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                  <text>10- The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Aug. '0,1979

World crude oil production hits record
World crude oil production set a record during the first six months of 1979
despite fears that political turmoil in Iran would worsen critical petroleum
shortages, nn industry journal reports.
However, "there's no assurance the brisk pace can be maintained for the
rest of the year, " said the Oil and Gas Journal, adding that because of the un·
certainty, prices will continue to rise unless COI1Sumption drops drastically.
The Tulsa-based journal said in its Aug. 27 edition world production
averaged 61.892 million barrels a day from January to June, compared with
58.736 million barrels a day in the first half of 1978.
The report comes after months of concern over energy shortages marked
by long gasoline lines and rising fuel bills. It was accompanied by other
reports of favorable trends :
+The Lundberg Letter, an authoritative oil marketing journal, said its
survey of 16,700 service stations showed U.S. Department of Energy gasoline
pricing regulations are being followed .

587 passengers
evacuated Sunday
STOCKHOLM, Sweden (API Rescue workers using helicopters
and boats struggled Sunday night to
evac43te 587 passengers, mostly
British, from a Danish ferry that ran
aground in a gale off the Swedish
coast.
The first evacuees, some 300
passengers, arrived in two boats at
the coastal city of Goteborg around
11 p.m. (6 p.m. EDT), said Ralph
Johansson , a spokesman at the
rescue center there.
Th e resc ue operation continued
into the early morning hours and
Johannson said winds reaching 39
mph made ~fforts "tricky."
He reported one of the passengers
was hospitalized with a broken leg.
There were no reports of other
injuries .

Authorities said the ferry, the
8,658-ton Win ston Churchill en route
from Goteborg to Newcastle,
Britain, was taking on water but was
firmly aground near Vinga Island
six miles off the coast.
Rescue officials declined to
speculate on the cause of the
accident.
But ooe passenger said the ferry
may have run aground because it

shifted course to avoid another
vessel.
"We sat to the front of the
restaurant and saw a little tanker
ahead which we felt was on a
collioon course," Nicholas Mercer,
an English teen-ager, told reporters
after he was taken by boat to Vinga.
"I believe the Winston Churchill
avoided the tanker and subsequently
ran aground," Mercer told the
Swedish TT news agency. "We sat in
the restaurant and had dinner when
the lightS suddenly went off and
everything tumbled."
He said he belonged to the
Lancastershire School Symphony
Orchestra, an 80-member group
returning to England following a
tour of Sweden.
Three helicopters assisted police,
coast guard and pilot boats in
carrying the passengers to Vinga.
Rescue officials said the passengers
would be transported to Goteborg to
spend the night in hotels.
'i'he Winston. Churchill, owned by
Danish shipping firm DFDS and
chartered by the Swedish Tor line,
ran aground at 7 p.m. (2 p.m. EDT),
officials said.

+Rep. Les Aspin, 0-Wis., said a study showed American homes and
businesses may bave stockpiled an extra 1 billion gallons of heating oil, and
the excess could ease a threatened shortage this winter.
The reports coincided with the !20th anniversary of the completion of the
world's first commercial oil well.
•
On Aug 27, 1859, Edwin Drake's well near Tittlsville, Pa., struck an oil'
pocket, starting a petroleum fever tbat began U.S. dependence on oil. His
success was discovered Aug. 28 +Oil Discovery Day.
In the first six months of 1!179, average non-communist production reached
~7.8 million barrels a day, according to the Oil and Gas Journal, despite a
shortfall of production in Iran.
The six-month average was 5.8 percent higher than the average for the
same period in 1978, the Journal said.
Saudi Arabia, the largest producer in the Organization of Petroleum Ex·
porting Countries, averaged almost 9 million barrels a day during the period

Area Deaths
OWENS.BRATrON
Owen S. Bratton, 52, 532 Fifth
Street, SW, Strasburg, Ohio, former
Meigs CoWlly resident, was dead on
arrival at the Union Hospital in
Dover Sunday.
Death was
attributed to a heart attack .
Mr. Bratton was born Feb. 7, 1927,
in Rutlnnd, a son of t~ late Oliver
and Linnie Hunt Bratton. He was a
member of the St. John United
Church of Christ in Strasburg and
was a past president of the
Strasburg Lions Cub. Mr. Brawn
was district plant manager of the
Cosmo Plastics Co., and was a
veteran of World War II having
served in the U. S. Navy.
SUrviving are hls wife, the former
Jean Luman ; two sons, Michael 0 .,
Chillicothe, and Stephen M. of
Strasburg; a sister, Mrs. Robert
(Betty) Musser of Rutland, a
brother, Orville Bratton, Cheshire,
and two grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held at
1:30 p.m: Wednesday at the TolandHerzig Funeral Home in Strasburg
with the Rev. William Hameister
officia ling. Burial will be in

HOSPITAL NEWS

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Saturday A~ons---none
Saturday Discharges--Shawn
O'Brien, Tina Jacobs, Phyllis
Knopp, Freida RusseU, Anna Rees.
Sunday A~ons-Matthew
Erwin, Middleport i Adra Swick,
Langsville; David Dunkle, Dexter ;
Paul Fife Cheshire; Meneford
JeweU, Langsville.
Sunday Discharges- -Opal
Webb, Avis Jackson , · Angela
VanCooney, Herbert Seth, Gladys
worth of municipal notes to six local . Dillon .
banks. The city still is attempting to
begin making payments on that
Holzer Medical Center
debt, and there no'w appears to be
Discharges
the likelihood of defaulting on $17.4
Aug. 24 - Ernestine Bauglunan,
milllon in loans held .by three city Annette Boyle, Mrs. Charles
accounts.
Buskirk and son, Terry Canterbury,
Kucinich has oullined a complex Suzetta Click, Charles Collins, Lotte
series · of plans involving the
Collins, William Crouse, William
transferring of funds in city Dillon, Tamela Dobson, Betty Dun·
accounis to meet the defaulted debt,. can, Faith Eisnogei, Jeffrey
as well as the latest financial crisis.
Gussler, Katherine Hagger, Ruthie
But council lawyer John .R . Jolmson, Veronica Johnson, Harry
Climacohas branded the mayor's
Kapps, Mrs. Steven Kearns ~and
plan as technically illegal, daughter, David Merry, Mildred
according to state law.
Mitchell, Mary Mulcher, Julie
After the last council meeting
Newell, Mrs. John Dorsett and
failed to provide an answer,
daughter, Forrest Payne, Leslie
Cleveland Law Director Jack
Penrod, William Perry, Lavetta
Schulman said : "We'll be working
Polly, Betty Robinson, Eric
over the weekend to try and figure
Roderick, Gregory Roderick, Dale
out some method by which the
Russell, Mrs. Roger Schinn and son,
administration can solve this
Loretta Slayton, John Spires, Mrs.
problem over the dead bodies of the
Paul Stacy and son, Mrs. Ronald
council who obviously don't want
Poler and-daughter, Bobby Walkup,
to "
Robert
Williamson, David Wyant.
· Kucin ich has proposed that
BiriiiB
council authorize refinancing of
August 24 - Mr. ansi Mrs.
$14.1 million in loans from the city
Raymond
Davis, a daughter,
waterworks construction fund that
Gallipolis;
Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Sider,
are due Oct. 5. The mayor also wants
a
daughter,
Jackson;
Mr. and Mrs.
council to waive a section of city and
George
Pope,
a
daughter,
Bidwell;
state laws requiring that a bond
Mr.
and
Mrs.
John
Prose,
a
counsel certify the $14.1 million
daughter,
Rio
Grande;
Mr.
and
Mrs.
refinancing, as well as $3.3 million
Charles Smith, a daughter, Leon.
refinancing which already has been
Discbargeo .
approved .
Aug.
25
Roger Berkley, Charles
While the mayor maintains that
Bledsoe,
Jeffery
Call, Charles Cary,
home rule is essential to municipal
Steve
Click,
Brenda
Coleman, Helen
fiscal policy, Climaco warned
Dempsey,
Christian
Diehl, Lillinn
council it would be acting illegally in
Donahue,
Lisa
Grady,
Brett
approving Kucinich 's plan because
Grosvenor,
Johnny
Call
and
son,
the city canol waive state
George
Hillend,
Jesse
Jeffers,
investment laws.
Russell Lear, Jr. , Sylvia Marks,
Danny Mitchell, Billy O'Brien, Mrs.
Ronald Pitchford and son, James
Richmond, Leslie Rister, Mrs.
(Continued from page 1)
Drexel Salyers and daughter, Tracy
Singleton,
Karen Skaggs, Larry
Godunov feared his wife would be
Wells, Roy
Tucker,
Lawrence
forced to return to Moscow and had
Whaley,
Sr.,
Alice
Weinegar.
heen "reassured that she would not
Blrlbs
get on the plane."
Aug
.
25
Mr.
and Mrs. James
Godunov, the first defector from
Mullins,
a
daughter,
Gallipolis; Mr.·
the Bolshoi , was granted asylum in
and
Mrs.
James
Long, a son,
the Unite&lt;l States on Thursday,
Wellston;
Mr.
and
Mrs.
John Hoff.
saying he wanted Ill explore new
man,
a
son,
Letart.
areas of dance.
Discharges
The rest of the Moscow-based
Aug.
28
John BW'Iile, Cathy
troupe left New York early tllday for
Frederick,
Karen
Cantrell, Mrs. Ar·
Chicago , where the y were to
thur
Dempaey
and
son, Christie
continue their American tllur.
Bobby
Halley,
Roberta
Hamilton,
ScheU said Miss Vlasova was
Harless,
Avis
Lawson,
Mrs.
Richard
married previously but had no
McCarty and son, Jessica McGuire,
children by either marriage. He said
Faye
Pancake, Glenn Roush, Terry
he did not know if Godunov left
Roush,
Pearl Seymour, Patricia
relatives in the Soviet Union .
Shaffer, Ernest Yinger.

Cleveland faces
another default
CLEVELAND ( AP) - Another
default may be on the horizon for the
city of Cleveland if Mayor Dennis J.
Kucinich and the City Council are
unable to bridge a chasm between
them that appears to be widening
each day.
Three council meetings caUed in
four days failed to produce any
action on the mayor's request for a
series of ordinances designed to
avoid defaUlt. In fact, the last of
those meetings, Saturday, drew only
21 council members when 22 .votes
would be required to pass the
measure .

Cleveland, Ohio's largest city ,
defaulted last Dec. 15 on $14 million

EPA documents
avai1ahle for
p,ililic viewing

According to Middleport Mayor
Fred Hoffman, the necessary En·
vironmental Assessment document.s
have been completed on the Page St.
project in Middleport and are
available for public inspection at the
Mayor's office, 237 Race St., Mid·
. dleport, between the hours of 8 a.m.
and 4 p.m. Monday through Friday.
The project consist.s of reconstruction of Page St. to a two-lane 20foot width highw11y from Powell St.
to the boat laWlching facility on
Raiiroad St. Some CW'b work,
drainage and driveway construction
will also be involved.
Changes in width, grade, and
alignment plus the drainage, curve
and intersection improvements in
this proj ect will enhance safety for
all users of the improved street
through longer sight distances, expanded side clearance for passing,
better vi.'!ion , improved, turning at
intersections, plus a drier (and thus
safer ) road surface.
This was considered the minimum
proposal that would properly
upgrade this street.
According to Division 10, Ohio
Dept. of Highways/ this project
should be available to process for
sale when Federal Off.System funds
become available in October.
Agencies offering comment on the
environmental assessment of this
project were Ohio Dept. of Natural
Resources, Ohio Dept. of Highway
Safety, Ohio Histone Preservation
Office, Ohio E;nvironmentai Protection Agency, U. S. Dept. of 'the Intenor, U. S. Dept. of Agriculture and
the U. S. Corps of Engineers.
ASK TOWED
Anyone wishing further inRalph
Edward
Searls, 21 , Rutland ,
formation on the project may con·
and
Bernice
Roland
Barrett, 16,
tact tile Middleport Mayor's office
J,angsville.
or Division 10, ODOT at Marietta.

Ballerina's

Blrlbs .

Aug. 26 - Mr. and Mrs. Gregory
Lane, a son, Crown City; Mr. and
Mrs. Dale Sisson, a son, Minersville;
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Massey, a
daughter, HamdeD.

+ 500,000 barrels a day above its self-imposed ceiling.
Communist production averaged more than 14 million barrels a day, a 3.8
percent increase over the same period in 1978, and the Journal said the
Soviet Union, the world's largest producer, boosted daily output to 11.5 ,
million barrels, up 2. 7 percent'from last year.
The United States, ranked third behind Saudia Arabia and the Soviet
Union, averaged 8.6 million barrels a day, up0.4 percent.
Meanwhile, the Lundberg Letter survey concluded for the first time that .
federal gas price controls 811! actually working.
.
Publisher Dan Lundberg SS!d dealers ·seem to be obeying federal rules
that fimit profit.margins. He attributed rising prices to wholesale price In·
creases.
"What is happening is that although the retail price has continued to go up,
the margin of profit allowed for dealers is set at 15.4 cents per .gallon over
acquisition costs and they are generally obeying the guldellnes," Lundberg
said.

Sign-language class slated

Grandview Union Cemetery.
Friends may caU at the funeral
home from 2 to. 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
Tuesday.
AUCE WINEGAR
Alice Winegar, 82, a resident of 133
Second Ave., died at 5:15p.m. Satur·
day in Hol2er Medical Center. She
was a retired employee of University Hospital, Colwnbus.
She was born Aug. 2, 1897, in Pl.
Pleasant, daughter of the late Allen
and Ida Catherine Presley Hartley.
She married James E. Winegar on
Dec. 29, 1921, at Akron. He preceded
her in death in 1966.
The following nieces and nephews
survive : Mrs. Owen (June) Cantrell,
Gallipolis; Mrs. Richard (Sara
Daune) Owen, Middleport; Mrs. Jim
(Ida Lee) Roller, Waldorf, Md.;
Mrs. Henry (Nancy ) Cooper, West
. Chester, Pa.; Mrs. Carolyn Sue
Hickman, Middleport; Jack Har·
Uey, Charleston, W. Va., and Don
Denison, Berkley, Calif.
Three brothers and two sisters
preceded her in death.
The Winegars returned to
Gallipolis from Colwnbus in 1965.
She was a member of the
American Legion Auxiliary ,
,
Gallipolis.
Funeral services will be held 2
p.m. Tuesday at the Waugh-HalleyWood FWleral Horne with Rev.
Frank Hayes officiating. Burial will
be in Gravel Hill Cemetery,
Cheshire.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 7 until 9 o'c:Iock this
evening.
American Legion AUiiliary services will be held 7:30 this evening.

The Gallia.Jackson-Meigs ComniWllty Mental Health Center an·
noWlced the beginning of a sign
lan811age class on Tuesday, Sept. 18,
from 7-ll:30 p.m.
This is. a reminder for people to
call the Center and sign up. Tbe in·
structor for the course is a specialist
in sign language and Is teaching the
alphabet, basic vocabulary and
idioms.

Miller announces staff appointments
Due to the recent departure of his
top assistant Dave Brown, who '
resigned to accept a poaiti~ in
private enterprise, loth District
Congressman Clarence Miller today
announced the appointment of Phil
Straw as his Executive Assistant,
Linda RO\ferick as Washington Of.
fice Manager, and Mrs. Judy Norris
as District Office Manager. All three
are long time employees of the
Miller staff.
Phil Straw, a native of Athens, is a
graduate of the University of Ken·
lucky, where he received a degree in
journalism in 1967.
He has been with the
Congressman's office since 1970. He
and his wife BeckY, a native of
Belpre, Ohio, and daughter Amy,
reside in College Park, Maryland., ,
Linda Roderick is a six-year
veteran of the Miller Washington
staff. Originally from Canton, Ohio,
Linda formerly served as the
Congressman's personal secretary
before being elevated to her new
post. Linda attended Mary

Cardiology review
session Tuesday

(Continued from page 1)
site at the front of the Sheraton·
Waikiki Hotel.
Miller was charged six years
ago with wounding a 50-year-old
woman in another sniping in·
cident in Waikiki. However, a
state judge dlsmisseri the attempted murd,,. charge m
February, 1974, after a team of
psychiatrists found him mentally
incompetent to stand trial. At
that time, Circuit Judge Masato
Doi ordered Miller confined to the
Hawaii State Hospital for the
mentally ill, saying he would be a
danger to society if released.

WALLET LOST
.John Lightfoot has reported that
he lost his waUet sometime while on
a run with the fire department to the
Happy Hollow area. Anyone finding
the wallet is asked to caU Lightfoot
at 992-3786, the Ohlo Power Co.
r.here he is employed.

.

As indicated previously, the cour.;
se Is designed to aid teachers in the;
public schools, p.Uell8ionala in tb(
medica] field , parents and the!'
general public to communieate will!;
hearing impaired individuals Inclassroom settings, emergency
situations, and for pleasure. The fee ·
for the class is S5 for the entire nine
week session.

A training session entiUed Cardiology Review will be . held on
Tuesday evening at 7 o'clock in the
Fifth Floor Classroom at the Holzer
Medical Center. Acting as the in·
structor for this most infonnative
class will be Gene H. Abels, M.D., a
member of the h&lt;&gt;~pital Medical
Staff.
This special program on Car·
diology is open io all interested
hospital persoMei and emergency
medical persoMei who desire to
take advantage of such an
educational opportunity, offered at
no charge.
Dr. Abels will conduct in depth
discussions on Anatomy and
Physiology, specifically the struc·
IW'e of the heart, circulation and
function of the heart; approach to
patient assessment; cardiovascular
problems ; a normal Elec ·
trocardiogram ; Arrhythmia
re&lt;;ognition ; cardiac drugs and prehospital treatment. To close the
evening, those attending will be in·
volved in a practice session with
supposed "patients" and Arrhyth·
miaAnnie.
Those interested in attending are
urged to be at the 5th Floor
Classroom of the Holzer Medical
Center on time Tuesday evening so
that the Cardiology Review may
start prompUy at 7 o'clock.

Washington
College
in
FredericksbW'g, Vl.rglnia.
Judy Norris, a seven year veteran ;
of the Congressman's staff, is a ;
resident of Lanca,.ter, Ohio, where ,
she resides with ~er husband Bob ~
and two daughters Michele and ,
Melissa. Judy will ~ge the •
Congresaman 's district office which :
is located in LanCBllter.

Apple Grove
News Notes
Recent visitors of Mr. and Mri
Ronald RusseU and family were Mr,
and Mrs. Dana Lewis of Clifton, Mr:
and Mrs. Bob venoy' daughter Robin;
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Russell, Mrs. Ethel
Clark of Pagetown, Mr. and Mrs. Don
RusseU, Eari .•RW!Sell', Mrs. Bertha
RusseU, Mr. and Mrs. Steve Hagey
and children of Wolf Pen.
Don Bell is a medical patient at
Holzer Medical Center.
Mr. and Mrs. Don BeU and Mrs.
·Doris Hensler enjoyed a cookout at
the home of Mr. and .Mrs. David Hensler recenUy .
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Bell were recent
dinner guests ol Mr. and Mrs. Don .
Bell.
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Rou..h and
daughter, Kim, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
Roush, Mrs. Iva Orr, Mr. and Mrs.
Louie Pickett and daughter, Tracy,
were shopping at the new K mart
store at Gallipolis.
PATIENT AT HOLZI".R
Troy Zwilling, Syracuse, i.s a
surgical patient at the Holzer
Medical Center. The rocm number is
223.

