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Hospital News
,.j.

Saturday Admi ssionS·•
Bertha Johnson, nacine.
Saturday Discharges ..
Latna Trout, Guy Neigler,
Madeline Chafin, Karen Rye,
.ilnna
Duffy,
Herman
Warner.,
Sunday Admissions ..
-Dennis Riffle , Pomeroy;
Birdie Conger, De'ter; Hazel
Zerkle, Acrozille; Dianna
Parks, Columbus ; George
Stanley, Albany.
Sunday Discharges-None .

...

Holzer Medical Center
Discharges, AprU 12
James ·Bishop, Clarence
Boster, Virginia Brooks, Nlila
Brumfield and daughter,
RF.X SHF.NF.FIF.I ,n OF THF. Roard of SuJit&gt;rvi, ors of
Gilbert Buzzard, Margaret
the Meigs Soil and Water ron"rvation n iAtrirt i' pirtured
Carpenter, Dian Chaney,
with the new district Uni-nriil
Roberta Cossin, Gretha
DIUon, Diane Doblns, Joha
Endicott, Emma Graham,
Timothy Hardyman, James
Hinkley, Robert Hood, Jule Jones,
Rosa Jones, Okey.
row
spacing
direct
drill,
A Mbore Uni-DriU is now
Justice,
· Joan Langsford,
suitable
for
grass,
brassicas
available for rental from the
Geraldine
Lightfoot, John
and
cereal
crops.
It
is
of
• Meigs Soil and Water Con·
Lloyd;
Joan
Lyons, Gamet
servt!tlon District to Meigs robust construction and has
Moore;
Ryan
Morgan,
Daniel
an output of up.to 5 acres per
County landowners.
Morrow,
Loren
Mountjoy,
A mlniii)iun· rental fee of hour ..
The no·tiliage sysiem EdWard Myers, Kelley Pope,
f30 is charged when the
eliminates
Uie standard Kent Price, Michael Rich·
rental agreement Is signed In
tillage
operations
and mond, Daniel ShaUer,
tbe District office on the
reduces
the
potential
loss
of 'Darlene Shover, Hilda Smith,
second floor of the Farmers
Anna.bel Stanley, Rosemarie
soil and water.
Bank building.
Storm,
·Ruth Tedrow, Susan
An additional fee of $6 per ASK TO WED
Williams,
Stacey Wilson,
acre for all over five acres
Joyce
Wisecup.
will be charged alter the
A marriage license was
Discharges, Aprtll3
renter completes his seeding. issued to Paul Thomas
William
Armstrong,
Names of prospective users Imboden, 26, Minersville, and
Maxine
·
Barlow,
Sophia
should be submitted now by Virginia . Gale Davison, 23,
Boggs,
Palrlcia
Brady,
calling
992-6647
for Syracuse.
Dorothy Cane, I Melvin
scheduling of the Uni-Drill
Church,
Debra Cremeens and
according to geographic
MEET TONIGHT
son,
Valerie
Davis, Ruby
location In the county to avoid
The Eastern Athletic Fitzpatrick, Carol GUbert,
excess highway travel.
Booste.r s Will meet this
The renter assumes full evening at 7:30 p.m. at the Ross Harding, Kenny !son,
Norma James and son, Karen
llabillty and responsibility lor high school.
Johnson,
Robert Keaton,
damages to the Uni·Drill,
Janet
Lambert,
Minor Leach,
•
beyond normal wear and
SEEKS DIVORCE
Paul
Lewis,
Mami
Uoyd,
tear, from the time he obtains
In Meigs Coonty Common Howard Montgomery,
It until the next ·renter claimS Pleas Court Deborah L.
Melissa Morgan, • Louisa
it.
Hawley,.Pomeroy,. filed suit · Mullins, Linda Neal, Jamie
The Uni·DriU is a narrow lor divorce against Bruce
Nelson, Richard Perdue,
'"t •••
Hawley, Micjdleport.
Michael Saxon, William
Shumate, A. Norris Simms,
t •• t • •
Rebecca
Stover
and
daughter, Shane Williams,
Donna Wooten.
·
Pomeroy, 0.
Discharges, Apr1Jil4 'f
•
Carol Barnett, enm er
Middleport, Q, • . Bias, Debra Creech, Anthony
Faught, Karen Franl: and
• son, Stephanie 6oble, MoUy
EVERY TUESDAY IN APRIL IS
• G~imm, Joyce King and
• daughter, Donald : Kirk,
FREE SUNDAE DAy
, Jamie Lambert, Linda Leach
.
• and son, Vietor Leifheit,
BUY ONE SUNDAE
• Pearl Lemley, Susan
auD
Luckadoo, John M~owan,
·
· ""
· • ,Rosetta Minnis, James
Parsons, Sherman Parsons,
Rex ·Patterson, Marvin
Radabaugh, Lawrence Reed,

Equipment is avallable

• t t ••• t t t

t t t ...

McCLURE$
3 IN ONE

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DAIRY ISlf .

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r-Ar~aoeathSl ~ _;

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Vt•tt.•raiL" Hospilal

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GO ONE FREE ·
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• t •• t e •• t t t t . t tee • •

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THE

FIRSJ
CHEVY

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Qf THE 8O'S
WILL. BE HER

APRIL 191!!

Our

MOTOR CO,

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Personal Notes .

ELBERFELD$

probed;

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SJAH.
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BIDDitho

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. Until this littl~ slugger makes the big
time, you may need .some extra finari. cial security. Our highest interest savings accounts can help! Find out! · ·

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FaJ•rliers,

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POMEROY, OHIO

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$40,000 Maximum Insurance For Eac,h Depositor
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation ·
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(USPS 145-96Q)

VOL NO. XXIX NO. 2

~~:~~e:.::~~tS:r::~

.ELBEIFELDS IN~ ~~E~Y .

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.enttne

MIODLEPORT·POMEROY, OHIO

TUESDAY, APRIL17, 1979

15 CENTS

No ·action taken
on cruiser
bid
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Hoofs and paws

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Calendar

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ELIZABETHSTEWART , . ilursirig . home following
1.
••
Elizabeth Rebecca (Uzzle) three year Illness.
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1
,.
stewart, 90, west Colwnbla,
~ts, WIJeman ;was , 11} ,
MONDAY
f
died Sunday at Veterans restden! of the , ~VIII~_I~l': · "'MJOPI.F:PORT BUSINEss
Memorial
Hospital, arealorthepastleVeity't.o ·
.
,
p
and formerly resided at and Profel'Simal Women s
;eroy. born F b 11 ·1889 Route 1 Rutland.
Club, 7:30p.m. MOf!daY atthe "
at w~;'~lwnbiae ~the lat~
She w'u born Feb. 'll, 1889 Columbia Gas Co. oftlce in ·;
Da id
d Harrlett Lewis In Mel&amp;• County, a dauabter Middleport. Membership :
Va~ Ma~.
of the !ale John and ElMla OO!Il1JIIttee to h~ve the pro- r'
She was preceded 1Q deatb · .Snton Nluholson.
She · ~ram. ,
. ,.
by htt husband, John Mack married Ollie Wiseman 1fho
nJEsDAY
'j.
. stewart, who died In 1937. · . Pl:•'*ed her In deatb· &lt;II
EASTERN BAND Boosters , ·;
She was a member of West April 20, 19'11, In March, 1909. · Tuesday, 7:30 p. m. ·to make
Colwnbla United Methodist
SurviVIng ar .
pia~ for spr!nlf banquet. . ~
Church.
.
Roy M. of H
ld
d Harrisonvllle senior ·•
• Survivors Include . a John D. of Sprlnilfle e' an CiUzenil Tuesday I p.m. at •
daughter, · M~s. t~·: Mary, WUlla M
· of ~th · ~ .town hall. Physical filne~s ~
Bleaslng, Point Ple11S811t; one · surv 1v1ng
ar .
. will lie featured .under tbe ..
son, Paul, of W~st Colwnbla; grandchildren, 13 n~~~r dlreetion of Mary • Geyer... :
four grandchildren, five :;-an~hlldren ·~:.. and Open to any adult In the com- !
grept- grandchll~en, ami ·~•ce;.ll;aberparenta\ munity.
:!
WEDNESDAY
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NEGI.F:CI'ED DOG _:_, Vivian and Don May, new . two great - great • grand- and ·~us band• abe was :
children.
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Humane Agents, with neglected animal.
Services will be at 1:30 preceded In · deatb by ~- ,POMEROY LODGE 164, F. :
· p.m., . 'fuesday at West brothers and a slltei'.
. ahd A . .M. special ~Ung, •
Colwnbia United Methodist
F'uMral service~ will .be Wednesday, 7:30 _p.m. wl!h =
Church by tbe Rev. Joe held at I p.m. Wednaaday at work In the entered aJII!ren· ::
Hatcher.
\he Rutland tllllted Metbodlat Uce . degree. · All master. ;
· Buiial will be at Graham C!lurch with tbe Jlev. Alap ·, masooslnvited..
~
BY MARION C. CRAWFORD
"-etery near New Haven Blackwood olflclalinK.
M I C ty H ne Society
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Burial,_
will Fbelend&amp;
In Yjhlte
e gs oun
uma
Friends ' may .call at tbe· . Cern
may Ollk
call
MAGNOLIA CLUB
:!:
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MII)DJ.RPORT- The photo accmpanylng this article.was Foglesong Funeral Home, at ~clt~chranytime alter
The
Magnolia
Club
will
:
' taken during the week and that poor creature is a story In It· Mason, fro.m 2-4 p.m. and 7-9 ~.m,· Tue·.... v until lime Of2 meet 'l'huraday, April 19, at :::
self." The small miniature white Poodle was found In a con·
t da
Y
. . .,
ditlon that just doesn, show in the picture. Jt was soaken-wet, p.m. 0 y,
. service~. The famlly will 7:30,p.m.attheh0ineo1Doris •·
dirty and so matted that it could hardly walk.
.
receive friends at tbe church Grueser. Margaret Roae will :
'be tbe assisting hostess, Cora :
I~ eyes ivere swollen half shut and it was so tlred1 hungry
LOVIN ABRALEY
from :i to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
and scared that four of us were hopping around In our
Mrs. Lovlna Castor Braley, Tuesday.
The Walker Beegle will give devGIIons ~·
workshop trying to do something for it.
.
95, formerly of Middleport, Funeral Home, Rutland, Ia In and Gorgla Watson will be In ::
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chirge of the program.
While 1 got food and water, Don tried to cut some. of the died Mmday morning at tbe charge of arra1111,ements.
matted hair off the Shivering animal with Viv reassunng the Providence Nuralng Hmne In
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animal with affectionate petting. Joyce Miller was buildlng.up Cincinnati.
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CARL E. FRANCIS
,
MEETING ruESDAY
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a warm fire In the building and ·putting dry· clean beddmg
Mrs. Braley, wu bern Oct.
Carl E. Francll, 86,' "1 · Group n of the Middleport •
do
28,1883,at Dyesvllle. She had Windsor Court,
Point First Unli"ed Presbyterian •
w:'•iJ bet that poor thin~ never had so much attention in its made her home for tbe past , Pleasant; died ·SUnday at Cllurcb will meet at7:30 p.m. "
several years at ihe ·Mt. .Holzer Medical Center. . . Tuelday at the home of Mrs. t
entire life.
The dog was brought to the.attention of our handsome new Healthy Chrlltian Home In
Mr. Francll waa born May Dwl8hl Wallace with Mrs. ~
Humane Agent Don May and his attractive wife Viv and they, Cincinnati. Mrs: Btlley was 29, 1913,it Welt Columbia !be Robert Woodward BB CO• ••
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in turn, brought It out for Jwce and me to gel a look at, After a member ol lbe Middleport .son o1 tbe late ~~~~ P. and hoateaa.
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getting the photo and making the dog a Utile more com- · Church of Chrllt. Sbe had · May Hagerman Francll.
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lortsble, the Mays too~ the dog home with them for the night. ·served as a yeoman In tbe
Mr. Francll
a retired
•
- Next morning they bathed and groomed the lltUe girland I ·United States Navy during ·employe of the Goollyear Tire
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found a new home for her ... one where she will be projlerly World ·War·l and had been a. and Rubber Co., Apple Grove
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rared for, and where she will be clipped periodically lthis Is school ·teacher In ot)lo and : ·plant. !'e was a member of, .
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not a luxury, but a necessity with Poodles). She willalsb be Florida lor a number of. Trinity United Methodllt spayed, which is something we always ask of folks who take years.
Church and
Disabled
our animals ..•
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. Mrs. Brilley is survived by American Veterans. ' of
Don and Vivian May have pets of their owil, but have a step~ughler, Mrs. C. L. Huntington. He wu an army
enough love for animals they asked to help us and for the past (Edythe'k) Bralefe Re~es, veteran of WvedorldbyW~_n.rit
two weeks have become two of the most valuable working , $andus y; a , n ce,· rs.
He llsurvl
.... · e,
members of the Hunjane Society.
: ~esley Ogden, Franklin, and Mar.aaret, SturlleOn Francll,
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They have made several runs in the van picking up a nephew. She wu preceded one Clauflhtar, Phyllll Young,
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animals and rll!llvenng them to new homes. non has made a: 1n death by . ber waband, Poln~ J?leuant, two listen,
.
few trips down to tbe veterinarian and spent one day in COD· Lewill Cash Bmy,
.
Min
Marie
Francis,
·
. · ChatJes
fereri~e with Drs. Don Notter and Allen Boster in Gallipolis
Burial .Will beR ~l ~IllS Po~, and Mrs
1 1~n, one
concernl~animals.
· Cemetery at . u an .
Mason, Chares
Further, he 'took time out of his busy schedule to assist a Arrangements are being brother, Marlon Francis, .
.
woman who has ~ ·quite a few" animals- inaking arrangemen· . completed at the Rawling$- M I d dIe p or t ' . I h r e e .
ts for the proper food to be delivered to her home, and for tbe · Coats Funeral Home In grandchildren and one areal ·
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necessary shots to be administered by a veterinarian -this not , Middleport.
grandchll~. .
will be
....
being a usual routine because as most of you readers know we ·
Fanera ~1ces
do not cannot concern ourselves with privately oWned
IDA E. WISEMAN
held Tueic!Ay at 2 p.m. at tbe
POMEROY
animal;.
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Mrs . .Ida· E. Wlsemin, 90, Crow.Jiusaell· Funeral Home
business iS" with the homeless animals which are plen· 6&amp;3
Courtland
Drive, with the. Rev. TaUy ·Hanna
tiful but there are occasions when the best interestS are con•. Springfield, Ohio, dled olfictatlng. Burial will be In
"Youi'Chevy Deater"
slde~ed.
· .
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Sunday at a Springfield Klrkla,~ Mem«&lt;aa Gardena.
•
992 2126
Wear.e most happy to .be able tq help folks out wlio need
Frlenda may t~v lfrt· tbe
l&gt;omeroy,O.
help. Anyway, Don works on the river and when he is at work,
Funeral HQIIII "'l'"" om 4 .
Open eve. till: oo p.m.
Viv will ll!ke over the runs for liS' with John Moore, Joyce
to .S. and 7 to 9.
Miller and I assisting her whenever slie yells for help,.
·
Vlv ahd Don May, there are many himdreils of.
humanitarians ir(Meigs County who sincerely apPreciate your
c
active interest in the homeless animals. Right, folks•
This past week, Joyce and I put 15 dog and cat banks out in
Mr --;;nd Mrs J.ee Davidson
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local hosiness establishments, so if you see one when o~t s~op- and · clllldren' r1 J.ondon,
ping and would like to help us out, do make a contnbutlom-, It Rngland are here for a visit
will be appreciated ... ev~ry nickel and dime co~nts.
~th her parents, Mr. and
Other events mvol~mg your Humane Soct~Y, hav~ been Mrs. Rmerson Jones. They
helping people place ammals that have strayed mto their yar- ...
ct to be here for the re· '
ds. We didn't include these doiens and .doze~ of animals with :nder of the week and then
the ftgure of 3l)llaced last month !)tat we physically handled.
will stop in New Jersey
Sometimes . we · place animals for people without ever before returnlngtol.ondon.
seeing the animal -bee~~· they ca)l, de~~rihe the animal
Second u. David and Mrs.
they ha~e. I check my little blaCk book. a,nd. ll!Ye them Swisher spen't several days
names of folks who want such an animal and its as s1mple as. here with his parents, Mr.
Just in, a big shipment ,
that.
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and Mrs. William · Swisher,
We also took a Point Pleasant wantmg a n!ce Indoor cat- and her parents, Mr. al)d
of Wrangler SJ)ortswear :
Shorts · · 'Blouses ·
we p.utthe two ~~ether.
.
Mrs. Jei-ry de Laval of near
Another activity that.kept the "working members" busy Athens. They also visited In
iris - Tank Tops ·
•this Jiast week was preparing for our Easter Bawar which r 0 1u m bus wlth Mrs .
·
Tops · Jog
· took place Friday and Saturday. I even made some nice fat· -Swisher's father, Jack CUrtis,
Sport Shorts, Jeans and
tening candy and I'm on the Weight Watchers Diet, so you who is a patient at University
Slacks.
Excel.lent
know how .dedlcated I am to animals. Wow, tslk about being Hosplllll.
lues: Big selection of
tempted!
·
Mr. and Mrs. Mike' Mason
les and colors.
The worst thing that has happened lately concerning of Columbus were Raster
animals was our investigation and confiscation of several guests of her parents, Mr.
small dogs and one cat being left in arl'oul·building in freezing and Mrs. John Fultz.
·
weather with no heat, no windows, no wafer, no food and no one
living in the nearby house for months.
,Massage pailor8
. It was reported that rio one had been to check on the dogs
Our, terry J
in 10 days. We guess that either the animals were just plain wifil&gt;e
separates are
deserted or were ·stolen from ·various locations and placed into
right in. step
thebuilding.
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.• PITTSBURGH (AP) with lhe
Well, don't worry- each animal is now In a good home and . Allegheny county District
sportswear Crowd.
won'tbeneglectedagain.
.
. . . Attorney Bob Colville 'says
Comfort tailored '
The best thing that has happened to the Humane Soetety ts, he 'II ask the courts to
jogging short
of course, the desperately needed help of Oon and Vivian May empanel a grand jury to
with white ,
¢ Poineroy. tViv's mom works at our Thnft Shoppe every lnvestlgatethec!ty'&amp;boldand
binding comes
Thursday). ·
·
sometimes violent massage
in pastels of
Thanks to all.of you.who contributeil and purchased items parlor business.
.
yellow, green,
"Law enf ore em en I
at our bazaar, folks . You're wonderful.
white, blue,
melon. The
agencies here generally
multicqlor s1ripe
agree thai maasage parlon
· tank top has .a .
Joyce Swain and daughter,
Blrlb8, Aprll1t ·
are nothing m'.ore·than fronts
drawstring neck '
Ronald Swlshet, cbrlltopher
Mr. and Mrs. Fred for'. prostitution run by
and band bottom. •
Thomas, Paul W!Jllams II, Chapman, da,ug'hter, .' organized crlmtt"· Cplvllle
Both are made of ·
Georg~ .Woomer. , ·
Pomeroy. Mr. arld Mrs. Olen said thll weekenG .."·r· ·
•
machine
washable .!
·· ' Dillchareo, AprO li '
At least four homlcldu
Sa un de rs, son, Oak ·HDI. Mr.
\
polyester/ co-tton:~
Rose Brumfield, PauleUe and Mrs. Chester . stewart, h·ave been attributed to
· terry in sizes S-M-L. ·
Butcher, James DePue, daughter, Jackson.
behlnd-ihHcelies stru~P~
,\ I
Ma.rk Fowler, Rick Gill,
for cootrol ci the lo~ 'row ci .
i..., __
Clarenoe ltash, · Samuel
.
rriaslage parlora that operate
SHOBJ.
MEET WEDNESDAY
openly along Liberty Avenue
Larch, ioha Mercet, MeUssa
Mlller, Beverly Rok, Jeffery
Directors of the Pomeroy- only a block from the federal
'7.00
·
Siders, Mells,a Sisson, Middleport Lions Club will· · oourthooae. , ·
TANK TOP
Colville said he'll peUtloo
•
Marvella Smith,
Rita hold a special directors
Whltlatcll and son, Marvin' ·meeting ~~ noon Wednesday Common , Pleas Prealdent
·'7.00
Wilson{
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at 't)le Meigs Inn.
Judge Michael J . O'MaDey on
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lllrtbi, AprO_'~ ~,
Wednellday for a 23-member
1 Mr. an~ Mrs. .DaVjd Hems'RE~DY7):'.0.·:~EAR.~":- ~NI) FLOOR
grand jury, which could begin
,_
WIU.ING WORKERs ' .
its probe In May.
'", son, RacIne.. Mr. and
OPEN FRIDAY NIGHTS TILl
Mrs. Gary Lane, daughter,
The Willing Workers Class
Other Week Days Open .f :30 A.M. to 5 P.l'f\.
(lalllpolis. Mr:. and Mrs. of · Enterprise
United
'
BOARD MEETING,
Charles Slaughter, son, Methodist Chllfch wiD meet
Gallipolis. Mr. and Mrs. Thursday, ·April 19, at 7:!10
jimmy HUI, 'daughter, p.m. at tbe home of Mrs.
Vinton. Mr. and Mrs. Mlcbucl · Mnes Weeks. Mrs.Barbara.
WoO&lt;~- son •.)at kson.
W""ks wilt serve .as hostess. sc;hool
p.m. Tuesday
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library. at the hi&amp;b · . .~----..-

Middleport

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10 - The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday. April16, 1979

'

• BYKATIECROW
•"or the third time Pomeroy
Council Monday failed to
accept a bid for a police
cruiser.
Meeting in ·regular session
council received · two bids,
each totaling, $5,900. One was
from the Pomeroy Motor
Company and the olber from
Smith Nelson Motors. The
only difference in the bids
was Uie transfer of the radios

