<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="15758" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/15758?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-29T17:23:32+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="48880">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/adb4435a152807ce9c0fcaf5c04d874f.pdf</src>
      <authentication>00f591afc79812f3f36750182eca2a70</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="50482">
                  <text>12 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. TUesday, April3, 1979

March' indi~ators ~show
Ohio· marketbaskets Up
Jy

JOE McKNJGIIT
Asaoclaled Press Writer
COLUMBUS, .Ohio (AP ) The Ohio Associated Press
Marketbasket survey has
again followed the nalfonal
trend by indicating another
rise in grocery prices.
As an experiment, the
survey included gasoline
prices in the enlk!f-March
price check and it showed
name brlind gasoline was still
available - in some places for 68 cents a gallon . Fuel
prices were sampled in· 17·
clUes and grocery prices in 18
clUes.
Am o·n g regular
supermarket Items, the price .
. check showed costs or
surveyed groceries were up .7

Commitments
up slightly"

percent at the end of March,
after a slight drop the
previous month . That
depline, of .5 percent, was the
first since last October.
Average costs on the J7.
grocei'y survey items among
the 18 cities was $21.66, up
from $21.50 a month earlier.
The prtce watchers folDld
some name brand serVIce
stations in Cohunbus and
Toledo sold regular gasoline
•

History
deadline
Thursday

at selfserv!ce pumps for 67.9
cents per gallon. Top price
(or unleaded.gasoline at fuD· '
service pumps was 79.9 cents
In Cincinnati. Averages of
regular gasoline at self-serve
pumps was 69.9 cents and 72.9
cents at fuUservlce pumps.
Averages on unleaded
·.gasoline was 74 cents at selfservice pqiQps and 76.5 cents
at full-serVice pumps.
The 11verage grocery
markethasket went up 16
cents over the month in the 18
cities surveyed. That was
four cents higher than prices
on the same ItemS at the end
of January.
Among Individual Items,
prices advanced on nine and
beld ste~dy on seven, with
me, a can of tomato soup,
holding steady at 22 ' cents.
Oniy slight changes occurred
in a pound. of slick
margarine; which dropped a
cent to 66 cents, and an Illounce container of namebrand peanut butter, which
advanced a penny lo $1.13.
Head lettuce and fresh to.
matoes were the most
volatile items priced. Cost of
a pound of tomatoes rose 25.3
percent over the month, from

rt.'('eivlng complaioh: of

phone calls ... obscene and
DOD lolkers.
.
SherUI Prollltt advises
residents to use the
telephone on ·their own
terms. Ask callers to
Identify themselves. When

63 to 79 cents, while the price a voiCe asks, "Who is
of lettuce dropped 31.3 this?" don't tell him, 10.
percent, from 83 to 57 cents on
stead ask, uwhat number
average.
did you Call?'; or "Whom
The price of a l.Q.pound do you want?" If the caD
sack of Idaho potatoes Isn't legitimate, that very
declined 3.2 percent over the
likely will end II- If It's the
check period, from $1.54 a
kind of caller that remains
month ago tO $1.49.
silent after you answer,
Cost of a dozen grade A hang upl If he makes any
large .eggs went up 13.4 · obsceae or suggestive
percent over the month, from
remark, bang up! He'd like
82 cents at the end of
oolhiDg better lhan lor you
February to an average of 93
to demand lo bow who he
&lt;;ents,
It, or to ask repeatedly
what he wants.

HOSPITAL NEWS
Veterans Memorui.! Hospital
Admitted - Janies Webb,
Guysville ;. Golda Lawson,
Minersville; Rebecca Cole,.
Pomeroy; Maggie Gllrilore,
Racine;
Aaron
Zahl,
Pomeroy; Virgil Day,
Middleport; Opal Zerkle,
Syracuse-; Timothy Hayden,
Croton ; Ge~rude PeUegrlno,
Middleport; Howard Searles,
Pomeroy; Myrta Schaefer,
Pomeroy; Clyde Barnett,
Langsville.
, Discharged - GeorRe
Hackett, Sr.

A·r ea• ea·
. th s

Prosecuting attorney, Rick ask if there would . be a
Jones, board .president,
Crow, acting as director ci possibility. that the Jaycees · declared ' t.he · meeting
the CETA Plat Mop program, could lease part d. the old recessed until noon on Thur·
and county engineer, Wesley Chester · Courthouse. The · sday, AprilS, at which ttme
Buell!, met with lhe Meigs board decided to contact the bidS will be opened on
county .Commissioners present ies8ee, the O!ester blttimlnous · and ·aggregste
TUesday eveiUng to discuss Grange , · 2809, · about ter· materialS and a plckuptruck. ·
the program and its progress. mino ting its lease.
. . . Attending w~re Jones, :
Crow presented two comto letter from Sheriff James Henry Wells, Cheater WeDs, ,
pleted sections of Bedford . J. Prdfitt. was received .and Mary Hobstetteer', clerk.
ToW118hip . and stated that reqq-esting that . contracts
· rapid progress could now he with the various villageS for
m~de since th~ Initial
boarding villalle prisoners In
EXTENDED FORECAST
training Is complete.
lhe county jail he reVised.
Friday lbrouch Sunday:
Buehl also discussed the The board will toke the matShower~~
or snow flurries
CETA Title VI B program ter under adviBement with
possible
In lbe north
that is being transferied from lhe proeecutor.
Friday.
Moatly fair
the Leading Creek Watershed
The foUowing persons were
Salarday
111d
rain po~slble
Association to the collnty appointed to the Melgs CounSUJiday.
Hl.lba
from lhelow
commissioners.
This ty Tuberculosis Board of
40s to low iiOa Friday and
program will consist of 23 Trustees: Marilyn Spencer,
Salnrday, warmlug to lbe
participants who are Maxine Philson, !len Philson
mid 508 1o mid 80s by
. assigned a8 laborers with the and Barbara Knight.
SuDday.
Low• ID tile upper
county highway department
Co.mmiasioners Richards
ZOs
and
low
30s Friday ·and
Victor Gaui,Gary Dill, and Jones and Henry Wells
Sa11u'day
and
mosUy In the
Bill Ollborne, members of the welcomed newly appointed
30. Sunday.
Shade River Jaycees met board member, Chester
with the commissioners . to Wells.

· SALE ITEMS READY - Charles David is pictured with wood work and other items
that will he sold at the Meigs Senior Citizens Easter Bazaar on Thursday, AprilS from 9:30
a.m .-3 :30pm. Friday, April6from 9:~p .m . with a pancake supper from 4 tD 8 p.m. lind
Saturday from 10 a.m.-! p.m.
·
..
·c

$56,171 contract awarded

Gillon and son, Laura Duffy, .
·
John Felton, Stephanie
By ROBERT E. MIUer
the old shafts so it can see
Fowler, William Gilbert,
Assoctoted Press Writer
they are effectively filled and
Mrs. Frank Goble and .
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - closed.
daughter, Herbert Hen- State controllers have apHe said timber and various
derson, Charles Justis, Lydia proved a $56,171 contract types of other matter - inKendrick, Raymond Kerns, under which the state natural eluding debris used to close
Sheila Lanham, Frederick resources· department will the shafts off originally,
Lewis, Anthony McGuire, try to find Ohio's unrecorded perhaps around the turn of
George Molden, Mrs. Ricky coal mine shafts.
the century - are rotting and
Moody and daughter, John
The shafts are described as causing the ground to sag and
Morrow · Edwin Neal
potential safety hazardS and fall ln.
Sen . Harry Meshel, D·
William' Norman, Phillip they already have. caused
Parsons, Pamela Pasquale, • property damage m three ·Youngstown, said the fill was
Georgia Pike, Terry QuaDs, countnes. Some have been washed out of a sh!ilt under a
Jr ., Rita .Randolph, Ed· caving In, Including one in a scho~l-yard In hts district,
ward
Reese
Michael schoolyard and nother . leavmg an open hole. He sa1d
Richards, · Mary Rutledge, beneath a housing project, another
shaf~
caused
problems under a housing
Mary . Stanley, ·Amanda the board. was told.
'rhievener Thomas ThornThe seven-member board project In the same area.
ton, Mae Venekamp, Patricia gave its unanimous approval
Midden assured the board
Ward, Roger Waugh, Morris Monday for a oohtract to be that the oerial photographs
Webster, Norman Wright, funded by the federal govern- will enable the division of
Andrew Yeager.
ment Qetween the natural geological· survey to locate
March 38, Discharges
re~urces department and a most of t~e abandoned
Vern~ Birchfield, Ralph prt.vate Painesville firm working&amp; by pinpointing
Clark Nora Cross Seth whtch will make detailed ground sags. But he said he
David, GlendQra Gilllam, aerial photographs of does not think aU the sl)altA
Roy Gladman, Joyce Harris, Mahon!ng, Trumbull, and can be found. .

· '
and foliage hide the ground
sags from view:
In other business, be
board:
,
- · Approved a ' $~~.000 ·
development department
grant for a ·water and sewer
line extension In Bellevue:
- Released $224,000 for an
e n v I r o n e n ta I I m provements project a,t the
University of Cincinnati.
-APProved expenditure of
$1~,000 by the College of
Osteopathic Medicine at Ohio
University for a microwave
system at Its regional clinic
facilities.
- .Released $230,000 for
roof repairs on . Miami ·
University's Irvin Hall.
- Permitted the ad·
ministratlve services
department to 'purchase
$250,000 worth of certain
types of papers which are not
available froll\ Its regular
contractors.

Family · histories · not
submitted for publication by
the Thursday deadline will
Meigs County Prosecuting not he accepted ·for the new
Attorney, Fred W. Crow, III, Meigs County History Book
announced today that the tieing compiled.
To aid people In turning in
Department of Rehabilitation
the
histories,
several
and Corrections issued its
locations
have
been
set up
1978 annual report.
this
week
to
receive
lhe
The report shows 6,930
The
new
locations
stories.
prisoners were committed to
state prisons during the year, lilclude the Pomeroy and
compared to a slightly lower Middleport Public Ubrarles
' Holzer MedlcaiCCI!ter
and the Meigs County Senior
figure of 6,867 last year.
FUNDS RECEIVED
Dlllcbarges, March 29
The 1976 commitment Citizens Center In Pomeroy.
State
Auditor Thomas E.
Edward
Adamson, Harvey
will
be
at
the
Personnel
figure of 6,930 is far higher
Ferguson report.ld the March Barr, Sara Bricker, Mabel
Meigs
Museum
on
Butternut
than the figUre reported for
distribution of $12,44~,297.19
the first haU of this decade, Ave., Pomeroy, from 1 to 3 in local government fund Brown, Maxine CaUicoats,
when commitments averaged p.m. through the Thursday money to Ohio's 88 counties Linda Dalton, Mrs. James
deadline to receive the
less than 4,800 per year.
and 408 cities and villages
histories.
All except one of Ohio's 88
levying
local income taxes.
Families may submit up to
counties contributed to the
County received
Meigs
number of prison commit- 500 words free of charge for $12,500.
publication
In
the
book.
ments in the fiscal year and
• !". ··~
again this year the state's six
Betty ·Henderson, Mrs. ~~umbl~na cotUJties.
He said · : the aerial . - Approved $90,000 for
largest urban areas were - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ~
I A suit in the IIJDCjunt of Thomas Kelly, Sr. and son,
That s
where
the photographs probably will architects' fees for lm·
responsible .for over half the I
I $29,900.17 has been IUed · Iii Michael Mathews Francis problems are," said Richard require abolit five g\'Od flying provements at Apple Creek
total number of .commit- I
I
·
·
.
·
·
·
I Meigs County Conunon Pleas McCulloch, Arnie' Murray, .H. Midden, .the departmeni's days. The depal'\menl will State Institute. ' ·
ments.
I
·
·
·
I Court by First Financial Carol Pierce, Goldie Red- deputy director. He added start tbe project as soon as
Meigs County rlinked '61st
. .
· Savings
and , Loan · man Edmund Reed Marian that the state needs to locate possible, before the leaves
in number of commitments,
FORRFSI'
KELLER
Survmng
are
a
brother,
·
.
G
· R ''Ids E 1 R' ' 1 J
while Gallia County ranked
Forrest G . fBoob)· PaulK. Keller Route! Mid- Assoclation,Downers, rove,
eyno ' ar
lege, r .,
8!st.
I
Keller,86, 2660 Wells Road, dleport ; a slst~r, Mrs. 'o. T. Ill., again~ John L. Davis Wa~da Scarbrough, Wendy
Ashland, Ohio,, died Monday iVeva ) Beck of Ashland, and and Mehnda J . Davis,. Smtih, Jane Teaford, Bertha
UDC •••
TRY OUR
at the Colonial Manor Con- several nieces nephews and Pomeroy.
Thompson, Emanuel Wears,
(Continued from page I)
valescent Center In Loudon- cousins
'
F.Uing for divorce were Jack Wheatley.
involved policemen in the
ville following a lengthy
Fune~al services will be F!orlne Ginther, Chester,
Births, March 30
(COntinued from page I ) , Island.
.
office rather than out on the
illness. ·
held at 1 p.m. Thursday atthe against Jack ~· Ginther, .. Mr. and Mrs. Antho~y , streets.
doses of a chemical intended -:- In Portland, Maine,
Mr. Kell~r had been a Rutland Church ·of the Chester; Earl A. Smith, Ward, daughter, Gallipolis . . Council wants the com- to reduce the effects of Rtchard Lewsen, head· of
CK.Y
resident of Ashland County Nazarene with the Rev. IJoyd P~meroy, against Edna A.
Discharges, March 31
plaints stopped . Chief radiation on hwnan thyroid Cumberland County's civil
KENTU
for the past 30 years. He was Grimm officiating . Burial Smith, Pomeroy.
Patrick Akers, Jeffrey. Webster said he would take . glands were being sent to the emergency p.rogram,
FRIED CHICKEN
a retired farmer and a will he in the Miles Cemetery. . Jani~s R. Neal, et al, Austin, Mrs. Monet Bass and care of it.
Harrisburg area.
su~gested that people In the
veteran ofthe u.s. Army oi Friends may call at the chur- · Cheshire, filed suit for daughter, Donna Bnggs,
- In New Jersey, about 14 southwestern area ci the
It was also reported that
. ..
.
World· WaF I. He was born chanytimeafter2p.m. Wed- dgecilart·atDory ljudgEmenht ~::: B~~~~u:.,arenByB::- there is a constant . disrega~d ·demonstrators were charged state stoy out of the danip, ·
fAMILY RESTAUAANT Feb. 25, 1893, a son of the late nesday. The family will a a ns oug as noc ,
.• .
• for speeding on Union Ave. with trespassing after they ra1~y . weather because of
Charles E. and Addie McHaf- receive·friends at the church ·Gallipolis.
Rebecca Call, Carolyn. The Mayor stated several blocked the entrance to the rodi~tion that appeared to be
992-5432
fey Ketler.
. from 2 to 4 and from 7 to 9
Ricky Lee Deeter, Rt. 1, Carbtree; Lowell Crabtree, arrests have been made.•
headquarter's ., of General blowmg in f~ Harrisburg.
• ..,;.Po;;,m;,;
· ileiiriioy"';.O;;,·;..~•
p.m. Wednesday
Portland, . and Sherry Lee Phyllis Cramer, Ray George,
Public Utilities the con- He emphasiZed that the
GRANT APPLICATION
. The Walker F~neral Home Deeter, Columbus, filed for Lunn Harris, Mrs. Steven
It was pointed olit that a sortium that 0~ Thret! Mile 1situotlon "is not serious." ·
is in charge of services.
dissolution of marriage.
J~nklns and son, Tamml grant application has been
'
Kmg,
Charles
Lew1s,
Lswrence Lewis, Barbara made to Housing lind Urban
Uoyd, Mrs. ROger McKinney Developent In the amount of .
ond daughter, Shirley Miller, $101,800 to repair the
Roddy Moore, Pamela Oiler, collapsed .road and retaining
Charles Perroud, William wall on Laurel Street,
Poling, Sr., Beverly Queen, deeming it an imminent
Anna Robinette, Dorothy threat to public heal\h and
(Continued from page I)
Sayre, Patricia Shafer , safety. A grant In the same
lead them to safety, authorities said.
George Stover, Mathew amount hos been requested
The lone woman on duty was asleep when the fire
Upton, Ralph Waugh, Ken- from the State .Controlling
started early Monday and was pulled from the building
Board.
neth WUson.
·
by two ejderly residents alter she was trapped trying to
Chref Webster·~ repo~
Marcb U, Births
. awaken everyone, they said.
_..,
Mr. and Mrs. Jackie showed the .department mad~
29 arrests, investigated 29
Jobnson,son, Letart, W. Va.
accidents,
drove 4,~88 miles
Dlscba~ges, AprU 1
and
collected
$1,570 from the
George Bates, Kat(ly
KERRVILLE, .Texaa (AP)-A Kerrville man has
Bowen, Nina Brumfield, parking meters.
been charged with murder foUowmg the electrocution
Kimberly Greenlee, Pauline Meeting with council was a
of a 4-year..ld boy who touched a metal trash can that
Harbolt, Josephine Hurt, representative of Rish
the man had connected to an electric outlet police
. Mrs. John Jackson and son, Equipment Co., Parkersburg
~d.
'
Eric Kemper, Mrs. Larry regarding a vibrating plate
·· Officers said Monday that the man Vernon ·Houston
Lane and daughter, James compactor to be used in
Smith, apparently was trying 1o pr~ent dogs from
McFann, GIK&gt;rlel Scott, patching streets at a cost of
g~ttlng Into his garbage:-Btt Travis Fry, 4, who had
Frank Schriver, Clyde Smith, $1,090. No aclion was taken.
slipPed oway from home Sunday while his mother was
•
Betty Baronlck, ·council
Mrs. Dannie Sturgill and son,
taking a nap; leaned his bicycle agalilst the cans, pollee
woman, reported she is
William
.Swan,
Timothy
ssid.
.
.
.
meeting witl1Edith Sisson on
Tennant.
'
·
.. ,
·
·'
,.
lv
a proposed plan lor handling . \
Births, Aprill
' Mr. and Mrs. Charles parking meter receipts.
Hudson,
daughter, Galllpoli,s . The meeting was opened
'•
MANSFIELD,
Ohio
(AP)
-Thaddeus
Lewlngdori,
Citizens National Bank is my kind of
with prayer by Lou Osborne.
on
trial
for
the
~ailed
central
Ohio
'
'.22-&lt;:illber
Ferry,
W.Va.
bank. The te'llers are all so friendly.
Attending were, Mayor
Discharges, AprU 2
killings," took the stand Monday and claimed he was
And if 1•m tired at lunchtime, or don 't
Andrews,
Brown, Wehrung,
not invoJ.ved in any of the shootings, Including three for
David brandeberry, ·Arlen
Osborne,
Baronick, Bill
•
which he already has been convicted.
have the car. I can bank by mall. It's
Brown, Lucille Burris,
.
Young,
and
Rod
Karr,
C!Oimcil
Jeremy Buskirk, Mary CathHe. ~d he admitted Involvement in the killings only
all so convenient! Here comes my
because of a death threat made against his wife and
man, James Crisp, Sr., members, and Mrs Walton.
J
thank you memo ...
children by a masked man,.adding that he oow fell free
William Davidson, Linda
·to give what he said waa the correct story because his
Fields, . Avanell · George ,
fat:nily.!s in seclusion. Lewingdon said be did not know
Millard Halstead, Lee Houck,
LEGAL NOT ICE
where the family had reloc.ated, but that ItS members
Sandra ·McKnight, Larry ·
The Public Ulililie s Commis·
were safe.
Mayes, Melissa Nance,
si
on of Ohio has s¢11or pub·
T.
.l
• ·
· Norman Rayburn, Sarah
lie
hearing Case No . 7il-629·
e&amp;ecfjOn
Rlrn~. Larry speakrrian n,
EL-FAC Subllle A. lo review
"The Friendly Bank"
Charles Stephens.
the fuel procuremenl prac·
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - John E. Jones of
Births, April%
flees and policies ol T~e Ohio
Gohanna has been appointed to a vacancy on the
Walk-up teller window
Mr . and Mrs. Thomas
Power Compan1 . lhe opera·
Franklin County Board of Elections by Secretary of
i!nd i!ufo-teller window
Cremeens,
daughter,
ol ·its Fuel Cost AdjuSI·
lion
State Anthony J. Celebrezze Jr. He will replace Nelson ·
Open Friday Evenings Sto 7 p.m.
. menl Clause. and relaled
Gallipolis.
Mr:
arid
Mrs
.
Lsncione, who recently resigned. The term explrea
fnatters. This hearin'g is
'.
Hullng Greene, son, Hartnext Feb. 29 and the salary ls$10,000a year.
scheduled 10 begin al 2:00
lord, W.. Va.
Celebrezze · appointed Jones after the county
p.m. on Apnl9. 1979. al lhe
Oemocratlc ~arty failed to nominate anyorie within the
Cily Council Olllce. · 218
Action is the word of the. 70 's ... and here 's the wa·y to
Cleveland Ave. S.W.. Can·
. required ltklay period.
~'
DEER KILLED
be active In style with a short sleeve, V·neck knit top
1on. Oh io 44702. An evening
with triple. striping down both ~hOulders , The poplin
A vehicle operated by
session will be conducted
,
shorts pick up the stripes on the sides for a coorJeffrey Kbnes, 17, Reedslrom 5.30 lo 7:00 p.m.
dinated look for active or casual wear. From the
ville,
Incurred
hellvy
damage
All
inleresled
parties
will
be
.
COLUMBUS,, Ohio. (At') - Olllo IJei,lutment of
Pro Action c: ollecti.on by Campus .
- .
durlilg an auto-deer accident
given an opportunil1 lo be
Rehabilitation an~ Corrections Dlrector George
qcua;
. .! I .
heard . Further intormalion
Many other stYles men.'s an~ boys' shorts and tops
Monday . on . SR 681, four·
Denton says Ohio and New Jersey are the only two ·
,may be oblaifMld by conlacttenths of a mOe west of CR SO,
slatell where no new prison con.structioh is planned.
lng the Commiss1oo.
··
- MeA's and BoYs' Department 0:~ the .1st FlOOr. ·
at 7:20 P·IIl·
· The state Is under court orders to relieve ·prison
T~ E PUBLIC UTILITiES
The
Gallla-Melgs
Post,
'
.
over-crowding, but efforts to obtain more money for
COMMISSION OF OHIO
Highway Patrol, reports that
building prisons have been turned oown by both the
Member F..D~ I.C. Deposits Insured ·to S40,000.00.
B1: Richard L. Smilh .
KIIpes' vehicle struck and
· .
legislature and Ohio voiers.
Secrelary
kUied a deer,Jllllhe roadway.
il&gt;

$29,956 court
action filed

Co

n

m

,.

(USPS 145·960)

ELBERFELD$

d

Plan mav neecJ insurance too

Cilber\s ,1alional Bank
'

£6

'

.

-i

]\To pnsan planned in Ohio.

ELBERFELDS .IN ·POMEROY .

(

,.

•

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 4, 1979

. plant expansion would do
much to help the welfare
situation ..
"The few that we've placed
so far go into janitorial or the
guard Ioree," he said. "The

15 CENTS

~

"

priority seems to be Vieblam

people locaUy "made any are going to train some of our
money out of the boom" when loc;al unemployed people," he
people would be the last .
tl]e plant was bullt. "Most of S8ld.
"Most of our people aren't the people who got jobs came
highly skilled," he added. · ' from oui of state.
Jenkins said very few
"This time, we hope they
veterans, then the welfare

Clyde because of shipping
problems.
General Motors Corp. said
about 2,000 wdrkers were laid
off ' at the 'Packsrd'"Eleetr!c
DIVision plant at Warren
because of the strike.
I..ordstown and Cincinnati
Gill plants cut shifts io four
hours.
Procter &amp; Gamble Co.
spokesman William Dobson
said the firm has built up supplies and is switching to rail.
transportaUon

where ,

feasible.
Meanwhile, a Teamsters
spokesman in Cleveland said
the pnion was continuing to
sign interim contracts with
some trucking . firms to
continue operations until a
new
master
freight
agreement is reached .
The spokesman, who asked
not to he identified, said 40
trucking firms . had been
signed to Interim contracts
Monday by Teamsters Local
407. and that statewide, 100

companies had signed
contracts out of 1,200
employers.in Ohio.
. Tht'signings ·W~&gt;re reported
to be another move In the
strategy employed by union
leaders and management.
. "The Teamsters' effort to
counteract the lockout Is
making · progress, as far as
Ohio is concerned ," the .
spokesman said.
The Teamsters struck only
selected trucking firms when
the walkout started at 12:01
a .m.
Sunday,
but
management counlered by
locking out Teamster
employees nationwide.
The Teamsters are asking
for 9 percen..,raises in each
year of the three-year
contract, improved mileage
allowances for nonhourly
drivers, impro.ved frin ge
benefits, cost of living raises,
severance pay , additional ·
sick leave and increased
lease rates.

Commissioner Wells sworn In

Sanctions put on district

...

post

'

enttne

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY, OHIO

Nationwise---.

Man charged with mUrder

JOnes name to

NO. 247

r

at y

•

OSP checks strike incidents

-.u

Clt(M'S

•

VOL Nil XXIX

e

•

PIKETON, Ohio (AP) - · construction workers They ·just live on welfare."
The county has a labor
The future of nuclear power; swarming into the area.
Coufi\Y Welfare Director force of 10,198, with 1,749
which is being debated in tl)l!
"We had 768 people here .Harold' Jenkins said 446 unemployed - 17.2 percent
wake of the accident at the when they began to build the persons were on his Aid to -compared to the state
Three Mile Island generating plant in 1950," said former DePendent Children rolls and average of 6.5 percent.
Jenkins doesn 't ,tl)ink the
plantnearHarrisburg, Pa., Is ·Mayor Ernest M. Osborne. anotber 1,045 on Medicaid.
li matter of vital concern to
"It grew gradually for
lbe economically deptessOd about three months and then
Piketon area in southeaslern really turned on. The biggest
Ohio.
income of the city then was
nuclear power opponents liquor and beer licenses for
are successful, It could mean the three taverns," said
By 'rhe Associated Press Wilke was charged with
cancellation of o $4.~ ii!Won Osborne.
Some InCidents of violence criminal damaging and
expansion of Pike County's
" We had one policeman, have been reported on Ohio endangering after a truck
·.uranium enrichment plan( , and every Friday evening I'd roads as the impact of the was . vandalized at a
. II would mean theiQOS 01 up deput.ize , tbree ·· special •Te.amsters
strike · and warehouse.
•
to &amp;,:;oo ·new jobs, which Is policemen for each of the trucking Industry lockout · The driver, Randy CUmnine more than tbe number three bars where they cashed SPreads across the state.
mings, 28, of Clarksburg,
people presently employed in checks. Now we've got about
The Highway Patrol W.Va ., was treated ·at
the entire county.
14 policemen," he said.
r,..-ted a truck w~s:fired at .. Bellaire City HoSPital for
And it would make some
The plant now employs With a shotgun as 1t left the facial cuts.
native residents of the area about 3,000, and the village Armco Steel Corp. plant · In Stark County James L.
population is 1,600.
very happy .
Tuesday in MiddletoWn, but, Davis 24 of Canton a nonWhat concerns the old•
"It was 10 times better be· the ~iver was uninjured.
striki~g d~iver, was ~rrested
timers is not the danger from fore the plant came here. I . Patrol officers refused ~ and charged with criminal
nuclear materials but a don 't like saying It, but It's tdenllfy the driver or hts endangering following . an
recurrence of the wild boom true," said Osborne, 71, who company.
armed confrontation with
times of the 1950s when the workS as a c~penter and
Georgia lruck~r Robert striking Teamsters. Sheriff's
Goodyear atomic plant was cabinetmaker.
Taylor, traveling .near deputies said Davis told tbem
buill , bringing 30,~00
"Everyone worked then ; Ravenna .TUesday, sa1d a he was forc~d at gunpoint by
now almost nobody does. heayy obJect was dropped four Teamsters to unhitch a
from . an Interstate 76 trailer he had just picked up
overpass onto his truck. Tay- at a truck terminal.
lor W8S'treated and released
Davis went hqme , got a .22from a local hOSPllnl. .
caliber rifle and fired one
At least two arrests were shot in the air before he was
reported in ~onneclion with arrested, deputies said.
picket-line 1n~ldents and
Whirlpool Corp. said it had
WASHINGTON (AP) - President Carter's "real
vandallsm surrounding the laid off 3,600 employees.at its
wage" insurani:e plan may soon need life Insurance
four-day-old strtke.
plants in Findlay Marion and
after a House cmunlttee vote to delete $2.5 billion for
Bellaire pollee said Charles·
'
the anli-inflatlon proposal.
· The House Budget Committee voted 14-11 TUesday
to remove all mooey f&lt;r the program from the
tentative congressional budget lhe panel is preparing
for fiscal198d, which starts Oct. I.
'
Chester Wells, Long Bot- fill that vacaflcy.
The new commissioner said
tom, Tueadoy was sworn in as
a Meigs County Com· he will devote all the time
missioner filling the vacancy necessary to work for the
PAINESVIlLE, Ohio (AP) - 'lbe Pain~e
Township Education Aaaoclation has voted
created by the resignation of peop\e of Meigs County. "The
professional sanctlms against the scbool district
.James Roush. Wells was commissioner's position
because the .assoclaUoo says "undesirable condltlona"
appointed by the Democratic comes flrst," Wells· stated.'
Wells has been in conhamper a quality education program.
·
party's central committeestrucl!on
for 33 years having
Association president Kathleen J. Riley said the
men. .
"group will ask the Ohio. Edl!calion Asaoclatlon .to
Wells was an Olive Twp. last worked at Kyger Creek.
Wells further stated . he
impose statewide Sanctions agalnot the district. The
trustee befoce his recent
OEA already baa sanctions agalnot six ' Ohio school
·appointment.
·He
has would like to see lmdistricts, meaning teacbers are advised not to seek
resigned that post. Henry provements made to CO\IIltY
Hensley has been named to
jobs in the districts.

CRISPY

Lewingdon claims· innocence

LARGE BOUL'DERS are falling from the base of .large rocks behind homes on Spring
Ave. It is feared that loss of support at the base·may cause a major slide of the huge rocks.
Several government agencies have been advised and are looking into possible solutions to
the problem.
. .
.
.
.

Nuclear power vital concern in Piketon area

Contamination

Nationwise---.

'

...

EX1RA

Just my type.~.
..

.(

Rapid progress
seen on program

· WARNING GIVEN
Meigs County Sheriff
James J. ProiCIII reports
his department has been

roads, the Multi· Purpose
Building and nursing home
projects completed and
improvement to access
roads.
" I have been involved in
industrial construction as
well as road construction and
feel that my background will
assist me in the repair of
highways in the county,"
Wells commented .
Wells Is county chairman of

the Meigs county D~mocrat
party, and a veteran of World
War II. He and his wife,
Dorothy, are the parents of 12
children, eight ~lrls and four
boys.
·
Wells further Stoted, "I wUI
do my best to serve the people
lo. make things better In
Meigs County and cooperate
with the other commissioners
and will devote full time to
j.he position i£ necessary."

SOHIO gas going up again

. '.'

CLEVELAND (AP) - Standard Oil Co. (Ohio)
raised gasoline prices TUesday hy 2 cents a gaBon on
both retall and wholesale levels becfuse of Increased
processing coats, said Ron Ka[lCSOI, manager of
pricing for Sohlo.
Effective TUesday, prices at company-owned
stations.were 81.9 cents a gallon for Boron, 78.9 for
unleaded Catron and 74.9 fOI' Octron at full aervlce
pumpa. In the last tlve weeks, Soblo•a prices have rtaen
5 cents, with 1-cent Increases on .March 13, March 2l'
and March 29.

Fonner leader banged
RAWALPINDI, Pakistan (AP)- Former Prtme
Mlnlater Zulllksr All Bhutto, Paldatan'o dominant
poUUcal fllure from 11711o 18'17, wa.1 hanged today at
Rawalpindi'• central jail after the general who oualed
him re!ecled clemency appeals from Preald«tt Carter .
and oth« farel&amp;n leaders.
President Mollamrned Zta ui-HliQ'• military
go'l!lrnmanl aald the body of the ~1-year-old leader of
the Pakistan Peoplea Party was Down by the air force ·
to Naurdro, his birthplace lil 1011thlm Pakistan, ·and
burled tbere eight houra after the 2a.m. -cuUon lil
the presence of two uncles and one of his two wivea,
Amlr Begum.
' \'flo

WARNING GIVEN
Numeroua complalnt,a
are being received at the . Two persons were injured
Middleport Mayor's olflee during two accidents inregarding tioga and cats · veatlgated Mooday in Meigs
runalng loose In tbe County by the G!illla-Melg.•
village. .
1"011, ~'1!11¥ ~trol.
Mayor Fred Hoffmaa
. Offlcera were CllDed to the
remlads relldeau that lcene of a two-vehicle
there Is • vUJage Ordlaance collision on SR 7, at the juneprohlblllnllbla alljl warns tlonofU.S. 33:at8:25a.m.
thai aU violators will be . The patrol reports that an
cited lo mayor'• court.
auto operated by Ann Ogdln,
Residents are advised to 79,l-angav1De, pulled fmn 33
keep their pels conflaed lo onto 7 Iillo the path of a north
their own property.
,.
bound vehicle driven by Van
.:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;::::::::~::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::
A. Willford,l8, Middleport.
. Ogdin , dlspillyed visible
signs of injury, but was not .
.
inunedlatelytreated.
·
Both vehicles incurred
~ound
slight damage. No citation
11
waa Issued.
Officers investigated a twoMeigs County Sheriff vehicle accident on SR 124, at
James J. Proffitt reports that milepo8t 17, at ll:40a.m.
he and his deputie. were
The patrol reports that a
called to the residence of parked auto 0)\'lled by Rita
George C.Cooper, 34, Rt. Maust, J.angsville, rolled on- .
2,Racine, TUesday at 4:35 to the pavement into the Mth
p.m.
of a west bound vehicle
Upon arrival they found operated hy Cla.renee Cor·
Mr. Cooper with a gunshot neD, 88, Middleport.
wound to the · head. The
A passenger in lhe Cornell
Racine Emergency Squad auto, Robert Bailey, 61,
was on the scene and sqUad · LangSville, claimed Injury,
perSOIUiel ad~ that Mr. but was not ~ately
Cooper wos dead.
treated.
The Incident is still under
Both vehicles Incurred
investlgaUon by lhe sheriff's moderate damage . No
department and th!' county citation was issued.
comer. Mr. Cooper leaves a
wife and two children

Racm·e man

dead

Bike-a-thon

RETURNS TO WORK
CHILLICOTHE, Ohio ( AP J
- Rosa County 'Deputy
Sheriff Forrest Powell was
scheduled to return to work
Tuesday night following 11
decision by the county grand·
jury not to indict him In the
shooting death of a !?-yearold prisoner.
The grand jury spent 3\\t
hours Monday conslderlilg
evidence surrounding the·
death of Ernest Alexander of
Frankfort. Alexanller was
shot lil the head by Po'!'ell as
he ran, handcuffed to another
juvenile from the deplity near
a detention &lt;:enter.
.
"We're grateful," aald
Sheriff Thomas Hamman. "It
will help lift the cloud over ,
this sheriff's office."
Cow1AciiIn Meigs County Common
Pleas Court Jean Cof·
fey ,Rutllnd, IUed suit . for
divorce agalnit James T. Cof.
fey, Uma.Henry J. Werry,
Pomeroy , wu 11(811ted a
divorce from Ethel L. Werry.

