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..

12- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, July 25, 1979

On .the farm scene

I-------------------------.
Area Deaths 1

...

Plan would also hike grocery costs
WASHINGTON (AP ) -- A plan by
the American Agriculture Movement
to . set up international price-fixing
cartels to ~lp boost farm income
would also add to consumer grocery
costs and radically change the
stJ:ucture of U.S. farming, says a new
government study.
But the Agriculture Department
report, released on Tuesday, said the
plan would accomplish AAM's goal of
raising farm income, at least in the
early going.
Later on it said, the "real" income
of farmers'- - regardless of the higher
commodity prices -- would begin to
decline because of "increased interest
charges, depreciation and real estate
taxes which are closely related to

increasing land values."

An important factor would be the
increase in land prices because of the
initial boost in prospective farm
profits, suggesting that even with
higher commodity prices under the
AAM plan "cash flow problems inthe
fann sector would continue," the
report said.
The AAM, which led protesting
tractorcades here last winter to seek
higher government price guarantees,
also told department analysts who
prepared the report that mandatory
crop production controls would be
necessary at times to keep supplies of
grain and other crops in line with
demands.
A spokesman for AAM said the

report was "very biased" and that
department analysts "took out
everything positive and put in
everything negative" relating to the
group's proposals.
The AAM seeks a boost in federal
price supports to 90 percent of parity
on major crops, a formula which at
100 percent would give farmers the
same buying power they had in a 191().
14 base period.
'For example, the mid-June parity
price of wheat was $5.98 a bushel and
the actual market price was $3.73 a
bushel, or 62 percent of parity.
The government 's wheat price
support currently is $2.35 a bushel,
representing how much farmers can
borrow from USDA by using their

General Telephone starts
toll-free consumer hotline
MARION - A new toll.free con·
sumer hot line is being started b)'
General Telephone Co. of Ohio to
satisfy customers faced with lingering phone problems.
The Marion-based company announced it will open GTE Action Line
to its 550,000 customers statewide.
The number is l»-282-li716.
Robert M. Wopat, president, said
information regarding the appropriate use of GTE Action Line will
'be introduced first to 133,000
cUstomers in the company's southern
division. Customers in the rest of the
state will be added at dates to be announced in the localities. The entire
state should be on line by year-end.
"Purpose of GTE Action Line,"
said Wopat, "is to involve the executive offices in service or billing
problems that haven't been resolved

through normal chaMels. The intent
is to get inunediate action for the
customer."
He emphasized customers encountering a service problem still
should first call repair or business office numbers listed in the introduc·
tory pages of their telephone directory.
Should that fall to resolve the difficulty, he suggested the user call the
local customer service manager. The
manager's phone number also spears
in the introductory section.
Wopat aald either of the first two
steps normally satisfies almost all
service or biillng problems.
"But occaillonally it simply doesn't
work," Wopat added. "This is when
we want the customer to call our Action Line."
People manning the GTE Action

Line will get full cooperation from all
departments necessary to reaolve the
probienn, he said.
·
The Action Line setup will enable
the caller to talk to a management
person who is experienced in service
operations, Wopat noted. If
necessary, the caller can be "paten.
ed" into a three-way conservation
with the Action Line penon and a
phone company official in the caller's
town.
Iilititally, GTE Action Line will be
manned 8 a.m. to 5 _p.m., Mondays
through Fridays.
General Telephone's southern division has 56 exchanges covering 5,500
square miles In portiona of. 13
Southern Ohio counties. Chief cities
include Athens, Circleville,
Georgetown, Jackson, Logan ,
Pomeroy, Portsmouth and Wilmington.

Four firms selling cheaper crude
NEW YORK (AP) -- Four major oil
companies may be earning more than
their competitors, . industry officials
say, because they are selling products
made&gt; from lower-priced Saudi
Arabian crude oil for as much as those
made from higher-priced crude .
The four companies are Exxon
Corp., Mobil Corp., Texaco Inc. and
Standard Oil Co. of California, the
partners in Arabian American Oil Co.
(Aramco) , which runs the ·Saudi
oillields.
'
. While the average price of OPEC
crude oil is about $20 a barrel, the four
farms are paying $18 a harrel for Saudi
oiL
"There certainly is a benefit, and
it's good-5ized," said E.L. Dow,
assistant comptroller for Standard of
California, though he added, "I don't
think that the huge number is there ."
The price of Saudi oil is lower than
the average OPEC price because
Saudi oil is of lower quality than some
other types of oil and because the
Saudis have attempted to hold prices
down to avoid upsetting the world
economy. Nevertheless, the price of
Saudi oil has risen 42 percent since the
end of last year.
Despite the lower price, the effects
of the advantage are diluted by a
number of factors.
"It's clearly an advantage to these
companies, but to quantify it is really
a difficult task," said an industry

source. "Clearly, it's an advantage to
them, but whether it's a bonanza is
another thing ."
Experts said the advantage is
reduced by higher costs of refining
lower-&lt;1uality Saudi oil and by moves
made by the Saudis themselves to
lessen the advantage. "It gets pretty
well watered down," said Dow. ·
Saudi Arabia recently stiffened its
credit terms to Aramco partners, thus
effectively making the oil more
expensive.
And the Saudis have made their '
latest price increase - - from $14.55 a
barrel to $18 a barrel - - retroactive to ·

June 1. It was approved at the end of
June, and that move cost Exxon about
$100 million last quarter.
"If your price goes tip $3.5Q after the
fact, you can't do much about getting
that back on oil you've already sold,"
said Dow. "It certainly soaked up
quite a bit."
•

grain as collateraL At 90 percent, the
support would he $5.38 a busheL
Under the AAM plan, supports lor
grain, soybeans, cotton and milk
would ail be raised to the 90 percent
level, with the increase passed along
to f&lt;reign buyers as well as domestic
users of the commodities. Stiff tariffs
and quotas also would be used to
restrict imports of foreign farm
products.
"The AAM proposal reflects a
radical change in both the basic
philosophy underlying this country's
farm policy and in existing programs
for agriculture'" the report said.
"It would establish a highly·
controlled and managed agricultural
sect&lt;r and would channel most of the
inCrease in benefits to producers of
the controlled commodities."
The proposals include provisions
"that would require new and
controversial legislation" and, in
some cases, violations of current
internationl!l
treaties
and
agreements, it said.
"For example, the imposition of
new tariffs and quotas (on . farm
. impOrts) would place the United
States in violation of the existing
General Agreemellt on Tariffs and
Trade '(GAIT)," the report said.
"Further, any cartel arrangement
agreed to in principle by the United
States would require Senate
confirmation, since this constitutes a
treaty."
The report said that the·AAM plan,
including the cartels, also would
mean :
--A 15 percent hike in retail food
prices this year, compared to the
current forecast of about a 10 percent
increase. But "after this initial
shock," the food price gains would
slow to about 9 percent in 1980 and
then "largely correspond to the
general rate of inflation."
- Retail prices of beef, pork,
poultry and milk would go up,
resulting in a drop of conswnption and
a decline in output by farmers laced
with rising feed costs.
- -Use of grain as livestock · feed
would decline 7 percent from levels
otherwise expected this year, another
IOpercentin 1980and about 11 percent
annually by 19&amp;'1.
--The value of farm exports would
climb 15 percent in the first year of the
program and by 19113-84 would be
about 25 percent more than they
would !Xherwise.
--A reduction in the actual quantity
of exports of wheat, feed grains,
soybeans and cotton because of the
higher prices triggered by the cartel.i
and u.s. price support policies.
The report said it \yould be Wlllkely.
that the Soviet Union -- the world's
largest wheat producer and second.
largest cotton exporter -- would join
any cartel arrangement with the
United States.
" The cartel prices for wheat would
encourage the USSR to move
significant volumes into the world
market and, in turn, to purchase
relatively lower-priced feed grains
from the world market," the report

encourage grain production in noncartel countries, and at the same time
discourage imports."
As a result, the ·report said,
members of the cartels "would
ultimately become the residual
supp)ier" of grain in , the world
markets.
Wayne Peterson of AAM's office
here said the department analysis
took "a negative stand on many
things" that his groUp wants.
"We've got proof positive that ii
Russia nins short of food ... they're
going to import it," he told a reporter.
" They (USDA) dop't take in the fact
that availability means more to the
importing cOuntries than cost."
The department's report said
AAM's proposal "is essentially" the
same as.a plan outlined - but so far
not acted upon - in House and Senate
resolutions.
However, the report said
"additional specific and detailed
information as well as assumptions
about how the proposal, lf adopted,
woUld operate were provided by
leaders of the AAM."
The arrangement of cartels was "a
critical assumption" in making the
·analysis, the report said. Another wu
the mandatory controls on crops to
keep production in line with demand,
a provision that would require
congressional action. -·

Mayor' S Court

. JOHN J. FRY
.
John Junes Fry, 50, ol Depot
Street, Rutllnd, died yestmllly at tll.s
home
•.
He
born April 28, 19ZIIIn Middl~rt.
.
.
· He was preceded In death by tll.s
father, John G. Fry In 1911'1. He wu
also preceded In death b)' one brotber,
Alv• L. Fry.
·.
He I! survived by Ill! wife, Donna
Rupe Fry Rutland, hla motber, Etbl!l
Mae Dall~y Fry, Rutland, llld fclur
daughters: Mrs. Robert .(VIclde)
Haley and Pammy Fry, both ol Rt. 4,
Pomeroy; Edna and Able Fry, both "t
home, and one soo, Timotby Fry, also
olPomervy.
He Ia also aurvlved by two alaters,
Mrs. Gerald (Artie) Reu~r,

..
A spokesman foe the Meigs CoWity
Rail Service Committee reported today no additional action has been
taken on an application filed May 16
with· the Intentate Commerce Comrnlaslon for authority to purchase nine
miles of track between Hobson Yard
and Kanauga.
Conrail lin that date filed its application for purchase. The notice of
purchase wa~ publsihed in the
Federal Register June 15.
Conrail currently has trackage
rights over the segment as well ·as
between Hobson Yard and Pomeroy
and Kanauga and Gaillpolis.
The CR application states that
Chessle would retain trackage rights
to serve a power plant at Cheshire. ·
No mention is made of service to
Middleport and Pomeroy which
Chessle System can reach only over
the Hobeon-Kanauga trackage . The
Hobson Yard-Pomeroy trackage has
been Wlused since February 1979
because of Ohio ruver flood and erosion damage, Chessle has refused to
indicate their future plans for the
·trackage.
The Hobllon-Kanauga segment is
part of an &amp;'I mile C&amp;O line which ex-

a

Pomeroy, and Mrs. Ronald (Clara)
Faye Hovatter, Columbus.
One ·brolber, Wealey A. Fl'y,
Denver, Colo., also IIUI"Vi•, altllll
with a sllter-ln~w, Vernlce Fry,
Pomeroy.
.
Several nieces and nepben ~
aurvlve.
Funeral aervlces wiU be Friday at 2
~.m. at the Rawllnga Coati Funeral
Heme with Cecil Wlae llld Herbert
Grate offidatinl!.
Burial will be in Riverview

CINCINNATI (AP) - Nuclear
Regulatory ColllllliMion inspectors
will take another look Monday at
security at the W.H. Zimmer Nuclear
Power Station before uranium fuel Ia
shipped there Aug. 17.
Charles Barth, NRC attorney In
Washington who has been handling
legal proceedings on the new $885
million plant, said he is "extremely
interested in seeing the place has
security guards and fences to have the
fuel on the site."
Barth aaid a stop shipment order
)Vould be issued "only if the site is not

.

tends from Logan to Pomeroy serving
McArthur; Vinton, Gallipolis,
Cheshire, and Middleport. Chessie
System filed to abandon most of the
line in April1974, while the matter is
presently in federal court the Chesie
System shut the line down in early
June supposedly for a 90 day review
of track problems.
Conrail has continued to use the
· Hobson-Kanauga segment as part of
its Columbus-Charleston line which is
presently undergoing an $8 million
upgrading as part of a multi-year program. CR has also been servicing
Chessie customers in Gaillpolis Wider
its elisting trackage rights agreement. The proposed purchase by CR
is related to the proposed merger of
Chessie System and the Family Lines
System.
The notice of the propn5ed purchase, published in the Federal
Register on June 15 by the ICC, allows
any interested party to comment
withlli45days (byJuly30 ).
The notice also states : "The proposed transactions allegedly involve
no change in the operation of either
Conrail, 8&amp;0, or C&amp;O, and no change
in service to the public and no effect

on the employees of any of the
railroad&gt;l.•The stated purpose of the
transactions is to permit Conrail,
principal pser of the involved lines, to
gain control of the dispatching of
trains and maintenance of each line.'
Local cOncern cen~s on service to
Middleport and Pomeroy by either
Conrail or Chessle Sy~ or both and
al!o the effect of the proposal on
several Chessie employees assigned
to HobSon Yard and Kanauga to control Chessie and Conrail traffic over
the lines.
. lndlvidua!B and businesses interested in further infonnation on the
pfl)pOSill should contact the Meigs
Rail Service Committee, 480 Broadway Street, Middleport,' Ohio 457&amp;!
(614-992-6794 6 to 8 p.m. only ).

•

Friends may call at the fwleral
home Thursday from &amp;-8 p.m.

•

Today

in conformity."
David Altemuehle, spokesman for
Cincinnati Gas &amp; Electric Co. which
will operate the plant, said the fuel 1.1
relined uranium and 1.1 safe. He said It
is not radioactive. The fuel would not
become radioactive uranium 23$ untU
it is actually uaed as fuel in a. ructor,
he said.
" It's safe enough f&lt;r the men w.ho
load it to do It with their hands,"
Alternuehle said.
·
The uWlty was granted a license: to
store the fuel by the NRC on June ~.
1978. The uWlty, howl!'ver, cannot
begin operationa at the plant withQut
an operating license from the
regulatory comml.ulon.
.
Barth said Monday's final
inapectlon wu ordered becauae ~
"tremendous local concern about the

.. .in the world

.Decision helps '
CINCINNATI (AP ) + The
president of the Ohio State
Chiropractic A.Yoclltion says the
American Medical AMociation's
dedalon to ea.se its policy agalnot
the chiropractic profession
should help elimlJIIIte duplication
of health cart .. rv~cea.
''Onl:r wllen practitioners of all
healing arts can cooperate in the
dlagnoala and treatment of
hwnan aliments can the public be
. provided with the best care at the
lowest cost," Dr. Ricahrd P.
Burgun of Cincinnati said Wed.
nesday .
The AMA Hou.se of Delegates
Mlied at the organization '• annual
convention in Chicago on
Tuesday that physicians are now
free to make referrals to
chiropractors, a practice that
had previously been barred .
Oliropractors will now have
easier access to patients in
hospitals and X-rays • and
dlagnoetic testing, Burgun said.
Joint research might develop, he

fuel."
The plant site, at Moacow, Ohio, Jl

miles up the Ohio River from
Cincinnati, lw been the acene of
demonstrations. They were ll!l8"ked
b)' the nuclear power plant accident at
Three Mile laland near · ~.
Pa. earller this year.
The Zimmer plant was built jllinU,
b)' Cincinnati Gas &amp; Electric, Dayton
Power &amp; Ught Co. and Columbus •
Southern Ohio Electric Co. Tbe.
Cincinnati uWlty wiU run the plarit
and tentatively has scheduled to begin
operation In mid-19ell.
Ucensing hearinga foe the uWltles
will reconvene in Clncinllltl on Alii!. 7.
The hearings are be~ conducted
b)' the Atomic Safety and Uce~Minc
Board of the NRC.
Several · groups are working tO
prevent the plant from being
operated,
alleging
improper
COIII1ruction in the plant's electrical
system. The charges were denied by
the utilltie~~ .

Couladis seeks

committee seat

Elberfeld's Warehouse

GENERAL ELECTRIC

AIR CONDITIONERS
.
.

'

Dependable Carry-Cool
Air Conditioners

4000 BTU •••.~ •••••.••••-•••• ~~~!.Jl9900
· sooo·BTU...•..••.........••••••..
· oNLY ~21 000
~--

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY ·

NO. 72

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

I

Emergency
landiiig
CLEVELAND (AP ) + A
United Airline~~ DC-10 with 172
puaengen aboard made a safe
emergency landing in Cleveland
Wednesday after one of the
plane 's three engines failed on a
flight (rom Los Angeles to
Newark , N.J ., a United
spokesman said.
The pilot, whose name was not
dlscloaed, landed Flight No. 4 at
about 4 p.m. EDT with no apparent difficulty and no injuries
to anyone on board the widebodied jet.
''We have determined that the
engine did fall. But we can't be
IIUI'e of the reason," said Jim
Guyette, head of operations for
United in Cleveland.
Guyette said the defective
engine would be removed Thursday and sent to a maintenance
overhaul team in San Francisco
for analysis.

19 rescued, '
BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) +
A U.S. Navy ship rescued 19 boat
people -fieeing Vietnam and they
will arrive at Pattaya in the Gull
of Thailand Saturday, the u.s.
Embassy said. A U.N . official
reported, meanwhile, that the
exodus from VIetnam will
become "more hwnane."
The embassy said the oiler
Wabash rescued the refugees
earlier this week west of Sublc
Bay, the big U.S. Navy base in
the Philippines, as !hi! U.S. 7th
Fleet began a broadened effort to
rescue refugees from VIetnam.
The embassy said the refugees
were plucked from a 25-foot boat,
and that 16 of them were membera of the same family and the
other three were friends of the
family . .

l

AI=,

Webelos, Scouts and their famWI!S are invited to attend. First row, 1-r, Gregg Carpenter, Rodney
Newsom~ and Mony Wood; second row,
Terry Neivsome, Tinuny Lawson, Roger
ter,
Matthew Darling; back, Eleanor Lawson, Goldie · ,
Flossie Dill and JoAnn Newsome. Absent were Wlllle
Hill and Ray Matson, den chief.

•

enttne
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

THURSDAY, JULY 26 , 1979

·Energy, housing_costs push consumer prices up
WASHINGTON (AP) - · Another big
spurt in the cost of energy and housing
pushed consumer prices up 1 percent
in June as innation continued to rage
above a 13 percent annual rate, the
government reported today.
.
Soar1ng price increases for gasol~
and heating fuel and a slight rise in
food prices kept the Labor
Department's monthly inflation
measure at 1 percent or higher for the
fifth c'Onseculive month.
·. Through tile first ha If of the yea r,
lnflation has been running at a 13.2
percent annual rate. If it conlinues at
that pa ce for tile lull year, 1979 will.
register the highest . inflation since
immediately alter World War U.
The in nation rate continued to take
its toll on a typical worker 's real
spendable earnings, after deducting
taxes and taking inf lation into
account. the Labor Department said .
Spendable earnini(S of a married

worker with thre e dependents
declined 0.8 percent in June , meaning
that wages co uld not quite keep up
with the rise in consumer prices
during tile month. For tile 12 months
ended in June , a worker's real
spen dable earnings decli ned 3.5
percent .
The Labor Department said
gasoline prices continued to soar in
June, jumping 5.6 percent after a 5
percent rise in May. Those prices
have advance at a 60.8 percent aMual
rate so far this year.
Similarly, fuel oil prices leaped 8.6
percent in June following a 5.3 percent
rise in May . Through the finlt half or
the year, fuel oil prices have been
climbing at 70.6 percent annual rate .
The government 's index of housin g
continued to rise steeply for a fifth
straight month . Housing pri ces
increased LS percent 1 during the
month. home financing costs jumped

2.1 percent and maintenance and
repairs rose 0,9 percent .
The good news lor consumers was
that food prices rose by a modest 0.2
percent during June, the smalleilt
advance in 11 months. Clothing prices
declined
0.1
per ce nt
and
entertainment costs rose by just 0.1
percent, tile smallest rise this year .
The overall I percent rise in
. consumer prices last month is down
slightly from a 1.1 percent r ise during
each of the two preceeding months .
The Consumer Price Index stood in
June at 216.6, meaning that a
markethasket of goods and services
that ,_ ~oo an tne'bli •m' or \!M!'!
cost $216.60 last month .
The goveriunent said prices of
grocery store foods declined 0.1
percent in June , primarily because of
a 1.8 percent decline in the cost of
meats , poultry, fish and eggs. Beef
prices, which had shown sha rp

increases during the preceding eight
months, fell 1.3 percent in June, as
had been expected.
All of the price increases are
adjusted to reflect seasonal variations
in price patterns.
The June consumer price repilrt is
the first since the administration
rasied its inflation forecast for 1979
into the double-digit range , an
apparent admission that the fight
against inflation would produce no
major victories this yea r.
In a new economic forecast issued
July 12, the administration said
inflation lillould bo lQ.i

~

thia

year, up from a preVIous forecast of
7.4 percent.
Since the end of World War II ,
inflation has lopped 10 percent only.,
twice -- in 1946, when the removal of
price controls sent prices jumping•l8.2
percent, and in 1974, when a
quadrupuling of imported oil prices

Commissioners reject funding request
A request for county funding of the
Sa lem Township fire department was
turned down by Meig s County
Commissioners durin g their regu lar
meeting Tuesday night.

Charles Lamber t and Terry
department
M c Guir e,
representatives, were informed the
county had no funds ava ilable to
finance tile department. Alternative

added.
I.

TAKE FIElD TRIP - Members of Cub Seoul Pack
235, Den 3, Wednesday were treated to a field trip.
They visited the Quality Print Shop, WMPO Radio and
the Royal Crown Bottling plant. Following the field trip
they returned to the scout hall where games were
played. A jamboree will be held Saturday, July 28, at 2
p.m. at the boy scout camp at Chester. All Cubs,

at y

e
VOL XXVIII

Weather

Scattered
showers
or
thunderstorms tonight and Friday.
Low near 70 and high Friday near ~­
Chance of rain is 70 percent tonight
and 60 percent Friday.

Cemetery,

Nuclear Regulatory
Commission to look at
Zimmer power station;

HOG REPORT
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) _ Direct
Three persons hurt
hogs (Fed-State): Bairows and gilts
not well established 75-1.00 lower,
demand light. u.S. 1-2, 20().230 lbs.
in Tuesday accident
country points, 38.25-38.75, few at
39.00, plants, 39.00-39.50, few at 39·75 ·
Three persons were injured during
U.S. 1-3, 23().250 lbs. country points,
a motorcycle-bicycle accident
37.50-38.50, plants, 38.25-39.25.
investigated Tuesday by the GalliiReceipts Tuesday: Actuais 6700,
Meigs Post, Highway Patrql.
today's
estimates
7500.
Called to the scene in Meigs County
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -- Ohioans
Cattle,
from
Columbus
Producers
on
SR 681, just west of U.S. 33, at 3
who have become attached to their
p.m.,
officers report that a bicycle
license plate numbers have until Sept. Uvestock Co-operative Association,
' ghe
ridden by Delores Dorst, 8, Shade,
1 to contact the Ohio Bureau of Motor uneven , 5.00 lower to 3.00 ha r.
Slaughtersteersandyearlings,choice ~~e higher cartel prices would pulled from a private drive into the
Vehicles.
path of a west bound motorcycle
The bureau has decided to allow 57 .00-M.fiQ, good 52.~1.00. Bulls
uneven,
sharply
lower
to
1.00
operated
by Eimer Althouse, 33,
market
motorists who reserve the same
higher.
Cows
market
uneven,
5.00
Coolville.
number each year to request it again,
Dorst was transported by the
even though Ohio license plates will be lower to 2.00 higher.
Veal calves 5.00 lower, choice and
Pomeroy Emergency Squad to
changed to three letters and three
prime 108.00 and down.
Veterans Memorial Hospital, where
numbers next year.
and
lambs
1.15-5.00
lower,
old
Middleport
Mayor
·Fred
Hoffman
.
she
was treated and released.
Sheep
The bureau said it has been deluged
sheep
30.00
and
down.
Tuesday
night
fined
three
defendants
Althouse
and a passenger, Toni
with requests from people who
and
forfeited
one
bond.
Althouse,
9,
Coolville, displayed
reserve the same number with their
Fined were Robert Moodbpaugh, visible -signs of injury, but were not
local deputy registrar every year.
EGG REPORT
They said some people have had the - COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Eggs -- 25, Rt. I, Middl~rt, $10 ~ . cosls, immediately treated.
tires; Elizabeth Giles, MidNo citation was issued.
same number lor as long as 40 years. Prices paid to country packing plants squealing
dleport, $25 and costs, disorderly con- ,
1
for eggs delivered to major Ohio cities duct; and Allen Tom Lowery, 21, Harcases included consumer grades risonville, $50 and costs, petty theft.
including U.S. grades, minimum 50 Forfeiting a $25 bond for speeding
case lots.
was Michael Larkins, 18, Long BotCarton Large A &amp;:Hi2, Medium A tom.
541,&gt;-56, Small A 41-45.
Sales to retailers in major Ohio
Three defendants were fined and
cities, cartons delivered: Large A four others forfeited borids Tuesday
white 71-80, mostly 71-73, medium 62- night In the court ot"Mayor Clarence
71, mostly 62-64.
Andrews of Pomeroy.
Poultry prices at Ohio farms, hens
Fined were Basil Haynes,
light 6-9.
· Pomeroy, $50 and costs, disturbing
and go to eligible wartime veterans
the peace; James Peck, Cheshire, $30
who are permanently and totally
and costs, running a red light;
disabled from causes not traceable to
Douglas Bums, Pomeroy, '100 and
their service, and who are in financial
costs,
intoxication and disorderly conneed.
duct.
Pensions are also paid to certain
Forfeiting bonds were Bailey
. needy survivors of wartime veterans.
Dugan,
Rutland, $30 assured clear
Athens County Auditor Pete
Under the new pension rates, a
distance;
Sheryl Roseberry, address
single veteran may receive a mu- Couladis announced today that he Is
not
listed,
~ speeding; Richard \
seeking
appointment
to
the
loth
imum pension of $3,902 a year, up
Peyton,
Dexter,
~ speeding, and ·i
District
State
Central
Committee
seat
from $2,364.
Debbie
Russell,
Pomeroy, $50
Because certain income that is ig- that became vacant due to the recent
disorderly
conduct.
nored under the old plan is counted in resignation of Herb Walker of Faircomputing eligibility for the improv- field County.
Couladls, a fanner Athena City
ed plan, VA said some veterans will
Councilman and County Republican
be better off to switch plans.
Marrtace LlceD&amp;ee
In cases where it is not to the Chalnnan, is currently serving as
Applying
for marriage licenses in
veteran's advantage to elect the new Chainnan of the loth District Meigs CoWity Probate Court Tuesday
program, VAllas been advising them Republican Committee.
were Dencil L. Proctor, o48, Mid·
.
.
to remain under the old pension pro- ! In a letter to district Republican dleport, coal miner, and Bonnie M.
leaders, Couladis stated 'Our district
gram.
needs a State Central Conunitteeman Whittington, 30, Middleport,
who understands the problems that forelady; Ronald J. Uve!v, 23,
our smaller county organizations Gaillpolls, body man, and Debra J.
face. Aa a fonner precinct com- Spires, 21, Langsville, laborer.
REHEARSAL TIIURSDAY
the Voices of Uberty will hold a mitteeman and county chairman, I
rehearaal Tbursday at 7:30 p.m. at have experienced these problems and
the United Methodist Church. Prac- feel this experience wl1l help me
Veterans Memorlal'Ha.pilal
tice is for the pfOIII'am at the Meigs represent your county on the State
'
.
ADMISSIONS
- Jack Neff, MidCommittee.'
Co. Fair on Monday night. All
dleport;
Esther
.
Roach,
Mason;
Each of the 13 counties in the loth
members are urged to attend.
.
Congressional District will endorse a Milford Frederick, Minersville; Dale
Hoff,
1
Pomeroy,
and
Unda
Stewart,
candidate for the State Committee Pomeroy.
PICNIC SLATED
·
The Laurel Cliff Health Club will seat 'and the State Conunlttee will
DISCHARGES - Ronnie Powell,
hold a picnic at 6:30p.m. at the state meet to make the appointment. The Dorothy Older, Maude Bulley, Randy
State Committee -Is expected to make
park on U.S. 33 on the south side.
Lee, Pearl Dant, and Dana Welch.
the appointment in late August.