council regarding what they
would like council 'to do, go
ahead with the mini.park
,project or concentrate on
improving the streets.
Wehrung suggested that
since there is .$22,000 In the
reve~ue sharing furtl ~.000
be used for patching and
$1,36!i for the purchase of a
street compaclllr. He .also
AMY SOUDER
CARMAN CARPENTER
suggested that since the
street fund has a deficit of
$8,000 $4,000 be transferred
from the parking meter lund
FUNOS APPRO.VED
to the street department
1\ pre-application for
fund .
$432,000 Jn Housing and
•
Council voted to approve
Southern High School . Amy Is a member' of the Na- Urban Development ' funds
requests made by Wehrung.
juniors selected by the tiona! Honor Society, on the filed by Pomeroy Village for
The compactor wiU be
American Legion Auxiliacy yearbook staff, in the Drama extending. the ·sewage
p~rchased
from
Rish
of Racine Post 602 as delegate Club, and for the past two facilities in the Kerr's Run
E
q
u
i
p
m
e
n
I
C
o.,
and alternate to Buckeye years has been a cheerleader. sector of Pomeroy has· been.
Parkersburg
.
Girls' S!Pte are Carmen
She takes baUet classes, at- approved, Pomeroy Mayor
At the request of council,
Corpenter and Amy Souder .
tends St. Paul's Lutheran Clarence Andrews said· this
Steve
Harten bach ,
Delegate is Carmen, Church in Pomeroy, is In the morning.
meterman,
submitted his.
daughter of Mrs. Retty youth leUowship, and attends
The village Is ·now eligible
monthly
reports
.
Carpenter, Racine, and · the catechism classes.
to file a final application for
Baronick
said
his reports
late James Carpenter. She is
·Girls' State will be held at · the grant· and that must be
were
exceUent
and the
a member of the Student Capital Unversity, June 16-23. ftled with HUD by May lO,the .
parking
meter
receipts
were
Council at Southern, a varsity
The Girl State tea has been mayor reports.
up
since
Hartenbach
!;Iegan
cheerleader, and in the Pep set for May 20 at I p.m. and
his
em pI o y men t . "
Club.
will' be held at the Pomeroy
Hartenbach
is doing an
During her freshman and American Legion post home.
exceUent
job"
Baronick
sophomore years she was
Present for the tea will be
stated.
class treasurer and a French Mrs. Agnes Merritt, ftiri
Mayor Andrews reported
Club member. Carmen is now State director. Del~gates ,
he
has been notlfled that Aid
empjoy'ed part-time for the alternates and their parents
JUST ACTING - These Meigs High School juniors get preity physical as they
lD Dt)pressed Cities Fund now
Adams Drilling Co., Racine.
rehearse "So the Jury Was Hung," one of four one-act plays to be presented at the high
are requested to attend· the
has a zero balance therefore
Daughter of Mr. and Mrs. tea .
school •t 8 p.m. on May 4. The junior class will ·also present "Gross En~?unte~.of the Worthe village will not receive
Seventy-eight
persons
Larry Groggei, Portland.
st Kind" while seniors will present "What Seems to be the Problem? and Keep Your
any funding for work on
reported to an American Red
'
Halo Straight. " Pictured in rehearsal are juniors, bottom, Cliff Kennedy and Margo
Laurel Street.
Cross Bloodmobile at the
Martin ; standing, Ito r, Rhonda Snider, Carrie Bearhs and Ruth Ailing.
Mayor Andrews said he is
.
Pomeroy Riementsry School
very displeased with our
Monday afternoon consenators, congressman and
tributing 70 pints of blood. to
representative.
the Meigs Blood Program.
Meeting with council was
Forty-eight
persons
Paul Gerard, representing
replaced blood used by frienMeat prices are up, up and away. But where is tl\e
the Pomeroy Chamber of
ds and relatives. There were
Thirteen trne bills of indict- with the Ohio nepartment of and did not adjourn until i :30
dollar going? A major supermarket cham, which asked
Commerce,
regarding the ment were _returned by the J.iqauor Control.
J8lirst time donors .
p.m. were : Dale Warner,
not to be identified by name, provided a look at what
upcoming Big !lend Regatta. ApriltePm ofthe Mel~s Coun·
Becoming three-gallon
I~ addition to the four In· foreman, Rllen Johnson,
Gerard. had several points he ty Grand Jury accordcing· to &lt;hv1duals charged With traf· I "n" Napper , Calvin Lane,
donors were Donna David·
ha~~~ roeceillly bought a 15!1-Jlound hind.quarter of · smr,
discus~ wi~ncU.
Bllty-J:-!Ijiencer, Martha
a ·late report released today . f• rkmg m dntgs , the Meii(S Kathryn Richards, Sheila "
beef for $198.00. Jt sold the meat from that hind 9uarter
He stated there will be a by Prosecuting Attorney rounty PrMerotln~ Attorney Junes . Fr~nres kauff,
L. Beegle aod Marvin E.
for $238 96 a difference of $40.06. But the cham says
small parade on Thursday, Frederick w. rrow, m.
Taylor. Harlan Wehrung and
indicated that twp J••veniles Harlry J;ohnson and Tom
only 81 ~enis of the difference was profit "ryte r~sl went
June 21, with ~0 un1ts or less
Robert D. King becaiT)i,
The jUtY. returned the in· have. al~o been_charged With Holl&lt;•r.
for labor, rent, insurance taxes; et&lt;i.;
·
participating. On Saturday dirtments April IJ, but in· trafftcktn!( .
seven gaUon donors and
June 23, at II a.m. there will fo,nnation Wfl !-i not released
Richard Barton became a 16
1'~&lt;~ Prosecutor ~as made a
be a larger parade with until Monday.
gallon donor.
mot ton to the Metgs rounty
approximately 200 units
Serving as doctors .for the
Indicted were: Harry Juvrmle rourt, Judge f\nhert
TEHRAN, Iran tAP) - Iran's fledgling Islamic
oarticioatln~ and an antique
were
Dr.
I
..
n.
Telle
and
visit
Ro~er
Butrher, reeeiving F:. Burk, requesting thai he
republic may be heading for a new 'explosion as rival
(Continued on!Jage 10)·
Dr. E.
VaUanueva and
stolen pro[l('rty : Krnneth be permitted to iry t~e
. political groupa appear on a collision course·and the
Mrs. Ferndora Story, R.N.
Mitchell, gran~ theit; Terry Juvrnilos ~ s adults. Th"
nation's unemployed confront a provisional govern·
worked at the unit.
L Joluiaon, B&amp;E and arsoQ motion h•s not heen ntled
ment unable to supply jobs.
.
Appointment of Manning
The senior citizens were in
Donald K Guinther, arson : upon by the Judge.
.
The victory over Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavt
Webster
: as
honorary
charge
of
the
canteen.
Robert
·
Sharon
Kuhn
,
passing
bad
•
Upon
cont~rtlng
the
rlerk
and his.SupPorterS is little more than t\Yo months old.
chalrperao~ of the ·annual
rherks
;
,John
Ray
·
Frey,
of
th~
,Juvrmle
rourt,
Janet
Roush
was
in
charge
'of
But political differences, partially submerged dunng
aggravated robherv : Greg Morm, who has worked for Hike-Bike 'for persons with
loading and unloading the
the upheaval and euphoric a.ftermath of Ayatollah
unit.
Alien Roush , dntg abuse : thr .Juvrnl~e r.ourt for mor• mental retardation was
The Meigs County lloard of.Eiections office will have
Ruhollah Khomeini 's revolution , have emerged.
John
Wayne Fleming, per· than 15 years, she mdirated announced today by Hank
Clerical wor~ers included
special hours for the next lew weeks for the purpose of ac·
jury
·
William Kauff
thatloherknowledge, thists Cleland the chairperson of
Mary Nease, Jean Nease,
, cepting vote~ registrations.
aggr~vated
""'ault.
'
the firs.t request by a the year's campaign. ,
Juanita Sayre, Jean Sayre,
Resides being open from 9 ·a.m . to 4 p.m. Monday
Cl-EVELAND (AP) - Investigators say they
Many volunteers . are
Four
srrret
indirtmenl5
Prost'&lt;·ultn!(
Attorney that
Martha J.ou Beegle, Macel
through Friday ·and from 9 a.m. to 12 noon on Saturday,
believe two Cleveland policemen who were cHarged
Barton, Helen.ptcken8, J~yce
were issued, one individual · jllvrnil• offenders be treated contributing their time and
the board office located in the Pomeroy Masonic Temple,
with burglarizing a West Side factory last week were
effort In this drive. Their
Hoback, Erma Roush, Rmwas rharged with lraffi&lt;-king as adults.
.
will he open fro:O 6 "to 9 p.m. on Friday, April 20; Friday,
involved in other burglaries .
ma K. Clatworthy, Robert
in drugs and two rourits of
Srrymg on the jury wh•rh aupport is coming In many '
April27; Friday, May 4 and from 6 to 9 p.m: on May 5, the
The information came in documents filed in
Roush, · Vernon Nease and ' deadline for registration before the June 5 primary elecromplirity: . a . se&lt;·ond In- w&lt;•nt mto session at 9::10 n.m. forms from workers, donated
Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court to support a ·
food, safety, sanitation, prize
Beulah Strauss.
dividual Wm; ehar~crl with
tions.
requestJor search warrants for the homes of the two.
publlclty,!
The event . would
Members of the county's
trafficking
in
drugs,
a
third
i Special hours are specifically for voters of the F~.stern
not be the succeas It always II
The docwnents ~liege that the two patrolmen, George
retired senior volunteer
was rharged with three coun- ~dergarten
and Southern Local School District and Pomeroy V11lage
.without their support.
Readence, 37, and Jeffrey Barto, 36, also were obprogram working included
where primaries will be held.
:
.
· ts of traffirking in dntgs and ·
served breaking into alnrain Avenue store April4.
V9lunteers Include: Meigs
Alice Struble, Clarence
a fourth with traffirking.
Rmployes of the local board have registered semors at
Senior
High School - Unda
Struble, !':dna Kennedy,
The grand jury Issued
Meigs-High School and E. A. Wingett, board member, ha.s
Meigs Junior High
Eason;
Rthel Hatfield and Bernadine
A!'rrei indictments based
registered high school students at Southern I.ocal. A vtslt
School
Paull Swlaher and
Meier.
upon
evidencE"
obtain
ed
to register students at !':astern High School will be made
KUWAIT rAP ) - The Organization of Arab
PauiB, Horton·; Southern Donors by community in·
through the Rureau of
in
the
near
future
.
Petroleum Exporting Countries expelled Egypt from
Denise Riffle and Tracy
Criminal Invrsti~ation along
(Continued on pa~e 10)
its membership today and announced an, embargo on
McGraw, and Eastern Kindergarten regialratlon Marlene Hein and Tina
011 shipments to Egypt. Chairman Omar Allylontasser,
on the Southern Local School Cozart.
the Libyan minister of heavy industries, announced the
District will be held. from 9
decision at the end of a two-d.ay OAPEC meeting that
·Distribution of literature
a.m.
to noon and from I to 3 and' posters wiJi be handled
· was attended by : the other nine members of the
p.m. Friday at the kin· by the poster committee
orgAnization.
·
·
dergarten
room . next to composed of Lynn Anna,
·
Egypt walked out of lbe meeting Monday. The
' Southern Junior High SChool. Kathy Cleland, Nora Euon,
move conformed with a decision by the Arab League
Parents are to take lm· VIcki Metheny and Mrs.
last month to impose a political and economic boycott'"
munlzation records, ·proof of Charles Blake.
against Egypt in retaliation fo~ Prrsident Anwar
a skin test within the last six
Sadal's signing of a peace treaty wtth Israel.
The Girl Scouta, Boy Scout
months and the child's birth Troop 249, sheriff's departcertificate.
ment, The REACT Squad, tbe
A child must be five years Jaycees and Jaycee-ettes,
HAMILTON, Ohio rA.P) - The oimers of IM bur·
old by Sept. 30 for entrance Royal Crown Cola, John
ned-out Beverly Hills Supper Club have won a zoning
Into kindergarten or six years Tucker Modem Sanitation
change· in Union Township to build a members-only
· old by Sept. 30 to enter the and Powell's Super·Valu
club.
. :.
first grade.
. have ·already offered their .
The Butler County Zoning Commission voted 4~
As required by tbe com· assistance.
Monday with the fifth member absent, to rezone about
pulsory · immunization law,
The Meigs Association of . '
40 acres 'from general industrial to light industrial use .
section 330i.07 of. ·the Ohio Retarded Cltlzeni II one of
'The Beverly Hills Supper Club, in Southgate, Ky,,
Revised . Code, a child en· over 1,700 member unltl of
burned down May 28,1977, killing 16~ persons.
terlng tbe public school must The NaUon~l A.uociatlon for
have the D.P.T. series and Retarded Citizens, Ol'llinized
booster; the poUo series and lill950 to help America's six
booster; measles and Rubella million mentally retarded
. ·, HAMILTON Ol)io (AP) - "! count myS&lt;'if very
(German measles) V¥Cclne citizens .
thankful to God that we're still alive, "said Mrs. June
and a r~ent lkln test.
The Hike-Bike II one of
Hendel home safely after last week's tornado at .
be no regular several year·roun~ progr.amJ
There
Wlchi~ Falls Tex. in which 44 died. The Hendels had
kindergarten classes tbe day to support actlv!Ues for area
gone to Wichlts F~Us for a family funeral. "Our In·
of registration.
mentally retarded children
tentlons were that afternoon to go bowling an~ we were
and adults.
going to go to the mall and have the baby s ptcture
Additional Information
taken with theEaster bunny '" she said . .
'
FIINOS
JliSTRIHIJ'J'F.Il
may
be obtained by con·
'We would have been at the mal\, wh1ch was ~e of
Stat~
Auditor
Thomils
K
tactlng:
~ ~yh at~
tbe wo.rst hit places, or at the bowhng alley, whtch Is
Frr~uson rqported the April
6025
0( 992-34112.
right across from the mall and was also hit.. The only
&lt;lislrlbutlon of $8,270,451 . :!.~In
'
'
.
Regl~tration form~ are
·reason we weren 'I there and caught In the m1ddle of It
Durin~ this annuat event, whlrh carries the ,them~. "this land ln&lt;·Hi ' ~overnmenl fund
PROCLAMATION
SIGNED
Pomeroy
Mayor
Clarence
available at New York
•that time was because.mY dad had called and wanted
Andrews, seated, si~ned a prorlamatlon Friday, proclillming ls ym1r land" the Southeast•rn Ohio Boafll of Re~ltbrs will !'f· ,money to Ohio's Ill! counties Ciotblng store, MeiP c;ouirty
.
!IS to come down to the shop again . He rea!ly wanted to
rrr ,, wf't'k of community &lt;•rirnted j&gt;rogt'll~ and activities And 40ft cities and vuta~rs Boilrd of Mental Retardatlol'!,
"April!~ through 21st as private property Week in Pomen•y ~nd
see·-ulllnd see the baby ... Only my dad~ phone call
is urging ritizens to join the more ti\Rn 60!),000 reB !ln.- and drsi~ned to rail attentlm to ~ [l&lt;'r.on '!I in.alienablo tights to ievyin~ !oral income taxes.
The Kiddie Shoppe, Cleland
stopped us frorri being at the mall, or we .would have
own real property. Standln~ l·r, are H;mk rJeland and ,RMire
rNtltor-~tsSOf'int r.~.; ; nAlif'{l-Wirlr . in m11rkinJ! th•· j\hsf'rv~n~ ·•·
Meig• l:ounty's portion"'"' Realty and all local bigb
been hit then."
'l'&lt;•aforrl. mrmh&lt;r. of Southeastrm (Jhio Roard of R&lt;•aitors .
11?.500.
lichools.
..,
1
11

Delegates named

70 units

collected.

·Nationwise--..

Where has dollar gone??:? .

Republic hesds for, explpsion

s:

which Smith Nelson does not
do .
Following a motion to
accept the .bid of Pomeroy
Motor Co., Betty Baronick
and Rodney Karr voted yes ·
and Harold Brown abstained,
killing the vote since there
were only four ·members
present at the meeting.
At thai paint the Issue was ·
dropped . lt ·was agreed to
meet Sunday at I ,p.m. to
decide on the cruiser.
La r r y
We h r u n g ,
councilman, reviewed the
grantfor the mini-park which
was approved sometime ago.
The grant totals $19,000 .
Pomeroy must match that
amount Of money.
Wehrung told council it
was his opinion that the
money,(council 's share)
could be put to better use. He
was referring mainly to the
streets.
He stated the park is in a
flood area and people of the
village have voiced their
opinion to him that it would
not be used .
"I would like to see the
$19,000 we would have to
come up with for the park
used somewhere where it
would do more good for the
residents."Wehrung stated."
Brown stated people have
indicated that they would like
to see the park project
completed. He also stated
that residents have made the
statement if Syracuse,
Middleport and Mason can
have nice parks wby not
Pomeroy.
Wehrung commenteo that
he had no objection to
spending $2,000 to Improve
the !ennis courts,at the park
area as he felt they would be
used.
Baronick stated the streets
were the number one priority
along with cleaning up of the
town.
AI this point Mayor
Clarence Andrews suggested
the issue be put to the P!lOple.
Those for or against the park
are asked to Vllice opinions to

.

'

13 persons indicted

Webster
appointed

Special hours offered

.May have done other crimes

registration

·Egypi eXPe~led today

slated •;riday

.

Owners

win zoning change

·Ohioan feels .v ery thankful

will

.

v

'

�.
op,n1ons
•

'

,

'

IMffiO£'

COMMENTARY

The 29-year-&lt;&gt;ld, l!air said
that the second time around
might be a little different for
Past.qre .
·
Pastore knows that and is
ready for the next time.
time.
The 21-year-&lt;Jld Cincinnati , ' 'I'll throw my slider mqre .
Reds rookie right-hander Is I'll throw my curvehall for
simply reaching back and strik_e s," Pastore said.
.
trying to overpower hitters.
Pastore believes that it
So far, he's been successful won't be hard to continue his
with two saves In the early early season success which
stages of the baseball season. has kept him wllh the Reds.
"Now it's-to my advantage
" lie 's gelling everybody
out with his fastball," said that the hitters don't know
Doug Bair, lhe Reds bullpen · me," he said . ''So why should
· 'ace last baseball·Se8$0n when I .waste my best plteh when
be had 28 saves, third best in it's (the fastball) working?"·
Bai,r has spent hours lh~
the league.
spring talking to Pastore , and
"What he has to do now when he's pitching ahead of helpln~ him to make the
the hitters - is mix in adjustment from a Class AA
another pitch. He has to think starter in 1978 to a major
league relief pilcher this
a little bit," Bair said .
CINCiNNIITI 1111' ! Frank Pastore isn 'I fooling
•nyhody right now, nor is he
trying to as he fac-es National
l.eague hitters for the first

Donald F. Graff

Uganda, the bottom line
By Doo Graff

IN WASHINGTON
Angle and
Hot&gt;.ert Walters.
Ma1rH1;~

' .
It appears to be ·all over put the accounting In Ul(an~a
Guerrilla skirmishing may. drag on for a 111)1e. llul'if•we
are to believe reports from the Kampallj-Enlf!bbe 'hallie
·zone, .Jdi Amin has lost the war he provoked last October.
The Conqueror· of the British Empire, a title he beStowed
upon himself with characteristic modesty after o.,. o!Chis
many tiffs with Uganda's form~r colonial •ov.e rlord, has
been conquered by a ragtag army of neigh!Joring Tanzanians
his own rebellious countrymen.
·
II couldn't have happened to a more deserving d!"'Pot .
But if ldi Amin and his war are finished, the consequen~es
of this latest ugly little episode in black Africa 'a continuing
effort to progress from independence to' a stable political
order are not.
. .
·
.
'
Amin inay be thoroughly dete~led by, h~ ~rs in the
Organization of African Unity , the entity that would be the
conscience and set the stetndards for the new 'Africa. But ·
Tanzanian President Julius Nyerere has. not become the
hero of the day by accomplishing his overthrow. •
While the invasion of Uganda may· have been morally
and politically justified, it sets a precedent for the
overthrow of a country's leadership by outside forces .
That's enough to make several other high-handed 01\U
members, all too aware of running houses constructed to
some extent' of glass, extremely nervous.
Vganda 's future could also become as mllch of a problem
as lts recent past. The return of fanner President Milton
Obote, sent packing by Amin in a 1971 coup, would not be
unlversally popular in or out of Uganda ._Kenya for one has
made it clear that given the unfortunate choice, it would
prefer Amin to Obote as a neighbor.
·
Uganda's economy, crippled by falling coffee prices and
a boycott by the United States and other big buyers , is back
to the village barter level. And it is not alone. Victorious
Tanzania isn't so much better off.
The war by some estimates has been costing it the
equi~alent of a million dollars a da.y- and this in a country·
h.eav1ly dependent up.o.n forelgn a1d for economic necessitles. Reserves of fore1gn exchange are reported to have
dropped to something like $25 m.illion, about what
Tanzania has been spending for imports every J1lOnth. ·.
B~t there you have a basic problem with battlefield
solutions to differences among nations. Winners very often
also end up as losers.

"'"d

It's up to· us
By Martha Angle and Robert Walters
. WASHINGTON I NEAl- President Carter, confronting
h1s twm nemeses of energy and inflation, ha~ in effect
adopted the old Pogo line·: ·•we have met the enemy and he
is us.·•·
That is hardly a message of cheer and comfort, and
White House political advisers are acutely aware of the
fate traditionally reserved for the bearer of bad news. Yet
despite the risks, Ca rter has opted ·for bluntness.
By .every availab le measure of ·public opinion most
Amer~cans still perceive the energy crisis aS a fig~ent of
the _m! · co~pani~s· imagination - a sinister plot t~
mampulat~ supplies and drive up prices.
No_t so, l.he president Says. The Crisis " is real," aild it
consists of a dangerous dependence.on foreign oil that has
been brought about .by our own excesses arld wastefutriess.
There is no quick cure, and the medicine p'reScribed for
e-ventualamelioraton is bitte'r indeed: " Each one of us will
have to use Jess oil and pay more for it." ·
There is no point sugar-coating the pill. The only way this
nation_can '' 1..\Se-less oil' ' is to accept, however grUdg-ingly,
a d~olme' i'h oll~ present standard of living - a proposition
which runs d1rectly counter to every impulse of the
·
American character,
To " use les,s oil" means to drive smaller cars less often
at . sl~wer_ spe_eds. It means colder homes and public
bUIIdm_gs m winter, hotter ones in summer. It means, in
short. some real discomfort .
And f9r all of this, we will have to pay more - a lot more
- and do' so indefinitely . There Is noJight at the end o(the
tunnel, no halcyon day ahead when energy wlll again be
· cheap and plet'ltiful,
\Y·hich means. of courS;e,· that steadily rising fuel prices
~h•c~ hav~ contributed so h~av.il.Y to the overall surge in
onflat1on Will continue to dr1ve up the cost of living. If
mflabon IS gotng to be curbed in the months ahead the
restraint will have to come fr'om Something other than
energy prices.
~or most consumer~, soaring food prices are the most
evident and aggravating element of the curre'n t innation.
Vet here again, the Carter' adm'inistration offers little hope
of. immediate imprOvement and places at least part of the
blame for the problem directly on us and Our eating habits.
Alfred ·Kahn, Carter's inflation czar. l~st week told a
~ouse he~rmg tha~ most · of "this recent terribly painfulIncrease an food pnces has ~en the result of competitive
market forces , interference with whir.h could only make
matters worse."
aeef. prif;:es are soaring because demand far outstrips
supply: Fruit and vegetable prices have gone up because
bad weather limited supplle111. And consumers themselves
by dining out more often and eating more and more pr~
packa'ged "convenience" food, are driving up costs.
-The surest way to curb inflation, Kahn clearly suggested , IS to change our habits. Buy ham, not hamburger.
Brown bag it at lunch instead of eating at the neighborhood
fast food joint. Make our own stew instead of .buying the
already&lt;PI'epared kind .
.·
The ,n-!lf'g~, in other wordS, is mucb the same as ·
Carters stern energy prescription. The government didn't
cause, the inflation in food prices and the government
cannot cure it . Time and good weather will ameliorate the
supply problem to some e&gt;&lt;lenl, but the rest is largely up to
usO!J both energy, policy and Inflation, .Carter Is under ·
tremendous pressure to act In some flashy and dramatic
fashion. " Don't just stand tbere - do something!" is the
public clamor.
·
B~t the p~esident has no magic wand. And what he is
saymg to all of us, no matter how unwelcome his message
ls: ''Dosomething your~lves!"
'

Pastore isn't fooling

'