Weather

1\aln endlni tOnight- Low In

SWORN IN 7 Chisler Wella, rlibt, wu IIWOI'Illn aa
Meigl Co101ty Cmunlsaloner TUesday by Probate Judge
·Robert E. Buck. Wells fills tbe unexpired term of James

II

Roush who reaigned. The term !1 tor one year and nine
, months. Wellllotated tbatat the end of his present term he
will run for a four y~r teml.

Two hurt_
in mishaps

, ;::::::~::::::::~:::::::~::::::::~:::~:=:::::::::~::::=:;:::::;:::::::::::

the upper 301. Partly cloudy
Thunday. hlih tn low to mid
50s. Chance of rain 50 percent
tonight, 20 poteen~'nlursday.

•

chaw1M'&gt;DPfi&gt;OnS
.. ~~~·
0

,

named today
The Central Ohio Chapt'er

of the Cystic Fibrosis
Foundation announces the
appointment of several
chairpersons lor the 1979
spring blke-a-thon campaign
In Meigs County.
Blke-a-thons are to he held
on any weekend from Aprll 21
- May 19. FundsTataed Will
support research to lind a
cure for cystic fibrosis, the
aecond leading killer among
Am lea chUdr
er n
en.
The event also brings more
public awareneu ret~ardlng
the symptoms of this genetic
k~~ tn every 20 Americans
Ia an unknowinll carrier of the
recessive aene.
Hall of aU chUdren with the
disease die before 19 and lung
• damaglns dlaeueo otm take
the Uvea of more chUdren in
thla country than any other
disease ezcept cancer.
Three chalrperaona named
today Include Syracuse and
Raclne-Mra. Mary Plcll:·
ena, Second St., Syr,a .
cuse:
POIIMi'oy,
Mid· ·
dleport, Rutllncl, and Raeda- ·
viDe, Raip!l Werry, ·Pomeroy,
Mlnenvtue - Mrs. ·Tonya
Davia, Ro"'f 3, Pomero&gt;:t

�•
.

,•

....

.

fTT"'"'-9111C·'I\Il-

HVLME

Editorial
• •
opmtons

N.E -11 . 7f

I

Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

A $30 million convention?
By Martha Angle and Robert Walters
WASHINGTON (NEA) - Convening a new constitutional convention to mandate a balanced federal budget In
the future will produce one certain result: the expenditure
of millions of dollars in government lunda.
Economy-minded taxpayers may be less lntrlgue&lt;l with
the notion of amending the Constitution at a special

~
:&gt;.,

national conve ntion when they learn that it could cost them
$30 million or more.

A previously unpubliclzed analysis prepared by the
Congressional Budget Office . (CBO) estimates that a
convention held in this capital would cost $2.3 million if it
concluded Its work In one month, while the price tag for a
_

Gasoline tax.hike proposed

A year-long meetmg here would cost $31.2 million, and
those costs would be only slightly lower if the convention
were held In Chicago. A year-tong meeting in that city
would require $29.8 million in public funding.
The analysis was prepared at the request of Rep. David ERT E. MILLER
R. Obey, D-Wis., who provldeo CBO with a series of
Associated Press Writer
asswnpllons based on the provisions of a 1971 bill
COLUMBUS, Ohio ( AP ) introduced by then-Sen. Sam J. Ervin Jr. , D-N.C.
Numerous winter potholes
Salarie~ for 435 delegates would amount to $1,000 to and the general declille in
$3,000 apiece for each month, dependiilg on the length of
the meeting. Expense allowances would be offered at the
standard government rate of $50 pt•r day in Washington
and $43 per day in Chicago.
Air fares would cost only about $100,000, but that would
allow only one round trip per delegate between his or her
home and the convention city. Salaries and benefits for a
staff of 85 people would consume another $1.4 mllllon per
I
year.
·
Not included In the CBO estimate is the delegate election
process, which would cost $1 million if it coincided with a
By DON McLEOD
regularly scheduled general election but as much as $100
Associated Press Writer
million If a full special election were required.
WASffiNGTON (AP) - A
All that money would be wasted If the proposed
Federal
Election Comamendment failed to gain the support of a majority of
convention delegates or three-fourths of the stAte legisla- mission audit gives Jinlmy
Carter's 1976 presidential
tures.
primary campaign good
marks despite a special
Inflating the council
Justice Department probe
There's more bad news for economizers, from the into Carter's family peanut
Council on Wage and Price Stability, the White House
agency headed by Alfred E . Kahn that's supposed to be business and Its alleged
coonections to the campaign.
leading the battle against infiation.
:'Except for the matters
The Council is asking Congress to more than triple ttl
speclflcally
noted In this
budget for the current fiscal year, from $2.21 million to
t6.95 million. Durtng the next ftacal year, the council wan!l report, the audit disclosed
authorization to spend even more - $8.48 million.
that the Committee for
In order to convince everyone else to hold the line on Jimmy Carter conducted tts
lnfiationary spending, the council also wants to expand Its activities in confonnlty with
permanent staff from 39 to 233 positions.
the Federal Election Campalgn Act," the final FEC
Chemical warfare option
audit report said.
'President Carter has quietly postponed a declaton on an
The report released
exceptionally touchy Issue - construction of a plant to Monday listed several
produce a new generation of hi&amp;hly lethal chemical discrepancies In the camweapons for the Army.
palgn committee's bookPresident Richard M. Nixon decided in 1989 to reduce the keeping and · reporting
armed forces' Inventory of chemical munltlona. But the
Carter admlnlslrallon IBBt sprtng postponed the acheduled practices, including a $1,930
scrapping of 900 "Weteye" bombs, the Pentagon'• most alvll pena,lty paid for scrambt1ng its b6nk accounts, but 11
sophisticated chemical weapona.
At the aame lime, the Army sought White House showed no serious violations.
approval for construction of a new facility, expected to be
Meanwhile, an independent
located at Pine BluH, Ark., for production of " binary"
nerve s•• shells.
Carter rejected that request, but approved a token
THF.DAH.Y SF.NTINF.I.
$479,000 for "proceu engtneertng and deatan of manufacfiJSPfil US.Ht'l l
turing methods." In addition, his 1980 bu~et Includes $4.1
million for research and development of ' binary" chenll·
cal projectiles.
IIF.VOTF.n m mF.
In other worde, the Carter admintatratlon Ia maintaining
TNTERE.'!TOF
Ita option to rM!nter the chemical warfare busln-, but
has delayed for another year a final declalon that could
~~\fF.W~!Jl;'~~~
touch uH a major controversy.
·
City F.dll"r
DAVtDRU!iiKIRK
Advrrtl•t•• """'""
Pnhll•h"l olully ""'PI Rolturd•y
hy nw Ohln V~tii"Y Publl ~hlnJ:
C":ulnt~IIV·Mu~thnl'llht, trw.,
Il l
ruur1 ~~ , Pornt'roy, Ohlu 457~!·
A""'"'"' l'lfll •~ ~''"'"'' ...,. 2156.
F.1hlurial Phunt' P!I2·21S7,

I

Names •••

in the news
WASHINGTON (AP) - Howard Cosellls upset by organized
sports In America. It's a "spinning spiral ol hypocrisy, contradiction and ripoH," he says.
The ABC-TV sports commentatilr attended a staH luncheon
at the Justice Department l'Ueeday at the invitation of
Attorney General Griffin B. Bell, who called the sportscaster's
hour-long talk "an inspiring lecture on ethics and sports."
Cosell's criticism focused largely on owners, who he said
shifted sports franchises to niake bigger jJI'Oftt8. But it took in
as weD the weekly wire service ratings of coUege teams, the
"lionization" of athletes and fan violence.
CoseD, who practiced law for 12 years before turning to
sports, llllid he felt "a little bit troubled ... a Utile bit embarrassed" in speaking about a career in a field that some regard
as "the toy deparlment of life." But he added that sports Is intertwined with politics and economics and that his purpose was
to make the public aware of the connections.
·
NEW YORK (AP) - 1\jayor Edward I. Koch got a visit from
current world chess champion Anatoly Karpov Of the Soviet
Union and made a plea for the previous champ, Brooklyn-born
Bobby Fischer, to make a comeback. .
"Wherever you are, Bobby, come back and defend us," Koch
said.
"To meet him around a chess table, ('m ready now," said
Karpov, "but not to play."
Karpov dropped in to meet Koch at City HaU on Tuesday and
was greeted by a horde Of chess masters and fans.
Asked if he would agree to a match with Fischer in New York
City, Karpov, egged on by Koch to "say yes," replied : "Of
course," but quickly added, " It depends on the terms." •
O!ess promoters reportedly are considering New York as
the site of rna tch between Karpov and Fischer, who won the
title in 1m by defeating BoriSSpassky in Iceland .
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Ofthospitalized and seven-timeswedded Woolworth heiress Barbara Hutton Is at Oedars-Slnai
Medical Center for treatment of pneumonia.
But the 66-year-old, jet-setmillionairess was not hospitalized
because she consumed UtUe for three years but Coca Cola, as
newspaper reports Indicated Tuesday, Cedars-l)inai
spokeswoman Tess Griffin said. ·
•
.
"She ·was admitted on March 26 with a diagnosis of pneumOnia,"· said hospital spokesman Larry Baum. "She is
Jll'ogressing very weD. Her condition is' stable. Her physician
expects her to slaY another week."

•... ,r,
.

.·

¢

.. '

..

,

'

'

:

~

'

·.

By Clarence,.-

Miller

Our nattoii 's
energy trine had tO be dlapoeed of for
adm(nlatraton are e:&lt;· each'barrel of oil that would
perlen~lng
a
bad be stored.
Beyond theae technical
case of "Murphy's Law" with
problema
tbe Department
reepect to the atablllhment
of a national atrlltet!ic oU has also bem plagued by a
reserve.' Murphy's law, as I .-tea of JlOIIr ~­
it
trust most of you are decisions. . Initially
famWar, Is that tcmgue .in attempted to bancle lbe job of
cheek axiom which maintains uaernbllng then ve out of
" whatever can so wrong Ita Wllblngton headquarters
-wlll go wrong." And without a filii, !ledged field
a lot has gone wrong staff to coordinate the
with this emergency pro- activities of the many
gram since Its inci!,PIIo~_ in contractora required. 1n that ·
the wake ofl!ii"" Arab oil the overall )JI'Oject caDs for a
11umber of ean relel'Ye sites
embargo of 1973-74.
In 1975, as part of the to be developed ail over tbe
Energy
Polley
and country considerable delay
'Conservation Act, the has been ezpertenced in
Congress authorized the getting many of theBe lites
establishment of a one· · underway .•
In
our
own
loth
bllllon-barrel petroleum
reserve as Insurance agaln!t Consreulonal District
a )IOIIIIble cut oil of imporied dlacuulons have been
oil. The projacted target date underway for aolnellme becalled for the reserve to be tween the Alj:M Portland
completed by 1985. An Cement Company and the
interim scheduling objedlve Department of Energy
was to be the lltllfase of 250 concerning lbe poulble 111e of
million barrels by 1978. At Alpha Portlancl's abandonid
prese)lt the reserve contains 'limestone mine in Lawrence
but 72 million barrels, 111d CoUnty. U the slow 11111111er In
that wlildl has been put in 'WbiCb this lljtllatlon II being
reserve cannot be retrieved handled typlfle~lbe nature of
for lack of the necelll8ry handllnB being acco~ded
oiher poulble reserve sltea,
pipelines aild pumps.
1be problems cOnfronting It's no wonder the project has
the Department of EnersY, fallen far behind sclledule.
The lmger the project Is
the agency reipmllible for
delayed
the mu-e llqllllllw
creating and maintaining lhll
the
total
cost of tbe l!rateglc
reserve have been numeroua.
,Perhaps the molt crltleal oil ii&amp;Si ve becxmet. Had the
'with respect to the failure of Department met the original
the project to stay on · objective to have 210 mll1lcin
schedule baa been the barrels in re.ve by 1178
difficulty the Department hu that ·atone would have uved
experienced developing the U. S. Treasury over ' two
suitable atorase facUlties . . llUilon dolla-a in foreign oil
Initial plans eaJJed for mOll pqrdwea.
I have apreaaed my strong
of the oU to bs lim-ed in
IUiderground l&amp;lt eavema. It concern on thla matter to the
tumed out that some of the , Prftldenl aild haw qed
caverns,
whlcb
were • him to do Ill that be can fD
acquired through ' Gpedlte IIIII mud! needed
condemnation )rOCeedlnga, project. 'lbe ~~ cbaln of
were not llllitable becalllll eventa in Iran and the mlaclle
they leaked. Otben .were east undenoores jult bow
found to be incapable of vulnerable · we aa a natlan
holding as much oil 'aa have become to w..-ld ewnta.
originally estimated. To 'lbe strategic oil ~e wiU
clean out the cav.ma the help pl'lltect Ill aplnlt aucb
Department 'bad to pump unapectec1 dmJnpmente. D
water Into them to get out the the present management
trine. This procedure proved team • tha ~~ ol
much more apanl(ve, aild EnirQ can't aet the job
time consuming
than done, I would IAiilelt to tbe
m-lginally lllltlmated; in that Prftl~t that he get a team
•roxlmately one ~el of that cant

.,.
,on
rna
oes
.
0
d
.1:'
.
JY/.•ld
w l cats, .9-3 ~a~~e~:~:~~ ~~~~~)~a;b\~=~
.

lh lll·.llM'II I·.I. NIS SE:IISIIN
\I' , purts \\r1tt•r

The c·r) of Pl•y B•il !"
will annou11('e the opemng of
the baseball season today.
The question is who will shout

,

,,

·--·z ·.

,._.,,
; ,,
:&gt; •
-~

!X&gt;"

· By Greg Bailey
Tl)e host Southern Tornadoes opened the1r 1979
basebaU campaign right last
night with a 9-3 VIctory over
Haqnan Tra ce. The Tor·
nadoes of Coach Hilton Wolfe,
Jr. pounded out nine hits
while winning pitcher John
West combined With Jim
O'Brien to limit the Wildcats
to just six.
'lbe ~ildcatslooked good m
the first two mnings when
losing hurler Tim Beaver
retired the side in order.
HaMan Trace wenl ahead
Hl in the top of the first on
Beaver's single, a walk to
Petrie, and a Southern error.
They made it 2-0 in the third
on a walk, an error, and a
single by Webb.
But Southern got the
opening game jitters licked in
the bottom of the third. Jim
Powell and West each slashed
a single, and Mike Nance
singled in Powell 'rhn ?ape
then cracked a double to give
Southern the lead for good, 32.
The Tornadoes added the
winning run in the fifth.
Dwight HiU reached on an
error and stole second. Jack
Duffy and Pape smgled to
give the hosts a 5-2 margin.
'lbey added four iitsurance
runs in the sixth on four walks
and three singles.
West and O'Brien combined to fan 10 and walk nine
while Beaver and reliever

Announce
boxing
matches

.---------...,

...

Health Review

There's
nothing
like it.

SAVE ....... 40.00

By Dr.

Wll} luUl SIJ411 l l lg padS

I h:ndr~ has

WILKINSON

..

~SHORIWORR

OF JDRG lAWNS.

BUY NOW AT REGULAR' PRICE
&amp; GET THE ATTACHMENTS
AT .25% OFF

gaven the
uka~ to v,o 1o work. hut Jt Wa!)
nut known \\hethtlr he wuuld
IX&gt; !)011 t of the crew m Seattle

when the Manners and the
( 'alifornia .~ngels play the AI.
opener ton 1~hl.
"\\'e w11l be usmg local

whl lt.! Blue was lH-lU illll l
Bcrwctm

:c! / 11

1~&gt;-20 l!lttJor

ltaguc
cxpt't ted to IJI.! un
dut) 111 Clnemneth

tli l)Jli'Cs an•
ptl

ke!

·• J:"'r) umpire within 12
huur ~·
dn v1ng time of
('monn&lt;th w1 ll be ptckettng
the hallpark ," said H1clne
Phillips, attorney fur the
umps

Thr Heds will get underway
wilh two important new (a{;es
John McNamara replacmg
Sparky Anderson as the man"Merial wizard and lighthittmg lla) Knight taking
uver at th1rd ba se for hardhittin g Pete Rose, who signed
a lucrative fr ee agent pact
w1Lh the Philadelphia Ph1lhes
after 16 seasons and 3,164 hits
w1th the Reds .
• The Angels will serxl Frank
Tanana . 16-12 and 3 65,
against S~attie's Glenn
Abbott, 7-15 and 5.28, but
most eyes wtll be on seventime AI. batting champ Rod
~a rew , who is now Ca liforma's first baseman after 12
seasons w1th the Minnesota
Tw1ns. The add11ion of Carew
lias made the Angels the
favonte to unseat the Kansas
City Hoyals in the AI. West.

•

Bench feels time now
closing ·in on career
By TERRY KINNEY
all active players in home
AP Sports Writer
runs with 505, but he's been
CINCINNATI (A P )
beaten out for the first base
Johnny Bench doesn't say it job by Mike lvie .
right out, but he feels time
In two O,ther changes from
1sst
San Fr cisc
closing in on his major league
season,
an o
baseball career.
had Roger Metzger at
h
d Bill N h
"I'm a senior citizen in the s ortstop an
ort
National League," Bench ac- batting leadoff.
Benc h 1s
· near ~vera 1
knowledged. "AU the other
j
1
for
catchers are J·ust kida. At any rna or eague recor
tch
)th h he · · t
other position, they'd expect ca ers, a oug
IIISIS s
you to bjo developing into your recorda are not as big a
prime at my age."
mot'tva ti ng fact or as th ey
Bench, 31 , was iii his best once were.
shape in years as the Cincin"I, d'l"'t worry about Yogi
" nati Re&lt;is opened the 1979 Berra or anybody else. I just
major league season today · worry about ha.~g a good,
against the San Frandsco consistent year, Bench sa1d .
Giants.
"Some of the records will just
But for the first lime smce faD mathematically" during
1960 the Giants' elder states- routine appearances, he said.
~- Willie McCovey didn't "I just wish I could have atopen' a season in the ;tarllng ways been healthy."
lineup. At 41, McCovey leada

·Wadkins heading field
By 8118 GREEN
,\P Gulf Writer
GREENSBORO, N.C. lAP)
- Lanny Wadkins, the only
twotime winner on the PGA
Tour this season, heads lhe
strongest field the $250,000
Greater Greensboro Ope n
Golf Tournament has
managed lo assemble in
more than a decade .
"I'm playing pretty well
right now ," said Wadkins.
" When you've got It going,
you want to keep it going."
While Wadkins, winner of
the Los Angeles Open and
Tournament
P laye r s
Champwnship, had this event
on his schedule fl om the
start, several players made
last~ninute entries, decisions
that gave the old event 1ts
strongest hneup in many
years.
"I need !.Q play. I need the
work . I admit I may be
looking forward 111 1the
Masters) next week, but I had
to play," said Hale Irwm,
who made a late commitment
for ti1e.event that gets started
Thursday on the 6,-964-yard,
par-72 Forest Oaks Country
l1ub course
Tom We~skopf. who hasn't
fm ished higher than 67th m

Bench's best year was 1970,
when he hit 45 home runs and
drove in 146 runs tO lead the
league. Then came a
disastrous 1971 season m
which he slipped to 27 home
runs and 61 runs batted in,
and then another big year in
1972 with 40 home runs and
125 runs batted in to lead the
league again.
The peaks and vaUeys have
been more evident in the past
four seasons, liut ·this year,
Bench had a great spring and
seemed primed for another
big season.
"I try to leave the game
basically at the park," he
said. ms favorite tension
reliever this spring was
fishin g.
"I usuaUy play so much
golf in the spring. Bull didn't
have enough time to devote to
it. I just decided to go
fishing,, he said.

'

h1s last four starts, was
another late entry, obviously
needing to sharpen h1s game
for the Masters in Augusta,
Ga - the event that often
prompts many leading
players to skip this
tournament .
This year, however, so
many exempt players - 143
- entered, PGA deputy
commissioner for tour
operations Clyde Mangum
had to expand the field from
the planned 14~ to 150 to
provide spots for the 72 men
attempting to quahfy .
A pa 1r of foreign stars are
among the more attractive
lures [Qr thiS tournament's
traditionally huge, boisterous
and sometimes unruly
galleries. They are Gary
Player of South Africa, the
current Masters king, and
defending Greensboro champ
Seve Ballesteros of Spam.
Some other standouts
include 1\ndy Bean, one of the
'more consistestly effective
players .all year ; Mark
Ha yes; Tom Kite; Ra y
Floyd ; l.ee Elder ; Australian
Graham Marsh, and 1979
tournament winners Fuzzy
Zoeller, Mark Mt'Cumber and
floh H)man

Bench, wbo has a hook
coming out this week, bas the
mellow attitude of a 12-year
veteran.
He
remains
supremely confident of his
abilities both on the field and
away. from basehaU.
"I wa~ valedictorian in
high school and first in my
Army class," he said,
surprised that anybody would
inquire about his intellect.
"'lbat 's part of the thing that
makes me so secure in
myself. I'll always be successful, even after I leave
baseball.
"I think if I put my nose to
it, I could do anything I tried.
Of course, there's a lot of
things I don't have to do."
Bench
already
is
spokesman for a Cincinnati
bank and has been paid to
endorse everything from
spray pain! to motels. He
recently disposed of h1s
interest In three restaurants
here, but still has holdings in
oil, cattle and other ventures.
Perhaps since he was once
host of a syndicated
television talk show, Bench's
commercials look more
polished than many that
feature athletes.
·
"Doing commercials is like
anything else," Bench satd.
"You try to polish yourself
just like Playing baseball."

Iht:rt"'(ylll l)t no pwkctln t;;

mnp1rcs 1n Seattle, ami the
Mcirln er!'i cxpc&lt;:t a c.: rCJwd of
bel wf.'en :J2, IIllO· I~ 1100 !J1anks
to an anonymuus fan who

purchased 10,000 of th e
J\m~d ome's

$l.JO seats to be

rli, tributed lo youngsters and
semor
dtht:!r s

dtlzt:! ns,

amo ng

has

reques ted
and
we're
complymg with that w1sh /'
K1p
Horsburgh ,
Mariner~~xecutive director
The otl'li!l- big league teams
will open etth er Thursday or
Friday. weather permlttlllg.
McNamet1a is the only new
manager 10 the NL, but lhe
AI. lists J.es Moss at Detroll ,
Pat Corrales at Texas, .Jim
Marsha ll at Oakland and
Chicago 's Don Kessmger,
who will be a pla yin gmanager. In addition, Bob
Lemon. J1m Fregosi and Ken
Boyer begm the1r first full
seasons m New York, Ca hforma
and
St.
Lou1s ,
respecttvely .
Most teams wound up their
ex h1b1tlon schedules Tuesday
and headed for their openinggame sites.
Detroit left fi elder Steve
Kemp wa s beaned by ,
floston's Andy Hassler as the
Tigers trounced the Red Sox
R-2
Kemp apparently
escaped serious injury when
he was struck on the batting
helmet but was taken to a
hospital for observation
The Minnesota Twins beat
the Philadelphia Ph1lhes 5-2
as .Jerry Koosman pitched a
flVehitter and finished with a
spring ERA of 0.96. Ken
Holtzman allowed one run in
six innin gs to help the
Chicago Cubs defea t the Los
Angeles Dodgers 4-1 and
proclauned himself "in my
best shape in 10 years."
The Ch1cago White Sox
made It six m a row by
whippmg the Atlanta Braves
6-1, and the Orioles scored
f1ve times in the seventh
if\lling, three on Billy Smith's
home run. to down the
Rangers 6-2. Bruce K1son
hurled six scoreless innings
as !he Pirates trimmed the
Mets 6-2.
The St. i.ouis Cardinals'
nipped the Reds 1-&lt;1 on Bernie
CariJo 's two-run double, and
Tony Perez drove m three
runs with a homer and triple
as the Montreals Expos
defeated the Astros 1..1.
Elsewhere, the Oakland A's
rupped the Clevelarxl Indians
3-2, Syracuse of th e
InternatiOnal League turned·
back the parent Toronto Blue
.lays 5-2, the New York
" li e

anonym1ty

' ""1

;;..

I&gt;

.·:

.

March and April are the two months that produce most of
the tunker bass on the end of a hne. and already thi s year some
local anglers have landed some dandles R1ght now 1s the
hottest lime of the year , SO don't Walt any longer to wet your
hne.
·
Speakmg of fishin g, ~th e Ohio Dlv1ston of Wildlife.
Department of Natural Resources, IS heavy into 1ts spring
trout stocking. Forked Run has not yet been stocked , bu t a few
anglers have snagged a few carryovers from last year
Jncident.ally, the major gutdehne for stockmg trout m a-lloe
two-stage body of water hke Forked Run Is water clarity. 1t'ii
be a whtle before Forked Run gets 1ts stocking of trout.
Like mushrooms? Now is the time to start roam1,ng the
woods 10 search of the much-sought-alter morel mushroom.
This tasty cone..haped funglli; is a-prize !.Q many outdoorsmen
and a warm, wet sprmg IS the t1c~et to a bumper crop Any day
now the fun gi should be poppmg their heads up lor some lucky
mushroom huhter.
You'll have to probably do your own searching though
because most experienced mushroom seekers are rather tightli pped Henry Bahr of out Chester way has h1s eyes £me-tuned
for these tasty treats, but his &gt;~secre t" patches are known only
to him . So don't bother to ask him - I've tr1ed!
Heard any wild turkeys gobblin g yet' If you have, or if you
do, please conta ct Game Protector Andy Lyles, 985-3947. It's
important that U1e DivisiOn of Wlldhfe keep tabs on the1r very
successful restocking program, and reports from you farmers
and cit1zens are one of the main ways the D1viswn can do this.
There definitely is an expa nding flock m Me1gs and Galha
Counties, as IS the case in most Southeastern Ohio regions.
But, sorry to say, the 2,0110 annual hunting permits have
already been 1ssued Maybe next year that ole' Tom w11l be
mine.
One of the major points of emphasis right now for the
DiVIsion is the conducting ol hunter safety courses being
offered. In case you didn 't already know , effective September
1, you must pass a Hunter Safety course before you can
purchase your 197~ hunting license. If you have a previous
license, then all you have to do is show that 10 order- to
purchase your new license.
The most recent local course began last night, April 3, and
IS being conducted by Joe Bailey at Eastern Htgh School . If you
d1dn't make it last night, I'm sur~ Mr. Bailey will be glad to
catch you up on things . Next meeting is tomorrow ni ght, April
5. You may contact Mr. Bailey at the high school, 985-3329. or
Mr. Lyles for more information.
If you happen to go north this summer, Lake Erie is alive
and welL The fish are big and they're there in numbers, so try
, your tuck. Good luck at the old f1shm' hole, but stay out of my
mushroom patch!

WaJker named co-captain
WILMINGTON - Ewmg
Carter and Jack Walker have
been elected co-captaiils of
th e Wilmington College
chapter of the Fellowship of
Christian Athletes.
Cart er, a sophomore
football lettermen. hves at
1014 Center Street, South,

Springfield. Oh1o. A defensive
end. he was graduated from
Sprmghcld South H1gh.
Walk er, a junior football
Jetterm~n. hves in Thunnan.
He plays olfens1ve tackle and
was graduated from South·
western High School.
Bill Ramseyer, Athletic
D~rector and Head Foot ball
Coach at Wilmington, is the
chapter advisor.
The Rev, Gordon Beasley,
of Port W!Uiams, .is the
chapter chaplllin

Yankees beat the Umvers1ty
of North Ca rolma 9-4 and the
Sa n Di e~o Padres shaded San
D1ego State Umverstty 5-3.

~

- -

.

-

-. " .

~~

,-.

7'ri-County .:&gt;port -,,1op

·~1.---:;~__.-::1\.