Deadline coming

Jim
Indlanapolll, fOI'II)W
Pomeroy Council member llld announcer for WMPO radio, Middleport, died TueldaY nlgbt.
.
Fwler81 arrangement~ will be announced by Ewing Fullerll Home.

Recent increase
could help vets
A recent increse of nearly 10 percent in some Veterans Administration
pension rates may prompt some
·veterans to take another look at the
"improved" VA pension plan passed
last year by Congress.
Ralph E . Smith, Jr., director of the
Cleveland VA Regional Office, said
the rate increase Wider the newest VA
pension program is tied direCtly to in·
creases in Social Security payments.
The latter were raised 9.9 percent as
of June I, 1979.
.
Nearly 432,000 veterans have asked
the VA to switch their pensions to the
"improved" plan.
And Smith reminded eligible
veterans who haven't made up their
minds whether to "stay put" or
switch that they have only until Oc·
Iober I to qualify for retroactive
benefits.
The Improved plan offers substantially higher pension rates than the
old program, but changes in some income counted under the new plan
may make it advisable for certain
veterans to remain under their current plan.
In e~~tabll5blng the Improved penmoo plan, Congress stipulated that
veterans may switch to II at any time,
but must do so before October I if they
wish the blgher rates it provides to
take effect retroactively to January I,
1979.
VA pensions are based on income

ICC hasn't taken any
action on application

M-.

. JJMMEE8

Miller pondering
•
•
union retirement
BECKLEY, W.Va . (AP ) - - Ailing
United Min e Workers President
Arnold Miller says he will decide once
he returns to work whether he will
retire from the union post he has held
since 1972.
'
In Beckley during a meeting of the
union 's governing board this week,
Miller said he expects to return to
work in about four weeks. He was
hospitalized for a week last month in
Washington for high blood pressure
and exhaustion and has been on sick
leave since then .
Miller did not preside over the
International Executive Board
meeting Wednesday, the first of a n
icipated three days of sessions. " I
said I could retire - - I didn 't say I
would," the W-year-old Miller said
Wednesday afternoon . "I'm going to
take another month off before I make
that decision ."
During Wednesday's session, the
board unanimously approved the
appointment of Harrison Combs to the
three-member board of trustees that
oversees tile union's Health and
Retirement funds. Combs, who will
continue in his present position as
general legal counsel for the union ,
replaces Julius Mullins of Pike
County , Ky ., who resigned June 23.
The board also upheld, on an 16-1
vote, Miller's suspension from the
board of Ohio's District 6
representative , Bill Lamb. Lamb,
who has been a vocal Miller political
opponent, was char ged with
insubordination stenuning from a
dispute over waion expense vouchers.
In a suit now pending in federal
court in the District of Columbia,
Lamb is seeking a temporary
restraining order to block the
suspension .
The near -unanimous vote O'l
1.~mb's suspension seemed to indicate

'

that Miller had eliminated much of his
politica l cfpposition on the board. The
sole dissenter was Robert Long of
District 14, representing Missouri and
Kansas . Long 'sseat is threatened by a
Miller plan to merge three western
districts .
If the board approves that action, it
is expected the IEB seat will go to
Leroy Baca, a former Miller aide who
defeated District IS lEB incumbent
Nick Halamandaris - another Miller
opponent - - in a June election.
Other hoard members who have
opposed Miller policies in tl]e past
have resigned from the board or been
defeated in recent elections.
Although Miller said Wednesday he
was perturbed by much of the political
infighting that has taken place in the
union in recent years, he said it had
not really contributed to his poor
health.
"I don't like (the infighting), but
I'm not tired of it ," he said.
"If I had one wish, I'd wiSh I had
good health. I'd teach them (his
opponents) a physical lesson."
Discussing his health Wednesday ,
Miller said he felt well, adding he
suffers no residual effects from a
stroke and heart attack he suffered
shorUy after the union's lll-day
contract strike ended in March 1978.
"I feel pretty good now - - I want to
stay that way," Miller said.
:::: ::::::: :;:;:; :;:;:;:;:;:;: ; :;:;:; :;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:; : ;:::::;:;:;:;:~:::::;:;:::::;:;:;:; .

EVENT RAINED OUT
Because of heavy rains the past
two days, the no-till pasture or
mea'dow seeding forage_field day
slated on Joe Bailey's farm, west
of Rutland, has been postponed.
The event will be held on Aug. 2.
:·:·:·:·:=:·:·:·:·::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:

"

means of raasang money were
suggested by the commissioners.
Transfer of funds to the County
Planning Commission was discussed
by administrator Charles Blakeslee ,
who said such transfers could be
made within the county budget.
Subdivisions regulations and the need
to have a person answer corrunission
phone ca lls in the courthouse were
also discussed by Blakeslee .
Mental Retardation administrator
Christopher
Layh
presented
architect's plans on the proposed ·
training center and workshop . The

SQUAD CAIJ..ED
The Pomeroy ER Squad wail called
Wednesday at 10 :14 a.m. for Dwight
Oliver who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where he was
admitted.

plans

were

approved

commissioners,

pend ing

by

the
state

funding . Permission was granted for
Layh to advertise bids for a new bus.
. County engineet Wesley Buehl
reported progress on county road
projects and bridge repairs.

BOND SALES
June 1979 aales of ,Series E&amp;H
United States Savings Bonds were
$34.9 mlillon. The State attained 48%
of its 1979 Sales Goal JW1e 30, with
sales totaling $233.9 million for the
year.
Theodore R. Reed Jr., Meigs CoWIty Volunteer Savings Bonds Chairman, reported June sales of Savings
Bonds in the County were $32,494. The
county achieved 43.1% of its annual
sales goal June 30.

Depuu·es check two accidents
Two acddents on private property
occured in Meigs County Wednesday .
There were no injuries.
At I :45 a.m. Steven R. Peckham, 19,
Middleport , was driving on County
Road 21 when he lost control of his .
vehicle and went off the road down a
hillside. The vehicle came to a rest

Ohio gets cold front

against a group of trees.
There was moderate damage to the
Peckham vehicle and no citations.
Carroll W. Johnson , Middleport,
was leaving the parking lot of the Tall
Timbers Night Club at ~ p.m. when it
is alleged a vehicle operated by his
wife, Mildred Johnson, Middleport,
struck his car from the rear. There
was slight dllmage to Johnson's
vehicle and moderate damage to his
wife's. NO citations were 'issued.
Sheriff James J. Proffitt has
advised children riding bicycles at
night must equip their bikes with
lights or reflectors and must ride with
the traffic .
Sheriff Proffitt also advised
residents to report any incidents of
shoplifting lf they any in progress.

By The Associated Press
A cold front is mQving into Ohio
from the northwest with slightly
cooler and drier air and some relief
from the heat of the past few days.
The National Weather Service says
significant shower and thunderstorm
activity is expected to continue ahead
of the front and there is a chance of
heavy rains in the southern COWities
today .
The
showers
and
thunderstorms will begin to taper off ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::;:;:;:
in central and southern counties
EXTENDED FORECAST
tonight and Friday.
Saturday throusb Monday , Temperatures this afternoon and
Friday should reach about 80 degrees, S~llwel'l or tlnmdersto11111 aDd humid
except in northwestern sections where Sllllday and Mollday. Hlgu in the low
readings will he a little lower. The to mid 1101 Saturday, warmillg to the
lows tonight will be near 70 in the mid 80ta to the low 90s by Mollday.
southeast and in the upper 5Qs Lows In tbe 110 to the low 70s.
northwest
·-:-::;:::::;:::::::::::::::::;v::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

contributed to a 12.2 percent rate.
Meanwhile, President Carter's
appointment Wednesday of Paul A.
Volcker as chairman of the Federal
Reserve Board was hailed by the
nation's financial community and in
Washington
as
a · welcome
development in the fight against
inflation.
Volcker , 51, president of the Federal
Reserve Bank of New York since 1975,
would replace G. WiUiam Miller, who
Carter picked to succeed W. Michael
Blumenthal, tile ousted, secretary of
the treasury.
Sen. Willlau\ Promnire,

~Wla. ,

ch8irn\an of the Senate Bank1ng
Committee, which has jurisdiction
over Volcker's conlinnation hearings,
said Volcker "is a man of great
intellect and proven leadership
ability ... . The president has shown
outstanding judgement."
In another inflation-related
development Wednesday, Rep. Jack
Kemp of New York and 17 other House
Republicans submitted a bill intendedto block Carter from denying
contracts to firms that violate the
president's voluntary 7 percent wage
guideline.
· The administration has threatened
ID withhold government businesS from
firms that don't go along with the .
guideline as a way to enforce its anti- ·
inflation program.
Kemp argued that a 7 percent wage
ceiling is "highway robbery" of
workers facing an inflation rate that is
almost twice as high.

One injured
in 4 wrecke
One person was Injured and four
vehicles heavily damaged during
three
accidents
investigated .
Wednesday by the Gallia-Meigs Post,
Highway Patrol.
Officers were called to the scene of
a two-vehicle mishap in Meigs County
on SR 143, at the junction of SR 7, at
12:25 p.m.
The patrol reports an auto operated
by Ralph Edwards, 25, Pomeroy,
pulled into the pa~ of a south bound
vehicle driven by Bobby Adams, 28,
Ppmeroy.
Edwards claimed injury and was
transported by a relative to Veterans
Memorial Hospital for treatment.
Both vehicles incurred heavy
damage .
Edwards was cited on a charge of .
failure to yield.
The patrol · investigated a onevehicle accident on SR 218, two and
one-tenth of a mile south of SR 7, at
I :35 p.m.
Officers report a south hound auto
operated by Dennis Mulford, 21,
Vinton went out of control on the wet .
!)l!vement, passed off the right side of
the roadway an.d struck an
embankment.
The patrol was called to the scene of
a one,vehicle mishap on Georges
Creek Rd. , one-tenth of a mile west of
SR 7, at 10 a.m. ·
Officers report a west bound auto
driven by Tammy Farley, 19, Pl.
Pleasant, bottomed-out on railroad
tracks crossing Georges Creek Rd.
In further action, officers
investigated a one-vehicle accident
this morning at 12:10 a.m. on U.S. 35,
se.ven-tenths of a mile west of SR 518.
The patrol reports an east bound
auto driven by Harry Mosher, ,32,
Wellston, ·struck a cow on the
roadway.
There was heavy damage to the
vehicle. ,b

.

..

�Dave Roberts on mound tonight

2-The Dally Sent.in:t'Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday , July 26, 1119
~

Letters have
WASHINGTON (AP) -· Literary
critics sometimes complain that
Americans have lost the art of letter
writing -· the kind of letters that get
collected in books and are graceful,
witty and fun to -read.
The spate of resignation letters sent
to President Carter by erstwhile
Cabinet partners, and his handwritten
responses, are unlikely to alter this
lamentable state of affairs. But they
do have their interesting passages.
For example, consider the fate of
outgoing Treasury- Secretary W.
Michael Blumenthal. He may have
planned to resign at some point, but
his associates don't even pretend he
had a July departure in mind before
Carter launched his Cabinet facelift.
You couldn't discern that from his
exchaqge with Carter, however .
" As we discussed," Blumenthal
wrote the president, "I feel strongly
that the time has come for me to
return to private life and that
someone else should carry on as
secretary of the Treasury. I
appreciate your agreeing with this
assessment. ...

interesti~g passages

Bench,Cruz pace Reds

I

Carter responded by accepting the
resignation " with friendship, respect
and
appreciation
for
the
accomplishments of our nation during
your service as secretary.... "

To resigning Energy Secretary
James R . Schlesinger, Carter
expressed regret, coupled with high
praise that "you have perf&lt;rmed your
many. duties superbly."

Carter's notes to the departing, if .
you except the letter to Adams, might
make one wonder why the Cabinet
resignations had been accepted.
To Joseph A. Califano, Jr., fired as
secretary of health education and
welfare, Carter ' wrote about
C a I i f a n o •s
' • n o t a b 1e
accomplishments" and lauded him
for "competence and compassion."
To Blumenthal, the president wrote
about "the excellent service you have
rendered" and lnuch more of the
same. '

When Ca!~er . invited some 30
reporters to JOID him f!X' an hour an_d a
half
of
no-dtrect-quotatton
conversation on ~aturday, some
reporters were a btl startled to be
served hamburger sandwiches on ultra-thin White House china.
For the record, the burgers served
in the State Dining Room were neither
rare nor . well done and were
accomparued by ketchup, mustard,
onions, tomatoes and p1ckles.
The abstemious president also
offered beer.

Berry's Worl.d

PEE WEE LEAGUE CHAMPIONS-The New Haven Dodgers won first place in the 4th of July Tournaments.
Pictured in the front row left to right, are Bob Byus, Robbie Grimm, Kent Rickard, Eddie Stevens, Todd Pethtel. and
Jeremy Lloyd . Second row, left to right, are Charlie Lawson, Paul Wolfe, Joe Burris, Doug Johnson, and Matt
Taylor. Back row, Coaches, Bill Lloyd, Glenn Johnson, and Harold Lawson. Not pictured is Greg Robertson, Mitchell
Hoffman , David Ball. and David Draper.

l'ITTSBURGH (APJ -- Cincinnati
catcher Johnny Bench homered, met
liard-nosed Pirate Dave Parker In a
home plate collision and survived to
homer again as the Reds beat
Pittsburgh\ &amp;-5 in 10 innings.
"1 thought 1 wasn't going to hit
anything anymore," Bench kidded
when asked about the encilunter
Wednesday night with the 230-pound
Parker, who's known fir his no-llolcls~
barred base-running. "1 thoughi,
'Parker! Here he COOtes again.' "
. Pittsburgh·~ big ou11leldet was at
· first wl!en Willie Stargell doubled with
· the Pirates ilhead a.-4 in the seventh
inning. Parker rounded third as Reds
reserve leftlielder Dave Collins
fielded the ball.
But Bench took shortstop Dave
Concepcioo's relay, held his ground

Stingley grateful
for fans' prayers

11

Carter. stressing teamwork
I

WASHINGTON ( AP) --Appraising
his clean-slate Cabinet now that the
purge is over, President Carter
stresses loyalty and team play as the
attributes of the people he wants
around him .
He thinks he has a team of loyai)sts
now, and that the administration will
be stronger for it.
But there is a thin line between
loyalty and lockstep . Carter is
confident he can command the fonner
without risking the latter. But
presidents always have found that
difficult.
When Carter is reminded that
Richard M. Nixon and his lieutenants

their viewpoints wlnle . policies are
still in the making. But when Carter
makes the final decision on a poliq; or
program, the president expects solid
and enthusiastic support, even if it
isn't the course the Cqbinet member
advocated.
Carter will not abide secondguessing by his top lieutenants. In
Carter's view, if a Cabinet member or
his aides starts telling congressmen
that they don't agree with the terms of
legislation sent by the White House,
that is disloyalty. Moreover, he thinks
it leads to confusion and inaction in
COngress.
Carter made these views known to a'
group of reporters invited to the White
House, llllder ground rules that do not
permit direct quotation .
ln•the description of Carter's test
for loyalty, it became clear ~hilt the
president thinks Secretary of Health,
billion. Sales volume was a record for Education and Welfare Jl&gt;seph A.
the quarter and the first half. The Califano Jr . flunked it. There is no bill
profit figure was second only to the of particulars, although Carter is not
satisfied with the record of
third quarter of 1974.
For the first six months of this year, congressional action on HEW .
Armco eared $118.9 million or $2.59 legislation.
One item on which Califano clearly
per common share, on sales of $2.5
differed with Carter was a bill to
billion.
create a new Department of
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -·Ohio State Educa lion. That would take the E out
University
endowment
fund o! HEW, and Califano didn't like it.
investments grew by $5 million during Congress is passing it anyhow.
There also was White House
the last fiscal year.
aqout
Califano's
Stocks held by the university susptcton
commitment
to
the
president's
goincreased in value . by 71'2 percent
since September, while corporate and slow formula for national health
government bonds lost I percent, insurance , and his drastically
according to OSU Treasurer James curtailed welfare reform plan.
Carter demands enthusiasm as well
W. Kristoff.
The' fund is one of the largest in the as loyalty.
The problem of which Carter
nation among public universities. The
complains
is nothing new . Harry S.
portfolio was $72.6 million on June 30.
Kristoff attributed the size of the Truman , reflecting on his presidency,
fund to "a very high level of support" said: " If a Cabinet member could not
from generous alumni. He added, support the policy I had laid down, I
"The number of donors is tried to work out an understanding
with him. But I could not permit, any
increasing.''
About a quarter of Ohio State's more than any president can, such a
portfolio is common stock. Other , difference of opinion to be aired in
funds are invested in short-term public by a dissenting member of the
commercial or goverrunent issues, Cabinet."
There's always another option, as
which Kristoff said have been giving a
Carter
observes: the aide who can't
better return than some other kinds of ,
buy
the
president's policy can resign .
investments.
used to talk of loyal team players as
the kind they wanted in their
administration, he quickly seeks to
draw a distinction . Comparisons with
the Nixon White House are the last
thing Carter needs,
Carter believes he can insist upon
loyalty without stifling independence.
He intends to encourage independent
thought
and
independent
administration in the Cabinet, and has
neither the time nor the inclination to
run executive departments from the
White House.
Carter wants his Cabinet members
to be frank and forceful in debating

Business briefs
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (AP) -- A
financial consultant for Commuter
Aircraft Corp. said Monday that only
a "very d,eep depression" can prevent
his company from building an
airplane factory near Youngstown
Municipal Airport.
J. Campbell Bryce told reporters
that, under existing economic
conditions, ground will be broken
within two· months.
If a mild recession hits the nation ,
Bryce said, the project will proceed.
Bryce said a recession could even help
the project by making the federal
government more supportive.
The government has already
guaranteed $35 million in loans for the
$66 million project.
Commuter Aircraft is 'seeking an
additional $4.5 million urban
development grant from the
Department of Housing and Urban
Development.
The firm also requires certification
of its proposed commuter plane by the
Federal Aviation Administration.
Company President Kornell Feher
said Monday that the firm has applied
for this certification.
Company officials project a total
work force of about 1,600 by the time
the JrOject is completed in 1982.

MIDDLETOWN, Ohio (AP) -- Armco
Inc. reported that continuing profit
improvement during its second
quarter has resulted in record
earnings during the first six months of
1979.
Second quarter earnings were $60.5 COLfTMBUS, Ohio .(AP) - Hiring
million or $1.32 per share of common an extra employee at self-service
stock, on sales of more than $1.23 gasoline stations, as mandated in
legislation before a House committee,
could hike gasoline prices 2 to 3 cents
a gallon, an industry spokesman says.
Today In History
"Those costs would be passed
By The Associated Press
directly to motorists who already are
Today is Thursday, July 26, the struggling under the · pressures of
207th day of 1979. There are 158 days higher energy prices," said James A.
left in the year.
Wilkins, market relations manager o!
Today's highlight in history:
Marathon Oil Cci. in Findlay.
On this date in 1953, Fidel Castro
Testifying at a recent House
began his revolt in Cuba, attacking an Transportation and Urban • Affairs
army barracks at Santiago.
Committee hearing, Wilkins said his
On this date :
company feels the extra employee,
In 1759, the French abandoned Fort who would be on duty in addition to the
Ticonderoga in New York to the cashier, could add nothing to the
British in the French and Indian War. safety of customers.
In 1891, France annexed the Pacific
" Statistics reveal fire records
island of Tahiti.
better at self-service (stations) than.
In 19«, in World Warn, German V- at attendaf1t service (stations ) and
2rockets hit targets in England lor the both are very low, " he said. "Existing
first time .
state and local fire codes mandate
In 1952, Argentina's first lady , Eva proper and adequate operating
Peron, died .
procedures
at
self-service
In 1973, the United States cast its (stations )."
filth veto in the U.N. Security Council, · But Rep. J. Leonard Camera, 'the
killing a resolution that deplored Lorain Democrat who is sponsoring
Israel's continued occupation of Arab the bill, said the state law pennitting
lands seized in the 1967 six-day war. se lf-se rve facilities ca lls for an
Ten years. ago: Scientists be gail attendant to be in direct control of the
testing the first rocks brought back station.
from the moon, and the Apollo XI
"I personally do not feel someone
astronauts arrived in Pearl Harbor taking money would be in direct
after their historic moon landing and control of those pumps," Camera
splashdown in the Pacific.
said, despite their ability to push
Five years ago: Greek, 'I'urkish and buttons and shut off the gas pumps
British representatives were meeting and the station's power.
in Geneva to attempt to restore peace ·Camera said he feels having an .
to the island of Cyprus after a Turkish attendant outside the cashier's hut
would add to the safety of consumers.
invasion.
Today's birthdays: Writer Alice
The measure also mandateS that
Winchester is 'l2 years old. Cellist gas stations provide free air pumps so
motorists can keep their automobile
Leonard Ross is 61.
Thought for today: A man finds tires inflated ·properly, thereby savir.g
himself seven years old the day after gas .
his marriage - Francis Bacon, "The bill ·very carefully points out
English philosopher, 1561-1626.
that the air must come from a

'Ohio perspective'
compressor and so on, so someone

said. "We cannot, however, endorse
the wisdom of mandating it.
"If a few of our competitors choose
not to offer certain conveniences, we
welcome that decision ."
Committee
Chairman
Ike
Thompson, D-Clevetand, said he is
concerned that service stations in
Otiio might start charging for air, like
stations in some other states have
done. He said he favors that portion of
the measure .
However, Thompson said he wants
his committee to further study the
idea of mandating extra personnel at
self-service stations.
The bill will be one of the first pieces
of legislation considered by the
committee in September after the
General Assembly's summer recess is
over, Thompson said.
mE DAILY SENTINEL
!USPS 11..9«!1
~'b

rsm~ ..,.._._..,... , ~e::~. -

q,v

DEVOTED TO 111E
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
ROBERT HOEFLICH
City Edlt.r
PubUsbed daUy nee pi S.tarday by The Olu..,

Valley PubUshlJ11 Company· MuJUmedia, Inc.,_
-111 Court St., Pomeroy, Oblo 45769. BudueaS
Office Phone 992- 2156. Edilortal Phone

.

Secoud class po•lliBe paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.
. NaUon~~lad 1crtlslog represent.atlve, Landoo
All8ociales, 3101 Euclid 1\ve., Cleveland, Ohio
MUS.
SubacripUun 111lcs: Delivered by carr1e11
where •vaU•ble eo ctnta per wuk. By Motor1
.Route where carrier servl« not available, One
monlb, $3,90. By nulllln ObJo aDd w. Va .. Onr
Year, $27.50: ~lx months, $1UO; Three mou :J
ths, SlUG: Elsewhere t:n.oo year; Six months'
$17.111; Three month!i, t8.08. Suhtcrlpthm pril'f'•
iurladf&gt;ft S11nday Tfmes- Senlino•l.

BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
Tony Perez strode to the plate and
surveyed the field. There were two out
in the ninth inning, and he represented
whatever hopes the Montreal Expos
. had of beating San Diego.
It wasn't enough that Perez had
doubled !¥'ice already and helped the
Expos pull within a.-4 after trailing 4-0,
As Jerry White danced off second
base · and Rodney Scott stepped off
first, Perez looked 10 the outfield
while awaiting . a pitch from the
Padres' Eric Rasmussen.
"When I come up in these
situations,! feel that the pitcher is the
one in trouble, " said Perez.
He was right. Rasmussen was in
trouble because Perez noticed Padres
center fielder Gene, Richards had
shifted way over to right-center, ''and
I thought if I could hit one into the gap
it would score both runners ."
Right again. Rasmussen's 3-2 pitch,
which could have ended the contest,
was decisive in a different way : Perez
sent it to the gap in left-center for his
third double of the contest. two runs ,
and a 6-5 Montreal triumph
Wednesday night.
"They were looking to me to hit one
and it was a big hit lor us," said
Perez, who has 87 hits this season - - 29
for extra bases.
And that's below his average. Of his
2,193 liietime hits, ~ have been
doubles, triples or homers .
.
"Perez hasn 't been stinging the ball
lately," oboenred Expos Manager
Dick Williams. " He had only two runs
batted in on our road trip (six games)
before tonight. But he really came
through when we needed him.''
The victory eased the Jressure
somewhat on the National League
East leaders, who bOOsted their
margin to two games over Pittsburgh

job .... "

Adams relieved the curse a mite by
adding: " ... and I join with the whole
nation ·in hoping that the remainder of
your administration . will be
·'
successful.''
Friday, July 27

C1 9/!l h oNEA 'rtL

" Notice how everything began to go bad tor
Carter when he started parting his hair on the
left side? "

SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Nov . !2)
Avo id social izing w ith a pal
loday who always seems to
stick yOu wi th the tab He or
she may attempt to pull of! this
same ploy again.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23-Doc .
Z1) Ach ie..-ements ma y no1
come a:; easily for you today as
you hope , but don 't u se this as
an excuse for qiJ itl ing . Second
or e~en third efforts ma y be
reQutred .
CAPRICORN (Doc . Z2-Jon. 11)
July 27. 1979
Say no th ing unflatteri ng about
This coming yea r unusual op- one friend 10 another today
portun it ie s could co me through unless that person is there to
pe rso ns you already kn o w def~nd hi'mselt. It could Jeopquite wel l N o matter how ardtze your relationsh ip .
strange the tips may sound , AQUARIUS (J1n. 20-Feb. 11)
you w ould be wise to study Sof!leone you know is very
them from all angles .
cunous about a !oint venture
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) Yo u may you 're i nv o lved in , and may pry
experience an urge today to a bit too muc h loday . Take care
gamble on so meth ing Jhat 's you don 't say more than is
Oul ol you.r f1eld of expert i se . wise .
Belter th ink it ove r carefully PISCES (Feb. 2G-M•rch 20)
before you plunk your money Your first decisions are likely io
down . Discover w it h whom you be your bes1today . If yo~w~ begin
best get along romant ically by to overanalyze , you could besending for your new Astr a- co me confused and impede
Graph Leller which begins w ith your progre ~s .
your birth day . Mail SUer each ARIES (M1rch 21 -Aprll It) It
lo Astra-Graph , P.O. Bo1t 489 , isn 't that you won 't have the
Radi o City S tat ion . N. Y. 10019. opportunities to l&gt;e proc:tuctlve
Be sure to spec ify birth time .
today , because ljOOd chances
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) Use will keep popping up. Your
no m eth ods today lhat co.uld tndifleren c e will stop you
make you appear as if you ' re
trying to De a martyr Do whar s
expe cte d of you witt"tout any
dramatic frills .
LIBRA (Sepl. 23-0ct . 231
NOTICE OF
Through someone else ' s efFINDINGS OF NO
fort s you could enjoy unexSIGNIFICANT
pected gains today . When dis·
EFFECTONTHE
cussmg what occurred . don 't
ENVIRONMENT
pretend you d id it all on your
Village of Middleport
own .
237 Race Street
Middleport , Ohio 45760

ASTRO·GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

~~

UURUS (April 20-Moy 20) You
could lose out on an unexpected fun Invitation today b•
cause of shyness . Don ' t beat
around the bush . Accept It
happily .
GEMINI (M•y 11-;Juu HI Do
what needs to be done immedi·
atety, instead of making prom·
ises to get to the chores tater .
In your heart .you know you
won' t get back to them .
CANCER (Jur&gt;O ti-July tt) Be
CO!'"Piimen tary ra~her than crl ti·
cal ot those who str ive to lend
you a hand today . If you fear
they can 't perform as expect··
ed , do it yourself .
( N[WSPAP£~

ENTERPRISE ASSN I

IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT,
MEIGS COUNTY .
OHIO
T'EXAS
EASTERN
TRANSMISSION
COPRO~ATION .

PLAINTIFF

vs

WILLIAM
POWELL .
( Jldtlrus unknown
ANTHONY
AN ·
ORULITES ,
CASS I E
ANORULITtES , laddreB
unknown)
SIDNEY· M . BOWLES .
CATHER:INE F . BOWLES ,
Rt . l, Box liSA , A lbany ,
Ohio 45710 : OHIO POWER
COMPANY , 305 Cl eHiand ,
Ohio SW . Canton , OH 1o
44101 ; NANCY CLARI( ~ 0
S.
Chestnut
Str eeT.
Jackson ,
Otn' o
446 40 ,

RALPH C . HALBERT , 13

NOTICE TO
PUBLIC OF
REQUEST FOR
RELEASE OF FUNDS
Vil lage of M iddlep ort
137 Ra ce St .
M iddleport , Ohio 45160

Main Street, Evinnll 1e
Indiana 47701 ; EAST OHI O
GAS COMPANY , 17 11 East
Ninth Street, CIHetand ,
Oh i o H 1 14 ;
GEORGE
COlliNS , Treut.irer of
M•l11 County. Ohio. M•f•• ,

county
courn•ovse ,
Pomeroy , Oh io 457S9 ,
DEFENDANTS
N0 . 17111
TO : All I NT ERE STED
LEGAL NOTICE
AGE NCIE S,
GROU P S
Th e
a bove
nam ed
A ND PER SON S:·
defendan1 ~ .
W i 11 1am
On or ab ou t Aug 10. 1979 Powel l. add ress unknown ,
th e above name d V i llitQC Antho ny Andr ul.tes . ad
will reavest the
dr ess unlc,nown , Ca:!ISIC
D e partm·e nt o f H ousing Andrulif es ,
addre ss
and Urban devel opment to unknown . w di t a ke not 1 ce
re l ease
~ederal
lunds that the p 1a 1nt i fl hdS
under l it l e 1 of the H ousing brought th is act ion nam 1n g
a n d
C o m m u n i 1 Y you as de fendants 1n t he
Development Ac t o f 1974 above en 11tled aC1 10n bv
( L93 383 ) t or t he f ollo w i ng
pr oiec t :
f iling i t s como l a 1n t on
June 18 . 19 79
Con str uc t ion o f sa n i tary
The obiect 01 lf'le com
~e w e r
fa cilities i n the
Powe l l St . area .
.
pla in t i s to appr opri at e
The est i mated to tal o f the easemenls and r igh t s o f
abovementioned act i vit ies wav:; ,
p erm a nent
in
w il l be $247 ,000 .
nat ure , on , ove r and un der
An
Environmental t he fo llo w in g descr i bed
TO ALL INTERESTED
Rev i ew r espec t i ng l he real es t ate ano f or _:;uch _,.·
AGENCIES
,
GROUP,
AND
NOTICE ON FILING
within proj ect has been• other and furt her r elie f as
PERSONS
OF INVENTORY
m ade by the abolle named the n_atu r e of t he case may
The
co
un
ci
l
o
f
the
village
ANO
Village whi ch dociJment s reQu•_r e .
.
of
Middleport
prop
oses
to
APPRAISEMENT
. Sa 1d
r eal
es tate
1S
request the U . S. Oepttrt · the env i r o nmental re vi ew
The State of Ohio, Meigs
of the pr oiect . This En
S1 t u ated 1n the To wnsh i P. o f
m en t o f Housing and Urban
county · Court of Common
vironmentat
Rev ie w
Sa lem, Co untv o f Me1Q S
Department ro
rel ea se
Pleas , Probate D ivision .
Record is on f il e at t he and Sta te o f O H io, and
federal
funds
und
er
Tille
I
To the
E )(ecutor or
above address and
is desc ~ 1 bed _ as t01 1':'ws
.
of the Housing and Com
Adminis tr ator
of
the
availabl e
f or
J;JIJbli c
B e1 ng Sl f ~iHed m SeC1 1on
munity
Deve
lopment
Acl
of
es tat e, to such of the
examination and cop ying
35 . . TownSh i p~ · Rang e I S,
1974 (PL 93-383) t o b e used
following as a r e r esi d ent s
upon request .
Oh10 Company s Pur c~ as -: .
for
th
e
f
o
llowihg
projects
:
of the State of Ohio, -..i)( : ~
Th e vi llage of Mid
comme nr 1ng ~ t a pam! !n
Con struct sanitary sewer
the su r viv i ng spouse , the
dleport wil l undertake the th e . n o rt h l 1ne of sa1d
fa
ci
l
i
ties
in
th
e
Powell
ne)(t
at
kin ,
the
project descr i bed aOove sec t 1on . 200 rod s wesl of J~e
Street area .
beneficiaries under the
with funds fr om the
nt;_~r t heas t cor ner of sa1 d
The
estimated
tot
at
ot
t
he
will ; and to the attorney or
Department Of H ous.l nQ
se~ t l on : thence west to .a
above
-mentioned
acti'.'
i
lie
s
attorneys representing any
and Urban D e-..e l opm ent
pot~ t h~lfway _
b etween sa 1d
242,000
.
is
at the
aforementioned
( HU DL under T it le 1 o f t he begmn 1ng po 1nt ond t~ e
It
has
been
d
eterm
ined
per sons :
Hous ing and Comm un ity
north w est corner of !.a 1d
t h at s uch request for
Ve rt i e B . Midk iff , Rl. 3;
Development Act of 1974 _ seC t iOn _: then ce_ south, ~~
releas
e
o
f
fund
s
w
i
ll
not
Pomeroy , Ohio 45769 .
The Village o f M i dd l eport
south h ne o f !ltlld _sec lion ,
cons titute
an
actio n
You are hereby notif ied
is cert i f yi ng t o H u D that
t hence ~as t lo a J? O•n t In_th e
sign i f ica ntly affec t i ng tne
that tile
Invento r y and
the
Village
of
M
i
dd
le
p
ort
south I me of sa1d _ se~·t ton :
quality
01
the
human
en
.Appra i sement ot the estate
thence ~ ast to a p_o tnt m ~he
vironment and , according , and Frett Hoffman in ll is
of the aforement io n ed .
sou th ltne of sa•d sechon
the Village of Middlepor t of fi cial c apa clt v as Mayor
deceased , late of said
consent to - accept lh~
100 rod s wes t from t~e
has decided not to prepare
County, were fil~d in thi s
ju risdi ction of th e Federal
sou l ~ ea s l corner of sa1d
an Environmental Impa ct
Cou rt. Sai d Inventory and
courts if an act i on is
sec t 1on ; t hence north to the
Stat ement
under
the
Appraisement will be for
brought
to
en f or ce
Pl ?c.e of beginning , con Na tiona l
Environmental
hearing before this Cou rt
t a•nmg 130 h acres , mo re
Poli cy Ac t of 1969 ( PL 911) . r es pon sibilit ies in relation
on the 13th da y of August,
to environmental re 11 iews ,
or less . .
.
Th e reasons f or such
1979, at 1 : 00 o'c l ock P .M .
decision
making ,
and
Ex c ep t 1ng and reser1110g
decision not to prepare
A ny person desiring to
26 acres ofl t he so_uthend of
such Sta t ement are as action .· and that respon
file excep tion s t h ereto
sibi lities
have
been
th e above descr1bed real
follow s :
.
must file them at least five
satisfied .
es tat e . 11 is the 1ntent o f
A public meeting was
days prior to the date set
The l ega l e fl ect of th e
s aid deed re c orded i n
held on July 11 , 1979 with no
for he aring .
ce rtifi catio n is ithat upon
Vo t~ me 219 page 11 ot th e
negativ e co mments be i ng
G i ven under my hand
Me1gs
Cou nty
Deed
received . Constr u ction Is its approval , lhe V i llage of
and sca t o f this Court, this
R eco rds to convey 102' 1
w i thin the village right -of - Middleport may use t he
2A th day o t July , 1979 .
HUD funds , and HUD will
acres of ~ea l estate . ·
way .
Rober t E . Bu ck
have
sat i sfied
its
Exceptmg therefrom 6 .0
An
Envi r onmental
Judge
acres tran sf er red to John
Rev ie w Record respect ing responsibilities under th e
By ca rolyn G . Thomas
Environmental
Elmer Ord by deed dat ~ d
the pro j ect has been ma de Nalional
Depuly Clerk.
Policy Act o f 1969 ; HUD
August 27 , 1975 recorded_m
by
the
village
wh i ch
171 26, IBl 2. 2 tc
Vo lume 261 page 385 Me tgs
documents
the
en - will accept an o bjec tion to
its approval of the rel ease
Cou nty Deed Recor ds and
vi ronm en ta l review of the
2. 16 acres transferred to
proj ec t and more f ully sets of funds and acceptance of
.LEGAL NOTICE
the certification only i f it is
Paul SfH.lnders, Jr . and
fljlr t h the reasons why such
NOTICE OF
on one of the following
Sandra SaiJnders by deed
S ~atement is not required .
PROPOSED MERGER
dated
May
24 .'
1976
T!lis
Environmental bases :
Noti c e i s hereby giv en
A . That the certi fi ca tion
re corded in ~olume 26.4
Rev i e w Record is on file at·
that app l i ca ti on ha s been
page 313 flt.e,gs County
the .above address e-nd is was no t in fa c l eJtec uted bv
made to th e Comptroller of
Deed Records .
avai l able
for
p ubl ic the chief executive ofticer
th e Currency, Washington,
You are required to
examina t ion and copying, or other officer of com .
D . C. 20 2 19 for his co n sent
answer
the
complaint
between 8 : 00a .m . and 4: 00 plaint approved by HUO ; .
· to a merg er of Th e Citizens
within twenty -eight
128)
p
.
m
.
Monday
through or
National Ban~ of Mid B.
That
appli cant 's
da ys
after
the
lll s t
Friday . No furth er en dl eport , Middl eport , Ohio
environme nt a l
rev ie w
publ i cation of this notice ,
v iron men tal review ot such
and Th e Central Trust
which will be published
project is proposed to be record tor th e projec t in
Company,
National
once each week for six
co nducted , prior
to the dicates om iss ion ot a
Associ ation , Cincinnati,
con secu t i ve weeks and the
reque s t for re l ease of required decision , finding
Ohio .
or step applicable to the
la st publication will be
Federal funds.
The
app l ica t i on
was
proje c t
In
th e
en made on July 26 , 1979
All interested agencies,
accepted for liling ·June 6.
v ironment at
rev ie w
tn case ot your tau ure to
g r oups ,
and
persons
1979 .
Process .
answer
or
otherwise
disagreeing
w i th
this
It i s c ontemplated that
Objections
must
be
respond to the complaint as
decis
io
n
are
inv
i
t
ed
to
all
offi c es
of
the
prepared and submitted in
perm i tt ed by th e OKio
submi t written comments
aboveln amed banks will
accordance
with
the
Rules of Civil Procedure
for consideration by the
co ntinue to be operated .
required procedure (24
within the time st a ted ,
Village Counc i l to the City
Thi s notice is publi shed
IUOgm ~:n• uy u crau11 wilt lJ~
Hall . Such written com - CFR Part 56). and may be
rendered against you for
pur suant to se c tion 18 (c) of
ments shou ld be received
addressed to HUD at the
the relief demand ed in the
the Federal Deposi l In Huo Area office, 200 N.
suran ce Act and Part S o f. a t the above address on or
High St ., ColUmbus, Ohio .
compl..:.int .
before Aug , 10 , 1979 . All
Th e Reg ulation s of th e
Objections
to th e rel ease of
Larry E . Spencer
such
c
omments
so
received
Com ptrot l er
of
the
funds on bases other than
Clerk of Courts ,
w
i
ll
be
c
onsidered
and
the
Currency ( 12 CFR 5) .
those stated above will not
Common P leas
village
will
not
r
e
Qu
es
t
the
The Ci ti ze n s
be considered by HUD . No
· Co urt,
r
e
lease
of
Federal
funds
or
National Bank
oblection r eceived after
Meigs County ,
take
any
administrative
o f Middleport
AUg . 10, 1979 wit! be con O'Brien and O'Brien Ohio
ac tion on the within' prolect
Midd lepor t , Ohio
prior to the dat e specified
s i der &lt;!d by H U D .
Attorneys tor Plaintiff
F REO HOFFMAN •
100'h Court Street
The Cent ral Tru st · in the preceding sentence .
Fred Hoffman ,
Con1pany, N .A .
V ILLX'tJ8~
Pomeroy , Ohio H769
Mayor
Ci ncinnat i. Ohio
MIDDLEPORT
Vi
It
age
of
Middleport
(6)
21, 28 (7) 5, 12, 19, 26 , 6tc
16) 26 , 17) 3, 10, 17. 24 , 26, 6
July 26
171 26 lt c
tc
;
r

u. s.

u s

won't just give you a hand air pump,"
Camera said.
Wilkins said Marathon installs air
outlets at all of its stations as a policy.
"We believe it is good business," he

m-m:.

Perez has game winning hit

Carter's
parting
with
Transportation Secretary Brock
Adams was abrupt and unplanned,
having been precipitated by Adams' ·
own questions about the president's
modus operandi.
Fired for presuming to tell Carter
how to conduct the presidency, Adams
submitted a resignation letter that
ended on what seemed a bitter note :
"I hope you find happiness in your

1

which lost a 6-5, IIHnning decision to
the Cincinnati Reds.
In the other NL contests, the
Houston Astros trimmed the Chicago
Cubs s-4, the Atlanta Braves blasted
the St. Louis Cardinals 13-4, the Los
Angeles Dodgers bombed the
Philadelphia Phillies 1~ and the New
York Mets blanked the San Francisco
Giants 3-0.
Astros 6, C. btl t
J .R. IUchard, the major league
strikeout leader, raised his total to 174
by striki.r1g out 12 Cubs in 71-3 innings
of work. He WB! knocked out in
Chicago 's three-run eighth, but Joe
Samblto relieved, recorded four more
strikeouts, and completed the fivehitter for his 12th save.
Sambito, the phenomenal Houaton
fll'eman, lowered his eamed run
average to 1.16 over 612-3 innings of
work in 39 apoearances.

MONTREAL (AP) - For a man
who had five days to learn almost a
brand new game, Tom Cousineau felt
he conducted himself adequately
Wednesday night even thoug~ the
Mootreal Alouettes dropped a 1!1-7
decision to Calgary Stampedef's in a
Canadian Football League game.
" I think I played well," Cousineau
said . ... I made some mistakes, but
they will be eliminated wben I get
comfortable wlth the system.''
Cousineau, the No.1 draft pick ln
this year's National Football League
draft, spurned a lucrative offer from
Buffalo Bills last. week to sign with-the
Alouettes.
He was given the jqb as an outside
linebacker after a high school and
college ca reer that saw him play the

OUTSIDE

.
.•

WHITE

•

Moreno aboard tied it at 4-4 earlier In
the inning.
.
The Reds went ahead 2-0 in the firlt
on consecutive home runs by Joe
Morgan and Bench. Morgan's home
run, his sixth of the seaSOil, ended a
hitless streak of 26 at-bats.
The Pirates got their first run In the
second inning when starter Tom
Seaver walked Rennie Stennett with
the bases loaded.
The Reds added two runs in the
third. Dave Concepcion singled t.o .
drive in Cruz, who singled·and moved
to third on a walk and a fly all. Garer
doubled in ' the fourth and scored on
Stennett's single to center.
"We're sill playing good, quality
baseball," Tanner said, "And you
can't ask for any 1110re than that except some breaks, maybe ."
GIIWI rouRNEY SET

The Girls Junior League SGftbal1
tournament gets under way thla
weekend at the SyraCIIIII Fleldl.
Eight teams make up the doubJe.
elimlnaUon tournament.
Saturday at 10 a.m, at the Loulll
Field, Sallabury . playa SyraCIIIII,
followed by the contest· between the
New Haven Bears and Muon.
At 10 a .m. at the King Field,
Pomeroy goes against Mlddledport,
followed by a game between the New
Haven Reds and Letart at 11:30.
Games will be played throu8b
Saturday and on Sunday beglnnl~ at
1 p.m. 1be Championship contest (or
contests) will begin Monday at 8 p.m.
on King Field,

'79 AMC
CONCORD II

Cousineau's new team beaten, 19-7

CHIEF
•

, CHlCAGO (AP)- AU you good folks
who took the time to write and care,
please listen. Darryl Stingley would
like to tell you something- you saved
Craig Reynolds' sixth-inning single his"Ilife.
don't know how to thank all the
delivered the winning run.
people for the nice cards and letters.
B111ve1l3, Cardlllals 4
Maybe I can thank them by standing
Barry Bonnell's three-run triple up some day," he said.
keyed an eight-run Atlanta seventh · Once, Darryl Stingley was a football
inning and powered the Braves past player . Standing was as natural as
the Cardinals.
breathing. Then he was paral)"':ed in a
Pepe Frial! had three hits ·and three (I'eseason game. He lingered near
RBI in the 17-bit Atlanta atta~k. Joe
death.
Nolan also had three hits for the
"I know for a fact those prayers of
Braves.
people kept me alive in those early
Dodgen 11, Pblllles 8
days. You know, there's strength in
Joe Ferguson and Dusty Baker numbers. AU th011e thousands of
combined to drive in nine runs as Los people praying. God couldn't ignore
Angeles overwhelmed Philadelphia their prayers," he said. ·'
and won Its sixth game in seven.
Stingley, now '!/, WB! a wide
Ferguson had five RBI with a two- receiver for the New England Patriots
run single and a three-run horner when he was paralyzed in a collision
while Baker - who had a grand slam with Jack Tatwn of the Oakland
in the Dodgers' 1S-3 victory Tuesday Raidef's last August 12. First he was
- had a tw&lt;H'Uil single and two RBI hospitalized in California. Then he
doubles.
was a patient at the Rehabilitation
Institute of Chicago.
·
Since April he has been home,
surroWlded by his records, plants,
flowers, inspirational plaques and
family 's love, It is a small, modern
middle linebacker position.
'"The pace (of the game) surprised apartment with not enough room for
me," Cousineau said . "It was the thousands of good wishes - many
definitely quicker than I though it still unopened - that came in the
mail.
would be.
It was in that familiar setting
"1 found out how much wider the
field wB! when Willie Armstead ran a Wednesday night that he gave his fll'St
curl pattern to the outside. I tried to face-to-face interview since he was
track him down and managed to run hurt.
Seated in a black recliner, he lalked
him out of bounds."
Head coach Joe Scannella said of the eur~ be ._.two biMin a
Cousineau had a "first kind" of a day with the help of his nurse,
Barbara Bradford; his detennination
game.
"He played better in the second to get better step by step, and his faith
half. I think he is exhausted. He's in· God and in people.
He can move his right arm and
boWld to be, he only practiced four
shake hands - "My grip isn't so firm
days. "
Scannella said Cousineau was anymore," be Joked - although his
playing a little soft "when they were left arm is ccming along more slowly.
running outside of him - he had a He can't move his leg.'! yet but has
great hopes.
long day,"
"I've come to accept myself as 1
am. nus is me in 1979. By 1983 or 84
who knows what might be? 'Ibis is a
SCIOTO RESULTS
rebirth for me. Not only physically but
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP )
spiritually,"
he said. "I believe
Finishing strong, Doc McBean took
there's
a
God
and a creator' and 8!
the lead in the stretch to win the
featured race going away· by 4'f.l long as I do there's hope."
lengths at Scioto Downs on . Stingley speaks gently and
articulately. His mother, Hilda, told
Wednesday night.
Circling the mile in 2:00 1-.5, the him when he was 10 he should be a
winner paid $7, $4 and $2.80. Joan Coy preacher. Stingley says if it is God's
returned $4.60 and $3.80 for second will he will do that. He knows he wants
to help and inspire people.
and Projects Godiva, $4 for show.
"Their faces light up with joy to see
The 10+2 ninth race trifecta was
doing so well because one time I
me
worth $l,t88.30.
was
counted out. They all but signed
A crowd of 3,920 wagered $345,250.
my death certificate. I think I can
inspire people," be said.
" I get inspired very easily. I have so
Mexico has been granted a $21(}.
much
to look forward to. Every day
mllllon loan by the World Bank to
that's
behind you is one more day of
maintain and improve the CI)Wltry's
exercise.
·
highways. '

and tagged Parker to prevent a
Pittsburgh insurance run .
Then in the Reds' eighth, Bench
belted his second homer of the night to
tie the game at 5-li and set up gamewinning doubles from Cincinnati
reserve- outfielders Dave Collins and
Heity Cruz.
Doug Bair, ~. got the win in relief
of Dave Tomlin and starter Tom
Seaver.
.
Collins led off the loth with a double
off the centerfield wall. Cruz then
smacked a line drive just inside the
third base bag to score Collins.
"This has been my best night," said
Cruz, subbing because Ken Griffey
was benched with a sore knee. The hit
came off loser Kent Tekulve, who
releived John Candelaria in the ninth.
Collins, who has filled in since
Foster was hurt in the All.Star game,
was making the most of the
opportunity to play.
" We need George in there," he
Said."But I'm going to go as hard as I
can until he gets back. This is a
chance for them to see rite."
Pirate Manager Chuck Tanner
wasn't disheartened.
.
"We've played three doubleheaders
in five days, and maybe we're a
fraction slower.
"Candelaria threw a good game
from the sixth inning on," he said. The
lefthander, frustrated in a bid to pitch
his third complete game in a row, at
one point retired 16 Reds in a row.
Phil Garner's sacrifice fly scored
Parker to put the Pirates ahead a.-4 in
the fifth after John Milner's loth
homer of the season with Omar

•

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For information and prompt service contacl ... John D. Herrold

Phone .(614) 533-1431

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�~The Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport·PQmeroy, 0 ., Thursday, July26, 19'79

4- ~ Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, July 26, 19'7 9

•••••••
•••••

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD
a.seb.lll At A Glance
By Tilt AIIOCIIted Press
NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST
W. L. Pet. GB
Montreal
5-I 39 .581
Pittsburgh
53 ~27 .558 2
Chicago
52 -42 .553 21h
Philadelphi a
52 o46 .531 41f2
St. Louis
o46 -47 .495 8
New York
-40 53 .430 1-4
WEST
Houston
58 « .569
Cincinnati
53 -49 .520 5
San Francisco
47 53 .-475 9'1'
San Diego
-47 56 .-456 14
Atlanta
-42 58 .-420 15
Los Angeles
-42 58 .-420 15
Wednesday 's Games
Los Angeles 16, Philadelphia 8
New York 3, San Fi"anc lscoo
Cinclnnatl6, PIHsburgh, 10 inn ings
Atlanta 13, St. Lou is 4

s,

Houston 6, Chicago 4

Montreal6, San Diego S
Tt1Ursd1y's Games
Cincinnati !koskau 5·3) at Pittsburgh
(Roberts l -2 (n) .
Chicago ! rukow 7 51 at New York
(Housman 1 - ~), (n).
Atlanta (S ·loman .4 -7) at St . Louis
(MarllnezB -3 , !n) .
Los AngeiFs (JSullon 7-12) at
Houston !Andyiar 11 ·5) , (n) .