Rule
is
'every
man
a
king'
•

rommittPP, as well as one on member of the subconunittee
" It 's going to be Max 's
limitations of Contracted · J have a budget of$147,000.
major oversight activity,"
and f)elrf!alt'!l Authority.
"Of whieh I 'Ve used ab- said an aide · to the senator.
What will thoS&lt;' sub- solutely zero."
F.xartly what the submitttte thf" rule is ''every man rommittt&gt;t}s rlo?
A newcomer. to the Semite, ronuniltee will oversee was
a kinf!," nr, at lf&gt;&amp;~t . a subNo onr '*"'m.' quite certain, SimpRon said he probably lrft to be detennined.
rommillf'P rhainnan.
rxrept thai. lhPy will have will lL'r part of his budget to
J)pRpile the every-man - a That was thr practice hudf!elR whirh will allow the hire an aide to work on all kin!( philosophy, two of the 10
·during lhe yrars Sen. James Rrnior members to hire staif iRRues before the Judiciary J)pmocrRis on Judiciary
0 . F.astland, t&gt;-Miss. , was to look Into whatever they Committee.
don't have chairmanships.
· Sl&gt;n. Howell Heflin, J).Ala.,
Judiciary Conunittee chair- rRn jusllfy.
One is Sen. Robert C. Byrd
"I am thr ranking minority another Senate freshman, is of West VIrginia, who as
man , and il remains in effect
now that Sen. F.dward M. mrmhrr on the sub- rhairmRn of ihe jurispruden- Senate majority leader has
Chinese walls
as ee subcol11ll1ittee.
Kennedy, J).Mass. has· sur- rommltlee known
enough power to sati•fy his
Jurispmdrnre and Governrrrded F.astland.
I.auren Steele, a Heflin ~.eeds:
In Peking, a wallis just .;all again . :
That's why there is a mental Rrlations," said Sen. aidP, . said, 11 We're in the
The other is Sen, Palrick
After a heady hall year, the authorities have had enough
Jurispn1denre and r.overn- AIRn K. Simpson, R-Wyo. pr(l('t'ss of hirin~ the staff, l.eahy of Vern! on!.
of plain speaking in public. They have declared Democmenlal Re lations sub- "And as rankin~ authority right now." And a lawyer
"All the . good sub- racy Wall off limits to the amazingly candid wall posters
from Mobile , Ala . , is coinmittees were taken," throug)l which Chinese · everymen let Mch· otheJi, and a
Sl'heduled to become chief said a I.eahy aide. ''He didn't ' fascinated world know what they thought of the current
state of affairs.
ronnsel May 1.
, partirularly want to he chairThe surprising thing is not the curbing of the phenomeWhat will the su b- man ·or the penitentiaries
n~n , but that it was allowed to continue as long as it did .
rommlllredo'
subcOmmittee," which easily G1ven the opportunity of free expression a generation
"It's not really been could have been created if · reared under socialism seized it to speak o~t strongly tor
dedded what they're going to I.eahy had insisted.
even more freedom. The shock to the leadership must have
·
do yet," !Oiid Steele.
The · Vermont senator been great.
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
The posters clearly did serve a purpose. They provided
Sen . Ma~ llaucus is chair- already
heads subman of the subcommittee rommlltees
of
the an outlet for widespread pubhc discontent and an
with thr somewhat exotic Agrirult11re and Ap- opportunity for a pragmatic leadership to redress some
grt~vances. And by establishing communication between
. lille nf Limitations of ConChmese· and world public opinion, they facilitated China's
llt-flnll&lt;'ly A Hrart Attaek
thi,newRRpprr, P. ·0 . Rox lrRrlrd and Delegated propriations conunittees.
"We struck a deal," said rapid re-entry into the mainstream of world affairs.
Ry f.awrenrr F.. l.amb, M.J) 1551 , Radio City Slallon , New Authority.
The reimposition of controls on expression is regretti-·
the aide. In return for not inJ)F.AR J)R , I.AMR _ Is it York , NV 1001~.
sisting on a subcommittee of ble, but nowhere near so regressive as the suppression Of
possible to have a myocardial
II'• ,mportant ··that you
his fJWJI, loeahy was assigned the "h,umlred flowers" movement in the late 1950's.
infardion ~nd have pain only .haveR regular ev~luatloi/ of .
to three of !he major sub- Pe~lng s Democracy Wall is e&gt;&lt;pected to continue asj a
in · lhe shoulder, side of the your JT\edlrRI status and thRI
symbol of public expression, but with access to .it
ronunittees- Administrative VISible
carefully controlled.
'
nerk and arm' Also flutter- youro~tinuetotak~medirine
Prartlee and Procedure •. An·
' Less easily controlled, however, wiU be the attitudes bf
in!( and hard bj&gt;atinl( of the to ro~trol your hi~h blond
MIOIAF.I, WINNINGS
lilmsland Crimlnal Justice- millions of Chinese toward the development of their society
heart without rhest paih . It preRRu(t'. Many p&lt;'Ople who
Navy Airman Apprentice
and he got a big enough share · and the performance of its leaders. The habit Of crilic}ll
was so diagnosed but myhus- have had serious heart trou- Mirheal L. Winnings, son of of the rommlttee budget to thought, once encouraged, Is not so easily turned off..:... or
Harold M. and I.eona G. WinhRnd has doubt• that it waR a · blr are ahlr ' to live normal
~~~
.
'
hire three aides.
nings
of 139 Howard St., and
heRr! Rttark because in the lives with a normal life span . .
seven years sinre I had this I .Stu·h individual• usually Im- whose wife, Kimberly, is the
haven't . had another attack. prow t)leir life style to enable daughier of.Jerry and f)elma
Thank Gnd! I've had a few lhiR ou""ome.
·
Aronal~ of Box 33, all of New
11fF.OAJJ.Y SF.NTfNP.I ,
, ...
fT ISJ&gt;S 145-tlMI
symptoms that T thou!(ht
J)P.AR J)R. J.AM8 - Would Haven, W. Va ., has comI
were an errallr heartbeat you please 'explain the term pleted the Aviation
with hurting around the jaw :•atelaMasis J.J.I."? It was on Machinist's Mate Rasir Jet
and nerk. My rlertrocar- a medirRI rrcord for an 82- F.ngine Course.
llF.V~OTO'J'HF.
JNTF.R~OF
nuring the five-week rourdlogram shows I have an ab· year-(lld person.
MF.Ir.S-MASON ARF.A
J')P.A,R RF.AJ)F.R - Atelac- se at the Naval Air Terhniral
normal heartbeat and left
RORF:RT HOP.FT .lnt
COLUMBUS
State government than, they conruv F.dH"r
ventrirular stoppage but I iasis "'fers to collapse of the Training Center, Millington,
0.4 VJO R1.1SI{JRK
senalor Oakley c. CollinS (R· , tribute.
URually feel well for a woman hmgR 'pr a lung Regment. II Tenn.; students received in, .:
ArtVf'rililinJ! Man&amp;jl:t'r
Ironton)
reports
the
of 71. I take medicine for high ean (l('CUr In patleniR with troductory instruction on the ·
Pnhlitcht'C'J rhrlly- t&gt;:tr·r)ll ~lurdety
l.eading the Jist of big wi~­
h_\' Tht• Ohin Vallf'~' f'l r hl i~hlnJ!
l.egislature took ' a one-week ners Is the State of VeJ:IIlont,
and
blond pressure.
rhrpnir illnesRes who are at ·rhararteristirs
rr•llirf!n~ · Mnllimt•rlht . lm·..
111
· prior to the Easter · which only pays 53 cents ffjr
recess
operating
principleR
·
of
jet
· My father suffen;d a fatal ' bed relit ·or aR a rompliralion·
t'r'ur1 S!. , Pnmr•rfly. Ohir• 457fl!l.
holiday.
·
Rn~hW!~~
Offic'r
Phont&gt;
'!l!l'l·
215fl.
engihes.
Their
studies
instroke.
,
of a numbt&gt;r ofillnesses when
every dollar it receives, a~
FA1i1tlri;.tl Phllnt•fm-2157
1·
•
•
•
It
is
~nticlpated that the
DRAR RF.AT)RR- You are 'the person has lo bt&gt; at bed rludrd en~ine lubrication,
the State of Mlssillllippl,
~·r·oml r·l11)j~ fii'IJ•:t:.~~«&gt; flllilf 111
NEW'¥0J:!K .( AP)- The U.S. State f)epartment is sending ri~hl to be thankful that you rest. !!'he I.LI. undoubtedly ignition and fuel systems. Adl.eglslature will now remain which receives $1 for every~ ·
Pl•nwru.1•. Ohi11·,
·
.
Ameriean pianist F.ugene lslomin, 50, to Cairo and Jemsalem. haven't had any further at- refers to the left lower lohe RO ditionally, they studi ed~ the
N;rllnnal ;rrlvrrli!&lt;int! rtoprf':o:l'nin session tHrough tbe end of cents it
con't rlbutes.
llllivr• . I aridnn A~!&lt;tlf'iHit·~- . :1101
Istomin 'will p.. y t~e same program Saturday night in C'.airo larks. Yes, you ran ·very the tenn "' used· probably proredures for refueling and
June by which lime the However,.by far lhe Qlg whiP.lwllll ""1'., f'l e1\·~htnrl . Ohiu 44115
and on May'21n !emsalem.
..
Snh~·r l rth•n rah•)j· flt•livt•N11 In:
state's two-year budget must ner is the District of Col~­
definitely have a heart attark referred to rollapse of thelefl defueling aircraft , for
r·:~rrit • r whr•n• :rv&lt;~ill•l11r• !II r1' nl ~ J'lf'·r
He'll play Haydn; Beethoven, Sch11herl and " The Four An· manifested with only pain .in . lower Iobt&gt; ofthrlun~.
be approved. The I.egislature bia , which pays Only 21 cents
removal and installation of
wprk. f\v Mr•tnr R11111!• whf&gt;rf' t•arrifr
niversaries" by l.eonard 'Remstein. Istomin also will play lhr jaw, nerk or shoulder or
is tentatively scheduled to for every federal dollar It
l'l'r\'lr ·•• ·mil avl!iluhlf'. On11 month .
airrrait eliglnes and for the
1:1.00. R~· m11il in Ohin and W. Y11 ..
'.'The F.mpetor Concerto" on May 1 with the Jerusalem Sym- ann re~ion. In fact , there
adjourn for a two-month receives.
operation of aircrRft ground
~
Otw Vf'ar. m .5fl : Sb: rrn&gt;nlh~ .
phony, opening the Jerusalem Musir Festival.
perind of July and August,
handling equipment .
ar-e
many
peo- 1
!JUiO : Thti'!' . mflnlhl' . ,1: .50:
In light of these statisticl,
: He will give master rlas.'Os to advanred piano students in pie who have heart attack•
F:li&lt;I'Wht•rf' J:ft'.OO n•a r: Six mnnlh~
aDd return into 'session lhe Go.vernor and the four
He joined the Navy in
!17.nn : Thn•t• ·m~•nth~. t:!t.nn.
bQth
Cairo
and
Jerusalem.
·
during the month of Sep- leaders . of 'the Gener•l
November,
1978.
who
have
no
significant
. •
I
!\U ~!·rirlitm rth•t• in! 'lllfl€'.~ ~lln!IH \'
.
..
.
Timr•l'...~'rllint•l .
'
tember.
symptoms at the time lhe atAssembly during the week
.DAI ;I.AS i AP l ~ Rob Hayes, an Olympir gold medalist and taek occurs. Sometimes they
Although there. were no . sent a telegram to membe!S
LIBRARY CATAIAJG
fonn~r , nallas Cowboys wide rereiver, has been srntenred to may have mild indi~esti on or
major legislative develop- of ·Ohio's Congressionijl
NEW YORK (AP) - A
fivi; year8.1n prison for sellln~ roraine to an nndrrrilver of- some nonspt'l'iflr symptom program to reproduce
ments during the week, the delegation urging them to
1
ficer .
Ohio Public · Expenditure retain the state's cllrrerlt ·
that'~ so , innoniOU!il that
photographically the New
.•
!fayes admitted during a pre-.rntenring hearing last month they're not aware they're York
Council released an .in- share of Federal Revenue
Public Library 's. 9·
''I'm not lhe smarte~tguy in lhr world. If I was, I wouldn't~ havin~ any .real proble.m . .. million"Card public catalog is
, report concerning funds.
'
1.:_~-....:..------..:..,-------'------, teresting
up here."
.· ·
the amount of money the
Heart irre~ularities which being undertaken, by the
Right now, It ·is estimateil i
He won two gold medals in the 1964 Olympics at Tokyo and iR you deS&lt;"ribe as nutterin~ library and Boston Publisher
state sends to and receives that the CongresS will cut ~
. the Cowboys' all-time leading touchdown sl'orer.
from the federal govern- total of $140 mlllion from
commonly orrur in the G.K. Hall'&amp; Co.'
Hayes, 36, who pleaded guilly to selling e!lf'aine . to an un- presence of heart attackR.
·
ment.
A spokesman says that tn .
Ohio 's Revenu·e Sharing
dercover officer, could be fret&gt; in 10 months on gond behavior. Hrart pain often is referred to book,lonn tbe printed catalog ·
Currently Ohioans pay budget. Not only would till
prosecutors said.
$1.29 in federal taxes for loss of these funds restrict
the arm Rnd there may not bt&gt; · will COI\'!Iist of Sl)me 800 J().
every dollar which tlfey Ohio's ability to solve ~
any pain in .the rhPsj when Inch by 14·inch volwnes. A
TOPF.KA, Kan . (AP\ - Sen. RnhPrt Oole, the Republican ym1 have )lAin in the ann or microfilm edition also is ·
receive hack from the federal serious problems facing u:1,
vire presidential candidate in 1976, says he Is assessing the the jaw. ·
planned.
•
government. This ranks Ohio including education, mental
It's ralher inlerestin~
The catalog "is being
competition for the Republican nomination for the 1980
sixth among the twenty-two health and welfare, but It
presidential rare,
·
that women are m..-e, indin- prepared for publication to
states wich send more money would also increase the cost
J)ole, meeting with 'reporters in his Topeka offi&lt;·e on Mon- ed to .have angina pain .lith Insure P!'eservalion of tbe
· to Washington th~n they get to Ohioans for federal dollarS
day, said he .thought the . 1980 Republican nomination for diSeaRe ' of · the coronary li'bra·ry 's ·deteriorating card
back.
·
above the current rate of
· presidentw ~~ld go to himself or Sen. Howard Raker, R-Tenn .
arteries than men . it seems catalog, as well as to make
Even though Ohio received
$1.29perdollar.
, ·
:
Dole., diSmissed. the reports lhHI fonner Cali.lomla Gov . like men are 8 littlr morr in- the · library's vast holdings
$2.9 billion In federal grants
According, to tbe Ohio
.. Ron~Id· ~eag~n. was the top ronlender for the Repub!iran rlined to have a •rlear-&lt;-ut mlire widely available." .
in aid during 1978 and even
Publto Expenditure Council
.nommatw~. saym~ :beyond thP fH&gt;lls , the rare Is wide opf&gt;n .
heart .attack with the sympthough this was $394 mlllion
report, the big winner In tbe
. Neatly all, of the politiral PXfll'riS !)ole has consulted, h&lt;• . tom.• we usually asiTi.hP to It
increase over the receipts
Federal Revenue Sharing
said, "have narrowed it down to me or Rak.r or maybt&gt; Geor~e and women arr. mort' inrllned
. from the federal government
grant In aid dollars game Is
LAFF-A- DAY
in 1977, nonelhele!l!l Ohioans. the State of New York. New
Rush." .
to hRvelra(l.'it"'1' •·hl&gt;st pains '
hole, who has no! yet offirially announred .his presidential without heart itltat&gt;ks.· Of .
still had to pay $1 .29 for every
York only pays 78· cents fo'r
bid, ~&lt;;aid, he will probably do so in May, in hiR hometown of ronrse; lhat) nnt a hard and
dollar whleh · they received
earh federal dollar It
·
Russell.
'fast ·rolr at 8JJ,.
back from the federal
receives, and during the last
government.
Indiana, paying
To I!IVP ymt more infonnR- '
fiscal year received $8.3
$1.45; Texas $1.35 ; Kansas
linn m what.yi&gt;u ml~ht """'rt
billion. This $8.3 billion \filS
SI
.33 ; and Connecticut and the largest allocation
HOCKNEY
SHOW
as
R
rr~Jilt
of
ili~PRSP
hf
the
any
One of the oldest of Biblinlinois $1.30 each were tbe
cal books names the three
WASHINGTON (AP) - An r..-on"rj, arteri..S. I llm senof the 50 states.
most beautiful women of , exhibition of 150 crayon fli~~ yolt 'I'Ill' Hrafth I ..,tier
five states ahead of Ohio that
Ohioans currently pay 5·
that land and time. They sketches, · line drawings, · nnmhPr 2-10. Hrart Attark,
have to pay more for the
per
cent of the total federal
were sisters~
money from Washington than
. and
· color Myor,.rdial lnfarrtion ,
tax bill, which mates the
"AI,III he O.Ued ~.· name ~tchings
· that which thfy receive.
Other .
of the flnt1 Jem~ 1!!11!1 the lithographs by BrillJh llrtisl A'n,rina PPI•Inris
Slate of Ohio the sixth .. rge$1
WhRe Ohfo and 21 other
aame of tne ~ . , KeaJa; David Hockney ~~· t,'; ori . n•Rdr'" who, want. ihls.J'"'"' ,
supporter of. lhe federal
"Sure, I'll tell you a scary /;Jedlime ~tory. How
· Rlates pay moo:r · to the
&lt;_.!~d ~e llflme, qf the ~trdl view lhrotigh June lit:.
· "'" «nd !ifl li&lt;•nts wifh "J'n111~. "I
~overnment . Howeve rl,
.n.erenhappuch. ADd In al
about 'Teddy Kennedy and the anti-conglomfederal government than
The
show
ihcludes s l11mped , . •••·lf-aclrlr.•:""'l. Ruth
invitation
return to Ohioans is eurrently
· the !find -wer¢ ao women
·
erate merger legislapon'9"
what th•ir rf!!urn is worth, 28 · only 3.9 percent of the total
foaad;.•o fair ail the daugh- portraits, still-lifes, Interiors o•nvelnp•• for it . ~rid vnnr r•.-- meant •'really ocrub vigoroilsare lrft to receive
stAtes
and
outdoor
scenes.
r
r~t
In
mr•
·in
t::n.,.
of
Jy
please'."
111
ters of Job... " - Job U: 14-15
federal payments 'lUide to .
' - - - - - - , - ' - - --,--~~---- more from the . federal .lhe Rtates.

By Doaald M. Rothberg
A••llf'lated Pl't'!ls Wrilrr
WASHINGTON ( APl - In
the Senate Judiciary Com-

a

HEALTH·

Collins' report

SOIITHF.RN EIGHTH GRAJ)P. SQTTAJ) -- Sotilhf'rn''

" I'

t•ighth grmtr lrHm -rt'('f•nth• finish(•rl its ~11Cf't·~sful ~t·nson
1
row, lt•f1 tn ri1!ht .
\ ~ • ;-~1 R-4. Ti•Hfn mrmhf'rs Wrrt•. first
111
Rif•httnl nu'j.!Hn, ,Tohn . PtlrfPr. Ru~ly Cummins. SIP\'('
. 1 .,

~PJuh•r .

.Tim Hurr. cmd .Tt'ITY WPifP . .~tr111din1r. lt•ff !11
ri, hl . Ni1·k ~~~t4kk . ?.:111~' f't'l'l'll'. Tyrl\lll' RrinflJ 11'1'. Tt•rry
PnlfPT'~flJ1, r~ri~ RP~th'k.riJ1d f'n:wh ,1iJn l .:tWf('nl'l' .
1

"'

By KEN RAPPOPORT
AP Sports Writer
While Fred Lynn continues
to crack pitches, Toby
, . Harrah is just happy to break
the ice.
•·. "I've been hitting lhe ball
" hard all year and coming up
with nothing ," said the
Cleveland Indian third
baseman after finally seeing
one of his shofs.._lurn into
_, something_
,, '
: ...· Harrah hila two-run.homer
Monday to help the Indians
: take a ,4-3 decision over t he
,. Boston Red Sox .
"It was just a matter of
-- tilne," added Harrah, who
.: incide8tally accounted for his
•t team's first homer of lhe year
well.
· The same might have been
.. . said of Rick Wise, who won
;, ius first game of the year
. after two losses.
'' '"it's been a long time for

.::as

that win," noted Wise. " It
.just feels gratifying."
Lynn,
meanwhile ,
continued his home run
assau\t. hitting his fifth of the
young; ~ason - all of them
off Cleveland pitching.
In other American League
games, the Detroit Tigers.
beat the Kansas City Royals
10-4; the Chicago White Sox
stopped the Toronto Blue
Jays 8-4 and the Oakland A's
trimmed
the
Seattle
Mariners 4-2.
Harrah's two-run shot
keyed a three-run fifth that
provided the Indians with
their wirming margin . Wise
:sw-rended six hils before
getting relief help from Sid
Monge in the seventh.
rigrrs 10, Blue Jays~
Steve Kemp, Aurelio
Rodriguez
and
Alan
Tranunell drove ;..,two runs
each to lead Detroit over

Kansas City. Kemp had a
two-run single in the secqnd
inning and later added a
double and · a s ingle .
Hodriguez singled in a run in
thethird and knocked in a run
in the seventh 'with a
b'I'Ounder' Trammell singled
in two runs in tile seventh.
Kemp' s
3-for-5
performatice improved his
batting average to a lustrous
.467 .
Whih· Sux H, Blue .Jays 4
Alan Bannister, Lamar
.Johnson and Bill Nahorodny
each smacked two-run
doubles as Chicago explnded
for Seven rims in the seventh
inning to beat Toronto .
Rookie Randy Scarbery
picked up the victory in relief
in his major league debut.
A's 4, Mariners 2
Hob Picciolo got his first
two hits of the season,
inc luding a garne-winnirig

triple in the fourth inning , as
Oakland
beat
Seattle.
Picciolo, the A's shortsjop,
was ll-for-22 before he singled
in the second inning. In the
fourth, his triple to rightcenter scored Mike Edwards
from third base, breaking a 11 tie, and Picciolo came home
on a passed ball by catcher
HOb Stinson .

&lt;.:OMMENCEMEN'r
PHILADELPHIA (AP)
Playwright
Tennessee
Williams will deliver the
commencement' address at
the
University
of
Pennsylvania 's 223rd
commencement exercises
May 21.
Williams received Pulitzer
Prizes for two of his plays, "A
Streetcar Named Desfren
and "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof."

"I know I rush,'' he said.

THIS Wf;EK'S SPECI.,L.

"I've been getting, like, a full
liming to get loose. One of
lhese days I'll be able to
anticipate when I'm going In
there like Doug ( Balr) can. ·
He can sense it. That'll

.,

home. Dodle Chapman
singled another run In, and
then Ash scampered home on
a passed hall. But that rounded out the Meigs scoring.
In the fifth, Meigs had the
bases loaded wllh just one
out. But a fine play by the
Logan third baseman snuffed
out the rally when she stepped on third and threw on to
first for a ~uble play. Logan
pulled off three double plays.
Nye got the win, fanning
three Meigs butters and
walking eight.
Terri Wilson took the loss
in an . admirable perfonnance, walking two and
fanning a !Ike nwnber.
Kuhn led tbe winners with
two singles while Nye socked
a triple and Keller had a
double. Chapman · led the
losers with two triples and a
single while T. Ash had a
single and triple. S. Ash had
the only other Meigs bit, a
single.
.
Meigs entertains Wellston
Wednesday night In an
S~OAL contest ..
Unescore :
L
:ml0102~81
·M
1000013~84
Nye and Kuhn.
.
Wilson and Chapman.

.

·~~~·
·'

.

USED. CARS

-· ~

,.

J .

1975

Kyger Creek to
'

'

CHEVY
CAPRICE
3 SEAT

Ky11er Creek's faculty will
lakr on the Ky~er Creek
slud•nl body in a donkey .
,_
basketball ~Rme on ThursRrci &amp; ht~rk, vinyl trim,
nrw tlrf'~. 11m fm rAdio,
day, Aprll19.
The ronteRt will begin at ,hlf'lfli'HlP rark, powpr win·
rtnw, powf'r bt~tkes , powf'r
7:30 p.m. in the KC high
~t('pr!np,
~uto mr.t lr,
350
'sf'hoolf!ym.
·
V·R.
ProreedR will ~o toward
the S&lt;'hool's athletic

WAGON

$3095

pro~rRm .

Title J&gt;f the pro~rwn Is
"C'ra•iest Show on F.arth,"
with Shaw llrothers bringing
lhrir combination of circus
atmoRphrrr and rndeo thrills
to th.rommunity.
Advanre tli:J(ets may be
pun•hasrd at thP high S&lt;"hool

·Karr &amp; VanZandt
You'll Like Our Quo lily

Woy of Doing Business · 1
GMAC FINANCING
i
"2-5342
Pomeroy
Open Evontnas '1116 :00
Till p.m. Sat.

...
••
I

'

'

New Store HOurs

'

'

'

llondiJ tlliwp SlturdQ 9:30 • 1:00 p.ni.

TO OUR FIRST .
10 CUSTOMERS
SAT., APRIL 21 WE Will PAY
vnuD REGISTRATION FREE IN
GROUNDHOG CONTEST .

-

NIGHT
CRAWLERS

75~

DOZEN

--

FlEE

--

·Coke and Cooldes

POLY ·
STRINGERS

19~

Friday &amp; Saturday
Apri~ 20 &amp; 21

EACH

UMITED

QUANTITiEs
. tie. llo&amp;

.

BEAR
WHIIDAIL HUNTER .•. ..,
·coMPOUND BCM

..

; Hip.&lt;dol box hss 36 romfl!llmenh in 3 wo•m~rool ~IJS. ·
Ills 2 ABS end .lalcllos, SioJ·Ilrt •ibs lhol prflletllum
fro.m, rusf Two-lonad HtrfeSt .Gpld and Raw Umber,
18S 10{1, MifiC~ Polypropylene botlom.

OFF

25%·

REG.
PRICE

•39'

··WAD£R.

$1395:
· Sales Prices In
Effect Through
Sat., April 21

,,
'

5

$6995
.REG. 189.95

REMINGTON ,
'1HUNDERBOL1"
22 LR. AMMO

8g~

tar

~

RY GRF.G RA II .F.Y
The Meigs girls softball
tea m committed three errors
in the first innin~ last night
that allowed vi silin~ J;o~an
Squaws to post an 8-5 victory.
I
ha nded Meigs It• first
!oRS after five straight season
wins.Some excellent defense
by the visitors allowed them
to overcome eight walks
given up by winning pitcher
KarenNye .
Catcher Becky Kuhn laid
down a perfect bunt to start
the game with an infield hit.
The speedy gal stole' second
and third, and !hen . raced
home on an error by Meigs'
third baseman. 1)vo . more
errors and a single by Emerson gave Logan a 3,0 lead
before Meigs came to bat.
Meigs got one run back in
their half of lhe first when
Sonia Aslulngled and came
home on sister Tonia's triple.
Logan got two 'more runs in
the second, one In lhe fifth,
and two insurance runs in the
seventh.
Meigs got a run bacl! in the
sixth, ·and then almost made
a comeback in the last of the
sevenlh.
..
Two walks led Mei.gs off in
the last inning, and then
Tonia Ash sin~led a nm

'If!""

:·· Cleveland ·tops Boston njne ·4-3

8erry s Wo .rId

"

Logan downs Meigs

I

,;

in the news

•

come.''
He's been a real Shot In the
ann ror us," said Reds
Manager John McNamara.
"Doug Bair has the nu ; he's
been a little weak. I believe
you need two good relief
pitchers In the bullpen. In this
day and age, It's critical."

host donkey tilt

Names •••

I

year.
" He's confldenl enough
1llat's for sure,"_ Bair said.
"Sometimes that's good and
sometimes that's had. One·
lhlng, he has to Jearn to
control himself inOre. He geta
too excited warming up. He'll
lind out in about two weeks
that he has to slow down."
Pastore says be I! aware of
his faults .
,

50 CT. BOX

Items in Store
Reduced for
lhis s. :
Phone ' 675-29a .

•

·-1--!'!!L·.·
'•

"

�The Oaih· ~ulinrl. Mirlrllt.•pprt -PnmPr•'Y , 0 .. Tut •:-.(l ;~~· ; =' pr . 1i.

4-

Sentinel, Middlepurt-Pomt•roy. 0 .. T!lt•srhl)'. Apl'. l7. 101o

, n~fl

_._'l'tl!o..

Lee blanks Chicubs 2-0

l

Today's

•••

• ••

I

•

•

I

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: :

• • • II

.

Sports World

By The Associated Press

.
.
Rob Wortman of Findlfly. Ohifl. i~ flOP flf :m l'nrhmgf'n'(!
~rts

" 7t'hrm;;",

Thry wear. striped shirts. Thc•y emit shrill, ~•r-.&lt;plittini•
sounds from whistles they krrp rnnstantly l'lin&lt;•hed he•( Ween
thPir trPth . They are always on center stHge. yet 'tiller from
lark of identity. They are ohjec•ts of unrelentin~ ahu.r.
They arr offirials. On the field of play, !hey arr jutlg.&lt;• anrl
jury. Thftir VPr(iicts. ~rP fin(ll.

Now people are a1·guin~ they are exp~ndahle .
"Thr t'lectrir eyt' i~ fHr mort' prohing anrl far mons CH'·
rur~te." critics rontpnd. 11 F.IN"tronir snrvrlllnn&lt;•P is ttw only

way to de&lt;"ide cn&lt;cial a~d controversial ralls."
"It may rome somr ctfty, hut not in our lifetime,"
Wortman, a 51·yPar-{'ld insuranrP PXt&gt;f'ntivr who

prrctkt~
moonlight!-~

AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST
W. L. Pet . GB
6 2 .750
Milw .
4 J .571 H 2
Boston
5 4 .556 l't 1
New York
4 5 .444 ,,,,
Toronto
3 4 .429 2112
Detroit
3 6 .333 31· 2
Baltimore
CJeveland . 2 . 6 .250 4
WEST

Texas

6

1
2

.85-7
.778

Minn .
7
Calif .
7 3 .700 'n
Seattle
5 7 .417 3',,
Chicago
3 6 .333 .4
Qakland
2 9 . 182 6
Monday's Games
Cleveland 4, Boston J
Detroit 10, Kansas City .4
Chicago 8, Toronto .t
Oakland 4, Seattle 2
Only games scheduled

as an offirial in both pro football and college basketball .
Hr is the only man ever to work both a National Foc1(ball
Tuesday's Games
!Rague Super Row! and an NCAA basketball final. He also is a
TeJ~;a~ (Jenkins 2-0) at
ga rbage man. He was in Augusta, Ga., ovrr lhr weekend with Cleveland !Waits 1-ll
. Kansas City {Splittorff l · l l
a seven-man forre from Ohio Jxoading up tbr n1hbisb detail.
Detroit (Rozema Q. l)
~
"Bob Settlemire of our town was a dose friend of an Attgusta at Baltimore
(Flanagan 0-11
National ('(lmmitt... man." Wortman said. "Rob was asked to at New York (Guidry 0-11
~et up a lew friends to supcrvisr the job. )t turned out to he
Milwaukee (,Haas 0-0) at
great. We not only get to see a Jot of ~real golf but wr got to Boston Torrez 0-1)
California {Ryan 1-11 at
play some ourselves ."
.
Minnesota !Goltz 1-ll
You wouldn't havr srrn thP two Rflbs out on thP rour.or

spearing half-smoked ci~ar.ettes Jxofore they louchrd the
ground. Rut, behind the scrnrs, they constituted part of tlx&gt;
most efficient house-&lt;: leaning crew in the wnrld.
The Masters' expansive terrain is kept as spotless as the rar.pet in the F.asl Room at the White House.
Wortman's autumn and wintrr

rhorr~

may not bP

f-IR

pleasant but they are equally exacting and many times more
fraught with peril.
"Alter a football 11ame or a basketball game it usually is the
better point of valor to ~et off the field quirkly and into the
locker room," he said: "I would murh rather be a liv&lt;: roward
than a dead hero."
Wortman· has been workin~ NFL games·for 14 yrars and
college basketball for II. He was one of the &lt;Trw of Sufl&lt;'r Bowl
V in 1972 and Super Bowl XII a' year ago. He offiriatrd the
' NCAA ~enlucky,UCI.A and Indiana-Michigan finals in 1975
: and 19'16.

• "Basketball is murh faster pared but it requir&lt;'S no more
I• concentration," be said. "Foofball is much tougher mentally
because almost every play - in the minds of the coaches and
the fans- has S&lt;&gt;!Tle impact on the Sufl&lt;'r RowL"
Wortman's views on electronic offidatin~ are not based on a
fear that the big eye threatens his off-season ernploymrnt.
"It simply isn't ft"asiblE' ," hP

Hrf:!u~.

"Visually nr

&lt;'('()nomically. I don't think fans want to ser tlx&gt; human
element taken out of a football , basketball or any other game.

Chicago (Barrios 0·0) at
Toronto (Underwood 0·1)
Seattle (Jones 0·01 at
Oakland (Johnson 0-2), (n)
Wednesday's Games
Milwaukee at Boston
Texas at Cleveland
California at Minnesota
Chicago at Toronto
Seattle at Qaklana
Baltimore at New York, (n)
Q1'y games scheduled

NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST
W. L. Pel. GB
Nlontreal
6 2 .750
Phil a.
.4 3 .571 l ~ 2
St. Louis ~
.4 3 .571 1112

SAN DIEGO (AP) ctncinnati Reds players have
agreed tc urge baseball
C&lt;llllllllssioner Bowie Kulm to
' intercede in an 'efflrt to get
regular IDilplres back to their
jobs.

Most ol the umpires have
been off the bases since tbe
• regular baseball season
began and they have said
they'll stay away until they
receive a pay raise.
Second baseman Joe
Morgan made the propooal to
write a letter to Kuhn during
a brief meeting ol pU.yers
prior
to
·sunday's ·
doubleheader in San Diego.
The letter has been oompoaed ·
by Tom Seaver, Johnny
Bench
and
player
reprnentative Ray Knight.
"Everybody
agreed,"
Knight said, "that he {Kuhn)
ahoulcl enter the matter ...
The quality of )he game has
jjone down because of the
inept Jobe they (minor league
and . all)ateur umpires
replacing the league staffs)
.
·
are doing .
K1Ugbt said he tUso planned
to discuss the
.. . situation
.
.with

Pitts.

.4

Two rolls of tape, 8ICh

subject

5

..444

1) , (n)

Wednesday's Games
'
New York at Montreal
St. Louis at Chicago
, Phil_adelphia at Pittsburgh ,

{n I

,
Francisco at

· San

San

Diego, !nl
Houston at Lo.s Angeles •. (n)
Only games scheduled.
Mondly's

..

Sports Transadions
By The Associated Press
FOOTBALL
National Football League
PHILADELPHIA EAGLES

__: Named Billy Joe as~istant

coach .
WASHINGTON
RED SK-INS
Signed
Ken
Houston, safety, to a series of
one -year contrads.
SOCCER
American Soccer League ·
CLEVELAND COBRAS Signed ' Tom Mulroy, mid-

fielder.

PENNSYLVANIA
STONERS ~ Signed John 0' Haru,

defender .

COLLEGE
ARIZONA
STATE
Named Juliene Simpson
women's basketball coach.
ST. ·. LOUIS UNIVE-RSITY
- Announced registration of
Dic k McDonald . athletic
director .

of

'.

.utd •·hasfd. Krukuw . whO

struc.:k out 10 cmd walked one
In Gt-.1 inning!-i ,

· off-field

A..;trus ·1, Untl~t·rs 0

year-1Jld hurler came within

iwo singles of a n'!"hitter
Monday as the Expos blanked
the Chicago Cubs ~l.ee recently was fined $250
by Baseball Commissioner
Bowie Kuhn for discussing
his use of marijuana, bu.t left
that issue behind as he won
his first game of the season.
was far from
charitable to the Cubs
Monday. He lost a perfect
game with ooe oui.in the sixth
oo Barry Foote's single. The
only other safety off ]..ee was
a ninth-inning base hit by Bill
Buckner.
In the only other National
League game Monday, the
Houston Astros defeated the
Los Angelo:; DOdgers 4-0.
Rain postponed Philadelphia
at Pittsburgh.
The first hit off Lee was a
controversial one. Ellis
Valentine claimed that he
caught Foote's sinking liner, .
but umpire Jolm Baird ruled
that he trapped the ball.
The Expos got the only run
they needed when Warren
Cromartie hit a home run in
the first inning off Mike
Krukow . Gary Carter's RBI
single gave Lee an insurance

I·••

'

pitched a no-hitter April 7
The Astros scored two tuna
u~ainsl Atlanta, did not allow
in the first innlns asllinlt
th e Dodgers a hit until two loser Doo Sutton on a W!llk to
were. out in the fifth inning, Terry Pub!, a triple by Jeff
when Dusty Baker and Rick l.eonarc! and a single by J Monday hit consecutive .Cruz .

POLLY'S POINTERS
Polly Cramer

o.;ing)PS.

RliitStafns On Yarn
. By PoUy Cramer
POlLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLI.Y -I left my
embroidery hoops for a long
period of lime over the crewel
emb!'Qidery work r was doing .
on a cotton pillow. The hoops
left a ring ol rust stains on the
pillow. I cannot soak the enlire thing .because of the colored yarn . embroidery but
want to kriow If there is any
way to spot remove the rust
from the cotton.- RUBY
DEAR RUBY;_ You have a
painstaking and rather·
tedioUs J9b ahead so save it
for a day when you feel there
will be no Interruptions. First
I .. would \ry spreading the .
stained.portion over a pan or
boiling : water and then
squeeze lemon juice through
it. no:not lei: the juice spread
il)lo the' colored embroidery.
II might he best to apply it
\l'ith an eye &lt;!ropper.
·
If that does ·not work, place
o!"''ll' ad~ crystals (poison if
taken internally) directly on
the stain only, moisten with
very Mt water and allow to ·

Rodgers se.ts record
Rv A~suf'iah&gt;d Pfl'fiiS

RO.&lt;iTON - Favorill' &lt;S!ID
Rill Rodgers wnre down
.Japan's Toshihiko S~ko on
"Ht•arthrrak Hill" less than
six miles from (he finish and
WPnl

on

·~~ttPrin~

tn N recorrl·
victory yeslpr'clay

in the 8.1rd Rc,.ton Marathon.
"The-rE~·~

only onr thinK

mi,.,•ing, " Rodge" panted aftttrwarct, H that'~ et mt&gt;dal in
the Olympii'S.
.
Rodgers, a ~1-year-old (ormer sehool teacher, now a
s porting goods ·store
Ofl&lt;'rator, whipped through
rain and 42-drgr.ee cold from
suhurban Hopkinton ·to
ROHton in 2 hours , 9 mini1tes,
27 seconds, the fastest
m:1rathon in Amrriran
history.
He said the la st 10 miles
were bitterly painful hrrausE' ht neMed to use a
toilet and even considered
making a "pit stop," but did
not.
While breaking the course
rP&lt;•nrd nf 2 hnnr~. !' rnhmt"'c: . .

55 Sf'C'onds h(l st•t as

8

virtual

unknown in, 1975 and · Jxot.
tering his winning time of 2
hours, 10 minutes and 13
se&lt;'onds, Rodgers avenged a
defeat by Seko in the
Fukuoka International
Marathon in .Japan last
flcorrmber.
The 23-year-old Japanese
college student stuck with
Rodgers most of t he way. The
strategy worked, but only for
a while. Virtually abreast after 20 miles, Rodgers opened
the throttle on the first of
three hills. He cleared the
. second hill about five yards
in front and headed for
Heartbreak, a famed burying
~round

for many runners in

the 2A•mile, 385-yar.d classic.
Althou~h Seko appeared to
he running easily, he was
unable to keep up with
Rodgers ' blistering pare.
" I really poured it on,"
said Rodgers . " I ~n 1 y run

Jxost when J have someone to
chase .''
Rod~ers rhar~ed

15 yards

Gru~ser

William

in front half•waY up Heart·
break and continued ~o widen
the' margin: He cleared the
hill witilciut difficulty, then
sidestepped a spilled polire
motorcycle ,nd breezed the
rest ofthe way, running 11 an
almost unbelievable pace 6n
the heels of a pollee escort,
with sirens waiUng. ·
Seko was second In 2 houl'l!,
10 minutes .tind 12 secmda,
followed by Robert Hodge of
Hanover, Mass., a fanner
student at The Unlvel'l!ily of
Lowell.
Veteran Tom Fleming,a
two-time Bostop runner-up
from Bloomfield, N. J., surprised the whopping field of
some 7,800 qualified starters
by grabbing the lead and
holding it for 15 miles. He
faded and had to han~ Clll to
finish fourth in 2:12.&amp;6.
Gary Bjorklund of · Min·
neapolis, who look the lead
-from Fleming but surren.dered it to Rodgers, was fifth
in 2 hours, 13 minutes, 57
seconds.
·

• •

stand for a few minutes.
Rinse out stained portion only
or. any other little place you
may have moistened by
misla ke. Good lurk . + POJ.J.Y.
DEAR POLLY - When
making cupcakes or muffins
and you do not have enough
pans use the screw-on lids
from the two-piece canning
lids. Set these to)lll upright on
a cookie sheet and put a
paper cupcake liner. in each
one. They will hold the shape
as well as when in muffin
tins.- MRS. J.K.
DEAR POJ.I.Y- When put-

Thl' R:lrd hir.·llnl:;,. flf
William GrtH' SI'r · wa~
r•rlt•hrAtP&lt;I Thur!-lcb1y t•,:&lt;'tlitlJ.'
with Cl dinnPr .party rit .,.ttw

Mr. /111ft Mf':-:. Suulh Hild
f'llilch•t•n rf•tnml'fl hciJnP Friday rtfh•r vi~ ili.nJ! lwrP with

fhl'ir pan•nts, Mr. and Mr.&lt;.

Willi~m

Hy,mns open missionary meetin:g
' ~rm'iTwn h.rrnn~. " Ht• flm··

c•d Jn.OOO Angds" hy Ph)•llis
J . u~ff'r .

&lt;'it Mt•" Hnd ''Tht• Kint' is
("umin ~! " npc•m•ll lhl' mis·
~iunary mrrting of fh p Mid-

.Judy

RrnnmP

pn•.,•nt&lt;'l • skit in whlrh she
pnrirayecl a shrpht•rtt whn
Mr. . Aaron l".ahl. P'"m•roy. tllrport rhurrh nf tht• had lost.her shc~·p. Rradln~ s
Tht•y wrn• joinrd by their Na1arrnr Wedne,.lay night.
from she1~p rut..outs on
son. Krn Smith of StrulwnScripture was followed by a rhurrh growth In Trinidad

hom e of Mr.. and Mr.s. Harnld
Rlarkstnn .
Attrndin~~ h"'irl••' lhr
h&lt;•norrd guest and the host'
WC'rr · Mrs.

honored

Willir~m Grur~..r tind Mi'. aiul

Gn1st-r,

viiiP. fllr H Wr-ctne~;rlay anrt

Mr.. and Mrs . .lat•k KHne, Thursday visit.
Heatlx&gt;r. and P.mily, Mariel·
ta: Mr. and Mrs. IRo Smith,
CT.(I'J'}IING sm.rrJTF.n
Rdty, Rarbara and S~m,
Good used artirles, plants
Rt.•rrirn Sprin~s, . Mirh . Rob and good-as-new· clean
•nrl Rruce Rlackston, Christy riotblng are Jxolng s(lliriled .
F.va~s
· nd Recky.. Ebersba.· &lt;'h . for a campus sale to .he held
A dec ated cake and ire 111 tlx&gt; West Virginia Trainin¢
cream err "erved followin g SdiQOJ, 2!ioo l.inroin Ave.,
the tli er.
.
Point Pleasan( , W. Va. The
srhool is a non-profit corporation eslahllshrd In 192.1. Prorome through onto thr bed rPeds will b.o used to rrplarr
rlothes. I took an old white outmoded and worn out
sork belonging to her and cut equip"'ent, supplies and
off tlx&gt; toe. J slipped the sock books. Residents with conting a picture in a framP use over her. bandage with the . tributions 'are asked to
the three -pointed or. heel of the sork ovrr the bend telephone 992-7173 or 675·1l80.
triangular-shaped glazed of her elbow. Shr said it was
RF.VIVAI . Sl.ATF.Il
pieres that are used to put romfortable and it slayrd in
glass In a window frame and place all night. I laundered
Revival services at the
find they work better than the sock and kept it for the Coolville Alleghany Wesleyan
next Injury .~ MRS D.F .
Churrh !orated on Route 7
nails. -BECKY
DEAR POLLY - Recently · Polly will send. yoil one of just north of Tuppers Plains,
my little girl fell off her bike her sig ned thank-you will hegin Thursday and conand skinned her elbow newspaper roupon clippers if tinue through Sunday, 7:30
enough that it had to be ban- she uses your favorite p.m. ~acb evening. The Rev.
daged. She was reluctant Pointer, Peeve or Problem In Robert Earlry will he the
about going to hed that night her column. Write POLLY'S evangelist. Pastor. is the Rev.
for fear the bandage would POINTERS in care of this Robert Cherry. The public is
invited.
come off or the blood would newspaper.

hymn . 11 HP Cnn]tt p .... , r .. n

New officers elected
Nrw riflirerR were i'll'&lt;'trd
l"iwit lix&gt; ·F.astrm Future

Pi.rce, Connie Rankin, Barbara Wells, MHr~ery ~yers,
Homt'makPr~ mPt r1•r(•ntlv at Helen Myers, ril:ircy Sexson,
F.astern High Sc•hnnl. Cin&lt;ly Jlehhie Dailey, Rrfnda Riffle,
Pit7.rr, president, opened tlx&gt; Reth Riehl&gt;! , Tammy Curtis,
mPPting.
and Mrs. Kestner.
Officer~ fnrt.he 1979-80 year
elected were Donna Rennet!,
president : Marcy Sexson,
vice president ; Kathy Pooler,
secretary; Tammy Curtis, Servicer planned
treasurer : Debbie Dailey,
Helen
F.vangeJistic services will
parliamentarian :
Myers, ret•reatinn leader: be held at the Church of the
Tanunie Starcher, historian: Nazarene in Racine beginBeth Riebel, news reporter:· ning April 18 and continuing
Rarhara Wells, song leader; earh evening at 7:30 p.m.
and Tammie Spencer., ·throu~h Aprll22.
chaplain.
The Rev. Richard C. Raket
Oisrussed at the meeting of Charleston, West Virginia
was the banquet to be held on will be the evan~elist and .
·
May 3 at 5:30p.m., the state singer.
F.veryone is cordially in·
('(lnvention, and a speaker for
the banquet. Attending were vited to attend these ser.vices
Cindy Pilze&lt;, Donna Rennet!, of gospel preaching and
Kat~y
Pooler, Kathryn special musir.

WH(;

~Lvf'n

by

spvpr~J

·1

Know'" was re8d by Margie

mrm!Jer.s. A poem, ' ~This I Taylor with this being followed by a closing ~ltar of
prayt&gt;r .
VISIT PARENTS
Mr. and Mrs . William
Hnwells, Robbie, Scott and
Ka&lt;·ey
and
l)ebbie
Mrl.aughlin, Rittman; Kevin
Mrl.aughlln,.North r.arolina,
joined their parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth Mcl.aughlin,
for Easter weekend. The birthdays of Kevin and Debbie
were celebrated.

DANCE SET
There will be a roWld and
square dance Friday, Aprtl20, from 8 to 11 p.m. at the'
Senior Citizens Center,
Pomeroy. The dance .is open
to thl! public. Admission is $1
for adults with children under
12 admitted free . Music wil.
be by the Strlngdustets.

Inexpensive
Home Furnishings
Visit ••.

Baker's Budget Shop

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

FOR YOUR FOOD BUDGET

•

21n

We've been talking to you about added value
to your health care protection dollar, but:
'

.SUPERIORS

•

.· .

GRADE A

sLAa.sAcoN...................~~s9~ FAMILY PAK CHICKE·N...........~~...sg~

.

·tfealth ·care protection·
.Is·nocure
Jor senseless .
~·healtll habits.

Games

New York (Zachry 2-01 at
fv\ontreal (Grimsley l ·Ol
St. Louis {Denny 1-1) at
Chicago {Holtzman 0-1I

G~DE

)

'

SUPERIORS

.

.

SLICED BACON ............~·.

99

A

BREA·STS, ............. -. ••••••••••••••.•••••• ~ •••• !!;. 99•
GRADE A

,

.
.
"
LB 8'9$
LEGS &amp; THIGHS
•••••••..••.• ~···············:·

GRADE A

ALL STAR
DAIRY

1% LOWFAT

"

GR.ADE B

WINGS •••.•••••••.•••••••••.••.••••••••••••••••••l!I.·.69C

MILK

.19

DAIRY VALUES

V~Y BELL

.

.

..

GAL

$169

,

$139

2 Yo LOWFAT MILK ................
VALLEY BELL PREMIUM

ICE CREAM ........................~.~;'!;...

•

EGGS
DOZ.

.

·'

Oh sure, if you
become sick or injured,
modem medicine may
be able to patch you up
and usually your health
care coverage will pay for it.
~-- If there is adequate value in your
·substitute for sensible health habits.
benefits to cover the constantly rising
· Smoking, overeating, excessive use of
costs of health. care.
alcohol and stres's are things that take
Your Blue Cross and Blue Shield
away from the value of every'fdV's
Plans have been talking to you and your
health care dollar. But worst o all, they
employer about the flexibility and
rob y-ou of your good health.
alternatives in group plans ... about
Your Blue Cross and Blue Shield
adding value to your health care dollar.
Plans will make a deal with you. We'll
But the challenge is in maintaining that
continue to wor}{ on ways to control the
value. Well, healthy lifestyles play a very rising costs of health care and add .value
important·part. After all, protection
to your health care protection dollat".
against the. cost of unexpected
All you have to do is ...
illness is vital, but it's no
please, take care of yo~lf.

PAMPERS
TODDLERS 1ft

·cHARM IN

ICE

RE~.

,.

.S tetilnq

tft.Oz.IOX

..,.

'
' '4'
/

Value added. ;

'

KING SIZE ·

-

.19

29
PAK

.

16 oz.

BREAD.....................~ .....'!!~~.~ ... 39~

.
.
69$
MOTOR OIL ....................~!~.
AMOCO All WEATER

PRODUCE

FRIDAY.
ONLY
'

.

DR. PEPPER
Blue Cross.
Blue Shield ~

.

HOlSUM

'

CclmpKt. kill! for puJM,
,P9cket, or auto. Color
'choice,

OR SUGAR FREE

PEP$1...............................~.~~~~.~~1

·Jo LB.
BAG .

I

Dl'(tlme dilpolable diapers
for bllbies 0- 25· lbs:
Pleated for better fit,
"fi/IW'' tape tabs.

6 ROll PAK

NEW I

'•

penserl Each roll
Inch•. '

v

Mnntrl'H I 1-:xpos mtJy be the

San Francisco (Knepper 1·
01 at San . Oiego {Rasmussen
0-21. (h) ·
.•
HoustOn {J . Niekro 1-1) at
Los Angeles (Messersmith 1-

NEW HAVEN-BEN FRANI&lt;UN
102ND ANNIVERSARY SAlE

with its own handy •

·h:mder Hill J'.ec or the

I' lU I

Ken 1-'or.sch hurled a fi~e­
Philadelphia (Carlton 1.1)
disputing
the
WHY
he
handles
.
hiller
to lead Houston over
at Pittsburgh (Biyleven 0-.IJ.
himselr oo the field.
l.os Ant!~ l f' ~ . For:~;f"h . who
!nO
•
Atlanta {McWilliams 1-1)
Making his home debut at
at Cincinnati { Hume 1-1), (n) Olympic Stadium, the J2.

3 4 .429 21f'2
1 5 .167 4
WEST
Houston
8 3 .727
San Fran.
7 4 .636
Cine.
5 6 .417 3'12
Atlanta
4 ~ ..400 J'/2
San Diego
4 7 .364 4
Monday's Games
Nlontreal 2, Chicago 0
Philadelphia al Pittsburgh ,
ppd .. rain
Houston .4, Los Angeles 0
Only games scheduled

Marvin Miller, executive
CORRECTIONS NOTED
director of the Major League
Several
cqrrections have
Ballplayers. Association.
beea
noted
in the recent
"I don't llllow if it has cost
of
Pomeroy
release
us any games, but it hurts," YouQJ League the
for
this year.
Knight said.
Jay Humphrey should have
Other ReeLs are o:qually
been
liBted under tee ball for
concerned about the umpires' Elberfeld's.
Managers for
strike.
Powell's
pee
wee league
"It's really
getting
should
have
been
Kelly Hawk
serioua," Morgan said. "And
and
Jimmer
Souls
byif it kee)» up, the ballplayers
wlll be d&lt;1111Ung money to the
,,
real umpires to get them
back to work." ·
Reds catcher Johnny
Bench believes that an
PERFECI' TRUCKER
uinplre's call which ruled PHOENIX, Arlz:{ AP) - For
him out at borne plate in the the past 43 years, Frank
Reds first series of the Waldron, a trucker., has
season,
against
San logged 3.~ million miles
Francisco, was a crucial play behind the wheel - the
in a Reds' lOllS.
equivalent or 140 limes
"My
acceptance . is around the earth - and has
ending," Bench said at tbe not been involved in. an
ttme. ·
accident.
.
"1 know they're trying, but
Waldron, 67, who now
you can't make calla like' drives for a Dallas
that. He misseCI me by this · transportation company, was
far," said Bench, holding up honored
recently as . the
his bands to show what be national driver of the year by
thought was a 12-inch the American Trucking
mistake.
Association, Inc.

TUCK TAPE

:\ iO(..TJ:t- :1\1. ~ 1\P1 _,_ l ~£t ­

I

New York
Chicago

Tuesd•v·~

Commissioner action sought

•••

qmlruversy, but there:s no

By WIU Grimsley
AP Cornspondeot

spt&gt;rit&gt;s -

: : I

BASEBALL · SCOREBOARD
Baseball At A Glance

.

•

81/!K Btl~ 89~
Plus Dep.

REG. PRICE 99' 8LL WEEK

..............5 LB. s1oo
Canots.. :.......... ., ....~..~~.5 1 00 Grapefruit
Yellow Delicious
.................. 3LB. 9!r
Radishes ................ ~.~~~.!! 00
Green .Onions........~.~~..~~

00

·'

'

.................. 3LB. 9f
ONLYJ.

RC or DIET RITE

8 ./:

Btls.

99~

Plus. o.p.it .

~

�•
•
'/~.!he Daily ~ent inrl, Mid(lll"Pnrl -PnmPrny. n .. Ttu·:o:d;ty ..~ pr. 17.

6""""7The- Daily S€-ntinl'l . MiddlP[iOr1 -Pnmt• rc•~· . 0 .. Tm•H1;1y . o\.t •r 17. ,rn,

Star Garden Club celebrates fortieth anniversary
The 40th anniver.;arv of th•• Mr~ . .Tohn Otn•tT ltq~;uri?t•d
Star Garden ('luh was t h(' duh whic·h w:rs !'Jl&lt;ln~l 'rl'&lt;l
celebrated rrcrntly whrn by the Mi~d!Pp"rt r.:~ r~cn
memb!&gt;rs gathered at the C'luh.
Mrs. Stout rt~Jlm1t'tl thut tht•
home of Mrs. Norman Will .
Mrs. C. E. Stout !(avo a 'fir~~ f1Pw t•r show wa~ ht-ld in
history of the r.Jub not in!( that &amp; pt•mhl&gt;r 1~:19 HI the St•r
it was organized on April 13, Hall with r.Jydr .lon e~. pro1979 with 20 charter fps~or tt l. Ohio Statf' llnivt~n:;i.
members. Dues were set at 25 ty as the judge. NamPS of the
cents and the bylaws wrrt' ~~'!!~;t;~!;;'~~r~r~~~·;;
adopted the following .June .
The year with the highest Mrs. Orion Nelson. The two
membership was 1947 when ehHrtrr memb!&gt;rs,' Mrs. r . f..
the olub had 43 members .
Mrs . Garen Stansbury and
pn•sented gifts.
Mrs. Henry Turner presid·
ed •t the meeting with Mrs .
givinJ! d(lvotions from
.John 20 •ml Hpoem, "The OnllORO'IHV HOWF.I J .
Mrs. Dorothy Howell , who is lv Perfect M•n" Pmvrr
srheduled to undergo ner rrppd and collf'&lt;'t wrn- Jlfvr~
fourth major operation this in unison .
Gur~ts at the mPPtinf! wPrr
week has been transferred to
F.lyria Memorial Hospital at Mrs. F.rma Cleland, Mrs.
F.lyria, 0 . Her mother, Mrs . Opal Hollon; Chester : Mrs.
F.d Templeton, will b!&gt; in Rern•rd Allen and daughters.
"lyria during Mrs . Howell 's Judy and Jill, Albany. A
hospitalization. Junior Tem- thank you note WHS read from
pleton will be staying with his Mrs. Reily Mi•kko. The open
brother, F.d, whil e Mrs . T•m- m••ling of the Rutland
Friendly Garden.rr'S at the
pleton is in l':lyria .

I'