--

_..;;:;

'
&lt;

.li-----~~~

TRY

ARCHERY
Buy Your Archery Needs
Now And Save
lEAR'S FINEST
COMPOUND HUNTING

BOW

COMPOUND lOW

ae1.•uus

'119

95

WHITETAI L HUN fER'"

HIGH MILEAGE RETREADS

1f2 PRICE OF NEW
TIRES WITH 'A NEW
TIRE GUARANTEE
Whitt• Wall• (No extra roirl)

REG. TREAD
RECAP

$}695

•
All sizes
Plu s Recappable trade-in

GRAVELY

.
TRACTOR SALES &amp; SERVICE

'

l'.llnt'ti i Ul t ctVt. l . lj.!,t·ld :-.1 \ l 'ril

bt~en

.
·
who has bolted the ranks of pe ople known to the dubs,"
Waugh· fanned five and dissident umpires to sign an san! AI. President Lee Macwalked four. Nance had two individual contract, would do Phail "These are umptres
singles for the winners while the honors in C1nc1nna h , who wor k college and
·?ape led the Tornadoes w1th where the Reds . were swnmer games ~nd are well
a double and single.
scheduled
for · their known to the clubs through
Dennison led the Wildcats traditiOnal 'opener th1s after- their scouting efforts."
with a single and double while · noon , w1th the San Franc1sco
The lwo leagues had hoped
Webb had two singles.
Giants
providmg
the to s1gn a dozen mmor league
Duffy, Kent Wolfe, Tim oppos1110n.
umpires , but eight of them
Brmager, O'Brien, Powell,
Pryor was expected to be rejet1ed the offer of threeand West each had a smgle one of the umpires in year major league contracts
."Those guys make $2,600 a
for the winDers. F. Whitt had Cincinnati. but there was no
the other hit for the losers, a word on who would round out )ear but they wouldn't go
single.
h1s quartet. Some 50 olher aga inst the regulars," sa1d
.Southern goes to Eastern major league umpires have Ai. ump1re Dave Phillips.
Thursday night. Their game refused to - sign their "This thing has br ought
with Federal Hocking has contra cts seeking to re- umpires from both leagues
heen rescheduled for May 10. ' negotiate' individually for and the mmors together."
More than 52,000 fans are
Southern was supposed to higher wages
,
play the Lancers Monday but
The only otl\r regular urn- expected at Cincinnati's Rivwas rained out.
pirt under contract is Ted erfront Stadium to watch
Line score:
Hendry of the A~ncan what co uld be a p1tchmg duel
101 001 Q-J 6 J
.
between Tom seaver of the
sHT
003 024 x- 9 9 2 Lea gue. He s1gned be e
Reds
and San Fr~ncisco's
Beaver 1 LPl. Waugh (6) MaJor League Umpir es
and M. Dennison
Association decided not tQ Vida Blue. Af ter a slow start ,
West IWPJ , O' Brien (5) report for spring trainin~ seaver was 16-14 wilh a 2 81

HEALTH

__________

HY GREG BAILEY

~pring means many thmgs to ma ny people, but to the
average out.doorsman 1t usually s1gna ls " f1 sh1ng tune ·•

The Daily Sentinel

,

Berr y s world

Den TaJk

SPORTS Umps still str· . g,
baseball starts today

'
'lbe collapse of th'e Grant a year, which could trigger
Street Bridge in Akron oo up to 90 percent in- federal
March 20 seems to have match~ funds for _projects
added to their· argllments. along the intentite ·aYBtem
M•
Two persons were killed and and a somewbat lower match
and Brlnager.
,•·•
on
other
U.S.
routea.
two injured in the accident.
,..,
Bowers
)JI'Oposes
giving
the
However, so far there Is no
••
groundaweU of support for state 40 percent of the lnC&lt;IIIe
~~
the hike that would mean and allocating Ill pi!I'Cent to
",
another two or three cents a local governments which
have
to
take
care
of
their
own
'~
gallon at the pwnp.
1
streets and highways .
Gov. James A. Rhodes' reAmong the. neighboring
~election pledge of no new
••,.
states,
West
Virginia
and
taxes, and the apparent
'" 1
special counsel appointed by embrace of tluit pledge by Michigan each have an 11·
~.
Attorney· General Griffin B. legislative leaders, loom as cent tax. Indlana has eight
cents, and Kentucky, nlne
n
Bell·is enmining the Carter the main stumbling block.
cents.
'.,"
famlly peanut business, In·
Rep. Arthur R. Bowers, oFour trophies will be
Rhodes,
at
a
recent
news
eluding allegations that some Steubenville, chairman of the
awarded rij:hters at boxing
•"
money fi'Ofll bank loans to the House
Highways
and conference, said he was
matches scheduled at 7:30
about
the
• :.
busineas fOund Its way into Highway Sa(ety Conunlttee, concerned
p.m. Saturday In the Meigs
~,
the campaign coffers.
Is pushing the bill which condition of Ohio's highways
High School Auditonum
•!
The FEC's final 'report on actually calla lor a hllre of 4 and bridges.
under the sponsorship of the
Carter's primary campaign percent In the tn on · He recalled his 19'15 bond
Meigs Jaycees.
''·
'
Issue
package,
which
does not mention any peanut wholesale purchases by staThe main event. fiv e
l&lt;
Included an lncr- of .9 ol a
busineas money going to the tion owners.
rounds, Will be between
campaign, Indicating the
Bowers,
wb.oae
bill cent in the sewn cent lu,
Winnie Johnson, Zanesville,
federal auditors found no 1 received ita second hearing and the fact ''they turned me
'and Larry Babbitt, Racine,
down1
"
·
with the winner to be
such connection. A com· this week In the Ho1118 Ways
Rhodea apparently
mission spokesman utd no and Means Committee, said
Presented a trophy given in
irregularities were found In thetaxwouldbepasseclalong referred to the legialature,
memory of the late Delmar
bank loans directly to the to consumers by station which refused to put the
A. Canaday who~e ring tiUe
govemor's
pi'CipGial
on
,
t
he
committee.
ownets. He • estimated It
~~ ; 'KI!l Kennedy," 1921The Justice Department woUld cost each motorist state bsUot In 1875. ~·Now, I'm
waltlnc.
I'm
waiting
to
hear
There wiU be at least 20
said Monday that· Paul J. about ~ a year.
Curran, the special counsel, • But that ~be a bargain, what they want to do," he
other amateur bouts of three
l.
had not seen the FEC's audit eapeclally
COIIlpared to said .
rounds each.
The Republican governor
report.
damages
could res\Jit
Ringside seats will be $3
never
nl&lt;o1tlooed
that
hlllour
Curran's investtsatlon Ia from hlttins a pothole or
with 400 available and
·.
1975
bond
~were pJ.ced
focused on charges that there crashing
over
an
general admission will be $2.
was double collateral used embankment where there Is 6n the ballot anyway, after a
Dr. James Conde wlll be
Bolentl!l Mulching Mower'•
major
drive
for
voter
and late repayment of nearly ·no guardraU, Bowers said.
Self*propelled model cuts
the attending physician.
lllgnaturea.
Tbe
best
any
of
$7 mlllion in loans made by
Ohio's
gasoline
tax
and recu t clippings mto
Forty perceht of the
his "economic recovery"
fme mulch which fert•l•zes
the National Bank of Georgia currently Is seven cents a
wlll go to the
proceeds
lawn • Cuts 22" swath •
to the Carter peanut gallon - unchanged since IJI'Opollals farBcl wu to set
current fund drive which is
Front wheel dn11e • Conbeat
by
a
marsln
of
about
4-1.
warehouse in 1976 and 1977. 1959 and the loweat among
venient wash-out port for
underway for the establishHis gasoline tax wu
The bank was headed at the neighboring states.
easy clean-up
ment
of a track and other new
time by Carter's forllier
The tax lncreue reportedly defeated by voters by about._
facilities
at the athletic
Buy Now &amp; Save
federal budget director, Bert would raise about t150 mDlion 1.
complex of the Meigs High
Lance, who resigned from the
School.
Reg ... $323.50
administration amid charges
Llwrence-E. Lamb, M.D.
The
Meigs
Athlellc
Now ... $283.50
of backing irregularities.
Boosters will operate a
Sharon Snyder, FEC
concession stand.
assistant press secretary,
Other trophies to he given
1
said, the commlsalon only
up
In
·
the
east.
Energy
Is
will
include one for the best
Ti 11 top shn11t~
I k d I t b k I
neither
created
nor
fighter
in the 7 through 13
oo e
n o an . oan
Lamar Miller
Offer Good Now
arrangements made 'with the
hut hi~-t
destroyed. Thls !s called the
years age group; the best in
committee.
Thru May 1
of conservation of
the 14 through 17 years age
Ms. Snyder said the FEC
OU College of Osteopathic Medicine OEAR OR.. I.AMB- I am a law
energy. If you are going to
group and the best in the 18
1
auditors did not directly
through 25 group .
34-year-old woman, 5 feet 10 spend that much energy,
Rt•1'11111l rlll ~'l pmdlt "!l' JlMhl at
tnvestiga\e loans to the
Tickets may be secured at
with a larg, frame and weigh you 11 need to conswne an
p,.,ll&lt;'"•y, Ohl"
warebouae because It found
of
energy
to
Small
Engines
equal
amount
'.
Hartley
Shoes or Simon's
BACKACHE
186
pounda.
I
run
four
and
a
NH!Innill lltiVI'rll!dnj! tl'prt!st• n·
unted f f da
lltllw, t.Hntlnn As..,~·ill ll'!l, :uo 1
no,unacco
or un on
One Of the most common patient CGIIlplalnta family half mites six days a week, keep from losing weight.
Sales &amp; Service
Carry-Out in Pomeroy; the
F.uduiAvt• ,Cit&gt;vt•hmti,Ohhr4411S.
the committee books Which pbyslclana must deal with Ia backache. Often it Is auoclated bike four miles six days a
I'm so convinced thai
Carpenter Pennzoil in
498 Locust 51.
l'uh'~t'rlptlnn rHlt'" Jlcllvl'rtod hv
l"'t..t h
t'llrtit•r wlll'rt•l!Vfl llahlt• 00 t'l'll!S Pt;r
m"6u
ave come from sueh ., with other medical problema, such as Influenza, emotional we~k and swim at least one either your !!lory Isn't tJ:ue or
Racine. from any Jaycee or
Middleport, 0 .
Wi•t&gt;lc R~ Mnllll Rnuh• ~· h l'l l ' l'llffit•t·
source.
992-3092
stress and lddney atones.
and a half hours a week. I on- else that you need some help
from
David Jenkins, 992-6681.
'']'----------'
"~'''"'''''' nut avt~lhthlt· , Orw mnnth.
The only reference to the
Back problems affect many mUilona- of people In lhls J y conswne 1200 to 1300 on how to count calories thai
f.1 25 A&gt; mail In Ohhr t~ud W VH,
~
O!tt• Yt&lt;11r, m~ : Six mnnlh.:~·
campaign's banking pr&amp;C• country every year and t;ast industrll!l billiona rl. dollan In ('alorles and that's a balanced I'm aendlng you The Health
$14 ~(I
Thrt•t• mnrtlhs , f 8 50
Uces ln the audit said the absentee hours. It ranks second only to colds and flu u the diet. Also, t'm very active l.ett~r number 4-7, Weight
F.l,o.:C'wht•rt• s.12 oo yt•11r . She munth...
committee had failed to
leading cause of dlaabiUty in the U. S.
dur'lng the day and spend I .oslng Diet. This Is a balan'C:
f17 110 Thrt•t• rnn nth ~ . J!l 0~ .
Slth ~r·riptu•n prlt t' mdudt•,O.: SumiKy
report to the FEC all the
The severity or at least lbe dlsab~ nature of backache very litUe time silting. Why ed diet ol about 1300 calories
often
forces people to seek medical attention qulcldy. Thla Ia does my weight stay high• Is a day. If you stick to that and
1-T-"n_"_'"'-'-'"-"'-''---.,.----' banks in which it had funda.
fortunate because occas!OIIally serious diseases IUch 11 it mo!lt beneficial to do push follow the exercise you're domelalltic cancer of the prostate or the breast, and poulbly ups leg lifta pull ups and sll Ing, l'ln confident that you
1
Paget's dlaease may flrat be manifested u a pain In the back. ups' every W:y or every other will lose weight. Other
AGravely ndmg tractor cuts
However, aince lons-ctandlng chronic beck pain II not aliSD ol day• 1 would appreciate your readers who want thiJ issue
tough weeds or mamcures your
ean send 50 cents with a long,
..-----'--------'------...,...-------. serious medical eondltiona such u cancer or heart dlaea1e, conunenls.
lawn fast and easy.
usually the physician's main intaresl Ia finding the cause and
DEAR READER - You stamped, sell-addresse,d
It's butll Wtth all-geardtrect
rellevlpg the discomfort caused by the backachle. ·
sound llke you're In top envelope for it. Send your re-\
dnve
and no belts. mstanl forTramna Is the most crunmon cause ol backache. All shape. Since you're 5 feet 10 quest to me In tare of thla
ward
and reverse, your choiCe
accident can induce beck pain In a number ol dll!erent ways: and have a large frame it newspaper, P.O. B011: 1551,
.
of 10.12.16 or 18 hp.
strains of the small Bide joints In the vertebrae, atraina of the follows thkt yotl are jlllll lf big Radio City Station, Ne,.·~.' - 0 Thetracror
,
ligaments connecting the vertebrae to one another, lean or woman. There Is nothing Vork, NY 10019.
11'&gt;
powers over 20
bruises of the back lllWICles and ruptures or slips of vertebr~e wrong with that.
Rega,rdlng bow frequentlj.
,_-..._:_""~'·
lawn and garden
~
~~to~to~ you should do the the set df
attachments.
Injuries to the hack are frequently located In _lbe lower . in terms of the difference bet- exercises you mentioned, It
area where the "lumbar" are situated. Moat commllllly the ween fat and muscle. That tlepends upon what your goat'
Call for a test
third, fourth and fifth lumbar vertelrae are affectecl. U1111Uy &lt;letennlnes whether or nol is. If you want to use up
drive We service
a twist , pull or sudden movement (Called "Indirect" trawna) you need to Jose weight and ealories, the rn~re frequeril
what we self
Is the cause of the back pain. Orily about5 to 10 percent ofbatk how much You t•an tell by the better. If you are lrt
pro~lemsarecatl8ed by "direct" trauma, thatts, due to~ blow notldng h~w much fat there teresled in growing musclesl
~GRAVELY
or direct hit on the back ltseH.
_
is under your skin. The waist then you really only need te'
MostofthelnjurleswhlchjJI'imarycarepbyalclans aeecan and small of the bac-k is a do them about every other
be managed with conservative methoda, ualng !taction, good place to· d1eek that. If day. In fact, good .studle.
various physleal therapy 11\odalillea, analgelllca, medlcallona ynu have much of a fat roll show that once you 'l(~
to relax the musclea and·manual manipulation o1 the apine. around the nllddle, then you developed good muscle slZf
Only the ruptured or sllppad disk mlchl require surstcal do have some fat to l011e but and strength, a good program
correction, but 111ually even this condlUon can be managed if you're all mus~le, forl(~tit. that uses the muscles lo thelf
With cmaervatlve treatment.
r•m rather dubious about fullest extent once a week If
"
TramnaUc low back pain Is alao sometimes the result of ' · your statement lhat you 11nty adequate to maintain them. •
Fracture of vertebrae. Fortunately, this Is the least common t•at12ll0 to 1300 calories a day
CaUsthenlc exercises a~ ·
of aU traumatic Injuries In the low back. There are several Jll'rllt-ularly If you're te111n8 you desCI'lbe do not stlmulali ·
types of these fractures which becauae ol· the very tec:bnlcal the truth a bout· how much large muscle developm~nt::
nature of the subject will be dealt with in a aeparate upcomlna physical activity you do. A Muacles ~et onl~ as large a~
·
pt"n&lt;on ynur size wnuld nor- they need to be to lift a l(iveh
column.
~ 1tno~NEA Inc ~
mally use 1500 calories a &lt;lily weight. The lal'{(er the well(h(; . · ·
'
if tlwy Jul!t sf.llyed in bed all you 1111, th~ larger t~
'·
musdea beeume. Pull nJl4'
tllty arxl did nothing.
" ... And upof1 being taken to a supermarket,
might cause you In devel"'t
Thert•
Is
a
hasit'
law
r~
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Lar- Award by the Ins Angeles
204 Condor SJ. 992 -2975
Pomeroy, 0.
you will remembf!r and demand that brand.
larl(e
ann mUBCtes hl•'lln,...:
n11tur&lt;•
that
you
t•an't
rhan~t·
.
ry Bird Qf Indiana State has Athletic Club as college
Mann·
,
1 " vush. Ow t&gt; r:r
must
.
~upport
all
I~
they
When I clap my hands you will awake ... " ,
been voted the recipient of basketball's player of the ~tny mCirt• than ynu &lt;'lin
t""eJ~•· tht• fur·t thr• &lt;un '"'"''' (&gt;Olinda of your bndy wei,.. •
·~· ...... •he lhird;jjnnual .John Wooden year

Ohio's highways and bridges
have
prompted
some
lawmakers to call for an
increase in state gasoline
taxes to fix them up.

Campaign gets
h I gh ratmgs

f

•. . •

Report

IN WASHINGTON

three-month session would be '7 .2 million .

.-. w~:sJ}ington

Plus 80c
J!t•d. tn: .

Free Mounting

MEIGS TIRE CENTER
')')?

1101

7 u~

E. MAtti . Pomeroy . 0 .

We Carry Parts For
Your
lear Compound low
Phone
$ale Prien In
Located Next To Mason County Fairgrounds
675-1.988
EHect Thr011h
p .. t PI
t WV
· set., April 1
OIR
easan ' · a.
Stort Hours: Mo"day Through Satu1day 9:30a.m. · 8.00 p.m.

�. &gt;:-The Daily Sentinel1 Middle£!&gt;J1-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday. April4 , 1!179

.

Sparky feels ·Wagner sabotaged job . chanc~s

'

By .HAL BOCK
A. I) Sports Wrih.•r

K
tl

1\
I '

who is in the midst · uf a
14ttionwide promotional lour

NEW YORK t AP )
· for Pitch, Hit and Run,
Sparky Anderson, on the ba seball's youth program.
side lines for the first time in " By then. every club except
Zl years as the major league Oak land had its, manager for
baseball season began today, the new season. If they had
says the Cincinnati Reds ' fir.e dme0ct. 1, 1'dhavehada
sabotaged any chance he job this season."
might have had to manage
Anderson
said
Dick
another team in 1979 by Wagner. president of the
delaying his firing.
Heds, had two reasons for
·: They decided at the end of delaying the dmoun""ment
the season, but they stalled that .John McNamara would
until Nov . 28,'' said Anderson, mana~e the rlnh th1s ~ason .

}".

'&gt;

~

",,R
~:

~:

..•"•
~~

t•

" !-'irs! of all. lie didn 't want
tu rock the .Japan trip, and
se&lt;.'Ond of all , he didn 't want
to give PeteRose a chance to

hse my firing as an excuse for

leaving the ball club," Anderson said.
Hose had played out his option with the Reds last
season, and after the team
returned from a length y
postseason tour or Japan, he
announced that he had
eliminated Cincinnati from

..

contra c1 O l" f ~n t iat i nns and.

he wouttl sign wilh

;llld l&lt;t\"Oill nf stn•ds li!' w,·Jl
Cl ." tht&gt; · hnu~t·~ nt;af· thl' l'h'l'l"
;~n d thnst• nftht• sw&lt;tmp h1mls.
[\]~u ~h nwn wt•n•tht• shi p(liii J~
ports cmrl vctriuus :-h ips nn thtwhll• Arum:nn Rivt•r H lon1~
with vit•w:-; of th(' 1•itv of fli 11
J\lves Ferreiva of Ohi&lt;i d&lt;' .Ian&lt;•irn.
.
University address&lt;'d lht• · Miss Ferreivu is com. group Monday night.
pl t•ting ·a mastt•r's d&lt;'gn·' in
Miss Ferreiva whma.· sn&lt;•ial sl'it•ncr Ht Ohio Unh•t•r-·
·· hometown is on lhl:' Hrant·h sity as Hn international stuRiver, a tributary of tht• dent ·undt•r a . scholarsip
Amazon, showed slides of tht• · "'holarship program , partial' ·•rohitCI'IUre of the buildings . ly supported by Delta Kappa

the contra c·l £rom a newsman,
not !rom club officials. And
l'hiladelphia Phillies.
when
t1ndnnati front office
Anderson said Uu:iol in relospe1·sonnel
took a veteran
IK.'f'L there were dues while
•·t,u l rad

Wit h

Nuggets ,slam
Sports ·World Net~, 1.10-97
Today's

By Will Grimsley

Ohio
Sportlight•..
.

.

New York Knieks 116-115, tbe
San
Antonio Spurs beat the
l'
COLuMBUS, Ohio (AP) The
Denver
Nuggets
Cle'veland
c,§valiers 116-112, The failure o a tax levy in. ~:
NEW YORK ( AP) - ·Arthur Ashe buried his reed-thin, angstarted without George the Washmgton 1 Bullets crease niay have dire con:: ular frame in the cushions of his Upper East Side aparbnent
.McGinnis and finished defeated the Milwaukee sequences
on
the
~: and tossed a magazine oo the coffee table.
Bucks IIZ-108, the Portland Interscholastic athletic
without David Thompson •
"Just reading a story by Roger Kahn in £squire about aging
and won anyway.
Trail ·Blazers topped the programs of Colwnbus city
~ athletes," he said.
They
climbed
into
a
firstSeattle
SuperSonics 100.102, sch®ls, a school official says.
{
" Is Arthur Ashe one of the featured subjects?" someone
place tie with idle Kansas the Ne'w Orleans Jazz
"The bottom line Is either
• asked.
in the -National outscored the Boston Celties. cut athletics or reduce
) ·The !rail-looking veteran of the international tennis circuit City
Basketball Association's 141-1~ and the Golden State programs," said Norval
• appeared momentarily taken aback by such a suggestion.
Midwest Division by beating Warriors beat the Detroit Goss, -executive director of
\'
"I don't know - l don't think so," he replied hastily. " I the New Jersey Nets lltl-97 "'Pistons
104 _100 _
general administration for
: haven~ got that far ."
Tuesday mght, de~tte the
l.akers 97, Bulls 95
the Colwnbwj school system,
i -Toll no knells for Arthur Robert Ashe Jr., former U.S. Open absence of McGmms due to
Los Angeles trailed hY Tl
Here are some of the things
) and Winnbledon champion, civil rights activist, tennis states- mJury and the late loss of points early in the third
that
may happen:
l man and ambassador.
Thompson due to .two period but rallied to win as
-City
League track,
At age 35, he is just getting his second wind.
•
Kenny Carr scored. sev"" baseball or teMis athletes
tecluucal fouls .
' "I twisted my right ankle in practice yesterday ," he said. Dan ~sel and Bobby points in the final 31f.
"Doctor says it '·S nothing serious. My left heel, the one that's Wllkerso\t _Picked up the minutes, including the g • . qualifying fer the state meets
in May and not being allowed
0
given me so much trouble, is fine. I'm PhYSically fit. I'm more sl~ck, scormg 25 and 18 ahead basket with 43 seconds
to participate.
eager than I've been in years."
.
left -and a free throw in the
pomts, re.specUvely .
-Football and basketball
Fifteen mo.nths ago he Wllll being consigned to the dump
.
Den_ver
s
v•c!ory
was
cts
closing
seconds
that
iced
the
games
being lopped off 19'19heap. Virtually inactive because of the heel WJammation, he flrst smce McGlnnlS suffered vicklry
1980
schedules.
had dropped to 257th in the pros' computer rankings.
ligament damage' in his left
Kare~m Abdul.Jabbar led
-Some minor, noo;evenue
Then came uie long, lonesome light back, climaxed in early
earning
sports
being
ankle
last
Fr1day
·
the
!.akers
with
Zl
points
.
a
nd
January when be battled to the finals of the Grand Prix
In other NBA games, the Carr finished with 16.
·abolished.
Masters at Madil!On Square Garden and twice had young John !.o~ Angel~ Lakersedged the
Rockets 116, Knieks 115
Goss admits these· are just
McEnroe within a point of defeat before finally lOSing a titanic Ch1cago Bulls 97-95, the
Calvin Murphy scored 29 possibilities after the levy's
struggle.
Houston Rockets mpped the points, including a pair of failure by a narrow margin
In the Indoor Pro Championships at PhiladelPhia, he
baskets to start a 9-0 Holiston last week.
knocked off Marty Riessen, Guillenno Vilas, Brian GOttfried
However, he said the cost of ·
surge late in the final that
and Vilas Gerulaitis to gain the final. He allio swept info the
malntaining
athletics is "an
· gave the Rockets the victory
last round of USTA Indoor at Memphis before losing a. second
eye
\ash"
compared
to the
over the Knicks.
time to Jimmy Connors.
system's
total
budget.
"If we
Spurs 116, Cavaliers 112
"I've been no worse than the semis in any tournament thiS
cut out athletics, our money
George
Gervin,
the
NBA's
year," he said. "My aim is to win Winnbledon and the U.S.
leading scorer. poured in 46 problems still would not be
Open again."
.
points
as San Antonio main- solved.
Odds appear astronomical, but he has laced such odds be"We don't want ·people
tained its lead of I¥.: games
fore .
over Houston in the Central
. A black man in a white man'ssport, son of a Richmond, Va.,
Division. Gervin's layup with
Exhibition Baseball
park policeman, be has had to siDrm racial barricades in one
Rio Grande College's
At A Glance
I :20 to play to put the Spurs
.of the most fcrbidding of atmospheres - snobbiBb country Redmen defeated visiting ahead to stay lll&amp;-I07·.
By 1'he Associated Press
' clubs, official stuffe&lt;khlrts and chaotic adininlstration.
Wilmington, 92-49, at Stanley
. Tuesday's Games
Rlaz"rs 106, Soules 102
New York (A) 9, University
Ashe has handled the situation with dlg~ty and grace.
L. Evans Field Tuesday.
Portland center Tom of North Carolina 4
Now he is spurred by pride, not economics. He has won more
Rio runners ·capturing first
Montreal 7, Houston 5
Owens scored 24 points,
than $1 million in prize money alooe. He has a six-figure place honors were Mike
Chicago (A) 6, Allanta 1
including a crucial jumper
St. Louis 7, Cincinnati 6
contract with a sporting goods company's tennis division. He is Payne in the~ yard dash; with'36seconds to play to give
Pittsburgh 6,, New York (NI
playing pro of the Dora! Country Club ·in Miami, parttime Dave Segrlst, 440; M.
the Blazers a 104-100 lead.
commentator for-• ABC-TV, regular contributor to tennis Wheeler, 8116-yard run; Mike
magazines and tbe Washington Post, He serves on the pras' Skaggs, mile run; Ben Junk, , Dennis Johnson of' Seattle cut put the game away.
the margin in l]alf, but Dave
ruling council.
~ee mile run; Mike Riley, Twardzik's driving layup ..., ·.Jazz 141, Celtics 125
_Now, Ashe sees :Ill-year-old John McEnroe as the new shot, put · and javelin and with six seconds left clinched · New Orleans shot '64.4 percent from the field to hand
Goliath on the tennis hcrizon and an early decline of topranked Greg· Neff, pole vault.
the victory.
.Boston
its fifth straight loSs.
J~McyEConnorsth.
be I Ia I'
in
" •·h
ld.
Tom Dorsey won the hi~
Bullets 112, Bucks 108
Warriors 104, PlstoDS 100
nroe IS e s P yer ve seen ·years, ,.....e sa · jump event and Rick Q ·
Washington trailed by II
" In two years,lt will he McEnroe and Bjcrn Borg baUHng for berry the 1
j . wsenR.,'
Tom Abernethy scored 18 of
.
th
ld"
ong
ump.
1os
points
during the third period
N0 • I m e wor ·
mile relay team
d H 1 but outscored Milwaukee 194 his 20 points in the second half
as Golden State sent De'lroit
And what about Arthur Ashe? Don't count the old
out. · Morgan won the ~~;,:'Jum:.
at the start of the final period, to its sixth straight defeat .
Dorsey, who soared 6-7 in The Bucks closed to within
the high jump, qualified lor two points before baskets by
•'
'
the nationals. He also set a Elvin · Hayes ahd Bobby
LATONIA'
LEBANON
Dandridge in the final minute
LEBANON, Ohio tAP)
FLORENCE, Ky. t AP) - school mark in that event.
Ca per Dee, winning his Da' Right Judge., ri¥en by
second start in tw.o outings Mike O'Bryan, rOJDped to an
this year, captured the $1,1110 easy victory in the $5,600 feafeaiured . conditioned mile tured eighth race at Latonia
pace at Lebanon in a wire-to- on Thesday night, covering
wire performance Tuesday the mile in 1:38.1-5 and
night.
paying $3.40, $2..20 and $2.40.
·. · WiMing time in the one·
.1' Acuse From Age placed,
length victory was 2:08 Hi returning $2.80 and $2.801 and
· and the payoffwas$6.40, $4.20 the show hor5e , King Trace,
·and $3.20.
paid $2.80.
.
•
Jersey Silk'was second, teBeach Pad combined 1tl-l
·. turning $4.60 and $3.20, &lt;~nd with F.isen for $1,490.40 in the
.Knighted Waverly was third, double . Attendance was 4,092
·paying $3.80.
and the mutuel pool totaled
. . 'T,he 3-2 double of Dr. l.amo- $555,292.
nica and Unadilla KB . paid
Latonia closes out its .
.· $67 and the crowd of I,315 bet spring thoroughbred meeting
$148,835.
tonight.

¥' Correspondent

tu~day's

Sports Transactions

By The Associated Press
BASEBALL
·American Lea11ue
BALTIMORE OR·IOLES Optioned Joe Kerrigan and
Dave Ford, pitchers; and

.

man

ruShing to the defense of
football. We want people to
rush to lbe, defense of the
school system. Athletics ate
just part of the whole
program."
School officials
are
to
defer
.•
·
class
lanning
1•
P
days from the SeptemberDecember school schedule
into 1980. That' may mean
starting the school year later
in September, alfecting tbe
fall SPQI:ts.
Undet Columbus City
Leaaue regulations, students
e
can't
participate
in
interscholastic athletics ir
schools are not in seSsion,
except vacation breaks.
"You could go back to six
football games or 12
basketball
games
or
eliminate totally some of the
90-&lt;:aned minor sports, irueh
as termis and cross country "
·
'
said Goss.
.• U schools close ahead of
h ul
sc ed ethls spring, athletic~
would cease. That means it's
possible for athletics to
qualify for state ·meets, ,but
not take part if sehools would
be closed the week of the
competition in-May.
"It's unfortunate," said
Goss, "bot if schools close,
the whole show closes."

Baltrfflore 6, Texas 2 • ~
Detroit 8, Boston ~

Syracuse (I L1 vs. Toronto
at Dunedin. Fla .
Daktancn. Cleveland 2
Chicago (Nl 4, Los Angeles

SPRING

· San Diego 5, San Diego
State 3
Wednesday~s

GameS
Baltimore vs.' St. Louis at

.

St. Petersburg, Fla.
Minnesota vs . Philadelphia
at Clearwater, Fla.
Pittsburgh vs. Chlc 0go (A)
Georgia Tech at Atlanta,

tnl

l" l

NEW SHIPMENT
OF

~~

OSCAR TIME·IS
MOVIE·TIME·

'

ALL OVER

Thursday"'s Game
University of Houston at

Ho~W~W .

IS

BURSTING
OUT

at Bradenton, "Fla. :

60" KNITS
45" LINEN &amp; POPLIN WEAVE
45~' _
EM_BORDERED FABRICS
60;' STRETCH TERRY
45" PERMANENT PRm.c:

AREHEREI

SALE TIME

Plaids, Solids, FlOra Is

QUALI'I\Y_

60" SURALINE 50" QIANG

HOME

Group of

FURNISHINGS
sz'e

MODEL 543

Teo stained
the rug
'

SOCCER .
North American
Soccer League . ·
COSMOS - Stgiled Wtm
Rlj.!sberJien, mid-fielder .
TORONTO BLIZZARD Announced the ·release of

CALIFORNIA ANGELS Placed Mike Bartow, pitcher.
David : ;enderso'n, goal .
on the 21-day disabled list.
. CHICAGO WHITE SOX- tender, from his .Irish Soccer
Waived Ron Schueler, pit- Association team.
cher, and made him assistant
American
pitching coach.
Soccer League
CLEVELAND COBRAS KANSAS CITY ROll' ALSPlaced Marty Pattin, pitcher, Signed Joe · Kowalszyk,
on the 21-day disabled list. mldflelder , and Charlie
Placed Jerry Terrell, in- Kadupski, mldfteldor .
,...
fielder, on the 15-day disabled
NEW JERS,EY AMcR·
ICANS - S1gne&lt;l Jim Lemlist."Optioned Bill Paschall,
pitcher, to Omaha of.. the " on,, midllelder, and Sk.lp
American Association.·
t&lt;.oderick, defender.
MINNESOTA TWINS Sold Donny Goodwin, cat.
cher. to Toledo of the lnLEGAL NOr'ICE
ternationat League. Sent
Mike Bacslk, Terry Felton,
The Public Utilities CommisSteve Green and , Paul
sion ol Ohio has set for pub·
Thor modsgard, pitchers ;
lie hearing Case No. 76·629·
· Ray Smith, catcher, Dan
EL·FAC Subtile A. to' review
Graham , infielder, and Dave
the Juet procurement prac·
Coleman and Garr, Ward,
t~es and policies ol The Ohio
outfielders; to the r minor
Power Company . the operateague camp lor reosslgn ..
tion of its Fuel Cost AdJUSt·
ment.
ment Clause. and related
Nation,! League
CHICAGO CUBS - Op.
!ll&lt;lners .• This hearing is
tloned Manny Seoane, pit·
scheduled to begin at 2:00
cher; and Mike Gordon . . p.m. on April9. 1979 . at the
catcher, to Wichita of the
City Council Office, 216 ..
American Association.
Cleve1and
Ave. S.W .. Can·
NEW YORK METS- Sent
ton. Ohio 44702. An evening
'Mike . Bruhert . and Tom
session will be conaucted
Hausman, pitchers : ' to
from 5:30 to 7:0n p.m
Tidewater of the
In lerna tiona! League. Signed
All interested parties will be
Wayne Twitchell, pitcher, as
given an opportunity to lle
a free agent. Released Nelson
heard. Further information '
Briles, pitcher.
may be obtained by contact·
PHILADELPHIA
PHIL·
ing the Commission.
LIES - Sent Todd Cruz.
THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
shortstop, to the Kansas City
COMMISSION OF OHIO
~.:'/:.Is for Doug Bird, pitBy: Richard L. Smit&gt;
FOOTBALL
Secretary
National Footba II League
2
HOUSTON OILERS Min~eso!a 5, Philadelphia 2
Sig?ed Mark Cohill., quar-

1

Polly Cramer

1979 contrads.

Wayne Krench.lckl, ' infield~r.
to Rochester of the International League.

By 1\l.EJX SAC!IARE

o\P Sports Writlr

.

terback. to a one,year free
agent contract.
C.111dlan
. FootiM II Loa gue
HAMILTON TIGER-CATS
- Signed" Ed George, of.
fenslve tackle, and 'Leif
Pettersen, wide receiver to .

··Transactions

r.mnmn.
h•:wlwr:-:'

"

I'Phll'n tu ht•J' Jn.m w an·:1 In
11 •cid1 in;, · nnh'f'rsli unh'I'I'Si ty . Spt•etking P.nglish yt·n·

~lorat · Arts
/\n orgHnii.Htiorf&lt;il mt'l'tin~!

disrlay. Mt• t•tin~ with ttw
g rnnp tn d t•mnns t ra l f'

for lht• Shadl• Val1l'Y fmml'il
nf Floml Art.\i was ht•ld TnPs·
tla~· t&gt;V£ming at the r.twst&lt;•r

fin•houst•.

~ht•

IS ~.50 .

Ohiu

'

Offi&lt;'Prs t•lt• c•ted wPrl' fqr ' ·1h«' duh mf:' ml}('rs is a
Mt•letnit• nt'etn, pres idt~nt : !'l'rit'S of !oiiX lt•sSon!' in ar;.
Sht'ila Taylor, viet:' presirh•nt. : 1·rmging- \o bt• offert'il in M~•v
rarol F.rwin, secrt'tl-lry: an(l .Jum· by Mrs. T n·n~·
.fHt•kit• Fr(~t . treasurer ; arid .lac•kson nf Wt•lJston. The•
Karla C:hevalier , nPws . dasst•s will .bt• ~IR for tht•
rt•pnrtt•r . Other dub ~·WI"il'S but tn p&lt;trtirip r~ h•, um•
mt•mbers lUI' PHf Holter. must br fl mt• mlwr of tht•
n)(Jncil .

. Booster

]enkinses entertain

Chss met

Ret

home

Leoi.on holds
tteSt«.lJ party
A

Ben Franklin
Desk Collectio

PICNIC - . · ~
HAMS ••••••••• ~~99,.

Valley Bell
\

2% MILK
. gal.

i&lt;acme, U.

' PHEBE'S STORE
ThUrsday, April4lhrough April7
We Gladly Accept Fe&lt;i. Food Sf1mps
Monday lhru Frid•y
,:001117:00

Salurdly 9:00.9:00

· CLOSED
. SUNDAYS

115 w. 2nd
Pomeroy, Ohio

·. On Cable Channel 4.

DAIRY

!ith &amp; P~r.l

FABRIC SHOP

n Free movies are coming
your way April 7 &amp;: 8!

FRESH· . suced
SIDE •••••••••••• !~·..

$169

Fresh Country

Eckrich
Beef or Reg., sliced

EGGS
do z

79$

Parkay

MARGARINE
ctua~Ier

g·ge
$

BOLOGNA.••••••••• ~~~.
.

714

oz..

'

1

PRODUCf

159

CHUCK
ROAST
.LB.

