up with prices . If it
practically disappears, which would
be around 2 percent or so, then
paychecks in all probability will begin
to grow in real terms.
That would be a huge change from
recen.t experience. In the 12 months
through March, for eKample, straighttime wages rose 7.8 percent, but
consumer prices jumped 10.2 percent,
Hugh Custer, Norma Amsbary to resuting in loss of buying power.
Jay Hall Jr., parcels, Salisbury.
Reflecting an understanding of how
Verlin Howery, Frances Howery to inflitiOn corrodes liquid assets ,
Rodney Howery, Marilyn Howery, would-be savers have been investing
lots, Colwnbia, Carpenter.
in more inflation-resistant items, inJames W. Carnahan, Nancy E . Car- eluding land, houses, diamonds, art,
nahan to ,, James A. Garnahan, 4.21 andgold bars.
acres, Sutton.
Why not? Does it pay to leave
Virginia F. Hawk, dec. to Lester M. money in the .bank at 5 percent to 6
Hawk, Roger Lee Hawk, Candace percent interest and pay out more
Carleton, Nancy B. Dorsey, cert. of than 13 percent to inOation?-or is it
trans., Orange.
better to invest in a house that appreGeorge E. Greenlee, Francy! Lynn ciated by at least the inflation rate'
Greenlee to Bertha Baylor, parcel,
Those questions have led to hard
Middleport.
decisions by millions. They chose the
F. Berl Boggs, Ida May Boggs to latter, and the u.s. savings rate
Jeffrey L; Householder, Edna May dropped to less than 5 percent of
Householder, .0312acre, Orange.
tllkehome pay, around the lowest rate
Ralph E . Knight, by atty in fact, f
1
Charles H. Knight, atty in fact, Carol or any major industria nation.
H. Knight, by atty in fact, Charles H.
The return on saVings has now been
Knight, atty in fact to Richard A. Ker- raised. U.S. Savings Bonds pay 6.5
percent rather than 6. Passbook
ns, Sandra K. Kerns, 2.45 acres, savings at thrift institutions have been
Chester.
.
.
raised to 5.5 percent , and at
Elma Holter, Edith H. Sisson, commercial banks to 5.25 percent.
DaVId P. Holter, Delores Hollo:[, .. A the rate of inflation falls nearer to
Harol~ H. Holter, Orva Jean .Holter, these numbers, the percentage of
Beatnce Stelzer, Jack Stelzer, Hazel . takehome pay that goes into savings is
Y!ynkoopto Edward SISSon, Ann M. · almost certain to rise.
Swan, 5.09 acres, Sutton.
So long as double-{figit inflation
Irene LaMont, Robert F · LaMont to persists, long-term life insw-ance is a
Paul A. Honaker, Jr., Debra questionable,
or
at
least
Honaker,lot,_Middlert.
.
· controversial, buy . At 10 percent, for
James Bailey,
E . !l"iley to e.&lt;ample, the face value of a policy is
James Salley, Celia E. Bailey, par- cut in half within a years.
As stability returns, however, it
eel, Chester.
James D. Hebner, Susan J. Hebner becomes more possible to calculate
fo~e~ly Susan J. ~onzelman to~- the risk-reward ratio. True, so long as
thia Blrt, Ronald Birt, parcels, Sclplo. any inflation e:&lt;ists, face values
Edward C. Evans, Edna L. Evans · decline. But sometimes premiums do
to Charles G. Sh&lt;!ets Jr.~ Dorothy to - as in the past two years.
·Shee~, parcels, Salisbury.
Not just in insurance but in all areas
Gail Bradford, M~~ Bradford to of finance, stability makes plannning
Kenneth Cozart, Patncla Cozart, lots, easier, and that could mean a
Lebanon.
.
significant change in American plans
Nonna Goodwm to The Elberfeld regarding jobs, pensions, big-ticket
Realty Co., parcel, Pomeroy.
purchases, debt, savings.

I
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seen was in Hamburg, Gennany.
Through some special magic, El
Gazebo made the bull disappear.
The other day I saw Mr. Dutton in
Middleport. I was also amazed and
shocked to have seen El Gazebo in
Middleport. If Mr. Dutton is El
Gazebo, then, of colirse, I would have
no objection. But if he Is, I am certain
that be would perfonn any magic to
insure his win. As stated before, I do
not wish to wind up in Columbus,
Ohio, It would be unfair for a
professional such as El Gazebo to win
in this manner. Hence, my protest.
Very truly yurs,
.
Kyle Allen
206 Mulberry Ave. , Pomeroy, 0 .

Names. • •
in the news
SEA'ITLE ( AP) - That's how it is
in the moon-walking business - one
day you're a hero and the next you're
telling a bunch of teen-agers that even
your wife doesn't give you any
respect.
·
It's been seven years since Apollo 16
astronaut Charles Duke spent a
record 71 how-s and 14 minutes on the
moon. And he's found fame not only
fleeting but dwindling.
Duke, an Air Force reservist
helping out with recruitment, told a
group of high school students Tuesday
that five years after his space
adventure " only my wife and monona
remembered."
A year after that all he could count
oo was momma, he said, and last year
"I kept pinning notes up around the
house" to jog the memories of his wife
and sons.

On hand willbe stars Talla Shire,
Burt Young, Bw-gess Meredith and
Carl Weathers. But the big draw, of
course, will be Stallone, who flexed his
muscles Wednesday for some 5,000
cheering admirers as he accepted an
honor proclamation from Mayor
Frank Rizzo. . _.....
And in case you haven't heard,
Rocky loses his rematch title fight in
tile $8 m!llion sequel, but he does wip a
wife and have a child. All in a film's
work.
NEW YORI&lt; ( AP) - The late
Robert F . Kennedy first made his
reputation as a hard-hitting
prosecutor and now his son , Robert F .
Kennedy Jr., is taking up the family
mantle in the criminal law business.
The 24-year-old Virginia University
law student started Tuesday as one of
45 interns working in the Manhattan
district attor ney's office doing
research and monitoring trials.
·
Like everyone else, the son of the
slain New York senator is getting $30
a week for lunch and transportation,
and he's getting no special treatment
frorr District Attorney Robert
·
Morgenthau .
" We have a lot of good law students
working here and he is just one of
them." Morgenthau said.

Underground home
CENTERVIIJ...E, Ohio (AP) - Bill
Sherbauer liked the idea of saving
energy that underground houses
provide but he didn't "want to live In a

cave."
The Dayton printer spent five years
planning his underground home
before he w~nt to work on it, doing
about 65 percent of the construction
himself.
The difference in his house is he
built it into the side of a hill, leaving
two walls exposed. From the front it
looks like a normal house, but attually
the only pl\l't above ground is a threecar garage.
"I've been interested in underground houses foc a long time, but •
1 didn't just want a basement with a
front .:JI'I it. I didn't want to live in a
cavf " said Sherbauer, who plans a
party for 400 guests when he moves in
with his wife and three children.
The design provides natural light

.

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.

.. .
..
displaced homemaker.
Divorce or the death of a spouse
each year thrusts hundreds of ~omen
mto the working world wlth no
preparatwn.
The ' Ohw Department of _Educatton s Dlvts lon of Vocatwnal

Jimmy's White House

Letters of opinion are welcomed. They should be l!ss
than 300 words tong (or subject to reduction by the editor I
and must be signed with the signee's address. Names may
be withheld upon publication. However •. on request,
names will be disclosed. Letters should be m good taste,
addressing issues, not personalities .

from windows on the exposed walls,
and the skylight protruding through
three feet of grassy earth gives the
interior an open feeling .
·
" It's a real fooler aU 'the way
through," said Sherbauer.
"People want homes to look like
homes," he !iBid, adding that a real
estate agent said he could get $200,000
for it.
He calculates that the savings in
heating and cooling costs in the house
will offset his mortgage payments
over the life of the loan.
" Last week, when it was 86 outside,
it was 67 inside. In the winter Iinne, it
should never get very low.
"There's a big saving, plus it can
become a bombshelter or tornado.
shelter.
" There are liD many advantages
over a conventional house and that's
what makes it worthwhile,"
Sherbauer said.

n•ilv -~"~tinel, Middleport-Pomeroy·, 0 ., Thursday, June 14, 1979

Meigs summer results

Displaced homemakers

- --- -

r----------------:---------1
l

3-The

Meigs
Property
-Transfers

&lt;;ella

izations represented.
But when the search began for jets
for the Far East trip, none could be
found. They 're being used in a frantic
effort to make up for th~ loss of thousands of DC-10 seats during the
s wruner tourist season.
Compounding the problem for the
Transportation Office is the fact that
White House-chartered jets aren 't out
of commercial service only for the
duration of each flight. They remain
idle on the ground as long as Carter is
on the ground - about a week in the
case of his visit to Japan.
Although two 707s, or a single jumbo
jet, may be chartered as the
departure
date
nears,
the
Transportation Office is taking no
chances. It has been talking to tbe
Pentagon about the use of military
aircraft if necessary.
Fortunately, a Pan American 747
jumbo jet was chartered for the
Vienna trip before the DC-10 problem
ar_ose.
.
Jody Powell, the president's press
secretary, has made antiCongress
statements - some would call them
speeches - so often at recent press
briefings that he was asked if the
&lt;&gt;dministration is "running against
Congress."
Powell denied it, but the .following
exchange took place dw-ing which the
normally glib Carter. spokesman dug
himself a hole, then dug it deeper:
Q. How should the government go ·
about 'holding these elected officials
accountable? Obviously voting
against them would be one way, but do
you have something else in mind?
A. The first thing I suppose is
necessary is for the public to know ...
what has been done to them and, to the
extent possible, we will try to point
that out. I would suggest ... that if I
were an American taxpayer ....
. Q. You mean you are not?
(Laughter)
Q. You had betier explain that.
Q. This is the news!
A. Well, if I had to vote for a
member of Congress, which I don't
since I live in . the District (of
Columbia) ....
Q. You don't vote for (Walter )
Fauntroy, a Democrat ?
A. Well, he is not a voting member.
.. . In any case, let's just strike all of
that . ...

THE DAILY SENTINEL
I USPS Jts-910)

DEVOfED TO THE
INTERFSrOF

ROBERT HOEFLICH

•

By Martha ADgle 'and Robert Wallen
WASHINGTON (NEA) - After all
the anguish of recent history, it is inexpressibly painful to see yet another
American president conswned by a
credibility gap. But that Is what is
happeningtoJinunyCarter.
Nobody believes the preSident who
campaigned on a promise that "I will
never lie to you."
It is not that the public thinks
Carter is deliberately deceiving it as
Lyndon B. Johnson and Richard M.
Nixon did in tbe dark days of Vietnam
and Watergate. Carter still gets high
marks for personal honesty and integr!ty.
But people no longer believe what
the president tells them about much ·
of anything, and especially about the •
nation's nagging nemeses of innation
and energy because they do not think
that Carte~ himself has any real
grasp of these problems. So they tune
him out.
It is not Carter's character that is in
question but his competence; not his
veracity, but his vision. And that is a
distinction that seems to have
escaped the president and his closest
aides all of whom are baffled and
some;.hat bitter about the obvious
lack of confidence in Carter that
shows up in the polls and in the growing challenger to his presidency from
within his own political party.

'(o' G'~t!~T

\',ef&gt;Jrlf\ ...

. vm

~~M!1U lfllNK l\{A.T IV!U.. t:e ~t\
~l(oW~ $N:J
TIRI lJ~ '· ·

•

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- ·- - -

Casey Kasem ·
WMPO
SATURDAYS
'8 til Noon

WINNERS OF HIKE-BIKE -First place winners
of the hike-bike, who received bicycles, donated by
Powell's Super Valu, for collecting the most money

.·;··-TOOKIE'S
-----------.
FASHIONS ANNOUNCE
SUMMER
A
.L
E
SAVE

50%

City Editor

Publllbed daUy tuept Satun:llly by Tbe Oblo

VaHey Pu.bllabi.Dg Company· Mlllttmedla,lac.,
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IIIZ~II'!.

Secoad dau polllll! paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.
Natioa.l ad 1ertllilll npreKa&amp;I.Uve, Laudoa
Auoclatel, 3ltJ Euclid Ave., Clenlud, Obto
f.Uli.

SUbledpttoa l'llt.H: Dellvered by can"'er
wbtre 1v.Uable • teats per week. By Molar
Ruute wlten: carrier 1ervkt .otavallable, Ooe
mouth, $UD. By maO Ia Oble ud W. Va., ODe
Year, $!7.51i Sb: moatlu, tlUO; 1'bree lllOG·
tht, ... 51; Ellewbere $ft.IU year; Sb: moatlu
$17.1111; 11lret mondul, St.M. SUblertpUoa price
Include~ Suoday Tlmes· Sentioel.

·

"The level ot cynicism out there is
just incredible!" p1oaned one of the
White House Georgians last week.
"No matter what we say, or how
carefully we back it up, people simply
don'tbelieveus."
There Is a very hwnan tendency,
within the president's inner circle, to
look for scapegoats elsewhere - to
point tbe finger at a cowardly Congress held captive by powerful
special interests, at rapacious oil
companies, at a selfish populace that
stubbornly refuses to recognize the
need for sacrifices in its standard of
liVing.
And indeed, there are good grounda
for crtticwng all of the above. But att.empts to spread the blame around
wil! ~ot get the president off the hook
politically .If anything, It exacerbates
Carter's troubles when be is percelved as beillfl 11 the mercy of events
rather than the muter of tbem.
-People will for:give 1 president for
making the "wrt\118" choice in a diff\cult. situation as l q as he acts
deciSIVely and conunwtleates an aura
of confidencebout hla ci'Kllell course.
Carter, however, does neither. He
acts to decontrol crude oil prices, then
says he wouldn't veto a bWextending
controls. He says all Americans must
make sacrifices to figh~ inflation and
c"!b ener~ conswnption, then prorruses to shield the poor, the fanners
and anyone else who screams loudly
enough.
Cabinet officials contradict
presidential slatements and go undisciplined; Democrats ·in Congress
denounce Carter's policies and go unpunished. The president says he will
fight to the bitter end for what he
bel!eves Is right, but he Is Wling
weapons loaded with blanks -and his
critics know.it.
As a consequence, Carter comes .
across as a president lacking not just
tbe courage of his own convictions but
indeed any strong convictions.
Fonner white House speechwriter
James Fallows, in his tw"1l8f! series
in the Atlantic Monthly, put .his fillfler
on the problem with remarkable
precision when be labeled the Carter
regime "the passionless presidency."
Carter's aic!es, while clearly s!Wlg
by the Fallows articles and similar
criticism, continue to insist that the
preside PI is "right" on the substance
of his pol!cies and Is being maligned
on matter,! of mere style.
• What they fail to realize is that in
any leadenhip position, "style" Is at
least ail Important as "substance." In
the presidency, in fact, it may
ultimately be more significant.

No batting slats were availabe for
the hosts.
SR
728 55-27
RB
065 25- 18

MEIGS .MASON COUNTY
PONY LEAGUE

ON: DRESSES, SLACKS,
BLOUSES, SHIRTS
AND MORE
NOW THRU JUNE 17

HOURS: CLOSED MONDAYS AT NOON
TUES.-SAT. 9:30.5:00

were Brenda Bentz and Steve Musser. Brenda is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jolm Bentz, Minersville, and
Steve is the son of Mr. and Mrs. John Musser,
Pomeroy. Other winners were Becky Ebershach,daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W!llard Ebersbach, Chester,
and Terry Hysell, son of Mr. and Mrs. Norman Hysell,
Pomeroy, second place winners; Ruth Fry, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs, James Fry, Pomeroy, and Charles
Davis, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Davis, Middleport,
third place. The second and third place winners
received trophies. Pictured, 1-r, are Rhea Roush,
treasurer, Charles Davis, Terry Hysell, Steve Musser,
Brenda Bentz, Becky Ebersbach, Ruth Fry and Hank
Cleland, chairman of the event. Collections thus far
total over $4,000 with move donations to be submitted.

2

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\'I love you dad..:~ and \'Here comes
the bride..:~ with a phone ,from
the GTE Phone Mart.

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minority interest in a small cable
televisin operation from 1968 to 1972
but at that tinne CATV was too capltai
intensive for our company. We now
believe that CATV Is a most alt1'8ctive industry. These cable
operations and their personnel wil be
complementary additions to our company."
Multimedia, Inc. pubLishes twelve
dally newspapers and twenty-three
non-&amp;ily newspapers and operates
five VHF television stations and thirteen radio stations in thirteen states,
predomill81ltly in the southweet.

NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST
W L Pet.
. 32 22 .593
Montreal
St . Louis
32 23 .582
Philadelphia
32 28 .533
Pittsburgh
28 27 .509
Chicago
26 29 .473
New York
23 33 .411
WEST
11ouston
37 27 .578

2

1
I
I
1

2

FATHERS DAY SPECIALS! ! !

Multimedia to buy
Kansas system
GREENVILLE, S. C. - Wilson C.
Wearn, president and cl1ief executive
officer of Multimedia, Inc., announced that an agreement has been
reached to purchase the CATV divisin
of Kansas State Network, Inc.,
headquartered in Wichita, Kansas.
Cable systems involved in the transaction cover sixteen cities in Kansas
and Oklahoma, seJ.&amp;ving approximately 17,000 subscribers · in
those areas. The systems presently
have over four hundred miles of plant
passing 36,000 homes. Several f the
communities are suburbs of
Oklahoma City and are presently
being developed. Penetration levels
are anticipated to increase
dramatically in the near future .
Weam stated that pay T.V. had been
introduced in nearly all of the
markets. It Is anticipated that the pay
T.V. portio of the system will also expand rapidly in the near future.
The purchase is subject to approval
by tbe Federal Communications Commission and certain government
authorities in the communities served, the purchase price is approximately eleven milllon dollars.
Weam Said, "Multimedia had a

L.

W.

Middleport
Pomeroy Royals
Racine
Rutland
Easter n
Mason .
Pomeroy A's
Syracuse

In another T·Ball game, Sugar Run
Ashland handed host Reuter-Brogan
Schedule
Insurance a 27·18 loss. Jolm Elliott
·Thursday, June 14
had two home runs for the winners,
Rutland at Racine
and Stacey Shank had three triples.
Friday, June 15
Hank Cleland and Jason Wright each Eastern at Middleport
had a homer. TeJTy Reuter tripled, ·Pomeroy A's at Mason
Syracuse at Pomeroy Roy aid
and Cleland had a double.

