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Two area ·men die zn weekend traffic·mishaps

0-8-ThrSund~yTimf" ~ ....~·nt im•l. S11llt lfl~· . A111', 22. l ft'7!l

Board hires personnel

EASR MEIGS ~ Employment of per,.,nnel highlighted a recent meeting
of the Eastern LoCal Boar~ of
Education.
The board approved the
following contracts for the
regular teaching personnel :
Larry
~!nes,
James
Wilhelm, Barbara Tripp ,
Unda Faulk Dave Weber
Alan Holter' John Boston '
··Marty Baud,, .lames Huff:
Joe Mltchein Anna Rice .
GaleDoughitt.'Melody Black:
Roger Spencer , Linda
Carpenter, Howard Parker,
Dorina
Chadwell,
Ed
Cromley, Doris WeD and
Kerry O'Cortnel.
James Page, Eastern High
School principal, was given a ·
new CMtract for a period of

Other conQ"acts were given
!~&gt; .Mary Pi-ice, school nurse,
and Steve Jewell , learnin~
disabilities teacher. Nichole
Abraham, CheSter E.M.R.
teacher, was given a
continuing contract.
In other business, the board
app~ved the attendance of
Jamce Kestner and Gary
Reed
to
professional
conf~rences in their subject
area.
The board also approved
the attendance of treasur~r,
Eloise Boston, to a clerk treasurer 's clinic in Athens
on June 7. Nancy Black was
hired as a substitute teacher.
Approval
for
home
instruCtion ,of two children
currently homebound was
given. The resignation of
Margaret Lewis, special

• • • e• • •

•

education teacher at Eastern, Year's Eve . Dance at the
.was ·accepted.
. TUppers Plams Elementary
The Eastern board agreed School oo December 31.
ro add Cindy Scyoc to the list
Coach111g contracts for the
of per,.,nnel covered by a coming year were approved
blanket bond for porposes of as f~llow~ : Joe Mitchem,
providing· necessary athletic director; M1tchem,
insurance coverage to head football; John Boston,
personne_l
who
h~ve · h~ad , basketball ;. bennis
responSlbil!tY. for handhng E1chmger, asst. basketball;
money w1thm the school Ralph W1gal, head baseball;
system.
Dennis Eichinger, asst .
Miss Scyoc is the assistant football ; Arch Rose, asst .
to the clerk-treasurer. football , asst. basketball, and
Negotiations meeting dates transportation coordinaror;
were. established with the !)ave Weber, asst. football
East~rn. Local Teachers and as~t. basketbllll ; Ed
Assoc1atwn on May_ I and Croml~y, asst . football; Pam
with the local chapter of Dough\lt, asst. bl!sketbaU;
OAPSE on May 8.
Sue
Tho~pson,
g~rls
V1c Gaul attended the volleyball, gll'l~ basketball
boar.d meeting as
a and gll'ls track .
representative of a lo·c a l
The board approved the
Jaycee group and advised the contracts of Gr11ce Weber,
IIi • • • • • • • • • • , board of a proposal ro repair Tom Gumpl and Mike Will_as
and replace playground head teachers for the_commg
!J
e
equipment
at the Chester school year.. Carol King was
1
:Elementary School approved as yearbook .
e' playground. ·
adviSOr for the 1979-80 school
Gaul advised that the year. Janice Kestner was
'!I '12 e Jaycee bas k~t b a II awarded another conQ'act as
V e tournament, previously luncheon SUperVISOr . .
e scheduled for Eastern High
The board entertamed a
0
School, has been cancelled. recommendation
from
. 8 ~
• The group anrtoWlced plans to representatives of the high
Willis T. Ceadingham • promote an ' adult basketball school's student' council
!lealtor
· • roumarnent next year.
regarding the school's dress
•
RepresentativeS from the code .. The board did not
orange Township Volunteer ilpprovethewearingofshorts
: . Fire Department received
during the regular school
• ''board aoproval to hold a New· year. ·

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• MORTGAGE INTEREST vs. EQUITY
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It is tr ue th t ownin~ .; tPrPs~ c:~ nc1 l c:~st p;~y~(l~f is
' home bu ilds ;~ doii M ·Villut&gt; pr ;~c h ril ll y it ll pr iOCIPil l. e
pq u ity for you i!S you p;~y About m id -wily c'lllrin~' thp
off the mortqnae
How tP rm of thr m orlflii9P, thE" •
much of you r n1or1thl y pr1y • i ntPrpst e~nd pr in( ip rtl
m ent poes to prtyinp off thP Pi1YrT1f'n ts r.rr ~hout r(1unl; •
princ ipttl ltnci how muc h
The onr Si'VJNI pr_iH"P _.n •
goes to p oY off th e- intcn•st thE' Pi'lrly Yf'~1 r !'&gt; o~ h19h m- I
is ~noth e r stor y. The out te rf' ~t p aY m C'n~s, IS th &lt;'l t &lt;'I ll e
co m e depends on how lbng o_f th 1S IO!Nf'Sf 1S t ~x riPrluc- • ·
you hve b('E:'n m il k ihp l 1h le w.h1 r ~ C"i'I O hP n hpff y •
payment.S.
. fif' d UdiOO IO(I f'pcl
.• •
Inasmuc h as most mort
gage-s M e self ·li ouidf'lt in'p
•
lo ons, you w ill pnv .1 le\/('1
·' "'•
amount eilc: h month toward
It th ere is anything we. •
pa y ing off the intP re st CH'Id can do to help you in th e
r eduction of p rin ri pi!l fi_el d o l real es tnte pleas e •
However , renwmber thilt phone or. dr op in at •
th e interPs t is fir st com LEADINGHAM
REAL
p uted on th£&gt; bi!l rm u-. rluf' EST!'T~ , 512 Secon d Ave., •
and th er f' fOrt" tht" first pny Gal It poll s. Pho, e 446-7699 .
m ent is pr t"'c fi c:a ll y il ll in . We' re here to help .
•

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BUick
Pontiac

TELEVISION
VIEWING

.McNeils to present folk concert
I iA 1:' .IPOl .IS .- A unique , stri1ments, Including fivet&gt;xpenen~&lt;·

1-lwmt'i the con-

N'rt audience on Monday,
Ap_ril30. it was announced by
Tri-County Community Con- ·
cert . A~soriation , 8 p.m.- in
Galha Academy High 'School
auditorium. Keith and Rusty
McNeil , folk music singers per!onners - historians will
present "A Celebration of
American Heritage in Folksong." In addition to singing
folk songs and ballads the
McN eHs . will pre ~ ent
trad.1t10nal folk music
)J]ayll')l'

twor

:lO

folk

j .., ~

s trin g

banjo,

guitar,

Highland bllgpipes, African
drums, mouth bow, Appalachian dulcimer clarinet
ham1onira, and ~n exoti~
collection of •.rhythm instruments from around the
wor-ld.
Their areas of expertise inelude folk music from
Colonial America, the
American Revolution the
War Between the Stat~s the
late 19th century , the tu,:, of
the century, the "Roaring

Movie "Lost Command" 10; Jimmy ·swagger! 13;
Gospel Singing Jubilee 15; Hazel 17; Studio See 33.
IO ,Jo-Rex Humbard 3; Robert Schuller 8; Gospel
· Outreach 13; Movie " Come Fill the Cup" 17: Zoom
20; Big Blue Marble 33.
11 :()()-Ernest Angley 8; Rex Humbard 15; Rev . Henry
Mahan 13: Que. Pasa. U.S.A.? 20,33.
·
ll :JC)-()utdoors With Julius Boros 3; Animals.
Animals, Anlmals6; Rev. R.A. West 13: Elec. Co.
2Q; Once Upon A Classic 33.
·
12:~A t Issue 3; Issues &amp; Answers 6.13; Face Th~
l'latlon 8; This Is The Life 15; Nova 2o: Masterpiece
Theatre 33.
12 :30-Meet The Press J, 15; Directions 6; VIewpoint 8,
The Issue 10: Evangelistic Outreach 13.
1:oo-Tony Brown's Journal 3; Communique 6; Bill
Dance Dutd"'?rs a; Washington Week In Review 33;
Thr!!&lt;! On Thr.,.IO; Wild Kingdom 13; PTL Club 15·
Movie "Sailor of the King" 17; Advocates 20 .
•
1:3o-Redscene 3; NBA Play-Off a.10; 'Midwesi Outdoorsman 13; Another Voice 33 ..

· 2:011-Baseball Warm -Up 3; Boxing 13: In Search Of 6;
_Q!L'f2ur Duff 33; Footsteps 20.
2:1o-Baseball3; 2:30-FBI'6; Movte "Alaska Seas"
17; Hocking Valley Bluegrass 20.
3:oo-Table Tennis 20: Sportsworld 15: Off Your Duff
Follow Up 33.
3:3o-Amerlcan Sportsmim 13; My Partner the Ghost
6; Great Performances 33 . .

SUNDAY, APRIL22,1979
7:30-TV Chapell; Show My l'eop1e 6: Jerry Falwell
8,10: The Bible Answers 13: Jlll]my Swaggart 15:
. Christ for the World 17.
,
a:O()-Mormon Choir 3; GraceGathedrol6: Insight 15;
Three Stooges &amp; Friends 17; Sesame St. 20,33.
a:3()-()ral Roberts 3; Celebration of Praise 6; Bay of
· Dslcovery 8: James Robison Presents 10; Willard
Wilcox 13; Open Bible 15.
,
9:011-Gospel Singing Jubilee 3; Rex Humbard 6; Rev.
Leonard Repass 8; Oral Roberts 10: Rev.Jim
Franklin 13: Ernest Angley 15; Lost In Space 17;
Mister Rogers 20.33 .
9:3o-Eiec. Co. 33; It Is Written 10; Morris Cerullo
School of Ministry 13; Sesame St. 20.
10:011-Chrlst Is The Answer 3; Kids Are
Too 6;

·.SEE GENE JOHNSON, BOB BRICKLES,
.
HARLAND 'WOODY" WOOD, OR

3: ~s-toLBA Play-Off a, 10.
4:011-Golf 15: Movie "Chubasco" 17.
4:JO--Wl de World of Sports 6.13; ~: 45-Bewltched J .
5:()()-Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea 3; Footsteps 33.
5:3o-Best of Grouch9 2Q: Boating Safety 33.
6:oo-News 3.10; Pulse 6: Championship Fishing 8;
Advocat-:s 33 ; A.BC. News 13; Cllffwoo~ Ave. Kids
15; Wres+llng •17; Academy Leaders 20.
6:30-NBC News 3;15; News 6; CBS News a,IO ; Battle
of the Planets 13. ·
7:Oil-World of Disney 3,15; Friends 6,13; 60-Minutes
a,IO ; Star Trek 17; Prevln &amp; the Pittsburgh 20: On
Ice 33; 7:30-Ralnbow's End 33.
a:oo-Movle " Rooster Cogburn" 3,15; ABC Theatre
6. 13: All In The Family 8,10; F.Y.I. 33; Movie " A
Covenant w,ith Death" 17: Who Killed Marlin
Luther King Jr? 20.
a:3()-()ne Day At A Time a.10.
9:011-AIIce a.10; Masterpiece Theatre 20,33 .
9:3o-Just Friends 8, 10.
10:()()-Weekend 3,15; Mary Tyler Moore Hour a,10;
Dragnet 17; Movie "The Old Fashioned Way"' 20; .
Firing Line 33.
10:3o-Ruff House 17.
II :Oo-News 3,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6: Open Up 17;
Wall Street Week J3 .
II :1s-ABC News 6; CBS News a.J.O; PMA Pulse 15.
II :3o-Movle "Til We Meet Agln" 3; Movie " W.C.Fields &amp; Me" 15; 700 Club 8; Face the Nation 10:
PTL Club 13; Money. News and VIews 33,
12 :011-Movle "The Legend of Custer" 10; 1:()()-Movie
"Island of Deslrl!" 11.

1:3o-ABC News ·13; 3:00--Movle "Summer Storm"
11 : 5:011-Dragnet 17.
..

GREG SMITH AT THE SIGN OF

1977 FORD F-150 PICKUP

1977 OLDS 98 REGENCY 4 DR

This car is one of th e cleanest, best
cared for autos on the m arket. Four

Silv€' r fini stl with blue v inyl sell t .
Fouippect wit h econom ical 6·
··c yli nder t&gt;ng ine, automc'ltic tran s.,
powe r stee r ing, powe r brak es, rmd
AM r;tcti o. Th is is a r{&gt;i! l Shilrp lor c:tl·
l y owne("l p ickup. Only 17,880 m i lf&gt;s .

Plathium finish with matching vinyl'

pectqual ity ,

"2295

1976 CHEVROLET

1

Bui ck Trade.

1974 GRAN TORINO ELITE

1976 DODGE CHARGER
·
'

'

4295

1977 PDNTIAC GRAND PRIX
The G.M. success car. Fin ished in
' Platinum with black 60·40 viny l in·
ter ior and a matching padded landau top. Air conditioned, tilt wheel,
radio, and Rallye II' wheels. See it

. Finished In ~old mefat/ic paint with .
a dark brown vinyl top . The interior
Is exceptionally clean, fully equip·

SPECIAL EDITION

Silver metallic with matching
Landau top. Equipped with AM-FM-

ped including AM·FM and factory
air. Local owner. NE"N LeSabre

T~pe ,
cruise control.
power
windows. western cast .aluminum
road wh'eels and rear defroster .

Priced Right .

trade.

'3795

1977 OLDS TORONAOO

MOTORCYCLE

YoU ' ll find her e t he finest personal
luxur y automobile manufactured by
Oldsmobile . Loaded with AM ·FM ·
tape. tilt &amp; telescop ic wtJeeL power
sea ts
( passenger
tooL
rear
defroster, powe r · antenna, ; and
heavily padded · landau top . Gt
blue . One local owner.

"795

1976 MONARCH GHIA 4 DR

1978 CHEV. MALIBU 4 DR

1976 PONTIAC GRAN PRIX ·
L J. Cruise -e-on trpl, P. windows, door

locks, AM-FM-tape: landau top,
bucket seals. Sharp.

White ex terior wifh burgundy vi nyl
top ;.nd matc hing cloth interior. If
you ' r e look i ng for a nice i n fPr mPdii'ltP this is it . Air cond ., P.
S tc e rin ~. P . hrCikt"!&gt;, P. windows, P.
SE'itt , r &lt;"'ctio ;~net nrw pr ('m iurn t ire-s .,

Real gas saver, sm'all V ·6 engin'e,
fa ctory a ir , rear Window defroster .
Dark metallic blue. Less than 20,000
· m il es. Exception·~ lly nice,

"3895

"3495

'4695

1978 OLDS CUTLASS ·

1972 PLYMOUTH

SUPREME

SAtElliTE

Only R.400 low m i les, AM ·FM ste r eo,
r &lt;"lctio, Rill lye w heels, m;oc:1ii'Jm blue'

Cheap, older model.

pt~ i nf. Tl1 i~o n t"'w i119 n fc1 s t .

"4395

"599!J

BUICK
PONTIAC
'

Phone
. ,f.

e

OLD COINS. DIAMONDS , .
gold bands, e~t.ate jewelery, :

etc. TAWNEY JEWELERS ,
422 Second Ave.

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CASH FOR junM cc rs. 24 hour
wrecker
service .
Frye ' s,

(USPS 145-96Q)

VOL. NO. XXIX NO. 6

II

EXCELLENT QUA~ITY

• TRESTLE TABLES
•ROUND TABLES
•OVAL TABLES
•CORNER. CHINAS
•ENCLOSED HUTCHES
•MATE and CAPTAIN
CHAIRS
•SPLAT BACK CHAIRS

ELB: ERFELDS~ .IN

1

visibiP signs of injury and

were lra 0sporled to St.
Mary's
Hos pital
in
lluntington .
No ot her detai ls were
ava ilable.
A driver was cited on a
charge of leaving the scene of
an accident following a twovehicle mishap on Georges
Creek Rd., one-tenth of a mile
west of SR 7, sunday at 9:23
p.m.
.
Officer s report that a
pickup -truck driven by Cora
E.-King, 32, Rona, W.Va., had
stopped at the railroad

•

crossing on Georges Creek.
A second pickup, operated
by .lames Gibson, 53,
Gallipolis , failed ro stop and
struck the Kin g vehicle in the
rear .
Both vehicles incurred .
moderate damage . Gibson
was cited on a charge of hit skip . .
The patrol investigated a
two -vehicle co llision in
Racine Saturday at I : 20 p.m.
Officers report an auro
operated by John M,
Freeman, 23, Pomeroy,
failed to yield ~t an

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY, OHIO

Rutland , OH. 742 ·2081.

Copiek, • 21, went out of
control , passed off the left
side of' the roadway, and
struck two gasoline pumps.
There was minor damage
ro the vehicle .
Officers investigated a onoauw mishap Sunday at 12:50
a.m . on SR 7, one-tenth of a
mile south of milepost 30.
lbe patrol reports a north
bo und vehicle driven by Toni
Hudson, 16, Racine, went of(
the left side of the roadway
and struck a guardrail .
There was mod erate
damag~ to the auw '

MONDAY, APRIL 23, 1979

15 CENTS

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CHIP

.Po le;s

WOOD .

ma x.

diameter 10" on large st end.
512 per 1on . Bundled slob . $10 '

Volunteers
sought for
flood area

per ton . Delivered to · Ohio
Pallet Co. , Rt. 2 . Pomeroy.

992-2689.

'

OLD FURNITURE. 'ice boxes , b rass

co ll992-n60 .

OlD COINS. pocket wat~he&amp; .
class rings . wedding bond s. '
diamonds . Gold or silve'\. Coli
Roer Wamsley , 742-2331 ,

- - -

--

.
- - - - - WANT TO buy : old 45 and 78

phonograph records . Coli
992·6370 or Contact Martin Furniture.

. .

-- - ---- - ----

WANT TO buy: old jewelry . Call

.992-5262 or write Kay Cecil. 87
~- ?n_d . _M~d~ l&lt;:p~r~

&lt;?H_. _ _ _

Yard Sales
GARAGE SALE. Sat. and
51Jn,, ra i n or shine. M en ' s,
women's and children's
c lothing, toys, tools, books,
TV' s, many other misc.l tems .
2 m i les off 218 on Kriner Rd . 1
past Coon Club .

YARD SA LE, A poi I 24 · 236, .
lOam to 6pm . Baby clothes
and furniture, video game,
lamps,. drapes, clothes, bed ·
spreads, and misc. Rt. 160 inside Vinton Corp. limits.

.

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FIVE FAMILY yard sale,

Apr~ 25, 26, and 27 . Good
!CI!;&gt;thing; some antiques and
· misc. Items. J miles below
tEureka, second brick house
on l eft .

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.

'

beds. iron ' beds .. desks , etc.,
co mplete households, Write
M.D. Miller. Rt . ..f , Pom eroy or

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BASEMEJ&lt;iT Sole . April 25th odn :
' 26th. 9-5. Good gas range , all .
- kinds of Items , set of Fender '
Bendrnoster ompHiier and bon
guitar, dishwasher. Chester.
Summerfield's Apts., across
from Post Office.

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'

By The Associated Press
Mayor Robert Bourne
'Police · loudspeakers ordered schools closed, told '
pleading for volunteers ro merchants to keep only
help shore up liikes along tha minimum.riumhers of clerks
flooding Red· River rousted in their stores and asked
residents in· East Grand residents ro stay home.
Forks, Minn., today, while
Fred Duerr of Grand
the Pearl River continued Forks, N.D., was spitting
spreading tlirough residential mad. He owns about 20
areas in south Mississippi. rownhouses in the Dooded
. 'Persistent. rah1s continued sout~west section of clty
to fall in both river valley~. where more than 200 families
The Red River swelled w 'had to flee what was thought
· 48.8 feet, 28.8 feet above hood to be a 'flood-proof"
stage, at East Grand Forks neighborhood .
and was still rising.
" When the water was
RECEIVES THIRD 5().YEAI! MASONIC PIN - Guy
While · more than 5,000 coming qp, we were told we
R. RI!SSell, seated second from right, now has the distinc·
.volunteers were reinforcing were on our own," he said .
lion of having received' 50-year pins for, membership in
4,000 feet of tllkes, police " We called for help
three different Masonic bodies. The most recent pin - for
moved tlirdugh the streets ' evacuating people. We were ·
5().year membership in Warren Council No . 58 Royal and
told there was no help
c~ for more help.
Select Masters- was presented to Mr, RUSliell during an
"AI Coh1mbla, Miss., where available."
impressive' ceremony at hi~ Minersville. ~me Saturday
ln the meantime , the/
hall the town's 7,500 residents
aft~rn~l). Ma(llng the ~.n;se~!&lt;i!til!!!:, Whi)e l ~api)dge of~ ·baa 'fle'd; t.tre· Pearl 'Natton'a l • Weather ·'Se'rv[c~ .
fiCials and rePf'\!l!Onliibve~·ol" wan-..n C011~1l No. 58
' ru.,r drqpped about a foot , said water would begin
looked on , was RObert Stevens, grand captain of the guard
· bul heavy rains througbout receding 'around some
for .the state Council organization, seated at far right.
the area - more than . 2 Mississippi rowns that have
·Others seated are Clarence Struble, Knight of the York
Inches since Sunday morning borne the worst flooding.
Cross of Honor and past Prior of Ohio Priory No. 181 far
- brought fears it would rise
The Pearl River at
left, and Mrs. Russell. Standing, from lei!, Harland
again.
Jackson,
Miss., · will
"The people are busy· "continue to fall " ·unless
sandbagging and building there is more rain than ·
dams around their home,s and anticipated,
and
at
businesses," said Fran Monticello, Miss., the Pearl
Vance, a civil defense will "continue to fall slowly,"
wor.ker.
forecaster Toby Landers said
Larry Middleton was Sunday.· He · said that at
By ,Tbe Associated Press
cutbacks and layoffs in the
hauling . goods out of ·his Columbia, Miss., the Pearl
Fourpicketsatatruckstop.
steel·
industry, until a new
Columbia furniture store in a . has just about crested and
van . "If it gets in there, rm a will probably begin receding west of Youngstown were hit agreement is signed.
by buckshot early to~ay in a · Police said the Maryland
~ner," he said.
(Continued' on page t'o)
confrontation
with
a driver fired a sawed-&lt;Jfl
Maryland truck driver, _shotgun at pickets at the
Austinrown Township police truck · stop at- Ohio 46 and
reported.
·
Interstate 80. The four were
The Incident was one of a treaied and . released at a
series that has marked the Youngstown hospital.
continued work stoppage in
After the shooting, the
Ohio by steelhaulers who trucker headed , west on
MARIETTA, Ohio (AP) - Authorities in Wood
object to the tenns of _a Interstate 80but was arrested
County, W. Va. , say they will conduct im Investigation
nationwide c ontract a few miles away, police
Into the disappearance of a Marietta man whose body
nego ~iated by the T~amsters .
reported .
was discovered m the Ohio River Sunday afternoon.
The Teamsters have • Police Said they expected to
reported reaching agreement file charges of felonious
Boaters found the body of Thomas Bush 35
with one indu$-y negotiating assault and illegal pollSI'ssion
beneath the Interstate T1 bildge across the Ohio Rive;
group covering steelhauler of a sawed-of! shotgun.
near Williamstown, W. Va. Bush had been missing sindemands . However ,
Township trustees had
ce mid-jlfarch. The cause of his death has not been
detennined.
steelhaulers have said they declared the truck stop an
plan to continue their work emergency area and asked
stoppage, which has forced the operarors to shut down

Wehrung, prln cip~l conductor of the work, lor Bosworth
Council No. 46; Harry Hall, Knight of the York Cross of
Honor and representative of Warren Council No, 58; Bob
Reed, high pl'iest for Pomeroy Chapter No. 80 and department master for Bosworth Collflcil; Kenny Wiggins, past
,master ,o! Pomeroy Masonic Lodge No. 164 F and AM;
Charles Hopkin's, conductor for Warren Council No. 58;
Virgij Cline, Jlhistrious Master for Warren Councl No. 58 ;
-Dale Sffilth, past inaster 9f Pomeroy Masonic Lodge No.
164 F and AM ; James ·Ciatworthy, District 12 Deputy
Grand Master and James Brinker, 6th district inspector of
the Grand Council and Knight of the York Cross of Honor.
Mr. Russell , a Meigs County native, had lived in the
Warren, 0 . area for many years before returning here.

Pickets hit by gunfire

..---Nationwise---.

Sunday following another
disturbance involving
truckers.
Officials said some trucks
were barricaded at the truck
'Sinp by striking steel haulers.
A confrontation was touched
off when the truckers tried ro
. free
their
vehicles ,
authorities said.
Police said they recovered
several weapOns from the
truckers involved in the
incident. They said there
were no serious injuries.
Township board chairman
E. Roy Davis asked the area
·truck stops to close IIi an
effort to avoid further
confrontations , but no
stations had complied.
The steel industry layoffs
include 1,060 workers at

Armco Inc. in Middletowri,
about 1,000 at Republic Steel
Corp. in Cleveland, and 3,000
workers at a National Steel
finishing mUl in Weirton,
W.Va.
U.S. Steel said it did not
plan any layoffs over the
weekend , but the company
said it would monitor the
Teamster situation . Jones &amp;
Laughlin Steel said it had cut
back production but not laid
off any workers.
EXTENDEDOoTLOOK
Wedn esday through
Friday : Warm through the
period with showers or
thunderstorms possible
each 4ay. Highs in the
upper 80s and 70s. Lows In
the
cts to mid 5Gs.

NEWPORT NEWS, Va. (AP ) - The 12-week-&lt;Jid
Steelworkers Strike at Newport News Shipbuilding and
·nry Dock Cb. was suspended officially with·the start of
the II p.m. shift Sunday.
.
· Shipyard spokeSlPan James Griffith said the yard
. will take strikers back within "a matter of day.s.'' lt
· was WICiear how many of the strikers would return to
. work. But before the workers report tb their jobs, they
· first must report to the yard's employment office. he

!lliiq.

.

..

.

·State workers being watched ·
COLUMBUS, Ohio (APJ - The energy crunch has .
prompted state officials to keep closer watch on state ·
employees who are caught violating traffic laws in
state-&lt;Jwned vehicles.
Robert Chiaramonte, the head of the state Department o1 Highway Safety, wants to be told by the Highway Patrol when a state employee is ticketed for
speeding. The employee's department head wiD then
be informed of the violation. Chiaramonte disagreed
"with criticism that the program amounts to a spy
program against state workers.
'

'

THE PRESEN'I'ATION - Guy R Russell of Minersville, right, is sHown receiving a pin for 5().year -membership In Warren Council No. 58. Royal and Select
Masters, during a Saturday ceremony. Making the
presentation was Robert Steve.ns, grand captain of the
guard for the state Council. lt was the third 5().year
Masonic pin Mr. Russell has received.

lJRAWS FIRE
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP)
- A tentative settlement
aimed at endtng one of the
longest , United Mine
Workers strikes already Is
drawing fire from striking
coal miners · who accuse

their union leaders of a
sellout.
The strikers, angered by
reports the settlement
would allow more votes by
Those who crosscil picket
lines than by lhose un
strike in the representation
dispute , threatened to
spread a wildcat movement.
•·

Accidents,
vandalism
checked.

Steelworker strike srispended

POM

intersection and struck a

vehicle driven by Wilma
Powell, 29, Racine .
Bot h vehicles inc urred
moder ate damage. Free!llan
was cited on a charge of
fail w-e to yi eld.
A Middleport man was
dted on a charge of reckless
operation following a onevehicle accident In Meigs
County on CR 31, one and
seven-tenth s of a mile north
of SR 124, Saturday at 10 :40
p.m.
.
The patrol reports an au!&lt;l
operated by Theodore

_en tine

at

. EDISON, N. J . lAP) - Human error probably
caused last week's head-Qn collision between an Amtrak Metroliner and a 3:1-ton track repair vehicle, a
· federal official says. Beth Segal, a spokeswoman for
the _Federal ·Railroad Administration in WashingtOn,
said the Washington-bound Metl'oliner, traveling about
80 ' mph, apparently was misrouted at the Ljncqln
Tower, a switch control point in Metuchen several
miles north of the crash site.
,
· The AmtraK maintenance vehicle was northbound
on the same track at about 10 mph. The Collision Injured 75 persons.

.BROUGHAM

"5495

This is truly th e nicest famil y sized
sedan in town . M ediUf!l blue fin ish
with match ing 60·40 cloth interior
and dark blue vi ny l top . Onl y 37,370
actual miles on -th is loca l one owner.

PQmeroy Forrest Products. ,

Human er.,ror blamed

1974 SUZUKI GT380

now.

4 DR SEDAN

·r,.rl ·F. Pinkcnnan. 22. Ht.
·fwo per~ms were ihjuced
' Ae('()rding to polic-e repilr- I, Willow Wood , di ed in an.ac- durin g . five
weekend
ts , Marrow was traveling cidt&gt;.nt Sunday morning on accidents investigated by the
south on W. va. 2 at about Greasy Ridge Rd . in J.awren- Gall !8-Mei~s P9st. Highway
6:30 p.m. when hi.s vehicle N' County.
Patrol.
went left of center, striking a
Al'cording to U1e Ohio State
Called to the scene at 4:33
car driven by 17 -year-&lt;~ld High Patrol, Pinkerman, p.m . Saturday, officers
Rebecca 1.. Davis of Hun- driving south at a high rate of . report that an auto operated ,
tington, and plummeted over ~pt'ed, apparently lost con: by
Ll!'da
Null, . 31 ,
im emba nkment.
· trol of his vehicle which ran Pi'octorvllle, was demol!shed
The victim's. car flipped
~ ff the roadway striking a durmg a one-veh1cle acc1dent
over several times , throwing ree .
on SR 1, two and !ow--tenths
the man from the vehicle,
The accident occurred one of a,mile south o~ CR 53. .
and finally landing on hi , and four tenths miles north of
W1th the acc1dent stlll
police said.
SR 775 near Wilgus. His body u_nder Invest ig at iOn ,_ t he
Law officers said Ms. was removed to Schneider's patrol reports Null and a
Hom e · · 'a t passenger, B11ly \'lull ,
Davis was uninjured in the Funeral
·Proctorville , di splay ed
mishap.
· Chesapeake:
•

Man 's death investigated

"6295

Priced to Sell

Dt&gt;p~rtment.

Call991·5965.