$119

·
sausage or

KIWT Mfl.ARONI &amp;CHEESE .. : 3Pl.OO 1
PillA MIX. ..................... $1.19
DASH DETERGENT.............. ~.~~;?~.~~; 49' I NOODLESampbell's ANNDIWCHIICKEN BROTHNo
. t can 5lSI()()
1
••. ,. •
PALMOLIVE DISH UQUID ........ :=.~:~ ..89'
DAWN DISH

Dm:RGENT..~ ...... ~~.~~:.'i.39 I BES PAK TRASH BAGS ... :..........'~.~::. 89'

WANTED
Colonial styled roll ·top desk with pidgeon hole com·
partments and bookshelf tor easy organizing, large
drawer haS 3 drawer effect. Full· finished back and
"Modesty" panel lets you use this beautiful desk

..'

anywhere in any room. Your choice In Knotty Pine
or Nutmet Maple ·simulated wood grained finish
with Writing surf8ce of genuine " Formica " ·h fgh
pressure . plasti c, !aminated to parti.cle bOi.trd.

CELERY
Bunch

39e

l2"x20"X4l" high .

INGELS FURNITURE
&amp; JEWELRY

Florida

.

ORANGES ·
. s lb.

$J29

"Two l11 Om .'itllr(
106 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, 0.
·
Cpmmunily Club Sponsor
1

Yellow

ONIONS
. · 3-lb.

139'

r

•

1

CARRIER FOR
TH~ DAILY SENTINEL
) IN
SYRACUSE.
AREA
Contact The
Dally Sentinel Office,
Court St., Pomeroy
or Calla 992-2156

11111'11'11

it f! ;.,.

illl llO IIIH'I'In(•nf

nf flw fl lll ll iii;Jiir\~~ C'dmmilll 'f'
nf HPrnlt ·i' ra rpr·n1Pr. Mctxi/11'

n (\r(lthy WIMKtilnt , pn•sic!t•nt,

pn·~ idcnt .

The April24 meeting will be
a dlnnc·r allh!' Meigs Inn in
Pomt•roy with the Gallipolis
Ph il :-:or1. n,•Jw rt &lt;~ Wil ..;nrl.
Rr;mch heing invited to hear ,
Thf •)' an· Fa ." ~&lt;HI P !' , first
Dr.
Clara _MtH' . F'n!derick; .
l'i 1 ·~ · pn •sich• 11l arul prnl!l';tm
d l;tinn .. n: Ro...;:Jii t• Slnrv . st•- prt'S!'nt ~tl nllt!'s from "A J)ay prnfcssor of botii ny at Ur·
(' Oilfl" • vii-t· ru·psi df• nt , · etrul
or JA'fl rllin~-:" itl Fawt'Ptt oona College.
nnruthv Qliver servt~d as
Mt&gt;nil)(•rshlp d liiirman, and rt•ntC'r nf Tmnnrrow jn r.(l].
KHthryn Knight . tn'H!'un•r .
um lms nn Frhruatv 24. Attt'n- regi:..Cf:rar: Hostesses were
Bf'tsy Horky , c·hHir·m;-m of tinn wa:-; f't+lled t;• tht• Ohju Maxine Pfilson, M~uri ta ­
Eel U&lt;' H t 1'1 lll&lt;l I F'u uncln t inn s State Division Conventi ~ to Miller, Margaret Lewis, and
Programs, cllndtt&lt;'tt•cl il silt•nt ht· lwltl in Middletown, April Ka te Jarrell . The F.aster
;mdion rnr ih&lt;•c·ontrihutimi to t7-2D . The Branch is cntitlt•il motif w"as carried out in the
ttw F.clm·atinnal T.ortn. Fu ~~~l .. \to senti two tlelegiltes and
the decorations.
. .., -.1- - '
in\'itl'd a rn&lt;•mher tn mit• her
rt'!'Prvtttiun o~ M'itrch 2R to allt•ml Lt·gislalivP Oay ;tt the.
NPil HousP in rulumhu s since
slw could not Httend . She

fil'l'hnnst• . rnchulf'ff in pJ;.m s

As.c::oeiatioi1 of Gnrdrn r.Jnh.s ,
U"~C· Council is opt•n for
mt•mbership to anynnl• in tht' · ~
•·vunty ilml meetings will dt•al
nnt only With 'finwrr Hrnmg·
in~t. but growing nnd propa Httting. plants and learni~~
about thmgs rt•IHtPrl tn nlunl

We service all m~ch

. DRAWING TONIGIIT
School.
·:: Drawings for the Eastern
Any team desiring to enter
· .Athletic Boosters Basketball should have a representative
·Tournament slated for April at the drawing along with
9'-14 wlll be held at 7 p.m. this their roster sheets and $40
evening at Eastern . High entry lee.

Rnnnv Kuhl . f)f•hhil' C: rm•s1' r .

.l:trwt' Knhlt•ntr.. nnd Mr~.

Jn;\('rarm· wHs Mr~ . Alit'(' Thumpsott.
Thmnpsnn, whn :.tl!'ln joiiu.. l
Nc•xf rm•{'ting will Ill' h(•l&lt;l
th•• m~t·ting . Mt•mlx·rship fi•p :111 7 p.m. im April 17 ~ I tht•

·

by

·council organizes

The Booster Class of the
·
-Mr . ancl Mrs . Roy .J&lt;•nkins Mrs . Apr·il Harmon. Wt•ndi
Racine Baptist Church met at
DEAR POLLY .- I spill ed
the home of Gamet Ervine on entertain&lt;~! reeently with a and Cry~tal, Helen Jlarr, an&lt; I
hot tea (nothing added ) 011
he
d, farrtily dinner hnnnrin '" their joining htht• family
F e.!w111memrsan
b 6 ·h o
1 for .1upper
my short-napped, all nylon
tliiu"hh•r
,
Kim
.
herl_v
D
.
awn,.
\V!'I'!'
t•r
g1K
parents. the
one visitor present.
' filllrlh birthday.
Rt•v · ·an&lt; 1 Mrs
carpet and wonder if there is
on her
. Werulell
Meeting opened by a hymn
s 1
any:ihlng that will remove the
Her
&lt;'ake
was
a
clown
bak· • lnl &lt;'f.
by group "Open My Eyes that ed hy ht~r ll'randmothcr, Mrs.
Oth er.'i sene ;·mg g1·fts Wl'rt:' •
resulting stain.- T.G.
I May See," followed with Don Lisle.' Attending were Kt•tl· h Lts· 1e, • Mrs. Rac hel
DEAR T.G. - !!ponge the
prayer by Helen· Simpson. ht•r grandparents, Mr. ami M,.Jl rl!· 1e: M.., . Rhea W'll
stain with lukewarm water
t 1's
and then with a half-pint of
Also a reading "When the M n I . I M
IM
and · Rem..-, anti Mrs. Judv
Last are First" and a poem
Ni.
nn .Is r, r. a.nc rs
.
lukewarm water that has a
Jt•nkt'n".·,
her "r•··'t·
King, Krislt'n and RPnee.
"ri
C
"Widen
My
Vision"
.
were
"
"
"
"
teaspoon of synthetic
read. Reading of the last grandmother. Mrs. Floren&lt;'&lt;'
detergent added . Rinse out
minutes was by Dorothy Potts, and Mr. and Mrs . .John fji£
d
1_
wi.th plain water. Next use
Badgley
and
the
treasurer's
.I
jsl&lt;'.
Ttxld,
Sebtt
and
Travis.
.
'
1
-e
retreat
piUnne
one teaspoon whit: vinegar in
report by Grella Simpson. Mrs. Krith Lisle and .Jason.
The Athens District United
three teaspoons lukewarm
They
reported
th~
balance
of
Mr.
and
Mrs
.
Rill
Tiee
and
Methodist
Women will huld
water and leave this on for
""5"
4'
n
f
d
•22
45
.
Sh••rry
,
and
Mary
RIX'ht•llt"
.
about 15 minutes. Sponge out
•• •· •· ower un , • . . .len kins, s1ster
.
of I he honon'e . • their spring spiritual life
Cha Irs for the new class
retreat beginning at .6 p.m.
with lukewarm water. Blot up
Visiting wiih her on her bir· Friday' April 20 with a
room have been ord.ere d and
as much of the moisture as
wlll be paid for. by class. thday were Mrs . Cathy t•overed dish evening meal
possible and then put several
PI ans were rna de for or- Moun•, Amv. and Andn•ct, .through April21 at 2: 45p.m.
thicknesses of paper towel.s
dering tables lor the fellow·
Dr. Van Boga rd flunn will
over damp spot and weigh
towels down with a heavy
~lp room of .the church.
he the speaker for the retrea t
The program was brought
U'f11,
using the theme, "Exploringby Velrqa Taylor with Vehna
fliscipl eship as Interpreted
by the Gospel of Mark ."
reading a poem entitled "My
Church." A song by the group
Rosem ary flupl er will lw the
"Must Jesus Bear the Cross
Mr. and Mrs . Lloyd Wright :song leader.
Registrati on whouill he
Alone?" Prayer was by have returned from a two
Velma, Also a reading was week vacation in Georgia, sent (o Mrs. F.verett Mowrey,
given by Velma "What Is the Florida, and Alabama. At 12770 Plea.,ant Va iiPy Road ,,
Church" Our church· Is a Covington, Ga. they visited · Rtx•kbridge, 43149 hy·ApriliO.
Full cirote protection
. permits "Tailoring" of
placeofthreeships,worship, their son -in -law and
t
..
1·
' specific plans for in fellowship
and
~ewardahip.
daughter,
Becky
and
John
, d1vidual needs.
We are to preach the Gospel Anderson .
6'
by our dally lives. Readings · From there they went to ·rr'
.J
were: "Going to Church" by Fort Myers, Fla. where they .L
David E; Jenkins
Helen Slack1 "Could I Be toured Edison's home. They · ,
At the American Legion ,
Called a Christian," by also had occasion to hear
~gen!
Mildred . Hart' " Preach Bruce Stalnaker in concert at Drew Wehslrr Post ~9,. birth·
304 E. Main
Pomeroy,
Jesus " by Ora Hlll; "Seven ' one of the churches there. ·day party 'ru1•sday l'venin g,
9'17.-6681
Problems of the Church," b~ Stalnaker and his family amonl( those intnxlu•·ed wt•n •
•
shr U,ieS your favorite Dorothy Badgley; "The Old reside at Port Charlott and Mrs . Florence Ri ehards ,
· Pointer, Peeve'or Problem in Hymri" by Marjorie Grimm; Bruce, a former Pomeroy Eighth Distric·t president of
her column. Write POJ.J.Y'S · 11 Ask Largely," by Hilda resident, .fs now involved in tht• Auxili~try , Mrs. Marjorie
POINTERS in cart&gt; of thi s Hart; "Too Busy," by Gretta • gospel "" music. Mrs.. Jo Gnett, department junior aent&gt;wspaper.
Simpson ; "Smile," by Mabel Stalnaker of Pomeroy was livities chairman; Mrs . Mary .
Brace; ".Don't Quit," by also there visiting, . and the Martin, nationa l ehilclrc•n and
Helen Simpson; "This l Wrights talked with the youth chairman, Eight and
Believe" by Gamet Ervine, Stalnakers' other son, Te!T)I, • I'orty: and Tra cie .lt•fft•rs
and "Eternity," I&gt;Y V.,Jma ~ho lives. at Fort Myers, and who has been sHedml as lht• .
R1t&lt;'keye Girls' Stat• dolt•ga te
Taylor: A song, "On Jordan's IS also an entertainer. ·
Stormy Banks I Stand," was
Mr. and Mrs. WrigHt spent from the Auxiliary. Also in done by the group. The · some time In Mobile, Ala. . trnducrcl. wer.• her parenl, ,
meeting closed by a prayer touring the Battleship Park ' Mr. and Mrs . Wendell .lt•fby Gretta Sinnpson.
and Belllngrath Gardens. f&lt;•rs . Trade is a member of
The·next meeting will be.at They also visited an aunt of the jnnior auxiliary and plays
the home of Ora Hill and Mr. Wright at St. Petersburg, laps for the Post sergpant at
program by Gamet Ervine. Fla.
ann s.
Dellcious refreshments
were . served by. the hostess.
RF.TURNS HOMF.
POMF.ROY--Mr. and Mrs.
C:arl Roac•h and son, Darin,
and Mrs. Gertrud e Miller
have returned .from Tampa,
1950 DISCO
Fla . where they 'visited Dale
A 1950 theme disco dance is Hnd Ronald Miller. They also
slated with Kenny Hysell, visih•d in J.aGrangt~, Ga . with
Rutland, spinning th.e plat· Mr. and Mrs. Elmer MillPr
ters. ·AD new ·equipment will and family. Tom Roat•h who
be used by Hysell whO made has spent the winter in·
numerous appe·a rances at I'lqri&lt;la, returned homt• with
dances in the 1950s: Old and his family .
new records will be played.
. The dance will be held
saturday, :April 21; from 9 Tht• nwuu
.Junior American
p.m . to midnight at the &amp;yal !.1•gion Auxiliary of FeenevO~k Archery Bulldirig Wtder . Rennet! Post 126, Mirldlepm1,
. the sponsorship of tl)e Meigs will hold a ya rd salt· at
' ·
. High Alumni. Those at- 1 Reeky 's C:rnssrnads (/rtx·ery
tending !Rust be 21 or older. Friday and Saturday. Tht•
Price will be $5 per couple sak will continue &lt;'H&lt;'h
and $3 per person.
wt•t•keml un\il May.

PROTECTOR

I

book until dry . - POI.I.Y
flEAR POLLV - Oil th..
ends on vour window
shaderoller:&lt; ·a nd find thev
work like new. - MRS.
A.W.D. .
flEAR POJ.J.Y - Did vou
know that the while ofr;t n egg
will remove . cht,wing gum
from anything including
hair? I know because I just
· did it.
To keep pi ctures from slipping and hanging unPvenly
first liang . them facin g lh••
. wall. Turn over and this will
cross the wire and thev will
not slip. I learn~d these irirk&amp;
when I took over the
household chores while my
· mother was in the hospital. Al.f.VSON
DEAR POLLY .. Mv
Pointer is for mothers whi&gt;
have toddlers who are Jearning to fee"d themselves. When
giving baby soup I only dilute
it with one-fourth can of
water or none at all. Stir
while heating so all lumps are
dis.,olved. This thicker .lex·
· lure allows baby to keep
Jllore on the spoon and
therefore get more into
himself. If the rest of ' the
fami~y is also having svup,
dish up baby's portion fin.1
and then dilute it lor the ·
others. These extra few
minutes give baby's soup a
chan&lt;.'e to cool a bit and I
think it works very well. J .M.
Polly will send you one of
he r signed thank-you
newspaper coupon dippers if

m •JJ.' S IH• ll 0 tPd lh:1t :-:111' h:ul , I'd lly 'Hr hi •Cf 'll T:d 1· \1·!w
l all ) ~ ht E pl'li sh in ;1 f ·nii ~·J~ t · in
hr11 11l~ ht lwr frprn :t nd !'1'1111'11 ·
~nuth t\nwrk:t w..: :111 intpr·n:lpfl hc•r·ln 1\ ihc •n~
l innitl !-:Uhjt'f'L
1'1w PIPI'fion ·;111d insl nll n·
Thl' ~pt·ak t•r wa ~ intrnduc- linn ••f tlin•t•.uffit 't'l'!' w;1s t'Pil·

1111 illlt'nlollinll.ill
~f'l 'h•h · ' ~Ill:• will

Sponsored

.

Wilmington
thmclads

I

or

An irlsight into lift'
North~m s ·razil. Snnth Amt•rit•ct
. w_as ·given Jn("mi:Mm.; of th1•
Middl epnrt-Pom~·nw Arl'H
· Branch of lhl' A.rnt•rkrm
Assllcia tion of Univt~r.:itv
Women when ·Miss Marh1&lt;.~·

about
it,
they 1 were ··Ande·rson ex:pl1aining the
significarit."
' reasons.
another tca111. Two days after
Anderson
said
that
Anderson said he would he
t hit 1
an noun cern en l ,
contrary
to
the
club
rooting
for Seaver in today 's
ftnderson was rired.
who
was announcement, no reason fOr ·Reds opener .
"That was no coinddence," the It· am was in Japan that he newsman
"I .admire Seaver," said
said Anderson. "They didn't was out as manager. "I just celebrating his 5oth year with the firing was given to hinn by
Anderson. "He's one of the
want Hose to have an excuse didn 't recognize them," he his paper out. to dinne r, Wagner:
"He said, 'Sparky, I'm not classiest players I ever
to leave. If Hose had said he sai d. " Bulnow,.whenyou line Anderson , one of the writer's
was leaving two weeks later, U1ings up, one thing after closest friends, was not bringing you back. I'd rather majlaged."
.
not discuss the reason why
And after today'.s opener
I would have been fired two another. well, the clues were invited .
"They're , littie things and because we mi ght have willAndersonstiUrodl'lor t.re
weeks later. They didn 't want there ..,
Reds?
him to· have an out."
The manager said that at the time, they didn 't mean · words .'"
W)len the club announced · "After today, I WU.'t 5ay,"
Hose eventually ·sign·ed a while the team was in Japan; . anything," said Anderson.
.
four-y•:·lr
t1? miiH"" · he learned that pitcher Tom " But now wben I think ba ck .. the firipg, it said Wagner had ~ sajd.
spent two ·hours with
. Seaver hml si1~ nPd, r~ fj vp.•·fl .. r

tlmt

Redmen whip

I

AAUW members gain insight into Northern Brazil

•

•

•

12 oz. l'a•CKllgE!D

ECKRICH BOLOGNA ••••••••••••••••••••••••
,$1.49
.
HOMEMADE HAM SALAD.•••••••••••••_••~~~. $1.19
. .

12 oz. Packaged

'

,

FRENCH CITY WIENERS ..... ~ •••••••••••••••• 97~

$1
39
SLICED CHEESE~~~.. •

12 oz. Kraft Deluxe
Choice 1\ti)erican

Lb. Parkay

/Jl

5 lb. bag Oranges

MARGARINE ...~~~~:~~:~.694 FLORIDA ORANGEs

.

$1.29
OLD SOUTH TASlEY ·PIES••••••••~.0•1; 2/$1
oz.

CRANAPPLE DRINK .••••,. ••••••••••••••••• ~:~.Ss~
3 OZ. NESTEA ••••••• ~.-•• ~ •• ~ •••••••••••.•• ~'.~ '2.29
5 oz . .Armour

VIENNA SAUSAGE ••••••••••••••••••••••••••. 2!97~
l2 oz.
$129
-ARMOUR TR.EEJ w-IOc off
•
29

•••••••••••~•••••••••••••a••••~ -

oz.

LIBBY'S
PUMPKIN ••••••••• ~ ••••••••••••••~:~. 53~
oz.
Monte
FRUIT COCKTAIL ................................ 83~
30

1o oi.

Del

Ma)\well House

·

INSTANT COFFEE~ ••••••••••..••••••••••• ~=:. $4.49
32 oz. Kraft Miracle Whip
SALAD
DRESSING ..................u•···•·· $1.29
oz. Krah Deluxe
MACARONI &amp; CHEESE DINNER •••••••~o.x••~ 894
14

�•

,'

•

6--The r&gt;aily &amp;mtint•l. Mitltllcpc•rt·Putn(•ruy. 0 .. Wt•tbw ~d; t y. i\pl'il 4. 1!17 ~1
FINANCIAL REPORT
JIOf to-w nships
For Flsul Year l::ndln9
Decemberll , 1t1J
Sutt~n Township
. Me1~s County
.
Rac•ne, Ohio
M·arch 28. 1.,9
I certify the following
r eporl to be corr~cf .
Pavl S. Moore
Tel. 614 ·949 21 94
Summ•ry ot Cnh
Balanus, R eceipb · .
And Expenditures
Balan·ceJan . I, 1971
General Fund
SJ.639 .82
Motor Veh i cle License
T~nc . Fund
1, S68.68
GasQime Tax Fund
1,:186.30"
Road and Br idge
Fund
1. 158. 16 Cenletery Fu nd
3, 249.72

Federal Re¥enue

_.

.·
!

i

~

;.
•
·•
~

~t
:
.,.

•

'''.•
.',

s
I

...,
't

l

Sharing FUnd
1.031.38
TOtals
11.924.06
Total Receipts
Genered Fund ·
12, 457 .:U
Motor Vehicle Llc.ense
Tax Fund
6.338 .72
Gasoline Tax Fvn d 13,200.00
Road and Bridge
. Fvnd
3,76~ . 411
Cemetery F vnd
3.818.13
Pederal Revenve
Sharing Fund
10,013.00
Anti -Recession
1:10.00
Totals
50,312.. 21
Tot• I Receipts &amp; aarancu
General Fvnd
16,087.17
Motor Vehicle License
Tax Fund
1,901 40
G&amp;soline Tax Fund 14,416:30
Road and Br idge
Fvnd
4,922 .64
Cemeterv Fund
7,066.45
Federal Revenve Sharlflg Fund
11.044.38
Ant i -Recession
720.00
Totals
62,236 .34
E xpenditurts
·
General Fund
12,.056 . 1:1
Motor Veh icle License
Tax Fvnd
7, 174 74
Gasoline Tax Fu'nd
IV;Jll :.u
Road and Bridge
Fund
4 , 776.5~
Cemeterv Fund
3,609.16
Federal Revenve
Sharing Fund
7 ,4..-0 .04
Anti -Recession
no.oo
To tals
..-• ""'-IJ .6B
Billilnce Dec . 31, 1th
General Fund
4,031.05

'
•
~

Tax Fund
Gasoline Tax Fund
R tfad and Bridge

],604 .3.
13,4117 .66

cash Balance
Receipts And

Real Estate and

Trailer (Grossi

5,891 .62

Tangible Personal Property
Tax (Gross)
79 .78
Estate Tax (Gross)
.592.21

~ '8irthdc\v
Aprll5,1t7•

This can be a strong and

Total Expend itures
- Adm inistretive 11,256 .12

- Fire Protection

Grand Total Exp . -

General Fund

2!, 28 (4) 4, 11, 6tc,

®

Disaster Relief
572 .00
Total Receipts
12,457 .35
Total Beginning Balance
Plus Receipts
16,087 .17
E Kpenditures

powerful year tor you when you

can build a firmer toundation .
Vou won't have to go It alone .

800 .00

12,056 .12

:173.00
3,764 .48
Total Beginning Bal&amp;nce
Plus Receipts
4,92:1.611

and talk over whatever needs

Tota l Receipts

discussing .. There'll be com·
patlble resulla.
LIIIIA (Sept. 23-0ct. Z3) You
are going to get a break today
!hal will put a major goal wllhin
easy reach . Act promptly. You
won't get this chance next
week .
SCORPIO · (Oct. 2'-Nov. 22)
Someone with whom You'll be
In contact socially co.uld bring
obOut a very fortunate situation
for you. You'll get a big mental

EMpendi1ures.

Total Expendltvres

- Miscellaneous
4,496.54
- Maintenance
280.00
Grand Total Exp . Road and Br idge
Fund
4.776.54
Bal.. Dec . 31.1978
146, 10
Total Exp . Plus Bal. ,
Oec . 31, 1978
4 ,92:1 .64
Cemetery Fund
Bal., Jan . I , 1978
3,:149.7:1
Receipts
General Property Tax Real estate and
Trailer {Gr0$5)
3,26.5.47
Tangible PersOnal Property
Tex (Gross)
53.26

Sale of Lots

FLOOD DAMAGE - Thls picture ~longing to Vic Brown, Minersville, show
destruction caused on E. Main St. following the 1937 flood. At the time the structure housed
the Parkersburg Rig and Reel, now MidweSt Steel Corp.
·

ATHENS
Ohio Williams said. As a . result;
UniversitY - responding to they will be uniquely
requests from the coal in· qualified to go directly Into
dustry - wl11 begin a new the mining industry, i\e said.
program
for
mining
The
program
was
engineers whose training will developed by Professor
locus
on
increasing Donald E. Sheck following
productivity while keeping discussions with represen·
down costs.
tatives of coal operations in
The program in mining Ohio and elsewhere on
systems engineering wl11 be problems of the industry.
the only one of its kind in the Sheck is cutTently on leave to
nation, according to Robert further study these problems
Williams, chairman ofthe OlJ8nd develop courses for the
Department of Industrial and program.
Systems Engineering, which
Williams pointed to a
will offer the new course of decrease of · average coal
study.
mine productivity from about
Graduates will combine 14 tons per man-day to nine
traditional ,1ntmng
en· tons per man-day over the
gineering skiDs wiUt the last 10 years.
·
special organizational and
To comhai such problems,
managerial skills of in- the coal industry has recently
dustrial engineering, been seeking industrial

Salaries - Trustees

Supplies

:1,738.68
240 .69
211 .94
4111 .45
3,609 .76
3,458.69

Repairs
Othet Expenses
Total Exp .
B51. , Dec. 31. 1978
Total Exp . P-lus Bal. ,
Oec . 31,1978
7,1)68 .45

Feder•l Revel\ue

t
I

whom you have strong emo·
tlonol ties. Thev're. lucky for
~~PRICORN (Doc. 22-Jon. 111
Tho balance Is Upping In your
laver today In situations where

1978
1,666.66
Total
1.666.66
Redeemed Dur ing Year
1978
1,666.66
T otal
1.666.66
Ra leoflnt.
6Pct.

Da .l eotr lna iMat .
(4) 4, He

No~&lt; 78

will

·

!
·I

By Alma Marshall

·

I

·

i

l

KITCHEN CENTER, INC.
2119 Jackson Ave.

year.

Mrs. Cecil Smith said-that tentative plans have been made
lor the Homemakers tour to King's Island later this year.
Several club m""'bers plan to go by bus. .
·
A
Jub
ber Mrs Lea Belch
·
new c mem '
.
er, was mtroduced by
Mrs. Landon Smith.
•
Refreshments were served by Mrs. CeciJ Smith and Mrs.
Elmer VanMeter to Mrs. Belcher, Mrs. Evelyn Stewart, Mrs.
Landon Smith, Mrs. Alburtice Young, Mrs. Ramona
syden str'ICk er' Mrs. Sarah Spencer' Mrs. Matild a Noble, Mrs.
John MarmaU, Mrs. Clara Williams, Mrs. Lester Johnson
.Mrs. Laurene Lewis and Mrs. William Zerkle.
'

Ice cream, cake and punch were enjoyed by Mr~ Robert
Oliver, Lance and Lynne, Pomeroy; Mrs. Joan Bennett, Gail
and Christl of Minerva, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. Luther Tucker,
Ted and Troy, the honoree, Tim Tucker and Mr. and Mrs.
Chester Oliver·

The Youth Class of the
Sutton-Cannel Methodist
Church has begun a lund
drive for Tracy Hein, 16, a
s.tudent at Eastern High
School.
The fWld will bO called
"The Tracy Hein Love
Fund" and is a class project.
Donations may be sent to The
Racine Home National Bank,
Tracy Hein Fund, Racine,
OH., 4Sn!.
Students il) the class are

PALMSUNQAY
SERVICES
The Pomeroy United
Methodist Church · will observe Palm Sunday by
processing from the city
park.ing lot at Court St. to the
church. Those who wish to
join in this processional are
invited to meet on the parking
lot at 10 : If&gt; a.m. The
processional will be led by
persons carrying the
American and Chrislian
flags . others will carry palm
branches and some will have
banners. Hymns have been
reproduced lor singing as we
march.
Those who are linable to
walk this distance are invited
to go directly to the church.

'

to-one
baais.
Keep buttlnskls . . .---~·-•••••Ill•••
out
of ~our
affairs.
A0UA IUS (Jon. 211-Feb. II)
· •
8 ecause you are showing a
...
wltllngness to get to work, an
~9

stress reduction and physical
activity. For more lnfonnation and registration
please contact
Nancy
Kohlrieser at 446-5000.

LOAD
. TRAILER
.
SALE
.

atfltu~o

stfmulales others. Pea-

pie desire to be around you

when you put on a happy face ,
!NEWSPAPER ENTEAPRtSE ASSN .)

LAFF ·A~ DAY

OFF

LIST

BUTTERNUT FINISH

--~·
. "
.

.

one

COUNT~

ClASSIC
by

•

RIVIeRR
!iere's COUNTRY CLASSIC, ·newest member of
Riviera's family of line cabinets. And what a beauty
it is. The grace of arched cathedral doors, the sub·
tie glow of hand-rubbed hardwood and the care·
fully coordinated hardware combine to make
COUNTRY CLASSIC live up to its name. Countrystyle gone elegant, It is perfect with American
. traditional furniture yet adaptable enough to be at
IJQ)ne with other styles. Riviera craftsmen even de· .
veloped a special stain to highlight lhe unusually
handsome !ltajn of the knotty alder hardwood.

•

-

_,
:
~
,..,

' 8::L .
I

f

'

I.

!

I
Turns three

f~
ll i;·

I

AN EVENING OF MUSIC AND FUN

* PEAS *CORN * BEANS
* LETTUCE *RADISHES *ONION SETS

PICKENS .HARDWARE .
''I'm from an averlge rami·
ly . ,·. we uwe e\lerybody."'

WITH

"RIO'S GRAND(E) REVUE"

Mason, W. Va.

.

I

A sparkling musical revue with
A super·lalented cast from the Rib
Grande College student body,

FRIJ)AY, APRIL 6

BUY NOW-

DEAR HELEN.
I was appalled at "Practical's" suggestion that dogs and
'cats killed in pounds could be used for food! Doesn't he realize
that no pel or stray would be safe? Those not in pounds would
be inhumanely rounded up, like the American wUd horses (us·
ed for pel food); or stolen and sold by greedY exp)oiters.
Perhaps "Practiclil" hasn't been oo this earth long enough to
know that there is nothing so horrible that someone won't do it
lor a lew dollars. - REAIJSTIC

I

LETs
GET a· ROWING .
.

from Ohio Seed Compony

8:00 P.M.
MEIGS JR. HIGH

.

; awarded

· Rachel Hales

BULK GARDEN SEED

US • • •By Helen Bottel~:~

HELENBO'ITEL
TIIEREADERSALWAYS..WRITE:
.
.
Ji'ROMRAPETONECKTIES!
'
I
JEARHELEN:
This Is for the brood who wanbl to charge her husband with
rape.
.
Any female who misrepresents )ly accepting the love, time
and flnanciai support of a male in matrimony and then breaks
her oath and fails to consummate the marriage by hl&gt;llering
"Rape'' should be (deleted, deleted, deleted, deleted - my
word, the man is vitious!), and put out lor the vultures. - P.O ·
:Lawrence Pooler
edMALE (Married)
' .
·
DEARMALE:
scholarship · If your actions are"" rabid as your words, my sympathies to
'
'· ·: ATHENS - Lawrence . your wife. Could she too have married a rapist? -H.
• ·Pooler of' Pomeroy bas been
• · awardee~ a Manasseh Cutler DEAR HELEN:
•
Schohushlp
by
Ohio
I agree wholeheartedly with "Mac" .who wants to start
"A ....L.M." (Adam's Apple Uberatlon Movement). Neckties
: aUcn lvdemersitcyyeaforr. the 1979-80
8
1
1
have no .PIIl'P&lt;"'"· They aren't even good eyeglass cleaners.
, PoOler Is the son of Mr. and They're open invitations for agressive people to grab you by
.. • Mrs·. ' Emerso~ Pooler of tllem and twist. You need a Boy Scout course in knots to tie
; · ·Route .3.
them; they hang in your soup; can kill you if theY get caught in
Tile $500 scholarships, machinery.; and they're a prime example of male inflexibility.
which are based on merit, ate
Over the years, women have discarded corsets, pointed-toe
: named In bonor of
of the shoes, even lr'!S, for comfort. Yet males cave in to custom and
: Wllverslty's · founders. Th~Y the ''tl.,..required' ' rule. It's time lor the great revolt. Men:
' are awarded on the recom- Make tomorrow "Be kind to your throat" day and leave off
, · mendatlOn of OU faculty · thosegarotes!- VINT.
?, ,J9!!111bers to ln!nmlng ~- . READERS :
·
·
Letters from necktie-haters everywhere indicate the general
• men who' haye demODBtrated
; acadi!mlc excellence in high . feeling, "IfGodhadmeantmentowearties,he'dhavecreated
• school ancJ potential for them without Adam's apples."
· So why donl yoo mllquetoasbl rebeJ? There's got to be a bel·
achievement in college.
Pooler attends Eastern ter neck-hider. - H.
High School.
DEAR HELEN:
. So people want to create a word lor "live-together" part·
ners. The two most common descriptions of married persons
are "mate" and "spouse." Combining them you'd get either
''mouse,'' (not so good) or '.tspate,'' my choice.
'
. Pleasesendme$lloreach timethe'wordis used hereafter.•I'
ROBERT
DEAR ROBERT:
'II
Sorry, IelJa: You don't'have a copyright. Besides, "spate"
I
reads too much like "spite" ''spat," or ..spayed"; and you
tend to spit when you "'Y" Even "significant other" has a
I'
better ring (or "S.O." toa&gt;old psychological jargon).- H.
l

D

NOW IN

Social 1
\ ! Calendar I

TilE READERS ALWAYS WRITE:
.FOR RELEASE WEDNESDAY, APRJL 4, 1979 BO'ITEL :_

l

cance Is going to be offered to
are In a fun . mood today. Ttl is

:~:
. ::;:

. I
, I

opportunity of great slgnlfl·
you .
PISCES (Feb. 211-Morclt 20) You

::

r

·.TIMLlLS) CHA~ .

emphasis on nutrition, eating
habits, · meal preparation,

·:: . -Helen Help iH

I

675-2318

from Eastern and Southern
High Schools and are working
together lor Tracy.