20·5~&amp;

MEIGS-MASON AREA

A question of competence

~NI\TUH ...lf\~ (ot-\M\I'io'e 1.\bUl-P. l-\~ 1i ~ ~T
t'P\V '#J N-11·.'';1~

'

Education has designed a special
program to aid women with no
apparent marketable skills, no jobs
and no prospects of employment.
The vocational home economics
section of the division has been
overseeing pilot projects for such
homemakers in the Cincinnati School
District, Ohio Hi-Point Joint
Vocational School in Bellefontaine,
Wayn~~unty Joint Vocational School
in Smithville, Upper Valley Joint'
Vocational School in Piqua, TriCounty Joint Vocational ·School in
Nelsonville, and Great Oaks Joint
Vocational School in the Cincinnati
area.
Each woman in the program is
counseled individually in efforts to
determine the individual's personal
goals and develop independence.
The education department says the
following areas are emphasized in the
program :
--&lt;levelopment of a positive self
concept.
--&lt;levelopment of sw-vival skills for
maintaining a home, refining
consumer purchasing techniques,
maintaining
reliable
car
transportation, seeking legal help,
analyzing personal money problems
and practicing skills as a single
parent.
--,assessment of work interests,
skills, needs and values.
-exploration of career oppor!unities.
.
--&lt;levelopment of job seeking skills.
--&lt;lrganization for the dual role-of
homemaker and wage earner.
-how to obtain training and
employment.
" A tremendous need. exists for such
program · in Ohio as the numf&gt;er of
homemakers searching for help
cannot be determined," Sonia Price,
assistant director iri the Division of
V~~ational Education, said ..
. M~ch mterest has been stunulated
m thts area, and proposals for
additional programs are being
accepted by the vocational home
economics section," she said.

In T-Ball action, the Syracuse
Bears came from behind to hand host
Racine · A a 20-17 sethack. Chris
Stewart socked two .doubles and a
single for the Bears while Andy Baer
had follr singles.
Doug Lavendar had a triple and
single for the winners, and Scott Lisle
smashed three singles . Kevin
Burgess had two s ingles, and Chris
Ebersbach and Jamie Anderson each
had one single.
No hitting slats were available for
the Racine team.

1112
.48.4 6

~

''
•

l

)lf)N'l,ll

34 .~9 7
29 35 .453 8
22 38 .367 13

Wednesdav Games

5-Pc. Combination

Montreal-4, Atlanta 1
Houston 4, Philadelphia 3

Clncinnatl4, New York 1
San Diego 3, Pittsbu•gh 2
Los Angeles 9, St . Louis B

WRENCH SET

"

Ch icago 3, San Francisco 2, 10 innings
Thursday's Games

Atlanta (Solomon 3-2) at Montreal
,
·
(Lee6·3) , (n)
Pittsburgh (Rooker 2·1) at San
Diego (Jones 5-4) , (n)
Chicago CLamp 2·4) at Son Fran·
cisco 1Blue 7·6), In)
&lt;Only games scheduled)
FridaV'S Games
Houston at Montreal. (n)
Atlanta at New York, (n)

With June be&gt;ng the month of graduations. Father's Day
and brides, you may be looking for some new gift ideas.
If so, the GTE Phone Mart is a great place
to look. Because not only is a phone an original
gift idea. but we have a phone to go with any
and every individual conversation style. .
You even get a free gift box to take it
home in.
And since we're your phOne comp.:~ny.
we can make all the necessary seNice
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So gtve someone dear to you a gift
that expresses his or her uniqueness w ith a
phone from the GTE Phone Mart

Si;Vi'Si

While Supplies Last

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Cincinnati at Philadelphia , (n)
Chicago at San Diego, Cn)
Pittsburgh at Los Angeles (n)
Sf . Louis at San Francisco, (n)

..

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Five popularlv·sized wrenchas fo r homeowner needs. Sizes:

Baseball AI A Glance
By The Associated Press

3/8,7116, 112, 911&amp;, and 518 inches in boxed and open ends.

AMER !CAN LEAGUE
EAST
W L Pet.
GB
Baltimore
39 22 .639
Boston
37 22 .627 1
New York
33 ·28 .541 6
Milwaukee
33 29 .532 6'1'
Detroit
29 26 .527 7
Cleveland
29 30 . ~92 9
Toronto
16 45 .286 22
Put a new Phone
WEST
California
37 26 .587
In your life.
Minnesota
31 27 .534 3'12
Texas
32 28 .533 3112
Kansas City
33 29 .532 3'12
Chic ago
29 31 .483 6'1•
Seattle
25 38 .397 12
~ Oakland
19 43 .306 17'12
~~
Wednesday 's Games
~~ Toronto9·2,California8·10
~ ~ _
Cieveland6.0akland4
~ ~ ~ ~~~~~ Detroil7, Seallle3
~~ ~~
Baltimore 8, Chicagd 7, 10 innings$
~- -~ ~ ~
Minnesota B. New York 7
~
~
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Boston 11 , Kansas City 3

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16 West washington, Athens
'·

..

�5- Tbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, June 14, 1979

Sports briefs.

®

B"SFBA! I SCOREBOARD
International Lea'gue
By The Association Press

Wednesday •s Results
Rochester 6. T i dewat er~
Richmond 9. Toleco 2
Syracuse 4·1. Charleston 2·7
Columbus 9, Pawtucket 8

Thursday 's Games
Rochester at Toledo
Charleston at Syracuse
Columbus at Pawtucket

(Only

~ames

scheculecJ

Friday's Games

Columbus at TidewaTer
Syracuse·at Richmond ·

Rochester"at Toledo
Charleston at Pawtucket
UITLE U:AGBUE - Frqnt, I to r, Greg Hoff,
Robbie DeLong, Bill Proffitt, Ryan Oliver, Fred
Evans, Shannon Riffle, Joe Hoff; back, Jay Bostic,

Father's Day
June 17th
GIFT SUGGESTIONS
•HUSH PUPPIES

Tony Frederick, Scott Wickline, Richard Hill, Sean
Riffle, Wendell Clark, Matthew Jewell and Frank Porter, coach. Managers are Ray Oliver and Jack Bostick .

SHOES FOR DRESS,
CASUAL, GOLF

•ANGEL TREADS
And Other Slippers

•SANDALS
•JOGGERS
•ROBLEE SHOES,
BOOlS, DRESS
·~

- REBELS PEE WEE TEAM - Front I to r Brent
Wilson,. Chris Diddle, Jon Tuttle, Mark Porte; Brad
Maynard, Charlie Wood, Steve Grady, Danny Gheen

SPfCIAL
ONf GROUP

HUSH PUPPIES
20% OFF

.a nd Kenny Lane; back, Donny Riffle Brian Diehl
David McMillan, Kenny Turley, Shawr{ Diddle ~
Jewell and Craig Brown. Chuck Williams is coa~h and
Benny Wilson, assistant coach.

TODAY'S
MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
By The Associatec Press
NATIONAL LEAGUE
BATTING (125 at bats) - Brock,
SIL, .368 ; Winfield, SO, .352; Rose,
Phi, .352; Murphy, All, .348; Hen·
drick, SIL, .342. ·
RUNS- Lopes, LA, 59; Kingman,
Chi.« ; K. Hrnandz, StL, 43; Royster
All , .0 ; Schmidt, Phi, 42; North SF'

COME IN
LOOK OVER
OUR SALE TABLE

,

4~

By the Associated Press
BASKETBALL
WASHINGTON (AP) - The Natipnal
Basketball Association coaches voted
overwhelmingly to adopt the 3-point
field goal next season at the coaches
and general managers meeting.
Another rule change the coaches
approved was a proposal to permit a
4-point play if a shooter·is fouled while
attempting a 3-point field goal. No
action, however, will be taken ·until
next year.
TENNIS
CHICHESTER, England (AP ) Martina Navratilova swamped 18year-old Linda Siegel IKI, 6-0 in the
rain-{lelayed first round of the $75,000
Chichester grass-court · tennis
tournament.
With two complete days lost to the
weather and only eight singles
matches completed, the organizers
decided to switch the final from
Saturday tD Sunday.
Billie Jean King won her first round
match 6-1, 7-43 against Anne Hobbs.
Pam Shriver defeated JoAnne Russell
7~ . 6-4 and nearly met a world record.
Shriver won the.first set tiebreaker 1311. That was only 2 points short of the
longest tiebreaker ever recorded in
women's play.
The two top British players,
Virginia Wade and sue Barker, both
struggled against lesser-known
American opponents. Barker, seeded
No.4, defeated Rayni Fox 7-5, 7-5,
while Wade downed Laura Dupont 7-5,
6-2. Seventh-seeded Kathy May;
Teacher defeated fellow American
BettYann Stuart 6-7, 7-5, 6-2.
LONDON (AP) - Tom Gullikson
beat Vilas Gerulaitis, 6-2, 6-3 in the
first round of the,$125,000 Stella Ar!Dis
tDurnament on wet grass at the
Queen's Club.
Tournament organizers struggled to
get the first round finished despite
rain, which shortened the program lor
the third straight day.
In other action Victor Pecci of
Paraguay defeated John Uoyd of
Britain 6-2, 3-43, 6-3.
American Tim Wilkison was a
convincmg 6-4, 6-3 winner against
Hank Pfister. Two other Americans
were defeated. Britain's Roger Taylor

• •

SPIDER·

.MAN

Sizes 5·12

IT'S A. . POW&amp;'WGtiDt

•-~~•
n

You Kid Will
Luv 'em

heritage
house
OF SHOES

HITS - Winfield, SD, 86; Rose, Phi,

83 ; Garvey, LA , 81 : Russell, LA, 81 ;
Templeton, StL, 77.
DOUBLES ~ Rose, Phi , 21 ; Maz ·
zilli, NY, 19 ; Parrish, Mtl 1 18 ; Reitz,

Middleport, Ohio

StL, 18 ; ·Buckner, Chi, 17; Hendrick

~-

StL, 17 ; Griffey, Cin, 17; Baker LA

17.

,

1

,

TRIPLES - Templeton, StL, 7; T.

•0

..

,•

•WORK CLOTHES
•TROUSERS
•WALLETS

•SHIRTS
•WINDBREAKERS
•HANDKERCHIEFS
•PAJAMAS

•SOCKS
•TIES
•BELTS
•JEANS

•ROBES.
•ANGEL TREAD
HOUSE SHOES

--

•

.

RACINE B T-BALL TEAM-Front, 1-r, Andy Hill, Jason Codner,
Aaron Knopp, Roy Jolmson and Tina Spaun; second row, Shane Circle,
Joshua Codner, John Hoback, Arnie Dugan, Chad Diddle, Collin Maidens,
Trevor Petrel and Brent Rose: back Marvin Hill assistant coach and
Bob Maidens, coach.
'
'
'
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Pgh, 5; J . Cruz, Htn, 5; Metzger. SF,
BATTING (125 at bats) - Smalley,
5.
.
.376; Carew, Cal, .355; Downing,
HOME RUNS - Kingman , Chi, 20; Min,
.351; Kemp, Del, .351 ; Wilson,
Schmidt,- Phi. 18; Lopes, LA, 18 ; Cal,
KC,
.342.
Simons, StL, 16; Winfield, SO, 15.
RUNS - G. Brett, KC, 50;
STOLEN BASES - Moreno, Pgh ,
24; T. Scott, SIL, 21 ; North , SF, 21; Lansford, Cal. 48; Baylor, Cal, 46;
Lopes, LA, 19; Taveras, NY, 18.

PITCHJNG (6 Dec isions) LaCoss, Cin, 8-0, 1.000, 2.32 ; J. Niekro,
Htn , 10·2, .833, 2.43; Zachry, NY , 5-t,
.833, 3.59; Knepper, SF, 6-2, .750, 3.87;
Lamp, Chi, 5-2, .714, 4.61 ; B. Lee, Mil ,
6·3, .667, 3.88; Rogers, Mil, 6·3, .667,
2.61 ; Vuckovich, SIL, 6-3, .667, 2.97.
STRIKEOUTS - Richard, Htn,
100; Perry, SD, 70; Carlton, Phi, 68 ;
P. Niekro. All, 65; swan, NY, 63.

Otis, KC, .U.; Lynn, Bsn, 45.
RBI - Bay.lor, Cal, 56; Lynn,

Bsn.
52 ; Porter, KC , 48 ; Boehle, Sea, 47;
Cooper, Mil , 45 .
HITS - G. Brett, KC, 86; .Lansford,
Cal , 84; Smalley, Min, 83; Rice, Bsn,
75 ; Remy , Bsn, 71.

DOUBLES - Lemon, Chi, 18;
Thornton, Cle, 17; C. Washington,
Chi, 17; Lynn, Bsn. 16; Bonds, Cle, 16;
Downing, Cal, 16; McRae, KC, 16; B.
Bell, Tex, 16.

TRIPLES - G. Brett, KC, 9;
Wllsor, KC, 6 ; Randolph, NY , 5; Grif ·
fin, Tor, 5; (8 Tied with 4) .

Transactions

HOME RUNS - Lynn, Bsn, 16;
Singleton, Bal, 14; Thomas, Mil , 13 ;
Grich, Cal, 13; R. Jones, Sea, 13.

STOLEN BASES - LeFlore, Del,

30 ; Wilson, KC , 27; J. Cruz, Sea, 22;

Otis, KC, 20; Wills, Tex, 18.
PITCHING (6 Decisions) - John,
NY. 10·1, .909, 2.23; Kern, Tex, 8-1,

By The Associated Press
BASEBALL
American League

Traded .889, ·1.8 D. Martinez, Bat, 9·2, .818,
3.04; Clear, CaL 6-2, .750, 2.91 ; Renko,
Ben, 5·2, .714. 3.22; Ryan, Cal, 7-3,
quette, outfielder. Acquired Bob Wat- .700, 2.92; Jenkins. Tex. 7-3, .700. 3.45;
son, first baseman -outfielder, from Walls, Cle, 8·4, ..667, 3.38.
STRIKEOUTS - Ryan, Cal, 94 ;
the Houston Astros for Peter Lad, pitcher, a player to be named later and Guidry, NY, 80; Jenkins, Tex, 74 ;
BOSTON RED· SOX -

George Scott, first baseman, to the
Kansas City Royals for Tom Po-

YOU

BEST

D.ETROIT TIGERS -

day disabled list. Recalled Dave
Machel'ner, Second baseman, from
Evansville of the American Association .
National League

· Morris, pitcher, Kirk Ortega and
Pedro Bazan, catchers . Assigned
Morris to Quad Cities of the Midwest
League. Ortega to Geneva of the New
York -Penn
League,
Bazan to

-52 GAL GLASS LINED

Sarasota of the Gulf Coast League.
SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS - Sold

ELECTRIC
WATER .HEATER

John Tamargo, catcher, to Denver of
the American ~ssoclation .

.

CLEVELAND BROWNS - Signed

Sam Claphan, offensive tack le, and
Curtis Weathers, wide receiver.

DETROIT LIONS -

VVittum, pi,Jnter .

LOS ANGELES RAMS - Traded

nlppln 32", between nlpl)ltt 1", height of electric

w•" lower andin·
J2 11111.,

MINNESOTA VIKINGS -

outlet 24 111", Immersion fVIM 4100

upper twin ellments. Clpacity
Will
IUIIted whitt entmtltd outer jiCktt. S· YEAR

NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS Signed John Spagnola, tight end .
NEW YORK JETS -. Signed

GAS MODELS

$123 $134
JOGal . &amp;lee. S11f.9S
57 Gal . Elf( . Stl7 .95 .

Ac ·

quired Jerry Latin, runn ing back,
from the Los Angeles Rams for an undisclosed draft choice.

OUTRIGHT WARRANTY.

30 GAUON · 40 GAUON
95
95

Signed Tom

Jerry Lattin, kick retl:)rn specialist, to
the Minnesota Vi!&lt;,ings for an undisclosed draft choice.

J•dl:tt cUamt111r 20112", htlght trom 11oor InclUdes

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Phone 992·2811
110 W..Main

Pomeroy , 0,

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'•.
•
'
••

PRESIDENT
MASSILLON BAPTIST COLLEGE)

Bench moves to top
spot in balloting
NEW YORK (AP) - Cincinnati's
Johnny Bench, Greg Luzinski of
Philadelphia and Davey Lopes of the
Los Angeles Dodgers lead at their
positions in balloting for the National
All-Star
team,
the
League
commissioner's office said today.
Bench, who has started every AllStar game since the voting .was
returned to the fans in 1970, moved
into the top spot for catchers with
346,474 votes, 10,923 ahead of the St.
Louis Cardinals' Ted Sinunons.
Luzinski leads balloting for
• outfielders with 442,588 votes. George
' Foster of Cindinnati has 374,624 votes,
and the Pittsburgh Pirates' Dave
Parker 390,818 in the race for the other
starting outfield positions.
Lopes leads Cincinnati's Joe

EVANGELIST- AUTHOR - RADIO PREACHER

Morgan 422,414-391,268 for second
base.
Philadelphia' Pete Rose (56o,128 )
bolds a comfortable lead over Dodger
Steve Garvey (416,650) at first base .
Rose's teammate, Mike Schmidt,
leads Dodger Ron Cey 598,072-333,933
at third base, and another Phillie ,
Larry Bow a (442,600) is the leading
vote-getter at shortstop.

JUNE 17th THRU 21st (p.m.)
VICTORY BAPTIST CHURCH

AMERICAN MOTORS
Your Leader In American Economy

MIDDLEPORT - POMEROY BYPASS
AT ROUTE t 24 INTERSECTION
REV.JAMES KEESEE,PASTOR

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with Multimedia

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MOORE'S
POMEROY, 0.

SUMMER DISCO CLASSES
RIO GRANDE COLLEGE AND COMMUNITY COLLEGE
CONTINUING EDUCATION

0
0

Rodg er ' Wiley, Roger · Farmer a!ld
John Coleman, wide recei ve rs ; Dave
A Ired , kic ke r ; Mark Di FBbio and
John Sialiano, gUards ; John Gallo,
tckle; Kevin Manni x, running back ;
Tony Madau, punter ; and . Monte
Mosih1an, tigfltend.

PHILADELPH lA EAGLES - Sign ·

ed Ben Cowins. running back, and
Don Swafford , t ckle, to a series of
three one· year contractS.

'

Stereo Record Changer!

• Record Cassettes and 8-Tracks,
Individually or Simultaneously,
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Lever and Dust Cover

Reg.
359.95

.

LATONiA RESULTS
: FLORENCE, Ky. (AP)
Cloverleaf Mike paced the $1,000
featured mile at Latonia in 2:04
ThW'sday night and paid $4.40, $2.80
and $2.80.
A Courageous Lady placed,
returning $3.40 and $3.40, and
~amboogie, third, paid $6.
·
• The 2-5 combination of Jeff Minbar
and Midnight Madness paid $40 in the
cjOuble. Attendance was 1,063 and the
IJIII!Uel pool totaled $95,254.

REVIVAL
. UNITED PENTECOSTAL
CHURCH
South Jrd Ave.--Middleport

June 3-June 17

GALLIA COUNTY- Section 002
SUNDAYS . ...... .. . ... ...... . . .. .. .. ....... . . . . , , • JUNE 17, 24-JUL y 1, 8.
7:00-9:00 P.M .. .... .. . . . ....... . _. . . .. _.. ... ....... 10 hours of Instructlon
· Community Room, Mental Health Center, Rts. 35&amp; 160
Cost: $30.00 per person
Instructor : Mikki Cast of Casto's Studio of Dance.