KELLER HARD ROCK
MAPLE DINING FURNITURE

Installed Citizens Band Radio. New

.

Another clean !Ocal one owner . Here
vou 'tl find c ruise control, tnt wheel.
AM stereo, 8-track, factory air, and
power door locks. Low miles, drives
super. White .

electric

antenna . AM-FM stereo with factory

'4395
'

MONTE CARLO

roof and black velour 60-40 seats.
Full power Includes windows, door
locks, seat and · trl -band

After their recent Kansas
tour, the President of the
Kansas Arts Commission
said, "What a wonderful experience it was to have you
with us. I tell everyone about
you everywhere. Thank you
for your gift of joy and song
which you give to everyone
who listens to you .''
Press acclaim from their
West Coast tour included:
"Two superb artists, both at
singing and discussing
folksongs of all ages :"
(Riverside Pres s Enterprise ); " ... the auditorium
resounded with an exciting
variety of sounds and rhythms which evoked a feeling of'
surprising order 'and
togetherness.'' (San Ber- .
nardino Sun-Telegram) ;,
"K~ith and Rusty McNeil
have their audience spellbound from the moment they
pluck the first chord on their
banjo and guitar." (San Jose
Mercury).
A ·graduate of Stanford
University, Keith McNeil
· worked as an administrator
for the Pacific Telephone
Company for fifteen years

wa·nted to Blly
JUNK .
Auto and scra p
metal. Call3aa-8776.
- - - - - - - .,..,_- - - - - TIMBER AND L.OGS.

JUST RECEIVED - NEW SHIPME"T

1974 DODGE MONACO CUSTOM
door 'sedan . a.ir, AM ·FM, new
premium tires . One local owner . E x

music.

Although no' fatalities were
recorded over the weekend in
the Gallia-Meigs area , two
i:nen lost their lives in traffic
accidents in neighboring
·
counties.
A 37-year-&lt;Jid Mason County 'man was killed in a twocar accident Saturday
evening at Flat Rock , W.Va.
' EarneSt F. Marrow of
J~n, W. Va., was Pronoun·
ced dead on arrival at
Pleasant Valley Hospital in
. · Point Pleasant, W.Va.-, after
· he apparently lost control of
his car on W. Va. 2, according
to the Mason County Sheriff's

until steadily increasing
demands for public , performances required Keith
and Rusty-to devote full time
to pioneer this fresh approacp to folk music and
history,
The McNeila have five
children, ranging in age from
11ine to twenty-five, who often
join them as ,they tour across
the United States, Canada
and Mexico inlheir 35-foot
bus-home. When not on tour,
the McNeils reside in Rivetside, Ca.

ELBERFELDS IN .POMEROY

QUALITY NEW AND USED CARS.
-

Twenties ," · the ·· Greai
Depression · and the contemporarY. period. In addition to the ·scores of folksongs inherited · from
generations ol their own
family tradition, the McNelis
have carefully researched
the .folk music of the many
immigrant groups which
enriches the American
cultural "Salad ·Bowl," the
so ng s which reflect
America's major social
movements during the past
two hundred years and
America 's religious history
through folksong .
·
Fot the past ten years,
Keith and Rusty have ,been
bringing America's rich
hi storical and multi-eultural
heritage to life through folk
music. Their more than 2,000
concerts, their recordings
and their work on Public
Broadcasting Television
have .enchanted audiences
across the United States from
J..ong Island to Los Angeles,
and from Florida to Alaska.
Between concert appearances they teach five dif- .
ferent graduate level courses
· on American history through .
folksong at ' uniyersitles
across the United States and
they continue their exiensive
research on American
history and lifestyles as ex·
pressed through ·traditional
and contemporary folk

..

MEMBERS mDUCTED - Sl&gt;rteen Meigs High School
juniors and seniors became members of the srhool's chapter of
the NaUonal Honor ·s()(&lt;Iety in reremonies held Sunday aftern?"~ m the school ce fet~ria . Janu Burson, president,
pr&lt;'stded. New members pictured inrludP. fr ont, 1 tor ..Janet

Horky , Mary Colwell, Elaine Barnhart, Tonia Ash~ Je~ell '
Kelly, Sonia Ash,' Marie t.egar· secood row, ito r, V1ck1 Smith,
Debbie Danner, Kim Warner, Cherie IJghtfoot, Rena Lefebre;
bllck, 1tor, &amp;:ott McKinney, Cliff Kennedy and Dan Thomas.
The 16th nt•w mrrnhPI' Ml present I ~ Croii• Swirk.

The Meigs County Sheriff's
Department Investigated
three acci~ents over the
weekend .
.
Friday at 11 p.m. at Jack'S
Club parking lot a vehicle
owned by Jack Ward was
darnaBed while parked. The
incident
is
under
investigation.
Saturday at 12:~0 p.m. on
SR 124 in Syracuse, Melvina
Burke,
Wellston , was
traveling east. She reported a
passing vehicle struck and
object in the highway and
flipped it into the windshield
of her 'car. .
·
· The win d'shield on the
Burke vehicle was shattered.
The object .was a piece of
tailpipe. The. driver and a
passenger, Cynthia Slavins,
were cov~red with glass but
were not injured.
Saturday at 8:40p.m. on U.
S. 33 a deer was killed when it
ran inl&lt;l the path of a vehicle
driven by Ted 11. Brauchla,
37, l..oveland .
,, · .
ln othe~ ~atters,ileput1es
are invesugatmg damages 1&lt;1
approximately 5,000 tomaro
(Continued on pa~e 10 )

Mausoleum ·
vandalized
The vandalism of a
mausoleum and the entering
of a Gallia County grave is
wider investigation by the
Gallla Co unty Sheriff's
Department.
Notified by the caretaker of
the cemetery, located in the
northwest area of the county,
last Monday the department
h a~ been conducting an
extensive investigation or the
incident for the past week.
According to a department
spokesman, extensive
damage, estimated at $3,000,
was incurred ro the marble
memorial plaque which
sealed the casket within the
walls of the mausoleum.
The plaque was broken and
a blcck wall demolished ro
g~ access ro the casket,
placed in the mausoleum
approximately four years
ago.
The sealed casket was
opened and the body exposed
as the subjects h\volved
apparently . searc~ed for
wer~
valuables -which
rumored to have been buried
with ihe deceased, a former
resident of Oak Hill.
The
department
spqkesman said the· she~iff;s
office has been unable ro
confirm that any · items of
value were interred with the
bOd)' .

-

According
to
the
s p okesman, upon
apprehension those involved
would be charged with at
least two counts of breaking
and entering-the mausoleum
vault and the casket-and
possibly other charges. ·
The name of the person's
grave violated and the exact'
location of the ~emetery is
being withheld pending
further investigation.
I

Weather
Cloudy with rain possible
tonighl. Low In mid 50s. Ram
possible again Tuesday. High
in mid 70s. ProbabUlty of rain
60 percent tonight, 80 percent
T.uesda

')

�pl~o

;t - 'JlfE&gt;nath Stnhnd MufllliJll lrf P"D'• 11, n \1,nd , \J'I ) ~

e'l'f"' -.. "-""""'i'r!W
""~"l !: R rg

Seven marks fall

llu~~~~e

Editorial
• •
opm1ons

COMMENTARY

Ironton, Miami Trace Rotary Relay winners

Donald F.Graff
----- -------------- ---~

OWEC vs. OPEC?

Seven records fell m the
12th annual GallipoliS &amp;tary
Relays held Saturday on the
Stanely r.. Evans Field, R10
Grande
Ironton repeated as boys'
champions m the annual
event - 1! was the Tigers
thtrd &amp;tary title in seven
years IndlVlduai sco ring
titles went to M1Bm1 Trace s
Bnan Zurface and Fa1riand s
Diana Calhoun
M1am1 Trace unseated
Solith Pomt m the glfls'
division The Pmnter gtrls d1d
not partiCipate m this year s

By Doo Craft
The 01l-exporhng countrtes may have started somethtng
they'll come to regret
Accordmg to recent reports out of Washington, the majer

IN WASHINGTON

wheat-producmg natiOns are begmnmg to talk senously
about establishing a priCe-controUmg body similar to the

Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

Organ1Z8tton of Petroleum E:z:porting Countries In addi-

tion to the Umted States, these are canada, Argentma and
Australia
The four nations together hold an even!more dominant
positiOn m wheat than does OPEC (13 countries) m ml,

Science? What's that?

accounting for 85 percent of world exports And some o[
the~r

Ry Martha Angle and Rubel"t Walters

WASHINGTON (NEAl

quarters

An Orgamzat10n of Wheat Exporting Countnes would
appear to be a beautifully appropriate way of getting back

saona l vaew of the he alth hazards posed by saccharm
should have been dlspelled when Rep Ph1l Gramm 0

gen or cancer -causm~ agent

Despite the fmdmgs of a Nat10nat Academy of Sc1ences

stui.l) undertaken at the express order of Cong ress , the
la wma kers are no more anx1ous today than they were m
1977 to see sacc hann banned from the marketplace by the
P'ood and Drug Adrmnastratton
An 18 month moratonum on any such ban by the FDA

w1ll exp1re May 23 but 1t now appears likely that Congress
wtll e xtend the mor:atonum for another two or three years
- hea lth hazards be damned
I here Js m fa ct shU constderable scJenhftc controversy
about the exact nature and scope of the cancer risk posed

lo humans by saccharm

One NatiOnal Academy of

Sc 1ences panel after revtewmg all existing studies last
fall concluded the sweetener IS mdeed a car c mogen albeit
a relatively weak one
The stud) committee also concluded there Is no evidence
whatsoever that sacchann offers any health benefits as
opposed to n sks

Nonetheless a secohd NAS panel stopped short of urgmg
an Immediate ban on saccharin - the only action avatlable
to the FDA under ex1shng food safety laws - and
recommended mstead that the laws be changed to permtt a
more Oex1ble response

Members of this panel m testimony before the House
health subconuntttee , last we ek suggested the FDA be
authorized to place some restnchons on the use of
sacchann as a food and beverage additive wtthout banmng
the substance entirely at least for now
Panel members expressed particular concern about the
gro" 1ng consumptiOn of dtet soda pop by young children
who are obviously 1n no pos1tlon to make their own
mformed JUdgments about the rasks of sacchann 1ngest10n
Indeed 1f there 1s a smgle form of saccharin use that

seems log•ca l to curtail 1! IS the diet soda By no stretch of
the amagmataon can soda pop diet or otherwtse be
comndered essential or ..e\len js1rable from a nutnbonal
sta ndpomt
r J8
For a thtrst quencher ~ .noUMil beats plam old water And

for weight control, t,..e i1s no substitute for slmple self

restraant Dtet conscious caters don t expect to consume
heaps of candy tee cream and other calone-laden goodies
So why should they vtew the unltm1ted consumption of soda
pop as some ktnd of God giVen rtght? Anyone who really

chenshes the stuff can dnnk the regular kmd, 1n moderate
quanbt•es and cut calor1es elsewhere

Logic unfortunately IS not likely to enter mto the
congressional deciSIOn on sacchann The diet s~a
mdustry 1s VOCiferously opposed to any restnctJOns on 1ts
product, and has stlrred up masstve pubhc res1stance to
such moves
Congress thus far appears a good deal more concerned
about offendmg daet soda lovers than about protectmg
children from a potential long term health nsk Rep
Henry A Waxman D-Cahf cha1nnan of the House
subcommittee, said he 1s personally very troubled by the

problem posed for k1ds

but conceded his v1ew 1s probably

a mmonty one even Within the subcomnuttee
Wh en It comes to sacchann and Its role 1n the
marketplace. Congress IS apparently not yet ready to take

the better safe than ~prr~ , ,ppproach So drmk up folks 1f ) ou share the leg•sJai;J!ni'luck of concern And 1f your
kidS come down With bladder cancer 20 years from now,
you can tell them to blame Con~ress

Coach Bill Wamsley s host
Gallipolis Blue Devils were
12th In the boys diVISIOn thiS

the past few years a turnabout-Is-fair-play kmd of thmg"
m the words of Sen Geo. ge McGovern, D-8 D Or as Sen
John Melcher, D Mont , expresses lt, a way of surv1vmg'
the prices OPEC exacts from the West
The OWEC Idea IS understandably particularly appeal '

" Let me assure you that we've upgraded s1gntf1cantly our system for
pred1ctmg future operattonal aberrattons "

Settlement confuses public
YORK tAP )- When does
30 equal 22 5' When the
Council on Wage and Pnce
Stability says so And when
does 22 5 equal 30' When the
trucking mdustry says so
And even more' When the
Teamsters say so
Those are the fi gures
released after the recent
Teamster settlement With
truckers , and they have left
the public confused and
suspiCIOUS Readmg has been
debased , they say And

wntmg Now anthmetlc
The pubhc knows well that
you can make numbers dance
to any tune ever conceived.
but they have been UICllned to

thmk the muSicians should
not be the public servants
from theu own federal
government
And It would seem that few
people really appreciate the
great efforts made not JUSt to
make the numbers dance but
to make tllem smg whatever
song the1r exploiters have In

Hoofs and paws
RY MARION CRAWFOl!D

Thursday mormng I got a call rrgardmg a cat btomg hit by
d rar m Middleport
11 1v1an May wrnt to see what the SJtuatwn was - p1rkrd up
thr ammal and came by to get me We took It to the vet m
GallipoliS It was a mce large tiger male who mdv make 11we left 11 lor rxammat10n II you lost stlt h a cat do call &lt;'It her
992 7680 or 992 7853
Same day a womdn ca lled from Pomeroy regarding a rat
found rlvmg Its body was glVlng off bad octor she didn't ilunk
11 1\ould five- wnuldn t help by ta kmg 1! to vet VIVIan was not
available so I got Joyce Miller torhetk on 11
The am mal was rntlral and had to bt• ruthamzed Mean
lime on the wav home Joyre p1rked up a R&lt; agle tvp( dog
rlropprrl off at dumpster corner Route 124 and Route 7 and
b1 ought 1! home
Frtd~v J was trymg dPspr rHtrly tn gt&gt;t snrnt&gt;thm.L! dnnt'
around my own phwe- but tht• rhunt&gt; ran J.!,: woman \HI S frHn
tic flog hit bv rar wh1rh rl1dn t &lt;lop Ht•r son loved ammai &lt;he

d1dn t know what to rlo I told her lo rdll WMPO and I'd 1Jto on
the lo&lt;•knut Two hours latPr she called back- dog ram&lt; hom••
limping but sremHI to be oka)
&gt;
Talked to V1\ um May - sht&gt; h,ts now H fpm,tlf' dog w1th stx

p11pp1es aJl C'Ute mnther .-log must h,JV£' ht-rn prnmJ S( UC\ll~
somt pups had lnng ha1r somp sort snmr nnP color othrrs
anotht&gt;r Anvonr mterestt&gt;d m tht&gt;sr st&gt;vt&gt;n "&lt;'ek old pups

mmd
But those pubbhc servants
do manage to make the
numbers smg and dance
although perhaps only
rarely to make them JIVe
when they should be waltZlllg
And busmess does 11, too And
so do umons
Raw numbers are suspect,
they must be processed,
rehabilitated And so they are
sent to the numbers factory,
where they are seasonally
adJusted weighted reviSed,
remterpreted Maybe even
fudged a b1t
Our JObless f1gures are not
raw the unemployment ,rate
IS not a count but a
calculation The Index of
leading economic mdtcators
IS revised every month for
months
after
1ts
announcement Retail sales
ftgures are routmely raised
or lowered Just before the
next month s amouncement
In the busmess world we
see vast remterpretabons of
net profit between the time of
labor negohatwns and the
shareholders meetmg They
are dangerously low at one
time superla!Ive at another
Aceountmg methods help
Usmg perfectly' acceptable
techniques, a steel company
a few years ago reported
great
news
to
Its
shareholders a really mce
profit And to the Internal
Revenue Servtce 1 A loss

in the news

Berry's World

Washmgton was JUSt !me How was everything around the home mfras/Fucture?
s

•

are usually hurtlng from depressed priCes The suggested ~
fixed export pr1ce would be between $4 and $5 a bushel •

about $1 over the current free market prtce ~nd certamly a
modest mcrease compared with the pnce hikes OPEC has
tmposed upon Its captive customers in recent years
If you can t lu; k 'em, JOin 'em m setting your own prtce 1s
unquestionably a temptmg course But a cartel is a cartel
IS a cartel It still comes down to the m;cpulatlon of a
mass market for the benefit of a domm t few With a
number of negative factors to be consider

•'

~

year

It 1s estimated that an ad-

ditional 80,000 mdlvtduals
would qualify for the ex
panded Homestead Exemp
twn program The savtngs
from rea 1 property tax
payments by the mdlVlduals
quallfymg under the expanded Homestead Exemphon program wdl be approximately $15 I million By
replacmg the present fiVe m
come ranges with the three
ranges menhoned earlier
the major share of the real
property tax savings wtll go
to those mdividuals m the
lower end of the mcome
scale

The Oh1o House of
Representatives durmg the
week passed House Btll 415
which would permit a
coroner to remove the eyes
from the body of a person
dunng the performance of an
autopsy Currently the eyes
of a deceased person cannot
be removed unless that m
d1v1dual while llvmg agreed
to donate h1s eyes upon hts
death Under this Jeg1slahon
1£ an eye bank requested the
eyes of the deceased person
upon whom the autopsy was
being performed, the
coromer tnust have notified
the decedent's family and
have their permission before
the eyes can be removed
House B1ll 150 was also
passed by the House of
Representatives last week
Th1s legislation would repeal
Ohio's female labor laws
Currently these female labor
taws contam rstr1ct1ons
which lun1t the employment
opportumttes of women The
bill specifiCally would
ellmlnate those prov1s1ons
which proh1b1t the employ
ment of women 1n certam occupatiOns, prohihit women
from workmg certam hours
and prohibit women from llftm~ more than 25 pounds

patr a man's sexual capacity

Alcohol doesn't make men
better lovers It usually
decreases their objectivity so
they don I realize how bad
they are Peple who drlnl!
often thmk they drive better
under the mfluence when m

•

discus, 113' -4" Old mark was
112 -4" set bv Miller of South

AP CGrreapoodenl

If Hollywood should ever run out of ideas for a screen sub-

Webster m 1978
- Powers Humcane, shot
put, 39 1, Old 111ark was
38 1 by- Powers m 1978
- M1am1 Trace mile relay,
rn 4 24 5 Old mark was 4 27 0
by South Poml m 1978
Diana
Calhoun,
Fairland most pomts m
meet 40 Old mark was 38,
set ln 1978 by V1ck1e Stroud,
Kyger Creek
Rob Jenkms and Andy
Evans were the only Blue
Devils scormg pomts for host
GAllS Jenkins was th1rd m
the h1gh jwnp (6 .lJ ) and
Evans tied for s1xth ln the 330
low hurdles ( 42 0)
Blue Angels ptcking up
pomts Saturday mcluded
&amp;bm Bowers second m

mile rw1 h 06 5, Sara Abels
second m high Jump 5 I
Susan Jennmgs second m
shot put 32 -4
The BOOmedley team fm1shed secpnd
m2048

Jodl Jenkms was thlfd m
the 100-yard dash ( 12 5)
Jennlngs was fourth m the
discus (89 11") The GAHS
mile relay team was fourth
( 4 46 0)
Sarah Evans »//s fifth 111
the shot put 129 .0' 1 Smtth
was f1fth m the 100-yard dash
1 12 8 l GAHS was fifth m the
441k-elay t 56) Robm Bowers
was fifth l1l the 88t).yard run
(2 46 2)
Smtth was sixth In the long
JUmp and GAHS was SIXth l1l
the 88().relay

BY GREG BAILEY

Ftelds smashed his long
Mtke Triplett ftred a two- home run that went 360 feet
hitter and Jerry Ftelds plus
smashed a two-run homer as
The Marauders of Coach
the host Meigs Marauders Dale Harrison added a run m
shut out Wahama 's White the secood and then m the
Falcons 8.0 Saturday
third four runs came home
Triplett allowed only on two walks, two Wabama
smgles to F Smith and Jay errors and a two-run smgle
Snuth as he fanned !OW' by Steve Ohlinger
Falcons and walked only two
The Marauders tagged Vm
There were 10 errors 1n the ce Weaver With the loss He
contest four on the Falcons and Riccart fanned five and
and six on the Marauders, walked a bke number Chns
but Me1gs coWJtered those Taylor, Ohlinger, Triplett,
nustakes With some timely and Ray Andrews also had
fielding plays
hits for the Marauders
Me1gs took an early 2.lJ first I mescore
mnlng lead
w
000 000 0-0 2 4
Cliff Kennedy led thmgs off M
214 001 x-3 5 6
by stnkmg out but then adWeaver (lp), R1ccart (6)
vanced to f1rst base when the andJ Smith
ball got caught by the catTnplett and Venoy
cher
That bad start
foreshadowed what was to be
The Falcons gamed a split
a long afternoon for In the doubleheader as they
Wahama Two outs later,
,....-...-------.-----------.

SPORTS
The Daily Sen.:-

..,.._...1

Pro playoffs

Philadelphia
Anf onto 115

123

San

Sunday s Game
San

Anton•o

115

Phd

adelphia 112
Thursday April 26
Philadelphia at San An
tonio (n)

Sunday Apri 129

San Antomo at Ph II
adelph ia 1f necessary
Wednesday May 2

Philadelphia at San An

tonto (n) 1f necessary

'

Seattle 108

103 OT

Gamel
Los Angeles 118 Seattle
112 OT
Sunday's Game

Seattle 117 Los Angeles 115

Wednesdays Game
Los An~eles at Seattle (n)
Fridays Game
Seattle at Los Angeles 1f
necessary

Sunday Apnl29

l.:os Angeles at Seattle tf
ne cessary

W L Pel
3 1 750

Wash

WHA Playoffs

I 3 250

Atlanta

By The Assoc1ated Press

Game 1

All T1mes EST

Washmgton 103 Atlanta 89
Game2
Atlanta 107, Washmgton 99
Gamel
Washmglon 89 Atlanta 77
Sunday's Game
Was~1ngton 120 Atlanta

118 OT
Tuesday April 24
Atlanta at Wash ington (nJ
Thursday, Aprll26

Washmgton at Atlanta (n)
1f necessary
Sunday Apr1129
Atlanta at Wash1ngton tf
necessary
Western Conferwct
Phoenix

Kan C1ty

2 1

Pet
667

1 2 333
Game 1
Ph oeni x 102 Kansas Clty 99

Gamel
Kansas City 111 Phoenix 91
Sunday's Game
Phoen1x 108 Kansas C1ty 93

Wednesday 1 Game
Phoen•x at Kansas City In I

los Angeles

Qua rterfena Is
Best ot Three
.. sertes A

Salurlfay's Game
New Englond 5 Cincinnati

Here are lhe boys
stand1ngs

TEAM

tmal

POINTS
89
as
53

Ironton
M1am1 Trace
Coa l Grove
Athens
Wellston

49 '
36

Chesapeake

Fa1rland
Vmton County
South P01nt
Pt Pl easant
Hurncane
Jackson
Gallipolis
Logan
Here are the g1rls
stand ng s

TEAM

33
33
24 '
J-41'1
13
10 '
10

Saturday's Game
Boston 2 Ptttsburgh 1
Sunday's Game
Boston 4 Pittsburgh 1

International Le11gue

By The Associ• ted Press

Suqday's Results

Toledo A Richmond I
Rochester 4 3 Tidewater 3

Series 'H'

w I pet glga 2 Syracuse 8 Charleston 2
Columbus 3 Pawtucket 2
3 I 750 10 5
Monday s Games
Ph1la
13250520
Richmond at Toledo
Game 1
Tidewater at Rochester
Philadelphia 3 New York
Charleston at Syracuse
Rangers 2 OT
Golumbus at Pawtucket
Game2
Tuesday s Games
New York Rangers 1
Richmond at Toledo
Phrladel ph! a 1

Chesapeak e
{Record)

54

6

58
51
49
36

Jackson gals
defeat Meigs
BY GREG BAILEY
The Melgs Girls Softball
teall\ feU to 6 2 on the year af
ter lOSlllg to host Jackson lki
Fnday mght The hosts pounded out 15 hlts compared With
10 for Meigs
Fannm got cred1l for the
wm while gomg the distance,
fannmg seven and walking
three Terrt Wilson took the
loss She and Beth Bartrum
combined to stnke out two
and walk three
Me1gs took an early H lead
m the f1rst 1ming when Pam
Crooks and Soma Ash both
singled Crooks then raced
home when April King
reached on an error
Jackson put three runs on
the board m the third 1mmg
Maerk, Reed Exline and
Green all got Singles while
Conley added a double in that
spree
Metgs knotted the score
With two runs m the top of the
fourth one a home run by
Wilson Three runs In the bottom of that mmng sent the
hosts on the road to VIctory
With the score 8-3 m the top
of the seventh, Meigs
comeback failed Tonia Ash
led things off with a double
and then Kmg kept thmg.s
abve wtth a run-sconng
single
Wilson doubled and Sheri
!Jghtfoot smgled but then
the fire went out
I 1ghtloot led the hittmg
with three singles, Wilson
had her double and home run,
and T Ash had her double
Weather permitting,
tomght Meigs plays host to
Waverly

120 HURDLES -

Becketl

Iront on

POLE VAULT -

H~ron

100 YARD DASH -

lace M1amr Tr ace

Zur

10 4

MILE RUN -

NcN1ckle

V1nton County 4 33 5

440 YARD DASH -

Wellston 20 21.e

Zur

'
'

~~=

Oliver Tex

413
RUNS -

AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST

W L Pet GB

Boston
New York
Detro I
Ball more
M lwaukee
Toronto
Cleveland
Ca l1forn1a
Texa s
Mmnes ota
Ch1cago
Kan Ctty

-4 1 2

357

493085
WEST
12

4

B -4
9 5
7 7

s e

Oakland
Seattle

750
667
643
500
385

2

2
4
51 2

5 11 313 7
5 11 313 7
Saturday s Games
Balt1more 4 Milwaukee 2
Boston 10 Kansas (tty 4
Texas 5 New York 0
Chtcago 6 Cleveland 5
Mtnnesota 6 Seattle 5
Toronto 5 Detroit 4
Ca1tforn1a 13 Oakland 1
Sunday· s Games
Detroit 4 Toronto 1
Balt1more 6 7 M ilwaukee
23
Bos ton 6 Kansas Ctty 0
New Yor~ s TeMas I
Cleveland 8 Chicago 5
Mmnesota 3 Seattle 1
Oakland 7 Callforn1a 6
Monday'S Games
Toronto {Clancy 1 2} at
Texas (Aie)(ander 0 0) (n )

Ca l

~anslord

17

Baylor Cal

23

Ch1cago (Wortham 3 OJ at
Kansas C1ty ISpllttorlf 1 2)
tn)
Only games scheduled
Tuesday s Games
Mmnesota at Cleveland
Detro1t at Milwaukee (nl
Toronto at Texas {n)

Chicagoal Kansas City [oJ
Baltimore at California

(nl
New York at Oakland In I

7
Down1ng Ca l 7 Cooper Mil
6 Lemon Ch1 6 C Washg tn
Ch i 6
TRIP~ES -

R M ller Ca l

Norwood M n 2 38 T1ed

W lh I

HOME RUNS - Lynn Bsn

7

Cooper Mil 5 Atkens
5
Gmh Cal 5
DeCinces Bal o4 Lezcano

Cal

M•l 4 Nellles NY 4 Ford
Cal 4
STOLEN BASES - Ran
dolph NY 7 J Cruz Sea 7
Harrah Cle 6 Bonds Cle 5

Mannmg

Cle

5

J Norns

Cle 5 LeFlore Del 5 W•lls
Tex 5

PITCHING (3 Dec sloos) -

Jenk ns lex 4 0 1 000 1 42
John NY 3 0 1 000 0 76
Wor tham Ch1 3 0 I 000 2 59
Koosman Min J 0 1 000
4 24 t.aldwell Mil J 1 J)IJ

2 31 Rya n Cal 1 1 750 3 33

Palmer Ba l 2 l 667 3 09
Eckersley Bsn 2 I 667 2 63

STR IKEOU TS -

Cal

33

.Jenk tns

Ryan

lex

25

Worlham Ch1 22 Guidry
NY IB Caldwell M•l 17
Jones Sea 17

Rod Carew, then wlth
Mmnesota, batted
526 ·
against Cleveland m 1978

Bos ton at Seattle (n)

NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST
W L Pet GB
B 4 667
Ph1la
B 5 615
Montreal
66 5002
Ch1cago
St Lou s
New York
Pttts

-462

6 7

21 2

4 8 333 4
4 10 2116 5
WEST

Houston
Cmc
Sanfran
Los Ang
San Dieg o

Atlanta

12
9
9
a
B

4
7
a
9
9

5 10

750
563 3
529 l 12
471 -4 1 2
-471 412

Ask me about.

Ufe Insurance
tor'IOdays
FamilieS

I offer i!l total program to help
protect your family sway of hvmg ~
end build financial sej:u rlty for yourl
retirement ye~ r~ Call me for detzuls

Zur

23 1

N1 ck le

County

TWO MILE RUN - Me
V1nton

10 08 8

MI~E

RE~AY -

3 31 0 I Record)
TOP SCORER-

Ironton
Brian

~OW

HURD~ES

16 7

M&gt;aml

PUT -

Hurrtcane 39

12

100 YARD

Powers

( Record)

DASH

Calhoun Fairland

12

HIGH JUMP- D Frank

hn PI Pleasant 5 2

MILE

RUN -

M ami Trace 6 00 I

LONG JUMP
Gal pol IS 16 4
880 RELAY DISCUS

Jenkms
M1am1

Trace l 5-4 6

Hurr1ca ne 113

Smith

Warren

( Record)

o4

440 YARD

DASH

440 YARD

RE~AY

Calhoun Fairland
M1amt Trace

61 7

55 0

880 YARD RUN - Sm th

M am1 Trace 2 ill

220 YARD

DASH

Calhoun Fatrland

MILE RELAY -

27 0

M1aml

Trace 4 2-4 5 (Record )

TOP SCORER -

(Record!