HOG REPORT
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Direct
hogs (Fed-State ): BarroWliB[ld gilu
.25lower, demand moderate. U.S. I·
2, 210.230 lbs. country pointa, 40.50411.75, few at 41, plants, 41·41.50. U.S.
I.J, 23(}.250 lbs. COWllry points, 39.7540,50, plants, 40.25-41.25.
Receipts Friday: Actuala 8,200,
today's estimates ·8,00),

VOL XXVIII NO. 95

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Nation's schools hit
by teacher walkouts
district's 43,000 pupils, but union of.
By 'lbe Alaociated Press
ficials
said 65 percent to 70 percent
Thousands of striking teachers
were absent .
.were olf the job in seven slates again
In Louisiana, a strike by the 1,1100·
today. In Oklahoma City, the school
member
Jefferson
Parish
district refused to send negotiators
back to tbe bargaining table, saying ·
it might be illegal to do so.
Other strikes were reported in
suburban New Orleans, where more
than 2,000 teachers walked out, and
in some scbool districts in Michigan,
Ohio, Illinois, PeMSyivania and In·
diana.
Oklahoma City Scbool Superin·
tendent Thomas Payzant ref used a
request by the striking American
Federation of Teachers to resume
By Associated Press
talks today.
Mild,
rainy
weather is expected to
In a statement issued Monday
the Buckeye state.
continue
across
night, Payzant cited language in a
The
National
Weather
Service says
state law barring teacher strikl'.'i
weak
high
pressure
system
the
that says school boards are relieved
keeping
skies
cloudy
will
hold
over
ol the duty to negotiate with teacher
of
the
eastern
United
States
moat
organizations that strike.
' 'That is extremely disap· through Wednesday. The warm,
pointing," federation President hwnid air associated with this
Mike Barlow said. "That indicates system has resulted in periodic
to us the superintendent and the showers and thunderstorms across
board don't wan! to reach a set- the state, and the threat of rain
remains.through Wednesday.
Uement."
Temperatures are expected to
Payzant said less than half of the
range
from the low to mid 60s across
system's approximately 2,300
the
state
tonight and highs will be in
teachers observed picket lines Moo·
the
low
to
mid 80s Wednesday.
dav. the first day Of classes for the
Scattered showers and thun·
derstorms were reported in northern
Ohio during the night. Several heavy
lhWlderstorrns developed early
today in extreme northeastern Ohio
from Cleveland to the Pennsylvania
border. The southern part of the
state, however, generally was rainfree .
Skies were cloudy across the state
and some patchy fog was reported.
Overnight lows were in the mid to
upper 60s.
Some progress was reported
Monday toward ending a walkout
by bus drivers whose fourth
EXTENDED FORECAST
strike in ,seven years left some
A ciiiDce of abowen or tbwl800,000 Southern California comdentorma 'lbunday tbrwgb
muters stranded, put ·extra
Salunlay.
HJg._ ID tile upper 7011
pressure on gas suppUes· and
to
low
11011:
LowaiD
tile ....
clogged freeways.
But in Northern california,
another 600,001 riders in the San
Francisco area faced loss of ser·
vice later in the week .
In Ohio, meanwhile, trains and
Mostly doudy with a chance of
buses roUed again for 200,000
showers
or thunderstorms tonight
Cleveland commuters with an
and Wednesday. Lows tonight in the
agreement to resume contract
mid to upper 60s. Highs Wednesday
talks Tuesday. in the low to mid 80s. The chance ol
rain 50 percent tonight and Wed·
nesday.
BROOK PARK, Ohlo (AP ) The Ford Motor Co. aMounced
MEETING CANCELLED
the layoffs of 4,400 woriCers at its
· A regular meeting of Middleport
casting plant in the Cleveland
Village CoWlcil scheduled for Mon·
subwi&gt; of Brook Park, effective
day night was cancelled due to the
Monday.
lack of a quorum. The three COWl·
The workers wiU return to their
cilmen who reported for the planned
jobs Sept. 4, the day after the
meeting were Marvin Kelly, Dewey
Labor Day holiday .
Horton and William Walters.

Rainy weather

will continue
around Ohio

Progress TWted

Weather

Federation of Teachers entered its
third day today without a budge in
financial positions by either side, a
federal mediator said.
None of the parish's 85 public
schools was closed. Classes were
staffed by administrators, substitutes and non-61riking teachers.
Less than half of the '11 ,500 pupils
in the district showed up for school
Monday.
In teacher strikes elsewhere :
- Nearly 2,300 teachers struck
five districts in Michigan on Mon1day. The Michigan Education
Association estimated 411,000
teachers in the state were without
contracts, including the 12,000
teachers in Detroit, where classes
are scheduled to begin Sept. 5.
-Teachers in two southern Ohio
districts struck Monday. Only 13
percent of the 6,001 students in the
Ohio Valley Local School District
showed up for classes while 78 percent of teachers stayed off the job. In
the Frontier Local School District,
none of the 78 teachers reported for
work to prepare for classes for I, 450
students scheduled to begin Wednesday.
-An orientation meetinj;( for 3,600
students in Park Ridge , ru., was
called off Monday when about :100
teachers formed picket Unes. Strikes
alsO were reported at the DeSoto
Consolidated School and schools in
the Sparta School District.·
-some '00 teachen in -the Chartiers VaUey school district in Pennsylvania struck Monday, while a
walkout of 400 teachers at Bethel
Park continued. Both districts are in
the Pittsb~h area.
- The leadership ol the Tippecanoe County Education
Association in north-&lt;:entrallndiana
said a strike of the system 's 387
teachers would begin inunediately
after an approval vote Monday
night. Mean,while, the 270-member
Crown Point Teachers Association
picketed one high ~hool Monday.
.~

Cooperation so ught
Principal Robert Morris is seeking
parents' cooperation for those who
might be transporting their children
to Pomeroy and Middleport Schools.
Morris said that sometimes,
parents transport a pupil in the mornings to the buildings and ask that
the child return home on the school
bus. This creates a problem in ad·
ministration ln that sometimes a
child . would not ride the same bus
home that would take him to school
in the morning .
Parents transporting children in
the mornings are asked to report the
euct location of their horne to the
office of the schools so that the child
can be put on the correct bus for
returning home.

Mrs. Roush, grand champ
cake decorating fair winner

DRILLING HOLES
George and Larry
· Greenlees, of the Greenlees Construction Co., Marie!·
Ia, are working at the Meigs High l!chool where they
,are drilUng holes in the side of the academic wing. Hardened steel rods will be nm from the side of the struc·
lure and bolted into the interior structural steel of the

Flac~Mist
NON-AEROSOL

Col&lt;?gne Spray
ONCE-A-YEAR SPECIAL
ONL~$295
IN ~AVORITE COTY FRAGRANCES:
EMERAUDE, L'AIMANT, L'ORIGAN, IMPREVU
See all the other items by Coty - Cologne • Powders - Perfumes · Lipstock - Gill Sets. On the 2nd
lloor,

MRS. NANCY ROUSH is pictured with the cake which won for her the
best of show.in the advanced teachers division in cake decorations at the
Ohio State Fair. Her silver goblet and other prizes which she won.with the
attractive cake are also pictW'ed.

~ Wages

:)
:"{·

WASHINGTON (AP)
are not keeping up with inflation, farm income will be less than expeeled this year and U.S. investments overseas are on the increase, government figures show.
·

\('
}:::

;:;:;:;

figured at an anriual rate.

.. ..

I rE1T:§~g;.::_::::::=::.::::
.1.1.1

.·.·.·.·

~~

~=W~~~~~==:== •

American workers a year from now will buy 5 percent less than they do now, the department said.

:.:!!,1.,,:.:',,•.:,

1\,uft~:!::~i~i§:!~~~§JI@M~
Ballerina, 52 others
RAISES RATE

NEW YORK (AP) - Cbaae
MallbaU811 Balik IOday raised lbe
prime rste to 12'1• percent, tile
blgbeat level ever for loaDS to
major corporalloos.
Cbaae, the nation's tblrd
largest baak, did not explala the
IDcreue from 12 percent, but
ecoaomlc aaalyaw bad expected
the lncreue foUowlng recent IDcreuealn other Interest rates.
1be Federal Reserve moved
lut week to force up abort-term
Interest rates iD an effort to con·
\troliDflallon.

Nancy Roush continued her long
line of wins in cake decorating by
coming up with grand champion and
best of show honors at the Ohlo State
Fair.
A resident of Tuppers Plains, Mrs.
Roush entered four cakes in the Ohio
The Meigs County Sheriff's Office
State Fair.
investiga~ one accident Monday.
She won three blue ribbon first
Edna L. Buchanan, Route I, Reed·
places and a red ribbon second sville, reported she was traveling
place. She went ahead in the ad- east on County Road 34 in the Mor·
vanced teachers division to be nJng Star area and lost control of ber
named grand champion and won a 1m Chevrolet Nova in gravel on a
silver goblet for having the best of curve. The vehicle ran off the road
show·in the division.
on the left, striking and knocking
Her winning cake, suitable for a down five fence posts and wire,
man's birthday observnnce, is a 10. owned by Harrison Smith, Racine.
inch beveled cake with colorful, The front of the vehicle came to rest
edible bird plaques - aU done in in a small creek.
exquisite colors. The cake features
No injuries were reported, but
pine boughs and cones, all edible, there was .slight damage to the left
around the top layer and colorful rear fender.
bird feathers, edible also, around the
Sheriff James J . Proffitt reports
ljase.
that Robert Stanley of Huntington,
Mrs. Roush recenUy showed the W. Va., notified the office Monday
same cake at Louisville, Ky., that approximately 14 window~ were
Parkersburg, W. Va., and Erie, Pa.
broken out of a house he owns on
At Erie, she won first place in the New Lima Road. Apparently, the
men's birthday cake division and damage was done sometime in July .
won the Wilton Professional
The incident is under ln·
Medallion against some 70 cakes In vestigation.
the professional division of tlie show.
Mrs.·Roush was in Fort Wayne, Ind.,
FREE CLOTHING DAY
In July where she took a number ci
Free clothing day will be held at
classes in furihering her cake
the Salvation Army Headquarters,
decoraUng art.
Butternut Ave., Pomeroy, Thursday
Tbe State Fair winning cake wUI
be displayed at the International from 10 a.m. until noon. All area
show to be held at Providence, R. !., .• residents in need of clothing are
welcome.
next nlonth .

,,

building. This is one of two corrective atepa being
carried out by the company to improve structural
defects which have developed in tbe !'line-year old high
school. The corrective processes are expected to be
completed by Sept. 5 when classes open at the scbool.

\·\ w ages way behmd mflation·~·\;

Deputies probing
minor complaints

Rich, captivating, irresistable!

.1'

en tine

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

ELBERFELDS

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

at y

e

Ford layoffs

FAIRVIEW
Mr. and Mrs. RusseU Roush and
Mandy Russell visited Mr. and Mrs.
Eddie Hupp and son, Jeremy, Sunday
afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Manuel, Robin
and Dnnlla, visited Mr. and Mrs.
Gilbert Hart, and her father, Earl
Hart a recent Sunday at Racine. Earl
Hart went to Florida Monday with
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Hart wbo will be
making their home at St. Cloud, Fla.

•

hack in USSR today
NEW YORK (AP) - A 73\'z.hour
showdown over 'ballerina Ludmilla
Vlasova's departure from the United
States could have been setUed long
before a compromise finally cleared
the way for her return to Moscow,
i:J.s. and Soviet officials agree.
But they disagreed Monday on
who was to blame for the episode,
each saying the other was at fault in
the diplomatic stalemate.
And both sides claimed vindication when Miss Vlasova
declared she chose to return to the
Soviet Union without her husband,
Bolshoi Ballet dancer Afexander
Godunov, who defected last week.·
Miss Vlasova and 52 other Soviet
citizens returned to Moscow early
today aboard the Aeroflot jetliner
detained at Kennedy International
Airport while U.S. authorities sought
assurances that she was leaving
voluntarily.
·
_
In Moscow, the Soviet news agency Tass said Miss Vlasova bad
"displayed the feeling of lofty civic
duty and colll'age in the face of
police threats and blackmail " in
returning.
It did not mention Godunov's
defection, the most recent in a series
of defections by Soviet ballet stars,
inclwjing Mikhail Baryshnikov and
Rudolf Nureyev.
Miss VI.asova left the United
!jtatea following a compromise in
whlch U.S. officials were allowed to
speak with her in the ''non-coercive
environment" they had demanded.
President Carter and · Soviet
President Leonid Brezhnev reportedly took active roles in the set·
Uement.
The New York Times reported
today that the two national leaders
exchanged messages during the
weekend in an effort to bring the incident to a conclusion.
Tass said the United States was

..

guilty of "crude provocation" aimed
at "worsening Soviet-American
relations. " It accused the United
States of ·:acts ol cruelty" to women
and children aboard the jet.
Soviet negotiator Evgeny
Makeyev called the settlement "a
victory of justice," adding, ''Our
stand was right from the beginning."
However, the Carter ad·
ministration, which has criticized
the Soviets for hwnan rights
violations involving the emigratioo
of Jews, said it defended Mills
Vlasova 's freedom to decide where
she wanted to live.
White House press secretary Jody
Powell said the incident established
a principle that foreigners have a
right to choose freely whether to
leave the United States.
' The standoff came at a time when
the Carter administration is trying ·
to sell the SALT II anns treaty to
(Continued on page&amp;)

Man injured in
Rt. 33 mishap
One person was injured during a
one-vehicle accident investigated
Monday by the Gallia-Meigs Post,
Highway Patrol.
Called to the scene on U.S. 33, fourtenths of a mile north of SR 7, at 7:06
p.m., officers report a north bound
pickup, towing a trailer, operated by
Robert Haley, 22, Pomeroy, went out
of control wben the trailer began to
sway.
The vehicle was demolished when
it passed off the right side of the
roadway, struck a guardraU and
traveled down an embankment.
Haley displayed visible signa ci injury, but was not immediately
treated.

�3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomerov. 0., Tuesday. Awz. 28. 1979

2- The Daily Sentinel, MiddlePQrt-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesdav . Au2. ?A Jq?q

Guns and cops
REP
RPBJK

~...., Ofltwsu~

c~W'Kot.

"Say, Red, there's an old salt up here on South Padre who's come up with
approach that might interest you ... "

Editorial opinions,
comments

IN WASHINGTON
Martha Angle and
·Robert Walters

Young's fatal mistake
By Robert Wallen
WASHINGTON (NEA) - The
elaborate theories being fashioned
to explain all the real and imagined
causes and effects of 1'affaire Andrew Young offer little more than
reaffirmation of Washington's First
Law of Swnmer Survival.
That unofficial but irrevocable
law holds that because so little of
consequence happens here in
August, whatever does occur is
embellished, embroidered and
otherwise exaggerated far beyond
reality.
·
Congress nas recessed for the entire month, the Supreme Court is
gone for the whole swnmer and
President Carter's entourage is
floating down the Mississippi River.
Those who remain in the capital
must seize upon whatever slim pickings are available to maintain
Washington's reputation as a neverending source of fascination, entertainment and news for the rest of the
country.
Young's resignation as U.S. ambassador to the United Nations is
certain to affect this country's relations with tbe Israelis, the Palestine
Liberation Organization and
assorted other parties in the Middle
East.
The ambassador's departure undoubtedly also will bave some impact on domestic PQlitics, especially
Carter's supPQrt - or lack thereof among black and Jewish voters.
But obfuscated by the almost
byzantine accounts of complex national and international ramifications of Young's resignation is the
mundane story of a subordinate who
caused his bosses to be hwniliated
because he didn't tell them the truth
about what he was doing.
"If Young had given the department a complete and honest account
of what transpired when he was first

asked, he'd probably still be ambassador today," says one State
Department insider. "We've finessed our way out of far' more difficult
situations in the past - when we
knew what we were dealing with."
Another diplomatic source suggests that Young's fatal mistake was
placing Secretary of State Cyrus R.
Vance in the untenable PQsition of
being unable to command a truthful
rePQrt of a key employee's activities.
The flap began on a Saturday,
when Newsweek magazine queried
the State Department about a rePQrt
that Young had held a substantive
meeting with a PLO representative
in the New York City apartment of a
third diplomat.
When questioned about the
meeting by C. William Maynes,
.assistant secretary of slate for international organization affairs, Young
offered a disingenuous reply. "That
was not a lie," he lat~r explained.
" It just wasn't the wholetruth."
On the following Monday,
Newsweek published a brief account
of Young's "inadvertent meeting"
with the PLO official. On the same
day, State Department spokesman
Thomas Reston told rePQrters at the
department's daily press briefing
that Young's encounter with the
PLO representative was "an accidental meeting" -a misstatement
of fact.
If Young had misled his superiors
about a matter of less interest to the
news media, the entire affair probably could have been quietly
papered over as an "unfortunate
misunderstanding" or "breakdown
in corrunwtications. ''
But no institution, whether a
private COfPIJration or a public agency, can afford the luxury of having
an employee's personal deception
produce public embarrassment for
the entire organization.

Capital ideas
WASillNGTON (AP) - If the appetite tor punishment has 'varied
·
Senate goes along with a staff with the times .
For example, it censured both
counsel 's recommendation to
censure Herman Talmadge, he'll be South Carolina senators, Sens. John
only the eighth U.S. senator in McLaurin and Benjamin Tillman,
history to suffer the punishment.
for fist-fighting on the Senate.floor in
In fact , the Senate has expelled 1902.
more members than it has cedsured.
But in 1850 Sen. HenryS. Foote of
11 threw one out in 1797 and then 14 Mississippi was not punished for
during the Civil War, all on charges drawing and cocking a loaded
or treason .
revolver on the Senate floor .
The House , on the other hand , has
The Union Pacific.Oedit Mobilier
expelled three members :._ all bribery scandal In 1873 led to
accused of treason during the Civil censure of two House members, but
War - and censured 19.
the Senate took no action on a
The Senate may keep censures at recommendation that one senator be
the remarkably low number of seven expelled and another censured.
for a while.
Sen . Timothy · Pickering was
Sources
say the
Ethics censured in 1811 for disclosing a
Qmrnittee's special counsel, Carl secret letter on the Louisiana .
Eardley , recommended that Purch ase , and Sen . Benjamin
Talmadge be added to the list. llul Tappan of Ohio was censured in 1844
some Ethics Committee members for leaking President John Tyler 's
are reported looking for a less message on the annexation of Texas.
Afifth senator, Hiram Bingham of
severe action.
Talmadge, D-Ga., is accused of Coonecticut, was censured in 1929
overcharging the Senate some for hiring a manufacturering agent
•~o . ooo for his official Senate ' to advise him how to vote on a tariff
expenses and of diverting campaign bill.
Th en came the recent-times
cootributions to his own use . He
censures of Sen. Joseph McCarthy,
denies both charges.
One reason the Senate has R-Wis., in 1954 and Thomas J. Dodd,
censured so few members is that it's D-Conn ., in 1967.

WASHINGTON (AP ) + Jim Fyfe
is a powerfully built man standing
well over 6 feet tall. He drinks beer
·and smokes cigars and spins out endless tales of the violence a tid pathos
and yes, the humor, of enforcing the
law for 16 years in New York City.
Not long ago, Fyfe traded his .38caliber Police Special and
lieutenant's badge for a Ph.D. Along
· the way, he studied police brutality
and how to curb it.
His conclusions may hold lessons
for many cities troubled by mounting complaints that PQlice officers
shoot, maim and sometimes kill
citizens in unnecessary displays of
force .
Fyfe found that a PQlicy change at
the top, made clear .to officers at all
and· strictly enforced, can
"drastically reduce" the frequency
of PQlice shootings at citizens.
That sort of PQlicy change is what
the Justice Depa.rtment hopes to accomplish with its unprecedented
an federal court suit against the
. Philadelphia PQlice department. Mter Houston . police made policy
changes, Justice Department officials decided it was unnecessary to
!Ue suit there, Attorney General
Benjamin Civiletti said recently.
Police critics in Houston and
elsewhere argue that a restrictive

Business
•
mirror

PQlicy alone cannot wipe out use of
unnecessary force by PQlice. Fyfe
agrees that the PQlicy must be accompanied by a high-level commibnent .to punish violators. Minor
penalties, frequenUy imPQsed, may
be more effective than hanh punishment used more reluctantly, he observed.
A change to a de(inite policy +
with a conunibnent + occurred in
New York in 1972. That's when
Patrick V. Murphy was PQlice commissioner and imposed a PQlicy
that:
+Reminded officers "to preserve
and protect life wherever possible."
+Instructed them to employ "only
the minimum amount of force"
necessary to accomplish a mission.
+ Prohibited officers from firing a
gun "where lives ol innocent persons
may be endangered."
·
+Prohibited firing at a moving
Vehicle.
+ Stated that officers carry guns
' 'for personal protection against persons feloniously attacking an officer
or another at close range. "
Before then, officers had been .
guided only by a vague law allowing
shooting to defend life or to apprehend an escaping suspect
charged with a serious crime. That
is the tradition in American policing.