WEIGQT LOSS
SEMINAR
The Community Mental
Health Center will sponsor a
ten week weight reduction
seminar beginning Thursday,
April S, lrom · I0-11:30 a,m.
The program is designed to
.introduce participants to a
variety of strategies and
techniques useful in efforts to ,
lose weight . with particular

·· ·'· ;~~t:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:::::::::;:: :;:;:;:;:;:;:;.: ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: ;:;:::::;:;\~ , - - · - - - - ··- ,

f
I

Point Pleaant

50%

.

'

Youth plan fund drive

you confront others on a one·

Sharing Fund
Bal. , Jan . 1, 1978
1.031 .38
Receipts
Grants-- Federal
10,013.00
Total Receipt~
10,013.00
Total Beg inning· Bal•nce
· Pl us Receipts
11 ,044.38 ,
. Expenditures
Mlint. and Operation
Equipment
1,773. 13
Other Expenses
5,666.91
Total Exp .
7,440.04
Bal. , Dec . 31, 1978
3 , 604 ~ 34
Total Exp·. Plus B.al.,·
Dec . 31. 1978
11.044.38
Miscellaneous Funds
Receipts
120.00
Anti Recession
120.00
Total Receipts
EKpenditures
Salaries
720.00
Total Expenditures
720.00
Townsl'llp Debt-Notes
Purpose For Which Note
Debt was Created
Note 19667
F ire Truck

Outstanding Jan . 1.

engineers to oversee work graduates of two-year mining
methods, organize work and technical. programs. Feeder
facilities and determine the schools ate expected to ,be
most efficient means of such instil utions ' as Rio
utilizing the mines, according Grande College, Belmont
to the professor. William• Technical College, .and West
defined
industrial
en· Virginia
Institute
of
gilieering as more people Technology.
and management oriented
During their first year,
th.an other engineering mining systems engineering
disi::ipllnes.
attend classes in
students
However, the typical in· basic engineering courses
dustrial engineer haJi not had required lor a bachelor's
exposure to mining, par- degree in industrial and
ticularly in areas such as systems engineering · plus
geology, mining methods and courses in geology.
extraction and materials
The students will take
handlil)g, and must un- courses in work design,
dertake expensive on-the-job operat(Ons research, extraining before entering the plosives, fossil fuels, coal
field, Williams said.
preparation and mine
On the other hand, systems during their second
traditional mining, engineers year, according to Williams.
are concerned with exThe professor expects the '
traction, mine structure and Ohio minirig industry wl11 be
the design of mine machinery capable of hiring all early
and may lack organizational graduates of the program.
"Coal rirlning is the major ·
and managerial skills, he
said.
growth industry of Southellsl
''A lot of mining companies Ohio. And the regional and
will welcome our graduates," national demand parallels
Wllllams predicted, noting the state situation," he said.
that the new engineers will be
"If all the students
well suited lor mine currently enrolled In in·
management positions. dustrlal
and
systems
Williams said he exi&gt;ects engineering
at , Ohio
from five to 10 students to University were interested in
enter the new program in its coal mining, the coal industry
first · year, with continuing could absorb every one of
'growth thereafter.
them."
Initial entrants will be

DALE'S

plays hit tunes of the 1960's and 1970's. The group is
currently doing recordings. They are fll'st row 1 to r
· Mike Newhart, Brian Gilbert, Don Be;nice· back 1 tor'
Larry Hall, John Paoletll and Jim WUdennutli. '
'

School Alumni Assoclallon reunion on May 28. The dance
wU1 be held in the present Meigs Junior 'High School
fono!lnllhe blnquet at the elementary school. The band

1•

I

·r ------------:---·,
I Mason County News Notes l1

(Nov. 2:i-Dec.
The birthday of Tim Tucker was observed on April!, at the
21) Your best hope of realizing home of hls grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Chester Oliver ;"
a ,S'ecret desire comes from Clifton.
.
l.tl
associating with Individuals to

.

.

Mining program will .be offered

SA GinARtUS

Tota l Receip_ts
3,818.73
Total Beginning Balance
Plvs Receipts .
7,068.45
· Expenditures

POSTCARD ·- This postcard dating back to 191o shows "a. birdseye view of Pomeroy ,
from Hanging Rock," As far as many residents know "hanging rock" doesn't hang any
more. The poStcard was submitted by Mr. and Mrs. Frank Clark, Hemlock Grove.

. 1'HE ''SKOKIE VALLEX BAND," Coiwnbus, wl11
·provide mullc f91' dane ill! at the aiii)Ual Middleplrt Righ

lift.

soo.oo

Mi ss P.rna .14·~~· hn~h·d a 82 and ·a medit~tHtln "Suffcrn•t·t•nt m~· l'lin~ at tlw inJ.{ Servcmt ."
Magnn1ia huh \vjth Mrs.
R·ound-·rnhil1 ·canis· were
Kathrv'n Mill&lt;•r, m•w prc•i· sign"l for Mrs. F.thei Stewart
1h•nt. t'·ondud.ing tht• business anti ' Mrs. Gladys Cuckler,
ml'Piing.
both i"nfinc'l to the Holzer
M(•mbers J.!HVt' the Lord'H Medil'al O•ntcr, and cards
Prayer in unison with Miss ..Jiere also sent to Mrs. Ella
Jesse presenting devotions Smith. Mrs. Iris Kelton, Mrs.

J PRAISE MEETING

MASON- Mrs. MatUe presented the homemakers lesson
''Rub
a dub, dub" when the Mason Extension Homemaker~
O~c . 31.1978
16,087 .17
met on Tuesday evening at the J.eo,vls historic home on Brown
Motor Vehicle License
Till lit Fund
St., with Mrs. Cecil Snllth and Mrs. Elmer VanMeter as
Bal. , Jen , 1, 1978
1,568.68
hoste
F urt
ber
·
Rece-Ipts
sses. O . een mem s attended including a new
Motor Vrhicle Llcrnsr
monlous conditions. Discover member, Mrs. Lea Belcher.
Tax
6,338. 72
which signs you are mosi com.
The lesson leader gave the following pointers in treating
Total Rece i pts
6,338.72
Total Beginn ing Balance
pallble with by sending for your stains on washable fabriCs, treat Utem "" soon as possible;
Plus Receipts
7,907 .40
copy ·of Astro-Graph Letter. always test the stain remover you pl~m to use on a sample of
EKpenditures
Malll1 for each lo Astro-Graph , the fab.ric or bidden part of the .aannent such as the seam or
Total Expenditures
P.O. Box 489, Radio City Sla·
D
- Miscellaneous
6,258.01
tlon, N.Y. 10019.' Be sure to . hem; place Ute dry stained garment right side down on paper
- Maintenance
916.73
specify birth sign.
towels and apply stain remover to wtderslde of the stain. She
Grand Total Exp. Motor Vehicle License
TAURUS (April 20-Moy 2G) Vou cautioned per901ls to never use iunmonia and chlorine bleach
Tax Fund
7, 1H.74
won't be oble to sit around together, Spot and stain removal charts and books on
Bal., Dec . 3\, 1978
73~ . 66
doing nothing today . The more removing stains from fabrt·cs were passed out by the lesson
Total EKp . Plus Bal .,
active the schedule and the
Dec . 31,1978
7,907 .40
blgqor tho project, the "!ore leader to the homemakers.
Gasoline Till Fund
you II !Ike it.
· i
The meeting was opened with Pledge of Allegiance to dbr
Bal. , Jan . 1. 1978
1.286.30
Receipts
GEMINI (Moy 21-June 20)'Lady F1ag, Homemakers Creed, Club Collect and Club Pledge.
q.asollne Tax
13,200.00 " Luck has • hand In pushing you
Mrs. Alburtice Young read Scripttlfe Psahns 19:12. The
Total Receipts
13 ,200.00
closer to your goals today. If de ion II de
.Total Beginn i ng Balance
you show the slightest tnllla·
vot a ea r gave a reading entitled, "Springtime," and
Plus Receipts
li,486 .30
live, she'lltake you all the way. ·closed with prayer.
Expenditures
Total Expenditures
CANCER (June zt..Juty 22)
The president, Mrs. J . R. Marshall, reported on the
- Mlscellaneovs
6,000 .65
TOday's
conditions
allow
you
to
recommendations
of the various county educational
- Maintenance
6,970.83
have
a
much
firmer
grip
on
itt
Mr
Sa
ah Spe
Grarld Total Exp .
controlling situations that may comm ees.
s. r
ncer, Citizenship chairper10n,
-Gasoline Tu Fvnd
have had the upper hond over read an article oo Arbor Djly. On Arbor Day, Apri122, the club
1:1,971.48
you. Be assertive.
voted to purchase a tree lllltfl:tant at the Lewis hlstoric home.
Bal.. Dec . Jl. 1978
l,SU .U
Tota l Exp , PIVS Ba l.,
LEO (July 23-AUf. n) Use
Mrs. Lester Joh1110n of the Cultural Arts Committee
Dec . 31, 1978
14,486.30
~~~~n~sg:~~: t.':.i~':.':~'~~~ reminded the club members of the Basket Workshop scheduled
Aold •nd Brld•• Fund
Bal. , Jan. 1. 1978
1, 1.58. 16
.
don't have . someone looking lor April 2 and 9.
Receipts
over
your
shoulder.
You
can
Mrs.
Cecil
Smith
of
Ute
Safety
Committee
gave
safety
tips
General Property Tax occompllsh a lot.
while doing your spring cleaning. ,
Real Estate and
4
V1RGO
(Aue.
2Mept.
22)
This
Landon Smith reported on Mason's emergency squad
TaT:o~gr: {;:r~~s~at P~~~~ ,:~~ Ia an excellent day to get and Mrs.
Vol
t
Fir Dep rtm 1
l'sh
d
Tax {Gross)
46 .60
together with a close associate
WI eer
e
a en accol)'lp 1 ments uring the .
Other

&lt;

u~in~ s&lt;•rinhm• ''"""" p~ ..1...,

~~~~~~g ~.~3.ople will offer a.
ARIES (Morch 21·Aprll19) Con·
strucuve Influences will be
prevolenl Ieday in matters affeetlng yo.ur home and family ,
Alrlnglng about excellent, har·

Bal. , Dec . 31, 1978
1,031.05
TOtal Exp . PIUS Bal .,

Erna jesse hosts Magnolia Club

'
F '

::&gt;.''

., . , ·
.
KAFI:L \' On EBEINSTEIN
IJ:oute 1, 8011. S63 B
West
Columbia .
South
Carolina 191&amp;9
Def endan t
No . 17 , 082
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATJON
To Karl \IOn Ebeinstcin ,
whose last known addr ess
was Route '2 . Bo~t 563 e , West
Co lum bia , South Carol i na
29169 ; vou are herebv not ified
that vov have been nam ed
aetendant in a lega l action
entitled
Pav Un c
von----":\
Ebe in steih vs . Karl von ·
Ebeinstein . This action has
been a$s igned ca!e number
17 ,082 and is pending in th e
Court o f Common P le as .
County,.
Oh fo .
,Meigs
Pomeroy, Oh.iO 45769 . .
,
The object of the Complaint
is for Qlvorce ,."alimony bnd
costs . You a.re qvalified to
answer the Complaint w ithin
28 days after the date of the
la st publicatiOn of this notice,
wh ic h will be published once
each week for Sill consecutive
weeks . Tr.e last publication
will bema de on April 1 1. 1979.
• In case of vour failure to
answer or to otherwise
respond as rrqulred by the
OhtO
Rules
Of
Civil
Procedure , judgment by
default will be rendered
against you for the relief
demanded in the Complaint .

~ ~

Local Government and
State Income Tax 2.78o4.S9
In-tangible Tax
2,530 .05

"
~· .
~.·.:_
t• ;'
).}:JO: •
i{ . ,., ~

'

Bernice Bede Osol

.

~

Plaintiff,

ASTRO•GRAPH

Rectlp1s

•

"Pomtr6f. OhiO .

Middleport •. Ohio.

~

,Expenditures
By Fund
General Fund
Balance , Jan. 1, 19711 3,629.82

Bjrd'o Eye V.!&lt;w from Honct"' llo«.

Col~ Str~et

BOOKMOBILE
SCHEDULE
Thursday's schedule for
visits by the . Meigs BookinobUe includes: Salisbury,
2:1r.-2:t:i p.m.; Letart, 3:1r.3:4S; Racine, Home National
Bank, 4-5; Racine, Wagner's
Hardware, 5~6; Syracuse,
swimming pool, 6:15-li:1S.
..
l'huradoy, April I

146, 10
3. .. 58 .69

General Property Tax -

u

(J) 7._~ 4,

732.66
1,514.82

Fund

Cemetery Fvnd
Federal Revenve
Sharing Fund
Total

. IN THE COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
PAULINE \' an EBEINSTEIN

Dated : February 24. 1979.
Larrv Spencer
Cl~rk of Courts
Meigs County Com roo n Pleas
Court ·

Motor Vehicle License

;r.:..!he:,Oally Sentinel, ¥iddleport·Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesd•y, April4, 1!'79

..

TICKETS $2.50
BOX OFFICE OPENS 7 P.M.
.

.

OPENING CURTAIN 8 P . ~.

Y·

A party was held recently
honoring Rachel Sue Bales,
daughter of Mr: and Mrs.
Ralph Bales, Rutland, on .her
thiro birthday.
A Bugs Bunny cake made
by ·her great aunt, MrS.
Rodney (Patsy )' Spires,
Route 1, Cheshire, was sen"ed with ice cream to Mr. and
Mrs. Sam Gibbs, her grandparents, Mrs. Inna Bales,
Route I, Cheshire, the
honored guest, and her
parents.
Sending cards and gifts
were Mrs. Lillie Robinson
and Sarruny, Rutland; Mrs.
(!apple Lange, Rutland; Mrs.
Ethel Nicholson, Rutland;
Mrs . Muriel Spires,
Cheshire; Mr. and Mrs.
George Markin and Jeremy.
Cheshlre, and Mr. and Mrs,
Pete Hendricks, Sheiia and
Travis, Route 4, Pomeroy.
- .TODA Y'S RIDDLE
What is · the 'latest date
when your family history
may be postm~rked or
handed in lor inclusion in the
1971 Meigs County History7
Yelterday's answer. Erwbi':
HistorY . published · 30 year1 ·
· ago tn 1949~, . ·
I•

A RIDDLE
FOR TODAY
What present day town was
once called Graham Station?
Meigs History Book free
story deadline April B.
Yesterday's answ.e r. Ali
stories must he turned in at
the Meigs County Museum or
postmarked by Thursday,
this week, AprU 5 to be in·
eluded· in the free story
history.

. REPORTER'S ERROR
The picture appearing in
the "Snnday·Times Sen!
line!" of Marilin ferldns
matting with ' lC!Ifl
Jenkloson" at the 19th
Cured Cancer Aaoembly
and lt79. Crusade Ktckolf
was In error. Perldos Was
chaltiag with Curtis
Jenkios, Middleport . .

··:·

I

.·

. I

WEDNESDAY
MEMBERS of the auxiliar)
of the Middleport Fire
Department planning to
attend the anniversary
dinner are ID meet at the fire
station at 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday.
UNITED
Methodist
·Women , Letart FaDs Church,
Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at the
home . of Mrs. Inez Hill.
Easter program will be
presented. Mrs. Ernest
Shuler will have the
.devotions.
SOUTHEASTERN Ohio
Garden Tractor Club will
meet at 8 p.m. Wednesday at
the Scout Building behind the
firehouse in Chester. .All
interested persons are in·
vited.
POMEHOY WIJGE 164, F.
.and A. M., regular meeting,
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. All
master inasons invited to at·
tend.

Envoy Ray Wining. of the
Salvation Ariny announced
that a "praise meeting" will
be held SWlday, AprilS, at liS
Butternut Ave., Pome•oy.
Capt. tester · Baker,
divisional youth secretary,
Cincinnati beadquarters, will
be the speaker. U. and Mrs.
Glenn Brookman, Athens,
will be in charge of the
meeting. YPSM Eloise
Adams and Robert Estep will
present a duet with Major
Glenna Rwmnel at the piano.

ECUMENICAl.
SERVICE
An treumenical service wU1
be· held April 13 at the
Syracuse Presbyterian
Church, Second St., at 7:30
p.m. Fred·S8111B, Ute interim
pastor, will deliver the
evening messlage: Dale Bass,
pastor of the Church of the
Nazar!llle, and Harvey Koch
of the United . Methodist
Church, wl11 also participate
in the service. The pabllc is
invited.

WARCRY''
ON SALE
The aMual "Easter War
Cry" of the Salvation Anny is
SR)p now on sale. Middleport was
contacted and Pomeroy will
Rt. 1, Mlddfoporl, o.
092.6173
be.
II you are missed and wish
a copy call 992-5472 or 992·
A~w as
7480. "The Vinegar Boy" and
Easter story, written by
~
~. Yd.
Alberta Hawse, a former
Pomeroy resident, is now
New Colo!S
available at the Middleport
a...:.~-~
Book Store and Pomeroy and ..__;.;N;;.;.;'"";;.;::':..;.;~N;::,J_..J
Middleport Libraries.

Smith, high ; M;tr~arel Rose,
dnor prize , and Gerogia Wat- ·
Canaday.
· son, low.
The group decided to begin
Next meeting will be at the
a flower lund . Mrs. Ellen home of Mrs. Doris Gruser
Coueh had the program·IL,ing with Mrs . Margaret Rose as
"I Am the Ught of the co-hostess. Mr&amp;. Watson will
World", a · messa~e for have the program, and Mrs.
Easter. There was also a con- Cora Beegle, the devotions.
test.
Miss Jesse served a salad
Prizes were won by ROmice c-ourse, apple cake and col·
Ann Durst. full house : Rurton -· ftoe .
fi:doa Slusher, Mrs. Kathryn

fri"I&lt;Kiwin, and Mrs. Hertha

·Picture.vour loved ·one
close to .
· ·.. ·

44

ODDS &amp; ENDS

Our beautiful gold-filled lnd aterllng ailver lockets by·Seville~
are exquisitely !tyled to ex;preas your love. For all those days you
wan~ remem~rtd. telect rrom our ellttmsive collectlonln"Ciud_lng hand-engra~Jed deelgna.

CARPET

()1p""'~llllllll
.....

JSO

~::0-:S'

''ettelen.
·
eJ
m 1. MAin- .Ptrneroy

Wee"'

RJrGoodness

THURSDAY
LAUREL CUFF BE'ITER
HEALTH CLUB, 7:30 Thurs·,
. day, at the home of Mrs. Poi-?
Jy Eichlnger. Mrs. Marjorie ·
Goelt to be co-hostess.
ELICANOR CIRCLE, 7:30
p.m. Thursday at Heath
Unite"&lt;! Methodi;1 Church,
with Marilyn Anderson and
Mary O'Brien as hostesses,
EVANGELINE CHAPTER
172; Order of the tcastern
Star, 7:30 p.m. at the Mid·
dlepnrl Msonic Temple.

.... ·On
AmericaB
N11111ber One
·favorites

Masonic

CATHOI.IC WOMEN'S
CI.UB, Sacred Heart Church,
8 ·p.m. Thursday' at the
church .

. POMEROY Chapter 186,
Order of Eastern Star,
rwnmage and bake sale 9
a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Thursday
and Friday at the Masonic
·Temple in Pomeroy.
·
FRIDAY
HAPPY Harvesters, ]. p.m.
Trinity Church, Friday,
BAKE SALE and Bazaar
Friday at Dale C. Warner
Insurance Agency, Pomeroy,
beginning at · 8:30 a.m.
Sponsored by Forest Run
Methodist Church.
MARY SHRINE 37, Order
of White Shrine of Jerusalem,
installation of officers Friday
8 p.m. at Pomeroy Masonic
Temple. Business meeting at
4 p.m. Potluck refreshments
following both events.

O NABISCQ INC . 1919

----_ -----~--~---met

tOCOFF

. .

i
ill

~

TO THE RETAILER: Coupon will be redeemed tor 10' plus S•

~I

for handling when yOu comply with offer terms. Any other
application c onsthutes fraud. !~voices p1oving suffici,ent purchases ol this product to cover
coupons presented must be available on request. Consumer to pay applicable sales tax . Coupon.
may not be assigned or transferred by you. Coupon ~Joid when present~d by outside agency 6_
r
broker or where use is prohibited. restricted or taxed. Good only in U.S.A . Cash "llalue 1/2rJt . Mall
to: Nabisco, Inc., P.O . Box 1754 , Ciintori , lowa 52734. Only one coupon redeemed per purchase.

COUPONEXPIAESAPRIL.;IO, 11110.
·

·

.

..

.STOAECOUPON

co

.

m· (:I

·

~-~------------10~

tOtOFF

:

fll

TO THE RETAILER: Coupon Wili be redeemed for10' plus S•lor

§.I

handling when you comply with offer terms. Any other application
constitutes fraud . Invoices proving sufficient purchases of this
produc t 10 cover coupons presented must be available on request Consumer to pay applicable sales tax . Coupon may nQt be
assigned or transferred by you. Coupon void wt)en presented by
outside agency

·I
·CRUSADER - ·CUrtis Jenkins, left, is shown chatting with Marlin Perkins at the 1979
CUred Cancer Assembly and Crusade Kick-off recently .
·

i(j

or proker or where use is prohibited, restri¢ted or

STORE COUPOril

'

I
I

·

1axed. Good only 1n U.S.A. Cash vo!lue 1/2rJf. Malllo: Nabiseo,lnc .. t:':O. Box 1754. Clinton. Iowa
52734 . Only one coupon redeemed per purchase. CO~PON EXPIRES APRIL 30,1110.
·

toe ·

I
I

.

.

I'

toe .

'---"---~---- · --. ------------

�I

..••;;;

~·

••

::
•...•,.,.,

..

•

•,

w

'·

PAINT BRUSH ~

:.

Anniversary
Special

Anniversary
Special

i·

249

Ann#veraary
Special ·

.:ill

4" BRU!iH
767·251/TY5S40.

•

• H igh QL ality

• 84 7 to lors
• H ighly w ashable
• Easy application
• Quick dry
• low odo r
• Easy c lean-up w ith Wiler

$795Gallon

F/el Latex House Pelnt

$914 '

• Very good quality
• Wood si ding an d tri m
• Shakes. shmgles and masonry
• Whit• only
• Good color retention
• Easy application
• Quick dry
• Easy clean·-u p wtth water

Gallon

All Weather'" High Gloss
hlk7d House Paint
• High quality
• Wood siding and trim
• 775 colors
• tiood color reten tion

After Sale Price 3.18

·$1Q75

large area coverage far quick
work. Beavertail handle.

Gallon

• Easy application

,

'

BIRD

.WINDSEAL
ROOF

Convenience and beauty to enhance anv bathroom decor.
e ManufaCtlJr_ed of acrylic
e

SHINGLES

and ABS materia ls. Guaranu•ed wa1er proof .
No tools needed. Easily
installed with trim knife
and cau lk gun.

235 LB• .

e Adjusts to tub al coves 40
to 60 inches w ide and 28
to 32 inches deep.

$21•S.U1N

• Complete instruclions for
Do-lt-Yourself insta!le1ion included in canon.
Avail9ble in three colors:
Gold Travertine
White Flotation Marb le
Celestial Aqua Onyx

e

Buy Now And Save

$5495

only

EXT~

5 Ft. Rail

6 Ft. Rail

.

..

...,.
00

.

zS
oC'i:
. UA.
z .
"'z
..
111-C:

00

·~:I

Per Gallon

... 1iC

· •:~~~~: 0
.

Q,

•.! ....

" ' .. · - 0

.

CANDLELIGHT BIRCH 4'X8'X%" ............................ ....~12.06

·---------

a"~~

$895 .

RUSTIC ELM 4'X8'X'4 '! ............ ...... ..................... .. ..~ 17.18

•

·.

,..

Only

WOODGLEN NATURAL BIRCH 4'X8'X'4~'......................!.1 1.78

'5.84
'7.58
'8.86

•

. Olympic

$3395

a1o•

•
INI1 GlllOG No
GNY .Lna 11ftd
------------~.
.
- .
.
.
"
.
.
:..-----------------------·
_...----~------~-.;..--------------------------------------.;.·
--P'ULL OUT AND FOLD ON DOnED LINE
PULL OUT AND FOLD ON DOniD LINt
f

ly

No. 1900

4 Ft. Rail

N~ .CnOA GNY·1ft0 1in.. .

.

STAIN

Prices S1art At .

.JNl1 GWOG
•

REDWOOD

Vanities

(Less Faucet)

'

' z
oe.a
....

Ill
II

ARAB

LAUREL 4'X8'X~/.lz" Print.. ......................................!8.69

SPRAY APPLICATOR

CHERRY 4'X8'XS/l2" Print ..................... .................. ~!8.89

'

'

SAURTERiU 4'X8'X ~/u" Print .................................. ~8.49
TROPHY BUTTERNUT 4'X8'X 5/l2" Print .........................~8.69

8 Ft. Flat Post.

$}Ql8

Say

. TAN AKLEAF 4'X8'X 1r•L "
o·

Prm
. t on Hardboar d .. .... .. .... ...'4• 18

GOLDEN HICKORY 4'X8'X3mm Print.. .............. .'.... : ......'6.98

8 Ft. Corner Post . .

with

$1568

ORNAMENTAL
IRON .

Many of our suppliers are

I
\

.

allow easy

mites, lawn insech qnd
shrub &amp; flower pesh.
-On-off- valve-.and •vari-

teaming up wit~ us to make

able ·,pray settings.

our TREASURE CHEST
••

marked ~o

mixing and application . Treat for ter·

Welcome

i

Sturdy garden hose ,
spray applicator is ...

• The ridge vent system Is reccim·
· 0 mended by more gas and elec·
u trlc utilities than any other type
~ of attic ventilation - because if
a. sares more enargy. It Is used by
~ mote leading construction com·
fl) panles and home manufacturers
.. than any other type of att!c vent

10Ft.
Vent· Ridge

Sections

...

i r--------------------...

Prizes. Bigger And Better Than Ever

SMOKE DETECTOR

..

'

Don't. Forget Your Key

ALUM.

::0

FINISH

WATER PIK - BATTERY

CAROLINA LUMBER .
&amp; SUPPLY COMPANY
312 6th Street

675-1160 .

Point Pleasant

Single station with will or cei li ng mounti ng .
lonizition-type detegor warns at first indica·
tion of fire or smoke. Opera tes by bettery, has
enef11izer ind icator with rad monitor light to
flash approximately every fiwe to ten seconds.
Low battery indicator giveS audible "thunk '',,
sound ap'proximately every fi~e to ten seconds
for ieven davs. Ell',! instal lation . Requires little
m alnten1nce. Diameter: 8.20 inches~

1m-,,.., #o 1 ..

STORE HOURS: .
Monday · Friday 8 a.tn .· 5 p.m. , Saturday 8 a.m. · 12 noon ·
.

'

I
I

)

.

I

;

'
I

•

�' .

11 - The Daily Sentinel, Middlepnrt-Ponwroy , 0 .. W&lt;•&lt;lrH'sday . Apri l t ! 07 ~

45-cases terminated

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

Tw~nty·two

defendants
were fined and 23 others
forfeited bonds in Meigs
' County Court.
: Fined by ·Judge Charles
, Knig~ were Steven H.
.. Russell, CoolvUle, $15 and
, oosts, ~;James M. Bing,
~ Long BOttom, $10 and costs,
' left of center; · Bruce L.
Fleming, Long Bottom, $5
• and oosts, unsafe · vehicle;
• Terrie L. Walkllf, Rutland,
$10 Md cosls, failure to yield ;
~ John F. Landaker, .Pomeroy,
• $100, and costs, littering ;

D

l

i

D

'&lt;

::!;S:

=--o_,
cn:z
... ...
.. .
.
.
.
. . .
.......
:

-t

'

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

.Hobart Riggs, Rutland, $10
and costs, left of center;
Roger· A. Imboden, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy, $50 ~nd costs,
reckless operation; James S.
Rucker, Reedsville, $34 and
costs, ovedoad; WiUiam H.
WUllams, Rt. 2, .Pomeroy,
$150 and oosts, three days
confi n ement, license
suspended 30 days, DWI;
Jayne A. Smith, Pomeroy ,
$25 and C&lt;&gt;sts, illegal passing;
Lance K. Oliver, Pomeroy ,
$50 and costs, unable to stop
within
assute&lt;l
clear

distance; Susanna Hubbar&lt;l,
Syracuse, $150 and costs,
three days confinement, nooperators license; Mark
Hale, Canton , $1~ and costs,
speeding; Clifford Whit tington, Rt. 4, Pomeroy. $15Q
and costs, three days confinement, license suspended
for 30 days, restricted
driving, DWI; William
Williams, Rt. 2, Pomeroy,
$150 a nd costs, three &lt;!ays
confln eme nt,
li ce ns e
suspended 30 days, DWJ;
]lruce Bowman,. Pomeroy,

$1&gt;0 ond costs, ,three days
confinement. DWl , $25 and
costs, no operators license,
$25 and costs, disorderly
conduct, cost.s only, resisting
arrest;
Kim - Hayman,
Hacine, $1&gt;0 and costs, three
days confinement, DWI ;
Soulsby,
William
T.
Pomeroy, $100 and costs,
thr ee day jail sentence
suspended , DWI ; Glenda
Connolly, Syracuse, $15 ~nd
costs,
speed;
Lind a

WHkinson , New Haven, costs
only , insufficient fund s;
Larry Hupp, Racine, costs
only, restitutionJ in sufficient
Bobby
Vance,
funds;
Rutland, $50 and costs, 15
day s
confi n eme nt,
destruction of property, costs

only , thr cL' days confinmuent ,

carrying fircann under inOuCilce.
· Forfeiting ilonds were
Hoilert C. Wilson, Columbiana ,

Connie

· Day .

Bru re Cottrill . Syracus e,
$62.5:1, reckless operation ;
Judith Hood , Pom eroy,
$35 .50, stop sign; Cynthia
Goodnight , Smithville, -w.
Va..
$35.50,
improper
passing; William T. Knittel,
Middletown, $35, defective
exhau•t; Guy H. Neigler,
Hacine , $60 .50 , reckless
operation; James F. Taubee,
Jr., Mlollersburg, $35.50; no
emerge ncy equipment;
Larry V. Epling, W. Mournbarere, Fla ., $360.50, DWI ;
· c urtis F. Riffle, Pomeroy,
$360.50, DWI; John Hunnell,
Middleport, $35 .50, no valid

L'hesapeake, Dan B. Lowry,
New Marshfield , Linda
Morris, Medway, Hicky L.
Law, Pomeroy, DannY Pyles,
Scioloville, Roilert W. QuallS,
Pomeroy, Bradley SmYthe,
Nashville, Tenn., Allen V.
Handley, Cheshire, Robin E.
Smith, Bidwell , Nancy
Harri s, Columbus, and
Roilert Wilson. Columbiana,
$35.50 each , speeding;
Dwight E. Carl, Pomeroy, operators l,icense.
· $35.50, improper plates; dleport, $35 .50, no va lid
Bruce Hawley , Pomeroy , operators license.
$35 .50, false information;

..

~

-

0

..-

U»

G')

•

OM •M&gt;G~I MANO
, fi'IODUCTI

SIXIkesman for the Nation al

Football League team called
"unpreCedented inter·est in
th e purchase of new season
tickets ."

'Domino
Sugar

~~
-lb.

Exclft Cit* ....-..,·11411&amp;M Tilt A111114ar
Exce,tlliltH aWlilt ..., ....

181QD IILOW An IUI1
,A NW IX AWL IS

....z

... ::lg

.._zn

::,..:z:
........
N

C)
C)

11011 fOI
fANIAiftC SAVINGs

-

'"0
M

J'MIOUGMOUT TMI

.,0

•.

,

BUFFALO. N.Y . iAP)- The
Buffa!" Bills have ' pul off a
ticket prkc increase for tw o
weeks bec~u sc of what H

OPE 24 HRS.
. ADAY

LOOK fOIIMtS. liON

G')

I

Charles
Hudson
and
(laughter , Connie Johnson,
Debra John so n. Joann e
Lawrence. Ivan Mulford,
Ph illips,
John
Ansel
Reynolds , Velma Roush,
Charl es Ho wland, James
Sc haekel, Alva Shafer,
Louise Stallings, Arch ie
Swartz, Charles Wo,lfc.
Births, 'l\prll3
Mr
and Mrs. Keit h
Brannen; son, Crown City ,
Mr . and Mrs . Stev en
Maley, son. Gallipolis.

YOUR FIIENDLYKROGER ·

U'l

I .

Sewell , Ga met Ginnis, Mrs.

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPOJf

..

::lg

Dlsrharges, Aprll3
Virgil Arbaugh , Frank
Clendenin. Ada Couch .
Charles Crouch, Terri Davis,
Danny Denney·, Marilyn

'·

:,..N-

::tl

Denney, lluth Ann Downey,
Brenda Ferguso n, Hattie

Jlolzer Medical Ce nter

i

'

00 •f
a .

HOSPITAL NEWS

.,

....

Z'""
-4:~t6

i~

1110

...,.!i.

COPY•GHI 1t"-'"l 11:10011 CO . ITIMI AND PIICIS.
OOODWNDAYAPIIL 1 fHIUS.ATUIDAY APIIL7 , ltniN

se•8

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

GALLIPOLIS &amp; POMEROY STORES
WIBIIIVI THIIIOHTTO LIMit QUANTinll. NONI SOLD

••
~·

TOOIALIH.

I
I
I
I

Hi" Nu 2%

IJ'OI'Ir Welc-1
FOOliSh!... - .·

Lowfat Milk

z

FARMS'. U.S.D.A.
INSPECTED GRADE A

. $

MOLLy

Whole
Fryers

Gal. Paper
or Pla1tlc
Ctn.