CALL BERNIE MURPHY 245-5353 TO REGISTER
OR ATTEND THE FIRST CLASS SESSION USTED ABOVE

Stereo 8-Track Record~r!

• Make S-Track Copies of Cassettes
or Cassette Copies of 8-Tracks

SCIOtO RESULTS
;.. COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Cami
l'ilmahurst zipped the mile in a track
·· and national season's record time of
~:00 2~ to win the featured race at
_,.:;CiotD Downs Wednesday night.
:• . The time bested the old track mark
•for 4-year.old trotting mares of 2:01 4; ~ll"t by Tango Girl in 1978 and tDpped
the national record of 2:021-li held by
;a.vid.
• Cami Almahurst returned $2.60 and
~.20 and Rasmerry paid $2.60 for
, aecond. There was no show betting.
·: A crowd of 4,251 wagered $352,470.
THISTLEDOWN
• • NORTH RANDALL, Ohio (AP) · biamond in the Sky, ridden by Gary
'\Cooper, ran to an easy victory
'~ednesday in the featured eighth
race at Thistledown Race Track.
~ · It was the second straight victory
tor Diamond in the Sky. The winner
covered the six furlongs in 1:11 2-5.
Diamond in the Sky paid $9.40, $5
and $3.60, while second-place King of
lhe Nicks returned $6.60 and $4.80 and
third-place Jog Time paid $3.60.
The trlfecta of Ellie K. ( 10),
«'urnover G. ( 3) and Highbrella (2)
paid.$12,283.80on four winning tickets.
' The crowd of 4,444 wagered $510,228.

SUMMER DISCO
MEIGS COUNTY- Section 001
,'V\ONDAYS . . . . .... .. .. . . . . .. ...... . ... . .. . .. . .... .. JUNE 18, 25-JULY 2, 9
·
7:30to9 :30P.M . .. ..... . . .... .......... . ... .... .. 10hoursofinstruction.
Chester Hill Hall in Chester, OHio
cost: $30.00 per person.
Instructor: Mikki Casto of Casto's Studio of Dance.

AM/FM Stereo Receiver!

f) Stereo Cassette Retcorder

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FOOTBALL

National Football League

'13 795

79 AMC

" .'

Placed Lou

CHICAGO CUBS - Signed Thomas

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18" MOWER

Whitaker, second baseman, on the 15-

MOR-FLO

VICTORY BAPTIST CHURCH

1nc luded

CHARGE IT (MOST STORES/

. Kravec, Chi, 62; Koosman, Min, 59.

an unannounced amount of cash .

BUY

Concord DL 2 -Dr.

· ' The current contract expires after
the 1979 season.
; "We're very pleased to continue the
: fine relationship we've had with
:WLwr and with Walter Bartlett for so
;1nany years," said Dick Wagner,
·Reds president.
·; WLWT has been originating
,telecasts of Reds games since 1956.

..~·iWJ~
G:fti'·

REVIVAL!

.seasons.

Scott, Stl, 7; Winfield , SO, 7; Moreno,

GIVE DAD
OUR BEST

Hayes, Bob Jeffers, Melissa Cllins, Tim Gilkey, Jack Hawetl , Daren ·
Barbara Hatfield, Patty Landakin; Hayes, Tim LeMaster, Rod Harrison,
· being announced by John Usle, prin- Folmer, Patrick Cleland, Jay Hwn· sixth grade , Jack Howell, Bob Foster, Kim Eblin, Jodi Harrison, Doug'
Cipal,
prheys, Traci Bartels, Marsha King, Jay Hemsley, Mary Moore, Christie Eblin, Michele King, TlmKnotts ,
Winners, first through sixth grade Kristin King: s.econd grade, Marc
Lauderrnilt, Kim Roush.
Ruth Fry, Jeff Kauff, Susan Jones ,
respectively, m the variollS events by Corsi, Nick King, Wesley Young,
lntrmural Softball Champions Beverly Kauff , Chritie Laudermilt.
grade Include :
Melodi Carl, Christie Sauters, Joanie
Standing Broad Jwnp - First Simpson; third grade, Tim Jeffers,
grade, Aaron Whaley, Mike Parker Don Dorst, Jamie Warner, Aliso:1
no third, boys ; Tracl Bartels, Heidi Jones , Gina Scarberry, Michele
Caruthers, Marsha King, girls; Folmer.
second grade, Nick King, Decker · Softball Throw - First Grade, Mike
Cull~, Bryan Chase, Melodi Carl, Burns, Wally Hatfield, Danny
Christie Sa.uters, Jody Taylor; third Folmer, Deanna Norris, Becky Kauff,
grade, Kevm V. King, Kevin D. King, Kristin King; second grade, Marc
Jamie Warner, Gina Scarbury Lisa Corsi, Bryan Wyat.t , Bryari Chase,
Frymye~, Alisoo Jones; (ourth lirade, -Mae Della Riley , Michelle 'l:aylor,
Phil King, Todd CullW118, Jeff ~oanie Simpson; third grade, Artie
7:00 p.m. NIGHTLY
Basham, Cathy Stotts, April Clark, Runnel, Raymond Riley, Otis Noms,
Heather CullW118; fifth grade David . Michele Folmer, Angie Sloan, Tamra
WITH EVANGELIST
Earth, Rod Harrison, Scott
Vance; fourth grade, Todd Cullwns,
Cheri Sauters, Jodi Harrison,
Gerald Moore, David Capehart, Carla
R. BRUCE D. CUMMONS
Cummingham; sixth grade, Jack King, Darla King, Meliaaa FOI)ter; fifHawett, Jackie Welker, Tim th grade, Kevin Mowery, Darren
PASTOR
LeMaster, Deruse Stegall, Teresa
MASSILLON BAPTIST TEMPLE)

CINCINNATI (AP)
The
, ~Cincinnati Reds and Multimedia
,., Broadcasting Co. have reached
· agreement in principle on a new
:: contract which continues WLWT-TVs
·• regional television rights to Reds
·• .baseball games lor another five
'years.
; The contract runs through the 1984

'

Cm, 50 ; kingman, Chi , 48; Simmons,
SIL, 4.5 ; Garvey, LA, 45.

THE SHOE BOX

Winners in. the ~uallleld day of. Pratt. Kim RollSh.
th~ Salisbi\I'Y Elementary School are
50 Yard Dash - First grade, Danny

came from behind to elin\inate
Winitsky 4-6, 6-2, 6-2, and Phil Dent
Australia downed Mike Cahill6-1,
· - TRACK AND. FIELD
DRESDEN, East Gerffiii~y (AP )
Olympic champion Ruth Fuchs set
world record in the women's
with a toss of 228 feet, one ·
international track and field
Fuchs, an East German, bettered
some8feet theoldmarksetln 1977
Kathy Smith of the United States
YACIITING
·
HAMILTON, Bermuda (AP) ·~().foot trimaran Rogue Wave,
and skippered by Phil Weld
Gloucester, Mass. , was first
the .finish line in the 1979 Ne•WDo1rt
Bermuda multi-hull race.

. RBI - Winfield , SD, 54; Foster,

-MANY BARGAINS-

Salisbury winners announced today

(Except Monday Night)

7:30 Each Night
Evangelist
Mr. &amp; Mrs.
Bruce Franklin
Braunswick, G·a.
ApOstolic Pruchlng - Spirit Fill·
eel Singing. Everyone Welcome .

1:

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William Knittel, Pt&gt;stor

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SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
ti A. DIVISION OF TANOY ~O RPOR AT I ON

h t~ • ghbor hood

pqiCf:S M AY V!.RY AT INDIVIDU Al S TO RES

�6-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday , June 14, 1979

The Tigers fell on Monday to the
host Middleport Braves , 10-9 with the
winning run coming in the eighth inning. Nick Bush had gone hitless for
thenightuntilhe smackoidthe gamewinning home run in the bottom of the
.tly Greg Bailey
Tbey combined to strike out eleven tioned were Mark Stewart and Jeff eighth.
.
The Syra cuse and Letart Pee Wee and walk nine.
North with a single each.
Outstanding defense was a key to
Randy Murray led t}Je hillers with
Meigs is . now 2-1 on the young the contest as Todd Hysell and Ottis
leagues battlCd to a 12-12 tie m a six
. inning contest at Syracuse last night. his double and single while Otis Core season. saturday the club of Coach Norris played well for the Tigers and
Syracuse pitchers Chris Baer and · had a triple. Jack Howell doubled, Homer Smith hosts Ashland, Ken- Donnie Becker was outstanding for
Barry McCoy walked twelve and fan- and Nick Leonard singled.
lucky in a twinbill at Syracuse. Game the Braves.
ned eleven while Letart hurlers Pomeroy
431 002 0- 10 5 time is 1:00. Sunday Meigs travels to
Shawn llaker had three singles and
---- 112 134 X- 12 11 Lancaster for another doubleheader.
a triple for the Braves, and Trey
struckout fourteen and wa lked fif- .Rutland
(IX) 100 010- 2 6 3
CasseU had two one-base hits. Bob
teen.
In the third Pony League contest, Logan
010 200 OOx - 3 9 1 Southern tripled, and Donnie Becker
For Syracuse, Scott McPhail led the Dave Demosky threw a no-hitter at Meigs
Berry and Myers.
' and Darrm Drenner each singled .
hitting with seven RB!s on two host Mason enroute to a 6-1 win for the
Brown and T. Wayland.
·
Bush got the win in relief of Baker,
homers, one a grand slam. Todd Lisle Middleport team. Demosky fanned
___
and together they fanned thirteen and
had a double and single while O yde ten · and walked six while Jeff
In Uttle League action, Syracuse- ~alked just three in those eight il)nSayre socked a triple . McCoy Wayland contributed a triple and
doubled, and Eber Pickens and Baer single in the eight-hit Middleport at- Hubbards ' Greenhouse won · two re- mgs.
. cent contests. on Monday, they came
Chris Shank had a homer and triple
both singled.
tack
Joey Roush homered and doubled
Te;,.y Wayland and Jimmy Boyer from behind to dowil host .Racine No. for the Tigers, apd Jackie Welker and
for Let,art. B. Hupp, A O'Brien, and S. each had a double for the winners. I, 13-6. Mark Salser got the win with
O'Brieneach doubled.
Getting a single each were Demosky, relief help from Greg Nease:
Dave FoUrod, Dave Hoffman, and Togethec they fanned ten and walked
In Tee-ball action, the Daily Sen- Greg Bush.
only two.
tinel won 37-11 over host Elberfelds.
Nease had a single, double, and
Estel Lavendar · took the loss.
WaUy Hatfield, Scott Barton, Todd Lavendar pitched well, fanning six homer while Richard Davis socked
PoweU and Jeff Smith each bomered and walking justfour.
two singles and a double to pace
for the winners . Joe Roush ·had ·a
---Syracuse. John Clark had a single and
triple, Randy Hawley doubled twice
Ken Brown struck out sixteen triple, and Mike Kloes had three
l!lld Shawn Hawley and Tim HaD each Logan batters as the Meigs American singles . Greg Michael. had two
doubled once.
Legion Baseball tea'm downed singles, and Mike Chancey knOcked in
Linescore :
visiting Logan 3-2 last night at three important runs.
.
DS
976 78-37 Syracuse. Brown had good control as
Scott Wickline took the loss as he
E
213 14-li he walked only three and gave up six and Jay Bostic combined to fan five
~ts .
l!lld walk two while yielding fifteen
In Pony League action Tuesuay,
Meigs' Terry Wayland knocked in hits. Wickline had 8 single and double
visiting Syracuse handed Racine its aU three Meigs runs with a two-run to pace Racine while Ryan Oliver and
first loss with a 4-2 victory. Winning homer and 8 single. The fifteen-year Frederick had two singles each.
pitcher Brian Riffle went the old catcher smashed his homer over Syracuse
031 270-13 15 4
distance, Ianning five and walking the left field fence in the bottom of the Racine
221 001- 6 8 3
seven while yielding six hits.
fourth inning. Logan had just knotted
---Brian Ash led the Syracuse hitting thescoreat1-1 inthetpolthatfourth.
On Tuesday, Syracuse bad an
with a double while Joe Bob Hemsley,
Meigs took a I~ lead in the bottom easier time as they downed the
Riffle, Brian Anns, and Bill Cogar of the second. With one out, Dave visiting Pomeroy Tigers 11-4. Richard
each bad a single.
Kennedy singled, and Brown reached Vance got the win this time with relief
Jeff Sopher look the loss for Racine, on an error. Then Wayland produced help from Darin Roush. They fanned
Kent Wolfe came on in the fourth to his run -~&lt;eoring single.
ten and walked only two.
finish up. They fanned six and walked
In the top of the fourth, Mark RugMark Salser led the winners with a
five while giving up five 'hits. Sopher gles and Dave Lehman hit back-to- perfect night at the late, socking two
led the hitters with his double and back doubles for the first Logan run. singles and two triples while driving
single. Jay Ress had a double and But Meigs got its winning tally then in in four runs. Darin Roush and Greg
Wolfe, Zane Beegle, and Scott the bottom of that inning on Nease each had a home run and single
Frederick each singled.
, while Vance had a single and double.
Wayland's bomer.
Host Rutland came from behind to
Logan got its other run in the ninth Mike Chancey and Richard Davis
down Pomeroy Royals 12-10 as Tod on an error, stolen base, and a single each had a triple, and Mike Kloes and
Eads pitched a five-hitter, striking by losing pil\'her Dave Berry. Berry Jim Wolfe ech singled.
out twelve but walking eleven. Eads struck out seven Meigs batters and
Chris Shank took the loss, fanning
also led the hitting with four singles. gave up just one walk.
five and walking three. Jack Welker
Mike Edwards and Rick Edwards got
Art Fogelstrom of Gallia Academy led the Tigers with two singles and a
a triple and double, respectively. got two singles for the local Legion . borne run while Vince Knight had two
Mike Willford had two singles, and team, and Dave Kennedy singled singles. Terry Smith, Jeff Hol12, and
Todd Fife, Paul Michaels, and Greg twice and scored two runs. Tom · Tim Gilkey each had a single.
Taylor each had a single. ·
.
Owens l!lld Brown each had a double, Pomeroy
201 001- 4 8 5
162 E. MAl N
Chris Allen took the loss for the
Royals in relief of starter Randy and Steve Little singled once.
__
Lehman led Logan with two dpubles
Stewart. Brian Whaley finished up. while
other Logan hitters not men-

'J I

•

l'~ezgs

..

l
s.u mmer resu ts
.

~S~yr~a;cuse,:;;.,.

I

324 000 00- 9 l1 3

M.

102 501 01 - 10 10 I

The .Rutland .Reds downed host
Powell 's II~ with Steve QuiDen getting credit for the win. He gave up
eleven walks but fanned eleven also.
Mike Roush led the .Reds with a triple and double while Donald Nickles
had a home run.
Bill Brothers went the distance for
PoweU 's, fanning thirteen batters
while walking nine. Brothers also
tripled in a Iossing cause. Sean Jeffers singled. P:aul Dailey caught a
fine game f9r the .Reds, . and Terry

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NEW YORK CLOTHING ·HOUSE
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No Pressure - Gimmics or False Advertising . We Can
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Backed By Good Service!

during the summer months

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

beginning Saturday, June 16th.

Veterans

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MARGUERITE'S SHOES
Betty Ohlinger

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Regular 164.95

GOVIR&gt;IMINT
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Sol id wood cons truction 'c o mplete with
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• Presterilized
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MARKED DOWN
PRICES GOOD THRU F~IDA~.
JUNE 15th TO
1t' 1F 2c:n

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Made of' selected wood
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·

a medical patient at
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You Owe It To You.self To

The Dale C. Warner Agency

--------------~-----------

Would Like One
.·of These Also! ! !

IT'S HIS ... DAY •• .JUNE ,.;

by

·

Today's bir tfldays :
singer Burl lves is 70. Actress n m-nH&gt;v
Maguire is 00. Former pre.sid&lt;ential
news

P.S-Grandpa

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the all leather
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TUPPERS PLAINS VIIS

Vacation Bible School will be held
at St. Paul 's United Methodist Church, Tuppers Plains, Monday through
Friday, June 18 through June 22, from
10 a. m. until noon .
The closing program will be held
Saturday, June 23 at 7:30 p.m . The
public is invited to attend.

SIZES Sthru XL

il

Cushion-Flex®

.

.

MEIGS GETS $28,43G
Stat e Audit or Thomas E .
Ferguson 's offic-e reports that a total
. of $27 ,744,923.32 in public assistance
and special activities payments were
made in April to Ohi&lt;t's 88 counties. Of
. the tot;ll Meigs County received
$28,436.39 in public assistance funds to
help ·cover general relief payments
and administrative costs of welfare
operations and $30,447.74 in s]iecial
activities payments which are for admnistering and purchasing family
and children services such as day
care, family planning and marital

DRESS SHIRTS by ARROW

.,.:532:.!~0:X~1~1~1~4~1~~===============~============ =======~

430 SECOND AVE.

SILVER ANNIVEHSAHY - The 25th wedding anniversary of Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth DeLong, Route 2, Pomeroy, wiD be celebrated Saturday at 6:30 p.m. -with an open house at their home which is located on
State Route 143. Mr. and Mrs. Del.&lt;lng were married on June 13, 1954 at
the Hila Chapel by the Rev. Samuel Clay. They are the parents of three
children, Mrs. Victor Roush, Mrs. Carol Chappel, and Robert DeLong and
have three grandchildren. The celebration is being hosted by Mr. and
Mrs. Victor Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Gary Chappel, and Mumd Mrs. Robert
DeLong who invite relatives and friends of their parents to call during the

•, evening.