PREVENnON
IS THE

BEST POLICY
As
an
Independent
Insurance agency our
primary fun ction is to
provtde pol iCies which
afford f1na nclal protection
In case of loss
But we also have a vital
mterest In loss preventl~,
as should our clients We
encourage care caution
and safety
preventiv-e
measures which can keep
that car accident from
happen1ng that building
fire from starting that
home burglary from being
comm1tted
Prevention saves life~
limb and property
and
helps control Insurance
costs and premiums
When l osses do occur:
our policyholders can counf
on protecting and serving
In time and need But we
sf1ll say - prevention Is the

best policy

149 s Th1rd
Middleport, 0
992 71 ss

,..----. ) tat e Fa rm l1fe and
i

•

I I.IIM

Ace den! Assuran ce

Ccmpa nv

Ho

11

8 oD'n

nun

~tj1on !l~lll ~

DALE C. WARNER
INS.
992 214)
102 w MaiO

Pomeroy

Atlanta 8 San Diego 7

St LOUIS -4 Cmctnnat 3

Houston 3 Pittsburgh 2

Los Angeles 9 San Fran
CISCO 2

Los

Monday's Games

1 1) al
I) (nl

(Messersmith
Philadelphia I Lerch I

Ans;~eles

Sf LOUIS (VuckOV'ICh 1 0) at

Atlanta 1N1ekro 1 3) tnl

Only games scheduled
Tuesday s Games
San 01ego at Montreal
Houston at Ch1cago
St Lou1s at Atlanta n&gt;
Los Angeles at Phtla

delphia (nJ

San Franc i sco at

York (n)

New

\o

Prttsburg h at

Cme~nnafl

Dontleave
kids to learn about
love from books.
Let them learn it
from you.

(n l

IJnescore

M
100 200 3-3 10 4
J
003 320 x-3 15 5
Wilson (Jp ), Bartrwn (5)
and Chapman
Fannin and Maerk

N Y Rangers

New

Game3
York Rangers

5

Ph•ladel ph•a 1
Sunday s Game
New

York

Philadelphia 0

Rangers

Tuesday s Game
New York Rangers

6
at

T1dewater at Rochester
Charleston at Syracuse
Columbus at Pawtucket
Wednesday s Game$

AFFORDABLE
ECONOMICAL
DRIVING

Columbus at Tidewater
Rochester at Toledo

Charleston at Pawtu cket
Syracuse at Richmond

3

Sunday's Game
Cincinnati 6 New England
3 senes tted 1 1
Tuesday s Game
C1ncmnat1 at New Eng land
7 30 p m
Semifinals
Best of Seven
Series B
Monday's Game

Wmn1peg at Quebec Bp m
Wednesday's G•me
Wmnlpeg at Quebec 8 p m
Friday's Game
Quebec at Wlnn1peg 9 p m

Sunday, Apr~l29 •
Quebec al W1n01peg 8 30
pm
Tuesday May 1
W1nnJpeg al Quebec B

pm

1f necessary

~one built for )UU!
See one of these courtec.us salesmen
Marvin Keebaugh or Georv- H•rns

Pete Burr1s

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
You II L1ke Our Quahty Way of Oomg Busmess"
GMC Flnancmg

992 5342
Oper. Fv,.nrngs unttl 6

POMEROY
c,~,»-

til S., m Sat

D1aoa

Calhoun Fatrland 40 pomts

MIKE SWIGER

333 6i'

Saturday s Games
Chicago 4 Montreal 3
Los Angeles 2 San Fran
CISCO 1 10 mn ngs
San D1ego 9 Atlanta 5
Phlladelphta 3 New York 0
Cmc lnnah 4 St Louis I
Houston s Pittsburgh 4 10
mmngs
Sunday s Games
New York 4 Phlladelphta 2
Ch1cago 4 Montreal 1

220¥ ARD DASH -

lace M1am 1 Trace

SHOT

413 Carew Cal

DOUBLES - HISle M I

2

nmg Athens 2 02 6

Trace 1 57

Lansford Ca l 26 Cooper
M I 24 Down ng Cal 24
Lemon Ch1 2.:1 Bochte Sea

24

(Record)

880 ME D~E Y -

9 4 692
Cooper M I 16 Lynn Bsn
966001
15 Lezcano M1l 15 Gnch
655452
8B5002i 2 Cal 14 Boehle Sea 14
HITS - Carew Cal 26
7 B 41&gt;7 3

5 9

45 7

Calhoun Fa1rland

Lynn Bsn 15 Cooper Mil
1-4 Carew Cal 1-4 Burleson
Bsn 13 Oownmg Cal 13

RBl -

tn

51 7

RELAY

llO ~OW HURDLES Beckett Ironton 40 4
880 YARD RUN - Brun

100

J

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD
BASEBALL
At AGlance

440 YARD

Zurface M 1am1 Trace 32
pom ts
Here are first place w1n
ners 1n the g1rls d1v1slon

''''....l[Jl
-By The Associated Press

downed the Me1gs Reserves
5-0 mthe f1ve mmng second
game VanMatre got the w1n
and Andrews took tbe loss
Me1gs outhit the VISitors 4
3, With Dave Hysell leadmg
the way With two smgles
Roger Carson and Dan Ed
wards got the other two
smgles off VanMatre
Four runs in the first mmng
were all the Falcons needed
as M Smith led the hitters
With a smgie and double
VanMatre added a smgle
IJnescore
w
400 01-:i 3
M
000 00-0 4
VanMatre and Smith
Andrews (lp) Owens (3)
Waybind (5) and D Kennedy
T Wayland (4)

fac e Mtam Trace

Mtam Tra ce 11

8

2

66

Harvey

lronto11 16 I
DISCUS - M c Whorter
Chesapeake 151 11

Patton

LONG JUMP

HIGH JUMP -

Ironton 6 4

SHOT PUT - McWhorter

final

POINTS
101

M.iam1 Trace
GallipoliS
Hurncane
Fa1rland
Ironton
Pt Pleasant

E:as ten 1
26
We llst on
17
CoaiGr ove
16
Chesapeake
12
Portsmouth East
2
Here are f1rst pla ce w n
ners 10 ea ch event rn the boys
diV 15100

7 ,

Triplett two-hits Wahama

Ject , 11 need only stroll down the boulevard a ways to Marma
Del Ray and look up a young man named Salt Walther
At age 30, Salt's life already is a book
Almost Since be was b1g enough to hold a steermg wheel, he
has courted death He has looked the specter straight m the
eye, dared the ogre to do Its best and then always come back
for more
Walther, they say, IS vicllmofa 'death Wish • He demes it
There was the time hiS speedmg hydropbine d1d a complete
somersault and spat him mto the sea
Once his sleek thunderbolt of a racmg car exploded tn front
of the packed stands of the Indianapolis Speedway The
machine dismtegrated mto flanung confetti Walther was
ptcked up VIrtually in pieces - both anns and legs broken,
nbs crushed, burned from head to foot - and was carted off to
the hospital to die
Thirty doctors frantically worked to keep him alive "No
chance " they sa1d Walther wasn t Jistemng
Thirteen months later, h1s older brother, Sk1p, whom he
adored, died m a hydroplane crash during a race off the Mtami
coast
The emot10nal pam from this tragedy cut deeper than any
phySical wounds suffered m hiS own reckless, death.defylng
experiences and he thought he might never recover from the
lingenng mghtmare
'After Skip died Walther said, I thought I would never
race agam I was sickened by the Idea But I became restless
agam Racing 1s m my blood "
~1
Today, the young driver Is lookmg toward the b1g pnze he.
•
~WIC'
has never won - the Indianapolis 500 When the loud speaker ,
,
blares, • Drivers, start your engmes'" on May 27, Salt hopes to .__ _ _ _ _ _'!'"!!!!!!"_ _ _ _ _. __ _
be at the controls of his Penskl-Cosworth He is still looking for
a sponsor
1
YVH~tner •wppea In New YOrk en route to Atlanta where he
and other leading drivers of Indy-type machines were to com
NHL Ployofls
pete Sunday In the second leg of the Championship Auto
Philadelphia
At AGlance
Thursday Apnt 26
Racing Teams (CART) nme-race series
By The Associated Press
Philadelphia at New York
He has hved a glamorous as well as perilous life
Quarter fmal Round
Rangers 1f necessary
He was pointed - but not pressured he InsiSts - toward a
Best ut Seven Ser.es
Saturday, April 28 or
Ser1es •e•
rac1ng career by a dotmg father, George, head of the $200
Sunday April 2'1
w I pel gt go
New York Rangers at
nulllon a year Dayton Walther Corp of Dayton Ohio He was
dr1vmg hydroplanes and race cars before he was old enough to N Y Islanders4 0 1 000 14 J Philadelphia If necessary
shave
ChiCago
0 4 000 3 14
Semlfmal Round
Game 1
A dark haired, handsome bachelor, he became a favonte of
Best of Seven Series
New York Islanders 6
Senes 'J'
the jet set that pursues these helmeted daredtvils all over the
w I pet glgo
Ch1cago 2
globe He sqmred movte starlets magazme cover g1rls and
Gamel
Monlreal
0 0 000 o 0
debutantes
New 'l{ork Islanders
Boslon
0 0 000 0 0
...
But he never mamed - and vows he never will He IS wed lo Ch1cago 0 OT
Thursda v•s Game
GameJ
Bos ton at Montreal {n)l
the thrill of racmg
New York Islanders -4
Saturdoy Aprll28 or
' No I never feel that I am flirting With death," he says ' I Ch1cago
0
Sunday, Apnt 29
am fl1rtmg w1th life One cannot 1rnag1ne the great feelmg of
Sunday s Game
Boston at Montreal
New York Islanders 3
Just bemg alive after a tough race "
Tuesday, May 1
Montreal at Boston (rtf
Walther now mamtalns residences m Beverly Hills and Ch1cago 1
Thursday, May l
Marina Del Ray, where he counts mov1e celebrities among hls
Ser1es 'F'
Montreal
at Boston lnJ
closest fnends Already he has done a bit role m the TV senes,
w I pel gt ga
Saturday, May 5 or
"Rockford Files," and probably will get other roles
Mont
4 0 1 000 19 10
Sunday May 6
Toronto
0 4 000 10 19
Boston al Man treal If
Gamel
necessary
Montreal 5, Toronto 2
Tuesday, May 8
Fnday's Game
NBA Playoffs
Gamel
Montreal at Boston (n) tf
~nsas City at- Phoentx 1f
At A Glance
Montreal 5 Toronto I
necessary
necessary
By The Assoc1ated Press
Saturday's Game
Thursday, May 10
Sunday, Spnl29
Second Round
Montreal A Toronto 3 2 OT
Boston at Montreal (n) If
t-"11oentx at Kansas City tf
Best of seven Senes
Sunday's Game
necessary
necessary
Eastern Conference
Montreal 5 Toronto 4 OT
Tuesday May 1
W L Pel
Sene!. 'I'
Kansas C1ty at Phoen1 x
San Ant
3 1 750
Senes G'
New York Islanders vs
Phlla
1 3 250 (n) 11 necessary
w I pet glga
New
York
Rangers
Game 1
4
0 1 000 16 7 Philadelphia wtnner
Boston
San Ant on• o 119 Ph1la
W L PcJ
0 4 000 7 16
Sea Ilie
3 1 730 P lis
delphia 106
Game 1
~ os Ang
1 3 250
Game2
Boston 6 P1tlsburgh 2
Gamel
San Antomo 121
Phrla
Game2
Seat tle 112 Los Angeles 101
delphia 12Q
Boston 4 Pittsburgh 3
Gamel
Gamel

Lavtrence E. Lamb, M.D.

fact they re traffic hazards
Or they may thmk they do a
dozen other things better AU
of this 1s IllusiOn Tests have
sliOwn that most people under
the Influence of alcohol t~rn
m substandard perfonnances
m almost ali areas, mcludmg
the sexual area
When a coup)e IS caught ln
a problem and only one of
them 1s Interested 111 domg
somethmg about 1!, that one
should probably go to a physician and possibly see a
psych1atnst or family
counselor By direct di:;cusslon 11 may he possibly to
work out a solution that Will
help m that speclflc situation
You might look •n the
yellow pages of your
telephone directory for
alcoholism and see what
orgamzabons or facilities are
available m your commumty
and talk to them about your
husband s problem In a
nwnber of mstances, the VIC
tun has great difficulty helpmg himself and many
orgamzatwns can be very
helpful to the other spouse
caught m such a Sltutlon
I am sending you The
Health Letter number 3·12,
Impotence, to gtve you
general mfonnation lin this
problem since it '~ the
primary concern to you
Other readers who want this
Issue can send 50 cents With a
long stamped, self·
addressed envelope for it
Send your request to me m
care of this newspaper, P 0
Box 1551 Radio City Station,
New York, NY 10019
Just keep m nund that 1m
potence 1s a symptom It can
be caused by honnonaf factors, alcoholism neurologiCal
factors such as compllcations
of diabetes, circulatory
disorders and of coors~.
psychologiCal factors A good
evaluatiOn by a professional
IS often necessary to understand what's really going on

Hurricane

By WW Grimsley

~

HEALTH
Frustrated Wife
By Lawrence E Lamb, MD.
DEAR DR LAMB - I need
help m understanding,-.a sex
ual problem that exists between my husband and
myself It nught even save
our marnage 1f I could gam a
little 1ns1qht At present I m
contemplatmg either an affair w1th a long time fl'lend or
a divorce or both
My husband is 64 and I'm m
my early 60s For the last 20
years there's been a decreasmg ability to function sexually on hiS part and now no at
tempt at all 1s made I've
(ned to be understandmg but
most of the time l JUSt end up
frustrated
He won't see a phys1c1an
He IS a heavy drmker andsmokes two to three packs of
cigarettes a day I've tned to
get Inn t&lt;1g1ve up these habits
and told hun that he would
hve longer and more
pleasurably so we could enJOY
our lives together but nothing
works
I can only conclude that he
enjoys things the way they
are which IS to go to work,
come home, start dnnkmg
and stagger off to bed This
means no hme life for either
of us and surely a shortened
life span for hun What 1s a
woman supposed to do m clr·
cwnstances such as these?
DEAR READER - You're
nght about the effect qn hts
life span If he drinks as
much as yu say and smokes
as much as you say at 64
years of age he may not be
around much longer to proVIde any form of compamonshlp
The excessiVe use of
alcohol can significantly lm·

Warren,

:

even more

homesteaders earnmg less
than $5 000 mcome a year
$3 000 for those earmng between $5 000 and $10 000 a
year and $1 500 lor those
homeowners earmng between $10,000 and $15,000 m a

-

Sports World

~

was
through
remterpretat1ons that the
Domestic prices would also be affected to some extent,
Council on Wage and Pnce which
American consumers would not be likely to regard
Stability managed Its own as fair play Abroad mantpulabon of a baste food source
good news recently the news could be resented w1th possibly undesirable political
that the umon-truckers consequences At the very least, U S parttclpabon would
contract came m exactly at undermme Washmgton's long campaign for freer MTorld
the 22 5 percent gllldebne trade just now culmmatmg m the 99-nation GAIT
limit for a three year agreement reached at Geneva
And It would necessitate hghter federa,l regulation of
contract
productiOn
'marketmg wh1ch, considermg Washing
Excluded from that figure ton's recordand
on wheat sales to the Soviets in which 11 was
was a portion of cost-of hVlllg the middlemen who profited should giVe growers long
mcreases m the contract's second thoughts
thlfd year The reason g1ven
There have been prevwus attempts to follow the OPEC
was that the contract Itself example m baux1te, rubber and several similar bases of
deferred th9 ~e payments developed economies ThCy have not been successful
until after the contract be~ause the producmg countries have not been able to
achieve the cohesion of the ml producers That coheswn
termmat1on
be tn part political, a consequence of the donunant
However 111 excludmg may
role m OPEC of the Arab producers with the bonds of their
those mcreases the council conunon mvolvement in Mideast affairs and adversary
completely reversed an relationship with the Industrial West But tn even larger
earlier specifiCally stated part, 1t may be a consequence of the umque character1sUc
mterpretatwn that Sllld pay of the product
Oil1s preenunently the nonrenewable resource Supplies
mcreases should be charged
In the period m wh1ch they are f1mte, and when they are gone they are gone This
actually prov1des a rationale as well as leverage for OPEC
are earned
The 7 percent gu1delme, policies The producing countnes, possessmg little else in
way of natural resources, have to make the most of it
which compounded amounts the
while they have 1t And as Iran's currently vacationing
In 22 5 percent over a three shah frequently remmded consummg nations, 01! is much
year period, 1s thus a matter too valuable an industrial material to be squandered on
of subJective JUdgment If a nonessentials such as unreabsttcally cheap energy
settlement
cannot
be
Wheat, on the other hand , 1s emtnently renewable It is
contamed
Wtthm
the widely grown, 1f not elsewhere on tbe scale of the big four
producers Ftxlng an artificially high prtce could spur
gUidelmes, change them
World
productiOn and create an eventually price-depressSubjective mterpretat1ons
ir\g surplus. weakemng the cartel's posttton and leaf108 j
also perqut varied use of growers even worse off
figures molded to su1t the
the circumstances, 1t would not appear advisable ,.
particular needs or goals to Under
rush mto OWEC We could well be startmg something we
The un1on bragged abont Its would come to regret
30 percent settlement The
truckers complamed 11 was
It

sprmg while Coach Nancy
Moran s Blue Angels fmlshed
second m the g1rls diviSion
New &amp;tary Relays marks
S!'turday were
Boys' Oivislon
Shawn McWhorter
Olesapeake He tossed the
shot put 54 -3", bettering the
record he set last year of 53plus feet
- Mile relay lrontnn m
3 31 The old mark was
3 32 9 set m 1975 by Ravenswood
- 44G-yard relay, Ironton
m 45 7 INew event m meet)
Girls Division

Today's

mg to the .,reg ion McGovern and Melcher represent, where "
wheat Is baste to the agricultural economy and growers •

Collins' report

Names •••

'

event

at the otl exporters for their remorseless pnce squeezmg of

COl UMBUS
State
please rail !l92 785~
Senator Oakley C Colbns (R
l.ast but not least a woman rallP&lt;i from th&lt; Ra&lt;trrn H1gh Ironton) was a co-sponsor of
School a rt&gt;a known as I ornst GrovE
leg1slahon passed by the
Hrr arPe~ has had Jnctdents m thr past bf .r~mme~Js twmg Senate last Tuesda) The bill
brutally btoaten
Am S B No 6, would raise
A r;d was see n beatt-n to dec1th Anvway M ondetv mormng the maximum mcome for
at 6 am thi S woman s dol( was seen staggrrmg from the persons quahfymg for the
dtrf'ctton of this sa me person s house Ctnd waH obviOusly rn bclrl Homestead Exempti011 from
shape
$10,000 to $15 000 The Oh10
Tht&gt; ownrr wa s railed rmd surr en ough - thrrr w,t s her Const1tutwn allows laws to be
bto,mlllul AKC Registered Golden J.abrarlor Retriever the v1r passed to reduce taxes by
tun of 1 1 ~mn1ronr' 1n that area thr Hmmal was tak&lt; n 1m lowermg the value \,r the
mechately to Parkersbur{! to the Vt t w1th wood splmters m 1ts homestead of residents who
ANDOVER,N H (AP) - Two men who figured pronunently CY&lt;' head and upper bodv
Ia&lt;era lions 1n several plH&lt;'&lt;'s are either disabled or 65
m the news dunng the VIetnam war era, one a soldier the )l&lt;&gt;Ss1ble broken JaW
years old The ongmal
other a protest leader, appear m pubhc fonuns Tuesday m
T~m't It tragi c that sn m:my tl rr selPcli\E:' humamtanam:'' Homestead F.xempt10n was
New Hampshire about 100 miles from each other
own :mlmdl~ themsPi ves but lt&gt;t (lnothPr rxrson'~ ammctl created under th1s con
Gen Wilham Westmoreland commander of U S forces m rome near and you wonder who 1-:; tht&gt;animal
st1tutlonal authority The
VIetnam durmg the nud 1960s buildup, IS to speak to Dart
Ohw laws when enforced, cao b.. used on people like thiS
Homestead Exemption per
mouth College students m Hanover on Retrospective VIews
Good
new!-i
1
ots
of
nlct' ammals placed m good homE's lftst
m1 ts a reduchon m real
and Lessons of VIetnam •
week, most folks have been great ,Ibout rooperatm{! w1th us 1n property taxes for certam
In Durham pohllcal activist Jerry Rubm Will speak to helpm!( us when we ve asked Thanks mn&lt; h
persons who own or occupy
Umvers1ty of New Hampshire students on • Twenty Years of
•
their homestead and who are
Change "
either permanently or totally
Westmoreland was U S Army chief of staff from 19611 until
disabled
or 65 years of age or
his rehrement m 1972
older
Rubm was a founder of the Y1pp1es the Youth InThe amount of the reduc
ternatiOnal Party and was one of the ' Chicago Seven actlon
1n the real estMe propercused of sta rtmg nots at the 19611 Democrahc convention
tv taxes for those quallfymg
Westmoreland's lecture IS free Rubm's IS$3
lor the Homestead Exemp
t10n
decreased as the home
NEW HAVEN Conn fAPl -Black activist Angela Davts
owner's
mcome mcrcases
says ' the lime• they aren't a changm'," at least as far as
The new schedule under
racJ.sm ISconcerned
Senate Bill 6 would provide a
Racism Is worse 1n this country now than 1! was 10 years
maximum decrease m the
ago and we have to keep on hghhng • she said at a rally here
taxable
value of the real
She sa1d blacks have been hurt by an assault on aff1rmahve
property
or $5 000 for those
actiOn programs notmg the US Supreme Court deciSIOn m
the Bakke case
In that case, the court ordered the Umvers1ty of California to
1ll'P. nAil V SF.NTINF.I
adtmt Allan Bakke to medical school He had been derued adI l iSP!' 1.5-!*1
mission under a quota system that set aside 16 places out of 100
lor nunor1ty applicants
The assault on the affinnatn e action program 1s based on
an •llus10n that we're free We must de mystify thiS IllusiOn
Ms Davis told the crowd Saturday
CLEVE! AND ( AP) - Cleveland s brash young mayor Denms J Kuc1mch •sn't unpressed by President Carter's per
formance 1n office and says he d feel better havmg actor
Woody Allen 1n the Wh•te House than Carter
I've met President Carter a few limes and I personally
fmd h1m a very engagmg mdtvtdual but 1 also believe that
when history IS recorded, he may have trouble elboWing out
some of our more mediocre presidents,' says Kucm1ch, a
Democrat who won office two years ago without party support
H1s comment was 1n an mterv1ew With Robert Scheer to be
published m the June edition of Playboy, said the Cleveland
Plain Dealer, which obtained a cop~ of the mterv1ew and
pub! Ished excerpts Sunday
Kucm1ch also discussed his stormy adtmmstratlon which
has seen the c1ty plunge mto default the recall attempt and
bitter fights w1lh the C1ly Council

best customers happen to be OPEC mell\bers, which

explams the strong mterest m the proposal m some

Any doubts about the congres

Tex s tr olled mto a recent House heanng on the s ubject
wa vmg a daet soda and sm1rkmg
While Gramm s grandstand act was hardly a class
performance at pretty much typafted the skephc1sm of
m ost m e mb~rs of Cong ress towards sc1enhftc evidence
adentlh mg the popular arhhcaa l sweetener as a carcmo--

J07c)

Children watch what you do So watch what you
do By show1ng them how to be good, and lov1ng,
you m1ght end up being better yourself if you
need help the best place to find •t IS at your house
of worsh1p Th1s week worsh•p w•th them and
then hve your rel•g• on every day

Bring the God you worship
into your life•.• practire
what you pray.

�\

-

Keith Ashley wznner
of West Virginia
State Grange award

Reitz' hit snaps Reds' five g:Jme win streak
ST. LOUIS (API - "They
beat . our best," .lamented
Cin ci nn ati Reds Manager
John McNamara, after St.
Loui s Cardinal Ken Reitz
banged out the game-winning
hit off a fastball thrown by
Reds' relief ace Doug Bair in
the Cards' 4-3 win over the
Circinnati Reds Sunday . .
Reitz's single up the middle .

COLUMBUS, Ohio (APl Some prophet s , including
rival Coach Johnny Orr of
Michigan, are predicting a
national college basketball
championship for , Ohio State
with the arrival of Clark
KeUogg.
However , his future
tea mmates are not that
br ash .
The 6-foot-8 Kellogg signed
a national letter-&lt;&gt;f-intent to
play his coUege career with
the Buckeyes, who led the Big
Ten Conference most of last
se ason before finishing
fourth .
" ! think we'U be a much
improved team," said 6-11
center Herb Williams, "but
I'm not going to predict a
national championship."
KeUogg wUI provide the
Buckeyes some sorely needed
outside shooting to go with 6-1
guard Kelvin Ransey. And
Williams should reap the
benefits.
'' He 'll {Kellogg) help break ·
up all that double and triple
teaming on me . I'm very
happy he carne. He. plays the
game very well," said
William s. hampered· all
season by sagging defenses.
Coach Eldon Miller plans to
use Kellogg at both forward

capped a two-run rally in the
eighth inning and helped snap
the Cardinals' losing string at
three games.
" I wouldn 't consider hin1
(Reitz ) a good hitter," sa id
Bair. "He's strictly a fastbaU
hitter. That's why it was a
bad pitch.· I didn't throw it
wher e I wanted it. "

·

Reitz 's hit followed Keith

and guard. Todd Penn, who
started much of last winter
with Ransey at guard, is not
worried about less playing
time because of the ·incorning
hotshot .
&lt;! He's real good," Penn

said of Kellogg. "He's a
natural. He's a ballhandler
and a guard. He's going to
help us a lot. [ think
everyone's going to accept it .
"Whoever attends Ohio
State was proud he signed. "
Kellogg also figures to take
playing time away from 6-2
Carter Scott at forWard .
"Sometimes la•'l year I was
overpowered,' ' said Scott .

''I'll be looking forward to
playing with him. I saw him
in the state tournament and
he didn '! have a,nybody to
compare with him on that
floor ."
Jim Ellinghausen , another
subsitute forward, said of
Kellogg, "He's the best high
school player I've ever seen."
Jim Smith, a strong 6-41
rebounding forward who
figures to keep his starting
job, summed up the
sentiments of the Buc~eyes
when he said : "I can't wait
until the season starts now. I
wish it could start next
mOnth. ''

Hf rnandez's onc'()ut double t'Cnter field before Reitz got
and Ted Simmons' RBI single hi s hit .~ff the right-handed
Hair, the Reds ' third .hurler of
off loser Torn Hwne, 2·2.
Pinch-hitter Tom Grieve th e inniflg. ·
But McN amara wasn 't
was then issued
an
intentional walk by Reds' seeond·g uessing his decision
reliev.er Dave Tomlin . and to insert Bair, last year 's
George Hendrick flied deep to th ird best National League

. ~~~:' ,,'

INDIANAPOLIS I AP )
Championship Auto Racing
Te~m s gave lodianapolis
Motor Speedway President
Joe Cloutier untll tonight to
reply to a telegram asking
' clarification of the U.S. Auto
Club's
rejection
of
Indianapoli s :;oo entries by
six CART teams.
If Cloutier .does not reply ,.
or if his answer does not
satisfy the leaders of the
breaka ·wa.y
ra c ing

orgljlliZation, " ... we will be
compelled to resort to our
available remedies," said
CART President Pat Patrick. ·
He did not say what those
remedies might be.
Patrick, whose own racing·
team was one of the six

singled out by USAC on
Friday, said he wants to know
who runs the Indy 500 USAC or the Speedway.
"We've got to find out who

ASSOCIATED.PRESS
Pity the Oakland A's.
" We don 't get the free
agents and don't get the big
·salaries," says catcher Jim
Essian . "We're hassled by
the fa_ns and Ulere are not
that many of them that show
up at Oakland. And .. . we
usually don 't get the calls
from the umpires."
So the A's had a team
meeting and decided that the
only thing they could do this
season was "go ouf and have
some fun," says Essian.
Sunday they had some at
the expense .of the California
Angels .
"We reaUy wanted this one
badly," said Essian, who· led
the A's to a 7~ win , snapping

.

the Angels' ,10-game winning MLU'phy with the winning run
streak. " California had in the eighth inning. "The
beaten us so b3dly in the first lead kept changing hands and
we were scuffling .
five games this year. "
"We're just trying to make
11Je Angels routed the A's
13-1 Saturday night and had a living - we don't have the
outscored Oakland 47-10 in best team In the league."
In other American League
five meetings before Sunday.
"The game was quite a games , the Baltimore Orioles
battle," said Essian, who swept a doubleheader from
doubled home Dwayne the Milwaukee Brewers, 6-2

Men's High' Game -,- Ken
MclauQhlln 214,.
·Women's

Hig_h Series ·-

Betty Smith
Dugan 535.

557 ,

Maxine

Sports briefs.

Roach 's Gun Shop

. Ff ve 's Pennzoil

SalemSt. Mkl.

WL
60 36

Str~et Market 828, Heine rs
1

we must immedi~tely know
the basis of this distinction ."
The six CART teams,
representing 19 entries, were
turned down oil Friday after
USAC ruled they were the
"nucleus of a concerted effort
to be harmful to auto racing ."
The Speedway stU! has 84
entries for the May 'll race,
more than enough to m1 the
33-&lt;:ar starting field: USAC
said its argument was not
with the drivers, including
former Indy champions AI
and Bobby Unser, Gordon
Johncock and Rutherford ,
but with the six car owners;
all of whom are on the CART
board of directors.
They . are Patrick, Roger
Penske, Dan Gurney, ·Jim
Hall, Tyler Alexander and
Bob Fletcher.
''I look at this as a lastditch effort by USAC to break
us up," said Patrick, who
owns the cars driven by
Johncock
and
Wally
Dallenbach. "But it's just like
when A.J. Foyt jumped ship
and went back to USAC. It's
making us stronger." .
USAC President Dick King
said he met with Patrick and
Penske last Tuesday, but
apparently there was no
movement in the stalemate.

SAUSAGE

BEEF .

$}39

. $139

PORK SPARE RIBS

lDNGHORN, CHEESE

•1.69

89'

GROUND CHUCK
LB

CUBE STEAK

'1.59

L8 . •1.89

ARM ROAST
LB

'1e59

5 LB.
BAG

FRESH HAM
LB

ROuND STEAD

10 LB.
BAG

'1.59

LB

'1.89

FINE ASSORTMENT
'
.
OF
STORE
S~ICED
.
.