San Franc l,co {Blue 8-8) at san

Diego
Acqulsto 6·6), !n J.
!Only games scheduled)

1D

Fridly's Games
Pittsburgh at Montreal, 2. !nl
Cincinnati at Atlanta, (n)
Chicago at New York , In )
St. Louis at Philadelph ia, (n)
Los Angeles at Houston, (nl
San Francisco at San Diego,, (nJ

~
53
48
46
26

.45

.5-41 l lf2
.490 B'h
.-165 11
.257 32

Boston 16, Oakland 4
Cal iforn i a 9, New YorkS

Detroit 11. Milwaukee2
Chicago 6, Kansas City 2
Cleveland 2, M innesota 0
Thursday's Games

California (Barr 7-5) at New York
{Guidry 7·71.
Oakland !Minetto l ·J) at Boston
{ Renko8·4).
Cleveland {Svlll ner 4·21 at Min·
nesota ( Hartzel l5·61 .
Seattl e ( Dressier 0·0) at Baltimore
!Stone 7·7). !nl.
Texa s (Medlch 4·3) at Toronto (T ,
Underwood 3·131. (n) .
Milwaukee (Haas 7-6) at Detroit
( Petry 2·1) , (n) .
Kansas Citv (Gura 5·1) at Chi cago
1Baumgarten9·61. (n) .
Friday ' s Games

Detroit at Toronto, (n J
New York at Milwaukee, (n}
Cleveland at Chicago, (n)
Ba ltimore at Kansas City, &lt;n&gt;
Boston at Texas, ( n)
Seattle at Oakland, (n)
Minnesota at California, (n}

NEW RIO roundballer Grant Greenwood, Mght, sizes up his new
Wlifonn as Rio Coach Art Lanham looks on.

Rio Grande signs
first new recruit
RIO GRANDE - Rio Grande's Art plays much taller than 6'-3," he ad·
· Lanham, heading Into his 20th season ded.
as coach of the Redmen basketball
Greenwood is the son of Mr. and

SUMMER
SHOE SALE
CONTINUES

1 GROUP 2Q~ OFF
MEN'S
o
fiJ9f PUPPIES
1 GROUP lQ~ OFF
MlMEN'S
o
tiJSH PUPPIES
.

THE

SHOE BOX

MIOOI£PORT, (1110

Sports transactions

Kansas City
50
Chicago
53
Oakland
75
Wednesday 's Games
Toronto 8, Texas 3
Seattle 5, Baltimore~

41

squad, today announced the first
player to ink a letter accepUng a
grant In aid at Rio Grande for the
19'7!1-al campaign is Grant Green·
wood, a 6'3", 193 pound transfer from
Allan Hancock College, in Califol'!lia.
Greenwood, originally from Bethel
High School in Tip City, Ohio, brings
some impressive high school
staUstics with him.
Named during the 1977·78 prep
season to numerous all star teams,
Greenwood received All State Special
Mentionand a taste of international
competition when the Russian Junior
Olympic Team visited the Dayton,
Ohio area.
The High School DlstMct Nine
Player of the Year In 1977-78 transferred to Rio Grande spring quarter
of 1979.
•
Lanham said of Greenwood's
abilities, "Grant is a great leaper
with a good touch around the basket.
During his senior year In high .Scholhe shot 58 per cent from the field. He

Last night at Rutiand, the Pizza
Shack Pee Wee team and the Rutland
Angels played for second place in the
league. Rutiand came out the victor,
5-4, in th bard.fqught contest.
Joey Snyder knocked In the winning
run fill' the Angels as Scott Williams
got the win with eight strike outs and
seven walks. Snyder smacked a triple
and two singles to lead the winners
while Williams had a tMple.
Artie Hwmel pitched well but took

AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST
W . L. Pet. GB
Baltimore
66 33 .667
Boston
60 36 .632 •
Mi lwauk ee
.co .600- 6'12
New York
.
45 .545 12 .
Detroit
48 .505 16
Clevelltnd
46 52 .-169 l9 1h
Toron to
30 70 .300 34
WEST1
Cali fornia
58 .ol3 .574
Minnesota
53 44 .546 3

Texas

Mrs. Lloyd Greenwood, New Carlisle,
Ohio.

PLAN TOURNEY
The Abele Ford softball team will
hold a women's Class A·B softball
tournament August 4 and 5 in
Wellston. Trophies will be given
through four places with individuals
for first. Entry fee Is $SO plus two ASA
balls. Drawing is 7 p.m. Thursday,
Aug. 2, at Jaycee Field. For further
infonnation call Bill Mahle at 384-3825
or 384-*40 after 5.

AA UW supports Ohio merit Selection of judges

R utlarid finishes
second in league

•••••
•••••••

KARATE STUDENT -An eight-year old Bamberg, GemwtY resi·
dent with Meigs County relatives is making quite a name for himself.
Robbie Rawlings, ~n of Brady and Rnse Sayre, is taking up Karate.
Recently Robbie~ third place In the Pee Wee Division in the Bavarian
State Karate ~ionships. That was Robbie's third tourney In his !if.
teen months of triWling. He currently holdl! a yellow belt. There were 250
competitors in thetoumment from as far away as England. In this pic·
ture Rob proudly displays his medal.

Sports briefs.

••

TENNIS
SPARTACADE
AJX-EN-PROVENCE, France (AP ) MOSCOW (AP) -- The United
-- llieNastase beat Jimmy Connors 5- States track and field team exploded
7, &amp;-3, 6-4 in the only match at a $75,000 for three gold medals, a silver and a
four-man exhibition series.
bronze at the
pre-Olympic
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AP) Spartacade. Jolm Powell won the
-- Evonne Goolagong of Australia men's discus, Wardell Gilbreath the
heat Emilse Raponi &amp;-1 , 6.2 to advance men's 200 meters and Henry Marsh
to th e semifinals of an indoor tennis the 3,()()()..meter steeplechase.
tournament among four world-ranked
Han Gen Si of North Korea set a
stars and Argentina 's top four women world record in the 115-pound
players. Billie Jean King heat Ivanna weightlifting division, with a lift of 245
Madruga 64, &amp;-3 in the day's other pounds, 1.1 over the mark held by
match to also advance to the Alexander Voronin of the Soviet
semifinals.
Union.
H!LVERSUM , Netherlands (AP) -American
gymnast
Teresa
Uli Pinner downed Australia's David Schneider, upse t by the judges '
Carter &amp;-1, &amp;-! in the third round of the refusal to raise the uneven bars,
$75,000 Dutch Qpen.
abandoned
the
all.:around
ln other matches, Jea n-Loui s qualifications at the gymnastics
Haillet defeated Kjell Johansson 6-4, competition. It was the first major
5-7, 7-5 ; Buster Mottram heat Claus dispute involving an American
Eberhard s-·1, 7·5; Tomas Smid competitor at the Olympic warmup
downed Eric Deblicker !h'l, 7-5; Peter competition.
McNamara beat Noel Philips !h'l, &amp;-2;
Schneider, who stands 5-:i, refused
and Jan Kodes defea ted Angel to compete on the uneven bars, her
Jimenez 7-ll, &amp;-2.
last qualifying event, because she said
KITZBUEHEL, Austria (AP ) -- she was afraid of being injured.
Arthur Ashe was upset by little-known
TRACK AND F.IELD
Frenchman Christopher Freyss &amp;-7, &amp;TURKU, Finland (AP) -- Ralph
2, 64 in the second round of the $75,000 King of the United States won the the
Grand Prix tournament.
5,000 meter race at an international
In other second round matches, top· meet in 13 minutes, 23.7 seconds, 10
seeded Vilas Gerulaitis defeated seconds better than his previous best.
Fenli T aygan 6-4, 6-4 ; Pavel Slozil
Two other Americans, Craig Virgin
upset Gianni Ocleppo 64, 4-ll, 6-4 ; and Paul Geis, finished second and
Wojtek Fibak defeated Andreas fourth , respectively.
Maurer &amp;-3, 6-4 ; Chris Lewis beat
Antonio Zugarelli, 5--7, 64, 6-4; Heinz
Guenthardt downed Ricardo cano 6-4,
O-Il, 6-4; and Zeljko Franulovic heat
Miguel Mir &amp;-3 , ~ LOUISVILLE, Ky. ( AP) -- Fourthseeded Ma nu el Orantes defeated
Randy Crawford 6-4, &amp;-1 in a first
round match of the Louisville
International Tennis Classic.
Second-seeded Eddie Dibbs beat
Uoyd Bourne 6-1 , 6-4. Marty Riessen
won his second round match by
default when Haroon Ismail arrived
late. Third-seeded Jose Higueras beat
Sherwood Stewart, &amp;-1, &amp;-2, and fifth·
seeded Jose-Luis Clerc defeated John
James 6-4, &amp;-1, in other second rol!"d
action .
Corrado Barazzutti ousted Steve
Kruievitz &amp;-3, 6-1 , in a first round
match while Eliot Teltscher defeated
Jaime Fillol &amp;-2, &amp;-1.
VICHY , F'rance (AP ) -- F'rance's
Pascal Portes and Yannick Noah
posted a 6-0, &amp;-2, &amp;-1 doubles victory
over Italians Patrizio Parini and
Marco Aliciati in the semifinals of the
four-nation Galea Cup tournament,
giving France a 2-1 lead over Italy.
Meanwhi le, Czec hos lovakia
clinched a spot ih the final as Miroslav
Lacek and Ivan Lend! defeated Daniel
Grosser and Gert Muller of West
Germany ~. &amp;-2, 6-1, giving the
Czechs a 3-0 lead in the best-{)f-five
competition.

By The Asoclated Press
BASEBALL
Notional League
CINCINNATI REDS Placed
George Foster, outfielder, on the 15·
day d isabled list. Recalled Frank
Pastore, pitcher, from Indianapol is of
the Ame:rlcan AsoclatJon.,
SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS -

. COLUMBUS- The OIUo State Divi·
Ilion ct the American Allsociation of
Unlvenity W0111en announced Thursday It would IRippOI't the merit aelec·
lion ct judgea In Ohio.
Dr. Marie Pfeiffer, president of the

the loss as he fanned eleVen and nlked seven. Hunnel also had a bcme nm
while Don Dorst doubled and Brian
Tannehill singled.

CLAIMS TOP HONORS
LEXINGTON, Ohio (AP ) - Mark
Barnett, 18, of Ridgeview, Ill., took
top honors Sunday in the Grand )&gt;rix
125 motorcycle championships at the
Mid Ohio race course.
Barnett, ridi!\g a 125cc Suzuki,
outraced about 4() others on the
outdoor dirt track. Sec.ond place went
to Californian Brock Glover, riding a
Yamaha.

lions.
"Because the decisions of our
judges affect e\'1!1")' Ohioan, " she
said, ''we feel it 18 lmpor1ant that the

I

,.,...

R

,~·: ~"''""

8

A

II&gt;YS &amp; GIRlS

INCLUDES:

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Except:
SLEEPWEAR - 30% OFF
SUNDRESSES- 40% OFF
SWIMWEAR - 40% OFF
Hours:·
9:30105 : 00
Mon. thru Sat.
9:30to8 :00
Friday

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

Langsville, Ohio
Dear Ellen,
I hope you are enjoying the visit
with ypur sister this week. I imagine
you hfd bave a lot ~ catching up to do
since you baven't seen each other In
sometime.
The libraMes are staying busy. Mid·
dleport bad an especially exciting
week last week, with the program on
snakes and al8o the Rocer and Mary
Gilmore program. Both were wen
receiv~ by the kids and adulta, too,
which pleased ua very much.
On Wednel!day, Aug. 15, ai 2 jun.,
Jane McGregor, storyteller from
OVAL is coming to the Middleport
Ubrary for a program. She is a
delightful storyteller and I know the
ldda are really going to enjoy her.
Brian and I have been putting the
boolts fill' sale (10 centa) out every·
day. They are goin3 slowly but 1111r0ly.
I hope people will continue to CGII1e in
and look at what boots we have fer
sale, since we did have toUing !OOle
back from the nea market.
By the way, I'm really pleased
about all the new books Middleport

Slinderella classes meet

We're

Get professional
results at a
fract ion of the cost.

The Sllnderella Diet clua of Point
Pleasant mel Monday night and accepCed one new members. Frances

..

nle.n t

Dillion lost the most weight and Judy
Uberatare was the rwurer-up.
Sl&amp; new members were accepted at
the Tueday momlng claJII at Mason.
Pat t..yne 10111 the mOll! weight and
Pearl Pbalen was the runner-41p.
Mary Jewell received ber :iO lb. ribbon and Pit t..yne and Pearl Phalen
received their 351b. ribbons.
. At the Middleport class .Tuesday
evening five new members were ac·
cepled. M- Ruuell lost the most
weight and Dorothy Ruuell wu the

America's No. 1
Hom6 Carpet
Clean i ng
SYstem

,--------------·
I
S}OO
I

runner-up.

RENT

PER HOUR I
I FOR
__ .___________
I._ ONLY
(4 ·Hour Minimum) JI

Camp meeting schedukd
A .bree-day Chrlatian camp
meeting will be beld August 2, 3 and 4
at VIncent, Ohio, SR 339 from SR 7

STAR SUPPLY CO.

•""'

Leuers

Ell~nBe!J

AND GIRLS DRESSES

November."
the selection of more women as
will, therefore, lend our support to the . The adoption of the merit plan, judges.
effort to give the citizens of Ohio the Pfeiffer continued, will also allow fot
The AAUW's support follows
chance to VIlle on the merit plan this
· similar endorsements by the Ohio
Plrenta and Teachers' Assoctlttlon,
the Ohio Fann Bureau Federation,
the I,.eague of Wmnen Voters of Ohio,
By Ho·lt'n ami Suo• lluth·l
the Ohio State Bar Allsodation and
hte Colwnbua Jaycees.
L .._,oo\.t.
The text ol the AAUW resolution
I
reads In part, ''that appointment ct
8
IUS ONE-TRACK MIND
judges on the merit principle .with the
&lt;""'
~
11'J~.t'i ':\
NEEDS
FAST
DERAILMENT
voters
having the power to retain or
A
DEAR
HElEN
AND
SUE:
not
to
retain
a judge after a period of
'
t
"'
&gt;
'"'
~,,
,
R ,,, S·
I !net this guy a couple of months service will improve the admlnlstra·
y
ago and he 18 really nice and very lion of justice by placing emphasis on
cute. The only thing wrong Is that he's the qualifications and character of
has received lately. It's like a few years older thaJi me and mar- judges."
Ouiatmas getting Into the boxes and ried, with two adorable children.
We talk all the time, as he works
seeing that wbat goodlea are,In there.
Welf, the staff will hold thinga Intact down the road from my home. He's
unW you come back, so enjoy your helped me with my problems: he real·
with your future. - HElEN
ly understands teen-age troubles.
Clmplllly.
But all he ever thlnka about 18 sex.
Sincerely,
Ruth Powers It Cllllles Into every "onversation. He WANTS OUT:
And you won't get on with your
Middleport Superviaor swears thel,'i!'s no way I could get
pregnant, but I don't know much Mure by moping In a dingy apartabout such things. (It would be my ment. Visit employment agencies,
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
scour the want ads, check out day·
first time. )
inSCHARGES JULY 25
care centers. Find some sort of work
My queatlons are: .
Teresa Combs, Mrs. Eugene
Should I go to bed with him? I do that will help you through this bad
Canaday and son, Michelie Corbin, lllte him a lot, but his wife would pro- tbne, and then aim toward getting
Lawrence Derenge, Paula Erwin, bably JdU WI both.
your high school diploma or, at any
Shawn Fetty, Garland Folden,
Should I keep our relaUonahlp just rate, taking courses at a local comMargaret Gentry, Geraldine Gerla·ch, mutual frienda?
,
munity college. Your Jetter shoWs In·
Teddy Hanna, Donna Haskins, Heath
Or should I stop talking to him telligence (though not much maturi·
Hoover, Altha Howard, Donald Kirk, altogether? lbat would be a real ty). You can make something of
Hays McMurray , Phyllls Newma!l, bummer; Help, I feel lllte - THE yourself with the right drive and more
Belfia Roush, Ellen Stewart, Effie SCARLET LE'l'I'ER
education. Go for it! -SUE
Swango, Lee Western , Gladys DEARTSL:
Williamson, Myrtle Wilson, Betty
1bia married seducer of teen-age - - Wise.
girls 18 scarcely better !ban a rapi.st.
BIR'IHS, JULY 25
Derail hbJ one-track mind before he
Mr. and Mrs. George Fox and son, ca1111es an accident that might mess
Wellston ; Mr . and Mrs . Donald up your life. -HELEN AND SUE
Lambert, son, Wellston ; Mr. and Mrs.
John Arrowood, daughter, Oak Hill ; RAP: ..
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Hall, son,
For three montha, I've been living
Leon, W. Va.
with a man I don 'I love, but he is the
father of my two children. I dropped
out ct high school two years &amp;go
becauae of him. He's been In and out
WILL ATI'ENDSEMINAR
ATHENS - Judge Lawrence Grey of llchool, In and out of work, but 18
ct the Fourth District Court of Ap- now unemployed and we're living on
peals has been aelected to attend the welfare.
I sit In my cruddy apartment thin!!·
Appellate Judges Writing Seminar.
The program, sponsored by the ing ol aU the fun I missed by getting I
American Academy of Judicial pnlgltllllt and bec&lt;mlng a dropout.
The PAY DAY by
Education; 18 being held at the tell myself, at least Dick loves me Ill'
MAINSTREAM has all
Univenlty of Colorado Law Sc:hoolln be wouldn't be with me and the ldda,
the hiatures and
Boillder. The program providea ad· but I'm tired of waiting for him to get
vanced training In writing Appellate work or graduate from high llchool. I
values found in higher
want some of the good life an Ill-year·
opinions.
priced work shoes . ..
"Since the dedslona ol the Court of old is suppoeed to have.
at a price you
Should · I make my children
~al• are often uaed as precedent
can afford
for other cases our opinions must be fatherless and myself an enemy by
Top grade American
clear and preciae", Judge Grey said. leaving him?- WANTS OUT
cowhide. All day cushion
Ambiguous language can result .in WANTS OUT:
comfort. Durable beyond
Leave if you must (only you can
needless and ezces&amp;ve litigation.
all olhers.
make that decisioo, so don't ask us to
• The patented non-sllp 1 sell·
do it), but remember, walldna out of
el. .ning, ao• 1~ guaranteed
one bad situation doesn't
not to wear out for one
automatically bring back the "good
full YNr.
July 15th was Youth Day at Faith life" an Ill-year-old 18 suppoeed to
Baptist Church in Mason with the have.
You're a woman who must support
youth clau cnductlng church aer·
~ .A~jot£-j'll.hl.loj~
two children. Thoee carefree teen
vices.
New record attendance ol 86 was years ended - for you - two years
ago. So one way or another, ~et. on
aet.
Y oulh participating were: Danny
Pomeroy
103 E. Main
Hannon, speaker; Randy Plrce, Sun·
day School Director ; S01Ji leaders,
Sieve ~er and Robert MOIIIIIIIBII,
Danny Wears and Kevin James;
poems by Tammy Hupp, Dena Van ·
Meter and Melanie M()IID!!In; plano
Every day is
music by David Cardwell; spec:lal
singing, Della Harmon and Maurlca
Goodnight.
V.B.S. was alllo held at the church
July 16 through 20 with 56 In at-

Library

L ~f;..,.o'i

R
y

SIJ(I(S &amp; JEANS

merit plan be adopted In Ohio. We

Generation Rap

ALL SUMMER
SPORTSWEAR

In Girls Senilll' Soltblll, bolt
Syracuse romped over Muon lf4.
Carla Teilford got the win, and Sonia
Ash led the winners at the plate with
two doubles and two singles. DiaDII
Nease bad a double and two llnclee,
Teaford had four singles, Tonia Alb
bad three singles, ~ Bartrmn had
a single and triple, and Teresa Ferren
bad two singles.
.
Karen Brown was tagged with the
loss.

In Junior Girls action, Letart do!m·
ed hollt Syracuse 12-4: Wl.nnlng pitcher was Traci Mea1111 with Debbie
Michael taking the 101111.
Recalled Greg Johnston, outfielder,
Fill' the winners, Laren Wolfe bl1d
from Phoeni x of tne P~' ifi c Coast two triples and a double while Becky
Lel!gue . Placed Mi!!lrc Hlll. catcher,
Johnson and Teresa HW each tripled.
on the 2·day disabled list.
Mearns and Tina HW each had a dou·
BASKETBALL
Nallonol Basketb.lll Alloclallon
ble. Mearns and Wolfe each IICill'ed
NEW JERSEY • NETS Signed three tbnes while JohnsOn and Carol
Cal\lin Natt, forward , to a four ·year
0 'Brien scored two each.
contract.
Micbael had a tMple fill' the loeen,
FOOTBALL
National Footb.lll League
and Dreama Owens bad two doublea.
ATLANTA FALCONS - Wai ved Owens also scored twice for
Leonard Walker, offensive guard , and
Syracuse.
Allen Holm , offensive tackle.

BALTIMORE COLTS Signed
Frank Grunt, wide receiver .
KANSAS CITY CHIEFS - Reieas·
eel Barry Bales, offensive tackle, and
Robert McCulloch, kicker .
LOS ANGELES RAMS '- Extended
the contract of Dave E lmendor f ,
defensive back, for one -;ear.
NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS ·Released Earnest Lee, defensiVe
lineman, and Bob Hurley, offensive
guard .
SAN FRANCISC049ERS - Wai ved
Rick Odom, cornerback .
ST. LOUIS CRDINALS - Released
Steve Jones, runn ing back .
HOCKEY
Nation•! Hockey Le•gue
NHL - Named Jim Gregory dlrec·
tor of central scouting .
NEW YORK RANGERS - Sent
Wayne Di llon, center, to the Winn ipeg
Jets for future considerations .
COLLEGE
BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY
- HAWAII Named Ted Chidester
head basketball coach.
UNIVERSITY OF TENNESSEE CHATTANOOGA - Named Frank
Kerns an assistant basketball coach .
TEXAS A&amp;.l - Named Ron Harms
head football coach .

Ohio AAUW, stated the organization
found current methods of selecting
judges to be "less than satisfactory"
and saw a need for judges to be appointed on the basis of ability and
merit rather than political connec·

and u.s.50.

T1le theme d this year's program
is, "Jeslli in 79." Adult reglstratioo

Youth meet

MAINSTREAM.

for the three day event Ia Sl7 a person
and fill' c:l1ildren age five through 12 is
~ each fer the three daya. ReglstraUon fill' one day Ia ts for adulta and f3
for children for evening only it is f3
adulta and fl children.
Some of the speakers will be Ben
Klnchlow d the ''700 Club", Don
Hughes, Brian Rudd and Doug
Oldham.
.
Also to be featured will be ''The lm·
perials", a gospel group and "The
Goads" a mualcal group.
For additional information persons
may cal! 614 889 2024. llalervations tendance.
On Sunday, July 16, the church picmay be made by wrtting Faith
Fellowahlp of Ohio, Rt. I, Box 13 AI, nic was held at the Maaon Park for all
V.B.S. claldren andthelrfamlliea.
Uttle Hocking, Ohio 45742.

K mart

Accepts
CREDIT
For Your

MARGUERITE'S SHOES

Savings.

Call Us the
Health Store

.

Most K mart Stores Honor These Bank Cards ..

.

·:

·"'·

We beUeve your banking should be hassle-free. Our
aufo.teUer wludow helps speed your banking, saves you
Ume and energy. And ft Is open Monday tbru ThUJ'IIday 9
til 3, Friday 9 til 3 and ~ til 9, and on Saturday 9 til 12 so
you can take care of transacUons as you need to. our
K mart takes credit and gives credit to save you money! Count on brand
names, quality merchandise at savings , and use your good credit-- right
there rn your pocket. Installment credit is available on major purchases .

20% to 60%

Grand Opening SALE

ON FINE
WEARING APPARAL

Starts _Thursday, 9:00 a.m.,
August 2nd at 185 Upper River Rd.,
Gallipolis, Ohio

FOR MEN &amp; WOMEN

Middleport, 0.
Open
M -Sat. 9 til S

"Tilt• Fril•mll)· R11n!.-"
Open_Fri. 9 A.M. to3 P.M.

SAVINGS

BAHR
CLOTHIERS

anto-teUer wludows are just some of tbe ways we're tryIng to make your banking better.

•

~

••

•

Walk·up teller window
and auto-teller wfndow ·
Open Friday Evenings 5 to 7 p.m .

,,

,,

Over 1400 atores .•. coast to coast!
STAtE AOUtE7

'I

---------Al A POift

c::.