...--:::

~~~
· ~~~~'

Annual picnic of the three circles of ano Nellie Zi~kle reported on the
the Heath United Methodist Church finan&lt;;!'S of the parsonage cQrnrnittee.
was held recently at the home of Mrs. - It was noted that the new minister
will arrive on June 21 and that a tea
Betty Full2.
Mrs. Fultz welcomed the members hosted by Mrs. Kathryn Knight and
and gave the blessing preceding the Mrs. Jeanne Bradbury, will be held at
picnic. Devotions were given.by Mrs. the church on June 24.
Twenty-t wo sick visits were
Ullian Smith who played a recording
of Curt and Charlotte Davis. She also reported. The meeting closed with
read an article from Helen Steiner group singing of "Bless Be the Tie
That Binds." Hostesses were Mrs.
Rice's book, "Thank You, God."
Mrs. Donna Byer noted that $175 Fultz, Mrs. Maxine Philson, Mrs.
had been made on the rummage sale. Smith, Mrs. Emily Sprague, Mrs.
Mrs. James Criswell gave a report on Cecile Kincaid, and Mrs. Vicky
·
the progress of the parsonage repairs, Houchins.

.
,t

KNIT SHIRTS by JANTZEN .
and PURITAN SHIRTS by h.i.s.,

Thr~e

circles of church
hold joint picnic

In a fine, fine Pee Wee baseball
game, two pitchers tossed a no-l)itter
against each other, but when the
smoke cleared, the host Middleport .
Mustangs had gained a 1.0 win over
previously unbeaten Pizza Shack.
Jeff Nelson of the Mustangs and
Brian Tannehill of the Pizza Shack
each gave up no hits, but Tannehill
gave up eight walks while Nelson
yielded just five. Tannehill fanned
two and Nelson struck out thirteen of
·
the fifteen outs.
Bl!th te8IIIS are now 3-1 on the year.
The game lasted only one hour due to
the fine pitching.
000 00-0 0 0
PS
OOIOX-1 o 0
' MM

e ight ~

P.

7-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, June 14, 1979

Fields and Decker Cullunns did w•ll
on defense for Powell's.
R.
100 31- 11 8 0
P.
ll1 20- 5 6 2

Otis Norris each had a double and
single. Terry Smith had two sil)gles,
and Tinn Gilkey and Parker Long had
a single each.
Welker took the loss in relief of
l_&lt;lng. They fanned six and walkoid

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49

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15/2WB'
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VALLEY LUMBER &amp;SUPPLY CORPORATION
992-66",

.

0
'.

'

�li-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, June 14, 1979

'

johnson guest of Hearthstone Class

Evangelist to speak locally

Ed Irwin, an evangelist, singer and in the Southwest, and all in between.
Keith Johruron , student from Ju$on to Give a Devotion " by Amy Bolding.
He has preached from the pulpits College who will be working with the
musician, will present Christ in Song
Mrs. Edison Baker welcomed those
at the Meigs Junior High School and platforms of hundred$ of chur- youth and the music at the Middleport attending. The teacher's conference
auditorium, Middleport; at 7:30 Fri· ches, public school assemblies, First Baptist Church this sununer to be held June 18 and 19 was noted,
day evening.
·prisons, hospitals, private homes and was a guest at the Tuesday night along with plans for a float for the
Doors to the auditorium wiD open at nursing homes.
,
meeting of the Hearthstone Class held Regatta psrade.
Mr. Irwin received his early at the home of Mr: and Mrs. Harold
7 p.m. and the public is invited to atAttending were the Rev. Mr. and
tend. There will be no sermon with the religious training in a Christian home Chase .
Mrs. McClung, Johnson, Mr. and Mrs.
concert wtuch will last until about 9 and the First Church of the Nazarene
The class enjoyed a plenic with the John Werner, Mr. and Mrs. Bob
p.m. Making a guest appearance on in Chattanooga, 'l!enn. He received his Rev. Mark McClung giving the grace
the program will be the Gospel Tones formal training at Trevecca preceding the meeting.
Nazarene College of Nashville.
of Chester.
Ann! versary greetings were sung to
An offering will be taken with the the Rev. Mr. and Mrs. McClung and
A native of Tennessee, the minister
for the psst 20 years has traveled money to be used to continue his devotions were given by Mrs. John
A bridal shower was given recently
from Michigan and Delaware to the ministries.
Werner from a bQoklet, "I'll Be Glad for Teresa Smith, bride-elect of John
Smith, by her aunts, Barbara Bums
Northeast, to Oklahoma and Arizona
and Loretta Smith at the Burns home
Ed irwin
in Logan.
SATURDAY
Gifts were presented to the bride•
INSTALLATION at Meigs Chapter
Order or DeMolay Saturday 7:30p.m.
BmLE SCHOOL SCHEDULED
Middleport Masonic Hall. Dinner at
Vacation
Bible School has been
THURSDAY
6:30p.m.
8cheduled at the First Baptist Church
STAR GARDEN CLUB, 7:30Thurs- MEIGS RETIRED TEACHERS
in Racine from Monday, June 18,
day evening at the home of Mrs. picnic, 5:30p.m. at the Racine Darn,
through June 29 with classes from 9
Robert Holliday.
New Haven, W. Va. All retired ·
until 11, Monday through Friday,
ROCK SPRING GRANGE, 8 p.m. . teachers welcome.
each week.
Thursday at the hall.
MEIGS COUNTY RETIRED
Directors of the school which will
carry out the theme, "Jesus, I'm His,
PARENTS WimOUT PARTNERS TEACHERS Association, annual picHe's Mine" will be Lil Hart and
family covered dish dinner Thursday nic to be held Saturday at 6p.m. at the
..
Marilyn Powell.
7 p.m. at Mental Health Center Racine Darn park. Spouses and
Teac;hers for the classes are Rexan·
Gallipolis. Meat will be provided: families · invited to attend with
na
Knighting, Marie Walker,
Women to bring salad, vegetable or WendeD Wagner, District 6 field
nursery; Cookie Salser, Roberta
dessert. Bring soft drinks and own representative to present memberSmith, beginning I; Pat Smith, Karen
table service. A planning session will ship banner to local unit.
Wever, Kathy .Wever, beginning -IT;
be held following the dinner. lnfonnal SPECIAL MEETING, Board of ·
.Terella Van Meter, Sheila Proffit,
dance lessons will follow meeting.
Trustees of Bedford Youth Center,
primary I; Jane Ann Hill, Cora Lee
mE SYRACUSE-MINERSVIlLE 1:30 p.m. Saturday at center:
Cununins, primary IT; Diane Thle,
Basebal Assn. will meet at 7 p.m. Dissolution of the organization and
Lori Swiger, middlers; Mary Porter,
Thursday. All psrents, coaches and disposition to moneys from the sale of
Alice
Williams, juniors; Jelll!ifer Butinterested persons are invited to the the center building to the Christian
cher,
Beverly . Cunningham, youth;
meeting to be held at the Syrcuse Assembly to be discussed. The public
Sharon Thle, Delores Wolfe, music;
Municipal Building.
is invited.
Donna Raw Wolfe, secretary and
Denise Manuel and Sherry Swiger
will be In charge of refreslunents.
All children from age three through
junior
highschool are invited.
Tax books open for second half of 1978

9-rbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, U., Thursday, Jlllle 14, 1979

~· :_,;,~_,:', , , , , , , , , , , , ,,,,,,A;;;

Campbell, Mr. and Mrs. Carroll
Cleland and Dodie, Mr. and Mrs.
Miltpn Hood; Mrs. Paul Smart, Mr.
and Mrs. Harold Chase, Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Hybbard, Mr. and Mrs. Don
Wilson, Mr. and 1'4r,J. WllliB Anthony
and his brother, Charles; Mr. and
Mrs. Edison Baker, and Mr. and Mrs.
Allen Hughes.

Bridal shower held recently

-r Social Calendar

I

,._,.~

elect. Games were played with Anita
WhiUatch winning the door prize,
Refreslunents of cake, punch,
mints and nuts were served to those
named and Jull · Whitehead, Thelma
Smith, Sherri Starcher, Jodi Smith,
Elizabeth Duffy, Patricia Mom:e,
Alberta Haning1 Julia Snnith, Lisa
Smith, Margaret Smith, Lori Bums,
and Olive Smith.

BmLE SCHOOL TO BEGIN
Vacation Bible School will be held
at the Middleport Church of the
Nazarene from Monday through
Saturday, 6:J30 to 8:30 each evening.
A surprise event wiU be held on Saturday from 2:30 to 4 p.m. All children
are invited.

.

..__..,__.._.

1

_

_.._.._.._.._....,

Your "Extra Touch"
Flor:_ist Since 1957 .

1
I
I
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~

. ·
p.~

l

FLORIST
PH. 992-2644
352 E. Main, Pomeroy

)
·'·'

' .

WAYNEGffiBONS
. , Wayne Gibbons, former well knQwn
. Middleport resident, died Wednesday
·• at a Bucyrus Nursing Home.
,
Mr. Gibbons who served on Mid·
dleport Village Council for a number
of years had been in ill health for
several years. He had been making
his hon)e for the past several years
,i with a sister-in-law, Ruth Carson, in
Bucyrus.
: Mr. Gibbons had been a distributor
·•· for the Standard Oil Co. in Middleport
" and Meigs County fnr many years

....

1

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I

J
• ~..
,,~..
,
''
:.
&lt;

.'

!

•

••
•

-

lifts
for
Father's Day.

•

STATE WINNER-Janet Koblentz models here her three piece
tailored suit of linen and polyester which took second place in Ohio In the
National Grange sewing contest. The suit was a first !!lace winner In the
Rock Springs and Meigs County Pomona Grange judging before going on
to state. Mrs. Koblentz, an excellent seamstress, also had in the state
.competition a child's dress and a lady's blouse in the creative class. For
her second place in the state, she received a pizza cooker displayed here
by Mrs. Barbara Fry, the Women's Activities Chairman for the Rock Spr·
ings Grange.

Attend conference

r·
'

DRESS

Five members of the Laurel Cliff
Free Methodist Church were at Sugar
Creek Saturday for the District Missionary Conference of Free Methodist
Churches of the Ohio Conference.
Going from here were Mrs. Jean
Wright, Mrs. Doris Shook, Mrs. Donns Gilmore, Mrs. Evelyn Young, and
Mrs. Iva Powell.
The Laurel Cliff Church in reading
competition came in first in the
district showing a m percent increase over last year. Mrs. Iva
Powell having read 145 books received first in the district in individual
reading, with Mrs. Young reading 93
books taking second.
The church showing the most books
read was the Zanesville church with
833, while Laurel Cliff which had the
highest percentage increase re11d a
totalof647 .

Summer, at last!
· Now's the time for ballgames
and swimming ... and hiding and seeking!
Run over out
,w~y an~ pick out some easy-care
children s play and swimwear. All here!

I

for the best
in children's

·~"

shop

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

~GIFTO

for you,.

DRD
Make his day ~ uper special
with a fe w sel ections from
our Dad's Day gift collection!
He' ll love them one
and all... sporty fa shions,
at-home wear, toiletries,
accessories ... all here'·

GIFT CERTIFICATE

Samantha Sisson

Turns one year .
The first birthday of Samantha
Dyann Sisson, daughter of Joyce and
Ernie Sisson was celebrated recently
with cake and ice cream. She had a
, Raggedy Ann and Andy cake.
Attending were Sherri Dawn
Sisson, her sister, her grandmother,
Ava Sisson, and Kim MOITOW, KeMy,
Jeanie, Tammi and Tyson Buckley,
Fritz and Carmen Sisson.

MODULAR
HOMES
By
ALL AMERICAN
Meets
eOhio Building Codes
eAFHA&amp;VA
See our lot model today.

CLOTHIERS

CANVAS FOOTWEAR
BY
CONVERSE and
THOM MeAN
DECK SHOES, JOGGING
sHoEs, TENNis ANo
BASKETBALL

Bringing you fashion's
newest looks In sunglasses
with a wide range of styles
for men and women. Top
quality variegated and
solid tint lenses, Buy several!

N. 2ND 'AVE,
·'MIDDLEPORT, 0.

·1100 E.

992 ·7034
'-- - - - - - - - _.i

source said.

May deposit funds in minority hanl&lt;s

Pharmacy
Ronald H1nlne. R. Ph.

Mon. tttrv Sal. I :OOa .m, to f p.m .
Sunday 10: JO to 1:1 : JO and

PRESCRIPTIONS

I

.s to 9 .m .

Friendly Se rvice

E. Main

t----------·- ·- ---..

. OPEN TO PUBLIC AFTER 5 P.M.

CAMDEN PARK
U.S. 60 WEST
HUNTINGTON
CLOSED EVERY MONDAY EXCEPT HOLIDAYS

•Kodak Color Burst
•Coty Musk For Men

CONVERSE
•Tee Shirts

•Socks
•Gym Bags

eva-.

STEAK HOUS:E

OF SHOES

0.

Sp~£ial ·6ifts
STOP BY FOR A
GREAT SELECTION
OF FATHER'S DAY .
CARDS &amp; GIFTS

to

Pomeroy, 0 .

FOR

•Polaroid Camera

\

~• ...,BREA

PH . nNU5

SATURDAY - JUNE 16th

• Brute After Shave

HEARTY HOME

Open Nights tlll9

UNTIL 5 P.M.

• Tiniex Watches

•Old Spice After Shave

J

PARK RESERVED

•Cigars

•Pipes
• Electric Ramrs

•Pen &amp; Pencil Set

Chor!K AIIIIo, R.Ph . ,, _ _ __

Ke,,eth M&lt;Cullough. R.Ph.

NOTICE
Special
meeting
for
Carpenters Local 1159 is
being called for ratification of contract 7:30 Fri.,
June 15th.
·

COLUMBUS, Ohio ( AP) - Federal allowed to become law without his sigfunds allocated to Ohio may be nature.
Rhodes announced his decision
deposited in minority banks under
Wednesday
concerning the measure,
legislation Gov. James A. Rhodes has
sponsored by Rep. Ike Thompson, 0Cleveland.
Minority banks currently are
prevented from receiving federal
~--t
deposits due to restrictions imposed
by Ohio's Uniform Depository Act.
They
must continue to maintain sound
Holzer Medical Center
opera ling practices under the new
Discharges, JUlie 13
Wilda Allison, Mary Church, Doris law.
· Only two Ohio banks are reportedly
Clark, Mrs. Kenneth Criss and
owned
by minority groups and
daughter, Mrs. Oscar Davis and son,
covered
by the law, which becomes
Terri Davis, Todd Dempsey, Neva
effective
Sept. 12.
DeMey, Richard Elkins, Marla
Ferguson, Darlynn Gaffney, Alfred
Graham, John Grieser, Bertha Hall,
Janet Hill, Judy Johnson, Michael
Kuhner, Betty McComas, Teresa
Miller, Henry Pierce, Jeffrey
Ridgeway, Ernest Saunders, Belva
Smith, Mrs. Carl Schriver and
daughter, Ronnie Smith, Truman
Souders, Pearl Turnbo, Bessie Swain,
AvoneU WeDs, Gladys WUllamso,
Dorothy Wright.
Blrtlu, June 13
Eastern Avenue • Gallipolis, Ohio
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Stewart, son,
Cheshire.

I

SWISHER LOHSE

HOLE IN ONE
Mrs. Lillian Roush of Middleport
scored 8 hole-in-Qne while golfing at
the Riverside Golf Course at Mason,
W. V.a ., Wednesday afternoon. Mrs.
Roush was golfing with her husband,
Walter, and his brother, Marvin
Roush, formerly of Middleport and
now of Atlanta, Ga. when she accomplished the dream of aU golfers.
She scored the ace on hole 7 using a
pitching iron.
.---- -- -- - - - - ,

•Hallmark Cards

,

In Washington, Secretary of State
Cyrus R. Vance urged mediation by
the Organization of American States

------------------~

LARGE INDUSTRIAL CONCERN

Pomeroy,Ohio

• 2ND

automobile, marine and farm equipment Industries . .
Principal market for polyester
monofilament is the psper making industry. The material is wov~n into
dryer fabrics for psper machines.
The equipment is expected to be on
line at Shakespeare's Columbia
production facility before the end of
1979. Goodyear will supply customer
needs during the transition and will
continue to supply Shakespeare with
polyester resin.
Terms of the transaction were not
disclosed.

stationed
the nearby Somoza
military
complex insurrounding
' s · - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -. .
military headquarters, called "The
Bunker."
Thousands of those less fortunate
poured out of the capital along the
southern highway psst the American
Embassv.
· The United States flew 160 more
Americans to Panama Wednesday
aboard two Air Force C-130
transports, bringing the toial
evacuated to 221 on Tuesday and
Wednesday. One American woman
among those evacuated said the
situation in Mansgua was "horrible.
It's a war. There is constant machinegunning and bombing.
"We saw thousand/! of Nicaraguans
looting every building along the road
we had to use to get to the U.S.
Embassy," she said. "They've been
without food for almost five days and
they're desperate."
Before the latest outbreak of
guerrilla war 10 months ago there
were about 2,500 Americans in this
Iowa-sized nation. Many have fled
since, and those left who want to join,
the evacuation flights to Pansma
must provide their own transportation
to the U.S. Embassy. "They must ·be
ready to lea\;e on short nOtice ·and can
carry only a suitcase," an embassy

heritage house

FOSTER GRANT &amp; COOL-RAY
COMPLETE STOCK
'!. PRICE

OF .

KINGSBURY
HOME Maon
SALES

to l1elp end U.e fi ghting between the
leftist Sandinista rebels and the 42·
ycar-Qld Somoza family dictatorship .
"We have told President Somoza we
believe that a political solution is
necessary to resolve the problem,"
Vance said . Otherwise "polarization
will continue and the chances of a
radical solution to the problem are
great."
water .
The guerrillas of ·the Sandinista
Ban$ ·scavenged areas on the