'

Royal Oak Pari&lt;,

Royal Crown Cola

'

Pis
100
86
74
58
38
28
Pat

Carson 199, Debbie Hawle~
181, Jan Sheets 172 .
High Series - Pal Carson

LONG HOTDOG
&amp; FRENCH FRIES
·oNLY . , 09

MONDAY-TUESDAY·WEDNESDAY
(April23, 24, 25, 19791.

McCLURE'S

500, Debbie Hawley 483,
An.nette Phalin 463.
Team High Came - Royal
Oak Park 494 .
Team High. Series - - Royal

Oak Park 1440,

·

,'d,alry15Je· ~ ·.
• Locust

M

' P.h. 992-5248

LUNCH MEATS

7.1JP OR .

HEAD ROOT BEE;R.j
$109 :~~::::it

MODERN DESIGN-Mrs. Gilbert Cullen of Marietta, an
accredited judge of the Ohio Association of Garden Clubs,
demonstrated the art of modem design at Saturday's
Region 11 meeting held at the Meigl; Inn, Pomeroy.

the Pomeroy Ubrary in honor of Mrs. Charles Kuhl, second from left, the retiring regional director. Miss Erma
Smith, left is regional secretary, and Mrs. Jan Knapp,
right is treasurer!or Region II .

Mrs. Cullen gives modern design demonstration
By Charlene Hoeftlch
An outstanding demonstra·
lion on modem design by
Mrs. Gilbert Cullen and the
election of Mrs. Pat Holter,
longtime ac'.ive member of
the Chester Garden Club, as
director, highlighted the spring meeting of Region II,

Ohio Association of Garden
Clubs held Saturday at the
Meigs Inn.
Nearly 100 garden club
members from 19 dubs in
Southeastern Ohio gathered
at the Inn for the day-long
program which included
reports of accomplishments

of clubs over the past year, a stale to provide 29 flower ar- dried and live materials
review of upcoming events of rangements. She urged the made numerous modern ar·
in
her
interest to garde]lers, and a members to familiarize rangemen!s
brief address by Mrs. James themselves with changes in demonstration during the
Pond, president of the Ohio the handbook and reminded afternoon program. She talkAssociation of Garden Clubs. members of donations needed ed about suitable containers,
Mrs. Pond announced the for the bird feeding project. . materials which work well in
stale convention to be held at The state president also com- modem design and then
the University of Akron and mended Mrs. Charles Kuhl displayed the technique for
asked for each region in the for her work as regional arranging the flowers .
director over the past two
The Middleport Garden
years. ·
Club was host for the meeting
· Another speaker at the with ~rs. Carl Horky serving
meeting was Mrs. Fred as chairman of the day. Mrs.
Schuster who talked about Rlia Hamm, Mrs. Fred kess-..
the care of miniature roses. inger Mrs. Marion French,
She displayed two · plants and Mrs. Dan Th 0mpson
noting that one of the nice registered the guests. during
features about miniature !he coffee hour which preced·
roses is that they are very . ed the 10 a.m. opening.
After the call to order by
hardy and scarcely ever
. Mrs. Kuhl, Mrs. Horky gave
freeze in winter.
Mrs. Cullen, an accredited the welcome and Mrs. David
judge of the OAGC and a fre- Bowen the devotions using as
quent judge of flower shows her topic, "Consider God's
in Meigs County, uslng ·both Relationship with Nature."
1

, h Jd.
Sch. 00 / .0if Rel'tgton
'0 s

REFRIGERATORS RANGES FREEZERS ..; DISHWASHERS WASHERs - DRYERS ·.

litE G.' or DII:T

WOmen's - HIQ.h Game Bess Hendricks 182, Dream
Rdach 180, Bess Hendr lcks

175

NEW REGIONAL DIRECTOR-Mrs. Pat Holter, third
from left, was elected director of Region II, Ohio Association of Garden · Clubs, at Saturday's spring regional
meeting. Mrs. Holter presented a book on wildflowers to

..

to

Keith Ashley of Chester has
Ashley has also been selecbeen notified by William ted by the West Virginia
Steele, Natonal Grange youth State Grange youth directors
director, that he bas been tu be an instructor for the
chosen as the winner for the state youth camp to be held
West Virginia State Grange this Jun e. He will instruct the
in the National Grange Youth youth on th e pr ope r
Represepta\ive Award con- procedure to display the fi rst
test. To win this award, the degree.
contestant must demonstrate
Ashley belongs I&lt;&gt; Silverton
high levels of achievement in Grange No. 506 in Jackson
attendance at his subordinate County, W. Va. He holds the
and Pomona Granges; in of- degrees of Pomon;;t, Flora,
fices held, in contest par- and Ceres I which is the
ticipation, and in community highest deg1·ee attainable ·. in
service. His applica\lon for the Order of the Patrons of
the award
now be placed Husbandry). Thi s award is
with the winners of the the fourth National Grange
various states where he will contest he has won. Presenbe eligible for the national tly, he is serving a two-year
title. He will receive a cash term as delegate for Meigs
prize for his selection as the County Granges to the· Ohio
West Virginia finalist.
State Grange.

will

*ADMIRAL *SPEED OU

Roach 479, Betty Whitlatch

Doug 's Marine Sales
Roble Const.
52 44 • Robert
H!gh Ind . Game

Team High Game - Saie\n

·oberkfell , a left-handed

WAREHOUSE CLEARANCE
*FRIGIDAIRE *CALORIC

455.

56 An

Heiner s Bakery
47 49 .
Powell's Market
42 54
Meigs Co. Ad Taker
31 65
Team · High Series - HE!iner s · Bakery
2246,
Fowell's Market 2137, Frye' s
Pennzoi l 2136.

·

High Series -

Reuter-Brogari Ins.
Friendly Tavern

Monday Nile League
Apri I i 6, 1979

••

Bess Hendricks 490. Drema

TuesdaY Triplicate
April17, 1?79

High Game
Women
Be lly Smith 212.

off ."

hitter, was installed at second
base in a Cards lineup
juggled by Manager Ken
-Boyer to manufacture more
runs.
He responded with a single
in his.first appearance, then
tripled and scored St. Louis'
first run in the fifth .
Afterward, his second single
led to another run in the
seventh , and in the eighth he
singled again.
&gt;'i had a 4-for-4 day one
time when I was in Wichita
with New Orleans, " said
Oberkfe U, who' spent most of
· 1976 and 1977 in the American
Association.
"That's the only other time
I've had it, I think,." he said.
" It was probably the greatest
day· in my life as far as big
league baseball is concerned.
I'm just delirious ."
In addition to OberkfeU,
more left-handed punch was
inserted into the Cards'
lineup in the ·form of
outfielders Dane Iorg and
Bernie Carbo . But, untU late,
the
moves
produced
negligible results.
Lou Brock'·s pinch single
finally gave St . Louis a 2-2tie
in the seventh. Then , after the
Reds moved back on top via
Ray Knight's single for his
third RBI, the winning Cards
rally was capped by Reitz's
single.
'You have to try to create
someihing," Cardinal
Manager Ken Boyer said of
the shuffling needed to
interrupt Cincinnati's victory
string at five games. Louis
skid at three losses.
"We hadn't· been scoring.
When yo'u lose is when your
whole club's not hitting,"
Boyer §~id.

and 7-3; the Boston Red Sox
blanked the Kansas City
Royals IHI; t(le New Y0rk
Yankees turned back the
Texas Rangers 5-l; the
Cleveland Indians beat the
Chicago White Sox 8-5; the
Minnesota Twins whipped the
Seattle ·Mariners 3-1 and the
Detroit Tigers defeated the
Toronto Blue Jays 4-1.
Murphy drew a walk from
loser Dav.e LaRoche and stole
second base to set up Essian 's
game-winning hit for the A's.
Dave Heaverlo, the third
of the event to hold .the lead Oilkland pitcher, gained the
By The Associated Press
from start to finish.
victory. The (I.'s had tied the
GOLF
Ritger reached the final game !Hi in the seventh
RANCHO LA COSTA, Calif.
- Torn Watson shot a final match by whipping Jeff inning on Dave. Revering's
two-run double.
round of 70 for a 275 total, 13 Mattingly 2:&gt;11-157.
See What we'Have in Store for You .
AUTO RACING
Orioles 6-7, Brewers 2-3
under par, and a 6-shot
During Our
victory m the Tournament of
MARTINSVILLE , Va.
Doug DeCinces and John
Champions. The win gave Richard Petty took the lead Lowenstein hit solo home
him a berth in the World on the 37Ist lap while Buddy runs and Ken Singleton
Series of Golf .
Baker and Darrell Waltrip contributed a two-run single
Bruce Uetzke sank 'a 12- tangled and held on for a four- a~ Baltn!'o.re defeated
foot birdie putt on the final second victory over Baker in · Milwa_ukee m the first game
hole to tie for . second with the $120,000 Virginia 500 of therr doubleheader .
Jerry Pate at 281. Each shot Grand National stock car
Moos Haas yielded the
homers in the second inning
73 in the final round.
race .
Gary PlaY.er of South
It was Petty's 15th victory and Singleton connected in
~
Africa was next at 68-282 and at the .&gt;25-mile Martinsville the third following a single by
was followed by Lee -Trevino Speedway and his second on . Dave Skaggs and a double by
and Larry Nelson, each with the circuit in nine starts this AI Biunbry.
The Orioles won the second
72-284.
season.
game as DeCinces and
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. Chi Chi Rodi'ig_!~ez birdied six
In a 1953 basketball game, Singleton · smashed solo
of the first 10 holes en route to Niagara defeated Siena, 811- homers and Eddie Murray
a 3-stroke victory, his ftrst 81, in six overtime periods. knoeked in four runs.
PGA tour triwnph in over
five years, in the $100,1100
Tallahassee Open .
Rodriguez shot a 5-underpar 67 and fmished at 269, 19
under par. Rookie Lindy
Miller fired a 68 for 272, with
Bobby Wadkins third at 274
and Rex Caldwell another
stroke back in fourth.
ORLANDO, Fla. - Jane
.
.
Blalock parred the second
we .reserve the right_.
PRICES GOOD NOW li:IRU APRIL 28TH
sudden-death playoff hole to
beat JoAnne Carner in the
lim~ quantities ·
$100 ooo· ·Lady Citrus Golf
ClaS:.ic.
Both finished regulation 72hole play at 6-under-par 286.
Carner began the day tied
STORE MADE
for the lead with Debbie
Meisteriin ai 8 unde~ par. She ·
shot a 2-over par 75 in the
final round, allowing Blalock
to force the playoff with her70.
·
LB.
Blaiock had started the day
five strokes back of the
LB.
leaders.
COOK-OUT
TENNIS
HOUSTON -'- Spain 's Jose
Higueras defeated Gene
Mayer in a tiebreaker for a 63, U, 7-6 victory in the title
match of the $175,000 World
Championship Tennis
LB
tournament.
CHAR(OAL
LB
!&gt;AN JOSE, Calif. - Topseeded John McEnroe

ST. LOUIS {APf working within the system. .Reu~ now plays with Los
"l don't like my uniform Angeles.
Cincinnati Reds second
baseman Joe Morgan thinks fitting the way they want it to
"Jim Barr {now with the
costwne has little to do with · fit, but I play within the California Angels) would've
winning.
framework of the rules," been the perfect guy for this
But Morgan, who belies the Morgan said, pointing to the team . He throws strikes. He
team's conservative image dark green, pinstriped suit keeps the ball down. With a
off the field, believes in with a velvet collar and wide man on first base, he gets you
l~els which was hanging in the double play, plus he's as
his
locker.
.
good a competitor as I've
Local Bowling
"Some people thmk ··ever seen. I can't believe the
conservativm is good. Well , I San Francisco Giants let
PQMEROY LANES
feel I'm as good a player as I Barr ge\ away, Morgan
Ecirly Wednesday Mixed
of
my added.
am
because
April4, 1979
personality.
Morgan believes Cincinnati
Pis
Young 's Market
66
"I don :t a~ree with . can win ihe National League
Headquarters
62 1 everythmg Regg1e .Jackson W~st with three consistent
No. 3
··;..-J:o : (of the New York Yankees) pitchers. "We have an attack
Smith .Nelson Mtrs
~ ,. :so 1
Zide ':i Sporf Shop
. _.. ~~ : &amp;les, but I'd like to play with that makes a pitching staff
Longshots
. lj Reggie Jackson . He's a good," he said.
Team High Series winner . Winning is what I .
. Young's Market 1962.
play for, not to be on a team
Team High Game - No . 3, of nice guys," said Morgan.
RAIN IN SPAIN
699.
MADRID,
Spain (APl - ,
Morgan
said
he
only
hopes
Men 's High Series ~ Bill
Porter 563. Bob Hensley S17 . the conservative bent of the Will the rain in Spain fall
Wom en 's H igh 'Series .
Reds managementdi&gt;es not rnalnly on the plain?
Pat Carson 579, Betty Smith get in the way. of making a
Sc1entisU; are undertaking
517.
a two-year study into the
trade .
Men's HiQh Game - Bill
fea.si~ility of · rain:'?akin2.
:•Too
much
importance
is
Porter 215, Bob Couch , 195.
Wompn's High Game - Pat placed on att,Jtude today. ?ffl~lally called ,preclp·
Carson 198, Carolyn Bachner - People wonder if a guy is a 1tallon enhancement. .
195.
The study, In the Duero
good guy or a bad guy. They
want to pick and choose. You River basin, is centered on
Early Sunday Mi•ed
April I, 1979
can'L do that anymore," the city of Valladolid,
Pis· Morgan said, noting that the northwest of Madrid.
3 In One
82
Scientists frOm the Spanish
Reds are looking · for a
Jack' s Dairy Bar
64
"straight--arrow" pitcher who government and the World
Tom' s Carryout
64
Royal Crown
48
Meteorological Organization,
can win 20 games.
"Gibbs' Grocery
46
"They would've loved a United Nations' agency ,
Meigs Inn
32
Tommy John," who signed will seek to determine " when
Team High Ser ies - Meigs
with the Yankees in the re- and under what conditions
Inn 2021 .
entry draft, Morgan said.
precipitation enhancement
Team High Game - Meigs
Inn 712.
"Sparky
(Anderson , can be achieved artifically in
Men 's High Series - Jerry
former Reds manager) and l a given region. "
Rought 559, Larry Dugan 549.
talked
about Jerry Reuss
The study will utilize
Men's High Game - Larry
after the All-Star break last sophisticated research
Dugan 201. Jerry Rought 199.
Women 's High Series year. I gave him a good equipment, including scrambledtoa7~ , 7~victory
Stephanie Rought 522. Betty report. We could've had him specially equipped aircraft, over his doubles partner,
Sm ith 50&lt; .
for nothing because the weather radar, upper,air · Peter Flemmg, to wm the
Women 's High Game devices
and Grand Prix $50,000 tennis
Betty Smilh 200, Stephanie Pirates just wanted him out so!'r.ding
RougM 194.
of there,'' Morgan said. satellites.
tournament. ·
- The experts will ass~ss
· BOWLING
,
Early Wednesday Mi•l!d
whether
the
cloud
systems
AKRON,
Ohio
George
Aprtlll, 1979
pro
Pis ---------~ · passing over the Duero basin Pappas capture\~
Bakery 808, Heiners Bakery are suitable for "seeding." H bowling 'S most prestigious
YoUng 's Market
72
Headquarters
64 1 ~n's High Series - John so, carefully designed tiUe by.defeating Die~ Rltger
Team No. 3
56 T¥ree 541, Dave McCunn
experiments of "seeding" 224-195 in the finals of the
Smith -Nelson Mtrs
56
will begin in 1981 and $150,000 Tournament of
Zide's Sport Shop
46 506, Raymqnd Roach 475 .
·
'
Men's
High
Game
Bob
•
probably continue for five Champions.
_
Long shots
J6
199• Dave McCunn years, according to the · Pappas became the .first
Hensley
Team Hi gh Series
and, John Tyree 198, Dave
Young 's Markel 2055.
Mann 184.
·scientists.
bowie• in the 15-year history
Womeri's

we're fighting before we start Dixie race won by Johnny
Rutherford.
USAC says it has the
The telegram read in part:
authority to accept or reject "If USAC Is acting in your
entries based on its position bebaif with regard to those
as sanctioning body for the entries, we must request
Indianapolis race.
immediate. clarification of
Cloutier was unavailable the grounds of the rejection
for comment on the telegram, for the entries. Since some 25
sent Saturday night from CART
entries
have .
Atlanta, where the CART apparently been accepted
owners and drivers were and a select few refused, none
preparing for Sunday's Twin of which are USAC members,
shooting .' '

A's snap Angels' ·win streak

•
ch~ge· ·conservative VIew

Team High Game
Youna's Market 727.
~n 's High Series - Russ
Carson 558, Ken Mclaughlin
545 .
-

'' I wa&amp; a little cocky. When
I didn't get off to a good start,
I put pressure on mYself," he
. said. "When I went down to
spring training this year, I
tried to relax and it's paid

Indy 500 reply due .tonight

Morgan feels Reds should
.

starting job for himsel(.
''Last year, when I came
Th e
Ca r din a ls '
Ke n up , I Uwught I'd lear the
Oberkfell . whose position _a league apart ." recalled the
ye"r ago was mostly on the • 22-yea r-old Oberkfell, a'
bench, banged out four hits in home-grown St. Louis
a starting assignment Sunday product who instead in 1976
and may have nailed do\vn a hit a mere .120.
rdiever wlth 28 saves.···' Balr

is OLU' best ." he said .

Mrs. Earl Bender, flower
show award chairman, read
A report on rallies at Akron
communications from the and Canton was given by
state chairman describing Mrs. Dorothy Ritchie at the
the duties of the regional recent meeting of Chester ·
director as being that link Council 323, Daughters of
between the state organiza- America, held at the hall.
tion and the general memberAlso attending the rallies
ship. She urged clubs to enter were Marcia Keller Doris
their flower shows ·in &gt;tate Grueser, Charlotte Grant,
competition and reminded Chester Council, and Bea
the clubs to send their books Moyers, Golden Gleam Counto the stale chairman, Mrs. cil254, Marietta.
Charles Brookey.
Mrs, Cullen spoke on the
nower show schools and urged more members to attend.
There was a report on junior
garden clubs and their activities by Mrs. Kuhl who also
told members of the OAGC
fall bulb sale. Mrs. R. H.
Capps described the various
parts of the publicity books
which are graded, and Mrs.
Virgil Adkins, state and coun·
ty fair nower show chairman,
reported on plans for county

~;..h~:;:~ c~nuni::,~,g~t~'::l

closing program April . 17~~:~~e a~~~~e e~~~~~s t~o~~~;
THE CARRIERS of Belmont, W, Va ., will be appearing in concert at 7:30p.m. Friday
at the Meigs Junior High School in Middleport. There is no charge and the public is invited. '
.

Apple ·Grove ·

David, of Troy were weekend Kelpre, were recent Sunday
guests of Mrs. Shields and guests of Mr . and Mrs. Bill
Fux ;_md J)avid.
Mrs . Roush .
Mr . and Mrs. Chariesc,
Tressa Hunt returned horne
Tuesday from Veterans \Vinebr~rmer and children of
Ry Mrs. Herbert Roush
Memorial Hospital.
.
Newberry, Mr . and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Hill
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Hart of Hobert Harden and son, Eric,
held a dinner at their home Columbus spent the Easter of Marion·, were Easter
f:aster Sunday following the weekend with their parents, weekend guests of Mr. and New Haven, and Veterans of
chri stening
of
their Mr . and Mrs . Don Bell and Mrs. Vernon Donohew.
F · W·
p !9926 will
· d Mrs Clarenee
oreJgp ars, os
'
grandchildren, Cortney Mr. and Mrs ..Robert Hart at . Mr. an
.
·
•.• . , -be dedicating. a memorial
Roush, daughter of Mr. and ljacine .
:;h.uler, of Urdana, IIi., are April 2tl, at 1 p.m. at the
Mrs . Marshall Roush, and
Mrs. Andrew Cross was VJ sltmg hiS mother, Mrs. U !ted M thod ' 1 Ch. h .
·;
e
IS
urc m
Mn
Ryan Norris , son of Mr .' and return ed to · her home 1•,.1s1·e ..Sh u1er an· d farmY.
·
cta
O'
Br
da
gh.t
f
ason.
I
0
0
Mrs .
Darrell
Norris. Saturday after being a
'
len, u , er
The Memorial honors all
Attending _were those named sur gical patient at St : !"'r.- and Mr s. Larry 0 Bnen those who served their counabove and Tracy Norris, Joey Anthony' s Hospi ta I, lS Ill Wllh pnewnoma .
trv from the bend area.
· Roush, IJtlan Hill and Art Columbus . Mrs . Cross pneumonia .
·
·
I ·
'II
Mrs . Nina Wagner is
_ Th~ American .eglon .WI
Hill.
return s to Colwnbus each day
Mrs. Alice Balser returned for
treatment
and · visiting with her daughter, d1slnbute 125, .12 x 16 mch
. among
the
to the home of her daughter, observation at Riverside Mr . and Mr s. F.arl Ada1ns. flags
!·:aster
Sunday
guests
of
the
congregatiOn.
.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Ables Hospital. Mr. and Mrs. CrosS
Kenny Bonds w1ll smg the
. .•
A th
Easter Sunday after visiting were dinner guests of Mr. and t\dam&amp;es were Mr . a nd Mrs. N 1.
Wayne
McLaughlin
and
a
lona 1
n em ac
her son , Mr. and .Mrs . Mrs . Don Bell Saturday··
Laurence Balser at Tuppers evening and dinner guests of children of Columbus and Mr . cornpamed by the Wahama
Plains.
·
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Roush and Mrs . Jim Adams and Hl~~ Sch~ol Band, The unVellmg Will be, done by John
Visiting Mr . and Mrs. at Columbus Easter Sunday, family or Syracuse .
' Easter Sunday guests of Blake of New Haven and Carl
James Young Easter Sunday Mrs . Cross is recuperating
·Mr . and Mrs. Junior Salser Dugan of New Haven, sons of
were Mr. and Mrs. Harry satisfactorily.
Mr . and Mrs . F.imer
llarton and children, Mrs.
Mrs. Till
Betty, legtonnaJres..
Speakers mclude, Denver .
Mrs.Webb,
NoraMrs.
Pearson
Helen Eaton and two sons of Pickens and son, Jiminy, were
Theiss,
Mike
Salser,
Mr
.
and
Gandee,
past department
Middleport, Mrs . Venida enjoyed a cookout at the
Mrs.
Charles
MatU
and
v1ce
.
commander
of the
ews
1
Knight and son, Brad, and home of Mr . and Mrs. Larry
Mr: . and Mrs, . Wayne Hubbard at Eagle Ridge children, and Mrs . Sally Am_erlcan Legl~n;. Donal~
Savage and daughter, Robin . ' Smith, Eighth Dlstnct ~om·
'•1. recently .
Roseberry .
Mr . and Mrs. Barry Theiss mander of Veterans of
Easter Sunday guests of
Mr. and Mrs . Dor sa
and
children, Stacy and Fore1gn Wars : Clarence
Mr. and Mrs. RandaU . Pa~son s and Mrs .- Anna
Matthew
, -0 r MI. Home , · Grow, vlcecommanderofthe
Roberts and family were Mr . Wheeler spent an evening .
Idaho
,
are
visiting his Department of West
and Mrs. Walter McDade and recently with Mr . and Mrs.
son, David McDade ol Troy, Eddie Huppandson, Jeremy, mother, Mrs. Betty Jheiss at Virginia; Rlch~rd M.
Dawson, senior vtce com ~
Mr. and Mrs. Jay Hill of . and Mr . and Mrs . Arnold Hacine.
. Middleport, Mr. and Mrs. Hupp at Portland .
Philip and son , Robbie, of
Mr. and Mrs. Eber Pickens
Athens, and Jared Hill of and family , Mr. and Mrs.
Sam Pickens, Syracuse, were
Middleport.
Custom full upper &amp; lower
Easter Sunday guests of recent guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs, Dana Lewis at Elmer Pickens and son ,
Clifton were Mr. and Mrs. .Jimmy . Mr. and Mrs . Charles
Dorsa Parsons, Mr. and Mrs. Anderson and family of
Russell Roush, · Cindy Mason were Easter Sunday
While you walt.
Edward and Da-~d, . Mr . and guests of the Pickens.
Mrs. Ronald Russell, Mandy" _ Easter weekend guest.s of
and Michael, Mr. and Mrs. Mrs, Anna Wheeler were
Our One Lo w Pflce, No Hldden , Ch•rt~et
Eddie Hupp and son, Jeremy, - Mrs . Frankie Foster . and
.
.for a SirtRIIl (.'uunm { 11fl upp1r or lo"'u d ~t n/ure.
Mr . and Mrs. Roger Roush ' children of Columbus, . .Joan
~ Our Onf' Lew Price. No lfldden O.•r11••
. and daughter, Kimberly, Mr. Kos!ln of'Colwnbus, Mrs. Bill
~~ {or Cu~tam Full ~1ppu &amp; /t.~/1/ow•rd•"tures.
and Mrs: 'Herbert Roush, Wheeler Qf Freemont anc
Mrs. Brenda Johnson, Mrs. Mrs. Ed Morris and childrer
For Complete Information CaU FREE
Charlotte Lewis, Monk of Bowling Green.
. 1-800-282-6410
..
Mr. ~nd Mrs. Bob Durs '
Barnette, Joe Moore and Rob
Outolde Ohio Coli Free I-81J0.848. .78
Waldnig of Columbus.
and children and Mr. anr
or. Jilvltre
Mrs. Dolly Wolle, Mr. and Mrs . Larry Durs t an&lt;
Mrs. Russell Roush ~ud son, children of Springfield wen
Edward, Mr. and Mrs. IO:asterweekendguestsofMr.,
Herbert Roush , Mr. and Mr,. and Mrs Halph Durst and
Dr. I...WF. IMnl
Bob Hill, visited Mrs , Edna Hick .
Dr . ....J. S11~hli • Dr. (j.J . Slombu-*' •, Dr . C'. W. Ek•l
Roush, Mrs. Gladys Shields
Mr. and Mrs . Orville
Dr . W.O. IC imb•ll• Dr. J.(' , i..turphy • [)r , V.W,. . SH&gt;Ic t
Dr. G .W. A.lilnn • Dr. G.A.. Moorr
at Racine, Mr. and Mrs. llarpold , Mrs . .Jamd
E. lhhtptcm ""'·
Columbut, Otllo
waller McDade and son ,. · I &lt;rnharn and daughter, .Jill, of

News Notes

pastor of the hosl church, was
instructor for the courses entilled ''Raptis! Doctrine" and
''Making Mission Work."
Devotional leaders were
Mrs . Margaret Bowles and
Deacon Oscar Qualls. Mrs.
Florence Richards was the
chairman, Mrs: l.ula Hampton , the registrnr; and Mrs.
Bernice Borden, the dean of
the school.

Memona' / de
J' t'
. . UtCa
ton se t

$05

mander of Veteran of
Foreign Wars, and Herschel
Woody Williams, who has
served the state of West
Virginia for 32 years while
working for the Veterans M·
ministration. He is also one of
two veterans in -that state
who holds the Congressional
. Medal of Honor.
At the conclusion, a
memorial service will be offered by Richard Dandury
and the Rev . Donald
Coleman.
A three-gun salute will be
presented by the VFW drill
team. The public is invited
and are asked to bring lawn
chaiN'.
1

Fair, and of no scheduled ex·
hibi1 or competition at either
Vinton or Gallia Counties
where only junior fairs are
held.
Mrs. Kuhl 'presented each
chairman with a rose bush in
appreciation for work and
recognized Janet Koblentz
· for special assistance. Mrs.
Janet Bolin was also
recognized for special work
with area garden clubs.
Stale Gardeners Center.
Mrs . Kuhl announced that the
fall regional rne~ting will be
hosted by the Washington
County Club, that Athens will
have the 1980 spring meeting
and that Hocking and Vinton
Clubs will host the fall
meeting, 1900. Mrs. Kuhl
spoke on annual dues and It
was voted to increase these
from 25 to 50 cenis.
There was a luncheon at
noon with Mrs. Waiter Hayes
giving table grace. Floral arrangements decorating the
tables were made by
members of several clubs atlending . Mrs . Holter
presented a wildflower book
to the Pomeroy Ubraty in
1honor of Mrs. Kuhl and her
work for the betterment of
garden clubs in the region .

lii~~i;~~iiiiiiiiiii!

The home and orphans
committee had a cake walk
with Charlotte Grant wiimlng
the cake ..Opal Eichinger and
Pauline Ridenour served
refreshments. Pianist was
Helen Wolfe.
Others there were Goldie
Wolfe, Ada Neutzling ,
Thelma white, Eileen Martin;
Ada Morris, Margaret Tuttle,
Mary Showalter , Erma
Cleland, Mary K. Holter,
Julie Rose, Elizabeth Hay~~·
Ada Bissell, Mae McP"'l, ~
Esther Ridenour, Dar s
Gruser, Betty Roush, Alta

®

.
only $8Q.Qg!~
($12.00 overn ight)

SAYRE.
HARDWARE

DALE'S KITCHEN
CENTER, INC.

Home Of Beautiful K.u:•·~"-""'

2119 JACKSON AVE.

PT. PLEASANT, .
W.VA.

675-2318
Ooyou ·
cultivate a

rich and easy
IHe style?
.

Statesman

VIBRANT
BEAUTIFUL
OAK FINISH

40%

·

,,

A corrununication was read
by Mrs. · Ritchie from the
state councilor, Mary Stipp,
announcing Stale Session on
Aug. 19·22 at Dayton. Dorothy
Myers and Zelda Weber were
reported ill. A thank you note ,:
was read from Beckie
Broderick thanking the council for a gift and cards while
hospiialized. Final plans
were made for the district.
rally held Saturday at
Marietta.

Meet your kitchen:

.DISCOUNT
OFF
LIST PRICE
ON
CABINETS
IN STOCK.