SOCIA]_. SI~ClTRITY

The practice of shooting at fleeing
felons has produced much of the
current controversy' particularly
when the suspect turns out to have
been innocent.
The Murphy policy also required
officers to file lengthy written reP~Jr­
ts every time a gun was fired and appointed high-level police officials to
a Fireanns Discharge Review
Board to judge the propriety of each
shooting.
The PQlicy, with only minor
changes, remains in effect today.
Examining the records, Fyfe
found that 831 officers were involved
In 630 shooting incidents in 1971. The
figures rose in 1972 to 1,051 officers
and 803 incidents, though there was
a sharp drop toward the end of the
year after the new PQlicy was imposed.
But in 1973, Fyfe rePQrled, the
numbers dropped to m officers involved in 574 incidents. The incidents continued to fall, so that by
1978, only 491 officers were engaged
in 372 shootings, aild almost haU of
these involved shots fired accidentally and those fired to kill
stray animals.
Fyfe said the type ci incidents that
declined most were the shootings at
fleeing felons.
New York PQlice, of course, still
face periodic allegations of unwarranted shootings at citizens.
The Justice Departmenl announced Monday that it had ordered
an investigation into the PQlice
shooting last week of 26-year-old
Luis Baeo; Twenty-tour shots were
fired, and 16 hit Baeo.
Police say Baeo attacked them
with scissors, but witnesses say the
shots were not provoked. Baeo had a
history of mental illness.
Nevertheless, such controversies
arise less often in New York than in
Philadelphia, for example, and
other, much smaller cities.
In addition, Fyfe said the statistics
rebut the argument that weapons
restrictions leave officers
vulnerable to armed criminals.
Fyfe found thalthe number of eXficers injured or killed in the line of
. duty also declined sharply following

NEW YORK (AP) - If the
projections of some Wall Street
analysts are correct, Wednesday 's
Bill Steif
news will bring further confirmation
draw them.
Help for worker's widow
of the much-discussed slowing of the
However, a disabled homemaker
By
Wllllam
SUef
U.S. economy.
(Seventh
of
14
parts)
can
begin collecting her widow's
The subject of their expectations
What
happens
if
the
family
breadbene.fit
at age 50.
is the Commerce Department's
winner
dies
before
retirement?
For
help in calculating your
monthly rePQrl on the index of
•
His
widow
is
protected.
She
gets
the
benefits,
consult my book "What
leading indicators - the nearest
woUld
same
amount
her
husband
You've
Got
Coming in Social Security
thing government statisticians have
have
received
in
Social
Security
and
Medicare."
For your copy, send
yet developed to an economic
benefits at age 65.
$1.50 plus 50 cents postage and hancrystal ball.
She could begin receiving her
The index is a collection of such widow 's benefit any time after tur- dling to "What You've Got Coming in
data as bullding pennits, stock ning 60, but the payments would then Social Security and Medicare" in
prices and other indicators which be reduced slightly for each month care of this newspaper, P. 0. Bo1&lt; 489,
tend to "lead" the general economy, she was short of 65 when she began to Radio City Station, New York, N. Y.
10019.
and thus presumably tip off its likely
A widow (or widower) 60 or over
future direction.
can
now remarry without losing
Its past record is by no means the numlier of companies reporting ·
benefits accruing to her from a dead
perfect, and the impact of the slow delivery of items they have on
SPQuse. Or she can opt to receive half
preliminary numbers is reduced by order.
of her new husband 's benftits.
the PQlicy change, dropping from a
the fact that they are almost always
This
provision
was
inserted
into
the
weekly mean ci 4.4 to 2.5.
"We lake this as an indication that
!977 amendments to the Social
The review board, he said, has
revised in .later reports. But they invo1untary inventory building has
still get considerable attention from
Security
law
to
take
care
ci
situations
readlly
punished those who shoot in
begun ," he said . "When companies
in
which
beneficiaries
were
living
violation
of the PQlicy, though the
economy-watchers.
begin to gel faster delivery from
together without marrying for fear of penalties usually have 'been no more
According to the projections of their suppliers, it is evidence that
losing benefits.
severe than loss ol five days' Pf'Y.
Richard B. Hoey, an economist at industrial supply..Jemand is shifting
Remarriage under age 60, however,
Fyfe watched the review process
the brokerage firm of Bache Halsey from excess demand to excess
still means forfeiture ci benefits.
and concluded that board members
Stuart Shields Inc., the July report supply."
Surviving parents of a worker were fair , but "the perception the
due Wednesday will show a decline
The level of inventories is an
covered by Social Security may be wlice officer has is that they're a
of 0.5 percent.
important factor in the pace of the . eligible for benefits if they can prove bunch ci hatchet men."
That would mark a continuation of economy because of the strong
the deceased was their sole supPQrt.
Fyfe said he once suggested to a
the erratic downward trend the influence it has on production and
Such
parents
must
be
62
or
older.
review
board member that the
inde&lt; has been in for the past business earnings. If inventories
Widows
-and
some
widowers
-are
proceedings
be videotaped and
several months. The preliminary build up too much in the pipelines of
entitled
to
another
benefit
:
a
lumpshown
to
officers
to demonstrate the
report for June, subject to revision the
slim
payment
of
$255
on
the
death
ol
a
fairness.
He
said
the board member
Wednesday, showed a 0.1 percent economy, manufacturers and
Social
Security
benefkiary.
demurred,
saying
: "Let them think
decline, following a 0.3 percent rise
suppliers at some point start cutting
This
provision,
which
has
been
in
we
•re
hatchet
men.
Let them worry
in May and a sharp 2.1 percent drop production.
the law since 1940, was designed to
in April.
provide for the special expenses of a about shooting their guns."
And unsold merchandise is a drag
A clearer image of a dropoff in on profits because of the costs of
worker's last illness and death.
11lf! DAD. Y SEHT1l'&lt;EL
business activity comes into focus holding it - including interest
The lum!Hlum death benefit has not
IIISPSl-1
when the reading for the second charges in the many cases in which
kept pace with inflation. Some exquarter of 140.9 (the index is companies use borrowed money to
perts now view it primarily as a boon
calculated using a base of 100 in bridge the gap between the time an
to the funeral industry, since it in·
1967) is compared with its level a item is produced or purchased and
sures payment of some of the exyear earlier of 141.9.
penses of burying even a beneficiary
the time it is sold.
Hoey said the most significant
who has no survivors.
Some administration officials want
development among the 12
indicators for July is likely to be a
Of 300 original copies of the to do away with the lumjHium death
considerable drop in an item called Gutenberg Bible, printed in about benefit to save Social Security several
vendor performance, which tallies 1454, only 45 are known to exist today . hundred million dollars a year. Companies that market small lifeinsurance PQlicies don 1 want the
benefit expended for fear that would
cut into their business.
· Some fear increasing the benefit
simply would result in higher funeral
ABOARD THE DELTA QUEEN gathered on the muddy shore in costs .•Still others believe the benefit
( AP ) - President Carter tried his Dubuque, Iowa, that their presence should be raised to $1,000 to .provide
hand as a riverboat gambler, and may did not mean they were all supporting significant extra protection to survivors of beneficiaries.
come away with a couple of chips. Jimmy Carter.
(NEXT: Is II too cosdy?)
For weeks, the president had been Instead, he said, they were showing
saying that he meant .to take his case their respect for the president of the
to the country, to break away from the United Slates.
confines of Washington and the The crowds along the river have
concerns of the government surprised the passengers, the White
establishment.
House staff and the president. Carter
He did it on a Mississippi River told reporters, in one of a couple of
excursion boat, in effect wagering long, rambling conversations he had
that the people along his course would with them aboard the- ship, that
respond and provide a counter to the neither he nor his advance teqm had
bleak news the pollsters have been anticipated the turnout.
delivering month after month .
White House staff members
They did :
traveled the route of the river last
At dusk or midnight, at 8 a.m . in a week to plan the president·•sstops and
heavy downpour, even at 3 a.m., the help bring out the crowds. But they
president drew crowds along the and Carter said no one on the White
SHOP
river. It didn't solve his foreign PQlicy House team worked on the
problems, or get his energy tax bill spontaneous events at the river's
passed. But it did provide a lift.
.massive locks. Nor, they said, did
People even waded into the water to they put together the noisy groups
get a glimpse of Carter, and as one that shouted greetings across the
fellow passenger observed, it had to water to C;Jrter from beaches and
be an ego trip .
bluffs.
The president seems buoyed by the
Many of the locks ·are in tiny towns
enthusiastic crowds he has that are rarely if ever visited by a
encountered along the river after the president or any other celebrity. And
political buffeting he took in those were the locations - at all hours
Washington this swnmer.
of the day and night and in misty, cool
The pace has hardly been one that weather - where the president
most people would associate with a worked hardest as a campaigner.
vacation. But between bouts of
Carter ''s trip was billed as a
feverish handshaking , the president vacation and a campaign for his
was able to read, lounge in the sun and energy policies. But a campaign for
chat with fellow passengers, including policies in 1979 and a campaign for reon several occasions groups of elect1on m 1980 are really one and the
reporters. He was relaxed on those same ·
occasions and took time to marvel at a
For as Carter has observed, the real
particularly st unning sunset and to test of his bid for a second term is
" You 're here from Washington . to bail me out
watch the river fowl.
going to be the voters' judgment of his
what ?"
of
The
president
in
effe ct first.
acknowledged to about 5,000 people

~,~---· -

Washington Today

B~rry's

Sports World
BY, Will Grimsley
July the Fourth was not exactly a
day for celebration and setting off
fireworks for the once proud and
rnigl)ty Cincinnati Reds baseball

team.

The Reds had fallen to rock bottom. They had lost a second straight
game to Houston at home and had
!~en 10 games behind the Astros in
the National League Western
Division that they once had
dominated.
"We had a meeting in the
clubhouse," John McNamara, the
lanky, graying manager recalled .
"There was no panic. We just sat
around and assessed our situation
and took hold of ourselves.
"Some of the older fellows like
Bench and Morgan spoke up. The
younger players put in their words .
Somebody · remarked that
everything wasn't hopeless, that if
we could pick up one game a week
for the rest of the season, we could
still make it.
"You could sense the determination of everybody in the room.
That's how it started."
By the time of the All.Siar game
July 19, the rejuvenated Reds had
cut the lead to St games. Now approaching the September
showdown, they are yapping at
Houston 's heels and making
threatening gestures toward the
National League pennant and the
World Series.
With the PIJSSible exception of the
Baltimore Orioles, they 're the hottest team in baseball.
They 're also the surprise of the
year.
Who would have thought such a
surge could come from the team that
had abruptly dumped their popular
and successful manager, Spar~y Anderson, and had allowed the symbol
of the team 's blood and guts. Pete
Rose, to be snapped up by the rival
Phillies?

RIVER DOWNS
CINCINNATI (AP ) - Lanta Lad,
Hey Mister and Ver E. Sharp, all
carrying 119 PQunds, were favored
today in the $5,000 featured eight
race at River Downs.
The track, nonnally dark on
Tuesdays, will be fan appreciation
day with free grandstand admission.
Mr. Researching, ridden by Perry
Ouzts, won the SS,SOO fl!lltured eighth
race Monday and paid $15.60, $5 and
$3.60. Anderson 's Pass placed,
paying $3.40 and $2.~ and See More
A. was third , paying $3.
Silver Jig combined 7.;) with
Pablosito for $21.80 the daily double
and the crowd of 3,579 bet $415,509.

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and had allowed only one hit since
the third.
Mter getting Joe Morgan on a fly
ball, Christenson gave up a single to
Dave Conc~pcion and walked
George Foster. Paul Blair ran for
Foster ~s Philadelphia manager
Danny Ozark called for Reed.
With the count 1-1, Driessen

PlllLADELPillA (AP) - Cincinnati Reds Manager John McNamara says his team has a lof of
AP Correspondent
character.
And tbe Reds showed him to be
quite a prophet Monday night when
Who would have believed that a
they came from behind with two out
low-key, little-Mown guy like Mcin the ninth to beat the Philadelphia
Namara, twice fired from major
Phillies, 4-2, and remain t game
league managerial jobs, could
behind the Houston Astros in the
replace the PQpular, charismatic
National League West.
Anderson or a kid named Ray
Dan Driessen's triple to right cenKnight could take Rose's place at
ter off reliever Ron Reed was the
third base?
deciding blow as the Reds won their
Knight, 26, became a jewel at
sixth straight game and their 16th in
third, playing great defensive hall
the last 21.
and hitting betier than .300. Dave
"There's plenty of character on
Collins, 26, subbing for the injured
this team," said McNamara.
George Foster and Ken Griffey, is
"We've been getting a great effort
batting around ,330. Heity Cruz,
by the guys off the bench, because
picked up from the Giants in the
we've had lots of injuries."
Pedro Borbon deal, has hit in 21 of
As for coming from behind, Mcthe last 2S games.
Namara was not at all surprised.
Tom Seaver, bothered with a hip
"We've done it rrumy times," he
ailment in the spring, has just won
said. "We just did it yesterday (Sunhis 11th straight game. Johnny Benday) in New York."
ch has come alive since the All-Star
Reed came into the game in relief
break, batting more than .351 for the
of loser Larry Christenson, 4-10, with
period. McNamara calls Dave Con- · two on and one out. Christenson had
cepcion the greatest shortstop he
a three-hitter going into the inning,
has ever seen.
"Baseball for me is fun again,"
says McNamara. " I'm comfortable.
It's a pleasure just to sit on the bench and watch these guys play."

Cidl f614llt6 ·S531 tor fret estimates .

Serving SouthP.astern Ohio, and West Virginia .
Commercial , Residential , Industr ial
175 Taft Ro.ad , P .0 . Box 909

Jadcosn , Onio 456•0

in Astros 3-0 victory
It's tough seeing the ball with J.R.
Richard seemingly in your face.
.
"H~'s so darn big, it seems like he
looking down your throat, " said
Montreal Manager Dick Williams
after the 6-foot-8 right-hander hurled
Houston to a ~ victory over the Expos with a sizzling, 12-6trikeout, twohit performance Monday night.
"He sure pitch.ed a gem," said
Williams. " If it wasn't for the walks
(six), that was the only way we had
a shot at him. "
Double-figure performances in
strikeouts have become commonplace for the hard-throwing pitcher. The 12 strikeouts gave him a
major league-leading total of 244 so
far this year.
"He's the master," said team-

Baseball AI A Glance

By The

Associated Press
AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST
W. L. Pel. GB
Baltimore
84 44.656
n 51 .602 7
Boston
79 53 .598 7
Milwaukee
70 57 .551 13 1/2
New York
70 61 .534 15 1/2
Detroit
66 65 .504 19 1/ 2
Cleveland
42 88 .323 43
Toronto
WEST
California
71 60 .542 8
Kansas City
Ill 61 .531 1'/2
Minnesota
68 61 .527 2
Texas
66 69 .473 9
Chicago
56 74 .431 W /2
Seattle
41 91 · .311 30 1/2
Oakland
41 91 .311 30 1/2

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Will
John Montefusco swallow his words
and return to the San Francisco
Giants tonight?
"I don't know. That's his decision.
· I can't tell him what.to do, " General
Manager Spec Richardson said Monday, not sounding too concerned
about the pitcher's departure from
the Giants' stormy Candlestick Park
clubhouse a day earlier.
The Giants open a three-game
series with the St. Louis Cardinals
tonight.
Montefusco, a pitcher in the
$:100,CMMHI-year salary range with a
~ record this season, was mad at
being fined $500, along with three
teammates, for brealting one of
Manager Joe Altobelli's rules and ·
drinking on an airplane flight during
last week's road trip.
·
"I'm not corning back," Montefusco said after meeting with
Altobelli following Sunday's game, a
4-1 loss to the Chicago Cubs. That
night, he admitted, "Sometimes I
say things I don't mean, " and said
he wasn't sure if he 'd return to the

Monday's Games

Minnesota -4·1, Baltimore 3·5

Seattle 6, Cleveland 5, 12 innings
Oe1roi13, California 2
Boston 4 , Chicago 3
Kansas City 10, Milwaukee9, 10 inni ngs
New York 7, Texas 4

Tuesday's Games

Oakland (Langford 9·13 ) at Toron·
to (S1 ieb 5·4i
Sea1tle (Twitchell 0·01 at
Cleveland (Wise 13 ·7)
Ca l iforn ia (Aase 9·8) at Detroit

(Robbins 2·21
Bo.ton (Ripley 301 at Chicago
&lt;Baumgarten 11-71
Balti more (McGregor 9·-4 ) at Min·

nesota (Erickson 1·7)
Mllwauk~ (Haas 8·8) at Kansas
Cit y (C hamberlain J ·O)
New York !Clay 1·5) at Texas

&lt;Johnson 4·14)

Oakland at Toronto
Balti more at Minnesota

New York at Texas
California at Detroit
Boston at Chicago
Milwaukee at Kansas Citv

AT LAST

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World

Philadelph i a
New York

65

Houston
Cincinnati
Los Ang.eles
San Franc isco
San Diego

A11anta

65

52 75
WEST
75 66
75 57
61 69
59 71
56 76
51 79

Monday 's Games

team.
GB
3
5

7

.500 10'1&gt;

.573
.568 '12
.469 t3 1/ 2
.-4.54 )5112
.424 19 112
.392 23'12

Tuesday's Games

Houston CAndu jar 12·101 at Mon·
1real (Rogers 11 ·81
(Pastore

2·6)

at

Philadelphia (Carlton 13·101
Allanta CP. Niekro 16·17! at New
York &lt;EIIis2 ·51
Chicago &lt;Reuschel 14-71 at San
Diego (Jones 10·9)
Pittsburgh &lt;Candelar ia 1Hl at
Los Angeles (Hough 4·4)
51. Louis (EI. Forsch 6·t0 l at San
Francisco (Knepper 9·8)
Wednesday 's Games
·
Atlan1aat New York
St. Lou is at San Francisco

Houston at Montreal
Cincinnati at Philadelphia
Ch icago at San Diego
Pittsburgh at Los Angeles
-•

Paul Dade lined a two-out pinchhit double in the loth inning to lift
San Diego over Chicago. Kurt
Bevacqua led off the Padres loth
with a single but was wiped out on
Jim W'lihelm 's fielder's choice
grounder. Wilhelm moved to second
on a ground ball by Bill Fahey and
after an intentional walk to Bill
Almon, scored as Dade doubled off
Bruce Sutter, working In relief of
Willie Hernandez, 4-3.
John D'Acquisto, 9-12, pitched the
final 11-3 inning to gain the victory.
The Cubs were ~ailing 4-2 with
two outs and the bases empty when
they rallied to tie the game in the
ninth.

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1

MeteZ.l. Braves l·S

Alex Trevino's single in the ninth
inning delivered Lee Mazzilli from
third with the winning run as New
York beat Atlanta in the completion
1
· of their suspended game. Jeff Reardon, 1-1, pitched one inning and
recorded his first major league victory.

I

-NOTICE
MEIGS TIRE CENTER

:
WILL CLOSE FOR
: VACATION SATURDAY,
•
AUGUST 25·
:
THRU
•
LABOR DAY

•
•
•
•
:

I
:

SCIOTO DOWNS

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) + Jeffs
Fashion, driven by Norm
Dessureault, scored a five length
victory in Monday's feature pace at
Scioto Downs.
The winner poated a time of 2:02 15 and paid $6, $3.20 and $2.40.
Second-place Special Account returned $4.~ and $3 20, while Carpenter ,
Bob was third, paying $4.40.

Dodgers 4. Pirales 2

Dusty Baker slugged a three-run
homer with two out in the ninth inning to PQWer Los Angeles past Pittsburgh. Gary Thomasson singled
with one out to launch tbe Dodgers'
winning rally. Von Joshua followed
with a pinch single, chasing reliever
Kent Tekulve and bringing Enrique
Romo out of the bullpen.
Ramo got Derrel Thomas to fly to
center for the second out. But Baker,
who was inserted in the lineup as a
pinch-hitter in the seventh inning,
hammered a 2-2 pitch over the leftcenter field wall for his 20th homer.
Ken Brett, A-3, who relieved starter Don Sutton, earned the victory.
Tekulve, S.7, took tbe loss.

• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •t

HOBBY

"It's not much of an attack when
you only get two hits," said Ozark..
"But they didn't get many either so I
guess you've got to give the pitchers
some credit. "

CAMP PARTICIPANT Scott Harrllon, IOU ol Mr. and
Mn!. Dale Harrfaon, Roote Z,
Pomeroy, attended Valley
Vlsla Sport. Camp near Bainbridge recently. He =elved
pnifeBIJional lnslnlcUon In
baseball from Ted Klonewald
IIIUI BW WoUe. Scott will be a
freshman at Melp Hlgll
School thiB fall.

a

.m 22

New.York 2, Atlanta 1. completion
of June 17 suspended game
Atlanta 5. New York 1
Houston 3. Montreal 0
Cincinnati 4, Philadelph ia&lt;
San Diego 5, Chicago 4, 10 innings
Lo. Angeles 4, Pittsburgh 2
Only games schedu led
Cincinnati

Montefusco look the loss Sunday
as the record of the fourth-place
Giants, expected to be a contender
for the National League West tiUe
this season, dropped to 59-71.
The Giants were off Monday, and
if ever baseball team needed a
cooling.off period, it was the Giants.
Vida Blue, an 18-game winner in
!978, was even hotter than Montefusco on Sunday, and not because
he was another of the players fined
for airborne drinking.
"I'm boiling over," he yelled in
the clubhouse while warning
baseball writers to slay away from
him. He grabbed a chair at one PQint
and warned a reporter to move away
or "I'll hit you over the head."
Earlier this month on a road trip,
according to Glenn Schwarz of the
San Francisco Examiner, Blue
threatened to "blow away" writers
he dido 't like.
Blue railed at Schwarz again Sunday, and the writer said later, "He's
just become irrational, and this
place is the snakepit of the major
leagues."
Richardsqn said Monday that he
was aware of Blue's outbursts.
"I'm making an investigation into
it," he said. Richardson, however,
had no immediate meeting
1
scheduled with Blue.