outskirta of the slums, but much of National Uberation Front ·lake their
these areas were already picked name from a Nicaraguan rebel who
clean. They stole from looters weaker fought the U.S. Marines who put
than themselves. Some, brandishing Somoza's father into power. They led
a two-week uprising last September in
pistols, tried to stop cars.
Wealthier townspeople and their which some 1,500 persons were killed .
families fled the chaos to the relative Another 2,800 are estimated to have
security of the Intercontinental Hotel, died in fighting since theri.
protected by several thousand troops ·

had to suffer in having to take what is
not theirs," and said the national
guard would soon begin distributing
food in barrios cleared of guerrillas.
Hungry Managuans looted all major
market areas and supermarkets.
Some 15,000 people took refuge in a
dozen Red Cross refugee centers but
they were running out of food and

DRESS &amp;
BY RAND &amp;
THOM MeAN
CASUAL
•
:....................................
•SHOE SHINE KITS
•SANDAlS
•SHOE HORNS
•HOUSE SLIPPERS

•"

.. SUMMER OUTING"

BAHR

DINGO
BOOTS

'

Entertained recently
Mary Crow entertained recently at
her Racine home with a layette
shower honoring Brenda Walters.
Garnes were played with prizes going to Dolores Will and Peggy Kern.
Mrs. Will won the door . prize.
Refreshments were served to those
na!"ed and Sharon and Scott
Icenhower, Pam Roush, Penny Clark
Tabetha Phillips, Kathy Hubbard'
Seth Kern, Diana Jenkins, and SherrY
Patterson. Sending gifts were Mr. and
. Mrs. Don Cotterill and Cynthia, Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Van Cooney, Mr.
and Mrs. Lawrence Eblin, Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Davis, Beverly Will
Brian J . Will, Mrs. A.EcH. Crow:
Becky Crow, Mr. and Mrs. Greg
Walburn, and Mrs. William G.
Walters.

&amp;CASUAL

SHOES

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

VETEltANS MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL
Admitted--Chester Mimdry, Reedsville; DorisAda~,Racine;Bertha
By TOM FENTON
Canaday, Pomeroy ; Roger Athey,
Associated Press Writer
Cheshire; Dorothy Wright, Rutland.
MANAGUA , Nicaragua (AP) SQUAD RUNS
Discharged-Shirley Long, David
Sandinista
guerrillas
battled
Smith, Harry Arter, Clell LaBonte.
President
Anastasio
Somoza's
troops
The Middleport Emergency Squad
Managua
for
the
seventh
day
today,
answered a call to 621 Oliver St. at
ASK TOWED
looting
was
widespread,
and
the
U.S.
7:06 a.m. Thursday for Mrs. Pearl
Marriage licenses were issued to
Hoffman who was taken to Veterans Bruce William Blackston, 21 , Rt. 3, Embassy planned to fly out more
Memorial Hospital. At 11 :31 a.m. Pomeroy and Christina Kay Evans, Americans .
Somoza 's planes rocketed and
Wednesday, the squad went to the 17, RD, Pomeroy; Edward Earl
strafed
Managua's slums, trying to
home of Dayton McElroy, near Sellers, .22, Pomeroy and Angela Sue
smash
the guerrillas in the
Pomeroy, who had a laceration. He Msrtin, 18, Pomeroy; Ricky Allen
they have barricaded
strongholds
was also taken to Veterans Memorial Stobart, 22, Middleport, and Melba
Friday
night. Natlonal
since
Hospital.
Jane Thomas, 18, Rt.l, Long Bottom.
guardsmen raked the barrios with
submachine guns in an operation
called "reconnaissance by fir.e .
"We shoot into all the trees on an
unsecured
block with .SO-caliber
SHOP
.
machine guns," said a lieutenant in
the guard, Somoza's combined army
and police force . "Sometimes people
with guns jump down and run away.
FOR THE BEST DEALS IN THE
Sometimes they faD out dead."
TRISTATE AREA
Managuans sleeping on their floors
because of the fighting said guerrillas
told them Sandlnista commander
Eden Pastora was leading an
Mon., Tues., Wed ., Friday &amp; Sat .
"international brigade" north from
8:30 to 5:00 Thursday till12 Noon
the Costa Rican border. Somoza
Claimed last weekend his forces
OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONLY
crushed an invasion there last week
Herman Grate
and drove the survivors back across
773-55,2
Mason, w. va.
the frontier .
The guerrillas' also said they were
battling Somoza's forces in Masaya,
20'miles slmtl&gt;&lt;tf"Managua, and ln the
norther~-~iti~l of Sebaco and
Matagalpa. Journalists returning
from the north confirmed that the
Sandinistas held the towns of La
Trlnidad and San Isidro and had the
guard pinned down in two locations in
. nearby Esteli.
'
In Leon, the second largest city in
Nicaragua, national guard sources
said the garrison was wider heavy
attack by the gurriUas. Leon has been
in rebel hands, except for the
garrison, since the beginning of the
month.
,
Somoza conceded in a broadcast
Wednesday nigh_t that his capital had
been "shut down"· by the fighting and
a general strike called by the
Sandinistas June 4 as psrt of their
two-week-old "final offensive."
Somoza spoke of the "shame people

; ;=:;~==:;;;
•'

represents a very smaU portion of the
Point Pleasant plant 's capscity and
~! .have .no appreciable effort on employment at Point Pleasant, the company said.
Shakespeare is a diversified
manufacturer of sporting goo$, thermoplastic and reinforced · plastic
products and components for the

that includes Goodyear's pstented
process that improves heat and
moisture resistance in polyester
monofilament. The process was
developed during tire cord research.
Goodyear said it is selling the
business because the product line no
longer fits its market objectives. The
sale of the monofilament equipment

Looting, widespread fighting
continues in Nicarauga

MASON FURNITURE

:

MEIGS COUNTY TREASURER
GEORGE M. r;OLUNS

..'

The
PT . PLEASANT
Shakespeare Compsny has purchased
polyester monofilament technology
and equipment from Goodyear, the
compsnies announced today.
Shakespeare acquires two complete
production lines from Goodyear's
Point . Pleasant, WV, Polyester
Production Facility and technology

MASON FURNITURE

•

New office hours .e ffective May 29, 1979 8:30 to
4:30, Monday through Friday. Closed on Saturday.

bEGiNs
OUTDOORS

before his retirment.
He was Esther. Surviving are a
daughter, Mrs. Evelyn Sweet of Ver·
mont and two grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held at
10:30 a.m. Saturday at the Wise
Funeral Home in Bucyrus where
friend/! may call from 7 to 9 p.m.
Thursday and Friday nights. Burial
will be in Bucyrus where his late wife
is buried.

Goodyear sells Monofilament interest

11

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'---~!!!.tJ-2~~~-~..J

will be July 20, 1979

I

,,,:rr:

m

Real Estate Taxes. Final day to j)ay tax

VACATiON

,d;;!h; :, , ,

,

AWAY FROM HOM-.
At Bob Evans Steak House, we
serve a lot more than steak. We have
hotcakes, fried mush, ·hot baked
biscuits, fresh farm
eggs, and all the
'
good things that go with Bob Evans
Farms country fresh Sausage.
' So stop on in on your way to work.
And do it right for breakfast.

VILLAGE· PHARMACY
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

WE DO IT :RIGHT.
OR WE DON't DO IT.""

992-5759

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-

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-y-- .

·-...y

\

"Where only lhe besl food Is good enough"
~- -

'

..

�11-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Thursday, June 14, 1979
D!CKTRACY
'
.

10-TheDaily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, June U, 1979

~est

Your
WANT AD
'CHARGES
Cash
1.00
1.50
Ull
3.00

3days
6days
Each word

Notices

Help Wanted

For Rent

GUN SHOOT . EVERY FRIDAY

I MMEDIA TE
OPEN I NG .
laboratory Technicion . 3· 11
shifl . E)lperienced MLT (ASC P')
or equivalent . h cellent 50 iory
and frin ge benefits. Shift dif·
ferentoil . Cor)toct : Personnel
Office ,
Pl easan t
Vo ll ey
Hospital, Vollev Drive , Point
Pleasant. WV. 25550. Phone
304 -675-4340. An Equal Op·
portunity Employer.

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Pork .
Route 33, north ol Pom&amp;roy .&gt;
La r.ge lo ts. Call 992-7479 .

FACTORY CHOKE GUNS ONLV .

OU1r~e

1.25
1.00
:!.25
J.i5

over the minimum

15 words is 4 {'ents pE&gt;r word per
clay. Ads runnin ~ other than t'Onseculive days W1l1 be &lt;'ha r~t'd at
thetdayrate .
In memory. Ca:rd of Thanks

and Obituary : 5 t'ents per u.·ord,
$:3 .00 minun um. Cash in lid-

vance.

MQbile Homt' sa les and Yard
salt's Hrl' ar.:l:epted only with

cash with order. 25 eent charge
for ads carrying Box Number In
Career The Sentin'el.
The Publisher reserves the
right to edit or rt&gt;ject any ads
deemed obj el'tional. The

Publisher will not bf responsible

for more. lhan. one incorrect insertion. Phone 992-2156

NOTICE
WANT-AD
IAPVERTISING
DEADUNES
Monday
Noon on Saturday
Tuesday
thru Friday

THERE Will be a Gospel Con cer t, friday , June 15 at 7:30
p .m. at the Meigs Junior High ,
M iddleport, feat ur ing Rev. Ed
Erwin of Harrison . Tenn . and
Ru ss and The Gospel Tones of
Chester , Ohio.

IMMEDIA TE OPEN ING
REGISTERED NURSE w ith od ministroti\le ewperience a.nd
public spe aking abilitie$ . Invo lves health tes ting and
presenta ti on of heolrh inf orma tion . Cor rqui red . Some
evening work . Hourly salary.
Some vol unteer work , Apply y
June 14 , 1979 to Tuberculosis
Clin ic , Mulberry He.i ghts,
Pomeroy , 992 -3722.

Lost aod Fo·uod
LOST: MALE Irish Sette r. Ap·
pro)( . 2 yrs . ol d . Area of
Bo sh on on Bas han Rd .
Child r en ' s pet . Reword .

9•9·2•66.
LOS T:
Fam e !
German
Shepherd, lighl to n face and
legs . black on bock ond ta il.
Broke col lar from home on
Storys Run Rood . below
Midleport, mising 4 weeks . If
seen call Gero ld Mathews ,
367·0095 or 992 -5207 . Reword .

Waoted to Buy
CHIP WOOD . Poles mo ~~: .
diameter 10" on larg es t end.
$12 per fan . Bundled slob. $10
per ton. Del ivered to Ohio
Pollet Co., Rt , 2, Pomeroy.

FOUND : Bla ck female poodle ,
older animal . in the Forked
Ru n Area , 378·6291 .

992-2689 .

992-562 1 after 5:30p. m.

4 P.M.
the day before publication

Sunday
~P. M .

Friday afternoon

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
PURCHASE OF ONE
SCHOOL BUS FOR
EASTERN LOCAL
BOARbOF
EDUCATION
Sealed propo sa ls will b e
received b y the Board o f
Education of the Eastern
L oc al School Distr ict of
Reedsville , Ohio at th e
Treasurer ' s Off ice unt i l
12 :00 noon Ju ly 18, 1979 and
at that t ime opened by th e
Tr e~surer of said Boar d as
p r ovided by la w for one ( 1 J
65 passenger school bus ,
accord ing to specifica t ions
Of said Board o f Educ~ti o n .
Specifica t ions and in str uctions t o b idders may
be obtained a 1 the off ice of
the Treasur er , Ea stern
Hi gh School.
A certified eheck payabl e
to the Treasurer of t he
above Board o f Educat ion
or a sa ti sfa cto r y bid bond
executed by the b id der and
the suret y comp any ih an
amou nt eq ua t to fiv e
percent of the bid sha ll be
subm i tted with each bid .
Said Board of Edu cat ion
re serves t he r ight t o waive
inform a I/ t ieS to a cce pt or
r e ject any and al l or parts
of any and all bid s
No b id s may be w ith drawn for at l ea st thirty
()OJ
da ys
after
the
sched uled ·c l osing t im e f or
r ec e ipt of b ids .
Board of Education
.of Eas t ern Local
Sc hool Distr ic t
Eloise Boston
T reasurer of
East er n Loc al
Sc hoo l Dis tr ic t
38 900 SR 7
Ree dsvi ll e, Ohio
45772

(6 , 14 , 21, 28 (7) 5, Ate

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
ESTATE OF P A UL A .
DILLARD,
DECEA SE D
!
Case No . 22718

NOTICE OF

APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On June 4, 1979, in th e
Me i g s Co unt y Pr obate
Cour t , Ca se N o . 227 18.
Ro b er t C . Coate s, 2699
Erlene D r i ve , Ci ncinnat i ,
Oh io. 45'238 was appo int ed
E )(ecuto r of t he es t a t e of
· Pau l A . D il lard, decease d ,
late of Midd l eport , Ohio . ·
Robe r/ E . Bu c k
Probat e Judg e.Cierk
(6) 7, 14, '21 , Jtc

PROBATE COURT OF

MEIGS COUNT Y , OH 10
ESTATE OF MARGARET
MAI&lt;O , DECEASED
ca se No . 22 665

NOTICE OF
APO IN TMENT

OF FIDUCIARY
On J une l, 1979, in t he
M e ig s Cou n ty Prob a t e
Court , Case No . 22665,
Giz€! lla Lu cas and William
Mako, 11212 H ava n a Road .
Ga r f iel d His . . Ohio 44125
and 12018 Der by Road ,
Garfield H ts, Ohio (R esp . ) .
wa s . appointed
Co E)(ec utors of t he es t a te of
Marg aret Mako, d ecease d ,
late of Rt . 1, Vinton, Oh io .
Rob ert E . Buck
Probate Judge Clerk
(6) 7, 14, 21, Jtc

Friday , June Hi

ASTRO·GRAPH
Bernice Bede

June 15. 1979
Set your S1ght s high and work
hard ro achieve yoU/ goals rhi s
co m~n g
year. Rewards that
appeared 1mposs1ble can be
won Otherwise . advantages
could sl1p thr ough your finger s
when you 're not looki ng
GEM INI (May 21-J une 2D)
Guard your action s carefu ll y
Ieday or you may un•ntenllonally offend so meo ne i mportant
who doesn 'I easily forgive or
f01g et Discover wllh whom you
bes t get along romantically by
sending lor your new AslroGraph Le tter Mail $1 lor eac h
to Astr o·Graph , P.O . Bo x 489.
Rad io Ci ty Station . N.Y. 10019.
Be su re to spec •fy bir th sign .
CANCER !June 21-July 22) An
md1viduat who has always oeen
difficult lo gel along with will
rub you the wrong way again
10d:1Y · Don·r be argumentative"
just because he is .
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Owing lo
a lack ol foresi ght, you may
in\lolve you rself in a si tuation
tod ay whi ch you can 't handle. It
coutd prove embarrassing .

BIG YARD SALE, Dorinda
Nordei, 364 East Main St ..
Pomeroy, Ohio, second house
ab ove Fronds Flori$ t, Friday
and Saturday, June 15 and 16,
10 to 4. lots o f clot hing, all
sizes . Other i tems too
numerous to men ti on. Ra in
cancels.

YARD CLOTHESLINE SALE. lol•
of men 's clothing in very good
condit ion. Ladies dresses and
other items. Charles Kuh l
residence , Ffotwoods Rd .. o ne-holf mile o ff Rt
7,
992-7537 , 10 to 8 Tuesday ,
W ednesday , Thursday , JuOe
12, I J and 141 , we ather perm it·
t ing.

LARGE 8 FAMILY Ya'd and
Porch Sale, June 11 thru 15,
from 9 t il 5, O n old Rt . 33 at
end of Co. Rd . 19.
YARD SALE. 2 family , Wednesday. Thursday , Friday and
Saturday . 9 t il -'· lhird and
Co llege Rood in Syracuse.
Slacks , shirts , ladies dreus .
Iorge and small , misc .

2 FAMILY YARD SALE Thu,.

t railer on righ t going north on
33 post the old Reuter Service
track
tope .
Station . 8
macrame planl hangers , small
boys and lets of men 's clothing
and more.

LOTS OF NEW CLOTHING .

HOOF HOllOW , Engl ish and
W es t er n.
Sadd l es
ond
harness . Horses and ponies.
Ruth Reewes. 61.4·698-3290.
Barding S Rid ing lessons and
Horse Care product $.
RISING STAR Kennel. Boor·

d;ng . Coll 367-0292 .
Auto Sales
PLYMOUTH

DUSTER .

Very goo8 conditi on . Good
gas mil eage. $1250, 992 -2378

FRIDAY ~VE., JUNE 15, 7:00 P.M.
MAIN ST., RUTlAND, OHIO
Extra large sale, new merchandise of all
kinds . come see and_ save . ~alen
welcome. Bring your own chair . Will
have a gospel singer from Tennesee.
Not responsible for acc idents . .
Terms of sale : ·c ash or check with

po~ itive 10.
Auctioneer , B i ll Brown

992-6022 .
TWO BEDROOM House, new ly
remodeled
k itchef1.,
in
Pomeroy. Cal l992-2288 after 6
p.m.
12x60 2 bedroom mobi le home
in Ra cine area. 992-5858 .
EFFICIENCY APT . sujit abl e f or
one . Utilities po id . Co!l

992-5738.

For Sale

99'2-3891.

0'

992-3325.

1974 VEGA HATCHBACK , call

303-675-1501

0'

305-675-2488

or 304·675 -1553.
1962 GALA XIE 500 original ,
excellent
shape , 667-3333
offer 5.

1976 OOOGE ASPEN STATION
WAGON ,

good

condirion ,

$2400. 992-6168 aflo'6 p.m.
1976 LINCOLN , excellent con diti on·. Wi ll sacrifice $5200,

992-2502.
1970 CHEVEll~ 4•p . $300.00.
992-60S7 .
' 1973 FORD RAN CHERO , out of '
state truck , no rus t, also 1976
TOY OTA needs borly w ork
992-3397 0' 8.43-2626 .

(

$25.00 .
SANDAl SALE, women 's and
girls' $8_
.88 to $7 .98 . Men's and
Boys sport shoe$ , beige,

$12.99 and $14.99 . BAILEYS
STORE, Middleport.

CUCUMBER

AND

MELON

PlANTS , Cleland Greenhouse,
Raci ne, Ohio.

1978
b ike,

* R.M. 125 SUZUKI d;,,
e)(cellenr

condi ti on ,

9•9-2410 .
SQUARE BALES HAY in field
2417 -3639 , Aa ron Wo lfe , Le fort
Falls , Ohio .

20%
DISCOUNT

NOW "HAULING limes lon e in
M iddl eport-Poemroy
area .
Coli lor fre e es-timat e.

•

367-7101.

AWMINUM
&amp; VINYL SIDING
BY
J&amp;L INSUlATION

PAINTING AND sa ndbla sting.
Free est imates._Col / 9419-2686 .
LEARN GOLF correctly this
sum mer. Beginn er's and advanced .
J ohn
Te aford .

614-985-3961 .