I

I
Atldhloftll I
Quantltlll :
$149 . I

-19

. UIIT lWITIICOIPOIIIIID $7.51 ADDinONAL PiiCHAIE ·
(UCUDIIIC TillS ml)

.INn GWOG NO-chOII GNY .l.ftO l1ftd .
.
,.
. JN11 GIUOG N() G10. .GNY1f'IO 11ftd :
t~-------- ------------------------""!"---·-~--------~~--~-~-------------------~-~---~-. PUU OUT AND FOLD ON DonED LINE
.
.-uu OUT· :AND F~LD ON Do1i'ED LINE: :

.

.

·•

' ---------------------·
. '"

.fo

'I

.g~&gt; ~
-·iiO

IL

m

CD
)&gt;

7'\

• l£m

;;'
..

,2 .

iC

~

l!;·

~
c
ll!:ln

At

_,a:::r -·

0

~e::~-

!;!:., .
""

.!'-

-

m

::0
C/)

:l)

)&gt;
n

s.., ~I;:-;
CT

Spc~ghetti

,.... . 35(:
'

,

.

~

Ill

-4

0

•

,.
I

r;

~

lb .

...

'

t
'.

c

1-llr.
Pkg.

:.:c=r-

I

-·
z
,...
.,.,.,.
z

:

1·1-LI. AVG.

Whole .
Smoked(SUCED
Picnics
LB •••
99')

·!';;;~-:!-~teg Fwk Sea6~

f.c~ Ocean Perch Flllet1 .. .. .. ... .. .. .. .. .. . ••
fiiiH

....5!-..

-·
!!.

Peanuts

s

16•tl.

::! ....

(til •

i;;:

Cl:=tD.
,.-CD

'

•

19

-

RED, RIPE

.

•••

Strawberries

F!!
rr-

'

....
co;;

Pepsi
Cola

p··

DRY IOASTID

O:lfio

PINT RETURNABLE •o·nu,~ .
MT. DEW. SUGAR FREE

D"11ed Flo~nder. . .................. ·

$ II

Pak
GENUINE

·Idaho.
, •
·lb.
Potatoes ............ aa,

~:a

c.n.

..

... 0::

. (lt-11. tAG ... II.,OU~Li . tAG ... "')

(

.

I

:
-1
I
I
I
I
I
I

I
I
I LIMIT 2-LBS. WITH CDUPOII.ND $7.50 ADDITIDIIAL PURCHUE I
I
IEXCLUDIIIG THIS ITEM)
I
I 12
LIMIT ONE COUPON PER FAMilY
I
CIIII'GI
IPI!ll. Ult
I OF
IllES

29

"·17·LI. AVG.

Fresh Whole
Pork loin .............;.....

Lvo.

...n z ,....

-

0

I
I

:1:~~
c,.. ...

a
•

I

PER LB.

20·oz.

I

$1.91)~~~!! I

Serve ''N' SAVE
soc
Save Weiner

Kroger 20-oz.
White Bread .........

Cut Up rrying .
Chicken ..... ........... lb.

N

(2·LI. PKG ....

ROUfi!DTOP

HOLLY FARM~ . U.c il.A. GRADE A

98C.

Gal.
Jugs

I
I

CIINI . . . 11!1111 Ifill fTIIIIATIIIAI IN!ll. ltlt
llllfCl II IPI'UCIILI STIR I tiCAl lUll

Spotlight ·
Bean Coffee ... ~!~

Mixed
·fryer Parts ...... lb.

Rice

LIMITONE'COilPON PER FAMILY

3$

HOLLY FARMS, U.S.D.A. INSPECTED

'· .

W

$

Bright
·
Bleach ................. ~

\

DF
12

I

PLus DII'OSIT

Chipped ..
(hopped Ham ... .. .. .. 11&gt;. ·
PIUH'
10 Far.
Glazed
Donuts
..
..
.
..
..
INCI.UDU&lt; ,_,11CISOF CHICKEN . HI.
I'Oli&lt;TO SALAD ANII4 DIN Nil lOLlS ·

.

Family Pak Chicken..... Each
Baby Swiss .Cheese ..... ·lb.

�•

\

•

FINANCIAL. REPORT
OF TOWNSHIPS
December 31 , 1978
Letart Town sh•p
Meigs County

Rt. 2. Racine . Ohio
'I

l5 W~or Under

Much 12, 1979
cer t i fy the follow.ng

report to

b~

co rre c t .

Durell Nor ris
Tow nshi p Clerk
Summary af Cuh

Balances, Rece1pts
And E ~ependitures
Balance Jan . 1, 1971
Genera l Fund
· $2,076. 11

Casl1
l 00

~·
1.21

l.:iO

1 iO
2.21

3.00

3.7$

uo

Te l No . (614) 2A7 · 2684

· Each 'lt'oed over the minimwn IS
worda La 4 ctnt.s per word per dly
Ads n&amp;Mini! «her than con.secutive
~r:. wiU bt c"""ed 11 !he 1 day

Motor Vehicle L• cense

Tax Fund
Gasoline Tax Fund
Cemetery Fun d

12,1 97. 58

Shar ing Fund
Totals

406. 19
16.254.3 1

Pederal Revenue

1,045 .04
529 33

Toti•l Rece•pf5
Ge11eral Fund
11 .924.90
Mot()r Veh icle License
Tax Fund
• 4,504 87
Gaso11ne Tax Fu nd 16,466 39
Road and Br 1dge
Fund
2.355 41

Cemetery

8.293 .01

Ce m etery Bequest Fd SOB 31
Federal Revenue
Sharing Fund
2,880.00

In rnmMX')', Card « 'nlanb W
Obituary : 5 cent.s per word, f3.110
mtnlmwn. Cuh tn advance..

I.

Mobile l!omt .. ~e..n&lt;IYord ......

are accepted lmly with caall wtth
order 2$ cent cha'le for ada ca~
ing Box Number In Ca~ rl. 'Mte Sen-

tinel.

I

The Publilhet' .,.._; ""'

. !

rilhll

to edll ..... It&lt;! lily ada deemed ob-i
joctlonol. n.. Ploblbher will ... bt
J1'!SI)(lf\ldble for tJtOre tham one incorn&lt;ll.,....on
Phone !1!12-2151

Notices
NIW ~A1C1N r ln" ~"" 8f'qtr"lf'l~
.ir •tn•rl"c•rl•otr nncl oclvO rlrrci
Tn~rftht hy f rnrly Pottr1 """ nt
'hf" "yrO(I1&lt;;,f" (,t fl(ff" 4\r hnnl
r,ym ~ "' '" l.'f f' •nfn rmn tt('l n
cnll ~'/'/(lit~

Mobile Homes for Sale
PI I-II I 1.'1\IPfll • ·.' • .U\ \J,-,,
(!o •t '&lt;~ fl"'l',j ,t ,. • o•

n o IJjll 'Jf
I

u,,,.

Nl

( ' l'•i \(l 'J/(1 'Ill ! ',

1' 1 rft• •• I

w Mt''\I"'N

1(\ ., ' •'/

t:l ll( &gt;(l

...

I.I{J /

rul•l &lt;.;C Hill •:• 1-~ f"r ~llt !.,. . ,. ..
t";.l JN li HOOT Rof' lllf' Vnf.111 lr(' r
'fl""'' .-...,.... ..,,.n, ,.,. , ,,. \c-,11
t:i!0 Oropt f vN y So!11 rrloy 6 •n
Ujl&lt;, 'U!f{l 01 IJ~&lt;, T lf."
r rn of !hr .r hutlrlmq tn Hn~hom
I nrtmy chC&gt;~f" 91111~ tm ly
For Rent
C·lJN SHOOT fVFRY FRinAv 6 :.K• COUN PllV MI)HII f H/..ror I'm~
PM RACINf GUN (I Utt 1- AC
R(lr rlr '! l nn rth t"' l l'f"'ll1t"' ' ' ~ \'
TORY ("HDKF G UNS ON I Y
l t"'r•w l ot ~ Cnl l &lt;.!&lt;l'l 'l t7CJ
MfiCS CO UNTY F 1~h ON i Gn mf'
rf"gu lor mrc tinq Fnrlny Apr•l f.,
'f rm Shorlf" Vo lt ~ Cl ut't Ho11o;;r&gt;

~ant_e~ to i!UY
rASH fOR prn k cor!&gt; 74 hn1•r
wrf'r lo.f'r
!if' I V! CP
FryC' ~
ll utl oncl OH 7~'} 10fll

o"r! olhf"r rnnrly
frf"f" fn ' '"' ronr!y
rlno;;c t"ntl Cn •npq• l &lt;'nn lf"r
t •onC' ty rn
M•rlrllro p ort
QQL' 6:141
chnf'ol ot f"~

~ urr l •r&gt; ~

Totals
46 ,932 89
COA l \ IMfS TO NF ~n n rl SlfOYC"I
Toti l Receipts &amp; Balances
rnlri,,. n r hl o r •~ f' fprl11i1rr r!nq
CHIP
WOOD
P o lE' ~
mo
)f
General Fund
14,001 07
f('&gt;l"rl nncl oil ty rt"~ nl ~ n i t f .,.
rliClll'IPIN HI" on I orge~! rnrl
Motor Vehi c le Ltcense
rrl ~;, t nr Soi l Wort. !'- Inc F Mn111
~ 11 rr&gt;r ton Bun rl l~rl "lob S10
Ta x Fund
.5,.549.91
Gasoline Ta x F und ~ 16,995.72
rr • ton Oeli ve r e~ to Oh to "!, Pt"'mrray Qfj') 'lfiQJ
Road and Br idge
Po ll r&gt; l fo . Rt '} PomProy
FVf!lYTH ING S GOTT A GO '
Fund
2,355,4 1
9Q') '/68'-1
H 011 ~f&gt;
onrl lnt
hrrnt tur f"
Cemetery Fund
20,490 .59
dn th ~~
oil '"'r' hnu~;, coholrl
Cemetery Bequest Fd . 508 .31
Ol () FURNITURE . ire ho xe" hro"'
Federal Rev enue
lff'm" Drar hy 7bU laurf'IS t
hf'd!i iron beds d £&gt;"~ " P I C
Sharing Fund
3,286.19
M1rlrl lr&gt;rnrt
n:•~ piPte hou~e h olds
WntE'
Totals
63 ,187 .20
M f) M11!er Rf 4 Pomeroy nr Hf AVV
DIJT Y upho ls i Pry
Mondat
E•penditures
roll lN7 77b0
NoononSaturdly
rnoC' h111r&gt;
$?50
Pho tHl
Gtn4!!ral Fund
12 ,133.42
Motor Vehic le License
f&lt; 4:1 754'/
O liJ fO INS . porkel wok hP'
Tax Fund
5,107 .22
r ln"" ring!' weddmg hcmrl" 1t. FOOT BASS boot SO h p MN
~
Gasoline Tax Fund 16,892 .53
rl•omon ds Gold rrr ~ii ..-N Coli
4P.M.
Road and Br idge
r ury , Pn~tnt" Mt nr1 koto trolltn9
R('\rr Wamsley 7 ~'} '13:!1
the day before pu.blic•Um
Fund
1 ,284.40
mo to r rPorl~ lor f1 o; hing S700(1
Cemetery
8,42 1. 16
14 ft lonn ~ tar runohnut wi th
WA
NT
TO
buy
old
45
nnrl
7H
sunday
Cemetery Beques t Fd 508.31
troi lrr onrl rO nve rlnhl t&gt; tnp
rhon og roph rernrd!i
Co il
Federal Revenue
IP. ~C
Sto(.l(l ']4ft Rrv 1e ro (nmP r pon
QU7 6170 or Con tor! Martin Fur
Sharing Fund
2,420. 67 j..J.I,-~Frklll~
. =:y.n~...=~;
toC1n hoot nil olummum. l ot~ ol
rlitur~
Totals
46, 767 71
f'l&lt;lros 50 h.p '7fl model MN
B•l•nce Dec . 31 , 1978
WAN T TO huy old jewPiry Co li
rury r ng rnr&gt; rng rnco ~ ft ll under
General Fund
1,867 65
Lost
OQ7 5'161 or wn te l&lt;oy CeC'i l fl'/
Motor Veh icle License
wnrr f'n ty 54500 Woulrl con
-S.
'J
nci
Mrrlrl
iPport
OH
Tax Fund
442 69
"'cir?r car lop fi shing haot C'lll
lOST
MFD
IUM
st1erl
dog
hlonde
Gasolihe T•x Fur.td
103 19
trode Qdq 7013 ftohr.rt Htll
On Old Rt
33
Anyttme WANT TO buy you ng lryer roh
Road and Bridge
Rncrne
1,07
1.01
~1 ~bb8
h1t~ .4 ', to 6 1bs Coi/Qq13617
Fund
CemeterY Fund
12,00'9 .43 LOST O R mi•:;slng Doberman WANT TO bu~ one row or row flf CTRIC GUITAR wtth rn~;,r likP
Federa l Revenue
mol e pup a round Mo rr h 78
onci ro lf . Call 9Q7 7b011 or wnt e
nrw Slt&gt;('ll gmtnr with rnsp
Sharing Fund
865 _52
Baldo; a nd ton with wh1tP. ltl"l e
:1Q340 Whtte Ook Rd PomrrC'Iy
g"od ~:ond•tin n Q97 7.&lt;15:1
Total
16 , 419 .49
, Cuh B•lance,
on chpo;t and 10 mo o ld In
'_""~:_" - - _ _ _ _ _ _
llH";.ISTFRfO APPA~OOSA Stnllion
Receipts And
bock of Che~ter off SR 7.t!l
Yard Sale
SPrv trP Br('lerling for rnn
Exrenditures
po •&lt;dm,·l'!;!' mo·'er
Rowor_.u
· - · - - - - - - - I ('lrrT~n t ·tOn
• "
5f'05tltOr1 en 1nr
Y Fund
(o il b67 b3~A
FOUR FAMilY Yard Sole V ~ rnon
t&gt;l 4 7fJ! 1:100
Gener•l Fund
l-l mg resu;~e nc e Rt 1.43 '1 mii P~
Bal. , Jan 1, 1978
. 2,076 ,17
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
Clut Werl Thurs Frr Apnl 4 TH RH
~FGISHRfO
Blu e t. c l.
Receipfl
Help Wanted
&lt; •
rC1on hor md~ Qf15 11 ?1 4
General Property Ta x- - - ·- - - - - _ _ _
-'
' ~reoollleErs(IGarteosasnld
TRACTOR TRAILER drtvP.r 1\ le-ody VAilD SA l f . Wed Thurs f rr SIA MFS f rohh•t " d •nol e" 1
, •.
2 86 11
1rrno 1P" Qij5 3555
e mp loyment · oil th e ho ur s you
Q ·• '} m1l e~ on 1,,, of Clorenre
Tangible Persona l Prop e•rty
"'
Tax (Gross )
wont ho me e..-ery mght Must
Jordon re~ idence
CO NOITI ONFO HAY lor ~olf" ,
861 _06
G(l('lci q uol11y Wtll cle lwf'r \a ll
Estate Tax
l,373.J(
be 11 ~e ar s old b67 3 13 1 OhiO THt.'fF FAMilY Vo rd Sole B e~;, 1 cfe
(/Q'). 7701 crr qrn 33oq
Local G overnment and
Vo lley Monufo r hJr ing Tuppers
Hubbard ' s
Greenh d 1, 5 c
Plains. Ohi o
St a Ie Income T ax 2, 021 . 71
Syra cuse Wed . and Th ur"\ q till JQf! ARHOWC;. lASS hn ~s ho ot
4
Cigarette LICense Fees
IMMEDIATf
OPENING
a Aprtl4 th8.5th Roinconr~l ~
wi th H5 h p f v,Hu de mnt('&gt; r
18.75
and F ines (,G ross)
l a boratory Techntria n 3 11
QQ? 'l/ 14 nr QQ? 5HH
Notes
3,000.00
hI
CARPORT SAlE Apr115 &amp; 6 a t 637
1, 784 • 8""
o; i t l:xperr enC"ed Ml T (ASCP I
lnl.n"lble
w
Grant Str· M1dd leparl. C l o thf'~ . IQ/Jt FORD PI('KU P "UPPr cob V It
Total R:eceipts
11 ,924.90
or eq ut..-olenr Excell en t so /or~
furniture , drs hes lomp5 o ncl
with ro mpN tnp. Cnnd conch
Total Beginning Balance
ond fringe benefits Shih ci lf
ma ny other t l e ms Stor to; 01
!rnr1 Gnorl !1C1 !. mrl roqe S5400
Plus Rece ipts
1.t,001.01
ferento H ConJ oC't Personnel
Glom Phone 991 . 3.t?
3
Q.tc,l 7047
Expenditures
Off tC'e
Pleas ant
Vo ll e y
Total
Expenditures
H
t I y 11
D
CARPORT
SAlE
A
- ADmin istrative 11.533 .42
os pr a
o ey
'"'"· Point
pn'I 5 a nu" 6 q HFTHJ\1 FOOT l owe lrn e
_ Fire Protection
Pl ea~ont , WV 75550 Phone
om to A
73 in TV , con~o iP
oluminrrm ho!'" hoot 70 h p
600 _00
Grand Total E xp _
3&lt;M b75 43 40 An Equol Op·
rf'rord player. _meno; Jod1t&gt;s
Mrn
sti r~
stPertrag ful ly
General Fund
12,133 .42
po rtunrtyEm~ioyer
r h1ldre.n s rlothtng nnci "hoP~
r-q wppP. d w•th trniiPr Pho nP
Be lance , Dec 31 , 1978 1,867 .65 RN FOR
Mnny •tem5 so me new TWP . 9fiS 433QnltPr Sp m
Total Exp. Plus Bal ,
speC' tO1 program "' Submi t
tlci 7q Flr!'t mobtle homt" 011
Dec . 31 , 1978
1.4 ,001 07
res ume ~ to
Mer gs Co un ty
lc lt
Behtnd Rock Srrings SfA RS CUSTOM 7 rirlinR mower .
Motor Vehicle license
Health Dep t
PO Box 63 1•
f ntrgraunds
C.onrl ron d1 tion $~75 G lf' nn
Tax Fund
Pome roy. Ohio by Aprtl 5
Hrs sE"II q4Q 'JHOI
Bal. , Jan . 1, 1978
1,045 .04 CAHRifR WANTED FOH SVRACUSF TWO FAMil Y New limo Rood
R1celp1$
Ru tlanrl Boys ' clo thes. si1e 6 to JQ7b HONDA 360 loodf'cl w1th f"'r&lt;
Motor Veh icle Licen 5e
ARfA PHO NE 99'1 '2 156
10 Thu r ~cioy andFw:4oy Q trll d
trn" 997 :lUHl
4,.50d 87 BARTFND'.R CLUB M
Tax Receipts
i' 4 ' ' "'II,...
Total
4,.504
'87
~:: ·
ust h ave
.r 1 vg
_
_
_
_
•
CORN S'1 n hu Al ~ o hay r oll
Total Beg inning Balance
I tran~portotro n New Ho..-en
Auto Sales
t-67 3q66 RohPrt 0C'Ir ~t
PIUS Receipts
5,549 .91 .
WV 1-304-007-3377 .
- ______ _
FOUR GOODVFA R 10 x 15 AT
Expenditures
BARTENDER OR ba r motd Ntre I DFCFMB~R SA U
Troc i.Pr hrf&gt; ~ Fo ur whtto ~po k r
Total Expenditures
oppeoronce
re s p on~• bl e SAVF UPT_03o~ STOREWIDf
whr&gt;P I$ lor Ford tr uck JC"I" fl C&gt;r
- Miscellaneous
2,719 .89
NFW '1 PC LIVING ROOM SUITE
- Maintenance
2,387 .33
dt'&gt;pe rrclo lbe ropobleolhe lptng
q
.
:
lnt
197 1 Kn w n, nkt l (lfl
Gra nd Total Exp in the hu srnen Five Poi nt!' Bor
514 q5 NFW 5 PC DINfTTE
Mnlnrrcrss 1Y77 Kowno;oki 'ISO
Motor Veh lcle License
and Gri ll Rt 3 , Porrwroy
'S HS 54q qs NEW S~ Al Y MAT·
cl11t htl. f' F11 co llf'nt rond1ti on
Tax Fund
5,107 22
·
TRESSS TWIN SIZf INTERSPR·
ru ~ t
hf' f'n
ovf' r hou lrd
Bal. , Dec. 31,1978
442 .69
lNG S45 NEW 3 PC fND TABlf
74'/ 3154
Total Exp . Plus Bal .,
l\HS S3Q ,qS U-HAUl RICit'S
Dec . 31,1978
5,549 .91
NfW AND US£0 FURNITUtff THRff BOY S' MillS Twn !ihP 17
Guollne T~x Fund
Year 1978
3,000.00
..... 2 • AV" p 44
lkly"' nnrl on f&gt; .,. ;7 f' 14 SS e nrh
Bal , Jan . 1, 1978
.529 33
Balance Outstanding
.,_, 4 nu o;;
H
b c,1 513
Coli Q85 35111
Receipts
Dec , 21, 1978
3.000.00 t&lt;rn GMC PICI&lt;UP 6 ryl ~!d
Gasoline Tax
13,200.00
Dale of F in II Mat.
81
~Q(l() 9CJ'J .7'J76
IN T THRFE bn!to m rlow Pu ll typ(" ,.
Other
3,266.39 Tota l - New Issues
011 ruhMer
I rt in. plow chtrl
Total Rece ipts
16 ,466.39
Dur ing Year 1978
6,264..39 IU7{1 {)00Gf DART fo ir ro11 ci1
ho tt om tlotC'h r utl('f ~ PC1mf"
Total Beg inn ing Balance
To ta l - Balance Outstanding
fi('&gt;n S:IOQ qcn- 5 141
nnd pl trw 1n gooci rondi ti an
~
Plus Rece ipts
16 ,995.72
Dec . 21, 19711
6 ,266 39
l'ilbtr G f 0 fxC'elll!'nl cnnri1tion
Rro ,.onnhly rnreci Poui Soyrr"
~~
Expenditures
(d) 4, ltc
~ Total Expendi ture s
H1 !1h p., rlorm anC'P 74'} 17~9 .
~·orm
1 m i l f' hP IC&gt;w
·~r
- Miscellaneous 11,236 28
Rnvrnswond lanci'''9 GrNrl
1lJ7fl FORO FLIT F, ~ il vp r wi th hlu f"
- Maintenance
5,656.25
BC'nd Rei SR 33ft Portlonci
v1ny l tor Goo d ro ndihnn
1:!. Grand Total E xp. nhi n fl4 3 45Q 1
:l~ ()(X1 mt lf's 304 Tf3 St! l5
M• · Gnoline Tax Fund
IN THE
' ; '
16,892.53
COMMON PLEAS COURT,
107:1
INTFRNATIONAl SCOUT TROY RIL T rnlf'l t i ii N ~ lmmMio te
tloil'-'t Sal. , Dec . 31; 1978
103.19
cieli vP ry 10 pe r rf'nt nff
PROBATE
DIVISION
7
1
noo
nju l"" full y ec, uiprrrl
~ TQial Exp. Plus Bal ..
A11thmm~cl Troy Bri t rl P.oiN ~
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIQ
~,
Dec . 31, 1978
16 ,995 .12
nir , wfmr h, f!' tr tu·rellf' nt &lt;'nn
IN THE
MATTER
OF
(' C'lmJ'IIF"!r gorrlP n " "rpliP ~
:a
Ro•d 1nd Bridge Fund
clition , qQ'J .1121 .
SETTLEMENT OF
AC ·
Al!TOC,AH INC Plmn Shopr
; ) ;.o..
Rtlcelpts
COUNTS ,
PROBATE 1Qi'5 ("AQill AC Fldorodo ·:?5 000
1nn &lt;"f'n!N Ath('n ~ Ohto
_,. . General Property Ta x COURT, MEIGS COUNTY,
rntl('~ Toll~ eq utpperl . f Mce iiPnt
Phn nf' 614 591' 30H5
~Real Estate and
OHIO
..f-..1'~~"
Trailer IGrossl
2.355 .41
!"('l ndit to n 9'17-7171
Acco
unts
and
vouchers
of
ASPIN
·~ · V FHMffR Bolt&gt;r ~;, nle~ on rl
1
·:
Total Receipts
2,355 .41
the
tollowrng
named 1977 BLAZFR 4x4 ChPyrnn~
"l'rvJC'e Hnler&lt;; In ~ t ori. lo r im .
~
Exaendltures
fudiciartes Mve been f iled In
rnrkagr 1 7c,J 000 ortuol mil~ ~
&amp;'',.a Total Expend itures
mNfint P ciP itvf' ry
f vrnmg"'
the Probate Court, Meigs
- Miscellaneous
1,284 .40
phonP 74') '/f1T/ 0 £&gt;x tf'r
Tilt
"tf!f&gt;rl AM -FM rociln A.C
County, Ohio. for approval
,. , Grand Total Exp fClw paclmgf&gt;. crut"if" wh it ~ 1Q74 TPIUMPH motorryrlt" SOOrc .
and settlement:
... " '' Road and Bridge
" I'C'Ii&lt;f! wbt'PI!; fxcellt' nt C'on r!i
CASE
NO
.
21429
F
irst
and
s~oo 747 10~1
·- "' '
Fund
1, 284.40
linn Alter~ C'OI I qQ? '}qf:J7
F ln.l!ll Account of Gene Paul
Balance, Dec . 31 , 1978 1,071 .0 1
Beeg le , Executor of the
1
~~ Total Exp . Plus Bal .,
of
Ira
Beegle , 1 rf:l G RANp PRI X. sun roof to pe ,
'W'Jt ·
Dec 31, 1978f .
2,355 41 estate
rC1wer Cooci tire s nrw mr
deceased
Cemetery Fund
ho u!'l " Y ~I em m SO!l:l
CASE
NO
.
2205
1
F~rs t
- ·~ · Bal ., Jan 1, 1978
12,197 58
Current
Account
of
Jeffrey
C t Bal. , Jan . 1. 1978
12.197 58
W
and Dolores Foster, 107? PL VMOUT H FURY Ill P S ,
!'Wir i
R ecelpts
P B. r rur ~c co ntrol 5650 nr
Guardians of the Estate of
General Property Ta x hf" ~ t r'l fl er qq7 37 17
Sarah Jean Foster a minor.
t'
Real Estate and
CASE NO . 13 ,497-A Six .,.~-.
Trailer (Gross)
2,866 .95
The liJ"/4 COMH 6 ryl 6'1 ()(]() mt1f''
:iL{., Tangible Personal Property ' tee nth Accou nt of
S 1500 hPr11 ngs, lilQ?,"/133
Hunt
ington
National
Bank
of
~~Tax (Gross )
750 00
Columbu s, Trustee of the 1Q74 (',Mf JIMMY 7·wPf' PI dtt vP
,..,\: Fees
4,167 15
Trust created under the Last
"
Other
508 31
p &lt;.; p B Olf !ihMh 'in thl'!
Will and Tes tament of Albert
..~... Total Receipts
8,293 01
I POf
JlPt'51' troilet htfrh fl
0 Ebersbach, deceased .
lt-1': Total Beg inning Balance
trnrl&lt; anrl CB r e~ci tn 9Q'} :tSHO
CASE NO . 20559 F irst and
,. ·
Plus Receipts
20 ,490 .59
Fina l Account of Helen L..
-~ Expend itures
107.t CHF VROLH 410' 4 fn r ~;,o i P or
':.- ; Salaries
4,.5l5 SO Teaford , Administratrix: ot
lrorll'! '1 4? 77H9
the Estate of Ru.th I . Cundiff,
Employer 's Retirement
\
1("7:t BUICK CFNTURV ss 000
~g
Contribution
631 32 deceased
Unle~ e,.,ceptions are filed
- Tools and Etluipment 1,295.63 thereto
rnrlf'!i
G no ~
li lf''
$950
, said accounts will be
~ Suppl i es
780 22 tor hearing
Ofl5 3fl57
said Court
A• Contract5
13 2,72 on the 3rd dabefore
v or May, 1979) at
- Other E xpenses
1,06.5.77
ch t 1me said accounts will
.... Total Expenditures 8,.421 16 whi
'
H9BSTETTER REALTY
be considered and continued IIJ-15 11 FO()T !n o r ~ rnrn r"' "" ll
-~l Bat ., Dec . 31 , 1978
12,069 43 fr
om
day
to
day
unti
l
finally
New Lima Road
~t· Total Exp . Plus Bal. ,
re'lntt!mr&gt;rl oir !'('U1citton,, ..,~
d ot .
,
Rutland, Ohio
......!· Dec . 31, 1978
20,490.59 dispose
cf"ilf'n t rot,diti on 9fl'l ?1~ ~
Any
person
interested
may
!
Phone 742-2003
.......!!
Cemetery Bequest Fund
file
written
exceptions
to
said
Receipts
NEW LISTING - On 325 in
or to rnatters TP.A VFL MATf 11 foot tr11rk
~ Bequests
508 .31 accounts
Danville.. Home ha s 4
rn mpN S l rcp~ ~ tw hoth &lt;:. in~
pertaining
to
the
e,.,ecut1on
of
Total R:eceipts
508 31 the trust, not less than ft\let , r rf rtgPrntor nnd fprnnrf"
be drooms, livin g and fami ·
•
. •·
Expenditures
ly room s, Kitchen and b'2ith
~1500 (o 11 7~'J ?fl4~
days pr ior to the date se1 for
4
Expenditures --hea rin g.
Situated on .75 of an acre
f
,'1" 1 Nonrestr icted ·
508.31
____ ("o_r ~~n t_ _
with cell a r, s moke house
1 ,1 ~ 1otal Expenditures
508 .31
Robert E . Buc k '
and 2 other good buldings
1
~
Federal Revenue
J\JDGE :t ANt&gt; 4 8M fur t, tsheci one-! 1111
The house· ne eds a little
•·
~~...
Shlrlng Fund
Common Pleas Court,
fuffll~ h r: ti
nph
Pho 11P
wor k, but it 's well worth
~s,r Bal ., Jan . 1, 1978
406,1 9
Probate Dlv 1sion,
UQ') ~~~~~
the effort at a pri ce of only
1t
Receirts
Meigs c ounty , Ohio
2,880 .00' (&lt;I) 4, ltc
' 'Grants- Federa
518, 000.00.
~~
ROIIINr, ACRF S nl r~nnd
Total Rece ipts
2,880 .00
R UTLAN.D - E~tra nice 3
pn"tr1rr&gt; Pl f"rl ty nf wn! f'r ('C'I 11 /ci
Total Beginning Ba la nce
bedroom home in Rutland .
flf're'llfh'1 dntr- 50 pl u ~ C'nttlr
PIUS Receipts
3,286.19
Out of flood area . Only
"14 NJ ., : l:lc,rlt
•
,..,...
Expenditures
PROBATE COURT OF
539,000.00.
11 •
M•lnt. ind Opentlon,
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
ONf Hfl)ftOOM o pt ~ cir"if!n,..,J
WEST RUTLAND
~ Salarles-Employees 423 .20
ESTATE OF GERALD 0 .
" f'l"dl1rnfly fnr whnl' khoi• f' 'l
~
Public Employees
Beau tiful country sett ing
VIOLET,
DECEASED
tit"nt&lt; f'o ll hf'lwf"e n Q nnrl "
~
Retirement System
61.10
,
rhis home has 3 bedrooms
UU/ T/7/
~ Other E Xpe-nses
1,936.37 case No . 21,646
and an extra large detac h
NOTICE OF
Total E xp .
2,420. 67
E'd garage . There's a
APPOINTMENT OF
mw 1 l't)IJI-' horlrl'otl"' o r t·
~
Bat. Dec . 31, 1978
865.52
FIDUCIARY
blacktop · drive and nic e
i' Total Exp. Plus Bal .•
,..
fnr
lm
ndy
('If 5 ' " fl
nvni!nr-1
On March 23, 1979, in the
fencing Call for more Info.
•'
Dec. 31,1978
3.280.19 Meigs
C nil 1-&gt;C"hll('lrn 9 nnd b IJCI1 7TI'J
Coun t y Probate Court, ·
POMEROY ·- 2 bedroo m
-Townsfllp Debt-Bonds
Cllse .N o . 22 ,6A6, Vlrg11 Roush, TWI) BfDIKJ OM rnnMtle&gt; hnm4" w
home on Brick Street Ex ·
Purpose Far Which Bond
Route
3,
Pomeroy
,
Oh
io
457(19
Morldlrrnrt do"f' . tC'1 ~rhn i, 1 ..,
Debt Was Creates'
cettent buy at $?0 ,000.00.
wa s appoin ted Executor ot
nnd • llt"1 p(l1 110 Uti li h t"~ pntt l
_Grader Motor
WE NEED LISTINGS!
the estate Of Ge rald o . V1olet ,
New Issues During
C:.7()( \
111npth p lu~ rlt'pl"' ''
Cheryl Lemley , Associatf'
deceased
,
late
of
Tuppers
Year 1978
3,2,6.39
.&lt;;UI ;.' .!.'7
Pla 1ns, OhiO .45783.
Phone 141·2003
Balance Outstand ing
H11ton Wolfe, Associate
lW£"1
HHlPOOM
111n hilr ~ he'lmr
Dec 21, 1178
3,266 .39
Robert E . Buck
Phone 949·2589
Oateof Fi nal Mat
81
!.. • ff I,C'n '• •r•1i ~ h f"rf fllr&gt;lro o "'rrl
Probate Judge GeorgeS. Hobstetter, Jr ..
• ~ Township Build ing
r11r
Oflf"rf
r(lup
lr
·
('t
n'rlr
'').•.
,,,
·
Cle rk
New Issues Dur ing
•
Broker 992-5739
(3) :28 (4) 4, 11 , ltc:
1 t,,... urr1 :''.t'J

, NOTICE

WANT-AD

ADVERTISING

DEADLINES '

.::",

·:;

anii Found - -

:r:. APRIL 4-7
I

•

Your Fleldqlilrllls For

PIANO
•
TIJNING

JEEP

•

Annstiont C.,.tiit

EWOTT

14 Yr. Experience
Aural Method

IS THE PLACE!