"I've been hitting the ball hard,
but right at someone," he said.
"He's been a tough pitcher lor me to
hit. it felt good to come through."
The Phillles had scored their two
runs in the fourth on only one hit.
Pete Rose and Mike Schmidt opened
with walks, and Rose crossed as
Greg Luzinski lined a single to left.
Schmidt tallied whil~ Bob Boone w•
grounding into a double play.
The Reds made it 2-1 in the seventh. Foster led off wtth a walk and
moved to third on a single by Jolumy
Bench. Trillo turned a hard smash
by Driessen into a double play while
Foster was scoring.
Starter Mike LaCoss pitched the
first seven innings for · Cincinnati,
and allowed only two hits before
being lifted for a pinchhitter. Winner
Tom Hume, ~. pitched two hitless
innings, and came in for some praise
from his manager.
"He has the ability to be an .outstanding pitcher," said the
manager. "Tom Seaver has been an
excellent influence on him, and pitching coach Bill Fischer has really
helped him. "
The defeat evened the Phillies
record at GH-l, the first time since
April!~ that they had not been over
.SOO.

·J•adreti 5. Cube 4

jumps Giants

Toronto 7, Oakland 0

NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST
W.L. Pel.
75 54 .581
Pittsburgh
69 54 .561
Montreal
Chicago '
69 58 .543
67 6() .528
St . Louis

mate· Enos Cabell, whose sixthinning single drove in two runs to
provide Richard with more than
enough supPQrt. "He said in the
dugout that he was getting tired but he sure dido 't show it."
Eisewhere in the National League,
Cincinnati whipped Philadelphia 42; San Diego defeated Chicago 5-4 in
10 innings; Los Angeles turned back
Pittsburgh 4-2 and Atlanta defeated
New York 5-l after losing a 2-1
decision in the completion of a
suspendf!l game from June 17.

'The Count'

Wednesday ' s Games

JUSTIN!

caught a Reed fork ball on the fat
part of the bat and drove the ball
deep to right center. Both runners
scored and when \he Phil 's Manny
Trillo threw the relay wlldly,
Driessen also crossed the plate.
Driessen was happy with the hit
because he's been hitting in tough
luck of late.

J.R. Richard fans 12

Seattle at Cleveland

~oo~w~~rnru

)

Reds' rally tops Phils, 4-2

Today's

•
:

:
:
•
:
•

•
•
•
•

-r:oJ:tDOM
flU-' f
.
0

.

cHOICE .

CORNERSTONE
OF OUR
INSURANCE STORE
Some insurance agents offer th e-policies of a single insurance
company. And thai 's okay. Every good insurance company
offcr1 policies Ihal provide excellent benefits to many people.
But here a t The lnsiJrance Store we offer more.
We arc indefJendent agent s. That means we are free to review
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your ~;pec i a l requ irement s.
·

THANK YOU FOR YOUR BUSINESS :
SEE YOU IN SEPTEMBER
.

MEIGS TIRE CENTER
NEXT TO KROGER'S IN POMEROY

e
•·

:

••••••••••••••••••••••••

POMEROY, 0
992-5130 or 992·5139
"YOU DON'T BUY A POLICY,
YOU HtREAN AGENT"

�5- The Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pomeroy;O., Tuesday, Aug. 211, 1979
4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Aug. 28, 1979

Quivey honored as
19 79 leading senior

POLLY·s POINTERS
Polly Cramer

DEAR POLLY - Karen asked
brighter day for her.
Removing
about removing chewing gum frcm
Quivey is blessed with good
ironed-on stain
her leather jacket and you suggested
health, a keen sense of humor, and
using an ice cube If her jacket did
difficult to reach - the elderly who an enthusiam for square dancing
not water spot. .I have an Idea If It
DEAR POLLY - How can I
Jive in a world of memories and like we've never seen. He says that
does water spot. Put the ice in a
remove an ironed.()n newspaper
frustrations.''
many weeks he attends two or three
plastic baggle and rub that over the
stain (orange colored ) from a satin
In making that statement, the dances, never missing the one at the
gum. It will still be Icy cold and
or silk blouse? The blouse is ivory
staff at the Senior Citizens Center in center, and seldom the ones held by
there's no worry about water getting
colored. - CHERYL
Pomeroy was speaking of William the three lodges he belongs to. He
DEAR CHERYL - I strongly
on the coat.- KIM
Qulvey.' the man who last week at even does some square dance calling
DEAR POLLY - When maJdng
recommend that you take the blouse
the Ohio State Fair received the 1979 when a regular caller needs a break
jelly, I lind a good quick way to
to the dry · cleaner. If that is n~
Senior Citizen Award for Meigs or can't make the dance.
strain juice is to place two overlapppossible, you must be aware that
County.
Quivey lives on a 25 acre fann in
ing facial IIBilues in a colander so all
anything you try may be ruinous
Qulvey was nominated for the the Darwin community with his dog.
the holes are covered. Pour the juice
since you do . not know what the
award by the local Senior Citizens At one time he raised dalmatians but
carefully and rotate the colander un·
material is. Presuming it is silk and
Center stafi who described him as a found that too co(/fining for his type
til the juice Ia all strained, This
washable, you could try putting a
" listening post for patients in health of life. He has a son who lives In
makes beautiful clear jelly.
couple of tablespoons of hydrogen
care facilities, an errand boy for Strausburg, but no grandchildren.
peroxide in a gallon of warm water
-MRS.F.E.B.
neighbors, a sitter for families with
As the 1979 Outstanding Senior
Polly will send you one of her signand letting the blouse soak in this lcir
confined members, and an active Citizen for Meigs County, Quivey
ed thank-you newspaper coupon
·member of the Retired Senior was presented a framed certificate
an hour or two. Rinse well. This is
clippers If she uses your favorite
suggested as a last resort before
Volunteers at the Center."
by the Ohio Commission on Aging
Pointer, Peeve or Problem In her
discarding the blouse. packaged colAfter retiring in 1976 from Ohio and signed by Gov. James Rhodes
column . Write POLLY'S
or remover is also a possibility but
University where he worked nearly which reads, in part, "In grateful
POINTERS in care of this
there is a chance with it, too,
00 years, Qulvey, at 75, comes to the recognition of exceptional service
newspaper.
because of the delicate fabric conCenter three days a week to deliver and contribution to the welfare and
WILUAM QUIVEY, Meig~ 0ounty's 1979 Outstanding Senior Citizen,
· hot meals to 25 elderly confined betterment of the community."
tent.
POLLY
displays the certificate prest11ted to him at the Ohio State Fair last week.
DEAR POLLY - Recently I fell
residents In the Syracuse, Recognition well deserved by
Writer Arthur Con an Doyle based
and
sprained my middle ·finger.
Minersville, and Chester com- William Quivey.
Wright-Patterson AFB, near
his Sherlock Holmes character on Dr.
munities.
Dayton, Ohio. It is the oldest and Thinking it might be broken, I went
Jose ph Be,l.l, a Scottish surgeon who
: Mason County
He's been doing that for the past
largest military avaiation museum to the hospital for X-rays. Until! got
could deduce much of a stranger's life
Hy A lms .\hr.t halt
I
three years, and is as reliable as the
I
in the world. Exhibits include ap- to the h06pital, I used a plastic SPOOR. and habits after merely looking at
postman, making his rounds in a
proximately 130 aircraft and as a splint. The cup of the spoon fit
him .
over the end of the finger and pro~ownpour of rain and through drifts
missiles,
plus
aeronautical
items,
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Shoaf, the
tected it. This worked so well that I
of snow, without complaint.
If your osteopo!'OW pennlta lt,
Betty Davis, and children, spanning the period from the Kit- thought campers , scouts, etc, might
fonner
Not only does he help out with the
tyha
wk
to
the
present
in
aircraft
.
you
can do sit-i!pS and modified leg
Teresa, David and Sherri of
like to know about it. - ETIIEL
elderly on the nutrition program, but
lifts to strengthen your abdocnlnal
Quivey regularly visits in hOBpitals,
A "For God and Country" pro- Palatine, Illinois and Mr. Shoaf's
muscles. These are n~ likely to
rest homes, and at the Athens Men- gram was presented by the Stewart- nephew, Randy , of Westerville,
cause an asthmatic attack becauae
tal Health Center.
Johnson VFW Post 9926, Ladies Aux- Ohio, visited with Betty's parents,
you can do the uerciJes for a few
He says he has always iliary, recently at the Guiding Star Mr. and Mrs. T. R. Davis last week.
minutes
and rest. It's prolmged ezWhile here Betty got to see several
remembered what a visit from a Advent Christian Church, Mason.
ercise
that's
more apt to precipitate
friend meant to his mother in her
The Rev. Wilbur Baxter had the friends and relatives. They all
asthma . And, of course, you can do
~
Lawrence E. Lamb , M.D.
years of failing health. Just to have a opening service. The program in- visited relatives at Red House, Bufthem in the house wltbout espoelng
falo
and
Arbuckle
and
also
went
to
friend stop by and chat meant a cluded, "Unceasing " by .Edwina
yourself to cold weather. And, of
Stanley, "Glad You Came By", Wen- Robertsburg to see the original
course, you can do them in the houae
dy Young; "What I Took" by Sonya home of Mr. and Mrs. T. R. Davis.
without elj)()Sing yourself to cold
recorrunend
an
eiercise
specifically
EXERCISE PROBLEMS
Mrs. J. Robert Roach and sons, J.
Bush;
"Trust
in
God"
by
Missie
Generation Rap
weather.
for you because people with
By Lawrence Lamb, M. D.
Adams ; "The Greatness" by Becky Larry and Roger, visited last week
The degeneration of the vertellrae
osteoporosis
must
be
careful
about
DEAR DR. LAMB - I am a 67By lf..!t•n :nul Sut• Hntlt•l
Adams ; "Our Prayer" by Karen with Mrs. Roach 's {Elsie ) sister and year-old female. My doctor says I the kinds of exercise they do.
may cause a person to l111e height.
Robinson; "Independence" by Keith family, Mr. and Mrs. Burton R.
With this shortening of the
I am sending you The Health LetWebb and son, Bernard, of Man- have curvature of the spine and con TRUST THIS WOMAN JUST LIKE
Ann Lee; and " In God We Trust " by
vertebrae, it 's almoat impoulble to
sfield, Ohio. While there they saw siderable demineralization of the ter number &amp;-10 on osteoporosis or
YOU'D TRUST . A MOTHER Dee Dee Collic.r.
keep the stomach from enlarging.
bones. I also have chronic asUuna. 1 dissolving bones. Other readers who
SHARK!
There was group singing of many intereting places including the cannot walk outside in the cold want this iSsue can send 75 cents In
This is particularly true If the
Mohican State Parle They had a
DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
thoracic spine benda forward as
"America, the Beautiful" Edwina
check or coin with a long, stamped,
At first I thought my girlfriend's Stanley had the lesson of war, and magnificent view from the large weather.
well,
I get no exercise. I have nqticed I sell-addressed envelope for it. Send
mother was just nice and friendly, Roger Adams played taps on the Fire Tower, and they fished in the
The abdominal muscles and the
Pleasant Hill Lake and caught am getting a very large stomach your request to me, in care of this
but she seems to hang over or rub up piano. Following ''The Brave Who
spine
are somewhat like a bow with
lately. Is there any exercise you newspaper, P.O. Box lf&gt;51, Radio Ciagainst any man who lsn 't her hus- Wait" by Beverly Hubbard, the con- several Perch.
'ii-string. If you 'bend the bow at
. Mr. and Mrs. John Marshall of would suggest? Do you think an ex- ty Station. New York, NY 10019.
band, especially if he 's under 20. gregation sang ''Faith of Our
each end, the string becomes slack.
As
I
discussed
in
The
Health
LetNew Haven returned home Sunday ercise bicycle is good for me ?
And especially me!
Fathel-s."
The abdominal muscles, Uke the strter
I'm
sending
you,
certain
kinds
of
DEAR READER - It 's true that
Gins doesn't like her mother very
Other readings were "The Eagle" after attending the West Virginia
ing to a bow, are stretciJ!!(I from
eiercise
can
cause
weakened
bones
exercise
will
precipitate
asUuna
atwell. She told me she's seduced at by Sherry Gerlach, "Uberty Bell" State Fair at Lewisburg, W. Va., a
to
fracture
.
Thai's
why
doctors
sugtheir attachment to the lower ribll at
tacks
in
some
people,
particularly
in
least one of her fonqer boyfrtends by Tina Neutiling; "Our Flag" by yearly annual event for the Marone end and to the pelvis at the other
gest
that
women
who
have
cold
weather.
The
t,emperature
and she's a barracuda where guys Sherry Gerlach; "Tell Me" by shalls to attend.
end.
As the spine benda and curves
OBteoporosis
be
careful
about
Wtlng
seems
w
be
an
important
factor.
On Monday eening Mr. and Mrs.
are concerned. I thought maybe Valerie McDaniel ; "The Symbol of
forward,
the abdominal muscles
heavy
objects.
I
asswne
from
your
letter
that
by
Gina was just jealous.
Price" by David Ohlinger ; and "I Harold Davia and sons, Chris and
beCome
slack.
On
the
positive
Side,
properly
done
demineralizatio'n
of
the
bones,
Now she (the mother) has asked Know My Flag" by Karen Robinson. Stevie, had a cookout for his sister
If you are in a locatim where you
you 're talking about osteoporosis exercises can help to strengthen
me to go with her to their mountain , The flag was brought in to "Stars imd family, Mr. and Mrs. Nonnan
can
get some good advice from a
your
muscles
81ld
provide
back
sup(softening
of
the
bones
),
whi
ch
is
cabin - she'll pay me for cutting the and Stripes Forever" and there was Shoaf, Teresa, David and Sherri and
physiCal
medicine or physiotherapy
port.
For
that
reason
,
I
think
you
common
in
women
your
age.
brush around it. But she chose 'a group singing of the national anthem friend, Randy, and Harold 's parendepartment
It may be able to help
should
have
some
individual
help
on
With
the
combination
of
limited
weekend when Gina and her father and "God Bless America." Soloist ts, Mr. and Mrs. T. R. Davis.
you
learn
some
exerclaea that can be
what
kinds
of
exercises
are
good
for
ilxercise
and
osteoporosis,
it
's
no
would be out of to\vn.
was Keith Click and the pianist was·
useful
without
Inducing any proyou
with
your
parllcular
medical
wonder
that
you
're
developing
a
Mr. and Mrs. Rick A. Casto of
Since I need the money, and I'm Roger Adams. Orilla Ohlinger,
blems
for
you.
problem.
large
stomach.
I'm
sorry
but
I
can't
not real susceptible, is she safe? - Americanism chainnan, and Hilda Mason are announcing the birth of
MOTHERED, OR WHAT?
Roush, youth activities chairman, their first child, a son, born Aug. 2.
He weighed seven pounds, five ounDEAR MOW:
had charge of the program.
ces and was 19 inches long . He has
Is Jaws n a brook trout?
been named Kevin Robert. The
The only safety here is distance
and a firm "No" to job offers that Pomeroy Bible m eeting
mother is the former Linda
Newberry, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
mean pay for play . - HELEN AND
Plans for a morning Bible study Robert J. Newberry of Letart Rt.
SUE
were made when the Evangeline The parental grandparents are Mr.
Missionary
Society met recently at and Mrs. Ben Casto of Mason.
RAP:
II you have a good imag1nation and an eye tor color.
Mr. and Mrs. LaWrence R. Wolfe
My dad is always yelling at me, the Pomeroy Church of Christ.
you
can
now design your O'Ml Styleline• Phone color.
Mrs. Betty Spencer presided at the of Letart are proud to announce the
but not at my sisters and brother.
You-Just
choose two different Stylel ine colors Jsay. a Vl&lt;tlite
Mom never helps me out of these meeting with Mrs. LaDonna Clark birth of their first grandchild, a boy.
base and a red receiver! from so many beautiful choices. and
situations. He makes my entire life reading "Ma and God" and "Sick." The proud parents are Mr. and Mrs.
Reports
were
given
by
Mrs.
Eileen
we'll put them together for you . Then you can
John Hoffman. The mother is the
miserable. The other kids all agree,
Bowers,
treasurer,
and
Mrs.
Clark,
tJ ke your new creation hOme with you.
fonner Debra Wolfe. The parental
I'm the one he picks at.
secretary.
They
also
reported
on
the
So Vl&lt;flether you're ma tching you r favorite
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Could you give me a number to
call about running away, and tell me mother-daughter banquet fund, and Hoffman. The baby was born Saturtwo-tone color scheme or your favorite
day, Aug. 25 and weighed six pounds
where I could go? - PLEASE the flower fund ..
school colors. come play mix ·n match at
For devotions Mrs. Clark read and 10 ounces.
HELP!
the G TE Phon e Mart
several verses on faithfulness , Mrs.
Mason and Area Personals
P.H.:
soon _More than JUSt a
Mr.and Mrs. Donald R. Van Meter
The best advice we can give you Bowers had a story, and MrS. Janet
pho ne st o re, w e 're
Venoy read scripture from Romans and family, Donnie, Matt, Debbie
. about running away is: Don't!
·
]UJr phone compa"¥.
If it's true that your dad only yel!.s 12. Mrs. Clark also read a poem, "Of and J enny were on a nine day
at you, but seldom at your sisters Shades ·Restaurant", and Mrs. vacation trip to Myrtle Beach, S. C.,
Put a new Phone
and brothers, then there's one-on- Venoy read, "Mother's Moments. " They camped out at Lake Wood
In your life.
one conflict here that might be FoHowing prayer by Mrs. Spencer, climpsite.
smoothed with real family talk. Ask Mrs. Venoy served a dessert course
The Teenage Youth Group and
chaperones of the Christian
your mother to be the go-between ; and coffee.
Next meeting will be held at the Brethren. Church planned to go to
tell her you'll try if he will, and
home
of Mrs. Clark.
maybe all of you together can deterKings Island on Tuesday, Aug. 28. · Robert E. Mossman, Jr. had the
mine what's wrong. When you two
PICNIC CHANGED
face why you're always at odds, you
misfortune of breaking a bone in his
Annual
picnic of the Ladies
can each work toward a truce.
right foot while practicing football
Auxiliary of Veterans· Memorial
last week. He will have to use crut-HELEN
Hospital has been changed to the ches for some time.
East-West Room at hospital, 6:30
Apprmtimately 25 membeJ:S of Boy
P.H.:
Perhaps you and your dad are this evening , instead of at the home Scout Troop 253 d Mason and
always fighting (it's safe to asswne of Reva Sims, due to weather con- leaders Chockie McDaniel and
he 1sn 't the only one whQ yel!.s ) ditions .
Charlie Sayre and counselors Clifbecause you 're so much ! alike.
ford Northrop and Randy Lavender
OURS REUNION
went to Kings Island Saturday and
When a man sees his own faults in
The
annual
Ours Family Reunon camped out Saturday night at a
his child, he 's that much more deter.
will be held Sunday at the Rock camping area near Dayton, Ohio
mined to weed them out.
... Or maybe your common fault is Springs Fairgrounds with a basket and on Sunday they toured the
stubbonmess- which would certain- dinner to be held at 1 p.m.
United States Air Force Museum,
ly lead to conflict.
Understand why he yells, and
you 're halfway toward a solution of
SHOP
the problem. The other.half depends
on his understanding and cooperation - and if your mother doesn 't do
FOR THE BEST DEALS IN THE
her part here she should be drumm(
TRISTATE AREA
ed out of the Parents' Union . .SUE

"Bill bas that special quality of
compassion and devotion which he
shares with those individuals most

VFW Auxiliary
meeting held

r----------------News Notes I

.(e)

HEALTH
A:11- - - -

Play mix'n match at the
GTE Phone Mart.

.
'

MASON FURNITURE

PERSONAL to "Bored With Pr~
lessor Gab": A good tea~ her lets his
students do most of the talking. Why
not put t!!ls note on the college
bulletin board : "A speech Is like a
wheel : the longer the spoke, the
greater the tire." And then ask for a
class discussion.on communication.
- HELEN AND SUE

(

whi~.

Portland Elementary - Michael
Bolio, Ann Sellen, Randy Beeale,
Olarlle Bolo, Mike Conley, Lee Cor·
nell, Jay Doddet er , Pam Amburgey,
Eugene Cllaney, Steve Teaford,

Mmlca Chaney, JoAM Evana, blue.
Krllta Sellen, Karla Smith, red.
Jerry Aleahlre, Jeff Connolly,
Shane Kincaid, Ray Laudermllt,
Rhonda Swift, white.
· Racine Elementary - Marty
Cleland, Jeff Evana, Dlon Jona,
Paula JusU.s, Wendy Wolfe, Amy
Harrilcln, Sbannon Wllllmls, Debbie
Holter, Sandy Deem, David Powell,
Lon SlmP""', Melody West, blue.
Danny Gt.n, RGger Spaun, Shannon Stobart. Melanie VanMeter,
Toni Andrew, Angela l!altlck,
Sharon Deem, Brian Diehl, Tammy
Holter, Tina Slater, Jimmy Deem,
Angela Manuel, Jerry Smith, Kerr!

