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8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-?omeroy, 0., Tuesday, Apr. 24, 1979

t:ha. li·persons
appointed
for bike-a-thon

HOSPITAL NEWS

Four persons mJure
· • d
in Monday

ac~idents

FoW' persons were injured on Sherman Hartsook Rd. ,
and
three
vehicles four miles west of SR 160, at
demolished during four 4:40p.m.
accidents in vestigated · According to the patrol,
Monday by the Gallia-Meigs vehicles operated by Russell
Gibson, 33, Vinton, and Noah
Post , Highwa y Patrol.
Thomas E . Banks, 31, Brewer, 68, Vinton, c&lt;lllided
Crown City, was admitted to at a hillcrest.
Brewer and a passenger in
the intensive care unit of
Holzer Medical Center for th e Gibson auto, John W,
treatment
of
InJuries Rose, 33, Patriot, were
s usta ined during a two - transported by the Ga!lia
vehic!e collision ,on SR 7, at Volunteer Squad to Holzer
Medical Center,
6:22a.m.
Rose was admitted for
With the accident still
TO VISIT - Ms. Joyre
WINNER NAMED
under investigation, officers treatment of a fractured left
Bird,
a · field
repRandy Tacket, son of Mr.
report that vehicles operated leg and is listed in stable
r
esentative
for
Worn·
and
Mrs.
Randall
Taeket,
by Mary J . Ours, 46, Eureka condition .
en's International BowlSalem· Center, was a
sors. ·~ rn order to continue Star Route , and Banks • Brewer was treated for a
ing Congress (WIBC I
facial
laceration
and.
a
nasal
winner
in
the
recent
radio
the fight against CF, collided on 7.
wlll be the guest of th e
and
televlsloo
competition
and
released.
fracture,
Ours and Banks were
everyone's help will be
·Mason
Women's Bowling
at
the
SoUiheast
Regional
The
Brewer
auto
was
transported
by
the
Gallia
needed, so please give
Assn.
Sunday,
April 21!.
Olympics. Randy is a
generously of your time and Volunteer Squad to Holzer demolished. There was heavy
She
will
be
at
the
Mason 1
student
in
·
the
damage to the Gibson
money when yod are con- Medical Center. .
Fire
Station
at
2
p.m,
l'Ommunkations
elec·
vehicle.
.
•
Banks was admitted to the
tacted, " said Mr. Thayer.
Questions
dealing
with
course
at
tronits
The
accident
remains
Cystic Fibrosis is the num- intensive care unit for
league procedures, rules,
Meigs High S.ehool and Is a
ber one genetic killer ·of · treatment of a separated under inve&amp;tigalion.
and re-cord-keeping
member
of
the
V.I.C.A.
Two
persons
claimed
was
listed
this
sternwn,
and
children, occurring in one of
systems
and other wmc
club. Randy will now
every 1,500 births . An morning in stable condition. injury fallowing a two-vehicle
procedures
will
be
compete
In
radio
and
Ours was treated for collision in AUt ens County,
inherited, incurable disease,
answered.
The
session
is
television
eompetltlon
on
CF destroys lungs and it contusions and lacerations of eight-tenths of a mile north of
open
to
aU
members
of
the
the
stale
level.
the
Meigs
County
line
at
8
the upper lip Jmd contusions
destroys. life.
Wumen's bowlin g
·
of the left leg and left chest, a .m .
association.
Officers
report
that
an
auto
and released.
by
Richard
Both
vehicles
were operated
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Blessing, 28, Pomeroy,
demolished .
Thursday
through
Two persons were injured passed off the right side oltbe
Saturday:
Showers
and
RETURNS HOME
Retail sales tax receipts in . during a two-vehicle aeciden( roadway, struck a bridge,
Utuoderstorms
possible
Mr.
and Mrs. Tom Rue of
Meigs County for March,
traveled back onto the
Thursday
.
Showers
Middlepor)
recently returned
1979, were down 6.56 percent
highway and struck a vehicle
possible
Friday
and
fait
Nolan
to
home
following
·a visit in
compared to Mar~h . 1978 but
driven by Darrell Young, 39,
Saturday.
lllghs
in
the
70s
Houston,
Texas
with their
auto sales tax receipts were
Albany .
Thursday and In the 60s to
daughter,
Sue
Rue
Spell and
up 24.40 perl!\'nt last m011th demonstrate
Following impact, the • low 70s Friday and
son, J . T. Rue.
compared to last year acYoung auto passed off the
·sattirday. Lows In the 50s
cording to the report of State
Howard Nolan, program right ~de of Ute roadway,
Thursday morning, falling
Treasurer
Gertrude chairman of the Ohio Valley struck a guardrail and
to the low 40s to low 50s by
SPAGHETII SUPPER
Donahey • .
Gem and Mineral Society, overturned.
Saturday morning.
There
will be a spaghetti
Retail sales tax receipts for has aMounced that Amos B.
Both. drivers claimed
supper
served
at Salem CenMarch, this year, totaled
Kelchner of Bliilgeport, W. injury, but were not
ter School Saturday, April26,
$53,626.01 compared to
immediately
treated.
There
beginning at 5 p.m. sponreceipts of $57,392.63 for Mar- Va . will show and tell how to was heavy damage to both
work
with
stained
glass
when
sored
by the SCEO.
Occasional rain
or
ch, 1978, a decrease of
the society meets on May 8, · vehicles.
Dinner
is $2 for adults and
·
showers,
possible
thunderThe patrol investigated a
$3,765.32.
at the Washington Electric in
$1
for
children.
The public is
storms
tonight,
Wednesday.
March, 1979, motor vehicle Marietta. He will exhibit Ute twa-vehlcle mishap on SR
invited
to
attend.
Mild,
lows
tonight
near
60.
sales tax receipts totaled
681, five-tenths of a mile east
Highs Wednesday in upper
$65,060.42 compared to Mar- lead and copper foil stained of SR 7, at 8:10p.m.
glass. He learned the art of
ch, 1978, re cei pts· of working with glass at Cedar
Officers report that autos 70s . Chance of rain 70
MOVIES SET
$52,295.34, an increase of Lakes, Ripley, W. Va.
by
Robert percent tonight, 60 percent
operated
Guy
Lowther,
pastor, inWednesday.
$12,765.08.
Kelchner has many in- Richardson, 24, Reedsville,
vites
the
public
to attend
terests and among them are and Gregai-y Bucllanan, 16,
three
movies
this
week
at tbe
FREE
CLOTHING
rocks. He became a rock Belpre, sideswiped.
Life
Gate
Baplist
Church,
DAY
There was heavy damage
hound while living in North
Free Clothing Day will be Route 124, Little Hocking at 7
to
the Richardson auto,
Carolina. It was here he enSESSION PLANNED
moderate damage to the held at The Salvation Army , p.m. each evening. The
There will be . a Title I joyed hunting sapphires and Buchanan vehicle. No 115 Butternut Ave., Pomeroy, movies are "The Burning
Parent Advisory Council rubies at mines near citation was issued.
Thursday, April 26, from 10 Hell " on Thursday; "A Thief
meeting Friday, April 'll, at Franklin. After acquiring
a.m. until noon. All residents · in the Night" on Friday; and
2:30 p.m. at 'tbe RuJ!and rocks be then · became inin Meigs County and surroun- uA Distant Thunder" on
terested in faceting and calr
Saturday.
Elementary &amp;boo!.
ding areas are welcome. ·
·
'l'he T\t\e I Reading · bing stones.
The guesl speaker resides
'program will be discussed.
at
Bridgeport with his wile,
'
All interested .persons are inBetty,
two
sons
and
'a
r-~---~----------,
. vited to - attend. Refreshdaughter.
ments will be served.
MASON- Charles Thayer,
president .of the Bluegrass
Chapter Cystic Fibrosis
Foundation,
announced
today the appointment of the
following people as chairmen
lor the annual "Breath of
Spring" Bike-A-Thon Campaign in Mason County.
·
Coordinating the event will
be Ms. Connie Goodnight,
Mason, and Mrs. Roger Dl!l~
Wright, Glenwood.
Conducting separate BikeA-Thons during May, these
chairmen will announce the
date for their locale. Riders
will soon be out seeking spon-

Receipts down

Weather

I

Social Calendar

.

The Meigs Bookmobile will
be at Reed's Store at Reedsville from 4 to 5 this
evening; · the Arbaugh
housing addition from 5:30 to
6:30; the Chester Methodist
Church from·6:45 to 7:45p.m.
and ·at tbe Baum Addition
·from 8to8 :30p.m.

..

TUE'IDAV
SENIOR CITIZENS of
Harrisonville Tuesday 7 p.m.
Cookies and coffee will be
served. Everyone welcome.
WEDNE'IDAY
LONG BOTTOM Community Association Wednesday 7:30p.m. at the Community building.

I'.

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY-MIDDLE ·
PORT Lion Club, Wednesday
· noon at the Meigs Inil.
·
WEDNE'IDAY
M I D D I. E P 0 R T
IJTF:RARY Club, 2 p.m.
Wednesday at the home of
Mrs. -Bert Grimm, Letart
Falls. Mrs. Grimm will
review ' 1Scribble, Scribble''
by Nora Ephron. Members to
respond to roll call with a
comment on the program.
..
WILDWOOD GARDEN
CLUB, home of Mrs. Fred
Nease, 6 p.m. Wednesday ,
with Mrs. Virginia· Fisher to
have the program. Members
to rtame a tree in their yard
for roll call.
SOUP DINNER Wednesday in the annex of the
Racine Melhodist Church
'from 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. Sponsored by UMW.
TWIN CITY Shrinettes 7:30
p.m. Wednesday in Riverboat Room, Meigs Branch,
Athens County Savings and
Loan, W. Main, Pomeroy.
. RIVERVIEW Garden
Club, 8 p.m., at home of Mrs.
Oakey Connelly: cohostesses Mrs . Ronald
Cowdery and Mrs. Tom Spencer. Workshop will be held.

-

I.
I

Does purchasing a new car fit into
our future plans? Now is the time to
find the new car you want, Make a .
dream come true ... see us about
financing. You 'II I ike our lowInterest bank ra'tes and easy budget
payment plans. See us today about a
. new car loan.
·

Walk-up teller window
and auto-teller window .
Open Friday Evenings 51o 7 p.m.

speclalltta at The Insurance Store,
ready to help ahould you ever need to II a claim. We work

with several fine Insurer&amp;, like The Contlnentallnaurance
Companies, and we know how to help you obtain ll
equitable claim settlement.

fa~ t .

We don't just sell you and forget you. We're here to serve you I

REUTER-BROGAN
INSURANCE
SERVICE
214 E. MAIN

I
.1\?~mber

,

F . o,~;.c. ,

.. Deposits

St.

POMEROY, 0 .
992-5130 or 992-5139
"YOU DON''T BUY A·POLtCY,
YOU HIRE AN A!l.EN'f"

·- ·~ ·

Insured to S40,000.00.

j
&gt;

A special connection ban
has been imposed upon the
Tuppers
Plains
area
prohibiting Meigs County
Commissioners from causing
or alloWing construction or
installation of home . sewage
disposal systems in Tuppers
Plains.
'n!e ban came from an
official notification received
by
Meigs
.County

. ' (USPS 145-960)

Fehruary . 4; he left th e
program and took over as
interim director of the
company. Massie wa s
appointed e&lt;ecutive director
of AORTA in May of 1978.
Massie was encouraged to
take on the executive
r es pon sib ilities by John
Bowers, a co unselor with the
Tri-County Community
Action Agen cy, which
administers the CETA
program, and Dave Vaughn,
then the executive director of
AORTA .
Massie had earned a
master 's degree in government at Ohio University in
Athens before enrollin g in

Nationwise
Suspect faces other charges BELLINGHAM, Mass . (API - Whatcom County
authorities say Kenneth Bianchi will have to face trial
on two local murder charges before any extradition to
Los Angeles, .where police say they are asking thjlt he
be charged in 10 killings attributed to the Hillside
Strangler, "Whenever we have a crime, it has to be
handled, and we feel our ease should be handled here
first," said Whatcom County Prosecutor Dave
MeEachran.
Bianchi, 'll, is accused of the Jan.-11 stranglings
here of Karen Mandie, 22, and Diane Wilder, 'll, both
students at Western Washington University.

ELBERFELD$
MOTHERS DAY GIFT SUGGESTIONS'

Charged in official's death

\

PERRYSBURG, Ohio (API~ Poliee have charged
John Roecker, 30, of Toledo with vehicular homicide in '
connection with the death Tuesday of state Rep . Irma
KarmoL
Sgt. Frank Brahier said Roecker failed to yield the .
.right-of-way at a flashing red light marking the intersection where the two cars collided. Mrs. Karmol ,
R-Toledo , was driving south on Route 25 and Roecker
was westbound on a cross street.

Pope John Paul II popular

MOTHER'S DAY IS SUNDAY, M.AY 13th

ELBERFELDS lN .POM'EROY

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

;1fter

•

at y

It was the t"'ncensus that
perm1sston
should
be
granted. The trustees also
asked to receive laborers
from the CETA program for
cemeter y maintenance.
Henry
Wells,
commissioner, reported he
had attended a meeting in
Marietta la st Thursday
concerning a solid waste.
pro.posal for the Meigs

•

County Sanitary l.andfill.
C h es t e r W e ll s,
commissioner , reported he
attended a meeting in Athens
la st Friday concerning
applications for new CETA
project grants.
The monUtly quotes for
bitwninous materials for the
highway department were
received from Ashland
Pet ro le urn r·o . , Asphalt

Material s Co., and Guernsey
Asphalt.
It was Ute wmnimous vote.
to accept the quotes of
Guernsey Asphalt Co., during
the month of May .
Attending we re Richards
Jones, president, Henry
Wells and Chester Wells,
commissioners, and Mary
Hobstetter , clerk.

'""

entt.ne

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY, OHIO

NO. 8

VOL NO. XXIX

established by a 22-year-old
Associated Press
HARRISBURG, Pa. (A?) federal law to pay the costs of
- The nuclear reactor a nuclear accident .
"I've been here 20 years
, accident at Three Mile Island
already' has led to five and I don't remember
lawsuits filed in behalf of anything quite like Utis," said
area r esidents who daim the Ken Mulhulland, federal
crisis has hurt tneir clerk of coUl1s who received
bUsinesses, depressed values four of the suits. " I think
of their property and caused tllere will be more coming ,"
Raymond Hovis, a · York,
them mental and · bodily
Pa.,
lawyer , sued·on behalf of
harm .
all
the
people and businesses
And it1may take years to
resolve the legal issues within a five-mile radius of
growing out of the March 28 the plant.
uln terms of the hwnan
incident that caused the
element,
I don't know of
biggest scare in the history of
anything
like
it," he said. "I
this country's commercial
can see this thing going on for
nuclear energy program.
None of the class action - and let me stress this is
suits, which effectively just a guess - three to six
blanket all 636,000 people an~ years."
Named as defendants rn the
merchants living with 20
various
suits were:
miles of the plant, seeks a
General'
Public Utilities,
specific dollar amount in
total damages. Lawyers say the consortiwn that owns the
the hefty tab still is being plant; Metropolitan Edison
Co. , ·the plant's operator;
oomputed.
But Utree of the suits Babcock &amp; Wilcox Co., the
estimate damage will at least plant 's de si gner ; and
match the $560 million limit Catalytic Inc., the company

DR. KIT HEDGES, QIIROPRACTOR ·

ROLFS ... it shows you care.

Commissinnf"rs.

CETA. Thus, Massie was not
tot ally unprepared wh en
Vaughn made him his
executive assistant after only
Utr ee months on the job.
15lt was during his tenure
as Vaughn 's assistant that
Massie began to take an
active role in the overall
operation oi the transit
company.
He
helped
establish three new routes in
Athens and Hocking counties
and set guidelines for
supervision of operations of
Ut e tr ansit company.
Ali of this was done under
Ute watchful eye of Vaughn
who, in February of 1976,

Five lawsui-ts filed

MAYJST .

WOMEN'S ACCE50RIES - 2ND FLOOR

is

necessary to nrotect the

r eading the notiflcation,

stated they wished to review
Ute orders before making any
comment .
Warden OUrs and Virgil
Windon, . Chester Township·
Trustees, met with the
co~i~ioners
requesting
permtsston to p!ace 'two fuel
tanks in __a section of the
township bordering county
prooerty.

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 25, 1979

15 CENTS

.

ATHENS - The transition
from a $3.50 an hour bus
driver to top executive of a
• five county bus line wotild
have to be describe&lt;) as a
dizzying climb up for the
t'Orporate ladder· under any
circumstances.
Well, Dale Massie, 31, of
Wellston , made that climb in
about one year. He is tbe
executive director of the
Appalachian Ohio Rural
Transit Authority (AORTA).
Massie joined AORTA
April 4 as a federal
Comprehensive Employment
and Training Act (CETA)
participan t in the work
experience p ro~ram . On

OPENING TUESDAY,

you get the credit you deserve, get the credit card carrier
you deserve ·too.

Tupper s Pla,ins area

health and welfare of the
people of the state.
According to Ute EPA the.
connection ban shall remain
in effect until,( A) the
Tupper s Plains area is
eitablished as a sanitary
sewer dist rict and( B·)
contr acts are let for
constru&lt;.'tion of sewers forthe ·
entire area.

Massie makes big jump
. .

$72,621

And as they get it, they need •·
eredit card carrier
like Rolfs Doubl.e Attache. The
Attache protects
your cards with Rolfs exclusive Credit Guard , and gives
you plenty of room for photos, currency a11d co ina. All
wrapped in the warm look and feel of nne leather. So when

allowing, permitting, or
acce pti ng a,ny additional
pollution into waters of the
state resulting from any new
t'O nstruct ion_
The notification. further
stated that the soil in the area
is not suitable for on-lot
sewage
disposal
and .
prevention of pollution in the

Commissioners from the Ohio
Environmental
Protection
Agency.
The same notification was
sent to. the unincorporated
village of Tuppers Plains and
the Meigs County Health
Department.
The EPA directive stated
that the Meigs County Health
Department shall prohibit
directly
or
indirectly

e

! Area Deaths I

FRIDAY

SQUARE DANCE Friday 8
p.m. to 12:30 a.m. at Tuppers
Plains Elementary School
'with music by Blue Knob Expres.• Band. Sponsored by
Orange Fire Department.
Refreshments and a cake
walk.
,
· WESTERN SQUARE dance 8 p.m. to midnight Friday
at Recreation building, Royal
Oak Park. Callers, Chad
Johnson , . South Point; Bill
Bush, Jim · Briggs, Hun. tington, and .Ed Clark,
Jackson . Refreshments, All
Western Square dancers
welcome.:
SATURDl\V
DYESVILLE WOMEN'S
. Group. of Dyesville Church
\\ill hold a soup supper Satur.day beginning at 5:30p.m.;
public invited.
'

E.P A imposes ·b an in Tuppers Plains

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

TIIURSDAY
omo .NURSF:S' Assn. to
meet •. 7:30 p.m. at OU Inn ,
Athens. All registered nurses
invited.

You'll find a "c r~w" of

"The Friendly Bank "

Bobo, l!elhany Browll,
William Dee!, Ronald Den·
n•y, Layunie · Hutchison,
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Dlscharges,Aprll21
Thelma Johnson, Mrs.
Scott Allman, Dan Byler, Michael Lambert and
Admitted-John ·DeMoss,
Pomeroy.
Gertrude • Kess!ey Carnes, Ada Clarke, daughter, Shirley Lawson,
Andrews,' Pomeroy; Edna Denney, Leah John McGowan , Angela
Margaret Stevens, 'vinton; Etchmger, Martha E!kms, Rider, Barbara 'Schoolcran,
Milton Bailey, Vinton; Allen Lorena Hammond, Linda Carrie Stevens, Corralne
Mills, Syracuse; Christine Hammonds, Paul . Harris, . Stocky, Tam! Trace, Earnest
Kirkpatrick, Pomeroy; Mrs . Ronald Hawkms and Ward.
Homer Bradshaw, Pomeroy; daughter, Janet Htll, Tony
Blrtks, Aprti2Z
Helen George , Bidwell; Johnson, Laura Lovett , Carol
Mr. and Mrs. Keith' ArrChri•1ine Branham, Letart Masters, . Namm M&lt;•adows, ington, son, GaUipolis Ferry,
~· a ils; . Thelma
Chase , Lonene Metzler, Kathleen
Dlsebarges, Aprtl23
Albany.
Moody , Richard Moore,
Anthony Angelo, Bryan
Discharged-Jason Adams, Toma Petrie, Marvell Boggs, l,{ebell Bolts, Mrs.
Leona Hubbard. .
Qmllen, Mrs. Issac Rose and Richard. Borton and son,
son, . Joseph Rose , Alex Mabel Brewer; Mrs . William
Saunders, Margaret Smith, Quchanan and son, Sandra
Goldie Terry , Lori Warner, IJuci\I~Y,;, ~a!)hall Canaday,
Holzer Medical Center
Myrtle Wilson, Eva Woomer . Dipn Chaney, 'Donna Holley,
• rilscharg~s, Apr1120
Brian Johnson, Sue Ann
Births, Aprll2f
Virgil Booten, Flossie
Mr
.
and
Mrs.
Lowell
KAuff,
Sheil'a Lanham,
Boster, Virgil Brown, Donna
Beaver,
son,
Winfield,
W.
VA.
Donald
Merry, Edward
Denney, Jennifer Eisnaugle,
Mr.
and
.Mrs.
Gheron
Myers,
Charlotte
Ratliff, Guy
Connie Frishett, Sandra GarDurham,
son,
Pomeroy.
Rawlins,
James
Rhodes,
rison, James Gaskins, Mary
Mr
.
and
mrs.
Palph
Miller,
Marvella
Smith,
Kay
Whitt,
Grant , Randy Harold, Jr;
daughter
,
Oak
Htll.
Carla
Wooten.
'
.
: Peggy Hap e r , Brenda
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Ward, '
Births Aprll23
Herald, Ann Hunter, Frank
Mr. and 'Mrs. Charles
Ireland, Julius' Janey, Paula son, Gallipolis.
Discharges,
April:!%
Chambers,
son, Patriot.
Jewell , Mrs . Gary Lane and
Mrs.
Demus
Benedum
and
Mr.
and
Mrs
Issac Plants,
daughter, Kend9,1l Lemley ,
son, Elanore Bennett, Boyd . daughter, Letart.
Mrs . Daniel Lewis and son,
Opal Mink, Peggy Murphy,
Melissa . Phillips, Tra cy
?ickesn, Clayton Poling, Jr.,
Sharon · Roseberry, Joseph
· Shrader, Mrs. Clinton Smith,
Jr. and son, Nicky Smith, I
I
Angela Sprague, Charles
Straight, Paul Taylor, Randy
Burial will be in M•igs
J .S. DAVIS
Taylor, Shad Vandennark,
J. S. oavis, 79, Tuppers Memory Gardens . Friends
Naomi Wilcoxon, Marilyn Plains died at his residence may call at the Funeral
Williams.
Monday
following
an Home after noon on
Births, Aprll20
Wednesday. The fainily will
extended illness.
Mr. and Mrs. Marshall ArrMr. Davis was born at receive friends Wednesday
ington , daughter, Apple 'll!Urman, Ohio, the son of the and Thursday from 7 to 9.
·
Grove, W.Va .
late David W. and Anne
Mr. · and ' Mrs. James Davis. He was ·also preceded
Counts, son, Pomeroy
WILLIAM M.BOLIN
in death by one borther, D.
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Whitt, Harvey Davis.
William M. Bolin, 73, Mill
son, Bidwell.
Mr. Davis \vas a retired Street, Albany, died Monday
school administrator with 43 afternoon at Mount St.
years of service, having spent Mary's Hospital, Nelsonville, '
Mr. Bolin was born in
34 years in the .Eastern Local
Athens
County the son of the
&amp;hool District. He was a
(Continu ed from page I 1
late
Richard
and Mary Bolin.
percent ot the cost on member of the Tuppers He was also preceded in
conservation measures. He Plains Christian Church, a 50 death by a half-brother, Jerry
gave an application for year member of Centerville Brooks ,and one grandson,
participation to King , who Lodge 371, . F&amp;AM, of ROdney Galenttn: · Mr . Bolin
with Councilmen Carl Horky Thurman, member of was a retired employe of the ·
and Dewey Horton, hi s Guysville Minear Chapter railroad.
committae members, will 274, OES, the Ohio Education
He is survived by his wjfe,
prepare the application since Association and a past Bessie M. · Barnhouse Bolin,
conservation at village member of the National five dsughters, Mrs. Bill
buildings has been discussed Education Association. He (Betty j Voorhees, Crestline,
was the recipient of a
by officials for some time.
o.f recognition Ohio, Mrs. Cal (Mabel)
certificate
The application must be
Waterman, Canyon County,
completed by May 7. The from the Modem Woodmen of Calif ., Mrs . Sal (Mary)
committee will meet on tJre America. He ·was a graduate Conte, Denver, Colo., Mrs.
of Rio Grande College having
matter Thur sday night,
Rodney (Lois) Galentin,
Council also discussed the received his masters degree Baclltel and Debra Bolin at
· condition of the levy which, from Ohio State University. home, three sons, Cbarles
He is S!lfvived by his wife,
members said, is a dangerous
McLane Davis 1 one son Bolin, Athens, James Bolin,
Doris
area. No solutions on the
and daughter-in~aw, David . England, and Tony Bolin,
repair of It evolve~! .
Albany, 21 grandchUdren and
Attending the meeting were W. and Joyce Davis, one · six great grandchildren.
daughter,
Mrs.
Deryl
(Doris
Mayor Hoffman, ClerkFuneral services will be
Treasurer Gene Grate, and Ann) Well , Reedsville, one he!&lt;\ Thursday at2p.m. at the
council members, William grandson, David W. Davis, Jordan-Blgoiny
Funeral
Walters, HortOn, Horky, King Jr ., one granddaughter , Amy Home in Albany with the Rev.
Lee AM Well, one cousin,
and Charles Mullen.
Ray Price officiatlrtg , Burial
Ruth Jones, Columbuli.
be in Athens County
.will
Funeral services will be
held Friday at 2 p.m. at the Memory Gardens. Friends
White Funeral Home in may call at the Funeral
COOlville with Pastor Eugene Home Wednesday from 2 to 4
END'MARRIAGES
· Underwood offi c iating. and 7 to 9.
r
In Meigs County Common
Pleas Court two divorces
were granted and three
others were dissolved.
Richard E. Phillips was
granted a divorce from
Barbara G. Phillips and
Donald E. Stobart from
Peggy Stobart.
I Former Bradshaw Office).
Marriages dissolved were
181
Second
St.
Middleport, 0 .
Esther Bonn Simpson and
Phone 992-6141 or 593-6886 (Athens, 0.)
James .E. Simpson; Roy F.
OFFICE HOURS
Parker and Mary E. Parker;
Michael V. Gardner and Alice
Tuesday 11 A.M. to s P.M.
Faye Gardner.
Thursday 11 A.M. to s P .M.

..

VATICAN CITY (AP) -In his six montm in the
ehair of St. Peter, Pope John Paul II has been basking
in a wave of personal popularity unseen since the reign
of Pope John XXIII·more than IS years ago. "The Pope
by Night, with Discounts for Tour Groups," jokingly
headlined the leftist magazine Espresso in an article
discussing the "boom of Wojtyla.'·' the pope's Polish
familyname.
.
Despite unchecked terrorism and mounting street
crime which the pope himself has decried, tourism Is
up 10 percent this year in Italy. The first non-Italian
pope in 455 years seems as much an attraction as the
Colosseum and tbe Roman Forum.

O..eating will be known
NEW YORK (API - ?resident Carter declared
today that the United States will be able to tell whether
·the Russia ns are cheating O!' a new strategic anns
limitation treaty from the moment it is signed.
Campaigning for support of tbe . yet-to-be completed treaty, carter told the American Newspaper
Publishers Association lp a prepared speech that tbe
nation Is faced with the choice of a possible imperfect
tteaty or "a dark nightmare of unrestrained arms
competition."

1
•

for
plant
responsible
maintenance.
Generally, the suits claim
negligence or defects in . the
plant 's design, operation and
maintenance
as
the
accident's cause 'and insist
the owners are liable for
damages.
Low level radiation has
been drifting from the plant
sinc e a series of hwnan and
mechanicial blunders
severely damaged a nuciear
reactor and almost .caused a
catastrophe.
For 11 days, Gov. Dick
Thornburgh advised
pregnant women . and preschool children to leave ·if 1
Utey lived within five iniles of
Ute plant. An estimated 75,000
others evacuated on. their
own ,
One suit filed in Dauphin
eounty eom1 asks that tbe
crippled facility be dosed for ·
good and that its owners be
forced to pay [or medical
treatment of the 636,000
people living in a 20-rnile
radius for the next 20 years.
The suit claims that
be
resid ents . should
reimbursed for medical
treatments, asking that thoSe
nearby be checked lour times
a year lor the next two
decades to detect possible
cancers resulting from ·
radiation .
The four suits filed in
federal court daim that
homes have dropped in value

resigned as executive
director to take a similar
position with a company in
Zanesville·
It 's understandable that
Massie has a soft spot for
CETA participants, For had ·
it not been for CETA;Massie
doesn't know where he'd be
working today. ,
.
From the time he
graduated in 1975 until hired
by CETA-in 1977 Massie held
several jobs, none of which
were remotely close to
fulfilling
his
original
ambition of working in public
administration . .
He has several CETA
participants on board now.
Their
duties
include
mechanics, driving , offi ce
work and admin istration .
Massie feels that being the
head of a rural transit system
is just as important as having
the same job in an urban
area . Especially in Athens ,
Hocking, Meigs, Perry and
Vinton counties, beca use
AORTA is the only Io&lt;:ai
regular daily transportation
:.tvailable in those eoWlties.
In addition there is the
specter of the every present
energy crisis and the
constant seeking of financial
assistance .
CETA pro~r am that
Massje was enrolled in is
funded with Balance of State
funds. Governor James A.
Rhodes is the prime sponsor
of the Balance of State, which
includes Athens County.

Rampaging river keeps rising

n\e

Reward
GaVID
•
workers

Three employees of the
General James M. Gavin
Plant were recently rewarded for their contributions in
the "Operations Improvement" program of the
American Electric Power
System.
They were Charles R
Alkire, Racine ; Vinson S.
Jarrell, Jr., Point Pleasant,
and Ralph L. ' Matthews,
Pomeroy.
because no one wants to buy
Matthews has since transthem and live next to the ferred to tbe Mountaineer
disabled plant .
Power Plant at New Haven,
W. Va.
Awards were given to employees by American Electric Power Company for
ideas which improve safety,
operating ·conditions, or
reduce operating expenses.
These innovations often
result in financial savings
being passed along to the consumer.
. The ideas are published in
a system-wide magazine so
other system facilities can
•· · benefit as well ,The awards
were presented by Mr. J. W.
Lizon, Gavin Plant Manager.