~~~:,n.·;:r. ~~~gni~~~~~

wm

A"angements made
to canvas for cancer
Arrangements to &lt;'Hnva!'
Thf&gt; Lord's Pravrr in
for the American Carwer unisot;~ orwn eci thr mP;ting at·
Society were made during the tendrd by Mrs. Jane Co•trs,
recent meeting of the Com- Mrs . Lilli Van Meter, Mrs.
', munity Wives r.Jub held at the Linda Well , Mrs . Kathv
' home of Mrs. Jan Sheets.
•1\ton r,
Mrs . Norm~
It was reported that the Hawthorne , Mrs. relia
Trary Hein Fund is going Railey, Mrs . Sue Kibble, Mrs.
• · well and plans for Regatta Jan Sheets, and Mrs. Sheila
participation and the Com- Taylor.
. munity Clubs Awards were
: discussed.

Rutl:mc! f' hurd1 ·t,f r tll'i.c.: l on

lnPt'fi llJ'

will•

Mr~ .

f :illwrt

l't'l':•lll'''ll ll 'lll ,

· rtrmtlJlst r:.t or . Ttw n•ginm1l
mPPfinl' 1n lw hPifl at lht'
Mri~'~ Jnn Satnrlitly · was
noh•d . Thr Middl!•port
n clrc1E'n f'luh i!' hnsling thr

th1• frCIVI'IiOI'

('fi7f&gt; Wlm

hy

Mr~ .

fL A. Rmlrkin. Mr~ .
Frcmk HHllirl&lt;iv won tlw

hosh•ss gill . F.•hihiting al lhl'
mt'&lt;"lint' wt-&gt;rf' Mr.- . Will. em

: : ,':;:::::::::::::::::::::, : , : : : , :,:::·:::::::::::'::::::::::: : : : :.:: ::::::::::;::::::.::::::::::.:::: ::::::::::::''::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·::: : :·:·: :·,::::::::::::::::::::::::,,
::::

)

G·.enera'tion Ra.p

)

·By Helen·and s·ue Hottel

:::'
··

IS SHF. ANORF.X1A VI("J'JM OR
FF.F.IliNGTIIF. M1 TJ:rm Til F.?
Ry Helen and Sue·Rnttrl ..
DF.AR HF.I.F.N ANDSUF. :
"Mrs . T.W. of Redwood City" who't"pe•·t•d her dau~hter of
hoing anorexir, 'hnuld think a~ain . Sl,t.r 'aid thr l(irl's per~on::.lity had (•hMn~Pd , shr is nrrvons, rfihrf. overeats or avoids
meals lis shP a junk food junky• l and that larfr amounts of
fond disappear from the refrigerato~.
Rather than get steamed up over a supPQ,~ed psyrhologiral
illnrss,.you ~nd .~hP shouJd consider this scenario'J havr srr n
Danya Gheen
tak•,plllte hrfore :
T.W.'s dau~htrr found out how nic'P mf&gt;n arP and is turninJ!
on with a number of th•m. R• they hikpr.;, dopers or other lowlifes, th•y don't have mm·h monP)', so daughter sliatrhr. food
to eure their munrhie.. Naturally this makrs her nervous. Or
mayb!&gt; she's on dope, whirh would arcount for the personalitv
nmiya Ghren , daughter ·or
rhttngr, and p::~rnnnia about hrr Mom'!'! ··~yin![ . '' ·
•
Frank ancl nonna &lt;ihern ,
If vnu 'rl rrallv rparl vnnr lrttPrs Hrlrn and St1r vnn'rl Middleport, relebrated her
susrWc·t had ronlrany ai'l(i dru![s, r~ther tha.i anot"f'~ict nrr·
seventh birthday on Aprii 7.
vosa. OF.ARGRRGG :
She was hon'ored with a party
If's you who rrad onJy wh(tt yon wanted to srf' and skiprwci
• t h.r home which carried
&lt;&gt;VPr the impurtant symptoms mentioned
. by Mrs. T.W. Thrv
. ont the Mi&lt;'kev Mouse th•m•.
are-:
A gift was present"'l tn ea&lt;·h
I. A rhange from !'lassir "good Iiiii• girl" to problem rhild .
··hild.
2. Her daughter'' vomiting after meal~.
Att rndin~ wer• Je1mniP
~ . RwinJ!s ftomhingr eHting to avoiding food .
Trrry
, Strphltnil' WhHIPy,
4. r.ontinuPrllo!'s of weiJ!ht.
r
.iR:-:r Poulin, Sn7.annP raRSPll ,
Wr stand on our worrl~ : Anyonr whn rlPmnnstratPS hulemic
Ka thy Thom as, Sa r:-:r h
t•ndenr i"" lthP . hinJ!r..,.nd-vomit pHttrrn l, is het-oming too
John•on , Robbie, Sh.rrie and
thin , and shows a markPd personality ehangP, should he eh•rk- Willie Johnson, Pam Hag~y •
E'd hy &lt;i physirhm. If Hnorexi::~ nrrvosa is rli~overrd ami
raroi Johnson , Robbie Joe
psyrhologkally tre•ted rarly, the virlim mav hr '"""d veHrs Clnrl Angela Johnson, and Scot
of rxpensiv• therapy -and mi ..ry . - HF.1 .F.N. ·
·
GhrPn, Sf'ndinfl gifts wPrP
hrr J!ramlparentf-l, F.ugiil
NOTF. FROM STJF. : Virtims - or snspectrd victims - of
.Tohnson
cmci Mr. cmrl Mrs.
:-mPrPxia nervm:;r fthP starvation disNISP1 Hnri thPir fRmiliPs
r arl Gheen and Raymond.
!':In learn morr ahout the· di s~rd.r and whPrr to find expert
help, hy sendln~ stamped, self-addrrs.ed envelopes with their,

Turns seven

Patrida Howr, Director,
NationHI Anorexii"Aid s..:ietv
••
P.O. Rox 29461
('olumhus, Ohio, 43229.
Membership dues of ~ per ypar will hrin~ regular newslrtters, ,inform(ltion on rlini,rs Hnrl d()('tors sp&lt;'c•ialbinf! in anorPX·
ia lthis indndrs some who are rxperimenlin R .with hypnothrrapy l, news of latesl d•vrlupm•nts in r are and rtJrr: and .
updates on how the various local sorietiPS are progr•ssing.
A!~- wp'vp said hPfnrr, An1:1rt&gt;xir Aid i ~ not et $Uh~titute for
psyrhiatry, but an adjunct to it. Victim.• dePp in the starvation
synrlrnmr rf&gt;Quirr proff's.~innal aid, and ch'etnl"r!' for r rrovrrv
aregoodiftheyarrtreatedintime.-SlJF. '
·

llO MECHANIC STREET
POMEROY, OHIO
992-3279

OPTOMETRISTS:

~

JACKSON BAILES
l JAY BRADSHAW

r
l

J ~;.•ddr jp

H I'H1Ji•

rpqnrsts to:

Optometric Vision Center

Mrs .

cnlkdinll : &lt; md ,. Mr~ .
n11h:•rf J-f;IIJitl ;l ~' , .""f\('l'inlf!ll ,
C.;1nl«•nirw 1i r !' fnr fh p
... . 4'ft ~P, wt•n• givf•n lw Mr~.
H~nry Turrif)i- w.ho ~ug~rt•!--:fl'&lt;l

April 1.5 "' lh•• at 7::lfl r .m. ri11l1'n fn ht• IIH' mPmi nJ'
wa~ ttllmlnm•t•tl. Mr!'. Rdt" ltf'rnf'll.~t r;rt1•r.
Mi~~ Rtrhy Oh•hl fnrnh:hf'l!"
J)p;on
will
hr
th~·

',.lit.&gt;

.,..
~

l -·.
....

sprayilll' fnr I':Jf")y im&gt;(•c·t ~.
applyihl! f••rtlli7~r .ami plan1inj..! ~H'f'Cl!-1 ,
R t• rrP~hmrnt s wPrr st-'rvNf

hy t h1• hostttss and ('Cl·ho~te:-;.c,;,
Mf'. Virgil Atkins, an~r
whi rh thr dub toured the
ganlrn of na rcissus at the

Will home. Norman Will led
thP tour and named the ·
varieties . He has more than
50 different \larietles.