Beegle, Joe Hoff, ~elly Rizer, red. ·
Carla Aelker, Joyce Barnes, Mar·
vln Bickers, Shawn Diddle, Jessica
Evans, Steven Grady, Angle Hill,
Chris Jewell, Sheryl Jobnlon, Billy
Jonea, Allee Panons, Mark Porter,
Dawn Roberta, Charlie Wood, Laura
Allen, Scott Bickers, Patrece &lt;lrc:le,
Donnie Riffle, Sara Rale, Jm Tuttle,
Juanita Frederick, Jamey Hensler,
u. Pape, Dmald Panorul, Rachel
Reiber, Harold Bird, Jim Carpenter,
Jamie Cwnmlns, Jennifer Evans,
Scott Hill, Kathy Ihle, Jennifer John·
sm, Jamie Jooea, CiJ8y Ly01111,
Melanie LyON, Brad Maynard, John
McClintock, Chris Murphy,
SICPbanle Paraonl, Joey Rice, Mary
~. Ammy Rouab, Sbelly
Sawyers, C8IICil Smith, Sarah Wiles,
Alia Wlllford, Eddie Williams;
Aimee Wolfe, OlriJ Wolfe, Trlcla
Wolfe, Brenda Zirkle, Sandra Harden, Lola Ible; James Ll!lhond,
Tamara Thellll, white.
sOuthern Junior High -ltancly Ar·
mea, Terry Bell, Jenny Bentley,
Kim Buckley, Greg Duvall, Ruaty
Flagg, Richard Hill, Katrina
Snodgrass, Charles Wolfe, Tlm
Fiumpbreya, Tmya SaJaer, Mla8y
VanMeter, Lori Warden, Melanie
Weeae, Laren Wolfe, blue.
Sherrl Bell, Trevor Cardone, Steve
Fillher, Jane Manuel, An81e Glenn,
Penny Wolfe, red.
Becky Jollllon, Mike Vance, ~
dy MIUiron, TcmCUDimllll, Mlebele
Jolnon, Patricia Pauley' .tate ..
a,r- Elemen&amp;ot;' - _Sbelly Arnold, Anile 01 II PI", 1DJil Adams,
Mike Ollncey, Jeff Frull, Sean
Gnlell!l', IW'en Remaley, blae.
Ktvln Burgeu, Nlcllelle Harris,
Jerod Moore, Juoo QalUin, Clwta

Deen\er, Trade

Mason , W. Va .
• Tn 11t h C&lt;~ ll ing "' '' a~· ail:~ble in a ll a rea;;.

Cand7

Houchins, blue.
Melvin Mullins, white.
Meigs High School- Brian Bailey,
blue.
Brian King, white.
Middleport EleJllfntary - I..A!slle
Carr, EddleBaer, blue.
Scott Hanning, Brad Utile, red.
Trey Glaze, white.
RuUand Elementary - Michael
Bartrwn, Cathy Blessing, Scott
Geyer, Patricia McGhee, Pamela
Stiltner, JCM: TIIlil~ blue.
John Sisson, red.
Salem Center Elementary -Cindy
PeYton. Kriltl Haynes, blue.
Riehle VIIIHOiiten, red.
Millay Primmer, wblte.
Salisbury Eiementary - Jeff
Basham, David Capehart, Melodl
Carl, blue.
April Clark, Donna Lambert,
Chucky Blake, Dong!•• Eblin, red.
Todd Cull1111111, RGgl!' Dowell,
Mellaaa Foster, Phillip King,
Jeremiah Prater, Cathy Slotts, Rod
Harrison, Barbara HaUield, Bobby
Jeffers, Tim Sloan, David Warth,
~Fry, white.

. RUSSELS BACK HOME
Captain and Mrs. Karl Rusliell,
Mellasa and Kenny, of Jacksmvllle,
N. C., have returned to their home
after 8 ten-day visit here with their
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Smtth,
DCII and Mike, and Mr. 8lld Mrs.
Xennetb a-ll Mr. RusleD II a 1*tlent at the 0 'Bleness lllljlitaJ in
Athens.
PICNIC IIElD
A family piCIIIo will be held
Wednesday at the Route 33, southbound roadllcle pan, 8:30 p.m. by
the Sew-Rite-Sewlna Club' Plana fer
the picnic were made at a recent
rneetinl! held at the horne ol Mrs.
lA!nora McKnight. Game · prizes
were awarded to Mrs. Mildred
Wells, Mrs. Carolyn McDaniel, Mrs.
Betty Webrung, and Mrs. Pandora
Collins. Mrs. McKnlglt served a
dessert courae to thole named and
Mrs. Flo Strickland, Mrs. Shirley
Batty, and Mrs. Evelyn Gllmore.

WilLOUGHBY KEml UILL

nJRNSt ,• .
The eighth birthday of Willoughby
Keith Hill was celebrated recently
with a dinner at his home In Chester.
A motorcycle cake was served
with lee cream by his parents, Larry
and Joaephille Hill, to his grandparent&amp;, Willoughby F. Hill, and Mr.
and Mrs. RAiler G. Toney, and Mr.
and Mrs. WIUiam Cash and April,
Athens; Brenda LaDeaUI., Chris and
Wesley, Ruby Burke, and Bud Coleman and Danny Coleman,
Fostoria.
·
Mr. and Mrs. ROnald Ritchie,
Grove City, sent a gift.

JORDAN REUNION HELD
Descendants af John and Rozella
Jordan held a reunion m Aug. 12 at
Springfield at the home of Roy Jor-

dall.

Homemade tee cream was served
following the picnic. Attending were
Mr. and Mn. Roy Jordan, Hazel
Clarlt, Ethel Clark, Mr. and Mrs.
Keith Clark, Mr. and Mrs. Dale Jordan, Mr. and ~ Don Jordan and
ddldren, Mr. and Mn. Fred Hazlett,
Mrs. Ruth Jordan, Mr. and Mrs.
John Jordan, Mr. and Mrs. Michael
White and cblldren, Mr. and Mrs.
Donald White, Mrs. Michael Smith,
Mike Hazlett and Debbie Bailey,
Vera Hyatt and Greg, Mr. and Mrs.
Danny Jordan and daughter, Nicole,
Mrs. Frank DIU and children, Mrs.
F. Smith and children, Richard Jordan, Sarah Peterson, Fred8 Beery,
Melissa Bailey, Donley Jordan,. Jr.
and several friends .

GeorgeS. Hobstetter, Jr., Broker,
has announced that Velma Nicinsky
has joined his finn as sal!!ll
associate.
Velma resides in Hutchison sub:division; Rutland, with her husband,
John and son, Craig. She has resided
in Meigs County for the past sill
years. Prior to moving here, she
Uved in Marianna, Florida, where
she graduated from Marianna High
School, and attended Chlpola Junior
College. She also attended Rio Grande Community College and the Ohio
School of Real Estate and Career
Technology.

Velma Nicinsky

Fashions from 18th
century on display
MARIE'I'I'A - An exhibit of
women's clothing showing fashion
trends from as early as 1810 to the
turn of the century has opened as the
Ohio Historical Society's Campus
Martlus Museum in Marietta.
The ne'w exhibit presents a dozen
dresses, including such clothing as a
high-waisted silk crepe gown from
about 1810, an organdy border print
dress with tiered skirt from the 18508
and a black silk brocade dress with
yoke, standing collar and leg-ofmutton sleeves from 1897.
The Items on exhibit came from
the private collection ci Doris
Gracey of Marietta and the collectl0118 of the Ohio Hilltorlcal Society.
The clothing Is presented in displays
.with fumlahings of the period. All
ltema are being shown to the public
for the first time in Marietta.
The exhibit will nm through
January 31, 1980. Campus Martius
Museum, which presents exhibits on
the earnest settlement of Ohio, is
open Monday through Saturday
from 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. and 2 to 5
p.m. Sundays and holidays. Admission Is $1.50 for adults and 75 cen-

FAMILY PAK

SUPERIOR

TAV.ERN HAMS ....... ~ ........L~ ~l
..

59

CHICKEN ....................~~~. 59~
CHICKEN

SUPERIOR

SEM 1-BLS. HAMS ........... ~:.;~1 49 BREASTS ·········~··~········L~;. 99~
~ICKEN

SUPERIOR

FRANKIES;......................~~-~:.. 99~ LEGS &amp; THIGHS ...... ~~~ . 89~
. 69' WINGS....................
. . .-~.........59e
BACON·······~·························~···

SAVORY

CHICKEN

LB.

LB.

FAVOR1fE-BREAlf~-~~~.~~ji9.~:W.i.~~.~.~~--4-1'1-·

DAIRY
SMALL

DOZ.

EGGS .................................. 43rc
AlL STAR 1%
MILK ...................~~~..........~ 1 49
BROUGHTON

COTTAGE CHEESE: }~.~~-!.1 19
BROUGHTON

'

ICE MILK .......... ~.~.......~ 1 19 :

POTATO RcHIPs ...................-----------~~r~~~~~-~~. 19 c
LAYS

POTATO CHIPS

71h
•••••••• 0 •• •••• •

VALLEY BELL

.

.

SNO CONES ......~.~~~ .......99~
VALLEY BELL

GAL .

CHOC. DRINK .................~

, ..

oz.

••• ••••• •

JOY

ts for children aged six through 12,
with children fi ve and under admitted free.
1'11!! museum is located at Second
81ld Washington Streets in.~ljlre .
TO HOLD BARBECUE
MASON - The Mason Fire Department Auxiliary will holda chicken
barbecue on Monday , Sept. 3, Labor
Day, with serving starting at 11 a.m.
at the fire station.
RAY KISER

GRAND FORKS, N. D. Sergeant Roy A. Kiser, nephew of
Mr. and Mrs. Ervin Kiser of Route 2,
Racine, recently participated in
Global Shield 79, an Air Force exercise conducted by the Strategic Ait
Conunand.
Sergeant Kiser is a security
specialist with a SAC unit at Grand
Forks Air Force Base, here.
Global Shield 79, which involved
bomber, tanker , missile and reconnaissance forces, and associated Ait
Force Reserve units, was the largest
and most comprehensive test of SAC
forces In more than 20 years.

PRODUCE

GR. 8

LARGE EGGS
ooz. 79e
-------------------FRESH

PEACHES

39·C

REG. 99'
••••••••• ••• •• •

•• 0 •

0 0 •

0 0 0 •

LB.

ALl. WffK

7-UP. ORANGE CRUSH
BARRELHEAD
ROOT BEER $ 09
8 PAK 16 OZ. BTLS.

1

PEPSI &amp; DIET PEPSI

•• •

VIENNA SAUSAGE .............:... t~?.. ~~ .................

49~

~ PAK CANS

$1 39

~ETER_GENl ................. }~. ~~..~~--- ---- - --- ........, 11•

COAST
.
'

.SOAP..................~ ....

I ••• •• I.

~M

-.· tiAMBORGER

.

R~§~.~~. ~-~. '-~~ ............. '

'

0 ••••

29 $ .

,

&amp; HOTDOG BUNS .... :.~ .~.~~......... 49~
~.

· AMoCo ALL s*A;)N

QUART

1

MOTOR OIL .......................·.................................... 69~
THURS. ONLY

RC
COKE, TAB

8 PAK

Herman Grate

H~.

Tammy . Staati, Kelly
an-. Juanita Guinther' Sberri
Siuon, Eric Thoren, Julie
HGuadelhelt, red.
Trlcla Mlcbael, Ray Sayre, Brent
Sbuler, Jane Wllltama, Heidi Cobb,
David Deem, T. J. Robanna, Jill
Nease, Randy Roush, Paula
Winebrenner, Cbria Arnold, white.
Bradbury Elementary - Ricky
Hawley, red.
Melgl Junior High - Stephanie

$taata,

SPRITE

16 OZ. BTLS. . , , ,

~ OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONLY '
.
773 -5592

Wlnnel'll of Pnmilllllll in the county achoolll exhibit at the Meigs Coun·
ty Fair were announced today by
County Superintendent of Scboolll
Robert Bowen.
Reclplenta of blue ribbons will
receive $1.50, red ribbons, $1; white ,
50 cents.
The winners of ribbons are, by
school, as follows:
.Eastern Junior and Senior High Dulna Per1101111, blue.
Riverview Elementary - Joe
Young, Arlu Ritchie, red. April
Ritchie, Kelly 1l1mlpem, Trent Uptoo, Larry DIUm, Scott Kessler,
Anita Reed, Jay Neutzllng, white.
Tuppers P1alns Elementary Amy Conriolly' Krlata Heaton,
Aaron Wilson, Paul Erwin, Tina
Newluo, Sunday Davia, Angela
Larkins, Tim Mlcbae~ Bernard
Bobo,bloe.
Brtan Sharp, Usa Henderson,
Cbria Adami, Michelle Malhotra,
Jasm Meier, Mattbew Flnlaw, Kim
Masten, red.
lDii Burke, Renee Tayler, Carol
Hendrb, Jeff Sayre, Cbrlltlna
Pooler, Dennil Klnl!. David Lawam,
Jasm Hager, Belinda Barber,
Christy Koenig, Jerrod Barber, UJa
Barker, Trlcla Burke, Kevin
Damewood, Scott Fitch, Juon
Riggs, Jennifer Meier, Dann Tripp,

Qr

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

1

Nicinsky joins firm

Meigs prernium winners announced

OR

DIET RITE
COLA
8 PAK 16 OZ. 99~
BTLS.
· Plus Tax &amp; Dept.

�6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pome r oy, 0 ., Tuesday, Aug. 28, 19~~

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Aug . 28, 197~

Your Best Buys Are t_,ound in the Sentinel Classifieds
ASTRO·GRAPH
Bernice Bede

Osol

Yard Sale

Wanted to Buy
CHIP

WOOD.

Pole i

WANT AD
CHARGES

max .

d iQmeter 10" on largest end .
$12 per ton . Bundled alab. Sl O
per ton . Oeli"Y ered to O hio

Aug . 29, 1979
"Corrections ot some unproduct •ve hab•t or •d•osyncrasy th 1s
coming year could allord you a
chartce to bHHik. out ot a bad
cyc le. Don ' t be alra•d to try di l ferent approac hes to th1ngs
VIRGO (Aug . 23- Sepl. 22) Do
you rself a favor Take a little res t
toda y You may teel 111 as a
hdd le Ou t vour mmd 1s l1red and
could cause you to mak~ an
e~tpensive m1st ake How to ge t
at ong w 1th ot her s•gn s •s one of
t ile sec t •ons you 'll enJOY 1n your
new A st ra-Graph Le ll er . wh1ch
begtns w1th you r bu th day Matl
$1 tor each to Astra-Graph _BoK
489 . Radto C• ty Stat tori . NY

10019 Be sure to spectl y btrlh
date
LIBRA (Sepl. 23- 0 cl. 23) Irs all
well and good to be understand Ing an a kmd to cas ual acquam tances. but don't go so lm as to
dtg rnt o your wall et 'l'ou 'll sutler
a toss
SCORPIO (Ocl . 24-Nov. 22) By
pult mg your seH-mterests first
today you 'll come out last Take
a ba c k sea t Let ot hers
maneuver thmgs around you
You 'll fare be1ter u1 th e long run .
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dae . 21)
You ma y th tnk you know all 1he
answers, but you are vrewtng
only the l tp at the rceberg Belter
de ter awhtle tl any tmport anl
dec •s•ons are called lor
CAPRICORN (Dec. 2:2-Jin. 19)
Those you ·re assoctal tng wtlh
tod ay but of wh om you know itt tie may att emp t to pull a last'
one Take care no money
e~~: c hange s hands
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) If
you try to act too sm art or too
w1 se today. rt could back lire Be
your old , cooper attlle. v.ll lmg -loQet-a long -wtth -o thers sell
PISCES (Feb . 20-March 20) All
facts and figures mu st be doubly
checked today You s1 and t o
mak e a cos tly erro r fr om
unsound reasoning Aslc someone 10 back up you r work .

l d e~y

OLD FURNITURE, ice boxes .
brass beds. Iron beds . desks ,
etc ., complete households ,
Wr i te M .D. Miller, Rt. ~ .
Pomeroy or call 992·7760.
OlD COINS , pocket watches,
class ri ng s . ~ wedding bonds,
diamonds . t;:;old or !il'Wer . Ca ll
J . A. Wam sley, 742·233 1.

WANTEQ: SAW logs . Payment
upon deli very to our yard . 7:30
to 3:30 weekdays . Blaney
Hardwoods , SR 339, Barlow ,

OH . 678.2980.
ANTIQUES. FURNITURE . gloss .
chino, anything . See or colt
Ruth Gosney . antiques. 26 N .
2nd .,
Midd l eport ,
OH .

992·3161 .

3:00.
FOUR

15 Words_or Under
Gash
Charge

Pol let Co., Rt . 2, Pom eroy .

992·2b89.

YARD SALE . August 30th,
Broadway and Vine , Racine,
O H. Kay And rews. 11:00 to

1.00
1.50
l.M
3.00

Zdt~ys

3days
6days

1.2$
1.90
2.~

3.71

Ea ch word over the minimum
15 words is 4 cents per word per
day. A.ds runnin~ other than con$t'l:ulive d&lt;Jys will b6 chsr)(cd at
•
the 1day rttle.

In memory, Ca rd of Thclnk.S
and Obituary : 6 cents per word ,
SJOO minimwn. Cash in lid·
va nc e.

Moblle Home !&gt;ales and Y~:~ rd
5ale.s are accept ~ only with
cash with order. 25 cent charge
for ads c.arrying Box Number In
Care o~ The Sentinel .

!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN )

WANT-AD
N?YERTISING
' DEADLINES

Cu stom . 992-·sasa.
Monday

1978 JEEP CJS. 304 V~ 8 , levi
pa ckage ,
p·. s.,
P . B.,

Noon on SC:Iturday

aluminum , spoke wheels , 35
Gumbo tires , headers. Toke
o.. er payments . Coll992-6363.

1\iesday
thru Frida y,

4P.M.
the day before publication

1976

Sunday

4P.M.
Friday aflemoon

Notices

REGENCY.

All

1978 SPITFIRE CONVERTA8lE .

GUN SHOOT. EVERY FRIDAY
7:30 PM RACINE GUtl ClUB.
FACTORY CHOKE GUNS ON·
l Y.

3400 m iles. Great condition .

Equipped . 30 lo 34 m.p.g.
992·7342 . .
1975 GRAN TORINO Squire
949·254S.

available for adoption and information servi ce .

1979 CHEVROlET h.4 350
auto .. 2500 miles. 992-5396.

BAR PERSON , honest. neat.
dependable . Apply in person .
Fi ve "Points Grill , Pomeroy.
Mole or f emale.
ONE PART time babysitter.
7:30 to 2:30, 3 days o week
0\l&amp;roge for
2 children .
949·2450.

NOTICE OF
PUBLIC SALE
Notice is hereby given.

that on September 7, 1979,
at 10 A.M . a public sale will
be held at the offices of The
Citizens

National

Bank

Middleport, Ohio to sell for
cash the
following
collateral to wit :

10.

Bank, Middleport Ohio
reserves the right fo bid af
this sale .

One 1978 17" Zenith color
T.V. MOdel K1780W
Serial No. 61B66S8.
The

Ci tilens

Na tional

1977

Mrs. Enna Fox visited several
days recently with her sister, Mrs.
Irene Couuntryman at Frankfort.
Mrs . Dick Karr was hostess to the
Laurel Cliff Health Club Thursday
evening, Aug. 9.

..

Virginia 26150
Plaintiffs

The fi rst natur al color photograph

FRANK G. WEAVER and
NANCY l. WEAVERLand
MICHAEL L . CON EY,

was made from the air in 1930. It was
a view ot the U .S. Capitol taken by
Me lville Bell G r osvenor of National
Geog raphi c fr o m th e dirigible
Mayflower .

Address unknown

GEORGE

CLLINS,

as

Treasurer of Meigs County,

Pomeroy, Ohio

Defendants

Case No. 17,170
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION

by Gill Fox

Frank G. Weaver and
L . Weaver and

5992.3133 .
1974 OlDS DElTA 88 .
992·5786.
1973 CADillAC Eldorado.
condition .

Coli

992-6255.
1973 DODGE PICKUP, while

r:

-"'•
.,,
,
t

\

'E
I

i

of residence of eac h

Defendants

Of sa id

being

unknown, wi II take notice

tion . 318 engine' 2.47 -3863.

1978 CAMARO. 11 .600 miles .

Camping Equipment
PRIVATE OWNER will sacrifice
1979 32ft. travel tra iler . Self·
contained, air , reor bunk ,
sleeps si x. See anytime.
Krodel City Pork , Pt. Pleasan t.
MUST SEll late model travel
trailer , 28',
fully
self contained .
fa ct ory
air .
carpeted throughout , many
ex tras . See any time , Krodel
Ci ty Pork , Pt . Pleasant .
1973 23 1/a foot Terry trave l
trailer. Air cond iti oning , ful l
bath with tub and shower
AM-FM with 8-track. Good
co ndition . Cell 992-3580.