Meigs man gets
hospital term
R.E.BOYLE
PROMOTION .
ANNOUNCED ,
R. E,
Boyle has been named
redu ction planl operalions
manager lor the Ravenswood Works of Kaiser
Alumnlnum and Cbemlcal
Corparation. He had been
production
superin·
tt•ndent ,
hot
metal
operations, at ,Kaiser
· Aluminum 's Chalmette,
Louisiana, locat.lon. Boyle
joined Kaiser Ahuillnmn
at Raveaswood.in 19C5 as a
reduction plant engineer.
He
held ·
various
engineering positions ; In
Nov e·mber,

197~,

he

bt•came chief engineer.

gives some lasi minute instructions to Mark Brockway, of
Athens, who is currently a driver in the CETA program
under the Title II work experi ence program.

. AORTA DIRECTOR - Dale Massie, the executive
dtrector of AORTA, a former driver on the CETA payroll,

Assorlated Press
The rampaging Red River,
bolstered by' new rains and
even snow, climbed toward
record heights as fatigued
volunteers plugged leaky
dikes and reinforced piled
sandbags, eroding after eight
days of severe flooding .
uThe wear on the people is
a little visible, but morale. is
up and we'll fight for two
more days/' said Jay Graba ,

assistant flood control
coordinator at Grand Forks ,
N.D., where the Red was now
expected to crest at 49.5 feet
on Thursday or Friday. flood
stage is 28 feet.
In Mississippi, Hood waters
from the Pearl River
slackened and oHicials
predicted some of the 4,000
persons who fled Colwnbia,
Miss., might start returning
home Thursday,
The Army Corps of
Engineers said the flooding in
Ute Red River Valley that
separates North Dakota and
Minnesota will be the most
expensive in

the area's

history. Preliminary damage
estimates for North Dakota
and Minnesota total $45.7
million, with 425,000 acres in
North Dakota and 274,000 in
Minnesota under water, the
corps said. ·
The East Grand Forks,
Minn., area received 2 more

inches of unneeded moisture
Tuesday [rom a mixture of
:11ow and raln.
About 1,000 workers in East
Grand Forks and its sister
eity , Grand Forks, N.D., built
new dikes Tuesday and

8 US has minor
fire Tuesday
The
Pomeroy
Fire
Department was called · to
Bailey Run Road at 4:11p.m.
Tuesday where a school bus
had caught fir e.
The generator had caught
fire damaging wiring under
Ute hood . There w..-e light

Meigs Prosecutor Fred W:
Crow, Ill, reports that Kim
Hayman, charged . with
unlawfully using a motor
vehiele belonging to another damages . There w89 one
person, has been sentenced to. child on the bus at the time of
an indefinite commitment to Ute incident .
At 5:54 p.m. Tuesday, the
a Veterans Administration
·Hospital in Chillicothe for emergency squad went to
·treatment in lieu of serving a · Fisher St . for Patty Landaker
six month to live .year sen- wbo ·had received a possible
broken arm in a fall. She was
tence in a penal institution.
The pro'l"cutor aiBo repo(ls taken to Veterans Memorial
that Donald E. Guinther en- Hospital wh ere she was
·tered a plea of l!lnocent to an admitted .
1\t 7:32 p.m. the fire
arson charge . aftpr being
·recently indicted by tbe department went to near the
January tertii grand jury. He · Jack Ward cafe off the Route
was released under $1 ,000 · 7bypass to extmqmsh a brush
ftre .
recognizance bond.

reinforced those that were
sodden and giving way .
Hundreds of volunteer s
remained on duty throughout
Ute night, walking lonely
patrols along tbe miles of
dikes, searching lor weak
SJXItS. Others remained in
flood control centers, ready

to respond if a break
occurred.
"There's a bunch of crabby
people. They're overly tired
and they 're working hard,
trying to save what they've

got,"said Jan Murray , an
East Grand Forks liquor
store owner doing a good
businss.
Th e
Red
and
its
overflowing tributaries also
were spreading out for miles
in the flat Red River Valley,
isolating
farms
and
inundating scores of homes.
Officials said East Grand
Forks now has six miles of
earth and sandbag dikes.
Some 1,400 people, almost all

in Grand Forks, have left

their homes because of water
2 feet to 10 feet deep.
In Colwnbia , Miss., Sue
King , a civil defense worker
sald the Pearl River had
dropped to 26.7 feet by
Tuesday night, still almost 10
feet above flood stage but
down from Ute Saturday crest
of 27.6 feet.
"No rain has fallen this
evening, ~' Mrs. King said.
"It 's pretty quiet around
here."

Shortages may be .worsened
'
deliberately • .••Schlesinger. ·
WASHINGTON (AP)- An
· anticipated summer gasoline
shortage may be made worse
deliberately to keep heating
oil flowing to homes next
winter,
says
Energy
Secretary
Jame s
R.
&amp;hie singer.
Schlesinger said the
administration may soon
have to take steps to see that
erode oil normally deslined
for relining into gasoline is
used to make home heating
oil instead.
Meanwhile,
an
administration proposal to
give the president standby
authority to save fuel by
ordering weekend closings of
gasoline .stations has been
turned down by an important
House committee.
&amp;hlesinger was scheduled
to appear today before a
House-Senate
Ecohomie
subcommittee chaired by
Sen. Edward M. KeMedy, 0Mass. , to defena the
president 's recent decision to
· lift price controls on
domestically produced oil.
Other witnesses called
includ¢&lt;1 Charles L. &amp; hpltze,
chairman of the Council of
Economic Advisers ; Alice
Rivlin, director of . the
Congressional Budget Office;

have yet to be worked out ,
The steps to ensure an
adequate supply of heating oil
will beg in with "polite
co nversation s" with oil
companies but could end up
with orders to refineries to
produce less gasoline and
more heating oil, Schlesinger
said Tuesday :
Because of the nearly
three-mqnth loss of Iranian
oil, home heating oil supplies
are now at critically low
levels, &amp;hlesinger said.

next wlnter .

Youths injured
in 'cycle ~eck
Two Patriot youths were
injured during a double
motorcycle accident Tuesday
on SR 141, four and fivetenths of a mile south of SR
233, at 6:40 p.m .
Th e Galli a-Meigs Post, .
Highway Palrol, reports that
motorcycles operated by
Ronnie Bevan, 14, Patriot,
and . Robert Bevan , 15,
Patriot, were south bound on
141.

Officers report that the
cycle operated by Ronnie
~ nd
several
private Bevan struck the second bike
while pulling along side.
ecomomists.
· Kenn edy sa id today's
Robert Bevan was thrown
hearing would "look at the from the cycle, which came
whole range of direct and to rest on the left side of t he
indirect economic· impacts of roadway .
oil decontrol" and "how any
Ronnie Bevan was ejected
revenue collected through a from his cycle as it passed off
windfall profits tax, if it is the right side of 141. ·
enacted , will be used ."
Both youths displayed ·
Carter has proposed using visible signs of injury and
some of the money from his were tr.anspotted 'by the
proposed tax to help low-. Gallia Volunteer Squad to
income people pay heating Holzer Medical Center.
Ronnie
Bevan
was
bills. -But &amp;hlesiger said
Tuesday specifics of the plan admitted for treatment of

\

" The message is clear ... he
said. " We are not going into
next winter's heating season
with the risk that homes that
need oil for heat will be
short ."
Testifying before the House
COinmerce energy and power
subcommittee, Schlesinger
said that although decontrol
is needed to ease potential
lon g range oil shortages, it
won 't do anything to avoid
possible heating oil shortages

•

multiple abrasions and
contusions and is listed in fair
condition.
Robert Bevan was treated
for multiple abrasions, and
released .
·
Both were cited on charges
of operating a motor vehicle
without a license .
Both drivers were dtOO
following a two-vehicle
collision in Meigs County on
SR 7, at CR 21, at 3:20 p.m.
Officers report that a so.uth
bound a uto operated by
Freda Swan, 40, Columbus,
had slowed in trafffic to tum .
off 7.
Asouth bound semi tractortrailer driven by John Gill, ·
23, Patriot, failed to stop and
struck the Swan auto in the
rear.

..

Gill was cited on a charge
of assured clear distance.
Swan was cited on a charge of
driving under susi&gt;ension. •
There was moderate
damage to the Swan auto,
minor damage to the · Gill
vehicle.

�3- The Daily Sentmel. M1ddleport-Pomeruy , 0 , We&lt;lne&lt;&lt;i"Y· Apri12!i, 1 !11~
2- The Da ily Sentmel, Mi ddl eport-Pornt•roy, 0 ., Wednesday, Aprl\ 25. 1979

HUl.M£

Editorial

N .E R . 79

' '

Pirates snap losing streak, rout Reds, 9-2

_W ashington
By Clarence
Report Miller

E1r1&gt;. •o tZrwo~n\ ~ ~ .-rw;G~
....• .

•

'

• •
opmiODS

CINCINNATI I AP I Pittsburgh left fi elder John
Milner: on a personal hlttilig
t~ar With four home runs in
mne gam e, fe lt before
Tuesday night 's 9-2 victory
?ver th~ Cincinnati Reds that
1t was tune for the Pirates to
break out of 1ts six-game
losing streak,
" The enthusiasm was
different
around
the
clubhouse," said Milner who
droye in two runs with a horne
run , double and single. " You
could feel the adrenahn
Howing'· after we came here
from Houston . We lost th ere,
but we played good baU ."

•

COMMENTARY
Donald F. Graff

Peace on the range
By Don Graff
It was touc h a nd go the r e for a tune . but it looks hke the
sovereign s ta te of Montana and the lmper10us city of New
York have settled their diHe rence s without resort to a
tra nscontlnental range war.
And a strange conflic t that would have been, waged at

.'
.
.
·
:
·

s uperma rket checkout counters and travel agencies.
In case you mtssed any of the preliminaries. 1t began
with Ne w York 's •consumer affairs authorities in a state of
high dudgeon s uggestmg New Yorkers pledge themselves
to .. beefless Wednesdays" to combat high meat prices.
It is ques tionable to what extent the populace of the
metropolis took note of the call - after all, what's in a
particular day when you can't come up with the
downpa yment on a steak to start w1th. But Gov . Thomas
Judge of Montana did . Growers in his major beefproducing state, among others, make the case that
deliberately curtatled demand is not the way to increase

supply and that the moderately effective consumer boycott
of the early '70s has had not a little to do with the th1nnmg
of herds that 1s a factor in today's short and high-priced
beef supply.
·
The governor wasn 't ~mihng When he said New York was
drawing a bead on Montana's economy. He fired off a

, protest to New York's Mayor Edward Koch, warning of
· rf taliatton - a

toUri~t

boycott of the city. (New Yorkers, to

cr~dit, relrain~d

: their

from making a case that it's not

easy always being at their tidiest and most courteous to
: entertain all those visitors. )
Equally qutck on the draw when he spots an economic
· threat at 40 paces or 2,000 m1les, the mayor fired back an
assurance that he personally loved meat, indulged
throughout the -week, wanted to hear no more of boycotts

· and , anyway, 1t was all the fault of price-gouging

WASHINGTON (AP)-The
Carter
administration 's
&amp;ruggle to promote change m
southern Africa 1s undergoing
a tough test in the Rhodesian
election.

For sure, blacks are
winning a share of power. But
the whites, who account for
only 4 percent of the
population, have reserved for
themselves the key posts in
rwming the country as well
as 28 of the 100 seats in the
legislature.
" It 's a step toward the
ending of white minority

selling beef, New York is still buying and eatlng, and for African Affairs. "But it
middlemen are presumably still out there gouglng. It all may also be , simply because
goes to show that :
of the manner in which the
a) Economics can make strange dinner companions;
election is carried out, a step
b) One man' s supply ts another's demand;
closer to chaos, a step closer
c) When in doubt , punch the middleman :
to
a larger war.''
d) If you can't make both ends meat, try a little public
The
election in the
relations on one of them ;
breakaway British colony, to
e) All of the above.
be known now as ZimbabweRhodesia, was arranged by
Fuel for 'hought
white Prime Minister lan
Some airlines are running short of fuel as a consequence Smith, who has formed a
of curtailed Mideast oiJ production, right?
partnership with three
The Arab countries are the world's leading oil producers popular black leaders,
for export, right?
Abel
So an Arab atrltne, one would think, should be spared mcludin g Bishop
Muzorewa .
fuel problems.
Muwrewa was assured of
Wrong . Alia, the Royal Jordanian Airline, IS delaying
inauguration of a scheduled new flight Linking Amman and becoming the nation 's next
Houston because of fuel uncertamty .
·
prime minister when his
Now Jordan itself is not a producer, but it has been in the party, the United African

forefront of the Arab solidarity movement with its big-time National - Council, easily
brothers during the Egyptian-Israeli treaty crisis.
The least it might expect would be that the blood of Arab swept a 'majority of the 72
seats
brotherhood would prove thicker than oil, but apparently parliamentary
reserved
for
blacks
in
last
not.
week's election.
The United Stat "s is
The last list?
SUSpiCIOUS
of
this
Just when 1t appeared that JUSt about every conceivable arrangement , and so is
category of non~ssentlal infonnation of the type had been Britain . Together, they have
januned between hard covers, along comes another "list" tried to promote black rule
boOk.
This one, the publisher infonns, catalogues ''The Worst' ' throughout southern Alr1 ca.
of everything from 1ce cream (Cheddar Chip) to sexual

·

Apparently missing from the listing is 1dentiflcation of
the worst waste of publishing eUort and reader time, but
that is easily remedied :

List books.

Names •••
in the news
uONDON (AP)- Ex-Beatle Ringo Starr says he nearly dlea
when he collapsed in his Monte Carlo home two weeks ago and
later underwent surgery to remove part of his intestines.
"I had a good look at death in the face . I was convinced this
was it," Starr, 38, sa1d in an interview published in Wednesday
editions of the Sun.
"It all went hack to whep I had peritonitis (inflammation of
abdominal membrane that causes severe internal pain and
fever) as a child. Suddenly everything twisted up inside me,"
· Starr said in the interview at his London home.
was to1d that another minute or two and it was nearly curtains," he said of his collapse.
1

'(

MEMPIDS, Tenn. (AP ) - A federal judge has entered a
default judgment against Jerry Lee Lewis in a suit filed by a
former member of the entertainer's band who was wounded at
Lewis' home in 1976.
In a written order issued Tuesday, Judge Robert McRae Jr.
of U.S. Qistrict Court said a hearing will be scheduled to determine the amount of damages Lewis must pay Norman Owens
·a former guitar player for Lewis.
'
Owens and his wife, Jacqueline , sued Lewis and his wife
Jaren Elizabeth, in September 1977 for $400,000 in damages:
Owens was shot in the chest at Lewis' Collierville, Tenn.,
home.

'

WASIDNG TON (AP) - Former senator Edward Brooke, RMass ., says it's utoo soon for vice presidential speculation,"
but he's not discounting a bid for some other unspecified office.
Meanwhile, the New York Daily News said in today's
editions that Brooke, 59, would soon marry Ann Fleming, 29,
daughter of the mayor of St. Martin , the French island in the
Caribbean. Brooke could not be lmmediately reached for comment on the report.
·
I Brooke, defeated in his try for a third term last fall, appeared before a Senate banking subcommittee Tuesday to ask
for an increase in the budget allotment or federal housing subsidies. Brooke chairs the National bow Income Housing
Coaliton.
AIR FORCE ACADEMY, Colo. (AP) - Former President
Gerald Ford has been sharing his perspectives on the Middle
East, arms control and other issues during a two-day visit to
the U.S. Air Force Academy.
Ford lectured at some classes during the visit, his first
teaching stint at one of IlK: nation's military academies. He
told his hosts Tuesday that he has lectured at 50 colleges since
leaving the White House in 1976.

+

Milner 's two-run homer in

the fifth inning and . Dave
Parker's solo shot in the nmth
keyed a 17-hit attack for
Pittsburgh .
"This is not uie ftrst time
I've got off to ·a good &amp;art,"
Milner said, talking ahout his

Bolena® Mulching Mower'•
Sell-propelled model cuts
and recut cltpp1ngs rnta
fme mulch wt1ich fertilizes
lawn • Cuts 22" swath •
Front wheel dn11e • Convenrent wash -out port lor

Health Review

easy clean-u p

says it is so. No, she said,
secretaries do not agree that
their careers are ~t a dead

end
Th a t

·

notion

was

disseminated this week in a
statement by the National
Commission on

Working

Women, which ushered in
National Secretaries Week
. . with responses from a survey
of 19,000 "secretaries."

But were they really
secretaries? ~t~rs . Hamby,
preside_l}t_ of the National
Secretaries
Association,
belie ves many responses
were from clerks rather than

secretaries. It happens all the
time, she says
Clerks,
it
seems ,
arbitrarily boost themselves
mto the higher classification ,
and in doing so confuse the
definition . The title has lost
prestige, she says. Even top
professionals have lost pride.
~~ women

now say 'I 'm only

a secretary' m the same way
they orice said 'I'm only a
housewife,"' she declared. It
disturbs her. ~'he abhors the
tendency to denigrate one's
own occup3tion.

"U a secretary is not just
marklng time and waiting
from payday to payday, but
instead works at her job as a
career, I can't believe she
thinks of it as a deadend ,"
said Mrs. Hamby , who is a
CPS.
A CPS' A Certified
Professional ~ecretary ,
earned m a two-day, six-part
examination

encompassing

behavioral science, business
law,

economics,

management,
accounting,
decision-making,
administration.
Mrs. Hamby, mother or
three, 34 years a professional,
demonstrates her

,,

Utetr version of 1 'Who's on
f1rst ?''- only t his one wasn 't

very

.,

e1ther

- the Camp Dav1d accord."
But there was still some
confusion over the detail s
alter 28 mmutes of animated
talk
"After you allow the man to
second base, how do you call
him out for not going back to
first base ?" Torre wondered

aloud .
This was the sttuation : The

Mets had runners at first and
third when Lee Mazzil\i hit a
t1y ball to r1ght that Jack ·

a

long
.

"They say streaks follow
streaks . Maybe now we' re

ready to play the kind of ball
we shou ld be playmg "
Parker sa1d

typically start out slowly but
are now rea dy to swap t heir

"We"ve had good pitchi ng
:md

lackod timely hitting, or

when we had . Jutting we

laeked pitching Tonight we
put1t all together "
P1ratc Manager Ch Ul' k
Tanner sa 1d he wa sn't/
sur pr ised at th e way

Piltsburgh ltn ally bro ke out
of its s\ ump .

Cl~ rk appeared to catch.
Hebner , halfway to second on

decision over Allanta and
Mon treal whipped San Diego
&gt;-1. Th e Houston-Chi cago

the play, retreated to ftrst
onl y to ~ind Mazztllt waVIng
at htm to r everse directwns.

BASEBALL

game was postponed by rain .

Philiics 7, Dodgers 6
Relief pitcher Rlln Reed
doubled with two outs in tbe
lOth inning and scored on
Larry Bow a's single to lead
Phila delphi a over Los
Angeles. Reed's run capped a
for what San Francis co mght of comebacks for bOth
thought was- a double play teams. The Dodgers built a 3'
The Met s, how ever , had 0lead, fell"behlnd 6-3 and tied
different 1deas, c\aimmg the it ·in · the e1ghth With three
dropp ed ball made both runs to. send the game into
Hebner and Mazz1\h safe .
extra innings.
lloth teams howled and the
Dodger Manager Tommy
wnpll'es ~ working in plat-e Lasorda was ejected in the
of regulars who are involv8d midst of a five-run rally by
m a contract dispute - Phil adelphia in the third
vac illat ed. Finally, th ey inning Laslirda questioned a
rule d Mazz illi out and decision by plate umpire Bob
ordered Hebner back to first Nelson , who called Pete Rose
It hardly sati sfied either sa fe at horn e on Mike
Torre or Altobelli , each of Sclumdt's single . Rllse slid in
whom filed a protest.
and was tagged by catc~er
Thing s were a little calmer Steve Yoager . .
.
· Cards 6, Braves S
around th e rest of toe
National League Tue sday
Ted Sm1rnons belted a ·solo
mght, as Pittsburgh routed h0me run ii1 the loth mnmg .
Cincmnati 9-2 ; Philadelphia off relief ace . Gene Garber,
edged Los Angeles H in 10 pacing St.: Louis over Atlanta.
mnmgs: St. Louis took a 6-5 The victory went to Cardinal
Now 1t appeared that Clark
had dropped the ball.
Umpire Phil Lospitalier
was stiil signahng 'out ' when ·
Clark relayed the ball to B11l
Madlock, who stepped on first

reliever
)'..jttel),.
who .
alS&lt;r
beat Mark
the Braves
in relief
in a 10-inning gru.ne Monday
night.
.
E!&lt;pos 5, Padres .1
. Ross Grimsley hurJed a sixhitter and EU1s Valentine
drove in two runs With a
hof11er and a single to pace
Montreal over Sao Diego.
After Valentine 's leal\off
homer in th e second inning:
the Expo s added three runs
off San Diego's star leftbander, Randy Jones. It was
more th an enough for
Gronsley.

Reg ... 5323 .50
Now ... $283.50

.SAVE .......'40.00
Offer Good Now
Thru Mav 1

.

WILKINSON
Small Engine s
Sales &amp; Service
49Blocust St.

Middleport, 0 .
992 ·3092

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Mi nnesot a
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Tuesday's Games

Cleveland 7, Ml nnesot8 2
. D etroi t a t Milwauk ee, ppd .,
ra m
.
Tor on to 2. Texas 0
Kan sas C1t y 5, Chi c a~o 0
Baltimor e 7, Cali fornta 2
New York 3, Oakland 1
Boston 4, Seattle 3, 12 in ·

• Fisliing Tackle
and Rods
and Reels
• ,Guns and
Reloading
• ·Ba II Gloves
·· Camping
Equipment
••Archery
• Indoor Games
••we have Gill
Certificates
601 Main St.

Pt. Pleasant, W.Va.

n1ngs

Wednesday's Games

Mi nnesota (Hartzell 0-0)
at Cl eveland (Wilkin s O· ll
Detroit (Wilc ox 2·0) at
M ilwa uk ee (Caldwell J. J),
l nl
·
Toronto (Lemon gel lo 0·2)
at Te xas ( Jenkins 4-0L (n )
Chicago ( Kra vec 0· 2) a t
Kansa s Cit y (Gura 1·2l. Cnl
Ba1t1more (Stone J. J ) at
California (Tanana 2.2), (r1J
New Yor k (Figueroa 2 I) at
Oakland ! Minetto o.o). tnl

Bos ton (Wrtght 0-0) at

Seatt le IMcla uqhl i n J.O) , (n)

BOAT
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992-6681

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~''~~~P~a
lVf~b@DiJ~~ ~

Me1gs trav~ls to Ravenswood tomght.
Linescore :
M
:.lJO 001 0-3 7 0
,J 001 201 x-4 6 Owens and
Venoy, Edwards (6 ) .
Music, Swan (6, wp ) and

Mo ael

$27Sf'
The Friendly
Little Store
Witti A Big
Big Selection!

break loose pretty soon ··

as he went along ."

Meet yOur kitchen:

SAVE 16.69
ONE cHAISE LOUNGER
AND lWO lAWN CHAIRS
MULTI.toLOR

-·-

streak," he said . " We had to

Teaford
ari~ Cardone.
J . Wayland
and · T.. l-~~~~j~~~~,
Wayland.

LAWN FURNITURE
SET
•

Sun-

erratic, he' was a httle htgh,"

sa1d Tan ner. "He got better

season although the b1g lead
tougher "
Hobinson, m. scattermg 10 his tearrunates gave him
hit s, seemed to get stronger made it a n easy game.
·' We were close in every
as the ~rune prog ressed.
"At th e beginnmg he was game d urin g our losing

I .inescore:

Juniors· 5 To 15
Missy • 8 To 18
Extra Large • 32 To 46
ON SALE WED. THRU SUNDAY

•

Ro binson sau.ltt was not his
best performance of · the

BY GREG RAILEY
3-3 tn the . top of the Si xth
The Meigs ·Marauders Ohlinger led off with a single,
played errorless hall and and Mike Triplett singled
Tom Owens turned in a fine him to third Roger Carson
mound performance last then stepped to the plate to
mght, but the Marauders fell pinch hit for the injured Mark
to host Jackson 4-3 in a real Venoy and quickly-stroked a
struggle.
run-sconng single.
A surprise squeeze bunt by
Meigs threatened in · the
M1ke Cosby in the bottom of seventh when Taylor singled
the sixth inning broke a 3-3 and advanced to third on a
deadlock and provided the sacrifice and groundout . But
margin of victory Cosby had the Mar~ud e rs just couldn 't
a two-strike count on hun, push the run home.
.
and then placed a perfect
Meigs left numerous runbunt down the ftrst base line. ners stranded' on base all
Meigs got off to a 2~ start evening.
by plaltng two runners in the
Owens fanned mne Irontop of the f1rst on a single by men and walked only two
Steve Ohlinger. Cliff Ken- while yieldmg just six hits.
• nedy led off the inning by Torn Music and Dave Swann
bemg hit by a pitch, and ad- combinedtofannine alsoand
vanced to third on con- walk only two with Swann
secutive walks to Chris getting (he win.
Taylor and Greg Becker.
Ohlinger led the Meigs atAfter a fielder 's choice and tack with two singles while
a strike out, Ohlinger drilled Triplett had a double and
hissingle.
single. &lt;;arson, Becker, and
Jackson got one run back in Taylor each added a single.
the third on a triple by Cosby,
Manering .(ed the winners
and then in the fo~rth went with two singles while Cosby
ahead 3-2. TWo s1ngles, a hild a triple and that perfect
walk, a stolen base, and . buni.·
another good bunt accounted
for.those two Jackson runs ·
Meigs knotted the score at ·

reserves

,S
.M

weather act ivities

THREE PIECE PATIO

off ensively

jo b,

defensively."
Tarm er has been preachmg
the theor y or positive tlunking
the last se veral days.
" If you keep thinking
positive .. . you 'll have more
good dav s than had days."

Tanner sa1d " lf you s1art
pressing, you make your job

AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST

Kent Wolfe led the winners
with two singles while Cardone ~nd Co\lins had the only
other two Southern hits .
Terry Wayland led Meigs
with two .singles while
Richard Dean, Harvey Whitlatch, and · Rao.dy.· Murray
. ea.cli had a single. M~igs is
now 3-2 on the seasoo,

DENIMS! POLYESTERS!
TWILLS! SHEETING! SEE-·--·

break

~l y ga mes schedul'ed

six .