'•

THI:; SAVING PLACEj

.....

,,

I

lliQeM ,attonal Bank

}~ -

~2 . 25~/1/,
...
J

!.!1.1.J.

'

-..:

· ·=~\

• ' I~ I•~.,l

j
..,#',.

t\trriber F. D. I. C. Deposit! Insurance .t l

You Deserve the
Best in Service
When it comes to
medicine, there can't
be any guess work.
Our trained professionals fill prescrip·
tions to the doctor's
orders.

.

148,~.

BANK BY
~~~~~ffi~fA Home
Bank
For
Meigs County
People

......

Mladleport.-0.

'... __,

when you

l(ennctl'l McCullough , R . F'h .
Charles Rillle . R. Ph .
. Ronald Hanning, R. Ph

Mon

thru5.11 . 8 : 00a . m . to ~ p . m .

Su nday 10 : JO!o ll : JOa nd S io9p .m .
PRESCRIPTIONS
PH . 9'12.29j 5

F riendlv Se rviu
hi I~

. Pometov 0 ..

RACINE
HOME NATIONAL.

BANK
Racine.- Ohio

�, 7-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pome~oy. 0 ., Thursdsy, July 2.;, 1979

6-Ttle Dally Senunel, Mul&lt;tleport·l'omeroy, U., Thursday, July 26, 1979

K mart initiated in 1962,
corporation founded in 1899

A. E. RILEY
Regional VIce President
Arthur E. Riley is vice president for
the K mart Corporation's Eastern
Region. Riley is responsible for more
than 300 K mart, Kresge variety and
Jupiter discount stares in 14 states
and the District of Columbia.
Riley's responsibility is supervision
of store operations in this region . He
works closely with his district
managers to see that each store
manager tailors the merchandise
assortment to meet the shopping
needs of local customers .
Among other duties, Riley sees to it
that the quality of goods remains
high, prices remain low, the K mart
Corporation's "satisfaction always"
policy is maintained and outstanding
leadership ability is recognized
within aU personnel ranks.
The retail business offers golden opportunities . for young people, Riley
believes. "Of course," Riley said
"the work can. be hard, but rewarru;
for those who put in their best efforts
come more quickly than in any other
field."
Riley 's owil career is a testimonial
to his beliefs . After graduating from
Pennsylvania State College in 1950, he
started in the retail business in the
coporation 's management - training
program. Riley managed four Kresge
variety stores and a K mart and served as a district manager in the
Eastern Region before reporting to
the Eastern Regional Office in 1970 as
assistant regional manager. He was
elected vice president of the Eastem
Region in August, 1972.

Shower comes clean

ung Will succeed," it said, "if
someone does it with top quality merchandise, real discount prices and
eliminates the shopper 's risk with a
'satifaction always ' policy."
These conditions - quality, price
and satisfaction - had been the corporation's policies since 1899.
Management simply proposed that its
new type of store - K mart - would
continue this tration .
A vital element in management's
. strategy was the complete involvement of its entire organization in
the new venture. Management was
confident that the long-range future of
the corporation depended on total
conunitment to K mart, and key
exec utive decisions reflected that

derstanding througnout tne corporation that every department
would be expected to participate.
The real estate department's initial
asslgrunent was li)e acquisition of 60
K mart sites. When the first K mart
was opened on March 1, 1962, there
were finn commitments for 32 others
involving a financial obligation
totaling o\ler $80 million. '
Shortly after the first stores
· opened, it became obvious that
management's concept was viable.
Public acceptance was over·
whelming.
The real estate department was
then instructed. to bring in sufficient
deals to assure a minimum of 50 new
K marts each year .through the
decade ahead.
Although each K mart attempts to
meet the specific needs of Its community, all K marts h9.ve one thing in
common
they adhere to
management's insight about the
modern shopper.
"Today's consumers are more

'

DEAR POLLY - We would appreciate bearing how to clean the bottom rl our glaas fiber shower. Liquid
cleansers take care of the walls of the
encloeure but the Door always looks
blotchy and dirty even though I have
used many cleaners on II. - KAREN
DEAR KAREN - The suggested
cleaning for such lhbwers Is an or~ry household detergent for dayIIHiay cleaninl. Use a nylon scrubber
- never 111ee1 wool or harsh abrasives.
Houehold ammonia or bleach can be
used occuionally to remove minor
stalna. Dl8hwasher detergent is also

Star Gardeners meet
DEXTER - The Star Garden Club
met with Mrs. Henry Turner as
hosleas. The hostess gave devotions
"Dally Reading from Upper Room." '
Members answered the roll call by
giving new ideas for garden club

Reside~ts

Mrs. Anna Tumei' was a guest The
Meigs County Fair Flower S~ was
IIMounced. The theme will be "Put A
Utile Collll' in Your Life." The rules
and claMes were eq&gt;Jained by Mrs.
JameaNicbolaon.
Mrs. Norman Well gave a report on
the trip to Adena. She told about the
dried ~eoients and that the
n~ were grown In the garden
there . The ID!!Jilbers enjoyed a tour of
the garden. The group abo enjoyed
the outdoor theater, "Tecumseh" at ·

inthe~enlns.

Mrs. Vi('gll Atkins fumi.shed
a
Chillicothe
.
traveling prize bought by Mrs.
r..wrence Chapman.
The aecretary announced dues were
to be paid by October.
_Mrs. Norman WW exhibited a mass
~ement and an arrangement of
Mrs. James Nicholloo 's topic wu
She told how to plant and care for
them. She eq&gt;lalned one should cover
carroll in late fall with mulch and
they wuld be good all winter.
Mrs. G. A. Radetin talked a bout
Swedlah Ivy. She !!aid, "II isn't
Swedlth nor an Ivy. II grows fut,
don't over water. Two kinds are
S.wtllth edged and rounded leaves,
anewhal waxed looking, apPearing
In ma.saea on Dushy stems, which
becune woody during lgiJii ...
' 'Care and Seledlon of Foliage
Planll" wu Mrll. Harry l...evla' topic.
She aplalned clay pols were btter

and they needed Jlght watering and
fertilizer, but abo need to be sprayed
for lnsecll and dilea~e~ . The foliage
.-Is cleaninl. She told of the many
kinds. She noted they are especially
used In public buildings.
Mrs. James Nicholson won the

I1 OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMEN r C
He rma n '-'• u; ...

1

713 ·5592

Mason , W, Va .

TUBE lOPS .................. ____ 99C

• Fits Anywhere - Only t'l•x4'1•x6'1o' '
• Slide-Action Volume , Balance ,
Tone Controls

by Realistic®

4 Wh. Drive Blazets.

Save S30 and dnve to the mus1c of you r cho1ce'
,FitS under dash . seat . even 1n most gloveboxes.
Lighted program indicators . pushbutt on
program change All speaker cable. mounting
hardware 1nc luded . 12·iso2

DISCOUNT PRICES

~

2995

L=.J

Reg. 59.95

CHARGE IT (M OS T STORE S!

HALF-PRICE TAPE SALE
Realistic Recording Tape
Sticker Price 57706.95
Discount 1003 .00

Save more when you record
your own tapes l Stock up now.
no limit .

$6703

95

Clearance Priced

40 Minute
Reg. 1.99 Each
44 -840

BO Minute
Reg. 2.59 Each

SAruRDAY

CHESTER Towmhlp Trustees
SaturdaY at7:30 p.m. at town ball for
the PUI'JIOB" of hiring a clerk . Applications are now being accepted.
NEVIlLE REUNION Saturday at
Krodel Park, Pt. Pleasant.
FISH FRY Saturday at Wilkesville
Fire Department. Garnes and water
batue in afternoon. Dance on street
Inn 9 p.m. unW midnight.

SUNDAY
PICNIC Sunday beginning at 4 p. m.
at Athena Acres, home of Joyce
Miller and Marlon Crawford; for
memberS and guests d Meigs
Humane Society. Members to bring
bathing suits and one covered dish.
Table ~~ervlce will be provided.
WESTERN BOOT CB Club picnic
for members at Portland Park Sun·
day fnm 10 a. m. unW 4 p. m. Bring.
covered dish and table ~~ervice . Club
will provide meal and beverages such
as pop and coffee.
TUESDAY

SWIM-A-niON Tuesday at Middleport Pool from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m.
sponsored by Meigs County Heart
Aa.soclation. Applications may be
picked upatpoolorMelgs Inn.

PARK RESERVED

SATURDAY, JUNE 30TH

FAMILY OUTING

SUMMER CLEARANCE
SALE CONTINUES

OF

LODGE NO. 344

44 ·84,

2 For 199
2 For~9

CAPRICE 4-DOOR SEDAN ,

Color 2 tone green, 305 v:o eng ine , Dx . belts, P. door
locks, tint . glass, P . windows , trunk opener, floor mats,
luggage trim , body mldg ,, Ded . guard, rear defroster,
air conditioner, twin remote mirrors, speed control,
automatic, power steering &amp; brakes, comfort tilt wheel,
bumper guards &amp; strips, radial w.s. tires, aux. lighting,
d ig ital clock, am ·fm stereo .
Sticker Price $9047.95
Discount 1270.13
Clearance Priced

SJ77782 ·

AND MORE

WE-'VE

GOT

YOUR
VISIT OUR 'tOT -

'

Rea~istic Autosound at Everyday
Low
.
.
-~

Car Stereo Power Booster
Doubles Power tor
Better Sound

. 2995

Give your car stereo rad10 a big BOOST with
increased dynamic range' Just press front button /
pilo t lig ht. Pl ug-in connections Only w, x3 15/,.x4 '1·~·

Stereo Speaker Systems

S-Track Demagnetizer
and Head Cleaner

KIND
OF
SALEI
CHECK

OUR DISCOUNT PRICES

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

1

6

95

7x 7V&lt;' easy-f1t housings. 5'!.'' d ual-cone

speakers , 4 '/• oz.
magnets. 12-1e••

···830

Switches one pair of speakers between radio, tape
~
player . Front-to-rea r
balance conrol
Switch I 12.

rut

by Radio Shack"

Reduces hiss , he lps
preve nt jamming . Demagnetizes as it cleans.

Car Stereo Speaker Selectors ,

Af H.A l)IO SHACI(

•

A• Shown

599
~

I.

U.S. ROUTE 160 WEST.:__HUNTlNGTON
Closed Every Monday Except Holidays

N. 2nd Ave. Middleport, o.

f.

f Palr

1095 ,
Pair

IJISL'OUN T COM/ S 01~ IHI IJ ~l l Hf I'"'ICt Ci0 l :S ON'

Mosl 11ems
al so a ~a il ab le &lt;~ I
Oeal~t •s

"Your Chevy Dealer"
Pomeroy ·

992 -2126
Open Evenings TiiB:OO p.m.

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
MA D I~ISI O N OF TAND Y CORPORATION

,,

12-1852

Aad'o Sh ack

daily.

OF SHOES

1 "'7 95

. On ly 4x4 '1•"- fit almost
anywhere! Molded 3"
surface-mounts . 5"
flush-mounts . 12-m 1,

Fall shQes are arriving

heritage house

Prices!

12-1876

30% 50% OFF

CAMDEN ·PARK
(

Sport Vans, 4 Wh. Drive Pickups,

11fURSDAY

BROTHERHOOD OF RAILWAY CARMEN
OPEN TO PUBLIC AFTER 5 P.M.
~ a. Y

"Super Small"
, Car S-Track
Tape Player

228 Camaro, Ught Duty Trucks, Vans,

BOARD OF TRUSTEES of Gallla Meiga Community Action Agency
Thursday at 7:30 p. m. in the village
council chambers at Cheshire.
VOICES OF UBERTY practice
aelllion for Monday appearance at
Fair ThundaY, 7:30 p.m. at United
Methodlat Church.

IL.••.;;;..~:::::::::::f:~~---1

Mon ., Tues ., Wed ., Friday &amp; Sat .
8 : 30 to S:60 !hursd ay till12 No on

1979 Chevy Caprice, Impala, Monte Carlo,

Social Calendar

ALL CHILDREN'S SUMMER
PLAYWEAR....•.••.30% OFF

I

"

.,

~·

Save
50°/o

CLEARANCE SALE

r---

VALUES TO s13.00
On Sale '6JI8 .

MASON FURNITURE

,

holtess.

SUMMER DRESSES

I

Hurry in! Right now!

hosleas gift.
Refreshments were served by the

WRANGLER lOPS .... .. ... .. .. .. .. .. ... REG. s10.95
SALE '7.00

MASON FURNITURE

Casey Kasem

•r---------·--.. .------..

" Planting Carrots Now for Winter."

MISSfS .100 SIORTS ............... _.. REG. 4.59
SALE •3.00

A worldwide decrease of about 15
pe rce nt 1n the inc id ence of . -..,~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
poliomeliti' took pla ce during 1977, r
SHOP
according to tl1e World Health
Organization. It says 24.764 cases
were reponed that year as compared
with29.'1M in J9;q
FOR THE BEST DEALS IN THE
TRl STATE AREA

good and will remove soap scum or
lllineral deposits. Do wear rubber
gloves when using this strong
detergent. -POLLY
DEAR POLLY - When an electric
COffee 'maker is used every day i~
needs a more thorough · cleaning
every couple CJf weeks. Fill coffee pot
with cold water up to the highest cup
level and add two tablespoons of a
water conditioner. Place basket and
stem In place, put the lid on it, plug it
in and let It go through the entire
perking cycle. Rinse thoroughly and
dry . II will be l,lke new. - MRS.T. W.
DEAR POLLY - When you break
an egg and some of the shell drops into the raw egg remove it with a colton
swab. The shell sticks right to it and
can be picked right out7.JEAN
DEAR POLLY -and Leah-During
the many years I wa, In the drycleaning business it was my privilege
to coach a number of ladies in the
repair and alterations department in

lllla.

KINGSBURY
HOME SALES

1 GROUP

!Jn»th

pr'Oilrarn&amp;.

MODULAR
HOMES

evacuated

vince, Mrs. Frances Whittington and Garry Acree and the Rev. and Mrs.
daughters Teresa ·and Lisa, Miss O'dellManleY·
The new Mrs. Davidson wishs to
Janet Biggs, Miss Lisa Thomas, Miss
send
thanks to those who came and to
Linda Donahue, Miss Cherie
Lightfoot, Mrs. June Smith and those who sent gifts.
daughters, Cindy, Tina and Kelly,
Mrs. Wanda Vining and dsughter,
Rita , Mrs. Nancy Synder and
children, Lisa , Debra and Roger.
Sending gifts were Mr. and Mrs.
Carl Davidson and family , Mrs. Wanda WiUiams, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
Skinner, Mrs. Ruth Fanner, Miss
Rboda Hall, Miss Andy Thompson,
Mrs : Irene Kennedy, Mr. and Mrs.
Rodger Manley and children, Donna
and Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Lane,
Ricky and Randy Smith, Mrs. Patty
Might and family, Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie Hawkins and daughter, Cindy,
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Bachner, Mr. arid
Mrs. Dave Herdman and children
Kelly and Pavid, Jr., Miss Pa~
Barber, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Davidson,
Rev. and Mrs. Ughtandfarnily.
Mrs. Violet Jeffers and daugher,
Penny, Mrs. Evelyo Mains, Mrs.
Marsha Capehart, Mr. and Mrs. Dan·
ny Fink and family, Mr. and Mrs.
Herbie Geary and daughter, J enniier,
WMPO
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Smith and famil y,
SATURDAYS
Mr. and Mrs. Den Raoch, Mr. and
Mrs. Jack Johnson, Mr. and Mrs.
8 til Noon

OO.tesses.
The color scheme of green and
yellow was caried out throughout the
room. The refreshment table was
Jolm Davidson.
decorated
with a ' yellow tablecloth
Mrs. Terri Tobin
and Mrs.
with
green
streamers
and while wedTerri Vining Smith served as coding hells. The gift table was
decorated with a green tablecloth and
yellow streamers. The bonoree's
table
was decorated with green and
the necessity for lubricating hand
yellow
streamers with miniature
sewing thread. Some does come
white
wedding
hells, with a bride and
already waxed, but draw your thread
groom
centerpiece.
The honoree's
over a clump of wax a couple of times
and
yellow
wedding
cake
had
green
and that will not only prevent tangles
bells
and
was
inscribed
"Best
but keep the thread from wearing out
Wishes,
Debbie
and
John."
'
befOI'e it is used up. Most
Games were played with prizes gohousekeepers have paraffin handy
ing
to Mrs. Nancy Syol!er, Miss Gail
but I prefer beeswax. -:MRS. J .D.H.
Pierce
and Miss Margaret Province.
DEAR READERS - Ethel wrote
The
door
prize went to Mrs . Nancy
urging Leah to use beeswax. She says
Synder,
it is a must when one Is doing applique
Attending were: Mrs. Jean Prowork as the blind stitching stitches
are so small. She buys this in a small
plastic container at her sewing
machine shop.- POLLY
GET DIVORCE
PoUy will send you one rl her signed
The
marriage
of Earl A. Smith and
thank-you newspaper column clipA.
Smith,
both
of Pomeroy, was
Edna
pers if she uses your favorite Pointer.,
by
decree
of the Common
tenninated
Peeve or Problem in her column.
Pleas·
Court of Meigs County.
Write POLLY'S POINTERS in care of
The court found both parties had
this newspaper.
sufficient grounds for divorce from
each other.

The Riverboat Room was the setting of the recent bridal shower of
.Miss Debbie Smith, brid~lect of

Polly Cramer

State announces new program
for reserve· license plate numbe.rs

\

B.M.FAUBER
Vice Chairman
Bernard M. Fauber is vice chairman and chief administrative offieer
of K mart Corporation.
Fauber entered the employ of the
corporation in 1941 as a part-time
stockman in a Kresge variety store in
Lynchburg, Va. From December of
1941 to 1946, he served in the United
States Navy. When he returned from
military service, he was an assistant
manager " in stores in Virginia
Washington, D. C., Maryland and
Michigan. During this period Fauber
also spent two years as an assistant in
the personnel department at the
finn 's headquarters.
He received his first managerial
assignment in 1905 at a Kresge
variety store in Hammond, IN.
Fauber managed a seeond Kresge
unit in Toledo, OH, and then in 1959
was promoted to a district manager
m K mart 's Central Region followed
by the same post in the Southern
Region. In 1961, he became assistant
regional manager of the Southern
Region.
Fauber was called to company
headquarters again in 1965to serve as
executive assistant to the president.
One year later ' he was named
manager of K mart's Western Region
headquartered in Loo Angeles. In
1968, Fauber was elected vice
president of the Western Region. He
was elected senior executive vice
president and chief administrative officer and a director in 1971. Fauber
assumed his present position in 1979.

POLLY.$ POINTERS

knowle&lt;f8eable about necessities, but
they also bave greater expectations
about obtaining the nice things In
life," management sa_id. "They
believe they are entiUed to not only
wbat they need but to those things
that will give them greater pleasure.
They want hobby items, sporting
goods, color televisions, swinunlng
pools, health and beauty
preparations.
"But they are also under severe
economic pressure due to continuous
and increasing inflation. K mart's
discount prices on quality merchandise make it possible for them to
buy necessities and discretionary
items while keeping a savings
program in their budget."
Management's study of modem
assurance.
retalling
also showed that mCill
The first step involved a restruccustomers
were willing to wait on
turing of the executive organization
lhernselvfl!.
In fact , grocery superwith top priority given to a stepped-up
market
shopping had conditioned
recrwtmg and trruning program at
them to prefer seU «rvice. However,
the store level.
personal service is available to those
A high-ranking executive was apK
mart shoppers who need it.
pointed to bead up the development of
Management
was convinced that
the K mart concept
with
un.
.
the economics of seU «rvice and concentration on exceptionally rapid
merchandise investment turnover,
rather lbaD percentage of profit oa
eacb lralllacllon, would enable its a perienced organization to develop K
mart as a mll'!t efficient major
retailing operation in the free world .
Time has proven numagemenl's appraisal
of consumer wants and the
and
act
inunediately
to
receive
apState Legislature to make 1t possible
organization
correct. More than 1,500
plications
for
these
plates.
Mr.
for these field reserved plates to be
K
mart
discoWlt
department stores
Dollison
noted
that
"there
has
been
available for use next year.
are
~ow
In
operation
in the United
ag
r1!9l
deal
of
public
pressure
to
have
Representative Arthur K. Bowers,
lhJs
type of program, so we are ex- States, Puerto Ri.co and Canada. The
from the 98th District, has introduced
H. B. 722 which will allow field reser- pecting that the U!gislatui'e will corporation is continlllng the rapid
expansion of K marl stores this year.
ved plates previously obtained from respond positively to this bill. ••
Persons
·wishing
to
retain
their
the local deputy' registrar to be issued current field reserve plate number _ _ _ _ _...;.._ _ _ __
by the Bureau of Motor Vehicles.
A fee of $10 will)jp charged for this must send their request to the BMV
special plate in a&lt;!Wtion to the regular before September I, 1979. Because of
annual license tax . From this fee, the processing time involved, no
$7.50 will be used to pay for the extra requfl!ts will be accepted alter that
services required to issue these plates date. A photostatic cvpy of the
by the BMV and $2.50 will be current' regiStration card must acdeposited in the Roadside Park Fund, company the request to demonstrate
By
for construction and maintenance of that the applicant holds the desired
ALL
AMERICAN
public roadside rest areas. These number at the present time. InMeet s
special plates may. be assign~ to terested parties should mall their
request and CpPY of the registration
eOhio Building Codes
passenger ca rs only.
card
must accompany the request to
In order to hav.e these special plates
eAFHA&amp;VA
available for issuance by January I, demonstrate that the applicant holds
See our lot model today .
1980, the Bureau must assume that H. the desired numoor at the present
B. 722 will be passed by the Ohio time. Interested parties ~IDould mail
General Assembly as soon as possible their request and copy of the
registration card to the Ohio Bureau
of Motor Vehicles, Attention : MW\
PF, P. 0 . Box 161121, Columbus, Ohio
43216. Please do not send any money
with the request. Applicants will be
later.
cou nties in the Beaumont-Port Arthur billed
By The Associated Press
Dollison noted that this period for
Wind-blown rain dr enched the area .
requesting these special plates is a
Hundreds were housed in "one time only" situation. He also
upper Texas coast early today and
1100 E. Main
National Guard troops and police . tempora ry shelters afong the upper said that certain of lbese passenger
Pomeroy, Ohio
evac uated residents of low-lying coast. Exact figures were not plate nwnbers may not be avallable
areas as water poured into homes a nd ava ilable, officials said, since flooding because they have been previously
992-7034
appea red to be reaching new areas by assigned to another class rl vehicles. ..__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___,J
businesses.
·
E. E. WARDLOW
One death was reported Wednesdsv the hour .
President
when
a man drowned after hi's
Ervin E. Wardlow is president and
thanNa20
inches
of rainService
fell at • .,.---~~~~~~~~~~~~=~~~----~
in. the
tional
Weather
automobile
went into deep water at a n AlvMore
chief operating officer of K mart Corsaid,
adding
that
it
was
still
raining
'
intersection in Beawnont.
poration.
mely
heavy"
there
before
',
"extr
e
The Nationa l Guard was mobilized
A native of Fillmore MO Wardlow
dawn
.
Street
flooding
was
said
to
be
joined the corporation:s ~gement Wednesday by Gov. Bill Clements to "severe ."
-trammg pr.ogram in 1939, starting as help with the evacuations as more
Forecaste rs urged motorists to stay
a st..;:kboy m a Kresge store In Kan- than 20 inches were reported in some off roads and streets because many
areas.
sas City, MO.
Forecasters said radar indicated are flo oded and closed because of high
From 1939 to 1942 he served in four
water and stalled vehicles.
stores in Chicago and Kansas City . that the showers extended well into
Strong southerly winds prevented
1
After military service, he returned to the Gulf of Mexico. The overall, slow tides from flowing out of Galveston
movement
of
the
system,
remnants