Wanted to Rent
REASONABlY PR ICED country
house in Pomeroy area. Phone
985·4366 evenings.

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park .
Route 33 , north of Pomeroy .
large lots. Call992· 7479 :
3 AND 4 RM furnished ond on·
furnisf1ed
opts .
Phone

992.543o4.
ONE BEDROOM opts . Contact
Village Manor, W'J.-7787 .
SENIOR CITIZENS , 1 i:ledroom
opts .
for
rnet .
Rental
ass is tance
availab l e .

992·7721.
SlEEPING ROOMS lor 2 or 3
c onstru c tion

wol"'kers .

992·5786 .
THREE BEDROOM 1'/, both,
co untry home. New ho'Wen
area. 304 -882-2339 after 5pm
weekdays .

TRAilER , ONE adult. 992·3181 .

RED

DOBERMAN ,

broke .

Humane

house
Society .

992·6260.

HOUND TYPE dog. Short heir,
brown and white , female .
Humane Society. 992-6260.

dants,

BROWN AND wf1ite Benji type
dog, female . Brown and white
female. short hair, beagle
type , oil shots . Humane Socie-

Frank G . Weaver
and Nancy L. Weaver and
Michael L. conley, are
'oint l y and solely liable to
he Plainti ffs in the sum of

j

'Y. 992·6260.
BORDER COlliE type, brown

ther aUeging tnat said
Pla intiffs have a first mor ·
tgage on
r ea l estat e
descr ibed in Mortgage

and wh i te mole . Four brown
and white Amer ican domest ic
killens , ton Persian with
brown feet . block and white ,
tiger .
Huomne
Society .

February 12, 19781 and fur ·

·''

Book 137, Pag e 105, Meigs
County Mortgage Recor ds .
Plaint iffs

demand

Ludgment
against the
Defendants in the amount

of $21.829.8• plus interes1 at
8 percent per annum from

February 12 , 1978, cos1s of

suit and

further demand
the forec losure of the r e al
estate described in Mor ·

!gage Book 137, Page lOS of
the Meigs Co unty Mor ·

tgage Records and such
blher re l ief as may be
proper .
Ea c h of the Defendan ts

named above is required to
0 ''''~· '-~·

'"' , ..

~ .g u s~"

" You're nex t , Mr . Kel ler. Right
after Mr. Fenwick re-emerges into
ordinary consciousness! "

PART COlliE • Beagle. brown
and whi te. female . 367 · 7~97 .

percent per annum from

$21 ,829.84 plus in1erest of 8

answer on or before the e x ·
piration at 28 days after
last publ ication of th i s

noti ce which date will be
October 30, 1979.

Charles H Morrison
Sara Ann Morri son
(8) 28 (9) 4, 11. 18 11012, Stc

1975 STARC~AFT camper with
owing. Sleeps si)( . Good conditions . Or will trode tor
!ives1ock. 742-2997 .

LIVING room su i te . coffee
table and end table in good
condi tion. All fo r $200. Phone

UPHOLSTERING

992 ~ 7331 .

ITHACA SHOTGUN

16

ga .

leotherlight, pump action .
modified borrel l. Excellent
condit ion. $150. 992-35.4.0.

l UMP COAl . $36 per oon
delivered.

m -7126.

IN SYRACUSE

Gutter work, down
spouts, some concrete
work,

TOPS, FURNITURE

plete antenna . Over 50 ft . of
CQ- 0 )(. 992·7126 .
U F90l lag·a-.!ong co~per .
Like new . $1200 . 985·3538 .

and

mo.

8-6·1 mo.

Real Estate Loans
Purchase
and
Refinance
30 Year Terms
A-No
money down
(eligible veterans)

1

IRELAND
MORTGAGE
CO.
E. S1ate, Athens

men's
&amp;
styling,

J&amp;L INSULATION

THREE BEDROOM hou!.e in
Pomeroy . Full basement, gas
furnace. Coli 992 -783Ci .

THREE BEDROOM house and
both in Bradbury . A ll mdoern .

992·6260.
Mobile Homes Sale's
1974 14 &gt;e 70 mobile home.
Good condition . m -5858.

1965 GENERAl60xl2 . 2 bedr .
1970 Sylva . 60xl2. 2 bedr .
1970 Cosola. 60x12, 2 bedr.
1974 Mark!ine , SOx12 ; 2 bed r .
1969 Valiant , 12)(60, 2 bedr .
1967 National, 12x50, 2 bedr .

8' S M081LE HOME SAlES, PT.
PlEASANT, WV . 304 ·675·442• .
MOBILE HOME and lot in
Ma son . WV . Call304 -773-5905

or 992· 7759 .
1965 RICHARDSON 10x50. 2
bedroom , fully carpeted, e)( cept kitchen . 992·7586 .

All Masonary Work
Foundation,

loa

Rutland .

Brick Laying,

Concrete Finishing.
Free Estimates
992 -5304, 992 -2238
8·21 ·1 mo .

H2·2••o2 .
SIX
ROOM house , both
remodeled home on SR 692 .
Carpeted. No , appointmen t
necessar')l . louise Dixon .

or69B·7•29 .
3.65 ACRES APPROX. 2 miles

698 ~ 5211

west of Rt. 7 on 1.43. level
acreage . 7.42· 2656 .
BY OWNER : 3 bedroom house.
Completely remodeled . Wall
to woll carpeting , firepla ce .
new oil furnace . Ci tu water .
6.9 ceres . location 34618
Boshon Rd ., l ong Bottom , Rt .

Headquar ttJrs

~
SR. ~~
"2·3325
216,E . Second

Street

BUSINESS ROOMS Plus a 4 or 5 bedroonn
home with 2 baths, front
back por c hes, glass
furnace , formal
dining ,
range
and
refrigerator,
2 car
garage and nic e lawn .

On Iy $35,000 .
NEW LISTING 2
acres. 3 bedroom home,
bath, ex tra
Pet .neling,

shower ,
utility

building and pig sly .
Creek

water ,

Vinyl and Aluminum
Siding

a

Feder11

BISSEll
SIDING CO.

CALL 992-7544

,. .. ~·.~-=- . ·--~ . .

sula1ed, 2 car garage
and large level garden

spol. Only $17,500.
2 LOTS - one sel up lor
2

mobile homes and
large 8 room house with
1 112 baths, 2 car garage.

Near slores . $17,500.
STORE BUILDING or you can make a home
out of th !s one and rent it

to pay ou1 . Asking
$12,000:
POMEROY - one a cre
for $1,500.
DON'T PASS UP THE
OPPORTUNITY OF
MAKING MONEY ON
THE ABOVE PROPER ·
TIES. SURELY THEY
WILL BE MUCH MORE
NEXT YEAR . CALL
992·3325TO SEE .

ll=ro m

ALI .E YOOP

REAl ESTATE loons. Pu rchase
and ref inance. 30 yeor terms ,
VA . No mo~ey down (eligible
veterans) . FHA · As low as 3
per cent down ( non-\l•terons) .
Ireland Mortgage Co .. 77 E.
Slate. Athens . 6U -592·3051.

llulld tu •'

•••' •'"

Smith Nelm
Motors, Inc.
Pomeroy

..

_...::._

' ... .!

.
Head uarters .•
-

•

REAl ESTATE : 1 aero lot in Rig-·
gscrest Manor, between Tupper s Plains and Chester,
Phone 985-3929 end 985-4129.

NICE COMFORTABlE 8 room
hom e on approx. 2 acres Of
leve lland with plenty of shade
tr ees , on
Rut land
Rd .
992 ~ 72S5 .
---·~--~-

SU P E R

POMEROY
lANDMARK

bedrooms, bath, dining

He~adquarter.s for

Hotpoint and
General Electric
Appliances
Sales &amp; Service .

SALE PRICES
9,., _ Jack W . Carsey

Ail

Mgr.

'

· Pnone99N181

heat, lots of remodeling,
features .

$28,000.00.
POMEROY Ranch
type, 3 bedroonns, lovely

kitchen , dlnln~ recrea t ion room, swimming

pool , carpeting, panel ·
ing, many features.
$39,500.00.
MIDDLE·PORT 2
story frame, hardwOOd

floors wllh carpeting, 2
baths, lots of remodel ·
ing done. A buy · at lust
$28,000.00.
LOTS OF OTHER PRO·
PERTY TO CHOOSE
FROM DROP IN
AND SEE US TODAY.
REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland
Henry E. Cleland Jr.
Phone 992·2259
or
991·6191

.

GOOSE

STOCK

TRAILER N OW AVAILA8LE .
A 51

1f c

Services Offered

-

Li/t.e what?

Well, now!
But I'd .have
'
.a time
That miqht · squeez.1n er 1n
be fix!
throuq h t,h'
s hac~ door 1

1 '"'Ill ~ !~ E1 ~ to f W H ~ nvill•

rooni, c arpeted, panel ·
ed, large carport, other

nice level lot, lots of

Within the citl.l limits
all houses must have
inside fa cilities !

•u "'' uu IE ~tn in9'

PAINTING AND sandblasting .
Free esti motft!\ r,u 949-2686.

Meigs School Dl•trlc1,
workshop. VERY LOW .
SYRACUSE - 2 family,
brick &amp; block. Hot water

We s t · pl aye d lo w and
Nonh ·s ni ne los t lo Eas l ·s

I+
4+

Pass
Pass

ki ng. The contract was now
assured.

So uth needed a liotle luck.
The king of spades was unfortunately so lualed . but So uth
m a de lhe most of hi s c ha nces.

DOZER , t:NU looaer ana oump
truck . Will do bo•emenh,
ponds ,
brush ,
t i mber,
limestone ,
and
grovel.
Chorles8utcher. 7~2-29.40.
Will HAVE vacancy for elderly
lady 2nd of September . Room ,
board and laundry. Core if
needed. Reasonable prices.

992·6022.
HAVE VACNACV to care for
the elderly in our home.

992·73U .
Will DO baby silting In my
home for a child from 3 to 9
years of age. Col! Alice
Williams . 949-2571 .

Auctions
BIG AUCTION every Wod., 7
pm, Hortford Community
Center , Hartford, WV . .t1 miles
above
Pomeroy·Maso'n
Bridge.

mo

&amp;RADFORD. Auctioneer, Complete Service. Phone 9.49· 2.487
or 9.ti9-2CX)O . Raci ne, Ohio,
Critt Bradford,

ElWOOD BOWERS REPAIR SwHpers. toasters . irons, all
small appllancts . lawn moer,
next to State Highway Garage
on Route 7, 98S..3a~5 .

WINNIE
YES, "AuNT . BE55 tf: .

AND WENDY WILS,.
IN A MANN ER Co.SPCA&gt;&lt;: tNG '&lt;U\!
lHE SIDESH0\'11 -'

WINNIE WINkLE

" SO YOU SET W EN£7Y

FASHION$

UP IN HER OW N
DIVIS ION.&lt;. EH '?

~E

WILL

TH E MAIN

ATTRACTION ...

HOW C£~VER.

OF YOU.'

makes, 992-228.4.
Shop, Pomeroy.
Singer Soles and
sharpen Scissors.

992·3525 or 992·5232.
EXCAVATING . dour ,
bock hoe and ditcher, Charles
R. Hatfield. Block Hoe Sel'\'ice.
Rutland, Ohio . Pon•742·200e .

PUlliNS EXCAVATING. Camplate Service. Phone 992-2478.

INSURANCE

l011er

7 One of a

DOWN

OF TABLE SCRAPS,
PAW

PIG

0' FIRE!!

OUT

OF HISSELF-!!

1 Cllurch
dignitary
sweet
2 Sidelong
11 Harem
3 In existence
chamber
4 Movie
1% Of the eye
house: Sp.
u Witticism
5 - trice
14 Pupil : Fr.
6 Part of COD
15 French river 7 Part of
17 Dobbin's mate N.O.W.
18 B!llanced
8 Worship
19 Greek letter 9 Appraised
:W cagney fihn 10 Budding
Zl Dolores
M .D.'s course
- Rio
16 capitol
ZZ Above : poet.
body : abbr.
23 Pieces:
abbr.
26 Adjective
for Tim
27 - king
28 Shore
31 Tickled

S &amp; G Corpe1 Cloonlng. Steam

Yesterday's Answer
18 Correct
Z6 Convert
a script
into leather
:W Losing
28 Meander
one's
Z9 Subject
marbles
:ro Mature
Z3 Actor,
3118th U.S.
Jack president
Z4 Din
33 Merriment
Z5 Dishearten 36 Wallach

6ETTIN6 READ'(
10 SO FISHINIS

R16HT

0

~

~

,.---~

AS SOON A5 I PUT
ON M~ 1-{AT...

podge
37 Wooden
core
38 French
lace city
39 Craving

J

.. AND M~
WADING
600f!

~ B

to work it :

LONGFELLOW

YBVHBSJ

IBHJ

AU

MBZPAO.

[

N Z B

XCBNJ

IPJJIB

BKSBYJPAX

JZPAXN
IUWPAX

--~

;.
·---·~

JZUCXZJN

..
~

guard. 992-6309 or 7•2· 23o48.
1 . - - - ..... -

. FAO

RPAO . -

VUNB

ZBAAPRBV
ZBFJUA
Yetlerday's Cryploqaole: DON'T LET A FRIENDLY FOX IN
TilE HEN HOUSE. ONE DAY HE'LL BE HUNGRY. - p•..0
ADAGE

cleaned . Free estimate .
ra1es. Scotch·
Reasonable
•..,_..,.

'.

4 :QO-Mr . Ca rton 3; Password 15;

l!t;erv Griffin 6 ; Addams Family
8; Sesame Sl. 20,33; Six Million
Dollar Man 10; Mike Douglas 13.
4 : 30- Lone Ranger 3 ; Hogan ' s
He r oes 8; Lucy Show 15;
Partridge Family 17.
S : O~ Bonanza 3; Bever ly Hillbillies
8; Mr . Rogers 20,33; Gomer
P yle. USMC 10; Six Million
Dollar Ma n 13; Brady Bunch 15;
Star Trek 17.

20.33.

CRYPTOQUOTES

e

Heroe s 10; 'Green Acres 17.

10 :00- Card Sharks 3,4, IS ; Edge of
Nig ht 6; All in the Family 8,10;
Morning Magazine 13; Movie
" The Girl Rush " 17.
10 : 30- Ho llywood Squares 3,1 S;
$20.000 P yramid 13; Bonkers! 6;
Whew! 8,10; 10 :5$-CBS News 8;
House Ca ll 10.
11 :DO-High Rollers 3, IS ; Laverne &amp;
Sh irl ey 6,13: Price is Right 8,10;
11 : 3~ Wh ee l of Fortune 3, 15;
Family Fe ud 6, 13.
11 :5$-News 17 ; 12 :0Q-Newscenter
3; News 6, 10,13; Mindreaders 15;
Young a nd lhe Res tless 8; Love
American Style 17 .
12 : 3~ R yan's Hope 6,1j; Search lor

7 : 3~Baseb all

PEANUTS

if-{ AT'S

News 13 .

7 :DO-Today 3, 15; Good Morning
Ame ri ca
6, 13;
Wednesday
Morning 8;· Batman 10; Three
Stooges· Li1tle Rascals 17.
7: 15- A.M. Weather 33 ; 7 : 30Fami ly Affair 10; Lilias, Yoga
and You 33.
8: oo-Capla ln Kangaroo 8, 10; Lassie
17; Sesame St . 33 ; 8: 30-Romper
Room 17
9 :QO-Bob Braun 3; Phi l Donahue 13 ,
15: Big Va lley 6; Porky Pig and
Friends 8; Love of Life 10; Lucy
Show 17 .
9 : 3~Sa nlord and Son 8; Hogan ' s

News 10; Love, American Style
IS; Get Smart 17 ; Dick Cavett

One letter simply stands for. another. In this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single lc&lt;lers,
apost rophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code lc&lt;le rs are different.

8 -ZB

6: 55- Chuck White Reports 10;

News3, 1S; ABC News 13;
Andy Griff ith 6; CBS News 8,10;
Over Easy 20,33 ; Father Knows
Bes t 17.
7 :00- Cross -Wi ts 3; Newlywed
Game 6.13; Porter Wagoner .8;

Is

~OU'RE

Report 3; 6 : 5!)-GoOd Morning ,
We st Virginia 13.

6 : 3~ NBC

Here's how
AX\'DLBAAXR

I SEE

Christopher Closeuo 10.
6 : 3~0 ra~ net 17; G: 4s-Mornlng

5: 3~ N ews 6; Petticoat J unction 8
Electric Co. 20; Mary Tyler
Moore 10; Odd Couple 15 ; Doctor
Who 33 .
6 :0Q- News 3,6,8, 10,13, 15; Family
Affair 17; Villa Alegre 20; Once
Upon a Classic 33 .

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-

U3.

WEDNESDAY,AUGUST29, 1919
5:4.s--:Farm Repor t 13; S : 5~PT
Cl ub
13;
S: 55- Summer
Semesler 10.
6:D0-700 Club 6,8; PTL Club 15;
6 : 10- New s
17;
6 : 25-

Tomorro w 8, 110 ; Not forWomen

Tolstoy duo

'fEP··HE MADE A BODACIOUS

Bf:'LLS

OL' BULLET ET
·THREE HELPIN'S

America 17; Lock,
Stock and Barrel 20.
11 :00- News 3, 6, 8,10 , 13, 15; Dic k
Cavett 20; Book Beat 33 .
11 : 3~Jo hnny Carson 3, IS; Andy
Kau fman 6,13 ; Barnaby Jones 8;
A BC News 33 ; Movie " The Vlsl1"
10: Mo vie " Red, Ho1 and Blue"
17 .
12 : 4~Movie " Betrayal " 8; l :OQTomorrow 3; News 13,15.
1:2$-Baseball 17 ; 3:5$-News 17;
4: IS- Untouchables 17 .

On ly 15; Movie " Showdown at
Boot Hil l" 17 .
· 00- Days of our Lives 3, IS ; All My
Children 6, 13; News 8; Young
an d the Res tless 10.
1: 3~As Ihe World Turns 8, 10.
2:0Q-Doclors 3, 15; One Life to Live
6, 13; Baseball 17; 2 : 3~Another
World 3, 15; Gu iding Light 8. 10.
3 :QO-General Hospital 6,13; Lilias ,
Yoga and You 20.
3 : 3!)-MASH 8; Joker's Wild 10;
Over Easy 20 .

fabric
35 Hodge-

systems,

lng, Phone 742·2455.

yo u foli o"· your bes t JUdgm e nt.

34 Cravat
mARNEY

882· 2952 or 882·3454 .
HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex·

WILL HAUL limestone and
gravel. Also , lime hauilng end
spreading. leo Morris Truck·

lo

10 Southern

Si)C days a week , 24 hours aer·
vice . Emergency calls , Call

IN STOCK for immediate
delivery: vorioua sizes of pool
ki ta . Do-it- yourself or let us
Install for you . 0 . Bumgardner
Soles, Inc . 992-572-4 .
·

best. Tha t is. unless vuur bes1
judgment tell s yo u
ignor e
the general r u le . i n wh ich case

40 Weight

I Serene

ser~lng Ohio Vo lley region .

Phone 1 (61•) 698·7331 or
7·2·2593.

If yo u slarted With lhree
ca rds in his suit. return the
higher . With four or mo re.
re turn th e original fo unh

GOP

992·2143.
E·C ELECTRICAL Conlracoor

Rt .

in

th e defense again st notrump .

32.Word
with
amajig
33 Part of

been concell~? lott your
operators . licens.e? Phone

cavatlng , septic
darer, backhoe.

ret urning part ner·s sui t

in

pink

'EXCAVATING. dozer. looder
and backhoe work : ' dump
trucks and Ia- boys for hire.
will houl f ill dirt, top aoil.
limestone and grovel. Call Bob
or Roger Jeffers, day phone
992· 7089 ,
night
phone

AUTOMOBILE

North

A New Yo r k r eade r as ks
w hat ca rd should be led bac k

:--.,.,.....,.....,:--..,..-r.-

SEWING MACHINE Repoiro.
seNice , all
The Fabric
Authori zed
Service. We

Ask tb• l!xP•Pts

trum ps .

ACROSS

Ll r19 tYIII• . OftiD

367·7101 .

carpet, some paneling,

GASOI.INE AI .L.EY

11l1G MOf'l tgotn tf'J Ad .

NOW HAULING limestone In
Middlepor t-Poemroy area .
Call for
free estimate.

bldgs. Owri gas &amp; water.
$30,500.00.
GOOO HOME - Has 4
lots, 4 bedrooms, ba1h ,

3•
Pa ss

~-~
by THOMAS JOSEPH

TRAilfR SALES

ANN' S CAKE Oec:oroling Suppi ies . 50716 Osborn Rd ..
Reedsville , OH .tl5n2 . For information ca'll , 667·6485. Will
be open late if you need
something.

4

Pass
Pass

wit h only one loser.