Our Entire Stock On Sale!
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~·o u

Yor k, (n )

BY GREG BAILEY
The Southern 'reserves
raised their record to 2-ll on
the year and played perfect
defense in whipping the host
Meigs Marauder Reserves
last night, 2-ll.
Dale Teaford fanned two
and walked three to p1ck up
the win.
The only runs came in the
top of the sixth inning.
Southern bunched three of its
four hits with Kent Wolfe
leading things off with a
single. Paul Cardone added
another single and Jay Rees
walked to load the bases
Mike Collms then stepped
to the piate, and with two
strikes lashed a double over
the ftrst baseman's head .
Jeff Wayland did an admirable job, but took the loss,
striking out four and walking

25% OFF

"That 's the way

out - everybody did their

Squeeze hunt heats Meigs

~~~~~~~~~00~~~0~~~~~ ·

wa· r1d

't

to

Costello out ther e, " quipped
New York infielder Richie
Hebner after watching the
act at Shea Stadium Tuesday
night during the Mets' J0-3
victory over the Giants.
Th e discussion between the
two about a btzarre pl ay at
first base ended m what

HEALTH

8erry s

funn y

manager.
" It was like Abbott and

Buy Now &amp; Save

Business mirror
'
NEW YORK (AP)
Beverly Hamby says she does
not believe it, even if the
Umted States government

By KEN RAPPOPORT
- AP Sports Writer
Joe Torre or the New York
Mets an d Joe Altobelli of the
'San FranciSco G1ants played

Torre call ed ''a compromi se

l

losmg ~t rea k for
wmning streak.

.

'

nothing
like it.

.

and trtple tu go w1th h1s home
nm , sa1d hts output was onl y
" SO;SO considerm g how I've
been goU}g ''
He sai.d the P1rat es

Ump:i re dispute mars
Mefs-Giant contest

There's

Struggle undergoes big test

middlemen who come between producers and consumers.
And wouldn 't the governor please join the mayor for
rule,'' says Richard Moose,
dinner, the menu to feature New York-cut steaks?
assi&amp;ant
secretary of state
So there you have 1t. Montana ls still producing and ·

technique (not specified) .

Well intentioned but sadly those of U. S. civil servants.
la cking in performance, - Political motivatioll!' are.
intern ational banks have often Involved in awarding
been a concern o[ mine since assistance for many of the
I first carne to Congress . As a larger projects funded by the
country we have been a banks. Public officials aiid
prunary sponsor of these their friends tend to reap .
mstitutions for many years; much of the financial rewa~il ·
with
such
m my JUdgement too many! associated
The expressed mission of projects. In effect the rich get
the international banks - to richer and the poor get
help less developed nations poorer.
-A number of the projects
help themselves, is not being
funded
are extravagant and
met in many instances .
unnecessary,
and fail to meet
Ideally the rnon1es provided
such international banks as the basic needs of the people
the World Bank, the African they were intended to serve .
Development Bank, the Asian In one unn~med Latin
Development Bank, and the American country, the banks
Inter-American Development funded a swimming pool
B'ank are to help truly needy complex more elaborate than
nations
enhance
their might be found in most
standard of living; to build affluent communities of
new highways, new housing , developed countries such as
new hospitals for their the United States.
- Many of the banks
populations. Instead much of
provide
their employees low
the financial assistance
interest
mortgage
loans from
provided these banks is being
frittered away on internal the international assistance
operating costs. High salaries 1hey receive. As of last June,
and high life styles have the World Bank ahd 669
Their ftrst target is Rhodesia. leader , said he was seems the government has become the order of the day housing loans outstanding to
The Thtrd World is solidly impressed with the large dev1sed tmaginative, for many of these institutions. employees, as well as 262
behind the guerrillas who are turn out. " Despite the concrete and complete plans
This year · we as a nation other loans to staff members :
operating under the haMer of terrorism and confusion in to allow the electtons to go are providing 2.5 billion all at rates well below the
the Patriotic Front and are the coWltry," he said, "it forward successfully."
dollars worth of aSsistance to conunerc1al market.
The list of abuses goes on
trying to gain power in
the international banks. We
and
on ; but I will stop here
Salisbury through force. The
have little if any c.ontrol over
with
the pledge that as -a
election, therefore, has
where this money ultunately
virtually no international
goes. In fact, much of it finds member of the House
support.
.
1ts way into the hands of Appropriations Committee, I
Secretary of State Cyrus
governments totally alien to will cOntinue to do all I can to
Vance, Moose and others who
our
national
interests. cut· the assistance our
By Dr. Lamar Miller
have had a hand in shaping .
Countries such as VIetnam, country provides these
U.S. policy under President
Cuba, Uganda, and Angola, institutions. Last year as
OU College of Osteopathic Medicine are
Carter beheve a civil war
past recipients of many of you may recall, I
might be inevitable unless the
assistance from these banks, authored an amendment
Patriotic Front has a voice in
Furthermore, these which would have cut nearly
NON-TRAUMATIC BACK ACHE
establishing a black majority
institutions
go virtually 600 million dollars from the
QUESTION: I have been having pains in the lower part of
unaudited in their spending of appropriations f..- the Inter·
govermnent.
But opinion in the United my hack lately, but cannot recall injurying it. What could be American aid dollars and American Development Bank
some of the possible causes of my problem?
States, particularly in
have continually resisted any and the World Ban~.
ANSWER: In answering this question, I will assume that
Unfortunately, at the urging
Congress, could shift toward
your pain is located in either the lumbar spine (between the effort on the part of the of the White House, the
backing Smtth's "internal
Congress
and
the
American
settlement'' if the election diaphragm and the pelvis) or in the pelvic area itself. Pain in public to closely examine majority of my colleagues in
results are perceived as lair this part of the back can be caused by a number of things other their operations. ,
the House of Represep\lltives
than mjury, including: kidney stones, Paget's disease of the
and democratic.
defeated by proposal.
Spurred
by
mcreasing
A trade embargo was bone, metastatic cancer from the breast or prostate gland, cr1tidsm from members of
Please be assured I will try
imposed on Rhodesia by the bone density loss (osteoporosis), other kidney problems such Co~gress,
the
House again tpis year. The
world conununity in 1966, a as infections, osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis of the spine Appropriations Comnuttee President has proposed to
year alter Smith declared (ankylosing spondylitis) and psychosomatic disease. The com· panel on foreign operations increase our country's
Rhodesian independence. plete list is, of course, more extensive.
international bank assistance
Your physician can analyze associated complaints or fin- recently completed a thirteen for 1980 from the present '
The United States supports
month inve&amp;igation of these
the embargo except for tmy dings in deciding whether one of these diseases is the culprit. institutions. Its findings bear figure of $2.5 billion to $3.6
shipments of medicines and For example, hack pain accompanied by blood in the urine, out many of my long held billion. a whopping increase
some educational materials. especially if the pain radiated or moved around to the lower con'cems :
of 44 percent. With our
This hurts the Rhodes1an abdomen, is suggestive of kidney· stones. Chronic low hack
- Pay and fringe benefits halance of payments deficit
economy, whlch depends pain in a person over 50 years of age which is worse In the mor- of
international
bank being what it is such a
heavily on exports of chrome ning and accmpanied by~ pain or stiffness in other joints employees were found to be proposal is hard to fathom.
s~ggests osteoarthritis. The same type of pain in a younger
and other minerals, tobacco
considerably higher than
and agricultural products. person, especially a male, may suggest ankylosing spondylitis
or "poker spine" which causes severe and disabling pain and
If Carter does iift tbe
stiffness.
·
sanctions , ZimbabweOther
causes
such as metastatic breast or prostate cancer
Rhodes ia's chances for
need
to
be
diagnosed
by X-ray of the bone, or better yet , by
survival would soar .
nuclear
hone
scans.
Obviously
examination of these orga!l.'l
Most unofficial observers
would
be
imperative.
likewise,
rarer
metabolic diseases such
in Rhodesia lor the elections
are taking a conservative as Paget's or blood cancers such as multiple myelorria need
•
VIew, but Bayard Rustin, a diagnosis by a physician .
If
your
problem
was
in
the
upper
back,
rather
than the
black American civil rights
lower back, the number of diagnostic possibilities would increase greatly. Certain lung conditions would have to be considered such as pneumonia , pleurisy and abscess. Pain in this
L&amp;~Nrence E. Lamb, M.D.
area can also radiate from the heart, a ruptured aneurysm and
even the gall bladder.
QUESTION: I have been told that my hack pains are all in
professional
skills
as my head . Is this posible •
area.
secretary to Albert Goiemon,
ANSWER: This much-abused term "all in your head" . Substituting
A callous on the bottom ol
a senior partner in Golemon makes me uneasy. 'Obviously·the pain isn 't all in your head- a good habit
the
foot is Just like a callous
and !Wife , architects. And it's in your back! Can hack pain be caused by tension, nerves
on
the
hand. It's because of
she still takes courses.
or just the emotional stress of daily life? Most certainly it can
DEAR DR. LAMB- I have work rubbing and irritating
· A deadend? Absurd, she be. In fact, this 1s probably one of the more conution causes of
been a runner for over four- that area. U you wear gloves
says. There ts always a all back pain.
challenge. In fact, it is well
A .medical problem called "chronic pain syndrome" has and-a-half years and have on your hands, you're less
known in executive circles received . much attention in recent years, This may be run over 18,000 miles. I rml likely to develop callouses on
your palms. If you adequate·
that many a secretary knows manifested as headache, abdominal paiM, or in your case, as the Boston marathon twice.
I
have
a
callous
which
ly protect an area that's
more about the office, and the back ache. The pain is very real and can lead to acute muscle
job, than does the executive spasms, which are no fun at all! These chronic pain syndromes builds up on the ball of my responding in this way on the
in charge .
are often difficult to treat since we must find the underlying right fool and pecomes hard bottom of the foot, you 'II have
It is as it should be, she stress and remove it or at least recognize its source. This and often bums. I cut it down ·Jess problem from the
s;~ys. "The secrtary should
somewhat involved subject would take up too·much space to do and use the sanding method. callous.
know· more about the office' it justice at t\tis time.
Can you recommend
FillBlly, about runners livsomethingtouseonit?
' ing lmiger. Many of them do.
than the boss." The boss
I also have heard that run- One of the reaso!l.'l is because
should be free to make
ners
will live 10 to 15 yearn many of them are lean. The
decisions . "He , or she,
1
longer. Once I was a near amount of exercise they do
shouldn't have • to be
alcoholic but when I started helps prevent obesity. That,
concerned with trivialities."
.
Pride, in self and work. ~---___:--------'-----·-------; running, I quit alcohol. Do in tum, decreases problems
Attitude. They, 1t would
you think the alcohol is out of of fatty-cl!olesterol buildup in
my system by now? Anyway, the bloodstream and it helps
seem, have as much to do
with making the professional
I feel great from a 15-mlle to prevent hihh blood
workout and I hope I run until pressure. These are imporas does a knowledge of
finance
or
law
or
I'msixfeetunder.
tant factors in preventing
management theory, which
DEAR READER - Con- heart attacks and
Mrs. Hamby ..tud1ed tn night
gratulatiO!lll on kicking a had strokes. Also most ol the runcourses.
habit and developing a good ners I know don't smoke.
one. If everyone could make That's Important, too.
such important changes in
Because of your interest in
lifs style, we'd have a lot less running, and the effort you've
THt~ llAII V ~F. NTINFI
medical problems in our made, I'm sending ou ·The
!I ~ P~ 145·!=16111
society.
Health Letter number 4-2,
Certainly you have , no Jogging, Exertion, Sudden
residuals of alcohol in your Death, to give you a better
system! this time. Unfortute· balanced idea of the relationnF.VOTFn T(l TJ-JR
INTF:R F.!\T OF
ly, alcohol is tissue toxin and ship of running and health.
M F. Jr.~ MA!i'ON ARF:A
some of the liver damage that Other readers who want this
RORFRT HOF:FI ll'H
f'lh• F."ltur
it causes may persist. issue can send 50 cents with a
OAVfORI ~ KTRK
lt!s
like
any
other
tissue
long,
stamped, self Ad~nlbln ~ 1\lnnHtl'r
Pu hl l~ lw fl d :• il~ t'Xr•t•pt f'l tlurdfly
that injllres and heals, II may addressed envelope for it.
lw ,,,, Ohin V:t ll••' r uhli&lt;:hinv
cause scar tissue in the heal- Send your request to me in
r:nm p~mv. Mn ll inwd u• . lnr·.
Ill
rnuf1 &lt;.::t Pnm1•rnv 11)1in 4:i7RQ
ing process. However, if care of this newspaper, P.O.
Fl,,,,w ·~" nrrul' Phnn•· ~ - 1 1 ~111
you're doing as well as your Box 1551, Radio City Station,
Pt llt mial rh, nf' 'l'l'l -? 1 ~7
letter suggests, I would New York, NY 10019.
Si•1 ll!lfl d 11H rt•~ I ,!J'I' JMirl It! ,
Pr•rrwrn\ Ohin
,
•
suspect that you have little if
Every once in awhile you
1 N:r!l,rml afl\'t•rll•lnl' rt • prt '~ l'f'l
anyresidualdamage.
bear
about some.promlnent
t:•th •t• I.Hn•k•n i\""• ill h'l'. :1Hll
Pl ll 'lirl /\\'1' . n. 1 r•lntH I 11hln 4411 !i,
Now about that callous on . public figure wlio drop&amp; dead
&lt;.::n h~t·dllilllll n rlo ·~ f1o•lh•o•ro•rl !11
your loot. That means that while running. But you
• :• r rwt w 11't r• "'' ••il.r hlt• !Ill''''"' ·~ JW •t
the ball ol your right foot is' seldom hear about emphasis
'' r'•'k Jh Mo ~l ••r fl nll ll' wlwrr· r·il r!'~t
' 1' 1 ,., ,., 'rwt fl \"mla hh· . ()rn ' m11r1!h •
bring more weight than the on the point that someone
&lt;1 fW1 "' 1''"' 11 111 0htn 111111 w V11
rest
of the foot. I suggest that die&lt;j in bed. U you spend· a
Ot •r Vr•:ll' ~&lt;J7 ~ ~~ .~i'( m • • n l h~
·"Sometimes I have this. fantasy of being a
tJ .I ..1'1 :rt•r•' m• nth ~. f ll ~ fl ·
you see an orthopedic large part of your time runnPI · ' 'l ' ho•r•• $ 1~ flO ' ' '•'' · ..::,., '"""'h
moronic wife or a sex object - the W&lt;IY
specialist and let him fit your ing, you Increase your chance
t'Ji tl fl
Tll!r ,. r• uo n lh ~
t 'l llll
women are portrayed In ·ads. "
·"rrh,, t rpJ r, r• f'l i• 1 h•· ·htrlt•' ...::,,.,,]:,,
foot with a pad or insert that 1 of something happening to
'l'ut,t· ~ ~"- o&lt;( " " I
decreases the weight in that you while you're running.

nine-game streak in which he
has had 13 runs batted in and
collected 14 hits in 28 times at
hat. '" I was leading the league
~a rl v hoth in 1973 and 1974
untii I was hurt ."
Parker, who had a stngle

OPEN
EVERY
NIGHT

GRAVELY ,

CABINETS
IN STOCK.

TRACTOR SAl ES &amp;.SERVICE ·
Pomeroy, 0.
204 Condor S t,
992 -2975
Manning Roush, Owner
Open 8 a.m .-5:30p.m. Mon. thru Sat,

,1\etnper,,

•

�· ~The-~Uy ~ntinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 . Wednesday, April25, 1979
4- The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Wednesd•y . April 2&gt;. 1979

Bird, Celtics break off talks
Bird • re portedly ha s
BOSTON I AP ) - The two
weeks of secr et talks requested a $6 million . 6-year
concernin g Indiana State All- contract . but Woolf refused to ·
Am er ican Larry Bird's discuss figures.
"As a result of today 's
multimillion dollar bid to
beco me th e highe st pa id meeling. we have decided to
player in the National en d negot iations at thi s
said Auerbac h
Basketball Association as a time ,"
rookie have erupted in open Tuesday afternoon .
" I don 't think it looks good
confrontation .
Sird's lawyer. Bob Woolf , for our getting Larry ." said
·'
says he is going to complain Cohen .
W
oolf
accuSed
Auerbach
of
to the NB A Players
making
"implied
threats
and
Association about what he
ca lled
" threats
and intimidation" and said he
intimidation "
by Red planned to meet today with
Auerbach, the Boston Celtics the player s association to
generaf manager , who said compH•in for Bird. the
Tuesday that the contract Geltics' No . 1draft choice last
year .
talks broke down.
However. Woolf refused to
Auerbach hid out in Bost on,
refusing comment after he go into detail e.cept to
announced the breakdown . remark that Auerbach
As for talk of "threats and suggested changing NBA
intimidation ," Jeff Cohen , a rules in a way "detrimental
Celtics' vice president, said to us."
Under terms of the draft, if
of Woolf, "I really don 't know
what he is talking about. It 's the Celtics don't sign Bird by
impossible for me to the June draft, the star goes
back into the player pool.
respond."
Bird was not at the meeting
Woolf disputed the Celtics'
between
Auerbach a11d Woolf,
announcement and said he
h~d .made "a dramatically the fourth meeting )letween
modified proposal" to the two since April 11.
Woolf claimed · he didn't
Auerbach during their 00know the talks had been
minute meeting Tuesday.

Green &amp; White fete reset,

ATHENS - Achange in the ho ur at 7 p.m .
The event . was originally
date · and main speaker has
been announced for the Green scheduled for Friday, May 11.
and White Club's 18th Annual but the date had to · be
Spring Recognition Banquet. -changed due to a conflict with
Sam Rutigliano , head the schedules of several of the
coac h of the Cleveland Ohio University spring sports
Bro\\115, will be the main teams. When the date w"as
it
became
speak er for the banq uet, changed,
which is now scheduled for rmpossible for Arkansas
Tuesday, May 1&gt; . The football coach IAJu Holtz to
banquet will be held at 8 p.m. fulfill his original ·commitat Nelson Commons on the ment as the banqu et's
Ohio University South Green speaker.
Two persons will be
to il&lt;' preceded by a . social
recipients of Certificates of
Appreciati on from . the club ,
which serves as a booster

orga ni zation
for
Ohio
University athletics: Their
· names will be announcfd
later. Also to be honored will
be senior athletes· at the

Gift .. ·

prese ntations · to
the ·
Outstanding Male Athlete
and Outstanding Female
Athlete .
Rutigliano. the fifth head
coach in the histOr v of the

Cleveland Browns, is in his
second

season

with

the

National Football League

for
MOTHER'S DAY
MAY 13, 1979

14 Kara1Gold, Gold
Filled. Slening Silver
Pierced Earrings

by~
From danng. del1ghHul
slud lype earnngs Ia bold,
beau11ful hoops. We have
an outsland1ng selection,
many set With genu1ne
stones. So reasonably

pnced.

From ·

-.~.{

..~ "0~
'
r

CANDrS

ClASSICS
In

learn .

·

Prior to taking the post
with the Browns, Rutigliano
served as an assistant for 11
years with four different NFL
teams, the Denver Broncos
under Lou Saban, the New
England Patriots, the New
York Jets an d the 'New
Orleans Saints. While with
New England , he was
credited with the development of quarterback Jim
Plunkett .
He gained grid honors as a
player at all levels - high
school in New York City, and
junior college AU-American
honors at East Central Junior
College in Decatur, Miss. He
then played college football
at Tennessee before transferring to Tulsa.
He coached at the high
school level in New York and
Connecticut, then advanced
to collegiate Coaching as an
assistant at the University of
Connecticut and Maryland
before accompanying ·saban
to Denver in 1967 to begin his
tenure in the NFL.
The Browns had an 11-8
record in his initial season as

INGEL'S
FURNituRE
&amp; JEWELRY106 N . 2nd

special

with

Middleport, 0 .

head coach last fall .
Tickets, priced at $12.50
each , are now on sale from
members of the Green and
White board of directors, at
severa l locations around
Athens and at out~f{o wn
locations. Th e doadline for
purchasing tickets is May 4,

T•ansa'ct n.·s .

CONTINUES
A revival will continue
througJ! April 29 at the
H ~~ VIVAI.

Wedding Bells?

23;

Centenary Grange•Hall with
speaker, Russell Knitz of
Middleport. Frank Woodall is
tM song leader. Public
welcome.

The Photo Place
tRob Horflich }
109 High St .
Pomfrov

. OPE .
24 HOURS
. A'DAY

TMIOUGHOuT lHI
lfOH'OI'
_fANtASm: SAVINGS
Oft aiOGIIIIAHD
·.. NOOutTS
.ltSTHJ AllOW All Jl.rJT
A fiW IXAMP'Lil

ADVERTiSED ITEM POLICY
&amp;ch of theM edvelt!Md 1letn1 11 reQuited IC be
rtldlly lvtilfl?ll fOf &amp;Ill in NCh Kroger Store. e•cept ~•
~ nolld in V. ad . 11 -.w do run out of .an ~led

Whole Pork Loin .............. "'· $139 Center Loin Pork Chops ....lb .
FIUH SliCIO INTO CHOP1
fiiSHIO ... IN
Pork Steaks ... ........... .. ..... lb .
Quarter Pork Loin. ... ... ~-.
WMOI.I 'IISM
FIUH SUCIO INTO CHOPS
. .lb .
Picnic Pork Roast ..
• •1n Half Pork Loin . . . . t~.

tMII offll" 'fou your choice ol 1 cClmpllrllble 1ient
..,hen tvtiltblt, ref*tlng the ume Ulllr\gl or 1 rlrnch«k

st••
st••

which will entilll vou to purct- the a!Ner1iled rtem t1 the
~~

......

flESH SUCIO INTO CHar$

item , wt

pnce ~ttl~n XI davs.

TOTAL SATISFACTION GUARANTEE

EVNVthtl'lg VOY bu~ at t&lt;;roge~ 11 gutranlq!fd lor your tou!l
.;.atisf..:::tion reg~~rd!MI of m~nufeclul"tll" . It you ;ue noI salit '
tied, llt:rogtf wi~ rtpqce your ilem With tl'le 11rm~ brand Of a
COI"I"'pMMMe btand or refund your purcha1e pnce .

Sports briefs. • •

COVER GIRL

FIUH SliCIO INTO CHOPS

COPYIIGHT ltH·THI 1(10011 CO . ITEMS AND PIICES
GOOD SUNDAY AII'.IL 22 THIU SATUIDAY APIIlll . It"

IN GALLIPOLIS &amp; POMEROY' STORES
WliUIIVE THI liGHT TO LIMIT QUATilliS NONE SOlD ·
TOOIAUts .

NUH IONIIN tOSTON tun

St59 Pork RoaaL ..
"'
t•· U'·LI . AVC .

Loin Half Pork Loin .. ..
FIISH AUOITID
Pork Chops ....... ............... ~-.
flESH
Center Rib Pork Chops .. ~-.

st••

'1"

..

Fresh Whole Ham ... .
Boneless Pork Chops .·

lb .

lb .

fiiSH CINTII CUT

lb .

Except Closed lm!Uy I•Pt ni9AI s.day
Except HilltN I Illite SllpHr

sp9

sps
age

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON
I

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

$}19

Sl 09
$2 49

I·

I
I

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CALIFORNIA
ClOVER VAlLEY

GrapeJeUy ·

c

•
'

Iceberg
Head Lettuce ·

•

~

!

•

~

•

$
California·
Strawberries ............ a•.
FIRST OF THE SEASO.N

$23

CHECK WITH US Fl RST

32·01.7 7 c
Btl.

$2~

Tylenol
.
.
Capsu Ies .............. .

Serve 'N' Save
Sliced Bacon

29

~:: $109

. PINT
69'

47

liMIT! rGINIS IIITM COIPON AND Sl.5D IDDIIIDIAl PUlCMUl
tUCliDIMC !MIS IIEil
LIMIT ON'l CDU~N !Ill fAMIL '(
ttlftl• ..., .,. u ,..·u•••&amp;~~~lll.

50-Ct.

KROGU

Catsup

Whife

$

EXTRA STRENGTH

Spool
Black Patent

AFFORDABLE
ECONOMICAL
DRIVING

.

Rinso
Detergent. ...

IIMU rt WfttCMl( J11U &amp; lllt&amp;l. lUll

I
I
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4

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::.'

40\a

I

KROGER ELBOW

•'..
'·•

.Have one built for you!

''

.See one of these courteous salesmen : Pete Burris.

Karr &amp; Van Zandt

CUBE
$179
STEAKS••. ~ •••...'!':•...

15'

_FRENCH CITY

. · · .

·. WIENERS ••••••~~.~r;.

$1 79

~~:e: 99~

lb.

Spaghetti

•'•

••
•••

...

..

~-

.

...l·lb.·a.gc

~

•

"

.,•

PICNIC.

•

I
~

HAMS

't•

••

99~

INTIUPIECE

Potatoes

Kroger
Meat Bologna .

ROUND TOP

Kroger 20-oz.
.White Br.ead ......

3$

'•
~.

LU.

HOlLY FARMS. U.S.D.A.

Mixed
·fryer Parts .....

'·

thru Thurs . &amp; Sat.
9 a.m .-a p.m. Fri.
Closed Sunday

Spotlight
Bean Coffee ~:~

79

Libby's

lOMATO JUICE.. .......~~~~:.59~

·------

Sprite, Tab
or C Cola

gc

at •

~

Wizzard Spray, Asst. Scents

DEODORIZER
.

· aoz.

········~··········

PEANUT BurrER ......~~ ~~: ·
•

•'

Pringles Reg. or Country Stvle

;

Valley Bell

Jif Creamy or Crunchy

y

59 TOILET TJSSUE; .. ~.~~~-$}49 POTATO CHIPS ... ~:~" 7'1. ..'
$}Sg
.•'
Charm in, Asst. Colors

ICE ... Y~.~.~~· s1

Meadowdale

09

OLEO ......

'

3'1

~~~.~~~~~- ;-o ••••1~·•••

I

.

10

FRESH

~

t'

~;:~~~.~~i~~~~~~~~;,o"_•·:~~~u~l

lb

.

SALI ..................~~.~~:. 2/49' CAT 'FOOD .......~.~~:.· 5JSi00

I
I
I

PINT RETURNABLE BOTTLES .
FRESCA . MR. PIBB .

:

Frisky &amp; Purina

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I u

Df

''•·

Morton Reg. or Iodized

I
I
I
I
I

..

INSPECTED

'
•'
•'

9 a.m.-5 p.m. Mon .

992·5342
POME RO 'I
Open E'lenings until6;1i0.. -til s ? .m . Sat.

.

•
"'

"Middle of Upper Block, Pomeroy, 0 ."

. "You'll like Our Quality Way of Doing Business"
GMC Financing

I
I

.

t
•,

·HARREY'S SHOES, INC.

Marvin Keebaugh or George Harris.

CN"'

I OF

·....···3··sc
.J.IIJ;

LIMIT ONf COUPON PU fA Mil ~

112

Macaroni

··lb~lae

Pkg.

lllll4111TH COU'IlN IND I! SO IDDITIOUL I'VIICMASI
IIICIIDINC THIS !Till

I.

Remember Her Mother's Day

'

SAVE

I

'

LEITUCE .

Fresh
Mushrooms

I

I

•''•

at1t

.ROGER COST CUTTER COUPO~

I

79

~atur'day 9 : 00-9,:00

~E~~~-w.~ .........-............ ;.~279

Thursday's schedule for
the Meigs Bookmobile will include : Head .Start, Racine, 22: 30 p.m. ; Portland Post Office, 3-3 :30 p.m.; Racine
Home · National Bank, 4-6;
Wagner's Hardward, Racine,
rH;, and Syracuse Swimming
Pool, 6:15-8:15 p.m.

LOOit fOi fHts'stGN ·

a

9:001117 : 00

CLOSED
SUNOAVS

EASTERN STAR
DINNER SET
Marilyn Giey, grand conductress, will be the inspecting officer at the May 3 in-.
.spection of E:vangeline
Chapter 172, Order of lhe
Eastern Star. Dinner will be'
served at6 p.m. a.nd reservations are to be made no later
than Saturday with Mrs.
Marilyn Wilcox, 992-5187
after 4:30p.m. ·

SPEAKERS SET
CORRECI'ION
Guest speakers have been
scheduled at the Pomeroy
Mr. and M.... Clarence
United Methodist Church Hayman, Sr., Rt. 2, Racine,
while the Rev . Robert celebrated their 20th wedding
McGee, pastor, and his wife · annive~ry April18, instead
are on vacation.
of lbelr 25th as was reported.
On Sunday, Richard Ash of
Syracuse will be the lay
speaker; on May 6, the Rev.
Eugene Brown, a former
pastor, will speak; on May
lr'f us rrC"ord forever
a lay speaker from Pomeroy
your bf'autiful weddinA in
full &lt;"O ior photoqrt1phs. ·
United will have the service;
Frf' l free to visit us to
and ·on May· 31, the Rl!v. Carl
\lif"w samples and discuss
Hicks, a former pastor, will
our r &lt;'.1 Sonable prices
be the speaker ..
wi th out obliq~tion .

.YOUR FRIENDLY KROGER

j

LB.}5'

·

with prizes going to Mrs.
Pearl Knapp and . Mrs .
Wright. It was reported that
the program boo.ks will' be
ready for the next meeting.
Participation in the Community Club Awards . was
planned. Mrs. Parker, Mrs.
Doris Shook, and Mrs. Ruby
Frick will be hostesses for the
next meeting.·
Mrs. Eichinger and Mrs.
Marjorie Goett served
refreshments assisted by
Tammy Eichinger.

Rusabe Story ·s third grade
won th e r oom count ..
Refreshments were served.

j

POTATOES

'

' ·A report o~ cardiac M.... Eichmger giving the
· ~Di!nry f!lSUSIIatlon and devotions. Mrs. Wright had
.. basiC life support .for cardiac
prayer and members gave
•t;r.est W~· given by Mrs. . the Lord's Prayer in unison.
· Jean W~ght, R. . N, .at · II · It was reported that. Mrs.
.meeting of the Laurel Cliff :June Eichinger is still in the
Better H~lth Club held hsspital: ·Cards were signed
Thursday mght at the home for Mrs. Della Curti M
of Mrs. Polly Eichinger.
Eichinger, and Mrs .s, Nel~~
Mrs. Wright ·announced Tracy.
Mrs . Bertha Parker
thataclassonCPRwillbeoffered at Veterans Memorial reported that the club has
Hospital on May I, 7 to 9 p.m, received donations from MarMrs. Iva. Po:-vell prestded at cia Karr, Edith Teaford and
the meetmg m the absence of M~s. Young. A silent auction
Mrs. Mil!lred Jacobs with was held . n"!Yl"' wPr. rl•~·~

A re·port !Ill playgi'Dund
equipment and planned improvements to begin in the
fall was given by Don Hunnel
at the Tuesday night meeting
of the Salisbury PTO.
New officers for the 197!).80
school year were installed.
John Lisle announced that his
spring minstrel )VIII be May
IB .and 19 a( 7:30 sach evening. Books' from the book fair .
were on display and orders
were taken. Mrs. Karen
, Walker had .charge of the
book fair.
· The pledge to the flag and
devotions. by Mrs. Martha
Hoover openE:d the meeting.
The PTO wiU sponsor a
skating party for students

now history

New Red

Hacme, .

. PHEBE''s STORE

'

J ·:

Stinger club

BACON

.