HANDYMAN WORK mowing
lawns , poin ting houses , r oofs
and bui lding sidewalks. etc.

Free Estimate

Call614-667-3263.

CALL
992-2772

Mobile Homes Sale's
197-t 14 w 70 mobile home.
Good
condition .
$7800 .

BLOCK &amp; BRICK

with a 7 room

frame
house. Has hot &amp; cold
water, 2 car garage,
barn, nice garden spot
and 3 a c res. $17,000.

AND

SHRUBS

on ly 523.500.
RACINE - A 3 bedroom

Jack W. Carsey

Mgr .

HARDWARE ,

2

doors down f rom Post Office,
742-2255 . PAINT SALE, Martin
Senour, Division of Sherman
and Williams , 2 gal. flat while
ex ter io r
point
$13 .95 .
Stainless steel double bowl
sink ond wosherless facet

8

ft.

older home with n ice
woodwor k but needs a
little fixing. J ust look a t
the price of only $12,000.

S RENTALS -

Phone 992 -2181

RUTLAND

dl•play

refrigerator case with sin gle
phose compressor $350.00.

4 BEDROOM HOME . lo'ge Bving and dining, on three
quar ter acre . Utility building
in Ruttand 742· 754 .

15 Ft. LOWE LINE ALUMINUM
BASSBOAT20H .P. Mere. Elec.
Start, stick steering trolling
motor, Trailer, fully equipped

Four 2

bedroom apts . up and a
business ot· six rooms
down . Good investment
for yc&gt;u at $44,500.

NATIVE

Remarkably nice i nSide
with· natural gas fur nace, city wafer and
sewer . 2 lf:~ acres with
lots of trees and lonely,

$27,500.
LEAVE YOUR SELL·
lNG PROBLEMS WITH
US . TRY OIALING A
DeEeAelo-FOR BEST
RESULTS.

Housing
. Headquarters

BALED HAY for sole to pi ck up
after the baler in the field

985-3555.
CO AL
FU RNA CE
with
outomofic damper 992-394-4 .
SWIMMING POOL 8Ft. x20 In·
ches w ith steel wal l heavy
vinyl lining, plus pla sti c cover
$25 .00
good
co nditi on,

992·2•32 .

POMEROY
lANDMARK
Headquarters for
Hotpoiot aod
Geoera I Electric
Appliaoces

SALE PRICES
Jack W. Carsey

Mgr.
Phone 992 ·2181

Give Away
FIVE KlnENS , 6 to 7 weeks
old . 4 calico , I tiger . 992 -7680.
Humane Society .
TWO KITTENS, one block and
while mole and one calico
female. Colt 367-0095.
HEALTHY 41 months old mole
k i tten s, Meig$ Humane Socie·
ty . Phone 992·2592.

KITIS:NS 3 block , one .!f!Ole 2
female , 6 wks old, l ong
haire d multi co lor gray male 8
wks . old also gray with white
markings male
wks . old.
Humane Society 992-7680 .

a

MI XED breed s female .pups,
qne bo)(er type mole·A months
ol d, one collie type female 4
months ol d. Humor. e Socie l y
992-7853 0' 992 -7680.
_......_
~-

____

eNEWHOMES
ti ROOM ADOITIONS
eROOFING
eVINYL SIDING
e GUl'TER &amp; SOFFIT

NEW LISTING -

Ex ·

cellent l ocation in Mid ·
dleport , 1 1J:~ story, 3
bdrm s., family room ,
fenced
lever · yard ,
garage &amp; storage. Home
fully
ca rpeted
&amp;

remodeled. PRICED
FOR QUICK SALE,
$25,000.00.
NEW LISTING
Pomeroy Elementary
School d istric t , very
nice- J b drm . home,
bath, dining room, base ·
rnent area, ·garden, nice

5·20·1 mo.- pd.

Jack's Septit
Tank Service

2Miles EoilstoiWI!kesVIIIe

Ov erweight People
Slinderella
Diet Classes
MOf'l. E\lenings-Mason , w. v~ .•
1:30 Sf. Joseph catholic Church;
Tues. Mornirig (10: Jt) an"a

Civil
Mechaoical
Archetectural
Lavouts

E._-enings at 7•30-Middleport;
H e;~ th

Unitecl M ethOd ist Church

Thurs.

Morni ng

(10 :30)

and

Evenings a ! 1:30-Pt. Pluunt ,
w. va . KrOdel Park Club House.
For furth er informaTion call Jo

187. ASH ST.
MIDDLEPORT
992-3100 6-6·1 mo.

Ann Newsome, 6U·992-lll2.
6·3·1 m o .

Roger Hysell
Garage

H. L Writesel
Roofing
New, repair,gutters aod
dowo spouts .
Window cleaoing
Gutter cleaoiog
Free Estimates

949·2862-949·2160
4·5·1fc

Real Estate lor Sale

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Traosmissioo
Repair
Phooe 992·5682
4-30-tfc

Busioess Services
Anything mode of wood . The
Wood
Shed ,
Broadw ay ,
Racine. Ohio.

THREE BEDROOM house, Iorge
living room ond k itchen , wal l·
!a-wall carpe ting . 11/1 acres,
Immediate poss8ssjon . Priced
at $32 ,000. l_ntersection of Rt.

3% acres In Pomeroy. SEclud·
ed wooded area on top of hill .
Overlooks riwer . Water , elec·
tric
available .
$7900 .

7 and 143. 99'2-3 183.

992-3886.

MODERN 3 Bedroom house,
total elec. Home situated on
Iorge lot in Hutchisons Sub·
Divison, 742-2047.

REAL ESTATE loons. Purchase
and refinance . 30 year terms,
VA. No money down (eligible
vetarons) . FHA · As low as 3
per cent down (non-veterans) .
Ireland Mort gage Co., 77 E.
State, Athens. 6 1-.f-592-3051.

HOTEL AND BAR for sole or
lease , located in Middleport,
Ohi o,
on
Ohio
River .
Pri c:e drea $onoble . Highly
potentionol business proper ty

882-2462.

CUSTOM

WOOD

WORK .

Real Estate for Sale

MODERN THREE bedroom
house ,
full
basement .
fireplace, fully carpeted , cen·
trot a ir , enclotoed sun porch,
located on 6 'A a cres on CR 18,
apprax. 3 miles from Racine. If
in terested contact lorry Wolfe
949-2836 weekends and after
5 evenings.
TWO STORY 3 bedroom house.
3 tots. Now's your chance ·If
you need a hou$e , $12,000.
Owner willing to talk .

992-2082 a' 7·2-2328.

LDS AGENCY

LET'S S EE NOW •-PRE S IDENT -·, THAT
""US T BE MR. S ACKS

WHERE JACK SACK IS T11 ' BIG
SHOT,.. BelTER ASK 'FORE
I TAKE AN'( 0' lH05~

Real Estate Loans

•
and· !

Purchase
Refinance
30 Year Terms
A - No money down
(eligible veterans)

OFFICE."'

OLD CRATE S .,.

592-3051

·KNOCK
'EM OUT
JUST LIKE
"THA"T; EH1"

4·23·1 mo.

brick hom e on M!Jiberry in Pomer oy. F . H .A . ap-

proved. $~8,00 . 00 .

Vinyl and.Aluminum

spade.

Pass

Led and overtook

dummy's last trump. Ran
the r est of his trumps to

come down
ending.

.·

'

a three-card

J.::NTE R P~ I SE

ASSN . I

two~club bid w as a

backfired . First, it got North
and South to seven clubs .
Left to themselves they

might well have stopped at
six. The n , it told South ho w
to play th e hand.
He ruffed a heart in

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

to

Dummy he ld A-K-8 of
spades. Declarer held 7-5 of
spades and the 10 of hearts.
West could not keep three
spades and a heart and just
gave up .

little else . This nuis ance bid

Siding

(Do you have a question for

the experts ? write " Ask th e
EKpe rts . " care of this newspa·
per. Individ ual ques tions wiff
be answereC if accompa nied
by stamped. self-addressed
envelopes . Th e most inreresring questions will be. used in
tnis colUmn and wm receive
copies oi JACOBY MODERN )

~'-~fd'
by THOMAS JOSEPH

call for a Free Siding
Estimate, 949·1801 or
949·2860. No Sunday

GA$0LINE ALLEY

I want to seea man named
Eqqs about a
job! .,.""1\(""";,.-"'

calls.

6·14·2 mo.

Y:didn't want
fried eqq~!

'

Business Services , "·

'·•

..

BRADFORD , Auctioneer , Com· .(
plate Service. Phone 949·2487
or 9449·2000. Racine, Ohia 1 '
Critt Bradford .
"',

Settle for
iheseeqqs
qo home!

That'll be three· ~
fifi-4 plus a dollar
forthetip!

...

Sweepers., tocsters, irons , oil
smal l appliances . lawn moar,
next to State Highway Garage
an Route '1 , 985-3825.

SEWING MACHINE Repak•.
· service, all make,, 992·2284.
Ttle Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authori~ed Singer Soles and
Service. We shdrpen Sclsson. ,

WINNIE

EXCAVATING , dozer, loader
and backhoe work; dump
trucks and lo-boys f~r hire,
will haul fill dirt, top soil,
limestone and gro vel. Call Bob
or Roger Jeffers, dov phone
992 -1089 ,
night
phone

#WHO'S Tl1E NEW f:tJVv'ERHOU5E BE·
!'liND 111E ULTRACONSERVATIVE ,
ULTRA-ELEGANT WINNIE WINKi.E
F/1$/IIONS? NONE. OfHER THAN THE
FOUNDE-R'S 5ffiiG, WMPY W/NKI.E,
WHO 5EEM5 "'ETERMINED
ro MAKE A NAME
FOR HERSELF, v

8/RPIE I
L1.57EN70
77(/.S,I

992-3525 0' 992-5232.
EXCAVATING ,
dozer
backhoe and ditcher, Charlei ""'
R. Hatfield. Block ,Hoe Service,
Rutlon_
d, Ohio. Pone 742·2008. ;. ,

.

30 The big
sandwich
31 Balaam's
steed
32 Words of
inquiry
31 Seek an
apple
37 Toulouse·
Lautrec
haunt
U Ethan or
Barbara
IZ Between:
Fr.43 Many
moons
M Subse·
quently

~

been cancelled? lost your &gt;~
oparotars
license? Phon.,.. &gt;'4

:. ~

E·C ELECTRICAL Contractor
serving Oflio Volley i-egion.
51)( days a week , 2.4 ho!Jrs serwice . Emergency ca lls. Call
882-2'152 0' 882-345-&lt; .

!!
BARNEY

"

HOWERY AND MARTIN h ·
svstems,
Rt . 143.

I' M GOIN'

SAKES ALIVE ··

OVER TO

THAT 'S R LONG
WALK WAY OVER
I./ONDER I JUGHAID

RRKV'S

o'

HOUSE ,

DOWN
1 On naval
maneuvers
2 Knife: sl.
3Finding
asylum
4 lmBglnary
being?
5 Unstable
Yesterday's Alllwer
8 Noggin top
1t Scar
33 " Though your
7 W.W. I
emotionally
- be as
Gennan
medal
20 Different
scarlet ... "
at "Goat"
8 Novelist
21 Sense
35 Fearsome
Wallace
conqueror
22
Oriental
being
18 Cordon Bleu 9 United
nursemaid 38 Beverage
.10 Coal
grad
37 Has the O.K.
by-product 23 Parched
22 Classify
38 "- Butteru Holy
zs Control
24 European
milk Sky"
28 Substantial
seas911
river
39 The gums
Z7 Surpassing
17 Hack's
27
Scoundrel
411 "_ Clear
bad
literary
Day"
Z8 Sheik's steed
produc tion 29 Distress
29 Type of
r.--r::--r;-r.:,--,.--

......,.,..,..:.!Qii'ii--,

INSURANCE' :i

9'12-2143.

ACROSS
1 Valued thing
6 Man in
the clouds
11 Fissile.-ock
12 Contention
sphere
13 High spot
of Paris
15 Neronian
greeting
18 Early comic
stMp hero
17 Sword's

crayon1

PULLINS EXCAVATING . Com. .:"~"!~
plete Service . Phonem-2...78 .: "'"!'-

I AIN'T
WRLK IN'· ··
I'M RIDIN' OL
W i LDFIRE

UNK
SNUFFY

It:

used for lhe three L's, X for Lhc Lwo O's, etc. Single letters,

AND

SERVICE

an

One

.,
.'

'

_,

'

7•2·2•55.

Rodol!y, Broker
Middleport, .O.
PHONE .992-2342
EVE. 992-2449

ADO ONS and remodehng,
gutter work, ·down spout s,,
some concrete work , walks
ond
drivew.ay s
(free
estimate). V .C. Young, Ill ,
Rocina , OH . 949-2748.

l etter

simply

st an ds f or another. I n t his sample A is

apos t rophes , . the l en gth and form at !on of the wo rd s are
h ints. Eac h day th e code l etler s are d1ft'er ent.

PEANUTS

Howard RotavotorS and V
chisel plows. leo Morris.

DOWNING-CHILDS

17; Movie " Advise &amp; Consenl"
10.
11: 45-Starsky &amp; Hutch 6, 13; 12 :asMcC loud 8; 12 :55-Mannlx 6, 13 .

Transition 10.

·

6:3G-Dragnet 17; 6:45-Mornlng
Report 3; 6:5o-Good Morning
West VIrginia 13; 6: 55-Chuck
While Reports 10; News 13.
7:00-Todoy 3.15; Good Morning
Amf!rlca 6.13 ; Frldav Mornlno 8:

Schoolles 10; Th•ee Stooqes 17;
7 : 15-We ather 33 .
7:3G-Fomlly Affair 10; Llllas Yoga
&amp; You 33 .
B;QO--Capt . Kangaroo 8,10; Leave It
To Beaver 1.7; Sesame St. 33 .
8:3G-Romper Room 17; 9:00-Bob
Braun 3; Emergency One 6;
Porky Pig &amp; Friends 8; Love of
Life 10; Phil Donohue 15; Love
Tennis 33 ; Lucy Show 17 .
9:30-Sanford &amp; Son 8; Hogan's
Heroes 10; Weather 33; Green
Acres 17.
IO:QO--Card Sharks 3, 15; Edge of
Nlghl6 ; All In The Family 8, 10;
Dallng Game 13; Movie "Naked
In the Sun" 17; E•p lorlng the
Cralls : Sllkscreen 33 . ·
10: 3D-All Star Secrets 3, 15; $20.9QO
Pyram id 13; Whew 8, 10; Daniel
Foster M.D. 33 .
11 :00-High Rollers 3, 15; Laverne &amp;
Shirley 6, 13; Price ls Right 8, 10;
Antiques 33.
11 : 30- Wheel of Fortune 3, 15;
Family Feud 6,13; Frying Pons
West 33; 11: 55-News 17 .
12:00-Newscenter 3; News 6, 10;
Password 15; Young &amp; the
Reslless 8; Over Easy 33 ;
M idday Magazine 13; Love
Amerlcon Style 17.
12 :30-Ryan ' s Hope 6,13; Search for
Tomorrow 8, 10; Not For Women

Only 15 ; Movie " Old Los
Angeles" 17; MacNeil -Lehrer
Repdrt 33.
1:00-Days of Our Lives 3, IS; All My
Children 6, 13; News 8; Young &amp;
the Restless 10; Watch· Your
Mou'h. 33.
1:3D-As The World Turns 8,10 :
Movie "The Band Wagon" 33 .
2:00-Doctors 3,15; One Lffe to Live
6, 13; · 2: 25-News 11.
2:3o-Another World 3, 15; Guiding
Light 8,10; 1 Love Lucy 17,
.
3:00-General Hospllol6, 13; lnflnlty
Factory 17 Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
3 :3D-Mash 8; Joker' s Wild 10;
Banono -Spllts 17; Over Easy 20;
Once Upon A Clilsslc 33 .
~ :00-Mister Cartoon J; HollyWood
Squares 15; Merv Griffin 6;
Addoms Family 8; Sesame St.
20,33; Mike Douglos 13; Flintstones 17.
4 : 30- Lone Ranger 3; Hogan 's
Heroes 8; Lucy S.h oW lS i Par -

tridge Family 17.
5 :00- Bonanza 3;
Beverly
Hillbillies 8; Mister Rogers'
Neighborhood 20,33; Gomer Pyle
10; Six Million Dollar Mon 13;
Brady Bunch 15; Star Trek 17.
5; 30-News 6; E lee . Co. 20; Mary
Tyler Moore 10; Odd Couple 15;
Doctor Who 33 .
6 : 00- News 3,8. 10.1 3.15 ; Family
Alfolr 17; VIlla Alegre 20; Studio
See 33.
6:00-NBC News3,15; ABC News13;
Carol Burnett 6; CBS News 8,10;
Over Eosy 20,33 ; Father Knows
Best 17.
7 :00- Cross -Wifs 3; Newlywed
Game 6.13; Sha Na No 8; News
10; Get Smart 17; Love
American Style IS; Dick Cavell
20,33 .
7:30-Hee Haw Honeys 3; $1.98
Beauty Show 6; Family Feud
8, 10; $100,000 Name thai Tune 13;
My Three Son• 17 .
8:00-Baseball 3: Operotlon Pet,
II coat 6, 13; Dllf 'rent Slrokes 15;
Incred ible
Hulk
8, 10;
Week

In

Review

Freshmen In Concert 20 ; Money

614-8.43-3011 .

LEO MORRIS Trucking. Will do
lima and fertiliJer hauling and
spreading. Also limestone and
gravel hauling . 7--42-2455.

33 ; M ash 8; Movie " War Devils"

Washington

DAILY C RYPTOQUOTE - flere"s how to work
AXVDLBAAXR
•·
ls I. ONGFEI.LOW

VERV GENTLE Quarter Ho rse.
Western parade ~oaddle .
Phone 698-3290.

:Views of

20.33: Basebal l 17.
·
8 :3D-Welcome Back Kolter 6, 13;
Pilot " McGurk" IS; Wall Street
Week 20,33.
9 :00- Movle " The IJIIIIatlon of
Sarah" 6, 13; Rockford Flies 15;
Dukes of Hazzord 8, 10; The Four

bow Ridge with top of the
lln.--Borth-Swiss Colony - .
Jay co - Motor Homes to Top·
pen, accessories ond friendly
service. For directions coli

SALES

am; _Br. Mgr.

4¥
5¥
6t
Pass

Michae ls' cue bid designed
to show both major suits and

IT !

A

dummy's ace and king of
diamonds to discard one

1.

Pass

West's

'1-IATS WHAT IH '
WIZER "TOLD ME,
UMPA) t .SWEAR

COONER'S CAMPERS on Rain-

kitchen down. Beautifu l wa lnut cabinets. A stately

Pass
Pass

to

Soulh

ff-.IEW SPAPER

SO IT\.1..

IN STOCK for immediate
delivery: various sizes of pool
kits . Do--it- yourself or let us
inatall for you. _D.. Bumgardner
Soles •.lnc. 992 -5724,

BUlL T IN 1877 - Completely restored. central heal

zPass
•

problems .

West.
So he .ruffed .a second
hea rt . Th en he cashe d

Vulnerable : Both
Dealer: South
Norlb Easl

his

spade-heart squeeze against

By Oswald Jacoby
ond Alan Sontag

77

Phone I (6 14) 698-7331
7•2-2593.

and a1r condttloned, three bedrooms, bath, laundr~~
upstairs, large living room , family room and eat-In

There was another way

handle

+AK987

Weal

He could not cash the spade

and diamond winners and
then c ross ruff . East would
almost s urely· ruff the second spade .

Openiog lead: • K

· ,.

MORfGAG.E
CO.
E. Stale, Athens

.

• s43 2

....

IRELAND

AUTOMOBILE

• Q 10763

Pass
Pass
Pass

FHA- AS low as 3%: ~
down (non-veterans)

would run out of his own
tr umps before East ran out.

~

LITTLE ORPHAII AIINIE-INQUIRE WITHIN
HM ·M·M ···THAT'S TH' FACTORY

covating, septic
dozer, backhoe .

k i tchen .

Henry E. Cleland Jr .
992-12~·
992·6191

'

SUPEit
GOOSE
STOCK
TRAilER NOW AVAILABLE .

four trumps,

in the East hand .
He couldn 't ruff out the
last two little hearts . He

• 96 2

.

hi s ha nd with a trump and
s topped to plan how to con - .

tinue against all

SOU Til
• 7 53
• A 10 7 4

IJTI'LE ORPHAN ANNIE

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR -

leve l lot. fu ll y

Henry E . Cleland Sr.

langsville, Ohio

mile off Rt. 1 by· pass
on St. Rt. 124 toward
Rutland.

TWO STORY house located on
'I• a cre in Rutland. 'lUll bos&amp;-men t, Iorge living and dining
room with server, drape$ and
carpeti ng. Utility building and
garage . Col/ 742-275-4 .

2 story, 12 room hou$e, one
smolf barn and Iorge out
building, property touches
Forked Run State Pork , has
excellent loke si te , all mineral
rights included. l ocated on
poved Rd. -2 miles from Tup·
pars Plains, Call 667·3932
pri ce $16,900 and wi lling to
talk abou t price .

.....

614 ·669 · 4245 Evenings

l J4

Pts. Exce llent condi ·
ti on, ce ntral air &amp; heat,

bldgs. N·e ar Long Bot ·
tom . $33.500 .00 .
WE ARE A FULL TIME
REAL
ESTATE
ORGANIZATION .
"FOR BEST RESULTS
LIST WITH US.' '
Realtors

+A K8 4
•3
t A K82

..'

Phone 985·3806
Jack Ginther 98S·3806

QUALITY
DRAFTING
SERVICES

IH~

8,1 0;

FRIDAY , JUNE 15, \ 979
5:25-World af Large 17; 5:45Farm Reporl1l; 5:5G-PTL Club
13; , 5:55-Summer Semester 10.
6:00-700 Club 6,8; PTL Club IS;
6 : IG-News 17 ; 6 : 25-Soclellesln

dummy at trick two, came to
NORTH

Flve-0

Asia 20.33 .
9:3G-Carter Country 13; 10: 00-The
Innocent &amp; the Damned 3, IS; 2020 6,13; Barnaby Jones 8,1O;