$

''

Ballard, Jean . Frederick ,
Doris Koenig, Mabel Van
Meter, Goldie Frederick,
Laura Mae Nice, Marcia
Keller, Mary Hayes, Virginia
Newland, Carolyn Holley ,
and Fern Morris.
·

1

be entered for competition, of

POMEROY-The Hocking
District ~rea School of
Religion held over the past
several weeks at the Naomi
Baptist Church held Its closing program on April i7.
Several of those enrolled in
the program gave as they
were issued their credit cards
for completion of the course.
Refreshments were served.
The Rev. Samuel Jackson,

Mrs. Ritchie gives
report on rallies

The Department Store
(H Building
Sillce 1915

�7- The J)Cii1y ~·nfim•l , Mirltlh·~1 rt -Pnmt•rn,r. n . !\'fp pll;•_\ \ ''" :':1 . lfli fl
6-- The Daily Sentinel . Mirlrllt•p.,ri·P'iinwrny, fl .. Mnntlny. ~pr . ?~. 1~7~

'

:Name convention speakers

COLUMBUS - Banquet
:speakers for the 18th annual
·convention here May 4 and ~
• 'of the Ohio Geneaologlcal
; 'Society wiU be Dr. Hube'rt G.
' H.
Wilhelm of Ohio
~ University , speaking Friday
'. on historical settlements and
::migrations into Ohio, and
•·Emmett A. Conway, a
~:G louster - . born consulting
: forester, discussing at the
' Sa turday banquet Indian
l trails and later migrations.
Both banquets are at 7 p.m.
' M~eting at the Carrousel
.. Inn on Sinclair Road, several
hundred members and non·
' members of the genealogical
society will hear speakers tell
of Ohio • bound movements of
· ea rly settlers from New
England, New Jersey and
New York, Virginia and West
Virginia, Delaware, Penn·
sylvania, Kentucky , Georgia
and the Carolinas. Other .
BUied subjects include Ohio
land records and bla ck
migration into Ohio.
Spea kers include Dr.
Thornton W. Mitchell, North
Ca rolina 's state archivist,

..

;

..

By Charlene
Hoeflich

DR. G. H. WWIELM

.
.
academic with academic
groups are encouraged. Any
agency . It supports public non-profit group within Ohio '
programs that bring the interested In submitting a
resources and perspectives proposal may write or caU
of the humanities (literature, The Ohio Program in the
history, phiosophy and other Humanities, 760 ·Pleasant
disciplines) to bear on issues Ridge Avenue, Colwnbus,
that are currently important Ohio 43209, telephone : (614 )
to Ohioans. It funds projects 236-68'19.
that use hwnanitles scholars
Inquiries are welcome.
and topical experts to discuss
Prospective proposers ·
subjects that relate to Its an· should request proposal
nual theme with adult, oul-&lt;lf- preparation "Guidelines"
school, Ohioan audiences.
and a Proposal Application
The
for i979-3! form from the OPH office.
projects Is "Hwnan Values in Cost-11haring of at least
a Changing Society.''
percent of the total project
The Ohio Program in lhf fort is encouraged. The
Hwnanities is suppot1ed by 8~ proposal'deadlines are:
Consulting Deadline- Mar·
grants from the National En·
dowment for the Hwnanities ch 30, 19'19, Final Deadllne and by contributloils from in· May 11, 19'19, For Projects
dependent sources . The Beginning - August 1, 19'19.
program is governed by the
Consulting Deadline - SepOhlo Committee lor Public !ember 14, 1979, Final
Programs in the Hwnanltles, Deadline - October 26, 19'19;
an independent committee of. For ·Projects Beglrming citizenS who represent public January 28, 1~.
and academic constituencies
Consultlng Deadline ··
throughout Ohio.
December 7, 1!119, Final
Since 1972, the . Ohio Deadline- January 25, 1980,
Pi-ogr810 in' the Hwnanitles For Projects Begirming has granted almost $2,015,846 April14,1980. ·
to some 285 projects in over
Consulting ~adline- Mar·
88 Ohio cities and towns. ch 28, 1980, Final Deadline Project fonnats have in· May 9, 1~, For Projects
eluded conferences, multi· Beginning .,. August 4, 1980.
media presentations , . ConsultingDeadline-Sep·
seminars, town meetings, !ember 12, 1980, Final
radio or television programs, Deadline - October 24, 1980,
lectures, etc.
For Projects Begirming Sponsors of projects have January 19, 1981.
been neighborhood and em·
Consulting Deadline mWlity groups, libraries, .December 5, 1980, Final
educational inst!lullons, Deadline -January 23, 1981,
public service agencies, etc. For Projects Begirming Combinations of non; April13, 1981.

By Clarice _Allen
The Ladies Ailxiliary of the
·fire department met Wednesday evening at the fire
house. Due to the absence of
the president, vice president
aeo Smith was in charge of
the meeting which opened
with The Lord's Prayer and
roll call. · The secretary's
report was read and the
trea surer 's report given.
Committee reports were
presented. The new cards
have arrived and are for sale
by the members. Roll call
was answered by Cleo Smith,
aara Conroy, Betty Newell,
Shiela Taylor, Darlene
lnzy
Newell ,
Newell ,
Margaret Christy. Opal
Wickham, Clarice Allen ,
Erma ·Cleland and Opal
Hollon.
.
Mrs. Warden Ours, Mrs.
Richard Gaul and David
visited Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. Stanley Trussell and
Mrs. Douglas Circle, Bashan.
Mr. and Mrs. Erroll Conroy
and Mrs . Rose Reynolds
spentthe weekend in Akron
with Mr. and Mrs. Hugh
Conroy and Mr. and Mrs.
Erroll Conroy Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Hollon
and family of Columbus and
Mr. an~ Mrs,. Robert Parker
and famlly were weekend
guests o[ Mrs. Opal Hollon.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Hayes
of Maxville were supper
guests 'of Mr. and Mrs. John
Wickham Tuesday.
Mrs. Bue: Ridenour, Mrs.
John Wickham and Mrs.
Richard Barton visited in
Gallipolis with Mrs. Caddie
Wickham Wednesday.
Mr . and Mrs. Oris
Frederick have returned
home after spending the
winter months at their home
in Winter )Iaven, Fla.
Mr . and Mrs. Richard
Frietag and daughter ,
Elizabeth, Canton, spent a
few days with miss Lucille
Smith.
Mrs . Charles Goeglein,
Flatwoods, called on Mrs.

The Ohio Program 'In the
. Humanities Is a funding

Mrs. Nettie Meeks will reach the century mark come
Wednesday . That's a long time and certainly c~use lor
·
celebration.
Mrs. Meeks was a long-time. resident of the Pratts Fork
Community and then wben sbe became unable to stay alone
went into the Syracuse Nursing Home. When that home was
closed' she was taken to the Mark .Rest Certter at Me·
Connelsville. .
·
It will be there that she celebrates her birthday and for those
of you who want to join in the occasion, cards may be sent to
her at the Center, McCOMclsville, Ohio 43756.
While she is blind, she is mentally alert and cards will
brighten her day . Incidentally, Mrs. Nettie Barnhart of
Pom'eroy,isa granddaughter.

EMMETr CONWAY .

Chester News Notes

Ohio Humanities
·1'Unding program

Had a call from Tina Jacobs this week who wanted to let us
know that Pomeroy made news in Europe when the old Ohio
overflowed:
. She had received from her granctson, Major Jerry Davis, a
clipping from a newspaper in Germany telling of Pomeroy 's
plight and M~yor Clarence Andrews' emergency d,eclaration.

theme

Mrs. Elizabeth McGee, wife banquets.
of the mayor of Dayton, and
Friday's banquet honors
Dr. Harold Hancock .of Otter· new members of First
The Bradbury Church of Christ has a new pastor. He is Edbein College. Three panels of Families of Ohio, only Ohio ward A. Fryman and be and his wife moved here this week
_speakers will. participate, at hereditary society, all of from Columbus, Ind. into the parsonage.
1:30 p.m. Friday and at 9 whom have proven descent
Roger and Mary Gllmore are sharing their talent with Meigs
a.m. and 2 p.m. on Saturday, from a pre-18~ Ohio pioneer. County folk. They recently presented a program of music
in addition to the two Among the new 1979 mem· - somewrittenbyRoger-ataPomeroyPTAmeeting,andon
bers Is one .who traces her ·· Tuesdjly ..perforrned ·for the boys and girts at the Salisbury
descent . - ftrst to do so Elementary School.
from a full·b~ooded Indian.
They earlier this year had been to Colwnbus to conduci '
whO was . living nea.t: San· workshops on Appalachian Music Wlder a grant from the Ohio
BY :
dusky, Ohio, before. 1812.
Arts COil!lcil. Both f!oger and Mary sing and play with
DIANA S. EBERTS
A.dvan~e reservations at an dulcimers and an autoharp and some other Instruments and
COUNTY EXTENSION AGENT
all·mclUSlve fee ~f$45 may be then did some actual instruction on the 12 dulcimers which
HOME ECONOMICS
made until April 28 to Mrs. they took along.
.
MEIGS COUNTY
Luella C~ates , Box 58,
This is the program which Jermlfer Sheets first introduced
Fowler, Ohio 44418 .. If space · into the Columbus schoots. She was assisted sometimes by
~rm1ts, later registrations Roger' and then when she decided to attend law school, Roger
will be accepted at tl!e door at -was joined by hia wife to continue in the work.
BY DIANA S. El&lt;~";KTS
slimmed down for the . a charge of $17 for each of the
Extension Agent
fashion 's slimmer silhouette. three convention sessions.
Lori Kloes and Debbie Danner joi.ned a dozen or so other
Horne Economics
With the spark of color you
young people from the Gallipolis First Baptist Church over
Meigs County
can choose bright fabric 'or
.Easter weekend for a trip to Bob Jones University in one of the
, POMEROY - You can add lacquered wqod purses for a
Carolinas. They traveled by church bus, visited classes and at·
·a new "sparkle" to your moresportivetheme.
tended chapel at the University, and slept In dorms. They also
present spring wardrobe by
Belts
stopped at a couple of places in Tennessee before returrung
using a few appropriate acBelts are a strong achorrie Tuesday. It was a nice experience for the two Meigs
pessories!
cessory item for the slim,
students.
· Accessories respond to the closer to the bOdy shape, and
many moods or looks of belts are available in double
Tuberculosis skin · testing Is scheduled to begin in the
· ~ashion and help you carry wrap to wide obi sash belts to
Southern Local School District next week. The tuberculosis
nurse, Jane Brown, will be assisted by the school nurse, Joyce
out a tlleme or convey cinch belts. The wide, soft
newness in clothing. For in- crushy leather belts wrap the
Thoren when the testing begins April30.
lbnce, the belt may help waist with no loose ends to
Now about permission slips. The testing carmot be carried
give waist emphasis as weD hang and dangle. Or select
out without written pennlsslon. If your son or daughter did not Final project work was car- who took ice cresm and cupas a punch of color to the out- the neat, updated look of a
bring home a form, just wrtte a note of pen:nlssion so that the lied out by the circles of the cakes. It was noted that
fit. You will find a variety of one to two inch belt with
skin test can be given. It's important and painless.
B. H. Sanborn. Missionary shutins had been given
accessories. Some you will - ,buckle interest or the
Society ol. the Middleport Easter remembrances with
Don't you just love spring and apple bi0980111S!
choose for individuality to traditional three-fourths Inch
First Baptist Church at Mrs. Janice G'bbs, circle
meetings Tuesday night. At chairman, and Helen
give an outfit uniqueness ; or metal.belt. The belt is an im·
1o get fashion mileage from a portant fashion accessory
the Sanborn Society meeting Bodimer WUng care of these.
basic outfit by adding a belt, and an easy way to update an
- on May 7, the circles wi1J be
Mrs. Gibbs presented ~
}ell!elry or a total accessory outfit.
reorganized . and new program laking an· article
JOANNE 'OLIVETO
Jewelry
chainnen ll8ll1ed.
from the American Baptist
fhange.
recently joined The Horace
Button earrings, bangles,
Each of the circles design- · Women's magailne on Jim
Let's look at some specific
big beads, multiple pins caped the baiance of money in its Jones and the Peoples Ternaccessory selections.
ture the bright colors for .
Scarf-Handkerchiefs
treasury for some specific pie. A dessert course wBll
representative providing
1 ,
Use small squares to add clothing accents. Try a single
project. The EJecta Circle's · served.
.
multl•line
inourance
texture or color. Feminine strand of color in a necklace
IIIQney wiD go to a shutln who
Mrs. Freda Hood had devoprimarily to teachers;
touches of lace and subtle worn high around the neck or
needli asslslance in purchas· lions ent!Ued "The Cross and
log medication. The Love Joy The Garden" at the meeting
embroidered flowers on light a long . rope ; . or select
j:,:t
Katie Crow
linen handkerchiefs, or multipl e color bangle
will send $25 to the Dayton of the Dorcas Circle held at
two-week training semlur
tiright splashes of color in bracelets.
Christian Center and use the the Church. Plans were made
at tbe borne office located ·j
Shoes
scarves can be worn tucked
rest of the money to buy a for remembering Mrs.
Stylish sandals, trim line
in Springfield, Dllnois. Sbe
It is nice 10 near from old Cobui'Jl and Homer Mldklff.
in 'casually to a jacket or vest
layette to be taken to the Frances Bearhs with a card
received bHieptb lralnlng
shoes relate to tlie refined
pocket.
Anyone who knows the ad· Women's Conlerence in June, and gift on her birthday and
In prtiduct knowledge and
friends who have moved
Purse
and softened fashions . Pretty
from the area.
dress of the abov~, please let while the Dorcas arcle wiD also to send a gift of money to
The style choice and leather shoes in neutral tones ·procedures, as well as
LaSt week, I received a them know about the reunion. send money to Janice Tovy, a the special_ interest mls·
,
training in customer
fabrics help convey a fashion,~ or shoes in bright colors are
MOOEL
mllsionary in Zaire, Africa.
sionary's daughter.
service
proeedures.
Oliveto
very
nice
letter
from·
Sbarlee Frances can be reached at
2042
theme. The envelope clutch sho'\"1. The choices you make
Meeting
at
the
home
of
·
Mrs.
Alwllda
Werner
had
11118 Medhurst Rd., Colwn·
from
Fairmont
Newnan
Whittle,
formerly
of
graduated
or the compartment envelope will influence where. the .emMiss Rhoda Hall, the EJecta the program using an article
Slate College wllb ao
Syracuse. Sbarlee and her bus, Ohlo4• .
Vlbra-G,_ II
purse with side gussets are . phas1s m the outfit will be.
circle
heard r,eports on a visit taken from the overseas mis· l!xcluelft
I am looking for.ward to
_ , bor brwh roll
assoCiate's degree lo . husband, Jack, reside at
to
the
Athena
Merital
Health
sion
news.
Refreshments
seeing Frances at the annual
business. Prior to ·joining
Scottsdale, Arizona.
r~-·---.-,--~---~--.,
• &amp;-position Dlai·A·Nape
Center. Going over.were MrS. were served.
Horace Maon, sbe was
In March, five Meigs Coun· banquet. I woo't tell what
• Reinforced vinyl
Mary
Brewer,
Mrs.
Bernice
employed by zhe Firat
lians were reunited in year we are celebrating.
decorator bag cover
Baker , Mrs . Lillian
National Balli&lt; 1n Fairmont
California for a visit..
,
, e Wide hNdliallt
Mr. and · Mrs. Carson Dernoskey, Miss Hall, and
ATrEND FUNERAL
as an lnsuraoce clerk for
Ted and Uiida Crow Beegle
Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Bailey
MONDAY
TIJESDAY
live
years.
As
a
and .sons, and Rita Beegle Hayes, Syracuse, are a Mrs. aarabelle Riley. Ar·
rangements were made to and Mr. and Mrs. Everett
OH -!\ \ !\ COIN Club
LADIES AUXIIJARY of representative wllb Horace
Fisher and son, all of CoJwn. delightful couple.
Come October they wUI send a gift ol money to Mrs. Levacy and Bill and Betty
·
Veterans Memorial· Hospital Mann, Oliveto wUI serve
bus, were Joining
vacationing
In
meetii •~ 'i onday• 7 p.m .. 10
California.
them at
celebrate 65. years of haooily . Elizabeth Gardner for her. were in Logan recenUy for
Palm Springs, Calif. for a
1ruverb, ,1 (oomof the Meigs will meet Tuesday at 7:30· clients In Meigs, Albens,
birthday. A thank you note the funeral services of
''
ed bliss ·
Branch, .Athens County p.m. Speaker will be Scott Vinton,
HockIng,
weekend visit were.C. Daniel wedd
Tbat
ts
scmething
,
to
brag
was
read from the Pinecrest Woodrow KalklOBeh, husband
Savings and Loan Co.,
Lucas.
Washington, Noble, alld
Sanbo
p d
Nursing Center for remem- of the former aareda Levacy
about!
106 N, 2nd Ave.
Main St., Pomeroy. Out~fWEDNESDAY
Morgan · Couoties. Sbe
and ~a~ . : : ~ha~~
--brances there during the past of Meigs County: ·
Middleport, 0.
. town coin dealers will be
M 1 D 0 L E p 0 R T currently resides lo
Newnan WhltUe of Scotts·
Plans for the Dave Diles In· year.
present to buy, sell or trade liTERARY aub, 2 p.m. Athens.
dal
vitatlonal Tournament, to be
Mrs. Riley opened tbe
collector items. · Election of Wednesday at the home or
.
~rlee commented that held at Riverside Golf Course ITlel'ting with the Lord's
officers will be held. A coin Mrs. Bert Grimm, Letart'
the group discussed how In Mason; are going great.
Prayer in unison. Devotions
auclion and refreslunents Falls. Mrs. Grivun will .
much they all enjoyed their
Dave has been a busy by Miss Hall were scripture
will follow meeting . Anyone review "Scribble, Scribble"
subscriptions to 1be Daily fellow this past month. He • from Mark and a meditation
interested in·coin ~nd curren· by Nora Ephron. Members to
At .a recent meeting of the Sentinel and how it heljlS just completed his fourth entitled ''The Neglected Art
cy collecting is welcome.
respond to roil call With a. United Asbury Methodist them keep track of old frlen- book, "Terry Bradshaw, Man of Being Different." Mrs.
TIJESDAY
comment on the program.
Women at the home of Mrs. .ds.
of Steel. "He wrote · 111,000 Mary B~ewer gave the
MEIGS OAPSE Chapter 17
WILDWOOD GARDE~i Anna Hilldore, It was
We ere delighted to hear words In 34 days and that is secretary s report, Mrs.
something.
Ellzabet,h Slavin the
Tue.;day 7:30p.m. at Meigs CLUB, home of Mrs. Fred reported that 39 shutin vbits · fromyouanddowriteagaln.
Dave will be moving to treasurer s report. ,
Juni"r High. There will· be Nease, 8 p.m. Wednesday, had been made during the
1be dessert smorgasboard
election of officers.
with Mrs. Virginia Fisher to past month.
Also received a very nice . Meigs County soon and wiD
OHIO
ETA
PHI have the program. Members
Mrs. Helen Teaford gave letter from Frances Dye reside 1n his new home back and meeting of the Sanbo.rn
'ofRaclne.
meeting w~ discussed. An·
to name a tree In their yard devotions. A missionary card Harris of Colwnbus.
CHAPTER, Beta Sigma Phi for roll call.
·was sent to Marianne Bohr of
Frances writes that her
we certainly welcome
no~ent was made of the
.
Rio Grande Association
sOrority, 7 ~ 30 p.m. TuesdaY
SOUP DINNER Wen· Nigera, and Mrs. Opal Kloes Pomeroy High School backtoMelgsCoWlty.
meeting being held tonight.
at the Meigs Inn, Kay Walker nesday in the annex of the read "Not By Bread Alone." gr9duatlng class ol 1929 Is
and Janelle Haptonstall to he Racine Methodist Church Mrs. AM Savage gave the planning a special 50th year
LuciJJe Schwarz, Mason, Refreslunents were served
hosAIMessEesR.ICAN LEGION 'from 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. Spon· treal!urer,'s report and read a reunloo at the annual alwnni who recently underwent open by the hostess.
At tbe Love Joy meeting
·
'·
d b UMW
card of thanks from Jean banquetto be beld In May
heart siu-gery, will be retur·
AUXIUARY Drew Webster sore Y ·
·
M1 f
trtbutl
.
held
the home ol Mrs. Eva
'
7 30
TWIN CITY Shrinettes 7· 30
a ory or con
ons.
They do need to know, ning this weekend to the
Post 39., Pomeroy, : p.m
.
. ·
Two birthdays were however,theaddreseesofthe home of her aLiter, Carrie Hartley, Mrs. Sarah Owen,
Tuesday at the hall. Mrs. p.m. ~ednesday 10 River· observed A freewill and following: Louise Quickel, Kennedy, Middleport.
devotlmal leader, read "He .
·
and boat Room, Meigs Branch, Ea te fl. .
. . tak
U yd M
V . Kle'
Frank Powers ' children
Is
Not Here" taken from the
, the nuoens
..~ · coun ty Sa vings and A s r rto enngs
o ;_,;::.
. oor~._ _
ercta
111
Carrie commented that
youth ·chairman to hitve
W were
rid D en.f . ___
.,...._ _
Easter
War Cry. A report was
friends who wish to visit her
·
Osb Loan W Main Pomeroy
repo on o
ay o
Crunchy, malted
Y
• ·
- ' ..
· ·
Prayer was given by Mrs.
.
glveJ!
on
a recent visit to the
program . wtth Mrs.
· WOLF PEN
·arewelcometodoso.
~arlin, E~ght and Forty na·
RIVERVIEW Garden Savage. Mrs. Margaret
?oJeigs County Jnflnnary by
milk ,smothered
Mr. and Mrs. Clinton
tio~l children and youth Club, 8 p.m., at horne of Mrs. Eichinger had the program
HAVE A: GOOD WEEK!
Mrs. Hartley alld Mrs. Owen
in chocolate :
chat!"""n, to be the speaker. Oakey Connelly:
co· with readings by Mrs. Kloes Gllkey visited with Lincoln
Bursting
. with
AMERICAN LEGION Aux· hostesses Mrs. Ronald and Mrs . .Bemlce Winebren· ' Russell a recent SWiday on
flavor!
lliary, Racine Post 602, 7:30 Cowdery and Mrs. TmnSJll'll- ner. A reading from their return from a winter
'f:Uesday night at the .hall. ·,___ cer. Workshop will be held.
Guideposts by Mrs. Kloes , vacation in Florida.
t~t/l.fh. .,
McCLUR~
'
POMEROY CHAPTER llfURSDAY
closedthem••lin~ .
OBS, Past matrons, Tuesday
OffiO NURSES' Assn. t
.
Pomeroy, O.
nightat7:30p.m.atthehome neet, 7:30 P·O:· at OU I
JAPAJI&lt;li:SETOURJSTS
of Mrs. Marjorie Crow.
Athens. All regiStered nurses
KYO (AP)- A survey of
HOSPITAI.IlATION?
Middleport, O.
;
MIDDJ.EPORT-POM ' invited.
.
3,781 Japanese who returned
EROY Branch of the
from foreign travels on one
' CAll.
EVERY tuESDAY IN APRIL IS
;
American Association of
SUCCINCI'
given day allowed that on the
University Women, 6:30
LOS ANGELES (AP) -,., average they had boiJ8ht '
Tuesday night dinner at the local newspaper's classified lliQre than $400 worth of goods
·: .
.FREE SUNDA. DAY
Mei~ s Inn. Dr. Clara M. ad section carried the abroad.
•
. BUY ONE SUNDAE
•
~'rederick. Urbana COllege to following "employment
The survey, taken by
bt' the speaker. Gallipolis ?_PPDrt~ty" i~em recenUy: Customs Service officials at
Branch invited along . with .. PoSition reqw:es: Wisdom the Tokyo International
· Gregg Gib.b s
husbands and friends of of Solomon, Patience of Job, Airport , show.ed that liquor,
members. Reservations to be Skill of David. No other cigarettes .and perfume 4-- 992-3443
1DO~iilfiiiDI '
· made with Mrs. F'ay Sauer.
applicants have a prayer." topped most shoj&gt;ping lists . ·

on this
Brand New

EUREKA

B. H Sanborn Society
finalizes project work.

Katie's

ln::ran:e

~!~~\::

~:::;

.f
1

Save

I
\

making strides in several new

s2~

Social Calendar

I

·.INGELS
FURNITURE
.&amp; JEWELRY

w.

time on activities that don ' t
of duties you've neglected .

Find out more a t what lies

ahead for you

Mutual€\

o/Omaha~

·:

3 IN ONE

:

DAIRY ISlf

I

'

•

MD

•

---...J ••..•..••••••.••••.:
·•

· GnONI Fill

.

•

..

.-v .BEff . . .

WIENERS •......••.•..•••~.O:. ~79~
GOOD SELECTION OF STORE
SLICED ·LUNCHEON MEATS

LEAN &amp; MEATY

$149
STEAK .......... ~•.

SOLID ~RISP ICEBERG

HEAD LEITUCE ................... 39~

FRENCH CITY

' $149

BACON....................~~ ..

HEAD

TENDER FRESH

29~

BUNCH

C:IEI.IEII,........••.•••...••.......

·
.
.
49e
M1xed . Fryer Parts••••••••.•• ~ •.

\

"ntE BEST" IDAHO

10 LB. BAG

$1 09

ftc:)1r~1rc:)IE!i ••••••••••••••••••••••

BIGGESl SAVINGS IN TOWN!
CRISPY

C~IIROT$

VAUGHAN'S.

•

5
••...•.

I)ELICIO.US ~LIFORNIA

•

.

1-LB. PKGS.

PINT

$1 ()()
69~

STRAWBERRIES•••••••• ;.:......... ·.
RED OR GOLDEN DELICIOUS WASHINGTON STATE .
~. 6 COUNT PKG.
21h LB. AVERAGE

OCUST &amp; PEARL ~TREETS
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

APPLES ••••••••••••

$109

FRIENDLIEST SERVICE IN TOWN!
R~~~

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Parker

the year

Opal Hollon.
Mrs. Enna Cleland and Mr.
d

WHITE. VELLOW or DEVILS FOOD
JIFFY

'

.

could come-' up with a clever

Kna~ .

feel comfortable.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jon. 11)
If i1 .gives you enjoyment 10

whip the house Into shape
today that' s great , but don't
know the family just because
they don't !)ave the same
enthusiasm .
.

AQUARIUS (Jon. ZII-Feb. II)
This Is an excellent day to

catch up on visiting or corre-

apondence , s~ long as YQU
·.don't spill the beans about
aomethlng not meant for another's ears.

PISCES (Feb. 2t-March ZO)
You 'll be a go-geuer In things

that tend to benefit you materially or financially today . In your
eagerness you could get taken,
so bf! careful.

ARIES (MitCh Z1·Aprll 111 Set

.,

your own pace today . Work
toward serving your personal

Interests. You won't be able to
please others: so don 't even

try.

FROSTINGS ....................... 3 ~~~~~ 8

69~

and family, Mr. arid Mrs.

HEINERS FRENCH

BREAD

CAMPBELLS

BLE~CH

LIQUID

216LVS.oz. 98~

. NABISCO

IIITZ CIIACKEIIS
1
::

89~

BORDEN'S

$169
2% MI~K ............. ·

when to stop.
guests were Mr. and Mrs.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. Don Eichinger Rio Grande
21) You 'll be an xious to do 1un
'
•
things today, and yet l~rge . and Mrs. Mabel VanMeter.
Intimate friends with whom you

JIFFY

A-1

however ,: Eichinger . Easter dinner

groups could unnerve you .
Share your time wllh a few

WHITE or FUDGE

136 oz.

with her aunt, Edith Welch .
Mr. and Mrs. Don Casto
and son , aarksville. Tenn.,

and fresh approach Io some- Elmer Newell and family ,
lhing, but 11 might not be so Keno, and Mr. and Mrs.
easy to convince others at your Dennis Long, Long Bottom.
ideas. Do your own thing .
a e1an d an d
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. Z2) Be
Mrs. Erma
wary ·lest you be drawn into a Mrs. Opal Hollon were guests
situation with strings attached . of Mrs , Norman Will,
You could end up having to Rutland, Thursday afternoon
make good another's obllga- and attended a meeting ofthe
~.
.
Clb
LIBRA (Sept. ZJ.Ocl. 23111's to Star Garden u .
your interests to listen to Ihe
Mr. and Mrs. Rick Frietag
suggestions of your male or andEllzabethofCantonspent
associates today . Don 'I push the Easter weekend with
too hard to have your way ·
Miss Lucille Smith.
SCORPIO (Oct. Z4·Nov. 221
Mrs. Gloria Jllencik and
Both your physical and mental
energieS are at ·a high point Barbara, Youngstown, spent
today , and this should be very a few days with Mrs. Opal
productive .

CAKE MIX .......................... 4

••

CI&lt;NCER (June 21·July 211
You 'll strive tor high goals spent a few days with Mr. and
today and do a good job toward Mrs. Henry Hartman and
achieVing them . However, Carla .
ahould you err in some man·
Easter dilmer guests of Mr.
ner, don't try to blame anyone and Mrs. HoQalt Newell were
~~6· IJuly 23-Auu. Z2) You Mr. and Mrs. John Newell

77t

~

in

careful you don't try to impose
vour wil l. Go along with the
wishes ot the majority.

·*-J•

II

SUPERIORS

-BEEF STEW ...............~.~: ..$} 99

and Mrs. Norman Will ha
dinner with Mrs. Esta White
on Monday helping her
celebrate her 86th birthday.
Mrs. Larry Ueland, ·Mary
and Greg. visited Sunday
ciate with friend s, who are on afternoon at the Pinecrest
the go and doin g things, but be Nufsing Home, Gallipolis ,

Malted
MILK
BALLS

•••••••
•••••••••••••••
.
'
· · . I

.i

BONELESS

Betty and family .

following your birthday by
sending tor your copy of AslroGraph Leuer Mail $1 tor each
to Aslro-Graph , P.O . Bo• 489,
Radio Cily Station, N.Y. 10019.
Be sure to specify birth sign .
GEr.! IN! (May 11-June 20) Asso·

Whopp•nl

at

49

include others ·today , thi s and family of Marietta spent
might become difficult be cause Easter weekend with Mrs.

uA M w met

h/lh

IIIEIE~ ••.••.•........•••••• ~ ••• ~

LB.., ••

PORK

LB.