,,

Trailing 3-2 in the fifth in- th was the winning pitcher.
ning, Kyger Creek rallied for
'KC hurlers, Nibe('t, Minor' '
1
You're one of the thousands of tennis players who started th~ three runs Tuesday night to and Taylor combined1 to fan' '
•
g;.m~ as a youngster and now, having been slowed by ad- edge Hannan Trace, :Hinan eightandwalklhree.
va ncmg age, suddenly find it 's not fun any more.
SVAC contest.
Paul Shaffer, who relieved
So what do you do? .
During the three run starter Tim Beaver in the sixYou toss ~our battered old racket into the closet, say "to uprising, Von Taylor and thinning was the loser. They .
beckwith rt and go downtown and buy a pair of jogging shoes. John Amos singled and both combined to strikeout five
'; ·
This, accordmg . to a survey conducted by the Opinion scored on Terry Porter's two and walk one.
Rese~rch Corp . of Princeton, N.J ., for the u.s. Department of run double. Porter crossed
The win gave Kyger Creek1~
InteriOr, 1~ a new and alarming trend .
the plate for what proved to a 3-6 overall record and 3-4 1'
No telling how many people, largely in the upper age be the. winning run on a slate in the SVAC.
·
brackets, have become disenchanted with the game. Equip- grouMer off the bat of cat- · The Bobcats wiD travel to
ment n;anufacturers, marketers and people involved in the cherSteve Russell.
Hannan, W. Va. tonight.
promotion and development of the sport are plainly worried
Coach Tim Scarberry's Other games this week are
"Whythedecline?"FrankHannah executivedirectorofihe Hannan Trace Wildcats took set for Southern Thursday':
Tennis Foundation of North America'asks in the latest issue of a 2~ first inning lead on a and Point Pleasant wil) visit •
SP_RING FIELD, Mass. goalie , played well in the the group's publication, Drop Shots.
.
walk, hit batsman and a Friday.
)
( APl - Add the Cincinnati series. They got us here."
Linescore :
,
:
"One factor may be our egos," he adds. "Our egos just can, 1 throwing error which allowed
Stingers to the list of World
."I really like- beatin g ta~e rt when we begm to lose after years with the attitude that both runs to score.
H. Trace 201 001 ·0--4 5 0
Ho c k ey Associa ti o n Cmcm natr ," said Smith. "It 'wmmng rs everything .'
Porter and Russell had the K. Creek
000 230 Q-5 7 3 ,
din o&amp;:~urs.
was a sweet win .''
only extra base hits for tJie
Beaver, Shaffer (6) (L) ·:
"T1!eanswer : Tennis for fun."
The Stingers played their
Smith played for th e
A year ago a similar study by the Sports Training Institute of Bobcats. .
andpennlson.
•
final game Tuesday night , Buffalo Sabres in 1976 when Chicago created a storm when it suggested that as many as
Jack Mmor. who . relieved
N1bert, Minor (5) (W) ~
10
losmg to New England, Z.l , in F1oyd Smith was the coach million players may have forsaken the game .
starte~ Gary Ntbert m the fif- Taylor (7 and Russell.
~
the decidin g match of a best- with that NHL team. There
All mtensrfled campa1gn was waged to discredit the findin g.
was friction between the two
of-three .playoff series.
Now.
It appears tha.t the newest survey, carrying undeniable
Cincinnati. which joined and the nebninder left ·the
AI en Simplified Scoring System ), that the game needa a hanthe pro ranks in 1975, joiris the Sabres and joined the credibllrty, could mdiCate that the 10 million figure might have dicap system similar to that in golf.
·•
fallen short of the mark .
·
Michigan Stags, New Jersey Whalers at the start of the
has
a
fixed
standard
the
course
which
tennis
does;
"Golf
Fifteen million could be more accurate.
Knights, Minnesota Fighting 19n-78 season.
not have," Hannah says. "Equipment and course are aU the '
The
s~rvey, conducted for the Heritage Conservation and
The Whalers move on to
Saints and Indianapolis
same.!
think it is n~cessary to establish a hypothetical player '
Racers among WHA teams E:dmonton for the semifinal , RecreatiOn Service, shows that while there had been only a 6 to - the club champ1oo or the best player in the park - and I
that have passed away. The best-of-seven series . New 7 percent decline of interest among pl•yers up to 34 years old gauge a play~r's rating off him, giving handicap points. .
~
&lt;temise of the Stingers comes England Ol)iy won four of 14 there had been a 44 percent drop per age group from the midVan
Alen,
IS
~onvmced
that
tennis,
to
become
universally
;
because of the National games against the Oilers 30s to the mrd-505 and 67 per cent loss in the 55-to-65 and above. popular, must d1scard the archaic scoring system of the Dark '
The federally funded survey involved 4,000 telephone calls
Hoc~ey League expanding to during the regular season .
Ages- deuce, love, ad- and use the simplified 1;2-3·count. He ~
madem
1977.
·
include four WHA franchises.
.But the winning goalie
favors
.Piaym~ 31-pomt games and using point differentials as
Hannah agreed with James Van Alen of Newport R I foun- a handicap
On Tuesday, · though, drsc.ounted that record
gu1de.
·
1
Cincinnati did not fold its tent Tuesday night. ."It's a new . ~er of t!le Tennis Hall of Fame and faiher of the VMiSS (Van
"P~ople think I'm trying to tear down the Eiffel Tower "the ~
and go away meekly . Only
season, " said Smith. .
puckish New England socialite says. "I only want to mak~ ten- t
superlative effort by goalie AI ·
rus more fun for all."
Smith - who stopped 33 of 34
shots including several in the
last minute. - enabled the .
1•0
Whaler s to win. .
.. ·
By The A•sociated Press
with 3,699 po ints. Joe
HI can't fault our guys,"
TENNIS
Schneider of St. John 's was in
said Stinger Coach Floyd
Tuesday •s
LAS VEGAS, Nev. - Peter third place with 3,678.
Smith . "We held them to two
Sports Transactions
Fleming upaet fourth-seeded
In fourth place was Steve ·
g~als and that 's a good
Sv The Associated Press
Vitas Gerulaitis 6-7,6-4, 6-4 in Rainbolt of Kansas , the
effort ."
.. FOOTBALL
a fir st-round match of a winner in the long jump
But the effort wasn't good
National Football League
NEW YORK JETS -men's
$250,000
tennis event, with 3,589 points. John
enough to keep the Stingers Tr aded Darrell Aus tin , of. tournament .
Papa of Slippery JWc~ was
alive in th~ WHA playoffs. fe nsiv e l ineman. to -the
In other matches, top- fifth with 3,504. Gudmund
Blaine Stoughton 's goal with Tampa Bay Buccaneers for
seeded Bjorn Borg downed Olsen of Mount St. Mary's,
17 secOnds left 'in the second their 1979 eighth -r ound. draft
choice
Hank .l'fister ~. 6-3, 6-1;
SPRING 1979
period .snapped a 1-1
PH ILADELPHIA EAGLES third-seeded John · McEnroe who finished first in the shot
· stalemate ·and proved to be - · Johnny Outlaw , corn er - beat Sandy Mayer 6-3, 6-3, put with a 44-11 throw, was
sixth with · 3,493.
the game-winner .
ba ck, retired . ·
and John Alexander topped
·'
· The . t'wo teams traded
Canadian Football League
· BASEBALL
TORONTO ARGONAUTS fWd Laver 6-7, 6-3, 6-1.
NEW
YORK
Right-hander
power -play go~ls in the -· Sign ed. Arthur Moo re.
''fRACK AND FIELD
1,
Nolan Ryan of the California
opening period with Jamie delensive back. ' •
PBILADELPHIA - Forest Angels was named American
••
Hislop sco ring fir st for
SOCCER
SHOES
Crigler ,
a
Prin ceton League player of .the week
J
h
·
North
American
.
·
·
Cmcmnab . . o n McKenzie
• Soccer Lea ue
sophomore, led .1/le. Penn and reliever Bruce Sutter of
ans wered with a goal of his
DALLAS TOR'IJADO
Relays decathlon after the the Chicago Cubs received
.,•
-0"11 four minutes later ..
Signed . Frank. Worthington.
first day of competition with the honors in the National
"We had our chances and · forward .
·
'Sibyl
3, 707 points.
League .
all the opportunities in the
TORO NTO BLIZZARD .. th S .
Purc ha sed Drew Busb y, · In the shot put, Crigler
Ryan's work included two
:wor ld , . e tmger coach midti elder . from Hear ts of threw a personal best of 43
Black Patent
victories,
one a shutout and
added . "We got a little tired lhe Scoll ish League.
feet, B&lt; inches; tied for
at the end . It was a very good · '
American
'v
Camel
second in the high jump with the other a flirtation with a
hockey ·game "
Soccer Leag~e
no-hitter.
He.
went
the
6-6%, and had the best time
·
LAS VEGAS SEAGULLS in
blanking
Whal ers
coach
Don Fired Orlando DiNitto , head
00
for the 100 meters (1 1.3 distan ce
Minnesota
6-0,
and
pitched
Blackburn praised his goalie coach . Named Raoul Carrizo, seconds ) and 400 meters
no-hit ball for 71-3 innings
and the rest of the team . "We pi aver · coach .
(50.3 ).
seem to play belt'er when we NEW JERSEY ., .. AMER ·
against Oakland in a game
In second place was Gary
· '·ba
' k
ICA NS - S1gned Ale.
won 13-1.
California
have ourseIveS"'m
a
c -to- Pr ingle defend er .
Bastien of Eastern Michigan
the-wall situation.
' COLLEGE
" (M) Smith played a super
GEORGIA - Named Andy
game and in fact both he Landers..women's basketball
'
•
coach
and (John ) Garrett, our other
·

Each

Monday thru Friday

'

.

By Will Grimsley
AP Correoooodent

ORANGES .

Thursday, Aprii2S through May J
We Gladly Accept Fed. -Food stamps

'" .•

Sports World Wildcats 5·4

broken off until he reLeived a
Woolf claitned A'uerbl:idl
telephone ca ll fr om The 1titl nol change his bargainin~·
Assoc iated Press on hi s JX&gt;Sllion .
return to his office from
·' )l's becom ing rather
fu sion Garden, U1e Celtics' bi zarre," he said .
headquarters. .
. Uird reportedly wanted to
"This is the first I've heard become th e highe st paid
of it," said Woolf. " I shook player in the NBA when ta lks
hands. and we. left very started two weeks ago .
amicably."

Caiifo·rnia ·

.5th &amp; Pearl

.

·Better.Health club discusses
Bobcats edge ..r.• life~saving techniques
recently

t

Browns coach new speaker

uni ver sity

. Todar's

P/a_yground equipment discussed by Pl V ~ ..,.......-......

Gla1ed Donuts ... _.. ....
CHIPPED
Chopped Ham ............... ..
AMERICAN
MUSTARD
·Potato Salad ..... .. .... .... .. ..
SIMI·SOfT MILD
Havarti Cheese .. ,...... .... .

Far

OR

'ROZEN

Banquet·
Pk,. ,
Dinners ........""''·

lb.

lb.

�.

.

S- -The Daily Sentinel, Middleport -Ponwroy, 0 ., IVL•dnesday. Apn l 25. 197V

·Grand Inspection plans completed by Eastern Star

Daughter born

..

Mr. and Mrs . Jack Jacobs
of . Beckley, W. ya. are announcing the birth of a nine
pound daughter, Kristie
Da""· on April 13 at the
Raleigh General Hospital in
Beckley. They .have a son,
Sean, seven.
Grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs . Clifford Jac qbs,
Pomeroy; and Mr. and Mrs.
Erwin Acree, Clearwate~.
Fla.

HAHHI~ON VILLE--Pians centlyatlhetemple.

}enn1;£er
~·

En~a'g&lt;em
..

CROWN PIN

RUTLAND - Mr. and Mrs.
. Wendell Grate of Rutland are
announcing the ·engagement
of their daughter, Jennifer
Kay, to James Lewis Harlow,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Beryl
Harlow, Cincinnati.
The bride-elect is a 1977
graduate of Meigs High

!hot will be worn with prldo
and cherished alw•ys.
Beautiful pear shape
stones in the color of the
f1mitv's
blr.th stones

personalire and give this
significance.

~~~11

.

Announce !Jirth .·

MOTHER'S
PIN
A blrlll-• for

..ch of 111o
loved ones In
her tomlly.

$2}50

offman Martha. and to any.member ma Columbus
hQspltal.. . . . · · '·
•
·ted and Charles. l';il)g r~porll!d on
The flag was pre~re lance the new parking lot. Pinons
~e pledge of
g"Tbis for .the evening were crosses
rv~. ~em~"!. ~~lations fashioned . o! lavender felt
ts lnsYpecti
. ~un ry. f m New · with seed pearls. Yellow~o
. . Olll! we~ ro .
fodils from the Norman Will
Marshfield, ·Apnl 30; Thea,
ard
used on the
May 29; Evangel~, May 3; fabl:.n ;~re organizational
. Beverly, ¥8 Y 23, Galllpolls, meeti · for a· past matrons
May.14. A thank you note wEasS club w':::s set for May IS at the
rece1ved .from 1h~. 0
. 'home of Donna .Nelson.
. HosplU.I Circle than!Ong .the · Round-robl~ card ·was signed
chapter for a donation. · .. nr •v•n•IIGeorge.
. Flowers ·ar~ sent byth~.Circle . . f .
·

Inspection 'will be held at remmded to · ta e P e 8 .
. the. Masonic Temple ·in Mid- sandwiches for refre~hmenU..
dleport with the worthy grand · Apractice forthe officers Will
matron, Suzanne Pearl, .as be held Thursday evening~
the inspecting officer. Har- the Middl~rt temple.
the day of mspect10n there
will be a 6:30 potluck dinner
hosted by the' officers and
past matrons.
Mrs. Lois Pauley, worthy
BY GRANGE DEPUTIES
Gr;ingc rriem~rs.
matron; and Paul ~auley,
In anticipation of. Grange
Have you . beard .of . - worthy jl8tron, pres1ded at
Week _ April 22-29 11 Meigs Agricultural Extension Ser- the meetmg with \be pro tern
County Grange members at- vil'e, Rural Free Delivery or officers . bein g Frances
tended a recent meeting at Parcel Post System, Fa.r ~ Young; a5sooiate' IJU!troo;
the Athens Grang¢ luill on the rriers' Home Administration, Norman Will ,', assocla~e · ..
Athens County F.ai~ground to Vocational . · Ed ucation patron; . p~uliri e 'Atkjns,
hear State Grange Secretary, . Prtigra.ms,. Soil 'Conservation associate ·.co nductress; .
Mrs. William Ginnery and Service,: Interstate Highway Pearle c~naday, : Adab; ·
her husblind giv~ methodS for System, etc. .· .
..
Beverly .'J;iishop, .Ruth ;. iler· .·
increasing . ·· Grange ; mem- · ·The . Grange .was there
·
· .·
· ·
tJership. . . · . · ·
. when t))ey becaine law, and it
. .
The 'Grange,. originally a is . still · heard at ·State and
· ·:
fai:mers&lt;irga nizaiirin;hasex- N'aticinal'levels.. ·
- · ·" .. ... 'cwsil'!G NoTED. . '
·
pa nded to include anyone. in- ' .. Join the Grange and · aM ·
· · .the list ·.,,:
_. . · UbThe . Middleport
terested ··In Agricultllfe · your name· to
·ube losed. FPublic'
'da
Agriculture is the source of. .Grange members seekmg to . ft rary WI
%,.
'Sat~y
G~ate
thefoodsupplyofallsoit.isof .. serve your community , your a 3'"':'IJn, a11 ~ .da Y.
''
interestto everyone. ·
· Statea~d your.NaUon.
.
.~ n un nopn pn on Y1or
Many ·&lt;)pportuniti.es &lt;;an be . . For more ·informa:tior ·. , mterlor. palnlillg·:. Mrs. Ruth .
found.in t~e Grange. One.can about Grange :membership!pib~wers re~ ~~..t whenMlhe .
)istthe fellows· hi P.tha't can '"" con tact Ra Y Ml'dkJ'ff •· Lang5: d rary
·t opens
· rr a · noon on·
n
enjoyed by the entire family, ville1 Ohio; John · Montay, 1 WI rema!n l&gt;p(ln ~I
School and is currently· The Grange ls a family 1gomery, R~. 1, Albany,.Ohi&lt;J; . 0 p.m. fo~ tJ:!e converuence.of
enrolled in the nursrrig fraternity .where all ages can Norman Will, Rt. I , Rutland, patrons. Regular hours will
cu rriculum at Capital. atteml meetings, pilrticpai~ Ohio; Robert Reed, Rt. . 2 then be tes'/ffle!l:
University. Her fian ce is: a : :in .' programs and contests, Pomeroy, Ohio; Bertha Gnpreligion major at MI. Vermiri and enjoy the recreation fur- pen, Rt. 3 Albany, Ohio ; Fred
SHARON ROUSH
Nazarene College.
nished at meetings and at Goeglein, Rt. 2, Pomeroy,
Sharon Roush underwent
The 2:30p.m. open church camps.
Ohio ; Earl Cross, Rt. I surgery Tuesday morning at
wedding will take place on
Many community projects Racine, Ohio, and ·Early the Holzer Medical Center.
Sept. 2 at the Rutland Church are sponsored by the Roush, Rt. 2 Racine, Ohio.
Her room number is 203A.
Granges in Meigs County and
of the Nazarene.
Grange people are always
ready .to help where there is a
·
special need..
The ·bea utiful · Ritual
. teaches good stewa rdship .of
· ihe soil and·rentinds us of the ·
goodness of.our Creator. ·
. The · Grange .se.eks· sound
legislation · through· idea~ ·
,presented at county meetings
Misses
and passed on to .state .and .
. National levels by qualified .
iunior.S ·
+tal~ Si'Zes

.

~g~lshop ~ader ' :

Mother-daughter banquet planned for May 8 here
Mother-daughter ban9uet
of the - Pomeroy Umted
Methodist Church women
was,planned for Mdy 0 at the
.church durmg a recent·

meeting,ort~e~MW.

.The dinner will be .potluck
With the dessert furm shed at
6 p.m. and vanous commit. lees were appointed . Mrs.
Faye Wildermuth, president,
announ~ed th~t Ma y
Fellowship Day will be held
on Friday, May 4 · at the
. Pomeroy Methodist Church

by Church Women United of
Mei gs County Mrs Wildermuth also rep~rted ~n therecent World Day of Prayer.
Prayer was had for the
fami lyofadeceasedmember
and for those who are ill in
hospitals and at home. Mrs.
Ada Warner gave a report on
the prayer calendar for the .
month and also spoke on
globalconcemsandthe work
being done in connection with
that. Mrs. Janice McGee announced several church con-

HOMELESS COLLIE
Vivian May with miniature Collie, female, who is ju~t
as lovable and sweet a \log as the fjwnane Societyh as had
in a long time . She says,'' Please, won't someone giVe me a
good home'" Anyone interested call Mrs. May at 992·7853.

Mr. and Mrs. -Richard A.'
Gill. (nee Apnl Walters), 757
N. Grape St., Edc&lt;indido, Ca.,
are.annoWlcing the arrival of
their ftrst child, a son, born
April. 23 ai the Marine Corps
· · Hospital, Camp Pendleton,
Ca. The lad has been named
Ch ristoph er Allen , and ·
weighed fi ve pounds, eight
ounces at birth.
Maternal grangparentsare
Mrs. Leona Walters, and the
late William L. Walters,
Ga llipolis; the paternal
grandparents,· Mr. and Mrs.
great 'Gill
grimdmot.her
.is Mrs. ·
·John
•. Gage.;· paternal
Minnie Caldwell , Gag.' .

All
..
WEAtHER .·
.

"

WAll . .·
· ' -· . ....

R ·" 9
.eg. •~

~

'

' THURS
FRIDAY
SATURDAY

·

Turns ten
Ti na Hendricks celebrated
her lOth birthday recehtly at
the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Carpenter, Long Bol-

407 PEARL ST.

traveled the road to Em·
maus, and of Jesus ' appearance to the 11 after his
resurrectionand of the evrnts
which took pla ce in the Upper
Room .
Miss Campbell closed her
program "1th . an Easter
prayer and a p.oem, " Cross in

WF:EKEND GUESTS
Mr. aod Mrs. Kenneth
Russell of Racine had as their
Easter weekend guests,
Mafihe Lt. and Mrs. Karl
Russell , Kenneth Roy and
Melissa Lynn, Jacksonvi lle,
N.C.; Mr. and Mrs. Floyd 1'.
Chapman, daughter, Kimberly, Pickerington. The birthdays of Marine l.t. Russell ,
Mrs. Chapman, and Kenneth
Roy were observed.
Telephoning on Easter were
Aleta Lynn, Burton and
daughters, Lisa and Erika,
Orlando, Fla .

BRICS
SUITABLE
FOR THE '
OUTDOORS

•60" STRETCH TERRY

Printed

In Plaid or So lid

DR. KIT HEDGES, CHIROPRACTOR .
(Former Bradshaw Office)
181 Second St.
Middle pnrl, 0 .
Phone 992-6141 or 593-6886 (Ath ens, o.)
OFFICE HOURS
Tuesday 11 A.M. to 5 P .M.
Thur sday 11 A.M. to 5 P .M.

Tina Hendricks

•60'' CHENILLE

•60" BOUCLE
•60" POLY KNIT
• 45" COITON POLYESTER BLEND

OPENING TUESDAY,
. MAY JST

992-3662

ing the me~ting. Hostesses
were Mrs. Alice Struble, Mrs .
Gertrude Mitchell, Mrs .
Wildermuth, and Mrs. Leona
Srruth.
-.------,

My Pocket." There was district.
group si nging of "He Lives.,.
The group formed a prayer
During the busin ess circle and Mrs. McG ee admeeting, Mrs. V. D. Edwards journed With prayer. A proreported that 1126 had been ducts party was held followpaid on pledges to the

tom.
A ca ke , bake d and ,
decorated by Mrs. Carpenter
was served tO the honoree,
her parents, I.arry and Bess
Hendri cks, grandmother,
Lucy Hendricks, sister, Barb
Hoffman, Robert Keaton ,
Ricky and Randy Smith, and
Greg and Roger Carpente r,
· Jr. Unable to attend were
Terri L. Smitl\, Thoma s
Tobin , stationed in~ Groton,
Conn, and Robert Tobin ,
··. Sidney, Australia.

OPEN
9-6 Mon.-sat.
12-6.Sunday

SINGER
MODEL 1200

Reg . $850

SALE

$600

FABRIC SHPP
11SW. 2nd
Pomeroy, Ohio

THURSDAY
FRIDAY
SATURDAY
APRIL 26-27-28, 1979

By any pair of
flat sand a Is
and receive ··
·a canvas ·or
stri~g bag at

. ~ 9.9

Nnw
$39 99
un ·. • .

,.
"
J!" ~ ''

T.his week Oiily

·

women at the tomb had
brought the ointments and
spices to annoint his body .
She told of .Jesus appearance
after hi s resurrection to
Peter and the other
fishermen , of his appearance
to lhe two fri ends while they

MIDDL£PORf'

.·.:.· j.! '·
,:~ -

TWO'S 'COMPANY
ORESS SHOP'

n 8 E . Main

nected meetings which will
be taking place in September,
October and November.
Fifty-six sick calls were
rep&lt;irled.
The resurrect ion appearances of Jesus was the
th eme of the program·.
presented by Grace Campbell, leader. T~e program
opened with group singing of
"Bies§ed Redeemer'' with
Miss Campbell telling of the
appear appea ranl'O of Jesus ·
after his resurrection to the

·RADIO SHACK

ent annou'need .

The story of Motner ~ life
beoulifully told In 1 truly
quolity )&gt;i«O of towolry

pin

.

nso~v1lle mel~berj a:J

·crange Week observed

THE I. DAVID

FAMD...Y

,

fur rand inspection to take
lac~ on April Tl were comPleted at a meeting of Har~isonville Chapter :zo:;, Order
of the Eastern Star, held rc-

MRS. JEAN MOORE
Mrs. Jean Moore is home
after spending the past six
weeks in Columbus, .five
weeks in University Hospital
and one week with her sister.

7-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., Worlnesd".V , April 2.1. 1979

CHAPMAN'S SHOES

. f&gt;omeroy, 0 .

,.

.

.' '

Nextto Elh&lt;&gt;rl&lt;&gt;lllc in p'o meroy, 0.

~=~:~~=:::::::::::::::::;!::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~

Yellow aold
filled or sterling.

,cORNUCOPIA
FAM.ll..Y PIN

Founder 's Day plans finalized
Final pl ans for th_e
Founder's Day observance to
be held Thursday evening at
the Meigs Inn were made during a meeting of the 'Xi Gamma Mu Chapter of .Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority held at
the Columbia Gas Co. Offil'O.
Members were reminded
that final registration is needed for the convention in
Cleveland. A letter was read
from the Comml\flity Mental

President ekcted
THE CORNUCOPIA
FAMLY PIN

Available In
White or Ye llow

Electro Plate
Holds up to 15
srones

GOESSLER
Jewelry Store
Court St.

Pomerov. o .

Mrs. Maxine Goeglein was
elected president of the Meigs
Band Boosters at a recent
meeting held at the high
schooL
other officers named for
the 1979-31 school year were
Mrs. Pat Kitchen , first vice
president; Florence Bearbs,
second vice president; Judy
Crooks, secretary; and Marie
Birchfield, treasurer.
Pat Woods presided at the
meeting at which time final
plans were made for the an. nual hand banquet to be hekl
on May 5. Ticket:' are $3.50.

Health Board regarding a
symposium . A couple 's
barbecue was planned for
May at the home of Mrs. Donna Nease.
Members were reminded to
get their Community Club
Awards coupons in by
Wednesday. Donna Nease,
Becky Anderson and Kareh
Sta nley will be sponsored by
the chapter in the bike hike.
Kathy J obnson and Kay
Aikins were hostesses.

Announce birth
Mr: and Mrs. Dan Lewis,

Langsville, are announcing
the birth of a son, Timothy
Scott, April 17 at the l:Jolzer
Medical Center. The baby
weighed eight pounds, 14
ounces. Mr. and ·Mrs. Lewis
have another son, Danny, age
four.
Grandparent:' are Mr. and
Mrs. Delbert Putney, West
Columbia; and Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Lewis, Sr., Mid- ·
dleport. Mrs. Allie Marr, Mr.
and Mrs. Ben R. Batey, Middleport, and Mr. and Mrs.
Cody 11ong, Point Pleasant
are great-grandparent:'.

TO END MARRIAGES
In Meigs County Conunon

Pleas Court three suits for
divorce have been filed and
one dissolution.
Filing lor divorce were
Faye E. Reed , Rt . 1,
Middleport, against Theodore
W. Reed, Oak Ridge, ·Tenn .;
Terry Lee McClellan,
Pomeroy, aga inst Joyce
Evangeline Stewart
McClellan , Bidwell; Terry
Goheen, Middleport against
Donald Keith Goheen, Sr.,
New Haven.

WEEKEND VISIToR ·
Mr. and M~ . ,'ThO!l)BsMit-'.
chell and Mrs. Bessie Mitchell w.er" ·weekend .Visitor,; :
of Mr. ·anct Mrs ... Alliert Martin , Sr., 'Chester. ·They aiso · ·
visited atthe home of Mr.and . ·
Mrs. Osby Martin with Vin' .
rent Mari·lli ·who is ilL
·

2,.x4"x8'

STUDS.
ONLY

GUEST SPEAKER
The Rev. William (Bill)
Beegle of Cheshire Methodist
charge will be the guesl
speaker at the Nease Settlement Church Friday, April
27, at 7:30 p.m. The public is
invited.

'

ASK TOWED
marriage li~ense was
issued to H. Glenn Brown , 2S,
Rt. 1, Rutland, and Debra
Kay Lambert, 20, Rt. I,
Rutland.
A

FISH &amp;CHIPS

84~
ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY
'

570 W. Main
Pome11!Y, 0.

BAKE SALE
Abake sale w~s planned for
May 12 at . t~e Rutland
Department Store when the
Rutland Firemen's Auxiliary
met recently at the firehouse .
Participation in the Community Awards program was
discussed and a quilt being
used in a fund raising project
will be awarded on Mother's
Day.
·

RUMMAGE SALE
A rummage sale will be
held at Becky's Crossroads·
Grocery Friday and Saturdayy ·beginning at 10 a.m.
·each morning hy the Junior
American Legion Auxiliary
of Feeney-Bennett Post 128.

'·

.

HOGG &amp; .ZUSPAN
MATERIALS CO.
.

OFFICIAL KD~LED
PERRYSBURG, Ohi o
(AP) - A state representative from northwestern
Ohio was killed and another
injured in an automobile acddent at a city intersection
Ihis morning.
.
'' Rep. lnna Karmol, RToledo, was killed and Rep.
Robert. Brown, R-Perrys- .
· burg, was .injured when their
car collided with an auto .
driven by John Roecker, of
Toledo at about 7:30a.m.

I

773-5554

.
.
.
-r--------.
- ------------------------------------.
-. ---------------.
,I -----,PURINA
::'!"""- ----------\
CA
. PTAIN 'CRUNCH CEREAL "· I ' TffiEY'TEA BAGS
:
. North ern
DOG CHOW

QUAKER UFE CEREAL

~o~;,o~ox

.

99e

1

~

~o~;.o~ox

· ·

·99e

·

:

1

1DOCI. Box

'169

~

BAlHROOM TISSUE
4 Roi1Pkg . .

8?&lt;=

I

~

-

..

2Sib.Bag

. ·~59

Limit one please w,ith this coupon 1
Limit one please with this coupon 1
Limit one plea.se w1th th1 s coupon 1 L1m1t one pl ease wtlh t.~1s c~~f on
coupon Expires Aprii2B, 1979
1
Coupon Expires April 28, 1979
I
Coupon Ex pores Apnl 28, 1979
CoupQn Expires Apn 2 AY
1
TWIN CITY GATEWAY __ ~-- --~_!:!_£!,!_!_2~!.E_W.f'_!___ ~ ____ _!.!,'IJ.~&lt;;_!!,!_~~T~~~~---.J- ---!.\'!.1 !:!.£!.J~!~~~---·-·----------- ------ -~---------- --------t
New Soft
.
1
I
Keebler
L.1

.1 0 ne please with this coupon
n Exp ·res April 28 1979
~:'1N CI~Y GATEWAY

~01

MASON, W. VA.

CLOROX BLEACH
Gallon

79e

J

1

l
I
1
.I

'·

8

I
I

I

•

1"

LESTOIL

~8o~;.o~ottle 99e
Limit on e please with t h'os coupon
coupon l;'xpires Apr.il28, 1979
N. t
TEWAY

·1

l
I

FABRIC SOFlNER

~3o~;.os

79e

I · L 1·m 1·t onD• pl ea.se with this coupon
1
Coupon Expires April 28, 1979
1
.
IN CITY GATEWAY

·. 1

!
I

I
1
1

MRS.. ALBERTS MARGARINE :

49e

lib . carton

,

Limi t one please with th is coupon
Coupon EXpires April28, 1979
TWI
GATEWAY

l
1
1
1

9

SALnNE CRACKERS
1lb. sox

59e

Limit one ,please with this coupon
Coup&lt;in Expires April28, 1979
WAY

�Sunrise services held in Apple Grove

B·-The Daily Sent1nel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. WednesdH y, April 25. 19i9
~~~: ;.;: ;:;:;.;-:: ::::;::::: ;:;:;.;:;: ;: ;.; :;:;:;:; : ;:;.;:;:;:;:;: ; :;:;:;:;: ;:;:;:;.;:;.;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;:::;:;:;.; :;:;:;:; :;:;:;:;:; :;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:; :;;;.;.;:;:;.:·:· :·:&lt;·:-::;:; :;: ; ::::: ;:; :;: ;:;. ;:;.;:;: ;.;:;:;:;:;.;:;:;:;:;:;:::::

!