- -- - · - - - "--~---

I

·-

. ,..

~-

.

\

~~

·• •

. APPLIANCE li ·

JACK W. CARSEY,
MGR.

PH _-t/92-218)
Real Estate
. - for
- Sale
FAPM f'OP SniP H pu&lt;~t&gt; , 'I hn rn ~
trnd,-.r !m q P p('lnci 10 orrf&gt;~ or
H'J nrrf&gt;s ., ~~~ 7560 n c rr ~ Ill

'

..

,_

11 -9-1 mo.

Ohio Valey Roofipa
and
'
Home Maintlnlace

· c.;fc l ,,rlprl
wopcif"d or~o nn top ni htll
()..-pr lno k" n ..-er Wotror ' f'lrr
l11r nvotl oh ll' 9'1'1 :'flflt&gt;

'

I

,. mll&lt;r,off Rt. 7 IIY-t~allon
51, Rt. ftC taw1t'll Rutfllld,

o. '

'

-

Au-If. TrucK

-'Repair
Transmission
· Repair
Phone 992-5612

~lso

OWNfR SE l liNG 7 1-w:&gt;ciroom 1
frnm p hov ~e h rce lle nt rn town
lnrotr on Call 991 3073
MOOFRN THREF bPdroom to tnl
r iN trk homco ~ 1tuot eci on lorgf'
~
IC&gt;t !41'} 7047

•-

• - ~••

..n:ll'JC

RANCH
E xce llent
oondlllon . 3 bedroom home,
equipped kitchen. dining
area, c.irpeted , carporl
and 2 storage buildings.
Immed iate
possession.
528,500.00.
1'12 STORY FRAME Natural
gas
heaL
Middleport schot&gt;ls, 4
bedrooms, ' 2 baths, part
basement , needs some
repair S13,000.00.
MIDDLEPORT - All legal
license, business for many
years ,
budding
and
business
with
an
apartment over, extra lot
for parking , excell ent
Income. Call Today.
MIDDLE PORT - 2 lois,
mobile
home
10 'x:45 ' ,
apartment, new kitchen,
new heating system, 2
bedrooms and a bath,
another
apartment
available. $15,000.00.
221 FOOT FRONTAGE On Rt. 1 within Pomeroy
corporation limits, 111..
acres in all, originally had
two houses. $3,000 .00.
REALTORS
He11ry E, Cleland, Sr.
c Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
v92-2259
992-6191

216 E. Sec011d Street

1

MAIN ST. Business
location with residence up.
All utilities and ideal
location for a new business .
COUNTY HOME - Nice 3
bedroom modern
li ke
home .
large
eat- In
kitchen, full b~sement,
front porch {enclosed ), and
ha If acre lot. Good garden
spot:. Only S23,SO&lt;f.
{RECREATION SPOT 01 the Ohio River. 3 acres,
drilled well , septic syst~m.
e lectric and 2 concrete
pads.
BUSINESS BUILDING In Middleport on the T.
26'x96' . Several rooms_. up
with bath , rest room and
large bulsness room down.
FAMILY HOME - Large
country ho~ with 4
,bedrooms, living and
1slttlng rooms, plus large
recreation room
with
fireplace. 3 car garage and
workshop and l'h acres.
Just $35,000.
LAND lots, acreage,
river
froritage,
some
cleared, some wooded . In
town and but .
CROW
WITH
THE
COUNTRY, INVEST IN
REAL
ESTATE
AT
TEAFOROS. CALL 992 -

992-2356

3-7-1 m11; (.Pd)

-

~Add-ons

Call for a Free Siding

1i Remolding&amp;
1li Free Estimates

949-2860.

Estimate,

949-2801 9r
No Sund!IJy·

.

SAVE ON

DRIVE ALIT1lE

.

SAVE

WALlPAP f RING AND pointlrrg
Coll747-7:t7ti

A~

A GOOD SELECTION OF
END &amp; ROLL BALANCES.

FROM

.

24 Rolls of Carpet In Stock
&amp; lOO's of Sempltts to
Qooose From.
BUY NOW &amp;SAVE
C.lf 742-2211 '.
TAI:KTO
' '
Wendell or Herb Orlle
or .G en• Smlllt

RUTLAND'
FURNitURE
7C2-2211

SS'JOO

I

LOTS -

JU S r LIST ED- 75 Acres wlih a 3 bedroom frame
house. barn and other building, mostly fenced Some
timber and excellent bottom land . About 1.000 feet of
bea1;1ti ful Ohio_River frontage. Owner will help finance.
As kmg $57,000.

. WANTED

WECALL
NEED
NEW HOMES &amp;FARMS •
JIMMY DEEM,
A~&gt;OCIATE9CI- 2lll

0

h'vm Jt.tmblt, c/o thl• n•w•P•P'r, lod4, Norwood, N J. 07AI.Incllldt your

nemt, 1ddre... dp code end

NANCf JASPERS, ASSOCIATE94M654

m~h

checkl

p•~•blt

to NIWip.l.,.reoolil.

a~u·"M'
by
THOMAS JOSEPH

~~=~

ACROSS

zActreaa

I Roughen,
&lt;'I as skin
5 Leaaen

3 Valuable

10 Man : Latin
11 Casa brickll-

12 The "U" 111

B.T.U.

Blackman

acid
4 Melting5 Turklah

clty

"Force of Arm1u 11.

I Round

,RUilAND .RRtRURE\
WE OFFER YOU ...
I. Two fvll floors . of all now
furniture.
2. Nice select1011s of usld
furniture.
3. A luge bUilding full ol
beoullful &lt;Jtroet.

Table

ze

BRIDGE

An unlikely slam 'success

Yer ba$kit, Min! Be
hllndl.j fer tot in' saws
cell!

taved the pup's life,
sir! Would 40U like to
have

her?

ze

•• •

Family

at

.