Ra ce for 'the Yellow Jersey 33 ;
Commanders 17; News 20.
II :00- Ne ws 3.6,8, 10, 13, 15; New
Soupy Sales 17; Lowell Thomas
Remembers 33.
·
ll.:lG-Johnny Carson 3,15 ; u .s .
Open Highlights 6, 13; ABC News

Baseball 17; 2:05-News ll;
4:05-News 17; 4:25-12 O'Clock
High 17.

Cue bid rewards opponent

¥ KQJ85
t JH

27320 Montgomery Rd ,

HARD
TO FIND .
$25,000.00.
NEWER RANCH - 5

70 acres, farm, ranch
type hou se, barn &amp; other

t-:io
B%i&lt;'(11llfJ0 I &lt;:&gt;A.Y .

• Q J 10 6
WEST
EAST
+Q1096 2
• J

Portable toilet rental.

J

MANY
OTHER
FEATURES . $29,100.00.
NEW LISTING MAJOR
INVESTMENT PRO ·,
PERTY IN MEIGS CO .,
POT E NTIA L
FOR
COM MERCIAL
&amp;
RECREATIONAL
USES . CALL
FOR
DETAILS .
SHOULD BE SOLD -

YOU'RE: AL-WAY?

·

l : DO-Tomorrow 3; News 15; 1: 35-

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

vice. Any day, anytime.

Chester, 0 .
5·6·1 mo . pd .

MAGIC HAIRDO QUENCH

One above the klng - AN ACE

BRIDGE

Residential and com mercial.
Call
for
estimate. 24 Hour Ser ~

Box J

I Jumbles : SCARF
An swer

BORNWSER

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

bdrm . home, basement
w -garage,
enclosed
por c h, dining room.

large

Yesle rday's

Thursday, June 14

on heating cost

Pomeroy

acres in town, garden

e quipped

.

---------.....-!~'

WANTED

lot. TRY AND TOP
TH IS. $24,000.00.
NEW LISTING 4
spac ~, fruit trees, good

.

L.

Free Estimates

26.76 WOODED ACRES w;th a

608 E .
MAIN
POMI'ROY . 0 .

MAIC::~ I AcSE,

(Answers tomorrow)

Experiencund
lully Insured
Free Est.
Call 992·1772
•
5-17·1mo. "'

Motors, Inc.
Ph . 992-2174

Phone 992·6323

'

STONE

985· 4339,

SPECIAL .puppies
of
a
regislered Engli sh Springer
Spa niel mother. all rhe puppi es look like her. We will not
le t them go unless as sured o f
on exce llent home, 843 -223-4 .

BOB'S GENERAL
CONTRACTING

.

hea t , and full

IN

IJ I J
"r I I I I 1-( I I I I ]"

.·~

· l~~!.~.~!\8
basement. Lot 160x1 60.
Sl4,000.
COUNTRY - On St. Rt.

•
'•

A

ONE' 6 L.IFE !5R'OU6HT
AeOUT ~y

Now arrange th8 circled letters to
form lhe sUtprise answer, as sug·
gested by the above ca rtoon.

U~DER·

F OOT~

Cellulosic (wood fiber J
Thermal Insulation
Save 30 pel. to 50 pet.

Smith Nelson

992·S547
,4-25· 1 mo. · Pd .

REAL ESTATE : 1 acre lo t in Riggscrest Manor, between Tup·
per$ Plains and Chester
Phone 985-3929 and 985--4129.

centra!

FROM

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE

Service

Rl. 3

Real Estate for Sale

MILLFIELD - 8 yr. old
2 bedroom home, bath,

I1 . J

YOU COMifJ'
AL.ONc; TOO •
I&lt;ID DO~... OKAY•
BUT 5 TAY OIJT

J&amp;L

EXPERIENCED
Radiator' r::"""'~

Pom eroy , Ohio

Coll992· 504-4 or 992-3792 .

216 E . Second Strtet

Tutankhamun. 6.

9:01l-Qulncy 3, 15; Barney Miller 13;

IRAPTP±

4231 mo. (Pd .)

I ·JO Pl"l

CONTRACTOR

GAS DRYER FOR ELEC. DR YER

9'92-3325

RYTAR

Hawaii

992·601 1

797 ·274 Sor 797-27S2

8:00-Hizzonner 3, 15; Mork &amp; Mindy
6,13; Waltons 8. 10; Nova 20,33.
8:3G-" Mathe' &amp; Me, M .D." 3,15;
Angle 13; In Celebration of

[(J

•New Home.
•Add oos
* Remoldings
*Free estimates

mainte na nce, new and repair.
St orm dn.on a "'d windows . All
work guarant l!l!d , :ID )lelrs fll ·
perier~ ct . Fru eslimates: Call
Tom Haskins 949·2160.

WORK, GENERAL

1970 CHAMPION 12w60 2
b e droo m .
Applian ces,
building. Situated on o nice
rented lot. Phon e 992·7235
after 5 p.m.

levellol. $23.000 .
BUSINESS - Want to

POMEROY lANOMARK

~ --

All typ~s rooti ng, !ill.ltfers and
dow nspou ts . All t)lpes home

Athen s Area

N. L Construction

B' S MOBILE HOME SALES , PT.
PLEASANT , WV . 304-675-4424 .

go into self employment
and be independent for

~-~=•=•·

Home Maintenance

Television
Viewing
THURSDAY, JUI\!E 14,1 979

Answerhere:

1970 Sylva, 60)( 12, 2 bedr .
1970Costle, 60)( 12, 2 bed r .
1974Morkline. 50)(12 , 2bedr.
1969 Va liant , 12)(60, 2 bedr.
1967Nolionol . 12 )(50, 2bedr.

ousmg · ·
Headquarters

I

rn

1

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

and

NEW LISTING - Rl. 33

ROSE BUSHES

$60 .00 .

Ohio Valley Roofing

6·6,1 mo.

992-S858.
l965GENERAL60xl2 . 2bed&lt;.

out of town is thi s 2
bedroom home, bath,
l arge dining, furna ce,
full basement, and n ice

ON ALL

~.

Unscrambia 1hese fo~r Jumbles ,
one letter to each square, to form
lour ordinary words .

Business Services

WA TE R A ND misc . hauling .

Coii992-S858 .

For Sale or Trade

WURllllER PIANO , very good
condition , $650 .00, 992. 7537 ,
al sO o pair of end tobias,

byHenri ArnoldandBobLea

YARIN]

1960 SKYliNE t roller 50)(10. N.
Main in Rutland . 7-42-2789.

Yard Sale

1972

. AUCTION .

SlEEPING ROOM for working
man only, Reasonab le re nl .

color and block ond white,
HARRISON T.V., 276Sycamore
St,, Middleport . 992-2522.

rr.EWSPAPEA ENT.EAPAISE_ASSN I

ti,me for good weather, good friends,
and good health. Share YOUR good
health by giving blood.

ONE BEDROOM oprs . .Contact
Vil lage Manor , 992-7787 .

BUYING JUNK cars and
bod ies. A lso scrap iron and
metal s. Rider's salvage , SR
124, Pomeroy . 992-5468.

Something for eweryone. First
house on left otter you crou
railroad track at Cheshire or
SCORPIO lOci. 2._Nav. 22) II the Mary layne residence.
there is a problem brewing June 13. 14 , 15. 16.
among friends with whom you
257 Main St. , M iddleport,
mi)C soci ally , don ' t take side s.
You 're th e one who "/1 come out Thursday and Friday , June 14,
15, 10 li .f. B.W. TV, $40, poron the wrong end .
table
stereo, $20, 'rondem
SAGinARIUS (Nov. 13-0ec.
21) Be su re you do ever:t lhing bike , $50 and many other
you promised yo u would for items. inc. winter maternity
members ol your !amity, or clothes , lg.
you 'll have some long·term BIG YARD SALE Friday and
gripers to co ntend with .
Saturday, June !Sand 1.6 9til4
CAPRICORN ~Ooc . !2-Jon. at Ro ger Rou sh re sidence at
1t)Try not to be so set on your Racine , Ohio Bucktown Road
ow n Ideas today that yOu 'll fal l lots of nice items , Rain
Ia listen to the suggestions of cancels .
another who Is trying to be
helpful. This reasoning could 3 FAMILY YARD SALE , odulls
be superior to yours .
and children d 9 th ing. Dryer.
AQUARIUS ~Jon . 211-Ftb. 11) cs , Co . Rd 5 Brad .
Tre11t lng youree lt once In a bury Rd., First M obile Home
while is all well and good , but on ri ght, Friday and srurday 9
today you 're apt to make some ti l 6.
silly and wasteful purchases
because you conwin ced your- BACKYARD SAlE , 2n Main
St., Middleport , Ohio. Starting
sell you deser-ve a reward .
PISCES ~Fob. !11-Morch !0) You June 18, 9 t il 3 All good dean
may leel stymied today by the Merchandise, Ra in cancels .
very people you love . They love
TWO FAMil Y yard sale, Se yo1.1 , too , bu t conditions are
cond St. across from Hubbard
such I hat they have to a11end to
Greenhouse in Syracuse, June
other lhing s fi rst.
ARIES IMt&lt;eh !1-Ap'll 19) 1i 15- 16-17.
won 't do you any good to thin!! BIG VARD SALE , Fridoy, Satur about how things should have, day and Sunday June 1s.
been. Face up ·to realit y and 17,81ua: and Wh ire hou se on
begin to work from there .
Ra ilroad. St. Middleport , Rain
TAURUS (April 2'G-May 20) A o r sh ine. Phone 993-60.47 or
friend who has done so before 99.2-7494, Follow yellow $ign$.
might pull another boner whi ch
could end up being e)(pensive
lor you . Don't be a fall guy . ·
Pets for Sale

This swnmer's byword is fun ; It's a

TWO BEDROOM rroi le r. Adu /r s
only. 992·332"1 .

99'2 -61 73.
1940 CASE TRACTOR . Good
condition. $600. 992-3 183.
GOOD USED TELEVI SIONS,

VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sepl. 22) A day and Friday, 8 to 5, first
possibl e rea so n you ·re no1 get·
ting complete coo peration to·
daY Is because yo u ' re hesitant
to te l oth er s s hare th e
app lause
LIBRA (Sept . 23-0ct. l3)
Pay a little more attenlion
than usual to yo u r assigne d
ta sks today . Unless you gi·.e
them some e)( lra care . the
results could be disappointing .

992-59 .. .

TRUCKS. 2 ton 1973 and 1•; ,
ton 1970. Both wi th 12 ft.
boxes. Phone 992-6206 or

'fARO
SALE .
Krowsczvn
residence , 300 Broa dway,
M i ddleport.
Furn i ture .
cl orhes, misc. · Tues ., Wed .,
Thurs .

QJ''Birthday

TWO BEDROOM furnished opt.
992 -3 129,
992 -5434 .
or

WANT TO buy : old -45 and 78
records. Co li
phonograph
992·6370 or Contact Mart in
Fu rni tur e.

Osol

ttt.\~r

FURNISHED APT . suitable for 3
or 41 construct ion workers .
After Spm call 992 -5434,
992 -3129, or 992 -591 4.

OlD COI NS , pocket watches,
doss rings , wedding bonds.
diamonds. Gold or silver. Ca ll
Roer Womsley, 742-233 1.

EXP ERIENCED CARPET in stall ers. Coll742-31 17 after 5.

Pho ne

3 AND .&lt;1 RM furn ished and un·
furn is hed
opts
Ph one
991-5434 .

~THAT SCRAMP.LEO WORD GAME

~ ~ ~J..!il~ tt

Services Offered

CO AL , LIMESTONE,
sand,
gra vel , ca lcium chloride, f ert ilizer. dog food . and all types
of salt. E)(celsior Salt Wo rks,
Inc.. E. Main St ., Pomeroy,

BARMAID WANTED . A pply ol
Headquarters in Middleport.

HANGER ,

.

OLD FURNITURE, ice bo~~:es.
br ass bed s, k e n beds, desks,
etc. , com plete households.
Write M .D. M iller, Rt . 4,
Pomeroy or co l1992-7760.

HelpWaoted

PAPER

\1\J\'INl m'il

Buys Are Found In the Sentinel Classifieds

7:30 PM RACINE GUN CLUB .

15 Words o~ Undf' r

lday
:l:days

•

WOW! T~AT MU5T SE
EXCITING FOR A NEW

FARMER LIKE ~OIJR5ELF

ACTUALL~, HE SHOULDN'T

AAVE AN'i' TROV61.E
SELLING ONE RA DI5~ ...

all

CRVPTOQUOTES
JBP

HXZ'W

NGWMBPW

MBVQ
LWXJGZK

.X

DXZ
QBNZ

QBNZ
NGW M

News &amp; VIews 33.
9:3G-Best of Families 33 .
IO :DO-Eddle Capra Mysteries 15;
Dallas 8,10; News 20. ·
10 :3G-Hollywood Squares 3; Ten
Who Dared 17; Consumer Survival Kll 20; Originals : Writers ,
In America ll .
11 : 00- News 3,8, 10, 13, 15; Two
Ronnles 20 : Lowell Thomas
Remembers 33.
11 :30-Johnny Corson 3,15; U.S.
Open Hlghllghls 6,13; Bonkers 8;
. ABC News 33; Movie "Man wllh
the Synthetic Brain" 10; Movie
" Room Service" 17.

.

. ;,., i

... .. ..

MGD . '- OBBYSU
W.
NXLMGzKWBZ
Yesterday's Cryptoquote : PROGRESS OCCURS WHEN
COURAGEOUS, SKILLFUL LEADERS SEIZE THE OP·
PORTUNlTY TO CHANGE THINGS FOR TilE BE)TTER.HARRY TRUMAN
ID 1979 King Fu tures Svncli clte , /nc .

12 :00-Barelta 6,13; Juke,Box 8;"
Monty Python's Flylng Clrcusll.
12 :3G-Movle "An Eye for an Eye"
8; 1 :00-Midnlght Special 3, IS;
Movie "Crealure wllh the Blue
H and" 10.

...•'
•

'•'

..

�.•

,

.

~

12-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, June 14,1979
business meetings Saturday and
again Sunday, with dinners both
evenings. The ceremonial
signingwill wind up the sessions MonContinued from Page 1
positions of the two parties," Vance day .
In a development that ~mild affect
said.
There will be talk about extending treaty ratification, the Pentagon anmost-favored-nation trading status to nounced Wednesday the retirement of
the Soviet Union + but no fonnal Anny Lt. Gen. Edward L. Rowny, the
agreement since Congress first would Joint Chiefs of Staff's representative
have to be convinced that Jews and on the SALT II negotiating team for
·
other minorities are allowed to the last six years.
Pentagon
sources
who
aslied
not to
emigrate freely from the Communist
be named said Rowny, 62, has "constate.
Jewis)) emigration now is at annual sistently had reservations about the
way the treaty was being drawn." He
rate of abJut 60,000.
Carter will also try to make head- is certain to be questioned by Senate
way on the Soviet treatment of corrunittees considering the treaty
dissidents, presumably including the and could hurt its chances for
ratification if he opposes it.
jailed Anatoly Shcharansky.
Meanwhile, White House press
There have been reports a number
of dissidents might be freed to secretary Jody Powell described as
celebrate the sununit and to coax "grossly misleading " a statementby
reluctant senators to cast their votes Sen. Henry M. Jackson, D-Wash., that
seven years of detente with the Soviet
for ratification of the SALT II treaty.
Carter also will appeal to Brezlmev Union was leading to a decade of apfor cooperation in promoting peaceful peasement.
"There was a misleading reference
settlements in the Middle East and in
to the fact that we couldn't build a
southern Africa.
Specifically, the United States wan- heavy missile," Powell said Wedts the Soviets to mute their attacks on nesday at the daily White House news
the Israeli-Egyptian peace treaty and briefin'g. While that is technically
to avoid blocking a peacekeeping role correct, Powell said Jackson knew
that "there has been no consideration
for the United Nations.
or
request from our military people
Also, Carter probably will urge
Brezhnev 1o prod Joshua Nkomo and for us to build a heavy missile."
·Robert Mugabe, heads of the
Patriotic Front · guerrillas, into
negotiations with leaders of Zimbabwe Rhodesia .
Continued from Page I
The summit was shifted to Vienna
from Washington to ease travel bur- in the case of Ohio Bell.
However, Tom Cotton, Ohio Bell
dens on Bre:zlmev, who will firs t meet
Carter Friday evening when they pay spokesman who sat in on the hearing,
a courtesy call on Austrian President said Meshel had missed an important
point.
Rudolf Kirchschiaeger.
._
"Residential rates never have paid
Carter and Brezhnev hold two
the cost of residential service," he
said, adding that the average base
rate for a residential customer now is
about $10 a month. The cost of
providing service is about $20. ,
Cotton said that if the company is
forced to charge actual costs only for
business service,
residential
customers would have to pick up the
slack. ·"The rates would double," he
said.
,
Measured rates for residential
customers have been optional for
Ohio Bell customers since 1976, and
for business since the 1930s.
Meshel said he didn't object to
Get profess ion a l
measured rates being optional on the
results at a
part of the customer, who he confra c tion of th e cost.
ceded can save on his monthly base
rate under that plan "if he only needs
1\
to make a handful of calls. "
.
Hearings
are
expected
to
continue
1
next week. Cotton said Ohio Bell officials will testify at their first opAmerica's No . 1
uL i
Hom e Carpet
,. h
portunity.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Carter heads

Measiired

WHY
.PAY
MORE ·
FOR
CARPET

tLEANING ;
Rent

.

IIISEillJIC (

Cleaning

System

E]'
),
..,. ..

DANCE TICKETS AVAILABLE
Five tickets are still available to the
last dance of the season sponsored by
$}00
1 the Raoyal Oak Ballroom Dance
·· PER HOU~ 1 Club.
(4·HourM inimum ) I
Featured will be Buddy Young and
Orchestra of Columbus and will be
held at Royal Oak Park Friday, June
16, from 9 p.m. to I a.m. For tickets
call Gerald Powell at 992-2622.
~~

'f

.--------------·
I
I
I

RENT
FOR
ONLY

L-------------J
STAR SUPPLY CO.

VOL. XXVIII N0. 44
Father's Day is this Sunday. You'll find many excellent gift ideas .a t Elberfelds.
Radios, T. V.'s, cameras, clothing, luggage, records and many, many more plus
Father's Day Hallmark Cards and gift wrapping.

MUSIC DEPARTMfNT

TAPE SALE
Special savings on S-track and cassette tapes.
Country, popular, easy listening, rock and
religious.

Jog shorts, tennis shorts,
camper shorts and dress
styles. Sizes 30 to 46 waist.

REG. •3.79 ...•.....

MEN'S ss.95 SHORTS....... .S7.59
MEN'S s9.95 SHORTS ........s3.49
MEN'S $10.95 SHORTS- -: ... S9.29
MEN'S sn.95 SHORTS.... -~10.191

POCKET KNlVES

FANNY fARMER CANDY

LUNCH BUCKETS
CALCUlATORS

ICE CREAM FREEZERS

SALE! MEN'S SHIRTS
KNIT SHIRTS
DRESS SHIRTS
SPORT SHIRTS

sizes, excellent selection, the
ideal Father's Day gift.

()~ _'.- 'j . ~
1

ROLF'S

BILLFOLDS

,; VJr. MEN'S s5.95 SHIRTS ............. ..S4.93

\~

\'
l ~'h.'.(,f
/~;X:.
·' ·
s ~ ~ :.,.. .
\, [ __.

GIVE DAD A

SA LEI

CHAIR

Men's Dress Socks

trHolds, attaches, credit card
holders, initial ·' key rings,
travel bags. Boxed, ready to
give.

FROM StQOO

Big shipment just In time for
Father's Day buying. One size fits
all sizes 10 thru 13. Big selection of
solid colors.

REG. '1.25 BULKY KNIT ORLON .••. 99'
REG. 11.00 BANLON PANELS ........ 88'

SAVE 20%

HANES
FATHER'S DAY
SPECIAL

SPECIAL FATHER'S
DAY SALE

*1.00 REFUND

·New

SPECIAL FATHER'S
DAY SALE

SUMMER FURNITURE

WEMBLEY TIES
ready
hand .

By mail when you buy any 3 Hanes
Men's white lightweight all cotton
underwear or Hanes boxers.

ties
tied

just

At

Mechanic
Street
Lloyd, Telescope,