; Highlights of Easter
; sefvices announced

the Sunday School hoiU' . They ·Aimee Hill, Michael Russell,
Psalm 51 and Jolm I. Puerru; . Bloom Agum", and ."The were ·courtney Ro~sh , Tyson Mugrage,: Brenda
were by Mary Roush, the Light of Jesus" by Dorsey daughter ·of .Mr. and Mrs. Hunt, Chriss and.· Stacey ·
"Easter Uly", by Donna Hill, Parsons . A caridle lighting Marshall Roush ; J1¥!tin Hill, Shank, . Joey jmell, Tracy
" When the .Easter Ulies service was held with Ed and son of Mr: and Mrs. Max Hilli · Norris,• Dolly and Michael·
Cindy . Roush lighting the
candles as Mrs. Jan Norris Amanda and Michael Joe Hui. Ushers were ·De¥1 , '
presenled "Must Jesus Bear Russell, .d aughter . Michael · Hill aiui Ed. Roush with 92
the Cross Alone." The con- Russell, daughter and son of persons a~ending the ileryice ·
·
gregation sang "He Arose'' Mr. lind Mrs. Ron Russell; andcootributing$121.36
Sunnse ser vice , a Lorraine Davis by Oleta Davis, gave ''Jesus' Love:'-by
Ryan
Norris,
son
of
Mr
.
and
Ali
Easter
·egg
hunt
was
and the Lord's · Prayer in
fr !lowship breakrast and a Joyce Davis, Edward Bowen Eric Heck , "Feeling Good"
Mrs. Darrell Norris ; Roy Lee held following the . Sunday
unison closed the service.
by
Amy
Beth
Brothers;
"The
by
Marjorie
Bowen,
Alta
program of recitations by the
Jr ., son of Mr. and school program: The church
Pierce,
The Rev. David Harris bap&lt;"tuldren hi ghlighted Easter Bentz by Floyd Bentz, Mr. Words" by Charles Dickens;
Mrs. Roy Pierce and Jeremy was decorated with lilies,
tized
several
children
during
:-,ervices at the Enterprise and Mrs. Emmett Will by the " Did You Give Thanks'" by
· Hupp, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ed ferns and vines trom Arthur
MARION - April showers
Jim Will ramily ; Ed and Errie Oleta Joyc'e Davis.
(lnitcd Methodist Church.
Hupp.
.
Hill by Mr.!. Dallas Hill. A
brill~
more
than
just
May
Children. or the Morning
The F. aster story in scri)&gt;- Arnold by their grandA progl'liJil followed with cross for the services was
flowers
.
Excessive
ltne
·noise
Glories Class taught by Mrs .
l·.~re CJnd .song was presented children and families; Clara
poems by Amanda Russell, made by Bob Speneer.
and outages that sometimes
Frankie Hunnel gave "We
Curtis
and
Mr.
and
Mrs
.
Mike
IJy the choir members at the
plague
telephone
servief
this
-.unrise service under the Bentz by the Thomas Bentz Thank Thee" by Mark Cor·
time of the year .are proof of
11irection of Mrs. Becky Cot- ramily, their parents by the bitt; " What HappineSs;, by
that.
lt• rlll. A breakrast was served Bentz, Weeks, and Davis Traci Casto; "Bless the
However, it's just not rain .
:n approxima tely 30 rollowing ramilie~, and Artie Evans by Children" by Darriri Warth;
It
could be any kind or
"Jesus · Lives" by Valarie
the grandchildren.
that service.
WEDNESDAY
moisture.
And when it gets
Recitations by tbe children Van Meter; " He Walks ToThe Rev. Jim Corbitt at the
into
telephone
cables, it can
LONG
BOTTOM
ComPOINT ··. PLEASANT-Mr.
rnorning worship se-rvice us- given during . the Sunday day" by Artie Hunnel; " I munity Association Wed-- cause · annoying service
arid
Ml'S. Marquis Om~r
ed the sermon topic, " He Is school hour included, ''Hello'' Would " by Joanie Simpson ; nesday 7:30p.m ..at the Com- disruptions .
Wallace,
·315 22rnfst;, recent. ·
.\live" with scripture taken by Jeremy Heck ; " "Usten" "Share" by Danny Hall; "I munity building ..
Th e problem is more ly celebrated·their 26th wed·
Have
a
Hope"
by
Bill
from Luke 24 . Over 100 per- by Jason Hall ; "The King"
POMEROY·- MI'DDLE - common' now than at other ding ~nru~ersart. . · .
,.ons attended with the church by Mandy Sheets ; "To All'' Brothers; "Loving" by Chris PORT lion Club, Wectnesday times because of the " post - . The -~OUple WaS married on
bei ng decorated with lilies by Josh Heck, of the nursery Davis; " In A Garden" by Jo noon at the Meigs Inn.
winter condition " of the cable March. 10, 1953 in Edgarton,
placed there in memory or class taught by Beverly WilL Ellen Crane; and "Easter
and
spring ~ains , according
by .tbe Rev. Nelson
MIJ)DJ.F.PORT to General Telephone Co . of · w.
\ 1yrtle Long by the ·r.milv: Children of the beginners Prayer" by Minday Spencer.
Ferrell.
·Mrs
. Wallace is . the
Benchwork Famil y Rings
class taught bv Mi"' .Ioyce
J.ITF.RARV Ciub, 2 p.m. Ohio .
. .
former
Ghidys
·Beavers,
WednesdHy at ·the home or
R. J . Dennis . General 's
Mrs . Rert C.rimm, I .etart vice president 1of net work daughter of ·tbe late Nathan
and Maggie Beavers of
F:~lls . Mrs. C.rimm
engjne.e ring
and
revipw "SC'ribble, Seribble" construction, explained that Matewan, W. Va. Mr.
by Nora F.phron . Members to small holes often form in the Wallace is the son of Otis
respond to roll rail with a cable covering during the Wallace of McCarr, Ky. 1\lld
In
addition,
you
disabled.
discounts
to
approxim,ately
the late Ruth Wallace. The
Hy Suitt' Rr p.
romm~ nt on th• pro~ram .
winter . They're caused by couple are the parents of one · ·
must
be
a
-resident
of
Ohio,
80.000
elderly
and
disabled
H.on .James
WILDWOOD GARDEN contraction and expansion, son, Roger-Dale Wallace of
Ohioans. This bill is now own and occupy your o.wn
j I ) ~ Proctorville ,
home,· and have an im.'Ome CLUB, home of Mrs . Fred which results rrom sudden Gallipolis, and they have two
awa
iUnt.!
the
consideration
of
9lnd House District t
th e Ohio House of Rep- which does not exceed the Nease, 8 p.m. Wednesday, temperature changes .
grandsons and one grand·
In lctst week's legislative
Then , any lime there's daughter. Wallace is a shift
income eligibility level. The with Mrs. Virginia Fisher to
res~ntati ves.
:-&gt; ~ ·t 1vity, the Ohio
Senate
. Senate Bill 6 extends the percentage of reduction will have the program. Members rain. moisture can work its foreman at the Meigs 2 mine
p~t s sed a pro posal which
be determined upon the to ·name a tree in their yard way into the holes. Melting near Albany.
.',\·nuld exten d propert y tax discount to eligible citizens
snow can do the same thing .
lor roll call.
by raising the maximum person's gross Income .
.
''Considering that we have
The Homestead Exemption
income of persons qualifying
SOUP mNNF.R Wedsome
36,000 miles of buried
for the Homestead Ex- program is organized so that nesday in the annex of the
and
aerial
cable throughout
emptioo . The upper in- a person needs to apply only Racine Methodist Church
Ohio,
the
magnitude
of the
come eligibility level cur- once. Alter the person is 'from 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. Sponproblem
becomes
all
too
BW8
BW7
IJW6
declared
eligible,
he
or
she
BWS
renUy stands at $10,000
sored by UMW.
apparent,"
Dennis
said.
needs
only
to
report
any
per year. Senate Bill 6, if
1WIN CTTY Shrlnettes 7:30
To keep moisture out,
changes in . status. Eligible . p.m. Wednesday in Riverenacted into law, would raise
Come in nOw and
General
pressurizes 10any or
this upper int-ome eligibility citizens should ~pply at their boat Room, Meigs Branch 1
buy a fuel saving
its
cables.
Checks
are
made
county auditor's office.
Her custom made ring or pendant in 10 kt.
level to $15,000 a year .
Athens County Savings and
daily
for
pressure
drops
that
Deutz
oir·c olled
Tbe
Homestead
ExBack in 1971, the Ohio
J.oan, W. Main , Pomeroy .
white or yellow gold is the most beautiful
would indicate the possible
diesel tra ctor and
General Assembly rirst emption has helped many
meaningful gift she will ever get.
RIVERVIEW Garden presence of a hole. In
we .ll ":lake you o
senior
and
disabled
citizens
enact ed the Homestead
Club, 8 p.m ., at home of Mrs. addition, the company also
who are suffering from hard- Oakey Connelly ; co dea l you"c: an "t
Exemption
law
which
Stop in and see the complete assortment.
uses buried cabJe·rilJed with a
ships resulting from inflated
reduced many homeowner 1s
afford to tur n
hostesses Mrs . Ronald waterproof compound .
Order early.
real property taxes. I have prices and fixed incomes. Cowdery and Mrs. Tom Spend own .
Still,
despite
these
voted to continue this Senate Bill 6; now pending cer. Workshop will be held.
preventive measW"es, water
berore i.be House , is a-step to
program during each or my
FEENEY
-BENNETT
occasionallY.
gets in. H ·it
further
help
those
Ohioans
term s here . A qualiried
who are especially hard hlt POST 128, American ~on, does, workers will try to
homeowner is given annual
TRACTOR SALES
SET CLOCKS
post everlasting services restore the cable by drying it
by inflation. I support it.
redUctions in property taxes
Spring Ave .
In further action , the House Wednesday night at 7:30p.m. and sealing the break. H that
depending oo . his or her
FORWARD
II&lt; E. N\AIN .' POMEROY
continued
work on the budget Dinner lor post and auxlllary rails, the damaged sectiqn.
Pomeroy, 0 .
income. Senate Bill 6 is an
ONE HOUR
effort to broaden this eight- bill. A vote of the rull House members at 6:30 p.m. SUN· will have to lle replaced.
.
year'-o ld
homestead on the budget proposal is DAY
SUNDAY
EVANGEUNE CHAPTER
expected the week or April :!:iexemptioo program.
OES inspection practice, Sun·
APRIL 29
In order to qualify lor a
day, 2 p.m. at theTe!llple. All
reduction in property taxes,
2 A.M.
William and Mary ' were officers urged to attend. Inyou. must be sixty-five years
crowned
king and queen of spection is May 3.
or agt or older, or you must
be permanently and totally England in 1689.
'nfURSDAY
OHIO NURSES' Assn. to
meet , 7:30 p.m. at OU Ihn,
Athens. All registered nurses
invited.
PARENTS OF girls participating in Salisbury junior
and softhall teams Thursday
7:30 p.m. at R,ock Springs
Grange Hall.
FRIDAY
REV. WILUAM. (BUll
Beegle of Cheshire Methodist
· charge will be guest speaker
at Nease Settlement Chlirch
Friday 7:30 p.m. Public invited.
.
SQUARE
DANCE
Friday
8
HOMEMADE HAM SAlAD ••••••••••••••
p.m. to 12:30 a .m. at Tupper.!
Eckrich
Plains Elementary School
with music by Blue Knob Ex·
BU, "": SMOKED SAUSAGE ••••••••••••••
press Band. Sponsored by
. Orange Flre Department.
Fren ,-, City
Refreshments and a cake
.
lb.
29
ALL~CLIMATE
walk.
HAM
WESTERN
SQUARE
dan·
20W
and
30W
10W/20W/40 or
BOILED
111W/20W/30
ce B p.m. to midnighl Friday
at Recreation building, Royal
Oak Park. Callers,. Cllad
3
or
Delicious
1 lb . Teen Queen
Jolmson, South Point; Blll
Bush, Jim Briggs, Hun,
auarters2/99C
Case of 24 qls. •
. tington, and Ed Clark,
•.
$14.81
Jackson. Refreshments. 'All
, · •t.
Western Sqoare dancers --HEAD
l,lb . Kraft
welconie.
80'!,
SATURDAY
30W, 40W, ..
'
DYESVILLE WOMEN'S
.qt. ~~~ of 24 qlt. Group of Dyesvllle. Chutch
.
- .
S11.DI
will hOld a soup supper Saturd,aly beginning at 5:30 p.m.; •
CARIBOU CAT FISH . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Caae of 2~ qt1. •
public inviteil.
.
117.11
I
·
.
20WI50
SPAGHETTI - SUPPER
R~CINQOlL
'l2 oz . Liquid
·Saturday at Salem Center ·
\
School beginning at 5 p.m.
10W/211W/40
Adults $2 and children $1.
IVORY DISH DETERGENT. •••••••••••••••••••• 9'1
V~LVOLI~E
CUI o·f 24 CUI. •
Public
invited.
·
.
17 oz . Chef-Boy-Ar-Dee
Sli.DI
. . XLD
qt.
' SUNDAY
HYMN SING Sunday 2
PEPPERONI PIZZA ••••••••••••••••••••• •••••$1.29
p.m. at Salvatiqn .Army. m
TUNE·UP KIT
49~
.
Butternut Ave. Everyone
PH-'IA, PM-1 1
TK-115, TK·IUI, TK·IIO,
welcome.
PH• I&amp;,·PH•30,
12 01.
TK•tm, TK•llll, TK-237.
99~
MONDAY
PH-.t3. IIIII moat
OXYOOL LAUNDRY
'or molt u.e.- oart.
U.S . Cl/'1,
REVIVAL AT Danvllle
Galton Rich 'N' Ready
Wesleyan Church Monday
tluwgh May 6, 7:30 p.m.
ORANGE DRINK •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 9'1
nl_g htly. The Re.v. Roy
1&amp; oz.
Ankrim,
Barberton,
32 oz .
evangelist. Featured singers
5
will be Mr. and Mrs. Dennis
HUNTS KETCHUP ••••••••••••••••••••••••
•• 1.09
Weaver of Pt.l"leasant.
46 oz . Hunts

I

APPLE GHllVf:-.sunrise
services on E:aster morning
were held at the Apple Grove
United Methodist Church at 6
a.m . with Mrs. Russell Roush
leading the service.
The group· . ng "Blessed
Redeemer'' and there was
prayer and ·scripture from
Luke 24 by Mrs. Dolly Wolfe .
Using "The Easter lJly" as
her theme, Mrs. Roush read
scripture from Luke 12,

1

Social

"LAND FOR SALE "
Tt1e Ot1io U11 1v ersi 1V F und
Inc .. wishes lo disp Ose of th e
· followi ng parce ls ot land
wh ic,h~re surplus to i t s needs .
Sect •on A : Burr Oak Lots,
si tuated in Morgan County ,
Hom er TownShip , Slat e of
Onio, and descr i bed .1 s
follow s : ·
Parcel A
Being lot 9W of
the Mor ningside Subdivi sion
Appro•imate sire 55 .08 ;
163 .38 N o. Bo undry , 55.08 :w
13 1.33 ~o Bdr y. x 106.37 East.
Bdr y .
Parce l B -· Bei n_g tot 9W ot
th e -Morn ingside Subd illision .
Appr o• . size 80 x 121 .06 No .
Bdry .• 80 • 130 So . Bdr y .. •
11-6 .30 East Bdry .
Section 8 : Situc:t ted in th e
V i llag e
or
M c Donald ,
Trumbull ·co unty , Stat e ot
Ohio, · and further desutbcd
as follows :
Parcel A Lot No. 372 40 ' •
120 ' fronting on Gr ant Ave
· f'ahel 8 Lol N o 374 40' ;
110 ' . fronting on q ranl Ave
Pa r ce l CLot No. J aB 40 ' •
120 ' fronting on Gr an f' 'Av e
Parcel D Lot No . J96 40 ' •
120 ' fronting on Gr an! Av e.
Par cel E Lol No . 11.36 40 ' )(
120 ' fr onti ng on I llinois Av e.

·April month
for noisy
phone lines

,-----~-~

Anniversary
observed ~--------------~

1

1 Cale~dar 1

Par ce l F oul!ots 19, 20, 21
co nsi sting of appro ,..; im ate lv
~ 3.0 0 acres more
or l ess
sit uated near M c Do nald Ave .
as descr ibed on map No . 006A
of th e . Tr u mbul l ~ County
Auditor's re cords and M?7
acr es as descri~ed on map
No." 002 of pa-Id ir·umbull
County Auditor r ecord s.
Section C : Sit u·ated in
section 13, townshi~ 10 , rang e
15, Lee Townsh ip. Athens
County:, State of Ohio, and
described as follow s :
Parcel No . 1 being ap .
prox i mately 8.27 0 acres mor e
or 1·ess si tuat ed on Le e
Townst1ip Road No . 2. Sa id
tract has 655 feet of r oat
frontage as surveyed June 11 ,
1977 .
Par ce l No. 2 being ap .
proximately 4.08 acr es more
or less s i tuated on Le e
Township Road along with a
two bedroom residence and
barn . Sa id tra ct has 205 feet
of road frontage as surveyed
June 11 , 1977 .
S.!le of the above pr opf;'rty
will be by sealed bid which
m ust be directed to Mr .
Gerald F . E\lans. Dir ec tor of
Materials· Manage"m ent and
Purchases, Room 212, Scott
Hall ,
Ohio
University ,
Athens, Ohio 45701. A ll bids
m ust be subm itted t o Mr .
Evans prior t o 7: 00 p .m . on
Monday , May 7, 1979.
Ohio University r eserves
th e r ight 10 accep t or rej ec t
.any and al l bids· and may
wa·i ve any i n fo r ma lit ies
w h ich
wilt
in no wpy
prejudice th e righ ts of any
other bidder . All sales subj ec t
to easement s, restriction s;
and conditions of re cord .
Payment must be in full
and by certif ied or cashier' s
check at the t ime of tra nsfer
of deed . Pro pe"rty taxes will
be prorated at the time of lh e
clos ing date .
Interested p~rtie s shoul d
contact Mr. Jack E ll iS (6l4t
594 ·6754 tor th e purpos e of
answering quest ions .

ya:.

Vi~"lJ

will

from Statehouse

·-

FULTON-THOMPSON

r

9- The Daily Sentinel • M1'd"leru&gt;
· . 197! t
11 ,_.... r t • r onwr.ny , 0 .. Wt•dnrs da j. Apnl25
BIDOE R: S CONFERENC E
1 he Olil&lt;e Ol Manpov.-(' 1
D~v 1' lop n 1eh t iS an nouncinc 1
p l &lt;tns l or a B1d Qcr s (fill
1Crt'ntc
to _ be ln:.· l rl
in
Columbu s on fo!.ay a. 19 79 . The
purpose 0 1 thi s con fer ence is
t o diss cm inu te in f orma t ion
o n tht• Youth Em ploym ent
and
T r aining Programs
~YETP ..j under l i!l t&gt; I V o f the
Com pr ehen sive Em pl oyment
and Tra1nin!J Act (CETA) of
1978.
En.1ployn1ent
and
tra in 1ng opportun ities will b e
offered under this Progra m to
youH1 ages 16 to 21. inc lusivr ,
w.ho
ar e
econo mic ally
d •Sadvan taged and in sc hoo l
or Will attend sclloo l o n the
nex t _a vailable dat £- . Ap
propr 1a t c efforts sh a ll be
made to ensur e th at th is
prog r am wil l en han ce the job
pr ospec t s and car eer op
ptlr tuni~ie s of you ng per sons.
1ncl ud!ng ' em pl oymen t ,
se r v ice
op
con1 m u!"' i ty
POrfiJ nihes and such tr aining
and suppc;&gt;rtiv e services as
are ne cess ary to e n ab l e
pa rt icipa nt s
to
sec ur e
s uitabl~ o...,;l nd
apprOJpriat c
un subsidiled empl oym'i/Ai in
the pub l ic and priva t e sec
tors
l h is pr ogta m will
suppl emf"n t but no t rep~ ac~
programs and a c t ivities
a vailab le under Tille I I B of
C ETA . T he geograph ic ar ea
se rve d is the 57 -co unt y
Ba lance of State. Ap pl icanrs
must ~ave the capabil ity of
operahng a cou nl y or mvlt i
county program .
ltl e (onfer enc e will be hl'! ld
in He ari ng Room "'- of the
St are Otfice Build ing, 65
South Front -Street. Co lum ·
bus , .Ohi o at 9 · 30 .a.m . o n Mav
8, 19711 . Inter ested applicants
w.i._ll
be
prov ided
with
p~posal pa ckages
and in .
f ormation a t th i s time
Propo sals for YETP g r ant S •
ar e to be sub·m itted to th e
O ffice of Manpower D eve lop
ment on or before May 18 ,
1979 . Additiona l in f ormat ion
may be
ob ta in ed
from
Chester D . White , Plann ing
Supervisor , at 61 4, .166 -8326 or
l ·B00 -282· 1050 !loll fre e J

~~&lt;$&gt;·

PROMOTION ENDS MAY 5, 1979

Store Hours:
Mon.-Sat. 8 A.M.-10 P.M.
Sunday 10 A.M. - 10 P.M.

'

.

\

298. SECOND
ST.
'
··"·'-POMEROY, 0.
:

·•

28, 1979

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU

GRADE A

Whole Fryers ... ~~.5 gc

A pril 25

APPEAL REFUSED

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The Ohio Supreme Court
refused Friday Ill hear the
appeal ofconvicted murderer
Timothy Papp, who wa s
seeking a new trial.
The court voted 5-0 not to
hear the appeal because the ·
justices said no substantial 1
constitutional question was
involved.
Papp, 27 , was first
convicted in the 1973 slaYing
of 9-year-old Roxie Ann
Kea1hley
or
Sheffield
Township the same year and
was sentenced to life
imprisonment. He wa s
April 15, 26, 29
.granted a retrial by a federal
court and again was
convicted in a · widely
Heavyweight Ossie Ocasio · . publicized trial a year ago.
of Puerto Rico is nicknamed
The latest appeal dealt with
"Jaws."
. 1Ule second trial.

~a.
'Q'Jwllen

COMPLETE YOUR STONEWARE .DISHES

B _E ER - WINE CARRYOUT
FOR SALE

CONTACT VIDIA GIROLAMI

Chicken Thighs~

'

89c
'

,_';'..

CHICKEN BREAsrsgge
29 OR DRUMSTICKS ••• !~
BACON ..............~~;~.l

'

·/'
'

.ERS
.
89e
WI EN • • • ••• • • •P•K:·. • _;
FRENCH CITY

120Z.

A Pork Loin.....'!.!.l

1

39

C/0 SHAMM.Y'S

arrived!

605

.,'

W.

Main , Pomeroy ,
0 .
No Phone cails
or Call Guido Girolami 1-305 -845-8425

. .'•1
•

-~

'•~·

••

~~}1.19

~

~~}1.79

$1
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •

3:. ,

LETltJCE,~ ••••••••

VELVEETA CHEESE

67

V~~VOL;NE

$1.79

•

•j

¢

67¢

~

DETERGENT..~~~~c.~~:.$1.59

79

'108

~~·:~·

TOMATO
10 OZ.

JUICE •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••~::.~ 1'1

NESCAF~

COFFEE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

12 oz . Armour

~~~.

5

4.49

~~~o.c.~::.. s1.29 .

TREET LUNCH MEAT. ••••••••••••••
200 Ct.

As&lt;ort~&gt;d

69e ·
A.il.•••••••••••••••••••••••••••l
. : fACISL

PUFFS

TISSUE •••••••••• : •••••••••••••

f

·,

PARTY PLANNED

. There will be a · party iO..
players and .cheerleaders of
the Pomeroy. Bomber.! fourth
and liHh · grade basketbilll
te8m at the Rivetboat Room
of the Meigs Branch, Athens
COUQI)' Sayings and.• Loa~ .·
Co.,-W. Maln St., Pomeroy, at ....
6:30p.m . Friday. Parents of
players aQd cheerleaders are
Invited. Trophies will be
presented the ballplayers.

I

.i
.. . ~

. ,i

OPIN

. 7 DAYI
AWIIK

•

'

:~

U. S.

"FARM EQUIPMENT : Ford 4,000 d iesei .IM m tr ac tor
in excellent condition , 3 pt . hitch w i th li ve power plus
hydraul ic coup ling , st of Ford pl ows (3 ~ 14 inch. J pt .
hitch ; in very good c ondit lon , Ford B ft . tran sr.ort di sc
(i_n excellent condition) , Dearborne disc w•th 3 pt .
h1fch , New Holland hay bi nd, Model 469 in very good

74~

$ 99

.,•"'

FARM EQUIPMENT- SHOP TOOLS- HOUSEHOLD
Saturday, April 28 - Time: 10 A.M . .- location : ·Tuppers
Plins, Ohio . Directions: Foii!)W .Rt. 50 &amp; 7 to· Coolville,
Oh;o, then stay on Rt. 7 to Tuppers.Plains, then turn w.
on 681 for Approx. smiles or from St . Rt . JJ turn E . on
681 at Etarwin. Watch for Signs .

62~.

58~

,.

I;

FARM AUCTION

HPO

APPL£5 •••••••~~~}1.15

MARGARINE •• , •••

·'
••,.

VALVOLINE

'I•

'

•

SUPERIORS

l
i

cond ition (9ft. cut), Mi\ssey Fer guson No. 9 hay bait er
in e-,c:c¢11ent co nditon, Massey Ferguson wheel r ~ ke
(good conditon ), For d hay conditioner (good cond . ),
N ew Holland fla i l type tank man ure spr eclder (good
con d.), Shaver hyd . post driver made for fro nt tra c to r .
mount (same as new), Side Wind er brush hog, S ft . (in
good condit ion ), M ono 5 ft . brush hog (frclr'ne in ex
cellent condition · needs gear r epair) , N ew Ideal M odel
71 row corn picker (good) , Qliver ld ft . f iAt bed fi'!rm
wagon (good ), John Deer e 1? ft . wago n (e:w trf' heavy
.fram e w ith bra kes ) , Winde Wind er r ea r blilde Model
UB ·7 (good ). case combine Madel 75·PTO drive On
good t onditon) . This machi nery hAS been well mi\in ·
tained &amp; kept ln a dry bui lding . Plu s : ?- 1,500 bushel
co rn crib s (portabl e heavy wire w i th dome r oo.f s). 3
r ound bale hay feeder s, set of tr r~ct6r chair~s . Plus in
the Sh op and Out ~ u i l di ngs - Lincoln 775 elect. welder
(complete w ith teeds) large shop air q&gt;mPr essor {ap
prox . 30 gal . t ank), Atlas dr ill pres s {in exce ll ent
cond), bench grinder, side grin der , h and tools of a!t
kinds, snap· on tool cabi ne t wi th 1o;, iri dr ive socke t se t
( complete) "' in drive socke t set (complete). combin a·
tion box &amp; end wren ches &amp; a large too l bo)(, iron work
ben ch, c hains, c hain bind e rs, vibrator snnder , 3 la rge
pipe stand s (2 leveling C~d ju s trn e nt s) , 1'? inch elec t . im ·
pac t wren c h, Century kerosene space herd er (like
new ), 2 wheel bl.J.99Y for cutting outfit, 2 elect . f ence
chargers, 2 se t s fence str etcf"l er s, A rolls br~ rb wire, ser
of truck chains.
Misc. hand &amp; &lt;:~ard en tool s, 2 hand corn planters, set of
4 .horse drawn double tr ees, WClrm Morning wood &amp;
coa l heati ng strive, New B en Fr&lt;"'nklin wood &amp; COi'! l
heting s tove estill in box), severa l sheets galva11ized
tin, several hundred ft . of tong &amp; groove 2J~i6's " CCresote
trea ted ). Several locust posts, olc1 Mrse d r awn
cultivators, old rake, 2 sheets .,d in . flat pla t e s t eP! ,
pr~lnt brooms, plu s man y, many item s not listed .
Plus Household : 'J living r oom suites , nice desk &amp;
chair, some antiques, storm doors. Ci'lnning jars,
clothing plu s other household furnishings plu s a 1971
Pinto, 7 door sedan (me&lt;hAnic;;~lly good but needs body
r epair) .
This wil_l be a very good auction with something for
everyQne. Come early. Look around. Al~o thi~ 190 acre
farm is for sale . Positive ID required for bid numbers .
tunch &amp; refreshments will ber served . See you Satur·
d~v . everyone w~tcome .

•

'. E. L. "Red" Miller:-Auct.
Mr . Lester "Buck" Keaton-.O wner
Not Responsible for Accidents

NO.

1

Idaho

·-.

r;/'

$ 119
Potatoes.12!~·.

~ - ,

''.,'

-·
1

.;.

...._•

'

Ch~i~late Miik~.~ 1

59

Paper Plates.. ~!! 79c MARGARINE.~~~.3/
DIXIE. WHITE ·

.

.

_

.

SHEDDS

J

ZESTA

.

.

.

INSTANT TEA

~oz. $169
limit 1 pe r C~stomcr
Gooctont y ~~ Pow'PII 's
Ofier' Fxpire s April78,
1979
..
'

. .

COUPON

COUPON

NESTE A

BANQUET

COUNTRY TIME
LEMONADE

33

oz. $}59

Limit 1 rcr C.I&gt; S IOm ~ r
Good Onl y ill Pow e ll 's ·
Off~r F• ir~s April78 , 1979

.

L__COUP_ON -

SUGAR
$-LB.

BAG

ggc

t imit 1 prr rustomrr
Good only~~ Powell ';
Off er Expires April -28 ; 1979

'

TIDE

FLAVORITE

DETERGENT

84

-'
;

....1

.'

~
,..

$

1
e
$
CRACKERS.......... 59 POT PIES......... A/ 1
oz. $219

Limit 1 per Customer
Good only at· Pow e ll' s
Olfer E~pires
28, 1979

.

'
"

"

it'

•

••

--c,:

••

•'••

.....•'
~

...,,

..•-•.
·'
'•

..
.
••

,,...

:I
'

•

.."••
'

~

:,

••
·'•
....•• .
~

�10- The Dally Sentinel. Middleport-Pomel'oy. 0 • WedncsdHy . April:!&gt;. 19i9
For Sale
---·--

WANT AD
CHARGES
l dtiy

.2&lt;hiys
ld&lt;~ys

3.00

6days

ElECTR IC GUITA R with case . l•~e
new Steel guitar w1th &lt;ose
good cond!I!On . 997 7-453

l.75

1975 HONDA 175 Elst nore Nt"w
hre:s . chain Ond sprocket Elr ·
cel le nl condi tion 742-315A .

F..ath word o~r lhe minimum 15
words is 4 cents per word per day
Ads rwmlng other tha n l"Ofl3e("Utivr:
days will be charged 111 the 1 day
r11lt

SPRING HAS s prung ogoin at
Bob ' s
Market
and
Greenhouses · Onton sets. seed
potatoes. ferl ili ler
balk
garden seed and all fforly
vege table
p la nB
and,
strawberry plants now reodv
lor sale Bobs Market . Ma son
!'lhbne: 773-571 1 Open 7 days ,
8-8.

In lllt'mory, Card of Thanks 1nd l
6 C'efll!i per word , 13 00
rrunimum. Cash tn advance
Obihtt~l")'

Mobile Rome sales and Yardsitles
only with t•ash wll.h
ordt:r, 2:5 ~~enl charge f1.1r 111da carry-·
in ~ Box Numb.:-r In Ca~ ol Th~ ~n­
&lt;~ re BL't.'t!pl@d

Uni!l.

Pl ANTS , CA BBAGE . ) broccoli .
cou ltflower 1 brussels sprouts .
head lelluce, tOmatoes , and
large selection of ~d ding an nuals . Pots of fl owers a nd
ho ng• ng baskets
Cleland
Greenhouse
Gera ldin e
Clela nd , Ractne.

The Publisher reserves the nght
w edlt or re.)e&lt;..1any ads deemed 01):
.lectional. The Publisher wtU ~ be
responstble for mortt lhlln ~ in4;orrect insertion.

Pl&gt;oo&lt; "'·!)56

,.....:-----· NOTICE

·
I

21 FOOT DELU XE Storcroft trai ler

Stove
re frigerator
A C. .
sleeps b. On displ ay at Hog er -

.!Y '.~ · ~25 Beec~ ~t

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

~ W:i~l~p~r!

1978 ", SUZUKI dirt bike 250 RM .
like new. Cecil Brinoger.
949-2387 .
1974 GMC JIMMY, P 8 .. P S..
A C , 2-wheel dr tv e. Pnced
reasonab le Co ll992 3580.

Mondat

Noon on&amp;lturdHy

-

GOOD CONDITIONED hoy S 70
Oe li ve ryovoi loble . 992-720 1 OJ
9'12 ·330'1 .

Tl.lesda}'
lhruFriday
4P.M
the day before publlntion

GOATS SOME JUS t freshened :
tw o due In July and Au9,ust .
Al so kids . Shade 696-1234 .

Sunday .
4 P.M .