of
management training in 1945 in EvanBay, adding to the problems and
ston, IL. He received his first Tropical Depression Claudette, was ca using more fl ooding problems for
northward
,
meaning
the
rains
would
managerial post in 1951 in Oak Park
res idents living along the bayous
IL. He managed two other Kresg~ continue, they said.
Flooding was reported early today leading into the bay. .
units in the Midwest before being
Elsewhere, a small tornado
(f
in Harris, Matagorda, Liberty and
named a district manager in 1955.
"prooted
trees
and
plants
near
Pikes
Wardlow was promoted to the post Brazoria counties as well as Seve ral Peak as a chain of severe
of assistant sales director at the comthunde rstorm s battered eastern
pany 's headquarters ln. Detroit in
Col
orado. No injuries were reported
NOTICE
1958. He was made sales director in
and
there was no damage to any
The Deportment o f Ad1961 when he was just 40 years old. He
buildings , the Weather Serv ice
m i nis trati ve Services, Off ice
had been with K mart for 2IJ years .
of M anpo wer Oevelopmen1
reported.
(OMD) ha s _presen ted a
His responsibilities were enlarged in
Thunderstorms developed
pre liminary CETA grant ap·
1964 when his title became sales
Rf(l( (f
Wednesday afternoon along and over
plication for Fis cal Year 1980
director and general merchandise
the Front Range and Foothills and,
to the Deportme nt of la bor to
manager. He was elected vice ,
receive $57 ,000,438 to provi de
accompanie d by gusty winds,
eli gibl e individuals wif h em·
president, sales in 1968. Wardlow was
mtensificd and moved south and east
p_
l oym.e nt and train ing ser·
elected a director and elevated to
onto
the plains. Woodrow reported
v1ces m the 56 cou nti es of the
executive vice president for merhail damage and 4.25 inches of rain.
Balance of State .
chimdising in 1970. He was elected to
The planning allocation is os
Thunderstdrnis also produced
fo ll ows :
Tit le II
BC.
his present position in April, 1972.
heavy
rain in the central Midwest
$1.4 ,702 ,095 ; Tit le II D, $l q ,
When Wardlow joined K mart 's
early
this
morning;
and
765, 199; Title VI, $15 ,773 ,037 ;
executive ranks in 19tH as sales direcVCCIP .
$642 . 590 ;
VETP
thundershowers were ex pected to
tor, company sales were $433 million
$5 ,917 ,517.
.
continue in the East today.
The Comp rehe nsive Em·
and the company had m Kresge
Occasional thun dershowers were
ployment and Training Plan'
variety stores. At the close of fiscal
expected tn be scattered .n Montana
and a comparison of pe r·
1978 K mart was operating 1,891 K
lormance against the prior
and the mountai ns of Arizona and
mart, Kresge and Jupiter stores in
year·s plan through the most
New Mexico. Heavy-rain was likely in
re cent qua rter may
be
the United Stales, Puerto Rico and
ce
ntral and northern Lousiana.
reviewed be tween 8:00 a. m .
Canada and sales were $11,7 billion.
Tem
peratures around the nation at
and 5:00 p. m. in the OMD
3 a.m. IEDT ) ranged from 46 in
libra ry , _JO Eas t 8rood Stree t
27 th Floor, Co lumbus , Ohi~
Arcata , Ca lif., a nd Cutbank , Mont. , to ·
432 15, phone 61 4· 466·8316
97 in Blyt he, Ca lif.. and Phoenix, Ariz.
The West African country of Ghana
Wri tten comments sh ou l d
be directed to Mr . l eonard
expects to mine some $14-million worBlanton
at the some address
th of gold annually for the next 30
byAugust30 , 1979.
years.
!7) 26, lfc

· K mart Corporation management,
Jed by Harry B. Cunningham, who
rose from store manager to chainnan
of the board, gambled $80,000,000 on
iLs beliefs about the modem shopper
when K mart was initiated In 1962.
The corporation, formerly known
as the S. S. Kresge Company, was
founded in 1899. By 1912, the finn was
operating the second largest group of
variety stores in the woild. For
nearly half a century, it was one of the
CHAmMAN ROBERT E. DEWAR
most successful retail businesses. But
Robert E. Dewar is chainnan and retailing in American was changing.
chief executive officer of K mart Cor- Management was well aware of this
poration. He was elected to the chair- when it initiated a study of consumer
manship on April!, 1972.
needs for the future and an inAfter receiving his LL.B. degree vestigation into methods of retailing.
from Wayne Stale University Law
In 1959, the management team starSchool and practicing for a brief ted laying the groundwork for the
period with a Detroit law firm , Dewar • coporation's entry into a new field of
JOined K mart legal department in, retailing - discount department
1949. He was appointed assistant to stores _;_ an unproven business that
Harry B. Cunnigham, then president, was not highly regarded by most obin 1960. For three years Dewar helped servers of general merchandise
develop the K mart concept and retailing .
worked closely with Cunningham in
But, management rl!llsoned, its aplaunching the K mart discount depar- proach would be different . "Discountment store program.
He was named assistant vice
president finance m 1963, financial
vice president in 1966 and was elected
a member of the Board of Directors in
1967 . Dewar was elevated to
executive vice president for administration and finance in 1968. He
was elected president and chief administrative office in 1970.
COLUMBUS - The Bureau of
Dewar is also a director on the
Motor
Vehicles announced a new
boards of four K mart Corporation
program
today to allow certain
subsidiaries - K mart Corporation
passenge~
car owners to keep thei r
Limited (Toronto, Ontario, Canada),
current
f1eld
reserved license plate
K mart Apparel Corp. (North Bergen,
numbers
\\'hen
the BMV changes to
New Jersey), K mart enterprises,
the
three
letter
/three
nwnber system
Inc. (Royal Oak, Michigan) and Planfor
the
1980
license
plates.
ned Marketing Associates, Inc.
, Several months ago, the BMV an(Dallas, Texas).
Dewar is a native of Traverse City, nounced the Intended use of the new
~umbering system, so that available
Michigan.
license plate combinations could be
mcrea.sed to 25 million from the only
15. nullion combmatlons available
With the present numbering system.
r
Smce this announcement the BMV
has received thousands ~f requests
from people who have reserved the
same number with their local deputy
registrar many years and want to
retain this same number next year.
Some people have had the same numberfor as long as forty years.
Dean L. Dollison, Registrar announced that a method has 'been
developed with the cooperation of the

Miss Debbie Smith.honored by bridal fare here

Look l or 1h1s
SIQ1"1 1n

your

ftad1e

lhaek

ncu~ hborhood

PRICES MAY VAR'f' AT INDIVI DUAL 51' 0RES

'

I

�8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, July 26, !979

9-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy 0 . Thursday July 26 1979

·your Best Buys Are Found in the Sentinel Classifieds
IN lOVING memory of Rick W .

15 W ord~ or Under

J uly 26 .
Your gentle fa ce and pati ent
smi le
w ith sodnen I rft&lt;oll

I day

u .s

1 00

?:days
3days
6 days

Snider o n his 25th bi rthday,

C"hiir~._.

Cash

1.90
:t l)

1, 5(1

] ,8(1
:~oo

u:;

Each word O\'f'r the minimum
IS word.'! ~ 4 f"f:nl&lt;s p;or word per
dH~·· Ads runnln ~ Qther than cunll{'(.' Utive days WJII be c ha r~ed at
the I d a y ra tt' .
·
I n memory. Card of ThHnks

and Qbttuary . 6 cents per Wl•rd.
S3 00 minimum. cash in advance.
Mobile Home s-a les and Ya rd
. sales arf' accepted only wilh
cash wtth order . 2!1 ct'n\ char,.:(•
for ads carrying Ro1 Numbt&gt;r In
Care ofTheSentinl'l.
Tbe PubU sl1~r rPServes Lhe
right to edit or reject any ads
deeme d obje e\ JOna l. Th e
Publi.sht'r Ifill not bt- respon.!!ihle
fur more than one m ~orn•c t insertion
Phont' 99'2-2156

NOTICE
WANT-AD
iAPVERTISING
DEADLINES
Monda y

Noon on Saturda y
Tuesd ay
thru Frida )"
4P.M
thl' day before publt eation

Sunday
4P.M .

Fr iday artcmrlf1n

L'EGAL NOTICE
Not ice is h ereby gi ven
n 1at the Publ ic Ut il i t ies
Co m m ·iss ion o t Oh io h as
i nstituted a pr- oc e edi ng ,
docketed as Cas e No . 79
67 9 TP COt , th e purp ose of
wh ic h i s to be r e eval uat e
the
prese n t s t atus o f
elementary a nd seco nd a ry
school s in Oh io to de ter
min e wtlfd l1er i t is ap .
pr o pr ia te to conti n ue to
a lfor-d t hem spec ia l rat e
tr eatm ent wi t h r ega rd to
l oc al m ea sur ed b us- iness
t el ep h one serv1ce . Publi c
hearing:. will be conve n ed
on W edn es da y , Aug u st 29 ,
1979 a t 10 :00 a .m . a t the
off ices o f the Co mm iss ion ,
180 Ea st Broad St re e t ,
Col u mbus , Ohio , wit h th e
sub j ec t t her eo f l imi t ed to
the t aklflg o f evi den ce,
fr om
p art i es
abl e t c
an
i nt e r e st ,
es tab l i sh
re l a t i v e t o t he p r ese nt
ci r c um s t a n ces o f Oh i o
scho ol s and t h e pr oprie t y of
c ont i n i.J i ng
the
t a riff
t r eat men t a ff o rded them
b y Case No . 78 863-TP
A T A . F u rt her in f ormation
m ay bl" obta inEd by ad
dre ss in g an in Qu ir y t o th is
Co mm is sion , at t en t i on M r .
D av i d M . P ol k .
T HE
PUBLI C
BY :
U T ILI T I E S CO MMI SS ION
OF O HI O
180 E . Bro ad Str ee t
Co lum bus , Ohi o 4J21 5
Da v i d M . Polk ,
Secr et a r y
£71 26, ltc

PUBLI C NOTICE
FOR SALE :
M ino ttal.a x 1I 17 T C Copie r
M a c hine U se s ro ll pape r
and li q u id t oner . Co p i es
!ro m b " up t o 14" in len g th .
Ma ch 1nc may be seen a t
the M e iq s. Co un t Y H ea l th
D CPil rl m en t lo ca t ed in th e
o ld Meigs Gene r al Ho sp .t a t
8 1.J II d 1n g, or p h one 992 3723.
Seat ed b ids wi ll b e ac
r C" p t eu a t t h e H ea lt h
D ep a rt ment , 8 30 A M . to
4 00
PM
M onday l h r u
Fr1d c1 y unt i l Augu st 3. 19 79
a t wh ich t im e bi o s wi ll be
op en ed and so ld to t he
h• gh est b idder
Ttl e M eig s Co u n t y H ea lt h
D&lt;:o p a r trnc nt r eser v es t he
r oQh l to r e ject an y o r all
b •d'&gt; The succ e sst ut b id der
• ~ l u s t ma ke paym en t in full
to t he M e.gs Coun t y HeB ltt1
Qpp ar tmE:&gt;nt b efo re copie r
is r emo ved
The cop ier
mus t be r emoved w iH1i n
1
10 ten days a tt er sat e
Ill 19, /6 , 2t c

PARTY &amp;
DANCE
FEATURING
RECORDING ARTIST:

STAFFHOUSE
ROAD
AT PT. PLEASANT
ARMORY

SAl, JULY 28
9 P.M . till1 A . M .
Admission SJ

B. Y .O . B .

You hod o fri endly word tor

ooch
and died belo-..ed by all
The voice is rnuta and still the
hea rt

that loved me well and true

Ah . bitter w as the trial ro port
from one so good as you
You're no forgotten , son
Nor will you ever be

As long as tile and memory
lost
I shall remember thee
My heart is sore
as time goes by , I Miss you
more

Your loving smile , your gentle
face
N o one can fill your vacant
place.
Sadly m iufKI by Mom , Dod,

sister

a nd

brothers,

For Sale

Yard Sale

In Memory

WANT AD
CHARGES

and

grandmother , Mrs . Edna
Picke ns, Mr. and Mrs . Raymond Snider.

Card of Thanks
THE FAMtl V of Harry Martin
Haymon , wonts to thank commander RictJorCI Ohlinger and
all the members of Post 99'26
ot Mason , WV for the military
fun.e ral they gave Harry Martin Hayman . We also wont to
thank everyone lese that
helped in ev&amp;ry way through
this sod and sorrowful time .
Our heartfelt thanks go out to
all lor the cords and flowers ,
foods and acts of sympotny
that
were
greatly
ap preciated . And o very heartfelt thanks to Commander
Ri chard
Ohlinger
and
members of Post 99:26 of
Mason , wV for tna money thay
gav8. Thanks "to Rev . R-ichard
Freeland Norris for the consoling messQge ne gave. Lost but
not least. the Ewing Funeral
Home.
Clarence
tfoymon
and
Families.

FOUR FAMILY Yord Sole. July
26 &amp; 27 . 9 om to ? Rou te 338,
across tne river from Kaiser
Aluminum . Coli 2•7-2161 .

VISIT THRIFT Shop, N. 2nd
Ava .
, Middleport , for
bargains in chi ldren's and
other articles .
YARD SALE .
mi. N. of
Fa irgrounds, next to Rollin
Radford residence. Sati.Jrdo-;.
Jul y 28 . 9-5. Electric neater,
sun lamp, sweeper , freezer
containers, conning jars.
YARD SALE. Fri . and Sot. ot
Earl Young residence on Rt. 7
North near State Hi9hwa-;
garage . Ra in cancels . , ·

rs

LOOK WHA
news! at Bob's
Body Shop on Depot St.,
Rut land. Besides body and
paint work , we also do oil
changes . grease jabs, shocks
and muffler work . 7111'2 -221115.

Lost and Found
FOUND: WHITE female kitten ,
an9rira with white flea collar .
13 weeks old. Powell's ParkIng lot, Pomeroy. 992-3760.
LOST: SMALL male Siamese,
brown flea collar. lost seen in
Pomeroy Elementary area.
Answers to Bert . 10 year family peL l()q Union ·Ave ..
qq'2 - 2B~ . 7 .

FOUND: GREAT Dane. mole,
between Rutland and Fort
Meigs area . Tan , wearing
choke collar . HI.Jmone Society .

9'12-7680 .

SALE PRICES
Jack W. Carsey

Mgr.
'

Tay lor. 614-367-7220.

247-2161.

GOING OUT of business . All
poodles ,
pomeranlan ,
pekinese. block pam pi.Jppy.
great coat line . Phone
696- .1111 after Spm.

SPI NET -CONSO LE
Piano .
Wonted: responsible party to
toke over
low monthly
payments on spinel piano.
Can be seen locally. Write
credit manager: PO Box 537 ,

Shelby,ille . IND ~617b .
POTATOES AT the C.W. Prot·
fltt Form, Portland OH. Prices
change day to day with the
market.
1977 FORD F-250 camper
special. P.S., P .8 .. A.C., cru is e
control. sliding bock gloss,
low milooge, good tires . Excellent condition . Phone
992-3356 after 5 pm.
GOLD

tor

sale.

pm.

or 30A-675-1553.

Air

1974 GMC Surburban , 9poss
truck . 45,. C. I, power steering,
brakes , automatic,
radio ,
M ichelin 8 ply tites . $1300 or
best offer . 992-3462.

Cond~ioners
1

Mgr .

Phone 99'2·'2181

1971 FORO LTD 2-door. 71.668
miles , A .C. $650. 992 -7065.
V~ 8 ,

auto., air cond ., AM-FM
S- trock . air shocks. Crogan ,
sport mirrors . Good condition .
Call after 4:30. 992-3870.

Help Wanted

FOUR DOOR 1977 O lds Omega
V-6 , air condition , AM-FM
radio , P.S., P.B. Excellent con dition. 992-5742.

good . 992-3273.

CRAIG POWER p lay couett
p layer. Also Jenson lri· axial
speakers. $225 . 992-2830.
SIX FOOT Oeerborne rear
mounted ower and a set of 2.
bottom Ill!" Deerborne Ford
plows , and straw. 985-4271 .
1979 7'1, h . p . Mercury outboard motor , new . 1971 Chevy
Malibu, 2·door . 2•7-39•1 after

4.

742-2336.

bl4-44b-7107 .

CHIP WOOD. Poles max .
diameter 1rJ' on largest end.
$12 per ton . Bundled slo b . $10
per fon . Delivered to Ohio
Pallet Co. , Rt . 2, Pomeroy.

WANTED TO rent or buy on
land contract. 3 bedroom
nouse or trailer . Meigs or
Gall ic a rea. 7&lt;42-2395.

OLD COINS, pocket watches ,
clo!! s rings , wedding bonds,
diamonds . Gold or 5ilver . Call
J . A . Wamsley , 742-2331 .

Yard Sale
YARD SALE ot James Swain's
on CR 28 above Eastern High
School. July 13 and 14 from 9
-t d? Ever-;thing imaginable.
YARD SALE. Cl~thes , m isc.
Longsville-Dextor Rd. Coi.Jnty
Rood across from Small's
Grocery . Follow signs . 10om8pm.

NEWDffiECTOR
WASIDNGTON ,(AP ) Esther Novak, director of
the Hispanic Arts Program
at Rutgers University, has
been named director of the
National Endowment for
the Arts ' Office of Special
Projec ts.

· AUCTIONc

992· 2082 or 7•2·232B .
REAL ESTATE: 1 acre lot in Riggscrest Manor, between Tuppers Plains and Chester.
Phone 985-3929 and 985-4129.
LOT FOR sole, Horrisonville.
Water tap on lot, dri ... ewoy tile
ln . App . 145 h . frontage . On
nard
rood . $ 1800 . Call
HOUSE FOR sole near Meigs
Mines . 742-7228.

ONE BEDROOM opts. C~tac t
Vi llage Manor , 992-7787 .

Compact
hom e

2

992-b022 .

OFFICE SPACE
FOR RENT

$2 1,000.
LIKE

NEW

3

bedrooms, fam ily room
with
woodburning
firepla ce, nearly al l
carpeted, 2 car garage,
front porch, and back

Sycamore St.
Pomeroy

sundeck . Asking $69 ,000.

375 ACRE FARM -

9

rm . renovated home, A
bedrooms, 2 baths, free
natural gas furna ce, lg .
family rm ., modern kit ·
chen, basement, and 2
porches . Ca ttle barn,

$100.00/ month
All utilities paid ,

CALL 992-6009

36x120,

2

si los,

a nd

For Sale

many other building s.
New
fenc es,
some
woven wire. S2JS,OOO.OO.

LIMESTONE .

POMEROY -

sond,

9'12-3891.

men!, loo . Just $19,000.
LOTS OR ACREAGE -

VE RMEER BALER Sales, ports
and service. Balers in st ock for
immediate delivery. Phone
7-4 2-2877 or 742-2152.
FORO DIESEL tractor . New
i tr es . Excel lent
condition .
742-2228 or 7... 2· 2832.
SUPER M Formal\ tractor 3 bottom 14"' plow5, B ft . transport
disc, nay e/eo ... atar, 550
Ol iver, salt ond mineral
f&amp;eder , crib feed'tr , Nick
Leonard . Rt . 3, Pomeroy.

Nice 2

story, 3 bedroom home
with ce ntral heating .
Almost
maintenance
free with aluminum
sidi ng, storm doors and
windows . Par tial base-

gra vel , colcii.Jm chloride, fertlliter, dog food , and all types
of salt. Excelsior Salt Works ,
Inc. , E. Main St ., POmeroy ,

We have several IOfa ·
ti ons and dif f e"r e nt
prices .

LIST YOUR PROPER TY WITH US THEN GO
ON WITH A REGULAR
ROUTINE , CALL
992-!325.

•

MARK MORA
HAIR STYLIST

Cellulosic rwOOd fiber)
Thermal insulation

S.ve 30 pet. to 50 pel.

on heating cost

Experience and
fully insured

Free Est,
Call 992-2772
5-17 -t mo.

Fe;,turint:
women ' s

men's

&amp;
styling ,

perms.
Call for •ppt. or walk in.

992-2367
Main St .

Pomeroy, 0 .

7-10-1 mo .

Vinyl and Alum inurn

Siding

BISSEll
SIDING CO.

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

NICE Comfortable 8 room
home on approx . 2 acres of
levella nd with plenty of shade
trees ,
on
Rutland
Rd .
992-7255 .
COMMERCI AL BUILDING for
sole. 59 N . 2nd Ave .. Middleport , OH . Formerly occupied by Dudley's Flor isf. Approx. 5000 sq. ft. on 2 floors .
$16,000. Owner may help
finance . Cal l 304-.C85-163f or
304-485-215-4 , ask for Peyton.
19 ACRES , 5 room houso . CR

28 : 247-311&gt;4 .
FOUR BEDROOM. both , livingdin ing on ,Jf4ocre lot in
Rutland . Utility bu ilding. Call

949-21MO.

No

Sunday

calls.

7 · 1(

tTHANYS!

CAPTAIN EASY
THIS MIS.&amp;I~G
OLD MAIJ
OWNS THE FOLLETT
Fl..AMBRA CE

BUT IF! FIND THe GtRL •. IT'LL.
GIVE US THE IN!JIDI!: TICACI&lt;
QIJ A JU ICY lt!&gt;oOOO,OOO
ORDeR OF '5T~UCTURAL
&amp;TE?EL FOR THEIR
FLAMBRACE!&gt;~ ·

GIR~'S

COMPANY~

Prlntanswerhere:"(

Radiat9r·.-----.
Service
J4

NO!\TH

and

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

• A 864

Refinanc~P

Sm~h

Nebm

Molor5y Inc.
Ph . t92-2174

Pomeroy

PnMFROY . O.

Housing '"

. ..-.....::..:, t
•Head uar ers ,_

In

Pomeroy, statel y Jwo·
story r e modeled home,
origina l hand -c arved
oak wood work , 3
bedrooms, formal d in ing, nice kitchen, base ment, in good condition,

large lot . $34,500 .
JUST LISTED -

Mid -

dleport, remodeled 2tam ily , live in one, rent
the other, 2 baths, many
features , needs some

tin ish work. $26,800.00.
A BARGAIN - NICE
home in town, fu II base ·
ment, 2 bedrooms, ex ce llent ,

l ocation .

REDUC E D
TO
$21,500.00.
VACANT LANO - 5b
acres, 15 · pasture, 5
tillable, balance timber,
se veral home sites.

water. $30,500.00.
BUILDING SITES - 1-2
acres,
starting
at
SJ.OOO.OO.
S POINTS AREA
about 6 yrs. old, 3 BR,
double closets, fully
equipped ki tchen, very
ni.ce dining area , central
heat &amp; air, deck , double

lot

100 '•200' .

New

drapes &amp; rods included.

$29,000.

WE HAVE FINANCING
AND NEED LISTINGS
FOR OUR &lt;!UT OF
COUNTY BUYERS .
REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland, Sr .
Henry E. Cleland, Jr .
992-2259
'
992-6191

queen, South was sure of a
- lOth trick .
How could he get the extra
30 points for five odd without

• A 65

low as 3%

WEST

down (non-veterans)

• J 10 9 6 2
• 10
• 10 9 84 2
• J3

IRElAND

592·3051

WOOD FOfi'

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTlON

THE FIR£ ·"

any risk? Obviously East
was going to be long in

• K5

hearts and clubs.

A squeeze against East
was the obvious way to get

•J9875

•Q

that lith trick.
So South proceeded to give
West a chance to put the bite

• Q 10 9 5 2

SOUTH
e AQ3
• A642

FRIENDSHIP!

4·13 1 mo .

EAST

on his unfortunate partner.

• KJ 73
• K 1

Hf'S GOING 10 MAKE
11, ANN IE HIS POWFRS
OF RECUPERATION

Vulnerable : Both
Dealer : South
West North F...ast

ARE---ARE AMAl1N6 1

New Home

Pass
Pass

Construction
Extensive Remodeling
GREG ROUSIJ

3 NT

South
I NT
Pass

Pass

There was no problem. He
cashed his queen of spades,
own hand with four hearts
and two clubs and East with
a hot potato.
East had only six cards.
They could not include four
hearts an\l three clubs and
South had that lith trick .

Phone 992-7583
By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

7-S.l MO.

tricks .
leaving dummy with three
clubs and three hearts, his

Opening lead : • J

992·22~

He simply cashed his king
and jack of diamonds and
led another diamond to
West.
West laughed, muttered a
sarcastic , "Thank you" and
claimed Lhe rest of the

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING
Federal Housing &amp;
Veterans Admin. L0o1ns.

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.
Hours 9-1 M., W,, F. •
Other times by appoint·
ment .

107 Sycamore (Rear!
Pomerov, 0 .
CALL 992 -7544
7B 1 mo.
BRADFORD . AuctionNr , Complete Service. Phon• 91119-2.487
o r 949-2000. Rocino . Ohio,
Cri tt Bradford.

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers, toasters , irons. oil
sma ll appl iances. lawn moer,
ne.~~t to Stohl Highway Goroge
on Roi.Jfe 7, 985-3825 .

H. L Writesel

E&gt;CCAVATING ,
dozer ,
bockhoe and ditcher , Charles
R. Hotfietd . Block Hoe Service.
Rutland , Ohio. Pone142· 2008 .

PULLINS EKCAVATING. Com·
plate Service. Phone992 - :2~78 .

AUTOMOBILE

INSURANCE

boan cancelled? Lost your
operators
license?
Phone

992-2143 .
E· C ELECTRICAL Con1ractor
serving Ohio Valloy region.
Sil( days o week , 24 hours ser·
vice. Emergency calls. Call
882-2952 or 882-.3.f5111 .

New , repair ,
gutters and
down spouts.
Window cleaning
Gutter cleaning
Free Estimates

It is worth going after.
After the jack of spades
lead produced the king from
East, South could count nine
top tri c ks.
At tri c k two he led a

TRAILER SALES
nno Montwom..-y Rd.
L• n~J w l lt t , Otlio
tU ·' "·UU E wt-nint•
l Mtl~' Enf o! Wif. ttv•llt

SUPER

GOOSE

4 ~

ADO ONS and remodeling .
gutt•r work , down tpoutl ,
some concrete worf.t , walks
and
dr i veways
( free
••timote) . V .C. Young Ill ,
Recine , OH . 9•9-2748 and
992-7314 .

ROOFING , fi:OOF repair ond
sid ing. ather maintenance. E &amp;
M Roof i ng
and
Sid ing .
61111-388-8860 or 614 -388-8797 ,
S&amp; G CARPET Clean ing. Steam
cloons .
Freo
esfimat• .
Reasonable
rot11 . Scot·
c h~uord .
992 - 6309
or

742-2348 .
NEIGLEM Construction. For
building good tlou•es and doIng repair work . Ce ll Guy
Nelgler . 949-2508 .

Auctions
BIG AUCTION every Wed .. 7
pm. Hartford Community
Cen ter , Harrlord, WV , Ill miles
obovo
Pomoroy · Moson
Bridge.

the~,J

742-2593.
IN STOCK for immodiote
delivery: various sizes of pool
kits . Co- It· yourself or let us
install for you . D. Bumgardner
Soles, Inc . 992-572A.

INSTitt!l:T70!'1
.tqril'('rf tmP/q_reJ h,v IMif .
trirC'Ici111 ''d'"rpauits hrld ~tn"l'al
ill'eraRC t'tlflliiiRJ' U{ llbOUI

$18,300

mJ''.

as qt1otcJ h.a· tltt' U.S. Depr of