·n
A

Caryl Co_ok gives book t:eftort
A n•purt on . the bnnk
"rhi\.'W Medrllin~ Women " :
hy Mrs. Caryl Cook was
presented at the 1'!mrsdav·
night · meeting of the Missionary So&lt;'irty of , the
Pomeroy Fi rst Baptist
rhureh.
Mrs. Cook noted that "meddling women" have hE-en with
us sinre 1591. One Ann Hut('hinson waR diF.rouraged
from studying theol ogy
berH use it was felt that "a
women's brain was too weak

to with•1and the strain.'' and female, before God. The
ijowever, ~r efforts combln· group read in unison Psalm
ed with those of. others who 19, verse 14 to clll!!e the prosought religiQus freedom for ~'ram.
Mrs . Phyllis Skinner
themselves , resulted In
reli!(tous diversity in t~ col- presided at t~ meeting
onies proving to be a powerful which opened · with group
force in ·~ realization of t~ ' singing of "He Arose." Mrs.
principles guaranteed by the Mar~aret Bailey, love gill
chairman, dedicated the love
first amendment.
Ann's life, Mrs. Cook, ex- gin. There was a commurtica·
plained , exemplified a pr"' tion from John Kennedy,
found faith In God and a deep scholarship student, thanking
belief in the intrinsic worth of the Society lor ·a Christmas
alt' human beings, both male gil!
others present for the
meeting were Mrs . EDen
r.ouch, Mrs. Burton Smith,
Mr:s. Georgia Watsoo, Mrs.
Retty Wiles, Mrs. Maria
Foster, Mrs. Harlett Sterrett,
programs, including ap· Mrs . . Audrey Young. The
pearances on the "Jlina~ group went to McCiures'
Shorr Show," Tom Snyder's Three
in One
for
44
Tomorrow Show," ~rbara refreshments following the
Walters' "Not for Women meeting.
Only," and the "Phil
nona hue Show." nr. and
Mrs . Dobson a'nd their two
children reside in Arcadia,
. r.aliforniu.
MEI.ISSA SISSON
ror. Dobson and his family
Melissa Sisson, four year
are active members of
Pasadena First Church of the old daughter of Mr . and Mrs.
is
Nazarene in Pasadena, Robert · Sisson,
recuperating at home followr-01ifornia)
The program will be aired ing two weeks at the Holzer
from 7 to 7:30 p.m. oo Medical Center. She was
discharged Easter Sunday.
Tuesday ov.er CJ\anne18.

'Family: Handk With Care '
qirs tonight over channel 8
"~

amily:

liandle With

r~rr-' ' is a must r'or anyone

interested in quality family
life. It doesn't attempt to say
everyting that can b!&gt; said on
the subject, but zeroes in on
some very rurrrnt causes of
family stress and offers
.sound ·and practical ways to
help a struggling family and
to make a good one better.
This bea.utlfully produced
:10-mi.nute television special
features Dr. James nobson
in an informal interview and
spuntaneous exchange with a
live audience. Dr. James
J)nhson, Ph.D., is Associate
('llnir a I Professor of
Prdiatrirs at the University
of Southern California Sc-hool
of Mrdlrine, and Is affiliated
with Children 's Hospital of
J.os Angeles, in the Division .
of Mediral r.enetics. He is
most widely known 'for his
three books on meaningful
family life. The first,"Dare
tn Oisdpline" has sold over
one million ropirs to date.
The other two are also
national b!&gt;st sellers. "Hide
or Seek" I dealing with self·
est""m in children l and
"What Wives Wish Their
Hu•bands Knew About
Women ."
Dr. Dobsoo has dedicated
his professional life In the intPI(rity of the American
family . He is a popular
speaker at seminars and eon·
frrences throughout the
country. He is heard weekly
on his own radio program
11
FO&lt;'us on the Family" and
has also been a frequent

!lANCE
SA'I'URDA Y
A . dance with music
' rangmg from the 1950s tD
tDday 's disco tunes will be
held from 9 p.m. tD rnidnight
Saturday at the archery
building of Royal Oak Park.
Spinning the platters will be
Kenny Hysell with all new
equipment. Those attending
must be at least 21 years of
age. Sponsorship is by tbe
Meig s High Alumni. The
dance is $5 a couple and $3 for
a single admission '
gut&gt;st on network

.

SHOP
•"

' ''

STORE MADE

BEEF

LB.

IN THE
-

Wi II Be Given By
Mr. H. W. Mattingly

Aid

"

MEIGS INN. POMEROY,OH
Thursday, April 19
'a.m. to 12: noon

.,

.'
'
''
'I,
I

.''
'

•'

town hall . Physical fitnr" Beegle , devo ti ons and
will be fea\ur.ed undPr the .Georgia Watson, prqgram .
. direc·tion of M~ry Geyer.. WILLING WORKERS·
Open to any adult in thP r om- Class of Enterprise United
•
munity.
Methodist Church Thursday
TUESDAY
'
TlJF.SDAY
EASTERN
BAND
Boo~ter
s
REGULAR
Meeting
7:30
p.m. at home of M,rs.
GROUP 2, MIDDLF.POR'I"
First United PresbyteriHn Tuesday, 7:30 p. rn. to make Southern Local School Agnes Weeks. Mrs. Barbara
District Board of Education Weeks, hostess.
Church, 7:30Tuesday night at plans for spring banquet.
Ha rri s onville
se nior 7:30 p.rn . Tuesday in th~
STJNI&gt;AY
• the home of Mrs. Dwight
RF.VIVAL ut the Chester
Citizens Tuesday I p.m. at school cafeteria.
~, Wall~ee .
REVIVAL through Sunday Church of the .Naza rene at
at the South Bethel United 7:30 each . cvemng through
Methodist Churcti, Gilbert Sunday wtth the Rev.•Joe ·
Spencer
and
William L1f e, Parkersburg , as
SiP,enstricker, speakers. speaker .
Services at 7:30 each
REViVAL SET
evening .. Publlr invited .
A revival will open ThuNi·
LADIES Auxiliary of day night at 7 p.m. at the
Pomeroy Eagles
Club Freedom Gospel Mission with
Tuesday, 6 p. m. at Eagles the Rev. 0 . G. McKinney,
speaker ,
Hall. Nomination of officers
Syrac use, aS
·
will be held.
Services will feature special
SALISBURY
PTO, , sin~~in~ and are open to the
Tuesday, 7 p. in. New officers
will·be installed and books of ;
the hook fair currently being
held at the school wiJI ·be on
display. The public' is invited.
(;AMMA
MU
XI
f'HAPTF.R, !leta Sigma Phi .
PHEBE') STORE
Sorority, Tuesday, 7:30p.m.
Thursday , April11 through April19
at the Columbia Gas Co. wit h
·we Gtodty Accept Fed . Food stamps
Mrs. !'lebbie Finlaw and Mrs .
Monday thru Friday
·
Kathy
9:001i17 : 00
. Johnson as hostessrs.
.

'

•

We Also service and Repoir All Mii~H ol Hurlng Aids.
. BaHeries •ncl Supplies For All Milke&amp; For Silt.

'

Phone m.J629

televi~inn

lui -

SBTEEEWFlNG
.
.. LB. $}69
••••••••••••••••••••••••

SPARE
.
LB.
RIB.S••••••••••••••••••••••••

CUBE
.
. $}89
STEAK •••••••••••••• , ••••-.~:.

:0~................ ~~~ . $159

We will give away
a whole ham Thuriday at

With all the latest deco-

rator colors' (like tongerine,
esp..sso brown and electric
biU&lt;I) to match or occani
your wildest color
schemes .

And """"'you 'can
• - our Christian Dior
umbrella conteit.
v.\en you visit yaur
Mort Mt

GTE""-

number.and yo&lt;1

LUNCH MEATS

SUNOAYS ·

able ones.

fill out an emy blarik .
wi1h yo&lt;~r name and
may be one ollhe ,
5 lucky winners of.a .

PEPS'I-COlA

· beautiful Christian Dior'
umbrello.We.'ll notify
yoU if yo&lt;~ win.(Na

Plus Tax
&amp; De~ .

CLOSED

Our Slyieline Phone line is inspi,...
rional. Not only does it offer YD" the
biggest selection of colors al1)"·
where, but also the mostloshio...

''

6-12 oz.
Bottles

Social Calendar

Saturday 9:00·9 : 00

N!eos.

age

=~~~--···········~····~;.$}89.

OF JTORE SLICED

MASON FURNITURE

MORF. TOP RF.AOF.RS - These are th• tor n•arlPrs
of thr ri~ht to rPtHI prngnun al Middh•port F.lt.•mt•ntcrry
School io the third and fourth gr:i!l••s. I ,eft to right . front
row, IRHh Danner, Chucki•• Pullin~ , thi; d grmlr•: .Rark
row I tn r. Mike Se:~ rl es, F:ddir Patrick , W. T. F:n glish.
fou rth grade. Ahsent was F.n•k O•niels, thirrl grad!'..

Mon ., Tues .. Wed., Friday &amp; Sat.
8: 30 to 5:00
Thursday till 12 noon

I

Clas$ of!e.red
For lhosr individuals wh"
lik• ! n k~er themselves in
good physical &lt;'ondilion ,or
are fi~nre consrious, the
Arlult F:dueation J)eparlment
of Rurkeye Hills Career Cen trr is offerin~ a c)at-;!-1 in Slim ~
ntt ~ti&lt;'!i .

t\1 the Aclult F.dur ation
Orrirr at th ~.&gt; f'HrN•r. f'.enler
· lwtwren 8 a.m. • 8 p.m.

OPIEN EVENINGS BY
APPOINTMENT ONLY .

rom~

rluri nJ! the WPPk of April 16,
nr call 245-53~4 !nr further
dt•t ;.tiJ~ . .

Herman Grate
773.5592

Mason , W. Va .

'

This ronrst' is desi!-!nrcl to
development basic skill in
weight rontrol with a majnr
emphasis on n exibility ''"d
hodv t!lm• rx(lrcisrs. Anvone
wh1; is lfi vears.nf·HI(i• or
·
old~r is eli gible t~ e~roll in
lhts. roues~. Shmna•~trs will
he~m ~pr.d 2.1 , 1!17~ anrl ":'II
tx• m :W!-iSion t"VPr} Monday
· , f
7~
1 nti!
evpn m~ rom ·· p.rn . 1
May 2 ~· .
.
To reg1!&lt;ter for lh!S Plass,