· · ·--

P'ridayol-- . ;_.
1

Card of Thanks
WE WISH to expreu o ur si ncere
thanks and ap p reci at ion to ou r

many friends , neighbor s and
relatives for lh e1r kindn ess
and sympothl" in the pani ng of

our lovmg wife , mothe r and
s,ister, Ethel · Peggy" Ohve r
God Bless you oH
Rober- t Olive r and Familv .
Brothers a nd Sister s.

-------·-

I 11 0 ,000 lb. mi lk route for sole
985--4207 or 985-3861 or wnte
27, Po ~eroy. _
TWO USED pianos and used
orga ns for sole tn your area .
For . mo re informati on wr ite
Credi t Manager , 154 W. Ma1n
51. . lan caster. Ohi o 43 140 or
coli I ,654-5883

· · - · --- - -·-

19?7 SUZUK I GS· 7SO ExcelLent
con di tion 5000 mi With ex tras .
742 -2375 .
TROY-BI Ll ROTISSE RIE · gQrden
plow . Used 1 year . 992-5564 .
1972cHARGER 31's good
condition . 992 2232·
DI-sHWASHeR . - ·
Ph.o ne
992-22C13

o00c-e

Nplices
GUN SHOOT. EVERY FRIO"Y 6 30
PM R"CINE GUN ELUB . FACTORY CHOKE GUNS ONLY.

-------------RACINE VOLUNTEER Ftre Dept. IS

concellmg th1er gun shoot unt il
th is foi L Tt,e Racine Fire Oep l
wishes to thank everyone lor
helpmg them make the gun
shoot a success. Hope to see
r~~ ~!2._h~ ~a_!!:- - - - - - LAST WEEK of co!"flplcte se ll ou t of
household goods . Stop by 760
Laurel St M1ddleport

.

--- ------,..- -·
Lost and Found

LOST• MALE Iris h Se tter Approx
2 yrs . old . Area of Boshan on
Boshon Rd . Ch ildren's pet
Reword 949-7466
A RING fo und m viC:t nity of
Ci tiren"s Notional Bonk , Mid·
d leport. Write description to
PO Box 193 , Middleport , OH
A5 760
LOST · RT . 3 Bypass
ltver and
white Springer Spaniel Leother
collar. Pot O'Brien . 992-6271 or
992·2381.

·=--:c.-,.----- ---

Yard Sale

s4o. -

FOR SALE: calf creep feeder Cell
9'1'2 -3652
.

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

NEW SAVAGE Fa• B d0u,ble bar :
re ll 12 gouge. $150 Coli
972·60'13 .
Camping Equipment
1975 11 FOOT truck camper , self.
con tai ned , ot r condi ti on . exce llent condtt1on. 99'1-2121
1974 27 FOOT CAMPER Sleeps
s1x
Ga s furna ce , El lectric
hea ter bu1lt -in. Lorge both with
shower . 742-2577 .
Wanted to Buy
CAS H FOR jun~ cqr s 2A hour
wrec lo. er
service . Fr ye' s ,
Rutland. OH. 742-2081

- - --

-~~------

CHIP WOOD . Po les ma x .
diameter 10" on largest end .
S12 p@r ton Bu ndled slob $1 0
per ton Deli vered to Oh10
Pollet Co. , Rt. 2 Pomeroy
9'1~ . 261!9.
OlD FURNITURE. ice boxes . brass
beds, iron beds . desks . etc
complete households. Writ ~:~:
M.O Mill e r. R:t . -4 , Pomeroy or
cai i992-77&amp;J .

FOUR FAMilY Garage Sole . April
28th at Ronald Harts res ide nce.
Oak Grave Rood . Racme , Ohio.
OiS h85, glasswa re , cloth ing, OlD COINS . pocket watches
doss rings , wedding bonds,
etc. ·
di amonds. Gold or silver. Cal l
Whit; S h-;. 1 ~e
Roer Wamsley, 7A2-2331 .
37. May 4 &amp; 5 at Pomeroy - -------- --- Masonic Tem ple. 9 to" - Pickup WANT TO buy o ld 45 and 78
. Phonograph re cords . Call
numbers,
call
992-7853 ,
992-6370 or Co ntact Ma rli n Fur 992-7495 , 992-5107 or drop at
nitu re .
Post:cO::f:::fi:&lt;•
:.::·'-c- _ _ _ _ _ _
THREE FAMILY Garage Sale Aprd . WANT TO buy . old jewelry. Call
26 27 . 78 . Good quality
992-5262 or wr1te Kay Cec1l. 87
ou.tgr o wn clothing , baby • _ ~ ?n~ ._M~d~l':p~r ':.:_ ,~H.: _ _ _
clothes . and otehr misc. items . WANTED· ONE acre of land nea r.
2 miles east of Racine on Rt . 124
F1ve Points Call oftet' 5
at Mororit)' reside nc e
997-3955
'

-- -·- -· - ------

RuMMAcE sALE.-

•(

-----

~---

YARO AND Bake Sole at the F.rst
Church of God in Syracuse on

2~ 127. 10~~ -----­
h·

,,
''
.,

·-

TWO FAMILY Vard Sole. Frtday
and Saturday. F1rst rood on left
postWMPO.
LARGE SIX Family Yard Sale
Thurs day and Friday, April 26 &amp;
27 . 10 am. Good chi ldren's
• clothing. all sites . good men's
• dress pants. size 40. lots of
dishes, b&amp;dspreods, trumpet ,
ftre sc reen with glass doors. 12
gouge dou ble ba rrel shotgun,
bose CB and 2 super mag
an tennas , lots of child ren's toy s
a nd story books lik e new
guitor.'Turn l'ight at top of Hart·
ford Hill , firs t house on !eft on
hill . Not responsible fo r acci dents lots of other mt sc.
YARD SALE . Thursdar and Fnday
26th and 27 th hti Collins f1rst
hou se on Rt . 7 , just pail 143 Ex it . 9 tll2.
FIVE FAMILY Yard Sole Friday ,
the 27 th at Howard Roush,
Racine 1 day on ly . rain o r
s hine. q om to 3pm

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

ACCEPTINGAPPUCANTS
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) _

The Ohio

Arts Counc il is acceptlng applications for
assistance grants · of up to
$500 as part of its Individual
Artists Mini-Grant program.
Arc hi tects , d esIgners, composers ' choreographers,·

film-m~kers

playwrights ·
. 'bl '
and craftsmen are e 1tgJ e to

'

receive the ~~nts . Deadline
for applications IS 5 p .m .,

July 1.

Help Wanted
IMMEDIATE
OPENING .
laborato ry Technician , 3--11
shill , Etcperienced MLT [ASCP)
or eq ui ¥ole nt , Excellent salary
and fr inge btmefits Shift dif ferento iJ. Contact: Personnel
Pleasa n t
Volley
Off ic e ,
Hosp1tol . Valley Onve. Po1n l
Pleasant, WV. 25550. Phone
30A-675-A3AO . An Equa l Op- ED.!' ':'.n~y_E~p_!_O!_!~· - - - - LOCAL UN ION 5668 USWA ore a ccepti ng a pplications for o permonent secretory App lica tions
moy be obtained at Local Un1on
Hall. The opp i1Cohons must be
retu rned no later t~o n April 77 .
Loca l Uni on Hall is located 3
miles south of Ravenswood. Rt .
2.
SOMEONE
~n- ;lde~y
man in the1r home. Roy
OOnohew . For inform ontoct
Jeff Donohew , 65 Oak Ortve ,
Little cine-Le tart a• ea.
CARPENTERS LU650 , 218 E Main
St. , Pomeroy Applications will
be Ioken for apprentice May
29th. 301hand3tst. 1979 . 10am
to 12 noo n. Morv1n E. Knapp ,
coordma tor
Tri ·Stat e O.C
J A c
Equal Opportunity
_ !"'__P loye~. _ _
' _____ _
T"KING "PPLI CMIONS lo•
waitreu and cook . Apply in
person on ly Steamboat In n
Racine.
__
_ _ __ _ _ _ _ _____ _
WANTED: O NE counter man No
plione calls. Apply in person.
Motor Ports Co., 157 Waln ut
St., Middleport
NEE D BABYSITTER - ;;;, - o-;,;
evemngs 0 week . My home or
_ !'o_ur! ~- ~~ :.. __ ___ _

-:,.o k;;;

MEDICAL TECHNOLOGIST
I'

For Best Results- Use Sentinel Classifieds

COAl , UMESTONE sand , grovel.
colc1um chloride fert ilizer . do g
load and oil types of soh b
rel:sior Salt Works , Inc E Mo m
St. Pome roy, 992·3891
'

15 words or Undt-r
Cash
Ch.argr
1.00
l .l'i
1.50
I.!Ill
1.110
! .l'i

Male or female, accepting applications .or
full time technologist . ML T . or CL T with
HEW. Salary will be commensurate .with
experience. Resumes can be mailed to
Veterans Memorial
Hospital,
Box 749
Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Phone 614 -992 -2104
Equal Employment Opportunity

-2

.

· · 11 - The Daily Sentinel. Middlepo rt -Pomeroy . 0, Wed nesday , April2!i.19i9
.

.

fliCK TRACY

TELEVISION
VIEWING

,.

-

BEAUTIFUL SE LE CTION ol /lowe's
for Memorial Day
Faye s
Flowe r Shop, next to F1restone
Store 10 Middlepo rt
TWO DEEP d1sh chrome reverse

wheels

with

lug

~--- - ·-

__ _ _c:;_;_v~ {!.w_ay .

For Sate

nuts , f1ts

Chevy . Tw o Anser slots with

.

Real Estate. for Sale

WEEK o ld pupp•es, half Jnsh 3 ' acres 1n Pnmeroy SEcllld .. d
""oaded area on top C"tf hill
Setter and Coc... er Spaniel.
O..,e,looks r~ver Wa ter. el ecBlock wrth whrte mar ki ngs Coli
tri c ava il able 992-3886
992-6093 .
REAL
ESTATE Loons P01 r hose and
FREE PUPPIES Rutl and 7A2 -3063
.
reltnoncP.. 30 year te rm s VA
No mo ne y down (elr gible
vetera ns ). FHA As low a s 3
_ ~-o~ile _!!o".!_es for Sal!_
per cenl down [no n-ve terans)
IQ65 Gene ral , 60x12 , 2 bcfr .
Ire land Mortgage Co . 77 E
1970 Skyline. 12x65. 2 br.
Sta te . Athens 61A-592-3051
I 970 Sylva. 60x 12, 2 bdr
MODERN
THREE bedroom house ,
1970 Cas tl e , 6dx 12 , 2 bdr .
full basement, fir eplace , fully
1973 Nobili ty, 12x60, 2 br .
ca rpeted ce ntral 01r enclosed
1973 R! dg ewood. 70x 14 . 3 bdr
su n porch. located on 6 1f:r. acres
1973 Noshva . 60•12 , 2 bdr
o n CR 28 ap pro• 3 miles from
1973 Governor , 60x12, 2 br .
Raci ne. If Interested &lt;a ntoct
1974 Mark li ne. 50x 12. 2 br .
lor ry Wolfe 949-1836 weelo.ends
' B&amp;S MOBILE HOME SALES
PT PLESANT , WV .
~n_d ~f~e r_ 5 ev_en~n~s- . . _ .
• - 675-4424
TWO STORY 3 bed room frame
1971 MOBilE HOME 12 • bO 2
~o.us_e ~n ~i~_l e~rt . 992- 345~.
bed room furnis hed f1rep loce.
Good
con d ition .
$470&amp;. SEVEN ROOM house and bose·
843 ~45
men! in Minerville . 992-5823 .
~O UR

H; L Writesel
Roofing

REAL ESTATE LOANS

New. repair.
g ullers and
down spouts.
Window cleaning
Guller cleaning
Free Estimates

IRElAND
MORTGAGE CO.

592·3051

POMEROY
LANDMARK

'

CAPTAI N F:ASY

Ca II for

a Free Si"ing
Estimate , 949-2801 or
949-2860 . No Sunday

calls .
4-4-1 mo.

Your Headquarters For
Armstrong Carpeting

ROGER HYSBl
GARMiE

ElliOTT
APPUANCE II

'4 mlle,off Rt. 7 •y-pau on
St .

GO HOMIJ,

IN FA CT, ! :;HALLTAl&lt;!!. YO U SACK
TO THe U-SA. PER50 NALL '1--ABOAI;;D
M'l PRIVATE
YA CHT :

8EL0VED

LEADER: , SO I CAr.J
!11SE M'l WIFS' 1\~P
I&lt;IDPIES. ASAIN~

Rl. l241oW!ll'il

Au,_&amp;Truck
' Repair
-1(iso Transmission
· Repair
Phone 992-5682

"For

11 ·9·1 mo.

~ ~ ~~ ~

..- ·

NL Construction
BLOCK &amp; BRICK

WORK, GENERAL
CONTRACTOR

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

STROUT
REALTY,
INC.

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

1973 INTERNATIONAL SCOUT '
21,000 mile s. fully equipped.
ot r. wen ch. e tc .. excellent con
ditlon . 992-2-121.

Housing·
Headquarters

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

1977 MONTE CARLO. P.S., P.B..
P.W C C , T.S , A.C ;13 ,000
miles
Call · 7,.2·2-421 or
9'122881 .
----·
1979 FORO CUSTOM F-150 truck .
302 eng me, '/1 ton , auto. P.S.,
P.B , A .C. 7A2-2826

----------

------------197 0
CHEVROlET
IMPAlA

Custom, 350, 2 bbl. , po'l.(er
seat s, P.S . P C. Overhaul kit
lor 289 Ford minus rod beortn g
9&lt;19- 2~1

1977- 0i.Os- cUTL AsS.Saio~ AM.
FM radio, bucket seats, extras .
742-2-435.
1972 BUICK LE SABRE, factory air ,
auto . P.S P.B.. New batte ry .
_ fl~!r ~o_or_lo_: k! :!_93:~4~7.:.. _
1973 OOOGE POWER wagon b4 .
Ne-rt tires . Q85-3378. ....

___________ __ _
Pets for Sale

000 OBEDIENCE Clones form ing

____
__ii_61A·367-05SO.
.... _______ _
now. Co
RfGISTEREO Old English
s"hee pdog pupptes. 8 weeks
o ld . Shots a nd worme d .

AI&lt;C

614-667 - ~20 .
-----·----- ----

For Rent
CO UNTRY MOBilE Home Pork .
~o ut.e 33 , n6rth of Pomeroy.
_ ~o~g! ~~~-- ~o~!!~-4!.! ·
3 AND 4 BM furni shed and un·
fur nished opt s .
Ph one
9'12-5434 .

__ _

90 ROlLING ACRES of good
postu re , Plenty of water , Could
occomodote SO plu$ cattle .
614-667·3398 .
SLEEPING ROOMS lor worlo.ing
men only Breakfast if deSired .
Reo sonoble rates . Phone
992·5422
TRAILER. 1 clea n adult 992-3181
-

'"

--

----- ---··

-

~

-

HOUSE. .&lt;t rooms and both , un·
furnis hed 992·3090.
TRAI,LER AND building In Syrac use
_ ~n_3~d -~~ ~h~r-~(9!2~~~~
TWO BEDROOM traile r in Mid·
dleport . Deposit required.
_ _?9:7· ~9! .&amp; offer 5pm .

HOBSIEI IER
. REALTY
New Lima Road
ttutfand, Ohio
Phone 742-2003
NEW
LISTING
~
buildings In Dexter. One
building is 30'x 45' and has
alum inum siding . The
other is two story and
measures 55'x30' . It· is
made out of beautiful hand ·
hued lumber. Situated on
nice size lots with 2 wells .
Call for more info. You can
have both for $16,000.00.
A-FRAME on State Route
. 1AJ . Exce llent 3 bedroom ,
mdoern home on 2112 a cres
Call for an appon1ment
On Iy $37,000 00.
WEST
RUTLAND
Bea utiful 3 bedroom coun try home . · Situated on
almost 2 acres . Large
-detached
garag e
a nd
much , muc h more ! !
RUTLAND - Very nice 3

~~;:,om E~~';!e, ~~ceSa~~~
building wi1h heat and elec ·
tric. Out of flood area. Only
!39,000 00.
NEW LISTING - l a rg e~
story home in Middl e port .
Home has 4 bed roo.m s , liv·
ing room , dining r oo m , kit ·
chen, pantry and bath . It
has a new gas furnace and
new roof De tached cement
bloc k garage. We won'~
have this one long. Sells for
$45,000.00.
FARM - 99 acre farm
F o rm er ly known as the
Paul
Orr
farm.
All
buildings In excelle nt condit ion. Home is built of
Cal ifo rn ia Redwood . You.
musl see this one to ap prec iate its beauty . Call to day
Chervl Lemley , Associate
Phone 742-2003
Hilton Wolfe, Associate
Phone 949-2519
GeorgeS. Hobste.fter, Jr.
Broker 992-5739
'

•

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

COUNTRY LIVING IN TOWN _:_ Total pr iv acy Is lhe
key here on 2 plus acres, the living room has brick
fireplace, step-down family room , equipped ki1chen ,
full bath , laundry area , and two bedroom s complete
downstairs. The unfinished upstaJrs makes expansion
possible . Priced to sell at $25,900 .
WE ' RE "SlNGING ·THE PRAISES ON THIS ONE "
Not only does it offer f ine value but at a low price
Located in Letart, 0 ., Rt. 338, It offers 3 BR with large
closets, full bath, beautifully carpeted throughout , the
living room is so inviting with a formal DR 8. fam ily
room . The large kitchen has plenty of cabinets and the
dishwasher stays. PriCed at $35,000 . ~JUST LISTED · - fl5 &lt;"!(r('!;, With ple nty o f po0r1 pas tur P
tann &lt;" net s omP fnr mino nrnu nr1 . nood bi"'rn with cir i l l~:&gt; ci
wr!l \.;t rnn ~:&gt; rl nct othP r huil&lt;i in&lt;ls Two fnrm ho usPs,
hoth nPf'ri somP r f'pn ir Min f' r r~ l r iohts too. Goocf loca
t ir. n "'hnut 5 minufPS fr('!m Pnm r roy off Rt 33 P r irPci
tnr mt 1r- k ~n lr !i 4 :?.~
75 .A C RES with n 3 brri room fr ilmf' ho u sf', bA rn &lt;"l Oci
('!thr r huilt1inn. m o!; tl y frnrPrl Somf" timhpr itnd Px
\f' ll l"n t hoftn m l;tnc1 Abou t 1.000 fpf't of h Pnutiful Ohio
RivPr fr fl ntit OP OwnPr w ill hPip f initn\1". As kino
~9 . 000 . Withnut t imhf'r ~SS , OOO
FNJOV COUNTRY LIVING · · In thi s bertu tihrl
n 'rnnrlr lf' ct 11 AR .full y \i1r pf'ff'c1 homf' . T hP homE' si ts on
5 ncrr~ ilnc1 inr lucirs n po nd . ThP !itonf' hi"M n IMnr
f trf'f'JII'\rr &lt;;rf&lt;; Off th f' !MOP l R r~rPi' K itC'hl' n i!' €' (1ll ip
r rrt with rrfrio ., s tovf' it nd cti!'hWil ShPr HomP hns hf' f'O
vrry wp fl 1no;ulr trrl Pr irPct &lt;'It 1i3'il,900.
FARM
Appr nx dO nrr('o; of lond , poocl• psture ;tnd
c;.omr f~r-mi no or0un rt F xtr,-. lit r ClE&gt; bnr n L;tr~p f ;:~ rm
h&lt;1u s r , nf'Pcis rr'pi'llrrci . F xrf' IIPnt lrtkP st tc- loc,1tPc1
Mor&lt;1f' rino POMPrny /\~ki n~ ~ ,n , Oo(l
HOME' SITE' - Bfi Sh itn il rf'et , E'XCE"II Pnt hom r s il&lt;' ,
W,-.trr il rlrl l" lr-r trir 1'\VCiiiM)II" Ha!i hf'Pn survt"yf'r1.
s~ f)(l0

18 Years Experience
Will Make
. Service Calis

'

651 Beech Street
Middleport,

0.

'
'

992-2356
3-7-·t mo . (Pd.)

60'1'...

TRAI[lR_SAlfS
27320 Montgomery Rd.
Langsville, Ohio
614-669-4245 Evenings
2 Miles Ea!loOYilkes~ill!.
SUPER GOOSE STOCK
TRAILERS
NOW

a.

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surpnse answer, as sug-

gested by the above canoo n

AVAI~ABLE

A Fll'IE HUSBI\IID HE

WAS ! LEP.P'IN' LI ZARDS.1

IT 'S ROCKY I'D Bf. CRYIN '
'BOUT ... IF I HAD TIME .. ·

C. R. ~ASH
VINYL &amp; ALUM•
SIDING

- -!,

WANTED
WE NEED NEW HOMES &amp; ~ARMS
CAll ,!IMMV DFFM , /\SSOCI.6TE 949,388
OR NMICV JA&lt;PE~~ . ASSOCIATE t49-7UO

BUT li1EY CAt-;
C.WE. HIM liFE: ...

Print answer here: "[

LESS WE C A~ GE T
SOME EVIDE NCE O F
OUR OWN. " ·

I

Yeste rday 5

I I I I XI ]"
(Answers lomorr~)

Jumbles BERET DECAY SPONGE ADJOIN ·
Answer Too heavy for the chair-results In thfl kind
of anQu lsh-" CEEP-SEATED"

*New Home

~Add-ons

'li

Remoldings
*Free Estimates

..

SMITH NELSON

MOTORS, INC.

992 -601 I

•

10 ·00-Card Sha rk s 3, 15 ; Edge of Nlghl6; All In The
Family 8, 10; Dali ng Game 13 ; Movi e " Goodb"tO,
My Fancy" 17 .
10 : 31&gt;'--A II Star Secrets 3, 15; Andy Grlffllh 6; $20,000
Pyramid 13; Whew ! 8,1 0.
10 :55--CBS Ne ws 8: House Call 10.
11: 00- High Rollers 3, 15, laverne &amp; Shirley 6, 13 ; Pr ice
is Righi 8, 10.
11 :30-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15; Family Feud 6, 13;
Sesame St . 20; Nova 33.
1:2 :00-Newscenter 3; News 6,10; Password 15; Young
&amp; fhe Restless 8; Midday Magazine 13; Love
American STy le 17.
12 :30-Ryan ' s Hope 6,13; Sea r ch for Tomorrow 8,10;
E lee Co. ~0,33; Not For Women Only 15; Movie
" T he Wfnnlna Team" 11.
·OO-Days of Oc• Lives 3,15; AII . My Children 6,13;
Young &amp; lhe ~~stless 10; News 8.
Ju-As 1he Wo rld Turns 8,10; 2:oo-Ooctors 3,15;
One Llle to Live 6, 13 ; 2: 25-New&amp; 17 .
~ : 30-Another World 3,1S; Guiding Light 8,10;
Love
Lucy 17 .
3: oo-General Hospital 6,13; Llllos Yoga
You 20;
Banano Splits &amp; Friends 17.
3:3Q-Mash 8; Joker 's Wild 10; Fttntstones 17: Over
Easy 20.
4 :QO-Mister Ca rtoon 3; Hollywood Squares 15; Merv
Griffin 6; Addams Fam ily 8; Sesame St. 20,33; Six
Million Dolla r Man 10 : Mike Douglas 13; Space
Giants 17 .
4 : 30-Bewltched 3; Gilligan' s Is. 8,17; Lucy Show 15.
5 · oo-t Dream of Jeannie 3; Beverly Hlllbltltes I ;
· Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; Gomer Pyle,
USMC 10; Bionic Woman 13; Brady . Bunch 15; I
Dream of Jeannie 17.
5 :30-Carot Burnetf
Frlenda 3; News 6; Sanford
Son 8; Elec . Co. 20 ; Mary Tyler Moore 10; Odd
Couple 15; Lucy Show 17: Doctor Who 3.1.
6 :00-News 3.8, 10, 13, 15 ; ABC News 6; Andy Grllflth 17;
Hodgepodge Lodge 20
6 :3o-NBC News 3,15: ABC News 13; Cerol Burnell &amp;
Friends 6; CBS News 8, 10 ; My Three Sons 17; Over
Easy 20.
.
7 ·00-Cross-Wits 3: Newlywed Game 6,13; Merty
Robbins ' Spolllght 8; News 10; Love, American
Style IS; Carol Burnell &amp; Friends 17; Dick Cavett
20; Wild, Wild World of A.n tmals 33.
7 : 30-Holtywood Squares 3; Bonkers 6; Match Game
PM 8; $100,000 Name Thai Tune 10; Nashville On
The Road 13; Dolly 15; Sanford &amp; Son 17 ; MacNeilLehrer Report 20,33 .
8 : 0Q-Whodunnlt? 3,1S; Mark &amp; ~indy 6,1_3; Time
E xpress B; Nova 20,33; Wayne Newlon 10; Movie
. " Valentino" 17.
8 : 31&gt;'--Highcltffe Manor 3, 15 ; Angle 6,13
9 :()()-Qu tncy 3,15: Barney Miller 6, 13; Ha~alt Flve-0
8,10; World ~0: Movie "The 81sl Blow 33 ,
9 :30-Carter Country 6, 13;.
10 :00-Susan Anton 3,15; Doctors' Private ~tves 6,13;
Barnaby JonesB,tO; Mission : Impossible 17; News

a.

REYNOlD'S
ELECI'RIC MOlOR
SHOP

ALLEY 00?

4 -~3 1 mo.· ( ~d-.)·

a.

..._

•

~0 .

Business Services

Business Services

SEW ING MACHINE Repairs, service , a ll makes , qq'2·72BA The
Fa bric Shop , Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Soles and
_ ~e_r.v~c-:_ ~~~o.T!n_:i~s~o~ ­
EXCAVATING, darer , loade r end
backhoe work ; d ump .trucks
and lo -boys fo r hire , w ill haul
fill dirt top soil . limes to ne and
g rovel Coli Bob o r Roger Jeffe rs, day phone 992-7089, n1ght
Eh~'!! ~3-~5~5 _or_99J -~2~2_.
EXCAVATI NG , dozer, backhoe
and ditcher . Charles R. Ha t~
fie ld
Block Hoe · Service .

BRAOFORO , Aucti oneer. Com·
plete Serv ice . Phone 949-2A87
or 949-'1000 Recine, Ohio, Critf
Bradford.

SAVE ON
CARPOING

_ ~u!:~~· ~~o- ~~e _?A_?-~:_

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

AUTOMOBilE INSURANCE bee n
cancelled? Lost your o perators
hcense? Phone992-2143

All CARPET
NaN ON
SALE
$]'15

covoting . se p tic sys tft.ms,
dozer, backhoe. Rt l-4 3. Phone

2 1_6 1~) _69!J ~3~1 c --- - - IN STOCK for Immediate deli very:
va rious stzes of pool kits Do-Ifyour self or let us install for you .
D. Bumgardner Sales, In c.
992 5724 .

S &amp; H Exterior Pomting.· Houses.
mob ile homes a nd rooh .
997-6..109 or 742-2174
·--- -

---- ----

---

Are 40u

FROM

sq. yd.

and up installed
24 Rolls of Carpet in Stock
100's of Samples to
Choose from .
BUY N.OW&amp; SAVE

&amp;

·

Co II 742-2211
TALK TO
Wendell qr Herb Grate
or Gene Smith

A Sent,Ie

2!1 Widespread

10 :30--Hocklng Valley Bluegrass 20: Area ShowcaH
33.
1.1 :00-News 3,8, 10, 13, 15; Hogan 's Heroes 17; Beat of
Groucho 20; Over Easy 33 .
11 :31&gt;'--Johnny Carson 3, IS; Star sky &amp; ~.ulch 6, 13;
Mash 8; ABC News 33; Movie " Gaslight 10; Movie
"Them" 17.
12 :05-McCioud 8; 12 :•1&gt;'--Mannlx 6,13.
1:oo- Tomorrow 3; News 15 ; 1 : ~Movie ''The Black
Invaders" 17.
. so- News 13: 3 : 50- News 17 ; 3 : 50-Movle
" Operation Bikini" 17 .

Wt&gt;d ncsday. April 25

"BRIDGE
--~wald Jacoby and Alan Sontag __ .

27 Exude
28 For each

Old fool?

Vienna coup saves a slam

.

h::--1--1---+--

31 Casey 's
weapon
34 Prepare for
the press

NORTH

.. - -

WEST
• J 865

EAST
'+Q97 32
• 10 9 8 4
¥ K J
f 32
• 5
+ K95
+ J8732
SOUTH.
+ A K 10 4

musician

.-.--.:= 36 Go astray

~~

. 38 Nobility

FRANK &amp; ERI',m.

1

----::~:::~-~-~~~;;;;;~lf:::::~~
~--T~-n~~~~~~Q~:
r
OH, a.0 oD,
FO,Sfc.e"M'You'RE AWAI'E.

40 Bum
- crisp
41 Pep up

¥A Q 7

• 9 76

tool
h...-+~42 Carpenter's
43 Texas city

•

A 64

Vulnera ble . North-south
Dealer : South

1.-.-+--+--

ooWN

t Barrel part L-...1.....1-

West

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE -

Here's how to work
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

Is

It:

One le tter sim pl y stands fo r a nothe r In thi s sa mpl e A is
used f or 1he thr ee l .'!i. X for lh e t wo o ·s, etc. S in g le lett e r s,
apost rophe s, the lengt h .-.nd for mation o f t he words are a ll
hmts Ea ch d ay th e C'Odc letters a r e d ifferent

Rullond

4-25

• 6 53 2
t AK~JI081
+QlO

v'-"'-',; 35 English

RUTLAND
FURNITURE
742-2211

21 Old hal

What do LjOU statesman
tal4e me for? 26 Relmburse

In m4 heart I'm

mad, Wallet? d4inq to evict
the old shrew!

A GOOD SHECTION OF
END&amp; ROLL BALANCES .

--------------HOWERV AND MARTIN Ex·

RUS S'S SHOE REPMR . Rt . ~ · SR 7
Bypass. Pomeroy Ohio. Open
everyday 9-5 except Thursda y
and Sounday . • Har o ld C.
Ru sse ll.
S &amp; G torpet Cleaning, deep
s team
ex tra cti o n,
fr ee ·
e stimates. Call between 8 om
an d S pm . 742-2211 eveni ngs ,
99:2-6309 or 74:2-2874

21 Proper
22 Trim
.---,..--,----~ 23 Texas

GASOLINE ALI.EY

DRIVE A UTn.E
&amp;
SAVE A LOT

PULLINS EXCAVATING Complete
Service . Phone992-247.S,

E C ELECTRICAL Co ntractor se rving Ohio Voll ey region Si x
da ys a week, 24 hours service.
Emergen cy call s. Coli 882-2952
or 887-3454.