GROUND

ROAST

beginnings. "
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Hollon
TAURUS (April 211-May 20) AI·
d f i1 f Col b
d
though you will wish to spend an am Y o
urn us an

$9'995

I

CHUCK

'-Your
'Birthday

Ko~ner

e~~~:: ·I By
I

FRESH LEAN

ASTRO •GRAPH

r------------.-.._..------;

·:.~~:~

llayton Allen, Wednesday.
Mrs. Opall!ollon and Mrs.
Ro ss Ueland were supper
&lt;guests of Mr. and Mr s.
Robert Parker and , family
Wednesday in Mar.ictta .
Mrs . . Elizabeth Wickham
and family of Richmond were
guests of Mr. and Mrs. B. K.
Ridenour for dinn er and
overni ght a. recent ,Friday.
Mrs. Martha Rose ha s,
returned home after spending
several weeks with her son,
Roger and family in Arizona.
Saturday dinner guests of
Mr. and Mrs. John Wickham
were
Mrs.
Elizabeth
Wickham and sons of Rich·
mond .
Easier dinner guests , of
Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Wolf
were Mr. and Mrs. Loyd Wolf
and Denny, Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Wolf, Mr. and Mrs.
Rick Jindra , Mr. and Mrs.
Hugli Conroy and son, Steve
and Debbie Nelson, all of
Akron,
Mrs .
Marlene
Thompson , of Columbus, Mr.
and Mrs. Howard Wolf and
Rick. Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Pannell, Belpre, Mr. and
Mrs. Gene VanMeter of
Granville, Mr. and Mrs.
James Cleary and son, D. J .,
of Newark, Mr. and Mrs. Don
Casto and son, Joshua of
Clarksville, Term., Mr. and
Mrs. Henry Hartman and
Carla and Mr. and Mrs.
Erroll Conroy, local.
Easter dinner guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Wood were
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Beegle of
GaUipolis, Miss Sandy Wood
of Belpre, Mr. and 'Mrs. Bob
Wood and family, Racine,
and Mrs. Letha Wood, local.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Orr
spent Easter with Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Lee and family,
Bashan.
Mrs . Herman Carson,
Bashan , visited Thursday
evening with Mrs. Warden
Ours.
Easter dinner guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Richard Gaul and .
Mark and David were Mr.
and Mrs. John Wickham, Mr.
and Mrs. Warden Ours, Mr.
and Mrs. Bob Hunt and Miss
Tuoodoy, April 24
Tammy Starcher.
Dr. and Mrs. Billy Robert
Allen of W'esterville spent
Bernice Be de Osol Easter weekend with Mr. and
Mrs. Clayton Allen.
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Wood
of Springfield spent a recent
weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
Roy Christy and Mrs. Letha
Wood. Other visitors have
been Mr. and Mrs. Bob Wood
and family of Racine and Mr . .
' 'April 24, 1979
Gallipolis.
Things that have proven unproMr : and Mrs. Roscoe
ductive in th e past will finaHy
come to an el')d for you this HoJlqn are visiting
in
coming year. Look fo rward to Sandusky with her. daughter,

·

w Jfpen·

·

GAL

0

IFREEZER

l\.T
l\.T
1 "'eWS 1 "tOtes
A famOy dinner was enjoyed at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Clair Giles observing
Mr. Giles' birthday. Those
attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Cecil Giles, Swrunet and
Donald; Mr. Frank Giles and
Cheri Sta(tforth of RuUand.
Decorated cakes w~ re served
and many cards and ~lfts
'were presented the honored
guest.
Mrs. Iva Johnson was the
weekend guest of Misses
Peggy and Barbara Murphy.
Mrs. John R. Murphy
enjoyed a tour to Opry Land
with the Senior Cili~ens
group,

"VALLEY BELL

·

.

. .

z.

.COTTAGE CHEESE ........... 24 0 . .'111 .
BORDEN .
. '·
.
.
SO.U.l CREAM ..........................,...... lc:;;:~. 99&lt; ·
BORDEN
. .
.
l ••. c
SOUR C:REAM DIPS ...................... c.;••;, 99.

VALUES

I

BANQUET

.BUFFET
Turkay. ·sans. s't ••k .
Noodl8s . a.. f .•

leei •

' Chlcktn .. 'O umplinQs

IS
.
Lb.$12'
Z
Box

%-Gal.

$1

Carton .

·

~

~

~OSTORES

�8 -ThrO~-til YSt-ntint •l, Mictrt1t·~,rt · Punwr·"'

n \.1,.,,d;1 r /lf'l' ?:t .
,......,.._W~ANT~
- ~-=-AD
--'-'-,

i

PR 08A E GOU R T C)F
MEIGS tb UNT Y, OHIO

c

CHARGES

the

Ill Wol'cb or Under
C.sh
1.00

ESf'TE Or ·RO ~~ oE
COZART . DE CEA·SED
Case No ne60

Mca q!. Count.,. Probate Court,
C asc No
71660 , R OtlCrl R
Cozar t. R o ute \ , Box SiS A
Gulf port , M 1ss ls s ipp , 39:.501

wa s

E)(ccu tor ot

appotnfce~

1t1c Estat e ol R os coe
(O t M !.
dC' C("ilSed ,
trit e

C
Of

Ye l lOW B us t1 Road . Rac i ne .
01110

ROb e rt E Buc ~
Pro !;late Judg e Clerk
f-I t 9 16. 13. Jt c
·'

IN THE

COMMON PLEAS COURT .
PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COlJ NT,V , OHtO

IN THE
MATfl'lt
SET T L EMENT OF

OF
AC ·

COUNTS ,
PROBATE ·
COUR T , MEIGS COUNTY.
OHIO
Accounts and vouct~ers of
ltl C
IOIIOWIO~
n'an1ed
f iduC ICirleS have been filed in
the Probate Co urt . MC'IQS

!:l~lp~ Wanted
For Rent
1IMMFDtAlE
o rrNtN G COUNTRY MOBILF Homr Pnrk
1.101
I nborntory T Pchn1cton
3 II
Ro ll lf' 33
r1orth nf P o r~1 e t o y
&lt;. hift ~xprnencerl ML T {ASCP )
I n r qf" ICI I' \nii99'J 7.470
or Pquivnlrn t Fx c ~&gt;IIPnt so1n ry
I : Elch word over the mintmwn 15
onci frmgt" he nPf ih 5h tfl till · 3 AN!' d t\M lurn isherl cmrl 1•n
wordl IJ 4 t.'t!fltl ~r lll'unl per day.
ft11 • rn s h~rl .
op h
Ph one
Ad! running other U\an t'ClllleCutivt
lrrPn lo•l Cd nlocl PP,r!SonnPI
(/q'] 5434
dlys wtll be ~.-lwrtled at the l d1y
Off ice
P1eosonl
Volley
r11te.
,
Hospital Volley Drive Pomt 90 fU1lliNG ACRES of good
Pl~osonl
WV 25550 Pho ne
posture Plrnly of wolN Could
In memory, Card of Thanks Me! I
30A ·675 ·4340 An Equol Op
o rcorT1 ndo le SO plu~ r nl!lc·
ObltWlry II cenb ~r ltii'Ufd, $3 00
po rtun•ty Employer
6 1A 667 3398.
rnlmmum Cash In Mdvanc.'t.
NATIONAl
COMPANY
now
ht
r
FURNISHED
APT suiloble lor 3 nr
Mobtw ltarnesaiMluwJ V•rd Nllrs
mg For !nlervtE' W wrt lf" 747
4
rons lru t: liOrt
wo rk e rs .
m k&lt;cepted only with caah wtth
Broodwoy Mrdd leporl Ohio
992 5434 N qq'].JI29
ordtor ~ cent ch.llrge fur 11cb: c11rry· ·
lnt~Box Nwnbtr In Cart al The Sen·
lOCAL UNION 5668 USWA ore oc MOBilE HOME for re nt Adult.o;
lineI.
C('pti ng Oj'1 pl!cotion1s fo r o pe r·
on ly 992·'1598
monent secretory Applica tions
The P'Ubli!her reserves the rilfhi
TWO
BEDROOM rro1 ler Adults
may be obroined o rt ocol Untan
10 edit e&lt; rtJect any ads deemed obon ly . 9&lt;/2 .JJ:2A
jt!ctlonal. 'J1.e Publistl« will not bt
Hal l The opplicaliQnS must be
retpoNI.ble for l1liln! lhan ont incor·
re lurne d no late r th an Aprtl 27 Sl ffP IN G ROOM S for wor"-tng
rect lnaert.lon.
l ocal Ur11on Hall ts loc otod 3
men only Breakfas t if destred.
Pbon&lt; 1182-1156
mll ps sou th,of Ravenswood , Rt.
Rea so nable roles
Pho ne
2
992.s .. n
I dsy
jdlys
3dayt
lld.ttys

15&lt;1

....

HEAD BOOKKEEPER lo ha nd le
fiscal ofl atr\ of ogency unde r
!iuper ... istO n of the dtrector
Must be copoble to colc::ulote
ond genera te o T&amp;l !ilotemenl
balance sheet . regular fisca l
projeCitons Posi tion wi ll be
responStble for i nvoici~g oc
rounts received and poyoble
i'os1l1on is located In Athens,
Vhi o ond Is ovo tl oble June 1,
1979 . Benelifs provided and
sala ry negotiable. Send resume
to PO Box I&lt; , Athens. OH . Ap
pl 1cotion deodline Moy4 , 1979,
SOMEONE TO .k eeP on elde rly
man in their home, Aay
Dono he w !=or inform ontocf
Jeff Oonohew , 65 Ook Dri ve,
Little cine te tort a reo

NOTICE·

Cou nty . Oh10 . for app rova l
end settlemen t.
CASE NO , 2 1 5?~ First and
F lnat Accou nt ot Arnold
R1g gs , E:o.ecutor ol the Estate
of Belv ta R loos. Oeceas«ld
CASE NO '22J9A Filial and
Di st, ibuftve Account o f Oma
l,ec Wolfe . Elllecutr ix ot fh e
Estate of Lawton Tl!'mp teton .
Decl.'ased
CA SE NO 20234 Thtrd
Current Acc ount of Bernard
'V Fultz as Succt:"sior Trustee
~y
ro Anderson B. Kibb le of the
I P.M.
Trust und er the W ill of Edn;,
tht day befort pllblk:aUon
i ,
K StewMt , D ec:e~sed
CASE NO . 20357 Fmal anQ
Sundoy
O ts tr i but ive Actoun t of
4P.M
,. Shirl ey
Juri \ Landers .
F
r
i d a y - . · ...
Ex ec utrt x of the eslate 6-f •
Ev ely n Lander s . Oece.isect
. . .
'
. . .
Unt us exce ptt oM are tiled
____ l!l!',tices ____ _ _ NEED BABYSITTER 3 doys a wee'k
thereto , sa 1d accbunts w tll be
some tim es 4 1524 Nye Ave. 1
tor hearmg before Sa1d Cout;t
GUN SHOOT, EVE RY FRIDAY 6 30
sl tro1ler before Beacon on left
on the 22nd (ja'1 of May • . 1?79 ,
'. .
PM RACINE GUN CL UB. FAC
at whiCh t •me s~1 0 accou nt s
CARP
ENTERS LU650, 218 E. Main
TORY
CHOK
E
GUNS
ONLY
w ill be conSidered · ahd cqn
St Pomeroy. Appltcotions wtll
tlnu ed fr om da v to da y utnll
RACINE VOLUNTEER F•re Dept is
be tok en for &lt;,?ppren ttce May
flnat iV dtSPOSe d Of
concell ing thier gun shoot unti l
19th 30th and Jlsl , 1979 10om
Any P.erson tn terested rilay
thi!i fol t The Recine Fi re Dept
to 12 noon Morvi n E. ,K napp,
f tle wntt"E! n nce pt tons to satef
wishe! to the n~ e11eryo ne for
coordinator
Tri· State D.C.
account s o r t~ m a tt ~rs
he lping them mo5.. e the gun
pertaining to t he ~xeclJtion of
J A.C. Equol Op portunrly
the trust , not t es~ th a n f1Y(
shoot o success Hope to see
employer
days prior to th e det1e set for
you oil this foi l.
heari ng

WANT-AD

ADVERTISING
DEADUNES

1
1

.

For Sale
-----.----·
--

Robert E . Buck
.'

JUDGE

Common Pleas Cbl.lrt , '
Probate Oi\li5ion ,
Meigs Coun f y, Ohio
lA I 23. li e
Q

lOST MALE Ir is h Setter Appro)!
2 yrs. old. P:rea of Bo!ihon on
Bosban Rd. Children's pet
Reword 949.7466
Blonde r. mole Fou nd off Flol·
woods Rd. CJ92·31lX3

•IDOERS CONFERENCf:
Not ice I.S he r eby gl\len· tl:laf
FO' UN
. ·o·. YO
. UNG fe·m-ole Dob
. e-rth e O ff 1ce of Manpower
man wi th collar on Hobson
Development tS sponsoring a
On ve. 992 7501
B idders
Co nferen ce for
~rag rams to be lun'de d url,Cilt!r
LOST SMAll block Chihua hua
it le I I B of, t~e · Cqm
Snowville a reo
Reword .
preh ensive Ern. plo yment ·and
Tr ain tng Ac t (C E,TA) of 1·9 7, .
... 991·5562
Th e purpost' 'Of the Con
A RING found in vici nity of
fttr enc,e i.s .. to~ e)lpi,~ti.li no)\" 1
Citizens Nottonal Bonk Mid·
ergan 1 zat t on~ may &amp;~plv: ~,d
dl ,
.
d
. .
ttr constaert!'ll' for orarTts-' 1r&amp;· ~ ~ , tPOrt Write . escnpllon 10
Operat e Tftte ··ll a Prooram.'&amp;· , . PO Bc ~e 193 Mtddleport. OH
under CETA . title . II 8
45760
program s
prbvid~
Co m
rehen sive employment and
__ - - - - -:f,--;'-ra ining se r v.ces whi ch ah
Pets for Sale
needed to cnabt• irtdiV1duals ...... ...-_ - - ---"==to obtain uns ub!j.i d1l:e d ein
t OW DOG holf s.,epord, holf
•IOY,ment or to parti clpa t~ ,tO
blue heoler 9"'9' 2822 .
other
em plo yme nt
ahd
. . - • - - ••
· tra ining program ac1ivilies
tead ln Q to the •r eventual
Auto Sales
snace ment In unsu bsid lzed
emplo yment . The geographic
1973 INTERNATIONAL SCOUT
area served is t he 37 county
11,000 mUes , fully equ1pped.
B•tancc of State . Appt1c ants
olr, wench, e tc excellent co n
must ha.v e the capab ilit y of
dillon . 992·2121.
operat1nQ a coun ty o r multi .
count y progr am .
1977 CHEVROLET 4x4 sho rt wheel
The Confe ren ce wilt be held
base Massey l=erguaon corn
•n Hcartng Ro o m ? of the
Stat e Oft i·ce Bu ildmg , 65 . p l~n!·~ ~- 7-~A . . - . . .
Iouth Front Street, Co lvm
1977 MONTE CARLO . P.S.. P.B
ltus , Ohio at 9 : 30am . on May
P.W . C.C.. T.S A.C 33 ,000
1, 1979 Fpr additional in
miles . Coli 7.(2 · 2"'21 or
IOt'ma tlon , call Chester D
9'112881
White, Plann1ng Superv 1sor ,
•t 61A 466 8325 or 1 BOO 262 · JCJ7q FORD CUSTOM F-150 true... .
_tQ50 I toil free)
• , ., ·;.l, 302 engine, 'I, ton, auto , P.S
Ul 23. lie
•,., I
tJ B.._A_0~2: 2826 . _ . . __
_ _ _ _ _ __..._...;;;_..;;;, 1970
CHEV ROLET
IMPALA
Custom , ~50 . 2 bbl. . power
seals , P S P C Overhoul kil
for 289 Ford minu!'i rod bearing
949 2641
The Five Point Star Stit- 1977 OLDS CUTLASS Solon AM
llhers 4-H Club met Aprill3 at
FM rod1o , bucket seats ex tros
''the Jackie Starcher residen- 1&lt;2 2•35
;~ With 10 membe!'11 and one I 97:1 BUICK GRAN Spo rt P S.,
"tidvlaor
in
attendance .
P B A C , o uto Rolly wh ..ls,
good coi1cl$1600 qa5.4226
.,...ject books were handed
. . . .
. . . . - ..
.• to the members, and of. 1966. 750 FORD van , near neW
1964 CkeVrolet NoVo stotion
llcers wer.e elected as
w~g-~n~ 7_42-3~3
·Mows : Terrie Starcher,
Jllftlllden\; Russell K~ller,
·•
president; Janet Werry, ·_ 9~_plng Equipment
Mrelary;
Donna CUrtis,
1775 11 FOOT true ~ camp&amp;~" ulf.
_.tstant secretary; Darlene
contai ned , air cond1ti on e~e ­
C@Iient condition 9fn·2121 .
. .pm, treasurer ; Joelle
· - · ·- - · · - · ·· --McLaughlin ,
assistant
18 FOOT FRANKLIN campi ng
trotle r ,
goo d
condition
treasurer ; Susan Baum,
].t2 l87A
••ws reporter;
Jodie
1q1 ... '17 FOOT CAMPER Sleeps
ldlakel, health and safety ;
s ix Gas furnace , e l&amp;ctnc
O.vld McLaughlin and Scott
heoter buill· in . Lorge bath w1th
. .rcll!!r, recreation. Tam!ihower. 742·2577 .
. inle Starcher, a junior
·~r, gave a report on BIDDERS CONFERENCE
Notice is hereby g iven that
~ties of officers" at the
Off ice of Ma npower
tneeting . Refreslunents were the
Deve lop ment is s ponsor ing a
_,ed by Jodie Schake!.
Btdders Conference fo r
r am s to be funded under
., Pllna lor the next meeting in- prog
T itle II 0 of the Com .
1 elude making plans for a pr
ehens ive Emplo'tment and
Tra ining Ac t ( CET A ) Of 1978.
, ~ng trip and each member
e purpo se of the · Con ·
' ...lng cooking projects are terTh
ence is to ex pla in how
may apply and
til . bring samples. - Susan organizations
be co nside red for grants to
. .um. reporter.
operate T1tle II B program s
und er C ETA
Till e I I D
TheTUppersPlainsGirls4- provides publi c service
employment and related
R Club met April I3 at the traln;ng and services 10
Mice and Amy Ritchie un e mpl oyed
economica lly
-...dence with ei""t mem'- o; soov anlag e d pers on s lo
.._
6"
enatble the m to move tnto
Ms and one a~visor 11'1 at- emJ) Ioyment o r traini ng not
h

•

r.

:f !J.·,

4-H News

-- - -

•

•

-

•

-

•

-

•

COA L, LIMESTONE , sond grove l,
colcium chlori de , fe rtilizer , dog
food o nd oil typ es of salt , b ·
cels10 r Soh Works , In( , E Ma in
St , Pomeroy , 992·3891.
·
·
EL ECTRIC GUITAR with case lik e
new Steel gu ttor wtt h cos e
~2 ·.7&lt;S3
good. con d'tt ton ..,.,
SP.R tNG HA S spru ng agam at
Bo b 's
Market
a nd
Green houses· Omon sets seed
po tat oes . ler tllt zer
balk
garde n seed and oil early
ve getable · plants
ond
stra wberry pla nts now re ady
fo r so le Bob's Mor... et Mason
Phone 773·5771 Qpen 7 day s.
8. 8
STEREO· rodi o·tope combination.
$190 Maple dinette set , $180
Block Baston roocke r, $90 See
at _?~ Lour~! ~t , Midd le~r t
PLANTS
CABBAGE
broccoli ,
coulif lowe r. k;russ els· sprou ts ,
heod lettuce , toma toes , ond
Iorge !ieleclion of beddi ng on·
nuo ls Poh ol flowers ond
ho ng1 ng boskets
Cl e land
Greenho use
Geraldine
Cleland, Roet ne
FOR PARTS ]970 Ponltoc Bon·
ne vtll e A55 4 bbl . motor and
tran s Pe rf ect S 150 992·6'170
or see ot 143 Butt ern ut
.

. -

.

.

22 FOOT DELU XE Storcroh trad e r
' Sto ve , relrtgerotor , A .C , ·
sleeps 6 On di sploy Ol Hog e r
.t(s .s 2_5 ~e~c~ ~t. , M1ddleport .
VESPA CIAO mopehead bi ke
Mole Doberman 26" boys'
bil.: e For more informa tion
coll985·4255
COMPLETE REESE h1t ch wtth 1000
bars. 7A2· 2667
-lb . sway
.
1
1
1978 , SUZUKI di rt b1ke 250 RM
Like new. Cecil Brinager
9d-2387.
197-1 GMC JIMMY . PB . PS ,
A C , 'l·wheel dri11e Priced
reasonable Coli 992·3580
-- · -- · · - · · - - GOOD CONDITIONED hoy S 70
Dehveryovo 1loble . 992·2701 or
992-330'1.
DOUBLE OVEN roinge, conllnlous
deontng Frost free Whrllpool
re.frigerator. Coldspot olr con·
ditioning
18,500
B.T.U
Whrllpool washer a nd dryer. 1
ba sse tt
be droom
suite .
. 9A9-2878. Ronald Hart.
·--~
-·-·.
GOATS . SOME jus t freshened
two due in July ond .August
Also k•ds Shade 696-1 234
GIBSON
UPRI GHT fr ee zer
997· ~80 mornings end even·
lng,.
t10.000 lb m i l~ route for sole
985·A207 or 985·3861 or write
'!'~ P_o~e_roy .
SAVE 1 SAVE' SAVE! Only o few
days left to get your best deal
on a Mosse y Ferguson tracto r
Big factory disco unts thru April
25th. Mossey Ferguson diesel
troctors os low as $65 50 Big
io v t n~s on otl m odels Visit
Sh1nn s Tractor Soles of leon ,
WV or Gallipo lis Ohta , before
Sp.m.on ~pr_il ?S. , .

POMEROY

LANDMARK

Headq~arters For

·

TRAil£~ .

1 deon odu ll 992 3181

-~----

MONDAY, APRIL 23, 197Y

ml,.r

ho t~ !ina

\ ol

Nr'tW

t-tAOLING

lim e ~lnnP

t1

f-' of&gt;!nr("&lt;y nrcn Cot
lnr frr r f'-. IIIT1 0!e 367 7101
Mtrl rl lf'p ~"&gt;rl

CAPf for two mvoltrf o r
rlrlr t ly rprsnns til my home
Twrnly yrn rs £'MpertP.n rf'
Rro so.,oh lc rate s 997 6072 Or
997 5.tn
PAINTIN G AND sandblo,. ti ng
Frl"'£&gt; esftmoh:&gt;s Co li 949 7686
TRH TR IMMING ond removal
74'1 3167 or 7-i 2 7573
Will

C. R. MASH
VINYL &amp; ALUM.

POOl CHEMICAlS Season por~s
Free de livery D. Bumgardner ·
SolP!'. lnr Equ ipme nt a nd sup
rlie&gt;s QQ1 5714

..

4-2_3 1 m o

1965 Genero l, 60~e l2 2 bdr
1970 Skyll l1e, 12x65 2br
1970 Sylvo . 60,..12 '1 bdr
l'no Castle 60 ~e l 2 1 bdr
1973 Nobtl 1ty 12~e60 1 br
1973 Rt dgewood 70.-14 3 brlr
1973 Nashua . 60x12 '1 bdr
1973 Governor 6() )112 1 br
1974 Mork lt ne 5011112 2 br
88 S MOBILE HOME SALES
PT Pl ESANT WV
675 ·4A24
1'173 FRfEOOM MOB ILE home
Ap p lian ces
under ptn nin g
f1reploce 992 .5413or9926118
S5700

I

I

1:.

· cllllo

Reai.Estate for Sale
------~-- --

FARM FOR Sole. House 2 barns
tro ller Lorge pond 10 acres or
82 acres 7417S66

STROUT

REALTY
INC.
Ali ACross America
25
Acr es
$55 , 600
bP.=.u1iful coun try home, 'l
bedrooms, b r~th, large lt v
inq room , b er~ utiful k1t·
ch.e n , J ~ bt~ sement , fo r ced
air h et~ t , fats of s h Mif' trPes.
5 acrf&gt;S tilli!bl e, 1 miiP from
Cht:&gt;s te r , 5 miles from
Pomeroy
161 ' Acres
- $16, 500, 3
bect roo m house , kitc he n,
li v/ nQ room, b ~th, 6 8 C~cres
titl;~b l e, 5 miles from
Po m eroy , ol2 mil e s fr om
Rutl ;~n ct ,

0

Spectalist 1n Home andl
School Piano Tuning and
Repairing .
Serving Athens . Meigs,
Gallla &amp; VInton counties;
a lso Mason &amp; Jackson
counttes in W.va.
Ph . 99'2-2581 or 991·2081
4·19 1 mo

.

GARAGE

Au;!! &amp; Truck
Repair
(lso Transmission
" Repair
Phone 99l-5682

/ . E. M&lt;oln 'Street,
Pomeroy, 0 . .
Call "Hill
"
"Fdr Free Estimates
I

- ~-'

-

~

REYNOlD'S

I

ELECTRIC MOlOR
SHOP
18 Years Experience
Will Make
Service Calls

651 Beech Slreet
Middleport, 0.
992 -2356
3-7-1 mo. ( Pd .)
S &amp; G Co rpet Cleon fng deep
ste am
C&gt;elrocl1on
!r ea
e stima te s Cell be tween 8 .1 m
ond 5 pm 742 2111 even1ngs
992·6309 o r 747 287.4'
BRADFORD, Au r tt oneL•r . Com·
plete Servlre Ph one 949·'1487
o r 949·7000 Roctn £&gt; , Ohta Crill
Brorff ord

THAT SCRAMBLED WORO GAllE
byHenn Arnold and Bob Lee

BORN LOSER

17'01.)..0'(&lt;;,

ro.Jl.DI CO
WITh AA?TilBR
WOMNJ~

Ohio Valley Roofing
and
Home Maintenance
A II types roofing, gutters
and downspouts. Afl types
hom e maintenance - new
and repair. Storm doors
and windows. All work ·
guaranteed. 20 years ex ~ ·
perience. Free extlmates.
Call : Tom
Hoskins ,
949-2160.
·
Athens Area
797· 2745 or 7?7 ·2752
4 15 Pd

I

Now arrange the circled laners to
form the surprtse answer, as suggealed by the above cartoon.

---THE

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE
HA 1 NOT THAT ...
BUT HOW ROci&lt;Y'5

IN BIG TROUBLE!

MortTGOMERY

OH· OH ... MI\YBE I DID

DO WROM(\ SHOWIH' 'EM
HOW TO FIND TH' BODy.. .
BUT ROCKY DIDN'T DO If ...