SAVE $1~00. • •

-/

~alher you're redecorating yo&lt;~r
present home or moving int9 a n - one, you might
want to stop into a GTE Phone Mort for .some col""

~~~:~...................~~~·2~9 s511~LAOKIN••••••••••••••••••••••
LB. $199

FINE ASSORTMENT
...

•

r··-··-·-·-··-·~----------·,

Anyone who has trouble hearing is wei.come to have a
hearing test us1"A the latest electronic equipment to
determine If his loss Is one whi&lt;:h may be helped. Some
of the causes of nearing loss wlll be explained end
diagrams of how the ear works will be sfiown.

YOU CANNOT COME IN- •
CALL FOR A HOME APPOINTMENT.

Rrad Little, Tony Heaton, Peggy Jarvis, third gra~f':
Amy . Rlakr. Mellinda KessrP, Kim Kennedy, srrond
grad!•: and Tara Hall, first grade .

WON-ROOKS ~ These arr the top rea ~r,.,; in Mrs. Wendy Halar's Tit1e J rrmlin~ proJ!ram whfl f'CICh \\'(ln a book
or their choice for their arcomplishments. r..n to ril(ht '
Gene Ratl iff. F.ddie Patrick, W. T. P.nglish, fourth gradP:

5th &amp; Pearl

'159

. . . . . . . . . .~.~~.$159

TRI-STATE AREA

'.,
'•
"•'

$149

CHUCK

~-=~~

FOR THE BEST DEALS

"•

ELECTRONIC
HEARING TESTS

Phone colors!'

SAUSAGE

Mason Furniture

.

•1n

L

Ho~X l , fourth grade: Nannette Rlak c, Dc Arinna Plants,
third grade ; Denise r.ilx•a ut, ~ohnny Little, most irnprnvt•d ; Stt•vr F'oulkrocl , nrainH Rrnwn. SCC'Ond gradt!.

Ph1ns for the va rietv show monry for hi glwst Jll' rtn hP prcscnt Pd ~t . Riv.ervil•w &lt;'Pntagp of parent~ in atSehno l, Ma y 11, wl're :._trnlhtnt'l' ..
clis&lt;'ussed at the April PTO
N!'w offleers for the nl'&gt;li
ml•£'ting .
.\'t'.Hr Wl're insUII11'd by
fkvntions bv C.r;-tc'P Stout TPrt'fHI C: olli ns,
vier
;oml fl ag pl erlge Jed by Sibyl pres!d&lt;•nt: .Jenny R!'rkhimer,
Fnsh•r, firth gnHfr student , ~wrr~·tH ry , :--md r.rraldmp
pr&lt;•('r ded the businPss HniRinJ!t•r , tl't.'fiSnrer.
Jn&lt;'t'l ing cnncluch•d by . Nf•w hnoks for th(• !--iChtinl
Mm·lrn(' Pu tm;m , pn•sid.cnt . llhrary ·hought frnrn hook fcii r
C.nulr six W('l n thP;.1ttendance fund!-! wrrt•on di splay.
·• ::
h&lt;-~mwr r1 1Hi rJttf'nrl(IJH'P
R'rfi'Pshments Wf'l'l:' Sl'rwd .

, "we're redoing our home

we resene. the tWbt
to limit quantities

WINNP.RS OF OOMPF.TITION - Thi•se are the top
pupils in th e Title I readi ng program of Mrs. D&lt;•wey Hor·
ton at th• Middleport F.lrmentary School. Winnrrs of thl'
rPading competition were, I to r, Donna Manley , Jrff

second grade: Tracy fle Wers, fi rst grade :
Heather Wood, first grade: Kim K•nnedy, sf't'ond grade :
Stephanie Crow, first grade: Lei ~h Anne Redovian, .Jason
Sm ith, and Valerie Raker, kindergarten.

· Riverview PTO met

HEARING TESTS SET
FOR ,.EIGS COUNTY, OHIO

IF

'

l ~1ckeydoo ,

TOP RF.ADF.RS - These are the tor rpadPrs in thr
right to read program at the MirldleJx•rt P.l••mentary
School in the lower thre1• ~ra dr•s for th• months of
February, March, ami April . Th&lt;•y inelmie, I tor, Amy

'

'

10 7 0 .

·t.

purchase is nee&amp;

sary and the

· contest ends
April20,
1979,)

16. West Washington, Ath,ns

'

'

4:00' p.m. Winners every day.

POMEROY Chapter OF.S
open house and products party Tuesday from 11 a. m. to t
p.m. and 7 tD 9 p.m. at
Pomeroy Masonic Templ e.
WF.IlNF.SOAV
POMF:ROY IJJJ'JGP. J64, F .
and A. M. speria l meeting,
Wednesrlay, 7:30 p.m. with
work in the ent•red Hpprrri·
tirr def,! reP . A11 ma slPr
ma son ~ invi lPd ..
DIRECTORS of Pomeroy Middleport Lions Club will
have special meeting at noon
Wednesday at the Meigs Inn .
111lJRSilAY
MIDDLF.PORT CHIJ.D
r.nnserv8ti0n League, 7:30
Thursday, Riverboat .Room . .
Members to rome dressed in
a role which a mother plays.
Mrs. Thelma Osborn to hav••
devotions, Mrs. Peggy Harris
and Mrs. Helen Rlaekston to
be hostesses .
RF.V!VAJ. SF. RVJCF.S,
Coolville Alleghany W•·sl•ya n
Church just north of Tuppers
Plains, . Thursday through
Sunday, 7::10 earh PVPning.
Rc' ' '· Robert F.arley ,
PVI\nl(rllst.

RO&lt;'K SPRINGS RF.TIF.R
Health r!uh. 1:.15 p.m. at tll!'
Trrrit&gt; Ahhntt . ThurRdm·.
,l•rkir ?:irklr to hav• tbe pr;,_
J!rHm , Mr!;. MHr1h;.~ K h'l' · thf•
rontPst .
Mi\GNO!.IA CI.UB Thursda y 7::!0 p.m. at · home ot
Oori s Orueser . Margaret

WHEN YOU BUY YOUR FAMILY .
THE COLONEL'S

15
PIECE BUCKET
'·

Our "Follow·Through Crew" at The lnou'rance Store will give
you to lid support If you ever noed to file 1 ctelm. \We can do

(REGULAR PRICE $7.55)

'.

thla because- we art Independent, working with not one,
but Hverll tlnelnaureri ... llkt The Conti'ntntal Jnauranct

ComPa'nlea. They want our: bullntaa, j uat 11 we went Your
bulintll. What we aay countl with the Insurance companlea,
juat ao what you noed ~unto with ua.

It' a a nice ayatem,' dulgned to give you tho ultlmato In
1nouranco prott&lt;rtlon ond ~leo. Drop by- day-nand
tet uo tell you what The lnouranoo Store oan dq ~you.

REUTER-BROGAN
INSURANCE
SERVICE
llA .E . MAtN 'ST.
POMEROY , 0 .
·
m -sl:IOor99H139

•; YOU DON 'T BUY A POLICY ,
YOU HIRE AN AGENT"

;;;;;;;;;;.~----••••••••• Ho~. ~ssislinf.{ host1~s:-. . Cur&lt;.~

•

OFFER GOOD THROUGH SUNDAY, APRIL 22Nif!J

�•

R-The Daily Sentmrl, Mirldteport -PQm&lt;'rny , 0 .. TurS{IHy. llpr 17 1!l7!l

Apple Grove

News Notes

Mr anrl Mrs. i"l&lt;lrna Par~nnfl v1sitNI

Mr

i!

For Best R·e sults Use Sentinel Classjfieds

Hnfi Mrs

nonalcl Rarnt•l1t• HI
J Jlng"~villt- Sunrlay and mr~
Rt•rtM Russrll at Wolf Pt•n,
Card of _T hanl!s
Mr. anrl Mrs. Sidn~y f'ar'
WANTAD
p&lt;'nter of Wellsvillr spt&gt;nt a I ·
THF FAMILY t~f Hf'rmon J ' Bnc&gt;h '
WNry p,..tnnrls thf'lt ~rohturl C'
wl't'k with Mr. and Mrs
1("1 thf' mnny ff lionrl" nf'•ghhor"
Rurhl Wolfr anrl Mr. and
nnrl rPinhv P'I tor ttu•ir mony
Mrs IRwis Onn;
I~ Words ot" Under
orH. flf kinrlnP~~ ~l\clwn rlu nnq
Cull
a....,.
Mr and Mrs Rob r.asJl&lt;'r of
thP In'-~ of lh("tr lovPd fin e A
I cloy
1111
Ul
~pt'(lnl thnnk" tn t,P mt"mhrn
r.olnmbus wrrr weekend , 2days
150
1.10
c-1 thl" Pomrrny FmrrrJI"nry
Sdoys
110
1.21
~u"'ts of Mrs . l"l&lt;llly Wolfe
I days
!110
S('lt•orl nnrl ti-l~ Ftu' DE"rt . Dr
and family.
fhrl!'lwOy onrl ~ toft Or Tf'll~
Mr. and Mrs CChuck. ' Elch woal over lhe minimum I'
onrl ti-l~ nurSP'- of VPtPron ~
words II t cenl.l per word Pft' daly
MPmoriol HN,rnlol onrl Rr\1
Mu~rage and family have
Ada )'Uill1lnc lllher lllln ~""
PNr.n fnr nllthf'y dtrl
moved to th•ir new borne at
dllys wiU bt charged It the J day
Snn" tiPnry onrf rhor lf''- n nrl
' MorningStar
FomtiiP"
' Mrs . Andrew fNora l rros.&lt;
In memory, Card ol 'l'hlnb and
Obl.tuary . I centl per wont.
00
had surgery at St. Anthony
mlnimwn. Caah In advlllce.
Hospital and is recovering
MobUe Rome •'- and Yard sakll
satl!dactorily. Her husband,
-Notices
--.... """""" only wllh cuh wllh
Andrew, Mr and Mrs. Edorder 2S cent chatse tor llldt CUTJ·
GUN SHOOT Roflne VoluntMr
ward Cr'oss, Paul Cross, Mrs
ing S..
In Care~ Tho s.n.
fnf' O~pt fvNy Soturrlav &amp; 30
Unol
prn at lhPtr h1J IIrlm~ in Bo " hom
Rita Hill are staying with
FoC"tory C"hok~ ~uns only
her. Other visitors were F:nc
Tho Publilhel' ,_,.,.. lhe """
10
edll
or
rele&lt;t
any
l
d
l
o1&gt;
Hill, Mr. and Mrs. Harold
jectlonal. Tho Publllller wtD not "'
Roush , Columbus, Mrs.
reiDOI1Ilble fw 100ft tban anelncw
red
lnlorllon.
Crestlyn Hill, Rev. David
_ _ . !"fi!_IP_~a !It~- . _
Pbono !112.21111
Harr1s, Mr and Mrs ClarenIMMFDIAT F
OPENING
ce Yeager, Mason, Mr. and
lohorotory TP.ch ninon
3 II
........
Mrs Don Bell and Mrs.
~ hilt bpertE"nced ML T (AS(P)
or equtvolt"nt Excellent solorv
· Bruce Hart .
ond fnngP. henelth Shill dlf ·
Mr and Mrs . Don Bell
fpnmto il Contact • Persan nP I
VlSited Mr. and Mrs. Bruce
WANT-AD
OfftcP
Pleas ant
Vollev
Hart in Columbus a few days
Hosrutol Volley Ori vf'l Point
Pleasa nt , WV '5550 Phonp
while Mr. Bell consulted a
304 675 .4340 An Equal Or
· doctor.
portun1ty Employer
Mrs. Pearl Norris, Mrs.
Mondo,
ASSISTANT
ADMINISTRATOR wtth
flon Hell, Mrs. Herbert
1•
Noon on S.turdlly
oht!.ties and know leciQP of
Roush paid respects to l.arry
hoC'Ikkeeping , typmg 'reporWilt and visited his family at
ting , post1ng ledgers poyro ll
~~
gront wrlttng, tlemal rluftps
the McCoy • Wetherhnlt .
fP.M
and lio tson for the Boord of
the dly btfot"'! public1Uun
Moore Funeral home at
1-4Pol1h Annual salary $7498
Gallipolis Tuesday
Sun!I&amp;Y
Suhm•t rf1'sumPs by Aprtl 30
IP.M
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
lq-79 It MPigs Co f:leo lt h DPpt
P Bo J( 631 Pomeroy , Ot-1
Russell , David and F:dward .j..ol,l--...;Fri4o=Y.;:;--,;;;;;~ ::. Roush, Mandy and Mirhael
SA NITARIAN wtlh riPQH!IP. to con
Notices
cit •rt ond corrv out state man
Russell spent Sunday with
-------rlotpcf and other toonly pro
GUN
SHOOT
FVERY
FRIDAY
fl
30
Mr and Mrs. Rob Russell at
nrnms tn MPigs County Annua l
PM RA CINE GUN CLUB FAC
Wolf Pen
~o lory
$8711 20
Submit
TORY CHOKF GUNS ONLY

Hy Mrs. Herbert R011sh
Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Bur·
ton and daughter, Sherri of
Columbus were weekend
guests of Mr. and Mrs Ver·
non Donohue
Mr and Mrs Lester Roush
took Mrs Don R1ffle and
children to tbe1r home in
Wheelersburg Sunday. They
had spent a week with the
Rousbes assisting them with
theirfanrung.
Jimmy and Billy Hup spent
the weekend with their grandparents Mr. and Mrs . Arnold Hupp at Portland.
Mr and Mrs Junior
Gawthrop, Mrs
Libby
Perkins and daughter, Dbbie,
of Summerville, W.Va. spent
a weekend with their
daughter and family, Mr. and
Mrs. Rocky Hupp and son, J .
R. They were all dinner
guests Sunday of Mr. and
Mrs Arnold Hupp and Mr
' and Mrs, Eddie Hupp and
son, Jeremy
Michael Rhodes was recen·
tly discharged from four
years of service m the United
States Air Force and is now
employed at Jones Boys
supermarket in Pomeroy
Mrs. Rnald Russell and
Mrs Bessie Parsons were
visitors at Gallipolis Monday.
Mrs Russell consulted her
doctor at Holzer Medical
Center. Visiting Mr. and Mrs.
Russell and family Thursday
evemng were Mrs. Chuck
Mugrage and sons, Tyson
and Travis, of Morning Star.
On Saturday evening, Mr.
and Mrs Bob Russell, Mr ..
and Mrs Steve Haggy and
children, Stephanie and
Oblo Valley Uvealocll Co.
Brad, Mr. and mrs. Don
Sale every Satarday at 1
1Russell, all of Wolf Pen were p.m., 52 VInton Street,
guests of the Russells. Other Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.
callers in the borne were Mr.
Total Head: 310
and Mrs. Dana l.ewis of ClifFeeder Steers : (Good
ton, Mr. and Mrs. Russell imd choice) 250 to 300 lbs.
Roush, Cindy and F.dward, 90 to 105; 300 to 400 lbs.
Mr. and.Mrs. Herbert Roush
87.50.to 105; 400 to 500 lbs.
and Mr and Mrs Dorsa Par·
85 to 99; 500 to 600 lbs. 84 to
sons.
95.50; 600 to 700 lbs. 68.50 to
Mr. and Mrs. Mike O'Brien
80; 700 to 800 lbs. 67.50 to
and children have moved to 80; 800 and over 65 to 78.
the borne of Mr. and Mrs. ;
Feeder Heifers: (Good
Roy Donohew and Mrs.
and choice) 250 to 300 lbs.
Florence Smith attended a 90 to 99; 300 to 400 lbs. 85 to
ministerial meeling at the 92.50; 400 to 500 lbs. 80 to
Immanuel Methodist Church
90; 500 to 600 lbs. 75.50 to
in Logan.
87; 600 to 700 lbs. 70 to
Mr. and Mrs. John Chaney 82.50; 700 .to 800 lbs. 60 to
of Pine Grove Road visited
71; 800 and over 55.50 to 67.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Bell SaturFeeder Bulls: (Good and ,
day evening.
choice) 250 to 300 lbs. to
Rev. and Mrs. RQbert 103; 300 to 400 lbs. to 100;
Sayre spent Thursday 400to500lbs. to99.50; 500 to
evening WJth Mr. and Mrs. 600 lbs. to 98; 600 to 700 lbs.
Dallas Hill .
to 76; 700 to 800 lbs to 72.50;
George Par s ons of 800 and over to 70.
Ashland, Ohio, spent the
Bulls (1,000 lbs . and
weekend with Mr. and Mrs. over) 58 to 69.25.
Coroll White and Mr. and
Slaughter Cows: UtUltles
' Mrs. Dorsa Parsons. George 48 to 61; CaMers and
was a Sunday dinner guest of Cutter&amp; 42 to 52.
his aunt, Mrs . Virginia Rowe
Springer Cows (by the
at Lincoln Hill, Pomeroy.
bead) 250-425.
Mrs. Alice Balser returned
Cows-Calves (by the
to the home of her daughter, bead). 37f&gt;-720.
Mr. adn mrs. Jack Ables afVeal Calves 90 to 111.
,'.
. , . ter spending the winter with
Baby Calves 75-140.
her sn, Mr. and Mrs. Carroll
All prices taken from the
Balser at Mansfield
auction of Saturday, April
Mrs Andrew (Nora ) Cross 14.
Is a surgical patient at Saint
Trends: Feeder cattle
Anthony's Hospital in Colum- steady. Cows steady to $2
bus . Mrs . Cross was higher. Veal calves steady.
discharged ·from Holzer
Hoc•
Medical Center on Friday.
Top bogs (21().230 lbs.)
She was taken to the Colum- 43.50 to 47.
bus bOBPital by her husband
Boars 32.50 to 34.50.
on Saturday and will undergo
Pigs (by the bead) 18.50
... surgery Friday. Her friends to 45.
and relatives wish here a
Sows (450 lbs. and over)
speedy recovery.
38 to 41.75.
Robert Smith Sr. was
•. , returned to his home from
• • Veterans Memonal HOBJ&gt;ital.
AlheDI Uv ..tockSal..
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
Sahlrday,
Aprl114,197t
,Russell and children, Mandy
Feeder
Steers
(400·800
1and MIChael, were Sunday
lbs.),
Choice
74-101.50;
Good
/guests of hls parents, Mr. and
53-73.50.
1Mrs. Robert Russell at Wolf
Feeder Heifers ( 400·700
Pen.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert lbs.) Choice 85-85.50; Good 56:~. Roush visited Mrs. Helen 84.50.
Feeder Bulls (400-800 lbs.)
Slack, Guy Neigler, Harry
Choice
72-95.50; Good 44.50Shain, Bea Stewart and Carol
71.50.
Hayman at Veterans
Slaughter Bulls (over 1,000
Memorial Hospital Saturday
lbs.) 61.50-68.25
evening.
Slaughter Cows, Utilities
Mrs . George Morris of
53.50-61:
Camers and cutters
Medway is visiting her •
40.56.
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Veals {Choice and prtme)
Durst and Rick.
86-113
-, .
Angle Barnett of Parker·
Baby Calves {by the head)
, sburg is staying with Mr. and
61·115.
.,''" · Mrs. Robert Spencedr and
(Hogs)
, . Tracy while her mother, Mrs.
Hogs (No. I, Barrows and
· Cathy Barnette is a surgical GUts, 200-230 lbs.) « .30-44.75.
patient at Camden Clark
Sows 35-42.85.
'
Hospital.
lloars 34-34.75.
Clifford Hill returned home
Pigs {by the head) 38-00.
Tuesday from Holzer
(Lmbs)
Medical Center.
Slaughter Lambs 71
Mrs . Jan Norris, son,
Ryan , and daughter, Tracy,
RACCOON MEAT
and Mrs. Donna Hill were at
nLMA, Ga. ( AP) - High
· • lltlzer Medical Center Mon- beef prices don't bother
' ' day. Ryan and Tracy con- ,Wayne Lewis who operates a
sulted their doctors.
,food store here. He simply
Sunday guests of Mr. and ,began offering his Ctllltomers
mrs. Dallas Hill and Dean dressed raccoon Instead.
'
11
• ' were J.orl Chapman of
1t's delicious," he says.
:'
Syracuse, Mr. and Mrs. Bob
He's selling as many as 50
Casper of Columbus, Mrs. raccoons a day at 79 cents a
Dolly Wolfe, Carl Wolle, Jr. pound to customers who
and claugWers (If Racine, Mr. cqme from as far away as
•. and Mrs. Darrell Norris, ' Florida.
:' ~ · Ryan and Tracy, Mr. and
He says raccoon meal can
Mrs Marshall Roush, C'&lt;lf(· be served stewed, baked or
barbecued.
·. ~t· neyandJoey.

.,

9,:-The n~ulv St•n1nwl. MHld]PJl(li'1 -PIIJfl{' ! , ,~

CHARGES

'·"

...

,

*'

-

N""""'"

----·NOTICE

ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

lFTART FALLS \emettory lot care
fpe~ ore poyablp now FM four•
grove lnts SlO For 7 g rovP
lot!' SS o yPor SPnci ch.-cks to

C"lorrnrp

Norr is

7376'

Hill

f'('\(ld Ronne Ohto

PUBLIC NOTICE
The Vtllage of Syracu·se
wtll hO ld a publiC auc tio n and
recetve sealed b ids on April
21, at the Fire Sta110n T t1e
auction will begin at d p m
Sealed bids must be s ub
ml tted by 3 p m

on the 21St

Items to be sold are pot tee
cruiser ,
tractor ,
gang

mowers and a tra nsformer
Th e Vtllage of Syracuse
r eserves the pght to re[ect
any or all bids
(4) 11 , 13 , 17 , 3 t c::

Wed!)eadoy, April II

ASTRO ·-=G=-RA:::-::oP"'"""'H
Bernice Bede Osol

~'lbur

~'Birthday
Aprll11, 1171
Vou 'll have many opportunities
lhts coming year for making
qutck gains, but consider partnership arrangements because
they could double your luck

rf&gt;sumes by April 30 1979 lo
Metgs Co Hf'olth Dept PO Bo x
631 Pnmproy OH

AN NEEDED fnr spet•ol pro1ect
thnl will be ending Sertember
30 1979 $5 67 on hour Submtt
rf'sumE"s hy April 30 1979 to
Meigs C'o HE"olth Dept , PO Bo x
631 , Pomf"roy, Ohio
HANDY MAN for roofing ,
"h1ngle!! spou ting . some ciuct
wnr~ rnof repo lr Must be ett·
pPr~enrflrl . !.leody wade Write
If\ Po Bo ll' 150, Pt Ph•o sa nt' WV
~5550

•MANAGfMfNT TRAINffS 15 000
tn 575 000 Mgt posltton now
open btellent •arnings w h1le
IPOrnlnQ When Quollfted you
w1ll ottE'nrl management train·
ing o;chool onrl will rereive $50
n daysolnry nnd upfln&amp;el!l rlur
tng l1mttPd ,s rhooling pe riorl
SPif posttinn olsn ovo dtJble Ap·
ply 10om Tue'- the 17th at the
Holirlny tnn Goll1polis, OH
A "lie fnr M r Morgan Fqua I
Fmployment Oppor!un1ty
HFAO BOOKKEEPER to hondle
li~rol oflotr ~ of· O{!Pncy unde r
"upervts1on of the direclnr
Must be ropoble to colculote
onrigP.nProte o T &amp; l slalemenl
holonce sheet, regular fis ca l
projPctions Posit ion will be
rPspons lhlf" for Invoicing or
rnl1nts rPrPiverl onct royoble
Position I'- located In Athe ns
Oh1o onrl 1s ovodoble Junf! 1
1979 BPnef tls prol.llderl onrl
saiCJry npgotioble SPnd resvme
to PO Box I&lt; , Athens Oh1 o Ap
pltrahon riPoctline May 4 1979

ARIES (Morch 21·AprH 11) You SOMfONf NEfOEO to move or
are quick to respond today and
help in thP. movmg of o plano
vou ' ll have no trouble staying
fmm Pomeroy to Mlddl epo rl
Plposc C"OII992 3747 after Spm
one step ahead of the compeli~
lion However , tread lightly NATIONAL COMPANY now hlr
when dealing with fnends. 1-low
In a F('lr lntp rvtew write 7.47
to get along with others Is one
8r~odwoy Middleport, Ohin
of the sections you'll enjoy In
your new Astra--Graph Letter
that starts with your birthday
Mail $1 for each to Astra-Graph ,

HELP WANTED

P 0 . BoM 489, RadiO City SIB·

I

Experienced

t•on, N Y 10019. Be sure to

specify blr1h sign.
TAURUS (Aprii20.May 20) Make
judgments based on your first
reactions today , because you
have a tendency to over-ana-

lyze things and diSiort the
facts

GEMINI (Moy 21-June ZG) A
friend may offer some tempting
diversions today, but you'd
better care for your responsl~ ,
billties first or you could find
yourself In hot water

CANCER (Juno 21-Juty 22)
Take advantage of the little
breaks In vour routine today to
have a little fun . Feeling too
lied down will make you fretful .

LEO {July 23-Aug. 22) Do whal

needs to be done as each job
pops up, ahtl your day will run
smooth Excuses th,at cause
delays will create a mess you
didn't bargain for .

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You

can have tun and ~nlo'Y your~

self today without spending a
bundle. Check out prices be·
fore you get involved .

LIBRA (Sep1. 23-0ct. 23) You're
apt to be more generous
toward others than toward
yourself tOday You deserve
equal treatment, so don't be
hard on you rselt .

SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-No•. 22)
There is nothing wrong wllh
your Ideas tOday, but your

negative altitude mlghl cancel
any opponunllfes you might
have to put them to use.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc.
Z1) Follow your hunches. Don 't
tet some fast-talking salesman
convince ~ou that you need
something you don't. Buy only
,vhat you desire

CAPRICORN (Doc. 22·Jon. 11)
Try to keep things on lhe fight
aide lodoy If you take work or
even play too seriously you 'll
try too hard and could become

pushy.
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. 11)

Those things thet come nat~

rally are lhe ones thol should
be pursued today. leave the
clever, new Ideas to the other

~rlces

(Fob. zo.Morch ZOl

Throw out a lot of Ideas ·or

possible sotullons , but dOn't
actually gel Involved In another's affairs . . You don 't need

ldded problema

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPR!S£ ASSN. I

•

Mechanic·
farm machinery &amp;
small engmes. Cilll for
For

mtervtew

Meigs Equipment Co.
Pomeroy,O .

992-2176

__ _~a!'t!d_ tl! ~uy __

\ jll' 1-

1

~

'"'7H

TELEVISION
VIEWING .
TUESDAY, APRIL 17,1979

MAN' S w nll~t hPtWN' f1 Toll
Ht"t••(' NM'rlc ('Ill r npt"r!i In
ll'mllrl rlr~pl'rOfPI)' Contnd 1AC
C'"nr""' l" ' "t Pnm Pr (1 y nr Ooil'r .
5('t1tll•r" l

7·30-Hollywood SQuares 3; Candtd Camera 6; Gong

Business Sert?ices

~~

Show 8; Price Is Righi 10; Donna Fargo 13, TV
Honor Society 15 : Sanford &amp; Son 17; MacNeil Lehrer Report 20,33.
8·QO-CIIflhangers 3,15, Hoppy Days 6,13 : Paper
Chase 8.10; Baseball 17; Austin City Limits 20 ; City
Notebook 33

FOUND Y0UNG fPm('llr O('lhf&gt;r
mon wtth rnllnr Npor l"to~~ n n
oq1 7501

H: L .W1tlael

Auto Sales

Roofine

1q73 INTFitNATIONAl SCOUT
'i'l (l()(l m1le~ fully PflmppPrl
Otr wron r h Pk l")l'rPIIf&gt;n t cnn·
rl illf\n
2121

q,q'

Mo ~o:l'y Fernuo;nn rnrn
rlnnt"' '~'~~ · 7 0A&lt;

1•60 MFRCURY cnMFT Spo•t
rnt tpt&gt; 307 VA outo . 1 f"PW
llrf"~ $400 985 4106

1077 MONTf CARLO p s p 8 .
P w C C T s A c 33 000
m df'S

Co li

741 14? 1

or

New, repair,

TRAILER
SA' FS
Monttomery Rd.

1071 rHFVROLFT ••• short wh••l
hCl'-P

gutters and

t;angovlllo, Ohio
&amp;14-'69-4245 Evonlnt•

..d
Hame MlinlenlnCI

8,10; Off Your Dull 33, Academy Leaders 20 .
9:30-TAxl 6.,13. 10 DO-Ropers 6,13, Baryshnlkov a1
the Wh ite House 33; News 10
10 30--13 Q~eens Blvd. 6,_13, World at War 17; Lock;
Stock &amp; Barrel 20
11 oo-N~ws 3,6,8,10,13, 15; Llk~ It Is 20, Book Beaf 33.

.

m•lnttn~~nc:e i

home

CAPTAIN F.ASY
FROM HIS Tlr.IV IIUIIBLI!'

new

and ropoir. Storm doors
ond windoW1. All work

Window clunl119
Gutter cleaning
Free Estimates

2MitesEastofWilkesvllle
SUPER \;&gt;O()SE SIUC.:K

8 ·30--Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13, Sneak P reviews 33 .
9 00-Movle " Hard Times" 3, 15; Movie "Transplant"

All IYPos roofing, rutltrl
and downs~u1s. AI ty""

dOwn spouts.

27320

Ohio Vallr Roufi111

gu•ranteed.

eshmates.

TRAIl E R S
NQW
949-2862,949-2160
AVAI"'ABLE
4-5-tlc
L--....;,'____.:::;:::.:..!~:...1 L.______;__..:..;_;_.;....J

1 1110UT

years

20
ox pori e,nc t .

C•ll:

SOt&lt;t&lt;V, WAS.HtDEAI&lt;: --&amp;UT e'Vft&lt;Y
AI&gt;! 51!'~ ML$ EAR.N HIS WAY
;---'t_~IN~T~()~HI!AVEN I

BACI&lt;WARP -- OUT Of' THE

TO CRAWL UP TO

OCT0 ·5'U&amp; TSNTACLE!

TH&amp; CULT "HEAV!!'N' l

Fru

Hoskins, 949-2160.

A IILMT OF- AIR' IILOWS HIM

PRISON CEI..L •• WI\5'H IS'

lq7Q FORD CUSTOM F 150 lrudc
3()") en~lnP , ' '• ton outo P S

RFYNOLQ'S

7&lt;~~876

ELECTRIC M010R

1974 OLOS CU TlASS SuprPme
s1100 985 3505

3-7-1 mo.

197H CHFVV 4 )t .t1 wtth IC'Ih tof P.)t·
lro ~ PncPd In sell 7,j') 7667
1977 FORD lTD d door
gpm
7800 ac tual
Show room
dean
997 74fl2

18 Yurs hperlance
Witt Moko

A reol
rndes
Phone

o.

CHEVY BLAZER Less fhon
75 000 onP owneor OvPrsile
nms tlrps Air ronci lttonl ng

$3350 '1'1~ 7731
1q75 CHfVROlfT MAII8U P S

· Re!NIIr
Pllone 992-5612

Siding

1q57 CHEVY BEl Atr 2 rloor 783
with tWo 3 speeci Iron!! Body
ro1tg h 992-7032 or 949-7184
nfler 5pm

BISSEll
SIDING 00.

1976 (HEVY , 8ef1onzo .tlx4 short
whf1'e l bo se 1 304 882 2396

~a_m_pi_n9 i;CU~iP'!le.!lt,
1975 11 FOOT truck camper self
rorotoined oir condition e)t
C'PIIent C"on rlitton 991 -2121

'

Ca II for a Free Siding

EWon

•14 Yr. Experlenca
Aurol Molhod

\PPUANCE li

lANE DANIELS

220 E. Moln S1rH1,
_Pomeroy. o~

Etberloldo of Pomaroy
ond Kimi&gt;Ott Music Conlor
of Alhons
Phone ft2-2SI1

..crrl'i'ii • rii"itis

4·• · 1 mo.
FOOT FRANKliN comptng ' - - - - - - - - - - - . J
tro1ler
goQd
C"ondtflon ,...
742 -187.4

18

13 FOOT trave l tro1le r hcellenl
Cf"nrl,tion
Gas
s to ve
• re frtgl'rator, portable to1let
00
New l1mo Rd
bet·
wPe nRutlond ond Harri sonville
Note
Vonomon
Phone
747 2761

_~o_bi!_e .H~'!l.e~ ~or. S_al!

'

,'r::t, c,"~'!:

---

-

_

_R~a)l§.s!a!e

M o r k e I , o n d ti - =='-==="':-=-""=" GfPE"nhnu~Ps Ont('ll"l Sf"ts SP.erl

for children

Has 2
lots
1 floor plan
J
bed room s, bAth, large eat ·
In kitchen, lots of cabinets,

full baement. S17.300 00

CABBAGE
brouolt ,
WANT TO huy o ld .tiS and 78 PLANTS
rouliflower bru11sels !.ptouts
phonogrnph records
&lt;"oil
hPod le tturfl , to motoes onci
99") 6370 ('I f Contoct Morttn Fur·
large ~e lo rt,o n of bedding on·
n1turtnuo!s Pnt!l ot flowers onci
WANT TO huy o ld jP.w.,lry Coli
hanging bo s lo: ets
Clelcnd
qq1-S767 or write l&lt;oy Ceril 87&gt;
IGreenhoUse
Gf!' rolrlin e
rl~lon d ~Onf'le
S _2nd. Mkir:trf&gt;po rt OH
_ _ _ _ _ _ __ .. _
FOR PARTS 1970 Ponflor Bon·
Yard Sale
nf"vj lle 455 4 bhl mntor onrl
~ - - - - - - - - , frons PP.rfect $150 992-6170
VARO SAU Aprtl 18th thru 71 st l or ~E"eot U3 8uttE-: nut
685 l nnt'- f St
M1drlleport ,
n hlo
")'}FOOT OFLUXE Stortroh troller
rf'frrgerotor
A C
StovP
sleeps 6 On displny ot Hogrr·
GARAGF SAlE .488 CornPr of
South 4th ond ltnC"ol n Mlrl ty''- , 825 Beerh St , M1ckfl•port
rllf'pl"''rf April "70th ond ?ht 1967 40&lt;1 lnt trCK tnr, nP~Iy
Storts
qom
C' loth l ng ,
nln~~worf&gt; Al.ltll'i et( , Clf"'on
cwP.rhol•IPd l'ngtf"te, new p01nt I
anorl ruhhcr . $1700 AMF ~· '
I
mrrrt'ltmrlisf' som~lh lng or
h r rntohNrr fnrword nnd
evP r_y nnP
rf' v('r!P I olrp ""w Sl30 Keith
PORCH SAt F. Thttr~tfy anrt Fridnv
R•rlf'nntor CJf\5 417~
I
April 19 ?0
Rn~ror
k arr
HlliHPnrP nrt('lr rhrstf'r F.l\lfow
~1gn~ tn rhes tf'r 5 fomti!P!I
Anhy ifr"lr' .. rhtlrfrr"n ' ,,~ nrlPit
••II$1(V TYPF Oo'(';. rnoiP nil
d(ltJ,inl"l 1- ilrhl"n '-lr'llr
nn w
•h C" To;
Gnod w nlrh ~('Ill
"1'11'"' " 1h n ~ l7r 1 IC'I"Ir n11 t 1
Mlruoturl' rnlltr" ft"mnlr" nil
n 11("
.,...,...,,.,n .,,.r,..lf'ln , ,,.,, ,..
,,,... , ,
nt!P Hount'!r1r Snrirty
Q'll:i 'J'l(IQ
llf)? 7hfU1 n r Q07 7fl~'l

•

24 ACRES with lovely 2
yeAr old split entrv home 3