Yesterday's AUwer
Gam
32 Destructive
Soul: F r .
emotion
lolite, e .g. 3.1 Almost
Electrical
adult
35 Seed
coating
36 Greek
letter
reaping
37 Fracas
39TV 's
31 Ready
to fight
Tarzan

23
24
25
26

ELWOOD BOWERS REP .. IR Sweepers, toasters, irons. all
small oppl ton,ces . Lawn moer,
next to Stole High way Garag e
on Route 7, 985-3825

P..assP ass

North East

54 ··~

Pass
Pass

,4 N

Pass

Pass
Pass

South
I NT

3¥
4+

Pass

5+

1t

Pass

7 NT

Pass

Pass

Openin g lead : •10

CRYPTOQUOTES
By Oswald Jacoby

.T L

CRV

THE WORD 'DAD"
STICKB IN YOUR.

lliROATf roEBN 'T
I

:ltlJlWtD FURNRURE'

'

;,

I YGO

XQCO
TL

c

HK

ILCGYSL

TV

WE OFFER YOU ...
l , Two full floors ..of all new •
furniture .
2. Nice selections of used
furniture.
l . A large · building full ol
beautiful carpet.

TV

QL
XQCO

I C R

ZHLG
QL

0 S Y L S
OQCR

M 0
DMFLG .

SHTLSO
GHYOQ
Yesterday's Cryptoquole : INVENTIVE GENIUS REQUIRES
PLEASURABLE MENTAL ACTIVITY AS A OONDITION FOR
VIGOROUS EXERCI~E .-A . N.WIUTEHEAD
llARNF:Y

and Alan Sontag
The cont ract wa s terrible.
Not e noug h c an be said to
c ondemn it . North's lea p to
seven diamonds was unwar~
ranted. He had teamed that
South had three aces, but
that by itself did not guarantee 13 tri cks . Fortunately,
South was able to find the
on ly winning line of play .
West's opening lead took

SNUFFY SMIF !!
See the Grate Family at

- Goon 5 b Pctroom hnusr w1th full h;to;p mrM "nc1 ? h.-.th&lt;; Nflf ~~~ s hPit1, npp r oy 1 C\('rf' litn rt
;tnrf In rn(' c;. tnr Mf'P hi I d rti r(l Price $'1 1,son.

Bob lee

YoU tnl'T Hf..VE MlltJF6RIORIT'I'

~7 1 , 500

('HF.STF~

17 .

THE ITALIAN LUNCH I
ANTICIPATED-INCLUDES
THIS KINO OF WINE

BORN LOSER

$VRACUSE · ~ ('?onc1 'I h Pc1ronm hom p, i' lm ~t new ki l
r tlf'n •hi nf't~ . i'!ll n ir- f'ly ri'!r(lf'trr1 . lrtu nr!ry r oom . n il in
~lllil ff&gt; ci . nitfur nl pno; hra t , utility huildin~ . ') JO ts.
I OTS

b~HenriAmok:J

Unscramble these four Jumbles,·
one letter to eaeh square, lo form
four ordinary words

C.OOPU;X ,

.

9 3G-Brady Bunch 8; Hogan 's Heroes 10; Green Ac res

1}fi\i~ fij}1} ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

Rult.nd, ·

'- . ..

SALE PRICES

6SE. W15EFATHER-- YOU'~E
T00600P
T' ME!

0.

220 E . Main Street ~
Pomeroy, 0 .
Call 992-7113
~
Fr... Estimates

..

YEll llEAL-t..Y
GONIJA ~eT ME

..

'.

,I

'

BISSEll
SIDING CO.

'

4-5-tfc

LANE DANIElS

Ohio Valley Roofing
and
Home Maintenance

Vinyl and Aluminum
Siding

'

949-2862. 949-2160

PIANO
TUNING

- ---------·- -

7:0G---Cross-Wit s 3; New lywed Game 6,13 ; Bealles
Forever 8, News 10; Love Am erica n Style 15 ; Carol
Burnett &amp; Friend s 17, Dick Cavet t 20; Bl9 Green
Magazine 33.
7. 3o-Oolly 3, Match Gam e PM 6; The J udge 10,
That's Hollywood 13; Wild Kingdom 15; Sanford &amp;
Son 17; Mac Ne il -Leh rer Report 20,33
8 .00-Real People 3,15; Eight is Enough 6, 13 ; Jef .
fer sons 8; Shakespeare Plays 33; Jack Nicklaus
Memor ial T ournam ent 10; M ovie " The Juggler"
17 ; Off Your O uif20
a ·JQ-Miss Winslow &amp; Son 8,10.
9 00-Whee ls 3,15, Charlie's Angels 6,13; M ovie "You
Ca r\'t Go Hom e Again" 8, 10; Mas terpiece Theatre
20
10:0Q--,Vegas 6,13; U.nt ouchables 17, News 20 .
10 :3Q.-.Footsteps 20.
11 ·{)()- News 3,8, 10, 13 , 15; Hoga h's Heroes 17; T urnabout 20 ; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 33 .
11 :3()-Johnny Ca r son 3, IS ; Po ll ee Woman 6, 13; Rock ford Fl ies 8, AB C News ·33; Movie " Th e Italia n
Job'' 10 ; M ovie " Fai r Wind to Java" 17.
12 .4()-Mannix: 6, 13; Kojak 8; 1 · ~ Tomorro w 3; News
15
1 :3o-Movle " G iant of the Evl l Is land" 17.
1 5()-News13; 3:15-News 17; 3: 35-Movie '' Avenger
of the Seven Seas" 17 .

.

lugs and was hers f1ts Oodge . 2
prece Early AmeriCan li ving
Purchase and Refinance
room suite. Stereo con$o le
30 Ye ar T erm s
9'12 3982 .
A- No mon ey down (e ligi ·
197,. and 1975 Pete Conventiona l
b! e veterans)
londem tractors 1963T Cater
FHA - As low a s 3% dOwn
pil la r eng ines set Up to haul
(non·ve t e rans l
cool Als o 1974 Crty a nd 1964
Frue hauf Tr1 -Axels . Phone
' 61 .. ·753-366
. . 1.
RUTlAND HARDWARE, Rutl ohd .
Ohio 742-2255. Martin·Se nou r
paint. pro -line e•tenor white ,
77 E. State, Athens
4·23 ·1 mo ;$8 10 gaL Plastic water sewe r
dram gas l.ne a nd fittings. We
also corry plastic water lin e .
same sile with fittings to match
golvon ired pi pe. Auto mo hc gas 1963 NEW MOON mobile home. FROM 5 t~ 80 a cres, 3 miles out of
Rutl and. 742 U51.
Good con d ttion . $3000 After
water heaten .CO gal. gloss li ned 5 year worrenty Sl 29 .Q5.
6pm. c~I 1_~2-~1J?7_
Au tomatic . e lectric wat e r
heaters , 52 gal . glass li ned '5
veer
worrenty
S13Q 95
La~ewaod wmdow fans , metal
blades. 5 yr.worren ty. drtces
Real Estate for Sale
start at $31 74 Ions an wi n·
dow panels e•tra . l&lt;ing cir- 90 ACRES IN Solem Township on
culating coal an d wood
Solem Cent e r V1 nton Rd . Will
60BE. .,..
Sprrialis t in Homr ilnd 1
heaters . Cabtnet model s 9900
d1 v1~ e
Water and electric
1
School P ia no Tur1inn cmd
MAIN
lor $319 95 w1th blowe r King
ovotlob!e . 30A· 768-SSSS .
RE-pairina .
POMEROY,O.
circu lating gas heate rs, ther Srrvlnq Ath e ns, Mt&gt;igs,
mostatically controlle-d w1th ra - BY OWNER · 3 a; 4 bedroom , wall·
Gil Ilia · &amp; Vinton count iPs ; ·
to -Wa ll co~eti ng, fully in
NEW l ' tSTING Mid ·
diance and glass fr ont . 70 000
als o Mi'son &amp; Jt~rk s nn
sul
ote"d
full
baseme
nt
.
Iorge
dleport , exre ltent home, 3
rountirs in W Vrt
B T.U.. $329 95 Gorde n seed
co rner
lo t
1n
Mason
Ph 9'97 . 1581 or 9'17 ?Oll?
bE&gt;rlrooms, 111., bclths, lots of
a nd suppl ies Reasonab ly pric 304 -773-5386
A 1Q 1rnf'
s torage, leve l lot, bclse ·
ed
mPnt: 'l ci'lr g ;tr i'l~H' w ith
OWNER
SElli
NG.
2
bedroom
RUTLAND HARDWARE . Rutland .
room ove r , 975 sq ft m it ll .
frame house. heellent in town
Oh1o 7-42-7255. Close-ou t at
N(ltural gas hecl f PorchPs,
location.
Coli
992-3023
.
cost All small electric ap u tilit y .
pliances incl uding toa sters . NEW HOUSE tor so le by Me1gs
NEW LISTING :
O ldec
blende rs. hotr drye rs and many
Mi ne No. 1. $26,000 qq'}. 71'll
homp hut much do nP in
other items Bran d names
way
Of
remo clP iin g,
Sunb&amp;om , Protor Sile x and
C'orp pting , pcm e lina, t ile,
All types roofing , ~mttt&gt;r s '
_oi her q u~li !y ~o~!s._
Pet 3 b Pdroom s, nnrurr!l
and downspl'luts . All typps
cti'IS hPclf, stora~e building,
homf" maintf"nanc e - new
; c&lt;1r c aq}ort , mclnv o ttlPr
I and rt"palr. Storm doors
f P ithH PS
Go inp
nt
and . windows . All work
$18.SOO 00.
Qtrclrantf"Pd . ?0 yf'ars E' )l' ·
NEW LISTING -- Lovely 1
prrirnce . Fn•f" PJi fimates.
floor plcln , ideill fo r f&lt;'tm i Iy,
Call ·
Tom
H os kin s,
3 bPdrooms, bnth , hot
949-?1.60
wilte
r
he&lt;"!t,
s
torm
doors
Headquarters For
Atflt&gt;ns ArPi'l
~net windows, dinina bM ,
797
-1745
or 797 -1757
Hot point and
Pnclosrd rE'M porch, lo ts o f
"Z-3325
.1 15 Pc1
rM pe tinp , very n ic (' fr o n t
General Electric
21• f. Second Stroel
porc-h
.
OisbWitShN
,
wa
t
e
r
.
Appliances
soft ene-r.
m~n y
ot he r
CONVENIE~. In town
fPMurPs ! 18.500 00
lot itfion n E"'.X t to bus inE&gt;ss
NEW LISTING -- M 'd
sf.d ion .- 3 bedroom s, l~rqe
diPport , 1 b usi nPSS rooms
bMh, nE'w fu rnilce .:~n et kit
JACK W .
'
frP nf f'dl ~ n d 1 Clpclr tmcn ts,
r hf'n cupbOMrl S, nil !Moe
CARSEY
Prtr l'1 ;tpMtmf'nt hr~s 1
s ilt"' rooms . $15,000.
Mgr.
l;l£'drooms, bilth, kikhe n,
RENOVATED
lnsicfe
F'Mne 997·7181
li v inq room , tot al numh e r
&lt;incf OUt iS &lt;'I ll MPW E nc iOSPd
brlth , IArrte kitche n , '..!'
of rOo m s in thf' 'J &lt;'Part
Services Offered
mPnt s is 8 Lot si1e is 50)i60
bf'drooms, Qt~rdeon , r urc1 l
Wl"'fE'
r
;md
ce ntr r~ l he Minp
with "'" itll e y in thE&gt; rE&gt;itr
WATER AND mi se hauling Call
133.500 00.
Jus t !73.000
9'12-5858.
NEAR CHESTER -- LOVP
INESTMENT -- A r E&gt;r~f
ly brick home-. P robab ly
NOW HAUliNG limesto ne in
wri tf' off with 5 in\ omeos
onP of thp nl cPst homPs in
Mtddle port-Poe mroy area. Call
You s hOuld see th! S or r omr
Rt . 3, Pomeroy,Ohio
MP1C1S Coun ty 4 bNtrooms.
lor free est1mote . 367· 7101
in tor dPt~ds Go od for thP.
9'12-5547
?I '-. -h~ t h$ , ') l;trQP r PC r E"it
fut u rE"
PAINTING AND sa ndblasting
• 4·25 ·1 mo.- Pd.
f
inn
room
s,
wood
b
urninp
MODERN - 5 bedroo m
Free e st1 motes Co119..9-2686.
f irf'piMe, be&lt;"!utiful kit
fr rlmP homP on ly " fE'w
TR EE TRIMMING a nd removal.
r hf'n , '} c"r Cl itr&lt;ipe, 'J arrPS
yec'i rS old . If you n Pe rl
IE"VPI l;tnd . M;tny oth ~P r
7A2&lt;3167 or 742·2573.
room , thi s onE&gt; h~s it . 3 full
fPitiUrPS
. $60,000 .00 . _I')C'If
hs.
C"('nfril
l
heati
np
,
Real Estate for Sale
POOl CHEMICALS Season pocks.
lnrp P ronven i('nt kitc he n,
LONG BOTTOM - 10 ~c rP
Free delivery. D. Bu mga rdn er
FARM FOil: Sale. House. 2 barn s
formit l dinin~J. Iar oe livinq ,
farm , up to 11 tilli'lb le &lt;'~cr es
Soles. Inc. Equipment and sup·
tra iler . Large pond . 10 acres or
nr\P Pnorrn ous f~mil y r oo m
if \ leare&lt;1, some tlood
p l ~es_. 9J2_· 5?7·~ - _ . _ . . __
82ocres, 742-2566
&lt;1n&lt;1 1 C'M Pi'lr&lt;'~PE:'
t imber, barn . milk ho use ,
EXPERIENCED babyst lter will do
NEW
LISTING
.d
\O rn
c r ib , old chicke n
, babys itting in my ,,.home .
bPrl r oo m
hemp
in
hou sf', fishinq c~bin w ith
Re,umes ovoilobl&amp;. 992-~63:'12
Ohio R tver front:tge
3
~YritcusP . Needs "' li tfl p
r f' p"'ir , but thi s Is your
bedroom ri"nrh type house
WILL give leSSOilS on natu ral
&lt;: 1'1o"~n•e to -;~e&gt;t · ilhf'~ct . H ~s
w hi c h is unfini shed , garden
guitar, Dobra and Hawoi1on
ce ntr r~l hPittjnq ! wooct bur n
s pilce, fl ll minerc1 ls, 1 yee1r
stee l. For information col i
inq firf'p l&lt;"!ce, t1£&gt;n , "nrt over
IPft o n oil i'lMd PilS • A
742-2975.
itO M rP of li'nd 526,000
S UP ER BUY !33,500 00
HAUliNG limestone. gravel , and
LISTING YOUR PROPER THE' EASY' WAY TO SELL
mise items. 742·2909 , oslo. for
TV , IS A PERSONAL
When you want to
All Aci--oss A mer tea
Rick Imboden .
THING . WE WILL NOT
change homes, you ' ll l'lave
25 Acres
!55 , 60 0
· - - - - - -- - . - - - - MAKE
A
PATH
plenty of problems as it is
hPit Ufif ul c ountr y horne, '1
Will DO pointrn g Inside and out .
THROUGH,
BUT
Will
without
worrying
about
hrn r oo m s. bilth, l&lt;"! rQr tiv
Good reference . For more 1n·
SHOW ONL V BUYERS.
SELLING y .OlJR HOUSE .
formoti Qn, co li 992-6331 belore
inn room , h Prtutiful ki t
Let· an expert do that!
,h.f' n, l!t b&lt;"!Sf' m pn t , fo r C'erl
noon crof ter 8::30 pm .
CALL '1'1 2 3325, WE' l l 00
Won ' t cost a cent UNTIL
~ ir hP.&lt;"It, lots of s h Mie trPPS,
OlJ~ BEST .
Wlll DO house cleaning .
and UNLESS we get you
5 ar rPs ti ll ilb lf'. 1 mt lr fr om
Helen L .
9B5-3S7&lt;.
the desired RESULTS!
Cht'S f(&gt;r , 5 miles fr om
·- - - -·---Gordon 8
LIST NOW!
WILl DO odd jobs or help SO·
Pom eroy .
!;ue P . Murphy
REAL
TORS
meone on jobs. 992-6038 or
Call Bill Stewart
Reator
Asso4!iates
HENRY E . CLELAND SR .
9'12-2934
374-7311
HENRY E . ClElAND JR .
Marietta , 0 .
992-l~S9
992-6191
Auto Sales
~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;.

-

WE ONE SDAY, A PRIUS. 1979

Business Services

-

THURSDAY, APRIL 2•, 1979
S: 35---Wor ld a t Large 17 ; 5 :45-Farm Report 13 ; 5 :50PTL Club 13
5 :55-Sunrise Se m ester 10; 6 :00-700 Club 6 ; PTL Club
15 ; 700 C lub 8.
6 . 10-News 17; 6:2MFor You ... Biack Woman 10.
6 :3Q-Oragnel 17; 6 45-Morning Report 3.
6 :5o-Good Morn lno . West Vlrqln la 13; 6 :55-Chuck
White Repor ts 10; News 13 .
7:00-Today · 3, TS ; Good Morning America 6, 13;
T hur sday Mor ni ng 8; Schoolles 10, Three StoogesLittle Rascals 17 .
7 · 15-Weather 33; 7. 3D-Famil y Affair 10.
S:oo-Cap1 . Kangaroo 8, 10; Leave It To Beaver 17;
Sesame St . 33.
'.
8 ·3o-Romper Room 17 .
9 00- Bob Brau n 3; Phil Donahue 13,15; Emergency
One 6; Hogan ' s Heroes 8: Love of Lire 10; Lucy
Show 17

I WANT '{OU TO

LEARN ~E NAMES OF
EVER'( TREE ANP PLANT
THAT WE SEE...

GIT BACK ON TH'
WITNESS STAND!!

care of one of South's prob-lems He now could count 12

tricks two spades, two
hearts, seven diamonds, and
one c lub. He realized the
13th t r ic k would have to

come from a squeeze. The
best squeeZe c hanCe wa• one
known as the Vienna coup,

an intricate maneuver in
which declarer . cashes a
high card to establish a
low er-ra nking card for the
defense whic h they will be
squeezed out of later.
His ace of hearts covered
E a st's king at trick one. He
cashed the a c e kina of
s pades ( pitching two hearts
from dummy) and now
made the key play of the ace
of clubs - the Vienna coup .
He nex t ran off all the
diamonds.
This broug ht him down to
a tw&lt;H!ard ending. Dununy
held the queen of clubs and a
small heart. It dldn 't matter
what East held. South held
the queen-seven of ht:arU
and poor West held hla-head
in his hands and aroanecl.
He had to dlocard down to
one hea rt to keep the kina of
clubs and the lucky slam had
come home. The Vienna
coup had worked becauae
West had been dealt four
hearts and the king of clubo. ·
INEWSP"PEK ENTERPRISE A.!JaN. t

(Fo• a copy of JACOBY MODERN. send S1 to: " Win •t

Bridge , .. care of this newap.tper, P:O. Bo• 489, Radio C/fy
$tat/on . New York, N. Y. 10019.)

I

l

�12- The Dluly Sentinel, Middleport -Pomeroy, 0. Wednesday, Apn l 25, 1979

BancOhio grows to 215 branches
CO LUMBUS, Ohio (API In a few months, BancOh10
Nat1onal Bank will explo de
across Oh1o Overp1ght, It will
have 215 off1ces lo serve
customers m at least 40
commumties.
The C&lt;J!wnbus-based Oh10
National Bank, und'e r a
recent ch ange in the law ,
plans to merge 40 of 1ts 41
banks under a single flag the
weekend of July 1
BancOhio Natwnal Bank
Will r a1se 1ts sta ndar d
Statewide bankmg w1ll have
arrived in Ohio
At first , httle change "ill be
apparent.
"! lhmk th1s be a fa1rly
mvis ible chan ge," sa1d
R&lt;lbert G. Stevens, chrurman
of the bank known locally as
BancOh1o .
"Each of \he banks w1ll still
ha ve a lo cal pres1dent ,''
Stevens sa1d " Each will shll
have a local board of
directors Actually, they will
be consultmg d1r ectors
instead of legal directors. but
we hope to get the same
support and guidance from
them
in th e1r local

conunumues "
But the public Will see some
differences under the new,

setup.
"For example, someone
who hves in Portsmoulh and
comes to C&lt;Jlwnbus would be
able to do their banking here
the sa me as at home,·'
Stevens sa1d " He would be
able to make a deposit , wnte
check. use lhe An ytilue Bank
machme lhe same as you
would at home.
Checks and Anytime Bank
machme ca rds will not
change - until their normal
tune for replacement comes.
Then they will be swapped for
ones bearmg the new name
and lo go
Th e me rger alSO WIIJ
benefit lhe bank
"It truns our overhead ,"
Stevens sa1d. "For example,
r1ght now we have to keep 41
sets or boo ks
"All of our banks help each
other ma ke loans to their
custom ers . A farmer m
Circ lev ill e, for example,
probably needs a larger loan
than the bank tn Circleville
can make. So the bank lhere
makes the loan and gets a
bank in Colwnbus to take
part of It," he sa1d.
"That sounds good , but 11
means that you have to have
two sets of .Joan '· flles , you

See What We Have in Store for You
During Our

WAREHOUSE CLEARANCE
*FRIGIDAIRE *CALORIC
*ADMIRAL* SPEED QUEEN
REFRIGERATORS - RANGES FREEZERS - DISHWASHERS -

WASHERS - DRYERS

BAI&lt;ER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

have to have two banks
approve 11 It takes more
tune, more people, when two
banks ar e mvolved,"' Stevens
srud " After July I, 1f the
fanner m CircleVIlle wants
lhe same loan . he wUI be able
to make it with one set of
files, one approval process . It
will be greatly simplified."
The merger also means the
new bank will be able to make
larger loans, more loans of
the $500.000 to $5 million
vanety )'"
"Right now, I lhink the
Circleville bank can make up
to a $150,000 loan The ~nk m
C&lt;Jlwnbus can make up to a
$12 million loan When lhey
get consolidated it ('lhe new
bank 1 can make up to a $25
m11Iion loan.
·'It 's mportant to be able to
make the b1g loan , but the
most 1rnportant thing IS to be
able to make that $500,000
loan. That's our bread and
APPEAL IS MADE
TEHRAN, Iran tAP)
Prfme Minister Mehdf
Bazargan made a ne"'
appeal for national unity,
urging Iran's citizens to
"do O."ay 10lth the sense of
revenge "

and

MEETING FRIDAY
Chester Township Trustees
will meet Fr1day at 7:30p.m.
at the town hall lor the
purpose of appointmg a clerk.
Applications are now betng
accepted.

State No. 2%3X
CONSOL!DA TED REPORT OF CONDITION

The Farmers Bank &amp;
Savings Company
ol Pomeroy, Ohio and Foreign and Domestic Subsidiaries, at the close of
business March 3t, l!rl9, a state banking Institution organized and operating
under the banking la"s ol this State and a member ol the Federal Reserve
System. Published In accordance with a call made by the State Banking
Authorities and by the Federal Reserve Bank ol thfs Dlstrlrt.
ASSETS
Cash and due from depoSitory mstitutions .
U.S. Treasury set·urttJes
Obligations of U S. Government
agencies and corporatiOns
Obligations of States and political subdivisions
in the United States . . .. .
.. .. . . .
All other securities
a Loans, Total (excluding unearned mrome) .
b. J.ess: allowance lor poss1ble loan losses
c Loans , net
Ban~ premises, furniture and fixtures, and

other assets representing bank

All other assets
TOTAL ASSETS

prem1 se~

5,339,000 00
2,734,000.00
1,694 ,000 00
' .. . . . 2,664,000 00
. . . .. "". 24,000 00
. 13,547,000.00
109,000 00
. . . .. 13,438,000 00
. . .. 380,000 00
. . . . . 75,000.00
. . . . . 26,348,000.00

I.IABII.ITIFB
Demand depoSits of indi viduals,
partnerships and corporatiOns
. . .. . 8,267,000.00
Time and savings deposits of individuals,
partnerships, and corp&lt;Jratwns
. 14,906,000.00
Deposits of United States Government.
... 41,000.00
Deposits of States and political subdivisions
in the Umted States ..
. 815,000.00
AII other deposits
.. .. . . ....
. . 2,000 00
Certified and officers· checks
. . .. .. .. .. . . .... 150,000.00
Total Deposits . . . ...
24,181 ,000 00
a Total demand depos1ts . .. .. . . . .. .. . .. . . . . 9,210,000.00
b. Total time and savings depos1ts
14,971 ,000.00
Federal funds purchased and securities
sold under agreements to repurchase
.. . .. .. . . . 250,000.00
All other liabilities. . . . . .....
232,000 00
TOTAI. 1.1 ABILITIES
.. .. " • . .. . 24,663,000.00
FAUITY CAPITAL
Common stock :
a. No shares authorized 16,000
b No shares outstandm g 16,000 .
. ..... (par value )
400,000.00
Surplus .. . .. .. . ..
600,000.00
Undivided prof1ts and contingencies and
olher capital reserves
.
. .. .. .. .. .. . . 685,000.00
TOTAL EQUJTV CAPITAl. . .
. 1,685,000 0
TOTAL !.1 ABIJ.ITIES AND
EQUITY CAPITAl. . . .. ..
26,348,000 00
MEMORANDA
Average lor 3() calendar days ror calendar month )
ending w1th report date ·
a Total depoSits
. 20,800,000.00
SUPPLEMENTAL MEMORANDA
Pledged assets and secunlles loaned (book value );
U.S Government obliga tions, direct and guaranteed ,
pledged to secure depos1ts and other liabilities ..... .
....... 1,161 ,515.01
TOTAL .. . ..
. . .. '. 1,161,515.01
1, Roger W Hysell, Cashier, of the above-rtamed bank do her~ by declare
that thiS report of condition is true to the best of my knowledge and belief
Roger W Hysell
We, the undersigned directors, attest the correctness of this report of condition and declare tha' it has been exa mined by us and to the best of our
. knowledge and belief IS tme and correct .
'
R C. FOJ .!.ROD
I.F.SLIF: F FULTZ - Directors
C. WAYN F.~WJSHF:R
State nf Ohio County of Mt•lgs, ss ·
Sworn to and subscribed before mt• th1&lt; lOth day of April, 1979.
· .JoAnn f'riSp, -Notary Public
My C&lt;Jmmiss1on Expires July 17, 1983

'

work

together lor progress.
But Bazargan safd In a
radiO&gt;-TV address Tuesday
night he was not criticizing
Ayatollah Ruhollah
Khomelnl's revolutionary
tribunals, which have sent
158 of Shah Mohammad
Reza Pahlavl's men before
!Iring squads since the
Ayatollah's forces took
po" cr 10 weeks ago.

1

butter busmess - loans of
$500,000 to $5 m1llion Most of
lhe banks l m the system
now ) can't make more th an
$200 ,000 loans, so we have to
go
through
that
. ( participatiOn ) ritu al."
Stevens said.

County Court
Twelve defendants were
fined and six others forfeited
bonds tn Meigs County Court.
Fined by Judge Charles
Knight were David C.
SIZemore, Galllpolis Allen D.
Moore, Whipple, Ohio, John
S. Thomas, Middleport,
Juamta E. Henson, Addison,
and Richard T. Hovatter ,
Middleport, $15 and costs
each, speed ; Donnie 0 .
Evans, Racine, $5 and costs,
no muffler; Theodore V. Coppick, Rt. I, Portland, $50 and
costs, reckless operation;
Harold E. Smith, Reedsville,
$150 and costs, three days
confinement, DWI; Max
La udennilt, Pomeroy, $50
and costs, reckless operation,
costs only, three days confinement, no operator's Ilcen·
se; Michael Braun,
Pomeroy, $15 and costs, no
cycle endorSement; Wetzel
Phillips, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, $50
and costs, no operator's
license; Della Braglln, RD,
Middleport, $5 and costs,
disorderly.
Forfeiting bonds were
Lowell Halfhill, Gallipolis,
and Thomas Joyce, Wood·
ford, Va., $380.50 each, DWI;
Donald E. Kelly, Middleport,
$362.50, DWI; Darrell Dill
Hanning, Rt. 2, Albany,
$37.55, failure to display
license plates, $37.55, expired
operator's license, $62.55,
reckless operation; Stephen
L. Gregg, Utile Hockmg,
$35.50, speeding; Lasch
Douglas, Rt. I, Shade,
$362.55, DWI
Holzer Medical Center
Dilcharges, AprO 23
Mrs. Marshall Arrington
and daughter, Sbaron Bailey,
Lydal Black, · Hobart
Blackburn, Charles Bw1,
Steven Combs, Mrs . James
Counts and son, Stacy Flooy,
Chad Granen, Waldon Herd·
man, Janet Holllngshead,
Alice Hopson, Caroline
Johnson, William Lewis,
Ethel Pyles, Donald Saxon,
Chaires Staley, Carl Sullivan,
Do\ph Swick, Mrs, Larry
Ward and son, Mrs Dale
Whitt and son, Hobart Wilson,
Sr.
Births, Aprll24
Mr. and Mrs. John Notter,
daughter, Ravenswood.
Mr. and Mrs . Ricky Stout,
son, Bidwell.

· ~------------------------~

1I

Area Deaths

1

I

SHAKUN DUSENBERRY
MASON - Funeral ser·
vices were held Friday at
Goebel's Funeral Home m
Crooksville for Mrs. Sharon
Dusenberry, T/ , Crooksville,
who died unexpectedly April
17
.
Survivors includ e her
husband , Richard , two
children, Heather and
Valeri~. her parents, Mr and
Mrs Harold Jeffers, a
brother, S~phen Jeffe r~' iihtl
sister, Mrs. Ruth Ellen
LeWJs, all of Crooksville
Attending the funeral from
here were Mrs . Lola Jeffers,
an aunt, Mrs Nancy Hayes
and Larry Jeffers ol Middleport

Wayne
Km g , two
daughter s, Mr s. Mark
1Elizabeth ) C.1ark, Albany,
and Mrs. Gloria Meeham,
C&lt;Jiumbus; a son, Raymond
l~ster King, Nowata , Okla. ;
a sister, Mrs. Calhryn Ervin ,
Middl e p o r t,
12
grandchildren, several greatgrandchildren, and several
nieces , nephews and cousms.
Funeral services will be
held at 2 p.m. Friday at the
Rawiln gs-C&lt;Ja ts
Funeral
Home 1n Middleport and
bunal Will be m the Bradford
Cemetery . Mrs. Kmg was a
member ol the Bradford
Church of Christ. Fnends
may call at lhe funeral home
from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p m
Thursday.