J.abu". Bun•au ol Lllbor statistics. bulletin No. 18 75.
Don't just be satisfied with a
JOB - Ptan NOW for a Profes sional ca reer Driving a " Big
Atg ." We are a Private Train ing
Scttool and i f you rnee1 OI.Jr
qualif icati on s vou wi ll be train ed by Pro fessional Instruc tors
on moder n eqi.J ipmen t . Train
on a Part Time basis (Sat . &amp;
Sun ,) and Keep you r JOb, o r
at ten d our 3 Week Full Tune
Resident Tratning .
R P t'( 'O

. Tractor Troila Troi~tinx. lm:.

PARKERSBURG
(304) 424-6413

ACROSS
I Rabbit's
relative
5 Accumulate
10 Employing
speech
II Haughty
13 Untrustworthy
person
15 Keats-type
effort
16 Teacher's

clon't stancl
this time .. '

BOB'S GENERAL
CONTRACTING
eNEWHOMES
eROOM ADDITIONS
eROOFING
eVINYL SIDING
eGUTTER &amp; SOFFIT
Phon• 992-6323
Free Estimates

17 Corn unit
Mobile Homes Sale's

18 Mordred's

WINNIE

1974 u x 70 rnobilo home .
Good
ca nd lli on. 57800 .

I HAD IT RE-

. 992-5858.

DECORAtED!
HOWDO YOU
LIKE IT ?

1965GENERAL60•12. 2 bodr .

1970 Syl ... a . 60t~~l2 , 1 bedr .
1970Cott le. 60x1 2. 2 b.dr.
1974Morkl ino, 50x12 , 2 b4tdr .
1969Val lont. l2d0, 2bodr.
1967 National. 12x50. 2 b.d r .

business
garb
20 First word
as clams
of the Aeneid 12 Printer's
21 Kid of jazz
errors
22 Fulfill
1!3 Tonuny

I 1M ... I'M NOT
SURE . IT'LL
TAKE OOME
GETTINGUSE D 10...
( I THINK).

OH 1
'Tl-lAT15 MY
NEW DOG...
5NOOP51E·
POOP51E I

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

28 Rang out
31 Efface

19 Watered

32 Poker

fabric

20 Revise
1!3 Indian state
24 Generally
25 Type of tire
26 Her name
means
"battle

maiden ''

term
34 Heredity
component
36 Pupil's
ordeal
38 Like : sl.
39 "Bay

window' '

26 Hollywood
Hopper
21 European

homo, $3500. 9B5-3504.

river
28 RoUing 29 Gratify
:J() First-born
33 Hockey
name
34 Mild oath
35 Sheila
Mac 31 Paris
street
40 Astolat
maid
. 41 Thessalian
mountain

ht.t: for r/u.: /t~n t: lWl

RlsQ.~'l2 HP

THAT DADBURN
RABBI T- IN MI.{ GARDEN

THI\R'S

.1-8123 RrsQ'-P2 HP HYD
1-8183 RIDisoJ-.9 HP HYD

PATCH

AG'IN !!

f

6-5260 8 HP WALK BEHIND
2-5460 10 HP WALK BEHIND
2-830 RIDING GRAVELY 8 HP

7-

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE.

20% OFF

PEANUTS

I JUST TALKED WITH
CHARLIE BROWN'S MOM ..
HE'S NOT AN't' SETTER

Tractors In Stock

GRAVELY
TRACTOR SALES

WAAT'5 WRON6 WITH A
WORLD W~ERE SOMEONE
LIKE CHARLIE BROWN CAN
6ET SIC~ 1 AND THEN NOT
6ET ANI{ SETTER?!

Here's

how to work It

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

-One lelter simply stands for another. ln this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two D's, etc. Single letters.
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all

I

I NEED SOMEBOVV
To HIT!!
0

hints. Each day the code letters are different.

CRVPTOQUOTES

'
~

ex

TBDDVJO

JXCTUJE

GXH

r

CT BC
C X

TBOJ'C

TBDDVJVF

v y

0 X W V X J .y

0

v

'II

Pomeroy, Ohio.
(

~-

Kit 33.
10 :55-CBS News 8; House Call 10;
11 : 00-HJgh
Rollers
3, 15;
Laverne &amp; Sh irley 6,1~; Price Is
Righi B,10; Biography 33.
11: 30- Wheel of Fortune 3, 15;
Family Feud 6, 13; 11 : 55-News
17.
12:~Newscenter .3;

News 6,10;

Tomorrow 8, 10; Not For Women

Only 15; Movie " Champ for a
Day "
17;
MacNeil-Lehrer
RePdrt 33.
1:DO-Days of Our Lives 3, 15; All My
Children 6, 13; Young &amp; the
Restless 10 ; Best of Ernfe
Kovacs 33.
1 :30-As The World Turns B.IO; In
Performance at Wolf Trap 33.
2 :DO-Doctors 3, 15; One Life to Live
6,13; 2:25-News 17.
2:30-Another World 3, IS; Guiding
Light 8, 10; I Love Lucy 17.
3:0D-General Hospllal 6, 13; Rebop
17.
3:31&gt;-Mash 8; Joker' s Wild 10;
Banana Splits 17; Over Easy 20.
·4:QO-Mister Cartoon 3; HollywOOd
Squares 15; Merv Grlftln 6;
Addams Family 8; Six Million
Dollar Man 10; Mike Douglas 13;
Fllntstones 17.
4 : 30-Lone Ranger 3; Hogan's
Heroes 8; Lucy Show 15; · Partridge Family 17.
S:OD-Bonanza 3; Beverly Hillbillies
8; Mister Rogers 20,33; Gomer
Pyle 10; Six Million Dollar Man
13; Brady Bunch 15; Star Trek
17.
5:31&gt;-News 6; Elec. Co. 20; Mary
Tyler Moore 10; Odd Couple 15;
Doctor Who 33 .
6: 0D-News 3,B, 10,13,1S; ABC News
' 6; Family Altair 17; VIlla Alegre
20; Studio See 33.
6:30-NBC News 3, IS; Carol Burnett
6; ABC News 13; CBS News B, 10;
Over Easy 20,33; Father Knows
Best 17.
7: 00-Cross -WIIs 3; Newlywed
Game 6,13; News 10; Love
American Style 15; Gel Smart
17; Dick Cavell 20,33.
7:30-Hee Haw Honeys 3; S1.9tl
Beauly Show 6; Family FeUd
8, 10; $100,000 Name That Tune
13; Pop Goes The Country 15; My
Three Sons 17; MacNeil -Lehrer
Reporl 20,33.
8 :00-DIIt'rent
Strokes
3, 15;
Operallon Petticoat 6, 13; Incredible Hulk B, 10; Washington
Week In Review 20,33; Movie

··....

......
•

..
•.'·

...'·
I

'•

" Corridors of Blood " 17.

11

992·2975

14 Seed

classic

1969 12.: 52 2 b.droom mobllo

•

210 Condor St.

Yesterday's Allswer

Dorsey

~GRAVELY

1-8122

DOWN

7·15·1 mo. pd.

Whew! 8 , 10 ; Consumer Survival

\2 :30--Ryan'-s Hope b,\3 ; Search 1or

per. Individual questions· wllf
be answered i f accompanied
by s tamped. self-addressed
envelopes. The most interest·
mg Questions will be used In
this column and wW receive
copies of JACOBY MODERN.)

42 Sidled
43Swann

I A road's
scholar
%Town in
Chad
3 Snake
4 Large deer
5 Highway
offshoot
6 Larder
contents
7 Diplomat:
abbr .
8 Chastened;
subdued
9 Cooked,

FRIDAY, JULY27, 1979
5:41&gt;-World at Large 17; 5:45Farm Report 13; S:55-Summer
Semester 10.
6 :0D-700 Club 6,B; PTL Club 15;
6: 11&gt;-News 17; 6:25-Socletles In
Transition 10.
6: 20-Dragnet 17; 6:45-Morntng
RePdrl -3; 6 :50-Good Morning
West VIrginia 13; 6:55-Chuck
White Reports 10; News 13.
7:0D-Today 3,15; Good Morning
America 6, 13; Friday Morning 8;
Schoolles 10; Three Stoogeslit11e Rascals 17; 7 :15--A.M.
Weather 33.
7:31&gt;-Family Altair 10; Lilias Yoga
&amp; You~3; &amp;:DO-Capt . Kan_g aroo
8,10; Lassie 17; Sesame St. 33 .
B:31f-'-Romper Room 17; 9 :0D-Bob
braun 3; Phil Donahue 13, 15; Big
Valley 6; Porky Pig &amp; FrlendsB;
Lucy Show 17; Biography 33. ·
9:31&gt;-Santord &amp; Son B; Hogan' s
Heroes 10; Green Acres 17.
10 :DO-Card Sharks 3, 15; Edge of
Night 6; All In The Family 8,10;
Dating Game lJ.; Movie "Hell's
Half Acre" 17; Paint Along With
Nancy Kaminsky 33 .
10 : 30-AII Star Secrets 3, 15; Andy
Grltflth 6; $20,000 Pyramid 13;

Experts, ·· CIU9 o f this newspa-

by THOMAS JOSEPH

l mo

THURSDAY, JULY 26, _1979
8:0D-Projecl UFO 3,15; Mork &amp;.
M indy 6, 13; Waltons 8, tO;
Dragnet 111 Vtolenl Universe 201
1979 World
Championship
Woodchopplng Festival 33.
8:30-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,1 3;
Baseball 17.
9:oo-()ulncy 3, 15; Barney Miller
6, 13; Hawaii Flve-0 8,10; In
Pertormance at Wolf Trap 33.
9:3G--Carter Country 6,13 ; JO :ooDavld Cassidy 3, lS; 20-20 6, 13;
Barnaby Jones 8, 10; News 20.
10 :31&gt;-Hocklng Valley Bluegrass 20.
11 :00-News 3,6,8, 10, 13 , 15; Dick
Cavett 20.
11 :31&gt;-Johnny Carson 3, 15; Starsky
&amp; Hutch 6, 13; Mash 8; Movie
" Journey into Midnight" 10;
Movie " Along the Great Divide"
17; ABC News 33.
12: 05-Movle "Duel In the Sun" 8;
12 : 40- Baretta 6,13 ; 1 :00Tomorrow 3; News 15.
1 :20-Baseball 17 ; 1:50-News 131
3 : 50- News 17; 4 : 10- Movle
" Winds of the Wasteland"' 17;
5:11&gt;-Dragnet 17.

IDo you have a question for
the e&gt;eperts ? Write " Ask the

6tw.-~

STQCI(

fii&amp; I LE R lrllOW &amp;V.&amp;IL&amp;B LE

949-2862-9q9-2160
4-S-tt c

HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex·
CO\'ating , septic s-;s1ems ,
dozer, backhoe. Rt . 143.
Phone I (614) 698-7.331 or

most important.

worth much. but if you can

Roofing

~ i 111 1 hi.!\/

are

l,n rubber bridge they aren't
get one at no rlak to yourself

WILL HAUL limellone and
grovol. Also . lime hauling ond
Repolrs . ' spreading . Phone 742-2455.

SEWING MACHINE
service, all makes. m -228111 .
The Fabric Shop. Pomeroy .
AI.Jthorlzed Singer Sales and
Service. We shorpen Scissors .

tricks

MONTGOMERY.

Television
Viewing

Young &amp; the Reslless &amp;;Password
15 ; Over Easy 33 ; Midday
Magazine. 13; Love American
Style 17.

!NEWSPAPER ENTE RPRISE ASSN. 1

. In duplicate bridge over-

$23,900.00.
FARM - ApprOKimately 20 acres, nice fenced
pasture, barns and
o ther
buildings,
remodele d
2 -story
home. · Free gas and

diamond to dwnmy's . ace
and when East dropped the

7-26

• 874
• KQ3

l'LL GET MORE

on St. Rt. 124 toward

(Answers tomorrow)

Jumbles ELITE

Scoring overtrick points

Real Estate Loans

mile otl Rt. 7 by -pass

I I) (I I I I I)"

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

77 E . State, Athens

Roger Hysell
Garage

Now arrange the cirCled letters to
form the surprise answer, as sugge,sted by the abo"e cartoon.

BRIDGE

SI. RI. 7
North of Chesler, 0 .
Phone 91H202
6-24·1 mo . Pd .

FHA- AS

SHOUL..D
HELD WHEN
HE WAS IN SUCH
A HURRY.

JOKER WIZARD HAMPER
Answer : Whom lo ask for when you want to buy a
diamond tiara - THE "HEAD" JEWELER
Thursday, July 26

USED GARDEN
TRACTORS
AND
RIDING MOWERS

Purchase

I

YeSielday's

SURE, DO&lt;&gt;

E~PERIENCED

·IHEHRfT~
I K X]

TILLIS

6-6-1 mo.

6-U ·2mo.

I K) ]

MORTGAGE CO.

CALL
992-2772

Call for a Free Siding
Estimate, 949 ·1101 or

EXCAVATING, dozer, loader
and backhoe work; dump
tri.Jcks and lo--boys for hire,
will haul fill dirt. top soil ,
limestone and grovel. Coli Bob
or Roger Jeffers , doy phone
night
phone
992-7089 ,

NEW LISTING -

byHenriArnoldandBobLee

I

*New Home
*Addons
*Remoldlngs
*Free estimates
992-6011
7·12

Free Estimate

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992·5682
4-30-ltc

near

Owner is now remodel ing this 4 bedroom
home. 2 new bath s,
carpeting , oil furnace,
basement, .. 2 trail e r
spaces, and atmost 2
acres of land. Asking

992-2897 .

Introduces-

HOUSE FOR sa le. 130 Butternut' Pomeroy . OH . 992-:2410.

bedroom

$25,000.
RENOVATING

:22 FOOT CAMPING troller for
1 person in Syracuse. Utilities.

Mlck ' s ·
Barber&amp;
Style Center

Blown lnsulatioo
JIM KEESEE

9'12-3525 or 992-5232 .

maintenance free
Pomeroy . A good
starter or ret irem ent
home with larg e extra
lot. This you must see .

TWO ROOM apartment.
Private both. All utilities paid .
First floor pr ivate entrance.
Also, sleeping room for rnet .

J&amp;L

367·0557 .

town. On ly $28,000.
HEIR SAYS SELL IT -

992-5434 .

992-5547
. 1 25-2 mo.

Rutland.

furnished ranch styl e
bedroom home with
larg~ yard . Has central
hea ting and runtl water .
Peaceful location out of

3 AND Ill ~M furnished ond un·
furni shed
opts .
Phone

COAL .

Anothe r b ig sa le this 'w eek, plenty of new
and diffe re nt merchandise, some from
bankrupt stores , furniture, appliances,
toys, tools, s o me carpet, many small
items, b ike &amp; a uto accesso r ies , many
mo r e items n o t mentio n ed . Bring yo ur
c ha ir' and stay la te. Dealers w e lcome .
Not responsible for accidents
Terms of sale: cash or check with
positive 10.
Auctioneer, Bill Brown

TWO STORY 3 bedroom house.
3 lots. Now's your chance if
)'OI.J need a llouse. $12.000:
Owner, willing to
tal k.

NEW LISTING - FUll

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Pork ,
R_oute l3, north of Pomeroy .
Lorge lots. Call ~2-7~79 .

FRIDAY EVE., JULY 27 - 7:00 P.M.
MAIN ST., RUTlAND, OHIO

REAL ESTATE Loons. Purchase
and rofinonco . 30 year terms ,
VA . No money down ,{eligible
veterans) . FHA - As low as 3
per cent down (non-veterans) .
Ireland Mortgage Co .. 77 E.
State, Athens. 614-592-3051 .

TWO
STORY
hoi.Jse
in
Pomeroy . 6 rooms and both .
992-5621 after 6.

- 992. ]3:25

For Rent

Pomerov, Ohio

Real Estate for Sale

21' E . SeCiond Streel

9'12-2689 .
OLD FURNITURE . ice boxes,
brass beds , iron beds, desks,
etc ., complete households .
Write M .D. Miller. Rt. .. .
Pomeroy o r catl992-7761J.

9B5-4271.

MODERN BRICK home on 5.23
ocrel in letart .7bedrooms,
li vin g room , dining room , kitchen , garage and 30 ft by 40
feet . $60,000. Moy be seen by
appointment .
Coil
61-111 -247-375'2 ,

A.C ., tope . Wheels, new
white letter radials . '$3395 .

Wanted to Rent

6,

7•2-275-4 .

1975 TRANS AM. P.S., P.B ..

Wanted to Buy

'ft'ft\IN} fel'\1 ~ THATSCRAM~LED WORD GAME

304-927-1568.

Jack W. Carsey
~·

1971 CHEVEUE MALIBU 307

after

SIX ACRES . 7 room house, 3
bedroom. If interested , coli

Large Stock

1978 JEEP J-10 truck . 6 cyl .,
std. shift. 20 mpg. $5200.
Bet or • '3pm , 985- 3597 •

Call

3.65 acres ,approx . 2 miles
west of Rt . 7 on 143 . Levol
acreage .
H2 - 2656
or
71112-2955.

25 to 50
Discounts

1

1974 Ford LTD wagon . All new
tires. new shocks. Good condition . $900. 992-62,.8 .

KITTENS TQ re!pon sib le person . I calico with blue e-;es, I
gre-; ·and 'fl'hite, 1 tiger . 398
Grant St. after 6 or coli
9'92 -2520 after 6pm .

651 Beech Street
Middleport, 0.
992-2356
7251 mo .

Rl. 3

and D-2 licenso included. 3 '
acres. · and house . Good
bi.Jsiness opportun i ty . Call

Hotpoint

18 Years E•perienc'

CONTRACTOR

GiveAway

RESTAURANT AND be• . 0-1

Spec:lal Sale

197!1 TRUCK ,/• ton Int. , 50,000
miles , 6 cyl. , heavy duty, fixed
for
ctuol wheels.
Trade .
RI.Jtland Hardware.

Shop
Will Make Service Calls

992-2020.

LARGE REG . Hereford bull
horned. 992 -7752 after 5 :30

VEGA HATCHBACK. coli
303-675-1501 or 305-675-2488_

BLOCK &amp; BRICK
WORK, GENERAL

KITTENS , litter box trained .

EIGHT WEEK old pigs. Phone

ANTIQUE
91119-2317.

'

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

Reynolds'
Electric Motor

N. L Construction

997-b022 .

949-2059 .

POODLE GROOMING. Judy

197~

foundry .
BOARD .
only . Reasonable .

ROOM .
Elderl y

PUPPIES .

Phone992 -2181

1977 16' Storcraft open boW ,
conv. top, 85 h .p. Mere with ss
prop. Sterling Troller and access. $3690. Phone 992-2791 .

Auto Sales

RIDENOUR GAS Service. Daxoll.P . gas . ~ hester , 985-3307 .

EXTRA SMALL border collie
type, block with white d,ittst . ·1 ..
year old. Well behaved house
dog, has had . all shots.
Humane Society , 992-7680.

poodles ,
pomeronion ,
pekine5e. black pam PI.JPPY
great coat line . Phone 696-1 11
after Spm .

MUST SELL Two l year quarter
horse geldings, 1 Appaloosa
more 4 ond pony. All ore gentle and well broken. E)(cellent
horses . Co11992-6162.

PAINTING AND sondblaatlng.
Free estimates. Colt 949-2686 .

year old. 7_..2-2702 .

Appliance~
Sales &amp; Servtce

GOING OUT of business. All

AKC DOBERMAN Pinscher
puppies. lifter is registered
Cehmpienship bloodlines.
Show quality. Has been worm·
ed .
Temporary
snots .
6U -675-1863.

367-7101 .

9'12-7680.
BLACK PART poodle, mole'

Headquarters for
Hotpoint and
General Electric

-·

'

~ ~ ~~ "

Business Services

NOW HAULING limestone In
Mlddleport-Poemray
area .
Call for free estimate.

KITTENS . ali kinds , all sites.
Coli
Humane
Society .

POMEROY
LANDMARK

RISING STAR Kennel. Boar·
ding. Col\367-0292 .

1967 CHRYSLER 300 , ai.JtO .,
P.S. , P.B., 440 engine , body

TELEPHONE EVENING soles .
6-9 pm . Coli M r . Finotari ,

992-6072.

HOOF HOLLOW, English ond

LOST OR stolen : large mole ·
collie . brindle end white , has
sl ight Hmp in hind leg. Afraid
of storms . Answers to Ra)( . ,
61• ·667·3253 evenings .

LIGHT PICKUP and del ivery in
local area. Cor needed . Call
Mr. Martin . 614-•46-7107 .

HARDWARE

1977 YAMAHA 125. with 1400
miles with helmet. $625

Western .
Saddles
and
· harness . Hones and ponies.
Ruth Reeves . 614-698-3290.
Barding &amp; Riding Lessons and
Horse Core products.

'

Unscramble these rour Jumbles,
one lett~/ to each square, to form
tour Ot'd1nary words.

$B_J9

Pets for Sale

'

Services Offered

71112-2255. One ..CO gal. Mor· flo
auto. gas water heater, gloss
lined, fu el ~oving , $120 . Vanity cabinet with marble top
w ith faucets and pop-up, drain
and 1upply lines. $99.95 . One
double bowl sink witn faucets .
$69.96 . Special Sole - Roofing.90 lb . roll white , green,
black granule , $13,10. 57 lb.
roll black , $9 .55 . 5 got. asphalt
roofing plain or fobrated ,

WE'RE HAVING o yard sole onJuly 27 and 28 from 8 till 6 at
488 South .tth Ave: in Middleport .

Notices
GUN SHOOT. EVERY FRIDAY
7:30 PM RACINE GUN CLUB.
FACTORY CHOKE GUNS ON·
LV .

RUTLAND

DICK TRACY

K U' ,y Y. U . B W
R V 8 C TV M
Y~sterday's Cryptoquote: THE ESSENTIAL THING IS !'lOT TO
FIND, BUT TO ABSORB WHAT WE FIND.- PAUL VALERY
~

19" King

'

F••rurn S\I'Micaft, Inc .

8:30-Hello, Larry 3,15; Welcome
Back Koller 6, 13; Wall Street
Week 20,33.
9-:0D-Roc;kford Flies 3, 15; Movie
" Black Market Baby" 6,13 ; .
Dukes of Hazzard 8, 10; Buckeye
Holiday 20 ; Money News &amp;
VIews 33.
9:31&gt;-Amertca Alter VIetnam 20;
Johnny Belinda 33.
lO:OD-Eddle Capra Mysteries 3,15;
Dallas 8, 10; Ten Who Dared 17.
10:3o-'-&lt;:onsumer Survival Kit 20.
11 : 01&gt;-News 3,6,8, 10, 13,1 s: N•w
Soupy Sales 17; Two Ronnles 20.
11 :31&gt;-Johnny , Carson 3.15; So.op
6, 13; Bonkers 8; ABC News 33;
Movie "1, Monster" 10; Movlo
"The Maltese Falcon" 17.
12:0D-Juke-B"o• 8; Monty Python's
Flying Circus 33.
12 :31&gt;-Movle "Where Love Has
Gone" 8; 12 :.j()--Movte "The
Forgotten Man" 6; I ron side 13.
1:DO-Midnight Special 3, 15; Movie
" Assignment Terror" 10.
1: 15--Movle "The Burning Hills"
17; 1:40-News 13; -2 :30-News 3.
3:15--News 17; 3:35-Movle "The
Lawless Nineties" 17;. ~:JS­
Movte ';The Night Riders" 17.

-·-'

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•.,.,..-

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.•.

•.

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:·,.
~

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.---."

�· Testimony received

10- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., ThursdaY, July 26, i97 9

OSCA leader says decision should
stop dupl~cation of health care services
CINCINNATI (AP ) -· The president
of the Ohio State Chir opr actic
Association says the America n
Medical Association's decision to ease
its poli cy against the · chiropractic
profession should help elim inate
duplication of health care services.
"Only when_ practitioners of all
healing arts can cooperate in the
diagnosis and treatment of human
ailments can the public be provided
with the best c.are at the lowest cost, "
Dr. Ricahrd P. Bur gun of Cincinnati
said Wednesday.
The AMA House of Delegates ruled
at the organization 's annua l
convention in Chicago on Tuesday
that physicians are now free to make
referrals to chiropractors, a practice
that had previously been barred.
Chiropractors will now have easier
access to patients in hospitals and x.
rays and diagnostic testing , Burgun
said. Joint research might develop , he
added .
·
The AMA delegates also refused to
reaffirm
a
1966
position
characterizing chiropractic "as an
unscientific cult whose practitioners
lack the necessary training and

background to dJagnose an

d

trea

! ' \l'

.

t

Area Deaths/ . Carter seeking help ·

'11IEODORE CASTO
BRIOOEPORT _ TheodorP. (Jen·

huma n disease."

Bur gun said : "This opposition was co) Casto, 39, Blackford Road,
based on a totally erroneous view by Bridgeport, fonnerly of Gibbstown,
th e AMA that the basis for W. Va.,diedJuly 16attheOhioValley
chiropractic is a theory that all Medical Center. He was a heavy
diseases are caused by misalignment . equiP':""nt operator for the Lear Con·
of spinal vertebrae and can be cured strucllon Co.
.
by manual manipulation.
.Mr. casto '!as preceded m death by
" In fact, chiropractic involves the his fa~r, his stepfather, a brother
diagnosis and treatment of many and a ~r ·
. .
.
human ailments without controlled SII1'Vlvmg are his wife, Joyce SIIIIth
drugs, prescription medicines or casto; two sons, Nonnan Ray and
incisive surgery . Chiropractors Josep~ Allen; a daughter, Rebecca
believe that a number of conditions Sue; hismother,Mrs: Mae Lewis, and
can be effectively treated with less three sbters, Mrs. William (Downey)
risk by correcting abnormal nerve Kemedy, Mrs. Richa~ (callie) Richirritation through adjustment of the mond, and Mrs. Katie LeWIS, all of
spine and through emphasis of the Middleport. .
body •s inherent healing powers.
Funeral semces were held July 19
at the Wilson Funeral Horne m
Bridgeport, with interment in Holy
Memorial Gardens, Pleasant Grove.

EGG REPORT

Lions Club meets
Plans were made for representation at the Meigs County Fair when
the Pomeroy-Middleport Uons Club
met Wednesday at noon at the Meigs

Inn.
Present were Uon JUlio E. Gon·
zalez Lopez and his wile of San Juan,
Puerto Rico, along with 13members.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -- Eggs -Prices paid to country packing plants
for eggs delivered to major Ohio cities
cases included consumer grades
including U.S. grades, minimum 50
case lots.
Carton Large A 6H5, Medium A 5356, Small A 41-45.
Sales to retailers in major Ohio
cities, cartons delivered: Large A
white 71-30, mostly 71-73, medium 6271, mostly 62-64.
Poultry prices at Ohio farms, hens
light fl.9'h , mostly 11-9.

DOWNING CHILDS
AGENCY
INSURANCE- REAL ESTATE
For all your Insurance
and Real Estate needs.

CALL US

OFF. 992-2342

'

MARIE M.CUSfER
Marie M. Custer, 78, 335 Lasley St.,
Pomeroy, passed away Wednesday
afternoon at Veterans Memorial
Hospital in Pomeroy following a
lingering illness.
She was the youngest and 12th child
of late John Miller and Mary
Buchmann Miller. fn addition to her
parents whe was preceded in death by
her husband, Alonzo Custer, seven
brothers, four sisters and six
nephews.
She is survived by one stepson,
Hugh Custer, a step-grandson,
Michael Custer both of Pomeroy, a
stepdaughter, Betty Lou Custer ,
Reynoldsburg, and a number of nieces
and nephews.
Mrs. Custer was a life long active
member of the United Methodist
Church, the J. 0. F.ClaSII and United
Methndist Women. She was a member
and past matron of Pomeroy Chapter
186, O..E.S. and Jane Howell Tent, D.
of U. V.
· Funeral services will be held at
Ewing Funeral Home on Saturday,
July 28, at 3 p.m,. with the Rev. John
A: Bryant and the Rev . Robert
McGhee officiating. Intennent will be
in Beech Grove Cemetery.
Calling hours wUI be from 2 to 4 and
7 to 9 on Friday.

EVE. 992-2449

JAMt;SR. MEES .
Funeral serVIces for James R.
Me•s 33, Indianapolis, former
l'o~~roy Council memper and
announcer for WMPO radio, who died
Wednesday will be held Friday at 3:30
p m at Ewing Chapel with the Rev.
Wiliiam Middleswarth officiating.
Burial will be . in Beech g rove
Ce te
~: x:.;:;s was born Sept. 2\1. 1945. He
was preceded in death by his father
Gilbert Mees.
He is survived by his wife, Connie,
two children and his mother,
Mrs Gilbert M.;.. Pomeroy.
·'
'

J.f...om
I '

PEARLY RALPH
SPRINGFIEW - Pearly Ralph,
90, 2845 ColumbiiS Ave., died at home
July 17. He was a retired mail carrier
in Pomeroy and Robbins-Myers employee in Springfield.
Mr. Ralph was hom in Meigs Coun·
ty on Ju)y 10, 11189, to the late Ira
Ralph and Nora Belle Wogan Ralph.
He was preceded in death also by a
daughter, a son, and two sisters, Mrs.
Elizabeth carmen, Pomeroy, ahd
Mrs. Nellie Thomas, Vera Beach,
Fla.
Surviving him are his wile, Ethel
Diane (Hysell) Ralph; six daughters,
Mrs. Elmer Schmenk, Phoenix,