bedrooms, lovely kitchen,
bath, own wilter svstem .
Rec room , mr.ny other

fe•lures $38,500 00 .
LOVELY BRICK -

3

bedr6oms, bath, n!ce kit
chen, f lreple ce, hardwood
Moors, p11tlo, porch, large
lot . Excellent for the
money S31,800 00

21

,1\CRES

With

mony

buildlnp si tes and close In
Electric
11nd
water
avAilable

Woods,

small

po!"'d, mp,nv other features

$13,000.00
THE EASY WAY TO SELL
-

~hen

you

w1nt to

ch3nQe homes, you'll have
plenty of problems as it is
without worrying 1bout

SELLING YOUR HOUSE.

Lf't an upert do that!
Won't cost a cent UNTIL

ond UNLESS we gel
tht' desired RESU l
LIST NOW. ·
RF'AHORS
HENRY E. CLELAND SR ,
HENRYE . CLELANDJR.
997 -7'159

992 ·6~91

XXH I XXXX1 )"

Jumbles FINAL AFTER !iYBRID GOODLY

I Answer

What the unconventtonal cop was-

"OFFBEAT"

fersons

ACROSS
1 " - the Knife"
Church
veslments
Moslem
prayer ~all
Take away

YeS, IT CSRTAINLY

~~tTl~~

FOR OINN~R?

,-;

BRAOFORD Auctioneer Cqm·
plete Service Phone 9.4CI-2o487 •
or 9.49-2000. Ractne 01-tio. Cr1tt
Bradford

flWOOD 80WfRS REPAIR •·
Sweepers toasters irons, all
smoll appl iances lawn moer.
ne)tf to Slate Htghwoy Garage ,
on Rau te 7 ~BS-3825

TWO BEDROOM house. large lot

GASO].INE: AI.IF.Y

Didn't he evict
her once
before,
. ;&gt;

She's one of
tenants'

Ru1to"d. Ohio Pone 7~2 2008.
PULLINS EXCAVATING Complete
Service Phone9'12-247B
·--------·AUTOM08flE INSURANCE been

G~rC?ge ~?·77~1 ~ . . . . .

Invalid's
food
31 Moroccan
mountain
range
W+l+t 35 A Klugman
co-star

contelled? lost yout operators
license? Phone 997 -2143, ..
·

·~-----~-

-

E C ELECTRICAL Contractor serv·
lng Ohio Volley region Sl)t
days a week . 2-4 hours service
Em~rgency calls Coli 882-2952
or882-3A54
·-·····

-

-~

I (614) 69S-7:13 1
.

'

~

..

"

. - .

Sl!rvlces Offer--ed
-,-'1'11·5858

9 rooms,

.

-

...

--

-

~-----~-·-

7•2-3167 or7d-2573.

!0
rWI;:N~N~lE~~==="~~~~m~~~~·~~~~~~~~-_..;..-....,.----'-,.,..-~
I WONDER IF I 'M OOING THE

zenr-r.r-r.r-

·-

garage . Need $27.500.
NEW LISTING - Burl·

-~·

ORDERS FOR n-11;.
- TRA:&gt;H ?

-···-~---

EXPfiUENCED babysitter will do
babysitting In my heme '
Rest~_m!S _o~ a~a~l4!. !'~ ~~ 1
WILL give le11ons an natural
guitar. Dobra and Howahon
steel For lntormotlon, call

baseboard

heat. 2 porches, garage and.
,,.. acres Onlv S17,SOO.

HAULING limestone , grovel ,pnd
mtsc lt•m s, 142-2909 , o1k for
Rick Imboden.

.

-

. .

.

.

SfRING REFRESHER ond begin·
ner't golf lesson• Club repair
John. Teaford
..
. . . .614·985:3961
. . _..., __ _
WILL DO point ing in tlde ond out
Good reference. For more In formation , coli 992"·633l' h.fC'.Ire
n~o~orc~h~r8~p~ _ ~ ~ . .

I

•

·

VATER W!tt

~rllllng.

Myors :

Pump Solet and ~rvlce, htot
and drilling 985 -4353 after
f,pm_
..

.

'

I'

t

up 1ca. e versus ru

WE'RE.NIMIIER ONE!

NORTH

+ K 8~ 2
'·

4-17-A

• KJ 9

• AJ 1093

dectdes he wants to wtn th e

WEST

EAST

• 10 4
• 86 32

• QJ 9 8
• 10 7 5

tBB
• A 10 as z

tK74
• J 94

SOUTH

+A 73
¥A Q4
• Q~ 2

1:;:-t'-+-

• KQ73
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer· South
We1t

North Ea1t

Paso

Pass

PBM

PBM

Pass

Pass

trick . He will be down one
for a ra ther average score
since other declarers will
fall mto that same trap

• The rubber bndgc 1 player

• 6

rubber. He lets East'$ jack
of clubs hold lhe first trick
and bls mne of clubs hold the
next one. At trrck three he
plays a club ho~or . West can
do nothing betler than to
take h1s ace for the third
defense trick Later on South
loses the d1amond finesse,
bullhat Is Lhe rourlh and last
trick ror the de£ense.

AlktiMIXMPII
South
I NT

You hold
• 2
•Ktlllt

3NT

LC

n•

GG

u·

your contract ts safe. Match

DGWMFWJ

MBCE point duplicate is a different

t -17-B

.

2+

Opening lead: +~
DAILY CRYPTQQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXK
'
Is L 0 N G F E L L 0 W
L - -- - - - - - , - . . . . J
By Oswald Jacoby
On e leller simply etands lor another In this sample A II and Alan Sontag
u sed £or the three L's, X for the lwo O's, etc Single letlers,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the word• are an
The essence ~f successful
hints Each day, Lhe code letter1 are dillerenl.
rubber bridge play Is to go·
after your contract and to
CRYPTOQUOTES
work on overtricks once

YONDER COMES TATER
TO OUR BOD!\CIOUS
COSTUME PARTY ·~_,

I COU~CI HAVE SWORN
WS WERE NUMBER 'ONE ... '-~

er

tr1c k s to that Qne diamond
II

eAK750

--

I

v}

bb

A New York f,e ader asks
\Yh&amp;t we bid. Partner has
opened three' hearts 11nd the

next play'er h.as overca11ed

three spades. N,b one is vul·
~.'

nerable .

We want to. 'get to stx
hearts and be ·allowed to
play 11 there. Our best bet 1s
to bid just lour hearts and
accept pus hes to five and

six.
(NEWSPAPER

ENT~RPR I S E:

ASSN. !

roo :You have a Question for
rne experts? Write " Ask the
Experts ," care of tn ls newspa·
per lndwldual quest1ons wllf
oe answered If accompanied
by stamped self-addrrssed
envelopes The most In terestIn{} questwns wt/1 be used tn
tf'lls column' and will receive
cop•es or JACOBY MODERN. }
'

RAHNF:V

7•12'175

1

0

,

'

_

Ingham , 2 nice bedroom
ranch home with bath, din-

Oswald Jac'oby and Alan Sc;&gt;nl~j!__ -

fense w1ll add four club

Loewe

MH

Un

BRIDGE

propostt1on
RIGHT THING(~UBMITTING
A match r.oi nt player wins
THESE TEST5. '-"'YBE: I 5HOULD
ZGK 0 B J HKZH
ZGQWFXH,
F K J
the rtrst c ub and takes a
.JUST PICK UP AND RU N .. LIKE
diamond finesse. Should that
I'VE BEEN OOING MOST OF r2::~ F K J
MBCE diamond finessse work. he
KGC
IFZUMFWJ
MY LIFE: I ·
would be sure of 11 trlcks
WHXWHC.
MBAABFY
WGLL and hoping for 12. The way
YM!erday'1 Cr)'pleqaole: A MAN OF WORDS AND NOT OF the cards lie, the d1amond
finesse loses and the clubs
DEEDS IS LIKE A GARDEN FUU. OF WEE:DS.-ENGLISH ore
so located that the de- ADAGE

..OU MEAN WENDY&lt;5
ACTUALLY GETIINcr

POOL CHEMICALS. Season pock1
Free delivery. D. Bumgardner'
Soles Inc Equ ipment and •up·
plle1 992-5724
'
.

modern Inside and 2 car

flol!:.lf lfl
HP..Ilh/Udt (('I .\

m

TREE TRIMMING nnd removal '

••'
2 ACRES - Rural water,
electric, B room house,

Holen, I-.
Suo P. MUrphy
RooHor Aa-18101

\

·----·····-~

'1'12-5422

In Pomeroy.

UorliiOn 8,

'

--~~·----~~

sm~ll vlll~ge

' NOW IS THE TIME TO
CALL US . WI! HAVE A
LARGE WAITING LIST
FOR PROPERTIES. DIAL
992-3325
HELEN l., GORDON 8.,
AND , SUE P. MURPHY.
'REAL TOR ASSOCIATr=&lt;

rF Y~u·u..
Tt4e, EX.PR~.S.SION,
SuNNY•S1De uP.

.

JAjNTING AND 1ondblosting
Free estimates Co119•9-2686

nice-timber and lots of good
A ·frame hom e sites located

utlll1y,

.

NIU CARE for two lnvolld or
eld~rly person! in ITIY home
Jwentv years experience
Reasonable rates
6022 or

lor jusiS12,000.
7l ACRES - Realty soroe

Ing,

..

crest

32 Set
straight
33 Entreat
3C Legal
document
38 T&lt;i0per-r"'at,.,ed

'%.'D 1-ltc.e

&gt;JOW HAULING limestone In
Middleport-Poemrov oren Coli
for free esllrnote 367· 7101

yard Only S35,000
BUSINESS BUILDING or cheap home wi1h bath,
In

. .

NATER AND mise hauling Coli

looks fine Inside, furnished
kitchen, carpeting' down ,
form ~ l
din i ng ,
small
business building and large

w~ter

dance
24 Of the
infernal
regtoos
25 Take
over for

6-+-+-t--il

- . . -·

9

m-5n•
.. - . .

rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2
baths, modern kit. with
stove . Full ' base ment end
lots of room for a garden or
ch ildren.

city

FRANK &amp; ERNIF: .

8, 10; Great PerforMances ,20,33;

Yesterday's ADiwer
22 Brooks
28 Stock
exchange
or
member
Blanc
30 Mountain Tuesday, Aprllll
23 French

HOWERY AND MARTIN bcavoting
npllc svstems
dozer. bockhoe. Rt . 143 Phone

IN STOCI( for immed tote delive ry
vorlous s izes of pool kits Do-lt
yourself or lef us Ins loll for you
0
Bumgardner Soles In c

NICE OLDIE -

region
5 Heraldic
color
8 Adjective for
Hood's
men
7 '' - 'sueker
for n
~Eliot play,
' wlth 11The"
9 Himalayan
hlgh spot
11 Tranquilizes

~--

dbl garage and workshop .
Drilled well, ho1 water,
wood burner, garden,
young bearing fruit trees
and smr~ll stream onlv

$17,000
FINE OLD HOME -

20 Asian
boll day
21 GIVe of(
o.:;;;:;:;=J 23 Starting
,.
Jl\lint .
24 A11as Miss
Brooks
hts favorite
Paces
,-,,...---~rl - cutlet
.1"-""-'211 Sound
the hell
Santa's
helper
Nigerian

43 Colored
DOWN
1 Counterpart
2 Venerate
3 Type of
reception
4 Patellar
11
•

:1.15: All My Children 6, 13;

touchablos 17.
8:30-Miss Winslow &amp; Son 8, 10.
9·DO-Wheets 3,15: Charlie's Angels 13; The-Bastard 6:
Dear Oetectlve 8.10; Movie "The Rainmaker" 17.
9:30-Great Midwest Hot Atr Balloon Rally 33.
JO·OQ-Vegas 13; Kaz 8, tO; Who Remembers Mama?
33; News 20 .
10:31)-Foofsleps 20 .
11·0D-News 3,8,10,13, 15; Turnobout 10; Lilias Yoga &amp;
You 33.
·
11 :30--Johnny Car'son 3,15; Pollee Women 6,13: Rock·
ford Flies 8: ABC Newa 33; Movie "The 5lender
Thread" 10; Movie "The Outsider" 17.
12 :40--Mannlx 6,13, Kolak 8.
1'0Q-TomorroY( 3;, I :30-Movle "The Fury o1
Achfttes" 17.
1 50-'-News 13; ~ !»-News 17; 4 20--12 O'Clock High
17

tri~~&lt;;sman

~-

··

Carry
14 Adorned
15 Virginia 17 Swnatran ape
18 "Wail Till
You See - n
19 '' - Way You
Want Me" .

SEWING MACHINE Repairs servtce , oil makes, 9CJ2 2284. The
Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Soles nnd
~e_rvic~ We s~o!p~n. ~ls!o:s .
EXCAVATING do:rer.)ooder a nd
boc"-hoe work, dump trucks
and to boys for hire will haul
f1ll dirt top soil, limestone ond
grovel Coli Bob or ~oger Jeffers . day phone 992-7089. night
p~o'!@~~ ~~S _or_~2 ~222__
EXCAVATING dozer backhoe
and ditcher Chorles R Hot·
field .
Block, Hoe Service,

SPECIAL Here's ~ 1
room older home with bath,

CLOSE TO SCHOOL -

Yes terdays

I&lt;A"l'"E'.S Pl.ACE ALL

!111 i: Second S1rotl

Mobile plus A8 acres of
ground. Has 8 ft expando
~nd
l4x36 add a room .
LOAds of dec k with built
1ns Centre I ~lr

THE "(

Now arrange th~ Circled letters 10
form the surpnse answer. as sug
gesled by the above canoon

(Answers tomo rrow)

IJTILE ORPHAN ANN!F:

- -Business
- - - - -Services
---- -

·

OVERLOOKS A LOVELY
LAKE '- 1978 Holly Park

I ·I

[j

I

Ans~er:

.

OFMING SHALLOW well pump
Goorl con1d1ton $85 tnl5 3867

OLD COINS pocket wotrhes
tiO!i!'i rtnps Wf'l'iding ba nds
chomflncts Gold or s ilve r Coli
RoPr Wamsley ?42 2331

J

"' .,,,.

88

lde~l

kELLBOWI

~"''M"'
Mf
by THOMAS JOSEPH

fPrttliJ Pr , bolk TWO STORY houSe aluminum
gnrrlen SP.Pd and oil early
"irltng 3 bedrooms wall to
vege tabl e
plants
onrl
wall corp~t1ng 2 baths natural
s trawherry plants now reody
wood cabinets d lshwosher,
for sol e Bob's Morice! Ma son
ga rage and s hop Coll949-2172
Ptlone 773-5771. Oren 7 de y!
or 446 9446

1C"e bo)tes bross
beds d esks etc
romplete ho useholds Write
M 0 MtiiPr, Rt 4 Pome roy or
tollm 7760

SFUlAL.'~

TO T&lt;\KE YOU 11'1 •

pi't ntof'~

STFR£0 roci JO· top~ t~ mb 1n ol!n n
$190 Mop lop din ette s~ t 5180
Block 8oston roocker $90 . See
nt 760 Laurel St Mtddleport

J

I KI

. ROCKY, 6UT WE GOT

.

u~on

(';WOOMY

.!O! Sale _ _

-

FU~NITURE

WHAT'S 111~

DOL.l.AR. PI'~ mo!t.Jt&gt;,QI2..
1H!'l ~'{ SI'Elat&gt;-l..'?

COPS ... SORRY,

-

B I" b ' s

1 . ,., ~

YEA~ 1 BUT WE'RE

.

SPRING HAS 'P'""9 ogaon at .:-· -';;R'"'e'"'a"I"E;;-:-st~a:ot;:e:-f;;:o:::r:oS~a:ol;:e:-

...""'"'"' .,.,,,,.,..

-

1973 ATlANTI C 12 ~e 65 Three SEVEN ROOM house and bose·
men I in Min erville 992 -5823
bedroom!
bedrooms
Iorge
.
. .
"
both all eleclnr Excellent con· HOU
SE FOR sole Carpel oil over
diti on
underpinned
ewtro
COAL UMESTONf sand gro vel
drapes
stol.le, dis hwa sher
sto rage butlding Ready to
rolclum r hlorici e , fertih7er , dog
goroge 1 mlle above Rocll'\e
lood and all types of soh h
move in Con left on Iorge
locks
. 247·2401
. .
.
private lot ot Moson $6500
rris1nr SoltWortcs Inc E Mofn
St PnmProy 991 -3891 '
J0.4 88~ 2&lt;66
SEVEN ROOM hou se 2", a cres
Rt 338 I mile above dam
flfC'TRIC GUITAR wtth cosp lik e THRFE BEDROOM ma b1l e home
Sl2.500
~47 - 31~3
Fu lly torpeted e,..cept lcttchen
f1Pw Stee l guitar w1th cose
lm TWO STORY HOUSE , alum Si ding ,
741-2953 or 742 3186
~oorl candJt1on 9917453
•
mediate possess1on
3 siding 3 bedroo rns wall to
1978 , ., Surulcl dtrt b1ke RM 250
wo fl corpellng, 2 boths natural
(Pr d Bnnoger 949 2387
wood t obmeb dishwasher
garage and
shop
Coli
1975 HONDA 175 fl s tnore Nl'w
949 -2192 or .446.-9-446.
lire!\ rham and sproc~l't fw ·
C'PIIP nt conciiti on 7 42-3154

Sale
-For
- - - -

00 '(ou VJ,6.\Sf. Mi( Fl~ -

IvA~

YounQ.&amp; lbe Res1tess 10: Big Blue Marble33.
1: 30--As The World Turns 8, 10; Rellop 33
2:DO-Doc1ors 3,t5; One Life to Live 6.,13; Off Your
Dul1 33.
2.25-News 17, 2 30--Another World 3,15; Guiding
Light 8,10; I love Lucy 17.
3:DO-General Hosptfat 6, 13; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20;
Banana Splits t7 ; Studio See 33.
3:30--Mash 8; Joker's Wild 10; Ftlntstones 17; Over
Easy 20; Walt S1reet Week 33.
4:0G-Mister Cartoon 3: Hollywood Squares 15; Merv
Griffin 6: Addams Family 8; Sesame St 20,33;
Batman 10: Mike Douglas 13: Space Giants ·11.
&lt;:»-Bewtfched 3; , Gilligan's Is. 8: Brady Bunch 10;
Lucy Show 15: Gilligan's Is 17.
5:0Q-i Dream of Jeannie 3; Beverly Hfttbltltes 8;
Mister Rogers 20,33; Gomer Pyl~, USMC 10; Six
Million Dollar Man 13; Brady Bunch 15; I DReam
. of Jeannie 17.
5:3o-:carot Burnett &amp; Friends 3; News 6; Sanford &amp;
Son 8; Etec. Co 20, Mary Tyler Moore 10; Odd
Couple 15: Lucy Show 17; Doc1or Who 33.
6:0G-News 3.1,10, 13,15, ABC News6; Andy Griffith 17;
Hodgepodge LOdge 20.
6·30-NBC News 3,15; ABC News 13: Carol Burnett &amp;
Friends 6: CBS News 8,10; Match Game PM 6;
Muppef Show 8; The Judge 10; That's Hollywood
13; Wild Kingdom 15; Sanford &amp; Son 17; MacNeilLehrer Report 20.33.
8:0G-Reat People 3,15; Eight Is Enough 6,13; Je1·

"

3-11-1

TOTAl ELECTRIC mobtle FARM FOR SniP Hou se '2 bo rns,
trader Lorge pond 10 acres or
horne
furnished
3 bedr
82 acres, 742-2566
wal!lher and dryer Atr cond1·
·tiMed I lOt 210 ft frontage
3' ', acres in Pomeroy SEcluded
S11 000 Phone 7 41 2826
wooded oreo on top of t·ull
1955 Protne Sthooner 28w8
Overlook! river Water e lec·
- . - - r=o!. ~l!_n!
Inc available 992-:1886
hd•
1965General , 60x12 2bctr
COUNTJIY MOBilE Home Pork
REAL ESTATE loo ns Purchase ond
1968 Eltono 52" 12 2 bdr
RoutP 33 north of Pomeroy
re finan ce 30 year terms VA
19698uddy
60
w
12
,
4bctr
t orge lots Co ll9'97 7479
No money down (eltg'lble
1970 Sylva . 60,.. 17 7 bdr
veterans) FHA As low as 3
3 AND 4 BM furnt !!! hed onci un 1970Costle 60x12 2bdr
per cen t dow n (no n-veterans)
hor n1s,erl
opts
Ph one 1973 Arltngfnn 60x 12 7 bdr
Ireland Mortgage Co 77 E
992 Sd34
1973 Ridgewood, 70xl4, 3 bdr
Stote Athens 614 597 3051
«x) ~OlliNG ACflES of ~oorl 1973 Kirkwood 50)1' 12 2 bdr
MODERN THREE bedroom house
B&amp;S MOBILE HOME SAlES
rosture Pl e nty of water Could
full basement, fireplo lO, fully
PT Pl ESANT , WV
naomodate 50 f'l us cattle
rorpeled central air, enclosed
675 -442.4
614 667 -3398
svn porch, loca ted on 6 "• acres
1973 FREEDOM MOBilE home
GARDEN FOR rent olreocty plow
Applionces
unrle rpinn1n g
on CR 28 opprolll' 3 m1le! from
pd Coll991 7330
Rnclne II mterested rontoc t
ftr e ploce 992 5413 or 992-6118
$5100
l orry Wolfe 949-2836 weekends
SMAll TRAILER In Syrnru"lP W1ll
ond after 5 evenings .
rpnt to dean re ltobl e worlcmg 1971 MOBILE HOMf 17 I~ , 60 ~
pPnon Seturtty depos1t Water
bedroom, furntsMed ftreplace TWO STORY 3 b ed room ·frome
pai d 992_7897
Goo d condition Coli 84:1-7945
hou se In M1ddl&amp;p~rt 997 - 3~ 57

.

Elee. Co. 33; Not For Women Only 15; Movie "Joe
Butterfly" 17.
1-m-n'w' nf Our I

IAKJ txJ

1967

.

12 30-Ryan's Hope 13,6; Search for Tomorrow 8, 10,

1

· or 992-2012

11 -9-1 mo .

byHenr~ ArnoldandBobLee

four ord1nary words

ASIOCiala ur

eonruw "

Estimate, 949-2801 or '
949-2860. No Sunday
calls.

\~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

Unscramble lhese four Jumbles.

Your lleldquarlels For
Armstronc Cilpeli!g

V"111J1111d Aluminum

Lowell Thomas Remembers 20

11 .30--Wheet o1 Fortune 3,15: Fam ily Feud 6,13; Love
of Life 8.,10, Sesame St. 20.33.
11 ·55-CBS News 8; House Call 10, News 17.
12 :DO-Newscenler 3; Password 15; Midday Magazine
13 , Love American Style t7

one lener 10 each square, to form

hit stee r1ng wheel o lr

rcmdtlton1ng, gooci cood1f1on
$3000 Coli 949 1009 before ;
5 30 or 949 2112 after 5-30

at .Comancf.e Cr.eek'' 10; 'Movie

"Companions In Nightmare" 17

\l'ft\}1.\.ft fii}1}

i'New Home
*Add-ons
1li Remoldings
· I
fi Free Estimates
99?-£ft11
3-16-mo.

'RIINIIr
-.-..o Transmission

651 Beech Street
Middleport,
992-23S.
· J.7-l mo. ( Ptl. l

1~ 73

P8

Au.-&amp; l"ruck

Service C•lls

Movie "Gunfight

~ ~ ~~~ ® .

C.R• •
VINYL &amp; ALUM.·
SIDING

Sti)P

Movie '' Lawrence of

Arabia" 6,13: Barnaby Jonefo 8; ABC News 33;

1:30--BaS.bolt 17; 1:&lt;5-7News 13, 4·oo-News 17;
4 21)-11 O'Clock High 17.

~---'--------....1

ROGER HYSEll

11 JQ-Johnny Car50n 3,15,

12 40-Madlgan B, l.OD-Tomorrow 3; News 15.

Tom

'1'1?~881

P8 AC

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 18,1979
5 20-World at large 17, 5 45-Farm Report 13; 5 . ~
PTL Club 13.
5 55-Sunrise Semester 10, 6:0Q-700 Club 6,8; PTL
Club 15
6. 10--News 17; 6 15-Chrlstopher Closeup 10
6.30--Romper Room 17; 6 : ~5-Mornlng Report 3;
6 50-Good Morning , West VIrginia 13.
6· ss-Chuck White Repor1s 10; News 13
7.oo-Today 3.15; Good- ¥ornfng America 6,13;
Wednesday Morning 8; Schoot)es 10; Three
Stooges-Lit1te Rascals 17
7:15-Weother 33; 7:»-Famlty Affair 10.
8 00--Capt. Kangaroo 8,10; Leave It To Beaver 17:
Sesame 51 33
8:30--Hazet 17; 9 oo-Bob Braun 3; Emergency One 6:
Phil Donahue 13,15, Hogan's Heroes 8, Match
Game 10; Mister Rogers 33: Lucy Show 11.
9:30--Brady Bunch 8; Hogan's Heroes 10: Green Acres
t7; Bftt Moyers' Journsl 33.
IO:oo-Card Sharks 3,15&lt; Edge of Night 6; All In The
Family 8.10; Dating Game 13; Movie "Touch of
Evil" 17.
10·30--AII Star Secrets 3, 15; Andy Griffith 6, $20,000
Pyramid 13; Do-lt Yourself Messiah 33
11 OG-High Rollers 3,15, Laverne &amp; Shirley 6, 13;

DICK TRACY

10$T

CHIP WOOD
Poles mo)t
diarneter 10' on largest end
Sl7 per ton Bu ndled slob $10
pP r ton Dell verect to Ohlo
Pollet Co
Rt :? Porneroy
'1'11 ~689
beod~

T l!t' o.; /l p ,

Lost and
. - Found
- -

CASH FOR jun"- cor! 24 hour
wretl&lt;er
ser vice . Frv e's ,
~ utl ond OH 747 'i081

OLD

n.

HOW COME HE AIN'T·WEARIN'

A COSTUME, LOWEEZY?

I
I.

I

J..

�JO- TheDaily&amp;nlinol Middll'pnrt -P&lt;•mt•rc•y, n .. T&lt;"'"l:oy. .\pr . : 7 . 1~7~

HOSPITAL NEws
Holzer Medlral Center
son. Ridwrll.
Dlseharges, Aprll16
Mr . and M". !Miwrl
Ea rl . Bailey , F.ugene Swisher.
dau ghler .
. Buckley, Allen Carter, Ada Gallipolis.
'
Crisp, Lucille Dalton, Walter
VF.TERANS MEMORIAL
Evans, Ro&lt;ie Geiger, RebecAdmitted-samuel Ptckens,
ca Hemsler and son, Donald Sy racuse; Donna Knapp,
Herman, . Julia 'J.ee, David Syracuse; Beatri'ce May ,
Lipscomb, Ca rolyn Mal· Pomeroy ; J.ena Adkins,
thews, Donald Merry , Julia Arcoville, W. Va .; Joseph
Osborne, Richard Owens, Stewart, Bidwell; Clarence
Joy"" Potter, Datha Rhodes Ogdin, Rutland ; John Powell,
and daughter, Jerry Sears, Portland; James Meadows,
Robert Steffel, William Portland; Maxine Mkhael,
Wilcox, Carrie Willis.
Pomeroy.
Births, April 16
Discharged-James Webb,
Mr. and Mrs.- Patrick Hill. Thomas Westen, Ruth Lewi~.
son, Pomeroy.
Mr. and Mrs. Clinton ·
Smith, son, Point Pleasant.
Mr. and Mrs. Ricky Long,
(Continued from pa~e 1)
eluded:

IIUCT TOUIIAVOim

· .

UDI"tS

LOVIN A r . BRALF.Y
Funeral M'rvif'E&gt;~ for Mrs .
I .ovina Castor Braley will be
held at 11 a.m. Thursday at
the Rawlin~s-Coa ts Funeral
Home with Mr. F.ugene Un·
derwood officialing.
Surviving are a step·
dau ghter , Mrs. Cledylh
Braley Reeves, Sandusky: a
niece, Mrs. Anna 'Elizabeth
Turner, Rutland ;a nephew,
Wesley Ogdin, Carlisle, and
several great-grandchildren.
F\urial will be in Miles
Cemetery, Rutland. FrieAdS
mav rail at the funeral home
from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 P·!l'·
Wednesda·y.

Sellers, Larry Fisher , .J ohn

Krawsczyn, Shari Colemer,

Jett Warner , Dorothy J .

Oliver . 'Homer Baxter, John

Blake, David Blake, Willard
D. Miller, Jr ., Lura Swiger.

Vlrail WindM. Leo Vauqhan ,

Jacqueline D. Brlckies,
Mark Tannehill. Joseph Hall,
Marvin E. Taylor, Sheila J .
Taylor, Ralph.., T. Spangler,

.

r--Ar-e-a~n;;;-i~t;-1

EX rENDED FORECAST,

Thursday
through
Saturday : Sho.wers
possible each day. Hlgh1
Thursday and Friday IIi
the upper 60s to low 70s.
Cooling to the upper 50s to
low
60s • Saturday .
Overnight lows in the
upper 30s to tus C!lrly
Thursday, in the upper 40s
to low 50s Friday, ami in
the 40s Saturday.

Report
'
probed .

T.F.AnTNG . RF.ADF.RS - l.eading readers in the
ret·eht right-to-read contest helrl at the Chester Elementary School are pi'rtured ..They ~re•, front, I to r, Jill
Reynolds, first grade , ]45 books: Melissa Miller, first
~r~de, 28 book~: Kri!Uen HeinPs. !'Pronci J'r~ ~P . Hl hf1nk~:

No action

Mary 'F.dwardS, second gr~de, :!2 books; back r~, I to. r,
Tim Ball, intermediate EMR, 32 books; D~nny .Crislip, tn·
termediate RMR, 28 books; Tom Morrisey, f1rst grade ,
103 books; Ray Reynolds, second grad~. 59 books.

;,!

Weather

POMEROY

HERE'S n·E KEY...

MOTOR CO.

to Financing_Your Gar

ELBERFEL·

1-\ tOW COS"f
1-\U"fO LOA~I

.-,-""":'•..0--'t
D 5 _._:·.;· . ·

WEATHERSFIELD ACCENT TABLES

D

C

..

-

.'
'·

'

'•
'
'

.'
•

,.

••
'

..

.... .
'

ve~etable mixture. separate·
!y. Garnlsl&gt; top of. rln)l with
tnmatnes and surround with
ham. Makos 6 servings.

•

Miculleport,.o.

M I ·d dIe port U n i t.e d
Pentecostal Church at 7:30 ·
p.m. The public is invited.
SQUAD CALLED
The
M i d· dIe p.o r t
Emergency Unit answered a

call to Route 7 below
Middleport at 4:42 p.m .
Monday where Maxine
Michael, Route 2, Pomeroy,
had ' been ihjured i~ a car·
truck collisi·on .. She was
lllken to Veterans Memorial
. Hospital where ·she was

The United States suffered
its worst submarine disaster
in · 1963 when the atomic
submarine Thresher failed to
. surlace after making a deep
dive in the North Atlantic,
nrhni1 tt~d':
killing all 129 men aboard .
•

RV F\OR HOF:FUCH .
NO\ i&gt;nly is lhe· roof at the nine-year-&lt;&gt;ld Meigs High Si'hool ·
"deplorable," but there are structural defects as well.
This was the report presented by Meigs !.oral Srhool
District's Administrative Assistant, Dwight Goins, to the
district's board of education TUesday night.
Goins said the , roof has been examined by. several
knowledgeable persons who a!lfeed it is In bad rondition . Continuing, he pointed out that above'evrry set of wlndows on the
' second floor of the high school building, brirks are roming
Jotise from the building and walls are boWi~g. 'l'he'sltuation has
beeri · worsening Goins said, but added, that It ,Is not a
dangerous situation.
Roan! members, Carol Pierre and J.arry Powell, also
stressed there lsn 't any dangerous condition at the school due
to the defects.
The .board authorized Goins to have county prosecutor,
Frederick w. Crow m, to advise all parties of notice that
litigation is being considered, both in regard to the roof and thr
·" structural defects.
.
.·
.
"""
Goins said that Mr. Sullivan, one of the original arrhlterts
on the construction of the building and Hora!'f' Karr, rontractor, had examined the structural defects. There are
theories, that, perhaps, dynamiting that was done in the ronstruetlon of the new highway near the school might have
ruused structural problems, Goins reported.
.
l'rfr. Sullivan will return along wlth an engineer to
reexamine the building May I.
·
SPF:CIAJ, MEF.TING
The board set a special meeting for May I at which time a

Sturdy, inexpensive wooden tables : Perfect lor fashionable
home or ·olfice decorating, has excellent strength and stability , 22 inches in ·diameter; 24 '3/B inches tall. Home Furnishings depart me"
on the First Floor.
·
' '
.

.Elberfelds' in

P~meroy

CUSPS 145-960)

report~

•

e
'

at y

VOL. NO. XXX

.

disru~sion will bP ht&gt;ld on t~e rmpJnymPnt nf ~ ~Ufl(•rinh•ncft)nt
tu fPp}fl('(\ f'h ~rlPs flOW)('r, who hfl~ rNtignt-.:1. Proh1€'1ll!i rwr·
taining to the high srhool will be disrus"&lt;'d then!&lt;"'·
·
Tn the mrahtime ,-the ~tat e 11t&gt;partmrnl of Rduration
building set'tlon, Iat the suggestion of Pil'rre, l will be notified
of the problems. The statrfurnished two-thirds of the m0ney
for the ronstn1rtlon of the building and should be brought into
the pl&lt;'iure, PierC~&gt; rommented.
·.
· The hoard heard a 'rf'quest from Greg Gatrell of the Meigs
County Jayc·ees regarding the Jayrees '"ing the former
Pomeroy Senior High &amp;hnolas headquarters.
It was pointed out that the senior high srhhol was given to
Pomeroy VIllage in 1976, for a token payment of $1 , with the
specification that it be used for a village hall .
The agreement stipulated that the building would be converted Into a village hall within five years or it would revert to
the board of edueation.
· Or. Keith Rig~s said he believes Pomeroy Villa~e officials
should be ronlllrted on Whether they want the building or not,
and if they do not, it should be returned In the board before the
five years have lapsed,
Board members felt no action should be taken on the
rf'quest by the .Jwrees to use the buildin~ sinrr the building
terhniraily does ·belongio Pomeroy at the present time.
HowPver, in rE"fPrrin!! the mattrr bArk, Mrs. JennifPr
Sheets, board memlli'r, suggested thr hoar~'s position that the
fonner high school be usr~ only for a village hall be reaffirmed .
Pierce said~ in his opinion, tPr:ms of lhP rontrart with lht&gt;