John Hancock brands. Choose
from chairs, rockers, loungers
and tables.

received,

and

SALE $5. 19
Men's S7. 50 wembley Ties
SALE $5.99
FREE GIFT BOX

SALE PRICES

SA I.E I

SPECIAL SALEI

MEN'S
TIMEX WATCHES

MEN'S s1S.95
WRANGLER
JEANS

Battery operated styles, self·
winders, digitals, calendar wat·
ches, good selection.

Sizes 29 lo 42 waist, lengths 30
to 36. Basic denim jeans In
boor flare or srralght leg
styles. Pre-washed, No Fault
blue denims.

SAVE 20%

$12.66

OTHER GIR SUGGESTIONS FROM
MEN'S DEPARTMENT • 1ST FLOOR
White Handkerchiefs
Suspenders
Work Uniforms
Sport Coats
Work Gloves
Swim Trunks
Chambray Work Shirts
Straw Hats
Bandana Handkerchiefs
Cigarette Lighters

§Jc)fl€
~
~\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\
Open your Savings
Account here.

Coveralls
Sweat Shirts
Work Socks
Dress Suits
Fashion Jeans
Bib Overalls
Summer Caps
sweat Pants
Alarm Clocks

SALE PRICES
FOR FATHER'S DAY

MEN'S
PAJAMAS
c

Sizes A, B.
and D. Solid colors and pat·
terns, choose shorties styles with short
sleeve top and knee length bottom or
regular style. Van Heusen pajamas includ ·
ed .

Meigs County

MEN'S '6.95 PAJAMAS ................. .. .15.59
MEN'S 18_95 PAJAMAS ..... .............. 17.19
MEN'S '12.50 PAJAMAS ................. '9.99
MEN'S '15.00 PAJAMAS ... ...... ....... '11.99

People

RACINE .
HOME

FDki
--

. ...... d

·· ~ · · · ~ ..

NAT! ~Jit
0

BANK'

our

Warehou~,

four · ln·

Men's $6. 50 Wembley Ties

Just in time for Father's
Day . New styles, new
colors, new widths. Ask
for free gift box.

FATHER'S DAY SALEI

MEN'S DRESS SLACKS .
Sizes 29 to 50 waist, choose your correct
length. Solid colors and patterns, entire
~tock on sale.

I

..

MEN'S $11.95 SLACKS .......... sg,go
MEN'S $14.95 SLACKS ......... $12.40
MEN'S s17.95 SlACKS .........$14.90
MEN'S s19.95 SlACKS ......... $16.50
FATHER'S DAY GIFT IDEAS

MUSIC DEPARTMENT • 2ND FLOOR
TABLE RADIOS
GUITARS
CAR FM CONVERTERS
STEREO COMPONENT SYSTEMS

SCANNERS
CAR RADIOS
TIMEX MINI AlARMS
CAR STEREO SPEAKllS

PORTABLE RADIOS
HARMONICAS

CB ANTENNAS
CLOCK RADIOS

STEREO HEADPHONES

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

Raciner Ohio

I

.

A Kentucky man became Mason
County's fifth highway fatality of the
year Thursday when his car crashed
head-()n into a tractor trailer on U.S.
35, near. Beech Hill, at ll :50 a.m.
John F. Dusing, 28, Villa Hills,
Ky., suffered fatal injuries in the
collision and was pronounced dead
on arrival at Pleasant Valley
Hospital where he was taken by the
Point Pleasant Rescue Squad.
State Police Cpl. J.L. Fitzwater
said witnesses reported Dusing's car
was traveling north when it crossed
the center line and struck a semi-rig
being. operated by Nelyon Gene

I

Big selection of fabrics and colors, recliners, rockers, wall -a ways, rocker -recliners, occasional chairs by Kroehler and
Berkline. ·
·

OPEN SATURDAY 9-.30 A.M TO 5 PM

.

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

are valid, the matter will be put
before voters in the fall. · The permissive auto license tax issue approved several times by earlier council has been defeated in prior referendwn actions.
During last night's meeting, Mayor
Fred Hoffman also announced the
resignations of two employes. They
are Don Roach who has resigned from
the police department and Mrs. Leora
· Sigman who has served as secretary
in the mayor's office for the past 14
years. Mrs. Sigman's resignation is
effective July · 15 and Roach's
resignation is effective as of the last
of May. Rooch indicated that he
might be available for extra work at
times

Kentucky man Mason
Coun.ty's . 5th fatality .

MEN'S
' $8
s •95 SHIRTS..............$s7•43
MEN,S s12.95 SHIRTS ........... $10.73
MENS 14.95 SHIRTS ............ 12.43
ENTIRE STOCK INCWDED

1

ELECTRIC FANS

Good .selection of styles,
leathers and ·colors. BHolds,

By ROBERT HOEFUCH
Middleport Village officials will apparently be faced with a voter
referendum action as the result of
their recent passage of a $5 permissive auto license tax in the community.
Clerk-treasurer Gene Grate reported to village council, which met
Thursday night, that petitions have
been received from a citizens committee requesting that the issue be
put to a vote of the peOple. The
petitions.are signed by 159 residents
of Middleport who ask that the matter
be brought to a vote of the people.
Grate says he has 10 days to file the
petitions with the Meigs County
Board of Elections and if the petitions

REG. '11.79 .............................. SALE '9.45
REG. '15.79 ....................... ,..... SALE '12.65

BINOCUlARS
WEED EATERS
THERMOS JUGS

FOR MEN

SALE '2.95

REG. '8.79 ............................. ... SALE '7.05

POlAROID CAMERAS
KODAK CAMERAS
BEVERAGE COOLERS

FlASHLIGHTS

o • o o • • • • • o • • • • • • •••• •••

REG. '5.79 ................................ SALE '4 •• 5

GIFT .SUGGESTIONS FROM
1ST FLOOR

en tine
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

FRIDAY, JU NE 15, 1979

Council faced
with referendum

•· -..·;.

MEN'S SUMMER
SHORTS

at

Middleport voters want say

OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8 PM

MEN'S
BELTS

~\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\~

e

•

SALE PRICES

•

\

Today
.. . in the world

Orip Carter visits
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) President Carter's son Chip visits
central Ohio today and Saturday
to campaign for a Gi&gt;lumbus
mayoral candidate and participate in local festivities in
Zanesville.
The younger Carter, a staff
member of the Carter-Mondale
presidential campaign committee, will attend campaign
gatherings for Columbus'
Democratic mayoral candidate
William Boyland this afternoon.
He will speak at a Muskingum
County Democratic Party
banquet in Zanesville tonight and
be a guest Saturday · on the
reviewing stamr of the Zane's
Trace Commemoration, a citywide festival featuring a parade,
arts and crafts, an antique auto
show and other activities.

Electric Co.
answers
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co. has been ordered to
answer 143 questiolis on company
' financing and operations within
the next 10days.
The Public Utilitie. Commission of Ohio said the answers
are needed to evaluate the electric company's applications for a
$126 million customer rate hike.
The questions were forwarded
to C and SOE last month by the
state Consumers' Coun sel,
William Spratley.
The utility had objected to the
questions, saying Spratley's
requests were burdensome and
overly broad.

Adkins, 29, Sias, W.Va.
Both the car and the cab of the
semi, owned by G.L. Slone, Inc.,
Hamlin, were demolished. Th e
·driver of the tractor-trailer was
unin jured.
Mason County Deputy Sheriff J .E.
Perry investigated an accident on
Millstone Road at 1:05 a.m. this
morning which occurred when a
pickup truck driven by ·Earl Ray
Stover, 64, Gallipolis Ferry, struck a
parked truck owned by Chester
Simpkins, Gallipolis Ferry.
After striking the truck, Stover
ran off the road into a creek bed.
Stover was cited for driving
without an operator's license.
Damage was estimated at $850 to
Stover's truck and $700 to the
Simpkins truck.
'

":

Council approved the report of
Mayor Hoffman for the month of
May. The report showed $3409.75 in
fines and fees and $911 in merchant
police collections for a total of
$3507.75.
Mayor Hoffman reported that the
village bas $9108 in the street resurfacing fund and asked the street committee composed of Dewey Horton,
Allen Lee King and Marvin Kelly to
study how the funds can be spent to
the best ·advantage and to make
·recommendations at the next
meeting. Mayor Hoffman asked the
group to look especially at Riverview
Drive in lower Middleport. The
mayor also reported that a new contract has been received from the
county on lodging prisoners in the
county jail. The contract provides a
charge of $14 for the first day and $10
a day thereafter. The mayor reported
that he has given the contract to
Solicitor Bernard Fultz lor review
since there are a number of
provisions involved.
The mayor reported also that many
(Continued on page 10)

EMEkG!:., {,.
TOWING

~

FOR rROG5
·ONlY

FROGS ONLY - During Regatta weekend Jack
Codner, owner of Codner's Texaco, Syracuse, will be
offering towing service for "frogs" only. Jack displays
a sign in regard to the service which will be posted in a

SEORC wants completion
of Appalachia Highway
The Southeasatern Ohio
Regional Council by action of its
Highway Users ' Committee bas
recommended that the ' Ohio
Legislature enact legislation
which will provide the necessary
funds for continued new highway ·
construction and maintenallc.~ of
the existing systems, Robert L.
'

(Bob) Evans announced. Evans,
president of SEORC, said the
recommendation has been mailed
to legislative leaders in the form of
a resolution which· was unanimously approved by members of the
committee.
.
.G. _ ~efll!er_ ~ush, chairma.n of the
highway committee, said that

Delay of Gallipolis Dam pro-iect
.J
costing taxpayers dearly--Glenn
WAslllNGTON - Senator .John years ago, on July 25, 1975, Glenn told
Glenn ([).Ohio) has told a Senate sub- a Public Works subcorrunittee that
comittee that Administration delays the project's Qriginal $159 million cost
in proceeding with the Ohio River has escalated more than 10 per cent a
lock and dam modifications have cost year.
the taxpayers considerable money.
"This has added tens of millions to
Noting that the chief of the Army the final costs of the project " Glenn
'
Corps of Engineers recommended a said.
go-ahead on the project almost four
Criticizing a long string of studies
that have been ordered for the project, Glenn told his colleagues:
"The escalating costs for projects
we all know will eventually be built
should be laid at the appropriate
doorstep. I think the case has been
:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;

CLEVELAND (AP)- Numbers
drawn in the Ohio lottery Thursday:
Blue 366; white 34; gold B•
winathon 37955. .
'

SANDI .
HAMll.TON

PAIGE

SMml

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Sunday through Tuesday - A
c hance of showers or
thunderstonns Sunday, becoming
partly cloudy Monday and Tuesday. Higba in the low to mid 80s.
Lows in the 60s Sunday and low to
mid 50s Monday and Tuesday.

f&gt;
BRENDA
FOSTER

\
JULIE
GmBS

made for putting a halt to these incredibly expensive 'te&lt;1tudies •."
The Senator urged that if the Public
Works Corrunittee decides to expand
the 'Administration 's original bill it
add Gallipolis as a priority construction item.

completion of the Appalachia
Highway and other highway projects which ha.ve been shelved are
of the utmost importance to the
economy of southeastern Ohio. He
added that the .Appalachia project
had been the f~rst pno~ty of the
corruruttt:esmceltsmcepllon.
According to Bush, a poll taken
of the SEORC membership in-

delays in new highway construetion, including comletion of the
Ohio Appalachia Highay as promised and scheduled by 1·the state
administration,
WHEREAS, timely completion
of the Ohio Appalachia Highway as
scheduled is of paramount .luiportance to the southeastern Ohio
region and has been the first

tion of the Appalachian Highway,
US Route 35 from Gallipolis to
Chillicothe including the Jackson
by-pass; construction of Route 33
from Darwin to Athens; 423 bypass at Portsmouth ; and the
.Nelsonville by-pass on US Route
33 ; andinthatorder.
The resolution stated that :
. WHEREAS, Ohio is faced with a
critical lack of funds to meet
escalating highway maintenance
and repair costs which threaten

regional highway construction
projects listed as top priority in a
recent poll of 200 southeastern
Ohio members are . jeopardized by
state highway under-funding,
· WHEREAS, Ohio 's _7-cent
gasoline excise tax has not been increased to meet escalating c011ts
over the past 20 years, and
WHEREAS, there are several
bills before the Ohio Legislature to
(Continued on page 10)

~c~:t~k~e ~w:~ep:~~~~~ ~~~~:~f~=:on°:lv~a~:::.ttee
WHEREAS, nearly all other

14 vie for Regatta crown
Fourteen Meigs County girls are
competing for the title of Big Bend
Regatta Queen and will begin a round
of social and contest activities in a
few days .
Opening festivities for the group
will be a picnic Monday at the home of
Miss Cathy Blaettnar, Pomeroy,
reigning queen hosted by her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. John William Blaettnar.
On Tuesday the contestants will get
together to construct their own floa I
for the regatta parades. Wednesday
everung wtD be the judging by a panel
of three out of county judges who are

TAMMY
MILLER

SMITH

members of the Ohio Festival
Association. Judging will be at the
Riverboat Room of The Athens County Savings and Loan, Meigs Branch.
On Thursday, the queens will take
part in the ftrst parade and on Friday
will visit the midway along with some
25 queens of visiting festivals who will
be coming for Regatta Weekend.
The new queen and her court wiD be
named Saturday on the upper parking
lot In ceremonies to be presided over
by Bill Quickel, general chairman of
this year's regatta. The queen and first, second and third runners-up and
Miss Congeniality will receive
flowers, gills from the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce, and trophies.
Bonds will be presented the four top
winners.
Following ceremonies, at which
time each of the visiting queens will
speak, a luncheon will be held for the
entire group on the P. A. Denny.
The queen contestants as announced by Mrs. Tanya Davis, queen
chairman, are pictured.
Sandi Hamilton, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Hamilton, Minersville ; Paige Smith, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Thomas Smith, Pomeroy;
Brenda Foster, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Brown, Pomeroy; Julie
Gibbs, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gary
Gibbs, Route .2. Racine ; Tammy

Amtrak derails
LANCASTER, Pa. ( AP)- Nhie
passengers were !J!ken to nearby
hospitals aflet four cars of Am·
trak 's National Umited bound for
St. Louis derailed here, police
said.
Five of the injured were
treated and released ; four were
admlited.
·
The derailed cars remained
upright after jumping the track
Wednesday night on an old stone
railroad bridge 80 feet above the
Conestoga River, autboritles
said.

•
-

'

DENISE
QUAI..IS

~ ~tJ,
CARRIE
BEARHS

window at the station. Codner offers towing services to
residents throughout Meigs County but next weekend,
June 21 through 24, "frogs" will have top priority.

'
ARMINTHA
HOLTER

ANGEL
BLAKE

SARA
DIDDLE

I

SONYA
HILL

Krl'CHEN
I;

Miller, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Wlllard Miller, Pomeroy; Tammy
Smith, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dan
Smith, Route I, Racine; Denise
Qualls, daughter of Mrs. Mary QuaDs,
Pomeroy; Carla Bearba, daughter of
Mrs. Florence Bearhs, Middleport;
Armintha Holter, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Holter, Racine ; Angel
Blake, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Eldon Blake, Jr., Reedsville ; Sara
Diddle, daughter of Mrs. Betty
Pooler, Middleport ; Sonya Hill,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Hill,
Racine; Julie Kitchen, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Kitchen, Sr.,
Middleport ; VIcki Blankenship,
daughter of Mr. and Jllrs. Robert
Good, Middleport.

Grand Croaker
investigates
'Gazebo" charge
William (Blll ) Young, Grand
Croaker of the Ohio Society of the
Promotion of the Bull Frog, said
today that he plans a complete investigation on the charges made by
Kyle allen against Dale M.Dutton.
Allen charged that Dutton Is really
El Gazebo, Spanish Matador, who
caused a bull to disappear in a ring in
Spain. Later, Allen contented, the bull
appeared in Hamburg, Germany.
Allen is fearful that El Gazebo will
cause him to disappear or the frogs to
disappear in order to win the frog derby.
Young commented that he plans to
call this matter before the Frog
Racing committee, Dale Warner,
William B. Downie, Paul Gerard,
TIJereon Johnson, and James Clatworthy.
The decision of the Frog Racine
commlttee .will be final unleas the
case Is appealed to another court.
Dutton denies that he Is El Gazebo,
that he has never been a bllll fighter
nor Is he a magician.

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