South

s hould have bid two clubs and
s upported partners spades
la ler. bul undoubt ed ly th e
partnership would play in four
s pades.
Sout h was unh a ppy when he
sa w the dummy. He had lo
lose l ~e ace a nd king of dia·

~~! .

gutters and
down spouts .
Window cleaning
Gutter cleaning
Free Estimates

MAIN
POMEROY,O.
OVER 20 ACRES

North East

No rth 's three-s pade bod had
lillie to recommend it. He had
13 hi gh·ca rd points opposite
h1s partner 's openin g bid , but
a jump raise s hould guara nlee

everl.j citl.j o rdinance in

NE!w, repair,

0

West

would in_c rease th e possibility
of bnng1ng 1n the trump suit

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alao Sontag

- - .- -

tl'te

Ph . 992 -217-4

~49·2862 --949·2160

Real 'Estate for Sale

special

.

and be

·If Ihe jack· l 0 of spades we re
in f ront of the t~ce-queen ""'""
o nl y a 25 percent chance the n pl ay in g a spad e to
dummy 's ni ne of trump s

Opening lea d : • 10

H. L Writesel
Roofing

•New Home
•Add ons
* Remoldings
*Free estimates
992-6011
7·12

has

ROADS ··

a

p l&lt;.ty

South Wds no mathema t i ci an, but he dJd know that two
chances wer e bette r than one .

Vulnerable : North-South
Dealer : South

OlHER. l="t!I N CV
CAR S Ol"l THE

lrH·~

a noth er trum r

set

• AQ2 .

M ILLIO NS OF

BUT IVAM 'S BOYS ARE
WATCHif'! G 1t\E FiElDS
LE SS
,., ORIVtHG WE'
l\tlBlE r6 BE.

Joel. (JOur .:;hac~ violates

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

home

ORPHA ANNIE--LOST
,. IN THE CROWDS

&amp;

101 Sycamore (RNr)
Pomeroy, o.

6 ·14· 2 mo .

96 4

• 76542
• A2
• QJ 9

7251 m o.

Hours 9·1 M., W., F .
Other limes bY appoint-

calls .

uovtously. nc &lt;·outa

spa de to th e queen. hut if t het l
lost to t he king he wuu ld lnst '

EAST
+K8
• Q J 10 5
+ K 7, 4 3
• 76 5

• A 665
• 10 9 8

r

651 Beech Street
Middleport, 0.
992· 2356

ment.

Good

•

\/eterilns Admin. Loans.

Call for a Free Siding
Es1imate, 949-2101 or
949·2860. No Sunday

6-211

• K 873
• 10 2
• K J 4 3

at least four

Housing

monds and he a lso had one o r
more potentia l trump lose r s.
His tmmediate problems we re
dr a wing trum p a nd fogu rin!
" ' 1' th e Pest wav t o do it.

+A Q9

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING

store.

bedrooms, wall to wall
carpeting,
front
and
side porches, util i 1y
room , all rooms ful ly in ·

NORTH

11 Ye.an Experlenc@

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

fron1
porch,
and
carpeting. $25,000.
NEW LISTING 6
room ap1 . with 3
bedroom s, 1112 baths, c:i ·
ty water, gar-age, and 3
rooms down tha1 have
Extra lot for a garden .
Asking just $27,500.
ONE FLOOR , 2

"eotJTRttLT"
CXJT ()J """''" I

GEE~ JU ST
Tl1 ' T ~ O OF
US AND
S ANOY ?

1. $23 ,500.

~

rM oo Kt.urt. 'bU

1 PtJr A

M ovie "Break heart Pass" 8, 10 ;
T e nde r
Land
J) ;
Great
Performances 20.
IO :OQ-Three' s Company 6, 13; News
10 : 3~Taxl6,13;

Accurate trump technique

IF

00·1fc

992-5871
40 ACRES lAND on Bailey Run
Rd . Good hunting, timber , oil
mi nerol righ ts . · $12 ,000 .

triM'(~

BWTIUI.IbM~!

Wor ld to China 15; easeball 17;
New Orleans Concerto 20; City
Nol ebook 33 . ··
8: 3~240 · Robert 6, 13 ; Two Ronnles
33 .
9:0D-Movie " To Kill a Coo" 3.15 ;

20.

J IGGLE

BORN LOSER

Will Make Service C•lls

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
Also rransmission
Repair
Phone 992· 5682

BEETLE

Jumbl1 look No. 13,containlng t 10pu.r.zlll, Is IYIIIIble for$1,75 po1tp1ld
from Jumble, cJo thl1 ntwap•:r•r, Box :u, NONood, N.J. 07648.includt your
ntmt, addre.., lip code an m1h checka pay1ble to Ntwlpaptrbookl.

l..ITII..E ORPHAN ANNIE

Shop

mile off Rt. 7 by -pan

HAIRY

SOUTH

Reynolds'
Electric Motor

on St. Rt. 124 toward

PIPER

Answer: Wha t most freQuen tly becomes a

6·6·1 mo .

Roger Hysell
• Garage

Now arrange tt1e ctrcled leHers to
form the surprise answer, as sug·
gas ted by the above cartoon.

I Jumbles:

WEST
• J 10 3

CALL
992-2772

992-5547
1·25·2 mo.

Services
OHered

Yesoerday·s

Free Estimate

Pomeroy, Ohio

[]
"r I XI I I XI r
(Answers tom orrow)

BY

Rt. 3

Real Estate for Sale

Wonder Womaf1 1Q; Around the

TOO MUCH OF TH IS ,

Print answer here:

"992-2367
M1in St.
Pomeroy, 0 .
8·26·1 mo.

WORK, GENERAL

592-3051

GAUSE HE WA5 DOING

woman?-A GIRL

BLOCK &amp; BRICK
CONTRACTOR

77

WIIH IA~AN BE-

[]

I I I

MARK MORA
HAl R STYLIST

ALUNINUM
&amp; VINYL SIDING

N. L Construction

low as 3%

J'ANE BECAME AN6RY
f

'ALLTOW f

Mick'S
Barber &amp;
Style Ce?ter
.. ~Introduces ·

perms .
Clll lor app1. orwllk ln.

RACINE,O.
949·2141 or
992·7314

949-2000

15; Get Smarl 17 ; Dick Cavet.
20.33 .
7 : 3~ H o l lywoo d Squa res 3; Candid
Ca mera 6; Gong .Show 8; Price Is
Right 10; Donna Fargo 13;
Abboll and Costello 15; My Three
Sons 17 ; MacNeii · Lehrer Report
20.33.
8:0Q-Runaways 3; Happy Days
6, 13; Bil ly Graham Crusade 8;

[]

f

IINGOPE

7·25·1 mo. pd .

Fe1turing:
women's

V. C. YOUNG Ill

~own (non -veterans)

COBRA CAM 11'1 CB bose. Com·

. walks

drfvew•ys.
(FREE ESTIMATE)

• Free Esti!T)ates
3rd St., Racine

I I I

Free Estimates

ADD ONS &amp; ·
REMODELING

CAR SEATS, BOAT

N ews 10; Love. American Style

- -""" ...

Phone 992-!323

Free Estim•tes

BOB'S
UPHOLSTERY

7 00- Cross ·Wil s 3; Newlywed
Game 6.13 ; P lease Stand By B;

NIUMS

eNiiW HOMES
e ROOM ADDITIONS
eROOFtNG
eVINYL SIDING
eGUTTER &amp; SOFFIT

JAMES KEESEE
Phone 992·2772
8·17·1 mo.

Ph. 992·3143 or 992·3752
8·Hmo.

FHA- AS

BOP'S GENERAL
CONTRACTING

elnsulatlon
eStorm Doors
• Storm Windows
• Replacemen1
Windows
• Gutter' and
DoWnSpouts

Under New Managemen! (formerly Sylvia's
Upholstery), across
from Codner's Texac::o.

7 ~5 · 1

'' 1~:.:,.~-··

J&amp;L BlOWN
INSUlATION
VINYL AND
ALUMINUM SIDING

A&amp;H

CJ I

Television
Viewing
TUESDAY, AUGUST 18, 1979

ARING .

·Business Services

1976 SUZUKI RM 250. Excellent
condit ion . $700. 217-3861 .

been used as

GiveAway

Morrison filed a comP'Iaint
!n the Common Pleas Court

of Meigs Coun1y, Ohio,
alleging that 1he Defen·

$150. 949~ 2450 .

Leading

I
I

H. Morrison and ::.ara Ann

USED HEAlWAVE woodburning sto'We, $200. 2 double
beds. I metal . 1 antique, $100
each. 2 lamps, $20 ea . I riding
lawn mower , needs work ,

VIRGIL B.

~

Charles

Johnson, Portland .

Housing

thai on May 2,

1979,~

Phone 304·773· 5721.
8ARlEY . Phone 843· 2105 . Don

SEVEN ROOMS and bath. 2
spoke wheels , A .C., auto.
trans ., P.S., P.B., good condi · . acres . 992· 2523.

was

Box 301 Waverly, W. Va .
26184, olherwise the. place

Sept . 15. Bob's Market ,
Mason , WV . Open 7 days.

bedr . remodeled house ,
alum inum siding, insulated.
storm windows , Iorge ba rn .
outbuildings, stocked pond.
$36,500. Owner may Help
finance. '19'2· 7733 .

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Michael L. Conley, whose
I

CANNING PEACHES now ohru

P.S', AM-FM 8- trock , cru ise
control. Phone 992·6681 , olter

Nancy

last known residence

BOAT . 1960 Glass Magic 18'
boat with 197 1 Merc ury 135
h.p. ou tboa rd and 1960 Gator
Ti l t t railer $1595 . Phone
992 -666 1, after 5 992-3133.

20 ACRES NEAR langsville' 3

For Rent
IN THE COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS,
MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
POMEROY,OHIO
45169
CHARLES H. MORRISON
AND
SARA
ANN
MORRISON, Route 2, Box
130·A, Mineral Wells, West

.=:..:..:..::..::::-:-:__~~-

CHEVROLET CAMARO

(8 1 27, 28. 29, 31c

Aug . 12.

LENNOX CENTR AL air condi tioning and h ea ting with
ducts . 992-2560.

V·B, auto., a ir , Rally Sports,

A .C.. P.S.. auto. trams , rear
defogger, 305 engine. Exce llent condition . 2.47·3863 .

Help Wanted

I

4·23 ·1 m o.

showroom

Col1992·711&gt;4 .

Unscramble these lour Jumbles,
one l~tter 10 each square , to rorm
four ordinary words

wagon . Auto ., P.S. . P.B., air .

MEIGS COUNTY HUMANE
SOCIETY . 992 ·6260 . Pels

Attendance at the morning services
Aug . 12 at the Free Methodist Church
was 66. Choir members present was

SIDE GLAN CES

OlDS

power, $3995 , or will toke
frode-in . 949·2818 7:30 until 3
or 949·2150 . May be seen at
Ca rpenter ' s Pennzoil
in
Racine.

REWARD: LOST in Hemlock
Grove areo , Medium size dog.
Block , curly heir, 4 ite feet ,
white on chest. grey around
muzzle. Answer s fa " Abner".

The W.M .S. held a meeting Aug. 7
with Mr. and Mrs. I.,loyd Wright at the
camp at Mason, W.Va .
Mr. and Mrs . Phil Wise, Waverly,
a ttended services at the local church

RISING STAR Kennel . Boor·

1974 VEGA HATCHBAC~ . coli
303•675·1501 or 305·675·24BB
or 304·675· 1553.
1974 DODGE CORONET 4·door

Lost and Found

Laurel Cliff
News Notes

liKE NEW in·do sh AM-FM 8·
tra ck
stereo . 2 co- a xial
speakers. For more Information . c a11992 - 37~3 after 5.

Auto Sales

CAll NOW or:td register for
cake decorating classes
beginning
soon at the
Carouse l Confectionery , M iddleport. 992·63A2 .

Margaret and Pat Puster of Akron
were weekend visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Ronald Russell. Pat is spending
a few more days with her sister, Mrs.
Donald Russell.
Mr. and Mrs. carl Russell and
grandson of Col inn bus spent the week
with Bertha Russell and Earl Russell .
Mrs. Iva Johnson accompanied
Julie Stevens and Barbara Steadman
of Fairfax, Va. Saturday for a visit
with Alta Atkins of Colwnbus .
Julie Stevens and Barbara Steadman spent Saturday evening and Sunday with Iva Johnson.
Mrs. J . R. Murphy, Peggy, and
Mrs. John Downs, Adam and Eric,
spent a week with cannel Murphy in
North carolina. They also spent a few
days at Myrtle Beach.

ONE DAY only Garage Sole.
Rain or sh ine, Wed ., Au'g ust
29th. 8 om to 3pm . Aho so x·
o phone ( like new). hi-li record
player ,
antique
sewing
machine . ph ilco stereo ,
lampS. brown stuffed chior.
Items too numerous to mention . JoAnn Crhip, CR 28. Oar·
cas .

Western .
Saddles
and
horneu. Horses and ponies.
Ruth Reeves . 6U·698-3290.
Barding &amp; Riding Lessons -and
Horse Care product.s.

ftfti}Nl fii)'i} ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
\.9 ~~ ®
b~Henri Arnold andBobLee

~

grovel , calc ium chloride, fertilizer , dog food. end oil types ..
1
of soh. Excelsior Salt Works , 1.-~-- - - - - - - - - - - - -- Inc .. E. Main St., Pomeroy .

992·3891 .

Taylor. 614-367-7220.

NOTICE

sand ,

Thursday and Friday, August
30 9nd 3 1, Rock St., 4th right
oft Spri ng A \le ., in Pomeroy.
Some furniture and children' s
and adults clothing .

ding. Call367·0292.
POOOlE GROOMING . Judy

ERWIN'S GUlf Sar'Wice will be
closed from August ~ till
Sept. 4 for vacation .

Wolf Pen
News Notes

Sol e.

HOOF HOl lOW, English ond

Phpne992-2156

would be 8 mis take to 8110'111
you rsetr to be lnlluenced toda y
by frtends who may mean well
but who don't know what they 're
talk ing about.
TAURUS (Aprll 20·Moy 20) 11
Isn 't fair to expect your mate or
partner to li ve up to your expec tat ions. To have a successful all iance, each must pull his or her
own weight .
GEMINI (Moy 21-Juno 20)
EKtreme care must be 1aken
today In what you say. Though
you may not intend any harm or
disrespect, your words could be
misconstrued it you 're not careful.
CANCER (JYne 21-July 22)
What may took like a once-i n-altlellme bargain could turn ou t to
be pretty 6K pensive today. Know
who and what you're dealing with
before you gamble.
LEO (Julr 23-Aug. 22) Lad y
Luck is not e~~:ac tl y In your corner
tod ay. Take care not to mess up
somethmg you have going for
you by depending on her.

Yard

Pets for Sale

Th e Publis her reserves the•
right to edit or r ej«'l any uds
deeme d obje ctional.
The
Publisher will nut be responsible
for more than one incorrect ir
sertion .

ARIEl (March 21-April 111) 11

FAMilY

For Sale
liMESTONE ,

COAL ,

DICK TRACY

3; Match Game PM
6 ; Muppel Show 8; The Judge 10;
Thai ' s Hollwood 13; Wild
Kingdom IS; My Three Sons 17;
MacNei l· L~hrer Report 20,33.
8 :DO-Eigh t is Enough 6,13 ; Real
P eo ple 15 ; Billy Grahann
Crusade 8; Dorolhy 10; Movsle
" A Very Special Favor" 17;
Masterpiece Theatre 20; All
Crealures Grea t and Small 33.
8 : 3~Hanging In 10; 9 :0Q-Charlle's
Angels 6,13; Movie "The Night
They Took Miss Beautiful " 15; ·
Mov ie " Behind the Badge" 8,10;
Great
P erformances
33 ;
Ups tairs, Downstairs 20.
IO :OQ-Bewitched 3; VegaS 6, 13;
News 20.
10 :3!)-Fa ll of Eagles 17; Best of
Groucho
20 ;
11 : 00- News
3.6,8,\0,13.15; Dick Cavell 20;
Book Beat 33 .
11 : 3~Johnny Carson 3, 15; Pollee •
Woman ~. 13 ; U.S . .Open Tennis
Highl ights 8; ABC News 33;
Mo vie " The First Traveling
Sa leslady "
10 ;
Movie
"Somebody Loves Me" 17.
11 : 45- Swl tch 8; 12 : 40- Baretta
6,13; 12 :55-Kolak 8.
1 :DO-Tomorrow 3, News 15. 1 :3()- '\
Baseball 17; 1:50-News 13;
4 : 00- News
17 ;
4 : 20Unfouchables 17.
I