----

~~~~~~~~

,.

Wl\$N'T

FIRS'r' TIM!. 'You
R!ft~eD -ro THIS
PLAC:! AS Jt.

•

+

J
;

,
,

; 1:S~;;====:=::;:;;;;;;;;:;;;;;:::::;:;__•~p~IU:-:O::R:,_..:.,_:':_~:&amp;&amp;-.t!..J

r.

(iJ) 1~ ~ Foo..... Syndicate, Inc.

RARNF:Y

WHEW!!
see the Grate

•

12 :os-Mc:Ciouc(8; 12:~annlx 6,13.
1 :oo-Tomorrow 3; News 15.
Yetterd.iy'a Auwer .
14 Wk. day
khlghl
1 : 30--Ntwl 13; 3: IG-NIWI 17.
7 Uncoln
15 Florida
17 Construct
Cook a
3:30--Movle "Gideon of SCQlltnd Yard" 17.
· ·
city
· was one
ZO still
certain way Wenelday, April I
lrtn pro8 "I Was a
water
!II Nurse,
:......Werewolf" Zl Rather
portion
French
18 Sou 'wester 9 Extensive
acid
ilyle .
properties
It P,a rlslan
H Compact
Z9 Habilation
summer
II Kind of
23 Hellespont 30 Ravine
type
Zt ~ctreu
swlnuner
31 step In
Geraldine
15 Strip of
Z4 Ride
SS Sea gtiU
wood ·
ZIP&amp;alm
to hounda
M VilaUly
four trickl), they Judcect •
· word
their defensive prolpectltdNORTH
for pause
equate lo defeat the cont A 714
tract.
Z4
Residences
. • Ql
~er
An orl&amp;lnll hetrt letd by
t IOU .
=• · •~ Good
Weal
would have defeatH;
.10172
whack: al.
the contract, but h• coul4
WElT
EAST
CelesUal
not be blamad for 101111 w1t11
+12
the kina of ditmoncla. Wilen
body
• 10712
• KJII
durnnly ctme down, deZ7 Actreu
IAUift
clarer did not like hil cbane·• Q782
Hagen
• QU
ea. Allde from the unlikely
Zl Dressing
occurrence of • queen-~ck
lOUTH
club doubleton, there did net
Lease
+ KQJllll
seem many ftvoreble wa)'a
"A 9.3
-vivant
to so.
·
Regardleu, South found a
• AKU
Receu
11..,
31 Wine
way to make the contrtct. '·
Vulnetable: NortMioutb
He ruffed the opanlnc dia- .;
FRANK &amp; ERNIE
37 Shandy's
Dealei': North
mondwiththekin1oh~ ·~
. . . . . . . . . . . .~~~~~~~~~:;~----. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .~...
creator
and led the queen of • .,.._."'!
•
Nortb
South
38Brinlt
to dummy , where he over• '
P111
It
38German
took with the ace. He happllJ
S+
city
noted the fall of the ·~
Puo
nine .from the Weat hand .
CG -Gynt
I
Declarer ruffed another
I
DOWN
diamond In hio liand with tilt
Openlnllead
:
K
1 Blockhead
ei1ht of apadea and led Ilk
I
carefuUy preserved five of
apadea to dummy'a aill. AJDAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here'• how to work It:
ter rufflng another dilmond,
AXYDLBAAXR
the stage was set. Declarer
~
By Oowald Jaeoby
II LONGFELLOW
played ace, klng .. nd a tblrd'
&amp;ad Alati Soalatl
club.
.
One lette r limply atanda for another. In this aamplt A Ia
~
'
Eut
wu
end-played.
He
used
for
the
three
L's,
X
for
the
Lwo
O's,
elc.
Stn1le
leiters,
4
Tlte bidding needs some
apoatrophea, the leneth and formation of the word1 are all explanation. West's three di- had to win . with the Que&lt;rll.
hints. Each day the code tellers are dlfterent.
'10tH'&amp;
4·4
amonds was a weak jump He now had the dubloua
overcall meant to show a choice of either playtna e ·
CRYPTOQUOTES
atro1111 six- or seven-card heart away frc.m the ldfiiinto Noi'th'a qute11 ar
I~WTHIN6~I
Z Y B Q T TO B 0 P
F By suit with little outside Jack
laylllfl
a diamond and liY.
NE.VER~EIJ
olrtnlth. North's three
n11 declarer a ruff 1nd dt.
E)(.I5TED J 501-AE
F
D apadea was rather light; he
X F Z E F.
PBNU
YZPD
GOOD ... BUT
ohould have paued. Eaat's card. Whichever way he
four diamonds waa Intended went, the s lam. wu cold.
MANYOP 1
YFTXY
R
T
7H6t1 IJA/),
B 0 G to impede the opponents , but I NEWSPAPER ENTERPRII! A81lf. )
South Judled hl.a hand Sood
(For s copy of JACOBY MOO.
Q B N U
R X B Z0
J.
enoul!h to barge Into slam.
I!RN, sond 11 to. ' 'Win at
Crypl......ll!l THE. HABIT OF lJSTENINI' TO Even though Eaot-Weat Bridge, " care of tf'tfa newa,..
OF DREAMING ABOUT IT PREDISPa!ESIONE have a cheap save In seven per, P.O Box 489, R!ldlo City
LOVE.-STENDHAL
dlam~ds (they go down Station, New York, N. Y. 10018.)

13 AtUc

1 Acre and up near Pom e roy .

SYRACUSE - goocj 2 bedroom home, almost new
kit chen ca binets, a ll nicely carpeted, laundry room, all
Insulated. natural gas h~t . utility building, 2 lots.
521,500.

•

.lumbitloo~ No. 12, contllni"8110puUIII, II l'lllllblt torSt.71polt~ld

.

AT ... .

JUST LISTED - Good 3 bedroom house aooul 1u yrs~
old. Mt&gt;slly carpeted w ith attached garage and utility
room . All lnsulatetl. Approx. lt.. acre land. Located
about 15 minutes north on Rt . 33. Priced for quick s ale
$22/500

,--sq.,..- _

$"ftS

llld up lnlllllld

1955 Proirie S&lt;hoo ne r 2Bx8 1
'
.
hcfr.
1Cl65 Genero l, 60xl2 '1bcir
JClbEJ Ekono 5'1r&lt; 17 7hdr
1Q6q Hurlrly 6(hd 7, d hdr
1970Sy lva ()()xl') 7 hd r
1&lt;no Costlc bOx I L 'J heir
1973 Arltngton b0xl 7 'J bci r
Ilill:l Ridgewood , 70x 14 3 heir
l973Kirkwood SOxl:l . 7brlr
88 S MOBllf HOMf SAl fS
PT PlfSANT , WV
6/5 . .:11174
IQY:i FRfFDOM M08JlF home
Arrlton ce~
und rrpin ning ,
f~r\-plorP 997 54l3 C'lr QQ'} 611fl

'

J•mblos EXEAT BATHE GRASSY IMMUNE
They often have shady posslbllltlea,
TREES

I,.Answer.

•u

..

JUST LISTED- lis acres, with plenty of good p~sture
l8nd and some farming ground. Good-barn with drilled
well . Garage and other buildings . Two farm houses.
both need some repair. Mineral rights too. Good
location about S minutes from P9meroy off Rt. l3. ·
Priced for quick sale . S42,500.

A(IIIIHIIIII)

THURSDAY, APRILS, 1979
5:'2!f-World at Large 17 ; S:Cl-Farm Reporl1'; 5:~
PTL Club 13.
s .ss-sunrlse" Semester 10.
6 ' 1l0-700 Club 6.8: P TL Clu~ 15; 6· 20-News 17.
6:2s-For Y ou ... 81ock Woman 10
6 :3!f-Romper · Room 17; 6 :4s-Mt&gt;rnlng Report 3;
. 6 :50-Good . Morning , West Virginia 13; 6 :5$Chuck· Wh ite · Rep!\~ts 10; News 13 .
7.:00-Today 3,15; :Good Mt&gt;rn lng America 6,13;
Thursday l'(lornlng B; Schoolles 10; Three Stooges.
Little Rascals 17.
7: ls-Weether 33. · .
7 .30-F amlly Affair 10.
8 ·oo-&lt;:apt. Kangeroo 8, 10; Leave II To Beaver l h
Sesame St. 33.
,B· JO-HaJel 17.
·9 .00-Boti Braun 3; Phil Donahue 13,15; Emergency
One 6: Hogan' s Heroes B; Match Game 10; Lucy
Show 17.
9:30-Brady Bunch a ; Hogan's Heroes 10 ; Green Acr" '
17 .
JO · oo-&lt;:ard Sherks 3, 15 ; Edge t&gt;f Night 6; All In The
Family 8, 10; Dating Gomoll; Movie "Company of
Killers" 17.
·
10 · 30-AII Slar Secrets 3,15; $20,000 Pyramid 13; Andy
Grlftllh 6; Magarlne 8,10.
11 :00-High Rollers 3.15; Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13.
11 :30-Wheel ot Fortune 3,15; Family Feud 6,13; Love
ot Life a ,lO; Sesame St. 20.
12 . 00-Newscenter 3; News 6.10; Password 15; Midday
Magazine 13; Love American Style 17.
· 12:3!f-Ryan's Hopa 6,13; Search for Tomorrow 8,10;
Not For Women Only 15 ; Elec. Co. 20,33; Movie
" Timberjack" 17 .
1 :00-Doys of Our Lives 3,15; All My &lt;;hlldren 6,13;
News 8; Young &amp; the Restless 10.
1:30-As The World Turns B,lO; 2:00-Doctors 3,15; ·
One Life To Live 6,13.
•2:25--News 17; 2 ;3G-Another World 3.15; Guiding
Light 8,10; Banana Splits 17.
3 :00-General Hospital 6,13; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20;
Speed Racer 17.
3::.-Mash B; Joker's Wild 101 Fllntstones 17; Over
Easy 20.
4 :00-Mister Cartoon 3; Hollywood SqUllreS 15; Mtrv
Griffin 6; Razzmatszz 8; Sesame St. 230,33; Batman 10; Dinah 13; Space Giants 17 .
·
~ : 30-Bewltchld3; Gilligan sTs. 8,17 ; Brady Bunch 10;
Patllcoet Junction 15.
5 :00-1 Dream of Jeannie 3; Beverly Hlllbllll" 8;
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; Gomer Pyle,
USMC 10; Bionic Woman 13; Bredy Bunch 15; I
Drum of Jeann lo 17.
5 :30--(arol Burnett &amp; Frlttnds 3; News 6; S.nford &amp;
Son 8; Elec. Co. 20 ; Mary Tyl•r ~~ 10; Odd
Couple 15; Lucy Show 17 ; Doc:tor Who 33.
6 :00-Neas3,8,10,13,15; ABC NeWill Andy Griffith 17;
Hodgitpodge Lodge 20.
6:30--NBC News 3,15; ABC News 13; Carol Burntlf &amp;
Friends 6; CBS News 8,10; My Three Sons 17; Over
Easy 20.
·
,7 : ~ross-WIIs 3; Newlywad Game 6,13; Mlrty
Robbins' Spotlight a; News 10; Love, American
Style 15; Carol Burnett &amp; Frlencla 17; Dick Cavett
20; Wild, Wild World of Animals 33.
7: 30-liollywOod Squares 3; Bonkers 6; Match Game
PM I; S100.00(1 Name That Tune 10; Nashville On
Tho Road 13; Dolly 15; Sanford &amp; St&gt;n 17; MacNeilLehrer Report 20,33.
8:00-Hart'lo &amp; Compeny 3,15; Mt&gt;rk &amp; Mindy 6,13;
Chlsholms B,10; Nova 20,33; Mlult&gt;n : lmpo.s slble
17.
8: »-Delle Houae 6,13.
9:0D-Thtt Duke 3,15; Barney Miller 6,131 Hawaii F!Vt·
08,10; Starltl Letter 20,33; Mt&gt;vle "Tht K/1/or Who
Wouldn't Oft" 17.
9 : 30--(lrler Country 6,13.
10 :00-0otlor&amp;' Private Lives 6,13: Black Mltn's Land
33.
10:30--Hocklng Vaii•Y Bluegrass 20.
11 :oo-:News 3,6,1,10, 13, 15; Hogan's Heroe1 17; B•lf of
Groucho 20; Aret ShowctH 33.
11 :30-Johnny C1rson 3,151 Starsky &amp; Hutch 6, 13;
Mllh I ; ABC N•ws 33; Movlt " Camillo" 10; Movlt

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

CARPETING

1q67 TOTA l FI£CTRIC ' mobtiE
hom e . furn is hed
3 bedr
wa sher nnd dryer Air cond •·
!t oned 1 lo t 710 It lr ontage
Sl7 000 Phone7 47-7670.
·-

with large beef barn near Pomeroy.

mo.
Ves ter day s

M081lf HOMf repa i r~ F u rnoC'e~
f"ll"rtrtcol work r1rrs sawerl.
phrmMi ng 991 5f158

NEW LISTING- Bashan area, excellent home site.
Water and electric available. Has been !IUrveyed .
53,000 .

Answer here:

Now arrange the c1rded lette rs to
form the surprise answer, 81!1 sug·
gesled by the above cartoon.

(Answers tomorrow)
ol-~-1

. _ I!U~if1e~s_S!!r11i~e~ __
BRAOfOHD Auctro nee r, Co m- WAT£R ANO mise houltng, Call
rle tr&gt; Spr..-ice Phone 949 2~87
097 585B .
'
.
. . .
or Q4Q 'JOQO Rocine . Ohio. Crttt
NOW HAULING lt mestone in
Brodiorci
Middl eport· Poemra~ oreo Coli
H WOOD BOWERS Rf PAIR
for fr ee est unote 3b7-7101 .
Sweerm~
tooo; te rs, rrons all
'moll nppliOnres lawn motir, WILl CARE for tw.o tnvolld or
e lde rly persons In my home
neJ&lt; t to Stol e High way Gorage
Twenly years expertence \
on Route 1
Reasonable rates Q92-6022 or
SfWING MACHINE Repairs ser·
99'1 5412
vrf'e otl mokes. ~7 7784 The
Fobr 1r Sh op
Pom eroy PAINTING ANO sandb lastin g.
Free est1mates.
Coli .q49-2'b86
Au thomeci Singe r Soles ond
.
.
Se rvice '('/c sharpen Sris5ors
TR EE TRIMMING and rer.1ovo l.
742 3167or 747 '1573 .
FXCAVATIN G dorN . iooder and
hor~hoe wo r~
d um!5' trucks PAINTING' ANo r epa ; r1~g- roofs·.
ond lo-hoy5 lor hire will hou l
house pointing, hauling. Fret'!
fi ll dirt, top so tl li me~tone and
es ti ma tes. Coli W7 -to3(}q or
grC'Ivei Co li Bob or Roger Je l·
7.:J'J.'J07.t of.t e~ 5pm .
frro; rlay phone ~7 - 708Q night
Will DO baby sitting $1 .50 ,on
r hone q117 .3525 or ~1 - 513'}
-hour or $70 a week. Across the
EXCAV ATING cio1er backhoe
street fr om Mason Drive- In
a nd ci ttc he r C horle~ R Hot
gold trotle r trimmed if] block ·
,· :
.
t1F" Id. Block Hot'l Service
Rutlo nrl Ohi o Pone 74'11008

.

.-----+--t [II)
lUG ARC I
_

calls.

f C HFCTRICAL Controctn r se r..tng Oh to Volley rPgion Stx
doy ~ a· wee ~ . 14 ho urs service
fm orgeory roll !' C(JII fl81 7q57
or fl~1 3~5~ .

CENTRAL REALTY CO. ·

ACREAGE -

[)

BISSEll
SIDING CO.

Housing
Headquarters

CHESTER
Good 5 bedroom house with full
basement and 2 baths. Nat . gas heat , approx . 1 acre
lllnd and l,a rge storage bu !lding. Pri ce $21,500.

o.

Siding

HOWFRV AND MARTIN fx
f'nv nting
~e rtr c
~ y"\tem "
dorrr harkhne Rt 1.4 3 Pho ne
I { (l J4 ~ fJQ[l 733 1

FIVE YtAI&lt;S OLD - oeo ut llul 4 bedroom home with
large eat-in kit c hen, 2 ba1hs, TV room , llll nicely
carpeted , large utility room and many more extras.
Natural fa s forced air furnace . Plenty of garden splice
on 1 acre of land . Priced right $36,000.

I

651 Beech Street
Middleport,

AUTOMOB il E INSURAN CE been
rnnr~ llecl? l ost you r operators
lic {' n ~p? Phone qy'} 21.43

Gordon-B.
Helen L.
Sue P . Murphy
Reahor Associates

ENJOY COUNTRY LIVING In thi s bea~llful
remodeled 4 BR fully car~ted home. The home sits on
s. acres and tncludes a pond. The stone heat.a -lator
f1replace s~ts oH the la rge L.R. area. Kitchen Is
equipped wtfh refrlg ., stove and dishwasher. Horrie has
been very well Insulated. Pri ced at $39,900 . .

• -- •

PUlliNS fXC AVATING Co mplete
SN v•re Phone 9cn 147B

3325.

"

,Will Mltkt
Set tlce C.lls

Home

.

LIP YET!

Ml' 7HIP!

NOW WHArf
WHAT' MOR!
DO YOU WANT.
"/OIJ ;cui.\

11 Yurs Experience '

3-16-mo. pdc

'~IRGILB. SR . .~~~ ·

;f(IPPEI!-·YEIZ
fJOT ALl. PAID

Vinyl and Aluminum

992-6011

NEW LISTING - 12'x60',
1972 mobile home, central
air ,
wood
burning
freestanding fireplace,
range,
refrigerator,
freezer and other furnitUre ,
lit!
underpinning
and
blocks. 1n exce lelnt con diton. $8,900.00.

wor so FAST.

Sfi)P

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

ALL. RloH-rl

I'VE PAID VOUI':.
ii:AN,OM OEMAND!
/oJOW 6ET' OFF

REYNOUl$_
ELECI:RIC.M010R
-

All types roofing, tvfters
and downspouts. All types
home m1intenence - new
and repair. Storm doors
and windows. All work
guaranteed . 20 years
Free
experience .
estimates; Call : Tom ·
Hoskins, 949-2:160.
3·7·1 mo .

M(11)fR N THRf~ hcocironm hC'III~f'
lull hmNnt'nt ftr f'r lnrf' full y
rnrpf"lrci rPntra f1o•r f'nl"lo~rrl
~' '" porc h lnro terl on b ' · ncr f'~
on CR ?H orprox 3 m1 I C'~ frnrn
!Jnnnr II, rntcrt''ltt&gt;rl rontnr t
I orry Wolf f' Q.:Jq 7836 Wf&gt;f'~ rn rf,
onrl oftf'r 5 PYe ninq s
__ _f:!eal Estate for Sale
SIX ROOM hn u ~P on 1 nrrt" on S\X ACRFS I room hnll'r&gt; 3
hlnr k lor rocrrl $15 ()()(l Cnll
M&lt;'rlronm~ lnrrerl ai r hC"a l a ir
Q4Q 'J737 or 9HS 47741
cC1ncliti nner. l oca ted in Chl's tet
VI lla ge $35 000 Qf15 :1S6:1 crr
TWn STORY J hPdrnnrn lrn mF"
Wl5 4'?1 1
hnu"t' 1n M1ddl o rort QQ? :la'&gt;7
WANTfD TO huy_ fn ur hPd toorn
r11rol hotnf' th crt will m~PI
f' rn HA sto nrl arrls 14? 30-!4

MOTCRS,I~:

CAPTAIN EASY

':_: liA~I' A DO:ZEN BOAT TRIP~ LATeR. ... THe
&amp;OLP F!l:OM IIAlCYON'S ~TRONI&gt; ROOM HA~
} ' 8E:E:N PUT A6HORE ON THe De!&gt;ERT ~LAND!

!

SMIIH

-rtrr F... l:itrm'ilii'

f'nmrrC1~

IUA I fS TATF I none; P1 rrrhn ~ r nnrl
rr l~ncmrf" :tO yr&gt;or tp1111 ~ VA
Nn mon e y down (f'1 1tQr hlco
vf&gt;IN n nsl f=HA As lnw o~ :1
r('r CC'rll fio wn {non v r'tPra n~)
ln~ lonrl M o rtgog ~ Cn
'!? F
Stnt p A th f'n~ t-14 5Q? :1051

••
,.

220 E. Mlln StrHI,
. Pomeroy, 0.
C.119f2-7113

. Elberfeldsof
and Kimball Music
of Athens
Phone 992-2581
or99H082
.3-11-1 mo.

.....,.t

1

7 :oo-cross-Wits 'J ; · Newlywea c.,ame 6,13; . Porter
Wagon~r a; Ni!ws 10; Love, A'meri can Style 15;
Dick Cavett 20; Big Green Magazine 33.
7:3!f-Dot!y 3; Muppet Show 8. The Judge 10; That's
Hollywood 13; Wild Kingdom 15; Edward The King
17 ; MacNeii ·Lahrer Report 20,33.
8 :00-Disney Animated Cele~rallon 3,15, Mackenzles
of Paradise Cove 6,13 : Jeffersons 8, 10; Great
Performances 20,33.
8:30-Miss Winslow &amp; Son B. 10; NHL Hockey 17.
9:00-Wheels 3, 15; Charlie's Angels 6, 13; Dear
Oetectleve B. 10; Scarlet Letter 20.33.
10 :00-Vegas 6.13; Kaz B,10 ; Black Man 's Land 33 ;
News 20.
10;.30-Footsteps 20 .
11 :00-News 3,B,10,13,15; Hogan's Heroes 17 ; Tu •.
nabout 20; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 33.
•
11 :3()-Johnny Carson 3,15 ; Pollce Woman 6, 13; Rocktord Flies 8; ABC News 33; Movie "A Fine Mod·
ness" 10; Movie "One Day Before Tomorrow'' 17
12:40--Mannlx ~.13; Kolak B; 1 :DO-Tomorrow 3.
1:30-Movle "Red Snow" 17 ; 1.50-News 13.
3:1G-News 17.
3:30-Movle " Pajama Party" 17.

100 PRIZES. FIRST
PRIZ E 4· WHEEL DRIVE

For Sale
W~

TELEVISION
VIEWING

"

Business Services

SPRING SALE

I 'r&gt;P ol it j('ll
./l)fl

1

'
Middleport-Pmm•J·oy, 0. Wt•&lt;in••s. lrty !\pril4 J07fl
,

WEDNESDAY , APRIL4,1979

Mark Your Calendar!
Come Register at

11!/fl

l~_:Ti,eOailv Sentinel.
D~CKTRACY

For Best Results Use O
Sentinel Classifieds

WANT AD
CHARGES

For Fiscal Yur Ending

..

'

12-The Daily Sentinel, Middl."port-Pomeroy , 0 ., Wednesday, April4, 1~79

6fT OUT
OF HERE!

,I THINK BETTER
STOP HERE AN' REST
A SPELL

�I
-~-------

---

. - --·

14- The Dail y St•rltirwl. Midtllt•nori -Pnlllt'rll~ . 0 .. Wl·dn('S4I;:y. ":" \l'ri 14. 107!1

•

atzon raging..at highest lev.e l

Equal yield formula .decision slated in June
lly Klii! ElU K MIIJ.ER
Assudah&gt;d

Press

Writt•r

distrids.

Ohio's " equal yield". school

wlx:rt.&gt; eal'h sadc w.rts upheld

desli tute at'l' providing bare·

l'dr.bre:a.:l! !)Uggested

he

state etttorncy gtmeral reprc-

·
ar~ empowered by the
legislature to go further that
the state demands.
"The only solid thing we
have to go on are the
colleclive thoughts of the
legislature," Beave r said
contendi~g lhe ' 'thoroughami
efficient" language. in the
constitution ·represents "a
direction for the.Ohlo General
Assembly to undertake as. a

I

duty ."
CO LUMBUS, Ohio lAP )'- formula , whi ch reward s ih part and overruled in part. bones educati on . The does not think it would be senting the defendants, conHe said the rights provided
ltmaybea monthorperhaps S&lt;·hool distr icts for increased
The trial court had upheld buildings are fallin~ apart. " J&gt;Ossible to have uniform tended lhe,right of local disfor in the constitution are imas late as June before Ohio 's local tax elforts, has created two contenti ons by the
He asserted : " We ca lutot fin andal aid in all of Ohio 's tricls to go bt!yond state replemented by the legislature
Supreme Court rules on the some
problems
the Cincinnati bOard -· that equal toler;ile a constitution that 611i school distr icts under quireme nls . has
been
by
means of stqtutes. "The
constt'lu,.tonal't1 Y 0f '"
a stale deprives ch'ildren of these Jll'e,&lt;-~-"nt laws.
. other
u•e s1a1e .s lawmakers are atl~rnpling to ·yield · violates
1
sanet'toned bY t'Ourts m
.
rights
do not .necessarily flow
districts the· same
equal Y1·eld sc h00 1 at'd resolve - the court case 1cunslttutiona h requirement
h
· · type of · "You would havet•v abolt'sh stales ·
fr om the words. In the
notwithstanding. .
offr . a " l oroug
and ed ucation" as th ose in the right to vole (in local
He said, however, 'that
formula, attorneys say.
constitution," he said. .
tctent"
syst•
rn
of
schools,
districts
made
"wealthy"
by
.
elec
tt
'
ons)
to
make
something
Oh'
· ld ts
· unique
. 1argue
The cour t hear d fma
10 •s equa 1 yte
The Cincinnati Board of
Meanwhile, a . Senate
ments ' in the major case F.ducation cha llenged the andh that II violates pupils' industry and commerce, statewide," the chief justice because it is the first to put
education subcommittee
Tuesday and took them under formula in a case filed .April r•g ~~ under I the con- which gives them a larger commented.
into its . statutes a system
reswnes hearings Thursday
advisement . Earlier, the 5 1976 10
·
st•tulton's equa protection local tax base.
David H. Beaver, a5sistant under which · local distr.icts
on
a proposal .to distribute
jurists received more than 40
'
•
Halllillon County clause·
lit this point, Chief Justice
·
Common
Pleas
Court.
II
The
appeals
court
sided
Frank
D.
Celebrezze
inlerrecord $3.5 billion .in aid to ·
boxes
of
transcript s con tends . " equal y 1·eld ' '
r-----------~-----_:---,-..:_-,-------.:.--, · local
school dislxicts in the
rep rese nt'1ng a 1rta
· 1 th
with
the
local
board
on
the
rupted
IJo.
y
d's
testimony
to
at
results
in
unlawful
d1·s·
1979-1981
bienniwn.
_
· · tn
· Ci ncmna
·
t't crimi nati on
Spa nne d a year
t' n
the equal protection argwnent , inquire if the plaintiffs
As
currently
drafted,
its ·
·a d t
· 0f
but agreed with the believe voters in a local
·~al
n wo more,
years
apdistribution
of
b1'll1'ons
of
chief
sponsor,
Sen.
Marcus
A.
k
defendants that equal yield district should not have the
"
s
wor
·
·
dollars
in
aid
to
the
state's
2.1
Roberto,
D·Ravenna,
said,
it
· State Jawmak ers, curren tl Y million school pupils.
does not violate the ''through right to vote higher levies to
utilizes
a
"modified
equal
By
lbe
Assoelat~
Press
wri ting a new school aid bill,
Defendants are '"e state and efficient" language.
provide programs in ex~ss
yield" formula desig~d to
. COLO SHUTDOWN - Nuclear Regulatory Conunission officials were cautiously
are
vita
lly
con
ed
bo
t
u•
Both
sides
appealed
to
the
of
the minimwn required by
·the
cern
a
u
Board
of
Educatt'on,
Departcorrect
deficiencies in 'llie
optimistie that the Three Mlle Island reactor was approaching a cold shutdown phase but
I't'
h' h
slate's highest court.
the state.
1 tga ,.ton
w
tc
ment
of
Education,
and
other
they
stopped
$hort
of
saying
aU
danger
had
passed.
·
'
present
formula . It is
· a state officials.
Cincinnati attorney John
Uoyd replied he eould not
COn~
1· va bly co uld requtre
•&lt;
.
impossible
to IJ'y to write a
"There
is
still
a
potential
that
some
1098
of
cooling
mechanism
might
still
cause
the
core
· th
Lloyd, representing the answer Ute question. " I ho~
maJ·or overhaul 10
e
way
·
They
deny
Ute
local
school
""
bill
in
anticipation
of what \be
to
become
uncovered,"
NRCoperaUons
chief
Harold
Denton
said
Tuesclay.
h 1
plaintiffs, told the Supreme . we can reach the place in.Utis
Oht'o funds 1·ts 616
courts will rule , he said.
·
ll.;iiiiiiiii~ii,i;,.;;;;.~sc;;;;;oo:_ board's allegations and claun
·
After a week of laboring under Intense pressure, atomic experts finally rid a persistent
Qlurt that in some cases, state where we can find out/'
One problem caused by
gas bubble that endangered the dlsabled reactor.
Ladies
equal yield allows for reason- "the districts that are he said.
able differences in Jllpil aid,
equal yield has been that it
WiUt the bubble gme, workers were free to concentrate on lowering nuclear core
For That Specia 1
based on the right of the
results in varying amounts of
temperaiures below the boiling point. ·
'
·
•
legislature to allow it and the i----~----~---~--------~-state dollars within the
willingness of school district
minimwn 20 local property
EV.ACUATION .-Three Mile Island evacuees trickled honie; cabnfid by word of the
bubble's removal.
·
voters to provide ~r pupil
tal&lt; mills required to
aid ·above minimwn levels
participate in the school
State government and many OOalni!SSell repm-ted tbat employee absenteeism was
required by the state.
. foundation program.
dropping. Customers returned to stores and most schools reopened.
·
Slop by
Clyde Barnett
baugll, Virginia; Bertha
. Both sides reiterated argulbis is because property
Officials had estimated anywhere from 811,000 to 250,0011 persons had fled the radiation
Bullard, Florida, and five
ments they advan~ during
varies in value from district
·Utreat, built was not known how many had returned.
Clyde Barnett, 84, Route !, grandchildren.
the !rial in Hamilton County
to district,. the amount of
Langsville,
died Tuesday at
Funeral services will be
Common Pleas Court and
money a mill generate,s
GOVERNOR'S ADVICE- Pennsylvania Gov. Dick Tbor~burgh continued to advise
Veterans Memolial Hospital. held at 3 p.m. Saturday at the
118 E. Main
their appeals to Ohio's 1st
varies according to the value
Utat pregnant women and young children stay out of the live-roUe radius around the
Mr. Barnett was born .April Ewing Funeral Horne with
Pomeroy, 0 .
crippled plant.
Dis~ict Cow-l of Appeals,
of the. pro~rty, and the
5, 1891 at Pliny, W. Va., a son burial to be In Pine Grove
amotmt of state' education
He also urged that schools In the area stay shut.
ol the late James Allen and Cemetery. Friends·may caU
dollars varies according to
"Maybe the worst Is over," the governor said. But he added cautiously, "I wiU continue
Elizabeth Sowards Barnett. at the funeral borne from 2 to
the amount of the local tax.
to take every precautionary method that is warranted by the facts."
He was •lllso pl'I!Ceded in 4and 7 to 9 p.m. Friday.
Roberto's bill equalizes the
death by a bnlther.
Sur.
FOOD SAFETY- AU food produced in more than 1,100 plants around the power plant
state grants.
vivors include his wife, EdiUt
were declared safe by the Food and Drug Administration.
Another llroblem has been
Nevllle Barnett, five
Though small traces of radloacilve indlne had been found in a milk and water sample
that some school districts get
daughters, · Mrs. Emezella
Herman Werry
around the plant last week, officials said there was no food contamination threat.
.
less state aid during one
Goodall, Michlgan ; Mrs.
Herman J. (Boob) Werry, L
year than
Uteydue
did In
Elwanda McKinney, Paint 82, 113 Pleasant Ridge,
· school
the previous
year,
to
Pleasant; Mrs. Virgipia Mae Pomeroy, died Wednesday
fluctuations in local tax
Athey, Lan~e ; Mrs. Judy morning
at Veterans ·
effortc
.
K. Parsons, Inez, Ky.; and Memorial Hospital.
R6berto's bill will be
l'tfrs. Ruth .Ann Loveday, Bid- He was a son ol the late
changed to prohibit this from
well ; four S&lt;li!S, Kennit C., Jacob ··and · Kathryn Durst
happening through an
Michigan; Wtlliam Richard Werry. He was preceded in
anticipated "hold harmless"
Bidwell; Kenneth N' death by his wife, Emma Ginamendment, Senate
•
Maysville, Ky.; Harold E.; ther Werry, two brothers and
President Oliver Ocasek, 0CLEVELAND · (AP) . Wilmington ; two sisters
sister.
llkron, has said.
·
Catholic
high
schools
will
be
Mrs. Edith ~yburn, Point
Surviving are two sons, ·open todily but officials said
WASHING~ON (AP ) Pleasant, and Mrs. Galena Charles M. and Henry ·J.,
parents should Wle discretion Beef prices, already setting lime, officials said beef
Smith,,
Virginia;
two
prices might rise an
both of Pomeroy; nine grand- ahout sending their children
' :Wr ~~·~ ~ 11 a:v of ~Ttaking Our Ea.srer Jlourers last aJI year /D'f1R.
records, wUI rise about 20 additional 14 percent this
. brothers, Harold, Napa, children,
Two defendants were glveri
13 great- to class.
Bec~I'St! t~·e Sena chtm m 50tnf'thing u.nfor8tuable. SJ, '\oOI.Ir /rie7ld.! u.nd
jail sentences when they all'
percent this year, probably year.
Calif. ; and Wilford B.,. grandchildren and several
· (~1m rl\uo". 'r be_~nil'lg ft!SI qnothcr bouquet.They ill be geuing the
Members of the Cleveland reaching their· highest point
Charleston, W. Va., and nieces and nephews.
On a brighter note, Agricul- peared In the court of MidBunny ~unch. A {loH 't'T garden enclosed [ry a channing p~ekrt {l!nct
· ' High
School and Academy
Toppe~ 01/ uuh, tr hat rLV! , an &amp;uur bunn~· !
several' grandchildren and
Mr. Werry was a Hfe mem- Lay Teachers Association this summer, the Agricultw-e lure officials also reported dleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
great grandchildren ..
Tuesday that that retaU, pork Tuesday nlghl ..
ber of. the· Pomeroy Fire went ai strike Tuesday. The Department estimates.
Spring
Blossoms
The department said prices "will decline, but the
Homer S. ~1, 39, New
·.
Mr. Barnett was a · retired Department.
235 association members Tuesday Ute rise in beef extent of their decline will be , Haven, was fined $225 and
river captain and pilot.
Funeral services will ·be wanted Uteir starting pay
For Someone
Funeral servi""" wiD be held all p.m. S.lurday at the rallied from $8,755 to $9,800. prices "probably will. peak limited by the redu~ beef coots and was given a three
day jail sentence on a charge
sometime
during
the supply.'.'
held at 2 p.m. Friday at the Ewing Funeral Home with
The Roman Catholic swruner," when an increase
They predicted Utat 1979 of driving while Intoxicated.
You Love
Rawlings-Coats Funeral the Rev. W. H. Perrin ofDiocel!f ol Cleveland offered in P«k and poultry SUP.plies pork prices "are expected to Roy Neff,!8, Pomeroy was
Home with the Rev. Amos ficiating. Burial will be In the to
raise starting salaries to is expected to help stem the average just above " the 1978 given a 10 day jail se~tence
Tillis officiating. Burial will Minersville Hiil Cemetery.
$9,500.
. rise.
price of $1.44 a pound.
on a charge of lrepasslng at
• Lilies
be In Meigs 16emory Gar. In Ueu ol flowers friends are
The Catholic educators
But·that
still
means
the
aUThe
steady
increase
in
beef
the
Meigs Juruor High School.
dens.
Friends
may
caD
at
the
invited to 'give dQnations to teach a total of 8,488 students
• Mums
cut
heel
price
used
by
econoprices
funeral
hoine
fr001
2
to
4
and
7
ts.
blained
by
analySts
Forfeiting
bonds In the
the Pomeroy Emergency at 10 high schools iri Lake,
•Azaleas
mists probably wUI he about on an abundance of beef In court were Frank C. Clar.k,
to 9 p.m. Thursday.
Squad.
Friends
may
call
at
Cuyahoga, Lorain and $2.18 a pound by year's end - 19~6 and 1977. A record ' 42.6 Middleport, $100 poSted on a
•Corsages
the funeral home:
Sununit cotmties.
•Cut Flower
compared to last year'.s million
cattle
were charge ol possession of
Wilbur
L.
Frecter
record
average
of
$1.82
a
slaughtered
in
·1976,
sending
marijuana; Buddy McKin:
.\rrangemenls
Wilbur L. Frecker, 55, 264
prices
ARSON
CHARGED
pound.
for
a
poand
of
choice
ney, 62, Middleport, $50,
George Cooper
Park
Road,
Painesville,
died
DAYTON,
Ohio
(AP
)
The
all-cut
average,
$1.62
a
lleef
down
from
$1.55
in
'
1975
disorderly
~nner; Rebecca
George Carl Cooper, 33, Rt. 2,
Permanent Memorial
at his residence Tuesday.
Roderick
Trice,
20,
has
been
pound
in
February
1978,
had
to
an
average
$1.48
in
1976.
C.
Mc?aruel,
39, Pomeroy,
Racine,
died
Tuesday
at
his
Flowers.
He was a son ol the late residence
charged with aggravated soared to $2.14 a pound this
The large supplies of cattle $25, failure to yteld the right
David and Ella Frecker. He
Mr. Cooper was preceded arson in Monday's Jire at the ,February, when the, average meant smaller profits lor of way ; otmer Roy Cook, 53,
was preceded in death by in death by two brothers, Dayton Safety Building.
price was 32.3 percent higher ranchers :... and they Letart, W. Va., $350, tlriving
three brothers.
Pollee
said
Trice
set
fire
to
than
the same monUt in 1978 responded by cutting back on while intoxicated ; Burton
Clement Eugene Cooper and
his
padded
cell
with
a
book
of
.
and
4.4
percent ahove the the size of their herds. By DeWees, Dexter, $50, disorl
Surviving
his Kenneth Eugene Cooper.
1.:
wife,Hilda
Fischerare
Frecker,
matches.
Twenty-five
people.
average
price
in January of 1978, only 39.5 million catUe derly manner.
He was a member pf Salem
.
a son, Larry Freckel', Community Clrurch, West are still hospitalized with this year.
were slaughtered, compared
· · ,
Mrs. Millard Van Meter
Painesville; a brother, Roy of Colwnbia.
Injuries suffered in the blaze,
The latest estimate of a 20 ill the 42.6 million killed in
·
Phooe.!l92-2039
·
101 Butternut Ave.
Pomeroy, four sisters,
per~nt hlke in beef prices for 1976. This year, government
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mr. Cooper is survived by officials said today .
. or992-5721 ·
·
Pomeroy,O.
Mrs.Olin (Mabel) Bailey
1979 outdistances Agriculture officials etimate t!tat only
Admitted·..Jon
Burns,
.his
wife,
Clarinda
Will
We. a~ept all major credit cards and we wire flowers
Euclid·, Mrs. . 'da Holter,'
Department estimates 36.2 million cattle will be Cheshire; Doq • Rea,
Cooper, one son, George
· everywhere.
'
·
"
released in January. At that slaughtered - the lowest Pomeroy; Sharon Wilt, MidDOLLAR ROSE
Cooper, Jr., one daughter,
level since 1973.
LONDON
(AP)
-1beU.
S.
dleport; MIUord Leonard,
Mf!i.:.Arlene ABh- Christina Cooper, both ,at
Cattlemen currently are Ree&lt;!'lville; Melvin Forester,
home, his parents, Clement dollar rose sllghUy on mosl
rebuilding the herds, but Utat Racme; Leota Cooper,
and ._Leota Matlack Cooper; European currency markets
means keeping animals for Syracuse; Ray Tryall, Danny
Syracuse, three sisters, this morning, while gold
breeding that otlierwise Kuhn, Cheshire; Everett
Karen Hood and Janet Com- prices. eased.
might
go to market. ' Experts Shuler, Middleport; James
In
Tokyo,
brisk
demand
pson, both' of Mason, and
say
it
will
take several years Meadows, Portland.
from
on
Importers
pushed
the
Irene Shaw of Point Pleasant.
to
build
the
herds back up to
dollar
ahead
in
the
morning
Discharged-Eugene Finch,
Funeral services wiD be
previ~us sizes.
Gladys Morgan.
held Friday at I p.m. at to 216.75 yen, but it slipped
Ewiug Funeral Home. Burial back to close at 214.425,
will be In Tuppers Plains . Tuesday's closing price. ·
Eastern Avenue • Gallipolis, Ohio
The British p&lt;&gt;und rose In
Christian Church Cemetery.
By The Associated Press
Friends may call at the London to $2.06800, compared
March-like
weather is here
with
a
closing
rate
Tuesday
of
Funeral Home Thursday
..
,
$2.06525. .
• in April.
from 6 to 9 p.m.
·
A low pressure center in
southwestern Tennessee was
Racine, Don of Pomeroy,
Sarah Diddle
Waid of Kentucky, and Ralph forecast to move into central
Sarah Elizabeth Roush Did- of Vinton, Oh., four Ohio by tonight, bringing
dle, 78, Rt. 2, Racine, died daughters, Adria Nelson, more rain to the state with a
Tuesday at her residence.
Marblehead, Oh., Marilyn threat of some snow in \he
Mrs. Diddle was the Powell, Carolyn Adams, and northwestern counUes.
Thunderstorms were
daughter of the late Waid and Ubby Fisher all of Racine, 24
Mary Sayre Roush. She was grandchildren, 11 great gran- forecast W develop in the
al~ preceded in death by two
dchildren, several nieces and southeast by afternoon,
ahead of the front.
brothers, two sisters and twin nephews.
As the low pressure center
daughters.
Funeral services will be
· Mrs. Diddle was a member held Friday at · 3 p.m: at moves northeastward, the
of the Antiquity Baptist Chur- Ewing chapel wiUt the Re:vs. National Weather ·Service
• '!14•
ch. She was a fonner mem- Earl Shnuler and Don Walker says colder air will spread
•••
•••
the
state.,
ber of Pomeroy Daughters of officiating. Burial will be in across
• ·.~~
•·~~ America·.
Letart Falls Cemetery.
· Temperatures are expected
• • • She Is survived by her Friends may caU at the to drop Into.the upper 20s !ali!
funeral home lifter 7 p.m. tonight in the' northeast and
• ••••
• • husband, Oval Piddle, live today.
.
Into the 30s elsewhere.
sons, Berrlt&gt;"&lt;l · and Tom of
· Under clear skies Tuesday
night, temperatures dropped
You shoUld see our new
· well into the 30. over most of
selection
of ufe curtains Auth.;&gt;·iz..t CATALOG
r"~'!'!!~----•1
the state . Readl~gs leveled :
rudy' mada
sheers
1
SALES MERCHANT
' Photos are
off early today as clouds ·
dro peries - cottogo ooll venetian 1h1des - window
11:'
began Ill move In ahead.of the
modes. We'll gladly help
rorever"
oncomlngllow pressure .
you pick out what you need
•P&lt;&gt;rlraits
sy•tem.
far your home .
1M E. Main St. .
•Weddings
Just
before
daybreak,
tern&gt;1'r'T\'Io.
'
• Special Occasions
peratures ranged from the
P~~y,o ..
()WNJ~RAnDIV '
• Pussporls
mid 30s In northern Ohlo to
HOME
· ·.Jock &amp; Judy Wiltlom,
~ Se.tior Porlrai.Js
the mid 408 in the eKixeme
F.URNISHINGS
. Open: Mon.lhru Wed. 9-5,
iloutheast,
·
Thur. f .J2, Frldor 9-5, Sol.
1ST FLOOR
I ~IUW
Mternoon
temperatures :
•
9-2.
.
.
(
Bob
HQeflich)
were
expected
to
range
from
-,.-- • -v-- . .~ .
. - . - - - -..,...
S.tW.t'IIM G,.,;,.tM
109 High St.
around 40 In riorthwestern
.
or Ycw.r ,.,Ofl~• Batlt
"Wh•r• only the best'food ls ·~ood •nough"
Pomerov
Ohio to near !10 in the extreme
7
suutheast.

a

._Nuclear~at-a-glance

' ByGREGORYNOKF.S
.
As:;ociated Press Writer
WASiflNG TON '( AP) + Wholesale prices increased another
I percent in March, the same as in February as inflation conUnued to rage at the highest level in moret...;n lour years, the
.
government said today.
Thj! Labor Department said wholesale prices which eventually are refl~ed in ltf!lric"" that conswners PaY, rose at a
seasonally adJusted annual rate of 14.1 ~rcent during the first
three months of 1979, It was the largest quarterly advance since the fourth quarter o( 1974.
But.a hint 'of some future relief-from rising food prices was
contained in the March pri ce repori. Conswner food pric-es
were up 1.2 percent, the smallest increase this year, and prices
of crude !~tuffs rose just 0.2 percent, down sharply from the
3.8 percent mcrease the month before
, The Labor Departrqent said whole.;,le prices were higher in
. March lor beef and veal, which were up shnrply for the fourth

and shoes .
tl
· Overall prices of non-food gocKls rose 0.9 pcrt'mt , lht• smnt•
as in February.
·
The price report showed inflation continuing at well above 10
percent, a rate that has the Carter administration seart:hing
for ways to stren0'1hen its battered wage and price guidcli lll'

EASTER '
OUTFIT

1

Area Deaths

enttne

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY, OHIO

NO. 248

prices.
However , council spokesman Joe Carter said Wednesday
at least one of the companies has justified its prices, it appears
a second may be a pie to justify them, and the other two are still
providing information to the government.
He said "more than eight" additional companies have
been informed they ate in probably non-compliance with the
guidelines, meaning they &lt;;o uld be publicly nwned if they can't
convince .their government they are within the guidelines.
But Carter indicated .it may be at least a couple of weeks
before any company is named, if any are named at all. "We
hi.ve not at this time told anybody they are in noncompliance," he said;
The voluntary price guidelihes call for companies to hold
price increases in 1979 to one-half of one percent below the
average price increases for the past two years.

•

y

at

r

VOL. .NO. XXIX

~ompa nies would be made public if.they couldn 't justify their
'l

today, hul " news briefing on the program was called off Wedne.,lay with no newdate set.
A spokesman for Kahn didn 't give any reason for the
program.
change
in plans, but it ap~ared Kahn didn 't want his
The administration is expected soon to announ••e plans for a
announcements
to compete for attention · with President
conswner watch on price,'Increases at the local ·Jevel to supCarll'r 's energy speech tonight.
plement government efforts to restrain inflation.
The LabOr Department's ,wholesale prireJeport is now of,. ;: - Meanwhile, officials of the Council ,on Wage and Price
ficially called the Producer Priee Index, wlilcll ine~sur"" ' Stability, the agency headed by Kahn, said they have found
prices of goods at three levels before they are sold to con- that. &amp;Orne co!llpanie~ thought.· to be violating the
administration's price guideliDes may be ih compliance after
sillners and industrial users .
Prices in March were up I percent for all three levels: crude all.
Kahn has recently denounced companies he said were
goods, meaning before processing; Intermediate goods,
. meaninJ! Hfl.':r :mmr nrOC'P~c;inw :-tnrl f'inic: hNI ,l!Mfi&lt;' whif"h ~u·p violating the guidelines, warning that the names of four

•

(USPS 14S-960)

for sHle to tlw ('on~mner .
qv·l·rall wholesale prit·cs hat! risen l~y 1.3 pcn.·pnt in .J(:I nuafy
lx•fon• dipping slightly to une perecnt in F'cbruary and March.
CHrh-r's chi ef anti-inflation strategist, Allred F.. Kahn , had
hcL·n1sl'hedul ed to annount&gt;e the consumer watch on prices

· l't•&lt;Jd\'

consecutive month, ami for t'J.!J.!~-: home healing nil. g;nmlinP

•

THURSDAY, APRIL 5, 1979

·,

·15 CENTS

f

TWO'S COMPANY
DRESS SHOP

----:----,-----------------,----,--_J

Cleveland ·

teachers
on strike

• .Long after Easter,
re711ember the flowers you

a

.

Beef prices
•
•
contznue rzse

DISPLAY PLAT M.AP - L-R Fred W. Crow, Ill,
proBeC!lting attorney. and project director of the CETA
Plat Map project, Dan Nease, workers supe~. and

Nationwise~DUSKY, Ohio

(AP) - Residents in a !o.block
waterfront area of northwest Sandusky were allowed
to return to their homes Wednesday night alter it was
determined that gas spewing from a burning waste pile
no longer pojied a threat. Sandu8ky Fire Chief Owen
Reed said smoke from the fire at the Vulcan Matrlals
.CO. -foumry conl@lne!l sulfur, 'ammmia and other
gases, but not lil·follic levels, And he said tha-threat of
u exp!OIIlon at the plant was ellmlnated when
firefighters cut through the floor of the plant to allow
gases to vetllate.

ev-a.

·STEAK HOUSE

·HEARTY HOME

AWAY FROM HOME.

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

.WE DO IT RIGHT.
OR.WE DON'T DO IT."

'

.

I

\

"'

\

'

.....

.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Some 2,500 nonteaching employees of Colwnbuo )llbllc school system
will be asked by their union to stay off the job starting
AprU 23. Larry De Cresce, executive director of the
Columbus School Employees Association, said the
request will be made unless the school board states
that It has enough mooey to meet payrolls for tile pay
period starting AprU 21. lbe union represents
secretaries, custodians, bus and truck drivers, food
service workers, maintenance employees and school
aides.

..

CLEVELAND (AP) - John White Jr:, 17, wiU be
treated as an adult on charges that he .and his 14-y'!Brold sister' MicheDe hired another teenager tQ slay their
lather. Cuyahoga County Juvenile Court Judge John F.
Corrll!an Issued a ruling Wednesday ordering the youth
tried as an adult. His slater faces delinquency charges
In juvenlle court proceedings. Corrigan also ordered
White hound over to the county grand jury for further
acUon after earlier hearing a report that the youth had ~
a nonnaliQ and was competent to stand trial.

JSears 1·

COLUMBUS Oliio (AP) - Legislation that would
make elnployme'nt discrimination on the basis of age
unlawful ·has been passed by the House .. The bill,
·spoll80red by Rep.' Troy Lee James, !).Cleveland, was
approved 85-7 · pn Wednesday. ~ndet. the measure,
employers who lire or fall to hire someone between the
ages of 40.Snd 70 because.of that person's age are liable
for civUacUons. The bill was sent to the Senate.
.

Th Ph......, Place

ELBERFELDS IN ·POMEROY'

.

"'.

.

'•

...

.

.

The report indicated that
Pol Pot and other leaders fled
24 miles south to the gemmining town .of Pa lin, six
mcles from the border. The
broadcast said Pailin was
capt,ured Tuesday, as Thai
military sources reported
then, and that Pol Pot, his

"cliQue" and some of thejr
troops fled across the border
into Thailan!l.
Ta Sanh is about 50 miles
west of Battambang; the
largest city In western Cam·
bodia , According to the ·
report tOday, Pol Pot and his
Khmer Rouge · forces

established a huge base
there . ,
Between March 'l7 and
Marcll"30, the VNA.SPK accoUnt said, Heng Samrin's
forces "killed, woanded or
captured 1,000 enemy troops
and seized thousands of ammunition depots.
·

Four persons hijured
in Rt. 160 ac·c ident

.

.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
The . size of
instructional grants available to students whO attend
diploma schools of nursing In Ohio would be increased
under legislation on Ita way to the Selllite. The House
approved the measure 93-0 on Wednesday. Sponsored
by Rep. Frederick H. Deering, 0-Monroeville, the btu
would make diploma 1111rsing school students eligible
for the larger grants now given only ID students who
attend private institutions of higher educaUon. Those
' grants are generally !50 percent bigger, but the
amounts are based iln Ute gros5·income of the student's
famlly the number of dependent children in the family
and ~ type of educaUonal institution attended.

•

.

.

·'

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
By the .Assoclated Press
,Saturday
through
Monday: Partly cloudy and
cool Saturday. Mild with
. rain paoslble Sunday and
Monday. Highs mid 40. to
mid 50s Saturday and mid
$91 to mtd,.IIOs Sunday and
Monday. 'Lows mid 2fs to
low 30. early Saturday ud
mid 301. to low 4GI early
Monday.

Map_work
progress
reviewed ..

Plat maps for section one
and section two of Bedford
Towlishlp for 1979 have been
;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: completed · according to
county
Low in the upper 20s to low Wesley Buehl,
30s. Mostly · cloudy Friday. engineer and Fred W. Crolf,
High In the mid to upper 40s. Ill , prosecuting attorney and
The chance of precipitation is project director.
There are 38 total maps in
40 percent tonighi and 20
Bedford
Township, whi ch
percent Friday.
36
sectio ns plus
include
1RIIPJIRRI!RMRAL"ftiiiiiW'.."XA«r~A¥-M!
Burlingh-am and Darwiil. •
BOMB EXPLODED
CE TA employes hav e
JERUSALEM iAP)- A
compl eted six months
terrorist bomb exploded
research on six townships
today near a bus stop in •
..._and are now ready to proceed
Arab East Jeru sa lem , ·
in making maps of other
wounding four Arabs and
townships .
two Jc\\·s, none seriously ,
Letart Township will be the
authorities repohed.
next
goal of the Plat Map .
Four persons claimed Erwin auto, and l'ersa Lewis. a west bound vehicle driven
The . blast occurred on
project.
injury following a two-vehicle 8. Bidwell, a pa ssenger in the by Huth Mlller, 65, Gallipolis.
. Sallahadln Street. a main
Dan Nease, workers
accident
on SR 160, at Click vehicle, claimed injury
Both vehicles incurred ·supervisor,
thoroughfare ncar the
who has a degree
mil epo st 12. inve stigated but were not immediately moderate damage. Taylor In mapping
Ucro,l' s Gate entrance to
from Ohio
Wedn esday by the Gallia- treated.
was cited on a charge of
Jerusalem's Old City.
Uni
versity
and
Bowling
Meigs Post, Highway Patrol.
Both vehicles incurred impro~r backing.
Asso c iated . Pre ss
Green
University,
anticipates
Called to the scene at 9:05 · severe damage. No citation
An auto operated by Julia that project personnel wiU
phot~graph c r
Rina
p.r.1
..
officers
report
that
a
was
Issued.
/\
.
Will, 24, Pomeroy . In- now be able to produce ap-.
Castclnuovo, who "':as at
south
bound
auto
operated
by
Officers
investigated
a
curred
severe damage during proximately four to five maps
the scene a lew ·minutes
Ronald
Click,
37,
Gallipolis,
second
two-\'chictc
collision
a
two-vehicle
accident in- per week until Bedford
alter the 4 p. m. explosion,
attempted
to
pass
a
vehicle
Wednesday
on
Georges
Creek
vcstigated
this
morning by Township Is completed.
sa id the sidewalk . was
driven
by
Jerry
Erwin,24,
Hd.,
nine-tenths
of
a
mil.c
cast
the
Gallla-Meigs
Post.
stained ll'llh blood and shup
The CETA administrator
Bidwell,
jlll&gt;t
as
the
Erwin
of
Bulaville-Porter
Rd
..
at
Called
to
the
scene
at 7: 40 evaluated the project and
windows were broken.
auto started a left turn. The I :55 p.m·.
·
·a.m .. officers report that a seemed plea sed with the
A large Ioree of pollee
vehicles
sideswiped.
The
patrol
reports
an
auto
.
south bound auto operated by progress . being made. The
n1oved In quickly to block
Both
drivers
and
two
operated
by
Patrick
Taylor,
Daniel K. Wallace. 40, stock: original CETA grant will
off the street and searchJor
passengers,
Michael
Lawson,
18,
Gallipolis.
backed
from
a
.port
, 0 .. had slowed in traffic expire Sept. 30 of this year.
other explosives.
19, ViRion. a passenger in the private drive into th e path of to turn left off of SR 7 at th e
Buehl, who has been ofJ:tiQ,.~,~~%.~---- RAIIIIl
·
junction of Little Kyger Rd.
fering
technical advise and
Will's vehicle failed to stop
assista·nce
and Crow, Inand struck the WaUac.c auto
dicated
there
Is a great need
ln the rear.
'
for
ibis
project
since the last
There wa s moderate
.·· .
county
tax
maps
were updamage to th e Wallace
dated
in
1928,
but
should
·
\'Chide. Will was cited on a been updated yearly.-have
1\dc h ~.r gc o£ [tssurcd clear
dltlonal tax properties are
distance.
being picked up on tax
records which wVl increase
Meigs County's .Oix-1ecelpts.
EmergeDCy Runs
The emergency unit of the
Middleport Emergency
Hensley chosen
Squad was called to the Blue
Tartan .at I :37 p.m. WedneSday for Cloyd Brookover . The Olive Township
who receive&lt;l a head Trustees hav~ named Henry
laceration in a fall. He was Hensley to fill a vacancy on
treated at the scene . the board of trustees created
· At8:09p.m. theunitwentto by the resignation of Chester
the Goodwin residence on Wells Monday.
Wells resigned to accept an
Hudson St. for a 16-month-&lt;&gt;ld
appointment·
by the Meigs
Infant who 'was running a
County
Democrat
Central
high tem~rature . The child
Committee
as
a
Meigs
County
wa$ taken to Veteran•
Commissioner.
·
Memorial Hospital.
He replaced James Roush
who resigned to take out of
Special board meeting
county. employment.
The Eastern Local School
'&gt;
District Board of Education
· will meet In special. session at
10 a.m. Saturday at the high
Bloodmobile
school.
Tlie meeting is called
Stewart,
Melinda
Mankin,
Benetta
Deeter,
Lori
Hudson
CHESTER SAFETY PATROL - These are the
specifically
to
Interview
ca
nThe
bloodmobile
will he at the
and Kevin Fi~k . Third row,! to r, Tim Showalter, Todd
members of _the safety · patrol at Chester .Elementary
Pomeroy
Elementary
School
didates
fo~
·
t
he
superinSchool ,this year. They are, fi rst row, left to right: Jerry · · Tripp, Joh~ Tripp, John Edward'f, Mitchell Holley; Tim
April
16,
.from
I,
30
p.m.
to
tendent's
pooition
and
no
Lawrence, Kevin Venoy, Sherry Ritchie , and Deloris
St. Clair, Billy Bobo, John M11ler, Jimmv Schaekel, Max
5:30
p.m.
All
types
of
blood
other
business
will
oo
con.
Mams.
These
students
will
tr~vel
!o
Washington,
D.C.
for
Eichinger, Renee Buckley, and Brenda Bentz. Second
are needed.
dueled :
their good work · this year .
.. row, 1 to r. Jennifer ~;rover, Sandra John:;un, Lindo.~

BANGKOK, Tbtiland (liP)
-Former Cambodian Pre·,
mier Pol Pot and some of
his followers Oed across the
border to Thailand after their
remote guerrilla headquarters and their last stronghold
at Pailln were overrun, the
Vietnam News Agency said
today.
.
.
There was no independent
confirmation of the report
broadcast from Hanoi three
months alter invading Vietnamese troops .drove Pol
Pot's pro-Chinese government from Phnom Penh, the
Cambodian capital, and installed a pro-Vietnamese
regime of Cambodian Communists headed by President
Heng Samrin.
Since then, Cambodian arrhy troops still loyal to Pol
Pot and his associates of the
Khmer Rouge, have been
waging a guerr!IIB war against the Vietnamese and their
Cambodian allies.
Quoting SPK, the new Cambodian government's official
news agency, the Vietnamese
agency said the headquarters
of the "disbanded Pol Pot army" in Ta S!lnh, about sl•·
miles from the Thai border,
was overrun last week.

ATMORE, AJa , (.AP) - Condemned murderer
John Louis Evans Ifl, seeking to end "a heU on Earth
In prison," awaiting electrocuUon tonight while his
mother pleaded with the governor and the U. S.
&amp;lpreme Court ID save him. In Washlnglon, attorneys
!or the mother, Betty Evans of Beaumont; ~s.
planned (to ask a U. S. Supreme Court jusill:e,
apparently Justice WUUam Rehnquist, ·to stay the
electrocution pending a hearing on Evans' mental
cm\peteilce.

Ohio gets
March-like
conditions ·

Former premier Pot
flees across border
•

COVINGTON, Ky. (AP) - Robert Stephens,.
Kentucky's attorney general, said he will go to the
state Supreme Court If necessary to .oppose the state
paying some $12.5 million In claims stemming from the
Beverly Hills SUpper Club fire dlsaater. The Southgate,
Ky. fire In May of 1977 took the lives of !55 and Injured
50 more. Most of the 250 claims filed with the Keqtticky
Board of Claims came from vicUms and their
survivors.

POMEROY
F 'OWER SHQp

=~~~~~~~~~~~S~~~~i~~~Po~m~e~roy;

map, Pat Thoma and Wesley Buehl; back, Roger
Michaels, Fred W. Crow ,III, and Dan Nease. Absent were
Naomi Brinker, CETA grants administrator, and Cheryl
Burdette.

lfJ'

Mayor's Court

-

CETA PLAT MAP WORKERS- CETA Plat Map
workers are front,l-r, JeMy Craig, Gloria Manuel, Janet
Korn, Jim Hudson, who is inking section three of the plat

Wesley Buehl, county engineer, who hllll been offering
technical advice and assistance, display one of the plat
maps that has been completed.

.'

.

.,.

.

.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="815">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11464">
                <text>04. April</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="50484">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="50483">
              <text>April 4, 1979</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="123">
      <name>barnett</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="376">
      <name>cooper</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1330">
      <name>diddle</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2496">
      <name>frecker</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="100">
      <name>roush</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1446">
      <name>werry</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