HILDA J.KING
Mrs. Hilda J . King, 84,
formerly of Bradbury, died
Wednesday morning at
O'Bleness Hosp1tal in Alhens.
Mrs. King was born May 6,
1894 in Me1gs County, a
daughter of the late Miles and
Anna Greenler Hysell .
Besides her parents, she was
preceded m death by a
grandson, two sisters, Edna
Russell and Grace King, and
lhree brolhers, Howard, Eli
and Nalhan Hysell.·
She had been living m
Albany.
Survtving are her husband,

MRS. PE;TER KRAJCOVIC
Mrs. Peter Krajcov1c died
Tuesday at Wmtersville.
Mrs. Krajcovic was the .
mother of the Rev. Father
Joseph Krajcovic, a former
pastor of the Sacred Heart
Church in Pomeroy.
Funeral services Wlll be
held at 11 a.m. Saturday at
the St. Addlebert Church m
Dillon vale The body IS at the
W1lson Funeral Home m
Dillonvale where friends may
call from 7to 9 p m. Thursday
and from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
Fr1day R&lt;Jsary services will
be held at the funeral home at
7 30 p.m Fr1day.

Hike hike set May 12 ·
The annual hike-bike of the
Meigs Association for Retar·
ded Citizens has been set for
May 12.
The hike-bike is a county
fund raising effort supporting
programs of the Association
of Retarded Citizens in the
county and the state.
Volunteer walkers and
riders travel a 2$ mile route
::: :::::::· ·:::;: :. ·.· :::'::::·:-:·:·:·:·::
EXTENDED 01JTIA)()K
Friday through Sunday ;
Showers poss1ble Friday.
Fa1r Saturday
and
Sw1day. Alternoon highs
will generally be In the 60s.
Overnight lows will be in
the 40s to low 50s Friday
morning, falling to the
upper 30s to mid 40s
Saturday and Sunday.

CADIZ , OhiO (API Sheriff's
deputy
J .E .
Me Millen says a second
conversation With Floyd
"Bill" Lamb Jr. produced no
new leads uof any value" in
the Investigation of the
shooting of Lamb.
Lamb, a United Mine
Workers offiCial, was
released from Martins Ferry
Hosp1tal Thesday, a day alter
being shot while en route to
Washmgton to claim a
disputed union office.
McMillen said Harrison
County sher~ff's officers
mterviewed Lamb twice
while he was m the hospital
"He thinks he may have $40
m1ssing, " McMillen added.
"He said it may be lost m his
car -and he hasn't had a
chance to get back to 11 to
look."

McMlllen said Lamb was
not ·asked whether the
wounds to Lamb's left arm
and left leg were selfmfllcted . " The 1dea JUSt
hasn't come up,'~
' he added.
No slugs were ecovered
and McMillen sai the Ohio
Bureau
of
Criminal
Identification
and
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Investigation is checking
Admitted-James Reeves, Lamb's clolhmg m an effort
Pomeroy ; Cltarles Challan, to determine the stze of
Athens; Jessie Wh1te, bullets that wounded hm
Pomeroy; Samuel Pickens,
Lamb, 44, sa1d he is not
Syracuse; John Nelson , willing to connect the
Middleport; Randall Batey, shootmg w1th his umon
Middleport; Lucretia Werry, activities or his dispute w11h
Pomer~y; Patty Landaker, UMW
President Arnold
Pomeroy; Mark Carson, Miller over handling of union
Racine; Linda Bailey, business.
Dexter.
Lamb was on1y two miles
Discharged-Bobby R&lt;Jy, from his home, en route to
Harold Jeffers, Jennifer Washington to try to reclam
C&lt;Jchran, Opal Kauff, R&lt;lss his elected seat as District 6
Kent.
representative on the umon 's
International
Executive
SUPPER PLANNED
Board, when he said he
Tuppers Plains School stopped to a1d a stranded
Boosters will stage a pubhc motonst and was shot.
spaghetti and soup supper
Lamb served mote than a
from 5 to 7 p.m Saturday at year on lhe board before he
the school.
was suspended by Miller last
August . He was again
MAYOR'S COURT
elected, over two opponents,
Two defendants were fined in a special election March I,
Wid three others forfeited but Miller suspended him
bonds in' the court of
Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman Tuesday night.
Fined were Anthony W.
Reeves, 18, Pomeroy, $225
and rosts and three days in
jail,
dr1v1ng
while
intoxicated, and Jessie L.
Stewart, 72, Pomeroy, $10
and costs, left of center.
WELLSTON, Ohio (AP) Forfeiting bonds were Faye A Texas firm is continuing
Powell, Racine, $25, posted studies for locating a deep in·
on a stop sign violation; jectlon well for hazardous
Danny W1se, 23, Middleport, wastes in Ja~kson County af$25, disturbing lhe peace, and ter rejection of the site as a
Christopher Mackm , 22, hazardous waste landfill by
Riverside, N J., $350, driving the Ohio Environmental
while intoxicated .
Protection Agent. -·'
Don Fitch, vice president
for marketing services lor
SQUAD RUNS
Browning • Ferris Industries
The
Middleport of Houston, said company
Emergency Squad answered
engineers should complete a
a call to 107 PleaSant Ridge,
of a 365-acre !ann site
study
Pomeroy, at 6:03 p.m.
within two weeks. He said !he
Tuesday for Lucretia Werry engineers also should comwho was taken to Veterans, plete a study of the EPA
Memorial Hospital where she '
ruling on tbe landfill by that
was admitted. At 2:11a.m. tune.
the emergency umt and f1re
Last week the EPA ruled
. department was called to the
tbe
soil under former dairy
R&lt;Jute 7 bypass where a car
farm did not bave a 25-foot
accident had bet•n reported.
layer of clay needed for the
The units found a car had disposal of hazardous wastes.
struck a guard railing _but
The company's plans have
there was no driver or been opposed by a Jackson
passengers at the scene.
Cllunty environmental group .

was It ," Lamb said

"The

next lhmg I know , I'm laying
in the front seat of my car
w1th my arm hurtmg like
hell. I don't remember any
gunshot n
Lamb sa1d he doesn 't
remember much about his!:..
mile dr1ve to the home of a
fr1end, Melvin Martm, 31,
who drove hlfD to Martms
Ferry Hospital.
"I remember thmkmg I
was never going to get out of
lhose back roads," Lamb
said

SALE!

Sea!s

the~

·

Yardware
store

'

.

I· ou r

BRUCE FISHER

MICHAEL McGUIRE

DANIEL LEE TIIOMAS

Nationwise--.
MANSFIELD, Ohio (AP) - Four children d1ed
early today when fire swept through their home on the
city's south s1de, firefighters said.
The victims were Identified as Adam Boyd, 2, Jef.
frey Gibbs, 3, Veronica Boyd, 5 and Mattbew Boyd, 7.
The1r parents, Isaac Boyd, 28, and Loretta Gibbs,
T/, escaped the fire and were taken to Mansfield
General Hospital for treatment on mjuries suffered m
getting out of the house

CUT •ISO
10-HP electric-start
lawn tractor

8

(USPS 145-960)
•

839°

Features 36-in. side-discharge mower deck .
3 speeds forward, 1 reverse. Medium-back
seat.
• Shipping extra • Prices are catalog preces
• Ask about Sears credit plans

• Now on sale •n our "B" and "T" catalog supplements

ctuthorrzed CATALOG SALES MERCHANT
234 E. Main St.

1

Pomeroy.O.

Open· Mon . thru Wed. 9-S, Thur . 9·12, Fr•day 9-5, Sat.

9-2

SatuJfaction Guaranle€d or Y9ur Monf?y Back
Shop C•taloc by Phone

ISears I

~

-

992·2178

'

ELBERFELDS..-W A REHOUSE

SAN DIEGO (AP) - A Nigerian exchange student
abducted a psycHologist and forced him to Withdraw
money from a bank, then held off pollee for 3'/z hours
on an interstate liighway before being shot and killed
by police, authonties sa1d
Police spo~esman Bill Robinson sa1d the 22-year·
old student had hved Wlth the doctor as part o( a
foreign studies program, and may have been usmg a
pistol the criminal psychologist reported stolen on
Tuesday.
'nr. Richard E Townsend's family also on Tuesd~y
reported a woman housemaid was IDissmg, said
Homicide Lt. John Gregory , and police wre checking .
for a possible link to the abduction.

· • NEW YORK (AP ) - 'Burglars knocked tbe dials•·
and handles off jewelry safes in the G~rnbels depart·
ment store on Herald Square and stole as much as $1
million worth of gems, the jewelry department's
operator said Wednesday.
The robbery took place Tuesday night. Even
before a full inventory had been completed, Stephen
Parker, director of Marcus and Co. said the thieves
were believed to have made of! w1th valuable fm1shed
pieces of jewelry.
'They got diamond rings, pendants and earrings,"
sid Parker. "Manyh of the pieces are Irreplaceable,
one-&lt;1f-a-kind. They 're worth $5,000, $10,000, $20,000
each."

, MARIETTA, Ohio (AP) - Authorities in
Washington County say a lea~ from an 'oil p1pehne produced a 2'h-rnile spill m the Little Muskingum River
Wednesday.
Tbe State Highway Patrol at Marietta said the leak
was stopped at its source along Ohio 26, about four
miles from the village of Reno.
A spiJkesman for the state Department of Natural
Resources siad hte spill apparently did not affect
wildlife. But he sa1d the possibility of a fish kill still exists The Ohio Environmental Protection Agency said
no one living along the river as affected by tbe oil leak

Senate delays

taX

CARPETING
6 AND 12 FOOT WIDTHS

GRASS GREEN AND DARK GREEN TURF

ELBERFELD$ WAREHOUSE
MECHANIC STREET

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

WASHINGTON (AP I Conswner pnces mcreased
another I percent in March,
led by sharply higher prices
for food, housmg , clothmg
and gasolme, lhe government
srud today
It said gasoline pnces rose
3 6 percent , the largest
monlhly jump In nearly four
years . Both housmg and food
costs were up by I .percent.
The March mcrease m the
C&lt;Jnsumer Pr1ce Index, whiclr
lollowed a 1.2 percent rise in
February, means that the
nation's 35 m1lllon Social
Security re c1p1ents Will
rece1ve a 9.9 percent increase
m benefits to offset the
unpact of mf!atum m the past
year. officials said.

The Gallla C&lt;Junty Board of
C&lt;Jmmissioners moved last
mght to send a letter to the
C&lt;Jmmun1ty Mental Health
and Retardation 648 Board
outimiitg fet'IIIS"lilong whiCI\'
the county would consider
frontloadmg the construct~on
of an admmistrative annex at
the Mental Health Center,
Jackson Pike
Questions roncerning the
legal1ty of expending county
and state monies for mental
health facilities in Gallia
C&lt;Junty ,,as well as the terms
of lhe agreement by which
the county rece1ved a portion
of the property upon which
the center IS built led
Prosecuting Attorney Josepll
L Cain last week to seek, on
behalf of the commiSSIOn, an

WASHINGTON (AP) Th e average elderly Soc1al
Security benefiCIAry will find
$25 extra .in h1s government
check this July and some Will
get up to $50 more as a result
or the automatic 9.9 percent
benefit mcrease announced
today.

cuts

The record mcrease, which

Dr. Zimm~rly
resigns post
Robert E. Dame!, chnic
administrator annou nced
today that Dr. John Zim·
merly, medical director at
the Jackson C&lt;Junty Branch of
the Holter Clinic, 1s resigning
effective July I. Dr. Zim·
merly, who has been w1th the
clinic for the past two and a
half years, has chosen to
• ·return to private practice and
will be re-locating h1s offic e
m the Jackson area
· Even with Dr. Zimmerly's
departure , Dame! commerted, Holzer has no plans
at this time to cease
' operations at the bran ch
clinic, located in the Jenkms
Memorial Clinic facility in
Wellston.
However , w1th1n the next 30
to -6 days, Holzer will be

Scout Awa rd in 1977 He 1s
Chief of the Order or the
Arrow Dance Team from
Thal-coo-yzo Lodge 457 Dan
IS a junior member of the
Pomeroy Voluntee r F1re
Department and a member of
Trinity (burch, Pomeroy
Williamson IS the son Of
Fred and Donna Williamson
ol Rutland. He IS maJoring m
co mmuni cations and electronics at Meigs H1gh School
H1 s hobb1es are tenni s,
photography . loot ball and
basketba ll and he IS a
member of the Rutland f' ire
Department

en tine

at y

111e average benefit will be
increa sed by about $25, to
$283 a month . Checks
refl ectin g mcreases Wlli go
out beginning in July.
Although the mcrease m
the C&lt;Jnswner Price Index
was less lhan in February, 11
was still at a level that
endangers the sue&lt;-ess of the
Carter admm1strat10n 's anti·
inflation program.
Pnces dur1ng the fust
three months of 1979
mcreased at an annual rate of
13 pe,rcent , the highest
quarterly rise In 41\o years
and
far
above
the
admm1stration's target for
thiS year of 7 4 percent.
The Increase- for the 12month period endmg m

optn1on from the Attorney
General
According to Cain, the
agreement with the Holzer
Hosp1tal Foundation contains
a cond1tioii that the cowJty
must use the property for
mental health or other health
related matters
A reverter clause attached
to the deed states that 1f the
county should not use the
property for such purposes
the property reverts to the
Hospital Foundation, and the
county IS pa1d $104,000, less
depreciation on the bUildings.
Pointing
to
other
goverrunent proJectS, such as
lhe Green Box Program and
SEOEMS, or1gmally funded
by federal grants and lhen
turned back to the local

SS recipients
given pay hike

WASIDNGTON (AP) - Sticking to the coutse
reconunended by its Budget Committee, the Senate In·
dieated Wednesday 1t will delay further tax cuts until
1!182 rather than make wholesale reductions in federal
spending.
On a 56-36 vote the Senate defeated an amendment
by Sen. William Roth, R-Del. , that would have allowed
a $10 billion tax cut in 1980 and a $$-billion reduction
the following year by cutting a variety of spending programs below the levels proposed by the committee.
Without such tax cuts, Roth said, inflation and
scheduled Social Security tax increases will take a bigger bite out of Citizens ' paychecks.

INDOOR-OUTDOOR

Weather

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY, OHIO

15 CENTS

THURSDAY, APRIL 26, 1979

•

March was 10 2 percent
figures commg out for aome period.
One of President Carter's tune to come."
- Housing I percent, down
top inflation adVIsers, Barry
In its report today, the from 1.3 in February and up
l)le Labor Department said 10 6 percent for lhe year
Bosworth,
told
Associl!ted Press Wednesday workers' spendable earnings
- Apparel and upkeep 1.5,
that if Inflation does not begm dropped another 0.1 percent percent,. up from 0 3 in
to cool soon, it 1s likely to get m March because of riSmg Felruary and up 5 percent
much worse as workers inflation That raised the for the year.
demand steadily h1gher total lost buying power · of
- TransportatiOn
I 2
wages to keep pace With paychecks in the last year to percent, up !rom 1.1 perc-ent
steadily rismg prices.
an even 2 percent.
m Febr~ary and an increase
At a Democratic fund·
The department gave lhis or' 10.1 percent for the year.
rrusmg dinner in Bedford, breakdown on price increases
- Medical care 0.6 percent,
N.H.. Wednesday night, for vartous categories ln the same as m February and
Carter also warned of further March, compared w11h the an mcrease of 9 percent for
price increases.
previous month, followed by \he year.
"Inflation is bad and it will the total increase over the 12
- Entertainment 0.9
be months at \he very least months from March 1976
percent, up from 0.4 percent
before it gets substantially
--'-Food and beverages I in Felruary and an mcrease
better," the president sa1d percent, down from 1.6 ql 6.1 percent lor the year.
" Frankly, we will conttnue to percent m February and up
-Dther goods and serviceS
see dtscouragmg pra ce 12.5 percent for \he 12--mon\h 0.6 percent, down from 0.7

Commission-'s letter defines terms

Leak produces oil spill

1

Thomas . son of Mr and
Mrs Donald R. Thomas,
Pomeroy, is on the footbaJI
and
basketball teams He IS a
school and iS c urrently
servmg as ycari.Jook editor member of Boy Scout Troop
risher is employed at Dut- 240 and recc1vcd hiS Eagle
ton's Drug Store
McGuire 1s the son of Mr
and M., DaJias McGUire of
Langsville and IS enrolled m
corrununication elel.1.ronics at
Cool er With occasional
Me1gs H1gh School He 1s a showers or thunderstorms
loot ball player. a member of tonight Lows m the m1d to
VarsJlY " M" , and a member upper 40s. Cloudy and cooler
of the high school VICA. He Friday with periods of
was a member of th e showers.

•

VOL NO. XXX . NO. 9

llillb1lllcs 4-H Club ,for f1ve
l cars

March consumer prices up aga1n

$1 million jewel robbery

' BY
OWNED AND OPERATED
Jack &amp; Judy W1111ams

member of the Me~gs H1gh
French Club during hiS first
t wo years of high school He
was a l earbook staff meml&gt;cr
his first two ycurs or high

•

Kidnapper killed Wednesday

0

RICHARD L. WILLIAMSON

Me1gs H1gh School
Junwn; hHvc been named
df'icgiltes to the 42ud ann ual
lluckc) e Boys State slated
.June 1ti-24 at llowhng Green.
1bc) arc Bruce F1 sher and
Michael McGuire, who Will be
del ega tes of Middleport's
Fecn cy -l:l enn ctt Post 128,
AmcrJcon Lcglon. and Daniel
Lee 1'homas and H1chard L
Willia mson, uclcgatcs of
Drew Webst cr Po st 39,
American !.egwn . Pomeroy
F1sher . son of Mr and Mrs
Hobert Fisher. Middleport, 1s
a mem ber of Health Umted
Methodist (burch' He "as a

e

Four children die in fire

LOGAN, Ohio (AP )- Members of U&gt;cal882 of the
United Brick and Clay Wor~ers of America at General
Clay Co.'s Logan plant have voted to stnke Monday at
12;30 a.m., when their current contract expires.
Union President Wlllirum Huffines said the 47
workers rejected a company offer Wednesday that in·
eluded a '11 percent pay raise over three years with no
additional benefits.
Astrike by about 40 workers at General Clay 's Diamond pliint outside of Nelsonville was in itS 57th day on
Wednesday. Wor~ers there have been on strike s1nce
Feb. 28 in a dispute over employee time off, insurance
benefits, and the hirmg of non-union personnel.

Site remains

under study

Meigs delegates.named

wgan plant may be struck

No leads found
in Lamb's case
agam, saymg the earlier
dispute over expense reports
was not resolved.
Lamb sa1d m a telephone
interview from h1s hospital
bed that he remembered
seemg a hght-eolored car
parked alongSide U S. 250
Wlth 1ts hood up. A man with a
flashlight waved him down,
Lamb_said, and he stopped to
g1ve assistance.
" I walked over and that

· established by a local com·
mittee. Friends, neighbors
and businesses sponsor those
taking part, agreeing to
donate a predetennined swn
for each mile cl route
covered by the walker or
r1der
Forty percent of the funds
raised will go to the Ohio
Association of Retarded
Citizens to belp lund the state
programs.
.
Henry Cleland, Jr., agam
heads the hike·bike which
will start at 10 :30 a.m. behind
the Pomeroy Senior Citizens
Center. Manning D. Webster
will be honorary chairman.
Anyone wishing any m·
formation on the event should
contact Christopher C Layh,
·administrator, Meigs County
Board of Mental Retardation,
992-'025

se riously evaluating its
ab1hty to provide coverage at
the Jenkins fac11lty subsequent to July I, 1979.
Daniel further stated we
are makmg every effort to
recruit additional fam1Iy
practitioners for the branch
operatiOn . As of August I,
1979, the chruc will add a
sixth full time pediatrician to
its staff, and it is possible that
full tune rotational ped1atric
coverage w1ll be available at
th e branch clm1c as of that
time.
Daniel commented that
Holzer Clinic will do
everything possible to
mamtaln continuity of care
during the transition or Or
Zunmerly' o departure.
~

wUI cost the Soc1al Security
trust funds $10.2 billion, came
automatically as a result of
the rise in the C&lt;Jnswner
Pr1 ce Index m the first
quarter of this year over the
same period m 1978
An estimated 35 million
retired or disabled workers
and their families and
sur v1 vors will get the
mcrease m lhe1r July checks.
Bimef1ts also will go up 9.9
percent for about 5 million
Supplemental Secunty
Income recipients at a cost of
$415 million.
Here is a hst ~ f the benefit
mcreases :
The maXImum monthly
benefit for a worker retiring
at age 65 in 1979 will jwnp
from $503 40 to $553.30. The
minirnwn benefit for ·a 65year-&lt;~ld worker Will go from
$121.80 to $133.90.
For a retired worker alone ,
It will go from $258 to $283.
For an elderly couple, both
gettmg benefits, it will go
from $439 to $482.
For a mother with two
ch ildren on Social Security,
benef1ts Will· jwnp from $614
to $674. t'or an aged widow, 11
w11J nse from $243 to $267 For
a disabled worker wilh a Wife
and children, it will go from
$581 to $639
The average benefi(for all
disabled workers will JUmp
from $291 to $3ZO.

The SSJ payments, -which
go to \he elderly, blind and
disabled who are nl'Ody , will
climb from $189.40 to $208.20
for an individual, and from
$2114.10 to $312.30 for a couple.
Most states supplement these
payments
Last year's cost of living
mcrease was 6.5 percent.
This is the fifth annual
cost-&lt;~l·living
automatic
mcrease and exceeds the
preVIOUS high Of 8 percent in
1975

Gatrell heads
Jaycee club
Gr eg Gatrell has been
elected president of the Meigs
County Jaycees.
Oth er ofh cer s elect ed
Monday mght were !lob Schmoll . treasurer ; Carl Gheen.
secr etary, J eff Russ~Il .
programmmg v1ce preSident ;
David Fox, administrative
vtce president. and Dave
Jenkin s, •tate director.
The new constitution and
by- laws were approved and
mem~ rshipnt ght

phms were

ma de for ~ prll 30 at the
coonhunt crs bulldmg on the
count) fairgrounds.
A district meeting will be
hel d ~pr1l 29. at the
coonhunt e r s building
H cgiStr~tion bcgms at 2 p m
llill Young and Dave
Jenkins were named to co·
chair the l!li1J fro g JUmp
1'he next I.Joard meetin g
\Ill! be hold May 4 at 6 p m at
th &lt;•
headqu a rt er&gt;
II
\·1sita t10n wa.s mad e IJy lh e

Athm s Ja) r·cts i't
Monda) ni ght m l'd lifg

th e

govern m ent for contmued

mamtenance, Cain said last
mght that if a Similar
situation should occur with
mental heal!h (unds ancj t he
county rollrd ' not maintain
such services at lhat site, it
would be unla1r to taxpayers
to have potentially millions of
dollars in constructed
buildings revert to lhe non ·
profit corporation.
Following a meeting In
executive session with the
prosecutor, the commissiOn
moved to send a letter to ,the
'648' Board adv!SIIm, lhat to
HEARING SCHEDULED
.The VIllage ol Pomeroy
will hold a public bearing at
(;30 p.m. on May 1, 1979,
concerning the Commuafty
Development Block Grant
iCDBGJ.
'llle (Mirpose fs to hear
suggestions lrom cftlzeos on
development of a proposal to
submit to the Department ol
•Housing
and
Rural
Development (HUD I.
.'[lie HUD dollars would be
used to extead sewer Jines to
the Kerrs Run Area .
. While the VIllage ol
Pomeroy has been notiHed ol
its ellgtltty to complete the
application , any proposal fl
subject to approval by HUD
prior to actual fuadtng.
.The meeting will be held at
City Hall council chambers,
E. Second .St., Pomeroy.
.For further Information
contact the Pomeroy Mayor's
Office. City Hall, Pomeroy.

alleviate legal problems in
lrontloadlng the annex,
arrangements should be
made with the hospital
lourulation to eliiQill!'le tbe
reverter clause, or to modify
lhe deed In such a way that
lhe·foundation would pay fair
market value for any
buildings constructed at the
s1te.
The letter to be sent wUl
also advise that consideration
of the annex JX'O ject will be
rontingent upon the return, to
Gallia from Me1gs C&lt;Junty, of
'648' Board funds and the
designation of Gallia C&lt;Junty
as official fiscal agent for the
board.
Cain said last night that
wilhout such a designation
the county auditor C8Mot
legally certify lhat funds
exist for the project.
In a letter dated March 5,
'648' Board Executive
Director Maxine Plununer
advised the commission that
lhe board's funds, which had
been assigned to Gallia
C&lt;Junty smce the beginnlllg of
the Mental Heallh Center
project, were being moved to
Meigs C&lt;Junty.
Cain
emphasized
throughout the evening
sessioo lhat the deciSion as to
where to locate the
administrative annex was
one to be made by the '848'
Board, and that it was his
opmion that the county
commission should not be
mfluenced by threats from
the '648' Board to withdraw
1ts funds and personnel If the

OSP checks
three· wrecks
The Gallla -Meigs Post,
Highway Patrol, investigated
three acCidents Wednesday in
Meigs County',
A Pomeroy man was Cited
on a charge of DWI following
a one-vehicle accident on SR
7. one and lhree-tenlhs of a
mile south of :;It 5,' at I :50
a.m '

Officers report that a norlh
bound auto operated by
Lulher Blevins, 19, ran off the
nght Side of the roadway and.
struck a guardrail.
There was severe dllmage
damage to the Blevins auto
The patrol was called to the
scene of a ml!!hap on CR 1,
five :lRd four-tenlhs of a mUe
north of SR 124, at B a.m.
Officers report a norlh
bound auto operated by Jaerl
Quick, 24. Albany, swerved to
avoirl ;m on comtn ~ vehicle

dr1ven by Earl Barnes, 28,
Albany, and pasaed off the
right side of \he roadway mto
a ditch .
Barnes was cited on a
charge ofleft of center. There
was slight damage to the
Q111ck auto.
The patrol investigated a
two-vehicle collision on
Township Road I, three·
tenlhs ola mile west of CR I,
at 8 am.
Officers report \hat a west
bound auto operated by
Ralt*l Chrlstian, 34, Welli!ton,
and an eai!t bot11d vehicle
driven by Unda Vaughn , 26,
Langsville, sidesWiped In a
curve .
There was moderate
damage to the Christian
vehicle, shght damage to the
Vaughn auto No citation was
Issued
41

county d1d not cooperate.
Present during the meeting
was Rev . Frank Hayes, '648'
Bo81'd member , who echoed
an opinion expressed by
Plummer in a Jetter
presented
to
the
conunissioners on Tuesday,
stating that Gallia County
had everything to gain and
nothmg to lose oy proceeding
With the $400,000-plus project.
··· · ::::·::·:·:··:·:·:: : :: ~~::•:':: •'••

·....;..;.;.;

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Saturday through
Monday: Showers ending
early Saturday. f'alr
Sunday and Monday. Highs
In the 505 Soturday, war·
mlng to the 70s by Monday.
Lows from the upper 30s to
tbe lower 40s Satunday,
warm!Dg to tbe mfd 40s to
mid 505 by Monday.

Attempted

B&amp;E
probed
Me1gs Count y Sheriff
James
J
Proffitt's
department is invesllgatmg
lhe attempted breaking and
entermg of Gilbert's Teuco
Station on SR 7, below
Middleport
According to the Sheriff's
report the mc1dent occurred
sometune ater 10:30 p.m.
Tuesday. Attempts to pry
open the front door were
unsuccessful Since the
per so n or persons were
unable to open lhe door, the
glass m \he door was broken.
According to Gilbert ,
manager , the intruders did
not go inside the b_uilding .

Sidewalk sales
slated May 3·5
Sidewalk sales will be held
m the village of Middleport
May 3, 4, and 5. Th1s was
decided when the Middleport
Chamber of C&lt;Jnuneree met
Tuesday night at the
Middleport Masonic Temple.
A!WIIda Werner reported
there are'!/ pald members of
the chamber
In other business,members
agreed to purchase new
atrtstmas bulbs.
Ladies of lhe Order of
Eastern Stars prepared and
served the dinner. Attending
were Caoh Bahr, Jresident ,
who Jresided, Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Owen, Mr. and Mrs.
nrw- bert King, Mr • ~·
""d Mrs.
Don Willloll, Libby stumbo ,
Ml!rilyn Meter Mrs. Werner I
Audrey Oav..;port and Mr :,
:~nd Mrs . Edi..W. Baker.'

percent m February and an
Increase of 7.5 percent for the
y~ar .

The Labor Department
said the C&lt;Jnsumer Price
Index in March stood at 209.3,
meaning that goods and
serv1ces priced at $10tlln 1967
had increased to $209.30 last
month .
The department said a 2.7
percent mcrease m meat
prices accounted for most of
the rise in overall food costs.
Beef and poultry· prices
increased sharply lor the
s1xth consecutive monlh .
There also were increases
m the price of eggs, pork,
fre sh fruits and dairy
produds However , prices for
fresh vegetables declined
sharply, reflecting an
mcrease in supplies of lettuce
and tomatoes because of
1mprov e d
we ather
cond1t1ons, the department
srud.
The department said the
mcrease in housmg costs
resulted from a 1.6 percent
increase in mortgage interest
rates and an 0 9 percent r111t!
m housmg prices.
The 3 B percent m gasoline
pr1ces was the largest for any
smgle month since July 1975
and renected the world oil
(Continued on page 9)

Urgent
appeal .
sounded
An urgent appeal was
issued today by Hank Cleland
for volunteers to help In the
Hike - Bike for retarded
citizens which wUI be con·
ducted here by the Meigs
Association for Retarded
Citizens
Cleland Is chairman of the
Hike-Bike which will take
place Saturday May 12 at
10.30, on behalf of persons
with mental .retardation In
Meigs C&lt;Junty.
.
Already the list of volun·
teers is extensive.
Ron
James ,
State
Representative from the 92nd
House District, pledged 1118
support. He wll! appear on
Hike-Bike Day.
Rick Crow, Proaecutlng
Attorney, Robert . Arms,
candidate for Mayor of
Pomeroy, and Christopher
Layh, Superintendent of the
Meigs County Board of
MP.ntal Retardation are all
so!letting sponsors lor their 25
m1Ie nde .
'This event takes people.
We have jobo for anyone
willing to give a little of their
time to our cause. Little jobs,
big jobo, all kinds ol jobs. If
working would be too much
tune, then be a sponsor! A
sponsor pledges an amount of
money for each mile the
person he sj&gt;onsors fln1shes .
We ask the people ol our
community to help us spread
the word," Payh commented
Anyone wishing to join the
H1ke Bike are asked to call
Rea Roush ·at 992-3232.
ACflONS FU.ED
In Meigs C&lt;Junty Cnmmon
Pleas C&lt;Jurt the Farmers
Bank and Savings Co ,
Pomeroy. liled suit in the
amount of $10,989.02 against
Thomas R. Dunham, Vickie
L Dunham, of Rt . 2, Albany,
and Harold R. Dunham,
Gahanna.
Nancy Lawson, Middleport
filed suit for divorce agalnat
Dale Lawson, Rt. I, Portl~ -

'

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