Ariz.; Mrs. Hank Hansen, Tampa,
Fla.; Mrs. Harry Osborne, Pomeroy;
Mrs. William Sullivan, Brandon, Fla.,
and Miss Irene Ralph and Mrs. Victor
Goff, both of Springfield; 14 grandchildren, 16 great-grandchildren and
one great-great'f!l'lllldson.
Funeral services were held July 2ll
at Richards Funeral Home, the Rev.
John WUson officiating. Burial was in
Glenn Haven Gardens in Clark Coun·
ty.

. of M
h tts
.
assac use · 1 was
Three or four_ years a~o
n
runnmg .~or president agai~\ ~at
Jackson, !Nier recall1
~ xt
time he predicted he wou 1977 e ~is
president , startmg In d th . And
Judgment was not very goo en.
now .r am ready for the next
questl?n."
.h
. . the
. Durmg the half our sess1on '" r
White House Ea:! ~m, 1 ~~defended I.ast ~ee s
lne
, 'to
up, declar!ng , 1 have no apolO!O
make for 1! ."
Saying thatsome have thought he
acted too rapully, he said he felt a
need to "create a new team to. work
with r:ne' '. and "I had .the . choice ~
draggmg It out or getting 11 over,
effect, in ~ ~~urs." .
..
As for cr1t1~1sm of h':' ~eciSIOn to
name longtime pohllc.al a1de
Hamilton Jordan to be. White House
chief of staff, Carter said Jordan will
do a "superb job"in an ~sslgnment he
md1cated will have str1ctluruts.
"He ~ill not be chi~f of t~
Cabmet, Carter sa1d pomtedly . I
will bechiefof the Cab met. He will not
be the chief of the Congress. The
Congress is an independent body ....
Hamilton Jordan will be chief of the
White House staff."
carter's appeal for public support
VETERANS MEMORIAL
for the windfall profits tax came a few
Admissions -- -Dwight Oliver, hours after a major setback in the
Pomery; Frances Whittington, House for part of his energy program.
Middleport.
The House abruptly halted debate
Discharges---Joseph Stewart, , on legislation giving him standby
Emma Wayland, Phillip Johnson , authority to ration gasoline after
William Morris, callie Metheney.
unexpected adoption of an
amendment sharply limiting his
flexibility.

WASJ:I!NGTON. (AP) - : President
Carter 1s tell.mg the Amer1can people
"your voice must be heard" if the
Senate is to pass· his windfall oil
profits tax . Without it, he says, "we
cannot reach our energy goals."
At a nationally broadcast prime·
time news conference Wednesday
night, Carter predicted "a massive
struggle to gut the windfall profits tax
bill" in the Senate. It already has
passed the House.
It was Carter's first · news
conference in Washington since May
29 and he appeared forceful
throughout. His upper lip twitched
briefly however when he was asked
if he h~d thought' about taking himself
out of the 1980 presidential race.
"I have considered all the options, ' ~
he reported, "and my decision will be
announced later on thiS year."
carter had a snappier comeback
when a reporter asked about a
prediction by Sen . Henry M. Jackson,
D-Wash., that the president's
problems will force Carter out of tbe
race and hand the Democratic
nomination to Sen. Edward M.

K~?nedy

The Farmers Bank &amp;

Savings Company
of Pomeroy, Ohio and Foreign and Domestic Subsidiaries, at tbe . close of
business June 30, 1979, a state banking Institution organized and operating
under the banking laws of this State and a member of tbe Ftideral Reserve
System. Published in accordance with a call made by the State Banking
Autboritles and by the Federal Reserve Bank of lhlll District. .
ASSETS
Cash and due from depository institutions .... . . . ., .... . , . .... .. . 2,011,000.00
U.S. Treasury securities . .. ... . .. .. ... ... ... .. .. . ·. .. ., .. . .. ... 2,632,000.00
Obligations of U.S. Goverrunent
agencies and corporations . . .... . ...... .. . . ... . . . .. . ., ., . . . . . 1,694,000.00
Obligations of States and political subdivisions
in the United States ... .. . ...... . .. .. .. , . ... . ... . . ... ... ..... 2,633,000.00
All other securities . .... . ...... . ..... . .. ....... . .. . . .. . . .... . .. . 30,000.00
a . Loans, Total (excluding unearned income) ..... . .... 14,090,000.00
b. Less : allowance for possible loan losses .. ..... . , .. .... , 74,000.00
c. Loans, net . . .. ... . .. ........ . ....... . . . ... .. .... .. ........ 14,016,000.00
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
other assets representing bank premises , ... ... . .. ••. , . . ....... 3&amp;),000.00
All Other Assets . . .. ... ........................... . ... , ...... , , 76 000 00
TOTAL ASSETS . . . .. .. . ...... : .......... . .. . . .. . .... . ...... 23,472,11()().00
LIABR.ITIFS
Demand deposits of individuals,
partnerships and corporations .. . . . ... .. .. . .... . ......... ... . 4,938,000.00
Time and savings deposits of individuals,
partnerships, and corporations . ... .. . . . . .... . .. .. . . ... .... . . 15,298,1100.00
Deposits of United States Government. . .. . . .. . ... . .. . .. •.. . .. ..... 14,000.00
Deposits of States and political subdivisions
in the United States . . ... .. ... ... .. . .. ... .. .... .. . ., ., .. . . ... 1,011,000.00
All other deposits ....... .... . . . ..... ... ..... . . .. ... . . . . .... ... .. . 8,000.00
Certified and officers ' checks ..... ... ., . . ... .: . ..... ..... .. ..... 132,000.00
Total Deposits .... . ... , . . ...... .. . .. ..... .. ..... . .. 21,401,000.00
a. Total demand deposits .. .... ... .. . . ... ....... ... . , . 6,038,000.00
b. Total time and savings deposits .... .... . .. .. . ....... 15.363,000.00
All other liabilities . . . , . .... ........... .. ...... . . . .. .. . . ...... , 2liLOOO,OO
TOTAL LIABILITIES .. .......... . ...... . . . ..... . ........... 21,652,000.00
EQUITY CAPITAL

EBERSBACH -HARDWARE
PH. 99Z-2811
110 W. MAIN

POMEROY

OUR ENTIRE STOCK OF
SUMM.ER CLOTHING IS
MARKED

SUPPLEMENTAL~ORANDA

Y2 PRICE

SWIMWEAR - SHIRTS - SLACKS - DRESSES SLIPS- SLEEPWEAR - SUITS - BLOUSES COORDINATE SPORTSWEAR - SHORTS -TOPS

I, Roger W. Hysell, Cashier, of the above-named bank do hereby declare
that this report of condition is true to the best of my knowledge and belief.
Roger W. Hysell
July 10, 1979
We , the undersigned directors, attest the correctness of this report of condi·
lion and declare that it has been examined by us and to the best of our
knowledge and beli ef is true and correct.
FRED R. CARSEY, JR.
FRED W. CROW, JR.- Directors
. E. ROBERT SCHELLHASE, JR.

SOMETHING FOR EVERYONEI
SHOP FRIDAY UNTIL 8:00, SATURDAY UNTIL ·5:00
.

.;.,
'ir

.~·

.

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

'

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

gave to the commissioners was an·- Roberts, the engineer retained by the

!1 the homes are incorporated into nexation would be good for the entire homeowners to study annexation
the village, owners will have a better village. The residents have the possibilities.

opportunity to.seU their homes or the
land they own. Attorney Steven Story .
argued the case for better land
distribution .
"It'~ the ideal area for the village of
Racine to expand into," he said. "It's
a prime develoiJ1tlent area."
The general impression residents

backing of the Racine village council.
A petition from Mr. and Mrs. Dallas
Cleland was filed with the commissioners against annexation,
because they already had their own
well.
Testimony was also given by county
engineer Wesley Buehl and by Philip

enttne
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

FRIDAY, JULY 27, 1979

-

Gasoline

Stolen auto
investigated

supplies
adequate

~ _A __stolen

auto and a ransacked Elementary School.
nouse are being investigated by
The car made several passes
Meigs County Sheriff's deputies.
around the town until Deputy Robert
At. 1:57 a.m. Mrs. Buddy Ervin, Beegle was sent' to the scene. Beegle
Racme, reported to the sherilf.'s office traced the car to SR 124, where the ocshe was a wakened by the SO Wid of her cupants stopped it and fled on foot.
husband's car leaving the premises .
Stlveral minutes another car,
When she investigated, she foWld the OJ1!lrated by Robert Arnott, Racine,
car was being driven p&amp;st the Racine was unable to stop and struck the rear
of the Ervin car. Both CJIJ'S were
demolished .
Deputies are investigating the in·
cident to detennine the ldenUties ol
the persons who were in the car.
In other mlltters , MUford Hall,
Reedsville, reported to the sheriff's
office he · was visited Thursday
.. . in the world
evening by three young men, one of
wh~im~ be a diStant relative
of Hall s Wife. Mrs. Hall is presently
in Parkersburg Hospital.
While Hall and the relaUve were
the house the two other young
outside
WASHINGTON (AP J - Gen.
men
are
alleged to have ransacked
Alexander Haig, until recently
house,
stealing items worth $600.
the
the supreme allied CWliJI8Ilder in
They
also
disconnected
the telephone
Europe , says the Senate should
di.!k to prevent Hall from
transmitter
set the SALT !I treaty aside and
calling the police immediately.
seek a new strategy to counter
The suspects are reported to be
the growing nuclear might ol the
driving
a dark blue Datsun wtth
Soviet untoo.
Florida
license
plates, Anyone spot" As ol today I could not go
ting
the
vehicle
is
requested to report
alone with SALT ll," Halg told
it
to
the
sheriff
's
office.
reporters during a break in
testimony before the Senate Armed Services Committee.
"I'm no! at all comfortable
with this treaty and I 'm not at aU
sure it gua{lllltees the salety and
security of the United States,"
Halg told the committee later.
'
''As of today I think it is not in the
AKRON, Ohio (APJ -- A consumers
interest of NATO."
coalition called on Ohio Edison Co .
c'Ustomers to burn candles instead of
electric lights on Sept. 19 to protest,the
utili ty's applicati on for a rate
CANNES, France (AP) - The
increa se.
Palestine
Liberation
A spokesman for the Consumer
Organization has vowed to step
Allianc-e to Stop Edison sa id that date
up attacks on Israel to avenge Its
is when th e Public Ut ilitie s
assassinated war rnini3ter. But
Commissign is expected to begin
the French police reported no
bearin gs on Ohio Edison's request·to
leads to the two killers .
make a 17 percent emergency rate
Zuhalr Mohsen, t3, died Thursurcharge permanent.
sday at Pasteur Hospital in nearThe candlelight protest was
by Nice. He hlid been in a coma
announced Wednesda y in Akron and
for 36 hours, since he was hit in
Youngstown, major cities in Ohio
the head by a .32 caliber bullet
Edison' s
35-count y,
714 ,000
fired just before midnight
residential-&lt;.:ustomer service area.
Tuesday as he was entering his
"All we're asking is that lights be
rented apartment in this French
turned off that evening and a candle
Riviera resort. The hospital said
or hurric.ane lamp be lighted in the
he never regained conscioWiess.
window," sa id Dorothy V. Ryan , a
A watchman at the apartment
Youngstown member of the coalition .
"We wanttoshow, and we also want
house said the two assassins were
to find out just how much support
a sportily dressed European
there. is out there for a citizens '
about 2ll years old and a small,
protest to the legislature against the
mustachioed man who appeared
continual utility rate lncreases, " she
to be an Arab.
added.
Roger Cerasuolo, an Akron
members of the group, said the
coali \ion
included
consumer,
WASHINGTON (AP ) + A Mid·
and
elderly
groups
within
taxpayer
western casket manufacturer Is
Ohio
Edison's
service
area,
as
well
as
advertising an exclusive deal
locals of the United Auto Workers,
with the U.S. Forest Service: for
United Rubber Workers and United
each person buried in one of Its
Steelworke.
rs.
caskets · the govenunent will
An
Ohio
Edison spokesman said,
plant a tree in a national forest .
.
"The
company
sympathizes with the
Under the promotional
people
's
complaints
about rising
arrangement, the agency
utility
bills,
but
their
protest
is really
receives 30 cents for each casket
against
inflation
and
govermnent.
sold to families who want a tree
"The company thinks more could be
planted on public land in memory
accomplished
if the citizens groups
of their deceased relatives.
would
join
it
in
a campaign against
The Forest Service, an agency
excessive
over-regulation
of utilities
of the Agriculture Department,
which
causes
a
lot
of
this
problem,"
entered Into the exclusive
he
added.
arrangement in 1976 with the
Batesville Casket Co. of
Batesville, Ind., and has received.
about '135,000 since then.
At 30 cents each, that means
more than 400,000 caskets have
been involved.

Today

Opposes SALT

GRANT RECEIVED - Members of the Orange
Township Volunteer Fire Department Wednesday
evening were presented a matching grant of $3,000
tolvard the purchase of a quick response vehicle. The
vehicle will be used for small house and vehicle fires ,
will hold :m gallon of water as well as emergency

p 0 St

equipment. John Dorka, assistant district manager of
the Ohio Department of Natural Resources, State
Forestry Division, made the presenation to Charles
(Red J Carr, president of the fire department. Shown
1-r, are, John Dorka, Carr, Bob Tripp, fire chief and
'
Jim Million, lor est manager at Shade River.

140 Takes Honors At
Department Convention

The American Legion Post 140 of Danbury, ·post chaplain, was
New Haven walked away with .a. selected "Blue Cap Legionnaire of
number of honors and awards while th e Year " at the Department
one of it' s members, Richard Convention in Clarksburg July 13-i5.

Vows attacks

Special offer

Weather

Showers and· thunderstonns, some
with heavy rains, through tonight.
Continued warm and humid with the
lows In the upper 60s. Variable
CLEVELAND (AP) -Here are
cloudiness ahd a good chance of more the wfDDlng 1111mbers drawo
showers or thunderstonns Saturday . Thursday ID lbe Oblo LoUery.
High In the low 80s. The chance of rain
Blue 34.2; Wblte 21; Gold 9; WID·
is 70 percent tonight and 50 percent a-thoo 897tt.
Saturday.
I

The commissioners exercised their
right to make a decision within 90
days on the subject. Commissioner
Richard Jones stated they would not
make any decisions baSed on the immediate testimony .

•

at

Coalition seeks
candle burnings

ELBERFELD$

Pledged assets and securities loaned (book value) :
U.S. Government obligations, direct and guaranteed,
pledged to secure deposits and other liabilities . . .. ....... .. . . .. . 1,061,610.06
TOTAL . . . .. .. . . . ....... ..... .. .. . . ... . .. • ..... . ... .. .. . . .. . 1,061,610.06

State of Ohio County of Meigs, ss:
Sworn to and subscribed before me this lOth day of July, 1979.
·
JoAnn Crisp, Notary Public
My ColiUIIisSlonExpires July 17,19113.

CANNERS

NO. 73

said.

•

I

I

FINAL WEEKEND FOR

Common stock:
a. No. shares authorized 16,000
b. No. shares outstanding 16,000 . .. . . . .... . .... . (par value)
400,000.00
Surplus .~ .. . ... . .. ..... . . ... . . . . . ....... . .. . .... . .. ... ... . . . . . 600,000.00
Undivided profits and contingencies and
other capital reserves .. .. ... . . . . . . ...... . .. . .. . ..... . , . ... . . , 820,000.00
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL ... : .... . . . .. . ....... .. ..... .. . ..... 1,820,000.0
TOTAL LIABILITIES AND
EQUITY CAPITAL .... . .. . .......... . ......... ... .... . . ... 23.472,000.00
MEMORANDA
Average for 30 calendar days (or calendar month)
ending with repcrt date :
a. Total deposits ....... ... . . .. . . . .. . ... ....... . ........... . . 21,603,000.00

VOL. XXVIII

Time

7 QT. &amp; 9 QT.

used during peak hours.
Two out of the 63 homes presented
evidence against annexation-on the
water issue because they were ser·
viced by private wells.
Since the village is in line for a
federal sewage project, Wingett con·
tinued, residents would like to be a
part of it.
"When the sewage system becomes
a reality, they want to be in on it," he

ship homeowners, wesented a
petition signed by 89 out of 112 persons
in the area favoring annexation to the .
village.
·
Wingett explained the homeowners
received village water on two private
lines, creating a situation in which
eight homes had water on a foot-anda-half long pipe. Some residents were
unable to dotheir laundry until.after
midnight because ~ lines could not

e

AEROMATIC
PRESSURE
CANNERS

Surviving are three daughters,
Mrs. Thomas (Esther) . Reynolds,
Point Pleasant, with whom Mrs.
Wamsley made her home; Mrs.
.Jessie M. (Helen) Abel, New Haven,
and Mrs. Betty McDennitt, Point
Pleasant; three sons, Rodney and
William, both of Point Pleasant, and
James R. of Columbus; two half·
sisters, Mrs. Ellen Hicks, Rand, W.
Va., and Mrs. Eulah Lyons,
Charleston; a brother, Fred Smith,
Columbus; 39 grandchildren, · 110
great1!f8ndchildren, and two greatgreat'f!l'lllldchildren.
Funeral services will be held Saturday, 1:30 p.m., in the Wilcoxen .
Funeral Home, with the Rev. Kemeth
Coleman &lt;iflciating. Burial will
follow in the Suncrest Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home after ~p.m. Fri~y.

CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDITION

No decision was made Thursday by
Me1gs County Commissioners to annex 63 homes to the village of Racine.
Testimony was given to the commbsioners. in Meigs Probate Court by
. res~dents m favor of annexing the
homes to the village· in order to get
village· water, sewage treatment and
land distribution.
Ernest Wingett and Dale Hart,
agents representmg the Sutton Town·

1be

Its

MOu.IE WAMSLEY
Mrs. Mollie Smith Wamsley, 89, :1»
Main Street, Point Pleasant, died
Wednesday evening in the Holzer
Medical Center after a short illness.
Born Jan. 7, 1800, in Henderson, she ·
was the daugher of the late Charlie
and Rebecca Casto Smith. She was a
lifelong resident of Mason County.
Mrs. Wamsley was preceded in
death by her husband, William, in
1965. She was also preceded by four
sons, Marvl!t, Charles, Cecil and

lloyd.
State No. 223X

Annexation issue still unresolved

American peonle
r

The "Blue Cap'' 'award is the

highest honor bestowed on any individual legionna ire and is awarded
to those men who are the most active, with the most achievements in
children and youth programs,
Americanism programs, service to
the community and for "God and
Country."

.

·,
j
i

I

;
BLUE CAP LEGIONNAIRE - Richard Danbury of the American
I,egion Post 140 of New Haven was honored as the ''Blue Cap Legionnaire
of the Year" at the Department Convention in Clarksburg July 13·15. This
award is the highest honor bestowed on any legionnaire and is received of
those who are the most active, and with the most achievements in
children and youth programs, service to the community and for ''God and
Country ."

The legion's national headquarters will present Danbury with this
award at the New Haven post home
at a later date.
The post itself placed first in the
state in civic affairs and won the
first place P.E. Kercheval religious
emphasis award for the most
programs sponsored in affiliation
with churches in the area. This
awar.d is named after Kercheval
who wrote the first line in . the
American Legion preamble - "God
and Country."
Child welfare programs, including
aid to the needy, underprivledged
and senior citizens, also won the post
honors. as the post that contributes
the most in these areas.
In addition, the New Haven post
placed second in the race for
sponsoring the most children and
youth programs. The post sponsors
the New Haven American Legion
Baseball Team, a little league
baseball team, youth basketball
(Continued on page 12)

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Galiollne
supplies around Ohio this weekend are
reported to be "adequate but a little
tight," while prices continue to rise,
following the pattern of recent weeks.
Spokesmen
for
the
Ohio
Department of Energy and the Ohio
Auto 'Club gave that assessment of
supplies Thursday. ·
The auto club's Ray Merrill also
gave more weight to the end-of-themonth time when more stations run
out oi allotted fuel and close.
Energy Department spokesman
Charles Morris said there appears to
be less demand at the end of July than
the holiday periods at the end of May
(Memorial
Day ) and
June
(Independence Day).
"People seem to have conserved,"
Morris said. " Demand is noticeably
down." He said it would be 60-90 days
before figures are available to show
the exact decline in consumption.
Profit rules changed by the U.S.
Department of Energy get part of the
blame fm- higher fuel prlcel In Obl.o
this week. The 1974 rule which had
frozen profit margins had recently
been amended to allow station owners
to pass through certain non-product
costs such as higher rents.
The new rule calls for 15.4 cents per
gallon across-the-board profit. While
it is effective Aug. 1, dealers were
allowed to apply the rate this week.
An energy department spokesman
said It raises the profit,margin three
cents to four cents per gallon.
An Associated Press price survey in
15 Ohio cities shows average costs
increased up to five cents per gallon
from the previous week.
. Prices rose more than 1 percent orne premium fuels went up 2 percent
- compared to a week ago when
increases per gallon were held to
fractions of a percent.
Price charts show self-serve
regular gasoline increased 1.2 cents
over the week, from 84.2 cents to 85.4
ents per gallon. Premium grades at
full«rvice pumps rose from 92.2
cents a week ago to 93.9 cents per
gallon this week.
~urvey reports indicate more
operator eliminated self-service
umps and some are buying less
premium fuels, opting for more of
their allotments • in regular and
,
unleaded grades.
Some Mansfield stations which had
curtailed operating hours because of
the fuel shortage are now extending
them again. One station manager
reported controlling sales by varying
pump prices: when supply is low the
price goes up and business drops off,
and conversely when his supply is
ample the price goes down and
business picks up.

School funds received
The July State School Foundation
subsidy payment of f70,331,502.55 to
611 Ohio city, exempted village IJIId
local school districts and 87 county
boards of education was reported
today by State Auditor Thomas E:
Ferguson.
Meigs County school districts and
county board of education received
the following : Eastern Local,
f70,169.66; Meigs Local, $124,509.23;
Southern U!cal, $72,219.91; countys
board, $17,219.91: Total payments
received ~.898.80.
MINOR TRUCK FmE
The Pomeroy Fire Department was
called Thursday at 4:40 p.m. to SR 325
near Danville, Salem Township
where a truck was on fire.
According to fire chief Charles
Legar the truck owned by Jolm Cald. well caught fire when the brake lining
broke. The fire was out when the
firemen arrived. There was very
minor damage .

NEW CRUISER- A new cruiser for the Village of
Pomeroy was delivered Wednesday. Bill Grueser left ·
of Pomeroy Motor Company, is shown presentm8 th~

keys to the new vehicle to Pomeroy Mayor Clarence·
Andrews. On the right Ls caplaln Henry Werry ol the
Pomr-oy Police Department.

·

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