village on the buil~lng had already been broken.

Pomeroy woman hospitalized after mishap

Meigs County Sheriff
James J. PruHitt reports his
(Con~inuedfrompage.J )
One person was iiijured side. ..
. Grande, was cited on a
department is investigating a
Michael was transported charge of DWI following a
complaint lodged by Freda car sllowmg at the miiii-park iluriiig two Monday accidents
Jerry E. Fields, Barbara
the
Middleport orie-vehicle accident on SR
on Saturday only.
iiivestigated by the Gallia- by ·
Fields and John A. Anderson.
Buchanan, Long Bottom.
Squad
to 588, two-tenths of a mile east
Getard also asked for Meigs Post, Highway Patrol. Emergency
Middleport - Patricia K.
According to the· report
YOU GET ALL THIS . Logan, Linda Haley, Kenneth
Officers were called to the Veterans Memorial Hospital, of U.S. 35, at 9:17p.m.
Mrs. Bucharian. was injured 'permission to use the upper
The
patrol
reports
Cook, James Whitlatch,
during a disturbance at her . parking lot from June 21 scene of a two-vehicle where she was admitted for Davidson's west bound auto
I-HX14
Robert V. King, James M.
Gerlach, Sarah J. Fowler,
residence when some people through Sunday. Council ·. collision b) Meigs County ~ treatment . .
2--i!XIO'S
There was heavy damage ran off the right side of the
agreed.
,SR 7, one-tenth of a mile
MIke WII fang, James R. :::::::::::::::::;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:~::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;~:;:;:;::::: eame to li'er home.
Dalley
,
Clay
Marcum
,
to
the Michael auto, slight. roadway, recrossed the '
Gerard also asked if Lynn south of milepost 2, at 4:35
2-5X7'S
Mrs. Buchanan was taken
damage to the Mulholland pavement, went. off the left
could be closed, as as p.m.
,_~~~: ~tr;::~o~~athy D. ( B4SEBALL MEETING . to Pleasant Va_lley Hll!IJ!ital Street
10 -W~LLETS
side and overturned.
·truck:. .
Stone, Thomas 0. Stone,
There will be a meeting o1 by private car. Charges are option, if needed during ·· ' According to the patr~l, a
The Davidson auto was
No citation was issued.
Howard E. Parker
and
· v 11
Ba b 11 expec~d to be filed pending Regatta weekend. Council south bound coal true!&lt; drtven
only
demolished.
Harlan A. Baltard.
the Ohio a ey
se .a investigation.
Walter Davidson, 55, Rio
also agreed to this proposal. . by_ Charles Mulhollarid, 29,
Langsville - Ellis E. League at the Syracuse Fire
when photographed and
Gerard, in oUter requests, Wilkesville, a !tempted to
Myers, Mike L. Barr and Station Wednesday at 7:30
•
IJ.9S when you
asked to use the old Pomeroy pass an auto operated by
COURT A('fJONS
FILED
Larry Sayre.
p.m. This is for men 18 years
Senior
High building in case Maxine
Michael, . 55,
pick up your pockag,e .
Cheshire - Charles W.
d ld
· Asuit to quiet title was filed
Searles and Christine Garst . an o er.
.
of rain . He also asked if a Pomeroy, just as the Michael
in
Meigs
County
Commori
Athens
Charlene
Any team wanting,to enter
permanent concrete stage, to auto started a left turn.
Gilmore.
should have a representative Pleas Court.by Clayton Allen, be lised during Regatta and
'-'
The Michael auw ~truck
Clarice Allen 'lind Denzil M.
Reedsville - Macel Bar- present or call 992-7448
for
other
organizations
Ute
Mulltolland truck m the
ton, and Richard Barton .
·
Cleland, all of Chester,
Syracuse Larra ine
throughout
Ute
year,
could
be
against Neva E . ·Bailey,
Cundiff. Brenda J. Davts.
3 COI.OII OtA.RMS ON
constructed oti 'the upper
Chester. ·
·
Virginia L. Davis, Kathy J.
SINGLE SU BJ ECTS WITH
PlJRCHAU Of,.H£ PACKr\GE.
Cumings.
and
Debbie
Filing for divorce were parking lot where the
Pickens.
Chris.ty Lynn Beegle, Racine, barbecue pit was formerly l.[sers ·should
Racine - Richard Dugan ,
Mark Alan Beegle, located. Both requests were
against
Phyllis Edwards, William H.
COMING--Racine; Neale Knight, taken under 'advisement.
Hoback, Martha Lou Beegle,
ONE -DAY-ONLY
Gerard also asked if report changes
Rev. 'David C. Harris and
Portland; against Robin ·
Aaron
Wolfe.
temporary
frog signs could
Clear
tonight.
!.ow
in
the
Friday, April 20
Knight, Pomeroy; Mary Lou
Rutland - Clyde Sayre, mid to upper :lOs. Partly J.ongenette, Rt. I, .Reedi!ville, be placed in the village, also
11 til4 P .M.
Roy Kesterson, David King dourly Wednesday. Hi~h
. against Clifford Longenette, . if a picture of a frog could be
and Donna Davidson .
Telephone users in the
painted on the street at the
near
70
.
rhanre
of
Dexter
Steve
Peyton
.
Rt. I, Reedsville.
POMEROY
Pomeroy
• Middleport areas
New · Haven
Mary precipitation · near zer'\
Loraine K., Davis, Pulaski, ·intersection of Lynn and East should report any rhanges in
Caroline Wiley and Larry tonight.
. BEN FRANKLIN •
N. Y ., and John Jay Davis, Main Streets. Council bad no their directory listings to
Wiley.
.
Rt . 2, Albany filed for objection.
General Telephone Co. of
G~rard also suggested
dissolution of marriage.
permanent signs be placed in Ohio no later than April26.
Jim Parker of Athens,
"\:::'j~;i\jr\jiij~j-,;;~ the
village
directing district customer service
.:
motorists to various locations
in the village. Council thought man~ ge r , said . the In - · ·
formation is needed for new
the idea wa• a good me and phone· .books to be delivered
agreed to work with the In July .
chamber on tbe permanent
Customers planning to
sign project.
move
and per~ons intending
Council also disc.ussed
to
acquire
service before
stopping trucks going
July
also
should notify
IV CIICILY IAOW-ONE
through the village and
General,
Parker
AHOCIIIM p,_, F~ ldhor
said.
checking their weight load. It
He
added
the
directory
. Ry Crdly Brownstone
was mentioned that truck
Asso!'lated Press Food Editor drivers do have weigh bills deadline applies to··
F..AS'Jt.R BUFFET
that Ut~y could show an customers in l.etart Falls,
Rice Ring Platter
officer. Chief Jed Webster Portland , Racine and
c:heese Tray
Rolls suggested he would look into Rutland since their listings
appear in the Pomeroy· Mid·
Daffodil Cake
the legality of the matter.
dleport
book.
997-2126
RJCF. RING PI.4TTER
Meeting wlth council was
· A food pr(lcessor wlll make Mrs. Sharon Mattox, Spring
quiek work · of slicing the Ave., in regard to a parking
vegetables.
problem
near her residence.
tt.t cup olive oi1
She
. asked
council's ;\···- - - - - - - - - - - · - -...
, - - - - - -.....
1'.! pound snap beans, tipped
1
permissionalongto side
· make
and rut Into "• to ".!-Inch driveway
of hera '
·house. The matter was
,.
1 Jar~e onion, cut In thin referred to the street
strips.
,
committee.
2 small zucchini (about ''.!
Council also discussed the
pound), thinly sliced.
possibility 9f purchasing 10
2 small straightneck yellow additional parking meters at
squash !about - 1-1 pound ), $98 each. They also suggested
thinly sliced.
the possibility of renting
oes purchasing a new
Jlarge,clove glarlic, mine· parking spaces on the village
•Easy to Assemble
car fit into your future
ed ..
owned. piu:king lot. No action
plans? If not, wish it could?
Salt, pepper and oregano to was taken, however.
•May be painted
Your dream may yet come
taste.
.
The Mayor's report in the
true ... with a low cost
1 cup converted rlre, amount of $-1,762 was· read
or antiqued
automobile loon!
freshly cooked according to and accepted. The · Il\eetirig ·
parkage directions and hot.
was opened by prayer. · by
Thinly sli ced cherry Mayor Mdrews. ·.
ome speok with one .of
• Packed in handy
tomatoes.
Attending were ·Mayor
our loon specialists. If
Thinly sliced ham.
\ Andrews,
W'ehrung ,
you qualify; we'll arronge a
~ny home earton
Tn
a
10-inch
skillet
or
a
wok
Baronick,
Brown
and Karr,
pion to suit your budgetary
heat the oil; add beans, onion, council members, Jane
ability .
zucchini, yellow squash, Walton, clerk; Chief Webster,
•Correct size Table
garlic, salt, pepper and Jack . Krautter,
Steve
oregano: mix well. Cover Hartenbach, Tom Werry, arid
Covers Available
ti~hly
and cook over Edith Sisson.
moderate heat, stirring occasionally and adjusting heat'as
necessary, until vegetables
'
are tender-crisp - IOminutes
or ,o. Park rice into a 4-to~- ·
cup oiled hoi ring mold; Jet
SPEAKERSNAMED
stand about 5 minutes. Invert
The Rev. and Mrs. David
rice onto hot serving platter; Banta
and
family ,
fill center with as much of the missionaries to Korea, will
'THE FRIENDLY 114NK"
veRetable mixture as it will speak at the Wednesday
Woik· Up Ttlttr Window O,On Frtdoy Evonint•• s to 7 p.m.
•
take ; serve remaining . evenin g service of the

t) i

.

.

Board gets

·s.oo

-

..
.~

Ram~Pv Smith.
~he WaS 3 mPmber

of t ht•
Pnmrrov United Methndi&lt;t.
c:hurrh.·
She is &lt;urvived by her
husband , F.arl Denny, Sr., a
son, F.arl Denny, Jr., Mid·
dleport , and · a daughter-inlaw, F\etty Lou 11t&gt;mosky
Ilenny, also of Middleport .
One grandson , Ronald Ilenny, Middleport; also survives. 1
The funeral wlll be In the
Pomeroy · United Methodist
Church, Thursday, I :30 p.m.,
with the Rev. Robert M('(;hee
officiating.
F\urial will follow in the
Riverview Cemetery, Middleport.
CORA DENNEY
Friends may call at the
Cora Frances · Denny, 86,
· Pomeroy Dennis J .
Funeral Home,
Foglesong
Gilmore, Harlan H. Wehrung , IO!l Peacock St., Pomeroy,
Robert W. Vaughan , George died Monday at Veterans Mason, between the hours of
Nash , Jeffrey J . Hilleary, Memorial Hospital at 6:25 2-4 p.m. and 7-9 p.m. WedBllty J . Spencer, Patty J.
nesday.
Barton• Helen E. Blackston, p.m.
The body will. lie in state
She was born Oct. 'n, 11192,
William W. Radford, Mary l.
Starcher , Howard Logan , at Morris Creek, w.' Va., to one hour at the church before
James H. Crow, April Smith, lhe late ,John F.. and Mary the funeral
Ada Martin , Jon ·P. Kar sch nik, Angela Mar II n, Edd ie ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

70

NEW!!!

.

NO. 3

.'

',•.

.

hires personnel

ROOF SJ Yr.GF.~TTON
nirk Robinson addrP&gt;&lt;.wd board membt•" on the
possibilities of a "troryl :· roof on the high srhool. He said SU&lt;'h
a roof,
would be rut on over the prl'!&lt;ent roof would be
. whirh
.
~uaranterd for 10 year" and that it would require minimal
maintenance. He asked bnar&lt;l members.to oheck references he
· provided on the use of trocyl roofs in other llK'alities and
suggested that they visit IO&lt;'ations where the material has been
used .
There is some 52,000 square feet nf roof at the high school
and !'ost would run about $1 .90 a square foot. Hoard members
were positive in their opinions that something must be done
,soon on the high school roof.
·
RF.•UGNATION
Resignations acC~&gt;pted by the board last night Included
those of Emina I .ou Finch, teacher, ~eli ring ; Mildr~ Arnold ,
rook, retiring: r"nnle Queen, business teacher: William
Stivers, welding teacher; Rruce Wilson, as.&lt;istant varsity
boys' hasketball Cllllrh; Dale Harrison as eighth grade boys'
basketball roach and John Railey as a custodian.
· Tearhers .given rontrarts with ' the number of years
foll owing their names inrluded : Arthur Arnold 12 ); Fred
llltloy f2l : Joy Bentley 15 l: John llond 11 ); Jane F\ourne fl);
.la&lt;'kie llrooks II I; Teresa r.asci 13); Twila c:hilds 13 1; James
&lt;'rnw 131: .Judy Crow 12\ ; Rarbara J'lemosky 13); Thm Dixon
15) : Verna Evans 12 \: Mkhael Fergus II l; Charles Frecker
15\ : Diane Haddadf2\ ; Wendy Halar 12); J)eJmar Haynes (5) ;
Ala~ Huntl2l; Randy Hunt 131; Sandy Korn 12\: Lynn Lovdal
(1): Sabra Morrison (5): Teresa Newfeld. 13) ; Dorothy Oliver
13\: .Joyre Rouse (1); llarlwra Sehultz 13\; Linda Shultz fl );

.

•
~enttne

MIDDlEPORT-POMEROY, OHIO

WEDNESDAY, APRil IS, 1979

15 CENTS1

Students get credit for classes
.

'

Southern Local School
District students who
. attended c._a during a
ncent teachers strike will be
given four days of! during the
last week of school this year
according to a decision
reached when the district's .

board of educatim met In
regular session Tuesday
night.
The board, in reaching the
decision, ·decided that such
action was only fair since
students who stayed In
claS!Ir&gt;S would be attending

Nationwise-----.
Dr. Caul hacking decision ·
ATHENS, Ohio (AP) - Dr. David Caul has told
state legislators that he continues to back his declaion
-l!li allOW nlalil~ · patient' Wllliam~MIIIlgan'
.furloaghaasparlofhls. .py: ~ .
·
MIJUgan was acctised last year of rape, robbery
and kidnapping and was found innocent by reason of insanity.
'
.
.
During a meeting with two leglslalors, officials
the Athens Mental Health Center and state Mental
Health and J'rfental Retardation Department officials,
Cl!ul said unescorted leaves from' the mental facility
encouraged Mllllgan to accept responsibility.
''AI ~oine point a therapist has to confront the
Issue" of lru81, he ·said of his decision to allow Milligan
t~radual reintroduction to the community.

of

Murdq trial continumg
PORTSMOUTH, Ohio lAP) - Testimony continued Tuesday In the separate murder trials of David
L. Gamble, 20, and Jame$ 1•. Bell, 23, both of West
Porlsmouth.
Each Is charged with two munts of aggravated
murder in the Jan. 24 slayings of Debbie Coleman, 22,
of Portsmouth, and Donna Kennard, 20, of South Shore,
Ky. ,
They are being tried simultaneously in separate
1
murtroollll! of the Seioto County Common Pleas Court.
The bodies of the two women were found Jan . 241n
.the Coleman woman's house trailer In West Portsmouth.

Seven more executed today
.TEHRAN, Iran (AP)- Two of Ayatollah Ruhollah
Khmneinl 's revolutionary committees executed seven
more persons early Wednesday for killing innocent
persons, Radio Tehran annotmced.
·
The announcement said six military men, ranglng
in rank from private to major, were .executed in
· Tehran after a revolutionary court convicted them of
involvement in the kllllng of hundreds of
demonstrators against Shah Mohammad Re!B Pahlavi
in the capital last Sept. 8.

MarviDs await decision
'1.bs ANGEl.F.S (AP) -

·With millions·of dollars in

the balance, l.ee Marvin and Michelle Triola Marvin

nervously awaited a judge's decision today In a lawsuit ·
that could·aHect lovers everywhere.
Superior Court Judge Arlhur Marshall, who has
heard three months of often lurid testimony in the
Hollywood-style courtrooni drama, said he would
release his written ruling today.
His verdict, based on a landmark California ~
Supreme Court Decision, is expected to become a
guideline for future property litigation between unmarried couples.
.
..I'm a nervous wreck. But I'm ready to face it,"
said Miss .Marvin as she waited .anxously for the mo- ·
ment of decisiOn .

Rubber talks resuming
;

.

· · AKRON, Olilo iAP) - Rubber industry contract
negotiations were set to resume today after an F.aster
recess, wlth leaders of the United Rubber Workers
nearing a decision on which companies to strike If the ,
talks fail.
As many as three of the nation's four largest
tlrema~ers could he struck If a new contract agreement Is not reached, Rubber Workent President Peter
Bonunartto told reporters TueSday after a two-hour
meeting with other union offlel~ls.
·
·

lrREE tUNic
Tltire will be a free blood

ea er

Clear tonight With the low
preuure
clinic
at in the upper :lns. Sunny
llmilamllle Senior cttizenl Thursd~y with the high In the
Center, the town . haD, low 708. The rhant'&lt;' of
'lbtnday, April 19, from 11 preriplttion is near ttro
tonight.
am.' ill 2 p.m.

more days of scbool than
.those who stayed at home
dur!Jig Ute strike.
The board agreed that 17
acres near Ute high St;hool
will be included in the
planned Racine Village
anneution and aecepted the
resignation of Miss Susan
Essex, home economics
The Personal
instructor.
Service Insurance Co. was
named for student insurance
and Brenda Yeauger was
accepted as a high school
tuition student.
• The resignatiort of Helen
· Sim~ '81 a cook at the
l.etart School was accepted .
She Is retiring.
Linda
Grindley was hired as a cook
for the neltl school year and
John Dudding and "Mickey
Wlnebremer were authorized
to attend a football clink in

Columbus on May t. Approp- school principal.; Jennings
rialions were modified and Beegle, junior high principal;
necessary transfers made. Robert Beegle, elementary
Teachers given one year principal; head teachers.
contracts Include Cheryl William Baer, Syracuse;
Boston, William Beegle, James Wickline, Letart
Florence Circle, Paula Falls, and Lawrence Wolfe,
Cochran, Karen Davidson, Portland; Carl Wolfe ,Connle Gilkey, William athletic director; John
Hensler, Michaela Hoback, Costanzo, Title I coordinator;
Valetle Johnson, Roberta Carla
Shuler,
DDPF
Maidens, John• Snediker, coordinator; Sandra Boothe,
·Patricia Struble a~d Joyce Tille IX com- plianee officer;
Thoren . Those given two Joyce Thoren,. handicapped
year contracts include Daisy coordinator; John Dudding,
Crawley, . Janice Deem, head football coaeh; Mickey
Debra Hoff, Mary Ann Winebrenner,. aniatant
McGuire, Debora Roush . • , football coach; 1 William
Howard Caldwell III was Heitsler, junior.high footbaU;
s;ven a three year eontract Carl Wolfe, head bQketball
and five year contracts went coach; Howard Caldwell UI
to Aaron Sayre and Carla . assistant basketball coach;
William Hensler and James
Shuler.
Etrtended service contracts Lawrence, junior high
went to James Adams, high basketball; CoMie Enslen,

head girls athletic direclllr;
Larry· Wolfe, 888istant girls
athletic director; Hilton
· Wolfe,Jr., head baseball
coach;
Sandra
Hill,
cheerleader advisor.
Instruction and activities
contracll!l went to James

Lawrence,

c;lr~ver's

education;
Carla
Shuler,senior play; Barbara
Bailey, school paper and
yearbook; Aaron Sayre,
summer VOAG program. '
Non-certified employes
getting con~acta were Helen
Diddle, mntinuJn&amp;, and one
....Di&gt;v. 'NIA'IWI - Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Anyear ea!enlled nrvice
contracla went to Larry
,~~~::: :1;:~:~ throe years to secure a gmnt for
Smlth, apecl81 educati111 and
the v
and TuOliday It finally arrived, The
grant Is a pre-application for $432,000 In Housing and Urnoon kindersarten bus ;
ban Development funds to extend the sewage facilities in
Delbert ~mith, vocational
educatloit ·and kindergarten
the Kerr's Run set'lor of Pomeroy. The village Is now .
eligible to file a final application for the grant and that
bus; Anna Grace Oiler,
must be filed with HUD by May 10.
lunchroom supervisor; head
cooks, Anna Grace Oiler,
Esther Wolfe, Dorothy Sayre,
Anna Obitz, Mary Virginia
Easterday, and Eleanor
Wingett; Grace Hoffman,
clerkoCWitodian. The board
Newly appolnte.d IIJ~Igs designated period on an Ute dog pouill.
also voted for perticlpation In '
The board voted to accept educaliooal .television for the .
County Welfare Director alternating basis.
Mrs.
Brinker
and the low bid on all niaterlals nell school year.
Mike Swisher informed
Meigs Cotmty Commissioners commissioner Chester Wells from two companies, Draw
Board members attending·
. Tuesday night that his will attend a Regional and RichardS and Sm, for the meeting were David'
department Is fullfilling Manpower Service CoWtCil aggregate materials.
Nease, president; Shirley,
Clyde B. Walker, Secrelllry the fact that in many In·
The lease of the Chester Johnson, vice president, and'
various
recommendations meeting in Athens Friday to
of
Buckeye Rural Electric stances the person who "wit·
made by a grand jury earlier determine what projects Grange, 2609, at the old members Sue Grueser, Betty
Cooperative,
Inc., today an- nessed t~e affixing of every
Meigs County would apply for Chester Courthouse was Wagner and Dallas HW.
this year.
nounced
that
the group of signature," had signed lhl!
Swislier commented that through CETA funding for the terminated because tl)e
member
•
consumers
at- certification days, and even
the hours for the employes . next fisCal . year . Various Grange is no longer active or
tempting
to
overthrow
the
weeks, before the signatures
In
existance
as
a
functioning
will be from 8 a.m. until 4:30 other aspects of the CETA
Buckeye Board of Trustees were signed on the petition: .
p.m. with one-haH hour for program were also discussed. organization,
and management staff, has
"Further/' Walker adde4,
was
A
willingness
ltmch. A · sick leave and . Charles Hysell, dog
been
advised
that
a
meeting
"while
one purpose of the · .
"acation schedule has also be warden, discussed his expressed to enter Into a winners are ·
the
group
announced
for
purported to be .on
petition
position and Ute operation of · lease of this building with tlie
set up Swisher reported.
expression
of approval of II\~· ': c'r.'J&lt;:.!
April21
is
not
a
legal
meeting
;;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::.:.::
Shade River Jaycees. A
Swisher stated that he has
of
members,
according
to
the
charges
filed
against me aiJd ..
discussion
m
the
matter
will
talked with the pr9secutor
WARNING GTVF.N , be held in the near future with·
cooperative's
Code
of
other
members
of the Board - · '
about selling up a IV-D
With the approaeh of ; the Jaycees and the
of Trustees, the actual··
Patricia A. Dyer, daughter Regulations.
contract for enforcement of
ow:ann Wf'athPr also rnmt'S prosecuting attorney.
Walker said the four ring- charges wcr~ not·made u~tli ·,"\&gt;L·&lt;·'
of Mrs. Maxine Dyer, of Rt. I,.
child
support
and
·tJie traveiing repainnen
leaders
of the group have April 7, weeks after the dale·. ·
Bidwell,
is
the
girls'
division
A letter was forwarded to
reclaMificatlon and training
•urh as roof painters, AORTA expressing Meigs winner in this year's Buckeye been so advised In a letter of' the signatures on the ; .. , : .
of employes Is being
raflWntrrs, trre trfmmrrs, County's willingneu to Rural Electric Cooperative mailed April13.
petition. In addition, t!)e.'
tmplmented.
etr,
,
"While
we
recognize
and
charges,
as made, are sO
Seholarshlp
Contest.
She
Is
a
in
a
grant
participate
Naoma Brinker met with
· Meigs County Shertff application to continue the senior at Meigs High Sehool even encourage the right of vague and indefinite as to fall .
commissioners to discuM the
Jame!! J. Proffitt urges AORTA bus servke.
and plans to attend Ohio our member · consumers to to fairly Inform the trustees
CETA programs.
area residents to know who
hold meeting whenever they of the.speclflc reasons for the
State
Unlvenlty.
Attending were Richard
It was decided to set up
you dul with. A "rhl'8p Jones, president, Henry
. . '· ···r;;,~&gt;;)i•:!
wish,"
said Walker, "at the requested removal.
Barbara
J.
Stewart,
crews of five or six laborers
joh"
ml~tht tum Into an ••·
".The Cooperative's
·
Wells, and Chester Wells, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. same time we feel It Is our
and a superviaor to be sent to
Jl"nslve OIN' In the long run. ' commissioners and Mary Paul C. Stewart of Rt. 2, ijuly to Inform them that no Regulations als&lt;J caills
each township to do whatever
Patriot, Ohio, was chosen official action ean be taken less than 10 days
Hobstetter, clerk.
work the trustees require iD a
alternate In the girls' by the members present at members of a~y
division . She Is a senior at the proposed April 21 meeting. Because ·,
meeting, becaUSe It doe~ not working day ' folloWbo~" ,,... '""
Southwestern High School.
Gregory B. Isaacs, son of meet the requirements for receipt of the c· ~~&amp;rgt!S. i&gt;rl.li•'&lt;-1
Mr. and Mrs. James E. legality according to our petitions was Aprl,l
obviously
Isaacs of Rl. 2, Vinton, tOok Code." . ·
Principal nems which review the
top honors In the boys '
· division. He Is a senior at disqualify the meeting from prepare and
Gallla Academy High School any official status revolve meeting to the
and plans to attend Asbury around the area which states members by
College. The boys division that It requires the signature this reason
alternate is James F.. Wllgtis, of ' 10 percent of the mem- pos8ible to
Jr,, son of Mr. and Mrs . bership, In order to call the member's mo,el)1ng
James E .. Wilgus an~ a senior meeting. While the dissident cordance
at Buckeye Hills, Gailla group submitted In excess of requirements
I ,600 signatures, many of Regulations.
County.
them
were duplications. The entitled to ' a ·
F.ach of thjo wlnners will
evident
mnfusion arises from
recei~ a n;o scholarship
and ate entered in the Ohio the fact that no matter how
Rural Electric Seholanthlp mariy times an Individual's
Contest, where they will com- name Is on the cOoperative's
pete with other CtHtp winners J'et'Ords (as the owner of·
from around the state for a multiple housing, for e&lt;amtop scholarship award of ple) the individual is entitled
Sl,tiOO. The alternates in each to only one vote. Slmllar con·
division will repre8elll the fusion exists ln the area of
Cooperatives at the statewide joint memberships. While the
level If for any r~nson the joint membership may conwinners are unable to par· tain the name . of both
husband and wife, it is en- .
tlclpate.
.
Judges for this year's coil- titled to only ime vote. Cirtest w~ Rryson (Bud) Car- culators of the petition
MAKF..'I ·CON'I'RffiUTTON- Marvin Boxdorfer, right, man~ger C'l/ the Jmperial Eltct.r,
Gallla County Extension evidently were unaware of"
trlc r.o., on behalf of the company TueRC!ay afternoon presented a substantial ronlribution to
thlslact.
the Mlddltport )"Ire Department. AN'eptln ~ the do~tlon waR Tl&lt;onald I •. Stivers, Middleport A~l'llt and CJ)'de M. Rvans,
Other. lrrel!)ularitles
PhT&gt;.,
Pro~t,
Rio
Grande
fireman.
·
C'&lt;ilegt,;
Walker reported, Included

Director gives report

Meet .illegal,
official says

Scholarship

announced

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