ACROSS

ALLEYOOP

~~~~~~~~~Cu12

r

mo.
HOWERY AND MARTIN h ·
covo li ng , sepltc syste ms,
doze r, backhoe Rt 14 3. Phone
1 (o1• 1698 -733 t

Libertine
classic
Porter
3 Ellington
13 Pu~ the
4 Watch
torch to
5 Music
14 Colorado
direction
Indian
6 Chinese
Winter
dynasty
c omplaint
7 Christie
Women's Lib · mystery
topic: abbr.
settmg
17 Wager
8 Fall back
18 O'Neill play
9 Pact
19 Take in
II Rosalynn's
20 Angelic
brother22 Reprieve
in-law

IN STOCK fo r 1mmediot@ deltv@ry·
venous stzes of pool kils Do· i1·
you rself or let us instal l for you.
D. 8u rhgorrlner So les, Inc.
qq2·5724

SAVE ON

Widow
Brown

CARPETING .

DRIVE A LITiii

IS

All CARPET
NCM .ON
SALE

I can no fonqer
ca II m4seli' a

Don't
taunt me!
I know!

man.

I

15 Dossier
21 Unusual
22 Great
quantity
23 Cackle
24 Cut, as
grpss
25 Skeleton
• abode

\i\ti\ 1

..,..

•

t.;--+-+-1-

0 .

and

WEST

EAST

+98 ?

+J
¥QJ 93
• QJ 87

•65
• 10 2
eQII lS 3!

Alan

GOSH , IM NERVOU5 . \ r = = r i
WHAT DO yOU SAY
'TO A FATHER YOU
HAVEN1' SEEN IN
VEARS .... HARDLY

Vulnerable : Both
Dealer: North

We11

One letter si mply stands for another ln lhia sample A Is
used for the three L's, X for th e two O's, etc. Singl e letters,
apostrophes, t he lengt h and formati on
th e words are all
hints . Each day th e cod e le tters are dtft'ercnt

or

CRYPTOQUOTES

RBTJA
AYEO

+ J 96 4

SOUTH
+AKL06 2
.. 8 4
t AK 63
+K8

OTA

GYT

YX

BZXERKJX

PENO

MTJ

BZELR

MTJ

W K A
CTJX

ZTRX

GN AY

RAEFXR

Y N R

VE 0

RIJ'I\AND FURNnuRE

C/0 SHAMMY'S

BRIDGE
NORTH
1-23-A
• Q J 54
"A K 10 7 2
• 9 54
eA

DAILY C RYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAX, R
Is l, ONGFEI, LOW

BZEL

WINNIE ·

PAW SHORE LOVES
HIS OJ: HILLS .: .

ALL RI6HT, TROOP6,
LET'S COUNT O~F ... I'Ll.
9E
ONE ...

...

Mooday , AprU 23

.
..
Bad breaks dictate plays-·.&lt; ·.: _
·. .

40 Bas ic ·
belief ·
41 sOmewhat
worn

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

CONTACT VIDIA GIROL~MI

,.- ~J · .

song
•F•R•ANK--•&amp;--E_R~N~IE_.. . . . . . . . . . . . . .. -. . . . . . . . . . . .- - - - - - - - - - - - _ .. .________________. 39 Cay

------- -.....-.-- -

See the Grate Familv at

.'

• t

Oswald

Dressler
film role
34 Inlet
35 Avowed
37 For fear
that

•

BEER· WINE CARRYOUT
FOR SALE

2&amp; Temple
role
%8 Fish
30 " I do" path
31 Classilled
36 Duffer's
item
37 Campus in
B rooklyn

28 Stitch

Pert!

I

Yesterday 's Arulwer .

24 Run into

25 African lake
f 2&amp; Sham
27 Destiny

1.30-As The World Turns 8,10: 2 :00-Doctors 3,15;
One Life fo Live 6,13.
·
2:25-News 17; 2· 30-Another World 3,15; Guiding .
Light 8, 10; I Love Lu cy 17.
3 :110--General Hospital 6.13: Lilias Yoga &amp; You 201'
Banana Splffs &amp; Friends 17; Bill Moyers' Journal
33
3:30-Mash 8: Joker 's Wild 10; Fllntstones 17: Dlck
Cavelf 20.
4:110--Mfster Carfoon 3: Hollywood Squares 15; Mlrv
Griffin 6: Addams Family 8; Sesame St. 20,33; Six
Million Dollar Man 10; Mike Douglas , 13: Spec:e
Giants 17.
'
4 :31),.-Bewltched 3; Gfllglan' s Is. 8; Lucy Show .15;
Gilligan' s Is. 17.
· ..
5:00-1 Dream of Jeannie 3; Beverly Hillbillies· 1;, ·
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33: Gomer f'Yiei ,
USMC 10; Bionic Woman 13: Brady Bunch l5i I ·.
Dream of Jeannie 17.
·. · .
5 :30-Carol Burnett &amp; Friend• 3: News 6; Sanford a,.
So~ 8: Elec Co. 20: Mary Tyler Mo«e 10: Odd.
Couple 15: Lucy Show 17; Doctor Who 33. ·
6·110--News 3,8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News6; Andy Griffith 17;
Hodgepodge Lodge 20.
6 :30-NBC News 3.15: ABC News 13: Carol Burnetl -11 •
Friends 6: CBS News 8,'10; My Three Sons 171· OVer · ·• ·
Easy 20.
· . '·
7 :DO--,Cross-Wits 3,15: Newlywed Game 6,13; Porfv .
Wagoner 8; News 10, Love, American Style 15;
Carol Burnett &amp; Friends 17: Dick Cavett, 20; H~
To Buy A Home 33.
·
•
7:30-Hollywood Squares 3; Candid Camera 6; Gong ·
Show 8; Hollywood Squares 10: Donna Fargo 13; .,
TV Honor Society 15; Baseball17; Mac:Ntii·Lthr~ ··
Report 20,33.
"'
8 oo-cflfthangers 3,15; Happy Days 6,13; Peper
Chase 8, 10; AuotlnCity L'!~n lls-20: City Notebook J3, ·
8 ·30-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13J Film Makers 33. · ,
9 :DO-Wheels 3,15: Three's Company 6, 13; ~le "The
Deserter" 8, 10: Generation On :rho Wind 201'
They'll Cut Ott Vour Proltc! 33.
.· • ·
9 :30-Taxl 6,13; 10:D0-20-20 6,13; World et .Wer 171
News 20.
. · , ~
10, 30-Loc k, Stock &amp; Barrel 20: Dlplomellc Style bl . ·· :
Andrew Young 33.
·
·.
11 :110--News3,8,10,13,15: Hogan' sHeroes17; Pkell.ie'
20; Book Beat 33 .
11 30-Johnny Carson 3, IS: Melvie "Love .tor· RalliOn\"
13; Movie "Night Flight from Moscov(' 6;' Barnabr. · ' .
Jones 8: ABC News 33; Movie "The Moon •IS: Blue • •
10; Movie " The .K illers" 17; 12: &gt;10-'--Madlgan 1. . ' .;
1:110--Tomorrow 3; News 13, 1S; 1:»-:-Baie!Niff . l71 :,
4 :00-News 17; 4 :2G-12 O'Ciock. Hig~ 17. · ·

&lt;:

_

.-----=-- 23 Yield

waitinq
~o be
evicted,

&amp;
SAVE A LOT

DOWN

1 Glut
1 Non-varsLty
5 Low on funds athlete
. 10 All , formerly Z Winged

AVAI~ABLE

SEWING MACH IN E Repotrs , ser
vice, oil mol-:es 9t;l'].2284 The
Fob r tc Sh op
Pom e roy
Autho rize d Singer Soles o nd
OWNER SEll iNG, 2 bedroom
Service We sha rpen Sc tssors .
frame hou se Exce llen t •n town EXC AVATING dozer , loader ond
loc ation . Ce ll 992·3023
backhoe work d ump tru cks
an d lo·boys for h.re wi ll hau l
Iill dtrt lnp so il . limesto ne ond
HOBSTETTER REALTY
gra11el Co il Bob or Rog e r Je f
New lima Road
lers doy pho ne q92 7089, ntght
Rutland , Ohio
ph_o':'e 99'1 3525 or ~2. 5232: .
Phone 742 ·2003
EXCAV AliNG dozer bo c ~ hoe
NEW LISTING - 99 ac re
ond dttche r. Chorles R Hot
A GOOO SELECTION OF
farm . One of the county's
f1e ld. Block
Hoe Ser ... ice
END&amp; ROLL BALANCES.
finest . formerly known as
Ru.tlond Ohi o. Pone 747•2008
" . .
the Paul Orr farm . There
are 50 acres pasture and 49 PUlLINS EXCAVATING Comp le te
Se rvice. Phone 992 '147B
.
til lable Pa stu re Is spring
AUTOMOBILE
INSURANCE been
fed . It ha s 2 ca ttl e barns , 1
cancelled? los! your ope rators
horse barn . e quipmenf
l• cense? Pho ne qq'l·2143
sheds , milk houses and
concrete silo Exce llent E C EL ECTRICAl Cont rac tor se rv·
home built of California
mg Ohto Volley regio n Six
Redwood . This far m 1s a
day s o week 2.. hours servtc e
FROM S7f5sq. yd•
good clean farm w ith some
Emergency co ils Ca ll 882·2952
or 882 3454
,.vood s and 2 ponds . ll 1s a ll
and up lnStttuw
fen ced Call toda y for more
info.
2q Rolls of Carpet in •tock
DANVILLE - 4 bedroom
&amp; lOO's of Samp~s to
Yard Sale
frame hom e situated on a
Choose From .
75 of an. acre. It has a
BASEMENT So le April 15th odn
BUY NOW &amp; SAVE
smok e. house , cellar and 2
26th 9 5. Good gas rang e , a ll
other good bu1 ld1ngs Home '
can742 -2211
kinds of Items set of Fender
needs a little work but 1t is
TALK TO
8endmostcr Olrtpliftcr ond bos s
well worth $18 ,000 .00.
Wendoll or Herb Grote
gu1lor , d1shwoshcr Chester .
Summerf ield's Apts .. o c ros~
RUTLAND We ha ve
or Gene Sm'lfh
fr om Pos t Off ice
several nice listing s in and
around Rutla nd so give us a
THR.ft FAMILY Y'o rd Solo, Tuos ·
call .
day. Apr·tl74th Chorles Dowler
1
POMEROY - 2 bed roo m
reside nc e , ' 1512 Powoll St ,
home on Br ick Stree t
Middl e_porl
$17.000.00
142-2211
Rutland .
WE NEED LISTINGS .
CALL
AND' DISCUSS
YOUR REAL ESTATE
PROBLEMS WITH us,
WE'LL TRY TO HELP
Cheryl Lemley, Associate
SHOP AT .. ,
Phone 7q2.2003
Hilton Wolfe, Associate
Phone 9q9-2589
GeorgeS . Hobstetter, Jr.
Broker 992-5739
WE OFFER YOU ...
1. Two full floors.of all new
furniture.
NEW HOUSE for sol e by Meigs
2. Nite selections ~ot used
~~n~ N_o _1 _S?6 ~0C!0·_~2-.? 1~ 1: ,
furniture ,
3. A large building full of
TWO BEDROOM house wit h both.
beautiful carpet.
2 lots, goroge, basemen t ond
~o!d!~· ~4~· 2.39? . .

..-

~
by THOMAS JOSEPH

TRAILER SALES
27320 Montgomery Rd.
Langsville, Ohio
61H69 -4245 Even ings
2 Miles East of Wilkesville
SUPER GOOSE STOCK
TRAILERS
NOW

t I XI ]OF AN( XXX)

(Answers lomorrow)
Jumbles: CHAFE BURST ISLAND LUNACY
Answer: What the bartender usually, said to a regular
cuslomer-"THE USUAL? '

RU SS'S SHOE REPAIR. Rt 2 · SR 7
ELWOOD BOWERS REPA IR
Sweepers toa sters tr ans. oil
Bypass Po mero y Oh1o . Open
eve rydoy 9 5 excep t T~u rsdoy
small o ppl.onces Lawn moer
and • Soundoy . Hoolrd C
nc&gt;:l to Stole H1ghwoy Goro ge
Russell
on Rou te 7 . 985 3825

Call Bill Stewf'rt
374-7311
Marietta , o.

l'jl

Unscramble theM tour Jumbles, ·
one letter to each square, to form
four ordinary~··

LANE DANIElS

'~~• lllilf.off Rt. :JY-INIII tin
St. Rt. 124 tow
Rutland,
0.

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

EIGHT ACRES tn Meigs Co 2
miles from Wtlkesvd le Co unty
wo te r seve ral good building
sites. Phone 1·304·675·5.. 55

,.

ROGER HYSELL

11-9-1 mo .

FROM 5 lo eo oqes 3 miles out of
Putlond 742·2451

Hearlq11arters

HSAVE'IV
KNOWs WHY..
&amp;UT HIS PAUCiHTE R
MARRIED THE

'il'llll~ ID'il'

-l-4· 1 mo .

EWOTT
APPUANCE II

'

TWO STORY house aluminum
std1n_g , 3 bedrooms , wo ll to
wel l corpeli ng , 2 ba ths natural
wood cab1nels, d1skwasher,
goroge and shop. Coii9A9· 2172
or 446 9A46

Ho11sing'

4·23·1 mo .

J.P. McKEE!

~ ~ ~~~

Call for a Free Siding
Estimate, 949-2801 or
949-2860. No Sunday
calls .

Armstrong Carpeting

· - -- - ·

CALL 992-3325, WE'Ll DO
OUR BEST.
Helen L.
Gordon 8 .
Sue P . Murphy
Reator Assoctates

"

E. State, Athens

SON-IN-L AW OF

50 IF WAs·Ff,
11.1 TUI':N, CA N
PERSUADE HER
TO JOI'-1 MY
CULT-

PIP5 Ql)EAK!

BISSEll
SIDING CO.

Your Headquarters For

FURNITURE ice boxes brass
beds. 1ron beds de!iks f'lc
co mpl ete house holds Write
M D Mtller Rt .. . Pomeroy or
co ll992 7760

111 E. stco ·d ~treot
CCJNVISNIENT - In t&lt;:· Yn
location next to business
sectio n . 3 bed roo ms, large
b~th, r;1ew furn ace and kit·
c hen c upboards, all l;~ rg e
size rooms . $25 ,000
RENOVATED Inside
and out is all new E ncl osed
bt1th . large kitchen, 3
bedrooms, garden, rural
water and central heat ing .
J us t$73,000
INESTMENT A real
wr lte off with S Incomes,
You s hould see th is or come
tf;1 for details Good for the
futu re
MODERN - S bedroom
frame ho me only n few
years old. If you need
room, thi s one has it 3 full
baths, central heating,
lilrge con venient kitchen ,
formal dining , lar9e liVing,
ni ce enormous famil y r oom
and 2 car gt~rage .
NEW
LISTING
4
b ed room
hom e
in
Sy racuse Needs &lt;"~ little
re pair, but thi s is your
chance to get aheM Has
central heatmg, wood burn•
lng fireplace, de n , and over
an acre of lan d . 526,000
LISTING YOUR PROPER TY IS A PERSONAL
THING . WE WILL NOT
MAKE
A
PATH
THROUGH , BUT WILL
SftOW ONLY BUVERS .

CONifl!ICT

592.3051

(~d . ) .

4-5-ffc

OLD

-· - - •

71

1'!1. H2-ZI74

New, repair ,
gutters and
down spouts.
Window cleaning
Gutter cleaning
Free Estimates
949-2862, 949-2160

CHIP WOOD
Poles max
d1ometer I0" on largest end
S12 per ton 8undled slob $10
per lon Deli vered to Oh1o
Polle t Co , Rt '] Pomero y
'1'12-7689

OlD €01NS. pocket welches
doss ring!'i, wedd•ng bond !i
dio monds . Gold or sil ver Coli
Roer Wamsley, 742 2331 .
31 '? oc:res tn PomeroY. SEcluded WANT TO buy old 45 ond 78
phonograph records , Coli
wooded oreo an top of h1fl
991·6370 or Con tocl Mortt n Fur·
Ove rl ooks river Wat er, e lf!c·
ntlu re
tri c ovodoble. 992·3886
WANT
TO buy old •ewe lry Coli
REAL ESTATE l oons: Purchase and
992 ·5:262 or wnte Kay Ced i 87
ref inonre 30 year terms , VA.
S 2nd, Mt ddleport. &lt;?H
NQ
money down (eli gi ble
vetero ns) FHA As low oS 3
per cent down {non vete ran s)
Ire land Mortga ge Co .. 77 E
· · --· ·- - State , Alh ens. 614 592 3051
Real Estate for Sale

t,\OToRs, rNC.

As A PRIZE.

PIZECISE'LY~ HEA D Of'
M,!&lt;EE /NOUSrRtE5.. ONt;;
Of AMIORICA'S 8166EST
COII!.POI':ATt0!-15!

THAT LITTLE SQUIRT
HAPPENS TO !l&gt;E THE

H. L Writesel I Vinyl and Aluminum
Siding
Roofing

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

CASH FOR iu nk cars 24 hour
wrec k er se r vice
Frye s
Flutlond, OH 742 2081.

CAPTAIN EASY
VOU Rf:6ARD
WAj;H TUEI8S

IRElAND
MQRTGAGE CO.

SMITH NELSON

992 -~011

WltL gi ve les!'ions on . noturol
gu1tor Dobro onrf Ho wo11on
sleel. For informot• on call
742 7975

• __ Y!'_a!!t~d__t!'._1!-UY __

Purchase and Refinan ce
JO Year Terms
A- No mon ey down (etig i·
bl e veterans)
FHA - AS lOW as 3% down
(non · veterans )

*New Home
ii Add -ons
1ft Remoldings
iii Free Estimates

fXPFRif NfHl bobys1IIN w ill rfo
bobys tthng tn my h o me
R c~ume s ovoi la blf" 991 6321

)~o~i[e }i~n!e~ f~~ 5~1~

REAL ESTATE LOANS

SIDING

Hot point and
90 ACRES IN Solem Township on
tlnllance. Projects disc~ .. ~~gg~~~~~;gdeet's t~ees:.;:ceTsh;!
Solem Cen ter.Vinton Rd . Wil l
ftre .Eats for Treats, - t Ho!'e !tr.uctUrally une m .
General Electric
di vide . Water and electric
Creative
Ari·s. · 'a ·n d · plov ed persons wno lack the
Appliances
........,__
·'
,
n etessa ry skills and or
avai lable 304 ·768·:1885.
rnu~Q~rlphy. Refr~hn'leflts emplo'tment ex pe r lencr to
BY OWNER. 3 or .. bed room. wotl·
Wa'! served by Carolyn Rlt- enable them to s uccessfull y
ta·woll ca rpeti ng , full y 10
......,._ The ~
tl • will com pete in the labor market
~.
neA~ mee ng .
and obta in meanmgful skill ·
JACKW.
~u lot e d , full bos e ment. Iorge
lit April 19 at the Ritchie devel bp;ng iobs Title 11 o
co rn er lot
CARSEY
In Ma so n
......,de
[ ' · " B k,.,.
combines t ra n si tional em
Mg•.
304..773·5386 .
.... DCe. ..uta
ur ~. piOyrilehl opportunities With
• Phone 992-2181
"PPrter.
training and ser viC'es. 1n
emp loyability '
e lud ing
ounsellnl.iJ a nd lob search BUILT-IN TAPPAN ~lec:trlc ove n,
The Meigs County Junior cassistance
. The geogr a PhiC
self cleoning, 26" c:ounler top
area
served is the 57 ·county
t.ledership 4-H aub met
un it good rendit ion $!'1!)0.
,
Bala nce of State Applicants
Dork finish oo~ din elle label, MODERN THREE' bedroom house
Allrfl 10 at the Pomeroy m u~t have the c apabilit y of
U chairs . good condition $150
fulf basement. firep loce . fully
llllnentary School with 24 operatlrtg a county or mutt 1
ty program .
·
7.. '].']873 . . • . .
carpeted , centro! a ir . enclosed
-hers and one advisor in coun
The Conference will be held 1000 FT of 2' p1pe 1 $ .1S 0 foot
su n porch , loca tftd on 6 1t. ocres
·. .a.ndance. Members af the in Hearing Room 2 of the
plain end. Lorge Army wmCh.
C" n CR 18. opprox 3 miles from
University 4-H Club' !II· Sta te Office BU tld1ng. 65
$475 742·3oq3
Porinf! If inte rested conlo ct
So uth Front Street, Coium
- · · l orry Wolfe 949 2836 weekends
e.ded and conducted a 4-H bus . Ohio at 9 . 30 am . on Mal/ TWO USED· pianos , - ond
used
and offe r 5 e'ven lngs.
·ll!ln'tltion training meeting. 9, 197? . Fo r adeftt lo nal ln
orga ns for sole in your orvo.
· · · - - for mati on , calt Cheste r D.
Main,Pomero.y ,
w.
605
For more ir1fo rrnotion write · TWO STORY 3 bed room from!'
Jllfrelhments were served Whi1e , Planning Sup ervisor.
C:redll
Manager,
15_..
W.
Main
h~us.e
~n
~i.:ld_lepo
rt
:.
~2:3~57,
No Phone Calls
... Beth Ritchie and April at 614 ·A66·8326 or 1 · 800~82 ·
1050 {toll free)
St., Loncoste r Ohio , A3140 or" SEVEN ROOM house ond boseor Call Guido Glrolami I-30S-84§-842S
"""'er. - Taminle Starcher,
coll1 ·65 ... !$883.
m" " ' ;,., Min.-nd lla ~?. 'iP,'}'l:
..,ner.
("J 23. ltc

SAL£ PRICES -

/ . 30-Thal Nasvhll le Musi c 3; Family Feuo I D;
Muppet Show6; Price 15 Right 8 ; $1 98 Beauty Show
13 ; Nashville On the Road 15 : Sanford &amp; Son 17:
MacNeil Lehrer Reporf 20,33.
8 :110--Little House On The Pra irie 3,15 ; Dorofhy
Ham ill 6, 13; Whlfe Shadow 8, 10; Bill Moyers
Journal 20,33 ; Mov1e " Diamond Head" 17.
9 ·110--Movle " Sancluary of Fear" 3, Is: · How The West
Was Won 6, 13; Mash 8, 10; Generation of the Wind
33 ; Bill Moyers' Jou rnal 20 .
'
9 :30-WKRP In Cincinnati 8,10 .
lO · DO-Lou Grant 8,10; Star Trek 17 ; News 2Q ;
Palesti ne 33.
10 30-Afmanac 20.
11 :00- News 3,6,8 , 10 ,13,15, Hogan 's Heroes 17 ;
Croc kef! 's Vlclory Garde n 20.
11 : 30-Johnny Garson :1,15 : Pollee Story 6,13 : Rockford
Flies 8; ABC News 33, Mov ie " Ride the T iger" 10;
• Movie "Spanish Affair". 17.
12 •46-McMIIIan &amp; Wife 8; Ironside 13, 1:DOTomorrow 3; News 15.
1 :Jo-Mo-vle " Bengazi" 17 ; 1·4o-News 13 ; 3, lG-News
17; 3·30--Qpen Up 17 .

Business Services

QO'] SHSH

. _ ~ _Giv~~~ay ~::
PUPPtfS 7 wee ~ s old Wtll be HAUliNG ltm e.s lone gravel a nd
smal l to mPd All female some
lllt SC Ite ms 74'1 79oq, osk for
short ha ir Some long ho lr All
Rirk Im boden
ru le 2 young short hair , WILl DO poin tm g 1ns tde a nd out
ff&gt;mole dog5 . One 2 mo old'
'Good reference For more in
one I year old. both quite gen·
lormohon coli 99'1·6331 before
tie ond lovable 2 cots, both
noo n or after B 30 p~ .
mole, 1 b lock , 1 bl ue and
white
Humane
Soctety .
997.7853 "'f 092· 7680

NEW LISTING - Mid
dleport, excellent ho me. 3
bedrooms. 11' ? b~ ths, lots of
storage, level lot , base·
ment, 2 c~r garage with
room over, 975 sQ . ft . in all.
Ne~tural gas neat Porche s.
ufility .
NEW LISTING - Older
hOm e but much done in
way
of
r e modelin g,
cnrpe tin g, p ane lin g, tile,
ect 3 bedroo ms, natura l
gas he at, storage build ing,
1 cCir carport , many other
features
Going
at
$18,500 00
NEW LISTING - Lovely I
floor plan , ideal for famjly ,
3 bedrooms, bath, hot
wrtte r hefl f , s torm doors
ilnd windows , dining ba r,
enclosed rear porch, lots of
ca rpeting, ve ry nice front
porch . Dl s hwC~sher, wate r
softener , .,4T\I any othe r
features 1!18,500.00.
NEW LISTING M;d dleport, 2 busi ness roo ms
(rented l and 2 apartments.
ea ch apartment has '1
bedrooms. bath. kltcnen .
living room. total nu mbe r
of rooms tn the 2 apart
ments is 8 Lot s ize Is 50x60
with a n alley in the reu .
$33,500 00
NEAR CHESTER - Love ·
ly brick hom e Probf!b fy
one of the nicest homes in
Meigs County A bedrooms,
1' 1:&gt; baths, 2 large recrea ·
ti on rooms, wood burn ing
fir eplace, beautiful kif ·
chen , 2 car garage, 2 acres
leve l IMd . Many other
features. $60,000 .00 . 1
SYRACUSE RUSTIC
HILLS
SUBDIVISON .
ReitiiY nice 3 be-d room
ranc h w)th bt:tth, living
room , dining room, bullt· ln
equipped kitche n , c arport,
carpeting, many features,
all In excelle nt condition .
REDUCED $31 ,500 .00.
LONG BOTTOM - 70 acre
farm . uJ) to 12 t11lable acres
if c leared, some good
timber, barn . m ilk hou se,
corn crib. old chicken
house, fish ing cabin ·with
Ohio River front a ge 3
bedr.o om ranch type house
which Is unfinished, garden
space , all minerals, 1 year
left o n oil and gas A
SUPER BUV $33,500 00
THE EASY WAV TO SELL
,When you want to
change homes, you'll have
plenty of proble~s as it is
without worrying about
SELLING YOUR HOUSE .
Let an experl do that!
Won't cost a cent UNTIL
and UNLESS we get you
the desired RESULTS!
LIST NOW!
REALTORS
HENRY E. CLELAND SR .
HENRY E. ClELAND JR .
992·12$9
992·6191

TELEVISION
VIEWING

Services Olfered
W A ffR ANO

TUESDAY, APRIL14,1979
5 :30-World at Large 17; s·o~&gt;-Farm Report 1 ~.
5:50- PTL Clu b 13: 5 :55-Sunrlse Semesfer TO.
6 :110--700 Club 6.8: PTL Club IS ; 6 :10-News .17. ·
6 .25-Concerns &amp; Comments 10; 6:3o-Diagnt! 17;
6 :&lt;5-Mornlng Report 3.
6 · 50-Good Morning Wesf Virginia 13; 6 :55-Chuck
Whlfe Reporls 10; 'News 13.
7 :110--Today 3,15: Good Morning America 6,13:
Tuesday Morning 8: Schoolle5 10: Three Stoogesllf!le Rascals 17 .
.7 : 15-Weafhe·r 33: 7 :30-Famlly Affair 10.
s :oo-Ca pt. Kangaroo 8,10; Leave It To Beaver 17;
Sesam e Sf. 33.
8 :3G-Romper Room 17.
9 : ~Bob Braun 3: Phil Donahue 13,15: Emergency
One 6; Hogan's Heroe• 8: Love of Life 10: Lucy
... show 11.
.
9:3o-B rady Bunch 8: Hogan's Heroes10: Green Acru
17
.
10:00-Card Shark s 3, 15 ; Edge of Night 6; All In The ·
Family 8, 10; Dating Game Ill\ Movie "Sometl11ng
for a Lonely Man" 17 .
,
10 :3G-AII Sfar Secrets 3,15: $20,000 Pyramid 13: Andy
Griffith 6; Whew! 8.10: 10:55-CBS News 8; HOUH
Call 10.
'
11 :00-High Rollers 3, 15 ; Laverne &amp; Shfrh!y 6,13; Price
Is Right 8,10; Conoumer Survival Kif 20.
11:3G-Wheel of Fortune 3,15; Family Feud 6,13;
11 :55-News 17 . ·
12 .00--Newscenter 3; News 6,10; Password 15; Young
&amp; !he Restless 8; Midday Magazine 13; Love
American Style 17.
12 :3o-Ryan' s Hope 6,13 ; Search lor Tomorrow 1,10;
Elec. Co. 20,33; No! For Women Only 15; Movie
"Al l Through the Night" 17 .
1 :DO-Days of Our Lives 3,15; All My Children 6,13;
News 8; Voung 8.-fhe Resffess 10.

0

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DICK TRACY

For Best Results Use Sentinel Classifieds

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FID UCI ARY
On Apr i l .$ , 1979 , 10

9- The l&gt;rlilv ~n t i nt•l , Mlc1c11Pport·f'I'IInt' I:(IY , 0 , M tl l'tfay :\pr , ?1. 1°7ft

l9i~'~

Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass

,.

North Eaot
Pass
3+
Pass
Pass
5•
8t
Pass
Pass · Pass

Soalh
It

4 NT '
5NT
7+

You hold ;
• AK~KX
9 X S: X ,

Opening lead : + 9

By Oswald .Jacoby
and Alan Sontag
Oswald : " How would you
plan to play today 's hand ?"
Alan ' " If trumps break 2-2
you can just s pread the hand
since you can draw trumps,
discard one of dummy's diamonds on lhh king of clubs
a~d ruff your two small
diamonds. I suppose trumps
will break 3-1."
Oswald : "They d o and
he arts fail to break 3-3."
1\lan : " I would play three

.: OUTSIDE AN'
INSID~

t AJ

+ Qxx
The bidding Is 0~~~:11~~~
one heart on
u
partner pa~.es
hearts Is DICI. Oll·Y!OUr n.~.~·-A
Michigan reader
'"' ·'
would bid two apades •l'i4n!l ·
vulnerable.
·
· .-, ;. ·
Yes, we would. We
taking a chance, but Wof·
can't get anywhere waltlnj(;i
for sure thlngs.
· 1 ,.

ere_.

I NEWSPAPER ENTERPRIBI:

~:t•

(For a copy ~~JACCI~1~_M'.ot;~:'l
ERN, send $1 to:

Bridge," care of 'hfso ;~~:~~i
per, P.0. Box 489, ~·
Station . New York, N. Y.

�~---------------~---------

PVH celebrates anniversary !
POINT PLEAS ANT _: per sonn el including In ez
Pleasant Valley Hospital's · Howes, David Lovejoy,
Hqp&gt;e
Health · Servi ce Duane Null , and Sandy Knott ,
celllbrat es
its
first Home Health Coordinator.
anniversary this month . One
This Advisory Committee
year ago, the new agen cy a pprov e s p o lici e s ,
cam e
i.nto
existence coo rd ina tes community
e&gt;Ctending Home Health Care information and conducts the
to the people of Mason, G.allia ann ual evaluati on of the
and Jackson (WV ) COID1ties. program. In addition to the
During the pa st 'year , Advi s or y · Committ ee
Pleasant Valley Hospital's evaluation , Pleasant Valley
Home Health Services has Hospital's Home Health
provide d pr ofe ssi on a l Service is also surveyed ·by
nursing care and phy~i c al the Joint Commission on
. therapy in the home of ill Ho;;pital Accreditation and ·
residents ranging in ages the West VIrginia Departfrom two weeks to 101 years: ment of Health .
Specifically, th e Home
A total of 1165 visits were
made and 20,480 miles were Health Service program
co-vered by t he nurses, offers to residents of the area
therapist and aides of Home professional nursing care and
Health.
physical therapy .
In ConjWlction with these
The objective is to extend
quality health care to the sick services. a Home Health Aide
or disabled person confined may be assigned for the
personal care of the patient .
primarily to the home.
PVHS STAFFF.RS - Pictured left to right are Sandra Knotts, R.N., Coordinator of
Home Health provides Also , the social worker at
Pleasa nt Valley Home Health Services and Diana Riddle, R.N., visiting nurse.
phy sical care, emotional Pleasant Valley Hospital ts
support and health teaching always available with help
that will permit the patient, when additional commwtity
relaxed . concerned person by simply
The patient need not be comfortable
either alon e or with family resources are needed.
atmosphere
of
home
. Early calling the Plea5ant Valley
bedridden to be considered
Examples of some of the homebound , but may be discharge to home often adds Hos~tlal Home Heall.h
and other community
resources , to regain an skilled care given in the home homebound if absences from to the emotional security of ServiCe at 675-4340 ext. 253.
·optimum level of good health . are : .dressing changes , the home are infrequent and the patient and may- cost
If the referral com~s from
There are also many people colostomy care, intra ~ of relatively short duration . from one third to two thirds other than the phystctan and
utilizing the service who have muscular injections, blood
Under Home
Heallh less than institut1·0 -1. d th e person qualifies for the
na tze
.
th"e horne hea lth
.an illness that necessitates work, inserl.ion and care of S.rvices, a patient may be care.
servtce,
urinary
catheter.
supervision
skilled
n·ursing
care
Referrals for home health nurse will need to contact the
. discharged from the hospital
indefinitely, and the Pleasant of oral medication s, dia betic earlier to recover in the care may come from any ph ysician lor his permission
and
te a ching,
Valley Hospital Home Health car e
·
to visit and establish a plan of
care. ·
Service offers an alternative instruc tion in therapeutic
to institutionalized care in programs, and observations
of signs and symptoms of a
·these instances.
Squad kept 'busy
David-Buskirk, advertising $10, went to Julie Sisson ,
problem in order to
specific
Home Health Services at
The
M i d d I e port
Pleasant Valley Hosi&gt;ital are keep the physican aware of direttor of The Daily Pomeroy, and Utree place, $5,
patient's
current Sentinel. today announced wen to Michael Zirkle, Emergency Unit answered a
evaluated annually by the \he
winn~rs of the annu~l Middleport.
call to 209 S. Fifth Ave ., at
Advisory
Committee condition.
6:52p.m. Saturday for Mrs.
To receive care under the col~nng. contest held m
composed of community
Nellie Tewksbary who was
people. Sam McNeill, M. D., Pleasant Valley Hospital conJunction wtth Bt~ Bend
area
merchants
durutg
the
00
.
0
dead
upon the unit's arrival.
Home
Health
Service
is .the physician advisor u.
program
,
two
basic
sea"?n.
.
"
·
AI
4:21a
.m. Sunday the unit
Easter
Home Health , and also serves
Jack Slavm, art mstructor
went lo 107 Park St. for
.on the Advisory Committee requirements must be met.
Barbara Smith who was
which includes Ms. Mary ( 1.) the patient must have· a of Metgs High School , JUd~ed
taken to Holzer Medical
Morrison of the · Mason medical problem that the hundreds of entri es
Center. The fire department
Cowtty Health Department; indicates a need for this . submitted by youngsters of
the
_
area
.
.
Tuesday's
Bookmobile
went to 771 S. Second Ave.; at •
service,
and
(
2
I,
the
patient
"Oris Lathey who represents
place,
a
cash
prtze
of
schedule
includes
:
2-2:30,
.
11 pm. Swtday wtiere a car
Ftrst
must
be
homebowtd.
·the consumer, and hospital
$15, 10 the 441 year category, Head Start, Racine; 3-3:30, · owned by Ronnie Hawley had
was Lartssa Long, Route 3, Portland Post Office; 4-5, · ·caught fire and there was
..
2·
$ &amp; - - - - - - - ,· Pomeroy. Second place, a $10 Racine Home National Bank ; moderate damage . At 2:24
ON~
II cash prtze, went to Chrts :&gt;.6, Wagiter's Hardware; 6:15 a.m . Monday the emergency
Noble, Mason, W. Va., and to 8: !5 p.m ., Syracuse squad went to 371 N. Fourth
.
. --~ PTO ETRIS'[__
•
I thtrd place. $5, went to Wendy Swimming Pool.
Ave., for Michael Marcum
who was taken to Holzer
. Fry, Syracuse. In the 9-12
· AT NOON.ON THURS.)- EAST COURT 1 calegory , thefirstprizeof$15 ~io offers new
MedicalCenter: At 9:45a.m.
ST POMEROY ~
I w~nt to Charlotte Lyons,
Mondsy the fire "department
' ·•"'
"
•
Middleport.
Second
place,
d
went to Peach
Fork to assist
5
w
·.
_ _ __,_ _ _ _ _ _ ...,.
SIU ent program
the
Pomeroy
Fire

Area Deaths !
I

NEJ.l.IE TEWKSil"RY
Wellston , and
Robert
Nellie Tewkshary , 87, 209 Tewksbary , MiddlepOrt, two
So uth
Fifth
Street, grandsons, Charles ol
Middleport , died Saturday at Warren and Tom of
he r residence.
Zanesville, five great
Mrs. Tewksbary was the grandchildren , one great
daughter of the late Harrison great grandson, one sister,
Jackson and Melvina Jane Josephine Shanabrook,