�t

8- The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Aug , 28, 1979

~~~~~~£~~~n~ ~~v~ a~!~9.?!_. I

lias collected some $6,900 in its Kirkham, Mr. and Mrs. Don Kelly ,
current fund dMve for a new heavy- Mrs. William Reynolds, Mrs. Blanch
duty rescue van , and is still taking .Gilkey, Mrs. Reva Beach, Roscoe
contributions .
Satterfield, Mrs. Leo Childs, Mr. and
A little over half of the 8031 has Mrs. Harold Hubbard, David Acree,
been reached, but approximately
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Duckworth,
$6,100 is yet needed for tlle van .
Mr. and Mrs. John Werner, Mrs.
Among tl1e latest contributors are Leona Booth, Mrs. Lena Adkins,
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Burkett, Mr. Mrs. Homer Jones, Mr. and Mrs.
and Mrs . Leland Brown, Mrs. Gr~ce Jack Satterfield, Mr. and Mrs. DanHawley, Hallie and Nellie Zerkle, ny Fink, Mr. and Mrs. Edison
Mr. and Mrs. Carroll Swanson, Mr. Baker, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Ranand Mrs. Ted Ril ey, Marty dolph, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Carsey,
Nicholson, Carl Lockett, Mrs. Cnn- Mr. and Mrs. Paul E. Davis, Mr. and
nie Dotson, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Mrs. Lawrence Stewart.
Horky, Mrs. Louise Thompson, Mr.
Greg Gatrell, Pete Roush, Leo
and Mrs. George Anderson, Mr. and Searles, Dee Hartinger, Pearl VanMrs. Tom Kelly, Mr. and.Mrs. Clyde Cooney, Nina Bland, Pearl
Ingels, Mr. and Mrs. John Lyons, Reynolds, EJecta Souders, Richard
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Thomas, Mr. and Bailey, Richard Hovatter, Don
Mrs. Terry Smith, Mr. and Mrs . Becker, Herman Kincaid, John W.
Ralph Pratt, Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Tillis, Dwight D. Ashiey, Mr. and

Area Deaths

Beulah Hayes, Frank Wilson ,
ORVILLE C. RHODES
Funeral services will be held at 10
Sharon Wilson, Dale Davis, Don W.
Orville C. Rhodes, 72, Route 3, a.m. Wednesday at tl1e Ewing
Roach, Florence arid Jean Custer, Racine, died Monday at the Fimeral Home witll tl1e Rev- Don
Linda Laudennilt, Myron Fran- Veterans AdminiStration Hospital in Walker offiCiating. Burial will be in
choviak, Dutch and Elizabeth Yost, Dayton.
Sand Hill Cemetery. FrtendB may
Nellie Price, Lightning Boyd, Gene
Mr. Rhodes was a son of the late · call at tlle funeral home anytime.
Goodwin, Velva Keys, Mary F. Milo and Clara Wagner Rhodes and
Bumgardner, Gene McDaniel, was also preceded in deatll by three
Gladys Sigler, George Knapp, Diana brothers.
Taylor, L. A. Wilkinson, Evelyn
He was an employe of tlle Modem
Bauer, Raymond Russell, Dewey Supply Co., in Pomeroy. Mr. Rhodes
Hudson, Mrs. Homer Rice, Sonny was a member of the Racine Baptist
Hudson.
Church. He was a veteran of World
The Chester Volunteer Fire Depart· Carl Still, Mrs. Nora Ball, Man- War II and belonged to the Racine ment will be llavlng its annual Labor
ningKloes, Lewis Sauer, WalterMc- American Legion Post.
Day Chicken Barbecue and Parade on
Dani.el, Roscoe L. Fowler, William
Surviving are his wife, Carol Story September 3. The barbecue will begin
and Lucille Davis, Ray Boggs, Rhodes ; a son, S-sgt. Gary M. at approximately 12 noon, with the
Harry Garnes, Jr .., Dorothy Rhodes and a daughter-in-law, Mary parade at follow at I :30 p,m.
In order to generate more enWilliams, Carl Williiuns, John S. Beth Rhodes, both of Homestead Air
Green, Jean Thienel, Connie Force Base, Florida; two brothers, tllusiasm, the fire department is· ofMoodispaugh, Ted Woods, Dennis Dale of New Brighton, Pa., and fering prize money to Ule tOP four
Hackett, B. J. Campbell, Dorotlly Russell of Marietta ; a sister, Nona floats, antique cars, civic or school
Jerikins, Charles Wayland, Brends Ritchie of Portland and several organizatiom which enter tl1e parade.
Prizes of $25,
$10, and $5 will be
Coffee, Debbie Harnnan, Pauletta nieces and nephews.
awarded to tl1e top four groups. Any
Sigman, Joe Struble,"Judson 'White,
fire department, civic organization,
Edward Evans, Uoyd Harris, Marother group interested in parsllaTerry, CathyErwin,BigBendC.
0Url or
ticipating in the 1979 Labor Day
B. Club, Henry Swift estate, Albert ·
Parade should call Pat Morrt.s.sey at
.Roush, Feeney Bennett Post, FrenEight defendants were fined, one ~.or Bill Buckley at 992-2996.
ch's Sunoc J , Citizens National Bank, was bound to tl1e grand jury and 10
Asa and Nora Jordan, Jeneree
forfeited bonds in tlle Meigs County
Chesher, Pauline Roush, Editll Bur- Court of Judge &lt;llarles Knight on
ton, Gertntde McElhinny,
Monday.
Fined were Amanda Savage,
Albany, $5. and costs, no muffler;
Britain's National Health Service Leola Gilmore, Rutland, $10 and
went into operation in 1948.
costs, failure to yield; James
Hughes, Montclair, N. J., $15 . and
costs, speeding; Rodney Pullins,
GREENVILLE, S. C.
Pomeroy ,$15 and costs, speeding;
Multimedia, Inc., announced MonRick L. Wills, Route 2, Wellston, exday tlle purchase of The Daily Stauncessive speed, $15 and costs; ton (Virginia) Leader and Sunday
Elizabetll W. Milton, Middleport, $15 News Leader.
and costs, dMving tl1e wrong way on
The Leader has an evening cira four lane; Mark A. Tillis, Rutland,
culation of 17,000 and tl1e News$15CJ and costs, three days in jail and Leader 20,000.
The company also publishes a
30 days restricted dMver's license,
driving while intoxicated; Brian weekly free distribution publication,
Matthews, Route 3, Pomeroy, $15 which is included.
Hierome L. ()pie, Jr., president
and costs, speeding.
and
general manager, will remain
Robert Riffle, Pomeroy, was
bound to tl1e grand jury on theft witll tl1e newspaper as publisher, as
will Evarts W. Opie, Jr., who will
charges.
Forfeiting bonds were John M. continue as vice president and
Davis, Route 2, Pomeroy, $35.50, treasurer.
MIGAS
E. Walton ()pie, present editor and
over height bumper; Walter Hompublisher,
will retire.
drick, Roanoke, Va. , $360.:i0, driving
"Multimedia
is extremely proud
while intoxicated ; Mary Lucas,
to
welcome
tl1e
Staunton
newspaper
Gallipolis; Robert Dale Srnitll,
into
our
company,"
sald
Wilson C.
Parkersburg, W. Va.; Scott Dewitt,
Wearns,
president.
Gallipolis; Gregory Sheets ,
"Staunton is iln excellent market ,
Hemlock Grove, and Clere Sayre,
and
this now moves us for tl1e first
· Route 2, Point Pleasant, W. Va.,
time
into Virginia.
each $35.50 on speeding cllarBes ;
"We
respect tl1e great traditioo
Jackie P. Allman, no address recorbehind
The
Leader and its longtime
ded, $35.50, failure to yield; James
publishers
and editors, the ()pie
NIWfiiiDOM
B. Pettit, Middleport, $37.55, no eye
family,
"
said
Werns, "And we exprotection, and William Williams,
Pomeroy, $112.55, disorderly conduct.

Otester chicken
barbecue Sept. 1

m.

County· C

CRUSADE AIRED
Major Gle1U18 Rwmnel of the
Pomeroy SalvaUon Army remlnda
residents tllat the Billy Grallam
Crusade from Nashville, Tenn., is ·
being aired this week at 8 p.m. on ·
ChanneU.

Deterioration will continue

Gasoline tax increase lacks broad support

DIVORCES SOUGHT

TIIree divorces, all on grounds of
gross neglect of duty and eztreme
cruelty, llave been filed for in tl1e ·
Meigs County Common Pleas Court :
by Doris Fisher, Racine, againat
Phillip Fisher, also of Racine; Linda
Rathburn, Middleport, against
Richard Rathburn, Middleport; and
Thomas E. Watson, Reedsville, against Delores Jean Watson, also of :
Reedsville.
RACINE FIRE
DEPARTMENT DINNER
The Racine Volunteer Fire Depar-

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio's deteriorating highway system apparenUy wtU not be rejuvena.ted with an increase in the rrtate gasoline tax.
House Finance Chainnan M)'J'l H. Shoemaker, 0-Boumeville, says Ule
proposal lacks broad support, especlallytllat ofGov, James A. Rhodes.
He commented Tuesday as his panel heard 10111ber forecasts of things to
come from David L. Weir, Rhodes' transpot1atloo director who has given the
tax boost his personal endorsement.
Weir endorsed tl1e tax earlier thia summer, obviously witll tl1e governor's
approval, but Shoemaker made It clear this won't be enough for majority
Democrata, who want to hear ltfrom tl1e man ltimaelf.
Shoemaker and other Democrats said tlley do not construe Weir's support
of the tax u being the i!ame u a fonnal endonement from tl1e governor, or
even his administration.
The governor campaigned tor MH!lectlon last year with a promise of
nonew or Increased state tues, u a result of any actions by him. He said he
Intends to keep tl1e promise.

tment will stage a barbecued
chicken d!Mer for the public at tl1e
fire station on Sunday beginning at
11 a.m. Cost for a dinner will be f3
which Includes potato salad, baked
beans, rolls and Qne-baif .chicken;
QIM!-half chicken will be $2. There
wifl also be homemade Ice cream,
pies and cakes available .

Multimedia ·purchases

e
VOL XXVIII NO. 96

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HOSPITAL NEW~
Vetera08 Memorial Hoepltal
Admissions - Benjamin Neutzling, Pomeroy; Torruny Sinunons,
Middleport; Pauletta Sigman, Middleport ; Terry · Eblin, Middleport;
Barry Stewart, Pomeroy ; Sandrs
Sweeney, Pomeroy ; Howard Stevr;nson, Albany; Hattie Powell, Racine;
Sandra Fetty, Athens ; '!'hiry
Milliron, Middleport; Doris Miller,
' Racine; Ronald Miller, Racine ;
William Brewer, Long Bottom.
Discllarges - Gregory Davis,
Paul Fife, Mary Pickens, Barbara
Smitll, Mary Derenberger, Linda
Sturgeon.

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NATURAL OISUPIII

STYLE
HAIR SPRAY

:1~JJO

pect to continue operating tl1e
newspaper in tllat tradition."
Staunton, located 35 miles west of
Charlottesville, Va., is tl1e iradlng
center for a three county agriculture

area.
Multimedia, Inc., based in Greenville, now publis~ 13 daily and 23
non-daily newspapers and operates
five VHF television stations and 13
AM and FM Radio !Italians in 14
states.
SQUAD RUN
The Middleport Emergency Squad
was called to tl1e corner ol Coal and
North Second Sts. at 5: U p.m. Mon.
day for Y\'llliam Atkins, Route I,
Letart, W. Va., who wu ill. Atkins ,
however, ret used treatment.
WATCH LOST
John Ughtfoot, Ohio Power Co.,
employe lost a •150 wristwatch in the
Happy Hollow area where he wen1
on a service call in conjunction witll
power service and a fire call to tl1e
area. Anyone finding the watch is
asked to call him at 992-JJJI or The
Ohio Power Co ., ~ -

ELBERFELD$

WARREN, Ohio (API- Trumbull County sheriff's deputies
began reporting for work as usual
this morning, ending their week-

old strike.
But tl1e 71 memben ol Local
21311 of the American Federation
of Slate, County and Municipal
Employees face IUIJM!nsions
becawte of the strilte action.
The deputies planned to return
to work during their nonnal ahi.fts Tuesday following an
a~ent by Sheriff Richard
Jakmas to continue to recognize
the deputies ' wtlon.

Bargaining begin
DETROIT (AP) - The real ·
berplnlng between the wtlted
Auto Workers Wtion and !be two

bluest auto cunpanla II about
to betlln now tblt Ford Mol« Co.
~ Gel!ml ~otors Corp. have
submitted economic t:Jfters to the
unioo.
Neitller side would give detaiJs
Tueedly, and UAW Pralldent
Douglas A. Fraaer ]ll'OI10IIIICt!
the t:Jftera ' wt acceptable ...
But he allo called them "a
buls on which to build" and a
aource close to tl1e !alb said the
wtlon found them ''not too bad.''

Levy approved
KE1TERING, Ohio (AP) Kettering voters pve their a~
proval Tuesday to a 3.117-mlll,
!w()oyear school operating levy.
School Superintendent John.
Lucas said tl1e levy will generate
about $2.3 million a year in tl1e
southwestern Ohio school
clliltrlct.
The vote In favor came by a
margin of more than 1,000, he
said.
Lucas said tl1e money will offset revenue losa from the closing
of tl1e Deyton-erea Frigidaire
plant and the effecla ol lnflaUon
and declining enrollment.

Holzer Medical Center
Discharges Aug. 21 ,
Virginia Arbaugh, Roger Bush,
Alice Clark, Gloria Cox, Reese Dinsmore, James 9ovenbarger, Mrs.
~ymond Davis and daughter, Linda Frye, James Israel, Glenn
Lawson, . Megan Long, Catherine
Montgomery, Darlene Moore,
Charles Neutzling, Jr., Mrs, George
Pope and son, Audrey Roush, Mrs.
Charles Smitll and daughter, Paul
Tripp, Jr., Mrs. William Wickline
and daughter.
Birtha Aug. 21
Mr. and Mrs. William Nichois, a
son, Jackson.
Mr. and Mrs. John Dunphy, a son,
Wellston.
·

Weir said Ohio willl&lt;l'!e out on $500 million in federal matching fWJds in the
next four years because it cannot come up with its 10 to 30 percent matching
sllare.
'
.
Inflation lias taken a toll even since late June when the Legislature put tl1e
tranapor!atlon department on a three-month interim budget, Weir said.
Highway comtruction coats are increasing at the rate of 2 percent a month,
he etq&gt;lainad.
Shoemaker's coqunittee currenUy is considering a departmental budget
covering tl1e 21 montlls remaining in the 1979-1!1111 biennium.
It was held over In part to give furtlter study to a proposal by Rep.
Frederick H. Deering, 0-Mooroevllle, for a 4 percent tax on wholesale purcllases of gasoline, which would translate into two to three cents a gallon
more at the pumps.
Deering's tax, despite sagging gasoline purchases, due to the energy crunch, apparently would bring in about $300'mllliona year. The rrtate would
share the revenue witlllocal govenunents to help meet _their increasingly

•

at

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

MEETS WEDNESDAY
The monthly meeting of the Long
Bottom Commwtlty Association will
be held at 8 p.m. Wednesday at Ule
commwdty building. All residents
are welcome.
CLOSED WEDNESDAY
Due to the deatll of an employe,
Orville Rhodes, Modern Supply in
Pomeroy will be closed until noon on
Wednesday.

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Ohio's ' million as the August subsidy
mooey-troubh;d school districts will payment.
get "a haymaker" this fall becawte
They said actioo should be taken
·of a ready cash problem at the state now to help deal with the so-called
level, a state senator says.
"cash Oow" problem, ratller than
Sen, Stanley J , Aronoff, R- putting it off until Oct. 1 when the
anctnnati , referred Tuesday to school cuts will have · to be even
temporary cuta iQ state l!Chool larger.
sub91dies which now appear likely to
"This will be a llaymaker for some
begin in October.
of our hard up school districts,
That 's because budget planners e!!pecially thoee in metropolitan
say tl1e state will he from $'10 million areas ," said Aronoff, whose
to S120 millioo short of the amount floundering Cincinnati district
needed to pay Its bills the last three recently rejected a new operating
moolhs of the calendar year.
levy.
Early 19110 taz collectloos will . Co111111~ and Cleveland are in
make up the deficit and the schooLs sirniW'' straits, and face additional
suboldies will be repaid In the first problema because of court-«dered
llalf of the year, under tentative desegregation, oth ~r
board
plans of tl1e Ohio Office of Budget
members ooted.
and Management.
However; Gov. James A. Rhodes,
Aronoff and Rep . Robert · E. legislative leaders and state
Netzley, R-Laura, both members of lnstnjctloo Superintendent Franldln
the state Controlling Board, opposed B. Walter decided last week to gl•1e
the plan Tuesday as the seven- tlle schools their run subsidies for
member panel released $142.5 the tinie being, pending further
evaluatioos of state revenues.
Harvey R. Bowermaster, an OBM
spokesman, said that agency wants
·
to look at revenues for the first
quarter of the new f~·~ year which
began July I , DeS!llte lower Ulan
ezpected yields from the sales and
Holzer Clinic Ltd. in Gallipolis and
in~e taxes in July, latest figures
its Jackson County Branch In available, he said OBM at present
Wellaton will be closed on Monday,
sees no re81l0n to revise its revenue
September 3, in obaervanee of Labor
estimates f~r the fiacal year.
Day,
Netzley, a fiscal cmservative,
In case of an emergency during said Ule July decline of about $6.3
the holiday weekend, phyalcians ci million in the income tax makes him
the Holzer Clinic Ltd. staff will be oo w~rry tllat a recession is under way.
duty in tl1e Emergency Room
Earlier, OBM scrapped, at the
(phone 446-6201) ol the Holzer
insistence or legislative leaders, a
Medical Cert!el' Hospital to handle plan under which the schools would
emergency cases only.
llave received 45 percent of tllelr
Holzer Cllnit Ltd. will resume nor- annual subeldies between now and
mal operaUons at both locations on Jan. 1, and 55 percent in the ftrst six
Tuesday morning, September 4.
mootlls of 1980.

Holzer Clinic
closed ·Monday

)

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ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

PRICE FlffiEN CENTS

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 29, 1979

'
GLASS REPLACED - The plate gllisB. window of
the Swlsher-LIM!Ie Drug Store, Pomeroy, b being
replaced by the Point Mason. Auto Glass Company.
This Is one of the approximate 19 windows and doors in
Ptxneroy business establishments witll broken glass.

IS PROJECT DEAD?? -Apparently, the plans for
a permanent !ltage to be constructed on the Pomeroy
parking lot llave been laicito rest. Some local prankster

has placed a · wooden cross atop a pile of gravel
originally destined to be used In the building of the
stage, signifying tllat progress on tl1e project is, at
least temporarily, d.ead.

.,
'replaced some siX windows on Matn Street. Pomeroy police llave arrested .
Ronnie Pickens, 23, Racine, for allegedly damaging
The Mason finn has

the glass.

Teachers striking in five
Ohio school systems today
By 'Jbe Associated Press
Teachers were on strike todsy in
at least five Ohio school districis
serving nearly 13,000 students, while
educat~rs in a silth district voted to
approve a contract In time for
schools to open as scheduled.
About 60 teachers in the EHOVE
Joint Vocational DistMct and 170 in
the Galion city schools went on the

Tornadoes
hit Iowa

Weather

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AuthOI'ities in two southwest Iowa
counties today began · surveying
damage from tornadoes tllat killed
two persons, Injured more tllan a
dozen and leveled at least 20 houses.
Officials from Fremont and Page
counties, tlle area llardest hit, made
a house-to.bouse search fOI' victims
after the twisters hit Tuesday,
Gov _ Robert Ray, attending the
Midwestern Governor's Cooference
in Osage Beach, Mo., directed his
staff and disaster services officials
to monitOI' requests f~r assistance,
according to an aide.
Page County Sheriff Dick Hunt
identified me of the dead as
Meredith Lovitt, about 60, woose
home was destroyed by Ule storm.
Authorities llave not relea.sed the
name of Ule other victim, a truck
driver killed when his semi-lraller
rig was blown off tlle road on
Highway 59 south of Shenandoah.
AuthOI'ities said about 14 persons
llad been admitted to Hand Hospital
In Shenandoah .

~. ,~r

-

•

Ohio schools
facing cash
Bow problem

Ballerbla
(Continued from page I)
some senators who think tlle
president has been too soft with the
Soviets.
And Rep. Lester Wolff, 0-N.Y., a
member of tlle House International
Relations Committee, cllarged Monday tllat the U.S. "botched" the affair by letting the ballerina board
· the plane.
.The Soviets acknowledged tllree
times tllat Ule U.S. had a right to interview Miss Vlasova before she
boarded the jetliner, a State Department official said.
"lt's ' quite obvious that U.S. officials could have avoided Ule whole
incident," said Wolf!.

critical highway and brtdge needs.
Weir conceded Deering's pfoposaJ probably is dead but warned thai "all
Ohioans will lose in thia situation."
'
He said ''the bottom line --· b tllat our highway funding system ~
support of those federal dollars (tlle $500 million) in order to serve tl1e 0 o
taxpayer."
Noting tllat Ohio's gasoline tu wu last increased in 1969, the tllrector said
"I know of no business in this state or elsewhere which b selling merchandise today at the same price it did 20 years ago, and depending on an increase in volume of sales to keep in business. You cap 't do both."
Pending before Shoemaker's committee is a 21-rnonth transportation
budget of $1.1 billion. Weir said tllat amount would only penni! criUcal maintenance while allowing virtually no new constructiOn, witll one of two exceptions.
The measure is expected to be voted on by Ule finance conunittee aftet;" the
Legislature returns Sept. 11 from swnm'er recess.

Variable cloudiness, wal'!ll and
hwnld tonight and Thursday witll a
chance of showers and thunderstorms. ·Lows tonigh~ 65 to 70.
Righi Thursdays in the upper IMls to
around 90. The cllance of rain 30 percent tonight and Thursday,

picket lines today, joining educators
in the Frontier Local, Ohio Valley
Local and Rittman Exempted
districts.
Galion Superintendent Lawrence
Mar8Z28 said teachers began setting
up picket lines about midnight,
although tlleir contract runs through
Aug. 31. Teachers are seeking an
increase in base pay from $10,000 to
$11,500 and a cost-of-Uving clause,
among otller items, he said. After
two all-night negotiating sessions,
Mar1122a said no new talks were

ENERGY PROGRAM SET
David Campbell, aupervlaor of
pupU transportation sectloa of the
Ohlo Department of Education, will
sbow a film on energy conservation
and
discuss
changes
In
tr11111portatlon regulations and be
will review safe driving rrocedures
with Meigs Couaty school bus
driven at tbe anuual school bus
driver safety meetiDg to be held at
7:30 p.m. Thursday at tbe Meigs
Inn.

planned.
Classes have been canceled
indefinitely In the EHOVE district,
serving Erie, Huron and Ottawa
counties, officials said. Negotiatioos
witll teachers in the 1,500-fltudent
district reportedly snagged on
economic Issues.
Classes also failed to open op time
In tlle /Frontier Local district this
morning, according to a school
·spokesman. Negotiatioos went on all
night before bre.aklng off this
morning, They were expected to
resume toolght, and school is to open
Thursday ivltll or wltllout the
teachers, officials said.
Twenty-ooe teachers in the 450pupU district were arrested Tuesday
as tlley picketed, officiala said.
However, charges against the
teachers wez;e rep&lt;rtedly dropped
when Uley pledged not to block
school entrll!lces today, officials
said.
The teachers are dissatisfied with
ootll economic and non-economic
proposals made by the district,
including a base salary propoaal
tllat does not exceed the $9,500 state
minimum.

Eastern district
shows increase ·
in enrollments
EIU'Ollment for the first day of
classes Tuesday In the Eastern
Local School Dis.trlct was 971, up
sUghUy over tl1e first day a year ago.
Eastern became tl1e county's first
district to open for the 197~ school
term.
EIU'Ollment for district schools
follows: Tuppers Plains Elementary, 130; Riverview, 141; Chester,
194, and high school and jwtlor high
school, 506.
Tuesday was a full day of classes
and officials reported tllat all went
smoothly witll the opening.
Clasaes in the Meigs and Soulhern
Lllcal Districts are scheduled to
open on Sept. 5.
~.

Administrators were keeping
. buildings open in the 6,QOO.pupll Ohio
Valley schools, but attendance was
rmning at about 10 percent, said
Allen Gaffin, supervisor of federal
P'Ograms fOI' the district. The .
district employs aoout 300 teachers,
the majority of them striking
overpay and fringe beneflta, Base
salary is $9,500.
Rittman schools remained open
today despite a striio;e by 90 percent
of the district's 86 teachers, said
Superintendent R.L. Stucky. He said
attendance today appeared to be
"nearly as good" as Tuead!IY, when
about ~percent of the 1,500 studenta
In the district attended.
Mianlisburg teachers voted early
today to ratify a new contract in
time f~r, schools to open aa
scheduled. They voted 1.. to
approve tlle same contract they had
rejected Sunday, giving them a raile
in base pay from $10,000 to $10,11011,
officials said.

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