Scott Smith. She was also Massillion, one brother Irvin
preceded in death by ber Smith, Columbus, and
0 . several nieces and nephews.
husband ,
Edward
Tewksbary, three sisters and
Funeral services will be
two brothers.
held Tuesday at 3 p.m. at
l'v!rs. Tewksbary was a Ewing Chapel with the Rev.
member of the Middleport Fred Sams ofliciating, Burial
Presbyterian Chw;ch, whete will be in Riverview
she served ·as deaconess and Cemet.ery. Friends may call
elder, and the Middleport at the Fwteral Home today
G'arden Club.
·
from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 and
She is survived by two sons, Tuesday until time ' of
Ed:.va'rd Tewksbary, services.

Accidents,

slakes that had beeit placed
in t!Je growtd in a field near
the Eden Church .
Bud Bartimus, . Rt. I,
Reedsville, discovered that a
vehicle had made several
passes through tbe field
knocking down the stakes
sometime late Friday
even log.
Asuspect is silltejl to take a
polygraph rxarnination.

(USPS 145-960)

w.

•

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O.D..

PJ

BY BOB HOEFLICH
The Meigs Cowtty Regional
Planning commission may
have a $10,000 Farmers'
Home Administration grant
forthcoming to be used in Implementing a recent in·
dustrial site study.
This ·possibility was reported by Executive Director C.
E. Blakeslee when the commission met MondaY afternoon.
Blakeslee said an application had been made
months ago lor funds to implement the industrial site
study which was done by Jennings and Associates, Colum·
bus. Blakeslee said that
locally, flllids equal to onethird of the grant must be
· provided.
It was agreed to approach ·
cowtty commissioners on the
possibilities of funds if the'
grant does come through .
The application is presently
itrlhe reviewing stage.
Tlie:·gr.m: woUid provide
fwtds for ways to i.nterest
businesses in available industrial sites thereby
creating jobs and expand services in the cowtty.
It has been suggested that
the ·chambers of commerce
of Middleport and Pomeroy
work tog'ether developing the
study and that perhaps, a
traveling group could be formed to advise industry of the
sites that are available in
Meigs County.
·It was pointed out that the
grant is very similar to a.n ap-

rLARF.NrF: PRJrP. is sown standing by fence built to exrlode livestock from woods
t1111s produ&lt;'ing the maximum growth oltimber or grass per arre. 7 ISCS-US[)A Phoio ). '

Graze grass, not timber
POMEROY - Soil loss
from a grazed woods can be
100 times the rate of a
protected woods. Soil loss
Studies in Ohio show serious

Volunteers

Dinner lwrwrs
bank ·retiree

At ·Farmers Bank

'

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. ~

••

••• •

Show Mom how much
she means to you!

__-

·a
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·=

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CADIZ, Ohio ( AP) United Mine Workers official
F1oyd "Bill" Larilb Jr. was
recovering in a hospital today
·from gunshot wounds to his
left arm and leg.
Lamb, 44, was. shot less,
Utan two miles from his rural
Cadiz home arowtd I a.m .
Monday. He had started to
drive to Washington, D.C., in
an attempt to regain his seat
as District 6 representative
on the union's International
Executive Board .
Melvin Marlin, 31, a
longtime friend and fellow
union officer, drove Lamb to
Martins Ferry Hospital in
Martins Ferry, where Lamb
underwent surgery to repair
wounds in the fleshy part of
his Jell lorearm and upper
left leg.

·

.

Free Checking Account For You

·Fal Itters 8ank

OPENING TUESDAY,
MAY

DR. HEDGES. CHIROPRACTOR

POMEROY, OHIO

:•., tt•

1

denied
. the allegation s. He ..sa
. i.d
Of Adnl;nt
, ·stratt"ve Servi"es,
,
changes in civil service procedures contained in the bill were
worked out and recommended by ci vil ·service
"professionals."
·
·
·
The exchange came as lawmakers returned from a weekend
recess for deliberations which will include House floor action
Wednesday on the two-year stale budget bill.
lt contains the $222 million needed lo lund Gov. James A.
Rhodes ' proposal lor a pay boost averaging about 7 percent for
the state's more than 80,000 employees. The total is said by
Rhodes and legislative leaders to be all that is ai(!J ilable io a
no-new-laxes budget.
Some employees would ~ et pay increases of as little as 3 per'cer\.1, Brindza said, adding, "!hal's criminal."
AFSCME, Ohio's biggest public emplm•ee "";"" •oith ~ s .ooo

.

Elberfelds In

•
'·

plication for "701 " funds
being applied lor by the commission through the Iiu~keye
Hills -· Hocking Valley
Regional Development Com'
mission and it was the consensus that with two applications the local commission stands a stronger
chance of one developing into
reality.
The commission agreed to
enter into contract with J ennings and Associates to have
a housing and land use plan
certified by June 30. The
housing and land use plan
would deal only with the
rural areas of Meigs Counfy.
The ' commission win pay
JeMings $2,000 to work on
the project which is needed in
order for Meigs County to
receive additional federal
grants.
.
It was also agreed to enter
into contract with the Jennings firm for consultant ad·
visory service lor the next
year ~inning .May I.
The . commission will pay
$30 to the firm and Blakeslee
and Thereon Johnson,
president of the commission, ·
will be authorized to .contact
the firm lor questions and
with problems which might
arise on various projects.
Several ' 4clearing house"
items were approved including one for Rutland
Village, step three in
development of sewage
disposal facilities on what is
known as tbe Higley farm
and another for Pomeroy lor

$15,000 ·on a housing and land
use plan.
A third clearing house item
approved dealt with services
for the elderly and Mrs.
Eleanor 'l'homas, executive
director of the Meigs County
Conunission on Aging., pointed out that continuation of
the services is quite important to OJ)\'ration of , (be
local senior citizens center.
The commission welcomed
L. W. McComas of Mid·
dleport as a new regular
coriunission member. He was
named lo serve on a district
water quality management
board which will meet on
May 7 at Rio Grande.
Other local residents serving on that l&gt;oard are Fred
Hoffman, Henry Wells, Roy
"Miller, Wesley · Buehl, and
Otis Knopp.
Buehl, who is county
engineer, met ,with. the commission, and discussed the
improvements to Page St. in
Middleport.
Plans have been underway
for several years lor that im- .
provement but Issue I funds
were inadequate to handle
the project and federal "off
system'! funds were to be
used for · the balance of
money needed.
However, those funds have
been recalled and the project
is at a standstill.
It wi!l cost an estimated
$209,000.
Blakeslee reported that the
Jennings firm is in the

Mine official recovering

Because We Fumish A

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TUESDAY, APRIL 24, 1979

\

15 CENTS

~

mem'-"rs··
" · ts an
· across-t he -tioa rd ' pay boost of $1.35 an
'· "" , '"an
hour , plus s~veral fringe benefits which also arc contained in
the govem6r's proposal.
OCSEA, with 24,000 members, is culling for,; 10 percent increase and annual cpst-of-living adjustments along with better fringe benefits.
'
. At his news conference, Bri ndza said the pay bill 's civil servtce changes create a sta te hiring system hased on political
favortll sm, gtvmg broad powers to the admini strative services
department.
He said that under the pt·oposed rules, when a vacancy occurs m a stale agenc~, the deparbnenl would give agency
heads names of 10 clVII se rvtce prospects who have pa ssed
tests, instead of the present three.
OCSEA objected to the same provision , .laving in a prepared

I

•

statement Monday lhal it rehresents "a power grab on the part
of the. politicians \O destroy the basic tenets of the civil setvice
syst em."

-· ·

\.,

Skinner said "there is noj,way OCSEA can sup)lort this
proposal " .and asked the l;.gt~lalure to kill the civil service
portions of the bill.
Hamillon said the so-&lt;:alled "Rule of 10"· is intended to fill
vacancies more promptly. He said ii takes about two weeks ~o
allow the three employees to respond before one is chosen. At
limes; offers are refused and the process must be repeated ,
and it now can take as lung as six months to fill a vacancy, he
claimed.
·
"This only speeds up the process and it doesn't hurt the
system. The directors would be foolish not lo pick the bestqualified employee," Hamilton said .

·I,

Are Preferred Poople

'

MIODLEPORT·POMEROY, OHIO

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f

SENIOR CITIZENS

I

e-n tine

at y

'·

$10,000 FHA gr.ant may
be approved in ·future

erosion from wooded areas In exclude livestock grazing.
where land cover should be at A Division of Forestry
its best.
Service Forester ·will certify
Timber is a valuable crop Ute need • for fencing and
in Ohio and we can't over - approve the fencipg If it Is
emphasize the importance of completed in accordance
protecting •that crop from with ASCS specifications.
livestock grazing.
For further assistance pn .
If you are going to graze your land, to discll.'lS your
(Continued from page 1I
woodland in Ohio it might be woodland management or
Department
with
a
fire
at
the
in
the
next
day
or
so.
better to clear the land and ' pasture management
RIO GRANDE, Ohio (APIIvan
Cannan
·residence
.
An
estimated
.
23,000
Seed
it to a good forage crop. program, · contact the Soil
-A program designed to give ·
along
the
Pearl
H
Ute
land use is to be Conservation Service (SCS)
persons
living
high school students a head
The
Pomeroy
Emergency
have
been
forced
to
flee
their
woodland
it should be at Box 432, Pomeroy, or call
start on a college degree will
protected from the damaging 992-1&gt;647.
be underwax this swnmer at Squad was called to Wolf Pen homes.
at 10 :39 p.m. Swtday for
In southeastern Texas, effects of livestock.
Rio Grande College.
Herman
Warner
who
was
on ,S un~~y
Livestock destroys .a
cloudbursts
· The program will be oftaken to Veterans Memorial brought
more
record
timber
stand by foraging oil .
fered to students from Gallia ,
Ho spital.
The fire . flooding.
·
the
seedling
trees
and
Jackson, Meigs and Vinton
And at least four tornadoes damaging roots and trun)&lt;s of
cowtties who are graduating department was called to
Peach Fork at 9:26 a.m . wucned down in Louisiana larger trees. This damage
NEW HAVEN - - The
high school seniors or juniors Monday for a lire at .the Ivan
SUJiday. One demolished the lowers the · value of the women employees of the
who rank in the upper half of
Carman residence ..
midway of the Crawfjsh present crop and· ruins the Mason COW\ty nank of New
their claSs.
Festival in Chalmette, a New chance of future stands. Haven held a diMer ThursThe particpants, according
~ , , 1&gt;
Orleans suburb, and injured Cattle hooves destroy the day evening at Shoneys · in
to Rio Grande President Paul )~'}~' {::??f)'{{:::~:~:: ::;: : ;: ::'( f two persons slightly.
cover on Uie forest land and Point Pleasant .honoring
C. Hayes, will be permitted to
6-year-old
boy
drowned
cOmpact the soil. The result is uWan Fields who Is reUring
A
take introouctpry college
Light damages were
over
the
weekend
in
an increase in water' runoff alter working for 20 years.
classes at the eoliege under incurred to two cars and one
Louisiana
when
he
fell
into
a
when
it rains. This resjl]ts in . She was presented with a corfull tuition scholarships.
driver was cited to mayor 's
rain-swollen
Balon
Rouge
soil
erosion
and increases silt sage by the ladles as a token
·"SeniOrs can receive a ~ court in an accident on East
bayou.
.
pouring
irito
streams.
of their friendship. ·
Head start on a rollege Main
St., .. Pomeroy,
The
Louisiana
twisters
also
Overgrazing
ts
not
only
Those attending and
degree · and juniors · will Saturday . Police "''id a car
touched at such scattered harmful to the woods but wishing her well were the
hopefully be sparked with ad· driven by Sara VanSickle, . locations as ·· Lafayette, woods can be harmful to .
ded motivation which will Gallipolis, pulled from the Hammond and Belle Chllllse. livestock. Thereareoverflfty following: C!JIIllie Fields,
continue through their senior Kroger parklr]g lot into the No major damage or serious poisonous plants common to Cathy Tucker, Connie Good·
year and . on into college," path of an eastbound car injuries were reported. But Ohio woodlands. The best nite, Sheila Oliver, Martha
Hayessaid.
driven by Lewis Bush, another tornado Saturday . way to maintain a healthy · Sayre, Enid Adams, Nancy
Minersville. Mrs. VanSickle near New Iberia caused more cattle herd and grow line Holbrook, Betty Fox, Mae
was cited to tour! on a failure than $500,000 in damage. At · quality hardwoods is to fence Roush, J!llia Willoughby;
to yield charge.
least two other persons ·were the livestock into protective · Helen Fields, Lona Howard,
Barbara ·Zerkle, Lethia Belle
hospitalized, but neither in pastures and out of Bumgarner.
APPROVALtiiVEN
serious condition.
prodijctive woods.
ASK TOWED
WNGBEACH .. Calif. (AP)
· The toll in property
The ASCS will pay up to 75
MEET TUESDAY
- The South Coast Air
Marriage licenses were damage from the flooding percent of the cost of the
The
Long
Bottom
Quality Management District issued to Terry Lee Garten, continues to rise.
fencing material' and the Commwtlty Association will .
has unanimously approved 24, Rl. !, Middleport and
Mississippi Gov. Cliff Finch labor to build a fence to meet April25, at 7:30p.m. at
Standard Oil Co. of ·ohio's Nanci Ilene Mehl, 29, estimated
damage
at separate woods from pasture Ute conunwtity building.
request to build a $500 million Gallipolis; Scott Ra)'I!Iond between $900 million and $1
·
oil tanker terminal in the Napper, 19, Langsville, and billion in his state. ·
•
Long Beach Harbor.
Pamela Sue Davis, 21, Rl. !,
Burt Bratcher of the Texas
Sohio will be required to Langsville.
Civil Defense placed the
pay more than $80 million to
Veterans
Memorial dsmage since Wednesday at
reduce air pollution at a Hospital
$100 milliqn. in Harris County
Sol!lhern · California Edison
Saturday Admissions-- and $50 million lo $75 million
. Co. power plant to make "up Je n n 1fer
Cochran, in Conroe, about 50 miles
for the additional pollution Langsville ; Mary Frye , nortlt of Houston. The floods
caused by the terminal. This Middleport ; Jason Adams , also have claimed at least
can be done by using low- New Marshfield; Thomas four lives in Texas.
...on Mother's Day, Sunday, May 13: A
sulphur fuel or by installing Wolfe, Pomeroy; Opal Kauff ,
AI Columbia, where about
thoughtful
card and gilt from Hallmark wiU show
ad~itional control equipment, Hemlock Grove;
Terry half Ute 8,000 residents have
her
·how
special
she is to you .. ."every day!
the AQMD said.
· Brewer, Long Bottom . .
already abandoned their
..- ·•
Saturday Discharges-- homes, Mayor Robert Bourne
:Aileil
Wilson,
Bertha has ordered schools closed,
Johnson, JuaniUi Chapman, told merchants to keep only
Mattie Wa rner , Beatri ce minimum numbers of .clerks
TOMEETTIJESDAY
The Meigs Area Holbess May, Donna Haning, Jessyca , in their stores and asked
Association will meet af the Hatfield, Mary tittle, Hazel residents to stay home·.
Elsewhere, Natchez. poliCe
Racine Churc.h of the Zirkle.
dispatcher
David Robinson
Nazarene at 7:30 p.m .
Swtdity Adn)ission-Dana
said 6.9 inches of rain fell
Tuesday. The Rev. Clyde .Covert; Pomeroy.
Henderson, pastor of the
Swtday Discharges--Jack Swtday in the Mississippi
VVe invite you to use this preferred service with no serPomeroy Church of the · Neff, Samuel Pickens, Edna River city.
ln Ute Upper Midwest ,- the
Nazarene, will 'be speaker. Swick, Joseph Ste'\'art, John
vice charge .. All those 65 years and over are welcome to
Air
Force ·flew 450,000
The
public
is
invited.
Powell.
open an account any time. Stop in and see us now.
sandbags Sunday to East
Grand Forks, Minn., where'
volunteers were fighting to
, .,
hold back the Red River, and
1ST .
. another 460,000 bag&amp; were oo
their way from Offut Air
1
l 979 Halii!VIrk Carets, !roc.
Force Base in Nebraska.
'PI• · Houston-Beaumont,•
(Former Bradshaw Office)
Conroe areas of southeast
Visit Qur Hallmark Card Department- 1st"
181 Second St. . .
Middleport, 0.
Texas have gott en 12 inches
Floor - Select your Mother's Day Cards
·
Pho.n e 992 -6141 or 593 -6886 (Athens, o. l
of rain sin e~ Wednesday and ·
now
while sel.ectton is best. Mother's Day is
OFFICE HOURS
thewealher!lervicesaidmost
-$40,000· Maxiili!mi Insurance ~or Each Depositor
·Sunday,
May 13lh.
.
.·
Tuesday·ll A.M. to 5 P.M.
streams were well ov~r flood ·
Co
Tl)ursday 11 A.M. to 5 P.M.
stage Sunday, with ·the
M b F. d · 10 · 1
. emoc-.-.ti!JUoc
er e era _______
epos1t nsurance ooc.O.ioc
rj)Qratlon
Neches crest
Riverat .nearing
. .IOCMIC:OOOIIOo--oooo____
_ _ _,a • - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' record
Beaumont.a

N.

VOL. NO. XXIX NO. 7

&lt;;&lt;JLUMBUS OH[O (AP )- Two major public employee
wtiOns. have assatled the Rhodes administration 's proposed
$222 mtllton slate.worker pay raise bill.
However, an administrption spokesman brushed aside their
charg~s Monday and accused the unions of stirring up
susptcton.
·
Robert A. Brindza, executive director of Ohio Council 8 of
the American Federation of Slate, County, and Municipal Em~loyees, told a news conference that the raise not only is
~actequate, but that the legislation seeks to "rape " the state's
ctvtl servtce system.
.
.David R. Skinner, operations director of the Ohio Civil Ser'\ttce Employees Association, echoed.the charge, saying the bill
reyam~ civil service "and just happens to include a small pay
ra1se ...
·
PhilipS. Hamilton, deputy director of the staiP ner•rtmont

B krn hil.e

I

•

·Two major unions assail_governor's proposal

'
TUESDAY SESSION
'i'he senior citizens of
Harrisonville ·will meet
Tuesday, April 24, at '7 p.m.
Refreshments of cookies and
coffee will be · served.
Everyone is welcome to
attend.

Name contest winners today

schedules

•

•

e

(Continued from·page I)

...

SET CLOCKS
FORWARD
ONE HOUR
SUNDAY
APRIL 29
2 A.M.

·~·

Hospital officials listed him
in satisfactory condition and
said he suffered no · broken
OOnes.
Both hospital officials and
Harrison County Sheriff's
deputies said later Monday
they did not know the caliber
of the weapon, nor if it was
possible for the wowtds to
have been self-inflicted.
Lamb was kicked off the
executive board last August
after union President Arhold ·
Miller accused "him of
insubordination in a dispute
over expense accounts. The
21-member board voted to
uphold the ouster.
·Lamb.was re-elected to the
post over two others in a
special vote March I.
Monday 's meeting was the

miles from the isolated
section of U.S. · 250 where
Lamb told officials he was
shot. said he was awakened
shortly before 3 a.m.
" He was banging on my
door," Martin said." "ll woke
both my wife and me, and I
looked out the window and
saw his little red car.
" Bill was leaning against
my kitchen door and said,
'You gotta give me a hand,
'cause I gotta get to a
hospital.' I saw blood all over
him and I asked what
happened . and he said he
would tell me on the way."

process of condensing a 30
page environmental study on
the project.
,
Buehl also reported h~ had
surveyed local ·roads
following the flooding and
found that damages totaled
abQut one-hall million
dollars, not necessarily from
flood waters, but from the
heavy traffic and weather
conditions. He urged members and the commission to
write their sUite legislators
asking for financial help.
He also spoke on progress
being made in the development of plat maps through
the CETA program.
Jeff Burt and Greg Keller
of th e Buckeye Hills
organization explained the
role of their organization in
assisting local groups in
various projects.
Burt distributed a list of
some 15 projects recommended for Meigs County
and members completed
their priority opinions on the
projects.
Another meeting was set
for May 21 to discuss the
housing and land plan. Boyd
Ruth of the Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation Service
reported that some 25 ,to 30
applications have been

STEEL COM~~ETED - Work is continuing on the
Multi-purpose butlding on Mulberry Heights, The steel
structure ts complete and bricks are being laid. The

$72,621 engine-- bid -aegepted ·

Middleport village council over a five year period on a · that all proceeds from such a
Mondsy night accepted the bank loan to be paid off lax , which would bring in
bid of the Johnson Fire through a !-mill five year about $10,000 a year would be
Equipment Co., Columbus, levy passed b~ voters last fall used for the streets. The ·
for a new fire engine for the and through p,ayments made discussion also brought out
Middleport Fire Department. for fire protection by that the cowtty could levy
Village
and such a tax at anytime if the
Tlte bid was the only Cheshire
village does not and the
Cheshire
Township.
submitted
on
the
truck
and
received under ''RAMP," the
village would receive only a
There
will
be
an
additional
had
been
taken
under
new mine reclamation·
part of the proceells from the
$25,000
involved
in
hose
and
advisement earlier by
•
program.
tax
. Fisher commented he
pther
accessories
lor
the
new
He stated that he hopes a council's £ire comlnittee and
believes the auto license tax
truck.
The
department
will
representatives
of
the
fire
comprehensive study can be
pay one-half of the i!tteresl is a very reasonable tax to
made of the entire area in· department.
cost$
involved 'lind the village keep streets in good condition
The
bid
was
$72,621
with
a
volved. Edison Baker,
and that the $5 a year is really
secretary, presided over the 1979 chasis, if available, and will pay the other half. If the nothing compared to the cos.ts
is
not
paid
for
at
the
end
truck
an additional $1480 with a 1980
meeting.
in repairing damages to a
Others attending were chasis. Bob Fisher and Kevin of five years a plan will be vehicle operated over bad
devised
to
raise
the
Dailey,
representing
the
fioe
Fred Hoffman, · Archie
roads .
The discussion
Siegal, E. F. Robinson, department, indicated that a additional moneys needed. brought out ihat a tax levy
Cowtcil
employed
K.
and
S.
1979
chasis
is
acceptable.
George Collins , Carol
The ir9ck will be financed Construction to point up passed . by residents thr\'f
Kostanzo, H. E. Shields and
village hall and replace loose years ago for slreel
.David Fox.
MINOR FIRE
bricks at a cost of $1450 plus maintenance brings in abJut
materials. The vU!age hall $12,000 a year but inflation
The
Pomeroy
Fire was sandblasted sometime has eal~n away what can be
Department was called lo 122 ago, but workers were nul accomplished through those
A~~~:!2~:S~!i~t~ to ~~~:;,.y A~~er:t a \!~evfs·i~ available for the pointing up funds . ,
Council took no action on a
drivinghiscatthroughafield ·
fir
work. Solicitor Bernard
was on e. at 8: 09 p.m. the Fultz will draw ·up a contract request from an ex-village
near Eden Church where emergency squ ad went to for. th e wor k whtch
· shoul d get employe for mileage to
5,000 torna to st akes had been Hemioc k Grove for George underway
in a few days. The Columbus to visit a doctor
placed Meigs County Sheriff logan who was taken to firm has until July 1 to regarJiing injuries received
James J . Proffitt reported. H~lzer Medtcal Center. AI .,complete Ute job.
while .working for the village
The stakes were the 12 .55 a.m. Tuesday, the 1, Council approved a second several years ago.
The
property of Bud Bartimus, emergency squad went to 'of three required readings on mileage, according to a
Rt. I, Reedsville. The suspect Dark Hollow Road for · Mrs. 1 . .
. .
communication from the,
was released pending filing of Stobart who · was taken w P. acmg al $5 permMtsstdvdel au tort · Bureau o[ Workmen's
1
Holzer Med" al Cente
tcense ax on
1 epo
ch arges by Bartimos ·
Compen sation, . will be
tc
r·
restdenls. It was potnled out
,
.
approved since the village
voiced no opposition lo the
request.
'

.firs~- sirlce since his re-

election .
Miller again suspended him
frorri Ute board last week,
saying the dispute over
expenses incurred during the
1977-78 UMW strike had never
been resoived.
Anthony Bumbico, another
personal friend, said Monday
lhal Lamb said he has
re ce.ived a number of
harassing telephone calls and
at least one .warning or
threatening call since his reelection.
.
Lamb's father, Floyd
Lam\! Sr. , 78, said his son told
him 'Friday he had received a
call from Kentu ck~ from an
unidentified man who "told
him if he had to come to that
IEB meeting, he had better
have a bodyguard."
"Bill said that call bothered
him, but his mind was made
up," the elder Lamb said .
"He didn't · say whether he
, thought it was from a friend,
and he didn't ·know if he
sliould think of il as a threa(
or a warning."
Martin, who lives some 15

$1,129,930 project will house a senior citizens center.
health depat1ment, mental health facilities and other offices. Karr Construction is the general contractor.

Public hearing
slated April 26

DESTROYED BY FIRE - A fire ol undetermined
origin destroyed a house owned by 1\arl Frerker Monday
mornin~ . The fire is belir\"ed to have started in the kttchen

\

are~ . The house was unoccupied, and dama ges are
estimated at approximalrly $16,000.

Thursday the Village of
Pomeroy will hold a publir
hearing concerning the Urban Development Action
Grant . Program (UDAG ).
Purpose is ,to hear
suggestions from citizens· on
development of a .proposal to
be submitted to the Department of Housing and Urhan
Development (HUD ).
'i'he proposal would consist
of methods to combine
private funds provided by
local enterprises and public
funds provided by the UDAG
program to help stimulate
thelocalecoooiny.
While the Villa ge of
Poll)eroy has been notified of
its eligibility to complete,
any proposal is subject to ap·
prova! by mm· prior to actual funding. ·
The meeting will be held at
7:30 p.m. at City Hall, Coun. cil Chambers, E. Second
Street.

Mayor Fred Hoffman
annowtced the resignation of
Paul Gerard from the village
recreation commission and
Charles
Cassell
was
appointed to fill the vacancy.
Harold Olase was named to
fill a vacancy on the village
planning commission created
•
by the resignation of Bill . .
Childs, who resigned because
he has entered the real esta!e
business.. Cftase will serve
until Dec . 31, 1984.
Mayor Hoffman also
reported the village has until
May 14 to file its application
for a HUD grant. A pre'
application has already l;leen
approved . The village must
hold hearings at 7:30 p.m. on
April 30 and May· I to receive
pubUc input. Mayor Hoffman
said he also will appoint a 10
member HUD advisory
committee- in the town in
order to receive more citizen
input.
Mayor Holiman discussed,
the possibility of hiring in
cooperation wiUt Pomeroy
Village a full time employe to
work on the current HUD
programs and on securing
future grants. Middleport
currently has about $18,000
built into two HUD grants for
administrative costs. Mayor
Hollman will check with
Pomeroy on .the possibilities
of the two towns going
wgether to secure a grant
epnsultanl and a meeting will
be set for the councils of the
two towns.
Cowtcilman Allen Lee king
reported that the vlliage
garage desperately needs a
new roof and plans were
made to secure · a cost
estimate on the roof.
Conservation of energy at
public
buildings
was
discussed
and
Mayor
Hoffman reported that .a
federal program orovldes 50
(Conlmued on page 8')

MEET TONIGHT
Past
Matrons
of
Evangeline Chapter. Order of
Eastern Star, will meet al
7:30 p.m. Tuesday (tonight)
at the home of Mrs. Enuna .
Clatworthy .
SQUAD CALLED
The · • M i d dIe p or\
Emergency Squad .alll!wered
a call to 367 Grant St. at 2:06
p.m. Monday for Homer
Bradshaw who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

,

"

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